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873a46bbf4fd17d29dec763ba8868c2c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.3712328450026 41.681744 -72.788147 choir sang. The junior talk consist-\ned of a story told by Miss Charlotte\nKendrlck of a lost Bible; at the close\nof this Dr. Kendrick, his daughter,\nCharlotte, and his sons, Marshall,\nAlexis, and Thelps, sang "Holy\nBible, Book Divine."\nThe choir rendered special music\nincluding a song dedicated to Mrs.\nH. A. Temple, the words and mel-\nody composed by Miss Anna J. Gran-nis- s\nand the harmony by Theron W.\nHart of New Britain. Mrs. Allder-lg- e\nread "Those Sweet Old Days."\nMiss Minnie Johnson and Mrs. K.\nB. Judson gave reminiscences of the\npast. Miss Johnson has been a mem-\nber of the church for 50 years and\nMrs. Judson for 42 years. Mrs. Jud-\nson, when a young girl, was organ-\nist for 14 years. Her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Harris, are the first\n on the roll of charter mem-\nbers of the church, which was or-\nganized in 1851; both were active\nin church work, Mr. Harris holding\nthe offices of church clerk, Sunday\nschool superintendent, and trustee.\nMrs. Mary Linsley, who recently\njoined the church by letter from the\nFirst Baptist church in New York\ncity, gave a brief outline of her con-\nversion when she was 15 years of\nage. Mrs. Linsley is now S7 years\nold and has been a Sunday school\nteacher from that time until now,\nwhen failing health makes It im-\npossible for her to continue.\nMiss Grannlss read one of her un-\npublished poems and gave a few\nreminiscences. She has been a\nmember of the church for 55 years\nand an earnest worker over the en-\ntire period. Frank A. Hart spoke\non "The Present,
eab7300f1bf552f900fa8b5ded6821e7 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.1273972285642 31.960991 -90.983994 had no relations nearthetn, they gave him bert. There were many whodid not love\na cordial welcome. He was o very hand- him, and more to whom his stern integri-\nsotuc, fascinating man; but if you looked ty was a reproach, but none had yet utter-\nlong or closely on him there was a fierce ed those falsehoods that aim at dishonor-\ngleam in his dark eye, a w ithering sneer ing merit. That deeper wound was re-\non his lip that caused you distrust his mo- served for the noon of his manhood, when\ndulated tones ot courtesy and blandness heart and brain and mind, if they be se-\nof manners. Ilis conversational powers parable, were alike in the full vigor of\nwore versatile and charming, and he seem- susceptibility. Ilis talents pointed him\ncd to have traversed tho globe, so thor- out as a fit person to represent his dis-\nough and accurate was bis almost univer- trict in the national legislature, and his\nsal intelligence. It was astonishing w hat integrity was so universally admitted as\noceans of wine and punch he could swal- his powers of intellect. He was accord-\nlow without being at all intoxicated. He ingly returned for Congress and took his\nhunted too, and in short, was accomplish- seat beneath the dome of that capitol that\n in ail those things in which poor Robert should garner none but the sage and the\nwas sadly deficient and which his uncle patriot, but beneath which the sordid and\nso highly prized. At first he courted Rob- unprincipled are too often thrust Ilisre-\nertt society, but a change soon came and putation for high, unbending honor and\nhe devoted all his time to the old man. spotless Roman virtue had preceded him\nNow that he had a companion in his rev- his peers received him with courtesy; but\nels, the planter gave up to deep drinkfng. it was not long before ho learned to look\nRobert never came in his sight but to be with contempt, ht took no pains toconceal\ncursed, and fie often attempted to cane his or qualify, on the occupations to which\nfine and manly son for supposed or trivial honorable members stooped, or at least\noffences, and upon Roberts asking him tacitly permitted. Stern and uncompro-\nto marry o beautiful, but portionless or- mising he stood aloof from the fetters of\nphan in the neighborhood, he drove him party and denounced with bitter scorn the\nfrom his presence and his roof without gross violations of truth and honor, his\nany provision being made for his present strong sense detected in many public func-\nor future maintenance.
a233be2da7691b35a1e764f3dd9b1a99 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.06420761865 41.681744 -72.788147 Numerous complaints have been\nmade to the night officer, but prac-\ntically all of these have been at\nthird or fourth hand, the only direct\nones coming from the night opera-\ntor at the telephone exchange. She\ncomplained twice last week and\napain Sunday night that someone\nwas making noises about the build-\ning, and Schubert has come to the\nconclusion that the prowler makes\nthis stop regularly as a decoy, draw-\ning the officer there in response to\nthe complaint and then slipping\nhome unobserved.\nA woman was seized at Broad\nand Church streets one night, recent-\nly and a witness of the attack re-\nported to the constable, but when\nthe latter called the woman she\ndenied all knowledge of the affair.\nOther Instances have been same,\nand it has been very difficult for\nSchubert to obtain information\nabout the man. He has done so,\nhowever, and now feels that he has\nquite definite suspicions. The fel-\nlow complicates matters by appear-\ning in various coats and headgear,\nbut. the reported descriptions all\ntally in many respects and the con-\nstable hopes to get the man soon.\nThe authorities say. that if the\nprowler Is caught he will be given\nthe maximum penalty on each com-\nplaint, as they intend to punish the\noffender mercilessly and make an\nexample of him.\nWomen are becoming afraid to\nventure out alone after dark, and at\nleast one instance is known of\nwhere one woman, braver than\n.others, has been carrying nn open\npen -kni -
0250afc4d3935d9bfe32f42d3d7fcc22 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 There are two machines upon w.h\none is apt to look as having ezhaus\nthe inventive genius of the Yankee\ntion without having accomplished a\n«juate results. 'We mean Washing H\nchines and Churns. More timo n\nmoney have been spent In attempt!\nto |>$rfect substantial Improvements\ntheseHwo machines' than on any otl\ntwo in all the long list that haveengi\ned the attention of inventors sine*\npatent office had an existence.' 1\npertinacity with which inventors cc\ntinue their endeavors to mitigate 1\nhardships of these two branches\nhousehold industry, speaks well fori\ngallantry of this large and respectal\nclass of citizens, ana entitles them\nthe favorable consideration of all 1\nhousewives of the land. We have c\namined a churn patented by Mr. lis\nof New York city. whicfa for silnplicl\nof construction is barely surpassed\nthe old-fashioned Dasher churn itsc\nIt is Biinply a neat, plain box, susper,\ned In a framo so as to socuipa pend\nlam or swinging motion. The dast\nis a piece of nard board, full of hol<\nand fastened vertically to a staff, ai\nwhen put into the churn .ttie staff is t\ncured to1 a by a wedge slipped\nwith the hand. The good lady, or wh\never does the churnlug, when .wear*\nwith oth6r labor, can Just Bit down in\nchair, and by the aid of a stick hook<\nto the lower edge of the churn box, ci\ndo her churning with very little effoi\nand get up from what is ordinarily co;\nsidered a severe task, thoroughly res\nMr. Hall claims for his churn l\nfancy Illusions such as bring butter!\nfive minutes, and. many others of 111\nnature, but merely that it is essentiall\na labor saving machine; that it does i\nwork as well as any churn ever use\nthat It requires no more labor to opera\nIt than it does to rock a cradle. %The\nis not a wheel or cog about it, and r\nauires no more skill to use it than\noes to operate the common old fas!\nioned dasher churn. We have exau\nined the'churn, and are satisfied th»\nMr.;Hall claims nothing foe his chur\nthat Is* toot frilly apparent' at a slngl\nglance. Mr. Hall can be fonnd at U\nGrant House, where any one wishin\nto purchase county rights could do a\non
0fcfc34e126a3b8a7d03dc5b53e3e8ba CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.401369831304 39.623709 -77.41082 " 1 dare say sue willlie better directly,'\nobserved Miss Fitz-Murray. Indeed, now\nthat they had recovered from their lirst\nscare, the company were inclined to rally\nthemselves and one another on the even-\ning's sensation, and there was perhaps a\ntendency to make Sallie the scapegoat of\nthe affair. If she had not interfered all\nwould have gone well. Some of the\nladies, who had been not far from faint-\ning themselves, whispered to one an-\nother that nothing else was to bo expect-\ned of a woman liko that; she had taken\nadvantage of having formerly been the\nowner of the house to force herself upon\ntho count (who was too polite to deny\nanybody anything), and of course she\nhad made an exhibition of herself.\nMeanwhile, General Bristowo, Mr. Roy-\nlance, Mr. Montague Gossett other\ngentlemen were discussing tho jugglery\nperformance, and had formulated at\nleast two theories to explain tho whole\nmystery. But all agreed that it was the\nmost astonishing thing ever witnessed\nin New York, and when Dr. Venables\nappeared with Sallie on Ids arm, looking\npale, hut smiling and entreating the\ngeneral pardon for having so misbe-\nhaved, the complexion of affairs re-\nsumed its former geniality. Tho tables\nhad been removed, the music stormed\nand palpitated, and tho people who\ndanced began to look at one another and\nbeat time with their feet, as if appari-\ntions, wizards and bloody daggers were\nbut a diverting preliminary to real en-\njoyment. Society uniformly deprecates\nserious views, and, if its spirits have\nboon dashed for a moment, laughs so\nmuch tho more lightly tho moment\nafter.
471f073cba7b12e8e10644b48295dc8d THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.7636611705627 39.369864 -121.105448 What have any of these adventurers done for\nCalifornia, after obtaining place and power ? If\nwe refer to the National record, nothing that\ncould not have been better done in their absence.\nIf to our State history, we find defective laws, an\nimpaired public credit, an enormous debt, and a\nbankrupted Treasury. Having no permanent\ninterests in common with the people, they labor\nfirst for their own advancement, and next for\nthat of their political friends; for the country,\nnever. Their zeal in the pursuit of office, is only\nexcelled by the shallowness of their brains. En-\ntire families are affected by the mania. Fathers,\nchildren, uncles, brothers-in-law, all join in the\nscramble. The bantling and the veteran, the\nupstart and the titled pretender, present their\nclaims, and urge them before the people. On\noccasions of great pith and moment, they are\nfound thrusting themselves forward, to the dis-\ngust of abler and better men. In the use of po-\nlitical machinery for managing primary elections\nor packing conventions, they have no superiors.\nThey arc full of expedients. Audacity passes\nwith their admirers for learning; impudence for\ningenuity; pretension for merit. On this capital\nthey trade, and become great men—in their own\nestimation. Nothing daunted by defeat in one\nlocality, we soon hear of their turning up in an-\nother. They arc leeches, varapyres, parasites—-\ndeficient in the self-producing principle, but\nclinging and deriving their nourishment from\nothers, Rebuke cannot abash them, nor change\nthe current of their vaulting ambition. Every-\nwhere, on all occasions, in season and out of\nseason, they are conspicuous in the front rank of\npolitical movements. They are as essentially\npaupers on the public crib, as the mendicant is\nupon the bounty of the village poor-house. Pap\ntheir ravenous stomachs must have, and the ladle\nof the Treasury is the medium through which\nthey receive it. Too proud to work themselves,\nthey yet appeal to the working classes to sustain\nthem. Too indolent to study, their hobby is the\ncurrent twattlc about party, party principles, and\nundying devotion to the cause ! Thus they fre-\nquently succeed against men of true worth ; and\nby this senseless style of argument, are enabled\nto flourish, and to perpetuate their power.\nIt were vain to attempt shaking these political\nfreebooters off. Tolerance has given them cour-\nage, and indulgence erected them into an insti-\ntution. We should therefore use the desperate\nphilosophy of the fox, whose body was covered\nwith blood-bloated flies, and endure the present\ninfliction,ratherthan drive the adventurers away,\nto have their place supplied by a hungrier swarm.\nSome of them are harmless from repletion, and\nsome from lack of mental ability to encompass\nthose gigantic projects of phlebotomy against\nthe public Treasury which their rapacious designs\nmay have included.
2bb09d02b5643436c62af9e4df245856 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.2999999682902 39.745947 -75.546589 wait president- Nell B. Sinclair. wi„LldT meeting at her home on\ngeneral secretar), Clarence C. KH - iVeduesdajr afternoon at which Mrs.\nIcn, aaslsunt secretary; Howell S. Hilu., wl,f 8)MMtk, Mrs. All.. ..1er\nJ -J,*Jand> I^redorlck H. Stelnle, I^roy a(|(|r(-»* a meeting at Georgetown on\nw. Hickman, J. H. Mehaffey, H. A . the «aine day. Thin meeting will be\nCasporson. I . C. Llthens, Henry R. I ),«|d „( the home of Mrs. Willis Jones.\nIsaacs, William F. Metten, Colonel i\nGeorge W. Sparks und D. L. Ott. It is\nexpected that the reception commit­\ntee would have been much larger had\nthe weather conditions been better.\nTh visitors were escorted by the\nreception committee to six special\ntrolley cars, which were waiting nt\nthe station and carried to the Hotel\nDuPont, where they we re given an\nInformal reception In the Hose Room\nby Governor Charles R. Miller and\nMayor Harrison B, Howell.\nIn vfedcoralng the visitors, Mayor\nHowell said in part:\n" Through mo people of Wil­\nmington, tho most progressive peo­\nple of tho East, extend to you, the\nmost progressive people of the West,\nour most hearty and cordial welcome.\nWo have learned more about Kansas\nIn tho last few daya than w« have\never known before ■ and It Is with\ngreat pleasure that wo receive you."\nMayor Howell declared that tho\npeople of Kansas have taken the\nwisest, step to advertise their state\nand that it would bring results. He\nsaid that if he was correct In his\njudgment the people of the West be­\nlieved that the East had tho people\nand the West, the country, but that If\nit were fiossiblo Wilmington and\nDelaware could run a train to Kansas\nshowing that this stale had both the\npeople and the country. He told of\nthe wonderful view that they could\nobtain from the roof of the hotel,\nsaying that they could see Pennsyl­\nvania, New Jersey and nearly all of\nDelaware.
0f5667bd39a0e95963d8869c8bf16ed9 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1893.015068461441 43.994599 -72.127742 Gould's, however, some newspapers utter\nexclamations of surprise and protest if\nsome of it is not bequeathed for public\npurposes or for organized charities. They\nseem to proceed on the assumption that\nthe man is bound to take away from his\nchildren money which he himself would\nnot give up dtiring his life. In other\nwords, they would require him to force\nhis children to make benefactions which\nhe himself had not made.\nIf a moral obligation to give away his\nmoney thus rests on a man, it rests on\nhim personally and during his own life.\nHe does not discharge it by keeping the\nmoney while he lives and compelling his\nchildren to give it away for him after\nhis death. If his money or any part of\nit belongs to the public of right, it be-\nlongs to them during the life of the man,\nnot merely at his death. He is respon-\nsible for the stewardship and is account-\nable for its performance, and he cannot\ntransfer to others the obligation.\nReally it cannot be called noble gen-\nerosity, high altruism, for a man to give\naway his money only after he is dead\nand he has no more use for it. He should\nbe his own almoner during his own life.\nIf the methods by which he obtained his\nfortune were culpable in his own \ntion and he wishes to make atonement\nfor them in departing from this life, he\ncan do it only by returning to the indi\nviduals the money which he took from\ntbem wrongfully. He does not whiten\nhis offense by giving it to somebody else.\nIf it belongs rightfully to others besides\nhimself, it belongs to those from whom\nhe got it by unjust means.\nIt was made evident during Mr.\nGould's life that he had no such consci-\nentious scruples as to the means by\nWhich he accumulated his great estate.\nDeath did not come to him unexpected\nly. For years past he must have been\nforewarned that his life was approach\ning its end. The consciousness that his\ntime on earth was likely to be short\nprobably induced him to pay special at-\ntention to his religious obligations as he\nunderstood them. He became a diligent\nattendant upon a Presbyterian church,\nand he gave his open adherence to its se\nvere doctrines of future accountability\nfor his conduct in this life. He was not\nan infidel. He was an orthodox believer.\nHe must have died thinking that his for\ntune was rightfully his own and had\nbeen obtained by means consistent with\nthe obligations of teligion. He could not\nhave felt that he was under the moral\ncompulsion of making restitution to any\nbody.
1131a6e7e4ac9bf6402ffda47e8d1228 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.7657533929478 40.063962 -80.720915 C0N8TAKTIxori.K, Oct. C . .A baiul of\nbrigands yesterday, in spito of the ro-\ncunt diplomatic action of Germany and\nFrance, and of tho efforts of the Porto\nto suppress brigandage, made a desper¬\nate attempt to wreck and rob a passon-\ngor train. Tho latter was missing along\na desolate portion of tho ilaidar-Pacal-\namidt railroad, when tho engineer dis¬\ncovered that eomuthing was wrong\nalong tho rails ahead of his train. Tho\ntrain wan brought to a standstill as soon\nas possible, and an examination of tho\nlino showed that the, much dreaded\nbrigands had torn up the rails and so\ndamaged the road bed that had tho\ntrain not boon stopped in time an acci¬\ndent would have surely happened.\nTho brigands, as soon as they saw that\ntheir plan had miscarried, instead of\nattacking tho train, decamped. This is\nonly one of similar outrages upon tho\npart of Turkish brigands.\nMm. lUitller and EugenodoKaymond,\nsub-managers of a vineyard company,\nwore captured early in August last by\ntho brigands of Chief Athanasias, and\nwere 011 payment of 5,000\nTurkish pounds, Later in tho samo\nmonth several Italian railroad ollicials\nwere carried off by Chief Mohadisn, and\nothers were murdered. Hero again a\nransom of $10,000 had to be paid for tho\nreleaso of the captured railroad ofllcials.\nOn .June I last the same band, that of\nAthanasius, placed obstructions across\ntho railroad track near Tcherossdoii,\nderailed an express train and captured\nseveral German tourists, lor their\nransom -10,000 was paid.\nAthaniasus is pictured as being a bri¬\ngand of the old school, an oriental\nClaude Duval practicing the tradition\nof robber courtesy and building up a\nhuge fortune for himself at tho expense\nof the Sultan's privy purse, ior tho de¬\nmands 0i the ambassadors for compen¬\nsation lor brigand outrages have been\ncomplied with from that fund. Tho\nOriental Railway Company, as tho re¬\nsult of the recent brigandage outbreaks,\nhas demanded special guarantees from\nthe Porte if it in to carry on its traflic,\nall tiio more as it is suggested that the\nIndian mail should take that route.
076cbed20029df960fb7dc49499bc585 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.015068461441 39.743941 -84.63662 ton county, Ind. His widow and mi in-\nteresting family of five daughters and one\nson survive him and mourn his loss.\nThere a re but few persons wl.o were born\nand have lived in Eaton longur than Mr.\nRossman : aud it mav be further said\nthat none have more quietly and faith-\nfully performed the duties of life, in ac-\ncordance with the views that he took of\nthem, than ho did. By nature he was\nsingularly, inobtrusive and retiring in so-\nciety, and, hence, seemed distant to\nstrangers, and even toward those whom\nhe personally knew, until he had become\nvery intimately acquainted with them,\nand it was only such as had become thus\nacquainted with him, who knew how\ntrue and good a man he was at heart.\n was a man of clear perceptions of\nright and wrong, and always intended to\ndo right, and being a man of few words.\nhe often asserted the right and condemn-\ned what was wrong according to his view,\nin a plain i ana olten. rather blunt man\nner. If he had not the faculty of making\nmany new friends, he had the power of\nretaining the confidence and esteem of\nthose he had which is the better test of\nthe worthiness of the man.\nSeveral years ago he had a stroke of\nparalvsis, from which he never recover\ned : although he was able, at times after\nwards, to get around with difficulty, so\nas to attend to his business. Suneradded\nto this he was attacked with that terrible\ndisease, consumption, and under
1688c173f16e9046c7df567297cbdb91 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.050684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 Proposed amendments to the L. A . VV .\nocnstitiuicn and by-laws, to be acted\nupon ut the meeting cf the National As­\nsembly in St. Louis next month, con­\ntinue to be forwarded to Secretary Bas­\nsett, and a number of important\nchanges are included in those received\nby him during the past few days. Fred\nGcrlavh, the Illinois cx-mem'ber of tho\nRacing Board, brings up the question of\nthe admission of professionals again,\nby proposing to strike out the word\n“amateur” from the list of qualifica­\ntions necessary for admission, and it is\nto 'be hoped that this'year that amend­\nment will be adopted. For the past two\nyears the organization has stood in th?\nillogical position of governing that\nlarge and still growing class cf riders\nwithout giving them any voice what­\never the government of the organiza­\ntion, because of a fictitious sentiment\nagainst admitting them to member­\nship, and it. is time that this should be\nrectified. Owen Lawson, of Kentucky,\npresents a similar amendment, but, pro­\nposes in addition that no pe.son, either\namateur or professional, shall be eligi­\nbletorideinaraceunderL.A.W.\nsanction unless he be a member of tin!\norganization. George L. Cooke, of\nRhode Island, proposes to solve both\nthat and the color question by making\nit optional with each state whether\nprofessionals or colored persons be ad­\nmitted to membership. The greatest\nobjection to the latter plan is the fact\nthat a person who had been admitted\nto membership in one state might he\nbarred from receiving any privileges\nin an adjoining state because in the\nlatter he would be ineligible to mem­\nbership.
132c125be2675ad4e040fee57f6f64ac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.4835616121259 40.063962 -80.720915 was too small, and then, as I havo said\nbegan tho practice of canonizing or ele\nvatinu to saintship some of ':hoso whosi\nzoal for tho church and whoso piou\ndeeds distinguished them above thei\nfellows. Not long after, each of thi\nsevoral trades and professions chose a\ntheir spocial patron and advocate sotm\none of those saints who while in lift\nhad pursued their particular vocation\nThus Saint Crispin, or Crispinus, wh<\nhad been a shoemakor, became the pa\ntron saint of that|trade, and from hav\ning mended tho soles of his customer:\nwhile in lifo was deemed worthy of car\ning for his fellow craftsmon in the spir\nitual world. St Dunatun, who haif beet\na blacksmith, became the patron sain\nof the workers in iron, and St. John \nBaptist, from his having boqn a membei\nof tho mystical sect or ordei\nof tho Eiseues, was styled tho patron\nsaint of tho Freemasons. There is\na tradition that tho lawyors, unabl\nunder this rule to find any of their owi\ncraft sufficiently distinguished in holi\nness to be cannonized as a saint, wer\ncompelled to accept tho patronag\nof tho devil himself, who has been thei\npatron and qpunsellor ever since-,' o\ncourse I do not vouch for tho truth c\nthis tradition. Saint John the evange\nlist is not spoken of as a patron saint o\ntho Masonic fraternity until some tim\nin tho sixteenth century, But for eigh\ncentrios at least the society^ known un\nder ditlerentname* in ditlerent countrio\nand at different times, but now call*
24a51a3d6681d215dda6e24cb87e10e2 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1917.7931506532218 37.451159 -86.90916 over with trailing vines, roses and perennials; and they all look out over tho\ngulf waters, at the dancing waves, the scudding sails, the beach and tho\nsurf. If you can't find happiness down thero in the golden sunshine and\namong the countless diversions and attractions of that playground, don't go\nSouth in tho winter expecting to find your "Promised Land," for you'll have\nonly your trouble for your pains. No choicer spot exists and greater com-\nfort is not to bo found. The winter climate is ideal, not uncomfortably\nwarm, but moderate and biacing, putting snap and ginger into tho system.\nTouring along the Gulf Coast is one of the ways travelers take to find\ntheir own particular choice and for this purpose the train service of the\nLouisville & Nashville Railroad is convenient You can stop everywhere,\nbeginning at Mobile, and stay a few a few days or as long as you\nwish. It is a facinating vagabondage that will bring you eventually to tho\nplace of your ultimate desire. You can, also, if you choose, ship your motor\ncar to Mobile and go in for regular touring along the gulf the roads arc all\ngood and tho country is facinating in the extreme. History lends itsback\nground of fact to a long list of interesting tradition and romantic legends\nconcerning this locality, and the "atmosphere," while wholly American, has\nthe foreign flavor in sufficient degree to give it diversity and variety. Top-\nographically, the coast lies low and curving, rising gently toward tho hin-\nterland, which is forested with pines, broken in the clearings, by rich and\nproductive farmlands. Tho shore lino is much indented, the numerous bays,\n"bayous," "sounds" and lakes give a seemingly endless and\nwaterscape.
0a098b165ea755078cef82fb24df9899 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.5860655421473 41.020015 -92.411296 "Hush! IShet IIJI! You told par\n> 011 would not sleep with a man."\n"ilad rather sleep witlj a wet dog."\n"Well, 1 have given up my bed to a\nsick man. I have been hard ill work\nall day, and have to work hard all\nday to-morrow and can't ail'ordto set\nup all night. That bed is wide\nenough for ns both. I shall stay on\nthe back side, and if you don't stay\non your side, you'd better, that's all."\nAs she said thisshe raised from her\ndress pocket an infernal jack-knife,\nsuch as farmers use iu trimming\nfruit trees, and then let it fall with a\nehng. 1 comprehended the situation\niu half a monienl, and unto this maid-\non I quoth as follows :\n"Miss,young lady, your intentions\nmay, or may not, be honorable. I am\ntraveling entirely by myself. My\nnatural protectors are miles and miles\naway beyond the boundless prairie,\nignorant of the perils which may be­\n their idol. Thus far I have not\nbeen insnlted by your sex. I am a\nman of few words, but they are em­\nphatic. I will give you part of that\nbed, and that's all I will do. If you\nattempt, during the silent watches of\nthe night, anything contrary to this\nfirm determination, by St. Joseph,my\npatron saint, I will shoot you right\nthrough the midritF."\nAs J concluded, I laid a Slocum pis­\ntol upon the candle-box. A low\nchuckle outside the bedquilt gave ev­\nidence that paterfamilias had heard*\nand approved the arrangement.\nMy antagonist laughed, and saying.\n"Mister. J reckon we understand\neach other," hounded over the hack\nside of the bed. There she is now,\nprotending to be asleep. I can't fin­\nish this letter. 1 can't do anything.\nTalk about the trials of the earlier\nsaints—about broiled over live coals\n—about beiug iiayed alive—about\nbeing boiled in oil. What was all\nthat to this ?
0c9c97d4cbb7fc812a0a03023803318b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.9383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 One seldom considers that gait is a\nmatter of fashion, but it Is. In the\ntime the large hoops were worn, a\nshort, waddling step was the mode.\nFashion and hygiene have never been\nso little at variance as at present,\nwhen an upright, straightforward gait\nis in vogue, says the Pittsburg Press.\nAn erect posture of the body according\nto the directions given to the military\ncadets, “chin in. chest out and stomach\nin.” should be observed. Tfhe lower\nextremities should be swung forward\nfrom the hip Joint freely and easily,\nthe foot coming down on the toes first,\nthen tho rest of the foot, the heels\nreaching the ground last. There has\nbeen much discussion as to which\npart of the foot should be placed upon\nthe ground in walking, but writers\nnow generally agree that the tec*\nshould come down first, are or­\ngans of feeling and give a sense of\nsupport to the body. The natural way\nof walking has been studied by ob­\nserving Indians and Arabs and It has\nbeen found that those who walk beet\nand most gracefully point the toes\ndownward stepping on them first.\nTne turning of the toes out In walk­\ning is not so much dwelt upon as for­\nmerly. The ungraceful toelng-in\nshould, of course, be avoided, but the\näugle made by bringing the heels to­\ngether and turning the toes out, mili­\ntary fashion, need not be practiced so\nindustriously as tho old time precepts\ndictate. The study of the gait and the\nbeat methods of walking is now prose­\ncuted by means pf prints of the soles\nof the frpt made either by walking in\nsoft clay or by chalking or blackening\nthe soles.
1c60f76192436b255af5e7939fc7a39e CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1922.132876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 'When it stops the gates fly open,\nas in any automatic elevator, and then\nthe floor tilts and the car slides for-\nward into its allotted space. The ele-\nvator has a door at each side so it\ncan discharge cars in two directions.\nTh booths to hold the cars also can\nlie moved sideways so that each ele-\nvator can unload six cars to a floor,\nthree out of one door and three\nthrough the other.\n"At night when the owner comes\nfor his car the young woman at the\nswitchboard presses a button, the ele-\nvator whizzes up to the twenty-fift- h\nfloor, the door opens, and then com-\npressed air will tilt the floor of the\nbooth and the car will slide down the\nrunway into the elevator; the fjrst\nfloor the car will slide out of the rear\ndoor of the elevator, and when the\nowner steps forward he'll find his car\nstill facing north and will drive out\nrear entrance iv'o Haddock place and\naround into AVabasb.\n"His car will never come in contact\nwith another car. It will always be\ngoing in the same general direction\nand yet we'll use no gas of his to\nmove it. This means there will be no\nfumes of gas in the building, and of\ncourse the dangers of slipping on oily\nramp floors will be done away with.\nIt would take considerable gas an 1\nmuch time to climb to the twenty-fift- h\nfloor by winding upwards along a\nramp. Our plan is fast, clean, safe\nand simple."
0a572a2d6ba0f810683f0a7343560663 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.727397228564 40.063962 -80.720915 Recent letters from Germany show that\ntho social as well as the political condition\nof the empire is far from satisfactory. The1\nGermans have taken pride in their freedom\nrom nervous restlessness and selfish hard\nness of other nationalities more given over\nto active business, and to looking at every-1\nthingfromamerepeeuniarystandpoint. No\npeople were more contented in the simple\nhome enjoyments, or satisfied with the do¬\nmestic comforts, if we may believe their\nown accounts, or tho testimony of stran¬\ngers who have spent much time with them.\nN'ow, intelligent representatives of tho lat¬\nter class inform us that tho Germans are\npeevish, irritable, excited, given to pecun¬\niary speculation, and in many respects,\nchanged much for tho worse. Even the\nskeptical Dr. Schenkel thinks they need\npreaching to. He would not enforce the\nold religious dogmas, but would enforcj\nthe preeminent importance of the princi¬\nple of universal love.\nThere are not wan ting ouier witnesses to\nthe change, but we have cited a sufficient\nnmber. Among the causes of the deterior¬\nation may be numbered the decay of ac¬\ncepted moral principles, following the re¬\npudiation of the dogmas on they\nwere based; the demoralization that en¬\nsued from the national pride inspired bv\nthe conquest of France, also the pecuni¬\nary inflation produced by the French mil¬\nliard*, and the disorganizing influence of.\nthe Socialism of late so prevalent Com¬\nmunistic theories have no doubt been ren¬\ndered attractive as offering a possible way\nof escape from a burdensome military ser-\nyico, while the growth of skepticism al¬\nready noticed has provided a moral vacuum\nto be filled by them. *\nThe moststriking proof that all is not well\nis afforded, however, by the government's\nchange of policy toward the Roman Church.\nA few days ago we had occasion to notice\nthe fact, previously denied, that the nego¬\ntiations between the empire and the Vati¬\ncan had borne important fruit. The re¬\nsult in brief was that while the former\nwould not recall any of its former acts or\npay back fines already received, it would\npermit a resumption of duties on the part\nof Bishops and priests, and would not ex¬\nact the discharge of penulties affixed but\nnot discharged. There may have boon\nmore important concessions not yet made\npublic.
1b78ad3dec88dea994371eed3a1ceb49 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.1383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 How little reliance is to bo placed In\nthis theory is apparent lrom the language I\nol its principal propounded When he\nfirst broached it be underto«k almost en-\ntirely to account lor the origin of specie!\nby natural selection, or the survival ol >\nthe fittest. All that he says abont sexual 1\nelection Is contained In two pages of bit <\nwork on the "Origin of Specie*." But '\nwhen be came to consider the descent of <\nman natural selection sinks into the back <\nground, and sexual selection occupies 1\nthree fourths ol bis work on that subject\nIndeed, be explicitly says ol himself that '\n"in the earlier editions ol my 'Origin of I\nSpecies' I probably attributed too much to <\ntbe action of natural selection or the aur- <\nvival ol the fittest." He also at stage\nor the discussion staked his whole theoiy\nupon the principle that every detail of\nslructure in every living creature must\nhave been ol special aso to some ances- |\ntralIorm,or must now be ot special use to\nthe descendantsol this form. Bat In his De-\nscent ol man he says, "I had not formerly j\nBUlllclcntly considered the existence ol\nmany structures which appear to be, as\nfar as wo can judge, neither beneficial nor\ninjurious; and this I believe to be one of\nthe greatest oversights as yet detected in\nmy work."* He acknowledges a number\nof such mistakes. This is calculated to\ncommend his candor, but it also shows\nthat his own opinions are not fixed. And\nit serves to warn us not to attach to his\ndogmatic assertions very much weight.\nHe Is quite liable'to modilj them.-
16154ef0178c034f59a9aeeaf5c26248 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.6106557060818 39.745947 -75.546589 ing, and his next Z? \\\njump was from\ntho topmast of a\nvessel. Ho then tried Niagara Falls,\njumping from a projecting rock some\nninety feet above tho jkjuI below tho\ncataract. After a few exhibitions else­\nwhere, he jumped the Genes«» falls,\nfalling ninety-six feet, on the 8th of\nNovember, 1829, taking a tamo boar with\nhim; both escaped unhurt.\nOn the 13th of tho same month ho mado\nhis lost jump from the same spot, but\nfrom a high platform, which made Ills\ntotal descent HO feet. At tho last\nminute ho became totally unnerved and\noverdosed himself with whisky; then took\nthe k»p in tho presence of some 20,000\nspectators, turned in falling, struck\nbroadside on tho water with a force esti­\nmated at 4,000 pounds, and was seen no\nmore. The next spring his mangled body\nwas found at the month of the river and\nburied in the village of Char­\nlotte, where a handsome monument\ncommemorates his “virtues.”\nA curious incident, well authenticated,\nis related of tho occasion. Among tho\nspectators was a Mr. Gibbons, who Lad\ntho bad habit of lidding his thumb in hie\nmouth when deeply interested,\nso excited by tho leap and disappearance\nof Patch that ho bit off tho first joint of\nhis thumb without feeling itl\nTo all that class of cranks the Now\nYork and Brooklyn bridge is a standing\ntemptation, but 1 no police are too vigilant\nfor most of them. After n few cases of\nsuccessful jumping, “Professor” Odium\njumped ami was killed, and soon after\nSieve Brodio and Larry Donovan mado\ntheir remarkable leaps from the central\nspan. They then announced that they\nwould jump simultaneously.ono from tho\nNew York and tho other from the Brook­\nlyn tower; but tho authorities soon had\nboth ia jail, where they remained\nmonths.
3354996a6831206d9eac3323933a58f3 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.7739725710298 37.561813 -75.84108 the cause of America: nnd that the per-\nsons so seizi'd, be confined in such places\nand treated in such manner ns shall bo\nconsistent with tin ir respective charac-\nters, nnd security of their persons."\nThey iilo recommended that "tho\nrecords nn 1 papers "! the Meetings of\nSufferings in tho respective States ba\nforthwith secured nnd carefully exam-\nined, nnd ee that such parts of them ns\ntuny be of apolitical nature bo forwitli\ntransmitted to Congress."\nThe report of the committee was\nagreed to, nnd the several persons\nnamed, consi-- 1 i n g of leven of the lead-\ning members of tho Quaker Society in\nPhiladelphia were banished to Freder-\nicksburg, Virginia. On tho same day\nCongress ordered the Board of War 6 ?\nremove to the same State the Hon. John\nPcnn. the Governor, and Hon. Benja-\nmin Chew, the Chief Justice of Penn-\nsylvania, who had evinced disaffection\n the Whig cause.\nIn these proceedings our Revolution-\nary fathers aimed a severe blow at that\n"freedom of speech and of the press,"\nwhose abridgement by our Government\nat the present timo causes the sympa-\nthizers with the rebellion so much dis-\ngust and well feigned alarm. They did\nmore. When two eminent "peace men,"\nmembers of the Society of Quakers,\nwere detected in giving personal "aid\nnnd comfort to tho enemy," they wero\nhanged. The sympathizers with tho foo\nthen, as now, made a great ado over this\nneedful exercise of authority; and Tory\nJohn Butts wrote to Tory Joseph Gal-\nloway: "Governor Livingston went to\nPhiliub Iphia. nnd utucd his endeavors\nto prcv .il on the banditti (the Congress)\nin power there to save Roberts anil Car-\nlisle, not from any principles of honor\nor conscience- - you know him too well\nbut from motives, as he thought, of pol-\nicy."
179c74651538277c57af895be4b9bcc2 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.3155737388686 38.894955 -77.036646 the Superintendent of the State. War,\nand Navv- - Department Building. Scaled\nproposals in duplicate, indorsed "Pro-\nposals for Fuel," will be received at this\nofiiee until 2 p. m on THURSDAY, May\n7, 1896, to supplv the State, War, and\nNavy Department Building with f'ici\nduring the fiscal year ending Jane 30,\n1897, a follows 5.000 tons or extra\nhard white ash furnace coal. 25 tons of\nwhite ash stove coai, 100 cords of lncktrr\nwood, 100 cords or cak wood, and 50\ncords ot spruce pine wood. All coal to\nbe or best quality, free from dust or im-\npurities, ami inspected by a person who\nshall be designated by the Superintendent,\nand to be wcighcii upon the government\nscales in the court yard. All wood to be\nof the best quality and inspected by a\npe'rson who shall be designated by the\nSuperintendent. The hickory and oak\nwood to be sawed into three pieces\nnnd measured after it is saweel and\ndelivered. The coal and wood to be de-\nlivered at the State, War, and Navy Build-\ning and toreel in the vaults by the party\nor parties to whom the contract or con-\n may be awarded at such time and\nin such quantities as the eonvenience of\nthe oflice may require. Reserving -- the\nright to order as much more or as much\nlessor either coal or word as may be re-\nquired at the contract price; also the right\nto reject any or all bids, or to accept anv\nportion or any bid. The successful blutTer\nto furnish bond in the sum of S5.000 as a\nguarantee of the lnithful performance of\nthe contraet. G. W . BA1RD, Chief En-\ngineer, U. S. N., Superintendent.\nPROPOSALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS\nITEMS OfI ice of the Superintendent of\ntlie State, War. and Navy Building. Sealed\nproposals in duplicate, indorsee! "Propo-\nsals for Miscellaneous Items." will be\nreceived at this oflice until 2 p. m . on\nTHURSDAY, May 7, 1896, for mrnishing\nthis office, during the fiscal year ending\nJune30, 1897, with soap, brushes, sponges,\npaints, oils, towels, crash, nails, screws,\netc., etc. Schedules, forms of proposals,\nand ail necessary information can be ob-\ntained upon application to G. W. BAIRD,\nChief Engineer, U. S .N. . Superintendent.\napll.l8 .25,26.my2,6\nPHOPOSALS FOR MISCELLA-\nNEOUS sui'PLIES FOR THE POST-OF F IC - E
18b3798cccd73b04a12ee0a58dcb46e4 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.7937158153713 29.4246 -98.49514 end. It Is said that If the tube Is proper-\nly made and planted no air will escape.\nThe right of way, It Is believed, can be\nsecured lor nothing, or at a nominal ex-\npense, and the main cost will be 'the\ntubes and the engines and stations. A\nletter, a samnle of irrain. or package of\nnny kind which Is to be sent, Is Inclosed\nIn a leather ball. A ball presents the\nleast friction as a rolling object, and\nthe leather Is to be Hill' and heavy.\nA continuous current of air la passing\nthrough the tube constantly. With one\npipe the plan Is to reverse the engine\nevery hour the first hourforolng air In-\nto It at the Chtcatro end and sending\npackages to New 1 ork, the next hour\nexiinusiing lie air aiiutcngoanu draw-\ning the packages as quickly back. The\nmen who have It In chartro do not sav\nhow long it will take to send n package\nIn this way. but claim to do It In less\nthan a minute. Stations will be estab\nlished at Important cities on the route.\nIt la expected to pay a large protlt aud\nto do the business of the telegraph com-\npanies, the express companies and the\nmall. They say the business of sending\ncrude petroleum by a pipe foralong dis\ntance, aa la now tionc, was laugueu ai\nat first, and that this one la more prac\nticable, If possible, and not nearly so\ncostly, as the pipes are to be small and\ncan go around curves and over hills as\nwell aa on tne level.
049781adc8ac65594557263ec8e46041 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.1136985984272 40.807539 -91.112923 "TVTOTICE is hereby given that the Board of\n_ L i County Commissioners of Lee County\nat their regular term in January, 1841, con­\nstituted and established the following Organ­\nized townships in said County, to wit: Frac­\ntional Township G8 North, Range 3 West;—\nFractional township G9 north, Range 3 west,\nand all that portion of Fractional Township\n69 north, Range 4 west, east of the north and\nsouth, line dividing sections 33 and 34, to be\none organized township, to be jtnown by the\nname of Green Bay Township, the place of\nthe first meeting to be at the house of Wesley\nHughes;—also, that portion of fractional tciwn-\nsliip G9 North, Range 4 West, lying west of\nthe North and South line dividing sections\n33 and 34, Fr. township G9 North, Range 5\nWest, to be an Organized Township, to be\nknown by the name of Denmark Township,\nthe place of the first meeting to be at the\nhouse of L. L. Thurston ;—also. Township G8\nNorth, Range 4 West, and Fr. Township sixty\nseven North, Range 4 West, to be an Organ­\nized Township, to be known by the name of\nWashington Township, the place of the first\nmeeting to be at the School house on the six­\nteenth section ;—also Township Ga North,\nRange five West, to be an Organized Town­\nship, to be known by the name of the West\nPoint Township, the first meeting to be at the\ntown of West Point;—also Township G6\nNorth Range G West, Township 69 North\nRange 6 to be an Organized Township,\nto be known by the name of Franklin Town­\nship, the place of the first meeting to be at the\ntown of Franklin;—also Townships 68 and\n69, North of Range 7 West, to be an Organiz­\ned Township, to be known by the name of Har­\nrison Township, the place of the first meeting\nto be at the house of Jesse Johnson;—also Fr.\nTownship 67 North Range 7 West, the West\nhalf of Township 67 North Range 6 west, Fr.\nTownship G6 North Range 7 west, to bo an Or­\nganized Township, to be known by the name\nof Van Buren Township, the place of the first\nmeeting to be at the house of Abraham llcnkle;\n— also Township 67 North Range 5 West, the\nEast half of Township 67 North Bange G 'vest,\nto be au Organized Township, to be known by\nthe name of Jefferson Township, the place of\nthe first meeting to be at the house of Cyrus\nPeck,—also Fr. Township GG North Range 4,\n5and G west, to be an Organized Township, to\nbe known by the nameof Ambrosia Township,\nthe place of the first meeting to be held at Am­\nbrosia;—also Fr .Township G5 North Range of\n4, 5 and 6 west, Fr. 6 -4, North Range 5 west,\nto be an Organized Township, to be known by\nthe name of Jackson Township, the place of tho\nfirst meeting to be at the town of Ke-o -kuk,\nsituated in said county to be an Organized\nTownship. By order of the Board.\n4t—36
4b67f45effe22a0b79a5cc5e85f5099c OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.078082160071 41.020015 -92.411296 rccognlzed the groat fact that the in­\ndustrial classes in this country, and\nthe better sentimrats of onr civilisa­\ntion. alike demanded that diplomacy\nshould be exhausted before a resort t»\narms was contemplated. And the pro­\nductive industry and peaceful arts\nwhich to-day blees oar country are\nlargely the result of this wisdom. The\nsettlement of thi# question by n new\nsystem of arbitration has also fixed a\npotnt in th# woHd'a history and estab­\nlished a precedent which it is believed\nwill do more to prevent In th# ffctnre\nihe wickedness and waste of war thin\nany other #vent of tb# eeniory.\nAgain, whan from maay quartern\nthere am# an attempt to complicate ofli,\nrelations and discourage n«gotlations\nwith Spain, In th#bop# that war Woold\nresult fTom the Cuban difficulty, the\nPresident was neolat# in the position,\nthat diplomacy sbaald be eAaasted\nfirst, and that war sbtfuld bfjthe last\n«nd a reluctant mart. T%t||laking\n•nasses felt that the young ilea of onr\ncountry would be more usefbit* them-\n-elves and tbe world, engaged in pro\nluctlve Industry, tbaajmwa«>% their\nives iu camps, and oh mavehe<, to\n:hase down a ,/#w bloodthirsty Span-\ntarda; aatftth^lSAtaa that we Want\n•id a greater bniaath of th# eountry we\n aoeaaas brought Into cultiva­\ntion, aad naw Industries developed to\nIIversify and employ profitably tbe\nnbor of tbe p#op!o, aer# than we\nwanted Cuba or its population. Upon\n>hls theory tb# admlalstration ietad,\nml b!atory will attaat Ita wisdom.\nI now turn to matters mora Imma*\nttately eaanaetad with oat #<aN gov-\nirnment, Th# faet thUta di^r wa are\n•ot ful y recovered from the effects af\ni financial panic auggeata the probabU-\nty that th# public mind will look with\nnora than ordinary anxiety far iegis-\natfva remedle#. It baa tweome a\n•abit of American thoaght, wkt#b\nrises almost to the eharacter of a\nnanla, to believe that, for all tbo pollt-\nical ilia to wUeh human economy 1*\n•elr. either miw statate, or aa amend\nneat to soma existing atab** w.ll b»\nto efTeotive eura. Almoe* #v#ry man\n•as a panacca whloh la hie judgment\n#111 Improve tha bualnaas proeperltr\n•f tbe country, and secure the future\nigalnet tha recurrane# of ttaa| fipaab\n-ial disasters which have beTetafoiV\nperiodically a*l#ct#d all rnmmsislV\n'latlona. In Iowa thaaa dbtarbtinom\ntave increaaed the former grlevanae»\n>f egricutture, and have eat la%Riry on\nip>to#lnseaiehofaraB»aay. MTeare\ntold by aaa thai Area bnakthg wll\nduce order ont of financial
19dec14d02623eb151db87e80a51fa8b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.815068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 Tlfoc, closli e Ht 78^0. Corn, cash No. 2, 40%^;\nOctober «Kh^;o, closing unOKo; November41%\na4tj<£c, clod: gat 41X«: December 4t9iai;c.cloa«\nlug ht 41c; Umy 44%t45c, Closing r; -uy{fl OaM,\ncash No. J . 3io: October 2So^sW5, cosing at\nioKc: November 2&5£o; Doeamber 25Kc: May\n!WKa29Hc, cloving at 2I&& itye, No. 2 , G«c. Barley,\nNo 2,71a KlHS^ta, No. J . 81 08K. Prlmo Urn'\notby scefl S2'j0a222. Moss Pork ?l3 CO: January\ni\\210a1217KC. Closed at 81212& Lord, per 1C0\nIts. , 6 8f»c: October 6 80o; November G.17XaG22Xc.\nclosed at C 17%o; .Jaauarv 6 22Xa0 25c, cla»od at\n6.22V4c: May C.bfcJ*c, closed at 6.62>(a Bacon,\nBhortrlba7l)Cc; shoulders &0Qa&.20o; short dear\n4iao7.lCa7.20c. Whisky 8110. Sugar*, cutloat 7o;\ngranulated 6jfc; standard A Q>4c. Butter, markot\nquiet at l&atto lor creamery; lCallc^for dairy,\n£ggs VJalsc and quiet.\nFbi<. iDtLrmk- Pa.. Oct. 74..Klonr stoady with\nmoderato demand; Ohio and other Western \n8i '.U'a-t 10: do. atrslgtu 81 10n4 2d: winter patent\n|t 3-iaft 00; Minnesota clear old wheat 84 '^5; do\natralghi« 87Vial CO; do patent« 75a4 SO. Wheat\nauletand weak; No. 2 red on track 82J<o: No 2 red\nctobcr 82a82>4o; Novemner 8'.%h}?3c; Dumber\n83%aB4o; January 8tJ4iS5c. Corn, spot'dull aud\nwcak;lulurut sto«dy;No 2 mixed on track &3Ma\n63K«: do In gtaln dei ot &Uko: No. 2 mixed October\n5la52c: November Nofcio; December 48!*a49c: Jan*\nuary4M*a49o, Gats, *pot In moderate demand;\nNo 3 mixed 82c; No. 2 mixed81o; No. 8 whlto34o;\nNo. 2 white 34Ka35c: futures iteady; No. 2 white\nI October 84^aVo; November 8t5ia36c; December I\nI S5V.iiIlI»?^c: January 8fia£(ft£r. 1\nrequest and steady. Fori, mess 515 50; do prime\nmens new 31& CO] do family S1Q 00a38 60. Butter\ni firm P.nd demand Mr ror lro»h good'? creamery\ncztra ific; western factory Italic, ChMM quiet\nJ and steady.
11b1cf92cafcfc7ca1e58484dbf08dfb NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.8890410641807 40.735657 -74.172367 Up to the present time no matter\nhow proficient a child might be in his\nor her knowledge of the doctrines ot\nthe church they were not permitted,\nexcept in rare instances, to receive the\nsacrament of confirmation before they\nhad arrived at the age of 10 years.\nThe ceremonies attending the admin-\nistering of this sacrament are among\nthe most impressive in the Catholic\nChurch. The bishop officiates in full\nrobes, attended by the chancellor of\nthe diocese and other clergymen, while\na man and woman selected from the\ncongregation act as sponsors for each\nchild In about the same way in which\nthat duty is performed at baptism.\nAs was the case yesterday, the chil-\ndren are all attired alike, the girls :n\nw'hite with veils and wreaths of smilax,\nand the boys clothed in blue suits as\nnear uniform as possible, with a bow\nof white ribbon attached to the left\narm. All of those confirmed yesterday\n been receiving instructions for sev-\neral weeks, and during the last three\ndays of last week they were on what\nis termed a retreat.\nOn those days they attended mass at\n8 oclock each morning and remained\nIn church until 11 oclock. They re-\nturned at 1 oclock In the afternoon\nand after benediction of the blessed\nsacrament remained until 6 oclock.\nYesterday morning first communion\nwas administered in both enurches to\nthose m mbers of the class who had\nnot receit ed it before.\nIn St. Josephs Church all those con-\nfirmed, except the adults, were mem-\nbers of the parochial school of that\nparish. In St. Antoninus, which is con-\nducted by the Dominican Fathers, the\nclass included beside the adults, their\nown school pupils, children from public\nschools whose parents reside in or are\naffiliated with the parish and the pupils\nfrom St. Vincents Academy, which Is\nnow cared for spiritually by the Do-\nmlnicars.
1c79ec6008a7def6d74d13219160d67e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.6589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 A reporter of the Parkersburg Stale Journal\nwhile at the depot in that city last\nFriday, had hie attention called to the\niisgraceful condition of two lunacy guards.\nDie Jouniari account says: The fast_llne\nIrom Cincinnati over the 0., W. & U.K. B .\nbrought among its pawngeraon Friday a\nlunatic and two officers; one a oounty iheriff\n»nd the other bis dtputy. It Is said that the\nIWO officers ere from Logan county, In'1]!"\n3tate, and that tbey started from lortj-\nnoutb, or some plaoe in that neighborhood,\nwith tho lunatic in charge. They boarded\n.he C., W. & B. train at the junction of the\ntwo roada which ooinelrom Portsmouth and\nCincinnati, and by that time were so intoxl-\nyited that they had neither control over\nthemselves or the luoatlo whom they were\n to Weston. Their oonduot was soi dii-\nrraceful that in their inebriate condition\n. hey forgot oven the most common foarim\nif civility and sat on one seat with both\ntcs up over the back of another and put\ntheir feet almost Into a lady's face, wbounr\nortonately was sitting near them. Thej\nrelied and hooted and jeered as only drfcnken\nnen can do. All this time the demented\nnan whom they were sent to take ohargeof,\njehaved In a manner which Indicated a far\ngreater degree of decency and self rtspcct\nban those in whose power his deranged\nnental condition had placed him, were rap-\ntble of showlug. So far an any protectloii\nvhlch the passengers in the car received from\nhese officers, the luuaUo had ample oppor-\nunity to commit any crime which his
98ff105586d581902b82c4d473fe72cf PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.3767122970573 31.960991 -90.983994 arriving at the place, found a young ecuted by order of General Jacksou m the\nwhite-man stripped naked, bound to a tree Seminole war of 1817, 18, and believing\nand his captors preparing to put him to that* the circumstances of her history pre-\ndeath. On observing this, Milly instant- seirîed a case of very peculiar interest, I\nly went to herfathei, who, as before sta*, mule it a point to obtain from hersell a\nted, was she Prophet Francis, and a prin-J statement of her conduct in 1818, when,\ncipal chief of the nation, and besought; as public history has already recorded,she\nhim to save the prisoners life. This he saved the life of an American citizen, whp\ndeclined, saying at the same time, that he was a prisoner in the power of some of\nhad no power to do so. She then turned her tribe. The history states that the\nto his captors, and begged them to spare white man was about to be burned alive,\nthe life of the white man; but one of but was saved by the interposition of the\nthem who had lost two sisters in the war prophets daughter. Being in the viçim-\nrefused to listen to supplications in be* ty of the Indian girl, near the mouth oj\nhalf of the prisoner, declaring that his the Verdigris river, and being acquainted\nlife should atone for the wrongs which he with a portion of her history, 1 rode sever-\nhad received at the hands of the white al miles to hear her story from herself,\npeople The active humanity of Milly 1 had been informed that she has a claim\nwould not be discouraged. She reasoned to some negro property, now held by the\nand entreated, telling the vindictive sa- Seminoles; and I first questioned her\nvnge who was bent on the destruction of relation to her claim, and then directed\nthe prisoner that his death would not re- her mind back to 1818, and told her I had\nstore his sisters to life. Aftern long time heard that she had saved the life ofa white\nspent in her generous effort, she succeed- man in the war ofthat year. She answer­\ned in rescuing the prisoner from the dread- ed that she had, and immediately gave me\nful death to which he had been doomed by a very minute and graphic account of the\nhis cruel captors. The condition on which circumstances.
09eeb86e1f6342945a9e90795c0a075b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1877.491780790208 41.004121 -76.453816 feel like asking the mercy of the Court in his\nbehalf. I think n sentence, as lenient as the\ncircumstances of tho case will permit, will en-\ncourage him greatly to reform."\nAfier Mr. Rico concluded, Stanley Wood-\nward, Esq,, arose and spoko as follows :\nIf your Honor please, when I first entered\nInto this case I supposed we had a good de-\nfence. I was tinder the Impression that casti\ngating an editor was not considered an offence\nin this court. Upon looking up the authorities\nhowever, 1 find no such exception. I cannot\naccount for this except by supposing it to bo\nlike the case"of the parricide, where, under the\nold law, thero was no mention made of the\ncrime because no ono was supposed capable of\ncommitting it ; or else, perhaps, is because\nthere were no newspapers in those days.\nThere Is another thing I wish to caution\nyour Honor about, and do so with great mis,\ngivings; it Is this: that although the prisoner's\nappearance is strongly against him, yet I as\nsure your Honor that he is not addicted to the\nflowing bowl. On that jioint, your Honor, I\nwould liko to swear a witness upon reflection,\nhowever, I believe 1 will not do that ; the ac\ncused is afraid such testimony would weary\nthe Court. He desires that I shall make\npleasant for the Court. As I before remarked,\nalthough his appearance is violently against\nhim, be is not a bibulous man ; be gets his com\nplexion entirely from Harvey's Lake.\nDie prisoner pat in the criminal dock in the\nfarthest corner.
5d6a61104bf9b4c71c2ba647337556af THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1921.3246575025369 43.994599 -72.127742 on his back he would take step with the\nmusic, first one foot forward and the hind\nfoot on opposite side at the same time,\nthen change" the ones opposite side next\nstep then kneel on his knees and lay his\nforehead on the floor and she on his back\nand one came on the stage and reared on\nhis hind feet and walked backwards and\nsat down in a Morris chair. Then there\nwere some most wonderful tricks done by\nthe donkey or common mule which some\nin this world think have no brains or\nfeelings but the stunts they can do on the\nstage show they can outwit some humans\nand we also had the pleasure of seeing\nand hearing Harry Kahne, the youth of\n2S with the master mind. There is\nnothing in his apjKUirance that would\nsuggest the abnormal. He looks like\nany chap you might see on the street.\nHe can do five things at once and we saw\nhim do to, talking and looking you in\nthe eyes, at the same time writing a\nsentence backwards, another forwards,\nanother upside down, and writing figures\nwhich later added up, bring a total that\ntallies with that of any total which you\nhave previously named. It is perfectly\nsimple he says, all you have to do is to\nconcentrate and he lias only beeu on the\nstage a little over a year.\nWe also went to a circus given by Uncle\nMoses for the poor kiddies and saw many\nwonderful freaks of nature in the animal\nkingdom, some of which I will name such\nas an extra leg with foot and hoof grown\nout on the shoulder of apparently\nhealthy ami good sized cows. Also saw\nanother large nice looking cow with her\nheart in her throat. You could see it\nUat regularly and as the lecturer said all\nof her food and water must pass over her\nheart. He said it had baffled all veter-\ninary science.
1ed4eaa1099041acbaf8311c13f08779 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1886.7849314751395 39.743941 -84.63662 But it is now to be hoped that be\nfore Mr. Sherman lays down the re\nport of the Bureau of Statistics he\nwill give his careful and candid at\ntention to the table of importation\nof manufactures of wool on page\n819. He will find that we import-\ned more than $35,000,000 of wool\nen goods, and paid an average duty\nof 67.51 per cent. The duty on\nsilks was only 50 per cent., and on\n"champagne and other sparkling\nwines, was onlv ofa.oo per cent\nThe . duty on flannels was 20.81\nper cent, higher, and the duty on\nwomen and children's woolen dress\ngoods was 21.21 percent, higher\nthan on the costliest silks worn by\nthe wife of a millionaire.\nBut lest the distinguished Sena\ntor may unthoughtedly that\nthe average duty on woolen goods\nmay be made so high by reason of\nthe fact that some kinds of wool-\nen goods are most luxurious ma\nterials, and the high average rate\nis caused by the exceedingly heavy\nduty on such goods, his attention\nis respectfully requested to an ex\namination of a table in the report\nof the Commissioner of Labor\nwhich has just been published,\nlhe table will be lound on page\n251 of the report. It gives the\nprice at the factory in the city of\nLeeds, England, of many kinds of\nwoolen and mixed goods. It gives\najso, the rate of duty on each kind\nof goods named, and the cost in\nNew York, "not including packing\ncarriage to port, ocean freight and\ninsurance."
31d6eb7ed452f78e25027a5c71185abc DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.736338766191 44.939157 -123.033121 The second day of the state fair open-\ned a little cool but with increased\ncrowds as tho late exhibits are being;\nput into place and the livestock that\nwere delayed in .arriving begun filling\nup the etock barns to capacity, Tho\nforenoon was devoted mostly to musie?\nand the Fernwood band of Yamhill\ncounty, the Cherrybnd band, and the G.\nA. R. Veterans' Fife and Drum corps\nrendered concerts in tho grove and in\nthe old pavilion. The grizzled voterans\nwith their martial music brought new.\nstrains to the customary brass bands\nand tho pioneers who heard the sama\nmusic in '01 and the younger ones who\nwore attracted by tho novelty througeu\nabout the seven veterans who played\ntho lilting tunca of the past genera-\ntion with the dash of youngar days.\nTho race program was on\nschedule time this afternoon but none\nof tho finnls weVe completed at a lata\nhour. The cool weather and fast time\nmade in the trial heats this afternoon\nindicated that this y oar's race meet\nwould be one of the most successful ever\nhold at the Lone Oak track.\nThe feature of todny's program will\nbe the horse show which ia scheduled\nto start with a horse parade at 8 o'clock\nthis evening. The parade will be held\nin the big tent stadium which seat\n5,000 people and promises to be packed\nthis evening. This novel feature of the\nfair program was instituted thia year\nfor the first time and. the heavy entry,\nlists show that the extra trouble and ex-\npense will be more than justified in th\nattraction which is added to the state\nfair.
2c591ae348ee7db01327189aff68079f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.828767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 As 86on as she came to. tho dock the\npolice took possession'of her and kopt\noff the tlirong. The sceno on board\nwas sod; for .near the engine room hulk\nhead lay the dead. First, a mother and\nber two children; next, a motlior and\nchildt'whoso husband and father lny at\nthe other end of the stUoon sufforing\ntortures inexpressable; next, a mother\napd wife.by her head sat her\nhusband... Hp., was alive, so was\ntheir child. Ho had gono out of\ntheir room just before the accident\noccurred; A man also lay in this group.\nThe following are their nutnes: Mr.\nBrook's of N. Y .. Mrs. Wallubar and\ntwo children of Albany, Mrs. Archam-\nbly and child of Albany, Mrs Julia E.\nReynolds of: Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs.\nArchambly and child occupied room\n and Mrs. Wallabar and child room\n121. The others occupied rooms imme¬\ndiately, over'these. The scalded were\ndisposed of in, other parts of the saloon\nana state rooms. Near by 10 lay group¬\ned around. The following aro their\nnames: Mr. Scarlo the Baggagemaster\ncan scarcely live; Mr. ATcEatnbly, se¬\nriously; F.Xyons and wife, Yorkville,\nSeriously; Mr.Lyous can hardly recover;\nW. Northrup of Albany, severely; L.\nZaren of Batavia, slightly; J. W . Cun¬\nningham of N. Y .; his wffo and two lit¬\ntle daughters had all their feet scalded;\nC. E . Sarlspough and wife, of Rome,\nfeet badly scanued; Mr. Coylo of Alba¬\nny slightly; H. Dudley of Brooklyn,\nslightly; Mr. . Caldwell ofAlbany, slight¬\nly; John Anderson of the steamer St.\nJohn's scalded;'Mary McDonald of tho\nsteamer St* John's feet scalded.
12f9581b2a5d7f70b26a50f3f11b458b THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.0808218860984 35.996653 -78.901805 In a music store on Third street, be-\ntween Marion and Columbia, there is an\nold piano which attracts much attention.\nThe old musical instrument is of the\nupright style and is in a fair state of\npreservation, though it is nearly one hun-\ndred year3 old. It has a keyboard with\nwhite keys for the regular notes, and\nblack keys for the sharps and flats, just\nlike the pianos of today. These, when\ndeftly touched, cause the ancient instru-\nment to discourse most eloquently.\nNo one could tell its great age by hear-\ning it played on. Its tones are still har-\nmonious and tuneful, though, of course,\nit cannot be compared with tfee best\npianos of today, xf hen volume or modula-\ntion of tone is considered. Its front is\nornamented with wooden scrollwork,\nbehind which is a crimson cloth of fine\ntexture. The frame on which the stringa\nare stretched is of wood, while the frame\nof the modern piano is of iron. The\ndouble row of keys is followed to this\nday, and the interior construction is\nmuch the same as in vogue at present.\nThe fact that the ancient instrument\nis in such a good state of preservation is\na high tribute to the old time piano\nmakers. They built their instruments \nlast. This is said not to be the case with\nmany of the present piano manufacturers.\nThe superannuated instrument has an\ninteresting history. The Nineteenth\nCentury had counted off but three years\nwhen it -- was bought by an English gen-\ntleman for his family of the makers, J.\n& J. Hopkinson, of Regent street, Lon-\ndon. It was made in the year 1803 and\nsold in 1803. It passed as an heirloom\nfrom one member of the family to an-\nother until it came into the possession of\na branch that left London for America\nin the year 1334. The voyage was made\nin the celebrated ship Robert Lowe.\nDuring the voyage a heavy gale was en-\ncountered, and the piano was washed\noverboard with other things, but was\nfinally fished out of the briny ocean.\nThe family that brought the instru-\nment to America settled at Victoria, B.\nC, and they passed away one by one\nuntil only two sisters were left. Finally\none of these died and the other became\ninsane with grief. Then it became nec-\nessary to administer on the estatejf the\nsisters, and the piano was sold by order\nof the probate court. The instrument\nthen fell into the hands of a gentleman\nnamed Johnson, who resided in Victo-\nria.
186a39808bb6fa1e6ff2dbd3fe1e4292 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.091780790208 41.020015 -92.411296 WASHINQTOX, 28.— The dead-lock in\nthe House can really be broken on\nMonday by a mere majority, as the\nSpeaker stated to-day. Under tbe call\not States tfn Monday for bill for refer­\nence, resolutions to amend tbe rules\nmay bo preecntel and referred, the\nCommittees on Rules may report and\ndilatory motions would not be enter­\ntained. It requires a simple majority\nvote to change a rule or eetabllsh a\nnew oue. As to the character of the\nnew rule tbe Republicans have had\nmuch discussion to-day It was de­\ncided tbat the substitute for Mr.\nCessna* rule of Monday last may be\nmade, 11 so modifled that tho Repub­\nlicans who voted against hiernie may\nvote for a new oue. This role is for\nall future, until repealed. It provides\nthat when any question is pending \nfore tho House tbere shall bo bnt two\ndilatory motion* entertained, one to\nadjourn and one fixing tbe time to\nwhich it shall adjourn, bnt the pre­\nvious question U notio be aeeonded\non the same day that the proposition\nis Introduced or reported, nnlessby\nthme-tourthg majority.\nAdvantage may however bo taken of\nthis rale to pass tbe civil rlghu bill.\nThere is no satisfactory explanation as\nto why this arrangement has not al­\nready been made, and this long eon-\ntest avoided. There is some appre­\nhension that an extra aeeaion will be\nnecessary to conclude the luge\namount of public business fettle sat-\nfaring oo accouut of this ffltbnetertof.\nFew If any members, however desire\nan. extra session, and if the night ses­\nsions are devoted to bnsinese there\nmay Ve no necessity of it,
0c03325885f2fc2343d9bab32e7badf1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.554794488838 39.745947 -75.546589 Tha Domestic Science Department\nis located in the basement and is equip\nped with stationary wasbstands and\nIndividual gas stoves and ranges will\nbe located there.\nOn the main floor are several Claes\nrooms and libraries, while on the sec­\nond floor two classrooms will be lo­\ncated. There are also eight sleeping\nrooms on this floor for the workers\nand the housekeepers, while the kitch­\nen, dining room and closets are near­\nby. In the rear of the building, access\nto which Is gained from this floor.\nIsalongporch12by60feetandIt\nis to be enclosed with screens, an\nIdeal place for sleeping purposes.\nGas Company Gifts.\nAs a gift from the Wilmington Gas\nCompany, the Settlement has received\na gas range valued at $80 tor the\nkitchen, at^ a like one is to be placed\nin the domestic science department, as\nwell as smaller ranges. The workers\nare very thankful for this gift, as it\nwould have been Impossible to have\nbought the stoves at this time at least\nThe Settlement was organ­\nized nine years ago with seven chil­\ndren by Misa Sarah W. Pyle, the head\nworker, and while it ie her desire to\nbave the work speak for Itself, too\nmuch praise cannot be given her for\nthe good accomplished by the organiza­\ntion. It has increased in membership\nfrom seven children to over 600 men,\nwomen and children, all of whom pay\nsomething towards Its maintenance.\nDonations For Building.\nAfter organizing the kindergarten\nnine years ago. Miss Pyle called on\nJ. H. Jefferies, president of the Fidelity\nStorage Company, at hie Philadelphia\noffice and be agreed to donate $10 a\nmonth towards the work. After strug­\ngling along for sometime be asked\nMiss Pyle to call on him, and be of­\nfered a gold bond for $1000 as a nu­\nclei for a new building with the un­\nderstanding that when the fund had\nreached $49,000 be could donate the\nlast $1.000. thereby starting and fin­\nishing tha work. He Is a formée Wil-\nmlngtonlan.
0351063553bdc09fea7b19d3caf09e6a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.4671232559615 39.745947 -75.546589 Gentlemen : “My opinion regarding\nthe power of the Council to fill the\nvacancy in the office of tax collector,\noccasioned by the death of the late Mar­\ntin J. Mealey, was transmitted by me to\nCouncil, agreeably to the request by\nthe Hon John C. Farra, your president.\nIt was by your body referred to the Law\nand Finance committees without read\ning As the city solicitor I have the\nright and it was my duty independently\nof any expressed wish from the Council\nor from its president, or from any\nmember thereof, to forward yon my\nviews as city solicitor whenever I per­\nceive that there was any danger of an\ninterference which threâtened the muni\nclpal government, althongh I am the\ncreature of your body by election ; yet in\nelecting me it is to be that you\nonly obeyed the wishes of your const itu­\nents, and I therefore feel that my official\nduty concerns the whole people, and that\nI am as much beholding to them aud as\nmnch bound to them for the proper per­\nformance of my duty as I am to your­\nselves. I therefore ask your honorable\nbody to cause that opinion to be read\nthis evening in the Council in order that\nthe people of thtB city may know who is\nthe proper person, in the opinion of the\ncity solicitor, to succeed to all the duties\nand powers of the late Martin J. Mealey,\ndeceased ; otherwise I shall deem it my\nduty to transmit to the press of this city\nfor the information of the public a copy\nof that opinion which is now in my\npossession.
0bdeada3a72361d3d35fcd0b77f6ca5b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.8205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 road to Jo<eph Molienry, Both changes are In\nCross ureek district. The price to be paid 1$ 17\ncouts per cubic yard for earth excavation, 85 oents\nfor jcoje rock and M cenu for solid rock. The\np»rno» n»ro already contracted and boguu worn,\nt laibe intention to havo be work completed bo*\nforetlie winter ssaton sett in.\nPlerpolnt Post No. 9 Q. A . B . of this placo at their\nregular meeting on Tucslay ovoulng, resolved to\nadopt measures that will ouablo tbc poit to attend\ntboU. A. R . National eucampmeut at Columbus\nIn 1SS8. Tbocommlttco to fjrmulato plaus con*\nnlnta of Comrades Ueorgo 11 Crawford, Jonu II. Mc*\nNally, City Matsbal L. C . Hall, lloujamln Ilarrcy\nnudJ.T Morou. 1 ho boys say they aro going to\nboom tho projcot lor all thoro In it, and no doubt\nfrom tho lutoru.it already taken tbuy will make ibo\nmatter a grand success.\nIt Is now pretty well understood that tho Buhdajr\ntrip to VN hoollug by Mesits, Kilmer, Tarr and\nOases to reo Senator Konua was not wholly in tho\nIntercut of tho postofflce, but that one of thetium*\nber whs looklugsfter a government appointment,\nan Inspector of river craft, lor Instance It looks\nas though somo of tho candidates were being\nslightly noDdwluked. Ju*t ^vhoro tho llghtolutr\nwill strlko and when the clouds will roll by In still\na matter ol conjecture. Tho stralu Is grcataud lite\nsooner the agony Is over tho loancr peaco and har'\nmouy will be restored1 in Democratic circles.\nAt a special meeting of Council on Tuesday\nxilght an ordinance passod both branches of
1bbab3de7a7f369d846998b39ade9aca EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.6890410641806 39.745947 -75.546589 " With Israel fully restored—raised from\ntho dead, able to see und able to speak,\ngreat results will follow. Tho Millenium\nwill bo at once Introduced. Verse 35 Is a\npicture of It; Jesus going about all the\ncities and villages, leaching In their syn­\nagogues, and preaching the Gospel of tho\nKingdom, and healing ALL manner of di­\nsease and ALL manner of sickness.\n"This is what 1» will bo when the King\ncomes. In the meantime the multltudee\nare Just like a great lot of sheep distre»»-\ned and scattered, not having a shepherd.\nH» 1» moved with compassion, and Ha\nputs the remedy Into the hands of HI»\ndisciple». That remedy 1» prayer. The\nharvest truly I» plenteous, but the labor­\ners are few. Pray ye, therefore, the Lord\nof the harvest, that He send forth labor­\ners into His harvest,' (V. 38.)\n“And that I» His plan, for the King­\ndom not only, but also for the Church.\nIs it not true today that the harvest Is\nplenteous? Lift up your eyes and look\non the fields, that they are white already\nunto harvest,' (John 4; 35 ) An'- are not\nthe laborers few? With all our boasted\nforeign movements, we are\nonly trifling with the great task, and ou»\nprogram is backward Instead .of forward.\nAnd what shall we do about it? Do about\nIt? What can we do about It? Apart from\nHim we can do nothing. But we can da\nail things through Him that strength­\nened! us: and It is our business to do thld\nthing, it is not something that only <a\nfew can do. We can all pray; and if wig\nknow not what we should pray for aj*\nwe ought, tho Spirit Is here to help ou»\ninfirmity; and Ho will lead us to pray th\nLord or harvest, that He send forth Is\nborers into His harvest. It Is written\n■Whosoever shall call upon the name o\nthe Lord shall be saved. How thon chai\nthey call on Him In whom they have\nbelieved? and how shall they believe 1\nHim whom they have nol heard? and ho\nshall they heed without a preacher?\nhow shall they preach, except they b<\nsent? And how shall they be sent, ex\ncept He. tho Lord of tha harvest, shai\nsend them. Otherwise their going h\nworse than their remaining at home. Maj\nGod help us to pray!”
0446704c5a32850728e5d42b3c1a9ce5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.6863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 Another dispatch 'aays: The acci\ndent wllich occurred near Colehoar\nIII., fourtoen miles from 'this city, ap\npears to have been the result of i\nhlimrlor innvrnaaKlo hv nvnn thfl mil\nroad officials. The trains wars schod\nuled to pais south on a single track be\ntween Colehour, III,, and Hammond\nInd. At tbo same time a train wai\nduo north on the same track. It wn\narranged to giro the north-boand trail\nwhich carried milk and way passengeri\nfrom Valparaiso, Ind., the right of way\nand it was ordered to proceed towarc\nChicago, and did so at the rate of thir\nty inilos an hour. In the meaniimi\ntrains No. 160 and 12, the latter thi\nPan-Handle limited express, were sup\nposed to have been held on the doubii\ntrack at Colehour to await the passagi\nof No. 45, the milk train. Orders weri\ngiven to nt Colohour, to hole\nNo. 100, but nothing was said to hiu\nabout No. 12 . Ho obeyed orders andNc\n12 was allowed to clear upon thi\ntinglo track on its schedule time, run\nning forty miles au hour, dlrectl;\ntoward the milk train, whi;h had als<\nbeen given the right of way in an oppo\nilto direction on the same track. Thi\n1'an Handle express had proceoded bp\ns short distance when the milk trail\nwas sighted ahead. Next the twi\ntrains, scarcely slacking in speed in thi\nihort distanco, dashed into each other\n'i'ho engino crawa saved their lives b;\njumping before the two locomotive\ncamo together with a crash that wreck\ned them both and drove the baggagi\ncar of the Pan-Handle train complete!:\nthrough the smoking car behind It. Ii\nthis car wore about forty people, and ii\nIt the Ion of life occurred.
e0c94594b82e5c88373360b017f54629 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1864.2472677279397 37.561813 -75.84108 this afflicting distemper, and for the cure of tho\ndisorders it entails. That it is far superior to\nany other remedy yet devised, is known by nil\nwho havo given it a trial. That it docs com-\nbine virtues truly extraordinary in their cfl'cct\nupon this class of complaints, is indisputably\nproven by tho great multitudo of publicly\nknown and remarkable cures it has made of\nthe following diseases : King's Evil Of\nGlandular Swellings, Tumors, Erup-\ntions, Pimples, Blotches and Sores, Ery\nsipelas, Rose or St. Anthony's fire, Salt\nRheum, Scald Head, Coughs from tu-\nberculous deposits in the lungs, White\nSwellings, Debility, Dropsy, Neuralgia,\nDyspepsia or Indigestion, Syphilis and\nSyphilitio Infections, Mercurial Diseases,\nFemale Weaknesses, and, indeed, the whole\nseries of complaints that nriso from impurity\nof tho blood. Mintito reports of individual\neases bo found, iu Ater's American\nAlmanac, which is furnished to the druggists\nfor gratuitous distribution, wherein may be\nlearned tho directions for its use, nnd some of\nthe remarkable cures whirh it has mado when\nall other remedies had failed to n fiord relief.\nThose cases nro purposely taken from nil sec-\ntions of tho country, in order that every reader\nmay have access to some one who can speak to\nhim of its benefits from personal experience.\ncrolulii depresses tne vital energies, ana thus\nleaves its victims fur more subject to disease\nnnd its fatal results than nre healthy constitu-\ntions, llenco it tends to shorten, and docs\ngrcatlv shorten, the average duration of human\nlife. Tio vast importance of these considera-\ntions has led us to spend years in perfecting a\nremedy which is aolcqtiato to its euro,
43cafa419a7305bffbc848f97209d142 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.4726027080162 39.261561 -121.016059 Tiik Milieu Westward.— The Livingston (N,\nY.) lityublican, says:\nPrivate enterprise U properly doing what the\nGovernment should have done long ago—aided\nin opening a rail road comnmnicauon to the\nPacific. The completion of tho Hannibal and\n•St. Joseph Kuilroad is one of the most import-\nant features of the season, as it will connuut tho\ntwo greut r vers bringing New York within\nsixty hours of Klwood, Kansas. This road has\nbeen pushed with great energy during tho post\nyour, which again illustrates the iudoinititbiu\nperseverance of Western enterprise. JS'ery\nmile of rail laid towards the Kausus frontier,\nmakes the great pucillo lluilway more possible,\nThe opening of lids road will afford the most\ndireot and expeditious route lor those going to\nKansas, Nebraska, Utah. California, and the\ngold regons. Klwood, Kansas, being directly\nopposite St. Joseph, Missouri, will reap the\nbenefit of the llrst railroad approaches the\nborder. Instead of passengers being eight\ndays in going to Northern Kansas mu Si. Louis\nand the Missoni! river, they can accomplish the\nsame via the St. Joseph mid Hannibal Railroad\nin sixty hours. From Toledo or Chicago to St,\nJoseph and Klwood. is almost directly west,\nwhile from either Toledo or Chicago, via St,\nLouiB, is to nutk" two bends—the one to reach\nSt Lonis and the other to get up the river,\nThe distance from Klwood to Cherry Creek la\nsix hundred miles, and from Klwood to Great\nSalt Lake City, eight hundred miles. Tint road\nis a very good one, since ft is the road that Cal-\nifornia emigrants hate ) u-sed over for (he past\nten years. It runs on the military roud to Fort\nKearney, uud is altogether the tin at direct path\nfor Pikes Peak. Westward the locomotive\ntakes its way.
455669a26899b3c0bfb88ad6dd39506b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.9958903792492 42.217817 -85.891125 of mortgages on pages 148 and 149, aud on which\nmortgage there is claimed to be due and unpaid at\nthe date of this notice the sum of four hundred aud\neighty six dollars and six cents, (486,06) and no\nproceedings at law or in chancery having been in-\nstituted to recover the amount secured by sai l\nmortgage or any part thereof:\nNotice is therefore hereby given, that by virtno\nof a power of sale contained in said mortgage,\nwhich power has become operative by the default\naforesaid, and in pursuance of tbe statute in sarb\ncase provided, said mortgai'O will bo foreclosed by\nsale of the mortgaged pre mites therein described,\nto wit ; ' all tbe following described pieca or parcel\nof lands situated in tbe county of Van ?uren and\nState Michigan, to wit; Lots numWr rne aad\ntwo (1 A 2) in block number two (2) in Dyckmaa\nand Woodman's addition to the village of Paw Paw\naccording to tbe recorded plat of said addition,"\nwhich premises, with the appurtenances, will be\nsold at public vendue to the highest bidder, at tb\nCourt ll6uae in tbe village of Paw Paw in said\ncounty of Van 2uren, (that being tbe jdace\ning tbe Circuit Court for said county, )n the t welft h\nday of Ma'ch tiext, A. D, 1859, at tn o'clock in\nthe. forenoon,by the sheriff of said count,\nor hisdeputy or under sheriff, subject to no install-\nment of said mortgage vet to becomo due, of !.\nhundred and fifty dollars and interest from the t'th\ndav of November, 1858.\nDated Dec. 17th 185.
5db8f2f5d7f244b4568d9c1ecfb6e952 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.2808218860985 39.261561 -121.016059 Certain it was, no horse could have got there\nto have dropped a tooth—a foal of a week old\ncould not have passed itself through the open-\ning—and how that single grinder, evidently no\nrecent introduction into the cave, could have\npossibly got mixed up in the straw with the\nhuman bones. Beems an enigma somewhat of\nthe class to whiob the reel in the bottle belongs.\nI found in Edinburg an unexpected commen-\ntator on tbc mystery, in the person of my little\nboy, an experimental philosopher in his second\nyear. I had spread out on the floor the curi-\nosities of Eigg. among the rest the relics of the\ncave, including the pieces of eartberu jar, and\nthe fragments of the porringer; but the horses\ntooth seemed to be the only real curiosity\namong them in the eyes of ltttle Bill. He laid\ninstant hold of it, and appropriating it as a toy,\n playing with it till he fell asleep.\nI have now little doubt but that it was first\nbrought into the cave by the poor child amid\nwhose mouldering remains Mr. Swanson found\nit. Tho little pellet of gray hair spoke of\nfeeble old age iuvolved in this wholesale mas-\nsacre, with the vigorous manhood of the island;\nand here was a story of unsuspecting infancy\namusing itself on the eve of destruction with\nits toys. Alas for man! “Should not I spare\nNinevab, that great city,” said God to the angry\nprophet, “wherein are more than six score thou-\nsand persons that cannot discern between the\nright band and the left?” Gods image must\nhave been sadly defaced in the murderers of\nthe poor inoffensive children of Eigg, ere they\ncould have heard their feeble wailings, raised,\nno doubt, when the stifling atmosphere within\nbegan to thicken, and yet ruthlessly persist in\ntheir indiscriminate destruction.
13b2e18681461b5ee20100233e2b56ae EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.8068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 According to the Statesman's Year\nBook for 1897, the number of paupers\nin receipt of relief in 1892 was 951,375,\nat an expenditure of £10,814 ,910. The\nnumber receiving relief in 1896, only\nfour years later, was 1,025,364, at an\nexpenditure of £11,010 ,324 . In addition\nto this a large majority of the chil­\ndren cf England, instead of being rear­\ned in the open country, under the dome\nof heaven, are being huddiled in crowd­\ned towns, under a pail of factory\nsmoke, among the soot-be-grimed walls\nof narrow courts and alleys paved wit*\ncinders, without a blade of grass or a\ngreen leaf to bo seen. The foul air\nand crowding in 111-ventliated houses\nmust be affecting the physique and\nstamina of the race, and ehe day will\nsoon if it has not yet come, when\nEngland, in defending her national ex­\nistence, will no longer be able to .rely\nupon a great rural population of the\ntype of those yeomen who drew the\nlong .biw at Cressy.Poicitiers,and Agin-\ncourt, or of those farmers sons and\nvillage lads who in their solid squares\nhurled back the pride of France in our\nlast great struggle at Waterloo.\n'An Englishman cannot appreciate\nthe intensely depressing effect of the\nmanufacturing districts upon the Ca­\nnadian tourist. Accustomed, as we are,\nto the clear, pure atmosphere and\nbright, blue skies of our native land,\nthe Black Country of England seema\nunnatural and uncanny, reminds one of\nthe infernal regions and arouses sad\nsympathy for the poor human beings\nwho have to live under such conditions.
6af65b928fe375926369c87c089cb9dd THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.2424657217148 39.261561 -121.016059 Eo. Democrat:—Never were the political\nelements so unsettled as at present. The Sen-\nator elect is in doubt whether he is elected or\nnot. The Physicians for the Insane Asylum\nare almost elected, and the candidates for the\nBoundary Commission are in quite as bad a\nmuddle. Men untainted with the least spark\nof southern chivalry, ignore party usages and\n•bolt political caucuses, landing in the arms\nof the Breckinridgers, who in payment pat them\non the back, button-hole and “smile” with them,\nmaking the poor fools feel as though they were\npersecuted martyrs to the cause of justice. This\nreminds me of the conduct of one of your As-\nsemblymen, who has got the art of bolting re-\nduced down to a science. When Capt. Miller\ncomes home be careful, should he ever get into\na caucus, not to count on him. In speaking of\nthe Captain and the other members the Doug-\nlas party who bolted the regular nominees of\ncaucuses, a gentleman who has figured high in\nour public offices, remarked the other day, that\nthe only trouble with them was that they got on\nthe wrong ticket, their names should have been\non the Breckinridge ticket, between whom and\nthe Douglasites there is no afiliation.\nWe of the capital city were aroused this mor-\nning with the cry that the city would soon be\ndeluged by the overflowing ofthe American and\nSacramento rivers, and sure enough the em-\nbankment on the north of the city had broken\nand Lake Como was filled even .with I street.\nThe new bridge at the mouth of the American\nriver, which was built last summer by Judge\nSwift, has been swept away, also Lyle's bridge,\nover which your stages pass. Norrisnew bridge\nstands it well and is beyond the reach of the\nHood.
1e04cad049b8dede0a5cab2a900b693c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.423287639523 42.217817 -85.891125 men, apparently iu the greatest distress,\nwill hail your boat, represent themselves\na.s having just escaped from tho Indians,\nand beg of you, for the love of (iud, in\nthe most piteous tones, to como to their\nrelief; but turn a deaf car to them to\neach and all of them even should you\nknow tho pkadors to be of your own kin ;\nfor iu such a case your own brother might\ndeceive you not wilfully and voluntarily,\nperhaps but because of being goa.ied on\nby tho savages, themselves concealed.\nYes, such things have been kuown as one\nfriend being thus used to lure another to\nhis destruction ; and so bo cautious, vigi-\nlant, bravo and true, and may tho good\n(Jod keep you all from harm !''\nAs ho finished speaking, HIanchc \nceeded to take an affectionate leave of all,\nreceiving many a tender message for her\nparents from those who held then in love\nand veneration ; and the boit swung out,\nand began to float down with the current,\nnow fairly entered upon tho most danger-\nous portion of a long and perilous journey.\nTho father of IJIanche, Colonel Philip\nertrand, was a native of Virginia, and a\ndescendant of ono of the Huguenot refu\ngees, who lied from their native land after\ntho revocation of the edict of Nautz in\nH1G5. lie had been an officer of sonic\nnote during the Kevolntiou a warm po-\nlitical and personal friend of the author of\nthe Declaration of Independence and a\ngentleman who had always stood high in\nthe esteem of his associates and cotcmpo-rarie- s.
0744aa5e49d1cafc664de401a48eecba PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.683561612126 40.441694 -79.990086 Director O. F. Scnife bay Andrew earne-\nste I Not In It A Short Iilne to Cleve-\nland to Benefit Flitsbarccrs.\n"Yes," said Mr. O. P. Scaife yesterday\nafternoon, "there will be an independent\nroad to Cleveland via Canton as the result\nof the combination made between the Pitts-\nburg, Yougbiogheny and Chartiers Kail- wa- y\nand the Valley road. The connecting\nlink will be as speedily built as a suitable\nroute is chosen. Half a dozen have been\nsurveyed, and the one presenting the least\nobstacles will be adopted."\n"Is it true, as reported, that Mr. Andrew\nCarnegie is one of the 'Pittsburg gentle-\nmen' alluded to by you in Cleveland as\ninterested parties?" was asked.\nMr. Scaife said: "If he was I would not\nadmit it, but he has no further interest in\nthe matter than that of dozens of other\nmanufacturers in Pittsburg, who would like\nto see cars loaded with coal go to Cleveland\n return loaded with iron ore. We see\nbusiness enough to warrant the construc\ntion of another line from this city to Cleve-\nland, and are going after it that's all.\n"The Valley line now runs beyond Can-\nton to what is called Valley Junction, where\nit connects with the Wheeling and Lake\nErie and Cleveland and Marietta Bailroads.\nThat portion of the line between Canton and\nValley Junction will notjform part of the\nmain line, as it would perceptibly increase\nthe distance between the terminal points. It\nis 147 miles via the Cleveland and Pittsburg,\nand 135 via the Lake Erie, and we will try\nto shorten tbp mileage by the new route."\nMr. Scaife stated that Manager G. E.\nTainter's remark "that he did not represent\nAndrew Carnegie, and thought Mr. Carnegie\nhad no money in the Valley, bnt that he\nwanted to see another line between Cleve-\nland and Pittsburg" was a fair statement of\nthe case.
81a9d31eb93e0a100763263ec9a5fd60 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.97397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 Lily Lexington, spoiled daughter\nof the Cyrus Lexingtons, Is engaged\nto marry Staley Drummond, a rich\nbachelor much older than herself.\nShe is fond of him, but realizes she\ndoes not really lovo him the day\nafter she accepts him, when she be-\ncomes instantly and vtolemly infatu-\nated with a tajiicab driver whom she\nsees down town when sha goes to\nmeet her chum. Sue Cain. Forgetting\nall about Sue, she jumps into his\ncab and he drives her home. She\nlearns that his name is Pat France\nand that he owns his owr cab In a\ncompany headed by his friend, roy\nJetterson. He tells her that he ts go-\ning to sell it to finance a piston\nring that he has Invented and he\nand his cab vanish from the streets.\nLily misses him terribly and de-\ncides she carts too much for him to\nmarry Staley Drummond. But Mrs.\nLexington announces tho engage-\nment, and the date of the \nIs set for June tenth. Then, on May\ntenth, Mrs. Lexington hires a new\nchauffeur, and it is Pat France. He\nadmits to Lily that he could not st\ntaking the job just to.be near\nher, and she tells him how much\nshe loves him. Things reach a cli\nmax when Carrie, one of the house-\nmaids who is In love with Pat, tells\nMrs. Lexington and Staley about the\nlove affair. Lily admits nothing to\nStaley, who refuses to let her break\nthe engagement. But she tells her\nmother how much she cares for Pat.\nand Mrs. Lexington humiliates him\nso that he leaves the house, Lily\nleaves with him, and the next day,\ndespite the protests and pleadings of\nStaley and her family, she marries\nhim. Mr. Lexington gives her a\ncheck for $200 when her mother re-\nfuses to let her have 'any of her\nedothes from the house.\nOp the following Sunday morning,\nPat spends several hours at Roy
218390400d0824c535b6304ce811bf10 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1920.7254098044425 37.451159 -86.90916 Bocniiso the limited Intelligence\nof the beaver goes no further than its\nown immediate purposes, owners of\nproperty In the Adirondacks nre wish-\ning Hint the lieuver was less indus-\ntrious and seriously vond.rlng whnt\nIs to be done to stop the Increasing\nnumber of these willing workers from\ndecreasing the value and beauty of\ntliifc famous region. Tht forest rangers\nof the conservation commission, snys\na writer In the Albany Journal. Inst\nsummer estimated the undesirable re-\nsults that bad followed the liuilding of\nnearly GOO beaver dams, ami found\nthat an area of about S,(!81 aeres had\nbeen flooded, and something like $."1,-I K-\nworth of good men lmntalile stand-\ning timber was being destroyed. Con-\nsidering that the number of heavers,\nnow estimated at about 18,000 Is be-\nlieved to be Im renslrig about a\nyear, fhe damage bids fair to become\na serious problem. Xot only do they de-\nstroy valuable tim'ior. but they are\nsteadily chunking the character of the\nAdirondack scpnery along the water\ncourses und altering the shore lin? of\ntbo lal.i's; yet the region without nny\nbeavers at all would not be thtf Adi-\nrondacks as mi tn r made It and as\nthose who now go there to enjoy Its\nbeauty like to find It. Time was when\nthe Ixmvers seemed likely to vanish,\nnnd the state took tlietn under Its pro-\ntection ; now the danger seems to be\nthat they are so well protected thnt\nthey will eventually "come back" In\nnumbers out of proportion to the\nnormal population of benvers when\nthe Adirondacks were subject to the\nconditions of life In s wild country.
146933ea083ff3ee3d986a43f620ee0d THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1895.719178050482 40.114955 -111.654923 be saturnteil vith sympathy IB inuii-\nOsteii for the express purpose of proJnci\nlug reform and especially lu it effective\nwhen coupled with liuo approbation\nCnstalizul truths ennuel be trans\nplanted from the adult innil to the\nchild mind unless conditions are nested\nto make such pofsiblf Moral comluct\n13 tile adjustment of nets to 11 o highest\nends and must prcduco uBjmpatuy that\nearl lea a coiibeinubiiefl ofioifict action\nDr Mncor addrvtbPd tin teachers at\nthe ofttruoon Bfcclnn on the Developi-\ninviit of Our Public School Sjbtciu-\nSjctuiiH grmv they art not nuilothpy\nare the result ot HI VII OJ IUI ns that IIHV-\nHmodillcdatil rroiuoted the Bane HisI\npreprly nnderoti d only lu this light of\nhistory The plonctmI entered lu povi\nerly with n oiire for ndvancf went and\nIlttiuiiwli anti Imperfect the\nfirst efforts mado wore to receivi educn-\ntioual advancement This was the per-\niod of heeplup tcheol\nOut of tliitchtidtlc condition d veln pfd\na school jttfin Ttnuhtra jomnitiiced\nto uiiiko their mark chief muting which\nmay be nuiilionrd Dr John H ark at\nDraper Front titers professional tooch\nfrs add nthiTH deiived ideas until a\nnormal school or class merRed tutu ex-\nistence hlf which was formed asrhrni\nlaw niiilfiwu Unit cimu our tpublic\nFChool ajfltfrn which system Is thr\nsanctuary of tin public institutions of-\nIm rouritry This njntein is not iCBting\nmenu olllcldls anti laus hut urns the\nolllclency of the tenuiicr The teacher Iu\ntho kepir of thin smictunrj tyMii the\nperform nco of whore duties ppi di the-\nprugrfssthe huildlnRH apparatus and\niippliaiiCs befog ccjulinalf
0b94b98aa9f4f0c0bb4036fe311dd583 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1895.3712328450026 42.68333 -96.683647 "My dears," he began, for he was pro-\n. fessionally pompous and oracular in his\n•> flux liner always. "you know well the mis-\n>•fortunes we have suffered. After a tour\n#f this gn at continent, and an accumula­\ntion of a modest fortune, we sold this es­\ntablishment and started overland for our\nftati ve France. We had not gone far be­\nfore we were robbed of the iron Ik>x con­\ntaining our money. That compelled us\nresume our labors. De have regained\n•(possession of the Relic Roulette, and our\n• projected route lies northward into tern­\nary which we have not yet visited."\nCascnbel's attentive and respectful lis-\nfener* were his wife Cornelia, his daugh­\nter Napoleona. his son Pierre, and Ned\n<Harley—constituting both a family and\n• circus troupe. It is true Ned Ilar-\nlev was no blood relation of the Casca­\nbels, for he was an American; but he and\nXjeona, as Napoleona was commonly call-\n' «ri. were sweethearts who expected to\n'•harry, and thus make Ned an actual\nMember of the Cascabel family. He al­\nready figured under that name in the\nfMTformanccH. One of these had just\nfceen finished. The Cascabels had done\ntheir feats of strength and skill on a rude\ntttage sheltered by a canvas awning, be-\n• 'ftm> spectators who stood in the open\nSir, and contributed such coin as they\npleased to in payment for the diversion.\nThe assemblage had dispersed, and the\nparental Cascabels had gone snugly to\nbed. but Leona still sat in a camp chair,\nwhile Ned smoked a cigar as he stood\nhy her side.
49ae727eb0456ceb9ed982b343145fef NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1920.8101092579943 41.681744 -72.788147 Habits," beir.s none other than our\nown Iwloved Connecticut. The writer\nsaj;s that the use of tobacco antedates\nthe building of the pyramids as evi-\ndence can be produced that it was\nused in the form of cigars more than\nten thousand years ago by the abori-\ngines of Central America.\nIt was while participating in the\nEnglish expedition against Cuba in\n1762 that Israel Putnam discovered\nthe delights incident to drawing on a\nlighted cigar, a pastime which he\nfound much more enjoyable than\nsmoking a pipe. He was lieutenant\ncolonel of the First Connecticut regi-\nment, 970 men strong, that was sent\nagainst the defenses of Havana.\nAfter the fall of that city. Colonel\nPutnam and several others started out\nto inspect the island, proceeding\nthrough the Pinar del Rio region and\ngoing almost as far as San Juan.\nWhichever way they turned, they\nfound smoking big cigars\nloosely rolled from which practice\nthey seemed to be gaining much en-\njoyment. Undaunted by piercing the\nunknown. Colonel Putnam secured\none of the cigars and proceeded to\npuff. With each cloud of smoke his\npleasure increased. He declared it to\nbe the finest smoke he had ever had.\nThere can be no doubt about the\nsoundness of his judgement as he was\nsmoking what is known as the finest\ntobacco in the world although at that\ntime the cultivation of the weed had\nnot been fostered or prosecuted with\nan eye to commercial gain.\nSo pleased was Colonel Putnam\nwith his find that he bought up what\nmust have been a prodigious store of\ntobacco for those days. Historians say\nthat as many cigars as three donkeys\ncould carry were brought back.\nCol. Putnam laid aside his sword\nat the end of tho warfare against
110b3b74a09dcd04d6fe4d958e45e0f7 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.6287670915779 39.261561 -121.016059 As a medical man it is the duty of every physician to\nlook at disease ns it affects health and life, and his sole ob-\nject should 1*e to mitigate, ns far as lies in his power, the\nbodily suffering. Human nature at best is but trail, all\nare liable to misfortune.\nOf all the ills that affect man, none are more terrible\nthan those of a private nature. Dreadful ns it is in the\nperson who contracts it, frightful as are its ravages upon\nIlls constitution, ending frequently in destruction and a\nloathsome grave, it becomes of still greater importance\nwhen it is transmitted to to innocent offspring. Such be-\ning the case, how necessary it becomes that every one hav-\ning the least reason to four that every one having the least\nrens on to fear that they have contracted the disease,\nshould attend it at once by consulting some physician\nwhose respectability and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and pennanent cure. In accordance with\nthis necessity, PR. VOIT.VG feels called upon to state that\nby long study and extensive practice, he has become per-\nfect master of all these diseases which come under the de-\nnomination of venereal, and having paid more attention to\nthat one branch than any other physician in the United\nStates, he feels himself better qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such as Ulcers, Swelling in the\nGroins. Ulcers in the Throat, Secondary Syphilis, Cutane-\nous Kruptions, Ulcerations. Tetuary Syphilis, Syphilis in\nChildren, Mercurial Syphilitic Affections, Gonorhca, Gleet,\nStrictures, False Passages, Incarnation of the bladder and\nProstrate Glands, Excoriations, Tumors, Postules, kc., a r e\nns familiar to him as the most common things of daily ob-\nservation.
048fb54afc54d8b0efdddffd96260463 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.760273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 *10.35 a. m .; *12.21, *2.29, *3.29, *5.22, *7.43, *1\np. m . Sundays, *3.13, »9.40, *11.25 a. m.\n■8.29, *5.22 . *7.43, *11 ». m.\nPHILADELPHIA, week days, *3.13 . 5 .55\n4.40, *7.16, 7.35. *8.25, 9.00. *9.40, *10.25. 11 .10 a\ntn.: *12.21, 1.20, *2.29, *3.29, 3.50, •\n•7.43, 9.15, *U p. m . Sundays. *3.13, 7.35\n8.50, *9.40, *11.25, 11.25 a. in.; *3.29, 3.60, *6.22\n6.30, *7.43, 9.15, *11 p. m.\nCHESTER, week days, *3.13 , 6.65,\n•7.16. 7.35. *8.25, 9.00, *9.40, *10.25. 11 .10 a. m.\nl.20, *2.29, 3.50, *5.22, 6.30, *7.43, 9.15. *11 p. m\nSundays, *3.13, 7.25. 8.50, *9.10, *11.25, U.25 a\nm.; *3.29, 3.50, *5.22, 6.39, *7.43, 9.15, *11 p. m\nATLANTIC CITY, week days, *7.15 a\nm., *8.25 a. in.. *12.21, *2.29, *3.29, *u.22 p. m\nSundays, 7.35 a. m.; *3.29 p. m.\nCAPE MAY, we-k day», *7.U a. m \n•2.29 p. ra. Sundays, 7.35 a. m.\nBALTIMORE AND\nweek days. *4.13 . 7 .10, *3.49. *11 a. m .; *12.5»\n•2.07, 3.04, *4.03, *4.67. *6.16. *8.17, *8.53 p. ra\nSundays. *4.13, 7.10, »8.19 a. in.; *12.56, *3.07\nl.04, *4.57, *8.17 . *8.53 p. in.\nBALTIMORE AND WAY STATIONS\n7.10 a. m.; 3.04 p. m . daily.\nNEWARK, week days, *4.13 , 7.10, *8.42\n•11.00 a. m.; *12.56 . 3.04, *4.03, *4 57, *6.16\n7.36, *8.17, 10.46 p. in. Sundays, *4.13, 7.10\n•8.49 a. m .; *12.56, 3.04, *4.57, 7.35, *8.17 p. m\nPITTSBURG, week days, *8.1« p. in\nSundays. *4.57 p. m.\nCHICAGO, dally, *4.57 p m.\nCHICAGO via CINCINNATI and IN\nDIANA POLIS, *8.49 a. ra. daily.\nCINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS, *12.51 p\nm. and *8.17 p. m . dally.\nTOLEDO AND DETROIT, rI\ndally to Toledo and dally except\nto Detroit.
8c78f0d5c83068d8f288e1cc15b4ba30 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6232876395231 40.063962 -80.720915 fact has led to the suspicion that Mr.\nKetchum is concerned in the forgery ol\ncertain fraudulent checks that have\nwithin a few days past been brought to\nlight. At all events, he is absent. It is\nsaid that Mr. Graham has been vietlin-\nized to the extent of $2S5,000.\nThis morning the firm of Ketchum.\nI Son «fc Oo. suspended payment, and\nGraham «fc Co. have also announced\ntheir inability to meet tlieir engage¬\nments. Mr. Graham stated at the boanl\nthat he hoped to be able to settle all his\nstock contracts at to-day's prices.\nAnother statement in explanation of\nthe suspension of Morris, Ketchum &\nCo., is that Kctclium's son had abstract¬\ned bonds and other securities from the\nvaults of the banking house, to the\namount of $2,000,000.\nAnother statement that young\nKetchum forged gold certificates to the\namount of two and a half millions of\ndollars, which had been passed into the\ncoffers of the bank, which will be the\nprincipal sufferers.\nSifting the various rumors, it seems\nestablished tiiat young Ketchum is\nguilty of robberies to the amount of\nnot less than two millions of dollars.\nHe had for some time taken the place\nof his father in the arrangement of the\nbusiness, and possessed the full confi¬\ndence of all who knew liim. Ho left\nhis home yesterday and has not been\ntraced since. His partners did not BUS-\npeel their losses yesterday, so adroitly\nwere his operations conducted.\nJenkins, the Phoenix Bank robber\nwaived an examination this morning\nand was fully committed.\nThe Com ififf State Convention In North
02afc2ec13387cc94210d067364d83dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.6972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 ran ii(i ui'ui vrimiir, nucio uu unu ucoi\n1 treating the prohibition question witt\n2 his usual eloquence. Mr. Carskadon';\nmodel of a house without nails has at\ntraded much attention. "Silos? said Mr\nCarakadon," "the ello has come to stay\nIt doubles the capacity of th<\nfarm. Yes, I'm writting on\nbook on ensilage, in fact nave writ\nen it. 1 expect to navo it out now in aMe»\nweeks, and 1 think you will find it a con\ntribution to the subject I intend it to bei\npractical guide. I want to say that thl\nyear's Fair surprises and delights me\nYou have made rapid progress since I wa\nhere three years ago. I regard it as om\nof the finest in the country, as it shouli\nbe with such territory to draw from."\nMr. James L. Henderson, Washing\nton,Pa.,owuer of the Locust Farm Heri\nof Holsteina: "I oughtn't to find fault\nbut your types made our Bitje two year\nold, when she is six. Velleure is a two\nyear-old. They each took first premium\nAnd then the herd was established ii\n1871), not 1859. I think that is all, excep\nthat we are having a fine show."\nColonel J. F . Ch&rlesworth, of St. Clairs\nville, said: "I am working up the layin]\nof the corner stone of our new cour\nhouse, September22. Come up. Wewil\nhave a great big day. The procession wil\nbe something immense, and the town wil\nbe full of people. We will have the K\nT. Coinmandery, the Patriarchate of G. U\nOdd Fellows, the Knighta of Pythias am\nmany other Wheeling people, and the\nMasons from all over tlie country.
159970aead546ca07da3157affdbd817 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.9301369545915 40.063962 -80.720915 of lluu,11 The London ]Im,the lint'\nuh tyuarlcrly, Avplelon'i Annual Cyelo-\npedta, the infldilt Caitelar nod De\nL'Arlege, the cxoomnuntcatcd friar\nHyacinths, (Uo condemned Janaenlat\nDuptn, erroneously quoted u "Rom-\nlab," and liarper'# ilagasine lot He-\noember should be added to the I let.\nThe only Oal hollo authorities men-\nHoned are Cyprian anil Tertnlllan,\nwlioae lexta are not apeelfledi a pawage\nfrom tlio Now York Tablet, whlob la\ncorrect, and lb* "Koman" blatorlan\nHefele, vol. I, p. 7 . If by this latter\nname Is meant ttie learned Clatliollo <\nDoctor Helele, or Tubingen, who wrote\na "History ot tbo UooboIIs," so far\nfrom bis Haying anything to favor the\naaeertlon that the Oral eight (Jounolla .\nwere convoked by the euiperora, he\ncompletely refute) it. Let Mr. Flaber 1\ntell us whom hemeana by tlio "Koraan" i\nHistorian Hefele. I\nThe aermon of Ur. Fisher remind) >\nme of the witty description of a Msg- (\npie's nest by the poet Y darts. There \nare 111 It rags and tags and bobtails, i\nbits and scraps, odds sod ends from all i\nquarters, I shall oondense the subject I\nof his borrowed materials and answer 1\nvery bristly. If any man wants more I\nInformation on any of these subjects\nwhlob upace will not permit we to i\ndevelops, let hlrn oomenut under his 1\nown name nnd he will get it. {\nHour can vis know a general Council 1\nsince the conditions oj ecumenicity are i\nundecided? Answer: They are notun. I\ndecided, We can tell general Councils\nonly after they are ended. There have\nbeen eighteen ho far. All Gsthollop c\nadmitthis. IfItIssobardtotella I\ngeneral Conncll how do you explain I\nthla unanimity t A general Council Is c\na historical fact. When the Oounoll >\nof tlie Vatican Is ended we oan tell I\nwhether It 1b general or not as easily aa >\nwe can know a meeting of Parliament 1\nni> * OM»lnn nf 1 lnnnasae "
54c22c3ad644af90aa07fe6fa8d63ddf THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.4150684614408 39.369864 -121.105448 “Reeve the line through a block, and take\na run with it! ” Up comes the vast length,\ntail foremost, out of the sea ; for a moment\nthe ungainly beast hangs, twining and bend-\ning Lis body, and gnashing those horrid\nfangs, till half a dozen boat hooks guide the\nmass to bis death-bed on the broad deck.\nStand clear! If that mouth gets hold of\nyour leg, it will cut through it—sinew, mus-\ncle, and bone; the stoutest man on board\nwould be swept down if he came within the\nreach of that tail. What reverberating\nblows it inflicts on the smooth planks !\nOne cannot look at that face without an\ninvoluntary shudder. The long flat head,\nand the mouth so greatly overhung by the\nsnout, impart a most repulsive expression to\nthe countenance ; and then the teeth, those\nterrible serried fangs, as keen lancets, and\nyet cut into fine notches like saws, lying row\nbehind row, row behind row, six rows deep!\nSee how the front rows start up in erect\nstiffness, as the creature eyes you ! You\nshrink back from the terrific implement, no\nlonger wondering that the stoutest limb of\nman should be severed in a moment by such\nchirurgery. But the eyes! those horrid\neyes ! it is the eyes that make the shark\nwhat it is—the very embodiment of Satanic\nmalignity. Half concealed beneath the\nbony brow, the little green eye gleams with\nso peculiar an expression of hatred, such a\nconcentration of fiendish malice—of quiet,\ncalm, settled villainy, that no countenance\nthat I have ever seen at all resembles.\nThough I have seen many a shark, I could\nnever look at that eye without feeling my\nflesh creep, as it were, on my bones.
13e9a3890379cab7229f050cb3202c2d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.105479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 berg to aald Jlardmau, dated May 27th, 1874, and\nrecorded in Deed Book No. 40, page 267; a deed\nfrom Harmon and Martha A. Tricket to tba aald\nllardman and Mary E. MiUner for two tracts of\nland, both containing &2U acres, dated June 10th,\n1870, and recorded In Deed Book No. 38, pages\n9 5.4, and deed from John B. Bherrard and others\nto aald llardman, dated May 18th, 1872, and ro-\ncordtd in Deed Book No. 41, pagea 2 and 3; a died\nfrom Margaret, Georgo B., James V., Julia A. and\n6arah E. Jackson to said George llardman for one\nacre, dated March I6tb, 1872, and recorded in Deed\nBook No. 3\\ paxei 484-5; a deed from Wm. B. and\nC. Brown to aald llardman for two acres and 21\nperches, dated March 27th, 1874, and recorded in\nDeed Book No. 41, psgea 4 and 6; a deed from\nCrrui and Nancy J. Linton to aald Hardman for\n12 acres and 2U perches, dated June 17th, 1874,\nand recorded in Deed Book No. 41, pages 18 and 10;\na deed from Bucknerand Bebecca Fairfax tosild\nHardman for 1C0 acres, dated August loth, 1872,\nand recorded In Deed Book No. 41, pane and 21;\nand a deed from John K. and Mary E. MiUner U\nthe aald Hardman for four tracts of land, aggre¬\ngating 888 acres, dated March 16th, 1874, and re¬\ncorded in Deed Book No. 41, pages 22, 8 and 4.\nTbe whole containing in tbe aggregate at least 850\nacres, with all the improvements and appurte¬\nnances thereto In any wise belonging, Including\nthe furnace and fixtures, and being tbe same prop¬\nerty conveyed to Thomas Y. Canby and George H.\nMiller, trustees, for the said George Hardman and\nwife, by mortgage deed dated November lit, 1874,\nand recorded In Book No. 39, pages 90 and 58, In\nthe office of add County Clerk of aald Preston\ncounty, lielug tbe aatna property conveyed to the\ntald Aimer Evans, Jr., by Hannibal Forbes, 8pe-\ncial Commiaaioner, aid deed la of record among the\nland record* of Preston county, West Virginia.\nTirmh or HiLK.One-third of the purchase\nmoney, or such greater amount thereof aa the pur¬\nchaser may elect to pay, cash in hand, tbe residue\nto two equal yearly p-yments, with interest from\nday of aale, and the deferred payment! to be se¬\ncured by deed of trust on tbe property sold.
038b0ea1a5baa54ffe353bf27fcaca20 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.6079234656447 41.681744 -72.788147 Dart of this city, is in the Hartford\nhospital with a fractured hip and\nbecause of her advanced age and the\nseriousness of her injury the is not\nexpected to live. She received the in\njury Tuesday at her home when\nshe fell as she was. being helped into\na wneei chair. The fractured bone\nhaa not been set.\nThe manufacturing departments\nof the Stanley Works will be closed\nfrom August 18 to 25 for the annual\nvacation of the workers. Thit will\ninvolve hundreds of men and women\nalthough those in other departments\nwill remain at work.\nMrs. C . E . Williams of 12 Maple\nstreet entertained at bridge yester-\nday afternoon in honor of her cousin.\nMiss Ola Wortman of Brooklyn,\nN. Y. Prises were won Mrt. Earl\nClark, Mrs. H. E . Parker. Mrs. Ed -\nward Smith of Weat Hartford, and\nMiss Wortman\nA son was born at the hospital\nyesterday to Lawyer and Mrs. Thom-\nas J. Cabelus,\nTo relieve storm water sewer con-\nditions in the locality of Miller.\nHayes, Brown, Blruta and High\nstreets, the board of public works\nwill recommend to the common\ncouncil that a trunk line sewer be\nplaced in High street, to cover these\npoints, at a cost of 117.000 . Much\ndamage is claimed to have resulted\nthere from overflows.\nThe employes of the Latimer\nlaunary held their annual outing\nyesterday afternoon at Lighthouse\nPoint. A beach lunch was enjoyed\nfollowed by swimming and boating.\nAlois Frankl, cabinet maker of 88\nBrown
4cd14c086819752d079c34c68250d28c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.443989039415 40.063962 -80.720915 The presentation by Mr. Gahfiklu <\nthe conlerence report on aumlry civil a[\npropriation bills led to the question as t\nthe precedence to be given such report.\nThe Bpkakkb ruled that the cont'erenc\nreport must have the first preference, an\nthe report was accordingly made.\nThe Democrats immediately resorted I\nfilibustering in order to defeat actio\nupon it. The objectionable Senate amem!\nment is merely a modification, and pre\nvides that whenever in auy county o\nparish in any Congressional district to;\nreputable citizens request the Unitei\nStates District Judge to have tko electioi\nguarded, the Judge shall appoint two cit\nfzens ol dillerent political parties as super\nvisors of tho election, with the powers c\nsupervisors in large cities.\nMr, Garfield severely denounced th\ncourse of the minority in opposing the en\nforccment amendment to the sundry civi\nappropriation bill, lie contended tha\nthe question which had arisen was \nabove the bill itself, or any Item in it. 1\nwaa whether the majority in the lloust\nwhich was held responsible by the cont\ntry, had the right tu consider a great nj\npropriation bill whenever the minorit\nsaid no. If not, they were in the raids\nof a parliamentary revolution similar t\nthe revolution that led to the late blood;\nrebellion, and which resulted in a viudi\ncation of the right ol thu people to hav\nmajority govern. He would rather com\npromise witli the opposition so long a\nthey demanded that unless the enforct\nment was stricken out, this great apprc\npriation bill shall not become a Ian\nlUlO prU|lU31lIUU Ul IUU U[7[iU3llIUU »u\nsimply a plain denial of the right of tl>\nAmerican people to mako laws throug!\nthe majority of their Representative!\nHe proposed to stay here until next D(\ncember, il necessary, to pass this apprc\npriation bill.
79e148fdb1c79754c9526b5b631bdac6 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.1136985984272 39.560444 -120.828218 [From our own Correspondent. ']\nRemoval of the State Capital.\nAssembly.—Feb. 3.—The House met\npursuant to adjournment, Mr. Mandcville\nSpeaker pro tern, in the chair—the minutes\nof yesterday were read and approved.\nMr. Stemmons, of San Joaquin county,\npresented a copy of the proceedings of the\nCourt of Sessions of San Joaquin county,\noffering the free use of public buildings in\nStockton to the Legislature in the event of\na removal tothat place—read and referred\nto a select committee, consisting of Messrs.\nThy, Godard, and Griffith.\nMr. Springer ottered a concurrent\nresolution, that when the Legisla-\nture adjourn on Saturday (tomorrow)\nnext, it adjourn to meet at Sacramento on\nThursday 9th inst—call of the House or-\ndered—nine absent. A motion to lay on\nthe table was lost, 38 to 33. Mr. Myers\noffered a substitute that the Legislature\n its present session at Sacramento\nafter the 9th inst—the substitute was\nadopted. Mr. Hunter moved to strike\nout Sacramento and insert San Jose.—\nPending a motion for the previous ques-\ntion, a call of the House was moved, which\nwas lost, 43 to 29. The previous question\nwas sustained. After a debate of about\none hour on question of order, the amend-\nment to remove to San Jose was lost by a\nvote of 57 to 20. The question then re-\ncurring on the original resolution, (a re-\nmoval to Sacramento,) it was carried by\nthe following vote :\nAyes—Aylett, Bagiev, Ballou, Bost-\nwick, Briggs, Burton, Conness, Davidson,\nDawley, French, Gilbert, Godard, Green,\nGriffith, Hollister, Horr, Houghtaling,\nHoyt, Hubbard, Koll, Lindsey, Musser,\nMcßrayor, McDaniels, Nichols, ONeil,\nF. A . Park, J. W. Park, Pratt, Purdy,\nRing, Rowan, Springer,
00f80958a3ffd6bc9e13f55166de6c30 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.491780790208 39.261561 -121.016059 Gkn. McLkllas.— Major General Georg**\n1). McLcIlan commands the military depart-\nment or the great Northwest, and will prob-\nably move down In the direction of the Mis-\nsissippi river, or western Vlrginiu. as tin-\nwar opens. He is a native of Philadelphia,\nand is under forty years of ago. He grad-\nuated at West Point with the highest dis-\ntinction ; thence be was transferred to Mex-\nico under Gen. Scott, where for Ills valor\nhe was twice brevetted. After tho war he\nwas associated with CapL Marcy in tbe ex-\nploration of the sources of tbe lied river,\nand was subsequently transferred to Ore-\ngon. II« was then appointed on the Cri-\nmean commission, which enabled him per-\nsonally to inspect tbe military systems of\nall tbe great European powers—England.\nFrance, Russia. Austria and Prussia—and\nto witness the operations of war, under tbe\n scientific attainments and on a\ngrand scale. He thus became one of the\nlicet educated officers in the service. For\nthe last three years he has been the execu-\ntive head of the great Illinois Central Rail-\nroad. He isfat once prudent and resolute.\nGem. McDowkm—This officer, who has\nbeen modest enough to decline a utyor\ngeneralship, because be thought himself on-\nly entitled to the lower grade, is a native,\nborn citizen of Ohio, has resided in Ken-\ntucky, and is a connexion of tbe celebrated\nJames McDowell, of the Shenandoah region\nof Virginia. He is about forty years of\nage, has served in the Mexican war, has the\nadvantages of travel in Europe, and is a\ngreat friend of Lieutenant-General Scott,\nlie is not only a regular offioer In the army\nbut believes in the cause in which h« is en-\ngaged.
28c50a9f786cf5d48a47adcb467e8cf0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.1438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Ferguson 9aid this was a ve*ry re-\nmarkable report. He had had intima-\ntions from members of the committee\nthat a report would be made completely\nexhonerating him, and he had been sur-\nprised to learn only yesterday that this\nto the request that he should resign, he\ndid not choose to do that. He was will1\ning to leave it to the House whether\nthere was anything in the aspect oi this\naffair and the manner in which it had\nbeen conducted to make it proper for\nhim to resign his seat at the bid of this\ncommittee. He didn't choose to do so.\nMr. Wheat said the committee had not\ndone their duty. They were not called\nupon to deal with the legal aspect of the\ncase. Mr. Ferguson's own statement\nshowed he had been indicted and par-\ndoned and it unnecessary for the\ncommittee to apprise the House of that\nfact. The committee had been appoint-\ned to examine the case and report their\nopinion as to Mr. Ferguson's actual\nguilt or,innocence. He didn't believe\nibere was a member of the House that'\ndoubted his innocence. The commit-\ntee bad put their report in a shape cal-\nculated to injure the gentleman from\nCabell more than the original charges.\nMr. Harris said the committee didn't\nundertake to decide on the actual guilt\nor innocence of Mr. Ferguson for lack\nof evidence. The committee did not\nundertake to say Mr. Ferguson's state-\nment in the House and that made to\nthe committee under oath, were not\ntrue in every particular, but there was\numj a auion part ot me laicer tnat\ncould be admitted as evidence. The\nrest only as tending to form their
2030a611589777221aeeab7b75c9ff3d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.6890410641806 42.217817 -85.891125 "Spun butter " is tho samo as "roast\nbutter," and this was ouco a delicate test\nof housewifery. A spit was thrust\nthrough a ; pound of firm butter, and,\nafter being very thickly basted with\nflour, it was set before tho fire. In tho\ndays of turnspits and smokejacks it was\neasy to turn this steadily and constantly.\nThe problem was for the housekeeper to\ndo this after these contrivances passed\naway. Tho butter was basted constant-\nly, and tho heat drew tho butter out into\nthe Hour. As soon as ono baste was\nbrowned lightly, another was thrown on.\nWlien finished, you had an excellent\nroll of puff paste fivo times tho original\npound of butter, and when perfectly\ncooked there was a hollow at tho heart,\nexactly tho size of the original pound.\nWhen served, this hollow could be filled\nwith jelly or preserves.\nTnE iEolian harp is composed a\nrectangular box, mado of very thin\nboards, 5 inches deep aad 6 inches wide,\nand long enough to fit across tho win-\ndow in which it is to be placed. At tho\ntop of each end of the box is glued a\nstrip of wood about half an inch in\nheight ; theso strips serve as a bridge\nfor tho strings, which are stretched\nlengthwise across tho top of the box,\nand are niade of catgut or wire. Theso\nstrings should bo tuned in unison by\nmeans of pegs constructed as in the\nviolin, and with the samo number.\nWhen tho instrument is exposed in a\nwindow partly open, so as to allow a cur-\nrent of air to pass over the strings, a\nmost agreeable combination of tones is\nproduced, constantly varying in pitch\nand intensity with tho force of the wind,\nand forming harmonica of a wild and\nmelancholy character.
0594d9e3291916953aa603e1d4fbe46e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.760273940893 39.513775 -121.556359 LateProfessorat thelnlvcrsity,Pcnn.\nCan hf found at *he old stand, earner of\nMontgomery and California street ♦, San\nFra nc'seo.\nWhen* he can be consulted privately and with (ho\nutmost confidence by the afflicted nt til hour* >lni Iv.\nfrom 8 A. M„ until e P. M . (Cures always guaranteed\nor no pnv required.\nIMPORTANT TO MINEBS*. TRWKLERS , ETC.\nBA (I ERE i* no malady of deeper Importance either\n8 in o medical or moral light of view. in which\niho human family i* more liable thHti that arising\nfrom impure connection*.\nds a medical man it is the .Inly of every phvslcmn\no look at disease as it effect* health and life, and Ida\nsole object should be to mitigate, ns far ns lies In hia\npower, the bodily suffering. I Inman nature at heat ia\nbut frail, nil are liable to miaforlune,\nOfnllihe Ilia that affect man none are meretcrrlble\nthan those of a private nature.—Dreadful a* it in\nthe person who contracts it. frightful as are its ravag-\nes upon hisconslitulion. ending frequently in deslrurw\nion .and it lonlhsomtigrnve.il hecomes of still greater\nImportance when it ia tntnamitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such being the ccse how necessary it be-\ncomes that every one Having the least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoll at once by consulting some physician, whoso\nrespectnthility and education enables him to w irrnnt\na safe, speedy, and permenent cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity. HI! . VOINIJ feels called upon to\nstate that, bv long study and extensive practice, ho\nhas belome perfect master of all those diseases which\ncome under Iho denomination of venereal, and hav-\ning paid more attention to that one branch than any\nother physician in tho United States, he feels himself\nbelterqnalifled to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its form*, such as ulcers, swelling in\nthe groans, ulcer in the throat.secondary syphilis, cu
1d99f63d3fdf3c42500cc5dd72eacbc2 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.3948087115461 44.939157 -123.033121 sharp industrial setback followed by\nlower prices and vanishing profits. It\nis quite certain that sooner or later\nsome readjustment will be necessary,\nif we aro to meet foreign Aiinpctition\nand gain the firm footing in the world's\nforeign markets which is becoming a.\nnntional ambition. Profits will have to\nreturn to normal, and costs will un-\ndoubtedly be reduced. But the question\nthat chiefly perplexes managers is, will\nlabor be willing to accept its share of\nthe inevitable readjustment! Probab-\nly not, anrj this is a difficulty that\nmay have to be solved before many\nmonths have passed. There is still an-\nother point of view, which is this: Keen\nforeign competition may admittedly be\nunavoidable when the war is over; but\nit is argued that we will be better pre-\npared to meet that competition than\nis generally supposed. Foreign compe-\ntition, it is argued, will not be so\nsevere as many imagine, because wages\nin Europe will relatively high\nowing to tho reduced supply of labor\nand tho excessive taxes which labor\nwill have to aid in paying.. Further-\nmore, neither Germany nor Great Bri-\ntain will waste much time before en-\ndeavoring to regain lost ground; their\nrecovery and readjustment will neces-\nsarily be gradual; consequently while\nlabor here may resist a readjustment,\nit will probably gradually- compromise\nas leaders come to realize irresistible\nconditions. Such are the widely diver-\ngent views of the labor outlook. It is\na question it either, view is entirely\ncorrect, and a solution in all probabil-\nity will be found between the two. An\nimportant factor in the labor outlook\nwill be the immigration movement;\nsome authorities expecting a large out-\nflow from this country when peace ar-\nrives, while others anticipate a large\ninflux. The latter is the most prob-\nable, because of the unwillingness and\nthe difficulties whic) soldiers will ex-\nperience in returning to their former
f30e830bf30946e80e9d5ccec0bd5612 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.7636611705627 41.681744 -72.788147 building as a community project to-- I\nward which the entire community\nhad contributed.\nThe dedicatory prayer was dellv.\nered by Rev. Oliver T. Magnell, pas-\ntor of St Joseph's church, after\nwhich the actual laying of the cor-\nnerstone took place,\nA lead box, containing varlpus\npapers and manuscripts of material\nrelative to the hospital, the city of\nBristol and the state, was placed In\nthe cornerstone by President Barnes.\nThe cement was applied to the 'cor-\nnerstone by Charles T. Treadway,\nchairman of the committee which\nconducted the drive for funds from\nwhich the new building is being\nerected, and Judge Newell Jennings,\nchairman of the building committee.\nAfter the corner stone was ce-\nmented into place, the dedicatory\naddress was delivered by the Rev.\nDr. L . H. Dorchester, pastor of the\nFirst Methodist church of Hartford,\nthe first president of the Bristol\nhospital, who through his efforts has\nbeen made an honorary vice presi-\ndent of the Bristol hospital for life.\n"I can hardly believe my eyes,"\nremarked Dr. Dorchester in his\nopening remarks as he stated that\nhe saw before him the realization to\nthe fullest degree of that which he\nhad often times dreamed about. He\ntold how he had worked and hoped\nfor such a building in Bristol when\nhe was pastor of the Prospect\nMethodist church and he congratu-\nlated the city on such a building.\n Dorchester told briefly of the\nchoosing of the present site for the\nhospital building. Several sites were\npresented to the committee in\ncharge, according to Dr. Dorchester,\namong which was the present site\nwith the announcement that it could\nbe purchased for $12,000. This price\nwas put on the property by Judge\nRoger S. Newell, the owner. In or-\nder that monetary consideration\nmight not Influence the members of\ntba committee In the choice of a\nproper site. However, Judge Newell\nhad secretly told Dr. Dorchester that\nIf the committee decided upon his\nland for a site of the proposed hos-\npital building, that It would be\ngiven to the hospital free of cost.\nDr. Dorchester explained how it\nwas his great delight, after the\ncommittee had unanimously decided\nupon Judge Newell' land as the\nproper site, to be able to announce\nto the committee that the land\nwould be the hospital's without cost.\nHe paid high tribute to Judge\nNewell for hjs gift.\nPr. Dorchester prsised the hos-\npital directors and the people of\nthe city for their efforts in the\nereat work of hospitalization since\nhe left the city. It was his re-\nmark when leaving the city that he\nhoped that the people of Bristol\nwould not be satisfied with a small\ntemporary hospital but would soon\nhave a hospital which would offer\nfacilities equal to that offered by\nthe larger surrounding cities.
2b50bc14d419789945aa4721453102c7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.368493118975 40.063962 -80.720915 [from Harptr'aHagMlnefor Jane.] I\nIn one instanco only have tho Jews\nconsented to change their habits ol lile,\nand in that we discover obew the marks\nof their perpetual euSering. From active\nand Buccesslul husbandmen and tillers of <\n<ho soli they have been translormed into 1\nmerchants and money-lenders. They\nseem to havo wholly lost that love for |\nnature and that agricultural skill that t\nmade Palestine a land of plenty. In 1\nBabylonia and Persia, under a compara-\ntlvely gentle rule, they wero rather 1\nfarmers than traders Even late in the (\nKoman period, and probably until near I\nIho sixth century, they were chielly an t\nagricultural people. Tho Talmud abounds 1\niu auusions 10 me cumvauon 01 uoias and i\ngardens, ol oil, wino, and wheat, Iruit and i\n11 iwers. Its nice and varied rules ol con- c\niluot relate chitily to the people ot rural c\ndistricts rather than of cities. When the 1\ngreat schools of Babylon and Pumbeditha u\nwere flourishing, and the vivid intellect e\nof the Israelites was expanding into a c\nliterature of commentators and professors, t\nthe race was marked by an intenBO love )\nlor ths Oriental lands they cultivated.\nBat when tho universal persecution foil\nupon them, when they were hunted\nfrom Babylonia and Persia, and began\nthat remarkable series wsndcriDgs\nIrom city to city, and from realm\nto realm, that has lasted for more o\nthan a thousand years, tho manners of the c\nrace changcd. They becamo a nation of\ntraders. Industry, thrift, learning, and\nrsro acnteness they never lost, but they 1\nwere nover again to becomo peaceful t\ntillers ol the soli. They were forced to |\nsnatch opportunities 01 gain lrom tho >\nmidst ol their wanderings. They became\nthe moat acute and untiring ol traders. 1\nTheir wares and profits wero such as t\ncould bo mcst easily handled and secured. t\nThoy supplied tho barbarous princes ol (\nGermany with the most costly drugs and |\nspices ol the E ist. They dealt in jewels )\nthat they could easily conceal or swallow, |\nand In Oriental cloths that wore ol price- ]\nless value. They were tho most active ,\nslave-traders ol too Middlo Ages, and the j\nOhurch vainly heaped its moledlotlons on ,\nthe Jow who should dare to purchase J\nChristian slates. Their cspital in money i\nprobably grew lrom nge to ago. They i\nwere the common money lenders ol tho .\noarly period. Tho Jews seemed to have ,\nconcentrated the wealth of tho Middle .\nAges among themselves; They lent their i\nmoney at an enormous interest and upon i\nample security; they accumulated
212cb9c350606a3624202957bd502e7a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.37397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 We have seen that, as the squad is\ninitiated into extended order the men-\ntion of the corporal becomes more,\nfrequent. In the same degree, his im-\nportant Increases. For, while a cor-\nporal commands a squad in close or-\nder to a limited, extent, he exercises\nmore authority and discretion when' It\nIs deployed in a line of skirmishes.\nHe then has the responsibility for the\nconduct and safety of his men under\nvarying conditions and rules far less\nmnutely prescribed.\nIf the new soldier, In verdant ig-\nnorance, has been inclined to resent\nthe corporal and his exercise of au-\nthority heretofore, he will appreciate\nit distinctly now. For, exactly as the\nrules of extended order work are less\nout and dried than in close order,\ngenerally the new soldier\nnow feels the need for encouragement\nand guidance. The function of a cor-\nporal Is to encourage and instruct as\nwelll as command his men.\nThe basis of the resentment which\nthe new soldier may' at first develop\nagainst a corporal or a sergeant lies in\nthe fact that the\nofficer, save for two or three stripes\non the arm, shoulders his gun and\nplugs along in the line Just like a\nprivate. The "rookie" therefore dis-\nlikes to be "bossed around," as he\nfinds himself In extended order, how-\never, and loses the; sense of mutual\nsupport that conies from standing\nshoulder to shoulder as In close or-\nder, the new soldier becomes exceed-\ningly grateful for constant admonition.\nInstruction and command from the\ncorporal.
0fcb754d4afc3d2bb8b7d401157e3db0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.8784152689234 39.745947 -75.546589 Accommodation,8 00, 8 88,7 ofi, 808, I 45. II 33\na tu,1288,226.345.(25.82*\\840.740.to3i!pm.\nNewYork. I85.256.430,815», H55,s». IoIV.\ntlMam, #12lit.128“,l:n,31«, a45,510,s17\n65b,606,Ri21 70«,7 18,» 12.1030pto.\nBoston, without change, 10 18 a in, 5 88 p m.\n« est Chester, via Lamokin, 8 80, 8 08 am.\n225,o45nin.\nNewark Center anfl Intermediate stations.\n140am,1264,633pm.\nBaltimore and intermediate\nam, 12U6,247,445.81)611m,1203night.\nBaltimore and Bay Line, 5 28 p m.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 48 ,801,811.\n1015, 11UO am, 1208, II18,208.428.523,*81«.\n~ 58,7«0,830p,m,1249night.\nTrains for Delaware Division leave for:\nNewCastle,815,1121ain,250.380,440.8I\n883,950pm,1208night.\nLewes,815am,487pna.\nHarrington, Delmar and way staMcns, 8\na m. Harrington and way stations, 2 50 p m.\nExpress for Dover. Harrington and Delmar\n18ain,437pm,1201night.\nExpress for Wyoming and Smyrna, 8 53 p\nExpress for Cape Charles, Old Point Com\nfort and Norfolk. 11 18 a m. 12 01 night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad street for Wll\ntnington, express. 3 50, 7 20, 7 27, 8 81,0 lu, 10 30\n1033,1118am,11235,130.21«,301,3ill,353,401\n441,508.+517.530,55»,817,657,740,1116.\npm. 12 00 night.\nAccommodation, 6 25.7 4», 10 38,11 55 a m, 1 32\n228,310.408,448,«32,838,10OS.Ill4P.1138pIn\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington for;\nPhiladelphia, express, 1 56, 2 51, 4 2', 8 50, 8 00\n10(«,11 51 a m.l 39,3 05;504,5 0«, 7 08, 7 25\n9 12 p m. Accommodation, 7 1». 81« a m, 12 1c\n145,4U5,530.1030pm.\nChester, express, 1 55,4 20. 8 50. H («1,10 (», 11 51.\na m,504,558,706,912p m. Accommodation,\n700.805am, 12in,145,405,620,725,lo30 pm.\nNew York, express. 155, 2 55,4 20,7 00, 860\n1151am. 1210,13o. 31«. 41«. 510. 5»,«(»■\n■*6 21,7 08,10 30 pm.\nBoston, without change. 5 58 p m.\nWest Chester.via Lamokin, s 05 a m, 5 3o p 111\nNew Castle, 9 50 p m, 12 08 night.\nCape Charles, Old Point Comfort and Nor­\nfolk, 12 01 night.\nMiddletown, Clayton, I)ov»r. Wyoming, Eel-\nton, Harrington, BridgevlUe. Seaiord, Laure\nand Delmar, 12 01 night.\nBaltimore and Washington. 4 48, 8 01, 10 P\nam,1306,523, +603,740,820pm.124« night\nBaltimore only, 6 00 u in, 12 13 night\nLeave Philadelphia. Broad street, for Wll\nmlngton. express, 3 50, 7 30. »10. 11 18 am. 4 41\n5 08, « 57,7 40,8 35.1] 16. 1130 p m, 12IW night.\nAccommodation, 8 35, 10 38 a m, 12 35.2 05.8\n838,1003and1138pm.\nFor further Information, passengers are re\nferred to the ticket ofllce at the station.\n♦Congressional Limited Express train* com\nposed entirely of Pullman Vestibule Peril,\nand Dinln ^
267aa011a84075cb130a634a127ebf40 FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1919.0808218860984 35.318728 -82.460953 ment of the Government is that tne\nState must provide at least 50 per\ncent of the cost of construction. Thus,\nconsidering the one million seven\nhundred thousand coming to North\nCarolina from the Federal Depart-\nment and at least one million seven\nhundred thousand to be raised under\nthe present law by the counties of this\nState, the State Highway Commission\nis faced with the tremendous task of\npreparing plans and carrying out the\nwork of the proper and efficient expen-\nditure of three million four hundred\nthousand dollars. It takes real brains\nand expert , business management even\nto handle this amount of funds in road\nimprovements. It is roughly estimat\ned by the State and Government that\nit costs approximately 10 per ceut to\nhandle the engineering and supervis-\n of the work and it is, therefore,\nnecessary for the State department to\nhave approximately three hundred and\nseventy thousand dollars to carry on\nthis work to the best advantage dur-\ning this five year period, whereas\nonly twenty thousand dollars a year\nfor the five year period is furnished\nto this department; xnly a hundred\nthousand dollars, or little more than\none fourth the estimated required\ncost. To meet this emergent: the\nState Highway Commission Ins pas-\nsed a ruling requiring ever Co.inty\nwhich accepts Federal Aid to make a\ndeposit with the State Department of\n10 per cent of the amount allottee,\nwhicn is to be used in preparing the\nsurvey, maps, plans and speciflcitiom\nin submit to the Federal Government\nfor their aproval before the actual to- -
23e3e4b0a3ec7d718f5bd46895f917f8 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1916.8401639028032 36.620892 -90.823455 north, range one (1) east of the Fifth Principal\nMeredlan In Missouri, containing t6 acres\nUpon this eipresss condition, however: That\nIf the said principal and securities should well\nand truly pay or cause to be paid, the said sum\nof borrowed money, and all the Int rest there-\non, according to the tenor and effect of said\nbond, that then and In that oase, aald Mortgage\nDeed should beoome Told; and that it default\nshould be made In the payment of the said sum\nof borrowed money, or the interest thereon, or\nany part thereof, at the time when they should\nseverally beoome due and payable, according to\nthe tenor and effect of said bond, that then tl'\nthen acting Sheriff of Ripley County aforesaid\nhculd (without any suit on said Mortgage\nDeed,) proceed to sell at public auction to the\nhighest bidder, for cash in hand, the property\ntherein conveyed mortgaged, first giving 20\nday, publlo notice of the time, terms and plaoe\nof sale, by puoliiatlon in some newspaper pub-\nlished In said countvj aid out of the proceeds\nof aald sale to pay the costs attending such sain\nand then the debt and Interest due the County of\nRipley as aforesaid; which said Mortgage Deed\nwaa recorded In the offllce of the Recorder of\naald oounty of Ripley In Hook 81 at Page 01.\nAnd Whereas, the County court of Ripley\nCounty aforesaid, by an order made and entered\nof recerd on the 18th day of May, IK16, doth find\nthat default has been made In the payment of\nthe aald turn of money, according to the tenor\nand effect of said Bond, and that the said Dodge\nCole- la now indebted to said County for the use\nof aald Capital School Fund, in the sum of One\nHundred and Forty-tw- o
0e5688b812be0ebfdd409cf74c5dab94 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.5232240120927 40.063962 -80.720915 Among the maiden ladles of noble\nbirth in London there are-few more\namusingly eccentric than Helen Hennl-\nker, sister of the present Lord Hennlker.\nMiss Kenniker has recently bought a\nnew bed, very artistic in its appoint¬\nments and architecture. In doubt as to\nhow to dispose of the one which until\nnow has served for her slumbers, sha\nat length hit upon the idea of getting\nrid of it by means of a rafllc. Ac¬\ncordingly she started selling tickets at\nhalf a guinea apiece.\nThe Idea seemed to tickle the fancy\nof her friends and acquaintances, who\nare legion In num'ber, and there was a\ngreat rush for the tickets, so much so\nthat the nobfe spinster has already rak¬\ned in considerably more than 5500 for a\nbed that is not worth even when new\nmore than $50, "Helen's bed" Is now\nthe joke of the hour in London. Its sale\nby rallle has given rise to no end of\nribald witticisms, and it 13 appalling\nto thlnlc of what may happen If ladles\nof society- become tired by the example\nof Helen to get rid of superfluous and\nIntimately personal articles of furniture\nand even'of apparel In this manner.\nQueen Victoria has at length, by the\ndeath of the old Duke de Nemours, at\nVersailles, recovered possession of the\npalace and estate of Bushey >Park,\nwhich is crown property, and she\nplneed at his disposal at the time of\nthe exile from France of his father,King\nLouis Philllppe, her Majesty's action In\nthe matter being prompted by the fact\nthat the duke has married a princess\nwho was a favorite cousin and ward of\nthe Prince Consort.\nIt was expected that he would give\nup the palace when his wife died, and\nlater on hopes to this effect were oqce\nmore entertained when the Orleans\nprinces were ¦permitted to return to\nFrance and secured from the French\ngovernment a restitution, of their im¬\nmense estates. The duke, however,\nturned a deaf car to all hints on the\nsubject, and In splto of the discussion\nraised every year in the house of com¬\nmons about the folly of maintaining at\nthe expense of English taxpayers, Eng¬\nlish palaces for rich surviving princes,\ndeclined to surrender the place.\nHe was the last surviving lcnlght. of\nthe famous French order of the Holy\nGhost, which was conferred, upon him\nns a mere boy by King Charles X. Elec¬\nted In the first place King of llelglum\nand at a later, period'King of Greece,\nho was on each occasion prevented\nby England from taking possession of\nthe crown, and his retention of the\nllusheyPark estate was due to the\nfact that he desired, to get even with\nthose English whom he publicly and\navowedly hat .<!.
0fc78cd3b3de90f48de939d153e9e200 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.332876680619 37.92448 -95.399981 The band which wont up was hired\nby tho Odd Fellows of Iola and La-\nHarpo but upon arrival at Garnett\nwas kidnapped. There was no other\nband there, not even a Garnett band\nwhich was advertised to give a con-\ncert In the evening. The iola band\ngavo the concert aud did everything\nelse that was dono during the entire\nday aud got for it a "vote of thanks"\nwhich is highly appreciated. Tho\nIola band led the parade in the morn-\ning and were told to show up Imme\ndiately after dinner. They did and were\nmarched a half mile over Garnett's\nstreets which aro paved with Ulnt\nrocks about tho size of a sandwich\nbut not as soft or as smooth. The\nexercises during tho day wero hold\nat four dlfierent places and the band\nwas kept comfortably busy marching\nfrom ono of these to the other. After\nmarching around and serenading\nthese differed placos they recolved In-\nstructions to go to tho Missouri Pa-\ncific depot and meet a special train\nfrom Yates Center. Garnett man\noffered to show them tho way but\nSomo of tho boys who explored tho\ntown during tho seventeen minutes\nthey wore Idle knew whero It was lo-\ncated and with somo of tho loin Odd\nFellows met tho special which brought\nIn about a half dozen people. Re-\nturning to tho hall whero they had\nbeen twlco beforo they wero usked to\ngo into it and play. This the man-\nager refused to do and they wore ex-\ncused until further orders. In the\nevening they gavo a concert and wero\nheartily applauded by tho Iola and\nLallarpo people and roasted by tho\nGarnett people. A bank was sere-\nnaded by the request of tho Garnett\nleaders which was ns near as the\nboys camo to getting any Garnett\nrconoy. Tho monoy which Iola peo-\nple paid tho band for Saturday should\nhave heed paid by the Garnott peo-\nple Tho Iola peoplo wero as good as\nposslblo to tho band and did nearly\novorythlng for them but thoy should\nnot have lot Garnett kidnap them.
4f5b79511c92b24e0dd251155187001e THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.209589009386 39.560444 -120.828218 A splendid new iron emigrant ship,\ncalled the Tayleur, from Liverpool, having\nsailed on the 19th Jan. for Melbourne,\nstruck a rock in Dublin Bay and sunk\nimmediately, by which 400 lives were lost.\nIt is generally believed that England\nwill inevitably be involved in a war with\nRussia. The accredited agents of Go-\nvernment no longer hesitate to speak of the\napproaching war, Admiral Richard Dun-\ndas recently addressed the crew of one of\nthe English vessels in the the following\nominous words: “I have come by request\nof the Board of Admirably, to make\nknown to you that we are on the eve of\nwar, and that war with Russia\nA Turkish meeting was held at South-\nampton, the Mayor of the town presiding.\nAnother famine is threatened in Ireland.\nProvisions arc enormously high, and prices\narc still going upward. In some parts of\nLimerick the people are suffering deplora-\nbly for want oi \nThe French Government are making\nactive preparations for war. It is rumored\nthat the Emperor will dispatch 50,000\nmen to Candia, who are to act in concert\nwith 20,000 English troops, and are to\ntake part in the contest.\nThe threatening aspect of Eastern af-\nfairs has its influence in Italy. The Pied-\nmontese Government is tilling its garrisons\nand magazines with provisions and stores.\nThe accounts of the battle of Uitale\nconfirm the reports of the Turkish victo-\nries. It appears that the Russians were\nconcentrating a force at Uitale in order to\nattack Kalafat on the 13th., but on the\n6th., fifteen thousand Turks marched out\nof Kalafat, attacked and stormed Uitale,\nhad a conflict with the Russians in the\nfield on the 7th., and renewed the battle\non the Bth., ending in the evening with\nthe total discomfiture of the Russians, who\nconfess to 4,000 killed, and their Generals,\nAurep and Turnout, wounded.
03376aa81acf309fa8a6eb7f313b33aa THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.8232876395232 40.063962 -80.720915 The market for old rails is reported\n"easier" at $23, with an unwillingness on\nthe part of havers to go above $22.\nIn regard to the pig metal market, the\nJfcntifacturrrdiscourses as follows:\n"Dealers report that transactions foot up\nabout the same as for some weeks past.\nPrice* hare undergone no change what¬\never, but strictly red-ehort iron continues\nvery firm and in good demand at our quo¬\ntations. Most of the red-short iron that\ncomes to this market is made in the Shen-\nango valley, where another furnace has\nblown in, after having gone out for repairs\nsome time during the summer. The fur¬\nnaces in the eastern part of the State are\nhaving a better demand for their product\nthan those in the west, letters from pig\nmanufacturers in the region from Altoona\nto Reading to dealers here show that most\nof the furnaces that are in blast areselling\ntheir iron as fast as they can make it,\nwhile some are sold ahead to April, and at\nbetter prices at the furnace than could be\nobtained here, delivered. This will, of\ncourse, be good news to western furnace\nowners, as it relieves them of a competi¬\ntion that felt to some extent not long\nago. These letters state that some of\nthe furnaces are sending iron to South\nAmerica, the others rinding a market in\nthe Kast. This favorable condition is more\nespecially observable in the Reading dis¬\ntrict and"in the Lehigh Vallev. It will,\nhowever, dampen the hopes that we may\nhave kindled in the breasts of western\nfurnace men when. we add Uuu the de¬\nmand wc have spoken off is mostly for\nfoundrv iron, and that there is an over¬\nstock o* some other sorts. But as an offiset\nto this it should not be forgotten that the\nBessemer works are all well supplied with\norders, and will require a large quantity of\nnig. Not only are a goodly number of\nfurnaces west of the Alleghenies now run¬\nning on this grade of iron, but in the Kast\nfurnaoes have within a month chanced\nfrom other kinds to this, and some that\nwere out of blast have blown in to make it.\nThe pig iron trade is gradually adjusting\nitself to the changing conditions in the\nmetallurgical world, and we may hope¬\nfully look for a better and more settled\nstate of affairs by and by.
2387e081df497cc89777aebb8e0a91af THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.842465721715 37.083389 -88.600048 thismorningatthey M C A but\nnothing of Importance war done other\nthan Ibe regular routine work and\nturning over to the council and\nlib batmen men the library project\nThe letter sables war taken up and\ndiseased but nothing new war dons\nRer Ferryman reported the receipt\nof Information nbtttr to the Mtab\nllihuent of similar llbrarlee In other\noilier and reported that tile library\nwa< a gift and that Mr Carnegie held\nno 1itringi to It IterPerryman bi\nslap been corresponding to see what\nsited of contract have been made\nwith Mr Carnegie restive to the\nestablishment of a library In other\nelks the building bung donated by\nthe celebrated phllanthrppUtand finds\nthat there li not a case where Mr Oar ¬\nnegie hat any control over a building\nslier building It He corresponded\n people In Newport Kyr and\nJackion Tenn amt flnd that the\nbuilding wai deeded to the board of\ntrniteei and that after the contract\nhad been ilgnedand the hbnsrymoney\nturned over Mr Carnegie bad nothing\nmore to do with the gift In order\nthat the project U better dUcaued\nand In order that more time be bad\nfor the diicnulou the inbjoct may be\npostponed by the council from tonight\ni until tom arrow night when a special\nmeeting of the council may be called\nand all Intereitd citizens be present\nto more fully dl >cnn the subject\nThe Rescue Mission work was also\nbrought op and theauoclatlondecfdedl\nto take a more active part In the work\nIn the way of soliciting inbiorlptlon\nfor the continuation of the work Her\nChltoi who U one of the factor of
ddbfc7e0c345a21861e07841615e1624 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.0999999682901 31.960991 -90.983994 THESE Lozengçs have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularly unpre<-eden-\ntod in the annals of medicine In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the,\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthemeans of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmaj» well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and.adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, even death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\n•often afflicted witn them, and are doctured for\nvarious eomplaints without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly eure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have' received the most flattering\ncommendation« from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey mav be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering.and death occasioned by#rorms; of\nthe impotency of mosPof the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
be787f2247cbaed3cbd035449ad779a5 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.1493150367833 43.798358 -73.087921 that he was, at first, irritated by the "gentled\nman's remarks Had any young . and\nvigorous man made so heartless, venomous,\nmalicious, and slanderous attack on him,\nhe would never have replied to him here.\njjut uiis uuucu came irom a man venera\nble for his age, his rank, and bis history.\nihe veneration which he, Mr. Wise, had\nlor Mr. Adams' father, for his own "pubirc\nservices, and for the renowned slate that\ngave him birth, .would restrain him from\ntaking any notice of this' wantoV assault.\nThe gentleman might be gratified by it,\nbut his friends here were deeply wounded.\nOne intimation he would repel viz. that\nhe (Mr. .Wise) would insult Mr. Adams\nor any man because he was not a duellist.\ninsult him sir, I would strike down \narm that dared it. The gentleman has\nobtained a victory, and I hops may enjoy\nit. I. leave him possession of the field.\nBut, at this moment, I am a happier man\nthas he is! J. of Covi.\nFriday, Feb. 6 . The bill was brought\nout of committee at seven" o'clock; the\nonly amendment Which was added to it\nbeing that proposed by Mr.' Wise, to au-\nthorise the coining Administration to is-\nsue five millions of dollars betwen the 3d\nof March and the close of the year, with-\nout regard to the amount that may have\nbeen previously issued by the present 'Ad-\nministration. This was concurred in by\nthe House, and the bill was speedily press-\ned through by the aid of the previous\nquestion, without farther debate.
3132220fd91c01e96de1ffae091e36b1 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.3838797497976 32.408477 -91.186777 mighty works. It was common com-\nplaint that in the days of his greatest\nvictories, men could not find Mr.\nMoodi when a service was dismissed,\nor get into his quarters at the hotels;\nhe would give no opportunity for self--\nglorification. Paul and Barnabas had\nhard work to restrain these hero wor-\nshipers (v. 14), and to convince them\nwho they were and how they had been\nenabled to accomplish such a wonder-\nful miracle (v. 15). Paul was of "like\nstature" with them and would not ac-\ncept worship as did the Caesars or\nHerod (12:22, 23). He exhorted the\nLystrians to turn from "these vain\nthings." i. e., such idol worship, unto\nthe "living God" (see also I Cor. 8:4;\nI Thess. 1:9). Hitherto God had not\nmiraculously interfered to turn\nmen from their evil ways (v. 16), but\nleft them to their own devices to show\ntheir inability to find their way back\nto him (see Acts 17:30; I Cor. 1:21).\nYet God is not "without witnesses"\n(v. 17). The seasons and the natural\nlaws point to God, yet men still re-\nmain blind and ungrateful. Thus by\nvehement exhortation they \nthis act of sacrilege. (2) Persecution\n(vs. 19. 20). The mob is ever fickle,\n(v. 18). but it did not turn them "unto\nthe living God" (v. 15). Conversion\nis the simple turning from idols (I\nThess. 1 -9), a rational thing, but one\ncontrary to the pride of men who de-\nsire to "do something" whereby they\nmay merit or can demand their sal-\nI vation. Even as Paul had difficulty to\nturn people aside from idols, so today\nit is hard to keep men and women\nfrom idolatry, not the gross or vulgar\nidolatry of heathenism, but the re\nI fined idols of culture, success, power,\nmoney and pleasure. To his difficul-\nties Paul had the added persecution of\nthe vindictive Iconians and those from\nAntioch (v. 19). God delivered him\nfrom this trial (I Cor. 11:25, 27). All\nloyal witnesses must expect pereecu-\ntion from the G(;od-hating world ill\nTim. 3:12; John 15:18-20) Some think\nthat this was when Paul was "caught\nup into the third heaven" (II Cor. 12:\n2-4). Hils treatment did not stop his\ntestimony, nor separate him from\nfriends vs. 2u, 21).\nIII. The Return (vv. 22-28).
124b21653ccdc495d2ab12193ff7e0d1 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.1410958587012 32.408477 -91.186777 In a fold of the Kentish hills, surrounded by\napple orchards and hop gardens, there stands a\nhumble building whose walls are eloquent of the\npast, a writer in the London Globe says. It is\nalmost the only one of Its kind left standing-so\nfar as the exterior Is concerned-in its entirety.\nThe adjoining land was granted to one of his\nknights by Edward I. In 1272, and the most roll-\nable antiquarian opinion is in' favor of the house\nhaving been built shortly after. Our knight, in\nthe matter of building, did not despise the record\nof the past, for he adopted the Norman method,\nthen dying out, of placing his living rooms on the\nsecond floor. This made for safety and the ground\nfloor apartments were simply windowless dun-\ngeons and storerooms.\nIn those days they built for strength, and the\nwalls of Kentish rag are of great thickness, cal-\nculated to withstand the assaults of any quarrel.\nsome neighbors, while' the turret, which gives ad-\nmittance by a stone spiral staircase to the living\nrooms above, is guarded top and bottom by mas-\nsive oaken doors, and is lighted by oylets through\nwhich a rain of arrows could be poured upon in.\ntruders below. The main style of the building is\nthat of the transition from early English to \norated. Oblong in form, it has gables north .and\nsouth, and at either end of the long east wall is\na square projection.\nAseending the stairs we find ourselves In a\nroom of truly noble proportions, occupying the\nlength and breadth of the building, 28 feet by\n18%, and lighted by windows east, west, north\nand south. It is open to the roof, which contains\nnearly, if not quite, Its original form, and has a\nfireplace and an "ambrey" or cupboard in which\ncooking and table requisites and alms for the\npoor were kept. In this "airs"or aitre" the fam-\nily lived and worked, and here visitors and better\nclass retainers slept. Here, perhaps, from the\nbeams supportlng the roof hung the store of dried\nprovisions for winter use, and the herbs collected\nby the squire's dame.\nIt was here in the "airs" that, at even, the\nfamily gathered round the firelight (candles were\nexpensive luxuries in thoe days) to listen to\nstory of battle or chase. The windows were ura\nglesed, but glass might be fied in the shutters,\nthe Iron hook for which still remains. Oaken set\ntIes did duty as seats by day and as restting places\nat night and meals were served on a board placed\non trestles--hence, perhaps, the phranse "the te\ntive board. "
2c282fab5153114ef807c3323c40657e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.1898906787594 43.798358 -73.087921 a text obscure, which might be madeplain,\nwould be treachery. It would, in fact, be\na failure to translate the Bible, just so far\nas the obscurity reached. If the meaning\nof a passage is not conveyed, it might as\nwell be wholly omitted, or left in the orig-\ninal text. Just so much of the Word of\nGod is lost to the reader of this version.\nA portion of the light from Heaven is\nconcealed from his view. He is deprived\nof his share of the common inheritance.\nIf a single word is left untranslated, which\ncould, by a corresponding word, or by a\ncircumlocution, be made intelligible, then\na part of the Word of God is hidden and\nlest. A minister, who, in preaching,\nvoluntarily conceals a part of the truth, is\na traitor to God, and a deceiver of\nmen. How much greater is the guilt of\naltering or riding a part of the word of\nGod, in a translation, which may be read\nby millions, from generation to genera-\ntion? It was not without necessity, or\nfearful significance, that these awful words\nwere introduced at the close of the sacred\nvolume, whether they be understood as re-\nferring to the whole revelation, or to the\nsingle book of the Apocalypse: " If any\nman shall add unto these things, God shall\nadd unto him the plagues that arc written\nin this bock. And if any man shall rake\naway from the words of the book of this\nprophecy. God shall take away his part\nout of the book of life, and out of the holy\ncity, and from the things which are written\nin this book."
03da63dd18e9dbf89dff7e81cfb2c48e NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.4863013381532 40.735657 -74.172367 Eight (8) noiseless manhole covers;\nOne (1) basin with connection complete;\nOne (1) basin, using old head and sill;\nOne (1) head and sill on old basin.\nBidders are not to state any price for ma-\nterials and work tor which there is a fixed\namount provided for in the specifications.\nEach proposal must be /enclosed In u scaled\nenvelope, properly Indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the improvement, and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners of the city of Newark.\nBidders will slate their prices In writing as\nwell as in figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposals that\nshould the above work be awarded to them\nthev will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within fifty (50) consecutive\nworking days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work can\n examined at the office of the Chief Engi-\nneer of the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners at the City Hall. Said proposals (/>\nbe accompanied by the consent in writing of\ntwo sureties, or a surety company qualified to\ndo business in New Jersey, who shall, at the\ntime of putting in such proposals, qualify as\nto their responsibility in the amount of such\nproposal, and bind themselves that, if the\ncontract be awarded to the person or persons\nmaking the proposal, they will upon Its being\nbo awarded, become his or their sureties for\nthe faithful performance of said work; and\nthat if the person or persons omit or refuse to\nexecute such contract they will pay to the city\nof Newark any difference between the sums to\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract,
1b7e684386a68c42382805128ed308a2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.957650241601 39.745947 -75.546589 AJ though Charlotte Walker, who\nplays one of ttie principal roles in\nDavid Belasoo's latest production,\n“Call the Doctor," a new comedy ty\nJean Archibald, which will be at the\nPlayhouse the first half of next week\nand for which seats are going on salo\ntoday, Is well known to theatro-goers\nhere for her many charming por­\ntrayals behind tlio footlights, there\nare very few, on the other hand, who\nare aware that Miss Walker is a very\nprolloient horsewoman.\nMiss Walkers proficiency In the snd-\ndle Is the result of early training and\na long continued familiarity with\nhorses nnd their habits. The Walker\nfamily has for years had Its home­\nstead on a large Texas estate that Is a\ncombination plantation and range, and\nRmong the nnlinals which make up Its\nstock equipment have always\nhern .a number of thoroughbred Ken­\ntucky horses, ns well as a few of the\nhardly less spirited, and even hardier\nponies from the Pan-handle.\nWhen a more child, Miss Walker\nknew what it was to have the wind\nwhistling through her hair as she\ngalloped over the plains, and sine,e\nthat time the management of anything\nwith four legs that would trot, leap\nor gallop, has had no fears for her.\nAmong Miss Walkers most valuable\npossession at the present time is a\nbeautiful black saddle mare named\nOro, which she keens in New York.\nEvery bright morning when she is\nplaying there, sees her traversing the\nbridle paths of Central Park.\nMiss Walkers role in “Call ttie\nDoelor" Is one that will give her\nsplendid opportunity for dramntio\nand comedio presentation.
1467cabe58546c9afc95f45b63f5fc68 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.9630136669202 37.53119 -84.661888 rhea I have proclaimed with all the\nper given me In all the counties of\nKentucky thus far visited where they\nhave had tbe religion to hear me three-\ns unties out of 48 refuted me a bearlug\nI pray God It may not be laid to their\ncharge Out the other 45 have listen ¬\ned patiently IIIam spared to go to the\nother 71 It will be my Joy to proclaim\nJohn Alexander Dowlo as the Elijah of\nwhom Jesus tpake Matt XVII 10 13\nWhile I do Ibis whatever It coats\nIt le not tho main object of my mission\nThat It to tare soul I remain seven\nday In eaob county teat and preach\neight sermons seven on tout saving\nTbe 8th ts devoted to Zion and a vie\ndictation of J A Da claim to the offleo\nof EIIJallI think tbe people tbut far\nunderstand the relative Importance of\nthe subject and listen patiently to No\n8 for tbo sake of the vital point ot\ncleavage between the doctor teaching\nand mine touches the ortbordox belief\nthat God permits evil which Is a rello\n to which be cilng tenacious-\nly Tome it Is rank blasphemy\nwhosoever hold It Iauer that there\ncan be no permission without approval\nand that make God the author of tin\nTherefore I have persistently and con\ntUtently fought It since leaving the\nold Presbyterian church over 30 veal\nago lOin willing to risk my soul that\nIt II a falsehood of the devil oouldnt\nput It stronger than that Out a bold\nlog on to tbe rag of a false theology\nor oven granting all the lies told by a\nvenal press to be true of whloh we\nknow are out out of whole cloth still\nhit claim M be EII Jab tbe Restor¬\ner of all thing are not Invalidated\nWhoa I see what God hat wrought\nthrough Dr Dole and look tbe world\naround to find a miD who can stand be\ntide him withoutbeing dwarfed I fall\nto discover him Ue It tbo great\nelL born of woman In his generation oa\ntbe lit John the Baptist was In bit and\nboth made so by being energized by tbe\nSpirit and power of Ellsha
32b4679b1310dc0e2473a87b9977cfed THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.864383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 t>e exceptionally severe in the eastern\nhemisphere." The data are not very\ndefinite or clear to one outside of the\nmeteorological oircles, but the inside\nwise men talk with much show of the\nsagacity of the beavera and prairie dogs\nui me weal, who nave Degun early to\nantiolpate the winter, and are making\nextraordinary preparatloni in advance.\nThe writer in the French Bulletin is\nmore scientific and aaya: Blnoe tbo at*\nmoepherlo perturbation of 18S9-C0, the\nyears have been warmer, clearer and\ndryer, and the barometrlo pressure\nlighter than before. These anomallei\ncannot fall to find their compensation\nere long, the winter before laat olosely\ncorresponding with that of 1828, and\neverything betokening that about 1870\nwe Bliall have a great winter like that\nof 1829-30, Wo are not frightened quite\nyet, and advise our readers not to be\n unduly by auoh predictions.\nWe remember to have read some of a\nsimilar character last autumn, which\nfailed most luglorlouBly. We have al«\nways had private donbts whether beavers\nor prairie dogs could see much far*\nther into the Inture than the almanao*\nmakers. We suBpect it is no better than\nguesB-work with them, and they often\nmake mistakes in their calnalatlmm.\nIt la a reflection on human Intelligence\nto think the beavers wiser than man;\nuud we have long tince deolded that\nthe oharactor of the winter will ue\nknown maoh better In Maroh than\nIn November. It may bo well, how*\never, to give hoed to the prophets of\nevil omen, and prepare for the worst.\nThe Governors of thirty-one Statea\nhave united with the President In\nrecommending November 18tb, as a\nday of thanksgiving and praise.
e7d0f9b3aaa1e4d0f51be9eabe529b1f VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.7383561326737 43.798358 -73.087921 4. The press can accomplish much.\nis able to rouse the public mind, to\nplead for the Sabbath, for the name of\nGod, for the institution of marriage, lor\ndomestic obligations, for salutary laws, for\ntheir obedience and prompt execution, for\nevery established defence of virtue, and\nagainst every admitted agency of vice.\nThe religious press of all denomina-\ntions can leaj tjie way. The ministry of\nall denominations can arouse, sustain and\nguide this powerful engine in its bearing\non the morals of the church.\nThe secular press can be enlisted. WTe\ndo not say universally, but we earnestly\ninquire, why will not the editors cf our\npolitical and secular papers engage in this\ncause ? They can feel, and they do feel\nthe value of the interests which arerat\nstake. A noble field is here open for eve-\nry editor to throw out his own earnest\npleadings in behalf of temperance, purity\nof manners, elevation literature, cau-\ntious reading, and propriety of deport-\nment. What paper would be rendered\nunwelcome to the family circle because it\ncontended for its vital interests, because it\nguarded its pages against anything which\nit would be improper to cast before the\nyounger members, or because it stoutly\nand eloquently pleaded he cause of so-\nbriety, decency, fidelity, love, kindness,\naffection, and indeed of every guardian\nansel whom God has stationed around\nthe domestic altar.\nBut it is to the domestic circle itself\nwe look for the most effectual measures\nof reformation. If we can have the eyes\nof parents open to the inestimable im. or -- ,\ntance of guarding their flocks from the\ninfluence of polluting institutions, we shall\nhave a barrier erected which cannot ever\nbe overthrown. We are full of confi-\ndence, if our pastors, churches, parents\nand editors can only be thoroughly arous-\ned, there will be a power of public opin-
243c346f80ac2aac193b14d40fed9c87 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1901.8397259956876 39.78373 -100.445882 The Appeal, when it moved into the\nnew building that it now occupies, had\noccasion to do plenty of roof-re pairi -\nThe roof on the building is made of tin\nand was as leaky as a screen door. A\nplumer was hired and he patched and\nsoldered every hole that could be found\ndoing a complete job, yet the roof leak-\ned. Upon the tiners suggestion, two\ncoats of Nevada Mineral paint was ap-\nplied, and during the last storm not a\ndrop of moisture leaked through the\nroof. For twenty years this piece of\nroofing has given trouble. E . B. Rail\nwas always fixing it and never seened\nto stop the leak. In sheer disgust he\nplaced a drain in the center of the\ncenter of the building, and caught the\n in tubs. The mineral paint ab-\nsolutely stopped all leakage and the\nAppeal office is as dry as a match box.\nThere is only one trouble with Ne-\nvada Mineral paint. It docs not come\nfrom a foreign market or have a chro-\nmatic label on the can. It is composed\nof graphite, ground in oil. and when\napplied to the roof of a building be-\ncomes part of the structure. The min-\neral allows sufficient expansion and con\ntraction and does not crack, nor does\nit rub or chalk off. The Arlington\nHouse roof, which leaked for years,\nhas been painted with this material and\nsince that time it has been as dry as a\nbone. The county buildings are to be\npainted with it and they will also be\nmoisture proof.
0162ab89975ce4829a99e4aca9c7d10d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.3811475093605 40.441694 -79.990086 statute under which Alderman Bohe rolls\nout '"?25 and costs" so glibly and so regu-\nlarly is a special enactment, which does not\nhold good anywhere else between tbe Dela-\nware river and the Ohio line.\nThe original "Blue Law" passed in 1794,\nand applicable to the entire State, provides\nfor a fine of M for participation in amuse-\nments or worldly employment on Sunday.\nThis is the act that is still in force in all\nthe other counties ot the State, and under\nwhich the Law and Order Societies of Phil-\nadelphia and other places hare carried on\noperations within their legitimate sphere.\nA Special Penalty for Allegheny.\nBut for Allegheny county a special or-\ndeal was prepared at a later date. Shortly\nbefore the legislative session of 1855 Pitts-\nburg had become such a populous and pro-\ngressive city that lines of omnibus were es-\ntablished to run through the farms out to\nLawrenceville and across the river and over\nthe meadows to Manchester. There \ntransit facilities were operated seven days\nin the week, and immediately there was a\nprotest from the McClures and Yosts of that\nday. The managers of the omnibus line\nwere repeatedly arrested and fined, but the\nsum of $4 proved to be insufficient to stop\nthe march of progress.\nThere had also been some trouble with\nliquor dealers selling on Sunday, and nnder\ncover of the sentiment aroused by this\nfeature a demand was made on the Legisla-\nture for a more stringent law. The rest of\nthe State, however, protested, against any\nsnch move, so the Legislature finally com-\npromised the matter by passing a special\nenactment for Allegheny county. The first\ntwo sections are devoted to increasing the\npenalties for the illegal selling of liquor,\nand it is the third section which, carried to\nextremes of which its authors never even\ndreamed, causes practically all of the vexa-\ntion and trouble to tbe general public to-\nday. This particular section reads as fol\nlows:
431da3c65b22e9e611a015c36477cf97 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.3383561326739 41.681744 -72.788147 The following invitation to the\npublic to attend the formal opening\nof the new high school tomorrow\nevening was issued today by Super-\nintendent of Schools L. S . Mills:\n" To the Citizens of Plainville:\n"The dream that we all had, on\nthat memorable evening In the Com-\nmunity theater over a year ago, of\na new modern high school building\nIn Plainville has now come true. It\nstands due east and west in the\nmidst of nine acres of playground\nwhere the children of this and com-\ning generations may play; where\nfield events may be held; and where\nthe community may assemble, from\nyear to year, as Plainville continues\nto grow until it becomes a city.\n"Within the walls are conveniences ;\nfor modern education, meeting the\nneeds modern social, civic and In-\ndustrial life. An education for the\nchildren, second to none in Con-- 1\nnecticut, may be carried on here\nand if managed wisely, at a reason-\nable cost to the town.\n"We now have, for the first time\nsince I have been connected with\nthe school of Plainville, sufficient\nschool accommodations to properly\nreorganize and operate the several\ngrades in our public schools.\n"Our new building Is so planned\nthat it will be adaptable to the new\nschool Ideals required by the educa-\ntional exigencies of tomorrow.\n"The building is so planned and\nlaid out that It may be enlarged\nwithout damage or change to the\npresent structure.\n"The building Is complete, and I\nam sure that you all want to see It;\ntherefore, come
b459196f384d95a254479be6b31d1c9b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.0942622634589 43.798358 -73.087921 kind justly demanded reasons of our fathers\nfor the steps they took in T6, the same de-\nmand may now be valid against as many as\nwould set aside this ancient practice espe-\ncially as, without doubt, it has been very\ngenerally held to, as a moral and religious\nduty, owed to our species and to God. But\nit is not enough that the usage has been\nof long standing that it has been very gen-\neral, and that men have been sincere in its\nsupport. All this did not satisfy Vindcx.\nNo, in settling other important questions, he\nhas already discovered the necessity of set-\nting up a higher standard of duty of throw-\ning himself on to higher ground. On that\nground we rejoice to meet him. If the "Law\nand the Testimony" are against us, we are\nanxious to know it. If it be otherwise, the\npublic ought to know it, as one great motive\nto the saving of human life.\n approaching Revelation, with this dis-\ncussion, a distinction presents itself, which\nto us, so far as we have examined the sub-\nject, now seems obvious and necessary, al-\nthough we do not recollect having seen it\nnoticed. It stands between laics and penal-\nties, and is to a greater or less extent prac-\ntically observed throughout Christendom.\nEspecially does the enlightened legislation\nof NewEngland, and, to great extent, of the\nUnited States generally, manifest that our\nlegislators, so far as they have any regard to\nthe codes of the Bible, do, in respect to near-\nly all these codes, treat the faunas one thing,\nand the penalties as another. Take an il-\nlustration : The penalty of the law as given\nto Moses against adulter', Leviticus xx. 10\nwas capital punishment : adulterers should\nsurely be put to death. Now while our le-\ngislators adopt the law, "Thou shalt not\ncommit adultery," they reject the penalty\nrequired under the former dispensation.
0fb09835b629d7f61b688f3b51f46e7d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.6890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 west. Profit takings at the close t\nuced Its net gain to lMi per cent. T\ndjustment bond gained a point net.\nThere were 79,000 shares of the pi\n?rred stocks during tbo day. New To\nentral lost a point in tho early de;\nigs, but more than recovered It on t\nublication of the statement of Augi\nnrnlngs, showing an Increase of J45\n19. The grangers moved very m\nawly all day and showed a large fa\njg off In activity, except St. Paul,whl\n2me next to Atchison preferred, wl\nnips of r.rt oon Rhnres. Tho stock decll\nil fractionally at the opening, \\\n380 strongly lty per cent, and fell ofl\nractlon at the closo on proflt-takli\nugaf was subjected to a rush to re\nze when It became known that the <\nactors had declared only the regul\nuarterly dividends of 3 per cent\nae common and 1% per cent on t\nreferred stocks. It had been rumor\niat an extra dividend would be £\nlared. After rising 156% after t\npenlng, the price fell to 153 atid lluct\nted in a very erratic manner, but clc\n1 at & recovery of over 2 points. T\nreferred stock also fell over 2 poln\n'otablo gains wore made by the le\nlooks, the common gaining nearly ti\nDints and the preferred threo poln\nlllnola Central gained 214 per cent\n;ports of largo increase in the ear\nigs. Louisville, Southern preferred a\nlobile & Ohio recovered a point\nyor of their early depression, whl\nas due to the yellow fever seal\nhero was some movement in stocks\n>ft coal roads on prospects of a sett!\nlent of the miner's strike. Wheeling\nake Erie preferred gain 2*4 per cei\nunsolldated Gas Jumped 5 points ov\n!>sterday'a high record price to 207\nther notable gains were Canadian P\nHe I; Chicago & Eastern Illinois\nad Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago\nt. Louis preferred 3 por cent. Cott\nil lofct u point, Iowa Central preferr\n4 per cent; Oregon Navigation pi\nrred a point.
2e5051cae3b239e67f98a73698b493c7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.2827868536228 40.063962 -80.720915 case now. There are manv exceptions of\ncourse at various places in the South.\nThe disposition of the whites is,\nin too many instances, to ignore\nthe rights of the negro and treat him as a\npolitical inferior. Seeing that he i.1\nreally their intellectual inferior,.seeing\nhow childish and improvident lie is,.\nseeing how unreliable he is as a laborer,\nthey cannot bring themselves to tolerate\nhis political equality, and still less tc\npermit him to exercise a potent voice\nin the doBtinies of the State. ,This feeling\nof the white racc in the Sonth is alto-\nvctlicr natural. Tlio only thing to do is\nto hold it under proper control and\ngive the negro nil the chance to riitc that\nthe nature of tho cAse will admit of.\nThe negro raco in tho South, that is the\nleaders them, have an idea that the;\nare entitled to much more than they have\nreceived in the way of political am\nsocial recognition. And to this end tliej\ncall conventions to set forth their griev\nances and demand redress. Underlying\ntheir calls are tho personal and politico\nschemes of such fellows as Pinchhack,\nWe must look out for them. The enrpet\nbaggers and the negro politicians of thi\nMouth nro suspicious characters as a rule\nThoflo who know them best arc not lille<i\nwith admiration. 11 is not to the interesi\nof tlic negro rnce to give them their em\nto any great extent, but to rely on th(\njustice of the government, as in the past\nfor proper protection, and give their\nprincipal attention to the every day wort\nthat appertains to the proper supporl\nand education of theirjfnmiliea.
222bede1a8f5ad591f6cf6317b50073b THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.1434425913276 40.832421 -115.763123 Captaiu J. W . Plumuicr of Mineral\nHill arrived here from Eureka, yesti r\nd.»y. nud departs for thu east by the\ntrain thiit evening, utjr he enjoy the\njourney, cml iu good time return to bin\nmany friends iu the Silver state.\nThe Grand Jury having discharged its\nduties most of tlic members arouu tbeir\nway to their respective homes again.\nThe train last evening took several\ntowanl tho Eastern part of tho county,\nand the stage for the north this morn-\nfrig tarried away a number. The reir\nguard, in the person of Colonel J. B\nMooro, is about ull of the otgauiz ition\nnow visible to the naked eye.\nThe Republican 'jonfnnls claim that\nat the last Presidential election, Hayes\nreceived a majority of the electoral vote,\nwhile tho Democrats as stoutly main-\ntain that Tildett was justly entitled to\ntho fiuits of a clearly wou victory. Iu\nall well regulated rnccs, a dead boat is\nrequired to beruu a second time. The\nDemocrats aro perfectly willing to back\nMr. Tildeu to buy amount iu the com¬\ning contest aul ilaro opposition to\ntrot out Mr. Hayes, ltither than mis*\nsuch a race they would even give the lat¬\nter tho advantage of the distance to the\nqu irter-polo. Why is it that wo. never\nhear the nainoof Rithcrford mentioned\niu connection with the uext Presidency ?\nAuuther attempt wis m.ulo to sup¬\npress the Czar of Russia and the baluuce\nof tho Imperial fauiily.Tucs lay evening.\nA urine was explod d under the dining\n. room ol tho Winter Palace at St. Peters¬\nburg which tore out the floor for a space\nof six. by ten feet, killing fivo soldiers\nan 1 wounding thirty live others. The\nSalvation of the family was owing to nil\naccidental d. lay by whicll they were n\ntrifle behind their usual timo at supper.\nThe adage "fWasJ ra'sts tho head that\nwears a Crown," is peculiarly applica¬\nble to the ease of tho present ruler of\nRussia. Ho appears to bear n cli irtned\nlife, howovi-r, and may possibly worry\nthrough his three score and ten, shnf-\ntling off his mortal coil like a mere hu¬\nman. after ull.
04cde744ef9508c1143f0db5fab485f3 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.5219177765093 35.996653 -78.901805 The early Christians for a long time ac-\ntually despised patriotism. They not only\nsaw and felt that on this earth they had\nno abiding city, but they claimed to owe\ntheir allegianco to a higher power. This\nwas a notion that prevailed until the\ngrowth of national sentiment became\nBtrong enough to make a Christian a pa-\ntriot as well. Machiavelli, who had a\nlively appreciation of the pagan virtues,\nwas one of the first writers of renown to\nexalt patriotism to a high place among the\nvirtues. In his eyes, all was fair in war,\nif not in love, and he openly declared his\nadmiration for those who loved their coun-\ntry better than the safety of their souls.\nPatriotism was, in short, an old world\nvirtue, which, at the time of the \nsance, was dragged out of its recess and\nrefurbished for the use of the modern\nworld. Eclipsed for a season, it has shone\nas bright again as ever it --did in Greece or\nRome. Many a citizen has since been east\nin the mold of Aristides or of Kegulus.\nBut it is curious to observe that when na-\ntional sentiment was weak there was's in\nBorne respects a greater sense of the broth-\nerhood of man than there is today.\nAmid all its wars and turmoil, Europe\nmade a nearer approach to solidarity and\nunion. Christianity was a groat Avoiding\nforce. The dreams of a universal church\nwere in some slight degree realized, and\nthe holy Roman empire was a stupendous\nfact which formed a cementing bond be-\ntween many disorganized races. Macmi\nMagazine.
187bc0de28c7975e2b9a2424076f3a3d THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.1219177765095 37.92448 -95.399981 Importance to put tlie town In a posi-\ntion to sustain n siege ot some length.\nThose works were begun on tlie day\non which Tomsk fell Into the hands of\nthe Tartars. At the same time ns that\nlast news the grand duke loarned that\nthe emir of Dokbnra aud the allied\nkhans were directing the movement lu\nperson, but what he did not know was\nthat the lieutenant of those barbarous\nchiefs wns Ivan Ogareff, a Itusslan olll -c e- r\nwhom he himself hnd cashiered.\nFrom the first, as has been seen, the\nInhabitants of the province of Irkutsk\nhnd been ordered to abandon' the towns\nnnd villages. Those who did not seek\nrefuge In the capital were compelled to\nretire beyond Lake Baikal, to where\nthe Invasion would not likely extend Its\nravages. The crops of corn and forage\nwero requisitioned for the town, aud\nthat last rampart of Itusslan powor lu\ntho extreme east was prepared to re-\nsist for some time.\nIrkutsk, founded In 1011, Is tltttnted\nnt the confluence of the nnd the\nAngara, on the right bank of tho river.\nTwo wooden bridges, built on piles nnd\nso arranged ns to open the whole width\nof tho river for tho necessities of navi-\ngation, joined the town with Its out-\nskirts which extended nlong the left\nbank. The outskirts were nbandoned,\nthe bridges destroyed. Tho passage of\nthe Angara, which was very wide at\nthat place, would not have been possi-\nble under the lire of the besieged. But\nthe river could le crossed either above\nor below the town, aud ns a conse-\nquence Irkutsk wns in dnnger of being\nattacked on the east side, which no\nramuart urotccted.\nIt was, then, lu works of fortification\nthnt the hands were llrst employed.\nThey worked day nnd night. The grand\nduke found a spirited population lu\nsupplying that need, and afterward he\nfound them most brave in Its defense.\nSoldiers, merchants, exiles, pensants.\nall do voted themselves to the common\nsafety. Eight days before the Tnrtars\nhad appeared on the Augara ramparts\nof inrt1i linil hi'fin rnUnil.
032d97f55e054359e0c5eac135d8d365 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.5575342148657 41.020015 -92.411296 Balance In Treaeary.....^;,...! 68 30\nThere are tees from delinquent mem­\nbers due the Grange amounting to\nprobably $250.\nThe following preamble and resolu­\ntion was offered by J. A. Browu:\nWHEREAS, The organization of the\norder P- ot H. was inaugurated and\npredicated on just and corrcct princi­\nples—the elevation of the agricultural\nclass of this country, and for the pur­\npose of unltuig the farmers together in\nsocial and ftrendly bonds, and was so\nheld out and published to the world,\nthereby bringing it to the favorable\nnotice of all good men and well wish-\nera of the race. And,\nWBXBBAS, The principles as pro­\nmulgated by the P. of H. if strictly or\neven bat partially practiced, would\nbenefit and be a source of much good\nin the community in which they exist­\ned. Yet we, after a careful investiga­\ntion both of the interior and exterior\nworkinga of said order, do declare it\nas oar candid opinion, prdicated upon\nactual experience as members work­\ning the order, to publish and de­\nclare to the world.\n1st. That the original principles for\nwhich tho organization was instituted\nhave been entirely overlooked and ig­\nnored, in that the officers have assum­\ned power* that are tyrannical, arbitra­\nry and entirely aabveraive of good\norder In the Lodge or in the commu­\nnity. The the officer* composing our\nGrand or State organization, are not\nthe true representative* of the mem­\nber* ol the order selected for that pur*\npose, being ex-offlcio members of the\nsame, aad alao that the officer* of the\nNational Grange have arrogated to\nthemaelve*—and that, too. under tho\nworidag* of the order, unwarranted\naad *y*tematio autocratic authority,\nruling aa with a rod of iron, from\nwhose edict* there 1* no appeal.\n2d. That large sum* of money have\nbeen (i* now, mid in time to come) col­\nlected by the several State Granges\nand the National Grange, fer which\nno adequate return has ever been real­\nized by the individual members of the\norder.
17f5f5a2fe78490ed9c9e872e184b018 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.5246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 their hands and waving their hats (\nind shouting: "Mow you're right," "tbat'a ,\nbusiness," <fec. Tho horses soon got the {\nword, Red Cloud having the poll and Ful- c\nierton second. Red Cloud took tho lead t\n>t the first sharp tnrn. Fullerton left his\n[eet and lell fifty yards behind all round\nto the half mile pole. Red Cloud held .\nhis position, tho Maid once or twice going :\nto his head, but ho shook her oil halt ,\nway uown me nomo stretch, the Maid "\nabout a neck in advance, when both c\nhorses slacked to a Jog to allow Fnllerton !\nto save his distance. Timo 2:25.\nThe 2:38 horses immediately started\nlor a.-fifth heat, which was exactly the c\ngame from the start to the finish as the c\nprevlousono. t\nThe Maid, Red Cloud and Fullcrton, 1\nafter receiving several starts, got oil for the t\nsecond heat, the Maid a liulo the best g\nof the start. Down the first stretch c\nRed Cload lapped with Fnllerton 1\nclose up,bat at the quarter pole the latter c\nmade a bad break, tailing far behind, and t\njust as the half mile was passed Red i\nCloud collared and psssed the Maid, keep- \\\nlng a length the advantage to tho homo c\nstretch. Doblo now essayed to take the t\nlead, bat Red Cloud had another link to <\nlet out and wonldn't bo headed. Down\nwent the whip on the Maid's back and she i\nbegan togain half way home. Bhe reach- <\ned the gelding's head, and from this point t\nto the ecoro both horses received the i\nwhip right and left, the Maid -winner f\nby a head, but it was the opinion 01 (\nevery oooy tnat Kotl Ulead was entitled t\nto Uie beat, as the Hald should have been i\nset back for running. Fuilerton barely r\nsaved his distance. Timo,2:25i. It was a\nnow paat 7 o'clock, a rain coming up, i\nand the flvoyear-old trot and (ree-lor-all\ntrot were postponed till to morrow
02e1fb6811fbb764a961736599cc6805 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.9712328450025 40.441694 -79.990086 A Good Reserve Itule Necessary.\nPresident Byrne's opinion or statements are\nof such a general nature that nobody can well\noppose them, and I suppose that every magnate\nwill talk similarly until something is definitely\nformulated. In speaking of a reserve rule we\ncan all say that it should be equitable and that\nno player should be forced to sign against his\nwill. If there is any fault to find with such\ntalk, it is that it rends to make a reserve rule a\nfarce. No matter what we say or what we do a\nreserve rule must reserve, and to do mat it\nmust be restrictive, and therefore probably\ncurb somebody's desire The reserve rule is\nnot sentimental; it is business from top to hot -to n-\nand business discipline is very otten dis-\ntasteful to employes whoseonlyanxiety isabout\ntneir wages or salaries. If a ball player were\nallowed to play where he liked and at any time\nhe liked, baseball people might as well shut up\nshop. The business would soon be in a state ot\nchaos, and this is so true that none of us, I\n will deny it. Well. tnen. we must all\ncome to the conclusion that a restrictive law\nis necessary to keep players from playing where\nthey like and at any time thev like. I am one\nwho clings to the belief that the "tyrannical\nsales" system was. generally speaking, a great\nblessing to the nlajerf; but it is possible to\nhavearesene rule without condition of im-\naginary tyranny. Bnt what I now contend is\nthat we must have a reserve rule that will re-\nserve: that will aid clubs in keeping their good\nplayers from being caught by tho inducements\nof wealthier clubs, for a reasonable time at\nleast. Aw reserve rule that will not accom-\nplish this will be a failure and any rule that will\nprevent two clubs from making an exchange of\na player's services ana a money consider ition\nwill be a very foolish rule and will deprive the\nplayer of more or less money. Altogether it is\nabsolutely necessary that a National agreement\nto be lasting and effective must not be built on\nmere sentiment, but must contain sound busi-\nness principles from etui to nrL
04e78d6c628cc1933ee77f2f0ee7e889 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1866.9164383244547 41.004121 -76.453816 in, and Mary j olted. Mrs. B. read\nthem a lesjou. It is ttnfo 'tusuite that\nYerringtou was not present to take\nnotes of tho address then made. She\npictured tho sin of tho proceeding the\ndisease which might como to tho chil-\ndren from being turned out of bed the\npossibility (hat such a yell uttered In a\nquiet household might have turned her\nhair white "and," said she In conclu-\nsion, "Mary, never do such a thing\nagain. What would havo been your\nfeelings if, in coming down stairs hasti-\nly, Miss Mary Jane had fallen and re-\nmained n cripple for life?"\nMary laid lived in sixteen ditreicnt\nfamilies each year blnce her sojourn in\nBo3ton, and ten years having passed\nsince she stepped ashoro from tho ship,\nher acquaintance with milkmen, grocer\nboys, and city dirtmen was somowhat\n Never before hud sho been\nso upbraided font simple yell; though\nshe said nothing to Mrs. B. (aware, no\nlimbt, of tho folly of such a proceeding),\nshe at onco gavo Jano to understand\nthat the next day sho should givo Mrs.\nB. " warning," for sho had nover lived\nmoro than a week with a nervous fami-\nly, and never would.\nAt ten o'clock tho two girls ascended\nto their room, leaving Mrs. U. still en-\ngaged in her book, and as the clock\nstruck eleven, that worthy woman rub\nbed her eyes and started up, evidently\nsurprised that she was not In bed. Sho\napproached tho window, and pulling\nup tho curtain, gazed out. It was u\nbright, clear, cold night, tho first of\nthose starry nights which wo havo in\nAutumn, and which are peculiarly at\ntractive if one is
0c6e4e114ee21a3a7053f05d556af72c THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.8784152689234 39.369864 -121.105448 A Wonderful Clock.—The Cl6ck in the\ntower of the Cathedral at Strasbourgh, is\nnot only a monster in size, but is the most\nwonderful piece of mechanism in the world.\nIt is TOO feet high, 30 feet wide, and 15 feet\ndeep. About 20 feet from the bottom, is the\ndial, on each side of which is a cherub, hold-\ning a small mallet in his band, while over\nthe dial is a little bell. The cherub on the\nleft strikes the first quarter, and that on the\nright the second quarter. Fifty-five feet\nabove the dial, is a colossal figure of Time,\nwith a bell in his left brand, and a scythe in\nbis right. A figure of a young man in front\nstrikes a third quarter on the bell in Times\nleft hand, and then turns and glides around\nbehind Time, when out comes an old man\nwith aliiallet, and places himself in front of\nthe great reaper. When the hour of twelve\n. ar rives, the old man deliberately \nwith much power, twelve times on the bell.\nHe also then glides behind Time, and the\nyoung man again comes out and takes his\nposition, ready to do his duty when called\nupon by the machinery. As soon as the old\nman has struck twelve and disappeared,\nanother Set of machinery is put in motion,\nsome twelve feet higher up, where there is a\ncross with the image of Christ upon it. The\ninstant twelve is struck, a figure of one of\nthe Apostles walks out from behind, comes\n•in front, turns facing the cross, bows, and\nwalks around to his place. This is repeated\nby all the twelve Apostles, of life-size. As\nthe last appears, au enormous cock, perched\nbn the pinnacle of the clock, slowly flaps\nhis wings, stretches forth his neck, and crows\nthree times, so loud as to be heard outside\nof the Church to some distance, and with\nlife-like naturalness. Then, between the\nquarters and the hours, ail is again as still as\n'death.
38a7f674875cd4b45644944a25bb4ac0 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.1653005148248 41.004121 -76.453816 Mr. J .T., Reading, Pa:\nMy Dear Sir Your favor of tho 20th\nInst., Isjust received in reforenco to tho\nadmission of colored children into tho\npublic schools of our city, nnd contain-\ning a copy ofyourremarksatn meeting\nheld by your colored citizens. I will\nforward your remarks to Washington us\nrequested, and I think you need havo\nno fears of removal. I um forming no\nopinion ust now on thd question, but\nthink Mr. Sumner's bill will settlo tho\nwholo matter. A great deal of my timo\ntho past season has been occupied in\npreparing a newaud enlarged cdltlonof\n"What I Know about Farmlng,"a most\nexcellent aud serviceable book, which I\nthink yon ought to havo. (I will send\nyou a copy, postngo prepaid, on receipt\nof price: Si, 50) As tho season Is\nadvanced and has kept mo lu tho houso\nn great deal, I have been trying to better\nthe condition of our people by endeavor-\ning to make improvements in cooking.\nFor somo years I have found that\ndoughnuts Ho too heavy on my stomach,\nwhich my physicians attrlbuto to tho fat\nIn which they arc fried. tell mo\nthat a doughnut contains about eight\ntimes as much fat as Is consistent with a\ndoughnut. To overcomothls dlfllculty,I\nhavo gono to cousldorablo philosophical\nresearch. By using only ono eighth of\ntho usual amount of fat for frying them,\nMrs. Greeley assurod mo the doughnuts\nwould burn. By using eight times as\nmuch Hour I would havo just eight\ntimes as many doughnuts as I wnnted.\nI therefore determined touso eighttlmes\ntho usual quantity of sots. Mrs. G.\nmixed up tho batter in lho bread bowl,\nnnu Having matlo most exact propor-\ntions, I put In oilo pint of sots. Tho\nnext morning, on entering tho kitchen,\nwo found that our batch of douehnuts\nhad risen about ninety degrees abovo\nour highest expectations, and the tido\nwas still rising. Mrs. G. heated tho\nlard whilo I tried to stir down tho bat-\nter, but all to no use. I poured in somo\nfat, but it only spritzed and crackled,\nand I was mortified to find my experi-\nment a failuro as tho doughnuts would\nnot stick together. Too much sots in a\ndoughnut is worse than CnrlSchurzln\na caucus.
50c037f0d80340a41a7e1a02c53fafd9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 Commercial and Financial*\nTX .rr^.n".-..'\nProspects of the Soger Market.\nFmm tM Tribunt qf Tuuday.\nThe week opens upon'on easy money\nmarket, with rates on call at 5@0 pei\nsent," but with an uneasy feeling In the\nnlnds of the. people, aa well as witli.tbi\nPanics and bankers having large wester:\niccounts, as to what Is to be thecondltloi\njf the money marker as soon as there U\ni -loader call for money from the west h\nnovo,the crop*. The President of one o\n>ur strongest banks Inlormed us this morn\nhg that last week he sent to the wes\nibout $60,000 a day; and bankers in Oht\nsago write blm,'"If there, is an nctivi\nnovoment in 'wheat, they will be imme\nUately in' want of currency. and thi\nnonoy market'there will be tight; aw\nher will atooco beobliged to draw out al\n fundB east to accommodate rprodaci\nlayers' at home." 'One ot the most promt\nlent bankers of Wall-st. and a gentleman\n>1 conservative.views la financial matten\nold to ua this morning, "Mr. Boutwcll hoi\ntin hi* power, -with' hit'160,000,000 a\n[old and his $10,000,000 of currency, t<\nc«ep thomoney market,: noti.only of thii\nilty, butof the -whole' country, in a verj\nssy condition this Fall. He has only ti\nelfalittle more gold, and then Increast\nome $5,000,000 or more of hl> purchase!\nif bonds thu monthTsnd from $5,000,0Q(\no$ld,000,000 next month, asthe bnslnes\nlemondB may requlre. and the banken\nviil feel confldoneo iir the sitratioo, ant!\nvould discount business'Diaper with i\nenseof satety in ttie 1 future.'1..The $3,'\n100,000 of. bonds, ajreafly taken: sby! tiu\niocrotary above the tumi named In hit\nidvcrtisement this month;baa prodocec\niie best of fueling, and made money east
291c3261f9161cdd48f0f525df9bffea THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.0534246258244 37.451159 -86.90916 meetings, all Democratic and Trustee\nmeetings, sometimes a called meeting at\nthe courthouse: and when none of these\nare available, he has a lot of new goods\nto open that night, so that it is oftener 12\no'clock than 11 before he gets home; and\nhis poor little coward of a wife, who had\nsat up and nodded in her chair as long as\nehe could, waiting for him, and had at\nlast gone to bed, and turned and shivered\nand shivered and turned, with cold and\nfear, hears him come home just as she has\nfallen into an uneasy sleep, and has to\ncrawl out and unlock the door. She is\nonly human not a model at all and as\nshe crawls back in bed she says:\n"Oh, husband, I do wish there were no\nmeetings to keep you out so latel I'm\nafraid to go to bed before you come home.\nAnd I do get to tired sitting up! When I\ngo to bed I can't keep warm, and I so\nrestless and uneasy I can't sleep."\n"Well, what in the world are you such\na little goose for? Why don't you put on\na good lire, and lay the kindling ready for\nmorning, and go to bed?"\nOf course that little woman has to make\ntwo fires in the morning, for that model\nhusband "couldn't sleep last night, and\nfeels too badly to get up."\nBut making two fires is not the worst\nof it. By the time she gets the ashes out\nof the grate and the kindling lighted, the\nmodel husband flings himself out of bed\nin a pet with "I don't know who iu\nthe world could sleep with such a racket!\nIt's mad, is It, because It had to make a\nfire once in two months?\nIt was only shame and compunction of\nsoul, reader, that caused that model hus\nband, that bitter morning, to lorget that\nhe was a gentleman and his wife a woman\nwhen he called her "It" in his most tan- -
de7b2fcdbf646d86eb80e1008dad92e8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0123287354136 41.681744 -72.788147 People who show Irreverence in\nchurch were severely flayed last eve-\nning at the South Congregational\nchursh by Rev, Dr. George W. C .\nHill who told approximately 1,000\npeople, referring especially tp young\nfolks, that those who did not con-\nduct themselves In church with due\nregard to the sacredness of their sur-\nroundings would be invited to leave.\nThe incident came, it is though,\nas the climax to a situation which\ndeveloped unexpected several weeks\nago, when during a moving picture\nservice which contained a number\nof thrills, small groups of young\nfolks in several sections of the\nchurch left their enthusiasm run\naway, with their judgement and\nheartily applauded tho picture, as is\ndone by certain types of people In\nthe movies. There also has been\nspme complaint of people develop-\ning the habit of to leave\nbefore the close of the program.\nIn the South church the evening\nservice Includes several hymns,\nBible reading, and a sermon before\nthe picture. The sermon is adapted\nto the picture, which usually points\nout a moral and the object Of the\nmoving picture Is simply to supple-\nment the' sermon. Following the\nshowing of the picture there are\nseveral hymns and the benediction\nand some people have shown a dis-\nposition to leave before the closing\nceremonies. This has been confined\nto a small group of individuals and\nwhile the congregation as a whole\nhas been but Blightly disturbed, the\ntendeticy on the part of few to get\nInto theso habits has brought down\nthe wrath of the church officials.\nDr. Hill's rebuke last night was the\nsubject of much favorable comment\nfollowing the service.
3047c2a9943190acaa19f00228f3b6a0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.828767091578 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described real estate, viz:\nAll that certain farm, plantation or\ntract of land with the buildings thereon\nerected situate In Christiana hundred,\ncounty and State aforesaid and more par­\nticularly bounded and described as fol­\nlows. to wit:\nBeginning at a point in the middle or\ntho public road leading from Newport to\nthe Wilmington and Kennett Turnpike\nroad being also a corner of lands belong­\ning to the estate of James H. Hoffecker;\nthence by said lands south seventy-two\ndegrees and thirty-eight minutes east\ntwenty two hundred and Ulnety-flve feet\nlo a corner stone; thence still by said\nlands north twenty-seven degrees and\nlifly-four minutes east seven hundred\nand fifty-four feet to a corner of lands\nnow or formerly of Henry C. White;\nthence by said Whites land South forty-\nfive degrees four minutes cost sixteen\nhundred and fifty-six feet to a point In\nth© westerly line of the right of way of\nthe Wilmington and Northern Railroad;\nthence thereby In a southerly direction\nfour hundred and seventy-five feet to a\ncorner of Hinds of Aaron K. Woodward;\nthence by said lands south forty-five de­\ngrees and eight minutes west nine hun­\ndred and forty feet to the middle of the\npublic road leading from Brandywine\nSprings to Wilmington; thence by the\nmiddle of said public road the following\ncourses and distances; south eighty-two\ndegrees and thirty six minutes west one\nhundred and fifty-three feet south seven­\nty-six degrees and thirty-four minutes\nwest five hundred and seventy-eight feet\nto a corner: thence north seventy-three\ndegrees and ten minutes west fifteen hun­\ndred and sixty-three feet to another cor-
adac6e8a2f6100b24c87486725b16034 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.842465721715 38.951883 -92.333737 exchange andrnAe it possible for Am-\nerica to sell her agricultural and manu-\nfactured products in foreign markets\nagain It would mean a revival of husi\nncss and an end of unemployment Also\nIt would mean that the European coun-\ntries which owe America billions of dol-\nlars would be able to begin paments on\ntheir war debt and interest The receipt\nof a lialf billion dollars of interest alone\nfiom Europe would mean an immediate\ncasing of the burden on the merican\ntaxpayer Dchind the urge for limitation\nof armament are practical and material\nreasons as well as idealistic conceptions\nMUST RIDUCE MONEY BlMJEN\nBut how can armament be limited\nlliis correspondent has canvassed the\nhighest army and naw officials They\ntails n terms of rclativit If America\nceases building so man ships so shall\ntlic others If America gives up many\nfortifications 0 shall the others And so\non But the navy men admit that in the\nend the proportion of strength between\nthe large owers will remain the same\nThey ee no other way out of it The\nconcede the nccc sit for a reduction of\nthe financial burden but the zealously\nmsil on holdrng the United Slates as\nthe second naval power if not the first\nUndoubtedly British polic will be the\nsame Japan would be prevented from\ncatching up with America or passing the\nUnted Stales and menacing the British\nscapowrr if such a stupendous job could\nreal be borne b Japanese leeople which\nis to be doubted The Japanese however\nwould be checked America and England\nwould stand still and monc would be\nsaved Thais about as concrete a pro ¬\ngram as one hears discussed in Washing-\nton
17961c938a47a2195e7c3be28fa29c45 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 of their provisions, and export a yearly\ndiminishing quantity of furs. Th«\ncountry in a frozen wilderness, bettei\nknown to Artie explorers and wbalerf\nthan to most other men, and probablj\nof no possible value to any men bui\nthem, the semi-civilized tribes that sup\nport existence there, and the Russiac\nsettlers who trade with them. The ter\nritory is larger than eight States likt\nNew York would be, its area beinj\n31*1,000 square miles. What we want\nit, unless to take a solitude and call I\nSeward, by erecting it into a Territory\nwe do not know, but we can buy th<\nprivilege ot flying the stars and stripet\nover a colony, and a worthless colony\nby paying seven millions of dollars foi\nit. This we suppose Congress will not do\nThere is no good reason for doing it\nand several good reasons for not doing\nit. We do not want far-distant, de.\ntached nor ice and snow ter\nritories, nor Esquimaux fellow-citizens\nnor Mount Saint Elias, and there fc\nnothing else to be had from Alaska anc\nBarrow's Point, so far as we are in\nformed. The Czar's intenLion9. usiti*\nfrom bis design of getting the sever\nmillions iu gold, are doubtful. It maj\nbe tbat be thinks New Archangel no\nworth the powder and shot be maj\nhave to expend in its defense in case o\na new Eastern war. It may be that ht\nwants to impress Europe with the idea\nof the closeness of friendship that mus\nexist between Russia and a country foi\nwhose sake Russia cuts off a limb. Bu\nwith all these considerations we hav«\nno concern. We are to consider ou:\nown interests, say yes or no to Mr\nSeward's chimerical project of saddliu]\nus with a frozen desert of a colony.am\nwe imagine there will belittledidicultj\nin choosing the right answer.
2e103d4c7a87678a22e9014b80d9d313 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.9931506532216 58.275556 -134.3925 Philadelphia, via the Panama canal.\nCapt. Fred Warner, of the steamer\nAlameda, will be master of the Ben\nnington, and C. B . McMullen, of the\nsteamer Dora, will be master of the\nsteamer Burlington during their voy¬\nages to this coast. Sam Codlic, chief\nengineer of the freighter Edith, will\nhave charge of engine room of the Beo-\nnington and Roy Bruce, of the steamer\nDolphin, will be in charge of the engine\nrooms of the Burlington. The steamer\nBennington will be kuown as the\nValdez aud the steamer Burlington as\nthe Juneau when they steam from\nPhiladelphia for Seattle.\nThe report of the department of com\nmerce shows that during the past sea¬\nson forty-six aids to navigation were\nplaced in Alaskan waters and five more\nare contemplated before the cessation\nof work for the winter. In addition\ngood progress was made on the new\nliifht and fog signal station at Cape\nSt. Elias, on Kayak island, which will\nbe placed in commission season.\nFlashing acetylene lights were placed\nat the following places: Lewis reef,\nToogass narrows; Narrow point and\nMiddle point, Clarence strait; Point\nAlexander, Wrangell strait; Marmion\nisland and Sheep creek, Gastineau\nchannel; Clear creek, Barlow island;\nNaked island, Little island and Low\npoiot, Lyun canal; Kingsmill point,\nPoint Augusta, Hawk inlet entrauce\nand Hawk inlet east shoal, Chatham\nstrait; Otstoia island and McClellan\nrock, Peril strait; Grey cliff, Anchor\npoint, East forelands, East Chugacb,\nFlat island and Race point, Cook inlet,\nand Point Romanoff, Norton sound.\nAn electric light wa9 placed at Sitka\nharbor, a float light on Blunt point\nreef in Wrangell strait; an oil lens\nlantern at Tenakee, in Chatham strait:\npost light at Beck island, in Clarence\nstrait, Rose inlet, in Tvelak strait, and\nAkutan harbor, in the Aleutian islands;\nbeacons on the Fish creek dolphin, in\nTongass narrows; False Point Retreat,\nin Lynu caual; Deep Bay entrauce, at\nPeril strait, and Priest rock, in lrnal .\naska bay.
0cb5159eb35cb84a465e42ffda1e5105 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1884.1024589847702 39.743941 -84.63662 mortgage is uncancelled and unsatisfi-\ned of record; that said Alexander Por\nter in his lifetime on the 13th day of\nNovember, A. D. 1870, executed and\ndelivered to said Charles N. Ide, dofcu- -\ndan , in consideration of the si m of\n$1500.00 to him paid by said Ida her\ncertain mortgage deed and thereby\nconveyed to said Ide all the interest of\nsaid Alexander Porter in said premi\nses; that said mortgage deed was con-\nditioned for the payment of said sum\nof $1500,00 in two rears from the date\nthereof with interest and the interest\npayable annually ; that -- aid mortgage\nwas filed with said Recorder for record\non the 1st day of July, A. D. 18S0, at\nJU o clock, a. m . and was afterwards\nby said Recorder duly recorded in\nmortgage record Xo. 18 , on page 2:Hi,\naim mac sam mortgage remains un\ncancelled of record; that said mort\ngages are a lein upon bat the one un- -\nuiviueu one nan part 01 sam real es-\ntate owned by Alexander Porter his\nlifetime: that said Alexander Porter\nwas at the time of the exeCution of\npaid moitgages and at his death seized\nin fee simple of and was the owner of\nbut one undivided one half part of s:iid\npremises; that said Alexander Porter\nby his last will and testament directed\nhis said interest in said real estate to\nbe sold by his said executor and the\nproceeds to be equally divided among\nhis heirs at law ; that said James B.\nPorter, Mary Porter, Helen Swing,\nMary Ricker, Emma McMillan, Mary\nMcMillan, Sadie Holmes, Elizabeth\nHolmes aud Ida Holmes, Geo. Cooper,\nAlexander Cooper, Mary Cooper ami\nMartha Cooper and James Holmes de-\nfendants, are each and all heirs at law\nof said decedent and are ti e only heirs\nat law of said decedent; that plaintiff\ndesires to hold his said interest in said\npremises in severalty ; that said prem-\nises can not be divided by metes and\nbounds among said several parties\nowning the same as herein alleged,\nwithout manifest injury lo the value of\nthe same.
27a652d611efe9a6405cdf6d1758fcce THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.546575310756 37.561813 -75.84108 organize a good Sabbath School there.\nThey have been, in the post, so divided in\nsentiment, that a good scholar has been\napparently out of the question, but it is\nhoped they are about to lay aside their\nchildlHh differences, and unito in that very\nprofitable enterprise tho Sabbath School.\nIt seems to be more and more the desire of\nthe people to so Instruct our youth as that\nthey may grow up moral and christian, as\nwell as learned men and women. No de-\nsire can be more commendable than this\nbecause on the intellectual, moral and\nchristian training of our children, depend\ntheir present and eternal wclfure, as well\nas tho prosperity and perpetuity of the Re-\npublic. In addition to the means already\nmentionod for carrying on the great work\nof Reform, is on institution called "The\nReading Circle," the direction of the\nSooiety of Frionds. The Circle meets gen-\nerally every Sabbath afternoon, from house\nto house, wherever it is acceptable to the\nfamily; and the object is, if I understand\nit, to disseminate, more thoroughly, moral\nand religious truths among the people.\nMay the glorious work gy swiftly on, until\nthe race shall stand up disenthralled, re\njuvenated, redeemed.\nIn conclusion, Mr. Editor, I am in favor\nof lion. R. W . Clarko for Representative,\nand I believe be is almost the only man\nthat would be at this juncture acceptable\nto the people of tins Tp., for that high\ntrust. We know something about him up\nthis way, notwithstanding he hails from\nthe farther corner of the District. We\nmake strict inquiry about the character of\nour publio men, nnd, generally, the first\nquestion Is this :
1dde1b63bb82ac65afd53547fc57cb7b THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.6506848997972 46.601557 -120.510842 Friday morning about eight o'clock a\nwoman was driving along the Quince\nroad upon a load of hay when the horses\nsuddenly became frightened at an object\nnot veiy far from the eHst side of the\nroad. Upon close examination from her\nposition on the hay, the woman discov-\nered the body of a voting man stiff and\ncold in death. The authorities were\nsoon notified and in a short time the\ncoroner and officials were on the scene\nwhere the body was first found. A pis-\ntol wound in the right breast at once\nshowed the cause of death. A spot on the\neast side of the road about two feet wide\nand three feet Long would indicate that\nhe had been brought to the place in a\nvehicle of some kind, grabbed by the\nshoulders and pulled out, his legs and\nfeet making imprint in the dust of\nthe road and that he was then hurriedly\ndragged to the spot where his body was\ndiscovered about HO feet from the road.\nIll* arms were thrown back at right\nangles from his body and in the right\nhand was found a pistol, ,'lB calibre, with\none chamber empty and one cartridge\nexploded. From the position in which\nthe pistol was laying in his hand one\nwould infer that it had been put there\nby some party or parties evidently de-\nsiring to leave the impression of self de-\nstruction. The murderer was notsmooth.\nThe pistol lay loosely in the murdered\nman's hand and his linger did not grip\nthe trigger which is usual in cases of\nsuicide. On the person of the man was 1\nfound a memorandum book in which were\nwritten tiie worda, "Monlton Camden,'\nArkansas.
02f3eff68267a4a324ef0cbd7886f960 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.6479451737696 42.217817 -85.891125 Tho explosion of fire damp in the\ncoal shaft, which occurred on Monday\nmorning, is another of those horrible\ncalamities which has taken place in\nthat section recently. It is not be-\nlieved that any men at work in the\nmine will bo recovered alive. Entering\nthe chamber in which the explosion oc-\ncurred, a fall rock was first found,\nwhich lay partly upon the car, com-\npletely blocking up one side, and leav-\ning space on the other side just suff-\nicient for a man to force himself\nthrough. Some distance further in\nthere was another tall which complete-\nly filled the passage, and behind this\nthe men are walled so completely that\nit took hours of the most persistent la-\nbor to reach them. Volunteers went to\nwork to get around this fallen rock, so\nthat they could reach the entrenched\nminers, the density of the black\ndamp prevented them from prosecuting\ntheir work with full etl'ect. They were\nbrought up at short intervals in an ex-\nhausted condition, ami their places im-\nmediately supplied by other volunteers.\nThose assuming control have ordered\nthe pumps reversed. Water has been\nforced down the shaft, thus helping to\nincrease the volume of pure air and ex -j e- l\nthe foul. This mine has been near-\nly exhausted, and was known to have\nbeen filled with black damp, and yet it\nhas been constantly worked since the\nconclusion of the strike, although not\nto its full capacity. Twelve feet of gas\nwas found just oil the gangway, which\nhas been traversed all day by explorers\nwith naked lights, and the merest acci-\ndent wculd have caused another and\nworse explosion, involving the loss of at\nleast f)0 lives.
11e3f9a5d5b64e21bae1428f05a4721f THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.2589040778792 39.743941 -84.63662 a lonsr and rugged road to travel be\nfore reaching specie payment. The\nbondholding shylocks have not yet\ntaken their pound of flesh. Wages\nwill still go lower and all the pro\nducts of labor, while the bonded in\ndebtedness of the government and\nthe niortsase indebtedness of the\npeople are correspondingly increas\ned, with every turn of the wheel that\nis crushing the people into the dust,\nThe burden of taxes is increased\nupon those having property, by eve\nry bankrupt who is dropped from\nthe list. If the government and Ihe\npeople were free Iroradebt, it would\nmatter but little as to what basis\nupon which prices and values may\nbe adjusted. But with the curtailed\nfacilities of the people with which to\npay, and the.decrease in the number\nof persons subject to taxation, with\nthe indebtedness both individual and\nnational remaining unreduced with\nthe rates of interest increased with\nevery curtailment of th volume of\nthe currency, let who dares con\ntrovert the proposition that we are\non the verge of impending bankrupt-\ncy and universal ruin; We, there\nfore, advise our readers who are not\nalready bankrupt, to economize in all\ndirections. If you are in debt, has\nten to get out, even if it becomes\nnecessary to sacrifice property and\nthe comforts of life to do it If your\nproperty must be sold at a sacrifice,\nit will still go lower if you hold it\nIf the interest you have been obliged\nto pay naa Deen a grievous burden in\ntne pastj it w;u become a greater in\nti, future, to crush vou to the earth.\nTnis may not e a cheerful picture\nfnr vml to contemplate, but It is bet\nter to know the truth and be prepar\ned for the worst, than to be deceived\nby the delusive promises of better\ntimes, and at last when powerless to\nprevent it, be driven into bankruptcy\nby the Sheriff, the
0306cb77aba40b3db91c21d7d783728d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1889.0808218860984 42.217817 -85.891125 ington would mis tho female lobbyist.\nShe is no more. True, Congress is not\nwithout its lady .ltors intoreted In legis-\nlation. Mrs. J. Kllen Foster, for Instarrce,\nmude tho argument beforo tho Senate Com-\nmittee on tho District of Columbia in favor\nof prohibition in the District this week, but\ntho only two women who nro recognized us\nlntoiested In Congressional affairs are Mrs.\nOon. Vurd Durnett, who is after un increase\nof iension. and Mrs. Charlotte Smith. Tho\nlatter is u chuructor. Sho puts Congres-\nsional ubnentees to hhamo by her attend-\nance on tho Hessinns, K.dn or shine, Mrs.\nSmith appears with hor hobby, which Is the\nsecuring of legislation for the working\nwomen. KepreHntutlvo W. K Scott will\nlong remember Mrs. Charlotte, for when ho\ncast a against her pet schema she\nkindly placed u choice bouquet of onious,\ncelery tops, cabbage leaves, und crab shells\non tho desk of tho member from Frio ns u\nmark of tho esteem In which sho he.ld him.\nFor this act command was given to tho\ndoorkeepers not to admit Mrs. Smith to tho\nliouso enl of tho CapitoL Thi ordor won\nnever enforced, and the festive Churlotto\nBtill buttoholes members who uro too court-\neous to rebuff her.\nIn tho gruvo und ponderous debate of the\nSenate, tho exciting scenes of the liouso und\ntho growing gaycty of society, there is no\nsign that timo presses on to tho end of an\nudministrution. President Cleveland was\nnever more courteously dignillod, nor his\nwifo more charmingly lovely thuti ut the\nla-- t
24d3a1f289cbeb0a05197be978dc36d3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.683561612126 40.063962 -80.720915 whoso meetings are Wmg held at Bismarck\nGrove, a beautiful.pariuowned by the\nKansas Pacific Railroad Coinimny. JMio\nground was formerly patented to Rock-a -\ntoo-wha, one of the Chiefs of. th© Dela¬\nware Indians. It was sold by him to ben-\nntor *Jim Lane mid otliors, us i am in¬\nformed. ami finally passed into tlio bands\nof tlic K. 1'. Koad. Speaking of tho Kau¬\nnas exhibit at tho Centennial reminds me\nforcibly of the similarity of enterprise ex¬\nhibited by Kansas people at this tomper-\naneo gathering. Every thing that human\nforesight could have dircctod, to make tlio\nmeetings pleasant, profitable and.Intorest-.\ning, has been done. No half-way work\n, was allowed,and when moncwHui wanted,\nthopooolo got right into their pockets and\nforked it out. Every newspaper man in\nAmerica ought to give Manual a lift; for\nher people have a true appreciation of the\nijowor of the printing press. She has some¬\nthing to advertise-she advertises it freely\nand honestly, and she eheerfuUy pavs the\nbill. In. the grand to which 1 have\nreferred, amonster stand lias been erected,\nand high above all are tli<i words 'Kansas\n- Welcome." JJelow are two, hands in\nfraternal greeting. This, Stan, is capable\nof holding five hundred peprle, while in\nfrotit are seats for thousands. I saiu that\nabove all on th'4 stand wore tho words -\n"Kansas.Welcomo;" that'sa mistake; for\nabove all and around all is tho\ntinir of our country; abdve all and\nentwined with all is the star spanglod\nbanner. Everywhere you Jgm_ .jfQji\nseo tho stiiis, and' stripe*.,rBcleoitie,\nandtcmpornnccandothermottoe9.TlieVros-\nident of the society, and upon whom rests\nthe care of this great undertaking, is Co .\nJohn P. St. John, of Olatlio, the ltepubli-\ncan nominee forGovornor of, Kansas. It\nsouaded fnnny to my West \\ ireinia eats\nto hear the nominee of a political party lose\nhis character of a politician And rtand tin\nboldly for prohibition. Jnstthink olHUt'll\na thing in our State, will you? .Jnst think\nof a State Convention (I refer to the ono\n.1
269224a95324aa0e6271daa95532559d THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.554794488838 40.419757 -77.187146 " Everyone was greatly astonished, for\nWilliams was highly honored,and many\nthought there must be some mistake.\nMr. Colby was well known and honored\nalso for his truth and sterling worth.\nHe would bring bis own son to justice\nif be had done wrong, bo of course there\nwas great excitement about it.\n" About this tlme,a young man living\nin our town had gone out to the little\nplace in Missouri where Harry was sup-\nposed to be, on a visit to relatives, and\nreturned about the time the forgery was\ncommitted, and upon being questioned\nby Mrs. Colby concerning Harry, said\nthat he could hear of no one of that\nname around there; there was no cattle\nbeing fed there ; that it was as poor a\ncountry as ever he saw.\n" Here was another surprise and\nmystery. Why should Harry wank to\ndeceive them so ? They wrote to. him\nabout it, but received no answer, and\nagain, and still no reply. Williams\nbeing in jail during the time, was\nwaiting for Court to convene ; so Mr.\nColby grew bo uneasy that hired a\ndetective to go out and hunt Harry up.\nHis wife was so troubled and anxious\nthat she could neither eat nor sleep : . the\nsale did not go off as advertised, and the\nwhole family were in grief.\n" Cora was almost Inconsolable at\nfirst, but, putting many little things to-\ngether that had not been noticed at the\ntime, she was forced to believe some-\nthing was wrong with Harry She be-\nlieved he had died, and Williams, in or-\nder to keep the one thousand, had con-\ncealed his death. All this she kept to\nherself, and urged her father to send\nsome one to hunt him up; but yet they\nreceived letters all the time from him,\nand surely he must have been at P ,\nin Missouri, for there were letters direct-\nly from him. So reasoned Mr. Colby.\n"The detective was a very shrewd\nman, and had his own views about the\nmatter ; he oalled for all the letters re-\nceived from Harry, and, after reading\nthem over, took his departure, and in a\nshort time started for P
9deac3db20b5f3f3fe8e8143a4a5b3ca THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.6068492833588 40.618676 -80.577293 American Federation of Labor which would com­\npel the Labor Board to certify a craft union as a\negitimate bargaining unit when a majority of its\nmembers so voted. The amendment is aimed at\nthe present power of the board to designate what­\never bargaining unit it chooses, whether craft,\nplant or employer unit—a power which it has used\nalmost invariably, and most conspicuously in the\ncase of the Pacific Coast longshoremen, to boost\nthe C. I. O. type of organization over that of the\nA. F . of L. The amendment would implement the\nconfessed object of the Wagner act, which is to\npermit workers to bargain collectively through\nrepresentatives of their own choosing as distinct\nfrom those chosen for them by the Labor Board\nunder the political pressure exerted by Lewis. But\nMr. Murray says it would break up the industrial\nunions in favor of the various crafts and "conflict\nwith the democratic principle of majority rule."\nWhat it would break up is simply the conspir­\nacy that has existed between the Labor Board and\nthe C. I . O . to promote the latter's domination of\nlabor. Perhaps under modern conditions of pro­\nduction the industrial union is theoretically the\nmore logical form of organization. Certainly, in\nthe mass industries, where the what­\never his craft, is little more than a cog in the ma­\nchine, the argument for organization along indus­\ntrial lines seems conclusive. But even here hu­\nman nature interposes with its obdurate desire\nfor differentiation. All men, including workmen,\nare proud of their individual skill, and the more\nspecialized it is the prouder they are of it. Thus,\nwhen they can claim a craft as their own they\nmuch prefer to be identified with it, and to or­\nganize and fight for it, than to submerge them­\nselves without distinction in a vast army of op­\neratives. Call this snobbery if you wish; it is,\nnone the less, an ingrained human trait so tough\nthat any attempt, bureaucratic or other, to break\nit down must result in either defeat or tyranny.\nThat such an attempt is at the bottom of the\nLewis-Labor Board partnership who can doubt?\nMr. Murray evidently considers this attempt\na contribution to democracy. But which is the\nmore democratic—to recognize and safeguard the\nright of workers who want to organize and bar­\ngain by crafts to do so, or, by an arbitrary se­\nlection of the bargaining unit, to force upon them\nrepresentatives without interest in, or very pos­\nsibly hostile to, their particular demands and prob­\nlems?
f9c1c5ba4d776dfed3fcd504c3f51a45 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0315068176053 39.290882 -76.610759 lie, induces me to state that my Panacea has been\ncounterfeited to a considerable extent, and that large\nquantities of it hate been sold illNew York, Philadel\nphia, and Pittsburg. The bottle* containing Ute tnedt\nciuc, as wellas the stereotyped hills which cover each\nbottle, has been so neatly and closely copied by those\nengaged in counterfeiting them, that it is difficult to do\nteet them, and which indeed can alone be done I v\ncritical examination. As to the spurious Panacea, it is\na most wretched and deleterious compound, ealculat\ned to do, as it doubtless has dona, great injur to the\nconstitutions of those who may lie so unfoiMuate as to\nuse it. IIthere be any tiling within the range of human\naction more immoral or wicked than another, it is\nwhere an unprincipled being jeopards the health and\nlives uf his fellow creatures, as in the present instance,\nior filthy lucre, palms ii|ioiithem as a grnutns medi-\ncine oI universal reputation for its sanative quality, a\nmost villainous counterfeit, whose constituent proper-\nties, instead of possessing the power of curing, trial oniy\nto deceive and blight the hones of the invalid, if not I'd\nmain ntli to destroy Ills health.\nHaving discovered the author and agents in this inju\nrious fraud upon the public, as well as upon my own in-\nlerests and being influenced by a sincere desire to pu\nnisli the aggression of the former, and throw the pano\nply of protection around the latter,! caused some weeks\nsince stuts to he instituted inthe U. States Court tot\nPhiladelphia, against the parties concerned in this net's\nnous affair; regular reports of which when adjudicated,\nwill be published for the public information, and to wart\nthe unprincipled against the danger of depredating upon\nthe rightof others, and of pcrilug human health.\n?12 4,
ae9e135f296fe00bca5023d9f7ae7768 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.009589009386 39.290882 -76.610759 'Perhaps not; so listen. A young man, twen-\nty-eight years of age, dark complexion, good fi-\ngure, and agreeable countenance, well educated,\nand possessing qualities which he flatters him-\nself would assure the happiness of any lady who\nmay enjoy an incemc oi not more than eight\nthousand francs, desires to enter the state of\nmatriinsny as early as possible. Youth and\nbeauty are not of so much value in his estima-\ntion as those moral and sterling qualities (hat\nform the basis of domestic happiness, yet he\nwould rather that the lady should not exceed his\nown age, nor would he unite himself to a wo-\nman repulsively ugly- Address (between noon\nand four P. M.) to M. Alfred Couvraud, 11\nRue d'Angouleme.'\n' Are these really the words?' said Madame\nSouville; laughing in turn!'\n'Read for yourself.'\nMadame took the paper, and looked over the\nparagraph, 'it is too absurd,'she said.\n'He is some ninny,' added Lucy, 'some igno-\nrant, stupid lout. '\n'W ho thinks himself an accomplished gentle-\nman,' continued Madame.\n' ltis carrying self conceit rather too far, ob-\nserved the lively young widow, 'such a fellow\nought to be punished; he wants a lessen. Sup-\npose we give him one!'\n'And how."\n'Send for him here, and laugh at him. He\nmust be a fit subject for mirth, I am sure!'\n'Oh, you jest.'\n'No, indeed, I do not!'\n'But what purpose would it answer ?'\n'Why, we are already weary of this gloomy\nday, and it is not yet half gone.'\n'Well, but reflect,my dear Lucy; observances,\nyou know,'
2c5894ccc0289840c071dca1d8fb31f3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.850684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 mining n wmglLHU iuiui, Ulilt UIU OHICC'TO 01\nhe company havo no hesitancy in making\nlie thing clear. The only matter in which\nheir vision is objured is to the date of the\nransfer of the company to the great Amurcan\nabsorber.Jhy Gould.' v a r\nThe name of the company is, in fact, an\n!2cplanation of ita workluya," for the present\netter delivery system .of the cities is to be\nitill/.ed, and, to a very largo extent, is to'\niccupy the present messenger service of\nlie telegraph companies. The Cleveland\nnercnant who wishes to address his distant\n:orresponflent\\vritcs his inessuge, say ol a\nKindred word/!, puts it into an unsealed\nnvelope, puts u one cent stamp upon it,\nind addresses it to this oflice of the Postal\nL'elegraph." Company,' and deposits it\nH ^the nearest, letterbox. / The letter\na,"" of" delivered, "tho Contents\nit once dispatched and delivered the same\n, v a v by the 1'ostoflice Department. Theie\ns a larger consumption of time than by\n;hc Western Union, but us it is designed\n;o occupy an intermediate place between\n;hc post and telegraph, it is observed that\nthe time of the railway of the letter is\niaved; which,' in fact, makes the Cleveland\nsender as near his Chicago correspondent\nits though he worn to send a letter to him at\nEast Cleveland. Ivor this message, of about\n125 words, without messenger service, the\nrates will not vary much from tiftceh cents,\nwhich, in most cases, will' be u reduction t\nfrom existing rates that will amply com-\npensate for tUe few hours' ixtra lime re-\nrjiiired in sendiug and delivering.\n,The working of this system as' detailed\nby'OHicerCampbell, who lias his
18ab71cd428b0d612f476d7a331e5550 THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1893.6452054477422 40.8 -96.667821 acreage this season. This is within\n40,000,000 bashels of last year's out-\nturn and just about an average of the\nprevious , three cropa The usual\nquantity of rye, buckwheat and bar-\nley will fie garnered.\nThe supply of hay (over 83,000 ,000\ntons) and other forage is abundant,\nthough mill feed and cottonseed meal\nmay be higher than last winter.\nThe wool clip is somewhat heavier\nthan last year. Serious reduction in\nthe supply of live stock is reflected in\nreduced arrivals at our domestio\nmarkets and decreased exports during\nthe past seven months, with a very\nfair tendency to values.\nThe American Agriculturist notes\nan increased domestio crop of sugar,\nbut a shortage in tha world's produc-\ntion of 300.0oO long tons of sugar; but\n"prices are more likely to be affected\nby changes in legislation than by\nchanges in production."\nPotatoes have the drouth and\nabout 165,000,000 bushels are looked\nfor slightly more than last ysar,\ncompared to 245,000 ,000 in the bounti-\nful crop of two years ago.\nReviewing the financial situation\nfrom the farmers' standpoint, the\nAmerican Agriculturist concludes that\n"the prospect for prices in the early\nfuture depends more upon the mone-\ntary situation than upon natural con-\nditions, all of which point to causes\nthat should result in higher prices."\nStocks abroad are not materially\nlarger than a year ago, so that the ex-\ncess of 5.000 ,000 bushels in the United\nStates stocks of old still leaves an in-\ndicated shortage in the bread crop of\nthe t world of 100,000,000 bushels of\nwheat This allows Russia as good a\ncrop as last year. The European rye\ncrop is hardly a fair average; oats are\nunder average and potatoes are In-\njured by arouth."
52e34518e058fd207780feea09accc15 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1906.4479451737698 46.601557 -120.510842 that their tires have only been pumped up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh no more than\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of thin, specially\nprepared fahricon the tread. That "Holding flack" sensation commonly felt when riding on asphalt\nor soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being\nsqueezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these\ntires is <>-- .. per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider\nof only $,; \\u25a0> per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received! We ship CO.D. on approval.\nVoi: do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented.\nWe will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price •4.55 per pair) if you send\nMM. CASH WITH OKDKK enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickel\nplated brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these metal\npuncture closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tires to be returned\nat OIK expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination.\nWe are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster.\nBanker. Express or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a pair of\nthese tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run taster, wear better, last longer and look\nfiner than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you willbe so well pleased\nthat when you want a bicycle you will give us you' order. We want you to send uS a small trial\norder at once, hence this remarkable tire offer.
2478d3476a7f2f721a0321a062fd177f WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1869.209589009386 40.827279 -83.281309 openings in the roof for it to escape\nthrough, and a continual draught of\nair irom the doors carries it upward,\nso that it is not so bad for the work\nmen as one would think. Besides.\nthey do not begin to blow until the\nsmoke is all burnt off.\n"There are five pots on each side\nof the furnace ; and you will see five\nmen m a row, blowing all at once\nwith the regularity of a file of sol\ndiers exercising. Each one gathers\nthirty or forty pounds of metal on\nhis pipe, which is very long and\nstrong. They stand on platforms\nto get room to swing the glass, as\nthey blow it. The five men begin\nto blow and swing altogether. Each\nblows a great globe of glass, which\nis stretched out gradually by the\nswinging motion into a cylinder, or\nroller, as it is called, five feet long\ninen trie nve rollers are swung up\ntowards the furnace holes, and five\nother soldiets spring forward with\ntheir guns which in this case are\niron bars, that they set upright un-\nder the five blowing pipes to sup\nport them while the rollers are being\nreheated in the necks of the pots.\n blowers blow in the necks of\npipes with all their might, then clap\ntueir tnumos over the holes to pre\nvent the air trom rushing out again\nin the meanwhile the end of the\nroller is softened, so that at last the\nair, forced in and expanded by the\nheat, bursts it outwards. The glass\nis men a cynnaer, opened at one\nend. It is whirled in the heat until\nthe edges become true, then brought\naway the hve iron supports drop\nping to the ground with a simulta\nneous clang. The cylinders are laid\non tables, where the imperfect sr her-ic- al\nend about the blowing pipe is\ncracked off from the rest by a stripe\not melted glass drawn around it.\nI he cylinder is then cracked from\nend to end on ooe side by means of\na red hot iron passed through it.\n"In the adjoining building is what\nis called the flattening oven. The\ncj'linders brought there are lifted on\nthe end of a lever, passed in thro ugh\na circular opening just large enong\nto admit them, and laid on some flat\ntening stones on the oven bottom\nwith the crack uppermost. The\noven bottom is circular, and it re\nvolves horizontal!'.
056b29d293f5157269809bc348a655be THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.9301369545915 42.217817 -85.891125 Washington, Dec. 2. The annual report'\nof Klihu Hoot, secretary of war, was made\npublic Friday. The first half Is devoted to\nthe operation of the army in the Philip-\npines, Cuba and Porto Uico. The report\nKlves a full history of the military opera-\ntions In the Philippines from August 12,\nIS'.k S , up to the present time. An Impor-\ntant feature of the report is a comprehen\nsive outline of a plan of government for\nl'orto Klco. It ls understood that Presi-\ndent McKinley ls In entire accord with Sec-\nretary Hoot on this question, and that the\nplan outlined by the secretary will be the\nidentical plan which the president will rec-\nommend to congress In his annual message,\n(o vern Mien t for l'orto ltlco.\nConcerning the plan of government pro-\nposed for Porto Hico, Secretary Hoot cites\n Paris treaty, which provides that con-\ngress shall determir. the civil rifclus and\npolitical status of the natives of the terri-\ntory ctded to this government. The scheme\noutlined includes a definite declaration by\ncongress of what American laws aro to be\nmade applicable to the Porto Rlcans, fol-\nlowing which it is recommended that a\nfederul Judiciary be established.\nThe form of insular government proposed\nprovides for the appointment of a governor\nby the president, to be confirmed by the\nsenate; the chief officers of state customary\nunder our system, and a legislative council\nto be composed of the chief officers of state\nand a minority selected from the people of\nthe Island by the president. All acts of the\ncouncil are to be subject to the veto power\nof the governor and to be passed over the\nveto by a two-thir-
5bfad18922f809f0c50c81028770d185 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.2671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 SEALED PROPOSALS WILL BE\nroceiycd by tho Committee on Water Works -t\nmini i u tiuuft, i uurruay, April 1U, lOf.i, lur\nmaklncand dellvt rinj; five thousand foot of four\nInch pipe, mnru or lots, and two thousand feet\nof pIx iuch, with branchci and tecs sufficient to re\nIny the came. and street boxes for atop cocks fl,\nthattho city may want. The six inch pipe to be\n9-16ths thick and the four inch, X inch. The\nhrauches to bo tho samo thickness as the pipes.\nThe plpts to be cast or moulded in dry Band and\nin a perpendicular position; to be of good dark s\npray iron, bo that It can be caally drilled. Kach I\npipe or piece to bo IS feet four inches lone (bowl v\nou one cud to ho 4 inches Ion#.) The G inch pipe\nto weigh not less than thtrty-onc pounds totno\nfoot, and not than 33; tho 4 iuch to welxh\nnot le«B than 22 pounds to tho foot and not mure\nthan S3. The pipes, branches and boxea to be\nmado and delivered on the lino of street where\nwanted in the city of Wheeling, on or before\nthe 80th day of Juuo, 1673. Tho pipes to bear\nthe teat of 350 pounda hydraulic pressure to tUo\ninch, and to bo tested in Wheeling nuderthe\nsupervision of the Superintendent of tho Water\nWorks an! at the expense of the contractor.\nPayments to be cash on delivery after tho test- «\ninrfa.don tho Superintendent's order to the\nCommittee Tho Contractor or ContraetorB to\nRive bond with Rood security for the fulflilmeut\nof tho contract-tho city reserving the right to\nreceive or reject any or all bids. Blis will be .\nendorsed "Proposals for water pipes, branches,\nAc." and to bo left with tue Clerk of the city.
0f39cdc0c93634800efafb3df988d9d1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1881.3027396943176 37.561813 -75.84108 while the harvest is so white, and the la-\nborers are so few, and the night for us so\nfast approaching. Truly the wind and the\nwave do his bidding, and do they not bear\nto us the Macedonian wail ot the benight\ned women of the Orient, "Come over and\nhelp us: Break for us these fetters of su\nperstition and caste, unbind our feet, un- -\nvail our faces, teach us that we may sit no\nlonger as slaves at the feet of our masters,\nbut by their sides as equals, worthy of their\nlove and commanding their respect: teach\nus that our daughters may no longer be\nsold bytheir own fathers to the sensuous\nbidder who can command the h.ghest\nprice. We have heprd what seems to us like\na dream paradise, of a land where moth-\ners are loved and tenderly cared for, where\nkindness and sympathy lighten the toils of\na woman's lot, where the female, unveiled\nand unprotected, is free :lrom insult,\nthough she traverse the country from cen\nter to circumference; no one presuming, by\nword or look, to question her right, or re\nfuse her the aid which her sex demands.\nAnd tell ns, is it true that where vour Je\nsus is worshipped womanhood is reverenced\nand woman honored and loved. Women\nof the church, to such appeals as these,\nare we giving an attentive ear are we\nstretching out a helping hand? We, the\nthe handmaidens to whom have been given\nthe one, two, five, yea, perchance, the ten\ntalents, with the injunction, "Occupy till I\ncome
17bb5e2f96e3e0371b2e934cf6d2be79 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.1301369545915 41.681744 -72.788147 Ruppert, Barney Dreyfuss, William\nRaker and Charley Ebbets took part,\nhut much was accomplished.\nThe announcement by John Heyd-\nler, president of the National league,\nthat the national agreement still is\nin force and that all deals between\nthe National .league and minor leagues\nmust be made in accordance with its\nregulations is significant. It shows\nthe majors are desirous of avoiding\nfurther strife. Heydler previously had\ntaken the stand that the national\nagreement had been dissolved and\nthat there no longer was any agree-\nment between the majors and minors.\nThe minors when they decided to\nshift for themselves did say that they\nbroke the old national agreement, but\nthey were careful to get a promise\nfrom August Herrmann, chairman of\nthe National Commission, that the.\nold agreement would remain opera-fiv- e\nuntil a new one was up.\nDave Fultz, president of the Inter-\nnational league, together with several\nother minor league men. now are\nworking on a draft of a new agree-\nment. This will be submitted to the\ncommission when completed.\nTo Select Chairman This. Week.\nThe National Commission will have\na new chairman before the Baltimore\nsuit is heard. The four club owners\nselected to recommend a new com-\nmission head will meet in New York\nthis week and go over a list of names\nwhich have been suggested. The\ncommittee consists of Col. Ruppert of\nthe. Y'ankees and Frank Navin of De-\ntroit, the American league commit-- "\ntee, and William F. Baker of Phila-\ndelphia and William Veeck of Chi-\ncago, the National league committee.\nRuppert and Baker reside in New\nYork, so it was decided to hold the\nmeeting here.
24eecb2908cc64e9aa07c84c93665ce6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.1904109271943 41.681744 -72.788147 goes to Bridgeport, where the thea-\nter Is. The stub Is traced to OLGA\nMAYNARD, a cabaret singer.\nJimmy meets and falls In love\nwith MARY LOWELL. Later he en-\ncounters Olga, She faints at hearing\npolice want her for murder. Mary,\nout with SAMUEL CHURCH, a\nwealthy lawyer, sees Jimmy lift Olga\nInto a taxi and misunderstands.\nOlga tells police the stub might\nhave come Into possession of a man\nwho "picked her up" two nights\nbefore the murder. Jimmy receives\nmysterious warnings to leave Bridge-\nport and later ts attacked by two\nmen but escapes.\nWith Jimmy and Mary estranged,\nChurch gets Mary's promise to mar-\nry him. Jimmy accuses her of mar-\nrying for money.\nJimmy and Olga, out one night,\nsee a man they both recognize she\nas the who got the stub, he as\none of his assailants. The man es-\ncapes, but they identify him by his\npolice picture as IKE JENSEN.\nChurch, motoring with Mary, runs\nover a dog. His heartlessness causes\nher to break their engagement.\nOlga tells Jimmy that Church, be-\ncause she had refused to have any-\nthing to do with him, had caused\nher to lose several jobs. Jimmy real-\nizes Olga Is in love with him and Is\ndeeply troubled. She offers her Hps\nand he kisses her.\nMary writes Jimmy a letter, ex-\nplaining that she had broken with\nChurch. The office boy sticks the\nletter in his pocket and forgets it\nThat evening Barry tells Jimmy he\nmet a smart lawyer that day. "His\nname," said Barry, "was Church."\nNOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
1869b46e5c03734a196472430a731411 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.6726027080163 42.217817 -85.891125 hastened, and so dead did he seem to be\nthat he was counted among those who\nhad given up their lives for the cause.\nSeveral days Andrew lay on the neutral\ngrounds between the hostile lines, and\nbeing only wounded, was entirely missed\nby those afterward in search of the dead\nand wounded, he having hid liimself\namong some bushes where he was found\nafterward by an old farmer, to whose\nhome he was removed, near Sharpsburg.\nHere he remained quite awhile, and was\nbeginning to convalesce, when J. E . B.\nStuart's cavalry made its famous raid into\nChambersburg in the fall of 1802.\nIn their retreat within the Con-\nfederate lines, a detective of Stuart's\ncavalry captured him and took him\nsouth of the Potomac river, and thence\nhe was sent to Libby, and from Libby\nto Macon, Ga. At the latter place he\nmade his escape after having twice\nshot in the arm by the guard, and when\non his way to the federal lines under the\nguidance of negroes he was recaptured\nby militia. Losing courage and hope,\nbe took the oath of allegiance to the\nConfederate government, was sent south\nto Texas under Dick Taylor, in whose\ncommand he remained, ever seeking an\nopportunity to escape by desertion. Be-\ning a Southern man by birth, he had no\ndifficulty in feigning assimilation with\nthe troops of the Confederacy, but still,\niu that remote region, the prospect of\nescape was feeble. The portion of Tay-\nlor's command to which he belonged was\ndriven across the liio Grande into\nMexico, and in a short time he fell un-\nder the power of the Republican bar-\nbarian Cortina, who raided upon friend\nnnd foe alike. Some border Imlian\ntribes had possession of some of Corti-na' - s\nmost valuable auxiliaries.
10da0fe2436adbf601281bd7abbce8e7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.3674863071747 40.063962 -80.720915 Pittsburgh, P.v .,May 13..The Chronicle "\nTelegraph thia evening eays: The rumor ^\nhas again obtained currency that President b\nJohn W. Garrett, of the Baltimore & Ohio (3\nrailroad comnany, -will shortly resign and I\nturn its management over to his eon, Rob- £\nert Garrett. There is probably more truth a\nin thia than usually attaches to such rumors, a\nas matters have for several years been c\nstapina themselves in this direction. Pres- £\nident Garrett is an aged man, and since\nthe death of hla'wife has broken seriously ?\nin health, being now no longer able to\nstand the duties and responsibilities of the a\nposition. When he went to Europe some t\nyear3 ago he left the road in charge of his v\nson, who can not, it muat in truth be said, r\nbe counted as one of tne greatest railroad g\nmen of the d\nIt was through disagreements with Rob- g\nert Garrett that the Vice President and ?\nbrains of the B. & 0., Mr. Wm. Keyaer, re- J\nsigned his position and went into the j\nbanking business in Baltimore, and the t\nsame cause also led to the retirement of a\nJohn King, Jr; also one of the beat men c\nthe company ever had. The Garrett?, it is 3\nuuuerss'.ixiu, own only aooui Sf,Uw,UvJU 01 t\nthe $20,000,000 of stock of the company, a\nbat are continaed in control through the t\nstock owned by the Jobna Hopkins Uni- jj\nveraity, the city of Baltimore and a few &\npersonal frienda among the ahare holders. 0\nA more liberal policy and the infuaion of ^\nnew blood and greater energy into the v\nmanagement would greatly enhance the\nearninga aa well aa the vaine of thia already\ngreat property.
3a38c6021f5a9304eabbabb67735fb1c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.2808218860985 39.745947 -75.546589 action vas entirely justified. There ia ter of the High Si'hool, and selections Pittsburgh a toruej The re-arrest- Smyrna on Tuesday.\ngrowing anti-American feeling alby members of the Mandolin Club of mg of MtTedlUt and the nurse was a The attempts of her nephew to end\nTampico and a general disposition on the school. Mr. Griffith received an ova- midnight «Imax to a day of Important hta life wh le delirious prostrated her\nflic part of both Federal« and Constitu- ] tion from the students and was oblig»sl developments, chief among »hieb , and It Is believed caused her heart\ntionylists to ignore foreign rights uc-: to respond to an Encore. He was ac ~J*ete the identification of remains dug to be affected- She was removed to .\ncording to information here Mavo, as companied on the piano bv his mother, up in the cemetery as those the German Hospital on Friday night,\n» representative of this government has Mr»- C . E. Griffith. Hearty applause of Mrs. Allison and the discoveries ! and it was apparent then that be- I\nalready sharply admonish-d both sides also greeted ihe Mandolin Club and that a criminal operation hail been cause of her advanced age and the j\nund it is realized that a forced salute they, too, responded with encores. The performed and quicklime used to de- prostrating effect of her experiences,\nof J1 guns to the American flag will chorus singing under the direction of stroy the features. Meredith was ar- she would not recover. 8he lingered\nemphasize that his orders and sugges Miss Nell C. Krumme was much en- | rested after midnight at his bungalow j until Saturday night, when she pass-\ntions must be respected.
1b9a13859e46dc1838a06c25685bb83a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.8671232559614 39.745947 -75.546589 That your orator may have such\nother or further relief as the nature of\nthe case may require.\nThat a subpoena may issue for the\nsaid, The Wilmington City Railway\nCompany, William Simmons, Ayres S.\nWebster and James C. Carter, as de­\nfendants in this cause.\nThe Wilmington and Brandywine\nSprings Railway Company, by\nROBERT C. JlTSTîS, President.\nThe order of the court is:\nAnd now, to wit, this 11th day of No­\nvember, A. D . 1899 . the foregoing bll\nhaving been read and considered,\nIt is ordered and decreed by the chief\njustice, in the absence of the chancel­\nlor from the state, that a rule do issue\ndirected to the said, The Wilmington\nCity Railway Company, and the said\nWilliam Simmons. Ayres S. Webster\nand James C. Carter, constituting the\nBoard of Directors of the Street and\nSewer Department, commanding them\nto show cause, if any they have, why a\npreliminary injunction, as prayed (or\nin the said should not be Issued,\nreturnable before the chancellor, at\nDover, on Friday, the 17th day of No­\nvember, A. D., at 11 a. m. A. D.. 1899,\nand that In the meantime the said The\nWilmington City Railway Company bo\nrestrained and strictly enjoined iron\nlaying its tracks, erecting its poles and\nwires, and operating its said cars on\nsaid Sixth street,and the said William\nSimmons, Ayres S. Webster and James\nC. Carter, constituting the Board of Di­\nrectors of the Street and Sewer Depar. -\nment of the city of Wilmington, be re­\nstrained from granting to the said.\nThe Wilmington City Railway Com­\npany, permission so to do until the fur­\nther order of the chancellor.\nCHARLES B. LORE, Chief Justice.\nThe W'ilmington City Railway Com­\npany up to this morning had been de­\nlivering. as fast as possible, rails au.l\ncrosstlcs on Union street and eastward\non Sixth street. When the injunc.iou\nwas served this morning this work was\nstopped.
24a37b00fdd4a6e7258978f2240b6103 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 K. HAVING SECURED Tilt: SER¬\nVICES of an intelligent assistant, who\nwill attend to the prepartion of medi¬\ncines, putting up prescriptions, «fcc. , will ena¬\nble him to give more attention to out pa¬\ntients, especially to his many friends in the\n[country. His medicines aw all prepared in\nliiKown ofllce, and all delivered to his pa¬\ntients by himself. Dr. K . treats all disease's,\nboth Acute and Chronic, with which human¬\nity is affilcted. He hasa large numl>erof new\nremedies, which have proved remarkably\nsuccessful in many of thoseol>stinate cases of\nChronic diseases which heretofore have been\nsupi>osed to i>e incurable, among which may\nbe named: Consumption, Scrofula. Dis-\ncharges from the Kar.Ozena.Enlarged Glands,\nCancers and Skin Diseases. His mode of\ntreating Liver Diseases. Stomach Complaints.\nBronchitis and ail disease of the Throat\nami Air Passages. Hypertrophy and all oth¬\ner diseases of the Heart. Neuralgia, Epilepsy,\nSpinal Affections, and all diseases of tne Ner-\nvousRvstem.is acknowledged by all who have\ntested it to l>e the most and successful\never known to the medical profession. Dr.K.\nhas been eminently successful in the treat-\nmentof all diseases peculiar to women, viz:\nMenstrul Obstructions, Painful Menstrustion,\nLeucrrhea, Uterine and Ovarion Tumors,\nProlapsus Uteri and all Nervous diseases to\nwhich they are subject.\nHe makes a specialty in the treatment of\nall Chronic Atlectionsof the Geuito Urinary\nOrgans, viz: Catarrh of Bladder and Urethra,\nIrritable Bladder, and Non-retention and\nDribbling of Urine, Urinary Deposits or\nGravel, Dialjetis and Difficult Urinating, Sy¬\nphilitic Diseases in all their varied forms\nGlionarrhea, its complications and seouella?,\nSpermatorrhea and luipotency. and all aflec-\ntions consequent upon youthful indiscretions.\nAlsosneeial attention paid to the treatment\nof Fistulas, White Swelling, Scrofulous\nSores, Varicose Ulcers, Ac. Persons allllcted,\nparticularly with old troublesome cases,\nshould lose no time to call on or address DR.\nKISNER. Communications containing fee\npromptly noticed. Office prescriptions and\nmedicine cash. For visits in city, same as\nother Physicians. Office hours, 9 A. M . to 12\nM..1P.M.to4P.M., and(JP.M.to9P.M.\nJanlO
18dcd5332375b1e85e4e7299e36dd7cc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.401369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 R0O8EVELTISM IN THE NAVY.\nHon. Theodore Roosevelt, the ex-\npresldent and terror of the Metropoli­\ntan Police Board, who is now assistant\nsecretary of the navy, has already com­\nmenced to fulfill his work In regard to\nreforming our official marine. As a\nstarter, he has set to work to “Roose­\nvelt” the Brooklyn Navy Yard, whither\nhe has gone for the purpose of Inves­\ntigating the charges of misconduct that\nhave beeu made against certain offl\nclals. These charges are numerous\nand specific. It Is alleged that the civil\nservice reform rules have been fla­\ngrantly violated; that favoritism has\nprevailed In nearly all of the depart­\nments, and that In some of them there\nhas been dishonesty of a bolder type.\nWe have no doubt that Mr. Roose­\nvelt will be an expert Investigator and\na just judge. He has a habit of getting\nat tho bottom of things and in this in\n his authority will not be ham­\npered by having to share it with three\nor four others. He is a better single\nhead than part of a plural-headed\nbody. One of the peremptory men who\nfind it difficult to put their views into\nlesser Intelligences, he has either to lie\nserved by his peers or work alone. Such\nmen were Stanton and Bismarck. They\nwere both very much older than Roose­\nvelt now Is when they attained world­\nwide prominence, and both had the ad­\nvantage of acting on a grand stage and\nof dealing with subjects of the first im­\nportance. Afforded similar opportun­\nity Mr. Roosevelt would probably Bhow\nthat in essential respects he possesses\nqualities that would produce results al­\nmost equally significant. His combat­\niveness is not the least admirable fea­\nture of his make-up, for It is backed\nby rare intelligence and the most scru­\npulous sense of honesty.
1d56bf2fbb223eef817ecdbe3ebce7a3 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.4260273655505 39.743941 -84.63662 Mr. Bayard, to provide for tbe exchange of\nthe subsidiary coins for lawful money and\nmaking such coins legal tender in sums hot\nexceeding twenty dollars, was taken ud,\nMr. Edmunds spoke against the bill. When\nMr. Edmunds concluded, consideration be-\ngan of the bill heretofore introduced by Mr.\nMcT'onald anthorizing the employment of\nmilitia ana land ana naval forces in certain\ncases, and to repeal the election laws. At\ntne conclusion ot Mr. McDonald's address,\nMr, Edmunds said he intended to speak on\nthe snbject when it again came up. The\nPresident pro tem.annonnced his signature\nto the Legislative Appropriation Bill, which\nnow goes to the President The bill rela' i ve\nto transportation of animals waa then taken\nnp. Senator McPherson delivered quite a\nlengthy speech on the bill regulating the\ntransportation of cattle. He has had long\nexperience as a cattle dealer, and his speech\nwaa the resnlt of actual of the\nevils complained of. He made a clear and\nstartling presentation of thetUUag cruel\nand inhuman method of transporting all\nkinds of animals, showing that in many in\nstances, if not aa a general rule, tbey are\npnt upon cattle trains at Chicago and\nshipped to Buffalo and then to Eastern cities\nwithout an noire rest and without any\nwater or food. Arriving in this abnormal\nand exhausted condition, at their destina-\ntion, the animals are soon after slaughtered,\nand their meat, being actually in a diseased\nstate, is liable to produce sickness and dis\nease in those who consume it\nMay 27. Senate Senator .McDonald cre\nated a breeze in the Senate by presenting a\nmemorial of soldiers of Rhode Island, ac-\ncusing the Collector of the Port of\nProvidence of violating the law requiring\npreference to be given Union soldiers in\nappointments, by turning ont soldiers and\nappointing civilian
334f1a027fe15d4dcb14aeaa6b47126a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.146575310756 39.261561 -121.016059 As a medical man it is the duty of every physician to\nlook at disease as it affects health and life, an* his sole ob-\nject should be to mitigate, as far as lies in his power, the\nbodily suffering. Human nature ut best is but frail, all\nare liable to misfortune.\nOf all the ills that atfeet man. none are more terrible\nthan those of a private nature. Dreadful as It is in the\nperson who contracts it. frightful as are its ravages upon\nhis constitution, ending frequently in destruction and a\nloathsome grave, it liecomes of still greater importance\nwhen it is transmitted to to innocent olfspring. Such be-\ning the case, how necessary it becomes that every one hav-\ning the least reason to fear that every one having the least\nreason to fear that they have contracted the disease,\nshould attend it at once by consulting some physician\nwhose respectability and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and permanent cure. In accordance with\nthis necessity, PH. YOUNG feels called upon to state that\nby long study ami extensive practice, he has become per-\nfect master of all these diseases which come under the de-\nnomination of venereal, and having paid more attention to\nthat one branch than anv other physician in the United\nStates, he feels himself better qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such as Ulcers. Swelling in the\nGroins. Ulcers in the Throat. Secondary Syphilis, Cutane-\nous F.ruptions, Ulcerations. Tetuary Syphilis, Syphilis in\nChildren. Mercurial Syphilitic Affections. Gnnorhea, Gleet,\nStrictures. False Passages, Inhumation of the Madder and\nProstrate Glands, Kxcoriations, Tumors, Pustules, Atc., ar e\nas familiar to him as the most common things of daily ob-\nservation.
12ae47fd1e313317540f4214a657a9c3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.89999996829 39.745947 -75.546589 From the Ups of Messrs. Briand,\nBalfour. Hughes and others on\nFrench day at the conference fell\nsuch phrases as "moral disarma­\nment.” "the will to peace,” and the\nlike. Such metaphors and general\nexpressions, of course, embody un­\ndoubted truths. But, alas, there can\nbe no complete reliance on their\nsaving grace! They bring painfully\nto mind what happened to a great\nworld hope when a supreme mas­\nter of rhetoric sought to reach port\nby a wind of words.\nThe Washington conference has\nhad great success in so far as it has\nconsidered speelllc proposals rather\nthan noble aspirations. Mr. Hughes\nsaid: “Bet us scrap this ship and\nthat ship; let us limit ourselves\nhereafter to a definite number."\nForthwith the world came in sight\nof a great settlement.\nThe same method, although less\n has been applied to the Pa­\ncific problem. We may be able to\nget an agreement not merely that\nthe territorial integrity of China is\nto be respected, but that particular\n“leases” are to be canceled; that\nnot merely is China to have control\nof her Infernal commerce, but that\nJapan is to surrender her grip on\nthe Shantung railroad.\nThere is no solution of the land\ndisarmament problem, because It\nhas not been handled with a like\npracticality. This is not the fault\nof France, but of her associates.\nThere is the Rhine, and beyond It\nare peoples which cannot prudently\nhe misted. What can be done? Ob­\nviously to build a dike strong\nenough to keep out trouble. France\nbegs for this. If it is granted she\noffers to reduce further her defens­\nive army.
22d726db2488b3d70aaad0c7672b0714 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1918.409589009386 39.623709 -77.41082 “The Birth of a Nations Flag,” was\nrich in pageantry. The scene is laid in\nthe shop of Betsey Ross at the time\nwhen the committee consisting of George\nWashington, Robert Morris, Col. Ross,\nand John Hancock comes to view the new\nflag. The costumes were artistic and\nbeautiful. The cast included Mrs. Agnes\nHarbaugh as Betsey Russ, Mr. Glenn\nBrown as George Washington and Miss\nMary Crawford, the Tory and Misses\nEsta McClain, Mary Kendall, Mary\nAlexander, Goldie Miller, Margaret Wil-\nlard, Ruth and Agnes McClain, Mary\nManahan, Edna Eby, Ada Harbaugh, II\nArnsparger, and Messrs Win. Bentzel,\nWhitmer Firor, and Wm. Bentzel, Jr,\nThe second part of the program consisted\nof the presentation of the stirring patri-\notic drama, “Somewhere in France.”\nThe story shows in a graphic way why\nAmerica forced into the war, and\nthe action takes place shortly after the\narrival of General Pershing and the\nAmerican troops. The members of the\ncast had caught the spirit of the play in\naway that enabled them to pass on the\nthought and prlriotism to the audience.\nThe cast was as follows: Pierre Grau-\ndet, Mr. C . B. Harbaugh; MadameGrau-\ndet. Miss Emma Crawford; Nation, the\ndaughter, Miss Esther Harbaugh; Jean,\nthe son, blinded by a shell, Whitmer\nFiror; Mary Dale, the American Rod\nCross Nurse, Miss Ruth Firor; Dr. Mon-\ntaine, Mr. Wm. Bentzel.\nThe proceeds from the entertainment\nwill be immediately used for hospital\nsupplies and wool for socks.\nMr. and Mr.* . Alva Harbaugh and\nyoung daughter spent the week end with\nMr. Harbaughs parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nThus. Harbaugh.
4bfa25b24189faaf73c34e761be234e1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.869862981989 40.063962 -80.720915 Beside the periodical character of ti\nphenomenon, it has been noted that\neach occasion of a motoric display, t\nmeteors diverge from particular cc\nHtellations. Tho August shower, frc\nthe star B, Oamclopardalia; and t\nNovember shower from the star Gai\nma, Leanis, one of the stars formi\nthe sickle in that constellation.\nFurther investigation ot this .pi\nnomenon has led to the discovery\nanother period of meteoric showers I\nsides the annual one. This period cc\nsists of thirty-three years, which sepi\nate the recurrence of extraordina\nmeteoric showers. Between the yet\nA. D. 903 and A. D. 1833, thirteen\nthese great showers are recorded, s<\narated from each other by intervals\nthirty-three and sixty-Fix years. 'X\nlast two occurred in November, 17\nand id November, 1833.\nIt is not a little remarkable that t\nepoch of these great periodic show*\ncoincide with the annual Novemt\nshower; and that their point of div<\ngence in the heavens is the same. ]\ndeed the phenomenon of long peri\n from that of the annual peri<\nonly In its numerical character.\nThe constellation lieo, whence t\nmeteors principally diverge, rises in t\nE. N . E. about midnight. The East*\nheavens will be the theatre of display\nThe theory of this meteoric showei\nthat at this period, the earth in\ncourse through space, crosses a regi\nwhere meteors are circulating, a\nthat these become luminous, andc\nhibit themselves in our atmosphe\nFar above and beyond these corrusc\ning bodies are seen the real stars of 1\nfirmament, which continue to k<\ntheir places as if nothing had happem\nThe meteor or "shooting Btar," and 1\nlereolite, are distinct phenomena. 1\nlatter consists of a mass of metal whi\nfalls to the earth, and is often foui\nThe former is but flame apparentlv.a\nLeaves no deposit behind. A shower\nlereolites might be worse than a rain\npitchforks or paving stones. One\nshooting stars is like a splendid displ\nof fireworks, so distant that no sou\ncomes to the ear.
2190f77af8fa75094a246fd0bcb27b51 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.1904109271943 39.745947 -75.546589 No. 2. Brginnlng at the corner formed by\ntbe Intersection of the westerly side of Lom­\nbard street witb the southerly side of Thir­\nteenth street tbenoe along the said side of\nThirteenth street westerly 200 feet 6 Inches\nto tbe oentre line of a 9 Inch division wall a\ncorner of land ooLveyed to Joseph M. Pusey,\nthence thereby by tbe five f liowlng lines,\nvis : Sc.utterly parallel to Poplar street 67\nleet 4 nobes to a oorner. thenee southerly\n•bout7feet7 1nobestoaoornerof ikebrick\nboiler boure, tbenoe aloDg tbe tide of said\nboiler house wall southerly parallel to Pop\ntar street 41 feet 2 Inches to another orner,\ntbeLoe oas erly parallel to Thirteenth street\n1 feet 1 Inch to another oorner, and southerly\nparallel to Poplar street 87 feet 3 Inches to a\nline or another lot conveyed to Joseph M.\nPusey aforosald,thence \nallai to Tbir een'h street 188\nti e westerly side of Lombard a rtet af re-\n<ai<l, and thence toereby northerly 141 feet 9\ninches to tbe piace of begluning.\nNo. 3 Beginning at the Intersection of\nthe northerly side of T irt?enth street wl.b\nthe easterly snde of Poplar street, thenee\nnortherly along said side of Poplar st.eet\n18> feet to the middle distance line between\nTnlrte nth and Fourteenth street, thenoc\nalong said middle distance line caster y and\npa*allel to Thirteenth street seventeen\nperches and fifteen hundredths of a porch,\nmore or leu, to the low watermark In th\nBrandywine oreek, tbenoe down said o etk\noy the vsrlous courses and dtstan es thereuf\nto the northerly side of Thirteenth s reel and\nthenee therebv westerly twenty four and\nfive-tenth perche , more or len, to the pLce\nof beginning.
0acd8327eb1ec1f21c62f0bf88d241cb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.368493118975 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Cullom introduced a bill to pro¬\nvide for the constitution of the Indian\ntribes, and to establish civil govern¬\nment in the Indian Territory, which\nwas read twice and referred to the Com¬\nmittee on Territories;\nMr. Slovens introduced a joint reso¬\nlution authorizing tho appointment or\nan additional Secretary of the Navy\nfor six months from the 1st of June\nnext. He explained that the Assistant\nSecretary of the Navy was about to\nproceed to Europe to examine the vari¬\nous navy yards, and that an additional\nussistnut would be required during his\nabsence. Some opposition having been\nmanifested, the joint resolution was on\nmotion of Mr. Stevens, referred to the\nCommittee on Naval AfTuirs.\nMr. Williams, of Pennsylvania, in¬\ntroduced a resolution, which was adopt¬\ned, instructing the Committee on the\nJud iciary to inquire into the ex pediency\nof altering the laws so as abrogate the\ntenure of otfico at tho pleasuro of the\nappointing power, and to muke all of-\nfical trust to be terminated at limes cer¬\ntain, subject only to tho condition of\ngooa behavior.\nMr. Stevens offered the following:\nResolved, That a committee of three\nmembers be appointed by the Speaker,\nwhose duty itshull be to proceed, with¬\nout unnecessary delay, to Memphis, in\nthe State of Tennessee, to make on in¬\nvestigation into all matters connected\nwith the recent bloody riots in ihut city,\nwhich began on the first instant\n particularly to Inquire into the\norigin, progress and termination of the\nriotous proceedings, the names of tho\nparties engaged in them, the acts of\natrocity perpetrated, the number of\nkilled and wounded, the amount and\ncharacter of the property destroyed, and\nreport all the facta to the House, and\nthe Sergeant-at-Arms or his deputy,\nand a sterographer of the House are di¬\nrected to accompany the said commit¬\ntee. All the expenses of the investiga¬\ntion shall bo paid out of tho contingent\nfund of the House, and the said com¬\nmittee shall have poworto send iorper¬\nsons and papers and to examine wit¬\nnesses under oath.\nMr. Harding desired to amend the\nresolution so as to extend the investi¬\ngation to Cliaitauooga.\nMr. Chandler, of N. Y., desired to ex¬\ntend it to the recent massacre by the\nIndians in Fort Goodwin, Arizonia.\nNeither of the two last propositions\nwere passed, and the resolution as of¬\nfered was adoped by yeas 87, nays 22.\nMr. Chandler offered tho following:\nResolved, That tho independent, pa¬\ntriotic and constitutional course of the\nPresident of the United States, in seek¬\ning to protect by the' veto power the\nrights of the peoplo of this Union\nagainst the wicked and revolutionary\nacts of a few malignant and mischiev¬\nous men, meets with the approval of\nthis House, and deserves tho cordial\nsupport of all loyal citizens of the Uni¬\nted State%
45c2a972d85d1fe9b77f6da72d219354 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1906.7794520230848 36.620892 -90.823455 by the wngon tongue or the mule,\nand thrown to the ground in such\na way that the team and the\nwagon passed over him.\nThroe or four persons were eye\nwitnesses to the accident but none\nof them can say definitely how\nhe was struck, only that they saw\nhim try to slop the team, fall and\nthe team and wagon passed on\nand his body lay still in the mid-\ndle of the street. The team ran\non around to the rear of the\nBorth Mercantile Co. store and\nstopped, and from there were tal\nken to the Malugen stable and\nput up. The body was picked up\nimmediately and carried up to\nDr. Hume's office, where exami-\nnation revealed that the left side\nof the skull was bursted outward\nin the form that doctors call a\ncontra coup fracture or a frac-\nture across the skull caused by\na lick on the opposite side of the\nhead, extending from the base of\nthe skull up behind and across\nabove the left ear into the corner\nof the eye. Three ribs on the\nsame side also crushed in,\nand there were internal injuries\nwhich caused him to vomit blood.\nQuoh aid was given him as\noould be in his condition, and bis\nwife and son sent for, they arriv-\ning shortly after neon. He never\nregained consciousness and died\nabout 1 o'clock this morning in\nthe Dr.'s office. The body was\nembalmed and shipped on this\nmorning's train to his old home at\nHigbee for interment, being ac-\ncompanied by the widow and sort.\nThe deceased was comfortably\nsituated.was a carpenter by trade,\nand had a lot of very nice stock\nthat he brought here with him\nfrom Randolph County.'\nA bunch of western horses\ndriven along the street where the\nmules were left standing, is said\nto have been the cause of their\nscaring arad starting to run. The\nmules, in going in back of the\nBorth Btore ran into Ponder and\nMerrelPs delivery wagon and\nbroke it up some and seared their\nhorse which also ran away, the\nanimal catching the wagon on a\npost, breaking the single-tre- e\nand tearing loose out of the har- -\nnA.a
1939c62e67d3be83cade547139ff00dc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.001369831304 40.063962 -80.720915 Wheeling territory, being one doml\nnatcd by manufacturing interests, is th<\nfirst to suffer from depressing Influ\n. encos and is likewise the first to fee\ntire effects of a revival, the cloud wavi\nnext reaching territories producing th«\nraw materials, then the agricultural an<\nstock raising industries and so on, sh^d\nding its sombre influence in turn ovc;\nnil lines of legitimate trade relatione\nA larger cloud than usual Is passim\nover us at present, and has obscure*\nfor some months tho prospective re\nturns to nnxlouH owners, but railroa<\nmen fool they are about to emerge int<\na brlgliter future, which promises bet\nter returns upon the larger capital In\nvested; however, this feeling is rathe\nborn «'f hope which "springs eterna\nin ih«> human breast" than of any tan\nglbie evidence of returning prosperity\nIn all lines of business the tendonc;\nIn later years has been toward central\ni'/atlon of capitul and power, and wit!\nthis has come a systematic effort a\neconomy, and It Is no lews true of rail\nroad Interests; made necessary by lowe\nrale# and small amount of freight mov\nIng. In oilier words, the averag\namount of revenue accruing' in the lus\nlive years has hot been sufficient t<\nmake a fair return to the owners of rail\nroad properties In this territory npoi\ntheir Investment. In the struggle for i\n existence, managers havi\nresorted to many expedients to mak<\nboth ends meet, and withal the result\nhave ncrt been satisfactory. By reasoi\nof this state of affairs management\nhave be«.«n restricted and in many case:\nprohibited from. Increasing flxe<\ncharges, with the result that many bad\nly needed Improvements have had to hi\nricmlorl' »him tvhiln n hcalthv COtnm»tl\ntlon Is always desirable when th»» sup\nply of transportation oxernils the do\nmantis, a temporary advantage may hi\ngained to a district. It can onlv b»* tern\nportiry and Is a menace to the pro«pi>rU:\nof that district by excluding fmprovet\nfacilities or such superior service ai\nsould encourage and not dlscourago en\nterprls-7 and tllhM capita?.\nIn no branch of the world's buslnesi\nhas the character of the men cmployei\nor servlc* performed been more ele\nvated In point of prollcl°ncy or Infill\nsenct* than In the railway sendee. Tin\nmanner of men now employed by th<\nrailroads compares most favorably wltl\nthat of other callings and professions\nguided as they are by Intelligent ani\nprogressive* managers. Everywhere an\nfound railroad'men of to-day takinj\nleading positions in the councils of thi\nchurch and state. By a system of clvl\nservice, encouraging reading rooms nn<\nother means of improvement, the stand\nard of character has been raised am\nhas become a power toward economics\noperation.
03ac4c63dcd3ec409ac0f950fa00ae4a THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1901.9849314751395 47.478654 -94.890802 State of Minnesota. County of Beltram'—s s.\nDistrict court.\nW. W . Kimball Company, plaintiff, vs. L. E.\nLarson, defendant.\nNotice is hereby given, that by vlrtne of an\nexecution to me directed and delivered, and\nnow in my hands, issued o«t of the district\ncourt, Fifteenth Judicial district, State of\nMinnesota, in and for the County of Beltrami,\nupon a judgment rendered in said court in\nfavor of W. W . Kimball Company and against\nL. E. Larson, I have levied upon the following\ndescribed real property of said defendant,\nto-wit: Lot Hve (5), in block four (4), in the\noriginal Townslte of. Blackduck, Minnesota,\naccording to the recorded plat thereof on file\nand of record in the office of the register of\ndeeds in and for Beltrami county, Minnesota,\ntogether with all singular the buildings\nand appurtenances "thereto belonging. And\nthat I shall, on Saturday, the 25th day of Janu-\nary, A.D,1902, at the hour of Uo'clock a. m.\nof said day, at the front door of the court\nhouse, Village of Bemidji. in said county and\nstate, proceed to sell all the right, title and\ninterest of the above named L. E . Larson, in\nand to the above described property, as of\nthe 20th day of July, . A. D. 1901, to satisfy said\njudgment and costs, amounting to four hun-\ndred eleven dollars and thirty-flve cents, to-\ngether with all accruing costs, of sale, and\ninterest on the same from, the 30th day of\nOctober, 1901, at the rate of 6 per cent per\nannum, at public auction, to the highest bid-\nder for cash.
07dc087c18317efecf25fc1616342696 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1906.5849314751395 36.694288 -105.393021 in harmony with nature, when nature needs assist-\nance: and another class, composed of preparations of\nunknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting tempo-\nrarily, but injuriously, as a result of forcing the natural\nfunctions unnecessarily. One of the most exceptional of\nthe remedies of known quality and excellence is the ever\npleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California\nFig Syrup Co., which represents the active principles of\nplants, known to act most beneficially, in a pleasant syrup,\nin which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to con\ntribute their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is the remedy\nof all remedies to sweeten autl refresh and cleanse the system\ngently and naturally, and to assist one in overcoming consti-\npation and the many ills resulting therefrom. Its active princi-\nples and quality are known to physicians generally, and the\n has therefore met with their approval, as well ns with\nthe favor of many millions of well informed persons who know\nof their own personal knowledge ami from act mil experience\nthat it is a most excellent laxative remedy. We do not claim that\nit will cure all manner of ills, but recommend it for what it really\nrepresents, a laxative remedy of known quality and excellence,\ncontaining nothing of an objectionable or injurious character.\nThere are two classes of purchasers; those who are informed\nas to the quality of what they buy and the reasons for the excellence\nof articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack courage to go\nelsewhere when a dealer offers an imitation of any well known\narticle; but, unfortunately, there are some people who do not know,\nand who allow themselves to be imposed upon.
18cfd6932fdbe8948ec1a5eec41ac658 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1895.7356164066464 39.623709 -77.41082 SAILED THE SKAS 38 YEARS.\nOne of His Experiences.\nFor thirty-debt years Capt. Loud followed\nthe so, most of that time as master of a ves-\nsel, and upon retiring from the water was ap-\npointed hy the Secretary of the United States\nTreasury to superintend the seal fisheries in\nAlaska, which position beheld live years. He\nrelates one experience as follows:\n“For several years 1 had been troubled with\ngeneral nervousness and pain In the region\nof my heart. My greatest affliction was\nsloeple-sness; it was almost Impossible at any\nlime to obtain rest and sleep. Having seen\nDr. Miles* remedies advertised I began using\nNervine. After taking a small quantity the\nbenefit received was so great that I was posi-\ntively alarmed, thinking the remedy con-\ntained opiates which would finally be Injuri-\nous to mo: on being assured by the drug-\ngist that It was perfectly harmless, I contin-\nued It together with the Heart Cure. Today\nIcan conscientiously say that Dr. Milos Re-\nstorative Norvlno and New Heart Cure did\nmore for me than anything I bad ever taken.\nI had been treated by eminent physicians\nIn Now York and Han Francisco without ben-\nfit. I owe my present good health to the\njudicious use of those most valuable remedies,\nand heartily recommend them to all afflicted\nas I was.” —Capt. A. I*. Loud, Hampden, Mo.\nDr. Miles' Restorative Nervine and Now Cure\nare gold by all druggists on a positive guaran-\ntee, or by Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart,\nInd., on receipt of price, it per bottle, or six\nbottles for IS, express prepaid. They are\nfree from all opiates and dangerous drugs.
25049b7651f7b8fe712ad4d611f90bb3 THE ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.7575342148655 35.084103 -106.650985 A French doctor has invented a new\nbed for babies which holds them safe\nin its custody and prevents them from\ngiving any trouble at night to their at-\ntendants. This gentleman has subjec-\nted his system to the most trying of all\ntests, for he has applied it to all his\nown children, and considers that the\nlife of one of them is entirely owing to\nits use. The idea is to fill the greatest\npart of the cradle with bran and\nimmerse the leg3 and part of the body\nof the child in this nest, covering them\nover in the usual way, but fastening\ndown the counterpane tight, so as to\nkeep him firm in his place. Why this\nchange of tactics should have the ef-\nfect of taking away from the infant\nhis usual desire to howl during a part\nof every is a question which we\nwill leave nurses to explain for them-\nselves after th ey have tried the system.\nIn the meantime, until that trial has\nbeen made it is only civil to believe\nthe testimony of Drs. Bourgeoise and\nViguroux, who in two French papers\nof some authority declare that such is\nthe invariable result. This is not, how-\never, the only advantage to be derived\nfrom the system. The bran is supposed\nto have a warming and stimulating\ninfluence superior to any sort of cotton\nor cloth.and to allow children of the\nmore sickly kind to develvop more\nquickly, and to be sooner able to use\ntheir limbs. The inventor of the sys-\ntem declare? that they delight in their\nbran beds, and always "quit them with\nregret" when moved at the age of two,\nto one of a different kind.
1878bba5c3b1c3621ef17280e2fa4611 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.6397259956875 41.681744 -72.788147 If the Russian people refuse to listen\nto peace terms that are incompatible\nwith true democracy then indeed is\nthe last straw added to the camel's\nback. There will be no peace on the\nterms advanced, there will be no peace\nuntil the armies in the field have made\nthe situation such that peace must be\nthe natural outcome of their labors.\nRussia has been the enigma of all the\nnations at war with Germany. There\nare those who, up to this, thought\nthat Russia was ready to back-wat- er\nat any moment. Now, the silver lining\nof the cloud shows itself. Russia,\neven disorganized Russia, will have\nnone of Prussianized peace.\nIn a few weeks the Allied natiqns,\nand the United States will formally\nanswer the "Vatican's peace message\nFrom advance notices out of these\n and out of Washington, it\nis easily seen what the answer will be\nThe diplomats of all nations are\nafraid of Germany and German in\ntrigue. Discounting the high motives\nwhich actuated the "Vatican in at\ntempting to bring about a peace con\nference, the statesmen of all nations\nattribute the peace proposals to du- -\nrjllcitv on the part of Austria and\nGermany. They see tn the terms sug\ngested nothing but advantage for\nGermany, and disadvantage for the\nnations fighting Germany. So long as\nthis thought is uppermost in the minds\nof men there can be no Compromise,\nno step, toward diplomatic conferences.\nGerman Junkerism is in wrong with\nthe rest, of the world, and the one so-\nlution is to depose the Hapsburgs and\nthe Hohenzollem. That is the only\nway out.
12c8bb611a38c436cad8f90628703c55 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.8479451737696 40.419757 -77.187146 the table In the earlier part of the eve-\nning was turned down, and of course it\nwas turned down by ine. I wondered\nsome at this, for on previous occasions\nJane had only allowed the lamp to be\nturned very low, so as to make a soft,\ndarkish sort of a light In the room.\nI commenced to speak, hut I had ut-\ntered only a few words when Jane asked\nto he excused, telling me she would be\nback in a few moments. She went out.\nThe room was pitch dark. 1 heard the\ndoor open and shut, and heard her glide\nalong the hall. 1 sat with my thoughts,\nand looked forward to the time when I\nshould he the happy possessor of Jano\nand her half million. But I did not sit\nlong. A step sounded In the hall, and,\nas I believed, Jane came in.\nI might as well let the cutout of the\nhug here, and tell the reader that, Instead\nof Jane coming again, she sent the\nservant girl, Ann Hayes, to receive my\ncaresses and my proposal. My blood\nbolls even to this day when I think how\nawfully I have been made the dupe of a\nfew unsophisticated country girls.\nThe room was dark, and how should\nI know whether Ann Hayes of Jane\nSuininerllcld received my embrace.\n1 commenced my proposal. I made a\npoetical speech. I had spent a great\ndeal of time on it, for I was determined\nIt should be a stunner; and then to\nthink It was all delivered in the cars of\na hireling. Isn't It agonizing V\nWhen I look back now I can remem-\nber that the Jane who came in seemed\nsomewhat more robust than tho Jane\nwho went out ; but how could I be ex-\npected to suspect that there was any-\nthing wrong, or that there was a deep,\nblack, damnable plot laid to ruin me\nforever and ever in the eyes of the Nuh-\nhlestown people f
25ab0b52fc5b2b32acfed9c50e954e5a NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.5657533929477 40.735657 -74.172367 William J. Ronnau. 62 Elm st.Someplace\nEether Estelle McGowan, 136 Ferry at...Same pi\nCharles F. Lutz, 62 Goble st.Same place\nGottfried Schmidt, 87 Kossuth st.Someplace\nCharles Johnson. 72 -74 Film road.Same place\nEugene Schleicher, 478 Snringfleld av.Same place\nEmile Kuhn, 245-247 Runyon st.Same place\nJohn Scott 95-95Vfr Aoademy st.Same place\nI James H. Mason, 30 Augusta st.Same place\nFerdinand© Tenora, 8 Bedford at.Same place\nPatrick Brady. 260 Bank st.Same place\n| Peter J. 8peler, 66 Blum st.Same place\n! Antonia Neeta, 31 Boyden st..Same place\n| Anton Slobozenskl, 60 Belmont av.. .Same place\nMax Smith, 61 Belmont mv.Same place\nSamuel Weg. 74 Belmont av.Same place\nLoula Hellrlegel. Ill Belmont av....Same place\nCharles Peters. 160 Court st.Same place\nGeorge Opdyke, 340 Fifteenth av.Same place\nSamuel Llfschltz. 169 Frpllnghuysen av.Same pi\nJohn Lang. 132 Hudson st.Same place\nWilliam J. Zusl, 250 West Kinney et.Sameplace\nMorris Knoller. 80 -82 Mercer ft.Same place\nj Heraphlne A Redden, 12 Mulberry st.Same place\nJohn C. McLoughlin, Mulberry st.Same place\nGustave PUlmann, ?72 Mulberry st...Same place\nJohn Connell. 327 Mulberry st.Same place\nGeorge Hodgklss, 57 Nassau st.Same place\nMichael Kaplan, 92 Orange st.Same place\nPatrick J. McDonnell, 615 Orange st.Same place\nEnl Mak, 169 Pacific st..Someplace\nIx>uls Gross. 73 Pennington st.Same place\nGustave A. Rueffle, 37 Springfield av.Same place\nClemens Scherer. 147 Springfield av..Same place\nFritz Herse. 261 Springfield av.Same place\nJohn Hertleln. 669 Springfield av.Same place\nJacob Haufler. 253 South Orange av..9ame place\nFranlt Sllberman, 148 South st.Same place\nJohn Martin. 610 South Ten»h st.Same place\nWilliam Gcssier, 225 Waverly av.Same place\n»Oscar Wurzbach. 104 Washington st.Same place\nFred Kralbuehler, 88 Lillie st.Same place\nJohn J. Thompson, 30 Marshall st....Same place\nGeorge Stahl. 35 Murray st.Same place\nFrank Guzzallno, 291 Van Buren st..Same place\nRotzy Jansen, 3 Lister av.Same place\nJohn Pusatal, 154-156 Pacific st.Same place\nI Angelo IMcclello, 229-231 Bergen st....Same place\nChristian Kalsen, 427 Washington av.Same place\nCharles Lemmermann. 439 South Tenth st.
28525ade422c7eaa4fa92105f56f42a0 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1873.215068461441 40.827279 -83.281309 Debility opens the door to disease. Nor is this alL\nWhen the door has been opened and the terrible in\ntruder has entered, physical prostration renders its\nprosress to the citadel of life comparatively easy.\nTherefore bar the door, and, if possible, keep It\nbarred ; or, if the enemy has already secured a foot\nhold, rally the strength of the system and assist na\ntare to drive out the foe of health and Ufe. The\nmeans of doing this is within every one's reach.\nBrace up the physique with Hoatetter s Stomach Bit\nters when there are elements In the air you breaths\nor the water you drink that are morbid and unwhole\nsome. This Is barring the door. Epidemics and en\ndemics will assail In vain the living fortress that is\nthus protected. It may " a siege to scorn.'\nBut if this precautionary measure has been neglected,\nthe seeds of disease can be ejected by the same po-\ntent vegetable agent that would, if taken earlier, have\nprevented their obtaining an entrance into the sys\ntem. The stimulating. Invigorating, regulating and\npurifying properties of this vital elixir render It a\nmost formidable antagonist of all debilitating disor\nders. The rapidity and certainty with which It van-\nquishes fever and ague, rheumatism bilious colic, in\ndigestion and nervous complaints. Is due Ul no smaH\ndegree to tbe strength ft Imparts to the muscular\nfiber, the nerves and the membranes which line the\nstomach and the bowels. It may be safely said that a\ncourse of the Bitters commenced now wiU be a sure\nprotection against most of the complaints incident to\nthe season.
0c247cd3d09656a109eb6d10f647c256 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.856164351852 37.005796 -89.177245 vVhllo a young gentleman of tho city\nwas repairing to his room, on Hunday\nnight, he was rudely accosted by a\nstrungo man who, with knlfo In hand,\navowed a purpose, right then and thore,\nto cut the young man'sheart out, and to\nperform sundry other deeds of blood, for\ntho commission of which he declarod\nhimself In an excellent humor. It be-\ncoming at once uppurent to tho young\nman that the stranger was a maniac, he\nturned and fled. The manlao pursued\nhim, and for a hundred feetor more thero\nwas a race for life, as, beyond all doubt,\ntho mad man would liavo used his knife\nhad he not been outrun. The young\nman'stopped at a pile of wood by the\nstreet side, aud gathering a bludgeon,\ncommanded his pursuer to halt, or ho\nwould him. Tho crazed crcaturo\nobeyed, but admonished tho young man\nnot to attempt the braining process, as he\nwas armed with a pistol and wouldsuroly\nuso it. At this Juncture n third person\narrested the at.entlon of tho maniac, and\nin nn instant lie was offln pursuit of him.\nThis third person took refuge In an empty\nhouse, and thus escaped, But the mad-\nman was on the "rampage," and wonld\nnotdeslst until ho hau "blood." A short\ntime afterwards tic got In chriso' of a\nleveo merchant, who, being lame of a\nleg, found it dlfllcult to get out of his\nway. During tho night ho visited the\nwharf boat where he was taken in charge\nby tlie police and calaboosed for the\nnight. The next morning reason was,\nat least partially, restored to htm, aud he\nWUK
0d249ba778c4029bfdb1faae91b0fb05 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.6863013381533 46.187885 -123.831256 ning of June, 18S9, and until recently\nuo word was heard from him. He\nproceeded from Sitka north, 1 dis-- 1\ntance of over 1,500 miles and camned\nin barren and bleak district It was\nexpected that the steamer A relic would\ntako the explorers a sufficient quantity\nof provisions, and relying on this help\nvery few stores were taken overland.\nUnknownjto tho campers the Arttir\nwas wrecked on her voyage and every-\nthing on board was jettisoned.\nTotally unconscious of this fatality,\nthe weary party kept daily vigil for\ntho steamer. Their scanty supply of\nprovisions commenced to thin out, and\nafter the expiration of a few weclcs\nthoir position became so serious that\ntho rations to men were halved, and\nlater on they were quartered. All\nhope that tho steamer woidd arrive\nwas finally up and the danger of\nstarvation loomed up threateningly.\nDuring the latter part of August\n18S9, the Jittle camp was surprised by\nthe appearance of several miners, who\nhad come down tho Yukon river.\nThoy told a pitiful tale ot starvation\nand some ot them had scarcely\nstrength enough left to cither talk or\nwalk. They demanded the return of\na lighter tent th McGrath parly had\nborowed some inontlis before.\nFaco to face with the perii of t. ter-\nrible death, the miners and explorcis\ndecided upon a last attempt to seenre\nsome means of subsistence. Two\nmembers of the exploring party\nMcLartz and French, accompanied the\nminers to a place called Muklukaquet,\nwhere it was thought some stores might\nbe had. After an absence of sowrol\nweeks, dnriug which the Yukon river\nfroze over,
2b23a749088cab309b537d01f86daf19 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.8975409519835 29.949932 -90.070116 DarnH or W. A. VIOLETT. -His manyR\nfrends and the citizens of New Orleans gen- d\nerally, will learn with no ordinary emotions of\npain that W. A . Violett is no more. Born in\nAlexandria, Va., Mr. Violett at the age of 23\ncame to New Orleans, and from that time\nlinked his fortunes with those of the Crescent\nCity. For many years previous to the war he\nwas engaged in the Western trade, obtaining\nby his energy and capacity . high place in it,\nand by his honest and many lovable qualities\nan enviable position in the regard of his fel-\nlow-citizens. A great portion of the large\nfortune which he had accumulated up to the\ncommencement of the war, hlie lo-t in the\ngeneral wreck which then overtook our people.\nAt the close of the struggle he rcturned to\nthe city again devoted himself to busi-\nness pursuits. For some time previous to his\ndeath he had been affttlhcted with neuralgia in\nhis head and back. Forthelastten dayshe\nhad been confined to hisbed with it On\nSaturday evening about eleven o'clock, while\nhe was asleep the disease attacked his heart,\nand in a very few moments he was a corpse.\nMr. Violett was a man respected by all who\nknew him at all, and loved by those whose\nintimacy had taught them his true worth.\nHe was a man of spotless integrity, and both\nhis business relutation and his private char-\nacter were unimpeachable. He was a good\ncitizen, and a man, too, that will be missed\ngreatly from the social circle, which he was\never wont to enliven. Hisfamily, on whom\nhis loss falls heaviest, have the hearthlt aytn-\npatby of hosts offriends.
1982647e6c387c81787b101d067f77da THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.9109588723998 40.063962 -80.720915 Having apparently studied Bishop Co-\nlenso alfttlo, Col. Ingereoll made himself\nmerrv over the assertion that the Israelite\nwomen in the wilderness must have hail\nUS children apiece since there were 3,000,-\n000 persons In the camp, and 22,273 first¬\nborn males were redeemed by the Israel¬\nites. He reckoned there could not have\nbeen over 45,000 mothers for the first born\nbov» and girls, or an average of 68 chil¬\ndren to each. Now It so happens that the\nredeemed males were only those born\nsince tho exodus, and they must be at once\nthe first chlhl of the fatlier and the tiret\nchild Of the mother also. The regulation\ndid not extend to tliose of tho three mil¬\nlion who were born before the departure\nfrom Ejrypt- The picture of the priests be¬\ning oonipelM to intseveral hundred tur¬\ntle doves at once was amusing as drawn,\nhut too ahsuttl to need refutation.\nWo might dilate on the leotnrer's trav¬\nesty of the plagtios of Etrvpt, butour space\nis lienrlv exhausted. For a popular dis¬\ncussion of the visitations, and one which\nsets them in their true light, we know no\nbetter book than Walker's acute, but rath¬\ner obscurely named Philosophy of tho\nPlan of Salvation. Of slavery under the\nJewish theocracy, it is enough to say that\nit interposed numerous and marked allevi¬\nation to the servitude cverywhorp proya-,\nlent in the ancient world. The Jewish\nextermination of the Canaanites, on which\nho with such indignant energy, was\njustifiable only on the ground that It was\ncommanded for thedcstructionof a people\nwho had filled up the measure of their in¬\niquity bv idolatry, liestiality, and other\nvires too revolting for description. TJw\nemployment of human executioners may\nbe a peculiar, nay, a suspicious feature.\nYet God or fate sweeps away whole com¬\nmunities by earthquake, pestilence and\n(amine, and death leaves no household\nuiivisited. If there he a supreme liuler,\nthere nyi'v be mercy in the stroke; if there\nis not, then are we, indeed, as Strauss\naffirms in his latest *Tork, exposed to en.\ntangteuient and hopeless destruction amid\nfrightful and merciless machinery.\nWe have noticed a sufficiency of the lead¬\ning perversions of fact by tho lecturer to\nthrow reasonable doubt on the validity of\nhis general impugnment of the Scriptures\nas the source ofall crime. Easily aaceri\ntainalile fuels ant also too much for his\n5ild charges. The countries where the\nibte his been and Is still read, and where\nits precepts are observed, even imperfect¬\nly W 11 CTTftW? WW S.i'J* %"*\nwhere it is not known. Were Tamerlane\nand Noro Christians')' Are Stanley's cant\nnibals the results of biblical instructions?\nWhen on the tree schools of Mohamme¬\ndan or heathen countries? Where does\nthe monflgamv prevail which he so\nhighly enlogixes? Is domestic purity to\nbe found most frequently among those\nwho reverence the Bpripturas,or tfio rtgp-\ntical classes of Christendom? Col. Inger-
bc8251fdac96b25ac8909ee962e372e6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.7438355847285 41.681744 -72.788147 mashle approach to within eight\nfeet of the flag and was down In\ntwo putts for a winning par five.\nMiss Cummings also won the\nsixth, becoming two up. Here Miss\nWall's approach carried over the\ngreen Into a trap and she had\nslashed away five strokes before\nshe finally got her ball on the car-\npet. The Chicago girl played the\nhole in par figures with a five to\nMiss Wall's seven.\nThey halved the seventh In par\nfives, but at the eighth Miss Wall\nlost more ground by once more\noverpltchlng the green. She re-\nduced Miss Cummings1 average to\ntwo up on the turning hole, how-\never, when the Chicago girl, trap-\nped on her drive, played her re-\ncovery too strongly and barely got\ndown in six to her opponent's four.\nThe cards:\nCummlngs: 553 755 556 46.\nWall, Otit": 464 667 64448.\nThe tenth, 11th and 12th holes\nwere halved, but at the short 13th\nMiss Cummings was down In a par\ntree while Miss was taking\nthree putts for a four.\nThe Oshkosh girl promptly re-\nduced her rival's advantage again\nat the 14th, however, Miss Cum-\nmings hooking two drives out of\nbounds. Miss Wall holed out In\npar five to her opponent's seven.\nMiss Cummings reeled off a pow-\nerful drive of 230 yards at the fif-\nteenth and then proceeded to sky\nher arproach into a trap. Miss Wall,\n20 yards behind her opponent's\ndrive, was only 50 yards short of the\ngreen with her brassie, and she\npitched on nicely to get down in two\nputts for a win in five. The Chicago\ngirl took two strokes to get out of\nthe hazard and finally holed out In\nsix to become only one up.\nThe sixteenth was halved in par\nfives, but at the seventeenth Miss\nWall flubbed a chance to square the\nmatch when her opponent's tee shot\nfailed to carry the 215 yard stretch,\nlanding in a trap. Miss Cummings\noverplayed the pin by 30 feet on her\nrecovery,-
131e6defeba114c087ea76bfaac33bce EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.2534246258244 39.745947 -75.546589 about 14 feet, and will bo sold separately.\nNo. 311. A two-story brick store and\ndwelling and lot, at the southwest cor­\nner of Twelfth and Claymont streets,\nhaving a front of b! feet 3% Inches on\nTwelfth street, and extending that width\nalong the westerly side of Claymont\nstreet about 51 feet C Inches, and thence\ntapering oft along the northwesterly side\nof railroad avenue, giving lot a total\ndepth of 75 feet.\nNo. SI . A two-story brick dwelling and\nlot. No. 1119, on the northerly side of\nFourteenth street, 129 feet 6% Inches\nwesterly from the westerly side of Clay­\nmont street, having a front of 13 feet 11%\nInches on Fourteenth street, and extend­\ning that width northerly 72 feet C Inches,\nwith the use of a ithree-feet wide alley\non the northerly side thereof.\nNo. .15. A twu-atory brick and\nlot. No. 1121, on the northerly side of\nFourteenth street, 115 feet 7% Inches\nwesterly from the westerly side of Clay­\nmont street, having a front of 13 feet 11%\nInches on Fourteenth street, and extend­\ning that width northerly 72 feet 6 Inches,\nwith the use of a three-feet wide alley on\nthe northerly side thereof.\nNos, 3(1, 37, 33 and 39. Four two-story\nhrlck dwellings and lots. Nos. 1123, 1125.\n1127 and 1129. 'on the northerly side of\nFourteenth street. HU feet 1% Inches west­\nerly from the westerly side of Clavmont\nstreet, having a front of 55 feet 5% inches\non Fourteenth street, and extending that\nwidth northerly 72 feet 0 Inches, with the\nuse of a three-feet wide alley\nnortherly side thereof.\nThese houses each have a front of\nabout 13 feet 10% Inches, and will be sold\nseparately.
708285552cb7eefe20fa777d7b77769c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6407103508905 39.513775 -121.556359 He was soon highly honored by those he\nexcelled, for they were noble and generous,\nlie was made spokesman for his neighbor-\nhood-mthc public Assembly—then a sort of\nrepressntative for a division of the nation,\ncalled a State, in whied In? lived; and then\nagain he was the Ambassador of the whole\nnation abroad, and earned as high renown\nthere as he already enjoyed at home.\nHuring all this time he never took a part-\nner to his home, according to the custom of\nhis fellows His early friends married and\nhad children, \\nd died, and those children\nmarried and did likewise ; ye* he remained\nsolitary and abate. All Wondered at It\nWhen ite was at la*t proposed by a large\nnumber of his fellow ciliacus lor their chief\nruler, lie had become gray in the service of\nhis country, and was st 11 a bachelor. Those\nwlio were opposed to him talked of this as\nan evidence of his coldness of heart, and ap-\npealed to the women to use their cll'orts\nagainst him. Only a few of his ft Sends knew\nthe truth; and felt how keenly these idle re\npraachrs cut him to the heart.\nMany years before that time, when he\nwas a strong and hopeful youth, but as yet\nlittle known outside of his own immediate\ncircle, he was already promised in marriage\nto the girl with whom his heart had been\nsince early childhood, lie and she hud talk-\ned and played together as children, an i lov-\ned each other as boy and girl, until they had\n s > inseperably intertwined in eai li\nother's visions of life, that no picture or fan-\ncied haj pine-s was ever formed hy either, in\ndreams by day or night, which did not in-\nclude the other as its chief joy. Neither ev-\ner passed a moment, waking or sleeping,\nwhen the ttlier was not present, in hope or\nreality. Jf he ever dreamed fora moment\nof the fame he was afterwards to achieve,\nwe may be Hire that she was there to turn\nhis pride into exquisite happiness.\nIn the midst of all this about the rtme he\nwas first chosen by his comrades to be hon-\nored and trusted, the sun of his inner life\nsuddenly set to rise no more.\nThe lady of his love sickened and died.—\nThat night which has no morrow fell on Ids\ninner life. Thenceforth there was no more\nhope of love lor him. lln had played high\nfor happiness and lost. The game was up.\nA weak man would have sunk down, ruin-\ned and dispairiug. A heartless man would\nhave filled her place with another idol.—\nHo was neither ' eak nor heartless. Ac had\nbeen taught in the school of the founders of\nthe great nation, and was a{ once strong ami\ntrue. He went on in Id - course, and served\nIds country well and honorably. Laurels\ngathered round hia brow, ami every year\nadded to Ids fame, lint bis dreams of love\nwere buried in the gt uve of the chosen of bis\nheart; and therefore he remainnd forever a\nbachelor.
1e501eb427790b56d239181f6a19c6c7 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1906.6013698313038 46.601557 -120.510842 DESCRIPTIONi Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined inside\nwith a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up smalt punctures\nwithout allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating\nthai their tires have onlybeen pumped up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh no more than\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of thin, specially\nprepared fabric on the tread. That "HoldingBack" sensation commonly felt when riding on asphalt\nor soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being\nsqueezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these\ntires is|B so per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider\nof only Ri» per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C.O.D . on approval.\nYou do not pay a cent nntil you have examined and found them strictly as represented.\nWe allow a email discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 54.5S per pair) if you send\nMM CASH WITH IIKUKK and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickel\nplated brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these metal\npuncture closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tires to be returned\nat OIK expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination.\nWe are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster\nBanker. Kxpressor Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a pair of\nthese tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look\nfiner than any lire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased\nthat when you want a bicycle you will give us you' order. We want you to send us a small trial\norder at once, hence this remarkable tire offer.
04c616a2b82032428fde9eb2ebb00f5a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.7904109271942 40.063962 -80.720915 wards nold for consumption In\nTrunsvaal, thus making up tho g\ntotal of over SloO.OOO .OQo. It will bt\nnerved from thin statement that i\nthe present time the Importatlo\ngoods Into the Transvaal has lai\npassed through the British porl\nCapo Colony and Natal, which will\nbe closed against commerce for\nstate, thus temporarily changing\ncourse of the supplies which the\npopulation there located must roni\nto have. The closing of these ports\ncompel the Boers either to obtain\nsupplies of Imports through Portug\nterritory or else live upon what\ncan obtain from their own territory\nthat of the colonies which they ma;\nvade. since both the South Africa!\npublic and the Orange Free Stat'\nsurrounded by British territory or\nery side except at the enst, where\ntuguese East Africa Intervene* bet\nthe Boer states and the Indian o<\nThe total value of goods In transl\nthe South African republic and\nOrange Free State passing through\ntuguese East Africa In 1897 was In r\nterms $14,000,000, and the Import*\ntho United States to Portuguese\nAfrica amounted In 1897 to $1,80\nand In to $2,897,000. Of this oj\ntatlon from the United States the\nlarge proportion was bread*!\namounting to $1,227,000; manufac\nof cotton, $13,811; manufacures of\nand steel, I151.M3; Illuminating oil,\n189, and manufactures of tobacco. $\nAs the very large proportion of\ngoods reaching the ports of Portuj\nEast Africa last year was trans-sht\nto the Transvaal, It may be asst\nthat practically all of the goods a\nnamed were for that territory.\nAs already Indicated, however,\nTransvaal has up to this time t\na large share of Its Imports from\nthrough the British colonies of\nColony and Natal. Imports Into\nCape of Good Hope from the U\nStates In 1897 amounted to over |10\n000, out of a total of $88,000,000. ar\nthis probably one-half was jntende\nconsumption In the Transvaal.\nImports Into Natal from thu IT\nStates In 1897 amounted to 11,20\nout of a total of $3f».000,00o, anil\nprobable that a considerable sha\nthis was destined for the Trans\nsince the rail distance from the\nport of Natal to the Transvaal li r\nlers than that through the port\nCape Colony.
238f2c14fe5bd0ba5bb7487c242f118e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1910.132876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 Indiana Electric Railvays Company, a\ncorpo'atl'in duly orgarized under the laws\nof the state of Michigan, its successors\nand assigns permission to construct, op-\nerate and maintain under the conditions\nhereinafter provided an electric railway\nwithin the corporate limits and on certain\ntrrtts and alleys within the village of\nPaw Paw, Van Buren county, Michigan\nTh? Village of Paw Paw i)rdan.\nStC. l That prrmissmn and authority\nand a right of way is hereby granted to\nThe Chicago, Michigan and Indiana Elec-\ntric Railways company, a corporation duly\nincorporated under the laws ot the state of\nMich and to their successors and assigns\nand to any company or corporation suc-\nceeding their rights and pnveltrges un-\nder the provisions of this ordiance\n(herein after tor brevity termed grantees)\nthe right to locate. eatabUab canttruct. cx\ntend, use, maintain, own and operate an\nELECTRIC INTERURBAN RAIL\nWAY together with all the appurten\nances thereunto belonging and allMCCS\nsary convenient tracks turn outs, side-\ntracks spurs and switches, and with single\nor double trolley wire, with nccess.ir\npoles and overhead wires and rail Connec-\ntions and t operate an J maintain 'hereon\ncara naccaeary and convenient tor \ntransaction ot their business; to wit: Trans-\nportation ot passengers baggage, freight,\nexpress and United States m ul.\nSl:C i The routeot sai J railway through\nsaid village of Paw Paw shall be as fol-\nlows, to wit: ommencing at the west\nlimits ot Paw Paw street so called, in said\nvillage and running thence easterly on\nsaid Paw Paw Paw street, so called, or\nalong and upon any street or streets which\nmay be mutually agreed upon by and be\ntween said gramee, its successors and\nassigns and said Village Coum il to the\neastern limits ot said village.\nSKCji The rails to be used for the track f\nof the said railvv ay by said grantees, shall be\nof the style known as T rails, which shall be\nlaidtlush with the surface of the street and\nso maintained as to form an even grade\nthere with and as such grade may trom\ntime to time be established or altered by\nlegal authority The space between the\nrails ot s.ud tracks and switches shall be\ntilled with 'he same kind ot maten.il as is\nused in making the streets, or highways\noutside ot and adjacent to said tracks and
190ad2a42060916d0d0507f8f7a55c6f THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.5630136669204 32.408477 -91.186777 as possible in stating the case. Mr. the\nWrandall. You will be surprised to My\nhear that I have taken it upon myself, ma\nas the wife of Challis Wrandall and, sai\nas I regard it, the one most vitally pla\nconcerned if not interested in the dis-\ncovery and punishment of the person W1\nwho took his life--I say I have taken bol\nit upon myself to shield, protect and wh\ndefend the unhappy young woman who pli\naccompanied him to Btrton's inn on hel\nthat night in March. She has had my str\nconstant, my personal protection for la\nmore than twenty months."\nThe Wrandalls leaned forward in if\ntheir chairs. The match burned Les-\nlie's fingers, and he dropped it without\nappearing to notice the pain.\n"What is this you are saying?" de-\nmanded .Redmond Wrandall.\n"When I left the inn that nght, after\nseeing my husband's body in the little\nupstairs room, I said to myself that\nthe one who took his life had unwit-\ntingly done me a He was my\nhusband; I loved him, I adored him.\nTo the end of my days I could have\ngone on loving him in spite of the\ncruel return he gave for my love and\nloyalty. I shall not attempt to tell\nyou of the countless lapses of fidelity\non his part. You would not believe me.\nBut he always came back to me with\nthe pitiful love he had for me, and I\nforgave him his transgressions. These\nthings you know. He confessed many\nthings to you, Mr. Wrandall. He\nhumbled himself to me. Perhaps you\nIwill recall that I never complained to\nyou of him. What rancor I had was\nalways directed toward you, his fan-\nfly,who would see no wrong in your\nking but looked upon me as dirt be-\nneath his feet. There were moments\nwhen I could have slain him with my ty\nown hands, but my heart rebelled. be\nThere were times when he said to me M\nthat I ought to kill him for the things wi
4a5b55902e24e97971a03ad1beaac3f5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.2808218860985 41.681744 -72.788147 "The action taken leaves available\nto the Netherlands government by far\nthe greater part 6f their merchant\nmachine and tonnage, which, accord-\ning to estimates of their own offi-\ncials, is ample for the domestic and\ncolonial needs of the Netherlands.\nShipping required for those needs will\nbe free from detention on our part\nand will be facilitated by the supply-\ning of bunkers. The balance is being\niput Into a highly lucrative service,\nthe owners receiving the remunera-\ntion, and the associated government's\nassuming risks involved. In order to\nInsure to the Netherlands the future\nenjoyment of her merchant marine\nintact, not only will ships be returned\nat the termination of the existing war\nemergency, but the associated gov-\nernments have offered to replace In\nkind rather than in money any \nsels which may be lost whether by\nwar or unarlne risk; 100,000 tons of\nbread cereal which the German gov-\nernment when appealed to refused to\nsupply have been offered to the Neth-\nerlands by the associated govern-\nments out of their own inadequate\nsupplies, and arrangements are being\nperfected to tender to the Nether-\nlands government other commodities\nwhich they desire to promote their\nnational welfare, and for which they\nmay freely send their ships.\n"The statement of the Netherlands\ngovernment explicitly recognizes the\ntraditonal friendship of the United\nStates toward their country. It rec-\nognizes that we have heretofore\nsought to act in accordance with the\ndictates of right and justice and to\nchampion the interests of smaller na-\ntions. It should not therefore hastily\nbe 'presumed that we
2aa2c3029053c0b775c9de156dc9e8a2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.815068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 Rev. Dr. Hosmer, President of An-\ntloch College, last evening preached in\nthe Church of the Messiah (Unitarian)\nupon "The Secret of Influence," the,\npurpose of the discourse being to exclte\nthe cougiegatlon to the exi rtion\nforcololb* end that their influence\nmay be benefleiul at the present M.*'\nant! In the future. He said: The es¬\nsence of Influence is known alone to the\nAUwise Humanity feels its exWeuce\nand knows that it has force, but why or\nwhat It Is, Is not of worldly knowledge.\nIt is and it can never be destroyed. It\nmay be increased or changed, and per\nhans lessened, but it can never be oblit¬\nerated He conceived Influence to be a\ngift of living quality, whlch,bel"K\nrightly nurtured may grow so that the\nonetale.il shall become ten; perhaps\nthe ten talents might become one, but\nthe influence of a single human being,\nhe believed, could only be swept away\nby the destruction of the human race.\nInfluence he characterized as^lnBOOm-\nDotted of three elements. That \\% hich\nflows from the man himself "P*rt from\nall conscious action.the involuntary\nelement. That which couies through\nconscious eudeavor-the voluntary ele¬\nment, because It is under control. The\nthird, or accidental element, which\ngrows out ol the reBillta of the other el¬\nements. This Inst I- exhibited in the\nresults C>r wealth, and it is ihe element\nmost In ihe world in con¬\nnection with the results 111 the volun¬\ntary Influence. The speaker thin de¬\nscribed his views of the Involuntary\niu 11uenee, which goes out "H "''\nmind to counteract. Ihe seeming of the\naccidental and involuntary Influence,\nprotesting against the deceptions prac¬\ntised or attempted I » be palmed off to\nsecure the accidental Influence of flow .\ne^or place. Men forget their ep'r ual\noart and so forgetting, train their\nbodies to deceive it; but they are una¬\nble to avoid the power of their Invol oil\ntarv influence, and theretore comes the\nnecessity or inakiug the three elements\nto flow in barinouy. He\nihMl if all were so regulated the eon\ndilion of mankind would be ill a great\nmtaiure changed. Were all the\nstreams ol influence flowing\nwealth would be Ihe porlion of -the\nwell-disposed, the generous, liberal\nand cultivated. Power would include\nthe idea of (he imperial adminis¬\ntration or justice by a person who\nshould Is- a model <>r excellence, lo,\nsav or a mall Ibal he wa- great. wl«e\nand good, would mean 'hat he had\nwealth, and was In power. All Ibis Is\nnow by daily experience shown to la-\notherwise The cause is that men seek\nfor Influence by reason of seemlng to\nhe what they are not. Instead of being\nwhat they sf.oi.ld be: tbey ianore the\ni
0b142731e3f8a7cafb14fed1c172a0cb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.5575342148657 40.063962 -80.720915 1\\i the Editor (Jthe Wheeling InlttllQcnctr.\nHilt:.Plcaao pardon ino for tho libci\n. take in writing n few lines to your ve\nraluablo and widely circulated papi\nMy object in doing bo in to bay a word\ni»y old comradeB who ehured with r\nho hardships, trials and suffering durii\nho dark days of the Rebellion, and\nhe voters in general of tho First d,\nriot, bo well represented by tho Hone\nbio Georgu \\V. Atkinson. I dot\nliink there is a harder-worked Congrei\nDan in tho Fifty-tlrst Congress than\n>. You can see him every luornh\nftcr 0 o'clock wending hia way to tl\n'oneion oliice with a largo bundle of p\nera calling up pension casts, wanting\nnow how limy utaud and wishing\nn<! out if there fa anything wanted\niinpleto tho case. 1 atauro my con\nidea that wo really have a good frien\n» Mr. Atkinson, and you voters of tl\nirat district should feel proud that yo\nlected him to repreocnt you in tli\nifty-tirst Congre*a.. Ho has faitnfull\none bo by his voice and liia vote. H\nleech on the Pension bill, which bi\nune a law on June 27th last, should 1;\ntrefully rend by every veteran of tli\nto war; also his speech during tli\n debato should bo careful.y peruse\ny all those who favor American indui\ny against the pauper labor of Duropi\nchanced to bo in the gallery of th\noufio during the time ho fpok\ni these two subjects, and I neve\nlall iorget the kind words ho uttere*\nfavor of thoold veterans and the wag\norkera of this grand and glorious III\nlblic. lie is a friend to all classes c\n>oplo and the country in general.. J\nb constituents^ could only havo\nlance to hear him plead for his peopl\nam snro thoy would not hesitate on\nomont to tender him a reuoiuinatio;\nid elect him to the next Congress,\nm'fknow whether Mr. Atkinson dc\nres a renomination Or not, but shouli\n) desiro to bo a candidate he should b\nnt back totho position ho now hold\nith credit to those who sent him am\nmor to himself. Air. Atkinson doe\n>t know rne, but in justice to him\nust givo him tho honor ho has wel\nrned on the Ibor of the House durin\nis session of Congress.\nIJiope, Mr. Editor, you will do me th\nvor to publish this communication tlia\ny late comrades may bo able to read il\nI havo no other way of communis\njgwith them.
1fdca8907f9590b97b6fbb09c99e4fec THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.1438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 in liiitory ns a crowning infamv of an\nunresting and insane personal and political\nambition. While the charge of fraud\nand perjury against the Returning Hoards\nof Louisiana and Florida is by disap- |\npointed and maddened partisans echoed\nthroughout the land, 1 might, were it c\nproper, point you to a conspiracy that\nhad its origin at Jo Oramercy Park, New t\nYork city, at the home and by the friends t\nof Samuel J.Tilden, the Democratic can- <\ndidate for President, that had for its pur- i\n|»ose the purchase of an electoral vote on a\nthe faith of which his title to the Chief a\nMagistracy of the Nation might be estab- l\nlished. Mr. President, I have faith in c\nthis Commission and in the justice of its d\nfinal judgment. t|\nAt the conclusion of Mitchell's J\nargument it was announced by the I)em- ci\nwratic couniel that they should require t]\ntin extension of their time to double the 31\namount, and were willing to sit until late |>\nIn the evening. The questi6p. however, §i\nwas not then decided, and as it was get* a;\nling dark candles were brought in and ti\nMr. Lawrencc was invited to proceed with Ji\nlis objections. The sneaker quoted the\nicts of Congress and the statutes of Ore- tl\nfon, and added that Odell and Cartwright 01\n;ame with evidence of title which satis- o(\nied all the provision*. He then stated a,\nis his first proposition, and lie declared »(\nhat the wnole controversy might be H)i\nlisposed of in favor of the Hayes electors ca\n>y a single proposition, that if the mous- i.\nrons
1531608cbecbf7d36aba378843969d77 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.7575342148655 43.82915 -115.834394 In the matter of parasols, fashion\nevidently inclines to those of ample\ndimensions, with an unpretentious\nhandle made of wood, with a heavy\nknobbed end, or one shaped like a shep­\nherd 's crook. Sun umbrella* for the\nbeach, garden or country, are made of\ncotton foulards, printed with designs\nof various sorts. (Mental, Pompadour,\netc. With satin foulard, summer silk\nami pongee suits the parasol is match nl\nto the dress. For semi-dr«.is toilets\nth ere are elabo rate styles in silk, with\na large satin bow on the outs d • and\nan o ther on the handle. Those have a\nrich band of plain satin as a border.\nFull-dress toilets are accompanied\nwith a rich l ice or tulle parasol, the\nlatter hand'd with a velvet ribbon\nand finished with alining«»! pale tinted\nsilk. Finally they are tiei-oovered\nmodel* in black, embroidered with\nwhite silk, lined with white, mid edged\nwith n Iflics of black and white lace.\nAmi th ere are very beautiful ones In\ncrenru-whito net, line l with pale rose\ncolor, and trimmed with costly cream*\nluce frills, the designs outlined with\nliny Roman and pink pearl beads.\nIn defiance of all alluring novelties\nthat have been intr nluecd since its ap-\npe iranro years ago, the \nstill asserts its-If among the list of\nhlghly-pop ular Styles tills season, and\nis far from being absud onnd, as was\npredicted <*f it, by many fashion seers\nearly In the year. IVohably the gar­\nment will never be wholly abando ned,\nbut will continue t<> furnish material\nf«»r fancy to exercise Itself upon and\nproduce numberless ingenious div ersi­\nties fro u the one familiar figure. The\np donni.se of to-day is no lo nger the ordi­\nnary commonplace article of wear it\nonce appenre I, all butto ned down be­\nfore, like old (»rimes coat, or occa­\nsionally varied by being open from the\nb It down. It has evolved in the hand s\nid skilled designers, and devolved into\nn complicated garment; sometimes a\njacket on one side, with slashed and\nplaited panels on the other, at times\ndraped moAt profusely* and at others\ndeprived of all hack broad th*. Th •\nbodice portion is fiibject to quite as\nmuch variation, ami is open in Rompu*\ndour style, cut down in n V front and\nback, for summer evening wear, and\nfrei|uont l\\ cut away to a mere side form\nin velvet, to simulate a zouave j ack et\novei au Inner bodice of crape or silk.\nA. 1. / <>(.
2c0ffdbb4eb0308edc87033d6e04385b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1908.941256798978 39.623709 -77.41082 EXPOSITION. —I . The Gathering\nat Jerusalem t 6 Dedicate the Temple,\nI, 2. Great national gatherings for\nreligions purposes were one of the\nmarked features of the life of God's\nchosen people Israel. Not only had\nthey their three regular yearly feasts\n(Ex. 23:14-17) but there were special\ngatherings for special occasions like\nthis (cf. Josh. 23:2; 24:1; 1 Chron.\n28:1). Sometimes, as in the case be-\nI fore us, the regular and the special\n| were combined (cf. Ezra 3:1-6). The\n| Israelites when walking with God\ntook plenty of time for due acknowl-\nedgment of Gods godness, and for\nthe cultivation of their moral and\nspiritual life. The dedication of the\ntemple occupied seven days, and was\nimmediately followed by the regular\nyearly Feast of Tabernacles (2 Chron.\n7:8-10). There were In all fourteen\n of confession of sin (for the\nDay of Atonement occurred on the\ntenth day of this month, Lev. 23:27,\nwhich would be the third day of the\n¦even days of the dedication), of\nthanksgiving and worship and prayer.\nNo wonder that God manifested Him-\nself to them In such a glorious way.\nThe Immediate purpose of this great\nnational gathering of all the leading\npeople of the nation was that they\nmight bring up “the ark of the cov-\nenant" with due honor. All the sen-\nators of the nation were there, but\nnone of them presumed to touch the\nark that stood for God's presence in\ntheir midst. God had appointed that\nonly "the sons of Kohath should\nbear the ark (Nu. 4, 15 D). On this\noccasion the most Important of the\nsons of Kohath, the descendants
86b9a7c99ca52786802aa97ef0612a41 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8620218263004 39.290882 -76.610759 * T TIGS?REPORT TO THE MEMBER* OF\nTHE -dSSOCFi'J 'LOA ?Viu are aware lliat the legiti-\nmate objects of tins Institution were to encourage a sa-\nving disposition amongst the members, and to give a fa-\ncilityin discounting the small notes received by them in\nthe course of iheir business.\nIn presenting the half yearly accounts of the Institu-\ntion. we would avail ourselves of the occasion to con-\ngratulate you upon its steady increase, which, front a\nsmall beginning in 1839, lias already one hundred and\nseventy seven members, and deposits (or capital) to the\namount of fifteen thousand dollars\nIn proportion to the increase of pie deposits, we have\nbeen able to extern! the discounts, which now average\nfrom fifteen hundred 10 two thousand dollars p*r week.\nThis has been effected with advantage both to the mem-\nbers and the Institution, as from the caru exerctied by\n Board of Directors,no loss lias been sustained on any\nnote so discounted.\nAgreeably with the resolution of your general meeting\nin Oct. 1839, the necessary arrangements were made to\nissue n supply of small notes, for the use of the mem-\nbers, ami with the view to being at all times preparedfto\nredeem them. You will perceive by the annexed ac-\ncount that a large proportion of the proceeds has been\ninvested in notes payable at ten days' sight, well secur\ned,which notes can be realised at pleasure; and thus the\nInstitution stands daily ready to redeem every obliga-\ntion as presented.\nIn making a hullyearly dividend of four per cent, the\nInstitution will be retaining a handsome surplus as a\ncontingent fund, a measure we think you will unite with\nthe Directors in considering an act of prudence during\nthe continuance of the issue of small notes.
2c692e47a7f0abfe56e2b8bbb5d27db8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.5493150367834 42.217817 -85.891125 A gentleman named Miller, residing\nat the corner of Park and John streets,\nSecond ward, and oged about GO years,\nwas engaged in picking cherries at Mr.\nPiohl's, near by, and while doing so a\nlimb broke ond ho fell to the ground, a\ndistance of only ten or twelve feet, strik-\ning on his shoulders and the back of his\nhead. This occurred about 10 o'clock\nin the morning. Miller was taken to his\nresidence, and Dr. Whedon was called.\nWhen the doctor reached tho house, and\nniado personal examination, ho found\nthat Miller had suffered a dislocation of\ntho neck at the base of tho brain and ot\ntho upper part of tho spine. He could\nhear and understand, but could not\nspeak. Dr. Whedon, ou further exam-\nination, found that when the man's \nand neck wero pulled into tho natnral po-\nsition he could not only understand and\nhear, but could talk as well. For about\ntwo hours tho neck remained in its dis-\nlocated condition, and most of the time\nersons wero employed in holding the\nlead and neck in position, his mental\nfaculties being in their natural state.\nDoctors who visited the house during tho\nafternoon declared that not in the his-\ntory of the country has such a case ever\nhaipened before. A dressing consisting\nof bandages aud weights was applied to\nthe patient's head to keep tho neck ex-\ntended. The injured man died about 4\no'clock Sunday morning, and previous to\nhis death he became paralyzed in his\nright side. Ho lived eighteen hours\nwith a broken neck! Syracuse (X. Y.)\nCourier.
1aa36cb3ea980df64db15148f008f94f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4972602422629 39.745947 -75.546589 Continued from proceeding page.\ngeneral election day, for two years,\nand are paid by fees fixed by the Levy\nCourt of each county. In Wilming­\nton five assessors are elected for a\nterm of four years, at a salary of 1\n»800 a year. Collectors of taxes are '\nappointed in each of the counties ;\nexcept In Wilmington, by the Levy 1\nCourt for a term of two years. These i\ncollectors are bonded In each year for I\nthe amount of the taxes he is re­\nquired to collect, and is required by •\nlaw to pay the moneys collected to j\nthe county treasurer.\nEach district has at least one con- j\nstable appointed by the Levy Court '\nfor one year. Ho Is paid by fees, and '\nmust give for the moneys he I\nI may collect The chief duty of these 1\n, constables is to serve writs issued by j\n1 the Justices of the peace. Each dls-\nI trlct has Its Justice of the peace, ap- 1\n( pointed by the governor, and may. J\nhave more, as provided In the law ; j\n1 the term for which these Justices are |\n1 appointed is four years. Every Jus- i\n! tlce of the peace 1s also a notary pub- |\n! l'c. They arc paid by fees fixed by |\n; the law. The jurisdiction of a Jus- j\ni lice extends ove - the county for1\n! which he is appointed and In which i\nhe must be a resident.\n; (.(Merriment of Cilles and Towns.\nEach incorporated town
2489e00b3e4f09feb1806b88f918a731 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.395890379249 40.063962 -80.720915 girl was on her way down to _\n(itchcn to preparo breakfast She It\nin the act of going to the pump lor &\nir when he espied her. hastily, but jl\nghtltssly placing his lighted stump ci\nio pocket containing tho powder. Not B\nminute elapsed ero a loud report was £\nd. The parents were aroused; sll o\nin an uproar for a few minutes. It J\nId that young Smith was the worst £\ned boy that was ever seen in Wheel- J\nIt is not necessary to state that that d\nth didn't go out hunting wild prey\nerday. He prayed for forgiveness and\nw pair of pantaloons, promising never\nimoke or go hunting again if his t\nler wolud go with him early Uonday\nniogtothe people's cqnare dealing J\n clothing house ol H. Frank, 40, ,\nstreet, and purchase him a new pair (\n?laco of thoso unmentionables. Wo li\ninland the compromise was made,\nwould here state that Frank Is the\nsquare dealing one price clothier in '\ncity. A child can purchase there as\nip as an adult. Ho has made special v\nictlons this week. Suits that were\nlerly sold at |3, ho is now selling at j!\nCoats that were selling at 75 cents s\niced to 60 cents. Pants that were\nth |1 have been reduced to 85 cents,\nall other goods In proportion. He this\nopens a new line of fino light colored v\ni which are lo be oflered and sold at\n;ry great sacrifice. Remember the '\nc, sign of the green front. E
2f034873a4683e94a6a4c22b0a077248 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1917.105479420345 39.623709 -77.41082 The results of the torpedo boats ex-\nploration Inside Iola are of course not\nknown. Undoubtedly they must have\nbeen very valuable, judging by the fact\nthat no attempt was made to torpedo\nany of the enemy ships before two\nhours, and It Is to be presumed that\nall this time was not lost. Besides, hud\nnot dawn been so near the torpedo bout\nwould have surely prolonged her ex-\nploration Inside Iola. It was about\nlive oclock In the morning when the\ntwo torpedoes were fired against the\nAustrian battleship In the Fusana\nchannel, almost simultaneously and at\na very close range. They both got en-\ntangled In the nets protecting the ship.\nEvidently three nets protected the\nship, because two were cut, but the\nthird prevented the torpedoes from\nstriking the hull, and propellers\nkept going outside the water with a\nloud noise resembling that made by the\npropellers of an airplane.\nIn fact, the Austrians on board the\nbattleship, us well as those on board\nother ships and on shore, mistook the\nnoise and took it for grunted that Pola\nhad been attacked by hostile air cruft.\nThe alarm was raised at once with the\nrapidity of lightning. Searchlights\nwere put on and illuminated the sky,\nwhile all the guns of the aerial defense\non the hills and on the Islands, ns well\nas all those on the ships and of the\nshore batteries, opened fire simultane-\nously, wildlyand Inefficiently.\nThe Italian torpedo boat headed\nstraight for the barrier. The Austrians\nIn the patrol boat watching the en-\ntrance of the channel, who were not\nquite awake,
5f236ffd1fc4087584b3ac5ca3fc1b3c WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.57397257103 40.827279 -83.281309 that- !ournal wholly misunderstands\nthe case . We are authoritatively\nassured that the removal of Mr.\nMotley was determined upon some\nmonths since, because of the incom-\npatibility of his views, upon the Al-\nabama question, with those of the\nadministration Soon afterMr.Motlcy\nwas appointed, be presented to the\nState Department a paj er containing\nmemoranda of suggestions of in-\nstructions as he desired them to bo\ngiven, which were entirely opposed\nto the v iews held bv theFresident and\nhis Cabinet.upon which the Alavama\nnegotiations shouli be conducted ;\nMr. Motley's suggestions being then\nentirely ignored, and other and dif-\nferent instructions being prepared\nfor bim upon which to conduct the\nnegotiations. There would probably\nhave been no reason for his recall\nbecause of his public dispatches, as\nin them he conformed to his instruc-\ntions; bat so far from concealing\ntbe fact that his written dispatches\nwere not in consonance with bis\n personal views, he took paius\nto have it known in London society\nor at least wes careless in allowing\nit to be known, that himself as well\nas Mr. Summer differed from toe\nadministration as to the grounds ou\nwhich our demands upon England\nbecause of the Alabama should be\nplaced, and that as Mr. Sumner was\nChareman of the Committee on For-\neign Affairs in the Senate, it was\nhardly probable that that body\nwould permit any negot'aiion to be\naccepted upon a different basis.\nHowever distateful Mr. Motley\nhad thus made himself to the admin-\nistration, yet it was not intimated to\nhim that his resignation would bo\nacceptable, from courtesy to Mr.\nSumner and regard to the Common-\nwealth from which Mr. Montlcy\ncame. Thedifference.however, be-\ntween Mr. Motley and the adminis-\ntration became eo distinct that it\nwould have required all Mr. Sumner'a\npower and prestige to have mai n-t rin e- d
12ddaf59b8e43da212be4a326969cab4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.228767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 frock-coat, but well cut away from th\nsocond button-hole; pockets in the plait\nbehind, and side-edges ou the skirts.i\nvery sttliah-coat, and better adapted ti\nmany figures than the frock.\nHoming coats this season ore mado ti\nbutton, medium height, to display\n"Stanley" scarf, or to throw well bucl\nand wear open lapels rather small, am\nthe fore-part and skirt well cut away ti\nfront. If of lino goods, the pockets an\nmade In the plaits behind; but if of meltoi\nor tweeds, tliey are made with rood sizei\nflaps on the hips, and edges double-stitch\ncd. Sack undercoats arenot In style, am\nwill bo but little worn by gentlemen o\nfashion. Vests tffVeat with thefrocl\nand Newmarket coats should be double\nbreasted, with lapels sown on and t\nmatch ibecoaL To match the moraioj\ncoat the vest shonld bosingle-breastetl\nwith a steep-collar, and buttoning ti\nmatch the coat In new coatings this sea\nson are specially the Granville fntl Bed\nford, diagonals In new styles am\ncolon. The Onovllle is a new weave, 0\nthe basket pattern, and tomes in blacl\nand blue; The Bedford* arc straight ribs\nof elastic make and peculiar patterns, th\nzig-zag and herrWz-bono being nmonj\nthe most stylish. The latest novelty ii\ndiagonals is a bold rib, in color, on a blacl\npound. The colors most iavored an\nbrown, green, rich blue, and gray. Th\nlines stand well out in relief, and on th\nblock ground have a very elegant cflecl\nIn suitings, the most fashionable are ii\nregular mixed stripes of gray, licathei\nmiko(J and small fancy stripe ol varioit\noolors of tbo herring-bine Btylo. Trowser\nare worn rather fuller at the knee, with.i\nmedium spring over tho boot, having:\nstraight appearance. Slits at the bottom\nare in bad taste. Light drab korsey over\ncoats (improperly called "white coots"\nare very fushionoble as driving -coats, am\nmay be worn with good taste on tho stree\nunder certain circumstances.
8da52c4a62cbcd770d570057eead73cb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4315068176052 41.681744 -72.788147 city has nothing to bo ashamed of\nin this respect, why not show the\nlist?" he inquired. When the vote\nwas taken, William G. Dunn, Milton\nD. Jones and Councilman Warner\nwere in favor and Mr. Hancock and\nCouncilman Stanley M, Cooper op-\nposed. The motion prevailed.\nThere was a discussion of the ad-\nvisability of making a recommenda-\ntion that a committee of insurance\nunderwriters supervise the placing\nof new insurance but it was felt in-\nadvisable to do so and the matter\nwas dropped, only to bring about\nconsideration of a recommendation\nto have the insurance redistributed.\nCouncilman Cooper said he believed\nthe school deparlment insurance\nwell handled but Councilman Boyle,\npointing out that vacancy permits\nwere not attached to some policies\nand, In others, motion picture equip-\nment permits were absent. Mr.\nHancock said he understood that\nspecial permission had been given\nto leave the motion picture permits\noff in view of the fact that the\nequipment was not in use.\nCouncilman Cooper said he could\nsee ho particular benefit in recom-\nmending a redistribution. The Com-\nmercial Co. has bulk of the in-\nsurance but he understood that the\nmatter had been gone into thor-\noughly and the school board had\ndecided that the company's repre-\nsentative was entitled to the busi-\nness because of the great amount of\ntime he had given to working up the\nplan. Mr. Hancock, Mr. Dunn and\nCouncilman Warner disputed the\nclaim that the Commercial Co.'s rep-\nresentative originated the plan. Mr.\nDunn said he would not favor a\nmovement to disturb policies in ef-\nfect at the present time, but he be-\nlieved there should be a redistribu-\ntion of the school insurance relative\nto expirations nnd new business.\nThe committee discussed the prob-\nable effect of such a recommenda-\ntion, and it was pointed out that in\nIhe event that the common council\napproved the request for a redistri-\nbution, the committee or any other\ncommittee would be entirely with-\nout power to force action. The\nschool board could refuse to pay any\nattention to tho request and all the\ncommittee could do would be to re-\nport back to the council the attitude\nof the board.
b8ab2c95a127cb06d7221bd96988c8b2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.7062841213824 41.681744 -72.788147 stabbed to death with his own wea-\npon in the hands of the latter. Tak-\ning the wounded In wagons ofd\ncarts, the British prepared to return\nto New London when reports came\nin that Washington's advance guard\nhad arrived. The British embarked\non their boats, the cartloads of\nwounded were allowed to dash un-\nchecked down the steep hill, add-\ning to the slaughter, and a slow\ntime fuse was attached to the great\npowder magazine. One of Washing-\nton's advance guards, a soldier nam-\ned Perkins, entered the fort and\nnoting the fuse, secured a cartridge\nbox of water from the old well otill\nIntact in the fort and extinguished\nthe fuse and saved the fort from\ntotal destruction.\nSuch was the story of the battle\nor massacre of Fort Trumbull, as\ntold visitors by the custodian, a civ-\nil war veteran and a veteran of\nthree Indian campaigns. Seventy six\nyears old, but halo and hearty, and\nstraight as an arrow, this old sol-\ndier delights in telling visitors of\nthe stirring battle during the\n18 years that has been at the fort\nhe himself has made some remark-\nable discoveries. Chief among these\nwas the finding of three graves of\nsoldiers massacred in the historic\nbattle. He had been custodian for\nten years before he made this dis-\ncovery. In the northeast corner of\nthe old fort was a pile of stones\nand slabs and one day, while doing\na bit of excavating, he noticed chis-\neled on three stones, definite ini-\ntials. Checking these with names of\nthe known defenders he found the\nnames and investigation showed\nthat the bodies of these old fight-\ners had been buried where they fell,\npresumably by relatives who had\ncared for the bodies and chiseled\ntheir initials on the atone.\nAt present Inside the fort the\ncustodian points out the old gate-\nway with some of the original\nstones in it. The sight of the old\ncook house has been preserved as\nhas that of the interior blockhouse.\nThe old well remains and a marker\nshows where the American com- -
0cc23bb28c2e72b4175455f90925ef75 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.8589040778793 58.275556 -134.3925 A dispatch from Anchorage states\nthat the Alaskan Engineering Commie\nsion i8 taking a census of its employes\nto ascertain the number of Alaskans\nwho are at work for the commission. It\nis believed that this is a move to refute\nthe charges that the commission has\nbeen discriminating against Alaskans\nin favor of foreigners because of the\nAlaskans beiug too independent.\nThere will be a convention of the\nAlaska Native Brotherhood for four or\n6ve days commencing on Monday\nmorning, November 22, next, at Metla-\nkahtla. Native delegates will come\nfrom almost every Indian village ou\nthe coast from Haines down to the\nlower boundary line, and these dele¬\ngates will represent the Thliugef,\nHydah ttnd Teimpshean native people. J\nNorman, the 11 year old and only son\nof Dr. Alfred Thompson, member \nparliament for the Yukon, was electro¬\ncuted near his home at Rocklitfe. A\ngang of men were engaged iu cutting\naway a tree recently blown down. It\nhad broken a live wire, which was hang¬\ning near the sidewalk, and the boy,\nwho was passing with his mother,\ngrasped the wire before Mrs. Thomp¬\nson could prpvent him.\nUnited States Marshal L. T . Erwin,\nof Fairbanks, reduced the disburse¬\nments of his office §G0,000 over that of\nthe previous year. When asked as to\nthe reason for the big decrease he de¬\nclared that the reduction was largely\ndue to the fact that the district was\nforever through with the administra¬\ntion of J. J. Crossley, as United States\ndistrict attorney, which to my knowl¬\nedge was the most expensive iu the\nunion.
13bef8f84101b658b6e6e37607521d58 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1881.4890410641806 43.82915 -115.834394 D Ï VIRTUE OF AN EXECUTION ISSUED OUT\nof the District Couri. Second Judicial District\nof Idaho Territory, in and for Ada county and to me\ndirected and delivered, for a judgment rendered\nand entered in said Court, on the i« enty-seventh\nday of January A. D. 1880, in favor of Joseph Per­\nrault, and against James Crew and William James,\nI nave levied on the following property, to-wit:\nThus ■ certain mining claims known as Copelands\ndiggings, situated in Boise county, Idaho Territory,\nabout eighty miles from Idaho City, i a northerly\ndirection, and about four miles from Long Valley,\nand iu the vicinity of what is known as Gold Fork,\nbeing Hill, liar, Gulch and Creel claims, and loca­\nted and taken up by James Copeland, James How­\nell. T . C. Underwood and George Mozier, and sold\nto Jam es Crew M ardi 23, 187(1, by T. C. Underwood\nand Furry. Also the main ditch used in\nworking said diggings; said ditch tapping a small\ncreek that empties into the said Gold Fork about\none and one-ball'm iles above tile mouth thereof,\nextending thence along tho mining ground, oil the\nsouth side of said Gold Fork about three miles to\na certain gulch, toga her with the ditches leading\nlrom the suid gulch to the main diggings, about\none-half mile from said gulch, the said main ditch\nbeing about tile capacity of two hundred and litiy\ninches, m iner's measure, together with the water-\nrights and privileges incident and pertaining tu\nsaid ditches, being the first water-right to the wa­\nters of said gulches, with sll reservoirs, flumes, etc.\nthereunto belonging or iu any wise appertaining,\ntogether with all and singular the tenem ents, here­\nditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging\nor in any wise appertaining. Notice is hereby\ngiven that on the
08bdee4cab49ffeb13912a8b9d1b5469 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.5575342148657 40.063962 -80.720915 Just before the men went over the 11\nlearn*hip Illinois en route to Liverpool\nia*sed and was cheered with screaming\nthistles, cheer*, &c. Arthur Chambers\nmd Frank Gormly started the men oil' in\nho Amada Powell at Chester at 1:40. At Jt\nliuiiMon'rt wharf, one mile and a quarter,\nJoyle led bjr two hundred yards, and the Ai\name position was maintained to 0t\nHnicum Island, when Coyle pass- |u\nd eastward and Johnson weat y\nf Lauretta three and a quarter mile*, oq\nJoyle still maintained the lead at the end\nf Tinicum Island. Coyle was leading \\\ntalf a mile at Fort Mitllin bar, and has\nained another ouarter of a mile. Coyle,\nrho had from the start taken the ehan- w\nel, had a decided advantage, and was\naining momentarily. At the rort Mifllin n{\night, eight miles from the starting point, fri\nJoyle was still half a mile in the co\nJoyle was swimming with his body out\n/ water, while Johnson was swimming a\nis side stroke with his head under: after\nimutinv the Kedbnrk liffhthnime. JnbiiHon\njade a spurt and Rained a quarter of a\nlile, opposite the Kedbark wharf it be*\narno evident that Coyle had over esti*\njated himself, he breathed hard and B\nailed for help and waa taken from the\nrater apparently lifeless. The |»hy«i- j\nians immediately attended and found\niim to be very low; in the meantime Cs\nolinson who was one mile in the lu\near wan struggling manfully, made\nspurt nnd in less than ten minutes had b'\ntossed the spot where Coyle gave out and\nras declared the winner. lie gavo an Is\nxhibition of his powers in the water,\nnd Mwaui one mile further, and the\nudgeM declaring him tho winner he was hi\nequested to get into their boat. The en-
07e45381cec88953f9cb44db1bdefd0c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.596994503896 44.939157 -123.033121 mind," said Dr. Charles Swlndt, ot the\ncounty hospital, "has Just died. Sho\nwas Mra Mary Ollllsplo, a woman of\nSf! years. During "nor llfotlmo she was\ntho mother of 30 children, and, what\nwas strangest or nil. they consisted\nof 15 pairs of twins.\n"Mrs. Ollllsplo camo to the hospital\nlu 1901. Sho camo to tho United\nStntos in IS 10 from England, whore\nsTTb was born. In 180C she camo to\nColorado tor her hoalth, as b'uo was\nsuffering from tuberculosis, not seri-\nously, but onough to bring hor to this\nstate from Massachusetts, whore sho\nhad mado her homo slnco coming over\nfrom England. I Imagine that hor life\nhad not boon a happy ono, though nil\nthrough her stay hero sho stoadlly ro\nfused to toll anything of her past his-\ntory, tho part 1 havo Just rolatod.\n"Whon she camo to us at 82 years\nof age practically all signs of tubercu-\nlosis had disappeared, and tho woman\nwas suffering from nothing save old\nago and general decrepit condition. In\nthis condition she might hnvo llvod\non. had he not. about throe Jays be-\nforo her death. faHou and broken her\nthigh bone. Tho utmost that medical\nskill could do for her was done but\nnil to no avail. Her system was too\nfeeble to Maud the shock,\n"From the number of her 80 chll\ndroit we havo only succeeded In locat\nIng one. Mrs, HMa Hildebraud. of\nSUmix City, who, upon hearing of her\nmother's death, wrote us and offered\nto iKty hor funeral expenses. Thi la\nthe ttret sign of Internet any of her\nchildren
0cb193456481f61c26d4514eb2cc8832 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.664383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 1,2.3,4,5.G.58.59.60,61.62.63,Si,88,\n91, 92. 93, 91, 95, 96, 97, 98. 99 . 100, 192. 193,\n194, 19C, 20«. 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217,\n218, 219, 220. 280, 283 . 288. 364. 3®, 366, 367,\n368, 369, 370, 371, 372. 873, 374 . 375, 37«. 377,\n878. 379. 38». 381 , 382, 383. 384. 385, 888, 387 ,\n388, 399. 400, 401, 4»2, 493. 404, 4U5, 40«. 407 .\n108, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413 , 411 , 415, 416, 417 ,\n418. 419, 420, 421 , 422 , 423 424. 425. 426, 427 .\n428. 429, 430 , 131, 432 . 433. 43». 435, 436. 437 ,\n438. 439, 44», 441, 412, 443, 444. 445. 446, 447.\n44«, 449, 45». 451, 452. 453. 4M . 435, 456, 457,\n458. 459, 46». 461. 462, 4(3. 464. 465, 46«, 467,\nW8, 169. 470. 471. 472 , 473, 511, 512, 513, 514,\n515. 51«, 517, 518, 519. 520, 573, 5*. Ml, 582.\n583, Bid, 585. B8f, 587, 5 'S . 589, EH), 591, 592,\n593, 594, 595, 59«, 597, 598, 599, bUO, 601, 6u2,\n603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608. 609. 610, 611, 612.\n613, 614, 615, 61«, 617. 618, 619, 620, 621, 622,\n«23, 624. 623. 626, 627, 628. 629. 630. 631, 632,\n633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 64«. 647. 648,\n670, 871 , 672. 673, 682. 683. 684, 685, 686,\n687. 688, 689, 090, 691. 692, 693, 691. 695 . 696 ,\n697. 698. 099, 700 , 701 , 702, 703 , 704 . 706, 706.\n707. 708, 709, 710 , 711, 712, 713 , 714 , 716, 716,\n717, 718 , 719, 720. 721, 722. 723 , 724, 748 , 749,\n750, 755, 756, 737 , 758. 759, 760, 761, 762, 763,\n764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 770, 771 , 780, 781, 782\n783, 784 , 836. 837 . 838, 829. 840 , 841, 864, 880 ,\n890, 901, 902, 903. 904, 905. 906. 307 . 908, 909\n910, 911, 912. 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919,\n920, 918. 919. 950. 986. 987, 988. 989. 990. 991,\n1006. 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 10H, 1016, 1016,\n1017, 1918, 1019, 1020, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1042 , 1051\n1062, 1063, 1054, 1055, 1050, 1069, 1060, 1061. 1065\n1066, 1072 , 1078, 1079, 1080 , 1081, 1082, 1083 , 1084 ,\n1085. 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089. 1090, pm 1092, 1093.\n1094, 1095. 109«. 1106. 1106. 1107. ROS, 1109, 1110 .\n1U 4, - 11 16. 1116. 1137. 1138. 1142 . 1143, 1144\n1145. 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149. 1152, 1153, 1154. 1165\n1192. 1193. 1196. 1196. U97. 119«. 1199, 1200.\nTHE WILMINGTON CITY RY CO ,\nBv 7VM. S . BELL, Sec'y and Tre--
547f3bb4224bb915a440eca80692f059 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.7301369545917 58.275556 -134.3925 Harry Lane was declared iu*aue iu\ncommissioner's court at Fairbanks. He\nwas picked up last mouth at a road\ncamp near Salcha. He was without\nfood or clothing and in a pitiable con-\ndttion, as he bad been rendered nearly\nblind from the ravages of mosquitos\nand flies. He believed three uien were\nafter him with gnns aud he was trying\nto get out of the country.\nIn discussing the question of a tax\nlevy for the towu of Cordova, the Alas¬\nka Times says that it would be well\nthat a liberal valuation be placed on\ntown property. If this is done a levy\nof one per cent will take care of the\nobligations of the towu for the year.\nThis would be a better advertisement\nfor the town than a smaller valuation\nwith a larger ceut of taxes.\nA letter to a Juoeau citizen from\nCommissioner d'Heirry, of Chitina,\na*ks as to the disposition of personal\neffects found on the body of Dan\nCrowley, who was drowned in the\nNizina river; $308.05 in cash, a jack\nknife aud five uuggets were found ou\nthe body. The commissioner writes\nthat $46.49 of the cash, the five nuggets\nand the jack knife are stili left.\nWhile in Fairbanks, Governor Strong\nwas waited upou by a delegation of\nabout twenty hunters who wished to\nhave the game laws changed, as they\nbelieve they are not applicable to that\npart of the territory. They urge that\nthe open season for ducks should be¬\ngin August 15 instead of September 1,\nclaiming that nearly all the ducks and\ngeese have started south before that\ndate.
2187158a97c2f4bed835fd42aff0a558 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.8784152689234 40.063962 -80.720915 When the count was finished 3Ir. Hi\npus asked that the question as to whetl\ner the name of Atkinson had been wri\nten alter or before the scratch was wad\nbu submitted to City Clerk Bowers,\nltepublican, and Mr. 6 . G . Iiannai\na Democrat, both export in Penmei\nship and both men of repute. This prj\nposal was rejected. It was too honest.'\nMr. Rob rig said: "Mr. President, I1\nmake a motion timt we don't do it," an\nthe. motion prevailed.\nAs returned by tho election official)\ntho votes cast numbettd 981. Whe\nthe recounts were iinished, each tin:\nthere was one more ticket than counte\nby the Judges and one more tliun tli\nnumber of voters' names on the pollin\niiou nils uiscrepancy taken in connei\ntion with the shortage of two votes fc\n is important.\nMr. McGregor moved that the fact I\nentered on tho minutes that there wt\none more ticket than there should be.\nMr. Myles moved to amend by suu\nmoniug tho election officials of the pn\ncinct and taking their testimony us t\nwhether they counted all the tickets i\nthe box. This prevailed.\nOne of the judges said last night the\nall had been counted.\nTho question is, whero did tho exti\nticket come from?\nWhen the Board mot yesterday tli\nMadison district election officers aj\npeared, and us a result of their explani\ntion one of tho tickets reserved tho dn\nbefore was counted. This leaves Pel\ndleton's majority in the countv 222.\nAnother ticket voted in MadiBon uu\ntrict is still reserved foriuture decisioi\nThe Hoard adjourned till 0:30 a. 11\nMonday.
5a301ddffd8b31516543a41185015f1c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2534246258244 39.745947 -75.546589 George Edwin King, director of the\nGelhel Junior Chorus of TOO voices, is\ntrying to make final arrangements,\nwith all the assisting talent, and as\nsoon as all the plans arc completed,\npublic announcement will be made\nof the special musicians and enter­\ntainers who are to take part in the\nSpring concert of the ^Jeibel Chorus,\nin Epworth M. E. Church.\nThe young singers are now busy\nrehearsing' the several selections to\nhe sung at the entertainment, and\nthey are making surprising progress.\nNo children's chorus in recent years\nhas given such high-grade concerts\nbefore Wilmingtons audiences, as\nhas this well-known Juvenile choir.\nThe enthusiasm ot those attending is\nalways aroused to a high pilch.\nThis year's chorus seems, if possi­\nble. better than ever before. The\nmanner in which they have \nhold of "The Lost Chord” is surpris­\ning to even those training them. Its\nrendition on the night of the con­\ncert promises to be a crowning feat­\nure of the entertainment.\nAnother especially pleasing selec­\ntion will be "The Deserted Garden,”\na twh-part song for soprano and alto,\nwith the melody in the lower notch.\nThe director had great difficulty in\nlocating the words of this song, but\nfinally secured this selection througn\nthe office of Dr, Enoch W. Pearson,\ndirector of music in the Philadelphia\npublic schools. This song«was sung\nby 3,500 children In Convention Hall,\nPhiladelphia, last Summer, under the\ndirection of Dr. Pearson. Choirmas­\nter King was present at the occas'on.\nand immediately determined that If\npossible he would secure the w'ords\nfor the Gelhel Chorus which has been
07b399cc7b78299ded8694cef75131b5 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1910.3219177765093 40.114955 -111.654923 roans success and money Why dont\nwe build a theater together Whet I\nhay a theater I mean a firstclass\nopera house and not a barn Well\nemploy the best architects to build It\nand of course Id leave everything\nabout It to you Ive got u block in\nNew York just about In tho right\nplace and It wont take long to build\nIll give the land and put up tho\nmoney for the building If youll un-\ndertake the management Youll put\nIn any money you like of course and\nwell share the profits Maybo theyll\nbo quite handsome for well lease the\ntheater to other people outside of the\nseason Well have tho best talent In\nEurope and pay for It and the public\nwill pay us back Well call It the\nCordova Opera If you like and youll\nruin It according to your own Ideas\nand sing or not whenever you please\nAre you In earnest\nMargaret had some difficulty In pro-\nnouncing the words clearly Was\nthere ever great soprano who did\nnot dream of having tho most perfect\ntheater of her very own and who\ncould receive unmoved the offer to\nbuild one from a man who could build\n20 If ho chose Very rarely In her\nlife had she been aware of her bodily\nheart but she could feel It now beat-\nIng liko u hammer on tho anvil\nIm In earnest Van Torp an ¬\nswered with perfect calm Ive\nthought tho wholo thing over In all Its\naspects Just as 1 would a railroad or\na canal or a mine and Ive concluded-\nto try It If youll help me because Its\ngoing to ho a safe Investment You\nsee Miss Donne ho went on slowly\ntheres no artist on the grand opera\nstage now whos so well equipped for\nthe business as you are Im not flat\ntorlng you either In your own kind-\nof parts youvo simply got no rival\nEverybody says so and I suppose you\nwont play kitty and deny It Lots\nstart fair now
26a7a3bda32583b4dc03a95f75dc663b OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.7472677279397 39.513775 -121.556359 the lamp of experience.” If our fellow citi-\nzens, who are so willing to vote for Fremont\nm l Freedom to the Slave, will reflect a lit\nilc on this wise and Statesmanlike princi-\nple, it can do them no harm. The motives\nif the Abolition party may seem to bear an\n■utward gloss of good, but is it not well to\nreflect on the probable consequences of the\nsuccess of their schemes, and to turn over\nthe records of (he past for some evidence of\nthe behavior of liberated slaves, under like\ncircumstances? It this suggestion meet with\nmy favor in their eyes, we would commend\nto their consideration the following passage\ntranslated from Bakri'kj.s History of the\nFrench Clergy, and published in IT'.uJ—al-\nmost at the very lime of the events it relates:\n“An officer named Onncs,, says a witness\n(at the trial «-1 and his fellows at\n.Nantes) to ask our assistance in favor of\nfive pretty white women whom the company\nof Negroes, had reserved for a purpose easily\nto he guessed at. A party marched off and\nsoon came to the house where the negroes\nhad lodged the women The poor creatures\nwere crying and groaning; their shrieks\nweictoho hcald at half a mile distance.\nThe party ordered the door to be opened,\nwhich was at last done They then deman-\nded the women. Js'o; replied the blacks;\nthey arc our slaves: we have earned them\ndear enough, and you shall tear them away\nlimb by limb if you have them. The bru-\ntality of the blacks would not permit them\nto listen to reason; they prepared for the\ndefense of their prey, when the party, al-\nways guided by prudence, preferred retiring\nto avoid slaughter.”
a347e57a8b1fe7c1ad715401b4fc780b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.8068492833586 41.681744 -72.788147 j established by the generation which\nhas become adult in years and de-- I\nmeanor. In all the denunciation\nthere have been few suggestions for\nthe amelioration of the situation.\nMany speakers and writers have ex- -,\npressed the belief that modern youth\nis well able to take care of itself\nand is doing no harm.\nBoiled down and stripped of unes-\nsential verbiage, the chief criticism\nof boys and girls of today is that\nthey are "different." They lack an\noutward show of piety, for example.\nThey are more frank than their\ngrown up elders were in discussing\nsubjects which were once confined\nto the class in biology. They have\nsandpapered the veneer of life and\nlook upon it in its natural finish.\n'Their attitude toward the opposite\nsex is changed. Boys longer treat\ngirls with that refined spirit of\nchivalry which was once the boast\nof the male and girls no longer pay\ntribute, to boys in a spirit of timidi-- !\nty, which is now accepted as a sign\nj of inferiority complex. Girls expose\ntheir limbs in public in a manner\nwhich was once confined to the bur-\nlesque stage, and nobody locks at\nthem twice. Girls smoke in theater\nlobbies, at dances, at parties and in\ntheir homes. They go to road houses\nand drink and they have developed\ninto connoisseurs of alcoholic bever-\nages. They can distinguish between\n"good stuff" and hooch and they\ncan pass judgment on the ability of\nthe person who mixes the drinks.\n.Many of them can mix the drinks\nthemselves and pride themselves on\nthe art.
296550071634f2433fd64aa6dac6dc1b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.5082191463723 44.939157 -123.033121 In the first place, there Is no de-\nnying the fact that Johnson showed\nthe greatest speed, strength. Judg-\nment and skill. His remarkable de-\nfense was ever to the fore and Jeff's\nbest efforts were turned aside as a\nduck's back turns aside water.\nBut was it the negro's superior\nfighting quality that won the battle\nfor him; was it a lucky punch or\nwas it a strange pall that seemed to\ncome over Jeffries the moment he\nstepped into the ring?\nFair minded critics will not take\nanything away from Johnson for the\nvictorious battle he fought He\nfought cleanly, cleverly and with\nhis consumate skill he combined the\nqualities of a gentleman, so far as\ngentlemanly conduct can go In the\nprize ring, where the principal aim\nof each contestant is to "knock the\nblock off" of his honorable opponent\nJack never transgressed the rules.\nHe took no undue advantage while\nthe referee was not looking but\nlashed out squarely and when he\nlanded It was a fair punch.\n down to brass tacks. Jeff\nlost everything he showed In train-\ning the moment he stepped into the\nring. He had absolutely nothing.\nCold as a fish, his hands more like\nicicles than the great bone and gris-\ntle mailers that sent so many men\no defeat He was nothing like the\nJeff whose training stunts made the\ngreat trainers marvel and say he\nwould make mince meat out of John-\nson. Why he should have bone to\npieces upon entering, the ring, as\nSam Berger, Jim Corbett and Billy\nMuldoon say he did. Is an Intangible\nsomething that may come under the\nhead of psychology. Psychology or\nwhatever you may call It. Johnson\nseemed to have Jeff's goat, and no\nmatter what the power or InSueaee,\nJohnson won easily and fairly.\nThe lucky punch talk made Its\ndebut In the second round. Johnson\nbounced a sizzling straight left off\nthe white man's eye. Instantly It\nbegan to swell. The punch did not\nrock Jeff but his eye was la bad\nshape.
5af8fe69620d899af48b9f002597684f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.1684931189752 40.063962 -80.720915 DiVroir, March, 3..The woman's 0t thi\nraying league met this morning. The ue (I\nstalled number ol praying committees of one ol\niree.or (our occupied the day vis- name\nIpf.SUOng the three hundred saloons. Mr.\none surrendered, somo were willing to ution\nlit it paid for it, others if provided with J, jVn\nher business, but most were resolute Youri\n;ainst it. The ladies kneiled aud pray- Chica,\n1. They are ,not encouraged by their umc o\n:perlenco, bat are more determined than men b\n'er. The street devotions will be delay- than\nuntil all.are visited and all other means seated\nrelormation exhausted. The men's mass the M\neetingwill reinforce the woman corps of Aid\nhioh will meet to-morrow. To-day three of the\nw saloons were opened. hundr\nCounmcs,March2.'Thetemperanco anothi\nass meeting to night was a tremendous turers\n"air and hundreds were unable to gain by lot\nmission to the church. Hon. £ . E . citizen\nbite presided. Sfiurt and pungent a\neeches favoring an earnest crugado signed\nsre made hy -^Governor Deanison, all ot'\nBnry C. Noble, Hop. James L. Bates, Mr.\nDn. It. J . Critchfield. Mrs Anson Brown from t\nd Mrs-Dessellam. Each speaker an- contra\nmnced themselves in earnestly in favor ferred.\nthe women's movement and thought The\nat great good must come of it. Gov. on Pu\ninnison warned the women to keep the ccmpl\navemcnt freelrom any tangllog alliance road v\nth existing temperance organization! Mr.\nd particularly to avoid politicians. If lie Lai\n0 movement proved a success there ceding\ned be no lear that politicians would be unsuri\ninting. Other speakers said that if the bodies\njvement did not banish intemperance in the\noncolhe people could feel that a pub- the cal\nsentiment had betn excited that would Mr.\n1 in Jean to come- The speakers were ladies\nartily applauded and the ladies say they vices\nil strengthened tor the great work be- and ai
0fe8579a2552b873cdf973a7e8f594d2 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.5164383244546 58.275556 -134.3925 Placer or hydraulic minin g is the art\nof separating gold from gravel, sand, or\nclay, making use principally of runuing\nwater and gravity. The deposits which\nare susceptible to treatment of this\nsort hare been formed by the breaking\ndown and scattering in gold bearing\nrocks and th»*ir subsequent eorting by\nwater. The disintegration may have\nbeen accomplished by any one of sev¬\neral agencies, or a combination of two\nor more of them. The rocks may have\nbeen broken and ground up by glacial\naction, piled in the valleys or on the\nsides of mountains and hills as mo¬\nraines, and subsequently distributed\nby the action of streams or rivers.\nHaving then fine particles of metallic\ngold distributed through a mixture of\ngravel, sand and clay, but not attached\nto any of it, the problem is to recover\nit economically. The most primitive\nappliance known is the miners' pan, in\nwhich gold rock are separated by\ncareful washing, but the pan only holds\nfifteen to thirty pounds of gravel, and\na man could not wash more than one\ncubic yard in a day, so that the gravel\nwould have to contain $"> worth of re¬\ncoverable gold per cubic yard to make\nit pay. Various hand devices have\nbeen used for gravel washing, among\nthem the rocker and long torn, both of\nwhich separate the gold by allowing it\nto settle through water-borne gravel by\nmeans of its greater weight. It settles\non canvas, carpets, woolen blankets, or\nin mercury held in riffles on the sluice\nbottom. All of these are makeshifts,\nthough, aud are for handliug small\namounts of high grade material, while\nthe real business of hydraulic mining\nis carried on by working immense\nquantities of low grade material by\nmeans of complicated and expensive\nlabor saving machinery, at a minimum\nunit cost;.. Engineering Magazine.
15701ffa36a63512c25ffc80e344ca2a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4424657217148 39.745947 -75.546589 above quoted Nor is it such a Jodi\nclal decision as would serve as a rule\nin this case, because this case Is not\na similar or analogous case to the\nMundy case; nor does It involve the\nsame or similar Issues.”\n“I am therefore, of thc opinion that\nthe Mundy case is not decisive of the\nquestion under discussion,\nopinion thc Court in the Mundy case,\nfrom the language used in that case,\nand particularly the concluding part\nthereof, never intended even to ex­\npress any opinion as to what penal­\nties «-ere to be Imposed.\n“ The question of the construction\nof the two statutes is, therefore, an\nopen one In this Slate.\n“ T he Legislature in 1873, in Section\n19 of the Act of 1873, provided that\n a specific penalty was provided\nfor a violation of thc Act, tho penalty\nfor such violation would be a fine of\nnot less than Fifty Dollars nor more\nthan One Hundred Dollars.\n“ The Legislature in 1881, eight\nyears afterward, passed another Act\nIn relation to intoxicating liquors,\nand provided In the. Act of 1881, in\nSection 11, that every violation of any\nprovision of the Act of 1881, and also\never) violation of any other Act, re­\ngulating the sale of Intoxicating\nliquors, should be a misdemeanor,\nand upon conviction thereof, where\nno other specific penalty was therein\nprovided, the defendant should pay a\nfine of One Hundred Dollars and costs\not prosecution, and should also bo\nImprisoned not less than\nmore than six months.”\nForfeiture of License.
0954b7d1aad51258d9577c07035dfd3a WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.6215846678303 40.827279 -83.281309 sown wheat in spring. JSow, if we can\nby this means increase the yield per acre\nhye, ten, or twenty bushels, it would cer\ntainly pay a handsome profit on the cost\nof extra labor expended thereon.\nWe know that there is a deep-seate-\nprejudice prevalent among our farmers\nagainst any new system of culture which\nis likely to involve any extra amount of\nlabor, even if it is certain to yield greater\nprofits. It is but another evidence of the\nwasteful spirit to be seen on every hand\nthe legitimate result of cheap lands, and\nwhich encourages the farmer to spread the\nlabor required on fifty acres over a hun-\ndred with a much less return in the aggre\ngate. Drilling wheat is extensively prac\ntised in some portions of the country.\nand with good results, although there are\nmany who still adhere to the old broad-\ncast system, and do their best to discour\nage their neighbors in trying the new,\n are, doubtless, many instances of\nfailure of drilled wheat, but it cannot be\nconsidered as anything against the sys-\ntem, and cause must be sought for else\nwhere. The principles involved are phu\nosophicai, and in accordance with those\nbelonging to other branches of scientific\nhorticulture and agriculture ; therefore\nshould not be condemned because every\ntrial does not terminate successfully.\nAs the season for sowing fall grain will\nsoon be at hand, we urge those who have\nnot tried drilling to give it a trial; also to\nsow a portion of the crop with the inten\ntion of giving it spring culture, keepin\nan exact account of the labor expende\nupon the same, and note the result.\nIt is not only possible but quite proba\nble that we can afford to cultivate and\nhoe our wheat as well as corn. This\nquestion can only be decided by careful\nexperiments, but it is important that we\nshould know the truth. Aew io-- K
282a472f516ff344178c1b3644658a2e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.3219177765093 42.217817 -85.891125 piivib ges tiertbv granted.\nSkc. XXIII F e said grantees, their successors\nor assigns shall, ou or before fifteen days alter the\npassage of this ordinance, signify their accept-\nance ot same in writing, and tile said acceptance\nwith the village clerk.\nHkc. XXIV Whenever any other Interurban or\nelectric railway phall desire entiauce into the village\nof Paw Paw, upon any of the ptreets covered by\nthis franchise, the gratifies shall be required, when\ndirected by the village council, to permit such rail-\nway so desiring entrance into the village to enter up-\non and over its tracks In the village upon a fair,\njust and equitable traffic agreement to be entered\ninto as between the companies themselves, if possi-\nble; and if they are unable to agree thereto, then iu\nthat event each company select au Impartial\narbitrator and the village Phall select a third arbi-\ntrator, all of said arbitrators to be men wtll vetsed\niu mat ers pertaining to the conducting and man.\nagement of electric and interurban railways; and to\nsaid arbitrators the whole matter shall be Piibmitted,\nand by them decided, and their decipiou phall be\nfinal and binding upon the companies.\nProvided further, that no interurban or electric\nrailway phall be allowed to enter the village on ttie\nline of paid grantees without first obtaining fran-\nchise so to do from the v lag council.\nWe do hereby certify that the foregoing Ordi-\nnance No. 4'.was adopted oy the village council of\nthe vibage of Paw Paw at a special meeting of said\nvillage council held ou the 17th day of April, A. I).\nP.iU--
0f90d734c7e6ac95691b2c7773841b03 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.0945205162354 37.451159 -86.90916 A meeting was held in the parlor of\nthe Rudd house by the promoters from\nOhio and the local parties interested\nDuring the meeting every minute detail\nof the railway project was gone over\nFrom the cost of similar interurban\nrailways It is estimated the local one\nwill require something in the neighbor ¬\nhood of a million and a halt dollars to\nput it in perfect running order The\ngreater amount of capital stock will be\nput up by the Ohio capitalists It is\nthought the trip from Hartford to this\ncity can be made in one hour and a half\nIt is the custom of the cars to run every\nhour but just yet none of the minor\ndetails are thought of The cars will\ncarry from fifty to sixty The\nFreight cars will be so constructed as\nto carry any kind of freight The coal\nmines in that section of the Green river\ncountry will be opened at once and\nthe coal will be brought directly to the\nrailroads at a very cheap rate The\nGreen river boats have reaped a harvest\nfor a number of years on freight and\npassenger rates Scores of farmers and\nmerchants daily in that district make\nthe trip to Evansville to purchase goods\nand to sell their own products It is\nthought that there is not a farmer in\nthe three counties who will refuse to\ngive the company the right of way\nthrough his farm Interurban railways\nare proving most popular all over the\nUnited States and none of them have\nbeen failures
26f462d8d2691b7e140ca5d146494174 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1919.1219177765095 42.217817 -85.891125 age. From the moment we stepped\nofF the boat, this fact was very notice\nable to all of us and a great many re-\nmarks were made about it. One thing\nthat attracted my attention particul-\narly was the number of people who\nrode bicycles. There were thousands\nof them, propelled by people of both\nsexes from six years old to seventy.\nIt was Sunday and everyone seemed\nto be going somewhere for a holiday.\nHut most of the faces wore not bright\nand cheery as we consider them, and,\nas I imagine they did before the war.\nIt appeared to me as though a sort\nof brooding seriousness hung over\neveryone but it may have been mere-\nly the Hritish soberness.\nWe left Liverpool the next morning\nat ten o'clock and boarded at train for\nWinchester. The trip across the Is-\nland was simply immense and we\npassed through some of the most\ncharming scenes I ever hope to see.\nThe fields were plotted as though the\nentire country had been done by one\nman, and that man an expert garden-\ner with a keen eye for the beautiful.\nEvery brush and tree seemed to fit\nin as though placed there a master\nhand, the houses and buildings were\ncovered with vines and blossoms, and\nevery house had its own little individ-\nual garden of flowers. This was true\nnot only of the fields close to the\ntrack, but as far as the eye could\nreach the effect was the same. The\nhills, the clumps of woods, everything\nharmonized perfectly, and the gv\neven seemed more alive and verdantly\ngreen than does ours. We passed\nthrough the town where the Oxford\nUniversity is located and had a\nglimpse of the old buildings.\nWhen we landed in Winchester, it\nwas about six in the evening and it\nwas raining. It is customary to have\nrain when there is a troop movement,\nI have learned since. .Also it was\nvery dark. Winchester appeared to\nbe much more afraid of the air raids\nthan Liverpool. We marched out to\na camp four miles from the city, and\nwhen we got there we found that\nsome one had given us the wrong\ndirections and we were booked to go\nto another camp three miles on th"\nopposite side of the city. It was\nvery interesting. We had had noth-\ning to eat since that morning and v
0e79e15e4cc278bcb99e866f7736e2ee THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.3904109271944 40.063962 -80.720915 birth, for it is to you 1 appeal in partlct\nlar, is not the memory ol England's crirui\nand treachery igainet Ireland and Auie\nlea fresh in )uur minds to day? Is\nnecessary for mo lo rewind you ci tutu\ncrimes in order to tret your aid and ayir\npatby lor the struggling Irish people, or I\nuk you by the memory of their suffering\nby the tears oi the wretched mothers an\nthe cries ol the starving child, by ever\nleveled homestead and by every uesolai\nhearth, by village and city wantonl\nburned and by oceans ol innocei\nblood shed to prop up and perpetual\ntheir devilish and tottering goverumeu\nto enroll yourselves members cf the Lau\nLeague in this city and aBslst tluauclallyan\nby your sympathies the Irish people no\nstruggling for tbeir Uod-given right\nNative American citizens, do I ask you I\nde more (or the Irieh people to day tha\ntbey did lor you iu your most trying timi\nsince 1770 to the present day?\nWho were they, when In the depths\nwinter, the tracks ol your barefooted so\ndiers could be traced in the frozen sno\nat Valley Forge, sympathized with au\ncontributed molt liberally money to pu\ncbase shoes, clothing and other neceas\nriea lor oar soldiers then lighting Iri\nAmerica from the yoke of the same lords\ntyrant that to dty oppresses Irelaud ? lli\ntory answers."Nine Irish merchants\nthe city of Philadelphia." Has not the\nblood been ahed on all your battle Held\nand have not tbelr bones whitened the Lli\nand vallies of your country from the Pot\nmac to the Bio Urande, yea even to It\nUlty of Mexico? History says yea. The\nI do not uk you lor anything unjuat.\nknow that you are a liberty-loving peop\nand that your aympathiea are with tt\noppressed oi all nationa and that you hai\nnobly responded to the calls made upo\nyou by the Irish people at all times. At\nnow that the tngiiah Government hi\nthrown down the gauntlet lo the Irit\npeople by aiding the landlords to colle\nront Irom the people lor land they do ni\nown, you will not hesitate, I hope, to gh\nyour aid and sympathy to thelrlsh peop\nstruggling to Ires themselves from the yol\nof a tyranical government. Again, tollo\ncitizens, I invite all to come and join tL\nLeague and help the noble lew who conel\ntute the branch in this city, to make\nwhat it ought to be, an honor to the city\nWheeling and a financial success lor tt\nIrish cause.
177fc0afd5b4fd3c2e9570a2f5a4fc8f PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.842465721715 39.756121 -99.323985 London, October 26. Not long ago state-\nments concerning the supposed weukne-- s of\nthe czar's army were quietly hatched by the\nGerman newspapers and began to make the\nrounds of the press of oil countries. Credit\nwas rarely given to the source of the inter-\nesting items and very generally it was lost\nsight of that German virulence and\nanimosity had inspired the articles,\nand hence they came to be consid-\nered as honest reports, and as such were be-\nlieved by people at large. Dire pictures of\nthe utter faithlessness of the Russian sol-\ndiery were drawn, and it was repeated again\nand again that a large portion of the officers\nof the Russian army were Germans, who\nwonld never turn their swords against tfie\nFatherland. It was said that many nihilists\nand socialists were in the ranks, and that \nthe event of a war the czar would find his\nown army so far from being a protection and\nan instrument in his hand for offensive war-\nfare, that protection from the army itself\nwould be a muuiertous ques ion to Russia's\nruler. All this and more was said uud it\nfound its way into general credulity. The\nfact, however, is that the cztr's army was\nnever perh ps in better condition than at\npresent. While necessarily there are nihilists\nto some extent among the soldiers of so large\nan army, and while there is a system of pecu-\nlation being carried on by a ring of unprin-\ncipled officers, the discipline and character\nof the rank and file of tfie Russian soldiery\nequal those of any country, and will exceed\nmost. If anyone has fears for the condi-\ntion of the Russian
3767aaaa89d663da5e4ebaaf70846e4f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.460382482038 39.290882 -76.610759 Georges County Court, by petition in writing, o\nWilliam B. Hothoron, of Prince Georges County, stating\nthat lie is now in custody for debt, and praying for (lie\nbenefit of the act of the General Assembly of Maryland,\nentitled, an net for the relief of sundry Insolvent Debt-\nors, passed at December si-ssion, 1H0"* and tli'i several\nsupplements thereto, on the terms therein mentioned; a\nschedule of his property and a list of his creditors on\noath, so far as he can ascertain the same, being annexed\nto his petition,and the said William B. hothoron having\nsatisfied mc by competent testimony that lie has resided\ntwo years within the Htate of Maryland, immediately\npreceding the time of his application, and the said Wil\nhum B. Sothoron having taken the oath by the said act\nprescribed, for the delivering up of his properly, and giv-\ning sufficient security for his personal appearance at the\nnext County Court of Georges County, to answer\nsuch interrogatories and allegations as may be made\nagainst him, and having appointed James Burni'H his\nTrustee, who has given bond as such, and received from\nsaid William B. Sothoron a conveyance and possession\nof all his property, real, personal and mixed; ft is order-\ned and adjudged this 6th of April 1840, that the said Wil-\nliam B. Sothoran, be discharged from imprisonment,\nand that he give notice to his creditors by causing a co-\npy of this order to be inserted in some newspaper pub-\nlished in the State of Maryland, once a week for three\nconsecutive mouths, before the next October term of\nPrince George's County Court, to appear before the said\ncounty court, at the court house ot said county, at the\nsaid term, to show cause, if any they have, why the said\nWilliam B. Sothoron should not have, the oenefit of The\nsaid act and supplement as prayed.
1a87da0bb75706dcbaa465c5b48239c3 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.6452054477422 44.939157 -123.033121 Lotus not be pessimistic nor blank\nfacts. Just because the tariff on\nprunes Is changed from 20 per cent ad\nvalorem to 2 cents a pound specific\nduty ls no reason why prune raising\nIs going to be a bonanza. Don't blink\ntho facts. The conditions of tho older\ncountries are fast becoming tho con\nditions here. Where nature makes a\nconcession the corresponding penalty\nfollows. The growth of our fine soil\nnnd climate has to compete with a\nsimilar soil and climate In France,\nItaly and Asia Minor. Our prunes\ni.ovn inrnmnrtn. In Now York, with\nthe countries named. The protection\nof the tariff is very little if anything,\nas the cost of transportation by rail\nis nearly equal to freight by water\nand tariff added. Tho Frenchman\nwill prosper on 500 francs a year a\nprune grower, while the American\nwill starye at the corresponding $150\na year. But A met leans may as well\naccept the conditions If they Intend\nto continue In the business. We do\nnot say this to discourage American\nprune grows In Oregon, but rather to\nwarn them against big expectations\nas a result of a change In tariff. Cli-\nmates, geography and peoples are not\nchanged so quickly as a tariff. Call\nfornla Is full of Chinese, Japanese and\nItalians, who will produce prunes on\nthe basis of European prices and be\nsatisfied with the European scale of\nwages and European living. Well\nmanaged prune orchards can bo made\nto pay In Oregon, but no one should\nbe deceived into expecting enormous,\nor even big profits, from prunes, be\ncause of a tariff.
11799a6cfc5875f6f09f83662d4cbea4 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1889.0863013381531 39.756121 -99.323985 than the rate from these same points to the\ncity of Chicago. The consequence is that\ncorn is alwaj s worth 3 or 4 cents per bushel\nmore in Chicago thhn in St. Louis. The\ndifferential was made and based on the fact\nthat Chicago is a long haul from these points\nand St. Louis a short haul, and, further-\nmore, that Chicago can ship its corn to the\nseabord for 2 cents less than St. Louis owing\nto its proximity to the ports. Thus, while\nSt. Louis is ihe short haul from the com\nfields the seaboard is the short haul from\nChicago, and the long haul from St.\nLouis. The roads over which this corn is\nhauled from .the corn fields to Chicago are\nmainly the Northwestern and the Union\nPacific. These roads have no terminals in\nthis city, but they have terminals in Chica-\ngo and they now contemplate a move which\nwill throw the entire crop of corn shipped\nfrom Missouri riverjpoints directly into Chi-\ncago, placing it there free on at the\nsame rate which is now operated for Mis-\nsissippi river points. The proposition\nwhich they are about to submit to the West-\nern association is this: That the rate on\ncorn from all Missouri river points and\nplaces west of that line to Mississippi river\npoints, namely, all points south of Bulin?-to- n\nbe advanced 3 cents per 100 weight. This\nmeans that corn can be bought in Chicago\nfor exactly the same price that it can be\nbought in St. Louis and the latter city will\nbe completely swept out of existance so far\nas ability to reach the sea board is con-\ncerned. With the present differential abol-\nished, St. Louis wonld be as powerless to\nto compete with Chicago in the matter of\nexporting corn as it would to compete with\nNew York cr Boston if the exports could be\npurchased for the same price in both cities.\nThe Merchants' Exchange has appointed a\ncommittee to investigate the matter and\nargue with, the railroads against any such\naction.
02a544538642574cd57e79f845f2a689 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.54508193559 40.063962 -80.720915 ST. LOUIS, Mo., July 17. - Tho arriv-\nals of delegates in tho national Popu-\n11st 'and silver conventions wero not\nnumerous to-day. To-morrow the na-\ntional .executive committee of tho\nPeople's party will hold a conference\nhere to arrange matters for tho nation-\nal committee and tho convention, both\nof which will meet next woolc. The com-\nmittee Is composed of H. E . Taubeneck,\nchairman of {his city; N. C. Rankin,\ntreasurer, of Terre Haute, lnd.; J. II .\nTurner, Washington, D. C ., and Law-\nrence McPartlln, Lockport, N. Y .; nee-\nretarles, and Ignatius Donnelly, Hast-\nIngs, Minnesota; George F. Washburn,\nBoston; J. H . Davis, Sulphur Springs,\nTexas;. George F. Galther,; Walnut\nGrove, Ala.; and V. 0. Strlckler, Oma-\nba. Of these J. II. Davis, of Texas and\nGeorge F. W . Wabhburn, of Boston,\nare the only members here, but the\nothers ore expected to reach the city\nto-morrow in time for tho meeting.\nChairman Taubeneck is In Chicago,\nwhere he went, last night. Inquiry at\nthe executive committee headquarters\nfailed to elk-it any Information about\nhis visit there. One afternoon paper\nstated that he went as an envoy ex-\ntraordinary, bearing terms of capitu-\n from the "Middle of the Itoad"\nPopulists to the national Democracy.\nThe paper then goes on to say: "The^\n"Middle of the Road" people led by the\nmen who have cdntrol of the national\nmachine, and who are exceedingly anx-\nious to retain It, are badly frightened.\n"For fear that endorsement of Bryan\nand Sewall which is to inevitably follow\nthe convening of the Populists would\n?throw them out entirely, the anti-Bryan\nmembers, most of whom have some sort\nof office in the present national organi-\nzation are said to be anxious to get terms\nwhich will leave them in power. They\nhave run up the white Hag and arc pre-\npared to surrender unconditionally if\nthey fail to secure their terms.\n"They want the Democrats to agree to\nthe proposition that both parties shall\nmaintain separate organizations-or in\nother words that the -Populists shall\nkeep up their national organization-and\nboth run electoral pickets with Bryan as\nthe presidential- .c andidate.\nVUjirrto"~thc PresonftTme Chairman\nTaubenack started so hurriedly for Chi-\ncago, the machine Populists had receiv-\ned no comfort from the Democrats.\n"The mass of the People's party were\nPO solidly for Bryan that there was no\nhope In that direction.
4f406e8660a4a33fa80f4d4988b20c68 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.7136985984273 41.681744 -72.788147 may have doubts as to the literal\ntruthfulness of this statement, but the\nSwiss have proved themselves worthy\nof the Alps, and the fitness of the com-\nbination was always admitted, even in\nthe time of Caesar. Unhappily, moun-\ntains and those who dwell on them or\nnear them are not always so well\nmated as the Swiss and their Alps. As\nregards, for instance, the mountain\nthat rears its white crest near Tacoma\nand Seattle, it is as worthy as the Alps\nor Fujiaina oi undivided and harmo-\nnious praise, but unfortunately it is,\ninstead, a bone, or rather a mount, of\ncontention to the two cities It over-\nlooks, and there seem to be no special\nharmony and .adaptation between the\ncities and itself.\nThe twin cities of Puget Sound have\na number of causes of disagreement,\nbut the chief of them all is their re-\nspective claims to the great mountain\nwhich each desires, or at lea,st seems\ninclined, to add as an annex to its\nown glory. They cannot even agree aa\nto the name to be applied to moun-\ntain. Seattle, to do it justice, was con-\ntent that the great peak should bear\nthe name Rainier in honor of its dis-\ncoverer, but Seattle's rival. Tacoma,\nlikes its own Indian name so well that\nit desires to share it with the moun-\ntain, and hence has named it Mount\nTacoma. Any one in that, region may\nbe known as a loyal citizen of Seattle\nif he calls the mountain Rainier just as\na loyal Tacomaite may be known by\nhis calling it Tacoma. The different\nnames have become, respectively, the\nshibboleths of the two cities, and the\nwayfarer from either regions will find\nit to his advantage during a temporary\nresidence in either of the cities to do\nas the romans do and call the moun-\ntain by the name of Tacoma or Rainier\nas his. location may demand.\nAs for the mountain itself, it is\nbig enough and glorious enough to ba\nthe pride of both cities, as it is in all\nexcept its name. In defense of apply-\ning the name Tacoma or Takbmah to\nthe mountain the Tacomans
1ac452d4082b8f9c3170581b6981e944 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.6051912252074 41.020015 -92.411296 r'Very early one morning, I resolv-\nel to take a look around for myself,\nS'l I set off for a patch of woods\natout a mile distant. I at length i\nsrrnck a stream thatdashed down the |\nmountain side in a narrow gorge,'\nhiving worn for itself a channel fti \\\ntlie hard rock. I followed up tSki\nstream for a short time, and came\na place where the turbid waters wc^1\nquite placid, there being formi'dfe\nInrge pool into which they had\nlected preparatory to another gr\nplunge down the mountain's sitiie.\nI sat down and resting upon the bnHk,\nlooked around me. Directly in front\nw*s a steep precipice, and beyond\nthe scenery was magnificent. After\nremaining for some time lost in re­\nflection, anil indulging in day dreams\nand building castles in the air for the\nfuture, I arose, anil about to re­\ntrace my step® back to the camp, when\nmy eves encountered the form of the\nSpaniard stealing noiselessly up to\nme. In a moment I knew lie was aft­\ner the gold in my belt. That he\nmeant evil I knew by the look with\nwhich he regarded me. He did not j\ndo so long, for he suddenly raised his\nrifle, and an instant after I felt a diz­\nziness come over me, followed by a\nsharp pain in my right breast, and I\nfell to the ground within a few feet\nof the water. The dizziness soon\npassed off, but I lay still, feeling un­\nable to do anything, but I was con­\nscious that the Spaniard was search­\ning mv person. The chink of gold\ntold me he had been successful, and I\nheard him mutter as he moved to-
140a01f4192065637475db71ca88cefd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.727397228564 39.745947 -75.546589 Have you noticed tbe uuuMial number of\nbold* pofheftHed by yoor acquaintance thin\nyear? There Been» to be no particular\nreaaon why the tall of thin year ahould be\nmore trying than usual. Hut. nevertheless, it\n1« a fart. Those who know Fometbing of\nthese matters, a*y that this extraordinary\nprevalence of cold* Ib the forerunner of\nanothervialtadon of the Grip Whether ii\nmay turn oui so or not, a thing everyone\nt-hould do ie to get rid of a cold an eoon an\npoBHibie on account of the danger to which a\nperron with a*'litlle cold * is exposed Pntu\nmoni nobody wiehea to face, and it ib no ex-\nagg ration to b»ate that eighty uer cent, of\nceatliH from this cause cou n have been\naverted If the colds out of which they grew\nhad been cured.\nHy far the bent, method of ridding oneself of\na cold 1h to lake a little pure st iuulam in\nwater and keep warm after having on# *o.\nThe greatest care and prou pt measures\n be taken at the s ightett sign of th*\na uproar h of pneumonia. I you have a tick­\nling in the throat, tightness of rhe chest, pain i\nin the head, a chilly feeling or pains through­\nout the body, immediately use ome pure\nstimula t to promote the circalatio i and\navert the catastrophe Ii should be part leu\nlarly borne In mind that to he o' the required\nvalue, the stimulant (whiskey preurably)\nmust be pure, and Duffys 1ure Mall\nWhiskey, which can be obtained of your\ndrugg'at or grocer, meets the requirements.\nIt in standard and reliable aud the 'act that\nIt has received the endorsements of the ie*d\nIng scientists and physicians of the present\nday is the best guarantee of its usefulness a«\na medicine Insist upon having it and do n t\nallow the salesman to sell yen a substitute\nwhich he may recommend as 'Ju-t as goo •.*\nThere is no other me fconal w hiskey which\nequals Duffys Pure Malt li^ purity and ex­\ncellence.
262aaa21cacb9c7fcdd0d99d1cba5988 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1908.613387946519 37.451159 -86.90916 OF night riders in that county and\nhad to waive a trial by Jury and take\nthanes before the judge of the Brack-\nen couuty court whose sympathy wWi\ntill night riding disturbances has beet\nso marked that It legs attrad ld tJbeo\nattention of the State government and\nJxsa caused the withdrawal of all con\nfidence of the Stalte government in\nhis county judge Ill any matters con\nnected with night rider disturbances\nTo make a long story shortJ this\ncounty attorney and the county judge-\ns vn done nothing In tour months of\nflagrant disorder to restore peace or\npreserve order or to protedt the rights\nor liberties of the people of their\ncounty they were elected by the peo ¬\nple and are the law officers and the\ncounty attorneys own brother a whlto\nman and of respectable standing was\nrurally whipped by night rjdtjs and\ntithing has been done about that and\n there Is not a worse fearrid ¬\nden community than Bracken county\nTho only safety and protection Is a\npatrol of State Guard strangers and\nwhose powers necessarily are limited\nThe Governor remits the Srvtoa\nport of the fine of Woinwrlghit Lee\nand If he had the power would remit\ntag whole fine and If the appUca ¬\nlUvn had been made before judgment\n1 would have pardoned him on the\ncharge and Hived any tine The State\ngovernment will maintain a force in\nBracken county as Ions 019 any dan ¬\nger to the liberties ot Itspepple re ¬\nmains and until tiwi disorder js abson\nlately put dowBflUkThtfGovrmon oil\nthe State will protect every cWdzen\nwho defends his liberties agabufta those\nlawless attacks of 1band seeking to\nterrify and Intimidate and white tho\nfgwatest care must be taken to guard\nBgalnat hurting any Innocent man the\nate government will do ayin Its\npower
0af27f86f39cb2542bb15b5e346c0880 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.0890410641807 40.827279 -83.281309 to repeal the Income tax, was considered at length,\nand the subiect was finally laid over Adjourned.\nIn the House, on the 25th, the Fortific-\nation bill, appropriating ?1,627 ,000, was reported\nand made the special order for the 81st .. Bills\nwere passed Senate amendment to the House\nbill declaring the meaning of the act of July 14,\n1S70, to reduce internal taxation; extending\nthe benefits of the act for the establish-\nment of an asylum for disabled volunteer sol-\ndiers and sailors to the disabled soldiers of the\nwar of 1813 and the Mexican war; to repeal the\nproviso in the sixth section of the act of July 27,\niStiS, relating to pensions; Senate bill to turn over\nto the Secretary of the Interior for disposal by sale,\nafter appraisment, the United Statesmilitary reser-\nvations at Forts Lane and Walla Oregon;\nFort Zariah, Kan.; Camp McGarry, Nev.; Fort\nSummer, New Mexico; Forts Jessup and Sabine,\nLa.; Fort Wayne, Ark.; Fort Collins, Col. ; Fort\nDakota, In Dakota, and such portion of Fort\nBridges, In Wyoming, as is no longer required for\nmilitary purposes, amended by the House by add-\ning Fort Smith, Ark The Indian Appropriation\nhill, appropriating 14,859,409, was considered in\nCommittee of the Whole Adjourned.\nIn the Senate, on the 26th, bills were\npassed authorizing the sale of a portion of the\nFort Leavenworth military reservation to the Kan-\nsas Agricultural and Mechanical Association for a\nfair ground ; making a temporary loan of ' 100.000\nfor the prosecntion of the work on the Sault Ste.\nMarie Canal and River; the Pension Appropria-\ntion bill ; to repeal the income tax of December\n81, 18t9 2t to 25
48d7cd486bbac46c95495dc7825b8278 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.3849314751394 40.063962 -80.720915 There is now a great buz* in the cop¬\nperhead hive of this State. Meetings\nare being held at every cross roads in\nrebel communities, to resolve that they,\nthe copperheads aforesaid are very in¬\ndignant, very much outraged at the\nWest Virginia legislature. Why are\nthese thing* done? Whatdld the Leg¬\nislature do atlts recent session that was\nbo grievous? Did li deprive one or the\nsoldiers who fought for the Onion or\nhis rights T Did It deprive one ot the\ncitizens who remained at homo and\nobeyed the laws of his rights? We are\nall aware that it did not. Who then are\nthe aggrievd parties? We answer that\nnoue have any right to complain. There\nwere men in West Virginia, in 1861t\nwho organized themselves and attached\nthemselves to'the armies of the rebel¬\nlion, and spent four years in a vain\neffort to overthrow the Government or\nthe United States, and establish an in¬\ndependent confederacy of their own.\nFailing in their *iboly work,\nmany of these men^^y* returned\nand are now resldlng^in West Vir¬\nginia, and their lives aud property\nare protected. Our Legislature \nprescribed a certain oath that all the\ncitizens of the State are required to\ntake ere they can exercise the privilege\nof the elective franchise. They are re¬\nquired to swear that they have not vol¬\nuntarily borne arms against the United\nStates since the 1st day of June, 1801,\nand that they have not given aid and\ncomfort" to the enemies of the United\nStates. If men cannot take the forego¬\ning oath,' whoso fault is it? Does the\nsin lie at the door of our Union legisla¬\ntors? They enacted the law that will\nprohibit uien from voting who have\nbeen guilty.of certain high crimes, bat\ntbevdid not commit the crimes! lp\ntheir judgment men who have been\nguilty or certain crimes are not worthy\nof enjoying certain political rights, and\nif men "have been guilty of those crimes\nit is their own fault, and own tnisior-\ntune, and not that of the Legislature,\nwhose duty it Is to make laws that will\nsecure the greatest good to the greatest\nnumber and which will most effectually\nguard our State aud its institutions\nagaiust the encroachments of disloy¬\nalty.
1413b9fffae8ca71c1afd2494c2a8342 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.0479451737697 40.441694 -79.990086 not row him outsido this country, so that if he\nis determined to be in Australia during March,\nhe will not row me for a long time to come. I\ndon't know whether or not I will go to San\nFrancisco when O'Connor and Gaudaur row.\nIf I go, I will be prepared to row somebody\nthere, and if I feel all right I will procceo. to\nAustralia. I want it understood that I am in\nno wav connected with Gaudaur and St. John,\nandif"Igo to Australia I will go only in the\ninterest of mvself and my backers.\nI am of the opinion that the Australian\nscullers are somewhat overrated. Taking\nKemp as a basis it seems to me that the rowing\nform in Australia is behind that of this cou-\nnts. Kemp made a great race with Searle as\nlong as he lasted, and tho probability is that if\n had held out a lew hundred yards\nfurther Searle would have shot his bolt. Bubear\nbeat Kemp, and goodness knows that Bubear\nis very far behind the best scullers in America.\nA very inferior man like Jack Largan almost\ndefeated Kemp on the Thames and this con-\nvinces mc that the best scullers in the country\naiB much superior to the best in Australia.\nHowever. I nave not definitely made up my\nmind as to what I will do between now and\nspring. Had I defeated O'Connor at Washing-\nton I might have been in Australia now. That\ndefeat knocked us out a little financially. As\nthings are now I state positively that I will\nvisit no foreign country except I know that I\nam in the best possible condition. It seems to\nme that I will not be able to get into that con-\ndition until about July."
190207819343b077323a8b1a2e0354ca THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1884.392076471109 41.004121 -76.453816 Jiidgo Jitcock ruled to proceed at\nonco and said : "Insanity ns a defenso\nhaB run wild. If mad neoplo were to\nrun tho streets uncontrolled, endanger-\ning tho lives of citizens, they should\nnot be considered more than mad dogs.\nTho prisoner's friends aio the ones to\njudge of his mental condition. I plnco\nlittle weight in medical testimony ns\nto insanity and I have no hesitation in\nsayiDg publicly that I havo arrived at\nthat conclusion alter many years ot\nexperienco in court. Tho plea of in-\nsanity gives a guilty man so many and\nso largo avenues of ojcapo that I havo\nno fear that any injustice will bo dono\ntho defendant by a jury trial."\nTho only reason given for tho as\nsault was that Mr. Ilcvcrin had treat-\ned McCaulloy coolly at his HovcrinV)\noflico in tho afternoon previous to tliu\nattack. Sovcral witnesses were called\nwho testified that thev known tho\nprisoner for many years, and consider-\ned him to be of unsound mind, A\nphysician who hid examined tho pris-\noner at tho jail testified that ho believ-\ned that ho was acting under a halluci\nnation when ho struck Air. Ueverin.\n"Insanity as a defenso to a criminal\nprosecution is becoming an important\nsubject,'' said Judge Elcock in charg\ning the jury, "bociety has a deep in-\nterest in it. It is a plea upon which\nmany people who ought to havo been\npunished havo escaped justice. Doc\ntors mislead us by talking wildly upon\ntho subiect. It is a matter that bo\nfar as concerns us In administering jus\ntico belongs entirely to tho law. Hal\nlucinations, melancholy, demenlia.tncdi\ncal experts regard as conclusive evi-\ndence of mental unsoundness. Yet it\ndocs not follow that any or all of these\nwould servo as a valid "excuso for tho\ncommission of crime.
0e6b6390a3a1cd9610bf643f48dee005 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1890.7739725710298 43.82915 -115.834394 also meet Mr. aNthoNy cOmStocK, who will\nrequire you to drape all your tigures in the\nfollowing manner (S).\nCome to New York and get a new soft\npalate put into your typewriter and have an\noperation performed on its tonsils.\nCome and visit tlio produce $$$lhiolhhbl\nbblbbl ExcHauge. Come and see Wall pfd.\n$$SOoO;i f street. Rido on our Elevated\nrailway from iUiZZZT***—(U)X!!!&&&;:rd,\nstreet, to GGXXKKrrttl(#B)a)i&R!ickeniex\nstreet. Visit the brig. Theodora, dam\nTarantula straight for place, b. m. Rob\nRoy dam Ella Jackson horse races!!\nThe more you mix up with us the more\nyou will like us. We New Yorkers from\nWyoming territory enjoy haviug people\nthrown among (S. You would meet with\na hearty welcome whether you came to gi ow\nup with our hacticria or to buy green gtxxls\nCordiality is our one weakness, if a cordial\ngreeting would not suit you you can tako\napollinaris water. With your natural ten­\ndency toward delirium tremens, perhaps ttiat\nwould he best, any way.\nI used to he acquainted with a young man\nwho wrote a beautiful hand $x:tj£&fm?fl,\nfor that was lieforo tne days of typewriters.\n would bring out liis writing m aterials\nand his tongue and make a corkscrew pea­\ncock swimming in a large cranberry marsh\ninfested by loops and funny business, all\nwithout taking his pen oif the paper. He\nwins a thorough artist, with u lofty soul, hut\nhe could not spell. Ho could construct a\ngraceful swan witli a halo of chirographioal\nworms all around it, but nature and art\nhad denied him the humbler joys of orthog­\nraphy. He could make a lovely purple\nscroll with a green fringe to it and red\neyed bobolinks, w ith heliotrope bosoms,\nperched on space and hearing in their\nbronzed talons yet other smaller scrolls that\nwere as graceful ns a doughnut horse, and on\nthese scrolls would he w ritten such glittering\ntruths us these: “In Frendshipgbright ger-\nland, Please regard me us your Humbel fur-\njgetmenott,” “Look up, press Onnerds & you\n!will git there.”\nj But liis stylo is robbed of much of its grace\nj and beauty by immersing it in cold and pulse­\nless tyjie. He was a bold and fearless writer\nand his hands were ever red with the blood of
0dfa8aa976f127f1a9ecc282cdf559e8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.2424657217148 42.217817 -85.891125 tion at Madrid, and thus from rear of\nweakness, strength grew, so that imur\nrection came to mean revolution, and\nthere dawned upon the sight of the\nstriving patriot the splendid vision of a\nblood bought but free republic.\nBut people know moro of the strug-\ngles of Cubathau they do of Cuba itself.\nKvery civilized inhabitant of tho globe\nhas followed with leeliugs of indigna-\ntion and pity the story of Cuba's suffer-\ning. All the "insurrections," the "Sep-\naratist wars" and the other vain but\nvaliant efforts of tho Cubans to throw\noff the .Spanish yoke have appealed to\nhis chivalry and wrung his heart with\ngrief and rage; but, as a rule, he is as\nignorant of the scene of these struggles\nas if they had occurred in the viewless\nair. And yet, in the comparatively\nsmall compass of its watery bounda-\nries, there is concentrated a greater va-\nriety of natural than are to bo\nfound in any other island, state, prov-\nince or country beneath tho sun.\nThis may sound extravagant, but the\nstatement is vended by all reliable sta-\ntistics and unprejudiced witnesses And\nwhen those who cavil come to reckon\nup its advantages its millions of acres\nof soil, richer thau any in tho United\nStates, tbat will grow anything from a\npotato to a pineapple; its abundant\nyields of sugar and tobacco; its tre-\nmendous forests of mahogany and other\nprecious woods; its uplands, upon which\nis grown every product of the temper-\nate zone, and its fertile valleys, from\nwhich luxuriantly spring the most lus-\ncious iruits of the tropics; its mines of\niron and copper and manganese; its\nhundreds of beautiful and excellent\nharbors, and tho soft, healthful atmos-\nphere of perpetual summer that forms\ntho setting for this peerless "Pearl"\ntheir doubts will be swallowed up in\nconviction.
41504cad9bb0c62e16d288c8075168ea CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.6561643518519 41.875555 -87.624421 An undertaker here has prepared an\nembalming fluid which he had de-\nclared was In every way as efficacious\nas that used to preserve the mummies\nof Egypt. As the body was to go, as\nhe supposed, a long distance, he em-\nbalmed It with special caro and a fine\nmotalllo coffin was provided. Then\nthe cablegram was sent to the Beres-\nford family In England, but no reply\ncame. This was believed at first to\nbo an oversight, but as the time passed\nthe people of this city began to be-\nlieve the stories that came to them of\nthe man being an Impostor. The un-\ndertaker did not remove the body\nfrom the coffin, however, and it was\nkept In a rear room.\nA short time ago a man was look-\ning for a coffin of a kind\nand this undertaker did not have any\nthat suited. Finally he was shown\nthe one which had held the body of\nLascelles for three years, and he said\nit wan oxactly what he was looking\nfor. The undertaker was thoroughly\nconvinced by this time that the body\nof Lascelles would never be claimed\nand rather than lose the sale of the\ncoffin dispossessed it from Its home\nfor three years.\nWhen the body was removed It was\nfound to be In a perfect state ot\npreservation, the skin like leather\nand resembling in that respect the old\nEgyptian mummies. The body was\nplaced in an erect position In a corner\not the room and has been visited by\nmany persons who knew Lascelles In\nhis lifetime and who have commented\non tho way his body has been
070cbfaadf9eb7177990b56ffd9a80c7 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.7383561326737 37.561813 -75.84108 the end of the seventh century King Ina\nissued an order regulating the fattening\nof swine with acorns or mast by his Saxon\nsubjects, and a century later Elphelmus\nreserved the pawnago or pasturage of\n2(10 hogs as a part of his lady's dowry.\nMast, as wild nuts came to ho called in\nlater years, was much valued through-\nout Great Britain, as it had long been\non the Continent, and Edward the Con-\nfessor, in 10)0, mentions or gives a cer-\ntain quantity in one of his donations. In\nthe time of William the Compieror the\nwoods of England were surveyed and\nvalued in proportion to the number of\nswine that could bo fattened on their\nacorns, the oak being then valued most-\nly for its fruit. The Norman kings, in\n lovo for the chase, sometimes in-\ntruded upon private domains nnd took\nfrom their owners the right of pawnago,\nor gathering the mast therefrom.\nFamines have sometimes been in-\ncreased in severity, if not caused, by the\nfailure of the mast crop. At the time of\nthe great famine in England in 1116 it\nis recorded that among crops failing\nthat year that of mast was very deficient,\nwhich made a scarcity of meat, and in\nconsequence added much to the distress\nof the people. In tho early settlement\nof America the acorn crop was named as\none of the good things found in the new\ncountry, and pioneers in all the wooded\nsections of the United States have found\ntho mast of much value, and in many\nsections mast-fatte ne - d
27af837111825fafa0aff1cd87edfe9b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.4698629819889 43.798358 -73.087921 violate or disregard these laws, so he can\nnot avert the consequences from those whs\ndo violate them. Liars mast suffer the\nconsequences of lying. All the dishonest\nmust suffer the consequences of dishones\nty. All wrong doers must suffer the con\nsequences of wrongdoing. The drinkers\nofalcohol and tea, and the eaters of opium,\ntobacco, salt, arsenic and other deadly sub-\nstances, must suffer the consequences\nHe who puts a razor to his throat, or a\nball through his heart, and empties bis\nblood upon the ground, musi suffer the con\nsequences. God cannot keep life and\naction in the man who has emptied hi\nown blood upon the ground, Nor can he\npreserve health, vigor, usefulness, longev\nity and happiness to those who are con-\nstantly poisoning their blood, lacerating\ntheir nerves, doing violence to all their\nvital powers. He cannot keep a sour.dr\nbalanced mind in a diseased, unbalanced\nbrain. Nor can he preserve sound and\nhealthy brains to those who make their\nstomachs tbe receptacles of all uncleanncss.\nAs a man sows he must reap. If he sow\nthorns, God cannot give him a harvest of\ngFapes therefrom. If he sow tares, God\ncannot make wheat to grow from them.\nIf he plant thistles, God cannot give hiro\ntherefrom a harvest of corn. So those\nwho cultivate their lower nature to the\nneglect of their higher, must not expect t o-re a-\nwisdom and enjoy its benefits. ArA\nthose who cultivate their intellectual pavv-t - o\nthe neglect of their moral, must not an-\nticipate a harvest of goodness. Those\nwho inflame their blood with unnatural
0b9a8c763b3e98f9fe862a1ab5ac540c PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.8397259956876 40.441694 -79.990086 It would be easier to say what is not to be\nworn this year than what is in style.\nEveryone to her taste, is the motto of the\nseason, and let us hope that everyone may\nhave taste, or some friend for her, enough\nto be saved in a becoming sense. Every\nfashionable rich woman can order gowns\nHoven especially for her, an extravagance of\nOxford undergraduates 40 years ago. Wit-\nness the bills for Tom Brown's waistcoats of\ngorgeous dye. The more moderate can be\nsatisfied that not more than two or three\nother women on the planet have gowns like\nhers on, for the pattern is destroyed after a\nlimited number of yards are made. By tbe\nunlimited samples of patterns and fabric\nshown on the desk before me, it would\nseem as it every Jenny and Jessamy\nthrough the Union might choose something\ndistinct from every other girl in town, and\nsomething becoming, \nThe materials in best style are the soft fin-\nished India cashmeres and camel's hair,\ntwills and serges, in plain goods, with many\nsilk and wool mixtures of the finest sort.\nfancy wools and plaids of dark, rich, often\nindistinct shading. French cashmere, woven\nin the figures and soft, gorgeous colorings of\nEastern shawls are among the most expen-\nsive fabrics, doubling the cost of rich silks;\nbut these are the choice of the few. The\ncolors best worn are Burgundy reds, Java\nbrown, the shade of perfect roasted coffee,\ngrape shades, which include the deep purple\nand the blue bloom of ripe clusters, bronze,\npine green, besides all the grays in a sea\ngull's wing. One thing is to be remarked of\nthe colors now in vogue that never since\nthe days of Magenta and Bismarck browns\nwere so many trving shades offered in one\nseason. The Eiffel reds, the dark blue-g ree n- s,
276819d082116f1598a7cfd749be7573 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1917.6260273655505 36.000618 -88.428106 ination of waste. The response not\nonly in planting, but also in conserva-\ntion has been of such spontaneous,\nmagnificent order as to justify confi-\ndent optimism in the ability of our\npeople to prepare and to preserve. In\nthe matter of our great surplus of per-\nishables, because of our inability to\nship these to our allies, a call was sent\nout from Washington asking that our\npeople should consume the perishables\nduring the summer and fall months\nIn substitution for the great staples\nwhich should be held for the winter,\nand for shipment to our allies. They\nwere asked to substitute corn for\nwheat and to conserve the waste of\nmeat and fats by the use- of substi-\ntutes. That this Is being done Is al-\nready evidenced by reports of dealers\nIn cereals and in meats, which indi-\ncate a most remarkable decrease In\ndemand for these commodities an\nIncreased demand for substitutes. A\ncall also was sent out asking that all\nperishables that could not be consumed\nshould be preserved and stored. This\ncall, since the arrival of perishables In\nMay, has been met by the response of\nmillions of women In the country, hot\nonly In the matter of preserving In the\nhousehold, but also by the creation of\nInnumerable committees, clubs, demon-\nstration trains and Instructors provid-\ned by our educational institutions,\nmaking a complete system throughout\nthe country. Although we are only\nhalf way through the canning season,\nwe can begin to see magnificent re-\nsults. It is obvious enough that the\nAmerican woman has not lost the\nhousehold arts of her pioneer mother.\nWill Supply the Deficiency.\nOur American canners will this year\nproduce .about 1,700,000 ,000 cans of\nfruit and vegetables. Our government\nand the allies will require about 200,- 000,0 -
2f253ab2025c4375b223311985d97f54 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.17397257103 37.005796 -89.177245 curately dotliwd and neither should bo allow-\ned to trcspay. on the other, nor ahovo all to\nencroach upon tho reserved rights of tho peo-\nplo and thu States. Tho trouble of tho past\nfour years will prove to tho nation blessings,\nif they produce so deiriib!o n roult. Upon\nthoso who became young muii amid tho sound\nof cannon uud din of arms, aud who quietly\nreturned to tho farms, factories aud th'e\nschool of tho land, will principally devolve\ntho solemn duty of perputuitting thu Union\nof tho State, in defeucu of wiiich hundreds of\nthousand of their comrades expired, and hun-\ndreds of millions of nutiounl obligations woro\nIncurred. A manly people will' not neglect\ntho training necessary to resist uggrossion.\nbut they should be jealous, lest the eiyil bo\nmado subordinate to thu military \nW need to encourage in ovory legiti-\nmate way a study of tho Constitution,\nfor which tho war was waged, a knowledge of\nnnd reverence for whoso wise checks, by tnoo\nso soon to occupy thu phicus tilled by their\nseniors, will bo tno only hopo of preserving\ntho republic, tlio young men of tho nation nut\nyet under thu control of party, must resist tho\ntendency to centralization, iin outgrowth of\ntho great rubullion, nnd bu familiar with th\nfact thut tho country consists of the United\nStates, and that when tho static surrendered\ncertain groat rights for tho snl;o of more per-\nfect union, they retained rigliU a vahmblo\naud important us thoso thoy relinquished for\ntlio commonwealth, Is found old doctrine, far\ndifferent from tho teaching that led to tho at-\ntempt to scccdo.
773fd42593edd0d118fe4b463ee0ce46 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.719945323568 41.681744 -72.788147 The Babe needs no further de\nscription. Combs, in his quiet way.\nis one of the best centerfielders in\nthe game. It may be t?ue that he\ncan't throw, but Simmons of the\nAthletics, one of the very best in\nthe business, has never knocked\nanyone off his seat with his arm.\nWith them Is the aggravating ana\nexasperating Bob Meusel. a real\ngood outfielder when the mood\nstrikes him. But, to his credit and\nto the safety of his job, the mood\nto hit a homer with the bases filled\nor the Inspiration to pull an aston-\nishing catch, or heave an astound\nstrike to the plate from the fence\nstrikes him often at the most pro-\npitious moments.\nThe St. Louis outneia is a wow.\nIf Douthit and Hafey had Roettger\nin there with them through the\nwhole season there might not have\nbeen a pennant in the Nation-\nal league and it would take high ex\nplosives to get them out of nrst\nposition against any outfield. It is\npossible that Roettger, recovered\nfrom a broken leg, may get into the\nseries but he will not be the boy he\nwas when he didn't have a bad pin\nto worry about There is nothing\nparticularly wrong with Harper and\nOrsatti can play some ball, but they\ndon't rate with Roettger.\nSimmons and Bing Miller certain-\nly have given Connie Mack no rea-\nson to lose sleep during the torrid\npennant race and Mule Haas be\ncame one of the finds of the year\nwhen the old Philadelphia gentle\nman had to dig up a replacement\nfor Ty Cobb. Simmons, Miller and\nHaas are a fine combination and\nFrench is a very capable substitute.\nCobb or Speaker might come in very\nhandy as pinch-hitt e-
14a691a1f1d88b1caf894b0923b8cf1a THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.560273940893 40.419757 -77.187146 were thrown into a great excitement by\nthe report that the Peoples' bank of\nthat place had been robbed the pre-\nvious night. The appearances of the\nbank did not indicate that any one\nhad been in, but on opening the cash\ndrawer it was found that the bills\nand some bonds had been removed. The\nnight previous the combination lock hod\nnot been locked till eleven o'clock,as the\nbooks of the Building association which\nare being examined were put in at about\nthat hour. Some think the robbery was\ncommitted before that time by some one\nfamiliar with the premises and who was\ncognizant of the fact that the combina\ntion was not locked. Others think that\nthe deed was committed by an expert\nfrom Philadelphia, acquainted with the\nlock and its combination. It seems to\nus that the former opinion is more prob-\nably the one, and that the rob\nbery was committed in the early part of\nthe evening.when the party was in such\na hurry to get out that he did not take\ntime to make a clean sweep of all the cash.\nHad the deed been done by a person\nopening the combination, they would\nnot have left some of the cash, and still\nhave taken time to lock the combina-\ntion and leave the bank In such appar\nent good order. At any rate the robbery\nIs a strange one. The bank loses about\n$5,000 in money and $1,500 In bonds.\nFollowing is the number of bonds\nmissing : One hundred dollar bond No\n124,413 ; 68,044 ; 8,715; 124,419 ; 30,639;\n67,215; 01,308 ; 19,942; 119,709; 119,788,\nFive hundred dollar bond Nos. 74 ,- -\n078. Also, a mortgage bond of $1,000,\nbelonging to Miss Maggie Whiteside, of\nHarrisburg.
4e107d7af0ea5b4ecacd220768765585 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.596994503896 39.513775 -121.556359 fiJHKRIPPS s \\T.K .—Hy Virtue«if ndecretal order\nxt issued out ol the District Court, Ninth Judicial\nDistrict, in and for Unite Comity and Sta'e of Cali-\nfornia, made the 12th day of June A D. 18.WI , tu me\ndirected and delivered, commanding me to make the\nsum of four hundred and ninety seven fifty one him\ndredihs dollars Judgment. and interest on said mnonni\nof judgment at the rale of ten p«r cent, per annum,\ntill paid, ana tne sum i f nihely-eieht sixty one bun\ndn dihs dollar* co*ls and accrnin costs of said order\nout of 'tie pr perlv hereinafter described, In sati-fy\nIhn aforesaid lodgment. wherein M. Walsh is plain\niill', and A. Skinkle defendant, to w it: Commencing\non the Plaza in tlie village ol Hidwell. County and\nstale aforesaid, at the North east corner of I,amp *\n Saloon, mid running in an easterly direction,\nto the co'ner of the said plaza, sixty feet more or less,\nthence inn sou'herlv direction to the corner on the\nstreet of Messrs Huffman, on which their reservoir i*\nsi (tiled, thence in a westerly direction to the line of\nI,amp li. 11Idas llakery. add He nce in a southerly di-\nrection to l hi'end ol the space dug out and formerly\nused a ten pin Alley Including Hie space Mmr be-\ntween Lamp fc lllda's Lot and the Re-ervnir of\nMessrs Hoffman & Co , together with the Hilliard Pa.\nloon, situated on said premises, which I will sell at\nPubl'c Sale at lha .'ourt House door in Mill well, coun-\nty and Plate aforesaid, on the 4lli day of Any list. A\nI). IBui>, at 'i oclock. P M.. to the highest bidder lor\ncash.
056d2ffd9336af329d78e668f73fc7f4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 New Castlo—Lewl» C Vandegrift, E. U.\nCochran, Jr., Franklin Hrurkson, John Wil­\nson, Levy Court i ommi*.sloner W. A. Scott,\nPatrick Neary, Receiver of Taxe« John T.\nDickey, ex-Speaker of the Senate John P.\nDonahue, John PtMinewllI, Recorder of Deeds\nJ. Wilkins Cooch, Insurance ('omminsloner 1.\nN Fooks, 8. B . Scott, Joseph L. Lavender,\nAlexander Maxwell, ex-Clerk of the Peace\nK. R . Co lirai», Sr., John Dolan, fex-Clerk of\nthe Senate Abram Vandegrift. J. K. Booth,\nJoseph Whittuck. Jamcm E. Wilson, Benjamin\nII. Jonas, R. C . Brocks. Clerk of the Or­\nphans Court Colen 1. Ferguson, Thomas\nReardon Hon. William Oooch,Purnell Lynch.\nKent— C, W. laird. State Treasurer W.\nBurnlte. Hon. Gideon Jackson, ex-Reading\nClerk William T. Parvis, B. F. Smith; Hamnel\nReynolds, for the Smyrna postofflee; Horan\nMustard, J Wesley Jones. W . A . C. Hardens\ntie, Constable Benton V. Weldon, Direct Tax\nCommissioner J. Frank Wilds, ex-clerk of\nthe House M. F . Dunn, Constable B. V.\nWeldon, James Starting, Hon. Daniel M.\nRidgely. John F. Saulsbury, John 1). Haw­\nkins. President of Levy Court Thomas\nRees»», Hon. Sv. E. Hall, B. B . Alien, Robert\nHill, H. C. Carpenter. George A. Bryan, Hon.\nT. T . Lacy, L. S. Hopkins, ex-Speaker of\nSenate B. Lewis. Hezeklah Harrington,\nCol. E. T. Coojor, Governor Robert.! . Rey­\nnolds. Col. C . I*. Stacey, General U. R . Ken­\nney, Clerk of the Peace William P. Dickson,\n-Prothonotury , oeeph Bun henal, James\nDunlap. J . M. Good. A. Sevil, IT. A. Cosden,\nUaileUville. Dr. N. Pratt of Milford, Pax\nCillecta, R. V, Wallen of Clayton.\nSussex -Robert C. White, ex-Kpeaker of the\nHouse W. L. birman. ex-Clerk of the Senate\nK D, Hearns, .lohn H. Layton, ex-Speaker of\nthe House McCabe, Han y James, Eue Walter,\nJ W. Kooks, Levy Court Commissioner Sam­\nuel G. Fisher, J. T . Jacobs, Ira D. Melvin,\nSuperintendent of Free Schools. John G. Gray,\nHorace j. Hickman. John M. Hobbs, James\nTheodore Houston, Robert W. Dorsey, Secre­\ntary of State 1). T. Marvel, ex-Governor C. C .\nStockley, H..I . Woollen. S. J . Wheatley, S.L.\nKenney,|John Prettyman, C. T . Purnell. Hon.\nK. ,1. Morris, William H. Boyce, Edward\nFowler, K. M. Walter, Clerk of the Peace E.\nW. Houston, C. C . Btarky, N. B . Robinson,\nElmer Outten, Charles W. Cullen, Hon, W.\nP. Watson, S. F. Stevens, R. M. Lynch, W. F .\nCausey, H. A. Houston, Hon. A P. Robinson,\nCharles F. McKee, lion. W . T . Records, Peter
2cefdbfa1dd46f32dc3c0e30ca1175fc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.5368852142785 40.063962 -80.720915 7ih. It can be used in a driven or bored woll -1\nIth the aame ease as*a well of larger diameter,\nBth. For its general adaptability this Pump la\nIthont a rlvaL The Pnmp may be placed at\nmr dwelling or barn, or within the building,\nid connected with the well, or spring or other\nidy of water, fifty cr one hundred yarda die- T\nnt, and will work with the aame eaaeaa though\nindingdlreatlyover tbo water.\ntfth. It ii single acting and pumps only with\nedown stroke of the candle, and thna avoids\no Juatu lift reau Ired In tho doubl» acting Pump.\nIOth. Uy attaching a short hose, a stream may ]\\\nthrown fifty to sixty feet and may often bo\ncd to advantage In watering gardens and lawns,\nisblng windows, cleaning buggWa. extinguish- J\ng fires, or elevating water, recogulzo the\n:t that Urequites more power to elevate water\n)m a deep tnan from a shallow well. But a*\nr.as posaiblo to obvlato thla dltllculty for deep »\nilia, wo manufacture a smaller cuamber, so that\nille the volume of water ia diminished, the\nwer required is not greatly increased Wo\niim thai by tbo combination^ having all tho\nvantages of atmospheric presaaro in combinain\nwith force, that the umciAiii.PuMP will -v\nsvate water from a deep well "with leas power V\nnn any miimtrge or purely force pump in exls- -1 - .\nice. This Pump la easily adapted to supply j\niter to steam mills, and for transferring iho\nntenta of vata in Tanneries ieunaurpaascd. roJ\nCr jou want a Pnmp guaranteed to give latis:tion,\nsend your order to SINCLAIR & HOL- Ue\nSTKR, Bridgeport. Ohio.\nOTTirn
318ddeb7ce65edfb13b3f83b721ee741 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.9549180011638 39.745947 -75.546589 ish'sl for was plarrd with a tenant Children of Delaware, and the foster business basis, offering hoard, cloth- homes are not treated as well as the how many citizens of this community\nfarmer on a large farm of 2U0 accès, father taken before a Justice of ttfc ing and 'proper' sdrooling, in ex- white children, only that the situa- they represent. I con assure you, there\nin Delaware with a shabby, rambling Peace and fined. The child was found change for his services on the farm tlon arising naturally from the combi- arc some citizens even In clerical\nold house. The farmer Is an elderly to ho covered with scabies and was llo stales quite frankly that lie docs nation is not good. One or two cases garb, for whom they have no right\nman of old-fashioned Ideas, very an- placed in a hospital for treatment. He not the boy if he must send (llm were seen where the white foster to speak. I would Invite you to en-\niagonlstlo to the School Code, Chit- was finally returned to the society to school full term. He is an open parents showed a remarkable affection terialn Ihe suspicion that they rep-\ndren must be made to work and if from whence he came and by them enemy lo the new school laws of 1919, •',I' "le colored child, for example, Ar- resent but a quorum even of the Min-\nllicv (ion't work, must he whipped. is was tinned bark to the oVfcrscers ol whjch provide for 180 days' schooling Jhur, a light miyatto boy of 17, has Isterial Union Itself; the abundance of\nhis Idea, yet he Is anxious to adopt the Poor. Tills happened In July, 1919. Tor the boy under 14, nnd 100 days lor
0651772c593a31c5114b5dbccc98cb3c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.4041095573314 39.745947 -75.546589 WASHINGTON, May 28.— The house\nyc8tenluy afternoon was Inactive for\nmore than an hour while a roll cull was\nVftken and tho sergeant nt arma was\nengaged In bringing In absent members\nto mak^ a quorum, the absenco of\nxvhich Was disclosed by the roll call.\nThe Suspension wus caused by a wran­\ngle growing out of Mr. Tongues (Or.)\nattempt to deliver a general pension\nSpeech when the house was considering\na private pension measure. Mr. D&lzell\n(Pa.) in the clsilr. Mr. Richardson\n(Dem., Tenn.) mad» the point of order\nthat the speech of Mr. Tongue was not\ngermane to the pending bill. Mr. Can­\nnon (Rep., Ills.) took lssqe with the\nTennessee member. The speaker sus­\ntained the point of order, nnd Mr. Can­\nnon appealed from the decision. Upon\nthe motion Mr. Richardson to table\nthe appeal 87 voted in the affirmative\nand 11 in the negative. Mr. Cannon\nmade the point of no quorum, nnd a\ncall of the house followed. It was more,\nthan an hour before the requisite quor­\num appeared. Tho appeal was then laid\nupon the table—jcaa, 131; nays, 9—and\nconsideration of private bills proceed­\ned. With the foregoing exception the\nday's session was without incident.\nAt the night session the house passed\n78 pension bills and In committee of the\nwhole considered a large number of re­\nlief und private pension inensures.\nAmong the bills passed was one grant­\ning a pension of J2R per month to Gen­\neral Cassius M. Clay of Kentucky and\nanother giving a pension of $30 to tho\nwidow ot' Brigadier General Daniel\nMacAuley.
a17c14bc24313265f5b1e0f16b0fd6f1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.023287639523 39.513775 -121.556359 IMIIiHTANT TO MINERS, Til WKI.KUS. ETC\nr □ AII ERE i, no mnlndy ol deeper Import time either\nI (n a medical or moral light of view, to wldeh\nthe doiman family i, more liable than that arising\nfrom impure connection*.\n\\,, t medical man II I, the Inly of every physician\nto hulk at disease as it effects henltlt nml life, ami hia\nsohsobjcct should he to mitigate, ns far ns lies in his\npower. the bodily safferimr. (Inman i.tUnre at best i,\nhut frail, all tire liable to misfortune.\n(if nil ihe ills lit. - . 1 affect man none are more terrible\nt brtii those of a private nature. —lirendtiil ns It is In\nthe person who conlrurtsll, (rightful us are its ravin;-\ne« upon hisconstlhillon. ending lre(|uenllyin deslruo\nion and a loathsome grave. it becomes of sit II create*\nImportance when it is Irtinsmilied to innccent off-\nspring. Such being the er.se how necessary it be-\ncome- that every one Having the least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disense, should attend-\ntoil at Knee by consulting some physician, whoso\nres pert nihility and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, nml penmuienl cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity. HI! \\ttl \\t. feels called upon to\nsuite thut. to lon* study and extensive practice, he\nhas betaine perfect master all t hose diseases which\ncome under the denomination of venereal, nml hav-\ning paid more attention to that one branch t licit tiny\nother physician in the I.lilted Slates, he feels himself\nbelter qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis In nil Us forms, such as ulcers, swelling In\nthe uruans. ulcer iu the throat.secondary syphilis, ett •\nburnout eruptions, ulcerations, terlimr) syphilis, sy-\nplijlis in children, merenren! -y phillllc nffeellons. gon-\norrhea, gleet, strictures, false parsnge*. inllamnllon o'\nthe bladder anil protrnlegliuids.excorlallons. tumors\npospiles. Site., m e ns I ami liar to him as the must corn-\nimmihimfs ol daily observation.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent cages in a few\ndnvs. and Buds no difficulty in curing those of lonic\ndural ion. wilhoulsubinittiiiß I he pniient to.iti hlreat-\ntii.nl ns w ill draw upon bon the alighlesj suspicion,\nor oblige him tonetrlect his business whether within\noors or without. The diet need not he champ'd , ex -\ncept in cases of severe inllamnlioit. There are In t'ali.\nk.rtiin patients itmiountlnic lo over two ihousantl in\nthe past vearl that could furnish proof of this ; but\nthese are mailers thol require Ihi nicest eecresy which\nhe always preserves.\nAll letters enclosing 310. will be promptly attended\n10. Office boors from I* \\.M to 1* M. Address .1 j\nt'. \\OUNC, M. O
1118d6c92a62dc0bfd978f4ce7a05167 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.5575342148657 39.745947 -75.546589 The creamery building was situated on\none of Mr. Colburns farms, a short dis­\ntance from this city, and was operated\nby John Wirtz, who occupied the dwell­\ning over the creamery. The origin of\nthe fire is supposed to be from a spark\nfrom the engine, although this is not\ncertain . Immediately after the discovery\nof the fire it became uncontiolable and\nthe building was soon wrapped in flames.\nWith the greatest efforts part of ;the\nmachinery and Mr Wirtz'e household\ngoods were saved. Word having been\nseut to this city the Volunteer Fire\nDepartment was soon upon the grounds\nin full force, and by drowning out the\nvast body of embers that had so soon\nwrought ruin to the building, all hands\ntried to save some of the surrounding\nbuildings,and succeeded,\nThe building and machinery were In\nsored But it is said that William\nWirlz had insurance upon bis house­\nhold goods U is likely that Mr. Col\nburn, who is abroad at present, having\nsailed from Philadelphia for Europe last\nWednesday, the 14th iostaut, will re\nbuild,as the business has been successful.\nWilliam Vail of this city, who nas charge\nof Mr. Colburns business here, has been\noffered room at the factory of Beck &\nPancoast, and it is quite likely the\noresmery business will be operated there\nuntil fnrther managements can be made\nFcrthepisttwo nights, theK. G. E.\nof this city have been holding a festival\nwhich has been well attended.\nThe Upland Base Ball Club of Chester,\nPa. .came here yesterdayand played a game\nwith the Atlas Club of this city. For the\nfirst few Innings, the teams were pretty\nevenly divided, but daring the latter\npart of the game the visitors weakened\nand the Atlas team "did them up in\ngreat style.
26fe792017caa4b7ec8e77b86b3c7cc5 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1916.9904371268467 39.623709 -77.41082 Early in the morning a heavy rain fell,\ncaused by the passing of a thunder gust\nto the south. Vivid flashes of lightning\nwere seen and the thunder was heavy.\nDuring the forenoon the clouds passed\nand the wind began blowing, its severity\nincreasing until after midday.\nThis storm came from the northwest\nand was particularly severe from 12 to 1\noclock. It was with difficulty that\nadies were able to walk on the streets.\nMany persons were obliged to hold on to\na tree or other object when a current of\nswift moving air overtook them.\nAbout town a number of windows were\nsmashed. The doors on the H. & F. car\nshed were torn from their fastenings and\nthe large doors on Mr. L. R. Waesches\nbarn were demolished. A large locust\ntree standing near the United Brethren\nchurch was blown over and by a very\n margin one of the memorial win-\ndows in the church was saved from being\ndestroyed. A large locust tree on the\nlot where Mr. John P. T. Mathias resides\nwas uprooted, and a walnut tree stand-\ning at the rear of Mrs. C . A. Wissler's\nresidence was blown against the house,\ndamaging the chimney considerably. Trees\nat various other places were uprooted.\nA portion of the roof on the house on\nMrs. Jos. Martins farm near Graceham,\nwas torn away. Many ricks of fodder\nwere blown over, fences demolished and\narticles moved here and there from their\nusual places of abode.\nAt the home of Mr. G. E. Rogers,\nnorth of town, a new henhouse was\nblown over and completely demolished.\nMr. W . C. Brenarnan returning from\nBaltimore in his auto got full benefit of\nthe storm. Many times he was going\nsideways in the road.
15a36bf661cca5ca73d2753839847176 FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1919.2726027080162 35.318728 -82.460953 timism ; and he very seldom\ncalls for help, being firmly\nof the opinion that God helps\nthese who help themselves.\nWhen a man of this type ap-\npeals for aid the aid is need-\ned. The menace of German\ndespotism is averted; avert-\ned by men on the firing' line\nwho never quit fighting\nwhile the breath of life was\nin their bodies ; but another\nmenace now looms on the\nworld's horizon the unut-\nterable menace of world-\nwide anarchy revolution\nBolshevism; a carnival of\nmurder and famine. In the\nforceful language of the man\nin the street the greater part\nof what used to be the civi-\nlized world is in a hell of a\nfix today. The most deadly\npossible blow at. , our goy?\nernmental structure " today\nwould be a thrust at our na-\ntional credit; The success\nor failure of this last loan\nmay itself be the deciding\nfactor between the safety\nor destruction of our govern\nmerit. No one ever averted\na danger by closing his eyes\nto it and telling himself it\ndid not exist. If . we are\ngoing to pull together and\nwin out let's do it' with our\neyes open to ;the dangers on\nevery side ; ifwo re going\nto sit down and all go to\nhell together, let's still keep\nour eyes open and see the\nsights on the downward\ntrip; there won't be any re-\nturn ticket. And if we are\ngoing to help Wytte Ewbank\nshove Henderson County\nover the top for the last\ntime let's help him now. No\nmatter who you are, no mat-\nter what part of the county\nyou live in, if you want to ,\nhelp let him know at - once\nthat you are wiling; he'll\ntell you how. This means\nYOU.
5d26a5440ed9b30c02344f3c36f02d87 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.4561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 Air. Bingham appealed to Sir. Banki\nfor an opportunity to offer a substitute fo\nthe resolution of the minority report.\nMr. Banks declined to yield.\nMr. Dawks submitted that it w»u\nhardly fair lor the debate to ho conflnei\nto the Committee on Foreign Affairs.\nVarious suggestions were made to Mr\nBanks, us the house had been in sessioi\nseven hours, to consent to adjournment oi\nrecess, but he resisted them, and anpealei\nto the members to remain in session ant\ndispose of the mutter, as udjouruinen\nwithout disposing of it would he lata\nto the proposition. Mr. Banks then pro\nceeded with his closing speech in supj>or\nof the resolution.\nAfter he hud closed, Air. Bi.voiras\nmoved to reconsider the vote by whiel\nthe main question was ordered, so hi\nmight offer an amendment\n Eldkidqk moved to lay the mo\n(ion to reconsider on the table. A voti\nwas taken on Mr. Klduidok's motioif ii\nthe midst of the intense excitement on tin\nfloor and in lite crowded galleries, and de\ncided in the negative, yeas, 81; nays, !)\nThe main question was then reconsidered\nanil Mr. Bingham then offered as a substi\nmo fi»r tlm resolution of the minoritv. th\nttd section ofthe resolution ofthe majority\nmodified as follows:\n"Tlnit the President is hereby authoriz\ned to remonstrate against the barbarou\nmanner in which the war in Cuba ha\nbeen conducted, and if he shall deem\nexpedient, to solicit tho co-operation c\nother governments in such measures as h\nmay deem necessary to secure from bot!\ncontending parties an observance of th\nlaws of war recognized by all civilize\nnations."
0ef07e4b68494f398188cf5342b7660d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.7219177765094 40.063962 -80.720915 iptemner;'JiJia'j^cUclobtr. viyja'Jtjio Novumer:\nai^a'Jle year. No. '2 red winter »t 02^ai 03 z\ntsh; Si 03 September; No, 3 Chicago spring 87; rc«\ntcted &*>e. Corn excited and higher at tiV%aG'J%c\nihh; OOftc September. GfiJ$uGS;'tc October. tiikaGac\novemlwr; 5M£ii5j*{o year. 5o)£o January; o'JJlc\nlay; rejected (Ifc. oats active, nrm and higher at\n;^«32Kc cash: 32JJc Sentcmlwr and October; 32>Jc\novembcr; 32c year;JMJjc May. rejected 20c. Kye\nrmer at Maltese.' barley strong and higher at\nie. Flaxseedeasier, closingUna ntSI23>{j. Butir\nsteady and unchanged. Kggs stronger at t»H)J^a\nIc. l'ork strong und higher at fjl -llUvl 12^ eium\nud October, fjo Ma'.HKi7}£ November; Sis S">Ja\ni 93 Deci)im»i.'n SIS Km 16 87% January. tenl\nirong and nlgher at S1'2 5Cal2 02]A Cnsh and\nctober; 5i'2 Ui'A&Vl 03 November: Sll 4'2U year:\n1115 January, hulk meats stead? and unchanged.\nV'hlsky steady and unchanged 1120. Cull.\nk'heat, dcmuml fair nud nricca higher; regular\nl WSjfcil 0;1^ September; %\\-fi October, 0lj«(\nNovember; !M5{a9|Keyear; No. U a'd winter 81 04\ncptcu.bcr. No. 2 Utit'bgo spring SI 01 Seotemcr;\nOlJ^c year. Corn irregular at C9J^a70c\nash; G'jJ^u Soptember, Gfrjfc October, G2l»c No venter;\nMJ$c year, 5G%c January: 53c May. Oats,\nejoand active and prices have advancod at 32ka\n25tfbi»h: 32%e September. 322^n;iiUc tkitober: 3-%\n. "i. - jic November; 32}£c year; Ul?iC May. 'l'ork\nilrly active and a shute higher at S2t45a'.»l47)$\nictoner: S20 CO November; SIS UJ year, Lard strong\nltd higher nt S1'2GU October; Sl2O7>£al210 Novum\ner; Sll 55year; Sll 42){ January.\n(1NCISNATI. September 20.- Cotton flrnt st\n2%c. Flotir quiet and unchanced. Wheat (Inn;\nlo. '2 red winter DSa9SV{c spot; 07c bid September\n:td October; yjJJc bid November; VP/ji bid year.\n, v^v. r.o
5e1ead68ce8ed4ace30ba185a30d932f THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1914.478082160071 37.451159 -86.90916 A certain tract of land lit Ohio\ncounty, Kentucky, and being samo\ntransferred hy the James Phillips\nheirs' to K.A. Huff and by him trans\nferred to Elizabeth Tlerney nnd re-\ncorded In Deed Hook No. 33, at page\n12S in the Ohio County Clerk's offlce\nand bounded as follows:\nHeglnnlng ata black oak in Solo-\nmon Phillips' line on the Cloverport\nroad; thence S. 18 E. 159 poles to a\nwhite oak and to gums; thenco N.\n12 E. 100 poles to a white oak and\nmaple nnd poplnr; thence N. 78 W.\n15!) poles to black oak and hickory;\nthenco 12 W. to the beginning with\nthe Cloverport road, containing one\nhundred and ten acres, more or less,\nexcluding one acre on tho north sldo\nof tract to E. C . Huff nnd an adjoin-\ning tract transferred by E. C. Huff\nto It. Huff mill by Iitnf .ranflferr-e - d\nto Elizabeth Tlerney nnd record\ned in Deed Book and page with the\nforegoing tract and bounded as fol-\nlows: Beginning near a blnck gum"\nN W. corner to W. S . Wright's G5U\nacre tract of land; thence S. 78V4\nE. 50 poles and C links to a stone on\nthe bank of Panther creek; thence\ndown said creek C4 poles to a stono\non said creek; thence N. 78', 6 W.\nCS poles nnd 15 links 'to a. beech\ntree; thence X. 11 E. G4 poles to tho\nbeginning, containing twenty ncrcs,\nbe the same more or less, excluding\nten acres to E. C. Huff on the North\nside of tract adjoining John Harris'\ntract of land as per deed to E. C.\nHuff, or sufficient thereof to pro-\nduce tho sums of money ordered to\nbe made.
09b9fc155e2eac3f8d86cc5eed1e5f7b PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.987671201167 39.756121 -99.323985 limits of nn overcoat pocket. Arniei\nwith this Ingenious device, the Intelll\ngent voter Is prepared to do anj\namount of execution, and his presence\nin a crowd before a bulletin board Is\none of the certainties of election night\nHut he Is not the only certainty. Tin\nman who has won a bet on the elect lor\nIs with him, and may be "spotted'1 It\nthe mob by his general air of content\nand satisfaction with his surroundings\nLife, for him, Is worth living, for tin\ntime at least, and as he cocks Ids ha.\non the side of Ids head and twists hli\ncigar up Into the corner of his mouth\nhe sheds a radiance over the whoh\nneighborhood, and Is looked on not onl.\nas a man of profound political wisdom\nbut also of the courage to back his opln\nIons with his cash. The man loses\nIhe bet Is also there, but gets nelthei\nsympathy nor admiration from the by\nstandees, any one of whom could, as i\nmatter of course, have told him exactly\nhow the thing was going to be, and sev\neral of whom In turn remind him o\nwhat he already knows well enough- -t\nliii t. he was a tool to bet his money oi\nomf candidate, .when the election of tin\nother was a dead certainty.\nFair woman is generally not more\nnumerous in the bulletin crowds thin\nat. the polls, but when she does conn\nshe Is a thing of beauty to Uie men win\nsurround her. She generally comes ii\ntwos and threes, accompanied by some\nbody else's brother, ami while maul\nf est lug Immense enthusiasm, displays\nalso the densest Ignorance as to 1 lit\ncandidates' names, and whether tho.i\nare Kcpuhllcau'or Democratic.
2b2e8ff895849bd4fe68d31b1cd8e227 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.491780790208 39.369864 -121.105448 YOU are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the complaint of L. II Fowler, filed against\nyou, within ten days from the service of this writ, if\nserved on you in this county, within twenty days if\nserved on you in this district and out of this county,\nand within forty days if served on you in this Stats\nand durt of this district, in an action commenced on\nthe 18th day of April. A.d . 1861, fh saidcotirt, toot*\ntain a deertfo of Ibis Court for the foreclosure cf acer-\ntaib mortgage, bearing date the Ist day of May, a . r>.\n3860. executed by the said defendant to Sylvester\nBryant and for the sale of the premises therein, and\nin said complaint particularly mentioned and de-\nscribed, and the application of the moneys arising\nfrom such sale to the payment of the amount diio on\na certain promissory note set forth In said complaint,\nnude and delivered to said Sylvester Biyatit by the\ndefendant Sind by said Bryant assigned to this plaintiff,\nbearing even <Utc with said mortgage and thereby\nintended to bo secured, wit; The sum ofssoo with\nInterest thereon from the Ist day of May a. d. I860)\nat the rate of two per cent, ptfr month rill paid; and\nif any deficiency shall remain after apply ir»g all of\nfcaid moneys, property so applicable thereto, then that\nplaintiff may have execution therefor against the said\ndefendant, also that said deferidant and all and every\nperson claiming through or under defendant subse*\nquoetly to tho date of plaintiffs mortgage ami th«\ncommencement of this action, may be barred and fore*\nclosed Of all right, claim, lien and equity of rcdempJ\nti6n in and to the said mortgaged premises, or any\npart thereof, and for such other or further relief, or\nboth, in the premises as may he just and equitable,\nAnd yon are hereby Notified that if you fiui to hh-\nSwcrsaJd complaint, as herein directed, plaintiff will\ntake judgment against you therefor by default, to-\ngether with ail cofetp of suit, and aieodemahd of tho\ncourt such other relief as ie prayed for lit plaintiffs\nsaid complaint.\nIn testimony thereof 1. John S Lambert, Clerk of\n......
10d7a291a75abcabd4fa655743cff745 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1895.2589040778792 37.92448 -95.399981 C5Mr. Wilson will doubtless prove\na useful secretary to Mr. Cleveland.\nIle will never dispute his master.\nPhiladelphia Press.\nCSfSome hungry democrat has said\nthat the administration ought to turn\nout more rascals and fewer bonds.\nIowa State Register.\nCSTThe new postmaster general wiU\nbe badly handicapped in point of use-\nfulness to his party by the fact that\nhis predecessor disposed of all of the\npatronage. St Louis\ndTStatesman Wilson, of West Vir- - .\nginia, in reviewing the work of thv\nlate congress, declares that "a cam-\npaign of education has been begun."\nWe not only agree with Prof. Wilson in\nthis view, but are able to state that\nthe actual beginning of the campaign\nof education was made on the 0th of\nlast November. 2s. Y. Tribune.\nCSyPresident Cleveland hasn't got\ncongress off his jusl because it is\ndead. He has several hundred politi-\ncal corpses for whom temporary inter-\nment is desired in foreign ministries;\nand consulships, post offices and the\nlike. He has made one minister to\nMexico and taken another Into his cab\ninet, but this isn't a drop in the bucket.\nNational Tribune.\nEifPresidcnt Cleveland makes a\nwide distinction between "a condition\nand "a predicament" When the treas-\nury had a surplus Mr. Cleveland was\nalarmed at "the condition," and ad\ndressed a special message to congress.\nWhen he found a threatened deficit the\npresident was alarmed at "the predica-\nment" and struck a bargain with a\nbankers' syndicate. Mr. Cleveland has\ndiscovered the solemn truth in Fred\nGrant's observation that it Is much\neasier to take care of a surplus than ol\n1 a deficit Chicago Inter Ocean.
194cbe757b1d7c6d637627a9e3bea495 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1880.3647540667375 39.743941 -84.63662 " Well," said Uncle George, " if the\ngentleman from Texaa is still in town,\nyou can go to him and say that you\nknow of a party who is willing to give\nhim say half of what your Chicago\nman was to pay, and. cash down; ' I'm\nsorry your commission will not be as\nlarge as you had first hoped, but Btill\nwin amount to something.\n' Tom was in a dazed sort of condition,\nbut all the same, found the Texas gen\ntleman, made him the ofler, which was\naccepted on the spot, and went home\nthat night to report to Uncle George..\n"Very, good," said Uncle George,\n"I'll take it. myself.. The fact of the\nbusiness is, when I went away from here\nI went down, in Texas to look at the\nBrazos Biver ranch, and a good deal\nmy surprise I found it very nearly as\nrepresented, and it has all the elements\nof a very sheep farm about it, and\nin tne course oi a year or two we can\nmake a jolly nice place of it I say we.\nyou know for I am not coing there\nalone; and I think, Tom, there is the\nmaking of a splendid sheep farmer\nyou. According to your own story,\nyou have not amounted to much\nanything else, and you know that\nare all created to fill some special mis\nsion, and the only inference to draw\nUlKb SUWp IKTIUUIg IB YUUXB, 1UC YUU\nhave tried about everything else.''\nrom was ueiiguted, oi course, and\nwherever he was, Bessie was satisfied\nbe. All this was five years ago, and to-\nday Tom Cornthwait is one of the most\nprosperous men in Texas, and he and\nUncle. George are partners on equal\nterms with a much larger ranch ; for,\nsingular as it may seem, Tom got a let\nter one day trom one of his Siew xork\nr
0fe8ea16fbd483930d3c724bcdfc576e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.4287670915778 40.063962 -80.720915 meet together and discusa their grief\nancea to be jealously guarded and^ main¬\ntained, bat a determined opposition to\nlawleeanees or to any reeort, to force ud\n?iolence u aubveraiveof public peace,in-\niarioua to public morale, and deatructive\nto the righta and intereata of all claaaes,\nand equal righu belore the law and equal\nprotection under the law without regard\nto race, creed, condition or oocupaiion.\nNo oxcluslve prlvalegee to ndivtduala\nor claaeee. Oppoeitlon to all sudsidies\nnational, State, county or municipal.\nThe common echool system to be cher¬\nished and perfected and to that end the\nichool fund ahould not be devoted to\nsectarian purpoeee. Rigid economy in\nall expenditures national, State, county\nand municipal. A Juet limitation upon\nthe taxee for State, county, township and\nttsaaKis\naccountability on the part of all the pub¬\nlic offioera. The Just reducUoo and\n of all toee and ealarlee.\nBuch legialation ai will secure to all\nperaone laboring for and furnlahlog sup-\npliee to railroads and other corporations\na full payment for their labor and ma¬\nterial. An Increased exemption ol prop-\nerty from execution and a liberal home-\nilead law. Such legialation aa will pro¬\ntect the life and eecure the comfort ol\nminera and other laborera engaged in\nbazardoua occupationa. A constitutional\namendment providing for atrict registra-\nlion and election lawe. American in¬\ndustries to be encouraged and fostered by\ninch legialation aa will develope the ma-\nlerial reeourcea of the country and give\nfull meaaare of employment and reward I\nlo labor. Oppoaition to repudiation in all\nita forma. The honor and credit of the\naation to be maintained in every contin¬\ngency. No abandonment or deprecia-\n;ion of greenback currency. A sound and
51ed510f0c669c1f2db3ba65b807f1f4 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1908.4275955967921 31.762115 -95.630789 young couple soon took on a phase\nof tenderness and pathos to describe\nwhich would palsy this pen The day\nwas fixed and all preparations for\nthe wedding were in progress One\nFriday night that unlucky night this\ndevoted pair were about ready to go-\nto choir practice The young lady\nstepped into the yard for a flower as-\na finishing touch to her toilet Just\nas she turned the corner of the house\non her return Alphonso bethought\nhim to get a bucket of fresh water\npicked up the bucket and dashed the\ncontents over her whom he would\nhave guarded as the apple of his eye\nNow this young man was noted for\nhis ability as a pleader but with all\nhis persuasive eloquence he never\nwas able to convince that girl that\n was an accident of the purest\nray Finally a compromise resulted\nThis young lady like many men had\none weak point She had long fondled\nthe notion that she would like to own\na drug store So to get matters in\nshape again her lover agreed to buy\nher a drug store provided she would\nadmit that the water episode was an\naccident So after looking over the\ncountry he decided that Patricks\nDrug Store would fill the bill and he\ntook her to look at it Then she got\nmad and created a scene because it\nwas only a half a drug store and sent\nhim off to look for another As he\nturned to go he gave her this parting\nshot Pauline Ill never come back\nuntil I find a better one and bless
12e3d614147efc9f7026b354d28d0b29 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.1027396943175 40.063962 -80.720915 >1m to a beech on the slue of the run, and uu Ami.\n1.1853, corner of John Davidson; tbent win, c,!\nue, which wmou April 1st, 1883. that o! ral Dm id.\nn, wutb 03 -W fxilesi to a chestnut. coirer t. ,\neoge bbarp; tb»uoe with what was A ril M, :,v.i\nlarp's line QJ 02 pole- north tu aatone in th.<\nlarp'a run; thence down the run witli the UJ,..;\ntra uortb 25* 24 po'ta, uortb I0J, »ust 21'. p., .,,1.,\nfgionlng, oontalnlng 11 acres, 2 ioo<U mi\nJm. Abo, another tract of laud iu i«i.| iuumj\nlundsd and dtacrll>ed as follows: Btirlnnli cat >,"!\nm April lit, liUS tbe mouth of Chirp's run, »|.fl\nthen foil Into the tall race ol Uiomiw utlll, curtk\nf°, watt 20 poles to a alone In thu tuidJle cf i'-,\nid oproalta a a»rann ro uev; >hci.c«* Iravlug rat\nmth 56', weatS.'Jf polee to a le^ulut; whlto <ak la\nta fence on the lunch near the top of tb<-\nlence with fence aoutt 21°, tut 6>» poire to h «Li<*\nUt, atuth 40J, eas1 II tu a hickory; tbtctt\nmill 24°, waat 18 poles to a lump 6 /of. i.oriu »*\nanlog white ouk, south 80 w«st U (»>1( u»\nrjje white oak at bead of drain; tlm,\n>wn drain eouth 34' coat 17 polca to the full*\ntiarp'e run; theuce dawn aal<l run north ;:i ,ei«\nS poles to forks of the run; thence north 2H\npole*; thtnc# north W, eaat 5 poles; tliencu\n4°. eaat 20 i.ol«i to th<* phce of beginning, coi.ui\nig 10 acre*, 1 rood and 21 perchu», the two trm-\nAd last mentioned hrlui; the mine granted ami iv\nlyed to the said Henry KelU >>T Benjamin y(.\n[when, by deed dated April 1st, 18.13, and rrxirJn\nnoog tbu public land recorda i f auid county, in\nMk No 10, page 171.\nTirmi or balk .On* third oilhe pari ba«e wonrr\nsuch greater amount thereof aa t>>« purchase ui,\neel to pay, cash In hand, tbu rcalduM In tworom'i\nlarly paymenta, with luieieat from day of sale,\nte deferred paymenta to be aecurod by dtwd ul uut;\nthe property sold.\njaSl
41bccff96c2610a985f56d4ad5a51bfc THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9549180011638 39.261561 -121.016059 To the south of Kaft'n and Sosa there is a\nvery sultry and humid country with many\nbamboo woods, inhabited by the race called\nDokos, who are no bigger than a boy of ten\nyears old; that is, only four feet high. They\nhave a dark, olive-colored complexion, and\nlive iu a completely savage slate, like the\nbeasts; having neither houses, temples nor\nholy trees, like the Gallas, yet possessing\nsomething like an idea of a higher being,\ncalled Yer, to whom in momeatH of wretch-\nedness and anxiety they pray—not iu an\nerect posture, but reversed, with the head\non the ground and the feet supported up-\nright agaiust a tree or stone. In prayer\nthey say: -Ycr, if thou really dost exist,\nwhy dost thou allow us to be slaiu? We do\nnot ask for food and clothing, for wo live\non serpents, ants and mice. Thou hast\nmade us, why dost thou permit us to ho\ntrodden under foot?” The Dokos have no\nchief, no laws, no weapons; they do not\nhunt, nor till the ground, hut live solely on\nfruits, roots, mice, serpeuts, ants, honey,\nand the like, climbing trees, and gathering\nthe fruits like monkeys, and both sexes go\ncompletely naked. They have thick pro-\ntruding lips, flat noses, and small eyes; their\nhair is not woolly, and is worn by the wo-\nmeu over the shoulders. The nails on the\nhands and feet are allowed to grow like\n talons of vultures, and are used in dig-\nging ants, and tearing in pieces the serpents\nwhich they devour raw, for they are unac-\nquainted with fire. The spine of the snake\nis the only ornament worn round the neck,\nbut they pierce their ears with a sharp-\npointed pieoe of wood.\nAlthough these people live iu thick woods\nand conceal themselves amongst the trees,\nyet they become the prey of the slave-hun-\nters of Susa, Kaffa, Dtitnbaro and Kulla; for\nwhole regions of their woods are encircled\nby the hunters, so that the Dokos cannot\neasily escape. When the slave-hnnters come\nin sight of the poor creatures they hold up\nclothes of bright colors, singing and danc-\ning. upon which the Dokos allow themselves\nto be captured without resistance, knowing\nfrom experibnee that such resistance is fruit\nless, nnd can only lead to their destruction\nIn this way, thousands can bo captured by\na small band of hunters, and once captured\nthey become quite docile. In slavery the\nDokos retain their predilection for feeding\non mice, serpents and ants, although often\non that account punished by their masters,\nwho in other respects are attached lo them,\nas they are docile and obedient, have few\nwants, and enjoy good health, for which\nreasons they are never sold for slaves be-\nyond Enarea. As diseases are unknown\namong them, they die only of old age, or\nthrough the assaults of their enemies.—[Dr.\nKrapt.
9678ce26669ba3a467dec60335e6bd83 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.6352458700162 39.261561 -121.016059 and diseases of Women and Children, invites the atti\nof sick and atllicted females laboring under anv of the\nous form a of diseases of the Brain, Lungs. Liver. I\nStomach, Womb. Blood, Kidneys, and all other disens\nculiar to their sex. The Doctor is effecting more\nthan any other Physician in the State of California,\nno false delicacy prevent vou. hut apply imrae liatciy,\nsave yourselffrom painful suffering amt premature i\nAll married Ladies, whose delicate health or other cii\nstances do not allow to have an increase in their far\nshould lose no time in consulting Dr. Czapkay.\nThe attention of the render is called to following A\nof high standing in society and grout respectability\nlislieu a card in the Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch.\n14th. 1851. which is as fellows:—\nA CARD—-The undersigned feels it her dutv toej\nher heartfelt gratitude to Dr. Czapkay, the* suec\ncare of herself and child. The latter having been ail\nbv n severe attack of cholera infantum, and was givt\nas iucurnblc bv some of the most celebrated plivs:\nwhen she called on Dr. Czapkay, whom she heart! ve\nvnrab!y spoken of. and who after a short period res\nthe child to perfect health. Encouraged by this ext\ndinar.v insult, she sought advice for the scrofulous m\nw ith which she had been atllicted for eight years,\nw hich hap withstood the tnutment of the best physi\nin Europe and America. But Pr. Oat kay has suee\nin affoniing her le.imanent relief, so tnat she can now\njoy life, which since eight years hail lost all charms t*\nshe therefore deems it due to herw«*)f. and to sick ai\nHicte.l to recommeml Dr. Czupkav as one of the most\nful physician* iu the Tnite 1 states.
2373895cd2e02f4d5e1178f7204d1623 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.5040983290326 39.745947 -75.546589 To the open and unbiased mind It would appear\nthat reference of the controversy to the Interstate\nCommission opens the surest road to an adjustment\nwhich should equitably consult the rights and equities\nof all the interests concerned—those of the employes,\nof the railroads and of the general public. This tri­\nbunal has Intimate and accumulated knowledge of\nrailway conditions such as is possessed by no other\nbody In the United States. By reason of Its control\nover railroad rates, it determines, in a way. the reve­\nnues of the agencies of transportation. It has full and\naccurate knowledge of what the railways are now\nearning, and It is in position to know whether or not\nLabor is getting a Just and fair proportion of those\nearnings. It also has the facilities for ascertaining with\napproximate accuracy what additional burden the rail­\nroads would have to he authorized to place upon the\npublic should the demands of the employes be acceded\nto, and It is best of Judging whether the im­\nposition of such an additional burden would be con­\nsistent with fairness and Justice to the public.\nIt Isnt expressing an opinion as to where the merits\nof the pending controversy He to say that the rail­\nroads, in offering to submit the matter to the Inter­\nstate Commission and abide by Its decision, are demon­\nstrating a confidence in the strength of their conten­\ntions which cannot fail to have effect upon the public\nmind. If the faith of the employes in the reasonable­\nness of their demands is equally as strong, why should\nthey refuse, or even hesitate, to leave the arbitrament\nto a tribunal whose competency to deal with the mat­\nters in dispute is unequaled and whose disinterested­\nness is not open to question? This is s question which\nthe public will naturally ask Itself, an«l the railway\nemployes cannot afford to ignore the significance\nwhich will logically attach to failure satisfactorily and\nfully to answer It.
ccf7aff2100c63dfe98e4ba6d35b8157 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.6315068176052 39.560444 -120.828218 Several attempts were made in the\nsummer of 1850 to annul the laws passed\nin the spring, but it could not be effected\n—it is a hard matter to change the first\nlaws made in any mining district, even if\nthey are few in number.\nI went to see Jack Smith one day\nwhere he was working, below the Blue\nBanks; he was panning dirt on a claim\nabove his own, and swearing away at all\nMissourians, Pike county hombres in par-\nticular. It was a long time before I could\nfind out what was the matter with him.—\nWell, Jack took up a claim above where\nbe was working, to sell to some greenhorn\nwho might come that way, and to make it\nprospect well put about two ounces in the\nhole all ready for the first one who came\nalong. It was net long before a prospec-\ntor came up, with his pick and pan, look-\ning for a claim. Jack told him he might\ntry that, and if he liked it, he was willing\nto sell; so he commenced pulling down a\nlot of rocks and dirt into the hole where\nthe gold was, and as he could only raise\nthe color, Jack had a job heaving and\nlifting them out. I think that claim was\nthe richest about the forks—l have known\nJack to wash out six pounds in one day\nwith a rocker wr as after we had\ntraded it to one another several times for\na plug ef tobacco. We had crovicing\nclaims that we used to work in a few\nhours during wet weather, and this was\none of them; and if after working some\ntime without getting much gold, we came\nto camp and sold it to him who would give\nmost tobacco in exchange.\nThe claim that I worked on opposite\nCraycrofts saw'-raill was a singular one—\nI could get heavy gold high up on the\nbank,amongst loose black dirt, leaves and\nsticks. I could not tell how it came\nthere, but there it was, from two to five dol-\nlars to the pan, while in the clay you could\nnot get a dollar to the pan. I only found\none place beside this where I could get\ngold in the same kind of dirt, and that\nwas below Bryfogle Flat,(opposite my old\nclaim) where I found it thirty feet above\nthe river. It was not heavy, but in large\nthin scales, and one miece that did not\nweigh half an ounce,measured an inch and\na half long; I always thought this kind of\ngold had been washed. lam not one who\nthinks gold floats, yet, if this came down\nthe hill one would naturally suppose that\nit would have been deposited in the clay,\nand not among leaves and sticks thirty\nfeet from the river.
068dc4844bbe8db476bad086db463be5 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.0671232559614 37.92448 -95.399981 had guided moro than ono party of\nwhites through the lands of the Sioux\nbefore tho bitterness of war nroso be-\ntween tho races. They had loved Fol-\nsom for yenrs nnd would not desert\nhim now in tho fnco of popular clam'\nor. Yet oven their Influence would\nhave failed but for the sound that\ntold of hotter conflict still nmong the\nfoothills along tho opposite slelo of\nthe valley. With straining cars, Fol-\nsom listened, hope nnd fear alternat-\ning in his breast. Tho mingling yells\nand volleying told that tho issue was\nin doubt. Man nfter man of his cap-\ntors galloped away until not half n\ndozen wero left. Now, Joke and Lan\nnlon could have shot them down nnd\nborno him within, but to whnt good?\nEscape from tho rnnch Itself wns Im\npossible! Such notion only in\ntcnslfy tho Indian hato and make\nmoro horrible tho Indian vengeance,\nFor 20 minutes the clamor continued,\nthen seemed to die gradually away,\nnnd, with fury In their fnces, back nt\nfull gnllop enmo n docn of tho brnves\nOno glance wns enough. Thoy hnd\npenned In their foo nmong the rocks,\nbut not without the loss of sovcrnl\nnt least of their band, for the fore\nmost rode with brandished wnr club\nstrnlght nt Folsom, nnd desplto the\nleap of his two champions to save,\nfelled the old trader with one stun\nnlng blow, then gave the snvnge or\nder to burn tho rnnch.\nfiy this time tho sun wns just peer\ning Into tho vnlley. Tho smoke nnd\nflnmo from tho corrnl wero dying\nor drifting nwny. Eagerly half a\ndozen young brnves rushed for fag-
3acc7b6e31abc611eb4991ff71f2d753 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.8095890093862 41.875555 -87.624421 Division number; , committeemen\nIrst aad alternates:\n1. Taos. 8 . Hayes; F. B. Carr.\n41. W. Q. Swing; A. P. Danforth.\n74. B. H. Jones; B. B. White.\n78. R, L. Piper; J. J. Kllckenger.\n78. W. W. Carroll; W. W. Donley.\n81. a C. Parker; A. J. Frailer.\n88. O. F . Conley; J. R. Zoll.\n87. Jas. W. Finley; J. C. Paul.\nM. J. M . Kelley; C. A. Watters.\n87. C P. Beats; B. 8 . Nichols.\n181. F . 8 . Thomas; Jerry McCarby.\n188. F . A. Bledsoe; A. J. Douglas.\n118. J. I. Davis; O. T . Harris.\n118. F . D. Snghrua; W. Erioksea.\n118. F. L. Howard; A. M. Barnes.\n187. T . F . Phleger; J. H. Vose.\nM8. W. P . W. H. Devlin.\n1x8. C. M . Dalton; H. B. Holt\n188. O. O. McCarty; P. O. Ronrke.\n188. Jao. Fowler; M. Ingham.\nM8. O. C. Craig; R. Trogdea.\n187. L. M. Hough; B. F. Bradley.\nW7. B. B. French; G. W . Melbourne.\nMl W. A. Sharpe; C. H. Stanley.\nM8. J. L. Lamport; J. C . McGaaa.\nM8. W. J. Smith; P. H. O'Connor.\nIW. D. W. Marshall: T. Nltsoa.\nM8. M. F . Cooper; A. 8 . KuykendaU.\nMl. D. 8 . Craig; J. A. Bonbam.\n188. B. Freed; W. M . Stevenson.\n188. D. Naaoy; C. B. Blaekbam.\nML H. Hill; F. a BteL\nM8. A. W. Stewman; W. B. Waaley.\n177. F . P . Mllle; B. B. Flanagan.\nm. B. F . Congdon; J. B. ShorteU.
22bad179a8b38c65670bb73e867425d7 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.932876680619 44.939157 -123.033121 numbor of hands employed nt tho\nbeginning would bo not less than\n100, tho number to bo Increased with\ntho Increased' output 'of tho plant nnd\ntho, wages pnld fully up to tho stand-\nard to that paid In woolon mills nnd\nsimilar classes of work, whllo the\nsalaries of tho offlcora nnd foremen\nwould bo upon nn equnl piano with\nthoBo engaged In similarly responsi-\nble positions In other Industries.\n"Tho total cost per day of operat-\ning tho plant, Including wages re-\npairs, oil nnd fuel, will not exceed\n$380, and tho vnluo of tho day's pro\nduct, oBtlmnteu upon tho basis of\ntho lowest grado fabric, which Is a\nmixture of cotton nnd llnx nnd actu-\nally sold for crash linen, to bo con-\nservative, would bo nt least $5 10,\nloavlng ii not profit of $125 por dny\nor G par cont Interest on tho capi-\ntal Invested, which, nt tho end of 20\nyears rcdconi $107, 12C of tho\nprlnelpnl. Thrco experts would have\nto bo employed to take chargo of tho\nthrco separate branches of tho In\ndustry tho malting of tho flbro, the\nspinning nnd tho weaving nnd fin-\nishing which would doublo the re-\nsults In tho realization of profits, nnd,\nbeing unfamiliar with tho dotnls of\ntho Inst two named departments I\nhave purposcHly overestimated tho\ncost of production nnd underestim-\nated tho true vnluo of tho fabric.\n"Whllo I spoak of tho lessor grades\nof fabrics, merely to glvo nn Idea of\nthe great profits to bo realised In tho\nflnx and llnon Industry, It must bo\nborno In mind that wo will grow nnd\nmake hero as good a quality of fibre\nnu any place In tho world which can\nbo used In tho manufacture of all of\nthe finest products of llnx nnd tho\nmeasure of profit Increases in propor\ntion to tho higher grndos of fabric."
3d45274187b155038d28153bf7b57092 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.8753424340437 39.261561 -121.016059 Having for the last THIRTY YEARS practiced my pre-\nfashion, and tbe last TEN in this State, i have consented\nto advertise, to the people of California, m/ name and\naddress, in order to inform them where they can find a\nRegular Graduate of Medicine in whom they can put the\nfullest confidence, in the treatment of all Private and\nChronic Diseases, such as Epilepsy, Apoplexy, Rush of\nblood to the head, Imflamatien of its different tissues, par-\ntial and complete paralysis and insanity, and all func-\ntional derangements, such as loss of memory, aversion to>\nsociety, misanthropy, timidity, nervousness from slight\ncauses, self-distrust, giddiness, headache, ringing in the\nears, confusion of ideas, love of solitude, optical illusions,\ndisturbed sleep and incapacity for labor and study. Also\nin deceases ol the lungs und air passages, such as tuber-\ncular diseases, or consumption, pneumonia, or infiamation\nof the lungs, pleurles, or pleurisy, asthma, humoral or\nspasmodic, bronchitis, larinitis, and all forms of catarrhal\naffections. Also diseases of the liver, such as hepatis, or\ninfiamation of the liver, abscesses of the liver, calculi in\nthe bladder and ducts, jaundice, and those disease* which\nimpede its function#, such as fever, billious and\nintermittent fevers and the consequences which these dis-\norders leave btdiind them.\nAlso diseases of the stomach, rucL as gastritis, or in-\nflamation of the stomach, enterities or inflpmation of the-\nbowels, dyspepsia in all its forms, which destroy appetite\nand digestion, flatulence, dysentery and diarrhoea. Also\ndiseases of the kidneys aund other urinary organs, such\nas diabetes, or an excessive flow of ujine, albumeniaria,\ncommonly known as Bright's disease. In this complaint\nphysician or patient oftentimes suspect the presence e£\ndiseases until too late, i he most common symptoms are\ngeneral indisposition with dropsical swelling, calculi in\nthe kidneys, urethra or bladder, enuresis or inability t*\nretain the urine ; cystitis or infiamation of the bladder,\nand all other disorders of the urinary organs. Also di-\nsease* of the womb and its appendages, such as irregular-\nity of the Mensem, when excessive, defective, suppressed\nor irregular, prolapsus or falling of the womb, sterriity;\noverean dropsy, and other diseases of the parts. In the-\ntreatineut of any of the above diseases, the doctor has\nmany new remedies and guarantees and a perfect cure in\nall cases, or the money will be returned.
2e3fb0e6b98f276cb53a34cbc97f68ad THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 The Academy was open lust night and\nfirst-class performance was given. During thi\nday the acton and musicians came together\nhad an understanding, and it turned ou\nthat the musicians wero not so implacabli\nafter all; in fact, when a calm talk was luu\nthere was no trouble in arranging affaire, am\nlast night the orchestra paruded before thi\nshow, and also furnished the musii\ninside. Manager Mullay went to Pittsburul\nyesterday, and Harry Leonard occupied tin\nbox office and handled pasteboards, whili\nKddie Edwards played the middle man am\nthe Masons took good care of the ends. Tin\nhouse was not one to encourage actors win\nwero in a tight place, but the coinpuuy di<\nexcellently, and live in hones that the shov\nwill be appreciated so that uy Saturday nigh\neverybody can lie fixed all right.\nThe bill for this week is excellent. Head\ning the list is Carl Hertz, who is really a kinj\nof cards necromancers; he does his trick\nvery neatly and more than rivals Herman!\nin the disappearing bird cage act. AI . W\nFilson, assisted by Miss Lee Krrol, do a ver\nneat and taking musical and society sketel\nin good style. In addition there is the list o\nthe old favorites who have furnished amuse\nmcnt for NVheelingites so far this season, am\nthe helping hand should now be extended ii\nthe shape of rousing houses every night.\nThe members of the orchestra claim tha\nthey were misrepresented by the person whi\nwas interviewed on Monday night in relatioi\nto the closing. They claim to have lived u|\nto their contract, and say that two woelu\nsalary was due them. Leader Miller also say\nthat the desire expressed that he should "ge\nout" is not so. ile says he wants to do th\nsouaro thing with all, and merely wunted 01\nMonday night $.'<0 out of $50 due the orchci\ntra.
18f6e4070a1047be781362795ce2bf84 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.1136985984272 39.745947 -75.546589 Justice Lore appointed Messrs. Melds,\nRodney, Higgins, Bird. Spruance, Van-\ndegritt and Gray. The committee held\na conference in the judge's room and\nreturned with these resolutions:\n“The members of the bar of New\nCastle county, assembled to take action\nupon the death of Honorable Leonard\nE. Wales, judge of the District Court cf\nD da ware, in common with the citizens\nof this and (lie adjoining common­\nwealths within the fields cf his labors,\ndesire to testify to the high respect in\nwhich he was held as a judge, the af­\nfection with which he was regarded by\nall and the sorrow with which his\ndeath is mourned. Therefore, be it\n“Resolved, That while we recognize\nthe kindness of the Divine Ruler in\nextending for more than three scare\nyears and ten his useful and distin­\nguished life, his departure was so un­\nexpected that the blow seems to have\nfallen too suddenly upon a community\nthat had hoped that his life, which had\nbrought so much that was honorable\ninto its midst, should lie continued for\nmany years to come, holding before it\n example that would lift higher its\nideals and desires.\n"Resolved, also. That while this bar\nrecognizes the many public and private\ntrusts committed to Judge Wales be­\nfore he was called to high judicial place\nin this state, and the conscientious dis­\ncharge of ail his duties and obligations\nas a private citizen, it has been as a\nmagistrate holding in the courts of this\nstate and in those cf the nation the\nscales cf justice uetween man and man\nthat he was an enduring crown, and it\nis to that the people of this state will\nlook barken as an inspiration to hersons\nof this and coming generations. Pre­\nsiding as he did in the state and Fed­\neral courts with marked dignity, he was\na patient listener and courteous, con­\nsiderate and impartial in his bearing\ntoward the bar. He has left behind him\nthe example of a pure, useful and hon­\nored life, and a memory which will long\nbe cherished with respect and affection\nby his associates upon ttie bench and\nthe profession of which he was a dis­\ntinguished member.
3e4f36b1061692bd605219d5742f086d DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.0040983290326 44.939157 -123.033121 in slippers ana or gentleness nir.rv\ndovellko than the dove's. A very subtle\nImpression, lllunllnnted with the "hopf\nthat wlthors hope", had come of that\nInterview, and now Fnrnsworth felt Its\nrestraint. He therefore saluted Hamil-\nton formally nnd walked nway.\nFather Beret's patcrnnl love for AI\nIce we cannot chnrnclerlxo It morn\nnicely than to call It paternal was htn\nJustification for n certnln mild sort of\ncorruption Insinuated by him Into the\nheart of Karnswttrth. He wns a crafty\npriest, but his craft wns always used\nfo u good end. Unquestionably Jesuttii\nwns bis mode of circumventing tho\nyoung man's military scruples by of-\nfering him n pnff of fnlr weather with\nwhich to sail toward what appenred to\nbe the shore of delight. He saw nt a\nglance that Fnrnsworth's love for Alice\nwas consuming pnsslon In a very\nardent yet decidedly weak heart. Hero\nwas the worldly lever with which Fa-\nther Beret hoped to raze Alice's prison\nand free her from the terrlblo doom\nwith which sho wns threatened.\nThe first Interview wns nt Father\nBeret's cabin, to which, as will be re-\nmembered, the priest nnd Fnrnsworth\nwent nfter their meeting in the street\nIt actually camo to nothing, save an\nindirect understanding but half sug-\ngested by Father Beret and nover open-\nly sanctioned by Cnptnln Fnrnsworth.\nThe talk was Insinuating on tho part\n"f the former, while tho latter slipped\ncvasttiy from every proposition, ns Jf\nnot able to consider it on account of a\ncurious obtuscness of perception. Still,\nwhen they separated they shook hands\nnnd exchanged n searching look per-\nfectly satisfactory to both.
01e58c96c6337f6f39cdba7818a94f07 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.7630136669204 40.063962 -80.720915 performed a prominent part, and paid a\nglowing tribute to the negro color-bearor,\nwho, with oho arm shot off and a leg\nmashed to a jolly by a solid shot, still, as\nbelay upou tho field, bold up the colors\nwith his remaining hand, aud told his\ncomrades that his orders were never to\nlet the colors touch the earth, and they\nnever had. "Now, I don't say," said Ueu.\nGibson, "that tho negro troops are the\nbust troops in the world, but 1 do say that\na race tbut can produce heroes like that\nought not to be bought and sold." Ho\ndrow a picture of the varying fortunes of\nthe war uutil Abraham Lincoln issued the\nEmancipation Proclamation, and uutil we\nwere brought to inscribe justice to a\nwronged race on our banners. Then, said\nho, the Uud of Israel led our armies\nto victory, as Ho did thoso of\nilia ancient people, and was our\ncloud by day nud our pillar of\ntiro by night. Looking uu to tho 1»a\nspoke of "Abraham Lincoln, tho martyr\nPresident, standing now before the throne\nof Jehovah, holding up the shackles that\nhad been struck from tho limbs of four\nmillion* of Uod's poor." lu that greatest\nand grandest deed of all history tho Detn-\nocraUo parly had had no lot or part. It\n'would staid forever as th# inspired act of\ntho Eepubncan* party. Ilo said that tho\nhistory of the Hepublicnn party was a\nsuccession of j»reat ueeas for the elevation\nof mankind, through'the,development of\ntho country, the progress Mif the arts and\nthe spread of intelligence. Ho compared\nthe Democratic party to ft man tiding\nbackwards in tho cars.. They had never\nrecognised anything for.tho laat .eighteen\nyears until it was past. They had opposed\neverything an J been defeated and defeated <\ntitjiO.ftftortime,alwaysblocking upthe path i\nof progress. Their whole career, bt»gin- <\nning with Buchanan's administration\nand continuing on down to this time,\nhad sitnplv been ono unbroken se-\nriee of mistakes and failures. What I
0866f74addce19fb29b9949c7da7cc06 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.6051912252074 40.063962 -80.720915 idltori Intelligencer.\nThe recitals of Mr. and Mrs. J. R . Scott\ni City Hall, last week, afforded oar\neople a most enjoyable literary treat,\n'be programme included five recitals by\nIr. and (our by Mrs. Scott, concluding\nrith a lively comedy. If we measure the\nnorits of the performance by the rapt at-\neution and keen enjoyment of the\nudience, the grade will be high. "The\nrall of Pemberton Mills," descriptive and\nlathetic, was rendered by Mrs. S . with\nuch vividness and depth of feeling as to\n>e painful. Tears were falling from the\niyes of many. The picture was only lesa\nhrilling than the reality. The "Exertion\n?arty," by Mrs. S., was greeted with\n- o ar s of laughter. She is to the humorous\n>orn; it is ner nati ;e element. Her forte\ns clearly the pathetic and the humorous.\nMr. Scott's "PhaidrigCrohoore" was won-\nlerfuilv true to life, strong and impres-\nlive. His personation of character is ex*\njellent both in dialect and manner. The\nmtertainment is calculated to amuse, in-\nitruct and benefit. Mrs. Scott nu Miss\nHoore was a Barnesville girl, raised here,\nind there is a local pride in her eflorta\nind her success.\n colored campmeeting is still in\nprogress, and will continue over Sunday,\nthe 8th inst. The following ministers have\nofficiated so far: The Rev. J . N. Busier,\nBarnesville, 0.; Rev. R . H . Morris, Circle-\ntrille, 0.; Rev. M . H .Davidson, Newark,\n5.; Rev. Prosser, Wheeling, W. Va.;and\nRev. J. E. Mitchell,of Z<tuesville, 0. Miss\nLucy Stevens preaches the evening of the\nTib Inst. The order has been excellent,\naccessions to the church few.\nWithin the past week four deaths have\noccurred in our community.an unusual\nmortality. Mrs. Elizabeth Piper, widow of\nWm. Piper, died July 31st, aged 82 years.\nRobert Hoduins died on the 2nd inst, aged\n75 years. He was an old, prominent and\nrespected citizen, born in this township\nand residing here all his life. Joshua\nBarneadled on the 4th inst., aged 61 years.\nA worthy citixen, whose whole life was\nspent here. "Guy," a bright, loveable\nlittle boy of J. D .and DorrieMcKeevers,\ndied on the 5th inst.\nMrs. Emma Lewis, of Wheeling, has\nbeen paying a visit to friends here.\nJohn R. Warfleld, Esq., of St. Louia. and\nJ. A . Warfield, of Ironton, formerly boys\nof Barnesville. are on a viait to the "old\nplace."
9ddbe8a662fd9c1e70420f58dfb07865 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.9136985984271 35.780398 -78.639099 ions of those with whom I differ, 1 cannot\nfor my life see, in this advanced stage .of tho\nreform, l.ow our efforts to obtain a prohibi-\ntory law can act as an obstacle in our way,\nor why we are not as well prepared to act\nnow, as we will be at any future period.\nWc have been telling tho good people of\nNorth Carolina for the last two years that we\ndesired such a law, and expressed our inten-\ntion to have it if untiring energy and perse-\nverance could accomplish it. We have\ngone so far as to humbly petition that hon-\norable body who make our laws, simply to\npropose a law and ask the people whether\nthey would have it ; and we, a large num-\nber of the good and respectable citizens of\nthe State, wore kicked out of the legislative\nhalls for our impertinetice. It is admitted\nthat so far from injuring tho cause, such con-\nduct gave it new strength and vigor called\nforth the indignation of the friends of the\ncause and planted in them the firm and un-\ncompromising determination never to resign\nthe contest until tho work was accom-\nplished ; when liko our sister States, who af-\nter repeated efforts have declared themselves\nfree, will we proclaim to the world that wb\ntoo are free ! With referer.co to the objec-\ntions of those who arc unfriendly to the\ncause, we arc inclined to the opinion that,\nlike the outcries that been made against\nthe Sons of Temperance and the temper-\nance reform, they have resulted from a viti-\nated appetite for liquor itself, or an insatia-\nble thirst after filthy lucre, if not from a com-\nbination of both causes Had jhcscEqureea\nneve; heard a murmur from tho bosom\nfriends of the' demon. Miserable wretches,\nin the shape of humanity ! they deserve ra-\nther to be pitied for their ignorance and un-\ngovernable prejudices, than censured for\ntheir deeds. Does tho liquor traffic contrib-\nute to man's temporal or eternal happiness?\nDoes it bring him nearer to his GodV Has\nit ever promoted tho moral and religious con-\ndition of our country ? Did it ever aid in\nestablishing any wiso and benevolent insti-\ntution ? Did it ever accomplish any good ?\nOn the other hand, has it not withered in\nmany instances, every hope' of happiness",\nalienated man from his maker? polluted the\nmorals of our country? blasted the early\nbuddings of benevolence? participated ia\nevery act in the dark catalogue of crimes?\n" cursed tho world and laughed at its ruin ?"\nThese quesitons, brethren, I leave for yon\nto answer, and when you have calmly con-\nsidered and brought them to bear on the\nevils to which your own experience will tes-\ntify, and added your experience to that of\nthe millions of earth, I am confident you\nwill not hesitate to act your part in the great\ncontest. We should endeavor to ha ?e our
181d157f8ecc38ed54a528692fce3fb6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.160273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 Paused February 20, 1866.\nHe it enacted by the hciiuilalure of\nThere-1shHit be1 lippoiriU'd' bt'tho\nGovernor, from nmoug tlio citizens moat\nknown for loyalty, firmness and u|v\nrigbtness, tbree persons for each coun¬\nty residing therein, who shall be styled\nthe County Hoard of Registration,which\nboard shall proceed to appoint one loy¬\nal and upright person, to bo atyied the\nRegistrar, lor each ward of the cities\nand incorporate towns, and ench town¬\nship or district of such county. Ihe\nRegistrar shall register the white male\ncitizens iu bis ward, township or dis¬\ntrict entitled to vote therein according\nto the provisions of'this act, in the man¬\nner hereinafter provided; and the mem¬\nbers of the said board, and the regis¬\ntrars, shall each, before entering upon\ntho discharge of his duties, take the\nproperoath of office, passed November\nsixteenth, one thousand eight hundred\nand sixty-three, which oath sworn to\nas aforesaid, shall bo subscribed by the\nparty and returned to, and tiled by, the\nrecorder of thupoupty. Each member\nof the said board, and each registrar,\nshall receive two dollars for each day\noccupied and required in discharging\nthe duties of his office. Anv vacancy\nin the county board or in office or\nregistrar, shall .be tilled as hereinafter\nprovided," any two of said board having\npower to act and perform all the duties\nand functions of their office.\n2. The Governor shall cause to be\nprepared Sdiiabl6; books for'the regis¬\ntration of tho names of voters and facts\nrequired by this act, to be furnished to\nthe county board of registratloh and by\nthem distributed to the registrars ol\ntheir respective wards,. townships or\ndistricts. The books aforesaid shall be\nso arranged as to admit of. the alpha-|\nbetical classification of the names of\nvoters," and ruled in pamllol columns,\non ivhlch shall bo entered : First, the\nname of the person registered; sccond,\nsworn* if&rd, agE; fourth, the place of\nh7s bfAh?fifth, thetimfrof his residence\nin the ward, township or district; sixth,\ntime of residence in tho.State; seventh,\nif nataralized, the date of tho papers,\nand the court by which issued.\n3. Before any registrar shall register\ntho name of any person as a qualified\nvoter, except as hereinafter provided,\nhe shall bo satisfied<of IrisqualiticatiOns\nas heretofore provided by law, and if\nhe has any doubt.us to:.such i person *\nloyalty, he shall administer tho follow¬\ning affidavit; '\n.»
303daa727449b95502d27c7f759057e5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.1438355847285 39.745947 -75.546589 SIMMONS- In this city, on February 21,\n1953». Lillie M.. wife of Charles H.\nSimmons.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral ten ice* at her late resi­\ndence. 435 Geddee street, on Wednesday\nI .afternoon. February 23, at £90 oclork-\nOI 1 Interment at Rlverview cemetery.\nWIIITRFOHD On February 22. 1921.\nWilliam S. Whlteford, aged 90 year*.\nRelatives, friends, member* of Morn­\ning Star Lodge No I, K. of P.. «re In­\nvited to attend the funeral service* at his\nkite mldSBM, Holly oak. Del,,\nThursday afternoon, February 24, at 2\no'clock. Interment at Rlverview ceme­\ntery.\nSTARK—In this city, on February 2^\n1921. Klixa A. , widow of Captain Wil­\nliam S Stnrr, «ged T8 year*.\nRelative* and friend* are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral service* at th»* residence\nof her son-in-law, MV. S. Bullock. 1003\nWalnut on Friday, February 25. at\n2 o'clock. Interment «t Rlverview ceme­\ntery.\nSIMMON«—At her late residence. 430\nGed.Te* street, LIIII« M.. wife of Charte«\nII. Simmon*.\nDue r.otlce of funeral will be given.\nLEWIS—In thl* city, on February 21,\n1921. William Sterling Lewis, aged 21\nyear*.\nRelative* and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral sen-1res at the realdenc*\nof his parents, «09 East Sixth street, on\nWednesday afternoon, at 2 oclock. In­\nterment at Sllverhrook cemetery,\nSTEVENSON—In this city, on February\n20. 1021, Laura Warren, wife of William\nM Stevenson.\nRelative* and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funeral service« at the re«l-\ndenee of her husband, 410 West Twenty-\nseeond street, on Wednesday afternoon,\nFebruary 23, at 3.30 oclock. Inrrerraemt\nat Rlverview cemetery.\nMERRICK—In this city,\n30. 1921. Frank A..\nand Susan Sherwood Merrick, «goo 17
09943035609425b83a89ea17be3bc552 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.3547944888383 40.735657 -74.172367 including the 75 leet ou the easterly side of\nl ltth Street opposite Fourth aveuue; on both\nHides ot Coeyman street, trotn bummer avenue\nto a point about W0 feet west of tho westerly\nline of Mt. Prospect aveuue; on both sides ot\nMt. Prospect avenue from u point about 275\nloet soutn oi the southerly line of Coeyman\nstreet to u point about 15b leet north of the\nnorther!; line oi Coeyman street, on the west\nfctue of Summer avenue from a point about\n225 feet south of the southerly line of Coey-\nnmn street to a point uoout 225 teet north of\nthe northerly lino of Coeyman street; on tho\noast side ot Summer avenue from a point\nabout 1.5 feet south of the southerly line of\nJMng utreot to VVinthrop street; on bofh sides\nttt Irving sheet from Summer avenue to a\n about 75 feet west ot the westerly line\nof Lincoln avenue; on both slues of pressed\nWood side avenue from a point about 225 feet\nsouth of tho southerly line of Coeyman street\nto a point about 225 feet north of the northerly\nline of Coeyman street, on both aides of Ve-\nrona avenue, from the worn side of »>raton\nstreet to Riverside avenue, and have tiled theii\nreport of said assessments (or benefits tn th»-\noffice of tho dork of the Circuit Court of the\nCounty of Essex, and that the Judge of said\ncourt has fixed Saturday, tho thirteenth day of\nMay. 1911. at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, in\nthe Circuit Court room at tho Court House In\nthe ity ot" Newark, as the time and place or\nhearing any objections that may lo made to\nthe said assessments.\nDated May 8, 1911.
0f04b432cf4ff9d24dc8fcd9f2822651 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.3630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 bought over with money and promised of\nappointments to otlieo, in order to get a\nquorum for the court room and a body\n'of men were sent for anil paid to couib\nand represent counties without certificates\nof election aud without any pretense of\nelection. In order to defeat a quorum\nin the Capitol .legislature one member\nwas bribed by Hinds and another was\ndrugged to insensibility. The money\n{used for corrupting the members was\n(iovcrnment fimds'horrowed for tho pur-\n. porte irom me poet nnii revenue otiiciaiH.\nWhen u compromise wan proponed by\nAttorney-tluneral William* it wan found\nthat iiiiIcmm one Democratic Senator could\nhe miHonU'd and a Republican placetl in\nIiIh ntead the record would nhow that the\nCourt Iiooni Legislature had no quorum\nin the Senuto and that Npcncer'H election\nwan void. Thereupon one tlliui, the\n Senator for Macon (JOitnty,\nwiut paid from $.'i00 to $500 to pair off\nwith a Democratic Senator in what wax\nknown ai tho Miller and Martin con teat\nnnd violate hi* pledge. The Lieutenant*\nUoveriior (McKlnstry) wan to rule, and\nthe Kepunlican Senatorn were nil to\nMUHtain bin rulingo, ho ax to Hettle the\ncontent More notice of the treachery\nnouill iw vuowyeil 10 the ntweiil Demo*\ncratie Senators.' The testimony of ltobt.\nllarber, clerk of tho court room of the\nLower House and also clef-k of the name\n1 Inline after the coiirtolidatiou, itumnmple\nof the whole iiiom».\nHarbor being nworn testified iw follow*;\nI was clerk of the Lower HottM of the\ncourt room of the legislature, and also\nclerk of the I tonne in the coiiHolidnted\nlegislature. The object of the court\nroout legislature wan to iiecure an
2aeb064598ea2ce25d12f2baace6ac98 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.3575342148656 40.827279 -83.281309 Of course this does not describe the\nhome behavior of husbands as a class ; but\nit indicates a style of conduct of which\ntnere is altogetner too much. ouch, de\nportment is fatal to the happiness of home,\nand to all deep and true affection between\nhusband and wife. It often prepares the\nway tor separation, it not what is worse.\nA wife naturally expects to be treated\nwith becoming courtesy and civility, to\nsay the least by the man whose attentions\nbefore marriage were so overpoweringly\nkind, whose every word was music, and\nwhose every act a gallantry. She natu\nrally craves kind attentions, appreciating\nnotice, a sympathetic look and air, and\nfeels hurt at heart by neglect incivility,\nand boorishness. And when, her husband\nmakes no effort to interest her, and re\nsponds to no effort of her own when he\ndenies the kindness which is her daily\nfood, and the affection which is the vitali\nty of her air either what is best in her\nheart droops and dies, or finds satisfaction\nelsewhere. Fine excuses may be framed\nfor conjugal remissness on the husband's\npart, lie 13 overDurdened with care, worn\ndown with anxiety, used up with work and\nworry. Which is very true ; this does\nnot atone for the neglect of those beautiful\ncourtesies and affectionate attentions which\na wife needs a thousand times more than\nanything eke, and which are the very life\nof her life ; this does not make stupidity\none whit more agreeable, nor ill temper\nmore endurable, nor a human porcupine a\nmore congenial companion. A true wife\nthinks more ol her husband than of houses\nor costly attire. She sets a higher value\non his love than on laces and upholstery.\none preiers tnat ne snail come home an\nhour earlier, with a shorter purse and\nlighter heart. She would have less money\nand more man. And if he knows what is\nbest for his happiness, and his interest too,\nne will respect ner wisnes, and make a\ndaily conquest of her heart by a behavior\nas fine in torm as it is anectionate in spirit\nThere is no sense in letting business wring\nall the juices out of the body and the mind,\nand then dropping dry and listless and\nworthless as a rag into the place which\nshould be the happiest and most sacred in\nthe world, and the companionship which\ncalls lor tne best and noblest that mind\nand heart can give. Golden Age.
275ab89d68ad2098e47fa60f85ac84bb THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1907.7136985984273 37.451159 -86.90916 npd In the forests primeval In the com ¬\npuny of Indians and guides are still\namong the most popular of nny works\nby American authors The centennial\ncelebration in Coopcrstown N Y\ntvhlch was for many years the au ¬\nthors home has awakened renewed\ninterest in his career and achieve ¬\nreins Coopcrstown was founded by\nWilliam Cooper tbe father of James\nFenimore Cooper who was the first\njudge of Otsego county and the first\nto represent his district in congress\nHe was a native of New Jersey but\non securing large landed interests in\ncentral New York removed his family\nthither He at first erected a log\nhouse nnd In this the future author\nwho was born In New Jersey In 1780\nspent his early childhood As soon\nas he could do so the elder Cooper\nerected a manor house long known as\nOtsego Hall and this structure \nthe sons home from ISIM until his\ndeath In It lie wrote some of his best\nknown works It was burned In 18JKJ\nThe Cooporstown of today contains\nmany things that remind the visitor of\nIts connection with the first noted and\nsuccessful American writer of fiction\nTim author loved his country anti rev\neled in the beauties of Its cenery\nand the romance of its logendaty tales\nand warlike history as his works ubun ¬\ndantly testify Yet in his own day he\nwas mush misunderstood and he lid\nnot enjoy the popularity among his\ncountrymen that he deserved Now\ntime ho has been for many years dead\nand gone bo Is duly honored and the\nspots associated with his career are\nI ca r efully marked while his resting\nplace In the graveyard of Christ\nchurch Cooperstown Is held especial ¬\nly snored Cooper Bled In 1MIJ mid It
b294001cb7963dcd5d1daa0964119f0d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.705479420345 39.261561 -121.016059 As a medical man it is the duty of every physician to\nlook at disease as it affects health and life, an*1 his sole ob-\nject should he to mitigate, as far as lies in his power, the\nbodily sulfiering. Human nature at best is but IVail, all\nare liable to misfirtune.\nOf nl! the ills that nffeef man. none are more terrible\nthan those of a private lu-tnie. I rendful as it is in the\nperson who contract* it. frightful as are its ravages upon\nid* constitution, ending frequently in destruction and a\nloathsome grave.it liecome** of still greater importance\nwhen it is transmitted to to innocent olfspring. Such be-\ning the cave, how necessary it becomes that every one hav-\ning the Iea*t reason to fear that every one having the least\nreason to tear that have contracted the disease,\nshould attend to it nt once by consulting some physician\nw lioue respectability and education enables him to warrant\nn safe, apeedv. and fonnanent cure. In accordance w ith\nthis necessity. DR . S OUXG feels called upon to stale that\nbv long study and exten-ive practice, he lias become per-\nfect master of nit these di ea-e - which conic under the de-\nnomination of venereal, and having paid more attention to\nthat one branch than anv other physician in the United\nSlates, he feels himselfbetter qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such as Ulcers. Swelling in the\nGroins. Ulcer* in the Throat. Secoudnry Syphilis, Cutane-\nous Eruption*, Ulcerations. Tettmry Syphilis, Syphilis in\nChildren, Mercurial Syphilitic Affections, Connrhea, Gleet.\nStrictures, Kal>o Passages, Inflamation of the Bladder and\nFrustrate Gland--
12304182e896242af995d5cc742c04fc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.4139343946063 40.063962 -80.720915 Chairman Dickie thou invited tfie\n>0st nominees of the party to the plat- J\norm, and as those present came in sight h\nhe audience broke into loud cheers, r\nvhich' wwd' redoubled and repeated e\nvhctrJolin "P. St. Jotin came forward, n\nColonel Kitter' of Indiunapolis, stepped L\nor ward at the same moment and made r<\nin address of' welcome, to which Chair- li\nnan Delano replied. The remainder of tl\nhe teninorary organization suggested c\n>y the A'utiouul Committee was then <1\nJnced before the convention and for- p\nuully elected us follows: Temporary \\\\\nSecretary, J. II . Cranllll, of Texas; t<\n'irat Assistant Secretary, Mrs. M. M . w\nJrown, of Cincinnati, Second Assistant li\nSecretary, (». F . Wells, of Minnesota. gi\nDelegate Needham, of Kansas, then\ntopped forward and presented Chair- d\nan Delano with a gavel made the n\nvood of the .telegraph pole upon which n\nGovernor St. John wus hanged in effigy L\nNovember 7, 1884, at Topeka, Kansas. \\\\\nVfter a short address of thanks by Tern- u\n>ornry Secretary CrantlU for the honor fc\nonferred by his election, Governor St el\nlohn made a few remarks upon how it a«\neels to be hanged in elligy. The con- u\n'ention then settled down to business, p\nmu on uiouon 01 i/eiegnie i nomas, 01 11\nsew York, the roll of Suites was culled uj\nur the naimpg of members of the com- c<\nuittees on credentials ami {>er!nnnent h\nirganixation. After the call was com- oi\n>leted, at the suggestion of Judge Black, \\\\\nif Pennsylvania, the call was ordered C\nml made for the Committees on ltesolu- tl\nions, and Kules. A reeess was then C\nukeu. tl
15c7f62e9ab02eabfa412410fc179195 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.9027396943177 42.217817 -85.891125 mortgage made and executed by Oeorge T, Rogers\nof the village of South Haveu, Van Duren county,\nMichigan, to Benjamin F. Heckert of the same\nplace, bearing date the first day of August A. D. 172\nand recorded in the office of the register of deds for\nthe county of Van Huren In the state of Michigan,\non the ninth day of September, A. D. 172, in liber\n"0" of mortgages, ou page 40J, and raid mortgage\nhaving been duly assigned by said ftenjamln F.\nHeckert to me, as one of the superintendents of the\npoor for the county of Van Huren aud state of Mich-\nigan, on the second day of Septeiulter, A. D. 1SK5 ,\nwukh assignment was recorded iu the oMce of said\nregister of deeds, on the 2d day of Sept., A. D., ISm.1,\nin liber "av of mortgages ou page '2, by which default\nthe power of sale contained In said mortgage, has\nbecome ojerative, and ujon which said mortgage\nthere Is claimed to bo due at the date of this \nthe sura of tight hundred and sixty dollars aud\nninety cents, for principal aud Interest, aud no halt\nor proceedings at law or in equity, having been in-\nstituted to recover the amount now remaining se-\ncured by said mortgage or any part thereof :\nNow therefore: Notice Is hereby given, that ou\nTuesday the Pith day of January, A. D.1HS6, at ten\no'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front\ndoor of the court house in the village of Paw Paw,\ncounty of Vau Hureu and state of Michigan that\nbeing the place for holding the circuit court for said\ncounty of Van lturen, by virtue of the power of sale\ncontained lu said mortgage, and in pursuance of the\nstatute lu such case made aud provided, I shall sell\nat publio auction to the highest bidder, the premises\ndescribed iu said mortgage, or so much thereof as\nmay be necessary to satisiy the amount due upon\nsaid mortgage together with tho costs aud charges\nof sale aud Interest, to- -
2d1626ab78eee697ee272f99f936d866 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.7062841213824 58.275556 -134.3925 The Stroller does not hesitate to\nconfcss that n typographical error\nIn a newspaper changed hi* entire\nafter life anil was directly the cause\nof his coining went and belnK In\nline to come on North with the\nrush of *97 und '98. The printer\nwho was responsible for the error\nst ill Uvea to enjoy the salubrious\nclimate of the country from which\nthe Stroller lost no time In sep¬\narating himself. It was thin way:\nMiss Arabelle Hourbon, the only\ndaughter of Colonel Karlscourt\nFrederick Hourbon, the most dead-\nly duelist of ten Southern States,\nwas married, and, In order that the\naffair might recclve the attention\nand publicity to which the wedding\nof the only daughter of the House\nof Hourbon was entitled, the Stroll*\ner, then editor of the only dally\npaper In that county-seat Florida\ntown, was Invited to call In person\nthe afternoon preceding the wed¬\nding nt Hourbon home to in-\nepect the half-dozen or more tri¬\numphs In mod Istery which were\nshown by the soon-to-be-brlde her¬\nself. The visit to the ancestral\nhome was accordingly made and\ncopious notes were taken of the\nvery elegant bridal outfit. As the\nStroller was to be one of the groom's\nsupporters during the ceremony, he\ntook time by the forelock, as It\nwere, and wrote a description of the\nbride's gowns nnd th« many pres¬\nents she had received before leav¬\ning his office to drers for tho wed¬\nding. In his article he used the\nexpression: "It was the "esteemed\nprivilege of the editor to person¬\nally Inspect the bride's trousseau."\nThe wedding came off as per\nschedule and without a hitch, the\noccasion being the greatest event\nIn the House of Hourbons since the\ngallant old colonel himself had\nespoused a lovely daughter of the\nantUbcltum South many years be-
22670e2eae1800165cd7fa2b4577bea3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.6953551596337 39.745947 -75.546589 'Governor," they said, 'we have\ncome to ask you to assign to us two\nor three good speakers to address\nseveral open air mass meetings Vhlch\nwe purpose to hold In Connecticut\nand In the vicinity of New York city.”\n“Gentlemen,” Governor Jewell re­\nplied. “If you will tell me where I\ncan find at this time an effeective,\nopen-air campaign speaker you will\ndo me and the Republican campaign\na great service,\n"I have been puzzling my brain\never sine« the Maine election to dis­\ncover what the real weakness of the\nRepublican party In that State was. I\nhave also been trying to find out\nwhat the reason Is for the lethargy\nor indifference among Republicans\nwhich prevails, apparently, In Indiana\nand In one of two other Western\nStates I have only wuithln a few days\nmade a discovery of something which\nI believe is new In American politic».\nGentlemen, I want to say to you \nwe have lost the art, at least, we Re­\npublicans have of effective outdoor\nspeaking, and that largely Influenced\nthe Maine election and is the cause\nof the lethargy in the rald-West.\n"When Î remembered the splendid\noutdoor campaigning which was made\nln ISßO In my own State of Connecti­\ncut l very keenly regret that ' the\ncampaign orators of to-day, at least\nIn our party, did not. when they were\nyoung men, learn the art of outdoor\nspeaking. Lincoln was a very effec­\ntive outdoor speaker, and so was\nStephen A Douglas. About the only\nman that 1 knew of now who has\ngreat gifts for outdoor speaking Is\nGeneral Sam Cary of Ohio. But un­\nfortunately he Is not with us\n“In Maine they have always been\naccustomed, In political campaigns, to\ngreat outdoor mass meetings. I sent\ninto Maine some orators who. 1 was\ntold, could speak with great effect In\nthe open air.
18f12d97496c582502a543ac49e5cc5d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.4178081874684 40.063962 -80.720915 The most perplexing question whicl\nnow confronts the producer is the un\nwarranted high prices demanded to\noil well supplies and machinery. Es\npcclally is this so with the small pro\nduccr. who can see no profit In operat\nIng their light calibre territory at thi\npresent figure paid for crude. The:\nhave petitioned in vain, the dealers ti\nreduce their rates, but they say In re\nturn the manufacturers are all mem\nbers of the trust and refuse to concedi\nan Inch of the stand they have taken\nand therefore cannot help the produce\nIn the least. It is thought, however\nthat such a preesure is being brough\nto bear upon the manufacturers, to re\nduce the present high price, that the:\nwill soon yield to the prcducer's Jus\ndemands. A committee appointed b:\nthe fraternity to look up the "Iron'\nquestion report that owing to tin\nhigh prices prevailing, business In gen\neral is being effected, and thut not onlj\nia the producer compelled to shut dowi\nthe drill, but building and many nev\nenterprises have been forced to i\nstandstill. They also ilnd in their Inves\nillation that the pig iron market Is \nmost stagnant^ and but comparative!:\nfew sales are reported. In short, tin;\nassert that unless the manufacturer\nreduce present schedules, that not onl;\nwill the great petroleum Industry b\nparalyzed, but nearly every othe\nbranch of business and enterprise b\ncrippled, In which Iron is a prlncipa\nfactor. The producers hope, from thi\nforce of circumstances, that at no dls\ntant day, the manufacturers will fin<\nout that they must adopt prices to con\nform with the growing strlngen\ntimes, or that their sales will net jus\nUfy them in running their works, or I\nthey do, the market will be overstocks\nwith production The small produce\n(annot see n ray of hope for the better\nment of their condition, only In thi\nreduction of high prices by the manu\nfacturers, as the oleaginous sltuatioi\nviewed from ajmost every standpoint\npresents a decidedly bearish aspect.\nThey fully realise that the recent do\nvdopment of prolific territory In thi\nuouthweitt district cannot do otherwise\nbut result in augmenting productloi\nand piling up of stocks, and the fallim\nofT of our export trade, all of whicl\nnaturally tends to a still lower maike\nfor crude.
5c51b91eda9dbd16b25c7a41e1716158 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.736338766191 31.960991 -90.983994 THESE Lozenges have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upward»\nof twelve months; during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptile» within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou-\nsands of the most blooming children and youth ,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest rfs-\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense and even death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted vvitn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without anj' benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused-they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians,.heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey may be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms;of\nthe im potency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented.to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
2d2e8f5cac86973307ae4320f874caa9 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.3456283836774 39.290882 -76.610759 "Hiintthis a orful sitivation to be placed in, nohow?\nIfI wos at ainboai, a rail, or a wood pile, I'd be better\nworth fifty cents on the dollar tiian I'll ever be agin.?\nUnless I'm a gone case now, there haint no truth in frc-\nnology. I've weighed all the chances like agincral, and\nfind only two that bjor* i:i my favor; tiic first is a * kunk\nla>!c to crawl into, and the second a special intcrspe-si-\ntjen of Providene ?; and the be. i chance of the two iao\nslim, ifI only had til 2 change, I'd give a premium for the\nskunk-hole?them's my wnumei-is. If1 could be a mink\na muskr.it, or a water snake, for about two months, pre-\nhaps I would'nt mount Hie first stump tolhersldc the Bio,\nand flap my wines and crow over evcriastin' life, skienti\nficallv prcservated. But what's the u*e hoidin' on this\nroot: there haint no skunk bole in these ere digging;?the\nwater is getting taller about P feet, and ifmy nose was as\n i? kingdom corns, itwold'nt stick out mu *h lonccr.\nOh," Jerry! Jerry! you're a goue sucker, and I guvs\nyour marm don't know you're out: poor woman! won't\nshe tvv the gla.-sej out of her spectacles when sue heirs\nher darlhi' Jerry his got ;!e whol of Buffalo Bio *brhis\ncofiin? What a pky *risf onic philarthr >:>is or member\nof the l.umme society r.ener had fortnight enough to\nbifida house ever this gutter, with ' strain engine to\nkeep out the wutef! iftliey'd done it in time, they might\nhave hid the honor and gratification of saving the life o:"a\nfeller being: bir it's all day withyou, Jerry, and a lug har-\nbor to cast anchor in. It's too bad to go off in this orful\nmanner, when they knows I oilers hated water ever\nsince I war bigenough to know 'twant whi-key. I feel\nthe root givin' \\va ?. and f ince I don't know a prayer,\nhire's a bit of Watt 's Doxologer, to prove I died a chris-\ntian :
0a30bba70397e43c9678c7038b9f76a2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.0259562525298 39.745947 -75.546589 Former Governor Preston Lea to­\nday retired as president of Union Na-\nI Iona I Bank and John H. Danby, vlce-\n; president of the institution, was elect-\nI cd president Mr. Lea had been presi­\ndent. of the bank for twenty-three\nyears, mid Mr. Danby has been con­\nnected with the bank for more than\nforty-one years, during which time\nhe has filled every position in it.\nI Announcement of Mr. Leas inten-\nI Mon to retire came as a big surpris»\nI not only In financial and business\ncircles, but also to the directors of\nthe Institution, to some of whom ho\nj had not confided his intention to de-\n! dine re-election. Mr. Lea had been\n( contemplating retiring ns active heod\n: <>f the bank for some time, hut had\nI not made any definite statement an\nI to when bn would do so.\nj He told some of his close associates\nwithin Hie past day or two that he\nexpected to decline re-election as\npresident, hut some of tho directors\ndid not know of until Mr. Le»\narose in tho directors meeting this\nmorning and asked that, he not he re-\nelected. He spoke of his long service\nwith tin* hank, and of his pride in its\nhigh standing He said ho fell that be­\ncause of his advancing years he would\nlike to give up the presidency and de­\nvote his time to institutions and pro­\njects in which ho has become Inter­\nested of a public and aeml-publlc na­\nture. Mr. Lea Is a trustee of Delaware\nCollege, in which he takes (ho deepest\n1 concern, and also is president of the\nFerris Industrial School to which ho\nis devoting much attention. He also\nis interested directly in some other in­\nstitutions and In the uplift of agricul­\nture, as exemplified at Delaware Col­\nlege and on his own farm, Tho Or­\nchards. He is a member of the Stale\nHons«' Commission, too.\nMr. Lea closed bia speech declining\nr«-electlon as president by recom­\nmending to the. directors that they\nchoose .Nil. Danby aa hta successor,\nand at the Same Uny
6fc4568a041ef30fb3b3c6e5c84bdd64 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.4150684614408 39.261561 -121.016059 Manzanita Tunnel.—Iq the spring of 185C,\nMessrs. Maltraan and Ritter commenced run-\nning a tnnnel into Manzanita Hill, beginning\njust north of Nevada. The ground had previ-\nously been prospected, and the objeet of run-\nning the tunnel was to get fall enough to wash\nthe dirt from top to bottom, and drain the hill.\nFor the first two hundred feet they bad to blast\nthrough solid rock, and the expense was so\ngreat that the work was temporarily abandon-\ned. A few months after, Mr. William Duryea\npurchased an interest in the tunnel and mining\nclaims, when the work was re-commenced, and\nhas been carried on ever since. The tunnel has\nnow been run a distance of eight hundred feet,\na flume for sluioing the gravel has been put in,\nand on Monday they commenced washing. The\nflume is 2,200 feet in length, extending 1,400\nfeet below tte mouth ofthe tunnel, is four wide,\nand three feet high—taking 33,000 feet of \nber for its construction. The cost of the tunnel\nand flume has exceeded $20,000 . Their claims\nextend over six or seven aores of ground, and\nadjoin the Live Oak Cos claims, and are sup-\nposed to be equally as rich ; the dirt being from\n40 to 120 feet deep, it will probably take them\neight or ten years to work it out. The gravel\nfrom the surface to the bed rock will be washed\ndown by means of the hydraulic, and run\nthrough the tunnel. It will take a year for\nthem to get in to the best part of their ground,\nbut Mr. Duryea informs us that at present they\nexpect to make $1,000 a week, over and above\nexpenses, and that the diggings will improve as\nthey get further in. That this tunnel will be\nvaluable property for many years to come, we\nhave no doubt, as a large portion of the hill\nwill eventually be washed through the tunnel.
334a21a1d7bab2db1b6096ed315bab70 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1907.5301369545916 41.875555 -87.624421 Truly life Is full of peril. Not merely\nthe peril that comes with steam and\nelectricity, and gasoline motors, perils\nby laud and peril of water, but tho\ndangers that confront us even when\nwe think we arc following the most\nhygienic laws of nature. Exactly\nwhere we stand we know not, for Just\nns we have learned from Mr. Gladstone\nand Dr. Fletcher that each mouthful\nof food should be chewed patiently\nfrom -- 0 to 150 times, according to tho\nsubstance thereof, along comes Dr.\nWiley and warns us against tho dan-\nger of too much chewing. Itnther should\nwe bolt our food, after the manner of\nthe Intelligent dog, for notably In the\ncase of meat much chewing Is tho fore-\nrunner of serious Indigestion. And\nwhen wo have meekly nccepted this\ndoctrine up rises n fresh nnd\nruddy from his sixteen days' fast, and\ntells us not to cat at all, but drink\ncopiously of sparkling water, for eat-\ning Is a vile habit, productive of many\ndiseases of I the digestive 'organs. Still\nbewildered, wo are constrained to ro-s o - r t\nto a cold bath, which Is much ad-\nmired of certain medical gentlemen.\nOn the brink of the tub u Los Angeles\nexpert halts us and nssurs us that no-\nbody ever did enjoy a cold bath, and\nthat, moreover, It Is as dangerous ns It\nIs unpleasant. We heat tho water,\nand again we nro checked by nn Eng-\nlish scientist, who warns us to forbear\nfrom soap If wc must bathe, because,\nns the Lancet admits, soap Is tho cause\nof "the froiuent Inability of the Anglo- Sa xo- n
9394c6e21e17e179711819b74f3d0f5c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.9520547628108 31.960991 -90.983994 “There is no country in the world\nwhose natural advantages are comparable\nto those of the Mississippi valley for naval\nmeans and warlike resources. Half the\nnaval strength that now lies dormant and\nneglected in that valley, could not be put\nforth by any other nation for ten times\nthe sum that would call this out. With\nproper naval establishments erected now\non the banks of the Mississippi river; with\nthe necessary workshops and munitions ot\nwar provided beforehand; with a fit place\nof rendezvous at Key West or the Tortu­\ngas—the West, with a few months no­\ntice, could send down to the Gulf of Mexi­\nco a fleet of war steamers such as the\nworld never saw; they would crown our\nweak points with strength, make her\nqueen of the Gulf, and this country per­\nfect mistress of the adjacent sea. On the\nWestern waters every thing that is requir­\ned for building or equipping, armingK man­\nning, and subsisting navy,is to be found\nin great abundance of the best quality at\nthe cheapest rates;coal at $4 the ton,hills\nfull of iron, fields smiling with plenty, and\nforests of the finest timber which may be\nfelled and fashioned almost where it falls\ninto the stoutest vessels of war; the\nstreams are alive with boats which con­\ntain engines, men, and machinery that,\nwith a moments warning, would be at\ntheir countrys service, ready m any num­\nbers to be transferred to the green but\nstronger hulls just from the forest. Con­\ngress has but to will the dock yard ofMem-\nphis into being, & at the echo along the\nWestern rivers of the first notes of\nsounded in its halls, hosts of armed steam­\ners, like Roderic Dbus men, would come\nfrom every glade and valley of the West,\nfull rigged and equipped for battle. With\nsuch resources and the means provided\nfor bringing them into play,\nwould dare to enter the Gulf.”
0513d71308bf5332793f72b94544ebfa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.9630136669202 39.745947 -75.546589 President Lore took the ohair and the\nroutine business of the society was\ndispensed with for a tima, iu order that\nCaptain H. H Bellas, of Germantown,\ncoaid raad his paper on the Delaware\nSociety of the Cincinnati. It was a\ncarefully compiled and exceedingly Inter\neating paper and detailed the history of\nthe association of brave men whose de\nsoendants, many of thsm to day reside In\nthis beautiful state. He deplored the\nfact that the society was ever allowed to\ndie and urged the sons of sneh Illustri­\nons sires to again band themselves to\ngether and resnsclate tha Delaware\nCincinnati. He named a number of these\ndecendants among them Jndge Wales, of\nthe United States District Court.\nReports of progress were received\nfrom committees an arrangement of the\nlibrary and collections ; on muster rolls\nof Delaware soldiers In the revolution;\non Colonial dames and their connection\nwith the society; on Guilford Court\nHouse monument; on old Crane's Hook\nChurch, and on largar and better accom­\nmodations The committees were retained\nfor another year, with directions to nse\na little more energy In tha matters on\n they were appointed.\nThe question of larger and batter\naccommodations was brought up and\ndiscussed. There Is a general feeling\nthat the large and valuable collection of\nhistorical volâmes and rellos should be\nplated where they can be seen to better\nadvantage, and that cannot be done\nin the present bnlldlng. The finanoes will\nnot allow of bnilding or buying a build\ning at present. President Lore thought\nthat the lower part of the building\ncould be put In shape for part of the\ncollection, bnt the librarian said it was\naltogether too damp. The chief justice\nwas in favor of employing a woman to\nolean np and said he would guarantee\nthat ehe be paid. Ha thought by keeping\nthe lower floor heated in Winter and\naired in Summer, the roomB would be all\nright. Judges Lore and Wales and H. F.\nDare will act as a committee to ascertain\nthe eost of fitting np the bnilding.\nA cuirass and helmet and an old\nfashioned flint-locked blunderbus pistol\nwere presented by Mrs. Elizabeth Judd.\nThe cuirass and helmet were taken from\none of Santa Anna's offioers during tbe\nMexican war.
1515889e9eba6446a168d03200cd47b6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.3510928645517 40.063962 -80.720915 16.QCQ buahe!s: No. 2 Chicago 81 C2al 02><;*\n0. ti1 spriUK i)J}$c: t\\o. 3 spring 81 Oial Vfiy,\\ n0.2\nrcu aiay, bum iz,uuu uusneis at 81 (W>$al lift,\nclcfiiug at 81 Vify, Juno, sales 83,000 bushels at\n51 llnl 13& closing at 81 lift, Julv, (sales 7S4.0CtJ\nbushels at 81 OTJial enclosing at&t08}£; August,\nsalea £$2,COO bijsholsat gi 05%al07,closing at31 u^i:\nsetembor. sales 21,030 bushels at*8i 05%alC8; closiug\n81 ObJfcDeeembcr. sales 83,1)00 bushels at\nSI 00)4*111,' cloalug at 8109%: No. a\nspring ami May, Baits 82,CC0 bushels at93%c8l00\nCorn, spot lots >aalc lower; options ocencii\nlower, later advanced lalj<c. closing with a reaciiuu\nof %a%c; reedpta 72,000 buBliclh; exports 13.001\nbushels; ungraded 6C}<aC2^c; No. 3 , 58>£a6'JKc;\nsteamer Gl>^kC3^c; No 2, C3J4aMc: ungraded yhlte\n58a7Jc; No. 2 A«ay 03}£a&l)ic,ulosius at 63Xc; June\n(WS^P'l&c, closing at GjiKc; WatiS^c, closlug\nat 01>£c; August65)ia6G)4c, closing at 6%c. Oats\nweak; rccelpia<57,0(Kj bushels; exports 955 bushels;\nwestern mixed 33a4Qc: while western 42a46c. llops\ndull and weak. Coffee, spot lair: Rio nominally\nunchanged; options fairly active with, an advance\nof lSa'JO points, aue to the demand from foreign\nbuyers to covet shrt; salesCOO bags IIIo ho. 7 May\nats.50a8.55p;Junc at S.5QaS.55a saies 5.7S0 bags July\n18.'50a8.C0c: Bales 12.CC0 bags August at 8.6ua8 65c\nsales 12,603 bass September at8G5a8.7Cc; nales 7.7G0\nbagu October at S.<0*\\5.60c: sales (j.OCO hags December\nat 8.6Oa0.CD. Bugar dull: retineil tlrrn; mould A\n6%i7c; cut loaf and crushed 7%c: granulated 7c.\nMolu&es dull and unchanged. Tallow easier at\n0%a016-lCc. Resin Ann aud unchanged. Turpentine\nfirm at 81J4a32c. Eggs. western fresh higher\nand firm nt 14c. Pork quiet and firm; old mess\neitnn nn»li,nnhnnn>..1 '1""' ...
2d824a27248794b502175d88b7d780c9 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.1136985984272 40.735657 -74.172367 Another reader, a lady, from Orange,\nj New Jersey, is deeply interested in tne\nEVENING 81 Alt. She says:\n! "lour proverus are so popular 1 think\n| it must be Impossible tor you to till\null ordeis. The EVENING s'tAIt was\n| introduced to us ttuougn a friend of\nI mine, who is in your contest, and al-\nthough we have oniy received a lew\nissues of the paper, 1 must ooutess that\nI like It better than any daily we\nhave ever taken."\nTh4se are only a few samples ot the\nmany hundreds of simi.ar letters that\nare received daily. They show con-\nclusively the interest and spirit the\ncontest has created. Many thousands\nof new readers staittd in the begin-\nning with Proverb No. 1 . but as the\ncontest progressed the Interest in-\ncreased until the daily demand for the\n STAR exceeded the regu-\nlar issue by many thousands of copies.\nIt is a remarkable contest; remarka-\nble for the entertainment and enjoy-\nment it supplies to the entire house-\nhold; remarkable for the occupation\nand Instruction that It provides for the\nyoung; remarkable for its magnificent\nrewards which aggregate over $6.0o0 in\nvalue. Are you a contestant? Are you\ntaking advantage of this opportunity\nto display your ability and test your\nmemory by solving these proverbs as\nth y appear each day?\nIf you are rot. and need any incen-\ntive to get started, Just look over the\nlist of prizes that are published on j\npage 2 and start todfty In an effort to\nobtain vonr share.\nr |« EVENING STAR rnav he had\nfrom your regular newsdealer, or you\ncan procure the paper by mail. Eider\nthe contest
23f7ea469bd52be4177dc43050a93300 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.7082191463724 39.261561 -121.016059 Could we. for the purpose of the present\n• inquiry, analyse also the internal move-\nments which seem desti led to affect the fu-\nture of Europe, we should find iu them, as\na whole, inducements to confidence, though\nsome of them may afford us occasions for\nanxiety. It may be true that Europe needs\na re-arrangement of its frontiers, that na-\ntions expunged from its map are living yet,\nthat others with whom Europe must count\nare raising their pretensions. There is\nprobably a future for revived Spain, for\nUnited Italy, and for the Stato or States to\narise out of the common aspirations of a\nhundred millions of Sclavonic origin.\nGreat empires which have beou among the\nprincipal weights in the balance of Euro-\npean power may dwindle, or they may\nchange their bases, or merge much of their\ndistinctive action in the tendencies of the\nGerman race to a common national gov-\nernment. It is quite possible that Haps-\nburgs and Hoheuzollerns may encounter a\nfate like that of the French Bourbons or\nthe English Stuarts; and yet it does not\nfollow that the European world will lose\nany of elements, so useful iu their mu-\ntual antagonism, and which preclude the\ngrowth of an overwhelming empire. The\ngrowth of such an empire in the western\nhemisphere is apparently forbidden by the\nrupture of the Federal Union, which por-\ntends the creation of a second series of\nStates, with a balance of power peculiar to\nthemselves. Russia alone seems competent\nto menace the future of Europe; and yet\nRussia, notwithstanding its colossel propor-\ntions, has restraints upon its aggressive ten-\ndencies within und without. Within, it has\nyet to reckon with its eighteenth century;\nand without, it is encompassed with a cor-\ndou or races —which must continue compar-\natively more populous and mature—with a\ngrander history, more expansive sympa-\nthies, a keener sense of their worth and\nhonor, with more varied and far more pow-\nerful resources. If the instincts of dynas-\nties are untutored and inveterate, if it\nshould turu out that they have learned and\nforgotten little, the public sense of the na-\ntions they have hitherto directed is a grow-\ning, and, in the long run, a remedial pow-\ner—[Lucass Seculana, or Surveys ou the\nMain Stream of History.
04ef096654925197c4b3279c2dd01f20 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.5273972285643 58.275556 -134.3925 "Grant Carlson, a 16-year old boy of\nSeward, at the risk of his own life saved\nthe son of Walter L. Goodwin, super¬\nintendent of the road commission, from\ndrowning. The child was playing near\nthe Glacier stream at the north end of\ntown and a caving bank plunged him\ninto the icy water.\nThe Juneau correspondent of the Se¬\nattle P. I. writes the followiug: There\nis every reason to believe that thii\nmonth will show a marked decrease i a\nthe amount of liquor sold to Alaska In¬\ndians. Gov. Clark's squad of gumshoe\nmen started after the whisky peddlers\nthis week, and there ia but little doubt\nfelt in official circles that most ot\nthem, like Davy Crockett's coon, will\n"come down" before the first shot ie\nfired. The sale of liquor to the Indians\nis a pr&ctice which <*ov. Olark- has\nfought with some success ever sinc6\nhis coming into office, but on the first\nof this mouth the sum -of $12,000 be¬\ncame available for the employment of\ndetectives who will devote their entire\ntime to hunting purveyors of "hootch.*\nThe fact that appropriation was m^de,\nand haa become available, is pretty-\nwell kuown throughout the district;,\narid this, with the governors well\nknown hostility to whisky peddling, it\nis believed, will be sufficient to induce\nmost offenders to seek other methods\nof livelihood. The lawbreakers, how¬\never, are to be relentlessly pursued.\n there are not so many whisky\npeddlers in Southeastern Alaska ai\nthere were a few yeaiB ago, about «\ndozen have been reported as engaged iu\nthe business last winter aud this spring,\nThere ie a class Gf men iu Alaska\nwho have some of the advantages of\nthe idle rich and still have the satisfac-\nfaction of knowing they are producers\nand not parasites. Thousands of mea\nare employed in the mines of Alaska in\nthe summer months receiving higb\nwages, while their expenses are low..\nThe majority of them work on the av¬\nerage of five to sis: months a year aud\nthe remainder of tbe time they have\nto themselves- With what they have\nsaved during the summer they cau\neither purchase a grubstake and pros*\npect in the hills or -else rentu-eabiu ic\ntown and go to "baching." A man do¬\ning his own cooking can board himself\non from 825 to $40 a month and live\nwell. By cutting his own wood au£\ncarrying his own water he can reduce\nthe cost of living to a very reasonable\nfigure. True he may not have auj\nmoney left wheu the winter is over, but\nhe is certaiuly as far ahead as his fel¬\nlow workman in the states who hae\nbeen toiliug day after day, month after\nmouth the year around. In Alaska t\nman can earn sufficient in five month?\nto last him the whole aear.
1b278f2fa59c2cc29b0f8a42f9a9a6a3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.2068492833587 39.745947 -75.546589 Dover Kuergy and Railroad Business.\nCity Council held a busy suasion last\nnight. Many bills were passed and im­\nportant business was rushed through in\na manner which Bnggoated that the city\nfathers had caught the contagion from\nthe energetic Dover Solona.\nA communication was received from\nCity Solicitor Curtia aud after Borne dis­\ncussion was ordered recorded and filed.\nThe letter referred to the communication\nfrom W. A. Hukill submitted for con\nsidération aud investigation, the reBult\nor which the solicitor stated waa the dis­\ncovery that Drake's first license expired\nIn November, 1891. At that time be\ndeclined to renew it on the ground that\nlie intended to retire from the business.\nIu March 1892, It was further learned, Mr\nDrake agaiu took out a license.\nThe city solicitor decided that Council\nhad no further jurisdiction in the mat­\nter; that if Drake carried on bustnees\nbetween November '91 aud March 92\nwithout license he was liable to prosecu­\ntion aud that upon the receipt of any\nevidence to that effect he would see that\nthe law would be enforced.\nThe councilmen were bewildered by\nthe of their legal adviser and\nsuggestions as to how the evidenoe\nnecessary was to be obtained were at a\npremium. After some discussion Mr.\nRat led go came to the rescue with a\nnun-committal motion and it was passed\nwithout dissent.\nA resolution from the fire committee to\nthe effect that as the Water Witch fire\ncompany waa new properly equipped\nand iu service the semi annual appro­\npriation of $1500 usual iu such cases be\nawarded -was adopted.\nMr. Thomas gave notice of an ordi­\nnance for an extraordinary appropriation\nto meet the deficiency in interest.\nA motion by Mr. McKinley authoriz­\ning the city solicitor to procure certified\ncopies of all legislative acts relating to\nthe city charter was passed.\nThe city treasurer reported the bank\nbalance to bs $91,225 68. Collections of\n$1,000, $250 and $250 were accredited\nrespectively to Messrs. Mitchell, Sayers\nand Mealey. The draught of $20,000\non the depository banka for the replen­\nishment of the account in Union Na­\ntional was reported.\nMiscellaneous bills for small amounts\nwore railroaded through upon the re­\ncommendation of the various commit­\ntees.
1971071d9fca785b9374a898a4b1b5f7 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.1188524273932 29.949932 -90.070116 and unprepared for an attack. At another time\nhe deliberately sh,t a colored driver. A squal\nof nen were sent out by a military commander to\ncapture him, anl met him on thi road well\nmounted and armed, and held a conversation with\nhim, but either from not knowing him or\nfrom some other canas snrtred him t eanue\nunmolested. The commander of the post at Itis-\nton, in Bowie county, Texas. issued a cir:'ular\noffering a reward of two hundred dollars for his\nhead. Baker, in return. wrote a pro-lanmation,\nsigning it "Col. Baker, C. S . A. ." olterinm four\nhundred dollars for the commander's head. HI\nproposed to capitulate on certain onditions,\nsnong which were tle fi,llowing: That a:l Utiited\nStntes soldiers should leave the lonuth: that all\nrebels Phould be repaid for their losses during the\nwar, and that the So•lt fern she lhi he\nacknowledged. Of late, he has announced that\nhe will not spare the rebels. He says they have\ncubmnitted to the Yankees, and have dared to cen-\nsure his acts, and he will treat all alike. This\ndesperado assumes an air of braRsvAo and de-\ntiance, and has intinidated the people of the\nregion which he curses with his presence. A\nterry privilege on bed River, whic:h was recently\nput up for public sale, and which would have\nbrought a good figure, was knocked down at ten\ndollars, because he had given noti.e that he\ndidn't want anybody to bid on it, and he then\nmade the purchaser transfer the priv:leg," to hiom.\nAmong the latest and most ficud,ah acts of this\ndesperate villain were a number of murders comn-\nmitted on Sulphur Fork, in Bowie cunty, in the\nvicinity of his father-in-law's residence.
415c078e7f47fd861b553796a3685e4e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.401369831304 39.261561 -121.016059 Personally, I hare no hostility to the men\nwho voted for John It. McConnell, or who sup-\nported General Breckinridge for the Presiden-\ncy; and have no objection to political associa-\ntion with such of them as were misled, and are\nnow, without condition, true to the Union; but\nno consideration whatever can unite me to the\nmen who hold the doctrine of the right of se-\ncession, justified the firing o» Smmter, rejoiced\nover the temporary discomfiture of our army at\nBull Hun, or who now would in any manner,\nor under any pretence whatever, restrict the\npower or render impotent the offorts of the pa-\ntriot who stands at the head of the Government\nand who is charged with its conduct and pre-\nservation. Upon this I have no compromise\nto make, no conciliation to offer, no generali-\nties or platitudes to deal in, until the last rebel\nshall retire from, or die in “the last ditch.”\nWhen the Federal authority is acknowledged,\nand the mandates of the Courts are obeyed,\nthen, as every good citizen must be, I shall be\nin favor of peace, and that i* the price that\nmust be paid for it. When this result is at-\ntained, questions of the greatest magnitude\nand importance must be settled, and our peo-\nple w ill into parties upon them accord-\ning to section, interest, circumstance and opin-\nion. We will then all find our proper places,\nbecause the questions to be determined will\nhave distinctive character.\nThe letter of mine to which you refer, ad-\ndressed to Geo. C . Gorham, Esq., last fall, con-\ntains a true reflex of my feelings to-day. I\nhave been willing and desirous that the true,\nloyal and patriotic people of California should\nuntil this war was ended, constitute one party\nfor the great purpose of maintaining the Gov-\nernment and ( have done no act inconsistent\nwith such an end. It belonged to the party in\npower to have promoted and secured so desira-\nble an object; but I regret to say that the ef-\nforts of their leaders have been confined to\nadroit movements, to add to their party num-\nbers and their partizan strength.\nHie party that I had the honor of being the\nnominee of, last fall, for the Executive office,\nhas always been true and loyal to the Govern-\nment, though proscribed here from any share\nin the patronage of the Federal or State admin-\nistrations; and so long as it remains true and\nloyal, and parties are kept organized as at pres-\nent, I will remain one of its number.\nTruly your friend,
2f2afe5b4d3ef3360f4c90bbe4866008 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1903.9602739408929 41.004121 -76.453816 The dominant thought in the act\nof 1895, and one that has domi\nnated my mind ever since is this,\nthat the thoroughfares or highways\ncontemplated by the act of 1903\nare not township roads at all, there\nfore, the townships ought not to\nbe required to contribute any thing\ntowards the cost of them. The high\nways or thoroughfares contemplated\nby the bproul bill are those which\nwill be found in the laps and folds\nof the mountains behind which lie\nmany townships on the borders of\nadjacent counties, or they will be\nfound to be the leading lines of road\nthrough the rich, fat, river bottom\nlands, and the rich and populous\nmining and manufacturing districts,\nor in townships where there are\nfound suburban residences. What I\nconceive to be township are\nthe cross roads of the township, the\nbyways of the townships, and those\nlines which lead to and from the\nfarmers' houses to the farm villages.\nThose the townships always have\nand must continue to improve and\nkeep in repair at their own expense.\nBut, I repeat, that highways, lead-\ning thoroughfares and main .lines\nrunning through the laps and folds\nof the mountain to the various rail-\nroad stations and those running\nalong the centres of the river val-\nleys, are not township roads, they\nare first county roads, and when\nplaoed together become State roads.\nThis I consider to be a rock bottom\nprecedeut to any progress in the\nmaking of good roads. This feature\nis absent from the Sproul bill. It\nrequires the townships to pay one -s ixt- h
0362c868aaa4f174f0161078e7b3252b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6571037935134 39.745947 -75.546589 NEW YORK, Aug. 28 . — TTie grand\npiano tn the corner of the north ball­\nroom of the Hotel Astor struck up a\nvigorous 'polonaise.\n"Drop, rush, run, run. Right, left,\nclick, click (Now the turn.) Une and\ntwo and a short one.”\nIn response to these directions from\nthe vhung man In while flanhels who\nstood In the center of the rlng.j, hun-\ndred members of the Amerfcon Na­\ntional Association. Masters of Danc­\ning in thirty-seventh convention as-\nsmehlefi droppMl.\nstepped lo tW* 1\nright, and clicked their heels In unis­\non. They were practicing the "eat\nstep," a new dtnee supporters of\nwhich strongly claim it Is going to\nsolve the problem of a moral and\nartistic substitute for the shimmy,\nthe shiver and the Jazz\n"One-Twoed" in Solemnity\nIt Is a serious thing lo reform the\ndance, and there was no evidence of\nlevity among the members of the\nAmerican National Association, Mas­\nters of Dancing as they practiced\nIhe cat step. Tall women and short\nmen, plump women and slim men,\nvorv lall men and very short girls,\nanybodv who happened to stand next\nto anybody else when the music\nstarted, counted "one and two"\ngelber with precision\nand clicked their heel*. Those who\ndid not have partners, danced alone,\ncounting and clicking\nRenaissance of Wall* Due\nThe Committee on New Dances was\nnot ready yesterday to make any\nstatement regarding new dances for\nIpe coming season, hut a rc*porter for\nThe World asked Mrs. Bolt what she\nthouirh't would he Ihe general tenden­\ncy In floor dancing\n“I believe Ihe waltz step Is going to\nhe Ihe most popular." was her reply.\n"I notice that in the roof gardens\nhere In New York the\nwaltz, as It was danced before the in­\ntroduction of hesitation lime. Is com­\ning more and more into vogue. The\nfox trot ha* substituted the old two-\nstep for good, and 1 notice that ihc\nwaltz sep is also Tieing used to frvx\ntrot time. The whole tendency is\n«tfongly conservative One\nthat Ihe public is thoroughly\nof Ihe sensational daneing introduced\nduring the war."\nThe womens clubs and the dancing\nmasters must Join In the eampaign to\nmake ali religious denominations\nrealize that thev should not put evil\nthoughts into Ihe minds of their mem­\nber* bv saving that, if a hoy and a\ngirl danoc together they are going lo\nperdition. "
1d18b8c29bb1a8add792ac79201a1e37 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.821038219743 40.063962 -80.720915 Chicago, October 26..A special from\nFort Robinson, Neb., says the mail carrier\nbrings news from Gamp Sheridan of a\nhorrible carnival of blood in a low den of\niniquity near that place, in which two men\nwere killed and two dangerously, perhaps\nfatally wounded and several others bruised,\nLast Saturday night there was a large at¬\ntendance of "cowboys" and soldiers in the\nplace, and half a dozen low women, poor\nwhisky and lively dancing soon caused\nbad blood. It be*an by a drunken Mexi¬\ncan brandishingrevolvers and threatening\nto shoot the bartender for swindling him.\nA dozen "cowboys" drew revolvers simul¬\ntaneously, a shot was fired, and one of\nthem, Ed. Callend, iell mortally wounded,\nhaving Bhot himself while drawing.\nThe dance was resumed twenty minutes\nafter his body had been removed. Jim\nJoyce and a desperado named Page soon\ngot into a rough and tnmble tight, how¬\never, over the proprietorship in a girl\n as Beaver Tooth Nell. It euued\nby Page shooting Joyce fatally. Sergeant\nGreen, of Company M, Fifth Cavalry, in\nattempting to disarm Page, received a snot\nwhich necessitates the amputation of his\nleg. He will probably die. The soldiers\nat once retaliated by emptying th«lr re¬\nvolvers into the page crowd nathey rushed\nout on the prairies. The women, scantily\ndressed,hprereturned from the rooniB they\nhad retired to, and ran pcreaujing about\nthe place andthepcenes that followed baf¬\nfles description. The melee ended in a\nrough and tumble fight between the "cow\nboys" and tho boya in bluo, which would\nhave resulted in a terrible loss of life but\nfor the timely arrival of the military from\nthe post. One of the females had an eye\nknocked out during the melee, while two\n"Cowboys," names unknown, were badly\nwounded. The murderer of Page is in the\nguard house and the soldiers threaten\nto lynch him.
0ebec92ec6db23f90f7e99c0d4ba999f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.9493150367834 39.745947 -75.546589 HoNol.rt.lT, Dec. 5 (via San Francisco. The government claims that with tho aup-\nDcc. is, (sT steamship Oceanic). — Tin 1 port of the Annexation club and the Citl-\nsteamer A raw a was held over until noon sens' reserve, backed by (lie present foi-mi-\nyesterday to allow Hon. Mackenzie Howell liable buttery of Gatlings, Maxims and\nminister of trade and commerce ot Ottawa. Austrian ticldpieces now on hand, an ag­\nio address the Honolulu chamber of com gresslve movement could be made, If neccs-\nmerco. Mr. Dowell was accompanied by snry, that would clear Honolulu of the ag-\nMr. Theodore H. Davies. Application will gregate forces of all the men-of-war vessels\nfirst made to President Dole to use his in at present in port should a landing be\nfluence to call the chamber of commerce made,\ntogether to listen to Mr. Dowell's cummer\ncial propositions, which are now known tc\nhave had a semi political significance. He\nporters were excluded from the meeting\nund it w as Impossible to get off a report\not the meeting by the Arawa, though Mr.\nDowell carries with him a verbatim report\nby bis secretary, which w ill probably In\npublished upon bis arrival.\nMr. Dowell's speech consisted mainly ot\nof an appeal for aid from the Hawaiian\ngovernment to encourage tin- Canadian\nAustralian steamship line. told of tin\nmarket in Canada for Hawaiian products\nand spoke of the necessity <if cable com nut\nideation between Hawaii and Canada mnl\nAustralia. He said a conference would 1«\nheld next year on tho subject and invited\nHawaii to send a representative.\nThe memhers ot the cabinet were seen\nshortly after the meeting yesterday mora-\ning, and from their guarded expressions ot\nopinion concerning the purpose of Mr.\nDowells proposition showed that the real\nscheme behind his speech, as reported, was\npreliminary to a proposal fora new treaty\nto be entered into on the part of England,\nthrough Canada, with Hawaii.\nOne of tile cabinet said: “Of course nc\nproposition has yet been made. We have\nnothing before us, but it is not likely that\nwe will enter into relations unless forced\nto do so by the attitude of the United\nStates. Ves; 1 am inclined to believe that\ntile hand mid influence of England is be­\nhind this proposal, and IImt a proposal toi\na new treaty will b« made before the lime\nfor expiration of the reciprocity treaty\nwith tile United Slates. 1 certainly believe\nEngland is trying to gain a foothold here.”\nThe policy of resistance to either inter\nmil or external forces bos received the\nunanimous consent of the government.
0497c2035f660d0739961e800110a1d6 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.3647540667375 41.875555 -87.624421 Chicago now has exclusively, the\nbiggest film company in America.\nWith the .opening of a new studio, the\nthird on the north side, the Essanay\ncompany has chosen its two outside\nestablishments, one In Nile and thn\nOther in Los Anselea. nreferrlnrr to\nconcentrate its efforts in Chicago. Of\ntne lour prominent concerns identi-\nfied With the film Inrlimtrv. flnllv. V.n .\nsanay, Klelne and American, Essanay\nis the only company with a perma-\nnent producing plant in this city.\nSellg takes the pictures at his studio\nin Chicago intermittently, while in\nEdendale, Cal he produces plays con\ntlnuously; tho American has its stu\ndlos tn Santa Barbara, Cal., and con-\nducts Its business affairs in this city;\nand Klelne's producing activities are\nin tho Bronx, New York City.\nThe Essanay studios are equipped\nwith artificial lighting facilities which\nenable Its producers to stage plays\nIn all sorts of weather, while tho days\nof sunshine are devoted mostly \nexterior scenes. Georgo K. Spoor,\npresident of the company, has been\na persistent booster for Chicago on\naccount of Its central location.\n"I havo always believed that Chi-\ncago Is the natural distributing center\nof the United States," he said, "and\nfor .the shipment of goods excels any\nother American city for centraliza-\ntion. I closed my western studios\nand Increased my Chicago holdings\nbecause I want the plays produced\nby our company to be as close to the\ndistributing center as possible.\n"It is not necessary to ko to Cali\nfornia for sunlight; artificial light\nmakes an ideal substitute, and you\nneed not fret over rain and elouds.\nWhile In the past capital was repre- -\nsemea mosuy in tne east, there is a\ntrend toward this city In that direc-\ntion. I believe that both maniifni.\nturer and distributor of motion pic\ntures logically belong In Chicago on\naccount of its central location and\nrailroad facilities."
01f4135771dcbda996780073e61e12c2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.9303278372292 46.187885 -123.831256 Wrong Is done Mr. Plngloy, and to\nthe party he has so efficiently represent-\ned In the ways and means committee,\nwhvn the IXngley bill Is Rokon of as a\nremedy devised and chosen by the Re-\npublican to settle the tariff question,\nsay the New York Tribune. Hy Its\nterms that bill was limited In operation,\nand was to have effect only until a Re-\npublican or else a IVmocratle measure\ncould be matured after the ptwldcntltil\nelection. Not one of the lVntooiats In\nthe present congress was willing to ac-\ncept It even as a temporary comprom-\nise, and now the situation has been en-\ntirely changed by a new decision of the\npeople. More than seven million Amer-\nicans have voted for Will. McKintcy. be-\nlieving that he could Ive trusted to carry\n the assurance giveiv day after day\nIn his wise and manly speeches Some\nJournals protested because he constant-\nly urged the necessity of tariff revision,\nand they called It a fatal mistake, but\nthe people voted for him. It is right to\nInfer that they wanted, not an expur-\ngated edition of McKinley, not the sort\nof McKinley the free trade journals\nwould have manufactured, but McKIn\nley as he was and la In any esse, the\nman who so frankly exhibited himself\nand his convictions Is the' man who\nwill be president, and with a Republi-\ncan congress can take up the tariff\nproblem within four months. The Ping-le- y\nbill waa a plank to bridge over this\ndifficult and doubtful year, but no Re-\npublican would propose It now as a\nsufficient remedy.
0cda097b3741e93da0857de326a5dac8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.3410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 authority for the report fliat the Presi\nilbnt will very soon, by proclamation o\notherwise, take active measures lor th\nenforcement of the Ku-Klnx law passe(\n(hiring the last session ol Congress. /Tin\nonly circumstance which will be likely ti\ncause date)' Is the absence of tho .Sacrq\ntary of War. Tho President rcmarkei\nsince his return from the West that h\nshould not go to California until he hai\ninitiated measures in accordance with th\nprovisions of that law for the peotoctioi\nol the loyal people ol tbc South"\nThe samecorrespondent also telegraphs\n"Many ctroris have been made, it is alleg\ned by the Joint High Commissioners, t<\nprejudice the treaty beforehand in lh<\nminds of the people, and to create a falsi\nimpression as to its contents. The raos\nnoticeable that which seeks to couve;\nthe belief that tlio American Commission\nera have allowed the claims of the Britisl\nsubjects to be put down as 0 set off to tin\nAlabama claims, and allowed them to en\nter into a basis of settlement to tiieamoun\nof about thirty millions of dollars.. It ii\nalso stated in public prints that the En\nglish Commissioners have presentee\nclaims to be considered for slaves ownci\nby English subjects and freed by thi\nInitcd States government during thi\nwar. As the British laws make the hold\ningof slaves by British subjects Iclony\nthe absurdity of this report ia apparent\nThere is also authority for the statcmen\nthat all the reports regardjng the countei\nclaims ol England are false and malicious.'\nJudge Granger, Recorder General o\n«i.. r
0874aab559bb25bf2d7bd3b0374f03b0 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.8237704601802 29.949932 -90.070116 From the Louisville Courier of October 24:\n"The river was rising slowly yesterday, with\nney 3 feet 9inches water in the canal, 1 foot 9 inches\nwater in the chute and 4k feet water on the Port-\nlishland bar last evening, a rise of 2 inches since our\nlastreport. Weather clear and pleasant. Blil.\nn•ea very doll. The Legal Tender, Capt. John\nRoberts, is advertised to leave the Portland wharf\nbforNew Orleans at 5 o'clock P. i. to-day. The\nArgonaut No. 2 will come off the docks this evew\noing,and will, it is said, load for Cairo and New\nOrleans. The LouiLsiana wu due from New Or-\nleans, and doubtless arrived last night She re-\nturns to New Orleans on Tuesday."\nFrcm the Memphts Avalanche, Oct. 25th:\nnts . Weather c~sar and pleasant. The ricer con-\ntinee to decline, with 7 feet in the channel from\n down. At St. Louis the river is receding,\nwith 5 feet on the bars between that point and\nvesCairo. The Ohio is rising slowly at Cininnnati and\nLouisville, with 3 feet 8 Inches In the canal and 4-\nandfeet on the br la the Lower Ohio. The A.rkan\nm is stationary, with 1feet in timchanelt from\nLittle Rock out. White river bisfalling suowly,\nwith 6j feet to Augusta."\nFrom the Louisville Courier, Oct. 26th:\n" The river was at a stand at this pointat yester-\nday, with 3 feet 9 ioches water in the canal, 1\nfoot 9 nlaches water in the chute, and 4j feet water\nYorkon Portland bar. The latest arrivale report 4 feet\nwater on the shoaleat bars in the Lower Ohie.\nSis aAt Rising tun bar there isscant 5 feet water. The\nits weather yesterday was clear and pleasant. Bouil\neent
1351fe8402979ff0d43fcc443b0dce6d THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1898.03698626966 32.612638 -90.036751 company, under the name of the Yazoo\n& Mississippi Valley Railroad Company,\nis one of the defendants in the suits I\nhave mentioned, and claims exemption\nfrom taxation until its profits enable it\nto declare and pay an 8 per cent dividend\nupon the costs of the road s construction,\nand that it has not been by its profits en-\nabled to pay such a dividend.\nThe railroad company, as claimed by\nthe revenue agent, contracted for the\nconstruction of the railroad, or a consid-\nerable part of it, with a corporation\nknown as the Financial Improvement\nCompany, the stock in which was owned\nby the same persons who owned the\nstock of the railroad company, and who\nwere thus contracting with themselves\nfor the construction of the road and were\ninterested in making the apparent cost of\nconstruction as great as possible.\nIt is also claimed by the agent\nthat nearly the entire stock In the Yazoo\n& Mississippi Valley Railroad Company,\nwhich is the successor in fact of what\nwas the Louisville, New Orleans & Texas\nRailroad Company, is owned by the Illi-\nnois Central Railroad Company.\nI am satisfied, from the examination I\nhave been able to give the matter, that\nboth these claims ure true, and that\nupon a fair, just and equitable deal be-\ntween the railroad company and the\nState the railroad company has long\nsince been enabled to pay an annual\ndividend of 8 per cent upon the actual\ncost of constructtion of its road, and\nought to pay its taxes, as other citizens\nof the State ere required by law to do.\nLarge sums of money concentrated in\nthe hands of gigantic railroad companies\nenable them, if they ure so disposed, to\nprotract resistance to the just process of\nlaw.
03a1bbd1e8755f582a8eb1638991abe7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8292349410544 39.745947 -75.546589 alleged eight hour law that has been\npassed. This law is no more like tho\nfarmer eight hour laws passed by Con­\ngress, than is a sandwich like a Thanks­\ngiving feast. The du Pont Company is\nmanufacturing smokeless powder for our\nGovernment under a real, genuine eight\nhour law. If, in the manufacture of this\npowder, the company employs any labor­\ner more than eight hours in a calendar\nday of twenty-four hours, it is subject\nto either fine or imprisonment, or both,\nand the Government officials keep a\nstrict watch on the company. This law-\nmeans eight hours for work, eight hours\nfor sleep and eight hours for recreation.\nThe same thing is true of the New Jer­\nsey eight hour law-, which, I think, was\npassed when Woodrow AVilson was Gov­\nernor of that This recent, alleg­\ned eight hour law. on whien the Presi­\ndent base« his bid for the support of or­\nganized labor, places no limit* on the\nnumber of hours men may wopk in a\ncalendar day of twenty-four hours. If\na railroad man can stand up under the\nstrain, he may work forty consecutive\nhours and the eompany that employs him\nnot violate the law. This law was simp­\nly a provision to pay railroad men in­\ncluded in the various classifications, for\nten hours when they only serve eight.\nThe law is not what the President says\nit is and be knows it. and he ia trying\nto put the deception across, just as he is\ntrying to put. across the 1 per cent, mu\nnitions proposition and the alleged Fe­\nderal Reserve Act service during the
02c176b4271ac253c74ec6b4060e1977 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1887.1410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 tie County of one Senator that Wil­\nmington might have two. Maob ee\nWllmtngtoa needs an lnoreese of Sene-\ntorlal re présentation, she does not wont\ntt nt tbe expenae of tbe oonntry ootalde\nof tbe city. Should Senator Fergu­\nson« bill pear, eaob county would have\nfour Senaore, but New Oaatle would\nhave 9S,000 population; Kent, 36 ,000 ,\nand Sniaez, 40,000. What oould be\nmore unequal than this exoept n far­\nther radnotton of Senatorial representa­\ntion for New Gentle County? Propor­\ntionally auoh representation wonld be\none Senator for every 23,730 population\nfor New Oaatle County; one for every\n9,000 in Kent, and one for every 10,000\nIn Sussex. By a farther ratio of com­\nparison It will be seen that rnral New\nOa* le County, wltb a population\nequal to Kent County, would hare one\nSenat« to every 18,000 population to\none tor every 9,000 lu Ksnt County.\nWilmington, by aueh an arrange­\nment, would bave one Senator to every\n population on a basis of a total\npopulation for the oity of 37,000. It\nginator Pwgusoos bill gave ratal New\nOaatle Oonnty equal representation\nwith Kent—four S motors, and the\nname number for Wilmington, It might\nbi tolerated, bat anything lese would\nbe saoh an acknowledgement of in-\nfeilorlty ns to be painfully humiliating.\nIn ralntlon to representation In tbe\nHonae Mr. Fergusons bill la\nequitable, In that It does not rob tbe\nrural portion of New Oaatle County of\nany part of its representation, to band\nthe stolen property over to Wllmlug on.\nIt simply provides for Wilmington be­\ning* separata legislative district wl.h\nfour representatives, one to every\n14,230 ; population, while Kent ooun y\nwonld have one to every 3,429. That\nan attempt should be made to fasten\n•nota Inequality of representation upon\nA people that bave no power to realst It\nby any moral force oan hardly be con­\nsidered aa coming from e New Cattle\nOonnty Representative
0cbc503b6be40b0aea448edf94c81d9a PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1899.5493150367834 39.756121 -99.323985 an invasion of the southern rights of\nour family. The result of that theft\nwas the consent of my family to con-\ntribute one recruit to the southern\ncause. I was the victim. There were\nfew if any regular confederate troops\nin Missouri at that time, certainly none\nholding a post. They were scattered\nin the southwest, and kept on the move.\nTo reach any detachrtfent required tact\nand some money. The state was over-\nrun with federal troops. While I was\nendeavoring to dodge through the lines\nnear Springfield, Mo., I was captured.\nI should have gloried in that, perhaps,\nif my captor had not been a German\ncavalryman who was unable to speak\nEnglish except when he had occasion\nto swear. He had a flow of profanity\nthat made my southern congeal.\n"I was sent to St. Louis. I was a pris-\noner of war. I was in Gratiot street\nprison, a place which became famous in\nMissouri during the war. I became a\nmark for a prison epidemic and not long\nthereafter I was paroled, and, much to\nmy disgust, a bond was executed in\nwhich my father pledged everything\nhe had that I was not to take up arms\nagainst the government nor in any way\ngive aid or comfsrt to the enemy.\n"About that time men of all sorts\nwere getting scarce. None was left able\nto get south.- The union enlistments\nhad thinned out the population. The\ndraft followed. Large bounties were\noffered for enlistments. The man who\nI had charge of the draft in St. Joe was\nthe father-in-la- w
72bbf765902d49430b210baa6c151899 HANNIBAL JOURNAL AND WESTERN UNION ChronAm 1851.9438355847285 39.70825 -91.358741 propriaiions ii snouiu d employed in\nsuch way and under such restrictions as\nCongress may enact, in extinguishing\nUie outstanding debt of the. nation.\nBy reference to the act of Con\ngress approved 9th September; 1850, it\nwill be seen that, in consideration of cer-\ntain concessions by Uie State of Texas,\nit is provided, that the United States shall ,\npay to Uie State of Texas Uie sum ot\nten millions of dollars, in a stock bearing\nfive per cent, interest, and redeemable\nat the end of fourteen years, the intre?t ;\npayable hair yearly at the 1 reasury ox\nthe United Slates. In Uie same section\nof Uie law, it ia further provided, tbat .\nno more than five millions of said stoclc\nshall be issued, until the creditors of tho\nState, holdin bonds end other certifi-\ncates stock of Texas, for which du-\nties on imports were specially pledged,\nsnuu nrst uie at lite treasury of Uie U ni- -\nted States, releases of all claims arainat\nthe U. States, for, or on account of, said\nbonds or certificates, in such form as .\nshall be prescribed by Use Secretary of\nTreasury and approved by Uie President\nof tb United States. The form of re-\nlease Uius provided for has been prescri-\nbed by the Secretary, and approved. It\nhas been published in all Uie newspapers\nin Uie commercial cities of the U&tcd\nStates, and aft persons holding cLims of\nUie kind specified in the foregoing pro- -\nviso, were required toile their release\nin Uie form prescribed, in Uie treasury of\nUnited States, on or before Uie first day\nof October, 1851. Although this publi-cati- o n
16c55814bd2f8d1db2a83371de7c004b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 der the laws of other States are pro\nled for in terms, and the expressioi\nnother government" must be con\ned to foreign governments, if not ap\ncable to that of the United States\nt this would - be to interpolate th<\nrd "foreign" contrary to the mail\nent of the act. Capital would b\nich more likely to run into Nationa\nnks erected in our midst than tollov\n0 foreign institutions. Thus an iin\ntuse amount of pecuniary capital it\nhands of the wealthy would escap<\ncation if the term "government" b\nced out of its natural signitication\noking at the attempt to reach al\nids oi money investments, wejshouh\nlly miss the legislative mark by re\nicting the subject of taxation t<\nires in foreign institutions.\nn the 33d section the Legislatur\n>vided for the mode of collecting tin\nite tax upon stocks o»r corporation\nated by any law of the Common\n- . ilth, making the payment directly\nin the corporation, into treasur]\nthe Commonwealth. This mode i".\nliewhat varied, and ia now supplie<\nthe act of 12th of April, 1S59. Bu\ns proceeding being confined to th\nporations of this State, and no\niching those of other Stales or gov\niments, the 32d section of the act o\n- 4 remains operative upou the share:\nstockholders in the .institutions o\n> latter class. Hence the decision ii\nlegbenv county vs. Shoenberger,\nnut, 35, is not applicable to the stocl\nour own Stale banks.\nThe general banking law of 1850 anc\nsupplement of 1852, as to State banl\ncation, providing for the exemptioi\nthe stock of the iState banks lrou\ncation other than for State purposes\nvas held in that case that such stoci\ns exempt from taxation for coutiir\nrposes. But that does not touch th*i\nte before us. The shares of the banki\n1 other corporations of other Statei\n1 governments, remain liable to as\nsmcnt under the 32d section of thi\nof 1S44.
445ca98810ed4e198319fa623c8a284f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0561643518517 39.290882 -76.610759 MARYLANDLEGISLATURE-\nYesterday, Mr. LXGRAND submitted the fol-\nlowing preamble and resolutions:\n"Whereas, it appears from the communication\nof the President of the Chesapeake and Ohio\nCanal Company, made to the Governor on the\n10th of February, 1840, that the Canal Com-\npany was indebted to the Bank of the United\nStates the sum of #200,000; to the Bank ot\nNorth America #200,000; to A. Brown & Sons\n#100,000; to the Merchants' Bank of Baltimore\n#150,000 , to the Mechanics' Bank of Balti-\nmore #100,000; to the Bank of Washington\n#115,000; to the Western Bank of Baltimore\n#85,000; to the Bank of Potomac #90,000; to\nthe Commercial Bank ol Baltimore #10,000;\nto the Girard Bank of Philadelphia #20,000 .\nAnd whereas, it also appears from said commu-\nnication, that a portion of the six per cent,\nbonds of the State, issued under the law passed\nin 1886, were hypothecated, the holders having\npower in nearly every case to sell them pri-\nvately or publicly; and whereas it also appears\nfrom the published correspondence between the\nPresident of the Canal Company and the ca-\nrious Banks of Maryland, with which the bonds\n so hypothecated, that they refused to give\ntime to the said Canal Company, and peremp-\ntorily insisted upon the payment of the several\namounts due to them;? Therefore be it\nOrdered, that the Bank of Baltimore, Me-\nchanics' Bank of Baltimore, the Western Bank\nof Baltimore, the Merchants' Bank of Balti-\nmore, the Commercial and Fanner's Bank of\nBaltimore, be severally directed to state to this\nHouse, as speedily as possible, what induced\nthe refusal on their part to allow additional\ntime to the Canal Company, and whether they\nhave effected a sale of the five per cent, ster-\nling Bonds given to each of them in payment\nofthe debts due to them respectively, and ifso\nto whom, at what time, and for what price.\nThey were referred to the committee on In-\nternal Improvements. The order of the day\nbeing the consideration of the report by Mr.\nGantt, to authorize the Banks of the State of\nMaryland to receive and pay out the orders\ndrawn by the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road\nCompany, or the stock of the city of Baltimore,\nwas taken up and several amendments propos-\ned and adopted.
64d54d2db50f020a99f569a98b267f03 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.9221311159179 35.780398 -78.639099 than any body freand therefore I solicit calls\nfrom my friends and customers generally, and\nfrom the members of the Legislature in particular.\nVisitors to the City of Raleigh will please call\non me, and I will certainly give them good bar-\ngains, eltherin clothing of my own manufacture\nor in that ready made ; as I am receiving a large\nassortment of clothing of the best kind, and for\nfurnishing goods none can be found cheaper.\nI also have a largo asfortmcnt of Fancy Good.\nwhich I will sell at a small profit, consisting of\nGentlemen's Robes, Fancy Shawls, Cravats, Gloves\nand every thing in the line of a gentleman's wear\nexcept boots and hats. My stock is too large to\nenumerate, and you will please call and examiao\nfor yourselves, as you will be tho best judge.\nCall at the well known No. 15, Fayette-\nville street, where you will find cheap bargains for\nyour cash; as I wish to do a cah business for\nthe future. My terms have heretofore been six\nmonths credit; but it is impossible fr ore to con-\nduct business on this plan, ns I have t meet my\npayments regularly every ninety days.\nThose indobted to me at home or at a distance,\nwill please call and settle their account, many of\nwhich have been standing a long time. I have\nmade this call on my friends throngh the press\nend by letter ; and it has not been responded to.\nPlease attend to this appeal, as my business can-\nnot be conducted on the credit system any longer.\nI return my thanks to a generous community\nfor past custom ; and I shall endeavor to merit a\ncontinuance of favor.
64cce574fb06db0036cccccc961ff6dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 Nkw York, Oct. 11 . .Government\nstocks continues strong under Hie stltu-\nulus of a foreign order for 5-20*8, and\ntho. growing strength of our. securities\nabroad. Some importers have bought\nfor remittance in lieu of exchange.\nThe old issue sold atf104 Hi an advance\nof Ko within three days; tho now issue\nndvnncod life. 7 -30's were offered more\nfreely, and sotno of the Western banks\naro selling; tho third Issuodeclined\nNow York certificates are more in do-\nnmml, and rose Kc. Tho miscellaneous\nlist was generally lower. Coal stocks\ndeclined la2 per ceuU Railroad stocks\nrun lower throughout the list. Money\nis a. turn easier, though the? demand is\nstill active, the majority of transaction's\non call, aro at 7 per cent; there Is, how¬\never, a good line of exceptions at 6 per\ncent. Hankers are lending Very little',\nand tho wants of tho street liavo to bo\nsupplied chietly at the privato baukers;\ntho western cities are borrowing. Dis¬\ncounts contiiino active. The supply of\npaper exceeds the demand, arid prime\npaper is current tit per cent; good\nnames are discounted as high as 9 per\ncent. There is at present an unusual\namount .of tea paper offering at 8a9 per\ncont. Cotton batts are abundant at 0a\n12 percent. Ifthe present partial strin¬\ngency should bo maintained,: relief-\nwill Le sought by the adlirig in of tem¬\nporary loans from the trensuiy. Al¬\nready notice has been given for, the\npayment of deposits at tho sub-treasury.\nAt the second board there was a general\nimprovement in stocks; Governments\nwere vory active and higher. Five-\ntwenties -rose,?£©, and new &sues %c.\nNbw Yoak, Oct. 11 .. - The following\ngeutlemen were yesterday re-elected di¬\nrectors of tho 'Erie railroad, by awte\nof about ^18,000,000 stock, out of $2*3,-\n000,000 of the combined common and\npreferred capital:\nSamuel Marsh, Daniel Drew; John*\n¦Arnold, W. B . tJkidmore, Cornelius\nVanderbilt, Robert H. Beadell, D. 8 .\nGregory, S. Murray, >Vm. Evans, Ji C.:\nBancroft, David H. S . Pierson, D. A .\nCushman. Alex; S.1 Dives, Thomas O.\nGates, J. N. Phelps, J. P. D. Sciurier.
0f3165c137a4e93a4b8380ca7bb81efb THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.7109588723997 42.217817 -85.891125 time, wen uncle Ned was in a swomp\nthere was a bigdile wiefa come to him as\ntame as a ole cow. last him did he fcri\nto oetofa it for the menagerie, and he\nsaid it was jest the other way, and wen I\nsaid wy diddent he oetoh it, he said he\nnew he ot, but the fack was he Bee it was\na coin his way and he diddent blcCTC in\ncompulsin folkes which was a goin rite\nin the long run. Crocky diles has got\nskins wiefa is so thick that nothing can't\nhurt 'em. Once there was a dog see one\nB lyhV down, and the dog run up and bit\nit real hard, and got away as (puck as it\neude, about a mile, mid wen it lookt\nback the dile beddent moove. Then the\ndog it went back and took a other bite,\nand the dile roled over on its other side\nand yoned ami abet Its eyes like it said I\nwas up so late la.s nit0, I DtkUS tri to git\nBOme sleep or I shunt be tit for work,\nThen the dog. seeing it mine it,\nwent to its tale and lay down too, not to\nSleep but to chew the pint of tin diles\ntale. Wen it hail chude a hour the dile\nIt begun to snore, and then the dog,\nwieh had ahnose w ore itself out a chuin,\ngot up and shook its head very sad like\nsavin poor feller, it runs be awfle to be\ntuf, but I aint got no time to stop, let\nhim go to hospital. Such big mouths\nnobody ever see. They WSJ a crocky\ndile a BWimmin up a Creek, and it saw a\nhorse more than a mile away on a hil.\nand it new it cuddent have the horse,\nbut it CUddent help throin open its\nmonth every time it see the horse, and\nwen ever it opened its mouth the water\nol run in it, an there wassent any to\nsw im in, so it stuck fas on the bottum.\nAt las it got out on the bank ami workt,\nand said it never see BSOh times as the\nworl was come to wen a gentlemen cud -d e-\ntake a quiet swim without bein
21332249f2132ddc3a69b2d6a34f5671 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.828767091578 39.745947 -75.546589 "What made you lonvo England and\nbecome one?" ho was asked.\n“Well, you know, my father, David\nWest, Is a rich man. who lives In New-\ninarkot, England. He la a retired captain\nof tho Hrltlsh navy. My grnndfuther's\nname was John Lancelot West, the same\nname as mine, anil he lived In Ingate-\nstone, Eseox. It was ho who loft me tho\nmoney. Now, I wont tq. Harrow and then\ntraveled all through Europe, Asia and\nAfrica with iny father. I lmd all (he\nmoney I wanted and spent most of my\ntiino with the horses.\n“Now, I had a chum named Arthur\nDonelly, son of Sir Peter Donolly, an\nIrish baronet. Woll, now, you know, one\nday wo had a little quarrel, and he fell to\nguying mo and said that I couldn't earn\n own living. That made mo ho«,\nand I wagered him A' 100 that I could eurn\nmy own living with my hands, and ho\ntook me up. You know people look at\nthings differently In the old country front\nwhat they do here, so wlthcJt letting my\npeoplo know 1 sailed on the Cumpaulu on\nher second trip and landed lu Now York\nIn June, 18l)fi, with $350 in my pocket. I\nhad a friend there, and through him came\ndown to Ridgewood within a month after\nlanding and wont to work for Mr. F .stls,\ntho well driver. After working a month\nat that I found I was not strong enough,\nand so I came to work for Mr. Herbert as\nhostler. You know," ho added, "I was\nconsidered the best amateur rider in New­\nmarket.
051dff00c8b132557122cfd46bb1ab08 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.6342465436326 39.513775 -121.556359 LftteProfessornt th#»Uni veryity,Penn.\nCan he found at 'he old stand, earner of\nMontgomery and California street*, San\nFrancisro,\nWhere In- can hccr«il«ult<sl p-lvs'clv snd with the\nutmost corflilt nee hv the afflicted at all hours daily,\nfrom ha. '1 . until 8 I*. M. (Cures always guaranteed\nor no pay fenllired.\nIMI'IIHTWT TO MINERS. TRAVKI .RRS , KTC.\nrHA HI ;R K i« no malady of deeper importance either\nN In a medical or moral liirht of view, to which\nthe human family is more liable than that arising\nfrom Impure connection*.\nAs a medical man it Is the duty of every physician\nto look at di-ease as il effect* health and life, and his\nsole Object should be lo mitigate, as faf as lies In hi*\npower, the bodily suffering. Hitman nature at best Is\nbut frail, all are liable to misfortune.\nOfnlllhe ills th.it affect man none are meretorrihle\nthan those of a private nature. —Dreadful a* it is In\nthe person who contract*!!, frightful a* are It* ravag-\nes n|kin hisconstitution,endingfrequently In deetrnc*\nMon and a loathsome grave. It becomes of still itrenter\nImportance when it I* transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such being the cr.se how neceseary it be-\ncome* that every one Having the least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoil at once by consulting some physician, whose\nresf'ectiithllity and education enable* him to warrant\na speedv. and permenent cure. In accordance\nwith this neces*Hv. DU, YOUNG feel* called upon to\nstate that, by long study and extensive practice, he\nhas belomc perfect master of all those disease* which\ncome under the denomination of venereal, and hnv*\nnig paid nmre attention to that one branch than any\nother physician in the United States, he feels himself\nbetter qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis In all its form*, siteh as ulcers, swelling In\nthe groans, nicer in the throat.secondary syphilis, cu-\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, terlimry svphilis. sy-\nhilis in children, merciireal syphilitic affections, gon-\norrhea. gleet, strictures, false packages, iiidainatioii of\nthe bladder and protrale glands.excoriation*, tumors,\npoMides.Mc., an - ns familiar Inhim as the most com-\nnioti thing* ot daily observation\nThe Doctor effects » cure in recent cases in a few\ndays, and find* no difficulty in curing those of long\nduration, without submitting the patient to sin (itreat-\nment ns will draw upon him the altghlesi suspicion,\nor oblige him to neglect his business, whether within\noors nr without. The diet need not he changed, ex -\nept in cases of severe intlamatlon. There are in t'«lt\nforma patients (amounting to over two thousand in\nthe past year) that could furnish proof of tins; hut\nthese nre matters t hotrequire thi nicesteecresy which\nhe always preserves\nAll letters enclosing *lO, will be promptly attended\nto. Office hours from OA.M.to s I* M. Address .1
2f89ec66de9996d48fb875429e99ce58 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.6561643518519 40.832421 -115.763123 H<Bil*«a is iMiiUd Ik* glory of kit-\nim in>i-u4 mpum ik* fO liJwt'i f-\nmo\\ .! . Tkot tomyfcol I* win\ntktl Brtftlsr; BkiM haa bora from tk«\n*Uft om oI tha moat positive tl«nnM\nof tb* rtaotil of Ik* Piwiital from\ntb« ¦¦Urul regioo of Um Wkifc. Bona*.\nTbo day tfitr tbo PiMdral *u shot\nBlaine taggMttd to Ik* lUradtut phjsi-\nciu* lb* desirability of gvlliog Wjo»d\nlb* rt*ck of tbo malarial infloeace*\nwhich sarroond tbcEirtstifi Mauaton.\nBliaa au ooa uf tbo moot ewinl op\nponenta of BI*<tM-*a theory. He main\ni aiurti that it ooold be p«*itiiil} <l-n-\ngrruno to attempt to mote tbe Pr«-aidmt\nixDti ikrlnrnl lLat be woolJ not tuUch\nfor tb* Preaidrnt'a life if tbe attempt to\nr emove him was nude. Bhaa .t:J other\npbyaiciana attendant apoa tbe President\nba«e dented that be was affected wilb\nDiliria, and daring tbia period at least\nhalf a d^'ita strong men about tbe\nExecutive Mansion have beea attacked\nand prostrate! by tbe in*idi->u* diaeaae.\nYeaterday be ia reported to bat* Mid\nt at be Ikuagbt if tb- President was\nrrmufrd he would aot live to pass be-\nJi.no *. Oil* House gate*. TUe\nPresident himself La< been rnoet anx¬\nious to get away. In bii mdc moments\ndaring tbe paat «e»-lc be bagged and\nplr»W to be taken t--' ond tte valla of\nibe White Hunw. A fee'ing of tbe\noo«t intent* longing to gel away from\nthe scenes which are a constantly vivid\nreminder uf bis auff-nng baa poasesaed\nhim. To Ohio be tooiJ prefer to go.\nbat dimly recognizing that bi* removal\nto such a distance ia impossible, he ha*\nsimply aaked to be taken to tbe Sol-\ndiera* Home or on the *alt water. It it\nimportable to tell to ahat an extent tbi*\ndesire of the Presid>nt to be taken frolc\nthe White Hons* will bate affected bi*\nchances of recovery, hot it i« uudrnia-\nble that aome of bis physicians believe\nthat utiles be is rtmoveU he bus nut a\ngboat of a chance to live. Tb* very\nworm malarial *ea«on in Washington i»\nbetween August 15th ami September\n1") I h . and Ibe Pr*»i lent i* at present\nwhere be will b« certain to iubale tbe\nmoat deadly breath of the poisonous\nPotomac marshes.
370ec2e2a36887470495dc4bd9dad585 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.2117486022566 40.735657 -74.172367 Contractors may make a total estimate, tn\neluding all the work above-mentioned.\nThe plans and specification* tor the above-\nmentioned work may be exumined at the of-\nfice of the architects, H. J. 6e J. V. King, 22\nClinton street, Newark, N. J.\nSaid proposals to be accompanied by the j\nconsent in writing of two sureties or a surety }\ncompany authorized to do business In this\nStute. who shall at the time of putting in\nsuch proposals qualify as to their responsibil-\nity in the amount of such proposal* and bind\nihwmseives that if the contract be awarded to\nthe person or persons making the proposal\nthey will upon Its being so awarded become\nhis or their sureties for the faithful perform-\nance of said work and that if the person or\npersons omit or refuse to execute such con-\ntract they will pay to the city of Newark any\ndifference between the sums to which he or\nthey would have been entitled upon the com-\npletion of contract and that which the\ncity of Newark may be obliged to pay the\nperson or persons by whom such contract shall\nbe executed. Bidders must specify in their\nproposals the number of days required to\nfinish their work should the above work or\nv\\ orks be awarded to them.\nIf the said committee on public buildings so\nlesires, bidders must submit samples of above-\nmentioned fixtures for comparison and ap-\nproval before the award of tho contract. Ail\nbids must be made out on blanks furnished\nfor the purpose, which can be had upon appli-\ncation at the office of the city clerk.\nThe said committee on public buildings of i\nthe Common Council reserve for themselves\nthe right to accept or reject any or all pro-\nposals for the above work or to waive any\niefects therein as they may derm best for the i\ninterest of the city of Newark.\nBy direction of the committee on pubtio\nbuildings of the Common Council of the city\n■)t Newark.
066257cc57b18126282186c8a515c411 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1891.0589040778793 39.756121 -99.323985 Tbe undrawn appropriations for the cur- ce -\nfiscal year amount to $566,023.43; esti-\nmated deficiencies, $75,ooo; estimated legis-\nlative expenses, $100,000; raid coupons to be\npaid, $?6, 00O; total, $777,023 .43 , Leaving an\nestimated balance of such fund In the\ntreasury June 30, 1891, $281,253 .93.\nThis statement Is based upon an estimated\ncollection of 50 per cent of the state taxes\nionsyo, to be paid into the treasury during\nthe current fiscal year, and upon receipts\nfrom penitentiary and other sources being\nthe same as during the corresponding six\nmonths of the preceedlng fiscal year. It\nhas been carefully made for your Informa-\ntion, in the consideration of appropriations\nfor the balance of this fiscal year. There\nare no sources from which an Increase of\nbalance. may be anticipated. I,.therefore,\nearnestly urge the exercise of rigid economy\nIn all appropriations for the current fiscal\nyear, so that this estimated unexpended\nbalance may be as far possible preserved,\nand the rate per cent of taxation for the\nnext year proportionately decreased.\nAs explanatory of the $75,000 deficiency to\ntie paid out of the general revenue of the\ncurrent fiscal year, I call your attention to\nthe fact that the legislature of 1889 omitted\nto appropriate for per diem and mileage\n' of directors of penitentiary, reformatory\ncommissioners, trustees or state charitable\ninstitutions, regents of the agricultural\ncollege, normal school, state university,\nand police commissioners. The law stipu-\nlates the compensation of the members of\nthese several boards and commissions. It\ndevolves upon the legislature to provide\npayment. An estimate of the amount re-\nquired to meet this liability is included In\nthe reportof the auditor, except the amount\ndue the police commissioners. There are\nsix cities ot the first class, commissioners\ntor which were appointed April 1, 1889.\nPermanent School Fund. Included In the\naggregate of receipts for the two\nfiscal years
225cd03549bf37cfb92e15004e61d313 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.7663934109999 40.063962 -80.720915 I bad a dream last night-a very queer\ndream.so queer in fact that I thought 1\nwould write it out for your paper. May\nbe you will publish it as a curiosity, if\nnothing more. It was as follows:\nIn my dream it happened that I was\nstanding upon a narrow isthmus, abont\nthree rods in length and one in width. I\nconld see nothing in any direction but the\nclear blue sky and the round silver moon,\nand the glittering stare above. While 1\nwas meditating upon the strange sur¬\nroundings of the situation, there descend¬\ned from bearen.suspended by asolldgold\nchain, a magnificent golden basin, which\nhalted on the rlgbt of me and about on a\nlevel with the surface of the isthmus on\nwhich I was standing. The basin was\nfilled to the brim with pure, transparent\nhoney, prepared from a thousand varietlea\nof fruits and flowers. On the left side ol\nthe isthmus, as I gated down into the\nbroad expanseof unmeasured spsce, there\nseemed to loom tip from the deep, dark\n of eternal despair, a huie iron\nkettle, filled to the brim with wbat ap¬\npeared to be a pretty good\nquality of Old fashioned soft\nsoap. Suddenly there appeared with\nme the two respective political standard\nbearers of West Virginia, Mr. Jacob B.\nJackson and Mr. George 0. Sturgiss, and\nwhile we were congratulating each other\non being able to sland with safety in so\ndangerous a place there appeared a fourth\nparty with whom Mr. Jackson seemed to\nbe well acquainted. Perceiving that my¬\nself and my friend Sturgiss wsre taken at\nsome disadvantage for Tack of acquaint¬\nance, Mr. Jackson turned to us and very\ncourteously said, "Gentlemen, allow me\nthegoodplessureofintroduclngmy friend,\nthe Devil." After the usual compliment¬\nary ceremonies of so grand and aristo¬\ncratic an introduction, his 8atanic Majes¬\nty, pointing to the iron kettle,said: "Gen¬\ntlemen,that huge iron vessel represents the\ncesspool of Preston connty, and that ex.\ncellent quality of soft soap with which It is\nfilled Is highly representative ol the Demo¬\ncratic party of Preeton."
177a9d4a02462464e40f14e3fdfb53ce THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.2178081874683 37.92448 -95.399981 Nono of tho ofllcers in this city will\nconfirm tho roport that tho Iola and\nWestern Is to uso tho Missouri Paci-\nfic track from Piqua to Iola, but tho\nconnection Is now being made near\ntho depots at Iola and tho work will\nbo completed In a short time. When\ntho now Katy branch is completed\ndownlln tho mineral district tho now\nroad will also bo in a position to get\nthis business and havo almost direct\nlinos to St. Louis and Chicago via tho\nKaty at Parsons. It has nover been\nofficially announced that tho Iola and\nWestern was a Katy schomo but It\nLas' all tho oar marks of being tho\nsame and that Is tho gonoral belief.\nPresident McDonald has been in St.\nLouis for raoro than two weeks and it\nis that his long stay there\nwas for tho purpose of arranging with\ntho Missouri Pacific regarding using\nthat road's lino out of Iola. Then\nnew road's charter roads to Florence,\nIjut this addition will not bo mado for\ntho present, so it is understood.\nThe now road will bo roady for op-\neration in a very short tlmo. All tho\nsteel has beon laid and a fiuo depot\nput up at Iola, just opposite tho Mo.\nPacific depot. This practically com-\npletes tho work. For tho present nono\nbut freight business will bo handled,\nTho old rumor that tho road Is to bo\nextended from Moran to this city,\nthereby cutting off many miles, has\nboon revived but it cannot bo confirm-\ned by ofllcial sources. President Mc-\nDonald has always said that tbo prob-a bl lti-
41d3e8adf2570e52bde298d37d364729 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.6479451737696 40.063962 -80.720915 heard of any result, I sIckhI among\nhose groups, and tho natmlWo-of the\nlien all amounted to tlicir. liuvijig been\nlent to confront a muth largci* force -tllitn\nJieirowu, and their divuioujtiiulboeu out\nip. 1 was struck by tlie' fact that\n. hough there won soma, i dissstisfnlipH\niiiggcstcd by their toue of voice,\nbeard no word uttered by tlto nurminrn\n>r listeners which accused any one. They\nI welt rather on the (act that they had\nlealt a heavy blow,on the fourteenth and\nlint lliotgh tho TeptltDirisioii luul, ns an,\nivuSlabla organ &*tihri, bemi Wemtiijliutl,\nt had sold its life dear. On the 17th the\nvounded from the preceedlng day began\no pour into I'ont-a-Mousson. Jliey were\nMiiight Ih In long uitcovfcfCrt carts lying\ni|H>u hay. from my window which\niverluokcd the luaiu street, and coijiiuaijd-j\nid .'alio nviiwot the market phcm/li\nlounted more tliuit ninety ot these \nlarts, each holding ou an average more\nluul tcri mini. It was strange to see\nhem as they passed amid tiles ol f'rencn\nluahlc tu conceal their joy on tlic one\nmud, ami the Prussian floldium 'on tho.\nitlier; but nmv camti thyull]Cjr£ida of tlic\niccount. The street begfirr W ' inviirm\nvilli other wagons uud^uUier wounded,\nhe wearer of the red trousers; inia how\n. ml then nunc u,.butch <)f uuiyopiided\nirisoners. At length urrived a carriage\nvilli a French Genera). It was followed\niv a.^iUt;.Towilj)f Kraiciiaiui luru litlla'\niniftil-'seemetl bi;it(lhere'irt)^liHi«'4 [dip\nisiftn' L'lJlwtVil Hn'e fiilfoiiiff&M'ami the\nPrussians, so earnest were tlie|hi|>ulnce,\niul it wan uow ill, least evident that the\ntrugglc wan very scVercf ut the Iront. At\nuidnight, or a little after, 011 the 17th, the\nrumpeUs for miles around began to sound.\nPliU was lireilwt tiinfe we lmd.beon star'\nled by, such wild, music. Trumpet
46e273ea5da1dd7838e6ada577c78c2a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.746575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 Sedan Completely Wrecked\nThe car driven by Miss Lose was\nwrecked. Windows were shattered,\nfenders broken and the body was\nsmashed to a great extent. Fitz-\ngerald's car had broken fenders In\nthe front and a bumper was ripped\noff the machine in the crash.\nDetective Sergeant George Ellln-ge- r\nand Patrolman Edward Carroll\nhurried to the scene of the accident\nshortly after a call had been sent In.\nDr. John L. Kelly responded to a\nhurry call and attended the In-\njured women. L'nder his directions,\n. Mrs. u Keere and Miss Lose were\nremoved to their homes and Mrs.\nFarr was later taken In the hospital\nambulance to that institution for\ntreatment. None ot the occupants of\nthe Fitzgerald car, who included\nthree brothers of the driver, suffered\ninjury. Sergeant Ellinger and Offi-\ncer Carroll Interviewed the princi-\npals and witnesses In the accident,\nsecured statements from the \nof both cars and made measure-\nments at the scene of the mishap.\nFltigcrnld Former policeman\nFitzgerald, who is a former su\npernumerary policeman, told the in\nvestigating officers he was driving\nwesterly on Commonwealth avenue\nat a rate of speed he estimated to\nbe about 15 miles an hour. He aald\nhe did not notice the approach of\nMiss Lose's car until It was directly\nIn front of him. He jammed on his\nbrakes and the other car almost\npassed his machine, hut despite his\neffort to come to a complete stop his\nfender caught under the back mud-\nguard of the car driven by the\nyoung woman, and it was overturned\nIn the roadway.\nMiss Lose said she was driving\nsoutherly on Carlton street, about\n:o miles an hour. She saw the Fitz-\ngerald car just before the crash but\ndidn't anticipate difficulty in clearing\nthe roadway, she said.
1f0b6d96a7129fdbebd4d72095d83533 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.1493150367833 40.832421 -115.763123 Following is tho full text of the\namended Bland bill for tlio remoneti-\nzation of silver, which passed tho Bun-\nate on Saturday:\nlit ,t tnaeitd, tie.. That there shall be\ncoined ut tho several mints of tho United\nStates silver dollars of tho woight of\n4'2 V, grains troy of standard silver, us\nprovided in tho Act of January 18, 1837,\non which shall bo tho devices and su¬\nperscription provided by tho said Act;\nwhich coins, together with all silver\ndollars heretofore coined by the Unit¬\ned States of like weight and fineness,\nshall be a legal tender at their nominal\nvalue for all debts and dues, public and\nprivnto, except whero otherwise ex-\npressed nnd stipulated in tho contract;\nand tho Secretary of tho Treasury is\nauthorized and directed to purchase\nfrom time to time silver bullion at tho\nmarket price thereof, not loss than $2,-\n0041,000 per month, nor more than $4,-\n000,000 worth per month, and causo the\nsame to be coined monthly, as fast as\nso purchased, into such dollars; and u\nsum sufficient to carry out tho forego-\ning provisions of this Act is hereby ap¬\npropriated out of any money in tho\nir< usury not otherwise appropriated;\nuud any gain or seigniorage arising\nfrom this coinage shall bo accounted\nfor and paid into the Treasury, as pro¬\nvided under tho existing relative to\nthe subsiding coinage. Provided, That\nthe amount of mency at any one time\ninvested in such rflver bullion, exclu-\n*iv«- of such resulting coin, shall not\nexceed Jj, 000, 000; and provided, fur¬\nther, ttmt nothing in this Act shall bo\nconstrued to notliorizo tho payment in\nsilver of certificates of deposits issued\nunder the provisions of Section 201 of\nthe revised statutes.\n*»ec. 2. AH Acts uad parts of Acts\ninconsistent with the provisions of this\nAct are hereby repealed.\nSec. 3 . That immediately aftor tho\npassage of this Act the President shall\ninvito the Governments of thocouutries\ncomposing tho "Latin Union," so\ncalled, and of such o.her European na-\nMous us he may deem advisable, to join\nthe United States in conference to adopt\na common ratio between gold and sil¬\nver, for the purpi'Hti of establishing in-\ner. rationally the use of bi-metullio\nuonoy, ni,d Of securing fixity a'f rela¬\ntive value between these metals; such\nconference to bo held at such place in\nEurope or in tho United States, and at\nK'.ea time within six months as may bo\nmutually agreed upon by the Executives\n»i the Governments so invited, or any\n, re e of them shaii have signified their\nwill, "guess t,. unito In the same. Tho\nresident shall, by and with tho advice\n«.<! consent of ,ho Senate, appoint
2ae9c84610cfd1cf6bde49b7ecdfd5ad OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.1931506532217 41.020015 -92.411296 don't dldpare uv gittin snthin out uv\nIt afU^H- Ef wc cau't make reform\ny?what is there for us? At the\nSrgt 1 perpose to make it earn me a\nin. 1 am in the reform biznis, and\nI Ahull push it et a Minis.\nI hev determined to start a Reform\nnoosepaper. Thi race sprung full-\nfledged from my massive Intellock two\nweeks ago. When I determine upon\na thingIgoanddoit,andso.two\nweeks ago, I ishood the prospecktns,\nand with it the Massedonian cry for\nhelp to all the rich Dimocrats I knowd\nor cood beer uv.\n1 stated in my prospecktus (wich 1\nwrote in Baaoom'a) vhat the "Cross\nRoad* Reformer and Friend nv Puri­\nty" wood be devotld to reform in its\nbroadest sense, public and privit. I\ndeplored the wide-spred corrupshen\nthat had pervadid aad permeated all\ndepartment* nv the public *arvi*,*ence\nthat gileies* patriot, A. Johnson, va­\ncated the Preaidenchel cheer, ex well\nex the laxity nv moral* that pervaded\nall claata* uv society, wich tit the\nlegitlait outgrowth of Radikle idees.\nI bed throwd myself into the breach,\nand wur. determined to do nil ia my\npower to check the flood uv fraud that\nwuz sweepia over land, and wich\nbid fair to rooin the RapnbUk. To the\nco* uv purity and reform, I hed devo-\ntid all there wuz nv me.\nI staled 'distinctly that the "Cross\nRoad* Reformer and Friend nv Purity"\nbed but oue panacea for aU the evils\nthe country is labrin nnder, namely,\nthe bustin uv the Republlkin party\ntb* pnttin in power nv the IHmocriay.\nThat is all there is nv it. This is the\nabort road to polltikla parity, and, by\nample, the preanoter av privit puri­\nty. We waat to hev back In Congris\nthat gaiaxyuv iattUeakalkatBhone so\nre*pl*ndeotly dOOrin Bookannan'*\nAdmlalataaaboa, and in the place* nv\ntruat and profit, the patriot* who ral­\nlied ao gloriously aroand the erib pre-\naidtd over by A Johnaon. Some nv\n•m are dead, alas! but there are ennff\nto fill all the office*, and there ain't\nanv risk uv their declinin.\n1 sent aa appeal for aid to various\nleading DUnocrat* nv tbecoaatry, aad\nreceeeved reaponae* wieh show that in\nthia enterpriae I hev hit the precise\nidee that is needed. For instaaee,\nFernando Wood wrote methe tollerin:\n"I agree with yoo that the time* de\nasaad a viggarou* paper, wich *hel oi
0a4aa9588ca72ca6d3004dc14f4b7fb5 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1884.4658469629123 42.217817 -85.891125 v tho Senate, Juno 9 Mr. riumb reported\nfavorably a till to five California 5 per cent of\nthe prcooeda of puhlio land Bales In that State.\nMr. Beck offered a resolution directing the Judi-\nciary Committee to make a report 00 the bill\nproviding for the central removal of political\ntllabllitltn. The Mexican war ieukn bill waa\ntaken up, and aeveral amendment were tabled,\nbut tin! action on tho muro waa deferred.\nIn the llouae, Mr. Gotl introduced a bill to re- -\nall Internal revenue taxes en tobacco, and\n1eal Dln?ly presented a measure to amend the\nnational banking law. Bills wero psed to au-\nthorize the eouMtruction of bridecs aoroM the\nWillamette Blver, ud to place Newport Ncwa\non an equal footing with other customs ports as\nte dutiable goods. In commit of the whole,\ndebate en tne river and harbor bill was finished.\nIn the Senate, Juno 10, Mr. Logan present-\ned a memorial from a Cincinnati mass -me et i-\ndemanding a Quarter section of for each\nsoldier, sailor, or marine who served in the\nUnion army. The consular appropriation was\ndebuted In secret session for some hour?. The\nHouse adopted a concurrent resolution for final\nadjournment on June re. In t ommlttee of the\nwhole, on the river and harbor bill. Mx. Ochiltree\nseen rod the cancellation of the clause appropri-\nating tXU,0Oi to continue work on Gal ronton\nharbor, and Mr. llolman ha1 an Item for the im-\nprovement of the Little Kanawha stile ken from\nthe bllL An evenlmr session waa held for the\nconsideration cf Indian affairs.\nMk. Voouueks oITcrod a resolution in the\nSenate, June 11, calling for Information as to\nthe supply of beef to Indians. Mr. Bntler pre-\nsented a resolution for a special committee to\nexamine into tho condition of the national\nbanks in New York Cltv. Two secret sessions\nwere held to consider th ltcin of $260,00J in the\nconsular appreciation to cover the expense of\nexecuting the neutrality act. A vote on\ntbe
6e8776a222061855376737fd5d0e0d4a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9467212798522 39.513775 -121.556359 To Hr. 11 . Ilelnlmnnn, Corner Jackson and\nMontgomery streets, Han Nranctsco—Dear Sir:—lt\nis with >(ensure that wo notice the imhounded sue-\ncess which has attended you in your practice since\nvour residence in this Stale, now over seven years\nThe irend you have done and the skill you linveexer-\ncised In the cures that come under our ohservation\nmake It onr duly to let it be known to the world and\nmore particularly to those now suffering witli disease\nMost of its wi re well acquainted with you whilst you\nresided at Mormon Island, and witnessed there some\nremarkable cures which you effected on patients\nwhose case* were pronounced hopeless by eminent\nphysicians. We have also seen what you have done\nfor some of onr friends now residing at Coloma and\nPlaeerville, who after mueh and induce-\nments on onr part, consented to go and you, w hen\nthey (tad almost tie-paired of their lives. They did so\nand returned, and are new living hale and hearty men;\nand read r. if this notice should reach your eye and\nvon are afflicted, lake our advice and go to Ur II KIN-\nIM ANN. and you will never regret it.\nHear Doctor, receive with our most hearty wiihes\nfur y .nr fiiinre welfare, the assurance that we believe\nyou to he one of mtr most talented and experienced\nphysicians in the State.\nFKK.er.KHK Hasvmxnh. |\n(propr Miners Hotel )\nJ*l OB Winki.kmanm,\nfpT tireenwiiod Brewery,\nJohn Ukosi-.k ,\nAkoust Hatisk,\nloSKPII WIUMASa,\n(HASLCS tils*.\nT. 11km*. t Proprs of the J\nT. n nzli, S Croix Federahi,
190d4085b40ec698331f5cb680ace516 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.6095890093861 39.261561 -121.016059 Hon. District Court of the 14th Judicial District, in andfor\nthe County of Nevada and State of California, on a judg-\nment rendered on the 9th dav ot August A. I> 1858. in faver\nof N. B ISA MAN and against WM. CALEY. for the nm\nof nine hundred and eighty dollars and eighty cents, debt\nand interest to date, with iuterest on the principal at the\nrate of three per cent per month from the rendition*\njudgment until paid; together with $30 25-100 costs of m»U\nfor the sale of the following described property, to wit:—\nA full and undivided ore-fourth interiet or share in the\nNorthman Juan Saw Mill Company's effects. comprU»f\none Steam Saw Mill, one Boiler, one Dwelling House, ee*\nOffice, and about three acres of land more or less, o*\nwhich said Saw Mill and other buildings are erected. *®d\n contiguous to the town of North San Juan, at\npoint where the roads to Sebastopol and Sweetland folks.\nAlso, included within the said Mill Co.s effocts, eertsis\nlands, with the lumber thereon, in the vicinity of the saw\ntown of North San Juan, cl timed and owned by the saw\nMill Co., part of which is enclosed by a sub.stancial feoct.\nnear Northups Ranch, together with all the sppurtensa\nces thereunto belonging.\nNotice is hereby given that I will expose to public sale\nthe above describe*! property to the highest b.dder v*\ncash in front of the Court House door in the City of N*r *\nda on TUESDAY the 31st day of August, 1858 between to*\nhours of ten oclock A. M . and four oclock P. M ., to satisfy\nand pay said judgment.\nGiven under my hand this 10th day of August 1858.
1ff0754337ddf9867a10d7cf655934b7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.4330600776664 58.275556 -134.3925 pole liue or pole lines carrying\nwires for the purpose of transmit¬\nting electric current of high volt¬\nage, as well as. for the purpose ot\nmaintaining telephone wires, elec¬\ntric light wires and any and all\nkinds of wires; the right grauted\nbeing the right to coustruct a pole\nline or pole lines along the entire\nlength of Fifth> Street from one\nside of Douglas City to the other.\nTbe City of Douglas Doe* Ordain:\nSeotion I. The City of Douglas,\nAlaska, hereby grants to the Alaska\nTread well Gold Miuing Company, a\ncorporation, Alaska Mexican Gold\nMiuing Company, a corporation, Alaska\nUuited Gold miuing Company, a cor¬\nporation, arid the Alaska Dougfas Gold\nMining Company, a corporation, and\nto each and all of said oorpoiatious,\ntheir successors aud the successors of\n$ach aud all the tight and privilege to\nUse the property of the City of Douglas\nand the streets of said City as herein¬\nafter designated the purpose of\nconstructing aud maintaining a pole\nliue or pole lines carrying wires for\ntbe purpose of transmitting electric\ncurrents of high voltage thereon, elec¬\ntric light wires, aud telephone wires.\nIt beiug understood that said pole liue\nor pole lines may be used for either\nany and all of the purposes and uses\nso indicated, aud that the pole liue or\npole lines to be couutructed hereunder\nshall aud may be constructed across\nthe entire City of Douglas followiug\nalong the line of Fifth Street.\nSection II. The rights hereby\ngranted are granted under the express\noonditious that the grantees shall keep\ntbe city harmless from all damages\ncaused by the maiutainence of said\npole line or pole lines or tbe wire* or\nhigh tendon lines maintained tbereou.\nSection 111. The rights, privileges\naud franchise hereby granted shall be\nconstrued to be iu tforce aud effect for\nHfty (50) years from tbe date of ap¬\nproval hereof.
1d79c61c25d9c1126f4b53764edff2ee DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.6671232559615 58.275556 -134.3925 Jake Haniker, who was working on\none of the giants, accidentally lost con-\ntrol of the deflector. The powerful\nmaehine begriu slowly to run around on\nthe pivot. With trepidation he chased\nafter it, but the deflector kept ju9t be-\nyond his reach. As he quickened his\npace the deflector quickened its speed.\nHe made a desperate effort and soon\nhad his hand on the Strang^ rudder.\nThen he clamored into the box, tryiDg\nto control it, but the circling motion\nhad gained &ucb momentum that the\ngiant began gyrating furiously.\nHaniker ^as at his wits' ends, and\nwhen everything was at the worst he\nnoticed that the neighboring giant had\nbegun to move. The wild stream from\nthe first revolving giant had struck the\nother aud started it. Soon both giants\nwere whirling like mad, each shooting\nits incessant stream of cold water,\nsometimes striking each other, now\nhitting the earth with thundering\nswish and throwing gravel hundreds\nof feet, now tearing off into space, the\nwater spouting rapidly on every side\nin continuous crisscross circles,drench¬\ning everything, flooding the immediate\nsite and presenting the appearance of\n devilish geysers turned loose and\nbent on destruction of each other and\neverything else.\nAll this time, in mortal dread lest\nthe stream from the opposing giant\nstrike him, Haniker was clinging to the\ndeflector, and riding the first giant.\nHis hair stood on end, and he also was\nin fear lest the two nozzles, being so\nclose together, might collide. And the\nfear was realized.\nWith a sharp, clear ring, the steel of\nthe two great' nozzles came together.\nIt was an awful moment for Haniker.\nHis lifo was in the balance.\nThe nozzles rebounded and then\nturned back. Haniker found himself\nstill clinging to the deflector, and from\none hand was spurting a stream of\nblood. He redoubled his efforts, and\nnow the giants had halted in their fury\nafter the shock of the collision, he got\nthe one he was riding under control,\nand others on the works ran in and\nseized the second.\nThe battle was over, but the end of\nthe index finger on oue of Haniker's\nhands was all but severed, and he had\nto come to the city at once for surgical\ntreatment.
15d832469f4d91d6f900dcdc675c065e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.8123287354135 58.275556 -134.3925 The following Tory apt answer to\ni quint Ion propounded Is Riven In s\nrecent Issue of the Valdex Miner:\nThe Miner, received n request from\nin esteemed subscriber to the west¬\nward on the last boat, ashing If we\n¦ould Inform him If "there Is a man-\nnine or paper published In Alaska.\n>'hl<-h stands for progress, liberty,\n'ruth, enlightenment and Justice to\n<irve humanity. Tapers which I\nhave seen are mostly yellow, parroty\nnd untruthful and stand pntl and\n;<r« obedient servants to all dark\n'orces which oppress mankind, and\n.lo the bidding of solf-seoklng poli¬\nticians when the whip Tacks In the\nliaudo of the political boaa."\nKvldently our subscriber's mind\nhaa strayed from the accustomed\ngrooves and he wants the morbid and\n. c n s atloual Papers were never so\nIndependent and truthfu|. and as\nlittle Influenced by politics as they\nire today. Many papers throughout\n'.he nation have taken up the cudgel\nfor what they term tho "oppressed\nind downtrodden masses," and are\ngrowing rich from doing no. These\nare the papers which are untruthful\nand sensational. Any man who has\n his living by the sweat of\nhis brow and has sense enough to\nchange a Canadian quarter knows\nthat the laboring man Is better off\ntoday than he has ever been In the\nhistory of the world. The msn who\nworks has the world at his command.\nThe men who champion tho labor-\n. r'a cause and labor not, are raking\nin money they are not entitled to.\nVery few papers give a whoop about\npolitics these days. They i*re too\nbusy trying to keep the creditors\nfrom foreclosing on the plants. The\neditor of the average country weekly\nknows thst the majority of his sub¬\nscribers are better Informed in poli¬\ntics than he It To seek to change\ntheir minds would be useless labor.\nWe know of no paper published In\nAlaska that would All the arbitrary\nroqulrements of out reader. The\nman who Is busy haa no time to\nwaste In prsgmatle opinions which\nliave not been proven. Sociology\nand economics do not worry him.\nHis waking hours are far too short\nto do his allotted tasks. It Is the\nilreamer. tho visionary, the dawdling
138ef9e41fad3a9801d29bfa17a8135d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.5493150367834 39.261561 -121.016059 It is stated that negotiations are opened for\nthe re-establishment of diplomatic relations be-\ntween France and the Court of Turin. If these\nnegotiations should come to a result, the con-\nsequences will be a recognition de facto of the\nItalian Kingdom, composed of the provinces\nand States which were placed under the scep-\ntre of \\ ictor Emanuel after those events on\nwhich France is not now called upon to pro-\nnounce any opinion, but which were accom-\nplished under the cover of the principle of non-\nintervention recognized by Europe. The re-\nsumption of diplomatic relations with Turin\nwould not imply on the part of France, on the\nsubject of the policy of the Italian Kingdom,\nany judgment on the past, or any solidarity for\nthe future. It would only show that the Gov-\nernment de facto of the new State was suffi-\nciently established for it to possible to en-\ntertain with it those international relations\nwhich the interests of the two countries impe-\nriously require to be established. France, by\nher new attitude, would not mean to interfere\nin anv way in the internal or external affairs of\nthe Italian Kingdom, which would remain the\nsole judge of its conduct, as it is the master of\nits future destinies. France will act towards\nItaly just as the great European Powers will\none day do in regard to the American question,\nby recognizing the new Republic of the States\nwhen that Republic shall have constituted a\nGovernment resting on bases which will allow\ninternational relations to be entered into with\ni* which inay comport with the general interest.\nThe American question seems to have\nbeen alluded to merely for the purpose of\ninsinuating a belief that the seceded States\nwould eventually establish tbeir indepen-\ndence.
4a84057f9f9b6287f6f65711f8a3adbd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.7849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 'Wlntner, George ........... .\nWalsh, Joseph ..............\nWebb, Emma ................ .\nWhite, Raymond .............\nWhite Bros.......................\nWilson, Sol ...................\nWright, John ................ .\nWharton, William B. ....\nWaronutz, Samuel ........\nWinoot'x, Fannie ...........\nWilliams. Eliza V............\nWright, William Thomas\nWilson. Alice ................\nWilliams, Harry 8........... .\nWoodward, John D. ....\nWoodward, Harry M........\nWolhar. Charles T......... .\nWllckens, Staats 4 Co.\nWaldman. Hyman .......... .\nWalnut Street Oarage ..\nWcldln, C. Wesley ....... .\nWhite, Albert W............ .\nWalter, Edward T..........\nWalnter, Israel ..............\nWllmer, E . M ... .... .... .. ....\nWeaver, George W.......... .\nWright, William P.......... .\nWolhar, James H............\nWeldon. Marlon T...........\nWinkler, L . W.. ... ... ... .... ...\nWinkler, L. W. .... .. .. .. .... ...\n Elva D...........\nWeiner, Max ..................\nWolters. R. W.. ... .... ... ...\nWeiss, John ....................\nWeinberger, David ..........\nWolfman, Benjamin .......\nWork, Stidham ...............\nWood. J. R. 4 U. R..........\nWood, Philip H...............\nW&lther, Hannah M.........\nWalters, Samuel ............\nWilmington Tire Repair Works 6 00\nWhile 4 Bro.....................\nWebb, Harry O.................\nWhitlock, W. H ... .... .. .... ..\nWirt, M. M . 4 Bro..........\nWinner, Charles J............\nWllscn, John P.................\nWilson, E. C. .... .. .... .... .. ....\nWeller, Frank O...............\nWollaston, William P. ...\nWoolley, John 'V ... .... ... ..\nWoolery, Robert P..........\nWhiteman, Luclea ..........\nWillis, Henry N...............\nWatson, William A...........\nWatson, William A., Jr. .\nWebster, W . A ... ... .... .. ....\nWeller, Harris ...............\nWinter, E. L
177bfcf1f1e58511a48cb4533c1b728e WEST VIRGINIA DAILY OIL REVIEW ChronAm 1902.582191749112 39.564242 -80.99594 It would be d fficnlt indeed to\nImagine anything . more pitiable\nthan the condition of the scores of\nwomen who were widowed by the\ndisaster at Johnstown. What could\nbe more hopeless and desolate than\nthe prospect before them? Only|\nthink of it! Strangers in a strange\nland, unable to converse in our\nlanguage, nearly all of them have\nflocks of helpless little children to\nprovide for, thrown so suddenly\nupjn their own resources, without\nany warning whatever . what can\nthey do? Having followed the\nrough wagons containing the re¬\nmains of their ill fated husbands to\nthe cemeteries, what must be their\nthoughts as they turn to the desolate\nhovels which they have called their\nhomes? What is there left to ani\nmate them to take up the struggle\nof life again? One of the correspon¬\ndents says that while there were\nmany mourning women, there were\nalso many caskets carried out with\noat even a small cortege following.\nThis is explained by the fact that\nmany of the men were m rried in\nthe old country, and had re\ncently arrived here, leaving their\nwives in the Fatherland. A\nnumber of them were prepar¬\ning (to send for their wives, as is\ncustomary with them at this season\nof the year. The widows in the\nold country are in their own land,\nwhere they relatives and friends,\nand while the loss of their hus¬\nbands and the great disappointment\nare sad enough, their cases are\nhardly to be compared with those\nof the poor, helpless, widowed\nmothers at Johnstown. When sol¬\ndiers are killed in battle their wid¬\nows are given something in the\nshape of pensions, but these poor\ncreatures hive positively nothing\nto sustain them. The thought sug¬\ngests itself that if the rich mining\ncompanies were compelled by law\nto pension the widows of their\nminers, it might have a salutary\neffect in causing the exercise of\nmore care in the mines. There is\nalways a demand for an improve*\nmentin the mining laws after each\naccident, bnt the chances are that\nif those now on the statute books\nwere enforced they would meet all\nrequirements.
19f32080a69d9f8c13ba0246e027d20f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.6068492833588 41.681744 -72.788147 Gradually as the craze was accept-\ned and slowly spread men and women\nall over the country began to utilize\nthe tops of their verandas and all odd\nlittle porches for sleeping purposes.\nAfter awhile the wealthier followers\nof the fad started to build sleeping\nporches to their homes. These were\nconstructed more or less like ordinary\nrooms, with heavy roofs and wails, but\nthe upper half of these walls was left\nopen. The fittings in some of these\noutdoor rooms are as beautiful as those\nin any of the indoor rooms.\nThe benefit of this fad is so patent\nthat it seems almost unnecessary to\nexplain wherein it lies. To breathe the\nfree, unadulterated air all night long\nis the most strengthening way to sleep,\nand it is safe to assert that no child\nbrought up in a sleeping porch will\never have a tendency to weak lungs.\nYoung children who are unaccustom-\ned to sleeping in the open should be\nstarted on their sleeping careers\nin the hottest weather and gradually\nworked up to the winter weather. In\nthis way they become accustomed to\nthe gradually increasing cold, and, far\nfrom being dangerous for them to\nsleep In the open, it is highly healthful,\nbut only under the above mentioned\nconditions. To put a young baby out\non a sleeping porch for a cold night\nwithout any previous experience Is\nquite enough to kill it.\nEvery suburbanite and country\nmother should form the sleeping porch\nhabit for herself and her children dur-\ning the summer months. No matter\nhow small a cottage the home may be,\nit is sure to have some kind of porch\nwhich can be utilized for this purpose.\nFor the city dweller, unhappily, the\nsleeping porch Is an unachievable\ngoal unless one happens to have the\nmeans to own a house. A great many\nof the brownstone houses have porches\nin the rear, usually on the third or\nfourth story. These can be utilized in
0220e3e107cde50ad12cf3ed7d4178f7 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.5904109271944 37.53119 -84.661888 word iifcd I too mild, too much like a\nSunday school word, and will not bo\nunderstood. It U like saving that a\nman Is Intoxicated when ho Is drunk,\nor that ho prcvarlcites when he lies.\nMiss Annie Houston col 1)3 per cent\nIn her examination on 11 topics, which\nis far above the averago. Mrs. G. M .\n1'nttcrron conducts all tho business at\ntho dcoi during tho absence of Mr\nPatterson and Is as well qualified as\nany agent on the road. Geo. Harris,\nage 10, Is an c.tert wire worker, hav\ning been asked to corae to Arkansas to\nconstruct a telephone lino.\njuugc J. u . iicmpniit cannot pet a\ndeed to tho property which ho bought\non Richmond Avenue as one of the\ngrantors, who lived in Kansa, died be\nfore tho deed nrrlved for acknowled-\ngment leaving soven Infant heirs. A\ndecree! court will be gotten before\n Judge builds on tho premises.\nRobt. Burton, who was shot by GUI\nPrather. on July 22, died Wednesday\nafternoon of tho wound. His dying\nstatement nnd other testimony tnako It\na very bad case, as It Is alleged that ho\nasked Prather not to shoot him and\nthat he did nothing to provoke the\nshot. No testimony was Introduced by\nthe defendant at the examining trial\nlast Friday nnd he was sent to Jnll,\nfalling to give bond for 91,000 . An ex-\namining trial on a warrant for murder\nwill bo held Monday.\nIt Is understood that tho commercial\nclubs of Hurrodsburg and Lancaster\nare working in conjunction for tho ex-\ntension of the Southern railroad. Capt.\nHerndon, Mr. G T, Hlgginbotbnmand\nHon. R. H. Tomlinson will go over the\nroute und see nbout the prlco of the\nrlt'bt of way. The town und tho coun-\ntry ure -al ik- e
f66084dcab0f372139724e6540d4d7b2 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.568493118975 40.618676 -80.577293 The differing House and Senate bills\nwere sent to conference. The confer­\nence committee just a few hours be­\nfore the lepal deadline reported out\na hodge-podge bill with the prevail­\ning wage clause dropped again. Be­\ncause of the emergency and with the\nprospect of having to close down the\nwhole relief program unless new\nfunds were appropriated immediately,\nboth Houses hastily adopted the faulty\nmeasure. It became the law when the\nPresident signed it.\nWhat happened? Within a few days\nunion men on WPA started to quit.\nThey were not ordered out. They just\nstopped. Their action was entirely lo­\ncal and spontaneous in character.\nThey were just following the tradi­\ntional principle that a union man,\nholding a union card, will not work at\nless than union wages for anyone.\nThese men are not striking against\n Government. They are loyal, law-\nabiding American workers. They are\nfighting for a principle that it almost\na religion to them. They refuse to\nhave the wage rates built up by col­\nlective action through years of strug­\ngle and sacrifice destroyed.\nIs the attitude of Congress as easily\nunderstandable? Is it in any sense\nlogical ? Let's see.\nUnder the Walsh-Healey Act, which\nis the law of the land, the Government\nsays it will only purchase goods pro­\nduced by labor which is paid prevail­\ning wages on its own work?\nUnder the Davis-Bacon Act, which\nis the law of the land, the Government\nis committed to the policy of paying\nprevailing wages in the construct i"ii\nof Federal buildings. How can the\nGovernment then logically contend\nthat it is wrong to pay prevailing\nwages on WPA building projects?
18ce2b33d2ed49a38badbe02867ba783 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.8237704601802 40.063962 -80.720915 On looking at Fitzbngh every member\nof the Committee knew that he was not\nborn when the war broke out; he could\nnot have been a soldier. How he ever got\non the soldiers' roll I do not know, uuless\non the same principle that we pension\nchildren of dead soldiers. Fitzhugh's\nfather, the old Doorkeeper, that " biger\nman than old Grant," was a dead Demo¬\ncrat; there is no doubt about that. [Laugh¬\nter] Itmaybethathe was put on the\nsoldiers roll because his father was a de¬\nceased Democrat. Btit Polk does not say\nso. What does he say? He says: "I\nvield to the Democrats of the House.the\nvarious delegations.this soldiers' roll to\nkeep it foil;" and he sayw, "There was al¬\nmost always a vacancy on it" Only think\nof that. Only fourteen positions on this\nroll, and the whole United Slates to draw\nfrom; yet you gentlemen who promised to\ntreat us fairly could not keep the soldiers*\nroll lull to save your lives! You went to\nthe Revolutionary War, the War of 1812,\nthe Mexican War, the Confederate Army,\nthe Union Army, the streets, field.\nYoo picked up every body you pleased.\nYou went to the volunteer companies;\nyou went to the independent com¬\npanies. You visited the muster\nfield; you searched high and low,\noroad and deep; yet Polk says\nthat you could not keep vour soldiers' roll\nfull, and because youcnuld not keep itfull\nbe put on Fitzhugh. Oh, spirit of the im¬\nmortal Falstitfl give us one hour of thy\ntime and at tap of drum and fqtieak of fife\ndrill this glorious battalion of Democratic\ncrippled aud disabled soldiers. [Laughter.]\nSee tbem fall into linel Here comes the;\nvenerable gentlemen of the war of 1812.'\nThen theMexican War contribute* a share;\nthen the navy sends in its boy; then the\nson of the dead Fitzhugh comes into view:\nthen comes the Irish brigade with Michael\nJ. Flannagan, "diseased tor tnany years";\nthen theraan that sprained his ankle when\ndrilling in 1801; and then that asthmatic\nfellow. [Laughter.] So they march up to\ndrill, one after anotner; and the spirit of\nFalstsff, disgusted with the display, takes\nheavenward its fl'gbt [laughter and ap-\nplau«el. shouting back as it goes:
26418593e9bf753d3d1bedc9232578c1 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.392076471109 40.832421 -115.763123 keep the other to collect with.'\nThere are great crowd* of idler* befc.\nAbout 13, 00U waiting to give their scalps\nto the Indians wheu tbe snow leaves\nthe Onnnison country. No rnle of cus¬\ntom here . (ew onl o f tbe wholo number\never lived in a city, und never turn to\nthe right. The streets aro blockaded\nwith lookers on.\nA few diiTssiuco lil.ick Crook pictures\nwere posted on tbe corners(leg drama),\nand there were at least fifteen huudreil\ncountrymen' climbiug over each other\nto gel a 'look at the pictures,' the devil\nonly kuows what there woaldhuvo been\ndoue hud tbey been real legs (?)\nIt was a great mistake in naming this\nplace Leadville. It should have been\nJopliu; there are more nice men here\nfrom Jopliu than are left there. They\naro lost though when tho? leave their\nwagons aro on the sidewalk, and\nwouder why people run against them.\nOne say*, 'You bet ycr life, I'm from\n¦Jopliu, Missouri, I am; come in boys,\nall ou ye, aud take Bomelhin'; my\nfriend from Nevadee is scttin' 'em up.'\nAll would have quite a city outlook\nhere were it uot that tho majoiity of\nthe people uovcr s.iw a city only by\nlookiug out of a oar window us the traiu\nstopped while passing through one.\nThere arc five dally papers here, and\ngood ones. One first-olas* brick opera\nhouse aud ten other theaters, ull in full\nblast; five of them h.ivo brass bauds\nplaying in front every evening.\nThere are nlso many people hero (torn\ntho State o( Maine; all come with let¬\nters ol introduction fn-m Professor\nFrank Stewart, Tbe M tine boys are\nall solid on the neutvueo of letter her\nW
28f5fa9a2b440ff13a05d0767ecf5c4e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.7472677279397 42.217817 -85.891125 Wherean, default ban been made in the conditions\nof a certain mortgage made by Eduard M. Carney\nand Mary A. Cugney, his wife, of Gobleville, Mich-igit-\nto the Michigan Mutual Life luur.uce Com-\npany, a Michigan corporation of Detroit, Michigan,\nbearing date ttie --!uth day of April, A. D. l'JOl, und\nrecorded in the olllce of the register of deeds for\nXhu lUiren county, Michigan, on May I, A. D.\nl'.Ml, in liber 71 of mortgages, ou page 12, aud by\nreason of the failure of said mortgagors to pay the\ntaxea leicd on said mortgaged premises, paid mort-\ngagee was compelled to pay and did pay on July 1,\nI'. fcH, the Htate and county taxes for UK) J thereon,\namounting to f:U.il, aid delault has been made iu\nthe payment of an installment of interest amouut-in- g\nto $:i7.M, which became due on April 'iotb, A.\nD. 1' .h i 4. atd paid mortgagee, according to the terym\nof said piortgage, and on account of said default iu\nthe payment of said taxea and said installment of\ninterest, lias elected aud does hen by elect that the\npilncipal Hum of said mortgage, being the sum of\ntil teen hundred dollars l.ftlHt.tKj), together with all\narrearages of interest thereon, be now ilue aud pay-\nable, and there in claimed to be due and ou\nsaid mortgage aud the bond and notes accompany-\ning the same at the date hereof, aud by virtue of\nsuch election, for principal, interest, taxes and in-\nterest, the sum of fifteen hundred aud nintty-ou- e\ndollars, aud no suit or proceedings at law bating\nbeen had to recover the same, or auy part thereol;\nNow, tin re tore, notice is hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power of sale contained iu said mort-\ngage and of the statute 111 such case made and pro-\nvided, the said mortgagee will sell at public auction,\nto the highest bid U r, on Tuesday, the rint day of\nNovember, A. D. l l'H.at ten o'clock iu the loreuoou,\nstandard time, at t tie front door of the court house,\nlu the village of l'aw l'aw, Van Uuren couuty, Mich-\nigan (that biing the building In which the circuit\ncourt for the county of Van Uuren is held), the\npremises described in said mortgage, lor the pur-\npose of satisfying the amount due as aforesaid for\nprincipal, interest, taxes and interest and the ex-\npense of said sale. The premises described iu aaid\nmortgage are as follows: All that certain pitce or\nparcel o' land situate in the township of Waverly,\ncounty cl Vau lluren. Mate of Michigan, known\nand described a follows, to-- w
7300b756a3949794d057724213a7ae3c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.7136985984273 31.960991 -90.983994 IS hereby given, that on application to\nme, by Trussy Bethea, of said county,\nwho claims for his ward Philip II. Bethea,\nan undivided fifth part of the following\nproperty, real and personal, to wit: “A\ntract of land containing about one hun­\ndred acres, situated in Claiborne county,\nState of Mississippi, about two and a half\nmiles North of Port Gibson, adjoining the\nland of Dr. Samuel Dorsey, on the West,\nthe land belonging to the heirs of Steph­\nen Minor, on the Noith, being the same\ntract formerly cultivated by John Thomp­\nson; another tract containing about one\nhundred and eight acres, situate in said\ncounty, adjoining the lands of Ben. Smith,\non the South, and the mandamus tract on\nthe Vyest, and the lands owned by the\nheirs nfStsphen Minor, known as the Da­\nniel Lyon tract, on the North; also a ne­\ngro woman named Polly, aged'about 25\nyears, with her two children, Christiana,\naged eight years, and George, aged six\nmonths; also a negro woman Emi-\nline, aged about 24 years, and her three-\nchildren, Jerry aged 5 years, Francis ag­\ned 3 years, and Polly aged about twelve\nmonths; also, a stock of cattle and sheep.\nI have nominated John S. Gray, Francis\nB. Lee, and James Redding, commission­\ners, to divide the said tracts of land into\nequal shares or parts, and to divide the\nsaid personal estate in like manner, if the\nsame can be done, and if not, to make sale\nthereof and divide the proceeds, and un­\nless proper objections are stated tome at\nmy office, in the iown of Port Gibson, on\nMonday, the 29th day of September next,\nthe said John #6. Gray, Francis B. Le»,\nand James Redding, will then be appoint­\ned commissioners, to make partition of the\nsaid lands, pursuant to an act entitled\nAn act concerning the partition of fonds\nheld by co parceners, joint-tenants and\ntenais in common, in common,” and to di­\nvide the said personal estate or the pro­\nceeds thereof.
05644225cf17567f28be0b2522e6e868 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.9958903792492 39.745947 -75.546589 The first women whose names ap­\npear upon our pension rolls were the\nfour daughters of the Count de Grasse.\nThey were voted $400 a year each for\nfive years. Anna Maria Young, of Mas­\nsachusetts, married a veteran of the\nRevolution In 1816. He died six months\nlater, but she continued to draw a pen­\nsion for seventy-seven years. Samuel\nDowning was the senior pensioner for\nmany years ,and even surpassed Mrs.\nYoung for the long-distante record. He\nwas born at Haverhill, Mass., in 1761,\nserved as an artificer or mechanic in\nthe Revolution, was wounded twice,\nand drew a pension from 1786 to 1867, a\nperiod of more than eighty years.\nThe Federal courts continued to grant\npensions until after the war of 1812,\nwhen the business became so active\nthat was intrusted to a bureau of the\nWar Department. Then it was very\nmuch easier to secure the bounty of the\ngovernment than when every claim\nwas adjudicated by men who were in\nthe habit of weighing evidence without\npreference or prejudice. For years the\nuse of political influence In securing a\npension was scandalous and was the\nsubject of frequent debates in Congress.\nIn 1820 the first list of pensioners was\npublished by order of John C. Calhoun,\nthen secretary of war, to silence these\nscandals. It shows the names of 16,163\npersons, drawing a total of $3,208 ,376 a\nyear—the highest $45 and the lowest\n$2 a month. In 1860 the pension roll\nwas smaller than for any time since\n1812, and the disbursements ter that\nyear were only $1,100,802. In 1893 It
0cc69505c03e0876a481d0a8ebd7b8b6 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.028767091578 39.756121 -99.323985 way from Mexico to his English home,\nreports the Kansas City Star, "and\nthey are guarded much more careful-\nly than many of us imagine, for they\nmake no great display in the matter.\n"This fact was impressed on me very\nstrongly by a personal experience in\nthe City of Mexico last spring. I had\nbeen thrown from a mule and had\nsuffered a severe sprain in my right\nwriet, in consequence of which I had\nit closely bandaged, and after It was\nwell enough not to be carried in a sling\nI went about with it ' .n the side pocket\nof my sack coat.\n"While walking with my injured\nhand thns supported early one even-\ning I saw President Diaz, whom I\nknew quite well, coming toward me,\naccompanied by u member of his off-\nicial household. They were walking\non the same side of the street as my-\nself, and some GO feet behind them\nand at the same distance in front\nwalked two men, who wore no \nof authority and in no way showed\nthat they had anything to do'with\nthe president and his companion.\n"As the two men in front neared me\nthey separated, making room for me\nto pass between them, and as I was\ndoing so the man on the left knocked\nagainst my arm as though by accident,\nand naturally I drew it out and away\nfrom danger. lie apologized politely\nin Spanish, took hold of my hand gen-\ntlyashedid so and askedifithad\nbeen injured. As I was accepting his\napology and beginning to tell of my\nhurt the president came up and, greet-\ning me heartily, laughed at the situa-\ntion' and explained that the two men\nwere guarding him and had deliberate-\nly made me expose my hand to make\nsure that I did not hold in it a weapon\nwith intent to injure him. The presi-\ndent's guardians are very watchful\nand it would be almost impossible for\nan armed man to get near enough to\nhim to do him injury."
0e3e62cfde574efb6111ba8d54656f9f THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.5273972285643 35.996653 -78.901805 "The one thing in a fight with a sal-\nmon that the fisherman most fears and\ndreads is the liability of the fish to sulk.\nA sulker is always a big fish. He will\nnot show fight at once, but will sink to\nthe bottom and lie there. Whenever he\ndoes make up his mind to fight the fisher-\nman knows that the fight will be a good\none. J5ut the sulking fish may lie for\nhalf a day or more, despite all the an-\ngler's efforts to start him. No salmon\nfisherman can with honor retreat from\na fish he has once hooked, and he nmst\npossess his soul in patience, and wait\nuntil the sulker concludes to open the\nperformance, if he has to sit all night.\nIt is on record that in lss:;, in the Mar-\nguerite river, a fisherman\nhooked a salmon at about seven o'clock\nin the morning. It was a sulker, and\nit lay in the dumps until four o'clock in\nthe afternoon. Then the big" fish sud\ndenly started down stream and ran at\nrailroad speed for a mile without stop\nping. Then he quit running and fotight\nthe angler, by all the salmon's known\ntactics, up and down and across the\nriver, for two mortal hours without\nmoment's rest, before he gave up and\nsubmitted to the gaff. The fisherman\nwas almost as nearly played ovit as the\nsalmon was when the end came, and\nwould have been corapeled to hand the\nold war horse over to some one else to\nfinish if the fight had lasted many min\nutes longer. That salmon weighed\nforty pounds the largest killed in that\nwater."
327f0dc2bfadb403d53c190b58293951 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.8945205162354 39.745947 -75.546589 Rule 17. Teams of the City Bas­\nketball League who do not show up\nfor two consecutive games shall bo\ndropped from the league.\nRule 18. The league shall play\ntwenty (20) games, spilt season, len\n(10) the first half and ten (10) th.\nsecond half. ' The winner of the first\nhalf shall play the winner of the\nsecond half k series of three (3)\ngames, third game to be played on\na neutral floor if necea.ary.\nRule 19. No player »hall receive\nremuneration for services In this\nleague.* If found guilty will be sus­\npended from the league for the re­\nmainder of the eeason. All games\nthat hq participated in shall be\nforfeited to the opposing team.\nRule 20. Forfeit money of twen­\nty-live (525.00) dollars shall be re­\nturned to teams or their \ntative» at Ihe close of season.\nRaie 21. Price of admission at all\nleague game» shall be Thirty (30)\ncents Including war tax.\nRule 22. Only persona allowed at\nthe meeting* of the league are tho\nofficials of the league and »lie man­\nagers and captains. In case either\nthe manager or captain» are un­\nable to attend an accredited repre­\nsentative ehall be alloweH-to attend.\nRule 23. In case any club shall\nhave insufficient players to start a\ngame, owing lo unavoidable cir\ncumstances. such club shall consult\nwith the manager of the opposing\nteam and may request one player.\nRule 24.— In case of police protec­\ntion being necessary the expense\nof some will bo divided equally\nbetween both clubs.\nRule 25. Each St\ntween first and second half\nwilt be played
0bb0418d37c14e326c3fcef57d709166 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 Mastorson's most celobratod exploit,\nperhaps, was tho killing of eight cow-\nhoys nt Dodgo City in '83, in rovongo\ntor tho cold blooded murder of his\nbrother, who was ut tho time town\nmarshal oi l)odgo City. A crowd of\ncowboyn fooiu northern Texas had\ncoino into town with cattle and had\ntaken possession of a dancini! hall.\nThey woro flourishing their guns about\nand tho town marshal orderod thorn to\nput up tho nuns. This they refused to\ndo, and, when Mastcrsou insisted, they\nriddled him with bullets and draggod\nhis corpse into tho stroot. "Bat" Mas-\nterson at this time was shorifi' of Ford\ncounty. He soon heard of tho murder\nof his brother, and his conduct was\ncharacteristic of the man and r,f the\nwe.it at that period. Ho tilled his\npockotH with cartridges, took two Colts\nand started for tho hall.\nBy tho time tho lights woro out, tho\ncry went that tlio dreaded Mastorson\nwas comingaud tho cowboys were pro-\nparod to make short work of him. Tho\nresult sliowod that thoy reckoned with¬\nout their host. Mastersoti at onco\nopened liro at tlio front door and tho\nmurdorers ropliod with cold load. In¬\nstead oi attempting to face the odds of\neight or ton to ono, Matterson banked\nupon strategy and won. Dropping to\ntho lloor he made his way around tho\nbar to tho rear and while tlio cowboys\nwere firing at the front whero thoy sup¬\nposed Mastersou was assaulting "thorn\nhe pumped load into thein from his\nplace without a return eliot and soon\nseven woro stretched on the lloor lifeloss\nand theeighth,badly wounded.succeeded\nin getting on his mustang and escaping,\nihenoxt dav, however, his dead body\nwas found on tho nrairio oight miles\nawav. After this Mastersou was tho\nmost foared man in tho west.\nMa*ter<«nn took part in tho famoti'
21824be3eb79213fd7caf37b43fc3623 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.4945205162355 37.005796 -89.177245 tions the other nJght; but wo do known\nman who would have hud all of them, nud\nmore, If ho had been!!:: E.'s skin In tho\neventful occaslou to which wo refer. It\nIs a well known fact that E. is a careful\nman, and not much afrftld of. anybody1\nHe sleeps Inn room, above the store;\nnnd, generally, keeps for u?e on short\nnotice, an excellent pistol, bought ex\nprcssly for the purposo of perforating\nburglars. But, conscious security breeds\ncarelessness nnd Indifference In the most\ncareful men; and E. had becomo infect-\ned. He thought there was no danger,\nnnd began to leavo his pistol in the\nstoreroom nt night. He was guilty of\nthis carelessness on the night lu ques-\ntion; and, to put the expression Into\n"spasmodic" language, soon after ho re-\n he embraced the somuorlllc deity.\nWhen theuighthad passed to thechurch-yar- d\nynwuing hour, and justbeforo tho\n"heralds of the morning," (or in more\nprosaic language, tho roosters of the city)\ntooted theirhornstotell of comlngdawn,\nwhile ull was yet darkness, E. awoke.\nWe aro glad to say that bright dream\nwasn't the fair, although ho is in tho\nshoo business; but it might havo been.\nHo awoke, and became nwaro of tho\nfact, that burglars were in the storeroom\nbeneath hlra, "l'0hS iiuoogti" thin,,.,\nmiu nelplng themselves to what they\nwanted. What should ho do? He had\nno pistol. Thejburglars had that. Ho\nhad no weapon of any klud; nud he\ncould not reach tho street, lu front or\nrear, to give nn alarm. They were vil-Ha -\nwho make Loot out of nil men; nnd
1d06d6d2a5436cef45c566296238a92b THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1882.223287639523 39.743941 -84.63662 Any one who is familiar with the man\nagement of the great newspapers in this\ncity, knows what a conjugal struggle th--\neditors have to out down the copy so as\nto get all the news into the paper. There\nis little exaggeration in saying that a\njournal the size of the limet or the Tri\nbune could be filled every night with\ngood matter which the editors of those\npapers strike out of copy with their bine\npencils, it is condensation, not late\nhours or night work, that is killing men\nin newspaper offices. If, then, this is\nthe case; if fashionable people think that\nthe publication of items about their re-\nceptions, weddings and dinners is highly\nimpertinent; and if the newspapers can\nhardly find room for actual news, why do\nthe journals in New York print, day af-\nter day, descriptions of social incidents\nwhich are most uninteresting to the gen-\neral reader? The explanation is simple\nenough. The fashionable people do \nalways tell the truth when they rail\nagainst the intrusion of reporters into\nprivate circles. They really like to see\ntheir names in print; delight to have\ntheir receptions noticed; are in ecstasy\nover descriptions of their fine dresses.\nIt cannot be denied that the newspapers\nprint what the publio demands.\nNot only do many fashionable people\nnot object in their hearts to seeing their\nnames and doings chronicled, but they\nsend the matter to the newspaper omce\nthemselves. Hardly a mail fails to bring\nstatements that a wedding will take place\nat such an hour in such a church; that\nthis lady has returned from Europe by\nsuch a steamship; that this one and her\nhusband will sail ; that a reception\n(whioh "please notice") is to occur at\nsuch a number in Fifth avenue at the\ntime named; that "enclosed is an invita-\ntion to a wedding to take place in Roches-\nter, which please send to your special\ncorrespondent there.'
04bee22260d2cd93b4ae7d7cc0ad1752 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.1520547628108 41.681744 -72.788147 to referee's decision, scheduled this\nWednesday night at Flamingo Park.\nThe essentials now are that Strib\nHng, In spite of several days of acute\npain from the rib injury, is pro\nnounced by physicians as fully fit to\nfight: that there will be no necessity\nto try to substitute Paulino Uscudun\nor any one else for the southerner:\nor face a possible postponement But\nthere have been a flock of anxious\nmoments for the principals a well\nas Promoter Jack Dempsey.\n"It all happened during a brisk\nworkout last Wednesday," said "Pa'\nStribling. " W. L . let loose a terrific\nright. He felt some twinges at the\ntime, I think, but continued, and we\ndid not discover until an examina-\ntion afterward that he had displaced\nan upper rib only about an eighth\n an inch but enough to be ex-\ntremely painful and dangerous.\n"It naturally affected W. L .'s\nnerves and to make matters worse\nhe also developed a slisht attack of\nneuritis in his right arm. We worked\non him with massages. It was very\npainful and I don't mind admitting\nnow we were mighty worried. But\nhe has come around fine. I think\nhis workout yesterday demonstrated\nthat there is absolutely nothing to\nworry about It was the most satis-\nfactory he had. Also, he has re-\ngained the slight amount of weight\nhe lost as a result of the accident\n"There's nothing the matter with\nW. L .'s right hand. You saw htm hit\nand hit plenty with It yesterday. He\nIs ready to go now. He will fight\nand he will win."
30b7a7e15cc6667d64280941afc776e2 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1877.6452054477422 41.004121 -76.453816 object of thta convention U wo are not in\nformed. If it Ii to oppose the erection of\nthe building at this time, we are not in ac\ncord with it. Kverrthing ha been done\nthat nan required in order to put the build\nlag under way, contract hare been made,\nand workmen are now engted In laying\nthe foundation?. If the whole thing should\nbe atoppetl It would be n great damage to\ncontractors who have gone to much expense\nto put themselves in shape to fulfill their\nagreements, and it is a question whether the\ncounty would not have large damages to pay\nIf the work should be indefinitely postponed.\nA new jail is needed. For years it has\nbeen a mockery of justice to put a criminal\nInside the w.ills of the old shell on tho j\ns one mm expressed it, he wa afraid to\nlean against the side of bis cell for fear lie\nwould fall nut. It Is only safe under such\nrigid surveillanco as is now given it by the\nCoal and Iron police. Take them away and\nwe will again hear of almost weekly jail\ndeliveries A properly constructed prison\ncm bo safely guaraed by one man where now\nIt requires a half dozen nrmed policemen.\nro bavo already expressed our disappro-\nbation of tho location, and of some other\nthings, and shall therefore say nothing more\non thai, subject, lint we bavo always been\nIn favor ot a new building, because the pres-\nent one ii a disgrace to a county liko ours,\nand hecanso it i.s not suitable for tho pur-\nposes for which it is used.
0ae3151dab836e008c4d8ad218e38c5d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.0479451737697 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described real «slate, viz:\nAll that certain lot or piece of land\nwith th« buildings thereon erected, situ­\nate In tb* city of Wilmington uloresald,\nbounded and described ns follows, to wit;\nBeginning on the westerly side of Ship-\nley street between Second and Third\nstreets, at the centre of the party wall\nbetween this nnd the dwelling of Henry\nGarrett, adjoining on the south; thence\nwesterly, through the centre of the said\nwall and parallel with Third street. 40\nfeet; thence northerly parallel with Ship-\nley street about 3 (eet 6 Inches; thence\nwesterly parallel wllh Third street and\npassing over the middle of the well of\nwater so as to divide the same Into two\nequal parts for the use of both properties.\n22 feet; thence southerly parallel to Ship-\nley street about 3 feet Inches to the di­\nrection of the line Just described; then«5e\nwesterly pm.ill« 1 with Third street 36\nfeet to the easterly side of a 6-feet wide\nalley leading Into Third street; thence\nnortherly by said alley side and parallel\nwllh Shipley street 23 feet 6 lncbes;thence\neasterly parallel to Third street and by\nother land of the said Henry Garrett 98\nfeet to the aforesaid westerly sld* of\nShipley street, and thence thereby south­\nerly 22 feet 6 Inches to the place of begin­\nning, be th«! contents more or less. The\nsaid alley having been laid out (or the\nbetter accommodation of the ground now\nof the said Henry Garrett.\nSeized and taken In execution as the\nproperty of Delaware Loan Association, a\ncorporation under the laws of the State\nof Delaware, and to be sold .by
33d79c692391a2d45888e4a13b7639c0 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.9166666350436 29.949932 -90.070116 have resebed a fall average argregate. The\nmarket has been more amply supplied with com-\nmercial bills than heretofore, owing to the largely\nIncreased purchases of Cotton for the European\nmarkets, and while prices were generally main-\ntained by advices of steady ruling rates at New\nYork, they nevertheles disclosed same weakuese\nas the day advanced, owing to a slight reaction in\nGold. Transactions embrace the following\namounts, viz: 1500 bank Sterling at 147, 2000\nprivate do. at 146g, 1500, 2500, 9000. 10,000\nand 15,000 Al commercial do. at 1464, 2000 do.\nat 14b., 1800. 3000 and 4500 do. at 1464. and\n2500 and 7000 do. at 146 30.000f ., 50,000f.,\n100,000f , 150 6,00f. and 350,000 . ; 1 commercila\nFranca at 3.874f., 50.,Ol0f. and 50,000•. do. at 3.8J4.\nWe now quo a bark Sterling 14641147, commer-\ncial co. 14b4(tl461, bank F'ranca 3.864@3.85, and\ncommercial do 3.I84@3.871 .\nDoMsaric ExcuAN•u. -The movement under\nthis has dislosed increasing ease. but\nwithout any quotable alteration in rates. Odertnge\nof commerital sight and short sight have been\nquite liberal throughout and the demand has been\nsteady from the opening 'to the close of business.\nWe annex particulars of the princtpal purchases\nby banks and bankers, viz: $3000 New York bank\nsight at j per cent. discount; $30,000, $30.000,\n$40,t00. $50,000 and $50,000 New York commercial\nsight at 4 per,cent. discount; $10.000 and 530.000 do.\nat 9-16 per cent. discount : $3000 do. on Boston at\n"-16 per cent. discount; $15,000 10 days sight on\nNew York at 4 per cent. discount: $10.000 15 days\ndo. at 1 per cent discount ; $20,000 60 days do. at\n2? per cent. discount, and $10,000 10 days do. on\nC(hicago at 14 per cent. discount. We now quote\nper cent. dieceunt at bank and j@j per cent.\ndiscount out of doors for sight checas on Northern\ncities. '
310d59b30ef00d2be2a21a285d305954 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1874.1027396943175 39.623709 -77.41082 left hand is in your right, let there be\nan expression to that, not I;ke the\ngrip ot a vice, (no gentle clasp, full of\nelectricity, thought and respect.\nBon t bj in a hurry! Her head lies\ncarelessly on your shoulder! You are\nnearly heart to heart! Look down in\nher half closed eyes! Gently, yet\nmanfully press her to your bosom!\nIStand firm, and Providence wi I give\nyou strength for,'the ordeal! Be brave,\nbut dont be in a hurry. Her lips\nare almost open! Lean lightly for-\nward with your head, not the bodv.\nTake good aim; the lips meet—the\neves close—the heart opens—the soul\nrides the storms, trouble, and sorrows\nof life (dont be in a hurry)—heaven\nopens before you—the world shoots\nfrom under your feet as a meteor\nflashes across evening sky, (dont\nbe afraid ) —the nerves dance before\nthe just erected altar of love as zeph-\nyrs dance with dew-trimmed flowers\n—- the heart forgets its bitterness, and\nthe art of kissing is learned. No\nnoise, no iuss, no fluttering and squir-\nming like hook-impaled worms. Kiss-\ning don t hurt: it dont require a brass\nhand to make it legal. Dont jab\ndown on a beautiful mouth as ifspear-\ning for frogs! Dont grab and yank\nthe lady as if she was a struggling\n•oil! Bon L muss her hair, scratch\nflown her collar, Lite her cheek,\nsqnizzlo her rich ribbons, and leave\nher mussed, rumpled and muxod.\nDont flavor your kisses with onions,\ntobacco, cocktails, lager, brandv, for\na maudlin kiss i; worse than the itch\nto a delicate, loving, scumble Woman.
12856f1333a95086e86bcfa318d565cf OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.042465721715 41.020015 -92.411296 This city is situated on the Des\nMoines river, within % of a mile of\nthe geographical center of the county.\nOn the 15th day of July, 1856, the\nLegislature of Iowa passed an act in­\ncorporating the city, and the first elec­\ntion of city officers was held on the 1st\nMouday of April, A. D . 1857, and not­\nwithstanding the strong opposition\nshe had to contend with, her growth\nhas been gradually ouward, and to-day\nshe can boast of being one of the enter­\nprising cities of the west.\nBeing a great railroad center, as\nwell as being backed up by a rich fer­\ntile country, and her natural water fa­\ncilities for'manufacturing gives her\nunoqualed advantages over any city\nin tne great west. Yes we say the\ngreat west, for we aro convinced that\ntime only is necossary convince the\nmost incredulous, comparing the Ai-\ntnre with the past, when Iowa will be\nthe banner State of tho Union, and Ot-\ntumwa one of her first cities.\nRailroad communications which give\nher the most ample and satisfactory\nmeans of business connection with all\nparts of the country, opening all the\nsurrounding territory, and concentrat­\ning a heavy trade, of which the Bur­\nlington ft Missouri Rivor railroad, now\nknown as the Chicago Burlington &\nPacific railroad, takes the lead as\nshown in the appended report given\nus through the urbanity of E. C.\nBrown, Assistant Supt.\nStatement of the number of men in\ntho employ of the Turlington & Mis­\nsouri River road, residing in Wapello\ncounty, Iowa, and the amount paid\nthem by said Co., for the month of Oc­\ntober, 1872, being an average month,\nviz:
7b9d0813ebea3f8e15139f9367e63d64 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.6808218860983 43.798358 -73.087921 ,.toW.hatever may be the kind of food on\nwbichman subsists, when the artificial\npreparation is made as far as possible in\naccoadance with the physiological laws of\nConstitution and relation esiasbhshed lit\nhis nature and is of that simple character\nwhich leaves the proportions of nutritious\nand innutritious properties as nature com-\nbined them, or, in ihe general average, con-\nforms in this respect to nature, and ef\nfects little change in the nutritious princi-\nples, and retains' the natural requisiton\nfor the function of the teeth and thus se\ncures the proper chewing of the food.,\nand the mixing of it wuh the solvent fluid\nof the mouth, and the swallowing of it\nslowly, the artificial process of prepara-\ntion militates very little, if at all, against\nany of the physiological interests of the\nbody. But if the preparation concentrates\nthe nutrient properties and destroys ihej\ndoe proportion between the bulk and nour-\nishment: and effects improper changes\nand combinations in the nutrient elements,\naud does avvay the necesity fpr mastication;\nand presents the food in too elevated n\ntemperature; and enables us to swallow\nit too rapidly wuh little or no exercise of\nthe teeth, without properly mixing it\nwun tne saliva, ine annciai process ol\ncooking is decidedly, and ofen exceeding\nly inimical, not only to the physiological\ninterests of the. alimentary organs, but of\nthe whole human system. , And let it ever\nbe remembereQ that, as a general rule, the\nprocess of cooking when regulated in the\nvery best . manner, cannot so perfectly\nadapt the substances which it is necessary\nto Cook, to the physiological properties and\npowers of the human body, as to render\nthem equally conducive to the highest and\nbest condition of man, withthose sub-\nstances which are naturally adapted to his\nalimentary wantSy And therefore, as al-\nready stated, all processes of cooking, or\nartificial preparations of food by fire con-\nsidered in reference to the very highest ca-\npabilities of human naturemust bo . re -\ngarded n.in some measure an. evil ; and\nthe grand desideratum is to ascertain how\nfar the various circumstances In Avhicb\nman is placeu, ana the quality, oi the ali-\nment' on which he is obliged to subsist,\nrenders this evil necessary ; or to -- what\nextent the artificial preparation of food can\nbe carried without causing
7a3d04376fdf262cef9bc453cfe3340d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4205479134957 39.261561 -121.016059 throughout the Commonwealth muster with-\nout delay their respective commands and\nproceed fonrthwiilt to Washington, or such\nplace as indicated by future order.\nNew Yohk, May 26th.—The Hirald cor-\nrespondent writes from Banks division,\nthat 7,000 men bail been added to tbe rebel\nforce in ihe Shenandoah Valley. The whole\nnumber of their troops is estimated at 18,\n000. or 20 000. with thirty-four pieces of ar-\ntillery. On the 9th of May, it appears, there\nwas a large rebel force in the mountains in\nBanks vicinity. The latter, however, had\ntroops sufficient to hold them in check; but\non the 15th, Shields and Geary'scominamls\nwere transferred to McDowells department,\nand the same day a junction had been made\nbetween Jackson's, Ewells and Johnsons\nforces, when they made preparations to ad-\nvance on Banks reduc'd force with the re-\nsult already telegraphed. The rebels now\noccupy the whole of tbe Shenandoah Valley.\nBaltimore. May 20.—Two members of\nKentrys regiment, arrived in this city to-\nday, give the following account: On Fri-\nday tlie fight at twelve oclock,\nby an attack made by a large cavalry force\nunder Ashby, with several regiments of\ninfantry. The tight lasted until night,when\nthe infantry succeeded in surrounding\nthem. Ou the first night a repulse took\nplace oil the east side of the Shenandoah.\nFinding tbe rebel force too great, Kentry\nretired to tbe west side oi the river, des-\ntroying the principal bridge. Here he made\nanother stand, firing at the rebels about\n2UU rounds of shell and grape, doing con-\nsiderable execution. The last fight took\nplace four miles tills sldeofFrout Royal.\nThe effort of the Federal commander had\nbeen to fall back in order, expect in a rein-\nforcements momentarily from Gen. Banks.\nA member of Knapps battery says our\nregiment at first fought bravely, Col. Ken-\ntry leading them frequently to bayonet\ncharge. He also states that on the third\napproach of Ashby, he displayed a while\nflag until within pistol shot, the flag was\nthrown down ami Ihe enemy rushed on our\ntroops, cutting, shooting, and refusing all\nquarter.
1cda498eda8681f76701976305061949 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.078082160071 39.513775 -121.556359 taxed in llm Mini of twenty one fifty live one loin-\ndredth dollar* together will, nil the costs accruing on\n•aid writ, wherein Hiram Ill is plaintiff and M 11.\nParley is the defenduni, I have seized ami le-led\nupon and will sell at public ante to the highest bid-\nder for cash,on the 14th day of February A. I) Iv'iT\nat the hour of one o'clock I* M., nil of the above\nn one I defendant's right title and interest in mid to\nallot block No. two Ci) and lots No four, cti llve.tSi\n•ix Mil and seven. <7> in block No. one. 111 us laid\ndown on Mm plot of the Carlton Ranoh now on file\nIn the t'ouety Kecorders office of rtutle County; also\nall of delendanls right title and Interest in snd to\nI be balance of the tract of land known as the Carlton\nKnnrh. situated and described as le'lew- .to w ilt-\nall >1 certain piece or parcel of land l)iug and\nle-iic/ situated in the county of Butte and state ot\nCalifornia, commenci'ig on the south west boundary\not the lailiinii Claim forty rods from the lllulT on\nKent her river and running thence in a southerly di-\nreel lon one hundred and sixty rods, thence inn\nwesterly direction one hundred and sixty rods to u\nsinke, thence ui right unities and In a northerly di-\nreel ion one hundred and sixty rods to a stake, thence\nat right amt ea and in an easterly direction one hun-\ndred and sixl) rods to the place of lieginuing, helnic\nmm linndreu'ttnd sixty a res of land, more or les*.\ntogether w it It all the lenneinents beritlilatnents and\nap'urleiimices thereunto behmitlnit or In mix way\nHpperlainiint: also all ot defendants right title and\ninterest in and to lots No. seven . (7) and eight t*i in\nblock No. thirteen (13) lo:s No. live i.
dc885160165865ef52bb48186876e4c1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8838797497976 41.681744 -72.788147 Alexander Belomul, aged 18, of\nSouthington. was bound over to the\nDecember term of superior court in\n$1,0(10 bonds on charges of obtain,\ning money under false pretenses and\nforgery by Judge H. P. Roche in po-\nlice court today. He was arrested in\nBuffalo, N. Y., a nd extradited to this\ncity. He was not represented by\ncounsel and made a plea of guilty,\nbut Prosecuting Attorney Woods or-\ndered it changed to one of not\nguilty. After the evidence was in,\nBelomizt was given a chance to\nmake a statement but declined. In\ndefault of bonds, he was taken to\nHartford county jail this afternoon.\nCharles Gryguc of 250 Grove street\nmotion picture operator at the Pal-\nace theater, testified that Belomizi,\nwith whom he had been \nthree months or so, asked him to\nidentify him at the City National\nbank on October 26 so that he could\ncash u check for (30 drawn on the\nPlantsvllle National bank by J. Ven-\ndetta and made payable to Robert\n'icrry. Gryguc believed Belomizi's\nname to be Terry and went to the\nbank, where both endorsed the\ncheck, the teller, John N. Hancock\nof SI Fairview street, requiring them\nto do so before he paid out the\nmoney. Belomizi had told Gryguc\nthe check was in payment for a de-\nlivery of potatoes and Gryguc\nthought no more of the incident un-\ntil he was informed that the check\nwas worthless and 132.50 including\na protest fee had been deducted from\nhis account. He complained to the\npolice.
20cbab11fb2099bd86bb749c47704e42 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.184426197885 40.063962 -80.720915 There was a fair sized audience at the\ntobacco warehouse Saturday afternoon to\nwitness the finrt part of Miss Von Blumen's\n25-mile walk. John Sbuttlesworth began\nand made half of his seven and a half\nmiles, then Newt Anderson made all of\nhis and John Koonce made six miles,\nwhen a rest was taken for supper. After\nsupper the crowd began to gather earlv\nand in such numbers that it was difficult\nto get to the ticket sellers and up the stairs.\nA great many ladies were present Jamen\nGill walked hrst, making one-half of his\none-fourth of the thirty miles, then Sbut¬\ntlesworth and Koonce finished their shares\nand Gill ended. Miss Von Blumen seemed\nin splendid spirits and made an excellent\nrace in the last half mile, when she and\nGill passed one another time after time,\nalternately. When her twenty-five miles\nwere completed the gentlemen had made\ntwenty-nine miles and eighteen laps, or\nseven laps short of their thirty miles. It\nwas difficult to get the shortest time of\neach, but the followingis probably correct:\nAnderson, 10:10; Gill, 10:57; Koonce,\n9:50; Shuttlesworth, 10:52; Miss Von\nBlumen, 10:40. Koonce Shuttles-\nworth together made one mile in 0:28.\nThen came the event.the fat man's\nrace. The contestants, who finally ap¬\npeared ready to "lard the lean earth,"\nwere Brown, the blacksmith; Hardenstein,\na boiler; Gordon, the C. A P. telegraph\noperator, and Freese, the livery man. At\nthe word go they started off at a great\nrate, to the tune of "Yankee Doodle, but\nthe cheering soon drowned all but an oc¬\ncasional note of the orchestra. Harden¬\nstein led at a fair walk until Brown, who\nhad set out to win the race at all hazards,\npassed him on a run, when he ran a little\ntoo. The track is a tolerably wide one,\nbut when two of the walkers came abreast\nthere was no room for anything else.\nThey kept it op for the two miles, amid\neach an uproar of cheers and laughter ibat\nthe building shook. Once in a while,\nwhen one of the runners had to Blacken to\na fair walk for breath, he would\nsimply point out to the crowd, as\nhe waddled on, a longer-winded an¬\ntagonist who was getting past him on\na run.
0e8d987d234668154edee062d4362e76 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.6315068176052 41.004121 -76.453816 mind. At one tlmo I thought that jwi haps If\nmado lovo to other women I might lio nblo\nto do so, on tho principle that one nail dl Ives\nout another. But it was n failure; for a\nmonth or two I got tho better of my thoughts,\nthen they would get tho better of me again.\nBesides, to tell you tho truth, I nm not quite\neuro that I wish to do so. My troublo nbout\nthis woman has become n part of myself. It\nIs, as I told you, my 'evil destiny,' and goes\nwhero I go. And now, dear Doll, you will\nseo why I asked you If you really cared for\nmo, before I asked you to marry me. If you\ndo not caro for me, then It will clearly not bo\nworth your whilo to marry me, for X am\nabout as a catch as a man can well bo;\nif you do, well, then it Is a matter for your\nconsideration."\nSho paused n whilo and answered:\n" Supposo that the positions wero reversed,\nErnest; nt least supposo tills: Supposo that\nyou had lovod your Eva all your lite, but sho\nhad not loved you except as a brother, having\ngiven her heart to some other man, who was,\nsay, married to somebody else, or in somo\nway separated from ber. Will, supposing\nthat this man died, nnd that ono day Eva\ncame' to you and said: 'Ernest, my dear, I\ncannot lovo you as I loved him w ho has gone,\nand whom I ono day hopo to rejoin in heaven,\nbut If you wish itj'aud it will mnko you tho\nhappier, I will be your true and tender wife,\nand the mother of your children.'
19042dcfebfd2fd4c51813f067d2e753 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.0833333017101 44.939157 -123.033121 could take part, also Salem people, who\ncould return on the 11 or 2 o'clock elc\ntrie cur, If a debater I would oppose\npreparedness. I think as Bryan did, we\nare affected with rabies from the sur-\nrounding dogs of war. My observation\nhas been that the two dogs that are al-\nways pitched onto, are the big one and\nthe little one, we arc neither.\nIf Kngland saw fit to pitch onto us,\nJapan and Russia and France nnd Italy\nand Turkey would bo compelled to, be-\ncause they are allies, we should not\nally our 1'uited States with South\nAmerica because we do not want to\nfight their battles, there is nothing to\nit but trouble. Canada and Mexico\nare also being fought to death. We\nare 1011 per cent safer than before the\nwar. Single handed Japan is afraid of\nus, and if she did interfere, Germany\nwould see her to play even with\nJapan. All we need do is not to snarl\nand rattle our chains, in other words\nuse diplomacy, and attend to our own\nbusiness, sail on neutral ships or better\nstill, those under our own flag; never\nunder a warring flag.\nOur right should be to ship our pro-\nducts to Germany as well as to the oth-\ner countries. If we kept on our own\nships, as we should, the submarine war-\nfare would kill no American. Americans\nunder a British flag, thus protecting the\nBritish is equal to putting Americans\nfor a breastwork on Uritish battlefield,\nvery un just. War at the best, is wrong,\nbecause it is nothing more nor less than\nwholesale murder. As a great nation\nwe should lead in abolishing war and\nteach other countries to lay (town their\narms instead of unnecessarily preparing\nas we are now doing.\nCome to the debate.
c7e1aec3788065afee73d491cb65673d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.0315068176053 31.960991 -90.983994 In short, the whole establishment\nwas noble and genteel, without the\nglare of the tinsel finery or the inconsis­\ntency of bad taste. His stiyle of liv­\ning was in unison with his house and\nfurniture, always elegant, easy and\ncomfortable. The arrangement of\nthe grounds was equally complete, the\nfamous shrubbery was a mimic wilder­\nness, with labyrinth walks bordered\nwith flowers, and interspersed with ar­\nbors and grottos. The extensive pas­\nture in front with its flocks and herds,\nwas separated from the lawn by an in­\nvisible fence; and the view up the\nOhio was unobstiucted for miles, But\nthe whole scene requires the pen of a\nmet. The description of Wirt is near­\ner the reality than is generally believ­\ned, and his sketch of Mrs. Blannerhas­\nset is equally true to nature. She\nwas a beautiful and accomplished lady,\nof dignified appearance and manners;\n friendly without the least affec­\ntation, yet with all her elegance, she\nwas a notable house-wife, and devoted\nto her needle; notin the production ol\n] owers and flounces, but of garments\nfor her children -and servants. The\nmiserable slanders which have been\nreported of her, are without the least\nfoundation. Burr did not seduce Blan­\nnerhasset, through the medium of his\nwife, as has often been stated; his only\nvisit to the Island did not exceed three\ndays, and no woman of Mrs. B.s mind\nand character, could be corrupted on\nso brief an aecquaintance. Blanner-\nlassct was an open and unguarded\nman, easily imposed upon, and enthu­\nsiastic in all his impulses. Burr ap-\niroached him in the most artful and in­\nsidious manner. Descending the river\nin a batteaux. he landed as a passing\nstranger merely to sec and admire the\nar-farmed Island. Mr. Blannerhasset
137b80f4614b1986c4614ac868ace73b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.4643835299341 40.063962 -80.720915 It is very seldom, indeed, that the medical p\nraternity caru to recognize the merits of a new t(\nne4ipine of to bestow praise upon a com- cl\n>aratively untriitd therapeutical chejnM d\n»r compound. But tho Medical and 8u'y- C\nfh<al HrpurUr for January 10, 1878, con- si\nains a professional report of tho marvelous m\nvork wrought by Detheada Water. The ar- 3;\nicle is from the i>en of C. C. Schuyler, M. $\n)., Assistant Surgeon, Troy Hospital, N. Y ., 7\nmd we make some extracts therefrom. The S\nJoctor first gives, in professional language, an S\niccount of the progress of "Diabetes Mellitus" V\nn the victim, "a professional man, 40 years ei\n>f age." (It should probably be stated here ci\nhat Mr. Jos. Fleming, the well-known drug- ci\n;lst or this' city, ba» l^een appointed sole\nigent for this wonderful water' lor this gtate.\ntesides Ohio and West Virginia. Mr. F . will\nitrnish Bethesda Water, or any information ei\nlesired, on V\n"Like Job, continued tho Doctor, "there\nwined to be no limit to his sufferings, fur\nhete (fQV £ pi'cured a crop of authrax and b\nurunculi. Wie»e ucre jq}Jowed by a pugtu-; t<\nar eruption appearing In (ho'noautu, the\nnds of the fingers, and the feet. Near the J\nleel of one foot there camc what at tirst bore 4,\ni suiklqg resemblance to a stone bruise, caus- M\nugaftharp pain whpt) fttenned upon. Great n\niwelling and tho formation of ft'deeiraeatiid f,\nilwcess followed, occasioning great suffering 1\nmd m?ccssitating the use of crutches for some tt\nnonths. Three of tlio incisor teeth b®came 1\nootengd jjnd dropped out, though previous to j,\n:he discane they Ijnd been in perfect order.\nHe became greatly etnaciafed. decreasing in \\\nweight from 105 to 128 pounds"\nT)je unfortunate tnan reached "Waukesha\nWii, ip p dying condition. The article in\ntuestion concludes os follows:\n"A constant use of the Water (Betbpadu)\nproduced the most marked results. The pa-
35adb7502219d28293661d7bbaa0656f CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1918.009589009386 36.000618 -88.428106 they may be brought to the boar's pen\nfor service. This is a much better plan\nthan permitting the boar to run with\nthe herd, because by this method an\naccurate record can be kept to Indi-\ncate when the sow will farrow, or If\nshe did not breed, when she may be\nexpected to be In heat a second time.\nIt also permits of one boar serving\nmore sows In a season, for the sow\ncan be removed from the paddock as\nsoon as bred. By following this prac-\nticeasmanyas50or60sowsmaybe\nbred to one mature bonr In one season,\nwhich is a much larger number than\ncould be bred by any, other method.\nThe lapse of time between heat peri-\nods Is 21 days In the case of the sow.\nA breeding crate should be In the \ndock and put Into use whenever the\nsow Is a "shy" breeder when there\nIs much discrepancy in the size, of the\nsow and boar. Many breeders use the\nbreeding crate for every service; It\nreally saves time and Is an Insurance\nagainst Injury to the sow.\nThe boar's ration during this season\nshould be a relatively narrow one of\nabundant quantity. The only Index to\nthe amount of feed is his condition,\nand this should be evenly maintained\nIf possible throughout the entire\nbreeding season, increasing or decreas-\ning the quantity of feed as bis condi-\ntion becomes too thin or too at In\norder to keep him in health some laxa-\ntive feed, such as wheat bran, should\nconstitute part of the ration, and If\ncorn Is fed It should be combined with
7569c673c758ed3d55f9ffa447f81ac8 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1923.4315068176052 39.623709 -77.41082 “Lady hack here in the crowd,”\nsaid Sandy quietly.\nFor a second Russell gasped and\nstared and, as he stared, the cold hard\nlook In Sandys eyes told him the\nmanner of man who had interrupted\nhim. But this mans guns were In the\nholsters, Russell's weapon was In\nhand though its muzzle was tilted sky-\nward. The crowd, thickening, waited\nhis next move. He had been stopped\nIn his baiting. He saw no woman\nback of the big bulk of Mormon, keep-\ning Miranda well away, not seeing\nwhat was going forward.\n"To h—l with the lady!" shouted\nRussell. At his back was only the\nunarmed assayer. This lean cold-eyed\nlnterferer wns a hardy fool who need-\ned a lesson. He swept down his gun,\nthumb to hammer. Two guns grew\nlike magic Sandy's hands. Russell\nread a message in Sandy's glance, he\nheard the gasp of the crowd. With\nhis own gun first in the open the\nstranger had beaten him to the drop\nand fire. He felt the fan of the wing\nof death on his brow. Ills gun flew\nout of his fingers, wrenched away by\nthe force of impact from Sandys bul-\nlet on Its muzzle, low down, near the\ncylinder. Dazed, he watched It spin-\nning away, his hand numb.\n“Back up to that door, you! Back\nup!” Sandy's voice was almost con-\nversational but It wns profoundly\nconvincing. The bully obeyed him,\nstanding at the door in the place of\nthe assayer, who stepped aside, feel-\ning a little sick at the stomach, Sam\nbracing him In friendly fashion by\none elbow.
9cb93bf7d010ba3ca766e4f61e5f0713 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.769125651437 39.513775 -121.556359 Mnnj of the Feote-ite party in California\nare making a great noise about the popular-\nity of Mr. Fillmore in this State. Upon\nwhat grounds they claim such popularity\nfor him, they do not state, unless it is be-\ncause he was once at the head of the nation-\nal government, and, by Hie aid of that great\nstatesman and exponent of the Constitution.\nHmiel Webster, conducted the nffiirs of hi-\nadministration in a national and State-man-\nlike manner. It is detracting nothing from\nthe living, and only rendering equal and\nexact justice” to the illustrious dead, to give\nMr. W ebster credit for the sound national\nand constitutional principles upon which\n. Mr. i illnioje's accidental administration\nwas conducted. Let not remorstlcs-politi-\ncians, and ravenous i flice-sceker* like Gov\nernor Foote, approach the hallowed ground\nol Marshfield, with the hand of political\nvandalism, open the “ponderous marble\njaws of the Sarcophagus, and plunder the\nbody of the nation's champion, of it* nation" 1\nreputation, (or the purpose of clothing their\ncandidate with the garb of nationality. It\nwas aj national administration, lor Daniel\nWebster wt s Secretary of State! Look at\nthe course of Mr Fillmore while lie was in\nCongress! Look at his votes! Look at his\nletters! When did his national character\nbegin ! When he aj pointed Daniel Webster\nSecretary of State! Mr. Fillmore is now\nthe nominee of the miserable nud contempti-\nble Know-Nothing order. They invest him\ni with the national reputation 1 ruin the grave\not the illustrious W ebster, and call upon old\n: line, W chsteriun wings to sustain him. Can\nFootites refute the f o s J
220e41a5c58579d5feb5f1ce234d8278 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.8702185476118 46.187885 -123.831256 Mrs. Morton is handsome unde\nniably handsome writes Clara Belle.\nShe is about five feet six inches in\nheight. She would be a little too\nheavy for a girl although there are\nmany girls as heavy but has a taper-\ning waist and beautifully molded\nneck and arms. Her eyes are large,\nbluish gray and very expressive.\nHer complexion is a healthy white.\nShe oan boast of her nose, and her\nmouth is exquisitely aristocratic.\nHer lips are curved and full and\nevery smile awakens the most babyish\nand bewitching dimples I have al-\nmost ever seen. Although Mrs. Mor-\nton's face has not one wrinkle, and\nher years scarcely seem to warrant it,\nher hair looked quite gray in the\ndimly lighted room. Gray hair is al-\nways an attraction, even com-\nbined with a youthful face. It was\ndressed very neatly, twisted to the\ncrown of the head, and there rested\nin Heavy, smooth coils, met by a\nfringe on the forehead.\nOf course every woman will want\nto know how Mrs. Morton was\ndressed. Well, she wore a gray cot-\nton gown, with a waist which fitted\nto perfection, the skirt trimmed in\nwhite, openwork embroidery. A\nstraight gold bar fastened tbe collar,\nand there was no other jewelry ex-\ncept a large solitaire and a large em-\nerald on the third finger of the left\nhand. A gray cotton gown, the ma\nterial of which couldn't have cost\nmore than 85! Think of itl and a\nwoman, too, whose husband is quoted\nat some $20,000,000. Chicago Her- -\naid.
08ab64c1a8ca54fc84ef86d3ca9f1947 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1883.5219177765093 43.82915 -115.834394 ingmen of America that we owe our\nstability as a nation. A country is\njudged, not by its magnates of wealth\nand power, but by its laboring classes.\nIf you want to find the true tionest\nman, go down among the little cabins\nof the working class. There you will\nfind him. earning his bread by the\nsweat of his brow, happy and content­\ned, and when his d ays labor is ended\nand he goes home, there you will see\nhim, with his children on his knee,\nhelping them over some "mount of de­\nspair,” which has appeared in their\nschool life, and ho is able to do it,\nfor the workingman of America is not\nignorant; thanks to the public schools.\nAh, these are the blessings of liberty!\nThat Scottish bard, Robert Burns,\nspoke truly when he said:\n“A prince can make a belted Knight,\nA marquis, duke, and a that;\nBut an honest man's a his might,\nGuiil faith lie manna fa that!\nFor a that, and a that,\nTheir dignities, and a that,\nThe pith o sense and pride o worth,\nAre higher ranks thaii a' that."\nWhen Patrick Henry, back in that\nVirginia Assembly, in 1765, spoke\nthese words: "Give me liberty or\ngive me death,” he echoed the thoughts\not all jus t men. Those words are\nstill tinging to-day. They have chang­\ned France into a republic. They have\nsoftened the hard despotic rule of Ger­\nmany. They have freed the serfs in\nRussia, and now they have reached\nIreland and are firing the hearts of\npeopl« witli the desire of freedom. No\nmatter where the Irish roam, the de­\nsire to have their country free is par­\namount above all others. The time is\ncoming when the Emerald Isle will be\nadmitted to the lanks of freedom,\nready to profit by the example of the\nUnited States.
2d248b17cdaa8d18644384b5b9213111 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8452054477423 40.063962 -80.720915 " Aii Improvement in fire place* has recently U\never mil coal It burned, and one which will also U\nin the sbatai of a combined Fire-place Diuupcr-plat\nand effective device for regulating the draft of siuo\nentirely when not In use, u> prevent the tailing ol\narch-bur to sustain the brick wall over the ilre-plac\nWe give herewith an engraving showlug the pL\nuration may bo rvudlly understood. A la a out Irui\ntide of the tin*-place, and having the oblong apertu\nthe escape of the smoke, A, damper, U, titled betwc\nso m to cover the opening, C. The plate I* ribbed i\nof the wall above the fire place, thuit obviating the\nlaving the expeuce of an arch-bar ordinarily used.\nThe improvement hua additional advantages in\nwith straw or rugs when the grate* are closed In the\n latter custom has been the cause of the d\nquenlly fall from other Hues, lu use, and igniting tl\nthe house. Another good feature is, that, where or\nrest cun be closed, preventing the blowing down ol\nihuttiugotrdruftsofcoldalr, which people are frw\nweather reudering tire desirable after the iluca havi\nuient to slip the Damper-plate back and thu grate\nwhich will be popular with all housewives, as well\nfoararu adapted for upplicatloii toalino-n ntiy «»1<\n'Ait bo tdjuatcd ta a moment by the haml. In put\nlima Im-rviuv the expeuae. Ever/ houwwife will\nleal of hard work In uludy weather, Inapring ami\nlulling curpeU ami furniture nud putting every out\nMr. Clark Ham*, of WheHlng W. Va., i* the i*t<\nDam |>er plate ami Arch-bar. aiufwlll furnUh all fu\nlie ma km three different allot to »ult different graii
0f71216f7ab8a96c20973b2942aaef98 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.4479451737698 40.063962 -80.720915 Bufealo, N. Y ., Jane 11..A sonsatioi\ndevelopod in tho Typographical Oonven\ntion during the secret session yestorda\nafternoon, tho particnlaro of which ar\nslowly leaking oat. When the doora wer\nopened and tho reporters admitted after\nsecret session they found tho Oonventioi\nballoting for a Secretary-Treasurer. Till\ngave risw to tho query of what had becom\nof Mr. Pascoe? Though every delegat\nwas sworn to sccrecy, there was eo mucl\nostentatious mystery that curiosity wa\nchallenged, and every holder of tho secre\nwas overburdoned with it. It was learne*\nlast night that Mr. Pascoe had tenderei\nhiu resignation, but tho reason for thi\naction wob kept a close secret. Thi\nmorning, however, it was learnod that\nshortage had been discovered in Mr. Pae\ncoo's accounts.\nTho Finance. Committee had been a\nwork on tho books for oomo time, and a\nsoon as they were convinced of the short\nage they reported to the Convention\nWhat transpired in tho secret session i\nknown only to tho delegates themselves\nbut Mr. Pascoe had~ severed his connec\ntion with tho executive department of th\nUnion when the doora were reopened\nOno delegate said this morning that Mi\nPascoe had evincad no desire to make fii\nexplanation of tho muddle, though give:\nan opportunity to so. Another sail\nthere was no ehortage, only a genere\nmix-up of tho accounts, occasioned by ai\nincompetent man trying to keep a set o\nbooks without knowing anything abou\nDooK-Keepmg. The report lie made wa\nvery, incomplete. The Childs-Drexel Ian\nis Bftid to bo about all right.\nThe Finance Committee this mornini\nBtatod that they had worked all night 01\nthe accounts, but tboy were in as great\nmuddle as ever, and it will require two o\nthree days to straighten them out. Mi\nPaecne handled between $17,000 an>\n$18,003 during the year, and was under.\nbond of $2,500. Ho will leave for horn\nto-day. The Convention again went int\nBecret sesfiion this morning.\nWhen the doors were opened the repoi\nof the Committee on Subordinate Union\nwas taken up. It was decided that n\nforeman ehall have a right to discharge a:\nincompetent "sub" when the regular ha\nnot been notified of the "flab'a" incom\npetency. It was reaolved that the repox\nof the Committee on Unfair Offices b\nftdopted by tho Convention and given int\nthe hands of tho Buffalo Union, with ir\netructiona to carry out the recominendE\ntiona. The Convention then went int\neecretscsaion. The report on unfair office\nwas aubmitted to the secret session yet\nterday.
1cb107c7ee54cf9408016c19b0549aca THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.683561612126 40.063962 -80.720915 ioclodea under on« manigtment a\nicasgvriv, cii ra n ina nippoarome, acu\ne cad »; without exaggerating that\nrery department ii firat clan. The\ntots are lofty, commodiooi and\nell ventilated, and the reserved seats\nre undoubtedly the moat comforta*\nle of an/ circaa that has visited the\nit/. All the officials connected with the\nut Hippodrome are moat obliging aod\nDurteoua. The performance of Mr.\nfeorge Conklin in the den of liom aod\nanthers via one of the beat we bare\nrer witnessed, and Mr. Frank Gardiner\node really brilliantly. Young Leon in\nii fire-horn act wu, to say the leant,\nnmense, and Mr. James Campbell in hia\nremendoua summersault* over 16 horaeeJ\nlirly brought down the hoaae. 1'eihape\ntie beat thing in the whole circui wu\nbe performance of the two ponice, "Bat*\nsrfly" and "Hampty Damptj^ on \ntee taw." It wu a marrel to see two\nmall creatures exhibit the aagacity that\nbene little ponies did. The comicalities\nf GrimaJdJ Adams, the clown, were not\nbe least interesting portions of the en»\nsrtainment The bareback riding of\nVm. 0*DaIe wu admired by everyone,\n'rank Gardner wu a good bounding\n>ckey. The. female gymnut wu par\nxcellence in her line.\nAt the close of the circa* a »err fine\noncert was given.a concert, by the way,\nir superior to anything of the kind ever\n/ore given under curiu in thii city,\n'be programme consisted of songs and\nances bjr burnt cork artiste, comic songs\na white faces, etc. A rare curiosi tr was\nUo introduced here.the mermaid, a\nroman fish, eating and drinking under\nrater in inch a way as to almost Jetd one\n9 believe she was
1dc9a206510d23eb35692ada9c348683 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.6434425913276 39.745947 -75.546589 “1 am sure that the demoralization\nin the Republican party which was\nfollowed by the capture by the Demo­\ncratic parly of the lower House of\nCongress in 1874 began with the bit­\nter personal quarrel between Grant\nand Sumner. That quarrel alienates\nall of Sumners friends from Presi­\ndent Grant; and you know he had a\nsomewhat large personal following\namong Republicans. Yet a little tact,\na little kindly consideration on either\nside would have removed all cause\nfor hard feeling or would, at least\nhave made it possible for the Presi­\ndent and the great Senator from\nMassachusetts to maintain, superfi­\ncially. at least, pleasant relations.\n“The quarrel began in this way.\nPresident Grant sont his private sh-\ncrctary, General O. B . Babcock, to\nSan Domingo in 4870 for the purpose\nof negotiating a treaty by means of\nwhich the republic of San Domingo\nwould surrender its sovereignty to\nthe United Slat«« Very likely there\nwas a want of tact in doing this with­\nout consulting with Summer, who whs\nchairman of'the Senate Commlttceon\nForeign Relations. As chairman of\nthat committee Sumner would have\ncharge of any treaty brought be­\nfore the Senate (or ratification.\n*T presume that Sumner felt a lit­\ntle hurt that General Grant and the\nSecretary of State, Hamilton Fish,\nhad secured a treaty of annexation\nwith San Domingo without in any\nWay consulting with At all\nevents, when General Grant sent this\ntreaty to tho Senate for ratification\nand recommended very earnestly that\nit be ratified. Sumner's manner made\nit evident that he would do all hff\ncould to prevent ratification.\n"I do not suppose that Grant would\nhave made It a matter of personal of­\nfense If Sumner had simply, as Sena­\ntor and on what he believed to be con­\nscientious conviction, opposed tho\nratification of the treaty. Sumner\nwas not a very congenial man. either\nto Grant or to Lincoln. But Lincoln\ndisplayed superb tact in all his deal­\nings with Sumner, although he once\nsaid that Sumner seemed to him to\nhave tU the characteristics of a bis­\nhop of the English church.\n"Sumner, however, made a speech\nin which he asserted that the Presi­\ndent had sent an epauleted aide-de-\ncamp to San Domingo, and that this\naidc-de-camp, who spoke of tho Presi­\ndent as His Excellence, had actually ft\nnegotiated a treaty with the blacks of y\nSan Domingo by whlcqh that republic ft\nwas to yield its sovereignty to tho y\nUnited States. Sumner rang changes ft\non the word aidc-de-camp so effective- y\nly that some of the Senators who 5\nheard him were convulsed with y\nlaughter as he described this military y\nipupnct of the President dancing at- / .\ntendance before the rulers of San Do- y\nmlngo
021a44f2148245da198499d8155003bd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.6013698313038 40.063962 -80.720915 Burr*u>, N. Y ., August 7..About-\no'clock this afternoon bystanders ncai\nthe boat houses at the loot ot Ferry streei\nheard twoexploBloua iu quick succeBsioc\nfrom the boat houses just buiug built by\nL. B . Crocker, Superintendent ol the\nNew York Central Stock Yards, in\nwhich bis pleasure yacht, the Cedar\nRidge, was stored. Immediately Iollo» ¦\ninir the explosions the lioat burst luto\ntlauies, which soon made a lurnace ol\nits interior, Simultaneously with the\nexplosions two or three persons were\nthrown into tho water aa if from the\nlorcoolthe discharge.\nCaleb Tolsiua got a boat and picked up\na young woman, Alias McLean, agod «o.\nIrom tho water. She was badly burned\nanil waa takeu to the hospital. At this\ntime tho form of Mr. Crocker a young\nson waa Been standing on tho boat a\ndeck againBt a background of tire. An\nelTort waa made to rescue him, but the\nlittle fellow seemed paralysed with fear\nand in a moment lull back into tho Ure\nand was burned to a crisp. A. car¬\npenter was seen clinging to a ratter\nlust over tho biasing boat. l;or lew\nmoments he hung desperately on his\nperch, anil theu, as II stupefied by the\nIleal, and nutlocaled by the smoke, loos¬\ned hla hold and dropped, another victim\ninto the lurnace below, liieotherchild¬\nren ot Mr. Crocker, Leonard Lemuel, a\nson aged 10 years, and Lthel, a daughter\nneed about U years, also perished in the\nHaines. Another girl, thai lotto, aged\n14, was blown into the water ami rescued\ntherefrom and aent along pith Mias Ml\nLean to the hospital. ,11,0\nknown aa a nupthu launch, run by\n"Tub supposed that tho accident wm\ncaused wheu tho engineer lit the match\nto ignito the fuel, by the explosion of\nsome uaa which had leaked out. It is a\ntotal wreck, The family waa preparing\nto go oil on a pleasure trip, and air.\nCrocker had takeu'hia four children and\nMiaa McLeau, a lady from Detroit, who\nwas stopping with tho family, to the\nriver for an excursion. Crocker him¬\nself barely escaped with his life, ihe\ncondition of tho other daughter and\nMiss McLean waa reported serious, but\nnot necessarily fatal nt a lato hour to¬\nnight.
0d31616ac0a5ce1af382c34f0479fccb DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.491780790208 58.275556 -134.3925 We had a pleasant trip from Shaug-\nhai to Hong Kong, a distance of 850\nmiles. Not a ripple. Weather was now\nwarm and comfortable and we began to\nthaw out. God knows, sometimes I\nwish I were frozen again.\nllong Kong has a splendid harbor\naud one year, a few years ago, had the\nrecord of the largest shipping of any\nport in the world. The masts are so\nthick, so tall aud eo straight that it\nlooks like a tamarack swamp. There\nare always a large number of British\nmen-of-war there besides those of other\nnations. There are thousands of sam-\npans or small Chinese boats. They are\ngenerally run by women; a man lying\nabout somewhere to get in when the\nwork gets too heavy for the womau.\nThe families raised; are born, live,\noat, sleep and die aboard the vessel.\nThe little tads begiu trying to handle\nboathooks and oars when two years old.\nMen and women are all barefooted.\nThe small boats are worked by one\nlarge stern sweep oar, and you some-\ntimes see three or four little ones, the\nlargest not as large as a cream pitcher,\ntrying to haudle a sweep. I often won -\ndered if any of the youngsters ever fell\nout of the boat. When a typhoon\nstrikes the harbor there are sometimes\nthousands drowned aud the dead\nbodies of men, women and children are\nseen floating in the harbor for days\nafter. The town itself is really named\nVictoria and is on Hong Kong island,\nbut everybody calls the town Hong\nKong for gome reason.
42458b1663b04b664dcb8bfb7268be5c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.9356164066464 58.275556 -134.3925 The first of the mouth a report came\nto the mission that a whale was strand- j\ned on an island close by. Now while\nCapt. Jensen of the Cottage City asserts\nt hat all they have to eat at the mission\nis whale oil aud dry fisb, none of us had\never seen a whale on land. One after¬\nnoon two of the teachers and some boys\nwent to locate the island, which seemed\nto be somewhere, but no one knew just\nwhere. After rowing all over the sound\nthey met a party returniug from the\nwhale who reported that the smell was\nso thick that you couldn't take a pic¬\nture through it. Another party re¬\nported that the air was so thick that\nyou could row a boat right over the\nisland. The next afternoou theWil-i\nliam, with Mr. Walton as captaiu and\nthe mission force as crew, whal¬\ning. We were told to steer by our\nnoses, but not a smell did we smell.\nWe landed on an island, but no whale.\nBut we were lucky. Mr. Merrill came\nalong and not only showed us the\nisland but took a number ashore iu his\nboat. The whale, which was a huge\nmale, was estimated to be 75 feet long.\nIt had evidently been dead a long\ntime, and had come in on a very high\ntide. The body was badly decayed, but\nas it was frozen and a strong wind was\nblowing there was no smell to epeak of.\nSeveral of the party walked over the\nfrozen body and the next day it was re¬\nported that these same ones were wash-\ning clothes. It is needless to say that\nall enjoyed the trip and wish to thank j\nMr. Walton and Supt. Beattie for our\nwhaling..Sitka Thlinget.
023c0f4a39af7ec4400f4480db30521d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.0616438039067 41.875555 -87.624421 Bridge, Rcucl W., 012 Chamber Commerce.\nIlrynn, Thomns It., Monadnock Uldg.\nChancellor, Justus. Major Ulock.\nClarke, Joint V., Ashland Ulock.\nCole, Gcorgo E., 80 Dearborn st.\nColvln, William II., 1 15 Dearborn it\nCornenii, David E., Htock Exchango Uldg.\nCorwlth, Charles It., 04 Washington st.\nFarwcll, John A., 142 H. Clark st.\nFisher, Lucius O., Polk and Plymouth place.\nFltsslmons, Clias., Tacomn Bldg.\nFox, Leo, Hecurttr Bldg.\nFullerton, Chos. W., 04 Dearborn it\nGarrlty, Patrick L., 1 21 4 Masonic Temple.\nGnylord, Frederick, 173 Dearborn at\nGiles, William A.,04 Borden Block.\nGrcve, Charles. "The Fair."\nGreeley, Hamuel 8., 822 Opera House.\nHallbcrg, L. Gustave, 110 Ln Hallo at.\nHamllne. John II., The Temple.\nHandy, Henry II., Block Exchange.\nHarris, Hamuel It., 32 N. Clinton it\nHiiyne, William J 423 Dearborn it\nmini, iiarvcy i., wt wnsiungion st.\nHutchinson, Chas. I. .. Corn Exchango Bank.\nJacobs. William V., N. Y. Life Bldg.\n C. Porter, Ashland Block.\nLay, A. Tracy, Chamber of Comment\nLerens, Thlcs J 172 Washington at.\nLcltcr.Lcvl 'A., 81 Clark at.\nLowciithal, Her I hold, Hccurlty Bldg.\nMcCormlck, It Hall. 84 La Hallo at.\nNelson, Walter C, 100 Washington st.\nPeabody, Francis II. 104 Dearborn at.\nPerce, LcGraml W., 323 The Rookery.\nPike, Eugcno H., 304, 104 Dearborn at.\nPorter, Washington, Hartford Bldg.\nPrlndlvllle, Redmond, 317 Htock Ex. Bldg\nRlckcords, Gcorgo E., 107 Dcarborb at.\nRosenberg. Julius, 104 Dearborn st.\nRyerson, Martin A., Chamlicr of Commerce.\nHcaverns, Gcorgo A.. 187 Rlatto Bldg.\nHheldon, Theodore, Borden Block.\nHmlth, Byron L., 103 La Hallo at\nHpooncr, Frank E., 8 50 Marquette Bldg.\nHtarbuck, James M Rlalto Uldg.\nHtowart, Archibald A., Htock Exchange.\nThornton, Charles 8., Major Ulock,\nWalker, Henry II., Tacomn Uldg.\nWheeler, Augustus W Block Ex. Bldg.\nWlllouftjiby. Charles L 30 La Halle at\nYsggy. 1 .0VI W., Lake Forest, 111.
061cf62ae56e4d31fa330896f1df9f8a THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.5013660885954 29.949932 -90.070116 " My Dear Sir-The Courant of Stanrday did\nnot reach me until this morning, and I embrace\nthe earliest opportunity to thank you for promptly\nexpressing your disbelief in the atatemeats grow-\nihg out outthe sale of the iron-clads Catawba and\nOneota. For your own satisfaction let me briefly\nexplain to you the other side of the story, stating.\nhowever, that there is no charge of 'stealing'\nagainst either the secretary, the assistant secre-\ntary, or the chief of the bureau who consummated\nthe sale-it is only of so arranging matters as to\nprqvent other bidders than those who purchased\nthe vessels from obtaining them-in other words.\nof favoritism, or want of good administration of\nexecutive duties.\n" These vessels, with six others exactly like\nthem in every respect, were appraised and ad-\nvertised according to law. When the bids were\nopened it was found that for these two vessels\nthere were six bidders, and, of course, high-\neat offer was promptly acoepted, and the bidder\nnotified to make a deposit, as required by the ad-\nveriisement. This, of course, released all other\nbidders from any obligation, expressed or im-\nplied, to stand by their offers. Nothing we\nheard from the highest bidder, and as the depart-\nment was anxious to obtain as much as pouihle\nfor the vessels, it no'ified the next highest bidder\nthat he could have them at his bid; but he, too,\nfailed to respond.\n"All the remaining bidders were then Informed\nthat it they desired the vessels at the prices named\nby them, they must make a deposit of the re.\nquired percentage within the time specified in\nthe advertisement, and were distinctly informed,\nas appears by the published correspondenoe, that\n'should more than one party make the deposit,\nthe boats will be awarded to the highest bidder,\nand the amounts deposited by the others re-\ntonned. '
11098ab581036e3e3443f75c807baf02 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1911.015068461441 36.620892 -90.823455 He wasn't long and came back look-\ning wonderfully young and clean. Tbe\nmall had Just arrived and I bad spent\na few minute over my letter before\nI also found the bathroom, following\nbis direction It waa without excep-\ntion tbe boat I have ever been In.\nand. to my surprise, the big porcelain\nbath waa half full of tepid water, and\na set of clean, newly warmed towels j\nhung on tne rau. 1 toot wnar tne\ngods gave and asked no questions, but\nI wanted more cold water and ex-\nperimented unsuccessfully with vari-\nous levers on tbe wait As a Inst hope\nI attacked a cart wheel affair on the\nfloor and after a stiff struggle man-\naged to turn It ' A flood of cold water\ngushed in one side of the bath,\nand It waa all I could do to wrench\nthe wheel around and stop the flow.\nAsIdidsolightcameuponmeina\nflash. This wa th prince's bntb. pre-\npared for him a second time by his\nobsequious valet It was tbe glorious\ncertainty of the fact that made me\nthat bath aa I have never enjoyed\na bath before or sine. Tbe cheap\nEnglish tourists were one np on bis\naerene highness, after all. Still. I\nadmit, when I had finished tabbing I\nlost no tlm In getting back to the\nfourth floor again. I told Parker the\ngreat news, and w were Just discuss-\ning It with rapture when WUks came j\nIn, looking supremely dejected for tb\nfirst time on the tour.\n"Tbe bathing place Isn't open." be\nanarled.
48561e855a56de675d0c0c88e046bacb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.3246575025369 39.261561 -121.016059 The committee lind that Rowe lias a judg-\nment obtained by him against the Tabic Moun-\ntain Water Company, in Calaveras county, for\nthe sura of over fourteen thousand dollars;\nthere is also evidence that lie let Wm. Neely\nJohnson, a brother of the Governor, have over\nsix thousand dollars some time in June 185G,\nand at different time# smaller amounts to Jas.\nM. Estell. These transactions are somewhat\nlarge for a clerk in the Treasurer's office. A\ncommittee of the Assembly collided the money\nin the Treasury on the l3thof January, and\nfound therein $130,107. It appears that a large\namount of this money hud been trausfored tern,\npnrarily from certain bunks in Booramcuto to\nthe vaults of the Treasury, so that there would\nbo no deficiency when the count should be made.\nThe committee handle the Hoard of Examin-\ners without gloves. It is made the duty of this\nHoard, which consists of the Governor, Secre-\ntary of State, and Attorney General, to count\nthe money in the Treastn y as often as once in\neach month, mid to publish a statement thereof\nin two daily papers. The Hoard neglected to\nperforin their duly in this respect, assigning ns\na reason that the Controller would not assist\nthem in examining his hooks, and they were\nconsequently unable to tell wlmt amount should\nbe in the Treasury at uny particular time. Hut\nif the Hoard had performed their duty, the Con-\ntrollers books might, have been subsequently\nexamined, they would have shown whut\nought to have been in the vaults at the time the\ncounts were made. It was not the duty of the\nHoard to count the money in the Treasury on\nthe condition that the Controller exhibited his\nbooks. The count was a distinct mutter, and\nwus designed to furnish a landmark by which it\ncould be ascertained whether money Imd been\nimproperly taken from the Treasury. The ex-\ncuse offered by the Hoard for neglecting to com-\nply with the law, Is evidently a mere pretext,\nand only aggravates the offense, lliul they\ndone their duty the injury to the .State caused\nby the illegal use of the money in the Treasury\nwould in all probability have been averted.\nTho committee recommend that the suit which\nbus Iwcn commenced against Itowc, restraining\nhim from paying the money on the July cou-\npons, lie withdrawn. He has executed a bond\nfor the payment of the money in New York. If\nthe Injunction should lie retained Ills bondsmen\nwould set up tlie defense that Rowe was re-\nstrained from paying the money at the suit of\nthe State, and this would no doubt bo held suf-\nficient to discharge them. If tho money is paid\naccording to agreement in New York it will\nextinguish so much of the State debt, which\nsooner or Inter will have to be paid. D«t if it\nis not paid tho State can pursue her remedy on\nthe bonds and against Rowe personally.
148254238b7f34159bd4ea636a847dbf THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.0123287354136 29.949932 -90.070116 SINOlLAe CnASEAND DacIrtoN. - Tbe Providence *\nBuletin gives the particulars of a case which was\nti d in the Court of trobate of North Prov4-\ndence, wherein certain parties, relatives of th*\nrespondent, preyed that some asutable perso\nmight be appointed guardian over his estate. Th\nr seondent s an old gentleman, who is we\nknown, oandwho, through a long hife of industr\naod self-denial, has accumulated a large propert.\nmostly in real estate. He is seventy-six years\nage. The evidence of the petitioners went to show\ntiat the respondent had at one time demad.e\ntent of a tenant after it had been once paid; tha\nat another time he watered his horre in the after.\nnoon of a certaoin day, forgetting that he e\nwatered him in the morning of the same day\nthat another time, when he and his family wert\ngoing "down the river," he forget the time thp\ncars started: at another time he gave one of hit\nfsmly $5 to pay for the ire of a horse and ca\ntIage, and did not ask for chage (pr nearly half\nan hour afterwards; at another timehe let his wite.\n wifej have a briallot for one of her\ncLildren that had died, and received for it only\n$10, when it was worth something more. At an-\nother time he asked a man twice about the coo\na ruction of a pair of steps; that at another time\nhe made out a rent bill for $5 to, when it ought tt\nhave bean$ti. and lost ;0 cnuT. The reupotleni\nshowed that he had been careful of his property\nthat the petitioners were the only persons who hb\nreduced ste amount in any antMttal way, as it ha,\nbeen spent for their -edneation and etabliehmen\nin business ; and he declared that they weremng\ning about him like vultures, determined to har\nbi property-which is considerable-withot\nwait rg for his desth, and the pending attempt t4\ndivesth m of the c areof his allairs was caused b\nhis re ural to turn over that property to petition\nera b- deed of trust, or in some other manne\nIThecourt, greatly to public surprise, appointed\nguardiao, but the matter will go to the -uprem\nCo't rt. The trial created much public interee\nand sympathy for the old man.
2bd274936a52858237d514adf0a89b2b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.0479451737697 40.063962 -80.720915 Senate Hill No. 30, a bill authorising\nthe Governor to provide the necessary\narticles for furnishing the State Capitol\nand appropriating money to pay tho\nsame, was read for the first time, and, on\nmotion, was laid on the table.\nOn motion of Mr. Newlon. the rules\nwere stiHpended in order to take up Joint\nResolution No. 4, acknowledging tho\nliberality and enterprise of the citizen*\nof Wheeling in providing the Capital\nbuilding for the use of the State, and the\nresolution was adopted.\nMr. Newlon was appointed to inform\nthe Houm of Delegates of the adoption\nby the Senate of the same.\nMr. Dennis retried from the Commit*\ntoe on tho Judiciary Senate bill No. ii -j,\nauthorizing the formation of corpora*\ntioiu for the pur|x>se of constructing\nbooms and for the purpose of sto|i*\nping boats, rafts, logs, Ac.\nAlso (Senate Bills Nos, 211 and 12, wiLh\nthe recommendation that they be rejected\nAdopted. And reported Senate Bill No.\n31, with the recommendation that it pan*.\nMr Looinis introduced Senate Bill No.\n33, a bill providiog for the appointment\nof an inspector of illuminating oils, anil\nprescribing his duties, iieferred to the\nCommittee on the.Judiciary.\nMr. Scott introduced Senate bill No.\n31, to amend and re-enact section 14 of\nchapter 139 of the Code, in relation to\n1m pendens. Referred to the Committee\non Judiciary; alio Senate bill No. 515, to\nprovide for compulsory education in the\nStale of Went Virginia. Referred to tlie\nCommittee on Education.\nMr. Dennis introduced Senate hill No.\n30, a hill to prevent attachment* hy nonresidents
15bdd22c75c643b91dce922971e8484a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.3356164066463 40.832421 -115.763123 lloiiril wi re ki |>t informed of the coliili-\nIioii ol alfnirn. In the curly |>art of l>e-\ncemlicr, I ree* iveil u letter Irom l»r.\nIlnrri«, In which ho doubted the pro¬\npriety of longer retaining the Kcrviees\nof I'r >f. (llunoux. I answered ninl fully\nconcurred with him in the matter, but\nwrote that a< he wan employed by the\ninoil'h, I did nol see how, ill the ulweiieo\nof liny ilerelietioii <d duly, wecoul I dis¬\ncharge him lieft 'i e the etui of the mouth.\nAt the expiration ol that time the <h -\np.irlnifiil was cImhciI, mid has not since\nI" en impelled. If rarriugton has ever\nmade n dem.itid for an investigation\nnpon any chaise, i xc.pt that ol having\ntampered with the n-li'iol Kirls (ii chary\nthat lie admitted tlimugh his attorney,\nin njH'tt Court, n vcre\\i»t«l, in Ins\ndiseased imagination), I have never\nlieuid of it. Iltlt is the present Hoard,\nor was the old one, mi I r any obliga¬\ntions I i oc-upy Die I i Hi" of it* nieinliers,\nfor wliicli they receive no compensation,\nin the investigation of any charges eon-\ntailifil ill that Ii I > r? lie wns lint in llic\nemploy of the old llourd when tho letter\nwas wrilt. li, and he has never ls-en em¬\nployed hy the new. lie occupied the\nfame position a i any other stranger who\nwas all i.pplii nnt for the position of\n1'rincipn). I lnlieve.1 he would lie an\napplicant, and as a member of the\nHoard, Wrote II letter to one of the other\nmembers, in which I expressed my opin¬\nion of his ccpacity as a teacher, and his\nintegrity as n man.
4080405666edb430a8f5de737f8ad859 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.5027396943176 39.745947 -75.546589 enough means to buy a large farm on\nBohemian Manor, to which he retired\nIn 1846, Under John Hall's manage­\nment the building was doubled in ca­\npacity. He remained four years and\ngave way to John Foster in 1850. who\nwas in charge until 1855. In the lat­\nter year Charles Allmond became pro­\nprietor, and under his management\nit was a very popular hostelry He\nwas followed by Miller & Harlan, the\nsenior partner being Samuel Miller,\nwho formerly was proprietor of the.\nWashington House, and the junior\npartner being J, Marshall Harlan,\nMiller remained hut a short while,\nwhen Harlan became sole proprietor\nand he In turn sold out to Benjamin\nC. Pearce. After Pearce came J.\nPusey Smith, and at the death of the\nlatter. Isaac C. came, into con­\ntrol In 1867, and continued until the\ndemolition of the building In 1871.\nThe old Indian Queen Hotel prop­\nerty was sold in 1871 and the next\nyear Its life as a hotel ended. The\nnew owners were the Artisans' Sav­\nings Bank and the First National\nRank. Prompted by the feeling that\nWilmington needed a first class hotel,\nthe Clayton House was projected and\nSt named for the distinguished Dela­\nwarean and statesman, John M. Clay­\nton. It was completed In 1873 and\ncost over $200,000 . Its completion\nmarked a new era in Wilmington ho­\ntels. Several men prominent in Wil­\nmington and vicinity were managers\nof the Clayton House, the last being\nHarry Bothman, who commenced in\n1897 and was manager up until rc-\nsently.
2e912b990feb8a49405a40fca91af228 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1909.3082191463725 36.620892 -90.823455 power and an apparent utter disregard\nof the money that comes from the tax\npayers of the State are the dominating\ncharacteristics of the present Governor,\nDemoorats in the. Legislature and others\nfamiliar with tbe facts as they exist\nmean to let tbe voter of Missouri know\nYhis, and feel ur that then the mis- -\ntaken popularity on which Hadley rode\ninto efflce will excite no more interest\nor admiration than that ot any of the\nlpng line of RepuWlpan candidates' tor\nthe Uovernorship, all of whom were lust\na worthy, but not so lucky a Hadley.\nThey believe with reason that the Had-\nley Press Pureau will not long be so\nactive a it ha been lately. Then the\ncollapse, like any other air-- machine\nwith it gas g&ne, will come.\nThe difference on the rate question\nbtween Geneia,Mu)or and the Gover-\nnor are elean cut, and, when known,\nadmit ot only one construction. Stand-\ning on the high ground that tbe law of-\nficer of the State eannot comprise with\nanybody when it involves a violation of\n law, General Major took and held\ntbe position that he had no favor to\ngive to, or ask of, the railroad. The\nlaw which had atarted all tbe litigation\nwas, be said, still In tbe courts, and.. it\nwas only tbe duty of tb transportation\ncompanies to continue to carry passen\nger, those who cannot afford to pur\nchase two thousand mile of mileage,\nas welt a those who can, till the matter\nin dispute le Anally adjudicated.. Gov\nernor Hadley contended for a oompro\nmise that would bav allowed tome\npeople to ride for two and one- ha- lf\ncent per mile, While the great majority\nwould pay tbe old rate ot three oente.\nIt was General Major's opinion at the\nsonferences, and is still, that th road\nwill not dare to restore the old passen\nger rate, and la 'the event that they do\nhe makes no concealment of tbe faot\nthat he will at once institute quo\nwarranto proceeding to compel them'\nto desist, and to show eause why they\nshould not be adjudged guilty\nIng the anti-tru- st
11fa8d1fb25180e0ca9530eb042dd67b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1871.4342465436328 37.561813 -75.84108 latter, instead of going home, turned in\nanother direction, and meeting a young\nman who was in waiting with an ex-\npress, the party got in and drove off.\nAs this was at quite a late hour, the\ngentleman (who is intimate with the\nfamilies of both girls) thought he would\ncall the next day to ascertain if the par-\nents knew where their daughters were,\nand found, to his amazement, that both\ntho girls had left home early the eve-\nning previous, each telling their parents\nthey were going lo stay with tho other,\nand both families rested in security, not\ndreaming of the deception practised up-\non them. The resnlt of tbe gentleman's\nvisit satisfied him that both of the girls\npassed the entire night away from home\nwhere, we cannot say and their par-\nents doubtless thought themselves us\nlittle liable to be deceived as the parents\nof any other daughters in the city.\nOf course, the girls that are led astray\nare but few, comparatively speaking,\nbut the number be greatly iucreased\nif parents do not exercise greater cau\ntion, and cirrb in time tho tendency to\n"fastness" and habitual promenading of\nthe streets, with no other object in view\nthan of seeing and being seen.\nThe danger of permitting these street\nparades does not arise from the fact that\nthe girls themselves, at first, have any\nulterior object in view, other than to be\ngazed at, but comes from the fact that\nby thus parading they attract the atten-\ntion of certain men, the height of whose\nambition would be to effect their ruin ;\nand they deliberately seek to effect it by\nleading the girls on step by step first\nby throwing themselves in their way\nuntil they become well enough known,\nby sight, to form a speaking acquaint-\nance, and, from this, progress to "hand-\nkerchief flirtations," and from this to\ngreater lengths, until, by the "romance"\nof tbe affair, the girls are persuaded to\ntake those steps which speedily result\nin their undoing.\nTyke warning in time.
fb9211fd77f62008323326f38d3abe2e PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.6068492833588 31.960991 -90.983994 In assuming the control of the Herald, the\npresent proprietor sot forth in a brief paragraph,\nthe motives and principles by which he would\nbe governed, as the Editor of a public journal.\nCommencing at the dullest and most unfavora­\nble season of theyear, and somo time before the\nclose of the present volume, wo deemed it ad­\nvisable to defer issuing a prospectus until by\nthe publication of four or five numbers, our\nreaders might judge correctly of our course and\nability, and approve or reject at pleasure.\nThe first volume of our paper is now nearly\ncompleted, and the success which has attended\nit, warrants the assertion that the Herald is\npermanently established. In the second volume\n(soon to commence) it i3 our intention to carry\nout the principles avowed in our first number—\nto make the Herald mteresting and useful as a\ncounty paper, by devoting a large portion of its\ncolumns to general news and agricultural mat­\nters. So far as politics are concerned, we shall,\nas before stated, advocate aud support \ndoctrines and Whig principles to the best of our\nhumble ability, and until the ensuing November\nelection, we shallopenly war against the odious\ndoctrine of repudiation—believing the defence\nand protection of our State honor paramount to\nany and all other considerations—ashamed as we\nure of tho degraded position which our State\nnow occupies—of the contempt and scorn hurl­\ned upon her by honest men of every political\ncreed; but sustained and cheered by the belief\nthat the moral honesty of our citizens is yet un­\ntainted and pure—that they have been misled\nand blinded by designing men, we shall spare no\neffort in our exertions to enlighten, instruct\nand warn them of the dangerous consequen­\nces of this dishonest doctrine—joining ourselves\nwith the patriot band now warring manfully a-\ngainst it, we will aid, so far as in us lies,in tear­\ning away tho veil from this hideous Mokan-\nnah, who, in the sacred name of Democracy,\nhas reared the altar of Repudiation among us,\nand calls upon us to worship at his unholy\nshrine.
11a9e5259902d2db5601efacda817441 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.4561643518518 41.875555 -87.624421 The most amazing stupidity conceiv-\nable of any peoplo with foreheads Is\nthat they should allow their supply\nof food to pass Into tho bands of ono\nspeculative Interest, says Charles Ed-\nward Russell lu n powerful article\nwritten by him In the Appeal to Ilea\nsou. You can understand how a care\nless community might tolcrnto a mo-\nnopoly of somo things, how it might\ncuduro to havo its transportation, for\ninstance, or its electric light, control-te- d\nby ouo ownership, for men can\nlive without sleeping cars or nre\nlamps; but that It should tolcrato n\nmonopoly of tho primal necessity of\nfowl Is beyond comprehension and\nwithout precedent. Evcu naked sav-\nages have uniformly been too wlso\nfor that, and the only nation that has\never submitted to such a monstrous\ncondition Is our owu.\nFrom a thousand Illustrations of tho\nInjuries wo all from this Idiotic\narrangement let us cite one.\nThcro is no way of communicating\ndlseaso to tho human body surer tbau\nthrough Infected meat tissue. Some\nof tho worst and most destructive ba-\ncilli that prey upon mankind nro com-\nmon among the nnlmnls bo eats for\nfood. Cows have tuberculosis nnd\nspread vast quantities of It through\ntho human population. It is so com-\nmon among cows that tho wlso nnd\ntho forowarucd will use nono but ster-\nilized milk. What is "hog cholera"\namong swltio Is merely typhoid fovcr\nIn meu. Trlcbinca In hogs polsous\nhuman belugs. Both theso diseases\nare common nmong swlno.\nWorse than nil these, nnd more\ndeadly, Is another fact that is seldom\ncommented upon becnuso It is too np\npallln,; to dwell much upon. What Is\ncalled "lumpy Jaw" In cattlo Is simply\ncancer. Tho germs of cancer aro\ncommunicable
14dd701f43bcb69d13fe6dbd7bbd7311 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1904.8647540667375 43.624497 -72.518794 Chester in said County hns duly lilcd\ntition to tho Cnurt of Chanccry in am\nsaid County aKaiust Hcnry A. lti'.nl,\nHcury M. JJennett, alias Mrs. Latira\nIjcr, the Gilleu Printins CoiupaiiT\nJaiuos H. McConuoll, settinu fortli Ih;\ntho Urst day of Jnnunry, A. D. 1103\nTTnnrv A. Head o Chester in tho O\nof Windsor duly executed to said Heii\nHoldon a mortpaKO deedof cortain lail\nuato in saul unestor, anu in sam pci\nfnlly doseribed, said lnortgngo beiiiR\ntn KPfiirn tlifi iinri'hnsn monov of\nises nnd duly reeorded; conditioued w\npaymont ot tlie sum ot louriecu iw\nriolliirs. Riiccifled in n certnin nron:\nuoto bearing dato on the first day ol\nuary. A. U. 1903, by llio saul lleK\nHead, , duly executed and payabloh\nHonrj ii. iiomen or oruer wuu micn\nnnallv. from and after fivo vears aft\ndato of said note, which notc l\nbeen liaid nccordini; to tho touor an\nof the same nnd is now justly due\ning: anu turiner couuuioueu ns in vt\ntiou fullv set forth. to wit. iu th\nof insuranco, which conilitiona id\nlipnn nnimilinil with; nnd lurlher I\nfnrl.li tlmt. Mrs. Tlenrv Bennett. aliiu\nLaurn tiigger, residing In the State oll\nHacihnsetts. tho Gillcn Printinir Conl\nin tho State of Now York,. ond Jaiuftl\nConnell, residing in partsunKuown, ii\niu tho Stato ot Alissouri, eiaim soiiiei\nat In Biiul TiinrtfTftf.fid nrflmiReH! nnd M\nset.ting forth that upon said laud\nprcmises aro n dwelfing house, rfl\nwoodshed. horso barn, cattle banl\nother buildings, and that said morl\nand liis assigns navo vacaica sam prei\nand thnt no person or porsons now cl\nsaul dweliing uouse; and turtuor\nforth thnt said ureimses are scant\nfor the paymout of tho said note anf
45f57115a5ed4002fdf4bdc1fda0516d THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.976775924661 39.290882 -76.610759 manned at Rlatamoras and despatched to nego-\ntiate an arrangement with them. On its arri-\nval at Corpus Christi, there was only one ves-\n; sel in signt, a sloop at anchor, which was\n' boarded and found to be a trading vessel. She\ni was suspected to be a smuggler,and thereupon,\nj an outlaw named Gonzales, the commander ot\nI the Mexican party, boarded the sloop, raaue an\nassault upon the mate, stabbed hun several\n| times, and killed him on the spot. Tne crew\n| (three in number) were then sent ashore anu\nbutchered. The master of the slsop was on\n, shore at the time of the occurrence. The mast j\ni and rigging of the sloop were cut away, her\n: anchor weighed, and she drifted into the gull\nbefore a strong breeze. Our informant in Mata-\ninoras says there is good reason to believe that\nshe was an American vessel,and that the Amer-\nican Consul investigatiug the matter with\ngreat vigilance. Gonzales and lusksng were\nat large about the town.\nThe latestnews at ''atatnoras from the Tex-\nians who had joined the Federalists, was, that\nthey had not returned to Texas, but were en-\ncamped 406 strong in some ofthe passes near\nthe Rio Grande; and were determined to collect\nthe debts due them from the Mexicans before\nthey would leave the country.\nWe learn that the commercial house of\nMessrs. Rubio, at San Louis de Potosi, have en-\ntered into an arrangement with the Mexican\nGovernment, by which they are entitled to im-\nport into Matamoras merchandize to the\namount of one million ot dollars, the duties on\nwhich will amount to over $300,000 . The\nobject on the part of the Government, in grant-\ning to them this permission, is believed to be to\naccumulate funds at that point to defray the\ncoming expenses of xhe crusade against Iexas.\nTh.-
105160037d2c4d7644f9c1a6b8fd9cd0 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.1301369545915 37.305884 -89.518148 where you find it is a surer proposi-\ntion than any specification of a mining;\nexpert. Let me give you a couple of in-\nstances. In the winter of '97 I was\nworking near Gold Hill in the El Do-\nrado district and one Sunday I was at\nthe cabin of Dr. Carper, of my town,\nwho was treating a lame shoulder I\nhad. After the professional part of the\ncall was over, the doctor and I, who\nwere old friends, were talking of min-\ning, he being in it himself more than,\ndoeloring, and I told him we ought to\ngo over on the opposite hill, next to a,\nclaim worked by a man named Lancas-\nter, and stake off a couple of chums.\nBut he would not have it my way at all,\nand insisted that if there was any gold\nthere, somebody would have claimed\nthe territory, which did not have s\nstake on it except Lancaster's. I listened\nto him and we didn't stake a claim, but\nin June followisg the doctor paid $10,-0 - 00\nfor four claims, each ICO feet square,\noa the same site, and out of 32 square\nfeet of one of them he took $22,000 , and\nhe is still working them. The same\nyear at Christmas he was feeling pret-\nty good, and the day before Christmas\nhe told his brother and a couple of men\nwho were for him that he\nwanted to give them a Christmas pres-\nent, and they could go into the mine\nand get a panful of dirt for whatever it\nmight be worth. The three tock hint\nup and went hunting for the richest\ndirt they could find. One of them did\nnot want to act the hog, he said, but\nhe overcame his scruples snd got into\nthe richest ground, as the others did,\nand when they bad panned their selec\ntions, one man got $32, one got $113,\nand the brother hit it for $164. Think\nof that for a panful, when a man can\npet rich at it if it pays him a dollar a,\npan regularly. The pay streak in this\nmine is seven feet thick and in places\nthe gold actually glitters in the gravel.\n"But I am getting ahead of my story.\nOn the following Sunday I was with\nthe doctor again, and I called his atten\ntion to another unoccupied hillside\nwhere he could stake claims, and again\nthe doctor turned me down. He in\nsisted that I was throwing away my\nright in the district to stake a claim in\nthat locality, and for a second time I\nlistened to him. On the same spot that\nseason a luckier man took $50,000 out of\nhis claim and afterward sold it for $60, -0G- 0.\nThe claim I finally got did not lose
69d5c13a5a75c1109436d39c4be4103b THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.7554644492511 38.729625 -120.798546 Clerks Office of the Hon. Dlotriet Court of\ntho llth Judicial District, in and for El Dorado\ncounty, on a Judgment rendered on the fifteenth\nday of September, A. D. ISSO, In favor of the\nEureka Canal Company, and nglluit David Zelilo,\nWm. Giannini, Joacph Callo,FalliBarnaidy. Felli\nBarnaidy, Jr , A. Badoni, F. Iapy, O. Gabby, B .\nDalfuck and John Kaetally, fur the sum of onn\ndollar, damage, with intercat thereon at the rate\noften per cent, per annum, from the fifteenth of\nSeptember, A. D. ISSO , together with the sum of\ntwo hundred and silty-seven M-KM dollars, eoate\nof cult, and accruing costs, I bava levied upon and\nwill espose to public isle, st the Court House, In\nIke city of Plsccrville,\nOn the 13th day ofOctober, A. D. 1860,\nAt II oclock, A . M. , nil the right, title, Interest\nend of the eeld David Zelilo, Wm. Giannini,\nJoseph Colio, Fells Barnaidy, Palli Barnaidy, Jr. ,\nA. Badoni, F . Papy, O- Gabby, B. Dalfuck and\nJohn Has tally, of, In and to tbo following deaeri bed\nproperty, lying and being in Diamond Springe\nTownship, and Stata of California, to wit > A\nmining claim located an Clear Creek, commencing\nat a dam near the Pleasant Valley Quarta Mill,\nrunning dawn and extending aerose the bed and\nbanks of raid Creak about two thousand feet. Said\nclaim is known is Zeiglio ft Co.’» claim. Alan,\nImmrdiately below and adjoining sold Zeglio ftCoa\nclaim, a mining claim known na Felix Barnlndy\nft Co.’» claims, running dawn and extending across\nthe bed and banks of said Creek a distance of about\ntwo thousand feet, to where the Wisconsin and\nPleasant Valley raid crosses said Creek, together\nwith all Improvement» thereon.
0b26401dd344787c17e319c76d151780 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.1575342148656 47.478654 -94.890802 Sec 2 Applications for license to still intoxicating Honors within tqe incorporated limits\nof the village of Shevlin shall lie In writing, ami shall designate the place where such busi-\nness is to la) curried on. Upon receiving such application the village recorder Shall cause a\nnotice of such nupllciitlon. containing the name of the applicant, a description of the prem-\nises, as slated In the application and the time when the same will be heard, published in the\n(itlVlal newspaper In IIK> said village, at least two weeks Immediately proceeding the time of\nsuch heating, and In easo there 1MS no newspaper In said village then in some newspaper of\ngeneral circulation printed and published in Beltrami county. Any person may appear at\nthe time slated and object*-to the granting of such license, and if It shall appear to the village\ncouncil thai the applicant has knowingly violated any of the laws of this state or the ordi-\nnances of this village regulating the Ilquor traffic, within the preceding such application,\nor anv law. relating to the sale of intoxicating liquors to minors, habitual drunkards or in-\ntern uerule drinkers, after receiving a notice forbidding such sale, within live years preceding\nsuch application, the village council shall refuse to grant the license. In case where applica-\ntion is made (here shall 1>e deposited with the village treasurer the sum of ten (10) dollars to\ndefray the expenses of publishing the notice of application as herein provided, which amount\nshall IK- deducted from the amount of license fee to be paid by the applicant, in case license\nis granted and taken out by the applicant; Incase, however, the applicant fails to takeout\nlicense after the same Is granted said sum shall be forfeited to the village, and in case the\nvillage council shall reject such application and refuse to grant a license to such applicant.\nthe whole amount of such deposit shall bo returned to the applicant, less the cost of publlca-\ntiouof such notice of application.
138cf7985cd2ddfcf066785c1971d368 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.6926229191965 40.063962 -80.720915 But true to their instinctive hatred <\nthe protective policy, they had 110\nturned their back upon him because h\nwould not desert his principles, and ha\nvirtually declared him a political outlav\nwithout standing or membership in tli\nDemocratic party. Mr. Kandall, a lii\nlong Democrat, bad declared the Mil\nbill an "un-American" bill and had vote\nagainst it as such. And now all tli\noilico holders and-nil the Bourbons an\nbrigadiers were busily engaged in rea«\niug this veteran Democrat out of tli\nparty. Cleveland's defeat will bo Rai\ndall s vindication, and after the Oth du\nof November you will sco the whol\nbread and butter brigade of Clevelan\nand Mills time servers once more pa;\ning homage to Randall.\nJs it not something remarkable, sai\nthe sneaker, that President Clevelan\nand brigadier Mills can lay down tli\nterms on which a man like Kaudall mm\nstay in or go out of party? Alludin\nto President Cleveland, lie asked who\npresident Cleveland that his message t\nCongress of December last should Fiav\nawakened such profound interest in Knj\nland in his election. Is he so deep\ntljinker, such a master of economi\nscience, so capable of instructing tli\nworld on a subject bo laminar 10 in\nBritish public, tnnt they hail him as\nhe was a discoverer of new ideas. Nc\nat all. lie is no such man. England\na unit for Cleveland's olection for a wel\nknown sinister purpose. She hails liii\nas the avant courier of Free Trade.a\nthe mnn who is striking a blow in th\ndirection of her hopes and wishes. Sh\nsays this man will tear a rail or two o\nthe .American fence that bars me oui\nand lie or some Democratic successor o\nhis will in due time tear down anothe\nrail, and after while another and anothe\nrail will disappear.
02b6c6acc35d39a685c00d9658d2ae29 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.3520547628107 46.187885 -123.831256 Section 3 of the act entitled : 4An act to\nprovide for the protection of the salmon\nfisheries of Alaska," approved March 2, 18S0,\nprovides that :\n"Section 3. That section 103G of the Re-\nvised Statutes of the United States is hereby\ndeclared to include and apply to all the do-\nminion of the United States in the waters\nof BehrlngSea, and it shall he the duty of\nthe President at a timely season In each\nyear to Issue his proclamation, and cause\nthe same to be published for one month at\nleast in one newspaper (if any such there\nbe) published at each United States port of\nentry- - on the Pacific coast, warning all per-\nsons against entering such waters for the\npurpose of violating the provisions of said\nsection, and he shall also cause one or \nvessels of the United States to diligently\ncruise said waters and arrest all persons and\nseize all vessels found to be or to have been\nengaged in any violation of the laws of the\nUnited States therein."\nNow, therefore, I, Bexjamix IIarrisox,\nPresident of the United States, pursuant to\nthe above recited statutes, hereby warn all\npersons against entering the waters of\nMehring Sea within the dominion of the\nUnited States, for the purpose of violating\nthe provisions of said section iOHS, Revised\nStatutes ; and I hereby proclaim that all\npersons found to be, or have been engaged\nin any violation of the laws of the United\nStates, in said waters, will be arrested and\npunished as above provided, and that all\nvessels so employed, their tackle, apparel,\nfurniture and cargoes will be seized and\nforfeited.
b312bc965878cd16e6bd57dd07048670 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.9795081650982 39.261561 -121.016059 Although over a dozen mattresses and\nsimilar articles were propped against the hole,\nit became impossible to withstand the pressure\n• of water. We commenced sheathing the ship\noutside witli large awning, which seemed to\nstop the h ak for a time. During nil this (lie\nhailing never ceased, but as we found the water\nincreased rapidly, the conviction was forced up-\n• on us that a second hole existed beneath the\nwater line. Notwithstanding throwing over-\n: board tiie cargo, and the continued bailing out,\n. the ship was sinking rapidly by the stern. Two\nlarge casks were then u>eu to bail the water,\nthe captain ami officers lending u helping hand\nwith the tackle. For a moment we thought the\nwater was decreasing, but it soon overpowered\nus. The bailing bad lasted bom 8 A. M., to 2\nI. M., and the men were exhausted from fatigue.\nThe captain then lowered th“ boats and em-\nbarked the passengers and crew. In order to\nbe prepared for the worst, a raft had been built\n•during the day with top masts, spurs, cabin\ndoors, boards, chicken Coops, Ac., and on it\nWere placed two barrels of wine, two puncheons\nof water, and various kinds of eatables, suffi-\ncient to last tiie fifty persons placid upon it, nt\n■least a month. In the first cutter some\ntwenty-five persons, amongst w liom were the\nfirst and second engineers, the steward, hi? ne-\nphew, all the cabiu servants, (ton iu number);\nthis boat was under the command of the chief\nofficer, Mr. Roussell. This bout had oil board\ncompass, charts, chronometers, a sextant, and\nprovisions for two weeks, with complete set of\nnew sails. A second boat, same size of the for-\nmer, took off twenty-five persons; she had tiie\nsame amount of food, nautical instruments and\nnew sails ns the first cutter, aud was nnder the\n•Command of the two sea captains. A life boat,\ncontaining nbout twenty persons, and having,\nlike the other, u complete set of sails, provis-\nions and instruments, was placed under the or-\nders of Mr. Dublot, third Lieutenant. Another\nlife boat, containing eighteen persons, withpro-\n• visions for two weeks, was placed under the\ncommand of deponent. The various boats, once\nequipped. Were kept during ttio night in the\nneighborhood of the wreck, tiie Captain remain-\ning on board the latter w.th the Inst Lieuten-\nant, four peliy officers, stewardess, aud Messrs.\nGlairin and Boncstac, tiie Doctor and Purser.\nTwo yawls, which might each hold ix persons,\n**rere moored to the wreck. During the night\n•the life boat Commanded by Mr. Dublot, which\nhad been damaged at the moment of the collis-
035003a0a9b5484c6116cb1f25de5060 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.1191780504819 40.063962 -80.720915 Startling Theory lu Rtgnrtl to ttii\nCam by m WmI Virginia DalMtlrr.\nFriday evening that quiet and self-poa\nsed detective, Alf. W . Burnett, of Charles\ni, and chief of the Enreka Detectivi\n[ency, arrived in the city on bis way hotsi\nim Columbiana county, Ohio, where fo:\nu put three weeks he has been working u|\nno of incendiarism and burglary, result\n1 in the indictment of six persons. Th<\naiai Burnett was employed in this city b;\nmo of our insurance companies abou\n[hteeu nionts ago in working up a esse, am\nthat time formed the acquaintance of\n'ge number of our citiuns, who were glai\nsee him on the street again and be able t<\nako hands with him. A reporter of tbl\nper was aflorded an opportunity to tall\nth Mr. Burnett Saturday afternoon, and ii\no courve of the conversation asked bin\nlat his opinion of the Ashland horror o\ncember 24th was, ami if he thought the\naft and Neal, two of the alleged outraged\nid been properly sentenced.\nMr liurnett at once became animated am\nId: "Now, if you want to listen I'll tel\nhi just what 1 think of it. 1 was dowi\nere after the crime. I went out of pur\nriosity. I was not and am not intereste<\nengaged, but following np clues Is ui\nisiness, and I" followed one up then whici\nuU tne to believe that Ellis' confession is\nirofAcad lie: that Craft ami Nm«I urn lr\n and that three n 'groes are the rea\niirutfcra. You must know that Kills is\nnatic.one of those cranks who get an Ide\nto their heads and firmly believe that cei\nin things are so. He said one evening t\nr. Powell that he had somo evidence at t\n!io did the deed, but not enough to make\nse. A . reward had Men offered; the peopl\nre clNmoring for the conviction of aom\nie. You never bow anything like it.work\nops and everything else stooped and me\nire almost wild. An IT. 8. Marshal name\neltln heard of tho remark made by Kill:\nid ho with a partner, worked up thatstor\nleged to be Ellis' confession, and then go\nm in a room and pointing a revolver a\nm said ho would kill him if he did not cor\nbs. The result was that Ellis supplied tli\nlines of two men as innocent as you or I.\n"Since that time Ellis' wife has repeated!\niked him to toll the truth, which he wildl\nserta he has done. He is a deplorable loot\ng person, and one would readily say th«\n) was insane. In his confession he says thi\nj dressed before going to the door to w\nraft and Neal. Wny did he dress tirst? II\nife says he did not leave the house tlx\night. lie says that Craft made him go i\nie mouth of a revolver, and said thev wei\n>ing to rape the Thoiuas and Gibbon's sirl
5374d93d67669e300dca41c5f9442fda THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.1434425913276 39.261561 -121.016059 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, County or Ne-\nvada. ss. District Court of the 14th Judicial District\nof said State.\nThe People of the State of California, to JANES *.\nGRANT. Greeting:\nYou are hereby summened to appear and answer ta the\ncomplaint of C. A . PECK and W. C. COLEY , doing burn-\nneaa under name and atyle of Peck A Coley, filed again it\nyou. within ten daya from the service of thia writ, If\nnerved on you in thin County, within twenty daya if aarv-\ned on you In this District, and out of this county, and\nwithin forty days if served on yon in the State and out of\nthis District, in an action commenced on the 7th day of\nJanuary A. D . I860 in said Court to obtain a decree of\nthis Court for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage, bear-\ning date 3d day of November A. D . 1836 . executed by the\nsaid defendant to Alex. J . Johnson, and assigned to one\nN. B. Isaman and by said Isaman assigned to these plain\ntiffs, and for the sale of the premises therein, and in said\ncomplaint particularly mentioned and described, and the\napplication of the moneys arising from such sale to the\npayment of the amount due on a certain promissory note,\nset in said complaint made and delivered to said\nAlex. J . Johnson, and assigned to one N. B. Isaman, and\nby said Isaman assigned to these plaintiffs, bearing oven\ndate with said Mortgage and thereby intended to be se-\ncured, to wit : The sura of $J60 with interest from the\n3d day of November A. D . 1856 , at the rateof3){ per\ncent per month till paid ; and if any deficiency shall re-\nmain after applying all of said moneys properly ae appli-\ncable thereto, then that plaintiffs may have execution\ntherefor against the said Defendant, also that said defend-\nant and all and every person claiming by through or nn-\ndcr him subsequently to the date of Plaintiff*! mortgage\nand the commencement of this action, may be barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien and equity of redemp-\ntion in or to the said mortgaged premises, or any part\nthereof, and for such other or further relief, or both, in\nthe premises as may be just and equitable. And yon are\nhereby notified that if you fail to answer said complaint\nas herein directed, Plaintiff will take Judgment against\nyou therefor by default, together with all coats of salt,\nand also demand of the Court such other relief as is pray-\ned tor in Plaintiffs said complaint.\n(
15fbfa85e743bbf786a323a21f31ae02 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7630136669204 40.063962 -80.720915 balance will be paid them in currency.\nThe secretary reserves the right of with¬\ndrawing this proposal anytime before\nNovember 1, If he ahould wish to do so.\nThe terms of the loan are good for both\ngovernment and people, and the loan\nwill be readily and quickly taken.\nThe repudiation of the confederate\ndebt by the State of Alabama, must be\nregarded as one of the most important\nsteps in the direction of real and stable\nreconstruction of the Union. Congress\nhas deliberately, for the information of\nforeign holders, and to correct the hopo\napparently entertained by some, of\nthem, declared that the government\nwould, in no event, ever assume a dol¬\nlar of tho indebtedness that was con¬\ntracted in tho attempt to overthrow its\npower. It is proper that the States, to\nwhich alono they can possibly look for\npayment, should declare themselves in\nan explicit and authentic manner.\nThe importance of a full and settled\ndisposition of tho question of tho rebel\ndebt is second only to that of the sla¬\nvery question. So long as any hopo\nremains of the payment of the rebel\ndebt, so long as it has any value, be¬\nyond the poor paper on which it is bad¬\nly printed, there will be a powerful dis¬\nturbing element in our politics. South¬\nern men, holding largo amounts of tho\ncertificates, speculators who have\nbought them, almost for nothing, back¬\n by the money of English holders,\nwill league with northern demagogues\nfor legislation that will recognize,\nin part at least, the validity of the\ndebt. They will demand it, as the\ncondition of adequate taxation, for tho\ninterest of the national indebtedness;\nthey will appeal to the people of the\nnorth to repudiate the nutioual debt.\nthey will charge that it is held by great\ncapitalists and by incorporated institu-\ntions, that it is exempt from tho bur-'\ndens of State taxation that rest upon all\nother kinds of property, and that it is\nfor the benefit of the rich and for the\ninjury of the poor. By such appeals as\nthese, they will agitate the country,\nupon false issues, and may afreet the\npublic credit in)uriously. Wo should\nbe wise in time, and relieve the future\nfrom such dangers. The revolted\nStates should follow the example of\nAlabama; and until they do, they\nshould not be deemed to have given\nsatisfactory assurances of such loyal\ndisposition, as tits them for a share in\nfederal legislation. Mr. Sumner, with\na wise and statesmanlike foresight,\ndwells npon this point, in his Worces¬\nter speech, and requires tho renuncia¬\ntion of all liability for the rebel debt,\nas a necessary condition of reconstruc¬\ntion. His just and prudent views on\nthis subject will commend themselves\nto all those who desire a reconstruction\nthat shall not need to be reconstructed.
6eee7c0f38909904b806d4ed6e0e3640 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1913.3904109271944 36.620892 -90.823455 Olie eaat Of the fifth nrlnflnal marlrilsn\nLou one aad two ot the northeast quarter aad\ntbe eaat half of iota one and two of the aorta-we -\nquarter of eeotloa three, townahlp tweaty- -\nuinm, norca, range ons weac or me nrtn princi-\npal meridian, aad by which said aotlon plalntlg\naeaka to forever bar end preclude the aald de-\nfendanta and each of thani from eettlng ap any\nin te real or claim ha or to aald real aetata edrer-ael- y\nto aald plaintiff, and whlon eald action la\nreturnable to and triable on the rat dar of the\nneit regular term ef this omirt to be holden at\ntea oourtnouae in the olty of Doniphan, at the\ncounty ot Ripley, la the atata of Mieeoorl.oa the\nttrd day ot June, A. D., llt, at wUtoh tiara and\npiaoe eald aerendaata are reoulmd and ooa.\n to be and appear te anewer, plead or\nurmurwpiainiiRs mm petition otherwise tne\nallegations oonulned In aald petition will be tak-\nen aa confeeeed and Judgment rendered aeoord-In- g\nto the prayer thereof, forever barring and\nprecluding eald defendanta and each of them\nfrom ever hereafter eettlng ap aay oiaua sr title\nv Mam mu pivpvnr.\nTheRiettt WHTT DltwocaAV, publlshe\ntwnipnan. Klptey UOi.aty, Mlaaourl, havlag been\nuoaiKiiateii oy tns piaintia aiM aia attorn e1\nthe paper moat likely to give aotloe to the del\ndents of the pendancy of thla actios, It le her\nordered that a oodv of thla order ha nnbiia\nla aald Rirtjtv Covwrv DssockaT, oaoe a weak\nfor and during four weeks euooeeelvely the leal\nInsertion of eald order In aald aewapaper to be at\nleast thirty days before the Ant day ot the aext\nreguULr term ot thla inn,\n(ban.)
1771a2dd0546537bb203f212e76c2fb7 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.1301369545915 37.561813 -75.84108 the floor. My mother wished me to\ncome and kneel by her side. I did so.\n"My child," she said to me, and the\nbig tears were rolling down bercheeke,\n"you know what has caused all this.\nThis man was once as noble, and hap-\npy, and true, as man could be, but oh,\nseo how he has been stricken down.\nrromise mo, my ciiiia, u, promise,\nhere, before God and your dead fath-\ner, and your broken hearted mother,\nthat you will never, never, touch a\nsingle drop of the fatal poison that\nhas wiought for us all thin misery."\n"O, shipmates, 1 did promise, then\nand there, ail that mother asked, and\nGod knows (hat to this rnommt that\npromise has never been broken. My\nfather was buried, and some good,\nkind neighbors helped us through the\nwiuier. When the next spring came\nI work, and I earned something\nfor my mother. At length I found a\nchance to ship and I did so, and every\ntime 1 go home I have some money\nfor uiy mother. Not for the wealth of\nthe whole world would I break the\npledge that 1 gave my mother and my\nGod on that dark, cold morning. And\neven had I made no such pledge, I\nwould not touch the fatal cup, for I\nknow that I have a fond, doting moth\ner who would be made miserable by\nmy dishonor, and I would rather die\nthan bring more sorrow upon htr\nhead. Perhaps you have no mothers;\nand if you have, perhaps they do not\nUw t() you fwr support, for I know\nyou too well to believe that either of\nyou woud ever Mng d(JWI, a ,oVj\nmother's gray hairs in sorrow to the
4c877a0e360eee28f2a233771367d8f9 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6707649956993 39.290882 -76.610759 the Empress of China, which it will be remem-\nbered was expected at our last advices, had oc-\ncurred, and the tiadc was stopped for 15 days in\nconsequence, by edict. The market was quite\nbajp of country packed toa, and Canton tea was\nscarce and high. The vessels which arrived\nfrom this country with cotton cargoes, had ex-\nperienced some difficulty. Cotton is not specie.\nAll the ships, English and American, had obtain-\ned cargoes; which puzzles the Chinamen, as will\nbe seen from the follawing amusing edict:\nBeing especially appointed to the whole con-\ntrol of a special duty, we, Fu, acting Kwa ngch-\nowfoo, and Kung,who is waiting for the appoint-\nment of a Eunfoo, proclaim to the hong and oth-\ner merchants for their full information.\nWc have received orders from the superior of-\nficers to the following effect:\n"Since the English foreigners were driven from\nthe outer waters, their ships have successively\nsailed away over the foreign ocean; these cir-\ncumstances* the pilots have already examined\nand reported. Those ships that yet delay, an-\nchored Lintin and other places, are still not a\nfew, anil tratiorous natives and banditti boats,\ngradually and mutually collecting in groups,\nand mingling with the shipping, through inordi-\nnate desire of gain, become regardless of life, and\ncovetous of profit which (from the source it is\nobtained,) stinks. On these accounts the naval\ncommandant on the 27th day of the last moon\n(29th Feb.) collected his forces and made an at-\ntack with fire-rafts, to burn the banditti boats,\nseige the traitqrs, and Ijring them heforo the ma-\ngistrates for triaj: this is on record.\nAs we are about to take measures to expel the\nEnglish ships, wc arc really apprehensive that\nthe foreign ships of other nations, going and\ncoming, and being in the outer waters, are con-\nnected with and near to the English ships; it is\ntherefcie, pfqpqr. that \\vc should immediately\ndirect the hong merchants tq Uaqsiqit the qr T\ndcrstothe Americans, who are to forward them\nto the chiefs of every nation, thatthey may trans-\nmit the orders ta the foreign ships of every na-\ntion.
1ead2c5bc3c108f2df3bd9167e3c9e4a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.4808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 rhn distance Is about 1,000 miles, am\nshn makes her record time she wll\nat Tnku In six dnyB, about the sam<\nno that the Brooklyn arrives fron\n^nlla. These ships antl the Monad\nck are the only ones going to China\nAdmiral Crownlnshlcld pronounce:\nitruo tire report that the gunboat:\narietta, Princeton and several othe\nIps at Manila have been ordered ti\niku. There Is felt to be no need to\nem and moreover, with the whips nov\nider orders to sail Admiral Kerne:\n11 have a force which Is cor.alderet\nundantly able to meet every posslbli\ntiulremcnt. The Rlonadnock has\nrge complement of men, who can b\ned as n landing party, and It Is thl:\nthcr than her armament whlcl\nikes here ho availa4il:> at thin time.\nMaking1 Great \nrhe war branch of the government I\nsparing for any eventuality tlfut *nu;\nrive out of the Chinese situation. A\nited by one of the hlghout ortleers o\ne army, the scale of preparation*\na magnitude which would both Inter\nt and surprise the publlo. But, b\nded, the Information would be of evei\neater Interest and service to any for\njn foe which the United State* inc.;\ncalled upon to face within the nex\nw months, and for that reason then\nno purpose to make public the com\nte preparations making to meet ttv\nluting Issue. All that the otllelnls wll\ny In that both th- army and the navy\nthe occasion arises, will give a goo;\ncount of themselves.\nAdjutant General Corbln was at hi\n«k during the morning and afte
2ff7edd7bbdb59c426164335de2e82d3 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.3538251049888 29.949932 -90.070116 labitants of I)ominica, under the lead of their\nchief, wlho afterward ran away, made an expedi-\ntion to this island, captured the eruployte of the\nc aimants to it. destroyed to-ir works, and tore\ndown the American flag, for which they o-ight to\nhave been shot on the spot, and for which they\nawold have been hanged under any just adminia\ntration of international law. Having torn dawn\nour flag they took possession of the island, and\nafter a conaiderable.period toftime the Domtnioans\nleased the island to a New York company.\nThen the original discoverers so despoiled came\nto our governms at and asked that their employei\nmight be liberated, and they were liberated. They\na so aiked that they might be put back in piece.\nsaon of the island, and there they met with diffl\nculty, because putting them in possession of the\ni,.atd would set aside the New York company.\nAnd whether right fully or wrongfully, it has been\nvery hard for some years past to touch York\nfirms through the state department.\nILe question was, ct all the government inter.\nfre In this matter? The depostlt of guano was a\nIluited one, and this is almost the only island on\ntis side of the continent containing such a de.\nposit, and from its nearness to market It is very\nvluatble. As soon uas the New York firm got\nis-seesln n of it they ran ships there as fast as\nth, y ceuld, in order to carry the gianoall off bh-\nfIre this government should tnake any steps in\nfavor of the original discoverors.\nAfter hearing the facts of t'e case, I said I\nt ought it was a case in which the government\nonght to send out a ship of war, sot for the par-\npose of making war on any bdy, but fir the per-\niposeof saying, backed by nffl~cient force, "hands\noct: let no one carry away a lad of that guano\nuttil the title to this matter is determined bly the\nco-urts."
10e5f2120f1512725e4ab552b156aa5a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.4698629819889 40.063962 -80.720915 muti Is » fair rooreeanUtlvo of tlo\nltapabllon party o tho U»to «»<l «\nmlloct crodlt not only oil tho party but\non tho n'Hto I troll. No-hotter rcpruion-\nI 'ill vo delegation iv m ovor Kent from\nWcat Virginia to any nutionalIconvon-\nlion. Another iniiUko «>f tho tele-\n,-rflph wai In making mo »ny ovor fifty\nS( tho Ufty-fonr counties wi»re ropre-\nionted. It should have read about\nforty-llvo counties." I like to bo an ex¬\nact as poaslblo in iucli matters.\nIt waa good to bom old tlmo Democrats\npreipnt uxiA participating in tho con-\nvoution. Among tl> n moat prominent\nworo lions. John U. MoydandC. 1 .\nDorr, both of whom have roproieuted\n(ho Democratic parly in tho legislature.\nMV. Dorr lma boon for yean tho leader\nof tho Democratic party in ttebntor\ncounty, ami tho Democracy of tU?\nInterior sustained n aovoro loa< when lio\nmado up hii mind that tho intor-\nuau of tho statu of West Virginia ho in\ntho adoption of tho principles of tho\ngreat parlv of protection. Mr. rloyd,\nthough not exactly a now convert, wan\nonly a (ow yoaru ago one of tho must\nhonored loadors of tho Democracy. It\nwas whon that party throw off ih pro¬\ntection disgjllse and bdoaino tho enemy\nof the Industrial dovelopmont of tho\ncountry that ho loft It. Tho object lc*-\nson, which Mr. Floyd then foresaw\nwould.bo presented to tho pooploif tho\nDemocratic party should pain power, in\nnow being learnod by many other\nDemocrats, liko Mr. Dorr, and another,\nMr. Fleming, ot Marshall county, who\nwas prominent in that dologatlon, aud\nit was not surprising that not a low of\nthorn turned tip at tho leaguo meoting\nwearing Kopublican badges and enter-\ning on tho activo work of a campaign\nfor tho undoing of tho change thoy\nvoted for in 18W2.
11a40336c7eac81e8ac5ae5801320417 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.1680327552622 38.894955 -77.036646 One of the suggestions of The Times last\nsummer, whicli met a very large and sympa-\nthetic response from the people of Wash-\nington, was the league for the protection\nof shade trees of the city.\nThis suggestion grew out of the condi-\ntion that, while thousands of the most\nvaluable trees along the streets and avenues\nwere dying, and many of whicli died, there\nwas at that time no money in the Treasury\nthat could be applied to their care.\nAs a result or this Inadequate protection\nsome or the most beautiful and historic of\nthe English elms on the White House\ngrounds tiled, were cut down and re-\nmoved. To this succeeded the partial de-\nstruction of the English elms on the south\nside of Lafayette Square.\nThe loss or these trees was due to tde\nelm beetle, which, after ravaging the foreign\ntrees, attacked tde native trccsan J stripped\nIdem or tdeir rolluge to sued an extent\ntdnt long before tde Tall tde trees exhibited\nthe or having been frost bitten.\nThe destitution of the leaves was so com-\nplete that It was a subject of regretful\nobservation among the townsfolk and vis-\nitors to Washington.\nIt was said last year that proper care\ntaken of the trees early in lite, spring would\nhave made this visitation impossible,\nnnd that the amount of money necessary\nfor this would be very little. The park\ncommission gave the matter some attention\nlast season but tde liarm was done berore\nthe question was taken up generally; and\nit was also found that tdere were no funds\navailable for Immediate use.\nTdere Is notding to sdow tdat tde same\ncondition will not exist tills year, if tde\nremedies arenotapplled in time, wdetder by\nspr.' iyhiK or other means of preventing tde\nbeetle from getting a lodgment in tde\ntrees. Tde elm trees are already putting\nout, and witli the approach or the warmer\nweather the pest may also be expected\nto resume Us preparations for this year's\nattuck.
3fa182f7d12df21c4cb88e78645ab503 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.6369862696602 41.020015 -92.411296 one newsboy ; the en; neer ot tbe coal\ntrain ; Thos. Stroug, 'Uiskegon; Mo-\nCartell, Chicago, badl bruised ; Wm-\nGutchell, Duck's Isia:. 1 . Maine, bad­\nly scalded; Thos. Crowley, scalded;\nWm. Curran, Duck''; Island. Maine,\nbadly scalded ; John W Smith, ward­\nen of Illinois Peiiivntiarv, badly\nscalded, J. Lamotte, PhU'a, si alded;\nJohn Sheries, Glas^w, ruptured;\nAlexander Ilackett, Docks Island,\nMaine, scalded ; A. B :don and Anton\n[ukleman, St. Louis* idly scalded all\nover; John Whaler, A-iron, Ohio, back\nand hands scalded ; Gm. Reatel, Chi­\ncago, arms a>'d head btdly scalded ; A.\nC. Nicklan, Chicago, hands and head\nbadly scalded and wiously bruised\nabout the head ; Jar b Klese, badly\nscalded; Jacob Cat''ivant, Oskosli,\nbadly scalded ; a Ger mu unknown in\na dying condition; isac MllK New\nYork, hand an;l ear --lightly scalded;\nMartin Carleton, Bk scald­\ned; M. M . Rie.hardso . Chicago, scald­\ned ; Albert Adams, t >>otnington, seal-\naed ; Heury Small, Ai ron, O., scalded ;\nL. A. Haiuliu, Dwig! \\ Ills., scalded;\nJohu O'Keete, Akr-;i. O., scalded;\nJames T. Doyle, stee workman, John\nSpears, Chicago ;B. Ai-tolne, St- Louis,\nhead and arms; M. St lohn, Chicago.\nThe traiu did not cavh fire as was\nreported, aud all the p issenger* killed\nor injured were in the ^econd-classcar\nwhich was used as atiimking car.\nExcept the train employee* the\ndeaths were all cau; • ! by steam.—\nNone of the regular|* -euger coaches\nor sleepers were thi wn from the\ntrack, or iti any way i\nThe officers of the\nwhen twenty-two mil.\nin the road, the pas-\nconfrouted by a co d\nrunniug at the rato <\nmiles an hour. Neith\ntho danger until too
260472d6cf2909b4c54001483fb0e80c THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8483606241145 38.729625 -120.798546 Pkc. Id. This Act si.nil take* effect on the first day\nof January, a . p . one thousand eight hundred end\nslxiy-onc, n* to all Its provisions except those rela-\nting to and necessary lor its Hiihiiiissiou to the- pe»».\npie, and for returning, canvass ng and proclaiming\nthe vede, which shall lake- ef-fccl immediately.\nPkc. 14 . This Act .thall he submitted to Mie people\nof the Plate. f«»r their ratification 1; at the next general\nelection, to be holden on the Tuesday next after the\nfirst Monday in November,one thousand eight hun-\ndred ami sixty: and (he qualified elector* of the\nPlate shall, at said election, on their ballots for Plate\nolheers, vole for or against this Act ; those voting\nfor the same shall write or have priuteil on their bal-\nlots the words "Fay the Debt;” those voting\nagainst ihe same shall write or have printed on their\nballots Mie words " Repudiate the Debt. "\nPkc. IÓ. The votes coat for and against this Act\nshall he counted, returned and canvassed, and de-\nclared iu the- same manner, and subject to the *ame\nrules, as vote* cast for the Treasurer of Plate ; and\nIf it appear that a majority of all the votes so edst\nlor or against this law, us aforesaid, are in favor of\nthis Act, then the same shall have effect as herein-\nbefore provided, and shall be irrepealable until the\nprincipal and intere*! of the liabilities herein crea-\nted shall he paid and discharged, and the Oot'ernor\nshall make proclamation thereof; hut If a majority\nof the voles so cast are against this Act, then the\nsame shall become void.
14d2efb0c66af45b80fd00ad34b54c16 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.1136985984272 44.939157 -123.033121 involved, either directly or Indirectly,\nbut tho Jones, Holt, King opposition\nto his making tho appointment think\nthey will win out and then pass it up\nto the governor and lot him veto tho\n(blll if ha sees fit. Tho joint com\nmittee held a conference at 1 o clock\nthis afternoon and tho matter will\nconio up at tho appointed hour, 3\no'rlock, on special order for final de-\ncision, Thoro was a rumor ufloat this\nmorning thnt It had been agreed to lot\ntho Chapin hill puss over today nnd\nawait tho action of tho sonata upon\ntho IHnghum bill, which Is a copy of\ntho riinpln hill, tomorrow morning.\nThis report, however, Is denied by\nChairman Coffey of tho houso commit\ntee, who says tho Clinpln bill will bo\ngiven full and duo consideration today.\nWhen tho house resolves itself into\na committee of tho whole Sneaker\nDnvcy will take tho and will\nstand out for his contention that tho\ncommission should bo created by Ite-\npubllcan votes und brains, but that,\nif ho Is defeated in his contentions,\nho will bow gracefully to the will of\ntho majority and stand by tho bill In\nwhatever form it is agreed upon. Jones\nof Polk and Lincoln also takes thht\nstand and Buys ho will stand for tho\nbill even if bo Is heatttn. The three\nbolting members of the house com-\nmittee were indirectly accused of be-\ning in leaguo with the Jfairlwan sys-\ntem in one of tho commltteo meet-\nings, or words to that effect, when ono\nof tho members of tho committee re-\nmarked that "we aro up against the\nIlnrriman system," but tho remark was\nexplained nway afterwards. The bot-\ntle on tho floor this afternoon, if mat-\nters do not tako nn entirely different\nform than whut Is now presented,
192a322299c88bf0bc83e148882a44aa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.1273972285642 39.745947 -75.546589 Special to Tho Evening Journal.\nSmyrna. Feb. 16.— There was satinons\namong the members of the Delaware\nGrand Lodge of Workmen, which\nclosed a two days' session here yester­\nday afternoon, caused by the receipt of\na telegram from Wilmington announc­\ning that Nathaniel Henderson, of Wil­\nmington, one of the best know n mem­\nbers of the order In the State, had been\nstricken with apoplexy on Tuesday\nnight. Mr. Henderson Is the Nestor of\nDelaware Lodge, and us an Illustration\nof hta devotion to the organization's\ninterests It was related. that by his\npersonal efforts at least three hundred\nmembers had been added to Wilming­\nton lodge. Universal and heartfelt\nsympathy was expressed In his behalf.\nMr. Henderson, who resides at No.\n1007 Trenton Place, In Wilmington, ha*\nbeen an engineer on the Pennsylvania\nrailroad for thirty-eight year*. He is\naged 67 He was first stricken on\nNovember 30, but Improved. His con­\ndition now is serious.\nThe proceedings of the Grand Lodge\nyesterday were mainly routine, the\nmost important action being the elec­\ntion of officers, as given in the late edi­\ntion of The Evening Journal yesterday\nafternoon. They are ns follows:\nGrand Maater Workman, Edward F.\nKane. Wlhnlngton; Grand Foreman. W.\nH. Richardson. Milford; Grand Over­\nseer, J. H . Bnwrson, Middletown;\nGrand Recorder. Thomas S. Taylor,\nWilmington; Grand Receiver, J. Wil­\nkins Ooooh, Newark; Grand Medical\nExanminer, Dr. L. W. Filmt, Wilming­\nton; Grand Guide. O. F. Melvin, Fred­\nerica; Grand Inside Watchman, Sam­\nuel J. Dennison, Wilmington; Grand\nOutside Watchman,. Phillip H. Willey,\nBridgevllle; Grand Trustee, A. M. Sut­\nton, St. Georges; Supreme Representa­\ntives, A. B . Jones, Wilmington; Curtis\nE. Davis, Laurel: B. A . Groves, Max-\nshallton.
0c5e5ec30e2a733f01fd64a136e647f6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.760273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 Things will bo jolly enough ovor in t\nJefforson county, perhaps, whoro the v\nunlorriQod believe that a tariff for pro- Jj\ntactioa is unconstitutional, hut when s\ntho hippodrome reoches tho groat cosl c\nand lumbar regions of tho wostern coun- v\nties the people will not bo so cordial I\nwith thoir receptions. Tho minors who i\nhave had thoir wages reduced to niuet f\ntho reduced duty will not pationtlv hoar I1\nMr. Wilson declare that tho lighti's only t\nbogun, and that tho next whack a Doin- v\nocrntic Congress gets at the tan 11 will r\nchop off tho ontiro duty. Perhaps tlioy t\nwill gather at tho barbecues and Dar- t\ntake of tho roasted oxen purchased by i\ntho campaign fund. After that they ^\nwill "say nothing saw wood" until t\nelection doy. Democratic ox banquets c\nwill not buy the voles that thdy intend I\nto cast for tho party that made it dos- V\nsiblo for them to have meat on their '\ntables ovory day ill tho year. In tho *\nmeantimo Alsiou Cordon Dayton goes s\nahead with iiis effective "campaign *\nagainst tho arch onemy of tho district, I\nand ovon tho Whnuling iiogistor is r\nforced to ncknowlndgo that, after all, t\nbis nomination was no joko. I\nWith all tho advantago of tho condi- 1\ntioiiB favorable to their cause, tho\nRepublicans in this Btato havo foarlul J\nodds to fight against. Tho national 1\nDemocracy havo witnossed, with alarm i\nthe tondeiiov oi West Virginia to break\nawny from tho solid south in pnst
0f9f85700a8716b0be6f21cb4c6b7ee9 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1900.9109588723998 39.756121 -99.323985 It has been quite awhile since we\nhave attempted to send in the news\nfrom this place, although we have\nnoticed items almost every week un\nder the caption of opeed in some\ncounty paper, but it has been from\ncorrespondents living some distance\nin the country from this place and\nknew very little of the happenings\nin and around Speed, and for fear\nthe people of the surrounding conn\ntry have began to think that Speed is\na fallen star, we have again decided\nto send in a few items occasionally as\ngentle reminders to the contrary.\nThe new telephone system recently\nput into operation at this place sup\nplies the town with a long felt neces\nsity and will do its share in building\nup Speed as the town is one of the\nbest located tradiog points in the\ncounty ; surrounded with good farm\ning communities that can reach the\nplaoe with good roads, from every\ndirection, and is bound some day to\ncommand respect from every town\nnear here, as to size and business.\nG G Ford, the best blacksmith in\nthe oounty, and tbe fastest bicycle\n in the world, made a' visit to\nsee his sister in Junction City, Kins ,\nlast week. He was only twelve hours\non the road there and baok. We know\nthistob afaotaswesawhim when\nhe started and and also saw him re\nturn, and he told us be was going\nthere when he started out on his\nwheel a few hours before dark one\nnight. As he is a very truthful per-\nson it would cast a reflection upon\nhis integrity if we were to doubt his\nword about anything.\nA A Green is ereoliDg a fine barn\nnpon his property nere. xnetown\nhowever is very little gainer for this\nlate enterprise as Air Green sum\nmoned help and pushed over one of\nhis best buildings in town the morn-\ning he started to build his barn. His\nreason for so doing is still a mystery\nto us, as the people of this place have\nalways showed a marked appreciation\ntoward the building destroyed as It\nwas in the best of repairs. We pre\nsume Mr Greene had some motive in\nview as he is one of the levelest head\ned citizens here.
0da56578dc4ccf5ef7eafa0991d52ef9 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.7849314751395 46.601557 -120.510842 Yon are hereby notified that I. V.V l.antcrman,\nam the holder of cettitteate of delinquency\nunintHTt"! 5047, issued on the 12th day of Juiy*\nA. I) , INS, by the comity of Yakima, state of\nWashington, for the amount of fifteen and 2b-\n10b dollars (|lV>). the . -a nte being the amount\nthen due and delinquent (or raxes for the years\nWas, ls'.»7. l*'. -h . U99, H-W and 1901, together with\npenalty. Interest and cost* thereon, upon real\nproperty aaMMed to mikiiouu owner, aim of\nwhich you are th»* owner or reputed on ner.\nsituate in Mild county ami particularly bounded\nand described at* follows, to wit: l,ot fifteen flft)\nblock two hundred ami forty teres (217) of the\nSyndicate subdivision to North Yakima, ac-\ncording to the official plat thereof oil file and\nof record in the county audi tor's othoc of\nVekiuiH county. Washington, and upon which I\nI nave Mid taxes MMMd awainst said prop-\nerty, as followi;\nTaxes for the year 1896, amounting to \\u00a3-;<'. .\npaid on the 12th day of July. 1908, <'. R .\nTotal taxea paid "ii account of Mid certificate\nof delinquency numbered 2647 18.4b; all of said\n so paid hearing interest at the rate of fif-\nteen per cent per annum from date of pay in t m.\nand said certificate of delinquency hearing a\nlike rale of interest from date of issue respect\nively. And you are further notified that I will\napply to the.- unerior court of the state of Wash-\nington in and tor said eountv, for a judgment\nforeclosing my lien agaiiiht the property here-\ninbefore it entioned, and >ou are hereby sem-\nni -ned to appear within sixty dajs after the\ndate of the Hist puhlicat on ol litis summons,\n10 wit: Within sixty days after the 9th day of\nSeptember, 1909, exclusive of said tirst day of\npublication, and defend tMs action or pay the\namount due, and in case of your failure so to\nd -. judgment will be rendered foreclosing said\nlien for »ald certificate of delinquency, taxes,\npenalty, interest and costs, against the lands and\npremises hereinbefore mentioned, according to\nthe demand of the complaint herein which has\nbeen filed With the Clark of the above entitled\ni ourt Any pleading or process many be served\nupon the undersigned attorney for plaintiffat\nthe address hereafter mentioned.
228ef486d38b76e17785230f17dcc532 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.3547944888383 39.743941 -84.63662 was adopted. Tbe motion was agreed to.\nBills passed : Frovidiog for a tobacco ware\nhouse, and to create the office of inspector\nof leaf tobacco, and to regnlate the inspec-\ntion of tobacco ; limiting the time for the re-\ncording of the deed to thiry days after being\nmade ; to allow the city of "Hamilton, Butler\nCounty, to erect or purchase gas works;\nauthorizing County Commissioners to\ncondemn lands for approaches to bridges ;\nappropriating $4,600 to provide a State lab-\noratory, and authorizing tbe Trustees of the\nAgricultural College to establish a professor-\nship of mines and mining. The report of\nthe conference committee on the appropria-\ntion bill was disagreed to, and another con-\nference committee was asked, which will be\nthe third. Mr. Blake, from a select com-\nmittee, reported resolutions of respect to\nthe memory of O. P. Nicholls, late Represen-\ntative from Summit County. Eulogies were\npronounced by Messrs. Blake, Hitchcock,\n The resolutions were unani-\nmously adopted, and the House, in respect\nto tb memory of the deceased, adjourned.\nIn the Senate, May 3, after rescinding the\nresolution which provides for an adjourn-\nment from each third Friday until the fol-\nlowing Tuesday, the Senate took up the bill\nto provide for registration of voters. The\nquestion pending was .on the amendments\nby which the operation of the bill is limited\nto cities of the first and second classes. The\nbill was passed after the amendment limit-\ning its operation to cities had been rejected.\nThe following bills were also passed: For\nthe relief of Mercer Conn ty Agricultural So-\nciety ; authorizing Trustees of townships to\npurchase lands containing gravel, fcr the\nimprovement of highways. The Thresher\nbill, to extend tbe grants of street railroad\ncompanies by allowiug them to lease and\noperate connecting lines, was read the third\ntime and discussed during the remain-\nder of the session.
5541e98cd634579940f1fd6b8694ab92 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.3164383244546 41.681744 -72.788147 Steel manufacturers will meet on\nThursday to arrange for distributing\nthroughout the industry very consid-\nerable government orders for vessels,\nnavy yard and ordnance steel which\nwere largely put in the hands of the\nUnited States Steel corporation.\nThe Government is expected to\n.p lace early contracts ifor fully 300,000\ntons of plates,, shapes and bars, and\nthe amount it will want this year ex-\nceeds .the first estimates, being now\nput at 1,000,000 tons. Already govern-\nment business taken at Pittsburgh\namounts to 100,000 tons of plates.\nIntimations that the government\nwill be asked by the Allies to aid\nthem in securing special concessions\non steel and copper are cropping up\nmore frequently. The British gov-\nernment's copper contract expires in\n60 days and the question of the still\nunused amount of the 200,000 gross\ntons bought for the first half is cut-\nting aa figure in the current\nmarket. All indications today are\nstrongly against the extension of such\nlow prices as our government has se-\ncured on steel and copper to any of\nthe European governments.\nManufacturing consumers are not\nyet facing hardship because of the\npreference to Allies and the govern-\nment in deliveries; but some o.f them\nare moving in the matter of their 1918\nneeds. Independent steel makers as\na rule refuse to entertain such busi-\nness, and where protection is given it\nis without any assurance as to price.\nBelief is that fresh foreign buying\nfacilitated by the big government\nloan now authorized,' will come soon\nunder the direction of Great Britain,\nprobably even for the railroad materi-a - fl\ndesired by Russia. France, with a\nnew credit, will also be in the market.\nAs an example, that country wants\n21.000 tons more of 19-l - b
2492a91870fb02cedf4806e1c92d221a PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1886.9246575025368 39.756121 -99.323985 strength, fairly skilled in boxing and\nwrestling, and many a legal celebrity\nwho to k hold of Uncle Peter to lay him\nin the dust went away sadder and wiser.\nIn ISoO he became disgusted with travel,\nmarried a widow in St. Paul and, after\nthe honeymoon, the pair eettled down\non a piece of wild land a few miles from\nthe New Ulm. As Peter had not been\nable to save any money on the road he\nfigured that he could uot do worse as a\npioneer. He web, moreover, rather taken\nwith the idea of pioneer life and when he\nfound himself buried in the woods, four\nor five miles from the nearest settler and\ndeprived of everything in the way of\nluxury, he was not a bit discouraged.\nWhen the Indian troubles of 1862\nfirst began to crop up Uncle Peter and\nhis wife were urged to 6eek the proteo-io- n\nof Eome fort or Settlement By this\nrime he had a clearing of acres\nor more around his house, had "planted\ncorn and potatoes and was the owner of\na yoke of oxen, a horse, a cow and sever-\nal head of young stock. To leave his\nfarm would be to leave everything to go\nto ruin, and he determined to stick.\nWhen this decision was made known to\nhis wife she declared that she would al-\nso rernaio, although he was anxious to\nhave her seek protection in the nearest\nsettlement. Uncle Peter had time to\nlearn something of Indian character\nthere being scarcely a day but that he\nencouraged some of them, and whde\nmany called him "brother" and express-\ned the greatest admiration for him, he\nfelt that his scalp would be no safer than\nany other man's in case the redskins\nwent on the warpath. His decision to\nremain had no sooner been taken than\nhe began preparations to defend his own.\nHe strengthened the single door to his\ncabin, made loop -hol e- s
187d50f6eea40f5932e0f8aa189b686e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1894.5849314751395 46.187885 -123.831256 "I cannot explain the cause of the al\nmost total absence of fish In the Fraser\nat this time of the year, for taking the\nhistory of the industry on this stream\nfor the past seventeen years, one would\nnaturally figure on an unusually large\nrun of salmon, beginning early In the\nseason. When the Hudson Bay Com-\npany, 30 years ago used to salt salmon\nfor the London market, they claimed to\nhave discovered that each four years\nthe salmon would come In increased\nnumbers Into the Fraser, continuing the\nsecond year. Then for the two following\nyears the run would decrease to almost\nnothing. This they claimed had contin-\nued during tiielr operation on the river.\n' .'In 1878 there was an unusually large\nrun of salmon, but the canneries then\nlocated on the river did not commence\nkeeping a record of the time the fish\nwould start or until the following\nyear, when the river eemed filled with\nsalmon. The run started on July 12th,\nand continued until the 6th of August.'\nThis was supposed to be the 'second big,\nyear,' as the canners called It, and was'\nverified when the two following years;\npassed with exceedingly light runs of,\nsalmon. In 18S2 the second year of the!\n'big run' commenced on July 8th, and!\nceased August 20th. Four years later\nin 1886, the run commenced on the 15th\nof July and stopped on the 10th of,\nAugust. In 1890 the second 'big run'j\nstarted on the 20th day of July and:\nceared on the 20th day of August, and\nwe have now on the 1st day of August,\n16 years from the time when the rec.\nords were opened, a year that promised\na heavy run of sa.mon, absolutely\nreport of any fish having entered the\nFraser river.
0f098260be9123b17994aa0e0dfc3169 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.187671201167 37.53119 -84.661888 After a time the mine were cloud\nand remained to until 1801 when they downI\nreopened bv Mossr Dix W Bmlth\n0 Barber the latter a brother 1alaw of the\npresident A new company was formed with\na board of trustees approved by President\nMcKlnler and Mrs McKInley and Mrs\nHarbor given 56000 sham\nIt Is claimed for Nevada where these\nmines are located that as a mining State It\nIs more easy of access baa a better climate\nand Is freer from hardship and danger than\nany other mining zone In the world It Is\nclaimed also that there U more unprospcct\ned territory and are more undeveloped\nmIne In that State than In any other equal\narra anywhere At present It costa but 12\nper too to mine gold and 81 per ton to mine\ncopper In the year and daring the\npast year the mines In Nevada are said to\nhave produced over a thousand million dol ¬\nIan In H98 the estimate of value wo\nJ697S20720 It has doubled since 1887 and\nalmost trebled since 1880\nIn one week the away values of the gold\nores are said to have Increased ft per too\nmaking an average of 119 per ton\nThe oaken of the McKlnloy Mining and\nSmelting Company aroi M 0 Harbor Can ¬\ntoo 0 Ireildent V E Fltcb ElmIra N\nY Vice President A J Hateltlne Presi ¬\ndent Warren Savings flank Warren Pa\nTreasurer and Dlx W Smith Elmira N\nY Secretary Mr Alger the traveling\nmanager who located the office here was\nformerly a special agent of the United\nStates government and became dI-\nn the enterprise while acting In that capac
1a60ef5e27a02b58b07fe50b7789a9a5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.1493150367833 40.063962 -80.720915 Money.Very easy to-day; the d<\nrnand on call ia freely met at 5aG o\nGovernments and (1*7 on stock eolatera\nprime discounts 7a8.\nThere is a railway war on wester\nfreight between the New York Centra\nErie and Pennsylvania Central on on\nside, and the fast freight lines on th\nother, and to day contracts were mad\nat 25a30 per hundred through to Cb\ncago. These are the lowest rates eve\nmade, and the railroads seemed detei\nmined to exterminate the transporti\nlion companies.\nTheshipment of currency to the sout\nand west has ceased, and remittance\nnot expected from the former unlee\ntMr cotton trade revives.\nSterling.Steady at lOOalOOJ-i for C\ndays, and lOilJialO'JJs for sight bills.\ntior.D .Weak aud lower; opened a\n133'd, and closed at 132J4. l .oans wer\nmade at 4a7 per cent for carrying, ltl\nnot believed the combination who re\ncentiy held prices above 135 en\ntirely unloaded, but havo encouraged\ndecline for the purpose of buying mor\nin order to make a low average lor tb\nentire amount.\n{^Government Stocks.Improved )4\n% per cent, ut the morning session,wit,\nit most active business iu '07s and '02:\nthe former were in active borrowing de\nmand for delivery on speculative sales\nAt the afternoon board there was a de\nclineof per cent., but the ninrke\nfinally closed firm. Coupons '81, 1133^1\n114. do. '02, 114?£all4J6; do. '01, lllj^i\n111%; do. '05, liai-'tfallUJi; do. new, 110>\n*110%; do.'07, 110J«alll; do. '08, llli\n111\\i\\ 10-403 IC'J^hIO'JK. The declin\nwas occasioned by a Washington re\nport that the Senate Finance Comtnittei\nhad decided not to report on any mon\nmeasures this session.\nStccks..Railway share market dur\ning the morning was steady, but rathe\ndull and without important features\nPacific Mail fell to par, while othei\nmiscellaneous shares were firm.
15e3ce9188a9edd56d874e085962fbdc RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1916.30464477712 36.620892 -90.823455 la the side to escape from splinters,\nsince that Is the side from which the\nBoches are firing. Anyhow It Is no use\nducking, since by the time you've\nheard the shell the danger Is over."\nAs we went up the steep, lonely\nstreets toward the cathedral our at-\ntention was suddenly attracted by a\natronge, piercing sound that con-\ntrasted quaintly with the continuing\nroar of expfbdlng shell. It was a\nkitten mewing plaintively in the first\nstory of a house. It bad obviously\nbeen forgotten in the baste of evacua-\ntion. The owner of the house had\nclosed up the shutters and had never\ngiven a thought to the poor beast and\nit waa slowly starving to death.\nA rescue party was at once formed,\nM. George Scott, the artist, who is\nmobilised as a chasseur alpln, mount-\ned on my shoulders and endeavored\nto pry open the shutter with a (tick,\n bis effort were unavailing, and\neventually the kitten' life wo saved\nby the firemen of Verdun, who, at our\nrequest, broke into the house.\nSeveral large shell had fallen near\nthe cathedral. One of them had gut-\nted a girl' school and another had\nlanded fair and square on a (hop that\nsold religious ornament and emblems.\nPot some unexplained reason there\nwaa a cure'a hat lying pathetically on\nthe top of the debris, and at the back\nagainst a wall that had miraculously\nescaped destruction stood a stucco\n(tatue of Joan ot Are.\nThe pigeon, which were flying in\nuneasy circles above the cathedral,\nseemed to be curiously disturbed by\ntha bombardment As a general rule,\nthe birds seem to regard bombardment\naa a natural cataclysm, to be suffered\nsince it cannot be prevented. Anyhow,\nthe pigeons of Verdun have not yet\ngrown accustomed to the noise ot the\nGerman bombardment,
32ca828763e00a1ff998cee3da3e9301 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1907.491780790208 41.875555 -87.624421 Why aro wo content to have onr\nfood prepared for us In secret under\nconditions that to any sane mind cer-\ntainly suggest fraud and treachery?\nWe ure not obliged to have tbesw\nthings If wo do not want them. The\nremedies aro slmplo ouough.\nAs to the "lumpy Juw," the tubercu-\nlosis and the cancer, put a stop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Let all the slaugh-\ntering of food animals be doue by the\nState In tho light of day, without any\nof this dark lantern business, on equal\nterms for nil. There nro very few\nprivate slaughter houses In England.\nTho cities and towns run their slaugh-\nter houses under medical Inspection.\nBut lu Englaud the people do not car\nto be poisoned in their meat\nAmi we need not worry nbout the ob-\njection that publicly owned slaughter\nhouses are an luvuslon of the private\n of business. When It conies to\nlife aud dentil there are no private\nrights of business. No man bns a right\nto saved profits that be uiuke by\nspreading disease. We havo gone to\nfar oil the roud to public sanitation to\ntum back bcause some gontlemau'aj\nprofits are threatened. The State wlH\nuot allow you to go around with small-\npox or to conceal scarlot fever In your\nhouso, although each may be strictly\nyour own affair. Compared with can-\ncer, smallpox und scarlet fevor are\nnothing. If the State can take radical\nmeasures to stamp out cholera It can\ntake radical measures to stamp out\ncancer, a million times worse than\ncholora. If It can provide pest house\nfor public safety It can provide slaugh-\nter houses for public safety. And it\nduty In tlio ono case is ut least as clear\nas In the other.
05745b8b01a7d2826feba6c31fc4b0ca THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1898.0945205162354 43.994599 -72.127742 that my Master's spirit? Is there not an\nold book somewhere that commands us\nto go out into the highways and the\nhedges and compel the people to come\nin? What would become of you and me\nif Christ had not come down off the\nhills of heaven, and if he had not come\nthrough the door of the Bethlehem car-\navansary, and if he had not with tbe\ncrushed hand of the crucifixion knor' -e- d\nat the iron gate of the sepulcher of our\nspiritual death, crying, "Lazarus, come\nforth?" Oh, my Christian friend, this\nis no time for inertia when all the forces\nof darkness seem to be in full blast\nwhen steam printing presses are pub-\nlishing infidel tracts, when express\ntrains are carrying messengers of sin,\nwhen fast clippers are laden opium\nand strong drink, when the night air of\nour cities is polluted with the laughter\nthat breaks up from the 10,000 saloons\nof dissipation and abandonment, when\nthe fires of the second death already are\nkindled in the cheeks of some who only\na little while ago were incorrupt. Oh,\nnever since the curse fell upon the earth\nhas there been a time when it was such\nan unwise, such a cruel, such an awful\nthing for the church to sleep. The great\naudiences are not gathered in Christian\nchurches; the great audiences are gath-\nered in temples of sin tears of unutter-\nable woe their baptism, tbe blood of\ncrushed hearts the awful wine of their\nsacrament, blasphemies their litany,\nand the groans of tbe lost world the\norgan dirge of their worship.
14cfacdf08aaa6d0211227d3ff8f56fa THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.7904109271942 40.419757 -77.187146 sheets and floods almost, and the water\nforced its way into the apartments below\nthe burnt part, deluging desks, papers and\neverything. It has been repeatedly stated\nthat the damage done by the water is as\ngreat as that by the fire, but that can hard-\nly be possible, although many thousand\ndollars worth of valuablo papers, records,\n&c, were destroyed. The fire occur-\nred two weeks ago yesterday and the roof\nthat was burnt away is still unreplaced.\nThe permanent roof cannot be constructed\nuntil Congress makes an appropriation for\nthat purpose, but a temporary one will now\nbe commenced within a day or two.\nThe Indians arrived here on the same\nday also, and spent ten days at the Capital,\ngoing home by way of New York. After\ntheir arrival there donned the citizen's\nclothes that the President gave them (ready\nmade suits, of rough coarse cloth), and\nwent out to spend their money (the Presi-do- nt\ngave them $40 each, with which to\nbuy presents for their families). Natural-\nly the most showy articles of dress at-\ntracted them, and they loaded themselves\ndown with cheap aud finshy shawls, scarfs,\ncalicoes, tinsel jewelry, metallio belts, &o.\nEach bought a hand satchel also, and Lit-\ntle Big Man indulged his fancy by pur-\nchasing a miniature Saratoga trunk.\nThe season, socially speaking, will not\nbegin for many weeks yerj but as the days\ngo by and the famous loth draws near, the\ncity grows lively with numerous important\narrivals and with the buBtling air of prep-\naration that Is evident on all sides. The
cf7e627027fd875aa57f007e999c099d THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.8479451737696 40.618676 -80.577293 broken into, their papers ransacked,\ntheir charters taken from them, their\nright to trial by jury jeopardized,\ntroops quartered in their midst, the\nright to speak, assemble, and print\nsuppressed. They had made heroic\nsacrifices to secure the recognition of\nthese rights; they were determined\nthat these rights should be preserved.\n"So strongly indeed did the peopie\nfeel about the fundamental guaran­\ntees against encroachments on their\nrights that the Constitution could not\npossibly have been adopted," in the\nwords of James Truslow Adams, "if\nthe people of some of the more im­\nportant states such as Massachusetts\nand Virginia had not been assured\nthat as soon as it was adopted ap­\npropriate amendments would be rec\nommended by Congress in the way\nprovided under the instrument itself."\n it is interesting to recall\nthat before the Bill of Rights was in­\ncorporated into the Constitution, there\nwere Bill of Rights in many of the\nState Constitutions. Many of the\nFounding Fathers thought these\nguarantees sufficient. The people,\nhowever, divined the future more\nclearly. They sensed that the Fed­\neral Government would in days to\ncome acquire more power and that re­\nstraints on such power should be in­\ncorporated into the Federal Constitu­\ntion. History has certainly vindicated\ntheir conclusion. It is the peculiar\nvirtue of the Bill of Rights that its\nsubstance has changed and is chang­\ning by the gradual process of inter­\npretation. But with ail this change,\nafter a hundred and fifty years this\nPeople's Charter is still the bulwark\nof our liberties.
322fcfcdaa4d55ae3f9066ebfdf10b48 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.1410958587012 37.561813 -75.84108 able to slate confidently that the "Bitten"\nare a certain cute for lie lyxpcpie and like\ndiseasoa, is to the proprietors a source of un-\nalloyed plcaxure. It removes all morbid mailer\nfrom the siomnoli, purifies tilt blood, and\nimparls renewed vitality 10 the nenreus system,\ngiving it that tone and energy iudispuiiMiMe\nfor the rest oral ioa of lieallb. It operates upon\nthe stomach, liver, and other iligeative orgmia,\nmildly but powerfully, aud soou rest urea ihem\ntoacondilioD essential to the healthy discharge\nof the fituclious of nature.\nElderly pcrsous may use llie Riders ilaily as\nper directions on the bottle, and lliey will bud\nin it aelituuluut peculiarly adapted 10 caiulut i\ndeclining yeurs, am it U pleasant lo the pnlnte,\ninvigorating to tbe bowels, excellent aa a luiiio,\nand rejuvenating geuerally. We have the evi-\ndence of thousands of aged men and women\nwho have the benefit of using this\npreparation while sutfering from eloinacli de-\nrangement! and general debility ; acting under\nthe advice of phjucians, I hey have abnndonetl\nall delelerioua drugs and fuii ly to ted I he ,\nmerits of this article. A few words lo the\ngentler sex. There are certain periods when\ntheir cares are so haraaaiag that many of Ihem\nsink under the trial. The relation of mother\nAil child is so absorbingly tender, (hat the\nmother, especially if he be young, is apt U\nforget br owa health in her extreme anxiety\nfor her infant. Bl.otild the perlud of maternity\narrive during the summer season, the wear ef\nbody and niiud is generally aggravated. Here,\nthen, is a necessity for a stimulant lo recupe-\nrate I he energies of the system, and enable I he\nmother to bear up uniler her exhausting u in'e\nand respousihiliiics,
0a23dda676acd400d3327d6da057e4e6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.771857891874 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho Iticlmioud left for Marietta yestcr\nday morning 011 time.\n'ijjiorWcrCommenced hilling yesterday\nmorning and continued doing so all da]\nlonjr, tiio marks last evening indicating j\ndepth of 4 feet 0 inches in tlio ehannol.\nAn old river man said yesterday when ask\ni»<l by a reporter what his ideawasas totlu\nprospect for a coal boat rise at this time\n"it is generally tho case, that if wo do no\nhave arise in September wo have low wn\ntor more or less until November. Y01\nknow that during September wo had lowe\nwater than for a long time. 1 do no\nthink that this little rise will swell ho a\nto be u coal bont rise."\nTho project of having tho United State\nGovernment to buy out tho Monongahel\nNavigation Company aud assume contrc\n tho same is strongly advocated in con\nand tow boat circles. Indeed, some of th\ncoal men go so far as to claim that th\nfuture of tho river coal trade depend\nhirgt'ly on this; that in order to succesi\nfully meet competition in the down rive\ncoal markets they must have cheaper tolls\nOn the resumption of navigation tlier.\nwill be a now combination on the uppe\nOhio. The steamer W. N . Chancellor wil\nmake two trips a week from Charleston t\nParkersbiirg and Marietta, eonneotinj\nwith the steamer C. AV . Batchelor and tin\niimv Ohio Jiiver railroad for Wheeling am\nPittsburgh. The Chancellor will leavi\nCharleston every Monday and Thursday\nand the Batchelor will leave Pittsburgl\non the same days, connecting at l'arkere\nburg on Tuesdays and Fridays. -. Cincin\niiuti Times.
f605250d9290eb4199a7d1ee301a00fe NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.2479451737697 41.681744 -72.788147 come under his jurisdictidn and are\nmatters which should be settled be-\ntween the complaints and their\nneighbors. Accordingly, the health\nofficer has called attention to the\nbulletin of tho state department of\nhealth which outlines the powers of\ntho officers appointed by them.\nIn tho first place, those who wish\nto complain should first be assured\nthat the condition is a real nuisance\nwhich, for the benefit, of the town\nas a whole, should be remedied.\nThere is a marked difference be-\ntween a private nuisance, and a pub-\nlic nuisance, the former being some-\nthing which annoys or vexes a per-\nson or several individuals the lat-\nter being something which affects\nlarge numbers or the whole com-\nmunity. According to the powers\noutlined in this bulletin, the health\nofficer may order the removal \nrefuse and rubbish from vacant\nland, he may order the filling in of\nswampy lands and depressions in\nwhich stagnant water, a detriment\nto tho public health, stands, he may\norder the abolition of plales where\ntin cans and other receptacles\nwhere water is apt to collect, thus\nforming breeding places for mos\nquitoes, he may eliminate breeding\nplaces if funds are provided for this\npurpose, he may order discontinu-\nance of manufacturers' nuisances in\nwhich raw materials or waste prod-\nucts are exposed, he may prohibit\nthe obstruction of passage on pub-\nlic highways, he may order the dis-\ncontinuance of depositing rubbish\nin a stream whose course is over\nproperty in, common and he may\nstop the dumping of obnoxious filthy\nmatter or garbage on ground adja-\ncent to the property of other.
3efeb12fad09a4139ee4018653148aa3 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.3547944888383 58.275556 -134.3925 never better than at present and he\ndon't need a rest. All that bothers\nhim Is the high cost of living and\nho is foolish to worry over that,\nwhich worry can be obviated by not\n:»aylng bills. Either the Stroller or\nhis readers had to take a vacation\nand It is better from an economical\nxtandpoint that he tako it. as one\ncan travel eheapcr than many. An¬\nother thing: The fact that the Strol¬\nler Is going alone la evidence that\nhe has money In every pocket. A\nman invariably takes his wife with\nhim when he is short of money.\nUut. Joking asido. tho Stroller\nhas been railed outside In connec¬\ntion with his patent knee brace for\ndepartment store girls, school teach¬\ners and other females whose busi¬\nness. callings and professions require\nCfcat they stand on their foet several\nhours dally. The Stroller may have\ndone things which he ought not to\nliave done and he may have loft un¬\ndone things which he ought to have\ndone, but In all his sins of both com¬\nmission or omission It has never\nbeen truthfully charged against him\nthat ho w»s ever derelict where fem¬\nininity was concerned. lie has\nmissed scores of trains in his travels\nthrough stopping to permit some\ndisconsolate female to weep on his\nshoulder and he has alwnys left her\nseeing a more rosette tint on the\nhorizon of llTo Notwithstanding all\nthis, he feels that his knee brace Is\nthe crowning effort of his life which\nhas practically devoted to the\nbetterment of conditions for the\noverworked and underpaid sister.\nAside from being held 48 hours\nIn a detention station In Chicago\nfor resembling a bigamist who was\nwanted at Fort Wayne, Indiana, the\nlast time the Stroller was outside\nhis experience was highly prosaic so\nfar as excitement was concerned, but\non that trip ho was not traveling\nalone. In fact, about the only vivid\nrecollections he retained of his last\nvisit below was that of his detention\nin Chicago and a shave he received\nIn a barber shop In Prince Rupert on\nhis way north and while the steamer\non which he was traveling lay In\nthat port for several hours discharg¬\ning freight. All along from Key\nWest to within a shadow of the\nNorth Pole the Stroller has patron-\nlied barber shops.had his fared\nlaved In Florida water and walrus\ngrease but never did he undergo\nthe treatment accordcd him In that\nPrluce 'Rupert shop, where ho could\nfeel the raxor coming when It was\na foot or more from his face. On\nhis coming trip. If the Stroller Is at\nPrluce Rupert and In need of a\nshave, he will go to a fish cannery.\nIn the event that tho Stroller Is\nnot required to visit Chicago In con¬\nnection with his knee brace, he does\nnot expect to bo absent more than\nthree weeks. four at most -on the\ntrip on which he will leavo next\nweek. However. It Is hard to re¬\nsist such appeals as the following:
8a94b65ee043f3b13441e594efd81ab7 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1847.0589040778793 31.960991 -90.983994 The following statement Ins been forwarded\nto us for publication from Mississippi, having\nbeen compiled, as our correspondent informs us,\na few days ago, by a gentleman who well under­\nstands the subject, and lias been veny careful\nand accurate in the collection of facts as they\nare. Upon this representation, we have plea­\nsure in placing the article before our readers.\nAt. the request of a friend, who ts one of the\nmost «tensive planters in this State, I prepared\nan es mm ate of the cotton of America the present\nyear, and also the demand lor manufacture tie?\nensuing year. Alter examining the estimate\nand the data upon which the calculations were\nbased, my friend suggested that their publication\nmight promote the interest of the planter, if in no\nmanner than by calling forth the calculations\nand opinions of those best qualified to speak with\nsome degree of certainty this important sub­\nject. In accordance with this suggestion, 1 of­\nfer the following tables to the public, sincerely\nhoping their publication may pr«>ve a substantial\nbenefit to the great producing class of the South,\nit is proper that I should state that tables now\noffered to the public were not prepared with any\nview to publication; nor have I any motive for\nsteting other than my candid convictions, as i\nam neither a producer, buyer, nor factor ot cot­\nton. It is true that every member of a commu­\nnity has his interest promoted by the générai\nprosperity of the section of\nhe resides; so far my interest is identified with\nthat of tho planter, and r.o farther. I have no­\nticed the Increase of consumption and produc­\ntion of several years past, and have frequently\nmade similar estimates for my friends. From\nthis circumstance I have accumulated a consid­
17641c4333dfcff8a8bfa6428dda6a88 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1895.8534246258243 37.92448 -95.399981 ated and bruised. The aspect of the\nyoung man was one to excite pity. I\nspoke to him and asked him the cause\nof his forlorn condition.\n"The young man stated that about\nthree weeks prior to this time he and\na young man named Kennedy left\nWilliams, ArL, to go to Jerome in\nsearch of work in the mines. Not\nhaving an abundance of money they\nconcluded to walk the entire distance.\nThey experienced nothing out of the\nordinary until the third day of their\ntrip. About noon on that day they\nwere descending a mountain when a\ncommotion in tneir rear prompted them\nto look around and they were horrified\nto behold a large cinnamon bear mak-\ning directly for them. To think was to\naet, and the man who tells the\nadventure dropped to the ground and\nrolled down the hill, over brush, cac-\ntus and .stones, to the arroya below.\nWhen he landed at the bottom he was\nnearly insensible from his contact with\nstones and cacti. He picked himself\nup and could distinguish the agonizing\ncries of Kennedy on the hill above, and\nhe felt certain his companion was in\nthe clutches of the animal.\n"The cries ceased soon, and the\nyoung man set to work to pick out the\ncactus points that literally covered his\nperson. The process was slow, tedious\nand attended with great agony. After\nhe had rid himself of most of the cac-\ntus points he covered the wounds with\nmud to keep down the inflammation\nand started up the arroya.
03dbbf0a2ecf6b4bf3d18abf1df2a09b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.89999996829 44.939157 -123.033121 sigh for the horseloss age.\nI saw crates of ducks and poultry so\nnear dead from oxhaustlon that thoy\nbarely had llfo onough to squawk.\nHow can peoplo oat such poultry, nftor\nhaving seen ItT Tho good thing Is\nthey don't see It and it Is nothing but\nwhat goes in any city.\nAt Pasco Friday thero wore sovoral\ndoxon passengers thrown off to await\nn train. Tho morcury was at ioro. and\nwomen and chlldron were froeclng,\nwith no fire In tho waiting room shod,\nand no coal In sight In tho othor ond\nof .the shod called a station at tills fa\nmous Junction woro tho railroad mon.\nworking with warm fires, and tons of\ncoko stored thoro. An old Gorman\nbroko In on thorn, nnd demanded that\ntho passongors got sholtor and\nwarmth. Coal wos "rustled," and tho\nsufferers mado comfortable Tho ducks\n chickens aro not tho only vlctlma\nof cruel treatment. At Kent Wash.,\nSaturday aftornoon, about SO hoad of\nbeof cattle wero standing In tho stock\nyard In from six inches to a foot of\nwater. Thoy had been there for soma\ntlmo, as nil look dejected and hung\ntheir heads. It was Into, and I sup-\npose- they spent tho night In that tor-\nture pen, where they could not He\ndown or slnnd up with comfort Cer-\ntainly money made by cattlemen or\ntransportation companies at the ox\nponse of such eruolty to dumb brutes\nwill carry a curse with It, and we\nshould not eat the beef.\nAccording to a stntoment of Uio Se\nattle city treasurer, assessments range\nfrom" 20 to SO per cont of values. Tho\npowerful Interests, llko groat corpora-\ntions, are In ono class and the smaller\nfry, like home- owno-
0a03e68c080d5965a5cd8b1d48adcb18 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1902.869862981989 43.994599 -72.127742 ing from this Act shall be paid into the\nState treasury and shall be distributed\nto the several towns and cities in the\nState according to population, as ascer-\ntained at the last census. It shall be\noptional for said towns and cities to\ndetermine how their said proportion of\nthe profits arising from the sale of\nliquors shall be used. All moneys re-\nceived by the State Store keepers belong-\ning to the State shall be forwarded on\nthe first Monday of each month to the\nState Liquor Commissioners. The quar-\nterly settlements herein provided for\nshall be made on the fourth Monday In\nthe months of March, June, September,\nand December In each year.\nSec. 23 . Before selling or delivering anj\nintoxicating liquors, except malt liquors\nand light wines, to drunk on the\npremises, to any person, a request must\nbe presented to the State Store keeper,\nprinted or written In ink, dated of the\ntrue date, stating that he or she Is of\nage, and the residence of the signer, for\nwhom or whose use It is required, and\nthe quantity and kind required; and the\nrequest shall be signed by the applicant\nin his own true name and signature, at-\ntested by the State Store keeper or his\nclerk, who shall receive and file the\nrequests. But no liquors shall be sold or\ndelivered if 'the State Store keeper ap-\nplied to personally knows the person\napplying is a minor, that he is Intoxi-\ncated, or that he is In the habh of using\nintoxicating liquors to excess; or If the\napplicant is
014d4f5466a0c2f7787e308d51086f34 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1885.2726027080162 39.78373 -100.445882 To the following named defendants\nand to all .owners of. or claimants to,\nthe real estate thereon, or improve\nments when assessed separately, here\ninafter described, known or unknown.\nYou are hereby notified that suits\nhave been commenced in the Jnstice\nCourt of Carson township, Ormsby\ncounty. Nevada, by the State of Nevada\nplaintiff against each of the defendants\nhereinafter named , and each of the fol\nlowing described tracts, or parcels of\nland, with fthe improvements thereon.\nand improvements when separately as\nsessed, and all owners of, or claimants\nto the same, known er unknown, to re\ncover the tax and delinquency assessed\nto said defendant against property, for\nthe fiscal year commencing January\n1st, 1884 and ending December 31st, 1884,\nand that a summons has been duly is\nsued in said case; And you are further\nnotified that unless you appear and\nanswer the complaint lied in said cause\non or before the\nEighth day of May, A. D. 1885\nJudgment will be taken against you and\nthe real estate and improvements here\nin described, for the amount of and\ndelinquency specified, and costs of suit.\nE, It. Sweeney and lots numbered 4 and\n6, Jn block No. 9 , with dwelling in\nSears, Thompson & Sears division of\nCarson City, personal property asses-\nsed at $500, tax and delinquency 59 67.\nR. H. Fish and land bounded as follows:\nBeginning at a point on the north line\nof 5th Avenue, 200 feet east of south\neast corner of Rice & Peters' division\nof block No. 8 , aud running thence\neast along the north lineofsth Avenue\n100 feet; thence north 248 feet; thence\nwest 106 feet; tnence south 248 feet to\nplace of beginning, with dwelling,\npersonal property assessed at $100, tax\nand delinquency $19 14.\nC. A. Nichols A O. P. Crawford and lots\nNo. 4 and 5, in block 25, of Musser's\ndivision of Carson City, tax,and de-\nlinquency $3 68.\nStephen Jones and east half of lots No.\n2 and 3, in block No. 34 , with dwelling\nof Rears, Thompson & Searsdivision\nof Carson City, personal property as-\nsessed at $100, tax and delinquency\n19 14.
129bdf027117dd32d29dcf8fd16037c4 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.664383529934 31.960991 -90.983994 Mr. Clay was so regarded; he was one of clined recognising ifio validity of your\nIbe leaders of the Democratic party, and State bonds. I happened to step fnto the\nthe foremost champion of the war under office of a friend, a highly respectable\nMadison. He was a prominent leader of merchant in London, where t met a g4ft\nthe Democratic pqrty when he upheld the ant officer of the British army, whose\nTariff of 1816—when he advocated the quaintahee 1 bad the honor and pleasure\nNational Bank the same year—when he previously to make fie informed me that\nlabored for the Cumberland road'and a ju- he was an unfortunate holder of Mississip-\ndicious system of improvements by the pi bonds. He remarked ! shall\nGeneral government. Mr. Calhoun went my 'grave a large deposit af American lead\nwith him in these measures. How hap- which C received at the battle of the Chi-\npens it that Mr. Clay,the most consistent pew®, where wounded and disabled I* fell\nwe had almost said the only consistent into the hands of your countrymen. From\nstatesman in the country from 1816 to the their generosity, unbounded kinduess and\npresent time, is now denounced by the par- humanity, I hought I could safelv depos-\nty which calls itself democratic? How *f in their good faith the IUtleg,oW*B limi-\nhaopens it that every prominent measure ted fortune still left I saw the sea!\nwhich marked the Democratic policy of an(l signature of the State of Mississippi\nMadisons administration is now denounc- j thought this.enough;but lam nearly\ned by the “democracy” ? A protective iued by my confidence in your country,\nsystem for sustaining domestic industry, ibis gentlemen, was said with a sensibiii-\na national institution to give an equable ly free from aH vituperation or querulous\nand sound currency, supportedandcarried abuse. It was said by a man who stood\nby the democracy of 1816, are now reck- six feet two in his shoes, the perfect and\noned as abominations in the eve of the de- entire impersonation of the finest models\nmocracy of 1843. Howisthis? Mr. Clay, of Phidias and Praxiteles. It was in one\nlaboring in the cause which called forth word, the gallant Sir John Marrilion Wil-\nhis gallant efforts as a democratic leader son> wbo was wounded in seven places at\nnearly thirty years ago, it is no longer to the battle of Chippewa* and who amidst\nbe deemed a democrat, while Mr. Calhoun, prejudice and ignorance in regard to\nwho has abandoned every principle of Mad- country, stood up as her generous and no-\nisonian democracy which ho once suppor- bio defender in his own. Can you blame\nted, is now a democrat and an aspirant to me» gentlemen. If I assured this veteran;\nthe Presidency under that name.
f674fb8af474247b58ffa3da250839fb CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1922.568493118975 39.623709 -77.41082 then all except the one holding Maries\nhand go towards the farm, concealing\nthemselves in the undergrowth as they\napproach it. After a brief interval\nshots are heard, and then shouts and\nshrieks, which soon cease, and after\nsome time the warriors return, with\nfiesh scalps added to those they al-\nready have, and bringing as captives\na woman ami a boy somewhat older\nthan Marie, whom they compel to car-\nry some provisions taken from the\nfarm. The woman is bewailing her\nfate and that of her family with pite-\nous outcries and lamentations, anti can\nscarcely walk as they drag her along.\nSeeing Marie, she exclaims, “Oh, you\npoor child! Have they taken you too?\nTheyve killed all of us except this\nboy anti me, and I wish they killed\nm 4 too.” A horse and two cows which\nthe marauders have taken from the\nform are also brought. One of the\nIndians mounts the horse, Marie is\nseated behind him, and thus they pro-\nceed all that day until the evening\nfinds them descending the western side\nof a hill that slops towards the bank\nof the Potomac River. At its foot\nthey camp for the night. The cap-\ntives arc carefully secured, but are\nallowed to converse with each other,\nand it is at least some poor comfort\nto them in their misery. They are\ngiven some of the milk from the cows,\nher own cows, which the woman is\nforced to milk, and some of the food\ntaken from the farm, and then they\nrest, while the night
14b15864fa970d5a613906cf04ee76a1 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1894.4890410641806 42.68333 -96.683647 The Senate hill grautliiK rlirM of way to the\nKa.stern Nebraska and tinlf Hal way Company\nthrough the Omaha and Winnebago Indian\nReservation In Nebraska passed. The House\nthen went intoeominktetiof the "hole to con­\nsider the antl option hill. Mr. Hateh opened\nthe debate with a speei'h in favorof the bill.\nM'\\ Warner of New York delivered avigorous\n(speech against the bill,in whichhe maintained\nthat while It was ostensiblj drawnin theinter­\nest of fanning people,arareful rea Inn showed\nthat It had been monkeyed uuh by someone\nwho was a thousand time, more amiller than\nthe Kentlemau from Missouri ilia'ehi was a\nfarmer. Mr lfryan of Nebraska eonMUered\nthis a bill to prevent gambling ill c,.rt iln pro­\nducts. and it was unjust to his constituents\n(who were niainl/ farmersi that other men\nshould have the riirlit to affect the price of\ntheir product, after they had taken the risk of\nrain drought and irraeshoppei-s andchinch\nbu.ifs. At f>:os Mr. Ill-van concluded his speech\nanil the House adjourned.\nIn the Senate on the 19th the 1,'lt was passed\nto ratify the agreement with the Yankton\nSioux of South Dakota. The tariff bill was\nthen taken up.\nIn the House on thelyih tho Mil for the re­\nlief and civilization of the Chippewas in Min­\nnesota passed. It provided that after lands\nhave been alloted in severalty. lOJ .t*)) acres of\npine landson White Karih and Ked I.ake Inn­\nervations be sold. The House then went into\nCommittee of the Whole to co sider the autl-\noptii-n bill and Mr. Combs spoUe in opposition\nto the measure. Mr. Sibley followed In ilo-\nteftse of the bill and Aldrich followed I? oppo­\nsition. Vr. l-'letcher presented several letters\nfrom dealers in wain protesting against the\npassage of the hill. At I :.V> o'clock the House\nadjourned.
7aa65595292c91dcc69ab5fe472c8b5f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.678082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 Baoss Jaii.U* *** three nw"\noo«flMa In lb# M«rtoncouotfJ»U. up¬\non » charga of i,ont l"*11"® ¦noc**d"\ned In-affecting thatr escape. Owing to\ntMr <taparate character they had been\nplaced In Irons. The* thejr *>«nd>»eaa*\nto remove, tad When the Jailor entered\ntheir ceil they knocked Mm down and\nlocked him la, and thro tooh their de¬\nparture. We ere not ftjlly Informed a*\nto particular!, bat understand that out\nof tha party bad bla lag broken, ft a\nsuppoee that thla waa caused by leap-\ning from a window or wall. Two of\nthe men w«r® brother*, named Yont,who\nprevious to tba breaking out of the war,\nresided In the neighborhood of Glover's\nlUap, They Joined the rebel armJ", and\nwe are told that theymade several trips\nhack to Marlyn county, currying ofr\nhoraea and running theiji.lnto tho rebel\nllnea. At coodualon of the war\ntb«y returned home and were arrested,\nand for a long time were confined In\nthe Jail In thla city. Some two or three\nmontlia ago they were removed to\nFhlrmont, Wbero they.have since been\nconfined up to tho time of their escape.\nT**H ScncK..The public sehools\nhave again been reopened, and it la pre-\nsumed that uuyty of the pupil* will\niiMiLuuoka and atatlonery. We, there¬\nfore, deelre to aay that J. 0 . Orr&Co.\nhate a moat Complete assortment of\neverything usually found In a Unit claim\nbook atore. lWoka for the lawyer, phi¬\nlosopher and statesman, IkkjIck for the\nchild'anil tho man, pens, pencils, InkM,\naud pajR'ra of every quality and kind,\nand laat, thongh not leust, the proprie¬\ntor* and their rlerks are clever ami iui-\nuouimodntiiiK gfntleuion. Itead their\nadtertkament, which appear* this\nmorning.^
ac25f71c2d8e43084141cc03f8b42471 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.105479420345 43.798358 -73.087921 The experiment was made in the fol-\nlowing manner : Two small bouses, about\neight feet square, by ten or twelve feet\nhigh, had been constructed of dry pine\nboards and timber ; the one open in every\ndirection, to permit a free passage for the\nflames and air, and the other close built\nand secure, so that combustible materials\nof any sort, such as gunpowder, &c, or\neven living animals might have been intro-\nduced with impunity, so as to make the\nexhibtion more striding. Thirty barrels\nof pine shavings were then placed around,\nand in contact with both the buildings,\nand six barrels of the same inflammable\nmatter were piled up on the floor of the\nopen house, in contact also with the sides\nof the interior. When the match was ap-\nplied, the flames rose to considerable\nheight above both the structures, (the in-\nterval being only two or three feet, and\nfilled with shavings,) with such fierceness\nthat, at one time, owing to the combustion\nof the oil used in the composition, the\nspectators imagined that the open house\nwould be consumed ; but on the decay of\nthe fire, it was found not even scorched,\nexcept in one or two places where some'\nboards had lately been replaced which had\nnot been a snfficient length of time covered\nwith the paint to prepare it for the test.\nBut the close built house, which had been\nproperly prepared, escaptd entirely.\nThe fire continued for nearly an hour, in\na manner that would certainly have redu-\nced to a heap of ashes any pine, oak, or\nother wooden buildings covered with ordi-\nnary paint.
a618481da6148cc28199533187540586 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.2726027080162 41.681744 -72.788147 friends, relatives in and out of town,\npublic officials, private societies, in-\nterested individuals, or by direct per-\nsonal application. As a member of\ntho United Community corporation\nthe Welfare association is one of\nseveral social agencies deriving a\nlimited support from a common\ntreasury. Appeals which, after due\ninvestigation, can be more properly\ncared for by other organizations in\nthe United Community corporation,\nare referred to them, or to city or\nstate departments. Por general fam-\nily work the Welfare association "is\nthe recognized organization serving\nthe city of New Britain.\n"As a last resort, when all means\ntoward fostering a normal, or near-\nly normal home life, have failed a\nfamily sometimes has to be broken\nup, never for a reason of poverty\nalone, but when a parent is beyond\na doubt morally and mentally unfit\nto such a point of incapability of\nbringing up the children, when re-\npeated readjustng. the best of ad-\nvice and help brings no lasting re-\nsults, the children must have a\nchance somewhere. Perhaps only\nwhile one or the parent is re-\nceiving custodial care, mental or\nphysical treatment, or is removed\npermanently. Then, by means of\nauthorities working wholly for the\nchildren's good, temporary or per-\nmanent homes are provided.\n"Among the 1738 applicants there\nhave been aeutally presented for so-\nlution the following problems: unem-\nployment, underemployment, physi-\ncal ailments, mental handicaps, be-\nhavior problems, assault, non sup-\nport, bad housing, adult delinquency,\nalcoholism, inadequate parental care,\nunmarried mothers, poor housekeep-\ning, social disease, irregular school\nattendance, personal maladjustment,\ndependent attitude, maternity.\n"In tho service administered to\nthese scores of applicants by trained\nworkers there has been an oppor-\ntunity to provide, or obtain through\ncommunity resources the following\nrelief: physician's services, city phy-\nsician's services, dental care, psychi-\natric examination, general health ex-\namination, special clinic examination,\nsocial disease examination, nursing\nservice, cooperation of probation of-\nficers, cooperation of other agencies,\ndebts paid, tonsillectomies, removal\nto better quarters, hospital care, per-\nmanent or temporary employment,\nboard of children, optical care, bet-\nter recreational facilities, pre -na t-\nand post-nat-
1795801b4ffe2d46deefee507256bd99 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.4808218860985 40.419757 -77.187146 highly respected citizen of the 3rd dis-\ntrict, committed suicide at hia residence,\nnear Pikesville, about 10 o'clock on Sun-\nday morning last, by shooting himself\nwith a gun. Rev. J. II. C. Dosh and\nRev. Mr. Brown were paying a friendly\nvisit to the house of Mr. Gore, and at\nabout the hour stated, the latter gentle-\nman left them for the purpose of going\nto his room to prepare for church. He\nhad been conversing cheerfully with his\nfriends and there was not the slightest\nsuspicion that he at all contemplated bo\nhorrible an act. Shortly after leaving\nthe room the ministers and family were\nstartled at the report of a gun which\nfairly shook the house, and on going in\nquest of Mr. Gore they found him lying\nupon the floor quite dead, the top of his\nhead being shattered by charge and\npresenting a horrible spectacle. He had\nevidently placed the muzzle of the gun\nagainst his head and pulled the trigger\nwith his foot. Mr. Gore was an exem-\nplary member of the M. E. church. He\nhad for many years been manager of the\nestate of Dr. John Fisher, and was him-\nself in good circumstances. It is said\nthat since the death of Dr. Fisher Mr.\nGore had expressed a desire to purchase\npart of the estate, which was sold at\npublic sale last week. This he failed to\ndo,the property passing into other hands.\nIt is supposed this weighed so heavily\nupon his mind as to dethrone his reason\nand while in this condition he commit\nted the rash act. Mr. Gore was in the\n52nd year of his age and leaves a wife\nand three children. Towsontown (Md.)\nunion.
0447beabb155e7ebce48caed60140793 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.375683028486 40.441694 -79.990086 ond time within less than six months, the\nUnited States Senate was called upon to\nmourn the loss of one of Its members and to\npay the last tribute of respect to tho mem-\nory of the late Senator John S. Barbour, of\nVirginia. The remains, in a black cloth\ncasket, were brought to the Capitol at 11 a.\nsi. and were deposited In the Senato cham-\nber, where Capitol police stood guard over\nthem. Tho chamber was arranged for the\nceremonies in tho usual manner. The chair\noccupied last Friday by the dead Senntor\nwas draped in black. The chaplain's opon- -\nIng prayer had only one direct allusion to\nthe occasion a rendering of thanks "for the\ntruo and falthtul life spared so long."\nImmediately after the journal of Friday"\nlast wns read Mr. Kenna roso and formally\nannounced, in the absence, because of\nIscicness, of Senator Daniel, of Virginia, tho\ndeath of Senator Barbour. He proceeded\nwith a personal sketch of the dead, the\nstory of his sudden taking off, and warm\nwords of eulogy for tne man and his charac-\nter. Mr. Kenna closed with the usual reso-\nlutions of respect, and when a committee of\nnine Senators had been named to accom-\npany the remains to Virginia a was\nhad at 12:50 r. h.\nThere were on the clerk's desk when tho\nSenate reconvened, two gilt candelabra, In\neach of which were three lighted candles,\nand between them stood a brass crucifix\nabout 15 inches high because, although the\ndead Senator was not a professing member of\ntho Church, his wife had been a Cathollc,nnd\nthe religious ceremonies were to bo con-\nducted, at the request of tho fainilr, by\nBlsbop Keane, rector of theCathollo Uni-\nversity. This was the first occasion In the\nmomoi-- of the oldest officers of the Senate,\nand perhaps in fact, when Catholic clergy\nofficiated In such maner In the Senate.\nAt 12:55 the members of the House entered\nthe chamber, followed by the Supreme Court\nJudges and members of the Cabinet, Mr.\nHarrison being out of town. Then came tho\nmembers of the dead Senator's family, near\nfriends, and last tho coffin, preceded, by the\nmembers of the committees of the two\nHouses, wearing white scarfs. These were\nfollowed by acolytes robed In white, bearing\nlighted candles, and who preceded about a\ndozen priests, wearing the sacerdotal vest-\nments, who ranged themselves nround the\ncoffin. While tho fumes from the censor\nroso In the air, Fnther Gillespie, S. J ., rec -t or-
2ca6a01f11ee70d9608bb1b66a662019 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.078082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 tonflKM, I will m>I1 nt I'uhlle AurHuti, nt ilio front\ndoor of the Court House of raid Olilo coiiuty, In the\ncity ul Wheel lug, on WBl)NIWI)AY. llm Iitli tiny\nof February, Ittfa, UglnnltiB at 1(1 o'clock a. m. of\nMidday, the following duaenlied nul cattle, Hint i«\ntomyi All of 4ula numk'red eleven ami tweive\n(II ami 12) In tlic addition to the City of Wheeling\nmill nut hy Mtwes W. Chapllne, .lame* If. Forty III.\nAlotander Wilson nnd Marcus Wilson, limited nt\nthe turner immI of Main street and northnf Twenty*\nfifth street (formerly railed Marnlinll alreel) In the\ntil fill Ward of raid city. Each of raid lota frohta\nfifty fi«l (W) feet)on Main street, and luteudi rait*\nwnnlly one hundred and twenty-two feet (1W feet)\nto lie alley In I .nof raid lots. Iielna all Hie name\n which was conveyed lo the Mid Klfeh\nMhnnley m Iter Dole and acjierato estate hy deed of\nJaroh Hnyiler and wtt«^ lieariogaven date with the\naliovo mentioned deed of trust; together with, all\nand singular, the Improvement* thereon, consisting\nof a two-story hrlck dwelling and a two-story frame\nbusiness house, with oilier Improvements\nTitMM or 8ALR. - One*fotirtli of tin purchase\nmoney in cash on the day of tile anil the residueIn\nllitw? equal semi-annual installments, wllh Interest\nti|Min the deferred payment! from the day of aale.\nthe pun'hawr uivlitK IjuihI wltli approved personal\nsecurity, and the title to the property to la« retained\niii ifia i»iM»ih liiiilinf Id fullf twill. Molllnu HI\nIriMtoe, i will r«n*oy I no llita which h mir»T In\ninn lit Ihf iImm of triirt. The Mhie l«, how\npfcr. Imitated to bo unexmrflonalilv.\nJiuili
6d764940a88f17ce6749473e35d5406d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.741095858701 41.681744 -72.788147 "I heard men working," he re-\nported. "It was distant but definite,\nI am sure of it. They aro alive."\nMakl's passage was blocked 50\nfeet beyond tho point where a res-\ncue party is working in the mine\nshaft to clear away the wreckage\nwhich blocks entry to the eighth\nlevel. This finding determined that\nit will be long before rescue can be\nmade by this route.\nIn the meanwhile every available\nbit of energy is being concentrated\nIn this and three other avenues, one\nof which is the piercing of a hole\nby a diamond drill to facilitate the\npassage of food, clothing and mes-\nsages to tfie men.\nAnother is a horizontal tunnel\nfrom an adjoining mine whilo the\nfourth and most hazardous is from\nthe mine shaft, access to which is\ngained through a lower level.\nEveryone is confident that tho res-\ncue will be made. Expectations were\nthat possibly one expedition would\n through late tonight. The Oliv-\ner Iron Mining company, which owns\nthe mine, however, issued a state-\nment that four or five days more\nmay be necessary. A total of 470 men\nare engaged in the rescuo work.\nElaborate preparations have been\nmade for the care of the miners, if\nthey are brought out alive. Every\nman who comes up from tha long\nspell in darkness will be blindfolded\nto prevent tho severe shock of day-\nlight. They will be taken to a car\nless than 100 feet away which has six\nPullman berths and seven cots will\nbe placed in it.\nAn attompt to communicate with\nthe entombed men by telegraph code\nusing an iron pipe as the transmis-\nsion medium failed early today.\nThe code for "O. K." was ham-\nmered on the pipe more than a\nhundred times by a telegrapher.\nThere was no response. One of the\nentombed miners understands the\ncode, mine officials said.
2c33185dadf6ea8f05560336aacc6d28 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.2281420448796 41.004121 -76.453816 When n new Congress is elected, a com-\nmittee is appointed by tlio Ring to discover\nby nil available means, the peculiarities,\ntastes, and general habits of all tho new\nmembers elect, so that tho necessary traps\nmay bo laid for them when they arrive hero\nns strangers. If n now member is known to\nbo of a "pious turn," two or three members\nof tho Ring contrive to get introduced to\nhlni, soinehow,aud snnko him oil' to a prayer\nmeeting if ho is an evangelical christian, in-\nto the church of any denomination to which\ntlio victim may belong. Tho Ring com-\nprises men of nil religious sects, from tho\northodox Roman Catholic to tho Spiritualist;\nor, moro correctly speaking, comprises men\nwho aro willing to represent themselves to\nbo connected with any church under tho\nsun, if anything is to bo "made" by it. The\nRing owns, through its members, ono or\nmoro pews in all tho principal churches in\nWashington. If a now Congressman bo n\ntemperance man, ho is snatched, quick as\nlightning, aud lugged off to a meeting of tlio\nSons of Jonadab. Thoso who take their\n"tod" arc escorted to all tho "best places,"\nnnd, finally, to tho Metropolitan Club, where\nthey nre allowed to swill, ad libitum, without\ncost, and aro assured that they will ho wel-\ncome and hospitably entertained whenever\nthey call that they can not coino too often\nfcc &c. Tho "gay and festive" member is\ndriven round and shown the "picture s,"and,\nin due course of time, it is intimated to him\nthat if ho has a lady "friend" whom ho\nwould like to place in one of the Depart-\nments, the thing can bo managed for him.\nIf ho is needy, and fond of draw poker, and\nhis voto is wanted, ho is nllowed to win, at\nthe "club," a few hundreds or thousands,\nnccording to tho importnnco 6f his voto nnd\ninfluence. Tho Ring goes strong for Con\ngressmen of slender means who have wives\nnnd daughters anxious to go into "society,"\nand mako n splurge.
0dc0b57684ba2be2cc0a4c3b8cf36244 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.5493150367834 39.745947 -75.546589 past are to continue to hind the party, or whether\nit will he in line with the movement headed by\nGovernor Wilson. What will be done depends tn\na large measure upon the attitude of the Demo­\ncratic weekly newspapers, and it depends upon the\nposition taken by the younger men of the party.\nDuring the last few years many young men\nhave come to the front. This is especially notice­\nable in Wilmington, where the young Democratic\nlawyers as well as other young Democratic leaders\nare plentiful. It is also true in the lower coun­\nties. There has been some disposition, though,\nnot very marked, among them to look to the\nfuture and to abandon warring between the fac­\ntions and the keeping alive of quarrels inherited\nfrom the days gone by. We say this tendency,\nas we see it, is not very marked, and this is due\nin some at least to hold hack and special\nprivilege doctrines pumped into them by most\nof ,their leaders and some of their newspapers.\nIt finds expression in Democratic conventions\nat Dover. The income tax had but a single friend\nin the committee on resolutions of the state con­\nvention. The Public Utilities bill was opposed with\nqueer arguments by one of the strongest of the\nleaders of Kent. So long as men don't think for\nthemselves or dont wish to go to the trouble of\ninforming themselves, but rather prefer to swal­\nlow the opinions of others, there will be no real\nchange in the attitude of the Democratic party\nin this state towards public matters. The person­\nality of Governor Wilson, however, and the ideas\nfor which he stands, may enable him to win the\nDemocratic delegates from Delaware, but he will\nnot if star chamber tactics can prevail against\nhim.
534a09a8a9752549a46c5a77dff6d7d7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.7308742853168 41.681744 -72.788147 "The committee Is of ths unani-\nmous opinion that no symbol thst\nwill "typify or remind one of wsr\nshould be erected or parked in the\nvicinity of the memorial, .as we feel\nit would be a desecration to those\nwho gave their lives snd in whose\nhonor this memorial Is erected.\n"The memorial committee feels\nvery grateful to. and wishes to thank\nsincerely, all those who have as-\nsisted in any way to make this me-\nmorial possible, especially H. Van\nBuren Magontgle, the architect and\ndesigner ef the memorial, and whom\nit is my greet pleasure to present to\nyou at this time.\n"As chairman of the memorial\ncommittee I want to express my deep\nappreciation to the members of the\ncommittee. I feel as If I were de-\nlivering a valedictory. The commit-\ntee has been associated together for\nfour years, and from the beginning\nto the present, nothing has arisen \nmar our deliberations and united co-\noperation. To, these gentlemen who\nhave given so much of their valuable\ntime and service. I want to extend\nmy heartfelt thanks for aiding the\nsuccessful completion of this beauti-\nful work of art.\n"And now, Mr. Mayor, the mem-\nbers of the committee which was ap-\npointed by you four years ago feels\nthat the duties imposed upon It by\nthe common council and the citizens\nof New Britain are completed. We\nrealized the importance of this great\nundertaking. We have watched its\nconstruction as If it were our own\npersonal property, and it gives me\ngreat pleasure as chairman of the\nmemorial committee, to turn over to\nyou. as chief executive of the city of\nNew Britain, this beautiful me-\nmorial. It has been erected within\nthe amount, appropriated by the\ncemmon council and the committee\nfeels that it is a perfect piece ef\nwork."
61b100b52c34e219a0d2e4243f02c90d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.7520547628108 43.798358 -73.087921 to science her boundaries, or restrain the\nactive ana insatiable curiosity of man with-\nin the circle of his present acquirements?\nWe may guess with plausibilfly what wc\ncannot anticipate with confidence. Tha\nday may yet be coming, when our instru-\nments of observation sJiall be inconceiva-\nbly more poweiful. They may ascertain\nsti!l more decisive points of resemblonce.\nThey may resolve the same question by\nthe evidence of sense which is now so\nabundantly convincing by the evidence of\nanalogy. They may lay open to us tha\nunquestionable vestiges of art, and indus-tr- y ,\nand intelligence. We may see sum-\nmer throwing its green m mile over ihesa\nmighty tracts, and we may see them left\nnaked and colorless after the flush of veg.\netation has disappeared. In the progress\nof years, of centuries, we may trace tho\nhand of cultivation spreading a new as\npect over some portion of a planetary sur-\nface. Perhaps some large city, the me-\ntropolis of a mighty empire, may expand\ninto a visible spot by the. of soma\nfuture telescope. Perhaps the glass of\nsome observer, in a distant age, may ena-\nble him to construct a map of another\nworld, and to lay down the surface of it\nin all its minute and topical varieties\nBut there is no end of conjecture, and to\nthe men of other times we leave the full\nassurance of what we can assert 'with tbe\nhighest probability, that yon planetary\norbs are so many worlds That ihey teera\nwith life, and that the mighty Being who\npresides in high authority over this scena\nof grandeur and astonishment, has there\nplanted worshippers of his glory.\nDid the discoveries of science stOD here\nwe have enough to justify the exclamation\nof the Psalmist, What is man that thou\nart mindful of him, or the son of man that\nthou shouldest deign to visit him ?' They\nwiden the empire of creation far bevond\nthe limits which were formerly assigned\nto it. They give us to see that yon sun,\nthroned in the centre of his planetary sj'S -te-
2065f879f30c429e4de95773471005a0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.8013698313039 40.063962 -80.720915 ening roar. It is a short stride from the poll\nword to tho deed, and every day in our the\npaporo we may read the result of this dia- Bon\ncontent. Labor of all kinda, from the wat\nmoat menial to the moat akllled, with the Wi!\ncry Btill ringing in their eara while their mal\njudgmont sleeps, has riaen up and refused to-c\nto work, preferring no pay to little pay. fese\nAnd with what result? i)efeat, disaater hiri\nand despair. ran\nThere havo been timea and incidents ver\nwhen the "strike" waa the only court of\nappeal for the workingman, and the evil\nlay in the abuse of them and not in the I\nuse of them. The methoda need to bring ci(j(\nabout a saccceaful termination of atrikea, d\nthe abuse of property and even of peraon8, \nhaa broufeht the very name into disrepute, *\nwhile the troublea of the laboring men are 1\nrapidly receiving mere cant, and sympathy\nlor him is dying out. More and more J"\nclearly defined ia tho line becoming which v"\ndivides tho honest man.satisfied with a ^\njust remuneration which ho has truly Jf\nearned, until by his own effort he can rise\nto a higher position in life.and the loud . '\nvoiced "bomb-thrower" who, scarcely able\nto speak the English language, seeks to\nwin his own comfortable livinx from those\nwho haye worked for it, presuming upon ,\ntho imagination and arousing false hopes\nin tho hearts of those who are still more ^\nignorant than himself. Among: sensible cai\nmen the day for. all.this is past. Lot in|\n"mercy season justice and justice be tern tfo
0c5dcb15c795c9c97026e4ffaf121f27 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.7630136669204 39.745947 -75.546589 tions of war is clearly indicated hy the registration for\nprimary elections which lias occurred thus far. This\nis especially evident In Pittsburgh, where registration\nfor the primary was held on September 21.\nPittsburgh and its vicinity have enjoyed the lion's\nshare of the munitions orders and a consequent tem­\nporary prosperity, but the fact that the voters clearly\nunderstand the situation and realize that it is only the\n"war orders" which have saved the country from dire\nand protracted hard times is shown by the registra­\ntion. Out of a total registration in Ihe city of Pitts­\nburgh of 79,584, those who recorded themselves as Re­\npublicans numbered 67,561, as against 7,963 who con­\nfessed to being Democrats. The remainder of the reg­\nistration consisted of 1,337 Socialists and 683 Progres­\nsives (“Washingtonians”), together with 972 whose\nparty ts unrecorded. ' The fact that Demo­\ncratic registration amounted to barely 10 per cent, of\nthe Republican In a county which gave Wilson 31,000\nvotes. Taft 23,000, Roosevelt 36,000, and recorded 19,000\nfor tbe Social Democratic candidate in 1912 is certainly\nsignificant of the tremendous movement toward “Re­\npublicanism and Protection” which has taken place\nduring the present administration. Hardly loss signi­\nficant were the registration figures In Philadelphia re­\ncently. and these all tally with the reports of compe­\ntent observers In different parts of the country.\nManufacturers, merchants and farmers all seem to\nrealize that but for the accident of the European war\nthis country would have experienced during this admin­\nistration the most serious period of depression ever\nknown, and still further to realize that whenever the\nwar ends most serious results will follow unless there
26010654a99b786fee93d3ddc49f14c7 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.8041095573312 39.261561 -121.016059 SOLKOHLMAN vs. IIIS CREDITORS. In tho matter of\nthe petition of Sol kohlmnn an Insolvent debtor, praying\nthat he may be allowed to make an assignment of his es-\ntate to his creditors ami he be discharged from his debts\nand liabilities, in pursuance of an act of the legislature of\nthe State of California, passed May 4th A. 1). 185*2, entitled\nAn not (or the relief of insolvent debtors, and protection of\ncreditors—In pursuance of an order of the Hon. Niles\nSearls, Judge of the District Court aforesaid. Notice is\nhereby given to tho creditors of said insolvent, to l*e and\nappear before said Judge in Nevada City in o|M*n Court, on\nthe 17th day of October A. 1). 1857 , at 10 oclock A. M . of\nthat date, then and there to show cause any they can,\nwhy an assignment of his estate should not be granted,\naiul he be discharged from his debts and liabilities, in pur-\nsuance of the statute in such cases made and provided. It\ni* ordered that the Clerk of said Court issue a notice call-\ning the Creditors of said Insolvent to bj and appear at the\ntime and place above specified for the purposes above\nmentioned, and that said notice bo published at least thirty\ndays, In a newspaper printed an<L published in the (ity\nand County aforesaid. It is further ordered that all pro-\nceedings against amid insolvent bo stayed. By order of\nthe Hon. Niles SoarlwDistrict Judge.\nWitness Rufus Shoemaker Clerk of the District Court\naforesaid, with the seal thereof hereto affixed this l*2th\nday of September A. I). 1857 .
1624e3546572790b54cb4eaca02e3ffd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.5931506532218 39.745947 -75.546589 "The Dole governtmmt owns throo-qHar­\nters of tho landed property in tho islands,\nam) tho proposition 1» if tho ox|>odl-\nllon !,t Ktircresfal, to distribute tho cap­\ntured property to thojmiherent» and send\nDole aud hi« supporters ont of tho islands\nwithout a cent. The standing nfiny con­\nsists of 120 men and 4u officers, besides a\nmilitia of »so men. Tho armament of tho\nstanding army is six gutling guns, which\nare stationed at the palace.\n“In tho city of Honolulu the Dole gov­\nernment claims 3,(MIO adherents, and of\nthose 8,000 there are 1,000 who are friends\nof I ho royalists, and out of the 120 men\nwho make up tlie standing army wo claim\nto have five men Who are ready to do tho\nbidding of the revolutionary party, and\nout. of the militia can command tho\nServi»«« of 60 mull.\n“Tho proposition is to capture tho five\nsteamers that ply liotween tho Islands, and\nthen approach Honolulu and capture tho\nrevenue office and hank of Bishop Uo.,\nthere being from $800,000 to »500,000 in\nthe revenue boxes and bank.\n"The proposition in regard to tho queen\nIs to place her on tlie throne as » mere fig­\nurehead, tho hood of tho revolutionary\nparty to ho In control of affairs.\n"Rudolph Spreckels has planted 1,000\nstands of arms to be used by the revolu­\ntionists on tlie island of Maui.\n“The Spreckels have little use for the\nprovisional government. They could fur­\nnish arms to the natives except that the\nnatives eould not use them, and to this\nfact 1 attribute the failure of the lost up­\nrising.
0ec412f4537059097af8ea9b5b5bdde3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.4424657217148 40.063962 -80.720915 An lOgdensburg special says that\nO'nNil is at Malone, and is emphatic\nin the declaration that a blow is to be\nstruck before Sunday night.\nA dispmcli suys ilio United Mates\ntroops are thoroughly tainted with *e-\nniatiisin. and can't be relied on to en¬\nforce extreme measures.\nNew Yoke, June 9..A portion of\nSpear's Fenian cavalry made a dash\ninto Freelinghsburg yesterday, and\nrouted a British force and captured a\nlarge British flag. General Speariiu-\nmediate! v commenced intrenching.\nThe morale of the army is very bad,\nand desertions are the rule, whole com¬\npanies are making tracks lor the near-\nest home transportation office, and in\nsome instances, regiments desert as\nan organization. Drunkenness prevails\nto an alarming extent. Colonel Scan-\nl,in, with bis regiment, engaged a body\nor British horse at Pigeon llill yester¬\nday. The British were driven in con-\nfusion, losing three flags and one man\nkilled and several wounded. The *e-\nuiatis had three wounded. Colonel\nScanlan then ordered his regiment to\n and they are now at St. Al-\nbUGeiieral Sweeney was heldI to bail for\n820,000, and Colonel Mahan for\nV Fenian council of war at Btiflalo\ndecided that it was best to order all the\ntroops back to their homes without\narms and without money, ihey think\nit is a useless waste ot life to enter Can-\n¦"b'uffalo, N. V ., June 9. -The com-\nmandihgofficer informs us that there\nare as many as 3,000 Fenians in Buffalo.\nThey are generally quiet and orderlv.\nVerv little if any trouble is anticipated,\nas not a quarter of them have arms, or\nnmild iret any here. A number ot them\nlearning Hint trunsportalion bad been\nfnruislied bv the government else¬\nwhere to send them home, have applied\nto Gen. Barry to send them there Gen.\nHarry has telegraphed-to Gen. Meade\nfor instructions on Ibis point. It is\nprettv certain that if the governme it\ndon't"send then, home, they are likely\nto stay here some time. Mostortlit\nmen have no money, and Gen.
0c3214552b8d6be9c0dd71025de05365 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.091780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 This ia followed by embracers il she\nheld 111 her arum a babe, and the invisible\nobi-Jet of hor affection is kiessil repeatedly.\nAiD-Mbis she lauglw Boltly to herself, as\nthough in conversation with mvislhle\nfriends. or guz.ug upou some pleasing\nscene, The sight of one of tiiene spells,\nall of which aro molo or less alike, is de¬\nscribed as affecting In the extreme, and\nthe numerous visitors who havo been at¬\ntracted to Mr. Huffy house out ol curios¬\nity leave aweetiicken and amazed.\noccasionally, instead of coming to after\none of these utrange opelln, tho child be¬\ncomes film, Beaming aluut to recover,\nand partially opens her eyee, which are\nuuusually bright and clear; but ouly to\nsiuk at'aiu lit) a comatoeo state, upon\ntho conclusion of which the same strange\naud pathetic sights are witnessed.\n "uionciu wondkh" outdone.\nThough, *s before stated, over two\nweeks have elapsed since the child 8 liret\nconvulsion or trance, she liaa in that time\noaten scarcely anything. Silo takes a\ndrink ot milk or a little solid food when\nresting in the intervals between the at¬\ntacks,Tiut her appetite seems appeased by\na morsel. Aud tho strangest patt Is to\nrelato, Sinco her fourth year the cli Id\nhas been a cripple, and cf feehie health.\nYet now she ia unusually atroug, her\nmuscles seeming aa hurd as iron, tiome-\ntimes near tho conclusion of au attack\nshe will straighten out into a rigid posi¬\ntion with burn force ae to propel her body\nupward until it cornea in contact with the\nceiling. At these times abe ohrioks in an\nuneaiTTHy toue: "Catch them! oh, catch\n11
3139df91ef5e79e4f745e8c300ce85e0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.443989039415 40.063962 -80.720915 Mv first full speech on the subject was\nin 1860, the second in 1870, and the third\nand fourth in 1878. I have been recogniz¬\ned for several years past as the leader of\nthe Renublirati party on this subject, and\nevery Republican member of the House\nknows mjr position, and, as I believe, ap¬\nprove it. In 1868, I made a speech in\nfavor of the resumption of specie payments,\nin which I discussed elaboratly the doc¬\ntrines of money, and the obligation of the\nNation to pay its debt. The Secretary of\nthe Treasury sent some copies of that\nspeech to our Ministers in London, be-1\nKevins that it would sttengthen our credit\nabroad. John Bright received a copy,\nand was so pleased with it that he had me\nelected an honorary member of the "Cob-\nden Club." I had never heard of\nthis club, and up to this time Chas. Sum¬\nner was the only member of Congress who\nhad ever been thus complimented.\nSome years after that the Cobden Club\nbelieved in free trade, as nearly all Eng¬\nlishmen do, but, of course. I was in no\nway responsible for the belief. This mat¬\nter had been repeatedly explained in the\niron districts, and it is fully understood\nby our leading iron men. I represent one\nof the heaviest iron districts in Ohio, and\nin Mahoning county, where the largest\nmills and furnaces are Bituated. I ran\nahead of the State and county ticket last\nyear, and I have the support of almost\nevery intelligent manufacturer of the dis¬\ntrict. I write this freely, that you may\nunderstand how entirely withont founda¬\ntion the article is"n the Dispatch, Very\ntruly, yours,
1563b1dcc2e61e783c09171b85881179 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.028767091578 39.756121 -99.323985 The profits of the farm arc its sur-\nplus. Some, however, consider this to\nbe after the family living is had and\nthe current expenses of the farm are\npaid. Others are willing to credit the\nfarm with the living, but charge it\nwith the labor necessary to properly\nmanage. A man is certainly entitled\nto a living if ho works for it, and if the\nfarm is not charged with tho value of\nthe work of the farmer and his help it\nis reasonable that it should not bo\ncredited. Strictly speaking, tho farm\nshould be charged with every day's\nwork done upon it; and it should in\nturn be credited with everything\ngrown or produced upon it, whether used\nupon tho farm or not. But with the\nmajority of'farmers this would necess-\nitate an account of details that would\nbe rather tedious to keep. If the farm\nliving is to balance tho farmer's work,\nthis lessens the small accounts and\nmakes only surplus the profits.\nUpon this basis, considering the\namount of capital invested, tho farm\nwould be paying a very good per cent,\nof interest if there was no surplus.\nThe living for the farmer and his fam-\nily would show a profit equal at least\nto many other lines of business.\nWhether or not in doing this the capi-\ntal is infringed upon depends upon the\nmanagement given. With good care\ngood crops may be "grown on the farm\nevery year, and the fertility of the soil,\nas well as the farm, be generally im-\nproved, Another, with fully as good\nopportunity, will gradually sell his\nfarm. In the latter case he is losing\nmoney, while in the former a profit is\nbeing realized, although there may be\nno visible surplus after the living is\ntaken out There is one advantage at\nleast on the farm, although the profits\nmay be small, the farmer is reasonably\nsure of a good average living. Prairie\nFarmer.
1d955f8451ad63508274225ca1e48c67 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1886.015068461441 37.561813 -75.84108 dollars were oiler'1.! any one of the owners of\nthe tickets not yet called, with not a single\ntaker. Strange to state, every number came\nout, belonging to parties iu town, h aving the\nlucky Hoosier's number in the box to the last.\nA nn eting was held in the Commercial Bunk\none evening last week, for the purpose of not-\ning an expression of certain parties regarding\nthe advisability of boring into mother earth\nfor natural gas. There were present Hon. H.\nL. Dickey, C. V. Price, Prof. Win. G. Molt r,\nGeo. Love. (ieo. W. llucker and several other\nprminent citizens, but no conclusion was reach-\ned, although it was quite evident that the\nmatter was favorably received by every one\npresent, and in all probability will soon bo\npushed with renewed vigor.\nThe supper and dance given by the members\nof the Church of thin place, en Tues-\nday evening of last week, proved uu immense\nallair, from which nearly one hundred and\nlit'ty dollars was tho net result. Too supper\nwas gotten up by the ladies who certainly un-\nderstand their business and were generally\npatronized for their work, while the dance in\nB( H's Hall proved a regular bonanza and was\nprobably the largest and bet conducted affair\never held in the building. Kverybody seemed\nwell pleased and nothing occurred to interfere\nwith the pleasure of the evening,\nOu Friday evening of lust week quite a large\nnumber of elderly married ladies met at the\nresidence of Mrs. Clara Dwyer on West Main\nstreet, aud spent a very en joy able evening.\nIt has been customary for several years past,\nfor this same company to meet, once each year,\nfor a renewal of old acquaintanceship,
39c42a1e8cb9c3ae499fc0342472f69c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.001369831304 39.513775 -121.556359 The undersigned, de-irous of acqunlntiu? those\nwho mnv he unfortunate enoierh to he similarly af-\nflicted where n perinnnent relief of their sufferings\nmav ho obtained, feels it liisduly to thus publicly\nexpress his sincere tern IiI tic to to |)r, 1 . *1 Czflpkay,\n'or the permanent recovery of his health Horne\ndown hy the distressing symptoms incident to the\nvicious practices of uncontrollable passion in youth,\ndepressed in body and mind, unable to perform even\nthe most trilling duty imposed upon the daily avoca-\ntions of life, 1 soutrhi the advice of many t»hysician«.\nwho at first regarded mv disease ot trifling import-\nmice. but ahvs! after a few weeks, and in several in-\nstances months, of their treatment. I found to my nn-\niitlerahle horror, that instead of relief the symptoms\nbecame more alarming in their torture, nml being\ndually told me hy one that Ihedisetise.being routined\nprinciply In the brain, medicines would he of little\nconsequence. 1 despaired of ever regaining m> health\nstrength and energy, and a last resort.and with\nhat a faint hope, called upon Hr. Cznpkay who. nfler\nexamining my case,prescribed some nit dicine " hieh\nalmost instantly relieved me of the dull pains and\ndizziness in my head, f'nconngeil hy this result, I\nresolved to place myself immediatelv under his care,\nand. hy a strict obedience to his din die ns and ad-\nvice*. my head became clear, my ideas collected, the\nconstant pain in my hack and groins, the weakness\nof my limbs, the nervous reaction of my wtiole sys-\ntem im the slightest alarm or excitement, the mis-\nanthropy and evil forebodings, the self distrust and\nwant of confidence in o'tiers, the incurability to\nstudy and mint of resolution, the frightful exciting,\namt ul limes pleasurable dreams at night, followed\nhv involuntary discharges, have all disappeared, and\nin fact, in two months after having consulted the\nin dor. I felt as it inspired hy a new life—that life\nwhich, but n short time ago, I contemplated to end\nby mv own hand.
57d65292e1b5abd1ba60f70bec67f23a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.6369862696602 37.561813 -75.84108 ArriToxs' Journal gives, in a weekly form, au\nthe features of the magazine. Its weekly iiwue\nbrings it a more frequent visitor to the family than\nin the case with a monthly neriodicaL while, in\ncoarse of the year, a much greater aggregate and\nlarger variety of papers are furnished than are giv-\nen in any of the regular monthlies. But, for those\nwho prefer it, the Journal is put up in Monthly\nParts, and in this form its scope and variety, as\ncompared with other magazines, become conspicu\nously apparent.\nAppletons' Journal will continue io present\nhealthful, sonnd, instructive, and entertaining liter-\nature. It will confine itself, as a rule, to mte aerial\nmirel at a time; it will coutain the best short stories\nattainable; it will give picturesque descriptions\nplaces, and stirring narratives of travel and adven-\nture; it will have papers npon various\nsubjects that pertain to the pursuits and recreations\nof the people; it will give portraits and sketches\npersons distinguished in various walks of file; will\npresent livelv, social sketches, having in special\nview those things the knowledge of which will con-\ntribute to ihe welfare aud happiness of the house-\nhold; it will describe phases of life in all quarters\nthe globe; it will discuss the important events of the\ntime, and the advances madein art, literature, and\nscience; it will endeavor to redect the ideas, move-\nments, and development of society; and, while hop-\ning to enlighten, will strenuously aim to entertain,\nwith large abundance of material, all who resort\nits pages for intellectual pleasure. Illustration will\nbe used stltlicieiitly to give variety and animation\nits pages; but the aim will be tci niake it rather\niounial of popular high-cla-
2ac80ae35c18880886cf63d3b52f943d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1871.4205479134957 39.623709 -77.41082 and its surroundings gathered up in\nlarge numbers at the Hall, and be-\nstowed their patronage liberally to a\napod cause, for all of which they will\nbe abundantly rewarded in the future.\nThe Hall presented quite a dazzling\nappearance, brilliantly illuminated and\nwreathed in green verdure. The ta-\nble was tastefully strewn with the\nchoicest flowers nature yields, the fra-\ngrance of which when entering the\nroom was sufficient to make one feel\nlike enjoying a saucer of luscioU/S.traw-\nberries, fresh from the Auburn Home-\nstead, smothered in a plate of highly\nflavored Avondale Ice Cream, which\nwas being received twice a day to\nmeet the demands. But this was not\nall; the ice cold Lemonade with quite\na variety of Cakes, was so cheerfully\nserved up to quench our thirst and\ngive tone and invigoration to the sys-\ntem. All was par excellent.\nThe ladles certainly deserve the en-\ncomiums of all for the skillful manage-\nment of the festivity, not to speak dis-\nparagingly of the married ladies, but\na few more with the "sweet\nlooking creatures" who made them-\nselves so accommodatingly agreeable,\nwould have been more encouraging\nfor the young gentry to invest.\nWe hope to see a flower garden of\nthe "tender sprouts" at Odd Fellows\nHall next week —ain't going to he\nfoolol neither —if we live. The mar-\nried ladies were agreeable and enter-\ntained the guests very intelligently.\nNotwithstanding a slight prejudice\nexisted on the part of some connected\nwith thecoming fair,everything passed\noff very pleasant and satisfactory, and\nwas quite a success beyond expectation.\nGreat and expensive preparations\nare being made for the fair next week,\nand it promises to be a grand thing.\nThev certainly have our best wishes\nfor the success attending it, and would\nsay to the hospitable people of the\nvicinitv and neighboring towns even\nat a distance, vou will be highly com-\npensated by calling and viewing the\nHall, which no doubt will be richly\nadorned ingrandeur. M care informed\nthat three or four bands of music will\nbe on hand to enliven the occasion at\ndifferent nights.
317ba4ac36b00128db04367547ec840a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1857.2698629819888 37.561813 -75.84108 ana, which three last are children of A lex uider\nMi Coy, dee'd., Clark McCoy, who resides\nthe tn d county of H igliland. Laniard Allen\nnnd Ann, his v.ife, Doctor Melvinney and\nRachel Jane, b is wife, w ho reside in the state\nof Iowa, Jonathan K irrett and Surah M. Bar-\nrel!, his wifo, Win. McCoy and Levi McCoy,\nwho reside in the said County of Highland,\nand Cyrus McCoy, w ho r sides in the state\nlown, and Sarah McCoy, widow of Thomas\nMcCoy, dee'd , who resides in llle stale of In.\n(liana, arc hereby notified that a petition was\nfiled In tho Court of Common Pleas of High-\nland County on the llth day of March, lbiT,\nby Walklns Johnson, and Jane Johnson,\nwife, and is now pending, demanding partition\nof the following lands and tenements, sitUd\nted in the raid county of Highland and stale\nOhio, and described as follows,\nA tract of laud, of John Hays' Survey\nNo. il 'JH'i, containing about 85 acres moie\nless, being the home farm of Thomas McCoy,\nlate of liighlund county dee'd , and upon\nwhich he residod at the time of his decease\nand for a long time previous thereto, nnd\nwhich is bounded north by land of John Mc-\nCoy, east by land of Levi Johnson, sooth\nland ol Joseph V. Putton, and west by land\nof James Y. Fairly.\nAlso, one oilier tract, coulalning about fif-\nty lu res more or less, bought hy thu said Thos.\nMcCoy in his lifetime of Thomas Montgom-\nery, and lying in the northwest cornr of\nhome farm of the v.ild Thomas Montgomery,\nand- bounded north by land of Alex. Walker,\neast and south by land of Thomas Montgom-\nery, and west by land of Henry Cowgill.\nAnd ut the 'uneTerin of said Court A.\nIs." i7, said petitioners will usk that Ihe dower\nof Sai.ih AfcC-i-
0d95d75d647dcb35e69107e17be8f4c8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.0863013381531 58.275556 -134.3925 Ono of the acts passed by llu« last\nthe holding of elections in Alnaku,\nTerritorial legislature relating to\nand designated to materially change\ntho methods heretofore in vojiuo In\nthe country for chooalug candidates\nfor tho mo vera I territorial offices, Ik\nknown as Chapter s. "to provide\nfor tho holding of primary olectlona\nIn tho Territory of Alaaka. etc."\nIl.v the provlalona or thin act all\nnominees for office under the terri¬\ntorial government and tho dclogate\nto congress from Alaska must be\nchoaon l»y a direct vote of tho people.\nHy the provlalona of this act all per-\naona aspiring to become cairlldatea\nfor delegate to congrcaa. for attor¬\nney general or any other olTlco\ncreated by act of congreas or the\nterritorial legislature ahall. not less\nthan alxty da.va before the date of\nthe primary election (the lust Tues-\n«lay in April. IS»18. and similarly\nevery aecnnd year thereafter) fllo\nwith the secretary of the territory\na dociaratlon of candidacy, alined\nand acknowledged, and certified to\nby live electors of tho territory who\nare members of the political party\nto whh h aueh candidate belongs,\nand he ahall pay to the secretary of\nthe territory tho proper fee with\ntho filing of aueli declaration.\nAll rnndidatea for mcmhera of tho\nTerritorial legislature. and all .' an -\ndidutea for the office of road com-\nmiasloner or other provisional office,\nahall alao, sixty dava prior to tho\ndate of audi primary file\nwith the clerk of tho district court\nfor the division in whh h they rn-\naide, similar declaration of caudi-\ndacy ua those required from candi¬\ndate* for delegate to comcrcx-i, and\nattorney general, and shall also de¬\nposit with the clcrk of court the\nproper fee, the fee to bo turned over\nto the territorial treasurer,\nTho form of tho declaration of\ncandidacy In prescribed In tho act,\nand lu It the candidates pledge\nthemselves If nominated and ele ted\nto qualify for tho office. Mid tb'it\nthey will aupport and abide by the\nprinciples enumerated by tho party\nto which they belong in Its national\nand territorial platforms.\nThe election shall he, under this\nact, conducted In all respects in ac¬\ncordance with tho rules and regu¬\nlations pertaining to general elec¬\ntions In tho territory, with tho ex¬\nception of the Australian balUit sys¬\ntem being employed, there will be\nprovided separate tickets for each\nof the political parties represented\nby candidates, and on each of such\nballots there ahull be plainly stated\nthe political party whose nomina¬\ntion the candidato thereon sc. Us.\nThese ballots are to be provided by\nthe clerks of the courts of the re¬\nspective Judicial divisions, and these,\ntogether with the customary elcc-\ni«'ti sii plies, shall bo forwarded by\nuch clerks to the election official*\nut aueh primary cloctlons who shnll\nbe tho same as thoso acting at gen¬\neral territorial elections.
1b886fd13660d9c0e11eec15e5b85f08 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.0534246258244 37.92448 -95.399981 of the great river of sorrow, made up of\ntears and blood, rolling thiotigh all\nlands and all ages, bearing the wreck\ni. families and of communities and of\nempires, foaming, writhing, boiling\nwltli the agonies of 0,000 years? lOtna,\nCo'opaxl and Vesuvius hnve been de-\nscribed, but who ever him sketched the\nvolcano of suffering retelling up from\nI' depths the inva and scoria nnd pour-\ning them down the sides to whelm na-\ntions Oh, If 1 could gatherall the heart-\nstrings, the broken heartstrings, Into\na harp, 1 would play on it a dirge such\nns was neer sounded! Mythologies\ntell us of gorgon and centnurand Titan\nand geologists tell us of extinct species\nof monsters, but greater than gorgon\nor megatherium and not belonging to\nthe realm of fable and not of an extinct\nspecies, a monster with an Iron jaw\nand a hundred iron hoofs has walked\nacross the nations, nnd history \npoetry and sculpture. In their attempt\nto sketch It and describe It, have seemed\nt'i sweat great drops of blood. Hut,\nthank Ood, there are those who can\nconquer as this woman of the text con-\nquered and say: "It Is well, though my\nproperty be gone, though my children\nbe gone, though my home be broken\nti; though my health be sacrificed. It\nis well, it Is welll" There is no storm\non the sen but Christ is ready to rise In\nthe hinder part of the ship and hush it.\nThere Is no darkness but the constella-\ntion of God's eternal love can illumine\nit, and. though the winter comes out of\nthe northern sky, you have sometimes\nseen that northern sky nil ablaze with\nauroras which seem to say: "Come up\nthis way: up this way are thrones of\nlight and sensof sapphire and the splen-\ndor of nn eternnl heaven. Come up this\nway."
40a7a5980fd07c3e6ddd26054dcb2b64 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8013698313039 40.063962 -80.720915 A Washington correspondent of the\n(Cincinnati OnnmcrcUil writes:\nin the absence of military topies, |>"l-\nI UicH form our only staple i-oiiiinmlil v,\nand, even in this unusually Iruitlul\nHeld, vou need no more than a daily\nglance at the dcspalehes to convince\nvou that news items are pre-ein inciitlv\nscarce K.ight weeks Inun to-day the\nThirtv-ninth Congress will open its ses¬\nsion, and the mighty job belore it is no\nless than the restoration ot the I iiioii.\nWill it prove equal to the task? men\nask with solicitude. Well, [I"'"'\npremonitory symptoms ot a division ol\nopinion such as will shake the old Cap-\nit,d with a "high debate," unequal ed\nsince the davs ot the formations ot this\n(joverntneni in the magnitude and In¬\nterest of the questions it will involve.\n>n one point there is no doubt. >> Hat\nis known as the "radical wing ot the\nrnion partv has a heavy majority in\nthe House of Representatives. Nonew-\n|v pardoned Kebel Congressman \nsea reel v white-washed S»*eesslnfTists,\nhave a L'host of a chance ol" partlclpat-\niuir in the early delilajratioiis of that\nInnIv. i'Jvcn in the Senate it is proba-\nhie that the candidates elect from such\nseceded States as may present them¬\nselves will be "hung up" in committees\nuntil a late period ol* the session. r .wn\nshould the loyalty oath ot July !*<?- .\nhe repealed, which now operates as an\nelVeclual blockade to the pretensions ol\nany man to bold olliec under this (.ov-\nerumcnt who has participated In the\nrebellion, it will only l*> alter a |»ro-\ntraded and bitter contest. I he points\nof ditl'ereiice between the friends ol n\nlenient policy ami the advocates ol a\nsevere punishment for t raitors, between\nsuch champions of radicalism as lluid-\nJus Stevens and Charles Sumner on\nthe one hand, and such conservative\nHepublicans as Senators Doollttle and\nCowan on the other, are two wide ami\ntoo vital to 1m* reconciled easily or at\nonce.
0a3b92230f34a60acc1b9a41467cafb5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.2835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 It was in February, 1SGS, that ho Gret 8U\n> became a figure that attracted national\nattention. In that month he made a\npowerful argument against the impeach- jjr\nment of President Johnson, and this, B0\nwith his outspoken utterances in behalf c0\nof tho destituto people of tho South, ^\naud in favor of Government aid to them, j8\ndrew to him the attention of men of all or\nparties. He also camo out squarely as\nan opponent of everything that savored\nof repudiation. His party lost many, of\nits able men in tho Forty-second and\n| Forty-third Congresses, and this gavo 1"\nmm uib opportunity wiieu tut "force"\n7 bill came up in tue House, lie was gn\nt quick to appreciate the situation, to de- »i$\na termine upon his course. From that\n time ho was in tlio Speaker's chair. Ho\nbecame a candidate for Speakor of the t&\nHouse in the Forty-fourth Congress,\n1 but was beaten.by M, C. Kerr, of Bh\nj Indiana. JJis servipejj to tho J\nparty wero rewarded with the »t\nChairmanship of tho Appropriations\nCommittee and ho entered vigorously\nfi upon tho work of reducing the expenses\nfj of tho Government, giving to the party nt\nW tho watchword "Retrenchment/1 which =\nA ^as its wlchvopd in Bubeequdrit canes'\npaigns. Speaker Kerr dying in office his\nf mantle fell on Mr. |Undall whph the\nTi Houae assembled on 'December 4,1870,\nfor tho short session, He was re-elected\nSpeaker in the Fort^-fifth and Forty-\nbixiu vjongrcBSGB, mo itopuDiicsns com*\nk inj; into power again in tbe Foyty^o^i\nentft Popcww. A*iijnea|cer,Uepreaided\n.
14fd7482efc2a2675271e6258ed404a7 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.0205479134956 41.004121 -76.453816 odformy nso n magnificent animal,\nfull of fire, and apparently ns untamed\nas if ust caught from the pampas. Ho\noven Jumped nt tho clanking of my\nspurs on the paved terrace, and not bo- -\ning much of n horseman at tlio time,\nand encumbered with a gun, I inwardly\ncursed the politeness that threatened to\ntransform mo into a Mazoppa or n John\nGilpin. However it would not answer\nto show fear in tlio presence of tho offi-\ncers, and while two peons hold tho fiery\ncharger I mounted. Tho countersign\nwas whispered in my ear, tlio horhO\nunloosed, and he bounded from tho\neorr,nearly knocking my head ngnlnst\ntho nrch Hint covered tho gateway. It\nwas Impossible toslacken his speed nnd\naway wo dashed, through mud nnd wa -t o- r,\nup hill nnd down, through long\ndnrk avenues formed by tho tropical\nplnnts twining over head, until I com-\npletely distanced Salvador, Quesado\n tlio servants. It now becamo dark\nfor under tho Equator tiicro is no\ntwilight and not knowing tlio way\nI trusted to his sagacity to take him to\nho hacienda. In n short tlmo tho picket\nlino was readied, tho cry "Halt, or I\nlire," reached my cars, but I could not\nstop ; a bullet whlr.zed by my enrs, and\nIn a moment I was past tho seutiies. A\nrldo of a few milm took mo to Tamblllo,\nnnd not until I reached its gates, did\nmy horse, now covered with foam and\ntrembling at every Joint, slacken his\nspeed. Tho servants refused to open\ntho gates to u stranger, and I was com\npelled to await tho arrival of my com-\npanions. As soon us Salvador camo up\nwo wero taken in charge by tho Mayur\nDomo, nnd the servants learning tlio\ncauso of my presence, did everything in\ntheir power to mako my stay pleasant\nand comfortable.
c634dbfd7fa5d159ef7fca3b218dd2e1 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.9712328450025 31.960991 -90.983994 ON Mouday the I5t!i of January next, an\ninstitution Of learning, of a high order, for\nthe education of young ladies, will be opened in\nthis place, under the above title. Experienced\nand accomplished teachers will be procured in\nall the departments, and a regular course öf in­\nstruction, thorough, Systematic and exact, will be\npursued. The. be^t selection of text books will\nbe adopted, and when once established, will not\nbo changed without urgent reasons.\nA regular merit and demerit roll will bo kept,\nexhibiting the progress and standing of uach pu­\npil, an abstract of which wilf be forwarded\nmonthly to her parents or guardian.\nA strict and uncomproposing discipline wilt\nbe enforced, yet tempered with kindness and\naffection, and no pupil will be received whose\nparents are unwilling to yield to this highly ne-\ny and salutary regulation.\nWhile the general policy of the school will \ndecidedly Christian in its character, the young\nladies will be left free to enjoy their own predi­\nlections, and will be required to attend worship\nat such church as their parents may desire. No\nyoung lady boarding in the Institute will be al­\nlowed to contract accounts at the stores, or\nleave the premises except by special permission\nor in company with a teacher.\nThe beautiful scenery and location of Port\nGibson, its excellent health and good society\ncombine to render it in all respects, one of the\nmost desirable situations fora literary residence\nin the South West. And parents or guardians\nwho trust their daughters to this establishment\nmay feel perfectly assured that no pains will be\nspared, not only to promote their intellectual\nimprovement, but also to form their character\nafter the most approved models of excellence, as\ndeveloped by refined society and Christian mo­\nrality.
665f299bb213aa7a99d0b4c613ea3f49 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.1630136669203 43.798358 -73.087921 It is our melancholly duty to record the\nmost afflicting disaster which has ever\nhappened in our city. On Friday after-\nnoon at half past three o'clock a portion\nof the hill east of this city slid off and\noverwhelmed nine houses; all of them,\nwith one exception, occupied ' by families.\nAt the time of the slide stveTal men with\nteams were engaged at the bottom of the\nbank, carrying off earth ; and narrowly\nescaped with their lives. Not so, howev-\ner, the unfortunate inmates of the dwell\nings ; ntarly all of whom wtre buried un\nder the mass of clay, which covered their\nhouses in several instances to the depth of\nfive or six. feet crushing some to atoms,\nand removing others bodily for the space\nof several yards.\n: The distance from the commencement\nof the slide to the outer edge ot the deposit\nof earth which it has is not far from\n200 yards. The earth .having been car-\nried more than 500 feet o?er a dead level,\nafter it reached the bottom of the hill.\nThe soil being a remarkably unctuous\nblue clay is doubtless the cause of the ex-\ntraordinary space which the slide covered.\nThe slide commenced about 100 yards\neast of Filth st. and its southern extremity\nfirst encountered two houses' adjoining\neach other on the east aide of said street ;\nboth ot which it destroyed. "\nThe centre of the slide was then'precipi- -\nlated upon the head of AVashington street,\noverwhelming the buildings on both sides\nof said street, with the exception of one on\nthe corner of Washington and Hill streets,\nwhich was Dartiallv destroyed. The\nnumber of houses' destroyed on Washing\nton street was eight." The slide. passed\ndown Washington to Hill street, which it\ncrossed, and proceeding a few yards .be-
85d4d1b9e5858e1060884b952c75321b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.6232876395231 41.681744 -72.788147 will not begin issuing certificates of\noccupancy until September 1, sev-\neral structures now either completed\nor nearly so are marked, for Idle-\nness because they do not comply\nwith the city laws, Inspector Arthur\nN. Rutherford declared today.\nUnder the code now In effect, no\nbuilding can be occupied until a\ncertificate of occupancy has been Is\nsued from the office of he Inspec-\ntor. This procedure insure? a final\ninspection after all work has been\ndone and Is an added safeguard\nagainst violations of the code, the\ndepartment explains.\nRutherford, who has been acting\ninspector for the past two weeks of-\nficially takes over his duties today,\nthe 'resignation of E. J . Hennessy,\nwho has been on a two weeks' va-\ncation, becoming effective at the\nclose of business Saturday.\nThe new inspector already in-\naugurated a policy of close applica-\ntion of the city ordinances and in\nthe past week rejected 35 applica-\ntions for permits on the ground that\nthe proposed structures did not con-\nform to the code or zoning law or\nthe proper papers were not filed\nwith the application. Much of the\ncomplaint registered against the\nbuilding department, which resulted\nin that bureau being in the lime-\nlight of publicity for the past few\nyears was grounded on alleged lax-\nity in enforcing the laws. Mayor\nWeld recently issued an order that\nthe law must be lived up to and In\nspector Rutherford has made this\nhis cardinal policy, he announces.\nMuch of the illegal work is of a,\nminor nature and may, with more\nor less alteraticn, be changed to\nmeet the inspector's approval,
110b24c44902b0bd0961ce26c156a4da FRANKFORT WEEKLY NEWS AND ROUNDABOUT ChronAm 1908.6789617170107 38.200906 -84.873284 step she would sink to her knees andI\nthen have a tug to get foot loose\nshe could step again I had on a low\ncut shoes and a bathing suit so\nwalked with much greater ease WeI\nfloundered along in the wake of\nCunny who skipped over the bog In\na hurry with apparent ease Just like\nhe was on dry ground in pursuit of\nfrogs We started out separately I\ncarrying the frogs that had been al\nready caught Suddenly the night allI\nwas rent by a scream and I saw\nqueenly clad figure sitting in the sot\nmud slowly sinking and yelling forI\nhelp It was the girl She had sat\ndown suddenly in the ooze and was\nabout to go under I rescued her and\nafter that I could not lose her That\ngirl clung to my hand like it was a\nhope And the way we lastj\nafter that holding hands and\ning about in that slimy water Oi\ncourse I did not mind holding hands\nIt really was necessary you know\nand kept us both from falling down\nWill 1 go again Not for mine\nNo more frog hunts If I want frogs\n1 will buy em I can still smell that\nmud 0 yes we caught frogs We\ncaught thirteen and had them for\nsupper the next night and they were\ngood They paid for the trouble of\ncatching them and it was an experi\nence that was rich but once is enough\n1 pass on any more such expeditions\nThe frogs can play and tumble about\nin that bottom uninterfered with by\nme I will not bother them\nYou know the pond about which\nThomas Nelson Page wove a romance\nand of which he told a grewsome sto-
45a0e5f1417b10f7c8a6136f15727177 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.3767122970573 43.798358 -73.087921 Messrs. Reed, Wing & Cutler Gent.\n1 feel it a duty I owe the public, and es-\npecially to hundreds of my fellow beings\nwho are now suffering under different dis-\neases of thje lungs, to give you a statement\nof the good effects I have experienced\nfrom the use of the Vegetable Pumonary\nBalsam. Having from my youth up been\ntroubled with different complaints of the\nlungs, such as spitting of blood, a dry\ntroublesome cough, frequent hoarseness,\nwith severe fits of coughing, and indeed\nall the symptoms of consumption, and from\ntime to time I have consulted several emi-\nnent physicians, and have taken much\nmedicine, bat I received liitle or no relief\nand at last they told me there was no help\nfor me; that my case was beyond the\nreach of their med' iciues. In the spring\nof I was advised by a friend to try\nthe Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. I ob-\ntained xwa bottles, and on trial 1 was sur-\nprised to find so sudden and effectual re-\nlief which it gave me, and after using it\nabout five weeks all my complain's were\nentirely removed, and I was restored to\ngood health. Since that lime I have kept\nit constantly by me, in case of the appear-\nance of any of the above complaints.\n1 have known a large number of cases\nwhere all other medicines have failed of\naffording any relief, the Balsam was at\nlength resorted to, and speedily effected a\ncure. I would therefore recommend to\nevery person that has any of the above\ncomplaints, on their first appearance to\ntake the Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam,\nwhich they will find a safe, convenient\nand positive cure.
117284a295a15861d2dfc27c90330e72 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4494535202894 40.441694 -79.990086 Connecticut, which gavo the President\nvotes and McKinley 8, was lost to Harrison\nin 1883 by 335; Delaware, which gave him 4\nvotes, he lost by 3,141; Florida, which gave\nhim the solid delegation or 8, be lost by\n12,902; Georgia, which gave him Its 26 votes,\nhe lost In 1S8S by 60,009; Illinois, which gave\nMm 31 votes and Blaine 11, was carried for\nHarrison In 1883 by 22,101; Indiana gave the\nPiesident its entire SO votes, and the Presi-\ndent carried his own State by 2 SIS; Iowa\ngave him 20 or the 25 votes. Harrison having\ncarried It four years ago by 32,000. Kansas\nplumped in 11 votes for him and 9 tor Blaine.\nThe State was carried by the Republicans In\n1SS8 by 80,000; Kentucky gave the President\non Friday 22 votes, and Harrison lost the\nState In IS88 by 23.0C0; Louisiana was evenly\ndivided between Harrison and and\nHairlson lost tho State in 1S8S by 51,000.\nMaine, which plumped in Its 12 votes for\nBlaine, was carried bv the Republicans for\nHarrison by 23,000; Maryland, which eavo\nHarrison 11 votes, was lost by him In 1S88 by\n6,000; Mnsachnsetts,whiobcavo him 18 votes\nand McKInlev 11, was carrlod by tho Repub-\nlicans in 1SSS by 31,000; Michigan, which in\nthe convention gave Harrison 7 and McKin-\nley 19 votes of the delegation, was carried\nby the Republicans In 1888 by 2J.OO0; Minne-\nsota, which gavo Harrison 8 and Blaine 9\nvotes, was carried by the Republicans In\n18S8 br SS.O00; Mississippi, which gave Harri-\nson 13i votes and Blaine 1J, was lost by\nHarrison by 55,000; Missouri, which gave\nHarrison 23 votes of Its 34, was lost by him\nby 25,000; Nebraska gave him the solid 15\nvotes of tho delegation, and Harrison car-\nried the State by 27,000.
12b692bd159d1680f2ab9ebb452515c2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.4397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 remember that while it went into\npower under the auspices of a cer­\ntain political party, It also want in by\nthe dielntereeted grace of men of oth­\ner parties and of no party. This fact\nshould serve to Intimate to It. Its ac­\ncountability to a conftltuency of more\nthan one political complexion. Ae a\nmatter of fact, its accountability Is to\nthe whole body of citizens regardless\nof party affiliations. We trust that\nthe new administration will so ece It\nand carry Itself accordingly.\nBut this Is not all The obligation\nIs not a one-eided affair. The citizens\nof Wilmington owe the administra­\ntion that Is to be, certain obligations.\nThey owe It their earnest and unani­\nmous support In Its efforts to promote\nthe citys welfare. This le written\nfrom the standpoint of one who\nIn civic affairs sits lightly to all po­\nlitical creeds, to whom a Republican\nor Democratic Mayor as much\nvital, valid difference as a Republican\nor Democratic undertaker.\nThe -American people have a way of\ntying the bands of their public of­\nficials or of failing to uphold them\nand then blaming them for their fall-\ntire to produce results Let us here\nIn Wilmington be manly enough to\nhelp thoee whom we have chosen to\nserve us, regardless of political dif­\nferences. Our Interests are one. To\nstand hack and criticise and hinder\nIs unworthy of those who desire to\npass for men. Let us give the new\ncity officials the pleasure of our hon­\nest society and hearty support. Let us 1\nnot compel them to associate only\nwith politicians. Tt la positively cruel\nto make a good man Mayor and then |\nturn him over to the tender mercies |\nof men whose political creed Is sum-1\nmed up In the barbarous words, "To\nthe victors belong the spoils.”
098ca4a6ae06e8a6346d18ab7d816ba3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.9575342148655 39.745947 -75.546589 "Lesser nations shall sit nl that table,\nnations that writhed under the galling\nyoke, Hi" Iron heel of the Hun. Their\nvoices, (oo, will be heard, and their\nclaims in tho larger spirit of the new\nJay will receive as large a considera­\ntion ns thoso who number themselves\namong the might of earth.\n" But the one nation that shall occupy\na place there, whoso magnificent un­\nselfishness has marked her out among\nall the nations of all times, will be our\nown beloved America, the land of the\nfr»; and the home of Ihe brave.\n"When our part in Ibis world strife\npasses under the review of tho his­\ntorian, it will appear that from the\nstandpoint of motives wo are unique\namong (he nations of the earth. Not hy\n shadow of Imagination could self-\ninterest. much less, selfishness, be at­\ntributed to the motives that brought\nAmerica Into the war. Wc know why\nthe other nations entered tho war, ll\nwas to save themselves, America drew\nthe sword to save civilization.\n“Wo entered ut the opportune mo­\nment. Tim Allies were war worn and\nwar weary, they were as Sir Douglas\nHaig graphically put it 'fighting with\ntheir backs against the wall, and they\nwere approaching the point of ex­\nhaustion. Suddenly a new force with\nnerve and nerve, with an audacity thaft.\nwas paralyzing to the Insolent Hun. en­\ntered tho fray. A courage robbed of\nfear hurled Itself against, the super man\nand Chateau Thierry wrote a new and\nglorious chapter in the history of brave\ndeeds.
2ff76ca7c514f60fba73eb63ceae5d09 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.392076471109 39.290882 -76.610759 The Sub-Treasury bill lias at last been taken\nup, and Mr. Atherton, having declined address-\ning the House in its favor, Mr. Cushing, of Mas-\nsachusetts, proceeded to examine it at length, by-\nmoving to strike out the enacting clause. Mr.\nC. is a very able and accomplished scholar and\nstatesman, and will probably- occupy sometime\nin dissecting the bill. Several of the adminis-\ntration members intend making long speeches\non the subject, and it is thought sometime will\nbe spent in discussion. The general impression\nis, that nothing but the Sub-Treasury, and or-\ndinary- Appropriation bills will be acted on this\nsession,, as all parties wish to go home. The\nweather is warm and disagreeable, and many\nmembers are suffering from indisposition.\nMr. Bell's bill to prevent the interference of\noffice-holders with elections, was gagged off yes-\nterday afternoon, in order to bring up the Sub-\n Mr. Bell asked to be heard in reply\nto some personal remarks of Mr. Brown, of Ten-\nnesce, but the permission was refused him.\nIn the Senate the Bankrupt bill still conti-\nnues the subject of discussion, but nothing will\nbe done with it this session, as the provisions of\nthe bill cannot he so fixed as to unite either par-\nty in its support. There is nothing to do in the\ntipper House, however, but talking, and it may\nas well be on one subject as another.\nThe chief Clerkship in the State Department\nhas been given to a son of tlie Secretary, or at\nleast, such is the rumor. He is a young gentle-\nman from Alabama, I believe the city of Mo.\nbile, where he edited an administration newspa-\nper, and held the office of District Attorney.\nThe Indian committee of the House are now
43d23f965316fad5102e5636d898101a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.2123287354134 58.275556 -134.3925 Capt. B . M . Chiswell, commauder of\nthe United States revenue cutter Ta-\nhoma, now lying in Elliott bay, has re¬\nceived orders from Washington, D. C.»\nto have his vessel ready to sail from\nPort Townsend to Unimak pass April\n20, says the Seattle P.-l. The vessel will\ncruise about the entrance to the pass\nuntil May 31, when she will join the\nBering sea patrol fleet. Her particular\nduties will be to patrol the seal islands,\nto prevent poaching, and to see that all\ninternational treaties' are observed in\nthe sealing industry. Capt. Chiswell\nhas been informed that the United\nStates revenue cutter Manning, now\nundergoing repairs at the Mare island\nnavy yard, will also be assigned to the\nBering sea patrol. The Thetis, whioh is\nnow at Honolulu aud has spent the\nsummer patroliug the bird islands of\nthe Pacific, will leave in the near future\nfor San Francisco, where she will pre¬\npare her summer's work in the\nNorth. The Thetis, as in past years,\nwill be the court ship taking the judge\nand court, officials from port to port in\nthe North. Offenders of all kinds will\nbe tried aboard the Thetis, which has\nbeen known as Uncle Sam's floating\ncourt. The United States revenue cut¬\nter Bear, now at her winter station at\nSan Diego, will make her usual voyage\nto Nome and Point Barrow and will\nspend the summer cruising Bering sea\nwaters. The new revenue cutter Un-\nalga is expected in Seattle in the near\nfuture from the East coast. The vessel\nwill replacc the Rush, sold by the gov¬\nernment recently. The Unalga will be\nstationed at Juneau. Upon her arrival\nhere she will proceed to the navy yard,\nPuget sound, where she will be placed\non dry dock for cleaning and painting.\nThe Unalga will proceed from Seattle\nfor her new station at Juneau May 1.
07a31f55f57976408515cbbb34a1c140 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.6863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 around, lor he saluted Englishmen\nwho ran out to see him, and raised his\nhat. By his side sat a French officer, I\nthink Achilles Murat. But who could\nlook at any but one man, and it was only\na glance any person with good feeling\nwould care to give ut such a moment even\nto him. The horses were worthy of the\nim(>erial fctables. The two postillions\nwere as smart jus if in the Baez, or en routt\nlor St. Cloud. On a wet day they and\nthe two who s:it behind wore"long watei\nproof cloaks, glazed hats and the imperial\ncockade. As the brougham was stop|>eil\nfor a moment, my courier caught a sigh\nof his Majesty's face, "whata change" h<\nsays, "since flic Prince NnpoTebnlbdget'\nin my liousc in London, before lie wen!\nto live in King street." lie luul his\nhand to bis moustache, which hat\nthe well known point and waxed ends\nthere was no nervous twitching, and tin\nemotion which shook, him for a lnomon\nwhen lie was speakiug to the Orowr\nPrince yesterday of the King's manner\nhad pawed away. Then ho brushed th<\ntears from his eyes with the gloves he hat\nin cue hand, aud was overcome for scv\n seconds. After the brougham cami\na char-a -banc with Normandy |>erchc\nrons, tilled with Prussian officers, mostly\ncloaked, with hoods drawn over thei"\nkepis and caps. Among the latter wen\nGeneral Boyen and tho Prince of Lcmaj\nwho are upixrinted to wait on his majesty\nSome ten or eleven carriages, char-a -bam\nfourgout, with superb horses aud fillet\nwith officers, followed; then some Frenel\nofficers on horseback, and after a Ion;\nati»tnn> <tf sndillf! niul Rcnforthomes,riddei\nIiy grooms, sixty or more Id number, tin\nrear being dosed by n troop ol blad\nhussars. 1 leave It to others to morallz\non the spectacle. I shall not My a won\nabout fallen greatness. Every one wi]\nbe readv. with the trite saying. "No on\ncried God blesa him." The FrcDchme\nand women who stood out in the rain cei\ntainly did not venture to show anysyn:\npathjr or sorrow, if tliey felt any. Th\nouly sound was the tramp of horses an\ntho inopportune jingling of belli of th\nciiar-a -banc and hones, but now and the\na chorus wna sung bytlio Wurtcmburgot\ntrudging through the mud, cclcbratin\nthe victory in which, so far as they m\nconccrncd; they had with doubtless regn\nlittle to da
32daca8536f81a185e23782663f37bdc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.532876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 The regiment were supping and were hi\nIn readiness to move at a moment's\nwarning. At 11:10 o'clock two shots Wl\nwere fired In <|iilck succession from the In\nrearol tho houses on the1 south side of "\nWest 27th street, the balls passing through of\none of tho open windows into tho Armory, in\nanil lodging in the celling. Doth of them w\npassed In clow proximity to the heads of *\nlit. Col. Balne, Capt. llacon, private ^\nK nowles and our reporter. Two shots lmd\nbeen llred about an hour previous. These 1"\nshots rouse<l the boys, who wiuitcil to ca\npour a volley Into the room, lint Col. es\nllalne succeeded In dlasusdlng them, fa\nWhen our reporter left at 11) o'clock, the th\nmm ware swearing lliat If the Hrlng waa ah\nrepeated they would clean out tlie house, an\n the early part of the evening there in\nwas a large crowd stretched from 24th to th\n2«tli streets on the east aide ol Hth ave- p!\nnue gazing at and Into tome houses which th\nhad been struck by bullet* and where «1<\nIhere wers other evidences of the day's tn\nsanguinary conflict, to the cellarway se\nleading loa bathing establishment, south- Ik\neast corner of 8th avenue and tWth street th\nwas a pool of blood. Tlie building was an\nchipped lu several places above the first w\nstory. Found In one corner in an are* way lo\nconnected with the same building was fo\nanother pool ol blood and Mood Rpatter- Ci\ned on some hoards and other wooil.stored in\nlu the area way. The Utah llonac, north- th\neast corner ol 8th avenue and 2!ith street pe\nU imnn. It .« » ...11.11-
244d5709c380d67eba94c0096329703f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.7575342148655 37.561813 -75.84108 are kept in ornamental palaces and\ntreated like songsters bred in parlors.\nTho buildings are often so tight and\nwarm that the inmates sutler for want\nof pure air. They tire allowed little ex-\nercise, and, as a consequence, they are\nlacking in vitality. They become sick\non the slightest exposure, and are then\ndosed like feeble infants. They are sub-\nject to all kinds of diseases and ailments.\nThey lead an artificial life, and its con-\ntinuance depends on fortuitous circum\nstances. The produce but few eggs,\nand these are considered as far loo valu-\nable to eat. They are often unfertile,\nthey are of no value for raising chickens.\nFowls wilh exceedingly long pedigrees\nwhich are raised in buildings luted\nwith all the modern improvements and fed\non dainties are chielly valuable for exhib-\niting tit fairs. expending twenty-liv- e\ndollars for a fancy coop, expressage and\ncare during an exhibition, a breeder may\nall sometimes realize a tilth of that amount\nof in the form of a prize. The chances are,\nan however, th t he will simply learn that\nhis rooster is somewhere deiicieut in the\nscale of points adopted at some national\nor international convention of poultry\nfanciers. It is possible that one of his\ntail feathers " is a little oil" in color,\nthat one of the notches in his com!)\nnot sufficiently well marked. At any\nrate, he is "not quite up to standard"\nto according to the highest acknowledged\nauthority in poultry science.\nOther persons keep quite a different\nkind of fowls and devote scarcely any\nto care or attention to them. Xo attempt\nmais to improve the old barn-yar- d
074c76700fa8991cf248f7833d296fd8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.8397259956876 40.063962 -80.720915 Among the revolutionary forces at work\namong ua the dean oi iiangor assures ua\nthat we must in futuro reckon lea. The\nargument is quite consecutive. Tea-drink-\ning, reuewed three or four tiinea a day,\nmakes men and women feel weak. They\nfeel weak because their nerves aro destroy¬\ned, aud this makes them nervous and dis¬\ncontented. Such people complain of the\nexisting order of tlio universe, scold their\nneighbor*, and sigh after the impossible."\nThe prevalence of this dissatisfaction ia a\n"dangerous revolutionary force." Q K. 1).\nThe reasoning reminds us oi the iamou3\n"Sorites" by which Touchstone proves\nthe impending damnation of C'orin from\n[the fact that he lias never been at\ncourt. In the face of such logic it is, per-\nhaps, out cf place to cite history; and yet\nhistorical reflection will tend to console those\nwhom Dr. Ldwurds' onslaught may have\nunduly disturbed. Wo get our tea from\nChina, where it ia the universal drink;\nthe Chinese being, nevertheless, tho most\nconservative nation in the world, and the\nmost.self aatielied. Uelioving themselves to\nbe the children of the sun, they do not\n"sigh after the impossible," ami the "ex¬\nisting order" of their universe is one which\nthey hope and believe will never be dis¬\nturbed. When the drink waa introduced\ninto England the first of our sovereigns\nwho was addicted to it waa the "good"\nQueen Anne, who can hardly be described\naa revolutionary. Among our leadera of\nthought during the past 100 years we have\n one, and one only, of whom it could\nbe truly said that bia tea kettle waa on\nthe iiob all day, and whose appetite for the\nbeverage was insatiable. Tin's was Dr.\nSamuel Johnson, whom no revolutionist\nhas ever yet claimed as an ally. With\nthese facts before us wo need not altogether\ndespair of the monarchy, even though tea-\ndrinking should not be abandoned iu favor\nof oat meal and milk. A t tho eame time, the\ndean of JJangor was not very far wrong if\nhe meant ouly to denounce the beverago\nwhich most English people now drink\nunder the name of tea. The true tea.the\nethereal essence which ia captured by the\nfirst touch of boiling water on the weli-pr^-\neerved leaf.is almost unknown to English¬\nwomen. They make, the stew, a a:rong\ndark brown infusion of some vegetable\nsubstance.oak bark would serve their pur-\npca d very well-and drink it with milk and\na good.deal of sugar. Itia mainly a solu¬\ntion of tannin, and tannin ia indigestible;\nand to remedy thia the hot liquor ia tem¬\npered with rum, or brasdy, or gin. So we\ncome round to tho dean'a remark that "the\ntea-kettle goes before the gin-bottle," in¬\ntemperance and ruin following the wake.\nIt ia a great mistake to 8appose that tea or\ncofle^ aa generally made in England, are\ntemperance drinks. They are promoteia of\nthat dyspepsia which is the parent of\ndrunkenness. This, however, is not the\nfault of either the leaf or the berry.
1edddc7267dcfefb82ed864d12d97c15 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1917.9136985984271 42.217817 -85.891125 The home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nBuckley was the scene of a pleasant\ngathering last Sunday, November 25th\nthe occasion being the marriage of\ntheir eldest daughter, Miss Blanche,\nto James Bale. The ceremony uniting\nthe young people was performed at\nnoon by Rev. Trott of the Methodist\nchurch, the ring service being used.\nThe bride was becomingly attired in\nher traveling suit of brown chiffon\nbroadcloth and wore a hat to match.\nThe couple unattended stood in the\narchway between the sitting and\ndining room, attractive floral decora-\ntions surrounding them, and exchanged\nthe solemn vows which are so sacred.\nThey them received the congratula-\ntions and good wishes of the guests\nand immediately sat down to dinner\nwhich was served by the sisters of the\nbride. The bride's table was very at\ntractive in its green and white\ndecoratioh, and was occupied by the\n and groom and the parents of\nthe young couple. Mr. and Mrs.\nBale left for Kalamazoo very early in\nthe afternoon and went to Detroit\nwhere they will visit for a few days\nat the home of Dr. Seabury, a cousin\nof Mrs. Bale. Later they will go to\nCanastola, New York to spend a week\nwith relatives. Mrs. Bale has a great\nmany friends here who are wishing\nfor her the greatest happiness. She\nhas been a very successful teacher in\nthe county, having been a teacher for\nfive years. For four years she served\nin the Steeple school district and is\nnow at the helm in the Palmer school\nin Almena. Mr. Bale is also well\nknown and respected by all, having\nlived his entire life in this community\nThey will reside on the Bale farm,\ntwo miles east of town. The True\nNortherner joins in congratulations.
25fa3332a76a50324905bba6b4d67129 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.957650241601 46.187885 -123.831256 If the crews of these thirteen whal-\ners had seen their vessels go down, as\nthey expected, and had escaped on to\nthe solid ice, they would havo made\nfor the nearest land. That would\nhave been tho desolate Herald island.\nThey would not havo survived the\nwinter there with such stores as they\ncould havo carried on their backs, and\nindeed, would not havo survived had\nthey carried off all the ship stores.\nThe whale fisheries of. the Arctic\nreached by the northwest coast are\ndestined to a much greater develop-\nment Indeed, for the few hundreds\nnow engaged, this forco may be in-\ncreased to thousands. There will, in\nall probability, be some disasters.\nThe steam whalers will press their\nway up to thq highest latitude. They\nmay, at no distant day, reach points\nas high as any exploring vessels have\never gone. If the north pole is ever\nreached it may bo by some one of\nthese steam whalers, which might fol-\n an open lead in some favorable\nseason until this goal of Arctic ex-\nploration has been reached. But the\nbolder the enterprise the greater the\nprobability that there may be some\nincrease of disasters in the Arctic, a\nprobability, however, which may be\nlessened by the gradual displacement\not sail vessels by steam whalers.\nIf the government should cache on\nHerald Island enough provisions to\ncarry three or four hundred men\nthrough a winter, or until they could\nbe relieved by the approach of a\nsteam vessel like the Bear, for in-\nstance, it would be a most humane\nact The crews of tho thirteen whal-\ners would have found this supply had\nthey reached the island, and might\nhavo been able to null through. If a\nvessel is wrecked in the open water of\nthe Arctic, the surviving crew in boats\nwould drift not toward Herald Island,\nnor townrd Point Barrow. The strong\ncurrent would take them over to the\nSiberian coast
13f6befda628d89230c0e5d61529771e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.2917807902081 40.063962 -80.720915 It is stated that Gen. Sickles has de\nlined nil appointments offered him\nnd has retired to private life on thi\null pay of an army Colonel.\nThe Herald says that Secretary Fisl\nlas been convinced that a decisivi\nourse must be pursued in the matte:\nelating to outrages on the Americar\n^lag in Cuba, and has assured Captaii\nCampbell, of the brig Mary Lowet, tha\nlis rights should be protected if thi\nacta in relation to the Lizzie Major an\nlot exaggerated. He has determine!\no demand ample reparation, indem\nilty and apology.\nThe Secretary of the Treasury ha\nirdered the postponement until Jul;\nst, or the operations of the recent regu\nations requiring all Railroads am\ntransportation lines carrying dutiabl\nfoods, to be bonded for that purpose.\nThe Committee of Ways and Mean\nrho are investigating the working c\nhe Custom House adjourned nntil th\necond week in May.\nThurlow Weed has returned fron\nSouth Carolina still in feeble health.\nToe passage of the City Undergroum\niailroad bill through the Assembly at\nracts attention to the article in th\nCablet threatening a riot if one stone o\nIt. Peters Church is taken down by\nIailroad Company.\nThe soldiers ot the Army of the Pc\nomac resolved to hold a gram\n>lc-nic, July 5th, at the Bast Rive\n?ark. The former officers of that arm;\nlave been tendered a reception by Gee\nSlialer on behalf of the city division c\nhe National Guard, Jnly 5th.\nThe sloop of war Lashula, at th\nBrooklyn navy yard, is to be fitted fo\nlea forthwith.\nCharles Wilson, tesiding at 49 Cans\nitreet, was arrested for swindling\nlumber of firms by forged checks am\nirders to the amount of abont f10,000.\nThe Investigation in the Crane case c\nhe Union Pacific Rsilroad was contin\nled to-day before the referee, Mr. Red\nleld, without any conclusion. It wa\nidjourned till next Thursday.\nJudge Edmunds appeared befor\nrustice Dowling, at the Tombs to-day\nis connsel of Mumbler the alleged phc\nographic spirit medium. He statei\nhere was no trick or deception in th\niretended spirit photographs prodncei\njy Mumbler, but they are genuln\nikenesses of deceased friends of Bitten\nind have been recognized as such ii\n:ases where no picture ol deceased per\nions was in existence, and when sucl\npersons could not possibly have bee\nmown to or eeen by the photographei\nind that the accused is ignorant b.\nwhat power he produced such picture!\nSearing adjourned to next Wednesday
a824e0fdd7494096b12cb83b9dd8d7e6 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.613387946519 39.513775 -121.556359 'J he ruining Irttldrnllil Elmlluii\nIs the must important one ever had\niince the organization ot our government.\nWhalever may be the names uf factions,there\narc but two parlies; one, a party for the\nConstitution, the other, a t artv against the\nConstitution ;cne. si party for the Union, the\nother, a party for disunion ; one, a National\nparty of the whole country, the other a sect-\nional parly composed of a sectional por-\ntion of the North. This is the great Nation-\nal is«uc in the coming election. The pitiful,\nmiserable side is. -u es, having their origin in\nnarrow prejudices, bigotry, sectariaui*ni,\nhatred of men on account ot the mere acci-\ndent ot birth, proscription of American citi-\nzens 1 realise of their religion or birthplace,\nareoi trilling moment in this election.\n parlies being in favor of the construc-\ntion of the l*ac tic Railroad, the real great\nquestion at issue is, are you lot* the Consti-\ntution, or against it? Arc you lor uphold-\ning the Government of the United States, or\nfor anarchy, tevolution and disunion^\nThose win* support the Constitu.ion of the\nUnited Stales arc for the existence of the\nUnion under that Constitution j ;st as it\nstands, with slavery existing just as our\nfathers found it. Not us a National, but\nas a State institution, with the principle in-\nseperable from the right of self-government\nthat grows out of it, to wit: The right of\nevery political commituity to regulate that\nmatter for themselves, under the Constitu-\ntion. That is the Democratic doctrine to\nsettle all sectional and geographical dif-\nferences.
1eaa12f06cc2a9e0acfbd72cce44653d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.356557345426 41.004121 -76.453816 when duo was "that tho treasurer of\ntho company had not yet mado his ro-\nturn of dividends for the year 1871, in\nwhich that dividend should appear,\nsimply becauso, and for no other reason,\nthan that ho ha3 not received, although\nho has written for them, tho blank\nforms that aro usually furnished him\nfor tho making of a dividend report."\nMr. Forstcr, tho former corporation\nclerk in tho Auditor General's ofllce,\nstates that ho did not know that such a\ndividend had been declared. This tax\nwas duo January loth.\nThe committeo do not beliovo this to\nbo a valid reason for the violation of a\nplain statuto law, nor aro they awaro\nthat tho Stato authorities are bound to\nfurnish any such blanks. "\nTho act of 1808 also requires that\nthero shall bo a quarterly report of tho\ntonnago of nil railroad corporations. An\nexamination of tho books of tho com-\npany showed that under dato of Decem-\nber Cist, 1870, thero was duo to tho\nCommonwealth a tonnago tax amount-\ning to $038 12. Up to the time tho com-\nmittee mado their investigation this\namount bud not been paid.\nMr. Carryl, tho auditor of tho com-\npany, testified as follows: "It is my\nbelief that tho amount has novcr been\npaid ; Iliavoso roportcd it to tho \nurer ; it stands lo tho credit of the Com\nmonwealth nnd ready to be paid at any\nHuso; the treasurer of tho comnanv\nhas told mo that ho had mado tho ro-\nturn to tho Stato officers, but that ho\nhad received no blank in return."\nTho Auditor General publishes annu\nally a statistical report of all railroad\nand canal companies doing bu3iness in\nthis State. Ho furnishes each company\na blank scries of interrogatori03 which\nthey nro required to fill out and roturn.\nTheso returns, if full nud eorrect.would\nbo exceedingly useful to tho people,\nbut such is not tho case. Tho Northern\nCentral railroad company, foroxamplo\nonly report tho amount of tax paid tho\nStato on capital stock, amounting to\nnlno thousand two hundred and thirty- -\neight dollars and ono cent, whllo no\nmention is mado of other taxes paid, or\ntho reason why they nro withheld. Tho\nDelaware, Lackawanna and Western\nrailroad has nlso uniformly failed to re\nport tho rato charged per ton per nillo\nfor freight. Mr. Forster, in answer to\ntho question as to whether tho statist!\ncal report is correct so far as relates lo\ntaxation, replied, "I supposo It 13 cor-\nrect, but 1 do not know whether tho\nperson who arranges thoso reports for\npublication thinks of examining as to\nthat point."
028897767fd85935ed020fa6f9c6979f CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1918.0479451737697 36.000618 -88.428106 gentleman who resided here endeavored\nto have a bill passed by the legisla\nture at Albany for Its purchase by the\nstate. The bill was not passed, and.\nsoon after, he vacated the house, It\nbeing "covered with mortgage."\nAnyone seeing this old manor house\na few months after this would not\nhave had the least doubt of its being\nthe oldest building in the United\nStates. Children played In 'it by day.\nand It was a rendezvous for tramps at\nnight The only i reason there was a '\nwhole pane of glass left was because\nit was beyond the reach of a stone\nthrown by the average small boy. Later\nIt was sold at auction, and purchased\nby a company of ice dealers. There are\nbut a few feet left on either side of\nthis old mansion, as the lawn at the\nnorth was sold last year, and, it\na modern dwelling was erected. A\nsimilar fate was awaiting the old\nhouse when It was purchased by Mrs.\nSusan De Lancy Van Rensselaer\nStrong of New Tory city."\nMrs. Strong Is a descendant of Kll\niaen Van Rensselaer, and is very en-\nthusiastic In regard to the restoration\nof this home of her forefathers. The\nfront hall and two large rooms on\neither sl are now being repaired by\nthe order of three patriotic societies.\nThey hope a sufficient number of so-\ncieties will become interested In the\nbuilding until it is entirely restored. It\nwill soon be opened to the public, and\n"kept as a depository of articles of\ncolonial or revolutionary interest."\nIf there Is the least doubt about Its\nbeing the oldest building In the United\nStates, It is certainly very old, and of\nsufficient historical renown to be\nworthy of preservation.
324c0e7b52587252d3909afb638c9d1f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.2671232559615 39.745947 -75.546589 Before the department endorsed the\ncanning of eggs its specialists made a\nlong a ml thorough bacteriological study I\nol eggs (o determine what changes they I\nunderwent and what factors made them j\n»poil. This spoiling was found to lx- due i\nalmost entirely fo growing bacteria in\nthe eggs—a little warmth and a little\nair, ami the damage was done. With\nother products the secret was found to\nbe absolute cleanliness and heat. With\neggs it is the same cleanliness combined\nwith good grading and cold.\nCanned eggs have been tested after\nhaving Iteeu kept in storage a year and\ntheir quality and flavor found unim­\npaired. As one investigator put It,\nthe chief difference was that you\nopened them with a can opener in­\nstead of a spoon. They come to the\nconsumer frozen and when melted\nthey look and smell like fresh eggs\nbroken Into a bowl and stirred until j\nthe whites and yolks are mixed, except\nthat, they are a little thicker. Sim­\nilar experiments have been made with\ndried eggs or egg powder, and this,\ntoo, will keep for months provided\nit Is kept at low temperature. It\nini hardly possible, therefore, that\ncanned or dried eggs will he ever\ndisplaced on store shelves.\nAn egg canning plant, which the de­\npartment regards as a standard looks\nmore like the modern operating room\nof a hospital than a commercial in­\nstitution. Tho eggs on their arrival\nat tho plant are sent to a chilled room\nand kept there for 24 hours at a\ntemperature a few degrees above\nfreezing. Then they are Candled and\nall suspicious ones are discarded.\nTho graded eggs then go to refrig­\nerated room that is as aseptic and j\nas well lighted as it is possible to |\nmake it. No dust or flics can get in\nand the temperature never rises above\n85 degrees. It is water light and\nsteam proof so that It can be washed\nand steamed throughout. Tho uten­\nsils fur breaking the eggs arc all met­\nal so they can be sterilized In live\nsteam. Before beginning work the\noperatives sterilize their bands much\nas a surgeon does before bcglnnlug\nan operation. Tho similarity also ex­\ntends to the donning of clean white\ncaps and gowns.
1d16662c38287d8fbec097d1b1ef90f4 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0479451737697 39.513775 -121.556359 the ravines, flats and side-hills, still remain\nin their richness, and must so remain .until\ntire advantage of sluice-washing can be had.\nIn addition 'to this, rich claims have been\nstruck in the table lands, claiftis which you\nmight a I must say with propriety that are\nnever-failing. And what ate the means of\nwashing? the cradle nothing else ! There\nare at present two companies which have\nstruck pay dirt in the tablelands,and availing\nthemselves of these extemive water privi-\nleges, are making from thirty to sixty dol-\nlars per day to the rocker.* It is an old say-\ning that “money makes the mare go,” but\nin this ca»e it is tralvK that makes the mare\ngo, and without it we shall all be bound still\nto remain upon our ears.\nNow iho conditions of orn two extensive\nmining districts stand exactly thus : Mor-\nris Raviae lias liuleor no water, and Thomp-\nson's Flat not half enough. Although tlie\n“Walker.& Wilson” ditch is bringing in a\nfair supp'y, yet ills not halt sufficient for\ntho demand, and at present, one half or\nmore of the miners with claims all \nfor work, are forced to remain idle The ex-\ntent and character oftour diggings, being of\nusual richness and over five miles in length,\nwill at once remove all doubt as to the pro-\npriety of at once putting on foot some new\nditch project, by which means something\nlika a sufficiency of water can be obtained\nthoavhole year round' Our Flat diggings\narc workable, with btrt few exceptions, the\nwhole year, but to better advantage during\nthe dry season, just tlie time when what lit-\ntle water we have has dwindled out.\nExpressing no unkind feeling toward ei-\nther ditch owners or projectors, we arc in-\nclined to speak partieuluily in refereaae to\nbringing in the Feather river ditch, from\nthe fact that if it can be done, the work can\nbe hurried on to completion in a short time,\nand with ut it vre shall soon be without a\nparticle ot water, and that too in the best\nraining season We ask ilie ditch owners,\n“Shall our wants be realized?” -Until than\nwe üball look forward with anriety and in-\nterest, until this great object shall be ac-\ncuranhalted.
08490fdbfc02bd2da7533a14e1a60aae THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1868.1980874000708 36.294493 -82.473409 How to Treat Balky Horses.\nTf yon have balky horses, it is your\nown fault, and not tho horses', for if\nthey do not pull true, there is aomo\ncause for it, and if you will remove\n1 he cause, the effect will cease. When\nyour horse balks be in excited, and\n. does not know what you want him to\nrlb When ho 'gets a littlo excited,\n(top him five or ten minutes; lot him\nliecome calm; go to tho talk horeo,\npat him, and speak gently to him; and\nas soon as he is over his excitement,\nhe will, in nine cases out of ten pull\nat the word. "Whipping and slashing\nand bwearing only make tho matter\nworse. Afrer yon havo gentled him\na while, and his excitement cooled\ndown, take him by tho bits; him\neach way, a few minutes, as far as\nyou can; pull out the tongue, gentle\nkirn a little; unrein him; then step\nbefore the balky horse, and let the\neither start first; then you can take\nthem anywhere you wish. A balky\nliorse is always high spirited and\nMarls quick; half tho pull is out be-\nfore the o Liter starts; by standing be-\nfore him tho other starts first. By\nclose application to this rule, you can\nmake any balky horse pull. If a\nhorse has beon badly spoiled, you\nfcbould hitch him to the empty wagon,\nand poll it around a while on level\nground; thon put on a littlo load, and\nincrease it gradually, caressing as be-\nfore, and in a short time yoti can\nhave a good work horse. American\nJBarmsT.
0d96b708eb5b523be9f917df86cd1da9 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.4835616121259 40.419757 -77.187146 the simple, superstitious Irishmen de-\nscending the ladder at the entrance leaves\nsunshine, sky and fields above in no\ncheerful mood. The short clay pipes are\nallowed to go out aud few words are\nspoken. It is a business to be done with\nas soon as possible. Thousands of tons of\nwater are pressing against the gates at\nthe entrance, and should a bar give way,\nor an order he misunderstood, the flood\nwould rush down upon the unfortunates\nand engulf them with irresistible force.\nOnce, in fact, on order was misunder-\nstood, and twenty men narrowly escaped\nwith their lives. Mr. Church, with this\nnumber of laborers, entered the aque-\nduct to moke some repairs, and in-\nstructed the keeper at the dam to let the\nwater flow in again at 11 p. m. The\nparty was making some repairs at a\npoint some distance below the entrance\nat 11 a. m., when Mr. Church noticed a\ngradual rise in the water. Afraid of\ncausing a panic, he did not say anything\nto his men, but urged them on in the\nhope that the work might be completed\nthat morning. The continued to\nrise, however, first submerging their feet,\nand then creeping up towards their\nknees with terrible stealth and certainty.\nThe situation was that of a shipwrecked\ncrew cast upon a rock which is being\nslowly covered by an incoming tide.\nThe engineer now realized the fact\nthat his order had been misunderstood,\nand that the water had been turned on\nat the wrong time, and would soon be\nwithin a few inches of the roof of the\naqueduct. By this time the men were\nIn a highly nervous condition, and Mr.\nChurch had to use his authority in pre-\nventing them from making a confused\nretreat for the nearest exit, which was\nsome distance away. Meanwhile the\nwater had made its way above their\nknees and was rushing through the\naqueduct with a velocity of two miles\naud a quarter per mile. It was no easy\nwalking against such a current as this,\nand the progress made towards the man-\nhole was unavoidably slow. The torches\nwere successively put out by the splash\nuntil only one remained, and that threw\na dim, yellow, uncertain flicker on the\ndark surroundings.
871ed6dc9420bd7e0a5ad0c5e5e75bfa THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1863.9027396943177 37.561813 -75.84108 Rollingfork of Salt River, thirty-on - e\nmilos from Louisville. The company\nmay vory properly bo tormod a High- -\nland Count Companv. as ninety of\ntho one hundred and forty men com-\nprising it are from that county. The\ncompany was recruited in the month of\nJune and July lost, by John 3. Irwin,\nand musterd into tho service on the\n20th of July, at Camp Dennison.\nThey were ordcrod to Covington Bar\nracks on tho 2lst of August, where the\norganization of tho regiment was com\npleted, and on Oct. 13th. Co. A arrived\nat this place, and have beon on duty ever\nsince. The fort was constructed by\ntho 50th Ohio, and at presontis ocou- -\npied by our company alone, with two\npieces of artillery to guard the ap-\nproaches to tho railroad bridge over tho\nabove named stream. The bridge is\nfine structure and was built by the\n company at a cost of $27,000\nTho importance of this road to the Gov\ncrnmcnt at this time cannot be over\nestimated, as all the supplies fur the\nArmy of tho Cumberland must pass\nover it. Consequently largo numbers\nof troops must be used in guarding it\nFrequent attacks hove been made upon\nit by rebel guerrillas. There has been\nperfect qniet here ever since our ar-\nrival and no rebels aro tthought to be\nin tho vicinity, and no danger of nny\ndepredations, unless committed by citi-\nzens, most of whom are good Union\nmen, and all profess to bo, but some\nfail to givo satisfactory evidence of their\nloyalty. They nro like their brothor\nsympathisers in Ohio, displeased with\neverything dono by the Administration.\nand can seo no other reason lor tho 4war\nbut tho abolition of slavery; but unlike\ntheir brothers in Ohio, they do not mis-\ntreat
06c11e95ee330a9bb93e292788f675b4 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.387671201167 41.262128 -95.861391 unhaiiowed «i>- i^iutst oar coantryneD\nwe woasd sutf«x the loss of oar right hind,\nfor we consider this on the part of the\nNorth only i war of conquest and subju­\ngation, which will nt'Tw be ifieoaplishsd,\ntbo* teaa of blood may tiow, snd untold\ntreasures be expended in the attempt.—\nThe South will go together as i unit, and\nas oar fathers did, will straggle for life\nand liberty. What then is the remody !\nfor thia deplorable stite of iffain?—\nSimple aooogh to those who hare a sense\nof justice. Let the Sooth go, we don't\nw*ct tbem—divide the debts ind mets,\nand let rirkiry io ili branch-ai of indus­\ntry build up two powerful, free, Intelli­\ngent, enlightened, wealthy knd brotherly\nBepublioa, either of which In twenty\nyears, mai what we are altogether\nsow- This is whit the South aaked, and\nwhat she now dwaanda, aad she oliuau rt\ntohejaat. For aa it is at least «*f«d*eBt,\n: and th,, tast way, iad bid our Dem&cra*-\ni io Preas stood ap manfully for the right,\ni this ai#ht have beeo aocomfiliahad. »l\n[ ean eerer get k bett.f bargain than shia,\n| and fw betfer would it be, to sooept is\n! new, than to w*jU till oar ssoney proper-\n| tt and bam« acre qstt aad dovasted, ind\nt (h« ;•<«.» . of widows, orphan# and ataryiug\n| tbo«*«adJi iweetid tc be«va» for *eog««ii<ja\n! upO£ ihv pkrtj , and thu men who &a?e\ni hrosg&t upon as tbts war, tsod againat\n! dtoae who hare iiaexitad, wded «i Sea­\nted.
1a513abf5a38c280d2df30d028d7122d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.519178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 tor of 1831 and '32 a protracte\nmeeting was held under the au\nspices of Rev. J . Nowland Mallii\nand large accessions were made to th\nmembership. Their house became to\nsmall to accommodate the comrrecatioi\nand at a Quarterly Conference field o\nMay 3d, 1832, it was unanimously rc\nsolved to build a new church, the on\noccupied at present being the result c\nthe effort. The plan was drawn b\nCapt. Robert Hamilton; the Rev. Wn\nLambden, R. Hamilton, John List, Jc\nseph Morrison and Elijah Day bein\nappointed a committee to raise sui\nscriptions, procure materials, «fcc., <fc<\nPrompt payment was the order of th\nday in those times, as the subscription\nwere made on the terms, one-third i\nhand, one-third in three months an\nthe other third in six months. Re^\nLambden, Daniel Zane and R. Humi\nion were appointed a building cornmii\ntee, authority to build a house f\nx 80. with basement, galleries, <3tc. Tii\nchurch wis finished in 1836, althoug\nit had been used for some time befoj\nthat year. Rev. Z . H . Coston wn\npreacher in charge during 1831 and '3:\nwith Rev. Robert Hopkins, Presidin\nElder, and the membership numbere\ntho nlnap of the pnnfprpnnn vpiit «\n1832, 273. In 1833 and '34 Rev. Hoi\nkins was contiuned as Elder an\nRev. T. M . Hudson as Pastor, wit\nReverend J. J. Swayze, as assist an\nIn the enumeration of these dates,\nmust be remembered that, the calenda\nyear and the Conference year do oi\nterminate at the same period,.the la\nter closing sometime in June, we tx\nlieve. Rev. J . Q . Sansoin was sent i\nEider in 1834 <fe '5, Rev. Limerick i\npreacher in charge. Mr. Sanson) coi\ntinued as Elder until 1837. tfrith
0bd4059e013ac199a8b23961a55bbc6d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.43698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 At 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon ex-\nJudge Daniel It Magruder was married to\nMiss Itosalie Eugenia Stuart Webster at\nMemorial P. E. Church, Kev. W . M . D .ime,\nthe pastor, officiating. Tho church was\ncrowded upon the occasion. Hon. J . T .\nBriscoc, Secretary of State, acted as bwt\nmau, and Miaa Bessie Webster, sister of the\nbride, was bridesmaid. The ushers were\nMessrs. Harry Orrick, B. Joseph Wilsoii,\nof Prince George's couuty, Augustus Rol¬\nlers Wilson, of Calvert county, and John\nH. C . Williams*. The brideisagreat grand-\ndaughter of Noah Webster, the famous\nlexicographer. Recently the names of sev¬\neral young ladies have been brought before\nthe public at the time of their marriage by\nthe erroneous statement of their being\ndirect descendants of General Washing-\nton. As the "Father of Ilia Country" had\nno child, there could not have been any\ndirect descendants General Washing¬\nton married, as is gem rally known, tho\nwidow Custin. Her only John Parke\nCuBtifl, married Gov. Calvert's youngest\ndaughter, Nelly Calvert. On the death of\nher husband, "John Parke Custis, her ten¬\nder love for her bereaved mother-in-law\ninduced Mrs. Custia to give up to her the\ngrandson,George Washington Parke Oust is,\nand her youngest daughter, Nelly Parke\nCustiB. The two children were adopted by\nGeneral Washington as his own ami reared\nas sucli in hie family at Mount Vernon.\nSome five or bIx years after the death of\ntier first husbatd, John Paike Custin, the\nbeautiful young widow married i r. David\nStuart, of Virginia, the life-long, intimate\nand confidential friend of Washington\nTheir youngest daughter, Rosalie Eugenia\n. Stuart, married tho only eon of Dr. Noah\nWebster, and it was their great grand-\n'laughter who stood at the altar yesterday\nin the Memorial Church and became Mrs.\nJudge Magruder. The bride wasdrevsed\nin white Ottoman silk, trimmed with duch¬\ness lace, and wore diamond ornaments\nand a wreath of orange blossoms.
3c7901e853696b08be54ed7fa23c088f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.37397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 Arrived tliere, they kissed a good nigt\nthe maiden to seek her couch, and he, a\nwas nreaumed. to seek liis home. But n\nsooner liad tho door closed behind hei\nthan an idea struck him to gtve her a sui\nprise. It appears that the young lady'\nroom was on tlio second floor, and til\nyoung mun whs acquainted with the lac\nlie, therefore, provided himself with\nladder, and placing oue end on thegroum\nleaned tho other against the house, an\nascended to the window of tho unsuspeel\ning girl, doubtless designing to lull her t\nsleep with one of his sweetest melodies.\nBut, alas for the futility of huuuii\nhopes I Fate had decreed it otherwise; fo\njust as ho was getting his voice in trim,:\nlarge bull-dog belonging to the family, no\nliking tho looks of things, made a nois;\nraid on the chap on the ladder. This wa\nso unexpected that it completely discon\ncarted him, and tho start that he gav\ncaused the loot of the ladder to slip, atn\ndown went our serenader, but into stil\ndeeper trouble, lie fell from the frying\npan in tho lire. The girl's parents, 1\nseems, occupied the room immediately he\nneatli her, and Uie ladder, as it slippe<\ndown tins aide ot tho house, loaded witl\nthe precious weight, fell directly throng]\ntheir window, landing our aeronau\nsquare into the room, breaking glass, sasli\nand ail in tho demolished window,wakinj\nthe old folks unceremoniously from the!\nslumbers that of burglars, earth\nquakes and tornadoes rushed tlirougl\ntheir tcrrilicd brains. Our hero, thunder\nstruck at this strango denouement, at\ntempted to beat a retreat\nTogo out of the window he dare not\nfor olil Bose was out there, growling at\nfurious rate. So, believing discretion t<\nbe tho better part of valor, he sought t<\nAnd his way out of tho street door, but it\nthis he was foiled, for before he could rnaki\nhis exit from the bedroom the old gentle\nman had seized him hy the coat collar\nand white attempting to extricate liimsel\nfrom the old gentleman's firm grip be wai\nconfronted at the stairs by his lovely Dul\ncinca with a lamp in her hand, en di*ha\n1/iUt, and sercaining with fright\nlie was, of course, recognized insumuy\nbut without waiting for apology or expla\nnation, went out of the front door will\nthe old gentleman's right foot in uncoiu\nfortable proximity to his latter extrcmi\nties, lie left his'hat, hut declares it wa\nstolen from him by robbers. The fathe\nthe next morning consulted a lawyer, am\nit was through that functionary that tli\nstory has leaked out.\nAn English judge once addressed\ncriminal, who had been sentenced t\ndeath for uttering a forged one-pouni\nnote, in this wise: "1 trust that, througl\nthe merits and mediation of our UIesse<\nRedeemerJyou may there experience tlin\nmercy which a due regard to the credit <i\nthe paper currency iorbids you to hope fo\nhere."
0603618eab5ba68adbe755951f3a06ec THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1903.0972602422628 47.478654 -94.890802 "Commencing at the point where the town\nline between townshipsone hundred and (Irty-\ntWO(152) and one hundred and fifty-three (153)\nintersects the boundary lino between Red\nLake and Beltrami Counties, thence south\nalong the range line between ranges thirty-\neight (38) and thirty-nine (39) to the point\nwhere said ranire line intersects the northern\nboundary line of Becker County, Minnesota,\nthence east along the town line between town-\nships one hundred and forty-two (143) and one\nhundred and forty-three (143) to a point\nwhere said township line Intersects the west-\nern lioundary line of Hubbard County, Min-\nnesota, thence north along the range lino be-\ntween ranges thirty-live (35) and thirty-six\n(.'«» to the point where said rango line Inter-\nsects the meandered lino of the southern\nshore of Red Lake. In said Beltrami County,\nthence following the said meandered \naround the western shore of said Red Lake to\nwhere said meandered line Intersects the\ntownship line between township one hundred\nand fifty-two (I5a) and one hundred and fifty-\nthree (153) thence west along the township\nlino between township ono hundred and fifty-\ntwo (152) and townshlpono hundred and fifty-\nthree (153) to the place of commencement.\nContaining and embracing therein townships\nono hundred and forty-threo (143). one hun-\ndred and forty-four (144), one hundred and\nforty-five (145), one hundred forty-six (148),\none hundred forty-seven (147). one hundred\nforty-eight (148), one hundred forty-nine (149),\none hundred fifty (150). one hundred fifty-one\n(I." .l). and one hundred fifty-two (152). north of\nranges tblrty-slx (30). thirty-seven (37) and\nthirty-eight (38), west of the Fifth Principal\nMeridian, being In all the thirty (30) town-\nships aforesaid of said Beltrami County.\nMinnesota.
0a996acaf12e3b5e5cd22df8a4eeaf77 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.050684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 this committee, "any attempt to over­\nthrow or destroy, nt tbe Bouth, the\nrights of American citizenship vindicated\nbv the war, or protected by the measures\nof rcccu struct ton which followed it ”\nAnd this from "Mister" Antony Higgins\nWhy, God save the mark, who was it\nthat! attempted to fairly deluge this state\nwith fraud and corruption at our late\nelections? Who was it that tried to\ndebauch that most sacred of the rights\nof American citizenship, the right\nto the freedom of tbe suffrage? And, who\nc ss it that turned into this state that\nfilthy ditch current of national, corrup­\ntion money? A sentence like the oue we\nquoted from the minority report,\nis well euougli, in a sorry sort of a\nway, io he used to political\ncapital in a stump speech; but it is\nan entirely different matter when it\ncomes to be used by a person claiming to\nact as a representative of tbe people of a\nstate. But just here we might ask. wbo\ndoes "Mister” Higgins claim to repre\nsent? Not a majority of the people of\nthis etate, surely, for everyone knows\nthat the majority are Democrats. Aud\nnot- the Republican mluority, for every­\none knows,too,that the great majority of\nthat party have made hot baste to dis­\nown him. No, h's constituents consist\nexclusively of his own iionmed insignifi­\ncance, aud his political official heel-\ntrackers. Let the Bella's and the people\nunderstand this perfectly, and wn shall\nbe entirely wtlliug to giaut “Mister"\nHiggins all the necessary execution rope.
094b79f4b611b393eedf738aadb3db72 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.9219177765094 41.262128 -95.861391 «as Mr Fn»deri'-k Von Maliar, of MamoO,\nBavaria. It ia aaid to be the only work\njf the kind in tbe world. Its weight is\nJi),m poooda. To tbia dat» th<?r« baa\nUoea paid upon ii$2fc.42^:00, Tber«are\nMae oowtsHtding biiit. , vad aose addi-\nuoaai exp^aae is uuw iacorriag. Wbao\nit is compi .St- and ready for sue, the to­\ntal eifK use will be «i»oui #iu,uuO.\nTh« leading aubjeet of it« eaibeiiiab-\ncneots is tbe bistort of Goinmtxi#. it\njiaa two valvea, witb four panneia on\ne«oh valve, and one semi-oarooiar pannel\nover the tranao®. Tb« firai patnei (bo-\nginning at th« bottom of tb- .; left aaad\nvalve) contains a sconce repesesting Co-\ntaabos before the cutracii of Salaxsancaj\nibe > »x- . jad pan<si bis ieaTiag tbs sOEteat\nuf Lasobitbt j tbe third panel bis aodiasee\nwith * ejuidand and laabelia . the fourth\npanel, hia departore from Palos: the\njetaitfircalar par»ei over tb« UrmasoHi rep-\nresent* hia first at 8aa Salvador;\nthe fiftb panel, bi« firat encounter with\nthe Indiana at Utapanoia ; tbe sirth panel\nbts ifiuaipbaat entry into Barcelona . tbe\nseventh pa&ei repre««aui iucb a priweer\nio chains about to be sent back to Spam;\ntbe eighth panel contains a ec«se repr*-\nsenting bis death. There are sisteen\nsmall niches ia the border or fmae\najosjQii to»; door, in which are auteen\nstatutju, representing Jtauoguianed co-\ntsmporaries of Columbus, aad between\nthe pannels are beads r- .preaer.ting aiaio-\nriaas who bare written on bia voyage\nfrom his own time down to the present day,\nending witb Irving and Prweeott. Crown­\ning tbe door ia a bust of Colombo*. —\nThe oraamasta are chiefly emblematic of\nconquest and navigation. There are also\nabsat -the edge four statutes, the largest\nof ail reproscnti&g tbe four great divis­\nions of the world -Europe, Asia, Africa\nand America. The surface of the work\nhas a beaatifn! soft and mellow tone. —
0b54da5a57c705affbf631c37e59cd5f THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.2397259956874 35.996653 -78.901805 A Typical Scene In One of the Well Known\n"Bankers and Brokers" Offices With\nWhich the Money Center of the Metrop-ol- i\nI Crowded Carrying Fror.\nIn the interval between the morning\nand afternoon sessions of the Stock Ex-\nchange the speculators and operators sat\nin the broker's office studying the ques-\ntions as they had been marked up on the\nblackboard by a junior clerk. They spoke\nbut little. Some were making mental\ncalculations, some were building air\ncastles, a few were hugging themselves\nwith delight because fortune was in their\nfavor, and others looked grim and en-\ndeavored to conceal their chagrin and\nregrets at losses by the operations of the\nmorning. Not a few were wrestling\nwith Bassamo's problem, considering\nwhether another arrow would discover\nthat already lost. In gambling the hope\nthat another fling at fortune will bring\nher down never fades. But those who\ngamble daily recognize that such reason-\ning is not sound, and where, as in "Wall\nstreet, all the investments are based upon\ntheorizing as to cause and effect, some-\nthing more than unreasoning faith in\nfortune's favor is necessary to open the\npurse of its followers. These men\nwere veterans, and the gambler's passion\nwas subordinated to cold calculations.\nAn old but gay and sprightly man\ncame upon the scene. He was the pro-\nprietor of the office, a big broker, widely\nknown and very popular. He was re-\nputed to be the possessor of great wealth.\nUpon his favor depended the fortunes of\nsome of the men in the chairs. Should\nhe withdraw it at a critical moment they\nmight sink out of sight overwhelmed by\nruin, wrecks to be pointed out by the\ncurious in after days as some of the "has\nbeens" of Wall street. He addressed them\non the subject of gold shipments, argu-\ning from his own view points as to their\neffects upon tho prosperity of the com-\nmunity. Ho had the manners and voice\nof a stump speaker. He interlarded his\nremarks with jokes. and reminiscences\nand talked volubly. A handsome gray\nhaired man, with smooth face and erect\nfigure, watched him and the others close-\nly. When the broker had finished and\ndisappeared into his private office, this\nmau said quietly to the friend, a visitor,\nwho sat beside him:
29ce6e610c40e3ada2545418f6921779 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.2452054477424 39.745947 -75.546589 Ah the Wayfarer was passing Eighth\nand Monroe streets one day recently,\nhe witnessed one of the most ludicrous\nincidents that has been his province to\nbehold. A woman who had both arms\nfull of table cloths and ginger cakes\nwhich she was taking to a bake at\nWest Presbyterian Church,had gone in\nto the drug store on the corner, and\nwhile she was engaged in making her\npurchases, a small black dog trotted\nup and stretched himself full length\nupon the door step. In due time the\nwoman made her appearance hut did\nnut notice the dog upon the step.\nHer dainty No. 3 came m contact\nwith his (ail and in an instant, dog,\ntable cloths, ginger cukes and the wo­\nman were in a mix-up on the pave­\nment. The table cloths became tangled\nwith the womans feet and when she\nattempted to rise she found she could\nnot so. The drug clerk hurried to\nher assistance but she, instead ot,\nthanking him, poured upon his head a\nstring of abuse that was enough to\nmake him lose his religion. He tried\nto explain that It was a dog and not he\nwho had caused the trouble, but she\ndid not see the dog which had made off\nas rapidly as his legs could carry him,\na«d refused to believe that a dog had\nanything to do with it.\nPeople passing thought the drag\nclerk had abused the woman and he,\nobserving the way matters were going,\nlost no time in getting into the store\nanil hiding beneath the counters until\nthe woman had gathered up hor cakes\nand other belongings and disappeared\nup tho street. Then he gained suffi­\ncient courage to poke his head out of\nhis hiding place and ask in a si range\nwhisper, “Has she gone?" *
9802e1908adbc7ec82620b084e1ebc09 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.2315068176054 39.369864 -121.105448 AVomcu arc curious, to a degree—so\nare men—the onlv difference being that\nthat clement in womans composition\ntermed curiosity, seems mysteriously\ntransformed when discovered to exist in\nthe other sex, and is at once dignified\nunder the head of—philosophy !\nAlbeit, my curiosity led me to ohse'rvc\neverything which by chance came with-\nin range of my vision. Among other oh\njects,l had noticed a stately looking dwel-\nling justacross the way, and every morn-\ning the hlooiuingconscrvatoiy attached to\nit was approved by the presence of a\nyoung lady, who usually appeared iu an\nelegant wrapper of white cashmere, re-\nlieved by a delicate blue, or peach-blos-\nsom color. Her step was measured yet\ngraceful, and her tone and manner as\nstereotyped and inflexible as the law of\nthe and Persians. She always\nassumed that same air of listlessuess,\nwhich deprived her classic features of\neven that infinitessimal degree of ex-\npression they might otherwise have pos-\nsessed ; and she turned from the rare\nexotics, as if in reproach that they should\nfail to how their “ diminished heads”\nbeneath her glance.\nOne morning she sat at the open\ncasement in the drawing-room, occupied\nwith the “news,” when the finely chis-\neled lips relaxed into the faintest possi-\nble smile, and I heard her exclaim—-\n“Only think of it Pa I Air. Aliddletou\nhas arrived. I have just observed/his\nname upon the list of passengers by the\nlast steamer. By-the-by, now I think\nof it, we were betrothed! I woildcr\nhas he forgotten it—hope he has, for\nthere is”
e4d3800387e3798fb7a67bb59372f5ca NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0726027080163 41.681744 -72.788147 Selectman Edward P. Prior stated\nthe town's position on tho matter\nwhen ho said that the public utili-\nties commission had left the matter\nopen for two weeks or until next\nFriday in order that the representa-\ntives of the railroad and of the town\ncould get together in an attempt to\nsettle the matter. He said that\nthree different kinds of protection\nwere discussed, a flashlight system\nwhich the selectmen think is out of\nthe question; a flag man which is\nnot thought to bo enough protection\nand double gates upon which the\nselectmen were decided as being the\nbest protection for the traffic both\nvehicular and pedestrian.\nMr. Sterling speaking for the rail-\nroad stated that the railroad's opin-\nion was that a flagman was belter\nthan gates and said that the rail-\nroad would agree to give the town\nthe triangular piece of land in ques-\n to move the switch and the\ngateman's shanty without any cost\nto the town, if the town would agree\nto do away with the gates and have\na flagman there.\nHe stated that all north bound\ntrains stop beforo reaching the\ncrossing and the south bound traf-\nfic is very slow at this point. He said\nthat the railroad company would\nclean up the entire affair if the\ntown would agree to do away with\nttio gates and have a ilagman there.\nHe was asked if ho would go on\nrecord assaying that a flagman was\nthe best protection for that crossing\nand ho answered that, he would 'go\non record as saying that it would be\nas good as gates. He said that a\nmoving sign to an autolst would bo\nmore attraction than still gates.\nMr. Wheeler stated that he could\nn't seo where a sign about two feet
0a46bcdad7d153cd1c80d99b39cc4603 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.691780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho men were seen later in the evening\nby an Intklliobnck^ reporter, to whom\nthey gave a short sketch ol their lite and\nadventures in that distant country. They\ngave tho uaines ol B. Bulllugton and 1).\n11. King, and Patkeraburg as their home,\nAbout nine months ago they accepted po¬\nsitions from the United Magdalena Trans¬\nportation Company, ol the tit«te oi Colum¬\nbia, to work lor them at the trade ol river\nengin;«i:ingonthoMagdalenarlver,anoble\nstream 800 miles in length, and eclips¬\ning the lewor Mississippi in width and\ndepth. Tho company's glowers were\nbuilt entirely ol \\run, and chipped Irom\nPittsburgh to their destination in pieces\nand riveted together on their arrival.\nThey liked the country and the li(o fairly\nwell, although they reported the oonntry\nas wild and uncivilised; tho huge forests\nswarinins with South American, tigers and\nlions anu the rivers and mall bayous that\nIntersect tho country like network, with\nhuge *eaym»nswhose ferocity make It cer¬\ntain death to the unfortunate peon dock-\nhand who chances to tumble overboard.\nThe people are mostly hall breed Span,\nlards and Indians, who always aettlo their\nsudden and frequent ouarreu with pistol\nand knlfo, Tin control of tho govern¬\nment this turbulent population is\nslight, and revolutions of a bloody diame¬\nter are ol yearly occurrence, l(ondn is\nsituated at the headwaters of the Magda-\nloon river, 8w0 miles in the interior, and\nconsists of a small adobe villago, built\nupon the rules of an old Spanish fort,\nthat has long since been rulnod bv one ol\nthe frequent earthquakes to which tho\ncountry is subject,\nTho cllmato is very warm ranging from\n«0° to 00" al| the year round, tho hottest\nrather being In December. The vegeta¬\ntion Is luxuriant and fruit* of all kinds are\ngrown and matured every month of the\nyear. A short time ago Mr. ilulUngton\nwas stricken with malaria and ordered by\nhis doctor to at once leave the country or\nhe would die.\nTho men who had boon chums together\nfur years throw up their positions and re¬\nturned homo via the Isthmus of Panama,\nembarking nt Colon on the Hoyal Mall\nline ol steamers for New York, where\nthey arrived safely after a voyage of six¬\nteen days. The men will leave this morn¬\ning on the Ohio Kiver road for their\nhomes In i'arkeriburg.\nTub Alhambra Palace Kink will be\nopen to-night with music-
1b626e97a2b58c8538359320629bfd30 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.6506848997972 40.735657 -74.172367 Shepard Avenue Grading, Curbing and Flag-\nging-Thirty (80) days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work can\nbe examined at the office of the Chief Engineer\nof the Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners at the City Hall. 8aid proposal* to be ac-\ncompanied by the consent In writing of two\nsureties, or a surety. company qualified to do\nbusiness in NeW Jersey, who shall, at the time\nof putting In such proposals, qualify as to\ntbelr responsibility In the amount of such pro-\nposal, and bind themselves that. If the conttuct\nbe awarded to the person or persons making\nthe proposal, they will, upon its being oo\n•warded, become his or their sureties for the\nfaithful'performance of said work, and that If\nthe person or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsuch contract they will pay to the City of\nNewark any difference between the sums to\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract and that\nv hlch the City of Newark may be obliged to\npay the person or persons by whom such con-\ntract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water"Commission-\ners of the City of Newark, reserve to them-\nselves the right to accept or any or all\nproposals for the above work, as they tn*.y\ndeem best for the Interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section\nof the law creating the Board-of Street and\nWater Commissioners, approved March 2ft. 1891 .\nJ that the bond or bonds to be given for the\ni faithful execution and performance of said\npublic work shall first be approved aft to suf-\n! ficlency by the Board, and as to form by the\ncounsel of the Board, and no contract shall\nI be binding on the city or become effective or\nJ operative until such bond Is so approved, and\n| the President of the Board shall have power\nj tq examine the proposed bondsmen under oath.\n11 he shall so desire, or shall be so instructed\nby the Board, but the Board will not be bound\nby any statement that may be ma-de by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full power\nI and absolute discretion in the whole mattes,\nI and this provision shall be referred to In any\nI advertisement inviting bids for any such pub-\nlic work.\nI By direction of the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners of the City of Newark.
a7be8c8634dc8d53a4236930bd1f30eb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.6589040778792 41.681744 -72.788147 stepped on their tongues and tripped\nnear the goal. The time for Bailey\nwas six seconds, with six instead of\nsixty seconds for a minute.\nThe fat man's race was a free for\nall fight. Several weighing over 300\nwere given a handicap and a slight\nhead start. Panting, the racers waited\nfor the shot to be fired by Starter\nCharles Newton and after half an\nhour's wait poised on all fours, New\nton announced that something was\nwrong with the pistol. It wouldn't\ngo off. They were examining it when\nbang! the gun exploded and the\nrace was on. Stanley S. Gwillim, who\nisn't fat, reached the tape, took\ndrink of water, and turning, saw the\nothers coming after him. He was\npresented with first prize for his\nfleetness and received an Eversharp\npencil to down the time and place\nof his victory. He did the 50 yards\nin four seconds, big question mark\nand said if he had been hungry he\nwould have done it in two. He gen-\nerally makes that time during the\nnoon hour from Trumbull's to his,\nhome on Hough street.\nThe standing broad jump was won\nby "Buzz" Cook who was awarded a\npair of cuff links. He jumped eight\nfeet, four inches.\nThe swimming and rowing races\nwere not held on account of the\nhigh tide coming in and besides that\nit was getting dark and the swimmers\nwere afraid to get lost in the waters\non the way to Brazil. These were\ncalled off and the party started for\ngood old Plainville.\nThe committees in charge of the en-\ntire affair were given
01c73068852259542cbdc061596be428 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1910.1493150367833 40.114955 -111.654923 thousands of sheep on tho ranges of\nSouth Dakota nnd Montana who is\nvisiting In Nobraka whero ho former\nly lived The cattlo men whose herds\nnot very long ago roamed at will over\nmore than half of western Nebraska\nhavo been driven across the bonier\nto make room for the small stock\nraiser and tho farmer In turn they\nt 111 have halted In eastern South Da-\nkota Wyoming and Montana but year\nby year they have been driven farther\nwest and north and It Is only a ques ¬\ntion of a short time In tho opinion ot\nthe herders themselves when their\ndomination will end Wyoming will\nprobably be tho stamping ground\nlonger than any of her sister states\nbecauso the topography there Is more\nnatural for grazing the profits\nlarger but tljo stay will be limited\nOno of the things that works against\ntho cattle men oven In Wyoming Is\nthe frequency of feuds between them\nnnd the sheep men Cattlo men as a\nrule It Is asserted have been the ag ¬\ngressors In these outbreaks and havo\nforfeited sympathy Dozens of flock\nmusters have been killed In tho\nclashes between the opposing forces\nand thousands of sheep wantonly\nslaughtered The cattle men have\ntheir defenders In those who say they\nwere the first on tho ground and the\nsheep men are interlopers Sheep It\nIs asserted will live and thrive where\ncattle would starve and there can bo-\nno peaco where tho two attempt to\nlive In tho same community Stock-\nmen from tho range country
1a97d7e2ac0c0d4aa81e098e18990b7c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.1821917491122 40.063962 -80.720915 Thus among every branch of unskilled\nlaborers there is widespread and deplorable\nsuffering. It should be remembered that\nfor many months before the actual stop¬\npage there was no regular work for the\nmen. They earned perhaps 18s in a good\nweek, more often considerably below that\nsum; and when the work was really lost\nthe only intermediary between the 18s a\nweek struggle and absolute destitution,\nwas that offered by a sale of their homes.\nThen came a rich harvest for the pawn¬\nbrokers, the second-hand clothes dealers,\nthe furniture brokers, and, finally, the rag¬\nman. First went little articles of luxury,\nthen home comforts; then clothes, utensils,\nfurniture, and bed, leaving a miserable\nhome of four bare walls and a three-legged\nstool. Those who have preserved their\nbed and table are fortunate. The writer\nwill conduct any one who is charitably\ncurious to see a dozen homes of British\nworkmen, within a stone's throw of\nthe Hall, where bare floors and\nwalls, and a heap of straw in\none corner constitute the owner's stock\nof worldly goods. Nay, there aro cases\nwhere the children have been stripped of\ntheir clothing, and because everything\npawnable is gone, the wretched garments\nhave been sold for rags. And the crusts of\nbread, dry and unpalatable, which they\nhave bought have served for the family\nmeal. Dozens of other children, who, by\nrare good fortune, happening to be Cath¬\nolics, have still their clothes left, and are\nglad to escape from the dreary home to the\nschool to which thev go breakfastlecs and\nfaint The kindly SiBters of Mercy, whose\nname is received with pious expressions of\ngratitude wherever the poor do congregate,\nhave a daily task in feeding the little starv¬\ning scholars who attend the catholic School.\nThese ladies have done and are doing much\ngood in the town, by relieving the distress:\nand tending the sick.
075afe2883bc032763e1ddcc38df65e1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 Tlio principal occupation, however, of\ntills persou, and tho one best relished by\nher employers. Is tlio massagebnth. Tlio\ntub Is filled with warm water, quite as\nhot as can bo comfortably boruo, and\ninto Ibis Is thrown a bath bag consisting\nof a little sack of checsa cloth, loosely\nfilled with almond meal, powdered orris\nroot and grated soap. The water turns\nsoft and milky as tho contents of the bag\ndissolve. and tho skin Is rubbed with tho\nbag, whlcli makes a smooth, vlolet-por-\nfumed lather, and leaves tho flesh as soft\nus a child's. Tho bather Is rubbed dry\nand rolled in a big shoot of Turkish\ntowollng, and then ovory inch of tlio\nbody Is carefully rubbed, kneaded nnd\npinched with hands moistened In vlolot\nwater, which impregnates tho skin with\nu faint, flower-like porfume, Tliattokos\ntho place of ojtorclso in a gloat measure,\nand who nro too Indolont or too\nbusy to walk or practice in a gymnasium\nfind tliis koops the skin In equally good\ncondition and is a mora pleasant method\nof setting the blood to circulating.\nAnother fancy of theso dainty women\nis to sleep in sillc. Tliev have long ab¬\njured any other wear for underclothes,\nand now lliero aro being shown iu the\nshops that cater to all tho now whims of\nthe sox, sets of silk sheets nnd pillow¬\ncases In all colors, With theso go the\nbeautiful Ksst Indian blankets, woven\nentirely of raw silk, and down sproads\ncovered with surali or satin. Theso\nsheet! and pillow-cases aro heinstitchcd\nwith n crest or monogram embroidered\nin ono rorncr. Homo ol tlicm have a\nilellcalo vino embroidered along the\nedge, or a broad band of Araliu work.\nXlicy ace of all ilt'llfsto colors and white\nand black.
05d6c02b302f607cba3704a76e0edf92 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.9164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 A bad precedent once fairly establish\ns very dillicult to get rid of. The Brit\nCompanies alonj* tho Ohfo river, seem\nconsider that there is nothing more net\ni try for them to do, than to start the ci\nLion of some bridge, so low and impro[\nly spanned that it will act as an act\nibstruction to the navigation of tlie O.\nriver. They can do Uiis on acompa\nlively light capital! They are'pfcrlet\nwell aware, that a disturbance will V\nwon bo raised, and the fight grow hoi\nind hotter, until when everybody is Ba\nled that such a bridge would bu ruiui\n;o all commercial- interests; tho compj\nquietly steps In, and levies a tax on ri\nnen, and the citizens ol the cities tl\nA'ill be injured, and in this way buili\njood bridge at a very low cost for t!\niwn pockets. Some forty fliotlsaiid (\nars, we think, were by the Bu\nnore and Ohio Kailro»d on Pittsburgh\nJie prlcc for not obstructing thoVlver.\njross outrage and one that ought no\n:o liavo been submitted'to. Now,\nLow Draw [Bridge Company, ink\n{round on tbc precedent of tbo Baltim\nmd Oh!u Railroad, culls on tlie cltiz\n)f Cincinnati to mibscribo a suflici\nunount to raise tbc bridge to the rcqui\njelght. Ifithis plan is to ba oorric^i\nind any sctof men be permitted to ci\nI structure over tho Ohio river tbat ti\nire well awaro cannot under the law\n- aiqed, and then tax those who .hud\nHand in their dishonesty," to'lfcljS tli\nSuild a better one, there is we think li\nase of any law upon tho aubjcct. 1\nprecedent is a bad one, as well as dish\nat in tbo schemers and plotters, and\nslty should submit to havo its legal rig\nviolated, and then pay tho violators\ndoing so.
0ca277f0bce772b16c20e5e3f7a3debd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.4260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 Areliblaliup Knuriuu Nut Dapuae.t l»r\nJtnina, nml Arclihltliop Kaln .Not in,\nHiiee«aanr.tlow tti« Bltatuka Ornirrrd.\n1»omi£, June 4-,It is stated at tho Vat¬\nican that tlio brief cnblo from St, Lntils\ntiinoiineltis tho popo's deposition ol\nArchbishop Konrick, and tho uomina-\nlion iti hlintp.nl of Arohhlehop Kaln ax\n"iiccoiior, is duo to an unfortuuulo uiln*\nnpprohonsiou ol n cable from Homo\nwhich lumnurizod tho action of tho\ncongregation of tho propaganda. Tho\nwritten decreo wastiialtad tottio United\n. States several days ago and gives in lull\nthocontouiplatod changes. It doe* not\ndoposo Archbishop Kourlck from IiIm\npro tout title or positiou, nor duo* ii\nappoint Archblihop Kaln ni hit sue\ncesser. Such HCtioti could liavu\nboon taken only through n papal\nbull. Tho present action it a\ndocrooof tho congregation tnado for tho\npurpoao of assisting in tbo management\nand administration of tbo church prop\nertyof tho llad thoarcti*\nbuhop boon roliovod, ho would havo\nbeen glvon a now title as archbuhop of\na supprossod dloceai iu tbo far eait in\norder that tho change would ontnil uo\n. a c riQco of dignity or station. Hut tho\ndecreo luakos no chance in hit title utid\nleaved him in possession of hit present\ntitle ni archblihop of St. Louis. U ds-\ntlnei exactly nod clearly trio position of\nArchbishop Knin as coadjutor, making\nmore definite tho powers couforrod\nupon bim n year ago. It does not, how.\nover, mako him tho successor of Arch*\nbinhop Konrick, but gives him such\npowers as coadjutor that ho will ue alio\nto carry on tho laborious work of man*\naging tho church property and atlairs\nas though he wore archbishop in name\nor in fact. This will bring no dupos*\nition or romov.il ot tho vonorablo bead\nof tbo archdiocese.
1b259c9464079bf25e78a2c157aaf272 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.3904109271944 40.063962 -80.720915 Ono ol the most forcible arguments w\nwhich can bo adduced in favor of the m\ntheory ol organic evolution is furnished Sn\nby the facts ol embryology. As was long 0f\nago pointed out by Von iiaer, the "voner- )j|\nable Nestor" ol that tcicnco, nil organisms u,\nwhatever aro pliko at the earliest etago ol en\ntheir existence. Mere specks of proto- u<\nplasm nt first, the dlDerentlatlon which c[,\ndistinguishes plants Irom animals soon qc\nbegins. At the outset all animal germs ce\nseem alike. As development, proceeds, k>\neach gradually assumes the characteristics to\no[ thu Bub kingdom to which it belongs, ua\nbut even alter this progress has been dc\nmade, the ern'oryo mombers ol any given ih\nclass are indistinguishablo from the ]UI\nembryo members ot any other given class wj\nwithin thOBame sub-kingdom. The germ c.\\\nof a man cannot be distinguished Irom the Cx\ngermoladog,ofareptile,ofabird, or ol no\na 11 sh, but all resemble the adult lorm ol\nan which, in classification, is the gr(\nstarting point of the urltbrata. As de- 0f\nvelopmtmt goes on, each assumes the gg(\ncharacteristics Buccesslvely of Its class, ca\norder, family, genus, species and variety. f0i\nBays Von li.«r: "in my possession aro W(\ntwo littlo embryos in spirit, wh030 names rn,\n1 have omitted to attach, and at present X 0d\nam quite unabio to say to what class they hii\nbelong. They may bo lliirds or Bmall 0f\nbirds, or very young mtimmallB, so com- it;\npleto Is the Bimiiarity in the modo ol for- pa\nmation ol the head and truuk in these mi\nanimals. The extremities, however, aro jn\nBtill absent in these embryos. But even 0iv\nIf they had existed in tho earliest stage of 0t|\ntheir development, we should learn no- BU(\nthing, (or tho feet of lizards and mam- br\nmals, tho wings and feet of birds, no less to'\nthan tho bands and feet ot man, all arise ml\nfrom tho same fundamental form."
e55cec115facca7c13b8dd04cd556b3c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.5273972285643 43.798358 -73.087921 Ireland occupies near the whole British\ntho't & anxiety 'rhirty six thousand troops\nhave been fcUUontd in that unhappy isl-\nand, and every day is adding to their num-\nber. The i.avy is aogmented, and there\nare ships enough upon that coast to block\nade an enemy. Mr. O'Connell proceeds\nin his agitation, collecting vast multitudes,\nnumbering them by hundreds of thou\nsa bus, anu aauressing to tnem harangues\nof the most powerfully subtle and elo-\nquently exciting charcter. i The Roman\nCatholic pi iesihood, With their bishops,\nhave come out still more energetically\nthan before, in favrr of a repeal of the\nUnion, and several Presbyterian clorgy- -\nmtn have -- swelled, the muster roll of tne\nAssosiattoa. i ne lormmaote prepara-\ntions made by the government to meet\nany revolt, have only tended to augment\nthe: ngifation, ana extend us iiiiluence ;\nfor, had it not been for the frantic ferocity\nof the admin'stratioo, : in dismissing \nmagistrates who take part in the discus\nsion of the Repeal question, and threaten\ning the? venjjauce of the crown on all par\nties' cocinecied with it, together wilht heir\nridiculously foolish parade of military\nforce, O'Connell never could have boast-\ned of such extraordinary support,' both\npersonally and pecuniarily 1 he last\nweek s. Repeal rent amounted to upwards\nof a thousand pounds, and during thai\nspace of time, the Liberatof.has addressed\nneatly 1,000,000 of people ! There is\nscarcely an fiour that the military are not\nunder arms ; and even during too aitenc-anc - e\nof divinejEervice, on the part of the\nsoldiery. thev enter the hoase of God with\nfixed bayonets, and thirty rounds of ball\nca l nuge, piquets being. esiaotisuej m me\ndistance, and sentries at the church door.\nEither the government must have some\nconclusive testimony in favor of a rebell-\nion, or theif proceedings will become the\nwonder anoMaugbiog-stoc- k
1d66f8d12d650181bed8162056510f11 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.6123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 Tiiosk who, like Mr. Fauminku,wan\na Convention to frame n Constitutioi\nthat will protect them against the eon\nse(|iienees ol engaging in future re\nhellions, may appropriately he callei\n"Democratic protectionists." We hav\nnot yet been al»It; to learn wlml Kim\nof a provision to protect Ihem these gen\ntlemen want. Couldn't the litghter giv\nus nn outline of it V We suggested i\\ fori)\nsome time ago, but it didn't appear to b\nlavorabiy received. After ail, may w\nnot feel some confidence that, under th\nvarious provisions of the Constitution (\ntho Uulted States and of our own Cor\nstitutlon, a man is fully secure who hi\nhaves himself ? Every man, woman an\nchild, irresjiectivo of race or color, Is\ncitizen of tho United States and tli\nState, and every personal, ind\nvidtml right that any citizen hti\nis guaranteed to every other citlzei\nEvery citizen is free to maintain any n\n political or other opinions h\npleases, without coercion in body <\ngoods. The laws protcct all alike. Ever\nmule over21 is a free voter, ami with tli\nballot can vote just as he pleases, withoi\ninterference or annoyance. Indeed, w\ndon't see hut that we have herein our li\ntin State to-day the model Republic,\nwhich the democratic theory, old as tli\nworld, find* a practical illustration.\nIt those who think otherwise woul\nonly specify; if they would only point ot\nin an explicit way how they are o|\npressed.what rights they arc denied\nwhat dangers actually threaten Ihct\nt hey should certainly have our cooporatic\nin an effort for their relief, if it should a|\nl>car they need any. Hut, gentlemen, i\nplease stop the vague ami general cor\nplaints that mean actually nothing, ar\ntell us specifically what hurls you,\nwhat you arc afraid of. Then Bugge\nwith equal specification the remedies y<\npropose.
313789df10ed9a27a455153778ea30cc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.6123287354135 41.681744 -72.788147 Two or three hundred people visit\nthe track every Sunday morning and\nseveral exciting brushes take place\nevery week. In addition to Plainville\nhorses there are several thorough-\nbreds from Bristol, Terryville and\nSouthington at the track every Sun-\nday and the interest shown in the\nmatinees is responsible for the plan\nfor improving the course.\nThe belief is general that a two\nday fair would be a financial success\nand would bring in enough revenue to\nmake several much needed changes\nat the track. It is not planned to\nhave the fair conducted on very ex-\ntensive lines, the men interested in\nIn the proposition figuring that a\nsmall agricultural exhibit with horse\nraces and other sports would give\ngeneral satisfaction this year.\nDeputy Sheriff W. C . owner of\none of the fastest horses warmed up\non the track, is enthusiastic over the\nidea and he believe it will be success-\nful. Other horsemen look favorably\non the plan and are ready to do their\nshare towards making the fair profit-\nable. Lovers of horse racing, who\nwitness the brushes on Sundays, con-\nsider that a sizable sum could be\nraised from such an undertaking, as\nthe townspeople would willingly pat-\nronize it to help the cause along.\nThe plans are yet in embryonic\nstate and will not be greatly disturbed\nfor a few weeks, "as it is believed that\nthere will be ample time to make ar-\nrangements for the exhibits of agri-\ncultural products and other features\nafter other fairs in the state are start-\ned.
16b9e68ba3e7f94a3db97e181be2e324 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.3246575025369 39.745947 -75.546589 Sacks. S .\nSaddler, E.\nSslvinaki, Mr.\nSampson, G.\nSanan. S.\nSanderson. R- W.\nSaunders. Arthur\nSavage, Frank\nSavery, Sarah P,\nSavin, Joe\nScanneU, Jet.\nSchaffer\nSehechinger, Herman\nSehend elms n, Mrs.\nScher, Robt\nSchneider, Herbert C.\nSchoengohn, Robt. P.\nSchroeder, Abrshsm L.\nSchultz, Jos.\nSchutts, Reuben\nSchultx, Stanley\nSchuman, Albert\nScblafennan, A .\nSchmidt, Frank A.\nSchwarts, Leonard\nScalasti, Csmilln\nScott. Helen E.\nScott, S. T .\nScott, Walter\nSee, John\nSeimer, Elwood E.\nSexton, Michael\nSbackleton, G. E.\nSham, Wm. K.\nSharp, Charles W.\nShepelewich, Pete\nSherwood, Chas. W .\nSherwood, Elmira\nShetzler, Jr., Edw. T.\nShew, Adelis W.\nShoff, Daniel W.\nShort ledge, Audrey\nShuster, W.\nSiemer. Walter J.\nSifons,o Toni\nSigmund, Samuel\nSimpson, Susan H.\nSimpson. Jas. F.\nSimpson, Robt.\nSummons, J.\nSingleton, E.\nSivinan, S. F.\nSlannei. J . S.\nSlifet, Chas.\nSklodowiki, \nSloan, J .\nSmart\nSmack, Walter\nSmeltser, Wm. E.\nStnentkauski, S.\nSmentxauski, Jos.\nSmcntkauski, Theo.\nSmith, Alfred E.\nSmith, Mrs. F. L.\nSmith\nsmith, John A.\nSmith, Jno.\nSmith, Paul\nSmith, W limer G.\nSmith, Williams\nSnead, Robt.\nSnyder, Samuel\nSnyder, Tneodorc\nSoDocinski, F ramies\nSomus, Geo.\nSpeakmau, Elis. W.\nSpeakman, Helen W.\nSpeakmau. Wm. C .\nSperry, Miss Mahle 1.\nSpring, Jas. W .\nSpruance, Alice Lee\nStaats, Mrs. Marne\nStanord\nStanard, Vincent C\nStapleton, John\nStaucoragb, Stanley\nStayseback, U. E\nStemle, F. H.\nStepheson, Harvey\nSterner, Dewey\nSteward, H .\nStewart, Wm. F.\nStewart, Chas. F,\nStiphens, Geo. F.\nStirling. Jas. S.\nStork, Leonard\nStradley, Watt\nStronski, Stanley\nStroys, Edw. R.\nStructabrowski, Cralton\nSture, Fred C.\nSturgis, F.\nSubers, Lena J.\nSullin, Matthew A.\n•Sullivan, Carrie L.\nSullivan, Mrs. Mary\nSullivan, Robt. E .\nSnivel, W. V .
193baf3be4dcf28a63b61e72d2532a16 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.89999996829 40.735657 -74.172367 You cannot treat your stofnach aa\nsome men treat a balky horse; force,\ndrive or even starve it Into doing work\nat which It rebels. The stomach Is a\npatient and faithful servant and will\nstand much abuse apd ill-treatment be-\nfore it "balks,” but when it does you\nhad better go slow with it and not at-\ntempt to make It work. Some people\nhave the mistaken idea that they can\nmake their stomachs work by starving\nthemselves. They might cure the stom-\nach that way, but it would take so long\nthat they would have no use for a\nstomach when they got through. The\nsensible way out of the difficulty is to\nlet the stomach rest if It wants to and\nemploy a substitute to do its work.\nStuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will do\nthe work of your stomach for you and\ndigest your food just as your stomaoh\nused to when It was well. You aan\nprove this by tutting your food In a\nglass jar with one of the tablets and\nsufficient water and you will see \nfood digested in just the same time as\nthe digestive fluids of the stomach\nwould do it That will satisfy your\nmind. Now, to satisfy both your mind\nand body take one of Stuarts Dyspep-\nsia Tablets after eating—eat ail and\nwhat you want—and you will feel In\nyour mind that your food Is being\ndigested because you will feel no dis-\nturbance or weight in your stomach;\nIn fact, you will forget all about hav-\ning a stomach, just as you did when\nyou were a healthy boy or girl.\nStuart's Dyspepsia Tablets act in a\nnatural way because they contain only\nthe natural elements of the gastric\njuices and other digestive fluids of the\nstomach. It makes no difference what\ncondition the stomach is in, they go\nright ahead of their own accord and\ndo their work. They know their busi-\nness and surrounding conditions do not\nlnflusnoe them in the least. They thus\nrelieve the weak stomach of all its\nburdens and give It Its mucn-needed\nrest and permit It to become strong\nand healthy.
0dafd8dfdd3b0deeb041808c7976e0d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.2616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 Xkw York, April 5..It . t». Dun\nCo.'s weekly roviow of trade will say:\nReturns showing tbe condition ot re¬\ntail trade in March throughout the\ncountry and tho distribution of goods of\nliunl comparison with the same mouth\nin Inland 1803 give gratifying evidence\nthat in most trades and districts marked\nimprovement over 18!)I is realized,\nthough on ttio whole trado is smaller\nthan in 1895. 'the main datloreuco in\ncomparison with 18915 is found in the\ngeueral dccline of prices, which rn.ik^s\ntrade in va uo smaller even where it is\nclearly us largo or larger in quantity.\nAccounts from tho chief centres of\nwholesale trade are also encouraging\nthis week. There is not only hopefui\nspirit,'but real gain in business, though\nnot equally distributed geographically,\nor as to branches of the trade, lho\nhost nows from the industries is that\nlabor troubles have been set'.lod or\navoided, Mahoning iron und eastern\n mills being again active. Next\nin importance is tho better demand for\nmany manufactured products, which\ngives greater reason to hope tnaL recent\nadvances from tho bottom may prove\nsuccessful. Following the rise in coke\nthere have been this week aalos of 2,000,-\n000 tons of lake ore at about 15 cents ad¬\nvance, and linishod products are no\nlonger inactive, Bessemer iron rising lo\n$10 05, grey forgo to $0 25, common bar\nto 05 cents, structural angies to $10-4\nand plates $1 per ton. !\nTho production of Connellsville coke\nfor tho week, 10S.101 tons, was the\nlargest on record, but thero is some fear\nthai nigher coke un 1 oro may close some\nworks. Copper is tirmer, as sales of ttie\nstock taken trom tho French syndicate\nremoved a load over tho markot for tho\npast six yeara, and tin has been stronger\nwith tin plates, becau«e of purchases\nfor Paeific cannons.
3b963d0244cfd36a8d6308414fd60525 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 we may. It It a happy augury for our develop cour**« and self reliance and orations of the Congress It (a related, ment of glorious military success. He numbers to any army under Washing-1 to unite with Arnold, who was making But we all know now the debt we owe r\ncountry's future that the vicissitudes which was Instinct with the best Ira- that, soon after Patrick Henry returned j was to encounter a more trying task i ton's command This called forth an a foray on the Virginia soil. It was to Washington for the part he look In\nof the passing years have wrought no dlttons of that English love of Individ- hoffte, upon being asked whom he I when he took command under the old Î exhibition on Washjigtons part of the, then. In September 1781, taking advan- bringing about that consensus of opln-\nd mlnutlon In this reverence for the u*| freedom that prompted so many thought greatest man In the Con-1 Elm Tree at Cambridge, of the forces j highest m-vital and moral qualities, i tage of the arrival of De Grasse,, with ton among the leading men Of the con-\nmemory of Washington, that It still of the bold and adventurous spirits of [gress, he replied, Tf you speak of elo-1 there assembled, on July 2nd, 1775. It j It was his unceasing vigilance, enduringhis fleet In the Chesapeake, and In con- ; federation, which resulted In the call •\npenades the minds and hearts of the Great Britain to seek homes on Ihese quenc e, Mr. Rutledge of South Carolina ils true that the patriotic Impulse which patience, quickness of Judgment, strat-,n ectlon with Rochambeau, commander of the Convention that assembled In\nAmerican people, and that more truly western shores.The sterling qualities I* by far the greatest orator, but If ;'followed the affairs of Concord, Lex-logical and tactical ability of a high[of the French auxiliaries
4a267565685de436d9074ca625620e34 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.6287670915779 58.275556 -134.3925 The lands eliminated cousist mainly\nof glaciated mountains and muskeg\nareas of practically no forest value but\nwhich were originally included within\nthe national forest because of the un¬\ncertainty which existed as to the loca-\ntion aud extent of the timbered areas\nand in order to establish a boundary\nthat could bo more easily described\nand administered.\nThe total area of the Chugach forest\nis now approximately 5,817,959 acres of\nland and 3,058,073 acres of water, mak¬\ning a total of 8,870,032 acres. The\npiesent proclamation, it is stated, puts\nthe boundaiy lines of the Chngach\nforest about where they belong. This\nforest is one of the largest aud most\nvaluable bodies of timber of merchant\nable size to be found anywhere ou the\nglobe north of sixty degrees latatude.\nOwing to the more rigorous climate,\nthe timber is smaller iri size and yield\nthan, for iustance, iu the forests of\nSoutheastern Alaska. However, it. runs\nfrom 35(H) to 5000 feet per acre, and in\nsome places as high as 30,000 to 50,000\nfeet. The total of timber uow\nin the forest is reported to be about\neight biiliou feet on a conservative es\ntimate, and it is believed that this body\nof timber will be the piiticipal and\nmost accessible source of lumber for\nthe development of the eutire vast re\ngiou of Northern Alaska. From these\nforests, the interior country must draw\nits supply of structural timber in the\nfuture. This timber is even uow used\nlocally, 10G timber sales having been\nconsummated «ince 1905, involving over\n17,000,000 feet JJ. M., iu addition to the\nlarge amount which h is been supplied\nfree lo local settleis, prospector?, fish¬\nermen and others. Exclusive of the\npanhandle, the area of Ala-ka is about\n300,000,000 acres, less than two per cent\nof which is to be retained wilhiu the\nChugach National Forest to supply\ntimber for this vast region.\nThe forest, wil! be drawn upon im\nmediately for railroad conduction by\ncooperation between the forest service\nand Alaska railroad commission, the\ntimber being supplied free of charge to\nthe Alaska railroad as authorized by
17cc66ac5e9b4775c8444fc1b02cbc42 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.9520547628108 40.063962 -80.720915 and corrupt olllciala, who, with ono or I\ntwo exeplions, liuve plundered tho public I\ntreasury, and set tho laws and rights ol p\nthe people at defiance. That those otli- 1<\ncials of late have been so banded together\nK9 to dlectually deprive the people of the b\nremedies provided by law ;lor their pro- si\ntection, and securo lor themselves com- e\nparativo immunity from punishment for li\ntheir crime?; that in their crusado Against\nthe rights ol the people these olllciala have n\nreceived the countenanco and support of o\ntho Governor and others ol high au- d\nthority in the titato government; that the b\nGovernor himsell has twice invaded their t<\nright, in open violation of tho mate laws b\nand the Constitution, by assuming to 1111 (j\nby Executive appointment, an office made\nelective by the people; that all these olli- tf\ncials lnivo been Republicans, and nearly\nall ot them ot the colored race, and that bi\nnot one of them has ever been molested ei\nin his nlllce by reason of his politics or his u\ncolor; that our people had endured these li\nevils in a spirit ol forbearanco until lor p\nbearance cta«od to be a virtue,and that they gi\nwero impelled to resistance by the instinct li\nd! Belt-preservation, assembled peacefully,\nFind, as the surest means oi attaining eecu- p\nrity, demanded of these faithless stewards li\nthat they resign the trusts confided to lc\nthem; that tailing in this, they resorted to \nthe remedy by injunction in equity, in so it\nlar as it was in its nature applicable to\ntheir case; that theso peaceable measures g\non their part were met by a scheme ol tl\nviolence and bloodshed, in which the ti\nlives oi themselves and their families n\nwere impaired, and they were obliged to a!\ntake ariH9 Jo their defense; that in this fa\nscheme their county clllciala were aided,\ncounseled ami encouraged by tho .Cover- ti\nnor of tho State, and through his influence a\nby other olllcera of the State government, tl\n:ivil and military; the citizens ol Vicka- ti,\nburg, in resisting the assault made upon cl\nLheir homes, captured a number of the la\nissaiUnts, and arrested the tiherifl, who tl\naad incited tbem to this riot, and out of ui\nrespect to the laws and regard lor human di\nlife, 110 violence was done to any of them; m\nhut the aheritt has finally and lrecly re- g(\nligned his oflice, a new election has been ill\nordered, and peace and quiet restored in ci\n)ur county; that there is therefore no\neason way the Slate should be subjected w\no the expenso of an extra session of the \\\\\nLegislature to make laws for this county; cl\nhat our people iu the trying circum- cc\nitauces in which they have been placed\nnight well have done more and could N\nlot have done less for the protection ol\nhemselvca, their families and their th\niroperty." to
4818e40d1515b75ff6640cc36966da11 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.7082191463724 58.275556 -134.3925 One day, while the whalesbip ;sar»\nwhal was tied to an ice floe iu Bering\nt-ea, and the lockouts were at the mast¬\nhead scanning the open water south¬\nward for the appearance of whales, a\npail j' of the forecastlemeu made a foot\nI all of rags and cord, and went over\nthe bow to kick the misshapen thing\naround on a smooth stretch of ice a\nshort distance from the vessel. The\nfun was at its heigh?, and the men were\nju^t getting the kinks out ol their legs\nwbeu the harpoouer in the crow's nest\ncalled softly down to the deck that a\npolar bear had scented the men on the\nice and was excitedly making his way\ntoward them. No warning was niveu to\nthe football players. Before long the\nb ar appealed cloen to the edge of the\ntloe, and he seemed to be a great\nhurry, lie shambled rapidly alone iu\nand out; among the hummocks, and\nevery few feet he would pull himself\nerect to sniff the air and crane hid head\nanxiously. Closer and closer he came\nand it wa9 plain that he grew mote and\nmore excited. The men ou board the\nship got out their rifles, to make sure\nthat the bear did no barm to the meu\non the ice. The gaunt ice bear came to\nthe last hummock that separated him\nfrom the tleld of play. One of the m» u\nwas iu the act of "kicking the stuffing*\nout of tbe ball when the bear suddenly\nemerged into clear view. The ball fell\nt o the ice, t he man's leg came hurriedly\ndown ou the ice, and the man himself\nbroke for the 6hip like #a deer. There\nwa9 a succession of frightened shoute,
30b4ec40f9c4aa60e8a0a0d112c110b5 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.001369831304 41.004121 -76.453816 were u fow scattered villages for tho\nconvenience of merchants, lilncksmlths,\ncarpenteis, and other traders nnd work\nmen, nnd mills sounded nlong tho\ntrcams. Cemetery Hill then, ns now,\noverlooked the town of Gettysburg;\nbut no war at least no war of civilized\nman had ever echoed upon its heights,\nnor had its soil received, as a harvest of\nbattle, the bodies of our patriot dead.\nSir Stevens's long residence in a ru--\ndistrict, such as I havo described it;\nInfluenced in a great degree his subse-\nquent character and conduct. And it\ngavo him a wider Unowlodgo of men\nand affairs than ho could havo acquired\nif ho had been nt all times the resident\nof a city. He knew the men or the\ncountry n? city men cannot know them.\nand with him always "knowledge was\npower," and ho gave it preetical appli\ncation to tho management of men.\n.Mr. Slovens enleietl life tit the\nripe age r forty as a Representative iu\ntlio Pennsylvania Legislature from Ad\nams county. I shall not detail with ex-\nactness or nt length the facts of his pub\nne career; nor snail i pronounce an\netilogiuni upon him or express emotion-o- f\npersonal grief at his removal bv\ndeath from u field of action and scrvico\nin which he was conspicuous. His la\nbor.s will lie detailed moro fully by otb\ners, nnd his character is one not so much\nfor etilogiuni as for analysis and for re\nflection. Ami as to mtnlfestatlons of\nMJiisinility at this time, I havo to say\nthat I think It will be proper to regard\n(omewhnt his example upon like occa-\nsions, nnd his general views o.iuc.'riilug\nfuneral solemn It en. Ho did not res -po -\nInsincere or undue praise of thu\ndead, and he always refused .to wear\ncrapo In lienor of thel.-
1f7dd0ef77555a957ef464f034b9a69d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.6863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 Stocks.The market opened (airly steady, hut ii\nthe early dealing* prices declined % to 1 per eeul\nthe latter Texan Pacific. At the first board spec u hi\ntiou became strong aud under good buying au ad\nvauce o( K to ft per ceut took place, the latter ii\nChicago, liurliu«ton «fc Quiucy. Denver Si ttii\n(Jrande, MUnourl Pacific, Colorado Coal Company\nNew Jersey Central, Illinois Central and bl\nPaul wepi uUo prominent in the ad\nvauce. This was followed by u partla\nreaction, a portion of which was subsequently re\ncovered. Jlut the market coutlnucd unsettled st the\nclose, the final sales being quite weak and showini\na decline of live per rent in Chicago, Hurlington J\ntyuincy and Half* per ceut on the remainder of thi\nlist. The corner in Uannlbal & St. Joseph commoi\nstill exist*. and stuck was up from 136 to aw\nthe last sale being at the highest point. The salts\nwere at 135, I V). itW, Itki, 170. 175. 1'JU and JU). Pro\n(erred stock fell off4 per cent, but rallied % pel\ncent. The decided time of lElfti*. * . (Hissed with\nout theaunouuccmeut of uuy failures on accounl\nof losses iu tluuuibid Si St. Joseph stock. A small\nlot was bought "under the rule'' but this was men*\nly to fix prices for settlement. ,\nKuporuwy one large speculator settled privately\nto-day by payiug the clique $7iW,(XW. It could not\nbe verified, but it is not uullkely. That oilier largu\nprivate suttlcmcu s reiualn to be made it uvideul\nfrom the (act that the price Is kept up. The (act\nthat there were no failures to-day shows that the\nhsiscs (all where they cnu be aflbrded. "Short
365e105e8391cb38f9d9617a397cc02e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.2753424340435 39.261561 -121.016059 A French Tragedy.—An extraordinary\nevent recently occurred in a restaurant in\nthe Boulevard du Temple. Paris. At about\neleven oclock one evening, a well dressed\nyoung roan and woman went to a room up\nstair*, in which there was no other person,\nand ordered supper. Some time after, the\nwaiter, on entering with a dish they had or-\ndered, was astounded to Hnd them lying on\nthe floor in a pool of blood, the female with\na deep wound in her breast, the man with\none in his left side, not far from the heart,\nnnd in the wound a poignard remained\nsticking. The waiter immediately sent for\nthe Commissioner of the Police district, who\nsoon arrived, accompanied by a medical\nman ; the coupte were found to be still\nalive, and in the hand of the young man\nwere two pieces of paper: on one of which\nwas written, evidently byva female. “I die,\nStruck with my own consent, by hand\nof my lover, Denise II—.” And on the\nother, in a mans writing, “I die now bp-\ncause I am weary of life! It—.” The\nwounds of the two were dressed, and the\ncouple removed to the Hospital Sau An-\ntoine. Shortly after their arrival the man\ndied without saying a word ; but the female\nthough in a dangerous state, is likely to re-\ncover. She says the man was a corporal in\nthe Sixth Regiment, and that he had that\nday spent the last of a sura of 2,000f. which\nhe bad received to serve as a substitute in\nthe army. Having no money, he bad pro-\nposed to her, In the course of their supper,\nthat they should die together ; she consent-\ned, and they wrote the two phrases quoted\nabove—then she bad bared her breast, and\nthe young man bad stabbed her with a\npoignard, after which he plunged the weap-\non into bis own side.
1975686550a9ebd1a9fb381d87550594 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.595890379249 40.063962 -80.720915 Daniel O'Connkj.i,..Thin fainoi\nIrish orator and political agitatpr, who*\ncentennial birthday a large portion of on\ncitizens will celebrate to-day, was bor\nnear C'ahirciveen, Kerry, August 0, 177J\nlie was educated as a Roman Catholic\nSaint Omer, in France, entered Lincoln1\nInn as a student of law in 171)4, and w:\nadmitted to the bar in 1708. He quick!\nattained the foremost runk in his profet\nsion, and became pre-eminent as the ai\nvocatoof Catholic emancipation.i. e . tli\nrelief of Catholics from political disabi\nities. In the promotion of this cause li\nentirely discouraged a resort to physici\nforce. He married his cousin,'Mar\nO'Connell. about 1802. In 1823 he fount\ned the Catliolic Association, Jlc was dec\ned a member of Parliament for Clare\n1828, and refused to tako the oath whic\nwas designed expressly to exclude Kuma\nCatholics from the House. The attnl\ncaused a violent excitement and ngitatioi\nwhich resulted in the passage of tho bi\nfor Catholic in 1820. an\nO'C'onnell then took his scat in the Itoiu\nof Commons. Ho represented Dublin i\nParliament from 18.')2 to 181)5, and froi\n181)7 to 1811. Having given tin his Inert\nlive practice to devote himself to legisb\ntive unties, he was indemnified by uuuiit\nsubscription raised by his pollticc\nfriends under the name of "rent\nAbout 1810 he commenced an nj\nitatlon for the repeal of the unioi\non which subject he made speeches\nmonster meetings in Ireland iu 1812 nil\n181.'). He was arrested, tried and foun\nguilty of sedition or conspiracy, for wliic\nhe was sentenced in 18H toimprisoumei\nfor one year, mid lined two thousnn\npounds. This judgment was reversed li\nthe House of Lords. Ho supported tl\nwhitf ministry which cnmc into power\n1H-10, nftor which iiw wtinttiMud a declit\nof liirt inllucncc in Ireland nnii tlu» ri«o\n(li(wen»ioiiH among his followers. lie die\nin Genoa in May, 1817, in the course of\njonrney to Koine.
2fbd95175c5cb9cc14baf9fe4a62244b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.788251334497 40.063962 -80.720915 Yet there can be no greater mistakt\nthan for the capitalist to desire to op\npose any measure tending to promou\nthe welfare of the workman, or to seel\nto preveut him from getting hlghe;\nwages. The more money the workmai\nreceives and the more prosperous hi!\ncondition, the larger his outlay for bli\nfamily expenses, and the greater thi\nproiits of capital. For the prosperoui\nworkman cau pay higher rents, maki\nmore liberal purchases, and enlarge thi\ncircle of trade; and hence It IB for thi\nInterest of every man of wealth tha\nwages should be as high as possible.\nThe measures employed by work\nlogmen for their own elevation am\nImprovement are these. Trades unions\nbenefit societies, and co-operation. Eacl\none has proved the source of undonbtei\njrood, not only to the laborer, but ti\nsociety. The trades unions have taugh\nworkingmen how to combine for thei\nown defence; benefit societies hav\nsuppled the wants of thousands in sick\nuess, provided for destitute families\nand prepared a decent burial for de\nceased members; while co-operatioo\ngrowing out of the other two, afiord\nworkingmen the means of rising abov\ntheir individual weakness, and of pre\nviding themselves with comforts an\neven luxuries which separately, the.\ncould never attain.\nThese movements on the part of tb\nimmense body of laborers to refine an\ncultivate themselves, deserve the re\nspectfnl attention or every man of it\ntellectand every patriotic citizen. The]\nobject is certainly a noble one, an\ntheir success, even'in a limited degre<\nwould be a common benefit; in fat\ntheir success seems already assured.\nThanks..We should have include\nin our thanks yesterday morning ft\ntelegraphic favors, our fair friend of tt\nAtlantic and Paci/lc Office, who ¥\ntrust will pardon the unintentioni\ndiscrimination and accept our sincere\nthanks.
1c810b2cdf09a5ba16b4e5c824324e6a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.9958903792492 40.063962 -80.720915 London. December 21*..The manager\nle North British Railway, telegrap\nom Lenchars at 4 o'clock this morniti\niveral large girders along with the h\nain from Edinburg. were predpitat' <1 in\nie river Inst evening. There were ueai\n10 passengers beside the company's si\nints, all of whom are bolioved to ha\nwished. A dispatch] from Kriinbu\nited 4 o'clock this morning says: A pc\n<n of the bridgo which fell, consisted\nveral large superincumbent girders,\ne central navigable portion of tho rive\ntiich averages from 40 to 145 feet\nipth, the train would fall about 88 fe\nifore reaching the water. Some tin\nipsed before tho nature of the diaast\nis ascertained. The damage to tl\nres on tiie bridge and the badness of U\n{Other, interfered with tho trausraiaaic\nnews, and it is unknown whether tl\nders were blown down before the trai\ntered the bridge, or wero carried awi\nth and it will probably nevor be a\nrtaincd, as thero are no survivor\nie bridge was only opened for traff\nMay, 1878. It was consider*\nA TlttUMl'It OK KNGt.VKKBING SKILL.\nIt was about two miles long aud had f\nins, the widest of which was 24."> fee\nthe highest point it was loO feet abo>\njh water. The train which left Edii\nrg at 4:15 p. m . consisted of four thirt\nas cars, one first class and one secom\nm and a brakesman's van. At tho lai\nlion before entering the bridge ticke\nre taken, ana tne tram was men crow*\nVast quantities of wreckage, such t\nors and loofs of carriages, pieces of tt\nidge and articles of wearing apparel ai\nnfng ashore. The entiro thirteen nirdli\nthe long central spanB of tlie bridge ai\nlie. The night was one of liright mooi\nlit, but the wind was blowing a hurt\nle.
1e0f71a4a10e81f4aef942b39b89bcad CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.532876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 able of any peopto with foreheads is\nthat they should' allow their supply\nof food to pass Into the hands of one\nspeculative Interest, says Charles Ed-\nward Russell In a powerful article\nwritten by htm In the Appeal to Rea-\nson. You can understand how a care-\nless community might tolerate a mo-\nnopoly of some things, how it might\nendure to have its transportation, for\nInstance, or its electric light, control\nled by ono ownership, for men can\nUve without sleeping cars or arc\nlamps; but that It should tolerate a\nmonopoly of the primal necessity of\nfood Is beyond comprehension and\nwithout precedent Even naked sav-\nages have uniformly been too wlso\nfor that, and the only nation that has\never 'submitted to such a monstrous\ncondition Is our own.\nFrom a thousand Illustrations of the\nInjuries wo all suffer from this \narrangement let us cite one.\nThere is no way of communicating\ndisease to the human body surer than\nthrough Infected meat tissue. Some\nof tho worst and most destructive ba-\ncilli that prey upon mankind are com\nmon among the animals he cats for\nfood. Cows have tuberculosis and\nspread vast quantities of It through\nthe human population. It Is so com\nmon among cows that tho wise aud\nthe forewarned will use none but ster-\nilised milk. What is "bog cholera"\namong swlno Is merely typhoid fever\nIn men. Trlchlnea In bogs poisons\nhuman beings. Both these diseases\naro common among swine.\nWorse than alt these, and more\ndeadly, is another fact that Is seldom\ncommented npon because It Is too ap-\npalling to dwell much upon. What Is\ncalled "lumpy Jaw" In cattle Is simply\ncancer. The germs of cancer are\ncommunicable.
3a5026c538c311f3935d3a3b741e149e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 some of the Military Districts indicate!\na necessity of great vigilance on the\npart of Military Commanders, to be pre-. j\npared for the* prevention and prompt\nsuppression of riots and breaches of the\npublic peace, especial I3* in towns and\ncities, and they should have their forces\non hand and posted on all occasions\nwhen disturbances may be apprehend-\ned, to promptly check, and, it possi-\nble, to prevent outbreaks and violence\nendangering public or individual safe-\nty. You will therefore call the atten¬\ntion of Commanders of Military Dis¬\ntricts, as directed, to this subject, and\nthey are requested to issue such pre¬\ncautionary orders as may be fo :ud\nnecessary for the purpose indicated.\nGeneral Grant's endorsement on this\norder is as follows:\nThe above conveys all the instructions\ndeemed necessary,*and will be acted on\nby district commanders,makingspecial\nreports ot precautionary orders issued\nby them, to prevent the recurrence ot\nmobs or other unlawful violence.\nThe papers embrace a largo amount\nof correspondence, orders, etc., most of\nwhich have already been \nWe give such ot them as have not yet\nmet the public eye:\nOKN. OR ANT TO GUN. sheridan, JUNK 7.\nGeneral: I see a dispatch from Wash¬\nington .announcing that the Secretary\nof War and myself favor a reprimand\nof your action in reinoviug the Govcr-\nnor of Louisiana. I was not even in\nthe city at the time. There is not one\nword of truth in the story.\n[Signed] U. S .Grant, General.\nOKN. sheridan TO OEN. ORANT, JUNE S.\nGov. Flanders assumed the duties of!\noffice to-day. He is a man of integrity\nand ability, and I now feel as though I\nwere relieved of half uiy duties. As it\nhas been, heretofore, there was no secur¬\nity, and 1 feel, as the people ol the whole\nState feel, that we have got rid of an\nuupiincipled Governor and a set of\ndisreputable tricksters, which he had\nabout him. Nothing will answer here\nbut a bold and strong course, and in\ntaking it I am supported unanimously\nby every class and party.\n[Sigued]
309524f32dabc9bf265ca2f6b46cf608 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.4753424340436 40.063962 -80.720915 hath done what she could," Anni\n<llass;'Music Chorus.Voici L'Oiagt\nmconc.) Conferring Degrees-Miwii\nOrgan bolo, F. JiasaeU;, Prediction,\nthe essays read by llie young ladies\n[need a very considerable range am\nnth of thought. A high moral and re\ntons (sentiment characterized them\nj language emploveti was atoncuchust\nd well chosen. There was none of thn\nkly sentinienlalism and ellciuLnacy t<\nfluently heard on such occasions. Tin\nid leal predominated over the imprae\nable; the solid and substantial, rathe\nin the li.ht and transitory.\nIlul while there was everything tocom\nInd the mallet of the essays, the mitn\nr in which the mujority ol theiu wa\nid, 111 our opinion, toriued a proper auli\nstof criticism. '1 hero was h degree u\niburimsinenl manifested on the part o\nthu young ladiufl, ox cent two or lliruc\nlicli made their enunciation ho IniliH\nlit us to be heard only by those oefupy\nf HcntA in tlio immediate vicinity o{ tin\nilform. That, however, could tin at\nImiIimI only to a lack of conliduuct\nlicit time and contact with the worlt\nII furnish. Ah bclore stated, not the\nMl objection could be legitimately mudi\nroiilliet with the BentiinenU expifefcta\n sevprul eaaays, and the critieism w<\nve ventured to olfer Is done in n Hpiri\nthe greatest kind new. It will not, o\nbrae, u fleeI the young ladies who re\nived thair diplomas hiflt ovculntf, but\nty bo beneficial to those who shall fol\nv in lliWr footKtejH herealter.\nrheccromonv of conferring the dcgrei\nMistress of English LiWrrtthrd on tin\nrural member* ot the graduating class\nis ni^niy iiiMJruHiiiijjf 1111.4 win pre\nJed by ft short address Jromntfretiden\nkrtun. in which In* urged tlio.su about ti\nminute. their school clayn "to M»eU aftei\nit wisdom which pometh from above"\nit tlrd RVtoitest and nVost imitffrtant dut>\nlife U to make preparation (or tlx\nb beyond. The remarks of Presided\nmade ndewi>and prorotind impressim\ntin,' large auditory.\nrVftor ha had closed, the\nis* advanced to the front ol the plat\n111 and received from the Ininlfo of lion\n1). JIubbard, I'resident of the Board o\nlisted#, (he parchment* for whMi the)\nd long and patiently toiled, itclnrniii).\ntheir seat*, Mr. F . 1tassel rendered 01\nj great organ 11 hrilliant passage, full)\nitlng the powers of the instrument am\nowing his skill and taste in it* munipu\nion.
7f349e40b457aa4676ade2152bfe1cee PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.2917807902081 31.960991 -90.983994 HESE Lozengos have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, wheu\none or two doses of these Lozengea would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily aa a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the publie generally. Moch more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey may be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nrhe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of\nthe impotcncy of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
1cb81dde5263a4fc9c5ac56dcb9ddde6 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.6287670915779 43.82915 -115.834394 An invention that is likely to revolutionize\nfighting, and prove a powerful protection to\ncities und harbors from hostile attacks, is\nGen. Berdans torpedo boat. It is a plate\nsteel war ram of high speed, w ith double\nends, decked like a ferryboat, and carrying\nattachments that will plant torpedoes iu the\nbottom of a craft at a greut distance iu a\nshort time. It is a double ender, w ith screws\nand steering apparatus at each end. The spur\nis only six feet long, and is intended to pene­\ntrate that distance into u ship when it is\noverhauled. The deck is rounded like a fer ry­\nboat, and cau stand u severe shock, lt has a\nradius of twelve degrees, which protects tho\nspur when the ram approaches at un angle\nless than forty-five degrees. W ith this, it is\nsaid, cau ta no loss or breaking of\nspurs. The smoke stack and steam pq«e are\nbuilt to telescojK) when within a mile of the\nenemys ship, aud the ram can then run the\nremainder of the distance on reserved steam.\nAt the moment of contact it is only necessary\nto tu rn a lever, which liberates a long,\njointed arm of positive motion, u nd this will\ncarry tbe torpedo through the water ami\nplant it firmly iu tho bottom of the other\nship, which cannot hope to escajie. To p o-\ntect the ram from small torpedo boats of the\nenemy, it can ta aeeomjianied by tw o small\nvessels of the same character. All four of\n*th? torpedoes can ta exploded at once. It is\nsaid that these torpedo boats will prevent\nauy possibility of a citys being shelled. —\nDemorest's Monthly.
35075ce2897d58c9185926ec5b408843 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.0396174547157 41.681744 -72.788147 house receipts, bills of lading and\nsales. But it should be possible to do\nfar more than has been done in the\npromotion of agreement rather than\ndiversity, inasmuch as our people are\nto a very great extent inspired by\nthe same ideals. When congress has\nlegislated on a subject within its pro-\nvince variations in statutes as to cor-\nresponding activities in the local\nfield may well be examined to see\nwhether such variations are worth\nwhile or whether it would be possible\nto secure harmony without sacrifice\nof any real local interest. The vari-\nous administrative commissions easi-\nly provide opportunities for deliber-\nation and conference which should be\nof inestimable importance in avoid-\ning unfortunat differences, particular-\nly when the legislative policies under-lyi- n\nadministrative action appear to be\n In most cases differences\nyield to a complete understanding of\nfacts and equipment for competent\ninvestigations should diminish the\ndangers of conflict. It would seem\nto be clear that bodies of intelligent\nmen dealing as experts, for example,\nwith the interstate and intrastate\nphases of traffic situations, should b\nin practical accord, or that at least\nsuch differences as may appear to ex-\nist should be put to the test of mutual\nstatement, analysis and consultation\nunder plans more definitely designed\nto prevent unnecessary divergencies.\nI should think that many of our dif-\nficulties might be solved by perfecting\nthe machinery of administration with\nthe direct purpose of promoting har-\nmony of action in dealing with those\nactivities which are conducted in the\nworld of affairs as parts of the same\nenterprises."
46eec52874e14b53736656c27e5337fe OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0561643518517 39.513775 -121.556359 A. n medical man il 1« lit*1 duly of every phvlrmn\nto look til disease an it effect* lirttll.lt nod 11 !«*, nnd hi.\n.olt* ol»ji*i*t should hr to mitigate. it. tar it. lit*, to In.\npower. tin* Itodlly dulß rimf. Human i.ittnn* nt best t.\nhill frail, all arr lillhlr Hi misfortune.\nI M nil ihr HU ni.it affect Ilian lioni' no* mm* terrible\nthan those of a private nature.—Dreadful a. H i. in\nIhn person whoronlrnct.lt lltghlful a. an* it. rsvng-\ni*. i i|ion hi. e,< >ii.titiilion, endina On| in lit Iv in d**.|rnr.\nlon and a loHlhsoim* grave. it lii*romi|. of "till greater\nlinportanci* w hen it i. Iran.imllrd to inh> n nt 11f-\nspring. f'llrli being tin* ei w how 111*1*1**ran tl In*,\ncome, that every one having the h ad r<* non to fur\nthat tln* t liiivr contracted tin* d i-ei*'*, should in'eiid\n101l id once li) consulting .ono* pliv.lcla,*, »1,,,.,*\nrespectaihlltly am) education enables him low rr id\na Mill*. speedy, and )rt*rnn*in nl i*nrr. In ar -nrdann*\nw ith ill). necessity. lilt 1H N« i feel> < * l, d upon to\n.tali* thill. In lolilt »lndy »nd extensive |irnrtli'i*. In*\nha. la I mu* |ii*rfri*l master of all those dim-a .i .wII. Ii\nroiin* undrr ihr driioininallnn of vrinTral. and h \\*\n11,K paid inori* an* niton lolhnl ana hranrh Ih;,n any\noilier physician in tin* Uniled Slates In li • > *l. hini.rlf\nl>i*llit i) uni ifii-il lo treat Ih* 111.\n•Jyphilia ill all H» forin*. Hindi a. lllrrf.. .welling In\ntin* it roa 11., nicer in I In* throat, . rr*»n*lar> s\\ |,hlli., cti-\nlaiinoiiH i*r 11( »t lona, nlcrralioii.. Irrlann -o f*l* i 11 o, sy*\npliilia in children. inercurni! syphilitic nit*, lion, iron*\norrlira. Kind, strictures, false mis-ngn*. inllntnnlion of\ntin* hlitddrr and pndrale Bland. , excoriation., ininor.,\npustules. Me.. an* a. familiar to him n. tin* mind com-\nmon done, of daily observation.\nTin, 1 1,,d0r effects n nirr In roernt I**, .** , in a few\ndm. and And. no difficulty In curing those of lone\nduration. without submitting the |. n 11, nt to nu hireat-\ninrnl n. w ill draw ii|»on loin tin* nlieht**.i
13adc427a861d4d535762d4fc4f6d837 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.850684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 both of them managed to escape n\nran oil up the ttreet. Their yells t\nJack's shots brought twenty pue\ndown stairs in all stages oi undress, I\neach man had a gun, pinto) or boi\nknife, and tho rascals were quid\npursued by most of the miners. Owl\nto tho darkness anil tho start they 1:\nboth not awov, but they left their g<\ncoin behind them. This was Riven\nJack by the express company for\nfending their properly and thus\nmade a handsome little Btuke in a s\ngle night, for the Mexicans never \\\nin an appearance to claim the gold.\n"Jack told me his escape from dec\nwas owing to a fortunate incident,\nhad been getting round shouldered a\nhi9 friends had poked so much fun\nhim about it that he got a \nto make hini some steel shouh\nbraces, which were covered with bu<\nskin. Thefo steel braces wore mi\nstrom: enough to have fitted Sains*\nbut their being so heavy saved Jac\nlife for the point oi the knife wli\nthrown by the .Mexican had struck c\nof these and thus failed to penetr\nhis body us it would otherwise hi\ndone. Throwing a knife was a favor\npastime with Mexicans and some\ncame so export that they could hi\nsilver dollar at a distance of ten\ntwelvo feet. They no doubt thouj\ntho knife would so suddenly end Jac\nlife that he would make no outcry\nalarm the people in the rooms upsta\nand, as he hud unlocked the safe, tl\ncould rob it at their leisure. It wa\nclose call for Jack, but hecaineouti\nharmed."
0a91b3e9f8d6763840631af66205fe4f PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1896.4822404055353 39.756121 -99.323985 France, Rusla's avowed ally, has her\nown little finger in the pie, having, ever\nsince the commencement, of the war,\nsupplied tho Abyssinians, In secret,\nwith the finest rifles, and with shells\nand ammunition. There will be some\niretty pickings for these two powers if\nItaly can be driven out of Africa.\nWearisomely does the war drag itself\nalong. Score after score of Indecisive\nbattles have been fought indecisive\nbecause while the Abyssinians have\nprevented the Italian troops from get-\nting further than their foot hills, they\nhave yet been unsuccessful iu driving\nthese enemies out of the province of\nTigre, which is the bone that is now\nbeing contended for. With Tigre once\nfully in tho hands of the Italians, Abys-\nsinia, while not fully theirs, Is in a fail- wa-\nto conquered. With Tigre lost\nto them not even the Italian possesions\non the banks of the Red Sea and cen-\ntering about Massowah, the seaports\nare secure. It Is more than Abyssinia;\nItaly in Africa Is at stake.\nIt has been demonstrated that these\nsavages of the hills are not only good\nsoldiers, but they havo good generals\ndirecting them. One day tho news may\ncome that the Italian troops have been\ncut oft from their landing place and base\nof supplies, Massowah. For, gradually,\nKing Menelck, through his commander\nIn the field, the "Ras" Makonnen, has\nbeen deploying his crude and savage\nbattalions so that instead of facing the\nItalians a large number have crept al-\nmost to the Italian rear, and are very\nnearly in control qf their enemy's line\nof retreat.
0744220918d0594a4e4b95376be9b5a9 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.0205479134956 43.994599 -72.127742 That is where Prince Jesus lived 19\ncenturies ago. He was the King's Sou.\nIt was the old homestead of eternity,\nand all its castles were as old as God.\nNot a frost had ever chilled the air.\nNot a tear had ever rolled down the\noheek of one of its inhabitants. There\nhad never been a headache, or a side\naohe, or a heart ache, There had not\nbeen a funeral in the memory of the\noldest inhabitant. There had never in\nall the land been woven a black veil,\nfor there had never been anything to\nmourn over. The passage of millions of\nyears had not wrinkled or crippled or\nbedimmed any of its citizens. All the\npeople there were in a state of eternal\nadolescence. What floral and pomonio\nrichness I Gardens of perpetual bloom\nand orchards in unending fruitage. Had\nsome spirit from another world entered\nand asked r 'What is sin? What is be-\nreavement? is sorrow? What is\ndoath?" the brightest of the intelli-\ngences would have failed to give defini-\ntion, though to study the question there\nwas silenoe in heaven for half an hour.\nThe Prince of whom I speak had hon-\nors, emoluments, acclamations, such as\nno other prince, celestial or terrestrial,\never enjoyed. As he passed the street\nthe iuhabitants took off from their\nbrows garlands of white lilies and threw\nthem in the way. He never entered any\nof the temples without all the worship-\ners rising up ind bowing in obeisance.\nIn all the processions of the high days\nhe was the one who evoked the loudest\nwelcome. Some times on foot, walking\nin loving talk with the humblest of the\nland, but at other times he took chariot,\nand among the 20,000 that the psalmist\nspoko of his was the swiftest and most\nflaming, or, as when St. John described\nhim, he took white palfrey with what
27c1b8948bc450487cdda6add2c53360 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1880.2636611705627 40.419757 -77.187146 The girl had left home on Saturday\nat seven o'clock. That night, long be-\nfore ten o'clock, (farmers usually going\nto bed with the chickens,) a woman liv-\ning in Green county, about forty miles\nfrom Plymire farm, awoke her husband\nin great terror, declaring that she had\njust seen a murder done, and went on to\ndescribe a place she had never seen\nbefore a hilly country with a wagon\nroad running through it, and a girl with\na bundle tied in a checkered handker-\nchief, her shoes and white stockings in\nthe other hand, walking briskly down\nthe grassy side of the road. She was\nmet by a young man the woman Judg-\ned from their manner the meeting was\nby appointment ; they sat down on a\nlog and talked for some time. The man\nat last rose, stepped behind her, and\ndrawing out a hatchet, struck her twice\non the head. She fell backward on the\nwet, rotten leaves, dead. Presently the\nman was joined by another, also young,\nwho asked, " is it done 1"' He \nand together they lifted the body and\ncarried.it away out of her sight. After\nawhile they came back, found the bun-\ndle of Sunday finery and the shoes and\nstockings, all of which were stained\nwith blood. There was a ruined old\nmill near the road, they went into it,\nlifted a loose board in the flooring, put\nthe bundle, shoes, etc., with the hatchet,\nunderneath and replaced the board.\nThen they parted and went through the\nwoods in different directions. The far-\nmer's wife told her dream to her hus-\nband that night ; the next day Sunday\ngoing to a little country church, she\nremained during the intermission be-\ntween the morning and evening services.\nThe neighbors, who had come from\na circuit of twenty miles to church,\ngathered according to their homely\nhabit, in the churchyard, to eat their\nlunch and exchange the news. Our\ndreamer told her story again and again,\nfor she was impressed by it as if it had\nbeen reality. After the afternoon service\nthe congregation separated, going to\ntheir widely-scattere- d
a0d3c5ebfb4e2968be920743dda3f890 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4521857607265 39.745947 -75.546589 Tn my private pursuits as a news­\npaper publisher, 1 am an employer of\norganized labor; having never known\na controversy, and i b lleve most cor­\ndially In rational unionism Organi­\nzation and eollectve bargaining under\nwise lea»|ershlp, have done more to\nadvance Ihe causa of labor .him all\nother agenclea combined, and any one\nwho thinks to destroy sane unionism\nby legislation or otherwise, Is blind\nto conditions, firmly established, and\nis insensible to a public sentiment\nwhich Is deliberate and abiding But\nIhe advancement of unionishm Is one\nthing and the dominai ion of organ­\nized labor Is quite another. I subscribe\nto the first anil oppose Ihe latter. I\ndo not believe In any class domina- ■\nHon, and the long fight to remove the\ndomination of capital, now fairly won,\nIs lost. If labor domination Is sub­\n in Its slead.\nSenator Harding favored Ihe con­\nstitutional prohibition amendment,\nvoted to sustain the chair when 11\ndeclared out of order the wartime\nrohlblllon rider oil the Agricultural\nill. voted to override the Presidents\nveto of Ihe Aolslead Enforcement act.\nThere was no record vole on the Vol­\nstead act itself.\nThe Ohio nominee supported woman\nsuffrage on the several occasions It\nwas before Ihe Senate, either voting\nor being paired tn Its favor.\nExcept on comparatively minor\nmeasures. Senator Harding's record\non war legislation was one of con­\nsistent support of all measures neces­\nsary lo carry on the war. Beginning |\nwith hts vole for the severance of,\ndiplomatie relations with Germany, |\nIn February, .1917. Senator Harding\napproved the war program. Since the\narmistice, however, he has been a\ncritic of continued wac control over
48b16fa778b5b4fa5c811aa16f428985 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.4726027080162 41.681744 -72.788147 The first of the American units to\nreach France was known as the Unit-\ned States base, hospital No. 4 and was\nrecruited in Cleveland by Dr. Crile.\nThis unit has taken over British gen-\neral hospital No. 9 somewhere in\nFrance. United States base hospital\nNo. 5, organized at Harvard by Dr.\nHarvey Cushing with Major Paterson\nas commanding officer, has taken over\nBritish general hospital No. 11 . Unit-\ned States base hospital No. 2 from the\nPresbyterian hospital, New York,' or-\nganized by Dr. George Brewer with\nMajor Hopewood commanding, has\ntaken over British general hospital\nNo. 1; United States base hospital No.\n21 organized in St. Louis by Dr. Fred-\nerick Murphy with Major Fife com-\nmanding, has taken over B. G. H. No.\n12; United States base hospital No.\n10, organized in Philadelphia, large-\nly in the of Penna, by Dr.\nRichard Harte, with Major Delaney\ncommanding, has taken over B. G. H.\nNo. 16; United States base hospital No.\n12, organized in Chicago by Dr. Bes,\nley. Major Collins commandng, has\ntaken over B. G. H. No. 18, all. of\ncourse, being "Somewhere in France."\nEach American, hospital staff has\norganized mobile units for service in.\nthe clearing stations Just back of the\nfiring lines for emergency work during\nthe first days of great battles. The\nAmerican hospitals present an inter-\nesting international study with pa-\ntients from England, Scotland, Ire-\nland, Australia; New. Zealand . and\nPortugal. Steps will be taken to in-\ncrease the various units and bring\nthem up to the strength : required.\nAmerican doctors and nurses have al-\nready acquired the tea habit, which\nthey enjoy every afternoon with the\nconvalescent wounded.
53396161d91c34e723a39e7f78506954 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1862.7712328450025 37.561813 -75.84108 Emancipation and the Army.\nTerhaps one of tho first Inquiries of\ncautions men, when the President's\nEmancipation Proclamation appeared,\nwas how it would bo received by the ar-\nmy? This question it may bo difficult\nto answer, as military subordination will\nrestrain the expression of opinion upon\ntho acts of the Commander in Chief.\nObedience is the soldier's first duty, and\ncriticism of the acts of a superior officer\nis in direct violation of the articles of\nwar. We may therefore conluda that\nwhatever the army miy think, it will\ncarry out tho orders of tho President.\nWill the hearts of tho men go with\ntheir work ? Will thoy bo "willing to\nstrike at the causo of the rebellion to\nassault its stronghold ? It seoms to us\nthat this question involves another are\nthey so enamored of a soldier's life, that\nthoy are willing to suffer the war to\n along for years without definito\nresults? Reasoning from tho most\nlogical premises, we should supp osj the\nsoldiers in the field would favor the\nmost sharp and decisive policy, and that\nthey would heartily indorso any meas-\nure which will take from rebels the\nlabor by whinh their army is supported.\nBut upon this point we aro not left\nto conjecture. Tho evidence is abun-\ndant, and we think conclusive, that the\nsoldiers, who have been longest in the\nfield, and who, from observation and\nexperience, have learned to estimate\nthe strength which Slavery has given\nto tho rebels, are in favor of emancipa\nting slaves upon military grounds. We\nhave found tbe evidenco in many sol\ndicrs' letters and we have before u"\nsome testimony upon tho point which\nis worthy of attention. A friend in a\nneighboring Stato, who has been a P ro -S la ver -
00d872d9f09b7bb6b24d9a0df81d6593 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.4753424340436 37.561813 -75.84108 pected a clear declaration of sound princi-\nples from tbe Democratio leaders be is\nonce more doomed to disappointment.\nThe Ohio Democratic platform, .which\nwe print in full elsewhere, very properly\ndenounces tbe present hirilf; but adds that\nin tho rearrangement of the tariff "all the\nnecessaries of life should be absolutely\nfree of duty," which would put tea, coffee\nand sugar on tbe free list, to the great de-\nlight of K"lley and all the protectionists,\nwbo hardly expected to find their strong-\nest allies among tbe Democrats.\nNext, the internal revenue system is de-\nnounced, though it is, by universal admis-\nsion, at present admirably arranged; and\nthese Ohio Democrats demand the aboli-\ntion of the stamp tax, one of the easiest to\ncollect, least burdensome and most ap-\nproved sources of revenue; aud of the in-\n tax, which is paid by about 270,000\npeople, out of our 40,000,000 of population.\nMoreover, the Ohio Democrats pledge\nthemselves to a tremendous change in our\nsystem to cause the federal revenue to be\ncollected by State and county oSicers.\nFinally, they denounce "the profligacy\nand corruption of the present administra-\ntion," which is certainly the most econom-\nical and pure we have had for the lust\ntwenty years; they promise the repeal of\nthe law enforcing the 15th Amendment;\nthey demand that the bonds of the United\nStales shall be taxed though this has\nnever been don since the beginning of\nthe government; they promise the substi-\ntution of Treasury notes or greenbacks for\nnational bank notes, and thus would make\nthe federal treasury a huge national bank;\nand they say not a word about specie pay-merit- s .
6ebb700ae0373a6a8c1202a82e6ba019 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1920.9631147224752 41.875555 -87.624421 Chicago. The constitutionality of\nthe new Illinois state banking law in\nIts application to those engaged in\ntransmitting money to foreign coun-\ntries, or buying and selling foreign ex-\nchange is attacked in a bill far in-\njunction filed in the Circuit court by\nformer Gov. Charles S. Deneen on be-\nhalf of 43 clients. Practically every\ndealer In foreign exchange in Chicago,\nexcept banks, express, steamships and\ntelegraph companies, is named in the\npetition. Unless the .restraining order\nis issued the petitioners under the\nlaw will be compelled to drop that line\nof business on January 1, 1921.\nSpringfield. The fifteenth attack\nPPon the constitutionality of the\nparole, act of Illinois was perfected\nwhen the Supreme court, at the open-\ning of the December session, granted\nAbe Schaffner of Chicago a writ of\n enabling him to takt his ase to\nthe United States Supreme court.\nSchaffner was convicted of robbery.\nHis appeal to the federal Supreme\ncourt is on the ground that the inde-\nterminate sentence phase of the parole\nact Is a violation of the "due process\nof law" guaranty of the constitution.\nChicago. After suspending its rules\nby a unanimous vote, the city council,\non the recommendation of Chief of\nPolice Fitzmorris, passed an ordinance\nrequiring every owner and operator of\na motor vehicle in the city to carry an\nidentification card setting forth the\nowner's or operator's name, his photo-\ngraph and his address, the license\nnumber and make of the car. The\nchief declared the council's action to\nbe "the longest step in the city's his-\ntory toward ending the theft of auto-\nmobiles."
109680ab9963a8878e610342718d886d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.6753424340436 41.681744 -72.788147 The Iron Age Says:\nWith labor difficulties temporarily\nout of the way, the iron and steel\ntrade is now beginning to devote it-\nself closely to the likely commercial\ndevelopments of the next few months.\nMultiplied bits of evidence have fully\nproved that the sentiment among the\nwage earners is heavily against a\ntest, of union 'strength, and so far as\nwage advances are concerned there\nis a widening circle of thinking work-\ners who realize the impossibility of\nreducing living costs with continual\nwage advances and at the same time\nlittle consideration to increasing unit\nproduction. The more cheerful out-\nlook comes largely from the presi-\ndent's p'roposal for a conference of\nemployers of labor and labor oilicials,\nwhatever may be the disposition of\nthe "putting the whole question of\nwages upon footing."\nAugust's steel output will closelv\nequal that of July but shipments\ncould have been greater but for car\nshortage. The future, with the com-\ning grain movement, docs not hold\nmuch promise in this particular.\nBookings generally exceeded capacity\nand it is getting more difficult to\nplace business with the mills.\nIn lines where the pressure is\ngreatest, such as sheets, the lack of\nskilled help is a limiting factor in\nprodu tion, and higher prices could\neasily he obtained. The resistance to\nany marking up of the major items\nin yeel products is still strong, but\nsteel bars, a minimum but. difficult\nto obtain at 2.35c, Pittsburgh basis,\nhave been sold by at least two mills\nat 2.40c, 2.45c and 2.50c, and 2.60c is\nnow, the buttom price with another\nmill.
0ff0590f7a86779d41bd33d60a072bef EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.0616438039067 39.745947 -75.546589 he associate justice of the supreme court,\nwhich was sent to the senate by President\nCleveland, sent f-jeuator Hill hurrying\nabout tbe floor of the senate in lively style.\nHe was quickly in conversation with mem­\nbers of tbe judiciary committee, who will\nbe called upon to pass upon the nomina­\ntion before it is reported to the senate.\nSenators generally thought when the\nnomination became known that Judge\nPeckham of the court of appeals of New\nY'ork was the man, but Senator Hill ex­\nplained that such was not the case, but\nthat the present nominee was bU brother.\nThe indications are strong that the nomi­\nnation will be opposed upon the same\ngrounds that Judge Horn blowers was.\nNew York, Jan. 23,— Wheeler H. Peck­\nham, whose name was sent by the presi\ndent to the senate (or associate justice of\nthe supreme of the United States, is\na member of the law firm of Miller, Peck-\nham & Dixon. He was very much sur\nprised, as the honor.was entirely unsolicit­\ned. lté declined to say whether he would\naccept tbe nomination or nut.\nHe has never held any office except that\nof district attorney in this county, to which\nposition be was appointed by tbe theu^ov\nernor, Grover Cleveland, to fill the unex\nplretl term of John McKeou, who died iu\noffice. Mr. Peckham only held this posi\ntiwii (ora few weeks when he resigned, and\nDistrict Attorney Olney was appointed.\nIlls father, Rufus Peckham, who is now\ndead, waa judge of tbe court of apiieals,\nand his brother. Rufus F. Peckham. is at\npr sent judge of the court of appeals ol\nthis state. He was born in Albany in 1834\nand was educated at Union college.
3e6074f9b15922ab09d54c10fbbd6a8d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.478082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 E. F. B . of Plainville Is Only Con-\ntributor TodayUmsualIyGo6d\nDay Vostenlay Total $413.50.\nOne dollar is the smallest amount\nthat the Fresh Air Editor has had. to\nacknowledge for the Kids Kamp at\nBurlington so far. Yesterday was an\nunusually good day for contributions\nand, as a whole, the people of New\nBritain are responding generously to\nthe camp. The Freh Air Editor\nrealizes that it is a poor time to try\nand raise funds, but at the same time\nit must be remembered that the\nmoney donated will go much further\nthan it would one year ago. There\nwill be more children this year than\never who cannot go away unless they\ngo to a camp such as the health auth-\norities are fostering at Burlington.\nEvery dollars can be regarded as in-\nsurance to 'a family. healthier\nthe community in which a child lives,\nthe more liable a child is to be\nhealthy. To take an individual case.\nSuppose a New Britain child was\nsickly, and in school next year sat\nnext to a healthy child. The sickly\nchild cculd not throw off the attacks\nof a contagious disease, and in the\nmeantime gave the disease to the\nhealthy child. If the sickly child\nhad been sezit to the summer camp,\nit would he in a better position to\nthrow off the disease. The potential\nvalue of a week's eamp life for a\nchild cannot be over estimated. Re-\nmember, $5 will keep a child at the\ncamp for one week, and all contribu-\ntions, however small, will be grate-\nfully received by the Fresh Air Editor\nof this paper. Contributions so far:\nE. .F. B.
25e01653331f62c8fa6fcd6d8e23cea4 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.8123287354135 37.561813 -75.84108 George Wilkes, writing from Wash-\nington on tho 13th, speaking of the\nadvance movement of our grand Army\nof the Potomac the other day, says:\nThe rebels beheld the movement with\ndismay, and yieldod to it; hot, after\nthree days of mood observation, they\ndetermined to test the resolution of our\nline. They advanced in strength, on\nSaturday, in the direction of Prospect\nHill, apparently with tho view of mak-\ning an attack, and drove our pickets\nrapidly before them. General McCall,\nwhose division was the nearest, at once\nformed into line of battle, and, support-\ned by a strong force of artillery and\ncavalry, began a responsive movement,\nwhile the divisions of Generals Smith,\nPorter and McDowell also prepared to\nto take an active part, should an extend-\ned battle follow. rcbols, however,\ngazed wisely on this vast perturbation of\nour mass, and, having amused them-\nselves by flinging a few shot from their\nforemost batteries, all of which were\nshort of range, fell back and declined\nthe opportunity. It is plain they do\nnot intend to give us battle on the\nground between our present lines and\nFairfax Court House; and it is also\nplain, that the step to Lewinsville suf-\nficiently menaces their main position to\noblige them to fall back to Centerville.\nThat it is the intention of Gen. McClellan\nto follow them as they retire, there oan\nbe but little doubt, and those who cling\nto the philosophy of retribution, may\nnow reasonably calculate upon seeing\nthe great battle of the Union fought\nupon the already famous triangle of\nManassas.
2fe7588ef46a76c1ff43a063774d8143 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.1794520230847 58.275556 -134.3925 During the participation of t he\nUnited States in the world war. Mrs.\nWhite's loyalty to the nation'H\n.ause found expression in efforts\n(hut she exerted to raise funds for\n(he Red Cross. She was not an of-\nficor of the organization. Her as¬\npirations were directed to obtaining\nliberal contributions to Its treas¬\nury. For instance, early In 1918.\nwhile traveling over the winter trail\nfrom Anchorage to Seward, she found\na man's woolen sock, badly worn,\nwhich had been thrown away by a\ntrail musher. She sold it for $600.\nThe sale was negotiated at an auc¬\ntion she held during an entertain¬\nment one evening in the social hull\nof the southbound steamship. A few\nmonths afterwards, on her return to\nAnchorage, she planned, arranged\n. and managed the "Days of '98,"\nwhich given under the auspices\nof the Order of Alaska Pioneers A*\na result of this affair, she turned\nover to the Red Cross nearly $2,000.\nMrs. White, by thousands of her\nfriends und acquaintances, was\nknown and will be fondly remem¬\nbered as "Mother" White. To some\nthe term "mother," when used In\npublic fashion of a woman who for\nmore than a quarter of a century\nstruggled with the vicissitudes of\nlife on Alaska's frontier, might con¬\nnote negligently-kept gray hair, a\ncare-worn face, stooping shoulders,\na scarcely discernible waist line and\nclothing not at all relating to pres¬\nent modes. Hut no such attributes\ncould be attributed to' Mrs. White.\nHer figure, to the day her last ill¬\nness put her to bed, was strong,\nerect and graceful; her face, with\n;lts regular, well-proportioned fea-
1ec0afaf68f19d4bd85cbdbfbc3d0855 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1883.0068492833586 37.561813 -75.84108 tho body dopends upon the quality of\ntho blood, and alcohol impoverishes the\nblood. The health of the blood, and\nconsequently the health of the body, do-\npends upon the amount of ovvgen\nwhich the red corpuscles of the I. loud re-\nceive and carry to all parts of the body.\nAlcohol has the o fleet of causing the roil\ncorpuscles to run together and clog.\nThis diminishes the surface of the red\nparticles of the blood, nnd so reduce\ntho supply of oxygen to the body.\nThe gain to digestion Ironi alcohol i\nonly temporary. Although it stimulates,\nan extra score ion of gastric juice for\nthe timo being, it reduces tho regular\nsupply of that article, so that at Iho next\nmeal thcro is a smaller supply, ami\nnothing is gained. So, although\ntho first effect of alcohol is to send tho\nblood to tho surface nnd produce a\ngenial glow, yet this heat is lost from\nthe surface at tho expense of tho vital\nparts. Hence it is that the warmth\ncaused bv alcohol is generally followed\nby a chilly feeling and all that has been\ngained is lost. Tlio same is truo of the\neffect upon tho mus ular system. It\nmay enable a man to m ike a "spurt,"\nbut it is followed by a corresponding\namount of Intigue. The same is also\ntruo of mental activity. The gain is\nonly brief and temporary, and has to be\npaid for by subsequent loss of force and\nmental depression.\nAgain, when we are overworked there\nis a leeling of cither physical or mental\nfatigue.
0edfba36114276d1083c82f30c3bfd3e THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.2773223727484 37.305884 -89.518148 couldn't wait, but went on up; and\nQuartermaster thought it over. He\ndidn't know the way she was wire\nrigged aloft; he had to hunt around\nfor the running riggin that he could\ndig his claws into. But he got up to\n'gallan yard 'bout the time we'd fin-\nished with the royal and came down to\nit, and sat down in the slings to watch\nus. He seemed to know just what we\nwere doin', and when we got done he\ncome down with us.\n"After that, every time he'd see us\ngoin' aloft on the fore he'd go 'ions',\ntoo, and know in' the way now, he'd\nalways beat us up, and we'd find him\nsittin in the slings of the to" gallant\nyard, waitin" for us. But he'd never go\nalove that yard; he'd no use for the\nroyal at all, and if he found the to" gal-\nlan sa'l wasn't clewed up to be furled\nwhen he got up, we'd nlways meet him\ncomin down, lookin kinder \nlike. Bimeby he got so he knew the\nropes a bit, and could tell if we were\nclewing up the royal or the top gallan"\nsa'l; or else he understood the mate's\norders, for he didn't make no more\nmistakes like that.\n"After he'd watehed us tie up the\nto gallan' sa'l a few times, he took\nthe notion o' heipin us. He'd brace\nhimself and dig his claws into the\nsail, and hang on to what we'd pulled\ntip. Course he couldn't hold much of\nthe sail in his grip, but he did his best.\nand he seemed so proud of it, too; we'd\nalways pat him on the head and encour\nage him all we could.\n"One time four of us and quarter\nmaster had rolled up the to gallan'\nsa'l, and were coniin' down. The\ncrowd below had lied a reef in the\ntopsail and were bowsin it up, and we\nall jumiied on the haulm part o the\nhalliards and rode down with it.\n"Quartermaster
1bda2e13246befcaec31a3eea2cd8fbb THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1897.7301369545917 37.92448 -95.399981 of Mrs. Kobbins' health, her physicians huv- -\ning advised her that it was the only hope of\nner ever regaining neriosi neaim.\n"Xhr years ago this last winter," said\nMrs. Kobbins, "I was very sick with that\nmot treacherous disease, the grippe. I had\na very severe time with it. but was able to\nget out after being confined to my home\nseveral weeks. 1 think I went out too\nsoon, for I immediately contracted a cold\nand had a relapse, which is a common occur-\nrence with that disease. For several more\nweeks I was confined to the house; and after\nthis I did not fully recover until recently.\nI was able to get out again, but I was quite\na different woman.\n"My former strong constitution was wreck-\ned, and I was a dwindling mass of skin\nand bones. My blood was thin and I had\ngrown and sallow. My lungs were so\nafTected thnt I thought I was going into con-\nsumption. During my illness Thud lost thirty\npounds in weight. I tried to regain my\nstrength and former good health by trying\ndifferent medicines and physicians, but noth-\ning seemed to help me. My appetite was\ngone, and when 1 ate the food it would not\nstay on my stomach.\n"The only thing my physician safd for me\nto do was to take a change of climate, and on\nhis advice I came here. At first I seemed\nbenefited, but to my sorrow it proved to be\nonly temporary, and in a few months I was\nin my former condition. The color had left\nmy checks, I had no energy, and life was a\nmisery. I had become a burden to myself\nand family. Finally I happened to read in\na newspaper of how Dr. Williams.'
47e4183d271d09ac8c606407ed36b10e THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.7684931189751 32.408477 -91.186777 any direction. Yet manifestly I could\nlinot remain there indefinitely, and so.\nblindly cllhoosing a course, !.set forth.\nfeeling a way cautiously forward until\nI first ran into a chair. and then struck\none hand against a side wall. I fol-\nlowed this latter as best I could.\ninspired by the thought that if I con-\ntinued this course long enough I must\nattain the opening through which I\nhad entered the room. On the way\nmy hands felt the outlines if a closed\ndoor, and. in aimlessly groping about,\nencountered a key in the lock. It\nwas so inserted as to he extracted\nat the touch of my fingers and instant-\nly a tiny ray of light shot forth\nthrough the vacated hole. It was such\na relelf in the heart of that darkness\nas t( cause me to quickly bend, dwn\nand endeaver to view the scene within.\nIt was evidently a chamber of \nsize, and well furnished, rather dimly\nIlluminated by a single shaded electric\nglobe, a handsome green rug on the\nfloor, and numerous pictures hung\nabout the walls. I could perceive the\noutlines of a bed at one side, barely\nwithin the range of the vision, and\nopposite this an ornate dresser, with\nthree mirrors. But what my eyes\nrested upon with greater Interest was\na luxurious leather couch beside the\nfurther wall on which a woman rested,\nwith some sort of covering draped\nabout her. She lay with face toward\nthe wall, motionless, and to all appear-\nances sound asleep.\nTo arouse her was the last thing\nI desired, and I would have slipped the\nkey back Into the lock, and stolen\nsilently along in the darkness, had she\nnot suddenly stirred. flinging out one\nhand as though In fear of some dream,\nand turned partially, so that her face\nbecame clearly visible.
4e6db40f85ec7ce7070d99947d19192b THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.9575342148655 39.560444 -120.828218 To all whop it may Concern:\nTHE UNDERSIGNED, John V. K . Cox.\nWm. G. Still, T. A, Moseley, Chas. H.\nFish, S. H. Olmtead, David Furney, F. C.\nPorter, J. K . Aldcu and J. A . Reticker, un-\nder and by virtue of an Act of the Legisla-\nture of the State of California, entitled “An\nAct to authorize the formation of Corpora-\ntions for the construction of Plank or Turn-\npike Roads,” passed May 12, 1853 , hereby\ngive notice of and declare their intention\nto organize a Joint Stock Company, for the\nconstruction of a Turnpike Road, to be of\nthe average width of fourteen feet; said\nRoad to be located wholly in the County of\n. S ierra, State of California, commencing on\nthe top ot the divide between the waters of\nOregon Creek and Kanaka Creek, at the\n of the old Kanaka Flat trail with\nthe Ridge Road; crossing Kanaka Creek\njust below Kanaka Flat, running thence to\na point about three-eighths of a mile bek»w\nChips Diggings, where the road wilj foj-k ,\none fork leading to and terminating at\nChips Diggings, and one fork Jedding to\nand terminating at Minnesota. Said r.oad\nwill be* from the point of commencement\nto Chips Diggings, about four and one-half\nmiles long; and to Minnesota about tour\nmiles and three-quarters long. And the\nundersigned hereby designate and appoint\nthe 27th day of December, A. D. 1854, at\n11 o clock A. M., and the town of French\nRavine, in said County, for a meeting uf\nthe subscribers to this notice, for the pur-\npose of a preliminary organization of said\nCompany, as provided by the aforesaid Act.\nJohnY. K . Cox,
164f7b4b01a479a115be2088a72867d4 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.1821917491122 43.82915 -115.834394 From the Kansas City •\nThe career olCharles Fonlk,\nCharles Watson, the gentleman\nbier who was shot and killed i\nSprings, by a negro policeman, i\ntime ago, was an eventful one-\nwas tall and handsome,cool as i\nele, dressed in exquisite taste, i\nmanner and conversation i\ninch the elegant, refined „\nHie friends never weayiedof\nhis bravery, and his enemies did\ngainsay them. Borne years ago a\nsoldier was found with a bullet in his\nheart on a bridge near Carlisle. He\nwas of gambling propensities and a*\navowed enemy of Foulk. The latter\nwith another gambler was charged\nwiththe crime and placed on tnaL\nThe men weregiven separate trials,\nand Foulk was tried first and aecquit-\nted on an undoubted alibi.\nTlie evidencein the trial ofFoulk*\neupposed accomplice was damaging to\nthe prisoner a» the bar. Onelady who\nlived near the scene of,the shooting,\nidentified the prisoner ahdswore that\nshe heard a pistol shot, ran to the\ndoor and saw him running hatte*«\nfrom the scene of the murder. Fhewas\ncertain that it was the accused man,\nbecause there was a light»}gas lamp\nnear her door which"enabled herto\nget a good view of hisfeatures. Other\nevidence equally was introduc­\ned by thestate and a convictionaeem-\ned assured. When the defense opened\nno one believedthat the casemadeby\nthe state could be shaken.\nAs Foulk took his seat on the wit­\nness stand heturned to thestern.gray-\nliaired judge, and in a dear,calm voie»\nthat could beheardin everypart oi\nthe room, said: “Judge, before I tes­\ntify in this case I wantto askyon*\nquestion. Can I ever be tried again\nfor the killing of that soldier?”\nFor a moment tne silence was pain­\nful. The venerable Judge seemed to\nhave guessed what was coming. He\nreplied in solemn, severe tones that\n«•ere rendered ail themore impressive\nby the deathly stillness:\n“So far as human law is concerned,\nMr. Foulk, you are a free man. No\nearthly tribunal can try you again.”\nFoulk was theonlypersoninthe room\nwho was not aliened. As coolly asif\ntalking to a circle o! friends, he repli­\ned: “Thank you, Judge; you are a\nman ol honor, and know thelaw, and\n1 believe you. I wish to solemnly\nswear, then, that I killed that soldier.\nYou have acquitted the wrong man.\nTlie effect of this cool, deliber­\nate statement, made in a voies\nthat nrer trembled and could bo
1b963ae5c1ea737b29f08c4af40d4eda THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.1051912252074 40.063962 -80.720915 d ustries, in education, in civilisitioi\nThote of us who have been waiting an\nwatching for more th.;n a score of year\nlook upon the existing state of things t\nvery uuu'uuiOKtug, nitiiuugu i>udxd -n\nmuch yet to do. There are about 250,OC\nIndians exclusive o( those in Alask\nSO.OOO of them to-day wear eitizon's clot!\ning complete; 60,000 more, in part; 40,(X\nIndians read and U£e the Enroll languaj\nin the transaction of their bueineoe, at\ntheir number is rapidly increasing. Thei\nis much yet to bo accomplished."\nThe first question discussed by the Coi\nference was: What changes in Indie\ngovernment are required by the abo!\ntion of the Indian reservation system\nFrom the remarks of Prof. O . 0 . Paint*\non this subject we make a few extracts.\n"The Dawes Land in Severalty and Ii\ndian Citizenship bill, made a law sin<\nour last Conference, has given us whi\nAchimedcs wished for, that he might tei\nthe power of his lever to move the worli\nand wo now have a standing place, au\nopportunity to teat tfce power of onr civl\niztog ^influences to uplift the India\nThe law we have done much to secur\nwe should bear in mind, is not the en\nwe have been seeking, but only a neede\nmeans to its attainment: it has only suj\n a necessary condition for snccesef)\nwork: the work still romaino to bo don\nIn this case, as in nil others, enlarged Oj\nportuuity means also increased danger\nand we who are responsible for the pre\nent condition of affairs will be held r\nsponsible for their future outcome. W\ncannot hoidoarpelves innocent of disa\ntero which may como io thsse neop\nthrough these enlarged opportunities at\nlees we do all we can to improve them.\n"lne JHW wo UBTU OCUUIOU jxium BUID1\nas ita provisions are carried oat, unde\nmine And destroy the present India\npolicy, and the machinery by which it\ncarried ont. This wao bat ill adapted I\nany work whlph oa friends of tho Indif\nwo desired to see done for him, bat it h{\nno place in the now order of tilings intr\ndaced by this law, which has been crea\ned since oar last Conference. Under i\nprovisions ho steps ont of his undiffe\neutiated, iuiporspnal tribal relation inl\none of individualized, responsible citizei\nshin, under the constitution and laws\ntho republic. All things are made new\nhis sta'us and relations; perforco a\nthings must be made new is} oijr method\nof dealing with him. When we muk\nhim a dt'zm, wa recognize his manhooi\nwith all its inherent rights under tl\nDeclaration of Independence and Co!\nstitution.
7acbdb2861541a39875da54fa9ed6d88 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0534246258244 39.513775 -121.556359 out of the Iddrict Court of the Fifteenth Judi-\ncial District In and lor Butte County and Slate of\nCalilornia. against N. Carroll and In favor of lannis\nF. ITiine for the sum 1 1 seven hundred and fifty and\nftp* two one hondtedihs dollars ($75 ' SI) prtncipaJ\nwiih Interest on s id sum at the rale of (lin e (3) per\ncent, per niofilh from the seventeenth (17) day ef\nSeptemlier A.D 185* until paid; also all costs of suit\ntaxed in the sum of twenty lour and live one hun-\ndredths dollars ($24 05, loge.her with nil the costs\naccruing upon said writ, lo me directed and deliv-\nered, commanding me to soil ail of the mortgaged\npremises hereinafter described' to satisfy said *le\nmauds ! WiU sell on the TWENTY FIRST (2lst>\nHAY OF JANUARY A. W, 1868 , at the hnnr of two\n(2i oclock P. M of said day. in pursuance with I lie*\nrequirements of said order, sell a public sale to the\niligbest lor cash, the following mortgaged\nproperly described ill said order ol salt- as lollows, to\nwit! all the rig lit title nnd interest of the deleiidanl in\nmid to that property situated in the town o( i irovilla.\nButte .naiiily California,and described on the plot or\nsurveyor said town ol Oroville us tolluws. to wi:\ncommencing on the south side of Bird street in block\nnumber one <1) eighty (88) feel from the corner of\nsaid Mock on said street on the corner of HiliUigm\nami Bird street, thence southerly one hundred nnd\nthirty twill 18 >1 feet, thence easterly fifty »i* (ati) feel\nthence northerly one hundred and thirty-two (132)\ntael- thence along the line ot Bird sireel filiy six t *t>l\nfeet to place ofbeginmng. together with »h and sin-\ngular I lie tenements hen dilmnents and appurtenan-\nces thereunto belong!, g or in any wist* anic Saining\nThe above sale Intake place at tlie Court House\ndoor 111 the low a ofOrovil e county and Slate afore-\nsaid
4c24bc085204408999e0ae3176a6765d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.3838797497976 43.798358 -73.087921 anu soiu, Knucweu 011 at aucuon, or Gar-\ntered in trade, the violation of the mar\nriage tie, the separation of families the\ndarkening and debasement of the soul,\nthe curse perpetuated to unborn trenera\ntions, in a word the blight and wretch-\nedness of Slavery remain the same, un-\nchanged and unchangeable.\nBy the laws ol the Slave States, and the\nresponding practice 01 almost the whole\ncommunity, the Word of God is withheld\nfrom the Slaves ; and while the gospel is\npreach uto some or them, and oral in-\nstruction furnished by the churches, the\ngreat body of the slaves is left in the most\nhopeless and helpless ignorance cf the\ncharacter and claims of the Christian faith.\nA people that cannot read in their own\ntongue the wonderful works of God, who\ncannot therefore fortn.an independent judg-\nment for themselves on the vast responsi-\nbilities of their moral condition, and who\nare compelled to take their religion from\ntheir oppressors, cannot be intelligent and\nhappy christians. Their piety must ne-\ncessarily be superficial emnustasww\n in many cases, utterly hypocritic-\nal and false. We feir, it too "much as-\nsumes the character of mere plantation dis-\ncipline, in the estimation of bo:h master\nana slave. And shall three millions of\nrational and immortal beings, in this land\nof light and liberty, be suffered to grope\ntheir way to the retributions cf Eternity,\nby the dim reflected light of oral instruc-\ntion, a light imperfect and impure at trie\nvery best and which through caprice, mis-\ntake or unfaithfulness, may become onlv\nthe ghastly glare of foul and damning er-\nror. Shall we accuse the Catholic priest-\nhood of a gross and outrageous act of spir-\nitual despotism, in forbidding the common\npeople to read the Bible, and earnestly\nurge upon the whole Christian world the\nsublime duty of giving the pure and una-\ndulterated Scriptures to the nations of the\nEarth, and ye; withhold it from our breth-\nren in bondage? Above all shall we do\nthis for the purpose of maintaining entire,\na system of universal spoliation & opp res '- si oti,- whi c-
1c0c12478530028c85a0e53ca59497b6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.3219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 On Market street next to the creek will t\nbo a baggage room, to bo used only for 1\nbaggage of passengers from incoming c\ntrains. On the new extension of High* e\ntecnth street will be a similar room lor a\nthe use of passengers' baggage for the a\noutgoing traini*. The entrance to the s\nstation will bo from a large shed or cov- i\nered yard at the corner of Murket and s\nthe now street. The iudies' room will bo fc\nto the eastward of this open space t\nand the gentiemou's or general watting c\nroom to the south of that. In the ladies' f\nroom will be a wido old-fashioned flro* i\nplace, this being visible through slidiog c\niloora with plate glass easlies in thorn, to i\nthe passengers in the other room t\nwell. The ticket office will bo in an or- 1\nnmental room built at the corner of p\ntho large yard, and occupying a portion ?\nof that cquare aod a bit of each ot the t\ntwo waiting rooms. Long train sheds, L\nnil under cover, will extend eastward v\ntip the creek, \\\nThe whole building will be surround- c\nI'd by roomy porchew, and tbe.,upuer t\nstory will be used as offices by the station p\nngent and the like. There will be cosy I\nand complete retiring rooms, closets and 1\ntoilet rooms, and in short the plans. 1\nuow at the office of the Terminal t\ncompany, represont a building which c\nwould be a credit to the city as a\npermanent union station, let alone a\nmere temporary one, It will be
15f8c8dd56a48dbdf8ff4dad8c08bcf7 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1886.401369831304 39.743941 -84.63662 map of the united States hung on one\nof the dingy walls, which was scrawled\nover with chalk and lead pencil, and\nstuck here and there was a paper wad.\nThe blackboard above the platform con\ntained a humorous sketch, whose figures\nhad graduated circles for heads and\nbodies, and straight lines for legs.\nJ. he minister, a mud old man witn\ndim eyes and a feeble voice, held the\nlamp over his Bible while he read his\ntext. He had preached for half a cen-\ntury, buffeted about from post to post\nand taking his buffetings meekly. Now\nhe had found a comparative calm in\nthe little, sparsely attended, unorgan-\nized church; he had settled into a pleas\nant peacefulness, and fallen back into\nthe vernacular of his youth.\n"torheclave totheLord I \nno idea," he said, setting down his\nlamp and taking off his spectacles\nslowly, "that Hezekiah- got none o'\nthem teachings from his father: it ain't\nlikely that Ahaz done nothing towards\nleading him into the way o' the Lord.\nAhaz had been one o' the worst o' the\nkings o' Judah. He'd ben idolertrous;\nhe'd broke up the Temple and set up\naltars in every corner of the land and\nworshipped idols. There ain't no sort\no' probability that Hezekiah got none o'\nthem teachings from him.\n. The door had opened and Biar Gillett\nhad walked in, alone. His face took on\na darker tinge as he met the eyes ol\nthe congregation upon him in a frank\nstare. He sat down in the nearest seat,\nfingering the rim of his hat.
21f6b0e2d76546a18db0e4d0574595a0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.691780790208 58.275556 -134.3925 When men are convioted of a felouy\nin the courts of Alaska, they are sen¬\ntenced to serve time in the penitentiary\nat McNeils island, near Taooma, Wawb.,\naod a U.S . deputy marshal is delegated\nto take him there. When a poor un¬\nfortunate in Alaska becomes mentally\nderanged. bughouse. he is consigned\nto the sanitarium at Momingside, near\nPortland, Ore. As the number of the\nunfortunates of both classes is by- no\niMeaus small iu the great Northland,\ndeputy marshals find these trips to and\nfrom the penitentiary or the insane\nasylum, occupy a large part of their\ntime, and we have not yet- located a\nsiuglo deputy who like that \\ ait of his\njpb. The distaste for talting them\ndown is not because the hardened crim¬\ninals are hard to manage,, for they are\nnot, for most of the jail birds ftom\nAlaska are only guilty of* the terrible\ncrime of giving a good squaw a\noip out of a four bit flask. Most of\nthem are simply ashamed and stick to\ntheir stateroom on the trip dowu, like a\nolam to its shell. When Seattle is\nreached the deputy usually chains him¬\nself to his man, or chains the man to\nhis left arm. But there is no trouble to\ntell without asking which is the deputy\nand which is the man with the sen¬\ntence. The deputy may not be any\nbetter looking, but he is proud aud\nshows it, but the prisoner is ashamed\nand downcast. Only a few old stagers\nare bold and brazen . they have made\nthe trip a uumber of tiuMM. Some have\ngone down to often that they recognize\nthe deputies as old friends. The mouey\nthat is now being spent io this way. by\nthe government would poou build a\nprison house right here in Alaska that\nwould be as safe as Sing Sing.
243555d28361e599608966335bf40aaa DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.478082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 ' The danger of relying too strongly\ncircumstantial evidence in murder trial\nwas forcibly Illustrated recently in the\ncase of Mis* Journeaux of the island of\nJersey. This lady, It will be remem­\nbered, went out lor a short row with a\nmale companion named Farne, and alter\nthey had rowed some distance he lost his\noars overboard and leaped into the water\nto regain them* lie could not get back\nto the boat, as the tide was running\nrapidly, and Miss Journeaux soon lost\nsight of him .though he managed to reach\nthe shore. This was on Sunday night,\nand the poor girl drifted helplessly about\nIn the trail bark until Tuesday morning,\nwhen she was picked up by a French\nfishing vessel ofSt. Malo. She was kind­\nly treated by the captain aud crew, and\nlanded, after a voyage of twenty six days\nthe shore of 8t. Georges Bay, New­\nfoundland, from whence was sent to\nSt. Johns to wait for a vessel bound to\nFrance. In the meanwhile Farne was\narrested for murder and imprisoned, and\nwas not set at liberty until a teleg\narrived announcing the safety of his for­\nmer boating companion.\nIIow different might have turned out If\nMiss Journeaux had been lost at sea! He\nmight have been hung for a crime which\nhe never committed, and all his protesta­\ntions of innocence would have be\ngarded as the wild jpieadlugs of a man\nwho d»*lred to escape the just penalty of\nhis misdeeds. No power on earth could\nprobably have ssveu him, aud he would\nhave gone down to posterity with the\nbrand of Cain upon his brow. Only the\ninterposition of Divine Providence seems\nto have 6aved his neck from the halter.\nThe opponents of capital punishment\nwill find a strong argument ;u this\nfor the abolishment of the death penalty.
36f14d84661b5191432eec5ccf3ab957 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.061475378213 40.063962 -80.720915 respectively shall not be recognized aa\nvalid or legal State Governmentseithei\nby the Executive or Judicial power 01\nauthority of the United States.\nSection 2. And be it further enacted\nThat for the speedy enforcement of the\nact entitled an act to provide for the\nmore efficient government of the rebe\nStates, passed March 2d, 1S67, and th<\nseveral acts supplementary thereto, th<\nGeneral of the Army of the Unltec\nStates is hereby authorized and re\nquired to enjoin, by special orders\nupon all officers in command withii\ntne several military departments with\niu said several States, the performance\nof all acts authorized by said severa\nlaws above recited, and is authorized t<\nremove at his discretion, by his order\nfrom command, any or all of snid com\nmanders, and detail officers of the Uni\nted States Army, not below the rank o\nColonel, to perform all the duties am\nexercise all powers authorized by sai<\nseveral acts, to the end the peopl\nof the said several States may speedll;\nreorganize civil government,repnblica'\nin form, in said several States, and b\nrestored to political power in theUnior\nSection 3. And be it further enactec\nThat the General of the Army remov\nany or all civil officers now acting ur\nder the several provisional goverr\nments within the several disorganize\nStates, and appoint others to dii\ncharge the duties pertaining to their r<\nspective offices, and may do any an\nall acts which, by said several lav\nabove mentioned, are authorized to t\ndone by the several commanders of tl\nmilitary departments within sal\nStates; and so much of said acts, or\nany act as authorizes the President\ndetail the military commanders tosa!\nmilitary departments, or to remove an\nofficers who may be detailed as h«re;\nprovided, is hereby repealed.\nSection 4, And be it further enactc\nThat it shall be unlawful for the Pres\ndent of tbe United States to order at
2b8b7ddedf184141b438974014470dcc THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.4166666350436 37.561813 -75.84108 nine acres, and was enclosed by a stockade, which\nwas made by digging out a trench air feet deep,\naround the outside of the lot, then logs about one\nfoot in diameter and eighteen feet long, were set\non end In the trench, jointed together, the dirt\npacked down tight around them. Sentinel boxes\nwere then erected, about one hundred feet apart,\non top of the stockade.\nAbout twelve feet from the stockade on the in\nside was the "dead line" not an Imaginary line,\nas some suppose, but a reality, in the shape of a\nlath nailed on top of a post. The posts were set\nabout ten feet apart, and about two feet out of the\nground, and one lath nailed to each post.\nThere was one entrance to the pen at the north\neast corner, and one exit at the northwest corner.\nThere was a stream of water running through\nor near the center of the grounds, and on each side\nof the branch was a quagmire a sticky\nmud that would swamp an animal, and at the time\nour little squad entered that awfnl place there was\nan alligator found in the mire four feet long. Sink\nriver was four miles south, and alligators would\ncome up from the river to Andersonville, (a noted\nplace for the reptiles) and deposit their eggs. The\nyoung would hatch out and sport around the vil-\nlage and wallow in the mnck until they were large\nenough to take care of themselves, then the first\ntime the branch rose they would float down to the\nriver and new ones take their places.\nWhen the cars stopped at the station we were\ncounted out at the door and formed in line, a new\nguard was placed over us, and we were ordered to\nmove forward. One of the guards told ns to whet\nup our teeth, for, said he, "they fight in thar like\ndogs 1" We were marched through the gate. It\nclosed after us, and we were in Andersonville\nprison!
36b68eef8714778d73f1ea92980d6b7c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.3383561326739 40.063962 -80.720915 The object of tbir auit in to obtain tbepajnriil\nof a debt of $45.00, with Interest from the *th\nday of May, 186U, (evidenced by a wwiilfwry\nnote for fu.oe. payable to the order of the plain\ntiff four months after date, dated Jatnurr 8,\nIMS), beim; in full of acconnt to date, BegotUllr\nand payable at the Merchant* National Bank nf\nWent > irginia, at Wheeling, and signed Lr the\ndefendant,) and the com of thi* nit. The inter\neat of the defendant lu the following deftribed\nrool estate having been attached in thi» Mil. to\nwit: in part of lot No. W on Main strret. « -a*;\nwide, between Union and MadKoti street*. in thr\nCity of Wheeling, West Virginia, on ahirh i»\nerected a three story brick Iioun- . mU turt of\nsaldlotTunntng44 net, won*or M»#\nstreet,and ISt reet, more or legs. I»ck from Main\ntrcet towards Market street. am! wld [art i«\nbounded on the west by Main street. on the mm\nby a lot formerly conveyed by Mary!.. Uorwj u>\nAilallnu Flcbner, on the north by all Uut part of\nsaid lot No. 88, north of the northern will of-aid\nbrick home, and on the south by a priwto alley;\nand affidavit having been ille«! in thi* cauw that\ntho defendant Is a non resident of the Stale «\nWest Virginia, on motion of the plaintiff by bla\nattorpejryH Is ordered that aaid defendant <"\nappear Wlthlb ono month «fl«t tho data of tie\nfirst publication hereof, to-wlt: within one\nmonth after the 87th day of April, 1KTU. and 4>\nwhat is necessary to protect her Interns in thw\nsalt.
4a4440c73a15083d8b9a4f2f5492a382 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.3219177765093 37.561813 -75.84108 and sentenced to fourteen years' trans-\nportation. Notwithstanding tbey were\ndefended by eminent counsel, aud that\nthey had high connections iu church\nand state, they were brought iu guilty\nby a jury, and seuteneed by tho Judge\nto the highest penalty of the law for\nuch tu offence. The governor of New-\ngate, who had ventured to suspend\nsome of the regulations of tho ptisou\nin favor of such important prisoners, was\nhimself iu turn suspended from office\nby the visiting magistrates for tho in-\nfringement of discipline and these "re-\nspectable" convicts will be detained in\nLondon until such information Bhall\nhave been procured from them as is ne-\ncessary for winding up their bankrupt\nestate, and will then bo shipped to Gib-\nraltar to work with the ordiuary con-\nvict at that station.\nBut wbat is the general sentiment\nrelative to such a conviction and sen-\ntence? Is there any maudlin sympathy\nfor men who have probably ruined the\nfortunes of hundreds wearing the cloak\nof religion, the more effectually to plun-\nder their confiding victims? We sup-\npose that tho language of the "Times"\nmay be taken as an index of the gener-\nal sentiment of the wealthy and com-\nmercial classes. That paper says:\n"We trust that the fate of these three\ngreat delinquents will be a mlutury les-\nson to the cammcrciiit community. From\nextravagance to fraud, from fraud to\ntheft, from theft to transportation, is a\nlaw of progression which many a man\ntrembling on tho narrow verge between\nright and wrong will do well seriously\nto consider."
5541e5829db05703c9bc26241984b1e9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 3t anticipated. It is quite trae, how- see\nrer, that rates have very generally I\n>ne lip, and the amounfcof the increase col\ntries, according to the estimates of the tell\ntal estate men, froui five or ten per tha\nint. to forty per cent. Thecompari- tioi\nin is with the prices of a year ago; but pie\ntere is of course, no absolute standard. wit\nearly all the agents who have had wh\nroperty for sal© for several months are ere\nrbidden to sell it at former prices, the tha\nvners declining to recognize the of- con\nrs they made last year, or in the early iQo\nirt of this year; and in many lustan- loo\nis the agents cannot, they say, guar- i tl\natee rates from day to day. [Hi\nThere are various causes for the ex- ma\ntement in regard to real estate. The An\nicent depression of general, trade here wo\nad in other parts of the country has rec\nnded to unsettle the public confidence his\nincerning the financial prospect for wa\nle future, which was so manifest few kB<\ntonths ago. The stagnation of busi- wh\n988 is supposed by some persons to in- Me\nicat© a change of values at an early ask\nly, and attention is directed to real lag\nitate as a comparatively safe basis of fix\nivestment. These persons think that, asp\nthough the prices of real property are the\n!gh, the decline cannot be so great as rra\nmay be In other kinds of property, tne\nbe fact that real estate in good loca- so,\nons has risen to double or triple its onl\nirmer valuation does not deter them ate\nom taking it freely at rates that good bel\nidges consider no criterion of its the\north. The great cost of putting up of\nalldings now has its full share of in- ing\nnenoe upon these persons, and they wo;\ntason that any property which can be wh\nstained ut less than the present ex- imi\nJnse of construction is necessarily tivi\n»eap. They take the risks.\nThere is at the same time a willing- des\n388 on the part of a large proportion mo
2a1c8dfb8548a01a866787c3f92c877f RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1918.4315068176052 36.620892 -90.823455 "The great results which we seek can be obtained only by the\npartieipatioa of every member of the Nation, young and old, in a\nNational concerted Thrift movement I therefore urge tha oar\npeople everywhere pledge tbemaelvee as suggested by the Secretary\nof the Treasury to the practice of Thrift, to serve tha Government\nto their utmost In Increasing production In all fields necessary to\ntha winning of the war. to conserve food and fuel and ussful mate-\nrials of every kind, to devote their labor only to the most necessary\ntasks, and to buy only those things which ars sssential to individual\nhealth and efficiency, and that the people as evidence of their\nloyalty invest all that they can ssvs In Liberty Bonds snd War- S avi n- gs\nStamps. Tha securities issued by the Treaeury Depart-\nment are within the reach of ovary one so that the door of oppor- -\ntunity m matter is wide open to all of wl To practice Thrift\nin pesos times Is a virtue, snd brings great benefit to the individual\nat all times. With the desperate need of the civilised world today\nfor matsrisla and labor with which to end the war, the practics ef\nIndividual Thrift la a patriotic duty and a necessity.\n"I appeal to all who own either Liberty Bonds or War-S a vin -\nSumps to continue to prsctice economy and thrift, and I appeal to\nall who do not own Government securities to do likewise and\npurchase them to the extent of their means. The man who buys\nGovernment securities transfers the purchasing powsr of his money\nto the United States Government until after this war, and to that\nearns degree does not buy in competition with the Government\n"I EARNESTLY APPEAL TO EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND\nCHILD TO PLEDGE THEMSELVES ON OR BEFORE THE\nTWENTY-EIGHT-
09c6c943d1d287be70ad1aa89ed87dd2 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1918.8178081874682 41.875555 -87.624421 Irwin II. Hnzen, born In Beaver\nCounty, Pennsylvania. July 29, 180'J;\nraised on n farm In eastern Ohio,\neducated In country school, taught\nschool live years; graduate Ohio\nNorthern University In class of 1895;\nadmitted to practice law in tho Su-\npremo Court in Ohio In 1895; came\nto Chicago, November, 1890; ndmltted\nto prnctlco In Illinois, Jan. 15, 1S9T.\nFor nine years after his ndmlsslon In\nIllinois, lio was associated In the prnc-\ntlco of law with Judge Charles N.\nGoodnow; has olllces In tho Chicago\nTitle & Trust Building since 1907; has\nhad an extended practice In all Fed-\neral, Stato and Municipal Couits,\nWas elected to the City Council In\ntho old 35th ward hi April, 1911; re-\nelected In the 33d ward in 1913; re-\nelected In 1917. Huh been active and\nngercsslvo In tho City Council In be-\nhalf of his constituents and tho city\nIn general. Ho Is now a member of\ntho Finance Committee, Committee on\n Transposition, and Committee\non Harbors. Ho is a member of tho\nChicago Bar Association, and for ten\nyears him been it member of tho Chi\ncago Association of Commerce, In both\nof which organizations lie' lias taken\nnn nctlvo part. Ho lias always been\nan nctlvo Republican, and is a mem-\nber of tho Hamilton Club.\nFor many yearn Alderman Hazen\nhas been recognized ns one of the\nleading frateruallsts of tho city; has\nserved for thieo years as a member\nof tho National Fraternal Congress,\nrepresenting the Columbian Clrclo, a\npatriotic fraternal benefit society, with\nheadquarters in Chicago, of which ho\nIs tho Supremo President. Ho has\nboon nctlvo In ninny other fraternal\nsocieties, having nn extended ac-\nquaintance In tlieso organizations. Ho\nIs n member of tho Board of Managers\nof tho Austin Masnulo Temple Asso-\nciation, n Knight Templar, a Shrlnor,\nnn Odd Follow, Knight of Pythias,\nRcdmen, Mnccahco, Loyal Order of\nMnoso and other organizations.\nAlderman Hazen's
1cc7f02bcd546a0ba426292e44588003 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.554794488838 40.063962 -80.720915 Arbuthnot Samuel\nAnnstrongT H\nBarton William H\nBlakely William H\n|Brown WmG\nBainford Wm\nBarnes Wm S\niBuchananRD4\nBenke Martin\nBuckley John M\nBerbert J\nBuckley J L\nBrowning John W\nBell Joseph\nBy rs John\nBaylis Jonathan\nBirch George 2\nBurket George\nBirch Charles F\nBrakely A\nBufllngton Col A R\nCraig Wm\nCongleton James\nChow H\nClary Emery B\nCollehs Thomas\nCarr Thomas\nCouell Wylie\nChalfant Lt E\nCarver D J\nCollins Peter\nCarroll Alonzo\nCoon Nicholas\nCaldwell Alexander\nConvent Andrew\nDeene Lovel J\nDu vail Tyler\nDuseubury R F\nDyorset Malltlas 2\nDitmore John\nDoerr John\nCrawford Joseph G\nDoyle John\nDiitmer Henry\nDayCH\n Allen\nElrlck Geo W\nEmbury Chas\nEmmondsHainnel J\nEzekiel M H C\nFuty James\nFaulensbee Louis\nFord James\nFisher William\nFeeny Michael\nFox Jacob\nFrazer George\nGray David\nGardner James R\nGames James\nGraffJohn\nGodfrey William\nGoffTM\nHolenger Wm\nHeilbnt William\nHoward William E\nHoward William SI\nHaukr Wm\nHarris Cap Tom\nHenderson R H\nHelmlck Cap N D\nHerrM\nHough Joseph\nHarr Joseph\nHolmes John M\nHoltsclaw James A\nHoge John\nHenderson John F\nHappy John\nHalliny John\nHunter James M\nHatton G W\nHartly George\nHouse Frederick\nHitchcock Davis\nHin Charles\nHerman Albert\nHiles A J\nHenderson J B Lt\nHoward Wm M\nJames John F
1e4c5383ea64759761a49a4effdd6ccb THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.305479420345 41.004121 -76.453816 Inauguratiou is over, the tariff\nis being attended to, business is\ngetting better and better, and the\nweatber is behaving itself beauti-\nfully. Therefore let Melancholy\ntake to the woods. We'll have none\nof her. Even in our reading matter\nlet us demand that which is pleas-\nurable and optimistic. Both of\nthese adjectives, by the way, aptly\ndescribe the May Lippincott's, which\nis filled from cover to cover with\nan assortment of stories and special\narticles, jokes and poetry, as varied\nas they are entertaining.\nThe complete novel "The Pom-\negranate Seed," by Katharine Met-ca - lf\nRoof is one of the most de-\nlightful love stories which have\nappeared in a decade. It is quite\nprooable that the marriage of a\npopular light opera star to a well\nknown novelist, not long ago, gave\nto the author the idea for her \nHer hero, it happens, is an artist,\nher heroine a dainty young singer\nin comic opera. Miss Roof's char-\nacters are admirably drawn even\nthe minor ones being clear cut and\nvivid. Griselda, the singer, is whol-\nly charming, and one doesn't in\nthe least blame Stephen for falling\nin love with her. The plot is ably\nhandled, and the theatrical atmos-\nphere distinctly good. The tale\nholds the reader's interest till the\nend, despite the fact that "battle,\nmurder, and sudden death," are\nconspicuous for their absence.\nThe short stories are of a high\norder of excellence. Mary Roberts\nRinehart, author of "The Man in\nLower Ten" and "The Circular\nStaircase," contributes a breezily\ntunny story called "Lady Godiva\nat the Springs"; Maarten Maartens,\na vividly powerful character study\nentitled "Mrs Marshatu"; Elsie\nSingmaster, a characteristic tale of\nthe Pennsylvania
41a730f0fe4119a6be600b3ebdc46434 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.664383529934 41.004121 -76.453816 If he is impecunious he may go to\na friend and tell him that If he will\nput up enough money for the flout-\ning of the corporation he will mako\nhim president and give htm half of\nthe promotion stock. Half of the\ncapitalization will be taken as pay\nfor the promotion and the remainder\nIs sold as the treasury stock.\nAnother plan of operation displays\nremarkable financial Ingenuity. A\nshark will go Into a district and get\nan option on a piece of worthless\nground for a few hundred dollars.\nHe organizes a company, but as a\nguarantee of solidity announces that\nIt will be incorporated only when the\nsale of the stock has been assured.\nAs the head of the proposed mining\ncompany he makes a contract with\nthe brokerage company, In he\nIs also Interested, by when the latter\ngets 60 or 70 per cent, commission\nfor selling the treasury stock. After\nthe work ceases on the unpatented\nground, the claim reverts to the Gov-\nernment and is open for relocation\nby the first comer after January 1\nfollowing. If it should happen that\none of the claims located by these\nsharks shows Indication of giving\ngood returns in ore assessment work\nwill be abandoned and the claim\nquietly relocated by the shark him-\nself. Instances have been known also\nwhere small dividends have been de-\nclared and paid out of the money re-\nceived for the sale of stock. This of-\nten proves a good investment for the\npromoter, since the receipt of a divi-\ndend is likely to cause a good de-\nmand.
1ad6a93079ccacd75c3acc23ddbbd751 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1899.2616438039067 39.623709 -77.41082 Aneven excellence makes the good thing! which\nTHE LADIES' HOME JOURNAL promises unusu-\nally iotcreating and atrong. The list fa strong and\nsturdy. One series of papers alone would sell the\nmagazine; that is, the three While House articles\nwhich ex-President Harrison is to write. No man has\never done what General Harrison will do in these\narticles: show us what "A Day With the President\nat his Desk" means In one article; in another tell of\n“The Social Life of the President, and in a third ar-\nticle describe “Upstairs Life in the White House.”\nEach of the articles willbe profusely illustrated. An-\nother series equally fascinating is the one called\n"Great Personal Events," in which some of the great-\nest enthusiasms which have occurred inAmerica will\nbe revived: those wonderful times when Louis Kos-\nsuth rode up Broadway; when the young Prince of\nWales was here; when Jenny Lind sang in Castle\nGarden; when Henry Ward Beecher electrified his\ncongregation by selling slaves in Ids pulpit; when\n went round the world; when Henry Clay bade\nfarewell to the senate; when John Wesley preached\nin Georgia, of which so few know. Allthese mem-\norable events and others will be vividly recalled,\ntold more graphically than ever before, and illustrat-\ned withpictures which have occupied twelve artists\nover a year. A third series is unique and valuable\nfrom the fact that it will give women scores of ideas\nfor their homes. It willreveal what there is "Inside\nof a Hundred American Homes," and carefully re-\nproduce pictures of one hundred completely furnish-\ned rooms in homes in this country—from Maine to\nCalifornia—where taste has gone farther than money.\nTwo new department writers have also been exclus-\nively engaged by the JOURNAL: Mrs. S . T* Korer,\nwho willhereafter have charge of thednmestic de\npartment and give a series of cooking lessons, and\nDwight L. Moody, the famous evangelist who is to\nput the result of his life study of the Bible in a de-\npartment entitled "Mr. Moody's Bible Class.”
7f08463f0a573064dcf6c14a97cb4d4f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.236338766191 41.681744 -72.788147 mobiles by tho state rather than by\nthe town authorities is advocated by\nTax Collector Willis J. Hemingway,\nwho was present at the meeting of\ntax collectors held yesterday in\nHartford. At present the collection\nof taxes on autos is a very difficult\nmatter, Mr. Hemingway said today,\nbecause cars frequently change\nhands witliout record being made of\nthe transfers and because the owners\noften move from one town to an-\nother. These conditions make it\ndifficult for the collector to find out\njust who owns a car or to locate the\nowner of It after his identity has\nbeen learned. As a result, the pro-\nportion of automobile taxes left,\nunpaid is disappointingly large\nthroughout the state.\nIt was proposed at the meeting\nyesterday that the state collect the\nauto tax at the same time m the\ncar was registered and that the vari-\nous be given the respective\namounts pall by residents therein.\nThis suggestion met with the ap-\nproval of the majority of tax collec-\ntors present, and Mr. Hemingway\nsaid today he would like to see a\nlaw to this effect passed.\nSeveral collectors reported that\ndeputy sheriffs in their towns were\nunwilling to collect unpaid taxes.\nThere is no trouble of this sort here,\nMr. Hemingway said, as Deputy\n.Sheriff E. W. Kurrey has cooperated\nwith the collector in fine fashion and\npas turned In a great many tax pay-\nments within the past six months.\nThe tax bills are now being made\nout an. I will probably be put in the\nmails Monday, Mr. Hemingway ex-\npressed great pleasure at the work\nof Town Clerk William H. Wilson\nin having the rate book ready on\ntime, as this is the first time this\nhas occurred in many years.
082acd81fba57f1324a866ae6725440c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1901.5246575025367 41.004121 -76.453816 Ethelinda thought of this for one\ndreadful, agonizing moment, then sho\nbecame aware of the professor speak-\ning, and she made a desperate effort\nto listen to what he was saying.\nHe was telling her in calm, even\ntones thnt there was no immediate\ndanger, that even if the worst came\nto the worst he could swim with her\nto shore, provided she remained calm,\nand did exactly as he told her to do.\nWhite and rigid, she promised, though\nin her heart nhe saw very little hope.\nThe professor was, on the contrary,\nalmost gay. He plied the oars vigor-\nously, humming a lively tune, though\nthe water in the boat continued to\nIncrease alarmingly. To Ethelinda it\nseemed an eternity before the mid-\ndle current had been cleared and shal-\nlower space reached.\nThen, without a moment's \nthe boat filled, nnd they were up to\ntheir waists in the river. Ethelinda,\nforgetting her resolution, screamed\nand clung to the professor, but that\ngentleman, having had the presence)\nof mind to seize an oar as he went\noverboard, steadied himself by it,\nbegging Miss Grayson to trust to him,\nfor he would save her if he himself\nperished in the attempt.\nFortunately at that point the river\nbottom was firm; some good genius\nhad surely directed their course, and\nafter the first shock Miss Grayson re-\ncovered her courage somewhat. There\nwas danger, to be sure, but the seren-\nity with which the professor faced it\nshamed her fears, and she let him put\nhis left arm around her waist to sup-\nport her, while with his right he as-\nsisted their struggling steps toward\nthe shore.
2327e312b5674821218d8f782c389d6c CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.9438355847285 41.875555 -87.624421 tho judge and this may Include power\neverywhere to suppressthe decree ns\nwell as the evidence and to seal the\nwhole record file so that It never can\nbe examined by the public. That\npractice has prevailed In New York\nCity for a long time, though It was\nnot brought to general public notice\nuntil census officials sent by President\nRoosevelt to obtain statistics of di-\nvorce found themselves confronted In\nNew York with sealed records In\nlocked safes. These cases are invari-\nably those of rich and prominent fam\nilies, or persons possessing nn equal\ninfluence with the courts. This Is n\nshameful abuse for protection of privi\nleged classes of a law strained from\nthe original purpose of protecting pub-\nlic morals. It Is one thing to prevent\ndemoralizing recital in open court and\nanother to cover up whoso exam\nple would bo wholesome to society.\nThe cause of public morals is not\naided but Injured by allowing persons\nof wealth and station concealment of\nvices which are ruthlessly exposed\nwhen practiced by humbler persons.\nThere can be no reason for this dis\ncrimination but some form of bribe.\nwhether paid In larger fees for secret\nhearings, as direct honorarium to\ncourt officers or a tribute to the polit-\nical organization by which they are\ncontrolled. Why should the Astor fam\nily be broken up In secrot while the\nfrailties of John Smith and his wife\nare exposed to the public and spread\nupon the record unless It Is because\nthey pay for the privilege? These se-\ncret records are kept with peculiar\ncare and, like tho secret archives of\ngovernment, will make Interesting\nreading for posterity.
2dad778e3fd55d97e9878c9f1a63a989 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.5630136669204 58.275556 -134.3925 M. M . Taylor has moved his family\nfrom Pindlay, Ohio to Wiudham, He\nwill assist his brother E. E.Taylor with\nthe work at the Jack Pot mine.\nThe Buckeye Mining Company will\nhave the first section of their shaft at\nthe Jack Pot mine completed in ci few-\ndays to a depth of 80 feet. They will\nthen commence cross-cuttiug the for¬\nmation in order to reach the ledge\nwhich is about 150 feet east from the\nshaft. The shaft at the surface being\n20 feet lower than the ledge at the out-\ncropping will give them about 100 feet\niu depth. The Jack Pot ledge is situat¬\ned on the east side of "Loch Mary'' a\nsmall lake about one mile id length by\none-half mile in width and a distance\nof one aud one-eighth miles from salt\nwater. The altitude about 200 feet.\nThe formation here is black slate with\nnumerous small veius running through\nit, on both sides of the ledge. It is a\nwell defined ledge about 4 feet in\nwidth, has free walls and is in plain\nsight for a distance of 500 feet. Man¬\nager E. E. Taylor is confident if they\nsucceed in striking the ledge at the\ndepth of the shaft, that they will have\na dividend paying mine in another two\nyears. The company will build a cor¬\nduroy road from the beach to the lake\nand haul their supplies, etc. with a\ndonkey engine. From there they will\nbe taken to the mine on a scow. There\nis good timber on these claims and\nabuudance of water to keep a stamp\nmill going the year around. J . H. K .\n! Windham, July 17th, 1000.
36090c46428e5817adfc31a145ba3d99 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0808218860984 39.261561 -121.016059 Nevada JPrmoctat.\nLatest Concerning the “Great East-\nern.”—At a recent special metting of tbe\nshareholders in the Great Ship Company it\nwas stated, in the report presented to the\nmeeting, that, ou account of the lamentable\naccident which occurred to tbe “Great\nEastern” on the 12th of September, a loss\nof §125,000 was incurred. She was now\nat Milford Haven, undergoing the neces-\nsary repairs for another voyage. The as-\nsets of the company were sufficient to meet\nthis Iofs, with the exception of $40,000.\nTo provide for this and for tbe extra capital\nwhich tbe directors thought would be ne-\ncessary, $126,000 would have to be raised,\nand it had been determined on raising the\namount by debentures beariug interest at\nthe rate of ten per cent, on the mortage of\nthe ship. Of this amount seventy-five tbou-\nsan dollars had been subscribed. The chair-\nman, in moving the adoption of the report,\nremarked that the ship had begun to \nprofitable, ai d there was no reason to sup\npose that such an accident would occur\nagain. The directors had had offers for the\nship. One gentleman had offered $750,000\ncash down, but the directors had not listen\ned to the proposal. The chairman moved\nthe adoption of the report. Capt. Halstead\nsaid it w as a mystery in the history of prac-\ntical seamanship how the ship got helpless-\nly iuto the trough of the sea. What the\nshareholders should know was whether the\nship fell into the trough of the sen in con-\nsequence of the breaking of the rudder head,\nor whether the breaking of the rudder head\nwas tbe result of getting into the trough of\nthe sea, and the efforts to get her out. He\nbad no hesitation in saying that no other\nship than the “Great Eastern' could have\nremained in such a position ten minutes.\nHe was of the opinion that the “Great Eas-\ntern-
b9817a55353ca42b0c59b1c4e94e8b2a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.491780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 upon, and ho raptaina that the report\nrait l brought bior fmurti meet-\ning of f ie board fat final action,\nErneat W. ChrUI. mmir of tha\ngi utral aaaemkii)' and a third ward\nreprr at MitlM on I he i lly ineiMiiif\nbuard, also regarded aa an authority\nun parliamentary preceduru, aaid thla\nmorning that. In hla opinion, tha mat-\nter no tluuda aa It did IWora tha\nmil ling, ii I'tpiniiia thnt un amend-\nment is Httiuhed to an original motion\nand riimiot at and oiT iudfj thoMoro\nwii-- tho ami nitiiient una paused, but\nnot tho motion aa amended, tha mo.\ntlon to adjourn HUM all,\nMr. K hoo waa ona of the Isadora\nin tho tight for accepttinro of tha re-\nport, whllfl Mr. Christ favored and\nvotod with tha opponent.\nCorporation C(MinMr Opinion\nCorporation Counsel John II. Kirk- -\nhum una present ot the meeting. Aak-r - d\n hla opinion by members of the\npnM, ha aald the union waa all right.\ncalling attention to the tact that tho\nprocedure la often followed In the\ncommon council. It waa recalled to hla\nmind by one of the newspaperman\nthat two years ago tha common conn,\ncit amended a rocommendntion of tha\nwater' board on an Ice contract,\nawarding tho contract to one other\nthan the contractor favored by the\nboard. The motion aa amended waa\nnot put The point waa raised after\nthe meeting nnd no that It might have\nIcgnl standing, the entire matter waa\nbrought before the common council\nat lis next meeting and final action\nwas taken at tills lime.\nAt the opening of the meeting Mr.\nQulgley moved for acceptance of the\nreport, with the exception of that\npart pertaining to the appointment, of\na school building commission which\nwas killed ut the last meeting.
236557849fe0ef6e8f12b66b7a64cbb6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.423287639523 39.745947 -75.546589 wise. We aro disappointed In Mr.\nBryan. We commiserate hls i>arly.\nQuite recently, Mr. Bryan issued a\nspecies of proclamation informing the\ncountry to the effect that, while he\ndoes not wish to he regarded as an ap­\nplicant for the third nomination, be\nand Ms friends expect to have a good\ndeal to say In the premises. This\nmeans, if It means anything, that Mr.\nBryan, “and his friends.” of course,\npropose to Indicate the nominee of the\nconvention in 1904. It means (hat, al­\nthough be docs not in so many words\nsolicit (he distinction for himself, he\nintends to have It conferred upon some\noneofhischoice Ifheisnotto be\nking, he will at least he Warwick. If\nthe Democratic leaders can no longer\nbo assembled In hls Interest, then he\nwill point Ihe way for their all »glance\nAnd this from a twice-defeated can­\ndidate who fall«! on both occasions\n hold bis party together, aud whose\ngreatest achievement in 1896 was that\nof bringing out at least 600,000 more\nRepublican votes than would other­\nwise have been heard of.\nWe have hart many occasions iu the\nIHist to commend Mr. Bryan. There Is\nmuch in him (hat is commendable.\nBut his present attitude does not ap­\npeal to our admiration, and wo think\nthe Democracy could do no wiser thing\nthan to discard him and all his claims\nto domination. As for his following\nof crazy Populists, the Democratic\niwirty will be ten times stronger with\nthe country if It should send them\nabout their 'business. Their alliance\nlias never helped that party. Their\nhostility would be a definite advantage.\nIn our opinion, the Democrats should\neither nominate Mr. Bryan once more\nor Invite him to a back seat in the\ncouncils. This may not be reverent,\nbut It is logical.
0b1f1a3f6a783b0491ffbd95f557d770 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.2890410641805 40.441694 -79.990086 Inman, Colonel w. L . Calhoun, President of\nthe Confederate Veterans' Association; Colonel\nA. J . West, of Governor Northern's staff, and\n17 members of tbe City Council. Tbey came\nfrom Atlanta In a SDecial train comnosed of\nparlor cars and a gondola, or flat car, on which.\nwas mounted a Held Dattery in charge of mem-\nbers of tbe Atlanta artillery. The purpose of\nthis cannon was made known as soon as tbe\ntrain started, for it then belcbed forth a\nwelcome which it kept np every three minutes\nduring tbe ensuing ten miles run to Atlanta.\nThe Triumphal Entry Into Atlanta.\nAmid a tumult caused by tbe concerted blow-\ning of thousands of steam whistles the Presi-\ndental train entered Atlanta exactly on time,\nreaching the depot at 3:30 o'clock. Tbe depot\nis in the center of tbo city, and the Western\nAtlantic Railroad, by which the 'Presidental\nspecial came from Chattanooga, is lined on\nboth sides almost Its entire length the\ncity limits by manufacturing establishments of\nvarious kinds. As soon as tbe Presidental\ntrain reached the city limits tbe signal was\ngiven by tbe Exposition Cotton Mills, and one\nafter another of tbe hundreds of mills along\ntbe line chimed in, and hundreds of railroad\nengines in the several railroad yards in the city\njoined the chorus. The oar mounting ono of\nthe heavy guns of tbe Atlanta artillery ran in\nadvance of tbe Presidental train, the cannon\nfiring as the car rolled on, adding to the\ntremendous din by which tbe entire citywas\nnotified that the Presidental party had passed\ninto tbe city limits.\nPresident Harrison stood on the platform\nof tbe rear coach as tbe train rolled into tbe\ndepot, bowing in acknowledzmeut to the wel-\ncome with which be was greeted. When the\ntrain stopped Governor Northern, with a large\ndelegation of citizens, advanced to receive the\nparty. The Governor, on being presented to\nthe President, said:
01d9e8f688f6e3d17300fffd9005a2c9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.7767122970574 39.745947 -75.546589 That tiger is the dread disease known ns\nconsumption. It slays more men and wo- '\nmen yearly than there are rain drops in a\nsummer shower. It steals upon its victim\nwith noiseless tread.\nThere is a sure and certain protection\nagainst this deadly disease, and a sure and\nspeedy cure for it, if it is resorted to in\ntime. It Is Dr. Pierces Golden Medical\nDiscovery. This Wonderful medicine acts\ndirectly on the lungs through the blood,\ntearing down old, half-dead tissues, build­\ning up new and healthy ones, driving out\nall impurities and disease germs and ex­\npanding the lungs and introducing life-giv­\ning oxygen into the circulation. It has\nwonderful curative powers and allays all\ninflammation of the mucous membranes of\nthe lungs and bronchial tubes. It makes\nthe appetite keen and hearty, the digestion\natid assimilation perfect, the liver active,\n blood pure and rich with the life giving\nelements of the food, and the nerves strong\nand steady. It is the great blood-maker\nand flesh builder. It has the most marvel­\nous sustaining powers of any known med­\nicine. Thousands who were upon the verge\nof a premature grave have testified to their\nrecovery through its wonderful virtues.\nMedicines dealers sell it, and have nothing\nelse “just as good.”\nWhen a dealer urges some substitute hes\nthinking of the larger profit hell make—\nnot of your welfare.\nDr. Pierces book, “The Common Sense\nMedical Adviser,” is a treasure in any fain- j\nily. It contains 1008 pages and 300 illustra- j\nlions. A copy FRKE to every person who\nWtlLseud to ftie Worlds Dispensary Med­\nical Association. Buffalo, N. Y.\nstamps, to pav the cost of mailing only.\nFor cloth binding, send 31 stamps.
4082db9d7ec2e61e02f99f8937031dfe THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.9821917491122 37.561813 -75.84108 reduction effectual, I.am in favor of\nenacting such a law as will make it\nbegin on the 4th of March last.\nWhere, as in the case of the Presi-\ndent who, in my judgment, was\nmore than all others combined re-\nsponsible for this increase wa 'are\nunable by reason of a constitutional\nprohibition to make such -red uc tio -\naffect the compensation of the pres\nent incumbent, lam in favor of doing\nindirectly that which we cannot do\ndirectly, by withholding from him dur\ning his present term; as was proposed\nby the minority of the select com\nmittee, all appropriations and allow\nances for the officers and attendants\nenumerated in their substitute for\nthe bill oriirinally reported by the\nmajority of the committee.\n"But sir, independent of this que s\ntion of economy, and waiving the\nquestion which gentlemen have dis\ncussed ably and earnestly, as to wheth\ner our compensation is at present too\nmuch or too little, there is another\nground upon which I advocate reduc\ntion of the salaries. It is this: The\npeople have demanded it: and we.\nas their servants, are in honor bound\nto obey their command. I believe \nthe good old Democratic doctrine\nthat this is a Government of the peo-\nple; that the people are sovereign in\nthis country, and that all public\nofficials, hisrh and low; should in all\ncases pay respect to their wishes.\nTo disregard the universal sentiment\nof the people upon this questtcn, as\nwell known as it is to all of us, would\nbe to abandon this fundamental pnn\nciple of Democracy and to assert in\ni: s stead the contrary one that we are\nabove the people; that we, the created.\nare greater than the creators; and\ncan never yield my assent to this.\nI trust, therefore, that this bill will be\nso amended as to make our compen\nsation $5,000 per annum, with actual\ntraveling expenses, and to withhold\nfrom the President his increased\ncompensation under the present law.\nor its equivalent, as I have indicated;\nand that we shall then pass the bill\nBy so doing we will restore, in\nmeasure at least that, confidence\nwhich should exist between the peo\npie and their Representatives, and\nwinch unfortunately for us, has been\nalmost wholly destroyed by circum\nstances over which we had - no con-\ntrol."
05e9ea67b262485b7f6ecc6a1f272a75 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.5136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 The north and south corridors we\nconstructed, the old wooden cases fe\nmodels giving way to iron ones, con\ntible material being everywhere banie\nIron doors, for still further prote<\nagainst the spread of a fire, were pi\n'at the entrances to tho corridors,\nnorth and aouth corridors being\nfinished, work was begun on that a\nthe eastern ocction of the great built\nIt progrea3ed well enough until a\nweeks ago, when it came to a aui\nstop. The cause of this cessation o\nwork authorized by Congress is Wil\nAndrew Jackson Sparks, the Com\nsioner of the General Land Office, w,\ninflaenco with Secretary Lamar\nbeen all-sufficient for his purj\nLet a visitor now step into\nnorth and south corridorB, and\nwill see them filled again with\ndiscarded wooden cases for models st:\nalong one after another their ei\nlength. Then in the east corridor w\nthe work of making everything fire f\nwas bo suddenly stopped, a force of\npunters are at work putting: in a l\npartitions to make a number of now rc\nfor clerks. Sparks came to the \nthat he wanted more room for his oi\nand as the inventors in this country\ncomparatively few in numbers, and\nLand Office has adherents, he prevt\nupon Secretary Lamar to have the Pe\nOffice people vacate a few more ol\nrooms they occupied and crowd thom\nthe corridors and lobbies on the u\nfloors, while the clerks of the Land 0\nmoved into tho quarters vacated.\nThis is all don« in violation of the p.\nly expressed intentions of Congress\nthe models of inventions saved from\ngreat fire, and to come thereafter, eh>\nbo preserved from all danger of deal\ntion becauso of the great valuo they w\npossess for future inventors. It is usf\nalmost for tho inventors to demand\ntne act ol Congress for their relief be\nobserved, for, as a rule, inventors are\nand do not pos-jeos political in flue\nCongress alone will be able to conv\nLamar and Sparks that thoy have\nthings which they should not have a\nand have left umloue those things w\nthey should have done, and there is n\ning to alone for their misdeeds.
9864761875a42fb36cd36f0a7f8f67a7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4287670915778 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Joseph Brown, Miss Frances\nWatkins, Mr. and Mrs. Francis B.\nWatkins, Mrs. William Davis, of\nOdessa; Mr. and Mrs. Richard S.\nRodney, of New Castle; Mr. and Mrs.\nTheodore Ferguson, of Blackbird;\nMr. and Mrs. Rassett Ferguson and\nfamily, Dr. and Mrs. C. Wolf, of\nRidley Park, Pa.; Mr, and Mrs. G.\nFurman Mather, of Langhorne, Pa.\nMr, and Mrs. J . Frank Eliason,\nMiss Levina P. Lynch, Miss Annie\nO. Lynch, of Mt. Pleasant; the Rev.\nand Mrs. Francis H. Moore, of\nWayne, Pa.; Frazier Purse, of Nar-\nberth, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Olin Davis,\nMiss Lucy Griffith, Mr. Harry Grif­\nfith, of Sassafras. Md.; Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Reynolds, of Trenton. N . J.\nMrs, James T. Shalleross, Mr. and\nMrs. John C. Green, Dr. and Mrs.\nDorsey W. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.\nJulian H. Foard, Mr. and Mrs. James\nE. Woodall, and Mrs. George\nV. Peverley, Miss Charlotte Pever-\nley, Miss Eugenia Beasten, Miss May\nHolten, Mr. and Mrs. Henry S.\nBrady, Miss Ethel W. Brady, Miss\nHelen F. Brady, Mrs. Cuthbert S.\nGreen, Mrs. William Green, Mr.\nVictor Green, Mrs. George F. Brady,\nMr. Frederick Brady, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Malcolm Coehran, Mr. and Mrs.\nJesse L. hepherd. Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam T. Connellee, Mr. and Mrs.\nMartin B. Burris, Dr. and Mrs. Har­\nris B. McDowell, Miss Louise Mc­\nDowell, Mrs. T. Edgar Clayton. Miss\nElizabeth Clayton, Miss Lydia Elia­\nson, Miss Josephine Biggs, Miss Hes­\nter Jones, Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank\nBiggs, Mrs. G. Lindsey Cochran,\nMrs. Julian Cochran, Mr, George\nLockwood, Dr. and Mrs. Edward M.\nVaughan, Mr. and Mrs.\nShallcrosB. Mr and Mrs. James T.\nShalleross and family, Miss Susie\nFoard, Miss Josephine Cochran and\nMastin Shalleross, of Middletown.
1d1c6ea368b9acca7c05397cfaa11dd0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.5396174547157 58.275556 -134.3925 ome a single electrical area.\n"The scheme (>. to Interconnect the\nel' trie power systems of this great\nregion and put them within reach\n>f the cheapest source* of cteam and\nwntcr power: this to be accompanied\nhv a general electrification of the\nrailroads. Kxistlng power companies\nami railroadc already electrified will\nform a nucleus for the contemplated\nsystem. Coal, for the production of\npower, will be burned as near the\nmine* as possible, and water power*\nwill be developed whenever this can\nhe done to advantage.\n"A fundamental object It to save\ncoal, and to relieve the railroads of\nIhe burden of hauling coal for their\nown use and for power purposes\nthis haulage being over one-third of\ntheir total traffic.\n"It Is suggested that thoro ahall\nbe a main JBO.OOO-volt line extend¬\ning ill the from Washington to\nRonton, fed by 'tap lines" from a\ngroup of larg» power station* at the\nnearest *oft coal fields and from an¬\nother group at the hard coal field*,\nsupplemented by auxiliary water\npower* developed on tho Delaware\nand Susquehanna rivers. The tap\nline from th" soft coal fields to the\nmain lino at Philadelphia will be\nlf>n mllea long, and a second tap\nline will connect New York with the\nhard coal fields. Possibly a third\ntap line might bring electricity 26«\nmill from Cedar Rapid*, on the St.\nLawrence lllver. to the point where\nthe main line croases the Hudson.\n"The great 'base load' of the super¬\npower system will be carried by large\nsteam and hydro-electric planta.\nGroups of smaP steam power*, or\nwater powers, will be connected with\nthe nearest dlrtrlbutlng system*, nnd
015ff593adc35dd92e8c2836ddf85a7a THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.547814176027 29.949932 -90.070116 We need, in summer or winter, whether ui:ig\nmrscles or bramins,or neither. every day f lodcuo-\ntaining carbonates for the lungs, nitraes for t:hi\nn necles and tis-ues, and ph ,shates for the vital\npowl rs ; but we need them in very ditterent pro-\np.ortions, accerdirg to the temperature in v-lt 'h\ntie live and our habits of life. These eleumeuts\nare furonihed at our hands, varying in proportions\nso as to be adapted to the different tempera;-ares\nand habit ; and for animals that have lasticts\nard not intel'ects to guide them, frini thdele.\nI haet to the smallest animalcule, these diltleent\nelemnnts are so niixi d and p, spared, and the ap-\npetite so adjusted to them, that they always want.\nir d always have ,and alway, eat the right kind\nti food at the right tunme,and in the right q tan-\nii y. But man, whlo ha intellect, is expect,'d to\nI derutard the laws iof tis being, and to adtapt\n!;is Io d to the wants of his nature, varying it\no-cc(rdimlg to circumatsn:'es. We are creatures of\n,abit, our sy)tems have wonderful power in\nadapting themselves to circumstances, and there-\nltre we do not all die. however thought'eosly we\nlive, and however perseveringly continue the\nwrong habits to which we have been accustomed,\nand tur appetites falling in with our habits, the\netils of wr, ng living are perpetuated. Still it is\ntrue everywhere that the average amount of\nhealth and the average length of life are in exact\nproportion to the care we take to live in accord-\nance with the laws of our being. This statistica\nthi w aid our own observations confirm.\nBut what a responsibility these consideratins\nplace upon wives and mothers who have, or ought\nto have, the direction of these matters. To them,\nin providence, as in the word of God, the inj mc-\nn,,o emphatically is, "Keep n'y command:ents,\nfor length of days, and long lile, and peace, shall\ntLey add to thee." and tLy family. This in por-\ntaut promise is fulfilled literal'y to those who study\nto obey lphysical laws, however figurative its fu:-\ntil.mnent may be in regard to moral law.
58be09c9336ebaceddd83e8abcd5e0af EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2835616121258 39.745947 -75.546589 ■Where tho beginner at plug casting habit of hunting the bottom and lov-\n■ikes his big mistake, old scout, Is in ingly cling to tho first snag or rock\n■ pping up on on Important part of crevice in the neighborhood. For early\n■< casting game, and that little old season fishing the surface plug Is the\n■int is the transfer of the rod from one that gets the fish, and In fact It\n■n right to the left hand the instantes good right through the season, al-\n■< plug strikes the water. Next to though about mid-season, when the\nplacing of the plug with accuracy i weather Is hot and especially for fish-\nJ^lthe weed-pockets, comes tho Impor-'tng during the daytime, at that period\nr^Bice of this transfer of the rod and, you will get better results hy using\nstarting of the plug on its retrieve | either an underwater plug or sending\nthe reel the instant It lilts the the surface affair down deeper for \n^Htcr And at that, I believe that it fish. Nearly all of the floaters have\n^■equally Important to start the plug eyelets or planes which send the lures\n^^meward instantly, as It is to place down to different depths and you can\njust the spot you had aimed at. fish almost any kind of water with\n^■A bass Is Interested in the plug from them, except tho real deep pools or\n^■> moment It strikes the water, and holes In early morning and late even-\n^Hcn this interest is awakened while ing Ashing, when the bass are In the\nplug Is In the air right above the shallows, feeding, the surface lure is\n^■ter. The bass often starts on the a rattling good halt, and for right\n^H>vc to make the strike before the fishing no other style plug has a look-\n^■lash of the plug, hut its a fen-to- in.\nj^Hc shot that he does speed tip the\nI^Htant of the splash, and he sure
45c378ebd9d43a0ce15f3f83e83bec94 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.5109588724 39.261561 -121.016059 The Marysville Democrat is informed that a man\nnamed Michael Myers, of Rich Gulch, Plumas coun-\nty, was found dead on the morning of June 27th up-\non his mining claim, with every appearance of hav-\ning been murdered. A person named Thomas El-\nder was arrested on suspicion of having committed\nthe deed. He has since confessed that he did the\nmurder, and assigns as the cause a quarrel which hr\nhad had with the deceased over a iniuiag claim.\nThe house of Dr. Hilton, of Petaluma, was burn-\ned to the ground recently, and it was with difficulty\nthat himself and family escaped with their lives.\nThey lost everything. In view of these facts, the\ncitizens of Petaluma raised by subscription the sum\nof $602, which they have presented to the Doctor for\nthe purpose of enabling him erect a new dwelling.\nIt is well to live among such generous people.\nWin. Clark died on June 23d, near Middletown,\nShasta county, of exposure. The Courier says: "A\nfew years ago, Clark worked for Stockton A An-\ndrews. Last year he went to Fraser river. Since\nhis return he has been residing near Middletown.\nHe was found in a dying condition, refused to drink\nwater when presented to his lips, and died before a\nphysician could be obtained.”\nA Mr. Kelly, a vegetable dealer of San Francisco,\nwhile endeavoring to subdue a refractory mule, on\nJune 25th, was kicked by the animal, the hoof strik-\ning the unfortunate man over the right eye, frac-\nturing the skull and exposing a portion of the brain.\nHe was living at last accounts, and the chances are\nthat he will recover.
29142218eae41f53e91db368312d94ff THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.8095890093862 39.743941 -84.63662 Christ. The Emperor was disturbed by\nthe constant invasion of the Tartars, a\nhardy, nomadic race who came from\nthe hills of Mongolia and plundered\nhis people, who were, indeed, afterward\nto come if the only the fcmperor could\nhave opened the book of fate and known\nand rule the country and fonnd the\ndynasty whioh exists, after a fashion,\nstill. So his Majesty resolved to build\na wall which should forever protect his\nempire from the invader. The wall\nwas built, and so well was it done that\nhere we come, wanderers from the an-\ntipodes, . twenty centuries after, and\nfind it still a substantial, imposing.\nbut, in the light of modern science,\na Useless wall. It is 1,250 miles\nin length, and it is only when yott con-\nsider that distance, and incredible\namount of labor it imposed, that the\nmagnitude of the Work bieaks upon yon.\nWe landed on a smooth, pebbly beach,\nstudded with shells which would have\nrejoiced the eyes of children. We\nfound a small village and saw the vil-\nlagers gathering corn. The children, a\nfew beggars, and a blind person came\nto welcome us. The. end of the wall\nwhich juts into the sea has been beaten\nby the waves into a ragged, shapeless\ncondition. There was an easy ascent,\nhowever, up, stone steps. At the top\nthere was a small temple, evidently giv-\nen to pious use still, for there was a\nkeeper who dickered about letting us in,\nand the walls seemed to be in order,\nclean, and painted. The wall at the site\nof the temple was seventy-fiv- e
10a95f57997e371ec22378591a407e45 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.1575342148656 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Wilbur Trueman, the talented\nyoung temperance orator, has been ap-\npointed Receiving and Shipping clerk at\nthe P. W . A Ky. freight depot in this\ncity, and entered dpon his dotiee yestor*\nPilot Joe Whitten, who has been ill for\nsome time, is improving.\nMr. Joel Bates, an old and well known\nsteamboat mate, is dangerously ill at his\nresidence in Allegheny.\nMr. Henry Tehnerd, bar-keeper at\n'Gus. Rolf 'a old stand, yesterday received\na telegram from his' lather stating that\nhis sister, aged about seventeen years,\nwas dying, at her home in Baltimore.\nCapt. C. H . Booth yesterday left for\nthe East, via the P. W. & Ey.Road.\nAt the McLure last night: J. E . Wil-\nkiuson, Martinsburg; W. M . Pen field,\nSteubenville: H. L . Billinger, Buckhan-\nnon; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mockin, Pitts¬\nburgh; W. J. Higgins, Wellsburg, N. W .\nKincheloe, Ravenswood; H. . Jenkins,\nGrafton; C. B . Langdon, Barnesville; W.\nA. Miltleburg, Pennsboro;\nAt the St. James: W. C . Bergonthal,\nPowhatan, 0; Mrs,Robert Brown, Grapei\nIsland;. H . T . Craig, Wellsburg; Jewett\nPalmer, Marietta. O; W. H . Foye, Zines-\nville; James Jarvis, Cumberland.\nThe Stamm House arrival* include:\nC. C . Howell, Boulder City, Colorado;\nDr. C. 8hriver, Bethany; Wm. Ritter,\nMantfield, 0.; John A. Grove, Belmont,\n0; J. W.Cooper. Brooke county; Geo. W .\nMadden, Zanesville.\nCoil Shipments..The recent rains\nhave put the river in good condition for\ngetting out coal, and quite a number of\ntowboats are passing down with tows of\nblack diamonds. The down river mar¬\nkets are all over-stocked, and in addition\nthere is a light demand and prices are\nvery low, but the coal men, anxious to\ntake advantage of the present rise, are\ngetting out what coal they have ready to\nmove.
3377f297f1595a0c97f1f229c40cac93 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.0616438039067 31.960991 -90.983994 THESE Lozenges have now b.een in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time »hey have\ngained for themselves« popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infaliible remedy for the\ndestruction of those ffeptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the'most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nma) well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and tho greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and oecasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Loccnges would speedi­\nly eure them. They are a certain remedy, *nd\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies,and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safely with which\nthey mav be administered to persons of *|| ages\nand «exes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms;of\nthe impotency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
11816194377cd53d58cf181a3192a6bd THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.0616438039067 46.187885 -123.831256 To tho W. M. wardens and members of\nTemple Lodge No. 7, A. F . and A. M.:\nYour cocamittee appointed to draft reso-\nlutions of respect to tho memory of our\ndeceased brother, M. M . Gilman, beg\nleave to submit tho following:\nWhkbeas, By the decree of the Supreme\nGrand Master of the universe the nil -d- o\nvouring scythe of Time has again severed\nthe bonds of brotherhood in tho ranks\nof Templo Lodge, No. 7, F. and A. M. .\nof Astoria, Or., cutting the brittle thread\nof life and thus ending the earthly exist-\nence of our esteemed and venerable\nbrother, M. 31 . Gilman; Therefore be it\nKesolved, That in tho death of Brother\nGilman Templo Lodge suffers tho loss of\na faithful member nnd true Mason, whoso\nlong life of moro than three score years\nand ten wa3 characterized by strict recti-\ntude of conduct and inflexible fidelity to\nevery trust confided to his keeping;\n That to the bereaved widow\nand relatives of our deceased brother, wo\nextend our heart felt sympathies, remind-\ning them, howover, that tho evergreen\nBprig of ac?cia deposited by the brethren\nin tue grave ot their departed brothor\nsymbolizes the belief of Freo Masons m\ntho resurroction of the body and tho im-\nmortality of tho soul and expresses their\nconfident expectation that in resurrection\nmorn every true brother will be raised\nfrom death to life eternal, through tho\npower and strength of the merit of the\n"Lion of the tribo of Judah."\nResolved, That these resolutions be\nspread on the records of Temple Lodgo.\nand that a copy with seal of tho lodge be\nfurnishod tho widow of our deceased\nbrother; also a copy furnished Tns Asto\nbian, with request to publish tho same.\nKesolved, Ahat in token of our sorrow\nthe lodge room and furniture be draped,\nand the members wear tho usual badge\nof mourning for thirty days.
2397960efdb5b7e29a161d1082e42e7c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.3520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 How the People ol Wheeling\nUi Provide Thrnielvei witk\nCheap Telephones.\nThe Lancaster (Pa.) Drily Era wit-\nnested a few evenings ago what waa an\ninteresting illustration of how sounds\nmay be transmit led to a considerable dis¬\ntance, after the manner of telephoning\nand withont the use of either expensive\napparatus or material. And as such ex¬\nperiments will not only prove interesting\nto those trying them, but may lead to val-\nuable discoveries, we publish a descrip¬\ntion of the instruments and material used,\nand the results obtained, so that others\nmav possibly be induced to engage in like\ninvestigations. The sons of Major Jere¬\nmiah fiohrer have an ordinary cotton\nwrapping yarn atretched from their fath¬\ner's store on North Queen street back to\nhia warehouse on Christian street. This\nthread is held up or supported by other\nthreads tied to different trees in the\nyard, and is probably two hundred\nfeet in At either end is a thin\ncylinder, an old fruit can with its top and\nbottom taken off, and the one end covered\nwith apiece of bladder. In the center of\nthia piece of bladder the string enters and\nis held by a knot. These cylinders are\nin common cigar boxes, having their lids\npartially open. These boxes evidently\nserve as sounding boards, and repeated\nexperiments have demonstrated their\nvalue: With thia simple contrivance\npersons may talk at pleasure from one\nend of the string to the other, and the\nsounds or reports are touch louder than\nwe have ever heard them from a regu¬\nlarly made telephone. And when a mu¬\nsical instrument waa played iq the ware¬\nhouse the air could be distinctly heard by\nthose who were in the store, and all came\nthrough the cotton thread. The thing is\nreally wonderful, and any one not having\nseen or heard it would scarcely credit its\nefficiency.
17bf5fe6fa1569a4ee4282928798c5c2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.0341529738414 39.745947 -75.546589 The Ilm. John M. Rico, of Louisa, Law­\nrence County, Kentucky, bus for the past\ntwo years retired from uctive life as Criminal\nand Circuit Judge of the sixteenth Judicial\nDistrict of Kentucky.\nHo lias for many years served his native\ncounty und state in the legislature at Frank­\nfort and at Washington, and, until his retire­\nment was a noted ligure in political and Ju­\ndicial circles. Tho Judge is well-known\nthroughout the state and possesses the beet\nqualities which go to make a Kentucky\ngentleman honored wherever he is known.\nA f-w days ago a Kentucky Put reporter\ncalled upon Judge Itice, who in the follow­\ning words related the history of the causes\nthat led to bis retirement. “ It is just about\nsix years since 1 bad an attack of rheuma­\ntism ; at first, but soon developing into\nfcleintic rheumatism, which bcjjnu first with\nacute shooting pains in the hips, gradually\nextending downward to my feet.\n“ My condition became so bad that I even­\ntually lost all power of my legs, and then\nthe liver, kidneys und bladder and in fact,my\nwhole system, became deranged.\n“ In 1888, attended by my son John, 1\nwent to Hot Springs, Aik., but was not much\nbenefited by some mouths stay there. My\nliver was actually dead, and a dull persistent\npain in its region kept me on the rack ail\ntho time. In 181H) 1 was reappointed Circuit\nJudge, lint it was impossible for me to give\nattention to my duties. In 1891 I went to\nthe Silurian Springs, Waukcshaw( Wi*. I\nstayed there some time, but without ,—\nprovement.
1fd8558575c4052b047364054b08781d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.5986301052765 40.063962 -80.720915 the herbalist's or florist'*, itn garniture.\nBoth, being light and portable, mayi lie\ndelivered at tho house in an liour or tfaj\nand the body may be at once laid iri ll\nand Rtrewu (except tho fuce and handii,\nwhich nhould l>o left exposed) with itH\nevergreen covering. All thin may be\ndone by the oilmen or older servants or\nmembers of the family, and no stranger\nnot*! lie admitted. There Is now ample\ntime to consider arrangement*, for tbo\nvisit of tlid physician or surgeon charged\nto verify the fact of denth, to teJegraph\nto friends, ami to make final preparations\nfor the in torment. The morrow come,\nand everything prepared inside and out,\nthe necessary agents for the interment\nwill enlor the houng for tho lirst time\nand the 1uh1, and remove the body in a\nHuitablo carriage, either br railway or by\nwater, to its the city,\none of the tnnle representative*'of the\nfautily in every case arCotnnanjihg it.\nThere will ho no procession through tho\nstreet*,.no opportunity for display,.\nnothing to excite tho sympathy or the\ncriticism of the neighborhood (both on\nHiich an occasion equally out of place):\nbut, arrived at tho cemetery, the body will\nwait in tho mortuary chapel attached to\nit, with thoHe who are to be present at its\ninterment. These, having been informed\nof tho death, will go and return as their\ndesire, nilectiiiin, or respect for the dead\nimpel them. The assembv will be in the\nchapel, and at the graveside only, whore\nthe mourners, men and women, (for,\nsince there is to he no public display,\nboth may go,) will find the trclliwied\ncollin on its bier, garnished and beautified\nby loving hands, awaiting them. Not a\nword of our burial nervico will be
041a727534e29d16c01c534e490510fb THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1899.6315068176052 37.305884 -89.518148 "When lions become maneaters these\ninert and treacherous brutes take no\nunnecessary trouble to catch men, and\nwhile human beings arc plentiful none\nof them undertake perilous enterprises\nor proceed on any haphazard expedi-\ntions. They know what to do and where\nto go that prey may be procured with\nthe least amount of risk or exertion.\nSuch a lion is well aware of who tills\nthis cornfield or that mealie patch. He\nhas informed himself of how nvuny men.\naccompany the village herds, where\nany outlying camps are situated, and\nhow they are guarded. There is no\nroute by which travelers proceed or\ntraffic is carried on that such animals\nhave not studied with reference to the\nfacilities for attack they afford and\ntheir own bodily powers. If otherwise\ngood strategic positions present natural\ndifficulties the lion not only considers\nhow these can be overcome, but per-\nhaps practices his part beforehand.\nAt all events, he has been watched\nwhile engaged in exercises can\nonly be explained in this way.\n"So puny a creature as a man is when\nunprovided with effective implements\nfor offense stands little chance against\nsuch a foe an assailant having 40 times\nhis strength, backed by marvelous ac- -\ntivity and an intense passion for car-- i\nrage. Under these circumstances sav-- i\nages can only shut themselves up or as-- :\nsault their enemy in large masses. On\nj the other hand, those precautions taken\nj by a murderous lion might not seem to\nj comport with that bold and often reck- -\nless temper attributed to this species,\nj But such a discrepancy has no real eT\nistence; it only appears when a judg-\nment is made without taking all the\nfacts into consideration. This animal's\nintelligence, developed in mancaters to\nits highest point, together with an or-- j\nganic stealthiness of nature and strata- -\ngems, fully accounls for everything a\nlion does in the way if guarding against\ni
0f31ab4f800f6a1bbd8e136e4ad7d3f5 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1897.3082191463725 37.92448 -95.399981 The ladies of the Presbyterian\nchurch wish to announce that they\nwill give a "Chicken Pie Social" on\nTueEday evening, May 11, at the G.\nA. R. Hall. Further notice will be\ngiven hereafter.\nBe they new or bo they tough, all\nhicycliBts have broken skin enough\nto warrant a purchase of Beggs'\nGerman Salve, and he is wise as\nSoloman who trusts its healing power.\nKept by Evans Bros.\nBlood is thicker than water. Pure\nblood is the secret of health. There\nis no better preparation to improve\nthe blood and prolong life than beggs'\nBLOOD PURIFIER AND BLOOD MAKER.\nEvans Bros. Druggists.\nMrB. J . F. Palmer, Mrs. Agnes\nScott, Mr. and Mrs. H. M . Miller,\nMrs. Anna Apple, Col. Temple, Mr.\nand MrB. L . Hobart, and Miss Helen\nHarding were in Chanute thiB week\nattending the Soldiers Reunion.\n Jennie Wood came down from\nKansas City Tuesday and will remain\nin Iola awhile the guest of her friends.\nMiss Jennie is a charming young lady\nand has a host of admirers here who\nwill be delighted of a chance to renew\nacquaintanceb.\nThis office has for Bale pamphlet\ncopies of the Kansas road laws, pre-\npared by Crane & Co., one of which\nought to be in tbehands of every road\noverseer in the county. They will be\nsold here for 25 cents, or will be sent\nby mail to any address for 30 cents.\nMr. A. P. Holden left Tuesday after-\nnoon for Greenfield, where he will\nprobably Bpend the summer. He has\nbeen working at the smelter here\nsince it began operation, is a fine\nyoung mau and haB many friends who\nwill be glad to welcome him back to\nIola next fall.
12ce52b0336f00c411ccf364149381e8 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.132513629579 40.441694 -79.990086 burg is likely to advocate. But as I under-\nstand it, the advocates of reform m this\nmatter neither ask nor expect anything of\nthe kind, but what they do uskis that\nPreventable Smoke Be Prevented.\nAmongst "preventable" cases might be\nclassed tho whole of the steam boilers\nused for heating and elevator service In our\nbusiness blocks after the fires are Well un-\nder way in tne morning. In addition to\nthese tho manufacturing concerns in the\ncity, who use fuel for no other purpose,\npractically, than the generation of steam,\nsuch as machino shops, sawmills, etc., and\nwhere the work is nearly constant. Many\nplants, too, could be operated with the pro-\nduction of much less smoke where the work\nis intermittent, If tne furnaces were proper-\nly fitted to consume the smoke.\n is a matter of practical demonstration\nthat in such cases as these mechanical\nstokers and improved methods of constitut-\ning boiler furnaces will not only reduce\nthe production of smoke to a minimum, but\nwill pay for themselves in a short time,\nowing to the faying ot fuel effected by their\nuse. Air. Koch's remarks as to the absence of\nsmoke in liirminguam, England, would lead\none to suppose that the above industry bad\nbeen killed by the law s for the prevention'\nofsmoke. Of course, Mr. Koch didn't mean\nto imply this, thongh the uninitiated might\npasily be led to infer so from his remarks.\nAs a matter of fact, Birmingham never was\nan iron manufacturing town; always draw-\ning its supplies of iron from the neighboring\niron uistricts oi sontn stauorasnire ana I\nEast
0c131e1b715181ba09c3fa2919787658 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.9221311159179 44.939157 -123.033121 The surprise of the session was\nwhen D. P. Thompson, brought down\nhis axe or rerorm and cut the wages\nper diem or the three employes or the\nboard. The clerks are to got $0 a day\nand the messenger $1.50 a day. Mr.\nWlngatesaid ho had never paid a\nwhite man as low as $1.50 a day, but\nas he labored hard to elect one of the\nclerks ho did not appreciate Mr.\nThompson's effort to cut their pay\nfrom $10 a day to $0. Ilcretororo tho\nclork has put in tlrao before tho board\nmet and at $10 a day got In about llfty\ndays. This year tho clerks arc to put\nin no more days than the members of\nthe board themselves, who arc limited\nto thirty days. Tlie board costs $90 \nday ror thirty days for the members\nper diem alone and their mileage\ncosts nearly as much more. But the\nmileage is the least unjust part of tho\nexpense, except where tho members\nride on passes and then charge tho\nstate besides. No one doubts that\nmen who have so largo a control over\nvaluations for purposes of taxation\ncan get all tho passes they want. If\nthe work or the stato board were ex-\namined rrom the start It would bo\nfound they lmvo released corporation\nproperty from taxation on a largo\nscale more than enough to pay for\nall their freo rides. Tho board, not\ntho gentlemen comprising it, audits\nits own accounts and is a kind of a\nlittle plutocratic senate, half of tliem\nbeing holdovers, and not really
1c4da2d05bb7ef240aeb5e9a979da072 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1898.091780790208 39.756121 -99.323985 "It is difficult to get some of the sen\nators and representatives to sit for their\nphotographs," says one of the prom-\ninent photographers In Wushlngtou\n"We give them each a dozen pictures for\nnothing, If they come and have a sitting,\nOf course, It is to our interest to have\ntheir negatives on hand, for we sell\nthem In great numbers. Besides, they\noften wunt pictures taken In Washing\nton, even after their term or olllce has\nexpired. Yet, at the time when we wunt\nto complete our pictorial congressional\nrecord, it Is almost Impossible to get\nthem to come and give us a sitting. I\nsometimes cret newspupcr men after\nthem, and thnt always brings them."\nJ. U. Ilawley, of Uawleyville, Conn;\nThnt was the address upon a card which\nwas hnnded to a ludy on cars in\n18GS. She was only 19 years of age, und\nwns in trouble. One little boy with her\nwns nearly two years old. and she hnd\nanother one just two months old In her\narms. She wns a very young mother\nnnd was traveling alone. Her pocket\nhad been picked, her ticket and money\nwere gone, nnd the train was rapidly\nnnnroaching the great city of New\nYork. Naturally her eyes were full o\ntears and her sobs attracted attention\nJ. B. Ilawley asked her some questions,\nnnd elicited the fact that she was on\nher wny from Canada to meet her hus\nband In Kahvay, N. J . She hadn't even\nmoney to pay her way across town to\nthe ferry which would take her to Jer-\nsey City. Mr. Ilawley offered her a live -doll -
b0022f67b345856db4442497622a77f2 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.741095858701 43.798358 -73.087921 beam truth that a righteous king is about to\nascend the throne of David, which has been\nevacuated since the days of Zedekiah, and\nwill remaia vacant till He shall come, whose\nrightit i3 to reign, and God will give it\nhim. Ezekiel xxi: 2327. I pray God to\ntake the following things of Jesus Christ,\nand to show them to brother Munay, viz:\nThat Daniel's 2300 days reach to the judg- -\nmeut day, that the 70 weeks are a part of\nthe vision, that the last sands of the vis-\nion, according to the best calculation that\nhe or any other man can make, are now\nrunning out, that the 1260 days of the\ncivil reign of the papal power ran out more\nthan 40 years ago, that the 1335 days will\nclose the gopel dispensation, when the\n will be separated from the wheat,\nthat six of the seven trumpets of the Apoc-\nalypse bare finished sounding, that the\nseventh trumpet and third woe will come\nquickly, even at the end of the days\nDaniel's vision, when tbe "Kingdoms of\nthis world will become the kingdoms of\nour Lord and of his Cbtist;" when Christ\nwill have the heathen for his inheritance,\nand the uttermost parts of the earth for a\npossession, and shall rule tbem with a rod\nof iron, and dash them in pieces as a potter's\nvessef, when, the' slain of the Lord shall\ncover the earth from one end to the other,\nand there shall be none to bury tbem or to\nmourn for tbem, that the idea of a 1000\nyears millennium previous to the judgment\nis a creature of human tradition that uever
040c3ac8e92039052df4d6666251d5b3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.9438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 tlonal provision in regard to general Bute Jf\nelections appointed then for the second Si\nTuesday of October after 1872; the provls- f°\nion of the Schedule fixed then for 1872 on Jj>\nthe 22nd ol August. By the retrospective °l\nniurotinn nF tha pntifinntfA. hnth tllPflR 01\nwere the Isw from the lint hour of the Bl\nlast named day. When the August elec- P]\ntion waa hold, therefore, the first scction di\nof the election statute had been altered by\nthe operation of the constitution and u.\nschedule, and by the lame operation it\nwas made to resd in effect that for 1873\nthe general elections for State district and n(\ncounty officers &c., should occur on tho h\n23nd of August, and for subsequent years ol\non tho second Tuesday of October. Tho yi\nsecond scctlon of the statute remaining di\nunmodified as to the election of Congress- j , ,\nmen, continued to provide that they should e[\n choeen at the general election for State, c(\ncounty and district officers, referring to p,\ntho first section and coniorming tho time In\nof tho latter election to the loijstr. It 4\nfollowed that under tho precise'Voiding, ej\nas well afl intent,of the statute Congress- ta\nmen had to be elected in August last year, e,\nbecause if the constitution should be rati- jj\nfled no other Bute election could be held tt\nthat year; and the constitution being rat- 0|\nifled no other waa held. If ratification (C\nhad lailed the old election machinery u\nwould have gone on aB theretofore, and e,\nthe regain Slate election and Congress-, m\nlonal election would have been held on\nthe foorth Thursday of October asniual.\nBut the now constitution and schedule\nhaving been ratified, according to tho view 'J\nof the can I have endeavored to state, the «\nelection of Congressmen in August waa 'J\nin strict and simple obedience to the leg-
092eb0f986826c049b6c2f0f2cfaec60 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1896.8674863071747 41.258732 -95.937873 We would like to inquire by what\nright or authority the superintendent\nof the Military Academy at West\nPoint, if the newspaper reports be cor-\nrect, recently paid Cardinal Satolli\npractically military honors, the Car-\ndinal receiving the battalion of cadets\nfrom the superintendent's balcony, and\nthat, too, on a Sabbath, when unneces-\nsary military exercises are always, by\ncommanding officers who respect the\narmy traditions of the best war days,\ndispensed with? That Cardinal Satolli\nwas entertained at dinner by a captain\nat the post, said high mass in the\nparish church, offered the episcopal\nring on his finger to the kisses of sup-\npliants, lunched with a throng of\nbankers across the river, and was ac-\ncorded a reception by local priests, are\nmatters which concerned only the par-\nties immediately interested. But that\nthe battalion of cadets, the most of\nthem Protestants, and many of \nChristian men who are ready to do\ntheir duty to their country, but whose\nreligious scruples should not be need-\nlessly disregarded, should be ordered\nout In a Sunday review before a Car-\ndinal who, however pretentious his\nclaims, has no diplomatic standing with\nthis county, is procedure very remark-\nable to say the least. When did Ameri-\ncan Protestants ever ask for a review\nin honor of Bishop Potter or of a mod-\nerator of the general assembly? And\nwhy should a representative of Roman\nCatholicism be accorded a special mil-\nitary honor in a country where there\nis, or should be, no union of church\nand state? An explanation of this in-- 1\ncident is in order. If the newspapers\nhave reported the matter wrongly the\nsuperintendent or the academy, per-\nsonally a very meritoroius veteran of-\nficers of the late war, would do well to\ndeny
ebbc599171638e9bb17fc14d86e4dbc2 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.3246575025369 40.807539 -91.112923 for said County, his certain Bill of Compkiy.\nagainst the said William Wilson Kin;;,\nGeorge VV. Kelly, representing in substaa«\non tho 1st day of October A. D., 1838, th.\nsaid George VV. Kelly, executed to llic'nii\ncomplainant, a mortgage deed of a eertVr\nhouse and lot of land, situate in the Tos;\nof Burlington, in said county, known see\ndescribed on the plat ol said Town, us p;a;\nted by the Surveyor of the United States,u\nlot numbered fifty-live, [A] conditioned "fer\nthe payment of several promissory notes\ning even date vvith said mortgage deed, TH\nnote for the sum of S269 70 cents, payable\nnine months after said date, with lawful ia\nterest. Also, one note for the sum of$189,\n70 cents, payable in twelve months after the\nsaid date, with like lawful interest. Alia,\none note for $2t-9 70 cents, payable fifitcj\nmonths after said date with like inter,\nest, and that the said George VV. Kelly, did\nnot pay said notes as stipulated in the con­\ndition of the said mortgage deed, and that th*\nsame are now due, and unpaid, and alto re\npresenting that prior to the cxceution of wid\nmortgage deed, a certificate of pre-emption\nwas granted by the commissioners appointed\nunder an act of Congress, approved July Jd,\n1836. entitled an "act for laying off the lowni\nof Fort Madison, &c., and for other purposes"\nand the act amendatory thereto, approved\nMarch 3d, lb37, to the said George VV. Kelly,\nto the said lot, No. 55, [AJ situate a* ai'ote-\nsaid, by which said certificate, the said Kelly\nbecame entitled to purchase from the Govern­\nment of the United States, said lot, uhm\nthe same should be exposed to sale, &c.,ud\nthat for some irregularity in the proceedings\nof said commissioners or some other reason
0b2ea80fdc181aa7b0dae8bdabee5b09 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.6315068176052 40.114955 -111.654923 It was in West Virginia their na-\ntive state that the romance began\nThere while the two brothers were\nstill more lads they began courting-\ntwo young women of their own age\nMiss Woods and Miss Asbury The\ntwo young women wero cousins This\ncourtship lasted for two years nnd\nthen came the call of the grout west\nThe two brothers decided to leave\ntheir native state and go to Kentucky\nShortly after tho war with Mexico\nbroke out and they enlisted\nAfter many exciting experiences In\nwhich the two brothers wero ever\nready to sacrifice for each other the\neve of the battle of Cerro Gordo ar¬\nrived Before entering the battle\neach promised that In case either\nwas Injured tho other would stay by\nhim until he recovered or until death\nrelieved his suffering During the\nbattle Charles was shot Everett saw\nhim fall and helped carry him to the\nrear where the injured man fainted\nnnd it was thought ho was dying It\n in the thickest of the fight and\nbelieving his brother dead Everett\nreturned to the firing line\nCharles gradually recovered and\nafter receiving his discharge went to\nNow Orleans whoct he engaged in\nbusiness At the beginning of the\ncivil war ho enlisted in the confeder-\nate army and at tho close he went to\nthe southern part of Indiana whoro\nho was married After his wife died-\na few years ago ho set out to find\nthe sweetheart of his boyhood days\nHo found that she was still in his na-\ntive state that she had been married-\nbut that her husband had died a few\nyears ago He went to West Vir ¬\nginia and when ho returned ho\nbrought hack a wife who was Miss\nWoods in tho days before the John ¬\nson boys left their native state\nAfter the Mexican war Everett\nJohnson went to California where\nhe made his fortune in the gold\nfields He married and was prosper-\nous
4f4c3c65e474fd8da2f496101d4b762b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0863013381531 41.681744 -72.788147 A Turk had killed the parents of an\nArmenian girl who was well off and\nhanded her over to his son, who, after\nhaving forcibly converted her to\nislam, married her and thus obtained\nthe wealth that was rightly hers.\nWhen asked if she would like to leave,\nthis girl could not make up her mind.\nShe said she was a;bout to become a\nmother and knew that if she returned\nto her own people they would not. take\nher in with the child of a Turk, and\nhence the baby would become a waif.\nSome sort of scheme on a large scale\nshould be put into effect for the bene-\nfit of girls similarly situated, for a.\nTurk, as is well known, will keep a\ngirl only as long as her youthful\nbloom and will then cast her\naside. There are thousands of Arme-\nnian girls and girls of other nation-\nalities similarly situated. Hundreds\nof orphans are being hidden under the\neyes of the Allies.\nEvery day a few Greeks and Arme-\nnians are found. It is true that these\nstolen girls and children are not actu-\nally maltreted as a general rule. In\nfact, the orphanages and other insti-\ntutions inspected show that excellent\ncare is taken of them, but entirely in\nthe same spirit that stock farms are\nconducted to produce fine animals.\nMuch could be done to educate these\ngirls, for the Armenians are particu-\nlarly clever with the needle and at the\nloom. Money is required not only to\nmaintain and educate them, but to\ncarry out a vast scheme of
52e36d8ded45d835306218613ea16279 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1938.878082160071 40.618676 -80.577293 ation of Labor are designed to afford special\nopportunities to review past work and results, to\nconsider or reconsider, if wise, our policies and\npractices, to plan for future, and to renew the\nsprings of devotion to our cause. This year the\nlargest delegate body in the history of our move­\nment met with a background of successful achieve­\nment in the economic and legislative fields and\nwith a gratifying evidence that our organization\nrested on firm foundations and could successfully\nresist effort to disrupt our movement.\nThis review strengthened our confidence in our\ntrade union movement and in the loyalty of Amer­\nica's workers for a democratic labor movement.\nWe have never claimed our movement was infalli­\nble but continue to claim that it has within itself\ncapacity and opportunity to correct mistakes and\nto adjust changing conditions. Changes may not\nbe as rapid as all could wish but sound determina­\ntion of policies affecting millions of persons re­\nquires time for consideration and for convincing\nthe majority within an organization. Those who\nhave no interests to be conserved find less diffi­\nculty in change than do those responsible\nfor the preservation of the gains of past decades.\nBut in the end the labor movement must serve the\nbest interests of the majority so that vested rights\nand interests are not the ultimate determinant of\npolicies. Democratic principles are the only safe\nfoundation upon which to base a labor movement.\nThe report of the Executive Council showed a\nsubstantial increase in the paid-up membership of\norganizations affiliated to the American Federation\nof Labor and gratifying progress in organizing the\nunorganized. Our organizers and activities have\nbeen focused on the office and white collar work­\ners; beet sugar workers; cement workers; alumi­\nnum workers; flour, feed and cereal mill workers;\ntextile workers; lumber workers; agricultural\ncanning and citrus workers; chemical workers,\ndistillery workers. In addition, unions have been\nformed in practically all industries. Not only have\nwe organized workers into unions, but we have\nunited locals in.the same industry in councils and\nhave given to them counsel of experienced organ­\nizers and special research services for use in col­\nlective bargaining and in taking up cases with\ngovernment agencies.
3d6569a26b3cc5609f4c7ebd0b52257e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2479451737697 40.063962 -80.720915 Congress adjourned on Saturday, and at\nordfng to the opinions frequently put fort\ny the money writers, there ought to be a n\n'ival in buaiuess. The worst Is known in n\nani to financial matters in a legislative wa;\nnd nothing more can be done to encouragt\n[actuations. The mat ket of Saturday shows\nirmnes3»bat no very great animation. Go*\nament *ecurittes are firmer in London, be\no very material improvement is Indicate\n2 N Y. The seneral markets howpv\naYe a good tone. We are or the opinion thi\nbetter feeling mast soon assert Itself. Tb\nloney is In the country and the demands fc\n£ employment ought speedily to spring u]\nOn Saturday last the banks were occupie\nlaklngup their quarterly statements, ft I\napposed that after the next lew days mone\nlatters will be generally easier, not onl\nere, but throughout the country. Up to thl\nate the paper offering has not been freel;\nlet, owinr to the determination of tb\nanks to keep safe within the lines of the!\nestrictions.\nSpeaking of bank matters reminds us tha\nre have lately heard of sales of shares in th\nrational Bank at Bridgeport at 125. and c\ntie Peoples' Bank here at 130. Bank share\n first class mortgage securities are quote*\ns hi demand in the East. This demand i\nrobably owing to a certain uneasy feel In\nliat has prevailed in regard to money mat\njts generally. It is well, however, for al\narties to bear in mind that tbe principa\nnd interest of shares, stocks and securitie\nf all sorts, are payable in legal tender notes\nnd that the interest of every citlzeu there\nireliea in standing firm for the govern men\nred it under all circumstances.\nInsurance business In the city Is reported a\njmewhat lively. Most of the companies ar\noing a good business. The National Com\nany has recently enlarged its capital fron\nnehundred thousand to two hundred thou\nind. Tnis change has occuired in conse\nuence of the new law in regard to forelgi\n>mpanles. So far as we hear tbe forelgi\nimpanies have all refused thus far to pu\np the deposit of 525,000 required of them.\nAn Eastern exchange says that.\n"Public opinion se*ms about equally di\nlded as to the chances of an apprnacbini\nisecr fall in the value of railroad securities\nnd would-be speculators are withboldin\nieir orders until circumstances which bea\npon the stock market are more fully de\neloped."
85017291e83ea6f452820f0e1fc317bf THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8702185476118 39.290882 -76.610759 EXTRACTS FROM THE LETTERS OF MRS.\nADAMS.?The following letter from Mrs A\nAMS, was written to her husband in the third\nyear of his second absence in France:\n"M y Dearest F' iend ?The family are all re-\ntired to reat and ih j scenes of the day are over;\na day which I wished tr> have devoted in a par-\nticular mariner to my dearest fyiend; but com-\npany falling in. prevented it, nor could I claim\na .moment until this silent watch of the night.\n"LOO/M (is there a dearer name than friend;\nthink of it Tor rue,) look to the date of this\n1 tter arid tell me what are the thoughts whieh\narise in your mind? Do you not recollect, that\neighteen years have run their circuit since we\npledged our mutual faith to each other, and the\nhyinenial torch was lighted at the alter of Love?\nYet, yet it burns with unabating fervor. Old\nOcean has not quenched it, nor old Time\n it in this bosom. It cheers me i.i\nthe ioneiy hour; ?it comforts ine even in the\ngloom which sometimes possesses my mind.\n"Itis, my friend, from the remembrance of\nthe joys I have lost, that the arrow ol affliction\nis pointed. I recollect the untitled man to\nwhom I gave my heart, and, in the agony of re-\ncollection, when time fand distance present\nthemselves together, wish he had never been\nan? other. Who shall give me back time??\nWho shall compensate to me those years I can-\nnot recall? How dearly have I paid for a ti-\ntled husband. Should I wish you less wise,\nthat I might enjoy more happiness? I cannot\nfind tlia' in my heart. Yet Providence has\nwisely placed the real blessings of life within\nthe reach of moderate abilities; and he who is\nwiser than his neighbor, sees so much more to\npity and lament, that I doubt whether the bal-\nance of har-oiness is in his scale.
a673a5c129b79f2ba1c11d87542a81e1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.6926229191965 58.275556 -134.3925 oped. The Forestor was not rontent\nto see the forests from the deck of\nthe government boat but got ashore\nnt every opportunity and examined\nthoroughly iogring operations, saw\nmills, cannerlc: marble quarrle*. a\nwhaling station, powor plants, min¬\ning operation*, dimhed mountains to\ninspect at close hand water power\nprojects, and went out and cruised\ntimber, lie is moat enthusiastic\nover Alaska's enormous timber and\nwater power resources and the part\n.hat the Forest Scrvlcc has played\nand will play III getting knowledge\nof these resources before interested\ncapital, and In assisting In a busl-\nnesssllke development of Alaska.\nThe Forester states that the quality\nand quantity of the timber of South-\ncoat Alaska was a surprise to him\nand that It is his firm conviction\nthat the pulp and paper Industry Is\nomlng to Alaska very shortly. The\nForester pointed out that the well\nestablished policy of the Forest\nService to develop Alaska's t'hiber\nwealth is bringing results in thnt\n and engineers arc al¬\nready making definite plana to start\npulp and paper plants. The timber\nresource of (he Alaskan National\nForests, the Chief Forester empha¬\nsized. have always been open to use\nand exploitation, but development on\na large scale has had to wait upon\neconomic conditions. The present\nhigh price and scarcity of nowsprlnt\nire offering sound Investments for\ncapital to develop the spruce and\nhemloek forests of Southeast Alaska\n"I have been surprised by the fine\nquality, of the Alaika spruce and It\nis encouraging to learn that same of\nthe best grades of this lumber Is now\nbeing shipped from Alaska to East¬\nern markets. The best of the clear,\nstraight-grained spruce will shortly.\nI believe find its way to Eastern\npiano manufatcurers and for other\nspecial uses calling for a wood of\nsuch high quality. The Alaska\nspruce met the tost of quality in be¬\ning used In the monufaelure of air¬\nplanes during the war." said Colonel
53807541c4d0bf4e07c465217b5ab7bd THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8592895858633 39.290882 -76.610759 Lieut. Brown, 3d Artillery, was very prompt-\nly on the spot with eleven men, and "remained\nduring the night on guard; and yesterday morn-\ning proceeded, in command of Lieut. Graham's\ndetachment of dragoons, and his own command,\nwith Lieut. Westcott of the Infantry, in pursuit.\nWc ask, why has not this plantation been\nprotected? Why the zeal of establishing a post\ntwo miles from it, when the owner has repeat-\nedly and again asked for protection?\nAn unfortunate and truly melaßchoiy occur-\nrence took place at Col. Hanson's plantation at\nhalf past 2 o'clock, Thursday morning. The\nsentinels having discovered, in two places, per-\nsons approaching, retreated to the house, with-\nin which the small force on Hie plantation\nwere, and gave the alarm. Immediately Lieut.\nBrown, with his men, proceeded to reconnoi-\ntre, as well as the four or five friends who had\noffered to remain on the place; and having been\non the watch for upwards of 30 minutes, they\ndiscovered persons moving quickly up; ttie\nSerjeant tired, wounding Lieut. Graham of tiie\n in the arm, and killing Serjeant\nWolcott, of his company. Lieut. Graham, it\nseems, was approaching with great caution,\n(he having, at l'icolata, received an express,\ninforming him that Indians had been at the\nplantation,) and the fact of the alarm having\ntaken place some time previous, brought him\nin collision with the troops in charge, who\nwere anticipating the approach of the enemy.\nAt the moment preceding the fire, they were\nheard to spring their bayonets, which sounded\nmuch like the click of cocking a gun; and it\nwas under these circumstances ;he accident\noccurred. Fortunately, Dr. Barnuin was one\nof the gentlemen who had remained for the\nprotection oi the place, in connection with\nLieut. Brown and 11 men of Lis company, and\nhis services were very promptly and beneti\ncially rendered Lieut. Graham. S rjeant Wol-\ncott was brought into the house immediately,\nbut he was dead. Lieut. G.'s wound, though\nsevere, is by no means of a dangerous charac-\nier, and he will, in a very short time, rejoin\niiia company.
0623fcf25ff3a1527bf673ed3571f374 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.4357923181037 44.939157 -123.033121 Tha Euphrates to Ba Dried Up.\nIn Revelation not merely the name Bab-\nylon la used, long after the literal city\nwas so blotted out thnt for a long time Ita\nslta waa unknown, but the symbolical de-\nscription Includes also the River Euphra-\ntes, and we read (xvl, 12) of the great\nRiver Euphrates that "The water thereof\nwas dried up, that the way of the Kings\nof the East might be prepnred " If we\nare correct In Interpreting these "watera"\nto signify revenuea from all nations, what\nwould be signified by the drying up of\nthe RIverT We nnswer that It would Im-\nply a cessation of the revenuea of Baby-\nlon, a decline In the contributions which\nheretofore have made her wealthy mil-\nlions coming every year from rich and\npoor of all natlona for her support It la\nin full accord with thla Divine prediction\nof what yet to come that we hear cry-In-\nand distress arising from all denom-\ninations, Cathollo and Protestant, to the\naffect that the "waters," the revenues,\nare being dried up. and thla at the time\nwhen the world la larger In population and\nWealth than ever before.\nHistory tella us that the great city of\nBabylon was captured by Cyrus and his\narmy after a considerable siege, which\nwas unsuccessful until hie soldiers digged\na fresh channel tor the river and turned\nIts course aside. Thus waa the River\nEuphratoa dried up, and the army of\nCyrue entered literal Babylon, suddenly.\nIn the night. While theeo things were\ntranspiring, the prlncea of Babylon, cor -\nresponding to the notablea of Christen-\ndom, were holding high carnival, rejoic-\ning In their aecurlty. boasting of the\nstrength of their walls, and the Impreg-\nnability of their gates, and the aureneas\nof their watera
104771a60da946379fc310a61b3f63c5 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.7630136669204 39.261561 -121.016059 The politicians are beginning to cast about\nfor the Presidency. One set are laboriing for\nDaniel S. Dickinson, of New York, who will be\nsupported by Mayor Wood, Mr. Schell, Mr.\nBeardsley, and others. In the extreme South\nJefferson Davie was put forward, till he mailo\nhis conservative speech at Portland, Me., which\nhas given great ofTene? to tho ultras, though it\nhas increased bis strength in tlie in or in.\nThe Richmond Enquirer, through its Wash-\nington correspondence, charges that the war\nupon Judge Douglas is instigated by Messrs.\nCobb, Slidell and Bright. A large number of\nJournals have raised tho name of Douglas,\nwhile many advocate tho claims of the indom-\nitable Governor Wise, of Virginia, and the\ngifted statesman Robert J. Walker. Mr. Breck-\ninridges late Lecompton speeches in Kentucky\nshow that goes the fall of the Administra-\ntions policy on that question. Mr. Crittenden\nhas caused it to be announced that be is not a\ncandidate for President. The New York Jour-\nnal of Commorco revives Mr. Buchanan's\npledge of 1856. not to be in the field for 1860,\nwhile the Richmond South thinks he might be\ncalled upou to acoept the nomination. Mr.\nHunter, of Virginia, seems to he out of the\nquestion entirely. The war of the opposition\nfaotions in New York, puts Mr. Seward greatly\nin the shade. It is certain, however, that both\nFremont and McLean look forward to the next\nstraggle with some interest. Mr. Everett is\nput down as in the field. His speech at Boston\non the 5th of last July, &Dd his travels over the\nSouth, eulogizing Washington's character, are |
14b4f76e6102115bb90aa247ad8d1e65 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.9684931189752 46.187885 -123.831256 operations until it is determined\nwhether the Sharpstein bill is to be-\ncome a Jaw. The situation in the ter-\nritory now is such that many short\nlines of road, branches and feeders\nare required to develop its great re-\nsources. All such short lines are\nmore expensive in proportion than the\nlong lines that command a large pas-\nsenger travel and avoid the expense\nof frequent handling of freight Bates\nthat would be fair for the long roads\nwould be entirely inadequate for the\nsupport of these short roads, and un-\nless a higher charge for freight and\npassengers on these short roads is\nallowed it will be impossible to induce\nanyone to put money into them. There\nare several enterprises that we could\nname that would feel the injurious\neffects of the proposed legislation se-\nverely. One that comes especially to\nnotice is the road above mentioned\nfrom Ilwaco to the bay. Hero is a\ncase where residents and local capi-\ntalists have got together to prosecute\nan enterprise that would develop the\nsection traversed and infuse new life\nand prosperity the country at\neach end of the road, and place near-\nly one hundred thousand dollars\nworth of property in Pacific county.\nFreight from Ilwaco toShoalwaler\nbay is now from six to eight dollars\nper ton. The railroad would expect\nto carry it at from three to four dol-\nlars per ton; faro for passengers be-\ntween the two points is now S1.25 ,\nby the the railroad it would bo re-\nduced to from fifty cents to one dol-\nlar. But if the proposed freight bill\nbecomes a law passenger fares would\nbe at the rate of four cents per mile,\naud freights low in proportion. In\nthis case the most of the travel on\nthis road would be on the first two\nor three miles from Ilwaco, so that\nfrom eight to twelve cents would be\nabout the size of most of their pas-\nsenger fares a ridiculous sum, too\nsmall for consideration. In this case,\nas in many others the attempt to\nplace restrictions upon the long line,\nwhich, perhaps, can stand it well\nenough, would result in killing\nmany local enterprises,
2d29cac2c97add9413594ca126015db4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.7636611705627 40.063962 -80.720915 Ed. Laubhlin complained before 'Squire\nWheeler yesterday that Tom Burns hid\nthreatened him with bodily injure. Burns\ngave a fifty dollar bond for his good be¬\nhavior for the next six months.\nAn official of the club fnrnishes the fol¬\nlowing: Tbe members of the Fourth ward\nGarfield and Arthur club are earnestly re¬\nquested to takotheircapes, caps and torch¬\nes to the club room this evening.\nRev. J . P. Thatches bae been conduct¬\ning a most interesting and successful meet¬\ning at Potomac, In this county, for tbe\nlast ten days. The order has been good\naud the results beneticient. The last ol\nthese meetings was held Sunday uight, the\nMrs. Rosenstbin, who resides wltH her\nbuBband at Alley 7 and Ohapline street,\nwas assaulted by a negro man, Monday\nnight last, bat her screams attracting the\nattention of her husband the man looaed\nbis on her aud fled. Mrs. Rosen-\nslain fainted at the time, and is still iu a\nvery weak and nervous condition.\nMb. A . 0 . Jamison and bride left for the\nSouth yesterday morning via. Baltimore\naud Ohio railroad. They will spend a\nweek or two in New Orleans and then\nproceed to their new home, near Baton\nRouge, Louisiana. A large circle of\nfriends assembled at the depot to say good\nbye to the happy pair. Bon voyage\nMinnie McConnell was complained of\nvesterday before 'Squire Philips by\nThomas Bray, who alleges that Minnie\nassaulted and maltreated the child of the\n?aid Thomas Bray on Monday, wherefore\nhe prayed that she might be apprehended,\nana dealt with in accordance with the law\nin such cases made and provided. Consta¬\nble Martin served a warrant on the lady,\nand her case was set for 9 a. m. to-day.
3b554ed5cf46deb22a3367a20a03c197 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.43698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 led gabled roots, of the.;* cloisters with la girdle around the waist, and a hood.\ntheir tiny dor. ier window» one could I The sisters' garments were similar and\nfancy one's self in Germany without at tho approach of a stranger the\ntho aid of the German speech that 1» hood was modestly drawn over thy\nheard on every side for Ephrata Is the face. More buildings were added by\nhi art of the Pennsylvania German, the labor of the order who made every\nor as It Is miscalled. Pennsylvania article used. The walls are rudely\nDutch, settlement, and It and the plastered with clay mixed with grass,\nneighboring town of Ettltz have a the beams and rafters are fastened\nnuaint foreign air, suggesting German with wooden pegs, the door* swing on\ntowns. The likeness Is heightened by wooden hinges and have latches\nthe German signs over the shops, the but no locks. Personal property was\noccasional pretzel factories, the women declared a sin and all who entered\nIn the close Atting black bonnets and the order had to surrender all they\nskimpy dresses, and the men with possessed for the common stock,\nbroad-brimmed hats and long beards\nof the Dunker brotherhood. The\ncloisters lie in a grassy Held beyond\nthe Cocalico, a pretty- stream crossed\nby an old bridge. They are huge,\ndark, ill-shapen and gloomy on the\noutside, their walls sheathed with\nshingles, turned black by age and ex­\nposure and with tiny windows dotted\nIrregularly over their surface.\nThese houses were built about 1735\nby the disciples of Conrad Belssel. who\nfounded ihe sect known as Seventh\nDay Dunkers, although they differ In
0a6399b0806450cdd1ab93e8404db66b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.943989039415 40.063962 -80.720915 "And then the Morey lotter. Wat use\nwuz it to forge a letter jis8 on the eve of\neieckahun. when everybody had made up\ntheir minds how they wuz agoin to vote\nanyhow? Wat good wuz ther in forgin\na Morey,letter ontil you hed a Morey to\nfather it, and bed the thing put up ao't\ntwood stand? Wat yooee wuz ther in be-\nin guilty of a forgery, when it only killed\nus? Wat good Is a muskit, the kick uv\nwhich is more powerful than the dis¬\ncharge? These two ekeetus was Barnum'a.\n"1 hav nothin to reproach myself with,"\ncontinued the General. "I talked tariff\nto Fennsylvanians, and free trade to Inje-\naniens. I pent every Confedrit wat cum\nto we a way perfectly satisfied that he wuz\nagoin to git jist wat he wanted, the\nMapsychooiita Dimecrat likewise. I ker-\nried out Barnum'H instructions to the let*\nter and wuz all things to all men. I was\nfur and agin internal improvements, fur\nand agin every question in Amerikan\npolitix. I indorsed to various parties\nevery kind uv finanshel polisy which hez\nbeen propounded.and bv the way the\nnumber uv tinanshel polisiea there is\nastoundin.jist ez he told me.\n"It wuzn't my fault that Barnum al¬\nlowed these differint peoplo to come to¬\ngether after they left me, and compare\nnotes. Ho shood hev hed better arrange¬\nments made. He shood hev let em out by\ndifferent doors, and h«d em cross the ferry\nby different boats, and all go to different\nhotels in the city. Theso arrangements\nwuz his to make, not mine. To do the\ntalkin wuz enuffforme.
933202959684e7ed7cfad719d0c92577 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.8863013381533 31.960991 -90.983994 ment on the subject of Slavery that is worthy of The rise and progress of this fanaticism is one tion.\nnotice in yonr letter, permit me to remark on its of the phenomena of the ageffn which we live.—\ntone and style and very extraordinary hearing I do not intend to repeat what I have already\nupon other Institutions of this country. You said, or to trace its career more minutely at pre-\neommence by addressing certain classes of our sent. But the Legislature of Great Eritain will\npeople as belonging to “a nation whose charac- make it historical, and doubtless you must feel\nter is now so low in the estimation of the civil- some curiosity to know how it will figure on the\nized world;' and throughout you maintain this page of t!*e Annalist. I think I can tell you.—\nDid the Americans who were “under Though I have accorded and do accord to you\nyour roof last summer” inform you that such and your party great inffuenoe in bringing about\nlanguage would be gratifying to their fellow-citi- the Parliamentary action of your country, \nzens “having no practical concern w ith slave- must not expect to go down to posterity as the\nholding? Or do the infamous libels #n Ameri- only cause of it. Though yo-u trace the progen-\nca which you read in our Abolition papers induce itors ot Abolition from 1 Sl-S through a long\nyou to believe that all that class of people are, stream with divers branches down to the period\niike the abolitionists themselves, totally destitute of its triumph in your country, it has not escaped\nof patriotism or pride of country? Let me tell contemporaries, and will not escape posterity,\nyou that you are grossly deceived. And although that England, without much effort sustained the\nyonr stock brokers and other speculators, who storms ol its scoffs and threats until the moment\nhave been bitten in American ventures, may arrived when she thought her colonies fully sup-\nhave raised a stunning “cry” against us in Eng- plied with Africans; and declared against the\nland, there is a vast body of people here besides Slave Trade only when she deemed it unneces-\nslave-holders, who justly
6de4b7922061f1370ef2315f5d9138f4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.2315068176054 41.681744 -72.788147 of a four room addition to the Fark\nstreet school, as a result of a vote\n'taken at a special meeting of tho\nvoters held last evening in the audi-\ntorium of the Church street school.\nAttorney Joseph P. O'Connell was\nchosen chairman of the meeting and\nC. V. Mason, clerk. The need of\nadditional room was emphasized by\nKmil H. Funk, chairman of tho dis-\ntrict committee. Following a short\ndiscussion, a motion that the district\ncommittee bo authorized to proceed\nwith the erection of a four room\naddition at a cost not to exceed $i'-0 -\nwas presented by John E. Con-\ndon. An amendment, was offered by\nThomas P. O'Brien that thu district\ncommittee secure bids and report\nback at a special meeting to be held\non May 6th. The amendment vas\nunanimously carried.\nIt was also voted to restrict tho\nbidding to contractors only, an\naction without a precedent in the\nhistory of the city.\nStafford District School Meeting.\nDisagreement as to the proper\ndefinition of the word "indefinitely"\ncaused a wordy battle at the special\nmeeting of the Stafford school dis-\ntrict last evening between Alfred J.\nTallis and Ashley L. Bishop. Tho dis-\npute came following a motion pre-\nsented by Tallis "that the report of\nthe tullding committee be accepted\nand tabled indefinitely." Tallis ex-\nplained that ho felt that there was\nno necessity for either a r.ew school\nor an addition to the present one at\nthis lime and that in the event such\na need made itself evident in the\nfuturo, another meeting could he\ncalled to again consider additional\nfacilities. Ashley Bishop, chairman\nof the district committee, and How-\nard j. Dutton, clerk, believed the\nword Indefinitely meant "Ad In-\nfinitum."
8f4a3646d46697a8381ede1423c35d56 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.6260273655505 41.681744 -72.788147 from politics. Bartlett told a report-\ner that "a man who is too busy to\nbe alderman is too busy to run for\nmayor." This will go down alongside\nCalvin Coolidge's cryptic utterance,\n"I do not choose to run." It might\nmean anything and it might mean\nnothing. Perhaps, when the time\ncome Bartlett will be relieved of\nenough business pressure to allow\nhim freedom to enter the race.\nCouncilman Judd. those close to\nhim say, would like to be mayor. But\nhe has been associated so long with\nwhat has come to be known as the\n"ring" that his chances of defeating\na strong democrat would not be\nworth betting odds on. Other "ring"\ncandidates have taken their beat-\nings like little men in contests with\nPaonessa and it is not likely that\nthe day has arrived when "ring"\nman can get a plurality of votes.\nJudd's chief strength would He in\nthe weakness of the democrats\nwhose organization is not as heal-\nthy as it was two, four or six years\nago. Judd has been one of the prin-\ncipals in the ring arouiwl a rosy\ngame that has been played in the\nthird ward. He resigned as alderman\nbecause of pressure of business, ac-\ncording to his statement. Then the\npressure let up, and he was elected\ncouncilman to fill a vacancy. Now\nconies the resignation of Bartlett\nand it is proposed to elevate Judd to\nan aldermanic chair again. If you\ncan figure it out, you have deduc-\ntive powers exceeding those of the\naverage man. Judd is the Finnegan\nof politics you remember the story,\noff again, on again, gone again, Fin-\nnegan.
5525f4ff7425b97d5883ffbd0ec2fd0f THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1906.223287639523 39.739154 -104.984703 DEMOBIPT9OBt Made in all sires. It is lively and easy riding very durableand lined inside\nwith a special quality of ruhl»er, which never becomes porous and w hu h clon.es up small punctures\nwithout allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customets staling\nthat their lire* have only been pumped up once or twice ina whole sean They weigh no more than\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers «»t thin, specially\nprepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding Hack" sensation commonly felt * hen riding on asphalt\nor soft roads is overcome by the potent Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from t«cmg\nsqueezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all auction. The regular price of these\ntires is c- v> per pair, but for advertising purposes we arc making a special factory price to the ruler\nof onlv ft so per pair. All orders shipper! same day letter is receiver! We ship C.O .D on approval\nYou do not paya cent until you have examined and foundthem strictly as jrprrsentrd\nWe a rash discount of 5 tier cent (thereby making the price •4.AA per pair 1 if you send\nFI'LL t'A*i|l WITH OKOKII and enclose this advertisement. We will also send otie nukel\nplated bras* hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closer* on full paid <>rdem these metal\npuncture closers to tie used incase of intentional knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tires to Ur returned\nat Ol'lt expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination.\nWe arc jierfrctly reliable- ami money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Pr*tmaster\nBanker. Kx press or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a jwir ot\nthese tires, you will 6ml that they will ride easier, run faster, wear lietler. tn*t longer and look\nfiner than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be to well pleased\nthat when you want a bicycle i»u will giveus your order. Wc want you to send us a small (rial\norder at once, hence this remarkable tire offer\ng%g% M OTTO
3d9c22398b6e14dd206335b4299f15f5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.8155737388686 40.063962 -80.720915 Storr's, the witness for identification, ri\nbeing those upon which the indictments ci\nagainst Mayor Hall are based. The wit- r<\nness identified the signature) or ctrtlfl 9,\numca ui auuu, oui mo Mayors signature\nwas wanting in one case. On lookiog fi\nover the signatures, Mayor Hall said he A\ncontested his signature to one of the cer- v\ntificates. The witness after examining li\nthe certificate some time, said it bad all ol\nthe appearance ol being genuine, but on ol\nsxamiuing the Mayor's signature oa a U\nwarrant, said it was different from that el\non the certificate. The Mayor stated he M\niiad doubts abouts his signature to some r<\nsther certificates. Several warrants, the a\nvouchers to which were stolen, were cx- ci\nimined and the Mayors signature identi- d:\ndad. In the indictments against Mayor &\nHall, fifty-fivo vouchers aro referred to, P\nbut only ten are preserved and are used r<\non trial, all relating to Kcyser's claims, w\nthe remainder are lost, but tbe warrants K\nare preserved. w\nAlter recess various warrants, including &i\n in favor of Garvey wero ex- ei\namined and tho signature ol the Mayor V\nidentified in all but one, being admitted J\nbyhimtobogenuine. Stephen J. Lyncs, P\nluruicriy county auuuor, also lesuneu to ie\nto their genuineness. He saw nothing to U\nlead him to suppose the warrants were C\nfraudulent at the time they were Issued, te\nHe described tbo office routine in such &\nmatters, and said all its requirements had\nbeen complied with. Court adjourned. B\nSome of the vouchers now in court II\nwere preserved from spoliation by being e:\nin the hands of the Clerk at the time the re\nothcre were removed. ci\nAndrew Garvev. the rintr olasterer. nn -\npeared in court to day, during tho pru- t<\ngress of Major Hall's trial. It is rumor- a1\ned that be will be used as a witness d\nagainst the Mayor 11\nThe tobacco manufacturers and dealers E\nhave resolved not to favor a candidate for\nCongress who will not pledge himself to si\ncontend for a modification of the present n\noppressive taxation of their interests.
aeaa34de992055d915f5556910ced602 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.4685792033495 31.960991 -90.983994 THE above Institute is now in successful\noperation. Experienced and accomplished\nteachers will be added to the faculty as the wants\nof the school shall demand. A regular course of\ninstruction, thorough, systematic\npursued. The best selection of text books will\nbe adopted, and when once established, will not\nbe changed without urgent reasons.\nA regular merit and demerit roll will be kept,\nexhibiting the progress and standing of each pu­\npil, an abstract of which will be forwarded\nmonthly to her parents or guardian.\nA strict and uncompromising discipline will\nbe euforced, yet tempered with kindness and\naffection, and no pupil will be received whose\nparents are unwilling to yield to this highly ne­\ncessary and salutary regulation.\nWhile the general policy of the school will be\ndecidedly Christian in its character, the young\nladies be left free to enjoy their ownr predi­\nlections, and will be required to attend worship\nat such church as their parents*may desire. No\nyoung lady boarding in the Institute will be al­\nlowed to contract accounts at the stores, or\nleave the premises except by special permission\nor in company with a teacher.\nThe beautiful scenery and location of Port\nGibson, its excellent health arid good society\ncombine to render it in all respects, one of the\nmost desirable situations for a. literary residence\nin the South West. And parents or guardians\nwho trust their daughters to this establishment\nmay feel perfectly assured that no pains will be\nspared, not only to promote their intellectual\nimprovement, but also to form their character\nafter the most approved models of excellence, as\ndeveloped by refined society and Christian mo-
185843cd201330b9bc414b59b5ca95f7 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1902.0808218860984 41.004121 -76.453816 devil is in it, don't you think?\nOn the Saturday night during which\nthe $37,000 package of the Law Vnlley\ni Farmers' bank took wings out of some\nunknown window, McCullough had the\nKansas City run. As lor actual phys-\nical duties, they were few enough.\nafter the fast train had gotten out f\nChicago. Now and then, at big towns,\nhe had a package to receive or deliver.\nThe through safe he could not open\nhad he wished. Ills duty was to guard\nit. Tognardlt wnsreally what the com- -\npany paid him his wages for. A load-- j\ned Winchester and a double barreled\nshotgun, sawed off to half its original\nlength and charged with about a pint\nof buckshot, were port of the tools of\nhis trade. His motto was: No train\nrobbers need apply.\nSunday morning at three o'clock.\nFlying express westward,\nhalf way across the big state of Mis-\nsouri. Brand McCullough dozing in\nhis armchair, lightly, his night's work\npractically done. He is\nof Mollie and the new bird cage, of the\ntime when he may be a proud father,\nof the later time when he maybe the\nsuperintendent of his division, and go\nhome every night in ths week.\nA queer creaking sound behind him\nin the car rouses him sharply, and as\nhe starts upon his feet what seems a\nheavy hand falls weightily on his\nshoulder, staggering him by its onset.\nA hundred swift sensations invade his\nbrain hidden robbers, death grap-\nples, surrender, fight, duty, Mollie\nthey troop across his fancy, but even\nas his thought flashed, he threw up his\narms to sieze his assailant, and\nwhirled about to meet what might\ncome, red, panting, but desperately\ndetermined.
14fd13efae43750c22e9b1d50f2f6d24 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.3109588723999 32.408477 -91.186777 "the valley" (v. 40 marg.) he prepared\nhis sling, with which every Israelite\nwas skilled (see I Sam. 13:19-23). On\ncame the giant, a man about nine feet\ntall (v. 4), "a stalking mountain, over-\nlaid with brass and iron," preceded by\nhis protector (v. 41). Why such a sol-\ndier after his period of triumph should\ndesire this added safety is not quite\nclear. It suggests, however, the sin-\nner's timidity which reveals his essen-\ntial weakness in that he trusts him-\nself, takes no chances, and is even sus-\npicious of his own supporters. What\na contrast! This armored giant and\ntlhs ruddy-faced, unarmed youth, car-\nrying only the staff, wherewith he was\nwont to fight wild beasth, and his\nsling! When God calls a man he uses\nthat weapon with which the man is\nmost familiar, and when the church or\nthe Christian soldier seeks to fight in\nthe armor of another, or by using the\nweapons of the world, it is foredoomed\nto failure (EL. 4:2; Judges 3:31). As\nthough this youthful shepherd were\nseeking some beast of the hills, Goliath\nexelaims, I a dog?" (v. 43), and\noffers to make carrion of David (v.44).\nSuch derision and boasting is the usual\nattitude of the enemies of God. It was\ndesigned to strike fear into David's\nheast on one 'hand, and to bolster the\ncourage of the Philistine on the other.\nII.. Conquering Humility, vv. 46 -61 .\nDavid acknowledged Gollath's sn-\npirior armament, yet armed with the\nname of the God of the army of Israel\nwhich Goliath had insulted, his conf-\ndece overtop that of the Philistine\nand he hurls back his broud boast.\nhrthermore, the vietory was to be an\nimmediate one., "this day" (ech. 4:6;\nJames 4:7?). With calm assuasee he\nInforms Gollath of the outcome of\ntheir coflict, but takes no credit to\nhimself. David had naught but naked\nfaith aud the sense of a just eause to\nstrengthen his arm, He wouald do to\nGo•lath and the Philistines the things\nthat Goilrth had basted he would do\nto David (vv. 44 and 44) "that all the\narth may know that there is a God\nin Israel;" see also v. 47. David's\nsemingly iasu
36626e487ca4e510fca8cb4905ff24b4 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.4808218860985 37.561813 -75.84108 in probate and testamentary matters, the appoint-\nment of administrators and guardians, the settle-\nment of the accounts of executors, administrators\nand guardians, and such jurisdiction fn habeas cor-\npus, the issuing of marriage licenses, and for the sale\nof land by executors, administrators and guardians,\nand such other jurisdiction in any county or conn-tie- s\nas may tw provided by law. But no provisional\norder made by a probate judge, in a cause pending in\nany other couft, shall la operative or reviewed, after\nscch orstar shall have been vacated or dissolved.\nSec. 17. All jq1ges, other than throee provided for\nin this constitution, shall be elected by tbe electors\nof the judicial district for which they may be created,\nbut not for a longer term than six years.\nSec. 18. Tbe general assembly may provide by law,\nfor the appointment of a judge pro tempore, to hold\nsittings of any court, inferior to tbe circuit court,\nwheu the thereof Is absent, or otherwise un-\nable, or disqualified to prnside.\nSEc. 19. Tbe judges of the supreme court, circuit\ncourts, courts of common pleas, and sncb other\ncourts as may be created, shall, at stated times, re-\nceive for their services saeh compensation as may be\nprovided by law, which after the first session uf the\ngeneral assembly beld under this constitution, shall\na not be changed during their term of office; but the\nor compensation of tbe judges of the supreme court\nshall be five thousand dolls rs per annum until the\nto legislature shall otherwise provide. No judge of a\ncourt of recorsl shall receive any fees or perquisites,\nor hold any other office of profit or trust under tbe\nauthority of this state or tbe United States. All\nvotes for such judge for any elective office, except a\njudicial office, under the authority of this state,\ngiven by tbs general aasembly, or tbe people, shall be\nvoid.
07fedde1862bb71893e74c7a467cc37a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1886.0205479134956 41.004121 -76.453816 point was 80, for 7 days ranged from\n80 to 80, lowest point 48. The most\npari of tho month cool, tho latter wait\nwarm and dry, no frost this month in\nthis locality. There was ono thunder\nshower. On tho wholo a pleasant\nmonth. Weather for October, highest\npoint was 80, lowest point 34, tho first\nfrost of the season lu this locality was\non 23rd October, tho second on tho 20th.\nIt was somswhat remarkable for frost\nnot to appear solato in thotoasou. Tho\nfirst part of. tho month warm and\npleasant, tho latter part cold and rough.\nUpon the wholo a pleasant month for\nfanners to do their fall work. Weath-\ner for .November, highest poiut 82,\nlowest point 20. Tho first part of tho\nmonth warm and pleasant, tho latter\npart cold and stormy. On the whole\na pleasant one tho season. Ono\npeculiar aspect of thu fall mouths but\nl'uw frosts and freezing trifling, ouo\nthunder shower on tho 0th of Nov.\nTho snow full for November was 21\ninches. Weather for Deceuiuer, high-n- s t\npoint was 00, lowest point was 18.\nFor 8 days it ranged from 30 to 35\nfrom tho first to tho 21st warm and\npleasant for tho season of tho year, with\nthe exception of 4 davs cold, for tho\nlatter pait of tho month cold. On the\nwholo pleasant and mild for tho month\nol Ueccmber, with a green Christmas\nwhich is gonernlly raro in this fpothm,\nSnow fall fur Deeemlier was 2 Inches.\nJuly was tho warmest month of tho\nyear and February mid --March tho two\ncoldest. Thero wcro 132 clear daye,\nsomo of them partially bo. Cloudy\nJ73 day. Rainy days including nights
08fd3650b13fd73092eec42ec74f59ff THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1900.8178081874682 42.217817 -85.891125 The operators say they have none to\nmake but under certain pressure they\nare expected to make them neverthe-\nless. The politicians have had theii\nsay In negotiations looking toward a\nsettlement and now tho sales agents\nof the big coal companies and the re-\ntail dealers in tne big cities are taking\na hand. They are writing and tele-\ngraphing every day to the coal com-\npanies that unless something is done\nvery soon to bring the strike to an end\nand an effort made to get some hard\ncoal on the market at reasonable fig-\nures, the anthracite trade will be de-\nmoralized for years to come and sorno\nof it will be lost forever.\nOne sales agent writes:\n"Ono of my largest customers tella\nme that consumers are getting to like\nbituminous coal and that they think\nthey will keep on using it."\nHazelton. Pa.. Oct. 23. President\nMitchell in an interview Monday night\npractically admitted that tho anthra-\ncite coal miners' strike would end as\nsoon as all the operators posted a no-\n guaranteeing the payment of a 10\nper cent advance in wages until April\n1st. President Mitchell said:\n"The prospect of an early settlement\nof the coal strike is becoming bright\ner. Some of the operators who have\nnot yet posted notices signifying their\nwillingness to fall in line either with\nthe Heading company or with tho prop-\nosition made by the Lehigh Valley Co.\nin the Hazelton region. If all of them\nnotify their employes by posting no-\ntices or otherwise that an advance of\n10 per cent will be paid each mine em-\nploye and guarantee its continuance\nuntil April 1st. together with the abo-\nlition of the sliding scale, I believe\nthat the terms would be accepted by\nthe mine workers. The reduction in\npowder from $2.75 to $1.50 has con-\nfused the minds of the miners, but\nsome of the operators have so fully\nexplained how contract miners could\nreceive the full advance of 10 per cent\nas well as all other employes that I\nbelieve that this obstacle can be over-\ncome."
252094d623473ccf0a625f5905a5b7a9 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.9658469629123 40.832421 -115.763123 grtiaa, v« b«I« ultr nmel at the\nfate of tbvtt viiteea o«mm of tilm\nto ode 'cut of gold: OS lb* other hand\nt'ltbct he«f« i* fall lefol- trader drt«-\ntottos a *J'*r reirtMj amoaa'ing\n¦on thas 9600.000,000, at the tsJ na¬\ntion of 1/Uea u4 a half oaaees of tf-\n»er to ooe ctac* of (oid ; ud farther,\nof this specie* of Bote; U (DMtittted,\nat this moment, the cuh reserve of the\nBaah of France to the extent of 915©--\nM,HO. And if the uo< *«jbt of\ndtw (iria ii lit 9*i.MO,'XlO »( itu-\nAard dollars which oar aitu have\ntaraid oat ap to the Itth of Kerrember.\nIMA. vera eased into Frtacb 5- franc\npftn, it vosld (a « cantxJ. tor abost\nftr0,(W more is fold ta Frasca aad\nmm the CeMiMat of Enrope genera- t\nAaa it don in oor ova cnrreocy. Sof\nis this all. While tbe* Franca haa a\nailear arealaUoa to the extent of 9410,-\n000,000, Talked, ia the aggregate 918.-\n115,000 hi* bar aith rcepect to jold\ntfiaa the weight of aileer oald\nhare if eojsed iato ataadard dollars of\n412% grain*, th* rat of Earope. that\nto to Bay. Germany. Holland. Bel^icns.\nItaly, intra, Switreriand. Spain, aad\nBuatia. h*s a silfer circulation of at\nleaat 9«OO.OnO.GOO of the like higher val-\nnitto* compared with oar ova. This\nheicg the nodeciable fact vith respect\nto Europe. v» mast add that that por-\nMoa of the British Empire vbicb lie*\nin India has a lilrer circalation at the\nrata of fifteen a-d s half onsces *f sil¬\nver to one of gold, to the extent of\n91.0rX>,000. Even in the British Iaknda,\nalso, there is a silrtr circulation b the\naxtaut of 9fj.OOO.(X>J (larger that the\n. Bioaiit of our standard dollar by 9*1\n. 00JMAt) aabmdiary money, vith a legal\nleader taloaUou fnr all transactions to\ntbeeataat of 9X0. Wa repeat, aa a\npertinent, corchuir* fact, that the\ntrad* and daily bqtinees dealings of\nmankind are largely carried on in all\npart* of th* glob* villi ailrtr money-\nis tba aggregate at leaat 92.220.000,000\n.
2888b8fe22eff7389e45184910f9d978 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.9794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 By virtue of a deed of Truit madehy\nand Mary, hla wife, to the Ubduniineil runt*\ndated the lit day of January, l»7z, and duiy id\ncorded In the Cleik'a office of the fountj i «mtt if\nOhio county, Weal Virginia, in De«d ol iruit ud\nMoitgage Book No. 4 , pages 403 and 40C. 1 nil oo\nFRIDAY, th« Mlh day of December, 1177,\nBeginning at 10 o'clock a. m . of wlJ div,»t the\ntrout door of the Court Huuaeof Ohio county, la\nthe city of Wheeling; aell at public auctU «lltl»\nfollowing deacrtbed .property, that U to uj: AU\nthat certain pteceof land lying an 1 beluga tba\nwateraof Qlen'i Bun, In a«ld county <>f Ohio, tud\nbdnj part of the land belong to the lale Andrew\nwjics, Hi asms\nand me tdn ol indrtw p. Wood., danJTS\n",blcFJ!"TS."00?*f°d 10jwthn, ind&S;\nad toudincribnl u [ollo»i,.G\nelm corner lu (taMcii and Rctllr on ih. w ,,.7?\nline; thence uptbe Itund a t'/'l.'- K2\nanda«H° IS»Pole. to.ilalaon S.S'Sd!\nol laid nad, th.nce a U° KIG 'ia-too ik>|(«\netaie; tbcnc? Iflll K-ioo u.|u l«, 1SJ\nlh.no. BIl'W <7 7S-100 pol«tolTcon,,, ,."S5\nW.Uhauion oputnel tract line sod erltb huiTu\nend aid tract Hue t> o;° W a M-IDo pd. JS!\nMl corntr ol tml now a corner ou tlir In* u S\nQard.nandwltbliilln. (anolh.r wlilnOlKiS\nE 83 4A-I0Opolmto the b^nnlne, E® ,3h\nthe improvement! thureon nod the h«r«ultam uu\nand ippurteoacM* bdonclDg thereto, t,wJ£\nonlr the coal underlying the atld tr»ct\nTMm or 8a I.*.Three hundred dollino/ ihe\nptucha*e money In cuh on the d 17 of ul^d the\nrnldue 0/ tbnrald purchue money on tiw ut j.T\nof January. 187«, with Interest on thedefmW.\nitallmeuta from the d«y of aale until pijrotnt; ttt\npnrchuer to tire good penonal *curtij lor tbt\npayment ol said deferred Installment* in.] ibe title\nto the property lo he reUined unlll the union\nmoceyu fully pild.
0c2694ea8e95c52f0ea0a22de5fccf5f THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9166666350436 39.261561 -121.016059 Judicial District of Maid State.\nThe People of the Stato of California to II. T. MOR-\nDOEF, Greeting:\nYou are hereby summoned to ap|iear ami answer\nto tlie complaint of E.J McWORTHY and It. A .\nHARRISON, tiled against you, A. 1). SKII .l .MAN and\nVOSS, within ten day* from the service of this\nwrit, if *er?ed on you in thin county, within twenty\nday* if served on you in thin District and out of this\ncounty, ansi within forty days if served on you in\nthis State and out of this District, in an action com\nmeucedon the 9th day of November, a . n. ISfto, in\n•aid Court to obtaiu a decree of tbiH Court lor the\nforeclosure of a certain mortgage, bearing dale tie\n2ftli diiy of July 185#, eieented bv the said defend-\nant II. T . Mordoflf, to plaintiffs, and for the sale of\nthe premises therein, and in said complaint particu-\nlarly mentioned and described, and the application ol\nthe moneys arising from such sale to the paynfient or\nthe amount due on a certain promissory note set\nfirth in said complaint, made and delivered to said\nplaintiffs by the defendant, H. T . Mordoff, bearing\n date with said mortgage and thereby intended\nto be secured, to wit: The sum of $100, 'with inter-\nest thereon from the 28tli day of July. A . n . ]S59at\nthe ratenflij percent per mouth till paid ; and il\naiiy deficiency shall remain after applying nil of said\nmoneys, properly so applicable thereto, then that\nplaintiffs may have execution therefor against the\nsaid defendants also that said defendants'and all aud\nevery person claiming through or under them suhse\nT-e tly to the date of Plaintiffs Mortgage and the\ncommencement of this action, may 1st barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien wad equity of re\nderaptiou in und to the said inoitgafced premises, or\nany part thereof, and for such other and further re-\nlief, or Mil, in ths premises as may be iust and\nequitable. And you are hereby notified that if you\nhid to answer said complaint, as herein directed,\nplaintiffs will tske judgment against you therefor bv\ndefault, together with all costs of suit counsel Ires\n,Vc. Ac , aud also demand of the Ourt such other re-\nlief as is prayed for in plaintitfs said complain:.\nin testimony whereof I, John 8. Lambert. Clerk\n(
08285f11fc999b954b81c09db5f83fc7 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.0260273655506 29.949932 -90.070116 the subject of birds. I used tobark at them, and\nmake them fy off, and she ran up trees after them,\nand sometimes she caught them and she always\nave me a bit, or I took it from ierand ate itmy-\nE-it. She could easily catch another, you khow.\nAnd even when we caught nothing, the pursuit\nwas entertaining.\nThere was one young water-wagtail-deserted\nby his parents-which used to hop about on the\nlawn, where she and I led at a pretty life. We\nshould have killed it over and over again. I am\nsure, If my mistress had not driven as away,\nscolding us severely, for she loved that littlea\nwater wagtail; why, I never knew.\nSo, on the whole, we spent a very happy om-\nmcer-the hitten and I-sand settled into downright\nfriendship; quarreling sometimes-all friends\ndo-but still making the best of cue anotthr. I\nremember even now how, when I had teased her\nuntil I was quite tired out-biting her ears and\nher tall, and even taking her Into my mouth and\ncarrying her, she was so would come\nand sleep beside me on the kitchen hearth, with\nher two paws affectionately round my nose. I be-\nlieve she thought me the very best of dogs; and\nI am sure I was very kind to her.\nWe might have lived In harmony for many years\nbutfor something which happened. I suspect it\nws pohson, for w had a flarm closre by, and I over-\nheard our gardeaner saythey were laying It for the\nrats. But one Sunday morning my kitten wouldn't\nplay with me as usual. She told me she couldn't-\nthat she felt vary ll; bat I oreue to believe her,\nand thought it all sham, until she crept away and\nlaid herself down on the lawn, writhing and moano\ning, where she rematined hour after heor, no bet-\nter-rather worse.\nI don't like to think of it. It was such a uonshiny\nh-•day,the birds singing and hopping about, the\nbees so merry io the flower beds. I could not\nmuchcoenjoy arnything, and I could not berar to come\nSrr mty poor little kitten and see her
3f55d94333a4a01df299df187b3fccae THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.4822404055353 41.004121 -76.453816 The fitting celebration of Inde-\npendence Day, is a question on\nwhich patriotic Americans are sep-\narated in two widely divergent par-\nties, one claiming that it ought to\nbe observed as noisily as possible,\nthe other believing that our nation-\nal birthday is too glorious an occa-\nsion to be marred by din and disor-\nder. Of course we know that even\namong those who favor a boisterous\nobservance there ore many who\ncannot tolerate it themselves, and\nescape to the country in order to\navoid the tortures of the "awful\nFourth" just as we know that a\nlarge proportion of the noisemakers\nincluding the small boy, too, is\nheedless, if not ignorant, of all that\nour holiday stands tor, and thinks\nof it only as a time when clamor\nmay reign unrestrained. The fig-\n which indicate the price that\nwe pay for each of cur yearly cele-\nbrations are so apalling that one\nwould suppose a knowledge of them\nwould be the most powerful deter-\nrent to our annual massacre. This,\nunfortunately, is not the case. For\nthe past five years the Journal of\nthe American Medical Association\nhas endeavored to collect statistics\nsetting forth what the celebration\nof the Fourth costs in life and hu-\nman usefulness; and although these\nare admittedly incomplete compil-\ned, as they are, almost entirely\nfrom newspaper reports instead of\nfrom records of hospitals, dispensa-\nries and physicians they form the\ngiavest posible arraignment of the\nrecklessness which is willing to pay\nsuch a price for a "jolly day "\nThey show that during the celebra-\ntion of five natioual birthdays, from
1c8a12fe6d086727dc57fb28553749bd THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.1356164066465 39.261561 -121.016059 Notel View of the United State*.\nTba London Critic, in an article review-\ning the recently published life of the pres-\nent Emperor of Russia, makes the following\nnovel and somewhat extensive predictions\nabout the future of the United States :\nRussia is a menace to Turkey, to Austria,\nto the Germanic States. Persia is her stave;\nshe projects Railroads through both Siberia\nand Persia. All the outlayiug possessions\nof the Chinese, Russia has already seized or\nis about to seize. Ere long her wolfish\nclutch will be on China itself. Japan she\nwould on the instant grasp if she dared ;\nbut her most covetous and pertinacious\nglance is throwu towards British India.\nNow Russia does not need nor care for de-\ncent pretexts when she wishes to steal.\nTurkey she has generally robbed at the end\nof a war. But the whole vast and valuable\nregion of the Araoor she coolly appropriat-\ned when in profound peace with China -a\nregion capable, it has been computed, of\nsupporting a population of millions.\nUulortunately for Russia, if she has no ri-\nvals in the Old World, she has in the New.\nThe United States of America have the\nsame insatiate and unscrupulous longings\nas Russia, are quite as pertinacious, and\nare much more elastic, prompt, energetic\nand enterprising. Now there is no aspira-\ntion dearer to the American heart than cou-\nquest on the north eastern coast of Asia.\nThe Americans were the first to force the\n. Inpauese to make substantial concessions.\nBut an American orator of eminence plain-\nly indicates that these concessions are but\nthe prcludcB to far mightier victories.\nJapan seems doomed to fall into the power\nof the Americans. But it is absurd to sup-\npose that they will be oootented with the\nJapanese Islands when they are so near the\ncontinent. They will make their own, with\nlittle ceromony, those coast tracks which\nthe Russians have wrenched, or are about\nto wrench from the Chinese. The first\ngreat war in which the Americans engage\nwill be with the Russians.
00834090a85d5a60bdee815d782c34f2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.505479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 The London post-offlce Is regarded as\nthe greatest institution of the kind in\ntbe world. In the first year of tho pres¬\nent century the local letters written In\nLondon, w'hich wore received and de¬\nlivered within the corporate limit* by\nthis post-office, numbered 3,200,000.\nLondon is now divided-into ten postal\ndistricts, and in 1R65 they received and\ndelivered 00,000.000 of these local letter*.\nTho average dally delivery of]'1"" |D\nLondon at preseut Is about 560,000. of\nwhioh about hair are local and halt\nfrom abroad. The dally number or\nnewspapers and book packet*delivered\nis about 55,000. The Postmaster asserts\nthat, if London correspondence contin¬\nues to increase as it has in recent years,\nit will soon be necessary to have half-\nhourly collections and -deliveries dur¬\ning certain parts of the day. He also\nalleges that London local letter® *re the\nmost that the post-offlce\nhandles, and that a very considerable\nportion or the total nett revenue or the\ndepartment i« derived front them.\nAt the banquet given at St. James1\nHall to William Lloyd Garrison, a let¬\nter was read Iroin Mr. Charles 1 rancls\nAdams, the tone of which, yte are told,\nwas "rather qualified and reserved.'\nThe course or Mr. Adams Is not such\nas we would expect from the son or\nJohn Quincy Adims. His sympathy\nseems hardfv to be in unison with that\nof the great "North, bb his son ia an ad¬\nvocate of President Johnson's Policy,\nit is not unlikely that tho love of office\nhas transformed pur Minister in Eug-\nlsnd Into one of tbose time-servers\namong whom Mr. Motley retosed to be\nranked. Considering the record or his\nfather and grandfather, we had expect¬\ned better things.
00e6b1702c5f701632dd4f08cc57d8de THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 A DoipfriitP Haiti* mid n Holilifirjr Frui*\nIraind.Ail Kiclting rJiimn by OMcnm.\nSt. Joseph, Mo., May 1..Two mon\nfatally shot and ono seriously injurod is\ntho result of a frustrated attorapt to rob\na Burlington train coining into this\ncity. Tor somo days past a gang of\ntough characters have boon hanging\naround St. Uoorge, a suburb of this city,\nand Inst night information was brought\nto the Burlington officials that the Oma¬\nha oxprois was to bo bold up.\nVVilliaui llnag, a hotel man, furnished\nthe information, and tho oilicers sent u\nposse, who frustrated the design. Lato\nthis ovening whilo Richard Kail, an\nemployed liaug, wiu sitting in tho bar\nof Hang's place, Thomas Farral, ono of\ntho gang, B'.oppod inside tho door, whilo\nhis partner,who givos tho namo of Pan\nHoward, watched on the outside. Far¬\nral stopped up to Ituu and without a\nword shot him through the stomach, in¬\nflicting a fatal wound. As Farral ran\nout tho door ho called to his partner:\n"I have shot tho wroug man," realizing\nthat ho had failed to not tho man who\n given tho information.\nSeveral citizons startod in pursuit of\ntho two mon, who ran out on tho rail¬\nroad tracks toward tho Kansas bridgo. A\nnumber of shots wore fired by both par¬\nties, but without eflect. As tho fugi¬\ntives nearod tho bridge, ox-Shorifl Car¬\nson and Officer Barry, who heard tho\nfiring, jumped into a buggy and gave\ncliaao. catching up with tho two men\njuntas they woro loaving tho Kama*\nond of tho bridgo. Carson covered\nHoward with a rovolvor and\ntorccd him to eurronder. Otli-\ncor Barry attempted to capturo\nFarral, who whipped out two revolvers\nand began firing, shooting tho officer\nthrough tho arm. Then Farral dashed\ninto the woods, followod by Borry and\ntwo other oflicors. Franz and Shea, who\nhad arrived by this timo.tand a battlo\nensued, during which over forty shots\nworo hred. Farral wai finally shot\nthrough tho left breast, the bullot pass¬\ning through hia lungs and ho is in a dy¬\ning condition. Farral is supposed to\nhail from St. Louis, whilo Howard's\nresidenco is so far unknown, as he re¬\nfuses to talk.
182e31852e724c3f1764b6d0832663fc THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.632513629579 39.290882 -76.610759 public money," which said officers shall hold\ntheir offices for the term of four years, unless\nsooner removed therefrom; one of which shall bo\nlocated in the city of N. York, in the state New\nYork; one other of which shall be located at the\ncity of Boston, in the state of Massachusetts;;\none other of which shall be located at the city\nof Charleston, in the state of youth Carolina;\nand the remaining one of which shall be located\nat the city of St. Louis, in the state of Missouri:\nand all of which said officers shall give bonds to\nthe United States, with sureties according to the\nprovisions hereinafter contained, for the faithful\ndischarge of the duties of their respective offices.\nSEC. 6. And be itfurther enacted , That the\nTreasurer of the United States, the treasurer o I\nthe Mint of the United States, the treasurers,and\nthose acting as such, ofthe various Branch Mints,\nail collectors of the customs, all surveyors of the\ncustoms acting also as collectors, all receivers-\ngeneral ofpublic monevs, all receivers of public\nmoneys at the several land all postmas-\nters except as hereinafter particularly provided,\nbe, and they are hereby, required to keep safely,\nwithout loaning or using, all the public money\ncollected by them, or otherwise at any time\nplaced in the possession and custody, tillthe same\nis ordered by the proper department or officer of\nthe Government to be transferred or paid out;\nand when such orders for transfer qr payment\nare received, faithfully and promptly to make\nthe same as directed and to do and perform all\nother duties as fiscal agents of the Government,\nwhich may be imposed Dy this-or any other acts\nof Congress, or by any regulation of the Trea-\nsury Department, made in conformity to law;\nand also to do and perform all acts ana duties re-\nquired by law, or by direction of any of the Exe-\ncutive Departments of the Government, as agents\nfor paying pensions, or for making any other dis-\nbursements which either of the heads of those\ndepartments may be required by law to make,\nand which are of a character to be made by the\ndepositories hereby constituted,
564a822fb4076a1b989dc8b6f4056a61 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1922.3630136669203 41.875555 -87.624421 Three hundred thousand taxpayers\nout of the one million who pay taxes\nin Cook county rush to the county\ntreasurer's office and its 95 substa-\ntions in the last week to avoid the\npenalty of 1 per cent accruing after\nthe first day of May.\nP. J. Carr, the county treasurer,\nstopped long enough while he was\nmarshaling the tremendous crowd\nwhich thronged his office to say:\n"This is certainly a remarkable\nthrong and never in the history, I am\ntold, has there been so many people\nat one time in this office, to pay their\ntaxes. However, I am very happy to\nsav that not a single instance has been\nduring the entire week of anyone\nlosing any valuables in this office. Of\ncourse, I have been aided in this by\nthe kind assistance of State's Attor\nney Crowe, the chief of police and\nSheriff Peters, who have, upon applica\ntion, assigned a special police guard\nand deputy sheriffs so that this work\ncould be done in a very efficient man\nner. I have been hampered in my\nduty somewhat in trying to bring or-\nder, as you see it, by thousands of\ntaxpayers who feel that they \nto bring their complaints, on account\nof the high taxes, to me personally.\nOf course, you gentlemen of the press\nknow that I am unable to give them\nany relief, as, the county treasurer is\nin no way responsible for the increase\nof these high taxes. However, I am\ndoing the best I can in relieving them\nby telling them that they may go to\nthe Board of Review during this year\nand probablv get a fair reduction in\ntheir 1922 taxes, which are payable\nnext year. I certainly am very much\nPleased that the immense throng of\npeople which have gathered here are\nbeine: so efficiently handled. I feel\nthat this is largely due to the 95 sub\nstations which I have located in Chi\ncago and Cook county where thou\nsands of taxpayers have paid their\ntaxes instead of coming down here\nThis has been. I am happy to say,\nagreeably commented upon by hun\ndreds of letters which I have received\nduring the week, as it not alone saves\nthem the carfare but keeps them from\nthe inconvenience of thronging into\nthese crowded offices.\nJacob Lindheimer, the assistant\ncountv treasurer, commented as fol\nlows:
480e3538f157be64b4363da4a8dc84e2 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.2534246258244 44.939157 -123.033121 Tho matter of flax culture, discussed\nat some length last fall, has apparently\nbeen dropped. A committee was ap-\npointed by the Commercial club, but if\nit has taken any action it has made no\nreport of it. Considerable interest was\nawakened at the time but it, like every-\nthing else, once allowed to drop out of\nsight is lost forever unless someone\ndigs it up and starts the discussion all\nover again. The trouble with the move-\nment Inst fall was that too much was\nundertaken at once, or rather too much\nwas suggested as being necessary to the\nsuccessful trying out of the experiment.\nIt wns then proposed --that a complete\nfactory be established, and this ran\ninto such figures that it was seen that\nthe scheme was impracticable. As is\nis remembered the sum said to be \nessary was above $130,000, and this was\ntoo large a contract for locnl capital to\ntackle. It is now suggested by those\ninterested that it would be better to\nget the farmers to growing the flax in\na small way, providing only the ma-\nchinery for getting the product in tho\nshape of rough fiber and shipping it\neast in that form. The idea is that once\nit is shown eastern manufacturers that\nflax of the very best quality can be\ngrown here, and thnt it is being culti-\nvated as a rcgulnr crop, they will find\nit profitablo to locate their factories\nhero. The abundance and cheapness of\npower makes this an ideal place for\nsuch manufacturers and in this way it\nis thought eastern money can be in-\nduced to come here and perfect the in-\ndustry.
0870ae538ecb0de0314e072f9d5ba268 THE LADYSMITH NEWS ChronAm 1905.2863013381532 45.463023 -91.104036 Among the important bills passed by\nthe upper house were the Budnall bill,\nproviding for the organization of cor-\nporations to create and maintain\nparks in cities and to receive gifts for\nthem, with the right to exercise , the\npower of eminent domain; the Frear\nmeasure, providing that all the pro-\nvisions of the statutes relating to the\nexercise of the power of eminent do-\nmain by railroad companies shall ap- '\nply to street and electric railroad cor-\nporations, but that such companies\nshall not have the power to vacate\nparks, streets and boulevards unless\nvacated by franchise of the common,\ncouncil; Senator Wylies measure, au-\nthorizing the governor to appoint a\ncommission of three members to serve\nwithout compensation or expense\nmoney, to detemine the advisability \ntstablishing a state park at Devils\nLake; another by the senator from\nColumbia, authorizing towns to levy\na special tax for the* care of ceme-\nteries, but limiting the amount of\nmoney to be raised for any one year to\nthe sum of $500; the Martin bill, au-\nthorizing the board of control to pa-\nrole prisoners in the penal institutions\nof the state, but forbidding the parblte\nof any prisoner who has served a pre-\nvious sentence, and requiring thatvone-\nhalf of the term for which he was\ncommitted to have been served; the\nStout measure, authorizing free pub-\nlic lectures on educational subjects;\nanother by the same senator, author-\nizing the state superintendent to pre-\nscribe a course of study for the com-\nmercial schools of the state.
16c02290c6204d93f6c8e0335b8b43f1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.8866119902348 58.275556 -134.3925 To the estate of Thomas J. Wilson deceased;\nto L. R . Gillette, administrator of the es¬\ntate of Thomas J. Wilson, deceased, and\nto the heirs of Thomas J. Wilson, de¬\nceased, trreetings,!\nYou are hereby notified that I have ex¬\npended during the years of 1910-1911, One\nHundred Dollars ($100), in labor and im¬\nprovements for each of said years upon or\nfor the benefit of the following named lode\nclaims, to-wit: Red Diamond No. 6 Lode,\nWyoming: No. 2 Lode, Red Diamond No. 4\nLode, Red Diamond No. 3 Lode. Golden Shield\nLode. Silver Shield Lode, Nevada Lode, the\nRed Diamond No. 2 Lode, the Golden Shield\nNo- 2 Lode, the Wyoming1 Lode, the Wyoming\nNo. 3 Lodf* Mid Red Diamond No. 1 Lode, sit¬\nuated on the lower end of Douglas Island in\nthe Harris Mining District, Juneau Record¬\ning Precinct, District of Alaska, the amend¬\ned location certificates for the same are\nfound recorded in Book 19 of Lodes in the k\noffice of the Recorder for said precinct, and\nabove named claims are known as the Red\nDiamond Group and the same constitutes a\ngroup of continuous lode mining claims and\nthe annual assessment work above referred\nto consisted }n driving: a cross-cut tunnel at\nthe of the shaft situated on the lied\nDiamond No. 3 Lode of the above named\ngroup of claims for the year 1910 and in\ndriving a tunnel upon the Wyoming Lode of\nthe said group of claims for the year 1911:\nthat there was expended during each of said\nyears the full sum of Twelve Hundred Dol¬\nlars ($1200) for performing the aforemen¬\ntioned improvements and developments of\nthe Rod Diamond Group of claims, in order\nto hold said claims under the provisions of\nSection 2324 of the Revised Statutes of U. S .\nand the amendments thereto approved Jan.\n22, 1880, concerning annual labor upon the\nmining claims, being the amount required tc\nbold said lode claims for the period cndin^fe\non the 31st day of December, 1910, and the\n31st (lay of December 1911, and if within 90\ndays after the publication of this notice you\nfail or refuse to contribute the proportion\nof such expenditure as co-claimant, which\namounts in the aggregate to £266.07, the in¬\nterest of the above named estate in said\nclaims will become the property of the sub¬\nscriber, who is one of the co-owners with\nsaid estate in said claims who has made re¬\nquired expenditures upon said claims as\nprovided for in said sections.
24ce5474d0516262ec9b45a13c079901 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1869.6890410641806 37.561813 -75.84108 period in her history, and what is true of\nIndiana may probably be said of most of\nthe other Western and - Northwestern\nStates, tt Is true there are evil prophets,\nas there always will be, but the condition\nof general prosperity must be admitted by\nall. Towns aud cities are growing, farms\nare being improved, fine farm houses and\nbarns are being erected, turnpike roads\nare penetrating through every township\nand country neighborhood, and manufac-\ntures are everywhere springing up with\nwonderful, rapidity. The Western Terri-\ntories are being peopled, and are fast\ngrowing to the dimensions of States; our\nmineral wealth and our resources of every\nkind are being developed with unexampled\nsuccess. The recent exhibition of textile\nfabrics in Cincinnati shows what wonderful\nprogress the Northwest Is making in man-\nufactures, and what may be expected in\nthe future under an honest and wise ad-\nministration. It is true all these interests\nwere much depressed by the three years of\nmisrule under the late administration, but\ntheir condition may be referred to with\npride and satisfaction, notwithstanding\nthe Democratic party tells us that the'\ncountry is being ruined, eaten np and de\nvoured by heavy taxes and the national\n Every department of business is\nprosperous, and most are flourishing, and\nalthough it is said that the merchants and\ntraders are not making as much money as\nthey have done at other times, yet the\nprosperity and permanency of business is\nestablished by the fact that there are com\nparatively few failures. It is said by\ndistinguished statistician in whose opinion\nhave confidence:, that there have\nbeen fewer failures in business during the\nlast six years than during any former six\nyears in the history of the country, and if\nthis is true it shows that the country is\ndoing remarkably well in what the Demo\ncratic party calls its 'dying condition.'\nThe taxes can be made lighter by the\nfaithful collection Of the revenues and by\nthe introduction of economy and retrenoh\nment. It is. estimated that as things are\nnow going on in the faithful collection of\nthe revenue, and thorough reform in every\ndepartment of the Government, it will be\nn the power of Congress, at its next ses\nsion, while continuing to pay a large sum\nannually in the reduction of the national\ndebt, to reduce the general rate of taxation\nfor internal revenue at least fifteen per\ncent..
019351d186a3c036e3e8b534c570f1ab THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 *W«ittn wlUiBogg'i run, end wlth««J5JJ\naaidrun oortb 85°, out NX poles, k>uth 61\npule* to a beech on tbe ilde of the run, tod ouTn^1\nlit, 1W3, corner of John Davidson; tbeuce\nHoe, Which waara April let, 1853. that ol uu u,,y.\non, louth 03 a polee to a cbeatnm, eorntr u\nGeorge tiharp; thence with wbet wsa April lit, iia\nSharp's Una 0° 62 palei west to a none lo the !Mk.J\nSharp'* run; thence down tbe run with the\nden north 2* po'ee, north iO^eait itUmmu\nbeginning, containing 11 Htn, 2 roods »ui 2\npoles. Alio, another tract of land in Mtd toUBl,\nbounded and described as follows: Beglnnlt at .k{,\nwm April 1st, 18M. the toouthof tfbtrp'i rua.thm\nIt then fell Into tbe tall race of tbe «w-will, boS\n87J, west '20 poles to a Hone In tbe mitlule ,| ^1."\nrun ouroslte a srcauiore tree: ibence limn,.."\nouth 66", WMt wk polM 10 a leaning vbttw oak l»\nthe fence on the m nch near the top ol th* htlT\ntbouce with Uac* toutt) 24-, ait £>H |x>lu toi«hlu\noak, eouth 40°, Mil 14 pole* to » htikurj; thiJJ\neouth 24°, WMt IB polee to a tump 6 font north of»\nIndIqi white Wtit 9 polM nj\nlaw white oak at head of drain; iwi\ndown <lxala eoutb M° eaat 17 polee to the UIU i!\nBharp'i run; thence down uiJ run north 74-. ru,\ngtVf polee to lorka of the run; thence north 23 mm\nJO polp; thenoe north 86', eaat A polee; thfo.-e nJ^\neaat tO polea to the pUce oi^lunlog, (onjffi\nlug 10 acre*, 1 rood and 21 perchei, the two trioS\nlaud lait uienUoned being the tauio grant, d mint\nveyrd to the aald Hear? Kelu 17 H-njaiutD Ms\nMechen.hr deal dated iprillit,liu,ami\natuou^tnej>ul>llo Und record* if laid couutj, la 4^\nTmu<» or £5i.Ono-tbJird 01 ikepunJuwaeerr\nor auoh greater amount thereof u tin purchuer mr\nelect to par, auh in hand, the rtildun Id ivomi^\nSearly payment*, with int«raet from day ol ul«, Vi\nla deferred payment* to be leeured by dt*l ol trui\nop the property told,\nJ»31 GEO. B . CALDWKLL\nTru*«CEHBRAL NOHOE8.\nJJOTIOJB.\nBoldere of th«7U P«r centtondi of Ohlocootiv\nare hereby notified that numbrn U. 7V, Hy. 117. i;(\nJH, 42, ffi, 1.90,1A9 have been drawn, and the HlH\nif111 be paid at the Bauk of Wheeling March in, iui\nand intereet will oiaae on laid bouda from that cm'
9e91d8acad69500876569bd2a396be16 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.9712328450025 39.261561 -121.016059 In lb* Marysville J&j/rtu, of Saturday, we\n$oticc f aommuBicatien, signed “G. H . B.,”\ncomparing the mountain routes via Placcrvill#\n4nd the Hetfnesa Pat*. Tlnee tbe first of N*»\n▼ember, tbe writer has crossed tbe mountains\nby tbe several routes, and tbus refers to tbe\na* mineral region sod tbe\nIn two years tbe population may attain to a\nquarter that of «rttfbmta at present; brtfwf\nwbieb, whatever it may be, will be drawn from\ntbe Atlantic side. They must be supplied by\nCalifornia, and lucky are tbe people who can\nfurnish them the best highway, and tbe nearest\npoint of trade. And, from presoot indications,\ntbe Trnekoe Meadows are very likely to be-\ncome, in a short tints, a rival to Carson City,\nbeing six miles nearer to tbe ricb mines of Vir-\nginia City than is tbe present depot of trade—\nCarson City. One bas already been open-\ned ou Trucks*, and others are likely soon lo\nfollow. A trading post, or.towu. started ii|\nthese Meadows, would draw its supplies over\ntbe Northern route. By Hennestn Trochee\nrouts, via Dog Valley, it is but 62 miles from\nthe center of Truckee Meadows to Forest Qitj ;\n67 to Dowoieville; 81 to San Juan; 1*1T to Ma-\nrysville; 64 to Eureka; 88 to Nevada, and 02\nto Grass Valley. Add 12 miles to either of tbe\nabove figures, sod we get the distance to Vir-\nginia City from either of the points named; 12\nmiles being the distance from tbs stove bouse\nto Virginia City by the new toll read, a saving\nof 17 miles as traveled at first, via Washoe and\nKagle Valleys. The distance, as traveled, from\nPlacervillo to Virginia City, is 128 miles; aud\nfrom Sacramento it if 173 mile*.
54e2cd1aecbf9878c7a6a235c69d6882 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.7254098044425 41.681744 -72.788147 October II Anniversary\nOf Poli-il - i Hero's Death\nIt New Britain is true to its tra-\nditions, It will not let October 11\npass without suitably recognizing the\ndate as marking the 100th anniver-\nsary of the death of Brigadier Gen-\neral Casimir Pulaski, whose name Is\nfamiliar to every boy and girl who\nhas studied the history of the Rev-\nolutionary war. It is particularly\nappropriate that New Britain, the\nhome of so many residents of Polish\nnativity or descent, should on that\nday manifest its interest ina hero of\nOther generations who crossed the\nsea to help the American colonists\nwin their independence from a gov-\nernment which was obviously not\nqualified to govern.\nPulaski cast his lot with the col-\nonist not as a soldier of fortune but\nas a native of a land which had felt\nthe Iron heel of oppression. Fearless\nin the face of discouraging military\nconditions, joined the struggling\nAmerican army with his heart\nbursting with sympathy and a de-\ntermination to contribute as much as\nany individual could give to its\ncause. Here was tho ultimate ex-\npression of patriotic ardor. As a\nreward for his services he was pro-\nmoted to the office of brigadier gen-\neral of the Continental army and\nchief of dragoons on September 15,\n1777 151 years ago last aSturday\nand in March of the following year\nhe was given the exalted position of\ncommander of an Independent corps\nknown as Pulaski's Legion. On Oc-\ntober , 1779, he participated in the\nsiege of the British .. at Savannah,\nGeorgia, and received wounds which\ncaused his death two days later.\nThousands of miles from his\nhomeland, on soil made sacred by\nthe blood of patriots, Pulaski\nbreathed his last. Like so many\nother of his countrymen, he gave his\nlife in the cause of liberty,
79c09d55e5c1941d30c67ec789c168a6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.6068492833588 39.261561 -121.016059 and order of sale to me directed, and issued from the\nHon District Court of tlie 14th Judicial District, in and\nfor the County of Nevada, and State of California, on a\njudgment rendered in said Court on the 23d day of July\nA. It. 1859, in favor of CARL HELLWIG and against JOHN\nANP MARY BLASAUF, for the sura of sixteen hundred\nand fix dollar*, principal debt, with intereat on the prin-\ncipal at the rate of three per cent per month from the\nrendition of judgment until paid, together with all coat*\no r nuit taxed at $28.25 for tlie sale of the following de-\nscribed property to wit: Situated lying and being in the\ncity and county or Nevada, and State of California, via :\nThat certain lot of land situated on the south hide of\nSpring Street, in said Nevada city, extending back from\nsalu Spring street one hundred and thirty eight feet and\nhaving a frontage on said Spring street of sixty-three feet,\nbounded on the easter y aide by lot of Henry Hyer. on\nthe westerly side by of K. O. Tompkina ; being the\nsame premises formerly occupied by Blasauf aa a Brew-\nery. and purchased by him from Robert Graham, with all\ntherights, members, privileges and appurtenances. Also\nall that certain piece or parcel of ground situated in the\ncity and county aforesaid, described as follows : Situat-\ned on the westerly side of Pine street between Broad and\nSpring streets, bounded on the south by lot occupied by\nBlacksmith shop, of Hughes, and on the north by a por\ntion of the Polka Saloon lot, having a frontage «f twenty-\nthree feet on Pine street, and a depth in a westerly direc-\ntion of one hundred and twenty feet with all its rights,\nmembers, privileges and appurtenances.\nNotice is hereby given that I will expose at public sale\nto the highest bidder for cash on TUESDAY the 16th day of\nAugust A. D . 1869, in front of the Court House door, be-\ntween the hours of 10 oclock a. m ., and 4 oclock r. m. .\nall the above described property, to satisfy and pay said\njudgment.
05ab49ab35af29fcadf524d6c09f86ee THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.9301369545915 42.217817 -85.891125 races without everlasting conflict. The reser-\nvations already set apnrt for the Indians are\nlargo enough, ind should suffice them to raise\nall the meat and grain necessary for their sub-\nsistence, but, meantime, they must have food,\nelse they will steal and right. To convert\nthese Indians into a pastoral race is the first\nstep in the upward progress of civilization ;\nthat of agriculture must bo the next stage,\nthough slower of realization. 13ut in this di-\nrection is the sole hope of rescuing any part of\nthe nomad " Indians from utter annihilation.\nThis end cannot be reached by means of tho\npresent peace agents, because 'persuasion is\nwasted on an Indian. There must not only be\na show of force, but actual force and subjection\nused. Force will bo necessary to compel the\nnomad to cultivate his own ground.\nThere is a wide distinction among the tribes,\nand each trilvo must be dealt with according to\nits nature. Large discretion to supply food\nmust le lodged with the President, or some-\nwhere else. Starvation with each year causes\nwar's such as occurred thia season with the\nShoshones and Southern Cheyennes. Tho army\ncannot foresee or prevent these wars. All it\ncan do, after the Indians break out, plunder,\nsteal and kill harmless fanners, is to pursue\nand capture them in detail, after infinite toil,\nthen conduct them back to their reservations\nand turn them lisiso to return to tho same game,\nad libitum. Congress alone can provide a\nremedy, and, if prevention bo wiser thou cure,\nmoney and discretion must be lodged somo- whe- i e\nin time to prc -ve a-t
6aa0ce94850388fd1b36328dfaf8dc6d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.215068461441 31.960991 -90.983994 The ordinary routine of a French dinner com­\nmenced. A regular series of servants appeared\neach instant at our elbows, inviting us to par­\ntake of a thousand different kinds of wine, under\nstrings of names which I no more understood\nthan I understood their composition, or they did\nmy gauclienes. Resolute to avoid all further\nopportunities for displayiug my predominant\ntrait; I sat in the most obstinate silence, saying\nom to every thing that was offered to me, and\neating with the most devoted application, till my\nfair neighbor, tired with my taciturnity and her\nown, at length herself began a conversation by\ninquiring how I was pleased with the opera. I\nwas just raising a large morsel of potatoe to my\nmonth, and in order to reply as quickly as pos­\nsible, Î hastily thrust it in, intending to swallow\nit hastily. Heavens! It was as hot as burning\nlava. What could I do? The ladys eyes were\nfixed upon me, waiting a reply to her question.\nBut my mouth was in flame. I rolled the burn­\ning morsel hither and thither, rocking my head\nfrom side to side; while my eyes, which" invol­\nuntarily I 'had fixed on her, were strained from\ntheir sockets. She regarded my grimaces, of\nthe cause of which she was ignorant, with an ex­\npression ofamusement and surprise, at which I\ncan laugh now when I think of it.\n“Monsieur is ill!” at length she gently and in\nanxious tone inquired; I could no more.—\nMy mouth was flaying with intolerable pain; so\nquietly abandoning the point, I opened it to the\nutmost, and out dropped the infernal brand upon\nmy plate. Not the si ightest tenden cy to risi bi 1 i -\nty ruffled the imperturable politeness of the lady;\nShe soothingly condoled with me on my misfor­\ntune, then gradually led the conversation to a\nvariety of topics, still exerting the magic influ­\nence that true politeness always exercises, and\nI began to forget even my own blunders. Grad­\nually my cheeks burned less painfully, and I\ncould join in the conversation without the fear\nthat every word I uttered shared the fate of the\naction . attempted; I even ventured to hope, nay\nto congratulate myself, that the catalogue of\ncalamities was completed for the day-:\n“Let no man call himself happy before death,”\nsaid Solon; and he said wisely. The Ides of\nMarch were not yet over. Before us stood a\ndish of cauliflower, nicely done in butter. This\nI naturally enough took for a custard pudding,\nwhich it sufficiently resembled. Unfortunately\nmy vocabulary was not extensive enough to em­\nbrace all the technicalities of the table, and when\nmy fair neighbor inquired if I was fond of chor-\nßeur, I verily took it to be the French for cus­\ntard pudding, and so high was my panegyric of\nit that my .plate was bountifully laden with it. —\nAlas, one single mouthful was enough to dispel\nmy illusion.
4d91b66aeeb01949890ab0a27b8d19b3 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.4808218860985 41.020015 -92.411296 Your resolutions anggest the pro­\npriety of employing counsel of equal\nability of those employed by the f.R.\ncompanies to write opinions in sup­\nport of tbe power of legialative con­\ntrol over railways, for the purpose of\ngiving direction to public opinion.\nThere is no money at the disposal of\nhe Executive Council which could be\napplied to this purpose, ae the law\nonly provides a fond to be used nnder\ncertain restrictions in employing\ncounsel to aid the District Attorneys\nin the prosecution of eaaea already lie-\ngun. And indeed it aeems to me this\nwill hardly be necessary, as I cannot\nconceive that the written opinions of\nthe paid attorneys of railroads will\nhave the effect to lead estray either the\npeople or the court* npon the ques­\ntion of the right and power of the leg­\nislature to retain control over corpo­\nrations of the public character of rail­\nway companies. This opinion Is\nstrengthened with me in view ot the\nthat our entire delegation In Con-\n«s have given this subject of legls-\nlve oontrol special attention, and\nhave delivered their opiaiona and\nvotes, nnder their oatha aa public offi­\ncers, which opinions have been pub­\nlished and distributed throughout the\nState by the newspapera in pam­\nphlet form. In the Iowa delegation\ntwo gentlemen, especially, 8enator\nWright and the Hon. Geo. W . Me-\nCrary, have given thia question mnoh\nstudy and thought, and their speeches\nand a&dreeses in Congress ana iu the\npolitical canvass last fall were pub'\nlished quite generally by the newspa\npers; and I do not hesitate to say that\nin ability as lawyers, and logical force\nand discrimination,they are uot second\nto tbe paid attorneys of tbe railroad\ncompanies, whilst their opinions pos\nsess the added strength of not having\nbeen obtained by a fee.\nIt in Kiatitying to me to be able to\nsay that, should it become necessary\nto Invoke the aid of tbo courts, in the\nenforcement of this law, we have an\nAttorney General whose legal ability\nis such that each month of my official\nassociation with him serves to increase\nmy respect and esteem for him. To\nthe Attorney General and District At\ntorneys this law confides largely the\nduty of seeing that its provisions are\nfaithfully executed, and should it be\nresisted or evaded I know that our\npresent Attorney General wi!l per'\nform his duty in respect to it with an\nalacrity, ability and persistency that\nwill insure justice to the people. With
5ff10b64236747b2e40240dc165653ac THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.629781389142 39.290882 -76.610759 No subject connected with the Presidential\ncontest is so important to the people of Maryland,\nas that of the disposition of the public lands, held\nby the Government of the United States.?\n'J'lie undersigned, influenced by this beliet, and\ndesirous of placing before you fr your consider-\nation, all the facts and circumstances connected\nwith this all important matter, have determined\nto make the following statement and appeal to\nyour judgments. The facts are all susceptible\nof proof, and ifcontradicted, can and will be sus-\ntained. The reasonings and inferences are sub-\nmitted, in the belief that they are lair and just,\nand such as any kdispassionate mind will approve.\nThe political party which sustains Mr. V . liu-\nren, has ever been, and now* is, opposed to the\ndistribution of the proceeds uf the public lands\namong the States, in proportion to their popula-\ntion. The famous land bill, which was sustain-\ned by Mr. Clay in 1832, and which passed both\nHouses of Congress, just at the close of the ses-\nsion of that vear, was placed by Gen. Jackson in\nhis pocket, and was in that way defeated. The\noperation of this law would have been to pay to\nMaryland, from 1832, from which period it was\ndesigned to take etl'eet, to 1838, embracing the\nsum of one million seven hundred and thirty-two\nthousand dollars, making nearly three hundred\nthousand dollars per year. By the refusal ol\nGcu. Jacltson to sanction measure, approved\nof by a majority of b-.th Houses of Congress, Ma-\nryland has lost this large amount, which would\nhave been lier proportion of the proceeds ol the\nlands, if this important law ha'J been assented\nto by him. During the last session of Congress,\nthe determined anu violent opposition ol the \\ an\nBuren members of the .Senate ol the U. States, to\nthe distribution of the public lauds, conclusively\nproved that the re-election of Mr. Y . Buren will,\nin addition to its other mischievous consequen-\nces, destroy all hope that Maryland willobtain\nany portion ol these lands or of their proceeds.\nOil the other hand, Gen. Harrison, and the\nparty which sustains him, lavors the proposed\ndistribution of the proceeds ol the public lands.\nIn Ids letter to Sherrod Williams, Gen. Harrison\nwrites as follows: "1 am perfectly reconciled\nto the distribution of tiie public lands as provi-\nded for by the bill introduced by Mr. Clay."\nThe plan of Mr. Clay's land bill was to pay-\nto Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Alabama, Missouri,\nMississippi and Louisiana, iu addition to what\nis reserved to each State by the terms of tile\ncompact, inade.vvith the United States, when the\nsaid States wqie respectfully admitted into the\nUnion, twelve and a half per centum 011 the\nnett proceeds of the sales ol the public lands,\nwhich,subsequent to the 31st ot December, 1832,\nmight be sold within the limits of the above\nnamed States.
097914fb8c2273c69bb7f5ed4668a424 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.360273940893 35.996653 -78.901805 He Got Away. Tuesday morning last\nthe mayor of this town, who is ourself,\nreceived a telegram from Prescott'to the\neffect that a young man from the east, who\nis making a tour of the west on a bicycle,\ncarrying an American flag with the staff\nthrust down the back of his neck and\nseveral bottles of soothing sirup and other\ndrinks in his pockets, would pass through\nthis town at high noon and wanted protec-\ntion. We at once started out to hunt ;up\nBill McGee, Tom Sloane, Jim Watkins\nand other eminent citizens who had never\nseen a human critter sitting on top of a\nhigh wheel and are agin the rush of civili-\nzation. We got the crowd together and\nlabored with 'em, but the best we could do\nwas to get a promise not to fire over three\nshots apiece. We telegraphed to have the\nyoung man take another road, but he had\nalready started. At 11 o'clock the side-\nwalks along Apaclie avenue were lined\nwith a quiet and expectant and\neverything above two feet high had a gun.\nWe had done the best we could, and the\nthing on the wheel must depend on Provi-\ndence. At 10 minutes to 12 it appeared a\nmile away on the hill. It didn't wear a\nbuffalo overcoat and a coonskin cap and\nwas therefore agin us and must die. When\nit struck the eastern fringe of the crowd,\nthe boys began to shoot. The enthusiasm\nwas infectious and spread, rapidly. The\nthing on the wheel had sand and was level\nheaded. It realized the situation and put\non the leg power, and while everybody was\nshooting and yelling and the smoke was\nhanging low it turned the hill, crossed the\ncreek and was safe. At the lowest esti-\nmate over 300 shots were fired, but all ap-\npeared to go wild. While on this subject\nwo wish to offer a word of advice to cer-\ntain people. The cayuse and the mule\nreached this locality with the first settlers.\nThey aro familiar objects. They live and
17f9d8d041fffd9fac93bf9531f00d15 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1896.3866119902348 39.756121 -99.323985 hear It, there Is no reason to suppose\nthat insects or animals have no lan-\nguage in which to communicate their\nideas to each other. It has beeu demon-\nstrated past question that the world 1b\nas full of sounds that we cannot hear\nas of sights that we cannot see. That we\nwill some day have what we might,\nfor lack of a better term, call a micro-\nscope for the ear, is as certain as that\nwe now have one for the eye, and we\nwill yet be able to distinguish sounds\nthat are now as imperceptible as are\nthe bacilli in ordinary drinking water.\nThat insects are able to communicate\nwith each other is evident from their\nactions. It is related that a naturalist,\nupon meeting an advancing column of\nants, evidently moving from one por-\ntion of the country to another, caught\none of the leaders and killed it, placing\nIt exactly in the middle of the path, at\nsome distance ahead of the column. The\nleaders ran back to their comrades,\nand putting heads close together,\nappeared to engage in animated conver-\nsation; then it was apparent that a\ncertain course was agreed upon. The\nants took up their line of march, divid-\ning the column in the middle, each por-\ntion going around the place where their\ndead relative lay, and although the way\nwas Inconvenient and rough, they came\nno nearer than sis feet to the dead\nbody. After passing it they joined\nagain and went on without hesitation.\nEvery housewife knows that If a mouse\nIs caught in a trap and escapes, it will\nbe extremely difficult to catch more\nmice in that same trap for some days\nto come. If the mouse is made a prison-\ner, it evidently leaves marks or warn-\nings of some sort for Its fellows. After\na number of mice have been caught In\na trap, those remaining will give it a\nwide berth. Instances of this kind\nmight be multiplied indefinitely to\nprove that all classes of living creatures\nare able to make themselves understood\nby others of their kind.
2023cd556a4b240d5f89fcdc7b64685d THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1866.4726027080162 36.294493 -82.473409 ever, except that watre due from h'tn\nto any operative, clerk of house ser-\nvant to an amount not exceeding fifty\ndollars, for labor performed within\nsix month next preceodtne tho adin\ncation of bankrnptcy, ahull bo enti- -\ntied to priority, and ahall bo first\nnaid in fall, i In the order for n div\nidond the following claim are to be\nentitled to priority or ueterence am!\nto be first iNtid in full in the foiluwing\norder: I- - ( Fees, cost. expenMe of\nsuit, and the custody prorty\n2. All debudae to the United State.\nand all taxe und uasessmcnta under\nthe, law thereof. , 8. All debts due\ntotiieStatoin which the proceedings\nin bankruptcy are pending and all\ntaxe, and aswsamenfa' mude under\nthe law Of such' State. 4V Wages\ndue to any operative clerk or house\nservant, to an amount not exceeding\n$50, for labor performed within six\n next proceeding the first pub\nlication of the notice of proceed' rigs In\nbankruptcy" 8.' Alldebta due to hhv\npersons who, by the law of tho1 Uni-\nted Sute. are or ny be entitled to a prior-ort- y\nprefereape In like nnnner a If thi art\nbad not been passed. Alway provided that\nnothing contained In thi act (ball interfere\nwith assessment and collection of taxe by the\nUnited State or any Stale. Section 29 and\nthe five following lection relate to the\nbankruptcy discharge aod iU effect. If it\nshall anuear to court that the bankrupt ba\nIn all thing cenTurmrd" lo hi duty under\nthi act ; and that be i entitled nnuer the\nprovision thereof to reoeive a discbarge,\nthe Court ahall grant biro a dicbarge from\n11 his duties excpt a hereinafter provided,\nand shall give bim certificate thereof un-\nder the aval of the Court. Seetioa S 'de-\nclares preference
24f11f4dc2eda5ba9a83324467900538 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8401639028032 41.681744 -72.788147 smaller crowds of the same sort,\ngolf tournaments do so to a less ex-\ntent, but baseball park are filled\nwith men and women who under-\nstand the game and go to see it\nplayed for Its own sake. Football is\nthe only game that attracts people\nby the tens of thousands who would\nnot go ,it the crowd were absent.\nThere is an adventure in going to\nthe Bowl. If you are not of the fa\nvored Yale alumni the excitement\nbegins with the search for tickets\nfor a big game. That may mean the\nArmy, Princeton or Harvard games.\nDartmouth tickets also may soon be\nscarce. You have to put your natural\npride in your pocket each fall and\ngo out begging for tickets.\nIf that method proves a flop you\nhave one other course open which\nadds a to the adventure. Go\ndown to the gates and try to pick\nup a ticket from someone who has\nan extra one for sale at face value.\nSay that you are provided with\nthe necessary tickets the day before\nthe game, your chief concern is the\nweather. Will it rain? Reassured by\nthe morning sun you hurry your\ngetaway from your duties. An early\nstart Is imperative. You learned that\nfrom experience. Once you missed\nthe flrst quarter of a game because\nof the delay caused by a blowout.\nAnother time, when you had allow-\ned an hour and a half for the trip\nto New Haven, a freight train on\nthe crossing at Plalnville delayed\nyou so long that you had to turn\nback. Delays are the order of the\nday so the wise ones start early and\ncarry their lunch.
04e28e3ff4f9517a61f94afb68cd5b6f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.6543715530763 40.063962 -80.720915 This morning at the usual morning\nneetingthe preachers nearly monopolized\nbe talking.\nMiss Thoburn lefton the morning train,\nrhis devoted lady has done a vast work\nor missions while here. She has, as\nveil made many warm friends, who for\nler sake, if from no higher motive will do\nlometbing for the cause to which she has\nlevoted her life.\nAt 10 o'clock Rev. J. M . Carr preached\nn his usual forcible style.\nThe children's meeting was, for some\neason dispensed with.\nA shower during the afternoon inter-\nered with all meetings, but after it quit\naining Rev. Sullivan preached.\nAt night Rev. Burt preached the closing\nermon. This gentleman is a fine orator\nAfter this the time until midnight was\npent in singing hymns and social inter-\nouree. It was a pleasant and long to be\nemembered evening.\nThe bell at the main stand fell to-day,\nand the congregation were called together\na la militaire by the cornet\n Taylor, of the Wheeling Female\nCollege, and Mine Kate Elton, ot your city,\nare spending to-night on the camp grouud\nLast night a bed iu the tent of Mr. Wat-\nkins was discovered to be on fire. It was\nquietly extinguished, thus saving an alarm\naud, it may be, a panic.\nMany families have already left the\ngrounds. To-morrow they will be deserted.\nYesterday the candidates besieged Uie\ncampground. Turn where you would you\n«aw tbem, smiling blandly upon ''ye in¬\ntelligent voter."\nI cannot close this report without ref\norence to the excellent musio. This was\nlargely due to the cornet of Jno. Wallace\nand the vocal leadership of Mr. Bulger\nThe organ was a good one, but as there\nwas no one particular organist it would\nscarcely be fair to name any.\nThe annual business meeting of the\nAssociation was held in the tabernacle to¬\nday at 1:30 p M. Presiding Elder Gray\npresided, and Eli Moore acted as Secre¬\ntary.
139c77941c5322e2564eb7da27b98e53 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.7547944888381 39.745947 -75.546589 Every Mau Should Use Some Influence.\nEx Attorney-General John Biggs was\nalso enthusiastically received aud an­\nnounced his pleasure at again facing the\ntrue and tried Democrats of New Castle,\nthe banner hundred of Delaware Democ­\nracy. He urged every man to join the\nassociation about to be formed and exert\nevery influence npon his neighbor lest he\nshould make a mistake next November.\nNow,” said Mr. Biggs, weve been\nthrough a siege and period of suffering\nand the Republican party is using this\nthroughout our country to overthrow\nDemocratic control, while the R-puhilcan\nparty has alone been responsible for\nbringing shout this ooudltdon of things.\nWhy what better condition of things,\nwhat better atmosphere wonld you want\nto live in than that which prevailed from\nMarch, 1885, to March, 1889, the four\nbright years of Cleveland and Democratic\nrule before McKinleyism was heard of?\n"Now there can never be such a\n as free trade ; there must always be\nenough revenue to pay the officers and to\nrun the machinery of this government.\nThere never was a greater piece of mis\ninformation than that the foreigner\npays the tax—for thats what tariff is—\nbut the consumer alwayspays it Duder\nthe McKinley act there was snob a con\ndilion of supply and demand that could\nonly bs lighted by our people going\nthrough the ordeal we have gone through\nand we are now on a solid Democratic\nbasis. Duly a little more than a mouth\nago tho McKinley bill was repealed and\never since that the wheels of machinery\nall over this country have been starting\nup, the groups of id!e men are decreas\ning, new homes are now springing up\nand, mark my word, if Democracy wins\nat the next election, we will enjoy the\nmost prosperous times you and I over\nknew. ”
049bc8a02dd4c4fe431549cef6306184 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1875.382191749112 39.743941 -84.63662 Why was this just and tquitable\nmode of deriving a revenue abandon\ned? The people ask and it is for\nthe advocates of the continuance o!\nRepublican rule to ' respond. The\nanswer is palpable and plain, which\nwe proceed to lay before our readers.\nIn the first place, there is no policy\nmore just and reasonable than that\nyearly incomes of $1500,00 and up\nwards, over and above expenses,\nshould pay five per cent revenue, to\nassist the government in paying the\ninterest on the public debt. A law\nof this kind was once in force, but a\nRepublican Congress repealed it, not\nat the instance of laboring men, but\nby the urgent interference of the\nbond holders, banke.s and other per-\nsons dealing in money. These men\nwere directly interested in the repeal,\nand placing the burden upon \nThey held their bonds, free of taxa-\ntion, but an income tax touched\ntheir receipts and was therefore ob\njectionable to them. Thus A. with\n$50,000 in bonds was placed in the\nannual receipt of about $4,000 , which\nby the repeal of an income tax, was\nexempt from paying the government\nsay, $2,000 . This raitio, run among\nthe bond holders, bankers, brokers\nand other moneyed men, would yield\nmillions uion millions of revenue,\nand thereby greatly relieve labor\nfrom the principal burden of taxa-\ntion, as the case now stands.\nHere is the secret why the income\ntaxes were repealed. These men\nclamored for' its repeal to subserve\ntheir own interest, which they ac\ncomplished by buying members of\nCongress. They besieged the repre\nsentatives of the people, and by their\nincomes converted Congress into the
10a3b6f26920206646526a23bf5e9235 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1910.9136985984271 37.451159 -86.90916 Baltimore Nov 2GThe move ¬\nment started by the Sun to bring to\nBaltimore the representative Demo ¬\ncrats of tho country in and out of\nCongress in a gathering that will\npresent an opportunity to rejoice\nover the recent Democratic vIctory\nand to Interchange views as to the\nfuture was placed on a solid founda\ntron to =day Wli fliecotnmlttc er\ncharge headed by Gov Crothers af ¬\nter a long conference with Norman\nE Mack chairman of the Democrat-\nIc National Committee and Chamr\nClark of Missouri who will be the\nSpeaker of the next House of Rep\nresentatlves adopted a form of Invl\ntatlon which will be sent to the lead\ning Democrats in all tho States\nActing upon the advice of Mr\nMack and Mr Clark It was deter \nmined to make tho occasion a na ¬\ntional celebration of Democratic\nachievements with a distinctly Jack ¬\nson day flavor The plans Indorsed\nby Mr Mack and Mr Clark contem ¬\nplate a big mass meeting In the af¬\nternoon at which speeches will be\nmade by leading Democrats of the\ncountry to be followed by a banquet\nwhich it Is believed by the Mary ¬\nland Democrats who have taken the\nlead in tho movement will set a\nmark that will stand for a long time\nHere is the invitation\nDear Sir The Democrats of\nMaryland propose holding a meeting\nin the city of Baltimore where An ¬\ndrew Jackson was first nominated\nfor the Presidency on January 17\n1911 at 1 oclock p m to celebrate\nthe late Democratic
a86069b40801bb4da007e3d50636e8c9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5860655421473 39.745947 -75.546589 (2) In addition thereto, an extra dlvl- bonds, or aeetired note«, or create addl-\ndend of one per cent. (1 per cent) on the tlonal funded lmlebtedneaa, or authorise to\npar value thereof shall be payable on the De Issued nu Issue or laauea of preferred\nPrior Stock on each of the 13th days of atm-k other than Prior Stock, In such\nJanuary, April, July and October ln each amount nr amount« and upon auch\nyear out of the net earnings of the Cor- term« and with such privileges, prefer-\nporatlon for the quarter year ending on encea or priorities aa It may determine,\nthe last day of the month preceding the provided only that the aggregate par\ndate on which auch extra dividend ia and or face amount of auch additional\npayable, It auch net earnings, after de- bonds secured notes, funded debt, and\nducting therefrom the quarterly Install- preferred «dock which ahull hereafter be\nment of the regular dividend aforesaid. Issued while any of the Prior Stock «hall\nand Interest and proper chargea for be outstanding, shall not exceed two-\nmaintenance and depreciation, are sufH- . thirds (2-8) of the coat of additional\ncleut therefor, provided that in any I property hereafter acquired, exclusive of\nquarter, the net earnings us aforesaid, auch additional property aa may be ne-\nshall not suffice for the payment of auch l qnired with the proceed« of the Prior\nextra dividend on the next dividend date, j stock or of the One Million Five Hnn-\ntbe same shall be payable out of such net I deed Th ou sa ni Dollar« (gl.300.0n)) face\nearnings for any previous quarter or «mount of bonds v-hleh the corporation\nquarters of the current calendar year, fc entitled to have lastied under the pro-\nand If auch net earnings for aneh pre- visions contained In anb-dlrialon <*) of\nvloua quarter or quarters «ball not auf- th|t Article, or any Investment of auch\nflee for auch payment, then the «aid extra proceeds or auy part thereof\ndividend shall cumulate during «aid cal- Additional property aa the term la\nendar year and »hall be puyable out of used In this Article, I« defined to mean\nsnch net earnings for any subsequent „R rea| estate or any Interest therein,\nquarter or quarters of the then current a|| permanent additions to the plant of\ncalendar year. Skid extra dividend »ball
0bfac1bcc87c2003e36d1ef41b88398f THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.6561643518519 35.996653 -78.901805 sociating with persons who do so is to\nprove one's self not to the manner born\nand by nature a snob. Even if your coun- -\ntry guest eats with her knife in public you\nwill prove yourself a provincial by paying\nany attention to it ic Happens to oo ner\ncustom, to which snu nas ueen reareu, anu\nif you have a cosmopolitan mind it will\nbe too insignificant a thing to worry you.\nHowever technically perfect your own\nmanners may be, they will exhibit a glar\ning deficiency if you correct thoso of other\ngrown persons. Besides you aro not sure\nof infallibility, and it is not impossible\nthat you may occasionally rebuke a per\nson who knows even more on the subject\nthan you do and is behaving quite proper\nly in tho eyes of the cultivated world.\nWhen sho eats her cheese with her knife,\nshe is merely following the English habit,\nand it is quite permissible to tako olives,\ncorn, undressed lettuce and lump sugar \nthe lingers. Again, many of tho actions\nthat you consider faulty may bo due to\nthe absence of mind engendered by lively\nconversation, while others are accidents\nto which anybody is liable.\nMost persons whom one meets socially\nhave a sufficient knowledge of etiquette to\nbo at easo among the people with whom\nthey associate, and that is all that is neces-\nsary. A really well bred nerson never\nrests her faith on such minute trifle3 as\ntho angle at which the knife is left or tho\nnumber of crumbs to be permitted to fall\nfrom tho piece of bread. Consideration\nfor others is tho foundation of all good\nmanners, and the man or woman who\nlacks that has mero affectation in the\nplace of tact and true politenoss.\nTho sketch shows a gown of rose and\ngold changeable silk. Tho skirb drapery\nof white mousseline tie soie, tho bodice\nwhito Bipuro, tho sleeves and girdle of\nold yellow satin and the two bows of\ncherry velvet ribbon.
2a2ba093acb27e3a1879f042f9f70b1c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.3712328450026 39.745947 -75.546589 have just attributed to your brother1 be discussed to the advantage of all.\nmay also very properly be affirmed of ,\\ campaign by all the papers for the\nyourself, for it is universally recog- general Improvement of our rural\nnlzed now that-your codification of schools and advancement of agrtcul-\nlaws was a stupendous undertaking tdre wollld give a publicity that is\nand that your persistence In the work muCb needed. Let us hear from some\nhas been regarded by American law- pf tl)p oldPr beads,\nyears as one of the most astonishing of\nall professional achievements.”\nMr, Field smiled faintly, "What you\nhave said reminds me of another les­\nson which I have learned.” he replied.\n"and that is if you rejoice in your\nwork, take pleasure In it so that tt\nbecomes really a mental recreation,\nthen It is no longer work That is the\nfeeling 1 have had since 1 first con-\nterap1ate4 my code, and it Is a feel­\ning that has helped to keep me in per­\nfect health at my age. ”\nHere was a man who was approach­\ning eighty and yet was as active, men­\ntally and physically, as a man of forty.\n“Wont you tell the whole story\nof how you have been able to maintain\nyour health so perfectly, despite the\ngreat burdens you have carried (or\nso many years?” Tasked.\n“ In the fist place,” was the reply,\n”1 think It is essential that if old uge\nand accompanying mental and physi­\ncal vigor are to be attained there must\nhave been an inheritance of a good con\nstitution from parents and from an­\ncestors who have lived simply and\nwisely. And simply and wisely a man\nshould live himself. For myself I be­\nlieve that I have lived simply and\nwisely-r-rl use the dumbbells a little\nevery morning, just enough to set my\nMood in circulation after the night's\nsleep; I am careful in the \\ise of bev­\nerages, though' J have never practiced\ntotal abstinence; I eat plentifully of\nplain food, and I have always found\nthat there are numerous very attrac­\ntive and appetizing dishes which come\nunder that head.\n"I have also kept mv mind active and\nnow,asIlookbackonmylife,Iam\nconvinced that constant mental and\nphysical occupation are absolutely es­\nsential if one wishes to live to old ag»\nand then to be in good mental and
04224a6e2574ee9c77fa165373d0d5bf THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.9027396943177 37.561813 -75.84108 truest and purest Republicans, and the\nablest and best Republican journals, have\nprotested without due effect, have at last\nproduced a decided influence upon public\nopinion. That this is the fact, none will\nquestion who candidly scan the returns.\nGen. Butler, for example, exceedingly\ntenacious as has been the hold which his\nability and his pluck have given him\nupon public favor, has, nevertheless\ncome to distinctly represent in public\nestimation certain policies and methods\nof which the country is tired. With\n5,000 majority at his'back, he is, never-\ntheless, beaten badly. Gen. Negley, of\nPennsylvania, had in like manner made\nhimself a conspicuous representative of\nsimilar policies and methods. Not even\nthe 10.000 majority of Allegheny county\nin 1872 has saved him. Other instances,\ntoo frequent and marked to escape notice,\nforce upon the party a frank recognition\nof errors, in which it has too long per-\nsisted, and which its best members and\nfriends have tried to correct, and have\nrepeatedly predicted would expose the\nparty to defeat if not soon corrected.\nWe do not need now to illustrate \nlength the faults to which we refer. The\nverdict of the people has been sufficiently\npointed to bring most of them to mind.\nThe defeats in Louisiana and other\nSouthern States bring to the public\nrecollection the prediction, so oft re-\npeated by the truest Republican states-\nman, that no party could long sustain\nitself there by such methods as have\nbeen employed by a part of those who\nuse the Republican name in Southern\nStates. The defeat of Butler, Negley,\nField, and other such men, forces the\nparty to consider whether it can afford\nto be used as the tool of monopolies, or\nof those who participate in public affairs\nfor the sake of private advantage. Sen-\nators Carpenter, Chandler, Ramsey,\nCameron, Morton, Boutwell, and\nhave each, in one way or another,\ncontributed in some degree to impair the\nRepublican strength, and to lead to losses\nin Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota and\nPennsylvania, and to defeats in Indiana,\nNew York, and even Massachusetts. It\nhas become absolutely necessary for Re-\npublicans, if they wish to successfully\nresist the reactionary advance of
1ce40c84d26dd61042c883c6d6fd8cfd NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.3520547628107 40.735657 -74.172367 Including tho 76 feet on the easterly side of\nFltth street opposite Fourth avenue; on both\nKides of t.'oeymfcn street, from Summer avenue\nto a point about 100 feet west of the westerly\nline of Mt. Prospect avenue; on both aides of\nMt. Prospect avenuo from a point about 276\nfeet south of tho southerly lino of Coeyman\nstreet to a point about 160 feet north of the\nnortherly line of Coeyman street; on tho west\neido of Suijimer avenue from a point about\n225 feet south of the southerly line of Coey-\nman street to a point about 226 feet north of\nthe northerly line of Coeyman street; on the\neast side of Bumrnsr avenue from a point\nabout 1.6 feet south of the southerly line of\nIrving street to Winthrop street; on bofh sides\nof Irving street from Summer avenue to a\npoint 75 feet west or the westerly line\nof Lincoln avenue; on Noth sides of proposed\nWood side avenue lrom a point about 225 feet\nsouth of the southerly line of Coeyman street\nto a point about 225 feet north of the northerly\nline of Coeyman street, on both sides of Ve-\nrona avenue, from the west side of Oraton\nstreet to Riverside avenue, and have filed their\nreport of said assessments for benefits In the\noffice of the clerk of the Circuit Court of the\ncounty of Essex, and that the Judge of said\ncourt ha? fixed Saturday, the thirteenth day of\nMay, 1911, at 16 o'clock In the forenoon. In\ntho] Circuit Court room at the Court House In\nthe* city of Newark, as the time and place of\nhearing any objections that may be made to\ntho said assessments.\nDated May 8, 1911 .
1e9fd650bab29747f9617077137fbdb1 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0479451737697 39.290882 -76.610759 BO UTH*?Travellers going South are cautioned\nagainst jpvina credence to tho hamltnHa and placard* is\nturd by Ihe Buy Company between Baltimore and Nor\noik, who remit to all aorta ofdevices to deceive the ;m>-\nicatul induce travellers to Uke their line, publishing J|\nurniw other tilings statement* purportingtobo front trai-\nflllerajtiiatby the inall routes passengers going South are'\n24 hours later than by the Bay line, and that they are sub-\nlet t*d to a personal superintendence oftheir baggage at|\nlbs riak ofloaing it, and that they arc compelled at the\nNorth Anno River to walk a ooneiderable distance down\nt steep hilland up another in the middle of tlto night,\nnvolving both exposure and risk.\nAllof those statements ate entirely false, rasaengers\nby tlto mail route are, n stated In lite bills ol the \nroute, "ofttn 24 totter in advance p/ those btj the Bay\n'tools in reaching Charleston, and nerer (unless in soma\nextremely rare contingency) behind them. Bo tar from\nlaving any trouble with baggage, this is ticketed on hoard\n?he rotmnao steamboau,( the companies on I he route thus\nbecoming rcsponeiblc for it,) and is delivered on board\nthe Wilmington cats, and the passengers have only at\npaints where changes occHr, to transfer faemscives from\none conveyanco to nnolhcr. At the North Anna, it is\nirue, the) are obliged for a few dayr to walk a short dl*\ntance acions a temporary but perfectly secure bridge,fron\none set of cars to another; but this is at half past eight\no'clock in the evening, instead of at midnight, as stated\nnone of the libels on the Mail route.
21fa7d7d3a5daeb514fcd742aff1888f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4357923181037 39.290882 -76.610759 ON APPLICATION to the Judges of Prince\nGeorges County Court, by petition in writing, of\nWilliam B. Sothoron, of Prince Georges County, stating\nthat he is now in custody for debt, and praying for the\nbenefit of the act of the General Assembly of Maryland,\nentitled, an act for the relief of sundry Insolvent Debt-\nors, passed at December session, 1805, and the several\nsupplements thereto, on the terms therein mentioned; a\nschedule of his property and a list of his creditors on\noath, so far as he can ascertain the same, being annexed\nto his petition, and the said William B. Bothoron having\nsatisfied me by competent testimony that lie has resided\ntwo years within the State of Maryland, immediately\npreceding the rime of his application, and the said Wil-\nliam 11. Hotlioron having taken the oath by the said act\nprescribed, for the deliveringup ofbis properly, and giv\ning sufficient security for his personal appearance at the\n County Court of Prince Georges Comity, to answer\n|such interrogatories and allegations as may he made\nIagainst him, and having appointed James Burnell his\nTrustee, who has given bond us such, and received from\nsaid William 15. Sothoron a conveyance and possession\nof all bis property, real, personal and mixed; Itis order-\ned and adjudged this 6th of April 18(0, that the said Wil-\nliam B. Hothonw, be discharged from imprisonment,\nand that he give notice to his creditors by causing a co-\npV of this order to be inserted in some newspaper pub-\nlished in the State of Mary laud, once a week for. three\nconsecutive mouth's, before the next October term of\nPrince Georee*s Cotfaly Court, to appear before the said\ncounty court, at the court house ofmid county, at-tln*\nofiid term,to show cause, ifany the> have, why the said\nWilliam B. Sothoron should not have the oenefit of the\nsaid act and supplement as prayed.
14ee799b58655224fce285b02a3027ca NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.741095858701 40.735657 -74.172367 The city of Orange has much to be\nproud of, but we need to wake up in\ncertain directions, to keep ahead of\nother cities of similar size in our State.\nThere are many things that could be\nmentioned, but th= main object of my\nadministration will cover them nil—\nwhich Is to endeavor to give the city a\ngood and wholesome business adminis-\ntration, looking for cooperation from\nDemocrats and Republicans alike, and\nleaving out all partisanship and petty\nI politics. Such an administration would\nInclude an effort to reduce insurance\nrates in our city on account of our in-\ncreased water supply and improved fire\nprotection: the repair and maintenance\nof our roads, which should be a matter\nof pride to Orange, as we were the first\ncity have improved roads; also more\ncleanliness i" our streets, the cultiva-\ntion of proper civic pride on the part\nof all our citizens; the beauty and\nadornment of our streets and system-\natic care of our trees and the de-\nvelopment of a playground system.\nOur non-partisan school system, which\nat the recent examination of the Sen-\nate commission received the highest\npraise, should he continued Taxation\nshould be kept ns low as possible, but\nit should be the duty of the officials of\nOrange to see that the taxpayer gets\nthe full worth of his money. Some\nchanges in our tax laws would be of\ngreat benefit, whereby the heavy Inter-\nest charges on our city for temporary\nloana can be reduced, and arrearages\nmore promptly collected.\nThe
1af4886030e44e3954c5d2d04e6ef54f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.441256798978 40.063962 -80.720915 Yesterday's New York Sua says: Those\npersona who aredeoply interested in such\nsporting matters as prize fights havo been\nmuch agitated as to the sequel of the West\nVirginia legal proceedings against Gosa\nand Ryan, who recently louglit a severe\nbattle just over the Pennsylvania line.\nBoth of the fighters say that they have\nreceived assurances that they will not be\nmolested, and both of them have returned\nto the quarters near the city where they\nwere trained for the fight. Gosa was not\nseriously punished, but he recognizes the\nfact that he is not voung enough to cope\nwith such men as Ryan, and will, there-\nLre, not fi^ht again.\nKyan is rapidly recovering, and says\nthat the effects of the body blows,\nwhich it was feared by his friends would\ndisable him from traiuingag-dn, were not\nserious, as the wounds aud bruises are\n healing, lie says that he has no\npersonal desire to fight again, but inas¬\nmuch as he is the third champion of Troy,\n. Slorrissey and Hteoan beiug the other\ntwo, he is constrained to defend the title\nhe has gained against all comers. B>it be\n¦lays that the next fight will have to be for\n$5,000 a side, as he does not intend to be\npummelled out of shapo agiin for noth¬\ning. Kvau yesterday called anon the\nstakeholder and received the $2,000 prizeT-\nNlany English members of the prize ring\nfail to take the same view that llyan does\nof his body bruises, and predict that he\ncan never appear again. In regard to this\nKvau says that had he hit Goss as Go«a\nnit him, these Englishmen would predict\nthat upon such blows Goss throve, aud\ntne more he got the longer he would live.
18beb9d1e34aa79eb438619c19ecee49 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.301912536683 40.063962 -80.720915 The.flrst through train over the Cleve¬\nland, Tuscarawas Valley and Wheeling\nrailroad arrived at the passenger depot In\nBridgeport at half past ten o'clock yeeter-\nday morning. That was the hour at which\nIt waa due, according to the time card of\nthe road, and it arrived with a promptness\nand precision which wonld have done\ncredit to the oldest road.\nAn old frame building standing near the\nroad is undergoing the process of trans¬\nfiguration into a passenger depot, and a\nsubstantial oak platform has been built in\nfront of it This was woll crowded with\npeople for a quarter of an hour or bo be¬\nfore the arrival of the train, and the\nsounding of the whistle as it approached\nthe station was the signal for the appear¬\nance, apparently, of the entire male popu¬\nlation of Bridgeport, with a respectable\nrepresentation of the female portion.\nThe train consisted of three box\nfreight cars, one combined baggage and\nsmoking car, and one passenger coach. A\n .showing of passengers disembarked,\nthe larger part of them ladies, and we\nnoticed several trunks in the baggage\ncar, as if the owners had come to stay.\nThe train was iu charge of 0. Westervelt,\na conductor who baa been in the employ\nof the company ever since tho first train\nwas put on the northern section, which\nwas some six years ago. The first engino\never purchased by the company, number¬\ned 1, and called "S. Chamberlain," in\nhonor of the President, pulled the train,\nand A. Welch, a veteran engineer who\nhas been in the employ of this company\nfor the past five years, and prior to that\nserved the Pan Handlo road for twelve\nyears, waa tho engiueerin charge.\nDir. Ai J. I»agg», uuuuritl AgCUl UUU\nManager of the southern end of the road,\naccompanied by lion. R. J . Alexander,\nMrs. Alexander and one or two other\nfriends, went out on the construction\ntrain in the morning and returned with\nthe passenger train.
13ab084e7078d903f0f7138d4d301b11 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.219945323568 37.305884 -89.518148 There is to be a change in economic\nconditions of almost every civilized na\ntion, jtie loreteus tne grow,h ot a\ndemocratic spirit in England, which\nwill result hi a revolution that will\noverthrow the present form of govern\nment and make the country a republic\nlie says the last ruler of England will\nbe the best the country eer hud, and\nthe first president of the new nation\nwill be one of the royal family.\nQueen Victoria is by long odds the\nbest ruler England ha3 ever had, and in\na recent speech the prince of Walea\nsaid it is his desire to live to see Eng-\nland a republic. According to the her-\nnit, liussia, France and Italy will form\nn alliance, and will enter into wa\nlth Turkey. war is to be the\nutgrowth of Turkish peisecution of\nhristian subjects. The triple alii\nance will conquer the domain of th\nsick man of the east. At the expira-\ntion of the war complcations will arise\nwhich will plunire Italy and France\ninto wnr with iiussia. The result will\nbe that the two countries will be gob -hie - d\nup by the northern power and will\ncease to exist as independent nations.\nWhile the war is being waged between\nthem the pope will move the seat of\nCatholicism from Borne to some town\nin southern Ireland.\nA rebellion will take place in th\nland of the shamrock, in which the\ncountry will become independent of\nEngland. Then a conflict will arise\nbetween the ul tr a-C at holi-
3f5daf6aee30ae2008bbf69232fc45b2 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.37397257103 58.275556 -134.3925 Animal life seems, according to the\npopular notion, to have peculiar warn¬\nings regarding the weather changes.\nSome of these are explainable by nat¬\nural causes. It is a fact recognized by\nall intelligent stockmen that cattle\nhave an intimation of an approaching\nstorm some hours before it is visible to\nthe human eye. There is a certain\nrestlessness which the cow-boy has'\nlearned to interpret at once. When\nyou see a pig pasturing in the field\nbuild for itself a nest you may look for\na storm. Chickens take extra pains in\noiling their feathers just before a rain.\nPea fowls send forth their shrill cries\nas a warning, and when the quail cries\n"more wet" from the meadow, the far¬\nmer works briskly to get his hay under\nshelter. If the chickweed and scarlet\npimpernel expand their tiny petals,\nrain not be expected for a few\nhours. Bees work with redoubled en-!\nergy jtxst before a rain. If the flies are\nunusually persistent either in the house\nor around stock there is rain in the air.\nThe cricket sings of the approach of\neold weather. Squirrels store a large |\nsupply of nuts, the husks of corn are\nunusually thick, and the buds of de¬\nciduous trees have a firmer protecting\ncoat if a severe winter is at hand. If\nthe popular or quaking asp leaves turn\nup the under side rain will soon follow.\nIf the fog rises in the morning, it is\na sign of rain; if it settles, a clear day\nmay be expected. Watch the smallest\ncloud you can see. If it increases in\nsize it is going to rain; if it melts away\nand vanishes completely, fair weather\nwill follow.
10a97a4cc867858a548caed8bed0eba7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5931506532218 40.063962 -80.720915 days the irritation of the throat was remov¬\ned, the congh subsided and a speedy cure\nwas effected. Soon after this, I sent some to\na lady in Londonderry. N. H., who had been\nsuffering for some weeks from a bad oouah\noccasioned by a sudden cold, and bad\nmucus streaked with bl od. She soon found\nrelief and sent for more. 8ne took about\nten ounces of It, and got well. J . B . Clarke,\nEsq., editor of the Manchester Dally Mirror\nmade a trial of the same preparation In the\ncase of a severe cold and was cured Immedi¬\nately. He was so highly pleased with the re-\nsu It*, and so oonfldent in success attending its\n. alee. If placed before the public, that lis\nfinally persuaded me to give it mw» ihh\nsend It abroad to benefit the suffering. In\nNovember, 1855, I first advertised it under\nthe name of While Pine Compound. In iwo\nyears from that time there had been whole¬\nsaled In Manchester alone one hundred dol¬\nlars worth, where It took the lead of all the\ncough remedies in the market, and it still\nmaintains that position. There is good rea¬\nson for this; it is very soothing and healing\nIn its nature; is warming to the stomach and\npleaxant withal to the taste, and is exceed¬\ningly oneap.\n_ As a remedy for kidney oomplalntsthe\nWnlte fine Compound stands unrivaled, it\nwas not originated for that purpose: bat a\nperson In using it for a cough was not onlv\nof the cough, but was also cured or a
694eb5fbcf8d4c6300316366e62e57ef THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.7493150367834 39.369864 -121.105448 I shot a quail the other day. It was an\nold coek, and had charge of the first brood,\nhatched this season, not half grown, while\nhis mate was sitting on the eggs for the se-\ncond brood. He got upon a rock on hearing\nmy approach, and was fearlessly giving the\nalarm to the fledglings of his charge which\nhe induced to fly in all directions, when I\ndiscovered him, and at a short distance I\nfired at him with a most miserable gun. The\npoor bird was not killed but tumbled off the\nstone with his legs and wing broken, and\nwith his bill split to pieces. I picked him\nup, and as he wasnt injured in any vital\npart he wouldnt die and had to be killed.\nI was callous and hardened, but I was sick\n my inhuman deed, and I would have giv-\nen, I know not what, to have been able to\nfix his bill and his mangled limbs, and set\nhim at liberty. But I could not, and must\nput him out of misery, and tried like a\nsportsman, by biting of his neck to kill him,\nwhich only hurt the bird and filled my mouth\nwith feathers. He couldnt complain, except\nby fluttering. I never undertook such a\ntask. Finally, through my efforts his bright\neye glazed and he died. I put him in the\ncrevice of a rock near where his mate was\nsitting, and where his brood was scattered\nin the chapparel with no one to call them,\nand took my way homeward witn enough to\nthink ef for a long time to come. I shall\nkill no more quail.”
11e283dc46a324a561621d6affddf9a9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.217213083131 40.063962 -80.720915 of the articles of faith by the Archbishop\nand the administration of the oath to the\nBishop elect, who wan then anuointed\nand received the various robenof his now\noffice and tbo' emblems of jurisdiction.\nThe Pontifical High Masn was celebrated\nby 11in Grace, Archbishop Wood, the\nchoir rendering Dachauer's Mom in Em-\nuior in splencid style, and the consecra-\ntion pennon wan delivered by Right Rev.\nJ. F. Shan&han, of llarrisburg, who took\nfor bin text the lirst chanter of the Gos-\npel according to St. Matthew, 18th to\n21nt verses, inclusive.\nThe sermon was unjable effort deliver-\ned with greal imprewiveness, and cloned\nwith an eloquent appeal for strength for\nthe newly consecrated Bishop.\nThe other dignitaries present were\nthe Right Rev. Bishop 0'Hara, of Scran-\nton, the Right' Rev. Bonniface Wimmer,\nAbbot General of Westmoreland county,\nbead of the order in tbis\ncountry and the very reverend Fathers\nCoody and Boff, Vicar Generals of Erie\nand Cleveland.\nTo-night the installation of the Right\nRev. Bishop Domenic as Bish-. p of the\nnewly created Diocese of Allegheny took\nplace in the St. Peters Cathedral, Alle-\ngheny, which will hereafter be the Episco-\npal See of the new Diocese.\nA Bud .11an in a Good Place.\nColonel Meyer «is n Revenue\nOfficial.\nSt. Louis, March 19..The Tima bos\na letter from Washington which contains\ntwo letters, one from ex-Governor Mc-\nClurg and the other from ex-Governor\nFletcher, of this State, which nrge the\nremoval ot Colonel Meyer, Supervisor of\nInternal Revenue for tbis district, on the\nground that he is a corrupt man and un-\nworthy of trust. Ex-Governor McClurg\nespecially speaks of Colonel Meyer as a\noaa anu uuprjui;i|jicu uiuu, uuu
38f636ce1dfa2420970702fa42021913 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.050684899797 41.681744 -72.788147 Wheels of the state's legislative\nmachinery began to turn In earnest\non Thursday when the general as-\nsembly had its second session and\nmembers received their committee\nassignments. Business offered was\nof small volume as is usually the way\nthe rush coming later and it In-\ncluded half a dozen bills In line with\nrecommendations of the judicial\ncouncil for changes in procedure and\nplace in the courts.\nThe council's' report has been Is\nsued in pamphlet for distribution to\nmembers and the legal profession\nand Is public document number 79.\nin a green cover, the prevailing color\nchoice for all pamphlets this ses-\nsion. In the report are drafts of bills\nfor changes in laws covered by the\ncouncil's Inquiry, and the bills ad-\nhere to the text of those suggestions.\nPopular Interest is expected to be in\n bill wldch proposes taking out of\nthe criminal code the trial of cases\nof minor Infractions of motor ve-\nhicle laws. The change would be In-\ntended to take the stigma of a\ncriminal action away from the\npenalizing of a motorist who had\nmade a slip in his conduct of a\nmotor vehicle. Consideration of this\nbill. It is already pointed out by\nlegislators, may bring up again the\nmatter of establishing traffic courts\nand relieving town Justices and city\nand police courts from handling this\ntype of complaint,\nThomas Hewes of Farmington.\nwho made a study of practice in the\nEnglish courts in a report to the\ncouncil mentioned that "the method\nof swearing a witness" was "much\nmore dignified than ours."\nThe witness holds a small Bible In\nhand while uttering the words of the\noath.
4c59053716d5fbd5ea9b333f1298bbb1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.7144808426938 39.745947 -75.546589 Alildred Emery; Helen M. Alalsano\nvs. Philip Alalsano; Anna C. Hamilton\nvs. Thomas Hamilton: Mary J. Marvel\nvs David S. .Marvel; Elsie Jamison vs.\nLee L. Jamison; Hulzlah A. Collins vs.\nWilliam James Collins; Edith V.\nLloyd vs. John 0, Lloyd; Mahle, AI.\nCari- vs. Saunders M. Carr ; Harry\nGreenberg vs. Helen Greenberg; Mary\nA Clark vs. John O. Clark; Mary B. j\nJohnston vs. Harry T. Johnston: Wll-1\nllam E. Smith vs. #sahell C. Smllh;\nHoward R. AVilson vs, Elizabeth Wil­\nson; Lola AT Ross vs. James F. Ross;\nAdalalde Qulnby vs, Jesse E. Qulnby :\nTomaso Stlllo vs. Pasquallno Sllllo;\nl.uoy A. Grim-s vs. William H. Grimes;\nAlle« O. Logan vs, Harry Logan:\nArthur David vs. Ella David; George\nII Robinson vs. Lydia Robinson;\nIrving H. Brinlon vs. Ethel H. Hrlnlnn;\nZora MeHlgh-t vs Frank K. AleRighl ;\nRussell .1. Bonneville, vs. Eva Gordy\n Laura H. I«aeh vs. Elinei\nJ Leach; Agnes AI. Bratton vs. John\nOscar Bratton: William Henry Hockey\nvs. Idella At. Hockey; Elsie At. Sliugis\nvs. Harry W. Sturgis; Richard Starl­\ning, sometimes known as Hlehard\nSterling vs. Fannie Starling, also\nknown as Fannie Sterling; Lulu AI.\nGrlffenberg vs. Henry A. Grlffenberg:\nAllan F. Davis vs. Viola M. Davis;;\nNewton E. Blue vs Sara L. Blue; \\'ir-\n.•In!a B Morgan vs. Norris C. Morgan;\nEmily P. Everson vs. Albert G. Ever­\nson; Lillie AI. Braddock vs. Albert R.\nBraddork; Margaret Lena AlcCoaneil\nvs. Patrick Joseph AleConnell; John\nJ. Bleyer vs, Alamle E. Bleyer; Clar­\nence A. Stark vs. Theresa Slgrk; Le\nRoy Riese vs. May B. Reese; Joseph\nF. Blockson vs, [Vila May Blockson ;\nEdmund William Hickman vs Edna\nAlrglnia Hickman; Eva At. Henry v*\nJoseph A. Henry; Anna H. Gehet vs\nDuane M. Cohce.
08d17d979d1ef2319220a42e0f20928e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.5575342148657 41.681744 -72.788147 the eyes of the baseball public. That\nis the position of "Bill" Scinski's\nclub this afternoon. After the wal-\nloping the boys gave New Haven yes-\nterday no one will predict that they\nwill not beat out Hartford in the\nleague standing. The score was: New\nBritain 13, New Haven 2.\nThe home club presented a new\nlineup which seemed to inject more\nginger into the playing. Dorey Mil-\nler was stationed at the dizzy corner\nand Tetreault was back at the same\nold, stand in right field. Miller did\nnot have a chance in the field, but\nTetreault carved a niche in the monu-\nment of fame by some of his speedy\ngallops after files, which he secured.\nOnly one error, was chalked up\nagainst New Britain, that being ac-\ncredited to Flannery, who otherwise\nput up a stellar game, accepting sev-\nen other chances without a "boot"\nand stopping everything that tried\nto ooze between "Big Jim" Heath and\nthe middle pillow.\nBut it was at the bat that the New\nBritain club showed its mark.\nThirteen clouts for eighteen sacks is\nthe story in a nutshell. Wee Willum\nJones was the Cobb of the afternoon,\nsmashing out two singles and a\nhomer. The four sacker arrived with\ntwo New Britain players adorning the\nsacks. Flannery and Heath came\nacross with two double crashes that\nrocked the mountains, beyond the\nfence. Dawson was decidedly in the\nrunning with three clouts. Dorey Mil-\nler shot two hot ones off his bat that\nwent for safeties. Whenever a hit\nwas needed it was produced without\ndelay and the small crowd of fans\npresent enjoyed the bombardment to\ntheir heart's content.\nJohnny Lower, who heretofore had\nbeen a stumbling block in New Brit-\nain's path, tried to repeat, but the\ntide was turning, and Lower slunk to\nthe bench after the . sixth inning.\nDuring his stewardship of the mount\nhe was hit safely six times and seven\nruns were scored off him.\nThe real earthquake, happened,\nhowever, in the seventh while Clausg,\n, a new twirler, was on deck. In the\n',
0326c169c0e314128999b6496a8c8e4f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.8784152689234 40.063962 -80.720915 If it were not/or the seriousness\nthe thing, the absurdity would atrik\npeople. It isn't a dozen years since tl\nSouth was compelled to stay in the Unio:\nNow here is the North waiting to hei\nwhom the South has elcctcd Presidec\nFour States in the North went again\nthe other eighteen. They were jm\nenough to commit the decision of Ui\n. c o ntest to the South. So, within eleve\nyeara from the timo when the rebellic\nwas suppressed, the rebellious States ha\nit in their power to choose a Preaidei\nwho was opposed by all but four of tb\nNorthern States. This situation migl\ncertainly be called, by a chap of cynici\nturn, absurd. Even the "average vote)\nwill confess that it 1b rather strange.\n"Is there any /air-minded man," asl\nDr, Bellows, "who does not now Buspe\nthat tne utmcumes in ooum uiroiina nr\n are inherent, and incurable 1\nany action of the Central Government\nIn bis opinion these difficulties proce<\nfrem the predominance of the negro rot\nIt is a misfortune, he thinks, that tho;\nStates are at the political mercy of\nhorde of recent slaves, still uuedacaU\nand barely civilized. He sees a parall\ncase in the unrest ot the better society\nthe metropolis, over tho political rule\nher largely untaught and undisciplini\nforeign element. To him sudden emanc\npation vu a dreadful remedy lor e\nevil with threatened the national exit\nenco. Once freed it was necessary\nclothe the slavo with citizenship. £\nconld understand why wbito Sputhernc\nwere ill at ease under the rule of the\nrecent slaves. But the Constitution ar\nthe fundamental law could not be s\naside. After so much sacrifice, the pe\nfile could not .and would not go ba<\nrom their costly record.
11353229653b73d557a407c24eae246d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.4342465436328 40.063962 -80.720915 of Ohio. There were one or two\ncompanies of gray-haired men, too old to\nbear arms, who had gone into the service\nto fight for a principle.not merely to put\ndown the rebellion, but to emancipste\nthe slaves. They were very religious, and\nthey would hold prayer meetings at\nnight. They would pray for the freedom\nof the slaves, and that the negroes might\nhave equal rights with the white people.\nTheir prayers were very interesting to\nus yoong fellows who would go\nthere to listen to tbem, because they\nwere asking tor someuung more man me\ntone of the war promised it that time, but s\neverything that those .pld fellows asked In I\ntheir prayers came about afterward, and it I\nis oot«f those results that this incident I 1\nkin telling you about came to a conclusion. '\nWe camped one day near a little town 1\n Ked Bank, on ths "Kanawha, and 8\nalter our coffee had been prepared we\nfound that we hadn't a spoonful of sugar f\nin camp. There were a lot of negro cabins 1\nover on a hillside opposite our camp, and J\n[agreed to go over and try to getsome 1\nsugar from the negroes. There waa but\nthirteen cents in money in the whole *\n. -a mp, out I took that and started over '\nwith a tin can to get the sugar. I entered '\n3n« of the cabins and found a buxom *\naegro woman with two little pickaninnies '\nbanging to her linsey dress. They drew '\njif into a corner of the cabin, half fright-\nsued when I went in, Dnt 1 told them that 1\nthey needn't be afraid; that I only wanted\n» getsome sugar, and that 1 had the\nmoney to pay for it.'
28a906f94aff4eb4c72c4524a4a4ce39 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.387671201167 41.020015 -92.411296 trickles from a crystal spring.\nIlow do theydo it?\nFirst the dirty liquid is pumped into\none thousand gallon caldrons, with a\nsteam pipe in tho bottom Then blue\nlitjnus paper (paper soaked iu blue\ncabbage juice), is dipped into it to see\nif it is sour. If it is sour the blue pa­\nper is changed to red. Then they put\nin a pail of lime. This kills the acid,\nor the acid leaves the sugar to attack\nthe lime, when, like tho Kilkenny eats,\nthey are both eaten up. If you pour\nacid into soft soap, the alkali (another\nform of lime), will leave the grease to\nfeed upon the acid.\nAV'hat nexl ?\nThen the half naked men who work\nover the hot caldrons pour five gallons\nof warm bullock's blood, fresh from\nthe slaughter into each 1,000\ngallons of melted sugar. The white\nof eggs would be better, but eggs cost\ntoo much, while blood, which is almost\nas full of albumen, only costs 11\ncents a gallon. This blood "settles'' the\nsugar the same as an egg "i-i -ttlef" your\ncoffee—that is, the albumen seizes hold\nof every particle of dirt and holds it.\nThen when they raise the temperature\nto 180 degrees, tho blood, lime, dirt,\nsticks, etc., float to the surface, while\nthe syrup, yellow aud quite transpar­\nent, is drawn off through drainers at\nthe bottom, leaving the scum on top.\nThe scum and dirt aro rinsed with\nclean water, the sweet part saved to\nwet up a fresh lot of susir, and the\ndirt carted off as a fertilizer. They\ntake a ton of rich manure out of the
7ab8f3129cbfb78b5d67ccfa2fb34098 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.1356164066465 31.960991 -90.983994 In the spring of 1843,1 collected cuttings from\none of the wild grapes, giving the preference to\nthe smallest berry, as it yields the most juice,\n;but is, by far, the most sour, and very austere.\nThis grape is called here the vinegar or winter\ngrape, (1 have given it the name of the “Red\nNatchez.”) It makes a choice Burgundy of the\nfinest body, and the aroma it possesses is beyond\ndescription. A glass of it to your nose is equal\nto a fine boquet, and to the palate it is most fas­\ncinating. In tact, I have drank Burgundy in\nthis city, at 14 dollars per doz., not equal to it.\nI planted out about 2000 cuttings, and paid the\nbest possible attention to them, but tliey ali died.\nIn the spring of 1844,1 planted out again, and\nhad no better success. But as this grape was\nso desirable, I wasdetermind to conquer, if possi­\nble. I commenced the third time, hoping for\nbetter succès. While the woods, seeking the\nmost healthy vines, I came on those I had cut\ntwo years before, and the astonishing improve­\nment in the wood of these, over those that had\nnot been cut, was beyond every thing. The\nwell matured ripeness of the wood of the former\nover that of the latter, the latter being full of\npith, flat and soft, and almost without the appear­\nance of vitality. I saw at once, for the first time,\nthe necessity of preparing the wild vine, by pru­\nning, so as to make it bear good for setting out;\nfor though the wild vine will produce wood that\nwill bear fruit, it produces a vast quantity that\nperishes and bears none, and a wild vine seldom\npears two years in accession. The wood from\nthem, generally, does not contain vitality suffi­\ncient to sustain a cutting long enough to form\na plant. The cuttings set out from foe last, have\nali done well, and will make good vines. I have
0e67cb4aa67230d1041b4dd7b274fcd6 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1898.554794488838 37.92448 -95.399981 pant nnd converted to his own use. Tbo real\nproperly of the state be may bold and admin-\nister, at the same time, enjoying the revenues\nthereof, but bo Is not to destroy It save In the\ncase of military necessity. All public means\ncf transportation, such as telegraph lines,\ncables, railways and boats belonging u\nthe state may be appropriated to bis use.\nbut, unlet In case of military necessity,\n.thev arc not to be dostroyed. All churcbet\nand buildings devoted to religious worship\nand to tho arts and sciences, all schoolhouses.\ntire, so far as possible, to be protected, and all\ndestruction or intentional defacement of sucb\nplaces, of historical monuments or archives, oi\nof works of science or art. is prohibited, save\nwhen required by urgent military necessity.\nPrivate property, whether belonging to Indl- -\nIduals nr corporations, is to be respected, und\nrnn be conlUcated only as hereafter Indicated\nMeans of transportation, such as telegraph\nlinen and tables, railways and boats ma), al-\nthough they belong to prlvalo Individuals ot\ncorporations, be seized by the military occu-\npant, but unless destroyed under military ne-\ncessity, are not to bo retained.\nWhile It Is held to be the right of the con-\nqueror to levy contributions upon the enemy In\ntheir stuports, towns or provinces which \nbe In his military possession by conquest, and\nto apply the proceeds to defray the expense ol\ntho war, this right Is to be exercised within\nsuch limitations that it may not sayor of con-\nfiscation. As tbe result of military occupation\nthe taxes and duties payable by tbo Inhab-\nitants to tbe former government become pay.\nble to the military occupant, unless he seei\ntit to substitute for them other rates or model\nof contribution to the expenses of tho govern'\nincut. The moneys so collected aro to be usee\nfor the purposq of paying the expenses ot gov-\nernment under the military occupation, sucl\nas the salaries of Judges and tho polleo and foi\ntho payment of the expenses of the army.\nPrivate proporty taken for tho use of tho arm\nIs to lo paid for when possible In cash at a fall\nvaluation and when payment In cash Is noi\npossible receipts aro to be given.\nAll ports and places In Cuba which may be it\ntho actual possession of our land and naval\nforces will be opened to tbe commcrco of all\nneutral nations, as v, ell us our an n, In article)\nnot contraband of war, upon payment of th\nprescribed rates of duty which inov be In forct\nntthotlmoof tho Importatloa William Mc-\nKinley.
350fc8270f3b685952b8e7ec75439042 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.4315068176052 40.063962 -80.720915 Commissioner.'There are flomcthiiif\no lie naitl about those men who hav\nnine along that I would rather not I)\nibliged to say to you. They have nc\nomchy wish of uuybody but themselve\no far a* 1 know, and they have bee\nources of mischief and trouble ever nine\nhey came here. They got youjto insist o\n;oii)g to the Washington House, and the\n;ot Home of you to go there, after 1 ha\nidd you that it wan not the proper plur\nor you. They have led you into ha\nradices since you have been here, an\niow they have the impudence to colli\nml ask me to nay them for that sort\nervices, and I leave it to you to judjj\nihether I had better do it or not. The\nre not interpreters at all. Todd Km\nlull, when lie came to interpret for He\n'loud, broke down, am) Keii Cloud ha\no get some one else, llallidav, the onl\nlie who did belong to you as an intei\nruler, was employed by lie is\nood interpreter, but he'likes whisky *\nroll that he broke down. Ilegot soilriiu\ncould not see him for several days,\nhall pay him for what he did, and sen\ndm home. Randall will also lie paii\n'liose other men who have deceived vol\nrho have kept yoti from doing your dut;\nud have leu you astray, have no clair\nor anything, and they may In? thankfi\nhat they are not driven out of the com\nry. That is all that is to be Hitid on tin\nuhjeet. I have told your i'gent tospen\nor you, in getting such presents as yo\nanl, twenty-live dollars apiece. This\nn addition to what you have already n\ncived insuits of clothes and other thin)\nhat vour agent has bought for you.\nfish 1 could make it more, and do f<\n- o n what you ask in that respect, and\nurnish each of you ahorse, with saild\nml couipmonts, but that I am not ah\nodo, because I have not money to mak\nlie purchase.
4c7bb98f1df6b2333abe0bfc9373926d OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.7301369545917 41.020015 -92.411296 "John McEnery and D. B. Penn,\nstyling themselves, respectfully, Gov­\nernor and Lieutenant Governer of the\nState of Louisiana, haviuginformed the\ndepartment commander of their will­\ningness, uuder the President's procla­\nmation, to surrender the State proper­\nty now in their possession and to dis­\nband the insurgent forces uuder their\ncommand, brevet Brig.- Gen. J . li.\nBrooks, Lt. -Col. Third Infantry, is\ncharged with the duty of taking poses-\nsion of the arms and other State prop­\nerty. He will occupy the State House,\nArsenal aud other State buildings un­\ntil further orders. lie is hereby ap­\npointed to command tho city of New\nOrleans until Buch time as tho State\nand city governments can bo rccogn-\nir.cd. The present police force in the\ncity, ender charge of Thos. Boyian,\nwill remain on dnty and be responsi­\nble for the good order and quiet of\nthe city regularly relieved."\nGov. McEnery and Lieut. Governor\nI'enu haveaddressed to Gen. Emery a\nprotest to the effect that no insurrec­\ntion exists iu the State of Louisiana\nagainst the McEnery government.\nThey say that the last trace of the Kel­\nlogg government has disappeared, aud\nthat the McEnery government is, dc\njure and dc facto, tho State goveru-\nmout. If compelled to retire by au­\nthority of the Uuited States, there is\nno power which cau succeed them iu\ngovernmental power iu Louisiaua.\nThey then call attention to the Presi­\ndent's proclamation, and tho notice\ngiven them by Gen. Euiery to comply\ntherewith immediately, and also to\nthe points of law involved, which arc\nthe third section of tho Constitution\nof the Uuited Slates, providing that\ntho United States shall, on tho appli\ncation of a Legislature or Executive of\na State, protect that Slate from domes­\ntic violcuce.
4eb99b444a30b3a59cd436579337dfe8 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.1821917491122 39.24646 -82.47849 "Now, this minute; give mo your\narm, and wo will go to squire Ben-\nton's and have tho bargain finished\nat once. I don't want to enter our\nhouse of distress again until I have\nono on whom I win rely, to control\nand direct the affairs of my discon-\nsolate home, and to support mo in\nmy determination to turn over a\nnew leaf in our domestic aflairs."\n"But not in this old hat, and in\nmy shirt sleeves, Mary?"\n"Yes and I in my old bonnet\nand dirty apron. If you aro content\nlet it be done at once. 1 hope you\nwill think I am not so had pushed-a - s\nthat comes to; but I want a mas-\nter, and am willing to bo mistress.\nwill then take you home and in-\n you as my own dear hus-\nband signed, scaled and delivered.\nSo be it permitjmejto say, that I\nhave always admired you from tho\nfirst minute I saw you for your beau\nty and energy, and industry, and\namiable deportment."\n"Now John, if that is sincere, this\nis (ho happiest moment of my life,\nand I trust our Union will bo long\nandhappy. Iamtheonly oneof\nmy father hears to; but alas! his res-\nolutions are liko ropes of sand. I\ncan manage him on all other sub-\njects; you must take charge of his\nbusiness, and have solo control;\nthere will be no difficulty I am\nconfident of the result."\nThey were married, and a more\nhappy match never was consumma-\nted. Everything prospered; houses\nand bams were repaired, fences and\ngates-wor-e
6301e22263468333423a60e3b6c2257e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.960382482038 39.513775 -121.556359 A CAUD—Prompted hy an honest desire of my\nJXk heart, I wish to lay before the public a enso\nwhich deserves u high commendation, not only as an\nact ol sciettlilh- skill. Inti (hat ef hu nattily also. About\ntwo years ago, 1 suddenly, and irorn causes unknown\nlo me, seized whit a lit of epilepsy,which, owing to\nmy inability lo meet the expenses eoli.eqm-nt upon ti\n'borough medical treatment,and the discouragement\nI met with on attempting it, soon became -itch (us 1\nwas limit led lo believe) as lo defy the skill of U phy-\nsician. I was frequently while in pursuit of my call-\ning, thrown down lo thr ground without lit*- slightest\nwarning, and although insensible lo the agonies. I\nyet despised the miseries of my life,and soon learned\nto look upon those who would render me assistance\nor shelter from danger as enemies who .might 10\nprolong the miseries of my existence. U bile in this\nMate, and having previous to my affliction lasted tho\nsweets of life, 1 once more was induced to attempt\nseeking aid of a physician, and, hy recommendation,\ncalled upon Mr. 1, . '4. Cxapkay. I told him inycir\ncuinst.' inces and my inability lo reward him for tils\nservices, regardless of which, however, he at onco\nundertook rny case, and with the blessing of flod I\nwas once more restored to perfect health. Unahlo\nto reward film for the boon which I enjoy at present,\nand yet conscious of my indebtedness. I consider it\ndue io myselfatid lo all the afflicted lo make the case\npublic, in order that those in need of medical advice\nmay Hud a physician in whom every confidence can\nhe placed
2a14742c56c4c1d0ee30d256ba437b9d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1902.560273940893 41.004121 -76.453816 It was when the officers were seri-\nously debating this problem thnt tho\nnatives approached them with what\nwns regarded ns a curious solution of\ntho difficulty. If, proposed tho latter,\ntho Europeans ook all the rice, they,\ntho natives, would bo quite content\nwith tho water in which it was boiled\nTho suggestion, in place of any better.\nwns adopted, when It wns remarked\nthat while tho Europeans found It dlf\nflcult to maintain their strength on full\nrations of rlee the natives lost none of\ntheir stamina by several weeks' diet on\nthe water. When tho proposal wns\nmade, the action of tho natives was\npraised as ono of great devotion to\ntheir superiors, but the sentiment wns\nsomewhat mollified when tho dlseov\ncry was mndo thnt the natives were\nqulto nwnro thnt tho principal nourish'\nment lay In the water.\nSince thnt time Europeans In tho \ncnt, following the custom of tho na-\ntives, hnve given rice water to pa-\ntients, particularly In enses of cholera,\nns a last resort when no other food can\nbe retnlned In the stomach nnd usually\nwith good results. But tho natives al\nways value this water so highly that It\nIs never thrown away.\nIn fact, It would surprise many cooks\nto discover bow much may be done\nwith this apparently worthless stocli\nIf tho rlee Is cooked In tho oriental\nfashion that Is, boiled only so long\nthat each grain comes out of tho pnn\nseparnto nnd not ns a sodden mass\nthe water when strained off and per-\nmitted to cool will become a Jelly np- -\nproachlng tho consistency of blnnc- -\nmnnge. To suit tho occidental palate\nthe water should be flavored with an\nextrnct or otherwise tho Jelly may,\nhave rather nn insipid taste.
d0dbe69a7344135f2e097e1dfe2e7321 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.7712328450025 31.960991 -90.983994 of the rising generation, the time honored title\ninscribed upon the banners of our reVolutionary\nfathers, when fighting the battles that won for\nus the proud title of freemen, not in name only,\nbut in substance and in fact. Whigs need not\nfear. The delusive theories & designing schemes\nfor power, practised by cunning and pandering\npoliticians, will burst upon their own heads, anti\nthey themselves will fiee to the mountains and\ncall upon the rocks to hide them from the face\nof a justly incensed and offended people.\n“I liave for years past looked with fearful ap­\nprehension upon the plausible plan by which\npower and place has been kept and procured by\nthe party in power. The particular description\nof time serving sycophants to which I have a!\nlutled, mostly composing that class are usu­\nally seen at hotel doors and corners ofthe streets,\nwith no particular business, hut waiting for the\ntide of time to roll by its ehhings some favorable\nfortune for them—ready to serve any leader that\nwill make them easy, and save tnem from being\ncompelled to eat their bread by the labor of their\nhands—at the tap of the drum, of party, they as­\nsemble—appoint their chairman—their secreta­\nry. &c., and assume to be tire sovereign people.\nThey nominate some favorite for office, and call\naloud for the people to come to the polls, and reg­\nister and confirm their appointments. This done,\nthey are then engaged in bluffing off and whip- j\nping in until the tale Î9 told at the ballot box.— ;\nin the next place you find them with great at-
4124a3a28fb16d69af122ea08d3e4219 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.2999999682902 39.261561 -121.016059 A* a medical man it is the duty of every physician to\nlook at disease as it affect*health and life, an* 1 his sole ob-\nject should be to mitigate, as far as lies in his power, the\nbodily suffering. Human nature at best is but frail, all\nare liable to misfortune.\nOf all the ills that affect man, none are more terrible\nthan those of a private nature. Dreadful ns it is in the\nperson who contracts it. frightful as are it* ravage* upon\nlit* constitution, ending frequently in distraction and a\nloathsome grave.it become* of still greater importance\nwhen it is transmitted to to innocent offspring. {Such be-\ning the case, how necessary it become* that every one hav-\ning the least reason to fear that every one having the least\nreason to fear that they have contracted the disease,\nshould attend it at once by consulting some physician\nwhose respectability and education enable* him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and peimanent cure. In accordance witli\nthis necessity, DR. YOUNG feels called upon to state that\nby long study and extensive practice, lie has become per\nfeet master of all these diseases which come under the de-\nnomination of venereal, and having paid more attention to\nthat one branch than any other physician in the United\nstates, ho feels himself better aualified to treat them.\nSyphilis iu all its forma, auen as Ulcer*, Swelling in the\nGroins, Ulcers in the Throat. Secondary Syphilis, ('utiine-\noti* Eruption*, Ulcerations, Tetuary Syphilis, Syphilis in\nChildren, Mercurial Syphilitic Affections. Conorhea, Gleet.\nStrictures, False Passages, Jnffamationof the Bladder and\nProstrate (Bands, Excoriation*, Tumors, Pustules, kc., a re\na* familiar to him as the most common thing* of daily ob-\nservation.
09752ba8800f027608501259fa130759 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.7438355847285 46.187885 -123.831256 "One night I had retired to my hut\nand had slept till the dawn began to\nshow, when I awoke with a strange\nfeeling of oppression and weight on\nmy chest. My gun was close beside\nme, and my knife within reach of my\nhand. For a moment I was not\naware what was the cause of the\nsingular feeling I experienced, and I\nopened my eyes without otherwise\nmoving. In the dim light I saw that\nwhich, for an instant, caused my\nheart to cease beating. Over my\nchest was the coil of a rock snake,\nthis coil being bigger round than my\nthigh. I could see that the tail of the\nsnake was outside my small hut, and\nin consequence of my lying on the\nground the huge reptile had not been\nable to coil completely around me.\n1 knew I was in imminent danger,\nand I also at onco decided on the\nsafest and most probable means of\ncscaie. my arm slowly, I\ngrasped my knife, and then raising\nmy head, saw the snake's eyes with-ii - f\ntwo feet of mine. His head was on\nthe ground and so close that I could\nlift my hand above it. I carried out\nthis movement very slowly the snake\nremaining motionless. Then with a\nsudden stab, I drove ray long knife\nthrough the snake just where his\nhead joined his neck and pinned him\nto the ground. With a struggle I\nslipped from under his bod', and\nnow the fight began. So tenacious of\nlife are these reptiles, that although\nI had separated his head from his\nbody as regards the vertebrae, yet he\ntwisted and rolled the great coils of\nhis body so rapidly and powerfully\nthat several times he had surrounded\nmy legs with a loop, and it was only\nby a quick movement on my part\nthat I escaped the danger of being\ninclosed in a vice-lik - e "
2ccf9e64bc7ae752c93d5a4daafde227 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.9520547628108 44.939157 -123.033121 tion. Now, mioh a boring has been sup\nrnfu1h ncfomplilied nt the atoll of\nFunafuti, one of tbe Klllce Islands, by\nnn Australian expedition. After suc-\ncessive fallnrct there waa reached In\nISM a depth of bote of 1114 foot into\nthe rim of the atoll. Betides, borings\nwore undertaken to a dwpth of 144 foot\nin the bed of the lagoon, itself. The\nRoyal society has joot published tbe\nresult of tbe examinations of the\nbores, which are to be soon in part in\ntbo British museum, part baring boon\nreturned to Australia for the study\nof science at the antipodes.\nIt may bo shortly said that, the ehar\nacter of tbe borings goes to support\nDarwin's Wieory. They show down to\na depth of nt least 1100 feet no evi-\ndence whatever of any foundation be-\ning represented, such an the second\n of coral reefa demands. Unlets\ncorals can live In much deeper water\nthan is admitted, it la clear they could\nonly attain this thickness through the\nsinking of tbo land on which they first\nbegan to grow; and this sinking ia\nstated to represent at least a depth of\n900 foot. Sundry other marine organ-\nisms, chalk .aaimalettlea, Ume building\nson weed, and tbo like unlet in the\nprogrool ef the reef building ; but tbelr\nshare In the work is entirely subsid-\niary to that of the corals. Kven, if it\nIs probable, I'anantl originally was a\nsubmarine maos, it is clear its atoll\ncould only have boon formed by tbe\nsubsidence of the mnoo; and If some\nother roofs seem to support the second\ntheory, none tbe lees Is this refloat\nwork a brilliant domonotrntlen of tke\ncorrectness of Darwin's views.
5661e78fe117959eb937d649be4ef3cb THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.1164383244545 39.369864 -121.105448 measure that is not open to the same ob-\njections, and which it would be mag-\nnanimous in the majority of our Legis-\nlators to carry out. We would respect-\nfully urge the propriety of passing an\nact, to be entitled, —An Act for the\nabatement of the nuisance of political\nspeaking in the Legislature.\nThe act should prohibit the offering\nof any bill, or resolution, or motion, hav-\ning the least allusion to, or tendency to\nprovoke discussion of any question of par-\nty politics; and the offering of any such\nbill, resolution or motion should be pun-\nished by declaring the offender forever in-\ncapable of holding any office of profit\nabove that of Road Overseer or Pound\nMaster. Such a law would be produc-\ntive of numerous benefits. In the first\nplace it would rouse the ambition of\nthose humble workers for party who are\nnow deterred from aspiring to Legisla-\ntive honors by reason of their inability\nto make the required political haran-\ngues ; and thus rewards of party fe-\nalty could be enjoyed by a greater\nnumber. This feature is very democratic.\nIn the next place, the proposed law\nwould relieve a certain unequalled news-\npaper of the great expense and respon-\nsibility attendant upon the publication\nof full legislative reports, which are\nlengthy by reason of the number and\nlength ofpolitical speeches made by mem\nbers. This feature would be one ofjustice.\nSuch a law by reducing the newspaper\nreports of legislative proceedings with-\nin readable and reasonable limits, would\nenable the people to keep better posted\nin the doings of their servants and work\na great economy of time and patience.\nThis would be very popular. Then again,\nthenceforth no U. S . Senator, after strug-\ngling to his brilliant position from the\nhumblest obscurity, making his painful\nway overland to the federal capital and\nhaving his toes frozen on the route,\nwould have his feelings lacerated by\nunkind condemnation and requests to\nresign. This effect would be a merci-\nful one.
0102074651da8cb456bb5fe2e14138d6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.3547944888383 39.745947 -75.546589 In addition to its many other entirely\noriginal and remarkable features on\nFriday, May 13, ait Front and Union\nri i < i is, Buffalo Bill's Wild West and\nOngrees of Rough Riders of the\nWorld, will present here, for the first\ntime, an immense, magnificent and\namazingly realistic spectacular and\ntableau reproduction of Custers last\nand dreadfully fatal Imttle on the Lit­\ntle Rig Horn. In this stupendous and\nlife-like revival of the heroic and har­\nrowing incidents of tl\\e most calami­\ntous event in all the sanguinary records\nof border warfare some eight hundred\nsoldiers, scouts, plainsmen, genuine\nSioux warriors and horses are intro­\nduced, some of the savage participants\nhaving actually been present at the\nCuster massacre, and the horses being\ntaught to most realistically simulate\ndeath on the battlefield. The \nscene reveals an Indian village with its\ninhabitants wildly celebrating a recent\nvictory. While they are thus engaged\na scout takes in the situation without\nbeing discovered and reports to General\nCuster, who instantly and furiously\ncharges with his battalion upon the red\ndevils. Terribly mistaken as to the\nnumber of the foe, his command is en­\nveloped in an overwhelming horde of\nsavages,and after a desperate but hope­\nless struggle annihilated, the closing\ntableau representing his death on an\neminence, to which he and the remnant\nof his command are driven. Colonel\nCody, with reinforcements, arrives on\nthe field of massacre and desolation too\nlate to be of service. The opportunities\nafforded for heroic action and all the\nelectrifying displays of mounted com­\nbat are fully utilized and the result is\nbeyond description.
15bc015fb552a5f875d29ac1b2cc46ca THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.332876680619 41.004121 -76.453816 One of the most perilous of the\nworld's vocations, but one in which\nan army of from five to seven thou\nsand men take part, is the seal\nhunt, as it is called. The scene\nof the hunt is the ice fields which\ndrift southward in the spring of\neach year from the Arctic regions,\nand a bleaker or more desolate re\ngion could scarcely be found than\nthis great icy waste. The prey of\nthe seal hunters, however, is of\nenough value to tempt them to\nbrave the rigors and dangers, for\nthe hair seal which is their quest\nis of especial value. Not only is\nits coat valuable, but the blubber\nof the young yields an oil much\nprized for different purposes.\nThe Arctic current which sweeps\nsouthward through the ocean along\nthe coasts of Labrador and New\n carries with it a variety\nof animal life, being one of the\ngreat feeding grounds for deep-se- a\nfish such as cod and mackerel\nThe low temperature of the wat\ners, and the fact that for such a\nlarge portion of the year great\nmasses of ice dritt upon them,\nranging from the glaciar berg to\nthe floe, render the Arctic current\na fit habitat not only for many\nvarieties of fish, but the seal refer\nred to. The ice floes form the\ncradle of the young, where they\nare cared for by the mothers dur\ning the first few weeks of their ex\nistence. The fine pelt which forms\nthe coat of these young seals is es-\npecially prized by the seal hunters,\nfor the reason that it can be manu-\nfactured into leather which is uti-\nlized
36d8ffc7e6572b2c0c4ec59c49a709bd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.1219177765095 40.063962 -80.720915 So much of the Street Commiss\ner'a report, presented to tho Counci\nTuesday night, as appertained to\nZane street bridge, was referred to\nCommittee on streets and alleys.\nto be hoped that, since necessity\nforced this bridge upon tho uttontlc\ntbe Council, the committee to whi\nhas been referred will give everyt\nconnected with the bridge a thor\ninvestigation. This bridge la nu\nimportant »o the city as leading tc\ncity cemetery. Complaints, both\nquent «nd serious, have been mai\nthe council nbout the almost imp\nble conditiou, both winter and\nnier, of the road leading from the b\nto the cemetery. It seems to be ui\nstood that it is an itnpossibilil\nmake a good road there by any rei\nable outlay of money. What, the\nthe use of "having a bridge to croa\ncreek u point from which the\ntry beyond is almost inaccessible'\nAside from tbU serious objectic\nlocation itself, seems to be a bad 01\na bridge, as every few mouths a\npropriation is necesaasy for its r«\nand it is but a short time sluce a\nsum, <we have not the tigures at h\nwas expended in repairing tbe b\nThe work of repair was hardly o\nbands of the contractors before i\ntion of it was carried away. Wh\nthen, siuce the bridge has bccoc\nterly unsafe, aud almost usele<\nany purpose, move it to a point t\nup the creek, to which, and\nwhich, there Is every facility for m\nan excellent road at small cost\nthink the necessities of the peoi\nthe eastern portion of the city pn\ndemand greater facilities for ii\nand egress.
f2bd6995cebae5484bdbdccaa87899d1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.491780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 broke out shortly before midnight\nlast night, destroyed a large barn\non the farm of Andrew Ronzillo in\nthe Bed Stone Hill district and\ncaused a loss estimated by Chief\nJohn H. Hayes of the fire depart-\nment of between $2,500 and $3,000.\nNotification of the fire was re-\nceived by telephone at the central\nfire station at 11:40 o'clock last\nnight and Squad A and Welch Fire\ncompany of Forestvllle responded.\nThe fire had gained such headway\nthat there was no possibility of\nchecking the blaze and the firemen\nwere obliged to stand by to see that\nthe flames did not spread to the\nfarmhouse and garage a short dis-\ntance away. The Plainville Are de-\npartment also responded to the call\nfor assistance but was also unable\nto do anything to the blaze.\nThere is no water available in the\nRed Stone Hill section and this has\nproved a handicap in the past when\nfiremen have been called to fight\nfires in that locality.\nIn addition to the building loss, a\nconsiderable amount of farm ma-\nchinery, as well as about 40 chick\nens, were consumed in the blaze.\nThe remainder of the live stock, in\ncluding cows and horses, were in an\nadjoining pasture.\nChief Hayes stated that some radi\ncal step would have to be taken to\nkeep automobiles from blocking the\nroads for fire apparatus when re\nsponding to fires. Last night there\nwere between 150 and 200 cars\nparked along the roadway near the\nscene of the fire, many people hav-\ning been attracted to the spot by the\nflames.
214be3fcf9494f697a1c20f44bd97774 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.6150684614408 39.756121 -99.323985 son, and the negroes who were exported\nfrom the South some years ago lead\nshiftless and forlorn lives, not much\nimproved upon the native black. There\nis no money, and in payment of what-\never labor there is to do the laborer is\ncompelled to take out the price ia what-\never is offered him. Flour, costing Jl\na barrel in Xew Y'ork, retails at $15 per\nbarrel; musKn of ordinary quality -- '\ncents per yard; milk the same price\nper pint, and email pints at that ; and\neverything else in proportion, The\nsteamship interests are controlled by\nBelgium and German firms, and the\nagents that are sent to Liberia to look\nafter their commercial affairs ara under\ncontract to remain three years; but few\nlast long. No white man escapes an\nattack of African fever. It seized\nPerry after he had been there but a\nshort time, but thanks to a sturdy con-\nstitution he was able to fight off the\nfirst attack, and a second and third, but\nit kept returning every month or two,\nuntil it finally wore him out. Its symp-\ntoms are very much like the ordinary\nyellow fever of the South, but, unlike\nthe yellow fever, the fact that a man\nhas it once is no guarantee that he is\nnot liable to continued attacks of it.\nThe mission of Monrovia is charge\nof the Bev. Mr. Ferguson, who is not\nonly a missionary but also the Bishop,\nand he has some twenty assistants, who\nare stationed at Monrovia and other\npoints. The mission was established\nin 1832, and it is maintained et about a\nyearly cost of 20,000 , and Dr. Perry\ndoubts if the conversions to date ex-\nceed 500. It is not a pleasant country\nin which to live, even for a native, aud\na white man migrating to its inhospita-\nble shore, although the doctor didn't\nsay this in as many words, might as\nwell leave all hope behiud. Bishop\nFerguson is a colored man, and this ac-\ncounts for his tenacity of life. There\nare two seasons of the year, dry and\nwet, but Perry failed to note much\ndifl'erence between the wet and dry un-\nless it was that in the wet season it\nrained day and night, while in the dry\nit only rained at night. The wet sea-\nson is the healthiest, because it is the\ncoolest, and the temperature during\nthe day ranges from 00 to 120 degrees.\nOnly ouce during his stay of ten\nmonths, however, did it drop to CO\ndegrees, and then it felt cold enough\nto don flannels and overcoat The trip\ngoing and coming from New Y'ork is\nmade by sailing vessels and usually\noccupies forty-fiv- e
173fe7da2ee4ffc248a0c1f6344eb4e9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.683561612126 40.063962 -80.720915 « i Der ana u llttio lower ior Sep torn at\n»d the latter on account of tho heavy r\n2 celpts In the northwest. Little whe\nwas offered for sale and shortly aft\nlg the opening the change In the aspect\noutside markets, which have been rel\ntlvely weaker than Chicago for son\n£- time past, but which to-day were cor\nparatlvely stronger, Induced gome co\nerlng by the more timid shorts and\ngood advance In prices took place. D\ncemhrr opened at 71(ft71 Vfcc und a\nvancod to 7P/4©71^c, while Septemh\nopened He lower at 69% and ndvanci\nto 703j,c. The advance was sulfide\n11, to Induce realizing Which carrhM pric\nback fractionally but after a long p\nrlod of comparative dullness durli\nor which December hung around 71M\n714c. the continued strength In ti\nnj northwest and outside markets and Ir\nprovement In the export demand 1\ncreused the volume of trading In ti\n\\'t speculative market anil again advance\nft. prices. The strength shown by Sopter\nDer was specially noticeable. The\nwas a good demand for this elev\ntl- tor people and shorts, and the spre;\nbetwee i September and Decemb-r nil\nrowed to 14c. The strength was\napltc of tho liberal country moverae:\nnnd free offerings. Minneapolis ai\nDuluth received 740 cars against 373 la\n0. week and 750 a year ago. fhlciiro r\neelpt.n were 205 ears. 19 of rontra\ngrade. Total primary receipts we\nof 958.000 bushels, compared with 1,364.0\nr" bushels u year ago. Atlantic po\n°f clearance* of wheat and flour aggregu\nid ed 410.000 bushels New York report"\nrd ai ywhere from 60 to 72 boatloads worl\nat ed for export and Duluth reported :n»i\nr- (tOO bushels of that amount worked fro\nno there Hradstreet's reported an I\nul erease In the world's visible supply\nhe 2,521,000 bushels. This was un<*xpcctc\npd but had llttlc-effeet. Buying by shor\nr- was quite heavy during the late tradl!\n?t. and best prices of the day were rear\ner ej shortly before the close. Decemb\ne, advancd to 7HJc and closed at 71\nto 71fcc. September sold at 70Mtfi>7u$\n- h and closed at 704c.
044d7ad41e813b8002bdbe4db1027fc7 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.0041095573313 35.996653 -78.901805 "Once the dam of one of our mills be-\ncame so clogged with logs that they in-\nterfered with the water power. It was\nnecessary to release the jam or shut down\nthe mill. The work would necessarily\nendanger the lives and limbs of all who\nengaged in it, and volunteers were asked\nfor, handsome extra pay being offered.\nPlenty of mrrn were ready to take the\nrisks, among them Pat O'Brien, rn Irish-\nman, 61 years old. He insisted on being\none of the gang and joined it against the\nprotest of the superintendent.\n"The work of releasing the log jam\nwent all right until the key log that held\nthe main jam was to be removed. There\nlay the danger. The key was removed,\nand the men raado a wild dash to escape\nthe rush. They all got out the way but\nfour, among them the old Irishman, Pat\nO'Brienl These four were caught among\ntho logs and went over the falls, a sheer\ndescent of 85 feet. Hen and logs went\nover together, and everybody supposed\nthat the men would be ground to atoms.\nBut a most astonishing thing happened.\nIn falling a number of logs fell on end\nin a group, their upper ends toppling to-\ngether, forming an almost perfect tent, or\npeaked hut, with the down stream side\nopen. The men had escaped injury, not\nonly from the logs in the fall, but from\nthe tremendous plunge itself, and it was\nas they landed in the water below that the\ntent of logs formed with them beneath\nits shelter. This saved them from being\ndrowned by the water that plunged\ndown from the great height.
26212ad52b1feb3f868f190effbeecc7 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1857.6534246258245 37.561813 -75.84108 the amount) named. He made no pay\nments lor which 1 did not give receipts.\n1 received S 10,11(10 on debt of Dayton\nBank. The whole amount paid mo bv\nMr. Breslin was $."'.03 ,865 .34 , to which\nmay bo added the $10,000 paid by Day-\nton Bank through Mr. Bcckel.\nIn answer to the question\n"When these certificates issued to\nCounty Treasurers were presented to\nyou by them, did Mr. Breslin make any\narrangements with you for their redemp\ntion, and tt so, what and why was not\nthe arrangements fulfilled on his part?"\n(nbson replies:\nI considered that $208,587.20 of the\namount paid me was applicable to the\nredemption of these certificates; which\namount remained after deducting the\namount admitted to be due on account\nof revenues and Bank, as stated before.\nHe mado no other or further provis\nions to the certificates; nor did he\nmake or propose to make any arrange\nment in relation to their redemption.\nexcept that when I met him ho assured\nme that he would do so, and never du-\nring my term of office, intimated that he\nwas unable or unwilling to do so.\nMr. Breslin was absent and I seldom\nmet him during the time that these cer\ntificates were being preseuted. Doubt-\ning the liabilty of the State, upon the\ncertificates, I advised with the Attorney\nGeneral, (Kimball) whow as of opinion.\nthat 1 was compelled to receive them as\ncash, according to their U rm.\nBut, Mr. lircslin made no arrange\nments, except to make promises, and\nhy they were not lulhllou, it is impos\nsible for roe to state.\nHo first admitted his inability to meet\nhis obligations to the State after I re-\nsigned office.
03b72dc6ddd1c49d48abf291c91df661 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.505479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 The Percy Kelaey and Belle MoGowan\npassed down light t) assist some of the fleet\nwho are returning with empties.\nWord waa received yesterday that the W.\nN. Chancellor was laid up at Parkersburg for\nrepairs, and consequently she will not pass\nby this morning.\nThe Katie 8tockdale passed down yesterday\nmorning from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati, and\nthe Emma Graham passed up at 4 r. m . Both\nhad medium trips.\nThe river fell 6 Inches yesterday, leaving a\ndepth in the channel at dusk of 7 feet 2\ninches and the river waa still falling. A fair\namount of business was transacted.\nOne year ago to-day, the fatal 6cloto-Lo-\nmas disaster took puce, and as yet the re¬\nsponsibility for the frigbt.'ul loss of life has\nbeen placed on no one's snoulders.\nThe O'Neal, Little Anna and Re¬\nturn have been chartered by Ivanhoe Y. R .\nK. of P. of Bteubenville to convey passengers\ntc-dsv from the city to Brown's Island where\nthe Lodge gives a monster pic-nlc.\nTho Frank 8teln will make trips between\nhere and Glenn's Ron to-day, ti accommo¬\ndate the Mwanerchor flinging 8ociedy and its\nfriends wno picnic there. The C. W . Ander¬\nson will take the Happy Eight picnic to\nCreep's Grove. The Prince wlU-iake the G.\nA R., of Martin's Fray, to Bellaire, and the\nlocal packet* will all carry more than usual.\nThe average American usually goes some\nwhere when he wants to celebrate.\nPm.uoaoii, July 3..River 4 feet and 3\ninches and falling.\nCiMciRKATi, 0., July 2..River 15 feet 0\nInches and falling; weather hot.\nGrukidobo, Pa.,
2f50fb82618d1272efd58f468fb1793f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.368493118975 39.513775 -121.556359 IMPniiTWT TOMINKHS. TRAVELERS , PTC.\nTlll RK Is nomalndv of deeper Importance either\nin a medical or moral light of view. to which\niV human family l« more liable than that arising\nOem Impure connections.\n\\s a medical man it i« the rtniy of every phy-lctnn\nto look at disease na it effect, health ami life, ami hi.\nnhlee4 should l>e to mitiifitle. as far a* lie. In hi.\n|.o» ,r . the i,ih! ilv suffering. Human nature at he.; i.\nhut frail, all are liable to mi«Cortime.\ni if all the ill. th.il affect man none are mere terrible\nthan tho.e of a private nature. —Dreadful a. it (' lit\nthe person who eoniract.il frightful a. nreltaraviw-\n.• « upon hl« constitution. ending frequently in deslrne*\nion ami a loathsome trriive.it becomes of still greater\nImporlanee w hen it i* transmuted to inti-ceiil off-\n.priiiL*. Such helm the cr«e how necessary It be-\ncome. that everv one bavlnir the len.l reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should nlleiai\ntoil at once by consulting some [ill \\ siciae. whose\nrespectalbllllv and education enables him to w arrant\na wife, .peedv. and oernietienl cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity, PR VnfVtJ feet, called Upon to\nstate thill, b* study and extensive practice, he\nhas behnne perfect master of all those diseases which\nconic under the denomtnalion of venereal, ami ha\\.\nimr paid more attention lothnt one branch than any\nother physielati in the Inited Stales, he feels himself\nbetterq'inlifled to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its form*, such ns nlecrs. swellintr In\nthe groan*. nicer in the throat.secondary phllls. cu-\ntaneous ertiptlons. ulcerations, tertnarv syphilis, sy*\npliilis in children, mercureal s> philllic affections. gon-\norrhea, gleet, strictures, false passages, Inflimutlion of\nthe bladder and firotrnte elands.excoriations, tumors,\npustules. \\ tc, . ate as familiar to him as the most com-\nmon l lulu's of daily observation.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent cases In a few\ndays and finds no difficulty in enrihg those ot tony\nduration, without submitting the pnlieiil losm hi rent*\nmein a. w ill draw npon him the alighlest sqspieioti\nor oblige him to neglect his business w hether within\noors or wMhunt. The diet need not he changed ex-\ncept in ease* of severe Infhiinaliiin. There are in • ill -\nfornin patients .amounting to over two thou and in\nthe past veari that could furnish proof of this; hid\nthese are matters thot require thi nicest eecre-v which\nhe alwnvs preserves
036bf066a9bc1924fdee346f4f4865dc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.4303278372292 46.187885 -123.831256 Washington, June 4. Gen.\nSheridan is now lying weak, and\nexhausted, and in a comatose con-\ndition. He has only rallied very\nfeebly from the attack which\nnearly caused his de$th. The hem-\norrhage which preceded the attack\nof heart failure came from the\nlungs, but was not accompanied\nby coughing. The blood emitted\nwas dark and thickly clotted. A\nrecurrence of the heart failure fol-\nlowed closely upon the hemor-\nrhage. The pulse beat feebler\nand still more feeble, his breath-\ning grew exceedingly laborious,\nand the sick man's face assumed a\nbluish tint. His heart ceased to\nbeat for a few seconds, and the\nanxious doctors bending over him\nthought all was over.\nPrior to this time, however, ex-\ntraordinary measures had been\ntaken to prevent or lessen the at-\ntack which they knew was coming,\nand his system, when it \nthat life was at an end, slowly and\nweakly responded to the treatment\nadministered, and gradually a\nslight rally took place. A gal-\nvanic battery was applied to his\nneck and back, and at last the pa-\ntient was brought from the verge\nof the grave to consciousness\nagain. He lay back, exhausted,\nand every one in the room re-\nmained anxiously watching, and\ndreading a return ot the attack.\nIt was the worst of all attacks, and\ngave way less readily to treatment.\nHe is extremely weak, but at times\nhis mind is clear, though intervals\nof consciousness are followed br-\nothers during which he appears to\nonly slightly realize what is going\non around him. He does not talk\nat all, and the doctors ever since\nhis iungs became affected, have\ndone all in their power to dissuade\nhim from using his voice.
030562cb1209244193c35adf63fe0955 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.7499999683769 39.745947 -75.546589 A few days ago, in a call at the house\nof a workingman, there were five chil­\ndren seated at a table, on which was a\nlarge dish of meat, swimming with\ngravy, in which potatoes had been cook­\ned. Theso potatoes were saturated with\nfat and almost impassible of digestion\nby uny person of ordinary constitution.\nThero were hot rolls, soggy looking\naud smoking from tho oven; parsnips\n•fried in lard aud reeking with the\ngrease. A pile of cheap cakes, sufficient\nto till a good sized four quart measure,\nstood on one corner of tho table; also\ntwo pies, witii crust containing so much\nlard that they looked absolutely greasy.\nThere was coffee, dark and rank look­\ning aiul worse smelling, and this the\nchildren were indulging iu quite as\nmuch us they pleased. They ate like lit­\ntle wolves, with an unnatural and fero­\ncious appetite. Two of them had pasty,\nunhealthy looking complexions; one\nwas evidently suffering some Rkin\ndisease; tho elder of tho group hud an\nugly looking eruption on his faco and\ncars, and the entire lot were living ex­\namples of the results of a mistukeu sys­\ntem of feeding It was no surprbe to\ntho visitor to hear, a few days later,\nthat two of them were very ill, one\nhopelessly so, with cholera morbus.\nThat tho death rate among such peo­\nple does not ine,rcase with frightful ra­\npidity is the one thing that the thought­\nful persons and philanthropists never\ncease to wonder at.\nThe parents of theso children would\nundoubtedly have said that they gave\nthe little ones tho best they coaid uf-\nford, but this was just exactly the\ncause of all the troubles. They gave\nthem too much and too expensive food.\nA proper diet would have oost a third\nof tho money and would have saved\nhealth and doctors bills, to say nothing\nof their lives.— New York Ledger.
1033a65df208280e6362a30ad6666cc3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.8835616121257 39.261561 -121.016059 By the overland mail we have received\nsome further particular* of the battle near\nLeeiburg, in wbieh Col. Baker waa killed.\nThere baa been considerable doubt, from\nthe accounts received by telegraph, whether\none battle, or three, or four, bad been\nfought in that neighborhood, and we have\nnot even yet, any reliable information as to\nwhether the Federal* still retain their po-\nsition on the Virginia side of the Iotomac.\nIt appears, however, that there was ouly\none battle, in which the California regiment\nand portions of the Massachusetts 15th and\nof the New York Tammany regiments\nnumbering, in all, about 1,800 men, took\npart. This force bad been sent forward,\nunder command of Col. Baker, to recon-\nnoiter in tbe direction of Leesburg. They\nwere attacked about five oclock in tbe af-\nternoon by a superior force of rebels, in\n and on botb flanks. The engagement\nwas short and bloody, and after Cel. Bakei's\ndeath the officer left in command gave tbe\norder to retreat to the river bank, where\ntbey could be supported by Gen. Stone and\nthat portiou of the army that had by that\ntime etrected a crossing. Temporary works\nwere thrown up on tbe river bank, to pro-\ntect the crossing, and it is certain tbey re-\ntained their position on the Virginia side\nthat night and the next day, and we have\nhad no intelligence of their having recrossed\ninto Maryland. The Federal loss in killed\nand wounded is stated at one hundred and\nseventy-five, and four hundred were taken\nprisoners. The battle took place on the\n21st of October, and Geo. Slone's official\nreport, which of course gives the exact loss,\nwas published a week or ten days later.
3415b95745f3c31622f0d1b42e76f948 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.7164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 Pci«r Cooper to the President.\nPeter Cooper has uddressed an earn\nest letter lo the President, urging hit]\nto accept the congressional plan of re\nconstruction, as the one, best calcula\nted, on the whole, to restore harmon;\naud peace to the couutry. He remind\nthe Presidont of the strong languag\nthat ha has himself employed, and a\nthe strong measures that ho has ad\nvised, so much beyond the require\nmenis 01 uougross. Mr. Cooper saye\nI have thought it strange and unac\ncountable that you should so severely\ncensure the large majority iu Cougresa\nfor adoptiug ho mild n form of meas\nures as a means for the guaranty o\na republican form of government in th\nStates so lately iu rebellion; measure:\nso much more mild thau those so forci\nbly recommended by yourself when\n said, "Treason against the govern\nment is the highest crime that can b\ncommitted, and those engaged in i\nshould suffer all its penalties;" un<\nwhen you declared, "that treason mus\nbe made odious; that traitors must b\npunished and impoverished."\nYou say "They must not only b\npunished, but their social power intis\nbe destroyed." "If not, they maintaii\nau ascendency, and may agttiii become\nnumerous enough for treason to bccoim\nrespectable."\nAgain you sa^: "I hold it a solemr\nobligation in every one of these State\nwhere the rebel armies have been beat\nen back or expelled, I care not hov\nsmall the number of Union men, i\nenough to man the ship of State, I hole\nit to be u high duty to protect and se\ncure to them a republican form of gov\neminent
064c76295ba006e0a587b0d6ea979dfa THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1886.691780790208 43.994599 -72.127742 the "pan soul" is more popular tlmn too ballet.\nAs in "mootlii'," the men sit on one side of tho\nhouse ami the women on the other. The same\nline of decorum is prosorvod in their social\ngatherings, the men sitting or standing in\ncliques at one end of the room set apart for\nthe entertainment, while the girls occupy\nchairs or benches ranged against tlio wall on\nthe opposite side, maintaining a rigidity of\nposition, with their arms folded and their toes\nfixed on tho same plank in tho floor, which\nwould do credit to a well drilled military com-\npany. The young men are ordinarily pain-\nfully bashful No girl would dare address a\nword, to one of the youths until he presents\nhimself before her and makes a remark to\nher, or asks a question which demands a re-\n and to do this the young swain must havo\ntime to make up his mind, first, whether he\ncan sufficiently overcomo his bashfulness to\ndo it at all, and, secondly, what he shall say\nwhen he has made up his mind to say some-\nthing a dilemma in which more fortunnto\nspeakers than Crackers have not unf requent-l - y\nfound themselves. This remark which oc-\ncasions such deep cogitation varies, of course,\nwith the taste and character of the speaker.\nIf he is of sentimental turn of mind he nerves\nhimself to the emergency, and, standing be-\nfore her, tells her that "tbor's a powerful line\nchance o' dogwood blossoms on the creek, and\nhe'll fetch her some if she wants them."\nThe maiden, being the first one addressed,\nreplies timidly: "I'm 'bleeged to you, John; I\nlike dogwood blossoms powerfully."
1f0e5c2394bd73d75a7c9fb9ff556655 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.0041095573313 39.743941 -84.63662 Scott was sent to jail, and in due\ncourse tried for. willful murder. Out\nof charity a young lawyer undertook\nhis defense. The evidence for the prose-\ncution was clear and convincing, and\nMr. O'Brien, the prisoner's counsel, saw\nno chance for his client's escape. The\nprincipal witnesses against him were the\nblacksmith, John Steele, his son Rich-\nard, the men that were in the smithy\nwhen the peddler and Scott first met,\nthe landlord of the inn, who swore that'\nScott urged the peddler to go to another\ninn, and the officers who found Scott\nwith the peddler's valise in his possession.\nThe hammer with which the murder\nwas committed was produced on the\ntrial, and shown to the jury. One of\nthem remarked to the Court that it was\n blacksmith's shoeing hammer. Mr.\nO'Brien quietly asked to be allowed to\nlook at it, and he examined it closely.\nTuen he stood up and handed it to the\nprisoner. Scott glanced his eye over it\nfor a moment, and then handed it back\nto his counsel. The next instant he\nclutched it, drew it from O'Brien's\ngrasp and scrutinized it with the most\nintense interest. Then he leaned on the\ndock and spoke in a hurried tone to his\ncounsel. The latter, with flushed face\nand hasty movement, made his way to\nthe side of the prosecuting officer, then\nspoke with the Judge, and,' after a few\nseconds, beckoned an officer and whis-\npered to him a few words. Mr. Steele,\nthe blacksmith, was recalled to the wit\nness-stan- d
1f92f2f4f7849ce28e7e5715a934f4bb THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1872.6024589847702 37.561813 -75.84108 having obtained a luxuriant\ngrowth, were limed and\nturned under. In May, anoth-\ner coat of manure was plowed\nunder, and the ground was\nharrowed perfectly level and\nlaid off in rows three feet\napart. In the furrows were\napplied Peruvian guano, salt\nand plaster, at the rate of 200\npounds to each acre. The\nseed corn having been soaked\nin a solution of nitre and roll-\ned in plaster, wa3 dropped ten\ninches apart in the rows, and\ncovered . with rakes, after\nwhich the land was rolled.\nThe corn was up in five daysj\nfrom planting and as soon as\nit was sufficiently large, a\nlong narrow plow was run a-- !\nround it followed by the hoe,\nthe crop being kept clean by\n level culture, until\nit began to shout and tassel.\nThe field was then irrigated\nby conveying from the reser-\nvoir a gentle flow of water\nthrough everv alternate row.\nTheyie!d on two acres was\n147 bushels per acre. The\nfollowing year the experiment\nwas repeated in like manner,\nexcept tnai tne rows were\nlaid off 2 feet apart. One\nacre yielded 2CK3 bushels, as\nattested by a viewing com\nmittee. Mr. Tarkerreceivod\npremiums on these crops from\nthe society named. He attri\nbutes much to irrigation in\nthese instances of extraordina\nry products, and concludes\nfrom these and former experi-\nments that success in corn\ngrowing depends greatly on\nthorough preparation of the\nsoil during fall and winter by\ndeep plowing, with under-drainin- g
30fa1d7fefca39e6dd50deda888cf9dd THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0671232559614 39.290882 -76.610759 the part of the people of the United States, to\nbe given or withheld by them, at their plea-\nsure. I have bee-i charged with wishing to deny\nto you tha right of citizenship. I have made\nno such proposition; but whilo I would give to\nthose now in the country all the benefits of\nexisting laws. I would appeal to you to say\nwbe.her the abuses, which have been practised\nin the ignorant exercise of the elective fran-\nchise, do not admonish us, that the time is come\nwhen we should modify our laws, giving to\nforeigners, heieafter coming to the country the\nright of voting: The time once was when to\nsay "I am a Roman citizen" was a protection\nagainst oppression.\nWhat advantage is it now to kave been born\na citizen of these United Btates? The hired\nsoldiery, whe plundered our property, ana\nwar upon oureountry, are, after a short probation,\nadmitted to all the rights of native-born eitizens.\nIs it not right, that in view of oar altered cir-\ncumstances, the increased facilitiee of throwiag\nupon our choree the ignorant and pauper popu-\nlation ef Europe, we ehould pretect ourselves\nagainst their pestiferous influence? And is it\nright that you, te whom so many privilege# have\nbeen granted, should take offence because it is\nproposed to put aa end te abuses, which, all\n see, endanger the public liberty? Are you\nnot conscious ef the increasing evil? Are you\nnet interested, deeply interested in arresting it?\nDo 'you not, in gratitude owe it te those wlto\nhave adopted you into the American family, to\nexert your influei.ee te do o; and is it not an\ninsult to your understanding; is itnot disparag-\ning your patriotism, when demagogues appeal to\nyeu and to your prejudices, as foreigners, te\nenlist your influence against a measure, is ne-\ncessary for the preservation of public liberty??\nDo 1 not giye a stronger evidence of my respect\nfor your opinions, end my confidence in your pa-\ntriotism, when I call upon yon to unite with\n;pe if aceempUb' nß this great reformation?\nTo the poople of the United States, I would\nsay, that this controversy is not of my seeking.\nIt has fallen upon me in the independent dis-\ncharge ef a public duty, It is pginful and un-\npleasant. But believing that the present mo-\nment, and the pocuhr\nare calculated to promote a modification of our\nexisting naturalisation lews, I propose to de\nall ip n7 power, as an editor, to accomplish\nthat end. Believing that a large majority of the\npeople of the United States cencur with me in\nopinion, and that the public will sustain me in\nthe conscientious discharge of this task, Iremain
0d3cb8d884f4da6cd209b27c2ff827d6 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1886.4150684614408 43.82915 -115.834394 don brokers are permitted to fix the\nprice of bullion produ ced in the U ni­\nted State s, and as they find it profit­\nable, in consequence of th ei r trad e\nwith India, where silver is the stand­\nard of value, to make it as cheap as\npossible, the price of th e metal is con­\nstantly declining. The United States,\nnow the g r e ate st silver-produ cing\ncountry in the world, permits Eng­\nland to regulate the price of the\nmetal, and instead of encouraging\nthe development of its mines by coin\ning silver fre e, pays only the L ond on\nprice for the bullion, which it coins\ninto dollars, which are a legal tend er\nfor all debts, public and private . A t\nthe present pric e of silver, the Gov­\nernment makes a profit of at least 25\nper cent, on its coinage, and in ste ad\nof restricting th at coinage to th min­\nimum allowed by law, it ought to coin\nthe maximum of $4,000,000 per\nmonth, and give bullion produ cers\nthe benefit of the increased demand,\nas it would have a tendency to ad­\nvance the price of bullion.\nAs the silver dollar will now pur­\nchase more of everything , ex cept\ngold, than it did twenty years ago,\nwhen silver bullion sold at a p remi­\num over its assayed value, no one,\nsave the untax ed bondholder, objects\nto its g eneral circulation, and as the\nSecretary of the T re asu ry is author­\nized by law to have 4,000,000 of such\ndollars coined monthly, he should, in\nthe present crisis, exercise th at a u ­\nthority, in the inte re st not only of sil­\nver miners, but of all the great in\ndustries of the country, as plenty of\nlegal tend er money will make work\nfor the factories as well as for the mi-
1a3278ea2fba1a1d647c9c51bbceb28e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1880.8647540667375 42.217817 -85.891125 Potomac had como to the conclusion that there\ni was a better prospect of good government from\nthe ilepublican party than from tue Democracy.\nWhatever tho exact way in which it came about,\nit is a hard fact that the Government of the\nUnited States for the next four years will bo\nRepublican in speech, purponc and action. Tho\nRepublican President will apparently have at\n.h is 'back, a Ilepublican Congress. What they\nwill they can do with tho Southern States and\nthrir people. We hope and behove, however,\nthat. the business interests, which were the\nmainspring of Tuesday's work, will be opposed\nutterly to any legislation that would in any way\nembarrass the agriculture and manufactures,\nthe trade and commerce of the Soutlu It is\nto tho interest of the North and West to take\nthis position. They will do it whenever and\nas soon as the people of the Southern States\ncease to bo by mliticians as the would-b- o\nautocrats of the Union tha they did their\nutmoht to destroy. When' this species of\nSouthern supremacy is laid, the Northern peo-\nple will bo freer to exhibit t&ir kindly feelings,\nand one of tho lirtt qveuliona the Southern\nwhites will have to ask themselves is, whether\ntho welfare of the Sou has and is hkely to bo\nhindered or advance' by alliance with the\nDemocrats of the Xorth. It docs not hurt\nthose gentrvto boheaten. They are sure U\nhave just and cial Governments in their\nStates in any cVt. Not so with tho South,\nIn losing politic" the South loses in pocket\nand in x&co of mind. Will tho South remain\non the losing 'ide, and if so on what terms and\nfor what pvlKseV Tho Southern people, we\nfancv, will fluke themselves heard on this sub-\nject before the winter is past."\nTho ngusta (Ga.) Cltronxclp and Constitu-
248e9099d19e3fd66c8de75084edb1dc THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1903.0945205162354 46.601557 -120.510842 Sec, 5. The secretary of state shall\nhave the power to revoke iinv license\ngranted by him under the provisions of\nthis act upon it being shown to lis ni that\nthe person, firm or corporation having\nsaiil license has heen negligent in the\nperformance of the duties oi caring for\nor in selling said products or in remit-\ning the sales of said products every\nthirty (801 days or for being guilty of\ndeceit and misrepreaentatonof any kind\nand character in respect to the market\nquotations or respecting the sale of I\nsuch products, the quality of such pro-\nducts, the condition in which saiil pro-\nducts were received and the condition\nof such products when sold. The pro-\ncedure Io revoke such a license shall lu-\nlls follows: The person making the\ncharge againat snch person, linn or\ncorporation whose license i- sought to\nhe revoked, shall make a charge speci-\nfically setting forth the grounds 01 ie-\nvocation, which shall lie forwarded to\nthe secretary of state, subscribed hy saiil\nparty and verified by his oath to the\nliest of his knowledge and belief. The\nsecretary of state shall thereupon cause\na copy of saiil charges to be forwarded\nto the person, linn or corporation com-\nplained of, who shall within ten days\ntime, specifically and under affidavit,\nanswer and explain said charges fully,\nwhich said answer shall be accompanied\nby such affidavits as may be corrobora\ntive of the facts set forth in said answer.\nA copy of this answer shall be sent by\nthe secretary of state to the person\nmaking the complaint, who shall within\nten days time file any affidavits tending\nt.i show the falsity of the facts set forth\nin such affidavits. The secretary of\nstate shall immediately thereafter de-\ntermine whether said license shall he\nrevoked or the application for revocation\ndenied. In case said secretary of state\nrevokes saiil license, said person, tirm or\ncorporation shall lie deemed then, to be\nwitln ut a license, and shall he subject\nto all the penalties provided for carry-\ning on such business without a license.\nSec. 10 . lt shall he unlawful for any\nperson, tirm or corporation, whose li-\ncense is sought to be revoked to present\nhis or its answer or explanation to any\nof such charges, tv the secretary of state.\nverbally or to talk with the saiil secre-\ntary of state respecting such charges,\nThat such answer or explanation must\nlv- made in writing and based upon docu-\nmentary proof as hereinbefore provided\nfor. ainl the person making charges shall\nobserve the tame condition in making\nthe charges.
039648f71ac27049ea965d901f7e4e55 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.2698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 Dr. S . Mt Stocuui, No. OS) Slxtoenth at\nChronic mnuktiona of tho ove-lida\nirise not only from the ocuto\n)f the disease, but may corae on\n;ho slightest irritation; the eyes\nfeol weak, prickle, itch, or fool hot\nough when exposed to bright li\n)r after reading some time; if the lide\n;urned up, little white specks may bo\n:iere and there, and the rest of the\nunctiva have a velvety appearance.\n;ew weeks, or perhaps months, all bj\n;omsand conditionBuescribodincrease\n?yea aro red, sometimes painful, the\nmrts thetn,tho sight is blurred by th<\n!8oa of teara, the granulations bee\narger, and finally a film commence\nhe upper side of the cornea, and pu\norward until the eight is obstructed\ni whitish coat and little blood-veesels\nleen running towards the pupil. 1\nire bettor and woreo alternately; a \nsruption of granulations causing g\niain for a few days.\nThese Chronic Granulations never\nveil without the moat skillful troatm\nmd a3 they are no very dancoroua to\nlight and to the health, no pereon affe\nvith them should depend a momon\nheir own remedies, or physiciauB i\nlave not had special study and cxperu\nn their treatment, for all aro sure to\nind thus, not only valuable timo is\n>ut the eyes aro greatly endangered\n>robably so much deformed as neve\nook aa well again, oven if tho dfseat\n. 1 1 removed. Frequently the condi\nmown as "wild hairs" is produced.\nGo to an oculist at once, and allo^\nmo else to meddle with your eyea.\nDr. Slocum can be consulted at hie\nice and Inlirmary, G'J Sixteenth utr\nhiacity,from'Ja.m. to5p.jr.\nF«ml«rN for th« Ohio Ulvcr llnllrond
068a1176a6b251b611d83a18f735715c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.4041095573314 40.063962 -80.720915 the late enemies of the Republic, si\nice* comment by it* audacity. Wo an\nt realizing what has been visibly com\nj for several years from 1808. It ha\nL'n apparent that the Republican part;\nthe South should be overthrown b;\nce if it could not be done otherwise\nio oiwning scenes of carnage in ilia\nar, in which more than *J,00O Republi\nih were killed and wounded in Louii\nla alone, were but n prelude to the cam\nij?n of violence which ended in th\n>odf field of laat year. The deitructio\nthe ltepublican partj would make th\nunocralic party supreme, and fwte\non! the country it* odioui policy ani\ninciplea. The men who directed th\n»ody crimadca in the 8outh for the la*\ni yearn that have culminated in a lino\nctofy in South Carolina and Louisian\ne still living, and have loot none of thei\niwer. The men who within nevera\nar* have wielded the Democratic part;\npolid column North and South uRain*\ne Fifteenth Amendment are ntill in th\ncendant. I* any man weak enough t\nlieve that they or a majority of thei\nive been noui'dlv converted, and ar\ninent advocate* the equal rights c\nen? It ift my opinion that the body c\ne Southern Democracy have not chanf\nin regard to the civil and politics\ngilts of the negro, nml that it Tilue\nid been elected President, within hi\nrm of four yearn the Fourteenth an<\nifteenth Amendments would have bee\nbstantially overthrown. Inmost of th\ntuthern Slated this would have been ac\nmpanied by the methods recently illu*\nated in Mississippi and other State\nid is altogether possible for thatcxqtlif\n?ly potential genius which can extrac\nDemocratic majority of 00,000 from\npublican majority of 30,000. No on\nays for conciliation and fraternit\ntween North and South mor\nrnestljr than myself, but concilia\njn and fraternity to be honorable an<\nirable must be based upon concession c\nual civil and political rights, peace an\notection to men of alt races and creedi\nthe men who held the colored peopl\nbondage, ami who at every step nine\ne war and until yesterday fought again?\nual rights and the Constitutions\nmendmcnta are to«day regenerated an'\nII administer tho great principles af\nrtcd by the Republican party, an\nnroil lit" it in tlii» I 'rtnalifntinn nnil llWi
20e204d006dbd66586edc619a4013943 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.2835616121258 41.681744 -72.788147 men Into the armV. but the serious-\nness of this may be exaggerated, for\nthe bulk of the recruits will be taken\nfrom cities, the counting room and\nfactory having provided .a large share\nof Europe's vast armies. Then, much\ncan be accomplished by a wider use of\nmodern agricultural machinery; the\ngasoline tractor for instance, which\nsupersedes the horse and promises to\nrevolutionize existing methods of cul-\ntivation. There is, theltefore, no rear\nson whatever for public alarm about\nthe food outlook. Last, year's short\nwheat crop and the locking up of\nvast supplies in Russia have been the\nmain factors in present high prices of\nwheat, and our farmers should plant\nevery available acre to make good all\ndeficiencies, especially the threatened\nshortage in our winter wheat crop,\n usually forms about two-thir - ds\nof the total. There, has been some\ntalk of Government regulation of\nfood supply, for which , it is hoped\nthere will be no necessity. Much de-\npends upon the attitude. Speculation\nin food products should be discour-\naged, and consumers should not fall\ninto panic, and unduly or selfishly\nstock up in advance of requirements.\nThere is an admitted shortage of some\narticles, yet the food situation in this\ncountry is nothing like so critical as\nabroad, and hasty action is unneces-\nsary in view of the' fact that : new\ncrops are already in sight. Our gov-\nernment is already considering vari-\nous plans of food control, and in case\nof emergency some form of govern-\nment intervention must be anticipated.\nOver-speculatio- n,
1e71255949beeab9a965257b222f19eb THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.4068492833587 32.408477 -91.186777 " It was to be anticipated that any\neffort to secure adequate and effective\nlegislation for special purposes Indica-\nted would be followed by the usual ar-\ngument that capital will be deterred\nfrom seeking investment in the state.\nThere would be as much reason to ar-\ngue against the enactment of more\nstringent laws against larceny on the\nground that such legislation would\nprevent people from coming Into the\nstate to make their homes. We do not\nneed the capital that might come for\nthe purpose of robbing the people any\nmore than we need and desire the Im-\nmigration of thieves.\n"The State of Louisiana has never\nbeen unfair In its treatment of eapl.\ntal, and there is no ground even for a\nsuggestion that its policy will be \nferent in that regard in the future.\nIts policy has always been and will\ncontinue to be sane and liberaL The\negitimate operations of capital have\nbeen and always will be promoted and\nassisted in every way possible. Even\nthe American Sugar Refining Com-\n-a ny has no just cause of complaint.\nIt has been left undisturbed for many\nyears, during which it has been doing\ntbusiness in the state, and the contro-\nversy with it arose only when it ina-\nsolently refused to deal justly and\nfairly with the thousands of the peo-\nple of the state engaged in the jre-\nduetion of sugar.\n"It must be borne in mind that the\nagricultural activities of the state rep-\nresent an Investment by our people of\nproductive capitaL The material wel-
2c021d5e3fe24a2bb86b8e3b43b0f286 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.1707649956993 43.798358 -73.087921 THE GENERAL JUDGMENT.\nWhen speaking of the final judgment,\nit is observable that he seldom omitted to\ninsist and enlarge on its publicity. He\nthus reminds us, that the tbcend for which\nthere is anyjudgment at all, is best secur-\ned by having it held in the presence of all\nworlds ; that piety may be most honored,\nsin most abashed, and the government of\nGod vindicated and glorified, on the larg-\nest possible scale. In a few descriptive\nwords, he fills the horizon with intelligent\nbeings of all orders and characters. It\nwill not be the judgment of a single indi-\nvidual, i;or of a nation, but cf a whole\nworld cf intelligent and accountable be-\nings. It will not be an assize of sins of\nrecent commission merely, sins committed\nthousands of years before will be repro-\n and examined, with all their circum-\nstances of aggravation, as if thev had been\nonly just committed. What a profound\nimpression will that produce of the holy\ncharacter of God, snd of the infinite enor-\nmity of sin! WThen his people are crown-\ned, "he would not have one of their ene-\nmies absent ; and when the ungodly are\ndoomed he would not have one of the\nrighteous absent; he would have them\nnow to forestall that day, to feel by anti-\ncipation, that they are speaking with the\nuniverse for their audience and acting in\nthe great theatre of the Judgment; and,\nthen he would have them to depart to their\nrespective allotments bearing away with\nthem impressions of the hatelulness of sin,\nand the beauty of holiness, which shall\nremain uneffaced through all the scenes\nof eternity.
213d41215442a9c68ee4be772c642fb3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.4534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 its beginning about two miles north of\nRoeendale end twenty mileslittle south of\nwest of here. It gathered force as it came\non, in its mad fury, assuming serpentine\nshapes, covering a track varying from 200\nfeet to a fourth of a mile in width, and\nsweeping everything clean in its path. It\nwas saen fully an hoar before it reached\nhere, and within a mile and a half of here\nit shied to the north a trifle, striking the\nnorthwest boundary of the town and\nspending its fury three miles to the north\nof here. Houses, stock, tiees, shrubbery\nand even grass were demolished in its\npath; everything being laid to waste and\nthe whole territory strewn with fragments\nof timber, houses and domestic articles.\nWhile the cyclone lasted the air was\nfilled with various objects, men were\npicked up bodily and thrown seventy-five\nfeet in the air and landed a mile\naway. A farmer named Maynard, living\nfour miles west of here, in attempting to\nescape the cyclone took the wrong course\nand ran into it. He was driven against a\nfence post and piercea through and\nthrough ly a four-inch piece of timber,\ndeath ensuing shortly aiter. His grown\ndaughter, Grace, was carried a quarter of\na mile from the houBe, and was found in\na corn field devoid of all clothing except\nstockings. She too died. The rest of the\nfamily were saved by fleeing to the cellar.\nThe house was blown to fragments and\nscattered for miles about. R . T . Nelson, a\nfarmer living a mile north of the town,\nwas sitting on his back porch reading, and\nwas instantly killed. His two sons nearby\nescaped severely injured. The rest of th'e\nfamily were at church. Mrs. Roberts and\ntwo children, three miles east of
23de27de06ed809e8aeb796554e96995 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1867.009589009386 41.004121 -76.453816 Newspaper" presented to us for consid-\neration, nnd wo nro notsure but our pa-\ntrons would bo woll suited with cither.\nTho first is tho namo of a distinguished\nliterary Journal In London ; tho second\nwould bo very npproprlato at tho com\nmencement of our ontorprlze, as wo\nstart with tho year; and tho last Is a\ngood word which can never become\nstalo or offensive. But wo havo not\nbeen able to content ourselves with any\nono of theso names. Each of them lacks\nmoro than one of tho requisites beforo\nmentioned, nnd all of them the Impor\ntant characteristic of Indicating tho\nplaco of publication.\nWo havo been induced, therefore,\nupon full consideration, to select tho\nnamo Columbian for our Journal, as\ncombining moro of tho requisites 'of a\ngood namo than nny other within our\nroach. It Is of proper length, a singlo\nword, expresses personality, and hull\ncatcs tho county whero published. Tho\nonly objection that could bo urged to It,\nthat It has been appropriated by another\n published here, no longer ex\nists; for that Journal is discontinued,\nand will havo no futuro existence. Bo\nsides, this designation of our paper will\nbo convenient In executing existing con.\ntracts with patrons of the former Jour\nual, tho execution of which wo havo as\nsumed. Current or running subscrip\ntions and advertising transferred to us,\nwill go on without disturbance of name,\nand with convenience to all concerned.\nIf industry, with fidelity, can ac\ncomplish our purpose, tho Columbian\nwill bo a welcomo visitor "all tho year\nround" to our patrons and readers, and\nwill take rank among tho best of country\npapers in the Commonwealth. Wo ore\ngreatly gratified and encouraged by tho\npopular favor already extended to our\nenterprizo; tho flno subscription lists\nfrom all parts of tlio county; the indi-\ncations of advertising patronage, nnd\ntho good words nnd volunteered prom-\nises of support from leading men. Wo\nask for a continuanco of this public\nfavor, and can pay In all sincerity that\nwo shall endeavor to deserve it.
0998c990ac24da2c36d3d293018bfc48 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1880.5696720995245 40.419757 -77.187146 IT of old Trnpbols, the miser, In the\nFortune! of Nigel, The heavy dull\nroom was lighted only by, the candle\nwhich tho young tioblemnu held above\nhis head 5 and It appeared to be exce-\nllently painted. But what drew iny\nattention was, that as a part of the\nconfusion In which the struggle between\nhe old man and his murderers bad\nplaced the, room, the washstand had\nbeen upset, hud fallen Into the fireplace,\nand the ewer had rolled Into the grate,\nwhere It was shown as unbroken,\nalthbugh the water was flooding the\nhoards afl exactly as I had seen the\nsame things five years before so exact-l - y,\nthat I wbb perfectly sure no chance\ncoincidence had produced the resem-\nblance, but that whoever had painted\nthis picture had seen the room where\nMies Parkway was murdered, and had\nhad the features of the scene stamped on\nhis Who so likely to have the\nscene so stamped, I instantly thought,\nas the murderer himself? As this rush-\ned on my mind, I could not repress an\nexclamatlon.although pretty well guard-\ned as a rule. The only other person In\nthe room heard me, and came to see\nwhat had excited me so strongly. Ap-\nparently, he was disappointed, for . lie\nlooked from the picture to his catalogue,\nthen to the picture again, then at me,\nback to his catalogue, aud thou went\naway with a discontented grunt. I did\nnot move, however, but remained quite\nabsorbed In tho study of this mysterious\npainting', and the more I looked the\nmore convinced I became that It was\ncopied from the scene of Miss Parkway's\nmurder. There were several little\njoints which I had not at first noticed,\naud In fact had quite forgotten ; such as\nthe position of the fire -ir on-
3f738718b77754a946a30fdca1846519 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1903.2561643518518 41.875555 -87.624421 mid If adopted ns to other corpora-\ntions would be a menace to the rights\nof litigants lit Chicago. When upwards\nof one hundred cases are placed on a\ncity trial calendar mid culled consecu-\ntively, the litigant whose case Is not\nnt the top of the cnlendar cannot ex\npect even a fair Judgment because the\nJuries who sit alternately soon begin\nto think that If they render ordinary\nsized verdicts tho city will soon be-\ncome bankrupt. If the same results\nwould follow In ease the traction com-\npanies succeeded In having special\ntrial culls made there would be u gen-\neral uprising of the Chicago bur. It\nIs possible that if special calendars\nwere iniido lu trnctloii eases tho pre-\nsentation of the evidence as to tho\nneglect of tho companies might enrage\nthe Juries nnd hence attorneys for\ntraction companies have not yet dared\nto suggest this cause.\n"Is it not time that some action was\ntaken by the Street Department of\nthe City of Chicago to render the\nstteets and sidewalks safe when It\nappears that there ure now more per-\nsonal Injury cases pending against the\nCity of Chicago than against the cities\nof New York, St. Louis, Minneapolis,\nBoston, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Den-\nver and Omaha? In fact, New York\nhas less than l.' .HM) personal injury\neases pending against it, and all the\nother cities mentioned 7'iO, making in\nnil about 1.000 eases, while Chicago\nhad pending against It on Jan. 1 . IW .'l.\n'J .aiM cases. If Judgments In these\nJ.. 'U4 cases were entered for $1,738.00 ,\nthe average Judgment for 18114, these\nJudgments would aggregate $4,085 ,-Mti. n-
126f9926cd5cb90c3af3612f32423e47 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.9849726459724 37.305884 -89.518148 "I want to tell you about an antelope\nI shot a week ago. I took my pony and\nwent away up above the ranch, tethered\nit out, and then went along a lit tle bluff\nto where I could look across the country\nfor a long way, I took out my glass and\nlooked and looked, but I couldn't see a\nsingle thing. Then I went on a ways and\nlooked again. I had been looking for,\nperhaps, an hour and a half when I hap-\npened to see a glimmer of something\nover a little hummock not more than 100\nyards away. It was just a little speck of\nbrown that I had seen, and I wasn't sure\nI had seen anything, but I cocked my\nrifle and waited. If it was anything, I\nknew it would come in sight 200 or25i)\nyards away and then I might accidental-\nly hit it if I tried hard enough. It\nseemed so long waiting there that I\nguessed I hadn't seen anything; then\nup went somethingon the rising ground.\nAnother jump and an antelope was in\nsight, followed by four others. I \nto catch sight at one, but they were so\nsmall in the sights looked little bit\nof rabbits. Pretty soon I pulled the\ntrigger; the next moment they were\ngone. I felt like crying. You know If\nI'd only seen them on the first rise in\ntime I'd have got a lotbetterchance.\n"But I put in another shell so that my\nrifle would be fully loaded, and waited\nfor them to come up on the rise beyond\nthat, 400 or 500 yards away. Pretty soon\nthey came up and I shot again it was\nlike shooting at a mouse. Ishotagain;\nthen I noticed that only four were in\nsight, and the other one must have\ncither turned off to one side or or and\nthen I ran over the first rise and up to\nthe top of the one on which I'd shot at\nthe antelope first. a ,nd there he lay, as\ndead as ever an animal was, and it was a\nbeauty, too. The bullet had gone into\nthe back of its head and torn a fear-\nful hole; two inches higher and I would\nhave missed, sure."
406fd6b9f7b1451f1d66f9d0469a6de7 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.9164383244547 40.827279 -83.281309 cannon, wnlch told that the battle\nhaJ begun. From that time till the\niast gun of the campaign was fired,\none hundred and nineteen days, it\nwas one unceasing battle. Not only\nwas the crack of the rifle our reveille.\nbut the sound of the cannot in the\ndistance soothed us to sleep at night\nand when the sound was hushed we\nawoke from sleep. So long a3 the\nfiring of the pickets told us that\nthey were awake we were secure,\nbut when all was quiet we felt dis\nturbed and anxious.\nI wish I had time, and it were ap\npropriate for me, to follow in detiv.l\nthe movements ot" those aemies\nthroughout the whole of that devi-\nous campaign, over mountains, aeros9\nstreams, and through those dense\nwoods and thickets. I have onlv\nume ou iuis occasion 10 give you a\nlew points, but nelore 1 proceed\nfurther I want to thank u for your\nsilence and attention,\nIt was my hope and desire to\ncrusli the army f Johnston by a\nsingle blow, and while you of the\nArmy of the Cumberland were\nclimbing the rough sides of Rocky\nFace, I knew what you did not, that\na brave and well appointed army\nwas moving to the right, upon a far\nmore important line than that 3 0 u\noccupied. I listened anxiously for\nthe boom of the guns of McPherson,\nwho had moved through Snake\nCreek gap, like a stream of from\na volcano, upon Resaca. Here I\ncame within an ace of accomplish-\ning my purpose, Johnston only es-\ncaped by a few minutes, as I have\nhad it from the lips of Johnston\nhimself, since the war.\nThen we moved down the valleys\nto Cassville, where I supposed John-\nston would fight. He has told me\nsince tho war, and shown me acopj'\nof his oraer to that etfect, that he\nintended to give battle on the range\nof hills below Cassville. He said\nthat he had been out all day and\nat night, when worn and wear.\nHood asked him to supper. The\nsubject of Jtb3 co uiiig b.ittlc was\ndiscussed and Hood told him that\nhis lines were enfiladed. Johnston\ntold him that it was impossible, but\nHood reiterated the statement, and\nJohnston could not go into battle\nwhen one of his most trusty corps\ncommanders was dissatisfied.\nThu'iiext morniug, when I had\nexpected to commence the decisive\nbattle of the campaign, I found the\nenemy's position vacant.\nTwenty .years ago, when a lieuten-\nant of artillery. I passed on horse-\nback through A 1 too 11 a Gap. I knew\ntbe place, and its advantages for de-\nfense, and I suiely thought John-\nston would make a stand here. I\nwas not a lhtlu surprised that he\ndid not, and we had no choice but\nto push on, for we would be satis-\nfied "only with victory. Below Al -to n-
c8c76d8724ed63defb035af879debd42 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.891780790208 43.798358 -73.087921 naces and other means of intimidation,\nthey assembled in a large yard on St.\nJames's street and according to the Vin-\ndicator's account of the affair, without\nnoise or offence organized, and passed\nresolutions expressing at once contempt\nfor the threatening attitude of government\nand a determination to persevere in their\nefforts to obtain the desired reforms re-\ncommending similar associations through-\nout the provinces, approving of the con-\nfederation formed at St. Charles, for con-\nducting the civil affairs ofthe province,\nwithout reference to the established gov-\nernment, &c. &c, and adjourned, not\nhowever without having been assailed\nseveral times during the proceedings, with\nstones and other missiles from the loyal\nists in the street. The breaking up of\nthe assembly appears to have been the\nsignal for a concentrated attack by their\nopponents. They succeeded however in\nbeating off their assailams, and retired to\ntheir homes. The skirmish, which ap-\npears to have been as brisk as it was\nharmless, was enough to bring out the\nmilitary the board of magistrates assem-\nbled the riot act was read and troops\nparaded the streets, with artillery, &c.\nUnder this display force, the loyal-\nists rallied again, and perambulated the\nstreets in a bodv. committing all sorts of\noutrages against'thbse supposed to be po-\nlitically opposed to them, and withoutlet oi\nhindrance from any quarter das'hing in\nwindows, breaking open and - riflng pri-\nvate houses among them the dwelling\nof Mr. Papineau, the leader of the liber-\nals, and, as if to leave no doubt of their\npolitical character and designs, they sum-\nmed up the doings of the night by an at-\ntack upon the office of the Vindicator\nnewspaper the only English liberal press\nin Montreal which they "gutted" fiom\ntop to bottom throwing the types, paper\nbooks, &C. into the street. The last out-\nrage occurred within sight and hearing\nof a picket of soldiers stationed to preserve\nthe peace, and with the knowledge of the\nboard of magistrates who seemed to con-\nsider it as an act of disloyalty to interfere!\nSo says the vindicator, the publication of\nwhich is to be resumed notwithstanding,\nand if we may judge from its tone on the\nday following this outrage, with increas\ned spirit and determination in the cause of\nfeform.
0da44bd0e8182f72296b0fdcb1389af1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.5246575025367 39.745947 -75.546589 are Interested in the enactment of a tariff\nlaw have urged upon their brethren the\nadvisability of coming to an understanding\nwith the Democrats under which the tariff\nbill will be passed within a reasonable\ntime and the federal election bill allowed\nto go over. But the friends of the election\nbill have brought a great deal of\nto liear In favor of forcing that\nto a passage before the adjournment, and\nwith a view to testing the possibilities of\naction they have examined the rules of the\nsenate and the record of past contests\niler similar rules.\nThe result justified them in the belief\nthat in spite of the fllilmsterlng of the\nDémocrate the hill could bo passed. In\nsupport of this claim It was recalled\nin the caucus that when the bill\nprovide for supervisors of elec­\ntions was under consideration in 1871\nMr. Thurman offered thirty amendments\none after another Intended to delay the\nconsideration of the hill, and by concerted\nand agreed action by the Republicans, un­\nder which one Republican senator\nognized, regularly to move to lay each\namendment on the table, all of these dila­\ntory amendments were disposed of within\ntwenty-four hours. It wus proposed that\nthe senate should sit out the consideration\nof the election hill if it took three months.\nThis was debated at great\nlength. The caucus adjourned without\naction on the federal elect ion law.\nThe hill was debated under the five min­\nute rule for nearly throe hours, Senators\nSpooner, Hoar, Fyre and Ecarts, all mem­\nbers of the elections committee, expressing\nthemselves in favor of passing the bill.\nMr. Aldrich, chairman of the committee\non rules, said it would be possible to pieis\nit in one of only two wuys—either by slt-\nt ng it out ns had been proposed, or by\nchanging the rules of the senate\npermit a limit to be placed on debate. This\nBNKgestiou gave rise to a long discussion\nabout the possibility of muking a change\nin the rules, which developed the fact that\na majority of the senators favored tho\npassage of the federal election bill at this\nsession of congress, and that a majority\nfavored a change in the rules which would\nmake this possible. Another caucus will\nbe held Saturday night to come to a final\ndetermination on the subject,\nmeantime nothing will be done with the\ntariff l*ill. A leading member of the caucus\nsaid after the adjournment that the tariff\nhill would probably occupy tliree weeks in\ndiscussion, but that the federal election\nbill would he put through in a week's time\nif it was determined to consider it.
6d0a0ac4aab0fb06078c20cdcf041306 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.441256798978 39.745947 -75.546589 reaentaklve Jefferson A, Staat», who\nrepresented Blackbird hundred Ir. the\nspecial eesalon of the (.encrai Assem­\nbly, at Dover, should have cast their\nvotes In favor of Equal Suffrage, a»\nit was endorsed by Hie Démocratie\nNational. State and •County Commit*\ntees. They openly speak In opposi­\ntion to the candidacy of Representa­\ntive Staats who I» spoken f for re-\nnominallon) on the grounds that hit\nvoting in the negative on the suffrage\nquestion was purely for political\nprenllge In his nwn IreheIf and that\nhe turned a deaf ear to the many\nwomen, as well as men who a\nproaehed him in behalf uf Hie su\nrage movement during Hi*' recent ses­\nsion Others claim that Equal Suff­\nrage Is a twentieth century move­\nment and are working In community\nspirit to procure a candidate who has\nthe Interests of the young at\nheart and who will endorse the suff­\nrage resolution If It Is Introduced In\nthe next session. Many of these young\nvoters wer abroad during the lime of\nthe last campaign and were unable to\ntahe part In It. During the period\nthat œey were in the service they be­\ncame much Interested In alUletle\nsports at the various training eampa.\nand as Messrs. I.atta and Staats both\nvoted m the negative when the box­\ning bill was before the Senate and\nHouse, at Dower, these young men\nfeel that this also Is a handicap to\nthe wishes of many young men who\nwould like to Indulge In the clean,\nmnnlT sport of boxing throughout\nthe entire Stale, which they remark\nwas endorsed by both the army and\nnavy during (he neoent world war as\nexcellent sport for the undevel­\noped young man.
131fff7c426c9989ed9bda3342d64d75 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.401369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 The old story that “cycling is dead”\ndoes not seem to be true this\nfor many wheels are seen spinning\nthrough the country bearing riders of\nboth sexes. Many riders of the fair\nsex who during the decline In cycling\nput their whees In thu garret have re­\nclaimed them, and may now be seen\nany day spinning through the parks\nand over the good roads that havo\nsprung up everywhere since the boom\ndays of cycling, Tho revival in cy­\ncling has besp growing steadily but\nsurely all over the country for tho\nlast five years, and the natural ques­\ntion arises, Why has it come bock?\nRoller skating, up to 16 years ago.\nhad been popular all over the country\nfor 10 or more years. Then It had\nnearly 10 years of decline, and anyone\nsuggesting roller skating nve years\nago would have been accused of\nbrainstorm, yet today there are two\nrinks in operation in and near th's\ncity. Cycling, taken in small and\nmoderate doses, Is one of tho best\ntonics to bo had. It furnishes goqd\nexercise with a moderate geared wheel,\nespecially to the person cooped up in\nan office or workshop all day.\nThen again, it permits one to closely\ncommune with bv getting out\nInto the open country, breathing tho\nsweet, pure air, exploring lanes and\nroads that street cars er automobiles\ncannot reach. It is very pleasant to\nride over good roads, coasting down\nhills and taking the up grades lets\nurely, with an hour or so lay over for\nrefreshment at some roadside ton\nfamous for Its chicken suppers. Old-\ntime riders even vet grow enthusiastic\nand vigorously assert that cycling is\nhealthy, will prolong life, save doc­\ntors' bills, keep you out of doors, euro\ninsomnia, aid digestion, increase your\nappetite. Improve you morally, men­\ntally and physically, and do other bene­\nficial things too numerous to mention\nCompared witji the prices of 20 yeais\nago. wheels cost nothing at all, and\nthe poor man does not now have to\nbuy a, second-hand wheel. Indeed,\nsecond-hand wheels, so plentiful a few\nyears aso. are now exceedingly scarce.\nThe local dealers assert that they are\nelamorlng fer second-hand wheels to\nsupply the country trade, and are en­\ntirely unable to meet the demand. One\ndealer has been advertising every day\nfor an entire year for second-hand\nwheels, and yet has not had a single\none on hand.\nMotor-cycles are also coming In for\ntheir share of popularity.
05ae38500866621085acf100b758c3ec EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.892076471109 39.745947 -75.546589 7 40, 8 3l)j, m, 12 49 nliiht.\nJralus for Delaware Division leave for:\nNewCastle,815.1123am.250,350,440,G16,\n«53. 3 60 pm, 12 08 night.\nLowes,815am,487pm.\nHarrington, Ueimar and way stations, 8\nam. Harrington and way stations. 2 50 p m.\nExpress for Dover, Harrington and Delmar,\n1118am,437nm,1201night.\nExpress for \\\\ yomtug and Smyrna, 8 53 p rn.\nExpress for Cape Charles, Old Point Com­\nfort amt Norfolk. 11 18 a m, 12 01 night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad street for Wil­\nmington, express. 3 50, 7 20, 7 27,8 31, U lu, in ai,\n1033 1118am,«1285,130,202.301.34«. 353,-*01.\n441,508,4617.530,56U,(117.«57,740,1118. ai\npm. 12 03 night.\nAccommodation. « 25.7 48. 10 38 ,11 55 a m, 132.\n88,3111.409,448,622,838,1003.1040,113»pm.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington tor:\nPhiladelphia, express, 1 55,2 66,4 20,8 50.9 00.\n10 05,11 51 a m.l 39,3 Of,,5 (4.5 10,5 58,8 08, 7 (HI, 7 28.\n9 12 p m. Accommodation, 7 00, 8 05 a m, 1210.\n145, 4 05. 5 20 .10 30pm.\nChester, express, 1 55,4 20,8 50, 9 00,10 OS, 11 51,\na m, 5 04,556,708,012 p. m. Accommodâtion,\n700.805am,1210,145,406.520.725,1030pm.\n express, 155, 255,420,700,850,\n1151 am, 1210, 139,305,405.610, 658,608.\n+8 21,7 08,10 30 p m.\nBoston, without change, 5 58 p m.\nWest Chester,via Lamoain, 8 0.5 a m, 5 20 p m.\nNew Castle, 9 50 p m, 12 06 night.\nCape Charles, Old Point Comfort and Nor­\nfolk. 12 01 night.\nMiddletown, Clavton, Dover, Wyoming, Fel-\nt°n. Harrington, Bridgeville, .Seaford, Laurel\nand Delmar, 12 01 night.\nBaltimore and \\Viishlngton, 4 48 , 8 01 , 1015\nam, 12 06. 5 23, 4603,740,8 20 pm, 12 49 night.\nBaltimore only, 8 (10 p m, 1213 night\nLeave Philadelphia. Broad street, for Wil­\nmington, express, 3 60, 7 20, 9 10. 11 18 a\n5M,857,740,835,11 1«, 11 30pm.1203 night.\n. ^0®°“mod,at*oo, 8 35, 10 88 a m, 12 35,2 05.6\n8as,1008andU38pm.\nFor further Information, passengers are re-\nferred to the ticket office at the station.\n♦Congressional Limited Express tralm com-\nposed enllrelv of Pullman Vestibule Tarlor\nand Otning Oars.\n«Limiten Express trains, composed of Pull­\nman Vestibule Parlor Cars, Vestibule Passen­\nger Coaches and Dining Cars.\nCHAS. E PUGH.
582985a8943a89f0c1087dea54650315 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.443989039415 39.290882 -76.610759 JL That being about to proceed under the authority\nof the act of Assembly of Maryland, entitled an act\nrelating to Mortgag'-s in the City and County of Haiti-\nmore, to sell at Public auction to the highest bidder a\ncertain parcel of Ground with the appurtenances par\nticularly mentioned and described in an indenture of\nMortgage and Vru*t between Edmund Gibson and wife,\nand John Glciiu, bearing date the nineteenth day of Oc-\ntober eighteen bundled and thirty five, and recorded\namong the Land records of Ruhiriiore County Court, in\nLiber T. K. No. 'J">3, folio 386 &c., he did oii the fourth\nday Of November eighteen hundred and thirry-r ine, give\nbond to the sscate or Maryland in such penalty and with\nsuch security a* were approved b? the Honorable John\nPurviance, Associate Judge of Baltimore County Court,\nin relation to the sale of said property, and did on the\nday hist mentioned file the said bond hi die office of lhe\nClerk of said Court, to the directions of the act\nof Assembly aforesaid, passed at Decernb: r session\neighteen hundred and twenty-six, Chapter 19-? . That\nhe did then give more than twenty days notice of the\ntune, place, niaunerand terms of sale by advertisement\nin the American, Patriot and Pilot,?three of the daily\nnewspapers published in the city aforesaid, that is to\n3ay, that the same would be sold at the Exchange in the\nCity aforesaid, on the thirtieth day of April, eighteen\nhundred and forty, at one o'clock, P. M. that the terms\nof sale were as prescribed by the deed aforesaid cash,\nbut the Mortgagees hud consented to extend the credits\nua follows, to wit: one fifth in cash at the sale, and the\nresidue inequal instalments at six, twelve, eighteen and\ntwenty-four month?, with interest, and undoubted se-\ncurity would he required on said credit payments, and\nthat at said sale John Gibson became the highest bidder,\nand purchused at and for the sum of thirteen thousand\ndollars.
3b94ca805f7da0acc14b8c5e174fc726 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.5986301052765 40.735657 -74.172367 than ten rears have elapsed since the subject of ,ios-\nquito extermination was first brought before the Legisla-\nture, and in that year the lawmakers made a bluff of\nappropriating $350,000 to be expended in different years in the work.\nThe State entomologist, occupied with many other duties, has done\nwhat he could, with beggarly annnal appropriations, to mitigate ibe\nsufferings of the worst infected localities, and he has given aid to tile\nfew municipalities that have made local appropriations for the pur-\npose. But the pest is as bad as it was ten years ago in most parts\nof the State, while in many sections it is worse. There are beautiful\nsuburban places in Essex and adjoining counties where this season\nthe people generally have been compelled to close their houses and\ngo to the seashore because of the plague of mosquitoes. The great\nmajority of these people have been accustomed to remaining at\nhome during the and taking short trips for recreation. In\nall these snburban places there is serious talk of moving away.\n.W here formerly a family could rent their suburban dwellingfor\nthe summer months to people living in New York no such oppor-\ntunity is presented now because of the dread of the mosquito. It\nhas become difficult to get yearly tenants for houses in pretty\nauburbs in North Jersey, and the same complaint comes from Bonth\nJersey near Philadelphia, the cause being the same. Practically no\nprogress has been made in mosquito extermination, because the\nState itself has virtnally done nothing and there has been no system\nand no management. It is time now for an agitation to be begun to\nbring pressure upon the Legislature and Governor to do something\nreally effective to rid the State of a nuisance that so seriously\naffects public health, personal comfort and even human life, as well\nas property interests and the States w-elfare.
229ed0cde23dbb36294fb2905b4825f2 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1882.2835616121258 42.217817 -85.891125 ing attitude than ever, every eyo fixed\nupon him, or painfully watching tho\ntho closing distance bet wee n themajestio\narbiters of a fearful doom. Our vert\nbreath was held as each and nil seemed\nto await the 'inevitable fiat of tho angel\nof destruction. Moments became hourc\nas the vessel's length forged through.\nCrash, crash ! not a word, not a move-\nment. The lofty giants had closed on\nour quaiters, throw cd one of our boats\ninbo.ud on the deck, crushing her aud\nher davits ; the ship, checked, staggered\nfor ono moment ; tho noise of her rush-\ning through the water reverberated up\ntho tides of tho bergs, when, just as we\nexpected to be overborne and flung into\neternity, our noble vtssc), that seemed\nto share in tho exquisite of the\nmoment, slipped through clear of the\nsplendid masses, that, Iwsing all their\ntenor, now commanded our admiration,\nwith full liberty of breathing action re-\nsumed. Lifo was bef 'o us again. The\nvery ship was endeared to her crew from\nthat moment? Did sho not seem almost\nto share our j'y and relief when, as it\nwere, passing through death's icy grip,\nshe so nobly plunged again into clear\nwater ? But a fresh scene had arisen be-\nfore our eyes. Couutltss icebergs of\nenormous magnitude had gathered round\nin all directions, obliging us again to\nyield obedience to their sway, unablo to\nthread our way to the open sea. Most\nfortunately the mysterious commotion in\ntho water had ceased, and these colossal\nmonuments of arctic solitude had become\nmotionless.
0da248ac6ce7337c4472253ae9bf7ce6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.1986301052766 39.745947 -75.546589 Tb« Italian bark Principes»* Mar-\nghevlta dl Piemonte, Captain Maristd,\nstruck on the Hen Mid Chickens Shoaie,\nnear the Delaware Breakwater, dur\nlug the dense fog of Thursday\na'ternoon. A fearful sea was breaking\nover the reefs at the time aud the unfor­\ntunate boat went to plecee and\ncomplete wreck in less than two hours\nThe tug North America and the life\nsaving crews went to her rescne in great\nhaste and those on board the bark had\nonly sufficient time to jump on board the\nrmculug boats when the illfated v« ogel was\nshattered against a reef,\ntng aud what little money the crew pos­\nsessed was lost, and the vessels destruc­\ntion was so complete that It was impos­\nsible to save even a log-book or the\npapers in the \nAt the thus of the accident "the fog\nwas so thick that it could be cut with a\nknife, " a s stated by one of the rescuers\nThe sea was so heavy that each\nmember of the saving party was\ncompelled to risk bis life in the attempt\nto get near the vessel Much floating\nwreckage, supposed to be the remains of\nthe bark, has been coming into the\nharbor at Lewes all day.\nThe ste&uer Alarnborn went ashore off\nDelaware City at noon on Thursday, aud\nshe is still there stuck fast in the mud\nThe tugs Crawford and Churchman have\nbeen hard at work trying to dislodge her,\nbut. ss yet cannot float her.\nborn was also cut down by a field of Ic s\n'-IT Delaware City about two mouths ago
37a82ffdc45fd67affebe1eebe47fe5e WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.392076471109 40.827279 -83.281309 By law every citizen in this State has\nthe privilege of not doing on Sunday\nwnai ne is ODiiged to do on otner days.\nThe very practical question meets him,\nwhat different things he can do which\nwill make this Sunday privilege a prcfit\nor a delight. Nobody is compelled to go\nto meeting or to sing psalms, or to learn\ncatechism, or to read sermons to fill up\nhis time. Every one can pick out some\nnew and unlaborious employment, and if\nne Knows now, can have sixteen free and\nhappy hours on one day in seven. It is\nof no use to object to Sunday as a Puritan\n&unday, tor tne law makes it a tree day.\nand forbids work, so that it shall be free.\nIt is a somewhat singular fact, that with\nthis chance of a free day so many can\nfind nothing better to do than to do busi\nness and work as on other days, as if\nwe did not all work hard enough from\nMonday morning to Saturday night. It is\nalso something of a commentary on the\ncapacity of many people for improvement\nand enjoyment, that after a little extra\nscrubbing and dressing is finished on Sun-\nday morning, they don't know what to\ndo with themselves for the rest of the\nday, and only consent to go to church\nbecause it is a little less stupid than to\nsit at home and gape at their own dull-\nness instead of a preacher's. Some try a\ncigar and a novel, others a big dinner and\nnap, others sitting around a or' stove\nand spitting at it. But after all these re\nsources have tailed, the only thing left is\nto wish for Monday and go to bed very\n:any. iiappy are tnose wlio in such an\nemergency have young ladies on whom\nthey may call.
12c852563f089f543f9eae268c5d7bfb THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1893.7986301052765 46.601557 -120.510842 mnn's when she sends father, brother, hus-\nband or sou Into the fight» It isn't the\nlilni of pnin that gives a man a cold chill\nwhen the bugle sounds "Forward!" but the\nthouKht that death willtake him from his\nhrlpleu other self. But If the other self\noan stand it nurrly he can. Death ends all\nfor him, while she must endure the shock\nof parting and take up a lifostruggle alone,\nand that, too, with her heart buried In her\nsoldier's grave. There would be no soldiers j\nIfmen as men arc had to bear the woman's\nsiilu of It. Man's courage is good for an\noccasional Kpurt; woman's fora lifelongtest.\nHowever, woman bears off some honors\nright front tho citnnon'x mouth. On the\nUnion side in the civil war military hero-\n came from every class and from every\nstage of civilization. Of thoxe who put on\niiMii'imithe record it hard to trace, but;\ntheir deAd and mangled forms on countless !\ntun i h llclils proved thut the American ama-\nton was no myth. Not to speak of these,\nthere were women who openly faced all the\nterrors and hardships- if war. Michigan |\nseems to have eclipsed the record in thisj\nclass of heroines.\nWhen the Second Michigan volunteers\nstnrUxi for the sent of war in 18til Annie\nEthcridge, a young woman just out of her\nterns, volunteered as daughter of the regi-\nment. Her 4MM «as a riding habit, and\n•he wore ami litiry cap as a badgoof her\ncalling. A pair of pistols rested in her\nhiiMiTs for nt iv emergencies.
49acb4b3ff91af915bca9c8942318f95 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.0341529738414 58.275556 -134.3925 Chief of Police McDonald handed\nin a report of the Police Department\nof the city for the time from Aug. 10,\n1903, to Jan. 1st, 1904. This report con¬\ntained some very interesting informa¬\ntion showing that the police business\nof the town is in careful hand«, and\nthat the expenditure of city fuuds is\nkept down to the minimum. In the\nmonth of September there were 14 ar¬\nrests made by the department, in\nOctober G, in Nov. 9, and in Dec. 13; j\ntotal 42. Fines were assessed to the\namount of S34G. The board of prison-\ners during this period cost the city\n$2.50 . Beds furnished by the depart-\nment 4. Meals furnished to broke\nmen 7; dogs killed 3.\nProperty reported stolen $70; property\nrecovered $40; loss $20.\n report also showed that the city\nhad on hands blankets and jail furni¬\nture amounting to $12.\nThe chief asked for handcuffs, leg !\nirons, and some slight improvements\nto the jail, the purchase of which was\nauthorized by the council aud the re- j\nport was approved and placed on file,\nMr. McDonald, as Chief of the Fire\nDepartment, also handed in his report\nfor the year ending Jan. 1st, 1904.\nThere were six alarms turned in dur¬\ning the year, but were only four fires.\nThe total loss of property by fire\namounted to $375. The companies laid\n4,000 feot of hose during the year.\nThe membership of the department\nby companies is as follows: No. 1,20;\nNo. 2,12; No. 3, 9; One chief aud three\noremen makes the total membership\n45.
05071c2bff3ccebbaed0da2328c458b4 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1895.987671201167 37.92448 -95.399981 Hurry Up, by Col. Bruce, a f ur\nyear old gelding, bred and raised\nright iu Iola, sold for $400.\nNettles, another, brought a price\nwell up in the hundreds.\nDr. Fulton has a Seneca See colt\ncoming that he is pretty high on.\nRespectfully dedicated to my friends\nIrving and Haney: How sad to me\nthese stormy days, they fill me full ol\npain; for by my office stove there's\nfought hard battles o'er again. It's\nCol. Bruce and little Budd and some-\ntimes others too; and from the horsey\nconversation the air gets fairly blue.\nFirst one will snap his fingers and\nthe other lay the law; whiln they tell\nof hard fought races and the horses\nthat thoy saw. This Bruce and Budd\nwere great ones too, to hear thet--\nstories two ten was but a hearse\nhorse clip for both these warrior0\nhold. And it's funny just to listen to\ndetails of a race; about the money\nthat they might have won at such\nand such a place, if the judges and\ntho starter, too, had not combined to\ntake each heat they won because a\nrun tho horse would always make.\nOr he grabbed a boot or threw a shoe\nor some such bad mistake; the kind I\nnotice all of thee two minute pacers\nmake. The record would he two-tw- o\nnow ifIhadhad ashow; is the wail\nfrom round my office stovo while the\nground is white with snow. How\npad to me these stormy days, they\nfill me full of pain; I have to listen to\nthese tales, till the weatherra fine\nagain.
1f1d526fd4ccc62e08968c56b5d8710d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1915.727397228564 39.623709 -77.41082 “I had left him very little to con-\nfess. It appeared that be had been the\nchief contriver of the plot, in revenge\nfor his own dismissal. He bad got two\naccomplices from outside, one of them\nthat doctor, who was as great an Im-\npostor as I was myself.\n“They elaborated their plans with a\ngood deal of ingenuity. Gomes began\nfeigning Illness several days before the\nreview, and made his nephew come to\nand fro continually, so that his appear\nance ceased to excite remark. Then\nthey dispatched the warning through\nPamplona, and lay In wait.\n“The king was, of course. Drought\nstraight from the tutor's presence Into\nthe cooks apartment, and exchanged\nfor Pedrlllo, and all that remained\nwas for Gomes to keep the child pris-\noner, by or persuasion, till they\ncould contrive to smuggle him out ol\nthe way unobserved. The Idea of ob-\ntaining the ransom while the captive\nwas still in his own palace was a\nbrilliant afterthought”\n“They were not punished T"\n"No; It would have been nnwlss.\nThey were informed that if they eve*\nreferred to their exploit they would\nbe put on trial for high treason, and\nthey seem to have held their tongues.\nOf course the fiction of the illness waa\nkept up to the end, and the king's con-\nvalescence duly announced.\nThe ambassador paused, and ap\npeared to be hesitating whether to sap\nanything more. At last be added:\n"When I Anally took my leave the\nqueen drew a magnificent ring from\nher own finger and presented it to
6f2437ebd36fd8b9cd87e64d56628fd2 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.919178050482 39.560444 -120.828218 Fetter, F. Rumnll,W. H. Ladd, iohnN.\nFlandreau, J.H. Craycroft, Green A Purdy,\nM. J . Goodfellow, W. H, Cheever, Wm. De-\nKay and W. S . Spear, under and by virtue\nof an Act of the Legislature of the State\nof California, entitled “An Act to author-\nize the formation of corporations for the\nconstruction of Plank or Turnpike roads ”\npassed May 12th, 1853, hereby declare their\nintention to organize a jointStock Compa-\nny, for the construction of a Turnpike road,\nto be located wholly in the county of Sier-\nra, State of California: said road to com-\nmence at Downieville, in said county, thende\nrunning down on the north side of the Yuba\nnver, following the river to Goodyears\nBar, crossing the said river at or near\nJames Goldens bridge; thence running\ndown the south side of the said Yuba river\nto the lower end ofRantedotlar Bar; thence\ncrossing said river to the north side, and\nrunning along said north side the lower\nend ofPierces Bar; thence crossing and pas-\nsing by two points to a narrow and high can-\non; thence crossing again and continuing to-\nanother canon about a mile and one half\nabove Indian Valley: thence rising to a\nlow gap in Indian Hill, where Eddy & Cos\nDitch first crosses the ridge, then crossing\nIndian creek a few rods above the forkst\nthence winding around the points of several\nhills until it shall strike the top of the\nridge at the corner of the “Frenchmans\nRanch;” thence following the ridge to the\ndividing line between Sierra and Yuba\ncounties. And the undersigned hereby\nappoint and designate the 20th day of De-\ncember, A. D. 1854, at 7 oclock, p. m.,\nthe National Theatre, in the town of Dow-\nnieville, in said county, for a meeting of\nthe subscribers to this notice, for the pur-\npose of a preliminary organization of said\ncompany, as provided by the aforesaid Act.\nAlanson Smith,
039817849a0c6511b25e5fb5f0cd3619 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.2999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 liiles anil giuo on liiin; hut it wasn't any\nJSC, that good little hoy always illeil in\nlie last chapter, and there was n picture\nif the funeral, with all his relations and\n. lie Sunday school children standing\nirounil the grave ill pantaloons that were\njmi short, and IkiiiiicIs that were too large,\nind cveryliody crying into handkerchiefs\nhathad a* muchas ayardand ahalfof\nHull in them. He was always headed oil\nn this way. He never could see one of\nhose good little boys, oil account ol his\nilway* dying in the last chapter.\n.lauoKIiad a noble ambition to Ire nut In\nI'&fiiiday-schriol hook. 1 lb franted' Ihr be\nnit in, with pictures representing liini\ngloriously dccling to lie to his mother, and\niho weeping for Joy about it; and pictures\n him .standing on the doorstep\njiving a penny to a poor beggar-woman\nvilli six children, and telling lier to 8|hjiu1\nt freely, hut not to he extravagant, be*\njaUHO extravagance is a sin; and pictures\n>f him magnauimously refusing to tell 011\nhe Imd bov who always lay in wait for\nlim around the corner, as he came from\nichool, and welted him over the head with\nlath, and then chascd him home, saying\n'I Ii! hi1" as he proceeded. That was the\nimhition of young Jacob Jilivens. lie\nvished to be put in a Sunday-school hook,\ntt made him feel a little uncomfortable\n. ometiuies AvJien ho reflected that the good\nittle boyfc arwftys dic^l: IIe loved to live,\n:ou know, and this wsi»thc most liuplcas\nmt feature about being a
21768e6906ee087a32a0cc9af606803a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8374316623658 41.681744 -72.788147 ant I am a mtmber ef the Methods\nchurch, and one of tbe first tMssP I\nlearned when studying lav was that\nno test should be made of the re-\nligion of any candidate for poblio\noffies. I should be ashamed of myself\nIf I voted against any man oa ac-\ncount of his religion. What differ,\nenco does it make what church a\nman attends so long as he becomes\nfamiliar with tbe ten commanamonto\nand lives up to them. I would sin-\ncerely recommend to the republican\nparty that they include In their plat\nform those same ten commandments,\nparticularly that one which reads.\nThou Shalt Not Steal.' "\nCriticises Hepeblicaa sswrnbsliaUusi\nDr. William F. Raardon ef West\nHartford, candidate for state seas,\ntor from the fifth senatorial district,\nflayed the republican administration\nboth state and national affairs.\nIn discussing the recent Watkins\nscandal, which was aired recently in\nthe superior court at Hartford, the\nspeaker called attention to a recent\nstatement made by Governor John H.\nTrumbull that a smoke screen was\nhovering over tbe state of Connecti.\ncut and that the only, way to get rid\nof It mas to return the republican\nparty to power at tbe election next\nTuesday. "I agree with Governor\nTrumbull about the smoke screen.\nHowever, Hugh Alcorn has blown a\nportion of that smoke away. If he\nblows all of it away before next\nTuesday, why Charles Morris of New\nHaven will be the next governor Of\nthe state of Connecticut"\nGovernment control of publle\nutilities was advocated by the apeak,\ner, who called attention to the fact\nthat one-s i xt- h
06f66616748717283c4f3aac0122cde1 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.57397257103 40.735657 -74.172367 avenue, 14-horsepower Maxwell runabout;\nRobert G. McCarter, 1080 Broad street, 4'J-\nhorsepower Packard touring car;Halacy\nTlcheuor, 850 Cliuton avenue, 40 -borsepower\nPackard touring car; Hurry Ervej. ttfc>\n1 fun ter don street, 22-horsepower Hudson\ntouring car; Charles Girrbacb. 308 Laiay-\nerte street. 20 -horsepower Mitchell run-\nabout; Joseph Ettenberger, J62 Abinger\nplace, 29-horsepower Reo touring car; Ben\nK. Wilson. 422 Orange street, 21-horsepower\nStcveiiH-Duryeo touring car; May Matt^cn\nPattern Company, 120 Pacific street. «<J-\nhoisepower White truck; lenient Morris,\n75 \\\\ ushington avenue, 32-horsepower Cad-\nillac pony tonueau; Gottfried Kruejor\nBrewing Company, 75 Belmont aveuue. 24-\nhorsepower Packard truck, Philip Miller,\n82 Clinton street, 24-horsepower Rungs\nFinch roadster; Pauline Oschwald, lvJ\nBigelow street, 32 -horsepower Velje tour-\ning car: May Mantou Pattern Company,\n12o Pacific street, 30-horsepower Whito\ntruck; F. & \\V. V. Engelberger Company.\n159 Jeiliff aveuue, 24 -horsepower Pope-1 i-\nledo louring car; August C. Begerow, 946\nBrood street, 35 -horsepower .Simplex tour-\ning car; E. Hill, 27 New street. 24 -\nhorsopower Packard touring car; Alfred\nCanfield, 35 Hu Heck street, 40-horsepower\nGrout touring car; Dr. Heury Ost, 477\nSpringfield avenue, 22-horsepower Ford\nrunabout; Jacob Htuver, 286 Runyon street,\n20-horsepower Oakland touring car; New-\nark Bllipostlng Company, 27 Treat plice,\n22.5 -horsepower Buick touting car; George\nVS'aer. 119 North Sixth street, 19.6-horse-\npower overland runabout; Louis Coburn,\nNinth avenue, 22.5-liorHapower Ford tor-\npedo; Henry J. Horst maini, 410 John street.\n2b.6 horsepower Overland touring car; Al-\nexander P. Milmoe, 83 Littleton avenue.\n32.4-horsepower Auburn touring car; Henry\nBachmau. 282 Clinton avenue, SO-hortie-\npower Cadillac touriug car; Karl J. Koes-\nter, 283 Orange street. 29-horsepower Reo\ntouring car; Otto Koenig, ICO Garrison\nstreet. 20 -horsepower Ford touring car;\nEarl c. Pullen. 900 South Sixteenth street,\n20-horsepower Ford touring car; Robert\nR. Wheeler, 26 Shanley iivemie, 20 -horse-\npower Hupp Motor Car Company run\nabout; Bray & Gorman, 612 Mt. Prospect\na\\enm\\ 20-hoi sepower Client
1c0fdaaf892b349ae8b8d8aac5ba681e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.5493150367834 58.275556 -134.3925 ber the wooden sheik 4.000 years old,\nfound iu Egypt and resembling Bob\nIngersoll. i remember letters written\nby Anne Boleyn, Queen Elizabeth and\nMary Queen of Scots. I also remember\nthe beautiful illustrated manuscripts\nmade by monks, some of which took a\nlifetime to complete. I will not give\nthe whole list. I visited the museum\nin Colombo as I visit the museums in\nevery city 1 visit if 1 have time. It was\nvery instructive. The industries of\nCeylon were demonstrated. First pearl-\nflshing. There were tub3 of oysters\nshowing the pearls and manner of sort¬\ning; the diving apparatus was a so\nshown. The silk industry was also\nshown; the mulberry tree on which the\nsilkworm lives; the worm is shown\nfrom its birth to its death. The cocoons\nwhich are cooked and otherwise treated;\nthen the process of spinning, dyeing\nand weaving the different grades; also\nthe manufacture of pongees, poplins,\netc. The growth of tea is shown from\nthe planting of the shoots to snipping\nthe full chests to Enrope or America..\nSo coffee and hemp and dozens of\nother things. Then the uses of differ\nent plants and trees are shown.\nl^or instance, the cocoauut palm.\nThere are huts built of the wood and\nthatched with the leaves; the milk of\nthe cocoauut is used as a driuk, also in\nmaking a fermented liquor; the meat\nis eaten, is used by bakers and confec¬\ntioners. The dried meat, called copra,\nis sacked upland shipped to large works\nwhere cocoauut oil and butter are ex¬\ntracted from it. These are used for\nhair oils, pomades and a dozen other\nthings. The shell is made into cups,\nsaucers, pitchers, all kinds of vessels,\neven teapots. They are also carved into\nworkboxes and all kinds of ornamental\nreceptacles. The outer rind of the nut\naud bark of the tree are u-sed for stuf¬\nfing mattresses aud pillows, for making\ncords and ropes, sacks, mattiug and\nbuffers. The sap, or juice, of the tree,\nis also used iu making a fermented\nliquor. 1 believe that is about all that\nthe cocoauut palm is any use for.
19cf768ac94ed5ee4df7af2758f0c016 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.7246575025367 29.4246 -98.49514 gone. He's a bully fellow and a true Christian\ngentleman. With men like him at the head\nof affairs, Mexico must, and will become a\ngreat nation. Our neighbors over the river, In\n.redo, Texas, are still struggling wilh police- -\nn i salaries, ordinances, etc. The city la\ncompletely basted so fsr as fioancial matters\nare concerned; Ihe dads don't exactly know\nhow to run matters, and everything connected\nwith the city govemment Is badly managed.\nn the early part of this m nth ihey dismisaed\ntheir Assistant Marshal, an i ihe following\nweek pnt him on again. It turns out that this\nAssistant Marshal jailed a popular Alderman;\nthis popular Alderman was caught using\nvery p ipular language In a poputar\nsaloon, and, of course, he wss popu-\nlarly drunk. Well, this papular Assls\ntanl Marshal felt it his duty t Jill this popu-\nlar aldermanlc bird, and of course it ended In\nthe pniular fine $7 Then the popular\ncitizens get up a n ipular petition to Insist\nupon mis popular Assuiani aiarsnsi ueing re-\ninstated in his popular place. This popular\npetition staled that ihe popular cltitens dtd\nnot consider this popular city aafe unless this\npopular otticer is put back, ine neat popular\nmove will lake place In the popular month ot\nApril, 1SS4, when Ihe popular citiiens will\nturn out the present unpopular\nand put in more popular men, providing the\npopular ring Is elasilc enough lor a popular\nstietch; if not this popular city must "buit."\nAnd now then about the popular bonds and\nmany other unpopular things that are taking\nplace. The same you shall know of in popu-\nlar time and It no doubt will cause a stir\namong a few popular dry bones. I send you\ninese lew popular items 10 nut in your popu-\nlar paper, as all popular independence in this\npopular place Is gone.
1cfae6584741d63b74a1c5e734868f83 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.9438355847285 39.623709 -77.41082 waving banners and under triumphal\narches he was taken to Castle Garden,\nwhere most of the great men of the nation\nwere gathered together to give him greet-\ning, and he was still not moved. Rut when\nhe had*taken his seat in the great amphi-\ntheatre. and when the curtain was lifted\nhe saw before him a perfect representation\nof the place in France where he was born\nand brought up, and when lie saw the old\nhome so filled with tender memories, the\nhomo where his father and mother had\nlived and died, it is said that the great\nman-was touched, and bowing his faoc in\nhis hands he wept like a child. If 1 could\nonly draw aside the veil which separates\nthe seen from the unseen, ho that yon\neoull behold that city which hath founda-\ntions. there would be no need for me to\npreach, for in the very thought of heaven\nyon would be almost overwhelmed. 1 have\nread descriptions of cities both in anoient\nand modern times, tint such a de-\nscription as this; adorned like a bride for\nher husband; a city in which there is\nneither sickness nor sorrow, death nor cry-\ning; a city of walls and gates; on the oast\nthree gnu's, on the west three gates, on\nthe south three gales, on the north three\ngates, and the walls had twelve founda-\ntions. and in them the names of the twelve\napostles of the Lamb. The angel that\nmade the revelation had a golden rod in\nhis hand with which he was measuring the\ncity, and found that the length was equal\nto the breadth, and that the wall was 144\ncubits; that the building of the wall was\nof jasper; that the city was pure gold, and\nthat the twelve gates were twelve pearls.\nIt is said that, they were wide open by day\n— there is no night there, and in that city\nthere was no need of the snn, for the glory\nof the Lord did lightea it, and the Lamb\nwas the light thereof.
2df91709209b74f3817f70e40cd5cfa1 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.5122950503442 40.735657 -74.172367 Second Avenue—Forty (40) days.\nSouth Twentieth Street—Fifty (50) days.\nThird Street—Forty (40) days.\nWilloughby Strpet—Forty (40) days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work\nran be examined at the office of the Chief\nBngineer of the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners at the City Hall!. Said pro-\nposals to be accompanied by the consent. In\nwriting, of two sureties, or a surety com-\npany qualified to do business In New Jer-\nsey, who shall, at the time of putting in\nsuch proposals, qualify as to their responsi-\nbility In the amount of such proposal, and\nbind themselves that, If the contract be\nawarded to the person of persons making the\nproposal, they will, upon Its being so award-\ned, become his or their sureties for the\nfaithful performance of said work; and that.\nIf the person or persons or refuse to\nexecute such contract, they will pay to the\nCity of Newark any difference between the\nsums to which he or they would have been\nentitled upon completion of the contract and\nthat which the City of Newark may be\nobliged to pay the person or persons by\nwhom such contract shall be executed-\nThe Board of Street and Water Commis-\nsioners of the City of Newark reserve to\nthemselves the right to accept or reject any\nor all proposals for the above work as they\nmay deem best for the Interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified\nthat under the provisions of the seventh\nsection of the law creating the Board of\nStreet and Water Commissioners, approved\nMarch 28th, 1891, that the bond or bonds to\nbe given for the faithful execution and per-
368843caf41f0643aab6e9fd572f27cf VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.6616438039066 43.798358 -73.087921 Perhaps more may be done by firm and\nindependent female?, in staying the pro-\ngress of this sin than has yet been accom-\nplished. Woman, in the march of this\npestilence, has bled at every pore. Who-\nmever is the drunkard, she is the sufferer.\nThousands have sighed and groaned in\nvain: thousands bound to profligate hus-\nbands still weep and wail ; bound to\nputrid death, and expecting deliverance\nonly when God commits the offensive bur-\nden to the grave. Here her power may\nyet be seen. And by frowning on it in\nthe bud, and opposing it in its first ad-\nvances, she may drive intemperance from\nsocial intercourse, from poisoning the\npride of her family,, and ultimately from of\nthe world. She has frowned profaneness\nfrom her society, and she is equally in her to\nsphere when she frowns indignantly on\ntne drunkard, and shuts every avenue that\nleads to her abode from his approach.\nThe possibility that in a congregation\nso large as this, there may be, unknown\nto myself, one single such mother as lam\nabout to describe, justifies the remarks\nwhich I feel it my duty to make. The\nvery thought that these walls embrace,\nand that yonder graveyard is soon to en-\ntomb, one single intemperate moiher, is\nsickening to very soul. No combin-\nation presents so much that is unnatural\nand loathsome as an intemperate mother.\nThe soul turns from it with abhorrence.\nIn describing an intemperate man, we are\non lawful ground. We see him and\nknow him. He is public. He publicly\ndrinks, and is a fair object of public re-\nproof. We must warn nim, and tell him in\nof his sins and dangers. But we shrink\nfrom speaking thus of woman. We would\ndraw a veil on the disgusting fact, and\nhide from the world the melancholy truth,\nlhat one such mother tfeads the earth.\nBe it buried, for ever buried. Let it not\nbe told in Galh that a single such mother\npollutes the air and beholds the heavens.\nBe it among those truths, painful truths,\nof which the world would not speak; the\nloathsome and melancholy facts, which,\nfor the credit of man, we wish o hide\nfrom every mortal gaze, and bury deep.\nand for ever, in the unbroken sleep of\ndeath. Tread lightly on her memory\nwhen she dies, and let it be speedily blot-\nted from the recollection of mankind, that\na drunken mother lived. Let no marble\ntell the cause of her dying, and speak not\nto the stranger at her grave of the man-\nner of herlivin?.
10a29c68c2c30a23b9b98f8985a4cf88 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.4287670915778 42.217817 -85.891125 wished his loquacious' landlady any-\nwhere but whero she was; hex voice\nsounded like an accusation against him.\nAt length, he hit upon the stratagem of\nyawning and pretending to fall asleep,\nat which, still chatting to herself, the\nwoman withdrew.\nRelieved to find himself alone, Salva-\ndore sipped a little more of tho coffee,\nand ato another mouthful of bread and\nbutter; but the one tasted bitter to his\ntongue, and the other seemed as if it\nwere sprinkled with ashes. At length,\nworn out, both in body and mind, he\nthrew himself, in his clothes, on tho\nbed and slept slept soundly. Nor\nwore his dreams unquiet. It seemed as\nif the countenance of his mother, wear-\ning an angelic unile, horjred over him;\na beautified shadowy f o) its clasped\nhands lifted up in benedictions, to which\na host of seraphim from a radiant sky\nsang sweet hallelujahs.\nSalvadore, half rising in the delight\nof this delicious dream, would have fol-\nlowed tho airy retreat of tho airy appa-\nrition into eternity, when the impress\nof a small, soft hand seemed to draw\nhim gently back to earth, and with no\nless deb'ght he beheld the lovely feat-\nures mt the jeweler's young daughter,\nbeaming in all their childish tenderness\ninto his eyes, inviting him to remain.\nAt this period, the dream dissolving,\nSalvadore awoke; and, rising partly\nfrom his bed, rubbing his eyes as if to\nconvince himself what he had seen was\nno illusion, something dropped from his\nbreast with a loud sound on tho uncar-pete- d
196f93bb4fac5974db3e2e6dd2e12522 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.5164383244546 42.217817 -85.891125 is insane. He haa no delusion, and taJka rationally\nand calmly about his crime, glorying In it,\nand evinces no symptoma of regret at its\nroiuiuiaslon. On 'be contrary, be is as firmly con-\nvinced as ever that it was his duty to kill the Pre- ide -\naud says that he hot him with precisely tbe\nsame feeling that he would have shot a rebel bad he\nbeen iu the army. Hia talk on thia subject is appar-\nently that of a fanatic. Tbe only regrst that he ex-\npresses at all is that the President is not dead. He\nsaid that he learned with sorr w that he is growing\nbetter. This was early in the afternoon, and he\nbased his remark on the talk he bad beard among\ntbe officers of tbe Jail, who been expressing\ntheir p'eaure at the favorabe bu:letina that were\nthen issuing by Dr. Dli. . Guiteau scoffs at the\nidea that he is an ordinary criminal, and desired\nto save himself from pun'.shmcnt On the contrary,\nhe says that tho happietd moment of bis life since he\nmatured his plan to kill the lTesklent h" exierlenced\nw hen he was n his way to Jail. The carriage that he\nhired to take bim to the Congressional Cemetery was\nreally intended to carry liim 1 1 tho Jul1, which ad-\njoins the cemetery. He had 1he carriage ready and\nwaitiug for him, and had instructed the driver to\nhurry quickly aa postib.e to the cemictery when he\nshould Jump in.\nThere Is no one here who believes that the crime\nhas any political Figuifliunce whatever. Th-
1f29e10f581fe5afaff7f5038e9312d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.8095890093862 40.063962 -80.720915 commencing at'J o'elouk p. in. , tho uuderalKiied\nspecial cumluiakioueis will sell at publlo miction\nat ibu hunt door of lUu Court House of said louuty\ntho following diaoilbed plecc, or pared oi gtoiinl,\ntiturned lu Ohio Uiuuty, lu ibu btaie uf toekt Vlr-\nglula, ou tho Maiii'iml i\\oud at thu cxtiuaiM uud of\nIbu fluid lylug east uf thu » ultou Faper Mill, aud\nibouuiud a* follow*: Hrgluulug ut thu north-\nwofeUru oorucr of kald tl*Jd. tbcuro aouih twenty\neight uud a half degrees we*l forty one p des, tan\nliukstuasiouc, ou the bank of Whecliug ('ruck;\ntheuce uortu forty im.veil and afourth ucgroui w ekt,\nUve ttolra aud twuuty ouu units to a sloue, theuce\nnorth iwouiy-clgbi aud a balf degree* w»t. forty*\none |MiUu to a staku at thu iuuco by uud road;\nthuncu ioutn lorty-ulue uud Ihice-fourihs digtuu\nwki *lx pole* auu twenty-eight lluka to thu btglu-\nmug, uoutHiulug ouu acre, two laid*, and twenty-\nsix polea, tubjet t, Uuwu.er, to au ugrcomeut b*\ntwocn Danlui oteuiir.*! aud wile aud John W.Beriy.\nabout cerUlu stnscU aud roida tlurulu meuito-icd\nwhlcu agruoiiKut U of record lu aaldUmuiY of ublo\n>u;U tktatu Mill bo uilured *k a tvnole, uud lu\ntlitoo purceU, tho nn>t It lug thu homl propcrt)\ntroutlngou thu Nitlloual hoad, mid cxiuud:n)i\nbuck u> aktrwot lu thu ruar; thu aocoud being the\nhomcktukdof ka.d UwUurth. aud tuu thlm Uu-\nfactory ur klaugbtur-houitu of aald Orth, caiunding\nto Ahcollng Ctvelt. a platol aald |>arcoia may be\nw'cu ut thu otllco of tho uleta of tho Uiuuty t.ourt\nol Ohio Couuty.\nTKUMb UK BALK: Om-fourth aud a« much\nuioio tu tnu pur. tuuur uuty doct to (ay, lu ca&b ou\ntbu day ol kale, the bulauuu lu tbruv u ju«l luttall-\nmenu »t one, two uui turuc yuant, uotca buurlug lu*\nturu>i from tnu day ol tale lu boglvua for tbu uu\nfuirod jmymeuu, and tbu tlllo I»bu ret«iuuil until\npayuiuut in lull. Tnu paymcut of Ibu purchaae\nlunucy ahull bu lurlher aoturud by pcrwuuU kvuiir-\ntty ou tbu uotck ihuiefur, to uo approved by the\ncoiuiulkaioiien, »r ut the elecuou uf thu puanafcr.\nl>y uolleluof lukurauco ou lliu bulldiuga ou auld\nproperly payabiu to»ald uniimUklonera lu auch\nurnuunt aa thvy ahull require, aud taauod by coin*\npuulua to be approved by them,
4f396259b470b63be90cde7fdd58e5be CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.3538251049888 41.875555 -87.624421 No argument Is needed to prove that\nIt Is the duty of every man to tuko an\nactive lutereit In the government under\nwhich ho lives, ami even to accept pub-\nlic olllcu when his hervlces are needed.\nHut each man HUM decide for hliiit-e i - r\nhow much of his time he can afford to\ngive to the publlo without neglecting\nhis duties to hN family. Mr. I.lttleflcld\nof Maine .resigned from Congress the\nother day on tho ground that after nine\nyears' mrvlco In Washington, at great\nfinancial sacrifice, his duty to hi fam-\nily required him to return to thu prac-\ntice of tho law. Senator fipooner of\nWisconsin resigned his peat about a\nyear ago for Mmllnr reasons, and\nThomas It. Heed left Congress and the\nSpeakership u few years earlier, to\npraetlco law New York, In order to\nniako provision for his family. The\npatriotism and public spirit of tlioso\nmen are admitted, and they weio no-\nwhere condemned for retiring, nftor\ngiving many years to thu Mirvlco of\ntheir country. Indeed, they received\nmora commendation for leaving public\nolllcu to make a living than Is given to\nmen of wealth who neck to nerve the\npublle In tho Senate. The recent death\nof the Duko of Devonshire has removed\nfrom public life In Ilugland a rich man\nwho was not condemned for his activi-\nties in olHce. IIo was one of tho wealth-\niest peers In the I'ulted Kingdom, mid\nmight have lived nt ease In tho enjoy,\nnient of his Inherited estates ; but dur-\ning prtKtlcnly all of his long life n\ndevoted his time and Ills great nbllWiM
01a779a7d4350eab0f4aca61d2f8c00c THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.2561643518518 38.894955 -77.036646 Tbe Commissioners this afternoon pre-\npared an order to have a careful Investiga-\ntion into tbe methods of kecptug tho ac-\ncounts ot tbe District, making the entries\nIn the books kept In tho ofllcea of the Au-\nditor, tho Assessor and tbo Collector of\nTaxes, to tbe end that the methods bo sim-\nplified and reduced to ono complete and\nuniform sj stein, and that alt proper checks\nbe applied thereto; also to havo tbo arrear-\nages of taxes copied Into ono or two\nledgers properly prepared therefor. Com\nrolesloDcr beatley is appointed a commit-\ntee to Investigate all of tho books ami\nrecords, and ho shall call to his assistance\nsuch persons as ho may deem necessary,\nand bo shall report to tbo Commissioners\nof tho result of tbo Investigation, with\nrecommendations as to tbo best and simplest\nmanner of keeping tbo accounts. Commis-\n Webb stated to a Carrie reporter\nthat there was nothing wrong that tho\nCommissioners knew of, and that the In-\nvestigation Is to bo made for the Improve-\nment of tLo present methods.\nTho Ccmmlsstoncrs mado an Important\noider tits afternoon concerning the assess-\nment of real estate and tbo collection of\ntaxi r, Tbey sa that after a careful exami-\nnation of tbo present law thoy find that It\nhould bo changed, and Commissioner\nWebb Is appointed a committee to draw an\namendment to the present law or draft a\nnew ono. Commissioner Webb stated tint\nthe present method ot assessing real estate\nIs not satisfactory, hcLauo assessors are\nselected from their respective districts with-\nout any peculiar fltutM for the work, He\nthinks tbero ibould bo a tioard of assessors,\nand the) should bo In fstlou cotiAUntl).\nJanus Small, the Sealer ot Wilghts'and\nMeasures,
2dc514f6235580d9eb1d3d21fe201a15 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.7445354875026 58.275556 -134.3925 In Introducing the Delegate to th«\naudience Mayor O'Connor referred to\nthe fact that he had not felt Tery kindly\nto him in tha pant and, while he did not\nthen express any "high and tnlghty"\nadmiration for blm, said he would «up\nport blm a* against bos* rule, by which\nbe ia supposed to bare meant the dic¬\ntatorial policy of a certain branch of\nthe Republican party In Alaska that I*\nantagonistic to the Delegate. Mayor\nO'Connor said he was no hide-bound\npartizan, but intended supporting the\nDouglas Inland nominee*, both Repub¬\nlican and Democrat, for the lower bou»e\nof the legislature, meaning Messrs.\nMonte Benson and Nela Anderson.\nThe Delegate prefaced bia address\nwith a One line of blarney In which he\nreferred to Douglas aa being the best\ntown, with the bo»t baud and the bent]\nmayor in For once in hla life\nbe bad no chip on his shoulder, but\noame bearing the olive branch of peace.\n11* wore a serene (tulle that suggested\nwhite- wiugeil doves and kittens with\nwhite ribbons on their neck*. He felt\n. o kindly towards humanity in general\nthat he nerer referred to the charge*\nhe framed up less than three month*\nago about transportation combine* for\nthe purpose of robing Alaskans.\nHe gnre an interesting account of his\nwork at Washington, telling bow tb»\nnumber of new bills passed at the last\nsession did oot average half a bill to\nthe member but bow of the bills\npassed, six were bis, introduced by blm\naud put through for the benefit of bis\nconstituency, lie said he ia au Alaskan\nrather tbau a politician and that wben\nWorn out with llfs's pilgrimage\ndreary,
1c13f222de5f295096cece2a625e305b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.746575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 The 21met told them very plainly that\ntheir presence iu Chicago was not desired,\nand suggested that thoy would consult\ntheir personal comfort by abandoalngl\ntheir proposed visit in this city. This\nsuggestion was hated, of course, upon a\npresumption that they contemplated a\nrepetition in Chicago of their perfor¬\nmances at Now York. It appears from\nthe statements of Dr. Aveling that such\nwas their intentions, ami that It has not\nyet beeu abandoned.\n"In short, Or, Aveling and wife and\nHerr Liebknecht propose coming to Chica¬\ngo for thu purpose of inciting, if they cao,\nresistance to the execution of the sentence\npassed upon their co-religionariee who\nnow languish in the Coos county jail.\nIn order to accomplish this end they wili\nattack the laws and Institutions of the\ncountry and seek to iiiilame the passions\nof the vicious and turbulent elements oI\nthe community by the samo methods\nthey are now employing in the East, In\na word, their erratid in Chicago will bs to\nrenew the of crime partially\ninterrupted by the incaroeratiou of the\nmiscreants who have been carrying it on\nIn this city for years past.\n"Tha.r/»iij has Intimated to those in-\ncandiaries that this will bo a dangerous\nbusiness. It Is said that there is more\nmedicine In reserve of the sort that has\nbeen prescribed for the Haymarket assas¬\nsins, which will be promptly administered\nto any who shall attempt to emulate their\ncrimes. II Dr. Aveling and his vitriolic\nspouse aud their Teutonic: co-laborer in\n,8 ,.ca"a" of 'revolution' do not believe\nthe Timet, thoy will certainly become con¬\nvinced of its truthfulness should they un¬\ndertake the experimsnt upon which they\nseem to be bsut. The public sentiment\nof this community is in no mood totrillo\nwith llrebrauda of the Aveling-Llebknecht\nvariety. The Haymarkst butchery is too\niresh in the popular memory to expect\nthat any latitude will bj klven to parsons\nwho may come here (o preach the detcstl-\nb o doctrines that boro fruit in that horri¬\nble crime."
4230cdc986d40bbe80089926f67b059f OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.9246575025368 41.020015 -92.411296 c:>iiirol thotn. The testimony of our bsst eltl-\n!.rn«, of all classes, establishes the fact, that\nCHERRY PECTORAL will en<l does relieve and\neuro tl.i> ufBicting disorders of the TliroRt and\nLung? bevond any other medicine. The most\ndinffcroni affections of the Pulmonary Ornns\nyield to its power; aud cases of Consumption*\ncursd by this preparation, are publicly known,\nso rematknble as hardly to be believed, were\nthey not proven beyond dispute. As a remedy\nit i"' adequate, on which the public ttiny rely\nfor full protection. By curing Coagba, tlu\nt'orerunuen of more serious disease, It saves un­\nnumbered lives, and an amount of suffering not\nto be computed. It challenges trial, and con­\nvinces the most sceptical, tvery family should\nkeep it on hand as a protection against the early\nand nnperceived attack of Pulmonary Affec­\ntions, which are easily met at flrtt, but which\nbecome an'd too often fatal, If r,se­\nlected Tender lunts r.eed this defence; end It\nis unwise to be without it. As a safe.'juiu'd to\nchildren, amid the distressing dileaies *hich\nbeset the Throat and Chest of cliildliood, CHEBEI\nPECTORAL is iimUuil/.e: for, by its timely use,\nmultitudes are rescued from premature graven,\nand saved to the love and affection centred on\ntliem. I: acts speedily and surely arair.st ordi\nnary colds, seciuiiiR sound and liealth-restoHnj;\nsleep. No oi^e will suffer troublesome InOU*\nenza and painful Bronchitis, wlieu tbey know\nhow easilv thev 0.111 'ue cured.\nOriginally tlio product of lonf, laborious, ar.J\nsnccessfiii chemical investigation, no cost or to=l\nis spared in milling every bottle In '.lis utmost\npossible perfection. It may lie confidently ruhul\nupon as possessing alt the virtues it has ever\nexhibited, IUIJ capable of producing euies as\nmsmorsM* as tiie greatest it lias ever ^ffsouJ.
32ba698486842c2988100ab0d00913c3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.250684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 obeyed In Moscow; German officers *h??lr hc,ro rake she clalm* Ask* aD-\ncommanded and German aupplles pu liment._ _ __ ___ _ __ _ ___ __ _ __ __ __ __ _ _\nequipped Russia Red's armies Njw\n(here Is practically a renewal of .the\nalliance which prudence reaulred lo be\ntemporarily d'savowed. In mllltar stlc\nand Imperialistic Hungary Koraiyl sus­\npiciously turns the government ove* to\nBolshevists when a boundiry settle­\nment did not suit h'm. the new gov­\nernment promptly ahgns Itself with\nmilitaristic Russia, and Lenlne warns\nhla follower« not to expect In Hun­\ngary full appllcafon of Red principles.\nGermans and Hungarians, one may\nbelieve, are too Intell gcnt to wish to\ndest"oy their industries as Russia has\ndone, but war, like politics, makes\nstrange bedfellows. The Bolshevist\npower has international cannotations\nas well as domestic ones. Oermmy.\ncne may surmise, feels that she can\nco operate with Russ a In the \ntional field without becoming Bolshe­\nvist in her domestic affairs.\nThe new triple allance Is as menât»\nmg as the old. Diplomacy of the mosi\n«eci el sort Is at work. A population of\ntwo hundred and fifty mill ons or\nmote Is being brought together for\naggressive purposes. To repeal an in­\nquiry made on another occasion, what\nsort of minds have the statesmen at\nParis7 Militarism, Imperialistic Im­\npel iahsm. Is again afoot, with a now\nset cf flags, but with no change of pur­\npose or methods.\nThese cond tions have been allowed\nto develop when they could ei« iv\nhave been barred—If peace had been\nspeedily made, a peace alike of vloto-y\nand of justice. Heavy is the respen-\n»ih.ilty of those who do not appre­\nhend the simple t:-u!,h that the war and\nthe peace are one.\n•In matters that do not fall within\ntheir immediate existence and obser-
24ef34c38bdd6c78191424d2f50af3b8 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1942.0205479134956 40.618676 -80.577293 Due to the rapid growth and sizfe\nof our treasury, some discussion de­\nveloped on the question of the local\nreducing the monthly dues. If you\nare interested in this matter, for or\nagainst, attend the meeting and voice\nyour sentiments. A motion was made\nand adopted that members should reg­\nister their attendance upon entering\nthe hall, instead of after the meeting.\nProblems effecting kilnmen, jigger-\nmen and decal girls were up for dis­\ncussion, but no decisions were made.\nThey will be discussed more thorough­\nly at a later date.\nMembers of Local Union 122 were\nvery pleased to learn of the ten per\ncent increase granted at the wage\nconference held recently in New York.\nOnce again we urge that our mem­\nbers' faults be overlooked and spot\n the better qualities which may\nhave gone unnoticed. Like begets like.\nA gesture of helpfulness and a co­\noperative spirit may bear a like re­\nturn. When imagination runs ramp­\nant, remember the saying about those\nwho are without sin. Familiarize your­\nself with the laws of the organiza­\ntion and then comply with them. Don't\nwait until some complaint is lodged\nwith the shop committee about dis­\nregarding the rules.\nThere always seems to be a shadow\nthrown across the happiness of Christ-\nis. This this it struck the home\nof Brother Fred Shimp, apprentice\ncaster at our shop. Phyllis Ann, 7,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shimp\ndied at the Swan hospital from in­\njuries sustained on Christmas Eve\nwhen struck by an automobile near\nher home.
119659a4b46128e5877bc7eeabfae455 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.9904109271943 39.745947 -75.546589 VICTIM OF A LEGAL CONSPIRACY.\nSamuel C. Hark lue, Judge Ball's of­\nfice boy, is always in trouble. He no\nsooner gets out of one scrape before\nsome of his designing friends got him\nin another one. A day or two ago 'Mag­\nistrate Sasse, his son, Wilbur, Consta-\nble Bowen, Artemaa Smith and Pierce\nBlair Pie entered into a conspiracy to\nmake Che day pass in an exciting man­\nner for young Harkins. When Magis­\ntrate Sasse has any legitimate work on\nhand he is all for business, but when\ntimes are dull and litigants scarce he is\nright in for any fun which comes t£p.\nWilbur Sasse brought action against\nHarkins on a forthwith summons to re­\ncover 25 cents, borrowed money—or\nrather, it was alleged to be borrowed.\nThe fake summons was placed in the\nhands of Constable Bowen, and he im­\nmediately went upstairs, read it to Har­\nkins and took him before the magis­\ntrate. The defendant was mad and took\nno pains to conceal It. He was advised\nto take the matter and not to\nmake himself liable to a penalty for\ncontempt of court. Artemaa Smith was\npresent and anounced himself as attor­\nney, for young Sasse. The magistrate\nad&ised Harkins to retain counsel, as\nIt was a very serious matter. He finally\nretained Pierre B. Pie, with the under­\nstanding that he was to pay him noth­\ning for his services. Then the trial be­\ngan. An effort was made to have the\ncase adjourned until some future day,\nand the court ruled that as It was a\nforthwith action an adjournment could\nonly be secured by the giving of special\nball. Constable Bowen generously of­\nfered to come to the rescue, and the de­\nfendants face brightened, but the cloud\npassed over the face of the sun again\nwhe n the magistrate refused to aosept\nthe. constable as surety, on the ground\nthat all the real estate he owned was\non the soles of his shoes, and it be­\nlonged to somebody else, and that he\nhad merely picked It up inadvertently\nand carried It oft with him.
31da0a9e3b155057080c65f03cf2181f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.4972602422629 40.063962 -80.720915 The Governors old friends were proud\nof him, and his little speech made man)\nnew ones in Pennsylvania.\nHon. Simon Cameron was the nexl\nspeaker. Ho was very happy in his re\nmarks. Ho praised the country and the\npeople.said they were his kind of wo\npie and had Ills kind of religion. (flu\n[alter remark provoked an Incredulom\nsmilo on the faces of the multitude.)\nHo said it was a good thing to unite\nthe colleges, and referred (pointing to tlx\nold college building) to the time whei\nthe old building was new. No doubt the\npeople then said, "My Godl what a nice\nbuilding 1" [Laughter.] Now we have i\ncollege five stories high, llut the daj\nwill come when this, too, will look inslg\nnlficant. When the old collego was bull\nthe United States had twelve or thirteer\nmillions of inhabitants. When this \nbuilding is as old as the other one. then\nwill I* two hundred millions In the Unltei\nStales, and Pennsylvania will have twentj\nmillions herself. People not like Kus\nsians or Japanese, but n Uod-fear\ntx>o|ilp. IIo said the last lime he wa\nhere lie saw two hundred women on horsi\nback, And from whnt the old fellow sai<\nabout the sccno we wished tlint wo couh\nhave lwen there to behold it. They wen\nall pretty and graceful rider*, and nt\ndoubt long ago became useful wives am\nmothers. He wound up with acompll\nment to the Hootch-Irish,\nBimon is still a hale, robust old mnn\nand can l>enl a good many of the boys ii\ntliM neighborhood making'n speech yet.\nRev.H . Pershing, of Pittsburgh, follow\ned with some facetious remlnlsenccs o\nthe class of I860 of which he was a mem\nbcr.
2cfff69953ccb48acdbfc10fec6a0e07 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.3082191463725 39.745947 -75.546589 Sanzone, James\nSantlllo, Nicholas\n•Santos, Wm.\nSapp, Nellie May\nSapp, Phoeba\n♦Schorah. Joa E.\nScott, Frank\nScott, J. H .\nScotton, Edwin\nScott, Harlan\n•Sdaman, Jo». F.\nSellera Marian\nSellinger, Rose\nSchaeffer, Chaa J.\n•Schofield, Amy\n•Schofield, Homer\n•Schlatter, Hugo\nSchmitt, G . F.\nSchnepfe, C . B.\nSchnepfe, Emma C.\nSchwartz, Miss\n• Sharp, Harry\nSharp, Mary B.\nSharp, H. Rodnev\nShaw, W. Miller\nShaw, Sallie R.\nShaw, Tamar D.\nShelton, H. E .\nSheppard, Frank\n•Siegrist, Frank\n•Simmons & Broa, Co., S. G .\nShinn, Wm. & Co.\nSimmons, Jr. , Chaa\n•Simon, Chaa. H .\nSimon, Clarence E.\n•Simon, Harry L.\n•Simon, H. Paul\n•Simonds, W A.\nSimmons, Wm. H ,\nSinclair, John G.\nSingles, Dora J.\nSipple, Wm. S.\n•Skelly, Helen G.\nSmedley, M. Esther\n Alice\nSmith, A .\nSmith, Assian\nSmith, E . W.\nSmith, r4»o.\n•Smith, Harry\nSmith, J. Henderson\n•Smith, Lester E.\nSmith, Rebecca\nSmith, Mrs. Sarah B.\nSmith, Willard E.\nSmyth, Earle\nSnitchrr, Sam. R.\nSnyder, Anna\nSalomon, Gertrude F.\nSolloway, Mrs. Josephine\nSomer, Dorothy R.\n•Spar, Martha R.\n•Speakman, Edw. M .\nSpeakman, Mra Chas. C .\nSpicer, Beulah M.\nSpire, Henry\n•Spragg, O. Herbert\nSpringer, Mrs. Pearl V.\n• Springer, Dr. Willard\n•Spur, Topbrelia\nStaats, Chas. H .\nStayton, Albertus B.\nSteinle, P. H .\nSt Johns Comdry, Ns. 1, K. T.\nSteele, Leander B.\nSteeL Leroy\n• Stern, Mona\nSteele, Mrs. Stanley\nStein, Julius\nSteptoe, Emma\nStetson, Fred\nSteuer, Albert\nStewsrt, Catherine P.\nStewart, Mrs. Eliza M.\n•Stewart, Mra Wm. I.\nStocktill, John W.\nStent, Jr, H. C.
5beec49815be798b80107ed0a7acf188 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.8456283836774 41.681744 -72.788147 The committee has stated' the\nprice that It is costing to stage this\nopera tomorrow night so that those\nwho buy the single admission tickets\nmay realize that they are paying;\njust what the production actually\ncosts the committee. As there are\nbut a few score over 1,000 good seats\nin the Community theater, it means\nthat it is costing tho committee II\nper seat to present the opera, the\nfirst of Its type to be offered the\npublic of Bristol.\nThe Manhattan Opera company\nhas had the capable leadership of\nKingsbury Foster, for years a suc-\ncessful impresario and formerly al-\nii' '1 with Foster & David, concert\nmanagers, for some time,\nOw(ing to the fact that the com-\nmittee could not tie up seats for the\nfive concerts by selling single ad-\nmission seats for the one perform-\nance of Thursday night, such tickets\nhave not been sold. However, they\nwill be. offered for sale tomorrow\nmorning (Thursday) at the store of\nWiilliins Brothers and in the \nning after fi o'clock at the box of-\nfice in the Community theater.\nTicket Chairman Charles S. Joy\nannounces that a very pleasing pre-\nliminary sale of tickets was a fea-\nture of the efforts of the commit-\ntee. However there remain many\ngood seats, these being for the most\npart In the balcony, which owing to\nthe acoustic properties of the thea\nter become the best seats in the\nhouse for concert or musical events.\nThe force of young men from. the\nhigh school, who usually act as\nushers for the most Important af-\nfairs held In the Community thea-\nter will again handle the crowds at-\ntending the opera tomorrow night.\nThis means excellent service.\nThe committee has been compli-\nmented on the manner in which ar-\nrangements have been handled. The\nsale of seats has been absolutely\ndemocratic, with no special favors\nto any. Not even the guarantors\nwho are underwriting the large ex- -\npense incident to the bringing of the .\nfive concerts, were
c7c8b0659c4700214cd68fbd3e5c5900 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.346575310756 31.960991 -90.983994 stroets, in the town of Port Gibson, thence\nrunning along Main street 98 feet to a stake,\nthence N. 78e, W. 175 feet, to a stake,\nthence N, 12atE. 98 feet, to a stake in the\nedge of Walnut street, thence along Walnut\nstreet 175 feet to the place of beginning;-\nbeing the same lot of ground sold by Israel\nLoring to the Bank of Port Gibson, by deed\nbearing date the 29th Dec. 1838, and re­\ncorded in book T., page 1G2, of the records\nin the office of the Clerk of the Probate\nCourt of Claiborne county, and being the\nsame lot of land whereon the Banking house\nnow stands. Also, the following lot, piece\nor parcel of land, being the South half of\nLots 4 and 5, in square No. 10, in the town\nof Port Gibson, fronting 19 feet on Main or\nMarket and extending back the same\nwidth on Walnut street, 300 feet to Fair\nstreet, being the same property sold by B.\nHughes and wife to H. N. Spencer, by-\ndeed bearing date the 4th October, i 836,\nand recorded in book P., page 632—also\nsold by II. N. Spencer and wife to J. O.\nPierson & David Bush, by deed bearin\ndate the 14th February, A. D . 1837, and\nrecorded in book O., page 275—also sold\nby Wm. M . Gwin, Marshall, to the Bank\n■of Port Gibson, as the property ofPierson &.\nBush, by deed dated 12th October, 1840,\naud recorded in book U., page 452.\nproperty will be sold to pay and satisfy the\namount due to J. B. Thrasher, and the costs\nof executing this trust. .Such title as is ves­\nted in us as Trustees will be made to the\npurchaser.
1c2c8b869721dfad53dfbcc7ea998a06 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1901.332876680619 36.694288 -105.393021 years later an enterprising machinist\nset up a head knife for dressing up the\nheavy timbers, and the woodworkers\nIn the cities began to get rid of some\npf his heaviest work, but he of the\ncountry shop sawed out his shafts,\npoles, felloes, etc., by hand. Then a\nset of rip and crosscut saws, which\nsaws, small and large, constituted an\nimportant part of the woodworker's\nkit. We recall a prosperous shop in\nan inland town where there were fif-\nteen woodworkers. Through the center\nof this shop was a row of fine chop-\nping blocks, with their broadaxes for\nhewing heavy timbers, spokes, etc.\nTho axle makers (the axles being all\nof wood), the wheel makers, the body\nmakers and the men of all work oc-\ncupied benches In the one shop. Not\na piece of power machinery was used;\neven the grindstone had to be turned\n the youngest apprentice; men\nworked eleven and twelve hours a\nday. The best wheel maker was able\nto make one set of buggy wheels a\nweek. The man who made a single\nseat phaeton body of a pattern similar\nto the "Queen" In one week was look-\ned upon as a marvel of speed, and all\nother work was accomplished In about\nthe same proportion of time. Wages\nranged from 17 to $12 a week, except\nfor the wheel makers; these got S2 to\n$4 more, according to their skill and\nspeed. The apprentice boy received\n$25 a year and his board for the first\nyear, and $35, $50 and $85 a year for\nthe three years thereafter.\nWhen the labor hours were reduced\nto eleven a day the year around em-\nployers cut down wages accordingly,\nand there was a visible reduction in\nthe yearly output. The life of the
364eb0a5617d908cbe28c78d217b7c01 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5423496951528 39.745947 -75.546589 with hundreds living In our own\nState, no doubt the following artlole,\na trcatlso on tlsh diseases, written by\nR. L. Riffle, who, by the way, is an\nauthority on the speices, will prove\nvery Interesting to our many readers:\nNew remedies must bn found froiru\ntime lo time for the treatment of\nflsh ailments. That which Is found\ngood for one trouble may not bo of\nany use In another case and there la\nno "cure-all" in the treating of flsh\ndiseases any more than In tho treat­\ning of other living things.\nHowever, salt was looked upon as\na great deal of a “cure-all" especially\namong Irout men In the past. Salt\nwill always have its place In the\ntreating of flsh where there Is In­\nflammation caused hy various tilings,\nsuch as rough handling, also parasites\nand the as temporary relief.\nUsed as a brine halb wherein hun­\ndred of flsh ran be placed at a time\nIt Is very beneficial In tending to\ncreate a new coaling of slime over\nthe body of I ho flsh which Is essen­\ntial to the life of tile fish Itself.\nIt is not necessary to give hern a\nlong list of the minor troubles that\naffect the flsh but rather to tell\nabout, and whet has been done In,\nthe treating of a few of tho worst\nand most destructive things that at­\ntack them. A few troubles such as\nthroat goitre, pop eye, and “going\nlight" as I term It, the latter being\na case where the flsr gets off feed,\nchanges color and In time becomes a\nmatter of skin and bones so speak­\ning, a trouble on the order of tu-
17ae2dbb029997010d75779fb8b9ac8e PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.8589040778793 40.441694 -79.990086 Referring to the recent pilgrim incidents\nin Rome, the Marquis declared that he was\nfirmly opposed to the abolition or modifica\ntion of the Papal guarantees law. Pil\ngrims, he said, might come to Italy with no\nfear of molestation. Italy's relations with\nforeign powers were friendly, and she would\ndo her best to strengthen peace. The vari-\nous Governments of Europe were inspired\nwith great prudence and moderation. Italy\nshould have no fear of the grouping of\nfriendly allied powers. Italy had renewed\nher adhesion to the Triple Alliance in order\nto guarantee a state of affairs fitted to pro-\nmote a policy of recuperation.\nWholesome Measures to Be Introduced,\nPremier Rudini announced the introduc-\ntion of measures to diminish the expense of\nthe local corps, to settle the difficulties of\nRome's civic administration and to re-\norganize banks issue by liberating capital\nand issuing uniform notes in the form\nadopted by the Bankers' Association. Con-\ntinuing, Premier Rudini said that the com-\nmercial treaties with Germany, Austria and\nSwitzerland did not injure manufactures.\nThey favored!the exportation of agricultural\nproducts. Alluding to the Vat jean, he said:\n"We have in our midst the Papacy, which\nsometimes assumes a threatening attitude;\nbut its sphere of action is limited to the ex-\nercise of spiritual power, not only by a law\nwhich cannot be lightly contravened, but\nalso by the almost unanimous consent of\nthose who thought themselves most re-\nligious. The country's ecclesiastical policy\nhas now become traditional. The honor\nand strength of the Kingdom of Italy must\nbe scrupulously maintained. The deplora-\nble incidents produced by a few short-\nsighted persons will not make us deviate\nfrom that policy.
716faf451ce7dd91ba962950bd1b67eb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0589040778793 41.681744 -72.788147 "Let the boy alone," said Prof. "I\nwon't have you women picking on\nhim like that. There are a few\nthings about us men they'll never\nunderstand eh, Jim?"\nThat was true, Jum smiled.\n"You mustn't blame Moilie," he\nsaid to Martha, "for what slip said\nm her letter. If you 11 remember,\nwhat she said was this: that there\nwasn't one chance in a thousand\nthat I'd ever be any better mental-\nly. Well, the chances are I won't. So\nthere weren't any lies in the letters.\nI thought I could play possum until\nthe twins had gone to Europe, and\nthen if Betty hadn't found a man by\nthe time she came back I could try\nall over again with her myself."\nAnd so, said Jim, there they were.\nNothing more to tell, and mighty\nsorry if he had upset them: "But\nall's well that ends well, you know,\n'and besides, it wasn't as if we'd gone\n of our way to make you suffer.\nYou never really expected to see me\ncome home well again."\nThey were interrupted by the ring-\ning of the telephone. Prof jumped\nup to answer. He came back after\na long while to tell them that John\nClayton had called up.\n"He got Mike's telegram, and he\nsaid the only thing that keeps him\nfrom getting drunk to celebrate 1he\nevent is that toe has made it a life-\nlong rule to limit his drinking to\none cocktail before dinner.\n"He says he'll be over here tomor-\nrow forenoon and that Mike is to\nstay here as a companion to Jim\nuntil Jim is strong again, when he's\ngot a job all picked out for Mikov\nrunning a cigar store he just bought\nout. How's that strike you, Mike?"\n"O. K."\nBetty suddenly lifted her head to\nlook at Martha Dalton. "Why," sha\naccused, "you've forgotten the peach\npie, Dalty!"
0c998778ed7f9e2dfbe2a065d74e6f1c THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1898.3246575025369 37.92448 -95.399981 Again, I remark, you ought to make\nthe very best of your bereavement.\nThe whole tendency Is to brood over\nthese separations, and to give much\ntime to the handling of mementoes of\nthe departed, and to make long visita-\ntions to tho cemetery, and to say, "Oh,\nI cau novcr look up again; my hope, is\ngone; my courage Is gone; my religion\nIs gone; my faith In God Is gone! Oh,\ntho wear and tear and exhaustion of\nthis loneliness!" The most frequent\nbereavement Is tho loss of children. If\nyour departed child had lived ns long\nas you have lived, do you not suppose\nthat he would have hud about the\nsame ainouut of trouble and trial that\nyou have had? If you could have a\nchoice for your child between 40 years\nof annoyance, loss, vexation, exaspera-\ntion nnd bereavements, and to years\nIn Heaven, would you take tho respon-\nsibility of choosing the former? Would\nyou snatch away the cup of eternal\n and put Into that child's hands\ntho cup of many bereavements? In-\nstead of the complete safety Into which\nthat child has been lifted, would you\nlike to hold It down to the risk of this\nmortal state? Would you like to keep It\nout on a sea in which there have been\nmore shipwrecks than safe voyages?\nIs It not a comfort to you to know that\nthat child. Instead of being besollcd\nund flung Into the mlreof sin, Isswung\nclear into the skies? Are not those\nchildren to be congratulated that the\npoint of celestial bliss which you ex-\npect to reach by a pilgrimage of ." il l or\n00 or 70 years, they reached at a flash?\nIf tho last 10,000 children who had en-\ntered Heaven had gone through the\naverage of human life on earth, are\nyou sure all those 10,000 children\nwould have finally reached tho blissful\nterminus? llesldes that, my frietids,\nyou are to look at tills matter as a self-il enl-
05c4adc3d9d6a711683b8d8ee9158a9c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.187671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 Ktzaiiniuona ngrood that tliolr acliona not\nproved it truo. of\nMitclioll and Ilall atood side by elds, tin\nbut Ilall did not outer tlio row. lie str\ndid not ovon look towards Fitzaimmons. gul\nJust at thin juncture i'roaidout Charles prl\nNoel ontoroil tlio room and tho mon u a\nquit talking. inf\nFitzaimmons, after the dispute, aitd\nthat ho had only doterred from acting\nraahlv on account of boing the guoat of j\nthe club. "I waa roady for uny kind of ,\na rnmpui," ho aald, "and* if tho\nbiutl'ors had pressed 1110 much further wo\n1 would certainly have usod iny walking boi\nnine over their hoads. 1 wnu not look- tor\nlug for u row and would not have viaited wo\ntho club room in aearch of It. I certain- hoi\nly would not havo aollod iny hand otn\non them if tho row bad been tin\nalarted, but would have knockod down du\naomn of tlicin dead sure. I bear no 001\nmalice towarU Hall. On tho contrary I ap|\nnin indebted to Ilall for giving mo a $73\nchance to win tho purao and I am not \nono of thoso follows whocrow aftor win- oxi\nnlng a battle. 1 am willing to meot tio\nIlall, but ho dooi not seom to want to\nknow mo and tlioro tho matter rcata.\n1'rrsidont Nool gave Hall Ills chock (\nfor 500 drawn on tho Bunk of Coin- jj0,\ninorco at Chicago. Ilall and the party .\nloft Fit! at tho club rooiu at 4 o'clock. lro\nFitzalmmone, after tho row, tnado Oa\na statomont that Wurron Lowia, A"\nbacker of Jim Ilall, viiitod him viu\nand inado a proposition to hlmtowllick wo\nup the purse evenly and lot him and\nHall light for the honor of viotorv on n\nlevel. "I did not liko tho gait,1' snid 1\nFltziimmona. "1 bud rilnyod tlio suck nm\nrolo once In my llfonnd It has taken mo thi\never alncn to sot myaolt right before the M.\npublic. Idotermlnnd I would never\nagain Iny nmolf open to criticism and\ntherefore) rufuaod tho Lewis oiler. I 1\nthought, too, that I had too good a Co\nthing to arrange to give Hull a half hai\nIntornst In a purto 1 /olt I could oasilv\nwin."
33cf2b4454e7b92ad1b38af7be952e22 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6424657217149 40.063962 -80.720915 Now the Congressional plan or re\nconstruction at once lays the axe at\nthe root or this whole scheme ot snh\nstltuting a Rebel aristocracy Tor the old\nslave oltgarony as the basis or Sntttlr\nern unity, and through it ot the return\nof sham Democracy to power. lue\nCongressional plan reorganizes the\nSouth upon tho broad basis of popular\nriehts. It recognir.es all the people as\nconstituting the political State. It re-\nfuses to establish class institutions, or\nto put power Into the hands ot an aris-\ntocracy. It says these people are all\ncTTlzeue of the United States, and the\nreconstructed States must rest upon the\nbroad foundation of equal rights.\nSouthern unity at once dl«ol»»\nlore this great measure. 1 here is no\nlonger any sectional bond to bold\nthen?together. They become.merged\nIn the great nation of which they\nform a part. But thissbam Democ¬\nracy reads Its death-warrant. It. can no\nlonger count upon a united South. H\ncan no longer appeal to a .M »1\nclass interest. It must gointo eacn\nSouthern State upon its merits, and put\nIts case before the whole people. And\nthis Is the secret of Democratic OPP' ;\nsition to the Congressional plan or re\nconstruction. It l» tho loss of polltioal\npower, and not a broken Constitution,\nover which they are mourning, it is\nnot the temporary dtarrmpcbtomimt of\na few Rebel leaders that afflicts them,\nbut the enfranchisement of the toiling\n«,ps n is not arbitrary power at\nthe South that distresses tbem, but the\noverthrow of arbitrary power, and the\nrising or popular power on Its ruins.\nIn a word, the Democratic party sees\nthat tne downfall of slavery and aris¬\ntocracy at the South has involved Its\nMutable dissolution.
687aa77b75b75cb7f2645d49fbdd03bd VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.4221311159179 43.798358 -73.087921 The LIFE MEDICINES are also a most ex-\ncellent relief in affections of lhe Liver and Bow- -\nels.as has been proved id hundreds of cases where\npatients hae come forward and requested that\ntheir experience in taking them unght be pub\nlished for the ben. ht ot others, in their opera\ntion in such cases, they restore the tone of the\nbtomach, strengthen the digestive organs, and in-\nvigorate the general fund ions of the whole body\nand thus become to both sexts f lor they are per\nfectly adapted so each) an invaluable means ot\npreventing disease and restoring healih.\nIn affections of the head, whether accompanied\nwith pain and giddiness or marked by the griev-\nous calamity of impaired mental energy; in pal\npitations of the heart, flatulence, loss ot appe.ite\nand strength, and multiplied symplon.s of\ndisordered digestion, THE LIFE MED1CI.VES\nwill be found to possess the most salutary efficiry,\nConstitutions telaxed, weak or decayed in men\nor wormn are under the immediate influence ol\nThe Life Medicines. Old couzhs, asthmas and !\nconsumptive habits are soon relieved and speedi\nly cured. Poverty of blood, and emaciated limbs\nwill ere long meet the happiest change; the chill\nwatery fluids will become rich and balsamic and\nthe limtis be covered with flesh firm and healthy.\nJVervous disorders of every kind and from\nwhatever cause arising, fly before the effects of\nTHE LIFE MEDICIJVES and all that train of\nsinkings anxieties and tremours which so dread\nfully affect the weak, the sedentaiy and the deli\ncate will in a short lime be succeeded by cheer\nfulness and every presage of health.
1d7c586073eaeaabe2e9d1cc9cddecc7 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.476775924661 46.187885 -123.831256 A few years ago while looking\nafter a miner's ditch in the solitude\nof the mountain forests on the\nUDDer Clear "Water river, I hap\npened to get hold of a work on\nnatural history; and as the ruffled\ngrouse were very plentiful, their\nhabits, as set forth by trie autnor,\nattracted my attention.\nIt was in the spring of the year,\nand they were drumming contin-\nually on all sides of me. I could\nnot believe the vibration that set\nthe still air in a tremble about my\nears was made by the tapping of\nthe wings upon logs, or upon any-\nthing more solid than a drum head.\nMy curiosity was aroused, and as\nthe opportunity was at hand I de\ntermined to settle the question as\nto how the drumming was done.\nEvery day an old cock clucked at\nme as he jumped from an old log\nand started behind the thick little\nfirs, with his ruffled neck nodding-a - s\nhe stepped proudly away.\nThat log was his drumming place,\nand 1 soon found the exact section\nhe occupied. No longer would I\nlet that bird puzzle me. I seleeted\na place with perfect cover as a\nblind, and with my ax trimmed\nout the brush so that I could have\nan unobstructed view of his resort.\nThe next morning, armed with a\nBerdan rifle telescope, I was in\nmy blind, with the glass arranged\non rests, when the shy bird came\nnoiselessly to his sacred bower to\n his matin song. He stood\nstill and upright for a long time,\nas if intently listening. He puffed\nup his neck as large as his body,\nhe raised the black tuft of featheis\non his neck, showing a wind bag\ntight as a drum head; then lie\nthumped the sac as if to test the\ntension of the drum, and then:\nthump thump thump thump\nthump thump, faster and faster,\ntill his wings were a blue blur to\nlook upon, and the sound was a\nrumble like the hum of a bee on a\nlarge scale. In the interim he\nwould smooth his feathers and\nlisten for an answer from some\ncharmed female; or the challenge\nof an enemy. I watched him until\nI was positive as to how the noise\nwas made. It is made by beating\nin the inflated neck of the bird, by\nthe butts of the wings, as a boy\nwould beat upon a drum; both\nends at once. I then killed the\nbird, examined the wind bag, and\nblew it up like a bladder.\nMy glass was 30 inches long,\nand so powerful that I could see a\n45 caliber bullet hole in white\npaper at a distance of 1300 yards.\nYot can form an idea how distinct-\nly I could see every motion of the\ngrouse. I could see him wink.\nEvery member of the grouse\nfamily makes his call or hoot or\nwhatever it is, by inflating the\nneck. The ruffled grouse is no\nexception.
1d080d235f56cbf4cc7f2fb8ce54966e THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.0534246258244 29.949932 -90.070116 Business for the week closed with a moderate\nshow of activity, and departing steamers had very\nfair trips of freight passengers and stock. The\nriver is in a mot excellent condition for all pur-\nposes. The Paoline Carroll came in at an early\nhour from New Orleans, andhad a very fair trip.\nIt was found utterly impossible to complete the\ncargo of the Thompson Dean yesterday. and as a\nconsequence, her departure was deferred until to.\nmorrow. The Glasgow passed Cairo at noon yes-\nterday en route to this port from New Orleans.\nThe towboat Atlantic reached Cairo yesterday\nmorning. She is on her way to New Orleans.\nCapt. E. W. Gould was a passeneer on the H. S .\nTurner yesterday. He goes to New Orleans as a\ndelegato to the convention of steamboatmen which\nmeets in that city on Wednesday next. Capt. )D.\nDe Haven and family were passengers on the\nLady Gray. -[St. Louis Republican, Jan. 17 .\nRain has falien almost constantly since Thurs-\nday evening. Business at the was greatly\ninterrupted thereby, some boats being compelled\nto lie over. River here nearly stationary; an-\nother rise is anticipated. Allfears of a closing of\nthe river are vanishing, although there will yet be\nsome v ry cold weather. The Missouri is on the\nrice, and that stream, as well as the others, is ex-\ntreaely high for this time of the year. Freight\nfor the Banth cannot be called abundant. Flour\n40 cents per barrel to New Orleans and Vicks-\nburg, and no wrangling about rates. The huge\nthompson Dean, Capt. Pepper, N. B. Fowler\nclerk, sails for New Orleans positively this after-\nnoon. The fast and elegant Lady Gay, Capt.\nBu'k, John 8. Lehner clerk, leaves at noon to-day,\nwithout fail, for New Orleans. The treasury de.\npartmnent has commenced the system of number-\nlug barg(s and flats under same conditions as\nsteamboats. Numbers have been assigned, and\nthe at oner they are all affixed, attached or carved,\nthe better it will be, probably. -- [St. Louis Demo-\ncrat, 16'h.
2700f9f9eec789d6b6f9e68452f3641b THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.864383529934 39.369864 -121.105448 V virtue of an execution issued out of S. B. Cas-\n£ 3 wells Esq court, of Bridgeport fow-f,-hip, county\nof Nevada, to me directed, in favor of M. F. Hoit, Otis\nHiscox and Adam Crawford, partners under the name\nand firm of Sliawmnt Mill Co., and against Peter Gra-\nham. J. F. Drake, Philip Riley. Robert Sterling, D.\nMcltcth. J . W. Wood and John Doe, partners, miners,\nunder the firm of Bay State Co., I have seized,and shall\nexpose for sale at public auction, at 2 oclock ou the\nFifth day of December, A. D . 1839 ,\nat French Corral, in front of S. 15 . Caswells. Esq. office,\nto satisfy a judgment rendered by the aforesaid court,\non the iai day of November A. D . 1859, in favor of the\nabove-named plaintiffs, and against the defendants, for\nthe sum of two hiifidred and forty-one dollars and\nninety one cents, debt, interest, damage! and cos's of\nsuit, with per cent, per month interest from date\nof judgment, the followingdescribed property, to-wit;\nAll tract or parcel of ground comprising the\nruining claims of the Bay State Co., there being eight\nin number, more or less. of the size of 150 by ISO feet,\nand situated in Bridgeport township. Nevada county.\nUpon Mauzauita 11 ill. in the town of Sweetland. back\nof the Old Dominion House, adjoining the claims ofthe\nProspect Co .and lying northerly from the same, hav-\ning a front of 160 feet, and running back into the hill\n750 feet, more or less, and designated by st akes.—to-\ngether with all tools, sluice boxes and privileges be-\nlonging to said claims. Also, all their right, title and\ninterest hi and to the tail sluice situated in Old Do-\nminion Ravine, and connecting with the tail.sluiec of\nClark A- Co., in Sweetland Creek.\nThe above having been taken in execution as the\nprunerty of the Bay State Co., a nd will be sold to the\nhighest bidder for cash, to satisfy the above demand\nand accruing costs.\nDated Sweetland, the ninth day of November, A . D.\n1859.
15d0ce449ac847c1ad2b5bb17f1faca4 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.3520547628107 42.217817 -85.891125 ple, nil of whom, but for his courageous\nefforts, must have been lost.\nHenry T. Noble, whose wife sunk before he\ncould reach her and was lost, saxed the life of\nanother lady, a Miss Smith.\nIn addition to those recovered, live corpses\nwere seen to fiost down tke stream, a nuinher\nmust have been caught by the under current,\nand still more must be last in the wreck of the\nbridge, which carried them to the bottom of\nthe river. A number owe their escape to the\nfact that, owing to tho crowding on the bridge\njust before it fell, they wero unable to obtain\na view of the baptismal ceremonies from that\npoint, left the bridge for the river bank. Hor-\nror Stricken crowds thronged to the s i ne of\ntilt disaster and watched the river below the\nbridge, while hundreds, as though laboring\nunder a horrible fascination, gazed vacantly at\nthe distorted corpses thus far brought ashore.\nHundreds, too, were searching for wives, sis-\nters, children or friends, and the frenzied\nanxiety of parents, husbands and relatives of\nthe missing was terrible to behold. Vet \nawful work of fishing up the corpsen of the\ndrowned, and Of hunting among the driftwood\nin the eddies for the upturned faces of dead\nmen and women continues.\nThere w ere a number of remarkabls esoeapes\nof children, Of whom there were not less than\n60 On the bridge when it went down. One\nlittle fellow, about hi years old, was caught by\nboth feet hi the iron rigging of one of the\nspans, mid had one of his legs broken. He\nmanaged by sheer strength to pull one of his\nboots off, tearing the sole off 111 the nrncVS\nand then coolly taking out his knife, ripped\nthe other hoot from ths foot of the wounded\nleg. and t hen. crippled as he was. swam ashore.\nTwo little gills, sisters, were Standing side\nbv side, and went down together As thev\nreached the water the eldest caught the other\nbv her dress with one hand, with the other\nClung to a portion of the iron work, and clung\nlast to it, up to her neck 111 the icy water, until\nthey were both taken off by a boat.
01ea4f6a8922e4c891951810cbc8bdfb UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1905.9712328450025 42.68333 -96.683647 To"W«o* it MAT Concern:\nNotice is hereby giveu, that011 June la, limr.,\nIra I). Porter and Fannie I. Porter, liiisbaml\nand wife, executed amidelivered to John ('over-\ndale tlieir promissory note for $84.90 due on\nDecember i»t, l'.»05; that at the same tinae aud\nin order to secure the payment of said note the\nsaid Ira 1). Porter aud Fannie I. Porter, mort\ngagers. made, executed and delivered to John\nCoverdale, mortgagee, their certain mortgage\nupon the following described land in Union\nCounty, South Dakota, to-wit: Cominem'inj.:\nIIfteen (ir>) chains south of the northeast eornoi\nof l<-t three (3), section twelve (12), township\nninety (!«), range fifty <r>0). thence south two )\nchains, thence west twenty (20) chains, them <\nnorth two (2) chains, thence east twenty (2in\nchains to the place of beglnuing; which mort\ngage was dated June is, mi, and was tiled for\nrecord in the ollioe of the register of deeds of\nL'nion County, South Dakota, on June 13, l!»or.,\nand was recorded in Hook 40 of Mortgages, on\npage soand has never been assigned; that sakl\nmortgage contained a power of sale and that no\nproceedings at law or otherwise have been ir>.\nstltuted to recover the debt secured by said\nmortgage: that default has beeii made iu \nterms and conditions of said mortgage,\nwlileh default consists in the failure\nto pay both the principal and interest upon said\nnote; that the amount claimed to be due upon\n»aid note is ts:i.Now, therefore, by virtue < I\nthe power of sale contained In said mortgage\nand the default In the terms and conditions of\nsaid mortgage, notice is hereby given, that the\nundersigned, sheriff of Unlou County, South\nDakota, will, at the request of the mortgagee,\nsell at pub.lc auction to the highest bidder for\ncash, at the front door of the court house in Klk\nPoint, Union County, South Dak >ta, on Satur­\nday, the 3rd of February, i!HMi, at the hour of\ntwo o'clock p. m ., the laud described in said\nmortgage, aud being th« following tract: Com­\nmencing tifteen (l.-, ) chains south of the north­\neast comer of lot three (3), seel ion twelve (12),\ntownship ninety (<«)), range ttfty (.W), thence\nsouth two (2) chains, thence west twenty (2e)\nchains, thence north two (2) chains, thence east\ntwent* (20) chains to the place of beglnuing; to\nsatisfy said indebtedness so secured by said\nmortgage, together with accruing costs of sale.\nDated at Klk P.iint. .South Dakota, tills luth\nday of December, 1986.\nJOHN COVKIIIIALB. '
5ec7b991c254da80f99e9de5540bd6e2 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.7904109271942 41.020015 -92.411296 A great deal is said and written\nabout farmers' homes; how to make\nthem aitractive, and how to keep the\nboys on the farm. Little of it proves\nseed sown upon good ground, import­\nant a^ubject as ii is. It needs experi­\nence iu tbisasiu other mailers to make\ncorrect decisions im u> the elements\nnecessary in a farmers' home and life\nto make them attractive to youth!—\nHaving just passed the meridian be­\ntween youth and manhood, I think\nmyself qualified to name some of ihe\ntrue elements of sucess iu this line.\nIn I he first place, young boysshould\nnot bo overworked, for nothing will\n:iooner or more certainly alienate\nthem rfom home and the farm. Be­\nlieving boih to be onlv places of toil\nand confinement, they seok at then-\nearliest opportunity foi fiome more\ncongenial .sphere oi' labor, and leave\nthe farm and home to degenerate. —\nBoys should have time for recreation,\nand when they work, such work as\nwill interest them. They should be\nallowed full advautage of all school\nprivileges, with means for study, and\nwilling assistance at home. Books,\npapers, etc., of a proper—not at all se­\nrious—character should be provided,\nand a taste for study and reading thus\nearly iuculcated, eugaging their minds\nand keeping them closed to the glit­\ntering illusions of the world. \nhouse should not be made a prison,but\na place of unlimited freedom in proper\n.games and amusements, with the flash\nof laughing ever, to light its rooms,the\n'coals of affection to warm iti hearth,\nmirth and wit t.j cheer the occupants.\nAt the table instead of grim silence let\nthe thoughts have vent; converse upon\nmatters ©f general, personal or public\ninterest; discuss the topic points of\ntho day, aud the affairs of the farm.—\nKeep the iiouse and grounds, after\nthey are tastefully laid out, in thorough\nrepair ; let order and neatness prevail\niu both, and keep the daily, monthly\nand yearly work systematically ar\nranged and performed. Educate tho\nchildren in religious as well as secular\natTairs, and seek lo instil a habit, of\nregular attendance npon divine ser­\nvice. Solicit and engage the fullest,\nconfidence in all matters, either of\ngreat or little importance. Preserve\nunity in family relations, letting no\nbad example of the parent meet the\neyes of the children, and show a dis­\ncreet liberality of opinion in all mat­\nters. The girls may do a good deal\ntoward keeping tho boys at homo, for\nif they try to make tho in-door alfiiirs\ninteresting, pleasant and agreeable -\nwhich is the natural sphere oi lier M>\\\n—the boys will appreciate their efiort*\nand be more contented at home.
1dce1c5994360504fc73af20d8f6e44a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.719178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 - Now, the few plain words that 1 desire\nto say ou this subject are: Tirst, a word or\ntwo its to the cause. One simple acknowl¬\nedged fuel, unpwu tomostmqn, js that (he\nwar was iliu causo of it: Now my friends,\nwhat is the eause of that extraordinary anil\nremarkable event happening in 187:1?\nThere is no mystery in It, it was bound to\nbe sooner or later; you could not escape it\nSee this lino of Soldiers marching along;\nI was delighted to have them as my escort\nthis morning, dressed in tho old uniform.\nThere was no nonsense about them for\nholiday play; best of all, when vou were\nmarching along and tho time you took the\nroulu stops anil struck tip (lie old songs,\nthen indeed yon rpiriindflfl my <hat\nthat portion of our eonntrv that made\nthe war necessary caused the hard times.\n[Applause.] Do 1 mnkea mistake? [A voice\nno.J I Ins war made the hard times us\nwar always Ilotacy-Why what Is war?\nW e know-about it now. Whoii that wnr Iw-\n(pn wu worn tliruutenoil with Its effects,\n;tsresults. I remember a brilliant writer\nin Cincinnati, where I resided in Imki/who\nsaid,."why thia.country can't go to war."\nlie said tliat the |H*oplo oi Cincinnati live\non the biuinrss o) tlieSouth; lAt nsgo to\nwar and lu six months the grass' will grow-\nin our bywavs and streets. Ilid it? Why\nmy friends tlie war hud not boon prosetw-\nted ninety days until every man saw what\na mistake it was, and that uvury \nwas busier than before tho war. A mill¬\nion of men In tlm.South should be taken\nfrom the ranks of Industry and instoud of\nmaking property Ihey became' dostrovors\nand consumers of property, and so It was\nill tlio Jforth, but where u, wci\na difference from what was expected-; ijos\nthin; every man who had wheat or corn\nor coal or labor, found when the war)\ncame that he .had, a better customer than\never before, a customer who wanted all ho\ngot anil didn't want to hurry a customer,\nwho would not liable about tho priitu.\nThat customer he had in the person of.the\nITnitod States. Kindness instead of being\ndepressed liagan to revive: proixjrtv which\nhad laid on the shelves of tho morelmnts\nfor a long time, increased in value day by\nday. The result of It theft was we made\nmoney fast, wo inndo it easy, wif could\nafford to borrow at hitfh rates ofintorest,\nbecause our investments wero anro to be\nprofitable. Our trading and fast living\nwere tho result* of the war, I need not\nenlarge on iu Finally th" war ended, men\nin the ranks returned to tl|<>}r homes,\nand the material needs of thoUovernoi#nt\nbegan to go down. You lost vour best\ncustomer, the United States. It did not\nwant to buy, It wanted to soil. Now every\nwise man knows we should have a ijay of\nsettlement. Flush times, like times of\nthe war, are to by followed by hard times\nlike these wo havo lately known and those\nare the eausees.
2abec5894740ca1d57aa4da5dc7b3e0a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2917807902081 40.063962 -80.720915 WiraiKOTOK, April 15..Tho opto\nof the Attorney Ooncral on the Fill Jo\nPorter rase, alter reviewing the history\nthe court-martial, the approval of lis «\ntenco by the President, and later actl\nof the Advisory Hoard, considers the qu\ntion whether it it is competent tor I\nPresident to afford tho applicant the rcl\nhe osiu under the existing law and c\ncumstoncea of liis case.\nThe Attorney Clciieral, after citi\nnumerous legal opinions and decisioi\nBays when the Presidont performs thedu\nof approving the sentence of a court mi\ntial dismissing an officer, his act has\nthe solemnity and significance of tl\njudgement of a court of Taw, as it has to\nperformed under the same consequenci\nNow, one of the consequences is that whi\njudgment luis been regularly entered jn\ncase properly within judicial cogn\nmice, from which no appeal has £<m\n or taken, and it has bo\nlollow'ed by execution, it is final ai\nconclusive upon the party against whom\nis entered. And tills effect attaches (Inn\nopinion) to the action of the President\napproving tlie action of the court-iuarti\ndismissing an otllcer, after that approv\nluis been consummated by actual di\nmissal. Here it is proper to add that tl\nvery inquiry now under examination li\nbeen resolved in tlm negative by the d\nliberate decision of a former aifiniuisti\ndon, as appears by tho message of tl\nPresident of June 6, 1870, transmitting\nCongress tho report and proceedings of tl\nBoard of Army Officers upon tliu case\nCicnerai Porter. Tho conclusion tin\nreached was that the President was "wit\nDut powor in tlie absence of legislation\nnet upon the recommendations of the i\nport further than by submitting the san\nLo Congress."
1de549415878efe726ae31ca0be00c4c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Delegate Hamilton ia a frank ma\n10 Thoae who doubted this can doubt it i\nIc- longer. Early in the present aeaaion whl\npy the Camden contingent waa industrious\naa killing time, a motion waa made to refer\nly- bill to a committee. The object waa\nle, consume that much more time. The ay\nuu buu jjuch r/vio uemanueu oj liepUDUCi\nqj» members, and aa those who wanted to e\ntend the session beyond the second Tae\net« day were called, each gave a reason f\n:or voting aye. One thought it too importa:\nfa. a bill to rush through hastily; another hi\ner, doubta of its constitutionality and desir<\n68 a thorough scrutiny by the committee;\nne third was afraid it did not come witb\nh- the purview of the Governor's call. So\n on until Mr. Hamilton's name w\ncalled. He too had an explanation\nmake, and the same ironic smile marki\n,the faces of the anti-obstructionists. B\nid. Mr. Hamilton's explanation differed fro\nity all the others. He said ho was one\nthose who thought it was the duty of tl\nl0t Legislature under the Constitution to ele\n[jjj an United States Senator; as a Democr\nn» he considered it desirable that a Senat\nl0* should be elected; knowing that mai\nIqq held other views and would rush tho bui\niyf ness through and adjourn before tl\n3 second Tuesday if possible, he wished\najl prevent this, and he therefore voted\ncommit because this would require th\nmuch more time to perfect the bill. 8in\nthat explanation votes in the .interest\nobstruction have been few.
10ce86921b6097aecefe73ed709ce36f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5396174547157 39.513775 -121.556359 I i J. Jolich. a.l i)c io* oi Tin* P ilrJe. if) mwi for\nipuir Township llnlte l 'ounly and Stale oi Cidiloriiin,\nio mo directed and delivered, wherein I am com-\nihiml■< I li i nnd.i the sum of nuo hundred and one\nmvooty live one hundredths Slut 73) dottars judg-\nmeiit. and four iwenty-five one hundredths [» I 23]\ndoll irs costs of Hint mil of the property oi Jacobs,\ndorm, the defendant in said execution, and accruing\ncosts of said writ, wherein N. Carrol la plaintiff\nTherefore in pursuance ot - .aid writ* I navesc/c.l amt\nlevi. il upon all the right. title and interest of the said\nJacob S. Morris in and to the followmg property, to\nWH ; All that cerium pi-ice and parcel oi land silutt-\n>ed in Uroville, • pliir Township, Hutu? County and\n of California and described on the map of the\ntown of i irovnle ai folhcve: tails number one.[l]\ntwo.) ] three, [d] foui. 4 five, 5, and six." . in block\nthirty-six. dll: hots number one, 1, two 2. live.s ,six,\nit. seven. 7. art I eight. 8. in lllock eight, s—hots mini*\nIn r one. I. two 2, three.3. four, 4. five, 5, six, 6, seven\n7. and eight, 8 , in block number ton, 10—lam one, I .\ntwo, o. three, 3. four 4, five. 5. six, li. sevi n. 7, and 8,\neight in block eleven, II Lots one.l, two 2,three,\nIt. four, 4. five, 5 . six.fi , seven. 7 and eight, S. in block\ntwelve, id;—Lots one, 1 two. 2, three. 3. four 4. Ibe\n5. six fi, seven 7. and eight 8, in block twenty 2 i '
0a0cb4e88543fbb20d738dfab5ccceaf PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.8753424340437 40.441694 -79.990086 the Court of Common Pleas ot Allegheny\ncounty and authorized by an ordinance passed\non the22dday ofJuly,AD.1889,a copy of\nwhich is hereto attached, to appraise the dam-\nages sustained in the openlngof Kirkpatrick\nstreet, from Wylie avenue to VVebster avenue,\nin the city of Pittsburg, and make an assess-\nment therefor under the provisions of and in\naccordance with an act of Assembly of the\nCommonwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled "An\nact relating to streets and sewers in cities of\nthe second class," approved the 16th day of\nMay, A D. 1889, respectfully report:\nThat, having been first duly sworn and quali-\nfied according to law, they proceeded in the\nmanner and accoraing to the directions of said\nact, to discharge the duties of their appoint-\nment; and having given the notices required by\nsaid act, they viewed the premises and heard\n the allegations and evidence of the several\nparties claiming damages, and after full con-\nsideration thereof, find that no owner of prop-\nerty has sustained any damage by reason of\nsaid improvement; that, after ascertaining the\nwhole amount of cost they made an assess-\nment ot the same upon the properties benefited\nby said improvement, and caused a plan to be\nmade, and prepared a statement, as required\nby said act, and, having given to the owner of\neach lot 10 days' notice of the time and place of\nmeeting, they met on the 1st day of November,\nA D.1889, at the office of the Board of Viewers,\nin the city of Pittsburg, heard. all complaints\nand evidence, and after full consideration\nthereof, present the following report, showing\nthe amount each property holder is entitled to\npay as the proper proportion ot said cost:
42bfa9394f52332883f229ae094ce40c THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8948087115461 39.290882 -76.610759 she might have been a revenue vessel; but th.\nis not vcrv probab! , inasmuch as she did no\nshow a per,ant Bcsidcs.it is rathei a"sliar|\npractice" for revenue vessels to lire into ships\nunless they have refused to lie to on being sum-\nmoned to do so, and are making sail to escape\naud thus affording strong ground for suspicioi\nthat they are engaged in illicit traffic \\ thi\nmatter stands, investigation, on the part of tin\nproper authorities, becomes imperative.\nFrom th' London .lunrnal of Commerce, Oct 31.\nNotwithstanding that there is no improve-\nment worth noiice in the rates of exchangt\nwith the continent. Money is decidedly t,trier\nin the discount market than at the date of' out\nlast publication. The highest charge for fits\nclass commercial bills is now oj per cert, wtli-\nout commission, and. indeed, bills of good\nrepute are discounted nearly at the sause rate\nby the banking houses. The re is no ground tc\nbelieve that the Bank of England has relaxed\nthe strain upon the circulation, but, from the\nconfidence placed in the large discount houses,\nand theii extensive command of capital, the\npower of the Bank of England is obviously\nmuch curtailed and held in check.\nThere is strong leeling against the attempt\nof the Bank lo force a farther reduction in the\nvalue of manufactured goads, and correspond-\ning disposition to resist it on the part of the\nwhole banking interest, with the exception,\nperhaps, of a lew of the private bankers in town.\nThe influence of the measures adopted by the\nbank has, however, been more b it in the man-\nufacturing districts in the north than it has been\nin town, in consequence of the timidity of some\nof the bankers inducing them to reiiisc all\npaper ha\\ ing more than two months to run.\nBut there is no probability of this impression\ncontinuing, as some of the leading discount\nhouses in town have, within thrse two days,\ngiven a preference to longer dated bill? nearly\nat the same rate of discount as the short, clwarly\nindicating an opinion, that the present value\nof money will not be long sustained.\nThe banker's balances, retun.abi cr call,\nare not woith mote than 4' per cent, but 5 per\ncent is given lor fixed periods not exceeding a\nmonth." On the stock exchanges short loane\non British securities can tie obtained tin- week\nat 1 per cent, and at that rate money is not\nmuch in demand.
1446f5831620ffd9e63d8c593e034feb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.546575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 The 1st Section of the Ordnance being\nmade so as to read "increase the police\nforce to 23" it was placed before tliej\nCouncil. Mr. A . G . Robinson moved to j\nlay the whole ordnance on the table..\nThe yeas and nays being called lor, the\nmotion was lost bya vote of0to 5.\nMr. A . <i. Robinson moved to strike\nout the number 23 and make it 14, he\nditl not think so large a force was at all\nrequired at present. That there was a\nlarge military patrol now in thecity,\nand if this force of three or four hun¬\ndred men were unable to preserve order\nhe could not see how 20 or 'Mi policemen\ncould dc so, it was only forcing addi¬\ntional tax upon the people, would\nask the Chairman of the Committee if\nthey had looked into the probable cost\nthe* increase would be to the city.\nMr. Pratt answered, that it will pro-\nbnbly amount to $0,(KH> and he thought\nthe citv could much betterl»ear this ex¬\npense than to bear the name which it\nwas fast attaining of a disorderly city.\nMr. Hughes said he would vote for\nthe increase to twenty-three men against\nhis own convictions, for he thought it\nwas not sufficient ro protect the citizens,\nas it has Itecoinc of late unsafe for any\nperson to travel the streets after night,\nand as proof of that, he would simply\ncall attention to the fact that the lamp¬\nlighters were escorted through the\nstreets by a military guard to protect\nthem.
353ffc6fe28aee1e3dd4547f50637e75 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.8510928645517 40.063962 -80.720915 ©JaJflMiigeum'\nXXAlio a Clean Breast or It.\nThe Register, thoroughly ashamed a\nlast vehope, of lta dlalngenuoua ooara\nduring the late canvass aod after th\nState election, la assuming a tone c\ngreat candor. In an artloie yesterd aj\ncommented on elsewhere, It endeavor\nto appear very honest by revealini\nparty* secrets and confessing certaii\ncauses.of defeat. In another, referrlnj\nto the hope of "conservative" journal\nthat Grant will betray the partj: tha\nelected hlm^. the Register with mnol\ncandor assures its resders that such i\nsuggestion Is preposterous, and tha\nDemocrats must make up their mlndt\nto submit to "four years more of Radl\ncal rule with Radicalism controllini\nevery department of the Government.'\nThis 18 all donbtlesB very true, bu\nwhile our friend la at the oouTessiona\n he not ease hla oonBolenoe f\nlittle by telling the truth about the re\nstilt of the West Virginia State election\nWe have urged him to correct his state\nmeat, kept up in staring headlines ai\nlate as the fourth day after the election\nthat West Virginia had given 3,004\nDemocratic majority. Bat not one w*rl\nin correction of it has ever appeared\nIf the editor of the Register ia not eana\nto the task of writing a paragraph or\nthis dreadfully unpleasant subject, wc\ngive him leave to copy from the Intki.\nLiQEjfCER, either the returns in detail\nor the tabulated statements of the vote,\nEither would enable his readers tc\ncipher out the truth.that Is, those oj\nthem who know how to cipher.\nThe Presidential Vole In West Vlr
2baeaf1111d00c00e503be93e2c4becc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.7110159500253 39.745947 -75.546589 panled by an affidavit furnished by the\ncompany, establishing Hie fact that the\nsteel company Is a necessary Indus­\ntrial enterprise within the meaning of\nthe act of congress of May 18, 1917,\nand Is engaged In lurnishlng essential\nproducts to the government In the\npresent emergency. A list of these pro­\nducts Is given. The letter points out\nthat It will be the policy of the com­\npany to claim discharge from military\nservice only for certain skilled and\nsemi-skilled employes who are neces­\nsary to the operation of the works. I\nThis claim will be made for them only j\na, long as they remain In the companys i\nemploy and hi tlielr present capacity.;\nNo exemption will be asked for com- 1\nmon laborers or for clerks, other than\nthe who represent Indispensable\nlinks In the operation of the works. In\n'order to assist tho hoard In meklpg de- [\nelslons upon all claims, the company\nannounces .there will bç attached to\neach claim filed, two affidavits—one 1\nfrom the general officer In charge of j\nthe branch ol the plant In which tho\nemploye Is enrolled; the other from the\nparty—Immediate department superin­\ntendent or other officer—having an Inti­\nmate knowledge of the man's qualifica­\ntions and the necessity of hts being\nkept In his present position.\nThe attitude of this company Is £\npatriotic one and unquestionably Is re­\npresentative of the entire steel Indus­\ntry. No doubt the government fully ap­\npreciates the vital necessity of tho steel\nIndustry being kept Intact by holding\nIts semi-skilled and skilled laborers at
2ac9fa50002b1022d25e98f363b0a917 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0999999682901 39.513775 -121.556359 After the Mexican war broke out. Saint\nThomas went to Mexico as an attache to the\nQuartermasters Department, and unfortu-\nnately was permitted to return, after which\nho acted, or assayed to do so, as ngml for\nthe house in which his degraded wife had\nwith other frail creatures engaged in busi-\nness, ami upon being denied a share of the\nprofits of his wife's shame, attempted to\nseize upon her goods and chattels by process\nof law, and by this was successful enough to\ngain sufficient money to buy a ticket to Cal-\nifornia. nnd crime "with wool on his teeth,\nand suspicion barking at his heels.” Hut\nhis brother didnt like his goings on,and he\nwas denied admission to the palace of St.\nJames, and shortly turned his face home-\nward again, and on the steamer became ac-\nquainted with some gentlemen who had a\nlarge amount of dust it) charge, and\nwhen going ashore at Acapulco left the\n"Brother and confidential clerk of the great\nCalifornia banker” in charge of their treas-\nure,who in an unguarded moment gave some-\nbody an opportunity of breaking open the\ntrunk in which it was contained, at which\nthe depositors became highly in censed and\nblamed the innocent Saint, who thereupon\npromised full payment when they reached\nNew York, hut unfortunately forgot it when\nthey arrived there—but went straightway\nto Philadelphia to sec his fallen wife, who\nspiritedly scorned him and his overtures.\nThen with misrepresentations nnd lies ho\ninduced the wife of James to come with him\nto California, and growing tired of her com-\npany, made an alliance with a " fancy wo-\nman," whereupon Col. Donne of Vigilance\nnotoriety took Mrs. King in charge and\ngallanted her to Ban Francisco.\nIn tho course of human events Saint
5d37c90c1c122f0c11ae524f3a94dcfe NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.987671201167 41.681744 -72.788147 According to the annual report of\nFire Chief John H. Hayes submitted\nto the board of fire commissioners\nat its meeting in the City hall last\nevening, the lowest amount of dam-\nage by fire in 15 years was record-\ned for the fiscal year ending No-\nvember 31 in Bristol. The figure,\n$21,415, is more than $200,000 less\nthan the highest figure which was\nrecorded several years ago. Of the\naggregate, $14,305 was damages to\nbuildings while $7,110 was damages\nto their contents.\nDuring the year 2. 16" gallons of\nchemicals were used; 17.6 .V' feet of\nhose, were used; 276 calls were re-\nceived, of which 28, five false, were\nbox alarms; 10 new hydrants and\none box alarm were installed. The\nlargest number of calls were made\nto Squad A in central station, \nthe largest single number being in\nApril when 36 were answered. No.\n1 answered 60 calls, No. 2 answered\n38, No. 5 answered 54, and Welch\ncompany of Forestville answered 43.\nCommissioner John Roberts an-\nnounced that a set of resolutions on\nthe death of William S. Ingraham,\nwho wsus a member of the board\nfrom 1906 until his death, would\nbe drawn up some time next week.\nChief Hayes said that he expected\nto present the matter of obtaining\npensions for retired firemen to the\ncity council at its next meeting.\nThe chief told the commissioners\nthat the fire department was utiliz-\ning an innovation, a rocket, in com-\nbatting chimney fires. This rocket,\nhe said, is exploded in the base of\nthe chimney and extinguishes blazes\nwithout much trouble as the gases\nwhich
0af3c600d643a383f495e700b4b8bb7b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.195890379249 39.745947 -75.546589 increasing the debt on our city, which is\nentirely too heavy at present. Now,\nthose in favor of widening Tenth street\nsay it will only odd a vory small amount\nto our present tax. I ask those experts\non finance to cipher up our present inter­\nest on the debt of this city and find out\nhow many men it would keep in work the\nwhole year around, and every one knows\nthe condition of our Streets in the winter\nThey are nothing better than mud holes\nin winter, and in summer they would\nblind you with dust. I dout think there is\na city in the country has less to show for\nthe heavy debt. We have not u public\nsquare for our citizens to spend à few\nhours iu on a summer evening. I think\nit is time that tax payers of this city\nshould rise up and stop such unnecessary\nexpenses Let the city railroad come in\nNinth and go out Tenth street, and let\nthe teams follow cars as they do in\nother cities. Still if the majority of tax\npayers are in favor of widening Tenth\nstreet let them go about It In\na business like manner. Let the City\nCouncil and the property holders\nTenth street each appoint two men, then\ncall in a fifth man and let them 'agree as\nto the value of this property. The next\nstep would be to get an estimate from\nthe contractors of the cost of moving\nthese buildings, then levy a direct tax\nand pay for it. If the city finances\nmanaged as a business man manages\nhis business the interest that is paid\naway would keep many a poor man in\nwork the year around. If there is not a\nstop to the increasing of the debt of this\ncity, a poor man's tax will be More than\nbis rent should be. By stopping the\ndebt our taxes will flow through the\nproper channel, ami the circulation of it\nwill be a benefit to us all.
0a897bf0c2d69a73a2b53fcecaa8c139 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.5849314751395 46.187885 -123.831256 The recognized railroad financiers of\nthe United States are still wrestling with\nthe problem of the consolidation of the\nGreat Northern and Northern (Pacific rail-\nroads, and that Mr. Hill still feels con-\nfident of success Is evidenced by the fol-\nlowing special dispatch sent from New\nYork July 2lith:\n"Further conferences were held today\nbetween different Northern Pacific reor-\nganization interests, including the Adams\ncommittee, J. J . ill.ll and J. P. Morgan &\nCo. Three plans are under consideration,\nIn all of which the terms of exchange of\nsecurities are practically the same. The\npoint on which they differ is the nominal\nform In which the agreement between\nthe Great Northern and Northern Pacific\nshall be effected. Under one plan the\ntwo roads could be made nominally de-\npendent upon a short road of about a\ndozen miles, owned toy Mr. Hill, which\nconnects them. The two other plans are\npractically the London unchanged.\nNo olMcial announcement could be se.\ncured, though the interests agreed in\nsaying that the plan would be soon virtu-\nally settled upon In all details."\nThat J. Plerpont Morgan, the leading\nbond dealer and banker of New York,\nhas lent himself to the scheme is In Itself\nproof that every means will be utilized\ntb consummate the deal. That gentleman,\nnoted for hi) conservative and successful\nbusiness management, never enters up"on\nan undertaking without first having care-\nfully considered all the pros and cons of\nthe proposition and Is undoubtedly pre-\npared to thrtow the weight of his great\nInfluence Into the breach for the success\nof the combination. Notwithstanding the\ngreat minds engaged on the proposition,\nand the fact that they believe It to be\nfor the best interests of the two proper-\nties Involved, there is still a question of\nright and., equity involved which it may\nbe weir to consider.
f662ba48726fb3e18fb3229f74469d23 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.2281420448796 43.798358 -73.087921 IN SENATE Wednesday, March 9.\nThe report of the Committee on Manu-\nfactures adverse to the petitions from Phil-\nadelphia and Baltimore, praying that\nbrown linens shall be admitted free of duty,\nwas taken up in its order, and laid on the\ntable for future consideration.\nThe resolution offered by Mr Prestrn.\nconcerning retrocession of the District of\nColumbia, was taken up, and postponed\ntill the first Monday in April, and made\nthe special order for that day.\nThe resolution offered "by Mr Kent,\nreferring to the Judiciary Committee to\nconsider the expediency of allow in? the\nDistrict cf Columbia a delegate on the\nfloor of the House of Representatives,\nwas considered and agreed to.\nMr Hubbard offered the following res-\nolution; which was agreed to:\nResolved, That the Committee on Pen-\nsions be instructed to inquire into the e-\nxpediency of restoring all those now livirc\nto the pension list, under the act of \n18, 1818, who were stricken fmm said\nlist in pursuance of the act cf May 1st\n1820; and in case any of said persons have\nobtained annuities under the act of June 7.\n1832, that said committee be instructed to\ninquire into the expediency of providing\nby law for the payment to such persons o!\nthe- pensions to which they would have\nbeen entitled if they had not been s'rickrr.\nfrom said pension list, after deducting\namount which they have received by vi-\nrtue of the act of June 7, 1832.\nResolved, That said committee be in-\nstructed to inquire into the expediency ot\nproviding by law, in case any persons who\nwere stricken from the pension list in pu-\nrsuance of the act of May 1. 1820. have\nsince that period, died, for the payment to\ntheir heirs of all arrearages to which they\nwouJd have been entitled had said persons\nnot been stricken from said list.
1c84b2e7a85d9ff65693e80234750ffe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.8726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 Detroit, Mich , November 14 .At the\nforenoon session of the National Health\nAssociation a paper was read prepared by\nDr. R. D. Webb, of Livingston, Ala., on\nthe changes in typho-malarial fever in\nSumpter county, Ala., from 1833 to 1683.\nThe Seprelary then read short papers on\ninterrogatories upon malarial fevers by I)r.\nTitos. Wood, of Wilmington, N. C . A gen¬\neral discussion followed on the subjsct of\nmslarial fevers. Imperfect drainage and\nhot weather were considered two of the\nmost fruitful sources of these disessos.\nFollowing the reading of papers this\nmorning was a lengthy and able discus¬\nsion oftho subject of malaria, its causes\nand prevention. CoL Ueo. U . Waring, ol\nNewport, R. I ., took the ground that the\n1'otomac marshes were not alone responsi\nble for the malaria ol Washington, and\nurged the importance of a proper drainage\nsystem for I bat city. He also contested\nthe position of the prosecution in the\nBerkshire, Ma?s., marsh trial. The eub\nj»ct was further discussed by Dr. G . A.\nDaveron, of the Louisiana State Board of\nHealth; 0. W . Wright, Health\nOfficer of Detroit, who strongly en¬\ndorsed the necuwlty for a thorough\ndrainage as a preventive of malnrir; Dr.\nKanney, of Michigan, Dr. 0 . \\V. Wright,\nhealth ctlLer ol Toronto, Canada, Dr. \ncott, of South Carolina, Surgeon Sternberg,\nof the U. S. A., Dr. Frometo, of New\nOrleans, Dr. E K. Grililn, of Chicago, and\nProfessor Vaugban, of the Michigan State\nUniversity, who antagonized the germ\ntheory, advocaled the possibility of a\nchemical causi; Dr. Btice, ot Ontario, who\ndefended the bactreai theory, called at¬\ntention to the necessity of examining the\ncirculation of the ground air ss well as the\nsubsoil water advocated by ths American\narmy surgeons, yesterday.\nTue afttrnoon session was occupied with\nthe subject of the vital statistics report of\nthe committee, being read by the Chairman\nDr. Elisha Hartis, of the Slate Board of\nN*w York. Medical Director Albert L\nGihon, of the Navy, followed with a paper\non vital statistics as sanitary monitors,\nclaiming that the mere records of births,\ndeaths and mairiageswaa not bofliclent for\neanilary purposes, hut that tko exact ex¬\nhibits of the actual amount of prevailing,\npreventable diseases in tho community, es¬\npecially those of the zymotic class, such as\nare now embraced iu the reports of the bu¬\nreau of medicine and surgery of the Navy\nDepartment, are what is really needed.\nAt the evening teesion papers were read\noil physical training by I'rof J. F . Madi-\naoi: on physical culture by Prof. I). A .\nSargent, of Cambridge, Mass., on
3917e9eaa0c7bff1800b5438ddf7e0ef THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 New Yobx, June 20..Washingtc\nHeadquarters, at Morriatown, N. J . w\nsold at auction yesterday, and bought\npresentation to tho State, at a buy\nprico of twenty-five thousand dolii\nThe sash worn by Washington wl\nGrand Master of a Masonic Lodge in\nSouth, was sold/or one thousand dolli\nThe Irish papers contain the particul\nof a terrible riot and firo in Dublin,\nthe night ol the 7th of June. About\no'clock p. m . a fire broke out in Kellc\nlimber yard and in the stores on Thou\nstreet, one of the most densely populai\npans of the city. Within an hour al\nthe tire commenced, from twenty\nthirty thousand persons had aaaemb\nIn the neighborhood, whose obj\naeemed to be the plunder of houses. St\nafter the arrival of the fire engines\nprincipal water pipe bursted. The in\nlore tbo hoso from the hydrant wh\nIhey smashed. Capt. Ingraham then L\nthe street torn up and the steam fire (\nijino put in which worked in waste wa\nIrom the mains. Tbo fire spread to\nleys and causeways behind the street. 1\npolico were powerless to maintain ord\nThe mob tore open the roof tbo hoi\n3i Mahoney, wine merchant, pillaged\nitore and carried cases of champaign\nthe roof where they drank so much tl\nsome ol them rolled ofi. The policcn\nwere stoned and some ot them compleli\nJisabled. Several priests who tried\niheck the disorder were beaten by\nmob, and the windows of their chap\nwere smashed. Four companies of inla\nry and eight troops of dragoons were ct\ned out, and at length order was restor\nSeveral firemen and soldiers were serio\nly wounded. The mob threw bricks a\nitones from the houses upon the aoldic\nand fought them with bludgeons. Fo\nof the rioters wero arrested and ma\nbadly wounded.\nThe President ol the Atlantic Bank, 1\nSouthwortb, appeared in Court to day\nrefute the charges set afioat yesterday\nbis having absconded.\nIn tho Court of General Sessions I\nmorning, Frank Gillen, who killed\nwife in Broome street on tho 10th in\nand Edward Kirtland, who killed Jo\nDufiy on the same day, pleaded not gui\nand were remanded to the Tombs.\nJohn D. Walsh, sash-maker, and A\ndrew J. Smith, shade-maker, are the i\nditional arrests under tho ring indi\nmenu.
262357835abceb56f309bd3d2f54c53b THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.8702185476118 40.832421 -115.763123 We have no means of knowing lu re\nwhether these rttmois nre correct, or not.\nIf New York was legally Carried by Gar\nfield'* supporters, Democrats m well »s\nRepublicans, -w ill unite against any\nattempt to deprive Oen. Gatfleld of the\ngreat itffl'6 f«r which he wan a candi¬\ndate; but if it be established, beyoud a\ndoubt, that New York was actually car-\nricd by the us- of such instrumentali¬\nties as tho«e by which the LnuisitiDii\nelection w«a *. t rmid" iu ISTtl, reversing\nthe will of a majority of fifty million of\npeople, then none will have cause to\ncomplain. An examination ought to\nbe made. It will be due to Republican\n. institutions tli tl it abonld be made.\nThere must corno a time when nn rnJ\nfhould b" made of this bargatu and pur-\ncliuse of n country asgrtntus tlii* i»;\nan end to the money and \nof a dozen men in two or three State*\nin controlling the entire nation. Unit**\nthat end cornea speedily this lt«-\npublic «iil speedily cotne to mi end. It\nhas gone to that extent already that a\nin ..j irity of the American people to-day\nenti ttain little respect fur eh cttons.nmt\nMill leas for a Republican form of Gov-\neminent. We are'becoming nu object\n(it contempt to ourselves. A Govern\nlii'ciit, so dearly bought as this, eMub-\nllnhed by men as wise aud patriotic as\nour fathers, ought to bd maintained in\na very different uiauner frotu that wit\nnesst.d by the prcseut generation. It\nargues little /or iu performance, wheu\nbitch ijuxilions uro ilis.in-.hcd as those\nu |.icli st I aiiaO tii'-* reiult of the Pres-\nid. ntiil i lection four yen is ig». or\nwl.ich mu> new i rise in the cousiUcin\nlion of the J-;:-ite of N.- w V.rk.
08457a3312527e07a7cd2b98040dec9e PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1916.5942622634589 39.456253 -77.96396 ley counties, began its tirst year's\nwork on Tuesday. The supervisor,\nMr. Uason, of North Carolina, entered\nupon tjis duties at the farm of C. S.\nBillmyer, near Shepherdstown. Today\nlie is at the farm of D. Z. Reyer. Ilis\nprobable course during the rest of\nthe month is as follows: Tabb Bros.,\nLeetown; M. K. Dowers, Kearneys-\nvilh;; C. Marshall, Kearneys ville; 1.\n1). Van Met re, Kearneys ville; C. J.\nCavalier, Harpers Ferry; McDonald\nBros., Charles Town; Messrs. Stull\nand Albin, Summitte Point; E. Conk--\nlyn, Rippon; Bruce McDonald, Darkes-\nvilIc?; J. B . Fisher, Arden; Allen Wel-\nirr, Arden; Elmer Seibert, Martina\nburg; J. Snyder, Tuscarora; H. Sny-\nder, Tuscarora; J. N. Thatcher Co.,\nTuscarora; J. Holland Sperow, Spring\nMills; A. it. Tablcr, (Jreensburg; W.\nL. Folk, Swan Pond; C. Harry Whit¬\ning, Shepherdstown; J. I). Foreman,\nShepherdstown; Staley, Scrab-\n.>!<.; Buther Cickers, Shepherdstown.\nOne or two others are expected to be\nentered before the end of tiie month\nwhich will linish out the month.\nMr. Bason is making friends wher¬\never lie goes and rapidly becoming an\nadept at his work. We predict that j\nlie will be of great assistance to the |\nopen-minded dairymen, such as the\nmembers of this association are. The\nFarm Bureaus of the two counties are\ncongratulating themselves on their\nsuccess in inaugurating such a worthy\nmovement. They are not forgetting,\nhowever, to give a large part of the\ncredit to (J. L. Oliver, agent in dairy¬\ning from Morgantown, who has labor¬\ned so faithfully to help us in this\nwork. That he s a true friend to\nthe dairymen of this and our neigh¬\nboring county, later results will dem¬\nonstrate.
369ed9e150c6c4754d53ed23819b6c7a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.1410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 For thegraelotii manner toil kloil\nwordi In which you bite made me we\ncome to your hoepltablo homo and moi\nhoepluble hearts, be 10 good u to accei\nmy cordial thanks; none the leu tlncei\nthat they come from a heart In which tt\nimitation ol eighty-three yean have a\nenfeebled the appreoMloa ol deed! j\ngeneroelty and klndneae. When the iu|\ngeation ol tho honor which you design!\nfor mo«M communicated to me, I confei\nI waa reluctant to accedo to you wiahe\nbecause my acceptance atoned to lmplf\ncoDsclouMett 6a my part ol defert, whle\nI did not feel; and my reluctance wu onl\novercome by the aiaurance that the reco)\nnitlon which you detiro to mike ol m\nHie-long desire to do my duty to the cit\nof my birth and to my fellow men, mlgt\nbo ukiIiiI Helping flibera, and eiMciail\nthe young, Jo do their duly I# a eoo\nmunlty hi which ao much dopenda upo\nUie voluntary actions of IU Indlvidui\nmembers. If, then, 1 had done or accou\npllahed anything which reallv merits von\ngood opinion, let me uy at oncc, To\ntil, that I have lound and received fu\ncompensation la the satisfaction which\nhave derived from the consciousness c\nduty performed; and that the cxperlenc\no( a long lile enables me to uy that mot\ney and efforts expended (or the genert\ngood ate a better paying Investment thai\nany possible expenditure lor personal grst:\nflcatloa. In looking back, however, ove\nmy lile, 1 am compelled to maku a re\nmark, in which most aged persons wil\nsympathize, and that is,bowmochlhavi\nseen comc to past, and how little 1 havi\nbeen able to do In a long career, thi\ncardinal rule ol which has been ti\nrender some equivalent to society, ii\nsome useful form ot labor, for etc!\nday ol my exlrtenct. When I wsi\nborn, New York contained 33,381 inhab\nitantB. The upper limits ol the city wen\nat Chambers street Mot a single fre<\nschool, either by day or night, existed\nGeneral Washington had just entered up\non his first term as President ol the Uni\nted States, the whole annual eipenditurei\nol which did not exceed (2,500,000, beint\nuhnnt alvtv onnta nor
52ed92d6f922746a99c7188836dda53b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.0560108973386 39.745947 -75.546589 With a copy of her testimony In his\nhand, he stalks up and down between\nthe witness and the attorneys and de­\nmands with ail the scorn and sar­\ncasm he can put into bis voice why\nshe related certain incidents at the first\ntrial and not at the present. Always\nending up wHh the enquiry! "Is your\nmemory not so good as a year ago?”\nThe witness, however, is cool, calm\nand self-possessed, sitting back In her\nchair watching the District Attorney\ncarefully and awaits the objection of\nLittleton which she knows is coming\nand which never fails. While the ob­\njection is many times overruled, wit­\nness has had a chance to revolve the\nsubject in her mind with the result that\nher answer is much less damaging\nthan It might be were she compelled\nto answer without consideration. \nstatement that Harry Thaw attempt­\ned suicide on the continent is to be\nsubstantiated by the testimony of the\nphysician called to attend him when\nhe had swallowed the poison.\nDefense to Rest This Week.\nDaniel O'Reilly, of the counsel for\nthe defense declared today that unless\ncomplications ensue the defense will\nrest by tho end of this week.\nJerome has not yet derided -hew far\nhe will combat the Insanity theory.\nIn fact it is said, that he will content\nhimself with the argument that if Thaw\nhas been insane from birth and irre­\nsponsive his case is Incurable, there­\nfore he is likely to urge if an acquit­\ntal is secured, the Immediate confine­\nment of Thaw at Matteawan.\nThe younger Mrs. Thaw resumed\nthe witnessed stand at 10.15, smiling\nacross the room at her husband as
24875e8a629dcc47427c98da2cfaf857 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.493169367284 40.063962 -80.720915 was thrown from hi* horse near Rofu\nney. The animal trampled upon hia\nin the face, crushing: and smashing i\nfearfully and breaking both jaw bones\nMr. T . is mending under skillful mend\niug under skillful medical treatment\nand his recovery is expected.\n. The Romney Intelligencer says:\nA meeting ot those opposed to th\npresent State JJoverment of West Vir\nginia, was held at the Court House oi\nSaturday evening, the 20ih iustant pur\nsuanl to published notice.\nThe Hampshire rebels will let the ca\nout of the bag if they are not careful.\n. An election was held on the landi\nofWm. Taylor,deceased, in Hampshire\nlast Tuesday, to determine whether\ncertain portion of the county Bhoald b\nannexed to Mineral. The Romnej\nIntelligencer understands the vote re\nsalted 39 for annexation and 10 againBt\n.The editor of the Morgantown Poa\nhas in his office an apple tree twig\ninches long IS well formed ap\nplea; and he saya it is not a very goo<\nseason for apples either !\n. The Board of Visitors of the Agri\ncultural uoiiege auviug sum iuh auhu\nemy bnilding for a public school, con\ntemplate erecting an addition to thi\nCollege building (Woodbnrn.) immedi\natoly. We learn the improvement wil\nbe a line three story building.\n. The Morgan town -Post says thi\n"great democratic and conservativi\nmass meeting" of "white men ant\nwhite boys," advertised for two week\nin advance, to take place at Maidsville\nin that county, Saturday (20th,) provet\nto be a miserable fizzle. The Po&\nlearns that about a dozen voters con\ngregated to see the big gans (1) am\nhear the "national salute;" bat narj\nspeaker was there, and nary usalute1\nfired; and adds: "The above is a fai\nspecimen of the 'large and enthnslastl\nmeetings' held by rebels recently li\nthis county."
0f90272ce0debdb3990aaabf4ba9afb7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.5532786569015 40.063962 -80.720915 yon; perhaps you wieal had made the Ui\nlonger, but the f&ot is, I have b little mat\non my mind tha'I must get rid of even at 1\nrlak of your wishicg me and my commu\n[ cation where Ward'8 ducka went.\nThe matter ia just thU: a large portion\nthe britk hunlea on Bixteehth cireet are r\nanilicioutiy burned for the pnrpo3n to whi\nthey era to be put, snd while I have no cri\nfo piok with the Board of Public Worka ii\neverybody uho tbatglv*n their work any\ntention, J . ees t hires that I think ought\nhave been done d fltrently and tome tha\nthink ought not to have been dono nt a\nbut this ia nvlthcr hero nor tfcero, so fjr a* t\naubjact in hand i£ concerned. Tho exi\nrlence whioh the experiment on Ohapii\n> street below the orcek ought to have tana\nthe Board, it did not, is that Race of tht\nbrick below a dark gray in tbade of colorw\nstand the frost anil travel; nnd yet $5 pi\ncent of thffie on Gixteenth street are b*l<\nthis, and some of them almost ai near wh:\nas tbey wer& beforo huy «.tt*nipt wb3 made\nburn them. Ibia fact would rjptiuUhe lei\nmilitate ajiniuat Uie fjood jadgit.«rit pf t\nBoard, as all tunuHable cnu readily ho\njicted, was it not for the fact that that th\nnave put tho city to the expeuaa of the hai\ninland probably committed j.heci'y to t\npayment of them, no matter ho* ;yorthl(\nthey may bo. It is u matter of common\nnort that the two most cctiva members of t\nBjard ara directly fntoreeted i» tho pate\non thete brick, wbioh Interest if it erton\nno further, would undoubtedly hnve a ie\nilpnr.v to DTOi&Zt tho Oitv in DrolectJnH' th*\nIowu,
15c8def36ee6adb269754145ed92b9d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.8838797497976 40.063962 -80.720915 During the six years that Benjimm F.\nPeixotto, himself a Hebiew, waa United\n. States Consul, under Grant, to R-)uman<a,\nthe outiasea and open violence against the\nJews were in a measure checked, and\neven now the vigilance ot tbo powers pre¬\nvents any open outbursts of rsge or vies\ntence against tbeir persona, such as\nmarked tbe biatorv of the country not\nmany years ego, when the Jews were\noften murdered becinee it wra charged\nthat they drank the blood of Christian\nchildren. Nevertheless, the condition of\nthe Jews there is degraded. Tbey form\n«bout half the p->nnlation ol the country\nand number ^76 000 souls, but they\naro loaded with disabilities and trod¬\nden under the feet of oppression and so-\ncial ostracism. Tbey are premltted to have\ntbeir synagogues, but religious freedom ia\nmerely tolera'ed. They are debarred\nfrom the profosslors and from holding\npublic office aud by enactment cl qualifi¬\ncation lawe they are, with few e»cen'ions.\ndeprived of the elective franchise. Prince\nCharles, of the hrrafo of Iloherzollero.\n to take a liberal attltnde towards\nthe Hebrews, hut he ia compelled to light\nbolh parliament apd the populace in their\nprescriptive enactments and inborn li^trgd\nuf the race in bis endeavors. Tho Jowisb\npopulation is ro-de up ol many of the\nold Spanish Jews, who went ca t-\nwnrd after the expulsion frcm'paln in 1403,\nwhile tho majority are Poles and Russians.\nOne of the arguments of the Roumanian\ngovern" ent against them is that they are\naliens, Inpludir g in this torm families who\nhave lived for ceuturiea ia tho iepd.\nitisbutafewwhohave,in\n«pite ol oppression, attained wealth\nand distinction that any considcra-\n'lon is given. The masaea are poor, and\ntheir pnK3<U lowly. Many are merchants,\nsome are agriculturists, and a few are arti¬\nsans. In culture and refioement they\nclaim that even among the pWS the Is¬\nraelites have kept ahead of their only par¬\ntially enlightened fellow countrymen.\nThev havo their own schools, and bo' h\ntbe biblical and pnat biblical literature Is\ntauebt to a high grade.
281765a25222d049fca333ee93f17ec0 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.2534246258244 39.743941 -84.63662 self, and introduced a resolution cen\nsuring such members of the legisla\nture as Had placed tnemseives in a\nposition to receive offers of money\nfor their votes during the recent sen-\natorial centest, and committing them\nto their constituents for the condem\nnation they deserved. The resolu\ntion gave no names, but was design-\ned to hit right and left, and hit\nso many that a scene of indescribable\nconfusion ensued. After a deal Of\nyelling, screaming, swearing and\nother moral exhibitions, the house\nsettled down into something resemb\nling order, and a violent angry de\nbate began. It not only began, but\nit went on and on till night. Such\nan exchange of "pet names" was\nnever before heard in a legislative\nbody. Members called each other\nthieves, rascals, cowards, base\numniatros, and hurled epithets\neven more offensive character. The\nSpeaker, Clarke, seemed to be the\nfavorite object of abuse. He was de-\nnounced as a "perjured villain," but\nthis did not excite him to reply. He\nsat uuraoved, doubtless thiuking that\nwhere there were so many "perjured\nvillains" no invidious distinction\nwas intended by the allusion to him\nOne member accused Clarke\nswearing to a hundred lies during\nthe Caldwell investigation in 1872,\nand said he was prepared to prove\nby statement subsequently mado\nby Clarke over his own signature\nAnother accused him of- having\nblackmailed the Kansas Pacific rail\nroad out of $15,000 while in Con\ngress, and challenged him to deny\nit. But still the honorable speaker\nof the Kansas House kept quiet. He\ndid not blush nor hang his head, but\nas item after item of his record was\nbrought out he looked prouder and\nstill more proud, as U he was rapidly\ndeveloping into a first class candi\ndate for United States Senator from\nKansas. We1 have drawn the picture\nmildly, taking every allegation from\nthe most reliable Republican sources,\nso as to be absolutely sure of keep\ning far within the boundary of fact.\nIf we look to Irennsylvanta for Re\npublican fruits, we find them mani\nfested in the election of a man to\noffice of State Treasurer who was\nknown to be largely interested\nand to derive his great influence\nfrom the leading gambling houses\nthe Quaker City and Long Branch.\nNot only was this man, with this re\ncord, made custodian of the State\nfunds, but he was intrusted with the\nleadership and management of\nparty. He was held in high esteem\nnot only by the "roughs" of Phila\ndelphia, but by the religious element\nof the Radical organization.
05563b7734791eb07d61e98d7cbf9490 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.009589009386 58.275556 -134.3925 cauvas were placed several large elec¬\ntric lights and the 9trange design could\nbe 9ee from all parts of the hall. The\nmusic which was furnished by the new\nTreadwell orchestra was the best heard\narouud here for a good number of\nyears. The orchestra was composed of\nMessrs. Norluud, violiu; Hughes, clari\nnet; Casey, coruet; Lawrence, piano,\naud Harris, drums. The music played\nwas all new pieces, and judgiug from\nthe encores received the dancers must\ncertainly have enjoyed it. The supper\nwas served in cafeteria style aud was\nlooked after by Stewards Hensou and\nFerris, to whom great credit should be\ngiveu for the able manner iu which j\nthey handled the large crowd and the\nexcellent supper that was served to\nthe hungry dancers. The buffet was\npresided over by George Stephens and\nAlex Graham. The programs were a\nwork of art and the mauuer iu which\nthey were gotten up showed good taste\non the part, of the committee. The\nfloor was iu excellent condition and the\ncrowd stayed long after the whistles\nhad tooted their New Year's greetiugs.\nThe dresses woru by the ladies would\nmake a down south mau open his eyes\nwhen be would step into the hall for he\nwould laugh at you if you were to tell\nhim that we had balls iu Alaska where\nladies and gentlemen attended iu full\ndress, but such was the case the other\nnight and the bright colors of the\nladies' garments offset the sombre\nblack of the gentlemen's clothing| and\nmade a pretty contrast. There Was a\nlarge crowd over from Juneau and a\nlate ferry was provided for their return.\nThe boys of the cyanide plant are to be\ncongratulated on the success of their\nfirst ball and it is to be hoped that it\nwill be an auuual event. The com-\nmittee iu charge of the dance was com-\nposed Jof the following gentlemen:\nMessrs. Lass, Jones, Hunt, Till, Bean-\nland, Goodner, Doremus, Spain, Good-\nwin, Hayes, Oleson, Prentice, Peterson,\nOliver, Delfel, Wilson, Beeman, Kapp,\nDelo, Johnson and Wyman.
e0279ada61af5ea3700145ae228f2b67 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1922.0753424340437 41.681744 -72.788147 experience in the basketball world\ngoes back is not known but from the\nway he handled last week's game, It\nappears that he is far from being ex\nperienced. His decisions were for the\nmost part weird and the interpretation\nthat he placed on some of the rules\nwere certainly novel.'!\nFirst just a word In regard to Mr.\nRogers' qualifications. Mr. Rogers is\nat present an Instructor at Choate\nschool, Is on the coach staff there and\nIs actively engaged tn the sport. He\nis a graduate of Wesleyan University\nwhere he played on class and varsity\nteams. He also coached Bellefonte\nAcademy for a year and officiated at\nthe Penn State games. At present he\nis handling all the home games of the\nWallingford High school teams and\nalso of the Meriden High games as\nwell as many outside games and is\ndoing excellent work.\nHe is a member of high standing in\ncentral Connecticut board as well as\na member of the approved list of the\nConnecticut Intersholastic Conference.\n this shows that he is fully qualified\nto handle basketball games.\nFrom reports given me by members\nof the board and men who witnessed\nthe game that night, the following\nconclusions cart be drawn. The referee\ndid all in I)is power to hold the game\ndown to a fast clean contest and any\nincident that occurred, happened not\nbecause of his inability but rather be-\ncause of unsportsmanlike conduct of\nplayers and supporters.\nToo many teams fail to realize that\nHigh school athletics are not devised\nwholly for the object of defeating a\nrival but rather for the clean sports-\nmanship and benefits derived by meet\ning and competing with other organi\nzations. The public tends to support a\nwinning team and too many schools\nat the present time have as their\nmotto, "Anything to Win." This atti\ntude is all wrong and until such time\ncomes that coaches and men in charge\nof school athletics "see. the light," very\nittle progress can be made In cleaning\nup athletics in the state.\nUnsportsmanlike
5745365245099c708bfbacdf450f2fd1 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.2342465436327 31.960991 -90.983994 The crops were very good in June last—espe­\ncially the wheat crop, surpassing any thing\nknown on this side of the mountains. Laborers\ncommanded $1.50 - per day, with board included.\nThe improvements about the falls ofWallamette\nwere progressing rapidly. The emigrants were\neager for the passage of the Oregon bill, and in­\nsist upon the retention by our Government of\nevery inch of that Territory. There is sufficient\npasturage for cattle during the whole year, and\nabundance of timber for building and other pur­\nposes. Produce commands a good price, being\nshipped to the Russian dominions and other points\nof the Pacific. Groceries, &c., can be purchas­\ned at different places in the Territory, though at\nrather high prices at present; the Hudson Bay\nCompany commanding the market for such arti­\ncles. In short, the first difficulties of an early\nsettlement in a remote region have b : en remov­\ned, and without the aid or encouragement which\nour Government ought long ago to have afford­\ned. The Reporter makes the following perti­\nnent comments upon this intelligence:\n“It must be humiliating to every American\nthat our country deserves, to a considerable ex­\ntent, the reproach cast by upon Great Britain,\nwith regard to the American colonies, and utter­\ned by Col. Barre, in the House of Commons, in\n1775, when, in reply to the charge that these\ncolonies had grown up under the protection of\nEngland, he declared that, instead of being nur­\ntured and protected, they had increased In wealth,\nprosperity aud numbers, in spite of the neglect\nof those who were bound to aid and encourage\nthem. So has it been with Oregon.\nEmigrants have gone thither, encountered dif­\nficulties, opened improvements, made prosperous\nsettlements, introduced the arts and comforts of\ncivilized life, established schools, built churches,\nfounded cities, engaged in commerce, established\na colonial legislature, defended themselves a-\ngainst all encroachments—in a word, laid the\nfoundations of a prosperous empire, in advance\nof any action by our Government. They now\ndemand, as they Iiave been demanding for years,\nthat the protecting and sustaining arm ofthe Re­\npublic snail be extended to them. Although their\ngreatest and best advocate, the lamented Linn,\nhas passed from the stage of action, yet their\ncause still remains, strengthening yearly, and\ndemanding with increased force the encourage­\nment which the country should always give to\nits pioneers.
10effd7ebad9d2e366b394f2892fe5ab DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.9438355847285 58.275556 -134.3925 Abe Conklin who breeds snakes on\nthe Warwick mountains, above Green¬\nwood Lake, has returned to Montclair,\nN. Y., having closed his snake hatchery\nj for the winter. "Abe" said that he was\nwell pleased with the success of his\nventure. His sales have been large,\nespecially in hoop snakes. When\nasked about the hoop snakes and why\nthe demand for them was so large, he\nsaid, with a hint of a smile:\n"1 thought most everybody kne vV\nabout hoop snakes" lie then explain¬\ned that when a hoop snake travels he\nsticks his tail in his mouth and rolls\nlike a boy's hoop.\n"That's how I conceived the idea of\nbreeding hoop suakes, and my sales\nhave been chiefly among rich New\nYorkers, who buy them for their \ndren. I tried to cross the breed this\nyear with rattlesnakes, so that the\nrattles would serve for the bells used\non the ordinary wooden hoop. I\nmanagod to produce one with three\nrattles. It was proud of its rattles and\nwe made a great pet of it. I think\nthat's what spoiled it.\n"My boy kept at me until I let him\ntake it outside and roll it for a hoop.\nThe boy was so delighted with th\nsound of the rattles as he wont along\nthe road that he became excited and^\nhit it with a stick harder than he in¬\ntended, and blamed if he didn't drive\nits tail so far down its throat that it\nswallowed itself."\nAbe says he will continue the experi¬\nment next spring.
0d20daee497da09e52dc518477494bdc THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.2452054477424 39.261561 -121.016059 and Order of Sale to me directed, and issued out of the\nHon. District Court of the 14th Judicial District, in and for\nthe County of Nevada and State of California, on a judg-\nment rendered in said Court on the 20th day of March, A.\nD. 1858. in favor of THOMAS WOODVII.LE and against\nMOUNT HOPE MINING CO., and JOHN JUDD, for the sum\nof two thousand four hundred and fifty-two dollars and\neighty-eight cents, together with interest on the said sum\nof $2,452,88 at the rate of two and a half per cent per\nmonth from the rendition of judgment until paid, together\nwith costs of suit taxed at $58,05, for the sale of the fol-\nlowing described property to wit: All the right, title and\ninterest of the Mount Hope Mining Co. , in and to that cer-\ntain piece or parcel and tract of mining ground and quartz\nclaims, situated lying and being on tbe south side of Mas-\nsachusetts Hill, in the Township of Grass Valley, county\nof Nevada, and which may be more particularly known\nand described as follows : that is to say, commencing at a\nstake marked (O.) of the Mount Hope Mining Co. , late\nRocky Bar Mining Co., as m arked upon their recorded map,\nthence north 62° east one hundred feet to a new stake, and\nthirteen and a half feet further to an old stake, thence\nsouth 36* east one hundred feet to a new stake, and \nenty-five feet further to a stump, with a new stake in it,\nthence south forty-three degrees east one hundred feet to\na new stake, and eighty-seven feet further to a stump\nwith an old and new stake, thence south 47* west one\nhundred feet to a new stake, and one hundred feet further\nto a new stake, and ninteen feet further to a stump, and\nan old and new stake, thence north 14* west ninety seven\nfeet to a stump and an old Rocky Bar stake and a new\nstake, thence north 21° west, fifty-nine teet to a stump end\na new stake; And also, that certain block of ground, com-\nmencing at that last point mentioned, and being enclosed\nbv the ground owned by the Mount Hope Mining Co. , ana\nalso, that certain other claim or piece of ground of aboej\none hundred feet square, on the eastern line, tbe whole e*\nsaid ground or claims mortgaged, are bounded on tbe north\nand east by certain ground supposed to be ewned by ths\nNevada County Gold Mining Company ; on the south by\nthe gronnd supposed to be owned by the Bans Bar Comp*\nny, and on the west by that other ground owned by the\nMount Hope Mining Co., Also, the Engine, Boiler, Pump*\nand Machinery, situate on the above ground for tbe pur*\npose of working the same, together with all and singular\nthe privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging\nin any wise appertaining.
12458121aefcc954fca05ff0690ed56b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.924863356355 40.063962 -80.720915 11' the railroad companies dkl carry\nInto Canton the number or people which\nthey say they did, they performed an\nunexampled feat In railroading. Canton\nis not a great railroad center, as Chi¬\ncago or St. Louis, or even Indianapolis\nis. But one trunk line runs directly Into\nthe town, the Pennsylvania. The Balti¬\nmore it Ohio has a Canton connec¬\ntion, whloh is fairly direct via Ak¬\nron. There Is only one other road, and\nth.it Is of a local character. Stop and\nthink for a moment what tho figures\n730,000 applied to passengers by rail\nmeans in the way of transportation. It\nmeans 12.500 cars loaded to their ca¬\npacity. reckoning sixty persons to a\ncar. Between tho nomination of Mc¬\nKlnloy and tlte election there were\nabout nineteen weeks. The average\nnumber of cars, all fully occupied,must\ntherefore have been rather more than\nsix hundred a day. It may well be\ndoubted if this number of cars was ex¬\nceeded by all the railroads running Into\nChicago during the World's Fair,except\ntho last six weeks of the exposition.\nSix hundred cars a day means sixty\n of ten cars each. Did the raJl-\nroods do it. or ar they making some\nmistake or exaggeration in their fig¬\nures? It does not Hoem credible. There\nwere days in which they rolled Into\nCanton thirty or forty such trains, but\nthey will have to come forward with\nsome detailed statement before they\nmake people believe they kept up an\naverage of sixty trains a day, Sundays\nund all. through that period.\nKven If the number of passengers\ncarried into Canton was only half that\nreported It was a marvelous perform¬\nance in railroading. So numerous were\nthe special trains to Canton that rail¬\nroad yards in that town went practic¬\nally cleared of freight cars. A3! the side\ntracks were used for passenger cars\nand extra tracks were laid. Even this\ndid not sufllce, and the Pennsylvania\nCompany, which handled the bulk of\nthe trallle, found It necessary to run\ntrains from the east through Masslllon.\neight miles west, in order to tirwi a\nplace for the cars to stand during the\nfew hours elapsed. while their passen¬\ngers wore standing before Major Mc-\nKinley's porch.
285514df496eaa6a0be8100df28ef7c9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.3986301052764 40.063962 -80.720915 laeo iusaid county, atFuilou, lu naahiuKtou UIslet.\nft. if. Gillespie, It, F . CrtnTetl and Hugh McGaw,\n:o hereby appointed Commissioner* of w»ld elecou\nut tho voitnx place lu said couuty, on Wheeling\nland, in Madison district.\n0. K . Wheat, M. t'oilock and T. II. Logan, arc\nereby Appointed Comtnlwloncre of i Id election ut\nio voting placo iu >ald couuty ut tho bucoud Ward\nuiket House, in Madison district.\nM. Kellly. W . F . Peterson and John Clator, aro\nsreby appointed Ooifltnbsloiiew of wild flection at\niu voiiug placo in uld county, at thu Court liouse,\nClay dlst. let.\nAug, Uoerlug, E. C . Jcfforonnd R. Crawford, are\n*reby apjiolnted commissioners of sold election at\nte voting place in Mild county, at tho Atlantic Kline\nHouse, in I'tilon district.\nJohn Vogler, Sr., T. it. Moffat and Win. Mylea ore\n appointed Commissioners of said ckction ut\nio voting placo iu uM county, at tho Guard's Hose\noum), iu Centre district.\n8. Clark, J. M. Todd and L. U. Crooo, aro hereby\n(pointed CommUslonet* of said election at tho vol\nH pluce in wild futility, ut tho United Engine\nouse, lu Webster district.\nThomas McCready, W. o . llandlau and John\nrown aro herebyappolnted Comral.'oloDcni of said\nectlon at votlug placo In Mid county, at tho\njuseof l.«wls Amuus, in Ritchie district.\nJ.H .Garvin, K. Criswell and John Uowman aro\nireoy appointed CommUaloneraof said election at\nc voting place In said county, at Uethlehem,\ndams' School House, In Ritchie district.\nJohn Hclfenbcne, Andrew Vance and L. Wheeler\nv hereby appointed (.ominlsalouem of election at\nie voting place In said county, at Precinct No. 1,\nlUobournol *rederick ilier,InTrladeiphfa dlsWesley\nRoblnron, Alex. McConn and James
03ecf1bf59344f43353dee596bcd4335 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1892.3265027006173 37.92448 -95.399981 All these things arc suggested as we\nstand this Easter morn amid the broken\nrocks of the Saviour's tomb. Indeed I\nknow that tomb has not been rebuilt,\nfor I stood in December of 1SS9 amid the\nruins of tliat, the most famous sepul-ch-\nof all time. There are thousands\nof tombs in our Greenwood and Laurel\nHill and Mount Auburn with more pol-\nished stone and more elaborate masonry\nand more foliaged surroundings, but as\nI went down the steps of the supposed\ntomb of Christ on my return from\nMount Calvary I said to myself: "This\nia the tomb of all tombs. Around this\nstand more stupendous incidents than\naround any grave of all the world since\ndeath entered it." I could not breathe\neasily for overmastering emotion as I\n down the four crumbling steps\ntill we came abreast of the nichu in\nwhich I think Christ was buried. I\nmeasured the sepuleher and found it\nfourteen and a half feet long, eight feet\nhigh, nine feet wide. It is a family\ntomb and seems to have been built to\nhold five bodies. But I rejoice to say\nthat the tomb was empty, and the door\nof the rock was gone and the sunlight\nstreamed in. The day that Christ rose\nand came forth the sepuleher was de-\nmolished forever, and no trowel of\nearthly masonry can ever rebuild it\nAnd the rupture of those rocks, and the\nsnap of that government seal, and the\ncrash of those walls of limestone.andthe\nstep of the lacerated but triumphant foot\nof the risen Jesus we
35392f5c55bb949cc43fc6a330b47c85 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.1767122970573 41.681744 -72.788147 obtaining land in various parts of the\ncity where playgrounds might be . es -\ntablished and be a great benefit to\nchildren, more so than if confined to\nthe grounds now in use which neces-\nsitates children traveling quite a dis-\ntance to reach them. Mayor .Quigley\nhas talked this matter over with peo-\nple who are especially interested in\nthe work and who appear to be will-\ning to make a personal sacrifice in or-\nder that the city may be equipped\nwith such plots of ground as may be\nnecessary to meet the wants of the\nplayground movement. Many other\ncities a,re doing more along this line\nthan is New Britain and as this in-\nformation is diffused among people\ninterested in the playground move-\nment local enthusiasm is naturally\nincreased. children love these,\nplaces because they get a lot of plea-\nsure out of them, while parents like\nto have them bcause they know where\ntheir children are when they are not\nat home. There is no mistaking the\nfact that they are. a great help to pa-\nrents in keeping children off the street\nand free from danger. The highways\nare dangerous places nowadays for\nchildren, parents themselves under-\nstand it and joyfully; welcome the in-\ncrease in the movement to provide\nplaces where the little ones can play\nright without molestation. The whole\nmatter hinges on whether the board\nof finance and taxation is ready to\ngive its sanction to it. The amuse-\nment commission would do a great\ndeal if it only had ; the money, but\nso would some "
b47958ec9f57ab1b728a4143c5396f1a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 A law which operates to make\nlawful such a wrong\nscribed in plaintiff s complaint\ndeprives the owner of the busi­\nness of the premises of his pro­\nperty without due process, and\ncannot be held valid under the\nFourteenth Amendment.\nBut four of the nine members of\nthe court dissent. Justices Aolmeg. I\nBrandeis, Pitney and Clarke hold j\nthat 1n denying the use of the in- [\nJunction the State had not violated |\nthe provisions of the Constitution ln- I\nasmuch as the employers had at\ntheir command other means of se­\ncuring remedy for an invasion of\ntheir rights. It was argued, in other\nwords, that restrictions placed upon\none method of relief did not violate\nthe Constitution inasmuch as relief\nwas still Obtainable in other ways,\nif rights were violated.\nThe decision of the court in the\npresent case, taken in connection\nwith recently given in the case\nof the American Foundries Com­\npany of Granite City, 111., is to be re­\ngarded as a blow to picketing except\nperhaps, in the mere form of an an­\nnouncement that a strike is in pro­\ngress. As the majority of the court\nview it, even compelling a customer\nto run the gauntlet of uncomfortable\npublicity is an invasion of property\nrights that may be stopped by the\nissue of an Injunction, and the in­\njunction process is one not to he de­\nnied by legislative enactment in such\ncase. It is properly described as a\nsweeping decision. It strikes at the\nroots of practices that have long\nbeen indulged in by labor unions.\nThe only comfort they arc likely to\nAnd in this particular expression of\nthe views of the highest court in the\nland is that but five of the nine\njustices concurred In it.
29d0c8dfec92ada3ec7c502b2fd74153 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.0532786569015 39.743941 -84.63662 get rid of my companion. Briefly, for I\nfeel my strength sinking, and I must\nhurry forward to the end ol what I have\nto tell you. I procured poison which I\npoured into the leathern bottle in which\nI carried my refreshment on the road,\nand, watching my opportunity, offered it\nto him to drink. He sank back in a\ncorner of the coach and in a Jew minutes\nwas a corpse. Emptying the remaining\ncontents out the window, and placing\nthe dead man in such an attitude as\nwould lead people to suppose he had died\nnaturally iu his sleep, 1 hailed the guard\nwith every simulation of trepidation,\nand stopped the coach. The outside pas-\nsengers got down, and a scene of great\nexcitement occurred. At the next vil-\nlage, the doctor, who, as it hap-\npened,' was a man of no great skill, was\nsent for, and dexterously insinuating to\nhim that I had known my companion to\nhave suffered from heart disease of some\nyears' standing, with many compliments\nto the professional acumen of ihe doctor\nhimeelr, that worthy was not long in pro-\nnouncing it a sudden death from disease\nof the heart ; and I was suffered, in view\nof my representations as to the urgency\nof my mission to Bristol, to proceed on\nmy journey. This is the bare outline of\nmy crime, the details would only weary\nyou, and my time is short. I succeeded\nin leaving England and reaching Brazil,\nwhere I have amassed a fortune. That\nfortune is within the box which lies be-\nneath my hand."
0ef5168518167a4cbce4731c06f55031 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 "We ar© stongly tempted to address\na few last words to our Southern read¬\ners. But, alas! what words of ours\ncan express the regret wo feel at their\ndisappointment and suffering T Wo\nmay, nowever, finally declare that in\nour opinion the long agony of the\nSouth will not be-without a reward.\nThough defeated, the South is not dis¬\nhonored. Tho history of her indepen¬\ndent existence does not exceed four\nyears, but it is a complete and brilliant\nrecord that will endure bo long as vir¬\ntue and heroism^¦are venerated. The\nSouth is not a separate nationality, but\nshe 1s a part or a vast and powerful\nfederation. The South has been* con¬\nquered and is afflicted. but as long as\nshe preserves the tradition of her glory\nsho cannot enslaved. The Southern\nConfederacy has fallen, but her gallant\nsons have not died in vain. Whatever\nflag waves over her capltols the South\nwill be free. Under whatever govern¬\nment her people live their influence will\nbe felt. As yet the Ihud is desolate. As\nyet the women mourn for those who\nhave died for their country. But time\nwill obliterate the ravages of the fierce\nconflict, and the South, chastened by\nthe will of God and exalted by her\nchastening, will yet be happy and pros¬\nperous: ns in bygone days. To nations,\nas to individuals, tribulation is often\nthe horald of blessings. We are confi¬\ndent ft will be so with' the South, and\ntherefore it is with a good heart,\nthough with personal pain, we bid our\nSouthern friends farew-ell."
564ef3c8233398e26bf3b70df7646771 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8589040778793 40.063962 -80.720915 And now they have just extended tl\nlease of power for two more years,\neffect; they have said to the party U\nthey were still willing to trust their!\ntertstf jutd the great future of the gore\nmeut to Republican safe keeping. A\nthis determination of the people we oc\naider' s' sew jtteetatlan of their ablt\nand wtllisgaets to discriminate aright I\ntween political parties. We regard it\nall. important that the Republican pat\nshould hold power until the National di\nand the queittrio of reconstruction art\nfar settled in their present direction as\nbe irreversible by those who may such\nto power. If it is necessary lorthepai\nto Incur odium, In anxue prejudices, ai\nlose strength in Uibs carrying out wl\nwe conceive to he its great mission, w\nso let itlie, eren to-the extent in the c\nof reducing its strengih bektw a majori\nBut we do not consider that a contit\nance of ha policy of steadily reduci\nthe debt, and of protecting the hombli\nhuman being i» the land ln the full enjc\nment of .his lights, necessarily involt\na loss of soprewscy in the end. On t\ncontrary, we Venture to hope that t\n point of danger has been passed\nthe tye.dMftfeosjand'thti'tiie party 1\nin the campaigns' jost ended, met a\nsustaibed the foil weight ot possible a\ntagonism in regard^id'the debt a\nthe Negro question. Wehopetoaeet\npressure hitherto brought to bear on t\nparty becanif'ofiben two questions abi\nhereafter and the prejudice* of many p\nsons wear away and be forgotten in t\ntwo years that are toeotne. Br that III\nno party in this country, let the fate\nRepublicans be what it may, win dare\nagitate any revolutionary reaction-\neither question. The debt will be »o mu\ndiminished and pertapa funded at»1\na rats of interest, that oo politician c\npotUMf HffSVSBS heTore (Ce people i\nany (Batform. tlist proposes to disturb\nAnd to likewise in regard to the neg\nqufeatloo, it will be by. that time less\nnovelty to the people to see a odor\nman vote and there will be do fonnidal\ndanger oT the franchise .ever being tak\naway from him. On the. contrary, t\nfeallagol thepeople will be that the,l>\nlot In bb hands is a logical necessity\nhis ireedom In the South and as such vii\nfor hia protection against those who ha\nmore advantages.
323b62994d7fd867105bbcc47a6be54f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.4506848997971 39.745947 -75.546589 year commencing with the year ending July 1, 1920; and\n2) Depositing holders of Preferred Slock will receive for\neach share of preferred stock 820.73 in cash and 873 par value in\na Six Per Cent. Series B bond of Aetna Explosives Company, Ine.\nmaturing January 1, 1941; one-twenty-flfth of Ihe total issue of\nSeries B bonds lo bo retired each year commencing with the year\nending July 1, 1920, Series B bonds will be scoured in like manner\nbut will be junior in Hen to Series A bonds.\nHon. George C. Holt and Hon. B. B . Odell, as Receivers of the\nCompany, have agreed, pursuant to an order of Court, that when there\nshall have been deposited Preferred Stock and Bonds lo an amount\napproved by the Court, and the ncecessary voles of the stockholders\nshall have been secured to authorize the Company to issue said Series\nA and Series B bonds, and to make the exchange provided for, the\nReceivers will pay to the depositaries th^ rash payments above pro­\nvided. At such time the Company is to deliver to said depositaries the\nSerie* A and Series B bonds as above provided. Th* payments of cash\nand the delivery of the new securities lo the dospusitors the de­\npositaries, above provided, will be carried gut under Ihe direction of\nthe Readjustment Managers, subject to the order of the Court.\nThe lime within which holders of preferred stock and bonds ran\nparticipate In the Amended Plan of Readjustment is limited, and it Is\nImportant that deposits of Bonds and Preferred Stock be made at the\nearliest date possible. When the readjustment shall have been car­\nried out, the Receivers are to be discharged, and the Company can\nproceed with the development of its business.\nAH deposits of Preferred Slock and Bonds under the Amended\nPlan of Readjustment should be made to the depositaries on or before\nJuly I, 1919. We urge all Bondholders and Preferred Stockholder*\nwho have not already deposited their Bonds and Preferred Slock with\nthe depositaries, under the Plan of Marrh 14, 1918, to deposit their\nbonds Immediately with BANKERS TRUST COMPANY. 10 Wall Street.\nNew York. N . Y ., depositary for the Bonds under the Amended Plan\nand Agreement, and to deposit their Preferred Stock with COLUMBIA\nTRUST COMPANY, 60 Broadway. New York, X. Y ., depositary for the\nPreferred Stock under the Amended Plan and Agreement.\nIn the event that the Amended Plan Is not carried out. all
508f05fa601d5e739b8e19a959340056 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.6287670915779 37.561813 -75.84108 Section G. After such appropriation\nis made, it shall be the duty of the pro-\nbate judge immediately to make up the\ncost bill of such proceedings, when the\nboard, or proper member thereof, shall,\nwithout any unnecessary delay, pay the\nsame, and shall also p:iy the adjudged\ncompensation by drawing his warrant\nupon the auditor in the manner pres-\ncribed by law, in favor of the proper\nparty; and if the party entitled to such\ncompensation shall not call for the same,\nthe auditor shall nevertheless issue the\nproper warrant upon the treasury in his\nbehalf for the same, and shall retain\nsuch warrant until called for; and the\nmoney shall bo taken and held to be\ndeposited in the treasury for the use and\nbenefit of the party entitled to the same,\nfrom the date of such warrant: Pro-\nvided, that no interest shall bo paid\nupon the compensation or costs as afore-\nsaid: Provided, that tho board or proper\nmember thereof, may, at their option,\npay the costs and refuse to niako the\nappropriation, if in their or bis judg-\nment, tho compensation assessed is too\ngreat to justify tho appropriation.\nsection i. I root ot tno servieo or\n of the certificates aforesaid,\nwhen required by this act, may bo made\nby tho affidavit of any person having\npersonal knowledge of tho lact.\nSection 8. If the property appro\npnaieu in a case 01 pnuiio exigency, as\nherein before provided, or to bo appro-\npriated in other cases as aforesaid, shall\nbelong.to the heirs, or devisees of a de-\ncedent, and the names and places of\nresidence ot such hoirs or devisees, or\nof any or either of them, shall bo un\nknown to tho board, or tho proper mem\nber thereof, such persons whose names\nand places of resideneo shall bo thus\nunknown, may be described in, all and\nsingular, tho papers and proceedings\naforesaid, as the unknown heir, or hens,\ndevisee, or devisees, as the case may be\nof the decoder t, naming such decedent\nif his or bcr namo be known to the\nboard, or said member thereof. Rut if\nthe namo of such decedent bo unknown\nto tho board, or tho proper membci\nthereof, or if tho names and places of\nresilience of the owners, or any of them\n(whether Holding by descent, devise or\npurchase,) bo in likti manner unknown,\nsuch owner, or owner-) -
197ce57837c713b39e7158ee6b453db4 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1917.8315068176053 37.451159 -86.90916 United States. They believed In and\nwanted international peace, but they\nwanted It on a basis of International\n. justice which would insure the right\nof our people to govern themselves.\nWhen the Imperial German Govern-\nment undertook to destroy the Uvea\nof our peoplo and to impose a rulo of\nconduct upon us without our consent\nin places under the jurisdiction of tho\nUnited States government, there was\nno coutse left but to resist," Secre-\ntary Wilson said.\n"Tho workers have moro at stako\nIn this conflict tlian any othors, be-\ncause it is only in a democracy that\nthe common peoplo can come Into their\nown. Tho great privilege is not given\nto all of us to serve our country on\nthe battlefield or in the trenches, but\nthere other ways In which we can\nserve and nssist those who are privi-\nleged to carry our flag on the battlo\nfields of Eutope. Tho impulse of sac-\nrifice for the common good is sending\nyouth of our country Into the\ntrenches in defense of Liberty, hu-\nmanity and democracy.\n"To those of us who must of neces-\nsity remain at home to till the soil,\nharvest the crops, man the factories,\nmines and mills, the way Is open for\nadditional service. Wo too must make\nsacrifices. The men who go forth to\ndo battle in the field must' be equipped\nand sustained. Funds must be forth-\ncoming to furnish the food, tho fire-\narms and other supplies for the fight\ning rorces of the nation. Finances\nfor that purpose must be secured
1415dfc5a9aada3c12b6f63a210118ac THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1887.3027396943176 39.743941 -84.63662 manure, gardeners use ashes, ground\nbone and various commercial fertilizers.\nThis liberal application of manure re\nsults not only m the production of very\nlarge crops, but in producing veg\netables of very superior quality. Being\nin all respects superior to those raised\non poor soil or brought from a distance\nthey bring good prices.\nAnother very common mistake of\nfarmers in the management of gardens\nis planting the seeds of all kinds of\nvegetables at nearly the same time.\nThey know that wheat and oats should\nbe sown very early in the spring, and\nthat the planting of corn, beans' and\npumpkins should be delayed until the\nair and sou are warm, and if they con\nsidered the matter they would see the\nnecessity of making a similar difference\nin the time of planting their garden\nseeds. But they are less interested in\ngarden than crops, and do not ob\nserve their habits so closely. As this\nis the case they are likely to plant bush\nbeans, squashes and melons at the\nsame time they do the seeds of onions\nand vegetables raised for" their roots.\nOrdinarily the former are planted too\nearly, while the latter are planted quite\ntoo late to secure the best results.\nOnions, like wheat and most other\nsmall grains, must be matured in the\nearly part of the season, while most\nBoots require many months in which to\ngrow. J . he seeds, of plants that origi\nnated in tropical countries, like beans\nand melons, should not be placed in the\nground till it is quite warm.\nIhe most general and the most fre\nquei.t mistake of farmers in the mana\ngement of gardens is shown in neg\nlecting them at the times when they\nrequire close attention
04ddd6e1215616f26d7a5b7534e8cee6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.3410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 'i-ly, brandishing his tomahawk and t\niking a number of feigned blown in\nliatieo and derision. Poe, however,\n'till on h*H guard, averted the real blow\nfrom his head by throwing up his arm\ni. ^ receiving it "on hix wrist, in which lie\nwas severally wounded; hut not so as to s\nentirely the u*e of his hand. In this\nperilous moment Poe, by a violent effort,\ni'roke loose from the Indian, snatched up |\n" i ie of the Indian's puns, and shot the\n'nail Indian through the breait, n* he s\nhi up a third time to tomahawk him.\nI'iiu large Indian w.a » now on his feet, (\ngrasping IV* by ,a thoulder and leg, ,\n' .. irow him down on"his back. Po« in- f\nHilly disengaged himself, and got on\nit. The Indian then Mixed him again,\n<1 new struggle ensued, which, owing (\n'/> the slipperv Mate of the bank, ended, j\nin the fall ot ooth combatants into the\nwater. In this situation it wa* the oh-\nof each to drown the other. Their\ni tl'.irt-t to effect their purpose were con-\nlined for some time, with alternate sue-\n* . sometimes on6 being under water\n"id sometimes the ether. I'oe at length\ni i.'. 'il the tuft of hair on the scalpof the\nii'dian, with which he held his head un-\n< r water until he supposed him drowned.\nWaxing his hold too soon, Poe instantly (\n'iind his gigantic antagonist on his feet j\n- ' un and ready for another combat. In\nuih they were carried into the water
61aef4fc38b023099abb017cb70d049e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.746575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 In 1793 tlie peace of Basil was mad\noctwecn Prussia and Republican Franct\njy which Prussia was to leavo Francc i\npossession of her conquests from Prussl\nan the Rhine, for which she was to liav\nin equivalent\nIn 1797 by secret articles Austria gav\njp to France the left bank of the Rblni\nthe city ol Metz included, from Basil t\nlbs mouth ol Nethe, near Andernoch.\nIn 1802 Franco obtained tlte whole (\n:bo right bank of the Khlne.\nBy tho peace of Tulsit, July D, 180'\nPrussia lost Prussian Poland, with Dani\nEig and tbe district of Blalytlack, ti\njetlier with all her territory west of th\nElbe.nearly half the kingdom. Th!\nivasu heavy humiliation compared wit\n:hat which she now proposes lor Franci\n1 new kingdom of Westphalia, ore\nivhich was placed Jerome Bonaparte, cm\ntraced tho dominions on tb\nTest of the Elbe.\nSecret articles of tills treaty contempts\n£d the expulsion of the Turks from Ei\nopo.Constantinople and the province c\nRoumella excepted.for tho benellt i\nRussia. Is not Russia now exacting t\njonsummatc this design, thut has bee\nlending with her for over sixty years?\nIn 1818 was formed the grand coalltio\n>f powers against Bonupurte, includln\ntil except Saxony und Denmark. Th\nbur great powers, England, Prussia, Auf\nria and Russia, were each to keep In tb\nicld ISO,000 men, and Oreat Britain t\nmy t15,000,000 of subsidies to the othc\nhreo powers. Tho plnn was lo reUuc\nFranco to nearly licr old limits. Englam\nind Prussia wanted a harrier orectci\nigainst the ambition of France on th\nelt bank of tlio Rhine. Has not l'russi\nlow revived this idea of (lay-seven year\nigoV
10354470ec80d54cd532fbd4aa98d25a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.683561612126 39.513775 -121.556359 an l our national tcpres.uit iuv' .m\nState at Washington, the necessity of u-m ;\ntheir most united exertions and utmost en-\ndeavors to secure the construction of this\ntruly important work\nResoh'fit. That we shall hail with pleas-\nure the commencement of the Wagon Honda,\nbelieving that they will bring within the\nState a hardy, enterprising and laborious\ncl iss of citizens, and wo call upon tin* gov-\nernment to hasten their completion by lib-\noral appropriations.\nRr./vel. That the liberal and enlight-\nened policy of our Democratic tJovcrnmciit,\nin opening to the hir ly pioneer the 1 roa i\nlie 11 of onr imhlic lands, ns an invitation t >\nhis industry and enter) rise, has already se-\ncured the affection > f our early settlers, uti l\nthat wo regard extension of .hat policy\nso far ns t » secure a homestead t » every\nhonest settler, free of charge, against the\nvicissitudes of fortune, ns the wisest, most\njust and reasonable course hieh the gen-\neral government cun pursue, and we ear-\nnestly reeommend it to the set ions attention\nof our representatives at \\\\ ashineton.\nResolved. That the Democracy of the\nState of California nro in lavor ot guaran-\nteeing to every Slate and Territory the\nrights and privileges secured t < them by the\nConstitution and laws of tlie country —that\nfor them there is neither North. South, East\nor West , and that duly regarding the im-\nportance ol the whole as a Union, they, ns\nunity of the c-nfedcrney, will j-ihmdy\nguarantee the rights ol each individual\nState.
128c96254bbd5b3da19da2de1c3f5ba6 THE DE SOTO COUNTY NEWS ChronAm 1916.8948087115461 39.78373 -100.445882 A number of ranches have been\nstarted In Florida this season and\nforemost In their operations are the\neradication of ticks followed by pur-\nchase of purebred beef typo bulls\nShoot the Tlcky Scrub Bulls\nOne of the leading cattle men In\nthe State emphatically urges every cat-\ntle owner to shoot the scrub hulls\nwould wild cats or other danger-\nous marauders for there Is no chance\nto Increase the size or quality of range\nproduced beet as long as they are\nused for heading thin herds The sire\nexerts more Influence on the offspring\nthan does tIme lIam which explains\nwhy large pure bled sires used on\ncommon cows can produce so much\nbetter calves than do the scrub bulls\nused on common cows\nThe experience of cattle own-\ners In Utah demonstrates the value\nof using pure bred bulls Hoth men\nsold their cattle on the same market\non the same day Hoth used the same\namount of national forest range per\nhead and paid the same grazing fee\nOne had used good bulls to produce\nhis cattle while the other had not\nThe wellbred cattle brought 40 per\nhead more than the poorbred cattle\nThere Is opportunity In Florida for\ngreater profit per head on wellbred\ncattle than the above example as our\nrange steers at present are among time\nlowest valued stock on any market\nEradication of the cattle ticks and\npurchase of some purebred beef type\nbulls will work wonders In building-\nup the quality size and value of Flor-\nIda range cattle
591e9be5bc13a3a9ae83492d3c694139 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.8589040778793 41.875555 -87.624421 Why nro wo content to havo rar\nfood prepared for us In secret under\nconditions thnt to nny snno mind cer-\ntainly suggest fraud and treachery?\nWo aro not obliged to have these\nthings If wo do not wnnt them. The\nremedies nro slmplo enough.\nAs to tho "lumpy Jaw," the tubercu-\nlosis and tho cancer, put n stop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Let nil the slaugh-\ntering of food animals bo done by the\nState In tho light of day, without any\nof this dark lantern business, on equal\nterms for nil. Thero aro very few.\nprivate slaughter houses In England.\nTho cities and towns run their slaugh-\nter houses under medical Inspection.\nBut lu England tho peoplo do not cars\nto be poisoned lu their meat\nAnd wo need not worry nbout the ob-\njection thnt publicly owned slaughter\nhouses are an luvnslon of the private\n of business. When it comes to\nlife nnd death thero nro no private\nrights of business. No man has a right\nto saved profits that ho makes by,\nspreading disease. Wo hnvo gone too\nfar on tho road to public sanitation to\nturn back bcauso somo gentleman's\nprofits nro threatened. Tho State will\nnot allow you to go around with small-\npox or to conceal scarlet fever In your\nhouse, ulthojpu each may bo strictly\nyour own affair. Compared with can-\ncer, smallpox and scarlet fever an\nnothing. If tho State can take radical\nmeasures to stump out cholera It can\ntako radical measures to stamp oat\ncancer, a million times worse than\ncholera. If It can provide pest houses\nfor public safety it can provide slaugh-\nter houses for public safety. Aud Its\nduty In tho ono case Is at least as clear\nus lu tho othor.
1c01bc12f1f713e190efeb296afab3f7 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1900.5657533929477 47.478654 -94.890802 / It was early in March when Constance\nIjperceived, or fancied Bhe perceived, a\nmarked alteration in the demeanor of\nher brother-in-law. He was not less\n*lna, and his fraternal attentions were\nrarendered freely and cordially as ever,\nbut he was less gay, and was addicted\n-to fits of abstraction, profound, al-\nthough apparently not sad, while his\n•fcaence from the family circle, with-\nout apology, became so common that it\n•ceased to provoke Harriet's frivolous\nWonder, and to disappoint Mr. Withers.\n•Constance had never complained of or\n.r ema rked upon this. But her mind\nwas tossed night and day upon a tu-\nmultuous tide of conjectures, she would\nfein have termed apprehensions, rath-\ner than hopes. Up to this date she had\nbelieved her love and her misery to be\n^unshared and unsuspected by him; had\n-reiterated, in her flimsy self-deception,\nthanksgivings choked by tears that she\nwas the only sufferer from her wretch-\ned folly. Did she grow suddenly cruel\nand base the moment when the thought\nthat the error was mutual awoke\n. raptures, the remembrance of the suf-\nfering he must also taste had not the\npower to still7Was the salve to her sslf-\nrespect supplied by the discovery that\n.Jrer divinity was a fallible man, impo-\ntent to the subtle temptation that\n"had overcome her prejudices and sense\nof right, worth the price paid for it? A\nnew terror, more sweet than any joy\nshe had ever kndwn, soon laid hold\nof her. It was idle to Ignore the fact\nthat Edward furtively, but persistent-\nly, sought a private 'nterview with her.\n;Shs might disregard hts beseeching\nglances, affect to misunderstand his\nsignals and his uttered hints, might\nseek, in constant ministrations to her\nbusband's wants and whims, to guard\nherself, and to forget these omens of a\nHearing crisis. But she comprehended\nbis designs; marked with a thrill, that\nwas the opposite to pain, his chagrin\n.- at his failure, and the augmented rest-\nlessness of hi3 mien, betokening per-\nplexity and desire. What was to be the\n•end of this pursuit, and her evasion of\ntt. when her own heart was the temp-\n'tor's strongest ally? She dared not\nhear him say that she was dear to\ntrim as he had long been to her. Know-\ning, as she did, that she ought to spurn\n"him from her at the remotest approach\n'to this theme, she was never able to\n•say with an honest purpose that she\n-was likely to do it. If she doubted his\n•Intentions, she doubted herself yet\n.more.
2d832a1a1a3548b42a57e7d2297c465c CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1919.2945205162355 36.000618 -88.428106 low Rock road; thence "south with\nsaid Beaver Creek Academy road\nto a point on the north boundary\nline of the lapds of Wilson Nesbitt;\nthence in a westerly direction with\nthe north boundary lioeof the said\nWilson Nesbitt land to the north\nwest corner of the same; thence in\na southerly direction with an old\nroad to a point on the Huntingdon\nand Buena Vista road just east of\nHenry Utley's; thence east with\nsaid Huntingdon and Buena Vista\nroad to the northeast corner of A\nE. Hall's land; thence south with\nthe east bouudary line of the said\nA. E . Hall's land to the southeast\ncorner ,of the same; thence west\nwith the south boundary line of\nthe said A. E. Hall's land to the\nsouthwest corner of same on the\nroad running from II. M . Conyer's\nto the Huntingdon and Buena\n road; thence north with said\n. r o ad with the west boundary of\nthe said A. E. Hail's land and the\neast boundary line of G. W. John-\nson, to the northeast corner of the\nsaid G. W. Johnson's land; thence\nwest with the north boundary line\nof the said G. W. Johnson to the\neast boundary line of the lands of\nB. J. Brevard; thence south with\nthe past boundary line of the said\nB. J. Brevard's land to Big Beaver\nCreek; thence in a southeasterly\ndirection with the meanders of said\nBig Beaver Creek to the north\nboundary line of the land of F. E\nJohnson; thence west with the\nnorth boundary line of the said F.\nE. Johnson's land to the east boun-\ndary line of Thorne, formerly the\nJ. A. Johnson land; thence south\nwith the east boundary line of the\nsaid -
2c70559a9535b364a5e10c5a0ad6e01d THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.669862981989 39.560444 -120.828218 LA given that under andby virtue of a de-\ncree and order of sale rendered by the Hon.\nW. T. Barbour, Judge of the 10th Judicial\nDistrict in and for Sierra' county, on the\n10th day ot August. 1854, and to me direc-\nted, wherein judgment was rendered in fa-\nvor of J. Quackenbush and against Sr . G.\nHeidley, for xhe ■sum of eight hundred dol-\nlars and eighty cents, together with the\ncosts of suit, amounting to one hundred and\nthirty-one dollars and fifty cents', with inte-\nrest on the same nttho rate of ten per cent,\nper annum, from the tenth day of August,\n1854, and wherein it is ordered, adjudged\nand decreed, the property of said N. G.\nHeidley be sold at public auction to satisfy\nsaid judgment,I hereby give notice, that 1\nhave levied upon will sell at public\nauction to the highest bidder, In front of the\nCourt House door in Downieville, on Thurs-\nday. the seventh day of September, 1854,\nbetween the hours of twelve m. and one p.\nm.. all the right, title and interest of said\nHeidly in and to a bouse and bowling sa-\nloon, situated on Craig's Flat in said coun-\nty, to wit: one half of all the interest, right\nand possession of the said house and bowl-\ning saloon, or so much there of as will satisfy\nthe judgment, together with accruing\ncosts. The above order of sale was issued\nupon a decree given by the District Court\nupon a mortgage given by N, G. Heidley\nto J. Quackenbush. aud recorded ia the Re-\ncorder's office on the 18th day of Hav 1654\nDated August 14, 1854 .
13c3b352b5fb4f9b82381c7da5bf9037 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.5109588724 40.735657 -74.172367 And in case you cannot make the damages\naforesaid out of said premises then and In\nthat case we command you that you cause\nth® whole or the residue as the case may\nrequire of the damages aforesaid to be made\nof the land, tenements nnd hereditaments and\nreal estate of the snld Jennie 3. Dodd In your\ncounty whereof she was seised on the third\nday of February, nineteen hundred and eleven.\nIn whosoever hands the same may be and\ndescribed ns follows to wit:\nBeginning In the middle of the road leading\nfrom John Mason's saw mill to stone houte\nplains In a line with lands belonging to\nMichael I. M. Vreeland and running from\nthence along the land of said Michael I. M.\nVreeland (1) north forty-four degrees and\nthirty minutes east fifteen ci.alns and sixty-\nfive links to land of Herman Linford; thence\nwith hia (2) north thlrty-ejght degrees\nforty-five minutes west four chains and forty-\nsix links; thenca (3) south forty-nine degrees\nthirty minutes west fifteen chains and fifty-\neight links to the middle of the aforesaid road;\n(4) south thirty-nine degrees east six chains\nand three links along the snld road to the Lo-\nginning, containing eight acres and nineteen\nhundredths of an acre be the same more or\nless. Bounded easterly by land of Michael I.\nM. Vreeland, northerly by Herman Linford®\nland, westerly by land of John A. McRIker\nand Herman Linford, and southerly hy the\nmiddle oi the aforesaid road. The lot of land\nabove described was bequeathed to the said\nJohn V. Drown hy his father, Henry Brown,\nIn hi® last will nnd testament.\nExcepting thereout any portion of the same\nconveyed by snld Jennie E. Dodd prior to\nFebruary 3, 1911 .\nNewark, N. J. ,
29cde2be73a8cfcaac546dac7632d30d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.5849314751395 39.756121 -99.323985 and in the center bore a hole to admit\njyie rubber tubing with" a tight fit. The\nporcelain base (D) is screwed to the\ncork (C) with two screws, which should\nbe long enousrh to reach into the\nwooden piece (B). The flexible wire is\nthen covered with the rubber tubing,\nAneasy waytodothisistotakea\nnail which will easily pass through\nthe tubing, tie to it a strong thread,\nand from an upper window) lower the\nnail into the tubing until it comes out\nat the other end. With the thread.\na string is then pulled through; and\nwith the string the wire in the same\nway. Firmly attach the string to the\nwire without any large knots, and also\nsee that the ends of the wire are not\nlikely to catch on the tubing. The\nwire on the lamp end should extend\nabout three inches to allow for connec\ntions in the bottle.- -\nThrough the cork, bore two holes\nfrom the center of the top side to the\nedges of the porcelain base. The \nand tubing are then put through the\nhole in the wooden piece (B), the end\nof the tubing being attached with bi\ncycle cement to the underside of this\npiece. The two strands of the wire are\nthen put through the holes in the cork\nand connected with' terminals of the\nlamp. The upper side of the cork is\nthen covered with cement and pressed\nfirmly against the piece (B). When\ndry, the water will not reach the wire\nwhen the cork has been inserted in\nthe bottle. The other ends of the wire\nare, when ready to use, connected to\nthe battery, and the lamp will then\nlight. The battery is kept in the boat\nThe wire not in the water does not re\nquire to be covered with tubing. In\nuse, the bottle is weighted so that it\nwill sink to the require depth. Tffe\nbattery is then connected to light the\nlamp. The light will attract inanv\nkinds of fish. The fisher and a proper\nly baited line will do the rest.
0c5a62e955e7207b42619dd942b74f0d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.9657533929478 43.798358 -73.087921 one will charge Vermont or any other Slate\nwith going beyond sound discretion in ad-\nvocating the claims nl Sunday School, Bi-\nble, Missionary, Education and Tract So-\ncieties. But are we sure that the Record\nis correct in this matter? I think not.\nAnd first, because I do not find sufficient\nevidence that the number of Baptists in the\nState has decreaseu dio since YSSZ. tsy\nrpfprriirr tn thp Minutps of thf Vprmont\nBaptist State Convention for 1S33, pae 16,\nyou will perceive that after adding the\nmembers of unassociated churches, the\nwhole number was 10090, instead of 10525,\nas stated in the Record. Deducting 10000,\nthe number in 1833, from 10209, gives an\nincrease of 119 members. So you see if\nthe Minutes of the State Convention be\ncorrect, the Record is mistaken.\nBut again, I know of no .division \nchurches, or exclusion of members on the\naccount of either Masonry or Slavery, in\nVermont, since 1834. I know not but there\nmay have been now and then an exclusion\nfor adhering to Masonry, since that time,\nbut the cases are few and far between;\nIt these excitements were the cause of\ndecrease, then we. must look back to 1829,\n'30, and '31, for the greatest diminutions;\nfor it is most evident that during those years\nthe churches in Vermont were more deeply\nexcited in relation to Masonry, than they\nhave been upon any subject since. Yet the\nnumber of Bantists in .Vermont ihcrpaspd\nfrom 1830 to 1833, no less than 208 mem-\nbers. This most clearly proves that if there\nhas been a decrease of members, altraism\nhas not been the cause.\nThere may have been, and probably has\nbeen,-
204cd00c5082ec72fbdabb20ceb9bc2d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.850684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 "The King of Denmark has given his\nconsent, the Prince of Wales approves of,\nit, the Princess Thyra is in love with the\ncomely young Frenchman,and "Napoleon\nIV," is willing, although the Princess is\nnot only older, but ever so much taller than\nhe. The King of Denmark can only give\nhisyounger daughter the interest of $100,-\n000, but the i»oor Kmpress can't see her\nway to giving anything, and it is as much\nan she can doto maintain a proper dignity\nin her own establishment. One way and\nanother «he -squeezes out an income of\nabout $12,000 a year, which with the low\nrent which her landlord favors her with at\nthe home at Chiselhnrst (he occupies\nrooms himself on tho top floor by way of\nlightening the rent), enables her to live\nwill) at least some approach to dignity\nbefitting her rank. Kugcnie is'now try¬\ning desperately to realize money on cer¬\ntain belongings of her's which aro not very\nproductive at present. For instance, she\nis supposed to own, as a private indi¬\nvidual, three of tho very handsome pri¬\nvate hotels of the Champs Klvsecs, which\nAmerican visitors who drive there always\nnotice for their massive beailty. In one of\nthese hotels dwells M. Kouher, her great\nadviser,a staunch imperialist.anci one who\nis supposed to he working day and night\nfor the Naj»oleonic cause in France.. M .\nKouher has always occupied this hotel\nrent free, not only as a favor to himself\nfrom the Kmpress, but as a sort of rally¬\ning point for the supporters of the party.\nWhen Kugenie proposed the Thyra match,\nto her surprise M. Kouher objected to it\na»
1f9b5b74d47145878bf7e2f5a2b7168a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.3931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 I'hey bf.ve here elejjant etoreB, fillod with wa\nixpeneive gooda. They dreeB well and rej\nivo well, according to Chineao ideas. Ouo am\nChinese banking house received a non- nn\nignment of $.500,000 trade dollar? a few the\nlays since, which will bo turned over to all<\nho Sub-Trenaury here, in exchange for 1\nitandard doIJara. A very important part cot\n>f the business of San Francisco and of coi\nhe Pacific Coast in in Chinee" hands. Wo dif\niappen«'d in the Btamp and license oHico the\nif the U. 8 . Revenue Department about nei\nMay 1, and found a largo room filled al- tai\nnost exclusively with Chinese applicants, his\nI'ho garden truck business, of Southern ma\nCalifornia eopecially, iu almost entirely mc\nnonopoli/.ed by them. It is a common an:\niccurrenco to see "John" with bin one or Th\nwo horpo wagon peddling pens, tomatoes, em\nice., from house to bonso. liid industry Yu\nind economy and ingenuity make him a ma\normidnble competitor in any department wa\nif labor ho undertake?, It was wise\nirobably in our law-makers to stop further in\nmmigration when they did. res\nThe revenue officiate find it a very difli* Mr\n'.tilt matter to enforce the law preventing Co\nnrther immigration. Within forty pit'\nhree eteamero have arrived from China, nei\ntarrying in all about .1,000 Chinrao. A gre\narge majority of these are allowed to re- frii\nurn, having been in this country previ- lie\n(Ufily. Thora who return to China are in\ndven certificates of residence here, which ^\n:ontain also a description of the party, sor\niver bis signature; a duplicate of which str\na kept in a book in the revenue ollico. fri<\ntfo is expected to present this certificate els\nm bin ret urn. These certificates aro in ter\nloma.nd in China. Broke there will or\njive from fifty to one hundred dollars for inn\ni male or three timea that amount for a Th\n'emale certificate. The certificates having Ke\njeen ficcured hy tim brokers, they pro- fer\n:ced to find a Chinaman (or woninn) cor- tki\nresponding an nearly nil jiousible to the tal<\nlescription. They then coach him, ro an\n,hat ho may bo able to answer, without an\ngiving bimaolf away, the personal or goo- to\ngraphical question!) ho mayboagked by ly\nhe revenuo-ofJieera on hia arrival hero, tin\nriioso who returned to China before the '\noreaent law waa enacted, and have no cor-1 bu\nlificato, aro required to prove previous «ri\nresidence horo. rei
1e9d9805f2a181b54aa3416364523249 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.7109588723997 39.756121 -99.323985 It is customary to treat this habit\nof betting as if it were nothing but a\nmanifestation of the gambling spirit\nthe spirit which enjoys the excite-\nment connected with risk of any kind,\nand which takes pecuniary risks on\ncurrent events for the sake of such\nenjoyment. This acounts for 8\npart of the practice, but not for\nthe whole, says College Presi-\ndent Hadley, in Century. If bet-\nting on sports had been nothing more\nthan an indulgence of the propensity\nto gamble, it would probably "have\nbeen restricted long ago. But it has\nanother function, and a very important\none. It can be used as a means of\ncheeking irresponsible talk. The pro-\npensity of some people to brag and\nbluster makes them at times a public\nnuisance. The men our colleges, es-\npecially the younger and more callow\nones, are no exception to this rule.\nUnder these circumstances, the de-\nmand, that the blusterer shall back his\nwords by a wager of money becomes\na means of protection to those about\nhim against the unpleasant talk which\nis otherwise dinned into their ears.\nIn this respect the pi"actice of bet-\nting has a function not unlike that\nwhich was exercised by the practice\nof duelling a century or two ago. In\ngenerations past the blusterer was\ncompelled to make good his words by\nthe wager of his life. We have become\nquieter in our temper at the beginning\nof the twentieth century, and only de-\nmand that he shall wager his money.\nBut the principle is the same in the\ntwo cases.
1e8ee3604ce7a154dac75367889134c2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.17397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 this in every Bhape. It was a propoa\ntiou which would lead to a surrende\nand abandonment of the rights of th\nState. That is what the Company wan\nHe would consent to no such thin}\nbut In the language of Geu. Grant, h\nwould "light It out on this line'" if\ntook till the crack of doom. If the Stal\ncannot stand and confront the Haiti\nmore and Ohio Kaiiroad Company to\nday, and proposes tesurrender now, 8\nthis early a period In its history, h\nwanted to know how long it, would b\nbefore the Baltimore and Ohio Kailroa\nCompany and other corporations woul\nown theState? lie would noversurren\nderonejotor tittle. Make a propel\nequitable and just assessment .again*\nthe Baltimore <fc Ohio Kaiiroad, stan\nupon it and enforce it. What was th\n, iiiiw*iilt.v with the road? Simnlvadetei\nruination on the part of the authorities t\n(>nforce the financial laws of the Stat<\nThis company will not pay their tax a\nlong bb they can avoid it. Of that fac\nrest assured. They never have pai\nthem. For thirty years they have en\njoyed the protection of Virginia an\nWest Virginia, and yet never returne\nto tho coders of either one dim<\nThey never will, if a vacillating pollc\nis pursued, if you carry a bold frot\nto day and recede to-morrow.if the\ncan make a foot-ball ot the Stale and\nplaything of the Legislature.or coure\nthey will do it. It was natural the\nshould; but they could not do it wit\nhim. lie was for enforcing the taxes o\ntho property of the Baltimore A. Ohi\nKailroad us on all other property.\nMr. McClasky asked if he was afrai\nto leave this thing to arbitrators.\nMn. Hekvby replied that no sue\nthing as arbitrators was known to tb\nConstitution in the matter of taxatioi\nIt was the business of the Iieglslatui\nto assess taxes and the business of thos\nassessed to pay theiu; and it wn\ncowardly when the assessment is mad\nand the party refuses to pay, for th\nState to back down aud say, let u\n"compromise" it.let us have a board <\narbitrators. The revenue laws wei\nenforced against the poor man, but\nrich aud powerful corporation, owuin\ntwenty millions of property,was allo«\ned to Jo as it pleased. lie delied an\ngentleman to show why this Company\nproperty should not be taxed just a\nall other property is.
8ce6e0d785119005098c3d0eddba93d9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.064383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 A year ago a wise and equitable rule\nwas put Into the playing code by the\nrules committee of tho major leagues,\nwhich, maybe because It was a wise\nequitable rule, did not last long.\nThe wisdom of baseball magnates.\nJudging by the lack of It frequently\nshown, does not always Iasi long\nwhen It does pop out. They are In­\nconsistent in their sagacity ns to the\ngame's needs. They have changed tho\ngovernmental structure of baseball\nand thereby they have vtonc a saga-\nclous and fav-sorlng thing; they t '\nshout in terms of hundreds of thous­\nands In efforts to strengthen teams by\nRi" aid of the bankroll, a* distin­\nguished to the far more healthful\npolicy of building and developing Hi\nteams, ami thereby pursue a offirso j\nnot to the best interests of the game. • '\nIt be a good thing If all deals\nfor players between major league\nteams were forbidden for two years,\nso that the rich ones would have lo\ndo mope digging up and developing of\ntalent instead of buying that already\ndeveloped, business which has been\ngreatly overdone.\nBut about this changed rule refer­\nred to Is the one making a ball batted\nout of the playing field fair or foul,\naccording to where It disappears /\nfrom the umpire's sight. What non­\nsense. what conspicuous absence of\nIngle?. If ever a rule should have.\nbeen left as It was It was Die one that\na ball was fair or foul according to\nwhere It left the playing field. Noth­\ning could be more unjust to a hatter ;\nttian to rail a drive a foul simply be- " *\ncause It hapn\npassing the d
a957298638b308fb5f0b99f0b23616cc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9221311159179 39.513775 -121.556359 H9V VIRTCH OF AN EXW DTION issued out\nci of the District Court. Twelfth .Indicia! District,\nin and lor the county of Mm Francisco, Stale of Cal-\nifornia, to me directed aiel delivered, commanding\nme to make the sum of three hundred and ten twen-\nty two one hundredth dollars principal, with interest\nthereou at the rate often per cent, per annum, Irom\ndate of judgment until paid, and costs of suit,\namounting to the sum of thirty-four twenty five one\nhundredth dollars, together with the accruing costs of\nsaid suit; wherein M D. Ramie veil is plaintiff and\nJohnd Thompson mid (Jeorge Marpiis are the tie-\nfeudants. I will, on the 2»lh day of November, A\n1). is.iO, between the hours of two and three oclock\nF M , sell at public sale, to the highest bidder lor\ncash, all of the right, and interest of said de-\nfVndiinlH in unci to one Imilding Hluaied on Mnin-\ngomery street, about 20 by U feel in sir.e and onestory\nhigh with a stoop in Iront. Also, all llial part or\nparcel or lot of land upon which said house is situ-\nled. described as follows to wit: fronting titty feet on\nMontgomery street and rmiiiimg bark M 2 feel Is;-\ntween the French hotel and Brewsters house, ns be-\ning part of Dot number Iff. and block number 19, as\nmarked on the Town Flat of the Town of OrovlUe,\nbutte couly, California, and partlv upon ground not\nincluded in said Flat, the same being the house and\nlot now occupied hy brown and Peacock, ns * dwel\nling house, Bale to lake place at the Court houao\ndoor, in ihe Town of Oroville. county and Mate\naforesaid.
0b3a023fc62a25798904415e470e6efa THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.4452054477422 46.187885 -123.831256 she returned ahe found the bleeping\ngirl s ued empty. Urently fnghteimd,\nshe hasteued into an adjoining room\nwhere the found Miss Grace silling in\nan easy chair as sound asleep as ever.\nIn her lap, half open, lay a small\nBible. It is certain that the girl had\nslightly aroused from her sleep, and\narising from her bed had secured the\nBible and gone into the other room,\nwhere she had scarcely seated herself\nwhen she agaiu dropped into the\nstrange sleep. She has not aroused\nsince that time and has continued in\nher peaceful slumbers ever since.\nNumbers of nlivsieinns hnv Iwn mn.\nsuited and brought to examine the\npeculiar case, but thev nil look irfso\nshake their heads and are profoundly\npuzzled. Jo attempt is made to diag-\nnose the case, and not very much hope\nbos been vouchsafed the sorrowing\nparents and friends of the girl.\nAmontr the manv surmises that have\nbeen offered as to tho cause of the\nprotracted sleep, there is one that i3\nunique, and iu support of which is\n the incident of tho girl's\narousing up and attempting to read\nthe Bible. Just previous to the girl's\nslumbers a large religious revival had\nbeen going on in Amboy, which was\nattended by much religious fervor. It\nis thought that Miss Gridley had be-\ncome so wrought up over tho meetings\nthat the mental excitement caused a\nprostration of her entire system. This\nis only a conjecture, but is as worthy\nas the many other theories presented.\nMiss Gridley, has, strange to say, lost\nbut little flesh, and appears to rest\nas calmly and easily as a child in gen-\ntle slumber. The beating of her heart\nand respiration are normal, and her\nbody is naturally warm. Food is given\nin liquid form, but not in very large\nquantities. After being placed in her\nmouth the food passes into the stom-\nach without nnv nnnnronf. nlTrf r,t\nswallowing. What the final result of.\nthe strange sleep may be no oue can\nsurmise, and the many anxious and\nloving friends must await until He\nwho reigns over all shall determine.
b9ff5e04cad7dba8964c434cb9a6e491 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.7493150367834 41.681744 -72.788147 The children of today are not\nnearly so fearful of the dentist as\nwe were. Partly it ia because he has\nbecome so skilled that the pain he\ninflicts is seldom very hard to bear,\npartly it is because children are In-\ntroduced to the dentist's office un-\nder pleasant circumstances.\nThey are not first taken to him\nwhen a toothache has given them\nwretched night, and when som\ncruel work must be done.\nThe wise parent today docs not\nwait until her child has a tooth-\nache before she takes him to the\ndentist. Instead she takes him with\nher one day when she herself has\nan appointment. If she Is a good\npatient she allows him to be present\nwhile she is in the chair.\nShe lets the dentist make \nwith him. Then she asks him to\nclimb up into the chair while the\ndentist merely examines his teeth\nand perhaps gives them a splendid\ncleaning. Most children enjoy hav-\ning the dentist clean their teeth and\nthe experience leaves them with i\npleasant, feeling toward dentists and\nall their works.\nThis preliminary visit is especially\nworthwhile if your child Is timid\nand inclined to nervous fear. The\nordeal of going to the dentist may\nthus be robbed of much of Its un-\nnecessary nervous tension. The child\nas he starts out for the dentist's of-\nfice is not then already tense with\nthe fear of being hurt a state of\nmind in itsself exhausting and bound\nto make more trying such pain as\nsometimeri may be in store for him.
17ed0d48213ee5f31e627d537a82514d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1898.091780790208 39.623709 -77.41082 same with amendments.\nSection 1. Be it enacted by the General\nAssembly of Msryland. that sections one,\nthree, ten and eleven of Article 11 of the\nCode of Public Local Laws of the State of\nMaryland, title Frederick County, sub title\nAlmshouse, be and the same aie hereby re-\npealed and rs enacted so at toreadasfo'iows:\n1. On the second Monday of February\nof every second year, commencing with the\nyear eighteen hundred and ninety eight, the\nCounty Commissioners of Frederick County\nshall appoint five discreet and competent\npersons of we.l known probity and intelli\ngent n Bidents of said county, two of whom\nshall lie ot an opposite political patty from\nthat of a majority of said County Commis-\nsioners, to lie Commissioners of Charily and\nCorrection, who shall hold office for llie term\nof two tears Irom the second of\nFebruary of their appointment, and until\ntheir auceessors are appointed and qua).fled;\nand shoud anv person appointed by the\nCounty Commissioners to tie Commissioners\nof Charities and Corrections fail or neglect\nto qualify lor thirty days, the County Com-\nmissioners shall fill the vacancy. It tdia'.l\nnot be lawful lor said County Commissioners\nor any one of them, to have any understand-\ning or agreement, direct or indirect, with\nany person by them appointed as a Commis-\nsioner of Charilies and Corrections, before\nor at the time of such appointment, whereby\nsuch County Commissioner shall seek or at-\ntempt to influence the action of such person\nappointed as a Commissioner of Charities\na:,d Corrections in the selection of any per\nson to he pverseer or keeper of the Alms\nhouse of Frederick County and manager of\nthe farm comic,
177c53c7873e2bed34c0135ab47443ee CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.6898906787594 41.875555 -87.624421 M. H . MrGovern, the well known\ncontractor, lives at 6459 Sheridan\nRoad and Is assessed on $2,100 .\nM. M. Magasarlan, at 5115 Sheridan\nRoad, Is listed at $2,700.\nThomas J. Webb, at 5256 Sheridan\nRoad, is listed at $1,400.\nF. Bowers, at 5116 Sheridan Road,\nIs listed at $4,350 .\nT. H. Gllloland, at 5133 Sheridan\nRoad, Is listed at $1,650.\nR. D . Huzzagh, at 5465 Sheridan\nRoad, Is llstod at $1,115.\nP. Malkan, at 5123 Sheridan Road,\nIs listed at $3,000 .\nC. H. Follows, at 5124 Sheridan\nRoad, Is listed at $1,500 .\nAnd so on,\nH. J. Brledo, 5246 Sheridan road, Is\nlisted at $1,750.\nA. Elltnger, 5220 Sheridan road, Is\nlisted at $1,000 .\nJ. B. Earl, 5133 Sheridan road, Is\nlisted at $2,900.\nA. M. Gazlay, 5416 Sborldan road, is\nlisted at $1,085.\n. S . L. Graham, 5117 Sheridan road, Is\nlisted at \nJ. C. O'Brien, 6132 Sheridan road, is\nlisted at $600.\nAlice A. Murray, 5412 Sheridan road,\nIs llstod at $7,650 .\nMrs. E . C. Koefe, 5120 Sheridan road,\nIs listed at $11,265 .\nSaddle & Cycle Club, 6227 Sheridan\nroad, Is listed at $11,250.\nElla Stromberg, 5442 Sheridan road,\nis listed at $10,000.\nJ. A. Van Engers, 5412 Sheridan\nroad, is listed at $950.\nW. M . Walker, 5430 Sheridan road,\nIs llstod at $1,800 .\nAdolphus Wolf, 6554 Shorldan road,\nis listed at $2,250 .\nHow the assessors could go north\nand south of 5325 Sheridan road, whore\ntho Edgewater Beach Hotel Is located,\nand assess all of te above named\ncitizens and not list tho Edgowater\nBeach Hotol Is a problem that faces\novery reador of the printed list Issued\nby the assessors for District No, 4,\nTown of Lake View.\nIt is certainly an interesting subject\nfor public Inquiry.
22d9b3e9971ee3b51b4019e421a8a432 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.554794488838 39.745947 -75.546589 the difference in the native varieties,\nand compared with some of the for­\neign varieties of corn planted in the\ncontest. Some of the seed ha« been\nbrought from the middle west corn\nlicit and will he grown In test with |\nthe home varieties.\nOf course, «eed cannot be saved |\nfrom this block for another year, be­\ncause of cross poliinizatton, but from |\nthe test a line can be obtained on the ,\nyielding power of the different varie­\nties, and a basis made for the selec­\ntion and Improvement of those varie­\nties showing the best results. One\nvariety has been planted In a row of\nsoybeans to see If the use of the beans\nwill Increase the yields of corn, as\nsome claim will be the case. The\ncorn from a plot where soybeans are 1\nplanted and the corn from a similar\nplot where there are no beans, wilt I\n gathered, weighed and tested for I\ncomparison. In addition to the corn,\nvariety tests are also being made with\nsoybeans, cowpeas and tomatoes.\nSeven varieties of soybeans and five\nvarieties of cowpeas arP belni used,\nwhile four of the best varieties of\ntomatoes from Delaware College have\nbeen planted. I^ter on In the season I\nalfalfa and some of the clover crops I\nwill also be tested. When the differ­\nences are well defined in the different \\\nplats, a field meeting is to be held and {\nthe experiments explained to the\ngathering of farmers.\nAnother field meeting will be held\nat harvest time. Although this Is\nonly a smalt start, yet on a small\nscale, the same experiments are being\nconducted at most of the rural\nschools, under the direction of the\nagricultural agents, and performed\nentirely by the schoolboys, whose\nwork t« being supplemented hy can­\nning work among the girls,
6eb42c9a15cda0754fa961b71fc22d15 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.4342465436328 39.261561 -121.016059 During the Revolution, Benjamin Franklin\nreudered as important and valuable servl*\nccs to the country as any other roan, with\nthe possible exception of Washington. At\nthe crisis of the war, Washington wrote to\nFranklin that unless he could persuade the\nFrench government to make an advanco\nof money, it was difficult to see how the\narmy could be kept together; the money\ncame and the war was soon ended. But,\nin the midst of these important public ser-\nvices, Franklin managed to keep his own\nproperty constantly increasing. Washing-\nton, too, amidst all the cares of the camp,\nkept a prudent watch over his private af-\nfairs; and there were many other men whose\nwealth steadily accumulated during that\nlong and wasting war. Thu thousands of\nmillions of dollars worth of property de-\nstroyed by the Britieh government in the\ntwenty years' contest with Bonaparte, was\ncontributed from the profile of business\nmen, profits made mostly during the \nand invested io the public funds.\nStill, there is no doubt that, as a general\nrule, business is less prosperous in times of\nwar than in those of peace. If great num-\nbers of men are taken from the labor of\nproducing wealth and set to the work of\ndestroying it, the production of wealth\nmust be diminished; and unless there is a\ncorresponding diminution in the consump-\ntion, the accumulation inu6t be at least\nchecked, If not stopped. The plain way,\ntherefore for a people to carry on war with-\nout diminishing their wealth, is by a gene-\nral practice of individual economy. One\nof the most Important elements in the mili-\ntary resources of this country is the elas-\nticity in the habits of our people. We can\nadapt ourselves to circumstances. An\nAmerican can make himself at borne In the\ndrawing rooms of dukes and princes, or he\ncan sleep on straw and live on soldiers\nrations.
00ad4147c4a07fa028a88e091ccadb9d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.919178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 ample by the laws of the State of\nNew Jersey, which limit the time\nduring which goods may be kept in\nstorage, prescribe the method of dis-\nposing of them if kept beyond the\npermitted period and require that\ngoods released from storage shall in\nall cases bear the date of their re-\nceipt. It would materially add to\nthe serviceability of the law for the\npurpose we now have in view if it\nwere also prescribed that all goods\nreleased from storage for interstate\nshipment should have plainly marked\non each package the selling or mar-\nket price at which they went into\nstorage. By this means the purchaser\nwould always be able to learn what\nprofits stood between him and the\nproducer or tho wholesale dealer.\nI would also renew my recommen-\ndation all goods destined for in-\nterstate commerce should in every\ncase where their former package\nmakes it possible, be plainly marked\nwith the price at which they left tho\nhands of the producer.\nWe should formulate a law requiri-\nng a federal license of all corpora-\ntions engaged in interstate commerce\nand embodying in the license under\nwhich it is to be issued, a specific,\nregulation designed to secure com-\npetitive selling and prevent uncon-\nscionable profits in the method of\nmarketing. Such a law would afford\na welcome opportunity to effect other\nmuch needed reforms in the business\nof interstate shipment and in the\nmethods of corporations which are\nengaging in it; but for the moment\nI confine my recommendations to the\nobject immediate in hand which is to\nlower the cost of living.
7d7f480a41983764a856bfc18e9877f9 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.7090163618195 39.290882 -76.610759 The papers dismiss the eastern question for the\npresent, and occupy their columns solely with\nthe details of Louis Napoleon's mad attempt at\nBoulogne. They contain reports I'rom the sub-\nprefect, the mayor, and the commander of the\nport, giving the most minute circumstances, but\nuot oflering any material fact with which we are\nunacquainted. The Paris papers all concur in\nviewing it as the most brainless expedition ever\nplanned, and wonder how Louis Napoleon could\nhave been entrapped into such an act of folly.?\nSome of t to persons taken with him are said to\nbe agents ol the police, who have been well\npaid for t..e risk of life they incurred on the oc-\ncasion, and for the measure of punishment which,\nto save appearances, they will undergo. I'' the\nprince was not misled by the manoeuvres of\nthose persons, how is it possible that he \nhave committed such an act of folly, or that,\nhaving engaged in it, he did not take the com-\nmon preaautions of securing a retreat.\nThe plan of invading the army of forty was to\nhave surprised the ganisons of Boulogne and\nMontrcuil, and then marched up to Dieppe to\nsecure the King's person at Chateau D'Eu. Lou-\nis Phillipe, once their-prisoner, the conquest of\nFrance was to follow ol course, after which Na-\npoleon 11. was to be proclaimed, aiul the live ea-\ngle maintained at the public cost in Notre Dame,\nas St. Anthony's ravens are maintained in the\ncathedral church at Lisbon. Fate, however,\nhas cut short these brilliant designs. The Prince\nis now a prisoner at Ham, to be tried, not by the\nChamber of Peers, as was at first supposed, but\nby the ordinary criminal courts in common with\nthe other delinquents.
07f19f8518a944cbf789eaf814f475fa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.664383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 scenery absorbed their ateution. ' Over\nthis grand route, traversing the\nAlleghany mountains, includes a trip as a\nthat Is without parallel in the history of\nrailroad travel iu the United States.\nDaylight again and mountain scenery\nno more, but the flat, level country of\nOhio and Indiana, dotted with manu\nfaoturlng towns, giving evidence of\nenterprise, energy aud wealth ; together\nwith marsh, farm and grazing lands,\ncomprise all that observation is able to\ndetect, with the exception of curling\nsmoke from fleeting trains on other\nlines of railroads. All eyes are now\neagerly watching for the first glimpse\nthat would betoken the approach of the\ngreat city of Chicago and the greatest\nfair ever known to civilization. And\nanxiety is soon rewarded with distinct\nviews of South Chicago and enormous\nstructures. The train stops at Grand\nCrossing, where all realize tne nearness\nof the fair grounds and deem it the part\nof wisdom to here abandon the train and\ntake the necessary for a week's\nsojourning and sight seeing.\nChicago is a great city—everything\ngoes and the citizens as a rule are\nworkers—progress and enterprise being\nthe chief characteristics of the people.\nTo undertake to describe the fair\nwould be simply folly, after all has\nbeen said aud written. Only those who\nhave seen will be able to form an idea of\nthis one international exposition in a\nmillion, by the million, for the million.\nJackson Park, including 1,037\nlying on the beautiful lake front, with\nthe massive buildings containing the\nmillion woDders there gathered at the\nexpeuse of many million dollars, is bard\nto describe, Besides the Midway with\nIts great Ferris wheel, are other wonder­\nful features cc mprising a representa­\ntion of the modes aud conditions of many\nforeign natiofis just as they exist in their\nown country. With Ahem they have\nbrought not only many wonderful feats,\nbut a clear knowledge of making the\nAmerican people pay for having them\nperformed.
d6185b67f1497a4c9c51f09aeebfd1e1 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1922.664383529934 39.623709 -77.41082 them away from their people for a\nwhile, because we had taken up the\nhatchet, but now the hatchet is buried,\nand we give them back to their people.\nThey must not forget us, but speak\ngood words to their people for us, so\nthat while the sun and the moon shine\nand grass grows and water runs, we\nmay have peace with them, and they\nwith us, as it is now.”\nAfter the Sachems speech had been\ngreeted with the usual Indian “Juheh!”\nby all the other chiefs and warriors,\nsignifying their hearty approval of\nhis words, the trader, who could speak\ntheir language fairly well, arose and\nreplied for the captives:\n“Brothers, our friends who are here\nwith us appreciate the kindness you\nhave shown them, and are very thank-\nfor it. They will not forget you, and\nwill speak good words to their people,\n that while the sun and moon shine,\nand grass grows and water runs, there\nmay be peace between them and you.\nIs it not so?" he concluded, addressing\nthe captives, to which they all replied\nby nodding their heads and repeating\nthe Indian “Juheh!”\nThese formalities being concluded,\nthe Indians produced their tobacco\npouches and filled their pipes with a\nmixture of tobacco and sumach, light-\ning them with coals from the fire.\nAfter some time, during which there\nhad been informal talk and the exhi-\nbition of a jovial spirit, at a sign from\nthe Sachem one of the braves began\nto beat the tom-tom, and another to\nrattle the tortoise shell, which was the\nsignal for the dance to begin. The\nwarriors started it, forming a circle\naround the fire and dancing in various\nattitudes, while the tom-tom beater\nand the tortoise shell rattler sang or
1f69237920f8a7c6c5e2de76a8d76ef9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.6726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 Are tho American people lsss freo than ii\nho English? Havo they uot tho right\na do as much ? To deny them thia right jjjj\n3 to enslave then:. Their very instincts\naach them they have thia right, and they\natend to use it wherever and whenever jj\nboy please. To call such demonstrations gj\nartisan is ridicaloug. It ia wito for the\neople to let tiieir rnlern know what they ^\nhink of them, and popular opinion can 0[\nie nowhere bo effectually expressed as\n?hen tho people meet in large masses. 0f\nVe do not propose to take council from\ninnpry politicians seeking oflica, or from ^\nImid upstarta with their livoried honch- flT3\nnon, irom bond' holders, usurers, or qj\nnobs aa to the manner in which wo will an\naakokuown our for or against\nny measure, man or thing.\nPOrULAE REVOLT AGAIN'QT CLEVELAND,\nEvery thinking man must aee plainly\nbat the demonstration at Wh »eling was pr\nui the manifestation ot ths popular Ban- ire\nimant of the federal Boldiera, v/ithout dia- Sfc\ninction of party, I veuturo to aay, and\nhat a vary large portion of tb.e so-called "c\nInion peoplo of the countrv ia in sym- rf\nathy with that sentiment. If tho Demo-\nratic party is v/iBO it will ta?;* warning trt\nrom tnia demonstration at Whealing. t"\nt was a revolt against Mr. Cleveland,\nliu x xBdiuKut. iiaot tuj our reiusal to go P1'\n,nder tho (Ug stretched across the street\nI apeak in metaphor) whoa Jlr. Lincoln b*\nran about to bu inaugurated Proaident. y°\nWe woro not revolting against Mr,
2ad77818a9431693304342f801be6da4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.7581966896882 39.261561 -121.016059 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, County of\nNevada, ss. In District Court of the 14th Judi-\ncial District of said State. The People of the State\nof California to .STEPHEN W. FOIiSUM Greeting :\nYou are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the complaint of JOHN MADDEN, filed against\nyou. within ten days from the service df this writ, it\nserved on you in tiiis county, within twenty days it\nserved on you in this District, and out of this county\nand within forty days it served on you in the State\nand out of this District, in an action commenced on\nthe 17th day of August A. n. i860, in said Court, to\nobtain a decree of this Court for the foreclosure of\na certain mortgage, Waring date the 5th day of Pc\ncember A. D. 1850 , executed by the said defendant to\none Hugh McMahon, and by him duly assigned to\nthis plaintiff, and for the sale of the premises therein,\nandin said complaint particularly mentioned and de-\nscribed, and the application of the moneys arising\nfrom such sale for the payment of the amount dne\non a certain promissory note, set forth in said\ncomplaint, made and to said plaintiff by\nthe defendant, bearing even date with said mortgage,\nand thereby intended to be secured, to wit: The sum\nof five hundred dollar*, with interest thereou from\nthe 5th day of June a. d. 1860, at the rate of five\nper cent per month till paid ; and if any deficiency\nshall remain after applying all of said moneys so ap-\nplicable thereto, then that plaintiff may have execu-\ntion therefor against the said defendant; also, that\nsaid defendant and all and every person claiming\nthrough or under him, subsequently to the date of\nplaintiffs mortgage, and the commencement of this\naction, inay be barred and foreclosed of all right,\nclaim, lien and equity of redemption in and to the\nsaid mortgaged premises, or any part thereof, anil for\nsuch other and further relief, or both in the premi-\nses, as may be just and equitablo. And you are\nhereby uotified that if you fail to answer said com-\nplaint as herein directed, plaintiff will take judg-\nment against you therefor by default, together with\nall coat* of suit, and also demand of the Court such\nother relief as is prayed for in plaintiff's said com-\nplaint.
05ded997ec0d4292578a303853eca535 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.8808218860984 40.114955 -111.654923 he was going to tho cross roads to see\nwhether tho 100 had been put under\nthe stone as ho had advised himself to\ndo When he saw himself take a\ndagger In his hand he know he must\nbe prepared for tho worst and that\nhe had a cruel Italian nature to deal\nwith So he took his shotgun In tho\nother hand and sallied forth bound-\nat all costs to protect himself\nBut hardly had he stepped outside\ntho door than he weakened What\nafter all was 100 as compared with\nhis life He went back into the\nhouse and took ten tendollar bills from\nhis sock and went out again Ho\nwalked to the crossroads and tucked\nthe money under tho stone and then\nstood back behind a tree to see \nwould happen In a minute or so ho\nlaid his shotgun on tho ground and\nstole slowly toward the fiat stone\nGlancing cautiously around he lifted\nthe stone picked up the 100 and\nslipped It Into his pocket with a\ncruel Italian chuckle of glee\nAt that moment his stanch Scotch\nnature rebelled Never would he be\nrobbed In this manner With a cry of\nanger he dashed for the shotgun and\nat the very moment that he laid his\nhand upon it his loft hand drew the trig\nger Then ensued a terrific struggle-\nIn which his Italian nature had all\nthe advantage Try as ho would he\nwas always too close to himself to\nuse tho shotgun whllo the dagger was\nJust tho weapon to use at close quar-\nters
4255094108fec1189fd3a20525497fa9 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.892076471109 42.217817 -85.891125 The ewarms of the poor, which, till recently,\ncrowded the ccllirs of Broad street, havo\nnearly all given room to the growth of trade,\nand that street is no longer to be regarded as\none of tho lairs of this degraded population\nTo these two facts is it due ihat so few people\naro left houseless bv this disaster.\nNot more than livo hundred families havo\nbeen unhoused. Tho real sufferers aro the\nmost active business men of Boston. They\nrepresent mainly that younger class of mer-\nchants, and to whom, in the last lUteen years,\nthe city owes its remarkable development, a de-\nvelopment which though not perhaps so notice-\nable to outsiders, has been a marked foaturoof\nBoston growth. These men, conscious of tho\nimmense advantages which the city had for\ntrade, had availed themselves of large re-\nsources to construct a system warehouses\nwhich had no superior in this country, per -l u- ps\nnone abroad, and to open new streets\nwhich should answer their needs. The old\nbyways in tho more northern part of the city\nhad become crowded and inadequate. They\nlooked with prido upon Pearl street. Franklin\nstreet, New Devonshire street, and Summer\nstreet, as business thoroughfare nowhero\nexcelled. Every new year tho deelopment cf\nthe manufactures and commerce of the coun-\ntry and of their own city had shown that they\nbuiit on no false hopes in constructing teuch\nsolid and expensive storehouses.\nOf this city, more than any other in this\ncountry, it is true that tho different branches\nof industrv likeJ to remain together and work\nside by side. To speak of a Boston man of\nMilk street ami Franklin street was to call to\nmind the large whole-al- e
0349edc689993c5e99fcd171ec15fcef PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.2671232559615 40.441694 -79.990086 maintain, operate or use in or under or along\nsaid streets, lanes, allei s and highways, or parts\nthereor. such conduits or subways and such\ncables or other devices as it may select for the\napplication or supply of poner; and it shall at\nany time or times hive the right to change Its\nkind nf power or system for the application or\nsupply of power; anil the said traction company\nshall also have all tho rights and privileges\nherein given in. on, under, over or along such\nstreets, lanes, alleys or highway asitniaytra.\nverse or occupy in order to connect with the\npower house or houses of said company.\nSection 2 The said Pittsburg and Birming-\nham Traction Companv shall have the right,\nand consent is hereby given to said company, to\nlease the property, rights and franchises of\nany and all of the aforementioned passenger or\nstreet railway companies which tho said trac-\ntion company mav desire to operate, and the\nsaid Plttnburg and Birmingham Traction Com-\npany shall Tiave the right and Is hereby au-\nthorized to construct, maintain operate, or\neither, the railway of each and every or the\nsaid companies, from which it shall spcure 1\nlease or enter into contract with for the supply\nof motive power.\nSection S If the said Pittsburg and Birniidg-har- a\nTraction Comnanyshall hereafter at any\ntiuio contract vnth any other passenger or\nstreet railway company or companies or other\ntransportation company to furnish or supply\npower tor the traction or operation ot cars over\nthe railways of any nf the said companies which\nshall be constructed with the consent of Coun-\ncils of this city, the consent of the city is here-\nby given to such futnre contract or contracts,\nand the said Pittsburg and Birmingham Trac-\ntion Company, in order to enablo it to econo-\nmically and conveniently carry out such con\ntract or contracts as it may hereafter make, is\nhereby given in, on, under, over and along the\nstreets, lanes, alleys or highways of this city\nincluded within the routes of anv and all of\nsuch companies and tbo branches and exten-\nsions thereof, and which shall be constructed
06f54b71231504c4339a9d9368a63145 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.1188524273932 40.063962 -80.720915 Will the UnltrU Statra Permit the Sap\nprrMlon of ItellAblr Cuban Xetri.l\nNew York Advertiser: Accompany\ning General Weyler yesterday on his ar\nrival at Havana on the steamship A1\nfonso XIII were two personages know)\nin Spanish warfare as "military ed\nitors." They were Captains Gelabe\nand Linares, and that they began thel\nwork last night Is quite apparent fron\nthe character of the dispatch cablet\nfrom Havana. This announces tha\n"they will most iikoi> n»vc wwiho ^\nthe press censorship" at the C?ubai\ncapital, and that the correspondent\nthere will now experience conslderabl\nmore difficulty than formerly In Ret\nting their news out to the world. Thl\nsumo dispatch, after having been sub\nJected, of course, to u most rigid pro\ncess of "military editing." describe\nWeylcr as a mild-mannered and paclfl\neating blonde of German extraction, t\nwhom the dark-eyed Benorilas and thel\nduennus torsed flowers and llora\ncrowns In the greatest profusion am\nbade the Butcher welcome to Havana\n stories of bin bloodthlrntlncsH or\ndiscredited and the Information Is give!\nthat the new commander will not d<\nanything that would call down re\nproach upon the Spanish government\n"especially as extreme measures mlgh\ncall for the interference of the Unlte<\nStates.a result which the Spanlardi\nhave no Intentlun to bring about."\nAll this Is very smooth and sweet am\ntender. Dut It is beyond doubt only\nI>art of the Spanish plan of extermlna\ntlon and news suppression. Weyle\nwas selected for this work for the chlo\nreason that he Is mercilessly cruel, am\nthe Madrid press agents have arrive*\non the scene too late to give him a goo<\nname before the world. Their profes\nslons of a purpose to retain the goot\nwill of the United States are too atten\nuated to hide their real meaning or th\nobject of their employment by the Mad\nrid government. Weyler will tio vlo\nlence to all the usages of modern war\nfare.begln'the wholesale slaughterinj
158dff0450f6cd35c4a5b94e642105a6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.3986301052764 58.275556 -134.3925 Alaska is to have a new governor,\nand it seems he has been selected with\na view to reconciling the discordant\nelements which have been scalping\neach other up here in this land of en-\nchauting distances. The new governor\nis a newspaper man and of course is\naccustomed to being abused and called\na liar aud a sneak. He likes it; and\nsome of us dou't care whether he likes\nit or not, if he lays himself broadly\nopen to criticism he will- get it. This\npaper intends to welcome him in words\nand actb of kindness, and we believe\nthe majority of Alaskans will do like¬\nwise. Here is a chance for Mr. Clark\nto become great. He can easily get in\ntouch with the people, help us form a\nterritorial government aud become its\nfirst governor. lu teu years we will\nwant stutehood. Theu senators aud\ncongressmen will be needed. It's up to\nyou, Mr. Clark.. Ketchikan Miner.\n the fiscal year euded June 30,\n1908, the Bureau of Education main¬\ntained 59 United States public schools\nfor natives of Alaska (of which 10 were\nestablished during the fiscal year;, with\n73 teachers, an enrollment of 3,080, and\nan average attendance of 1,197. The 59\nschools are distributed throughout\nAlaska as follows: On the shores of\nthe Arctic ocean, of Bering sea and on\nthe rivers emptying iuto those waters\nuorth of the mouth of the Yukon, 20; in\nI he valleys of the Yukon and Kusko-\nkwim, 13; on the shores of southern\nBering sea, on the North Pacific ocean\nwest of the 141st meridian, and on\nrivers emptying into those waters, 8;\non the maiuland and on the islands in\nSoutheastern Alaska, 18. The cost to\nthe government of these schools based\non average attendance was §05.89 per\npupil. The district having the poorest\nattendance was the southeastern, the\naverage attendance being below 25 per\ncent.
1ca4e2a155e49891549dedff9be4ccb6 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1879.5383561326737 37.451159 -86.90916 who proposes to denv this to the tfnkml\nStates? Is the President the United\nStates? Tlie Constitution confers upon\nCongress the right to make certain reg-\nulations concerning the election of its\nmembers. The two Houses have pass-\ned a bill designed, as they believe, to\nprevent any undue interference of the\nmilitary at such elections. This action\nLs most certainly within their province.\nIt Ls not a denial to the United States\nof the rights conferred by the Constitu-\ntion, but on tlie contrary it is the exer-\ncise by the Congress of the United\nStates, with whom the power is lodged,\noi me very ngnis in question. Tne two\nnouses of congress certainly represent\nthe "United States" as much at least as\nthe President, and when they deny to\nthe array the right to interfere at the\npolls they deny nothing to United\nbtates. It is the people of the United\nStates by their representatives in Con-\ngress assembled who insist that the\n"nght of citizens of the United States\nto vote shall not be denied or abridged"\nby the display of an armed force at the\npolls for partizan purposes. If there fa\nno ground for apprehension, no harm fa\ndone by rendering such a menace ille\ngal, and thus securing to all a full and\niree exercise or the elective franchise.\nBut the pretense that because the Presi\ndent fa of one political party and the\nmajority in congress are or another he\nis the United State, and Uiev bv the\nexercise of their legitimate powers are\ndenying something to the United\nStates, is a most offensive and unwnr\nmutable assumption that ought not in\npass without severe rebuke. X. Y.\nJouAuil of Commerce.
00e5af41119b833f090db615414e4feb SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1872.5259562525298 43.624497 -72.518794 Ordinarly I must confess to having\nsufficiont repard for the customs and\ncourtesies of life to endeavor fo nppear\nin socte y suitubly and appropnately\ndressed. Hut when tho aJnrm of ' ln\ndians" wasgiven, nnd iu sueh a startling\nmunner as to show thev were almost in\nour midst. the que?tion was not " What\nshall 1 wearV " hut. " Whnt shall I do? "\nIt hns becomeso eommon in fact, al-\nmost a hiw to deseribe thc costnmes\nwom unon memorable oceasions, that I\nmav be pardoned if I iiidnlge in a des\ncription which 1 will enrteaver to mako\nns brief us tho costune ltself. A modern\nJenkins, if desiriiig to tell the truth.\nwould pronablv rxpresr' him'iclf as fol\nlows: " General Custer on this oceasion\nappeared in a benutiful crimson \n(red flannel robe de nuit), very beeoming\nto his complexion. His hair was woin\nav natutl, and peimitted to fall tnreless\nly over his shoulders. In his hand he\ncarried gr.acefnlly a handsome Spencer\nnfle. It lsunnecessary to add that he\nbecamc the observed of nll observers.\nMy orderly, as was his custom, on my\nretinug nnd securely tied all tho fasten\ninc to my tents, nnd it was usually the\nwork of several minutes to undo this\nunnecessarv labor. I had no time to\nthrow away in this raanner. Leaping\nfrm my bed, 1 Knisped my trusty bpen\ncer, which wasalways atmy side whether\nwakng or sleeping, and with u singlo\ndash huist open the tent, and hatless\nas well as shoelecs, ran to tho point\nwhere the attnck seemed to bo concen\ntrated.
00f6168e575305c93e0dc99308e918b5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.0205479134956 39.745947 -75.546589 Members of tho Central Labor Union,\nat their meeling last night, adopted a\nresolution favoring tho construction of\ntwo new bridges across the Brandywine\ncreek at Washington and Market\nstreets; The resolution will bo for­\nwarded to the-New Castle Levy Court.\nThe full list of nominations from\nwhich oltleer» arc to be elected neat\nmonth follows; For president, George\nSauter, Morris Zebley and I». J. Byrne;\nvice-president, E. Spina, J. A . Grant.\nC. A. Duncan and Dennis Burns; *«c-\nretary, Fred W. Stierte; financial sec­\nretary, Frank A. Houck: treasurer, J.\nIrvin Allcorn, William Hearn, Guy T.\nBrowning and William W. Barnes;\ntrustees. James Mitchell. C. J. Hall,\nCharles Dayton, J. R . Hall and Gran­\nville Walker; guardian, George I. Grif­\nfith; guide, J. F. Tlmoney.\nJ. Oliver resigned as treasurer\nof tho rentrai body.\nLeon H. Ryan, executive secretary of\nthe City Committee on Education, ad­\ndressed the members on tho plans of\nthc Joint committee to Improve school\nconditions here. Tho labor men ap­\npointed the following committee to\nrepresent the Central Labor Union»\nSimon P. Doherty, E. Spina, I. J. Kent,\nJ. irvln Alleorn and H. S . Creamer.\nThe recommendation of Chief of Po­\nlice Black to the Police Commission\nthat 21 additional men be appointed to\nthe police force, was approved.\nThe following committee was also\nnamed to meet Dr. Joseph If. Odell, of\ntho Service CHIzens, to discuss that\npart of the Citizens program concerning\nlabor: H. A. W. Rehen. E. Spina, J.\nIrvin Allcorn, James O'Kune and J. F.\nTfrnoney.
bb7d2dd8c18923e564f92f0d3b9ad9de PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.9438355847285 31.960991 -90.983994 'Fhe steamer Neptune arrived at Tampico on\nSaturday, the 22d November, with 455 regular\ntroops, under command of Col. Gates, and the\nsteamer Sea with 200 troops on tbe 23d, when\nthe town of Tampico was formally handed over\nto the army. Fort Andonega was immediately\ngarrisoned under tne name of Fort Downer, and\narmed with two long 8-pounders. A battery of\ntwo 42-pound carronades, called Fort Ann, in\nhonor of Mrs. Cha^e, lady of the late American\ncon«ul at Tampico, commands the Altamira\nroad. Besides these, some field-pieces are\nmounted on the house-tops.\nThe Neptune sailed from Tampico or. the 24th,\nand encountering a heavy Norther was driven\nback and wrecked on the bar, all hands saved,\nthe vessel a total loss. The town of Tampico\nis already in a good state of defence, and rein­\nforcements are arriving daily.\nThe state of affairs in Mexico are becoming\nworse every Santa Anna lately made an\naddress to his troops, apparently to extract from\nthem an invitation to instal himself at the head\nof the government; he was disappointed, howev­\ner, at finding that his oration was received in\nprofound silence. Immediately after, he started\nwith all his cavalry on a secret expedition, the\nobject of which was supposed by some to be to\nattempt to cut off one of the divisions of our ar­\nmy. The most probable conjecture, Capt. Rol­\nlins thinks, is that he lias gone to Mexico, to con­\ntrol the action of the new Congress.\nIn consequence of the two regiments which\nhad marched from Tampico, hav ing revolted on\nthe march, they were disbanded on arriving at\nSan Louis Potosi. The army at San Louis\nnumbers about sixteen thousand, and are report­\ned to be badly supplied with provisions, and the\ncountry continues to be distracted bv factions.
1b0c3d94bd3604186e96db177367c250 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.0341529738414 39.743941 -84.63662 people of the State. At the outs tart of your\nsession, it may be well for you to consider\nwhether the public interests will not be best\nsubserved by a prudent and determined\ninquiry for means to reduce the expenses of\nthe State and local governments, and relieve\nthe people from as much of the burden of\ntaxation that is now weighing them down as\npossible, rather than by excessive legislation\nwith which former General Assemblies have\nbewildered the people. Changing circum-\nstances, of course, require modifications in\nthe laws, and new statutes are needed, from\ntime to time, to meet contingencies ; but, in\nmy judgment, the path of wisdom leads\naway from wholesale legislation, in the\ndirection of a prudent and conservative\ncourse, which will not incumber our statute\nbooks with laws of doubtful necessity, or\nadd to the confusion of our people by changes\nof doubtful utility. Statutes should be al-\nlowed to stand until they are and\nslight imperfections are better borne than\nthe utter "chaos and uncertainty into which\nthe public mind is thrown by constant\nchanging of the laws. A little law well un-\nderstood and strictly executed will better\nsubserve the public good than tomes of\nstatutes which have been amended beyond\nthe comprehension of the people.\nThe last Ueneral Assembly proposed two\namendments to the Constitution of the\nState for adoption or rejection by the\nelectors. One provides for a Commission\n"to dispose of such part of the business on\nthe dockets of the Supreme Court as shall,\nby arrangement between said Commission\nand said Court, be transferred to such Com\nmission ;" and the other was intended to\nprovide for taxing dogs. These amend-\nments were voted upon at the election held\non the 12th dsy of October last. The former\nwas adopted, and has been declared a part\nof the Constitution of the State. The latter\nwas rejected.
03c86e423dc170de7c15aa4dcaa905ee PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.691780790208 39.756121 -99.323985 animals mistaken for ants may very\nwell have been marmots, which are\nsaid to be plentif ul in those parts. As\nfor the monstrous shapes which no\ntraveler pretends to have seen with his\nown eyes, they existed no doubt in\nbright colors on the inner walls of pa-\ngodas, and were intended to depict the\nEakshasas or demons, odious alike to\nmen and gods. Such was the probable\norigin of the beings who were born\nwithout mouths and lived on the aroma\nof fruits and flowers; of those whose\nfeet were turned the wrong way, the\nheels being in front while tho instep\nand toes were behind; of those who\nbore the head of a dog and were furn-\nished with claws, who lived by hunting\nand fowling, and clothed themselves\nwith the skins of wild beasts; of those\nwho had the ears of a dog, erect hair\nand shaggy breasts, and one eye\nin the center of the forehead ; finally of\nthose without nostrils, who devoured\nraw meat and all manner of abomina-\ntions, and died in their youth, ungainly\ncreatures with the upper lip hanging\nover the lower. Of no greater im-\nportance are the marvelous animals,\nerroneously delineated rather than in-\nvented, such as serpents with mem-\nbranous wings, that flew by night;\nhorses w ith deers' heads surmounted by\na black horn, with legs without a joint,\nand with the tail of a pig ; tigers' twice\nthe size of a lion ; the phixnix sprung\nfrom the sun's rays, that lived its life of\n5,000 years in India, and, singing its\nown dirge, died in its nest of aromatic\nherbs hard by the fountains of the\nXile. It would be sheer waste of time\nto bestow further thought upon tho\nchildish inventions fathered by Philo- st r at u- s
4ef7935699d1b33917bb3adc7574b5a0 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.3811475093605 39.290882 -76.610759 Gentlemen :?1 address you this letter that it\nmay find its way to the public ; and write 011 the\nsubject of politics, to aid in refuting some of the\nmany slanders and falsehoods, that, being heap-\ned on "one of the bsst men that God ever made.\nI deem it my duty, so far as my influence ex-\ntends, to aid 111 refuting any slanders that may\nbe circulated against the man to whom I allude.\n1 believe it to be the duty cf every good man to\nto try to undeceive those who may have been\nimposed on by the enemies of the men who have\nspent their earliest and best days in defence of our\ncountry : and I hope many of the witnesses who\nare yet living may take a part in defending the\nreputation of a who (to those who know\nhim,) could never bcinjurcil by any slanderer.\nOf course I allude to the slanders against Gene-\nral Harrison, by the hireling presses which con-\nstantly teem with abuse against him. lam one\nof General Harrison's old soldiers. I was uiider\nhim in General Waynr. iiTdJ!" 1794, und par-\nticipated in the battle at the foot of the Mau-\nmee Rapids 20th August of that year. I was\nalso witn him at the seige of Fort Meigs, during\nthe late war, and know that instead of being a\ncoward and a tory, as his enemies asert, he is\none of the bravest men that ever lived. I know\nthis from hating seen him in situations well\ncalculated to try the valor of any man, and Gen.\nHarrison always proved himself to be 'prudent,\nwise and brave."
024ceabcedd27694c2cd485cc22caa1f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.6178081874682 58.275556 -134.3925 NOTICE is hereby given that C. W . Young,\nwhose postoflico address is Juneau, Alnsku,\nhus this duy filed his application for n patent\nfor five hundred and seventy (570) linear feet\nof the May Flower mine or vein, hearing\ngold, with surfaoe ground three hundred\n(300) feet in width, situated on Douglas Is-\nland, in tho Harris Mining District, District\nof Alaska, and designated by tho Field Notes\nand Official Plat on file in this office as Min¬\neral Survey No. throe hundred and eighty-\none (381), and described as follows, to-wit:\nCommencing at cor. post No. One, whence\nU. S. Local Mon. No. 4 hears S. 53 dog. E. 5636\nft dist , thence S. 45 deg. W. 600 ft to cor. post.\nNo. 2, identical with a location cor. also with\ncor. No. 3,survey 112 Hounu/.n lode: thence N.\n45 deg. W. 570 ft to cor. post No. 3, identical\nwith location cor., also with cor. No. 2 survey\n A, Enterprise Lode; thence N.45deg. E.\n600 ft to cor. No. 4, identical with a location\ncor., thence S. 45 deg. E. 570 ft to cor. post No.\n1, the plnce of beginning, containing 7.85\nacres;.magnetic variation 29 deg. 30 min. E .\nThe location of this mine is recorded in the\nRecorder's office at Juneau, in Book B-l,\npage 73 of the records of said office.\nThis claim is bounded on the N. W . by Sur¬\nvey No. 341-A, on the N. E . by Non-Mineral\nclaimants, on the S. E . by Survey No. 112, and\non the S. W. by Survey No. 111.\nAny and all persons claiming adversely any\nportion of said mine or surface ground are\nhereby required to file their adverse claims\nwith the Register of the United States Land\nOffice at Sitka, Alaska, during the sixty (60)\ndays period of publication hereof or they\nwill bo barred by virtue of tho provisions of\nthe statute.
12af93d6968bd408278193c0ed152ff2 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.6671232559615 37.53119 -84.661888 In Memory Of Jim Henry Pettus\nThe relentless destroyer ylsltcd us\niddenly on Friday morning Aug 28\nat 1 oclock and set his seal upon be-\nlunny brow of our darling little boy-\nand nephew Jim Henry Pettus All-\nwas done that attentive skillful physl\ncianI and loving ones could do but that\ndread disease membranous croup bad\nfa s ened Itself upon the dear little fel-\nlow and the precious bud which was\nunfolding with such rare beauty was\nnipped as by an untimely frost But\nob dear surviving ones he bas been\ntransplanted to a milder more beauti-\nful clime where the rude rough blasts\nof mortality can never blight his pure\nlittle spirit Our little treasure hils-\nbeen torn from our fond loving em-\nbrace but look with an eye of faith\nto that haven of rest where little Jim\nHenry Is asleep In Jesus with bll-\nbead pillowed on the bosom of his Sa-\nvior who said Suffer little children\nto come unto me and forbid them not\nfor of sucb Ir the kingdom of Heaven\nYe shall miss his happy childish\nprattle and merry gleefal laughter\nthat fell so sweetly upon our ears but\nwe should all rejoice that bo Is now a\n10 theangeloats\nAfter a few remarks prayer and a-\nsonl at the grave the little body of-\nclay was laid away to await the resur-\nrection morn So let us sorrow not\nbroken hearted ones but strive to-\nmeet him In that better world to which\nhll little spirit has taken Its flight
5808f86aa9e881d5550991866284960d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.678082160071 58.275556 -134.3925 strued as to pre Tent the authorities of the\nTown of Douglas from sewering, planking,\npaving, repairing, altering, or otherwise\nimproving or re-improving any of the\nstreets herein named ,»nd the town shall not\nbe liable to the owner or owners of said road\ni for any damages that may occnr by reason\nof the performance of such work, or by the\nexercise of any right, provided of reserved\nin this Section. This ordinance shall not be\nso constructed as to deprive the town of\nDontrIns of any powers, rights or privileges\nwhich it now has or may liereaffer be con¬\nferred upon it tcr regulate the use of and\ncontrol of the streets and alleys of said town.\nAny person wilfully or unlawfully ob-\nj strncfhig or interfering: with either the\nconstruction, maintenance or operation of\nthe railway herein provided for shall be\ndeemed guilty of misdemeanor, and upon\nconviction thereof, shall be prmfehed by a\nfine not less than Five (5) Dollars, nor more\nthan fhie Hundred (100] Dollars, of by ira-\n in the town Jail for not more\nf than 20 days, or both such fine and imprison¬\nment. That when any person shall obtain\nt Ijemrission to use any street of the city for\nthe purpose of removing any building, said\ngrantees, their successors ©rfossignsv ftpon\nForty-Eight Honrs written notice from the\nj- street committee, shall raise or remove airy\nof their wires which may obstruct the re-\nraoval of such baildimr so as to- allow the\npassage of such buikJiug across, hot not\nalong, any street ©» which the wire* of said\ngrantees, their sucensors <vr assigns, may be\nerected: provided that such crossing shall\nhe done art sflch reasonable hour o# the\n1 night, and in 9Wch reasonable manner a*\n. hall cause feast interference on the line of\ngranTees, their swcwessor* and assigns- .\nSec. i. That the grantees,their successors\nor ass-igfte.by its acceptance of thfefraucbise\ndoes agree for itself, the sticessors and aw\nsigns,to»pro<ecf and setter harnvlese that own\nofDovvgms from all etortus, actPons' ot dam¬\nages of every kbrsf
3a66e3ca8caad2a608260de5a1f5bc2f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.132876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 Special to THE EVENING JOURNAL\nDOVER, Del., Feb. IS. — Good roads leg­\nislation of a character that shows that\nthe subject has taken a firm root in the\nState is contemplated, under notices\ngiven to the House yesterday. Represen­\ntative Spruance gave notice of a bill au­\nthorizing another bond issue of $300,000 to\nImprove the roads of New Castle county.\nThat sum was spent on the roads in the\npast two years, and it is desired by the\nLevy Court to continue the good work.\nRepresentative Bradford will have a\nbill providing for a Slate bond issue of\n$500,000 to rebuild the State road from the\nnorthern to the southern limit of the\nState. It will provide for a competent\neugineer-to lay out and supervise the pro­\nject fo ra macadam road that will be a\npride the State and one of the finest\nstretches of highway in the country.\nRepresentative Hazel gave notice of a\nsimilar bill. It provide* for a commission\not three men to be named by the Gover­\nnor at a salary of $1200 a year for the\npresident and $1,000 for the other two\nmembers, and a secretary who may re­\nceive up to $1500 a year. The commission\nIs empowered to engage a competent en­\ngineer or engineers to have expert charge\nof the road building, and a bond issue of\n$500,000 is authorized under the act.\nTills with Representative Sopers good\nroads bill for Kent county and a good\nroads bill for Sussex county given notice\nof by Senator Reed gives the impression\nthat something ma)' lie done in the way\njf giving the State better highways in the\nfuture.
0b080f11764e556111640511593bf814 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1891.042465721715 41.004121 -76.453816 At the close of the afternoon exer-\ncises, Mr. E . R. Ikeler, on behalf of\nthe teachers of Columbia county, with\nan appropriate speech, presented Prof.\nCarver with an album, containing por-\ntraits of the donors, as a testimonial\nof their respect, It was received by\nthe Prof, who returned his acknowl-\nedgement in a few well chosen sen-\ntences, and after a song by a class of\npupils the audience was dismissed.\nIn the evening the large hall of the\nInstitute was filled with a gratified\nand 'appreciative audience,' and the\nexercises began with a prayer by Rev.\nJ. R. Dimm. A song was then given\nby the glee club. At the request of\nthe Board of Trustees Judge Elwell\nthen delivered an admirable address,\nin brief reciting the history of the\nInstitute, and urging the friends of\neducation to push on the and\ncomplete the building, beautify the\ngrounds, provide a library and neces-\nsary apparatus, and assuring them\nthat thus they were affording to their\nchildren means foran ample education,\nand bestowing upon them a legacy\nwhich would be forever a blessing.\nLooking back now upon that occa-\nsion, important as it seemed at the\ntime ; it is doubtful if any one realized\nall that it has accomplished for the\ntown, and will yet accomplish. All\nits influences have been for good, and\nmust continue to be. It has brought\nmany strangers to our town it has\nbeen a means of education to many\nhere who would have gone elsewhere\nall its surrounding influences and\nteachings are of the pleasantest kind.\nOn the 4th of May 1S67, the stock-\nholders of the Bloomsburg Literary\nInstitute met and elected the following\nBoard of Trustees :
1f12bd6cc1be47b88a493e12255fd00a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.83698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 Reorganisation In Arkansas.\nWashington, Nov. 1 ..It seenw from\nrecently received .official intelligence\nthat the reorganization in Arkansas lias\nprogressed quietly and is a success.\nPresident Johnson has informed the\nGovernor of that Staite that there will\nbe no interference with its government,\nand not only does he invite tho State to\nresume its former relations with the\nfederal government, but promises it all\nthe aidand the power of the govern ment\nin the preinises.\nHon Jos. L Orr, Governor elect of\nSouth Carolina, was pardoned somo\nweeks ago, but us that State has not\nrepudiated the rebel debt, she has failed\nto prepare herself for official recogni¬\ntion as a State loyal to the Union.\nThe Remains of Col. Dahlgren.\nPhiudblphia, Nov. 1..-The re¬\nmains of Col. Ulrich Dahlgren in\nstate in Independence Hall during the\nnight. Tho funeral ceremonies took\nplace this morning. After an impres¬\nsive sermon the remains were removed\nfrom the; Hall to Laurel Hill, escorted\nby six companies of the 7th regiment of\nthe 1st army corps,'two companies of\nmarines and city troops, which acted as\na guard of honor.\nAmong the distinguished mourners\nwere Adm'l Dahlgren; _ Gen. Mead,\nHumphrieS and Mayor Henry.\nGeneral Meigs to fee Relieved.\nNew York, Nov. L^-ThaHerald's spe¬\ncial says that the speculation th$t Geo.\nMeigs will shortly ue relieved from the\nQuartermaster-Generalship of the army\nis again obtaining credence among the\ngossip of military circles, and it is now\nalmost positively stated that General\nRobert Allen~ or General Ingalla is to\n> succeed to that oflloe.
35942662a381c53a3ddf50e0831b6a2d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.8945205162354 39.745947 -75.546589 “ Word« cannot express the awful skin\ndisease I suffered witn. My whole body\nwas covered with it. My head broke\nout so that 1 could not comb ray hair.\nFor a month or more I suffered with a\nterrible sore throat. When I should lie\ndown at night ray ayes would stick to-\nKther and I would have to bathe them\nfore opening them each morning. I\nscarcely could see for ray eyes had failed\nme from the effect of the skin disease. I\ntried three doctors, but they gave roe no\nrelief and then 1 tried all kinds of things\nthat I thought would do me good but I\nx)uld find nothing. I was a perfect\nprisoner with the awful humor.\n"One of my neighbors begged\ntry the Cuticura Remedies, and\nup my mind try them but not think­\ning that I would ever be cured. I would\ntake a hot bath with Cuticura Soap and\nthen apply the Cuticura Ointment. I\nfound relief in a few days and in a\nmonth you could scarcely see a spot on\nray face. I felt like a new person. When\nI first began to use the Cuticura Reme­\ndies they cooled the itching flesh and\nbrought mo real good sleep and rest at\nnight. I had suffered fully two years\nwith the skin disease but now 1 am a well\nwoman and in good health. I beg every\nskin sufferer to use the Cuticura Reme­\ndies. I cannot praise Cuticura enough\nbecause I thought that I would never\nget well again. Mrs. Cordelia C. Pitts,\nNewborn, Ga., Nov. 24 and Dec. 21, 08."
001783601c494936dda79551668677c7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1894.7986301052765 42.217817 -85.891125 out on the streets and has beggared\nindustry all over the United States. (Ap-\nplause.) Rut my fellow citizens, bad as\ntheir bill Is, even before it had become a\nlaw under the constitution, the president\nhaving refused to sign it, every Democratic\nleader from Mr. Cleveland down now re-\nmember this was after the passage of the\nlaw, after eighteen months of uncertainty\nand distress and disquietude among the\nbusiness men of tho country, after the\ndistress of the wage earners of the coun-\ntry, after they had passed their law,\nthey publicly announced to tho business\nof the country that their law Is not a set-\ntlement of the question at all; that it is\nbut the beginning; that it is the first\nstep in the direction of turlfT reform; that It la\nt lie entering wedge to free trak cveu\nMr. Cleveland saya the war ha only Just\nWar against what? War ngaliiht the In-\ndustries anil occupations of the people. War\nagainst whom? Against lit own follow citizen\nover whose reputdle lie presides by the voire of\nthe people. He has become a warrior In caee.\nlie was a ieace man In war. (tSreat cheering.)\nAnd kii while the business Interest of this coun-\ntry have lieen waiting all these month for Koin e-t hl n- g\ntin matter what, so they could adjust their\nbusiness to it, they publicly proclaim that you\nneed not try to adjust your business to It for\nthis Is only the beginning and we have got an-\nother wsslon of the present congress In which\nwe have full control of the government. Do you\nknow how to btop this further war on our In-\ndustries?"
05c49f64aa8979ce756f6b0e1b55def7 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1885.346575310756 39.78373 -100.445882 subject to usual conditions, will be re-\nceived at this office, and at the offices of\nthe Quartermasters at the following\nnamed posts, until 11 o'clock A.J M\nSan Francisco time, on Friday, June 5\n1883, at which time and places they wll\nbe opened in presence of attending bid\nders, for furnishing and deli verirg mill- -\ntary supplies during the fiscal year com-\nmencing July 1, 1883, as follows; Oats\nBarley, Hay and Straw at Fort Gaston\nand San Diego Barracks, Cal ., a nd Fort\nMcDermott, Nev.; Oats, Barley, Bran\nand Hay at Fort Bidwell, Cal.; Oats,\nBarley and Bay at Fort Hal leek, Key\nAlso at the same time, at this ofitt only\nfor military supplies for the same period\nas follows: Oata, Barley, Hay and Straw\nat Alcatraz Island, Angel Beni\ncia Barracks, Fort Mason, and Fort Win\nfield Scott, Cal .; Oats, Barley, Bran, Hay\nand Straw at Presidio of San Francisco\nand Oats, Hay, and Straw at San Fraa\nclsco. Cal. The Government reservea\nthe right to reject any or all proposals,.\nPreference given to articles of domes-\ntic production and manuactcre, condl\ntions of price and quality being equal\nand such preference given to articles of\nAmerican production and manufacture\nproduced on the Pacific Coast to the ex-\ntent of the consumption required by tbe\npublic service there. Blanks and fall\nInformation as to manner of bidding,\nAc, will be furnished on application at\nthis office, or to the Quartermasters at\nposts where bids are to be opened. En-\nvelopes containing proposals should be\nplainly marked "Proposals for\nat
11a29b8b0aedf0aa97beb41f501cc87c THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.6726027080163 40.832421 -115.763123 There was t litlU ijaUt trovth on\nthe Fuartb 4t Oabkosb. which hti just\nleaked cut. A uuuit. r of special po-\nlioecaen were appointed (or lb* Fourth\nand among then) was a young man who\nbaa a girl. He perforated bia duty well\nduring tbe day. su.! at srsniug be had\nto go ci'.U ou his girl, to show bar bin\natar, aud to abow her how ths hand-\neoffa ba carried *<rt used. While eon-\nvereing with h«r ba playfully band,\ncuffed ber, call'ug her bia little prison-\nsr. 1'iually it was tims (or tin to go\noa duty, and be took tha kay to unlock\ntha handcuff* and broka it in tha lock.\n11a tried every means known, and final-\nbly eeided that tb»re w-s only one wsy\nto get tUtin off, uud t b lit waa to file\ntbe I off. 11* got a file and worked ( <r\n(on- boars ons bandcr.ff and got it\nod, and theu commence.! ou lb' otbir,\naud it waa near day lig it the moruiuii of\nthe Oth before at>« waa free, opeu-\nli-nried girl. It i« protable ib»t no\n0»hUo«h gill w.n ever art up with more\ndilllg-ntly than tlie ntuilrur police-\nuiuii'k g>rl nai llint uiglit. One tbinu\nI but wan very uuunying about it whh\ntbat alter tlie b-iudculJa bud ba«n lllrd\noff it wan (ouud alio could have alipptd\nb*r bauds through thetn «t any time,\nb»r h'Hidi vein so aunll, but tbey ware\nno excited tbey tiaver tbougbt ol tbat\nwnv o( getting tlo in out of lb* strap*'.\nHa gave up bt« atnr to tbe cbii ( rigb'\nafter knslfwt. and enid be liun r\nwiuteil to look on oue a;aio. Tbe\nchief asked biui whur* bo \\v la all ni|{lit\naud be said h« wn» wiv'.cUing a scspic-\nious looking parly.
18e287d90d3137d5ba9bb399b28063e3 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.3438355847286 40.441694 -79.990086 While putting out this Are at Boenlgk Broth-\ners' tbe falling embers set fire to tbe cellar of\nF. Q. Oralgbead,and three streams were turned\ninto It After the cellar bad been flooded witb\nwater It was discovered that tho principal flame\nwas from natural gas, as after it was shut oil\ntbe fire was easily put out\nAbout UaO o'clock, as James A. McNally\nwas on his way to the depot, while passing bis\nestablishment, at 805 Liberty street, tbe private\nwatenman told him the rear ot sis store was ou\nfire. Not having bis keys with him, he put his\nfoot to the door and burst it in. Bushing to\nthe rear of tbe store, be closed the door\not tbe safe, where the books of tbe establish,\nment ware kept, tbe safe always having been\nleft slightly ajar. Tbe firemen immediately\npnt lines of hose into the building, and In\na short time bad tbe flames subdued.\nMr. .McNally stated that the work of the men\nwas the best be had over seen, and that he has\nthem to tbank for saviug bis stock from total\nloss. The Insurance carried by McNally Is be-\ntween 890,000 aud 8100,000. The stock on the\nfirst floor was thoroughly saturated by water.\nHardly a piece of goods escaped a soaking.\nAbout midnight fire was discovered on the\nroof of Godfrey & Clark's hulldlng, and a\nstream was turned on it by No. 12 company,\nand the flames put out In a short time with\nbutlslight loss.\nThe buildings occupied by Boenlgk Bros,\nand Craighead are owned by G. H. Dauber.and\nare fully insured. The building occupied by\nJames A. McNally is owned 'by the Head\nestate, and is fully insured.
2ba512c601122eeb27ae2c1bf46f3fc7 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.6352458700162 40.832421 -115.763123 Following Is tlio full text of the riatform\nadopt* J liy thf» National Democratic Convcnlbn\non the 26th of Juue, 1S7C, at St Louii, Mo.:\nV»V. t!ic L'cmocratlo jirty of the Ut'ltcJ Slati*\nin National Convention es^inbled. do hereby\n«J«vhw tin &dmiul«tratio:i of tho Federal Cuv*\ncrumciit to bp In urgent need of Itnnrcdlafo re¬\nform. Vfo do hereby enjoin up-»n th » nominees\nof this convention and cif tlio IKoiocratin pirty\nl*i each St ite a ccalom otTurt and co-o|m ration to\nthis end, end tlo hereby appeal t'» our felloxr\ncltlr.euA of every former political connection, to\nuudertako with us this fitat cud mont patriotic\n<!nty of the I cnWracy of tho v. hole country.\nV» o do here idfttin our faith in llio pcrmanen-\ncy of the Federal Union, and our devotion to\ntbo Constitution of«tho I'nited Fbtcs, with In\namendments utilTcrially accepted as a final\nsettlement of tho controversies that wore en-\nl.rmlored by the civil war, and do hero rocord\nour Ktr cdfa*jt con ftden co In tho prcpotulty of\n]?epuhllca;i rclf-ftovcrunicnt hi absolute a<-r]nlr.\ncccuco to the s\\ til of Iho majority; thi»v\\itnl\nprinciples of llepublics in the supremacy of tho\ncivil of or n.illt Ary authorities; in the toal\nKcpat&Mou of c!surch nnd Htate. for tho rake\nallUo of civil and religions freedonI; In the\nequality of all cltifcrns beforo lust la^s of their\nown cnachuenl; In tho liberty of individual\nconduct, unvcxcd by sumptuary laws; In the\nfaithful education of Iho rising feneration that\nth-y may prescrva, enjoy and transmit tlio*o\nbc4t condition i of humau happiness atid hope.\nWo behold tho noblest production* of a hun¬\ndred years of cbmiteful history, but while up¬\nholding tbo Ik lul of our Union nml tho (treat\ncharter of those our rlQlits, it buhoovti . Creo\njMM.ple to practice al»<o that el« mat vigilance\nwhich (it the vrke of liberty, licform li necen*\nr.iry to rc-biilld and chtabllxh in tho hearts of\ntlio wholo pcopliytlio Cuimi, eleven years a;»o\nhappily rcscura from Iho danaer of a corrupt\ncentralism, wldelt, after iulUcitn^ upon ten\nStates Iho rapacity of carpet bait % tyrannies, has\nhoney-comlnd tho ofticea of tho federal liovern-\nl.ient lUvlf with incapacity, vi- to and fraud,\ninfected Hlatesand municipalities wllh the con¬\ntagion of inls-rnh\\ and locued fa»»t the prosperi¬\nty «»r in iiidiuttrlou* people in tho paralysis c f\nliar.l tluics.
1665c687949bbec1e13fb67a289e976c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.5876712011668 39.745947 -75.546589 Captain Kane told the Judge that the\ngirl had said that her home was not\nw'hat It should be.\nThe court then asked the Curtin girl\nas to her age. She said that she would\nbe 19 years tff ago next month. She\ndenied, too, that she was with Lynch.\nOfficer Flynn, who arrested the trio,\ntold the court that a certain young\nman had given him the information\nthat Lynch was with the girls. Judge\nBall ordered till® case to be held over\nuntil to-morrow, pending a subpoena\nbeing issued for that certain young\nman, who must positively state that he\n«aw Lynch ,1a company with the girls.\nOtherwise the cose will lie dlsminscd.\nFt is said that the West End Park la\na regular rendezvous for young men\nand women, who congregate there to\n cards, drink beer and act disor­\nderly generally. The park is situated\nIn the extreme 'Western section of the\ncity and is almost Isolated.\nThese drunks were disposed of at $1\nand cost« each: Robert Dougherty,\nEphriam Daley and Benjamin Green,\nRichard Williams got $3 and costs for\n'the same offense.\nMary Price, colored, was held until\nto-morrow for larceny, as the authori­\nties think that Mary Is the “pal” ot\nDaniel Roll, colored, who waa held yes­\nterday on the same charge.\nMichnel McGrath, the bartender at\nthe old United States Hotel, which the\npolice raided on Sunday, and who per­\njured himself yesterdny, when arraign­\ned in the Municipal Court, at the trial,\nwas next on the list. His counsel, Wal­\nter H. Hayes, waived a hearing for his\nclient for the upjier court.
3d7e37916d1c2165bbc8ca0411ea9135 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1855.0342465436327 39.560444 -120.828218 A few of my fallen companions lifted\ntheir wan eyes to mine, but meeting there\nno kind response, laid their cheeks to the\ncold earth and expired. Then I wished,\nand wept, and prayed, like them to rest in\nforgetfulness, prefering oblivion to an ex-\nistence whose only hope was death. As\na wanderer amid pathless an l untrodden\nsnows, sinks at length lifeless and be-\nnumbed with cold, so did a feeling of un-\nconsciousness steal gradually upon my\nsenses, and “sleep that twin brother of\ndeath,” reigned supreme over my being.\nHow long I remained thus lost to my own\nmisery, and deaf to the rude jeers of my\ncompanions, I know not, but in my dreams\nI was blest The sun seemed to shine\nwith unusual brilliancy, reflecting light\nwarmth and happiness upon all things.\nThe fields were again clothed in beautiful\nverdure Myriads of flowers, white, blue\nand red, springing amid the velvet\ngrass, letting their delicious sweetness out\non every breeze. Birds of gay plumage\nswarmed the air, and made it vocal with\nredundancy of song; they folded their glos-\nsy wings to rest, and nestled |ovjng|y amid\n,iny branches, .tor I seemed no longer *\nlowly acorn, but * ipighty o*Je, the.king\nof the forest. I van pot lonely, for the\nsilvery laugh of childhood gladdened my\nheart, mingled with soft, low words of ten-\nderness, whispered beneath my shade, in-\ntended for the ears of lovers only.\nI was at length awakened from this de-\nlicious dream by a voice; it was the voice\nof nature, and it thus addressed me :\nPAwake! oh, sluggard, why sleepest thou ?\nArouse thee to potion! thou bast duties\nto perform. Know then, that within thy\ntiny shell, is the germ of future greatness,\nthat which shall exaltthee pboye thy fel-\nlows.”
4bf496aed4cda88e6480423610b3bca3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.932876680619 39.261561 -121.016059 When Gen. Puehlita entered the town of Ayn,\nin Sept. last, be exaoied a foroed loan from tin\npeople, and a share of it fell upon the curate ol\nibe place. The curate acted as though he\nwould pay, but be did not make bis appearance\nat the point designated for payment, and Geo.\nPuehlita ordered him to be arrested. A party\ncf men went to his dwelling and knocked at lie\ndoor; there was oo answer, and they broke in.\nThey found no one In the house and were about\nto leave It, when they heard a frightful voice\nproceeding apparently from the ground, say-\ning “I am hungry 1” The ofBoer In command\nwent back to Gen. Pueblita and told hint about\nthe voice. The General appointed a commie\nsioo lo examine the bouse. This commission\nwent to the ourates dwelling, and, after a care-\nful examination, they found a moveable stone\nin the Boor, and under this was astaiiway lead\niog down lo a vault, wbloh was entirely dark,\nand had no oouueotinn with the air, save by the\nstaircase, and a small hole that served as a ven-\ntilator. this vault were some bocks, a few\narticles of furniture, and a woman who had\nbeen shut up there for eighteen year*. She was\ntaken to Gen. Pneblitae quarters. When\nbrought into the light, where she saw a number\nof persons,sbe fainted. After she had returned\nto her senses, a thousand questions were asked\nof her, to which she replied only that she bad\nbeeu buried in that vault for eighteen years,\nwithout going out for a moment; that she had\nbeen married, and had children by her husband,\nbut sbe knew nothing of their fate; that, while\nimpr soiled in the vault, she had had children\nby the curate, hut she knew nothing of what\nbad oecome of these children; and after saying\nthis much she beoatao obstinately silent. While\nthis was passing, a sergeant of the Pueblita\nBrigade, then present, discovered that this wo-\nman was his mother, and sbe reoogniaed him as\nher son and embraoed him. The son then ran\nfor bis father, wbo came and reoogniaed his\nwife. The husband, fifteen years ago. was im-\nprisoned three years, under oharge of having\nmurdered hie wife, this woman.
0ce23f1b439dbf9c5c354e45044d1079 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.9549180011638 41.004121 -76.453816 The A'athn, "with the utmost respect,"\nmakes this appeal to Governor Hayes: "You\naro an honest man, in whosa lite not even\nthe fierce light of a Presidential campaign\nhas revealed a speck of reproach. From a\ntribunal, therefore, liko tho Louisiana Re-\nturning Hoard, composed exclusively of your\nfrieuds and partizans, whose judicial integ-\nrity and capacity havo been already success-\nfully impeached j whic'i refuses to obey tho\ndirection of the law and give the opposite\nparty even ono place on its bench; which\ndeliberates in secret, andgivcano reasous for\nits decisions; which sees glaring frauds ex\nposed in its presence without manifesting\neither surprise or displeasure, and which\nnotoriously enjoys not one iota of confidence\nin any part of the Union from such a tri\nbunal you would not accept tho award of\neven $100 neainst the claim of tho humblest\nman in America, would you? We know\nyou would not. Are you now prepared to\n at its hands nn office which equals nny\ncrown in dignity and surpasses most crowns\nin power ad responsibility, which no man\nhas hitherto held with a stain of suspicion\nresting on his title? Can you encounter the\nterrible ordeal of holding such a position for\nfour years in the fuco ot the belief of full\nhalf the voters that you have obtained it\nthrough judicial fraud and chicane? Would\nnot your so holding it be a new nnd great\nmisfortune to the country, and a source of\nunending shame and rcpentanco to yourself?\nShould you allow eager and unscrupulous\npoliticians to override yourown nobler judg-\nment and thrust it upon you? Finally do\nyou suppose that in an otlico so won, and\nneeding so much popular respect, if not\npopular support, to give it either dignity or\nauthority, you could exert any appreciable\ninliuence in behalf of any uf the causes\nwhich you and all good men have at heart 7
36478dc5d50543ffc3b46154f525d0f3 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.78551909406 58.275556 -134.3925 The said action is brought to obtain a de¬\ncree of this Court for the foreclosure of a\ncertain mortgage described in the * com¬\nplaint. and executed by the said Alexander\nSmullwood, on the 15th day of May, 1906, to\nsecure the payment of a certain promissory\nnote, dated May J^th, 19(k>, made, executed\nand delivered by the said Alexander Small-\nwood to the said Julius Heubner, by the\nterms of which said note said Alexander\nSmallwood promises to pay to the said Jul¬\nius Heubner, the plaintiff herein, the sum\nof Twelve hundred dollars, two years after\ndate, with interest from date until paid, at\nthe rate of ten per cent per annum, which\nsaid note has become due and remains un¬\npaid, except as specified i.i the complaint,\nand the sum $750.00, with interest on the\nprincipal of said note at ten per cent per an¬\nnum from May 15th, 1906, still remains due\nand unpaid, and that the leasehold premises\ncovered by the said mortgage may be sold\nand the proceeds thereof applied to the pay-\nment of said note to the said Julius Heub-\nncr, and in case such proceeds are not suf-\nlicient to paj the same, then to obtain an\nexecution against the said Alexander Small-\nwood for the balance remaining due, and\nalso that the said defendants, and all persons\nclaiming by, through or utideJ him may be\nbarred and foreclosed of all title, right\nclaim, lien, equity of redemption and inter¬\nest in and to the said mortgaged premises,\nand for other and further relief as specified\nin said complaint.
05c2b71ec053fb9f064b1024a0f3f2f6 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.878082160071 46.187885 -123.831256 The Cape Hancock station is also\nto be looked after. Major Blakeney\nrightly considers this station to be\nsecond in importance to none on the\ncoast He realizes its requirements,\nand had he the power would have\nlong since given it the conveniences\nand improvements its importance\ndemands. He hopts, however, this\ntime to be able to have the life crew\ntransferred to better quarters. The\nbuilding they now ocoupy was con-\ndemned fourteen years ago, as unfit\nfor use then: in the interim it cer-\ntainly has not improved in commo-\ndious residence for men.\nHo also intends to arrange for tho\nbnilding of a house on tho beach and\na more convenient arrangement of\nsurf boat, thus doing away with tho\npresent tedious delay of portage.\nIt is the further intention to estab-\nlish a life saving station tho\nweather beach, almost directly in\nfront of the residence of L. A. Loom-i - s .\nThero is an existing need for a\nstation in that vicinity, and it is be-\nlieved that proper representations to\nSupt. Kimball at Washington will\ncause the placing of a crew and suit-\nable accommodations at that point.\nTho establishment of a life saving\nstation at Gray's harbor is also recog-\nnized by Major Blakeney as a neces-\nsity and on this trip the preliminary\nsteps will be taken to secure one\nthere for the protection of life and\nproperty of our neighboring coasting\nand shipping interests.\nThe station at Neah bay is a con-\ntinual aunoyanco by reason of its in-\nefficiency in its present situation. It\nwas poorly located at tho start, and\ntill it i3 changed satisfactory results\ncannot bo expected.
ae3a811ff1e35c8f8d30f8a8580106ea VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.582191749112 43.798358 -73.087921 Confirmation. Rev. Mr. Clarke,\nBaptist missionary in Jamaica, who is\nspending a few months in this country,\ngave an interesting account ot the mission\nand its prospects, last Sunday evening, in\nthe Baptist church in Broad street, in this\ncity. On every point to which he had\noccasion to allude, his statements amply\nconfirmed the accounts given us in the\nbook of Kimball and Thomo. The no-\ntion that the emancipated slaves would\nnot work and could not take care of them-\nselves, was met by incontrovertible facts.\nOne instance was mentioned in which a\ncolored man paid about thirty dollars tow-\nard the erection of a chapel, and soon\nafier surprised the missionaries with a\nvoluntary donation of thirty dollars more,\nto carry the gospel to the East Indies.\nA negro congregation was mentioned who\nbesides their own worship,\ncontributed oue hundred and fifty dollars\na year towards the East India missson!\nAnd all this under the apprenticeship, and\nwhile the masters claim four days and a\nhalf labor without wages! What a re-\nproof to Americans who make less sacri-\nfices to do good, and yet pretend to doubt\nwhether the negro is a man, and has\nmoral enterprise sufficient to entitle him\nto a place among men! The speaker\nexulted in the prospect of speedy and\ncomplete emancipation. The address of\nMr. Clarke was followed with some ap-\npropriate remarks by Rev. Mr. Eldridge,\npastor of the Broad street Baptist church,\nin which the duties of American Chris-\ntians in respect to southern slavery were\nstrikingly brought into view. The exer-\ncises were closed by singing the appro-- !\npriofe anthem
0509500ed14f05953f4a94322c74836d THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.1821917491122 37.92448 -95.399981 The question Involved here, however,\nwhether It vv 111 pay best to turn off\nthe steers grown on the farm as feeders\nat tho age of 12 to 18 mouths or carry\nthem a year longer nnd finish them\nfor market. In view of the conditions\nnamed and tho good breeding nnd qual-\nity of tho cattle mentioned I have no\nhosltnncy In advising in this case that\ntho cattle bo finished for market.\nI would suggest, however, that llbcr-u- l\nfeeding bo practiced from tho begin-\nning instead of nt tho ngo of IS to 20\nmonths, ns mentioned. Under the con-\nditions picvnlllng in the locality from\nwhich this Inquiry comes (Iown) It will\nprobably prove to be most profitable to\nhave the cattle ready for market nt\nfrom 20 to 21 months of ago of\ncarrying them until about this ngo be-\nfore beginning to fatten them.\nOther things being equal, tho younger\nsteer Is much tho more economical beef\nproducer, nnd another point well woith\nconsldeilng Is the fact that a better\ncatcass of beef can bo grown by liber-\nal feeding throughout the life of the\nnnlmnl than by taking a year and a\nhalf to grow the framework, followed\nby slv. months or a year to make the\nfat. In other words, the fnt should be\nmade along with tho growth In such a\nway as to Incorpotnto It In nnd mako It\na patt of tho muscular tissue, where it\nwill give quality and flavor and thicken\ntho high priced cuts lather than be\ndeposited as an external layer nnd\nabout the Internal organs, as Is the
148d512d88731cb9d2749ade33cd86d0 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1875.595890379249 39.623709 -77.41082 was a disgrace to serve ; and so fool-\nish is the idea on this subject that\none of my little girls looking over as\n] was lln'i-hiig a letter for her to mail\nin tho village, ran to her mother sav-\nin'.,': "Ma 1 Pa wrote Your obedient\nservant, as if it was something very\nhumiliating. Cottagers can got along\nwith men, for though they live plain,\ntheir fair is substantial and no fancy\ndishes are expected, though in the\nemployer's house they arc rarely sat-\njsilod.' The farmer's wife having a\ndairy, poultry, often the flower gar-\nden and some other beds, besides her\nchildren to attend to, her position is\npitiable, and it is no wonder that well\neducated farmers' daughters choose\nhusbands that are not farmers.\nWhen the advantages of having\nmarried men in tho cottages is fully\nunderstood, it will bo found to bo a\ngreat gain to employ the hoys in \nfamilies, as there are many new imple-\nments coming into use which can be\nmanaged by any one who can ride or\ndrive a horse, and thus there will he\na great saving in the cost of manual\nlabor. There is a plow coming out\nwhich may make a great change in\nthe cost of cultivation, for, as stated in\nIllinois, tho horses draw much easier\nwith a rider than the common plows\ndo with a man walking behind. It\nwill ho a great saving, as a man or a\nboy unable to walk all day can guide\nthe horses, and l.y using one pair till\nnoon, the driver could do as much\nwith each team in half a day as will\nbo done in a whole day in tho old-\nfashioned way of resting at land's ends\nand going very slow to make the ani-\nmals and man hold out for tho long,\nscorching day till sundown.
3c5a6be28c40aa27609b0256ad05df8c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.0890410641807 41.681744 -72.788147 you have asked about was 'a member\nofCo.EandIknowthatifhisauntj\nwrites to him there in the 102nd in- -\nfantry he'll receive her letter O. K.\nIt was a surprise to know that St.\nThomas' seminary has an honor roll,\nand that I'm at the head of it. That\nbrings me back to the years when I\nled my classes and I see I'll have to\nkeep up' tho reputation that I have\nmade and I'll do it, mother, don't i\nworry about that. I'll be looking for\na letter from Sister Rose Gertrude\nand I'll write to her immediately. It ;\nsure is good of her to think of me, j\nand I am grateful to her. I wish that\nI had Tom Carty's address as I could\nwrite and tell him what is before him j\nover here in France. It won't be so j\nbad if weather keeps up. It is j\ncold but not unbearable, and no one\nis complaining. I wasn't in that j\nspecial picture at Keeney's, mother,\nfor there has been no movie man\naround our camp. But don't be sur-\nprised to see me come bouncing in on\nyou pretty soon, not in the movies but\nin person. But, the picture will have\ngiven you an idea of what we are doing\nover here, for all the troops are doing\nthe same thing and believe me we are\nhaving some fun. Send me a lot of\nbig, thick socks, Ma, because I'll need\na lot ot them over here, i nave an\nsorts of things to keep me warm, so\nI don't think of anything else, except\na house and lot and you can'C send\nme that. But keep on writing to me,\nMa, and I'll do the same.
19be4fc647111720eeca4c41e2687fc5 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.6452054477422 39.513775 -121.556359 Sec. 14 Tills act shall he submitted tofhe people of\nthe Slate for their ratification, at the next general\nelection, to he hidden on the first Wednesday of Sep-\ntemlier. A. I*. 1857 . and the qualified electors of this\nState shall, at s ild election on their ballot* for Stale\nofficers, vole for or against this Act; those voting for\nthe sitnie, shall write or have printed on their ballots,\nthe word* “Pay the Debt;” and those voting against\nthe same, shall write or have printed on their ballots\nthe words “Repudiate the Debt * \nSec. 15 . The votes cast for and against this Act,\nshall lie counted, returned and canvassed, ami de-\nclared in the same manner and subject to the same\nrules us voles cast for the Treasurer of Stale, and it it\nappoiir that a muj .my of all the votes furor\nagainst this law u* aforesaid.or In favor of thi* Act.\nthen the same shall have effect ns hereinbefore pro.\nvliled. and shall he Irrepealahle until the interest of\nthe liabilities herein created shall be paid and ilis\ncharged, and the Governor shall make proclamation\nthereof; but if a majority of tin- voles so C a»t are\nagainst this Art, Ihen tin- same shall become void\nSee Iti. It shall hi- the duly of the Secretary of\nState to have this Art published in one newspaper\nin each judicial DWrlcl of this Stipe, if one lie pub\nlished therein, for three months next proceeding the\ngeneral election to he holden upon the Hr*t We tnes-\nday of September next. f . .r which publication no\ngreater allowance shall ho made than the rules al-\nlowed by lux to the Slate Printer.\nApproved April '2Bth. 1857 .
867ed1b815fca968e903cbc76ad502ea NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.6150684614408 41.681744 -72.788147 hood. The more attractive attrac-\ntive In the eyes of Koreans, at least\nare taken to the market place and\nthere the connoisseurs of reptiles\nexamine the stock carefully, select-\ning those desired for pets and those\nto be eaten. Not an inconsiderable\nnumber of snakes are purchased for\nthe preparation of home medlclr.es\nin Korea, making the business a\nprofitable one, all In all.\nFather Sweeney's experiences in\nthe maintenance of his "menagerie,"\nwhich now Includes, two dogs, two\nowls and a deer, have been amus-\ning. His experience with a bear cub\nas related by him, wrs:\n"Two years ago I had a bear cub.\nBut the cub as it began to grow\nwould eat enough for a horse, and\nbesides it was forever breaking out\nof Its and giving me the trou-\nble of chasing it through the\nstreets. The police requested me to\nkeep It within bounds so that it\nwould not scare the neighbors. Then\nI magnanimously gave It to the sis-\nters at Gishen. Of course the sisters\nhad more trouble than I, for the\nbear was growing and when It be-\ngan pulling pans off the stove,\nsometimes scalding itself, they\ngenerously gave it to another priest.\nHe built a good pen for it. Although\nthe bear was tame and would wan-\nder about the house and play with\nthe dog. It wouldn't endure being\ncaged. So, when it .grew strong\nenough to tear holes in its cage,\nthe priest highly recommended it to\na Jap and sold it, making a profit\nof 10 yen."
0cc798196f20baf3bd96e051d6bba72d OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9822404055353 39.513775 -121.556359 the Curium tract to lie highways, and to idlerthe\nroad to McConnells Kerry, It is hereby ordered that\nHie present road running froiu the termination of\nbird. Robinson and Montgomery Itreets in the town\nof i iroville to Butcher Ranch in said county, be. and\nthe same is hereby declaredvacated as a public high-\nway. And it Is further ordered that Hi- said Bird,\nMontgomery and Robinson streets of said town of\nOroville. be extended a* public highways across Hie\ntract of land known ns the Carlton Tract, and ad\njoining said town of < iroville. .'laid continuations of\nbird, Robinsm and Montgomeryslreel, to be sixty\nsix feel in width, and extending indirections parallel\nwith each other, according to U» plan or eervov of\nsaid Carlton Tract, mado by M. 11 . Earley. And it is\nfurther ordered that the street iwrked Fourth Ave-\nnue. according to the plan and servey of the said\nCarlton Tract be. Hie same is%ereby declared to\nlie a public highway—the said A vUt«e to lie sixty six\nfeel in width, arid extendingacross said tract of land.\nAnd it is further ordered that so much of the First,\nSecond,Third. Fifth Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Av-\nenues, as lie between Robinson and Montgomery\nstreets, according to the plan or survey of said M. 11 .\nFarley of said Carlton Tract now on tile in the office\nof the county Recorder of said county, be, and the\ngame are hereby declared to be public highways, all\nof said highways to be sixty feet In width. And it\nis further ordered that the road now laid out from Hie\nterminal ion of the said Robinson street, across\nthe Butcher Ranch, to its junction with Hie old road\nbo, and the same is hereby declared a public high-\nway. said highway to bo sixty six feel in width.\nAt.esl the foregoing a true copy.
31cb730703e6f3f7210b007710d81d81 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.321038219743 58.275556 -134.3925 taken off the Dolphin at Ketchikan,\nsuffering from a rerer, wnicn aiter it\nwas conquered by careful nursing, left\nhim in a very weak condition. Carl\nreports a thriving town on Revilla\ngigedo, but is still of the opinion that\nDouglas is the best town in Alaska.\nOn the afternoon and evening of\nWeduesday of next week, May 4, at 8\no'clock, the Ladies League of the Con¬\ngregational church will hold a sale of\nthe useful and faucy articles which\nhave been made at their sewing con\ntests during the past six months. They\nwill display kitcheu aprons, a largo col¬\nlection of handkerchiefs, childrens\ngarments, fine lace work, handsome\ndoilies, &c. Coffee and tea and cake\nand lemonade will be served. There\nwill be a musical program and a social\ntime. The solid silver card receiver,\nexhibited in Jeweler Kemmis' window\nwill be awarded to the winner that\nnight by the judges. The one who\nreceives the highest number of votes\nwill at the of the sale receivo the\nCarnation lunch cloth now displayed\nin P. II . Fox's window.\nOne of the nicest dances ever given\nin Douglas wa9 that of last Wednesday\nevening in the Natatoriura Hall by the\nBand Boys, in celebration of the first\nanniversary of the birth of the organ-\nization. The music, under the direc¬\ntion and leadership of that prince of\nmusicians, Prof. Miller, was sublime,\nand seemed to inspire the dancers with\nthat soulful symmetry of motion that\nis so entrancing. The attendance was\nlarge and well selected, not only for\nlooks, dress, and appearance, but for\nability to dance. The Douglas Har¬\nmony Band was organized in April,\n1903, a "kid" band, i. e., composed of\nyoung men and boys. But they have\nstuck together and to their music in a\nI remarkable manner,' and today don't\nneed to take a back seat for any band\nin Alaska. Long live the Douglas\nHarmony Band and may it prosper\nand wax strong.
0cdb97546794691659101b027ec0555d THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1901.23698626966 47.478654 -94.890802 this soil it is possible to raise from 40\nto 60 bushels of wheat to the acre, oats\n75 to 100 bushels, all of which bring\ngood prices at the local market. For\nmixed farming these new districts are\nprobably among the best in Western\n<Janada. Stock fatten easily on, the\nwild grasses. Hay is plentiful, and\nprices splendid. Another settler writ-\niiV to a friend In Iowa says: "The\nclimate is all that could be desired,\nplenty of rainfall in summer, with no\nhot, dry winds. On the 28th of Sep-\ntember I saw prairie flowers in full\nbloom, sweet corn, potato and tomato\nvines that had not been touched a par-\nticle with frost, and the winters are\nmilder than those in the State from\nwhich I came. After the holidays the\nwinter sets in clear and cold, with\nplenty of snow for sleighing; no\nhigh winds or blizzards are known.\nHorses live out all winter and pick\ntheir own living, while cattle Jive an\nwinter in open sheda and around the\nhay ricks. Wheat, oats and barley are\nthe principal grain crops. Potatoes\nand all other roots and vegetables do\nwell, the yield being enormous as\ncompared to those in the States. Wild\nfruits, such as strawberries, raspber-\n. ries, cranberries, gooseberries and all\nvarieties of currants yield in abund-\nance. As a reader of your valuable pa-\nper for a number of years, I feel that\nI should inform you of- the progress\nand advancement being made in Can-\nada within the past few years, and the\ninducements and advantages that will\nfollow settlement in Western Canada.\nThose who desire information can do\nas I did, and apply to any Agent of\nthe Canadian Government,
edc3d004b1891916ca15561bc61f8290 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0999999682901 41.681744 -72.788147 "Take the helm. Mister Twining,\nwatch him! If he's been lying, keep\nhtm thero until he learns!"\nCaptain Stevens turned to Mary\nand she looked UP rather suprlsedly\ninto a face wreathed in a Droaa\nsmile. Sometimes she was puzzled at\nStevens' moods. She felt certain this\nsudden decision to have Drake stand\na trick at the wheel was induced\nsimply by meanness. As for the\ngenesis of that broad smile, she did\nnot know what it was. Only a sailor\ncould be expected to know the su-\npreme disgrace of being driven from\nthe helm of a sailing ship for in-\ncompetency. Besides, she had no\ninkling of the depth to which Stevens\nhad been' stirred by her outspoken\nchampionship of the mature ship's\nboy. The helmsman whose proper\ntrick it was, passed on his way to\njoin the singsong, grinning expec-\ntantly, for he was one the foe'es'le\nhands who could not understand\nDrake and therefore disliked him.\nShall we walk a while? "the skip\nper suggested, taking her arm in a\nstrong grip. They turned and walked\nthe decH. Pt tne wheel, to the taff- -\nrail and back to the forward ran.\nMr. Twtnlng stood beside the wheel,\nwatching the compass with a queer\nlook on his brown face.\nDrake stood at the helm as uncon-\ncerned as if he had done nothing but\nsteer clipper ships all his life. Mary\nglanced at him 'and smiled. The\nskipper glanced at him and smiled\nless broadly. Next time they passed\nhe flashed a glance at the mate, who\navoided his eye. And when once\nmore they spprocahed the wheel,\nthe skipper stepped to the binnacle\nand peered In sharply.\n"Drake steers better than anybody\nIn my watch, sir," grinned Mr. Twi.\nnlng.
3635eae2a0a8129aba70579500b7ea44 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.015068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 either ub a game, or edible flak\nUeulo Soolt wakes brief mention of\nhim nnder the name of channel cai,\nwhile Roosevelt does not even allnde\nto blm. For s ohowder or a soup there\nIs no flih at all oomparable, we think,\nwith the white and blue cat taken at\nthe Falls of Cole.\nN. R . 8 ..Breeder* differ aa to the\neffect of wolf teeth npon the eyes; the\nsafest plan is to extract them, whlob la\neasily done with an ordinary forceps.\nT. F . A . W . Vs..Albemarle plpplna\nand lady applea, strictly flrat-clau A\nNo. 1, and carefully packed, aold In this\nmarket tlile Fall, the former for nine,\nthe latter for thirty dollar* per bbl.l\nniiiivn>.OltUHIDU M JUKIO| ivuiutvi\nfrom navigation or railWSd, with a\nsaw-mill of your own and plenty of\nUmber, It would be better eoonomy to\ndrain with wood. Nail four* I nob stripe\nof plank In the shape of tho letter V;\nlay these In the trench with the angle\nupward, oovor where theendsjoln with\n or chips, and then till In. There\naru dralDH made In this way whloh\nhave been drawing well for thirty years\n8. T. Q ..The oolt la born with two\ngrinders. When four front teeth have\nmade their appeatanoe, the oolt Is\ntwelve days old, and whon the next\nfour appear It Is four weeks old. The\ncorner teeth appear at eight months,\nand whon they attain the Height of the\nfront teeth tho oolt Is a year old.\nN. T . II..There can be no objeotlon\nto goats in the pastures with your\nsheep; on the contrary, they will prove\nmore efflolout even than sheep In\ncleansing your old fields of briers and.\nshrubbery. Thoy are more inclined to\nbrowse than sheep, and eat urnny\nplants whloh they would rejeot.\nM. M., Vs..The Chester whites are\ntoo coarsc lu the boue and too large.\nThe best hogs wo have seen are the\nBerks!) ires as bred In Kentuoky. At\nthe allows lu that State this Fall the\ndisplay of lierkshlree was magnlllcent,\nand they brought great prloes,
19deb69a723b7baad01532d599f3c06c THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.9931506532216 46.187885 -123.831256 that someone else will make some-\nthing out of it in a trade, other towns\non the coast are giving away property\nin the way of inducements tocapital\nseeking investments. Capitalists will\nnot come here and invest their money\nunless they can see a profit in tho in-\nvestment They willnot furnish both\nthe flour and the water. There is\nland in abundance about Astoria, but\nit is capital we need to build up a city.\nIn the same editorial you refer to\nthe fact that Astorians send money\naway to other places for merchan-\ndise at the expend of Astoria mer-\nchants. Itistruetoey do; but who\nis to blame for it? So long as Asto-\nria merchants make no distinction be-\ntween cash customers and customers\nwho buy on six months', or a year's,\nor longer time, so long will cash cus-\ntomers send away and purchase\nwhere such distinction is made.\nA merchant must make n profit on\nhis merchandise and in his capital\ninvested, and if he gives long credits\nhe must charge enough more for his\ngoods to make up a fair interest on\n amount of those credits, and the\ncash customer is compelled to pay\nthe larger part of this. Then where\ngoods are sold on credit, there are\nmore or less bad or uncollectable ac-\ncounts. The cash customer must be\ncharged enough to cover his propor-\ntion of those losses. Then, too, tho\nmerchant who does a large credit\nbusiness, unless he has abundant\nwealth, must necessarily buy on cred-\nit instead of for cash, and thus be\ncompelled to pay the highest prices\nfor their goods, and also being com-\npelled to patronize certain houses to\nwhom they are indebted, instead of be-\ning at liberty to go into the market and\npurchase their stock wherever they\ncan buy the cheapest for cash.\nThese are some of the principal\nreasons why cash customers send\naway from Astoria for merchandise,\nand so long as the reasons exist so\nlong will tho practice continue. If\nAstoria's merchants want to retain\nthe trade of Astoria's cash customers,\nthey must sell goods as cheap as the\nbuyer can purchase them at neigh-\nboring towns and cities and ship them\nto Astoria.
5c5e6ef91992697c010c0210d4c21098 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8155737388686 39.513775 -121.556359 The Black republican. party sxpeofc to be\nable to carry the State for Fremont by tbo\ndelusive cry of free labor.” They hope,\nby comparing-the labor of tha Germans of\nPennsylvania, with that of the Slave of the\nSouthern States, to induce them to vote lor\nt remoufc. Against the probability of th> ir.\ndoing so, however, there are several impor-\ntant and weighty reasons. Pennsylvania,\nfor the first time, has furnished a democratic\ncandidate fur the office of Chief Magistracy\nof the I uioa, and, were there no other con-\nsiderations in h>s favor, this alone should\ninduce the State to cast her vote for the\ndamocratia nominee It is an honor of which\nany State might be proud. But there are\nother reasons which will tend to throw the\nvote of.the State for him. It is conceded, by\nthe opposition press claiming the for\nI term nt, that, whichever way the Society\nof Quakers oast their influence will the vote\nof tho State be given. The Know-Nothings\nsecured this vote, when they elected their\nGovernor in 1851, hut failed to retain it,\nand ware defeated at a subsequent election.\nIhis vote will be given for James Buchanan,\nthe purity of whose life is not excelled hy\nthe rigid rules of the sturdy Quakers them-\nselves, They have exulted him time and\nagain, and will not now desert the man\nthey have so often honored and advanced,\nwhen they have the double opportunity of\nshowing.titeir'devution to their country, and\nelevating, a.citizen of their ownStatc, whose\n“Life is without a stain,” to the Chief Mag-\nistracy of the Union. These, are the causes\nwhich wilbopcrate to give the votaol Penn-\nsylvania to Buchanan and the Union. Who.\ndoubts it ?
f2d1014539b692705281fc92d9764615 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.491780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 Vses Hands to Beat Flames\nThomas and Beta ran, screaming\ntoward the door, but the boy turned\nand saw his mother enveloped In\nflames. He ran to her. Regardless\nof the sheet of flame about her body,\nhe beat upon it with his hands fran-\ntically, crying for help.\nHis fattier, roused by the first cry\nof the children, ran into the kitchen\nfrom the bedroom across the hall.\nHe pulled his wife and son into the\ncorridor, and with his bare hands\nwas beating upon the flames In his\nwife's dress when neighbors who had\nalso heard the children's screams,\nran In to help. They extinguished the\nfire in Mrs. Daly's and Thomas's\nclothing and then Daly, seeing that\nhis tuo children were burned, picked\nup one under each ami, ran down\nfour flights Meps and two blocks\nto I'nlon Hospital. He refused aid\nfor himself,, although he was pain-\nfully burned about the face and\nhands but ran back to his wife.\nMeanwhile the neighbors had\nturned in a fire alarm, applied first\naid to Mrs. Daly and telephoned for\nan ambulance. She was swathed in\nrloths soaked In caron oil. The Bre-\nmen had succeeded in confining the\nfire to the kitchen and dining room\nof the apartment when an am-\nbulance from Cnion hospital arrived\njust as Daly returned. Dr. Kline\nlock her to the hospital Immediately\nsnd the patrolman accompanied her.\nHer condition was paid to be serious\nend she was removed to Fordham\nhospital. Daly was treated for his\nburns and learned that his daughter\nhad been only slightly burned about\nthe arm. They
1f0ea193e3bf82ab2502758c6a580925 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.6999999682903 43.82915 -115.834394 one passes this single exit merely\nfor the sake of passing it and assuring\nhimself that he is still free. A single\nroad then presents itself—a road inai-\nvelously kept up by the English and\ncons tantly filled with carriag es and\nped estrian s, which, un der a bla zing\nsky. goes along the liny of Gibraltar at\nthe left and the neutral territory at the\nright, and leads you in lo3S than a\nquarter of an hour to tho first custom­\nhouse po rt , the first Spanish village,\nLinea. There the sp ectacle changes.\nIn place of th e E nglish s entinels , so\nfresh, so ru ddy, and so well fed, here\nare the custom-house officers with their\nhollow jaws and starveling air and\nsomber and seedy uniforms. For them\nevery comer is a smuggler; but don t\nbe afraid, they will not treat you badly.\nFrom time immemorial tlio smuggler\nhas been the friend of the Spanish tax -\ngatherer. It is he that enables him to\nlive b ett er than the government, which\ndoesn t alw ays give him his pay.\nIn 1874 muggling flourished in this\npart of Spain. The frotittor was never\nworse gu ard ed, and tho customs offi­\ncers were nev er worse paid. G ibraltar,\nwhich, as a free port, has at all timos\nsorved as a depot for the smuggling\nlone along this part of the coast of\nSpain, overflowed with the merchandise\nthat forms tho object of this int er­\ndicted traffic. The city was filled every\nlay with caravans of mules loading\nwith bales of goods. J u st before tho\n•ate closed for the night they departod\nin single file fo r Linoa. Oa reachi ng\n•he frontier the man at the head of tlie\nlino jabb ered with tho customs officer,\nwhile the rest hurried on. Guns were\ntired, an d the officers made a feint of\nopposition, b ut no blood was shod.\nLinea is a miserable place of throe thou­\nsand or four thousand inhabitants,\nnearly all employed at Gibraltar in\nloading and u nl oading vessels. Each\none on entering Gibraltar In the morn­\ning receives a pass good for tho day,\nwhich he gives up at night— Paris\nFigaro.
400d81ed149530d309a678e1da6b7c9a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.2041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 ble (or over 16 year» unable to do anything during thattime: have\nspent all I had doctoring with several local doctor» and many spe­\ncialists, all to no pun»»«. My case Is a very hard one and Incur­\nable ; const!peiion of a very »erloua nature. I would, for years, go\ntrom three to Ave days without a movement: would take pills,\nsuite, etc., until I was entirely tired o( life. Have tried everything.\nI saw your ad: sent for free sample of Syrup Pepsin, received it\nand It did me so much good that 1 got a 6O0 bottle and have taken Is\nas i>er directions regularly; »ball get another bottle today It hat\ndone me a world at good. It ta the nicest to take and the\neffective ot any remedy I have ever used. It la a god-aand\nto me —A. A . Lewja, B. S, Box 61, Bentonvllle, Ark.\n"I received your tree sample ot Syrup Pepsin and bava taken It\nand am now taking a tl 00 buttle. It la doing me a great deal of\nood. 1 have bad trouble more or less with my stomach evar since\nleft the army, but have never taken very much medicine (or It.\nbut the sample you sent me did me so mucb good I thought I would\ngive it a trial. It Is helping me and 1 shall continue to taka It. 1\nran recommend It to any one bavins stomach trouble and beart\ntrouble Qeo. S. Spaulding, Nat. Soldiers' Borne. Kansas.\n”1 bave tried your Syrup Pepsin and found IS all that you\nclaim. I am «comme ndinglttotbeuld veterans and they are buy-
8429e48019f283946deee9127a427705 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9357923181037 38.729625 -120.798546 Why Not?— Will some Republican or-\ngan, or aoroe of the neutral organs that\nare habitually denouncingthe South, an-\nswer the following : “If the Legislature\nof almost every Northern State may make\nit a crime, punishable by heavy and evm\ninfamous penalties, for one of their citi\nZens to aid in the execution of a Constitu-\ntional law, passed in pursuance of a Con-\nstitutional engagement—we mean the law\nfor the arrest of Fugitive Slaves—why\nmay not the Southern States make it a\ncrime to aid in collecting the taxes of the\ncustom house ?" Why may they not also\ngive license and encouragement to the\ncrowd to beat st their discretion the Fed-\neral officer who undertakes to discharge\nhi« functions? Is not the North as much\nunder obligations to observe the laws of\nCongresa as the South? The people of\nthe South believe that their institutions\nare imperiled by the success of the Black\nRepublicans. Believing so, they pre-\nparing to defend them, and they should\nnot be censured for demanding of those\nabout to come into power that their Con-\nstitutional rights shall be respected.\nA Prophecy. —Thomas Jefferson once\nsaid that the opponents of the Democrat-\nic party would attempt to get into power\n“at some future day," by stealing the\nname of “ Republican.” How strangely\nand truly baa this prophecy been realized!\nBut it is hardly possible that when he\nmade it, he anticipated that political au-\ndacity and baseness would ever go so far\nas to prostitute the name to the service of\nsuch a dangerous revolutionary party as\nthe one tbst has adopted it—a party\nwhose leader and representative, Abraham\nLincoln, said in a speech delivered in Chi-\ncago on the 10th of July, 1658, that if\nthe Declaration of Independence did not\nmeen to place the negroes on sn equality\nwith the white*, be was for tearing the\nwords out of it.
3668ca05753b7ec31bd5aa2634b41398 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.1383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 As we view it, the women have acted with commen­\ndable fairness in tho matter, because it would be use­\nless to apply Stale censorship to something that al­\nready lias been subjected to national censorship and\nthat is admittedly in no need of State censorship.\nAt the first conference held in this city it was agreed\nhy the club women and the moving picture men that\nthe Delaware circuit is loo small to have a board ot\ncensors of fis own. One of the moving picture men\nsuggested that as an alternative a law might bo passed\nproviding that, no film that had not been approved pre­\nviously by the board of censors of Pennsylvania or Mary-\n'jmd nilglitboexliJbltod la Delaware. At tho same time\nthe proponent of that plan asserted that Delaware\nwas not in need of any censorship other than that sup­\nplied the National Board, the desire of the man­\nagers to run decent houses and the sense of decency\nof Delaware audiences, which would soon put an in­\ndecent moving picture house out of business.\nIt was agreed that a memorandum bill be drawn\nalong tho icnnsylvania-Miiryland-censorsliip-for-Dela-\nware lines and that, after it had been considered fully\nby the Individuals, another conference be held. At\nthat second conference it was pointed out that the\nboards ot censors in Pennsylvania and Maryland were\npolitical in their nature and subject to change in\npersonnel. The advantages and the disadvantages of\nthe proposed plan were discussed from all «ides, and\nfinally the club women came to tho conclusion that it\nwould be bettor to leave things ns they are today, re­\nlying upon the moving picture men to keep their places\nupon the present high recreative and educational\nplane.
e9566670f5f978c58b66a6d04e92697b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.042465721715 41.681744 -72.788147 Leonard, who has not been acthe\nIn the ring since 1923, has held his\npresent title for nearly seven years.\nAfter fighting his way through, the\nranks for five years following tils\nfirst appearanc, he faced on May\n28, 1917, that king of defensive box\ning from Great Britain, Freddy\nWelsh. The bout took place at thej\nManhattan A. C .\nA few' months previously ths\nchampion, Welsh, had made Leonard\nappear amateurish In a Brooklyn\ncontest and Leonard had outpointed\nWelsh In a battle In Madison Square\nGarden. This was the decisive con-\ntest. For eight rounds Welsh kept\nhis head well covered, but in the\nninth, the man who was to become\nand remain champion of the llght- -\nweights for seven years, sent Ms,\nright to a point behind the British-\ner's left ear. Welsh staggered, but\nguarded, in his excellent \nDriven to a corner, the Britisher\nwas forced to lower his hands and\na stinging left sent him tottering.\nToo weak to raise the arms that\nhad protected his crown since he\ntvon it from Willie Ritchie, he was,\npowerless before a terrific offensive\nand Benny Leonard came into fame.\nKid Lavlgne captured the world\ntitle from Dick Burge. the English\nchampion, and brought it to Ameri-\nca in 1896. It soon became the\nproperty of Ad Wolgast. who later\nbowed to Willie Ritchie. Kttchi'i\nmade tha mistake of going to Eng-\nland to fight Welsh and lost.\nAfter winning the title more than\nseven years ago, Leonard met all\ncomers and defeated them. Mne\ntimes he encountered the recently\nretired champion of the feather\nweights, Johnny Dundee and severs\nclose battles resulted. After he be\ncame champion he knocked ou\nJohnny Nelson,
a741b0b8cdb510337433a7681f98c1c3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.9904109271943 39.261561 -121.016059 Tbe Pittsburg Font, a staunch Democratic\npaper, thus notices a late effusion of Dr. Gwin :\nWe base been readiog a weak advocacy of\nan old political heresy, which appeared a few\ndays since in some of the papers written by\nSenator Gwin of California. Tbe Senator from\nthe land of gold attempts to aid the learned\nAttorney General of the United States, to prove\nthat in tbe Dred Scott decision tbe Supreme\nCourt decided that it was the duty of Congresa\nto protect slavery in tbe territories against the\nwill of tbe inhabitants of the territories. Tbe\nmost that can be said of Mr. Gwine effort is,\nthat it amount* to very little. He make* the\nattempt to put down Mr. Douglas argument*\nby adopting the old idea of Federalism, that\nthe inherent right of self-government doe* not\nexist in • free people but that power must be\nderived from tome higher source. With tbie\n he thiuks to answer Mr. Douglas' unan-\nswerable arguments. Congresa is. in bis opin-\nion, the higher source whence power is derived\nso far as the people of the territories are con-\ncerned. His own State! might furnish him an\nexample to the coutrury, which proved that\nwithout being dependent ou the pleasure of\nCongress that the people have of themselves,\nand by themselves, tbe right to form their own\ngovernment without let or hindrance from any\nhigher authority. And in the Dred Soott ease\nthe Supreme Court by no means advances the\ndoctrine that the people of the territories derive\ntheir powers to establish a municipal govern-\nment from Congress or any other source, than\ntheir own sovereign power. Tbe California\nSenator is evidently not familiar with tbe de-\ncision itself of the Supreme Court in the Dred\nScott case, but has taken bis premises from\nsomebodys individual interpretation of that\ndecision.
28d02a84358145b6c8d3409ac42efdb8 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.6150684614408 40.832421 -115.763123 Tb« !>..« n-tilll Bid* of un.\nOu« of the rati sight* of lite i* that of\nbrokeii-down wen who have passed be¬\nyond middle age. They are Been every*\nwhere, in city, town and village; men\nwho were onee in easy oireumataneea,\nhot hove loat situation* and health, and\nare floating like driftwood on the ocean\nof life. There is soisethiog peculiarly\ndistressing in the contemplation of\nthtao person*. Their poverty is not\nlike the poverty of youth, for th«n\nthere was health, hop* and ambition to\nhslp it out; M*lf-deuial could then bo\npatiently borne because there was ex¬\npectation that it would not be laating.\nIf the meal was scanty at time*, and the\nwardrobe limited, both woro supple¬\nmented by anticipations of the future.\nYouth and health uud hope cau afford\nto Now all is changed; there is\nnothing to look forward to; no bright\nanticipatioua of future oomfort. Youth\nis gone; the summit of the emerald bill\nhas betu passed, aud thu path leads\ndown on the other side. Now wbon\nthere should be esso aud comfort and\nrest, thsr* is th* hard, hopeless strug¬\ngle for daily bread. It is indeed a\npitiful picture, and rendered all the\nmoro melaucboly by the murmurings\nof the sufferer* themselves. It seems\nto them that fate has dealt hardly by\nthem, aud that aonio have more, while\nthey hav* less, than they deserve, lie\nthis ns it may, there is no better teacher\nof the lesson of thrift and ecouomy\nthan these cases supply. They apeak iu\naccent* not to be missunderstood of the\nnecessity of obeying the injunction,
ca798d2efc40c358cddb9070b1946ba5 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.17397257103 31.960991 -90.983994 While the Oregon debate “drags its slow length\nalong in the Senate, the ^public appear to have\nmade up their mind on the subject. The gen­\neral opinion seems to be that a fair compromise\nwith Great Britain ought to be made, and that\nthe 49th parallel and Vancouvers Island is the\nproper basis of compromise. The prospects ot\nwar is so much diminished, that no one seems\nnow to apprehend such a result. An honorable\nadjustment, by negotiation, has been called for\nby the House, and will be by the Senate. The\nnotice, it seems now to be agreed, will hasten\nan adjustment of the difficulty.\nIn the Senate to-day, the Committee on For­\neign Affairs reported without amendment the\njoint resolutions ofthe House, for the abrogation\nof the Convention with Great Britain of 1827,\nand their Chairman, Mr. Allen, was instructed\nto move they be made the special order of\nthe day, for this day at one oclock, which was\nagreed to. When the Senate come to the vote,\nit is extremely probable that they will adopt the\nHouse resolutions. That there is a majority in\nthat body in favor of the notice, there is now no\ndoubt. At one oclock, the Senate resumed the\nconsideration of the Oregon question, and Mr.\nColquitt spoke at length on the subject; much in­\nterest was felt as to Mr. C .s views, as he was\nregarded as one of those upon whose vote the\nquestion hangs, and who was well known to be\nopposed to any rash measures. Mr. C. took\nvery much the same ground with that of Mr. J.\nM. Clayton. He was for the notice as a peace\nmeasure, and believed it to be the surest course\nto secure peace.
1790c136eb60c243d00d30867da438e2 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1910.0698629819888 37.451159 -86.90916 humble Instuiueut In one o dc most\ndiabolical plots over hatched to kotch\naman an ItIthadnt ubbeenforde\nblessed fac dat dc Lnwd was wid me\nId sho have been trapped\nDar was a lady good lookln yallah\nwlddab dat Indooced me In mub so ¬\nphisticated Innocence to hot her ban\nnow an agln an guggled like a jug\nwId bashfulness every time An sbo\nsoftly wWspuhed In mub yeah dat her\nhusband had died o dat ar Intellectual\ndisease infomatlon on do brain lean\nIn her mighty nlgb 300 on deposit an\nall alone In de col world cept for\none brudder eight feet tall But uh\nwell sab I was tuk sick on muh way\nhomo count o a cullud man dat was\nfatigued bout do afosald wlddab\nkotchln me an bommerln wldout\nmussy Lawds wuk sab dough I\ndidnt organize It at do tImeontwell-\nI was fast in muh bed to two weeks\nWhen I was able to crepe out into de\nsunshine again I learned dat it wasnt\nbrains dat had killed her bus ban but\na gropln pain Inbls abandon dat\ntwisted him outn lila mawtal qulle\nan do money he left on deposit was\nwhat de couts bad clected outn him\nTurn time to time In fines Ande\nrudder eight feet tall dat a critcrprlfl\nIn pusson could a made his fawchln\noutn In de opry business was two\nhalf brudders bole hunchbacks to\nfeet high an busted In delr flnanclals\nat dat An sides de cullud man dat\ngimme de bcatln bad done mard de\nwlddah next day arter his frolic wid
0db4ffd2ddfa86ad0585675334258605 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.875683028486 43.798358 -73.087921 eipality. I know, said Mr. L., you are\nfamous for jumping in Wales; but that is\nnot owing, I suppose, so much to the\nstrain of preaching which the people hear,\nas to the enthusiasm of their characters.\nIndeed, said the Welchman, you would\njump too, if you heard and understood\nsuch preaching. Why, said Mr. L., do\nyou not think that I could make them\njump if I were to preach to them ! You\nmake them jump ! exclaimed the Welch-ma - n\n; you make them jump ! A Welch-ma - n\nw ould set fire to the world while you\nwere lighting the match. The whole\ncompany became very much interested in\nthis new turn of the subject, and unan-\nimously requested the good man to give\nthem some specimen of style and man-\nner of preaching in the "Principality.\nSpecimen, said he, I cannot give vou : if\nJohn Ellis were here, he would give you\na specimen indeed. O, John Ellis is a\ngreat preacher. Well, said the company,\ngive us something that vou have heard\nfrom him. Oh, no ! said he, I cannot do\njustice to it besides, do you understand\nthe Welch language? They said no, not\nso far as to follow a discourse. Then,\nsaid he, it is impossible for you to under-\nstand, if I tvere to give you a specimen.\nBut, said they, cannot you put it into\nEnglish ? Oh ! said he, your poor mea-\ngre, language would spoil it; it is not ca-\npable of expressing those ideas which a\nWelchman can conceive. I cannot give
106a910b51963bd25bbb8a6963e608f2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.3109588723999 41.681744 -72.788147 about government ownership of tele-\ngraph and telephones. In it Mr.\nBurleson exhibits a strange lapse of\nmemory or understanding. He rec-\nommends .in that, report that all of\nthe rural free delivery of the United\nStates be taken out of the govern-\nment's hands and farmed out to pri-\nvate contractors under various routes\nand he sustains it by the argument\nthat the contractors can do the work\ncheaper than the rural carriers are\nnow doing it for the government.\n"I agree with him as to the prin-\nciple of it, but it is contradictory to\nall of his arguments and to every\nutterance on the question he has\nmade since I have known him in\npublic office. I do not think he is a\nfit person to decide it. He is carry-\ning about today in his private fortune\n proceeds of the labor of Texas\ncenvicts in connection with cotton\nfarming on his land in that state. An\ninvestigation by the Texas legislature\nshowed that his farm was let out,\nrun by convict labor, and that he re-\nceived a share of the proceeds of the\nfarm. Now he is the last person in\nthe world to be , talking about gov-\nernment ownership and issuing orders\nand edicts from his department to\nthe postal employes of this country,\ndenying them in substance the right\nto organize themselves to respectfully\npresent their claims to congress or\nthe department. Mr. Burleson rep-\nresents in concrete form labor that\nhas no right to speak.\n"This is another one of the presi-\ndent's advisers with whom he will\nconsult on this bill after the power\nis delegated to him to consolidate the\ndepartments."
5ea05c085707dd716d5842f4954620ef PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.4342465436328 31.960991 -90.983994 I WILL offer for sale, to the highest bid­\nder for cash, before the court house door\nin the town of Port Gibson,Claiborne coun­\nty, on Monday the 29th day of May next,\n[1843,] between the hours of 11 oclock a\nm and 3 oclock p m, the following tracts,\npieces or parcels of land, in said county,\nto wit: Lots 3and 4, section 43, township\n10, range 3, East, containing 408 acres;\nLot 2, section 45, township 13, range 3,\nEast, containing 36 acres; Fractional sec­\ntion 13, township 13, range 4, East, con\ntaining 47 acres ; Lots 2 and 3, section 12,\ntownship 13, range 4, East, containing\n135 acres; West half of lot 2, section 32,\ntownship 14, range 4, East, containing40\n«eres; Lots 5 and 6, section 33, township\n14, range 4, East, containing 198 acres;\nLots 1, 2, 3,4 5, section 36, township\n14, range 4, East, containing 341 acres;\nWest half of lots 3 aud 4, section 37, town­\nship 14, range 4, East, containing 298\nacres; Part of section 38, township 14,\nrange 4, East, containing 70 acres; South\nhalf of section 42, township 14, range 4,\nEast, containing 392 acres; West half of\nNorth West quarter of section 42, town­\nship 14, range 4, East, containing 98 acres;\nNorth West quarter of section 43, town­\nship 14, range 4, East, containing 196\nacres; Fractional section 25, township 13,\nrange 3, East, containing 325 acres; as­\nsessed as the property of Charles A. La­\ncoste, Thomas Bernard and Lemuel Pit­\ncher, and will be sold, or as much thereof\nas may be necessary to pay $29 43 cts.,\ntbe State and county Tax due thereon for\nthe year 1842, and alt costs.
4a4b447a0b2c6831f277391c77527c9c WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.195890379249 35.318728 -82.460953 Sec. 3 . Upon the filling of com\nplaint, under oath, by a reputable citi-\nzen, or information furnished under\noath by an officer charged with the ex- -\necution of the law before a Justice,of I\nthe peace, recpfder, j mayor, or other I\nofficer authorized by law to issue war-- I\nrants, charging that any person, firm, I\ncorporation, association, or company, I\nby whatever name called, has In his,\ntheir,Tor; Its possession, at a place or I\nplaces specined, more than one gallon I\noi spirituous or vinous liquors or more I\nthan five gallons of malt liquors for the I\npurpose of --sale, a warrant shall be Is-- 1\nsued commanding the officer to whom\nit is directed tta search the; place or\nplaces described :in - such complaints or\ninformation; and if more thanone al-- 1\nIon of spirituous or vinous liquors or I\nmore than five of malt liquors\nbe found in any such place or. places,\nto seize and take Into custody all such\nintoxicating liquors described in said\ncomplaint or information, . and seize\nand take into his custody "all glasses,\nbottles, kegs, "; pumps, bars, or other\nequipment used in the business of sell-\ning intoxicating liquors which may be\nfound at such place or places; and\nsafely -- keep the same subject to the\norders of the court. The complaint or\ninformation shall describe the place or\nplaces to be . searched with sufficient\nparticularity to Identiiy tne same, ana\nshall describe the intoxicating liquors\nor other property alleged to be used in\ncarrying on the business of selling In\ntoxicating liquors as particularly as\npracticable, and any description, how\never general, that will enable tne om-c - er\nexecuting the warrant to identify\nthe property seized shall ; be deemed\nsufficient
109056cd440ec6aa29da9d079946347a THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.5164383244546 46.187885 -123.831256 cannery employes are working some\nof them not half the time, and very\nlittle salmon is being put up. Well\ninformed canners estimate the pack\non the river up to the first inst.,\nfrom 175,000 to 210,000 cases: proba\nbly 200,000 cases would bo a fair es-\ntimate of the total salmon paok on\nthe Columbia river from April 1st to\nJuly 1st this year. Usually there is\na May run, a June run, and a July\nrun. As for the April ran it is a thing\nof the past Time was when boats\nin April caught some salmon; that\ntime is gone by, apparently never to\n.r eturn. This year the usual May\nrun didn't appear, and the June run\nwas also absent For the last ten\nyears the river has usually been full\nof fish from the Fourth of July as\nlong as the canneries wanted to run.\nTti '83. thev hpemn rnrrnnc in irrpftt\nnumbers on the second, the day of\nthe big fire, and swarmed up the\nstream through the remainder of the\nmonth. In '84, they were a little\nlater; iu '85, salmon were plenty after\nthe 8th; in '86. they were in profusion\nfrom the 10th onwards. They are\nlooked for daily, and the probabilities\nfavor a big run of fish any day now.\nWhenever the salmon come in they\nwill be packed. The canneries are\nall well equipped with men and ma-\nterial, and should occasion offer,\nfrom 15,000 to 18,000 cases a day\ncould bo packed on the river. The\nvolume of the pack of '87 depends in\nn greater degree than ever before on\nthe July run, as the total pack to\ndate is away behind that of former\nyears. In every cannery groups of\ndisconsolate Chinamen are standing\naround, viewing with hungry eyes the\nFEW SALMON TOSSED ON THE DOCK
64036f90ac437421766a41a5ae9b4fde NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.7219177765094 41.681744 -72.788147 The present enrollment at the Plain-\nville Grammar school stands at R17\npupils registered. When school opened\nfor the term, there was an enrollment\nof 755 and Principal Orrin L. Judd\nthen estimated that it would reach the\n800 mark. It Is provable that more\nwill enter before the month is over as\nseveral aro absent at the present time\ndue to sickness and others are out f\ntown. It is probable that the total\nnumber will reach 850 before Novem-\nber. There have been approximately\n110 new pupils admitted to the school.\nThe kindergarten has 81 pupils tn\nits room and of these. 70 are new\ncomers. The first grade rooms are\ncrowded, approximately 47 in each\nroom, the overage enrollment for first\ngrades is about 35 or 40.\nAfter November 1, there will bo no\nmore new pupils admitted to the\nschool unless they have had attended\nbefore. There are also new state rules\nin regards to admitting pupils under\nhe age of six years. The law requires\nthem to be at least that age. However,\nwith consent of the school board,\nhis rule may be overcome and with\nthis result the Plainville Grammar\nschool is admitting pupils for the kin-\ndergarten at the age of five or over.\nThe action of the school board on this\nmatter is one to be appreciated by the\npeople Insmuch as It gives their chil-\ndren an added year for education\nwhereas they would have to wait un-\ntil the age of six for entering.\nThe expense of transportation for\nchildren who live where they have\nto take the trolley to school has been\ndecidedly increased. There are 121\npupils receiving car tickets this term\nwhile last year there were but 100.\nThese children live in the White Oak\ndistrict and past the Landers. Frary\nand Clark company plant. Each child\nis given a book of tickets which will\nlast them for a period of two weeks.\nA book of tickets costs the school\n$1 which means that there are $250\nworth of transfers used every month\nand with 10 months of school, the ex\npense of $2,500 will be incurred.
339981a021160e3a6ae5f034aa1877e6 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.1273972285642 37.561813 -75.84108 ISeginmng wild a quarter ot a century\nago it was urged that the Kepublican\nparty was a sectional party, and men\nthe iien Hill stamp urged that sectional-\nism would never cease while it existed.\nIt required four years of frightful car-\nnage, and the enfranchisement of the\nslave population, to blot this from tho\nends of their tongues and to convince\nthe ignorant ranters of the North that the\nsectionalism was wholly on the other side.\na Without so much cost we hope in time\nconvince the mils ot the country that\nthe Kepublican party is not responsible\nin the slightest degree for the mainte-\nnance of cither war or race issues.\npeople and a party who look calmly on\nwhile men who are pardoned rebels\nerect costly monuments to perpetuate\na the memory and rebellious acts of de\nceased soldiers whose heroism was only\nknown in rebellion cannot justly be ac\ncused of keeping alive war issues. The\nmen who keep them alive are they who\nglorify treason by honoring its chief-\n and erecting monuments to those\nwho died in its service.\nMen w ho w ere rebels can reside in the\nNorth as comfortably and as undisturbed\nas the most valiant of Union soldiers.\nIn their mingling with tho people they\nhear nothing, see nothing and know\nnothing of war issues. In their rela-\ntions w ith their neighbors, in church,\nthe polls and in business it is to them\nthough there had never been a war.\nThey are not proscribed, they are not\neven pointed out. And they tind them-\nselves living among a people who have\nforgotten tho war except as an inspira-\ntion of patriotism and as it illustrates\nGod's tremendous judgment upon great\ncrimes like slavery.\nWhat is true of tho war issue is true\nof the race issue. The Republicans\nthe country do not urge the blacks\nvote against tho whites. Hut in\nin South the whites aro urged to vote\nagainst the blacks, and this not by Re-\npublicans, but by Democrats.\nThe war issues would soon die out
2b7a953c390c8c24ac78458d22e3a585 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1912.1106557060818 39.456253 -77.96396 This organization has tackled the\nproblem of police discrimination against\nprisoners and their unjust arrest on\ntrivial offenses, their maltreatment of¬\nten on their way to the station, ami\nlias, through the co-operation of Police\nCommissioner Khinelander Waldo, so-\ncured equal protection and Justice to\ncolored prisoners as is glyen to all oth¬\ner?. No longer Is a colored prisoner or\ncitizen misused by a policeman in the\ncity of Now York. Next it took up the\nquestion of certain localities where\ngangs wore in the habit of insulting\ncolored people when in their locality.\nThese gangs wore dispersed.\nNow it is vigorously attacking tho\ncustom of discrimination in public\nplaces.restaurants, theaters, hotels\nand cafes. It has brought a number of\nsuccessful suits against those places to\nenforce the civil rights law. A custom\nhad been growing in New York city to\nrefuse colored people seats in the or¬\nchestra of tho theaters. In a t«'st case\n was brought by the committee\nHarry A. Levy, assistant treasurer of\nthe Lyric theater, was convicted of n\nmisdemeanor for excluding a colored\nman and young lady from tho orches¬\ntra seats of his theater.\nHe offered to exchange the seats for\ntwo in the balcony, but this was re\nfused. After a hard drawn out legal\nfight. conducted by Hon. Charles S.,\nWhitman, the district attorney. ? hrouch\nMr. James A. Smith, as assistant, who\nbad immediate charge of the case, and\nAttorney Charles II. Studin. one <»f\nthe advisory legal counsel of the com-(\nmittee, this first conviction criini-|\nrially under the statute of New York\ncity had a startling effect upon pre.iu-:\ndiced conditions. All of the daily pa\npors of New York gave it wide promi¬\nnence. The committee is fulfilling it«\npurposes of coping with tho constant\nincrease of discrimination and vio-j\nlence against colored men and women\n1n this city. j
025dde872356fec7b5a30d6cdcd04b68 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.2445354875026 46.187885 -123.831256 able men may reach judicial position,\nwhere they can interpet the law, and that\nonly honest, fearlesj, and sensible men\nmay reach executive position to admin-\nister the law. It is a cowardly and scan-\ndalous thing for the press, the pulpit, or\nthe individual to endeavor to make it\nappear that politics is anything other\nthan a duty demanded of the highest\npatriotism, and alike honorable to the\nmost pious, the most learned, and the\nmost ambitions of oitizens. There are\nonly two kinds of p3litics: honest and\ndishonest; honorab.e and dishonorable;\npatriotic and selfish; politics for one's\ncountry, and politics for one's self. There\nshould be no other standard for political\nthan fur personal onduet. The man in\nprofessional, commercial or other em-\nployment should have no higher or purer\ncode than the man who engages in poli-\ntics. It is just as Cowardly and wrong to\nlie in the pulp.t or in the newspaper\noffice, to betray professional confidence,\nor to steal in business, as it is to lie or\nsteal in politics, or steal in office, and no\nmore so. The man wuo misrepre-\nsent, overreach, defraud, and lie in the\nlowest political position will defraud, in-\ntrigue, lie, and cheat in the highest posi-\ntion to which he may attain, and betray\nthe most sacred trust that may be im-\nposed upon him. It is to the honest politi-\ncian that the country is indebted for its\nprogress. Of this class were our early\nfathers, who formed for us our constitu-\ntion, who moulded our organic laws, and\nwho shaped the institutions of our coun-\ntry. Of this class were the men who\nconducted our national affairs with suc-\ncess down to a period verging upon the\ncivil war. Of this class were the states-\nmen and soldiers wh j carried us success-\nfully through that war, with Abraham\nLincoln at their head. There are no idi-\nots in po'.itioa. There is no place in po-\nlitical life for the man of dull\nintellect. So, instead of classifying\npoliticians a3 honest men, knaves and\nfools, they can be writtan as honest and\nhonorable men, knavish and selfish men.\nThere is a class who make. of politics a\nbread-gettin- g
b1ac34f4c5d1060e9f0be2d65da83ea6 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.8397259956876 31.960991 -90.983994 which have recently held elections, it is natural\nfor human nature to exult at a triumph, but it is\nfoolish to parade these successes as so many vir­\ntues and excuses why Locofocoism should pros\nper, when reflecting men, and men of intelh\ngencc look to this state of things as a sure imh\ncation of vitiated morals. We discover, also\nan indication in your party to support Mr. Ca!\nhoun for the next Presidency. We very well\nremember how bitterly you were opposed to Mr.\nC. and his nullification doctrines in 1832, and\nas he professes not to have changed in his polit­\nical course, we are more than surprised to di;\ncover you occupying place in his ranks! who\nhas changed then? Not Mr. Calhoun, surely!—\nThen you must have changed yourself, if so, we\nare almost induced to suspect your motive, and\nthink you too have made a surrender of your\npolitical principles, and thrown yourself in the\n of a party, to be led by Mr. Calhoun over\nthe rough and dangerous whirlpools in his rnnd\nfancy. We could warn you in this place against\nthat man, but the party to which you belong,\n(without attributing to you any of its bad qual­\nities,) have but one blessing to contend for, and\nthat can be found in the spoils of office. Mr.\nCalhoun perhaps is as confirmed in his opinion\nof your party, and still believes you are “held\ntogether by the cohesive force of plunder,” (for\nyou know he boasts of his consistency,) as he\nsay» he is confirmed in his notions of State\nRights. Now, to convince you, (if it can be of\nany benefit to you,) that John C. Calhoun has\ntoo much ambition, without sincerity, and by\nmeans a prophet, we will subjoin a letter of\nhis to us, in 1838, which was intended for pub­\nlication at the time, but was omitted. If his
0f319562bc5222f87d3478852c34ea1a CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1901.4726027080162 41.875555 -87.624421 per mouth? This fact Is convincing\nproof that they do not want to. neither\ndo they Intend to pay. Money was bor-\nrowed for a given time one or two\nmonth, and was contracted for to be\npaid at that time; the men were not\ncompelled to keep paying Interest If\nthey paid principal when due.\n"The money was cheap enough at\nany price when borrowed. The money\nwas loaned for groceries, rent, sick-\nness, funeral expenses, and In many\ncases to square outside accounts to pre-\nvent trial board Inquiries,\n"They will agree to pay (I per cent per\nannum, or Khi per cent a minute any-\nthing to get the money,\n"Many claims were secured by chat-\ntel nioilgages, executed by husband\nand wife, which these deailbeat won't\nprotect. Wo have no desire to fore-\nclose mortgages, thereby \nfamilies of their homes; but lenient,\nJust and kind treatment on our part\ncuts no Ice with people of this charac-\nter. This class of men have no right\non the l'ollco Depaitinent, when there\nare so ninny good, honorable men ready\nto tako their place who nro willing\nand hoitorablo enough to pay their con-\ntracted obligations. Thcso nioii borrow\nwhere they can, vihon thoy can, from\nwhom thoy can, and aro alway on tho\nalert to learn of new places and new\npeople to victimize.\n"They perjure themselves to get\nmoney, making falbi statements that\nthey owo no other claims of llko char-\nacter, whllo all tho til io they nro In-\ndebted to ninny otherk aggregating\nhundreds of dollars.\n"Oh, yes, I am onto tielr curves, ns\nthese aro tho part am' parcel that\ninako tho-
1b134b6b5f4a0656a1c8b992d1936673 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.4397259956875 44.939157 -123.033121 class quality of clean, puro ice. Somo\npcoplo liavo a projudico against arti\nficial ice, calling it unhealthful, nnd\nthis is simply becauso thoy do not un\nderstand tho method of its manufac-\nture. Knowing that chemicals aro used\nin making it they imagino theso samo\nchemicnls aro mingled with tho water.\nSuch is far from tho fact, tho ico is as\npuro nnd clenr ns any mndo by naturo\nin her great winter laboratory. A visit\nto tho Salem ico plant would dlsabuso\nthoir minds of all such ideas. It Is nn\naxiom in chemistry that whero evapo-\nration takes plnco cold is produced,\nand it is by taking advantngo of this\nprinciple that artificial ico is produced.\nIn tho big air compressors nn\npower cnglno is swiping tho ntmosphcro\nnnd squeezing it into nlmost nothing.\nIn tho comer of tho room near it\nnro ammonia tanks with pipes connect-\ning with thoso leading from \ncompressor through tho frcozlng vats\n" When tho proper pressure is reached\nthe nlr and ammonia nnd n salt solution\nnro sent through tho pipes and tho re-\nlieving of tho promuro on tho air and\ntho evaporation of nmmonia produces\ncold reaching below 32 degrees. Those\npipes nro carried along and nround tho\nfreezing tanks, which nro filled with\npuro fresh water, which in a short\ntlmo aro converted into clenr transpar-\nent, healthful Ico, as puro nnd sweet ns\nif from n mountain lnko. Resides tho\nmaking of ico tho pipes nro led through\ntho cold storago rooms nnd on opening\ntho doors n breath of gcnulno winter\ngreets you, and tho whlto frost gath\nered on tho pipes makes ono nlmost\nshiver. Any ono visiting tho plnnt will\nlose all projudices against artificial\nice, for it is mndo in elenn metallic\ntanks tightly closed, and from water\ntaken front tho city mnlns.
87398beda0c242339c5226695b17e95c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9002731924206 39.513775 -121.556359 thoustiud eight hundred and lifty.slx, deo|iire Oroville\nto lie the Count; seat of Butte County from and after\nthe said twenty-fourth day of September A. 1». 1-Oti.\nin pursuance of an act eniitied An Act to change and\nA\\ the County Seat of Butte County, approved March\nloth, tsr.ti; and it further appearing toiny satisfaction\nthat the present buildings nwhiali the said Court lias\nI,coi held, and in which the Uecords have been kept\nin Hie town of Bidwell, are unsafe us a place of de-\npository for said If. cords, and IhaUlhe same is liable\nto de,truction by Are. by reason of their being eon.\nsi reeled entire of wood. And it further appearing\nthat there is no building In the town ot Bidwell. suit-\nable for holding the terms of this Court, and to safely\nkeep its Uecords I torn Are <>r other calamity, and it\nappearing that the town ofcro- ille is a 111 place to\nhold terms of Ibis Court, and that aside mid com\nniodious brick building in said town lias been ten-\ndered the county it« county buildings.\nIl is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that\nthe Clerk el the County Court.in and for Butte\nCounty, forthwith remove his office and the Uecords\nthereof, to < iroville, in the building selected by tin*\nsaid Board of Supervisors as County Buildings, and\nthat lie do and t 1111*110! the business of his said office,\nat tie* town of Oroville. as the County Seal of Butte\nCounty. And it is further ordered, that the terms ot\nsaid Court, from and after the said iwetdy b.urth day\nof September. A 1> IS Mi, he held at the said town of\nOroville until otherwise ordered.\nAmi il Is further ordered, that the Clerk of the\nCounty Court in at d for Butte County, issue an order\nunder the seal of said Court, in conformity with this\nrder.
3481f0f560e38bc1ceee79f43a91a131 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8183059793057 44.939157 -123.033121 yards holding for lower values are said\nto have been caught with short stocks\nm the face of the most severe car -\nshortage in recent years, and their ef\nforts to get lumber for fall trade re\nquirements has resulted in a very heavy\nvolume of inquiries.\nv est coast nulls are saut to be ae- -\ncepting only such part of the business\noffering as may be shipped in a reas-\nonably short time: and are generally re-\nported fighting shv of londing up on\ncontracts culling for delivery a month\nor two hence. The week's advance of\n$1 right through the list, while not\ntaking up the sag that has occurred in\nthe values since Mnv, is looked upon\nas the possible beginning of a 'drive"\nwhich may add to the general\nprosperity of the Pacific northwest.\nOrders, last week, booked for trans\ncontinental rail delivery exceeded ship\nments by rail 20,070,000 feet, or 33.34\nper cent, a condition in this particular\nbranch of the trade that is without\nparallel this year.\nProduction tor the week was 6!,\n434,649 feet, which was P.40 per cent\nbelow normal, the curtailment ben"\nalso attributed to the shortage of. rail\nshipping facilities.\nthe total of all orders rail, local\nand cargo for the week amounted to\n74.898,074 feet. The total of all ship\nments, r7.li20,: "ti0 feet.\nThe balance of unshipped orders in.\nthe rail trade is 7807 cars and the bal\nance of unshipped cargo orders is 41.,\n7S4,7:)8 feet in the coastwise trade and\n42,"97,t20 feet in the export trade.
05b80fd840fb0cc71d3d0d6d8ce79284 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.8205479134956 37.53119 -84.661888 Wm. llraxdale for gaming waa fined $10\nand coats, and Hill Foster wa treated in\nlike manner. Len Hutchinson, for carry-\ning concealed weaons did not appear, but\nhe was fined $26 and coals and a judgment\noften days in jail entered againat him.\nJoah Mulllna got the same dose for the\naame ouVnw, but the judgment for some\nreason waa stayed, John Walls, same of-\nfense and same verdict. Jerry Hughes,\nPete and Matt Houston, were each fined\nfor gaming. Hill Alatott, fined $10 for\nbreach of peace, and M. T. Morgan for aa.\naault, $17. Meaar. William Hrrndon, J.\nII. Dunlap and laaao II. Irabue wereaworn\nin a attorneya. John Young refused to\ntestify againat Jim Carter before tho giand\njury and he was ordered tojiil. Col. W.\nO. Welch and flcorgo Denny, who worked\nin some of their wit on thla case, were fined\n$5 each. Polly Ann dill, who sued her\nhusband for divorce, condoned the of-\nfense charged by returning to Id bed and\nboard and her suit waa dismissed. Jo Mc- -\nSoilth filed an answer denying each and\nevery charge thai his wife had brought\nsgainat him. Her attorneys asked that al-\nimony be allowed her during the pendeucy\nof the case and It will be argued on the\nlilth day of tiro term. The case againat\nWilliam (ireaham and John Held for the\nmurder of Cam Uowsejr waa called Tuesday\nmorning and after several hours were con-\nsumed In tho effort to get a jury, the court\nadjourned after getting ten and ordered\nthe sherill to suinmou la more men irom\nwhich to choose the other two. The\npanel wa completed from the number, 40\nmen In all being examined, and It la aa fol-\nlows: David Bcolt, 11 F. Oaine, J. II.\nKoul, John Pepples, Isaao Cowan, Wm.\nAlexander, W. It McCall, John Htepheii-son -
2a2b10ce1c336e082ab7c24a2c52b4e3 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1859.2123287354134 39.560444 -120.828218 amended.the Registration law: “In addition to marri-\nages, birth-, divorces and deaths, there are also to be\nentered for registry in the office of the County Recorder,\nthe dame, residence, locality, etc., of all persons who\nmay take out letters testamentary or of administration\nThis duty is made under the new law to devolve upon\nthe Clerk of the Probate Court; likewise in the case of\ndivorces the Clerks of the Courts in which divorces are\ngranted, instead of the parties applying, as in the pres-\nent case, are required to file record of the same. The\nClerks in performing each service may charge in addi-\ntion to costs, two dollars, to be paid by the parties apply-\ning. Notices of marriages, births and deaths are to be\nentered according to the regulations already prescribed,\nbut under the amendatory Act. are simplified\nand shortened. The County Recorder is to receive one\ndollar for every entry, one half of which he may retain.\nThe remainder is to go to the State Registrar.”\nThe Registrar will receive duplicate records every\nthree months, from which to prepare annual returns for\nthe State's use. It is supposed that the change in the\nlaw will require a re-appointment of Registrar. [Reg-\nister is not the word.] If the Registrar must be re-\ncommissioned, wc shall regret to see the sufferings of\nthe present official prolonged contrary to his wishes, as\nit is understood that he took the office last year at a\nsacrifice and does not desire to remain in a position\nwhere, he comically expresses it. the trar is a d— d sight\nmore than the Regis.
4c4a356f4e6f5978281aa3cb63207855 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.1027396943175 41.681744 -72.788147 of, the comittee for this afternoon to\ndiscuss his military bill introduced\ninto the senate a few weeks ago. The\npossibility of military activities and\nthe action taken by the governor in\nregard to taking a military census of\nthe state have prompted the chair-\nman of this committee, which will\nprove to be one of the most impor-\ntant of the general assembly, to hold\nn hearing upon the military bill,\nwhich is most sweeping in its pro-\nvisions, and will probably be opposed\nby labor leaders throughout the\nfctate on account of at least one fea-\nture, which permits the militia to be\ncalled out for riot or disturbance of\nany sort. This is in opposition to\nthe provisions of a bill, which has\nbeen introduced through their ef-\nforts, which provides that the state\nmilitia shall not be called upon to\ndo strike similar duty. It remains\ntO' be seen whether, in view of the\nextreme situation into which state\nand nation are forced at the present,\ntime, the labor people will oppose\nthe Brooks military bill.\nThe bill which is most exhaustive\nprovides for three classes of service,\nthe unorganized militia, the national\nguard and the naval militia. It pro-\nvides principally that all male citizens\nand all male residents of this state,\nwho have or shall have declared their\nintention of becoming citizens of the\nUnited States between the ages of IS\nand 45 years of age, not exempted by\nlaw. shall be subject to military duty\nand be designated as the militia.\nThe unorganized militia is to con-\nsist of all male citizens and all male\nresidents who have become or shall\ndeclare fheir intention of becoming\ncitizens of the United States between\nthe above ages.
0cbec00b6c1a6d8d315b4d6af72548c2 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.613387946519 39.290882 -76.610759 power to provide for calling forth tlie militia to\nexecute the laws of the Union, to suppress in-\nsurrection and repel invasion. Tlie militiaforce\nprovided for these purposes, by existing laws,\nand which, to render it effective, is compelled to\nbe at all times provided with arms, accoutrements\nand ammunition, and to be mustered and drilled\nat stated periods, and kept always ready for ser-\nvice, comprises, with limited anil enumerated\nexemptions, tlie whole of the able-bodied male\nwhite population of the United States, between\nthe ages of IS and 45. When it is considered\nthat the number of these accjr.iing to official re-\nturns exceed a million and a half of men, and\nprobably at this period, amounts to two millions,\nthe immense and consequently oppressive exces\nof the existing preparatory enrolment, beyond\nthe possible wants of the country, must be aupa-\nlent to all. Ilow fur the existing organization\nand laws passed by tlie States in pursuance\nthereof have proved successful in accomplishing\nthe great object in view, viz: the instruction and\nimprovement of the citizen soldiers in military\ntactics, you are able to judge foe yourselves.?\nThe results were a short time since summed up\nby the officer before alluded to, in these emphatic\nwords: "It is to expect, that the whole\nadult population of the country can, or will f-.r -\n--nish themselves with the articles required by\nlaw; or that their collection, for any number of\ndays they can afford to devote to this object, and\nunder tlie usual circumstances of such assem-\nblages, can produce any beneficial effects to\nthemselves or their country. Already, in a num-\nber of the States, the system has sunk under the\nweight of public opinion, and the practical ques-\ntion now is, whether we shall remain in fact,\ndefenceless, or resort to a large standing military\nforce in time of peace, that just dread of all tree\nGovernments, or adopt an efficient pl- n, which\nwill.prepare for tlie public defence the greatest\nforce at the least cost, and without danger."\nTo remedy the evils of the present system, it\nhas been repeatedly proposed to re-organize the\nmilitia, in such manner, as to reduce the number\nof Mien, wlio shall be fitted and always ready to\nperform tlie service contemplated by the Consti-\ntution, say from the number of two millions to\ntwo hundred thousand, and to pay the latter a\nreasonable compensation out of the National\nTreasury, in order to remunerate them for the\nincreased burthen thus imposed upon them.
134d22d3176e98087c31cf5450255b0f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.9958903792492 39.745947 -75.546589 Charles C. Copeland.\nincluding those In attendance wore:\nMr. and Mrs. Ash. Miss Austin. Mr. and\nMrs. William N. Bonnard, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Bancroft, Mr. and Mrs. E. T.\nBetts. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas. Mr. and\nMrs. E. T. Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Wil­\nlard Hall Porter, Mrs. H. B, Richard­\nson, Miss Agnes Richardson, Miss\nEleanor Betts. Mr. and Mrs. George P.\nBissell, Miss Blair, Miss Bancroft, Miss\nMary Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. A. A . Cur­\ntis. Miss Corlilt, Miss Chase. Miss Vir­\nginia S. Cooper, Miss Elizabeth D.\nCanhy, Miss Elizabeth S. Swift, Miss\nStciff, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Scott. Mr.\nand Mrs. J . Ernest Smith, Miss Eliza­\nbeth B. Smith, Miss Mary Swift, Mr.\nand Mrs. Montleth Jackson, Mias Fran­\nces Jackson, Mias Mary C. Jackson,\nMiss Ethel P. Canhy, Miss Elsie B.\nCooch, Miss Madeline Draper, Miss\nJulia S. DuPont. Mr. and Mrs. T. C .\nDuPont, Mr. and Mrs. A . B. DuPont,\nMrs. W. K. DuPont. Miss 1/oulse Da\nDuPont. Mr. and Mrs. J . A, Moore, Miss\nMorse, Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Miller,\nMias Mcllvalne. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S,\n Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Gilpin, Miss\nGilpin, Miss Mabel C. Jackson, Miss\nMargartte Johnston. Mr. and Mrs. Pres­\nton Lea, William C. Spruance, Jr.. H .\n0. Scott, Mr. Sllltman, Dr. Edmund D.\nShortlldge, William L. Scott, E . ft.\nCochran. Jr., A. B. Cooper, Jr.. W . H .\nCooper, Jr.. E. T . Canhy, Mr. Corhlt,\nWillard Hall Porter, Jr., C harles Pago,\nRobert Penlngton, Joseph A. Richard­\nson, John S. Andrews, James N. An­\ndrews, Thomas F. Bayard, Jr.. J. D.\nBush, John B. Bird, James F. Nlelds,\nJohn P. Nlelds, C. C. Williams, Dr.\nJoseph P. Wales. L. E. Wales. Mr.\nWallace, Mr. Winslow. Victor B. Wool-\nley, Martin E. Walker. Mr. Williams.\nGeorge A. Elliott, Dr. Walter G. Elmer,\nHarry C. Fritz, Russell Gilpin, Hugh\nGarland. Charles B. Gray, Ernest Du­\nPont. Eugtne DuPont, Jr„ LaMotte\nDuPont, Eugene DuPont, Pierre S. Du­\nPont, D. Wendell Hulhurd, Harry O.\nHaskell, LeRoy Harvey, O . B. Har­\nrington. W. P. Johnston, W. J . P. Can-\nby, Charles C. Copeland. Frederick\nLenlg, Clarence K. LaMotte. J. W. Mat­\nthews. Dr. MoLester, F. M . Munson, Jr.,\nC. L. Mcllvalne.
3a9c5940d949e35d052dbd35335efe68 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2342465436327 40.063962 -80.720915 lioRRowxxfj..Almost every day sow*\nof our subscribers complain to us of th<\nannoyance they are continually sub\njected to by people who borrow thei\npapers.people who hunger and thirs\nfor the news, but are too stingy am\nznean to pay for it and have it and eu\njoy it for themselves, like intelligen\nChristians, who have self-respect an\nsome regard for the rights of others, j\nman accustomed to read the mornin\npaper bel'or© he goes to his work or hi\nDUMiness, would just as lief lend hi\nbreakfast, and the person who has th\ncheek to borrow the one, shouldn\nhesitatA to borrow the other. There i\njust as great a disregard of proprieties\nas great a violation of personal right!\nand as great an imposition on goo\nnature, in one case as in the other.\nShould this gentle paragraph reac\nth*» eye any of the class for whom\nis intended, we would say to him, o\nthem as the caso may be, that we bein\nIn the newspaper business, are alway\nhappy to furnish a copy of our valua\nble family Journal to each aud ever,\nperson who desires to read it. We dt\nliver it in any part of the city befor\nbreakfuHt every morning, and onl.\ncharge fifteen cents a week, includin\nMundttyn. And for this small consid\nration any person who has hithert\nbeen sponging his news from his neigL\nbor, or d .priving him of it altogethei\nmay begin the world anew on a basi\nof honesty and self-respect, may hav\na newspaper all to himself, aud ma\ngo to bed at night with the light heai\nand quiet conscience that belong to tb\nman who patronizes the priuter un\npays for his newspaper.
151c4c86451579253e6f57dbbe1a12e0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1883.9082191463724 37.561813 -75.84108 the feeling of interest hn.s been ex-\ntended by the protests of those who,\nbuying and selling live stock, have n\nmistaken notion that their interests and\nthose of their customers are attacked\nunjustly. Such men declare that, the\nmotives of those who have called at-\ntention to this subject have been Hellish\nones; that (be articles published have\nlieen sensational and without a basis o\ntruth; that those who are agitating\nit his subject are ignorant of the matters,\n,of which they talk so much and so\nstrongly; and that no harm comes of\n'eating diseased flesh. Some of those\npeople who get a living by "scalping"\nIn the Chicago live stock market, have\nfreely anil publicly admitted that, for\nthe last century or more, they have,\nseen such animals sold in tho market,\nand they agree that no evil result has\ncome of eat ing diseased flesh, because\nthey, the scalpers, have not known o(\nany cases of sickness directly tracea-\nble to this cause. They fail to show\nthat any effort has ever been made to\nfollow this matter up with a view to\nlearning the facts in the cvie, and they\nsignally fail to prove that they have the\nability to decide, in any event, whether\nthe eating of the llesh of ani -,m a- ls\ncould cause bad effects or not.\nWhat such people say on the subject\nis, however, of little moment. As a\nrule they are not well informed, and\nthe mere fact that they will deal in tho\nllesh of animals suffering from loath-\nsome diseases proves that their opinion\nis not worth much. Now that atten-\ntion has been called to the subject the\nmatter will not be suffered to rest until\na more dclinitc knowledge of the extend\nV. which disease prevails in our Hocks\nand herds shall ha' e become general.\nThat a thorough understanding of\n(his matter is of National importance\nwill not be doubted by any one who\nrellccts that every person who eats\nmeat, or uses butler, chei'se, milk, or\neggs, is more or less directly affected\nby the action of any cause which tends\nto lessen the supply, increase the cost,\nor make less nutritious those articles.\nKven those who may not incur even a\nremote risk of eating diseased flesh are\ninjured by the existence of disease\namong our domestic animals; but those\nwho depend for a part of their income\ntipon the production of meat for market\nare the ones who should feel the deepest\nand show the most active interest in\nthis matter.
49cf92cfb4606ea23a6804218be339e2 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.89999996829 40.114955 -111.654923 Sho became conscious of how fast\nshe was going Instinct made keen\nby thousands of saddle miles told\nDlckslo of hor terrific pace She was\nriding faster than she would have\ndared go at noonday and without\nthought or fear of accident In spite-\nof tho sliding and the plunging down\ntho long hill the storm antI the dark-\nness brought no thought of fear for\nherself her only fear was for those\nahead In supreme moments a horse\nlike a man when human efforts be-\ncome superhuman puts tho lesser dan ¬\ngers out of reckoning and the facul-\nties set on a single purpose though\ntrained to tho breaking polnt never\nircak Low in liar saddle Dlcksle\ntried to reckon how far they had come\nand how much lay Sho could\nfeel her skirt stiffening about her\nknees and the rain beating at her\nface was sharper she knew the sleet\nas It stung her cheeks and knew what\nnext wns coming the snow\nThere was no need to urge Jim He\nhad the rein and Dlckslo bent down to\nspeak to him as sho often spoke\nwhen they were alone on the road\nwhen Jim bolting almost threw her\nRecovering instantly she knew they\nwere no longer alone She rose alert\nis her seat Her straining eyes could\nsee nothing Was there a sound in\nho wind Sho held hor breath to his\nten mil before sho could apprehend\nJim leaped violently ahead Dlcksle\nscreamed In an agony of terror She\nknow then that sho had passed anoth-\ner
5d8202175f654f2b14a3fe09443359e7 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.703551880945 39.290882 -76.610759 tree of the High Court of Clinueery of Maryland,\nthe under -igllol, a-- Trustee, will sell at public auction,\non MOM DAY, the sth day of October, at 1 o'clock, P.\nAI., at llie Exchange, in the city of Baltimore, owe un-\ndivided fifth of, la and to a around rent of TWO HUN-\nliliEl) DOLLAR?!, payable on the Ist day of Septem-\nber, Uccemlier, March and June, out of a l,ot of Ground\non the west side of Hanover street, near the corner of\nLombard, fronting on llanover street, 27 feet and ex-\ntending back 90 feel more or less.\nALSO, one undivided filth?in and In a ground ren i\nof NINETY* DOLLARS payable on llie l.'illl June, out\nof aLot of Ground situate nil thy north side of Lombard\nstreet?beginning 1-14 feet from west side of Hanover St.,\nrunning thepoo oastwardly -Ju feet on Lombard street,\n Northwardly 87 feet, thence Northwardly until it\nintersects u line drawn from the beginning mid thence\nSoutherly 9-1 feet to the beginning.\nALSO, undivided tilth in and to aground rent of\nNINETY' DOLLARS, payable on lath June, out of a\nlot of ground adjoining the above, on the North side of\nLombard street, beginning 118 feet from YVest side of\nHanover street, running thence Eastiynrdly 28 feet on\nLombard street, thence Northwardly 80 feet, then\nNorthwardly to .a i.ae drawn from the beginning and\nthen Southwardly 87 feet to the beginning.\nALS<, one undivided fifth, illand to a ground rent id'\nONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY' DOLLARS, paya-\nble on 19th June and December, out ufa lot ofground at\nthe North west corner of Hanover ami Lombard streets,\nfronting DO feet "It Hanover street, and 92 feet on Lom-\nhaid street.\nM These LOTS are nil well improved
18539172b76d92ac5b5f13a15e6be9e2 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.0616438039067 44.939157 -123.033121 (1) It shall be unlawful for any per-\nson other than a common carrier which\nis under public control us a public util-\nity, keeping such records and complying\nwith the provision, hereinbefore set\nforth, to bring or introduce any intoxi-\ncating liquor into this state for his per\nsnnal use or for the use of or for deliv-\nery to any other person, or to deliver in-\ntoxicating liquor into this state to any\nother person, and it shall be unlawful\nfor any agent of any such common ear-\nlier or other person knowingly to de-\nliver Intoxicating liquor to any minor,\nor to any person known by the agent of\nsuch common carrier to be an habitual\ndrunkard; or to any person in an intox-\nicated condition; and it shall be unlaw-\nful for any such common carrier or nnv\n agent or employe of such com-\nmon carrier knowingly to deliver in\ntoxicating liquor to any other person\nthan the original consignee whose nam\nis marked on the package containing\nthe same, lis required by the provisions\nof chapter LTill of the general laws o,\nthe stale of Oregon enacted by the leg-\nislative assembly for tin- year 1913; and\nit shall be unlawful for any person to\nhaul, transport or carry on' or through\nany street, road or other public highway\nwithin this state, for the purpose of de-\nlivery to any other person, any package\ncontaining intoxicating liquor, unless\nsuch package shall be marked as re\nquired by section 1 of said ehapter --''ill\nof the general laws of the state of Ore-\ngon, enacted by the legislative assemb-\nly of the year 113; and it shall be
0e565288f6edcb6a394971de4501d8a9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.7493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 Our answer i* that these matter.* do not\nouch the marrow of the cane. OurCath- I\n>lic cemeteries are a.* sacred to u* a*\nMir Catholic home*. Our dead one*,\nvhose hodie* are buried there, are a* dear t«\no u* a* are the living member* of our K\namities who nit round our dinner ta- H|\nile. The condition on which any one $\nan be admitted to burial in our conse* tj\nrated eemeterie* i* that he die* with the h\nnark* of the faith. If lie die* otherwi*e, <|\nt i* a deMcrulion of our cemetery, and an w\nmtrage to our religion. Whoever do- I\nlire* to be buried in llii* consecrated p\n(round mu*t *o live, and mo die. a* to be n\nmilled to tlii* burial.which, in face of e<\nhe existing civil law, cannot Ih» claimed n\nl* a general right, hut a* a special p\nirivilegc. are plenty of burying a\ndace* unconsecrated. It i* no note of t<\nivil infamy to be buried in one of these, u\na man ha*chosen, in hi* life,so let bin d\n»ody lie when he i* dead. p\nlint let us, Catholics, have the liberty d\nor the bodies of our deceased that we p\nlaim for them in life, and for ourselves, f|\no choose our company.\nA* to the small-talk about denying to\nhe "intelligences" of library-frequenter*\nhe right to "improve their minds" by 'j\ncading bad writing*, every bead of a t|\nutility, lit to be such, exert* it in regard (j\no the family. The shepherd* of tlio tj\nJhurch of Christ are bound to do tlio ,|\nmine for their llocks, and have to answer |,\no Ood for it when they do not exert all\nheir power to turn the Docks committed r|\nothem front poisoned pastures.
53c9bfe51578411fbabe5ac12d2197f3 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.7117486022566 40.807539 -91.112923 some such artifice to cover his retreat by the parties themselves, as will appear\nfrom the position into which he had been by the following extract from one of\nthrown by his vain desire to qualify those C ROGUAN'S letters. In 1818 some mis-\nwho had followed him in the raccoon and understanding arising from rumors relative\nhard cider pageantry of the day. Con-! to the affair, caused CRO-JIIAN to open a\nvicted of making an assertion which the correspondence with Gen. HARRISON.\nTecords of the senate and other familiar The letters of CROGHAN, without the an-\nhistory proved to befalse,he now attempts sicers of HARRISON, have been recently\nto qualify it by the following language: published in the administration papers, to\n" In arguing from cause to effect, I con- give a one sided view of the complaints\ntended that the appointment of Mr Liv- of a subordinate officer who seemed to\ningston was a pernicious precedent—that' think that sufficient credit was not given\nit a virtual proclamation to all who him for his services. The object is to\nwere or might be defaulters, that their in- throw blame upon Gen. HARRISON. We\nfidelity, in a public trust, constituted no know not that Col. CROGHAN has had\ninsuperable barrier to a promotion to one anything to do with the republication of\nof the highest offices in the government. \\ letters relating to a personal misunder-\nI did not attribute to Gen. Jackson a; standing that took place more than twenty\nknowledge of the default. I went even so years ago. At all events, Col. CROGHAN\nfar as to say that he might not have re- himself has left on record a clear and sat-\nflected upon the consequences of the ap- isfactory statement of the original affair,\npointment of an individual so situated. I 'which shows the whole thing in a light\nmust now say that until Gen. Jackson honorable both to Gen. HARRISON and\notherwise asserts, I am constrained to be- himself.
0e4ad3d86ad78d970f8365f6165e4643 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.3027396943176 39.513775 -121.556359 yi hmirl, I wish In lay Itrlnrr Ihr pnltlic a casn\nw hirh drsrevrs 11 liVgli coin mr trial inn. iml only as 1111\nan nt s.' ir :t I itlr skill, hill Ihal el hll nmiily also. Via ml\ntwo t ears ago. i *iidt|*'idy, and from c.nisr" nnkiinwn\nIn | nr. sri/rtl With !l Ml (if rI lilt'p<), WIIIt'll. n'.VIIIg In\nmy inability In meet Ihr rxprlisr" cnn-ri|tirnl Upon 11\nttinpnigh inriliral irealinml,ami Ihr dis* iiuriigrinrnl\nI mrt with on allrnipiing it, soon lirnimr sncli (as I\nWas I hrn led tn hrlirvrl as In drfy Ihr "kill n( a phy-\n"in:iti. 1 was frripii ally whilr in piirsinl "I my call\ning, thrown dow n In Ihr grntiml wlllmnt tin- siighlrst\nwarning, and although in«rnalhlr In Iln-agniin s, I\nyet de-pisrd ihr misrrirH nf my life.and mhui Inarm'd\n iiaik upon Ihnsr whtt Wnal.l rrmlrr inr is-i "lanco\nnr shrltrr mr from tlmigi r asi'iinnlrs who sought t* *\nprolong ihr misrrirs of my rxisirner. " hilr in thla\n•lair, and having prrthoi 10 my iitthclloii tasted the\n• wi'ris nf Hlr, I oner ninrr was Iml ii't il In allrnt[>l\nsnrk ing : 1Inl ii |ill t "jrill li, a ml. h> rnroniliii'liilal in11,\ncull, r| upon Dr. D. J . Cy.apkii . I told him my cir\n(•iiio-i inrrs and my inahilliy to reward lihn for In*\n•in in s. regardless of which, how i t , r, hr at imw\niindrrln'ik my ease, and with the hi*—sing of Hod I\nwas oner more restored to perfect health. Unable\nIn r* ward him for the tmnn which I rnjny tl present,\nand yrl I'nli*riniis nl nit indrhtrdm "• .
18a8e82fef9c66f1cb01869e1f52011f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.401369831304 41.004121 -76.453816 lowing iioragraphs givo tho citizen an idea of\nwhat glory costs the soldier:\nAfter Longstreet's soldiers had driven tho\nSecond corjis into their iutrenchmeiits along\nthe Brock road, a battlo exhausted infantry-\nman stood behind a large oak tree. His back\nrested against it. He was very tired, and\nheld bis rillo loosely in his hand. Tho Con-\nfederates wero directly in our front This\nsoldier was apparently in perfect safety. A\nsolid shot from a Confederate gun struck tlw\noak treo squarely, about four feet from thu\nground, but it did not have sufficient force to\ntear through the Uugh wood. Tho soldier\nfell dead. Thero was not a scratch on him.\nHo was killed by concussion. While wo wero\nfighting savagely over theso Intrenchmenta\nthe woods lu our front caught Cre, and I saw\nmany of our wounded burned to death.\nMust they not have suffered horribly I I am\nnot at all sure of that Tho smoke rolled\nheavily and slowly before the fire. It envel-\noped tho wounded, and I think that by far\nthe larger portion of the men who wero\nroasted wero suffocated before tho flames\ncurled round them. Tbo spectacle was cour-\nage sappiug and pitiful, and it appealed\nstrongly to the imagination ot the spec-\ntators; but I do not believe that wound-\ned soldiers who were being burned suffered\ngreatly, If they suffered at all.\nWhen wo got into the Brock road (at tbo\nbattle of the WUdsrness) iiitrenchments n\nman a few Hies to my left dropped dead, shot\nJust above tho right eyo. Ho did not groan\nor sigh or niako tho slightest physical move- -\nmeat, except that his chest heuvwl n fow\ntimes. Tho light went out of his face in-\nstantly, leaving it without a particle of ex-\npression. It was plastic, and as tho facial\nmuscles contracted it took ninny shapes.\nWhen this man's body became cold and hU\nface hardened It was terribly distorted, as\nthough ho had Buffered Intensely, Any ir-so - u\nw ho had not seen him killed would havo\nsaid that he had endured sapient agony\ndeath released him. I havo seen dead\nsoldiers' faces which were wreathed iu smiles,\nnnd heard their comrades say that they had\ndied happy, I do not believe that the faco of\na dead soldier lying on a luittlelleld ever\ntruthfully Indicates tho mental or physical\nanguish or iieacef uluess of mind which ho suf.\nfei od or enjo ed before his death. Tho faco\nIs plastic alter death, and as tito facial mus-\ncles cool mid contract they draw the face into\nmany shapes.
1127ad5b46120184790f5134e0902c10 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.476775924661 39.745947 -75.546589 crats dare not go to the country on a\nplank unqualifiedly endorsing Ihe\nHague as President, Wilson submitted\nto the Senate. Leaders who are. here\npredicted today that Bryan will he de­\ncisively defeated in the resolutions\ncommittee and that a plank will be\nadopted based an that written by\nthe Democrats of Virginia.\nTtie Virginia platform uses this\nlanguage with reference to ihe league\n"We advocate prom pt rati Anation of\nt.he Ireaty without rroervalions which\nwould Impair its essential integrity.”\nBryan also wants a plank affirming\nthe parly's support of national pro­\nhibition. In that he is to be vigor­\nously opposed by wet forces headed\nhy Gov. Edwards' of New Jersey, who\nis seeking the Presidential" nomination\non a personal liberty platform. Both\nthe wets and drys will find opposi­\ntion from a number of deleg­\nates who believe that ,r view of the\nSupreme Court's ruling on prohibi­\ntion the qinvstton is settled ami\nshould nnt be touched upon by the\nDemocratic platform.\nAs to the Irish plank there is a gen­\neral feeling among leaders and del­\negates who ape on the iground that\nsome general non committal expres­\nsion of sympathy for Irish nation­\nalist aspirations might well be in­\ncluded in the plalforiiv but a wranpfi\nthreatens, over the form of plank.\nSome hold the view that Ireland's\nhope of freedom lies In Ihe toague of\nnations, and that any reference to\nIrish freedpm should be coupled with\nthe demand for ratification of the\nleague covenant. An active lobby will\nbe on the iground isle this weej; to\ninsist that a separate Irish plaivk be\nadopted,
9f79c5033fde68e762cb64160ec49712 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.9410958587011 41.262128 -95.861391 against the modie tovernmsnt of tbe\nworid j the masses [of the people of\nwbicb, were struggling to adopt, as tbe\ngovernment uudcr which to enjoy the frtse-\ndom guaranteed to aojd esjoyad by tbe\ngood people of tbe I United States. —\nYou have blasted Ihe hope of the\nworld by striking a deadly blow at tbe\ntemple of liberty reared by the fathers\nof your once gloriotw Republic. You,\nand your traitorous associates bave struck\nthe fatal blow, and mc^rdorad the Repub­\nlic outright. MiiUoujs of Millions of\npeople now weep the premature demise,\naad billions 00 billion* of intelligent be­\nings yet unborn, mast jweep, and sorrow\nout a painful exiiteaca of d espotism, in\nconseqoaace of the truaaon of the Rev.\ninfidels of the "corj^regations" under\nthe cloak of piety, to flrocdom, to our ho­\nly reiigiou, to God andj thr of man­\nkind; and the untold qaillioas, bora, an I\nunborn, will go down t|> the grave mourn­\ning for the loss of tbsir hopes of free­\ndom—tbe boon of heafenTMand thj bit­\nter corse of the traitors who plotted this\nvile treason against thu world will bo\nthundered from living, millions and whis­\npered from the exhausted lip of tbe dy­\ning mourner, for al! tiiise and among all\ngood people amoag tha geaerationa.\nThou traitor-hypocrite thou purloiaer\nof men's rights thou thief of the liber­\nties of mankind; thau traitor to high\nHoavsn, aad masking! Is it yem that\nbilks of the sin of whipping Staves, and\ndtbauchtritt! Is it J ,,~u who pronouacs\nslavery tbe sun of ill viiianiesyau,\nwho by success io the treasonable eaase\nyou bave espoused, ba re blasted the high\nest bopos of mankind\nvastation, ruin, and
1af48bba0c7d30b213f9cc458c3f2e8b IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1882.160273940893 43.82915 -115.834394 It is claimed, however, that the com ­\nplaint and the answers made by the peti­\ntioner, showe d that the money was on de­\nposit in San Francisc o, and without tlie\njur isdiction of this Ter ritoiy and ot the\nProbate Court of Boise county, and there ­\nfore that there was no power in tlie Court\nto inquire conce rning the book. W hile\nwe have not the disposition to enter into\ntlie questiou o f the relative rights of prin­\ncipal aud ancillary administrators, or ot\nwhat we c once ive to be tlie law relating to\nthat subject, aud may admit, for the pur­\nposes ot tliis proceeding that it is the law\nin California that estate found there upon\ntlie decease o f a citizen o f another state or\na territory, and belo nging to him, must be\nadministered upon aud distributed under\nthe la ws o f that state, without, in any\nmanner, r e cognizing a principal or home\nexecutor or administrator ; ignoring, it you\nplease, the well-se rules aud p rinci­\nples ot c omity that 1ave ex isted between\nthe states and between a state and a terri­\ntory ever since the formation of the g e n­\neral Government. Still it cannot be suc ­\nc es sf ully claimed that a bank book—an\nassignable cho se in action—an e vidence\no f indebtedness, kept in tlie hand w riting\nof the officers of the bank, is not one of\nthe assets o f the estate, or that, if it be\nwithin the territorial jur isdiction o f the\nCourt, it is not the sworn duty o f the ud\nministrator to reduce it to possession, oi\nat least to do all in his power, under the\nlaw, to that end. But it is urged that un­\nder the pro visions of se ction 617 and 620\nof tlie code of Civil procedure the maxim­\num punishment is one hundred dollars\ntine and one day's imprisonment.\nThat part of section 617 which it\nclaimed is applicable to this que stion is us\nfollows :
2e94a8ab81cc0cc09144c2e5db017f53 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.2561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 Chemical Works, for the purpoio of Diln- t\ning, celling and aiilpplng coal and any and «\naUothiT uilnerala fomul upon any Ifchdi 1\nWhich they may acqniraj of ttorfn/lor, i\npumfcing, shipping, wiling and refining 1\nmineral oil, and manufacturing rmy ana\nall products which oan be obtained from t\nthUl oil, and marketing" the mum; maim- 1\nfactoring coke and oomprosMd coal, nit, <\nsoda, glaai and glaaware ot all kinds, I\nboxes, barrel! and packages anitablo for t\nany of the aforesaid produeta otfor sale to 1\notben, and all and any articles i\nwhich can be found or produced i\nIrorn any minerals mlnml as aforesaid, <\nand selling anything which haa been ao I\nmanufactured or produ ced, and of carry- I\nIng on in connection wH.th such operations a\nthe buslnus of mercb audiilng. The cor- I\nporatlon will keep ita office or place of\nbusiness at the city of Charlseton, Kana- t\nwha county, and la to expire on the 15th i\nday of February, 1890. The aom of 11,000 t\nhas Wen subscribed to the captal stock, I\nand $100 paid in, the privilege being re- I\nerred of increasing the said capital to I\n$100,000. The cupltal ia divided into \nahirea of $100 each, and held aa followt;\nAlexander Hunter Steen, of Berlin, Onta- 1\nrio county, Canada, 1 ahare; Richard I\nHarte, of Charleaton, 3 aharee; Mrs. Kate I\nHarte, of Charleaton, 1 ahare; Mm. Ann\nIlarte, of Baltimore, 2shares; Leon Bern- (\nelmaua, ol Charleaton, 3 share*.\nPfafy Crttk Boom and Dan Company..\nTo a corporation ol this name, for the 1\npurpose of constructing booms and dams I\nTor the stopping and securing of boals, 1\nrafts, logs, masts, span, etc.. in New 1\nRiver, where It passes through the conn- (\nties of Kalelgh and Fayette, in the State\nof West 'Viivrala, and In Piney Creek and\nClade Creak in the county of ltalelgh S\naforesaid. The corporation will kcepita\noffice at tho mouth of Piney Creek, ted\nshall commence on the flrst day of June,\n1879, and is to expire In June, 1897. Tho\namount subscribed to the capital stock is i\n11,SIX), of which 1180 Is paid up, Uie privi- 1\nlogs being reserved ot increasing said\nBlock to $^0,000. The shares are SlOOeaeh,\nand held as follows: Hernhard Fanbe r «\nand Thompson Walton Wilton, of Ham- <\nburg, Ontario, Dominion of Canada; John\nLeo Wilson, Wm. Wilson and Robert
59a73a87a7416b08da1e29f78d216a67 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1923.0616438039067 39.745947 -75.546589 case or to comment on the sermon\nDr. Grant preached the day before.\nIn the congregation of the Church\nof the Ascension there Is a disposi­\ntion to regard the heresy trial as\ninevitable. There Is an element in\ntho parish, too, which appeals to\nlook forward to such action and tho\nbelief is held that if Dr. Grant 1«\nunfrocked an attempt will be made\nto take the church property at Fifth\navenue and Tenth street away from\nthe Protestant Episcopal Church,\nretaining it for Dr. Grant.\nTho church property is not owned\nby the diocese. It la owned by a\ncorporation known as "The Rector,\nthe Wardens and the Vestry of the\nChurch of the Ascension." Tho dis­\nposition of the property would,\ntherefore, finally repose in all prob­\n in the vestry. The complexion\nof this body has changed markedly\nin tho last two years. There are two\nelements, conservative and liberal,\nbut tho latter has been increasing\nin strength constantly and will stand\nby Dr. Grant, so it is said.\nA split in the Episcopal Church\nin tho diocese as a whole I« looked\nfor by some of the more conserva­\ntive clergymen. They hold that Dr.\nGrant will have the support of be­\ntween fifteen and twenty ministers\nwho hold liberal views in varying\ndegrees and, like Dr. Grant, resent\nauthority and especially the appar­\nent deelre of the conservative ele­\nment, which they contend Bishop\nManning represents, to hold strictly\nto the orthodoxy of years ago.\nNext Sunday Dr, Gustave Arnold\nCarstensen of the Church of the
5d3764e5d442948befe4b389dfd012c2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.015068461441 37.561813 -75.84108 The whole secret of success in the\nmanagement of a stock of cattle in\nw inter rests with the farmer. If he\nuei judgment aid care in feeding,\nLis stock will come out in the spring\nlooking wi II, and on much less fodder\nthan if no consideration had been used\nin putting out the fodder. Farmers\noftn complain that their cattle waste\ntheir hay, do . eat it up clean, and\nleave oata. The fact is, it is the farm-\ners themselves who waste it. The\ncattle are not to blame, when twite\nthe quantity of hay is put before thi m\nthat they need, if they do pick out\nthe best: but it is unjust to charge to\ndumb animals the faults the farmer\nhimself is guilty of. Be saving of the\nfodder. Do not stint the stock ; give\nthem they will eat, no more.\nII. Feed regularly, and give a good\nmeal at a time. We know farmers\nwho are in the habit of throwing in a\nlight sprinkle of hay before their cat-\ntle and horses, whenever they go into\nthe barn. As a consilience they are\nalways uneasy and always hungry.\nIf lying down, w hen, for any cause,\nthe farmer enters the barn for a mo-\nment, up they all jump and begin to\nBtretch and bellow for something to\neat. The stock of such farmer is al\nways poor and always hungry. The\nthe true system of feeding is to feed\nregularly anctimlformly. Three times\na day is often enough for all kinds of\nfarm stock; although in Very told\nweather it may be well to feed four\ntimes, and on moderate days only\ntwice, especially to sheep.
801adb1c582a8879d65deef61fb47f04 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.3674863071747 40.807539 -91.112923 and M'Cubbin was still farther back, it guard who figures in the Gazette,*®\nbeing difficult for him to keep up as lie injure Mr. VV right, but merely 'to ^\nalledged on account of the soreness of his the citizens of lhe Territory the 'link"\nfeet. Abden was quite communicative1 gard the Gazette has for truth. In®"1\nand friendly in his acts and conversation, the only truth there is in the whole^\nGuy was more reserved. Tuesday they cle, is that Mr. Wright was elect©*4\ntravelled on together, passing through a; Congress. It is not true that lie 11\nvery large prairie, till they came within! elected from the Cincinnati\nperhaps two and a half miles of Fort : was he ever a candidate forelection Iw\nMadison, when Mr Gage felt a sudden and that District; nor is the Diairict\nviolent blow on the side of his head, and! which he was frequently electedUk\nimmediately after lost all consciousness gress, within two hundred\nof life. When he recovered himself he j It is not true that he\nwas lying in a ravine a short distance from' ed a federal paper any where, J'''*\nthe road, badly bruised about his head and| true that he ever fled from any\nface, the tail of his coat, containing the Neither is it true tlfat he ever\npocket which had contained the money, time a federalist.\ncut oil, and with the money taken away, J The editor either wilfully B\nand his clothes remaining on him very} Mr..„Wright, or he is grossly ig°^2\nmuch stained wilh his own bleeding. He| the politics of the State frwa*)1^\nfound lying by his side two canes, one of| has so recently came. Doe3\nwhith he recognized to have belonged to man know that among the leadi#^\nGuy, he could not recollect which had 'of Uliio, there is not a single\nthe other. He got on his feet, found his j note, or ever was a federal^\nhat was missing, and saw no person near.' any time within the lasttwelrty8®*'
07caec82bf04d0fa981e2794f6b98356 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.9139343946063 37.451159 -86.90916 blo hitch to mar the evenings pleasure\nThe edibles were of the most appetlz ¬\ning kind of sufficient variety to form a\nfeast equal to the best bill of fare of anyII\nof the big city hotels The cooking and\nservice was excellent and the cause orII\nmuch laudatory comment In fact\nHartford is noted for Its excellent cooks\namong the good wives of the town and\nthis occasion afforded a splendid sample\nof their art in this line It was a ills ¬\ntinctly home gotteu np affair even to\nthe candles and reflected great credit\nupon the ladles in charge of it\nIt was a representative assemblage of\nnot only some of our best citizenship\nbut our most congenial society The\nladies looked beautiful and the men\nwell they did their best to make them ¬\nselves agreeable And girls Qod\nbless emlooked sweet enough to eat\nIn fact they did eat And so did their\nbeaux while they did the gallant act to\na finish All ate until they were filled\namid a flow of repartee and pleasant\nconversation that enhanced the pleasure\nof the event to the tallest degree It\nwas an occasion long to be remembered\nfor all that makes life worth living\nThose present were Messrs and\nMesdames D Walker E E Dirk\nhead John T Moore W H Barnes A\nC Taylor Ben D Ringo W M Fair\nRTCollins TJMorton SamT\nBarnett R E L Simmerman J S\nGlenn Wayne Griffin M L Heavrin\nCESmithSAAnderson TH\nBenton Sam Bach Heber Matthews\nfDrandMrsEWFordCoLC\nM Barnett and wife Dr J R Plr\ntie and wife U S Carson and Miss\nDessie Duke Chester Keown and Miss
72cad662d7a3a9d4341cdf133083eac9 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.1243169082675 31.960991 -90.983994 IB S Published in the City of New York, every\nSaturday morning, in quarto form, on a very\nlarge sheet, and afforded to subscribers in the\ncountry at Two Dollars Six copies will be\nforwarded a year for Ten Dollars; Ten copies for\nFifteen Dollars; and any larger number in the\nlatter proportion. Payment in advance invaria­\nbly required, and the paper stopped whenever\nthe term of such payment expires.\nThe TaiauHK—whether in ita Daily or Week­\nly edition, will be what its name imports—an\nunflinching supporter of the Peoples Rights and\nInterests, in stern hostility tc the errors of su­\nperficial theorists of unjust or imperfect legisla­\ntion, and the schemes and sophistries of self-\nseeking demagogues. It will strenuously advo-\ncate the Protection of American Industry a-\ngainst the grasping, and to us heightening poli­\ncy of government, and the unequal\ncompetition which they force upon us, it will\nadvocate the restoration of a sound and uniform\nNational Currency; and urge a discreet but de­\ntermined proseeution of Internal Improvement.\nThe Retrenchment, wherever practicable, of\nof Government Expenditures and of Executive\nPatronage, will he zealously urged. In short-\nthis paper will faithfully maintain and earnest,\nly advocate the Principles and Measures which\nthe People approved in devolving on Whig\nStatesmen the conduct of their Government.\nBut a small portion of its columns will be de­\nvoted to purely political discussions. Tbe pro­\nceedings of Congress will be carefully recorded,\nthe Foreign and Domestic Intelligence early\nlucidly preseuted; and whatever shall ap-\npear calculated to promote Morality, maintain\nSocial Order, ex©nd the blessing» of Education,\nor in any way subserve the great came of Hu-\n~
172844e31661467accddf229c0c769ab THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.3273972285642 42.217817 -85.891125 when the slightest approach to a fuzz\ncommenced to ornament my upper lip\nand blend with the peach bloom of my\nchoeks, and it was almost necessary to\nget out a search warrant to find a mus-\ntache on my youthful faco, I havo been\na patron of ono of our prominent barber\nshops. During the few years that have\nelapsed since the days when I had to\ncarry the necessary papers to prove to\nthe knights of the razor that 1 was en-\ntitled to be shaved and was not an es-\ncaped lunatic, I have never had\noccasion to complain of the treatment\nreceived at tho hands of the proprietors\nof tho tonsorial parlors or their efficient\nemployes until a few days ago. From\nthe time I first learned' of a man who\nhad his throat cut by a barber in a\nmoment of emotional insanity, I have\ndeemed it policy to treat the manipula-\ntor of a razor with the utmost respect,\nespecially while being operated upon,\nand I would advise all others to follow\nmy example, as it may be the means of\nsaving their life. But I degress.\n"I entered the pleasant apartments oc-\ncupied by my friend, the barber. The\nchairs were all filled but one, at the\nrear end of the shop, and being some-\nwhat in a hurry, I did not stop to tako\n notice of tho operator, but I\nwish now I had looked beforo I leaped.\nI wanted my hair cut, and just as I got\ncomfortably seated in the chair, I cast\nmy eyes up into the mirror beforo me,\nand it was then that I first beheld that\nthe operator wai well, he is one of the\nproprietors of a popular orchestra in\nthis section of the country, and plays\nthe violin, and occasionally assises his\npartner in prompting. Ho had been\nout all night before playing for a coun-\ntry dance, which may havo accounted\nfor tho strange proceedings which fol-\nlowed. Ho tucked the long bib neatly\naround my neck, and waded in. For\nthe first five or ten minutes nothing un-\nusual occurred, but standing in close\nproximity to a red hot coal stove mado\nray friend somewhat drowsy, and tho\nnext time I looked ia tho mirror, I taw,\nto my surprise, that his eyes were\nclosed, but so accustomed had he be-\ncame to his work, that he went on as\nthough nothing had happened. Sud-\ndenly ho yelled out, Balance on tho\nhead 1' and simultaneously with tho ex-\nclamation, tho sharp pointed shears\nwont something less than an inch into\nray skull. I tried to vacate tho chair,\nbut ho held one hand firmly on\nmy breast, and sang out again,\nDown
10f143372bf1916e1c5f28f5e983d953 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.4671232559615 39.261561 -121.016059 You are hereby auramoned to appear and answer\ntothecoinplaintofS.il . D1KEMAN, filed against\nyou. within ten days from the service of this writ.\nIf served on you in this county, and within twenty\ndays if served on you in this District and out of this\ncounty, and within forty days if served on you in\nthis State and out of this District, in an action com-\nmenced on the lHth day of April, a. n. 18fil, in\nsaid Court to obtain a decree of this Court tor the\nforeclosure of a certain mortgage, bearing date the\n12th day of October a. p . 1R69 . executed by the said\ndefendant to plaintiff, and for the sale of the premi-\nses therein, and in satd complaint particularly men-\ntioned and described and the application of the mon-\neys arising from such sale to the payment of. the\namount due on four certain promissory notes set\ntbrth in said complaint, made and delivered to said\nplaintiff by the defendant bearing even date with\nsaid mortgage and thereby intended to be secured,\nto wit: The sum of $1,600 , with interest thereon\nfrom 12th dav of October A. p . 1S59. at the rate\nof two per cent, per month till paid ; and if any defi-\nciency shall remain after applying all ot said moneys\nproperly so applicable thereto, then that i'taintiff\nmay have execution therefor against the said defend-\nant. also that said defendant and all and every per-\nson claiming through nr under defendant subsequent-\nly to the dale of plaintiff s mortgage and the com-\nmencement of this action, may tie barred and fore-\nclosed of all right, claim, lien and equity of redemp-\ntion in and to the said mortgaged premises, or any\npart thereof, and for such other and further relief,\nor both, In the premises as may be just and equita-\nble. And you are hereby notified that it' you tail to\nanswer said complaint as herein directed, plaintiff\nwill take judgment against you therefor by default,\ntogether with all costs of suit, and counsel fees in the\nsum of $160 and also den and of the Court such oth-\ner relief as is prayed for in plaintiff's said complaint.\nIn testimony whereof, 1, John S. Iambert, Clerk
5aeb1cfefa78c865be5a5b281036494f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.8013698313039 40.063962 -80.720915 The Polaris Investigation.\nNew YouK.Oct. 18..The Timet in\nstory to-day ol tho Polaris invcsti^alii\nttyi Sir. Morion denim absolutely that\never had any suspicion of foul play in tj\ndeath ot Cant. Hall, or that bo ever\nthe best ol his knowledge and belief to]\nany one be bad or cave any one reason\nsuppose be had. When Dr. Hall retun\neil Irom the sledge expedition Dr. Bisaol\nwas.'tuiploycU in the observatory, aboi\ntwo liusdred ynrda from the l'olaris. i1\nhe saw Dr. Hall and party approach 1\nran down and greeted and shook bam\nwith them and then returned immediate!\nto his work at the observatory. Dr. He\nand party entered the vessel and all pai\ntook ol some coftee, which all the crew\ntbo vessel bad previously drank. T1\ncoffee was prepared by the cook and wi\ngiven to tho party either by him or J<\nor Manna; me pany were uuuwiw l\nthe coflee, c.xcept Dr. Hall, who was in\nmediately attacked with ait\nwhich he Tell into a state of insensibility;\nwas about half an hour after the return\nthe party, when Br. Jilsaels was summo\ncd irom the observatory and lound I)\nHall already in a comotose conditio\nWhen Dr. Hall revived from this state\ninsensibility, it was found that his It\naide was paralyzed. Considered by me\nical men in itself a direct refutation ol tt\ncharges of poisoning. The suspicion thi\nDr. Uissels caused the death of Dr. Ill\nis baseless, and it undoubtedly is felt t\nhis friends, many of whom were all\nwarmly attached to Dr. Hall, to be mo\nliarsh and cruel. The symptoms an\nmedical treatment ot Dr. Half have bee\nsnbmitted to the most eminent men I\nthe country, and by them death has u:\nhesitatingly been pronounced to bai\nbeen due to natural causes, and the treal\nment employed by Dr. Bissels is indorse\nas exactly that which was required, an\nwas the only treatment proper under tl\ncircumstances.
ff4e4b24c27a30f33976f1e30ddd82a5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.1027396943175 41.681744 -72.788147 The history of the church has\nbeen marked with much progress by\nthe present pastor. The parish house\nwas micchased at a cost ot 14.imii,\nThe cfTtlrch now consists of 200\nfamilies making a total membership\nof about 1200. A parish school, witn\n120 students Is conducted every\nday, except Saturday and Sunday. In\nthis school the students are Instruct-\ned in the catechism and the Uk-\nrainian language. The church has a\nchoir ot about 40 voices which sings\nwithout accompaniment, this being\none of the characteristics of Ukrai-\nnian church music.\nRev. Vladimir Kozoriz, the local\npastor, has charge of the pastorate\nof St. Michael's church in Terry-\nville, which has a total membership\nof about 000. Bishop Hohachevsky\nwill visit that churcji tomorrow af-\nternoon 4 o'clock and will con-\nduct a mass there. Although no\nplans have been made, it is possible\nthat Bishop Bohachcvsky will return\nto this city tomorrow night after his\nTerryville visit.\nTho status ot tho Greek Catholic\nchurch is not familiar to many in-\nhabitants ot this country. It is un-\nder tho jurisdiction of tho Holy See.\nbut the Slavic language Is used en-\ntirely in the church services. The\ndogmas and sacraments are. how-\never, the same as in the Roman\nCatholic church. Since the death of\nRishoD Othinsky the local church\nhas been under the jurisdiction of\nBishop Nilan. The visit to the local\nchurch will, in the future, be an\nannual event and tho members of\nthe local parish have made extensive\npreparations for tomorrow's
220d2f5eec57a3d3930f51ea06589520 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.7164383244547 39.261561 -121.016059 HamcRxii I.nmst. —Dispatches from Wash-\nington state that the Government has de-\ntermined to retaiu possession of the two\nforts lately captured al Hatteran Inlet, al-\nthough the original intention was to de-\nstroy the forts in order to break np a ren-\ndezvous for pirates. The position is re-\ngarded as au important one in a military\nview. Gen llutler, who was in command\nof the expedition, says, in his report :\n“On consultation with officer Stringham and\nCommander Stellingcr, I determined to leave\ntroops and hold the forts, because of the\nstrength of the fortifications and their impor-\ntance, and because, if again in possenaion of\nthe enemy with a sufficient armament, of the\ndifficulty of racapturing it. The importance of\nthe point canaot be overrated. From the whole\ncoast of Virginia and North Carolina, from\n to Cape Lookout, is within our reach\nby light draught vessels, which cannot possibly\nlive at sea during the Winter months. From\nit, offensive operations may be made upon the\nwhole coast of North Carolina to Bogue Inlet,\nextending many miles inland to Washington,\nNewbern and Beaufort. In the language of the\nChief Engineer of the rebels in an official re-\nport, *it is the key of the Albermarle. In my\njudgment it is a station second in importance\nonly to Fort Monroe. On this coast is a depot\nfor cavalry and supplies for the blockading\nsquadron. It is invaluable as a harbor for our\ncoasting trade, or inlet from the Winter storm,\nor from pirates. It is of the first importance.\nBy holding it. Hatteras light may again send\nforth a cheerful ray to the storm beaten mari-\nncr*
0b314f15c7cf2f82f5c7825dd93e8fc3 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.401369831304 39.560444 -120.828218 difficulty occured in the Solar family. The\nMoon, becoming jealous of the Suns con-\nstant attention to Earth, and observing\nthat Mistress Earth looked exceedingly\nhappy and withal a little green, mistrusted\nthat all was not right, and after she came\nto think of it, she recollected of sundry\noccasions of the Sens absence under pre-\ntence cf acting as Universal latnpligbter\nfor ail creation. The more she thought\nof it, the more she was convinced that\nMistress Earth was no better than she\nshould be, predicating her suspicions on\nthe increasing family of Mistress Earth.—\nDetermining to investigate the matter, she\nstepped across and intercepted her un-\nfaithful lord, and demanded an explana-\ntion; complaining that more than half the\ntime she was left alone with not even light\nenough to display half her charms, in case\n should be called upon by Mars or\nJupiter; in fact she would'nt be responsi-\nble for the honor of the family, if Venus\nand the Pleiades become aware that she\nkept company in the twilight; at the same\ntime requesting the Sun to go back and\nmake some domestic arrangements, while\nah? went tliQ rounds and discharged bis\nduties. “Madam,” says the Sun, “dont\nyou observe that you are attracting at-\ntention from those people below ? that you\nwill be taken for a chunk of green cheese?\nGet out of the way, you cant shine!”\nWhereupon Mistress Moon put her\napron to her thee and went off blubbering\nthat if her husband hadnt a pair of horns\non his head as well as herself, in less than\nan hour, it wouldnt be her fault—shed\nbe drat if it would.
313c3a96f33efd13fa6ad7258dcedae0 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.580601061273 39.513775 -121.556359 All this pretension and the inferences\nsought to be drawn from it, is untrue. The\nelection of the Republican candidate, would\ndestroy all hopes of a national railroad.\nIt is a project which requires the united\nenergy of the whole nation, and that can\nnever be brought to bear upon the project\nby the triumph of the Republican party\nThe idea that a party whose very organiza-\ntion is a sectional one, and whose strength\nmust come wholly and entirely from one\nportion of the Union, can unite the nation\nupon any project, is simply ridiculous. The\nauthentic announcement that the govern-\nincut was no longer a National but u mere\nsectional government, ouc section waging\nopen war and pci verting the whole power of\nthe government to the injury of another,\nwould be considered ipso facto a dissolution\nof the Union, as fourteen of the thirtj'-onc\nStates have already declared, and instead of\nengaging in national undertakings, the sec-\ntional party would be obliged to add another\nplauk to their platform, ami “let the” Rail-\nroad “slide” with the “Uniou. At the\nbest, several years must elapse before its\ncompletion ; and even if the election of the\nRepublican ticket did not lead to a dissolu-\ntion of the Union, is it not apparent, that,\nunder the auspices of its fanatical leaders,\nflushed with their long-covered ami just ac-\nquired powers, measures would be taken by\nthem in consummation of their plans, and to\ncarry out their doctrines which must inevit-\nably lead to the same awful result- \nany railroad could be built. Were the\nBlack Republicans the only party that build\nthe Pacific railroad, and the question should\nbe urged as it is now presented, and the\nnation would be obliged to choose between\na railroad to the Pacific and a dissolution of\nthe Union. What would it profit us to gain\nthe Railroad and lose the Union ?\nThe construction of the Pacific and At-\nlantic railroad does not depend upon the\nsuccess of the Black Republicans. That\nparty nctef yet conceived, much less execu-\nted any national project. The bigotry and\nnarrow-minded sectionalism of the party,\nincapacitates them for any national under-\ntaking, and all their leal in favor of a na-\ntional railroad is done for tiie purpose of\nconcealing their sectional deformity. The\nhopes for an Atlantic and Pacific Railroad\nrest alone with the Democratic parly The\nparty, by the resolution adopted at Cincin-\nnati, are committed to it. The Constitution\ndoes not forbid it. A Democratic Congress\nhas sanctioned the undertaking by appro-\npriating five million acres of land for similar\npurposes. A Democratic President has\nsigned the bills making such grants. A\nDemocratic Congre-s will authoriie it again.\nJames Buchanan will sustain it. The Pa-\ncific Railroad must and will be built. The\nRepublican party must and will be beaten\nThe Union must and will be preserved\nThese must be accomplished by the glorious\nold Democratic party—the party that Las\nheretofore breasted the wild waves of fanat-\nicism, and restored peaoe to our agitated\nand convulsed Union.
4ccfa4d31c6c83972a531c59468308ce THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.9438355847285 40.618676 -80.577293 Magistrate Vincent J. Sweeney re­\nleased him in bail of $2,500. Mr.\nBergoff's daughter, Harriet, 31 years\nold, with whom he lived at 105 West\n72nd street, where they were arrest­\ned, was paroled in the custody of her\nattorney on a charge of being associ­\nated with her father in his renewed\nstrikebreaking venture. Lew Cohn, 50,\nof 559 West 158th street, who also\nwas charged with being involved in\nthe enterprise, was released in $1,500\nbail, pending trial in Special Sessions.\nAll were charged with violating pro­\nvisions of the penal law and the gen­\neral business law.\nBergoff, according to Leonard E.\nRuisi, Assistant Attorney General, re­\nturned to the strikebreaking field by\ngetting his daughter and a private de­\ntective, Bernhard Haas, 61, of 311\nEast 89th street, to serve as front.\nUsing Haas' private-detective license,\nthe Modern Investigation Bureau, Inc.,\nwas set up on Aug. 29 at 1834 Broad­\nway, just above Columbus Circle, Mr.\nRuisi charged. Haas was made \ndent, but to Miss Bergoff, as treas­\nurer, was assigned 75 per cent of the\nstock, and hence 75 per cent of the\nprofits. Haas received 25 per cent,\nMr. Ruisi said. With the arrests, the\nHaas license was suspended by Mi­\nchael J. Walsh, Secretary of State.\nAccording to Mr. Ruisi, the Modern\nInvestigation Bureau hired 70 men as\nstrikebreakers, 10 of them who had\ncriminal records. To get the services\nof the latter, at least for a 10-day\nperiod, smudged or incomplete finger­\nprints were sent to police headquar­\nters to comply with the law. By the\ntime police sent an indignant demand\nfor better prints the men involved had\nput in a good several days of strike­\nbreaking, he said.\nMr. Ruisi said that Bergoff's men\nwere employed actively during No­\nvember in breaking the strike of mem­\nbers of the International Brotherhood\nof Teamsters, an American Federation\nof Labor affiliate, at the warehouse\nof Spear & Co., 524 West 28rd street.
03e7005106ea4f235f34751ff22bd266 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.6479451737696 37.561813 -75.84108 dependent treasury of the State of\nOhio," paed April 12, 1S58; and on\npayment of the same, he shall take the\nreceipt of tho person presenting the said\nwarrant and entitled to receive such\npayment, on the face of said warrant,\nnnd in full for the amount specified\ntherein; and tho treasurer shall write on\nthe face thereof tho word "paid," which\nwarrant, when so paid nnd cancelled,\nshall be numbered in the order in which,\nit is paid, nnd bo shall record the same\nin nn appropriate book kept for that\npin pose, and file the same in his office,\nas his voucher for so much money paid\nout, and shall credit bil.is.ill wbh the\namount of the warrant paid, in Ins ac-\ncount against (ho particular fund appro-\npriated, nnd for which Jie has charge. 1\nhimself, as herein provided, so as to\nkeep an exact debit and credi" account\nof each particular fund in his office.\nSection 2. That section fifteen (15)\nof the aforesaid net be so amended as to\nreed as follows: Section 15. It is here-\nby made tho duty of the' auditor nnd\ntreasurer of each nnd every county in\nthis State, conjointly to make out and\ncausa to be published in least one\nnewspaper of general circulation in the\ncounty in and for which they arc such\nauditor and treasurer, a statement of\ntho exact amount of money existing in\nthe treasury of such county at tho closo\nof the last business day in each of tho\nmonths of February and August in\nevery year, nnd oftencr, if the commis-\nsioners of the county shall so direct;\nparticularly specifying in such state-\nment the amount belonging to each par-\nticular fund, together with all other\nproperty, bonds, securities, claims, as-\nsets and effects, belonging to the county,\nin the custody or under the control of\nsuch treasurer. Such statement shall\nbe signed by said county treasurer and\nsaid county auditor; and the expense of\nsuch publication shall bo paid oulof the\ncounty treasury on warrant or warrants\ndravn by tho county auditor, particu-\nlarly specifying the same; and if at any\ntime it shall be found that such state\nment was uutrne or false in regard to\nthe amount of monev and other prop,\ncrty then on hand mid in the treasury,\nthe said treasurer mid the said auditor\nmaking tho same, shall, without regard\nto lapse of time, be held to be guilty of\na breach of tru.--
03b4e7578735827df6f09f6740c2691e THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.8232876395232 40.419757 -77.187146 mother and children running about In\nthe beds of cress. Under the trees rises a\nhut of planks, where all sleep, not far\noff the two mules which carry the be-\nlongings of the encampment are tether-\ned. They are birds of passage, travers-\ning the forest and sojourning where the\nwood Is cheap. In this green combe sev-\neral fine beech trees are marked for the\nax; they are fifty feet high and three feet\nin girth. Each will probably give six\ndozen pairs wooden shoes. Other kinds\nof wood are spongy and soon penetrated\nwith damp ; but the beech sabols are\nlight, of a close grain, and keep the feet\ndry in spite of snow and mud; and in.\nthis respect are greatly superior, to leath-\ner. All is animation. The men cut\ndown the trees ; the trunk is sawn into\nlengths, and if pieces prove too\nlarge they are divided into quarters.\nThe first workman fashions the sabot\nroughly with a hatchet, taking care to\ngive the bend for the right and left; the.\nsecond takes it in hand, pierces the holes\nfor the interior, and scoops the wood out\nwith an instrument called the cuiUer.\nThe third is the artist of the company ;\nit is his work to finish and polish it;\ncarving a rose or primrose upon the top,.\nIf it be for the fair sex. Sometimes he-c ut - s\nan open border round the edge, fid\nthat the blue or white stocking may be\nshown by a coquetish girl. As they are\nfinished, they are placed in rows under\nthe white shavings ; twice a week the ap-\nprentice exposes them to a fire, which\nsmokes and hardens the wood, giving it\na warm, golden-brow- n
0dc73f4a6a4f8ee87c83bc87bdc2a113 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.9493150367834 37.53119 -84.661888 In your last Issue was named In hon ¬\nor of Casey county wbo e people al ¬\nways gave Judge Mike Owsley a largo\nmajority In his various races\nTbe writer was in Lancaster Wed ¬\nnesday While there bo learned that\ntbo INTERIOR JOURNAL has a list of 200\nsubscribers at that office most of them\nhaving taken the paper for years and\npropose to continue It\nAfter ono weeks illness of pneumo\nnia Hiram Fish died last Saturday at\nhis home In this place The remains\nwere taken Sunday to Fountain Read\nTenn for burlalln the family lot J\nB Put and wife George T Fish and\ndaughter Eva and John and Minor\neons of deceased atteadedtbojburlal\nMr Fish was a good citizen and his\nfamily have the sympalbyof all\nLancaster has an up to date telephone\nexchange since they have moved into\ntheir new quarters above Stormesdrug\nstore All the principal streets have\ntall poles cables ore used across\npublic square and everything has a\n Improved appearance Tbe ser ¬\nvice Is splendid no otberilexcbango\ngives better In the State Mrs Hobbs\nand daughter Miss Lenna the day op-\nerators aro experts at theflwork and\ngive general satisfaction to patrons\nLittle Marguerite Fish who has been\ncritically 111 of pneumonia Is some bet\ntor Sbe has not been Informed of ber\nfather death Dick Cummins has\nmoved to property recently purchased\nof R H Livesay and the latter now\noccupies the Croucher house on Rich ¬\nmood street When In Lancaster\nWednesday wo found our mountain\nman James I White hard at work\nwith his several contracts Ho has re ¬\ncently added marble works to bis line\nand Is turning out some beautiful work\nIn monuments and tombstones Rev\nOliver Wallln was thrown from a\nhorde near Bee Lick and badly bruis ¬\ned up Judge Williams made a horse\nback trip to Woodstock Monday Mr\nF H Hardy writes back from Ala ¬\nbama that Mrs Hardys health Is but\nlittle
1d154fe234db266f2caea97fe7251cfd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.0068305694697 39.745947 -75.546589 In contrast with man's depreciation\nof the human soul mark God's ap­\npreciation. All during the centuries\nour heavenly Father has been endeav­\noring to Impress upon mankind how\ngreat a value he sets upon a human\nlife. He has shown this by the en­\nvironment with which he has sur­\nrounded his creation. Why he farm­\ned the star and thfe stone, the fruit\nand the flower, the planet and the\nplant ?\ncreated for themselves,\ngiven u* the mountains, big with their\ntreasures of silver and gold?\nhave we the lakes and the seas, bear­\ning on their broad bosoms the white\nsails of commerce? Why have\nthe hills and valleys waving In\nsummer with their rich\ngulden grain?\nexist for themselves,\nanalysis we find but one object, and\nthat Is for the benefit of humanity.\nIf the environment of man is great,\nhow much greater is his endowment?\nIf an artist would spend a fabulous\nsum upon a frame for r. painting,\nwould you not reasonably expect that\nthe picture within the frame would\nbe of greater value? In­\ndeed is the physical endowment\nman. „Take the human eye, for ex­\nample. Did you ever think what a\nproblem God had to solve In bringing\nthe outer, the material universe. Into\nrelationship with the Inner, the Im­\nmaterial the spiritual universal Sci­\nentist tell us that the difference in\ncolors Is due to the difference In the\nvobratlons of the waves of ether.\nFrom the color red, at one end of\nthe spectrum, produced by the vibra­\ntions of ether waves at the rate of\n460 million millions a second, up to\nthe color violet, at the other end of\nthe spectrum, produced at the rate of\n720 million million vibrations a sec­\nond. Not only can the human eye\ndistinguish red from violet, that Is It\ncan note the difference between ether\nwaves at the rate of 460 million mil­\nlion vibrations a second and 720 mil­\nlion million vibrations a second, but\nalso can distinguish all the interven­\ning colors and all of the shades of\nthese colors, and the eye is but one\nof the marvelous mechanisms of the
138f2016a339a7e4d335f93471f2361d IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.7630136669204 43.82915 -115.834394 Kalintsl travel In Hnw-ta 1 __________\nof tint i« rertaia Meti«asat tî» UnUml\naiates. wlwre tb* roads are very orsr. (fee\n- q i i f p invn!, rlMvp, t'a* employ** !o*xp*ri-\nsiiced, and all kiwis of seeomatUUun*\n•-ery Ibnftnl. It «a* only since the lot*\nrebellion la A m rrtca ii<at Russia bas\nenured at all in railroad nreka. The\nBias* tmilt by Wiinao*. of Baltimore, were\n»eil built, but tbey werenotwellequipped\nand bare been pooeiy maintained. Tha\narbitrary direction of the czar, that\nail the lines should be perfectly straight\nfrom one barge city u> the other, o r tram\nthe »«ginning to the termini, regardless\nof the lesserpoints on the way, will be a\ngreat drawback to the country for many\nyears. The stranger*« attention is diraetly\nattracted to the large number of small\ncities and important Tillages he sees from\none to Are miles off the railroad liras.\nThesemarts of trade are more orlesssub­\nstantial, and generation* will come s ad\ngo before the stations are as plentiful\nalong the railroad lines as they would at\nflrst have been made but for the inter-\nference of the czar.\nIt very seldom that a house is pro-\nTided for locomotives, or there is a sited\nfor any class of m aterial or equipment,\nnotwithstanding the fact that the nine\nmonth* of Mia or snow in each year moke\nthem more necessary than is other coun­\ntries. Locomotives, rusting and falling\nto pieces, although but a few yean eld,\nand tools of every character are seen\nstrewn about everywhere. The «*■«»— .\nhowever, are commodious and comfort­\nable. The fastest express trains, which\nmake about twenty miles an hour, stop\nat ercry station from five to forty min­\nutes. The guard comes to your carriage\ndoor when the train stops, opens it, and\ntells how long the stop will be. He also\npointsto the restaurant hard by, an) tells\nyou what can be purchased, and, further,\nthat there is ample time. It is probable\nthat there fe * commission arrangement,\nor all the railroad restaurants are ran by\nthe company. Few panerngrr Crains that\nhave not some freight cars. The train*\nare long, the rails heavy and good, the\nballasting fair, but the equipments are so\ninferior that the employes refuse to make\nany speed.
90a656dc9904be93dde706b0056920f0 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.319178050482 43.798358 -73.087921 Reply Mr Ellis worth, of Washing-\nton, recommends. sowing broadcast, and\nwould put four bushels of seed per acre.\nHis mode of preparing the land we have\nnot learned. Our own practice has differ-\ned from . his. We prepare the land by\nplowing and. harrowing as for corn;\nThen mark 'or furrow out about four feet\napart. Then put in the drill five or six\ncords Osgood compost per acre level\n"down the surface of the compost with h\nhoe then sow. thick, putting perhaps\nthree bushels of seed per acre. The seed\nis scattered so as to give a belt of plants\nnearly one foot i wide on each drill : the\nplants stand very thick The land is tilled\n' as much os for potatoes in. drills. As\nsoon as the spindles are fairly opened, we\nbegin to cut, and each evening to the\nbarn'as many as will be wanted for the\nstock that evening and the next morping.\nThus we continue until all are consumed.\nIladwe more than were required for .use\nin a green state we should cut up before\nthe frost had taken much hold of the\nleaves, bind in bundles and cure in the\nfield, as the top stalks are usually cured.\nIn order to have this green feed in a\ngo jd state from August to October,' the\npans of the field should be planted at three\nor.(our difTerent" times from the first of\nMay up to ,thev middle of June. Even\nlater that will do in many seasons. We\nhave seen good' crops upon sward land\nfrom which a crop of hay was taken about\nlhe first bf July: the land was then plow- -\ned and sowed. Should the autumn be
a9e5e38d4ae68d31080060377a76b747 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.6260273655505 43.798358 -73.087921 1 In this new and solitary settlement, she\nhad no relative to protect her from his in-\nsolence ; she felt that she was entirely in\nhis powerthat it was a power without\ngenerosity md that there is no tyranny\nso entire an4 terrible, as that of an aliena-\nted and intemperate husband.\nStill, looking to her Father in Heaven,\nshe found her courage revive, and deepen\ninto a childlike confidence. ; After putting\nhjr childien to bed, as she sat alone, eve-\nning after evening, while the joys of early\ndays, and the sorrows of maturity, passed\nin review before her, she questioned her\nheart what had been its gain from Heaven's\ndiscipline, and whethershe was to sustain\nthat greatest of all losses, the loss of the\nspiritual benefit intended by affliction.\n absences of her husband grew\nmore frequent and pro ractcd. Ojce, dur-\ning the third night of his departure, she\nknew not where, she lay sleepless, listen-\ning for his footstep. Sometimes she fan\ncied she heard his shouts of wild lau7hter.\nbut it was only the shriek of the tempest.\nThen, she thought the sounds of his iren- -\nzied anger rang in her ears. It was the\nroar of the hoarse wind through the forest.\nAll night long she listened to these\ntumults, and hushed and sang to her af-\nfrighted babe. Early in lhe4iiommgrher\neye was attracted by a. group comiug up\ns.'owly from the river which ran near her\ndwelling. A terrible, foreboding, came\nupon her. She thought they bore a\ncorpss. It was, indeed, the corpse of. her.\nhusband.,
5ef4a664f39242bac3f0cd2e3ee205d7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.0589040778793 58.275556 -134.3925 Very reliable information is at hand,\nsays the Petersburg Progressive, to the\nthe effect that, a New York firm has its\nagent in the vicinity of Petersburg\nlooking over the advantages and prac¬\nticability of putting up a paper mill\naloug this coast.\nElia Kanagin, charged with giving\nliquor to Indians, after two juries at\nValdez had disagreed, entered a plea\nof guilty^ and was sentenced to 20 days\nimprisonment. Kanagin is an Aleut,\nand in passing sentence Judge Lyons\ntook occasion to say that the Aleuts\nwere not citizens within the meaning of\nthe act, and that the mere fact that\nthey had voted occasionally was no in¬\ndication of their citizenship.\nSo many inquiries have been re-\nreceived by the United States govern¬\nment iu regard to Alaska that it has\nprinted a small pamphlet to supply the\n Copies of the pamphlet have\nbeen received at the governor's office,\nsays an exchange. Contained in it is a\nbrief historical sketch, beginning with\nthe explorations of Bering and Chiri-\nkov and ending with the passage of the\nhome rule bill; a description of the\nclimate and the geography; population\nof the minor subdivisions, as shown by\nthe 1910 census; facts in regard to the\ngovernment of the country; general\ninformation as to national forests, rail¬\nroads, roads and trails, and telegraph\nand cable lines, aud some detailed in¬\nformation in regard to agriculture, fur\nbearing animals and huuting regula¬\ntions; brief statements in regard to\nfisheries, labor, educatiou and reindeer\nservice, geological, mineral aud water\nresources, where maps can be secured,\na list of the newspapers printed iu the\nterritory, and how other information\ncan be obtained.
d66c2cca01e4b87f0fe04acf0dbe5576 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1922.2424657217148 39.623709 -77.41082 On Monday of this week Rev. Dr. P,\nE. Heimor, Roger Geisbcrt anil Wil-\nliam Six, made a trip in Mr. Geis-\nberts machine to Lancaster y in the in-\nterest of the coming 175th anniversa-\nry—June 4th—of the organization of\nthe old Monocacy Church. The trip\nwas made without *nishap in about\nthree hours going and coming respec-\ntively, the speedometer recording the\ndistance 72 Vs miles from the Thur-\nmont square to the Lancaster square.\nWe first stopped to see Rev. Dr.\nStuart Cramer and the First Reform-\ned Church which was organized in\n1736 and is the oldest church organ-\nization in Lancaster and visited by\nMichael Schlatter when on the journey\nto Monocacy in 1747. This historic\nchurch is beautifully designed and has\nmany sacred memorials of the past\nof which wo can not speak in this ar-\nticle to mention an exquisite\nbronze tablet costing S6OO fifty years\nyears ago when placet! and which\nwould now cost SIOOO. This tablet\nhas a bust of Zwingli and Schlatter,\nand cuts of the two old churches prior\nto the present building, and a complete\nhistory of the church from the time\nof her organization. It was in this we\nwere especially interested and can only\nnote this feature here.\nWe then called on the Rev. Geo. A.\nWhitmore, former pastor of the Thur-\nmont charge, to pay him a friendly\nvisit and consult him in reference to\nthe old Monocacy Church concerning\nwhich ho made considerable research.\nThe reverend gentleman is improv-\ning in health slowly tho far from well.\nHo was much pleased and interested\nwith our call, and wo invited him to\nthe anniversary sendees and will be\npresent if able.
124a013363ceceb9291e06ab59882e5f THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.505479420345 46.187885 -123.831256 "The whole country looks like war anc\nthe situation is considerably strained;\nbut the peace element is hoping that th\ntension may be relieved and matter!\nsettled without a resort to (arms. Russia\nhas been secretly but actively at wort\nand in the event of trouble with Japar\nis prepared to hurl a formidable navy\nand land force into the coveted territory\nwhich Japan has wrested from China\nThese ships and troops have been massec\nat Vladlvostock, where the scene is de-\ncidedly warlike. The entrance to th\nharbor at Vladlvostock is planted full o,\ntorpedoes, and no vessels are allowec\nto pass in or out without Russfan naval\nofficers or. board, as well as experienced\nRussian pilots who know where the tor\npedoes are planted. My vessel was es\ncorted in this manner both going in \ncoming out of the harbor. Inside th\nharbor the entire Pacific fleet of Russlar\nwarships is massed,, ready to steum dowr\nthe coast at a moment's notice. On Bhorc\n80,000 troops have been concentrated and\nthe evidence is clear that Russia is fully\nprepa.ed for trouble in case the Japanese\ngive any occasion for It. The massing o\nthese troops at Vladlvostock has been\ndone secretly by Russia, unusual precau-\ntions having been taken to prevent th\nspread of any intelligence regarding thf\nactual force she has quartered there.\nWhat Russia's designs are cannot, Oi\ncourse, be told and are purely conjec-\ntural, but it Is clear that if she builds\na railway line south from Vladlvostock\nto the Yellow sea her Intention is to ob-\ntain an open port and hold it at all haz-\nards."
1974a4f2874ebf30888f2e7f132a02b0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.160273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 To tho Editor of the Intelligencer.\nSIR.In Saturday's Issue of the Ir\ntelllgencer appears a communicatlo\nfrom this place. Incorporating therel\na petition r.lgned by a number of bui\nIness men in Weston, which was pit\nsented to mo on that day. Both th\ncommunication and the petition do ni\ngreat injustice. I do not hesitate I\nassert that I have at no time mad\nany misrepresentations of the smallpo\nsituation In this locality. I have almc\nto report, and believe I have reports\nthe truth on the subjectr and woul\nhave no reason or motive whatever I\nmisrepresent the matter. It will be ot\nserved ttiat neitner in me communis\ntlon nor th« petition is there any spe<\nIdeation wherein I have done any li\nJustlco to my own people. The sweej\nIng and general charge la mode thi\nnumerous and unfounded reports upc\nthe subject have been made by mc.\nis but fair to me and due from coi\nrespondent and signer* of the petltlc\nto be more specific to state how, whe:\nwhere and wherein I have reisrepn\nsented the matter. I call for specif\ncations. These petitioners assert thi\nthere is not a single ens-; or smallpo\nIn Weston. This is true, for the reasc\nthat the only cases we had In town wei\nrecently moved without the corpora)\nlimits to the pest house, provided ft\nthe purpose; and yet my friends talk «\nmisrepresentation. I am glad to sta'\nthe conditions on the subject have in\nproved here, nnd whllo I would n<\nmisrepresent tho situation to the pre\nudlce of my friends, neighbors and mj\nself. I would not suppress the fac1\nthrough fain' notlona of buslncHa into]\nests. My Idea ha» always been thi\nthe beat and surv-st way to arrest sue\na scourge Is by vigorous efforts an\nstrict quarantine, nnd not by supproi\nslon of the real facts of the situation.
220a37f3bc32897da1d105fe74f3182a WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.2773223727484 40.827279 -83.281309 tor tne past six yenrs nev bin compelled\nto either degrade theirselves with actooal\nlabor, or go without thrse meals a day! I\nappeal to you in the name uv that blessed\nsaint, Deekin Pogram, who is actooally\nredoost to the ignominy of getting his lik-k-\non tick, and goin half the year with-\nout boots, while the niggers wich wunst\nwuz hizzen (wich now are hizzen ef he\nhed his rites), are livin in comfortable\ncabins and go warmly clothed the year\naround. I appeal to you in the name uv\nDeekia Pennibaeker, who since the strict\ncolleckshnn uv the revenoo, by the mm-\nyuns uv the unfeclin tyrant Grant, hezn't\nbin able to run his distillery half the tune.\nI appeal to yoo in behalf uv Issaker Gav-\nitt, whose late father's is kivered a\nfoot deep with mortgages, and who is at\nthis moment a leanin on the counter at\nBascom's, a wonderin what he will do for\nthe next meal, and, wat is uv more ira\nportance, the next drink. There is a de\nmoralizashen agoin on wich it is pitiful\nto think uv. There is no less than four\nskools bein kept within ten miles uv the\nCorners, in which readin and writin are\nbein taught to the children uv the niggers\nand Northern white men, and ther aint\nbeen a skoolmaster shot or tarrd and\nfeathered for nigh onto a year, and in ad-\ndisben to this a railroad is bein talked uv,\nwhich, ef it is built, will certainly bring\namonsst us the labonn popuiasnen uv\nNoo England, and all its accussed
0471a4a2dc9664e32259bfbd45ef222f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.0726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 After Senator EVarts retired from\nthe Senate, In 1891, he gradually be­\ngan to disappear from the. places\nwhich had long known him. Finally, it\nbecame known that he was confined to\nhis house. He lived in a roomy, old-\nfashioned dwelling, which faced Stuy-\nvesant Square In New York, and lay\nin the shadow of St. George's Church.\n! Gradually, he was confined to his\nj room, and at laat to his bed. Then his !\nfriends knew what he had known\nwhen he was in the Senate, that he\nwas a victim of if.n hereditary disease\nof the eyes, a malignant physical taint\nwhich was In the Roger Sherman\nblood, from which, also, Mr. Evarts'\ncousin, the late Senator George F.\nHoar of Massachusetts, suffered. And\nIt was this aftlletlon, secretly, bravely\nborue, that had caused him to seem\nlike another when Senator.\nNever was an Invalid more patient\nthan this heroic figure when he was\nbrought to bed. In (he summer, with\nthe window open, he eould hear the\nmurmur of the city, and the children,\nas they played in the square. The fra­\ngrance of the blossoms ho perceived\nand greatly enjoyed, so that he could,\nwith mental vision, picture forth the\ncoming of the spring and early sum­\nmer. But friends reported that, af­\nter all, he was finding his greatest\nconsolation in the unobscured mental\nvision which was left him. By means\nof it he could picture forth the men\nand Incidents of the historic events\nwith which he had been associated.\nAud, thus consoled, thus occupied, with\nthe varied and fascinating mental like­\nnesses of men and historic scenes, the\ngreat American at last passed Into per-\nfeet sleep.
1822f16928e1b236bd5bc32f76da9e7b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.727397228564 39.745947 -75.546589 (borge S. Capelle, viee-president of the\neoneern, said that the Mi-NHrN, Dobson\nhad bought the plant mid that the linn I\ntransfer of stock would he made on or\nabout Octolier 1. When the sale was\nthought of the I»(disons were bidder«, of-\nfering 1116 per share, with the proviso\nthat they should control K.IHtO shares, pur\nvalue of the slock, $50. The stock of the\ncompany is divided Inin 12,000 s lia res and\nthe directors at omv began eiimniunicat-\ning with the various shn»dodders, the re­\nsult btdng that the holders of 11,632 shares\nhave signiliisl their acceptance of the of-\nf«>r. Two parties Holding jointly 44\nshores have not yet given their consent\nto the price offered, which Is considered\na good one. Several of the stnekhiilderx\nare abroad have not yet been heard\nfrom. There is no doubt, however, that\nlive-sixths of them will willingly give\ntheir consent to the sale, mid it is highly\nprobable that the entire slock will lie\nbought up by the Dutisons.\nIn s|ieiiking of the purcbas«>^s this\nmorning Mr. Capelle snitl: "They are\ntuen of high financial standing, of strict\nintegrity mid stand high in the matters\nof finance in Philadelphia."\nIt is understood that the new manage­\nment proposes to make extensive improve­\nments. among which will be a large gas\nreceiver in addition lo lliose already in\noperiHion. The purchase of I lie Conduit\nHeut, l/ighl and Power Company, of\nwhich Kdmnnil Mitchell, dr,, is president,\nis also rumored. This report has been in\ncirculation for some lime. It is also «1-
5bf11152a4ef475164f78a23dc0fd8ff NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.4041095573314 41.681744 -72.788147 definitely known that a New York\ntheater man was in this city but what\nsuccess he had is unknown, lie, the\nreport has it, is willing to give the\npeople of the city some good stock\ncompany plays if they will patronize\nthe theater enough to make it a fair-\nly financial success. If the man who\nwas in the city comes here the people\nmay rest assured of good plays as\nhis reputation is well known in other\nlarge and popular theater resorts. The\nquality of his plays has always been\nof the best and he would of course,\ngive this city only high class stock.\nThe financial end of the matter is\nthe only one which ever bothers in\nthis city and is the only worry of any\npeople who have presented plays or\n vaudeville sketches in the city.\nIf the people, who like the stock plays\nwould patronize a few so that the\nmanagement would feel assured of\nbacking in the city, then it is sure\nthat a permanent company could be\nmaintained for the summer.\nAs it is now the deal is not com-\npleted and the facts reported would\nshow that, the men behind the entire\nproposition are worried as to New\nBritain's financial support of such a\nproposition. They naturally do not\nwant to take the course. of defeat or\nfailure which other companies have\nmet with in the city. The men be-\nhind Ihe game are. willing to go half\nway with the. people who want such\nplays and the rest, remains with the\npublic in the line of whole-hearte- d\nsupport.
006c95a367fe7f43d031e2f9f2e102a1 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.8452054477423 41.004121 -76.453816 Jacket pockets. I felt as n goner. From\nthnt hour I was too big for my breeches ;\nSundays, I borried dad's breeches\nIiu'd been married in beforo tho Revolu-\ntionary war, and como oir at his knees;\nbut ho was tall and I warn't, they canio\nbelow mlno threo or four Inches. Agin\ntho nieetln' I was prepared to cut n big\nstlfT sister Sal, for tho purpose, starch\nanil Ironed my new shirt ns stiff nud\nslick ns a sheet of tin. This shirt had\ntho finest kind ofllax linen in tho bos\nom and collar, but tho invisible part ho\nIt was coarso low, witli u horn that\nwould cable n steamboat.\n"Now, while Sal was smoothing tho\nwrinkles near tho said hem with nn\niron Just hot from tho fire, down stairs\ntumbles ono o' tho tarnnl brats, knock-i - n'\n breath otit'n It. It was Satur\nday night; and bho was the only ono up\nand ran to It in course,but aforo it como\nto, tho iron had mado its mark that Is,\nburnt two holes In tho oxtromlty of my\nlinen. Next mornin' I put it on as it\nwas, then dad's truoblues.thon tho fust\nreg'Iar built par ofshoes I'd ever had.\n"I was seventeen just tint Sunday\nmornin, and in my Sunday riggin' folt\nmyself a man, nnd was resolved if Het\nsy Crumpton was nt mcctin' to show\nit. Well, sho was thar, and I axt for\nher company, and got It. Walkln' by\nher side, I folt n3 light ns notliin'\nskerccly touched tho ground I wnlked\non. Hut I shan't tel 1 the fino tliinus I\nthought and said to her on tho way,\nand moro after wo got home.
0d5b6b8a017ad54dd2442851fb648b9b PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.9166666350436 39.756121 -99.323985 The rice storm still rattles gayly\nabout the shoulders of the newly mar-\nried; in spite of the fact that rigorous\nefforts have been made to suppress it\nStatisticians have counted up the\nthousands of bushels yearly wasted in\nthe ceremony, and have urged that all\nthis nutritious grain should be put In-\nto the mouths of the poor rather than\ndown the backs of the opulent. Physi-\ncians speak of the eyes that have\nbeen injured or made permanently\nblind by the flying particles. Half the\npeople present secretly recent the\nstinging hail, and the departing cou-\nple are compelled to amuse the public\nat large for the next few days by shed-\nding rice with every movement.\nOne must be young and excited to\nthoroughly enjoy the rice scrimmage,\n it goes on year after year, a rowdy\nbut a permanent adjunct to Lohen-\ngrin. Boston tried to substitute inof-\nfensive white flakes made of gelatine,\nbut the public was not to be moved\nfrom its rice orgle. Then rose leaves\nwere tried, but they, too, had only a\ntemporary acceptance.\nAnd now the simple flinging of a\nhandful is being changed for an elabo-\nrate mechanical distribution. At a\nrecent eastern wedding breakfast a\nbomb was arranged under the flower\nIn the center of the table, and at the\npressing of an electric button this\nblew up, scattering rice In every di-\nrection. The next device will prob-\nably be a rice shower, arranged on the\nprinciples of stage rain ,and falling\nalike on the bridal couple aud every\nbody else.
1223769d3ca49fce1c6cb21fec875ff9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 any I'tb tickled In seven yeir. Then1\ntome satisfaction la buryl#' a mm Ilk\nthat. You (Ml that what you're doing\nippreciated. Lord blAs yon, w/i he gc\nplanted betore he sp'lled, he was perfetl\nsatisfied; laid his» relations meant wel\niw-hctly ydWat all them preparation\nwas boond to'delay the thing wore c\nlest, and he didn't wiih to be kept Uyli\nround. Too nereMee inch a clear hei\nu what he had.and so ci'm and iocoo\nJtttt a11 hunk '"of brains.thit\nwhat A*.ww Perfectly awlal. I\nwis a ripping distance from one en\nof that man's head to t'other. Ollen am\nurersgaln he's had brain lever aragin\nIn one place, and the reel oi the pil\ndidn't know any thing about it.didn't if\nfeet it any more than in Indian Ininrrec\ntlon In Arizona afiects the Atlintii\natatu. Well, the relations they wantei\ni lurid funeral, but corpse said he wa\n3own on flummery.didn't want any pre\nsession.nit me uearso rail oi mourner\nind get oat a stern line and tow him b<\nbind. He was the moetdown on styl\n3f any remain I ever attack.' A beantl\nhi simple-minded creature.it was |ua\nwhat be was, 70a can depend on thai\nBe was )nat set on things the wa\nie wanted them, and he took a solid com\nfort in laying his little plant! He had m\nneasnre him and take a whole raft c\nlirectioni; then he had the miMster stani\nip behind a long box with a.taMe-olotl\niver it, to represent the coffin, and reai\nlis funeral sermon, saying 'Angcore, ang\n:ore I' at the good places, and making bin\nicratch out every bit of brag about him\nind all the hllalutln; and tbei\nie made them trot out the choi\nio's he Mold help them pick ou\nho tnnes for the occasion, and he go\nhem to ting 'Pop Qoes the Weassl,' be\n:ause he'd always liked that tune when hi\nras down-hearted, and solemn must\nnade him sad; and when they sung tha\nwith tears in their eyes (because they al\noved him), and his relation! grievinj\niround, be just laid there as happy as 1\niug, and trying to beat lime and showlnj\nill over bow mnch he enjoyed it; Jan<\n>resently he got worked up and excited\nrad tried tojota In, (or mind yon, be wai\niretty prond ol his abilities in the singing\nine; but the first time ho opened hi\nnonth and was Just going to spread
32d05a0134786ed26b050914e08c4e7f WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1869.864383529934 40.827279 -83.281309 The Temperance Party.\nWhen the Leader reviewed the\nground, a week before the election,\nand predicted that the temperace\nvote in this county would not ex\nceed six hundred, it was thought\nunduly sanguine It now appears\nthat its estimate, instead of being\nfar below, was far above the mark.\nOnly 248 votes were polled for\nthe temperance candidate for Gov\nernor in this county, and less than\nseven hundred were polled in the\nentire state. In all but four coun-\nties, the total temperance vote is\n646. Of these four counties there\nare thirteen temperances votes in\nAshtabula and seven in Summit.\nNever was there a more conspicu-\nous and utter failure in a party that\npretenaea to an organization at all.\nThe party claimed 2,500 votes in\n county alone, and ten thousand\nin the State. They find themselves\nutterly without support. This is\nnot to be attributed to the absence\nof temperance feeling in the State.\nmere are hundreds ot thousands of\npeople in Ohio, who heartily, sym\npathize with the temperance reform.\nBut this verdict at the polls is an\noverwhelming one against thrusting\ntemperance into politics, and. mak\ning the idea of prohibition the nu\ncleus of an independent political\nparty. We hope that our temper-\nance party friends have been sober\ned lor their is such a thing as in\ntemperate advocacy, even of tem\nperance by the result of the elec\ntion, and will realize the utter hope\nlessness of attaining their object by\ntne means which they are now em\nploying.
139e128ed6d0dc763437a029c784f516 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.595890379249 40.063962 -80.720915 From theN. Y . Foil) ol\nIn view ol the possibility that both «\nliese offices [Presidency and Via* Preai- P\nlency] might become vacant, leaving the\nGovernment in an embarrassing position, P\nhe Congress early took action tinder the tt\nuthority here given It. In March, 1793, 1\nt adopted an act providing thit "in case fr\nif removal, death, resignation or inability >>'\n>t both the President and Vice Prealdent, J*\nbe President of tho Senate, or, II there is It\ntone, the Speaker ol the House ol Repro- ca\ncntatlves lor the time being, shall act as T«\nresident until the disability Is removed '«\nr a President elected." This provision til\ni embodied in the Revised Statutes or be\nue United States, Title III, Ctap. I, and hi\ni the whole of section 10, treating ol the >»\nucoesaion without election. Sections 17, Ti\n8 and 19 treat ol the manner In which an in)\nlection lor a successor la to be made, tor \neither the President sf the Senate nor eel\nno Speaker of the House can hold the of- er,\nce oi President to the end of the term, il «"\nle vacancy occurs more than two noothi tic\nelore the first Wednesday In December rej\nthe sccond year preceding the year '«1\nliirh i>Lhm thfl term In whtrh ihrt n- trc\n»ncy occurs. This la to tax, lbs choice to\n[ President and Vice Preaiaent oust be an\nisde by the appointed electors on the thi\nret Wednesday in December, and the cn\nUlcers elected will Uka their seats oa the [>e\nth day of the lollowing March. II vacuo- be\nies occur,Therefore, even as early as No- »"]\nember of the second year previous to cjj\nis year dating the Presidential thi\nirm, there will be no election, cei\nEcause the electors could not be tal\nilled together until December of the cat\nBxt year, or a month later than the rei\nigular election of President and
0eac63e807685ddc361c2bf9c84c802d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.43698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 of Senators and "Representatives, with\nhuli<*L Then followed .Minister Thornton,\nwife and Iifdy friend, with' Secretary and\nMrs. Ford, with all .the other attaches of\nthe British Legation; Huron Oerolt, wife\nand daughter, Mr. , irad31adanio Garcia,\naud, in short, the representatives of every\nnation on the faco of the globo,. except\nChiun aud Japau. The DiplomaticCorps\ndid not wear their uniforms, hut were\ndecked with aU their stars aud ordure, and\nuniformly inclosed fn" swallow-t;iil coats,\nwhite vesta, neckties, gloves, and dark\npantaloons. Mrs. Grant was attired in\nfull flowing pink grenadine, with Hounced\nsatin uvcrsknt, with handsome diamond\nnccklftcc and japoniea liuir adorning?.\nThe ladies of the cabinet and the ladies of\nthe diplomatic corpf», tft^Dtller with the\nothers present, scented to have made up\ntheir minds to outdress each other for the\n for never during the past gay\nseason lists excellent taste and rich dress*\ning been so unlfonnally displayed.\nWitliin a few minutes the President\nwith his party had all got into the East\nKooni, and taken position 011 the west\nside, the President, with Secretary Fish,\nGen. Parker and Mr. Bcauvis, the chief\nInterpreter, taking places at tlx? head of\nthe room, with Airs, uratit, Mrs. uen.\nParker and Mrs. Fish next them, ami so\non they were distributed waiting and\nlooking nt the Indians, nnd the latter\nlounging lazily on the sofas and Htaring\nat them. It was a mutual surpslse.\nSoon Gen. Parker gave a signal, and\nShotted Tail, witb bis braves arose from\ntheir seats, und one by one advanced to\nwhere the President and his group were\nstanding, and then commenced the
104e94417563db93808725a752d38a26 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.6315068176052 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr Derby comes to Delaware\nhighly recommended Since graduat­\ning from the University of Illinois,\nhe has had several years' experience\ncoaching colleges and high schools\nin the Middle West. He also grad­\nuated from the coaching school of\nthe University of Illinois, where he\nwas under the directlpn of Coach\nZupke, who la regarded as one of the\nmost successful coaches among the\nhigher colleges and universities.\nDuring the war he served for two\nyears as an ensign in the Navy.\nCoach Shipley, who is now at Po-\ncomoke City, Md., managing a base­\nball team there, plans to take a\nsquad of Delaware football players\nto College Park, University of Mary­\nland. for the preliminary training.\nOwing to the fact that the opening\ngame of Delaware's schedule is Sep­\ntember 24 with Penn, at Philadel­\n only two days after the uni­\nversity opens, It is necessary for the\nfootball men to report early In Sep­\ntember for the preliminary training.\nCoach Shipley will probably have\nthe men report to him here from\nSeptember 5 to 8, and after securing\nthe equipment the squad will then\nleave at once for College Park. This\nwill give about two weeks for pre­\nliminary practice before the Penn\ne. Tbis arrangement gives Del­\naware the opportunity to scrimmage\nwith the Maryland squad. The list\nof men who are to make the trip will\nbe announced in a short time.\nMr. Derby, it is understood, will\nalso accompany the squad to College\nPark. He was In Newark this week\nand had a conference with President\nHulllhen and Dean Smith, the latter\nbeing president of the Athletic Coun-
21cb0bc93e77210193adad7921c7d323 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.815068461441 40.419757 -77.187146 full Into a well of water at the foot of the\nlower. The atmosphere on this plati\nform was too warm to make a prolonged\nstay agreeable, and the ascent was con-\ntinued. What amount of time It look to\nreach the top Is not known. It seemed\nto be about six weeks ; hut the watch\nman said It was not quite so long, and\nhe appeared to be a truth telllng man,\nWhen the lop was gained, however, the\nreporter was far from Inclined to cry\n"Excelsior I" What he felt like doing,\nand did In fact do, was to seat himself on\nthe last step and try to breathe.\nAfter a time he succeeded, nnd with\ntime also the whirling seiisnllon In his\nhead began to nbale, Then lie looked\nfrom the tower to the ground, feet\nbelow, and drew back to the centre of\nwhat seemed to him a ridiculously nar-\nrow platform. Home people say that\nwhen they stand upon a great height\nthey feel a desire to Jump dowu. Not\nthe slightest longing of that kind arose\nIn the Star reporter's breast. He felt\nthat he would like to get do A n, but the\nJumping process never even suggested\nItself to him. The desire to descend was\nnot lessened by the discovery that the\nlower was swaying to and fro In the\nbreeze, and that he expected each mo.\nment to see It topple over.\nJust us day hud fully opened, the\nwatchman of the tower thrust his head\nabove the scuttle door and bade the re-\nporter good morning. If he wished to\nget some Idea of shot-makin-
1a5c5f9895420498fb1911e43bfd0939 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.042465721715 40.063962 -80.720915 I'tilher O'Connor, n- former Catholic\n1'rleNl, Driven from n Platform.\nZanesvillk, 0., January 15..Father\nO'Connor, who claims once to have been\na Catholic priest, lectured here on Friday\nnight to an audience of about one hundred\npersons. The audience listened attentive¬\nly to liiB lecture, although it was very dis¬\njointed. Ho ridiculed all rights of the\nchurch, denounced the Pope, and pro¬\nnounced the Roman Catholic church a\nfraud, based upon error and superstition,\nand in every regard an outrage upon the\npeople. To-night ho attempted to lecture\nagain, and before he had spoken fifty\nwords stones were hurled through the\nwindows, and tho speaker was compelled\nto retire from tho platform. Simultan¬\neously with the throwing of the Btoues,\nsome fifty persons entered the hall with¬\nout paying, and thrusting the door¬\nkeeper aside, entered and began to\nhalloo 'Tut him out!" The audi¬\nence, which was of some\nthree hundred persons who had paid to\nhear the lecture were thrown into a panic,\nand for ten minutes the wildest excitement\nprevailed. The speaker mouuted the plat¬\nform a second time, but had uttered but a\nfew words when stones came hurling\nthrough the windows from tho streets, one\nof which struck a lady on the nose, inflict¬\ning quite a wound. Amid the excitement\nthe police entered, aud after great difficulty\nhustled O'Connor out of the way of the\nmob. It was the most disgraceful scene\never enacted in Zanesville, aud is the only\nconspicuous instance of suppression of free\nspeech that ever occurred here. Prominent\nCatholics severely condemn tho course\nfaken by a few hot heads, and fear that it\nwill cast a stigma upou the Church that\ntime cannot remove.\nFather O'Conner announced that he\nwould lecture to-morrow night, when he\nwould be properly guarded.
0d0e8107a4cc1d2a9d0c10cbadabbf86 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.8589040778793 43.82915 -115.834394 Something after this fashion dt»es he suffer\nfrom them. Very likely, when a stranger\nniul first called, the illness he treats is a\nsevere one, or it may be a desperate emer­\ngency. He is successful in his treatment,\nund for several months after is the recog­\nnized attendant of that family. They think\nmuch of him, and encourage neighbors and\nfriends to patronize him. After a time his\nbill comes in and is met with some excuse\nwhich is readily accepted. As time goes on\nand the debt remains unpaid, his collector is\nmore i>ersistent. At last another atta ck of\nsickness occurs in the same family, and, in­\nstead of sending for the physician to whom\nthey are indebted, who did so well on a\nformer occasion, and in whose praise they\nhave been so loud, they employ another.\nThe neighbors see the str ang e physician\ncalling, and naturally ask why the change.\nNot one of the class of people we describ­\ning have manhood and womanhood enough\nto prompt him to give the true, honest rea­\nson for it. No! They simply say Dr. S o\nand-so did not do as well the last time we\n“had him” as hedid at first, and so we\nthought we would not call him again. That,\nof course, has its influence, and the friends\nund neighbors who have previously been\nwell disposed toward him whose experience\nwe are illustrating, are thereafter inclined\nto doubt Ins ability.\nThe consequence is, the skillful and oblig­\ning physician, to whom is owed not only the\nmoney, fur which he has patiently waited,\nbut a wealth of gratitude for his devotion to\nthe former sick one, loses not only the\namount <>f his bill, b ut also the reputation\nwhich he has justly earned in the neighbor-\nhood. Une evil disposed person, w ithout a\nshadow of truth to sustain his assertions\ncan in a close community do a physician an
0a04c767fb39f8cd7d26c83eee41891c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.7383561326737 39.261561 -121.016059 Every Intelligent and thinking i-ersnn must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian, whose preparatory study fits him tor all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cuie-alls. purporting to be Hie\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be Rah\nTtcrtsK in selecting his physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incootroveitible fact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nhy mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nby the best svphilograpliers. that the study and man-\nagement oftliese complaints should engrossthe whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir comonly pursues one system of treat-\nment, in most cases mskfng an indiscriminateuse of\nthat antiquated Bnd dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used bythesypli-\nilltic patient, in cousulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or oilier\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Deter\nFunk ••institutions,” ami unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Dersons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J . C. YOUNG\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 761 Clay street, opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom9a.M..to5e.m.
32d309677ad7655c2812aa6ea165b2da DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.5246575025367 58.275556 -134.3925 More ditch building on Seward penin¬\nsula is contemplated the present sea¬\nson than ever before in its history. In¬\ndeed the number of proposed ditches\nwill not be less than twenty, some of\nthem of considerable length, those\nproposed for Candle and the Inmachuk\nsections being the most extensive. The\nfield is a promising one, and by means\nof these canals an immense stretch of\ngold-bearing ground will be opened up,\nand it will soon be adding its quota to\nthe gold production of the peninsula.\nRev. J. W. Glenk has just been re¬\nappointed pastor of the Methodist\nchurch at Skagway for another year.\nIt was expected that ISishop David II.\nMoore would visit Alaska this year for\nthe Annual Meeting which was to be\nheld at Skagway, but he has found it\nimpossible to do so. As the Methodist\nlaw demands that pastoral appoint¬\nments shall be made annually, Bishop\nMoore is making the Alaskan appoint¬\nments from his episcopal residence in\nPortland, Oregon. Although nothing\ndefinite has been received in regard to\nthe other appointments in Alaska\nthere will probable be very little\nchange except that new work will \nopened up..Alaskan.\nThe Ear mountain district is fifty\nmiles north of Teller and ten miles\nsouthwest from Schismareff inlet, a\nbody of water navigable for light-draft\ncoastwise vessels. There is an easy\ngrade from the mountain to Port\nClarence, and a railroad of fifty miles\nin length would connect this district\nwith deep water navigation. Tin ore\nhas been discovered in places, and a\nconsiderable amount of cassiterite has\nbeen brought to Nome for assay. The\nsamples brought in have assayed as\nhigh as 57 per cent, pure tin, while\nsamples running 20 per cent, are com¬\nmon. The discovery of tin ore in well\ndefined ledges in places is considered\nby mining men of this vicinity to be\nthe "greatest find" yet made in Alask a\nMuch activity in the Yentna distric\nis reported by Captain E. A. Swift,\nowner of the little river steamer Cas¬\nwell, which was brought up from Se¬\nattle under her own steam this spring.\nCapt. Swift writes to The Gateway\nfrom Tyoonok: "The Steamer Caswell\nhas made her initial trip to up river\npoints. The center of attraction seems\nto be on Yentna River about Lake
dec66f2425367c99244581c052b6bc82 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.215068461441 43.798358 -73.087921 ately say from fourteen years experience\nthat no disease or injury to the' human\nsystem has a more certain remedy than\nthis for the most distressing of all injuries,\nthat of scalds and burns. The relief is al-\nmost, instantaneous ; from a minute or\ntwo to half an hour, will usually fi.,d a\nfull relief from pain. No matter the ex-\ntant of the burn, even if all the skin is re-\nmoved from the body. The first knowl-\nedge I had of it was the almost miracu-\nlous cure of a little boy, who fell into a\nhalf hogshead of boiling water prepared\nfof scalding the bristles from swine. The\nentire person and limbs of the'bov pass d\nunder the scalding water up to the chin,\nso asr to scald his whole neck. On re-\nmoving his clothes, all his s!;in\nfollowed from hisneck, hands, arms, chest,\nback, abdomen, and almost every bit of\nskin from his extremities. In this deplo-\nrable condition, literally flayed alive with\nscalding water, the remedy was promptly\napplied as a momentary application until\nthe physicians should arrive. Two emi-\nnent physicians son came, and on learn-\ning the extent of the scald, pronounced it\na certainly fatal case, and directed the\nboy to remain with the remedy over him\nuntil he should die. In six weeks he was\nrestored quite well, with scarcely a scnr\non any part of his person or limb?. The\nremedy increases in value from the fact\nthat under almost all circumstances it may\nbe obtained. It is as follows : Take soot\nfrom a chimney where wood is burned\nrub it fine, and mix 1
2db4f7bd943d60219750f9726679a98f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.2999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 A large amount of preparation' hi\ncontinued to be made of the work <\nthe Ohio river bridges, and tho exper\nditures for these structures now excee\n(000,000. As the board is aware, an al\ntack was made during the last sessio\nof Congress upon the plan for the char\nnel spans ol these bridges.\nIt will be rembered that tho bridge\nat Bellaire and Parkersburg are bein\nconstructed under an act of Congref\npassed in 1S62, under which tlie Stei:\nbenvilie bridge, which is used by tl\nPennsylvania road and its connection:\nwas also built. That bridge remain:\nand has not been practically altacke\nby those who assume that tho navigi\ntion of the river will be interfered wit\nby the bridges of tho Baltimore an\nOhio Corapauy. Under the act of 1S(\npiers is required to be i ot less Ilia\nthree hundred feet. The Steubenvill\nbridgo was so imperfectly conslructei\nthe piers having such insecure found;\ntions, that in order to maintain tliei\ntwenty feet of rip-rapping on each Bid\nof each pier was required, so that th\nwater way has reduced to -GO ir\nstead of 300 feet, as required by law.\nThat bridge was also constructed in\nbend of the river, where the water wa\ncrooked, and where thero were Beriou\ndilliculties in navigation, irrespectiv\nof the structure ittelf. The bridge\nplanned by the Baltimore and Ohi\nCompany have been located not onl\nin straight water, bat where, lor half\nmile above and below each site, there i\na direct current, thus preventing th\ndilliculties which arise from crooke\nwater, which exists wherever the rive\ncurves. The Baltimore and Ohio Com\npany also, instead of attempting to plac\nits piers upon the bottom of the rivei\nwith little or no foundation, has, f\ngreal cost.and thus far under grei\ndilliculties, arising principally from th\nfrequent rises of the river during th\nlast season, which uestroyed or damaf\ned seriously and repeatedly its colli\ndams.constructed its piers with a\naverage depth of foundation of eleve\nfeet, thus making them so substantin\nthat when constructed the superstrut\ntures can be placad upon the piers an\nthe bridges be safe without resorting t\nrip-rapping.
14971500dccfbec72fe52be26018c7fb THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1903.0397259956874 47.478654 -94.890802 A sufficient contest affidavit having been\nfiled in this office by Clara J. Llllevold, con-\ntestant, against Homestead entry No 3 375,\nmade August 21, 1000. for NEW, Section 2S. '\nTownship 15(i N.. Range 37 W.. by Guilder i\nMarsten. Contestee. In which it Is alleged I\nthat the said defendant (Guilder Marsten) J\nhas wholly abandoned said land for more\nthan six months last past, and next prior to\nthe date herein: that said tract Is not culti-\nvated as remit red by law; that there Is no\nbuildings of any kind, and that the land is in\nIts natural state: and that the said alleged\nabsence from the said land was not due to his\nemployment in the army, navy or marine\ncorps of tne United States as a private sol-\ndier officer, seaman or during tin-\nwar with Spain or during any other war In\nwhich the L'nited States may Is- engaged.\nSaid parties are hereby notified to appear,\nrescind and offer evidence touching said al-\nlegation at !0 o'clock a. HI. on Feb. 2. 1003. IN -\nfore Nels K. Nelson, U. S . Commissioner.\nDlst.. of Minn., at Grygla, Marshall Count v.\nMinnesota, (and the final hearing will be held\nat 10o'clock a. m . on Feb. Pth l!W!,before) the\nRegister and Receiver at the United States\nLaud Office In Crookston. Minnesota.\nThe said contestant having, in a proper af-\nfidavit, tiled Dec. 10th. 1002, set forth fads\nwhich show that after due diligence personal\nservice of this not lee ran not be made, it is\nhereby ordered and directed that such notice\nbo given by due anil proper publication.
0ed9bc8b61b316946701d314233fa2e3 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1886.8397259956876 42.68333 -96.683647 a promise as the President asserted he\nmade would have been inconsistent with\nhis whole connect ion w ith the suspen­\nsion of Mr. Stanton. He had in the\noutset protested against his removal;\nwhen inevitable he had consented to\nact od int'rin} to prevent- the appoint­\nment of some one who would, "by op­\nposition to the laws relating to the\nrestoration of tlio Southern States to\ntheir proper relation to the Govern­\nment, embarrass the army in the per­\nformance of the duties esj>ecially de­\nvolved upon it by the laws;" and he\nhad, as agreed, notified the President\nof his intention to respect the tenure-of-\noftico bill and vacate the War Office the\nmoment Mr. Stanton should be rein­\nstated. The President did not deny\nthis, but sought to impugn Grant's\ngood faith by asserting that he further\npledged himself not to vacate without\nnotifying him in to ap)K>int his\nsuccessor, or to hold on aud await a\njudicial decision. This involved a con­\ntradiction in itself. The President did\nnot deny that Grant at this interview-\non the 11th informed him how he should\nact under the law of Congress if the\nSenate non-concurred in Mr. Stanton's\nsuspension. He satisfied himself by\nthis statement, anil determined the\nquestion of veracity in favor of Grant.\nThe General hud visited him, as he told\nGen. Sherman that day it was his in­\ntention to do, for the express purpose\nof Hunouncing to the Presideut that lie\nhad changed his opinion of the tenure-\nof othce bill, and should retire if the\nSenate reinstated Stanton. He had no\nother object in view, and the President\ncould not have been left in doubt of the\ncourse the General would pursue. If\nhe wanted to anticipate the Senate and\nappoint Stanton's
61bfc2651aa02026c97f4ed9674b4bb3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8095890093862 40.063962 -80.720915 He argued that tho reconciliation\nndopted was the most wise course to\npursue. Tho plan, he said, gives us a\ngreat national advance iu the progress\nof moral and political elevation which\nare now to be made fast and firmly\nfixed, for It secures a voluntary aboli¬\ntion of slavery by tho insurrectionary\nStates, and secondly an effectual adop¬\ntion by the late slave States themselves\nof tho amendment to tho Federal Con¬\nstitutions prohibiting slavery forever\niu any part of the United States.\nIn this work of reconciliation he\nurged, in tho language of tho President,\n"we must trust each other." As tc\nfears or too much leniency on tho part\nof the President, ho said, except thoso\nwho have been wounded or bereaved,\nnone had suffered more of wrong, in¬\ntuit and insolence at the hands of tho\nleaders of tho rebellion than the Presi¬\ndent, and cannot wo forget where he\ncan forgive. Ills terms of amnesty are\nfar more rigorous than thoso offered by\nAbraham Lincoln. Mr. S . guaranteed\nfidelity and faitlifulnss oil the part or\nAndrew Johnson. Ho had never in his\nlife met a man more free from personal\ncaprice and selfish ambition; none more\npurely and exclusively ihoved in public\nactions, by of country and good\nwill to muiikiud.\nMr. Seward then passed in review the\ndifferent members of the Cabinet since\nthe first Inauguration of Mr. Lincoln,\nspeaking highly of them all.\nConcerning' foreign relations Mr. S .\nsaid ho was permitted to say In general\nterms we have claims on foreign na¬\ntions for injuries to tho United States\nand liorcitizens, and other nations have\npretended claims' against this govern¬\nment f<ir alleged Injuries to them or\ntheir subjects, lie bolieved the Presi¬\ndent would conduct these affairs iusuch\na manner as to yield and recover indem¬\nnities justly due without any compro¬\nmise or tho national dignity and honor.\nWith whatever jealousy wo may adhere\nto our inherited principles of avoiding\nentangling alliances with foroigu na¬\ntions, wo must continue to eXcreisc a\njust and beniilcent influence lu tho in¬\nternational conduct of foreign Slates,\nparticularly those which are near to us\non this continent and which are espe¬\ncially endeared to us by their adoption\nof republican institutions. He was\nsure tlio President had not lost sight of\nthis important interest and he expected\nto see republican institutions wherever\nthey have been heretofore established\nthroughout tlio American Continent\nspeedily vindicated, ronowed and- re -\nInvigorated.
1def61f756684e4de16e4f70d5ea8bb8 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1863.0397259956874 37.561813 -75.84108 llou waa returned, endoraed, no gtMxlVor chat tela, lunda\nor tan amenta found whereon to levy," and atating that\nno paymenta at all hare been made on the aaid judg-\nment, mid that the Mint rialna unreveravd and uu\ntatltfled. Said petition further atatea t hut aaid dei eiid -a n- t ,\nT. W, Kcrugttf, haa no property of any kind, tub-je-\nto htry and aula to aattufy aaid judgment; that aaid\ndsfuodaut, T.W .IHcrtigga, hua an twuituble fntereat in\ncurtain real estate, situate in tho town of IlilMigro, in\naaid County of Highland and KUt of Ohio, vix: part\nof I n Lot No. 03 iu said town, the conveyance for the\nsame being made to James M. Shipp, but that the pur\ncbaaerinoney, 10UO, waa In fact paid by the aaid defwnd-au- t ,\n W. Scruggs, or the moat part 01' the aame.that all\nthe Improvaineota put upon said Lot No. OJ, which are\nvaluable, wore put there by the saldT. U.Sarugga.or with\nmeaua furnish od by him, and tiiargiug that the Judg\nment aforesaid Is Inequity a lien upon the aaid lot and\nImprovametita thereon; and praying that the widow and\nheirs be made defendants who the aaid T. V, Scruggs,\nand that aaid In.lt M. i; and 'improvement he sold\nand the proceeds appljed to the antisfiu'tlon of auld plain- -\ntiiT'aaaid Judginatit, Intereat and costs and increaaad\ncoata, and for g -- coral relief. Said defendant, Willimn\n. ve r eit enipp, la hereby notinetl that unless be answer\nby the 7th day of February, (Saturday) 1903, the same\nwill be taken aacoufenaed, and juilgmnnt rendered.
003438959dfc38bfa4fa3bcc24f48b19 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.9136985984271 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Clulfuy, as far as has been ascer¬\ntained Irorn the glaasblowers hereabout,\nIs a demagogic sort ot a person who has\n|ust been elevated to a position of trust\njy Uia lellow-workmeu. Ho ia now cole-\njrating hla elevation by the pticullareort of\nMethods recently employed by Butler out\nu Ohii'ip, who engineered ao disastrous-\ny the Strike of packers, and by Martin\nIrons, vtho giiwd such an unaivory rep-\naUtion in oonneotlon with the strike an\nJay Gould's Southwestern system. Hy\nreason of Mr. GolTey'a Imperative orders\nill the glass blowers employed at Hagert\nBrothers A Co, in Brooklyn, and nearly\n. 1 1 cf these employed at the JJnsbwick\niiaea Works are also out. This enforced\nitrike ia not approved by a great majority\nif the men, who are meiijbora of .the\nJlaeablowers' l/mgun,\nLast summer the Kteoqtivo (Jouimittee\n)f the league met and adopted a acale of\na-agoii, and In a conference with the man-\nlfacturera It waa agreed to pay the men\n15 percent below the scale, and\ngive the manufacturers tbe right\n employ and train the two\napprentice) they asked for. On this basis,\nahicli was perfectly satisfactory to the\niterative Committee, the man were or-\nlend to .o towork,andthey didsoon\nDie lat of November. They wero not bad¬\nly oil, csrluiuly, for under It they could\nmake from io to ill a day,\n. Iust alter the turnaces wero started, and\nwhen the men wprp we|i at work, there\njama a call for a special'meeting ot the\nletigno at Camden, N.J. Not knowing\nthat anything "f iminrtaDOe was coming\njp, a largo nurnbar of the fictorles failed\n,o be rtpresented at this meeting, held\n:wo Wlf ago. Its principal outcome\nwas the deposition cf Tqnilfn from the\nposition lie bad m long and catlefaciorlly\niceupicd and Ihe substitution of John\nBoflVy, a radical woikmau and agitator of\n[he Homo Club school.\nHardly hud (JoSey been inducted into\njllice, 'nefore, liko a flash from a clear sky,\njama the orilor to strike.\nIljlley was dumbfounded by the rtfusal\nof tbe gians-blo act's to obey tne mundate\nlo strike,
02c479ca8fef752c190fec676b71ae3b SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1913.3356164066463 43.624497 -72.518794 looked Eafo, but evldently tbcre was\na hole that was not corked. Not hav-l n- g\nmade camp. untll three o'elock, we\nwcre tlred. After a swlm, went to bed\nat 9:30 Juat beforo turnlng Iri Wat-\nson remarked hls head was downhlll.\nI sald to put eomothlng under the Jegs\nOf hla bunk to ralse lt, but ho sald it.\nwas caslcr to turn around, so ho slept\nwlth hls head at the'lent Joor.\n"About 10:30 I woke up'to seo plaln-l - y\nIn tbe entntnce a Moro wltb a\nbaronK. He was iumnltu? about cut- -\ntlng to the rlght and left' rlght merrP"\nly. Hls posltlon brought. bim wlthfn\ncasy rango of both bunks, I let forth\na yell that arousod the' camp, and\nawung my lega ln nnd to tho head of\nthe cot, ending by slttlng on the head\nof tbe cot wltb tny left Blde toward\ntho door; tben reacbed for my plstol\n of course. could 'not flnd lt I\nhad taken lt out of the holster and put\nlt. whero I could not mlas flndlng lt.\nbut eome of the bed clothes must havo\ncovercd lt when I moved, nnd I hnd\nto kcep my eyes on' the Mdro: Instead\nof comlng Info tbe tenti'he. stepped\nback out of slght tpr jiacendttien.\nreappcarcd with a spear about ten'\nfeet long, the longest I have Been.\nWlth thls ho made two lungea at me\nswlnging far back on hls rear foot\ntben drlvlng forward wlth' all hls\nmlght, He was a busy little bee. The\nmoon llgbt shpne on the tent and 1\nwaa ln tbe ohadow. I managed to\nparry cach tbrust wlth my left arm.\nstill trylng for my plBtol .wlth my\nrlght band; then ho stepped back\nagaln and reappeared comlng toward\ntho tent wltb hls barong.\n"Two plstol shots squnded butstde the\ntent (Saxtonl: ho stacsered but cnn-
09ac5f3403548596976285c2bb6faabd THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.43698626966 39.261561 -121.016059 Timportant to females— when a\nfemale is in trouble or afflicted with disease, and re-\nquires medical or surgical aid. the inquiry should be where\nIs there a physician who is fully competent to administer\nrelief, one whose knowledge of the female system is perfect,\nand who thoroughly understands the application of medi-\ncine to disease, and whose scientific attainments in surge-\nry have made him pre-eminent in his profession, and\nwhose respectable standing in society, recommends him\nto the confidence of the community. Unless these, and\nmany more questions can be satisfactorily answered, the\nafflicted should pause before consulting any one. Consid-\nering these things in their true light, the celebrated J. C .\nYOUNG, corner of Montgomery and California streets, has\nconcluded to advertise his place of business to the public,\nstating that has been a professor of obstetrics and fe-\nmale diseases for the last fourteen years, and is fully qual-\nified to administer in all diseases, both medically and sur-\ngically, not in a su]»erficial manner, but in as thorough a\nmanner as years of study and practice—both in hospitals\nand private families, can make : therefore, families can\nrely upon him as a father All in affliction can find in him\none who can sympathize with, and befriend them in troub-\nle, one in whose secrecy the utmost confidence can be\nplaced. Come all ye that are afflicted and in trouble, and\nyou will be relieved or cured. Apartments privately ar-\narranged so as to preclude the possibility of exposure.\nN. B .—All letters inclosing $10 will receive prompt at-\ntention, and the best advice and instruction.
11df0ed68fcb70000e2e59430a44f389 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1903.8068492833586 41.004121 -76.453816 The first Important work, then, Is to\ncurry grange work into tho scattered\nterritory, for first of all some form of\norganization is necessary for systemat-\nic work. Then' some clearly dellncd\nwork for tho upbuilding of the town\nshould be begun, and tho first In im\nportanco is its educational Interests,\nThe public school can do much, but it\nmust be a live one, and it should con\ntribute more than has been done to tho\nreal life and interests of tho town,\nSchools should be a more potent factor\nIn a community and do more for It\nthan teaching in a perfunctory man\nner tho English branches. The grange\ncon with great profit study the needs\nof the community and then uld In put-\nting tho school upon such a working\nbasis as to contribute largely to them,\nThis will naturally lead to the lui\nprovement of roads, for the Isolated\nrural school Is gone forever, and good\nroads are a not only for the\nlurmer, but for tho dally transporta\ntioii of his children to and from\nstrong central school. Itoud construe\ntlon becomes a vital problem for the\ngrange to study and work out. Then\nfollow the many questions of the lm\nprovement of the farm, tho soli, stock\nof markets, taxation and of great iui\nportanco official representation in local\nas In state nnd national legislation\nThe grange should be more definite In\nIts object and more direct in its work\nand every new grange organized upon\nthis basis will in tlnio revolutionize\nany community In which its work is\nvigorously and intelligently conducted\nFarmers aro overwhelmed by many\npresent day problems which are rapid\nly pressing upon them faster than they\nare educated to meet them. The grange\ncan do greater service by clearly do-\nfining the lines of educational work to\nlie taken up and directing well organ\nlzed effort toward these ends In all\nnewly organized territory.
288a437a77ab29833f80a7c1dc624f4d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.9383561326738 41.681744 -72.788147 fraud in the making of contracts\nand purchase of supplies, larceny\nand the altering of public records.\nThe men were named in six in-\ndictments returned after a two\nmonths' Investigation Into the affairs\nof the city, begun at the lnstanca of\na committee of citizens. All of the\nmen pleaded not guilty upon ar-\nraignment with the right to retract\ntheir pleas within a week. Each was\nheld in $1,000 bail.\nThose arraigned Included Mayor\nJohn J. Donovan, charged with three\ncounts of conspiracy; former Mayor\nDennis J. Murphy, charged with\nthree counts of conspiracy; As-\nsistant Superintendent William F.\nHunt of the Water Works, charged\nwith violation of the city charter ln\naltering public records; Frank P.\nMcNeil of the election commission\nland William H. charged\nwith larceny of J300 from the citv;\nFred G. Leary and James Reynolds,\nsuperintendent of the water works,\ncharged with attempted larceny of\nf 7 50. Leary wat, also named In an In-\ndictment charging violation of the\neity charter. Fred P. Eloy of the\nsame commission was charged Jn\n12 counts with violation of the city\ncharter. John J. Moynihan. superin-\ntendent of the building department\nand Edward J. Donnelly, city pur-\nchasing agent, were charged in three\ncounts with conspiracy.\nOne Indictment charged that\nseven of the men conspired from\ntime to time to nullify the city char-\nter laws of Lowell for their privato\ngains, and for the interests, gain and\npurposes of various persons and con-\ncerns favored financially or political-\nly.
44884f9e38c6e9b3a8d46aa9e3f139c4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.8123287354135 41.681744 -72.788147 "Almost immediately we see again\ndeadened fire and the smoke hov.r -in- g\nas a pall over the burning wood\nand a mad man in 1'JOl has shot\ndown another beloved president, ana\nthe country again mourns.\n"Follows now a period when the\nburning logs settle comfortably into\nplac o as the flames play about in\nrosette hues, marking the steady ad-\nvance of a lapidly growing nation\nwhose inventive genius, scientific\nresearch and expanding commerce\nhave brought ll into tho forefront of\nthe family of nations. How secure\neverything sterns when almost with-\nout warning the fire is beaten down\nand tro flames seems to stand still,\nwhile there arc mutterings and roar-\ning in the chimney until the draft\nis again clear and our fire rushes\nup the chimmy with so tremendous\na gust being in turn blown into the\nvery room that It seems as though\nour habitation must be destroyed by\nits intensity and Ihe roaring pande-\nmonium that has ben lt loose. It\nis the World War, not a pleasant\nthing to dwell on and we will pass\n over quickly. Hut changes have\nbeen wrought whose portent we are\neven now, after eleven years, just\nbeginning to understand. May I di-\ngress to voico what I am sure is\nthe sentiment of .all present; that\nworld peace as an objective, seem -\ningly almost in our grasp, is identi-\ncal with the basic teachings of our\nfraternity the Brotherhood of man\nI'nder the Fatherhood of God and\nthis ideal must be near to the heart\nof every Mason and must be the sin-\ncere purpose of our most, serious\nand intelligent efforts as citizens in\nthe days and years that stretch out\nahead tf us, or we have failed to\ngrasp the opportunity to direct our\ngreat fraternity into a path of im-\nmediate and lasting service.\n"Permit me to suggest briefly the\ngreat changes wrought in fifty years\nby the invention of new transporta-\ntion facilities that have reduced dis-\ntances so amazingly the bicycle\n(imagine if you can Bill Pease and\nHorace Kddy setting out for a spin\nastride those old high wherls dressed\nin the height, of fashion!) soon the
4c5f46e99c0080a101b5483ad79adab1 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.1082191463724 39.369864 -121.105448 called to a dog which accompanied him, which,\nobeying its masters voice, fastened upon Mun-\ndells right arm. This compelled him to change\nthe order of his defence. He recovered his feet,\nand releasing himself by an effort from the dog,\njan a short distance to his shop, where was also\na dog belonging to him, which he unchained and\nurged to the encounter. The dog of the Mexi-\ncan met him, and the dumb brutes, as well as\ntheir masters, at once became involved in afierce\nbattle. The Mexican having gathered several\ncobbles from the road, hurled them at Mundell,\nwho was forced to resort to the same expedient.\nOne of his hurtling missiles struck the Mexican\nin the stomach and for a moment doubled him\nup ; but he still resolutely maintained his ground.\nMundell finding his adversary intent upon shed-\nding his blood, ran towards his shop a \ntime for his revolver, with which he determined\nto kill his man. The Mexican appeared to com-\nprehend his design, and broke for the hills, over\nwhich he clambered with a speed which defied\npursuit, and which could only have been attained\nby the promptings of a wild tenor.\nUp to this moment there were no witnesses to\nthe double-conflict. Soon after, however, several\ngentlemen were attracted to the spot by the\nhowling of the Mexicans dog, which, poor brute !\nwas no matchfor its larger and fiercer adversary,\nand was being literally torn to pieces. The spec-\ntators soon effected a separation.\nMundcll had his arm considerably laceratedby\nthe fangs of the Mexicans dog, but sustained no\nother material injury. It was not until a day or\ntwo after that he learned he had been contending\nwith a madman—a victim of mania potu—whose\nwhereabouts has not since been ascertained.
37b6495f75dc662720593dfb2b618458 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.4030054328578 42.217817 -85.891125 service was also brought up, but Mr.\nMcGuire said he had nothing to do with\nthis department of the service what-\never, and this will be taken up by our\nbusiness men with the passenger officials\nof the road. We are sure that a proper\netTort will convince tho railroad people\nthat they are combatting their own in-\nterests by maintaining the present sched-\nule. Our Chicago service is good, but a\nvery small portion of the travel in and\nout of Paw Paw is to and from that city.\nThe Pere Marquette can furnish us at\npresent no eastern service, and our people\ndesiring to go east are necessarily de-\npendent on the Michigan Central. Under\nthe existing schedule, our people use\nhacks between this place and Lawton,\nand ticket sales at the local P. M. ofllce\nmust bo materially diminished. Paw Paw\nand South Haven are the two principal\ntowns in the county, .TO miles apart and\nconnected by a direct line of railroad.\nNaturally, there is a great deal of busi-\nness back and forth, and yet it is impos-\nsible for a person to travel from oue\ntown to the other via the P. M . and have\nany time to do business return tho\nsame day. Several witnesses in the cir-\ncuit court have driven through from\nSouth Haven this week, and it is not an\nuncommon thing for someone from Paw\nPaw to drive 10 miles to Gobleville to\ntako the Michigan Central to South\nHaven, returning by the same route. A\nlarge portion of Paw Paw's mail and ex-\npress matter comes by way of tho Mich-\nigan Central, and a largo amount of it\nlies at Lawton from 12 to 1G hours be-\nfore being brought to this place. Through\nmails arrive at Lawton from east and\nwest about o and G o'clock in the after-\nnoon, and they are not brought to Paw\nPaw until 8:15 the next morning. It\nwould seem to us as though the railroad\ncould furnish a much more satisfactory\nservice without additional expense by\nstarting a train each morning from South\nHaven and Paw Paw and running two\nround trips daily, instead of cutting the\nservice in two at Hartford. It is certain\nthat some change will bo necessary if\ntho railroad desires to retain the good\nwill of the people on the South Haven\ndivision, as none are better satisfied than\nPaw Paw with the existing passenger\nservice.
8cb243fe21dc4cf669ac4a6688488d6c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.974043684224 39.745947 -75.546589 precepts of Christians to appeal ex- fore this land and before ttie world,\nelusively to file great Lawgiver of ; and is swiftly closing in upon the\nthe universe to aid them in making „„ns and daughters of men isevldent\nmen belter - In correcting their prac- lo many of querent faiths, both spir-\nhces h> purifying their hearts . When; jiuaj and secular. We hear the mut-\ntliey shall have so Instructed the pub-1 tarings of the storm, the distant roar\nlie mind, and awakened the con-|0f t|10 angry billows of strife in\nsciences of Individuals as to make things religious and civil. The tem-\nlliem believe that It Is a violation Ripest wUl surely break, but let It be\nl,0ds law to sell cigars, candy and I our poly glory, our snored Joy, that,\n■ . ï .rriVn îf Sunday, evil of although we may be broken by It, we\nwdi rh the blue law advocates com- shall never bend before It. Infinitely\nplain will rease of itself, without any I happier Is the man wiio is defeated\n■xertinn of the strong arm of the ; in a good cause than the man who is\ncivil power. VVhon man iindcrla.es victorious In a bad one.\nlo become Gods avenger, he becomes. After the night there .will come the\na demon. Driven by the frenzy of a ! glorious dawning of the better morn,\nrelis loua zeal lie loses every gentle, r will bo for the good and the pure,\nfeeling forgets the most sacml pre- We may dlfTor as to how it will come,\ncopts „f his creed and becomes fero- but that it will come we all believe,\nclous and unrelenting.
28d2d3cd7a8da0648df5a2b577cf0743 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.891780790208 40.735657 -74.172367 Among tho guests were: Air. and Airs.\nThomas McGrath, Alias Edith McGrath,\nHarold McGrath, ol Nutley; Mrs. J. A.\nDainty, Mrs. James Kilgore, Mrs. Clar-\nence Crane, Mrs. Charles Wardell, of\nNewark; Air. and Mrs. J. OMara, of\nLong Island; Mr. and Airs. M. Be Arer-\ngan, of Alorris Park, L». I.; Mr. and\nMrs. T. Dempsey. Miss AI. Hamily, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Bradshaw, Charles\nAlurphy. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Toma-\nlin. of Allendale; Air. and Mrs. A.\nMitchell, of Bayside. L. I.; Air. and\nMrs. P. Reynolds. Martin Reynolds,\nMiss Grace Reynolds. Miss Nellie Rey-\nnolds, Mr. and Mrs. William AIcNa-\nmara. Air. and Mrs. PatrickF. Guthrie,\nEdmund J. Guthrie. Miss Mae Guthrie,\nAliss Eugenia Guthrie, of Nutley; AR\\\narid Mrs. C. Dempsey, of Newark; Air.\nand Mrs. J. Grndy, of Aleriden, Conn.;\nJames Grady. Miss Bessie Grady and\nWilliam Grady, of Hat ord. Conn.\nMrs. M Gilroy and Aliss Mary Gil-\nroy. of Newark; Joseph Carroll, Air.\nand Mrs. Etienne Le Bel, Mr. and \nW. B. Duncan. Mr. and Airs. Thomas\nMacVeigh. Dr. and Mrs. A. Harvey\nVan Riper Miss Adrianne Van Riper,\nbliss Lillian Van Riper. Miss Isabel\nDuncan, Mr and Mrs. Alaurice Lob-\nsitz. Miss Helen Lobsitz. Samuel Lob-\ns^tz, Mrs J. Shave, of Nutley; Air. arid\nMrs. M. I. GrifCen. of Belleville; Mr.\nand Mrs George Nelson, of New. 't'ork;\nMr. and Mrs. Horning, of Lake View;\nAjrs.' George S. Coe. Mr. and Mrs. Henry\nM' Libby of Nutley; Mr. and Mrs.\nIfjdward Corrigan, of Bridgeport, Conn.;\nAir. and Mrs. Curtis Wigg, Mr. and\nbtrs. Joseph G. Lamb, Mr. and Mrs.\nIlenry A Connolly, Miss Jessie Dolan\nAir. and Mrs. Francis X. McCabe, of\nNutley; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Soleau,\nof Newark; Air. and Mrs. T. Crosbie,\nof Delawanna; Miss Mamie Hannen,\nAliss Christine Hannen, Gordon Ham-\nilton, of Bridgeport, Conn.; Air. and\nAirs. George Bradshaw, of Newark;\nMr. and Airs. T Rutledge, of Far Roek-\najway; Airs M. Callaghan, of Camden;\nJ; Haimy of New York.
4382c9c2f299694f1c9db5fb18989e42 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.1931506532217 32.408477 -91.186777 Will Assoeeate Ito ComaseL\nWe are ready to associate ourselves\nwith the nations of the world, great\nand small, for conference, for counsel,\nio seek the expressed views of world\nopinion, to recommend a way to ap-\nproximate a disarmament and relieve\nthe crushing burdens of military and\nnaval establishments. We elect to par-\nticipate in suggesting plans for media-\ntios, conciliation and arbitration, and\nwould gladly join in that expressed\nconscience of progress which seeks to\nclarity and write the laws of Inter-\nnational relationship. and establish a\nworld court for the t.slpoltio:t of such\njustlcitble luirttona as cations are\nagreed to sub:nit thereto,. but every\ncommitment must be made in the ex-\n' r cise of our nctlonal sovereingty.\nbince freedom impelled, and independ-\nence inspired, and exalted,\na world super-government is contrary\nto everything we cherish, and can have\nno sanction by our republic. This is\nnot selflshaes, It Is sanctity. It is\nnot aloofness, it is security. It is not\nsuspicion of others, it is patriotic\nadherence to the things which made\nus what we are.\nuWe have come to a new realisation of\nour place In the world and a new appral-\nsal of our nation by the world. The en-\nselAshness of these United States Is a\nthing proven. Our devotion to peace for\nouralves and for the world is well estab-\nlis&hed. Our concern for preservod clvtll-\natrtom ha had its Impoassioned and herocle\nexpression There was no American fall-\nure to resist the attempted reverase oft\nScivlUaation. There will be no failure to-
17282558e1afe230e15d3c9431c4718d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.3219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 J welcome you to this third anniversary\nol your existence. You, who in our hui-\n11es 'n"^ruct the coining generation in I\nthe history of thoir race; you, who break\nfrom duties in church or in State, to show\nyour love for your fellow men by your ml\nin the study of their nrogrehs; you, who\nfor a moment throw aside the cures of the\npress, the toil of authorship, or the do-\nlights of study in retirement, in the name\nof the Association, I bid you ull joy at\nyour 'onewed presence with one another.\nlhe object of our pursuit is one of the\ngrandest that solicits the attontion of\nman. The .movement of mighty States\novor the scene ol over-succe .ing action is\nlike the march of so many armies with\ntheir various civlliiations for their ban-\ntiers; they themselves have faded away;\ntheir career, thoir enduring contributions\n the sura of human knowledge, their\nmen of transcendent genius, suctias aro\nvouchsafed to the race at great intervals\nof centuries, all cotne withiu the range of\nour pursuits. Moreovor, we are nearest\nof kin to the students of moral philosophy.\nThe movement* of humanity aro gov\nerned by law. It is true that tho sparrow,\nwhen the timo conios for its fall to the\nground, obeys a law that pjrvades the\nkosmoa; and it is equally true that every\nhair in the head of a human bolngis num¬\nbered. The growth and decay of empire;\nthe morning lustre of a dynasty and its\nfall from the sky before noon-day; the\nfirst turning of a sod for the foundation of\na city to the footsteps of a traveler search¬\ning for its place, which time line hidden-\nall proceed as it is ordered. The charac-\nter of science attaches to our pursuits.
9828c3689eae49fac91ab42c466da977 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.6945205162353 31.960991 -90.983994 known by the name of Kendall cottons and\nplains, of which wool shall be the only material,\nsixty cents per square'yard; liners or run-out\niron, being iron in advance of pig iron, forty dol­\nlars per ton; Russia hemp, two hundred and thir­\nty dollars per ton; mens pumps, shoes, and slip­\npers, two dollars per pair; coal, and all prepara­\ntions thereof, at eight dollars and sixty-eight\ncents per caldron of thirty-six bushels; cord\nwood, four dollars per cord. Twenty-five per\nc^nt. upon these several values, and upon the\ndeclared value of every dutiable article named\nin the bill, except sugar and fine iron, and thirty\nper cent, upon them, will ascertain a specific du-\nty'and die exflet specific duty, upon each and all.\nThe values in this bill may be too high or too\nlow, but they show any bill upon the home valu­\nation of Mr. Clays compromise act to be alto­\ngether specific. Mr. Simmonss particular bill\nreceived the support of every Whig Senator in\na caucus to which it was submitted. Abbott\nLawrence and Nathan Appleton, names known\nand respected not only throughout New Eng­\nland but the United approved it. Could\nit have been first taken up in thesSenate, it would\ndoubtless have passed that body, and would have\nfound its way easily through the House, and\nwould have proved to the whole country a wise\nand sufficient measure of protection. Mr. Clay\nadhered to the principles of the compromise act\nwith that tenacity of good faith which so much\ndistinguishes his long and eventful public life.\nHe did not forsake them, because he believed\nthat, if they were justly and faithfully executed,\nthey would give adequate protection to home in­\ndustry, secure the permanent prosperity of the\ncountry, and keep down the excitement of an\ni nfuriate sectional opposition against the protec­\ntive policy. He was faithful to the principle of\nthe ad valorem duty upon the home valuation\nwhen gentlemen who are regarded aa the other\nrarty to this compact of peace denounced it as\nimpracticable. No fair mind will deny the truth\nof the position that he has done more than all\nother men to commend a moderate, just, and\nmanent system of protection of Amerieaa*indus-\ntry to the Southern States, in Virginia, North\nCarolina, Georgia, and Tennessee,®whera for­
08040202b85aec7ca781d81ac2ad1f34 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.346575310756 41.262128 -95.861391 named " A Comedy of Errors."\nTbi* abolition Congress discusses no\nother questions than confiscation acts and\nslave emancipation, #omc twenty bills\nhaving boeu intro iuccd oa Uut Mibject-\nThese bills propose to aboli»t Stat« lii»ss\n- make slave Stau-s terntori«- treat\ntbem as subdued provinces—w^t tbe ne-\ngroe* to fanamg iL South Carol10a, and\nput a Government aguu to 0 >oirai thsna\n' At a salary equal u, the ralue of tbe crop\nraised.) ihey offvr ii HOiutiwiia that ar­\nmy officers shall rctaxn no tuorc 1 >1^i;aves.\nand, la»tiy, they h.>ve frt^tni the tK-groe*\nin the District of Co.uutbiii, thus throwing\na helpless, unprotected pet^)le upon a\ndety which always Imkod upon them as\nservants and inferiors. The***; negroes\nhave no meaos of subsistencs^.. and art j W»l«\nturned out to starve, steal—to iuf«at eve­\n avenue a* b 'ggars—to fill prisons and\nworkhouses! This 4 aboluiou phiian-\nthropy ! and it ia for the transaotiag of\nsuch busiui's* that tUis Coogrrtii devot..\ntheir lime, and stjuacdcr the puuiic mon­\ney ! 1 should consider all this as crimin­\nal, aad deserving of >be just\ntion of every honest man.\nI hat e not mentioned these odious and\nunequal tax bills, or their biunde.ing du-\ncrimmatiotis in favor of the sWck jobbers\nia tbe issue of their treasury notes, or of\nthe arbitrary arrets uid iinpri-uniaent by\norder of the Prc«id<nt or Secretary of\n^ sr, of good citiseas— o^ men and women\nof r ospeclability, wi.bout a charge b«o«\npreferred against them—kept in fetoas1\ncells at the pleasure of the Secretary a-\nfaresaid, without a hearing, and some of\nthem afterward* released without ever
1e0f3e35d689b8b33d3275c9fb0a842b THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1905.028767091578 46.601557 -120.510842 Flashlight portraiture la now coming rapidly to the front, having been\nrecently so improved that It Is possible to obtsln results almost Impossible\nby any other means, and Is being used by the most up-to-date artists with\ngroat success as a means of reproducing nature In Its truest forms, because\nwltb this artificial light the greatest amount of detail possible may be ob-\ntained, sittings made either day or night, and with a little practice plates\nare always fully timed and timed alike, thus enabling one to develop several\nst once with the same results, as If each were developed separately and\nalso because It is Instantaneous, It Is very fine for children.\nTbe first thing to be taken Into consideration is tbe lamp, which should\nlie either of electric or alcohol style, snd so arranged ss to be Instsntaneons\nnnd operated In connection with the shutter, and to accomplish this I hava\nmy shutter set so to close as bulb Is released with the bulb connected at on*\n to the lamp and the other to the shutter, snd let me say, slwsys hava\nplenty of hose, so that by squeezing same tbe flash Is made, tbe shutter\nopened and then closed when released, which should be done at once If\noperating In daylight. If at night, tho shutter part may be dispensed with,\nthe shutter being opened Just before the flash snd closed soon after, lamp-\nlight not nlTet-tlng a plate unless directly In front; In fact, tbe more light\nIn a room the better, ns by this means the flash Is not noticed as much and\nbetter expressions are obtained. Then the placing of the lamp Is very\nImportant, and should be ss near the subject as possible, and thft light\nshould strike at sn angle of sbout 45 degrees, so that the shadow formed\nwill fall down Instead of on the background. Avoid placing light too far In\nfront, as the shadows are very seldom too heavy, nnd It avoids flatness ahso\nwith properly timed plates.
7f2cc3ded38e2cbca762af44dcad8787 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1864.132513629579 37.561813 -75.84108 hurryini: to and fro. nnd there were all\ntha evidences of such a panio ss has sel\ndom been witnessed in Richmond. On\nSaturday morning there was no nbate.\nment in tho excitement. Tl.o guards\nwero nil marched out. nT the city for de-\nfence, and armed citizens were placed\nnn guard over the rrHoncrs. IT irse-me- n\nware dashing to an I fro, auJ thi\nexcitement among the prisoners, to\nknow the caue of all this excitement,\nbreams intense. It was soon learned\nthat a Urge body of cavalry, and infan-\ntry force with artillery, had m ida their\nappearance on the Peninsula at Bottom's\nbridi'O, within ten miles ef tho city, and\nthat Richmond was actually threatened\nh tho Yankees. The same hurrying of\ntioops, arming of cltigons and excite-\nment among the women and children\non'inued the morning, and at\nto o'o'oek, when the'iwo released pris-\noners tiore ubout to leave in the truce\nbnst, the alarm bella wero again rung\nwith great fury. The rumors that pre-\nvailed were conflicting iDJ wild. It\nwas their impression that from 800 to 1\ncavalry would havo but little diffi\noulty in entering the city, liberating the\nUnion prisoners, destroying the forte\nand public property, and retiring by the\nPeninsula before any sufficient force to\nrctdrt them could ba brought to the aid\nof ti e srcsll yarrieon K ft to defend it\nFor several dsyi previous to this alarm,\nthe troops in snd around tha city to tlo\nno ib ber of 4,000 or 5,000, had btcn\nsent off to joiu Lee's army with great\ndispatch, the impression prevailing that\na movement was contemplated by Unn.\nMeade.
36c962c04dcaf0d677b29e082eba2209 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.932876680619 39.623709 -77.41082 requirement* of the spirit God unci\nthe spiritual life. When the finger of\nGod through some stalwart Nathan Is\npointed at the sinner, It matters not\nwhether he Is a king upon his throne,\nhe must listen to the "Thou art the\nman,” "wherefore hast thou despised\nthe word of the Lord to do that which\nis evil In Hi* sight?” and In deep con-\ntrition of soul he. must cry out for\nmercy and confess, "I have sinned\nagainst the Lord.”\nNot only have men as Individuals\nbeen led to a false emphasis upon the\nmaterial, and to blindness toward the\nspiritual, but the church herself has\nbecome too material In the expression\nwhich she has sought to give to the\nreligious impulse. Too much of stress\nhas been and is laid upon form and\norganisation and not enough upon the\nspirit. Not until the church comes\nagain to the side of Jacob's well and\nhears afresh the sweet emphasis of\nthe Man of Galilee upon the essential\nspirituality of and (he supremacy\nand priority of the spiritual can sin*\never enter Into her full heritage of\ndivine power. It is high titan that\nwe should have done with the be-\nfogging and befooling effort to meet\nthe requirements of that God who is\nspirit, with substitutes that are mere\nmaterial foibles. It Is the imiers of\nthe soul that God desires and requires.\nIt Is a damning folly to offer any sub-\nstitute for that self which God has\ndestined for eternal fellowship with\nHimself. Goodness, not goods; char-\nacter, not cash; piety, not pretense;\nsincerity, not sham: these are the\nsacrifices acceptable to that God who\nis a spirit and who would he wor-\nshiped In spirit and with reality.\nAnother, truth Is placed beyond per-\nadventurc by those words of Jesus.\nTrue worship Is not a matter of local-\nity, or nationality or sect. Men love to\ndistinguish themselves by some dis-\ntinguishing mark and will congratulate\nand Hatter themselves that it in some\nway makes them superior
17dc47a4d1135b031a78f1987a1b6360 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1894.6068492833588 46.187885 -123.831256 Druggists' Sundries as large as any re- ta - l l\ndruggist on the coast; we have 1700\ntooth1 brushes to select from at prices\nranging from S to 75 cents; hair brushes\nIn different styles from la cents to tl;\nan endless variety of lather brushes\nfrom 10 centfl to II; in toilet soaps, we\nkeep in stock the best grades manufac-\ntured from 40 cents a dozen to $1 a\ncake; also the finest grades of Spanish\nand Italian soaps in bars. In perfumes,\nwe handle the finest extracts of Amer-\nican make, together with the best\nknown odors of Pinauds & Lublns, of\nParis, Gosnell's. Atkinson's and Piesse\n& Lublns, of London, and sell them In\nany quantity to suit. We carry a. full\nline of drugs and patent medicines and\nmanufacture a full line of remedies of\nour Sarsaparllla Blood Purifier,\nCough Byrup, White Oak Llnament,\nJuniper Kidney Cure, Beef, Iron snd\nWine, Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, Diar\nrhoea Mixture, Dead Shot for Corns, i\nSaponaceous Tooth Wash, Tooth Pow-\nder, and Lightning Cloth denser, are\namong our .own preparations which we\nparticularly recommend, knowinir them\nto be nf the beet material nnrl frphlv!\nmade when used, not having stood In\nthe manufacturers' warehouse and been\nwith th Jobber for years before reach\ning the customer. We are always glad\nto show goods whether you buy or not,'\nas we know that after examining our!\nstock you will call again when in need\nof anything in our line. If you cannot\ncall in person, your mall orders will re-\nceive prompt attention. Prescriptions!\nand family recipes carefully prepares'\nby competent men brought up in the'\nDusinesa.
69c66605bc83877bb7ce80ef2321a178 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4671232559615 41.681744 -72.788147 his steel helmet, and Phillip realized\nthat as usual he had disobeyed\norders and stood stock still in the\nmiddle of the road, trying to explain\nto himself what was going on.\nIt was not fright, he concluded,\nwhen he thought of it afterward\nit was just that he had not known\nwhat it was. It had all come so fast\nthat he had not gotten the com-\nmand while he was trying to place\nthe sound of his first shell.\nHe. came to himself calling, "Rod.\nRod!" His only fear was that some-\nthing had happened to his friend.\nHis heart beat more calmly when\nhe saw Rod rushing toward him.\n"Everything's Jake with me. old\nmatt," he assured him. "And you?"\n"Same here, Phil,"\n" Company, fall in! Forward!"\nThey marched on.\nAlthough Phil thought lie had not\nonly sampled, hut exhausted all \nsmells that could assail his nostrils,\nhe knew before he had spent one\nnight at the front that there was no\nsmell so terrible as that of disin-\nterred bodies. He also learned there\nwas no noise so terrific as the noise\nat the front T hen a barrage was on.\nPhil and Rod were immediately\nordered to report to the Intelligence\nDepartment. There had been desul-\ntory fighting back and forth across\nthe river all day, and Rod and Phil\nin headquarters company, were kept\nliusy laying lines from the batteries\nto their headquarters and their out-\nposts, and repairing them when the\nboche shell had cut the wires.\nEvery day there were rumors of\nthe mobilization of the Germans at\nthis sector with a last "do or die\nand get to Taris" push.\nAnd then one morning Thil\nawakened from his two- ho-
122c5f72c90e115e104d295e7ec29809 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.1024589847702 46.187885 -123.831256 Beginning at one end o the ho-\ntel, piles twenty feet long have\nbeeu driven into the earth in a line\nparallel with the outer wall. Each\npile is distant from the other about\nten feet. Then by the side of the\nfirst line of piles another line was\ndriven. The tops of all are on a\nlevel. The plan is to place these\nparallel lines of piles over all the\nground beneath the hotel, and\nthen lay beams upon them, upon\nwhich may be placed steel rails.\nIn this way between twenty-fou- r\nand thirty pairs of tracks will be\nconstructed beneath the house.\nThis number will be necessary be-\ncause the hotel is between 400 and\n500 feet long. The tracks of steel\nrails will be laid not only all the\nwidth of the hotel, which at some\nparts is 120 feet deep and at oth-\ners 150 feet, but will reach back to\nthi rear about 500 feet.\nWhen the tracks are all in place\na massive frame work will be at-\ntached to the floor of the first\nstory. The beams of the will\nbe bound together by other beams\nand an immense platform will be\nbuilt downward from the floor.\nTrucks, such as are used for heavy\nfreight cars, will be placed on the\nrails, and upon these trucks, which\nwill all be fastened together, will\nbe built a kind of platform extend\ning up to the platform built down\nward from the iioor. lhen the\nbrick foundation walls upon which\nat present the house rests, will be\nknocked away, and the immense\nBrighton hotel, four stories high,\nwith gables and jutting roofs, with\nextension rooms and broad, long\npiazzas, the whole structure 500\nfeet long and 150 feet wide, will\nrest on the car trucks.\nIf the ocean does not sweep away\nthe foundation walk and tumble\nthe hotel down on the heads of the\nmen who are driving the piles and\nlavinr the railway tracks, and if\nthe plan of turning the big hotel\ninto an immense car succeeds,\nthe next step will be to move the\nhouse back from the shore. To do\nthis will be needed six or n\nor more heavy locomotives.
137c040f668d5b502fa1067e9db60fe5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.941256798978 39.745947 -75.546589 Tli« Wilmington Trapshooting Club\nin special session last night, talked\nover tomorrows shoot with the Queen\nQlty team. The team Is leading tho\nPhiladelphia Trapshooting League,\ntiavrng won four matches and lost\nnone. West Chester, Camden and I.ans -\nilale, each with three victories and one\ndefeat ,arc tied for second place. The\nUiren second-place contestants are par-\nIteularly anxious to have the local sun-\nners shoot holes" In the Quaker City\nbante r (..morrow, as this would make\nIhe four teams tied for Ilrst plare,\nmaking one of the closest contests In\nthe history of the league.\nA number of the local members will\nleave Wilmington by automobile, 10\noclock tomorrow morning, and any\nshooters desii inis to go can gel a seat\nin one of thecars by communicating\n 1be secretary of the Wilmington\nTrapshooting Association. The Qua­\nker Gity traps are at Maple Grove.\nAmong the shooters the local asso­\nciation Is counting upon are Hilly\nFoord, John Mlnnlck, G. W . Phillips,\nHarry Hoffman, Price Jackson, Joe\nHen McHugh. George Simon, Harry\nHeed, Harry Carlou, Jack Kaiser, Wil­\nliam Goyne, T. W. Marshall, W. W .\nTerrell Joe Snow, Frank Malin, Pete\nGuest. C . Walkor, G. Voshelt, Charlie\nGriswold, E. M . Ross, II. D . Albnugh,\nW. Mlnnlck, I.. 0 . Hoyce, William\nShaw. W . T. Colfax, Vic. duPont. E.\nE. Hanby, George Huber, Clyde\nl.eedoin, Gapt W. A. Slmonton, Dudley\nWood, W. J. Weaver, James Stein, J. I.\nWratten, H L Morgan, James Dawson,\nn. Bowman, A. L. Richards und J. An­\nderson.
3dc8c59265980d397362647655d50a56 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0534246258244 39.745947 -75.546589 You probably do not have to be To bo descendedfrom one of the Nine ©\nInformed that Dougherty Is an lr.sh Hostages Is like having eo:ne over y\nmime. U is one of those surnames with the Norman Conqueror or in\nthat could from the very sound of II the Mayflower.\nbe notiiing else. Hut there 1« a good Some member of this family came\ndeal more to know about the name to America In early colonial duys,\nIlian tliât it Is Irish, ln Ihr llrst though records are Inadmiuale and\nplace the usual spelling in Ireland, at the llrst whosenaipe wr nave was\nleast In days gone by, seems to be Charles Dougherty, who nourished In\nDoherty, it is idenCcnl in origin I Framingham, Masachuaetts, Just be-\n"Ith O'Dooharty. To become more fore the revolution, oddly enough\ninvolved In Irish nomenclature we. name was sometimes spelled\nmay discover ttiat these names arc ! Dorltha, but that was apparently\nall derived from Dooiiartacii, a name ! merely because of had spelling and\nborne by the Lords of Inlshowen ln I not because Ihc family was reully dif-\nCounty Donegal In the good old days j-feront from that of the Irish\nwhen princes and kings of Ireland Dohertys.\n"ere numerous, lie was in fad a In legend Uie Dohertys are among\nLord |>r ........... . Inlshowen, a de­\nscendant of Cean Favla, prlneo of\nTire Connell, now. the County of\nDonegal, and he was twelfth In de­\nscent from the seventh son of Niai,\nwho was one. of tit« Nine Hostage*.\nAnil when you get hack to the Nine\nHostages you have got back to Ihc\nplace where all true sons of Erin like
07369aebd2b762432135acd1c1979927 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.595890379249 39.745947 -75.546589 capped, waterproof; well I knew how suit\nhe was in aim; but I drew the plauk\ntoward me which he had let go of when lit\nclutched his weapon. He raised his hand,\nMs weapon was leveled at my heart.\n“Give up the plank!” he shouted.\n“Never, coward—never! Fire, and ray\ndying curse go with you!"\nI closed ray eyes—I knew my fate—but a\nwild rush of water, a fearful wave, swept\nme far, far away from the rock. Then 1\nwas drowning—gurgling, choking in tho\nwater. But I rose, and as I did, something\nhard touched my body. I clutched it—it\nwas that blessed plunk. To it I clung with\na dent h grasp; yet it seemed as if I was\ndoomed to die. after all, for the waters cov­\nered me ami I lost all consciousness.\nBut not for ull time, i was restored to a\nknowledge that dear life was yet mine by\nthe kind acts of Cubans, who had drawn\nmy body, yet clinging to the plank, from\nthe surf, and were applying stimulants\nwhen I opened rny glad eyes once more ou\n face of bright humanity.\n1 naked if any others had got to the shore.\nThey carried me to a mournful lookiug\ngroup of bodies. I saw several of the crew,\nbut not him—not the captain. But even\nwhile we stood there a great rolking wave\nswept him in, and for an instant I thought\nhe lived; he looked so grim, with the pistol\nyet clutched in his hand. But he was cold\nand dead, aud after they bore him to th>-\ncorpso pile of the rest, und I had grown\nstronger, I took the pistol from his stiffened\ngrasp, took aim nt a piece of the wreck\nand lired. The bullet which hud Ijoc-u in\ntended for my heart went doep into the\noaken wood. I went- down on my knees\nthen and there and thanked the Almighty\nthat I was saved for my poor Ella; and\nthough I have sinco done a sailor's duty in\nprotecting aud aiding the widow and or\nphaiis of the poor captain, 1 never have\nbeen so unselfish as to regret that I had pus\nsession of the lust plank.— True Flag.
0a72507f12138eba0e339bec3826f407 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.932876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Coleman struck her on the bea\nknocking her down, but not storplr\nher cries. He then seized a razor at\ncut her throat. He picked up tl\nbleeding body and placed It on the be\nHe' then left the room, but returnln;\nheard her still groaning and with s\naxe he struck her repeatedly on«tl\nIl6tld until ne. wan sure nuc nun ucn\nWithout any show of alarm or remori\nfor hlH crime, the negro calmly wash<\nthe blood from hit handsand clothir\narid went tc where Mr. LashSook wi\nat work In the fleld, and told htm thi\nbe had better come to the house us rorr\none had Killed hlH wife. Mr. Lasl\nbrook did not take the matter serious!\nuntil Coleman insisted that his wife wi\ndead. Kven then, so great was tJ\nconfidence of Mr. Lashbrook In Col(\nman, that no thought occurred tlmt ^\nwas the murderer. It was not unt\nafter the officers arrived that suspicic\nwas directed against Coleman. Bloc\nspots had been found on his clot him\nbut he accounted for them by snyin\nthat he had been killing chickens.\nThat night, however, at \npurtiul confession was obtained, an\nknowing the result If that fact shoul\nbecome Known, me oiucers Huictg i«v\nhim to Covington. Ky., for safe keej\nIng. He was Indicted for the murde\nShortly after his Incarceration at Co\\\nIngton, lie made a complete and horr\nble confession of his crime to the Jalle\nThe dtory of his revolting crime, Ir\neluding worse than murder, was tol\nwithout any appearance of feeling b\nthe prisoner. This confession beopmln\npublic, roused a feeling of tndflfnatio\nagainst the prisoner among the reli\ntlves and friends of the victim, tvhlc\nmade it morally certain that the off\ncers of the law would be powerless t\nprevent a summary vengeance at tl;\nfirst opportunity. Still, the authorltU\nat Maysville did not act upon thi\nbasis. Theru was no call upon the go\\\nernor for troops to protect the prisone\nOn Tuesday, Sheriff Perrlne, undi\norders of Judge Harbeson, with foi\nassistants, went to Covington expectin\nto return with Coleman on Tuesda\nnight, but. after reaching Covlngtoi\nthe Jailer at Maysville wired not 10 ai\ntempt to bring the prisoner Into Mayi\nvllle at night.
2eb9bd40561a86f0550b8790514aee0d THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.2671232559615 35.072562 -98.243663 "Well, Oscar Keith! Yen know him?\nA Ph. D. novor played football In his\nllfo but ho was an nttuntlvo escort\nnnd qulto Intorostlng. Ho found out\nthat I'd road a fow things myself, too.\n"Tho night after tho theater up came\nMr. Kolth again with tho word that\nKenneth had sprained his ankle prac-\nticing, nnd was In tho depths nf woo,\nnot bocauso ho couldn't como to see\nmo oh, no! but becauso ho might\n1 avo to miss playing In tho gnmo Sat-\nurday. That was tho night Mr. Keith\nbrought mo tho copy of 'Peer Gynt'\nfrom his Ibsen sot. A few evenings\nlator ho camo up on purposo to toll\nma Just whoro Kon wnnted mo to s!t\non tho grand stnnd Saturday, bo that\nI could seo him best Tho anklo was\ncoming nil right. It seemed, but I\ndidn't get ono word direct from Kon,\nand I couldn't help showing how I felt\nabout It when Mr. delivered hla\nverbal message\n"Yes, I went to tho football gamo.\nIt was tho third ono of my life. There\nwore girls all around mo, screeching,\n'Co It Ken! Go It! Go It! Co It!'\nlust ns If ho wero nn animal, nnd he\nlooked enough llko somo queer animal,\ntoo! Thoso awful togs! Why, from\ntho mlnuto ho trotted Into tho field\nwith that noseguard on I could have\ngono through tho floor I\n"But tho glrla wont on shrlokldg nnd\nJumping up and down, and tho torrlblo\nmlxedup game wont on, until nt last,\nwithout a bit of warning, thoy t.irned\nnnd pounced on mo, nnd told mo how\nproud I was becauBo Kon's magnificent\nplnylng had won that gamo! Then\nthey rushed mo down to tho gato and\nJust as wo got thoro, Kennoth was ear -r lo - d\nout on tho shoulders of four boys\n"Such a fright! His hair was wild;'\nthoro was mud plastored nil ovor hla
09aad7be07ef4aeff0c9d8887b6c6c40 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.1904109271943 39.745947 -75.546589 tononce of the children in the schools at\nthe lowest ami best rates that can be\nsecured. Many other provisions not in\nharmony with those contemplated in the\nnew bill will also Ik1 eliminated.\nThe measure looking to the\nment of a superintendent of\norphans sehools was introduced on Jan.\n22 and two days afterwards favorably\nreported. A short time subsequently\nSenator Sloan, a member of the legisla­\ntive committee appointed to inquire into\nthe management of the schools, had it\nrefeired to the committee, in whose con­\ntrol it has been kept since, first, to await\nthe action of the annual encampment of\nthe G. A. R. and second, to await the\naction of the joint committee of the leg­\nislature and the G. A . R,, which decided\non the abolition of the present system at\nits meeting in Philadelphia.\nThe coming week «dll be one of great\nmoment to the house of representatives,\nas the general revenue trill will lie con­\nsidered on second and also on third lead­\ning, if the latter stage can lie reached.\n interest in this bill is very great and\na number of members have prepared\nspeeches for delivery. The opposition of\nthe manufacturing corporations to the\nproposed restoration of the tax on their\ncapital stock lias materially changed the\nsentiment with regard to this measure.\nMany of the members who at first\nwere disposed to favor the imposition of\nthe promised tax have iieen converted liy\nthe arguments advanced against it, and\nthe amendment of the bill, so as to spe­\ncifically exempt all manufacturing\npondions from the payment\nhighly probable.\nThe judiciary committee of the house\nwill this «eek consider the bill to prevent\naliens from owning prop rty in this state\nafter a certain time and to prohibit aliens\nfrom inheriting property. This bill is\niMirticnlariy directed against the Schen-\nley estate in Pittsburg, which is esti­\nmated to he worth ns high as $20.000,000\nand would also, it is said, affect a rich\nestate in Philadelphia.\nIt s*>emH to lie pretty generally agreed\namong the members that adjournment\nwill occur between the 10th and 15th of\nMay.
040d87282baff9cbdc9fb56600fe0b8b OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.7254098044425 39.513775 -121.556359 Charitv. —Night kissed the young\nrose, and it bent softly to sleep. Stars\nshone, and pure dewcliops hung upon\nit. -i bosom, and watched its sweet slum-\nbers. Morning came with its dancing\nbreezes, and they whispered to the\nyoung rose, and it awoke joyous and\nsmiling. Lightly it swung to and fro\nin all tiie loveliness of health and youth-\nful innocence. Then came the ardent\nsun god, sweeping from the east, and\nsmote the young rose with its scorch-\ning rays, and it fainted. Deserted and\nalmost lie nt-hokcn, it droop d to the\ndust in its loveliness and desp • ir. Now\nthe gentle breez •, which h id been gam-\nboling over the sea, pushing on the\nhoinc bound bark, sweeping over hill\nand dale, by the neat cottage and still\nbrook, turning the old mill, fanning\nthe of dis> asc and Disking the\ncurls of innocent childhood, came trip-\nping aim g on her errands of mercy\nand love, and when site saw the young\nrose she hastened to kDs it, and fondly\nbathed its head in cool, refreshing show-\ners, and the young row icvived, and\nlooked and smiled in gratitude to the\nkind breeze; but she hurried quickly\naway, for she soon perceived that a <1\nlicious fragrance h d been poured on\n■hor wings bv the grateful rose, and the\nhind breeze wasgla 1 in heart, and went\naway singing through the trees. I bus\ncharity, like the breez ■*, gathers fra-\ngrance from the drooping flowers it re-\nfreshes, and unconsciously reaps a re-\nward in the performance of its office of\nkindness, which steals on the heart\nlike rich perfume, to bless and to cbm r
446db0fd2e7acc4abeba38f8f274c1cc PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1915.6561643518519 39.456253 -77.96396 Is anything new to be said about l he\nentrance hall? The smallest room in\nmost houses, it is usually given in the\nplans an amount of at tent ion that\nmight seem out of all proportion to ih«j\nrest of the house. Ami yet the ordi-\nnary entrance, whether it be a mere\nvestibule, a spacious hall of tUe colo¬\nnial style or. as in our present day\nfashions, a part of tin? living room set\noff by an archway, is quite unsatisfac¬\ntory. It is unsatisfactory for this rea¬\nson.that the entrance way is designed\nand decorated from tin; standpoint of\nthe impression it makes on visitors,\nwhereas the impression we should seek\nis not that made upon quests, but upon\nourselves, the occupants of the house.\nToo often we the entrance a se¬\nvere treatment that impresses the stu¬\ndent of beauty or that amazes the less\ndiscriminating visitor by the other ex¬\ntreme of lavish display. Kilt how does\neither of these two types of entrance\naffect those who come into the house\nmany times every day. tin* good man\nand his good wife and their children?\nIs it a room that by its suggestion of\nrest and repose tempts one after a\nhard day's work at the oflice to drop\ninto the first easy chair that comes\nalong, or does it irritate the nerves and\nkeep one going, restless and uneasy,\nwandering from the entrance to the\nliving room and ITom the living room\nto the study and thence to the attic by\nway of th<> basement ?.(Jood Health.
2e3786938faab4a5cb69170892e44f85 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.850684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 I call this a' rebel'plan'because It U wl\nlaisl^d upon by Alexander H. Steph- sti\nis and Robert .E. Lee. I call it a rabi no\nplan* because over it every rebel Gen- £r<\n- al who (heed our men on the field of T1\nittlo, and every rebel Congressman do\nap their hands. I call it a rebel plan br\njcause every bushwhacker and guer- fie\n11a is in eoatapy over thlB plan of re- pr\n>nstruotlon. But there are others wi\nho oppose our plan. There are those on\nbo etui it an abolition plan. Every one th\n'theeemen4<th6nuoetheJastCongress. on\nreiolco that they do. [Laughter.] Cicero loi\ntid truly that a nation that lost Its lib- [C\nty was wifcse than one that loBt it be\nItUtiut d. sfrdggle, 'Upon thla plan, yo\nils Union plan of reconstruction, we In1\nught and won our glorious victory in In\nidiana in October last, and upon this so\nIan you will fight win that victo- wi\nr next Tuesday. [Cheers.] I consent thi\n> no plan of reconstruction. When the in>\nirnudo of treason swept over that land pa\nere were adme" meii who refU'MM to pe\nJw the knee to Baal. Prisons yawned w<\n;foro them, tortures wore inflicted, vet th\nley succumbed not. and::when this to\nindtttl who called themselves the Con- lo;\nderate Government" at Richmond [C\nissed resolutions that every man who thi\ndnot give up his rights and fight for fol\ni«t country should be bound, htsprop- thi\nty confiscated, and himself put "to wi\nlath. These men, when they could pr<\n3 longer remain, fled to the mountains bo\nid caves, and said, "Welcome impris- olt\nlment, welcome death itself.we stand we\nJ the Stars and Stripes to tbe last no\nrop of onr blood." [Cheers.l God dl<\ness these noble and faithful men. er'\nIheere.] And now, when by the mis- asl\ninduct of the *
1a96b617ad3d59678464d4c00509e55f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.6232876395231 39.745947 -75.546589 IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF\nTHE STATE OF DELAWARE, IN'\nAND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY.\nIn the matter of the Real Estate of\nBabilla A. Stone, deceaaud.\nIn pursuant of an order of the Chance],\ntor In th* strove stated cause, made th*\nTwenty-tifth d»y of May, A D .. 1907. alt\npersons having any lien or lien* affecting\nthe lutereat or estate Mary B. Lambert.\nbill* 8, MorrU, Samuel Mom». Evan\nMorris. Mary R 11. Beale, Horace A.\nBeale, Jr., her husband, Herbert M Ken­\nnedy, Arabella B. Kennedy, his wife. Ad­\ndison B. Robinson. Anns Mould* Hob n-\n»on. Adele N. Robinson, Ethel B. Silver\nHorace P. Silver, Agnes 8. Silver, h »\nwife, Joseph Robln»on Silver. Elisabeth\nS. Silver, MS Wife, Robert Cole« Hobln»on,\nHarriett« L. J. Robuveon. Charles N. Rob­\ninson, George B. Mary M. J .\nRobinson, hi» wife, Amelia T. Morris and\nSarah Anna KoMu«on. trustee« under in«\nwill of Samuel Morri». Amelia T. M ms,\nSarah Anne Morris and Mary R. Harts­\nhorn«. truste** under tho will of llarniatte\n8 Dunning. Amelia T. Morris and Sarah\nAnna Moral» or either of them, in the\ntonds and premises to which the soil]\nabove slated o«u»e relate«, are hereby\nnotified to tile a petition setting forth the\nnature and amount of the «am» In the of.\nflea of tlje Register In Chancery tn and for\nNew Castle county, ten day» before the\n»ceond Monoay In September. A. D .. lap?\nand to appear and prove »aid Pen or lien«\nat the ensuing term of the »aid court, he.\nfore the rising of the count on the th rd\nday of the term
21a42a155478ebf98db980d56d581db8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.4685792033495 40.063962 -80.720915 meeting of we8tkkn associated l'kes\nChicago, June 19..The annual mce\ning ol the Western As3ocialed Press wa\nheld at tho Tremont House, in this clt;\nat 10 o'clock this morning. Nearly ever\npaper in the association was representet\nThe old ofilcers of tho association wci\nre elected, tho only change being that <\nSiebeneck, or the Pittsburgh Chronid\nwho was added to tho Executive Con\nmtttee, and Win. Hyde, of the tit. Lou\nRepublican, was elected on the ExecutU\nCommittee in place of D. M . Hauser, fo\nmcrlyoftjie Miuouri Democrat. At or\no'clock the members of the associatio\ntook carriages for a drive through tt\nburnt district This evening they will g\non an excursion to Hyde Park, where\nbanquet and ball will bo given.\nThe members ol tho Associated Pres\naccompanied by a largo number of gei\ntlcracn and ladies of this city, made a\nexcuraioiijto IlJJe Park, this eveninj\nwhere there was a handsome collatio\nand afterwards dancing. part\nbroke up at midnight, and returned t\nthe city by a special train on the Illino\nCentral Railroid. Everybody was di\nlighted with the entertainment, whic\nwas given by the local press. The Boar\nof Directors for tho ensuing year are f\nfollows: A. N . Walker,of the Detro\nFree Pren, President; H. E . Baker, ot tfc\nDetroit Tribune, Secretary; Joseph Medil\nof the Chicago Tribune, Richard Smitl\nof the Cincinnati Gazette, W. N . IIald<\nman, of the Louisville Courier Journa\nW. A . Beckhall, ot the Dayton Journa\nJos. B . Seibeneck.ol tho Pittsburgh Chroi\nI iele, and Wm. Hyde, of the tit. Lou\nRepublican. Tho Executive CommitK\nconsists of Messrs Medill, Smith as\nHaldeman, as heretofore.\nnational division sons op tkufsrakc.\nThe National Division 8ons of Tempe\nance of America, commenced their anni\nal session here this morning. Delegati\naro present from every Stato and T«h\ntory in tho Union, and from tho Britif\nprovinces.
2a97fe1eab3fa068aa89fa7ba257936a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.050684899797 40.832421 -115.763123 lion. J . P . Jones was re-elected to\nthe United States Seuate by a vote of\nCo to 14; A. M . Hillhouso, of Eureka,\nreceiving tho Democratic complimen¬\ntary vote. J u»t before tho vote was\ntaken it was discovered that the joint\nresolution, instructing the Senator to\nvote in favor of the anti-discrimination\nfare freight railroad bill now beforo\nCongress, had been purloined, suppress¬\ned or iu Homo manner waylaid ou its\nroute to the Governor, to whom it was\ndirected, with instructions to telegraph\nthe same to Washington, in order that\nthe Senator's indorsement mi.lit bo re¬\nceived before tho votfc npon his re elec¬\ntion was tnken. What became of the\nmissing document appears to be in¬\nvolved iu mystery, but as both Houses\nmet iu joiut convention to confirm\nJones' election, yesterday, its pre*: \nresting place is matter of sniull conse¬\nquence. The scurvy trick was success¬\nful, and tho State lias another unpledged\nSenator firmly established iu his seat\nfor the next six years.\nTint Lako Democrat of tho 4th says:\nGreat excitement has been created by\nthe discovery, iu the north end o( Lake\ncounty, of a quicksilver mine that indi¬\ncations point as the rival of the cele¬\nbrated Sulphur Hank mine. It is situated\non the south fork of Eel river, and is\nbeing developed by a practical minor\nnamed Charles Hice, who contends that\nit Is the most wonderful thing ho has\never bee n permitted to look upon in the\nway of a quicksilver mino. The ledge\nis easily traced for milea, and tyonsauds\nof tons of cinnabar are being axposod\nto light aa the cruat is cleared off.
2a75fd89a0a109c72d23e06e9a389462 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.856164351852 40.063962 -80.720915 to will on that ground. And courts, under\nicli circumstances, have refused to Interfere.\nThat is exactly aud precisely this\nary case. 1 may as well explain bore,\nantlemen, that to put a party under a\nimmission of lunacy it is only necesiry\nto show.and this authority aud\nrery other I havo ever seen on the\nlbject so states it.that he is in such\nn infirm condition he is not able to\nansact fully iftid entirely aud safely\nusiness concerning his own property.\nis doue for the purpose of protecting\nim. It is not necessary that he should\n> insane,luuatio or incapable ofmaking\nbargain with a fair honest man. It In\nily necessary ho should possess such\ni estate as that by reason of his In-\nrtnities of age and disease he is not\nipablo of transacting business himself,\nbis old gentleman confesses, as it lias\n»eri by more than one witness, ,\ntat ho was not capable of transacting\nis business, but relied on JLewis and\nx. Thornpson to transact it for him.\nm was not nble to make up a Htuto-\nent of his income, and Mr. Pratt the\nisessor had to do it for him;\nid he made tho stateinont to ,\n[r. Pratt, as to others, that he was\ni>t able to attend to business.\nontlemen have brought witnesses here\nho have testified that they were satis- i\njd of Daniel Steenrod's mental caputs!'\nI neither doubt their intelligence (\njr their integrity, but I want, you to\niow what Daniel Steenrood did which\nlowed his capacity to make his last ,\nill and testament in the light of tho\nithorities I have read, on tho !£2d\nly of November, 1862, or any subse-\nlent day. There is not one transao-
8b5b18236b30ac7e1f9ca3c79e88cf2d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.732876680619 39.261561 -121.016059 TN all branches of both the\nJL arts and sciences, as well as the Medical l'rofes-\nsion, speciality has ever been recognized by men of\njudicious reflection, as both progress*. ? and instruc-\ntive for it is a perfectly well demonsliated tact that\nuny individual, however astute he may \\e, attains\nto an infinitely greater degree of perfection by a\nthorough and persevering continuity to one branch\nofart, science, medicine, or mechanic', ihun -i be\nattempted to accomplish half a dor.cn—as in the let-\nter case he would be likely, nine times out often, to\nobtain at most but a very superficial knowledge ol\neither. In the practice ol medicine o: surgery, it un-\nravels, simplifies, anil makes cVar to the arduous\nstudent, the mysterious complications (complicated\nou account of the numerous causes which produce\nthem) which diseases of any kind take upon the hu-\nman system; operating, as they do frequently, both\non the mental and physical organs. It seeks to re-\ncuperate and restore the f unctions to their natural\nand proper status, as well as to neutralize all antag-\nonistic influences to which the system is continually\nsubject. Certain it is, that while the busy affairs ol\nlife seem to exhaust all our time and attention, the\nincipieney and progress of disease, sometimes of dan-\ngerous fatal character, approach us almost un-\nnoticed. Slow in its progiesa but insidious in its\ncourse, a disease, or even the simplcdisturhance ofa\nsingle function, frequently becomes an affair ot im\nminent danger when least expected. To this the nt-\nteution of the physician of Speciality is always ear-\nliest given. With pn per perceptive powers, added\nto ample experience, lie is necessarily able to arrive\nw ith unerring certainty to n correct conclusion as to\nthe character of the ailment and the proper appli-\nances for its cure. This 1 have never found to fail.\nA remedy properly administered, and at the proper\ntime, is sure to accomplish the object of its mission,\nprovided it be directed by the hands of a skillful\nphysician, who knows his business. I need not re-\niterate the old adage, tliat “Health is the endorse-\nment of Divinity, sent to us for our own benefit,\nand that we should not for a moment disregard the\nsecret admonitions that tell us to beware lest we tall\nimperceptibly into a layby rinth from which it will be\nmuch more difficult to escape tiian if we had given\nproper attention toourselves before venturing so for.\nConsult your physician before it is too late; confide\nin him, and you will save yourself an infinity of suf-\nferine.
2aff84faeaa31fec514db407eabeb858 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.3438355847286 40.735657 -74.172367 deep sand-rit about 100 yards wide.\nThis gave him the lead by 2 up.\nThe third hole, of 352 yards, was ad-\nmirably played and halved in (he par\nof 4. The fourth hole is 611 vards fain,,',\nand Kirkbys long game proved of ad-\nvantage to him, as he won the hole i «\nthe par of 5. Travis taking 6. The iiftt\nhole of 304 yards was faultlessly played\nand halved in the par of 4. The 48.-\nyards sixth hole, witli its par of 5, was\nno bugbear to Kirk; y, for while Trav.3\nwas there with the goods, Ills 5 was of\nno avail, as Kirkby won the hole w.tli\nan exceptional 4, and incidentally In-\ncreased his lead to 4 up.\nThis was a bitter pill for the mighty\nTravis swallow, especially as he was\nplaying his home course in better than\nbogey and was only two strokes under\npar on the first six holes and was nev-\nertheless 4 down. This was almost be-\nyond comprehension, as the golf played\nwas about as perfect as it could be\nplayed. The tide began to turn on tho\nlong seventh hole, which Is 650 yards ri\nlength. It was here that Travis won\nhis first hole of the match, which ha\ncaptured in the par of 5, Kirkby re-\nquiring six strokes. Tills slight advan-\ntage was followed up by Travis, with\nan astonishing 3 on the 375-yards eighth\nI hole, while Kirkby was down in the par\nI of 4. This reduced his lead to 2 up.\nwhile the ninth hole was halved in the
19dae6091ecb483c964405d3e8d1e75b OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.3712328450026 39.513775 -121.556359 lon ami a loathsome trrave. il beeomt t of tijij greater\nimportance when it it trantmitte>l to inifcenf off-\nspring. Soeh being the cr.se how necettary if he-\ncomet that every one Having the lent! reason to ft ar\nthat they have contracted the disease. thoohi attend\nto it at once by consulting tome physician, whose\nretpectalhllity ami ml neatlon enablct him to warrant\na tafe. tpeeily. an.l permenent core. In accordance\nwith thit neces-ity. OR YOf Nt; feelt cnlleil upon to\nttale that, liy lona at inly ami extensive practice, he\nhat belome perfect matter of all tbote illaente* which\ncome omlcr the denomination of venereal, and hav-\ning paid more attention to that one hraach than any\nother phytician in the Inited States, he feelt himself\nbelter qoalitleil to treat them.\nSyphilis in all it* form*, toch n« uicert. swelling In\ntheirronnt. ulcer in the typhilit. co-\ntaneont eruptlon«. ulcerations. lertnary syphilis. sy»\nphilit in children, mercurial sy philllic affeillont. gon-\norrhea. gleet, tlriclnret, (alt** pattaL'et. inflamalion of\nthe bladder and protraie glands. excoriations. tumors,\npotloles.&tc.. ate at familiar to him us the most com-\nmon I bints of daily olitervntion.\nThe lloctor effect!, a core In recent cases in a few\ndayt. and flmlt no difficulty in curing Unite of lon if\ndnralinn. wilbool submitting the patient to sin h treat-\nment as w ill draw upon him the a!ighle*i suspicion\nor oblilfe him to neifleit ills bil-iliest whether within\noops or wlUiool. Tile diet need mil he changed ex-\ncept in cases of severe inllamalion. There are in Iali-\nfornin patients lamounlinif to over two ilioiinhiml in\nthe past year! llial could furnish proof of lint: hill\nthese are matters Unit reipcre ltd nicest eecresy which\nhe always preserves
656be09f9bcf17cc5e86a5a3b354b591 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0972602422628 41.681744 -72.788147 Kdward Oilman, manager of tho\nComuierclul bowling alleys at 610\nMain street, was found guilty thla\nmorning In police 'court on charge\nof violating the labor luws regard-\ning tho employment of boys undr\n111 years, and was lined 15 and costs\non each of two complaints. Ho was\ncharged with employing Walter\nKobus, 14, of 44 Orango street, end\nStanley Klllian, 14. of 88 Orango\nstreet, In the bowling alleys aflmr\nL6 o'clock In tho afternoon.\nI DO (rial or Oilman was Inter-- ,\nrupted by the appearance pf the\nfather of young Kobus, who rams\nthere In search of his son. Enter-\ning the courtroom from the door\nleading to the rear of tho gullery.\ntho father looked about for his son\nand falling to see him, him-\nself in the rear. It wus not long\nbefore tho son wus called to the wit-\nness stand, but the father was evi-\ndently napping when the boy was\ncalled for its was several minutes\nbefore he started to stretch his nock\nin an effort to get a better view of\nthe boy on the witness stand.\nThe father immediately left, his\nseat and walked towards the witness\nstand,' attempting to catch a look\nat the boy's face with each step. Ar-\nriving in front of the witness stand,\nthe futlicr recognized his son. and\nImmediately set upon IJri with a\ntirade in Polish, attempting to pull\nthe boy from the stand.\nPoliceman Patrick O'JIara was\nforced to Interfere and hnd consid-abl- n\ndifficulty in getting tho father
0f9229b409ecc55d0aeab8cbf41d646a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.4150684614408 42.217817 -85.891125 To these claims complainant, by his\ncounsel, replies that the laying out and\nopening of a highway in said township\nwas a mere pretext for issuing said bonds,\nand that the real object for which said\nbonds were issued was as set forth in tho\nbill of complaint.\nAnd thereupon complainant's counsel\nargues with great force that if the as-\nsertions of defendants in relation to tho\nbonds having been already negotiated\nare true, defendants could not be harm-\ned by the granting of a temporary in-\njunction as prayed; while on tho other\nhand, if defendants' claims should prove\nto be untrue, complainant will suffer ir-\nreparable injury by the denial of the in-\njunction. And the court is strongly of\nthe opinion that if the bonds which are\ntho subject of this controversy are in-\nvalid, then the complainant is entitled\nto the temporary injunction asked for\nin this motion.\nThis view renders it necessary to ex-\namine tne question of the validity of tho\nbonds upon the that they were\nissued as a bonus to tho South Haven\nand Eastern Railroad Co. in considera-\ntion of the making of certain changes\nand improvements in the road and rail-\nroad projerty of the company.\nCounsel for the railroad company ad-\nmits that if they were issued for this\npurpose they are invalid; but the judg-\nment of the court is not to be governed\nby concessions of counsel.\nThere can be no question but that,\naccording to the decisionsof the supremo\ncourt of Michigan, in the cases of the\nPeople vs. Salem, 20 Mich. 452, and Bay\nCity vs. State Treasurer, 23 Mich. 499, a\nmunicipal corporation of this state has\nno authority to issue its bonds in aid of\na private corporation building, or pro-\nposing to build a railroad to bo owned\nand controlled by the corporators; and\nthat tho legislature cannot, under tho\nconstitution, authorize the issue of such\nbonds, either with or without a vote of\nthe electors of tho municipal corporation\nissuing them.
426bcd725d5521dcfe527da94b106308 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.064383529934 41.681744 -72.788147 port is unanimous. One feature is the\nappreciation on the part of the British j\nstatesmen that a settlement must be\nreached for the sake of continuing\ntheir friendship with the United States\nnot only for the period of the war but\nthe future. The other is that the i\nBritish public has become wearied by\nthe present state of affairs.\nIt is pointed out that the war has\nchanged the whole problem. Hitherto\nthe question has been kept alive by\nparties but there are no parties and\nall the leaders agreed that if a settle-\nment is 'possible it must be reached.\nThus far. there is no inkling what\nthe report of the convention will be,\nbut it is possible that the government\nwill be prepared to step into the\nbreach and force a settlement if nec-\nessary. If the convention is unani-\nmous the government will probably\nact accordingly, but in the of a\ndisagreement the feeling is that the\ngovernment will accept the majority\nreport and put it into effect, with pos\nsibly a few alterations to harmonize.\nthe different factions in Ireland.\nThe Telegram's Dublin correspond-\nent states that a report from Wash-\nington that the United States is pre-\npared to loan Ireland 20,000,000\npounds to obtain the fullest measure\nof home rule and American capitalists\nare ready to invest a like sum in Ire-\nland if the question is settled, is\nprominently displayed in all Irish pa-\npers and has caused the liveliest in-\nterest. The correspondent of the\nTimes says that the report furnishes\nthe friends of a settlement with a\nnew and powerful argument and will\nserve to increase the disrepute of the\nSinn Fein policy whose violence and\nabuse now embrace the president and\ngovernment of the United States.\nDublin reports regarding the Irish\nconvention continue hopeful.
384e1afcc742bfb812ff909b05197f67 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1855.215068461441 41.262128 -95.861391 manafaoturin^\npurpooe of betag sold according to the pro­\nviaions of this act, to be used for mechanic­\nal or medicinal purposes.\nSac. 3. Tka county Judge of any couc-\nty,oa tha first Monday of May annually, akaU\nappoiat some aaitaMe peraoo or peroons, not\nnaore tkaa two ia aaaiker, raatdaots of aaid\neoaaty, bat aot both vaaidsota of tha aaota\nuianaMii. to aet aa a§ant or ageala af aaid\neooa^ fer tka pnrrkaai ef intaTinstiag li­\nquor aad for Ika aala Ikwaof walk in aaah\neaoaty, Ibr aalkiML meokeaioal aad aao>\nreasoatal porpoeoo onfy. And tke aaid oooa-\nty Judge may iiaaaaaolt agaatat kisploas-\nure, aad appsiol sanlkar la kia atead, at\nsuch time after aoek reasval aa skall ba\nconvenient. Every aaakagal sksll kold Uia\noffice one year anlsaa aooaar fsasared, He\nshall sell such liquor oaly in one place, to be\ndesignated ia tke written oartiftoata to be pv-\non him tho eeunty Judge, and no two\nagents shall be allowed to sell sueh liquor in\ntno same township. He shall in the par-\nchase and in the sale of such ttqaor eonform\nto sueh ruleeaad regulations as shall be pro­\nscribed by aaid ooaaty Judga, aot inooaaist-\neut witk the proriaioas of tkia act. Ha skall\nkeep an accurate acoouat of all kia purahas-\nes, and all his salaa^ apocifying in auch ac­\ncount the kind aad quantity and priea of the\nliquor bought br kia, tke data of each por-\nrhaae mafi by aim, aad tke aaaM of the per-\nsoa of wkoa audi parckaae waa made, tke\nkiad, qaaaiftilj aad priea of liquor sold by\nhim, the da!o*f each aala made by him, the\nname of tka parakaaar at every sack sale and\ntke use for whiek tka liqoor oa evevj auek\nsale sold as stated by tka parekaeer; wkieh\naccount akaU ba at all "
a4d5a7170b1bc81eef3adc8e250533c7 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.1520547628108 39.560444 -120.828218 W e have received the following well\nwritten letter from a gentleman at Bul-\nlards Bar, which we take pleasure in laying\nbefore our readers. The columns of the\nCitizen are always open to such commu-\nnications, particularly from “Yuba.”\nCalifornia wants preachers. Not men\nto come and settle down in the cities only;\nnot preachers to come here with the belief\nthat everything is wrong and must\nremain wrong, until everything becomes\nremodeled upon the New England plan ;\nnot preachers who will come to parade\nti.e great sacrifice they have made in\nleaving home to care for the lost souls who\nhave come to California to dig gold; not\npreachers who will exact a polite deference\non account of their cloth, and be shocked\nat the tree and easy familiarity of miners;\nnot preachers who smell of the studv\nand smack of the theological seminary,\nand remind one of the reverend lion of a\nYankee sewing society. California wants\nno mealy-mouthed, mincing, precise, “good\nyoung men,” who imagine themselves\napostles because they have been regularly\n“educated for the until all their\nbest qualifications have been ground off\nin the process.\nAnd yet California wants preachers.—\nNot to tell men that it is very wicked to\nswear and extremely improper to break\nthe Sabbath—as if they did nt know it\nbefore. Certainly not to continue here\nthe insult which the ministry i.i the older\nStates are continually offering to “the rest\nof mankind,” by denouncing dancing as a\ncrime, and theater-going as a cardinal\nsin. All men know that profanity is\nwrong—all men, even those who do not\nbelieve in the Jewish Sabbath being\na divine institution believe that\nSunday should neither be made a day\nof business nor of sport. And almost all\nmen know that dancing is as innocent us\nkissing, and a ball not a whit worse than\nan apple-cutting or a candy-pulling, and\nall of them well enough in their way.—\nAnd most men are sure that the theater\nmight be a most useful institution, if puri-\ntauism did not abandon it to the unbe-\nlievers, and denounce it for the faults thus\nforced up;>n it.
06be6545fee9b84173321681b6f5cb83 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.7547944888381 41.681744 -72.788147 first wave and they did not get a\nchance to drop any shells on us. I\nwas not looking on either side of me.\nI was afraid if I saw the others fall\nI would get cold feet.\n"A bullet passed my head, and hit\na fellow in back of me in the cheek.\nI can't dope out how it missed me\nbut close calls don't take you to the\nhospital for a rest anyway. One fel-\nlow had a shell land so close to him\nthat the concussion threw him across\nthe road. He got real shell shock\nand he went dippy.\n"When we went over we threw our\npacks away and chased the boche.\nThey had a head start, but when we\ndid catch up and they started to say\n'Kamerad' they were the hottest\n bunch ,1 ever saw. We took\nquite a few prisoners but I think now\nthe ones we did get think we are a\nbunch of nuts. We could not put\nthem out of business with their\nhands up but a few got an American\npunch on the jaw. The second day\nwe did not see a live Boche and went\nabout ten kilometers, about six miles.\nWe were on the go for six days and\nwere glad to see our relief coming.\nWe are going to get some more men\nto fill up tho company agrain.\n"We are near an English oamp\nand they have a bunch of prisoners\nthat were taken in 1916. 1 will take\na Yankee division to drive them back\ninto Germany when the war is over,\nbecause they are lTVfeyer jfciow.
2184d971a1cf63f561a728df4ed83fc4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.9767122970572 41.681744 -72.788147 smiles and remarks that he is really\nquite an accomplished young man. La-\nter, he plays again, but the same\npiece and the opinion seems to 'be that\nhe probably has learned only one se-\nlection. Still later Charles Mylott sits\nbefore thio piano and he too begins a\nlittle jazz, strange to say, the same\none that Mr. Deayey had been play-\ning Still the audience thinks that\npossibly all is well. However, in the\nfourth act Miss Leonard, in the course\nof Iter lines, starts for the piano to\nplay a few bars, but before she can\ncircle the instrument and get seated,\nthe audience is surprised to hear the\nstrains of "Take Me to the Land of\nJazz" issuing from somewhere. The\nmystery is solved. And one more ob-\nservation. Mrs. Clement Harding is,\n a woman in the same so-\ncial class as the Nelsons. And as such\nher part would 'be strengthened were\nshe a little more careful to have her\ndress hang evenly, and not up in\nfront and down in back. That an-\nnoyed the ladies very much.\nThe ornamental policeman on duty\nat the theater could be a little more\nuseful if he would essay to prevent\nthe usual "smal town comedian" from\nplying his offensive tactics in the\ntheater. It is a common thing in lo\ncal playhouses to hear a gang of\nyouths somewhere in the theater be-\ngin to snore when a bedroom scene\nis shoAvn, or to titter and sob during\na pathetic part," or to make unneces-\nsarily loud remarks that are intended\nto be. humorous. This should 'be\nstopped.
573902de747389c6ed96a8be1b1ae41c CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.2068492833587 41.875555 -87.624421 Why arc wo content to huvo our\nfood prepared for us lu secret under\nconditions thnt to any sane mind cer-\ntainly suggest fraud nnd treachery?\nWo nro not obliged to havo these\nthings If wo do not want them. The\nremedies nro slmplo enough.\nAs to tho "lumpy Jnw," the tubercu-\nlosis nnd the cancer, put n stop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Lot all tho slaugh-\ntering of food animals be doiio by tho\nStnto in tho light of day. without nny\nof this dark lantern business, on equal\nterms for nil. Thero nro very few\nprivate slaughter houses In England.\nTho cities nnd towns run their slnugh'\ntor houses under medical Inspection.\nBut In England tho people do uot cart-t - o\nbo H)lsoned In their meat.\nAnd wo need not worry about tho ob-\njection thnt publicly owned slaughter\nhouses nro mi Invasion of tho private\n of business. When It comes to\nllfo and denth thero nro no private\nrights of business. No man bus n right\nto Bated profits that ho make by\nspreading disease. Wo have gono too\nfur on tho road to public sanitation to\nturn back bcauso somo gontlemmt\nprollts lire threatened. The Stato will\nnot allow you to go nround with small-\npox or to conceal scarlet fever In your\nhouse, although each may bo strictly\nyour own nffalr. Compared with can-\ncer, smallpox and scarlet fever arc\nnothing. It tho Stnto can take radical\nmeasures to stump out cholera It can\ntake radical measures to stamp out\ncancer, a million times worse than\ncholera. It It can provhlo w.st houses\nfor public safety It can provide slaugh-\nter houses for public safety. And Its\nduty In the one caso Is at least ns clem\nus In tho other,
07217ae8850b3a410edeff94e3e42ad9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.705479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 During the dark days that havo sue- to\nBeded tho panic the bemooratic leaders as\nave $one through the country inflaming ot\n: ie minds of the people against what they si\nall the Money Power. Now I want to 01\nay a few words to you on this head. You a\nave been taught to hate the money st\nower of tho country. The seeds of com- tr\nlunism have been sedulously sown di\nmong you by designing demagogues. d<\n!hese demagogues kave taught the peo- ec\ntie to believe that it is almost a crime for sa\nne man lo havo money and another to ot\nave none. how, wnatts Money rowgry w\niQt us bo just to roason and common sc\nenso. The man who works in this mill ol\nnil saves $10 in a week or a month over fo\nnil above his necessities is the owner of di\nmoney power to the extent of $10; is he m\ntot? He has the purchasing power that si\n10 giveS to overy possessor of that much to\nlonoy. At tho end of a year he has re\naved $100, and he has the money power at\nf that much money. By and by he saves pi\n1,000, and he has tho*money power of te\n1,000. Now, 100 such men. wno havn in\nroated each $1,000 out of his labor, fr\nlub together under the form of a corpo- a\nation and they put their $100,000 in a in\n enterprise like this mill, and* they E\nyield the nxonev power.ol $100,000. That w\n8 their rightful power In the com? w\naunity. All capital simply repre- oi\nents the surplus earnings of fo\nabor. The man who is industrious, oi\nemperate and economical saves his sur- si\n)lus and employs it as a producer in order tt\no Increase it, and in the process of doing m\no gives other men like himself a chance al\no earn their $10, their $100 and finally tt\nheir $1,000 each, or in other words, he tx\nireates opportunities for other men to pi\nireate a succession and finallv an ajwrftorft. m\nion ot money powers that make up the si\nlavinys a»d the wealth ot the nation, d\nSowbthisacrime? Iaitathingtobe tc\nailed at by demagogues. Are we to turn b\nlociety into chaos and make men comqu- si\nlists? Is every idler, every waster, every w\nmproductive member ot society to be b\nslothed with the right to come to every g\nnan who labors and saves and demand ot p\nilm a division ot bis savings. If so, pan- V\nJenjonta has cerae, and there is an end e\nto clvillution. And yet the Democratic c\nleaders have beon at work inculcating ti\nthese nefarious principles among the poo- d\npie during the dark days ot the panic, ti\nAnd now we bring them to the bar ol b\npublio opinion to answer for such cum*\nmunlstic and anarchical sentiments.
eeece377857e74de73b5d96a9f806daa NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.091780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 avlug of their service an, I not leav-- ;\ning it because he is discharged\nwhether with or without reason. The\n'second question involved under the\nlanguage herein before recited raises\na question of proof which certainly\nhas not been met on the hearing for\ntho dissolution of this Injunction.\nThe defendant agreed as a part of\nthis Exhibit A, in substance, that he\nwould not solicit business from any\ncustomers of the plaintiff during the.\ntime ho may have been employed\nunder this contract.\n"There is no way In view of tho\njfact that the defetidcnt was employ-\ned by the plaintiff previous to Hie\n;making of this contract, that it can\n;be held from the evidence before\ntho court that he is now sillciting\nbusiness from customers acquired by\n;the plaintiff during the existence of\nithe contract which It seem, in\n'view of the circumstances under\nwhich the contract was entered into\nas disclosed by the evidence, would\nbe a fair interpretation of the Ian\nguago used in the contract. The\nlanguage of the contiact would had\none to believe thai its purpose was\nto keep the defendant continuously\nin the employ ot the plaintiff am\n'not pprmit Mm nU,.T he haj ar(,llr\ned their met beds of doing business\nand fhf list of tlnii customers to\nvoluntarily leave Hi" employ of Xh\nplaintiff and carry i lilb him the\nmethods of doing business and the\ncustomers of the plaintiff, but that\nis not the present case.\n"The temporary injunctions grant-\ned In these Two cases are dissolved\nwithout prejudice to the rights of\nthe plaintiff to meet the objectiont\nraised in this memorandum on th\ntrial of the action,"
061386b804f3a9619fb529761a27b647 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.3794520230847 37.92448 -95.399981 Of course this withdrawn! of the solar\nlight and heat throws our earth into a\nuniversal chill, and the tropics become\nthe temperate, and the temperate be-\ncomes the arctic, and there are frozen\nrivers and frozen lakes and frozen\noceans. From arctic and antarctic re\ngions the inhabitants gather in townrd\nthe center and find the equator as the\npoles. The slain forests are piled up\nInto a great bonfire, and around them\ngather the shivering villages and cities.\nThe wealth of the coal mines Is hastily\npoured Into the furnaces and stirred\nInto rage of combustion, but soon the\nbonfires begin to lower, nnd the fur-\nnaces begin to go out. and the nations\nbegin to die. Cotopnsl. Vesuvius. Ktnu.\nStromboll, California geysers, cease to\nsmoke, and the lee of hailstorms re-\nmains unmelted in their crater. All\nthe flowers have breathed their 'Inst\nlireath. Ships with sailors frozen at\nthe mast, and helmsmen frozen at the\nwheel, and passengers froen in the\ncabin, all dying, first at the\nnorth and then at the south. Child\nfrosted and dead In the cradle. Octo-\ngenarian frosted and dead at the\nhearth. Workmen with frozen hnnd otf\nthe hammer and frozen foot on the\nthuttle. Winter from sea to sea. All\ncongealing winter. Perpetual winter.\nCilobc of frigidity. Hemisphere shack-\nled to hemisphere by chains of\nIce. Universal Nova Xomhln. Theeartb\nan iec lloo grinding against other ice\nfloes. The archangels of malice and\nhorror have done their work, nnd now\nthey may take their thrones of glacier\nand look down upon the ruin they have\nwrought. What the destruction of the\nsun In the natural heavens would be\nto our physical earth, the destruction\nof Christianity would be to the moral\nworld. The sun turned into dnrkness!\nInfidelity In our time la considered a\ngreat joke. There are people who re-\njoice to hear Christianity caricatured\naid to hear OH ! r died with quibble\nnnd quirk nnd misrepresentation and\nbadinage and harlequinade.
0fe2d9097e118ba52e7b5da77e1a405c THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1880.4166666350436 40.419757 -77.187146 Capt. Sim and his men pretending not\nto see the movement of the enemy held,\nsteadily on their course, laughing to\nthemselves meanwhile that the bait\nthey had thrown out wa9 so quickly\nswallowed. The British, excited by the\nhope of a pri.e, pulled vigorously at the\noars, and the barge gained rapidly on\nCapt. Sim's boat. Suddenly the Amer-\nicans seemed for the first time to become\naware of approach of an enemy. With\nloud cries they bent to their oarB, but so\nthoroughly frightened did they seem,\nthat there was no sort of time kept by\nthe rowers, the efiect of which was to\nretard rather than add to the progress of\nthe boat. They however managed to\nget the boat headed to the mouth of the\nMystic. The British were hard on their\nheels and gained rapidly on them. The\nAmericans had gradually recovered\nfrom their fright, and now were lustily\n work. The distance between them\nwas kept about the same, each party\nrowing at the top of its strength.\nAt length the daring Capt. Sim order-\ned his boat up to a certain point on the\nwest side of the river, about one mile\nfrom the Sound, where it had been\narrauged that he should land ; and dis-\nembarking, the boat's crew ran over the\nbank. The British by this time had\nalso ed'ected a landing, and no sooner\nhad their barge's keel grated the sandy\nshore, than they encountered a most\nsudden and unexpected lire from a vol-\nunteer company fiorn Mystic and vicin-\nity, composed of Captains Anson.Haley,\nAverly, Crary andDenison, with Lieu-\ntenants Wheeler, Palmer, Hyde and\nWilliams, with thirty others secreted\nbehind the bank for that purpose. The\nBritish, startled and confounded by the\napparition and the fall of several of their\ncomrades, leaped like frogs into the\nwater.
143aacaf6dedb4b7037a02768ce00a5a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.9112021541691 44.939157 -123.033121 Some time Inst spring Mrs. Pickett\nnnd one Fred Hndirott, the latter claim-\ning to be a detective, came to me and\ntold me that a shipment of liquor was\nmade a few days before from a houc\nnear the fair grounds to Astoria over\nthe Oregon Electric, ami that the dis-\ntrict attorney's attention had been call-\ned to the fact while the goods were In\nthe depot at this c'riy. but he would\nnot do anything in the matter, notwith-\nstanding the trunk and suit cases hold-\ning Uie liquor were pointed out to him.\nThey also said they had eallwt the at-\ntention of two policemen to the matter\nand they refused to interfere with the\nshipment. Jlr. Kudieott said that he\nknew where the liquor came from and\nthat there was moro in the house, as\nhe had seen it. They then asked me ro\ngo and investigate and seize the liquor.\nAs I knew nothing of the matter only\nwhat they told me, and as they, or,\nrather Kudieott claimed to have seen\nthe packages liquor, 1 asked them\nfor a search warrant for the purpnsu,\nand refused to go without one. They\nnor either of them, although one hnot\nseen the goods ami the other belioven\nthey were in the house referred ta,\nwould apply for th warrant. 1 confer-\nred with Justice of the Peace Webster\nconcerning the matter and he agreed\nwith .me that 1 had no authority to\nenter any man's promises with a view\nto searching them without a warrant\ntroin sonic court giving me. that author-\nity. 1 saw Mr. Kndicott several times\nsoon after the above visit and asked\nhim for the warrant, but he never eume\nthrough with it. If, .as they said the\nprosecuting attorney had refused to\ninterfere and two policemen had not\nseen fit to attempt a seizure when\ntho liquor was pointed out to them,\nway should they at this late day fautt\nme fof refusing to do an unlawful acl\nby entering and searching tho premises\nof another without proper authority,\nsimply upon the ipso dixit of an irre-\nsponsible "detective."
2dcd29b7a2e1cc1cc697eb58492c65db THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.7246575025367 41.004121 -76.453816 James Boyd Roiiison, Esq,, tho\nRadical candldato for Assembly, has\nnamo enough to All any ofllco possibly\nvanity enough too. Ho was a soldier,\nnnd for nught wo know butchered moro\nrebels than any other man In tho na-\ntion, but Bates' history (an official his-\ntory of tho Pennsylvania soldiers) does\nnot mako tho brilliant record for him\nthat It docs for Bkockway. Both nro\nmembers of tfio bar, but Biiockway\nhas much tho largest practice, though\nIn other business all tho time. It would\nscarcely bo generous to speak of Boyd's\nago, as that might affect him with peo\nplo who aro not voters, but In this re-\nspect neither candldato Ins material\nadvantngo of tho other. In Intellect,\nenergy, political and general kuowledgo\nof government and of public wants and\ntho ways to supply Ihcm, Buockway\nis greatly superior to his opponent and\nwould therefore mako much tho best\nRepresentative. So far as correct pollt-ca - \nprinciples Is a superior qualification\nto possessing tho worst, all tho advan-\ntages nro with Biiockway, as Is tho\ncase too In habits of thought and action.\nFor somo years past Roiiison has held\nn Ilttlo placo under tho'Fcdcral govern-\nment, which ho used in assisting to tor-\nment somo of tho unfortunates who fell\nunder tho ban of tho rovenuo laws. In\nthis capacity ho camo about as near set-\nting tho world on flro as ho over will In\nany other. Whether ho has yet engaged\nrooms in Hnrrlsburg wo do not know\nbut think it likely, though his clmnco\nof election Is about as good as his chaneo\nto bo appointed King of Dahomey. As\nono of tho Radical ring of Qloomsburg,\nhols about as efficient im his brethren\nIn concocting small tricks and petty but\ngroundless slanders upon his fellow cit\nIzens, and probably comes in forasharo\nof tho spoils accumulated by that Insti\ntutlon.
0ec06a08ffc59b60499f618e7b2e948e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.878082160071 43.798358 -73.087921 After the testimony was heard, the\ncounsel of the accused, Mr. Micou, said\nhe trusted Ihe Recorder, having heard the\nevidence, would see the pi opriety of at\nonce discharging his client, and would not\nsend "Him before the Criminal Court. It\nwas evident he was actuated by no evil\nintention,' and that the most of which he\nwas guilty was indiscretion: (8) for which\nhe had already suffered enough by the\narrest, and by being brought befoie the\npublic as he had been in the newspapers.\nHe believed that the true policy for every\none friendly to southern institutions to\npursue; was to get up no unnecessary\nexcitement, nor create . any unnecessary\nalarm; but to punish at the same time,\npromptly and severeiv, in every instance\nwnere mere was evidence oi guiiu V)\nHe then argued that the fact of a\nlave, Can yon read or write 1 will you\ntake a Bible V of which his client was\nunwittingly guilty, does not come' within\nthe purview of the statute, which makes\nit punishable to do any act which would\nlead io insubordination among the slaves.\nThe Recorder briefly addressed the pris-\noner and told him that he highly approved\nthe laudable work, distributing the Bible,\nin which he was engaged :( 10 but while\nexecuting that duty, he must be cautions\nthat he does not infringe on other rights\nWHICH ARE AS SACRED TO THIS COMMU-\nNITY As religion itselv. (1 1) Believ-\ning that in speaking to the slave? be was\nactuated by no evil intention, he would\ndiscbarge him, bidding him God speed in\nhis religious career, and cautioning him\nagainst ever bringing himself in contact\nwith our institutions.(12)
68f1b66c7e982bba62b52bb749a68ff3 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.03698626966 39.290882 -76.610759 From a late Englith paper.\nHXPKDITIOBi TO SIBERIA.\nNo portion of the globe, scarcely excepting\neven the interior of Africa, is less known to the\ncivilized world than the northern coast of Asia.\nThis region being entirely in the posession of\nRussia, it was by that power alone that discove-\nries could properly be prosecuted; and, till oflate\nyears, its rulers have not been in a condition to\nappreciate the full value of such explorations,\nether to themselves or to mankind at large.\nThe matters brought to light, therefore, by\nAdmiral Wrangell s expedition of 1820?1823,\nthe account of which is now, for the first time,\nlaid before the world, have all the charms of\nperfect novelty; and of this, as well as ol their\ngenerally interesting character, a few extracts\nwill suffice to satisfy the reader.\nThe northeastern district of Siberia, visited\nby Admiral Wrangell'and his companions, lies\nbetween the river Lena on the west, aud Beh-\nriag's Straits on the east, and extends from\nabout the 126th to 130th degree of east\nlongitude, and from the 62d to the 73d degree\nof north latitude. The expedition was a land\none, its main object being to settle certain\ndoubts which prevailed as to the existence of a\ngreat arctic continent, north of the Siberian\nseas. An extensive tract of the Siberian coast\nwas traversed by the party in the course of\ntheir enterprise, in order to enable them to cross\nthe ice northwards, at various points, in sledg-\nes; and the result of these journeys was the\ndiscovery ola "wide immeasurable ocean" at\nall points which they tried. This obstacle, of\ncourse, compelled them to pause, and renounce\nthe object immediately in view. But in their\nvarious routes on the land, they saw enough\nto render their expedition ef profound interest,\nboth to themselves and to others. The little\nthat was formerly known on the subject of\nNorthern Siberia, must have often led reflecting\nminds to wonder in what manner life could be\nsustained in regions so cold and dreary.
1756b4e0c6902ac5f0c230dc376a6a0f THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1878.368493118975 44.593941 -72.616505 may nut be faiulllur with these people\nbut tlieae faces that w e have seen in thU\nprosecution arc familiar In these walls.\nhor the last live vears at all events there\nhas no term of court, passed, I think, with-\nout seeing these gentlemen here in full\nforce, all ol them without exception, at\nleast once during the term. We see them\nthis term, tuidoiihicilly we shall have the\npleasure or meet lug them at the next\nterm Hid so on tluonirli eomlnir time. Jt\ncertainly would be a great kindness to\nt'.icbc parties 11 they coulj lie tauglit Unit\nthey have been in court about long enough,\nthat they have spent about money enom;li\nIn litigation, and the sooner tliev get\nthrou;;h with that follcy the better tt will\nbe for them and the state itself. The\n.State is subjected to the expense of call\ning from twenty to lorty oi tliein out here\nand keeninir them a week so that they earn\nmore money undoubtedly every term of\ncourt in witness here, than they earn\nthe balance of the year. They come here\nat the expense of the .State and get some\nspending money which they use foolishly.\nand the time has come when some notice\nshould be taken of it. Those of us who\nare charged with looking after the wel\nfare of the community and especially the\nprotection or the .Stale Trearury are call-\ned upon to say publicly to these men they\nhave been in court louir enough iu their\npetty quarrels, that they had better settle\namong themselves, or best not have them\nat all. But, gentlemen, the case is here,\nand there is no reason why vou should\nnot try it according to the obligation of\nyour oath, but to those ot us who are\niiiniilhir with this class of litigation It be\ncomes highly important that you be can-\ntioned that you look the case over very\ncarefully indeed and see to it that you ex\ntract the exact truth ot th matter.\nOn Thursday lust a jury was
21d2b941b242c40920b732138d048f65 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.856164351852 40.063962 -80.720915 It fccms msivelous liow men could\n¦ver lorra tuch ideas cf God ss tsro reprc-\nicuted in tin Image worship ol India. For\n;he ujoat part the iiyrnns they slog and\nhe stories they relate concerning their\nleitli 8 ore nontenco or filth.\nWhat Is Westprn civlllsitlm doing fcr\nhcse people ? Is a ready question. It oer-\nlalnly la breaking up old Eiiperalltlons\namong some of the people. Castn Is jie-\nloming weaker every Uepaiie. The i|tp-\nposed Infallible swemcnts ol tlio sacred\nliooko upon scientific subjects are now\nlaughed at Ity thn i dnjatpd. Tho hurn-\nIrg ui willow t|ip nhowluaiion ol Inlanti-\no de and bodily mutilation In rcllaloua\nworship ere things ol tbs past. Is India\nadvancing In morals? Tbemrst reliable\neducational reports will esy, ill propor¬\ntion to the acceptance and practice ol\nChristian truth jn plfiso cj auaudoiieu eu\nporslillons In India ndyarclnn morally.\nLoid Lawrence, ono ol India's best Vice¬\nroys, sp.ld: "Hdncito Indian youths\nwithout OhriitianlilcR thein and you\nwill linye generation ol educated\ndevils." When Hinduism etepi-down,\neither Christianity or somo modified form\nof It. or Atholsm must step in. Kank\nAtheism abounds In this land with all ol\nIta results, 1 think there Is Utile doubt\nbut there aro many more Atheists than\nChrlstiaiiB iu India. Is this due to the\npresence of the missionary or to the fact\nof thero being eg (ow of thein at band to\nlead the people m'tlils transition period\nIrotn beastly superstltionn past the dread¬\nful regions ol "no-belUf" into llio liberty\nof the gospel of the lord Jesus Christ?\nMissionary preachers and missionary ed¬\nucators certainly aro nt uded liow in this\nland. A nation without any filth In God\nl* an organljitton.a commune of friends.\nShould men minlmlio Christian missions\nIII India? Would you discourage the\nspirit thut.lod Knglnnd and Kuropetoro-\nipnuij to tho cry from liurnlng Chicago\nWilli her benevolonceq, or the oplrlt of\npractical eyrapitfiiy with lroland no strong\nnow In America? Narrow-minded or\nshort-jlgbted turn nilcht say
0820517de5bf766d266550232ec61ec3 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.1986301052766 58.275556 -134.3925 H. M . Love, special agent of the in¬\nterior department,has announced that\nthe stumpage tax for timber cut on\ngovernment lands will be advanced\neach year until the final price will be 30\ncents per cord for firewood or the same\nprice per 1000 feet, board measure, for\nlogs cut for lumber.\nProspectors are going into the\nYentna district in a steady stream, so\nquietly that not many people are aware\nof the fact. About 100 have left Sew-\naro within the last ten days, all well\nsupplied with outfits for a summer's\ncampaigu. They usually go in small\nsquads and two or three days of each\nweeks sees a party mount the train for\nthe end of the track, from which point\nthey trek over the trail to the land of\npromise..Gateway.\nThe Canadian Yukon government has\nclosed the contract with Charles Hat-\niield, a Los Angeles rainmaker, to work\nin Klonkike camp for four months dur¬\ning the coming season, virtually all the\nopen season, beginning May 1. He\nwill get $10,000 if he succeeds in keep¬\ning a sufficient supply of water to oper¬\nate the hydraulic and other placer\nmines ail summer. A board of seven\nmen is to be chosen by the government\n Hatfield to rule, the decision of\nthe majority being final.\nA heavy wind from the southwest\nblew the ice shoreward last Tuesday,\nand on the pack near Wales were five\npolar bears. In a short time a half\ndozen white men from Tin City aud a\nlarge number of natives were in hot\npursuit over the ice floe. A native\nnamed Teeweruk succeeded in killing\none big fellow which measured nine\nfeet. Another was killed on the shore.\nBruin had made his way to a cache\nwhere he was trying to get something\nto eat, but his good intentions were\nruthlessly cut short..Nome Nugget.\nWhen a bill granting an extension of\ntime to the Solomon River railroad at\nNome and also a rebate on the federal\nlicense of 8100 per mile was under con¬\nsideration in the House, one congress¬\nman who was opposed to the bill de¬\nclared that the road in question had\npaid for itself the first six months after\nconstruction. Another congressman\nsaid it was the Seward road that had\npaid such big profits and a third man\narose and explained with considerable\ndetail that both gentlemen were wrong\nfor it was the road;running out of Val-\ndez which had been the money maker.
0fafb8f91ebb15989403b6a79fbc1e0b THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.1767122970573 40.832421 -115.763123 Death or Hfntlor Carpenter.\nSenatqr Malt. Carpenter, of Wiscon-\n«in, who baa been dangerously ill for\nsome time punt, died at Washington on\nThursday, ilis wifo, son and daughter.\nDr. Fo* of Milwaukee and C. W . Wil¬\nliam* of Washington, were present at\nbis death. The fuuersl will take place\nto morrow at Washington, hut the re¬\nmains will be conveyed to Wisconsin,\nthe former home of the deceased, by a\nCongressional Committee.\nTh« qsrstioa of a sacccssor to the\ndeceased Senator, is now agitating the\nminds of Wisconsin's politicians; the\ntwo parties being ho evenly represented\nin the next Senate r< uderiug it impor¬\ntant that Carpenter's pluce should be\nsupplied with a Republican in time for\nthe organization. There lire difficulties\nin the way ot the accomplishment of\nthst object, which may, should the\nDemocrats desire to take advantage of a\ntecbr icalitv, prove troublesome. Under\nthe law of Congrtss bis successor can\nnot regularly be elected uutil March 'Jib,\nthe vacancy not having occurred during\n recess of the Legislature. The lug-\ngcHtiou has been made that the Legisla¬\nture adjourn after iudicating its prefer¬\nence for Senator, ami pernit the Gov.\nernor to appoint a successor. The\nquestion might ariBe, howevir, ss to\nthe legality of tfuch appointment and\naction of the Legislature.\nGkn. IIani. -o ck was interviewed Thurs¬\nday in regard to bis intended visit to\nWashington during the inauguration.\nHe declined to talk on political sultj< cts.\nbut said he thought it only, proper for\nhim to accept a polite aud formal invi¬\ntation giveu him. Ife was naked to be\nthe guest of the cliairmfin of the Com¬\nmittee, but has engaged rooms at Worm-\nlej'sin order that he rosy bo free to\nreceive callers without imposing upon\nhis host. Hi- has not decided whether\nbis attendance will be in military or\ncivilian capacity. It is his intention\nnot to attend lh-> ball iu the eveuirjft\nbut he will be present in tho Senate\nchamber dining the iuaugursl ceremo¬\nnies.
e8a5466c05ac8baef4dcdc67fb9278a1 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.8041095573312 39.560444 -120.828218 A jolly* independent fellow is the miner,\nwhen the World goes well With him, and\nthe diggings pay. Seated on a stool be-\nfore a roaring lire*, he listens to the putter-\ning of the rain on the nro'f, or watches the\nsnow piling up round his cabin, with the\nUtmost indifference, knowing that when\nthe storm is over, he can shovel away the\nsnow, and every day lay up something tor\nthat much talked of day—the day of going\nhome. Not so with the Unlucky one —\ne-voiTthii'”1 ho touches scents to wither and\ntail lo the ground like a rotten branch.\nHe has talk'd long und faithfully, and the\nia&rdcr be ■isojked the less he had at the\nf -ud « the /ear. Others, apparently idle,\nloafing about doing nothing, seemed to\njget possession of wkat he was seeking\n. aftur. while he was working,early and late,\nragged and perhaps with but indifferent\nfood. The consciousness of having tried\nto do right, having patiently.subinitted to\nthe decree that “ man. should earn his\nWread by the sweat of his ;” Laving\nlabored hopefully, until every bone ached,\nand at last when winter comes on and the\nrain and sleet begins to dash against the\nsingle pane of glass in his window, and\nwhisk off' the clapboards from his cabin—-\nmo money, no provision; dealers in “ mi-\nners stores” looking askance at him when\nhe enters, to ask credit for a weeks provi-\nsion—then the miner's life is a different\nthing. How dismally the wind moans\nthrough the tops of the fir trees I and how\nit goes howling down the canon, in very\nmockery of his poverty ! What wonder\nthen that he should grow desperate and\nfeel half inclined to shake hands with hon-\n■osty, and say “go thy way—at a more\n■convenient season I will call for thee."\nThen is the time when principle is sorely\ntried, when he has to struggle with the\nteachings of childhood and his inclination\nto be avenged of a perverse fortune; and\n£hes he makes a misstep which leads to\n■another, untU he finds himself a fugitive\n. and a vagabond.
0d7bdb4f220e2a909dbc79fd79fa262f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.8260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 part were Intrenched.\nAfter an heroic fight Capt. Belgier\ndrove off the enemy, killing more than\n76. The fight lusted for two hours.\nCapt. Belgier and three privates\nslightly wounded, and two of\nAmericans were killed.\nAn engagement took place Oct. 24\nbetween detachments of the Third\ncalvary and the Thirty-third volunteer\nInfantry, numbering (50, and a force\nof Insurgents Including 400 riflemen\nand 1,000 bolumen. The fighting was\ndesperate. Finally, under pressure of\noverwhelming numbers, the Americans\nwere compelled to retire on Varvicao,\nBleut. George B. Feblger and\nprivates were killed, nine were wound-\nand four are missing. Twenty-\nnine horses are missing. A number of\nteamsters were captured by the Insur­\ngents. but were subsequently released.\nThe enemys loss Is estimated at 160.\nA civilian launch towing a barge\nloaded with merchandise near Arayat\nwas attacked by a force of 160 Insur­\ngents under David Fagin, a deserter\nfrom the Twenty-fourth Infantry. The\nAmerican troops, on hearing the tiring,\nturned out In force before tbe boat\ncould be looted and recaptured It.\nFagin, who holds the rank of\neral among the Insurgents, has\nspecial enmity toward bis former\npany, Of the 20 men he captured a\nmonth ago seven have returned. One\nwas killed la a fight, his body being\nhorribly mutilated. Fngln sends mes­\nsages to his former comrades threaten­\ning them with violence If they become\nhis prisoners. It was Faglns men who\ncaptured Blent. Frederick W. Alstatel-\n who is still a prisoner.\nGen. Halls expedition, with a force\nof nearly 800 men, which went\nthrough the mountains of Bln-\nangonon, In the province of In­\nfanta, in pursuit of the Insurgent\ngeneral Cailles, although It discover­\ned no trace of the enemy, encountered\ngreat hardships on the march. Twenty\nChinese porters died, and 40 men ware\nsent Info hospital. After stationing a\ngarrison of 250 men in Blnangonan\nand visiting Pollllo Island, off\ncoast of Infanta province, Gen. Hall\nand the rest of his force embarked\nthere on the transport Garronse. .\nReports from Gen. Youngs district\nshow a dally Increase of Insurgents\nthere, owing to the fact that recruit«\nare going thither from the town«.\nWhile a detail of the Thirty-third\nvolunteer Infantry was returning from\nBangued on rafts It was fired upon by\nInsurgents, Sergeant Berdstaller being\nkilled and two privates wounded.\nThe Philippine commission has de­\ncided to compile the revised Philip­\npines customs tariff from Us own In­\nvestigations, assisted by the report of\nthe army board. The result will be\nforwarded to the United States for\npublication and discussion among those\ninterested in foreign commerce. When\nthe details appear to be satisfactory\nand the draft has been approved by the\nsecretary of war the commission will\npromulgate It here as a law. The\nmeasure has taken on a new and Inter­\nnational commercial Interest, and the\ncourse of the commission is heartily\ncommended here.
36a76d7cd77adda3d3893cdc513b3937 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.0778688208359 58.275556 -134.3925 were encouraging. Though the de¬\nvelopments at the Jumbo mine andl\nXiblack mine are ski!) being advanced:\nand good ore bodies are boing opened,\nore shipment* have been temporarily\nsuspended. Work has beer* discon¬\ntinued for the winter at most of the\nprospects which gave promise of be¬\ncoming copper producers.\nIn the Juneau mining district, to the\nnorth, where gold is the predominating\nmetal, there has been a steady advance\nin mine development. At the Tread-\nwell group, on Douglas Island, the use\nof oil instead of coal has been intro¬\nduced for the steam plants, Mid the\ncapacity of the water-povrer plants ha*\nbeen increased, thns materially reduc¬\ning the co9t for power. Ihe gold pro¬\nduction for 1907 from these mines will\nbe somewhat leas than it was for 1906..\nThis decrease is attributed to the \nefficiency of labor, a condition which\nhas alFected the entire region. At the\nPerseverance mine a 100 stamp mil)\nhas been completed and flity stamp*,\nhave been in operation moat of the\nsummer. Work at the Aiaska-Juneau\nmine was continued from June until\nNovember, and results similar to those\nin former years were attained. The\nEbner mine suspended operations early\ninJuue and the mine has been idle\nsinco that time. Some exploratory\nwork was done at Sheep Cretk, but no\nactual mining. At the Eagle River\nmine developments havo been vigor¬\nously advanced in search of the main\nvein, which is displaced by a fault.\nThe developments now 6how both the\ncharacter and the amount of this com¬\nparatively wide zone of faulting, and\nthe vein is being developed at point#\nfarther iu the mountain, beyond tiia\nfault.
06c8ac1704a75e6037e2d7ea26bc0b7f WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.9712328450025 40.827279 -83.281309 cruel wars and ultimate extinction.\nWe do so because he is firm and un\nflinching in his measures to enforce!\nthe Constitution and the laws for the\nprotection of the rights of our newly\nenfranchised pople, and thns to\nsecure to that people, with all others,\nan eqoal chance in the race of life.\nWe do so because, whatever mistakes\nhe may have made during his term of\noffice are as the spots upon the sun\ncompared with the eminent success\nwhich has distinguished his Adminis-\ntration. We do so because, among\nall the able patriotic statesman thus\nfar named as possible candidate for\nthe Presidency in 1872, there is not\none the certainty of whose election is\nso well assurred as that of U. S Grant\nWe have been in no basts to make\nthis announcement, and we shall be\nin co haste to retract it We have\nmade it, t jo. with a full knowledge of\nthe fact that some men for whom\nwe feel a profund respect will regret\nand condemn our course; but we are\n a place where deliberate conviction\nof what is wisest and best makes it\nour duty to take sides, as we now\nhave done; and we fully believe that\nthe colored citizens of every part of\nour country will approve onr choice.\nLong ago we adopted the maxim,\n"never to occupy ground which onr\nenemies desired lis to occupy, if we\ncould help it Whl j General Grant's\nnomination is opposed by some of\nthe truest and best friends our race\nhas ever had, inside and" outside of\nthe councils of the nation, this does\nnot conceal from us the fact that he\nof all men in the latd is most dreaded\nby the dark, designing, and reaction\narv elements which have arisen in the\nwake of defeated rebellion and slavery.\nWith him as our candidate, the last\nhope of these forces will disappear.\nand the country wilf enter upon its\nnew career of jirstice and liberty, and\nwill be peaceful, prosperous and\niappy. Without, therefore, multiply\ning" words, we earnestly recommend\nto all Republicans the\nand
0f2fb73c531447abd95282840ca0cd2d WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1914.4424657217148 35.318728 -82.460953 The agricultural department desires\nthat; in each county .specimens of the,\nbest crops shall be carefully harvested\nand prepared and due notice given so\nthese.can be collected. In the case of\nsmall grain the samples should be se-\nlected and put up In the sheaf,-no- t\nonly as to length of stalk. but size of\nheals, and there should be two speci-\nmens of each crop, po one can be sent\nto the exposition and the other Used\nby the department In other parts of\nthe country and in the museum. There\nshould be also . two samples , of the\ngrain, half a bushel of each. Two\nsamples of grasses, clover and vetch\nshould be'prepared in the same way."\nAs to corn, five ears of any notable\ncrop Vor variety should be saved\nNorth Carolina the, world in the\nyield of , corn per acre, 239 bushels\nhaving been gathered.\nIt is of particular Importance that\nfine specimens of cotton and tobacc j\nshould be secured. North Carolina\nholds the record for cotton production,\nseven bales on two acres, and the\nState leads all in the average yield to\nthe acre, - last year this being Zl"\npounds of line, Every part of the\nState where tobacco, is grown should\nsee that meritorious specimens are se-\ncured. In all cases the. department\nshould be notified by the growers\nwhose .products are to be represented\nIn what will be the most important ex-\nposition to the South ever held jitruly\nan occasoin :: of opportunity for this\ngeciQfi of the - country and certainly j\nivl HUUU VAUUJIUO, WlllU UUCIS EU.
2f150970d6a6251623865f79a5b3d5d9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.2917807902081 41.681744 -72.788147 Omsk, April 17. Indisputable evi\ndence of the massacre by the Bolshe-- ,\nviki of more than 2,000 civilians in\nand near the town of Osa has been\nj obtained by Messrs. Simmonds and\nBmerson and Dr. Rudolph Teusler ot\nthe American Red Cross, who have\njust returned from reoccupied Rus-\nsian territory. Approximately 500\npersons wTere killed at Oea and 1,500\nin the surrounding districts.\nOsa, which had a population of 10,-0 0- 0,\nwas so denuded oi males by the\nBolshevik! that Gen. Casagrande,\nupon the occupation of the town, was\nobliged to telegraph to Yekaterinburg'\n,for men to administer civic affairs.\nIn addition to securing verbal and\ndocumentary evidence the American\nRed Cross officials saw the exhuming\nof scores of. victims from trenches\nwhere they were buried sometimes\nseveral deep. The murders wexe\nwithout provocation and the victims\n largely of the thrifty and intelli-\ngent classes or servants of the church.\nA blacksmith was shut because he\ncould not. pay 5,000 rubles. A man\nwas shot because he lived in a brick\nhouse. All attorneys and jurists and\ndoctors whose services were not re-\nquired were killed. A woman was\ncompelled to fetch a lamp and gaze\nupon her murdered sons far the\namusement of' the slayers.\nThe Soviet called a meeting and\nprepared lists of those to die. The\nhouses proscribed were visited by\nsquads, the doors were smashed in\nand the victims dragged to the edge\nof the town and forced to dig their\nown graves. A survivor testified that\nho had seen men thrown into a pit and\nburied alive. Priests were hunted un-\nmercifully. The evidence showed that\nmen were slain whose onlj offense\n;
5b1fde8133ef46cda628c3641de7571c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.160273940893 42.217817 -85.891125 Professor's story recalls the tradition in\nregard to tho infancy of Romulus and\nRemus, and suggests that Darwin's\ntheory of tho descent of man may be\nsuperseded by another, taking the\nground that the lower creation is man's\ndescendant rather than his ancestor.\nTho letter is as follows:\nNot far from Agra, in Northern India,\nis a mission station in the Church Mis-\nsionary Society, connected with which is\nan orphanage with several hundred chil-\ndren, now under tho efficient care of the\nRev. K. G. Frhardt. Tho region around\nis infested with wolves, by which, every\nyear, numbers of children are carried oil"\nand devoured. But in two instances, at\nleast, instead of being killed and eaten,\nthe children have been kept alive ami\nnourished with, if not by, these beasts.\nWhether the story of Romulus and\nRemus bo a or not, this is an ac\ntual reality, lor the chiiuren themselves\nhave been captured from among the\nwolves and brought to tho orphanage\nabove mentioned. They were both\nhoys, and apparently of some seven or\nipht years of age when taken. They\nwere found at different times, tho last\nne in March of the present year. Some\nhunters, smoking wolves out of a cave,\nwere startled when the wolves appeared\nby tho appearance among them of a\ncreature looking strangely human, but\nrunning rapidly on all fours, like tho\nwolves, though not so rapidly as they.\nHe as caught with difficulty, and there\nwas no mistaking that ho was a child of\nhumui parentage, but with tho habits\nand actions and appetites of a wild\nbeast. The hunters brought him to the\norphanage, where he was received and\ncared fur.
14f09da681d8dce6685a1eb81a6f1b5b THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.9712328450025 40.618676 -80.577293 capacity to appreciate the higher powers of\nhuman beings and to strive for contact with high­\ner levels of life. He urged that we appreciate the\ngood in others and make our relations with all a\npower appealing to their better selves. Life is\nessentially a conflict between human desires for\ncomforts and personal gains, and spiritual desires\nfor capacity to live with good-will toward all and\ndoing good toward all. Between spiritual ideals\nand material ideals there is irreconcilable conflict.\nAs the Master said lie brought not peace but the\nsword—a weapon against the foes of the spirit.\nAll the world is in conflict. In some countries\nit is a conllict of ideals—those who seek power\nagainst those who seek freedom, and the appeal\nis to love of fellow men and justice. In other coun­\ntries the conllict is between armed forces, and the\nappeal is to hatred and destruction of life. in\nthe Western Hemisphere are fortunate in that his­\ntorical forces do not lead us to policies of territorial\naggression and that we plan for commerce and\npeaceful relations with other countries without\ndesire to control them. Our desire and opportunity\nfor developing procedures of democracy and for\nrealizing the possibilities of human freedom, are\nthe most precious possessions of the nations of\nthe New World. The foes of these possessions\nagainst which we must be armed with the sword,\nare within our domain. The maintenance of free­\ndom and democracy requires more than passive\npossession and there are rights which must be ex­\nercised and ideals that must be steadily advanced.\nThe battle which counts for most in human wel­\nfare is the battle for ideals, and this battle can\nbe won only by giving the ideals reality through\nour lives and getting the cooperation of other;\nthrough conference and agreement.
1d632cea7789b895e3568d73fc8348ee DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.028767091578 58.275556 -134.3925 In the fifth century a king of Britain\nmarried, as kings sometimes do. After\nbeing married some years and having\nnothing to show the king and queen\nprayed to the pagan gods for a child.\nAfter doing this for some time without\nresult an angel appeared, told them\nthat they were barking up the wrong\ntree; that if they became christians\nthey would have a child, but it must be\ndedicated to tho christian god. In the\ncourse of time a girl was born who was\nnamed Ursula. I might mention that\nthe name of the king, her father, was\nVionultus. not that it makes any dif¬\nference, but I have just had a long let¬\nter from Frank Bach (mostly guff) in\nwhich he says that if 1 do not go more\ninto det ail, facts and try and get a\nlittle closer to the truth than 1 have in\nother descriptions, that he would rather\nI would say nothing about Germany.\niTou will now understand why 1 am so\nparticular in in giviug the exact height\nof a mountain or church. But to go\nback to Ursula.\nShe was very devout aud did not in¬\ntend to marry, but when she grew up\nConan, the son of theGermau emperor,\nproposed marriage. She refused at\nfirst, but the angel again appeared and\ntold her to go right along, marry the\nprince and convert him. Ursula agreed\nand started for Germany on a sailing\nvessel which she steered hereelf. She\nhad with her eleven noble young ladies,\neach of whom had one thousand virgins\nas attendants, making a crowd of 11,012
020b1ab58cc9e46dba5a83ef84881351 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.1625682743877 40.063962 -80.720915 impeachment shall be exhibited anc\nthe presiding officer of the Senate in\nform the managers that the Senate\nwill take proper order on the subject o\nimpeachment,of which due notice shal\nbe given the House of Representatives\n3d. Upon such articles being present\ned to the Senate, the Senate shall at J\no'clock in me arteriioon of the daj\n(Sunday excepted) following such pre\nBentation, or sooner, 11 so ordered bj\nthe Senate, resolve itself into a higl\ncourt of impeachment for proceeding\nthereon. A quorum of the Senate shai\nconstitute a quorum of the court, anc\nit shall be in session from day to day\n(Sunday excepted) after the trial shai\ncommence, unless otherwise ordered bj\nthe court, until tlnal judgment shai\nbe rendered, and so much longer ai\nmay in their judgment be needful\nImmediately upon the Senate resolvini\nItself into such high Court of Impeach\nment, the Senate snail administer to thi\npresiding officer (unless he shall b<\nChief Justice) the oath required by th>\nConstitution, aud therupon the pre\nsiding officer shall administer suet\noath to the other members of the Sen\nate, as they appear, whose dutie\nit shall be to take the same.\n4th. The presiding officer of the Sen\nate shall be the presiding officer or th\nHigh Court of Impeachment, ezcep\nwhen the President of the United State\nbe the "Vice President of the Unitei\nStates, upon whom the powers an»\nduties of the office of President shai\nhave devolved, shall be impeached, ii\nwhich case the Chief Justice of the Su\npreme Court shall preside and in a can\nrequiring said Chief Justice to presid\nnotice shall be given to him by the pre\nsiding .officer of the Senate of the timi\nand place fixed for the organization o\nthe high court of impeachment, as re\nquired, with a request to attend, aud b<\nshall preside over the court until iti\nfinal adfournment.\n5th. The presiding officer of the cour\nshall have power to make and issue bi\nhimself or by the Secretary of th"\nSenate all orders, mandates, writs am\nprecepts authorized by the rules or ty\nthe court and to make and enforce sue!\nother regulations and orders in th\npremises aB the court may authtirlze o\nprovide.
72402ce9418dc2f3f9d426f3a4236d36 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.6671232559615 39.261561 -121.016059 Th« People Alone ore Sovereign.\nFrom every portion of the county ring* this\nbattle cry of the true Demneraey. The hill*\nthat echoed it in fifty-si* have caught again\nthe well known slogan and shout it to the tea.\nThe clam are gathering. Upon the one aide,\nthe vulture*, the jackal* of Federal power, that\nlive only in the corruption of government, are\ngrasping in despair at the power about to be\nwrested from them forever; while upon the\nother, in their giant strength, come the cohort*\not the people—they come a* came their eire* in\nthe ftruggle of the Revolution, armed with the\nright, to battle for themselves in the content of\nto-day, which decides whether the government\ni* the servant of the people, or the people the\nserfs, the vassals of the government. It i* a\nstruggle in which power is arrayed\nagain*! an Incorruptible people; In which each\nman decides fur or against himself; in which\neach freeman must fall prostrate bvfore the\nBaal of an Administration, or renew bis fealty\nto the freedom of the people. With such is-\nsues the result cannot be doubtful. The people\ncan only fall by their own band. Armed with\na just cause, and battling for their own rights,\nthey are invincible; and in their strength alone\nlies the national safety, for the government\nthat conquers the people must stand upon the\nruins of American Liberty. Wiih these parties\nand this issue, the result is certain; and to-day\nthe voice of California, from her golden moun-\ntains and her fertile plains, will ring across the\nsea, proclaiming to her eider sisters, that where\nAmerican Freemen rule the Feople alone are\nSovereign.
408e913831135567eafaa0b30592637b CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.6734972361364 41.875555 -87.624421 Of all the Inhabitants of these popu-\nlous cities the dogs come first, and do\nall tho work, digging out the holes,\nbuilding a firm, hollow cono around\nthe opening to servo alike as a pro-\ntection and as a point of vantage In\nviewing the remainder of the town,\nand later building the mysterious un-\nderground waterworks and drainage\nsystem that Is so complete and amaz-\ning in Its ingenuity.\nEach hole connects with theso lat-\nerals, which often underlie the city at\na depth of from 40 to .100 feet, if It is\nnecessary to go down so far for water,\nEach house also connects with every\nother house, so that the person who\npours buckets of water In a hole after\na TCtreatlng dog and then watts to see\nthe dog's halt drowned reappearance,\nIs pretty sure to bo disappointed.\nThe dogs live on buffalo grass. \nvariety, the little fellows eat loco\nweed, which is deadly In" Its effect on\na horse or steer, but only Berves to\ngive the prairie dog a comfortable Jag.\nShortly after a dog town is estab-\nlished the owls put In an appearance.\nThere are no trees, hollow or other-\nwise, for them to Inhabit, and as thoy\nare altogether too lazy to build their\nown holes, they simply move Into the\nones already prepared for them, They\nare harmless creatures, though, and\nthe dogs do not resent their advent.\nTho snakes do not llvo In the towns\nIn tho same numbers as the dogs and\nowls, because these two, by uniting\ntheir efforts manage to kill a good\nmany of them. In every prairie dog\ntown a scaled hole is occasionally\nseen. Every sealed hole means that\nin It an unhappy rattler has threshed\naway bis life.
dcd574f66dfb10729199a13c9576848b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.160273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 Subjected to much ridicule, chief-\nly by monarchists when he headed\nthe republic that succeeded the\ndownfall of the Hohenzollern reign\nIn Germany, Friedrlch F.bert was\nregarded highly by Jhe people gen-\nerally and, in his own country at\nleast, was given the major portion\nof the credit for bringing order out\nof the chaos that followed the ab-\ndication of Emperor William.\nWhen the upheaval came on No-\nvember 9, 1918, Kbert assumed a\nleading role, becoming chancellor In\nsuccession to Prince Maximilian of\nBaden, who had been instrumental\nin negotiating the armistice. He was\nin office only 36 hours, being forced\nout when control of the government\nwas taken over by the people's\ncommissaries. It was Ebert, it was\nraid, who by skillful maneuvers at\nthat time, prevented the radicals\nfrom gaining the upper in the\nturmoil created by the revolution.\nA few weeks later Ebert became\none of the six commissaries who ar-\nranged for the first meeting of the\nGerman National Assembly at\nWeimar to form a provisional gov-\nernment of the republic. On Feb.\n11, 1919, he was elected provisional\npresident, receiving 277 out of the\n379 votes cast in the assembly. The\nconstitution adopted by the national\nassembly provided that "the execu-\ntive power lies with the people."\nThe provisional government func-\ntioned until August 23, when Ebert\ntook the oath as Imperial president\nand two days later the national as- -\nsembly ceased to exist, being super-\nseded by the new .Reichstag, t'pon\ntaking the oath President Ebert\nsaid: "The essence of our consti-\ntution shall, above all, be freedom,\nhut freedom must have law.
226ade681dc4367d4a5867c571c70ddb THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.2123287354134 29.949932 -90.070116 A Brussel fahlia paper devotes asa tole to\nthe question, "What European prines. dresme\nmost teetefally ?" Itdiedee the qestion in favor\nof the mpreme of Austria. A . regard, the m-\npresso the French, It mys that her attempts to\nconceal her age cause her to choose toilets which\nare by no mesau in keeping with her appearsance.\nSome distnguished muropen priacems, the\name paper mnsions, pay very Htle attetion to\nthe reqabemset of fashion. Ameng them are\nQueen Viltora, ber daughter, the queen of Bl-\nglum, and th empress of ussia.\nt1issMlis Paris that a well-dressed stranger\nwas arrsted on the night of the 15th of Februa-\nry, n attrmpting to force his way into the bed-\nroom of thepriboe Imperd. oen. Frmeerd had\nthe intruder arrested and earoed, whet . re-\n and a dagger were found in his pocket.\nHe refused to give his name. and as nothing\nseemed to dailnate that be wasutane, It was\nthought that he intended to amsaubats the prise.\ne s till enlsed in a oell at the guar-room of\nthe Tuleries. Stops were immadiely tubam to\nprevent esp but the sernts free ea g sohe\npavilion now ocoupied by the pri•e Imperial.\nSome amsment was created by a soene whleh\noccurred in the Senate on Tuesday week, justaoter\nthe adjournment of Congress. Mr. umner was\nengaged is earnest eonversati with a friend.\nwhen a young African, dressed is the height of\nfalhion, sooompanied by two females of the emie\n'race and color," gorgeona In feathers elkak,\napprosached sad touching Mi. Sumer on the\nshoulder, clamed• qataca•inoe, aad immeiatly
0be58c81c68fe6df7680b30a8f10016a WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.4877048864096 40.827279 -83.281309 We do not say anything very original\nwhen we say that the chief object in the\ngovernment of children should be to teach\na child to govern himself.\nWe know that most people think differ-\nently, or rather they believe differently.\nOne cannot dignify their mental processes\nwith the name of thinking. Most people\nbelieve, or at least feel, that the business\nthey have in hand in the government of\nchildren is to conform the child's will to\ntheir own. What is falsely called family\ngovernment is in most families a selfish\nstruggle between the willfulness of the\nparent and the willfulness of the child, a\nstruggle between the strong and the weak,\nin which the weak goes down.\n"ButhaveInotarighttobeobeyed?"\nasks some indignant parent who has read\nthus far. We answer that your very\nquestion betrays the selfishness your\ndemand. You are thinking of your right,\nand not of the child's good. Half your\nfailure lies just there. And if you insist\non a categorical answer to your question\nin regard to your right, we answer with\nmore indignation than you asked it, that\nyou have no right to exact obedience un-\nless you exact the obedience for the child's\ngood instead of for your pleasure. Mark,\nwe do not say the child, except in flagrant\ncases, has a right to refuse obedience.\nThe child has no right to judge of your\nmotives or of your wisdom. But you\nhave no general right to exercise your\nauthority for the mere sake of being\nobeyed. For, let us repeat, the chief ob\nject of family government should be to\nteach a child to do without your author-\nity.
3b1ca4b00f3ab8b4728c8448c61b9a8f WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.2424657217148 40.827279 -83.281309 tion of Senator Sherman.to . instruct\nthe Judiciary Committee to report a\nbill for the suppression of the Ku\nKlux. Sherman himself delivered the\nfirst speech. It wa3 very radical,\nand took the broad ground that the\nKu Klux should be put down by the\nstrong aim of theGovernment. bher\nman is not usually an extremist, nor\na sensationalist He is a man of such\ncareful statement that what he says\ngeneral has great weight with hi3 fel-\nlow:, senators. Many of his col\nleagues were surprised to day to hear\nhis strong denunciation of the Ku\nKlux, and not a few came to the con\nclusion that there must be something\nin it. Sherman informed the Senate,\nbefore starting out, that he had given\nthe whole subject a careful, patient\ninvestigation, and what he was about\nto say was the result of his deliberate\n He confined himself to a\nbare recital of facts, without attempt\ning to point out any remedy, except\nin a general way. The remedy he\nproposed to leave to the Judiciary\nCommittee. His speech received\nmarked attention, and is generally\nspoken of to night as very able.\nSenator Stevenson, of Kentucky, re\nplied to Sherman . Unfortunately\nfor him, and for the Democratic side\nof the Senate, he admitted nearly all\nSherman charged. He denied that\nKentucky was any worse- - than other\nStates, aud asserted his willingness\nio hunt down the Ku Klux, if th re\nwere any. Sherman turned the ta\nbles on him by producing a coppy of\noteveusons annual message while\nGovernor of Kentucky, wherein he\ndistinctly admits the existence of bod-\nies of armed men whose combinations\nare too powerful to be dealt with by\ntue civil law.
5209e47a147ac25050f3f723a397fa62 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.091780790208 37.561813 -75.84108 were are lew varieties 01 the human race\nunrepresented in tliis nos'iionolltan citv.\nCoolies from Cltlna Miilays frem lite Enstern\nA rch i pniago Ited.ik I lis from the We at\nskins from all purls of Africa Whalemen\nfrom Greenland and tlie region of the Arctic\nPole bronzed liulf breeds from Braiil and the\noilier atutoa of boullt America JJoriienns\nI usiiiaiiiuut, Ariihs, Hindoos, Armeuiuns, New\nZeuluuders and Koflirs these, with tha mil\nlions Irom all parts of Europe, make up tlie\nmotley Immigration which our world- em hr-\nlug commerce tlirow duily on our shores.\nThousands of such, perhaps, have never heard\nany one of the great names which we have\nbeen trained to regard with reverence; the\nname 01 vasnineiou cannot thrill their slug\ngish blood; of Napoleon Bouauarte. hi con\nquests and his full, they aro utterly igtioiaut\nout iianii mem a and aee how rap\nliny inetr iac.es ongiiieu: 1 Hey recoguize its\nfriendly promise they rely on lis long tested\ntruth; they rejoice, and are, nerhans. aston\nished to know tliut the great physician, whose\nat visit to their own country I, Mined the epoch\nof physicul regeneration, litis likewise been\nbefore tlie.ni on a like errand of mercy to the\nmm oi llieir ru lure adoption! They no long\ner feel that they are strangers; for Holloway\nby his genius, lubo: a, adventures and world\nwide truvels, lias established a connecting line\nueiween a n triiies and race of men. fosses\ned with a leal lo relieve the alllicted. and fear\nlug nothing that man can do, he line made the\npilgrimage of the earth, and established In ev\neryspothe visited not only depots for llie snl\nof his medicines, but likewise journal in the\nI
040cc813faab3b1b5ce468b64f2388a7 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.3109588723999 40.419757 -77.187146 wheels were rattling furiously. Who\ncould it be driving at such a break -ne c- k\nspeed V Then suddenly it came In sight\nand at the same moment I heard the tcr- -\nrlfio screams of women, saw that the\ndriver was missing from his place, and\nthat the horses were running away.\n"In an instant, forgetting everything\nelse at those cries of distress, I dropped\nmy pistol and sprang into the road.\nJust for a moment the startled horses\npaused, and in that moment I seized the\nbits. Then commenced a fierce battle\nwith the frantic, plunging steeds. I was\nthrown down, trampled upon, but I\nclung to them with despairing energy,\nTen minutes ago, my only thought had\nbeen to take life ; now, my only desire\nwastosaveit. Soitwas;Iclungtothe\nhorses and kept them there, until I felt\nstronger hands assisting mine, and \nthe wild struggle, the broad fields, and\nthe white road all faded away, and left\nnothing but darkness and silence.\n" When I awoke well, boys,I thought\nAladdin's lamp had certainly ceme back\nupon the earth, and somebody had been\nusing it for my ben fit. If I had come\nback to life in our own room, Ranald's\nand mine, I might have concluded that\nthe whole affair hod been a horrible\ndream, and so said nothing more about\nit. But it certainly was surprising to\nfind myself in a strange room, on\nBtrange bed, with a rosy old gentleman\nleaning over me on the other side, and\na rosy old lady on the other, their faces\nexpressing the most lively solicitude,\nwhile a grave medical gentleman first\nfelt my pulse and the rubbed the palms\nof his hands together with great satis-\nfaction.
0b1668809e0a068fc9e6add867c64feb THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.5027396943176 32.612638 -90.036751 The position continues to be held\nthat this step is outside interference\nwith affairs in Russia. It was said on\nauthority that when Mr. Riddle, the\nAmerican charge, presents the petition\nat the Russian foreign olhce, he will\nbe received with the same cordiality\nalways accorded an American envoy.\nIn returning the petition to Mr. Rid-\ndle the officials will assure him that\nRussia cherishes no ill will toward the\nUnited States, and that the action it\ntakes with respect to the petition is\nnecessary in view of Russia's unalter\nable policy of refraining from inter-\nference in the internal affairs of other\npowers and insisting on similar treat-\nment for itself. The Russian govern-\nment hopes its firmness in the matter\nwill not be misunderstood, but in view\nof the announcement of its position\njveeks ago it is surprised at Hhe de-\nvelopments which will forte a reitera-\ntion of its views. Mr. Riddle, it can\nbe stated, will subjected to no per-\nsonal embarrassment in presenting\nthe petition and he will be given to\nunderstand that the St. Petersburg\nauthorities appreciate the fact that\nhe is only carrying out his orders.\nShould the presentation of the peti-\ntion be deferred until the return to\nSt. Petersburg of Mr. McCormick, the\nAmerican ambassador to Ru3sia, the\nsame programme, will obtain unless\nin the meantime the Russian govern-\nment is made aware of extenuating\ncircumstances which put the matter\nin a different light. Indeed, it is de-\nclared Russia would be glad to do any-\nthing possible to relieve the tension in\nthe United States, but feels unable to\nsacrifice a principle which it has fol-\nlowed hitherto and the American sup-\nport of which it has warmly indorsed.\nThe Russiam government readily ad-\nmits the sincerity of the American\ngovernment's decision and declines to\nlisten to reports that the forwarding,\nof the petition has any ulterior sig-\nnificance.
7bc2b6a7986fba3a666a57296f2b476e THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4030054328578 39.290882 -76.610759 His present facilities for manufacturing agricultural\nimplements, are not surpassed liy any other establis-lt\nincut inthis country, lie can therefore afford them oil as\nreasonable terms as any other person for the same qual-\nity of work. His present stock of implements are ex-\ntensive both in quality and variety, to which he would\ninvite the attention of those, who wish to purchase.\nA liberal discount Willbe made to all cash purchasers,\nand those who purchase to sell again.\nThe following names are some of his leading articles,\nviz: His PATENT CYLINDRICAL STRAW CUT-\nTER, wood and iron frames, but all with his patent dou\nhie eccentric feeders, withor without extra knives; prices\nvaryingfrom .®33 to SIOO, subject to cash discounting;\n. he challenges the world to produce a better machine for\ncutting long forage; MYEKBWHEAT FAN and EL-\nLICOTT'S PATENT HORIZONTAL WHEAT FANS\nboth a very superior article. Fox Borland's PAT-\nENT THRESHING MACHINES, and Martineau.s\nPATENT HORSE POWERS, also a very superior ar-\nticle. A great variety of PLOUGHS, wrought and\ncast Shares, of all sizes and prices, Gideon Davis's im\nproved PLOUGHS, of Davis oivn make or putterns,\nwhich are sufficiently known to the public not to require\nrecommendation; 100 CULTIVATORS, also expanding\nCULTIVATORS, both iron and wood frames, and new\nplan; TOBACCO CULTIVATORS.\nF. H . Smith's PATENT LIME SPREADERS, the\nuiiiiiyof which lias been made known to the public; to-\ngpther witha large assortment of FARMING IMPLE-\nMENTS, PLOUGH CASTINGS of every description\nand superior quality kept constantly on hand, at retail or\nby the ton; also, MACHINE and other CASTINGS lur\nnislied at short notice and on reasonable terms, this iro\nFoundery being furnished with the best materials\nexperienced workmen withample niacliuieiyr *'s\nby stdam power for turning and fitting up mac
c784d6af840340972766434bffe5e35c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.4193988754807 41.681744 -72.788147 Chairman F. H. Johnston ot the\nsubway board said today that an\nordinance had been approved pro-\nviding that poles in the subway dis-\ntrict mustbe down within !0 days\nor the companies weii liable to\nfines ot $50 a week. The 60 days\nare now up but the lighting com-\npany has not taken down its poles.\nThe city has considered chopping\nthem down, but it fears the company\nmight be able to sue for damages.\nA special meeting of St. Mark's\nchurch was held last evening to hear\nthe report of ths vestry on the ques-\ntion of a new rectory. The rector\nsuggested that the purchase of a lot\nand erection of a house, total cost\nnot to exceed $8,000 be authorized.\nW. E . Attwood moved this be done,\nand the resolution was carried.\nGovernor Chamberlain has signed\nthe Berlin town court bill.\nThe school board committee fit\n'charge of higlT affairs held\na meeting last evening and gave\nconsideration to the entrance quali-\nfications of the pupils from the low-\ner schools. The committee consists\nof Judge Roche, W. E, Attwood, B.\nF. Gaffney, and L. Hoyt Pease.\nA communication to the Herald\nsuggests that Supernumerary Harry\nMount of the local police force be\nmade chief of the state police, be-\ncause he is "a man of discretion."\nEngineer Max Unkelbach, who\nspends, his entire time supervising-th-\nsewer work, both at Beckley and\non the pipe line, said today that\nhere are now more than 150 men\nemployed on the work. Twenty-on - e\nbeds have been sunk.\nThe town of Plainville has won\na victory. Selectman P. J . Prior\nwas Informed this morning that the\nrailroad commissioners have order-\ned that flagmen be placed at the\nEast Main street and Broad street\nrailroad crossings from 7 a. m . to\n7p.m.
789320c441b5d732ad04efa9a8975cfb OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8510928645517 39.513775 -121.556359 The news from the variousportions\nof the State, renders it certain that\nthe Democracy have swept the State\nlike a whirlwind, and that their ma-\njority against Fillmore will exceed\nthe expectations of the most sanguine.\nWe arc free to confess, however, that\nMr. Fillmore has made a much bet-\nter run than we had anticipated, and\nthat the Republican vote is much less.\nWhen we take into consideration the\nfact that, California was one of the\n“sixteen States” composing the Fre-\nmont Republic, and which was going\nto elect him President, has gone\nagainst him with nearly all of Fill-\nmores vote to spare, it is probable\nthat there may bo some one or two\nothcrof the “Sweet sixteen” claimed\nby “Jessie,” that may do likewise.\nIndeed, we are satisfied that a large\nmajority of the people of the north-\nern States arc opposed to die eleva-\ntion of a sectional President, and\nwere they divided between Bu-\nchanan and Fillmore, there ia not a\ndoubt but they would declare against\nthe Republican party. It- impossi-\nble that Fremont lias carried the.\ngreat State of New York, if ho lias\ncarried it at all, by anything but a\nplurality, and should the Republi-\ncan party succeed, it will be by the\nelevation of a minority President,\nand the consequences, whatever they\nmay be, will be the result of party\nprejudice, and .a blind adhesion to\nmen. Had the national sentiment of\nthe northern States united, we doubt\nnot but the response would be over-\nwhelmingly in favor of a national\nman. The verdict has been render-\ned whatever it may be, and until the\nlapse of time shall break the seal,\nand show us to the contrary, we shall\ntrust that enough of the northern\nStates to elect Mr. Buchanan, have\ndone as California has—declared for\nthe whole country, and for James
27074bdad6420d4d768ec63046cb7832 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.3547944888383 58.275556 -134.3925 Whether anything good cau be ac\noomplished by a mob ie a qpestion\nwhich we wiM not attempt to answer,,\nalthough we are rather inclined to make\na- negative reply.. At Cordova-a mob. of\nthree hundred men dumped a large\nquantity o5 foreign coal into- the bay.\nAs a rule mo be are made up* of teughs\nand dead- beats.. Saoh» was not the\ncase at Cordova,, we are informed.\nMany of the best citizens of the town\nwere in the thick of it and acting as\nleaders. However, the action of the\nmob was criminal, and the individuals\noomposiog.it are liable to pro9esution.\nThe affair has been heralded X) the\nworld as a- repetition of the "Boston\nTea Party." Ground down by the cruel j\nhand of goveuument these people have\n last rebelled, defied the law and de¬\nstroyed property. The offense may be\nwinked at by the authorities and the\nperpetrators never called upon to face\ntheir crime. But what good have they\ndone? Wili the action of a mob hasteu\nShe deliberations of the courts* Will\nthe people- of the world be inspired by\na deeper respect for the quality of citi¬\nzenship in AJaska by this act? Most\nassuredly nut. fclveii residents of other\nfiarts of Alaska will b« hard to con¬\nvince that the act was necessary. The\ndeed savored too much of ^uarchy to\nplease the sterling citizens of the\nNorth. What it vM>uid» not be proper\nfor an individual to dc is not any more\nproper or right to be done by a collec¬\ntion of individuals.
169b233d5f20558f06797b43d022e170 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.691780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 Whci-Unji'M Hufo and 8uro I'rotfrt-HH.\nIt is often cold, and tho Intblliqkkcs\nis among thooo who cay it, thnfc if the grei\nadvantage of this city and ita liolghbo\nhoed could bo tranaforrod in bulk to ar\nono of tho " boom " towna cf tho "Wee\nIhot particular town wonld bo in a la\nway to doublo ita population within\nycRr. All this is true, nnd it touches tl\nobviona locson that "Wheeling could n\nvance moro rapidly than sho doea if h«\npooplo would put thoir ohouldera to tl\nvrheel with half Iho Western cntnusiast\nThcio is, however, this encouragemet\nthat if Wheeling does not go ahead aa fc\nno oho could and should, flho doos\nahoad, and hor progrceo is as eolid r>s tl\nhills that look down upon her. The\nhavo bobn timco when Wheeling scemi\nabout to stand still, bnt in her matori\ninterests Dho has never alipped back.\nfact there has not been « year when a]\nhen not strengthened her foundations.\nThero have always been \nmen of affairs who saw through the dee\neat gloom cud kept on building whi\nothers devoted themselves to croakir\nIf new industries were not cotablishe\nold oneB were expanded. It hp,a not bei\nlong since thero web grave apprehensii\nthat Wheeling's beat days wero goi\nnever to return. In that very hour\nseeming darkness plana wero maturh\nfor Eorao of the most substantial impro\\\nments ever known in the industrial life\nthe city, and these plana havo materialise\nNatural gnu" eame, and, in cpito of dolef\npropbecics that it never would como,\nblazsd upon us in rich abundance.\nFrom thy hour that natural gas was\nfixed fact V/heeling began to wear a ne\naspcct Lit any one recall for himself tl\nWheeling of, say, two years ago with tl\nWheeling of to-day, and strike the bji\nauce. Thero has not bben much blare\ntrumpets, but progress is written in eve;\nday of tho local history; cot go mnc\nprogress as there should have been, bt\nstill progreea steady aud sure.
06dfb567ff4ff576a2a6e6e915f11e56 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.9794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 rj^RUBTKE'S BALE.\nPursuant to tbn deed or trust of tho CHRI\nCBNT IKON COMPANY to tnc, dated tho «5\nday i>( Ki braary, A. 1). 1373, and recorded\nDeed or Trust liook numbered tt, pages Ms, 11\nand 1C5. In the Clerk's ofllceof tho County Cou\nof Ohio county, West Virginia, 1 will on\nTUB3DAY, tho 9th day of February, 187 j,\nat the front door of tho Court House or pa'\ncouuty, soil nt public auctlou tho property coi\nveyed to mo by said deed, that la to say:\nAll that tract or pucel ot land, coal, minora\nand ratning privileges, nod part* of lota, whb\nwere conveyed by Oeorgo I'. WhlUker and wl\nto tho itt»d Crescent Iron Company, by Dei\nbearing dato tho sccotd day of March, lb?l, ui;\nrecorded lu Deed Hook nutnbwcd59, page 11\nIn tho ofllco or the Cloik ot tho County Conn\nOhio county, In tho StatoofWest Vlrglnls; thi\nIk to cay, tho tractor land containing lortytw\nacrcs, two rood? and three perches, bounded «\nfollows: beglnniug at a point in the central\nWheeling creek In it lino with tho Bsmcrn sld\n a lot conveycd by John W. Mill and wltu an\nUeorgo Uardmunand wlloto John N. Zlmtnc\nthenca with the lino of e»id Zlmmor's lot, Bout\naO>tf degrees West, 111 poles, to tho South Hide\nWtbatcr street; thence with the South sldu\nWebster street, South 64 degrees But, 19 pole\nto theKast side of Mfbsltoe'; tbunco with tl\nBast aide or ll'gh street, South 510 degrees Wee\n10 poles to the Hubbard road; thencu with sal\nroad, North 89 degrees Bast, 17 poles,-Soul\ntilt# degree# Bast,28 poles,. routh 48tf deuroi\nBast, poles,-South bl* degrees Bast, 7;\npoles,-.South 61 degrees Kaat, 9# poles,-Soul\noil# degrees Bast, tf poles..North 60 degrut\nBast, 15# polos,-South 88M degrees Batt,\npoles,-South degree® mst, 5 polos, to th\nlino of tho Singleton tract; thenco with said lit\nSouth 17# degrees Bait, ll poles,.North 67;\ndegwes Jiast, 51 poles,.North 11) degrees Wet\n»H poles, to tho centro of Wheeling creek; an\nthenco down the ccntro or aald creek, South 1\ndegrees w est, 35 poloa, Booth 69 degrees Wca\n3i poles, North 73 degrees West, Is poles, Nort\nKO rfiiirtnna U'n«» 1J r*n1»«\nu >n»v.
3eb10f662fdea0e01257a6c870a6764d UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1912.0860655421473 42.68333 -96.683647 ffettlas. —The time is not fir tffvMMt\nfor succeRfjful drapers of numbers in\nthe Mellette and liennett county land\nopening to receive notice from the gov­\nernment as to where they will be ex*\npeeled to report to offer their filings\nfor the lands to be opened for settle­\nment and, as usual in events of this\nkind, there are the regulation number\n©f men called "locators" who know\nall about the new country, and are\nwilling to offer their services to the\n"newcomers" to select their new\nhomes. These firms are at the pres­\nent time located at Gregory, Dallas,\nWinner and Carter and are carrying\n©n their correspondence with the\nluckies from these points, but they all\nwant to be at the land office city when\nthe harvest is on.\nA peculiar condition exists and the\nlocators are "up in the air" and are\napt to remain there until the govern­\nment makes a move or two. The en­\n Rosebud country is in the Greg­\nory land district, with the exception\nof Mellette county—the county to be\nopened, and it, with Bennett county,\nis now attached to the Chamberlain\nland district. It is reasoned by those\nwho are up in matters of this kind\nthat the department, will have an ex­\necutive order issued soon transferring\nthe new territory to the Gregory dis­\ntrict This will have to he done or the\nfilings will have to be tnade at Cham­\nberlain Then there is talk, and not\nall talk, either, that the government\ncontemplates the consolidation of the\nChamberlain and Gregory offices and\nthe establishment or a new district\nfurther west and more accessible to\nthe homestead lands to be entered. In\nthis anticipation the various town? of\nPresho and Murdo in Lyman county;\nCarter and Winner in Tripp county,\nand White River, the comity seat of\nMellette county, are all candidates for\nthe new land office city.
1cc671a5b3a3ee69cb353e1e74806d1c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.8972602422627 42.217817 -85.891125 quence of frequent attacks of acute\nCatarrh or "cold in tho head," as it is\nusually termed, the mucous membrane\nof the nose and air passages of the head\nbecome permanently thickened, the\nmucous follicles or glands diseased, and\ntheir functions either destroyed or very\nmuch deranged. Although Chronic\nCatarrh is most commonly brought on\nin tho manner above stated, it some-\ntimes makes its appearance as a sequel\nand result of typhoid fever, scarlet\nfever, measles or other eruptive fevers.\nIn the early stages of the diseaso the\npatient may be annoyed with "only a\nslight dropping in the throat," as many\nexpress it, the amount of discharge\nfrom the air passages of the head at\nthis stage of the disease being only\nslightly in excess of health. In some\n tho discharge is thick, ropy and\ntough, requiring frequent and strong\neffort in the way of hawking, blowing\nand spitting to remove it from the\nthroat, where it frequently lodges. In\nother cases or in other stages of the\nsame case, the discharge is thin, watery,\nacrid, irritating and profuse. The nose\nmay be stopped up from the swollen\nand thickened condition of the lining\nmucous membrane, so as to necessitate\nrespiration through the mouth, giving\nto the voice a disagreeable nasal twang.\nFrom the nature of the obstruction in\nthis condition it is useless for the\nsufferer to endeavor to clear the pas-\nsages by blowing the nose, which only\ntends to render a bad matter worse, by\nincreasing the irritation and swelling of\nthe already thickened lining mem-\nbrane.
1d85624df9cbec7f1564ecd470c18dad LAS VEGAS MORNING GAZETTE ChronAm 1881.4808218860985 35.593933 -105.223897 a word, to be his own master for a few\ndays. His health is good and long anx-\niety about his wife removed.\nGrant has not yet called on the Presi-\ndent. A good deal of curiosity if felt to\nsec whether he will allow his disappoint-\nment of the collector of New\nYork, who did not vote for him at Chi-\ncago, to keep him from crossing the\nstreet and calling upon the President.\nSome personal friends of his say that\nhe will call before the President takes\nhis departure. As to the correspond-\nence which passed between Grant nnd\nGarfield after Robertson's nomination\nit may be said on good authority that if\nGrant wishes to publish it there will be\nno objection on the other side. The\nPresident's letter, which is said to be\nvery quiet and dignilied in tone, elicit-\n no reply from Grant. It seems to\nclose effectually the argument. People\nwho have seen both letters say their pub-\nlication would produce no Iresh politi-\ncal sensation. Grant's letter is known\nto be quite similar to the one he wrote\nat the same time to Senator Jones and\nthe President's reply is a calm assertion\nof his position with regard to the .Rob-\nertson appointment, accompanied' with\nexpressions of personal regard for\nGrunt and recognition of his services in\nthe campaign and surprise that he\nshould fed agrieved because of the ap-\npointment of a single man in New York\nwho did not belong to the faction which\nsupported him for the nomination last\nyear. There is a rumor that Grant is\nwriting a rejoinder but he has not\nspoken of it to those closest to him in\nsocial and political relations.
0c99130e9a5e276d1827d7a6e0cbca64 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.5246575025367 43.798358 -73.087921 ing in 'good faith. It is not interided by\nthis remark, - to make the impression; that\nthe South had all along pressed the ad-\nmission . of the neW :slayeTStates, simply\nwith a view to the increase of its own pow-\ner. By no means. Slavery had insinu-ate- d\nitself into" favor because of its being\nmixed up with (other) supposed benefits\nand because its ultimate influence on the\ngovernment was neither dreaded nor sus-\npected. But, on the Missouri question,\nthere was a fair trial of strength between\nthe friends of Slavery and the friends of the\nConstitution. The formertriumphed, and\nby the prime agency of otto whose raiment,\nthe remainder of his days, ought to be\nsackloth and ashes, because of the pres-\nent ills which impend over,ps, the disgrace\nhe has continued on the name of his coun-\ntry, and the consequent injury that has\ninflicted on the cause of Freedom through-\nout the world. Although all the different\nadministrations, from the organization of\nthe government, nad, in the indirect man-\nner already mentioned, favored slavery,\nthere had not been on any previous occa-\nsion, a direct atruggle between its pretend\nsions and the principles of liberty ingraft\ned on the Constitution. The friends of\nthe latter were induced to believe, when-\never they should be arrayed again I each\nother, that theirs would be the triumph.\nTremendous error 1 Mistake almost fatal 1\nThe battle was fought: S'avery emerged\nfrom it unhurt her hands made gory\nher bloody plume still floating in the air\nexultingly brandishing her dripping\nsword over her prostrate and vanquished\nenemy. She had won all for which she\nfought. Her victory was complete the\nsanction oj the nation was given to slave- -\nif
242e438a8fe87a7dc7db5aa790dc9179 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.5876712011668 31.960991 -90.983994 In assuming the control of the Hkiiagd, the\npresent proprietor set forthin a brief paragraph,\nthe motives and principles by which ho would\nbe governed, as the Editor of a public journal.\nCommencing at the dullest and most unfavora­\nble season of thcycar, and some time before the\no.idse of the present volume, Wo deemed it ad­\nvisable to defer issuing a prospectus until by\nthe publication of four or five numbers, our\nreaders might judge correctly of our course and\nability, and approvo or reject at pleasure.\nThe first volume of our paper is now nearly\ncompleted, and the success which has attended\nit, warrants the assertion that the Herald is\npermanently established. In the second volume\n(soon to commence) it is our intention to carry\nout the principles avowed in our first number—\nto make the Herald interesting and useful as a\ncounty paper, by devoting a large portion of its\ncolumns to general news and agricultural mat­\nters. So as politics are concerned, we shajt,\nas before stated, advocate and support Whig\ndoctrines and Whig principles to the best of our\nhumble ability, and until the ensuing November\nelection, we shall openly war against the odious\ndoctrine of repudiation—believing the defence\nand protection of our State honor paramount to\nany and all other considerations—ashamed as we\nare of tho degraded position which our State\nnow occupies—of the contempt and scorn hurl­\ned upon her by honest men of every political\ncreed; but sustained and cheered by the belief\nthat the moral honesty of our citizens is )Tet un­\ntainted and pure—that they have been misled\na nd blinded by designing men, wo shall spare no\neffort in our exertions to enlighten, instruct\nand warn them oT the dangerous consequen­\nces of this dishonest doctrine—joining ourselves\nwith the patriot band now warring manfully\ngainst it, we wilt aid, so far as in us lies.in tear­\ning away the veil from this hideous Moka
02898a646298b32ccaedc5ff1890bc4f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1900.4123287354134 41.004121 -76.453816 save himself from conviction and\nprison ; the conviction and sentence\nof a former United States District\nAttorney, with a machine favorite\nfor a judicial office, on charges of\nbribery ; the conviction and sen-\ntence of election officers in one of\nthe wards of this city ; the criminal\nattempt to impose upon the Recei-\nver of Taxes 20,000 or more fraud-\nulent orders for tax receipts ; the\nattempt to bribe a jury in the Uni-\nted States Court in the Ingham\ncase ; the oleomargarin frauds ex-\nposing the inefficiency and corrupt-\nion in the State Agricultural De-\npartment, confessed by the enforced\nretirement of the Chief of the Food\nand Dairy Commission ; the crimi-\nnal leakage in the State Printing\nOffice, through which medical ex-\namination questions were obtained\nin advance ; the conviction of sever-\nal members of the Shamokin Bor-\nough Councils for bribery, and the\nproceedings against a of\nScranton Councilmen on a. similar\ncharge ; the flight of the Lancaster\nCounty treasurer, with $60,000 of\nthe people's money.\nThese things, and others less con-\nspicuous, but not less criminal, have\nall come before the people within\nthe past half year. They furnish\nreason for earnest reflection on the\npart of every intelligent and con\nscientious citizen of Pennsylvania\nwho has regard tor the good name\nof the Commonwealth and who is\ncapable of feeling the shame with\nwhich widespread political crimes\nafflict it. The most of these events\nare directly due to the active pur-\nposes of that criminal combination\nknown as the machine; the others\nare due to the low and depraved\npolitical methods which have been\ncultivated by the machine.\nThese methods are certain to con-\ntinue and permeate the official and\npolitical life of the State as long as\nQuayism is permitted to have an\ninfluence. Piia. Press.
16b38e079da5a9017723c807b1c13305 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.5301369545916 42.217817 -85.891125 pbyvdeian, that these things meant anything\nserious or that a monstrous disease was be-\ncoming fixed upon me. Candidly, I thought\nIwas suttering from malaria, and so doc-\ntored mvself accordingly. But I got no\nbetter. 1 next noticed a peculiar color and\nodor atout the fluids I was passing-als- o\nthat there were large quantities one day\nand very little the next, and that a per-\nsistent froth and scum appeared upon tho\nsurface, and a sediment settled in the bot-\ntom. And yet I did not realize my danger,\nfor, indeed, seeing these symptoms continu-\nally, I finally became accustomed to them,\nand my suspicion was wholly disarmed by\nthe fact that I had no pain in the affected\norgans or in their vicinity. Why I should\nhave been so blind I cannot understand.\nThere atciritle future for all physical\nneglect, and impending danger always\nbrings a person to his senses, even though\nit may then be too late. I realized, at last,\nmy critical condition and aroused myself to\novercome it And, oh! how hard I tried! I\nccnsulied the best medical skill in the land\nI visited all tho prominent mineral springs\nin America and traveled from Maine to Cali-\nfornia. Still I grew worse. No two physi-\ncians agreed us to mv malady. One said I\nwas troubled with spinal irritation; another,\nnervous prostration; another malaria; an-\nother, dyspepsia; another, heart disease; an-\nother, general debility; another, congestion\nof the base of tho I rain; and so cn through\na longlistof commend scases, the symptoms\nof all of which I really had. In this wav sev-\neral years passed, during
247cca1f69e58e82495068fbb0ab6bff EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.7931506532218 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hudson, to J. j place In tho front rank of free, pro-\nHarry BaxteV. The ceremony will be «resslve American cities?\na home wedding, performed at 'he1 "Many of our citizens are now agi-\nreeldence of the brides parents at No. ' tnllng the question of a new charter.\n1.114 Van Buren street, hy the Rev. Unless wo take a definite, determined\nAlexander Alison. Jr., pastor of West hand In the process ot getting such\nPresbyterian (hiireh. at G.30 oclock, j an Instrument fashioned the polit 1-\nThe bride will wear a wedding dress j clans will fashion one fp their own\nof white satin, with a veH and will taste and rush If thunugh the legislu-\ncarry a bridal bouquet. She will he 1 ture and force iiTlo accept It,\nattended by Miss Mabel Berry maid I "The need of the hour in Wilming-\nof honor. Robert Glover will be the I ton is an alert. Intelligent, fearless In-\ngroom s best man. John Craig, or- terest In this matter—an Interest that\nganist of First Presbyterian Church, shall reach to the very last man. The\nwill play the wedding music. Follow- Immediate need Is leadership;men and\nIng the ceremony there will be a women all over (he city who will\nw edding reception, held at the house, «tart a civic center In their own neigb-\nTho color scheme of yellow and green, borhood. The school buildings should\ncarried out with yellow chrysanthe- be open to the taxpayers and they\nmums and palms, has been followed should come together to discuss the\nIn the decorations for the wedding. question of a better city government.\nOnly relatives
0933ec764d652f8bf0756912525c6e27 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.3356164066463 44.939157 -123.033121 It is a distinctly fabric Benson.\nSlipper ornaments are exceedingly\npretty. The woman who has the time\nand a little taste may muke these at\nborne. These ornaments are so small\nthat tbe coBt of material Is very alight,\nwhile tbe price asked for them In the\nshops Is really startling.\nIn order to get the bows JiiBt ths\nright size the copyist should experi-\nment with scrnps of material. A tiny\ntbree looped bow, each loop showing\nan edge of steel, gold or jet beads, Is\none of tbe favorite slipper trimmings,\nthe crossplece being covered with sev-\neral rows of the bends sewed on to\nstraight lines up and down.\nTbe loops of tbe bows may be either\ncurved or square, but In either case\ntbe bow Bhould be set up a little the\nInstep and curve out prettily In con-\ntrast to tbe flatness of a pump bow.\nAn expensive pair of wblte satin slip-\npers displayed this type of bow, tbe\nbending being done In jet and a single\nline of Jet bends outlining the slipper.\nThese bows are made of double pieces\nof satin, stitched and turned, snd ths\nbeads are set on the extreme edge so\nthat they stnnd out from the satin\nafter tbe manner of a plcot edged rib-\nbon. Tbe effect is best when tbe beads\nare In direct contrast to the color of\nthe satin. Bleel or gold beads on a\nblack satin slipper are always good,\nand tbe revival of Jet trimmings Is\nnoticeable In the liking for jet buckles\nand Jetted bows on slippers of white\nand pale colors.
912a1daca4f3111e4f09f582f3389a17 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.2972602422628 43.798358 -73.087921 system, I have in the most natural, de-\nlightful; and cheerful way, recovered un-\nusual health and spirits ; my wife and\ndaughter, having made the same change\nin diet and regimen, enjoy better health\nthan they have for many years past. Be-\nfore this change, we were often called up\niq the night, by an attack of some unex-\npected disease that threw us into confu-\nsion and alarm but nothing of the kind\nhas occurred since; and we have the\nstrongest reason to expect, we shall escape\nmuch 'suffering and pain, while we con-\ntinue to conform to the diet and regimen\nwe have, pursued the year past.\nOur diet, excepting milk, cream, and a\nfew eggs, in cooking, and occasionally a\nlittle cheese, and about once a week some\nboiled fish, is purely vegetable, cooked in\nthe plainest manner; the number of\narticles entering into it, is very numerous ;\nsuch as wheat, peas, beans, Indian-corn - ,\nrye, rice, tappaoco, sage, potatoes ; and all\nthe garden vegetables, squashes, pumpkins,\nmellons, &c. and fruit ol all kinds, and\nthose articles, prepared and cooked, in a\ngreat variety of ways, afford as great a\nchange from day to day, as one could wish.\nTaking care not to eat from more than\nthree dishes at onemeal ; but change them\ncverv meal if "'c wish. Our drink is cold\nvratcr at ailtlmeSi and cold water banner\nevery morning; and a brisk rubbing or\nbrushing of the skin immediately after it.\nA good share of exercise in the open air\nevery day, and exposure to all kinds of\nweather; and by thus living we seldom\ntake cold; and feel elastic, energetic, un-t irt n-
17407e3f94b540bc2d0b6af5ca47b2d0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.1410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 An Increase over yesterday's attend\nance will certainly occur to-day, am\nthe promoters expect record-hreaklni\ncrowds on Friday and Saturday. Th\nhoursarefrom11a.m. to11p. m\nand splendid meals are served at sea\nsonable periods. The latter feature o\nthe affair is destined to net a good):\nshare of the profits, Judging by th\npatronage the restaurant received to\ndinner and supper yesterday. Music 1,\nfurnished throughout the day.\nA wagon load ot additional exhibit:\nwas received yesterday, but owing ti\nlack of space, for the space assigned ii\nnot too large for the present number o\ncurios, they bad to be returned wltl\nthanks. The curio section is the cyn\nosure of admiring eyes and the antl\nquartan Is in bis element in looklni\nover the rare volumes and ancient rel\nics. It shares the honors with the ar\ngallery. The feminine heart finds equa\nrapture, however, In Inspecting thi\npottery and needle work exhibits.\nThe Turkish booth looks especially\nattractive at night. In connection Ii\nthe Japanese temple, which contains i\nBuddhist shrine or tabernacle, a magnl\nflcent piece of work In copper an(\nbrass, and to be the only one ii\nthis country. It is. owned by Mr. O. C\nDewey, and it was smuggled out of Ja\npan. This booth is in charge of Mr\nand Mrs. E . B . Franzhelm, and the as\naistants, who are garbed In Turklsl\ncostume, are the following ladles: Mn\nA. A . Wheat, Mrs. Robert C. Haase\nMiss Sue Caldwell and Miss Gertrudi\nList. A Buddhist prayer bell is showi\nin the temple by Rev. Joseph Speera\nand given to him by a college class\nmate, a native Japanese, now a mis\nsionary at Tokio.\nFor the accommodation of the tire<\nslght-seer, seats have been scattere*\nabout, and they are eagerly taken ad\nvantage of. 80 much that is wortl\nseeing is embraced in the exhlbitioi\nthat several visits will be nepessary\nOne could easily spend a day in thi\nart gallery with profit.\nBanerlatively fine coffee is dispensed it\nthe lunches, and It Is greatly commend\ned by the patrons of the restaurant. I\n(s only proper to add that the coffee wai\ngiven by Albert Stolze & Co., the Mar\nket street grocery Arm.
28c2ab5754fddeda4e8983345e974fed CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.2616438039067 39.623709 -77.41082 Iheother clerks predicted it dousn t last\nBefore many months he realizes that,\nhis position is secure and life looks so\nshort- In six months or a year, accord-\ning to this temperament he has entered\ninto the competition with the others to\nsec who can do the least work and make\nthe noisiest demands for promotions.\nHe has seen the uselessness of trying to\nrun a business that was being run just\nthat way some years before his grand-\nfather was born and his interest and bis\nenthusiasm alike vanish. There are\nthose who predict that, the President\nwill be of this sort. Ho has come into\noffice determined and announcing that\nthere shall be certain sweeping reforms.\nWill he stand up to Congress for them\nor will he get tired of his job and give\nup? He Las demanded legislation on\nrailroad on the Federal control of\ncorporations, on supervision ot Lite In-\nsurance corporations; on the canal com-\nmission; on the reduction of Philippine\nduties; and on arbitration trea'ies. He\nhas delivered messages to Congress on\nthe subjects; he has spoken of them\nfrom the rear of trains and at the ban-\nquet table. There is no doubt but that\nhe is in earnest and that the subjects\nlie near his heart. But has he counted\non the snail like moveuunt ol the Sen\nate? will his enthusiasm and liis energy\nsurvive the dense unreaponsiveness ot\nthat uuwieldly body? Aa the sessions\ngo by and there is nothing to siiow for\nhis hcait's desire but bloated Congres-\nsional Records will he think it worth\nwhile to go on trying to regulate the\nWestern hemisphere or will he settle\ndown and let the “blamed thing run it-
3adb8d92d5ff6704bcb8f3b13b9b16e4 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.5657533929477 37.451159 -86.90916 The Owensboro Vwoiycr says\nA suit of a somewhat unusual nature\nwas filed In the Circuit Court yesterda\nin which J Edwin Rowe and other\nseek to enforce John W Tichenor to ac-\ncept a deed to property on Griffiths ave\nnne adjacent to tbe city of Owen boro\nand to pay them a specified amount of\nmoney for it The plaintiffs in addition\nto J Edwin Rowe are his wife tog\nM Rowe Ella W Field and her hue\nband N H Field Bessie R Morto\nand her husband W D Morton and\nEdwina Rowe under twenty oneyear\nof age sue by their statutory guardian\nLoga M Rowe\nWith the petition is filet as an exhit\nit a deed in which the plaitlffa in the\naction are parties of the first part am\nJohn Wr Tichenor the d fwidiut IIII\nparty of the second part The tfll\nconveys to John W Tichenor a cer-\ntain lot fronting 100 feet on Grlffltl\navenue and running back south 1\nsufficient depth to contain nine acres\nTbe consideration is fttOOO of which\nit is specified that 1000 is paid In\ncash that two notes of ftiK each wadle\nbyLoga M Rowe toC J Bosleya\npurchase money on the land are as-\nsumed and remaining amount iIs-\nevidence by three promissory notes\nJ Edwin Rowe and Loga MI Row\nenter into covenant of general war-\nranty but the other parties of the firs\npart do not join in tbe covenant J\nEdwin Rowe however Bpedflcall\nguarantees that when Bessie R Mon\nton and Edwina Rowe with any hus-\nbands they way have will when the\nreach the age of twentyone years rat\nify and confirm the conveyance\nA contract between J Edwin Rowe\nas agent for his wife and children\nanti John W Tichenor is filed IU\nan exhibit It sets out practically the\nsame facts as does the deed excep\nthat the cash payment mentioned iIs\nSIt instead of 1000 the remainini\nJ990 to be paid when the deed iis de-\nlivered Tbe contract bears date of\nJanuary 28 IOOT\nIt is stated in the petition and also\nin the contract that the deed was to\nbe delivered to Tichenor and the sun\nef 990 paid to the parties of tbe firs\npart on March 1 t005< It Is allege\nthat by the request of the defendant\nwho lives In Ohio county the deliver\nof the deed was delayed until April Is\nor until such time aa the defendau\nshould dufflcently recover from
52a6afae4c132fe546e3acecf40c4843 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1906.3219177765093 39.78373 -100.445882 For sending to a d. strict judge out !\nof cotirt a letter stating that "The\nruling you have made is direetlv con-- 1\ntrary to every principal of law, and\nevery body i.nows t, I believe, and it\nis our desire that no such decision j\nshall stand unreversed in any court,\nwe practice in," an attorney was fineu\n$50 and suspended from practice until\nthe amount shouia be paid. In de-- I\nlivering the opinion of the Sunreme\nCourt of Kansas in Re t'riov, 18 Kan.\n72. 26 Am.. 747 . Brewer J., said:\n"Upon this we remark, in jc first\nplace tnat the language of this letter\nis very insulting. To say to a judge\nthat, a certam rui.ng which he has\nmade is contrary to every principle oi\nlaw and that, everybody . no'ws it, is\n a most severe imputation.\nWe remark, second Iv, that an attor-\nney is under special obligations to be\nconsiderate and respectful in ins con-\nduct and communications to a judge\nHe is an officer nf the court, and it is\ntherefore his duty to uphold its honor\nitmI dignity. The independence of the\nprofession carries with it the ricrht\nfreely to cha'lcngo. criticise and con\ndemn all matters and tiling under re-- j\nview and in evidence. Tim with this\nprivilege goes the corresponding obli-- 1\ngation of .constant courtesy and res-\npect toward the triimnn! in which the\nproceedings are pending. And the\nfact that the tribunal is an inferior\nne, and its rulings not final and with-\nout appeal, does not diminish in the\nslightest degree this obligation oft\n',rlPSy abd respect... A justice of\nJ'e
17d18d459560591252b906b38691b680 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.4178081874684 37.92448 -95.399981 most honored ol my present privileges,\nthat I am , ermltted to address a few\nwords to you with whom we have\nformed sucti pleasant fellowship. You\nhave given us new spirit ol mind, a\nnew mode ot thought, a new vision ot\nlight and it is our purpose to be\nworthy ot them To you has been\nglveu the tusk ot imprcss'ug directly\nupon our minds those truths that\nshall develop the truest man and\nwomanhood of each nature aud the\nempljutlt'g iu each brain aud heait\nthe germs ot Knowledge whose pel -f e- et\ngrowth shall form lives of suc-\ncess ami whose fruitage be the\ncrowning of well spent live. We\nthank you for the many sacrillces you\nhave made for u. for the lite labor\nyou have embodied In your teaching.\nAud now lu the name of my class,\n'Whose representative uiu proud to\nlie, I bid you a farewell hoping that\nyour memory of us may be as pleasant j\nas ours shall always be of you.\nMembers of the under graduate!\nbody: To you we commend tho In-\nterests we have hitherto cherished\ntogether, knowing that your enthus-\niastic loyalty for our uhn.i inater Is\nnoue less than ours. We would vain\ncommit to your sacred trust the old\nschool house, tint uo more shall your\nteet trod those halls of learning, no\nmore shall that chiming bell call you\nto the old assembly room where we\nhave so often met. It Is our honor to\nbe tho last class to graduate from the\nold school house, it Is your honor to\nbe the llrst high school to assemble lu\nthe new, the grander, the greater.\nWe do not envy you lu your good t or-t un-
082170bb202c56b04a368054152933ca THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1878.3136985984272 39.743941 -84.63662 Has Congrets the power to authorize the coveted\nguarantee if it has, then power has been confer-\nred upon Coogress to make gifta sf the public\nmoneys ana puuiic property to private corporations\nand individuals. Has an such power bean eranied\nby the Constitution, or is it necessary to the execu-\ntion of any power that it has granted ?\nThis railroad, when built, will be the p irate\nproperty of the shareholders. It will be a military\nand post road in the same sense, and to the same\nextent, and none other, that all other railroads of\nthe count ry over which the government mav trans\nport iu mails, troops, or supplies for reasonable\ncompensation, are military and post roads. It is\nsuomiitea that tne posrer nas not been conferred\nupon Congress to make the Dmted States a party in\nsuch an enterprise by subscription to its capital\nstock ; or more, to authorize tne construction of\n road out ot tne resourodS of the people to he\nmadea gift to the railroad company.\n.ine attempt tonsrire sucn power, toe power to\nslid and aire away a railroad from the sower to\nettaUuk military and post roads, is. In the opinion\nof the nndtrsigned, an attempt to prevent the ob-\nvious purpose of a power Intended lor the public\ngood te private ends. The United States are bound\nto provide ior ine general defense, but it does not\nfollow that they may constructor operate a railro. o\nfor the exclusive benefit of a private corporation,\nbecause tney may ultimately and in some possible\ncontingency want to use It for a military purpose, any\nmore toan they may go into partnership with a stoca\nraiser btcsuse horses are ntceasary in war. Tne\numtea Slates hare power to regulate Ionian com\nmerce and commerce between tne States, but It does\nnot follow that they mar indorse tha noteaof\ner
1a0151748642d6f03d3378d1c57adc00 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1894.1109588723998 37.305884 -89.518148 Yeas. 201: nays. 114 .\nSeparate votes were demanded on the fol-\nlowing amendments, adopted in committee of\nthe whold: On the amendment providing that\nthe wool paragraph should take effect August\n8. IH&i; the amendment striking out the reci-\nprocity clause of the petroleum schedule, and\nthe Income tax amendment The other amend-\nments (including the two Important amend-\nments af the sugar schedule, the repealing of\ntho bounty on sugar, and the Warner amend-\nment putting refined sugar on the free list)\nwere agreed to. on a Viva voce vote.\nThere was a difference of opinion as to which\namendment to the wool schedule should be\nVoted on. Johnson's provided that the wool\nftchedute should take effect immediately after\nthe bill is passed. This was agreed to in com\nmittee of the whole, but subsequently the com\nmittee, at Mr. Wllsou's instance, adontcd an\namendment, striking out all after the first\n wor Is of the Johnson amendment, and\ninserie I "August 2, 1MB . for raw wool, and De-\ncember 2. Ifi. for woolen manufactures."\nConsiderable confusion existed as to whether\nthe Wilson amendments only should be vot?d\non. or the Johnson amendment also. Thf\nspeaker held that as the Johnson amendment\nhad been favorably acted on in commit tyc, u\nenmild also be reported to the house.\nMr. Dingtey Inquired what would happen fa\ncase the Johnson amendment was lout and the\nWilson amendments should be carried, Inas\nmuch as the latter included several words con\ntallied In the former.\nThe speaker repliel that the house would\nthen be in an awkward position, but still held\nthat the Johnson amendment should be voted\nThis was done, and the Johnson amend\nment was agreed to.\nThe vote was then taken on Mr. Wilson's\nfirst amendment, and it also was carried on\nstanding vote of 2"
3bb8d61610da693763eb206714a1720a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.1657533929476 39.745947 -75.546589 The women of China, generally,\nhave favored their foot-binding cus­\ntoms. though the light Is now- break­\ning there, and the Turkish women are\nprobably satisfied with the harem-\n. Shall reform wait until all want it?\n“The spectacle of a class vehement­\nly striving against its own freedom,”\nsays Beatrice Forbes-Uoberlson Halo\nIn that, interesting book. "What Wo­\nmen- Want,” is not by any means new\nIn history, such is the conservatism\nin human nature. Whether it be the\nChouans in France, the slaves in\nAmerica, the Hindu widows in India,\nor the agricultural laborers in Eng­\nland. groups and individuals, have\nnever been wanting who through loy­\nalty to old masters or old customs,\nhave flown in the face of their own\nsalvation. When, as on such a sub­\nject as woman suffrage, class preju­\ndice and sex prejudice are added to\nconservatism, the wonder is, not that\n arc anti suffrage women, but\nthat there are so few."\nDo all the women ever want any one\nthing, from a certain stylo of dress\nto house furnishings, to the rearing\nand (lie education of their children,\nin the management of their homes\nand In the choice of a church denomi­\nnation? Why then ban suffrage for\nwoman until “all the women want It?"\nHundreds of thousands of women do\nwant If. women who have given years\nto educational and philanthropic ef­\nforts, woman who have studied every\nphase of it, women who have found\ndire need of it in their work tor\nthemselves and for humanity, and\nmany Women have worked for it unsel­\nfishly and untiringly during long life­\ntimes. Shall it be refused all these\nbecause other women are indifferent,\nor ignorant of the merits of the sub­\nject, and shirk the responsibilities\nof the vote?
0dd882b477d3fcefe6f51384376cdacc THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.6808218860983 42.217817 -85.891125 regardless of ability to pay. All of\nthese things failed to drive out the fever;\nhow much good they have done in\nrestricting the ravages can only bo\nguessed at. Certain it is that the num\nber of cases rose to an average of 100 a\nday. and the fever become so virulent\nthat thoroughly acclimated persons were\nattacked almost as readily as others.\nEven those born and raised in the\ncity were numerously stricken, par\nticularly men whose systems were\nalready full of the poison of alcohol.\nAlthough indifference to danger is a sen\ntiment that, as abundantly proved by\nexperiment, is begotten by the presence\nof pestilence, fugitives from New Or\nleans were numerous after the dreadful\nextent of the scourge was realized. It\nis said that 50,000 residents have tied\nfrom the city, scattering themselves\nover the country and getting into quar\nantined places in spite of all efforts to\nkeep them out. They are in the main\nof tho wealthy classes. The poor are\nleft iu terror and danger. Hardly any\nbusiness is now done the city. JLhe\ncommonest vehicles in the streets are\nundertakers' wagons and physicians'\ncarnages. .Letters cannot bo sent away,\nand all communication with the outer\nworld is by telegraph. Gloom and con\nsternation fill all minds.\nDread of tho pestilence was quickly\nshown throughout the oouth, and meas\nures of safety were hastily taken in most\nof the larger cities. In most instances\nrigid quarantines were established ; but\nsome cities, like Louisville, did not at-\ntempt to exclude all visitors from the in\nfected region, relying rather on more en\nlightened sanitary defenses. There were\nvillages, however, which were supine in\ntheir fright, and did nothing to avert\nwhat they dreaded. Orenada was one of\nthese, and for her all the possible hor-\nrors of the disease were reserved.\nGrenada is in Mississippi, at the head of\nsteamboat navigation on the Yallobusha\nriver, 275 miles north of New Orleans,\nin a direct line of railroad communica-\ntion. There had been no quarantine,\nand one or many of the visitors from\nNew Orleans, without doubt, brought\nthe disease.
2e5b6c3d63d9eb6070a408a30ffff5cd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.7109588723997 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described Rsal Estate, viz:\nAll those two certain pieces or parcels\nof land with the building* thereon erec­\nted, «Ituate In the Village of Rising Sun.\nIn Christiana Hundrsd and County of\nNew Coatle aforesaid, one of them\nBeginning at a point at the Intersec­\ntion of the northeasterly side of a new\nroad or lane with the westerly side of\npublic road leading from the Ken-\nm Turnpike to the new bridge over th*\nBrandywine; thence north forty-two and\none-half degrees west sixty-*lx feet to\na stake; thence north thirty-two degrees\neast twenty-one feel one and one-quarter\nInche* to a stake; thence north forty-\nfive degree* west to tho aforesaid north­\neasterly *ldo of said now road or lane;\nthence north two degrees east slxty-ntn*\nteet six Inches to a hole In a rock;\nthence south fifty-eight degrees esst\ntwenty-nine feet snd nine Inches to a\neteke; thence south Ihtrty-two degrees\nwest thirty-six feet to a stake; thence\nsoutherly Hfty-elght degrees, east ninety-\nfive feet to the aforesaid westerly \nof said public road leading to new bridge\nover the Brandywine ana thence along\nthe westerly elds of said road In a south­\nerly direction seventy-two feet and seven\nInches to the place of beginning,\nthe contents thereof what they may.\nAnd the other one bounded and describ­\ned as follows, to-wlt:\nBeginning at a point on tbs westerly\nside of the aforesaid public rood lead­\ning over the new bridge from the Ken-\nnett Turnpike at seventy-two feet and\nseven Inches northerly from the Inter­\nsection of the northeasterly i d* of sa a\nnew road or lane with the said westerly\nside of the public road leading 9« new\nbridge Over the Brandywine; thence\nnorth fifty-eight degree* west ninety-\nfive feet to a stake, thence north thir­\nty-two degrees, east thtrty-slx feel to a\n«Take; thence south «(*£•£!*'«•«»«{■.\neast ninety-five feat to ■. P? "h».. *nrl!?5\nsaid westerly ftlde of aald public road\nleading to new bridge OW tne Brandy-\nwine, and thence thereby In ft\ndirection thirty-six feetlothepUceof
0a3b853535b7cfe2dd88df371f1b5db6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.209589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 more than 4,000 hours in a year. Tlhe ) shops <»r the Pennsylvania railroad would\ncontract dates from January 1, 1902, to\nDecember 31, 1907. Tim resolution un­\nder which the contract was made was\nrood at Blio last meeting.\nAndrew O. Gray, attorney for t*n\ncompany, was present, and said the\nterms were satisfactory.\nMayor FTsher appeared before the\nboard In reference to a clause in the\nelectric light contract regarding the\npenalty when lights are out Mayor\nFlefiier objected to the city paying for\nelectric lights that do not burn be­\ncause of unavoidable accidents. Ho\nthiouglit the city should not (my for\nlampe that are not burning,\namendment to that effect was made to\nthe contract.\nDr. Sbortlidge appeared before tlhe\nboard and asked that some repairs lie\nmade to Market street near Rlvorvlew,\nTho street is ip such a bad condition\nthat trolley cars pulled several teams\nout of line mud yesterday..\nDr. J. H. Morgan, president of the\nBoard of Health', asked the board to\n a sewer from Ninth to Sixteenth\nin Walnut street, and in Fourteenth\nfrom French to Walnut He said the\nsewers were made necessary by a num­\nber of dirty wells. Dr. Morgan said\nter inspectors had served 700 notices\nin tlhe past ton days.\nLevi <\\ Bird, representing the Har­\nlan and Hollingsworth Company, ap­\npeared before tiho board and objected\nto the payment, of sower liens. He\nclaimed the com(«.ny was not com­\npelled to pay certain sewer Hens, be­\ncause the company never used the\nsewer. 'Die matter was referred to the\nCity Solicitor. Mr. Bird, representing\nthe Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Com­\npany. took exception to a *1,220 sower\nlien again«! tltuit company for tho use\nof Shipley run sewer, near the West\nYard. Mr. Bird claimed tlhe company\nWas exempt, as it did not use the\nsewer. The matter will lie looked into\nby the board.\nThe question of awarding the Brandy­\nwine and the Wilmington City Rail­\nway companies franchi«*« was again\npostponed.
bd2db7ac519ce17f8c232c753d219492 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1858.5164383244546 37.561813 -75.84108 As Mrs. Crandall began to fail in out-\nward signs of affection, l'eter observed\ntheir withdrawal as the gradual failing\nof sunshiue, when clouds gather over\ntho sky in filmy veils, that deepen into\nobscuring curtains, liut the cause, was\nto him a mystery, lie felt as of old to\nhis wife, ami worked for her ns cheer-\nfully as iu tho beginning. The homo\nfeeling was as strong as ever; and, after\nwithdrawing from tho outer world, when\ntho night shadows fell, ho had riot tho\nbeginning of a desire to go abroad from\nhis humble sanctuary, shorn as it was of\na chief attraction the smiles and loving\ntoues, and words of his changing wife.\nFrom this inauspicious beginning\nwent on, steadily, tho unhappy change.\nTho coming of children, which, on their\n was liko tho falling down upon\nthem of sunbeams through suddenly\nrifted clouds, rather increased than di-\nminished tho unpleasant aspect of things\nin the house of l'eter Crandall. If tho\nmother's heart had been cheerful and\nstrong if her husband had not shutout\ntho light it needed to keep its green\nthings unwithered and its flowers in\nbloom this would not have been so.\nThe cheerful spirit would have given\nlife to tho body would have filled ev-\nery nervo with vital force, nnd every\nmuscle with strength for daily toil.\nliut the children proved more a burden\nthan a comfort. There was, in their\nhome, so little sunshine, that few green\nthings flourished in their hearts; .and\ntho opening of a flower was a rate oc-\ncurrence, liut thorns to wound and
043bb1b4f8c9c514d7dd23641df6f22b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.7499999683769 40.063962 -80.720915 will work aa welt andcr aa above the water\n7 h. 11 can t>o UH'-d in a driven or bi>r«:d well\nwith tho famu eaee aa a well of larger diameter.\n8ib. For ll« general adaptability thl« i'timp is\nwithout a rival. Tho Pump may bo placed at\njour dwelling or barn, or wltbln the ouildlng,\naud connected with tho well, or spring or other\nbody of water, 11fty rronw bondre-i yard# dlaUilit.\nand will work with tho ramuoiBoaa though\nstanding directly over the water.\nUth. It la alnglo acting and pumpa only with\nthedown atrokeof tho andie, ni.a thua i. voids\nthe Aaatwfl//required in the doubla acting Pump.\n10th. by attaching a abort hoae, a atream may\nbe thrown fifty to alzty feet and may often bo\nuacd to advnntaneiu watering garden* snd lawn?,\nwaehing wlndowa, cleaning Imeglea, extinguish.\nIng Urea, or elevating W« recognise tlio\nfact tbat it renali e* more power to ele*ato water\nfrom a deep ttun from a aba'low well, butaa\nfar aa poatihle to obviate tbla dlffl :ulty for d«t«p\nwells, we manufacture a tmuller chamber, aotbat\nwhile tho volume of water la diminished, the\npower required la not treatly Incroaacd Wo\nclaim thai by the combltatlon. having all tho\nadvantacea of atmoaphcrl: presaure incoiublnatloa\nwith force, that tbu m.nclaiii 1'ump will\nelevate water from a deep w«ll with Una power\nthan any sut/iruryt or j>ur<ly jure* jnitnj) In *!«\ntence. Tbla Pumpis eaally adapted to inpp'.y\nwater to ateam mtlia, utm (or tranafirrlng the\ncontenta of vaUs In T. nui rlca la uuaurpaaEed.\nir jou want a l'ump guaranteed to give aatlsI\nfaction, aend your order to bilsX'LAlH & lioL,\nL1HTK11, Bridgeport. Ohio.\nEBTTwo or three flrat-claaa Agents wonted.\nJyTs
1f978109726baa017d48704466af0215 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1886.669862981989 42.217817 -85.891125 Whatever objections may be made to\narbitration and there are instances whero\ngrave difficulties lie iu the way of one side\nor the other tho possible sacrifice can\nicorc?ly equal that certain to follow a\nlong and bitter conflict between employer\nand employed. It has come to bo gen-\nerally acknowledged that in national dis-\nputes, where each party feels its cause is\njust, the rational way is to leave tho de-\ncision to intelligent, friendly anil impartial\narbitration. The decision may bo unpalat-\nable to the loser, nnd for a time cause ir-\nritation, but the fact of going into arbitra-\ntion binds both parties to accept tho\ndecision in any event, and tha irritation\ngradually subsides. In the end there is\nsatisfaction in the thought that a great\nsacrifice of life and treasure been\naverted, with the possibility of tho samo\nfinal result being attained.\nWhat is true of uational disputes i\nequally true of trade controversies, and\nespecially those between employers and\nemployed. In such controversies one side\nmay think its opponent unreasonable, and\nthe other believe its antagonist unjust. If\neach maintains that view, refuses to con-\nsider the plea of the other side, and deter-\nmines to maintain it position at all haz-\nards, nothing can come of it but a conflict,\nruiuous to one side or tho other, if long\nmaintained, and a costly victory to the\nwinner. It wero far better for both that\nthe disntitants had met each other at the\nbeginning in a conciliatory spirit, and\nagreed to submit questions of irreconcil-\nable difference to unprejudiced arbitration.\nCleveland Vlmndcaler.
1ba64a318a6f05a69ff7d81e1f1f9e13 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1902.8095890093862 41.004121 -76.453816 The home, like our beiug, is a\ntrinity, 01 body, soul and spirit;\nand the soul and spirit of the home,\nis characterized by the possessors,\nor occupants of the home. The\nhome has an eternal destiny, and if\nsanctified by holy and christian in-\nfluences, though it be broken up\nby tbe relentless hand, and eternal\ndecrees of death, the home militant\nis transfered to the home triumph-\nant, beyond the confines of time.\nHence, for every immortal soul\nthat is born in the home, only in-\ncreases pareutal responsibility in\nthe moral aud intellectual training\nfor the good, not only lor the addi-\ntional charge, but for the commu-\nnity at large and society as well.\nAud hence, the necessity of the\nschool. And what is the school?\n is only an additional room to the\nhome, or community of homes\nwithin prescribed limits of a small\nterritory. The same moral and\nchristian influences should prevail\nin the school as in the home. In\nthe school the parents delegate\ntheir authority, care, overnight aud\nprotection, as well as their moral\nand intellectual training to a peda-\ngogue, for a certain length of time,\npreparatory to a more useful period\nin the life of the recipients of such\ntraining. Then it behooves every\nparent, who has an interest in the\nschool home, to frequently step into\nthis room, and see for themselves,\nit their children are receiving the\ncare, protection, moral and intel-\nlectual training, and necessary cor-\nrection that they would receive\nunder their own guidance, and\npersonal supervision.
0d9f1a3b60c3483adac91ad65b8dfdee THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1900.815068461441 47.478654 -94.890802 To John R. Jeffrey. Bemidji. Minn.:\nWhereas, a certain contract in writing was\nmade and entered into between the Little\nFalls and Dakota Railroad Company, as party\nof the first part, and you. John R.Jeffrey, as\nparty of tho second part, dated the ;7th day\nof December A. D . 1898. under and by the\nterms of which contract the said party of the\nfirst part contracted arid agreed to sell to\nyou. the said party of the second part, upon\npayment by you of certain sums of money\nan'd the performance by you of certain condi-\ntions, the following described lands, to-wit.:\nNorthwest quarter of the northwest quarter\nof Section Thi rty-three, and the south half of\nthe southeast quarter of Section No. Twenty-\nnine, in Township No. One Hundred and\nForty-seven north, of Range No. Thirty-\nthree west of the fifth principal meridian,\nstid lands being situate In the County of >\nBeltrami and State of Minnesota; and,\nWhereas, default has been made by the said\nparty of the second part in the performance\nof termsand conditions of the said con-\ntract, in this, to-wit.:\nFailure to make payments in default as per\nterms and conditions thereof; and.\n"Whereas, the Northern Pacific Railway\nCompany, a corporatioa, has succeeded to all\nthe interest of the said Little Falls and Da-\nkota Railroad Company In and to the said\ncontract and the premises covered by said\ncontract and is by the terms of said contract\nentitled to declare a forfeiture thereof, and to\ndeclare the same wholly null and void.\nNow, therefore, you the said John R. Jeffrey\nare notified that the said Northern Pacific\nRailway Company does hereby elect to de-\nclare a forfeiture of the eaid contract and to\ndeclire tbe same wholly null and void, and to\ncancel and terminate the said contract, and\nthe same Is hereby forfeited, canceled and\nterminated, as provided In said contract and\npursuant, to the statute in such cases made\nand provided, and such cancellation and ter-\nmination will take effect on the first day of\nDecember 1000\nNORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY COM-\nPANY,
31351429ff2f4314630c6ab161a998b1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.546575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 West wanl the star of empire takes Ha way."\n"Time's noblest empire Is the last."\nBut the beueflts of our victorv will\nnot be confined to our own continent.\nLike the morning sun, thev are uow\nfast spreading their genial*influence\nthroughout the world. By meuus of\nthe American discovery of steam and\ntelegraphs, our example and free priu-\nclplw. are fl.vlng with lightning speed\nall o\\er Europe, where some revolu-\nnonary demonstrations have prema¬\nturely occurred, aud therefore speedilv\nput down by the combined action of\nthe Holy Alliance* of despots, who\nalready, Nebuchadnezzar-like, see "the\nhand writing on the wall." Hereafter\nrely upon It, when the friends of free¬\ndom make a general, concerted aud\nsimultaneous strike for liberty thev\ncaunot, they will not fail. What can\none, or one buudred men, though\nwearing crowns, do against millions of\nstrong men determined to be free? To\nbe free, the people or Europe have but\nto will it, aud II is done.\nSome of yon, gentlemen, may deem\nthese anticipations extravagant. If so\nlet me invite your attention for a mo-\nment to some of the changes which a\nfew years have brought forth iu our\nmidst. I see many gentlemen here, old\nof course, like myself, who cannot fail'\nto remember what I recollect\nwhen the whole trade and commerce\nbetween the East and West was carried\nover yonder mountains on horseback\non pack-saddles, followed by armed'\nmerchants, each horse carrying east\nabout 2.500 Spanish dollars, the only\nmoney then iu u*e, aud carrying b'ack\nmerchandise, Including salt and bar\niron, for the supply of the Western\nStates, embracing Kentucky and Ten¬\nnessee.up stream navigation beiug\nthen unkuown.\nBut for the presence of these vene-\nra"'e witnesses, this might teem In¬\ncredible. And if I had then predicted\nthat one small iron horse would soon\ntake over the mountain more than lour\nthousand horses then carried; that one\nboat, with four or five hands, would\ncarry from New Orleans to Pittsburgh\nmore than one thousand keel boatsaud\nfive thousaud men carried; that a per¬\nfect picture of this vast meeting could\nbe taken by a single flash of light; or\nthat you could couverse with vour\nfriends in Europe as if pres¬\nent! And if I were now to predict\nthat tnailsgand merchandise iwould be\nsent in iron tubes from here to New\nOrleans with lightning speed, by the\nconcentrated power .of electric!ty.\nwould ita consummation be more won¬\nderful than what you have already\nseen accomplished? Progress and Im¬\nprovements have not ceased. -
31bc8820c44146d3f2ad6b4f2e06ff32 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 Conjuror at the Davenport rope trick.\nHo docs It first; as tho HDaveniKirt*. do,\nwith closed doors, doing all the "devil\nin the ihouseH music; pitching things\nout of the hedes in.tbe press.and show¬\ning hands, some block and soino white.\nThen he goes through the same per¬\nformance with opqu doors, and lota the\n;public see In strong gaslight that which\nJhe Davenport Spirits require darkness\nhand closed doorsto achieve. It is high¬\nly amusing to see bis "medium" sup¬\nping- In' and out of tho ropo-knots,\ntransferring the tambourlnb to tho head\nof a confederate, Ac., I must, however,\nin all honesty; confess'that ninny peo-\npie say Robin does not do-precisely tho\nsame thing as the Davenports, and as I\nhave not seen either of them I can givo\nno evidence in the matter. My unwav¬\nering conviction thut tho Davenports\nare' merely conjurors will, of course,\nhftvo no weight with people who prefer\nbellqvlng that tHdy work by supernat¬\nural agency.*\nVAWiANDioirAM is vigorously stuinp-\ning the copperhead districts of Ohio for\n "Democratic" ticket,' and giviug\ntho stampedo hero of Cumberland Gap\nan energetic support for Governor. Ho\n|-is received with more enthusiasm and\ndruwa larger crowds in tho copperhead\ncounUes than other demagogue they\nhave 6n*the stnuip. Heconfines his\nspeeches, chiefly to four points. Jfirst.\nBittor denunciation of free negroes.\nSecond.Repudiation of tlie national\ndebt. Third.Ardent ^support" of\nPresident Johnson's scheme of recon¬\nstruction. Fourth-^-The good timo\ncoming, when the northern copperheads\nand southern confederates will again be\n. united and form tho "national democ¬\nracy." This last is in fiict tho point of\nthe entire'copperhead programme, and\nYallandigbain speaks out of tho abun¬\ndance of hisheart when lie dwells' upon\nit with more unction than on any other\n^portion of his speech.\nThe Masons and Odd Fellows are la¬\nboring to roatoro the era of good feeling\nbetween North and South. Tho Free\nMasons of South Carolina have elected\nHonry Buist to represent thom in the\nnational' Masonic convention, and ho\n. talks thus feternally in his letter of ac¬\nceptance:
36f1ad807814a6ea1da2438434ba3ee7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.4658469629123 58.275556 -134.3925 Of the political situation in that\ntown, the Seward Gateway says: That\nWickersham meeting yesterday was\nvery similar to the reception tendered\nMartin Hnrrais, the democratic con¬\nvention nominee. Seward was formerly\na Wickersham stronghold. His fore¬\nmost friends and political snpporters\nwere to be found among our residents.\nIf he has lost the political aid of these\ncitizens, the fault lies with himselfl\nalone. It cannot be charged to the\nfickleness of his former friends here.\nWhen matters of vital concern were\npending before committees of the\nhouse, and especially before the com-\nmitteeon territories, the delegate either\nmaintained silence or would seek to\nturn the trend of the discussion off on\nhis home rule hobby. lu such con¬\nstructive legislation as a government\nowned railway system in Alaska and in\nthe development of the coal areas of\n north, the delegate has had little to\nsay, when, in fact, he should have taken\nthe initiative. Home rule, in the emas¬\nculated form which the bill as passed\nby the house prorides, is well aud <?ood.\nBut self-government of a limited na-\nture is not the thing to aid in the\ngrowth and development of this coun¬\ntry. Our primary needs are adequate\ntiansportation liner* and the opeuiug of\nour coal lands. Home rule will not ac¬\ncomplish these desired ends. Home\nrule will follow as a logical result of\nincreased population; an augmented\npopulation will follow the opening of\nthe country through transportation\nlines and the development of our im¬\nmense fuel resources. The delegate\napparently fails to realize this patent\nfact, and he nm -t suffer the penalty for\nhis refusal to voice the sentiment of\nhis constituents.
17ff8f50d7c44f924d297a61a351ddb3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1895.028767091578 42.217817 -85.891125 "Terrible destitution exists In Perkins,\nChase, Dundy, Lincoln, Hayes, Hitch-\ncock and Frontier Counties, nnd tht\nworst feature of it Is that the peoplo in\nseveral localities are atllicted with scurvy\nfor want of wholesome food. Tho State\nRelief Ceanmitteo finds itself uuable to\nrelievo all the people in distress, so great\nis the demand for aid. Raiiroad men re-\nport that since the cold snap no less than\na dozen people perished in the above coun-\nties in the past two days for want of\nfood a;id fuel."\nHundreels of families are without roal,\nanel in tho border counties, where no\ntrees or brush exist, the poor peoplo will\nhave a hard time to keep from freezing to\ndeath. In Perkins County the destitu-\ntion is complete. Over GOO families are\nappealing for help.\nIn Hitchcock County the wife of a set-\ntler gave birth to twins during the storm,\nand beforo neighbors couhl Tench her\nhome the poor woman for want\nof 6u0icient food and attention. Tho\ntwins arc still living and in charge of\ncharitable neighbors.\nNorth Platte reports that there aro\nmany cases of suffering and hunger\namong drought sufferers in Lincoln and\nLogan Counties.\nOverseers of tho poor state that unless\naid comes from outside there will bo\nmany deaths from hunger nnd want of\nclothing this winter.\n"The State Relief Commission has fifty\nfamilies on its list ns needing assistanco\nand most distressing reports come in from\nall over the western part of tho State\nrelating to woful lack of food and cloth-\ning," says a Lincoln dispatch.\n"No deaths certainly attributable to\nstarvation aro yet reported, although\nit is claimed that a woma and two chil-\ndren found dead In a cabin near Niobrara\nthe morning before Christmas died from\nlack of food and care. Coal is most need-\ned and Mr. Ludden, of the State Relief\nCommittee, nnd General Manager Hol-drodg - e,
a15c72b536397fb7f8b899a8de04f138 DELAWARE ADVERTISER AND FARMER'S JOURNAL ChronAm 1831.8013698313039 39.745947 -75.546589 As we entered the gate of the yard the multitude ns ftev gradually disappeared affliction, winch succeeding years, though\nbell ceased to toll; the last note seemed among the intricacies of the tvood, and un- 'Kv may blunt the keenness of the soi-\nto linger among the caverns of the rocks, til j ®aa ,„ft wilh n0 companion but the tu": never can remove,\nand its distant echoes struck mournfully sextnn. He was smoothing oil4 the grave . As we walked along together near a cot-\nnpon the ear, fill they gradually died a- allrt scraping together the dirt around it, taSe grounded by a tuft of foliage that\nway and then sunk into silence and cter- a3 if fearful that it might he levelled by 'va9 ,a TM09t .»«penetrable to the eye, we\nmty. It was like the calm and gentle the careless footsteps of the school boy fn tiea>4«l tlie voices of two females Aging m\nparting of the spirit to its.earthly tene- h;8 dailv walk acr0'9 the yard, or bythe concert. The was romffihc and\nment, to seek upon tho slimes of eternity i(lle Spf)rtsm,in in his pursuit after game. Çlelightful, and the moon which had just\nthe echoes of its own celestial thought,, when he had finished Ids task, he turned *bTM begai> to pour forth her silver beams ;\n\\Ve followed a narrow pathway through to .... an(1 ob8erved that he ha(| never fill. m all their splendour permitted us to\nthe graveyard to the nave. I he bearers 0(1 a ,ave with glIch „ heavy |iea,.t since at a short distance two females tn a bow.\nhere rested the bier upon the grass, and the day he had buried his wife; and he er overshadowed by the wild rose and lio-\nafter having placed lie coffin on two nar- questioned wl,ether any body in the neigh- neysuckle, and while we leaned against a\nrow boards across the grave, they retired gourhood had known an occmrence which fnendly ending they sung the following\ninto the surrounding crowd. A long and excited such general interest.
3854075a403ed837c09b15626e1441ed THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.028767091578 39.261561 -121.016059 Judging from tbo quantity of rain that\nhas fallen in the past few day*, and taking\ninto account that the streams were all up,\nthe ground thoroughly soaked, and the\nsloughs and ravines full of water, there is\nevery reason to believe that the Feather\nand Sacramento river valleys are now be-\ning desolated by a flood, such as has never\nccourred since the spring of 1828. The\nmost intense anxiety prevails here to learn\nsomething of the fate of Marysville and Sac-\nramento, and the inhabitants of the valleys\ngenerally. It Is feared, and not without\nreason, that both towns have been destroy-\ned, and that thousands of lives may have\nbeen lost. If the storm has extended all\nover the northern part of the State, us there\nis every reason to believe it has, the water\nwill rise high over tbo Sacramento levee,\nand flood city to the depth of six to ten\nfeet in the highest streets, and fifteen to\ntweuty feet in the lower parts of the city.\nIt is probable that many of the inhabitants\nleft for the mountains in the early part of\nthe week, and if the people ofHau Francisco\nknew of the danger in time, they would cer-\ntainly send up boats to take the population\nbelow. At Marysville, the rivers rise and\nfall very suddenly, and unless the most of\nof the population left in anticipation of an\noverflow, the destruction of life must have\nbeen terrible. From the fact that the\nstreams In the mountains rose several feet\nhigher, and remained up much louger, than\nat the time of the former overflow, we con-\nclude that the water must be eight or ten\nfeet deeper at Marysville to day, than it\nwas on the Util ult.
13dd3f4f4686fb4c5b2a932fcac4da0e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0177595312184 41.681744 -72.788147 Occasionally the Observer pauses\nfor a moment in the hurly burly of\nthedaytosayagood wordforade-\nserving cause. This is not going to\nbea Bob story, so read On. Jt is a\nsimple plea for a group of men who,\nthe writer believes, deserve a great\ndeal at the hands of their employers,\nthe public. Reference is to the mem-\nbers of the New Britain fire depart-\nment, who have applied for an in-\ncrease in pay of fifty cents a day.\nThe Observer has always liked\nfiremen. Ever since the first fire\nchief he ever knew took him for a\nride in a rubber tired wagon in the\ndays when horses were de riguer,\nlie has had an affection for firemen.\nBut he wouldn't care to be "on the\ndepartment." because there are mpny\nthings connected with the work\nwhich are decidedly disagreeable.\n there is more than sentiment\nin this appeal. It Is a question of\nwhat the writer believes is ordinary\njustice. Wo are all apt to cheer for\nthe firemen while he Is sitting as-\ntride an Icy ladder on a cold night\ndirecting a stream of water on a\nraging fire. But we are fickle mind-\ned and within a few hours, the\npicture of heroism fades and wc vis-\nualize the fireman as a good fallow\nwho sits around a card table to while\naway the hours or spends his time\npolishing the apparatus. The fact\nthat he way be called out at any\nmoment whilo the rest of humanity\nsits In comfortable homes to scale\nan icy ladder ayitn and risk his lit-t- o\nsave others does not appeal ro\nstrongly. That Is something which\nevery fireman has constantly In the
246445bb2402903e12154f18f6728a68 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.8041095573312 39.513775 -121.556359 ■RBRWAUR OF IMPOSITION,—M consequence\n8j) of the wido spread celebrity ol DR. YOl'Nil,\nnamerous Imposters have sprouu into existence, pre-\ntending to he perfect masters of the healing art. ami\nha ve succeeded m imposing upon u few of the nn\nwary sufferers. Persons w Ishing to consult a Physi-\ncian. should lie very careful how they pm aonfldonce\nin the published statements of soch charlatans, for\nthey are ns unscrupulous in such statements as iu\ntnelr practice of medicine, nnd ti e very unsafe to\ntrust. They wilt hrst deceive yon hy fal e certificates\nprocured from '-drunken loafers.” who perjure them-\nselves to get money to satisfy the cravings of a dis-\neased appetite. When such Quack gninv your con-\ndence, he will then dose you with mercury and other\npolsnoti* drugs, and after they have robbed you of\nyour money and rajured your conslition, they will\ncast yen off with the charge th.»t you have not fol-\nlowed tiis dreclons.\nThe only wav in avoid such imposters, is to con-\nsult Dr .1 . C . Young, the Pioneer Advertising Physi-\ncian of California. At a mee ting of the Medical vac-\nuity of this Hi ate, called to Investigate llir source ol\nmalpractice has caused so much suffering in\nthis country, it was unanimously recommended that\nnil the a (Dieted should consult Dr. Young, as he was\nthe only regular physician now adverti-ing in Cali-\nfornia, al| others in hi* line being quacks and impor-\nters, and are not to l.e trusted Tfte afflicted will\nptens.. take notice Diny there was not a Physician c.l\nthe meeting who had ever seen or heard of a singl >\ncase of malpractice Irony Dr. Young, while not one\nof them but had seen a number of wises from the\nfore'gn quacks, whoso vaut.ling'y set forth thei:\npretended virtue* In the j,unite prints.\nThe above facts should bo horny, iu mind by rII\nseeking medical assistance\nThank heaven, thev are getting IhogoUghly expos-\ned. and it will not be long below [hey w ill have to\nfly the country *o avoid the just lutiignalion ol nn\noutraged public Than will all good people thank\nDr Young for hi* cotiliuuea efforts to banish quack-\nery from uitr midst.\nDR YOI NDcaabe consultedfrom HA M.tor P\nM. at his office, cow* rof California and Montgomery\nstreets, over the Puclgc l-xpre** office, Han I r*nci*co.\nAll lettersenclcsll.g the usual fee ofSIO, will meet\nwith prompt attention.
07827657600400f6e042ecbb065de558 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.1188524273932 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Whitthorne expressed himself as in\nfavor of a modification of Rulo 120. It was\nby "riders" that omnibus bills wero made;\nit was by omnibus bills that the legislation\nof the country was corrupted, anil it was\nin the interest of the peoplo that he op¬\nposed giving the Appropriation Commit¬\ntee the right to incorporate legislation on\nappropriation bills.\nMr. Garfield offered an amondment as a\nsubstitute for Mr. Speor's amendment pro¬\nviding that it be in order to strike out any\nsum of monoy appropriated in a bill aud\ninsert a less sum. He offered tho amend¬\nment without tho slightest feeling of any\nother interest than the good of tho House\nand the good of his party, not only as a\nminority but ob a majority; the good of\nany party, whether in the majority or mi¬\nnority, and for tho purpose of sealing up,\nas far as the House could, the fountains of\nthe bittor water of strife, and putting in a\nline of fair plain business work.\nMr. McMahon opposed Mr. Speer's\namondment and thought that it oupht to\nmake that young member shake in his\nboots when ho started a new proposition\nto find the Republican party ready to\nstand sponsor at the baptism.\nMr. am young, but I trust that\nI am a member of those "whoso follies\nceaso with their voutli." [Laughter and\napnlauso on the Republican side.]\nMr. McMahon.A very good answer,\nbut wheu tho supjlbrt of the Republican\nparty cduies up for his proposition a Dem¬\nocrat ought to stop and consider "What\nhave 1 done to bring on me the applauso\nof that side of the House?" lie continued\nappealing to bia party friends not to give\nnp rule 120. It would bo giving up the\nvery standard which they had raiseu. It\nwould be almost giving up tho causo in\ntho next presidential election; for if the\nDemocratic partv struck tho rule out it\nwould confess that it could not make\nthe fight in tho interest of economy. He\nwanted to say to the Republican\nside of tho llouso that their unan-\nimity surprised him, and he could\nonly accept it as one of thoso confessions\nthat only come from the Republican party\nwhen out of nower; that when in power\nit was one of the worst parties which ever\nhad control of the government. [Derisive\nlaughter on tho Republican side.] The\nrule under discussion provided (I) that\nlegislation must be germane: (2) that it\nshould retrench expenses. The Republi¬\ncans
25a60368f04f60285e56b37ffe8cded5 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.6616438039066 40.735657 -74.172367 from South Tenth street to South Twelfth\nitreet. approved October 7. 1910 .\nSaid assessment comprises nil lots, tracts\nind parcels of land and real estate liable to\nje assessed as aforesaid lying cn both sides of\nArdsley court, from Walnut street for a die-\nance of about 200, feet southerly; on both sides\nnf Cabinet street, between Bruce street ar.d\nSouth Sixth street; on both sides of Camp al-\nley. from Camp street for a distance of about\n185 feet southerly; on both sides of Coeyman\nitreet, between Summer avenue and Mt. Proj-\nect avenue; on both sides of Dickerson street,\nbetween Jay street and Norfolk street; on both\nildes of Hawthorne avenue, from Peshine avg-\naue to Belmont avenue; on both sides of Mad-\nison avenue, between South Thirteenth street\nmd South Fourteenth street; on both sides of\nSouth Orange avenue, between South Tenth\nstreet and Ashland street; on both sides of\n3outh Thirteenth street, from the terminus of\n:he present sewer about 200 feet north of Avon\n to Woodland avenue; on both aides of\nEarl street, from Elizabeth avenue to Fre-\nllnghuysen arenue; on both sides of Hedden\nplace, from Orange street to the East Orange\nine; on Both sides of Ridgewood avenue, from\nWatson avenue southerly 257 feet: on both\nsides of 8eymour avenue, from Runyon street\n:o Hawthorne avenue; on both eldee of Sheri-\nlan avenue, from Peshine avenue to Hunter-\nIon street; on both sides of Thirteenth avg-\ntue, from South Tenth street to South Twelfth\nitreet. and have filed their reports of said as-\nlessments for damages and benefits in the\njfflee of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the\n-ou nty of Essex, and that the Judge of eald\n-o urt has fixed Tuesday, the fifth day of Sep-\n:ember, 1911, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, in\n:he Circuit Cburt room at the Court Houae la\n&e city of Newark, at the time and place of\ntearing any objections that may be made to\n:ht said assessments.\nDated August 29. 1911 .
1b5874505a703aa0093768fe7510bb6f THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1897.9438355847285 33.031451 -111.387343 Finally Mr. Oechsley was aWe to leave\nhis room. He was not rich, and the ill-\nness had made a deep hole in his store\nof savings. The ohl problem of keeping\nthe wolf from the door was to be met\nonce more, but this time under a terri-\nble handicap. In the hour of his mcst\ntrying experience his old employer\ncame to him and the men went to the\nold store. Mr. Oechsley know the place\nby heart. He was at home there, even\nif he could not see, and as the days\nwent on he realized that all was net\ngone, even if his light was lost. He\nfound that he could tell as cf old the\ndifferences that lie in materials.\nHis hands seemed to lave been given\nan extra share cunning and in a\nmeasure became his sight. He prac-\nticed and grew more expert. His whole\nenergy was thrown into the work he\nhad put himself to do, and in a short\ntime it was fonnd that as a buyer of\ngoods he was almost as good as before\nthe calamity overtook him.\nThe merchants and jobbers with\nwhom Mr. Oechsley deals know him.\nThey would not take advantage of him\neven if they could. And they all admit\nthat they could not if they would.\nThe hands of this fnaa are as good and\nbetter in their way than the eyes of\nmost men. He tells all about a piece\nof goods, no matter what it is, by feel-\ning the texture and finiEh. He is con-\nsidered to be a first-clas- s
056ebd313b62455ef361ed7968fe897b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.2609289301254 46.187885 -123.831256 assigned to work up u mystery or i uir-d-\ncase, or a politicial or sooial event,\nhis fellow reporters threw aside their\npons and started out. It would have\nbeen a waste of time for them to write\nanything while Tom was at work upon\nhis assignment. It was always safe to\nwager money that he would fill the first,\npage and a portion of the third of a four\npage newspaper, such as tho Sun. It was\nfortunate, however, for the rest of the\nreporters in the same office that Tom\nwas not favored with an assignment\nevery day. When diagrams were in order\nTom was never behind time, and he be-\ncame not only a terror to the space men,\nbut a terror to the compositors as well.\nThe murder that might havo been unin-\nviting and commonplaco to an ordinary\nreporter became in Tom's eyes the most\nfiendish and mysterious of all crimes.\nColumns were given up to his story, and\n ordinary reporter gasped for breath.\nTom at last tired of one thing, and\nthat was the unceasing wars made upon\nhim by jealous competitors in tho race\nfor bread in the Sun office, and he packed\nup his family and household effects and\nstarted for San Francisco. Charley De\nYoung, afterward murdered by young\nKalloch, was in 1875 in the height of his\npower as editor of the Chronicle and had\nurged Tom to accept lhepo3itirnof man-\naging editor of his paper. He asked\nTom to stop over in St. Louis for a day\nor twoj gather some facts concerning tbe\nearly life of Pickering, one of the pro-\nprietors of the Call, and write a few un-\nsavory paragraphs for the Chronicle.\nTom, of course, stopped over in St. Louis\nas directed, gathered some facts, and\nsent to De Young eighteen columns of\nmatter in relation to Pickering's career\nin, that city. Do Young's amazement\nupon tho receipt of this package of man-scri- pt
0fabac326024dd5836e183685575b401 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.5013660885954 40.063962 -80.720915 The question ot oar coming Ooogrea\nelection.whether one cm be held and i\n10 when.has been pretty thoroughly dli\ncussed by press and correspondent!\nThqgi Is a wide diversity ol opinion\nOur own has been expressed, and still is\nthat there will be no distinct authority\nshould the new Constitution be ratified\nfor an election at all, till provided for by\ntho Legislature. At the same time, on<\nmust be and ot course will be held unde:\nconstructive authority. Some gentlcmei\nrely on the piovisloni of the Code toi\nauthority to hold the election In October\nsome oi them claiming it may be held 01\nthe fourth Thursday and others on th<\nsecond Tuesday.. If authojlly of an in\nfercntlal or constructive kind is to be re\nlied on, we are disposed to think thi\nbest reasons are in lavor ot holding thi\nelection in August when we vote on thi\nConstitution and for other officers. Il\nmay be said the new Constitution doe\nnot provide for the election of Congress\nmen; but neither does the old. The Leg\nislaturo did; and it provided that the;\nshould be at the election whet\nState and County officers and members o\nthe Legislature are chosen; and the lan\nguage ot the statute warrants the belle\nthat as the time of holding this genera\nelection is varied by the proper authority\nthe election of Congressmen necessarily at\ntends it So far as the present year is coo\ncerned the provisions ot the statute in reli\ntion to the time ot holding these genera\nelections must yield to the schedule. Th\nelections must be held in August Then\nof necessity, they cannot also be held i\nOctober. As Congressmen are to be chc\nsen "at these said elections," which mu:\nbe held in August, is there not, we sut\nmit, a better inference of authority und<\nthe Code for voting for Congressmen 8\nthe August election than at any late\ntime ? In a common sense point of viev\ntoo, is it not better to elect them then\nOne election then will suffice; the sam\nelection, too, at which we have been at\ncustomed to elect members of Congress\nand no more trouble about authority tha\nmust attend any other day.
18b4db303da286c8ca7a5890c5436f4b PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1899.83698626966 39.756121 -99.323985 in 1894, because of the presidential\nelectors and because there were more\ntickets in the field, and it was un\nquestionably worth more money.\nHowever the state ticket was printed\nfrom plates, and there was no more\ntype setting, no more press work, uo\nmore changes of type for township\nofficers than in 1894. A power press\nwas required to do thework in both\neases, the same number of ballots\nwas required. So that the only dif-\nference was in the cost of paper and\nink, and the extra work of handling\nthe larger sized ticket, yet the county\nwas charged 464, or more than twice\nas much as in 1894.\nRoyce does not attempt to deny\nthat he charged $153 50 for printing\na certified list of nominations, while\nBrainerd charged only $35 for the\nsame publication. He only tries to\n it away by saying that he\nprinted the Herald supplement\ncontaining the certified list in the\nDispatch office and it did not cost\nBrainerd anything except the paper.\nHe fails to state that he agreed to\nprint the Herald supplement in\nconsideration for the use of the Her-\nald type which he used to print the\ntickets. Brainerd was out the cost of\nextra paper for the supplement, the\nextra work of folding, etc , and the\nwear and tear of his type for printing\nthe ballots. Royce fails. also to state\nthat he was out even less. He printed\none side of his paper while printing\nthe certified list. It cost him not a\ncent extra for labor, paper or type-\nsetting. He used the type from which\nhe printed the ballots, and only ex-\npense was the make-u - p,
2318327c01f9b8b42e1e525f1b0b1e3c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.1734972361364 40.063962 -80.720915 A correspondent asks ua, says the,Phila¬\ndelphia Press, to state the facts connected\nwith the voting of the delegation from\nPennsylvania in the Chicago Convention\nin 1868 on Vice President. On referring\nto the Prat of June 27,1808, we find that\non the first ballot ex-Governor Curtin had\n43 votes, Benjamin F. Wade 3 votes and\nSchuyler Colfax 1 vote. Respecting these\nour recollection is that the one vote for\nMr. Colfax was cast by Mr. Browfli'pl\nAllegheny, and that of the three votes\ncast lor Mr. Wade two were cast by the\npresent Senator Cameron, then a dele¬\ngate at large, and by Mr. Goodrich, now\nsurveyor of the port of Philadelphia, and\nthen a representative delegate from\nthe Bradford district. The third is\nnot remembered. The delegation was\nthen -tinder instructions to support\nCurtin and to rote as a roar aeio-\ngates refused to obey, and the Convention\naccorded their right of independent ac-\ntion. Mr. Goodrich, in hia newspaper of\nlast week, theTowandaJ&porfer, preached\nqnite a homily on the coda of "political\nImmorality" which Justified a representa¬\ntive in refusing to obey inatructioua given\nby a State Convention. The subject, it\nseems, struck him differently when he\nwas instructed to do what he uid not wish\nto do, from what it doee when the instruc¬\ntions are to do what he wishea to see\ndone.which is not an nnfrequent expe¬\nrience in this world. Now, if precedents\nare worth anything, or a principle is worth\nanything, on'what ground can Senator\nCameron's friends refuse to concede to\nothers the right to do what he asserted\nhia right to do, and actually did, nnder\nprecilely similar circumstances? Wepanse\nlor a reply.
141585f3e275f053e5ed407e85573bbc UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1911.2999999682902 42.68333 -96.683647 tained, while awaiting events, with\nthe latest northern papers. Harper's\nWeekly and others, together with the\nextraordinary apparition of a box of\n[French bonbons, just arrived by under­\nground express.\n1 It was a dismal day, depressing to\nstoutest spirits, rain falling heavilv,\nland the Capitol square beneath us one\npass of open umbrellas. When the\npoor, wet bishop and the president­\nelect came upon the stand, there waa\nian immediate portentous hush in the\ncrowd. One heard nothing but the pat-\njter of the winter rain. The brief cere­\nmony over, when President Davis\nkissed the book, accepting, under God,\nthe trust of our young and struggling\nnation, a great shout went up and we\ndistinctly heard cries of "God bless\nour president." That evening President\nand Mrs. Davis received at their resi­\ndence, making a most favorable Im­\npression upon all Richmond.\nWe had hearing a good deal of\nthe inner life of the president's fam­\nily, from a young inmate of his house­\nhold destined to play an important\npart in my life thereafter. This was\nBurton Norvell Harrison, born In Lou­\nisiana. of Virginia parentage on the\nfather's side, who, at the instance of\nhis friend. Congressman L. Q. C. La­\nmar, had been summoned by the pres­\nident to be his private secretary at the\nmoment when Mr. Harrison was about\nto enlist in New Orleans as a private\nin the ranks of the Washington artil­\nlery. Mr. Harrison, having graduated\nat Yale in the class of 1859. had been\ndesignated by President F. A. P . Bar­\nnard. then of Oxford university In\nMississippi (whose first wife was Mr.\nHarrison's aunt) to occupy a junior\nprofessorship in that institution, and\nhad remained there until the outbreak\nof the war.
51851c5f30e9ce635f86f49f43360ebc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.9246575025368 41.681744 -72.788147 also,' in such untoward circumstances,\nto admit Germany to the free econom-\nic intercourse which must inevitably\nsprig nout of the other partnerships of\na real peace. But there would be no\naggression in that; and such a situa-\ntion inevitable because of distrust,\nwould in the very nature of things,\nsooner or later cure itself by processes\nwhich would assuredly set in.\nThe wrongs, the very deep wrongs,\ncommitted in this war will have to be\nrighted. But they cannot and must\nnot be righted by the commission of\nsimilar wrongs against Germany and\nher allies. The world will not per-\nmit the commission of similar wrong's\nas a means of reparation and settle-\nment. Statesmen must by this time'\nhave learned that the opinion of the\nworld is everywhere wide awake and\nfully comprehends the issue involved.\n.Xo representative of any self governed\nnation will dare disregard it by at-\ntempting any such convenants of sel-\nfishness and compromise as were en-\ntered into at the congress of Vienna.\nIt is in the full disclosing light of\n thought that all policies must bo\nconceived and executed in this mid-\nday hour of the world's life. Ger-\nman rulers have been able to upset\nthe peace of the world only because\nthe German people were not suffered\nunder their tutelage to share the\ncommondership of the other peoples\npf the world either in thought or in\npurpose. They were allowed to have\nno opinion of their own which might\nbe set up a;; a rule of conduct fon\nthose who exercised authority over\nthem. TUit the congress that con -fti- ll\neludes this war will feel the\nstrength of the tides that run now\nin the hearts and consciences of free\nmen everywhere.\n"All these thing;: have been true\nfrom the very beginning of this stu-\npendous war, and I cannot help think-\ning that if they had been, made plain\nat the very outset the sympathy and\nenthusiasm of the Russian people\nmight have been once for all enlisted\non the side of the allies; suspicion and\ndistrust swept away and a real and\nlasting union of purpose
b24d4a150024f65578ebefc266dab9d6 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6215846678303 39.513775 -121.556359 To »■'• 11. Ileliilmotm, t'ortier Jiiclisoii utul\nMoiitit din ry streets, San Nruneisco.— Dear Sir:—lt\nis with yleusurn (hut we notice Hut uiihonmled sue\nee«s which Inis ulli iuh d you In your pnuJlre since\nyour ro-ulelice in tins Stale, now on r sevi n years\n'ldle ueod yon have done and the sk dl you U,i»e i-. mt*\nCised ill llie cures llud come under onr obsi rvidioii\nmake It our duly to let It he know u to the world and\nmore particulardy to those now sullen ox wnh disease.\nMust of ns were w ell aeiju.diilisl with you whilst you\nresided at Mormon Island, and witnessed there m i\nremarkable cures which you ethclcd on pain 11 a\nWhose Case* were pronounced hopeless liy eminent\nphysieiuns. Wo have also seen what you haw \nfor some of onr friends now resident at l.olouiu and\nIl.ici rvdle, who after tniieh pesU'isioti and induce-\nments on our p irt, const nli d to itaiu-il see you, w te n\nthey had almost despaired of their lives. They did so\nniitj returned, and are new liunit lmlc.au .l licarly men;\nand read r. if this nonce sliould reach your ey. and\nyou art uflliclwd, take our ad vice mid ito to Dr Ul'..N .\n1 il ANN, and you will never regret it.\nHear Dorter, n ceiwj with our most hi arty whites\nforyoiir future welfare llio assurance Dial \\w believe\nyou to lie one of our most talented and experienced\nphysicians in the Suita.\nl ucerne. K llxi vtvnn, 1\n(propr Miners Hotel ) |\nJ\\i on Winki.i; s ann,
71f0da437c19076c36e118b5c55681f2 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.97397257103 35.780398 -78.639099 and for the relief of consumptive patieuts in advanced\nstages of the disease.\nWe need not speak to the public of its virtues.\nThroughout every town, and almost every hamlet of the\nAmerican States, its wonderful cures of pulmonary com-\nplaints have made it already known. Nay, few are the\nfamilies in any civilized country on this continent with-\nout some personal experience of its effects ; and fewer yet\nthe communities any where which have not among them\nsome living trophy of its victory over the subtle and dan-\ngerous diseases of the throat and lungs. While it is tbe\nmost powerful antidote yet known to man for tbe formi-\ndable and dangerous diseases of the pulmonary organs, it\nis also the pleasantest and safest remedy that can be em-\nployed for infanta and young persons. Parents should\nnave It in store against insidious enemy that steals\nnpon them unprepared. We have abnndant grounds to\nbelieve the Cherry lcloral saves more lives by the con-\nsumptions it prevents than those it cures. Keep it by\nyou, and cure your colds w hile they are curable, nor neg-\nlect them until no human skill can master the inezorabls\ncanker that, fastened on the vitals, eats your life away.\nAll know the dreadful fatality of lung disorders, and as\nthey know too tbe virtues of this remedy, we need not do\nmore than to assure them it is still made the best it can\nbe. We spare no cost, no care, no toil to produce it th\nmost perfect possible, and thus afford those who rely on\nit the best agent which our skill can furnish for tfceir cure.\nPREPARED BY DR. J. C. ITER,\nPractical and Analytical Chemist, Lowell, Mass.
1ab59603542567c4702ff71af892924c THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1880.9385245585408 39.743941 -84.63662 At the time of the passage of the act now in\nforce requiring the coinage of silver dollars,\nfixing their value and giving them legal-te- n\nder Character, it was dciicvcu uj uwuj ui wn\nsupporters of the measure that the silver dol\nlar, which it authorized, would speedily be-\ncome, under the operations of the law,\nequivalent value to the gold dollar. There\nwere other supporters of the bill, who, while\nthev doubted as to the probability of this re\nsult, nevertheless were drilling to give the pro-\nposed experiment a fair trial, with a view\nstop the coinage, if experience should prove\nthat the silver dollar authorized by the bill con\ntinued to be of loss commercial value than the\nutandard eold dollar.\nThe coinage of silver dollars, under the act\nreferred to, Degan in juorcn, ioio, auu\nbeen continued os required by the act.\naverage rate per month to the present time has\nbeen $2,276,492. The total amount coined\nprior to the first of November last was $72,\n847.750. Of this amount $47,084,450 remain\nthe Treasury, and only $25,763,291 in the\nhands of the people. A constant effort has\nboon mode to keep this currency in circulation.\nand considerable expense has been necessarily\nincurred for this purpose, but its return to the\nTreasury is prompt and sure, contrary to me\nconfident anticipation of the friends of the\nmeasure at the tune of its adoption, the value\nnt tia Hilvnr Hollar, containing 412W eroins\nsilver, has not increased. During the year\nprior to the passage or the bill authorizing\nminora, the market value of the silver which\nit contained was from ninety to ninety-tw- o\ncents, as compared with the standard gold\nTmrine the last year the overage market\nvalue of the silver dollar has been eighty-eig- ht\nand a half cents.\nTt obvious that the legislation of the last\nCongress in regard to silver, so far as it was\nbased on an anticipated rise in the value\nsilver as o result of that legislation, has failed\nto produce the enect men preaiciea. aiio\nlonger the low remains in force, requiring as\ndoes, the coinage of a nominal dollar which,\n;
21a164f5ce955f46fed23f1e15c16943 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.1191780504819 39.745947 -75.546589 tute reverence for the law. any more\nthan the hiring of thugs and gun­\nmen. and the too-well-known “cor­\nporation lawyers” by capital.\nHe expressed regret that the press\nand the motion pictures “have been\nsubverted to undermine the national\nprohibition laws." and declared that\nAbraham Lincoln would urge the\nnewspapers and the movies to show\ngreater reverence for the law. The\nfact that a man is rich, he said, does\nnot give him the right to drink.\nSpeaking of the motion picture«,\nhe said that nowadays it was not\na question as to what keeps thé\nmotion pictures unclean, but rather\none of what keeps them as clean\nas they are, after reading stories of\nthe lives of the people who make\nthem. He blamed Jazz music, drink,\nhastily gotten money, extreme fash­\nions and dirty shows for the down­\nfall of the motion picture actors,\n he said, should be pitied for\nthe plight Into which they have got­\nten themselves.\nThe speaker said that, as Lincoln\npointed out, no nation can live with­\nout unity. A nation cannot endure\nit It 1s half Christian and half pagan.\nCelebration of the birthday anni­\nversaries of the Polish patriot,\nKoscluszko, and of Lincoln, was con­\nducted by the Polish residents of the\ncity last night at the Polonia Thea­\nter, Linden street and Maryland\navenue, under the auspices of the\nPolish Falco/l Alliance. Nest No. 20 .\nThe speakers were Mayor Leroy\nHarvey. Stephen Chroszcynskl, presi­\ndent of the Twelfth district; Rafal\nKopysteckl, president of the local\nnest, and the Rev. John S. Oulcz, of\nSt. Hedwig's Church. A patriotic\nsong by Mrs. Karlczcwska, a recita­\ntion by Miss Mroczka, and violin anjJ\npiano selections by the Misses Sabina\nKowalska and Mildred Green form­
1f0ccdb78ca2a39c96c6d1eea9bed3ea THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.264383529934 41.004121 -76.453816 wero applied to tlio cholco of members\nof Congress thcro would bo no district\ning of this or any other Stato j that tho\nmcmnors woum do ciectca uy general\nticket throughout tho wliolo Common-\nwealth ; and ho seemed to apprehend\nthat thcro would bo somo difficulty In\nexecuting such n plan. To this I mako\ntwo replies: I say, In tho first place,\nthat tho districting of States is not at\nall Incompatible) with this plan of vo-\nting j it comports with It perfectly.\nYou mlghthavoaplannf plural though\nnot of single districts. Hut thcro would\nbo no difficulty ifniombors wero elected\nuy general ticuet in tno wnoio state.\nKeprcscntatlou of different localities\nin tho Stato oven, could bo easily secur-\ned. Tho reasons for this opinion I havo\n upou another occasion.\nAgain, tho Senatorseoms to supposo\nthat it Would bo necessary, if this plan\nof voting were applied to tho choice of\nmembers of tho Legislature, that tho\nStato should bo divided Into four Sena-\ntorial districts for tlio cholco of Sonators,\nand Into four Representative districts\nfor tho cholco of representatives. Well,\nsir, 1 never heard that suggestion bo-\nforo. It never oecurroil to mo that such\narrangement would bo selected If this\nplan wero applied. Tho senator win\nfind, by referring to tho presont Consti\ntution or tno stato or Illinois, that it\nprovides that each Senatorial district in\nthat Stato shall select threo representa-\ntives upon tho plan of tho freo voto.\nTho result is that in that Stato tho Leg-\nislature will form flfty-on- o
04975031ec5ed1441a78853977169559 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1889.932876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 oue book for we on royalty, and the roy-\nalty came along in lntle driblets, and\ndidn't do me much good; so when they\ndesired to publish tho "Bad Boy," I\nwanted them to piy rue so much down\nand hove it over. I thought I was awful-\nly smart, and w hen I got the check for\nthe price, I felt as though I owned a\nbrewery. They thought I was pretty level-\nheaded, too, because they neVer had any\nidea that the book would have an excep-\ntionally Lirgo sale. SVell, they put the\nbook on the market, and it sold like beer\nat a picnic. Within a week orders came\nfor a hundred thousand copies, and the\nboys had a hot box. They had all the\npresses in Chicago that thev could hire\nat work night aud day, and the demand\ndid not let up until half million copies\nwere sold, aud the profits of the "Bad\nBoy" put Belford, Claike, & Co. on their\nfeet, and made tbem happy. They must\nhave sold a million copies of the book.\nDuring the extraord.ntiry snle of the book\nI was often congratulated ou my good\nfortune, and it was generally understood\nthat I was making a fortune on the. book,\nbut all I could do was to squeeze my\nthousand dollars in my pants pocket, and\ngrate my teeth and kick myself becuuso\nI was such au ass as to sell that copy-\nright for tho book. Belford, Clarke, &\nCo. were sorry for me, and when I got\nready for another book thoy kindly al-\nlowed me to retain my interest in the\nroyalty, to that I could mako a foitune.\nThe next book didn't sell worth a conti-\nnental, and so I was whip-sawe- d
11bacc9258583f780f22723d58f3762b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.028767091578 42.217817 -85.891125 interest accrued and became duo on said mortgage\nand was payable by the terms thereof on the T.Kh\nday of April, A. D. 1818, and said sum or no part\nthereof has yet been paid, but the whole thereof Is\ndue, payable and In arrears, and more than thirty\n(30) days have elapsed since the same so became\ndue, payable and in arreats.\nNow, therefore, the said Peter Walker, the owner\nand holder of said mortgage, has elected to declare\nand has and does declare the whole of the principal\nsum of said mortgage with the accrued Interest to\nbe due and payable immediately. The whole sum\nclaimed to be due and payable on said mortgage at\nthe date of this notice is Seven Hundred Thirty\nrive and 0 Dollars and the costa of this pro-\nceeding to be added thereto as It accumulates, and\nno suit at law or proceeding In chancery having\nbeen instituted to recover the (amount due on said\nmot tgage or any thereof.\nNow, notice is hereby given that by virtue of the\npower of sale In said mortgage contained and the\nstatutes in such cases made and provided, I shall\non Saturday, the 8th day of April, A. D. 18W, at nine\no'clock In the forenoon at the north front door of\nthe Court House for the county of Van Iiuren, In\nthe state of Michigan, In the village of Paw Paw In\naid county (that being the place for holding the\nCircuit Court for said Van Buren county, Michigan)\nsell to the highest bidder, the premises described in\nsaid mortgage, or so much thereof as may be neces-\nsary to pay the amount then due on said mortgage and\ncost of this proceeding and of said sale. The premi-\nses so to be sold are known and described as all that\ncertain piece or parcel of land situate and belDg\nin the township of Almena, county of Van Hureu\nand stale of Michigan, and described as follows,\nt:
583b11492c05a73af40bc843cdcbece1 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1908.236338766191 36.620892 -90.823455 createa respecting tne same) upon me requesi\nof tho holder of aald note may proceed to sell\ntho Droiwrl v herein conveyed, or any part there\nof, at publio vandtte, to the htu.heM bidder, for\noaslr, at the east front door of the building then\nused by the Htate Circuit Court aa the Court\nHouse, at Doniphan in said Couuiy of lllpley\nnrst giving twenty one days public notion of\nsuch sale in the manner required by law at the\ntime (or If there be no such law, then In the\nmanner now so required) by advertisement in\nsome newspaper printed and published In the\nCity of Doniphan in the County aforesaid) and\nupon auoh sale, shall execute a deed conveying\nto the purchaser thn property sold. Any reci-\ntal of fact In such deed shall be prima faclu evi-\ndence of the truth of auoh fact. Bald trustee\nshall receive the proeeede of such sale, Out of\nwnion snail oe paia, nrst, tne oi exe-\ncuting this trust, Including legal compensation\nto said truslee: second, tho moneys with Inter-\nest aa aforesaid which may have been advanced\nor emended bv said .Southwestern Trust Com\npany, or the holder or bolder of aald notes or\nany of them, and next, all Interest note then\ndue and unpam anq an interest remaining\non thn nrlncioal note to the time of sale:\nand next, ail of aald principal note then unpaid;\nand tbe balance, If any, shall be paid to sain lirst\nparties, their belra or assigns.\nAmi whereas, the said Southwestern Trust\nCompany has disposed of aald note ar.d trust\ndeed, and assigned same for value rooivod: now\ntherefore, I, at the request of tbe legal bold of\nsaid note and trust deed, and In acoordanoa with\nthe expressly stipulated provision ot aald trust\ndeod, will at the east front door ot the oourt\nhouse la the city ot Doniphan, county ot Ripley,\nana state oi Missouri, ou
12c2744a5b524842b943c8655f1037bf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.2445354875026 39.745947 -75.546589 people who are constantly talking about\nbimetallism by International agreement\nAould give careful study to the exper­\nience of France aud other bimetallic\nschemes. I do not believe an Interna­\ntional agreement Is practicable, evsu If\nIt is desirable. There Is not the slightest\nsubstantial reasou for bsltving that tha\nleading European nations which arc now\njonagald basis will throw away their\nefforts of years In establishing their\nexisting monetary system\n“Admitting, for the sake of argument,\nthat a bimetallic agreement wee once\nmade, and the infinite difficulties regard­\ning the ratio, the mint legnlattous, and\nthe disposition of existing masses of\nsliver, were dlspoeed of, there wonld be\nabsolutely no power l) enforce such an\nagreement. No country which was a\nparty to It, would witness with serenity,\ntbe departure of Its gold and the entry of\nsilver In its place. An International\nagreement would not long deter tbe\nBank of England, the Bank of Franca,\ntbe Austro Hungarian Bank, tha Imperial\n of Germany, or the Imperial\nGovernment of Russin, from finding a\nwav to nullify paper pledges if they saw\ntheir gold supplies sifting «crocs the\nborder Into other countries, as ths result\nof opening their respective nations'\nmints to the free coinage of stiver.\n• It would not be necessary bo formally\ndenounce ths agreement, lu the language\nof diplomacy, to defeat Ita practicable\npurnoee. Mint regulations aud banking\npolicies would interpose when a ouutry\nsaw Itself losing gold, and the momeut It\nwas apparent that one country had lost\nfaith in tbe cfficaoy of tbe bimetallic\npolley, tbe others vould tumble over etch\nother iu their esgerneis to repudiate It\nThe countries which succeeded most ef­\nfectively ia nullifying tbe agreement\nwonld hold on to their gold, and tha reat,\nafter fltnnderiug In the mire of vitiated\ncontracts, repudiation and business\nparalysis, wonld begin at the bottom of\nthe ladder to sgeln acquire lufflclent gold\nto resume specie payments upon the gold\nbasis.”
40e161ecb17df8ab73f18f08a5eb924f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9904371268467 39.290882 -76.610759 days, withont effecting the most delicate constmitiOT\nor causing any disagreeable effect from its operation,\nis so concentrated as to render it efferent IB small do\nes, comtequentiy itis practicable at ftllttmas, in perioral\nine a cure much sooner than any other medicine in ui\nUnited States, and is n Id under the sure plan of 110 cut\n110 pay. Price 31 pir bottle.\nAlso, tlie Ve rotable Fluid Syrup, or Mercurial Bi\ntractor. This infallible Syrup is the discovery ot an ol\nveteran in mndieie.es, and has long been In use in pr\nvale practice, bi tli in Europe and in Aineiicii. and bs\nnever been known to fed in effecting a cure in all eaw\nof mercurial diseases, and where persons had givou t\ntlie thought of ever getting well. It iH indeed an inv\nliable medicine, and whilst it lias this new and i>ocu\nar effect upon tlie bones affected with mercury, it at U\nametimc purines the blood from the remnants of V\nnereal disease. Scrofulous Affections, Splotches ar\nEruptions upon Skin, old standing and indolent 1\ncere upon the legs, and elsewhere, attended with gei\nera! debility This medicine stands unrivalled?it\nnot only the greatest purifier i ver known, but at tl\nsame time il strengthens the whole nervous system,!\nving fresli and permanent tone to the bsoken coiistit\nlion. Pi ice only $1 50 per bottle.\nThese medicines are lor sale at the LABORA"OR\nof Dlt. IIOWI.BY, BROTHER, c CO, No. 00 Sou\n( IHARI.I s STREET, between Pratt and Lombard slree\non the comer of Chler's Alley, and at the General\ngeney Mice, No- 3 PITT STREET, between Front\nand Bazaar Bridge. Plan of no cure no pay.\nWo beg leave to say to strangers, and tlie afflicted\nIsith sexcs;be on yourguard,and do not he trifled with\nthe miserable compounds now sold in this city, by soi\noftlre upotheearics-they arc calculated to deceive\nmost cases where they are used. Those suffering *\ntier Ore above symptoms are assured that in the ahi\nnamed medicines, they willfind tlie true balm aniTW\ncomforter.
039e7dd1102572c7325e22282b64ad76 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.3520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 "How to raise pocket-money is a hard n<\nquestion for a great many farmers' J*\nsons to solve.' True, some may have w\nbut little .trouble (to get;it, providing\ntheir parepts are,.wealthy; bnt to this\nclass I'shall not' speak. To such boys Jc\nas like to ^earn what they spend, and 01\nhave a desire to become farmers, I if ill J\npresent a plan by which..both'these\nends may"be attained to a more or less\n^jtn the first place it will be necessary C\nto have a small piece of, ground, on the\nfarm, Of course; ;to. those who cannpl be\nget that, my plan will hot be.feaslble. at\nAfter having gpt youj: land you are\nr§ady to commence operations. All\nyoqr spare moments may- be,employed j\nuponit. :X,suppose moat.boys would,\nknow;, what to ,.plant; but still ff feyv\nhint*, from onewbo haB triefl it may\nnot be out of place. IfjyQu are near a\nready market, J would suggest nearly\n each as pe^a, string beans,\nbeets, early potatoes, etc.; and to those\nthat . were a' distance from any such\nmarket, pop-corp./might ,be raised to\nadvantage, or white bush^beans. as thev in\nalways command a good price# & good\narticle; still a great deal would depend\non the' nature or the land, and what\nwas. most in demand in either, case.\nAfter planting;tio not think that yOur\nworkis done'till barvestingi'lrai keep\nthe- ground mellowj hoe your crops as\noften as yOu eanfj do* not let ai weed be\nseen. Wp all1-1 that goes to nOdrlAh tlie /\nweed will be taken from yoilr pocket. X\nj It Will take you but a few moments a\nday to hoe it over,' if you do not hire m\ntoo mu(a,i jprbundj whlch^Woiilfl be\nworse than 'havlng none, for yon will\nfind that«f little gronnd^wsU tftled is si\ngreat deal-better than a s»od deal left\nto tfcke<tibreof it^lfioromy half taicen\n1 care of."
9790d6dd3ab395ec8fc9154fedaa4125 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.97397257103 39.261561 -121.016059 Whatever might be said of the policy of ex- 1\neluding a slave State, be thought that they\nwould never be able to exclude a slavo State on\nthe gronnd of it being a slave State. W'hen a\ncommunity is formed, and witli slavery, and\nsays, we propose to come into the Union as a\nState, they would not be able to go behind her\nown action, or interfere with her sovereignty,\nso far as to prevent her coming into the Union\nwith slavery, so as she wus Republican in form,\nlie stated this, not as his opinion, but as a de-\nduction from history. For instance, suppose i\nthat Cuba should come into the Union (and bo\ndid not desire that she should; he desired that\nshe should not), and had formed a Slate Gov-\nernment, they would never be able to keep her\nout because she was slave State.\nAnother point. He thought that experience\nhad settled the matter, whatever we might say\nof Popular Sovereignty or of the rights of the\npeople, that the principle obliquely laid down\nin tbe Cincinnati Platform, and more delibe-\nrately expressed in the Presidents Message,\nthat tbe appropriate time for a State to decide\nfor herself when she will have, or when she will\nnot have slavery, is wbun she comes to ask ad-\nmission in'o the Union, is practically settled.\nHe did not say he would not like to have it\notherwise, but it was so very difficult to deter-\nmine when territories should decide this ques-\ntion for themselves, that he saw no other course\nof action than to say that when they oome to\nframe a State Government they shall decide for\nthemselves whether they shall have a slave\nState or a free State.
a31eec618be7af42dcc83dba75def9c5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.3483606241145 39.745947 -75.546589 man. has met with suooos*. Aroused\nfrom his slumbers beneath the sod\nof the hills of Corinth, he had heard\nthe cries of those suffering from the\nhigh cost of living Making his way\n4o hts tub at Metrbom, he found that,\ncontainer had long slnoe been ap­\npropriated by makers of home brew\nlie recovered his trusty lanbrn, bat­\ntered, but still able to give light.\nGathering hts tunic about btm. he set\nforth In search of an article that had\nnot been affected by a rise In price.\nAt a sugar refinery the old fellow\nwent down for a count of nine, but\ngame to the core, he recovered hts\nequilibrium and made his way to a\nshoe store. Tile shock received liiere\nput another wrinkle In his face. Fur­\nther investigation revealed to him the\n price of Jamaica ginger and\nwood alcohol, he having found an un­\nusual shortage of these liquids due\n4o prohibition, wherever he went\nhe found the cost of everything high­\ner than his wildest Imaginings.\nWeary from the search that had\ncarried him over Die entire United\nStates, the old philosopher sl.retr.hod\nhts tired frame across tho brake,\nheann of a box rar and made his\nway to Wilmington. Tired and hun­\ngry, he eirtcred a hotel and called\nfor food. At the finish of Ills din­\nner he received a bill on which was\nmarked "couvert charge, 50 c<«it8."\nTaking another lock, the old fellow\n■was dismayed. Galling the wulter, he\nInquired of the charge. Again he was\nHound for the count, but regaining\none last ray of hope, be started out\nagain on his search.
1d95326aa126eed0f03f24ef64fe65fe THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.1301369545915 41.004121 -76.453816 It would bo a proud thing for any\nparty to havo such a candldato as Its\nexponent a prouder thing still for any\ncountry to havo tho merit of electing\nsuch a candidate. But, wo fear, tho\nAmerican peoplo can never make such\nu boast. Discreditable to our National\nprldo as it Is, tho fact exists, that thero\nIs something elso than high patriotic\npurposo and overtowerlng ability neces-\nsary lo constitute availability In po-\nlitical contests. Tho least offensive\namongst theso "somethings" is com-\nbination or sectional feelings and\nInterests, or tho possession of ephem-\neral popularity for Bomo peculiar\ncause. Too often, tho worst form, sel-\nfish Interest, and bald demagogulsm\ncontrol, and In tho retlnuo como nil\nmanner of disreputable motive and ob-\nject. The man of comprehensive mind,\nunderstanding questions and boldly\nsupporting or opposing all upon tho\nsolid princlplo of public requirement\nand general good, who has tho manhood\nto oppose" bad popular measures with\nenergy and effect, or to opposo that\nwhich demagogues havo mado popular\nthough wrong, or yet to support with\npower a measure or merit that may bo\nunpopular bceauso misrepresented and\nconsequently mlsundeistood such a\ngreat, honest bravo man, we aro com-\npelled to admit, Is seldom popular ex-\ncept when ho has tho rare opportunity\nof demonstrating his great merit In a\nsingle brilliantact that forces attention.\nHappy and honorable would It be to\ntho country If theso things were other-\nwise. Unfortunately tho truth Is as wo\nhavo stated, and we all havo to deal\nwith public affairs as they exist and\nariso before us.
0bbeb22bf753f4b9fb5473976ae336f2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.9303278372292 40.063962 -80.720915 ilig legislation. Hut tho probabilities arc\ngreatly against tbe«o events, and, as wo\nsaid at the outset, it is much more likely\nthat the National bank. notes will be J!,\ndriven out of use altogether and their f.\nplace taken by an,exclusively Govern- l '\nnient currency.\nTho existence of National bank cirenln* p\ntlott, it must bo remembered, depends en* »\nLirely upon the profit it yields tho banks.\n1'heso* institutions are; conducted upon\ncommercial ami not upon philanthropic'\nprinciples. * .So long as the bonds required n\nas security for their circulation lu«nr » »r\nwfllciently high rate of interest tliey will c<\nitsuu the notes; but bo soon as the rate pi\nfalls below the pitying point the circular tl\nlion will be withdrawn. At present there u\nire enough X percents to be hail at about \npur to make it worth while to take out' T\ncirculation upon them, hut these bonds, T\ni» we know, will soon be paid oil", and the\nrVmiptroller of the Currency, tells us that »\n;he 4s and 4As are already too high to ^\n,nuke them a prolltable basis for eireula- gC\nlion. The 4Js will surely be redeemed at 0(\n. heir maturity in 1801, and the 4sareris- j0\ning in nrico continually, under thecompo. [j\n:ition tor them.by executory trustee?, suv- w\nii gs institutions and timid investors.\nThat the people of the United States j.\nwill, for the sake of the banks, sanction \\l(\nmy legiblation by wliieli either the nation's\nlelit shall be prolonged or the intorebt . ,\nipon it be increased is idlo to suppose ;\nrhat they will permit banks to issue cir-
4f8e4e13a4e1051caad30c2d0f95a764 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8346994219287 39.513775 -121.556359 t&J ii\\V tins .lay it appear! tt-T to my s.n isl.ntioii »s\n.Indue of Hie Co.nitv Court, in and lor Unite\nConn'y .llmt Hie Itonrd if Supervisors in nail lor sui t\nCounty, diit, on the "IHi dm ol -epiemlier. A. D. one\nIhons ind eiuht hundred mnl liftv.si\\. deo|iire tiroville\nto lie Hie Count; seat ot Unite Conn'y from and alter\nHie said twenty mail li dm ol September A , It. 1 ■"•>(!«\nin pursuance ot an act emili.d A n Act to rhnnue mid\nMv Hie Count > “Vat of Itnlle t neocy, approved A.areli\nlillli. ISn 1'; aial it further nnnc.irinu to m> satisfaction\nthat 'ln- present till if li l nr* it whi.ih tin-su'd Court h is\nIn-eti held, and in w liicn the lb-cord' have been kept\nill the town of llidwell, lire unsafe ns a place ot d*--\npository for Hi-i-ords and tlnil il.e'ame is liable\nto de trnction hy tire, to reason of their helnit con*\nstructeil entire ..f wood. And it furll■■••r appearing\nI lint Hiefe is no hnlhfin /in I lie low nol I'.id well suit\naide lor holdint; Hie terms of Hits Court, and to -at ly\nkeep its Records from fire or oilier calainit y. and it\nappearinu Hint the town ol (ho- ille is a lit place to\nho;d Hie terms of H i» Court, and that n safe mid com\nmixtions brink hnildlnti in “aid town lias been ten\nttereii the county as comity Imildlnus.\nIt is therefore ordered, mljt.dtfed and decreed, that\ntin- Clerk et tile Count) Court, ill and for Unite\nCounty, torihwiih remove hia ofttce and tin- IJecords\nthere if, to c iroville. in the linihlinu selm led by the\nsaid Honril of Supervisors as Comity Itnddmus,
00e099671a1340144cf8d61620f45a2f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.6150684614408 39.745947 -75.546589 United States Martha! Ijannan.\nThe libel Is as follows:\n"That on the ninth day Of August. A.\nD. , 1897, tihe said libellant (being on\nboard the British steamer Lueillne,\nwhich was lying on the soifJh side of\nthe Standard Oil Company's wharf at\nMarcus Hook in the district aforesaid,\nheard a great noise and commotion on\nthe deck of said steamship and imme­\ndiately wen't on deck from the cabin in\nwhich he was dining and from there\nsaw she«.« of flame and fire surround­\ning, spreading over and upon the sides\nof the «aid barkentine Ha Viguesa,\nwhich was lying moored to the north­\nern Eide of said wharf.\nThe said libellant at once went upon\nthe said wharf and to the 'burning ves­\nsel, but could not ace any cf her crew,\n■.hey having deserted her. He (solid\nlibella nit) then ran to the there end of\nUhe wharf looking for assistance, hut\ncould get none. Ho then returned to\n'ahe southern side cf said wharf and as­\nsisted in casting off the bow line's of\nthe said steamship LuclHme, and while\nthere he saw one of the crew cf the sold\nbarkentine La Viguesa in the water,\nand being assisted by anOJher man\nthrew him a line and drew him up on\nthe wharf. Said libellant then return­\ned to the upper of the wharf anld\ntried to looeen the how lines of raid\nbarkentine so that she could floalt from\nthe dock, 'but he ciould not do so, as\nthey were too tank. Said libellant them\nran quickly to the end of the doek and\nthere found the quarantine tug John E.\nMehrer, which had come to render as­\nsistance, and with and on her came two\nmen whom this libellant thinks m N\nLea Burton and George Richardson,\nand they, with the captain of said tug.\ncame ashore, and said Burton and\nRichardson went aboard of said 'burn­\ning vessel and loosened her bow lines\nso that said barkentine might be cast\nlccse from the wharf, Wh ;-h said libel­\nlent, with the others, did; after i;his the\nsaid libellant then started to cut the\noil pipe which connected the said bark-\nentine with the wharf, but broke his\nknife, and said George Richardson\ncompleted the cutting. The stem line\nof said barkentine was then loosened\nand said libellant then took ft from\nthe wharf post and handed it to an of­\nficer of said tug, John Fl Mehrer, an<^\ngot aboard Of said tug himself, and as-\nFlt' cd In making fart raid line to said\ntug. The said burning itarkenklne was\nthen towed by said tug to an anchor­\nage away from the wharf, which was
00abe783ed90a91f62d8b5174749e3a8 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.4534246258245 40.441694 -79.990086 Improperly Delivered to Kr. Wanamaker.\nduring the lifetime of Mr. John C. Lucas,\nand that negotiations for the surrender and\ncancellation of the same liira failed, for the\nreason that Mr. Wanamaker claimed to hold\nthem as a pledge for the payment of a cer-\ntain sum of money dne him from the estate\nof John C. Lucas, and he declined to sur-\nrender the stock until tho debt was paid.\nUpon learning these facts from Mr. Marsh,\nI immediately determined to close the bank,\nbut did not so inform Marsh. I asked him to\ngo to the residence of Mr. Wanamaker and\ntoll him that I had been informed as to the\nexistence of this stock, and then to return to\nmy house. My purpose in this was to secure\ntime enough to inlorm Department of\nJustice and give an opportunity for Mr.\nMarsh's arrest before he left the city, in caso\nthat course was deemed advisable.\nAs soon as Mr. Marsh left my house I called\nat the residence of the Attorney General,\nbut learned that he was not In tho city. I\nthen laid the facts before the Solicitor Gen-\neral and discussed with him the entire situa-\ntion. The Solicitor General did not deem it\nneoessary to arrest Mr. Marsh at that time,\nbelieving that a man who had voluntarily\nconfessed ns to the Lucas defalcation and\nmade a Journey from Philadelphia to Wash-\nington to inform the Controller as to these\nIrregular issues of certificates of stock. wa3\nnot likely to fly for the purpose of avoiding\nthe arrest which he had thus invited.
0ede3e5afc05c35963030ea5f3cf11c4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.3410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 He goes into a saloon, gels drunk, is\ndisgraced by being urreated and lined,\nwanders Irom home, and perhaps, in hi*\nshame, puts a violent end to bis lilo. Here\nis a young wile witb her little lamily\noverwhelmed with misery. If it was not\nlor the help ol friends she must suller for\nthu lack ol the necessities ol life. Here is\n11 business establishment closed, and those\nwho are employed in it are left without\nwork. Other firms which were suppled\nwith the products of this establishment\nare disappointed. One of the wheels of\ncommerce, small though it may be, is\nslopped, and in some degrees it aflects the\nwhole community. There are plenty of\npeople who arc rash enough to make\nsuch an incident a ground of opposition\nto the aaloon business. They would even\naay that if this man has put an end to\n the men who sold him the whisky,\nto all practical interna murdered him\nThey hold that the saloon keepers might\nas well have picked his pockets, of the\nmoney which be spent for driuk and if ho\nis dead,.tllen have with a pistol blowed\nout his brains. They argue that It is fool,\nlsh, and wrong lor tho State In anyway\nto countenance a system which licenses\nilm ollSnir nt (him* nniftnnnna mnriflrnina\nanil death doaling mixtures. Even from a\npecuniary point of view, the pittance paid\ninto the public treasury for tho right to\npursue this business is not worthy of\nineniiuu as an oDset to the Icsseif which\nensue to eociety. And they insist that If\nthe evil must for a time continue, it shall\nbe under severe restrictions, and that they\nwhcKgo into tho buiinets either directly or\nindirectly, shall bo held responsible for\nthe damageB.
1444fc63264753c9a38d4818e7f0714e THE ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL ChronAm 1884.1571037935134 35.084103 -106.650985 the efforts ot Mr. and Mrs. Wilson to\ncheck the measles, the disease has carried\noff within the time specified between\nfittv and sixty children to an early grave.\nThe scenes in the pueblo have been heart\nrending in the extreme, and one hears\nand sees nothing but weeping and lam-\nentations. The disease at the present\nwriting is greatly abated and will prob-\nably soon have numbered its last victim.\nThe sanitary condition of this pueblo can-\nnot be described. Though we have a fair\namount ot learning we fail to find words\nin the English vocabulary capable ot de-\nscribing the scene. Should one of the\nfiercer contagious diseases come among\nthese Indians in their present condition\nvery few, in my opinion, would survive.\nI have been under the impression that an\nM. D. was appointed to profes-\nsionally to the Pueblo Indians. If such\nis the case the incumbent ot the office has\nneglected his duty terribly as regards the\nZuni Pueblo. While death kas been\nreaping a rich harvest uncontested. The\none that should have stood with the sword\nof professional knowledge to dispute his\nprogress is undoubtedly reclining in his\neasy chair, oblivious of the many heart\nache that he will have to give an account\nfor in that last great day. If there is no\nM. D. appointee, it would be a charity, in\nthe greatest sense of the term, for those\nwho to some extent have the care of these\nIndians under their control to call the at\ntention ot Congress to the fact, through\nNew Mexico's delegate, Mr. Luna, who\nwill undoubtedly make the condition ot\nthese Indians his study.
809826c7cea9f76c994b71a620ca142a PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.8972602422627 31.960991 -90.983994 In 1841 the Whigs carried the State\nof Tennessee by 3,224 majority over\nthe strongest and most popular Locofo­\nco in it, electing their Governor and a\nmajority of the Legislature. (They\nhad 39 to 36 in the House, while their\nopponents had 13 to 12 in the Senate.)\nOn this Legislature devolved the impe­\nrative duty of electing two Members of\nthe U. S Senate, both seats from the\nState being vacant, and Tennessee\nwithout any representation in that bo­\ndy. The uniform usage, if not the posi­\ntive law of the State, prescribed an\nelection by Joint Ballot of the two\nHouses; and besides, it 7»as obvious\nthat an election could be made by\nHouses, politically opposed in no other\nway. Accordingly, the Whig House\npromptly passed a joint Resolution to\n into Joint Ballot on a specified day,\nand the Senate, after much delay, ulti­\nmately concurred in it—the Locofoco\nSpeaker (who represents a Whig Dis­\ntrict) voting with the Whigs to carry\nit. The day came; so did some of the\nLocofocos; but the mass of their Mem­\nbers, especially of the Senate, refused\nto he present, or to go into an election;—\nand a law of the State requiring two-\nthirds of each House to form a quorum\nin Joint Ballot, no business could be\ntransacted, no election made. Repeat­\ned attempts were made, with this iden­\ntical result, and the Whigs had to give\nit up, and leave the State withoui re­\npresentatives in the Senate of the Uni­\non, where measures vitally affecting\nher interests were constantly under dis~\ncussion.
0f3edbbce260a296f6c58a294a139d81 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1883.3904109271944 39.78373 -100.445882 few weeks ago the jury m the\nCoombs trial had to be boarded at\nthe county's expensa. The Com-\nmissioners asked the Ormsby\nHouse to feed the jurors, witnesses,\netc., and send in its bill. It did\nnot ask the other hotels to enter\ninto competition or cheap two bit\nrestaurants to send in bids. The\nbill of the Ormsby House was 280.\nIt was paid in full, although\nno doubt there are second-clas- s\neating houses in Carson who would\nhave fed the same men for $109 and\n180 might have been saved. The\nprice paid was the usual rates of a\n5rst class hotel. A few days after\ntne bill was paid the ounty had a\nregister list to print and called for\nbids. A bid of 6.50 for three\ncolumns of advertising was accept-\ned. As the Appeal pavs its \ners, that amount of matter could\nnot have been put in type for the\namount paid for it. The Ap-\npeal bid was higher from the fact\nthat to have printed three columns\nof matter just so much paying ad-\nvertising would have been dis-\nplaced. Messrs. Jones and Cheney\nof the old Board have always been\nthe most savage adherents of the\nCheap John policy with newspa-\npers. With the new Board Mr.\nJones works tooth and toe nail to\naccomplish this result. The Ap-\npeal is not running a 'cheap news-\npaper, nor will it take cheap adver-\ntising. The circulation of the pa-\nper is larger than ever, its columns\nare filled with cash advertisements,\nand it is recognized by business\nmen in Carson as being worth so\nmuch money to them. No one who\nadvertises in the Afpeal-
16e07df6c2f274899225710ff06cfc06 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1896.372950788049 43.624497 -72.518794 Q. He dldn't have on any Free Mason\ncbarm. a. No, slr, not that I know of.\nQ. WIU vou explaln to tbese gentlemen\nhow you happened to send out for tbat\nparty on tbat occaslon; wbat was there\nabout tbe party about tbat partlcular party\nthat Induced you to send out for tbem wben\nyou wouldn't Bend out for anybody else. a .\nI don't know as there was any partlcular\nthlng about lt.\nQ. It was a very unusual thlng for you to\ndo; uow, I want you to tell thls board of\narbttrators bow it happened that In the case\not thls party whlch came In there slmply for\ndlnner you happened to send out and get thls\nwlne, when you wouldn't for tbe generallty\nof people who asked you. Wbat was there\nabout tbe party that Induced you to It.\nA. There wasn't anythlng about the party.\nQ. What was there about the occaslon that\ninduced you to do It. a . I presume because\nthere was net many In tbe dlnlng room and\nthe boy was Idle, and lt was convenlent.\nQ. Y ou bad a boy that you could use just\nas well as not and you thought you mlght\njust as well send hlm out. a . I tblnk so.\nQ. It Mr. Clark or Gov. Woodbury had\ntold you not to send out and get llquor and\nserve It In the dlnlng room do you thlnk you\nwould bavo sent out on tbat occaslon. a .\nI don't know. I have broken other orders.\nI presume llkely I would.\nQ. Do they pay you for breaklng orders\ndown there. a. No; don't pay me for break-\nlng orders.
48d7869c33f0bd675af23120b7696338 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.1684931189752 41.681744 -72.788147 "I hope that the discussions of this\nconference will take as wide a scope\nas you think necessary. We are not\nmet to discuss any single or narrow\nsubject. We are met to discuss the\nproper method of restoring all the\nlabor conditions of the country to a\nnormal basis as soon as possible and\nto effect such fresh allocations of\nlabor and industry as the circum-\nstances may make necessary. I think\nJ can testify from what I have seen\non the. other side of the water, that\nwre are more fortunate than other\nnations in respect to these great prob-\nlems. Our industries have been dis-\nturbed and disorganized disorgan-\nized as compared with a peace basis,\nvery seriously, indeed by the war, but\nnot so seriously as the industries of\nother countries; and it to me,\ntherefore, that we should approach\nthese problems that we are about to\ndiscuss with a good deal of confidence\nconfidence that if we have a com-\nmon purpose we can realize that com-\nmon purpose without serious or in-\nsurmountable difficulties.\nFeels for Those More Obscure.\n"The thing that has impressed me\nmost, gentlemen, not only in the\nrecent weeks when I have been in\nconference on the other side of the\nwater but for many months before I\nwent across the water, was this:\n"We are at last learning that the\nbusiness of government is to take\ncounsel for the average man. We are\nat last learning that the whole matter\nof the prosperity of peoples runs\ndown into the great body of the men\nand women who do tho work of the
244f3a16b1f5cdbd0ecf886928b70832 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.7876712011669 42.217817 -85.891125 it so ; while the man without family thinks and\ncares little for police so long as he takes care\nof hinisnlf and has no one else to care for. It\nbaa bean doubted by some whether, in a repub-\nlic perfectly organized, any but heads of fam-\nilial should vote at all. They urge that, m the\nbeginning, and in the very nature of tiling,\nthe family is the political unit of human soci-\nety. Within the family government is not\npolitical, it is purely domestic. The home is a\nOtatla, within which human laws do not enter.\nWithin that the laws of itnd. as stamped upon\nthe very constitution of man. govern. .Man\nand woman together make up man. Eaoh is\nthe complement of the other neither without\nthe other complete. Man and woman, in the\nholy relation of marriage, are tmth required to\nmake up the full of man -- male and fe-\nmale, as God created them. Prom that re-\nlation and m that relation the coming genera-\ntions are reared. Therefore it is that in the\nfamily, the home, under the roof which\nshelters the hoius of sleep and of infancy,\nis found the true basis of human society.\nInto that little kingdom no one can titer ex\nopt by permission : and if any enter, so\nlong as they remain under that roof, however\nhumble, thev are subject, bv the laws of God\nand man. to the head of the family. Meads of\nfamilies, therefoie. have natural rights, which,\nin the organization of government, should bo\nfeepectad and defended. In some of the New\nI'.iiland colonies, where, under township gov-\nernments, our republican system grew, it was\nproridad, when titty families formed a settle-\nment in MM new town, tiny could be organ-laa-
7aaebba7fe604d887709ba08ba71d414 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0753424340437 39.513775 -121.556359 The undersigned, desirous of acquainting those who\nmay be unfortunate enough to he similarly afflicted,\nw here a permanent relief of their sufferings may lie\nobtained, leels it his duly to thus publicly express\nhis most sincere gratitude to Dr. 1,. J . Izapkay, for\nthe permanent recovery of hi* henltn. Horne down\nby tins distressing symptoms incident to Ihe vicious\npractice of uncontrollable passion In youth; depressed\nin body ivnd mind: unable to perform even the most\ntrilling duty imposed upon (he daily avocations of\nlife, I sought the advice of many physicians, who at\nfirst regarded my disease as ol trilling importance—-\nbut ala-l after a few weeks, and in several instances\nmnmhs, of their treatment, I found to my unuttera-\nble horror, that instead of relief, the symptoms be-\ncame more alarming in theirtorture, and. being told\nby one that my disease, being principally confined to\nthe brain, medicine would he of lilt ecouseq- ' ienco. I\ndespaired of ever regainin' -my heullh.strength and\nenergy; and ns a last resort, and with but a taint\nhope called upon Dr. t'r .npkay. who, idler examining\nmy case prescribed some medicine which almost in-\nstantly relieved me of the dull pain and dizziness \nnu head. Encouraged by this result, I resoved to\nplace myself immediately under his care, and by a\nstrict adherence to Misdirect iousniid advice, my bend\nbecame clear, my ideas collected. Hie constant pain\nin my hack and groins, the weakness of my limbs,\nthe nervous react ion of my whole body on the slight-\nest alarm or excitement; the misanthropy and evil\nforebodings; the self distrust and want of confidence\nin ethers; the incapability to study, and want of res-\nohilion; the frightful, exciting, and at times pleasur-\nable dreams at night, followed by involuntary di*.\ncharges,have nil disappeared; and in fact in two\nmonths alter having consulted the Doctor, I li -lt as if\nInspired by a new lit, -—that life which, but a short\ntime ago I contemplated to end by my own hand.\nWith a view to guard the unfortunate from falling\ninto the hand* of incompetent ipiacks, I deem it my\nduty to offer this testimony to the merit and skill of\nDr. Czupkay, and recommend him to all who may\nstand in nel d of medical advice, being assured hy my\nown experience, that once under his care, a radical\nand permanent cure will he effected.\n1
47baf8412926adb387e4bf400054e988 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.4835616121259 39.745947 -75.546589 from a county that is gridironed with ooor roads; that\nhas wasted hundreds of thousands, if not millions of.\ndollars in rr.rke-gbift road repairs and that has per­\nmitted Its road system to he made part and parcel of\nits political system to sucj an extent that for years\nthe condition of the roads has been a public scandal.\nThat criticism also comes from a newspaper that has\non its editorial staff a lawyer who has played in the.\npast a conspicuous part in holding up the Boulevard\nproject, and who intimates that he and others like him\nwill do so again if General duPont attempts to build the\nroad along the lines proposed by him.\nThe people of Delaware want the road. They know\nIt Is needed, particularly in Kent and Sussex counties.\nwheVe good roads are few' and far between. 'The at­\ntempts of General duPont to give Ihe road to (he public\nare unwelcome only to s small clique of men who find\n the situation an opportunity to earn fees and to\nplay short-sighted politics at the expense of the public\n“We have more roads now than we can keep in con­\ndition,' concludes the Index. Not more than can be\nkept in condition, but more than are kept in condi­\ntion. The roads In Kent never have been in good con­\ndition and never will be In good condition while the\npresent system of road construction and maintenance\nis in force and while reactionary and selfish interests\nsu'-h as are represented by Ihe Index are permitted\nto have their way. Such a road as General duPont\nproposes would do more good to Kent county in a\nmonth than the forces which oppos% it would do in a\ncentury. The qpposition represents the same old argu­\nment from the same old source and animated by the\nsame old selfish spirit that has regarded the mainten­\nance of roads as a mere political Job rather than an\nimportant public service.
228e3cfacb5b937b44a5359a64bd2450 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1886.9438355847285 39.756121 -99.323985 u important feature has entered into the\ncontroversy between the green glass manu-\nfacturers and blowers over the abolition of\nthe apprentice system. Meetings of the lo-\ncal assemblies of the glass blowers were held\nin Clayton, Miilsvillo, Halem, Woodbury,\niliiainbiown and Glassboro. S . J ., when it\nwas decided that they would not strike, as\nordered by the executive board of district\nassembly So. ii'.t, Knights of Labor, but\nwould surrender their charter rather than do\nso. These blowers are working with ap-\nprentices under a reduction iu wages of 5\nper cent. , a cc o rding to an agreement enter\ned into with the manufacturers some weeks\nago. The respective charters of the six as-\nsemblies were Sent to General Secretary\nCharles H. Litchman at the general head-\nquarters in Fittsburg yesterday.\nThe new dam which has just been finished\nat Langley cotton mills, on the line of\nthe Charlotte, Columbia tit Augusta rail-\nway, in South Carolina gave way, and it is\nagain inmost a complete wreck. The water\nrushed through in a ilood from tiie pond,\nand swept away half a mile of the track of\nthe Charlotte, Columbia Augusta railway,\nand badly damaged the track of the South\nCarolina railway. All the new and expen-\nsive work recently completed on the farmer\nroad is totally ruined, and it will be at\nleast a week before the damage can be re-\npaired. The accident is ascribed to the\nviolent shock of earthquake which is report-\ned to have been felt in that locality. It is\nbelieved that the shock was suiUciently\nstrong to shake way the foundations and\ncause the structure to break loose. The\nwaters Hooded all the adjacent oauntry and\ndid much damage.
343007ee0d15f26250641781e5aa6b98 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.595890379249 41.681744 -72.788147 At a hearing in New Haven yester-\nday, attorneys for . the Connecticut\ncompany put' forward the plea that\nthe financial strength of the com-\npany is threatened by the continued\noperation of jitney busses. They,\ntherefore, asked for relief in the form\nof a, modification of the injunction by\nwhich state officials are restrained\nfrom interfering with the operation of\npublic passenger motor busses.\nIt is generally acknowledged that\nJitneys are eating into the revenue of\nthe trolley company, and if this be\ntrue, is it not an argument in favor\nof the jitneys, proving that the peo-\nple, of their own volition,, are patr-\nonizing: motor transports in prefer-\nence to trolleys? This thought leads\nto the conclusion that there must be\nsome reason for the people's actions\nand immediately the word service\ncomes to mind. If the Connecticut\ncompany would give service at a rea-\nsonable rate of fare there would\n be any jitney problem. The\nthousands of nickels that are rain-\ning into the pockets of the jitney\nmen would be diverted to the treas-\nury of the Connecticut company.\nIsn't it really about time that the\nmanagers of the trolley companies\ncame around to the people's way of\nthinking instead of trying to force\ntheir inflexible wills on the public?\nBusiness men everywhere .are cutting\nprices for the purpose of attracting\nmore trade. They are enabled to do\nthis by enforcing economies. Per-- ,\nhaps if the trolley managers would\ninvestigate they would discover eco-\nnomies of administration and opera-\ntion which would permit them, also,\nto offer a more attractive . rate for\nthe goods they have to sell.\nThe petition for the modification of\nthe injunction appears to be a plea\nfor special protection ' against com-\npetition, a condition which would be\nrepugnant to the great mass of citi-\nzens.
64e17926efdc2a65cde055a199e6fd85 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.2616438039067 39.261561 -121.016059 On all the varinioi form, of Chronic diseases, including\ndiseases of the Lungs, I .lver, Stomach, Heart, Kidneys,\nand Spleen,—n cure guaranteed in Rheumatism, Neural-\ngia, Amaurosis, or nervous niindness. Sick, or nervous\nHeadache, Apoplectic nnd Congestive fullness of Brain, Ep-\nilcptic, lnrylectic nnd Hysterical affections.\nCancer Cured without the use of Knife,\nand attended with little or no pain also Tumors, Ulcers,\nFistulas, and all the various forms of diseases pertaining\nto the EYE nnd EAR. Diseases of the reproductive\nor genital organs will receive special attention.\nDr. SNYDERS practice in Chronic and Surgical\ndiseases have been extensive, having been many years\nconnected with an Infirmary in which patients were re-\nceived from all parts of the Union, whose diseases were of\nthe most desperate character. Of these he failed to cure\nin a very few instances, in which there was any reasona-\nble prospect of success, lie has restored to health and use-\nfulness hundreds who had given up all hope of recovery,\nand who had suffered for years relief, under the\ntreatment of many of the most distinguished iVictors of\nthe age. Dr. 8. will visit in the City or country, those\ncases which require personal examination and Surgical\nSkill—Invalids, living at a distance, who cannot make it\nconvenient to consult I>r. Snyder in person, (although\nhe would prefer seeing the patient at least once,) hv send-\ning a carefully written description of the origin and history\nof liis or her case, with its symptoms, and its treatment\nheretofore, with a correct statement of his present condi-\ntion will enable the doctor to judge pretty accurately of its\ncurability, and enable him to prescribe the proper reme-\ndies, and give the necessary instructions requisite to effect\na cure. A volume of testimonials of such cases could be\ngiven, received from patients in all part* of the country,\nwhom lie has cured, and who it was never his pleasure to\nsee. DR. 8NYDER deals in no secret nostrums—his pre-\nscriptions are prepared in accordance with the latest im\nprovements in Medical Science.
152216623e8ac0f8a64a4c47e9c276bc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.7301369545917 39.745947 -75.546589 Rusles prime pitching possession,\ndeclares the old fox. was his curve.\nIt was not a drop, but a sldearra curve\nthat broke sideways and was under\nthe absolute control of its master.\n“Believe me,” said the Washington\nleader, In a reminiscent vein, T've\nseen them all come and go, but John­\nson is the greatest of the lot. I don't\nsay this merely because he happens\nto be a member of my olub. I moan\nthat from the bottom of my heart,\nRadbourn, Husle. Matty, all of them,\nwere wonders, but'none of them wae\nas good as Johnson. Walter has\neverything. You hear a lot of wise­\nacres talk about his speed, as If that\nwere the only thing that be possess­\ned. This is a mistake. He has a\nsplendid curve ball, a change of pace,\n I wouldn't be surprised a mite\nsome day of he cultivated a spltter.\n“And, again, he uses his bead con­\nstantly. There are none of them a\nbit wiser than Johnson, and none of\n)hem who takes better care of him-\n• self. He hasnt a single habit that\nwould impair his ability or hurt his\nusefulness. He is big and strong, and\nIm certain that he will be pitching\nJust as good 16 years from now.\n"Is he better than Matty? you ask,\nI say yes. Mattys pitching was never\npitching ou strength. He constantly\nstudies the batters to know their\nweakness and to learn their groove.\nOnce he has a batter measured, then\nthe batter is up against it.\n“But for pitching, as pitching is re­\ngarded in baseball, Walter Johnson is\nthe superior.
3a924d3b73c399116236da0375bee8cc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.4534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 following: Appropriating |100,000 to\nmake suitable compensation tor Inlorma-\ntlon, etc.; declaring that the aettlement\no( duties ahall be final and conclusive >\nupon partiea alter the expiration ol two\nyean Irom the time ol entry (tho Senate I\namendment fixed three years). The J\namendment fixing the salaries ot customs >\nofficers wu finally struck ont. The\namendment providing that public cartage i\nahall be abject to the regulation of the <\nSecretary ot the Treasury was amended 1\non motion ot Mr. Randall, by requiring it\nto be left to the lowest bidder alter July,\n1875, and was then agreed to. AU other g\nmaterial amendment! to the bill were re- t\nJected. The bill was then sent to the s\nConference Committee, composed on the a\npart ot the House of Messrs. H. Rob- c\nerts, Sheldon and Wood. o\ncokfkukrci report currrhcy bill, t\nMr. Maynard then made > conference 1\nreport on tho currency bill. He then J1\nproceeded to explain the report and to 1\nspecify the changea In the bill aa passed e\nby tho House, and aubetituted aa re- ?\nported back from tho Conference Com- v\nmittee, the two material pointa being. P\nfirst, aa to the proposition of the legal i\ntenders to be cancelled, and an issue of *\nmore DUE currency, It being now fixed *\nat | percent; and second, as to the time °\nfor redemption ol United Btates notes in »\ngold or bonds which is now fixed for the .\nfirst oi J anuary, 1878. These he said were "j\nconcessions made in opposite directions.
4721fd4105b88db795330d37fa7bd5a8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.187671201167 58.275556 -134.3925 Stephen Na99, an old-timer in the\nNome district, was killed by falling\ndown a shaft at Center creek last\nmonth. The hoist had become tangled\nat the surface aud despite warnings of\nother miners Nass started to climb out\nof the shaft by the ladder without\nstopping to warn the engineer. The\nengineer, after fixing the hoist, lowered\nthe bucket, which knocked Nas9 from\nthe ladder to the bottom of the shaft.\nDeceased was a native of Nova Scotia\nand has relatives living in Maine.\nLess than three years ago Frank\nAhlberg was in business in Fairbanks,\nAlaska, doing a little mining on the\nside and making a fair living. Today\nbe is marketing an invention of his\nown and a fortune stares him in the\nface. Mr. Ablberg's invention is novel.\nHe has evolved a process printing\nlettering aud designs on apples and\noranges without injuring the fruit. The\nprinting is doue with the aid of simple\nchemicals and electricity, and the ma¬\nchine turns out the labelled fruit at\nthe rate of forty a miuute.\nCaptain Frauk Kleinschmidt, form*\nerly of Nome, is now a war correspon\ndent for a Berlin paper and is with\nGen. Hinden berg's forces in Poland. It\nwill be remembered that Klenschmidt\nmade a fortune by taking moving pic¬\ntures in the Arctic and on the Siberian\nand Alaskan coasts. He sold the films\nto a London syndicate for $750,000.\nLouis Lane, who claimed to be a part¬\nner in the enterprise, has started suit\nin New York for bis ahare of the\nmoaey. Kleinschmidt is a son in law\nRev. S. Hall Young, the well known
0453a2de0c281bcf3d8ee158e5816929 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.387671201167 40.441694 -79.990086 At a meeting of the Inglish Chemists\nAssistants' Association, a ncmber described\na little microphone whlih would render\naudible tho footsteps ofa fly. The little\napparatus consists of a boc with a sheet of\nstraw paper stretched m its upper part.\nTwo carbons separated bja morsel of wood,\nand connected with the two circuit wires,\naVe fastened to it, and a carbon pencil, placed\ncrosswise between the two, is kept in this\nposition by a groove madJ in tho latter. A\nvery weak battery Is tbjn sufficient to set\ntho'lnstrument at w6rk and when the fly\nwalks over the sheet o paper it produces\nvibrations strong enougl to react energetic-\nally on an ordinary telcjhone.\nA Mansfield, O., dodor is the owner of\na horse which has a fanlnes for playing\npractical jokes. Recenly tho, physician\ndrove out Into the counry to answer a sick\ncall. Arriving at his testination, he tied\n horse to a post near vhich hung a. rope\nattached to a large bJl used as a dinner\nsignal for employes on tie place, nnd went\nInside. Shorttvnfter thebcll rang violently.\nThe doctor and the mnrpf the house both\nlooked out, but could seenothing except the\nhorse. They had hardlt tnmedaway, how-\never, before the bell raig again, ana acain\nthey looked but could see nothing. Tills\nwas repeated and the doitor determined to\nsolve the mystery, so , othe thlrdfring, in-\nstead of going into the htuse, he stepped out\nand hid in the yard. He kept his eye on the\nbell rope, and In about a minute was sur-\nprised to see the hors4 lift up his head,\nsmilo slvly and give the) rope a good, hard\ntug. When the physlcljn sprang out and\nconfronted the horse, thj animal instantly\ntried to put on a look of Innocence, but was\nunsuccessful.
00e15c1173523fe7d4542e054d0c6ca3 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1883.2534246258244 43.82915 -115.834394 T N THE NAME OF TILE PEOPLE\nJL ot the United States of the Territory\nCf Idaho, you are hereby notified that\nthere is now on file in the office of the\nolerk ot the District Court of the Second\nJudicial District ot said Territory, in Ida­\nho City , county of Boise, the complaint of\nS. K. Goldtrap, demanding judgment\nagainst you for the sum of $lj404 43 aud\ninterest thereon at the rate of l},4 per cent\nper month from the 15ih of May, 1879,\nalso for the sum ot $375 38 and interest\nthereon at the rate of 114 per month from\nDecember 28ih, 1878; also for the sum ot\n$12!) 52 and interest thereon at the rate ot\n1H per cent per month from September\n26th, 1878; also for the sum of $63 46 with\ninterest thereon at the rate of l l4 per cent\nper month from July 19th, 1880, upon four\npromisso ry notes a nd delive red by\ndefenda nt to plaintiff, at Idah o City, Boise\ncounty. The tacts more fully appearing\nin plaintiffs complaint on file herein,;»\ncertified copy of which is served h erewith,\naud that unless you appear and answer U-.\nsaid complaint within ten days after the\nserv ice hereof, if seived within Boist\ncounty, and within twenty days if served\nout of said county but within said Judi\ncial District, ami within forty days it\nserved out of said Distiict (exclusive of\nthe day ot service), judgment will be tah\nen against you by default for the sum ot\n$3,496 76 and inte re st and costs of suit.\n( —-— j In testimony whereof, I. A. L.\nj seal. Richardson, Clerk of said Dis\n( — ) trict Court, have hereunto set my\nhand and affixed the seal of said Court, at.\nIdah o City, this I6tli day of February , A\nI). 1883. '
50c43f7eaa42c7ea8333a1b3b9705816 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.54508193559 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho "Rotten Boroughs" of Esiti\n(From tho Phllidelphi* Lodger.)\nTo those readers of the Ledger\nmay have forgotten what Is meat\n"rotten boroughs",lt should be expla\ntliat, when Parliaments were first lie]\nEngland, the king summoned to\ngreat national council representative\ntho towns, or boroughs, as they were\ncalled. The countTcs wero ordere\nuntwl mon rvmni'qm'it (if ft f.6ftuin Ami\nof landed property to represent them,\nthese deputies were called "Knlgh\nthe 8hlro." Tho boroughs sent tv\ntheir citizens, or burgesses. In the co\nof tlmo many of these boroughs decs\nnnd now ones sprang up, oat the\nboroughs went on sending their two n\nbcrs each to Parliament, while the\nandfartooro Important ones sentt\nIn the lapso ol centuries soma df t\nold boroughs actually dwindled dow\na low citizens; and the land on w\nthey stood became the property of s\nwealthy man, who thus, of course\nqulrod preponderating Influence 6vei\nhall-dozen tenants still entitled to\nunder tho old law ol qualification,\nowner could thus return, at his pleai\ntwo members to Parliament, and thlsi\nhim power with the ministry of the\nho could ask his own place for\ntwo seats, according to the poll\nexigencies of the moment. Boroi\nso situated were called "rotten\noughs," and by the Reform bill of\n number of them were disfrancbi\nand tho rest were shorn of one m\ntier. At tbo same time. London,Liver]\nManchester, Birmingham, and a nun\nol other cities had members given to tl\nBut the system remained lundameni\ntho same and equally vicious. Tho c\nties sent their own representatives,\nvoting for them being limited to t\nwho jntHda certain amount of r\ncrty. The boroughs seat theirs, a al\ncut system of qualification prevailing\nthe Idoa ol apportioning the represi\ntives to the population was not cat\nout, though loudly clamored for at\ntime by tho Chartists. Lord liussell\nnot prepared to sacrifice the power of\nDucal House ot Bedford in that mat\nTherefore largo cities like Manchester\nLiverpool, with U00,000 Inhabitants c\nwero allotted tho same number, whe\nin comparison, tho former ought to 1\nhad six times as many as tho latter.\nanomaly still exists, and in some case\nmost flagrant disproportion. For insts\ntho borough ol the Tower Hamlets, a\ntion of London, contains moro\n400,000 inhabitants, and that of Lym\nton, in Hampshire, contains 5,000; the\ntor returns one representative to Pa\nrnont, but tho former with all its we\nlactones, skipping, and general in*\ngcnce, rctnrns only two members, or\nmoro than tho number sent by an obs\ncountry village.
48ab4004996ccf85ef31ee861020fe2a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.746575310756 39.261561 -121.016059 County of Nevada, —ss. By virtue ofnn execution to\nme delivered, issued from the Court of John Caldwell l <j. ,\nan acting Justice of the Peace u and lor the county aiore\nsaid, bearing dale Bent. lltli, A. P 1H67, to satisfy a judg\nmoot rendered by John Caldwell on tho lltli day of M'pi.\nA. 1). 1867. In favor of JERRY I'AQCLITE and ugain-t T.\nW. BR00KB, for the sum of eighty-three and 60-100 dol-\nlars, debt, interest, damage- and co-t* ol - nit. I have ta-\nken in execution, and will sell to the highe-t bidder for\ncash, the following property to w it: One Trunk, one un-\ndivided one half of t ha i House and Lot Him e near the\nHteam Mill in Humbug, known a- the Ho s** of Brooks A\nPaquette. also one undPIded one halfol a Cook .Move \nsnid house, also, one undivided one third of tho-o certain\nMining Claims, situated about eighty rods in a northerly\ndirection from the Mill of Messrs. Kmici k Co., and being\nthe claims of Endeis, Brooks & Paquette, and all the inter\nest of said T. W. Brooks in the fence enclosing that certain\nLit in Humbug City, lying «»n the east side of Main street,\nand hounded on the north by a house and lot owned by\nWin. Taylor, on TlK-PAY, the 0th day ol October A. P.\n1857. between the hours of 10 oclock A. M . and 3 oclock\nP. M . Taken as the projierty of T. W . Brooks, to satisfy\nthe above demands and accruing costs. The sale to he\nmade at the Billiard Bulnnti of Rohr A Co. in Humbug City.\nSeptember 12th, A. P. 1867.\n60 Uw
012d785987d34c78c175bc4117a418a5 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.5219177765093 40.441694 -79.990086 Tux success of tbe Wild West Snow In\nParis, far from decreasing, grows greater day\nby day. Thousands are unable to obtain ad-\nmission at the Sunday performances.\nIt Is now stated that Parisians will hare\nnearly everything in a "bull fight" except tbe\ndeath of the bull at the corridas about to take\nplace In the Plaza de Toros of the exhibition.\nThe ring is in the Ruo de la Federation, by tho\nChamps de Mars.\nThe Municipal Council at Athens has deter-\nmined to erect in the middle ot the principal\npublio square an exact reproduction of the\nEiffel tower, only with slightly diminished pro-\nportions. There will be an electric light on\ntbe summit somewhat after the fashion of our\nstatue of Liberty.\nRarblt has tbe supply of strawberries been\nso abundant in Paris as at the moment.\nThe refreshing fralses are piled In colossal\nheaps In tbe markets and in the shops of fruit-\nerers all over the city, and pottles of straw-\nberries are sold at such an Infinitesimal rate\nthat the poorest of the working citizens in the\nFaubourg St Antoine can afford a dessert\nalmost as luscious as that of Dives and Crcosus\nIn the Champs Elysees.\nFreedom of tbe press is not as yet very\nfirmly established in Japan. A newspaper\ncalled the Tonchikyokwai Zatthi, published an\nillustration recently representing the promul-\ngation of tbe new constitution. In this picture\nthe imperial throne was occupied by a skeleton.\nThe editor and two printers were forthwith ar-\nrested, and the former condemned to a fine of\n50, with three years imprisonment while the\nlatter were incarcerated for ten months with\n30 to pay.
04658facb0508b18952e079dc153225c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.632513629579 40.063962 -80.720915 The handle ia made of two wrought iron\nrods and so arranged that while it la light, yet\ntus great strungth. Tho cylinder in whicn ail the\nwork ia performed is iron, lined withcopper.tbu\nooppcr lining prevent* nut and makes but little\nfriction. This iron chamber la not submerged,\nbat placed in the well above the water, and yet\nwill work as well under aa above the water.\n7ih. It can be used in a driven or bored well\nwith the same ease aa a well of larger diameter.\n8th. For lta general adaptability this Pump Is\nwithout a rival. The Pump may be placed at\nyour dwelling or barn, or within the building,\nand connected with the well, or spring or other\nbody of water, fifty cr one hundred yards distant,\nand will work with the same ease aa though\nstanding directly over the water.\n9th. is single acting and pumps only with\nthe down stroke of the xandie, and thus avoids\nthe heatyl\\ft required in the doublaacting Pump.\n10th. By attaching a abort hose, a stream may\nbo thrown fifty to sixty feet and may often be\nused to advani&go in watering gardens and lawns,\nwashing windows, cleaning buggies, extinguishing\nfires, or elevating water. We recognize the\nfact thatitrequiicfl more power to elevate water\nfromadeep tuan from a shallow well. Butaa\nfar as possible to obviate thla difficulty for deep\nwelli, we manufabture a smaller chamber, so that\nwhile the volume of water is diminished, the\npower required is not greatly increased. We\nclaim that by the combination, havinr? all th«\nadvantages of atmospheric pressure In combination\nwith force, that the Sinclair Pump will\nelcTato water from a deep woil with less power\nthan any submerge or purely force pump In
7bb52c985df80bdac79033c5d3e60a70 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.6123287354135 39.560444 -120.828218 Political.— Genl Denver and Major\nBowie, democratic and whig candidates\nfor Congress, will be in town to-morrow',\nand will of course address the people be-\nfore leaving. Mr, J . R . Beard, the whig\ncandidate for Clerk of the Supreme Court\nis also here, on his way to the north.\nExchanges.— Both expresses have sup-\nplied us liberally with exchanges, and\nwhatever papers we choose to select, for\nwhich we tender our thanks; and while\nwe are about it, we may as well say that\nthe extra trouble they take is appreciated\nby the Citizen , though we are often cul-\npably neglectful oftheir attention.\nOriental Hotel, San Francisco.—\nOur mountain friends visiting the Bay City,\nwill doubtless take our advice and stop\nat the above establishment, corner of Bush\nand Battery streets, where they will be\ntreated as gentlemen should be, by our\nfriend Caleb Hyatt, who has a hap-\npy faculty of making people comfortable.\nAccident.— Yesterday evening two\nmen named McGovern and Howard, were\nseriously wounded while on their way to\nSecret Canon. A man on the opposite\nside of the river discharged a shot gun,\nloaded with slugs, at a squirrel, and the\nunfortunate persons happened to be in\nrange; one of them was wounded in the\nface and the other in the breast. It is\nexpected that they will recover.\nFirst Page.— The readers ofthe Citizen\ncant help being pleased with the grace-\nful pencilings of “Florence.” Major\nDownies quaint letters speak for them-\nselves, and are appreciated by the gold\nhunters of California. We are not a lit-\ntle vain of our contributors, and would be\nglad to have a few more of the same sort.\nRev. A. Woodruff will preach in the\nM. E. Church to-morrow, at II oclock.
3a30dda7ac99a7488eb603f970ba4efc VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.3620218263004 43.798358 -73.087921 Responsibility. Children constitute\na sacred and interesting charge committed\nto parents by the great Father of all ; and\nwith each child he may be regarded as\ndistinctly uttering the command, take\nthis young child and bring it up for ine.\nThe duty is interesting, the responsibility\nthrilling. Parents are amenable to God\nfor the manner in which they fulfil their\nobligations in relation to their offspring,\nand under no pretence can they escape\nfrom these obligations or transfer them to\nothers. Many efficacious means may be\nsufffested to communicate religious in\nstruction to children, but none of these can\nwith nronrietv be regarded as lessening\nthe responsibility of parents, or as super\nseding their assiduous personal attention.\nThey have peculiar duties which can\nnever be performed by proxy. This sense\nof personal obligation is felt with sufficient\nJforce by parents, as far as it relates to the\nsupport, protection and temporal well-be- -\nmg of their children ; nut this is not\nenough. Their children possess undying\nsouls, and God has required them to culti\nvate their moral faculties ; restrain them\nfrom evil, to direct their thoughts heaven-\nward; and by earnest expostulation and\ntender entreaty, to induce them to remem-\nber their Creator in the days of their youth.\nThey have, to a certain extent, a command\nover the eternal destinies of their offspring ;\nthey may by pious care train them for\nheaven ; or by negligence, plunge them\ninto ruin. How seldom is this relation\nol parent to child appreciated ; how sel-\ndom are its duties religiously fulfilled.\nThe consequence is inevitable. An igno\nrant childhood prepares the way for a\nthoughtless youth, and this in its turn is\nthe precursor of hardened iniquity in man-\nhood. Fearful must be the future account\nof those" parents, who from a want of reli-\ngious principle, or to escape the toil and\nfatigue of instruction, permit their off-\nspring to make their first steps in ignor\nance of God and in neglect of his com- -\nmandments. It is a cruelty which will at\nlength bring these objects of their natural\naffection to certain infamy and everlasting\nremorse and ruin.
05175965941ac7ff049cabcae7184730 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.6188524273932 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Ilryan says that this campaign.\nlike that ot 1776, will afford an "oppor¬\ntunity to prove whether you be putriots\nor torles." In what category would he\nput those Democratic leaders and elec¬\ntors who have solemnly declared that the\ndoctrines of tin- Chicago platform would\nruin the country If adopted, and who yet\nsupport the candidate who stands on\nthat platform?. Are these men patriots\nor torles or trimmers or cowards?\nPhiladelphia Record (Dem.)\nSenator Caffrey, of Louisiana, meets I\nthe demand of the free silverltes that\nhe resign his seat in the sennte by the\nclaim that when he was elected to rep¬\nresent the Democratic party It stood for\nsound money, the enforcement of the\nlaws, the malntenace of the co-ordi¬\nnate branches of the federal government\nand the freedom and Inviolability of all\ncontracts. lie inserts that he believes\nIn all those principles now and there¬\nfore cannot see any reason why he\nshould resign, Mr. Caffrey takes a sen¬\nsible view of the question. And, by the\nway. if the free silverltes think that a\nDemocratic senator who will not follow\nhis party always should realign, why do\nthey not ask such Republican senators\nas Teller, Pettlgrew, Cannon, Mantle,\nand Squire, who huve deserted their\nparty, to resign? Isn't It Just as bad for\na Republican senator to refuse to go\nwith his party as it is for a Democratic\nsenator?.Philadelphia Press (Dem.)\nWhen Mr. Dryan seeks to make a\nquestion of patriotism of Independent\nfree he Is simply appealing to\nignorance .and prejudice. England does\nr.ot oppose free coinage by this country.\nHer commercial classes do not care a\nbrass farthing whether we try the ox*\njHTlinent or not. They would undoubt¬\nedly profit by it if we should, for they\ncould pay for their enormous purchases\nhero.amounting on an average to over\n$ mo.ooo.ooo a year.in cheap money and\nexact gold from us for our interest and\npurchases..New York World (Dem.)\nWhile the Democratic defection Is\ngrowing dally, the Republican lines are\nshowing a firmer front. The threatened\nRepublican cleavage In a few western\nstates appears now to be entirely check¬\ned. One state convention aftor'another\nwalks up squarely to an endorsement of\nthe St. Louis platform, in some cases a\nspecific endorsement of the gold plank\nbeing made. Iowa, Minnesota, and\nthe Dakota*, when- there was much talk\nof Republican disaffection on the silver\nIssue, had already fallen Into line, and\nyesterday Michigan and Wisconsin Join¬\ned them. Tho Republican committeeman\nin Illinois, who a few weeks ago ex¬\npressed great fears for that state, now\nconfesses that a great change In public\nsentiment has set In, and that Illinois\nIs safe for McKIr.lcy. All told, the drift\nis at present decidedly against the Dem¬\nocrats. Something may occur to change\ntlie fatv of things, but their best outlook\nIs for an up-hill fight against Increas¬\ning odds..New York Post (Dem.)\n'J'lir I Joy Oiutor nt rod mm tltiuacJf.\nNew York Sun.\n1 am mil.
6db46818447f0aef5c34957180df1bb2 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.195890379249 31.960991 -90.983994 rilHESB Lozenges have now been in use, in\nX the Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves à popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy • for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\n"the means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering (he cords of affection, end forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called the «only certain worm de-\nstraying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and eveu death, without \never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, arid are doctored fo*r\nvariou» complaints without any benefit, wheu\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste,' that children cry for\nthem, afid eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the moat flattering\ncommendafions from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey may be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of\nthe impoteney at most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity aa a remedy; *\n(ErPrice 25 cents per box. For sale
0ae1c5ba48de5ea1c8f6f0fa772115d3 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1886.1547944888382 46.187885 -123.831256 The London Grocer o January\n80th says of the market of that city:\nWith some improvement in the\nweather there is a slightly better\nfeeling in the market generally, and\nalthough business has not percapt-ibl - y\nincreased, inquiries have been\nrather more numerous in nearly all\ndirections. Attention at the moment\nis still centered chiefly in salmon,\nfor which the demand is unimpaired,\nand4arge quantities are passing be-\ntween one wholesale house and an-\nother, and also from the import firms\ninto the grocers' hands, who are lay-\ning in stocks, as they have been doing\nfor some time past, in anticipation of\nthe renewed wants of customers later\non. Supplies then may be expected\nto show a marked falling off from\nvarious causes, but here they are at\npresent sufficiently ample for all pur-\nposes, and the firmness which\nthey are held proves that the article\nis in a strong and favorable position.\nPrices tend slowly upwards, and for\ngood merchantable brands in any\nquantity, the nearest quotations that\ncan be given are 22s to 25s per case.\nIt is possible to buy at something\nbelow these rates, but the quality\nand character of the goods could not\nbe guaranteed, and it they went into\nconsumption they might obtain for\nthemselves a bad name, which as ap-\nplied to a "dog," is equivalent to be-\ning condemned or hanged outright.\nOf the Liverpool market the same\nauthority says: The demand for salm-\non is unabated. The orders since the\nopening of the year, though hand-\nsome in the extreme as a total, clearly\nshow from the everyday repetition\nthat the purchases made have beeu\npurely for hand-t - o
23abb7a191e9952f4ff1f32e3780096e CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.1684931189752 41.875555 -87.624421 The most nmar.lug stupidity conceiv-\nable of nny pcoplo with forehead Is\nthat they should allow their supply\nof food to pass Into tho hands of ono\nspeculative Interest, nay Charles Ed-\nward Russell In a powerful article\nwritten by him In the Appeal to Ben-\nson. You can understand how n care\nless community might tolerate u mo\nnopoly of somo things, how It might\ncuduro to hnvo its transportation, for\nInstance, or Its electric light, control-\nled by ouo ownership, for men can\nlive without sleeping cars or arc\nlamps; but that It should tolcrnto a\nmonopoly of tho primal necessity of\nfood Is beyond comprehension and\nwithout precedent. Even naked Rav-\nages havo uniformly been too wise\nfor that, and tho only nation that lias\never submitted to such n monstrous\ncondition Is our own.\nFrom a thousand Illustrations of tho\n wo all suffer from this Idiotic\narrangement let ub clto one.\nThcro is no way of communicating\ndisease to tho human body surer than\nthrough infected meat tissue. Somo\nof tho worst and most destructive ba-\ncilli that prey upon mankind nro com-\nmon utnong tho animals ho cats for\nfood. Cows havo tuberculosis and\nspread vast quantities of It through\ntho humnu population. It Is so com\nmon among cows that tho wise and\ntho forownrncd will uso none but ster-\nilized milk. What Is "hog cholora"\namong swlno Is merely typhoid fever\nIn men. Trlchlnea In hogs poison\nhuman beings. Both theso diseases\nnro common nmong swine.\nWorse than all these, and moro\ndeadly, Is another fact that Is seldom\ncommented upon becauso It Is too ap-\npalling to dwell much upon. What is\ncnllcd "lumpy Jaw" In cnttlo Is simply
2e2274e66202f14caa34cb5d627d8590 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.3027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 Johu C«rapbell, a wealthy and well\nknown citizen of Washington district\ncame to town Saturday last, and indulged\nin considerable more of the ardent that\nwas advisable. 4 fier mounting his horse\nhe rodo homo, and, as is supposed, los'\ncontrol of both himself and the animal\nArriving at the fence surrounding bit\nhouse, his horse jumped the bars, throw\ning the rider off, where he was found\ncompletely paralyzed, and has unly,beec\nable to move one of hiH hands since.\nComplaint was made last Sunday night\nby a couple of young girls that they had\nbeen assaulted while on their way tr\nchurch by two young men, residents ol\nthis village. One of the chaps was arrested\nand fined $10, which he paid; the othei\nescaped and has not jet been found.\nThe children of Kev. liuchnnan'{\nfamily, and several other children of thic\nplaco, ate severely alllicted with mussels,\nThe friends of the Masonic Hall Build\ning Association are arranging for a seriei\nof entertainments, to be given at the Hall,\n(or the purpoeo of raising funds to liqui\ndate the outstanding debts against the\nbuilding. It is certaiuly due to the enter\nprising gentlemen who paid their monej\nso liberally towards supplying our town\nwith a public hall, without any probable\nreason to suppose that their large outlay ol\nfunds would meet with anything liko o\nreasonably early return of the same, thai\nthese entertainments should meet with a\nhearty support from the people of the\ntown, and surrounding county. From\nwhat f can learn of the parties who are to\nhave charge of, and tike part in the
0da9c02c780425bdbb6e10c97b7143a3 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1899.5356164066463 37.305884 -89.518148 S' t forth in his statement that he in-\ntended to make his home at a holel in\nFntriand. as he l as done for many sum'\nTiers. The hotel, the board of agricul-\nture replied, was hardly within the\nr leaning of a "permanent residence."\nA s for the detention anil isolation of\nthe dog. the board has the authority to\nput Fido in quarantine ( for that is what\nii amounts to practically) for a period\nof half a year, if it is advisable, and that\nat the sole expense of the owner.\nCats which go to Europe travel in the\nRime class as dogs. $ III each, and are also\nlooked after by the ship's butcher. The\nfare for birds varies a good deal with\nthe different lines. One transatlantic\ncompany charges regular fare of $5\na cage for birds, and they have to be\nleft, like the dogs and eats, with that\noverburdened mortal the butcher. An-\nother line charges a certain rate which\nvaries in propoition to the size of the\ncage or number of cubic feet which it\noccupies. A third company makes no\ncharge for carrying a bird, and permits\nthe ow ner to have it in his stateroom.\nlings, cats and birds are frequently\nnfllictcd with sea sickness, and manifest\nth? symptoms of the dread disease for\nall the world like their masters. Often\nthe birds succumb and die when two or\nthree days out. but the dogs and eats\nseldom show signs of the illness after\nth second day, and It is vefy unusual\nforoneofthemtodie at sea. X.Y.\nSun.
978c97cc2cafe9534dd7b6bc28a3a613 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.023287639523 39.261561 -121.016059 Summons—state opcalipobnu\nCounty of Nevada, «#. , District Court of the Uth\nJudicial District of said Stale. The jet.pie of the\nState of California, to J. T . KUTHERFORI) and H. J\nKINGMAN, greeting: You are hereby Kurntnonedto\nappear and answer to the complaintof W. L . MANLY\nfiled against you, Samuel Aikin, John Dunn, Robtp\nRutherford, and C. D. Whitaker, within ten days f\nthe service of this writ if served on you In this coun-\nty. and within twenty days if served on you in thii\ndistrict and out of this county, and w ithin forty\nif served on you in the State and out of the District,\nin an action commenced on the 9th day of ScpUm-\nher, a. i)., 1861, in -said Court to obtain a decree of\nthis Court for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage\nbearing date the 27th day of April, a. r>., 1889, c*,]\ncuted by the said defendants to plaintiff, and for the\nsale of the premises therein, and in said complain\nparticularly mentioned and described, and the appp.\ncation of the money* arising from such sale to the\npayment of the amount due on a certain promissot *\nnote set fortli in said complaint, made delivered\nto said plaintiff by the defendants, hearing even date\nwith said mortgage and thereby intended to lie se-\ncured, to wit: The sum of *71G 66 with interest\nthereon from the 26th day of August, a. d ., 1860. at\nthe rate of two per cent, per month till paid; and it\nany deficiency shall remain alter applying all of said\nmoneys, propelry so applicable thereto, then that\nplaintiff may have execution therefor against the\nsaid defendants, also that said defendai . and all and\nevery person claiming through or i Oder defendants\nsubsequently to the date of plaintiffs t. ortgage. and\nthe commencement ol this action, may he barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien and equity of re-\ndemption in and to the said mortgaged premises. m\nany part thereof, and for such other anil further re-\nlief, or both, in the premises as may he just and\nequitable. And you are hereby notified that if you\nfail to answer said complaint, as herein directed,\nplaintiff will take judgment against you therefor by\ndefault, together with all costs of suit, aud also de-\nmand of the Court such other relief as is prayed for\nin plaintiffs said complaint.\n—,
0d8055a0fd90ad21ba68a0c7928f9c07 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.541095858701 58.275556 -134.3925 NOTICE is hereby given that C. W . Young,\nwhose postoffice address is Juneau, Alaska,\nhas this day filed his application for a patent\nfor five hundred and seventy (570) linear feet\nof the May Flower mine or vein, bearing\nsold, with surface ground three hundred\n(300) feet in width, situated on Douglas Is¬\nland, in the Harris Mining District, District\nof Alaska, and designated by the Field Notes\nand Official Plat on file in this office as Min¬\neral Survey No. three hundred and eighty-\none (381), and described as follows, to-wit:\nCommencing at cor. post No. One, whence\nU. S. Local Mon. No. 4 bears S. 53 deg. E.5636\nft dist., thence S. 45 deg. W. 600 ft to cor. post\nNo. 2, identical with a location cor. also with\ncor. No. 3,survey 112 Bonanza lode: thence N.\n45 deg. W. ft to cor. post No. 3, identical\nwith location cor., also with cor. No. 2 survey\n341 A, Enterprise Lode; thence N. 45 deg. h .\n600 ft to cor. No. 4, identical with a location\ncor., thence S. 45 deg. E. 570 ft to cor. post No.\n1, the place of beginning, containing 7.85\nacres;.magnetic variation 29 deg. 30 min. E .\nThe location of this mine is recorded in the\nRecorder's office at Juneau, in Book B-l,\npage 73 of t^e records of said office.\nAny and all persons claiming adversely any\nKortion of said mine or surface ground are\nereby required to file their adverse claims\nwith the Register of the United States Land\nOffice at Sitka, Alaska, during the sixty (60)\ndays period of publication hereof or they\nwill be barred by virtue of the provisions of\nthe statute.
109568bd43336814ff50cc3afaf290cb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.001369831304 40.063962 -80.720915 Win. Thaw, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Prof. E\nJreidenbaiigh, Oettyidmrg, Pa.; Rev. A\n,'onrad, Kev. Dr. Albert, John Wana\nlinker, Kev. Dr. Baum, Mrs. M . New\n;irk (50 years n teacher), William J\nfiller, John K. GraelT, Geo. 11. Stuart\nind Mr*. E . Stork, of Philadelphia, Pa,\njatiuier W. Small,Sam'l. Small, Kev. A\nY. Lilly, Rev. Goodlin, St. Paul's Infan\ndepartment, York, Pa.r Kev. Dr. C; A\nItork, Sain. Appold, Charlcn Markell\ndan. lIolli«lay, John W. Rice, Win\nVoodwnrd, Baltimore, Md.; Johi\n'homaH. Supt. of C. tip.Railroad,Cleve\nand, Ohio; Henry J. Iteinmond, Corres\n>onding Secretary of National Lutherai\nlunday school Association, Lancaster, O\n'eterSchindler,Springfield, U,; Augustu\nCounts, New York city; Walter Gel>bar!\n)ayton, 0; (i. D . Emerick, Leeche'\nCorners, Pa.; J. M . Emminger and N\nX Barter, Mansfield, 0.; Mrs. 'I\n. {earner, John GrafT, Pittaburgh\n*8.; William L. Hearne, Jacob Born\n>rook, Thomas Bornbrook and otherf\niVheeling; B. and W.Allen and Mrs. A\nSmith, Germantown, Pa., and Rev. W . C\nJurson, Japan. The»o letters were full 0\nmcouragement to oflicers, teachers am\ncholars, and also bore testimony to th\nnfluenre of the mission on general Sun\nlay School work. Altogether the schoo\n:lones the year with a cheering record o\nnuch £ood done, amid the bearing o\nicavy financial burdens. A social meet\nng of teachers and officers will be held a\nhe pastor's residence this evening, \nitev. Mr. Goodlin will teach the lessoi\nor next Sunday.\nServices will be held each evening o\nhe week, also, preparatory to the com\nnunion next Sunday.\nNew County and District Officer!\n- Below we give a complete list of th\nlew countv and district office whoa\nerms will begin with to-day:\nSheriff.Geo. R . Tingle.\nfroiecuting Attorney.L . S . Jordan.\nJtulje of County Court.Geo. E . Boyd.\nAnxenor.1st Dis..Ralph Arkle.\nAumor-2i\\ Dis..Wm. H . Caldwell.\nBoard of Commiuionert.Washington\nfohn liayha; Madison, Jon. Bpeide\nJlay, John Frew; Union, James M. En\nng; Centre, Win. Myler. Webster, Johi\nllandlan; Ritchie, M. Roth; Triadeluhij\nW. H . "Waddle; Richland, John W. M<\nJulloch;'Liberty, J. D . Whitham.\nJuMice*.Washington.H. A . Phillip*\nsmith McDonald; Madison.Wm. H\nCaldwell, John R. Miller; Clav.Jo«\nMivar, Wm, Phillip#*; Union.Win. I\nfiller; Centre.Jamea Wheeler, Benin\n[Cannner; Webster.Geo. Forbes, L. G\nHughes; Ritchie.John W. Scliultx.Lean\nler Mix; Triiulelphia.N . J . llrowt\nfohn White; Lilierty.Wm. BuahQeld\nfohn Gardner; Richland.Alex. M . Ja\nlohrt. There ia a vacancy in Union am\n>no in Richland.\nCurtUalle*.Washington.Godfrey Pric<\nMadison.Wm. Richardson,Robert Bond\nJlay.Jacob 8. Hull; Centre.John Haui\nnauer, John Finnegan; Webster.Join\nf. Cooper; Ritchie.Wm. II. Cornbi\nJharlea K. Funk; Triadelphia.John A\nJa*ton, Ira J. Wait; Liberty.Sarnue\nJmilh, John N. Hunt. Vacancies exia\nw follows: Washington, 1; Clay, 1; Wet\niter, 1; Union and Richland, K1 each.
26a68ae7c40021ae9445d0470a2008ca EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.741095858701 39.745947 -75.546589 license number. I am sending men to watch the\nJersey ferries. Call me up In an hour—"\nWithout a word of response, and without a word\nof apology to the Reverend Mr. Wright, Alan\ndropped the receiver, snatched up his hat. and fled\nthat house like a man demented.\nRose, escaping from Trine's house, overpowered\nand made the captive of Trines lowest creatures—\ngunmen possibly, of the stamp of that animal whom\nTrine had charged with the assassination of Alan\nthe night before!\nThere was neither a motor-car In sight for him\nto charter nor any time to waste In seeking one.\nAlan could only hope to find one on his way back\ntoward the ferry. It must have been upwards of\nan hour before he came Into a street which he\nrecognized, by Its dlnginess and squalor, aa that\nIn which he had thrown Marrophat from the run­\n of the taxicab.\nAnd then, as he paused, breathless and footsore,\nto cast about him for the way to the ferry, a tour­\ning car turned a corner at top speed and slowed to\na stop before that selfsame tenement of the un­\nsavory aspect to whose sidewalk he had seen\nMarrophat assisted by the loafers of the quarter.\nAnd this touring car was occupied by some half-\na-dozen ruffians in whose bonds a young girl\nwrithed and struggled when. Immediately on the\nstop, they Jumped out and wrestled her out with\nbrutal Inconslderatlon.\nLike a shot Alan had crossed the street—but only\nto bring up nose to the panels of the tenement door,\nand to And himself seized and thrown roughly aside\nby a burly denizen when he grasped the knob and\nmade as If to follow In.\n“Keep back, young feller!” his assailant warned\nhim viciously.
1a78c01165e3b9087b0d62019469f140 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1922.0753424340437 41.875555 -87.624421 in 1021, the .SlSS.350.55o loss shows a\ndecrease of Sl.S24.s72 under the 102O\nloss, according to the state fire marshal.\nThe 12.205 fires in the state last year\nwere' 1.011 fewer than in 302O. The\ndecreases for 1021 are the first since\nthe war. The Armour elevator ex-\nplosion in Chicago is included in the\ntotals for last year, although the bulk\nof the damage wis due to explosion\nand nor to fire.\nFrbana A telegraphic meet between\nthe freshmen track teams of the Uni-\nversity of" Illinois and the University\nof Wisconsin w ill be held . Saturday\nafternoon, February IS. the date of\nthe Iowa indoor meet at Iowa City.\nEach team will run the respective\nevents in its own armory or gym-\nnasium, and the results will be tele-\ngraphed to the other institution for\ncomparison of times.\nBellevilie. A temporary injunction\nrestraining members of all irnions in\nEast St. Louis from interfering in any\nway the business or molesting\nemployees of the East St. Lolis plants'\nof Swift & Company and Armour &\nCompany was issued in the Circuit\ncourt at Belleville. The order is re-\nturnable at the April term of court.\nUnion packing employees have been\non strike six weeks.\nSpringfield. Work on the Mate's\nnew $150,000 building at Jacksonville\nto care for World war veterans now\nat state hospitals for the insane is ex-\npected to start soon, following the\nselection of a site. Appropriations ag-\ngregating .S300 .0OO were made by the\nlast general assembly for buildings and\nequipment to provide for 300 World\nwar veterans receiving treatment at\nstate institutions.\nSpringfield. Arraignment of Gov.\nLen Small at Waukegan has been\npostponed one week, according to an\nannouncement by State's Attorney C.\nF. Mortimer of Sangamon county. The\ndelay was suggested by the chief of\ncounsel for the defense, owing to the\nfact that Vernon S. Curtis, Governor\nSmall's
cd058efa1b1b351847a95206c1f311bc PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.050684899797 31.960991 -90.983994 tween Texas and Mexico.\nBe this as it may. we are satisfied that\nthe barrier is broken down, the Rubicon is\ncfossed! and the valley of the*Rio Grande\nwill hereafter be the theatre of our wars\nwith Mexico! Shame, shame, on the do­\ntard who alone prevented this consumma­\ntion eight months ago, under fourfold bet­\nter auspices!! Not only will the blood\nspilled, the prisoners led captive, and the\nproperty destroyed, rise up in judgment\nagainst him, but the household gods of de­\nserted homes, will blot his name from the\nroll of fame; the deep drawn anathemas\nbreathed from the half famished lips of\nouf western settlers, whose sufferings.no\npen has attempted to describe, ariso daily\nto (he seat of judgment; and were any pi­\ntying angel to attempt his vindication, the\ngod of war, whom he has so often invoked\nwould protest against the interference.\nThe Houston Star, of the 7th,\nin relation to this matter, says:\nWe learn from a gentleman who lately\narrived from the Colorado, that a courier\narrived at La Grange a few days since from\nthe army, and brought news that our\ntroops croosed the Rio Grande near the\nmouth of the river Salado, a few days after\nthey left Laredo, and captured Guerrero\nwithout meeting with the least resistance.\nImmediately after capturing this town\nthey marched to Comargo, capturing one\nor two villages on the route; but when\nthey reached Comargo, they encountered\na detachment of the Mexican army, con­\nsisting of about 1600 men, with four field\npieces. They immediately gave battle,\nand after a short but «ever« engagement,\ncompletely defeated the Mexicans, & look\nthe four field pieces. Comargo surrender­\ned immediately after the engagement, &\nthe troops took possession of the town.\nThe annexed note from our Galveston
1b689fcf7e3ebe6d0e4691f1d95ad4a1 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.943989039415 46.187885 -123.831256 The trade generally will be pleased to\nhear that the new season's salmon, by\nthe four vessels whose arrival in Mersey\nwas notified in our report of last week,\nhas turned out to be finer in quality than\nany parcels received from Astoria for\nsome years past, and should future im-\nports be of the same character there can\nbe no doubt that the salmon market will\nresume its wonted buoyancy, and the\npublic will be found to show aguiu its\npartiality for this valuable auxiliary to\nthe family board. The lowest sanipfe is\nfully equal oven to the best of last year's;\nin some cases tho quality is simply su-\nperb, and in both flavor and appearance\nleaves nothing to be desired. The bulk\nof tho import was sold for arrival ex\nquay, and there are very few parcels re-\nmaining on the quay unsold, the remain-\nder having been warehoused for tho turn\nof the year, when grocera' windows will\nhave been cleared of the seasonable\nstocks of dried fruits. Liverpool Corres-\npondence London Grocer .\nWc have but little to add to our last\nweek's report, as no transactions of\ngreat importance have been carried\nthrough. The situation is a littlo firmer,\nas consignees have decided to store their\narrivals and await a better market. The\ndistributive demand ia as good as can be\nexpected for this season of the year, con-\nsidering that retailers' attention is most-\nly concentrated upon laying in their\nsupplies of dried fruits and Christmas\nnovelties. Correspondence London Gro -ee r- j '\nGazelle
229d41409f1572343d648c8ffe23efb6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.7109588723997 39.745947 -75.546589 plucky boy pltchei settled down and the\ngame was a gilt edged exhibition of ball\npbjlng When nine full Innings wore\nplayed aud the score stood 3 to 3, the\nt nthnrdusm grew Into an uproor which\nnone of the officers were able to quell.\nNieid, the fine-looking Crescent left\nflrider,stepped up to tho plate and started\nthe tenth inning by banging the ball\naway Into loft field. There was, for a\nmoment,painful suspense as Nleld started\naioui.il the bases like a fraotlo\nman But Sprinter Montgomery had his\neye on tbe ball and, all out of breath, he\nleaped Into the air, pulled down the ball\naud delivered it to Cnuly. Nlold walked\nIn from seuoud basa aud S'.ten, a bro her\nof the Brooklyn pitcher, stepped up aud\nfanned out Tbere were two bauds out\n two hundred hands clapping. But\nt here w as no joy on the bltechers when\nCatcher Tug Wilson followed with a\ntwo-bagger away out In right centre.\nThings were loosing desperate. Then\nthe gilt-edged third baseman, Elliott,\ndrove a hot ball down toward second base,\njust what all New Castle wanted him\nfor. Iu a t winkling “Senator” Higgins\nwas after the ball and delivering It into\ntbe ever watchful Lylties hands. That\nretired the side amid deafening applause.\nColumbia's best hatters came np to\nstruggle fop the finish. Pitcher Pleton\nstruck out Montgomery. Oh! would\nHtgglus only get first? No. The senator\nse?t a pop to P.ctou. Then came Conly\naud then came the applause. Out went\na base hit that "Duke” came very near\nreaching Bfoond on.\nFlanagan. it was\nnBg ard two
3a751efb8ee535871ce45ff509be5653 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.5136985984273 41.741039 -112.161619 at tho first session of tho Fifty-ni nt - h\ncongrccs. Tho railroad rate and the\nmeat Inspection hills will soon become\nlaws nud before adjournment both\nhouses will have passed pure food\nbills, which, though dissimilar In\ntermn, are both baced on tho enmo\nprinciple of fedorol control. It Is the\npresent Intention to try and adjust\nthese differences beforo adjournment.\nResides brnnchlng off Into this now\nfield of legislative endeavor, the pres-\nent session has made Itself Important\nIn other ways. It lias added ono, and\nperhaps two states to tho union, nnu\nby so doing hns iVsposcd of four terri-\ntories. Great results to the peoplo aro\nexpected from tlio removal ot tnx on\ndenatured alcohci and if predictions\nnro fulfilled, heat, light and power nro\nto bo supplied by alcohol mado from\ntho corn fields af tho country, from\nsugar and sugar cano, from\nfruits and other vegetables. By a dctt\nturn of legislative points of vlow, tho\nquestions thnt hnvo perplexed congress\nfor somo tlmo regarding tho Panama\ncannl havo ben settled.\nTho president mny dig a lock canal\nas fast as he pleases. A joint resolu-\ntion wns agreed to requiring cnnal sup-\nplies to bo mndo of American manufac-\nture. Congress has not dealt with tho\nforeign situation to nny extent. An act\nmaking a much needed reorganization\nof tho consular sorvlco was passed.\nNothing wns dono In tho Santo Domin-\ngo controversy and tho legislation af-\nfecting our colonial possessions was\nmeagro and unimportant, although\ntariff revision for tho Philippines re-\nceived attention nnd approval of tho\nhouso and nn act was passed revising\ntho tariff collection by tho Phlllpplno\ngovernment. A colnngo act for tho\nIslands nlro wns passed.
1b5ef70d54f1322fa111af18d84ce73b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6013698313038 40.063962 -80.720915 Fiqht..yesterday .evening a collie\nsion occurred on the stone bridge,.at\nleast, it is generally snpposed there\nwas a fight. We "were on the ground\nearly but could only see the crowd..\nAn omnibus and a wagon had stopped\non the field,, to give the passengers and\ndrivers an opportunity to- witness the\ncombat. The purapet' walls of the\nbridge was occupied by spectators, and t\nthere being no reserved seats for there-\nporters, we had to get our information!\nfrom second hands. It appeared to to\na well conducted engagement, and all\nwe could find out was that the little one\nhad the best of it. The Provost Guard\narrived In due time, coming in 011 the,\ndouble quick. The crowd gave way,\nthe 'bus and wagon drove ofT, Tnit no\nbeligerents could be found. Nobody\nsaw any fight, and was hurt..\nIn fact, it is doubtful about there being\na fight. The crowd and the Provost\nGuard retired in good order.\nBoard op Supervisors..The Board\nof Supervisors met yesterday at the\nCourt House. The license question was\nagain brought before the Board by the\npresentation of a number of applica¬\ntions for the same, but after a lengthy:\nand animated discussion they Mere all\nrejected, except a license to Mrs. Law-1\nson to keep a house of private enter-\ntainment. The Clerk of the Board was\ndirected to make out a supplemental\nreport, showing the county liabilities\nand the various items composing the\nsame. The Overseers of the Poor were\nauthorized to bind out children depend¬\ning on the county for support. The\ncommission of the Sheriff for collecting\nthe county levy was fixed at five per\ncent.
084bf1de0be4a0594d4ebddb5dd7c086 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.6972602422627 43.82915 -115.834394 Elliott,” said the leader, “there are\nseven of us. Four think you ought to\ndie, three do not. We have decided to\ntake your valuables and your horse back\nto Hank's widow and leave you here,\njust as you are, alive. There aint much\nprospect of your getting away, but we\nwont murder you and we wont set yon\nfree. You swore to God you were inno­\ncent. Let yonr God see to it you are\nfreed or have mercy on your soul. Come\non, hoys, our job is finished.”\nWith that he rode away, the others\nfollowing him, and none of them looked\nback as they returned over the way they\nhad come. Off in the distance the men\nnoticed the mare throw np her head and\nlisten a moment and then whinny. One\nof them setentiously remarked, “She\nmust have that whistle, boys, but\nshell never hear it again on earth. ”\nIve got my boots on to die in, any­\nway,” said the man on the barrel, and\nhe smiled grimly as he thought of the\nbravado of his boyish remark years be­\nfore, that he “didnt want any lingering\nsickness and death in his.” There wasn't\na cowardly bone in his body. He really\nfelt relieved when the men had gone, for\nhe at least had his thoughts to himself\nas long as he lived. There was no one to\njeer, no curious spectators around to\nworry him and he calmly awaited the\nend. He could feel the barrel oscillate\nbeneath his feet, knew that there was\nbut a few inches slack in the rope, und\nthat a false movement and a slight\nchange in equilibrium meant strangula­\ntion and death.
1ba9f3121faf5f56f326c28432b75a11 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.132876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, February 17..1The Sun* "het\ndry Civil Appropriation bill has been exce\nAnally adopted by the committee and sent d 1*\nto the printer. Among its items are |31,- jjj*\n500 to provide for participation by the that1\nUnited States in the International Mone- were\ntary Conference; (or building*, Chicago next\n$20,000; Cincinnati, $350,000; Hsrrinburg, rate*\n$7,(XX); Kansas City, $75,IKK); Little Hock, per\n$18,000; Memphis. $100 (XX); Nashville, passe\n$15,000; Topeka, $IK),000; Toledo, $100,000; nays\nfor support of tho National Holdiers Home, Th\n(130,000. The bill provides for the ap- the ii\npointment nf Geo. 11 . McUlellan an one uf that\nthe managers ot the Home, to fill the uu- sllirn\nexpired term of General John Lane, of in th\nIndiana, tieueased. Exponce# of the coast tho n\nand goede'ic survey, $522,000; Geological An\nsurvey, $250,000; completing t^e tenth notea\ncensus $600,000; expenses 0. 8 . Courts, that\nsalaries, fees, support of U. 8 . prisoners, one\nifcc., $2,375,000; public printing, $1,700,000; were\nfor light Iioii*h on Stamlard Kock, Lake\niTiiuuiKHii, ti<i urn', nuinrius unci expenses\nincident to light house establishments, 1 'll\n$181),000; to be expended under the direc- trioui\nlion of Ihe Cominisiioner on Fish aud C0D1p\nFisheries, $121,000; construction of a\nsteamer f ir the pioaecutiou of tbe work of l"\ninvestigation of Commission on Fisheries, Wea\\\n$10.'!,(MX); Honk Inland arsenal, $221,000; with\neuro and repairs of the Kxecutive Mansion, ener,,\nand li^htin^ the same, $!2./)(H); continuing\nthu construction of the new building for b'acfc(\nthe War, Navy and State departments, Vote\n$450,000; Signal Service, $375,000; National emie\ncemeteries, $100,000; military telegraph nepU\nlines, $75,000; I'urcliaue of private papers\nfrom Confederate Generals, Brag* and (jrBej\n1'olk, relating to the late war, $70,000; ex-
3d1b14a705c705f8fdc73dc19e35dab9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.3109588723999 41.681744 -72.788147 Joseph Blair, 16 . of 49 Pleasant\nstreet, bought an automobile for $20\nrecently and had it registered in the\nname of a man who boards with his\nfamily. About 10 o'clock last night\nhe was driving west on Austin street\nwhen Supernumerary Officer Dewey\nHultcn observed that one light on\nthe ear was not burning. When he\ncalled to Blair to stop, the car con-\ntinued for about 30 feet and the\nofficer suspected that the brakes\nwere not in proper condition, so he\ntried them and found neither foot\nnor emergency brakes working.\nBlair was unable to produce his\noperator's license and was arrested\non charges of driving without hav-\ning it in his possession, and operat-\ning a car with defective brakes. He\nadmitted having left his license at\nhome when ho changed his clotnes,\nbut claimed the brakes were in good\ncondition far as he knew. Judge\nSaxe lined him $5 and costs on the\ndefective brakes charge and suspend-\ned judgment on the other charge\nwhen Blair produced his license.\nThe question of financial responsi-\nbility arose during the trial and\nProsecuting At'.orncy Woods told the\ncourt the boarder referred to by\nBlair will be arrested on Blair's ad-\nmission that the car was not in-\nsured. Blair claimed the boarder\nintended to trade the car for another\none, and for that reason did not in-\nsure it, but Prosecuting Attorney\nWoods pointed out that the law re-\nquires drivers between the ages of\n16 and IS to furnish proof of finan-\ncial responsibility, and as the board-\ner has tlte car registered in his name\nhe is tho actual owner and as such\nmust not permit a driver between\nthe ages mentioned to drive unless\nproof
18589b6f34b595441a08fc454f23498e THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1900.2808218860985 32.612638 -90.036751 nized if they could look down on the\nfashionable lingerie of the day. These\nprecepts have assumed higher stand-\nards of elegance and a growing tenden-\ncy toward extravagance which seems\nto have no limit. That the undergar-\nments are beautiful to look upon and\nan irresistible temptation goes with-\nout saying, for all women who are\ntruly feminine by inclination find this\ndepartment most fascinating at all\ntimes and never more so than it is\nnow. Fine laces, embroideries, dainty\nheadings, linen lawns, wash silk and\nnainsook as fine and sheer as a daisy\nhandkerchief, illustrate the elegance\nin materials employed, which is only a\nbeginning when you appreciate the\nfine handiwork which adorns them.\nThe special point in the new lingerie is\nthe fit, which has to be pretty nearly\nperfect when there is so little room\nfor superfluous material underneath\nthe gowns. Skirts both long and short\nare cut to fit the hips quite smoothly,\nwith a few stitched plaits directly in\nthe buck. The back seam is gored,\nwhich helps to give the desired flare.\n wide flounce, sometimes cut partially\ncircular and sometimes straight and\ngathered, forms the lower half. This\nis trimmed in every conceivable fash-\nion that embroidery and lace can as\nsume. Two lace trimmed flounces, five\ninches wide, falling one over the other,\ntrim the lower edge of one skirt, and\nthe deep flounce over these is also fin\nished with a lace trimmed ruffle and\nbow knot of lace insertion set in above.\nThelow necked nightgowns with elbow\nsleeves are dreams of daintiness when\ntrimmed with a lace edged ruffle around\nthe hem. Something new for wear in\nwarm weather is the chemise night-\ngown. It is exactly like a chemise at\nthe neck, with a simple short sleeve,\nand will certainly look very attractive\nnext July. The new corset covers, with\na belted bodice, have a circular frill\nwhich fits the hips smoothly and there\nis another little novelty made of fine\nnainsook embroidered all over in small\neyelet holes a little distance apart like\npolka dots. Kibbons tie the shoulders\ntogether, so it is easily adjusted for a\nlow-c-
0a0af3833b3b5700b71dfe103e862d4f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.5301369545916 44.939157 -123.033121 New York, July 13. A disppatch\nto tho Herald, from Washlngton,says:\nHawaii has offered to refer to arbi-\ntration the Immigration question\npending between herself and Japan,\nbut the Toklo government has so far\nignored the proposition. Telegraphic\nInformation to tills effect lias becu re-\nceived at the state department, and it\nis therefore possiblo to deny tho re-\nport published that Japan had agreed\nto arbitrate the vexed question sho is\ndiscussing with tho Hawaiian govern-\nment. The proposition was made In\nthe report sent to the Hawaiian min-\nister for foreign affairs. Mr. Cooper,\nIn answer to Mr. Shlniumura's last\nletter reiterating the demand of his\ngovernment that Hawaii recognize\nthe principle of monetary liability as\na motive of her action in excluding\nthe Japanese Immigrants.\nThe Ilawallans do not expect that\nJapan would accept arbitration. In\nfact, before Minister Slmumura began\ncorrespondence with Mr. Cooper in re-\nlation to matter, he declared that\nhis government would never consent to\narbitration. At that time neither ho\nnor his government had any Idea that\nthe strong arm of the United States\nwas seen to be thrown around Hawull,\nand it was becauso of this ignorance,\nstate department officials say, that\nJapan has assumed such a command.\nIng tone in her ucgotations with the\nlittle republic.\nIt is said' that Mr. Shlmumura in\nhis last correspondence with tho Ha-\nwaiian government, demands further\nexplanation In regard to certain de-\ntails connected with the Immigration\ncontroversy, Hi which ho holds that\nHawaiian authorities havo committed\nan official offense against his govern-\nment. The minister refused to ad-\nmit the prlnclplo of momentary lia\nbility, and Insists that tho Japanese\ngovernment docs not want to get at\nthe real merits ot tho controversy,\notherwise it would acquiesce in the\nproposition to refer the matter to\narbitration.
71bfc603339b99099b2ea17f4282c034 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1920.217213083131 41.875555 -87.624421 Tlio Mutual Underwriter u widely\nlead Insurance paper pays a grout\ntribute to an honored Chicago man In\na loading article It pays that the\ndevelopment of tho Insuranco system\nluta shown that miccess usually fol-\nlows tho man who c.nn Institute orig-\ninal and practical Ideas and who haB\ntho benefit ot a wldo experience its\nn foundation upon which to build. Tho\nrecord of T. V. Harry, Secretary and\nManager of tho Globe Mutual Life, of\nChicago, shows that his Held experi-\nence In Kuropo and America taught\nhim tho needs of tho insuring public\nund tho mothods which would .result\nIn successful operation. Tho practical\nresults can bo seen best when tho\nrecord ot tho year 1010 Is reviewed.\nTho gains aro as follows: gain In In\ncome, 30 per cent.; gain In assets, 80\nper cent.; guln In Insuranco In foico,\n27 per cent. In tho last live years\ntho gain In Income was L'70 per cent.:\ngain In nssots, HG0 per conLJ uuln In\nInstil unco In force, 210 per cent.\nMr. Hurry was the organizer and\nhas directed Its operations from its\norganization In 1905. Its buslnoso has\nbeen built almost without capital and\nwith tho most active competition fiom\ntho largo industrial companies.\nMr. Harry who received splendid\nuniversity education in It eland, his\nnative country, hns boon untiring In\nImproving his education and unlllto\npractically all mon ho has not allowed\nhimself to remain at u standstill when\nho complotod his school courses.\nSinco becoming an American citizen ho\nhas taken courses In freo bund draw-\ning in night schools and in poisonul\nstudy ho has been an untiring reader\nand student. Later ho entered as a\nfreshman at tho Illinois Collego of\nLaw and graduated with thodegrooof\nL.L.H. Ho hits taken special cottrsos\nIn astronomy, sociology, Greek trag-\nedy, Fronch und German, sclenco of\nsalesmanship and advertising. At tho\npreBont time bo Is prcpnrlng to entor\ntho Department of Finance of Com-\nmerce at the Northwestern Univer-\nsity, of Chicago, During his llfo ho\nhas had tho privilege of oxtonslvo\ntraveling both In Amorica and In Eu-\nrope and has nvnllod hhftelf of op-\nportunities of hearing tho groat mu-\nsicians, lecturers and actors. His In-\nsuranco library and reference books\naro nmong tho most comploto. Ho finds\ntho tlmo to edit tho "Olobo Weekly\nNews," an agency publication dovotod\nto tho operations of his company.\nThose aro evidences that Mr. Barry Is\noxtromely versatile and untiring in\nhis efforts to keop abreast of tho\ntimes.
30a6d35bf79324142b24c50f6747eb85 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1872.3592895858633 39.623709 -77.41082 According to the New Orleans R'i- 1\n\\publican, the veritable remains of\nHernando de Soto, the discoverer of\nMississippi, and most intrepid and he-\nroic of all the Spanish explorers, now\n, lie in state in the Mayors parlor in\nthe City Hall at New Orleans, encased\nin the leaden wrapping to which they\nwere lowered into the Mississippi riv-j\ner three hundred and forty years ago.\nThe identify of the remains seemed to\nhe proven by the inscription, in Span\ni.-d i, rudely but plainly wrought upon\na broad copper band, which was found\n(irmly welded around the leaden cot\noring in which the body is enclosed.\nA Captain Blank I suspicious name;,\nhas for some time had a mania for dig\nping up sunken vessels from the;\ndepths of the Mississippi and the!\nhavous in which that river forruerh\nflowed. In the course of this pursuit,\ntin! aged captain, now in the Tilth,\nyear, has dug up several vessels laden\nwith the finest Bonlefliix wines chain\nptignes. cordials, <Ve,, which may h-ivi\nlaid there fifty years, and mav have\ntried that ruse to get into Now Orlean-S\nwit tout paying duties. However Cap\ntain Hi.ink has thrived in his under\ntakings, and acquired a sort of topo\ngraphicil skill in telling by the ir.\nof file mtid whether.! vessel from Hm\ntie,an .V lies buried twentv-livn fee( un\nder the snrf.iee or not. In one ot hr\nttuirs of observation he came upon .\nmud island, will' ll his. peeliiiar , -k lb\ndetected is liaMIig been formed bv\n.sunken vessel, probably from Dor ,\ndeans.
44ce02eec1a6c9c3ea5a9b7cf6c70b8e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9986301052766 39.513775 -121.556359 the sevetiloemh day of July, A . I>. eighteen hundred\nand IHty-six, or which he fins acquired or possessed\nat any linm since, he sold by Win. It. Thornburgh.\nSheriff of Yuba count*, and for such purpose lie be\nand is hereby appointed a Master and • oiniiii--ii.ni r\nIn Chancery, at million, to the highe-t bidder, for\ncash. In like manner :in*i upon like notice and adver-\ntisement as sab • of real properly under execution\nlire required by law to he made, in both Vuha and\nUnite counties ; nn t that the parties In this action,\nand all jier-oi s claiming under them, or any or eillu r\nol them, alierlhe tiling ol the notice ol the pendency\nof this act ion in the e(lice ol the 1tec ird rol Yuba and\nUntie Comities, he for* ver barred and fureeloseil, * l\nall right, tit is*, sari equity *>t rrsiemtdion in Ihe said\npiMiiiv **s above described m sold, and * very part\nthereof, after six mouths irom the fi.no of -ale\nAnd it is further idjndged.decreed and ordered,\nthat after the expiration of six months from the lime\nof such saie of the pr*>pe ly so sold, w Hereof'no re-\ndemption shall have been mad-, | i rsuanl It* law,\nthe said Master mill Commissioner mi hancery ex* -\ncti'e to the party or parties entitled thereto, a /<••■ I of\ni onveyiince of th** prom ises so sold an*i tieredeemed.\nand that Up Hi tlie* production *d' such />*■«/. such\nparty or parties lie let into possession of the premia* »\nthereby cuivi vod.\nXolice is her* by giv **n, that on\nSntnnluy, tlir I'll li tiny of ilantinry, IV>.\nbetween the hours of * n and twelve in the forenoon\nof Unit day in I rout <>l i lie t toiirl Moose, In the city of\nMary sville. I w ill sell ai public miction, to the highest\nbidder, for cash, the above described premises, and\nshall apply the proceeds arising from such sale as by\nsaid judgment and decree directed.
08db1855e6647abce2586e949f6ff02b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.0315068176053 39.745947 -75.546589 Charles aud Thomas S Cornell, father\naud son. got into an argument at Fourth\nand French streets yesterday afternoon\nand proceeded to settle it with horse-\nwhipB. Sergeant Evans arrested both.\nWhen arraigned It was shown that the\nquarrel was ou family matters aud Judge\nBill dismissed both, on payment of costs,\nat the same time cautioning them to\nsettle such difficulties at home hereafter.\nThomas W. Lynch, an 11-years old\nboy, whore father works in Elkton, has\nlong been a souroe of trouble to the\nauthorities He haa uo home nor mother,\naud has subsisted on charity bestowed by\ntue good people of Hrowntowu. He has\nbeen put with families by Agent Frank\nStoat, bat has Invariably run away. A\nfew nights ago a railroad man discovered\nhim lying between the tracks of the P..W.\n& B R R fast asleep, and palled him out\nof danger in time to save him from the\nexpress. On the suggestion of Agent\nStout he was committed to the Ferrie\nIndustrial School, with the advice to be\ngood aud he would have a good home.\nEdward Wardeii, white,\nBertha Pryor, colored, recently, was\narraigned. His counsel, William T\nLyman, is absent from the city and will\nnot be back until January 23\nEngland stated that ths Pryor girl was\nnuable to appear and asked that con­\ntinuance be granted until Monday\nCounsellor John D Davis, who has charge\nof the case during Mr Lynama absence,\nasked that the case be put over until\n• Tuesday morning, but Iudge> Ball said\nthat the Court of Errors and Appeals\nmet l> Dover on that day and be waa\nobliged to be present. The case was than\nfixed for Monday morning\nAlgie Stanley, an old and respectable\ncolored man, employed by Mrs Dauby,\nNo 712 West street, was cleaning off the\npavement yesterday afternoon when\nThomas Nicholson, white, passed by.\nStanleys attention was attracted by a\ncrowd of boys who were following\nNicholson and calling him to drop a\nbrick hs had in his hand,\npassad to Seventh and West streets, and\nin a few minutes came back to where\nStanley was still at work He com\nmanded Stanley to shut off the water from\nthe pave wash, and on his refusing to do\nso, cursed him,threatened to kill him and\nthen strack him In the face Mrs Danby,\nwhose attention had been attracted\nby the noise, telephoned to headquarters\nand officer John Ward proceeded to the\nscene. Nicholson saw him and ran, bnt\nWard canght him The officer learned\nafterwards that Nicholson, had, prior to\nhis attack on Stanley, thrown a brick\nthrough ths window of Townslev's\nsaloon.
b1a14be0ae0850423b2b187fce8f93ca SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1852.3237704601802 35.780398 -78.639099 On Friday we accompanied the G. W. P.\nto his appointment at Hookerton, ia Greene\ncounty, where' we found a very large number\ncongregated to hear the Addresses. The Sons\nmet in their Hall, and after forming Process-\nion, proceeded to the Union Room ofthe Daugh-\nters of Temperance, who were duly received\nand escorted to the Church. After services by\nthe Chaplain, Rev. II. II. Gibbons, we were\nintroduced to the large audience, whose atten-\ntion we endeavored to engage in a speech of\nnear two hours. We were followed by Dr.\nJohn F. Tompkins, an enthusiastic Son of\nBath Division, in Beaufort County, in a speech\nof considerable force and argument; and he\nwas succeeded by Bro. Odom, in a few remarks\nconcluding by calling for volunteers to engage\nia great moral crusade. Some names\nwere obtained both for lhe Sons and Daugh:\nters. The members of the Division, who are\nan enthusiastic band of brothers, seemed much\npleased with the exercises ; while the Daugh-\nters smiled their gratitude to their vUitTng\nbrethren for their aid in advancing the cause in\nthe sphere of their operations. We feel suro\nthe cause will never suffer in their hands.\nWe spent the night most pleasantly with our\nold friend and Brother, Col. Alfred Mote,\nof Pitt, and on Saturday morning proceeded to\nH alkland. 1 he weather was unpropitious, rain-\ning a part of the day quite copiously, yet, not-\nwithstanding, we found an immense concourso\nof ladies and gentlemen present, all eager , to'\nparticipate in the interesting exercises of the\noccasion. The-
2fc812e38bd08ff6aae6c36c12ad8cac WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.2616438039067 40.827279 -83.281309 injured as she had been, I could not bring\nmyself to believe that, loving me as she\nhad once loved me, and I fondly hoped\nstill did, she would really leave me ; but\nhaving once made public her intention, I\nfeared lest she might not shrink. Would\nshe do so? Oh, how anxiously I awaited\nthat eventful night! and when at last it\ncame, I was dressed and in attendance at\nan unusually early hour. As I paced the\nfloor anxiously, I hoped, I prayed that her\nheart would conquer, that love would\nsubdue pride ; but how could I how\ndared I hope it! What indignities had\nshe not borne from me ! Ought I not to\nhumble myself, and ask her to forgive me ?\nHad she came in that moment I would\nhave done so, but she came not. I won-\ndered how she wenld dress. Perhaps some\ncarelessness her apparel would betray\nthat her mind was too much\nto think of it. I glanced at the clock ; it\nwas time that she should be there. Just\nthen she entered, and as pale and calm as\nusual. I looked at her dress ; it was of\ndark velvet, trimmed with rich lace ; she\nwore just such a dress in happier days be-\ncause I admired it, and thought it became\nher style of beauty. But now what was\nher object ? Did she desire to please me\nstill, or was it habit? I glanced at her;\non her neck she wore a suit of diamonds,\nwhich I had given her shortly after our\nmarriage. She had rarely worn them at\nfirst, because she thought them unsuitable\nornaments for one so young; but now,\nwhen she looked so queenly, and moved so\ngracefully, they gave her a grandeur which\nstartled me.
0e08f7f4a470764e153946902714c64c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.1493150367833 40.063962 -80.720915 Another terrible story of the murder\nof a colored postmaster by a mob in the\nsouth comes from Lake City, South Car¬\nolina. In this Instance '^ho crowd of\nmurderers were not satisfied with\nshooting to death a colored man who\nhad the audacity to accept a petty fed¬\neral office from the hands of the admin¬\nistration at Washington, but thought it\nnecessary to burn bLs property, and\nwhile the family of the audacious col¬\nored man were yet imprisoned in the\n. burning building, opened fire upon\nthem, killing a babe in its mother's\narms, and wounding the po3tmoster's\nwife, his two daughters and one son.\nThe dispatch cOironlcllng this cruel deed,\nalthough it relates that the attacking\nparty was composed of "several hundred\nmen," presumably from "among the best\nfamilies," gravely asserts "there Is\nno clue to the composition of the mob."\nThis is clearly a case of the color of the\nvictims being their only offense. There\nwas not even t'he excuse of their being\nguilty of a crime against the law, least\nof all the one crime for which, In some\n- portions of the country, it is nut re¬\ngarded as neccssary to give the accused\nperson a trial by a Jury, as the law\ncommands. The head of tho family had\naccepted a post-office from President\nMclvinley, and, being a colored man. it\nwas decreed that not only should he be\ncowardly slain, but that his entire fam¬\nily should suffer death with him* if not\n. by bullets in tho hands of the chivalrous\nnob, then in the* (lames that were de¬\nstroying their home.
2b6fe3ebef51128712f2be8268e7fbc8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.580601061273 41.681744 -72.788147 which have leaves no larger than\nholly leaves but which are full of\nsweet acorns which are relished\nequally by Mexicans, prairie dogs and\nbirds, principally sparrows the male\nof which is bright red on his head and\nbreast. There are also wild doves\nand mocking birds which are very\ntame and come and sit within a dozen\nfeet of me as I write. Less than ten\nfeet away is tho home of a little\nbrown prairie dog. When I first\ncame out this morning he was sit-\nting outside eating acorns, but he is\ninside now and has closed his hole\nbehind him with dirt so that you can\nhardly see where it is.\nTho climate at Nogales is no worse\nthan New Britain on a hot day and\nat night it is cool. There is always\na Here it is better than that.\nWe are over four thousand feet high.\nThis morning it was as hot as the\naverage day and was 88 degrees at\n10:30 o'clock but with the breeze you\ndo not mind the heat but little.\nThis is the rainy season which\nmeans that almost every day there\nis a very hard thunder shower and\nlots of water comes down. This noon\nwe noticed some hail with the water.\nYesterday afternoon my men set\nthe pole which is to bo this end of\nthe telephone line and they have\nerected the instrument in the tent of\nthe First Sergeant which is the clerical\noffice of the troop. Four of the\ntrucks returned yesterday afternoon\nto Nogales; I kept the other two here\nfor use in erecting the line and tak\ning back my men.
beb8a2a072aeaeede0e823524a31f748 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.519178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 the issue involved. They are interest-\ned in the issue of whether or not a\nbody of men can hand down any\nsuch a decision as this and get away\nwith it. I don't care if the Connec-\nticut company carries us to Hartford\nfor nothing, as long as a decision like\nthe ones just rendered stands legal. I\nam only interested In whether a body\nof men can tell Perrett and Glemey\nor anyone else, 'You must take your\ntrucks off the street.'\n"I have no doubt Perrett and Gle-\nmey will be arrested if. they run\ntheir busses," continued Mr. Rogers.\n"The Connecticut company, has the\nbest legal minds available and is pay-\ning them fabulous salaries. They will\ncomb the actions of this .meeting\nwith a fine comb in an effort\nto find legal flaws in it. But we are\nready to fight. If Perrett and Glemey\ncannot find a driver to operate one\nof their busses on the 15th I'll run\none of them myself."\n"Let's not bother with the smaller\ncourts,'' continued the speaker. We\nalways get a raw deal in East Hart-\nford anyway. Lets ehow the Con-\nnecticut company we have as much\nmoney to fight as they have. Let's\ncarry this fight to the superior court\nand if the decision is adverse, let's\ngo to the supreme court. No matter\nwhat they do, let's fight them in the\nhigher courts. Let's get out injunc-\ntions if necessary."\n"The public utilities commission\nisn't feeling any too good over this,"\nsaid Mr. Rogers.
4d2241f3666271f6fb0d1ca69c71d6e0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.1356164066465 40.063962 -80.720915 arrests liavo been' made in connects\nwltlrthis burglary, and It Is intimate\nthat a "spccial" watchman, an outside re\ntroi, is sus|iectcd of having participated i\nit. The InatlUitlotl that Is iiyif watched\nmore poorly |>rotecte<l than one that!\nwholly witliout a private watch, for in tli\nlatter case the public wateii naturally len\nsome attention: This NewOrlenns rol\nbury demonstrates two or threo'impoutat\nfacts. First, nngnrdAl premise* Invite tli\nattention of burglar*! ^ccfl^'d^that 8atu\nday nlgiit and Sunday,an generally chose\nfor but^huioui opuutioi^and.tlurd, Iht\nburglar proof sola against,tlie present in\nproved madiinbry'af' burglars intsrpoc\nlittle olistaclo to bnrglariou^'nSsanlts. I\nthe case of tills Vov (Means' bank II\nstrong vauii.ium;liijiijicq»<! jww wwu i<\ngardcd iih bumlnr-proot Uut.UiQ. rovuli\nUoiib iff llonfloy morning established til\nfuel flint suircelv any pMUo bomblni\ntion ofilngenuftyaiul strength is pnx\nugnlust till! skllllol burglur. One\n!u, the most approved an\nthe finest tools nrf.'.' brougbt' to ben\nujHin the vaults and safap, "JT>o Jla\nyune describes these as |to ordinary tools\nLevers, bits,Jimmies, crowbars. Aria ma\nehlnery In strength anil, quality alinoi\nsiiftlcient to wrench a hnuso from Its four\nilutious. Tbe strong iron doors-nwrougl\nIron as they were.and rlvoted by stron\nsteel bolts, jvnr wrencl/cdj from Hid\nplaces like pi|icr. The walls of the vault\nwere pierced, arid tli$ (te>ra that guard?\ntlm inner «ilb|< Iqro uvVaj- by ntachlncr\nso powcrtUI as to pxdte surprise anil ai\ntonUhmuntr Thcar toolntarpass anj\nthing pf'tly>_l$1ii(l tverb^fomfipen lniNei\n(Wbnns.umi'^limtnioiWTitilesiiiirrlsin)\nthough not uncommon, they were lei\nwhere mod. As :it. is not iniprolmbli\nhowever, Uutt there are more as eflltlpii\nIn the market, we.venture to TOuM (ll\nvarious Iiujtaqiniwirtoo turns orraone\nor valuable* of the taut, and Inform titer\nthat a look of wntohtutn is juor oootomj
04c4acbfcfbcb840851580ab14f00560 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1246575025368 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their fdticacy established by well tested expe-\nrience in tire bands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian. whose preparatory study fits him for all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country is Hooded with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, hut\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be par\nT1CULA$ in selecting ins physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible tact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitution*\nby mnl treatment from Inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nby the best sypbilograiihers, that the study amt man-\nagement oftbese complaints should <engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, hnving neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comnnly one system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should lie used by tbesyph-\nilitic patient, in cousulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nami, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters. they induce the unwary to enter their l'eter\nFunk “Institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citirens.\nin view of the above facts, Dr. J.C YOUNG\nwould say that lie is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole lime to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 761 Clay ftreet. uppesfte tire I'la/.a.\nHoursfrom 9a.m., to Sf. x.
3e36eff118b5e2e59bf2105c733d65ff SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.8811475093605 37.53119 -84.661888 Tbe turnpikes bad been voted free\nand the people were demanding that\nthe gates ba thrown open but the own\nera were unwilling to do so unless they\nwere paid for their pikes and there was\nno way under the circumstances to pay\nthem There was great trouble over\nthis very question In many counties\nand we were about to have It here\nAt the next term of the flical court\nafter the November election represen ¬\ntatives of two bond houses appeared\nbefore the fiscal court and agreed to\ntake the bonds provided they were to\nrun to years and bear 5 per cent not ¬\nwithstanding the Irregularity of the\nelection but reserved tbe right to have\ntheir attorney pass on them The court\nwas la a hole and accepted tbe proposi-\ntion and tbe bonds were knocked off to\none these houses at a premium they\nhaving filed sealed bids After consid ¬\nerable length of time the bond firm de ¬\nclined to take these bonds and tbe\ncourt was left In the fix It waa In at the\nstart At this juncture of alTlre tbe\nofficers of tbe Danville and Crab Orch ¬\nard pike agreed If tbe bonds were is ¬\nsued directly to them they would throw\nopen their gate and hold the bonds\nuntil a legal election could be held I\nOther turnpike companies did the same\nthing but tbe wealthiest roads In the\noonntv declined to accept tbe bonds on\nthe advice of their attorneys among\nthem tbe Danville and Hustonvllle road\nwhich I represented myself livery\nbody know at tbe time that the bonds\nwarp worthless and that It was just a\nmakeshift to save tbe county from
0fe29f1814179b5ac19bd1eba1b12b90 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6898906787594 39.513775 -121.556359 being destroyed by fire. Our late seems to\nbe scaled. It seems an inevitable fact that\nour fair little city must be the scene of an\nawful conflagration. It appears that there\narc those who will not take warning from\nthe danger that threatens a-o It appears\nthat the burning of other towns and cities\nin California, within the last three months,\nstrikes no terror to the citizens of Druville,\nmany of whom have every dollar theyloos-\nsess in the world invested hero, and which\nis liable, at any moment to bo swept away,\nthrough the least carelessness of some loaf-\ning drunken, trilling vagabond, w ho may be\nentrusted to sweep out and light tip s one\nhell-hole ol a grog-simp, when perhaps he\nknows no more of the dangerous and explo\nsivc qualities of burning fluid#, such as ram-\nplicuc spirit gas. than one of these most\nignorant diggers. We hear almost, every\nday of home house being fired by the most\ngross, culpable and wicked carelessness\nOur private opinion is that one who would\nset a house on tire through such neglect as\nwould endanger the property and the lives\nof others, ought to be dealt with just as an\nincendiary who applies the torch at mid-\nnight. Such a one should be taken and\nthrown in the midst of the flames, that be\nmight realize how severe the punishment\nwas to others, who might be asleep unsus-\npecting, ami of course, less guilty.\nWe again appeal to our citizens to be on\ntheir guard; to be watchful as they value\ntheir property—their lives—their all—to\nkeep a constant watch, at least until wo\nhave some means provided ot protection\nfrom fire.
29a4c30ac82835b8b95aeb2c84768142 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.97397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 avenue, and also all garments turned\nover to her from the Red Cross War Re­\nlief Committee. The Red Cross sends\nonly assistance and medical aid to the\nsick and wounded soldiers, but is per­\nmitted to receive money and supplies\nfor any country and see that the money\nand supplies are sent to the designated\ncountry by an authorized agent,\ncase anyone should have been overlook­\ned she is taking this opportunity to\nthank again every donor, as well as the\nfriends who, not being able to knit, have\nsent her contributions in money for the\npurchase of wool and flannel.\nThe following list, being the contents\nof one of the many boxes which Mrs.\nSpeakman sent to gladden the hears of\nall those who are working for the relief\nof suffering humanity, contained the\nfollowing articles:\n113 \n35 helmets\n14 flannel bands\n14 knitted bands\n7 woven bands\n26 pairs of socks\n38 pairs of wristlets\n22 shirts\n5 pairs of drawers\n10 handkerchiefs\n1 pair of mittens\n4 pounds of absorbent cotton\nMrs. John F. Neary. chairman of\nthe cutllng-out garment committee,\nis having prepared a large number of\nhospital garments to give out to vol­\nunteers willing to finish them. These\ngarments will be ready for diatrlbu-\nI tion as soon as the rush of the holi­\nday season Is over. The committee\non hospital supplies, Mrs. H. B .\nThompson, chairman. Is busy three\nmornings a week making surgical\npads, rolling bandages, etc. The do­\nnations come in dally from the cir­\ncles and groups of workers engaged\nj in the making of these hospital sup­\nplies.
0df7cefa850c2334e37e78ccccf08be0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.050684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 From the start to the finish It was,\ncn the part of the field, an y Indy to beat\nSaulsbury. At the outset the votes were\nwidely scattered, but they gradually\ncame together and finally the word was\npassed out of the door of the Hall of\nRepresentatives and a shout went up:\n"It's Kenney! It's Kenney! Hurrah!"\nand off the boys dashed to spread theit\ngeed news and to almost tear out the\nfortunate young mans office in their\nefforts to grasp his hand.\nSaulsbury's strength started out at\nsix on the first ; increased to seven on\nthe second, and held at that until the\nsixth ballot, when It went up to eight.\nOn the eighth it dropped to seven\nagain, but went up to eight on the\ntenth. Then it dropped to seven on the\nnext three ballots; went up to eight on\nthe fourteenth; fell to seven on the fif­\nteenth; went up to eight and held at\nthat until the eighteenth, when. It went\nto nine and remained bo until the\ntwenty-fourth, when it fell to eight\nagain, and remained at that figure\nwhen the curtain went down.\nKenney started at three on the first\nballot, went up to four on the third;\ndrifted along at four five until the\nnineteenth, when it went up to six;\nnext ballot to seven; then to eight for\ntin©» ballots, and on the twenty-fourth\nto ten. Next I «»Hot he got thirteen.\nEx-Chancellor Janies L. Wolcott did\nnot develop the strength expect«!. Hia\nopponents used his lukewarmness in\nthe last campaign against him and also\nhis connection with the Pennsylvania\nrailroad, and these pleas had their ef­\nfect. Early in the evening it was ru­\nmore that a deal hail been consummated\nwhereby the Wolcott men were to vote\nfor John N. Carswell for state treasurer\nand the Saulsbury men to vote for Wol­\ncott in return for the favor. While the\nstory did not sound altogether plausi­\nble, it was accepted in certain quarters\nand buoyed up the Wolcott heart. But\nthe rumored deal did not materialize,\nand Mr. Wolcott never got more than\nsix vote«. His strength cn the start wae\nfive. It see-sawed up and down until\nthe tenth ballot, when it reached six\naind stood at that until the sixteenth.\nIt dropped to five, and In the eighteenth\nit went to four; then reached low-water\nmark nt three; raised one on the twen­\ntyi-thiçl and twenty-fourth; then fell\nto three bn the last.\nEx-Congressman E. I,.
293b57794f11f61b1fbf7d0c6098a3a6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.891780790208 58.275556 -134.3925 On November 12th the cltlzohK\nof Whltehorao Invited 40 of the\nlending lights of Skagway over to\nhelp celebrate tho end of the wur\niiH guests of tho Canadian city. Tho\nbimy merchants of Skngway were\nreluctant about going at flrat until\nsome one suggested that they would\nbe doliiK great missionary work for\nthe cauae of prohibition If they\njoined In the colebratlou. and by\nthulr precept and example help to\nshow the folka of the Yukon the\nbeaut les of prohibition.\nSkagway. without a doubt, la the\nconfer of the dry movement In Alaa-\nka. and they have u dry squad that\nla drilled In all propaganda work\nthat was mustered out and sent over\nto represent their city.\nThe motto for the day waa "Down\nWith Rum i Hudson Hay); alao\nScotch (House of Ixirda)" and It la\nMild that the dry aquad obeyed the\nordera of the day almoat to a man.\n'Hiere la no doubt but that a great\ngood wna accompllahed by tho trip\nfor bcaldca burning the kalaer In ef¬\nfigy In u pile of cordwood twenty\nfeet high, the dry aquad mndo the\ndemon rum hurd to catch In White-\nhorne; In fact, ovory time he \ndiscovered he waa dragged from hla\nhiding place and killed, the aquad\nbeing armed with deadly corkacrewn\nfor thin purpone . thoae corkscrews\nbeing part of the outfit of every\ngood Alaskan since the territory has\ngone dry. So many timen wan the\ndemon slain while the aquad atopped\nIn Whltehorse that the zcaloua work¬\ners in the vlneyarda were exhausted\nfrom their efforts and many of them\nhud hardly stiength enough to drug\nthemselves from o' e lair to another.\nIt la said that If It had not been\nfor the many drlnka of clear cold\nwuter that were nerved after each\nterrific struggle with tho demon,\nmany of the workcra would have\nj fallen by the wavaidc.\nAs it was, everyone had a Joyrut\ntime and It Is thought that If tele¬\ngraphic orders are not sent out and\nexecuted In Rood time there will not\nhe timet rum or Scotch, either. In\nNVhltehorse for quite a spell.\nAfter Whltehome had been placed\nIn the dry column, tho citizens there\nwere so grateful that they arranged\na half an hour's stopover for the\nsijuad at Carcross on the way\nhome, and that little city was also\nplaced among the dry ones.
537fd5612cc8bd97837d79c9f335402c OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.6150684614408 41.020015 -92.411296 Mr Burnet at about 3 o'clock, a. w .,\nMonday morning, 10th inst., murder­\ned bis step son, Mr. Bister, at Cres-\nton, Iowa. Tbe particulars we get\nfrom Conductor Vannaman, who saw\ntho murdered mnn in five minutes af­\nter hit* doatli. Mr. Vnnnaman Bays\nihat the mother of the deceased had\nbeen separated from Bnrnct, hur hus­\nband, for some two years, and i* now\nliving at some place in Illinois he\nthinks. The son Bisler b^d been in\nthe habit of writing rind sending mon­\ney to his mother. This displeased the\nold man, and be forbid Bister sending\nmoney to her, or writing to her, and\nat one time made the threat that he\nwould murder Bister if he sent his\nmother any more money. In order to\nunderstand the sitnation, we should\nstate that Burnet and Bister were, at\ntbe time of tho murder, in partnership\nin tbe marble business, and had just\nerected a large building for their bus­\niness. Burnet had a room in the house\nin which Bister lived with his wife\nand family. On Sunday Burnet had\nrefused to eat anything, and it is sup­\nposed bad got bold of a letter tbat had\nrecently been written the mother to\nher son. At about a quarter before 3\no'clock Monday morning Burnet got\nup, and in tbe dark felt his way along\ninto the room where Bister and wife\nwere asleep, with a little babe about\nsix weeks old lying between them and\na little daughter sleeping near by, and\non reaching the bed, the old man de­\nliberately cut Bister's throat from ear\nto ear with a razor. Bister, as the\nstroke was made, rose, catching the\nold man, and struggled with bltn for a\nmoment, waking the little daughter,\nwho awakened the mother. The strng*\ngie, of course, wa9 short, as tbe de­\nceased's strength wasted in a moment,\nand he fell into the arms of his wife\nonly to literally bathe ber from bead\nto foot in his blood The old man es­\ncaped down a flight of stairs, leaving\nbehind a trail of blood. He went into\nthe country some two miles, and hid.\nSearch was made yesterday, and this\nmorning be was found, and taken to\nthe Alton jail. This is the third mur­\nder at Creston within two years, and\nall of them happened so near the same\nspot as not to be twenty yards distaot\nin location.
5eaed29d414881ba164893b2761d0515 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.9575342148655 40.063962 -80.720915 say, tho tract or parcel of land lyiug and bein\nin Oblocountr, Went Virginia, bounded and d«\nscribed as follows, viz: Beginning at a stake o\nthe bauk of the Ohio river, corner to land* a\nlotted to Anna Martha Wood*, and with her line\nn. 84,V deg. e. 66 99-100 poles; a. 19# dcg. v\n41 90-100 poles; s. 70 deg. e . 67 61*100 poles to a\noriginal line of the Reager tract, now a lino <\nRobert Marshall, and with said line a. 30 deg. v\n835100pol«a to a stake;thence n. 70 deg. v\n59 10-100 poles to a stake; n. 33# deg. e. 10 9-1C\npoles to a stake; n. 36 dog. o. 1680-100 poles to\nstake; n. 10# deg. e. 11 8-100 poles to a stake: i\n81 deg. w. 40 50-100polesto a stako on thebank <\ntho Ohio river; thence up said river and biudln\n 07 41-100 poles to the beginning, contair\ning fifty-eight acres (58 A.) more or less, an\nmarked No. 6 on a recorded plat of the larm of tt\nlate Andrew P. Woods; also, all that part of th\ncoal field reserved by Andrew P. Woods in hi\ndeed to Kobort Marshall, bearing dato tho lot\nday of Jannary, A. D., 1859, aud rccordcd in tb\nRecorder's office of Ohio county aforesaid, 1\nDeed Book 43, lolio 486, that underlies a surfac\nwhich is bounded as follows, viz: Beginning t\na point which is In Robert Marshall's line, an\nwhich is a. 30 deg. w. 75 poles from an origin)\ncorner of the &f0 acre tract known as tho Re*g<\ntract, and the 30 acre Browu tract, or corner\nRobert Marshall and Vvilliam Nichols. berct<\nforo mentioned; thence s. 30 dcg. w . 60 pole*\nthence s. 70 deg. e.
4634e646b15e673e04e1e110db375ab5 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1860.375683028486 37.561813 -75.84108 ered by tlio majority as inimical to\nbeauty; wo, however, are of tho miuori-ty- ,\nand rather admire them. They are\ntho result of tho intermingling of race\nof tho dark blood of the South with the\nfair Saxon. It is positivo that they in\ndicato exuberant hcaltli ana what is\nmoro beautiful than tho hue of health?\nAs the summer advances, freckles ap-\npear. If the skin is exposed to the sun,\nit is darkened liko a cherry or a peach\nthat is ripening. Tho effect of tho sun\nupon a delicate skin js very rapid, and\nit becomes sunburnt, which in innny in-\nstances produces inconvenience, attend-o- d\nwith slight pain. Of tho various\ncosmetics invented for preventing and\nremedying this evil, Cucumber Cream\nbears a just reputation. Tho following\nis tho method of preparing it: Cut tho\nCucumber very thin, and place it into\nas much almond oil as will cover it; let\nboth remain together twenty-fou- r\nhours; then strain away tho oil, aud re-\npeat tho operation a second timo with\nfresh Cucumber and the same oil; then\nstrain away tho oil and placo it in a jug,\nwhich put into boiling water, making it\nhot enough to melt wax. for every\npound of oil add ono ounce of sperma-\nceti and one ounoo of whito wax.\nWhilo tho spermaceti and wax are melt-\ning, cut up a Cucumber and place it.\ninto two folds of book muslin, and\nsqueeze out the juico with all tho force\nthat can bo employed. Ho the same\nwith half a lemon. Then tako tho oil\nwhen tho hard materials aro melted, and\nallow it to get nearly cold, when (finally)\nadd gradually, and with constant stir-\nring with a small whisk, the juices be-\nfore obtained. Put it into a jar in a\ncold place. In less than twenty-fou- r\nhours it will be set like an
0c6a3117aa13f60781ebd2e9f304bacc IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.8315068176053 43.82915 -115.834394 An ex-keeper of a penitentiary bring\nasked tbe other day to describe ease ot\nthe characteristics of tbe female prisoner»\nIn the wards, said that one of the things\nthat struck her most forcibly was the way\nIn which the personal vanity of women\nprisoners remained strong within moat of\nthem to the last, no matter what other\ntraits prison life crushed ouL When bustles\nwere fashionable many prisoners would\nsacrifice the warmth of their petticoats,\neven in midwinter, in order to rail them\nnp nDder their skirts to give them a fash­\nionable hump behind. No m m bnt the\nchaplain and tbe warden saw them, and\nt hen only occasio nally; and what ratlrieil\ntion It gave them that would offset their\nshivering it is bard to see.\nThe wearing of prison uniform is a great\nblow to them Few of them when they\nenter seem to expect that. It never oc­\ncurred to them that they would have to\ntaka off all their Ornamente and wear the\nugly convict garb, and they plead for a\nribbon or a ring more pitifully than they\nwould for Bnt when ft cornea to\ncropping their hair close, that is tbe finish­\ning touch; youd think their hearts would\nbreak. They may have remained stolid\nand stoical all through their trial, received\ntheir sentence even In silence; but when it\ncomes to cropping off their treasured locks\ntheir pleadings and prayers and tears and\ncries would move a heart of «tous.\n“I remember the case of one woman In\nparticular,” said the speaker, “who man­\naged to excite and sustain the envy of\nnearly a ll her companions In misfortune\nby keeping her short block hoir shining\nwith oii. How she did It, where she got\nthe oil, was a mystery that I set myself to\nfind out. It took me a long time to do It,\nbut finally I w as rewarded. She used to\nlet her soup get perfectly cold. Then she\nwould carefully skim off tbe grease that\nhad risen to tbe top, and use it on her hair.\nThen she drank her soup. Try to drink\ncold soup yourself, and yon will be able to\nappreciate the sacrifice she made for van­\nitys sake.
0198d321353d0f522c3f6255ad7dfe8d THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.7575342148655 46.187885 -123.831256 "Children and fools tell the truth,"\nI have heard, and certainly children\nhave a faculty of working the truth\nin at the wrong time. Truth is a good\nthing in its place. But the great\nharm comes from using it at an inop-\nportune time. I am the only and\noriginal father of one of the class of\nchildren who are loquacious and\ntruthful in a way that makes the\nparent heart bleed sometimes. If\nthis little incident did not happen to\nmake me its victim, I would scorn to\ntell it, for people ought not to make\nthemselves or their children too con-\nspicuously smart in print.\nGuests" were invited to dinner,\nand while in my baronial hall the\nwelkin rang and the cold baked\nbean was passed around amid jo3ous\nlaughter, and witty remarks rang out\non the warm air, while the gorgeous\nflagons and glittering cut glass and\nsilver of a neighbor shone resplendent\nbeneath the mellow light of tho chan-\ndelier and candelabra, the humble\n of these lines, as the host,\nwould ever and anon make a brilliant\nremark which would bo received\nwith wild and Jlumultuous applause.\nIf a guest sought lo evade his 'duty\nas an applauder, or to come in on\ntime with his or her welcome plaudit,\nthat guest was marked by the eaglo\neye of the carvist, and he was given\nthe neck of the turkey and tho wing\nof the duck as a mark of respect.\nHabitual gucsis at my houso have\nlearned this, and whcnl ladle out the\ngravy and a " Jew do sprit," as A.\nWard called it, the' know that they\ncan take their choice between bois-\nterous laughter and starvation. In\nthis way the meal passes off with\nmuch eclat. For each sla"sh of tho\ncarving knife there is a suitable joke,\nand thope who have been in the habit\nof eating at my table are aware that\nthere is a proper moment for mirth,\njust as there is for napkins, finger-bow- l s
29870b7d31fd14619c982a69ca94ad0e THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.441256798978 29.949932 -90.070116 The attempt to establish separate schools, which\nwould have secured education to both races,\nfailed. The white people generally pay the taxes\nfor public educatlen. They are thosa practlalsly\ndebarred froms the privilege of edousating their\nchildren in schools supported by their money; for\nupon this question of mixed schools thepeople of\nthis 8tate share the pride and inherit the tradi-\ntions of the Northern people.\n"ArT. 99 . The following persons shall be pro-\nhibited from voting or from holding any office:\nAll persons who shall have been convicted of\ntreason, of perjury, forlery, bribery, or other\ncrimes punishable in the penltntirry, sad per-\na us under interdiction.\n"All prsons who are estopped from elamlatg\nthe right of sufsage by abjuoring their allegisace\nto the United Statesgovernment, or by notorionsly\nlevylng war against or adhering to Its enamies,\ngiving them aid or comfort, but who have not ex-\npatriated themselves, nor have been coavicted of\nany of the crimes mentioned in the fisat par-\ngraph of this article, are hereby restored to the\nsaid right, except the followiag: Those who\nheld office, civil or military, for one year or more,\nunder the organiation styled 'The Confederato\nStates of America;' those who registered them-\nselvres uasenemies of the United 4tates; those who\nacred as leaders of guerilla bands duraing the late\nrebellioo; thoe who, in the advocacy of treason,\nSwrote or published newspaper articles or prcbed\nsermons during the late rebellion; and those who\nvoted forand signed an ordinaoce of seeselon In\nany State. No person included In these exoep-\nStions shall either vote or hold office until he shall
1cdd8dbf73dc0d87501b08ccab223563 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.1219177765095 58.275556 -134.3925 A marten farm is the latest project\nfor Sitka..Ex. Rampart has had a\nmarten experimental station for two\nyears past under the care of Dr. J . II .\nHudgin. Sitka can claim first place in\nthe culture of Alaska lobsters, but we\nclaim the original marten farm for\nRampart..Forum.\nIn his annual fire report to the gov¬\nernor, Fire Chief Lester, of Dawson,\nshows that the total losses by fire in\nDawson during the last year aggregated\nonly $8,468. None of the properly was\ninsured. Ir. all previous years losses\nhave been much heavier there by fire.\nThe chief reiterates his recommenda¬\ntions for a better fire alarm system,and\nsays that the old system is useloss.\nThe names of the powerful financial\ninterests, which have arranged to build\nthe Copper River & Northwestern Rail¬\nroad, are the J. P. Morgan Co. and the\nGuggenheim interests. The Guggen¬\nheim interests referred to arej the\nAmerican Smelting and Refining Com¬\npany, a trust which coutrols practical¬\nly every smelter in the United States\nI and which represents a pool of some¬\nthing like $200,000,000.\nCol. Glassford, of the U. S . \nservice, is of the opinion that the break\nof the cable between Juneau and\nHaines was not the result of accident,\nbut that it was cut by the captain of\nsome vessel who had anchored during\nthe storm and pulled up the cable with\nthe anchor. It was easier to cut the\nline than to free it from the anch r.\nAll that remains for the Col. to do now\nis to ascertain what ship was anchored\nin Lynn canal at the time.\nGas caused by decayed vegetable\nmatter in muck seventy-two feet deep\ncaused the death of Jack Darling at\nFairbanks. It was ignited by his can¬\ndle. His pick struck a gas pocket.\nThe flames shot sixty feet in the air\nfrom the mouth of the shaft. After\nthe foul air had somewhat cleared a\nman was lowered down the shaft and\nfound Darling standing on his head\nand shoulders, almost covered with\nmuck. Darling was an old-timer and\none of the best known mining men in\nthe country. The intense heat from\ns the burning gas made the cable red\nj hot and set the windlass box on fire.
076c662500892a0acf807cccedda0466 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.9438355847285 31.960991 -90.983994 disagreeable noise—two wooden clappers\nor a small gong, or at all events a most vil­\nlainous voice, with any or all of which they\ngo along the streets, and se ecting at will a\nshop, enter and (not leaving off “their dam­\nnable faces,” as Hamlet recommends) begin\nto sing, or beat their gongs, or bamboos, to\nthe great annoyance -of the owner, and the\ncomplete prohibition of more decent custo­\nmers, and here they are allowed by law and\ncustom to remain beating and singing, till\nthey receive the cash. If the keeper is, as\nmost Chinamen arc, blest with that forti­\ntude which is « good remedy for evils when\nthere is no other, and lets them beat till\nthey are tired, they lie down before the\ncounter, and forget their woes in sleep a-\nwhile, and then up and beat again,\n of patience between the two. The\nbeggar holds on as long as he can, hoping\nthe shop-keeper will be aggravated\namount requisite; the shop-keeper sits with\nthe utmost apparent indifference, to let the\nbeggar see he has no chance. Meantime\nthe beggar is losing time, and the shop­\nkeeper customers. If the shop-keeper pays\nat an early period of the visitation, he may\nget rid of one infliction, only to make way\nfor another. If he keeps one pretty beara­\nble plague, he is secure against others, and\nmay get up a reputation for invincibility\nand stoicism, that will protect him in future.\nSo, there they sit, shop-keeper and beggar,\ntlte one doing his worst to annoy, and the\nother his best not to notice it, till one or the\nother gives in.— [Fletcher Webster's Lec­\nture on China—Extractedfrom the N. Y.\nHerald,
09f2ea3d1c412ceeaa30cbffb9995cd6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.7931506532218 39.745947 -75.546589 The following described real estate, viz:\nAll that certain farm, tract or tracta of\nland with the buildings thereon, situate In\nMill Creek Hundred, New Castle County, and\nState of Delaware, co'-taining 17 acres, more\nor less, severally bounded snd described\nfollows, to wit:\nNo. 1 . Beginning at the lane running from\nthe turnpike to the mansion house at the\nsoutherly side of the gate post a feet to the\nadjoining post of ths cross fence, thence from\nthe first stone after leaving the run In said\nlane, southwesterly along said lane to a stone\nset or to be set by tr e said parties, and thence\nby another new line southwesterly to three\nash trees at De side of said run to Joseph\nHollingsworths line, where a stone Is to he\nset, thence up said run to a stone, being the\nold corner iu other laud now of said first, for­\nmerly of Rotiert Morrison, thence with said\nline north 84H degrees, east 4» 5-1U perches, or\nthereabouts, to the place of beginning, con ­\ntaining six or seven acres of laud, more or\nless, with a house, barn and other outbuild\nings thereon erected.\nNo. 2 Beginning at a stone now standing\nwhere a corner black oak tree did stand, being\na corner of John Fausts land, thence by his\nland south 86 degrees 45 minutes, west 19 2-10\nperches to a stake in the saidijohn Fansts\nline, thence by a new and by land of\nRobert Morrison, north 41 degrees 10 minutes\neast 16 65-100 perches to a new corner stone \nthe sauth side of Lancaster Turnpike road',\nth-nce . by the south side of said road south 60\ndegrees® minutes, east 10 7-10 perches to the\nline of said John Fausts land, thence by his\nland south 6 degrees and SO minutes, west four\nand six-tenths perches to the place of begin­\nning, rontainlug one acre of land, bo the same\nmore or less.\nNo. 3 Beginning at a corner stake in the\nmiddle of the old Hockessin road at a point\nwhere the line of the northeasterly side of the\nWilmington Turnpike titerseets the same,\nthence along the middle of said road no-th B\ndegrees, east 6 chains and 17 links to a stake\nin the same, and north 3194 degrees, west 0\nchains and 30 Unas to a new corner in said\nroad, thence by a new line dividing the here­\nin granted land from other land of said B.\nFranklin Whiteman, south 49 degrees, west\nseven chains and 90 links to the northeasterly\nside of said Turnpike, thence down the side\nthereof south 48Hf— east 1.') chains and 28\nlinks, to the place of beginning, containing\nseven acres of land neat measure. Book W,\nvol. 13, page 433, etc.\nSeized and taken In execution as the prop­\nerty of Peter S. Litzeuherg and Frances E., his\nwife,and £. t., and tobe soldbv
16562ae4cfe6af663c21578f1d1e00ea EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.683561612126 39.745947 -75.546589 sake of the child, for the sake of the community,\nand for the sake of our free institutions, which\narc founded on and must continue on the basis\nof individual intelligence and integrity and\ncumulative co-operation and responsibility. If,\ntherefore, parents and children will be patient\nuntil the new order is understood and estab­\nlished, wo feci sure that what the Board of\nEducation has done will be approved as sdjind\nv, is,loin and for the best of all concerned.\nDuring the last few years our schools have\nmade noteworthy progess in a number of pas-\nticulars; among them tlicsc may he briefly men­\ntioned; The continued simplification of the\ncourses of study by the omission of unnecessary\nand unpractical details and the substitution of\nmaterials for study that come within the plane\nof the practical in the childs cverwidcning\nexperiences; the methods of teaching the several\nsubjects arc made simpler and throw the child\nmore and more upon his own resources, thus\ndeveloping the power of initiative and the ability\nto do things for himself. Out of this recognition\nof the child's ability to do there has come a\nresourcefulness, a homelike spirit and life \nhave stimulated democratic responsibility for the\nindividual and for the school, a condition that\nis fundamental in a free government. Our\nschools are in this way working out the prob­\nlem of social service in the life interests and\nactivities of the pupils. The various aspects\nand phases of reading, arithmetic, language,\nliterature, art, and the manual arts, etc., are\nmade the means of socializing the pupils and of\npreparing them for intelligent co-operaticn in\ncommunity life. The utilization of stories and\nliterature, adapted to the various stages of the\nchilds development, is also a great step toward\nputting it into possession of its inheritance,—\nthe worlds best thought and treasure. Much\nattention has also been given to the sanitary\ncondition of the schools and their appointments,\nand to the health and recreation of the children,\nThese items with others that might be enu­\nmerated. indicate that our schools arc keeping\nabreast of the most approved educational prac­\ntices, that thev are singularly free from “fads,\nfancies and frills” and that their one abiding\nand controlling purpose is to sene the chil­\ndren. They arc worthy of and should have the\nsupport of every citizen.
7904eda825e7f356344921f279c75240 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.03698626966 39.261561 -121.016059 SRC. 2 . Upon the second Monday in February,\n1862. at the close of the business hours for that day,\nthe tax collector shall euter upon the lax list, or\nassessment roll, a statement, that he lias made a\nlevy upon all the property assessed in said roll, aDd\nupon which the taxes have not been paid. On or\nbefore the thin! Monday of February, 1862 , the tax\ncollector shall complete a list of all persons aud pro-\nperty then owing taxes, and the tax collector in ad-\ndition to the tax k-vied, shall collect upon each de-\nlinquent, the sum of one dollar, as costs ino urred in\npreparing and publishing the delinquent list.\nft Sue. 4 . On or liefore the first day of March, 1862,\nhe tax collector shall cause the dclinquen. tax list\nto be published, giving the name of the owner of all\nreal estate and all improvements on the same, to-\ngether with such a condensed description of the pro-\nnerty, that it may be easily known, and also a simi-\n condensed description of any real estate or im-\nprovements assessed to unknown owners; and also\nopposite each name or description, the amount of\ntaxes, including costs, due from each delinquent per-\nson or properly; such list, with the levy thereon, as\nheretofore provided, shall be published for three suc-\ncessive weeks, in some newspaper, or supplement to\na newspaper, published in the city ofNevada. Such\npublication shall also designate the time and place\nof the sale, which shall not be less than twenty-one\nor more than twenty-eight days from the first ap-\npearance of the publication. *AI1 real estate sliall be\nsold in front of the Court House disir, and all sales\nshall be made by the Marshal or his deputies.\nSic. 5. The provisions of the Art entitled an Act\nto provide revenue fur thesupportot the Government\nof this State, approved April 29th, 1857. from Sec. 16\nto Sec. 28 inclusive, ot said act, shalLcontrol, direct\nand regulate the sale, issuance of certificate, record\nand all further proceeding* of the tax collector, under\nthe foregoing ordinance.
0abb7a9b6e63ba5cf5d2775704b2b876 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.9575342148655 46.601557 -120.510842 1902. In a certain action wherein S. K . Aumiller.\n' plaintiff,assignee of Klolse W. Wood, recovered\n' a judgment and decree of foreelo«ure In said\ncourt against liyrou A Young and .lane 1 oung.\nj defendants, on the 19th <!ny ol November. A.I).\nI'.HJ -' . for the sum of ifllM. with interest thereon\nI at the rate of 7 per cent tier annum from date\n! thereof until paid, anil the further sum of\nI*a 970. as attorney fees, ami costs of suit taxed\nat Jit.HO . I am commanded to sell all the certain\nlots, piece, or parcel of land situate In the\nCounty of Yakima, State of Washington, ami\nparticularly described as follows, to-wit; Lots\nseven and eight (7 and H), in I,lock one hundred\nand fifteen (lift), In the cltv of North Yaktms,\n delineated ou Hie official plat of said City of\nNorth Yakima, filed of record In the office of\nthe audit r of Yakuna county, Washington.\nNotice is hereby giveu that on Saturday, the\n20ih day of Dei-ember, A.D. 1902. at the hour of\n2 o'clock in the afternoon of said day, at the\nfrout door of the Court House, Iv th* City of\nNorth Vakima. in said Yakima eountv, Wash-\nington, I will, In obedience to ssid execution,\ndecree of foreclosure and order of sale, sell at\npublic auction the above described property, or\nso much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy\nsaid judgment and decree, with interest thereon,\nattorney fees, costs, and Increased costs, to the\nhighest ami best bidder for cash, lawful money\n01 the United states.\nDated this 17th day of November. 1902,
43aac8e89f957d71bc8c6e58359ec562 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.319178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 New Haven, April 2 7. The an-\nnouncement that Chief Bender, Billy\nKopf and "Baby Doll" Jacobson had\nbeen signed as the nucleus for a new\nColonial team to replace Jack Bar-\nry's Navals at the Light against the\npowerful Newport Reserves has oc-\ncasioned such delight among local\nfanatics as the initial mention of the\nBarry proposition two weeks ago.\nBender will undoubtedly prove a\nwonderful drawing card. His mar\nvelous performances at the Light last\nseason are far from forgotten locally.\nHe was beyond a doubt the Bender of\nold, the same Chief who led all the\npitchers of the world for four sea-\nsons.. He had the same blinding speed\nand sharp breaking hooks and, above\nall, the same craft which marked\nhim supreme among hurlers. Just \nprove that his local performances\nwere no flash 'in the pan, when as\nwas to be expected when word of his\nreturn to for became known, he took\nup mound duty with the Phillies, he\nstartled the baseball world with his\nwinning streak of seven straight vic-\ntories, putting the Phillies right in\nthe pennant fight. This season Pat\nMoran figured on him as Alexander's\nsuccessor but the big Red Skin de-\ncided that he had had enough big\nleague twirling and would stick to\nhis various activities at the Hod\nShipbuilding corporation, Englewood\nGun Club, lie being rated as one of\nthe crack shots of the country and\nplaying independent ball.\nKopf and Jacobson, his big league\nrunning mates, are two more stars in\ntheir prime and whose
0a1fbc205782329eaf51a4c592a5c36d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.6352458700162 41.681744 -72.788147 The republican presidential can-\ndidate's schedule called for five\nstops, at Dodge City, Hutchinson,\nNewton. Emporia, and Topoka, the\nhome of his running mate, Senator\nCharles Curtis, who was unable to\nremain to greet the head of the\nticket because of pressing engage-\nments in the east.\nDavid Mulvane, national commit-\nteeman. Senator Arthur Capper ami\nJ. N. U!iy Tincher, former rep-\nresentative, who nominated Curtis\nfor the vice presidency at Kansas\nCity, were among thu party leaders\nwho were to board the train as it\ncrossed the state. Plans for conduct-i - n\na vigorous campaign there ;. ,e r e\nlo be discussed.\nFollowing his usual practice,\nHoover will make brief rear end\nplattorm talks at ull of the Kansas\ncities, with a more extended one at\nthe state capital.\nFrom Topcka his train will go to\nKansas City, Mossouri, where it s\ndue early tonight with Mayor Al-\nbert I. Beach others planning\na reception at the station while th\nspecial train is being switched to\nthe Kock Island lines for thu over-\nnight run to West Branch.\nWhile crossing New Mexico, the\nrepublican candidate, was joined by\nnearly loo of his party leaders,\nboth men and women, who con-\nveyed the information that the raco\nin their state promised to bo holly\ncontested. He received the same in-\nformation Saturday regarding Ari-\nzona, but those in charge of party\naffairs in each state expressed hope\nof victory in November.\nSenator Bronson Cutting and\nGov. K. C . Dillon were of the opin-\nion that the Issue in New Mexico\nwould be decided largely on the per-\nsonalities of the republican an .\ndemocratic candidates and on the\nwet and dry Issue, with the prohi-\nbition question cutting across party\nlines. Asked if Hoover's prohibition\ndeclaration in his acceptance speech\nhad been accepted as a "bone dry"
20a2d9842dce85811b80995210813de9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.9958903792492 41.004121 -76.453816 ner ns to glvo fair apportionments, and,\nto n great oxtout, duo reprojontation to\neacii political party In Congress and In\ntho Stato Legislature Tho election\nfrauds of 1803, 18G4 , and 1809, when tho\nDemocracy woro cheatod out or their\nvictories, con not therefore bo repeated,\nnnd when wo carry elections heroaftcr\nwo will reap tho advantages of success.\nThcro nro lessons In tho result of tho\nelection In tho first district. A malu\ncauso of Col. Decumit's success Is un-\nquestionably tho fact that by education,\nuxperlonco and personal character ho\nwas a fit man for the place Was emi-\nnently qualified for tho position. Ills\nown party was unanimous In his sup-\nport for this reason for this reason ma-\nny Republicans supported him and ma\nny others witnheld their votes from his\nopponent, and for this reason nil who\nwero not governed by strong partisan\nfeelings supported him. Why will not\nall parties overy whero, then, heed this\nlesson, and for tho mero sake of success\n their most rcspectablo and\nbest qualified citizens for offlco? Wo\nnroovldcntly on tho ovo of tho tlmos\nwhen rogues and incompetents must\nstand asldo when thoy will bo weak\ncandidates suro to bring defeat and\nwhen peoplo will solcct candidates as\nthey do agents or employeos : for their\nfitno33 to do tho business doslred nnd\ntheir Integrity In nil things. No man\nwillingly employs a roguo to do his pri\nvate businoss, and ho is himself a roguo\noranasswho voluntarily entrusts his\npublic business to such. When any\nsensible man has work to do ho cm- -\nploys a man who by practlco has proved\nhimself fit to do that kiud of work\nwell; Why should not tho rulo apply\nwith equal forco to public affairs? Tho\npeopio oi tno nrst district havo set n\nwlso oxamplo let all others profit by It.\nNotwithstanding his largo official\nmajority of 1301, extraordinary precau-\ntions had to bo taken to prevent Col.\nDeciieht from being cheated out of tho\nelection.
41f6be54b975e40f7a0f85ca48a8758b DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.1246575025368 58.275556 -134.3925 The Potter Hansen says the Santa Fo\nrailroad has withdrawn its advertising\npatronage because tho paper slandered\nthe road. Here a>*e a few paragraphs\nfrom ono of the slauderous articles:\nA man who recently took a trip on\nthe Pollywog sends the Kansan the fol¬\nlowing account of it: They made so\nmauy stops 1 asked the conductor what\nwe had stopped for. He said, ''There\nare some cattle on tho track." Wo ran\na little ways farther aud made another\nstop. "What's the matter now?" lie\nreplied, "We have caught up with those\ncattle again." There was a lady 011 the\ntrain with a baby. When the conduct¬\nor asked her for her ticket she said tho\nbaby had swallowed it. The conductor\npunched the baby. I asked the con¬\nductor what the difference was between\nfirst, second third class passengers.\nHe replied, "Just wait awhile and I will\nshow vou." Presently we stopped again\nand the conductor came in and said:\n"First-class passengers keep your seats;\nsecond class passengers get off and\nwalk; third-class passengers get off and\npush." There was a Dutchman on the\ntrain tryiug to ride on a meal ticket.\nThe conductor told him ho would have\nto pay his fare. lie said: "How much\nto the next station?" The conductor\ntold him .'W cents. The Dutchman said\nthat before he would pay more than 25\ncents he would get off and walk. The\nconductor stopped the train and put\nhim off. The Dutchman ran ahead of\ntho engine and started to walk. The\nengineer began to blow the whistle.\nThe Dutchman said: "You can vissel\nall you vant to,l vou't come pack."
137794d24ea29c0873c84fc37802d0d6 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.1816939574478 46.187885 -123.831256 and they would riot in his blood be-\nfore the moon would wax and wane\nAnd equally united and vindictive\nhostility would be exhibited against\nany leader of either side who attempt-\ned to dictate a party policy. Morri-\nson tried it with his boasted fret\ntrade invention, and he is now in i\nminority in his party, in his commit-\ntee and in the house of which he it\nthe proclaimed leader. Blaine tried\nit in an awkward improvement tf\nBarker's surplus distribution tom-\nfoolery, and he has been hiding as a\npresidential candidate ever since.\nThis remarkable want of both pol-\nicy and leadership in the two great\nparties which must soon lock horns\nhi a national struggle, is not accident.\nIt iB the natural, logical result of the\npositive absence of a living issue to\ndivide the parlies. Their old issues\nare all irrevocably settled. Tie\nquestions of war have passed into\nhistory, never to be disturbed no mat-\nter who shall rule hereafter. Some\nof the once active Republican leadeis.\nwho were great twenty years ago, but\n have been bourbonized by pro-\ntracted power, have been trying to\ngather up the tatters of" the blood\nshirt, but they are so utterly rotten\nthat they won't hold together to be\nflaunted into the face of the nation.\nSherman and Mahone are making\nthat experiment and winning the con-\ntempt of the naticn as their just re-\nward. Arthur is hesitating over vari-\nous theories of Stalwart reorganiza-\ntion, but even the Stalwart chieftains\nare slow to respond. Blaine sees\nsafety in retreat and Edmunds, wisest\nof presidential pickles next the wind,\ncourted the positive Stalwart wing bj\ndeolaring for Grant in 18S0, and\ncourts it now by intimating a prefer-\nence for Arthur. The Democrats\nhave tried the slogan of "historic\njustice" to galvanize life into the\nTilden element; they have exhibited\nMorrison and McDonald on the free\ntrade flying horse, and fusiladed\nRandall, "Wallace and Hancock from\nthe liberal incidental protection lines,\nbut both sides have feebly skirmished\nand retired because to advance was\ninevitable disaster. There is no man,\nno party, on either side.
0318b5aa595adf3f13e428fabcdac744 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1901.8671232559614 37.451159 -86.90916 There hints never been any good reason\nto doubt there Iis certainly none now\nthat these men would have fair trials in\nthe courts of Kentucky IVrfect imut\nneal quiet prevails nil over that State\nFour men implicated in the Ooelwl con\nspiracy have already been tried One\nwan acquitted l two were convicted but\ngranted newtrlals by tine Conrt of Ap ¬\npeals the supreme judicial tribunal of\nthe State a majority of the member ¬\nship of which by the way Iis Hepnblic\nan On his second trial Powers has\nnow ltII convicted That Taylor and\nFinley if taken to Kentucky under\nrequisitions would IU fully protected\nin nil their legal rights nobody can\ndoubt who stops to think that tllIpeople\nof that State lute tine same laws the\nsaute institutions and the sammy respect\n authority anti the same wholesome\nregard fur the legal rights of tine imli\nvidualI as Itie people of Indiana have\nWe regret exceedingly that Governor\nDurbin inns allowed himself to be Intim\nidated and coerced by brutal and un ¬\nscrupulous partisans into violating his\nsworn duty in this matter We regret\nthat he hints deliberately placed a stain\nupon his administration which time can\nnever efface that he hints delllierately\nadvertised Indium to the world as nu\nhaven for refugees from justice and\nthus brought shame and disgrace upon\ntine State We believe he would have\nmuch preferred to resjiect his oath and\nilo his duty III thi premises and it Iis\nlamentable that he was uimlili to with\nstand till pressure that was brought to\nhear upon him to pursue a contrary\ncourse
25bf893f8a2b9769fb150e1300e20e71 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2178081874683 40.063962 -80.720915 Pnmnip-, Onlont, Ac., A c .\nFew readers of the Intelliobncer,\n>n sitting down to their dinners, fully\nealize the subject that at least fifty\niiatiuct branches of trade and art are\nequisite to make and set out a table\nk-itbits various appointments of cloths,\nrockery, plate, cutlery, «fcc., prepara-\nory to the reception of viands. Not\ninly this, but all part* of the world\nre taxed to procure these necessities or\nomforta of life. Take the article of\nread, for Instance.the staff of life.,\nnd trace it from the seed to the blade,\nnd from the blade to the fruit, and\nrom the harvest to the mill, and from\nbe mill Jo the wholesale store, and from\nbis to the retail, and again from this\n3 the family.and what a history we\nave. The Newbury port Herald., in\nbis wise, thus honors oar National\n'lant, Indian Corn, which nature has\n exclusively to North America,\nnd which furnishes directly as bread-\ntuff, or indirectly as the food of oar'\neef, cattle, hogs, and poultry, the Bta-\nle of oar entire population. We quote:\n"It contains more nbBolnte nourish-\nlent of the various forms necessary to\nealth and strength.as gluten, starch,\njgar and oil.than any other plant\nnown to man; which boiled, hulled.\nopped, cracked or ground, in hominy\nr hoe-cake, or mush, fermented into*\ntiica or distilled into whisky, in the\nrigwam of the Indian, the log cabin of;\nie Western settler, on the plantation\nino oouia idu in me palatial hotels\nf the metropolis, over the table lands\nf Mexico, through the valley of the\nmazon and on the pampas of Buenos\n.yre8, is a staple article of food for\nirty millions of men. But its highest'\nlission has not been to fatten liogs,\n>ed hoosiers, furnish Juveniles with\n>rnballs, and
dc02278b6baa0af0e75a7661dffaeff6 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.042465721715 39.290882 -76.610759 taining the commission gf St. Helena, tile Abbe\nCoquereau, &o'. preceded the car.\nThe car was flanked on either side by a bo-\ndy of seamen belonging to the Belle Puule and\niavorite, and wa9 followed by a charger, led by\nservants, also iu the Emperor's livery. Behind\nthe car, and immediately following the non-\ncommissioned officers who were to be the col-\nfin bearers, were several old soldiers of differ-\nent grades of the Imperial army in the uniform\nof that day. Grenadiers of the old guard, Ti-\nrailleurs, Mamelukes, Dragoons ot the Em-\npress, Seamen of the Guard, &c. were mingled\ntogether, and received loud acclamations as\nthey passed. A great number of Polish offi-\ncers, and some Belgian officers joined the pro-\ncession in uniform. On the whole, however,\nit was remarked that the procession did not\ncontain quite sufficient appearances of morning\nto give it the character of funeral solemnity\nwhich formed part of its character; on the con-\ntrary, the procession was almost entirely a tri-\numphal one. The regular troops too were in\nmuch smaller numbers than we expected to\n them, especially tire eavafry. A strong\ntboih of. Lancers was posted at either side of\nthe Arc de Triomphe, with a detachment of ar.\ntiliery who fired a salute of twenty-one guns as\nthe body passed under the archway.\nGuns were hred'every quarter of an hour du-\nring the day from the Invalides.\nThe decoration round tbe Arc de I'Etoile,\nand on the top of that monument, presented\ncertain features of grandedr. vfci'.hout being so\ncarefully fiifishod' as might have been wished.\nW rnlgiit, indeed, observe, that though the\ndecorations, in general, aU along the Champs\nElysees, the Bent de la Concorde, and in tne\nEsplanade of the Invalides, bore the marks of\ngreat haste in their execution, yet that, from\nthe very short time allowed by Government for\ntheir completion, only twelve days, end from\na desire to spare the public as much charge as\npossible pn the parliamentary budget, the most\nwas executed that was possible, fhere is no\ndoubt that the money voted by the Chambeis\nwill not coyer the amount incurred for the ex-\npenses of this great solemnity. We learn that the
06fc4d98ce6971ddae4151f7a60e061c SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1907.395890379249 43.624497 -72.518794 first book my father bought me, and\nbefore I knew a lettcr of the alpha-he- t,\n1 could repeat all her rhymes\nfrom cover to cover. I think I could\nsay the most of them now, if you\nvvould start me off with the first line ;\nbut Mother Goose vvasn't the only\nbook I was allowed to enjoy, for my\nather never had a boojj 011 his library\nshelves that I was not permitted to\ntake and look at as long as I pleased,\nprovided my iiands were ci.ean\nAND I TUltNED THKLEAVES CAU- E-\n"FUI.ly, and I am going' to give you\nthe same privilege when you come\nhere. And if I know the day you\nare coming, l'm going to honor the\noccasion by wearing a knot of red,\nwhite and blue ribbon fastened with\na pin bearing the picture of tlie one\nwho wrote, Man Without a\nCountry," ahd I'U show you a souve-ni- r\ncopy ot this book, printed when\nthe person was eighty years old.\nAsk your teacher where this person\nis now, and why the book was writ\nten, and tell me when you come.\nThen we'll look at the picture of\ndear old Dr. Russ, who was born, I\nthink, in 1800. Your grandfythers\nand grandmothers never svould have\nlived as long as they did, had it not\nbeen for the kinJly services rendered\nunselfishly by this good man. We\nseem to see him now riding along\nwith his long, slim legs crossed and\nstarted to wind again. His pet dog\nsits by his side nnd the vcritable old\nsaddlebags are at his feet.\nHe enters the sick room, looks at\nthe patient's tonguc, takes tlie pulse,\nsits back and meditates a little, pre -s cri b-
12e044a07d1cd5b366641a62e8abb21a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.015068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 Commissioner ^Miller, In speaking to\nyour corrospondont, remarked that, con¬\nsidering all the circumstances, the bust-\nneia of his bnrcitu lite moved along in the\nsmoothest manner.In fact, In a more satis¬\nfactory way than ono would naturally ex¬\npect during tho first mouths of a new ad¬\nministration. He says be attributes this\nto the caution wblcb has been used In the\nmatter of making changes In hll oflloe\nforce. The splendid showing of the ofllce\nand Uie perfect smoothness with which\nthe nlRcbluery Is run 1>, be thinks, a strong\ntestimonial of the wisdom of the policy of\ntho administration In going slow QMUt the\nwork of changing the clerical force of the\ndepartments. Hie retention of the ex¬\nperienced men who have charge of tho\nvarious branches of the revenue bureau\nhas been demonstrated to be * wise and\nJudicious course. quick and sweeping\nchange would have demoralised and eon-\nfusedthe work to a great extent. Changes\nmust be made gradually. A new clerk,\nbe be evsr so competent a buslnees man,\n-could not familiarise himself with the de¬\ntails of the Intrlcato and peculiar work of\nthe ltureau In a day. It was necessary to\nretain the old, experienced men for a\ntime, In order that the great work might\ngo on uninterrupted Mid without confu¬\nsion. "Ons who has nsver Investigated\nthe matter," said he. "has but a faint Idea\nof the Immense work of this Bureau, or of\nthe amount ol experienced labor required\nto keep the business running smoothly."\nThe truth ol what the Oommlsalonsr says\nmust be apparent, when It li considered\nthat the business of the Internal Revenue\nofllce amounts to more than a half million\ndollars per day,
07dec978f2046e9f61757d331e3130a5 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1892.9357923181037 39.756121 -99.323985 laughs besf'And for lack of more\nforcible argument it resorts to foul\nname?, all sorts of Vile epithets not\nworthy of repetition, much le&3 re-\nturning. Our cause has no lack of\nmaterial for strong argument in favor\nof the right cause, for we are sailing\nunder the banner of Jesus and work\ning for the' uplifting of humanity.\nAnd we believe that He will send an\ngels before ua and we will be led on\nto a glorious victory. A very large\nnumber of our citizens adhered to t he\nrepublican party beleiving that that\nparty could do more for our cause\nthan any other, but as the republi-\ncans have shown their inability to do\nwhat was expected of them, many\nhave become awakened and will meet\nus on common grounds for the over-\nthrow of this gigantic evil as well as\nthe uplifting of all, the reforms de\nmanded our platform. And wb\nbelieve that we shall 'soon seo that\nthe hindrance to our cause is a di- -\nvided party and not in the principles\nof the prohibition party. If all the\nbetter elements of the different par\nties could be united in one army and\nmove in one solid phalanx against the\ncommon enemy, there would be the\ngrandest victory of the century. You\nadmit that our party caused your de-\nfeat (that prohibition would still have\nbeen prohibition if we had voted with\nyou). That is acknowledging' a good\ndeal. That proves we are gaining\nground and our power is being felt,\nand to us who are prohibitionists at\nthe sacrifice of the old party ties, the\nlight is dawning and we behold the\nprohibition luminary mounting the\npolitical sky and expect soon to see it\nin all its glory, shedding light over\nall this rum -cur s e-
8ee75862856dca95fde291c99f6c437b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.83698626966 39.261561 -121.016059 A correspondent of the Red Bluff Beacon,\nwriting from lit River Valley, under date of\nOct. 15th, says in regard to the Indian difficul-\nties in that section :\nYou are doubtless aware, before this, that an\ninhuman slaughter bus been perpetrated upon\na tt itle of friendly Indians by u band of men\ncalling themselves the ••Pit River Volunteers.”\nThe excuse for this barbarous outrage is said to\nbe that the Hal Creek Indians were iu the habit\nof visiting the Pit River Indian village, and\nthat they were there when the slaughter took\nplace. This is not so; there were no Indians\nbut what belonged there, and It is only snid for\nthe purpose of justifying Captain Langley's\ngang, in an outrage only worthy of the most\ndepraved of savages. There is not a single one\nof the Pit River volunteers that has a cent's\nworth of property in the Valley, and their de-\nsire to avenge the wrongs which have been com-\nmitted, is a delusion for the purpose of druwiug\nhonest men into the belief Unit it is their duty\nto contribute to the expenses of the expedition.\n80 much for the Pit River volunteers.\nIt is said that Capt. Adams, Lieut. and\nLieut. Brewer, take sides with the Indians, and\nprotect them in their outrages. Any one who\nis at all acquainted with these gentlemen know\nthis to be u gross falsehood. Lieut. Carr has\ndone more to prevent Indian hostilities limn\nthe Pit River volunteers have done, or could\ndo, und never yet has lie resorted to the cow-\nardly means (hat Langleys gang has done to\naccomplish it. His course has already been\nhumane and to the purpose, and with the ex-\nception of one expedition, has found and pun-\nished the offender. The garrison at the Port\naffords ample protection to the citizens and\ntheir properly; hut if this gang continuum their\nindiscriminate slaughter, wo can expect no pro-\ntection whatever.\nI do not write this for the purpose of forming\nthe mind of the public against any men, or set\nof men, but simply for the purpose of placing\nthe matter fairly before the people, and to place\nthe blame where it belongs, and not on the offi-\ncers of the Fort, who are gentlemen of charac-\nter, and who feel (and justly too) it beneath\ntheir notice to condescend to a refutation of\nthe charges preferred by this baud of outlaws.
057a64e2ba660c4c62f0cf59040ab37b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.9301369545915 40.063962 -80.720915 When horws ire compelled to remain\nexposed to storms at itiia season the uae of\na rubber blanket, with tlannel lining, will\nbe of valuable assistance In the prevention\nof colds and lung diseased\nFork or beef which la Intended for keep¬\ning should not be salted while in a frozen\ncondition, as It will not properly absurb\nthe salt, and cannot, therefore, be depend¬\ned upon to keep in hot weather.\nWhile It may be an advantage to keep\nyoung pigs over winter in order to obtain\nhogs of large site next season it is not\nalways profitable, unlees extra care be be¬\nstowed in supplying liberal food and warm\nquarters. The spring pig makee an animal\nof fair size and at less expense.\n01 the different breeds of blooded bulls\nthat have neen sold to Western ranche-\nmen in recent years, and there have been\ntbouaands sent to the range, no breed haa\ngiven better satisfaction than the Polled\nAngus and galloway cattle, their hardiness\nand compactness of build making them\nmost deetrable to cross the Texas..\nA'aruaj City Sleek Btcord,\nTo find out whether any individual cow\nis a profitable member of the dairy herd or\nnot, a separate account should be kept of\nher milk and butter. If no BUch pains are\ntaken is is not easy to tell just what the\nworth of a doubtful milker la. The true\npolicy ia to throw out every one which\ndoee not yield a profit and replace her\nwith a better one. It costs jostsa much to\nieed a mean cow as a good one..SlockmuTi.\nThe American Cultivator Is of the opinion\nthat the relative merits of soiling and past¬\nuring for cows, the advantage of exercise\nby the latter method may aa well be left\nout of the account. For the beet results in\nthe dairy cowaneed no more exercise than\nthey get in goint to and coming from\nwater. The best dairy breeds have been\nbuilt up on cattle that are fed in stalls, or\nsoiled bothlwinter and summer. Jersey's\nand Guernsey's in their native home are\nfed largely on roots.
3d4a5b0a13ff94bdf2a5c0d3b47228d0 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.3986301052764 40.735657 -74.172367 the time of putting In such proposals qualify j\nas to their responsibility In the amount of such\nproposal, and bind themselves that. If the\n1 contract be awarded to the person or persons i\nmaking the proposal, they will, upon Its being\nI so awarded, become his or their sureties for\nI the faithful performance of said work; and j\nthat, if the person or persons omit or refuse to |\nI execute such contract they will pay to the city ;\nj of Newark any difference between the Bums to I\nwhich he or they wuuld have been entitled\nupon completion of tho contract, and that\nwhich the city of Newark may be obliged to\npay the person or persons by whom such con*\nI tract shall be executed\nj The Board of Htreet and Water Commission^\nI era of the city of Newark reserve to them\nselves the right to accept or reject any or all\nproposals for the above work, as they may\ndeem beat ror the of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section of\nthe law creating the Board of .Street and\nWater Commissioners, approved March 28, 1891 ,\nthat the bond or bonds to be given for the\nfaithful execution and performance of said\npublic work shall first be approved as to suf-\nficiency by the board, and as to form by the\ncounsel of the board, and no contract shall bo\nbinding on the city or become effective or\noperative until such bond is so approved, and\nthe president of the board shall have power to\nexamine the proposed bondsmen under oath, if\nhe shall so desire, or shall be so Instructed by\nthe board, but the bourd will not be bound by\nany statement that may be made by such pro-\nposed bondsmen, but shall have full power and\nabsolute discretion in the whole matter, and\nthis provision shall he referred to In any ad-\nvertisement Inviting bids for any such public\nwork.
0acb19ee99c6ea488ae82e0b50173320 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.4178081874684 40.063962 -80.720915 There hai nnrrr been any dotftt In the minds\noi the medical profession as to the worthies*,\nnew ol tprava, douches. and atomiiers in the\ntreatment of (.atarrh, Bronchitis, Pneumonia\nand Consumption.' There should be tu*t left\nin the minds of the people whrn confronted\n«2L,Ufl,«fevilw,(ie & '' ^mlihed by the\nHoard of Health of this city, their weekly re-\nports not only showing that more people die\nannually from these diseases thsn from all\nother ailments combined, but also a startling\nincrease in the nnmber of persons lifllicted.\nUhat can be the cause of this rapid increase\nand growing fatality in these diicsics, it the\nfirst question to arise in the thoughts of the\nreader, fsot tlic regular practicing physician*,\nfor they Icyg gave up the old and dan¬\ngerous method of treatment by sprays, (touches\n>nd atonilicra. and «rc belter nrcp.red today\nthan ever before to successfully treat these\nailments. It seems that the fault lies irith the\npeoflt lUtmstlvtt, for it is a well-known fact\nthat during the past four years there has\nbeen a jicrfcct crare on their part for ex-\nperlmentmg with advertised cure-alls, instead\nof trusting to tli«v science, skill and knowledge\nof the legitimate profession. This is\nespecially true in cases where the patient was\nsintering with cstarrh, bronchitis and consump¬\ntion.the results of this reckless experiment-\ning being readily seen In the increased death\nrate and larger percentage of people suffering\nfrom these diseases, to say nothing of the\nhundreds who have lost their hearing 'and\nsense of smell and taste, by forcing liquid\nmedicines into the air passages with powerful\nsprays and ntomirers. How to stop this ex¬\nperimental crare of the people hat been tue\nstudy of every true physician in the land. It\nseemsthere is nootherway ofreaching them ex¬\ncept through the columnsofthe daiiypapcrs, and\nas the regular physician cannot advertise with¬\nout losing his standing in the medical world,\nit has been decided that the manufacturers of\ntrue medicines mint do so. Thus it is that\nItyomei,' the only cure for Catarrh, Catarrh-\na. Dcafness.-Uroncnitis and Asthma ever used\nand endorsed by the medical profession, it-\nadvertised to the public. That the u«e of "Ily-\nomei will soon put a stop to further experi¬\nmenting on" the part of those suffering from\ndiseases of the air passages cannot be doubted,\ntor it is the one treatment endorsed by the\nphysicians.
2e3b0bc87ecafcc01bd34f0634d75260 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.532876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 tension, but referred solely to tho matters In\ndispute between tho two companies concern- ]jj\nIng tho land and right of way on the river {?\nbank south of tho creek. Uy the former or- ^\ndlnanco on this subject the 1'., W. it Ky. l*\nroad was required to lay its track twenty-tivo it\nfeet west ot tho It. it 0. Conquiny's present }*\ntrack. By the agreement the former road is J|\nto occupy ground forty feet west of the other i*\ntrack, and all that the city was aslccd to do It\nnot comprised In tho former ordinance wus\nto grunt a wider tract of land on the beach\nsouth of tho creek, and to allow tho D. it 0.\nrnnd tnnrrtinv tho niuco nf ornmul ti\nthe tracks of the two roads. The 11. it 0.\nagreed to give the 1\\, \\V. »t Ky. road a free\nright of way twenty-live feet in width.\nThe ordinance was read the first time by\nMr. ltu. -- . iell, and on motion the rules were 1$\nsuspended and the ordinance put on its\nsecond reading.\nAfter the reading of tho first scction, Mr.\nKiwberly moved that the paper be referred\nto the committee on aud the City q\nSolicitor, with the understanding that they\nshould consider the proposition to-day unu C<\nCouncil meet to-night to receive their report.\nAfter some discussion, Mr. Walker J'eier- ( .(\nson appeared on behalf of the Southern Ten n- jj\nsylvania road and asked that tho mntter be W\ndelayed asuillcient time for representatives of T<\nthat company to be heard in this matter.\nHe saw nothing in the ordiuar.ee that pro- 1£\nvided that the i\\, W. <t Ky. track should be\na union track for other railroads south of the 16\ncreek as it is north, and he would say as an\nengineer that if an additional track be laid {|j\nwhere contemplated by this ordinance, it\nwould be impossible to lay another track out- p ,\nside of tbat, and any other raiiroad coming St\ninto the city from that direction would be Tl\nobliged to lay its track on some oilier street.\nJudge Cochran was invited to speak for his\nrailroad, the \\V. it L. 12., but was not pre- 1fi\npared to say whether the passage of the ordi- 'I'1\nnance would interfere with any of their in- 111\nterests or not. lie agreed with Mr. Peterson,\nhowever.
58d4ba2ae44e13b4a4d38775765009d9 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1921.2698629819888 41.875555 -87.624421 "merchandized" to the public through\nlarge display windows similar to those\nused by department stores. Hereto-\nfore banks have been singularly una-\nware of the value of display windows.\nBut the new Madison & Kedzie State\nBank is utilizing them to the utmost.\nIt is stated there will be some ex-\ntremely interesting and valuable dis-\nplays in the thirteen windows devoted\nto this purpose and it is expected\nthe windows will make the corner of\nMadison Street and Kedzie Avenue\none of the most talked of in Chicago.\nThe building is next door to the new\nSenate Theatre, a mammoth affair\nwhich attracts many thousands of peo-\nple to the district every day. Madison\nand Kedzie is practically the geograph-\nical center of the city, and has be-\ncome known as "The Hub of Chicago."\nIt is the center of a district combining\n of the largest industries in the\nworld, as well as great retail business\nactivity and desirable residences. The\ncorner of Madison and Kedzie has\nbeen neglected for many years but is\nnow awakening to a new life of which\nthe new Bank and theatre buildings\nare only the beginning.\nEver since its organization, the\nMadison & Kedzie State Bank has\ngrown rapidly. During 1920 (Decem-\nber 31, 1919 to January 3, 1921) de-\nposits increased $1,379,900.37. From\nJanuary 3, 1921, to March 31, 1921,\naccording to the latest Statement of\nCondition issued by the Bank, de-\nposits increased $754,008.59. The\nBank has particularly made a name\nfor itself in the investment field,\nwhere the demand for its investments\nreached national proportions and ne-\ncessitated the organization of The In-\nvestors Company.\nThe founder of the Bank is Benja-\nmin Kulp,
2201a3d348cb7d9a15fad374f1492029 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.4890410641806 39.756121 -99.323985 American bicycles will be from 25 to\n33 3 per cent, larger this year than\nin 1900 may be safely accepted. Fur-\nther than this, the demand from all\nquarters for the highest grade of\nwheel is to a most satisfactory ex-\ntent largely in excess of such demand\nin 1900. More $50 machines and fewer\n$25 wheels of the chain .type, and 20\nto 25 per cent, more chainless bicy-\ncles will be sold this year than haa\nbeen he case since the advent of the\nchainless machine.\nThese are the facts as nearly as\nthey can be arrived at by chance or-\nders received from bicycle agents\nthroughout the country. With the\nsport itself as attractive from all es-\nsential standpoints as it has ever\nbeen, and with the country's system\nof public roads in better condition\nand far more extensive than ever be-\nfore, theSndustry has so equipped it\nself as to produce bicycles 100 per\ncent, better in quality and 300 per\ncent, cheaper price than was the\ncase when cycling, as a new sport,\nhad attained the zenith of its popu-\nlarity. Certainly no vehicle consid-\nered from all standpoints of utility,\nrecreation, pleasure, economy, cost\nand reliability of service has ' yet\ncome to the front to take the place\nof the bicycle, and that the public is\nfully alive to that fact is demonstrat-\ned by the size of the orders reaching\nthe leading makers, from thousands\nof dealers throughout the country,\nand the anxiety expressed by them\nthat these orders shall be filled with-\nout a day's unneccessary " delay.\nThese and other indications point to\na decided increase in the popularity\nof the sport, and a highly prosperous\nseason. Cycling Gazette.\nPedestrians Have Some Rigbtf,\nThat bicyclers must give warning\nof their approach when they are ca-\nreering along behind unsuspecting\ncitizens, who have net outgrown the\nhabit of feeling safe in the streets,\nmay be taken for granted, as in the\nline of the teachings
2cac1fc0452f16dc6dbaa7ce97ead0ce THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.9821917491122 39.369864 -121.105448 Justice.—Few of us weigh in our\nminds the beauty and glory of justice;\nmany, indeed, seem ignorant of its true\nmeaning. Men of every degree and\nbusiness think they have rendered jus-\ntice to themselves by the accumulation\nof wealth, no matter how; but this is a\nmistake. They may enrich their Peek-\ne's, while they cheat their souls. How-\never much, by business transactions,\nwe may enrich ourselves—the legality\nof which may be recognized by law even\n■—and, in doing so, injure our neighbor,\nit is wealth unjustly procured. Again,\nif any one deals unjustly with me, it is\nany thing but justice for me to retaliate\nby injuring him. Hierocles says, we\nought always to deal justly, not only\nto those who are just to us; but like-\nwise to those who endeavor to injure us;\nand this, too, for fear that in rendering\nthem evil for we might fall into\nthe same vice. Our conscience is the\nbest judge of justice, even better than\nthe decisions of the most learned of\njudges, for conscience seldom misdirects,\nwhile judges are liable to err. There\nare few questions of justice so intricate\nthat the individual minds of those con-\ncerned cannot unravel them; but there\nare such strong inducements for the\nwrong-doer to appeal to judge and jury,\nthat the most simple cases are placed in\ntheir hands for settlement—often to the\ninjury of the innocent. If all men\nwould act justly, many of our well-fed\nlawyers and fattened judges would min-\ngle with the obscure things. It is as-\ntonishing that justice, year after year,\nassumes a more mysterious and compli-\ncated shape; so much so, that the learn-\ned and grave are still writing volume\nupon volume, to add to the existing huge\n!)ile,
1332559dd97bb08589c893df1e6ca6b2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.3767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 Lard and pork steady. Butter flrn\n^hetso irregular. Kggs weak. Talloi\nsteadier. Cottonseed oil steady. ^\nKosin sieaay. xurppauuu auu i»="\niuts Arm.\nRice and molasses steady.\nCoffee, futures opened dull and un\nchanged to Ave points advance: close\nllrm at five to ten points net advance\nsales, 1,250 bags.\nSugar, raw steady: refined quiet.\nBALTIMORE.Flour dull and ur\n'hanged; receipts 4.434 barrels; export\n50,661 barrels. Wheat dull: spot an\nMay 70^@70ftc: July. 30%i®Ilc: Augui\nnc asked; steamer No. 2 red 65@65H<\nreceipts 5.867 bushels; exports 56,0(\njushels; southern wheat by sample 67(\ni2%c; do on grade 67@71c. Corn steady\nspot and May 41%tf41%c; June, 424\nI2%c; July. 4214#42%c; August, 42%c\niteamer mixed 40%@10%c; rec3lpts 26,\n(52: exports 222.S57 bushels: souther\nvhite corn 42Vr®4S%cr do yellow 42(?43<\n easier; No. 2 white 20U@29%c\nMo. 2 mixed 27@27M>c. Hay steady; N<\ntimothy $17 00 asked. CheeBe, butte\nmd eggs firm and unchanged.\nTOLEDO.Wheat dull and higher\nMo. 2 cash 74*£c; May, 74%c. Corn flrr\nind unchanged: No. 2 cash 40c. Oat\nlulot and higher; No. 2 cash 24c. Ry\nlull and steady; No. 2 cash 57c. Clov\nirseed dull and higher; cash prime ol\n14 70; prime new $5 00; October J5 07V4\nMo. 2, 14 1004 25.\nCINCINNATI.Flour dull. Whea\nlomlnal; No. 2 red 73ttc. Com firm; N<\nmixed 41%c. Oats dull: No. 2 mlxe\n!5&c. Ryo quiet: No. 2, 61c. Lar\niteady at $6 95. Bulkmeats dull at $7II\nBacon quiet at $8 00. "Whisky dull a\nfl 25. Butter quiet. Sugar stead]\nZggs quiet. Cheese qujet. Eggs, 10%<
940489a560c02cfce8c94704e26f4124 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.9193988754807 39.745947 -75.546589 The annual election of the ntficers\nof tlie. Good Will Fire, Company was\nheld last evening, with 74 members\nin attendance. This was the largest\nmeeting ever held in tlie fire house.\nSixtli and South streets. There were\nseveral lively friendly contests, which\nresulted in the etertian of the follow­\ning officers for one year: Theodore\n\\V Cavender, president; Walter Sib-\nPy, vice-president; James McDevll,\nsecretary ; Chart« Dougherty, treas­\nurer: Charles Dougherty, trustee;\nJames V. Campbell, fire chief; John\nJ. MeDevKJ, first assistant tire chief;\nJames Freeberry. second assistant fire\nchief; John P. I -conard, chief engi­\nneer; Charles Thome, John Fosler,\nj of in Doris, Frank Reynolds, and\nCharles Dougherty, as a board of di­\nrectors. James V. Campbell was re­\nelected recorder of fires.\nThree members nf Industrial Coun­\ncil. No. 25, Jr. O. U. A. M„ were dis­\nturbed from their slumbers last Tues­\nday night, about 12 oclock, when\nabout forty members of the council\nvisited homes and informed\nthem that they considered it was time\nthe council informed their brothers\nthat they knew they were married.\nTh -* three persons visited had become\nbenedicts during the past year and\neach wa-* presented with a v ry useful\npiece of agate ware. An improvised\nand equipped e,alithumpian band ac­\ncompanied the aggregation of noise\nmakers. The homes visited were those\nof CharUs S. Flemings, Hugh Mr-\nCaughan and Harry Newlove. Re­\nfreshments were served at two of the\nhomes but Mr. Fleming was caught\nnapping and informed the serenaders\nthat his treat would he at the coun­\ncil chamber next Tuesday evening.\nThe funeral services of Mrs. Lillie\nS Wise, wife of John S. Wise, who\ndied at her home last Sunday morning,\nwas held from her late residence yes.\nlerdav afternoon at 2 oclock, with the\nP v. S. Beattie Wylie, pastor of the\nFirst Presbyterian Church, in charge, j\nInterment was in the Presbyterian |\ncemetery.
020cc0fbb612a8d521d087a6f49e52c2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.2315068176054 39.745947 -75.546589 “ 'We have mot together, my friends,\non a very Interesting occasion'— the\nchristening of this little child—bull see\nalready a look of disappointment on\nyour faces. Is It because this Infant\nis so small? We must bear is mind\nthat this globe upon which we live\nmade up of small things, inflnltealmaj\n■objects, we might say. Little drops of\nwater make the mighty ocean; tho\nmountains which rear their hoary\nheads toward heaven and are often lost\nin the clouds are made up of little grains\nof earnl. Besides, my friends, we must\ntake into consideration tho possibili­\nties in the life of this little speek of\nhumanity. He may Ivecome a groat\npreacher, multitudes may be swayed\nby his eloquence and brought to see\nand believe in the truths of the gospel.\nHe may bo a distinguished physician,\nand hla fame as a healer of men may\nreach the uttermost parts of the earth,\nand his name go down to posterity a*\none of the greatest benefactors of hu­\nmanity. may become a great ea-\ntronomer and read the heavens ne an\nopen book. Ho may discover new stars,\nwhich may be known by h.la name and\nhis name may be coupled with that of\nNewton and other great discoverers.\nHe may become a rUwtinguiehed states­\nman and orator and by the strength of\nhis intellect and eloquence he may con­\ntrol the destinies of nations, and l;ia\nname, may be engraved upon monu­\nments erected to perpetuate Ms mem­\nory by bis admiring and grateful coun­\ntrymen. He may 1>eeome an author\nand a poet, and bis name may yet ap­\npear among those now entombed at\nWestminster. Ho may become a great\nwarrior and lead armies to battle and\nvictory ; bis prowees and valor may\nchange the map of Europe. Methlnkji\nT hear the plaudits of the people at the\nmention of bis deeds and name. He\nrnav become—'er, 'er—bo might—er—\n" Turning to the mother:\n“ 'What Is his name?' ”\n“The mother—What is the babys\nname?
3fcd22e1a747a72166cb259d9e1b5f8f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.4479451737698 58.275556 -134.3925 Tho following Interesting article\noil ledum! Is taken from u paper In-\nsued by t lie .Mergenthuler Linotype\nCol, which builds thu typesetting\nmachines t hut aru used ull over the\nworld In modern printing; offices:\nIceland has linotypes. If news¬\npapers had reached the Hlinple per¬\nfection of vor llbre, tills simple re¬\nmark would be the whole story.\nSomething more, however, Beems to\nbe required anil therefore aH a\ntrain, no to speak, to the majesty of\nthe plain announcement, wo add that\nIceland's linotypes are not operated\nby polar beara or the aurora bore-\nalls, but by operators who "put It\nover" all o\\her composing rooms In\nthe world sy far as classic purity of\ncomposition is concerned. If a New\nYork or a Chicago or San Francisco\noperator were setting his lintoype\nmatter In the Saxon of King Alfred,\nor compositors .of France. Italy and\nSpain wore linotyping pure Gothic,\nthey would be doing something to\n with those Icelandic men. They\nnrc linotyping in pure saga language\nand why this Is so Is explained in\nthe following interview with VII-\nhjnlmur SlefaiiBson. the famous Arc¬\ntic explorer and ethnologist.\nThere are no elementary schools In\nIceland. There hardly are what we\nshould call high schools. It would\nfollow, apparently, that the per¬\ncentage of Illiteracy Is immense. The\ncxact contrary is the fact. In tills-\nlonely sea-caged place Just under\nthe Arctic circle there Is absolutely\nno Illiteracy at ail. There never has\nbeen any. Evon the Dark Ages did\nnot ecllpe Iceland as completely as\nthey eclipsed the rest of Europe,\ni There has been so sustained a\npreservation of knowledge that to¬\nday there is no farm, howovor lone¬\nly. that does not possess Inmates\ncompetent to educate the chlldron.\nSome worker always is compcent to\nnet as tutor, and every Icelandic\nfather and mother Is competent as\nn matter of course.
0dea09de5d026be922a81c5eb8c1f82c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.368493118975 40.063962 -80.720915 "An Old £stablisi!bd Firm..The $.\nlirm of 8. M. Pettenglll & Co. commenced\ntheir Advertising Agency in the old Jour i?t\nnal building, No. 10 Stato street, Boston, gj;\nnoarly a quarter ol a ccntury ngo (Feb- pi\nruary 1849), whero their Agency Is still gj;\nlocated, carrying on a largo and success- pi\nful business. They established a branch 'c\nin New York City, May 1852, which has n°\ngrown to bo larger than the parent bouse,\n. increasing steadily, year by year, until\nnow it baa the Agency oi nearly every ell\nnewspaper hi the United States and sc\nBritish Provinces,and doesayearly buii- la:\nncss of hundreds ot thousands ot dollars, th\n8! Hi. Pettengill & Co. have recently on\nopened onother branch ofllco at 701 Chest- m\nnut street, 1'liiladclphla, where they are th\n a successful increasing business. Fi\nThey have dono advertising exceedtog ten ta\nmillions of dollars since commencing bust- be\nness. The firm is favorably known not W\nonly throughout this country, but in all ot\nparts of tho world. The; have establish- Pi\ned a reputation for honorable and fair CI\ndealing which any firm might envy, and 82\nbut few havo attained to. Wo congratu- OG\nlate tbcm upon their bucccss. Wo would 90\nrecommend all who want advertising j,\ndone in any part of tho country to call\nupon them. They can point to hundreds\not business men who have followed their ®°\nacvlco, and trusted to their sagacity, and di\navailed themselves of their facilities, who\nhavo made fortunes for themselves, and\nthey are dally assisting otters in tho same\npath.".notion journal, may oiu.
031d3cc9148ba60aad891a925a726644 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.387671201167 39.745947 -75.546589 were among those who sat down to din­\nner; Dr. Hugh Martin, D. P. Barnard,\nJr., F. G . DuPont. Bishop Coleman, Rev.\nCharles E. Murray, Rev T. G. Littell,\nRev D.O Howard, Rev. 8. D . McConnell,\nD D., John A, Bell of the New York\nChurch Club, Dr. C. Elton Buck, E, T.\nWarner, Alfred Lee, Charles Stewett,\nRev H L Braddon, 8. Minot 'Curtis, A.\nH. Foster, Isaac Elliott, Captain Wil­\nlard Thomson, Colonel E. L . Martin,\nJames E Dallett, J. D Carter, John 8\nGrelle, E. A . Van Trump. Delaware\nClark, E. T. Can by, Captain G. L . Brown,\nRobert Justls, Jnsta Justis, David\nOurlett, Henry G. Morse. William M\nKenuard, Dr. Horace Burr, VYIlllam\nDavidson, George Lodge, W. Jeuks\nFell, John R. Lambson, T. Leslie Car­\npenter, William J. Fisher, Thomas\nMitchell, Thomas Holcomb, John H\nRodney, John Brown. Dr Orr of Lewis,\nGeorge A. Elliott, Charles B. Paimer,\nWilliam L. Mitchell. Charles E Dubell\naud Charles B \nThe menu was served under the super­\nvision of Caterer Robert Graves and an\nhoar aud a half was spent in the discus\nsion of it. At 10.15 o'clock Dr. Hugh\nMartin, the new president, introduced as\nthe first speaker President Bell of the\nNew York Church Club. Mr. Bell con­\ngratulated the Church Club of Delaware\non its success in bringing together\nrepresentative man of the church\nthroughout the state aud presented to\nthem the congratulations of the New\nYork Club. They all rejoic.d in the\nformation of au association that ensured\nunity of action and interchange of ideas.\nRev. 8. D McConnell, D D.. of St.\nStephen's Church, Philadelphia\nlivered an eloquent aud complimentary\naddress, in which he congratulated\nBishop Coleman on the aid such organ­\nizations would give him by bringing\ntogether high churchmen, low church­\nmen and broad churchmen and secure\nunity of action to the church at large\nHe thought that the laity\nthis way be more servicsabli\nclergy.
39260f39cf1ed7610a5b23d455624d8f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.6671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 Btated to me tbe lact that my Legislature\nwas infested with thieves, and gave mc\nthe names o| many that ho held to\nbe ot this class, i will give\ntbe name of one bo designated as\na consumate rogue, was then a member\nof the Mississippi benato, to-day is your\ncaudidate for Auditor o! l'ublic accounts,\nno other than W. II. Gibba. Musgrow,\nwho is au honest and competent ofllcer,\nwas over-ridden by the Convention and\nGibba nominated. Gibba bad made an\neffort to rob the State by approving a\nfraudulent account ot $20,000. Ames\ngave me the names ot many others, who,\nbe laid, were no better.. lie sulci these\nmen intended to plunder tue .Htatft and\nwhen they found mo iu the way, would\nmake war on me by misrepresentation at\nWashington. He stated that I would\nneed a iriend at Washington who .knew\ntbeso men, and who could save my gov*\nernuieut from the consequences of their\nrepresentations. 1 was alarmed And soon\nagreed to support htm for the Senate. He\nlaid be bad no taste for political life,\nand desired an endorsement that he\nnight bo appointed Brigadier General in\nthe regular army. I agreed to do1 what \ncould to advance him. He was elected,\nand bis credentials were referred to the\nJudiciary Committee of the ftenate. All\nthe lawyers of marked distinction In iho\nCommittee reported that Ames was not a\n»U»not» r>f Mtnalsotppt, ami mw notantillad\nto a seal; but under the manipulations ol <\nliis party he was admitted. He soon Ula- (\ncovered (hat hla chances for promotion in '\nthe arm; were without hope, and began i\nto look to the question ol his poaitlon as\nSenator from Mississippi Anus knew 1\nwell that his hope ol continuance in the\nSenate, while living out of the Stato,\ncould not be realized. ShooId thecolored\nind white people become, u the; should\nbe, friends; when the S|iue should once\nSnd repose, with contented people,\nthey would desire to be represented Jn\nCongress by men of their own Suto.\npien .whose intereets are-identified with\nthe people of the'State. Amis was not\nnow, nor did he intend to be, of this clan.\nMisalsippi, as a place of residence had\nno attractions for Ames. A quasi state\nof war mult be kept up or Ainos could\nnot hope to maintain his -place. He Baw\nthat my purpose was to make peace
335439019c57e0bb8683bda635bb62ed THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.7082191463724 37.451159 -86.90916 tures were received by the editor andI\nforeman of the Beacon brickbats were\nthrown through the windows of the\nprinting office and in the still hours o\nnight the type was mixed up and pled t\nso that the paper was greatly delayed\nin being issued Dempsey appeared1 to\nbe the especial victim of the\nand the office suffered conslderebly from\nthe depredations Foreman Dempsey\nclaims to have been struck several tin I\nby rocks and missiles He appeared to\nbe greatly agitated and scared halt to\ndeath all the time Mysterious lette\nthreatened both him and the editor\nwith death if the publication of the pa ¬\nper was not stopped\nThe matter was put into the hands of\nClay Morris town marshal of West\nPoint yet the depredations con\ndespite careful watching Finally\nenough evidence adduced to impli ¬\ncate Dempsey In the strange plunder ¬\ning of the Beacon office and he was ar ¬\nrested Soon after his arrest he made a\nconfession in which he said that he\nhimself was the cause of all the trouble\nand the sole actor in the mysteriousI\nperformances He said he was inducedI\ntodoitbyH A Clark a well known\ncitizen and promoter on account of the\nlatter having a grudge against the lieu\ncon because the paper had failed to give\nhim the support to which he thought tie\nwas entitled in the establishment of a\ncanning factory at West Point Clark\nindignantly denied the charge and afte\nhis arrestdemanded an immediate trial\nwhich ne was given In the trial before\nJudge Shirley Clark was discharged on\nthe ground that proof was InsufficIent-\nto
af04538078be8f25267f9c29dc77608c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.1109588723998 41.681744 -72.788147 Rev. William F. Cavanaugh of the\nSt. Augustine Novitiate was the speak-\ner at the Lenten services last evening\nat St. Mary's church. Father Cavan-\naugh spoke on the necessity of\npenance and told of the work of the\nTrappist order, whose monastery lie\nvisited in Canada some time ago. The\nspeaker told of seeing the grave of a.\nlocal man who had affiliated witlj The\norder of Trappisls and had the details\nof his burial described to him. Since\nit is one of the customs of those who\nenter thc order to drop among other\nworldly possessions, their names, and\nto be henceforth known by the name\nof a patron saint, the speaker was\nnot In a position to know of the de-\nceased anything other than his name\nin religion and the city from which\nhe entered the order.\nAfter a of penance and labori-\nous work within the cloistered walls\nof the Trappist monastery near the\nCanadian side of the St Louis lake.\nthe local man passed away. Father\nCananaugh said, and was buried dur-\ning a heavy snowfall. Significant f\nsubmission .to the Creator, the body\nwas laid, face downward, on a fla'.\nboard and borne to the graveyard by\nbrother monks. At the grave, .one of\nthe monks stepped into the hole and\nreceived the body in his arms after\nwhich he folded the arms as a sign of\npeace. The monk then stepped out of\nof the grave and the hole was lilled\nin. Following the simple ceremony, the\nmonks chanted a hymn and returned\nto their labors. Thus was ended, the\nspeaker concluded, the life of a man\ndoing penance that the rest of his\nbrethren might be saved.
76414d0f9ddd79b5e989b08d27ba529e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.919178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 If you will examine carefully you will\nfind two facts in our late rebellion\nwhich have been mainly overlooked.\n1st. Slavery was an intermediate\ncause of the rebellion, not a primary.\nThe primary runs back for generations.\nVirginia was settled by the reckless\nchevaliers of Charles the Ist's day.\nSouth Carolina by the Huguenota and\nthe same spirit was perpetrated by both,\nThe memory of the old instead oftbe\nprospect of the world's progress. Per¬\nsonal pride, the memory of genera¬\ntions.the bones under ground, was the\noriginal spirit of the whole thing. I\nwill give something good to find a man\namong the whole Southern Confederacy\nwho feared, in the election of Mr. Lin¬\ncoln any attack upon or injury to\nslavery. As we have said it was onlv\nan element that sustained\nthe old programme of the few govern¬\ning the many, because the fow drew\ntheir ideas of social life and the world,\nfrom the past.when the world was half\n. yea more than half savage and would\npreserve that status because they are\ndetermined to impress upon social cir¬\ncles.that youth, strength, beauty,birth,\nwealth, exemption from labor, Ac.,\nshould bo the governing power, and all\nelse was "poor white trash."\nThe tournaments of East Virginiaare\nintended to foster the past in a feeble\nway, instead of looking to the future\nand the great principal of equality.\nFrom an examination of our Southern\nfiles we think much more work is to be\ndone yet to suppress the real rebellion\nand give us a firm, loyal, equal people s\ngovernment.
26c0ff0936659d7ec1da5e731b568fbe THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.2342465436327 42.217817 -85.891125 "Our language is the language of\nfree people and fails to furnish any form\nof speech by which the right of a citizen\nto work when he pleases, for whom ho\nplease9, and on what terms he pleases,\ncan be successfully denied. Ihe common\nsense of our people, as well as the com\nmoo law, forbids that this right should\nbe assailed with impunity. It is vain to\nnay that the man who remains at work\nwhile others ceaso to work, or takes the\nplace of one who has abandoned his\nwork, helps to defeat the aspirations of\nmen who seek to obtain better reconi\npense for their labor and better condi-\ntions of life. Approval of the object of a\nstrike, or persuasion that its puriose is\nhiuh and noble, cannot sanction any at\ntempt to destroy the riyht of others to a\ndifferent opinion this respect or to in\nterfere with their conduct in choosing to\nwork upon what terms and at what time\nand for whom it may please them to do\nso. The right thus to work car not be\nmade to depend ujon the approval or\ndisapproval of the personal character\nand conduct of those who claim to exer\ncise this right. If this were otherwise\nthen those who remain at work miirht, if\nthey were :n tho majority, have both the\nright and power to prevent others, who\nchoose to cease to work, from so doing.\nThis all seems too plain for argument.\nCommon sense and common law alike\ndenounce the conduct of those who in-\nterfere with this fundamental right of\nthe citizens. The assertion of the right\nseems trite and commonplace, but that\nland is blessed where the maxims of\nliberty aro commonplaces."
1be570dae32ede4bf7801233278588bc THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.382191749112 37.451159 -86.90916 went about halt way down the alley\nand called to the darkies to make leu\nnoise He pleaded with them that\nthere had been no trouble so far daring\nthe two days of the fair and begged them\ntonotlettho event sod up in a row\nHe told them he would have to arres\nsome of them if they did not get quiet\nofAndy Render then walked out from\nthe crowd of regress towards Marshal\nPurls and said in a tantalizing way that\nhed be dd if the Marshal could arrest\nhim He kept advancing towards\nMarshal Paris in a threatening manner\nwith one band behind him Pa\nthought his life was in danger and jnstii\nbefore Render got to him he thrust his\npistol out anishot the darkey in theI\nbreast The bullet pierced Renders\nheartand bo died instantly\nMarshal Paris went straight and gave\nhimself up to Sheriff C P Keown\nThere was considerable excitement\ndown the alley for a little while Sever-\nal darkies went to Render to hold him\nup but he was already dead There\nwas no weapon found upon him but iItI\nis said he displayed a pistol only a short\n before the shooting He had the\nreputation of being a desperate darkey\nand had several times threatened\nMarshal Paris life He with other dar\nkin got into trouble with Marshal\nParis several weeks ago and the\nMarshals life was in great danger then\nHe had to call upon the Sheriff to help-\no him quell the mob One of the regress\nwas heard to remark shortly before the\nshooting that there was going to be\ntrouble in this old town tonight\nThe above account of the shotting is\nthe sum and substance of the affair as\ngiven to a HERALD reporter by Marshal\nParis The excitement did not last\nlong and was in no wise of such a sen¬\nsational character as depicted in several\ncity papers by some irresponsible re ¬\nporter here Render lay where he fell\nfor about an hour and there was groatI\nwailing among the darkies About\nnine oclock his remains were taken to\nMcHenry in an express wagon\nMarshal Paris has been in the hands\nof guards since the shooting and his\ncase will probably be taken up by the\ngrand jury now in session here some\ntime this week
1a44e3c1098bf25a75deeba82ea9bdda EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.023287639523 39.745947 -75.546589 The greatest drawback to security\nfavorable legislation, however, is pol\nitics. One or the other party is oppos\ned to this or that law because It h\nliable to injure its chances at the bal\nlot box, and when a legislator feel)\nthe etfect of the party whip It doesnl\ntake him long to make up his min!\nthat some particular law Isnt half at\nnecessary as ne thought It was.\nThe idea that the Legislature doei\nwhat the people want is even more a\na palpable fraud than the populai\nidea that the people elect their owi\ncandidate for President or für Con\ngiess. They dont do anything of thi\nkind, but so long as they can be foole!\ninto believing they do they will con\ntinue to fulfill the statement made b]\nsome smait man that “Where ignor\naace Is bliss 'tis folly to be \nAnd so It is with the average leglsla\ntor. After he i,s elected he sweLs ui\nwith honest pride and says In sub\nstance, “I am going to see that ml\nconstituents get the laws they nee!\nand want,” and off he goes to the Leg\nislature. But he has not been then\nlong before he learns that in the eyei\nof the politician the people öccupl\nabout the same position that Barn un\nalioted them. He is given to under\nstand in vai lous way# that If he value!\nhis political future it will be better tot\nhim to vole as he is told, and the ma\njorlty of them generally do It. That li\nwhy there have oeeu some mighty ba!\nlaws passed and for the same reasoi\nseveral thousand more will be passet\ntime continues to roll on and Leg\nIslatures continue to meet.
7ab5dbe63948863040fae67f92575597 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.4561643518518 39.261561 -121.016059 An Ordinance providing for the licensing of Togs. Th*\nTrustees of the City of Nevada do ordain aa follow* :\nSec. 1. From and after the first day ofJuly a. d. 18W ,\nit shall not be lawful for the owners or other peraons hav-\ning the charge of dogs to allow them to run at large withia\nthe corporeal limits of t e towu of Nevada except a* pro*\nvided lor in this Ordinance.\nSec. 2. Every owier or other person having the charge\nof dog* shall pay for a license for keeping each dog th*\nsum of five dollars per year, payable in advance at th*\nMarshal's office.\nSec. 3. The Marshal shall provide for each peraon ap-\nplying for a license under this ordinance a brass tag, stamp-\ned with a consecutive number, which tag shall be securely\nfastened upon neck of the dog for which the license i*\ntaken out. He shall also furnish to the person taking out\nthe licence a receipt for the amount of money paid with\nthe date of the license a receipt for the amount of money\npaid, with the date of the license.\nSic. 4. It shall be the duty ot the Marshal and watch-\nmen to kill and remove all dogs found running at large,\nthe owners of which shah not have complied with the pro-\nvisions of thia ordinance; and all persons o structing th*\naforesaid officer* in the performance of their duties u»d*r\nthis ordinance, upon conviction, may be fined in any sum\nnot exceeding one hundred dollar or less thau ten dollars;\nor. in default of payment, by imprisonment nol more thap\nten days in the city jail.\nPaaaod Jure 9th, 1858.
1f788f6be037d8d5f295cd2fd8788842 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.4753424340436 39.745947 -75.546589 Harry Luff. Mr and Mrs. Charles Hayes.\nMr. and Mrs. John W. Dakins, Mr. and\nMrs. Harvey T. Clark, Mr. and Mrs.\nPrsston Shockley, Mr. and Mrs. William\nHash, Mr. and Airs. William Day, Mrs.\nAllred Banks .Mr. and Mrs. Kmmor Cloud,\nLeonard C. Talley, Mr. and Mrs. Joel\nPierre, Air. and Airs. H. K, Hanby, Air,\nand Mrs. Henry F. Bartels, Mr. ami Mrs.\nCharles Humes, Air. and Mrs. John C.\nPprreL Afr. and Airs. D. K . Pierson, Air.\nant) Mrs. Samuel AleDnniel, Mr, and\nMrs. L . Scott Townsend, Mr. and Airs.\nB. F . Simmons, Jr., Aliss Jest me Sim\nmorts, of Dover; 7!r. and Airs. Benjamin\nT. Dickey, of Stanton; Air. and Mrs.\nHarry Hanee, of New Castle; James T.\nWebster, Townsend; Mr. and Mrs. Wil­\nliam T. Lymun and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Henry Miller, and Airs. Wil­\nliam Pyle, J. LyIna ii Pyle, Mrs. Lizzie\nIngran. Air and Mrs. Harry M. Hinkson,\nBessie L. and ft, Is-e Miller, Ada Ben\n(janVAlr. and Mrs. William P. Jones, Mr.\nfind Mrs. John Linton, Air. and Mrs.\nHfixry.Hullingsworth, «11 of Wilming\nton; Mr and Mrs. George W. Webster,\nMr. and Mrs, Thons id C. Webster, Mr.\nfiM Mrs. H . Paul Simon, Mr. and Mrs.\nWalks I u Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Dutton\nWebster, Air. and Mr«. < assius C. Web\n(befrei*1' Mrs Stewart Ramsey, Mr.\nand Air»! Ttlarrv Weldin, Mr. and Mrs.\nOurlée Hanby, Kir. and Airs. Joseph Pel\nitdemange. Mr. and Mr*. Alfred Petttde\n* mange, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Talley, Mr.\nand Mrs. William P. / .elder, Air. and\nMrs William P. /elder. Mr, and Mrs,\nClark Pyle, Mrs. Mary Pierson, Mr. ami\nAir«.
3afd229e297e26168ac52cbb5073add9 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4972602422629 44.939157 -123.033121 entries for the "Grand" are Winnipeg\nRowing Club, Winnipeg, Canada, and\nthe Mainzer Ruder Veroin, of Mayence,\nGermany. The Hoyal Club Nautique of\nGhent, Belgium has entered an eight\nfor the Thames (Jhallcnge Cup.\nFor the Stewards Cup, (fours) the\nMainzer Ruder Arerein, of Mayence,\nGermany and tho Grasshoppor club, of\nZurich, Switzerland, compete while in\nthe Diamond Sculls, virtually the\nworld's amateur championship for sin-\ngle scullers. American is represented\nby James B. Aver, William Tudor\nGardiner, and Paul Withington, all of\nthe Union Boat Club, Boston, Mass.;\nCanada by Robert Dibblo, Don Rowing\nClub, Toronto, Canada; and Italy by\nGiuseppe Siuigaglia, Lnrio Club, Como.\nSo seriously ha this foroign invasion\nbeen taken by British rowing men that\nthe Iicaniler Club England's leading\naquatic organization, has strained every\nnerve to put the best possible eight in\nthe competition for grand challenge.\nThere will be tho usual strong College\neights from Oxford ami Cambridge, but\nwhen Lcander puts itself to the trouble\nit always manages to get a real Eng-\nland eight. Leander always gets into\nthe filial and the crew which will do\ndutv this vear is: D. L. Dav, S. E.\nSwan, C. E . V. Buxton, E. D. Horsfall.\nC. S. ( lark, A. F. R. Wiggins, F. F.\nScrutton and R. C . Bourne.\nTho best of the British champions for\nthe " Diamonds " are: A. McCulloeh,\nK. G. Williams, "S . E . Swann, K. D.\nPinks and E. L. Watts. The finals will\nbe rowed Friday and Saturday. Only\ntwice have American oarsmen carried\naway the Henley trophies: in 1872 when\nColumbia University won the Visitors\nCup (fours) and in 1S97, when E. H.\nTon Eyek, Wachusett, Mass.,
27929ff89706d751c1505fda1bfbcbaf THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.703551880945 39.743941 -84.63662 What are the white people to do in an\ninstance of this kind; In the parish in\nquestion there are two thousand colored\nregistered voters and about two hundred\nwhite registered. The minority are com\npletely at tbe mercy of the majority.\nThe courts are in the bands of ignorant\ncolored men, and the law officials are\nthose who are instigating tbe crimes, it\nwas in this parish that young Hale was\ndragged from his mother's room and shot\ndown by a mob of infuriated blacks so\nclose to that mother mat nis brains ana\nblood bespattered her clothes. W. D.\nWinter, who had a big brain and a warm\nheart, was called to the window of his\nstudy, wherein he sat teaching his little\nboy, and brutally shot down in the \nence of his household. These facts should\ngo for something. If they are good for\nnothing else they snouia De suincient to\nshow the condition of society that Radi-\ncal rule has fostered. In this parish\nwhere I have stated there are two thou\nsand colored registered voters to two\nhundred whites, there is a company of\nsoldiers stationed for the avowed purpose\nof protecting the majority from the mi-\nnority. Yet for one negro killed in that\nparish there have been five white men\nbrutally murdered. What is tbe material\ncondition of the parish? The whites are\nimpoverished, the blacks are working on\nhalf wage;, while a few Radical office-\nholders are living in luxury and fast buy-\ning up the best property to be had in the\ncounty.
51fc8095816cc9cdcef5745f812fa0af THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6379781104533 39.290882 -76.610759 has been the only place where articles of public\ninterest belonging to individuals could be de-\nposited to be scan; and it has been the recipient\nof many a treasure from far beyond the sea.?\nBut as a museum it has been comparatively use-\nless to the public, because of the "pay system"\nthat is necessarily connected with it.\nWe have inthis city a Library of eleven thou-\nsand voluiraa, as well chosen, I will venture to\nsay, as any collection of the same size inthe Uni-\nted States, ?a Library which is every day be-\ncoming more and more valuable as a Library of\nreference. This is also the property of a joint\n. Stock Company, and tc enjoy its privileges,\none must not only own a share of the capital\nstock, but must, in addition, pay an annual fee\nto support the Librarian, and pay the rent of the\nbuilding, as well as to provide a fund for the\npurchase of new Such purchases\ncannot now be made to any extent, however, for\nwant of means; audit must be fresh in the recol-\nlection of most of those present, that during the\nlast two years, numerous attempts have been\nmade to keep it upon a proper footing, by en-\nlarging its means and extending its usefulness, ?\nattempts as yet but partially, if at all, successful.\nWc have also in Baltimore, the Maryland\nAcademy of Science and Literature, an institu-\ntion organized upon an excellent plan, and such\nan one as should be adopted for that which it is\nproposed to establish. The Academy consists\nof an association of gentlemen, who pay an an-\nnual fee, which is appropriated to defray the cur-\nrent expenses. It has a very excellent collec-\ntion of fossils and minerals, and various articles\nof interest connected with natural History. It\nhas also an useful scientific Library, and it has\nprofited already by exchanging its duplicates\nwith other Itamed associations.
177be3aebabf8c25f1e5367fd91bc7bf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.8534246258243 40.063962 -80.720915 rounds, owing to tbc size of $jjifcrcrow<\nbut although tbe sudden teritrfnaWon c\nthe contest at tbe end of tbS^Ptecnt\nround was a surprise to ev^JrybOdy 1\nthe. house, uot a protest was heard.\nOscar Gardner, who arrived lit Wheel\nlag last evening, officiated in refer*\nNo one felt the slim receipts piore tha\nhe did, for he secured a banner card 1\nFisher and Colyer, and he confident!\nexpected to see his enterprise rewardet\nBut a plethora of boxing contests thl\nfall, and little or no acquaintance wit\nthe men, conspired in 'there not beln\n100 people on the register. Those wh\nattended saw a gilt-edged battle. Flsli\ner, who has all the ear-marks of .a ton\nnutcber, had a foeman worthy of hi\nsteel in Colyer, but Fisher'* superiorit\nwas manifested at every stage. It wa\na case where two men are good, an\none IB Better, wqemer mey nuu a\nvloim arrangement whereby flftee\nrounds was the limit cm account of th\nslim attendance, isn't known. But the\ncouldn't have worked harder, and th\ndecision of draw, with the cessation c\nthe contest, were both satisfactory an\ntiouncementR. It was a great contest c\ntwo crackerjacks, at catchweights, uac\nweighing: between ISO.and 155 pounds.\nBuzz" Auber secured the decislo\nover "Little Pete" in a four-round pre\nllminary, and in the other prelirolnar\nalso of four rounds, between Jerse\nGordon, of Washington. Pa., and "Red\nConley, of Wllllnmsport. Pa., no decla\nIon was rendered. Gordon ouhreighe\n"Rpd" fortv nounds. and "Red" mad\nup the deficiency In his cleverness.\nBoth Fisher and Colyer looked to b\nin splendid condition for their bou*\nThey were a well matched pair, and fln\nphysical specimens. Coilyer was a trifl\nthe smaller. Previous to the call c\ntime. Manager Murphy, in view of th\nsmallness of the house, asked the audi\nepce to supplement the Club's contrlbu\ntlon towards swelling the purse. Th\nmatch was arranged on Opcgj-- Gar^l\nt>cr> responsibility. pnd th* b'osers ha\ncome from'New York. for.the contes:\niMUilirg them considerable expens<\nhence the crowd responded nobly t\nManager Murphy's appeal. ^JTben th\ncontest opened up.
00e6049567e322a54deaf477e14ce787 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.5520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 tho total production of pig Iron in the\nUnited States In the first half of 18*7, was\n4,403,47® gross tons. Am compared with\nthe flrst half of 1806 there was a decrease\nIn the first half of 1897 of 572,760 tons, but\nas compared with the second half of 1896,\nthero waa an increase of 756,585 tons.\nThe production ot Bejwemer pig Iron In\nthe first half of 1897 was 1495,971 gross\ntons. Of the total Increase of 756.585\ntona of all kinds of pig Iron in the first\nhalf of 1897, over that of the last half of\n1896, 634 .695 tons, or almost six-sevenths,\nwas of Ifc-ssemer quality.\nThe whole number of furnaces in Mast\non June 30. 1997. was 145, against 159 on\nDecember 81. 1IM The number out of\nblawt on Juno 30, 1897, waa .119. Unsold\nstock* of pig Iron on June 1897, In ths\nhands of manufacturers or their agents,\nand which were intended for their own\nconaumptlon, amounted to 827,163 grots\ntoo* agnln«t 711.649 tons cn December\n31, an Increase of 115.514 tons.\nIncluded In the stock of unsold pig Iron\non hand Junr 80, were 75,085 tona In ths\nyards of the American pig Iron atoraga\nwarrant company, which were yet under\nthe control of the makers, the part In\nthc«o yards not under their control\namounting to 145.511 too*, which added\nto the 827,153 tons above mentioned,\nmakes a total of 973,578 gross tons of pig\nIron which were on the market at that\ndate, against a similar t<'tal of 847.686\ntona on December 31, 189<J. The total\nslocks In th* above named warrant\nyarde on June 30. 1197, amounted to Ml,*\n600 tons, of which slmost four-fifths\nwere held in Ihs eouth.
152da36d6033165e735eb39e19dc9a47 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1902.009589009386 41.875555 -87.624421 Kvcry day things happen that furnish\nmitllclcut excuse for Individual, munici-\npal, or even national rejoicing. It Is not\nso often that anything happens to ben- el - l\nt the whole world and to mako tt\nproper for the two Hemispheres to con\ngratulate each other. Just such hap-\npening, however, Is this of tho trans-\nmission of tho lint wireless MgnaU\nacross I ho Atlantic. In this achievement\nall mankind may tnko satisfaction. It\nIs a trlumpjjjfor everybody. Of course\nIt Is Marconi In pitrttculnr who Is to bo\ncomplimented, nnd tho public will not\nbo sorry that It Is he. Marconi has con-\nducted his researches and experiments\nIn tho most odinlrablo way. Ills dis-\nclosures to the public have coma after,\nand not "before, tho fact. They havo\nbeen accounts of what ho has done, not\nof whut ho Intends to do. If \nhad plans for communicating with tho\nPleiades tho public would know noth-\ning nbout It till tho first messago from\nthat constellation bnd been received\nnnd translated. So when ho says that\nhe, In Newfoundland, has received sig-\nnals through tho air from England, ho\ncan bo believed. No doubt Marconi,\nllko other men. Is not mndo unhappy\nby public recognition of his services.\nHut ho relies for that recognition on his\nachievements, not on his aspirations.\nFor such a man tho public has a deep\nrespect mid a cordial admiration. Only\nono exception can bo taken to tho uni-\nversal shout of approval that will\ndoubtless grcot tho young scientist.\nThere Is some danger that In glorifying\nhim tho public may forget tho men\nwhoso steady, patient toll made his\ndaxzllng success possible. In tho 'SO's\nJames Lindsay sent a wireless t el o-gr a-
29f88e255f41609fff9d046ff5c713c7 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.6315068176052 37.451159 -86.90916 And so the Democrats of Kentucky\nknow that W S Taylor had mlhiny to\ndo with the killing of Governor Goebel\ndo they How many of them know It\nor even think ItV Is there a single\nKentucky Democrat who will come\nout over his own signature and say\nany such thing We hardly think so\nIf the editor of the Journal Is a con ¬\nscientious and fairminded man and\nnot knowing him we cannot aver\notherwise and will come to Kentucky\nand Investigate Into the assassination\nof Wm Goebel wa believe he will\nhave every reason to lnote that W S\nTaylor did have something to do with\nthe killing of Mr Goebel We will\nnot ask him to take the word of Dem ¬\nocrats for it Wo will refer hIm to\nthe sworn testimony of men high up\nin tho councils and esteem of the Re ¬\npublican party of Kentucky These\nmen say that Taylor knew every\nmurderous detail Then wo will ask\nhim to go to the plain history of\nevents In our Stato at the time of Mr\nGoebels murder and see If ho can\nglean from them anything that points\nto W S Taylor us having any pre ¬\nIous knowledge of or anything to do\nwith Win Goebelti taking off Who\nbrought the mountain feudlstH to\nFrankfort a thousand strong Who\nIssued orders fur soldiers who barred\nthe entrance to thu legislative\nhall and at the point of whose\nbayonets the Kentucky Leglsla ¬\nture was dispersed Who adjourn ¬\ned the General Assembly to meet\nat London Laurul county the\nhotbed of the feudists section Who\ngave orders Immediately utter Mr\nGocbels assassination forbidding that\nany search bo made around the Capl ¬\ntol buildings for the assassins Who\nsuspended the writ of uttous mrjnu In\nviolation of Section 1II of the First\nArticle of the Constitution which de-
428234a648ace797154e214a6c1fe1cf OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6352458700162 39.513775 -121.556359 towns. The telegraph is one of the im-\nprovements that we need to assist us in our\nonward march. It will not do to say tFiat\nthese things will all come around in time\nwithout effort on the part of our citizens.\nIt was the completion of the Ditch that\nbrought so numerous a population to our\ntown ; in fact, that built Oroville, and that\nwas net completed without an effort, and a\nvery serious one. If we now construct a tel-\negraph to connect with the cities below,\nhowever much other cities may amuse them-\nselves at what they are pleased to term our\npretensions, they will be compelled to ack-\nnowledge that we have the spirit, determi-\nnation and means to rival older towns of the\nState, and capital, which always seeks the\nbest places for investment, will seek our\ntown and county, establish wholesale \nin our midst, dig out our coal, and ship our\nlumber and marble, just as certainly as the\ncompletion of the Ditch brought the present\npopulation to Oroville, and developed the\nmines now enriching those who arc working\nthem. It is but a step further than we have\nalready progressed, and as we cannot stand\nstill, let us take events by the forelock and\ncontrol and direct them, instead of leaving\nthem to chance, or we may find ourselves\nsituated like a city somewhat lower down—-\nriver navigation “drying up,” and the trade\nof the mines cut off by a railroad along the\nfoot-hills from the Day to the northern por-\ntion of the State. Let us build the Tele-\ngraph now, and when that is completed, we\nwill take another step, and have the Rail-\nroad, which must ultimately traverse the\nvalley, establish a depot at Oroville.
028a15265fa762478990dee884976dd1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.7109588723997 40.063962 -80.720915 ay night last rh follows:\n"Prince Georgo showed his British\nluck the night before last, which ir\nolved hia Retting into a senouB acrapi\n'he whole story has been carefully k«p\nom tho public, and all questions ar\nlet with oflicial denial. Alier tlie Acai\nmy reception on Wednesday Princ\nleorge returned to hia hotel, change\nis dress suit, and otarted out with on\nf hia lieutenants and a local nabob t\no the town. While passing the coi\ner of St. ConBtan and La Gauchetierr\ntreats, the trio were accosted by a nun.\nar ofruUiins, who asked for monej\nbefore they had time to con\nly with the request the prince and hi\nrienda were attacked. JuBt how it haj\nened is not known, but in a mo men\nhe prince and hia friends were engage\nn a rough and tumble light with six c\nheir assailants. The Montreal nabo\nraB aoon laid low and a few minutt\nhinga looked bad, for the prince nn\nhe other oflicer found that aix to tw\nvere big odda. Then the princo and th\nieutenaut gotback to back, and handlin\nheir fiata with true British pugiliati\ncience, astonished the rongha. Thre\n(these fell before the scientific hittin\nf royalty alone, while hia compauio\n*id low two and the sixth took to fligh\nlad matters ended here everyihin\n?ould have been lovely. But thuy di\nlot. For along came two of Montreal\nloatotupid French "bobbies," who, set\nau six men lying on the sidewalk an\nvviicid uouuiuj? over tuetn, n;\nested and took, them all to th\ntation, in spite of the protests of th\nirinco. They wero all, of course\noneiderably battered and tougl\nooking as a result of the fray. No pre\nesta or requests could obtain release\n;nd they locked up the royal prisoner\n'inally the sergeant of police conaente\no
28a31fae33dcee54d549ba86d8d99ccc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.1931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 nd infamous attempt to attach disgrace b\nind dishonor to my name. B\nMr. Carpenter said that it was with b\nmrpriso and grief he listened to tbe argu- n\nrcent of tho Senator from Indiana (Sir. $\nMorion) yesterday. lis had never before si\nlecn tbu Senator In the warmth of a po- ei\nlitical debate vigorously extending his 1c\nright hand to support his own views, and t!\nbringing it down on tbe Senator Irom c\nKansas with ail earnestness.that he c\nwould attack political opponents. When n\npou come to the mere lact of tbe money t(\nbavisg been drawn ont ol tbe bank at cl\nLawrence and paid to a party on the b\ntame day, you have not proved that the b\nmoney was used to brlbo legisla. ir\n It might have been ex- tl\npended lor - railroad or other legiti- h\nmate purposes. The Senate ought to tl\nlooflne themselves to Judicial rules of ai\ntestimony. Tbe testimony against Cald- si\nveil was not such as would be submitted ci\nby a court to a Jury, he should vote\nigainst expulsion of the Senator and ask-\nid the Senators before they cast their\nrates to disgrace at least to read and\nitudy tbe testimony. He would ask tor h\nCaldwell what he would ask Cor any man si\n:harged with crime, he would ask the n\n:ourt to dlBcbargo its duty no matter E\nivbat might be said by mobs outside. 1<\nWithout proceeding further in debate the is\nSeriate went into Executive Session and 01\nifterwards adjourned. tc
0ae6446b78a53b5247a5cd62f48b410d OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.2753424340435 41.020015 -92.411296 NEW ORLEANS, April 0. — Shortly\nbefore three o'clock members of tho\nCommission waited upon Gov. Pack­\nard in the executive office at the State\nHouse. The interview lasted over an\nhour. At first the disucsion was ex­\ntremely formal, but on the Commis­\nsion expressing a wish for a free in­\nterchange of views, Gov. Packard as­\nsented, but stipulated that the steno­\ngraphers who had accompanied the\nCommission should be requested to\nwithdraw. This was acceded to and\nthe discussion was opened by the\ncomprehensive question addressed to\nGov. Packard, "What do you ask the\nPresident to do and what are yonr\nreasons for so requesting?"\nIn reply to this question, Packard\nmade a statement of the organization\nof the Legislature with a returning\nboard quorum in each House, and\nthe canvass by that body on the day\nnnnicd, and the way prescribed by\nthe constitution ot votes cast for\nGovernor and Lieutenant Governor.\nThis brought up tho decision of Lu­\nther V. Banden, the case referred to\nin Secretary of State Evarts' letter of\ninstructions to the Commission and\nto Packard's letter to the President.\nA map was produced by Packard\nshowing a very large area of the State\npresided over by republican District\nJudges, who, he claimed, had to a\nman refused to acknowledge the au­\nthority of Nicholls or to enforce the\nmandates of his Supreme Court. The\nnames of the Judges presiding over\nthese districts and the places of their\nnativity were attached to tho map, \ngreat majority of the judges being\nnatives of the State. This led up to\na discussion of the resolution recently\npassed by the Nicholls Legislature\nimpeaching Judge Fontelieu, one of\nthe native-born republican judges,\nfor not recognizing the Nicholls gov­\nernment and a messenger was dis­\npatched for a copy of those articles of\nimpeachment. It was claimed by\nPackard that nearly all the officials in\nthose districts had qualified and ob­\ntained their commissions under Kel­\nlogg, but many of them as a measure\nof precaution had since filed an oath\nof office with the Nicholls Secretary\nof State. The Commission then in­\nquired especially as to the feasibility\nof uniting the undisputed members\nof the two Legislatures in one body.\nPackard replied that he had not con­\nsulted any member of tho Legisla­\nture on this subject, but he believed\nit to lie entirely impracticable. He\ndid not think the democrats would\nconsent to any such arrangement. In\nanswer to a question Gov. Packard\nstated lie was satisfied if rccognizcd\nby the President and reinstated iu\npossession of the court buildings, ar­\nsenals and arms,of which he contend­\ned ho had been illegally despoilcd.and\naccorded the support of the national\ngovernment, ho could sustain him­\nself without intervention of troops.\nThe Commission in leaving were es\ncorted to the street cars by General\nMcMillan, and expressed themselves\ngratified with the interview. They\nleft to call npon Governor Nicholls at\nOdd Fellows Hall at half past seven\nin the evening.
41e74cf01d920dad621d2835d9badd0f CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1922.305479420345 41.875555 -87.624421 the nucleus of the state force. The\norders require all officers, to report\ndaily to their chief, John M. Stack, at\nKankakee. The Illinois highway patrol\nis not a force for general police duties.\nThe rules specifically instruct eacTi of-\nficer to confine his activities to en-\nforcement of the motor vehicle laws.\nSpringfield. Corn is still king in\nSangamon county. In the Illinois crop\nreport, put out by the department\nof agriculture for 1921, the produc-\ntion of this staple crop in the county\nis listed at 0,300.H1 bushels, valued\nat harvesting time last fall at $:t,150,- -\n032. This is three times the value\nof the oat or the hay crop, according\nto the report. The value of the six\nprincipal crops of the county, corn,\nwheat, oats, rye, hay and potatoes at\nharvesting time. last year, is estimated\nat $).57(j..'28. The valuation is made\nby taking the market value of these\ncrops at harvesting time from a list\nof the Sangamon county farm bureau.\nSpringfield. With the coal strike in\nits third week, a survey of the state\nindicates that the larger public\nutility companies generally are well\nsupplied with coal, although the small\nindependent companies were expected\nto suffer, should the strike continue\nfor a long period. Two hundred towns\nsupplied by the Central Illinois Pub-\nlic. Service company an average\nof 90 days' supply on hand, and the\nvice president of that concern stated\nthat other large companies were sim-\nilarly situated. These towns are con-\nnected by transmission line, and so\nare not dependent upon coal for light.\nSpringfield. Fining of doctors who\nfall to record births is continuong In\nthe state, in furtherance of the cam-\npaign started several weeks ago by\nthe state department of public health\nto bring the birth statistics up to the\nstandard required for admittance into\nthe United States birth registration\narea. Several doctors have had to\npay fines recently for neglecting to re-\nport births, the department says. In\neach case the complaint was brought by\nstate's attorneys at the request of\nfield agents of the state health depart-\nment. Several other prosecutions for\nthe same offense are pending.\nSpringfield Percy B. Coffin of Chi-\ncago, chairman of the Illinois tax com-\nmission, in a statement said that Cook\ncounty is the worst offender in failing\nto turn in just valuation on personal\nproperty. The statement was made in\nconnection with a letter sent by the\ncommission to William II. Weber of\nthe Cook county board of assessors\nurging a more equitable assessment of\npersonal property. Copies of the letter\nwere sent also to the taxing officials\nof all counties of the state.
1a9066e927b3b7f0185eb25a9be9dfca THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.595890379249 41.004121 -76.453816 Tho coffin story, may ho thought a\nvery grave matter at first view, but its\nimportanco will disappear upon exami-\nnation. Somebody acted very improper-\nly in playing a rough joko upon Stiles or\nsorlously attempting to alarm him.\n"Whatever may have been tho motive of\nthis unknown offender tho net of annoy\nlng Stiles was n wrong for which wo\nhave no'dispoaltlon to mako any excuse.\nBut what had Mr. Colloy to do with tho\ncoffin transaction, nnd why was it in\ntroduced in ovldeuco against him? Tho\nanswer to this question Is easy and It is\nono pregnant with Instruction upon tho\nsubject of military trials. Mr. Colley\nhad nothing whatovcr to do 'with that\ntransaction nud proof of It was Intro\nduccd on his trial in contempt of nil\nlaw andjustlco and in splto of his pro\ntest, only to'prcjudlco his caso and \ncure an unjust conviction. This would\nnot havo been allowed In any regular\nCourt of lustlce. but It was In keeniii"\nwith tho character of n Military Com-\nmission. W0 will only ndd, that SUles\nwas probably never in tho slightest\ndanger of actual Injury from his un-\nknown disturber. Tho people who send\nauonymou3rlcttcrsnnd glvo secret warn\nIngs, very commonly Jack, boldness,\ncourage, will aud onterprlso for tho ex-\necution of unlawful or violent designs.\nWo havo now mentioned every item\nof testimony given by Richard Stll&s in\ntho Rantz aud Colloy cases, and havo\nsubjected all Important points thereof\nto distinct examination. Tho conclu-\nsions to which wo como nro not favora-bl - o\nto tho witness, but thoy aro fairly\ndrawn from his own language and rest\nupon considerations which must bo ac- -\ncopted by ovcry Impartial and careful\noDservor.
2974e9a6e6d4f75e1526f391bfb63433 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.028767091578 39.743941 -84.63662 The attention of the Legislature has often\nbeen called to the rapid increase of munici-\npal indebtedness and expeuditures, but it is\nso important that I do not hesitate to repeat\nwhat has heretofore been said. The whole\npeople of the State are deeply interested in\nthis subject The burdens borne by the cities\nand towns must be shared, in part at least,\nby all who transact business with them.\nThe town and the neighboring country have\na common interest and, in most respects,\nmust be regarded as one community. I sub-\nmit that, to the subject of local indebted-\nness, the General Assembly should apply\nthe principles of the State Constitution on\nthe subject of State indebtedness.\nUnder the provisions of the eighth article\nof the Constitution, the State debt, notwith-\nstanding the extraordinary expenditures of\nthe war, has been reduced from over twenty\nmillions, the amount due in 1851, until it is\nnow only about six millions. An important\npart of the constitutional provisions which\n been so successful in State finances is\nthe section which requires the creation of a\nsinking fund, and the annual payment of a\nconstantly increasing rum on the principal\nof the Slate debt. Let a requirement an-\nalogous to this be enacted in regard to ex-\nisting local indebtedness; let a judicious\nlimitation of the rate of taxation which\nlocal authorities may levy be strictly adhered\nto, and allow no further indebtedness to be\nauthorised except in conformity with these\nprinciples, and we may, I believe, confidently\nexpect mat witnin a lew years tne ouruens\nof debt now resting upon the cities and\ntowns of the State will disappear, and that\nother wholesome and mnch needed reforms\nin the whole administration of our municipal\ngovernment will of necessity follow the\nadoption of what may be called the cash\nsystem in local affairs.\nUnder any limitations and . safeguards\nwhich the Legislature may adopt, a very\nlarge discretion must necessarily be com-\nmitted to the local authorities. The witdom
018cead2ca4b8e9b3a6cdc13b998f2fa THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1884.596994503896 37.561813 -75.84108 ougb examination waB made by Dr. Scott, and\nat its conclusion nothing new was developed.\nThe eminent plipxician, from Chillicothe, fully\nagreed with Dr. Wilson in tbe treatment of\nme case, and advised the friends that in all\nprobability the eyesight would bo permanently\ninjured. Mrs. Crothers was taken to Cincin\nnati on inurBuay aiternoon, and will receive\ntreatment at the Uood Samaritan HoBpital.\nQuite a laughable incident occurred at\nrecent meeting of the School board and has\nbeen the cause of much amusement at the ex\npeuse of the boot aud shoe member ever Bince,\nIt appears that the question of locating cer\ntain outbnildiuKB was under consideration.\naud all member, were displaying their orator-\nical nourisheB, save and alone tbe teutonic\nmember, who waB unavoidably absent. After\ntne matter had been diBeussed at lenuth and\nwas ascertained about how the members would\nvote the motion was announced and a call of\nayes ana nays resulted as follows : Ayes\n Baldwin, litalen, and Irwin; No: Mr,\nbuupson. At this stage of the ballot the tall\nmember from the fifth district arose and in\nfew words stated that as he was the only mem\ntier voting in the negative he would go with\nthe majority and make the vote unanimous.\nThis was quickly done by the Secretary and\nthe result announced by the 1'resident, after\nwhich it was discovered that instead of being\na unanimous conclusion, Urother Simpson\nvote still remained on the negative side.\nEverybody smiled and for a few minute! busi\nness was Busended, during which time Mr,\nFullerton wished to change bis former vote.\nbut as tne motion had carried and so an\nnouueed by tne Cliair, there was no going\nbehind the returns. Before adjourning the\nmembers were cautioned not to mention the\nmatter to a living bouI, but we presume the\naliHeiit member and Secretary were not parties\nto the compact for Burely some person divulged\nme circumstances.
0d33005dcfa1283a07ab983d47fce528 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1890.9849314751395 43.82915 -115.834394 "Ye mowt nutrally spose tht durin\nthe hunderd year er so tht the Rippei\nhad knocked around in McGonlgles run\nheorter be a git tin a leetle old hiss.lt\nan ye'd s'pose right Time th't Hunk\nYellrack lust begun to try an sarcuinveut\n01 Redtail. ez 1tol ye. the fish had begun\nto show his age consid able, tin at the end\no Hank s fifteen year fight agin him he'd\nfailed most ez bad rz Hunk hed One eye\nhail took to lookin ez if it'd been chanced\nferonetht blonged toadead mack rul s\nhis shoulder blades begun to h ist then\nsells up inter onpleasant lookin ridges\nan th was a couple o hollers behind 'em\nth t ve could ha sot teacups in The\nRedtail Rippers ribs showed up tol able\npluin too. an bis gin ral build o carcass\nwere setch th't it didn l hoi much in\nducemetit fer Hank s saved up appetite\nan ruthei nmdt folks think th't if Hank\nshould happen to hook outer the Rippei\nltd be a bad thing fer him arter all ez\nhed starve to death sure, wile he were\nhimtin ter the Rippers meat Hank not\nnobody else couldn't understan wat\nmade the cunnin ol fish fall away so an\ngit so lank till one day Hank see the\nRipper travelin' up stream t'ordsBilers\ndam ;;n whanged away at him with a load\no buckshot liedtail stopped an' listened\nan tlieu Hz hisself up to the top o' the\nwater. stuck his head out, an' kinder\ncocked his eye round to see w>t the dis\nturbailee were In doin of it lie throwed\nhis mouth open, an Hank see th t th\n" il,u l much left in his mouth but guno\nailt ar^u ol winbless snags
0b94e88edb4548d2f45f26749a737b1a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, Nov. J£ Attorney\nGeneral Stan berry is out with au opin¬\nion, presumed to be unofficial, as Itapr\npears as a communication in the news¬\npapers .in stead of being addressed to the\nPresident, on the additional session of\nthe Fortieth Congress. After quoting\nprovisions of the Constitution for the\nmeeting of Congress, the article says:\nThe act of January, 1867, does not\nchange or interfere with the day of\nmeeting fixed by the Constitution, and\nall sessions of the Fortieth Congress\nheld prior to the first Monday In De¬\ncember, except such as were convened\nby the President, are irregular. It is\ntrne the term for which members are\nelected Senators and Representatives be¬\ngin and is dated from the 4th of March,\nbut that does not affect the time fixed\nfor the regular annual session to begin.\nA new Congress cannot meet under the\nconstitutional provisions before the first\nMonday in December, unless convened\nIn Interim by the President. Hence un¬\nless Congress, by law, appoints a dif¬\nferent day for such regular annual ses¬\nsions there can be no constitutional\nmeeting of Congress prior to the first\nMonday in December. Any meeting\nof Congress in the intervening \nwould be an extra session, and can\nbe called only by the President\non an extraordinary occasion de¬\nmanding it, of which he is to\njudge. The Constitution does not\nanywhere in any other way pro¬\nvide for any other than the regular\nsession or Congress. It does not\nauthorize Congress to provide- for an\nadditional meeting, butsimplv gives it\nthe power to change the day lor such\nregular meetings from the first Monday\nin-December by appointing a different\nday. There is a first ana second ses¬\nsion of each Congress, and the meeting\nof a new Congress oommencing before\nthe time fixed by the Constitution for\nit-* to assemble in regular legislative\nsession cannot be legalized by calling\nit an additional session or additional\nmeeting. The Thirty-Ninth Congress\nhad no power to pass the act of the 22d\nof January, 1867, otherwise it had\npower not only to convene an extra\nsession, but to create an extraordinary\noeoaaion for it in contravention of the\npower of the President. The article\nconcludes as follows: The present\nmeeting of Congress is not an sojourn¬\ned meeting for the regular session. The\nsession of March 4th, 1867, it has been\nshown,
5472525a519899fb40ea695281d918ee DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.4057376732949 58.275556 -134.3925 Lust night these speakers said that\nif the railroad was not coming to\nthe reindeer the reindeer was going\nto the railroad, and it was stated\nthat to make a tryout of this scheme\napproximately 2.000 reindeer will be\ndriven to the railroad. It Is also\nplanned to have 25.000 reindeer\nused for experimental purposes this\nyear, and the work of training the\nnatives to raise the animals In sci¬\nentific fashion will be continued.\nThe speakers said that 90,000 tons\nof reindeer meat can be shipped out\nof the territory when the reindeer\nindustry Is developed.\nJudge Lomen said there Is room\nfor 10,000,000 reindeer In Alaska\nand with the present rate of repro¬\nduction this figure can be reached\nwith In a few decades. Ho has Just\nreturned from New York, and he\nsaid New York sportsmen were pay¬\ning tl per pound for reindeer meat\nthere, and a big New York dealer\nwanted him to sign a contract to\n over the entire output of rein¬\ndeer carcasses to him with the un¬\nderstanding that he should be given\nexclualve market for reindeer In\nNew York and London, despite the\nfact that Northern Europe is sup¬\nposedly the home of the reindeer.\nJudge Lomen called attention to\nthe possibilities of the reindeer In¬\ndustry If the Americans get hold\nof It and develop It along scientific\nlines, and said they could be much\nmore successful than the natives.\nI'rof. C . C . Georgeson. Alaaka pio¬\nneer and farmer, who made straw¬\nberries grow in Alaska and brought\nwheat production up to thirty bush¬\nels per acre at tho government ex¬\nperimental farms In Alaska, said\nthat when he first went to Alaska\nhe was discouraged, but today he Is\nso enthusiastic he has visions of the\nday when Alaska will hnve millions\nof people. He urged the commis¬\nsion not to adopt any policy which\nwould result In thousands of farm¬
198dbb10f7ce1d3210a27233189c4feb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Flint mine would be. But much more a\nbun this something so strangely sympa- i\nhetic between you, good sir, and me, c\nitrangers, it would Bcem, ever beloro tbis s\ntfternoon, moves me to narrate an inci- e\niont which the sight ot that phantom-like t\nboat recalls. The.epi.yea, I will call it t\nepisode.remains with me an ineltaceable c\nimprcasinn, and yet this is tbo tint time I c\nbavo mentioned it. Some doubt.some 1\ninstinctive sentiment that I cannot ana- [\nIjzo.some involuntary Check that has v\njorno upon mo whenever I have been on t\n!ho point or uttering it.has hitherto pre- t\nrented me from repeating the (acts I was 2\nt witness to, sctor in, I may say. This I:\nrepugnance, il I may call it so, was not a\nill Bupcrstitloas, for the incident had /\nlotblng in it ghostly to vu, nothing op- I\npressivo or fearful, only very strange; un- J\nlccountablo certainly according to our I\npresent lights, but suggesting only a vig- 2\narous train ot speculation to my thoughts i\nHowever, to givo you my little story: I *\nwas invited a year ago this summsr.by £\n[he way, in this same month ol July.to s\nioin a youDg friend of mine, my nephew, t\nIn a coasting voyage in his yacht. I c\njladly accepted, and becameoneol asmall 1\njut very pleasant party tor a fortnight's f\n:ruiac. Wo ran down to tbo Chesapeake, 1\nlad some charming trips in its waters, r\nHopped at Fortress Monroe, entirely es- t\n:aped bad weather, and in every way
26655f3affd4be066e23d783d442192f DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.1547944888382 39.745947 -75.546589 There wee » general feeling of atop-\npointaient an one of the anion meetings\nlately drew to a close. The house was\nfull, crowded with eager listeners, who\nbeard with Dated breath the solemn\nmessage delivered with all ti»* strength\nnod tenderness that butnan heart can\nfeel. They beeid, tie true, and the\nspirit of God was there, undoubtedly,\nmoving on the face of the waters, for\nthey felt as well as listened ; but when\nthe invitation was given to rise for\nprayers, so few seemed ready. Their\noonvlotion was not that strong kind\nthat we wanted ; that would make\nthem get up with streaming eyes\nfaster than they oouM bo counted ;\nthat,not content with that, would make\nthem rush forwrad to where'.be pastors\nwaited, crying out for all the help that\nGods people oould give them.\nOb, tor sqnh a time to come! Must\nthis week pass and our meetings close\nwithout the spirit having once been\npresent in mighty power? Ob, you who\nfeel, who are convicted, with whom the\nHoly Ghost Is atriving,—help us, we\npray you! Already you can begin to\ndo God's work by not hiding his power\nin you, by letting it all be known.\nYour example, your courage, may move\na hundred others. Our cry from the\ndepths of an agonis*! soul would shake\nthe gathered multitude as the very\npower ofGod. You to whom God is call­\ning, are responsible with us. Oh-\nway—make way—for the spirit\n Cast out the stumbling blocks\nHelp us toiind out and cast aside the\nhindrance whatever It may be. He will\ncome, He will surely come if our hearts\nare ready ; the trouble is always in us;\nGod is never in fault; His word ol\npromise cannot fatl.\nA t the meeting mentioned a lady said\nla passing out, " I felt as though 1 was\nthe Jonah; 1 was angry before I left\nhome ;” and the one addressed starte«)\nand said, “ Why, that Is lust what I\nwas thinking of all the evening. It\nseemed as if the whole trouble lay ai\nmy door. I hadnt feeling enough , I\nhadnt prayed euongh ; my bean and\nthoughts, it seemed to me, bad been all\nday auything but what they should be\nWhat right bad I to expect anything ?"\nSo doubtless others sat through the\nmeeting with the same «ad questlun-\nings and searchings of heart, wonder­\ning if all the fault was not in thorn.\nThere were professors, it is true, who\nrose from their seats and wont out with\nthe old, untouched and worldly faces,as\nthough the whole object of the meeting\nwas forgotten the moment the bene­\ndiction was pronounced, but their num­\nber is nightly growing less ; more aud\nmore the softened imprest of this\nsolemn time is stealing into every\ncountenance ; more and more the looks\naud tones ami manners of all who at­\ntend show that the rock within hat
4b1904db6473169b9f21882ca4aabe27 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.195890379249 41.262128 -95.861391 Sir, these hungry brats k&ip tejggisg at\ntbe public pap. They say, *'let down\nyour silk, sucky, or you'll have a split j\nDug." Do they think they am stuff «nch :\nbunooinbe dowa oar craw ? So, sir , you!\naught as well try to stuff batter in n wild\ncat with a hot awl. (Continued laughter,]\nThe thing can't b« diiL\nThe public griod itoae is a great in-\n«titusion. sir -yea, sir,agrsotiastitatia^,\nOae of the greatest, perbapa, that ever\nrose, reigned or fell. But, »ir, th'*e is\ntoo uucb priTate cutlery ground. The\nthin^ w .a't p*y. OecasKmaily a Lug ax\nis brought in to be fixwi up, ostia^ioly\nfor tbe purpoae of hewing down the gnarl­\ned trunks of errur, and deasing out the\nbrush-wood of ignorance and Tolly that\nobstruct the public high-wav of pro^ru**.\nThe aaebin« whirls . the ai is appli ni —\nTbe iuokt.Ts-011 are eaobantod with the\n elicited. Tfaataol i< pol-\ntshod , keenly ftdged, aad, wbib th< pub­\nlic star •»> in guying «xp<H,tiU»oy of is M.iug\nthe road eiwared, the unpianient »* suyly\ntaken off to improve tbe private* acus of\nsoiae "faitbfal friend of tbe p< ople."\nWhat is tbe risHjit i Tbe obsim-ttoiss r»»\nmrin unmoved.' Tbe p»>ople eur»« be*\ncautH; tbe car lags-or, if it does move,\n'tis at the expo**..- of a broken whevi and\njaded and sore-ba«ked teaax. 1 tell you,\nthe thing won't pay, Tbe time will eotae\nwhrti tin uasal promontorias of these dis-\niu teresuxl griaders will be pat to tbe\nstone, instead of their hardware. [Ap-\nfilaust.] I a® mighty afraid the maehirse\n» going stop. Tbn greast- is givn.^ out\nthunderi^E fast. It i» be|inniog to oreak\non its axis- •iaiii-mn -a, it i« my puvnte\nopiaion, sonfidestially espreased, that ail\nthe "gTit'"' iffietty new worn off. j[Ap­\nplause.)
40965a03d0257490a6468731d99de14c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.0423496951528 39.745947 -75.546589 1030. Annie L f'leaver.\nRelatives *nd friends are Invited to at\ntend the funeral services, st her 1st» resi­\ndence No. ml ft. du Pont street, on Satur­\nday afternoon, at 3 o'clock. Interment si\nSllverbrnok cemetery.\nJAUQUOT—Suddenly. In Philadelphia. Pa\non January 14. 1030, Larlnla, wife o! *\nFrnnel« X. Jacquot.\nRelative* and friends are Invited to at\nfend the funeral from her late residence\nHighland avenue, Rellefonte. on Monday\n■nomine. January 10, at S o'clock. Requlen\nmaaa at 8t. Pntrlek'a rbureh, at 9 o'clock\nInterment at Cathedral cemetery.\nRICHARDSON- Suddenly. In PhlladelphTi\nPa., on January 15. Phoebe, widow ol\nthe late Albert Rlehardann.\nDue notice of funeral will he given.\nPOWERS -In this elty. on Jannary 15\n1930. Bridget, widow of Patrick Powers\nRelatlvea and friend* ape Invited to at\ntend the funeral from her late realdenee\nNo 1330 French street, on Monday \nJanuary 10. at 10 o'clock. Requiem ma*>\nat St Patrick'» Church, a* 10.30 o'clock\nInterment at Cathedral cemetery Pleas-\nomit flowera.\nSPLAN—In Ihla elty, on Jannary IS. 1030\nMary, wife of William Splan and daugh\nter of Francia P and Margaret Welsh.\nRelatives and frlenda are Invited lo at\ntend the funeral from the realdenee of hoi\nparents. No. 70« S. Heald atreet. on Mon­\nday morning. Jannary 10, at 10 o'clock.\nReonlcm mass at St, Mary's Church. In­\nterment at Cathedral cemetery\nPALMER—In this city, on Tanttary IS,\n1030 Hannah J Palmer, wife of the late\nGeorge W Palmer, aged 71 year*.\nRelatives an- ' friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral aervlees. at the realdenet\nof her son In-law, Pr-derlek Dohson. No\n302 Weal atreet on Sunday afternoon, at 1\no'clock. Interment private at Christin«\nPreshvferlan Church cemetery.\nJESTER—In this elty. on
06898e6692e23af859330ed862ee0e13 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.3931506532217 43.798358 -73.087921 lew hours by resolutely holding cold wa-\nter in the month. The first t fleet is to\naggravate the pun, but the ultimate effect\nis most happy. Though I believe most\nfnnily ih'il all curable diseases may be\ncured by cold water, ex ernaliy and in-\nternally applied, still 1 think much\nknowledje and j idg:nent and energy are\nneeded to practice succeully with waier\nas a carutiv-- i agent. TVople have so long\nbeen wed Jed to old errors, that\nthev inav be pretty well satisfied of the\ntruth of simple m.ides of curing diseases j\nwhen they hll ill, they lall back "pen\ntheir old faith in drugs, give themselves\nup to death and the doctors and die or live\nas chance may determine.\nHomeopathy has paved the way for Hy-\ndropathy, and pa' hie practitioners\nunite the two modes of practice. I have\n. long been satisfied of the negative good of\nHoa cepathy. of its positive good I havt:\nnever yet been satisfied, but any thing\nthat takes men from the horrible dosing\nand drujrsintr thev have so long been\nguilty of, deserves our thanks, i hope\nthefriends ofHydropathy wi11 pive us\nfacts: and 1 for one, wish Mr. Graham\nwould open a' Hydropathic Institution,\nand rtnoviite his disciples, so thit they\nwould not be stalking like ghos's around\ni he land. You know, Mr. Editor, that\nvery many Gru ha mites have only adopted\ntheir present mode of life as a dernier re-\nsort ; they have ; violated all taws but those\non the. statute books, gnd to escape God's\npenalty they turo Grahamhes.
095a4e7f3bf4c8f0b37fa9387882482d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.099726744333 40.441694 -79.990086 tarifl" reform by legislation, and find myself\nmore and more inclined to the opinion that\neven If the Democratic party were in full\ncontrol of both brandies of Congress ana of\nthe executive the wisest and most practical\nplan uouldue yi bat might be termed tenta-\ntive rather than radical. To frame a new\ntariff bill, wisely embodving reform Ideas\neAen if the plan of the Walter tariff of 1SS\nis adopted as a structural model w ill re-\nsult e much time, great labor and almost su-\nperhuman wisdom. The best experts can\nrarely tell whero. iu our complicated indus-- '\ntrial and commercial organization, the final\nincidence of any tax will fall. So bill can\nT)p framed that will not contain incongrui-\nties, inexpcdicnccs, errors, and perhaps\nburdities w hich onlv time and experience\nwillreeal. In that het, partisan, political\ndiscussion that will follow such a bill, all\nthose eak point 'Rill be picked out, ex-\naggerated and ued to obscure more im-\nportant issues and confuse the public\nArt IVoris as Valuable Educators.\nSuppose, for example, the proposed bill\njiuts woiks or art, paintings and statuary,\nnot ordinary merchandise, on the free list,\nns would bo desirable. The argument in\nJavor of such legislation is that such prod-\nucts do not need the protection of any\ntariff; that all civilized countries make a\njxiint of encouraging such importations and\not not restricting them, and that their pres-\nence in the country develops artistic tastes\namong our people, which, in turn, creates a\ndemand for artistic products, nnd so calls\ninto existence new domestic industries, em- -\nloving highly skillrd labor at high wages,\nSoth of men and women. But how much\nwould this plea avail before the great mass\nof voters in tlio agricultural districts, with\na political opponent's
25681f54842dcdc6739f821b88159a31 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.0178081874683 44.939157 -123.033121 of I'etrograd, Herliu and London have explained that the chief purpose of\nthe Herman advance on Warsaw was to force the Hussions to let up In\ntheir campaign iu Oalieiu and'Hungary. (lerinnny is not so much in danger\nfrom a direct invasion from 1'olund an it Is from a collapse of the Austrian\ndefense nnd It Mussina advance from (lulicia. So Field Marshal von llinden-bui- g\nhas endeavored to force the cznrs forces to come iiorthwnru to defend\ntheir own lauds and give Austria n breathing spoil. It is the snmo strategy\nas was employed by (ieneral Joffro when he forced the battle line away from\nI'aris nu.l into southern Helgium by constantly attacking the (lermnn' right\nflank in that field. Hut apparently the Hnssinns hnvo not been turned from\ntheir purpose. They have retrented in central I'olnnd given up Lodr, Skier-niewic- e\ni.owicx and Piotrkow and drawn back within thirty miles of Wa-\nrsawbut they nro still maintaining a force nt the southern'end of the bat-\n that is alibi to take tho offensive against the combined (lernmn-Auii-triui- i\nunities ami to keep a hold in Ilungnry, They nro now reported to be\nsending new masses against Cracow, This great, battlefield is shown on tho\nmap. At A there npiienrs to bo n gap between tho northern ami southern\nItussian armies, nnd here, so I'etrograd dispatches say, (lermnn cavalry in\nstrong force is trying (0 prevent the R issinns from completing a lino that will\nrun along the Pllicn river. At H the (lerinans and Austrians hnvo launch-\ned mi nltnck along the Nida river, trying to get to Kiolre but have been\ndriven back after once crossing that st eatn. At C is the front nf the (lermnn-Austria-\nndvnnce, which came from We t Cracow and the Carnathinas anil\ndrove the Hussiuns back almost to the railroad running from Lemberg to\nCracow through Tnrnnw. Now the Hussion ntain are attacking and report\nthat the have met with success in tho enttnnres to the
04d7f2c5d60ce3bee1b3edd3c35158df THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.4890410641806 46.187885 -123.831256 might meet for Instruction at appointed\ntimes. There should also be provided\nby the board of directors material for\nillustrations, music, etc. When there\nwere no organs or pianos, pitch pipes\ncould be furnished and pendulums and\nmusical blackboards and suitable music\nand songs, as selected by the general in-\nstructor of music.\nAs a natural result of the neglect of\nmusic in the pubil schools, we find a\ncorresponding deficiency in the Sunday,\nschools of the various denominations. A\nvisit to any of the churches, during the\nSunday school hour, will make this plain\nto a casual observer. To improve this\nhas become a subject of earnest and\nthoughtful consideration by those de-\nvoted to the moral and religious instruc-\ntion of the young. How shall It be ac-\ncomplished? Something might and ought\nto be done, organization of the sev-\neral denominations, for the much needed\nimprovement, but it seems clear that\nthe Sunday school does not afford, In\na fundamental way, the means and oppor-\ntunity. Nothing could be done there ex-\ncepting rote singing. The cultivation and\ndevelopment of the young in . vocal\nmusic Is the province of the public\nschools, and were the children given, in\nthe latter, the instruction and encourage-\nment they ought to have, the Sunday\nschool would undoubtedly show a marked\nImprovement In tha absence, however,\nof instruction in this branch in the pub-\nlic schools, something useful might be\ndone by organization and drill In the Sun-\nday schools, and if they could 'be gathered\nand held together in one body, and\nplaced under a competent teacher, ne\ndoubt the results would) be very grati-\nfying.
2c425a5ef5260c9d8db093874163445e THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.424863356355 40.832421 -115.763123 availability us a residential candidate.\nAs to Coiikliug, ho i t not tlio hi com!\noiioicc of lSlaine's friends. It argues\nagainst his Candidacy being sustained.\nTho Herald, in di:>cussiug tlio I'rcsi-\ndtlitiiil question, sayrf lis tho canvass\nnow stands, Conkling is in the lea" I.\nNo prurient jiarly will wish lilaiiio as a\ncandidate in view i>f his transaction in\nI'licilic IioiiiIk. Tho only power Itlaiin!\n< ni h.ivo nt Cincinnati in to name\ntho ^rciit unknown. It thin!;? bin\nprofe-rciico will he for Washburne, of\nIllinois, in which case Wnslilmrno will\nprobably he the successfully mini. The\nwhole vote of tho Convention is 75U|\nnccessary to a choice, 37SI. Of these it\ncredits lil.iiuo with III).!, Morton J.'IO,\nItriiiloW l'2Uf Conkling 87, llartrauft 3H,\nllaycs 10, Jewell 10 mid Washburiic I;\nthe unknown being the voted of N'oith\nCarolina and \nA cable dispatch received from Lou-\ndon Kiys tho pigeon match l^otwecn Ira\nA. I'liinc, of Illinois, mid Capt. Hilton,\nof I.olldon, takes jilueu to-morrow, nt\nthe (tun (-'lull's grounds, nt :io hirils\neach, for $2"<0. The second r.ico run at\nFpsom to-day, resulted in u dead heat\nbetween Camelia and Kugcnin, Merry\nDuchess third. I'ouitecli ran.\nAt y o'clock this morning a squad of\nconvicts at Sii>}< King prison stole an\nengine on tho Hudson Hivor Itailroad,\nran it two intlfit down the track, then\njumped oil* mid cscapcd to the woods,\nA special from Washington nays Ad¬\nmiral Kobctton, head of tho lliirwiii of\nDocks and Yard*, tho lifst witness call*\ntil before the Committee to day, testi¬\nfied that Secretary Kohcsmi never 1 nt* r*\nfeted in the making of contracts, and\nnever told him to favor any contractor.
5bdedf17c28917d1e7d85e22d0013369 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.842465721715 40.827279 -83.281309 ambition. Man does not make cir-\ncumstances, they make him, .they\ntiirect aiul control him: the wise\nman, the cunning and tin strong,\nmay take advantage of them, but\nthey must transpire before the ad\nvantage i3 apparent. Circumstan-\nces which requir much explanation,\nwill olten account for the political\nnd social condition of a people\nTako a nation isolated by deserts\naud mountains, and perhaps a thou-\nsand years will pass over it with-\nout any perceptible progress in its\nsocial and political condition. The\nclimate, the physical and moral\ncha.acter of some people fcecn to\nrnfit them forcivil libertv. Indeed\nthe love for and maintenance of pop-\nular liberty, seems to depend on\nciicumstance3 in some measure of\nclimate, of commerce, of habitation,\non great rivers and by great seas,\non popular education and a moral\nami Hocia. coudiiion which can only\nbe begjtteu by Christianity. There\nare perceptible social differences,\nbetween people of the mountains,\nand people of the plains, between\nthose who dwell in torrid, and those\nwho dwell in temperate zones, be\ntwecn a commercial people and a\npastoral pec pie, and in fact almost\nevery has some modify-\ning influence on character which is\noften observed to be even hereditary.\nWhy is it that the Ueduiu is to day\nso unchanged yet so like the Ish\nmaclites who stoo l about Ishmael\nwucn he "died in the presence of all\nhis brethren "f" Whj on tho other\nhand are the modern Greeks what\nthe' are : imbecile, capable only of\nfighting in the mob, of robbing the\nwayfarer among their native hills\naud of guarding their cottages by\nsavage floijs. ami of ekin ' out an\nuncomfortable existence by\nted and irregular toil? The isles\nof Greece arc there still, hero still\nwaves the classic sea stirred bv the\nbreezes which delighted the eldoi\nGreeks, there are Ida, and the hills\nwhere d welt the Gods, there are raon\numents of the age of Pericl js, there\nare still the features of the Grecians,\nbut the soul ot old Greece is no\nmore. To explain these things we\nmust recount circumstances that\nwould fill volumes ; and when I 9ay\ncircumstaojocs, I do not mean for-\ntuitous events, but circumstances\nthat are governed by invariable\nlaws, trjNare alvrayarfp' .iV"
0d24f2f504fde4da4e5d541853c1d5db PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.9684931189752 40.441694 -79.990086 Detroit, Dec 19. Dr. E . L. Shurly, of\nHarper Hospital, and Dr. Heneage Gibbs, of\nthe Michigan University at Ann Arbor, an-\nnounced a few days ago the discovery of a sure\neuro for consumption. They propose now to\nmake pnblic tests of their discovery on which\nthey have been working for over a year.\nTheir theory does not harmonize with that\nadvanced by Dr. Koch. It is founded upon the\nbelief that the chief injury in consumption Is\ncaused by powerful alkaline poison3 which tho\nbody is capable of generating, and that these\npoisons cause ulceration and tho Catherine of\nthe cheesy matter In the air cells of theluncs.\nOwing to the complex nature of the affection\nno specific can effect a complete cure.\nThe doctors decided that an injection or ani-\nmal matter was dangerous to life, and. search-\ning for chemical, they hit upon the chloride of\ngold and chloride of sodium as the proper\nmaterials for the injection. In addition to the\ninjection they decided to chlorine gas. but\nchlorine gas has always been supposed to bo\nirrespirable. By introducing a spray of sodium\ninto the room before the chlorine gas the doc-\ntors found it not only rendered thegas breatha-\nble but also heightened its effects.\nThe patient is placed in a cabinet with no\ncommunication w 1th the outside air except a\nbreathins tube which is fitted closely to bis\nmouth. The air in the cabinet is rarified until\nthe pressure Is eight pounds to the inch. The\nresult of this is that the air rushes to the cells\nthat have been broken down and debilitated,\nand the process of rejuvenation is started. This\nis helped out further by a series of chest exer-\ncises. The hospital has spent 512,000 m perfect-\ning arrangements for the cure.\nA dozen cases attest the efficacy of the treat-\nment The most marvelous feature is the\ncure of Miss Jackson, of Windsor, who was\ntaken to the hospital in a dying condition in an\nambnlance seven weeks ago, and
056a56f3d5e8bd678bdc982ee3422765 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.6534246258245 40.441694 -79.990086 A man went into a Broadway clothing store\nthe other day and asked to see a pair of\ntrousers. He went into a closet to try them on.\nCalling out to the clerk that they didn't qnite\nsuit he was handed in another pair. Five pairs\nwere banded in to him in this way, the last pair\nbeing just what he wanted. He kept them on,\nhandlngthe clerk tbe price as he passed out\nIt was learned soon after 'that he had kept on\nall tbe trousers that had been banded in to blm.\nTbe fellow was arrested, and he deserved to be,\nas bis performance was a miserable plagiarism\nof the work of a real genius who once operated\nIn Butler. Pa.\nIt was before Butler was as large a town as It\nis now. man named Epstein started a cloth-\ning store there in a small way. The people had\nbeen in the habit of having their garments\nmaue at nome, ana xur. Epstein's store was\nsomething of an experiment His stock ac-\ncordingly was not extensive.\nOne day a stranger walked In and said he\nwanted to bny a suit He was one of Epstein's\nfirst customers, and he was anxious to make\nthe sale. Tbe stranger retired to a small room\ncurtained off in one corner to try on the\nclothes. He was hard to fit Epstein kept\nhanding him in drawers, undershirts, pants,\ncoats, vests and collars and cuffs nntil the en-\ntire stock was in the little room. The man\nwas ungainly in build, and be kept up a run-\nning fire of pleasantry about his
48208cca907db3d8d2f708fc554c7511 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.0887977825846 44.939157 -123.033121 Sleeplessness is at once a. symptom aad\ndisease. Jutt as soon as the nerves become?\nderanged the patient suffers from sleepless\nnsss. Deprived of their natural Ttst'ine\nnerves soon I6te all force and vitality audi\nwhile sleeplessness is a symptom in sucln\ncues it frequently becomes chronic cacti\nremains the chief effect of disordered nerves-D- r .\nMiles' Nervine quiets the1 rienres aA\nstrengthens them; soothes the tired braim\nand permits sleep; restores lost energy and\nvitality and brings sleep, health and strength.- -\n'Trevious to our coming o (he terrltferr"\nthree vests ago, we lived in Virginia, and fe\nwas there that I got acquainted with 'the\nwonderful powers of Dr. Miles' Nervine. S\nhad been under the doctor's care and taking:\nhis medicine for overtwo years, but'the nels-\nons trouble that was gnawing life ttway\ngrew steadily worse. I had nervous cramps'- i -\nmy hands and legs, which would draw ap\nand pain me so that I could not Sleep ap\nnight. Often I never closed my eves fto\ndays and nights together. The doctor finally\ntold me he could do nothing more for me aadJ\nthat I was on the verge at Insanity. He totdl\nme I might try your Nervine as a last rtteitt.\nand It proved to be my salvation, YVhtnli\nhid used four bottles of the remedy together\nwith the Nerve and Lirer Tills I had ic\ngained my former good health. MJtsu\nMarttia J. Shkffbr, Omer, Oklahoma.\nAll druggists sell and guarantee first bot-\ntle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book\non Nervous and Henit Diseases, Address\nDr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, 1
3eb58d48a3899472fd7ab231bc92d9f7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.7301369545917 41.681744 -72.788147 peared. He returned before the of\nficers left anl the sergeant searched\nhim and found a key which fitted\nthe lock on a door leading from\nthe room to a closet. In the closet\nthe beer was found, the sergeant\nsaid. Dunn asked the sergeant to\n"be fair" In the matter.\nAttorney Dunn moved that all the\nsergeant's testimony be stricken out\non the ground that the witness did\nnot know of his own knowledge that\nDunn was the owner, therefore he\ncould not refer to him in that ca-\npacity. The sergeant admitted that\nthe reason he believed Dunn to be\nthe owner was that Officer Doty\nsaid so. The sergeant knows better\nthan to give testimony based on\nhearsay, the lawyer contended.\nJudge Ailing denied the motion and\nadmitted the sergeant's testimony.\nOfficer Stadler testified that when\n reached the door he signalled\nto someone Inside that the police\nwere about. Asked by Attorney\nDunn If Dunn had knocked on the\ndoor, the officer said he did not, but\ngave a signal with his hands. Asked\nhow he knew Dunn was aware that\nthe police were about, the officer re-\nplied that a friend of Dunn had\nseen the officers go into the yard\nand he therefore surmised that the\nfriend had notified Dunn.\nIn the room was a show case, a\npool table and several chairs and\ntables. Officer Feeney went In first\nand warded off two interferes while\nOfficer Stadler seized the pitcher.\nWhen Dunn came in later and was\nplaced under arrest by Sergeant El-\nlinger, he applied unprintable names\nto all the officers, the witness said.\nOfficer Feeney said Elza White, a\nbrother-in-la-
187f1bb581e13ac86eb980535f4875ba EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1493150367833 39.745947 -75.546589 THAT psychologists who have served Hie army in\ntime of war might be prolltably employed as dl-\nI rectors of "departmente of psychology and efficiency"\nI in city public school systems, is suggested by the Bureau\nof Education, Department of the Interior.\nIn a letter to city superintendents Commissioner\nClaxton points out that psychology departments already\nexist In the schools of a number of cities, and that they\nought to bo established in ell cities of over 110,000 popu­\nlation, with such men in charge as these psychologists\nwith army experience. Dr. Claxton writes:\n"The fact that two or three hundred young men who\nhave for several months been working in the psychology\ndivision of the army- are now about to be discharged '\noffers an unusual opportunity for city schools to obtain\nthe services of competent men ns directors of depart­\nments of psychology and efficiency, for such purposes\nas measuring results of teaching and establishing stand­\nards to be attained in the several school studies, applying\nmental tests and mental aptitudes of pupils,\ndiscovering defective children and children of superior\nintelligence, and Investigating various other vital ques-\ntjons necessary to establish an intelligent basis for pro­\nmotions, class organization and special schools.\n"Such departments have already been established in\nthe publie schools of a number of our cities and have\nJustified themselves by their results to such an extent\nas to make It quite plain that In every city of more than\n90,000 such service should be provided.\nMost of these men arc young men who have had ex­\nperience in the schools ond arc graduate students from\nour best colleges and universities. As they are dis­\ncharged they are rapidly finding employment either in\nschools or in colleges or In the business world where the\nvalue of such services as they can render is now gen­\nerally understood. After a few weeks It will hardly be\npossible to obtain their services without offering them\nsalaries sufficiently large to tempt them from work in\nwhich they will then be engaged.
04b53fb91c843bf0fb9ae4284f1b80ec DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1887.015068461441 39.745947 -75.546589 Howard L. Pyle, of Akrjn, Ohio, baa\nbetn at home a lew days on a visit tn\nhie parent« and other frteods In this\noily, but hp leaves to day for WMhing-\nton and from tbeooe be will go to bis\nOhio home. Mr. Pyle le the bead of\nthe "Pyle Electrical Gomp.ny," en­\ngaged Id the invention and manufac­\nture of electrical machinery. Ona of\nbla lalMt Inventions, which I* destined\nto take an Important place In railroad­\ning, Is hi* electrical locomotive head\nlight. He has bad one of these llghte\ntested on the Lake Shore and Michigan\nSouthern, which te but a continuation\nof tb* New York Oentral Railroad, and\nIt In giving so much satlefnotlon that\nthere eeeme to be no dealt Ikottt will\naome Into general use.\nTbe light te so that on a\ndark night the time can be told ou a\nemail watch eleven miles distant, and\na uewapaper of ordinary size I print\ncould be read pine miles diitant Mr.\nPyle rays that with auch a headlight a\nterrible accident like that at TKBn,\nOhio, on Monday morning, could not\nbave occurred. The light could not, of\noouree, have shone around the fatal\ncarve, but It would have been so 41f.\nfa»«! m to light op the whole country\naround and thereby would have given\nwarning of tbe approach of tbe train.\nMr. Pjl* baa tbe rofuaal of an englue\non the Penoaylvaula Railroad to teat\none of hie lights on that road, and be\nthinks that In the near lulure he will\naccept '.be ofiur and lake it to Washing­\nton for inspection.
2e4a72ee03cff8fdd01ba9895bbff3f1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.7630136669204 39.745947 -75.546589 Afternoon session in charge of Baraca\nClass, 2.30, processional ; music, address\nby Dr. E rancis H. Green, subject: His\nWords ; Our Work;" music, benediction.\nEvening praise, 7, Kpworth League\nmass meeting in charge of 1,. O. Wise;\n7.45 sermon hy the Rev. E. L . Hubbard,\nD. D.; music, benediction.\nOfficers of the church arc; E. T . Dca\nkyne. president of board of trustees; J. !\nB. Manlove, treasurer of hoard of true-j\ntees; Mrs. J . B . Montgomery, president\nof Ladies Aid Society; Miss Lily Mont- |\ngnmery, president of Dorcas Society.\nAirs. Mary Challenger, president of W.\nH. M . S.; Miss Cordelia Deakvne, presi\ndent of W. C, T. U .; Miss Cordelia Oca\nkyne, president of the IV. K. M. S.; R.\nK. Pinder, president of the Epworth\nLeague; W. K. Roihwell, superintendent\nof the Sunday school: Mrs. Mary dial\nlenger, of the primary\ndepartment; Mrs. Anna King, superin\ntendent of the cradle roil department ;\nF„ T. Deakyne. president of the Burma\nClass; Mrs. B . F . Lancaster, president of\nSenior Philnthca Class; Mrs. George\nProud, Jr., president of tho Junior Phi1\n«then Class; Timothy Steele, president\nof flic Ushers Union; William Rossell.\nScout Master. B. S. A., No. 1; Mrs, ,T. L.\nJohqson and Miss Myrtle Maguire,\nguardians of the Camp Fire Girls: J. M.\nWise and E. T . Deakyne. local preach\ners; Rev. Dr. E . L . Cross, located elder;\nT. D . Ford, class leader.\nDeath has been busy among New Car-\ntie people in the past week. The fun­\neral of Mrs. Annie Comegya took pliee\nyesterday afternoon from her late resi\ndonee in Dalhys avenue. Services were\nconducted by the Kev. John L. Johnson\nand interment made in the Presbyterian\nCemetery.
29917fb1326e51423c713f36da08bb7d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4631147224752 39.745947 -75.546589 SHsisrSMotifs and Borders for the New Embroidery\nh<t)no rebels1 at'^hê thought of paying A Simple Combination of Stitches Will Develop This\nfifty cents a yard tor calico, yet under\nthe title of English prints and greatly\nimproved by modern processes of man­\nufacture, calico ranks—and Justly-^as |\none of the smjlest tub fabrics of the V J\nseason. This year it closely resem­\nbles the choicest foulards and the\ndaintiest effects in ehalHs. Quite\npretty Is a blue calico with black and\nwhite dots, the skirt being made with\nthree flounces, loosely applied, yet not\nwith sufficient fulness to add bulk\nto tbe figure. The waist Is In kimono\neffect, with short sleeves and square j\nneck. It Is entirely self-trimmed, even ;\nthe overblouse <nt in one with the\nsash being of the call >.\nThese calicoes, as well as the vofles\nand dimities give prominence to Rou­\nmanian colors. Many have gay print­\ned flower on white grcümds.\nDr lines of fruit in dot patterns on Ian\ngrounds, while others are limited to\nthe polka dot In sizes varying from a\npinhead to a silver quarter. There is\nalso an almost unlimited use of color\nnnd patterned materials of every kind\nlor sports apparel which is constant,\nfy growing in favor for other than\nlegitimate sports service.\nOne finds the most unexpected com­\nbinations. however. in checks and\nplaids. The -cottona, as well as silks\nand satins, feature them. Polaon\ngreen with black. Jade with ^rchid.\nblue with mauve and gray\nbrown are only a few of the mixtures\nseen and there Is n-o doubt that they\nlook much better than they sound.\nLarge checks in brown and white,\nblack and white and gray and black\nused for separate skirts and straight-\nline Jackets are among the novelties\nI of the season. They\n1 evidence ai the seaside and country
0293668142132dde422914fb06713059 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.5301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 Another Ocenu Hyslery.\nFrom the Scottiih American Journal.\nThe steamship United Kingdom, a\nnost of our readers are now aware\nailed from the port of New York, fo\nGlasgow, on the 19th of April last. Sh\niad a fair cargo on board, and a good);\nlumber of passengers. On the 20th, th\nlay after she sailed, she was bpokei\nome one hundred and fifty xniles froo\nJandy Hook. It is supposed by som\nhat she was seen on May 4. about fiv\ntundred miles from New York. Thi\n9 all that we know of the United Kins\nLom. since she last left her harbor ii\nhese waters. It is now a long tim\nince April 19. April is gone; May am\n^une have followed, and now we hav\nutered iif.on July; but the fate of th\nJnited Kingdom is still unknown\nrhat she has perished al\n>n board it is now reasonable to con\nlude; but from what cause, or in wha\nlircutuatances, we are left to conjecture\n>n the 28tli ol April, six days aner in\nJnlted Kingdom sailed, tbe City a\nJaris arrived in this port and reportec\ncebergs and heavy galea In tbe neigh\njorhood of Cape Race. It ia poasibl\nhat tbe United Kingdom perisbec\nimid these gales, and probably Iron\nollision witn an ioeberg. It is bard ti\njive up hope, but we are not left an;\noundation on which longer to lean\njike the Uibernia, of painful memory\nhe United Kingdom has no doubt gon\niown; but, unlike the Uibernia, has, li\nill probability, carried with her entir\niving freight. It is in faot another ter\nlble sea tragedy.all the more terrible\nn truth, that no one has survived ti\nell the tale.
1c28ef89ade2d6ca45070997a0cf81e3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.1438355847285 41.681744 -72.788147 motive is unknown, where there are\nno roads, and only primitive methods\nof transportation exist. It knows no\nbarriers; neither deserts nor seas,\nmountains nor valleys can halt its\nflight. It will be the carrier of the\nfuture, and a not distant future, ac-\ncording to Sig. Caproni's prediction.\nItaly will play an important role\nin he development and practical ap-\nplication of the airplane. Sig. Caproni\ngives two reasons for his belief the\nfact that Italy has at hand all the raw\nmaterials necessary in the manufac-\nture of airplanes, and the fact that\nher geographical position makes Italy\nthe logical center for intercontinental\ntrips. Furthermore, Italy has a large\nnumber of pilots trained and ready to\nundertake the most difficult journeys.\nThe colonies of Italy in Africa are cut\noff from the motherland by stretches\nof ocean; her islands are almost iso-\nlated except for the poor and infre-\nquent steamship service. Italy needs\naero transportation, and, therefore,\nwill be more likely to progress in that\nfield than countries which do not.\n!As an example the revolution in\ntransportation facilities which would\nresult, from aerial navigation, Sig. Ca-\nproni states that the trip from Rome\nto Naples could bo accomplished in\none hour and a half; from Naples to\nPalermo, from Naples to Brindisi,\nfrom Naples to Messina, in two hoiirs\nand 15 minutes; from Messina to Pa-\nlermo in one hour and 20 minutes,\nand from Palermo to Tunis in two\nhours and 15 mimites; from Rome to\nConstantinople would take 12 hours.\nThe time specified in the above es-\ntimates does not apply to fast, racing\nmachines, but to planes carrying pas-\nsengers and merchandise. Such planes\nare being built at present in Italy.\n"I am building," said Sig. Caproni,\n"a triplane in which 100 persons can\nbe accommodated, with cabins, beds\nand all the comforts desirable. Soon\nthis triplane, which will be a model\nfor many others, will have its first\nflight. As soon as a sufficiently large\nsquadron is ready itineraries avIU be\nplanned, not only for points of de-\nparture and destination, but also for\nintermediate stops."
4e4ef66236c72da815b963585f810777 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.6789617170107 41.875555 -87.624421 astonishing shapes of tho various for-\nmations, though sliico that remoto pe-\nriod there has been such a change of\nlevels that tlio celebrated Garden is now\nnearly 0.000 feet nbovo tho sea.\nOn tho llrst rock as ouo enters tho\nmnsslvo portals Is to bo scon tho perfect\noutline of a stag's head, with antlers\nlaid back nnd none high, as If startled\nby tho baying of tho hounds. A few\nyards further on Is a huge stono of 200\ntons weight perched llko n spinning top\nupon tho shoulder of another. It Is so\nnicely balanced that evory passing\nbreeze seems to threaten its stability,\nand yet It has stood like that for cen-\nturies. Still, further on one sees a duck,\ncompleto In every outline, nnd as de-\nmure though about to finish tho\nhatching of n brood of ducklings. Then\ncomes an nlligutor stretched out nt full\nlength and so natural that ono Involun-\ntarily wonders If the gigantic saurian Is\nnot waiting for a meal a small one--off\ntho duck. Further udvnnco Into this\nmuseum of wonders reveals now sights\nto cbarni or Impress the beholder. Of\ntheso there may bo mentioned tho rod\nsentinel that guards the north portals\nof tho Garden, flanked on either side by\ncathedrals and fortresses of amazing\nslzo, and nflnmo with brilliant coloring.\nThero aro thin slabs of sandstono stand.\nIng on edge nnd lifting their heads hun-\ndreds of feet high, on which the gods\nor witches have sculptured Imagos of\nbirds nnd animals and many strnngo\nshapes such ns needle rocks.
0d0ea4909b7febf4c003153e358749b9 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1887.3246575025369 43.994599 -72.127742 ment : in these two passages for men and\nwomen who will be busy, but no solace for\nthose who are waiting for good luck to show\nthem, at the foot of the rainbow, a casket of\nburied gold. It is folly for anybody in this\nworld to wa't for something to turn tip. It\nwill turn down. The law of thrift is as incx-\norable as tho law of the tides. Fortune, the\nmagician, may wave her arm in that direc-\ntion until castles and palaces come; but she\nwill, niter a wlulo, invert the same wand, and\nall tho splendors will vanish into thin air.\nThere are certain styles of behavior which\nlead to usefulness, honor and permanent suc-\ncess, and there are certain styles of behavior\nwhich lead to dust, dishonor and moral de-\n I would like to Are the ambition of\nyoung people. I have no sympathy with\nthose who would prepare young folks for life\nby whittling down their expectations. That\nman or woman will be worth notning to\nchurch or state who begins life cowed down.\nThe business of Christianity is not to quench\nbut to direct human ambition. Therefore it\nis that I come out this morning and utter\nwords of encouragement to those who are oc-\ncupied as clerks in tho stores and shops and\nbanking houses of the country. You say:\n'Why select one class, and talk to one\nspecially this morning?" For the same\nreason that a surgeon does not open the door\njof a hospital and throw in a bushel of pre-\nscriptions, saying: "Come, now, and get\nyour medicine."
0250968dc812520c18861d32e6af641d THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.1383561326738 47.478654 -94.890802 The evidence in this case tends to\nshow that the plaintiff in this action—\nand the court thinks the evidence does\nshow conclusively, that the plaintiff\nin this action fe a full-blooded negro,\nborn of slave parents in Richmond,\nVa., that when a boy he was brought\nto Washington Territory by his\nmother, and when a little boy he was\ndutiful to his mother and labored and\nfomnd employment at any work that\nhe got which was honorable; that he\nsaved, by means of his labor and.\nthrift, money, with which to pay his\nway to college; that he attended the\nUniversity of Washington and grad-\nuated with the degree of Bachelor of\nArts; that therafter in order to obtain\nfunds with which to complete his edu-\ncation and obtain a profession, he\nworked as*a sleeping oar porter, run-\nning from Tacoma, Washington, to\nSt. Paul, Minnesota, and as a waiter\nin the Ryan hotel and other prominent\nhotels, particularly at Niagara Falls,\nDetroit, Michigan, and in Buffalo;\nthat he attended the law department of\nthe Univevsity of Michigan and re-\n the degree of Bachelor of Laws,\nand in a post-graduate course, the de-\ngree of Master of Laws from that uni-\nversity ; that he practiced his profes-\nsion as a lawyer for some years in\nChicago, Illinois, during much of his\nresidence in Chicago having assisted\nthe Hon. Edward Morris in his large\npractice in that city, and was assis-\ntant South Town attorney in Chicago\nfor two terms; that in the year 1898 he\ncame to Minnesota and located at Be-\nmidji, and has ever since his arrival\nin Bemidji enjoyed p, lucrative and\nlarge practice as an attorney at law;\nthat he is a man that has accumulated\nsome property, has his own residence\nand office, and a very respectable law\nlibrary; that prior to the alleged in-\ndignity which he received from the de-\nfendant he had always, especially in\nthe state o,f Minnesota, been accorded\nthe full and equal privileges of all\npublic places, hotels «,nd accomoda-\ntions; that he never had, prior to said\ntime, been denied the same privileges\nthat were accorded to white men.
0936939281f52c95bcfedce25aa9ed12 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.7472677279397 43.82915 -115.834394 long, used for tbe men to walk on while\noiling the pulley at tbe top of tbe gal­\nlows over tbe Boise County Mining\nCos shaft, fell, going down the pomp\nway. On the way down it struck\nand broke one of tbe heavy timbers,\nfinally striking on tbe shoulder of\nGeorge Wilhelm, who was turning\nsteam on tbe pump. Tbe blow was a\nheavy one, striking bim on tbe left\nshoulder, bruising it badly, and break­\ning tbe left arm betw een tbe shoulder\ntnd elbow. His left leg and side\nwere also very badly bruised. Geo.\nwas taken to tbe residence of Joeeph\nHill near by and the wounds attend­\ned to by Dr. Zipf.\nHow it was that the young man\nescaped immediate death is a mys­\ntery, a« the plank was a very heavy\none and fell feet. James Fisher,\nwho was below George, sitting on a\ntimber, came near being hit. Not\nuntil he heard George groan did be\nsuspect that be was strack. The call\nfor the bucket was immediately an­\nswered and two men went down in It,\nto render assistance. George stood\non the bnoket and held to the rope\nwith bis right band. Charley John­\nson came up with bim to see that be\ndid not fall in case of fainting.\nGeorge is an Idaho City raised boy,\nand bis many friends throughout the\ncounty deeply sympathize with bim\nin bis sad misfortune.\nWhen we went to press last even­\ning George was resting easily, but his\narm had no feeling or blood circula­\ntion and was discolored. Dr. Per­\nrault, of Boise City, will arrive this\nmorning to consult with Dr. Zipf.
08fc35dd2327e80c074ebbe5bf0a69a2 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.7821917491121 42.217817 -85.891125 legal contract, which, if performed out\nof legal time, must necessarily be void;\nand, claiming this, the son and daugh-\nters of a recently deceased -- millionaire\nmean to contest his will, because in that\na largo portion of hi estate wflj willed\nto the children of their stepmotherwho\nwas wedded to their father .on a Sab-\nbath, in a church in the city of Roch-\nester, in this Stato. If th? question is\nto be decided that such marriages are\nillegal, another long catalogue of vexa-\ntious suits will be brought into our courts\nby parties similarly related ps the one\nabove mentioned.\nThe decision lately rendered by a\nlearned judgo of our courts, that mar-\nriages of minors are illegal, and a di-\nvorce for such not necessary in order\nthat they can separate and remarry le-\ngally since it was carried into immedi-\nate practice by tho parties for whom the\ndecision was rendered, is proving bane-\n to society. The harm that this de-\ncision doe to our society is temporary\nonly, and if the entire marrying popu-\nlation but learn of this decision, the\nfuture will witness less elopements of\nyoung couides, and a less number of\ncases where guileful and designing men\nentice young ladies from home in order\nto wed them. That the ceremony per-\nformed for minors on any and all days\nof the week, or for a couple where one\nis a minor and the other an adult, should\nbe pronounced illegal and riot effective,\nis not strange. Put in the face of long\npracticed customs, 'that Sabbath day\nweddings are illegal,' will strike thous-\nands with feelings acin to consterna-\ntion. With all our laws and codes it is,\nindeed, strange that these legal enact-\nments which most concern our personal\nwelfare and happiness are least known\nand least understood by the general\npublic, including our most intelligent\npeople. American Socle'y.
05483ea5ddeb0fcddf5014cabead213e THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.1712328450026 37.561813 -75.84108 lawful sale or giving away of intoxi-\ncating liquors shall work a forfeit\nure of all rights of the lessee or ten\nant under any lease or contract of\nrent upon premises where such un-\nlawful Bale or giving away shall take\nplace; and all suits for damages un-\nder this act shall be by a civil action\nin any of the courts of this State\nhaving jurisdiction thereof; provi-\nded, that such' hmband, tcife, child,\nparent, guardian or other interested\nperson, liable to be so injured by\nany sale of intoxicating liquor to\nany person or persons aforesaid,\nwho shall desire to prevent the sale\nof intoxicatiny liquors to the same,\nslutll give notice, either in writing\nor verbally, before a witness or wit\nnesses, to the pesron or persons \ning or giving the intoxicating liq\nuor, or to the owner or lessor of the\npremises wherein the intoxicating liq\nuor is given or sold, or shall file with\nthe township or corporation clerk in\nthe totenship, village or city wherein\nsuch intoxicating liquors may be\nsold, notice to all liquor dealers not\nto sell to such person or persons any\nintoxicating liquor 3 from and after\nten days after the date ofJUing such\nnotice ; and such notice or notices,\nfiled with such clerk, shall be enter\ned by the clerk of such township,\ncity or village, in a book to be kept\nfor such purpose, which said book\nshall be kept open for the inspection\nof all persons interested ; any notice\nentered in such book shall be erased
39d791f082b339455c133bfaf1e97e59 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.4397259956875 39.560444 -120.828218 If Nebraska does not receive the assist-\nance and protection of the General Gov-\nernment, the country will nevertheless be\nsettled, and that speedily. Hundreds are\nawaiting the news that the Indian title is\nextinguished, and an hour after the river\ndistrict will be swarming. Already many\nhave taken over materials for building;\nhave staked out their claims, and have\npromised to stick together through thick\nand thin, and assist each other in the pro-\ntection of their several claims.\nNo families have removed to the Terri-\ntory. neither have they a right to do so,\nuntil the Indians have relinquished their\nclaim and title to these lands. The first\ncounty north of the Platte, and west of the\nMissouri River, and east of the Horo,\nwill become the most populous county \nNebraska. This is considerably well tim-\nbered. has limj quarries, stone coal and\niron ore, and is an excellent, dry, rolling,\nfertile region. The embryo city, opposite\nthis place, will be the capita of the Terri-\ntory for the present, without a doubt, and\nwill eventualy be second to none in the\nWest but this city. Next in importance\nwill be the cities twelve miles each way\nnorth and south of us, Bellev*ew and Win-\nter Quarter ; making three very important\nriver cities in one comity. Besides the\nordinary business importance of this new\nfrontier river county in Nebraska, the great\nPacific Railroad is to pass through and\nhave there (probably at Omaha City, or\nnear) a great resting-house, before skim-\nming the broad plain and leaping the\nRocky Mountains.-
27b20b1740db17fff5c71e61bee16a46 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.4205479134957 40.832421 -115.763123 tlo iu doi>bt />s fo what jwljpy ougljt to\nbo pursued in Ibis regard, and that ho\nmight )jo inclined to favor makiug tbo\nsilver (lullar n legal tender for o limited\nanjount, toy $50. It is tho opiuion of\nsovcra) persons v ho have talked with\ntho President on (|)ti *ubject vitbiu the\np$st fu\\r days that bo will recommend\nto Congress that tlio silver dollar bo\nnuido a legal tender oil equal terms with\ngold or for some limited nmouut.\nTho Tril/iine't Washington special\nsays: Tho President iu pleased with\nMorton's lettor. To buvo undertaken\ntbo (support of Packard with tho army\nwould have been futile, aud its failure\ndisasterous. At tbo same timo, the\nPresident did uot agree with Morton as\nto tho position and purposes of tho\nSouthern people. Ho did uot sharo\n distrust of Southern leaders;\nb(jt ho dec|areu tbat whatever may hap-\npen iu tho South now, (ho Republican\nparty cannot bo held respousiblo for it.\nTlio South is in tho bauds of tho Dem¬\nocrats, and that party alouo must be\nheld respousiblo for tho uoiulnot of\nptlblja ntTairu, Tito President says lie\nbaa always boon a Republican aud is\nouo now, ut|d (bat 11)0 Republican par¬\nty was uever moro ueocssary to tho na-\niiou than U is to-day. Tho language of\ntho Prcsideut showed very clearly that\nhe did not favor a uow party organiza¬\ntion, and would not bo likely to give\nauysuch movement bis aid.\nTbo Tribmie't Washiugtou special de¬\nnies (hat Butler goes to Colorado to\nlivo. Ho purchased §73,000 acres of\nlaud there for English capitalists,\nCutcAuo, May 30.
14781ebcb028131be6833429057daee9 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1899.9520547628108 46.601557 -120.510842 misnioncr ami tin1 County ißSpSCtori\nIrnvi' been duint! all tlu-v OOnldtO kc*p\nmich Mock from lieini! tlintribtili il In-fore\nit to tliorniiiililyiliHinfoi'teil, Imt MiOIH\nof (lie importers seem to be makintt pvrry\neffort to evailf the ruiuiremcntH of the\nlaw it \\<> impnrtHnt that all bin era\nshould be on their K'lard mul receive DO\nMock that is no' Hccomputiied by a cer-\ntificate of inspection •bowing thai the\ntrees have been duly in-pectpd. us re-\nquired by law. since beititf brought into\nthe BtHte. A crrtilu-ate ol inspection\nsigned by im Inspector from another\nstate it iisdrHS lof It in 'in Baa? miller\nfor unscrupulous DBTWrjnmo to net a\ncertificate on a lot of clean trees and then\nadd any number of iiifeotfid trees Inter,\nor in many other ways unlawfully use\ntins certilieatc to cover tries it ni never\nIntended to cover. S.ime of the iiost\nbadly infested MM in a lot that wa-< re-\ncently inspected had upon them a cer-\ntificate of inspection from a New York\ninspector, the agent claiming that tllil\nwas gnllieieiit evidence tlmt trees\nwere clean, but it required only a look at\nthem to nhow that they were badlj ii. -\ntested with Woolly Aphis. The usuhl\nand perhaps the best method of liisin-\n!e< Uiik such stock is by fumigation with\nHydrocyanic Acid jjap. If tbil is prop-\nerly done all insect lite on the plant will\nbe destroyed. The km is such a deadly\npoison, however, that it must be used\nwith the utmost raw, the best method\nbeing as follows: Hating placed the\ntrees in a ti^ilit room, or in a ti^ht lx.x\nif only a few are to be trr-ated, an earthen\nvessel is filled with the proper amount\not water then the sulphuric acid and po-\ntassium cyanide are added in the order\nnamed. The roam in then kept tightly\nclosed for a ball or three-quarters ol an\nhour. One ounce of potassium cyanide\nshould be used for every one hundred\ncubic feet of space Inclosed. The pro.\nportion in which the chemicals are used\nis also important. The beet results seem\nto he obtained when a half more aeiil
0fcd143f6beb073f508a1edf03be6f2f THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.4506848997971 35.072562 -98.243663 Plant tho cabbago seed on land\nwhero this dlscaso has novor 'appeared.\nWhen tho plants nro ready to set out\nInspect tho seed bed vory carofully,\nand If any cases of tho disease, nro\nfound reject all tho plants nnd set\nfrom somo other bed. Ono cannot af-\nford to run any risk of Infecting his\nland by tho use ot seedlings from sus-\npicious beds. It would bo hotter to\nplnnt somo othor crop than to tako\nthis risk. A good prnctico Is to strew,\ntho land to bo used for seed bed with\nstraw or dry brush nnd burn It ovor\nboforo plowing. Tho seed bed should\nbo mado In a different placo each year.\nSet tho plants on land which has\nnot boon In cabbages or othor crucifor-ou- s\nplants for eomo tlmo. If It Is Im-\npossible to avoid cabbages\nby cabbages, at least tako tho precau-\ntion to plant only on land which has\nnovor suffered from this dlscaso, To\nfollow any othor courso Is simply to\nInvito tho trouble Tho practice of\nplanting cabbages after cabbages for\na long series of years also Invites oth-\ner parasites, and must as a rulo bo\nconsidered very bad economy.\nAs a matter ot precaution avoid the\nuso ot stnblo manures, sinco theso\nmay possibly servo as a means of car-\nrying tho dlscaso Into uninfected\nfields, that Is, through cabbago refuse\ntod to animals or thrown Into tho barn-\nyard or onto manure' piles. As far\nns possible mako uso of commercial\nfertilizers in placo of barnyard ma-\nnures, both In tho seed bod and in tho\n'field, at least until It shall havo boon\nabows conclusively that therp Is no
100d466c00fd11ac3cb79a60ba0ccbf8 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1895.705479420345 38.894955 -77.036646 In un "Underground Asiatic City.\nTho Russians have made a singular\ndiscovery In Central Asia. In Turkestan,\non the right bank ot the Amou Daria, Is a\nchain of rocky hills near the Bokharan\ntown ot Karki, and a number of Jorge\ncaves, which, upon examination, were\nfound to lead to an underground city,\nbuilt apparently long beforo the Chris-\ntian era. According to effigies, inscrip-\ntions, nnd designs upon the gold nnd sil-\nver moneyjincarthed fromaraong the ruins,\nthe- - existence of the town dates back to\nsome two centuries beforo the birth ot\nChrist. Tho underground Bokharan city\nis about two Tersts long, and Is composed\nof an enormous labyrinth ot corridors,\nstreets, and squares,, surrounded by\nbouses and other buildings two or three\nstories high. The cell rices many\nkinds ot domestio utensils, pots, urns,\nvases, and so forth. In some of the streets\nfalls ot earth and rock have obstructed\nthe passages, but generally the visitor can\nwalk about freely without so much as low-\nering bis head. The high degree of civili-\nzation attained by the Inhabitants of the\ncity is shown by the tact that they built\nin several stories, by the symmetry of\nthe streets and squares, and by the beauty\nof the baked clay and metal utensils and\not tbe ornaments and coins which hare\nbeen found. It is supposed tUtt long centu-\nries ago this city, carefully concealed 1 ti-\nthe bowels of the earth, provided an entire\npopulation with a refugn from the incur-\nsions of nomadlo savages and robbers.\nLondon Publio Opinion.
cadaa845882942c25056776a57055d1a VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.8726027080163 43.798358 -73.087921 lions, auring me last year, lor wneat and\nother bread stuffs. Not a verv flattering\nstatement This importation of bread\nstuffs from the old countries into one that\nis comparatively new, and capable of\ngrowing bread stufls enough to supply\nalmost the whole world, is not much to\nour honor, and hns hurt our credit abroad\nexceedingly. The Silk Culturist, in re\nmarking on this subject, very truly ob\nserves, that 11 the farmer who is dependent\nupon his neighbor for the ordinary agri\ncultural products of the climate in which\nhe lives, is not considered entitled to very\nlarge or very long credits, and it is pre\nciselv so with a country who are dnen\ndent on other nations for the staff of life.\nNot long since the Holhchilds were invit\ned to make sundry investments in the\nUnited States, but declined ; offering as a\nreason that they did not think much of a\neovntry that did not raise its bread."\nThis view of the case at once puts \nthing in its proper light. The farmer\nwho owns an equally good farm with his\nneighbor -- warmed by the same sun, and\nmo 1 st en 1 by the same dews fertilized\nby the same showers cherished and pro-\ntected by the same laws, and yet neglects\nto cultivate it, and depends upon his neigh-\nbor for wherewithal to eat, would be con\nsidered as a shiftless character. So with\na state, which having the means of sup-\nplying itself with bread given it by a\nbountiful Daity, but neglects to do it, will\nbe looked upon, by even those who are\nglad to supply them, as not a little below.\npar. We hope this reproach is passing\naway Trom us. llie spirit of improve\nment is now abroad, and if properly\nstimulated, it will elevatr us to a height\nwhere we ought to have been long since.\nIt depends upon the farmers to do this.\nIt is their business to do it it is their\ndoty to do it.
4eec09bda9ed8bf5ff5d44d8d2fd9bf2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.683561612126 40.063962 -80.720915 riors and they engaged in theearinsi\nwork until, as we have to-dav, they\nhuuihly confessed their sins ami asked\nthe hlessin^ oftiod upon their labor.\nWe come Jiere as brethren ami friends,\nunder circumstances iiiosi peculiar.\nWar, in its most dreadful form, has\nravaged a large portion of our fair land.\nBrother has drawn tin* sword against\nbrother, and numy of our fruitful iidds\nhave been soaked iu human gore. The\nbattle 1ms been fought, the victory has\nbeen won, and tin- I'nion stands strong¬\ner than ever iu tin* a fleet ions of neiirlv\na wholo people, Fiuerging from this\nawful conflict wo, the first national or¬\nganization, I helieve, that has met sinee\nthe strife has censed, have assembled\nhere from the North and fr..m the.\nSouth, from the Must and from the\nWest, to do our endeavor to sow the\nseed of eoneord, to re-establish the tic\nof brotherly all'eetion, and tocxhibil to\nthe world the evidence that discord\ncannot long endure among a ureal\npeople determined . live under a\nfree and popular finvcriimcnt. As¬\nsembling under these eireumstances,\ninstead of our wonted course,\nand gathering quietly within lie- walls\nof our asylum, we have thought proper\nthat the nation should see a bam! of\npatriots and Christians, from all parts\nofthernion, publicly acknowledging,\nas did the Templars of obi. that the will\nof <hid is far stronger than the will of\nman, ami expressing their earnest de-1\nsire that henceforth there should exist\nin all our borders that peace and good\nwill which our blessed Redeemer so\nearnestly taught to 11 is disciples, And\nwe shall lake sweet «*<»uuse] together,\nand, our business duly accomplished,'\nwe shall go to our homes carrying with\nus that grateful appreciation of the\nKindness lhat has given us so warm a\nwelcome,and the assurances in our dis-'\ntaut friends that the intlueu. es of a pa¬\ntriotic people can be carried tar and\nwide, and be so sound as to bear fruit\nan hundred fold. You can hardly con¬\nceive of tlie pleasure and satisfaction\nthat it gives me, who have been so\nlong and so highly honored by my\nbrothers, to look iipon faces so fa¬\nmiliar, and which have
1b97cb12870af3def8e1507f4266eadc THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.7827868536228 39.369864 -121.105448 The Transcript says that the new quartz lead\nrecently discovered by Plummer & Co., on Kel-\nseys Ravine, is represented as becoming richer\nthe more it is developed.\nThe Races.—At the Glenbrook race course on\nTuesday, Dolly, Church's grey mare, beat Jus-\ntices white mare, Jenny, fifteen feet. After that\na scrub race came off, in which Browns roan\nmare beat six competitors. Considerable money\nchanged hands on both races.\nOn the reception of the news of Col. Bakers\nelection, the Republicans of Nevada fired a sa-\nlute of thirty-three guns.\nFreight is now two cents a pound from Sac-\nramento to Nevada. This high rate, the Trans-\ncript says, is caused by the scarcity of teams.\nImmigrants continue to arrive by the Hen-\nness Pass. A half dozen of wagons reached\nEureka South on Sunday. of the child-\nren came barefooted through the snow. They\nmade no complaints of the cold. —Transcript.\nOmega. —On the 13th of the present month, a\nshooting match for turkeys, chickens, and a fine\nbear, wul come off at this place. Also, a dog\nand cub fight, open to all dogs in the county.\nMr. J. G. Phillips-informs the Transcript that\nthere is snow on the ridge to the depth of over a\nfoot. At Omega it is six inches deep. It was\nalmost impossible for the stage to get out of Ome-\nga, the snow had drifted so much.\nFound.—The horse, saddle, coat and papers\nof Frank Anderson, who, it will recollected, was\nmurdered at Dog Valley, were found a few days\nsince near the scene ofthe murder, and will he\nbrought to Nevada.—Transcript.\nSluice Robbery.—
0f2cacc95daf110124fc9e3b04aa6ff8 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1913.4698629819889 39.456253 -77.96396 This is good English,and profound\nOrienting wiedoui and it reveals more\ntban it oonceals. Toia ia uol a Jap\nunese-American question.it is a\nworld question, and its solution is to\nccme by way of Japan. Of this\nthere is not the fcligbteat doubt. Tbe\nanswer to tbie question bas been\nadj.)urned and delayed, avoided and\nglossed over from time to time by\nfirst one or tbe other white races\never since they took over tbe govern\nment and control cf tbe darker races\nof tbe globe, assuming that they are\ninoiipuble a&d onfit for self govern¬\nment and that wisdom, morality,\nChristianity und tbe ecienoe of gov\neminent began, and will end with\n"ifce euperior lace*"\nTbe Japanese question which must\nbe oettled, and settled right, will fix\nthe ets'us nf the darker races in tbe\nfamily cf nations for all time to\ncome and destroy forever tbe fiction\nthat because one man's face is white\nand another's b!ec!t or b-own, be is\ntherefore fundamentally inferior\nmorally aod mentally to bis lighter\nskinned brother. Coun' Oknma baa\narrived at tbe. crux of this question\n telling force, and tbe irresisti¬\nble logic and reaion of a past master\nin Polemical discussion. That the\nJapanese occupy formidable ground\nin the discussion, will not I think be\ndenied by any one who baa followed\nolosely tbe arguments for and against\ntbe adoption of the anti alien land\nlaw passed by tbe State of California\nThat bill is purely and simply a .bill\nto legalize race prejudice and it is\nspecifically directed against the Jap¬\nanese people resident on the Pacific\nCoast, If its provisions can be en¬\nforced in the case of the Japauese, it\ncan with tqaal f^oilitv be applied to\nany other alien or indigenous rooe\nwho may, as the J^p^nese have done\nin California, exoite tbo "superior\nrocs" to ac's of hostility, because\nthese ali^n or indigenous darker races\ndemonstrate tbeir rigbi to survive\nby their fitneos and capacity for\neuateined effort along industrial and\nintellectual lineo. Ie tbe Amerioan\nwbue man actually afraid to com¬\npete on hio own ground with tbe\nblack, red, yellow, and brown man?\nIt lonkfl that wa7 really.\nYonkers, N, Y. John E. Brnc#.
22964e5d2ab8c42080fb69bc838bbdf4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.9958903792492 39.745947 -75.546589 Professor Webb, the state director\nof the Institutes, today received a\ntelegram from the United States De­\npartment of Agriculture—Bureau of\nRoads—stating that Mr. Boykin would\ncome to Delaware as requested. Ef­\nforts will now be made to get him to\nreturn for the annual convention to be\nheld here of the Peninsula Horticult­\nural Society, the following week.\nA full program for the two days has\nbeen arranged, opening at 10 oclock\non Thursday morning and closing with\na session Friday night. Professor H.\nHayward, director of the Delaware Ex­\nperiment Station, will talk about the\nuse of corn and forage plants for\nfeeding to Ihe stock. andTtow to\nutilize dairy products on the farm.\nThe Hon. Oliver A. Newton, of Ufldge-\nvllle, one of the most successful farm­\n In Delaware, will talk about grow-\n' tng strawberries and Irish potatoes\nThe Hon. James T. Shallcross, of Mid­\ndletown, is an all-around farmer and\ntruck grower and will give several\nshort talks. A . C. Howe, of Milford,\nwill talk on poultry. B. F . B. Woodall,\nalso of Milford, will talk about soil\nfertility and the use of fertilizers, and\nalso tell how ho has made money\ngrowing a large variety of crops. The\nquestion of fertilizers will he thor­\noughly discussed by a number of\nspe akers. The United States Depart­\nment of Agriculture has been asked to\nsend a good roads expert and a lively\ndiscussion of rond building is expect­\ned. Senator Drexler and other citi­\nzens will make addresses and engage\nIn the discussions.
323cbf17cafc33ae81dcc211b19daf73 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.5423496951528 41.681744 -72.788147 son at the opening of the new ses-\nsion of the insular legislature.\nWith regard to this modernization\nof corporation law, Mr. Stimson said\nit was necessary "so as to insure the\npeople who are willing to lend mon-\ney to you that the enterprise in\nwhich they invest will be thoroughly.\nJustly and equitably treated."\nAs to land law revision the ogver- -\nnor general said: "At the present\nrate with which the agricultural\nland of these islands Is being dis\ntributed among their people, it will\nbe 400 years before that great asset,\nthe great guardian of the peoples'\nstability is fully put to use. This is\nnot conservation; this is waste."\nColonel Stimson said "certain\nthoughtless critics" had sought to\narouse suspicion with the argument\n to invite the help of American\ncapital "would be to Institute eco-\nnomic serfdom to America."\n'It would be hard to conceive a\nmore serious error," he went on "By\nexciting an unfounded fear, these\ncritics would block the only avenue\ntowards economic, and therefore po\nlitical independence of these islands.\n"The Philippine Islands today\nstand in much the same economic\nsituation as the United States stood\n104 years ago. We in America were\nthen possessors of the boundless re\nsources of a great continent, but we\nwere poor and lacked means to de-\nvelop those resources. We borrowed\nfreely from Europe, including many\ncountries with whose political insti-\ntutions we had no sympathy and\neven held in profound distrust. Is\nAmerica in economic serfdom to-\nday?
17539e718fba5a6c54cb97c14de6bbea THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.1712328450026 40.114955 -111.654923 empire brought back tho raw ma-\nterial front which opium Is made\nIn 1368 the habit hind become no\nwidespread that tho emperor rooting\nIts III effects Issued an Imperial do\nctce against time use of and the traffic\nIn opium In the original decree he\nprescribed only moderato penalties for\nIts violation but ns his subjects did\nnot obey him ho Increased tho sever\nity ot the penalties until death or trans-\nportation became the lot of every\nono who persisted In tho use of the\nbaneful pipe And ns the Chinese\nhad then been smoking opium less\nthan CO years they broke off the obit\njust us an American youth who has\nsmoked tobacco only n year or two\ncan give up the use of tobacco\nBut like the American boy who\n off und then In two mouths\ngoes hack to his tobacco the Chinese\nIn a few years resumed the use of\noption and again a stern emperor\nstopped It Nor was opium again\nsmoked In China until the matter part\nof the eighteenth century\nBritish rule having been imposed\nupon India the government In 1757\ngrunted to tho East India Company a\nmonopoly of the trade In opium The\nEast India Company at once cast its\neyes China ward There It saw an em\nerror who had forbidden time Impoita\ntint or use of opium there It also saw\nlaws fixing time opium smokers penalty\nat death Rot there It also saw Chi-\nnese gold and plans wero at once laid\nto provide the Chinese with opium\nwhether their emperor would have it\nor not
1adfe42441f555386de6094ab4a3274d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.1571037935134 40.063962 -80.720915 Sir. CoNKi.tNU said lie would accept th(\nlendiuent proposed by Mr. Titusuuii.i.\nMr. Morton.The statement I Bpoko o!\nFriday was not made out at ray re\nLest. I do not know at whoeo request ii\njs mada out, but I had seen it. Ishouk\nit liavo referred to it, however, but loi\nc insinuation Senator Tiicmiium. hat\nade in rei^ard to myself and others hang\ng on to theskirts ot power for mercenary\nirposes. I have tho right to denoanci\n>pocrisy wherever 1 find it If any mar\nimes here and casts insinuations on m<\nat I am seeking for patronage, while\nhimself linn vnnft n* far na nn« nn<\nrecommending to office; has recom\nended in writing and verbally; has ever\nine to the Executive and demanded per\nnnlly tho appointment of relatives ant\nends; has been persistent; has been im\nirtuno. If any such man cornea on thii\n>or and casts imputations on me, 1 havi\ne right, without being criticised for \ncall attention to what be has done him\nif. In regard to prowling around thi\napartments, I have been In only one Do\nirtment during this session of Congress\n110 not go to the Department once i\n«r, where I suppose Senator Trum\n111 goes twenty times, and s<\nr as sneaks are concerned, whi\ntbe sneak? Is it the man wh<\nuncs hero and casts imputations on Sen\nore and ipipugnes their motives; talki\nlout theirTianging on tho skirts of pow\nand attemps to make party capital bj\nlarges of that kind, Hhen he has bcei\nio of tho most importunate seekers foi\nlice and has urged tho appointment o\nsrriends personally and in writing timi\nid again. Now I said I had seen a state\nent showing that the Senator had madi\n8 recommendations in writing to thii\nIministration. 1 believe that statomcn\nbe true and that it will be verified unde:\no resolution offered by the Senator Iron\newYork.
2abd76a57eb48bdcf48695bd76ab4ed4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.4287670915778 39.745947 -75.546589 Something very novel and smart Is\nshown In this shirt waist suit, which.\nJudging from the new spring arrivals, has\nlost none of Its prestige. In both design\nand construction it Is out of the ordinary,\nand this, combined with a great deal of\nstyle and charm, makes It a most attrac­\ntive model. The blouse proper Is tucked In\nfront and back, over which Is fitted a\nprettily shaped facing held In position\nover the tucks by buttons. The facing\nJust meets the rughm sleeve, whose full­\nness is taken up In plaits that extend to\nthe neck edge. The lower edge of the\nsleeve Is also plaited, and the model is a\ngood ono to follow If one desires to\nfreshen up an old waist by the addition\nof a new sleeve. The sklr* is one of the\nnewest this season. It I. in four gore\nstyle and Is exceedingly simple in Its\nconstruction. It has been some time since\nwe had four gore skirts, but they are\ncoming in for they give the full-\nnesa required by the present modes with­\nout cutting up ones material so badly.\nThe new four gore skirt has a box plait\ndown the center back. This plait Is a part\nof the back gore and simply means the\nbringing of perforations together to form\nthe plais so one can see how much easier\nIt is to handle than an applied plait. The\nside gore is fitted by a dart, and the lower\nportion falls in very graceful lines. For\na model that la worthy of the attention\nof the home dressmaker this Is to be com­\nmended It is equally good looking fash­\nioned of cloth, of linen or any wash ma­\nterial Quite a pretty Idea would be to\npipe the edges of the fancy facing with\ncontrasting color, whether the dress be\nmade of brown cashmere with cream\nwhite satin pipings or blue linen with\nwhite pipings. Sises. No. 6269, 22 to 42\nInches bust measure; No. 6260. 20 to 30\nInches waist measure.
122a5da4489a6ab2179981f70877ac78 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.1219177765095 29.4246 -98.49514 were Jointly engaged as such part-\nners In all civil cases In which one or\nboth shall be employed. That In all\ncriminal cases wherein the city of San\nAntonio was plalmlfT or prosecutor for\nany violation of the law and ordinances\nof said city, said Newton was solely and\nseparately engaged and interested, and\nthe said Kckford had full liberty to be\nemployed as igalnst said oily to defend\nsaid cases, and having the exclusive\nright to receive all fees nml emoluments\nderived therefrom. That on the other\nhand, said Newton was to receive and\nemploy exclusively without any division\nthereof, and without any rebate made\nIn lieu thereof in other cases to or with\nsaid Kckford, the salary allowed him as\nsuch City Attorney. That during the\nexistence of such partnership, the said\nKckford was employed In many crimi-\nnal cases wherein the said city was\nplaintiff and prosecutor, and openly\nand notoriously defended the same In\nthe Hecorder's court of said cltr. and re\nceived In compensation therefor divers\nfees the defendants therein. But\nIbat during the existence of said part-\nnership, and at all times since the dis-\nsolution thereof, the said Kckford and\nthe said Newton have faithfully com-\npiled w,ith the letter and spirit of their\nsnld agreement, nor has the said New\nton received ono dollar or other sums of\nmoney, or other profit or advantage of\nany kind or character from the said em-\nployment, by said persons or any of\nthem, In such oases (criminal) wherein\nthe said olty has been plalnlill or ad-\nversely Interested. Nor has any rebate\nbeun made by both, or either of said\npartners, in lieu of said employment of\nsaid Kckford in tho manner aforesaid.\nThat said Kckford may have bten, and\nprobably was employed, in relation to\nthe case charged, and may have ren-\ndered, and probably did render service,\nin his professional capacity in virtue of\nsuoh employment, but that said employ-\nment was public and made without at- -\nnmni ai concealment, anu me services\npublicly and notoriously rendered, and
262072506909a16a227d7456a15487f4 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.5219177765093 39.745947 -75.546589 Principal refera further to noble characters\nwho. as pu pi la, read bis mind, heart and\nconduct fer year«, to state their own per­\nsonal expenenoe and value of Instruction\nreceived from him. tIi: To the surviving\nrelatives and friends of Ada V. Carswell,\nfirst lady graduate, who reoelved a high and\nliberal education, became a prominent pub-\nlio school teacher, was a steadfast Christian\ncharacter, and Is an ennobling Inüuence for\nUhrlsUan Intelligence; Friend Emma Oak-\nford, public school teacher, and Friend Hue\nF. McAllister, ex-teacher of like character,\nsucoeas and usefulness, and both gtaduutes;\nMiss Brown, Miss Blanken, Mrs. Louise M.\nScott (nee Oountls); the Misses Mary E. and\nSarah J. Derrtckaon, Miss Guy, Mise House­\nman, Mrs Linie Emmons (noe Lancaster);\nMUs Heckle P. I«atlmer, the Misses McCall,\nthe Misses railler, the Aliases McKeag, Miss\nMaggie McWhorter. Miss Laura E. Price.\nMiss Addle Rowland,excellent public scnool\nteacher, departed; the Misses Roberts, Allss\nLittle it. Shakespeare, the Misse« Springer,\n Little Emma Woodward« Mias Jennie\nWebb, nleoe of the late Rev. James Riddle;\nMrs. Annie L Hod vornan (nee Wheaton);\nMisses Addle J. Pierson and Annie E.\nWoodward, teachers; Mrs. Vlotorla A. Cole\n(nee Vandever), excellent public sohool\nteacher: Miss Annie Speakman, excellent\nschool teacher; Mrs. Agnee K. Ooheltroe\n(nee Ogle), ezoellent ex putllo school\nteaoher; Miss Saille J. May. excellent Dela­\nware Bute sohool teacher. The last named\nsix are graduâtes. The Misses Pieroe, the\nMisses Uowpertbwait, the Mlsee« Dorsey,\nMiss France, Mrs. Marv Batterthwalte (nee\nBaker); Miss (.layer, tbe Misses Allen, Miss\nCooling, the Misses West, Miss Morgoy,Mlas\nMary H. Wright, graduate; Misses McCord\nand Grubb; the Misses Janvier, Miss El­\nliott, Miss Johnson, Miss Becker, exoelleat\nprofessional teaoher of music; Misa Gebhart,\nthe Misses McDowell, the Misses Gookln,\nMiss Zebbey. Miss Ulbsun. Consultations\n8 o'clock mornings and evenings and 10\noclook mornings; aleo bv malli\nRespectfully, JOHN O. BARENESS,\nFounder and Principal, Tenth and Maskat\n.M
0a0d5d417e228dd4700c0f8575710b3b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.0260273655506 39.745947 -75.546589 * Washington, Jan. 10 .— T he Hepburn\nI Nicaraguan canal bill passed the\nhouse lute yesterday afternoon by\ni practically a unanimous vote. Only\nj two members out of 310 voted ugainkt\nj It. Messrs. Fletcher (Hep.), of Mlu-\n; nesota, aud Lassiter (Dem.), of Vir­\nginia, were the two voting in the nega­\ntive. The opposition to committing\nI the government to the Nicaraguan\ni route attempted to secure amend­\nments to lodge with the president the\ndiscretionary power to purchase and\ncomplete the Panama canal It It could\nbe purchased for $40,000 ,000. The\ntest came on the first vote, when the\nadvocates of an alternative route\npolled 102 against 170 votes. All other\nI amendments to the bill passed ux-\n: actly as It came from the committee.\nThe bill as passed authorizes the\npresident to secure from the states of\nI Costa Klca and Nicaragua, In behalf\nof the United States, control of auch\na portion of the territory belonging to\nsaid states as may be desirable and\n'■necessary, on which to excavate, con-\n; struct and a canal suitable to\nthe wants of modern navigation and\n1 commerce, and appropriates such a\nI sum as may be necessary to secure\nthe control of said territory. The bill\nalso authorizes the president to direct\n{ the secretary of war to construct auch\ncanal from the Caribbean sea, at a\nj point near Qreylown, in Nicaragua,\n! by way of Lake Nicaragua, to a point\nI on tho Pacific ocean near Brito, and\nI also to construct proper harbors at\n! the tcrmlnll of said canal, and to\n1 make necessary provisions for the de-\n! fense of the canal and harbors,\ni Tho last section makes a present ap-\nI propriation of $10,000,000 to carry on\nthis work, and authorizes the secre­\ntary of war to enter Into proper con-\nj tracts for material and work as may\nbe deemed necessary therefor, such\nwork and material to be paid for aa\nI appropriations may be made from time\nto time. The section fixes the aggre­\ngate cost at $180,000.000, to be drawn\nI from the treasury on warrants of tho\npresident.
51fc3382c71e9842ed44edcf8809c108 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.5560108973386 40.063962 -80.720915 to tho spirit of Chief Justice Tanoyi\ndecision in the Rhode Island case the Ju\ndiciary cannot review the decision of the\npolitical departments upon a politica\nquestion. In recognizing this result wt\nnoither approve nor excuse tho proceed\nings whereby it was attempted to dcclarc\none of the amendments ratified by the\nIndiana legislature without tho presenci\nof a constitutional quorum, tho pcopli\ncannot allow that proceeding to become!\nprecedent to be followed in tho future\ntheir most important rights are imperriU\nel if they allow any legislative acts in thi\nabsence of a constitutional quorum.\nUpon the subject of tho tariff Mi\nGreeley is known to differ with tin\nnom/vrata nnH mono 1?nr\\iih1i/*nnn hut In\nbaa agreed to a fair, safe and honorabl\nadjustment of that question. It is to t>\nregarded as the peoples business, to b\nregulated by them in the selection o\nmembers of Congress, and the Presiden\nis not to attempt to control it by the vet\npower or the use of his patronaae. Thi\nagreement in advance between Sir. Grec\nley and the people is not only lair an\nsafe.it is in accordance with the spirit c\ntbe Constitution,which expressly proriilc\nthat ail revenue measures shall original\nIn the House of Representatives.\nMr. Hendricks readMr. Greeley's \not acceptance and appealed withcarnesi\nness and confidence to his Democrat!\nbrethren that the constitutional rights o\nthe States are no longer to be strlppe\nfrom them; local self governments are t\nbe preserved; domestic and flresid\nrights protected'and the States to regulat\ntheir internal policy without superVlsloi\nMr. Greeley, be said, pledges himself t\nbe President not of party, but of tho pot\npie, and that civil service reform shall I:\nreal. A change is necessary to secui\nreform. It is tho President's person!\npartisans now in office who are wrongin\nthe people. Speaking of the reduction\nthe national debt, reduction in taxatioi\n&o., he claim that had economy prevallo\na much larger reduction in the publi\ndebt might have been made, and thi\nwhile the Internal revenue had bee\nreduced In 1868, about sixty millions p<\nannum, there had been nearly a corr\nspending increaso in tho receipts froi\ncustoms. Relerriiw to tho recent specc\nmade by Benator Morton, in which tt\nlatter called his sincerity in question;\nthat he had aald we turn our backs upt\nthe past; we stand in the present at\nlook lorward *to the future. No fa\nminded man understands this languaj\nas a desertion ol convictions of rigl\nor an abandonment of essential prim
026c4d79347ebcf77f0356602ecc0975 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1884.976775924661 39.745947 -75.546589 other fine candies, a demand ,>\nhigh coloreil goods, and the confectioner\nwho tx>uld make them the most attrac­\ntive, was certain of doing a business.\nVegetable colors, such us saffron and\nother like substances were tried, but\nwould not answer the purpose; they\nwould not pit see the eye, and con­\nsequently the good* would not sell.\nThe use of chrome yellow, carmine,\nPrussiau blue, aniline, ultramarine\nblue, burut umber and lamp black then\nbecame general, ami the goods looked\nnice, consequently the people bought\nthem, aud the confectionery business\nincreased, until at present there is not\na couutry in the world where there is\nas much candy cousumed per capita\nas there is in the United States. It is\nhowever doubtful if eveu in using these\ncolors there is enough of them ui the\ncandy to injure anyroue, and it is proba­\n mat a person would be made sick\nwith the amount of sugar they would\nhave to eat, before they would be\npoisoned by tue coloring matter.\nNot many years ago, a demand\nspiung up for low priced candies,which\nwas partly met by the introduction of\nsteam aud machinery, combined with\nunskilled labor at low wages in the\nlargo manulo« tories. But some people\nwere not satisfied eveu then, although\nthe price of candies were reduced fully\none-half; they wanted goofs\ncheaper, an«l when sugar w\ncents a pound, there were retailers who\nwanted to buy candy at eleven cents,\nso that, they could retail it at twenty\ncents, and the manufacturers accom­\nmodate«! them by using terra abba and\npowdered soap stone in the candies and\nlozenges, aud glue, or starch ami glu­\ncose, in the gum drops and marshmal­\nlow drops.
2dde161ce9e9e499ef61da93cc2e7067 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.850684899797 41.681744 -72.788147 Lieutenant Chevalier proved like-\nwise to be an energetic speaker and\ndeclared that if there are any British-\ners in this city who are hiding from\nthe American draft on the grounds\nthat they are aliens and subjects of\nGreat Britain he does not care to rec-\nognize them as fellow countrymen.\nHe explained how, during the first\ndays of the war, the German morale,\nthen at its height, was superior to\nthat of the British army, but now\nthings have been reversed and the\nmorale 'of the Allied forces is the\nbest. If at the beginning of the war\nall the eligible Britishers and Cana-\ndians had enlisted the war might have\nbeen over by now, the speaker said.\nThe speaker likewise declared that,\nto use the words of Theodore \nvelt, the Allies are not fighting a war\nfor democracy, they are fighting for\ntheir own salvation and their own\nexistence as a. nation. Referring to\nthe war situation today Lieutenant\nChevalier said that it is the worst\nthat it has been for a long time and\na supreme effort must be made to\nestablish the superiority of the Allies\nagain on the Italian front.\nIn conclusion, he urged all Amer-\nicans to try and persuade any of their\nBritish' friends to enlist. But don't\nuse the word slacker, he advised, for\nthe word slacker will not become gen-\neral until after the war, Then the\nman who has done his bit can come\nback, look any other man in the eye\nand if necessary tell him to go to\nhell.
20c5dd0a83faefe405753db2b48b1b7c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.2945205162355 40.063962 -80.720915 "You wouldn't take that foi\nwould you?" inquires the swii\nThe man, of course, replies tl\nnot, whereupon the swindler c\n"They are counterfeit, but\ntation you ever saw. You\nthem." The man at once seei\nfor a good speculation with\ntions, and becomes inquisitive\nthat the money is made at dif\nfor an organisation, with hea\nWashington, and to purchai\nmust become a.member of the\ncan then have exchanged at f\nsum of good money for seve\nmuch in the bad. At tho. Ban-\ntold the object of the orgat\nprotect auy of its membere\ninto difliculty from handlim\nrr>onny. There is no such orj\nWashington or anywhere uls*.\nThe victim, through differen\ntione, is finally induced to go\nquarter?, and is always aceoi\ntheman whohashadhimint\nsame train, however, in a "sti\n after the two arrive at\ntho third man appears. It is t\nintended victim is requested t<\ntract before be can become a\nthe alleged organization. The\ning signed tho first gentleman\nalleged headquarters to see ab\nplicant'd initiation. He returr\ndisappointed, and stating ths\nnot enough members ]\nperform the ceremony,\ntrie, all prearranged, th\nbetween the two "copp\nseemingly mad at tho other f\nthe applicant over to Washingl\nfirst Ascertaining that enoug\nwere present During this,\nthrown out that the applk\nallow one of them to conv<\nmoney into bad, as he was priv\nbeing a member. Some new\nobtained at the Treasury, and\nare again displayed. If the i\nup the money, the man goes\nquarters but never returns, anc\nis left to get back to his home\nhe can.
2b58509505d559943d83f54425400dfc CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1920.80464477712 39.623709 -77.41082 Emory Eyler, and Roy Eyler, an infant,\nHarry G. Wagaman, Joseph C, Waga-\nman, Leota Attig and Mildred Wagaman,\nan infant, are owners of a piece or parcel\nof land, situate in said district, about 400\nfeet west of Annandale school and ad'\njoining the lands of George g. Springer\nand W. L. Hess, and more particularly\ndescribed by metes and bounds, courses\nand distances, as follows; Beginning for\nthe same at a point on the sixth and last\nline of the property described in a deed\nfrom Robert Annan and Mary Jane An-\nnan, his wife, to Jacob Hoke dated April\nsth, 1856, and recorded in Liber E. S. No.\n8, folio 377, one of the Land Records of\nFrederick county; said point being dis-\ntant 40.9 feet from a Sycamore tree at\n end of said sixth line, same tree be-\ning a(so the hegjnnjng of the above men-\ntioned property, and running thence with\nsai i Hie reversed. S 10J degrees W 14 2\nfeet, thence S 55$ degrees W 160 8 feet,\nthence S 7*2J degrees W 121.3 feet, thence\nS 84J degrees W 270.8 feet, thence N 88$\ndegrees W 300.2 feet to a point on the\nthird line of above mentioned property\nfropn Robert Annan and wife to Jacob\nHoke, said point |>el nK distant S oj( de-\ngrees W 1?2 feet from the center line of\nHampden Valley Road, thence with said\nline reversed N 0| degrees E 10 feet,\nthence S 88$ degrees E 299.8 feet, thence\nF 84| degrees E 269-2 feet, thence 72|\ndegrees E 118.7 feet, thence N 56| de=
0e4c5bdf47a1b659119875d4b02ab512 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1893.2424657217148 46.601557 -120.510842 loss bf my fortune. Those circumstances\nconstituted the second reason why 1\nthought that she might not have been\nmistaken, and that 1 bad really seen ber\nbefore without knowing it.\nItsounds mysterious, but all the cir-\ncumstances were mysterious. Inspector\nWilson had declared that I was a good\namateur detective, bnt he little knew\nhow hard 1 had worked to unravel the\nstory of my own life—or perhaps he\nknew a good deal about it. He certain-\nly knew that 1 had been rich, and per-\nhaps he knew more about me than I\nknew myself. In any case I had grave\nreason to study It all over again before\ngoing out, for 1 was suspected if not of\nactual murder, at least ofbeing accessory\nto it. Not knowing why I was suspected,\nIcould not tell how my most natural and\ninnocent act might serve to strengthen\ntbe case against me.\nIremembered how Pesach Rnbenstein\nhad Deen convicted of tbe murder of\nSara Alexander on purely circumstan-\ntial evidence in one of the most famous\nmurder trials in New York, and I also\nremembered how, long after he starved\nhimself to death in his cell and so cheat-\ned the gallows, another man had made a\nvoluntary confession of the murder, ex-\nplaining every one of the circumstances\nthat had helped to convict \nand explaining them in a perfectly ra-\ntional way, although bis story was one\nthat no lawyer would have dared to\nsubmit to a jury as au imaginary one.\nIt had led me to fear and distrust any\nchain of circumstantial evidence, no\nmatter how strong it might seem.\nIt is now five years since 1 lost my\nmoney so strangely. My name is really\nArthur Levinson. I bad been left an\norphan when a lad only fonrteen years\nof age, and had been allowed by my\nguardian to do pretty nearly as I chose\nafter that He was strict on one point\nonly. That was that I must apply my-\nself to study until I should reach my\nmajority. He allowed me to choose my\nown schools, and 1 had attended an ex-\ncellent private school in Boston nntil at\nseventeen I had qualified for a college\ncourse. When be asked me what college\nIpreferred going to I chose a university\ncourse in Germany. He approved of the\nchoice, and 1 went abroad. So it hap-\npened that, although 1 was born in New\nYork and bad spent my childhood there,\nIbad not seen the city more than two or\nthree days at a time for ten years, for\nafter finishing my studies 1 had chosen\nto travel for some three years before\ncomiui/ hum.
0a7b99c87d15bd34cb4b1a4aa89debf0 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.8616438039066 41.004121 -76.453816 devised schomo will this year toko five\nor six hundred millions of dollars from\ntho peoplo, nnd pay it over to tho caplt\nallsts who own your mines and mills\nand furnaces and salt works, toalloviato\ntheir unprofitable labors, as certainly as\nIf tho tax was openly levied ur,d tho\nbounty avowedly paid. Under thu samo\nsystem our ocean shipping is broken up\nand our shipyards are closed, nud tho\nfarming land of Now England no Ion\nger fetches tho cost of tho buildings\nupon It. And that Its conspicuous\nmerit in affording protection to tho\nAmerican worKiuan from tlio pauper la\nbor of Europo may bo apparent to tho\nmeatiest capacity, almost tho only artl\nclo which it admits duty freo Is au un\nlimited supply of cheap Chinese, im\nported in lots to suit capitalists. Tho\ndemocracy, on tho contrary, accepting\ntho past and frankly recurring to tho\nprinciples of Jefferson, hold out tho\n to all who long for reform, and\npress forward to redeoiu tho future. To\nthat end they call on nil men who are\nfor a moderate and equal tariff, concolv\ned in no interest less universal than that\nof tho wholo peoplo, on ull who know\nthat ti depreciated currency Is n curo\nto every ono but utter perdition to tlio\npoor and on thoso mon who seo how\ncorruption Is sapping the foundations of\ntlio government, to maintain by tlieir\nvotes tho truly domoeratlo mearares of\nhard money, n revenue tariff nud a rad\nleal reduction nnd reform in tho civil\nservico. in Stato allair.s tlio succoss ot\ntho democracy would mean thonbsoluto\ncessation of grants of public funds or\ncredit to local or partial uses. Tho stur\ndy beggars who Infest tho Stato Houso\nneed no longer doubt whether thoExo\ncutivo can bo screwed up to forbid their\nplans of plunder. Democratic economy\nwill not im-a-
271eab2d9c8496475c0906d31337a3a1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.505479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbe Racing at Dexter Park, Chicago.\nChicago, July 3..An extra purse\narranged to come of) on Saturday at\nDexter Park, ol $4,000; $1,900 to the first\nhorse, $1,200 to the second horse, $900 <\nto tbe third horse, and $400 to the fourth j\nhorse; free for all. American Girl tocarry i\ntwenty pounds dead weight, all others i\ncatch weight to harness, best three in live, j\nwas filled lust evening. The following (\narc the nominees: Wm. Lorell names b.\nm. American Girl, A. W. Faucett names i\nBashaw, Jr., Lewis names Henry Tood, j\n! W. IX. Crawford namea J. W . Conlcy, |\nBen Msce names B.Q . Sensation, R. Arm- t\nstrong names Fred Hooper. 1\nThe third day of the Dexler park meet- l\ning opened with pleasant weather and a\ntrack vastly improved from the slush of ]\nTuesday or the hoaviermudol yesterday. i\nThe first race was running race, dash\nof one mile and a halt, for all aget, lor a e\npurse of $500, $300 to the first, $150 to [\nthe second and $50 to the third. There j\nwere thirteen entries and eight started. 1\nMarch, Young Harry ol the West, Harry I\nO'Fallen, Altojna, Flush, Keno, Holly- 0\nwood and Venn*. In thopool Flush was t\nthe favorito at 50 to 35. The field start o\nwas (fleeted, Harry in lead, with March a\nclute alter liiui, the rest well bunched be- l\nhind. Flush's rider evidently held her c\nin lor iuture use. Around they went.\ntheir portions not chtnged, except that b\nHollywood came up for the second place,\nuntil at the end ol tho mile, when FlosU'u «\nrider called on her and she responded t,\nwith & dash that carried tier to the front, y\nVoung Harry dropping gracelully back to\ntho second place, but aucceesluily
004d8e4d879eb78f0486ea3fc6088ef2 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.732876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 havo been looking for news from tho\nfront and to them came tho word\nthat thero will be nothing doing un-\ntil after tho holiday recess of Con-\ngress nnd moro particularly until\nafter the Illinois Legislature has In-\ndicated tho courso which It will take\nduring Gov. Deneen's extra session.\nOne of the members of the State\nSenate, according to report, was prom-\nised one of the "blg'fedornl places In\ntho northern Federal district of the\nState, and closed up his private busi-\nness affairs In probation for begin-\nning to labor on tho, Federal pay roll.\nHo Is still on the waiting list.\nTho belief Is held In substantial\nquarters .that Senator Lorimer finds,\nhimself so hard pushed to deliver tho\ngoods that he Is porfeotlng an appeal\nto Senator Aldrloh, to whose rescue\nho hurried when tho Sen-\nators were warming things up for tho\ntariff makers, and to Uncle Joe, seek-\ning to get them to use their Influ-\nence upon President Taft in behalf of\nhimself and his friends.\nAll over Illinois State politics be-\ngins to sizzle, and the first real splut-\ntering Is scheduled for State fair\nweek nt Springfield, when tho gather-\ning of tho clans from all ovor the\nStato will open up a chnnco tor a pre-\nliminary tost ot tho now alignments,\nwhich aro expected as a result of the\npeculiar conditions existing between\ntho, old factional leaders.\nTho Supremo Judgeship election In\ntho Fourth Supremo Court District\nnext Saturday commands tho atten-\ntion of tho entlro State, duo to tho\nbitter feeling which has been engen-\ndered .ever since tho Macomb conven-\ntion. Tho managers for Milton
178f3272d7142b6989827a32ffacdda4 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.6352458700162 29.949932 -90.070116 da e body of our late frend. Chua. 8. HoBman,\narrived yesterday eveling on the Riohmond. He\nwill probably be buried te-day.\nThe Psahne Carroll, from St. Louis, and Legal\nTerder, from Louisville, bound to this esty, left\nMepbhis on the 17th last. The Buimarok, heace\nfor t)t. Louis, arrived there the same day.\nThe first bale of the new cotton crop was re-\nceived at Memphis on the 17th inst.\nl he owners of the Great Republic have been\ntrying to sell her. So says the Mempets Ava-\nlanche. The highest bid received was $75,000.\nWe learn from the Vicksburg imes that Capt.\nThoe. W. Smith intends placing the Dora in the\nNew Orleans and Yazoo river trade.\nThe Emma No. 3 was advertised to leave Cin-\ncinnati for this City on the 18th inst.\n officers of the Caddo and Richmond have\nour thanks for favors.\nOur friend. Charlie Moore, Jr., has our thanks\nfor a late Natchntoches paper.\nThe river opposite this point still contlnues to\ndecline, wi h scant three feet on the principal\nbare between here and Alexandria. Boats draw-\ning two feet can just about manage to get to Boon\nBend, on Cypress Bayou. Twelve Kite Bayou ii\ngetting very bad. and a fall of a few inches more\nwill effbctally elites up lake navigation for the\npresent. The Rt bmond, the lsut boat up from\nthe city, made the trip in five and a half days, the\nquickest in some time. The reason of this was\nprobably that the bottom of the boat was nearer\nthe top of the water than the other boats. -\n[(hreveport Southwestern.
075b153bbc4ebb9f665a97dd7cbf76ed THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.6150684614408 37.561813 -75.84108 8. Appropriation Bills. A change of\nthe greatest importance is the proposed\nlimitation on the passage of appropria-\ntion bills. Under the existing Constitu-\ntion, the general appropriation bill, like\ntbe general appropriation bill in Congress,\nbas been made the vehicle for the grossest\npeculations in the public funds. Ab-\nsenteeism often reduces the attendance to\nmere quorum. A bare majority of this\nQuorum can incorporate in the general ap-\npropriation bill, by amendment or rider,\nany scheme for depleting the treasury.\nOn the final passage of the bill, it must\nbe voted on as an entirety; and unless it\nreceive the vote of a majority of all the\nmembers elected to each house it is lost.\nAppropriations necessary to carry on the\ngovernment ara thus conpled with, and\nmade to abide the fate of, schemes of mere\npeculation and plunder. Members are\ncompelled, against their convictions, to\nvote for the bill including these obnoxious\n or suffer a stoppage of the wheels of\ngovernment To preventtbis is tbe pur-\npose of the new provisions in sections\ntwentythree and twentyfive. Each item\nof appropriation must stand on its own\nmerits and be voted on separately, by yeas\nand nays, on the demand of any member.\nIf it fail to receive the constitutional ma-\njority, it is to be stricken ont, Thus each\nmember is made personally responsible to\nhis constituents for the vote he may cast.\nHe can no longer have the pretense that\nunless Jie vote for the bill, including tbe\nobnoxious item, it must fail, and the gov-\nernment suspend for want of funds.\nAnother check and safeguard is the\npower vested in the Governor to veto any\nitem in the appropriation bill, and ap-\nprove the resid ue. It is beli ved that these\nprovisions will result in an annual saving\nto the treasury of many thousands of\ndollars.
5fcadec8d08167ca0b28c12de119736e THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.8315068176053 32.408477 -91.186777 The cotton worm, or army worm, as\nit frequently is called in the South, is\nnow attracting considerable attention\nthroughout the cotton belt. This in-\nsect has been known as an enemy of\ncotton in the United States for over\na century, but for many years it was\nso scarce that recent outbreaks have\ncaused considerable comment. Before\nthe appearance of the boll weevil it\nwas one of the two principal enemies\nof cotton in this country, the other\nbeing the bollworm.\nThe cotton worm varies greatly in\nesie and coloration at different peri-\nods, but the form generally seen may\nbe described as follows: Length, about\n1% inches; upper surface with a\nbroad brownish or perfectly black\nstripe. Down the center of the stripe\nis a fine yellowish line and similar\nlines bound the black area on either\nside. Each segment bears four black\ndots upon its upper surface and four\nsmaller ones on either side.\nThis pest is not a native of the Unit-\ned States, nor has It been able to\nestablish itself here permanently,\nowing to the fact that it cannot with-\nstand the cold of our winters. Each\nyear a fresh invasion of parent moths\nfrom Central or South America must\noccur if the cotton worm is to be\npresent that season. The first moths\nusually reach the region of Browns-\nville, TeL., about April. Here they\nstart a new generation in cotton\nfields and this and succeeding genera\ntions rapidly spread farther north.\nThe damage done to the cotton plant\nby the larvae or "cotton worms,"\nhatching from eggs laid by the moths.\nis often very great, unless efficient\ncontrol measures are adopted and in-\ntelligently carried out. The leaves are\nattacked first and may be totally de-\nstroyed. In cases where the worms\nare very abundant the bolls, equares.\nand even the twigs may be attacked\nafter the leaves have been destroyed.\nBy tar the best method of control\nis the use of powdered arsenate of\nlead. This substancLdoes not injure\nthe foliage, as paris green does under\nsome circumstances, and adheres to\nthe leaves in spite of considerable\nra.inall It should be dusted over the\nplants, preferably in the early morn-\ning while the dew is on and little\nwind is stirring, at the rate of about\ntwo pounds per acre. Paris green may\nbe used if arsenate of lead is not availl-\nable. To lessen the danger of burn-\ning the plants alrslaked lime and\nparts green should be used in equal\nparts. Whether the lime is used or\nnot flour should be used with the parts\ngreen in equal parts. 'This will assist\ngreatly in cansing the poison to adhere\nto the foliage. lther of the poisons\nmentioned may be applied very satis-\nfactorlly by sifting them from cloth\nsacks at the ends of poles.
94cf089bf47b5040821a75acade14844 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.6999999682903 41.681744 -72.788147 Washington, Sept. 13. Whether tho\ntax revision bill to bo presented to the\nsenato next week will contain a pro-\nvision requiring the corporation:! o\nthe country to pay excess profits 'taxes\nfor another year was to be decided to-\nday by the senate finance committee.\nAlthough Chairman Penrose and\nsoma other .majority members favor\naccepting Seretary Mellon's recom-\nmendation that the repeal of these\ntaxes be made retroactive to last Jan-\nuary 1, it was predicted that the com-\nmittee probably would approve the\nprovision in the house bill making; the\nrepeal effective next January 1.\nWith . this question disposed of,\nChairman Penrose expecta the com-\nmitter to make rapid progress in de\nciding upon other proposed changes in\nthe honse bill aa these are dependent\nupon the date ot the elimina-\ntion of the profits tax. Should the\ncommitteo accept thu house proposal,\nit is expected that it also will approve\ntho house plan for repealing all the\ntransportation taxes aa of next Janu-\nary, aa well aa of repealing and re-\nducing other levies.\nThe committee has decided definitely\nthat it must report a bill that will\nraise a minimum of $3,200,000,000, this\nfiscal year. The house measure, by de-\nferring repeal of the profits tax will\nraise approximately 1100,000,000 more\nthan tuat amount.\nTwo important sections of the house\nbill, one reducing the maximum in-\ncome surtax rate to 3 2 per cent and\nthe other increasing by $500, the ex-\nemption to heads of families having\na net income of $5,000 or less and by
6ed61dc032402ad5f764f94adf0a9e42 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.3657533929477 39.369864 -121.105448 thirty or forty private gardens in the village,\nbesides the larger ones heretofore described\nunder another head, and they give the whole\nplace a very inviting, eastern aspect when\ncompared with the desolate appearance of\nmost mining towns. The horticultural ef-\nforts of our citizens arc greatly facilitated\nby the possession of abundant means for ir-\nrigation. The town is mostly built in a hol-\nlow. or on slopes to the same, both sides of\nwhich are traversed by the Middle Yuba\nCanal, or its branches; and from this source\nis conveyed, through pipes, hose or troughs,\nall the water needed. The Company has very\nliberally allowed such use of their property\nwithout demanding compensation.\nOneof the most attractive gardens the sum-\nmer evening lounger will observe, belongs to\nMr. Richard Abbey, who was one the first,\nif not the first, some three years past, to lead\nthe way in tlio cultivation of the soil about\nhome. Besides a beautiful assortment of\nflowers, it is filled with a choice variety of\ngrafted and budded fruit trees, vines and\nbushes, nearly all of them bearing. Peach,\nApricot and Pear trees, from two to four\nyears old, are loaded with young fruit, and\nseveral hundred strawberry plants are snowy\nwith blossoms. The garden is also well\nstocked with culinary vegetables, all of\nwhich thrive admirably. The whole enclo-\nsure about the cottage is remarkable for\ntasteful, orderly and cleanly culture.\nAdjoining this--cTiarming spot on either\nside are the residences and gardens of Messrs.\nWm. Abbey, Hustler, Fraser, and others,\nthose named presenting similar beautiful\nfeatures to the one above described. Mr.
1469a3cfa1d02547cea6d15c50942edf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.9082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho IsTKUiOKNCEnyoBtordny clironl\nled tho accident at SiateraviUo by whicl\nIr. Jamea A. Anderson, of Sardlfl, Ohio\ncontractor and builder, uud a brothc\nI Superintendent W. II, Andei\non, of the Wheeling Bcboole\n)ut liia life. Later particular\nhow that Mr. Anderson was at For\nyth'fl planing mill, abovo arid nlmoa\n,djoining HiatoravilU', having somu huu\nter prepared for a job ho had 011 hum\nu SiateraviUo; and Mr. Forsyth and Mi\nVndereon after talking a while, came uj\nrout the railroad track at tho trestle jus\nhovo tho mill. After talking a fo\\\nnoments, Aiulerson left Forsyth am\ntarted slowly down tho track toward\niisteruviiio. It was then about Bchedul\nime for tlui fust exnreea going ouuth,oi\nho Ohio HIver roud.and Anderson hu\\\nnit a rather diilicult job on bund, \nTilkingiaa slow and meditativu man\nier, with bi» head down, apparentl\n>blivlonn of liia surrounding.\nMr. Forsyth wau standing noarth\nrack watching Auderaon's departure\narhen ho WftB Buddenly Btartled by th\noud alarm whistle, Bounded two <1\n, hree timed by tho f.iat train, Soein\nbat Anderson did not appear to tnk\nlotice, lie ran down the Bide of th\nrack and called loudly to Auderfloi\niut Anderson being a little bard c\n1 earing, and obviouHly intent on hi\n:alculatioiiD,did uot hear anything, an\nho engineer a^ain, within twonty fee\n)f tho doomed mm, gave a loud whistl\nmd reversed the engine, but tho nic\nnentuiu being bo great, Anderson wa\nstruck by (be cow-udtchor ontho'leRi\nthrowing liia head buck, and crushing\nigainst the engine, death being pro babl
70456148bcc59dd004855e05c3531502 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.3301369545916 39.261561 -121.016059 tIm atli day of April, a. l>. 1862 , a final judgment\nami decide was rendered in the Justice's Court of K.\nW. Smith, an acting Justice of the Peace in ami fur\nthe Township of Nevada, County of Nevada, and\nState of California, apt inst GEORGE VANMARTER,\nand in favorof HENRY VV AI.L and JOHN NEWMAN*\nheretofore doing business under the firm and name\nof Wall fc Newman, 6>r the sum of 8175 50 debt,\n$17 50 counsel fees, and $17 5*5 coats, making in ail\n$210 05 with interest on the principal at the rate of\ntwo per cent per month, from the rendition of judg-\nment until paid, together with all costs of sate. And\nwhereas, on the said tittli day of April, a. l>. 1802. it\nwas ordered and decreed by the said Court, that the\nmortgage set forth in plaintiffs complaint be fore-\nclosed, and the property therein described, to wit:\nAll and singular that certain tract or parcel of land,\nor possessory claim to public land situated in Nevada\nTownship, County of Nevada, b'tate of California,\nnear Blue Tent, and about live miles northerly from\nthe City of Nevada, containing about 85 acres, said\nland adjoining the land lately owned by J. Cooper,\nnow running thence east and west along\nthe north line of said land being 1190 yards in length,\nrunning 128 yards oast of said Coopers north east\ncorner to an oak tree, thence north 350 yards to an\noak stake, and running 181 yards west of Coopers\nnorth-wot comer to a sugar-pine stake, thenre 850\nyards to a pitch-pine stake, thence direct to he\nnorth-east corner of said land; also, the house and\nlot and garden lot enclosed, heretofore occupied by\nthe fiarties defendants herein, situated on Gopher\nPoint, near Blue Tent afoiesaid, together with all\nand singular the tenements, hcieditHments, franchi-\nses, rights, privileges, and appurtenances thereto be-\nlonging or in anywise appertaining, lie levied «ij-s'n\nand sold to satisfy said judgment interests and costs\nami the proceeds thereof applied to the payment of\nsaid sums of money as aforesaid. Notice is hereby\ngiven that 1 will expose to public sale all the shove\ndescribed property to the highest bidder for cash, in\nfront of the Court House door. in Nevada, on SAT-\nURDAY, THK SEVENTEENTH HAY OF MAY. '* •\ntween the hours of nine oclock, a . m. . and 5 oclock,\ni. M . (liven under my baud this 26th day <>f April,\na. d., 1862.
411a0976e1eaed372da0cd4062fae301 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.7438355847285 42.217817 -85.891125 ment ot party fealty was strong enough\nto blind their followers in all cases to\nthe difference between right and wrong,\nthe speeches last evening, and the tem-\nper in which tho audience listened and\napplauded, must have convinced them\nthat such insolent confidence was mis-\nplaced. Tho King has strained its\nstrength too far, and has now broken.\nThe people of New York, without dis-\ntinction of party or condition, have\ngiven fair warning to the shameless\nclique which has tyrannized over them\nfor so many years that they will submit\nno longer to its extortions, will break\ndown the machinery of party, and\ndrive the swindlers certainly into ob-\nscurity, ami, if possible, into a prison.\nIt revives our confidence in the Ameri-\ncan system of Republican government\nto see that when an emergency is fairly\n the people can thus cast be-\nhind them selfish considerations ami\nunite in working for the public good.\nIf the meeting had done no more\nthan to unite our citizens for once in a\ncommon effort for a good cause, or to\nprovoke from so sturdy a Democrat as\nRobert B. Roosevelt a scathing, straight-\nforward, honest condemnation of Demo-\ncratic rascalities, or to call forth from\nthe Gorman Democrats a promise to co-\noperate in any movement for reform and\npublic purity, whether started by Demo-\ncrats or Republicans, it would have\nserved a noble purpote, and wo should\nlong remember it with pride and gratifi\ncation, iiut we relieve it has accom-\nplished a more immediate and practical\nresult. The resolutions, adopted unani-\nmously amid a tumult of applause, call\nfor instant and energetic action.
0693a9abcdb6b333b2260ec293afabe3 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.595890379249 40.832421 -115.763123 A Port Said diepatobof the aame date\naaya: D « leaeopa suddenly returned\nfrom letcailia and a violoid acene be-\ntveeeu him and the r«preaentativca of\nI be Pruncii colony occurred, lhe Coo-\naal. De beat* pa and. conal.lered Port\nSaid hi* propety; that tbe Coneul wa* a\nfool for aakiog for the occupation; that\nit waa playing into the baud* of Eng¬\nland to do *o, and that there wa* no\ndanger, aa he bad a guarantee of eafety\nfor French aubjecta from tba ofllc«ra\ncommanding Arabi'a troopa. AMien\neverything waa ready for Handing tba\nFreueh Admiral refoeed to carry out hia\npart of tbe arrangement!. De Leaaepe\nviaited the Governor and the Aaaiatant\nGovernor, who were still on board tbe\nMongolia, and Bear Admiral Hotkin*.\nbut failed to bring them to hia view*.\nNews ia reotived from London that\nbefore the vote on the credit \nwit* taken in tho Hon** of Common*,\nTburtday, Northcote accu**d the Gov-\nernuttnl of vaccillation, heaitation and\nn.glcc-t of the iut*re*tsof the Khedive\nand of tbe Porte. He declared that if\ntbo Govetuiueut hud dealt with Arabi\nI'aaba earlier, rso«ut event* might have\nbotn avoided. Th* Government had\ndelayed action until tba lad iuoin*nt,\nand in the meantime had done all it\ncould to off.n .lthe Sultnn; but he fell\naure that tho vol* about to be tak*u\nwould adequately represent tho wl*h*s\nof the Kngli*h people.\nGladitone said that the landing of\ntroop* could not hnvo prevented the\nfugitive uraiy from firing the town; that\nnothing could be more eoroplete than\ntho concord between Oreat Hritain and\nFrauce. He concluded by appealing to\nthe Hou*e to aupport the Government\nia its boneet endeavor lo promote the\nwelfare of Egypt and eatablUhing psao*\naud order.
2b466e9a792bc2531b3b042cb8d52008 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.2226775640052 39.745947 -75.546589 It is not surprising that the people in the grow­\ning section of Montrose, just1* north of this city,\nare indignant that they have been deprived of the\nrural free delivery of mails by the Postoffice De­\npartment on the ground that the streets in Mont­\nrose arc in such bad condition the woman mail\ncarrier cannot drive through them. The absurdity\nof such a plea is shown from the fact that coal\nwagons, oil wagons, grocery wagons and other ve­\nhicles make regular trips through those streets,\nand by the further fact that the mail wagon is\nmuch lighter than any of them. There are thirty-\nfive families in the Montrose district, which covers\nless than two miles. The feeling among the people\nthere is that if the woman carrier who has been serv­\ning that route and who recommended its discontinu­\nance until better conditions prevail, docs not care\n do it should he substituted and that the\nto do the work should be substituted and that the\ndelivery should be resumed without delay. It is\ntrue the streets in Montrose arc not paved or sur­\nfaced with macadam. The reason for that is that\nthey arc not yet under control of the road com­\nmissioners and Montrose has no government of its\nown to look out for their improvement. That\ncounts for little, however, when it comes to rural\ndelivery. The Montrose streets are as good as the\nroads in nine-tenths of the districts in this country\nthat arc covered by rural free delivery, and infi­\nnitely better than many of them. If Senator du­\nPont and Representative Heald desire to increase\ntheir popularity in that section of their homo\ncounty they can do it quickly by getting the Post-\noffice Department to restore the mail service at\nonce.
5251308107b2b62560e9b095226892dc WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.8510928645517 40.827279 -83.281309 have increased largely their wheat area.\nappear to have enlarged their productions\n50 per cent, or from 18,000 .000 bushels\nto 27,000 ,000 . California has increased\nher product at least 7j per cent Minne\nsota and Iowa have made a material in\ncrease, while Missouri and Kansas the\nformer growing winter wheat mainly, the\nlatter Dom winter and spring have had\na comparative failure in both varieties.\nVirginia and Kentucky have had good\ncrops, while Maryland and Ohio return\ndiminished yields, as does the entire dis-\ntrict between the Ohio river and the\nlakes, the Miami and the Hudson. Re\nturns have been received from counties\nrepresenting a large proportion of the\nwheat of each State, which indicate an\nincrease of about 5 per cent over the\nproducts of last year, which were\nestimated at 230.000.000 bushels.\nIt is probable that the corrected esti-\nmate will not fall short of 210,000 ,000\nbushels upon an area a little less than\n20,000,000 acres. This will make the\nyield between twelve and thirteen bush-\nels per acre, which may be considered an\naverage for the I nited States. The in\ncrease in the States west of the Missis\nsippi appears to be about 15,000 ,000 bush\nels, or, in comparison with last year s\n 85.000,000 to 70.000 ,000 bushels.\nThe central line of wheat production\nrunning north and south is this year fur\nther west than ever before, and is nearly\nidentical with the sunn meridian, which\ndivides centrally the States of Wisconsin\nand Illinois. Nearly all the wheat pro-\nduced between this line and the Missis-\nsippi river is grown in the western half\nof tbose two States. The quality of the\nwheat is in most of the States better than\nlast year. The percentage of product in\ncomparison with last year, in each of the\nslates, is as follows :\nMa ne, 109; New Hampshire, 98; Ver-\nmont, 95; Massachusetts, 90; Connecticut,\na; xsew lork, 70; New Jersey, SU; .Penn\nsylvania, 60; Delaware, 75; Maryland,\ntu; Virginia, lUI; JNorth Carolina,\nSouth Carolina, 113; Georgia, ISO; Ala\nbama, 133; Mississippi. 101: Texas. 320\nArkansas, 102; Tennessee, 200; West\nVirginia, 104; Kentucky, 175; Ohio, 85;\nMichigan. 88; Indiana. 101; Illinois. 98\nWisconsin, 121; Minnesota, 130; Iowa,\n112; Missouri, 60; Kansas, 80; Nebraska,\n140; California. 175: Oregon. 100.\nIn States where the crop was Bhort last\nyear, as Kentucky and Texas, the per-\ncentage of increase is heavy. In Califor-\nnia it is mainly due to an increase of area\nand a superior rate of yield.
e7f15597e1765105f6162e6228aa09cc THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1855.091780790208 39.560444 -120.828218 California and Missouri Stage Route.\nIt is a matter of extreme gratification,\nV> learn that the people of Missouri arc\nas much alive to the importance of a stage\nroute, between-their State and ours, as we\nare in California*. On the 23d of Decem-\nber, a meeting was held at St, Louis, in\nthe office of. the North Missouri Railroad,\nto consider the practicability of establish-\ning a line of. stage coaches &om the fron-\ntier line of Missouri to Sacrameuto. Tho\nmeeting, after a free and fall consultation\nupon the subject, and hearing and weigh-\ning the opinions of intelligent gentlemen,,\nwell acquainted with, the various routes\nacross the plains, unanimously adopted\nresolutions in favor ef the proposed meas-\nures, and that application be made at\nonce to the State Legislature for a charter,\nand that a committee be appointed to\ndraft at charter, and also a committee to-\ncorrespond with parties in California who-\nare reported to have already taken steps-\ntowards a similar coach line tho\nwestern end. The meeting then adjourned,\nto meet an call ofthe President, when the\ncharter will be presented and considered.—\nMarysville Herald .\nA Hopeful Child— The Pioneer tells,\n©f a young “mackerel catcher,” who waa~\nwatching his mother knitting stockings,\nand listening to the marvelleus deeds of\nhis father, the Captain. Breaking off the\nthread from the ball, he attached thereto-\na table fork, and spreading himself “hav”\nit into- thfr cat. harpoon fashion. Puss-\nwent through the window, fork, stocking\nand knitting needles, while the young\nwhaleman jumped and swore like an old\nskipper; “why the devil did'nt you f*y\nout, mam, I had only one iron in her ?”\nGouging —An Ohio girj lately had *<♦\nfight with a pet deer. She took the crit-\nter by the hons, and “fit” about an hour,\nbut finding that was no go, the fair wrest-\nler insinuated her thumb into one of the\nanimals eyes, and gouged with sn.ch energy\nthat the brute gin in.
16d7051761764f1f9f161816ecb9264a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.4945205162355 42.217817 -85.891125 Section 13 provides that the driver\nof the auto shall have the machine\nunder control at all times in order\nthat he may be able to slow down at\nbridges and narrow places.\nSection 14. Upon approaching a\nperson walking in the roadway of a\npublic highway, or a horse or horses,\nor other draft animals, being ridden,\nled or driven thereon, a person oper-\nating a moter vehicle shall slow down\nto a speed not exceeding ten miles an\nhour and give reasonable warning of\nits approach, and use every reason-\nable precaution to insure the safety of\nsuch person or animal, and in case of\na horse or horses or other draft ani-\nmals, to prevent frightening the same.\nSection 15. Any person operating\na motor vehicle shall, at request or on\nsignal, from a person riding, leading\nor driving a horse or horses, or \ndraft animals, guide such motor vehi-\ncle to the right of the wrought or\ntraveled portion of the highway, and\nimmediately bring such motor vehicle\nto a stop, and if requested shall cause\nthe motor of such vehicle to cease\nrunning .o long as shall be reason\nably nccesary to prevent accident\nand insure the safety of others. And\nit shall also be the duty of any male\nchauffeur or driver of any moter vehi-\ncle, and other male occupants there-\nof, over the age of fifteen years, while\npassing any horse or horses or other\ndraft animals which appear badly\nfrightened, or upon the request of the\nperson in charge of and driving such\nhorse or horses or other draft animals,\nto give such personal assistance as\nwould be reasonable to insure the\nsafety of all persons concerned ami to\nprevent accident.\nSection l'.
b69a4a86610f1aa96d0168a9d7147f15 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.2472677279397 43.798358 -73.087921 ed relief from the burden of sin, aud were\nresolved to serve and obey God the resi\ndue of their days. Meetings during the\nday were now suspended, but were kept\nup every evening for a considerable time;\nand the work went on, and spread into\nsome neighborhoods where the influence\nof the meeting had been but little felt.\nOne interesting occurrence I will relate,\nfor the encouragement ol youthful effort.\nTwo sisters who had found a precious\nSavior, one aged 12 and the other 14, had\nfelt deeply for an aged grandfather, and\nhad repeatedly requested prayers on his\nbehalf. The youngest of these lived in\nthe same house with her grandfather, and\nthe other four or five miles distant, most\nof which she travelled on fcot, in but an\nindifferent snow path, to make effoit\nfor the salvation of her beloved grandfa-\nther. The two sisters met at an evening\nlecture, where they on :e more presented\nhis case, and sought strength to do their\nown duty. When the meeting was closed\nthey repaired to the dwelling of the hoary i\nheaded sinner, whose desperate case they\nfelt to be above all others. They imme\ndiately entered into conversation with him\non the concerns of his soul, pressing them\non his immediate attention. After labor-\ning with him by their gentle and earnest\nentreaties for nearly an hour, they bowed\ndown together in his presence, and in suc-\ncession lifted up their voices and their\nhearts to God for his salvation. God\nheard ! the aged sinner's heart melted\nand from that hour he dates his conver-\nsion to God.
35f818198f29fc79d4ab0b443880d8fc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.741095858701 39.513775 -121.556359 termined the position of California towns,\nand ibe prodigious rapidity with which cities\nhave been reared and capital wrecked, has\nalmost paralyzed the reasoning faculties of\nthe whole civilized world to adjust a solution\nof (lie problem to a scile of rational calcu-\nlation. It seives indeed to illustrate the\nunrcstrainable power and force of our en-\nergy when left to its untrammelled scope,\nbut associates a moral, fiom our violation of\nthe sober guards of reason : nature nurtures\nher infants in slumber, that the reign of\nmanhood may be more vigorous, lasting and\ncomplete Had some of our towns followed\nher example; bad our sister Marysville\ndrank her wisdom at that salutatory foun-\ntain. they or she would not be, as they as-\nsuredly are. dot med by the unmistakeablo\nmutation- of time to experience the disas-\ntrous i evu'sion which premature expansion\nas-iiredly invites It is i>i no vindictive\nspirit that I pen the preceding clause, being\nconvinced that no business brain,\npremising a flithful conception of the min-\neral and agricultural resources of the re-\ngions watered by the Yuba and Feather riv-\ners and their tributaries, can doubt that\nMarysviilelias been overbuilt, and posse-sed\not such information it is not difficult to fore-\nsee that the palm of superiority is about to\nbe vigorously conte-ted with her by the town\nof Oroville, and however the capital and\ntact of Marysville may be exercised to di-\nrect either rail or wagon road from us, we\nwill and must soon successfully contest her\nwholesale supplying trade to the north- rn,\nnorthwestern, and nortlicasiei n mineral re-\ngions watered by 1 Clio heather and its tribu-\ntaries To the trade derived from this re-\ngion she in a great mea-ure owes her ex\npansion. and totally destitute of local min-\neral wealth to compensate for its withdraw-\nal, she manifestly does not present equal ad-\nvantages with Oroville for the location ot\nsettlers or capital.
3d67c4aa3577a6e31cc411a888dc61a4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.6315068176052 58.275556 -134.3925 decomposed body of John Smith was\nfouDd yesterday at the foot of Tuznlina\nlake. The skull was crushed and the\nbody hiddeu iu the brush and partly\ncovered over. An inqust was held to\nday and a verdict reudered that he had\ncome to his death at the hands of per¬\nsons to the coroner's jury unknown.\nSmith, who was an Austrian about 30\nyears of a ge, had been dead for two\nmouths, lie was a member of the mi\nner's union at Black Diamoud, Wash.,\naud was also a member of the Frater¬\nnal Order Eagles. It is supposed jthat\nIndians may be responsible for his\ndeath aud the Uuited States Marshal's\noffice here is strenuously investigating\nAll possible clews to the murder at the\nsceue of the crime, which ia about\ntwenty miles from where the two mur¬\nders ou the Willow creek trail took\nplace last year and for which no one\nhas as yet been apprehended.\nDeacouess Sabine, of the Episcopal\nmissiou the Lower Yukon, 1100\nmiles below Dawson, came out on last\nSaturday night on her way to Victoria,\nB.C ., where she will visit for some time\nprevious to going East, says the Skag-\nway Alaskan. She has beeu engaged\niu mission work iu the interior for the\npast 20 years under the leadership of\nBishop Rowe, having gone to Auvik in\n1894. The Anvik mission, of which\nRev. J .W. Chapmau has had charge for\n28 years, has about 200 Indiaus in its\nimmediate viciuity, aud a great mauy\nothers withiu its jurisdiction, along the\nShageluk Slough at tho mouth of the\ninnoka river, tho entrance to the Idita-\nrod country. She says that since she\nfirst went into the couutry the natives\nhave greatly improved in every way\nand are now an industrious and con¬\ntented people, well clothed, well fed\naud living in moderu cottages instead\nof the dugouts to which they were\naccustomed in the early days before\nthe advent of the missionaries
58acf717bc7f8912e8cc4e786379b497 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.368493118975 41.020015 -92.411296 One of the darkest crimes in the\nsomewhat eventful hi-tory of Kansas,\nhas just been unveiled in tlie north­\nwestern part of Labette county. Those\nwho have road the papers lately are\nfamiliar with the report o< the myste­\nrious disappearance of Dr. York", of\nIndepcndeuce, as well a* a number of\nother parties. The whole comity,\nwell as all parts of the State have "been\niti a lever of excitement over this\nmysterious affair for some time. The\nother day the uuliring energy of those\nwho had never ceased work in hopes\n>1 ferreting out the matter, was re­\nwarded with dcvelopcments which\nneed only to be known to cause one's\nblood to curdle in their veins. I have\nearned the following particulars of\nbe matter from Mr. John Keefers,\nwho lives miles west of Cofl'ey-\nville, and who, in company with Mr.\nJohn Crowell, special agent ol the\nPost-office Department, was at the\ncene of the horror.\nIt seems thai a parly of German peo-\nple named Bender, who pretend to be\nSpiriftialists, were the perpetrators of\n:i series of the most damnable crimes\non record. Sir. Keefer's says the scene\nof the horri'ilc (raged)'is one inile east\nand two miles south of More-head Sta­\ntion, and six miles northeast of Clicr-\nryvalc. The. house is situated in a\nbeautiful valley, enclosed on the south­\neast and north by a low range of hills,\nandiufairviewottheL.L.&G.rail­\nroad and many farm houses, though\nnot nearer than half a mile to any one.\nThe house is about sixteen by twenty,\nshingle roof, and neither ceiled nor\nplastered.
0ed4e49738922f3cafb3a3caf606d01e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.409589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 “It was a terrible sight," said one\nof the men to the Wayfarer on the Ul­\nrica. "I had been In the habit of walk­\ning into all of the buildings, no mat­\nter whether I had business there or not.\nIn fact, 1 became so used to being\naround there that 1 lost sight entirely\nof the danger. This explosion has\ncured me of that, and you may depend\nupon it that hereafter I shail attend\nstrictly to my business and not go any\nnearer to danger than my work neces­\nsitates. There was something decid­\nedly laughable about the explosion, in\nspite of the terrible events attending\nit. If you could have seen those Jer-\nseymen running you would have laugh­\ned until you cried. I don't believe that\nsome, of them have slopped running\nyet, unless they have been headed off.\nThere are between 200 and 300 men em­\nployed over there, and you should have\n them hunting for safety. Two of\nthem started to run into the Delaware\nriver, and did not recover their nerve\nuntil they were on the bank. I saw\nothers who ran up the bank towards\nPennsgrove, and they never came back.\nHow many more left for an indefinite\nperiod 1 am unable to state, but Ill bet\nyou that lots of them will fail to an­\nswer to roll-call on Monday morning. I\nhavo heard a good deal about the\nbravery and grit of the DuPonts in\ntime of danger, and now I believe it,\nfor I saw four of them to-day àoing\nwhat dozens of their men were running\naway from. Just as soon as the explo­\nsion came they rushed to the spot and\nassisted personally in putting out the\nfire. When the gun-cotton store-house\nwas threatened they assisted to drag\nout the explosive, and the way they\nmade gun-rotton fly for a little while\nwas a caution.”
03eca3dc92771eb70b2f67f9f1e237c8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.7493150367834 39.745947 -75.546589 The report of the Civil Service Com\nmission, before which recently appear» d\nover a hundred applicants for positions\nas clerks and carriers in tbe United\nStates postal service in this city, has\nbeen leoelv.d by Chairman W. J . Young.\nThose who pissed above the required\npercentage aud their standing on the list\nare as follows;\nClerks—Charles H. TenWeeges, No,\n703 Washington street, 88 08; John\nLynch. Bancrofts Banks, 88 28; J Henry\nMonaghan, No 111 Rodney street, 86.28;\nJohn J. McBride, No. 238 Uadisen street,\n85 35; Warren H. Farra, No, 824 King\nstreet, 84.75; Frank M. Sevier, No 106\nEast Fifth street, 84 08; Arthur H Smith,\nNo. 618 Washington street, 82 S3 iTbomss\nB Monaghan,No. 80S Orange street,83 73;\nJ H. Rebman, No, 008 Jefferson street,\n 18; James L Ziegler, No. 500 Madison\nstreet, 81 58; Samuel G. Brown, No 215\nWest Second street, 8100; John A.\nButler. No. 217 Jefferson street, 80 08;\nPaul W. Taylor, No 827 Jackson street,\n80 11; Oscar L, Young, No 907 West\nNinth street, 79 90; D. H Mackey, No.\n510 East Kiev ant h street, 70 00; Frank\nJeandell, No. 1910 Gilpin avenue, 70,43;\nIsaac W. Howard, No. 006 Wilson stieet\n79 88; William F. MoOloskey, No 201\nWest Eighth street, 78 48; Lulle H.\nPatton. No. 1103 We»t,El»hih street,\n77 85; Peter C Dally, No 206 Woodlswn\n• venue, 75 88; Henry Klelustnber, No.\n708 Walnut street,75 48; Daniel R Caurr,\nNo. 507 West street, 74 94; Thomas\nHamilton, No. 188 Rodney street. 73 88;\nThomas A. Lynch, No.
3a9f61c27d93c2d0108e3cd62f84c542 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.2808218860985 41.681744 -72.788147 New England. On that occasion\ndemocracy was at its zenith. Today\nit seems to have reached its nadir.\nBut it is a popular fiction to be-\nlieve that the democratic party has\nceased to exist. Internal strife has\nweakened it, persona,! animosity has\nbrought It to its knees but repub-\nlicans wil make a serious mistake\nif they believe that it cannot he ral-\nlied. Given an issue on which all\nfactions can unite, the democratic\nparty will spring from its present\nposition and offer a solid front. The\nmen and women who made up the\nrank and file are Ftill here and will\nhurry into action if given a reason.\nBut they must stand aside for the\ntime being while the factions fight\nit out to the end. A political party\ndies slowly. Its decomposition is\ngradual. No party that made such\na strong showing November 7\ncan be considered dead on the fol-\nlowing April 13. Things don't hap-\npen that way.\nsession of Legislature\nMoves at Slow Pace\nSenators and representatives alike\nare of the opinion that the legisla\nture of 1&29 is the slowest of many\nsessions. During, and after the war,\nreeds were plentiful for reconstruc-\ntion legislation, but now conditions\nare different. The birth control bill,\nthe vaccination bill, and the wom-\nen's jury bill, are old stories. Wise\nlegislative heads have stock argu-\nments to advance. Hearings before\ncommittees are much the same, so\nmuch so in fact that the judiciary\ncommittee is noticeably irritated\nwhen an unsuspecting person re-\npeats his speech. They've gone\nthrough a reconstruction period in\nthe state, and they can't even fight\nabout roads the highway commis-\nsioner seems to have the final say\non that matter.
05bb9da95152bcec1a0b423a61c9d8bf THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.7958903792492 42.217817 -85.891125 "Mr. Mayor, Members of the First South\nDakota Volunteers nnd Fellow Citizens:\nIt gives me very great pleasure to Join\nwith your fellow citizens of the state of\nSouth Dakota, your friends, your families,\nyour neighbors in this welcome to your\nhome. We are a nation of hero worship-\ners, and yet we are a nation of 70,0U0 ,(K)0\ngrateful people who love valor and re-\nward the heroic deeds of our soldiers, nnd\nI think I appreciate quite as much if not\nmore than most of my fellow citizens the\nalue of the services this regiment with\nIts associates of the eighth corps rendered\nthe country In its hour of great emergency.\n"And I am here to speak not for myself\nalone, but for the whole American people,\nIn expression of gratitude and thanks for\nyour heroic action in the island of Luzon.\nI have with me this morning a dispatch\nJust received from your commander, the\nmajor general commanding in the Philip-\npines, telling me of the gallantry of Col.\nFrost and his First regiment, telling me\nthat from early In February until late In\nJune you stood on the firing line; enemy\ncould resist your onslaughts upon them.\nNor can I forget, soldiers of the republic,\nthat when the treaty of peace was pending,\nwhen negotiations were being Conducted in\nParis, when the ratification of the treaty\nwas awaiting the action of the senate, and\nfinally when we were awaiting the ex-\nchange of the ratification with Spain I\ndo not forget that when that time came\nevery one of you was entitled to be mus-\ntered out of the service of the United\nStates, and I can never express the Joy\nyou gave my heart when you sent word\nthat you would remain until a new army\ncould be formed to take your places.\n"That, members of the First South Da-\nkota, was an example of personal sacrifice\nand public consecration rarely known In\nthe annals of war, hut It is Just like the\nAmerican soldier. No matter where he\ncomes from he never lays down his arms\nIn the presence of an enemy and he never\nlowers the flag of his country until he has\ntriumphed, over enemies who assail It."\n(A voice: "We will never leave there until\nthey are all licked.")
0d54d75b15d59fc6f03ecad4518d5ed4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.0068305694697 40.063962 -80.720915 l Promiccnt fur liter of Columbiana\nCounty lllltud by UN Nou\nSai.km, 0., January 2..L. N . GriUlth, a\ninner residing three miles south of this\nlace, wpb found dead in n piece of woods\near his residence about 8 o'clock this\nlorning. llisson Stanley first gave the\nlarrn, stating that his father had commit*\nni snictde. Neighbors at once tlocked to\nlu scene, aud the most intense excitement\nnaued, during which young Grillith dis.\nppeared.\nFurther details show that tbo deed was\nirtainly committed by the Bon. The facts\nre that during the morning Mr. Griilitii\nquested his son to assist about some f irm\nork. The son refuse' and went to the\noodn for a hunt. Shortly after the elder\nriHitli started in search of him, and upon\n the woods he met a neighbor of\nbom he inquired if bo bad seen his son.\nhe neighbor said no, and ho started upon\nis search. Sboilly afterward tbo\neighbor hc-ard a shot and soon eaw\nte boy running towards him. As bo\nrew near be cried out that his father\nad been shot. .The neighbor went to the\nlace w hero ho had heard the shot aud\nmud the older Griflitb dead with a rovolir\nlying near him. The ball struck him\ni the li ft breast, taking a diagonal course,\nid lodged intho back. Tracks were vial- .\nle iu the suow, showing that two persons\nad been in close proximity to each other,\nad thero wna evidence that the murderer\nad washed his hands in tbo enow near\n10 body.
fc8427aa28367b2b7e2d5498b8f96b90 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.5259562525298 31.960991 -90.983994 So far ns we are enabled to judge, the\nwhigs have triumphed in all quarters.\nWe are satisfied that we have cnrripd a\nmajority ot both branches of the Legi*-\nture, and that the whigs and conservatives\nunited, have elected a large majority of\nthe State Convention. That we have\nalso gained two members of Congress, is\nbeyond controversy. So far as we have\nheard, we have gained one member of the\nSenate, and a most gratifying gain it is,\ntoo. Gen. David Edwards, a whig good\nand tiue, has been elected from the St.\nTammany district by a majority of one\nhundren and forty votes over Thomas\nGreen Davidson, one of the most radical,\nnoisy and red-mouthed locofocos in the\nState. The signal defeat of Davidson i©\nà matter of cordial congratulation to all\nour citizens. We are not yet without\nhopes that Mr. P- has been return­\ned to the Senate from1 Jefferson, which\nwill make another gain. It is tolerably\ncertain that that staunch whig, Truman\nPhelps, of Catahoula, is. elected from the\nRapides district—still another gain.\nThere can be but little doubt, wc imagine,,\nthat Jhe whig supremacy is restored tp\nthe highest branch of our Assembly—it­\nself a bright political triumph.\nFor the House, we have already heard\nof the gain one member—Mr. Van Win­\nkle, of Point Coupee. In the course of\nthe <iav we confidently expect to h am\nthat two whigs have been elected in the\nConcordia district, in place of Selby and\nCoffee, locofocos, ancUhat two whigs have\nbeen elected in East Baton Rouge, in\nplace of Newpurt and Morgan, locofocos.\nWe alsorely upon a gain of two in Rap­\nides. Our majority in the House will vary\nfrom ten to twenty votes.
4611e11efb2335fe60418edbc15c5fbb THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6980874000708 39.290882 -76.610759 The True Issue, of the 18th -\\ug., contains\na long card from 11. G. Runnells, formerly Go-\nvcrnorofthe state of Mississippi, explaining the\nhostility and low abuse heaped upon him by\nVolney E.Howard. These two gentlemen fought\nsome few weeks ago, and Gov. If presumed,\nwith some reason, that all future abuse would\neeap.e, bift the scurrility of the two papers under\nthe control of Howard has been greater since\nthan before the tight. The following Governor\n11. gives as the cause of Howard's malignity.\n"Ist. That some time diiring the winter months\nof 1833 and 1839, V. E . Howard, after having\nrepeatedly recommended to me his fatlierpn-law,\n(Gor.ch,) tor a clerkship jn the JVJispisgippj Union\nBank, ard having been told that there was no\nsituation vacant?came to iac and urged upon\nme the importance of creating an office especially\nfor the benefit ?)' Mr. Gooch, adding a reason,\nthat he was a good writer and would write for\nme, (meaning, as 1 presume the Bank.) To this\ncorrupt oveiturc for office 1 male no reply?hut\nfound myself an J the Bank assailed most bitter-\nly in the Mississippi.!n in a few days thereafter!\nThus has all his patriotic alarm for the people\nand for the safety and well being of the state\noriginated. Can any one doubt, that I had flow-\naid on the block and his price set? Goooh was\nhis father-in-law, whom he urged upon me to\nappoint to office expressly upon the ground that\nhe was a WHITER; he himself was the owner\nof the Mississippan at that time avowedly; and\nI repeat, docs any man doubt that this was an\noffer to me of the use of its columns and influ\nciicc, in consideration of a petty clerkship for his\nrelation.
0258d12c7d7f3a385ab96331823afdc8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.6561643518519 40.063962 -80.720915 "LET DS 00 OS UNTO PBBPKCTION."\nIt ia very important that we set\nproper standard of laith, of piety, o\nDunty. II the standard ia too low, w\n:sn DDI uccuuipiiao tue goou WO BUOUll\nlo. The theme is the nature of perlec\nion. First, what it is not It is not\nitate oi grace in which there is no suflei\nng. Borne of the remains ol sin arc lei\niround us In order to do us good. W\nire made better as wo endure sflilctioi\ntnd fluttering. It is not a stale in whicl\nhere are no unpleasant things, but thi\nligher we get in this state the lights\n*91 be our crosses. We will only bi\nlaved Irom sinful fear. There ma; stil\n>e the remains of our natural tempera\npeats- We must not be expected to bi\nllted above our Saviour, tie, as a man\nulTered; we must expect to do tbo same\nIVo may not expect exemption tron\nemptatlon. But wo must discriminati\nbetween temptation in tlio abstract an<\nhe yielding to it Those who say the;\nire living above temptation are sure);\n under a mistake. If wo t>\nwholly sanctiflcd we are not lifted abov\ntemptation, but we are enabled the bette\nto withstand the temptation. Wo ar\nible to withstand it altogether.\nTHE TEMPTATION OF TUB BOLT MAN\nmust como from without as there I\nnothing in the heart to lead to it. On\nliving in a lower state has still the elc\nmenu within the heart that lead to ttmf\ntalion. Utnce the temptations are dillei\nant: It may not save us from errors I\njudgement. Adam in his original Btat\npossessed a more perfect Judgment tha\nthe most truly sanctified man can noi\npossess. These mistakes in Judgment,\nthey are made when we use all the ligt\nwe have, does not provo that there\nanything sinlul Id tbo heart. Cbristia\nperleotion will not lift us »o high In tt\nscale ol being, that we ma; never la\ntherefrom. Yon may bo a long tlm\nascending the hill of moral parity. Yo\nwill never, until you enter in through th\ngalea, be so high that you cannot lall;bu\nthe higher you get tbo less tho liability I
f495cf4aa828e0187cce88bc0a1badf2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0260273655506 41.681744 -72.788147 Narrow Road Only Road\n"The narrow toad for you and mo\nis the only right road also in the new\nyear. It is the way of the same daily\nduties, perhaps in a small, closely\nlimited situation or position, the nar-\nrow road 'of your daily tasks. Tour\nvery happiness and success depends\non going this narrow road faithfully\nand to avoid tho way of wild-ca - t\nspeculation. Tho way of duly is al-\nways narrow. And narrow your way\nmust be in your moral life. You\nwant others to meet you on tho same\nroad. You want others to' treat your\nsister on this road of purity and re-\nflect and surely you will meet tho\nsister of the other man oh tho same\nnarroy road. You want your bank to\nbe careful your money and\ncertainly you will be careful with\nthe money which is entrusted to you.\nAnd, friend, narrow after all is also\nthe road to pleasure and enjoyment,\nnot unnecessarily narrow, but also\nnot carelessly wide. Tho artist must\ngo a narrow road to be a good artist,\nthe athlete must go on an indeed\nnarrow road to be a good athlete\nand certainly tho Christian must go\na narrow road in his amusements to\nbe a good Christian. Somebody said\nthat a good book is a good book not\non account of what is put into it but\nen account of what is left out of it.\nTho same holds truo about our\namusements we are however moro\nconcerned about what we put into\nthem than about what we leave out\nof them.
0153759ae9ee19e6005f17e14c01f5cc CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1918.1246575025368 36.000618 -88.428106 Now, of course, we don't mean to\nsay that when a person takes a drink\nof anything containing alcohol he at\nonce is reduced to a brute animal;\nbut very few will dispute that a drunk-\nen person is not much better than a\nbrute animal. And the reason he has\nbeen reduced to such a state by alco-\nhol is because, before he can take\nenough of it to kill his body, he has\nhad enough to paralyze his brain, es-\npecially the highest parts of his brain.\nIt has paralyzed his power to think, it\nhas paralyzed his power to judge, has\nparalyzed his power to control his ac\ntions. The amount of alcohol which\nmakes a person drunken varies with\ndifferent people. Some can stand very\nlittle, others a great deal. However,\n a very little, though it does not\nshow Itself In drunkenness, has a\ndamaging effect on the brain. This is\nwhat we want to point out particular-\nly. Too many people think thjit if\nthey drink alcohol in moderation, such\nfor example, as three or four glasses\nof beer a day, or one or two drinks\nof whisky a day, they are not doing\nthemselves any harm at all. Very\nmany even think that they may safely\ndrink as long as they stop before get-\nting drunk. These are very danger\nous and mistaken ideas to have,\nDrinking even In moderation has dang-\ners for the brain and nerves, and\nsteady drinking Is very bad.\nOne of the most terrible effects of\nalcohol on the nervous system is de\nlirium tremens the "D. T .'s."
f744c1e83378732dd7de2dbb579851ca SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.0068492833586 35.780398 -78.639099 A Ring Puzzle. At an evening party,\nan amusing experiment was made by one\nof the company. A group of five or six\ngentlemen and ladies formed, and a ring\nwas produced, and we, says the party from\nwhom we got this paragraph, were told by\nthe ownpr, that if one of us would take it\nand put it on any joint of any of our fingers\nduring his absence from the room, be would\ntell us on his return who had got it, on\nwhat finger, and on what joint of the finger.\nOur friend went out of the room, and on\ncoming back and putting us through a short\nquestioning in our addition, subtraction and\nmultiplication tables, he discovered the\nperson, together with tbe guilty finger and\njoint. Having satisfied us that he did not\nderive his knowledge from clairvoyance, or\nfrom intercourse with spirits good or evil,\nhe kindly gave us the following rules,\nwhich we have since tested ourselves, and\nhave found correct in every single instance,\nexcept one, when, in a fit of abstraction,\nwe added 2 and 10 together and made 20.\n our readers may like to try the rule for\nthemselves, we give it to them without re-\nserve : When you have formed your circle\nand are seated in order, you will call your-\nselves respectively No. I, No. 2, No. 3. &c.\nThen first double the number of the holder\nof the ring, add five, and multiply the sum\nby another 5. (Thus, supposing, for ex-\nample, the ring was in the hands of No. 3,\nwe should get 11 by addition and then by\nmultiplication 55.) To this, add the num-\nber of the finger on which the ring is, and\nas your sum now consists of two figures,\nput the number of the jointafter the second.\n(Supposing the ring to be on No. 3, 4th\nfinger and second joint, this will make 59,\nand when the joint is added, 592.) From\nthe sum thus made take away 250 ; and\nthe three figures of the remainder will show\nthe holder, finger and joint respectively.\nThus, take 250 from 532, and the remain-\nder 342 gives 3 the holder, 4 the finger,\nand 2 tbe joint.
03abdea9c7b8d2a1d6bbc2bb3eb6d9d5 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1867.6999999682903 41.004121 -76.453816 "Tin: opinion of thinking men, of\nslatesmeii and philanthropists, Is fast\nclosing strongly on tliu subject of secur-\ning tho passage of ti general law of Con-\ngress, regulating tbo suffrage question\nIn all the Stales of thn Union. ( Ongross\nfixes the status of citizenship tho peri-\nod at which a native born arrives nt tlio\nrights of citizenship the period for\nnaturalization and Congress, unques-\ntionably, Is tho proper power for defin-\ning thu rights ot the black man to tho\nelective frunehlso lu the several States.\nCongress, In order to promote harmony\nof action in political contests, and do\nnway with tlio wijittt. tlincriniliialionr,\nwhich nre practiced by tbo States on\ntills subject, should nt its next tension\nact upon Its unquestionable Constitu-\ntional authority by adjusting tills vexed\nquestion throughout tho nation, by do -In- g\nJustice to men who add tliu pro-\nductive' wealth of tho country in peri-\nods of peace, and wlio in timo of war\nhave shown their ability and willing- nes - s\nto peril their lives in tho defense of\ntho Government.\n"At tho session of Congress last spring\nMr. Sumner introduced a 1)111 in the\nSenate providing for the adjustment of\ntho franchise question in tho several\nStates. There Is no doubt whatever that\nCongress, when it meets next Novem\nber, will puss ut an early ilay a general\nnet, f)'',''".' to the teiole (ountri, anil\nrrtntilMiintf throughout Ihe nrttion the\nritht qf alt American citizens to role,\nwithout am cceluxinn on aeraitnt of com-\nplexion. Tills will bo u most potent\naim prompt remedy lor mo iiiiucuitles\nIn all the Northern State). In everal,\ntlio lteptibllcans hesitate to ral - - e tho\nIn behalf of colored suffrage.
1119897afff0dc60f588d8e571aa2d4c THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.8972602422627 37.92448 -95.399981 When Alexander assumed the position ol\nrchining prince of Bulgaria he found his coun-\ntry in a sad state, with no nrmy.no means of\nUefenso and little inclination to defend The\nmajority of his people could not even write\ntheir names. He set valliantly to work and\nin time organized with his shepherd subjects,\nunused to arms, an army of respectable\nstrength. The commanding officers, for a\ntime, were Russian, but it soon became\napparent that the Russians intended to Rus\nslanize Bulgaria, and it was for the purpose of\nquietly exp 1 ing the Russians and the Rus-\nsian influence that the young prince was in-\nvested with unusual lcgl Iative rights. Affr\nruling one year ; s a sovereign, he returned the\npower into the hands of his people. Iu the\nfall ot 1S3 ho united Bulgaria with Roumeiia\nwithout bloodshed. In his moves, both diplo-\n and otherwise, attending nnd fdloning\ntho union, the prince was uuusually successful\nand aroused the rnmltv of King Milan of\nScr ia. wh seized a pretext and declared war.\nHe crossed the boundary ot Bulgaria with his\nforce, seized several towns mid marched to-\nward Sophia, the capital Alexander gathered\nhis army, which was -- mailer than that com.\nmanded by King Milan, and sallied forth.\nThough rather inexperieuccd in the art of wjr\nthe prince proved himself the equal of\nhis adversary and by his personal bravery\nand strategic skill won several pronounced vic-\ntories, and on the intervention or th3 European\npowers King Milan was obliged ta consent to a\ntreaty of peace, which was signed nt Uuchtr-es- t.\nBv conSenting to the union of the two\nBulgarlas Prince Alexander incurred the dis-\npleasure of the czar, who struck his name from\nthe Russian army list.
4423437aeba0210cd6740eecf6033ce8 WEEKLY CLARKSVILLE CHRONICLE ChronAm 1857.4643835299341 36.527761 -87.35887 an unfinished sentence, and about this in-\nstant Gen. Harris gave him a push which\nprecipitated him off the platform in front,\nand immediately followed him to the ground.\nThe parties were then out of our sight, and\nwe did net see them again until they were\nentirely separated. We may state upon\nthe authority of others, who saw the strug-\ngle that, as soon as the parties touched the\nground Mr. Hatton turned Gen. Ilarris,\nand had evidently the advantage, when\nthey were separated. Gen. Harris bore\nsome slight marks of tho rencounter upon\nbis face; but we do not remember to have\nseen any thing of the sort upon Mr. Hat\nton. This, in brief, is the substance of\nwhat occurred. We were on the outskirts\nof the crowd, and could hear distinctly\nwhat Gen. Harris said. We think we\nheard all that Mr. Hatton said, as his voice\nwas at tho speaking pitch. After the ex-\ncitement consequent upon the assault, had\nsomewhat subsided, Mr. Hatton with the\nmost perfect coolness ascended the stand,\nand concluded his speech (as we have else-\nwhere stated) during which he received a\nmost silent and attentive hearing.\nOur impression is clear that the purport\nof Mr. liattou s remarks was as to the doc\ntrine, and had no personal reference what-\never, and that, to say the very least, Gen.\nilarris acted very precipitately; and whol-\nly without sufficient cause. We are infor-\nmed that Mr. Hatton has used precisely\nthe same ideas, and frequently the same\nwords in his previous discussion, and had\ni
243a076c8c5c2bbf34893868b875accb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.4041095573314 39.745947 -75.546589 While it is true that over $600,000,-\n00« are annually expended in this\ncountry for advertising purposes,, it is\nequally true Uiat skilled and ex­\nperienced advertising men are few.\nThis business needs a vast army of\nefficient ' men and women, and mer­\nchants atd manufacturers say that it\nis almost impossible to get hold of\nthem, consequently, salaries are high.\nIn every line of business advertising\nmust be done, and if outside help can­\nnot be obtained, it must be done on\nthe inside. 'Therefore, the young clerk\nor other empdoye who studies adver­\ntising and learns its working prln-\n«îiples stands a much better chance of\npromotion than, his fellows and soon\nfinds himself enjoying a larger salary\nand working his way to «he front.\nAdvertising men unite in saying that\nthe business offers by far the most\npromising and profitable to the\nyouth ot this country. Those who ■\nhave a profession, or a business al­\nready chosen, or are preparing for it,\nor those who are already In business, )\nshould add to their other qualifications\na knowledge of the advertising busi­\nness. In these days success without\nadvertising Is an impossibility and\niuoso who learn to advertise rapidly\ncapture the business and earn fame\nand fortune while others lag behind.\nCharles Austin Bales, aVnder- I\nBuiicing, New York, one of the (\nbest known American advertising men, |\ntrad an acknowledged authority on tho\nsuoject, la responsible for the state­\nment that he has perfected a plan for\nteaching advertising which brings it\n■within the reach of_ everybody and\nwhich cannot fail In achieving the tor- j\nj seat measure of results in the shortest\ntime and at the smallest possible ex- i
07fd17d40bf81c68617c325ae5df9226 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.5368852142785 46.187885 -123.831256 party and British policy we demand\nfor the people of the United States\nan American policy, under Democrat\nic rule, and a policy for our merch- - j\nants and sailors, Hying the stars anu\nstripes in every port, successfully\nsearching out a market for tho varied\nproducts of American industry.\nUnder a quarter of a century of\nRepublican rule and policy, despite\nour manifest advantages overall other\nnations in high paid labor, favorable\nclimates and teeming sails; despite\nfreedom of trade among all these\nUnited States; despite their popula-\ntion of the foremost race of men and\ntho annual immigration of the thrifty\nand adventurous of all nations; de-\nspite our freedom here from inherited\nburdens of life common in old mon-\narchies and their costly war navies;\ntheir vast, tax consuming, standing\narmies; despite twenty years ot peace,\nRepublican rule and policy have\nmanaged to surrender to Great Bri-\ntain, along with our commerce, tho\ncontrol ot tho markets of world.\nInstead of the Republican partj's\nBritish policy, we demand, on behalf\no! the American Democracy, an Amer-\nican policy. Instead of the Republi-\ncan party's discredit, shamo and false\npretense of friendship to Amerio n\nlabor, expressed by imposing taxes,\nwe demand, in behalf of the Demo-\ncracy, freedom for American labor,\nby reducing taxes, to the end that\nthese United States may compete\nwith unhindered powers for tho per-\nmanency among nations in all the\narts of peace and fruits of liberty.\nWith profound regret we have been\napprised by the venerable statesman\nthrough whose person was struck\nthat blow ot the vital principle of the\nrepublic, acquiescenco in tho will of\ntho majority, that he cannot permit\nus again to place in his bantU the\nleadership ot the Democratic hosts,\nfor tho reason that tho achievement\nof reform in the administration of tho\nfederal government is an undertaking\nnow too heavy for his age and failing '\nstrengtn.
07e2f69dbca4e77464d58f81930cb2e7 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2808218860985 44.939157 -123.033121 "They will cross over the bodies of\ntho slain, and these, in places, will\nchange the course of the waters. They\nwill bury only the men of noble fam-\nilies, the leadiing commandants, and\nthe princes, because to the carnage\nmade by the armies will be joined the\nwholesale death of those who will die\nof hunger or of the pest.\nVThe Anticrist will ask many times\nfor peace, but the seven angels who\nwalk in front of the three animals de-\nfending the lamb have declared that\nvictory will only be granted oil the\ncondition that the Antichrist be crush-\ned like straw on the barn floor.\n"The executors of the justice, of the\nLamb cannot stop fighting as long as\nthe Antichrist possesses soldiers to\nfight against them.\n"That which makes tho decree of\nthe Lnmb so impacable that the\nAntichrist has pretended to bo a fol-\nlower of Christ, and to act in His\nname, and if he does not perish the\nfruit of the Redeemer would be lost,\nand the doors of, Hades would prevail\nagainst the Savior.\n"The fight which will take place\nwhere the Antichrist forges his nrni\nwill not in any way be a human fight.\n(This may have referom'0 to Essen,\nwhere the Krujip works are, and many\nauthorities believe that the decisive\nbattle may take place in Westphalia.)\n"The three animals defending the\nLamb will exterminate the last army\nof the Antichrist, but they will be for-\nced to erect on the battlefield a phyrc\nas large as a city, for the bodies of\nthe dead will change the aspect of the\ncountryside, as there will be mounds\nof the slain.
7b6684097f8d82f3e92e94271cce30c0 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.2909835749342 40.807539 -91.112923 revenue to pay the public debt, and in general confined to a very few; suspicion of his situation struck him,\nfoster the commerce of the country, words, and was never commenced by; and he began to think it possible that\nshould also encourage and sustain do- his keeper. Vevancourt was, there-; some snare had been laid for him,\nmestio manufactures, was the leading: fore, not a little surprised, when the; though why or wherefore, he was un-\ncause in producing the present na-J man said to him, "8ir, you no doubt j able to conjecture.\ntional Constitution. No class of per-| have reasons for calling yourselfj In this uncertainty he almost deter-\nsons was more zealous for the newj Mons. Laterer. I have nothing to. mined to defer the attempt to some\nConstitution than the handicraftsmen,'do with that; it is not my business other night, and in the meantime re-\narti/.ans, and manufacturers. There j to verify your title. You may call j solved at least wait for the first un-\n"were then, it is true, no large manu-| yourself Peter or Paul, for all I care,] certain glimpse ot light, which mo-\nfacturing establishments. There were; but I know (here he gave a most-tnent^ might be almost as favorable for\nno manufactories in the interior, for| knowing wink with his left eye.) that his flight as tne present. Ilis iincom-\nthere were no inhabitants. Here wast you are M. Theodore Amandee Fran-I "10n strength enabled him to climb\nFort Pitt—it had a place on the map, cois, chevalier de Vevancourt, andj hack to his dungeon; he was almost\n— but here were no people, or only cousin of Madame la Dutchesse de; exhausted when he arrived at the pro-\na very few. But, in the cities and: Maile. Well," added he, with an air; jeeting stone under the window,\ntowns on the Atlantic, tlie full impor-< 0f triumph, after a moment of silence.; where he remained watching at the\n•l
583f7f148148e588666b822c1aae9486 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8483606241145 39.261561 -121.016059 cial District nf wild Stale. The I'eople «f the St.itc\n„f California to STEPHEN W. FOLSOM Greeting :\nYou arc hereby summoned to appear ami answer\nto tl.H complaint of JOHN MADMEN, filed ..gainst\nYOU within tcu dnva from the service ol this writ, it\nserved on vou in this county, within twenty days it\nserved on you in this District, and out of this county\nand within forty days it served <>n you In the State\nand out of this District, in an action commence* on\nthe 17th dav of August *. I>. 1800 . in said Court, to\nobtain a decree of this Cnurt for the foreclosure ot\na certain mortgage, bearing date the Mil day of De-\ncember a. i>. 1 so1.* , ex ec uted by the said defendant to\none Hugh McMahon, and liv him duly assigned to\nthis plaintiff, and for the sale of thepremlocstherein,\naudio said complaint particularly mentioned and de-\nscribed and the application of the moneys arising\nfrom such sale for the payment of the amount due\non a certain promissory note, set forth in said\ncomplaint, made and delivered to said plamilfl by\nthe defendant, even date with said mortgage,\nand theieby intended to lie secured, to w it : The sum\nof five hundred dollars, with interest thereon from\nthe 5th day of June a. i>. 1860. at the rate of live\nper cent per month till paid : and If any deficiency\nshall remain after applying all of said moneys so ap-\nplicable thereto, then that plaintiff may have execu-\ntion therefor against the said defendant; also, that\nsaid defendant und all and every person claiming\nthrough or under him, subsequently to the date ot\nplaintiffs mortgage, and the commencement of this\naction, may be barred and foreclosed of all right,\nclaim, lien and equity of redemption in and to the\nsaid mortgaged premises, or any part thereof, and for\nsuch Other and further relief, or both In the premi\nses, as mav be just and equitable. And you arc\nhereby notified that if you fail to answer said com-\nplaint as herein directed, plaintiff will take judg-\nment against you therefor by default, together witli\nall costa of auit, and also demand of the Court such\nother relict as is prayed for in plaintiff's said com-\nplaint.
8d4ea66aab93b6ec74befd4173cedf22 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4330600776664 39.745947 -75.546589 The guests of Ihe evening were Dr\nand Mrs. Samuel G. Mitchell, Mrs. Wll-\nlinn E. Holton, Miss Uraybold ond Miss\nllaby. During Ihe evening Miss Gray-\nhold sang nreompanied by Mrs. Holton\nand Miss Raby gave two readings,\nsocial committee that arranged the\nbanquet end reunion consisted of Mrs.\nWllmer Hill. Miss Alloe Kerr. Miss\nEthel Campbell, Miss Gertrude Hill\nand Wallace Cook.\nMiss Alice Kerr presided at the ban­\nquet and made a charming toastmls-\nIress, Dr, Mitchell, president of Dela­\nware Colege, made an Inspiring ad­\ndress, which was greatly enjoyed by\nall who heard it. Dr. Mitchell, who\nIs soon to leave Newark, said what to\nhim has been especially enjoyable in\nhis stay of several years In Newark\nwas lo meet so many fine children,\n of whom he knew by name. Ho\ni ll,n eed the lllgll School alumni »num­\nbers that It was their duty lo do\neverything possible that these chil­\ndren might get as good an opportunity\nas any In the country for an education.\nThe speaker referred to the In­\nfluence that Bowdoln College has had\nIn the lifo of the nation and said it\nwas a mystery to him until he visit­\ned the college last summer and found\nthat in practically every home In the\ntown there was a childs eollngp fund.\nIn conclusion, I»r. Mitchell proposed\nthree charges that he would leave\nwith tho High School Alumnus; 1.\nThat thqy advocate a childs college\nfund in every home. 2 . That they\nlook after the proposed new High\nSchool,.
33d2299e7848a2396ba14502c022d90a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.5246575025367 39.745947 -75.546589 This weekly news letter has been\nissued from the headquarters of the\nEastern "Department of the Military\nTraining Camps Association o# the\nUnited Slates, under date of July 7.\nIt is published at the request of John\nP. Nielcls, of this city, who is Dela­\nware director of that recruiting work.\n1. Stimulating Recruiting.\nThere is only one thing for us to\ndo lu the coming week—the last one\nfor recruiting for the second series\nof Officers Training Camps. That\nis, to bend every possible energy to\nstimulate recruiting. Reports from\nall over the country are to the same\neffect: that while plenty of men ask\nfor application blanks and bulletins\nof Information only a small percent\nage, about ten per cent., are filing the\napplications. The result is that so\nfar, in many districts, there are ac­\ntually not enough men, have\nfiled applications, to fill the quotas\nand there is no chance at all for se­\nlection. Of course, this will not be\nthe final case, but we need to work,\nand woidt hard, to get as many men\nas possflile to file their applications\nso that the Examining Officers will\nhave a choice from which to make\nthe final selections. The War Depart\nment knows the situation and we\nquote for your benefit the following\ntelegram received from General Me\nCain, the Adjutant-General of the\nArmy, which should he given the\nfullest possible publicity:\n"The statement that mature men\nwill be given preference for the sec.\nond series of Officers Training Camps\nseems to hove been misunderstood In\nsome quarters. This preference will\nonly apply where qualifications are\nequal. There is no intention to bar\nout applications by men umloV thir
0563844caf45be315256567c021bf7db CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1896.8319671814916 41.875555 -87.624421 rent and shattered the great old party\nor Jefferson mid Jackson, there Is still\nno cause for despair. The era of re-\nconstruction will rollow closely the pe\nriod of disintegration. Before another\ngeneral election convulses Hie laud It Is\nmore than proliable that Hie Demo\ncratic (Kirty. purged of the dross and\nrubbish which worked Its ruin ror the\ntime being, rejuvenated and regenerat-\ned with Its ranks drosed nml the old\nbanners Hying will be ready to face the\nIssues. There are In the ranks of the\nIndependent Democratic organization\nwhich the odious bnsslsm of Altgehl\nforced upon the party lu this State,\nenough men of courage, ability ami\nhigh standing to place the parly where\nIt once stood. With the downfall or\nBryan and Altgehl there will pass away\nfrom ranks of tlie Democratic parly\nall the hercsliis ror which they stood,\nand all the foreign parasites which\nAltgeldlsm and Debslsm drew around\nthe Democratic jmrty mid brought It to\nthe very verge of destruction.\nThe men who refused to allow Ihe\nDemocratic wirty to be made the stalk-\ning horse for anarchy, populism, free\nsilver and repudiation, and who res.\ncited Its banner from the mire Into\nwhich these nNistcs of disintegration\nwould havedraggeil It, will be lu control\nor the party maiiijuery. They will be\nHie recognized leaders of the Demo-\ncratic party, They will start the work\nr reorganization immediately Hie elec-\ntion Is over, and four years hence they\nwill be at the head; of a noble host wor-\nthy of the name Democracy, mid wor-\nthy of Uepubllcnn-stcel-
1e565cc9650714233f4555d06044b068 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.2205479134957 39.745947 -75.546589 œfU6Qi:y tL' tulbfliatenoe ui Havana,\nOnto. wrJ-.e s «a. lliniteflvie.ling l«t.t«r f ixurn\ntiter». .After desvcrlblng -t.h.#» cMy. »(he\nh:iue.-a, thie jlLUtrow tiilreielia, the ftluh,\nthe lack of caml.ta.tOtQ anxl tlhie unlvvir-\nsal'i-Uy of gamto get .he aaye;\n• Bflgigdr» and fleaU abound. Tlhe for­\nmer tue«it you ait every .turn, and if yuu\n(holppnn uo give cr.c a ptrry, you wUl\nsoun be suc.roumlfdi IT you refuse. .thB>\ntake la to a ma1titer df corirso and dlo\nm (t «elm dlli-iappcito'ted. Tlh® ot.beir doj-\na man a t itthe wa-nefnoutse askvd me (for\na oab of rcaat 'beef. *ai> .ny .he was\nduiin'gipy afid (had Uhred IliltOe cHalllUmpni\nI was about to dupent from my .rntle\nnot to give awry a.ntyHlnling at iibe w»ne-\n(bcoiäe, but be/forc l g,t -to nh? ipHacw\nwh«To tlhie meait wj ■ a crowd at itwv.niXr-\nBlglht cr thirty, wr'jib .thtelr Ihamda out-\nrtrietrlhieW. Jabbemllng ttpan.lFh arri toll­\ning fljbcnit the number' df .hungry clhliil-\nditv.n batbathtuRte. sumaunliiteH' Bnet\nT Unt to wtfuae Khe.m all. T.h'ay aro aa\nmuch given to tWit Tiling m to brgfilrg.\nEven ilhe mismi we haw at work at the\nwnnelhi.Tiieie cia good wa.ge.s hiave to .be\nwHiohlali mtu® carelfuCIy iihan would a\ngatng. from, err pcrfilieriLlary. Wlhen 1\nam iNorlvlng or eiMpplnig .rattii r.ö wie\nhave eametilimf» sixüy er sevem.ty men\nat work. We maika ilhf.m leave I (war\nccoüa at ilhe doer, and as rtihlry go out\n(Si1 y are esairai'mi.rd) to set .i .ha.1 they\nhhve e.- «ir<tte«i' ra.' - ' .l htiug; Ibciîlkles, there\nare me.u waflc.hiing lihetu all the tinta,\na.nd yen they imcimag'1 .to s.Beall a great\ndrei. Porti 'It la not confined tio tIMa\nrjaas. TU? ttia.ikmoni, the nw irOianifs,\ntjhi-. ;fcv i'y .1 -keirpeira—every, body ejer me\nbertl on. cheating you to some way. and\na efra.ntpfT Ihe.u?, uaDeMs he uatlcivtarlda\ntfh.hu (»röcoff.vo-rJd.. will soon 1* am It. but\nhhj teducatlLr w®l cwt hilan eoniskdMr-\nablte.
22482372f11a68075254efa8661d88e4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.099726744333 40.063962 -80.720915 siy strongcsi paruaiiiics arc lor th<\nJ'anbaniMe anil her people, but I mils\n. . mfess that the deportment and kindness\n(il the people of Charleston are well cal\nciliated to win tlie good opinion ol\nstranger, anil if the seat ol governmen\nremains in the beautiful valley of the Ka\nmiwlia, Charleston in less than ten year\nwill lie the largest city in tlio State.\nIl is understood beyond her limit\nthat West Virginia is a loyal State\nhut it looks here as though tin\nhews of the "lost cause," arc on top\nIt is said this morning that the Oonven\ntion, on Saturday, changed the uames o\nthe counties ol Lincoln and Oraut t\nIjL'C and .Itff. Davis. This is probably\nmistake, but such is the talk on the street\nlint a very amusing scene did occur 01\nSaturday. The Convention was adoptini\nrules for its future government, when\nruin was uttered providing that, on 111\nmotion m a member.auven cor\nciirring.the yeas and nays should be 01\nilereil on any questiou to lie voted on b\nthe House, when agentloman by the nam\nill Devilport moved to amend by rcquir\ning the concurrence of fifteen members il\nthe call. This proposition seemed llkel\nto puss without opposition, when a tal:\ngmiiiloaning man sprang to his I'ect in\nremote corner of the hull.the l'riai\niloit called lilm Willis, or homo sucl\nname, niul amidst much confusion spok\nabout the twelve apostles, and somethin]\natinnt I'attl and Timothy; about this tim\ntin; noise became so great tlmt it was iin\npossible for un outsider to hear what wa\nsaid, ami the vote being called for. 111\nmini |i'<|>ul:tr iimeuilnieiit was voleil dowi\nwith hut one dissenting voice. Man;\nregrets wore expressed among the outsiii\ncrs that tliey could not hear and undei\nstand what tlie twelve Apostles luul to d<\nwith the iiuration, hut one tiling iscertni\nHie speech killed the amendment.
1582a4132a316f41d51a1bab1d2b5e00 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.8397259956876 41.681744 -72.788147 Tho contractors in charge of\nbuilding the new highway, hampered\nby rain today, now expect to com-\nplete the new road by Saturday.\nCement has been laid up to School\nstreet and this leaves aboilt 200 reet\nmore to be paved. Traffic, which\nhas been dctouring up School street,\nis now being sent straight up the\nhill and this is causing all kinds of\njams on the Hartford highway. Cars\ngoing to New Britain are forced to\nstop on this highway and many\ntravelers, who are going to Hartford,\njoin this line because they do not\nknow the cause of the tie up. At. of\ntimes there are from 15 to 20 cars\nthat arc not going to New Britain, at\nstalled in the line. With the heavy\ntraffic that Is due this week- en-\nthis problem presents the authori-\nties with a serious problem to solve.\nThe rain had halted work on\nthe road but at 10 o'clock the au- - at\nihnritles decided to finish the road\nin front of School street, about 30\nfeet. This will give the cement mis\nafternoon and tomorrow to dry so\nthat the traffic may be detonrcd\nthrough the street on Saturday.\nThe problem that now confronts\nthe contractors Is the bridge. With is\nthe road paved it is planned to open\nit up for travel in about 10 days. a\nThe bridge work Is being done by a\ndifferent concern than the road\nbuilders and they state that it will\ntake at least a month before the\nbridge will he ready for travel. Cars\nare forced to go out on a small path j\nto pass it and there is room for only\none car. The rain It Is feared may\nreduce ihis path to a mire of mud\nand water.
2ab4e4a4b8be5e6bbfd2f6fc510171f4 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1920.7390710066281 38.951883 -92.333737 Clly CeancITs Provision, for Jfaa\nInemse Brines ABBUeafltsv'\nWhen James Barnes and Henry Good\nlook their places on the Columbia fire de\npartment this morning, the force became\nnormal again. They will get tie benefit\nof the $20, raise recently granted by the\nCity Council alter the resignation ol two\nfiremen. Barnes has formerly worked as\nan "extra" in the department.\nAccording lo Chief Tom Waiden, train\ning bf the force depends npon fires. Prac-ti- c\nruns are never made by the Colum-\nbia department because of the danger of\nleaving the city unprotected. If tbe de-\npartment owned a chemical truck to leave\nat the station practice runs would be pos-\nsible. It could also be used to proceed\nthe big Truck and, in most instances could\neasily handle the fires.\n'Most of tbe alarms n the early\nfalL "If the people would look after tbeit\nSues and repair them we would be saved\nmany unnecessary runs," said Waiden.\n"Sometimes we are called out four or five\ntimes a day to put out a burning flue. If\nthe shingles are dry there is also danger\nof the house catching fire."\nBesides about a year's training, Wai\nden mentions many other qualifications\nfor' a fireman. He must have nerve in\nabnndance, must be able "to eat smoke,"\nand, above all. be cool in emergencies.\nRunning up ladders, clambering about\nslippery roofs and knowing just what to\ndo. are things that come with training. In\nfighting a fire, two men usually fasten the\nhose to the water plug and two others\ncarry the nozzle to the bouse and set the\nladders for a climb.
189f4cc0d8ca9d508e40d9344ffe1a9d NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.599726744333 40.735657 -74.172367 man act and in investigations in the committee rooms of Congress, where\nmen who wanted to know the real facts have been busy with inquiry; and\nwe begin to see very dearly what at least some of the methods are by which\nprices are fixed. Wo know that they are not fixed by the competitions of the\nmarket, or by the ancient law of supply and demand which is to be found\nstated in all the primers of economics, but by private arrangement^ with\nregard to what the supply should be and agreements among the producers\nthemselves. Those who buy are not even represented by counsel. The\nhigh cost of living is arranged by private understanding.\n“We naturally ask ourselves, how did these gentlemen get control of\nthese things? Who handed our economic laws over to them for legislative\nand contractual alteration? We have in these still another view\nof the tariff, still another proof that, not the people of the United States\nbut only a very small number of them, have been partners in that legisla-\ntion. Those few have learned how to control tariff legislation, and as they\nhave perfected their control they have consolidated their interests. Men\nof the same interest have drawn together, have united their enterprises and\nhave formed trusts, and trusts can control prices. Up to a certain point\n(and only up to a certain point l great combinations effect great economies in\nadministration, and increase efficiency by simplifying and perfecting organ-\nization; but, whether they effect economies or not, they can very easily de-\ntermine prices by intimate agreement, so soon as they come to 'control a\nsufficient percentage of the product in any great line of business; and we\nnow know that they do.
05458ad4bc4a5b2dc445ec81b179054f THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.8068492833586 40.419757 -77.187146 Coffee culture is very Interesting, and\nthe growiug crop is very beautiful. The\ntrees at maturity are from five to eight\nfeet high. They are well shaped and\nbushy, with dark green foliage, and\nplanted eight or nine feet apart. The\nflowers are in clusters at the roots of\nthe leaves, and are small, but pure\nwhite and very fragrant. The fruit has\na rich color, and resembles a small\ncherry or a large cranberry ; it grows in\nclusters, close to the branches, and when\nit becomes a deep red, is ripe and ready\nto be gathered. The trees are raised\nfrom seed, and do not begin to yield\nuntil the third year. In Central Amer-le- a\nthey bear well for twelve or fifteen\nyears, although .in exceptional cases,\ntrees twenty years old will yield an\nabundance of fruit. The trees are par-\nticularly beautiful when in full bloom,\nor when laden with ripe fruit. The\nprocess for preparing cofiee for mar-\nket is as follows : The ripe berries when\npicked, are at first put through a\nmachine called the "desplador," which\nremoves the pulp; the coffee grains, of\nwhich there are two each berry, are\nstill covered with a sort of glutinous\nsubstance which adheres to the bean.\nThey are now spread out on large\n"patios," made especially for the pur-\npose, and left there, being occasionally\ntossed about and turned over with\nwooden bhovels until they are perfectly\ndry. They are then gathered up and\nput into the "retrilla" a circular\ntrough in which a heavy wooden wheel\nshod with steel, is made to revolve, so\nas to thoroughly break the husk with-\nout crushing the bean. The chaff is\nseparated from the grain by means of\na fanning mill, and the coffee is now\nthoroughly dry and clean. After this\nit Is the custom of some planters to\nhave it spread out on long tables and\ncarefully picked over by the Indian\nwoman and children, all the bad beans\nbeing picked out. It only remains to\nhave them put in bags, weighed and\nmarked, before it is ready for shipment\nto the port. On some of the larger\nplantations this process is greatly\nsimplified with considerable saving of\ntime and labor, by the use of improved\nmachinery for drying and cleaning the\ncoffee.
4b0471de51f301b8131b05a842b043b5 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.5520547628107 44.939157 -123.033121 ity will bo further increased upon the\nestablishment of a regular freight serv-\nice from the Pacific coast of the Unit\ned States to Spanish and Portuguese\nports by way of the isthmus.\n1 no import lumber trade as it now\nstands in Spain is in a flourishing con-\ndition. Oregon and California woods.\nparticularly Oregon pine, are well liked\nfor their quality and especially for\ntheir large sizes. Several consignments\nhave come to Spain, in renlity trans\nshipments from France, England nnd\nGermany, which puts the local quota-\ntions for this lumber nt a high ficure\nand renders it practically impossible to\ncompete always with the pitch pine\n(long lent yellow lune) from the At\nlantic and Gulf of .Mexico ports. Pitch\npine is extensively used in Spain and\nMould, it is bo still further em\nployed had there not been disputes be\ntween sellers and buyers ns to qunlity\nr lots ordered, tins unfortunutelv has\nled to a grnilunt rearrangement of con\nditions, so that now most importers\nnuy through the lurge Spanish wood\nbrokers who gunrunteo fulfillment of\ncontracts nnd nllow a Rood portion of\nthe payment to stand over until the\ngoods hnve been received and approved.\nMoreover, they ngree to the insertion\nof a simple arbitration clause In .the\nlumber contracts. At tho present time\nonly entire cargoes could profitably be\nbrought direct from United States ports\non tho Pacific to Spain. This would be\ntoo considerable- nn undertaking regu-\nlarly for nny single importer with tho\nexisting high freights nnd would ren-\nder a successful competition with pitch\npine impossible.
03f166c5404da3d3a32636c21e21b13b THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1897.4972602422629 46.601557 -120.510842 menced with A triumphal pageant, in\nwhich 100 performers and as many\nhorses, elephants and other animal*\ninarched around the main ring. One of\nthe moat Intonating exhibitions was the\nperformance ot wild animals, all under\nthe charge nf Jesse Howard, whose abili-\nty as a trainer of savage beasts atid\nwhose, perfect control over them wt-re Bet\nforth. A large iron cage was erected in\nthe middle of the tent and in this were\ndriven lions, tigers, leopards, Jaguars,\npanthers ami a boar hound, n hor.se and\nan elephant. Howard and two attend-\nants were in the ca^e with the animals\nand he made them perform all kinds of\ntricks, encli as see-sawing, looping river\neuch other, and Jumping through hoops\nof fire. A large lion mounted the borse'l\nhack ami rode around in the cage several\ntimes. Thi> conclusion of this unusual\nperformance consisted of the formation\nof a pyramid with the elephant mounted\non bigb pedestal in the center and the\nother beasts grouped around him and\nleaning aginst him. The hare back rid-\ning was exceptionally good and a score\nof men and women took part in this.\nThe best animals obtainable for the pur\nnose were to be seen and the train-\ning of the riders and the horses was won\nderfnl. Among the best features of thin\npart of the performance was the two-horse\nriding anil double earning act of Tony\nLowanda and wife and W. (.). Dale and\nMiss Correia. There were a number of\ntrained horses and ponies, which gave a\nvery novel exhibition. There wero wo-\nmen ring masters, and women clowns\nand acrobatic and trapeze performers\nThe Vernon trio, two men and a U-year-\nold boy, gave a daring mid air exhibi-\ntions, and the Eddy and Livingston fam-\nilies, both men and women, the latter\ndressed in long skirts, performed many\nwonderful acrobatic feats.
01116f9af4eb1dd3f973636dbb0819fc DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.3027396943176 44.939157 -123.033121 property on cither Bldoof the street to\nthe outer rails of the tracks on the\nrespective sides of tho street;\n"Provided further that no turntable\nmay bo constructed under tho provis-\nions of this ordinance, except at the\nterminus ot each orany of said lines of\ntrack now constructed, or hereinafter\nto bo constructed;\n"Provided further that the said An-\nson, or his successors or assigns, or\nany person who may hereafter own or\ncontrol tho rlgUts and privileges\nhcroby granted, shall remove the\nturnout or sldotraok now laid and\nmaintained on Commercial street, be-\ntween Ferry streot, and Trado strcot,\nto tho west sldo of the contcr lino of\nCommercial street beforo ho or ,thoy\nshall hayo any right or privllcgo to\noperate street railway lines under\nthe provisions of this ordinance;\n"Provided that no track or\ntracks now ope ;u ted within tho limits\nof said city shall bo torn up, discon-\ntinued or removed, except as may be\nnecessary to mako repairs thereto or\nimprovement thereof; and that no\nright or privllcgo for the laying down\nand maintaining of any turnout or\nturnouts for the mcotlng and passing\nof cars, or deviating from tho center\nof tho street shall hereafter bo\ngranted to tho beneficiaries hereun-\nder, except by consent of tho common\ncouncil, of said city, and 'then only\nafter uotlco to tho abutting property\nowners, whose rights may bo affected\nthereby, which notice or notices shall\nbo given to such proporty owners, or\ntheir agents, at least ten days beforo\ntho application shall bo made to tho\ncommon council for such right or\nrights,
2f3c381f0405a832f3025f7b7a04e4d4 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1907.4534246258245 43.624497 -72.518794 that he killed his own horse, ar.S tio\nwas rallroaded out of the countty to\nSouth Afrlca, having wlthdrawn hh\nconfession, and no attempt was wafla\nby the pollce to prosecute hlm.\nEdalji ls the son ot an EplsuipU\nclergyman of Parseo origln. He ws\nalways a studlous boy, and his mtiWia\nsay acts of cruelty were abhorreut\nto hlm. He went to various schoola,\nstudled law, took all the prlzea that\ncame hls way, and when a little tioro\nthan ot age wrote a notable law book.\nHe practised law in Blrmingbam. Ho\nadvertlsed for lnformtttlon as to the\nanonymous letter wrlter who was ub -i -\nhls name, protested that he know\nnotbing about tho crimes and then\nwent about his bualness. He livod\nat the vlcarage at Wyrley wlth hl\nfather, mother and slater.\nMoreover, lt been proved thnt\nEdalji was a victlm of myopla, so\nthat evon with the most powerful\nglaaaes he eould only see a few lnchis\nand that after dark he eould not ane\nat all and would have to grope hls\nway home unless ho was famlllnr\nwlth every Inch of ground. It wns\nproved by Slr Conan that the pouy\nfor tho death of whlch Edalji was\nhrrested waa seen sate and sound at\n11 p. m., and that when it was found\nbleedlng to death at 6 o'clock the\nnext morning the veterlnary testlfled\nthat the cuts were less than slx hours\nold. It was known posltively that\nEdalji had entered hls home at 9.30\n,0'clock on the evenlng ot August 17\nand dld not leave lt agaln that nlght.\nThe houso was guarded by no Jess\nthan twenty detectives.
0430e9362857104d198ce6b673e5ab2c PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4959016077212 40.441694 -79.990086 perches, more or less.\nAnd also, all that certain piece or parcel of land\nsituate in Glade township. Warren county. Penn-\nsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to\nwit: On the north by the right or war or the\nWestern NewYdrk and Pennsylvania Railroad;\non the east by lands or Guy C. Irvine; on the sonth\nby the Allegheny river, and on the west by the\nabove described lands containing about seven (7)\nacres of land, more or less, being lots marked "A"\nand "B" on the map or plot of East Warren, and\nthe strip of land lying between the north line of\nsaid lots and the south line of the right of way of\nthe W. N . Y. A P. R. R. aforesaid. Subject, how-\never, to a lease for oil purposes to F. P. Hays,\n Mar 23, 1835.\nHaving thereon situated one brick boiler house,\n5x&feet. and one 80 h. p . tabular boiler; one\nframe barrel house, 32x13 feet: one frame bleaching\nhouse, 55x37 reet. containing rooxsettllng tanks, com-\nbined capacity 675 barrels: one frame office build-\ning. 19x28 reet: one brick filtering huuse.24x4S feet:\ncontaining five Alters, combined capacity 105 bar-\nrels; and four tanks, combined capacity 250 barrels:\none frame bone house. 40x43 feet, with two brick\nfurnaces: one frame nunm bouse. 12x14 reet. with\nsix duplex pumps: one frame cooper shop. 84x20\nfeet, with platform 12x84 feet; all buildings have\nIron roofing. Also, four patent stills with con-\ndensers; also one agitator, capacity 466 barrels;one\ntank, capacity 2.815 barrels: one tank, capacity 718\nbarrels: one acid tank. 54 ,000 pounds capacity; one\nsoda tank, capacity five barrels: two
8ea4238f306ce90a2900393191059657 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.2315068176054 47.04502 -122.894872 would now b 0 the condition of the world?\nWhvrc would be our glorioul republic. with\nits twcnt --six millions of enlightened free-i\nmrn? leiechnnicd skill and lcicnti?c inn\nvmtlon have been the prime motors of hu.\nman civilizntion. As thuage has achieved\ngreater triumphs than all former ngcr com-\nbined, go itimmeasurably rurpusu all oth-\ner: in power, prOlperlly and happinest.\nThe great reality of the use—~thu Itort\ntnhen in social, civil and intellectunl Id-\nvnnccmnnt, is not. more observable In the\nitnprtltllal Ind improving condition of the\narts, min the fact that. it originates in\nMan. The movement not only began with,\nbut its incrming momentum come- from\nthem. ifthey 1105,10 must it. While they“\nprogress. nothing can retard it. Thera can\nbe no decay of nations without I decline \nthe arm and sciences; but when they are no\nlonger fostered, or when web only are ehcr-'\nished a: tend 'to aggrandiz- the weaken:\npirea must become utinct.and their proud-\nest, monuments mm crumble tum . An-\ncient ltgislalorl Mum nedmtnnd this ; utd\nthe present disordered condition of I great\nput of the earth, in the unit. of their ig-\nnorance. Preferring the anlminn o! 1\nch» to tht ot thomthe mistook mu-\nni?conce for power, and miimy force and\ndisplay for proapority. Huithey perm ived\nthat nothing can he lasting that in not henc-\nticinl to society at. larger—had they devoted\nthe trauma: they squandeud in erecting\ncnnatapha to their gmndourua the general\ndi?hsiun of science and ml, the earth would\nnot now he sprinkled with the tombstones\nof nalinns.
4e639fcd882b33e7e7c088b11d8e25ea THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.746575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 English Repdblicasish .II wo ma\ncredit Mr. Bradlaugh, who ought to be a\nauthority on the point, the movement fc\nRepublicanism has already secured n<\nonly a looting in England but a tol\nerably healthful growth. He declart\nthat there are at this moment over tw\nhundred Republican clubs in thst conn\ntry, well organized and led with abilitj\nwhose members are openly in favor of th\nestablishment ofajlepublican form ofgot\neminent for the English people. H\nknows this to be the fact, because he his\nself has framed the roles and is an iionor\nary member of moat of the societies, i\nwell aa President ol the London Republi\ncan Club. In London the organization:\nspecially numerous and strong, and\naourishes also in Birmingham, Hotting\nham, Manchester, Sheffield, and all tt\ngreat manufacturing towns, chiefly amoa\nthe cotton spinners, factory opera\nlives mechanics, and it also claim\nconverts among the miners ol Morthqn\nberland and Durham. The English laru:\nera do not take kindly as yet to the R<\npublicanism of firadlangh. Their specii\nchampion is the loyal Arch. The Iris\nRepublicans seem to be a class by them\nselves.possible allies in the future (\nBradlaugh, Odgers, Beales, Murray an\nthe English agitators, but with a watel\nword ol "home rule for Ireland," which\nnot at all the same thing as British He\nnnkliAsniem Q/Ti|1qrid OfWirdtnO1' tnlfl\nBradlaugh, has & lew clubs and quite\nnumber of Republican sympathizers, a\npecially in Glasgow, Dundee, Edlnburg]\nand Aberdeen, but is not so much infecte\nwith the desire lor a republic as aroth\nmanufacturing districts of England. A'\ntogether, the great agitator who has jui\ncome among us takes a rosy view ol tt\nprospects of his cause at home.
2c7d6dbbb64104f60cd7cd48658568f3 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0835616121258 39.513775 -121.556359 1 use the word “disease generally, nnd before 1\nspeak of l!m signs ot particular diseases, it will be\nor per to take a general v lew of v> mploms. When a\nperson is troubled or afflicted w ith disease, which\ncauses a weakness of the hack and limbs, pain in Un-\nbend dimness nf sight, losh et muscular | ower, iml-\npitallon of the heart, irritability, nervousness, dys-\npepsia, derangement of the digestive functions, gen\noral debility, symptoms of consumption, and many\nothers which are better explained than put on paper,\nami require Medical or Surgical attendance, it would\nbo well for them to inquire it there is a physician who\nIS competent to attend them and who undertsnnd*\nthe application of medicine, and whose scientific at-\nlidiiim-iil* in hi* profession, mid whose age and expe-\nrience entitle him to yours confidence. Considering\nlhc*e things. Hr. fhs-. II Tozer has concluded to \nfonu \\on that are afflicted, advertising Ids place of\nbusiness, staling that be bus been a successful prac-\ntitioner for over twenty five years, ami has\nATTENDED AND CURED HUNDREDS,\nwhen they have been considered by other physicians\nand have been pronounced by them past recovery\nTherefore yon may rely upon him a* one in whom\nsccresy and the utmost confidence can be placed.\nhr C. 11. T .would invile nil ttint are I.libeled to call\non him, and it lie does not administer tor them,there\nwill he no charge made, l.et n-> false delicacy pre-\nvent you, but apply immeulali ly. ami save yon-rli\nfrom ihe dreadful consequences which must follow\nthose who neglect toreceiveultendance.\nHr C. II Inzer's office is on 6th street, near the\nIh-lv Mere Hotel, between J and K si reels. Mis rooms\nare so arranged that the Doctor can he consulted\nwithoiit fear of ini le-intlon.
3abba74aa0fdf5e186ac132ec0e7cb64 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1909.9410958587011 40.735657 -74.172367 sovereignty Is not In the States them- ;\nselves, but In the people who compose\nthem. Theoretically, legally and senti-\nmentally this statement may he satis-\nfactory; actually It is not.\nmere are many laws on me statute |\nbooks today that oro not enforced be-\ncause they are absolutely unenforceable, j\nAnd this is because public opinion is ;\nopposed to them and will not tolerate ;\ntheir enforcement. There are other j\nlaws upon the statute books, laws to\nwhich public opinion is opposed, that\nare enforced with more or less vigor\nand consistency, but whose enforce-\nment leads Inevitably to corruption,\nperjury and bribery. Enactments upon\nthe statute books that are not sup-\nported by public opinion are not worthy\nto be called laws. Either they arc not\nenforced at all, in which case they arc i\nno better than so much paper, or\n1 f they are enforced they becorno of-\nfensive, or as James C. Carter puts It,\nthey arc not so much law as tryanny.'\n"Despite this, £ear after year our\n! Congress and our Legislatures, with a\nI perseverance and an energy worthy of\na better cause, enact statutes by the\nthousand, all designed with the best\nwill in the world, to bring us a little\nnearer to perfection, and all due to the\nprevalent impression that auy statute\nwill certainly accomplish the good In-\ntended by Its authors.\n"T he great legislative rival of Con-\ngress is tho Supreme Court, for the\nsanction of public opinion lias been\ngradually giving it greater and greater\npower, so that today under the legal\nllctlon of constitutional, interpretation\nand application It amends and vetoes\nat wilt any act of Importance that\ncomes before It.
3c7e68439a857d726deb0cbee3be8add THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.1434425913276 40.618676 -80.577293 ties the so-called model bills were not clear as to\nprinciples or designed for simplicity of adminis­\ntration. These are the difficulties of pioneering\nin legislation. On the other hand we have the ex­\ntraordinary achievement of a Federal social se­\ncurity law with supplementary legislation in 51\nooperating jurisdictions. We have something to\nouild on. Amendments to the old-age insurance\ntitles of the legislation have broadened that to\nmore satisfactory proportions. We need now to\ngive study to experience with unemployment com­\npensation in order to make results more in keeping\nwith its purpose—economic security.\nEvery state has unexpended reserves which in­\ndicate that benefit payments have been too low.\nThe waiting period has been too long so that un­\nemployed workers have had to go on relief pend­\ning payment of benefits. This situation is a tra­\nvesty on social security. The benefit checks them­\nselves are for too small amounts compensate\nworkers for wages lost and are paid for too short\na time: 10 per cent of all checks are for amounts\nunder $6; 43.5 per cent under $10; and checks for\none-third of these unemployed stop before work­\ners can find jobs. To meet these conditions the\nAmerican Federation of Labor asked to have a bill\nintroduced in Congress which would write Federal\nstandards into the law, compliance with which by\nthe States would be mandatory for approval by the\nSocial Security Board. These standards are: One\nweek waiting time; flat benefit period of 20 weeks;\nbenefits equal to 60 per cent of full time weekly\nearnings, but not less than $6 or more than $24;\ntotal annual collections in every state to average\nnot less than 2.7 per cent of annual payrolls, with\nno cancellation of earned credits as a penalty but\nonly extended waiting period, but not to exceed\nsix weeks.
0be91893f278d8e1ac212622ecab4d2d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4643835299341 40.063962 -80.720915 dweUlngnoute of Itaac B Kelly, on the tract (\nland herelnaitcr designated as No. 1, the fcxlov\nlag described tract* of land tltuated In Obi\ncounty. West Virginia, between Ave and si\nmiles from the city of Wheeling, on the W bee\nlag, West Liberty A Bethany Turnpike and o\nthe waters of the souin fork of bbort Creek ac\nof Wooda' Boa. thai it to tty;\nNO, I Containing 311 Acres, 2 rood\n89 pcrchee, known at the Benjamin b«i)y fern\nbeing the suae which was conveyed to ral\nIsaac B. Kelly and others, by James Ed)\naed wife, by deed dated September &\n1866. and of record In the office of th\nClerk of the County Court of Ohio county l\nDeed Book No. 41 . page S04, and of which tree\nan undivided halt waa conveyed to Isaac E\nKelly by Daniel P. Jacob aad wife by deed date*\nOctober 7, 1868 , and of record In aaid Clerk'\nostein Deed Book So. M,ptge84.\no. a, imuutatn Acres, 1 rood u\n88 pcrchM, being pari of a uxt of 803 acres,\nroods and St perches, known aa the James Kell\nAim, waa conveyed-to Isaac B. Kelly b\nIsaac KeUy and wife by deed dated Septembe\n18,1864, aad of record la the said Clerks office 1:\nDeed Book No. 48, page 816, the tract to be soli\nbeing the pet refining to tald Isaac B. Krll\nafter bit conveyance of 861 acres and 88 perche\nto Daniel V. Jacob by deed dated October'\nIM8, and of record la said dark's office iu D*ei\nBook No. 66. page ts.\nMo 3 Oontalniag 74 Acres, « roods. *\npercnca,beingsasse landwhlcn vaa conveyed ti\naaid l»aac RXeliy by KMak Pogne aad oiher\nby deed dated-April LlB-> ., and of record in tali\nUmf plies la DeedBook No. 68, page 197.\nMo. # coatalnlng 4 5 OOTOO 8 roods 1\npeRhoLbaiac the eame land conveyed to salt\nIsaac B-KeEr by Geo. W . Smith by deed date*\nNovember 17, 1884, aad of record In salt\n<Berk'a office la Deed Book No 48, page *71\nFor the melee and bounds of aaid several tract\nreference fnfliaAe to the deeds aforesaid, and u\nthe s^d decree of sale !n this csaae.\nTMa land ta among tbeaoetvaluable ftrmlnj\nlandiaObk)oeuaty. Becktraetto aceeeeibleb:\nsncrarT
313f3c1f44946d0ee80cd4e2d90a065c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.0890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 Wo have before us a bill reported by the o\nJudiciary Committee of the House of w\nDelegates, to provide for submitting to ci\npopular vote the question of holding a Con- w\nvention to frame a new constitution, and 1}\nif the proposition lor a Convention should c<\ncarry, to provide for tho election of dele- tl\ngates. It proposes that the question of a tl\nConvention shall be submitted on the a;\nfourth Thursday ol May. The Governor ci\nLi to api>oint three Commissioners for each r<\ncounty, who aro to superintend the elec- it\ntion in the county. These Commissioners H\nare to nopoint three persons at each voting ti\nplace in the county to judge and conduct ol\nthe election. All of whom take an oath oi\nto support tho Constitution of tho United ri\nStates and of tho Stnto. No person offer* n\ning to vote is to be deniedUinles?, upon J\n at the polls, it shall bo made to o:\nappear that he is a minor, or pauper, or of o\nunsound mind, or under conviction of p\ntreason, felony or bribery in an elcctiou, sj\nor that he has not been a resident of the ti\nState ono year and of the county thirty C\ndays; or unless written charges of some n\nspecific net or acts of disqualification veri sj\ntied by the written affidavit ot some quail- ai\nfled voter shall bo preferred; nor pi\nthen unless the charge shall bo at\nclearly established by the oaths of it)\ntwo competent witnesses to each overt ti\nact; and the person offering to vote shall m\nnot, on oath or otherwise be required to v<\ncriminate himself. The returns are to be gi\nmade to the county commissioi.crs; who la\ncertify them to the Governor, who counts ai\nthe vote and makes proclamation of it.
1dd216727b6f81f092a8a78cab62e99c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.3838797497976 41.681744 -72.788147 In the annual 'report of city treas-\nurer Frederick S. Chambelain was a\nlittle item which, while it probably\nescaped the eyes of many, awoke in\nthe memory of some of the old men\nnew nearing the three score and ten\nmark some exciting days of their van-\nished youth. It was a bill of $8.05 for\nfox bounties. There is a state law that\nany one who kills a fox can, by, pre-\nsenting the beast's head to the,\nproper authorities, receive a bounty\nof $1 per head. This law is one that\nexists for the benefit of the farmers\nand which has existed for many years\nbut which is seldom noticed in the\ncity. However, eight foxes were killed\nor trapped by enterprising young\nhuntsmen during the past year and\nthe bounty money paid. To the old\nmen the mention of fox hunting serves\nto quicken their faultering pulse, for\nfifty years ago fox hunting was re-\ngarded here as great sport. The lit-\ntle red animals were a pest to the\nfarmers and made a nuisance of them-\nselves by their repeated depredations\non the poultry stock. The youths of\n day would ofttimes load up the old\nsingle barrel shot gun or take down\nthe old powder horn and flint luck\nRevolutionary musket and sally torth\non a fox hunt. Their hunt was far\ndifferent from that sport as it is prac-\ntised by the elite of England today.\nTheir own rusty legs had to be their\nsteads and the family watch dog act-\ned as the full blooded pointer.\nThrough the woods beyond Osgood\nHill and towards Pinnochle mountain;\nto the southward towards Shuttle\nMoo rl rw to the east and south tow\nards Berlin and Beckley these little\nhunting parties would go, searching\nout the farm yard scavanger and as\na result of their prowess many a\nmother of those olden days was sup-\nplied with a warm winter' coat, the\nfox's pelt being tanned and cured at\nhome. But as the years sped past this\nsport decreased as did the foxes until\nthe past year only eight of the little\nanimals were caught. It will not be\nmany more years before a fox will be\nknown to the city boy only as an ani-\nmal of which he reads.
09a5a1e6f6d5883d6e50b8e4d6c86fdc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.8890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 1110al4.2Cc; i ocember 14.05at4.15c. Bugar\ndull and more or less nominal; rellned quiet; extra\n0 5fta5%c; oir a &J$a5%c; mould a. GaGJic;\nconfeotiouers a. G%aG U-lCc; cutloai and crushed\n7^o. Molasses quiet aud unchanged, hice Grin,\nTallow ilrui at 4^0. coiiu steady. Turpentine\nquoted at 37Mc Kggs liavo a fair Inquiry; re>\neelpts 4,346 peonages; western laizio. Vorkflrm\nbut quiet; iness quoted at 813 75 lor old; 814 bOn\n15 00 for new. Cut meats quiet and firmly h-ld.\nLard'2a3 points higher and fairly active: west\nera steam spot 7.i5c; Decomber 7.15a718c; Jan>\nuary 7.- iU725c; February 7.«Ja7 81c; March7.85a\nh7.86c; April 7 43a7.42o; May 7.45a7.50c; Juno 7.50a\n7.55c; city steam 7.00c. Butter quiet aud flrmlj\nhold; western 13a23o; - .wo«torn creamery. 17a28y.\nUhcesosteady and quiet; western 9>£aic.\nChicago, Noy. 19..The main results of to-day'j\noperations on| 'Chaogo were a decline oi 35c in\npork and au advance in wneat aud corn,\na heat, corn and oats held very nearly at the clos\ninn urices of yesterday durlun the morniuir lioura\nof the Bisalon. Tho activity fn tho pit was fair aud\nprlcts steady early, with considerable weakness\nshortly afternoon. Just before mo closo thoro vrui\na spurt among buyers, aud prlcts lor wheat galued\nabout %c, which cloned them at tho outside for ttu\nday at 7&o 'or December. Floor biiytr»wltharo\\\\\nowIub to higher asking of holders". ft heat, cash No,\n'j, 75%a"5xc; Wo. 3 ifrrluc m^o; No,\n'J red Tj^a; November 7»%a65)4o; clas\nlng at 7aKo; 1J ccember 7o>£a75&c, 'clus\nIns at "654c; January 7%a"6>$c, closlug at 76c;\nMaySlKa84{c, closing at ttftfc. Cora,No.2 44%c;\nNovember4^a4lXc. closln* at 44><c; Decern uei\n43Ha44Hc, cloilug at 44}£c; January43j£ai4%c, clos\nlngaUiHo? May 4SJ4ats;Jic, closing aub^c. Odta\nno. 2, '27o; November '/TaJJ-ic. closing at 27%c\nDecember 26J{c, closlog at
005f1e3e83f242038eabad7ef6894e02 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1872.4549180011638 39.623709 -77.41082 lists as published by said officers of regis-\ntration respectively, they shall sit at some\nconvenient place iii their respective wards,\ni.om nine oclock in the morning until five\no'c. ick in the afternoon, on the second\nMonday of February, and annually there-\nafter, having given at least live days prior\nnotice, by advertisement inserted in some\nnewspaper published in Frederick city,and\nby hand bills set up at public places iu their\nrespective wart! >. of the time and place of\nsitting to correct said fists: and at the time\nand place published by said officers of reg-\nistration for correcting said books of regis-\nIIati*n ami fists as publl*! *'d by said olli-\ne * rs rcspei lively, they shtdl proceed to\nstrike from said lie's persons ! nown or\nma It* known to them to have died, or who\ndo not possess the requisite qualifications,\nm vv ho will not possess said qualification-\nfie ft ire election next ensuing, o. who)\nare disqualified under the second and third\nsections of article first of the Constitution,\nand to register the name of rvery person\nwho shall apply to them to be registered\nwho shall satisfy said officer of registration\nthat he po--, .-- .-(oi will posses,- the requi-\nsite qualifications before the clccLon next\nt-nsiiiiiif, aud that he is not disqualified uu-\nd* r the second and third sections of rlie\nfirst article of the Constitution; and also\nthe name of every pi rson whom a Judge\nof the Circuit Court for Frederick county,\nto which an appeal, (which is hereby au-\nthorized in the same manner and for the\nsame causes staled in section fourteen, of\nchapter four hundred and fifty-nine, of the\nlaws of eighteen hundred mill seventy.)\nshall f*e taken from the decision of any of-\nficer of registration shall decide to be enti-\ntled lobe nuistired as a qualified v* >t< r;
e18845e52729d4a6c39a89ecfc397ad4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.1986301052766 41.681744 -72.788147 go down. He has to be knocked out\ntechnically.\nThe Senegalese, who attained fame\nover two years ago by conquering\nths world light heavyweight cham- -\nplon, Georges darpentler, lnva bout\nin Tarls, last night demonstrated the\nart ot retaining good footholds, apd\nwhen Anally he was Informed thai\nhe should be stretched on the can\nvas he argued with the referee.\nFor pine rounds and a portion of\nanother the negro was the target for\nona of America's modern maulers,\nPaul Berlenbach. Crouched, Sikl\nendeavored to stave off punishment,\nand from swollen eyes peered for\nthe opening that never came. He\nhits hard and his right was primed\nfor a blow that would bring hlrd\nvictory but found no opportunity.\nBerlenbach forced the fighting in\nhis usual exasperating attack, using\nboth hands In a constant tattoo \nhis opponent's head and body. Only\nin the first two rounds did Sikl re\ntailate. one right in the second\nlifting Berlenbach oft the floor,\nBound after round the Senegalese\naccepted an unmerciful pounding\nuntil he tottered in the tentn. wun\nthe referee's decision to call a halt,\nhe threw his arm about the shoul-\nders of the official and asked what\nit was all about.\nOn being informed that he was\nknocked out to all intents and pur-\nposes but had forgotten, to fall. Sikl\nshrugged his shoulders and waved\nhis right arm as if to say, "it makes\nno difference, anyway."\nFrankie Schoell of Buffalo accept-\ned a handicap of seven pounds to\ndefeat Larry Estridge of New York,\nnegro middleweight, in the semi-\nfinal. Estrldge Jockeyed for position\ntoo long, and In a tenth-roun- d
1644039bae92e4afe7a2aab43756252b THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1866.395890379249 36.294493 -82.473409 100, taies 00,08, clerk lee 1,50, sheriffs\nfee 1,50 printers fee 1,60 .\nJames Curd, one tract of land lying in\ncivil Dist. No. 3 containing 60 acrea valued at\n150, taxes 3,27, including one poll, clerk) fee\n1,50 sheriff fee 1,50 printera fee 1,60.\nHeirs of A. Hampton, one tract of land ly-\ning in civil Dist. No. 3, containg 200 ecres,\nvalued at 300, taxea 2,04 clerka fee 1,50, aber- -\niQs fee 1,60, printera lee 1,50.\nS. R. H. Mcliwen one tract of land lying\nin civil District No. 3, containg 170 acrea val-\nued a', 700, taxes 4,73 clerka fee 1,50, sheriffs\nfee 1,60, printera fee 1,50.\nHeir of W. R . Waugh.on tract of land\nlying in civil Dist. No. 3, containing 100\nacrea valued at 300, taxea 2,04 clerk fe 1,50\nsheriff 1,50 , printer 1,60.\nWilliam King, one tract land lying In\ncivil District No. 7, containing 10,000 acre\nvalued at 2,600, laxe 17,00, clerk fee 1,60,\nsheriffs fee 1,50, printers fee 1,50.\nHeirs of Andrew Taylor, one tract of land\nlying in civil Dist. No. 8, containing 100\nacra valued at 50, tnxes 00,34 clerk fe 1,60,\nsheriffs fee 1,50, printer fee 1,50.\nHeira of A. D. Smith, one tract of land ly-\ning in civil Dist. No. 8, containing 300, acre\nvalued ut 150, taxes 1,02, clerks fee l,b0, iner-if - fi\nfee 1,50, printer fee 1'50.\nHeir of E. Pemberton.cne tract of land ly-\ning in civil Dist. No. 8. containing 200 acres,\nvalued at 100, taxes 00,63, clerk fe 1,(0,\naheriifs fee 1,50, printera fee 1,50.\nWilliam King, one tract of land lying In\ncivil District No. 8 containing 10,000, acrea\nvalued at 600, taxea 3,40, clerka fe 1,50\nhcriffs
448a930fd54454e19f97631491ef9ded NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.9657533929478 41.681744 -72.788147 Housing: Question Taken Tip.\nThe question of iproper housing for\npeople in certain sections of the city\nwas discussed at length and the direc-\ntors felt that this matter might well\nbe given more study before anything\ndefinite should !be attempted. Several\nproblems entered into this question\nwhich must he taken separately. The\nfirst, which seemed most important,\nwas the matter of "collecting rubbish,\nashes and garbage in order that prop-\ner sanitary conditions might be pro-\nvided. The directors felt that a move\ncould 'be made in the collection of\nasheg and garbage throughout the city.\nNew Britain is one of the few cities\nin the state in which ashes are not\ncollected regularly throughout the\nyear. The insanitary conditions are\ndue in part to the accumulation of\nfilth and rubbish during the winter\nmonths and any result that would\nclear this away regularly would tend\nto imtprove conditions generally.\nA committee was appointed by Pres-\nident Pelton to reports of\nneighboring cities and to make an in-\nvestigation as to cost to the city. A\nvote was passed that the directors\nrecommend to the board of health\nthat proper steps 'be taken to see what\ncan be done in the way of the city\ncollecting ashes, and that a sum suf-\nficient to take care of this matter bo\nput into the city yearly budget. The\nquestion will be reported upon at the\nJanuary meeting of the chamber,\nMyron H. West, of the American\nPark Builders company of Chicago,\nwas present and gave a brief outline\nof the advantages to New Britain if a\ngeneral city plan and survey were\nmade. The fact was brought out that\nNew Britain is a growing, progressive\ncity, and a plan, made now, antici-\npating steady growth and correcting\nany unforeseen mistakes would ensure\na city that every citizen would be\nproud of. Many Western cities have\nfollowed such a plan and several New
81ccc263071113a4db61d09e08765f29 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.3630136669203 39.261561 -121.016059 War Tax—Official Delinquencies.\nIa consequence of the unaccountable (le-\nla/ oa the part of the Legislature in passing\nthe bill for the collection of the Federal\nwar tax, and the unpardonable, it notcrim'\ninal, neglect of the Secretary of State to at\ntend to his duties, a considerable portiou\nof the tax will never bo collected. Karly\nin the session, the Legislature uotifled Sec-\nretary Chase that California would under-\ntake the collection of her quota of the tax,\nand notwithstanding our revenue law re\nquires the taxes to be levied prior to the\nfirst Monday in March, and the A-sessoi"\nand Collectors to commence their work im-\nmediately after, the bill providing for the\nlevy of the war tux was suffered to drag\nalong in the Legislature until the 12lb of\nApril, when it was adopted. The act re\n the Supervisors of the different coun-\nties to levy the additional tax on or before\nthe third Monday in April; but as the act\nwas not piinted. even in the newspapers,\nthe county officers had no knowledge of its\nprovisions, and the tax of course was not\nlevied. Two supplementary laws were\npassed, however; one requiring the Secre-\ntary of State to compile and cause to be\nprinted all laws relating to the war tax,\nand forward copies to the different counties;\nthe other, requiring the Supervisors to meet\nand levy the tax on the first Monday ia May,\nif they bad not already done it. but the\nSecretary of State, instead of sending to the\ndifferent counties all the acts as required,\nsent only the two supplementary acts, nei-\nther of which stated the amount that was to\nbe levied.
0d22686b73516a1659b1caf90e4ca311 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.5164383244546 39.560444 -120.828218 Second Day —July sth, 1854\nAt 9 oclock A. M ., the Convention\nassembled, Mr. Wright in the chair. The\ncommittee on credentials was then called.\nMr. Campbell read a majority report,\nsigned Campbell, Pearson and Smith,\nwhich was followed by Mr. Anderson and\nGoodfellow. Mr. Mosely moved that the\nmajority report be adopted, which was\namended by Mr. Galloway, to adopt the\nminority report on the adoption of the\nminority report; a division of the Con-\nvention was called; the Convention was\nthen divided and iho chairman was called\nupon to give his decision, but declared he\nwould not give his decision, and instantly\nresigned the chair, whereupon Mr. Gal-\nloway moved that J. Hj, kilbournc, of\nRabbit Creek, act as permanent chairman\nof this Convention, which was carried by\na large majority. Mr. Anderson was\nchosen to act as Secretary. The minority\nreport was then put on its passage, and\nwas carried unanimously. Mr. Cossitt\nthen offered the following resolution :\nResolved, That this Convention proceed\nto the election of officers, as they are\nnamed in order in this resolution: First,\nfor Senator; second, for Judge; third, for\nAssembly; for Public Administra-\ntor; fifth, for Coroner; sixth, for County\nCentral Committee; and seventh, fof* Dele-\ngates to the Stvte Convention.\nOn motion, resolution adopted. Mr. Gal-\nloway then put in nomination Ferdinand\nJ. McCann, for the Senate, and James\nH. Gardner. On motion, the chair ap-\npointed two tellers, to receive and count\nthe votes. Edward Casey and. John C.\nJames , were appointed, ti was then\nmoved to vote by precincts, which was\ncarried. The Secretary then proceeded\nto call over the precincts and the names\nof Delegates. The whole number of votes\nthen cast was 125. Ferdinand J. Mc-\nCann received 112 votes; James H\nGardner received 13. On motion, Ferdi-\nnand J. McCann was declared the nomi-\nnee by acclamation. Nominations for\nCounty Judge being next in order, Mr.\nTarlton nominated B. Hall, and Mr. Gal-\nloway nominated Samuel J. Pettibone;\nthe w.iole number of votes cast was 155.\nB. Hall received 113 votes, and S. J .\nPettibone received 42. On motion, B.\nHall was nominated by acclamation,—\nThe nominations for Assembly being next\nin order, Mr. Walker nominated James\nKane; John C. James nominated O. S.
0b57800bb4ac908fe82660f9c129c7a1 WEST VIRGINIA DAILY OIL REVIEW ChronAm 1898.8232876395232 39.564242 -80.99594 The people of our city are in\ngreat cor sternation over the ap¬\nparent presence of a person or a\ncombination of persons who have\nincendiary designs upon their prop¬\nerty. During the present week\nthere has been four conflagrations,\nand while two of these undoubtedly\noriginated from natural causes, the\nremaining two give palpable evi¬\ndence of malevolent work.\nOur citizens are thoroughly\naroused to the gravity of the situ¬\nation, and we are authorized to\noffer a reward pf $400 for the ap¬\nprehension and conviction of the\none who started last night's fire.\nMr. Thistle is too generally popu¬\nlar to make the supposition probable\nthat his barn was fired in a desire\nfor revenge for some fancied wrong\nand the more consistent theory\nshould be accepted that some un¬\nnatural creature is venting his in¬\nnate cussedness in this way. It is\nto be devoutly hoped that the mis¬\ncreant will be caught in the meshes\not the law before his evil handi¬\nwork is put further in evidence.\nEarly Wednesday morning the\nWells Hotel stables were fired as\nchronicled in the Review. The\nblaze last night was nearly opposite\nand the ignition was made in the\nsame material . baled hay. This\ngives indisputable proof to\nthe inference of incendiarism.\nLast night's fire was discovered\nat about half-past ten by a stable\nboy, who was passing by at the\ntime. The alarm was communi¬\ncated in relays and sounded by the\nBaptist bell. The reliable J. T.\nJones hose boys responded with\ntheir usual alacrity and had every¬\nthing ready for business before\ntheir co-workers from the other\ncompany loomed up.\nBut their services were not\nneeded. The barn had already\nbeen entered and the blazing hay\nand two horses and a pony removed.\nThe affair as fortunate a termina¬\ntion as the previous one at the\nWells stables. A seasonable dis¬\ncovery in each instance balked the\nwork of the incendiaries.\nMr. Thistle's barn fronts on Al¬\nley B., which connects Charles\nand Catherine streets at the Wei s\nHouse. There were two horses\nand a pony in the stables at the\ntime and these were gotten out\nwithout much difficulty. The im¬\nminent danger of the little pony\nserved to accelerate the speed of\nthe J. T. Jones* hose company.\nThis diminutive specimen of horse\nflesh is a prime favorite and mascot\nof the company and the question of\nhis safety was superior to the prop¬\nerty consideration.
2befeb6c80a05c1e514e97952f1db84a THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.228767091578 40.807539 -91.112923 own, and of the Governments with which\nour relations are m ist intimate, a pleasing\nguaiantv that the hat tunny so impmtunt\nto the intents < f their subjects, as well\nas of our citizens will not lie interrupted\nby t'i.e advancement of any claim or pre­\ntension upon their part to which our ho­\nnor would not permit us to yield. Long\nthe defender of ray country's rights in the\nfield, I trust that my fellow-citizens will\nnot see, in my earnest desire to preserve\npeace with foreign powers, any indica­\ntion thut tiuvr rights will ever be sacrifi­\nced, or the iionor of the nation tarnished,\nby any admission on the part of their\nChief Magi .. .te unworthy of their for­\nmer . ory. in our intercourse with our\naboriginal neighbors the same liberality\nand justice which marked the course pre­\nscribed to me by two my illustrious\npredecessors, when acting under their di­\nrection in the discharge of the duties of\nSuperintendam and Commissioner, shall\nbe strictly observed. 1 can conceive of\nno more sublime spectacle—none more\nlikely to propitiate an impartial and com­\nmon creator—than a rigid adherence to\nthe principles of justice, on the part of a\npowerful nation, in its transactions with\na weakt r and uncivilized people, whom\ncircumstances have placed at its disposal.\nBefore concluding, fellow-citizens, I\nmust say something to you on the sub­\nject of the parties at this time existing\nin our country. To me it appears per­\nfectly clear that, the interest of that coun­\ntry requires that the violence of the spirit\nby which those parties are at this time\ngoverned, must be greatly mitigated, if\nnot entirely extinguished, or consequen­\nces will ensue which are appalling to be\nthought of.
009ab844aeaf547634ffa2ba489562ee THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.560273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 commencing at 10 o'elook u. in., poll at publlfl\nauction at the north front door of the Court\nHouse of Ohio county, to the highest bidder,\ntho property hereinafter doscribod: Thut U t<i\nsay. all that certain tract of laud situated on t!m\nwater# of Little Wheeling Creek, near llonejr'a\nPoint, Ohio County, West Vlrfluia. and bounded\nand described as lollows: Beginning at a none,\ncorner to lands of Aloxander iiigg<; tbuuci)\nwith his line north 57° oast »y poles to a do*,\nwood; thcnco south 3GV cast 29.3 poles to im\nohn; thence north 40° eait 3L8 poles to a white\nwalnut Iu tho run, corner to lands of C. ,ti,\nTerrell; thcnco north 41" west 03 poles to «\nwhite walnut stuiup; thence north 23® west 78 b\npoles to a sumo near run. corner to Frazl&r}\nthence with Hue south GQ3 west 10.6 poles to\na mapJo; thence south 4!>J west lb. lb poles to a\nwhite oak; theuco south 51° west 48.5 poles to a\nstone; thcnco with tho Williamson Hue soutU\n86%° cast 100.9 polo* to tho place of beginning,\nand containing fifty-two acres and ti(ty-two\npoles, more or less. Saving and excepting Iroia\ntho above described tract tho following do*\numllinri tmr/ti.l a/tlfl titf ltnh<>rt S< It'I 11 In mintt\nund wifo to John l'hilfips, «a appear* l»> deed\ndated September 21, 180H, aud bounded as foU\nlows: Uouinnliur at the elin, corner to Ill^nj\nthenco north 10° emit 81,8 poles along Iflirgr\nline to a point in Dixon's Kuu, IniiuooflXB,\nTorroll. near a white walnut: thence with Tor*\nroll's Hue north 14° WOSt 23.75 polos to u itono;\nthonco iiouth 57® wcit 27.75 polevto the old
2712e71e791be58959817d43580e6d82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.0534246258244 40.063962 -80.720915 New Yore, Jan. 19,.Flour, reccipta 19,158 bar¬\nrels; exports 8,817 barrels. 3 839 sacks; market dull\naud strongly iu buyers' favor; sales 11,600 barrels;\nsupcrllno western aud Hutu H lUil 25; common\ntogood extrawesternaud8tato|310a3 ou; good to\nchoice do $3 6Ca66U: common to choice extra at.\nLouis |J H'aS 4'J . Wheat, receipts 2,7jO bushels;\nexports31,638 l»iuheb>; sjkjI lower aud heavy;op¬\ntions opened strong uud %a%o higher, butioou\nweakened aud drouned lka'io. eloslnu linaw: uiu\n7.984,000bushels ot luturu; al.uuo bushel* of spot;\nNo. 2 spring bile; ungraded red 80alH>Ho; No. 'ireil\n88He; No. 1 while WHo; No. 2 red February\n87*aa9o, cli»ing at h)yto: March\ndosing at KSjg'Ji April WHaWo, closing at\n. J OKo; May u.MaMtfc, elodug at Ml%o;\nnine 92^93%", closing at U'-k)io; July S&Hawe,\nclosing at 93k« August 9J%a944dc,clouugat'JJjwc;\nSeptember 955ia9;ic,clo«jiiguiV6Ho; December 9.tHc\nall 00H, closing al 9hHc. Corn, spot lower; options\nopened liluher, cloaca dull at an advucce: receipt!\n40,rn bushel*; cx|K)rU 120,010 bushel*; hiIon741,000\nbushels of futures; 124,0OJ bushel* of aoot; un\ngraded 4fl»l9o; No. 3 47c; steamer 47%h47H«;\nNo. 2 4l%ufi0o: ungraded white 4Sj; No. 2 Jauuary\n elodug .at £0c; February 48fc*!llHo, clos-\nlug at 48j£o; March W/fakMMPt dosing at 4M£c;\nApril 4)Ho: Muy 47^tstfc. clotlug at 48a Oat*\nlower; receipt* (w.fiW btuheli; export* l.' .OO bush-\nela; mixed western 9tiH*38c; white do. 89a43o. Hay\nQrm. hops steady. Cufleo, spot fair; Moduli;\noption* a shade higher but (|U ct; sales 12,0C0 bags;\nJanuary 6.40j; February C.60afl.t>6o; March\n0.60o; April C.UAU<tto; May fl,0Uati.T0c;\nJuly 6 75a; December fi.DOc; October(LWXt. MiiKar\nateady and quiet; fa'r to good refining GHattfio;\nrellucd dull; A 4H*iH'} outioaf and crush-xl 7a\n7Uu; cubed Oiflftc. Molasses ateady aud quiet.\nBice llrm. Turpentine stronger at 41c, 1-gga easier\nand dull; r«cdpl*4tM packagts; western «KJa23Hc.\nl'ork llriuly held; trade very quiet; uum 9:0 25a\n1076. Cut moat* firm; sales: pickled bellies bH»\n6^« Middles quiet and firm; long cleat; fr^e\nUrd more dolug; sale*: western atcara apot 0.4ta\n0 60e: oil'grade 8.26a; January 0 4sat».ft0c; Febru¬\nary 6 4ttutt.60u; March U.r*3a0.bfic; April tt.6Ka0.6Uo;\nMay fl.ttiaO.Gto; Juris fl.'Cc; city steam 0 86a0.40o.\nButter steady and in fair demand; western 12a83o:\nF.Ik In creamery Sialic. ihceso firm aud moderuto\ninquiry.
26c3da9e680ef408289ddcb036823706 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.0479451737697 58.275556 -134.3925 The Whitehorse Star tells of the won¬\nders of the mineral springs located at\nTenakee, Alaska. Ed Marcotte, a\nWhitehorse tonsorialist, went to the\nsprings and the Star says: One month's\nbathing in the life-giving, health-pre¬\nserving waters of the hot springs at J\nTenakee, served to eradicate from the\nMarcotte system four pouuds of tin,\nthree and a half of pewter, forty\nounces of bornite, twenty-seven ounces\nof pyrites of iron, two quarts of nico¬\ntine and nine clay pipes, also several\nhundred wads of pepsin chewing gum.\nThe refusal of some of the old line j\nsteamships to land at the Douglas dock\nis quite in contrast with the efforts to j\ntie up at other places. The Haines j\nPioueer Press relates the following:\nThe S. S . Jefferson had a hard time\nmaking a landiug on her last trip.\nAfter three unsuccessful attempts,\nCapt. Nord pulled out for Skagway and\nreturning made three more attempts\n then steamed up into theChilkoot\nto await the abatement of the wind\nand finally got tied up early the next\nmorning. A stiff off-shore wind was\nthe cause of the delay.\nThe Washington- Alaska bank o? Fair¬\nbanks suspended payment on Jan. 4th,\nand P. W . Hawkins, cashier and act¬\ning manager of the defunct institution,\nwas appointed receiver by the federal\ncourt. Depositors of the closed bauk\nheld a mass meeting on the night of\nJan. 5th and passed resolutions asking\nthe court to appoint E. H . Mack, for¬\nmerly clerk of the court, as co-receiver.\nReceiver Hawkins states that the assets\nof the Washington-Alaska bank are\nmore than $1,000,000, including 6311,000\nof Gold Bar Lumber Company stock,\nnow in the Dexter Horton National\nbank, Seattle; cash on hand, 675,000;\nloans and discounts, $610,000; realty,\npersonal and mining property, $50,000.\nThe liabilities are S900,000. A majority\nof the depositors are workingmen,\nminers and clerk9.
47150d9afab69da498b9e19c2b0c9375 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.7082191463724 39.513775 -121.556359 Sec. 7. Whenever, <m the first tiny of Jrnnary or\nJuly in any year, there remains, after the payment of\nthe interest as hereinafter provided, a surplus of ten\nthousand dollars or ore, it shall lie the duly of the\nTreasurer to advertise for the space of one week, in\none dally paper published in English, iu the city of\nNew York, and for one month m one dully newspa-\nper published in English at the Slate Capilal. for\nsealed proposals, to be opened one month alter Ihe\nexpiration ol such publications liy the Treasurer, iu\npresence of ihe Govern >r or Com piroller, at Ihe Slate\nCapital, for the surrender of bonds issued under this\nAct, which advertisement shall stale the amount of\nmonev he has on hand for the purpose ol redemption,\nand they shall accept the lowes proposals, at rules\nnot excis'd log par value as may redeem the greatest\namount ot bonds until tho amount ol cash on hand\nfor redemption is exhausted; fifnvidrd, hnwerer, in\ncase a sufficient amount ol such bonds shall not be\nollered, as aforesaid, to exhaust the sinking fund to a\nless amount Ilian leu thousand dollars, then it is\nhereby made the duly ol the Treasurer to advertise\nin two newspapers, one in York and one al the\nCapital of the Mule, for three months which adver-\ntisements shall state Ihe amount iu the sinking fund,\nand ttie number of bonds numbering them in tho\norder of their issuance, which such fund is set apart\nlo pay and discharge; and if such bonds, so num-\nbered 111 such adverliseu euts, shall hot he presented\nfor payment and cancellation w ithin three months\nfrom ihe expiration ot such publication, then such\nfund shall remain in the Treasury lo discharge such\nbonds whenever presented—bill they shall draw no\ninterest after such publication as last aforesaid.\nSec-H . The Treasurer <u Slate shall keep full and\nparticular account and record of all his proceedings\nunder this Act, and of the bonds redeemed and sur\nrendered, .md he shall transmit to the Governor an\nabstract of all his proceedings miner this Act, with\nhis annual report, to Ire by ihe Governor laid before\nthe Legislature ; and all I rook s and papers pertain-\ning to the matters provided for in this Act. shall at all\ntimes tre open to the inspection of any pa ly interest-\ned, or the Governor, or ihe Attorney General, or a\ncommittee of either brunch of the Legislature, ora\njoint committee ol both.
386f00191961c829596a5be378b8de7d THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1875.8232876395232 39.743941 -84.63662 These words were overheard by one\nMakepeace, a village constable.and repeat\ned next day to the rector, who was a magis\ntrate. So much importance was attached\nto them that Mrs. Hand was sent for,\nand privately examined by the magis-\ntrates. She swore positively that Squire\nUreene was the man who paid her the\nmysterious visit, and accompanied her\nto Sunderland. There was but one thing\nto do to arrest Squire Greene for the\nmurder of his own brother. This was\ndone, and Mrs. Band's identification of\nhim was complete. It will be remem\nbered that when Mrs. Band's strange\nvisitor changed his clothes for her de\nceased husband s, he would not trust tne\nwoman out of his presence, but insisted\nthat she should remain in the room.\nWhen he removed his shirt he remarked\nthat he could see behind him, as he had\ntwo heads, at the same time pointing out\na between his shoulders, which\nclosely resembled a rudimentary head.\nOn examination, Squire Greene was\nfound to have an excrescence in the same\nplace and precisely similar to that on the\nstrange man, as described by Mrs. Hand,\nThere was an attempt made to prove an\nalibi, but it was shown by the prosecu\ntion that at the time of the murder of\nthe late Squire, his brother was living in\nthe slums of a low street in Sunderland ;\nthat he disappeared for a day ; and on\nhis return was flush of money. He ex-\nplained this by stating that he went to\nHoughton by appointment, met his\nbrother the very evening before the mur\nder, and received from him one hundred\npounds to secure himself a decent outfit\nprior to his returning home to lead a\nnew life. This story was not credited,\nand the Squire was tried and found\nguilty, and hanged at inn-ha-
8115d37463f24189831dd5f121c0b268 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.2397259956874 43.798358 -73.087921 limit its depressing despotism to the case of\ntotal denial of its right divine. This is a\nson of high treason which might be expect\ned to arouse its ire. But it also takes into\nits vengeance any partial denial of its puri\nty, and on smaller occasions thunders forth\nits unrelenting anger.. When any young\nman,, happily conscious of the wickedness\nof learning to shoot Lis fellow creatures\nrefuses to be drilled and bear deadly arm\nagainst the innocent, the guns of the-wi- l\nling are 'pointed at his head, and long im\npiUonroent as the lightest expiation, follows.\nSuch a mode, of protecting the persons of\nits citizen;of respecting their native feel-\ning?, their purest sentiments, seems abund-\nantly curious, and difficult ef reconciliation\nwith our intuitive moral precepts.\nMany. years have not elapsed since we\nwere a like predicament regarding the\nchurch. It is still thought in some countries\nthat a legislative enactment, a procedure of\ncollective man, is necessary to the due up-\nholding of Divine Laws. Some people still\nthink, or pretend to think, that communities\nand nations can be" made religious by act of\nparliament. We have, however, beneficial-\nly escaped from this unworthy predicament,\nand it is not a very profound foresight to\nprophecy that we shall soon be rid of the\none In question. We prefer a" voluntary\nchurch as the only 4 rue church. We shall\nshortly devfse a voluntary political organiz\nation as the only true slate. Humn beings,\nwe are now convinced, can not be rendered\nmore fit for heaven by human coercion;\nNeither can they, by such a contrivance, be\nbetter qualified for a true life on earth.-
3768b7920a77939ef759e7922db6a90f COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.03698626966 41.262128 -95.861391 Daring tbe dme sbey w«re making\nsuch r pealed aad violent efforts to hurst\nopen my door, they gave me no mtima-\ntioii tbat tbey wers government officers,\nor that L'oay had aay government authori­\nty- for iav wreet. Tntv <saaae like assas-\naia« aod robbers-—they behaved like as-\nttMiae aad robbers, and had I act been\ninforms by the bo<u»tng* of certain rs-\npubiie^ns that affidav its designed to eause ;\nmy afreet had been forwarded to tie War\nDepariinetit, I shoaid aiost undoubtedly\nhav« t.iken these govwnsBMt ruffians for\nmidnight robbers.\nWh u. after my eaptore, I demanded\nto kaow by what authority they had thus\nrudnly broken into my room, and by wbat\naattiority tbey aad thus seised my per­\nson, they very grumolingiy informed me\nthat they were acting under authority of\nthe War Department. 1 demanded\nto be shown their warrant. Tbey in­\nformed uie that 1 had aa right to make\naay such demand—that ths order which\nthey bekl was for their protection, and\nnot for my gratification. Tbey, however,\npermitted m» to see st.\nThe document was signed by tha As­\nsistant decrt-tary af War—was dated at\nWashington City, Aug. 2, isbi. it\ndirected to W H. Seott, and eommts\ntioasd him to take with bim oae assist\n•at, and to proceed to Laaaa&ter, Ohio,\narrest Jidaoa B. Olds, aad to eonvey him\nto Ne%t ¥ jrs aad deliver him to tha com\nmsftdiug officer of Foci Lafayette; aad\nto.u. if &« was resisted ia ths execution\nof ths ordar, he was direoted to osdl npon\nGov. Tod, of Ohio, for saob aatiaaanoe\nas migtit bs aesoaaary.\nThe order contained ao intimation of
7f0b90135f5eabd38d5aa2fc2926a1e9 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8620218263004 39.513775 -121.556359 genlto urinary organs for so many y<ir ( n i- him\n|KTteclly master of »yplinllic ■.i-t a-i s .\nThe large number of aggravated ruses that he l as\nperfectly cured after they lime la i n given up by\nmany others is the only proof that a physician re-\nquires nl his id it Illy . Hr Tn.er would stale that hn\ncan cure any mill all cases nl i urietles of the ills, lire,\ntin mailer how Intitr slandiiur. nr what progri the\ndisease has made, every patient can rely upon a cere.\nHr Tn/.i r has. it isweil known, taken patients\nfcolll Hie very Verge of the irrave, and restored them\ntn perfect health He would furl her state, that he\ndeems it sufficient to attract the alielilinn of those\nwho might need the servieesol n physician in all\ncases, hut particularly ffho-e enumerated in the ad-\nvertisement, nut tin y would lest my minis as\na practitioner;and the result nt my practice has lieen\nthus far satisfactory to my | .eieuls and myself Nor\ndo I deem il necessary In till columns nl the newspa-\npers with fulsome einpric and limetia-lic advertise-\nment, professing niy ability In lie;d all dl-easns flesh\nis lieir to, for to do Ihnl i must he something ninro\nthnn .Man. hit* to give those that are ntlllcled wild\nVenereal. tlirnaic, ulid ntl.er diseases. In understand\nfrom Intitr experience, 1 am lolly competent In treat\nthem successfully,\nMy regard lor Hie dignity of Hie t lii al profession.\nIn w lileti I have the honor to belong, deters me Imin\ni nmmitln.jj any ai l savoring ol rank quackery, and\nregard lor my own dignity would preieiilmy placing\ninysi II on a par with quacks and nnsiriim y • nders of\ntlin present ace.
0d0c6827cf8f73f63f000556c308dfba THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.1734972361364 46.187885 -123.831256 By a careful examination of in-\nsurance reports wo find that there\nhas been a sharp reform with re-\nference to examinations, (and that\nno man can now got any amount of\ninsurance who has tho least develop-\nment of kidney disorder,) because\nthey find that sixty out of every\nhundred in this country do, either\ndirectly or indirectly, sufler from\nkidney disease. Henco no reliable\ncompany will insure a man except\nafter a rigid urinary examination.\nThis reminds us of a little instance\nwhich occurred a short timo ago.\nA fellow editor was an applicant for\na respectable amount of insurance.\nHe was rejected on examination,\nbecause, unknown to himself, his\nkidneys were diseased. The shrewd\nagent, however, did not give up the\ncase. He had an eye to business and\nto his commission, and said : "Don't\nyou worry; you get a half dozen\nbottles of "Warner's safo cure, take it\naccording to directions and in about\na month come around, and we will\nhave anothci examination. I know\nyou will find yourself all tight and\nwill get your policy."\nThe editor expressed surprise at\nthe agent's faith, but the latter\nreplied: "This point is a valuable\none. Very many insurance \nall over tho country, when they find\na customer rejected for this cause,\ngive similar advice, and eventually\nhe gets the insurance."\nWhat are we to infer from such\ncircumstances? Havo shrewd in-\nsurance men, as well as other shrewd\nbusiness men,found the secret answei\nto the inquiry? Is it possible that\nour columns have been proclaiming,\nin the form of advertisements, what\nhas proved a blessing in disguise to\nmillions, and yet by many ignored\nas an advertisement?\nIn our files wo find thousands ol\nstrong testimonials for Warner's safe\ncure, no two alike, which could not\nexist except upon a basis of truth ;\nindeed, thev are published under a\nguarantee of 5,000 to any ono who\nwill disprove their correctness, and\nthis offer has been standing, wo are\ntold, for more than four years.\nUndoubtedly this article, which is\nsimply dealing out justice, will be\nconsidered as an advertisement and\nbe rejected by many as such.\nWo have not space nor timo to" dis-\ncuss the proposition that a poor\nthing could not succeed to tho extent\nthat this great remedy has succeeded,\ncould not become so popular without\nmerit even if pushod by a Vanderbilt\nor an Astor.
06c3593c037aae912453b6d9dec33ad6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.2671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 Yesterday at noon Col. Charley Shay,\nwho for several seasons past has been tbe\nefficient and popular mauagor ol the\nAcademy ol Music, Beveled his connection\nwith that theatre, which has become well\nknown everywhere as bis, and Mr. 0, C.\nGentber, a well known business man of\nthla city with a taste for managerial life,\nassumed control. Tbe announcement ol\nthe change will he quite a surprise to the\npublic, though It has been known to a\nlimited few for several weeks that such a\nchange was contemplated.\nThe change of managers will not result\nin any special alteration of the plana or\ncharacter of the Academy us au amuse¬\nment resort. Col. Shay bad hooked good\nattractions and these will appear according\nto biB contracts, the new management as¬\nsuming his engagements and continuing\nthe policy which nus governed Col, Shuy's\nmanagement in the past.\nMr. Gentber is au experienced man of\nbusiness, energetic, enterprising and suc¬\ncessful in his past ventures. He will\ndoubtless make a continued success the\ntheatre, and keep It up to the high stand¬\nard iu which Col. Shay lias established it\nin the public estimation.\nMr. Genther said last evening that it\nwould be bis aim to make the theatre\nbetter, more popular ami more vorthy ol\npublic Bupport than ever. Ilia high stand¬\ning in the buaiuess community will give\nhim In advauce the conlldonce ol the pub¬\nlic. lie ia a progressive spirited citizen,\nand his management may be expected to\nredound to tbe advantage ol tbe bouse and\nits patrols. He desires to run the pre¬\nsent season up to the end ol Julie, and\nalter closing will renovate and relit the\nhouse throughout lor next season.\nCol, Shay is a llle-Iong theatrical man¬\nager, with a national reputation. He was\nformerly a well known traveling manager,\nand it is sale to predict that be will not he\nout of the bunineta long, hero or else¬\nwhere. A large circle ol friends will sin¬\ncerely wish hiui success In any new un¬\ndertaking.
1a4536a397a970f1b090c94c37226de3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 . W W UUWIUUVIUU ui llbl. i»l, T* illluil\nis Assistant Becrct&ry to tho Conventio\nvaa confirmed, when the chairman ac\njounced the rules governing speakei\nvho wished to be recognized by the chai\nind the Secretary read lists of the nam<\n)ii several standing committees.\nThe applications of Bishop Seymour,\nIllinois, and Bishop Wells, of Wisconeii\nor an election to the houso of Bishoi\nvas referred to that body. A memorii\nvas received frotn the diocese of Wiscoi\ntin, asking that the Convention takeatcj\n0 secure an English version ofthe Nicer\n:reed, which would correspond as near!\nls possible to tho original text, was r(\nerred to the Committee on Prayer Book\n1 memorial was also received from tl\nliocese of California, petitioning that the\nliocese should be divided as it was muc\n;oo large for one Bishop to visit, and wi\nelerred to the Committee on Canons.\nResolutions expressing gratification\nhe presence of the Bishops of Litchflel\nMontreal and in Conventic\n«rere adopted, as were also resolutioi\nnvitingthe members of the Orthodc\nIUU wwtt uuiukuso IU ocaia 1U tuu UUU\nrhe rules to govern the Convention wei\nliscussed at some length, the old ruli\nMing taken up section by section, ar\nliscusaed, amended or not as the case ri\nquired, and adopted. The considerate\ndi" rules was suspended to enable the Sc\nretary to announce that tho annual mee\ning ol the Indian Commissioners wou\ntake place at its own church at thri\no'clook this alternoon. The Chair a]\npointed Dr. Back, Dr. Vinton, Chi\nJustice Waite, and Mr. Kacc, a Commi\ntee to tender thanks to tbe Bishop\nLitr.hfleld lor his sermon yesterday, alt\nwhich a recess was taken.\nAfter recess a memorial from Texs\nasking that that diocese bo divided, w\nreferred to the Committee on Canona.\nIt wsb resolved that the hoar of noi\nto-morrow bo appointed for hearing im\nmorial aiklrcesus from the dclegatii\nIrom Canada.
0ff5219888ada81e22e91fe88edd332d THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1908.7609289301254 35.072562 -98.243663 When It einly takes a few mlnutcH\neach day and half an hour one day a\nweek te keep tho nulls looking nice1\nnnd well groomed It Is surprising how\nmany peoplu neglect the nails. In the\nfirst place the hands should be\nscrubbed once a day to keep them\nclean. Kven people who have no man.\nmil labor at all to perform with the\nhands will find that they will become\ndirty from merely coming In contact\nwith the articles which every one must\nhandle. Wash the hands, especially\nthe knuckles mid nails, with n null\nbrush and warm soap suds until they\nglow nnd dry them carefully. Then\ntake a piece of orange wood stick nnd\ncarefully loosen tho cuticle around the\nnails, being sure to get it all loose,\nbut not to use the stick roughly\nenough to Injure the young null, ror\n will produce the white spotH\nwhich are so ugly on n nail. Then\nwith a scissoiB and file shnpe the nails\ncarefully, making them round Instead\nof pointed. If there are any hang-\nnails they should be carefully snipped\naway with the scissors, but If tho\nornngo wood stick Is used every day\nthere will be no hangnails. Then rub\na tiny bit of vnsellnu on the nails and\ntub It In well. Now cover tho chamois\nskin buffer with the powder polish and\nrub the nails briskly until tho desited\namount of "shine" has been produced.\nThen wash tho hands carefully again,\npushing back the cuticle which you\nloosened with tho towel. Now rub (he\nnails of one hand em the palm of the\nother and the shlno will reappear. Ten\nminutes devoted to the nails each day\nwill keep them In perfect trim.
00199afe33433e6f8e51485cb956fa53 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8315068176053 40.063962 -80.720915 The Roman Catholic Council at Bal- ii\ntimore has just adjourned, and after tl\nthe fashion of its church has not admit- pi\nted the publlo to much knowledge of its n\ndoings. It is stated that Archbishop ^\nPurcell;'ih a'sermon on- the last day of 01\nthe meeting, intimated that the grand li\nobject of assembling the Council was n\nto redeem the United States to the\nCatholic faith. In a word, a grand u\neffort of proaolytiam is to be commenced p\nin order that the Pope may recover the s<\niground that-he is losing in Europe, e;\nThe Council sent to the Holy Fatter its a'\npledges of fidelity, and sorely is he Jn d\nneed of all the consolation he can draw h\nfrom its promises of affection and help, n\nWhether he was invited to find a home ii\nhere does not appear. For him to ii\nmake such a move would involve such p\nchanges as are quite alien to the habits tl\nand doctrines or the Papacy. It u\ninvolve a surrender of the temporal *\npower, for which there are no signs of ti\nits being ready. And yet, to all appear- s<\na nee, it is .likely to lose what it is: not g\n. ready to surrender. . Archbishop..Man- -fl\nning has been arguing lately in London n\nthat somehow it has divinity enough n\nto maintain itself after French bayo- w\nnets have -withdrawn;- But- that is a e'\nhope only for such as< have bis amount tl\nof faith. The latest information is by u\nthe Atlantio Telegraph, that Spain is tl\ngoing to step into the vacant protecto- a:\nrate. Brit Queen Isabella has uses w\nenough for'the little money she has, not £\nto have a great deal to spare for sus- a\ntaining an army in Bome. Spain has b\nquite enough in hand to take care of d\nitself. The Antibes Legion, which has e]\nbeen enlisted for this special service,\nhas already arrived in Koine, and has\nso .soon shown very doubtful qualiiica-
35c50548f60f743e8dbfdf1b36bb198d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.050684899797 41.681744 -72.788147 Jim Creegan, a crook James M. Maher\nMr. Marshall, a detective Fred Sutton\nThe plot of the piece is difficult to\ndiscern until the final act and. then it\nis all easily understood. Courtland\nWainwright has been a district attor-\nney in New York and in that capacity\nlie sent a number of people to prison,\nsome to the electric chair, among\nthem one Watkins, and his brother\nAndrew, vowed he would be avenged\nupon him. He began by sending him\nwhite cards to indicate that he was on\nhis track, red cards to show that he\nwas closing in on him and black cards\nto prove that he was ready to strike.\nWatkins was unknown to Wainwright\nand although he came to the latter's\nhome it was not known that it was he\nwho was sending the cards. Me ob-\ntained the four members of the Blount\nfamily, parents, son and daughter, to\ncome to New York, under the guise\nof respectability and Wainwright, who\nhad previously the girl and who\nhad since been in love with her, mar-\nried her and the rest of the family\nwent to live with them. The robbery\nof the safe was planned and when\nMrs. Wainwright was informed by\nHawkins of what was going to take\nplace he gave her a large sum of\nmoney to give to the burglar and when\nshe did this a detective pounced upon\nher and the burglar, Wainwright hjm-se- lf\nappearing on the scene and the be-\nginning of the end was In sight. He\nlearned the truth tnen, souglit to\nhave Hawkins, who seemed to know a\ngreat deal about everybody, sent to\nan insane asylum but failed and when\nthe "Master Mind" threatened to ex-\npose the details of his family relation-\nship and destroy his ambition to be-\ncome governor, Wainwright signed a\npaper withdrawing from the contest.\nHawkins upon the pleading of the at-\ntorney's wife destroyed the document\nand withdrew from all connection\nwith the case.
7cd57a63f43aaf62fe4ce7250acbd4aa THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.7144808426938 32.408477 -91.186777 14th. 1919. and the contract made with 11\nthe City of New Orleans under date of\nAugust 16th. 1918. through the Bert t\nRailroad Commission to carry into n\neffect Act No. 8 of 1918 In relation to "\nWld Navigation Canal are hereby rati- a\nled and confirmed. Baid Board shall\nhave the power to lease for manofac- e\nturing. commercIal and business pur-\npose, lands acquired for said canal. t\nch leases may run for a term not\nexceeding twenty years at a fixed t\nrental without any provision for re-\nnewal, readjustment or reappralsement.\nbut may run for a term not exceeding\nninety-nine (99) years, provided they\nshall contain a clause or clauses for\nreappraisal of the promises and a re-\nadjustment of the rental at Intervals\nnot exceeding tean (10) years aft..r the a\n of the fi:sat twenty-year\nperiod. In the event that the said\nBoard aml the lessee cannot agree upon\nthe readjustment and reapprsis.r .senst,\nthey each shall appoint an aristrator\nwho shahl have the powers of amicable\n•empounders to whom the matter shaill\nbe referred for decision, and in cdse of\ndisagreement they shall appoint jmn umr- t\npire and decision of any two s.iall be t\nbinding upon the part'es. Said ioard I\nmay also construct warehouses. ele-\nvators, and other buildings ard In--\nprovementa upon thie said canal, hut\nthe revenues from tire navigation ",anal\nshall be kept separate from the othe.r\nrevemuee of the Port. Such canal rev- 1\nenues shall be de-med to include t\nrentals of all lands leased upon the\ncanal, lock charges. and charges for\npassages, through the c(anal. If
14998d2c7b43d9a336091e254d890fd6 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1913.064383529934 36.620892 -90.823455 Geo E. Ponder, county assessor, pre\nsented the land and personal tax booka\n(or the assessment of 1912 and taxes of\n1013, which were examined by the court\nsnd approved and accepted, and he was\nallowed the sum of $916.77 for the work,\none half to be pail by the oounty, and\nthe remainder to be paid by the state, a\nwarrant being ordered issued to him for\nthe county's part, $457 88,\nThe court ordered all forsser orders\nredisricting the county into road dis-\ntricts recinded; and then made an order\nrcdlstricting and establishing the fol-\nlowing new road districts.\nRoad district No. 1 shall be composed\nof the munioipal township of Pine.\nDistrict No. 2 . to be composed of the\nmunicipal township of Gatewood.\nDistrict No. 3, to be composed of the\nmunicipal township of Union.\nDistrict No. 4, to be composed of Pre\ncinct No. 1, of Current River township.\nDistrict No. 6, to be composed of Pre\nclnot No. 2, of Current River \nDistrict No. 6, to be composed of Pre\ncinct No. I, of Sherley township.\nDlstriot No. 7, to be composed of Pre- -\nclnot No. 2 , of Sberley township.\nDistrict No. 8, to be composed of Pre\ncinct No 1, ef Jordan township.\nDistrict No 9, to be oomposed of Pre\ncinct No. 2, of Jordan township.\nDistrict No. 10, to be composed of the\nmunicipal township of Johnson\nDistriot No. II, to be composed of the\nmunioipal township of Flatwoods,\nDistrict No. 12, to be eompoaed of the\nmunicipal township of Washington.\nDistrict No. 13, to be eompoaed of tht\nmunicipal township of Varner,\nDUtriot No. 11, to be composed of tht\nmunicipal township of Thomas.\nDistrict No. 15, to be composed of\nPrecinct No. 1, of Harris towathip\nDistriot No. 16, to be composed Cf\nPrecinct No. 2, of Harris township,\nDistrict No. 17, to be composed of the\nmunicipal township ef Doniphan\nDistrict No. 18, to be composed of tht\nasuatoioai lowneain m
ce24d3c205a20d6b5e4373aab8d8ccdb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.305479420345 41.681744 -72.788147 That the proposed widening of\nMain street from North Main to\nSchool stroots through the expe-\ndient of cutting down the sidewalk\nspace should be postponed for the\ntime being, was the report of City\nEngineer Carleton W. Buell, repre-\nsenting tho special committee re-\ncently appointed by the city board,\nto the council last night. Further\nrecommendation was made by the\nspecial committee through Mr. Buell\nthat the ordlnanco committee draw\nup a no parking ordinance for the\nstreet and that trolley cars bo pro-\nhibited from using that section of\nthe street for a terminal point. The\nrecommendation was also made that\nthe terminal of the Terryvllle cars\nbe established on School street and\nanother terminal be on North Main\nstreet at the city hall so that the\npresent congestion the Main\nstreet river bridge be eliminated.\nThe council voted to accept the re-\nport and to carry out the recom-\nmendations with tho exception of\nCouncilman Wilbur H. Kelsey, who\nannounced that he wished to be put\non record as opposing the report or\naction other than one favoring the\nwidening of the street. Councilman\nFrank Graves concurred with Mr.\nKelsey in saying that he favored the\nstreet widening but said that the\ncouncil was in a dilemma.\nIn presenting his report, Mr.\nBuell said that the cutting down of\nthe sidewalk space would not im-\nprove the situation to any great ex-\ntent arid as opposition to the move\nhad developed, it was unwise to at-\ntempt to rush matters and to force\nanything undesirable down tho peo-\nple's throats.
107aeb693af38ec2ba130d075ee8fe91 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.4835616121259 44.939157 -123.033121 in a day or two. It will take up the St. Johns case in a short\ntime and this will occupy its attention for two or more woeks. It is a\nvery important case, being somewhat similar to that of Salem. St. Johns,\nthough, is even more complicated than is the Salem matter, as it involves not\nonly prices, but poor service and poor wter are both in the St. John's caso,\nwhile hero the main contention is that the charges are excessive. Besides the\nSt. Johns cmso there aro several others ahead of Sulem, so that it is probable\nthat the latter will not come up for two or three months. However, the mat-to- r\nhas boen started and will be reached in good time, and will finally be ad-\njudicated. That is the main thing, that we are in tho of reaching a set-\ntlement of a mattor that ought to havo been settled long ago. While many\nfind fault with the quality of the water, this is generally accepted as being\ngood, and tho chargo for the same is what has caused the greatost complaint.\nWhen the cost of water for a family is greater than it coBts that same family\nfor bread, there is somothing the matter with the water bills, and this is what\nSalem i trying to find out. No doubt tho water company will put up a hard\nfight, and it behooves the city fathers to prepare for this, and to secure such\nassistance for the city attorney as he may desire. It is a question that goes\ndeeper than just the bills wo have to pay, for oxcossive wator rates sorve to\nprevent others locating hero.
7c7b0a61ae16f8808c7b72f462680075 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5915300230217 39.290882 -76.610759 After all, however, you have shrunk before the\nnaked facts of the case, even when set in the\nvery weakest light in which your utmost inge-\nnuity could place them; and consequently you\nfortify your absurd "accusations by statements\nwhich are untrue, and reasons which are ridicu-\nlous. Thus you say of the first and second num-\nbers, published in the Post, and headed Geologi-\ncal Discussion, (being the two noticed by us, in\nour March number,) "Dr. B. knew full well that\nthey came from my pen; and so knowing, assail-\ned you "with the most offensive personalities."\nThese statements are both incorrect; for there is\nno personality, much less an offensive one,against\nany body, much less against you, in the article\nto which you allude: and I did not know, when\n1 wrote it, that you were the author of the other\npapers; nay, did not believe it when I first heard\nit- Dr. Horwitz showed me those two papers,\nand also an extremely severe article in manu-\nscript against you as their author; which. I must\nsay, being their author, you richly deserved.?\nBut I urged Irim not to publish his answer, as-\nsuring him that, in my opinion, you could not be\ntheir author; since you not only professed to be\na Christian, but had in the most solemn manner\ndeclared your belief in the plenary inspiration\nof the Scriptures, and recorded your testimony\nagainst the fatal heresies of the church of Rome;\nwhereas, in these two papers, the author appear-\ned to mc, to rank enlightened defence of scrip-\nture truth in the same category with papal per-\nsecution, and actually used in regard to the Bi-\nble not only the arguments, but the gibes' of\ninfidels.
f94e5c9f13995edc94d481a9f4e1efe4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.5915300230217 41.681744 -72.788147 else had made any complaints to the\npolice regarding gambling being con-\nducted at the carnival grounds, but\nthat anything that was done by tho\npolice was done in accordance with\nstanding orders that all gambling de-\nvices discovered in operation shall be\npromptly closed by the police. He\ncould not say whether Judd's name\nhad been used by any of the patrol-\nmen at the grounds, adding that if It\nhad, it would be a very easy matter\nfor Alderman Judd to get in com-\nmunication with his informant and\nlearn the patrolman's name.\nCouncilman David L. Nalr, who\nwas quoted by Judd as authority for\nthe statement that there was gambling\nat the first carnival, was shown the\nletter written by Juddd and said that\nthe letter explained situation cor\nrectly and thoroughly. He said that\nhe had visited the carnival grounds\nduring the first carnival and saw a\ngambling wheel In operation, and had\nspoke of it to Chief Hart, but had\nmade no formal complaint. He said\nthat he did not know whether the\nwheel was closed during the carnival\nor whether It continued in operation.\nHe said he knew nothing about the\nwheel that was alleged to have been\nin operation at the second carnival, or\nthe closing up of It.\nIn commenting on his letter. Al\nderman; Judd, said that he wished to\nemphasise the fact that he had made\nno charges against anybody, but had\nsimply had asked a few questions that\nhe felt he had a right to ask. His\nletter was:
07ed44c2a1209e6fe4f40400873aed56 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.03698626966 41.004121 -76.453816 Secretary Lamar was married at 10\no'clock on the flth at tho residence of\nthe brido by Hev. William Park, of\nSandersvillc, to Mrs. William S. Holt,\nof Macon, Georgia.\nMrs Lamar is a daughter of tho late\nJames Dean, of Macon, and iu early\nlife was one of tho bcautie? of the\nSouth. Sho grew to womanhood among\ntho feudal liko institutions which flour-\nished in that section heforo tho war,\nand was courted and loved by half tho\nsops of tho neighboring planters. Sur-\nrounded by every luxury that wealth\ncould buy, sho was not eager to yield\nher heart to any man. The two most\nprominent, as well as most persistent,\nsuitors for her favor wero Mr. Lamar\nand tho late Judge Holt, whose efforts\nsecured the favor of tho parents and\n tlio consent of tho maid and tho\ntwo wore finally uniti-- in marriage.\nAfter mourning for soveral years, Mr.\nLamar also married, and, though both\nwore faithful to their marriage vows,\nit is said that each cherished the mem-\nory of tho other through life. The palo\nstudent, with his intellectual face,\ncrowned by its masses of dark curling\nhair, who had taught her in his wooing\ntho courses of the stars, held an inter-\nest to Mrs. Holt that not even her\nwealthy and devoted husband had, and\nwhen he died aud the wife of tho Sec-\nretary ww also laid to rest, tho two\nturned to each other without reserve.\nAt tho time of General Unit's death\nhe was tho head of a Georgia railway\ncompany and ono of tho richest men in\nthat section.
89427d62b6bfa05b9e804f120e5454f0 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.872950788049 39.513775 -121.556359 As u medical mini it is the duty of every physician\nto Uaik at disease as it effects In allh ami life, ami hi*\nsole object should be l<> mitigate, us far ns lies in his\npower, the bodily suffering. Iluinan iiiiturv nt best is\nbut frail, all are liable to misfortune.\n(If all ibe ill* tb. t affect man none are mere terrible\nthan those of a private nature.—Dreadful as It Is in\nthe person w ho contracts it frightful as are its ravag-\nes upon hisconstitiitinn. ending frequently in deslrnc-\nlion and a loathsome grave, it becomes of Mill greater\nimportance when it is transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such being the er.se how necessary It be-\ncomes that every one nav ing the least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoil at once by consulting some physician, whose\nre#|*Clnlhlliiy and education enables him to warrant\na safe. s[iee.lv. and penmuiei.t cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity, UK VOUXt, feels called upon to\nslate that, by long study and extensive practice, h*\ntms helome perfect master of ail those diseases which\ncorns under the denomination venereal, and hav-\ning paid more attention to that one'branch than any\nother physician in the I'nited Stales, he feels himself\nbetter qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in ail its forms, such as ulcers, swelling In\nthegromis, nicer in the throat.secondary syphilis, cu -\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, fertnary syphilis, sy-\nphilis in children, merciirenl syphilitic affections, gon-\norrhea, gleet, strictures, false pas-ages, inffiimntlon of\nthe bladder and protrate glands, excoriations, tumors,\npostuh s, A le. , me ns laiinliiir to him as liie most com-\nmon tilings of daily observation.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent rases In a few\ndays and finds no difficulty in curing those of long\nduration, without submitting the patient to am ii treat-\nment as will draw upon him the alightesi suspicion\nor oblige him to neglect Ids hu. -iuess whether within\n(airs or without. The diet need not he changed, ex -\ncept in cases of severe inflaipiition. There are in flail-\nforma patients uimoiinling to over two thousand in\nthe past year! lluit could furnish proof of this; but\nthese are* matters thot requTe tbi nicest eecresy which\nhe always preserves.
03bf0ff9379f2a238971cadaf0767bbf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.3410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 worse. Scales would form over the sores and then dry out until they would\ncrack and pop open, showing a watery matter. My skin was all liko a dry\nwrapper. It felt as though it hud dried on mo. Tho scalos were so bad Ihut\nthev would collect in tho bed and have to be shaken out. It was about this tiiny\nthat I commenced using B. B . B. I was so bml that I was ashamed to tuso my urn\noil hoforo a neighbor. I hod used flvo bottles of another medlclno without noticing\nany effect; but when I commenccd to take B. B . B . tho sores carno out thickor\nthun before, and they burned llko flro! they were Immense blotches of fire that\nwould burn so I could not sleop. Tho way they burned and Itched can not bo\ntold, and I hopo no one elao may over know from experience, Tho only relief 1\ncould got was from washing tho sores with some B. B . B.\nI stuck the medicine and was on tho fourth bottlo before I could sco that I\nwas roallv better, although I knew that it was better to got sucB rottenness out of\nmy blood than to havo it stay there. I did say once that I wished I had never\ncommenccd taking B. B . B ., but my wife encouraged mo, and to day I thank her\nfor the advice, for I am In good health now, and 1 don't believe I ever would havo\nbeen with uiy blood in such u condition as it wag.\nMy scalp now is clean and cloar of all scales and tetter, and on my body there\nare only smull spots to show where tho Bores wero, and these spots are free from\nscales. I do not doubt but that tho euro will be perfect.\nI am now on tho sixth bottlo and will take mora until every spot Is gone. 1\nfirmly believe that Burdock Blood Bitters will cure the worst disorders of the blood,\nfor such certainly was mine.
034adc3a7e8e6ee46e5b67b7116f77a9 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1895.4123287354134 32.612638 -90.036751 out, but In this I reckoned without the\nmilkman. I had no idea before that\nthe multltudlnal milkman was such a\nfiend in human shape. He drives a ve-\nhicle modeled after the old Roman\nchariots, and he drives at a rate of\nspeed that is something appalling. The\nmoment I got on my bicycle in the\nroad some accursed, milkman would\ncome tearing up, and taking it for\ngranted that I knew all about bicycle\nsteering he never paid the BllghtoBt at-\ntention to me.; Consequently I came\nwithin an ace of being smashed up\ninto pieces on several occasions, and\nafter steering my machine up on the\nsidewalk and into the fence to get out\nof his way I used language that I knew\nmust have turned most of the milk in\nthat neighborhood sour.\nOne morning, thoroughly discour-\naged with, the business, I got out on\n street a little later than usual, so\nas to be rid of the milkman. One pe-\nculiarity ct the bicflle seems to be\nthat although you are reasonably suc-\ncessful on your last interview with it,\nthe next you seem to have to begin all\nover again. This particular morning\nI was more than usually discouraged\nand had practically made up my mind\nto sell the machine. All at once 1\nfound myself. In the saddle and rea-\nlized that 1 had- run along several\nrods without any serious wobbling. On\nand on we went with a beautiful sense\nof smoothness, ease and exhilaration.\nI turned in to the main coaching\nroad with my heart in my mouth\nbut my feet still on the pedals, and I\nexecuted a turn without disaster.\nThere was now a straight stretch\nahead of me for miles on a smooth and\nexcellent road.
1573f491b2fb3727fdc9d50f37d4b601 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1895.1438355847285 41.258732 -95.937873 was a candidate for mayor at the next\nelection, and ho could not afford to let\nan A. P . A. have the opera house. It\nwas impossible to secure a hall, and Mr.\nClark was compelled to use the hall of\nCouncil No. 20!), as be did not wish to\ndisappoint the members and their\nfriends. The hall is rather small.eeat-In- g\nprjbably 150 persons. While Mr.\nClark was distributing tho bills on the\nstreet, he passed a livery stable owned\nby Mike Gaffney. Five or six men\nwere inoide the stable, and Mr. Clark\nstepped in and handed Mike Gaffney\nand the other bystanders each a bill.\nGaffney crushed the bill back into Mr.\nClark's face, and with oaths and curses\nordered him out of the stable. Clark\ncomplied with his request, ard when\nhe was on the sidewaik he noticed \nwere following him. He told them to\nkeep their distance with the remark\nthat some day they would run up\nagainst the wrong man, who would\nmake a lead mine out of them. They\nretreated into the barn. Later in the\nday, Mike Gaffney swore out a warrant\ncharging Mr. Clark with assault. The\nconstable refused to serve the warrant\nuntil Monday afternoon, stating that\nhe was a Roman Catholic, but hated to\ndo such dirty work. Mike Gaffney and\nhis Romanist witnesses swore that Mr.\nClark displayed a revolver and threat-\nened to shoot said Gaffney. Mr. c "Uark\nbeing sworn testified that he carried no\nrevolver while in the citv and made no\nassault on Mike Gaffney, only using the\nexpression as quoted above. Mr. Clark\nwas fined $50.00 and costs. He gave an\nappeal bond, which was refus.- -
572609ab58367da4e4fd5302e33d5477 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.0205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 It was a Mr. Simmons' deal. I was\nthe oldest man, and the blind was three\n. calls seven. Ike Raggles saw it; then\nit was risen by Jones to fifteen for to play,\nUrown came In, and also the dealer\nstayed. Then It took me twelve to make\nit good, which I put up, and remarked to\nthe society that it would cost only twentyfive\nmore to draw. Every last gentleman\nstayed, hut it was not risen any higher.\nThen the dealer says to me "How many\nwill you take?" Says I: "A card." I\nbad aces and kings, and got an ace In the\ndraw. Ike took three ana Jones two, but\nBrown had enough, and told the dealer to\nhelp hisself, which ho took only five.\nThere was now about a hundred and\nninety chips on the board. Ike bet one;\nJones went ten better, and raised\nit to twenty.because he stood pat. The\ndealer said that his'n was valued at\ntwenty more. Then said I, "How many\ndoosittakemo?" Some one said "lorty\nchips," which 1 invested likewise, with\nsixty better. Then all passed up to\nBrown, and I wanted him bad to stay\nwith his steal, but his Band gave out, and\nlit p&sscd. Bays the dealer to me: "How\nmany did you draw J" Bays I, "a card."\n"Weil," says he, "I don't want to lay\ndown this hand, I will bat sixty more\nthan you 1" Now, the dealer was a\nstranger like, to our party. Ho was Irom\nthe country, and didn't know much about\nd. p . Bo I thought it was my charitable\nduty to let him down easy, and I only\ncalled him. "What have you got ?" said\nllTmn nB:~. I'l .4.1 ai. »*- Ji\n<nu
1071badc48214d79487a091127329636 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.9959016077212 40.063962 -80.720915 ore known for all dU*a*et peculiar td the ae*.\n'LIVE BLOSSOM. The euro ia effected by ho\ncnaulttUon Free and Strictly ConadenUiu Cc\nYOUNG MEN.Who have become victims of sc\niff vice* that dreadful and destructive Bat\nrhlch annually sweeps to an untimely gravy tboi\nnds of young men of exalted talent and brilui\nitellect may call with ctohfldence.\ndhs. France and ottmam, aft*» Yean oi\neriance, havo (Uncovered the greatest cure kno\nor weakneu in tKe back and limbsJnvoluntary c\nharget, impotency, general debility, nervousne\ntngnor, confusion of ideas, palpitation of the hea\nimldity, trembling, dimness of sight, or giddint\niseases of the head, throit, nose, of akin, aff\nions of the liver, lungs,stomach. or b6wets->-th<\nfrribUdisorders .arising from the solitary vice\nouth.and aecret practices, blighting their m<\nadlant hottes, rendering marria\nnpossible. Take one candid thought before it is I\nite. A woek or month may place your case beyo\nhe reach of hope. Our method or treatment *\npeedtly aftd permanently cure the mostobitiw\nase, and absolutely restore perfect manhood.\nTO MIDDLE-AGED MEN.-There art many fn\nhe age of 80 to 00 who are troubled with frequc\nvacuatloni of,the bladder, often accompanied b)\nIftHtfbntataf OfSburting seniatioo.weikehltig t\n«etn ic*taaaa*r the patient cannot account f\nJn ftomtnatton of the urinafjr deposits, a ro\n#aw5l Will be fcund, Of th*tolot mUlm ft thio\nlilkish hue. There are many tnen who die of tl\nifficulty, ignorant of the cautfe which Is a »eco\ntage of Seminal weakness. Wo will guarantee\nerfect curd in all such cases, and a heilt\nMtorationof the genito-Urinarjr organs.
0c3256470e15b4e9b3156023ab492725 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.4193988754807 39.623709 -77.41082 the endless day beyond tlie stars.\nWhat wc need to know today is tho\nproper use of things. That means study,\nthe exorcise of the mind. Others have\nstudied and thought for us. The result is\nthe locomotive, carrying us sixty miles an\nhour; the electric wire, by which we talk\nto a friend bKK) miles away, if wealth\nis to benefit the owner of it. he must use\nit and use it wisely. So, if we are to feel\nthe stimulus and reap the benefit of the\naccumulations of the ages, as lifes assets;\nif these arc to answer their need, in tlie\nmaking of a man—wc must study and\nthink and pray. In the right use of tlieso\nis the making of a holy character.\nAll tbat has been said is. we believe,\ntrue. But it is not the whole truth. We\nmust a step further. Man lias heart\nconditions ami soul needs, which neither\niiatlire, nor science, nor Scripture, can\nmeet. Man needs a God. God is every-\nwhere. God is in the sunlight which\nbathes us every day with its warmth and\nglory. He is in the bread which wc eat;\nHe is in the music which comes floating\nthrough tlie air, making I lie heart to dunce\nfor joy. But this God is too vague, too\nvast, too impersonal. Can this God be\npersonalized? It is Gods eternal purpose\nto adapt Himself to the limitations and\nneeds of His children. We do not think\nof God merely as Power, or Majesty, or |\nHoliness. God is Love. Love is the win- |\nning tiling. Love conquers. Love is bent ;\nun drawing home to the Father s heart all j\nHis wayward and lost ones.
1fb59c27472bafe1ddada93855222c48 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.9193988754807 40.063962 -80.720915 jTwo peculiar and remarkable inatancea\nf disease -which have batfled medical\nkijl, and possess much intereat to the\nnodical world, have recently excited con-\niderable comment. Both caaea occurred\ncross the river in Pease townahip, Bel*\naont oounty, Ohio. The first mentioned\ni that of Miss LiiM Qow, whose death\nook place on Thursday of laat week. Her\naae being one of long standing, was gen-\nftlly known of in the community, and\nrom her extreme and protracted suffer-\nog, called out a great'deal of sympathy\nrom her frienda and neighbors.\nFour years or more ago the late Miss\ntaw became aware of some inveterate\n>ersonal ailment, and the aid of aeveral\ntbysiclans and surgical experts availed\ntor nothing toward recovery. Her disease\nit length grew into what was termed a\niterine tumor. The tumor enlarged\n. apldly, until its size became immense.\nDaring the last two years of her life she\nfas a confirmed and helpless invalid. It\nirss deemed wholly impracticable to relieve\naer, by heroic surgery. So she bore\n. be trouble patiently until Thursday, when\n'death safety quit ber of her burden."\ni Oh the following day a post mortum el¬\nimination revealed the presence of an\nImmense frlbrld-ecirrhns.balloon shaped\ntumor weighing thirty-five pounds, which\niras attached butsllghtly to the promintory\nof the sacrum, from which it evidently\nbad its origin and growth. The only at¬\ntachment the tumor had was some minor\ntedder adhesion in front, easily broken\nup with the finger, all of which indicated.\nnotwithstanding its great size.that at al¬\nmost any point along the morbid history\nof her cose, Bliss Gow might have been\nafforded bright and substantial hope of\nrelief by a capital operation.\nThis case is worthy of careful attention,\nand the medical profession should regard\nit with interest and gravity. These facts\nare mentioned not bo much to create\nhopes of recovery in other persons sim¬\nilarly affected, as to draw the attention of\nmedical skill thereto, for more thorough\ninvestigation.
2ceeea392466f0fdb8374712f337d149 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.9712328450025 39.623709 -77.41082 slated that prior to 1896 he had not been\npaying as much taxes as he should have\npaid aud wanted the county to get this\nmoney. Since 1896, he said, his property\nwas assessed all right. The money will\nbe turned over to the use of the county.\nIt is the first conscience money ever\npaid to a Kent county official.\nThe Ernest Darby Elevator at Seneca,\non the Potomac river, burned down;\nloss $6,000. The elevator had much\nwheat and corn and other grain stored in\nit. The warehouse of W. B . Tschiffely\nnear by was saved. This elevator re-\nceives wheat for storage for shipment\nby canal and is largely patronized.\nThe laby deserted at the Brunswick\nHotel, in Cumberland, by an unknown\nwoman, who is thought to have come\nfrom Meyersdale, has been adopted by\nMrs. B . M. Flaherty, of Cumberland.'\nCharles Brown, colored, aged 5° years,\nwas killed in the woods on the farm\nbelonging to the McKeiiuey heirs, near\nCentreville, by a tree falling on hint,\ncrushing him to death.\nA boy 12 years old, son of Mr. Lewis\nGardner, of Germantown, Montgomery\ncounty, found a dynamite cartridge, and\nnot knowing character of the explo-\nsive struck it and was thrown down, re-\nceiving only slight injuries. How he\nescaped death was marvelous.\nJames Wishard died at Fairview.\nWashington county, aged 88 years.\nThe family and friends of Mr. Charles\nF. Saettberlick, a truck gardener near\nBladensburg, are considerably agitated\nas the result of his failure to return from\n1 business visit to Washington Tuesday\nmorning. He is president of tlie \\ ot-\nwaerts Social Club of Bladcnshttrg, and\na director of the almshouse of Prince\nGeorges county. He wore a gray suit\nof clothes, with black overcoat and a\nblack plush cap. He came to this coun-\ntry from German about 27 years ago.\nHe is about 47 years of ago and ha? a\nwife and eight children.\nThe electric current from the Shen-\nandoah river plant of tlie Harpers hern-\nLight and Powr Company was turnd on\nin Brunswick by Miss Lppi, agd 13\nyears, daughter of President Breath.\nAfter a short period the power compam\nwill be in a position to quote rates on\ncheap electric power, which will natur-\nally attract manufacturing plants to Brim?\nwick, as there is an abundance of good\nlabor available.
4da1c6e8c633d17d16dad19e58f878cd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 is beeQ, and Bodlne close to the Boy\n;hose place bo took at tbo half mile polo\nnd kept it to tbe end, but waa unable to\nvcrtake Hooper who came In winner of\nlie beat and race In 2:28}. Summary\n'red Hooper 1,2,1,1, Bodine 2,1,4, 2,\nUpon Boy 8,4,2,3, Joker 4,3,3,4, Byon\nS, distanced, Ella Wright, distanced,\n'ime 22fli, 2.25}, 2:27!, 2:28}.\nTbo last race on tbe programme waa\nunning for a premium of (600, for ail\nges; (400 to tbe first, $140 to the second,\nnd ((JO to the Becond. There were eleven\nntries and seven started, viz: Cape Race,\n[uartermaster, Roger Hanson, Lady Faireld,\nF. Lloyd's chestnut filly, John H.\n)avls' bay mare and Rocket Cape Race\nraa the favorite and Quartermaster next\n"he track waa very heavy, but,' as tbo\nime shows, the pace was a botone. Capo\nlace led from tbe start to tbe finish, with\njady Fairfield second, Rocket third;\nQuartermaster fourth, Roger Hanson fifth,\nnd Lloyd and Davis' entries distanced,\nriie second was ft splendid one.\n;apo Race secured tbe lead at the Btart\nnd kept it to tbo quarter pole, when\nQuarter Master, who waa running very\nast, came to him and tbe two ran neck\n,nd neck to the finish, passing under the\nfire go close together that the judges de-\nlarsd it a dead beat Time 1:50}. None ol\nbe other entries baying taken a beat\nboy were, under the rules sent to the\ntables and Cape Hone and Quartor\niaster finished the race. Tbe start in\nhe next beat was an extremely bad\nne, Cape-Race baring sot less than\n50 yards tbe start and running\nrell, U seemed Impossible that his\nntagonlst should ever reach blm 1\nritb such a start, botthe gallant chestnut\nipped the race at the ball mile pole, and\ns tbey came down the homo stretch they\nfere nearly neck and neck. Cape Race,\nmwever, passed under the wire a neck\nhead, and was declared winner of tbe\nicat and raco. Summary.Cape Raco\n,
052352bbba40953cfac5ff79c2d5a6eb THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.6215846678303 37.305884 -89.518148 "In the face of such results.' says\nthe "World," "maturing loans and\nmortgages would be called in, foreign\ninvestments would be thrown on the\nmarket, credit would be destroyed and\nbusiness stagnation, panic and failure\nwould follow. With such a contraction\nof currency and credit all merchandise,\nIncluding wheat and cotton, would de-\ncline to the lowest values ever known.'\nShould the new Congress be sumiuon-e - d\nIn extra session it could not meet\nbefore March 4, 181)7. A time would\nelaps before the House could pass a\nfree coinage bill. There would be re-\nsistance to it on the part of the gold\nstandard members, but we may con-\nceive that the bill would get to the\nSenate by April 1. In the Senate the\nminority would fight it obstinately, so\n'that several months might elaps \nfore the bill would be ready for the\nPresident's signature. Secretary Car-\nlisle has estimated the coinage capac-\nity of onr mints at about 40,O0 .00O\nyearly. It would take nearly fifteen\nyear to replace with new silver dol-\nlars the gold that had been drives out\nof ase. Silver men would foresee\nthis, and their free coinage act could\nprovide for an immediate issue f sil-\nver certificates at the lii to 1 ranjo ($1\nfor -- 3c), and the whole world would\nshare in the rush to get certificate be-\nfore they fell to the ultimate Ttallion\nvalue of the silver in the dollar. The\ndearth of money might make so arti-\nficial demand for a time fr such\nmoney, as was to lie had, but silh the\nissse of certificates a new .nation\nwould begin.
0c3c577ecc6a3c0678c04b9131b3ea77 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.2205479134957 40.063962 -80.720915 The Intelligencer headlines yesterd\nis to the meeting of the county coi\nmittee left the Impression that Senat\nArcher was at the meeting and met\nreverse. This Is erroneous. The ser\ntor was at Columbus and did not ev\nknow of the result until yesterdi\nsvhen he read the newspapers, and\nthough his name was used, doubth\nwithout his knowledge and consent,\nivas npt a candidate actively seeking\nsecure control and to bar others, a\nthis is written at the Instance of frlen\nma in JUBUve 10 HIC ncuaiui,\nnatter of fact, the whole committee f\nthat they would rather refer the sell\ntlon of delegates to the voters.\nJames Patterson was badly, If i\nfatally hurt, at the steel works yeat<\nJay. A crane chain broke while 11:\nIng a huge to be loaded Into ct\nfor shipment, and when It dropped\n:aught young Patterson, breaking o\naf his leg*. injuring, the other hip a\ntils abdomen. His injuries were drei\n»d by Dr. Mlnesirig'er and he whs cc\nicious throughout the operation.\nThe Ariel Ladies' Sextette will elt\nthe lecture course entertainments hi\nwith a concert. The programme\nvery attractive, and as the coromiti\nproviding these entertainments is 1\ntiind with the financial end, it is hor\nthe public will help, them out at tl\nclosing one for the season.\nThere will be a "surprise" social\nthe home of Mrs. A . Kern this evenl\nfor the working society <?f the Fii\nPresbyterian church. A nice program]\n>8 arranged, luncheon will be serv\nand a silver offering taken. Do\nmiss it.
45a300300479781a97a9b259a275187f COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.4397259956875 41.262128 -95.861391 by ru coosUtuu^uai aeaas, hot I do aot\nbt;i v-» this f i«icral Admuiistraiton will\never «ui>pr?*s tb^ rebellion, or restore the\nUni jo by the policy it has adopted. ' I\nbtbe A.laHuafcraooo has jostk fw-\nfeiud the cor*tidcooa of a l.- i^ge asyori&y\naI tin; people, oven iu theistatwi faithfal\nu> thf Unkin, and ha* rendered it^alf\npow rieas to win back the secc-ded States\nby unj paacelai or otbega»a»sfc 1 tbare-\nfore believe the Adouai<tratioa ought to\nbe changed as so as a* tbe eA*nge can be\naati • in a eonstitutiooai w:ty, by a free\nelection ot the paople ; and I mean to do\nwhat loin to effect that chaogv. Tbe\npeojjc of tbe Tenth Co<igr>jssiooal iJis-\nSric . whom I bsve the honor to represent,\nooad' moed Administration ia tbe last\nOctober eleetion. I made an issue before\nthem against the Adansistratioa upon ai-\nnoti every measure you aase as a part\nof 4'the war policy of the (jovemawmtj"\nand n majority of the people agreed witk\nao ia tbe ;um I raaie by ehtctmg me\ntbtsir Representative. The same people,\niu cunjactioo with the Deaoeratie Unioo\naen of the Ei-rentb Gongressiocal Dis­\ntrict, k s ta Ms-convention at Fort Wayne,\noa kbe 29tJ> of April last, by solemn res-\nOitit! Jds, clearly dtfined their opinions\nand purposes as to the Admuusuation\nand in policy. I have placed a copy of\nthws *• Vesolutions in jour possesaioa, that\nyoat&ay fully understand what the peo-\nf ott t"id l)e«»Jcrati« aewspape** and or»-\nlors of those districts m«&n to do. Ifui-
2f1f28aaddec31cd1e3beeb45f2ccff5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.7254098044425 58.275556 -134.3925 3, wild mining claims being situat¬\ned on the southeasterly shore of\nDouglaH Island, Harris Mining Dis¬\ntrict, Juneau Recording Frcclnct,\nTerritory of Alaska, the amended\nlocation ccrtltlcaled for said mining\nclaims being of record in the olllcc\nof the United States Commissioner,\nKx-Offlclo Recorder, Juneau. Alas¬\nka. to which reference Is hereby\nmade for a more complete and def¬\ninite description of said mining\nclaims; that the above named lode\nmining claims form a contiguous\ngroup of lode mining claims and are\nknown and called the Red Diamond\nGroup; that the unnuul assessment\nwork above referred to consisted In\ndriving a tunnel upon the Red Dia¬\nmond No. ti claim, said claim being\nu part of the abovo mentioned\ngroup; that there was expended\nfor said labor and Improvements\nabove mentioned the sum of ono\nthousand live hundred dollars; \nsaid expenditure was nccessary In\norder to hold the ubove mentioned\nmining claims under the provisions\nof Section 2324 of the Revised Stat¬\nutes of the United States und amend-\nments thereto, concerning the an-\nnunl assessment work upon lode min¬\ning claims, said sum being the\namount required to hold said mln-\nIng claims for the period ending\nDecember 31, 1915. And, if with¬\nin ninety days after the personal\nservlco of this notice upon you, or\nwlthln ninety day after the publica¬\ntion thereof, you fall or refuse to\ncontribute your portion of such ex¬\npenditure as a co-owner which\numounts to, one hundred and sixty-\nsix dollars und sixty cents, your In¬\nterest in said claims will become\nthe property of the subscriber, your\nco-owner who has made the required\nexpenditures, by tho terms of said\nsection.
1af1fe5575137a3132e4fbdcaeff8234 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.582191749112 39.745947 -75.546589 ! Miss l.nur.i Calhoun has been engag'd\nto teach in the ähuwnee school, soirUi-\ni west of town, beginning with the opening\nI of the fall term. She succeeds David H.\nj Isaacs, who has accepted a place else­\nwhere. MUs Calhoun Iasi year taught nt\nPthc Webbs school In Milford Neck, and\nhas a splendid record as a teacher.\nThe Millwood Sunday school held a pic­\nnic In the grove at Millwood yesterday\nafternoon at which time there w\nplenty of refreshments served and Inter­\nesting games to pass the time pleasantly.\nSenator Allee Is interesting himself to\nsecure for Milford a clerkship for «he\npoatotttuc. The business of th's office has\nwonderfully Increased during the past\ntwo or three years and more help has\nbeen found necessary recently.\nMiss Bessie Hall Johnson, one of Mil­\nfords estimable young was mar­\nried on Tuesday afternoon last at the\nhome of her uncle, James P. Pierce, Lake\navenue, to oorge Todd Vaille», grandson\nof Thornton Vaules. of this town. Mr. and\nMrs. Vaules will reside at Rahway, lN. Y.,\nihe home of the groom. After a wedding\nbreakfast tho couple left for a wedding\ntour through New Jersey and New York.\nOnly relatives and Immediate friends\nwere present at the ceremony, which was\nperformed by Dr. 8. M . Morgan.\nCharles Q. Fisher, of this town. Staite\nEngineer for the Highway Commission.\nwIM begin tho work of macadamising the\nfive-mile experimental roadways In Kent\nand Sussex County at an early date.\nThe vltrllleU brick for paving Walnut\nstreet arrived this week and Is now lin­\ning the sidewalks of that thoroughfare.\nThe work of laying will be begun next\nwees.
f7ee1f396fb7f57ac1ccbda4821505d4 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.9082191463724 43.798358 -73.087921 It is hereby enacted by the General As-\nsembly of the State of Vermont That\nhereafter, the Supreme Court shall be\nholden in and for the county of Benning-\nton, on the third Tuesday next following\nthe fourth Tuesday in January, in each\nyear; that said court shall be holden at\nNewfane, within and for the county of\nWindham, on the fourth Tuesday "next\nfollowing the fourth Tuesday in January ;\nand at Woodstock, within and for the coun-\nty of Windsor, on the fifth Tuesday next\nfollowing the fourth Tuesday of January ;\nat Chelsea, within and for the county of\nOrange, on the second Tuesday in July ;\nat Montpeleir, within and for the county\nof Washington, on the third Tuesday in\nJuly ; at Danville, within and for the\ncounty of Caledonia, on the fourth Tues-\nday in July; at Guildhall, within and for\nthe county of Essex, on first Tuesday\nnext following the fourth Tuesday in Ju-- .\nly; at Irasburgh, within and for the coun-\nty of Orleans, on the second Tuesday next\nfollowing the fourth Tuesday in July j\nand at Hydepark, within and for the coun-\nty of Lamoille, on the third Tuesday next\nfollowing the fourth Tuesday in July, in\neach year. And all complaints, informa-\ntions, and indictments, actions, suits, bills,\npetitions and every other matter or thing,\nin law or equity, now pending, and all\nwrits, warrants, appeals, recognizances,\nand' every other matter or thing returna-\nble to, or hereafter made returnable to said\ncourt, in the several counties above nam-e- d,\nshall be entered, heard and determined\nat the several limes in this act named for\nholding said court in the counties above\nnamed, respectively. And all persons\nand parties required by law to appear be-\nfore said court in the several counties
531f3731bec95221ad52fbec752415b1 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1914.332876680619 39.456253 -77.96396 other advantage of the general-pur¬\npose breeds is that they will baton\neggs and brood their chickens, while\nthe Leghorns, and other breeds ol\nthe egg-laying class are non-sitters.\nA great variety of methods of feed¬\ning and caring for poultry are used\nsuccessfully. 'Hatching and brooding,\nor rearing chickens undor hens, is the\nbest method to use where a small\nnumber of chickens are raised, and\nespecially if the care is not to be ir\nregular. Incubators and brooders\nmay be used also, but they ir.creast\nthe cost of equipment considerably.\nChickens can be reaired under hens\nsuccessfully by keeping the hens .con¬\nfined in the brood coop, while allow¬\ning the chickens to room at will.\nWhen many fowls are kept in a\nsmall space, the f.round becomes so\nfoul that in time it becomes difficult\nto rear chickens with good success.\nIn order to avoid this condition, it is\nadvisable to divide the lot and sow\npart of it with some of the quick-\ngrowing grains such as oats, wheat\nor rye. By this method th0 yards\nmay be rotated every th-iee or four\nweeks during the growing season,\nturning the hens or.';o the growing\ngrain when it is a few inches high.\nA good combination of grains is oats\nand wheat in equal parts, 6\nor 7 bushels to the acre (43.560 sq.\nft), and using wheat alone for the\nlast seeding in the fall.\nThe prime essentials In poultry\nhouses are fresh air. dryness, sun¬\nlight, and space enough to keep the\nbirds comfortable. Allow about 4\nsquare feet of floor space per bird\nfor the reneral-purpose breeds, and\n3 square feet for the smaller breeds.\nA good egg-laying ration may be\nmade of a dry niash of equal parts\nof corn meal, bran, w'dtflings and\nbeef scrap, which is kept before the\nbirds in a hopper all of the Mm-;;\nand a scratch ration of equal parts\nof corn, wheat and oats fed in a\nlitter 4 to 5 inches deep twice daily.\nRegulate this feed so that the birds\neat about one-half mash and one-half\nscratch grain, which will mean feed¬\ning about 1 quart of mixed grains\ndaily to 12 Plymouth Rock hens, or\nto 14 Leghorns. In order to utilize\nthe waste table products to the best\nadvantage, a moist mash may be us?i\nin place of the dry mash, feeJin?*\nonce daily. If it contains much meat,\ntable scratch may be subsituted for\nthe beef scrap; if not, merely add it\nto the mash given above.\nThe selection of stock is a matter\nof considerable importance,
4000364e927a2f79d64f4aaaf5081a47 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8178081874682 40.063962 -80.720915 proceed 10 sell,.at public auction, to the blghe>\nana beat bidder, at tlio front door of thu Com\nHouse of said County, be^innlug at 10 o'clocl\na. x., thu fallowing de«« rib»d property, that is t\nsay, the tract or parcel of laud lying and bcln\nIn Ohio Couuty, West Virginia, hounded and d<\nncrluod as follows. viz: Uegiunlng at a stake o\nthe bauk ot tho Ohio River. corucr to lands a\nlotted to Anus Martha «\\ oods.and with hurliui1\nn JMX deg. e . OdUlMOO i>ole»»; 8. 19# deg. '<v\n49 IkMuO poles; s. 70 deg. e. 07 01-100 poles to a\noriginal Hue of thu Reager tract, uow a line c\nitooert Marshall, and with Mid lino h. SO deg. v\nHi MOO p »les to a stake; thence n. 70 deg. w\nfi'i 10*100 pole* to a stake; n. 8*Jtf deg. e . 19 9-1C\npole* to a make; n. 28 deg. e. lu 80-100 poles to\nrtake; n. 1UX dug. o. 11 8-100 |kjW3 to stake; t\n81 deg. w. 4950-100poles to a ..take on the bank c\nthe Ohio River; tneucoupsald river and hindin\nthereon 87 «1-100 poles to thu hegluulng. contaii\nlug fllty-eight acre* (58 A.) wore or less, an\nmarked No 8 on a recorded plat of the farm or tli\nlate Andrew K Woods; also, all that (tart of tli\nc*tal field reserved by'Andrew P. tVoods lu h!\ndeed to Hubert Marshall, bearing dale tlie IOi\nday of January, A. D., 185U aud recorded lu tt\nRecorder's office or Ohio County aforesaid,\nDeed Book 49. folio 480. that uuderlies a nurfai\nwhich Is bounded as follows, vis: llcgitmlngi\na point which is in Robert Marshall a line, at\nwhich is s. 80 dug* w. 7ft poles from an origin\n© nur or thu SMTacre tract known as tho Reagi\ntract, and thu 90 acre Brown tract, or corner\nKobcit Marshall ami Williams Nicholr, iierei'\nfore mentioned; thence s. 80 deg. w. «0 pole\nthence a. 70 deg. e.
303e57bfe0744e166245ac65f501fb8d THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.6013698313038 37.451159 -86.90916 My opponent Mr Hays In his open\nIng speech at New Castle drew a gen\nera indictment against the Democratic\nadministration whIch In excess of Irony\nhe terms a machine There are only two\ncharges In his Indictment that the statuU\nof limitation his not run against Every\ncharge except the one termed Architects\nfees and the one termed Salary rebates\nIs made against the administration whosi\nterm closed on the first Monday In Jan\nuiry 1901 when the present admlnlstrs\ntlolloof which Mr Kays Is a member\nassumed centrol of the affairs of the\nstate tla licE the nominations for state\noHcers ware made In a primary election\nno principle or policies being enunciated\nIn a platform The manner la which the\nattain of the state were being conduct ¬\ned by thl Democratic administration was\npromulgated as the platform won which\nthe campaign of 1101 was based and\nvery speaker from every platform ex\nollain language of burning eloquence\nhe wisdom conservatism andecpnomy\nhat marked the leading characteristics\nJf that administration Upon that plea\nind upon that platform Mr Hays and\nJie rest of us were elected by the largest\nnajorlty received by a state for\nlearly a quarter of a century\nGen Iiaya equally with other officials\nonitltutlng the present state adminis ¬\ntration was elected to administer the af ¬\nfairs of the state with a double responsl\nlllty not only to tho Democrats of Ken\nucky whose representatives they b-\nam but to all tho people of the state\nFor myself I have Inteproted that com\nnlsilon from party and people to do\nrather than shunning or not doing and\nHanding by for the purpose of criticizing\nit IIs a trite saying that It is much easier\nto be critical than to be correct While\nnot claiming for myself 9r associates In ¬\nfallibility In acts I do claim for them\nand myself that In all administrative\nduties we have brought to their discharge\nthe Very best judgment of which we\nwere capable and have discharged these\nduties with an eye single to the best\nInterests of the taxpaying public and-\no the glory and renown of the staU\nft hose agents we are It la a fair com\nment on his speech to say that In ac-\ncusing others who have with as single\nsilnded ourooee as he cap claim efl
0dd2208969e18971d2b7a440c96784a2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.2999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 Dr. Goorgo F. Urookt, No. - 0 Touiple\nPlaco, lloaton, aayst\n"I have mod a good tnauy rhouuiatlaui\nluedlcinos in tho coiirao ol my practlco,\nbut I can candidly Bay that I now aaw\na romedy aa ell'octlvo as Munyon'a Rheu*\nmutism Cure, 1 gave thoanuiplo tfottlo\nI not Monday to ono ol my patients, a\nlady, who hai liad chroulo rhoumatiam\nin her limba for yoare. 1 lor knee and\nolbow jointa vroro atlll and alio Huflerod\ngroat pain. lm o(Toct was bliuply ,nHr*\nvoloua. Kollof from pain waa obtained\nin a few hours after tho llrat doie and\nInsldo of twenty-four hours tho lady was\nfooling bolter than sholiad for yoars. I\n»hall prescribe Munyon'a Curo for all\ncaaea of rhoumatiam that come undor\nmy caro In tho futuro."\n. Munyon'a Uhoumatiam Curo i« guar-\nanteod to curo rhouinatiam In any part\nof tho body. Acuto or miiacular rhou-\nmatlain curod In ono to llvodava.\nIt uofor fails to curo a harp, ahoutiug\npaitia in tho armn, logs, sidoi, back or\nbreast, or sorouosa in any part of tho\nbody in from ono to three houra. It is\nguaranteed to Dromptly curo lamenoss,\nstill and swollen joints, still back and\nnil palna in tho hips and loins. Chronic\nrhoumatiam, aciatica. lumbago or pain\nin tho back are spoodily curod.\nMunyon'a llomiuopathic Ilouie Uom*\nody Company, of Philadelphia, put up\nHpoc'illcs for uoarly overy dhease,\nwhich aro sold by all druggiats, mostly\nfor IT) cents a bottle.\nThose who aro in doubt as to tho'na-\nturo of their disoaae, aliould address\nProfessor Munvon, 1MK> Arch street,\nPhiladelphia, gtving full aymptomi of\ntheir diseano. I'rotosHor Munyon,will\ncarofully diagnose tho case and give vou\ntho bonellt of his advice absolutely freo\nof all charge. Tho Koinedios will bo\nsout to any addrois on rccoipt of retail\nprice.
1a82f4776e92dd3a8c8517f2cd413cfb WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.760273940893 40.827279 -83.281309 one of the men who joined it because\nof the principles it holds and the atti\ntude it assumes. And he belongs to\nit not through previous personal par\nty association or education, but be-\ncause he believes that its principles\nrepresent the nation's safety, develop-\nment, and destiny ; and he represents\nit because, in so doing, lie represents\nthe interests of the whole people. In\nillustration of his fitness and ability\nas the head of our government, I\npoint, without distrust, to his success\nm the discharge of every duty which\nthe people have intrusted to him. As\na soldier, he redeemed your country\nand reestablished your government.\nAs a statesman, he will preserve, pro\ntect, and defend that country and\ngovernment, and all that makes the\nsafety and advancement of the one,\nthe dignity and honor of the other.\nlne ability to command ercot ar\nmies and guide great campaigns has\nbeen an index of ability for govern\nment since governments began. We\nare so disarmed by the simplicity of\nhis character that we are not to ap\npreciate him ; but the mind which\nalong was able to grasp and control\nin one harmonious conception the ele-\nments of the great rebellion, brain\nwhich alone was competent to con\nceive in its grand proportions, and\ncarrv out in its endless details the\ngreat campaign which reached from\nthe Mississippi to the sea, tempered\nby cool judgment and inspired by un- -\nseltisn patriotism, and pursuing no\npolicy against the will of the people,\nmay safety be left to administer the\nsettled and defined functions of a rep\nresentative government safe from the\ncriticism of theorists and restless "re\nformers," or the loud attacks of\ngreat emergency dwarfed in the shad\now ot nis great genius, or moved as\npuppets to execute his will.\nIt is true, as he himself has said\n"No man can hope to perform duties\nso delicate and responsible as pertain\nto the presidential office without some\ntimes incurring the hostility of those\nwho deemed their opinions and wish-\nes treated with sufficient consideration\nbut he who undertakes to conduct the\naffairs of a great government as\nfaithful public servant, if sustained by\nth e approval of his own conscience,\nmay rely with confidence upon the\ncandor and intelligence of a free peo\npie, whose best interests he has striv\nen to serve and can bear with pa\ntiencetho censure of disappointed\nmen."
28fec35265e1502604e22dac0908b9ec DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.3712328450026 58.275556 -134.3925 Dr. Chase una Joe ihu«n leu Cor¬\ndova Tuesday for Hlnchlnbrook\nIsland, anil at 1 o'clock Wednesday\n.i fternoon they Kot on the trail of\nseven ItearH. For four hotirH and a\nhalf tlicy followed thlH trull, and\nfinally tame upon u group of four\nhearH In name deep, heavy under-\nliruHli. The doctor and Mr. Ibarh\nwere below the bears, hairing fol¬\nlowed up a crock which drowned\n.he noise of their approach, bo the\nhears were totally unaware of any\n'innnn presence.\nAt a distance of about sixty feet,\nnd huir hidden in the brush as\nthey wore, the position was a dif¬\nficult one to shoot from. Out the\nfirst shot from the doctor's rifle en-\ntere.l the bear's breast, smashed\n'our ribs nnd toro open one lung.\nMr. Hear fell down und then got\nIglit aguln, und there wns mur-\nler in his eve as he looked nliout\nfor his assailants.\nNot seelnfc them Immediately, he\nnude a rush for a nearby treo, nnd\nlanding up on his haunches, due\nHis claws Into the tree. teariiiK down\nhranclu » and digging out big splln-\ners. all the while giving vent to\n(he rage within him, not by the\nogular high, squeaky call of most\nboars, but by deep, llon-llkc roars\nvlilch would have curdled the blood\n>f any but the bravest.\nOver the top of the tree ho caught\ntight or the hunters and made\nstraight for them. Dr. Chase stepped\n>ut in the open nnd wnlted for the\niifurlated animal. Closer and closer\nlie came, until at u distance of llf-\nteen or twenty feot. the doctor llrcd\nhe second shot, which struck the
203a933d6881383eb1d576cdd744d050 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.3620218263004 39.756121 -99.323985 Green Crops for the Cows.\nWe trust that all of our farmers\nthat have dairy cows will at this time\nbegin to consider the matter of green\ncrops to be fed when - the summer\ndrouth is upon them. In fact, whether\nthere Is to be a drouth or not, there\nla always a time in the summer when\nthe pastures do not give the amount\not Bucculent feed needed for the pro-\nduction ot large quantities of milk.\nHeat Is one of the provisions ot na-\nture for the ripening np ot the crops\nwe grow. The heat of August Is neo\nesary for the drying up of the crops\nsufficiently to lead many of our most\nimportant plants to start in the forma\ntion of seeds. So we must always\ncount on that condition prevailing in\nthe middle of the summer. The only\nthing for the man that has milch\ncows to do la to sow corn and other\ngreen forage crops at this time of\nyear to supply this need for green\nfood in the summer time. It is best\nto sow such a crop quite early in the\nspring, that the plants may have\nobtained a good growth and some\nmaturity by the time they are wanted\nfor feeding. The old idea was that a\nyoung crop was the best for feeding,\nas it was like green grass. But since\nwe have come to know more about\nsuch things we have found out that\na plant to be at its best for feeding\nmust be somewhat mature. The corn\nplant should be about ready to form\nears to be very good forage. We have\nseen in the past corn sown late in the\nspring, grown aa thick almost as grass\nand mown for the stock when it was\nonly two feet high, under the mis\ntaken notion that it contained a great\ndeal ot nutriment and very dlgestlbls\nnutriment at that Some farmers still\nhang to the old practice, which they\nhave inherited from their ancestors,\nCorn, sorghum, beets, turnips and\nvarious rapidly growing grasses may\nbe sown for this summer use. We\nwould like to hear from our readers\ntheir experiences in growing such\ngreen forage crops for the purpose ol\nsoiling their milch cows in the sum\nmer.
171cbc44fa245184d7fbbcab6a0f8a2b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.4726027080162 46.187885 -123.831256 with key. Red Alaska rules Arm in all\ncenters at 92. Operationis on the lower\nriver during the past week show the\nslackest record since the season opened.\nEver tlnce last Friday the catch has de-\ncreased very perceptibly and has now\nnarrowed down to very poor woik. In\nfact, all indications point to the prova-\nbility of our estimate of 400,000 oises as\nthe total pack for this season being en-\ntirely too Jurge, though the figures are\n50,000 oases less than last year. It Is\nthe general supposition among cannery-me- n\nthat the fleh now appearing in the\nli ver are the result of the propagation\nfrom the Clackamas hatchery four year\nago, when no late fish were batched. It\nhas been usual. In previous seasons, to\nget slack runs at this season on account\nof big freshets in the river which have\nkept the fish outside In fresh water for\nseveral days. These slack periods, how-\never, have ulways been followed by large\ntuns, which will not be the case this\nseason, simply because there toes been no\nfreshet, and the scarcity of Hfh cannot\nbe attributed to that cause. We do not\nexpect to see any Cfhtaiook fish in the\nColumbia this year after the middle or\nJuly. The salmon being cuught now av\nfully thirty pounds, and in color and\nquality are magnificent, showing all the\ncharacteristics jat July fish, and being\nseasonable like everything else, are Just\nas much ahead of time the vegetation\nin this vicinity. The middle river can-\nneries are packing on .the average about\n100 cases a day. Bluebacks this year will\nbe almost an absolute failure, and though\nthey are slowly beginni ng to lncreuse In\nnumbers. It Is not probable that half\nthe orders for this quality of flsh can be\nfilled. Steeihead are becoming a little\nmore plentiful and by the end of the pres-\nent month may attain full proportions\nfor an off seauon. The lower river pack\nto date is now about even with thut of\nlast year to this time. On the upper\nriver at the Cascades and The Dalles Uh:\npack is fuily 70 per cent behind and we\nhave received information stating that\nmost of the fish wheels tfhere will be\nclosed dawn before the end of this month.\nMany of the best wheels have not enougn\nwater to operate In, and those that are\nworking find the river too clear to flsh\nwith anything like fair results, as the\nsalmon will not lead up to these contri-\nvances In clear water. Not more than\n19,000 cases have been packed at the\nCascades and . The Duties duifng the\nwhole season, and of these F. M. War-\nren's cannery is responsible for 6,600 cases\nand McOowan & Bons for 8,000 cases of\nthe balance. A careful estimate of the\npack ct the whole river to date places It\nat 210,00 cases and these figures are. If\nanything, little too large.
3fcffce005f1b2d995a4718d0c08bc59 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.4972602422629 41.681744 -72.788147 "Marion saw the horses, and she\ncould have dodged them il she had\nbeen alone or had left the baby, for\nshe's the lightest little thing on her\ntect T ever did see. Put she never\nseemed to think of hrself. I heard\nher say kind of soft, 'Oh. Junior!'\nThen she grabbed him and threw him\none side as hard as she could, lie\nstruck m some boards Ticer had left\nto fix the porch, and his arm doubled\nup under him, and his head got a\nhump that made It bleed. But Marion\nthe horses went right over her. I\nheard her give ,one awful scream, and\nthen she never made another sound,\nand when wc picked her up she was\njust the way you see her."\n. As if controlled by . the same im-\npulse, Lillian's hands and mine had\nfallen apart. I turned to see in her\neyes the same horror had\nsprung into mine. It had been her\nchild or mine, and hers would she\npay the supreme --last penalty, while\nmy motherhood went unscathed? For\na second the vision divided us as far\napart as the poles, then her face soft-\nened, and she put her hand on mine.\n"Forgive me, Mrlge," she said. "For\nn second I bated you. but. ot course,\nt know oh, Marion! Marion!"\nShe clung to me for a shaken sec-\nond or two, then went calmly, quietly\nback to her station by the side of her\nunconscious child, while I rushed to\nmy little son, gathered him in my\narms and hushed his grieving wails.\nPut my heart was so full of woo for\nthe brave child who had saved mine\nthat I could not feast my eyes upon\nhis little face. Instead I must keep\nthem watchfully upon Marion's still\nfigure, while Dr. Pettit cross- qu estion- ed
32fbfc949eef3d42bc09e9e99be3f5a9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 Home time iM(o the New York llcm\npijhli*lie<JasenMtionj>toryof u nrwpoli\n- al movement, «»i«l to hare inciitmtoil\n(Vortfl/i,having for ii« otijeel tiio brcn\nin# up of the Republican party, or rnth\ntheriefent of (letirfttl (IrtMt Tliin fltn\nit now Hiilrttnnt tally reiterate*, iiihI «v<\nHint lliouid the Demoerncy gnio groin\nin the iNortli ut tin* emuiing elcetiorw, tl\niiKiveiiirtit will hi' iiiriiliMitfiti-it imriu-i\nately iiltcrwiifdb. Hon. lien. 1 Illl is na\nhi be the father of the project. In«l<\nit in claimed tfmt he H (lie tuther of t\nlit*w 'loparture, find that partly lit hi«\nhImiim', llendriclia pernuaded Vallandi\nhalfi to net 11m obstetrician at iJh liirl\nThe writer in the J/rraltl Matea that t\nproposition has taken immensely wi\ntin- fleorgia lb publican*, ol whom, e\nccptintf the iMmtnittHtLTH ami Kcticf\n(ifftcialH, imly FoHlcr illoilitett i«\nfavor of the feiiomination\nOenera) Hrant. The same hostility,\nadds, is exhibited in nearly nil the Bodt\nern BUtc* Where the Republican* are\npower.jjoulslana, MUmifmlppi nn<l /\nkannua helm? cited us instant s in |m>1]\nThe eoffOfpomlent further iutimatea th\nHenutor Kllllon, Of W»-w Inn he\nin e*ten*lvo corrwpondence with t\nprominent men of the South on tin? m\nji< t «ftheformationof a new partya\ntin* probability of the Hon them jmjo|\nmipportldg a ticket headed hy a new\npartnre Democrat and 11 new depart!\nRepublican, the latter to he the unttiidi\n!«»r I'nuident niul the former for Vi<\nI'realilent. A number M influential Ni\nKngland KcjiolilifntiM urn alno Implicit\nin the Alleged anti Urant movement, o\nof whom, in n 1etu*r to u lewling f,l\npolitlelan, I* flaid to have uttered sol\nvery ievofOi Hlflf-tuntn on the I'rcnide\nand to hatfl declared llmt a new orga\n/dtlon wm ImpefaUvely ncceimary. T\nwflter Htnti-M in addition that lie haa |h\n11vi! evidence'that nmneroun HcpuMlf\n|tf>litirlan« of the North have promi«e<\ntin- Southern people will lead the way\nthe formation of a third party on a pi\nform :*iiinlar to that of the new depart\nmovement, they will join it, hnt that 111\npant rrcnril forbid* the |M»sRihility of u\nalllliatmn with tin? I Mnoc.rilr.v. Tin\nvariotw Rtfttcmenta of the llrrtiM are,\nronton to In- received m,,, f/rano
33dbc9b0d38da5072279134010af7077 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.727397228564 40.063962 -80.720915 These lords of the soil are gentlemen\nwho represent the wealth and iutelligance t\nof their several districts. If they had\nbeen derived from old Virginia ancestry\nthey would all have beeu of the Jirat\nfiiiniUts. The Brownleea and the Wylies\nare among the llrst names associated with t\nthe great wool growing interests of Wash-\nington county. Col. Manchester is fami- '\nliarly connected with the earliest recol-\nlections of this reporter about the "pomp <\nand circumstaces of glorious war."\nIlia military tastes, however, did\nnot prevent him from being ono of\nthe beat farmers in the country.\nKobt. Buchanan is a farmer whoso place\nis Euro to Attract the attention ol r»v<»n tlw>\nino3t casual observer. Ita high state of\ncultivation, the extreme neatness that is\neverywhere visible, stamp the owner \nu gentleman oi aesthetic taste anil habits,\nAs lor Bam Crothers, aa ho ia familiarly\ncalled, every body knows him aa a man j\nbrim lull ol energy and practical ideag.\nMr. Archer ia one ol the great Spanish ,\nbreeders ol his county. The other Wash- i\niugton county gentlemen, though not\nknown to us as (amiliarly aa tho parlies we (\nhave mentioned,are representative men, as\nwo have said, and the lact that they occupy\nplaces ou this important Committee ia\nenough to aay of them. The rest ol the\ngent leraen who were only honorary mem-\nbera of tho Committee are well known for\nthe full measure of their ability. Thomas\nand Absalom Buchanan aro widely\nknown, tkoughout not only the\nPan-handle counties ol West Va,\nbut also in portions of western
0b9b3d1824da84b5eb9f6b190813d835 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.3109588723999 44.939157 -123.033121 Heretofore the society has never, at\nthe last, term ofthe school year, failed\nto honor a senior member of the soci-\nety with the office of president pre-\nvious to his graduation as a mark of\napprcslatlon, butlasteycnlng It estab-\nlished a precedent to this standing\ncustom. Tho failure of tho senior to\nbo thus honored this ye?r may bo at-\ntributed wholly to his own actions of\nthe past month that have Incurred\nfor him the enmity of the majority\nof the students. Just previous to tbo\nmeeting the prospective president\nhaving evidently "smclled a mouse,"\nhad Ins name placed on the "Inactive"\nlist. By such action and refusing to\nallow his name to be placed before tho\nsociety, ho cyaded a most disastrous\ndefeat that was unmistakably await-\ning him. Ho considered a surrender\npreferable to utter defeat As cor\nrespondent from untvcralty, he made\nan unjust arid unwarranted attack on\nfour members of the school who were\ndismissed for alleged misdemeanors,\nneither of the charges of which have\nbeen proven. Tho correspondent al-\nluded to the dismissal of the quartette\nof boys in the following manner: On\nMonday last the faculty performed a\ndclicato surgical operation by which\nfour 'warts' were removed from tbe\nstudent's body by means of "lire"\nThe senior lias evidently learned\nthat there Is still another wart' In tho\nuniversity and that at least one de-\npartment of that institution can exist\nwithout his assistance In the capacity\nof presiding officer.\nThe election of officers was followed\nby a debate on tho subject, "Resolved,\nThat tho president of tho United\nStates should be elected for a term of\nsix years and bo ineligible for
1cb3a09f640fc887ba73e4f1b28b5c02 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.54508193559 46.187885 -123.831256 or clothing, as has been proven of yellow\nfever, had transmitted the infectious\nmaterial of the Asiatic disease. In olden\ntimes, when no railroads, no steamships,\nhastened the travel, the march of the\ncholera kept pace with the rapidity, re-\nspectively slowness, of human inter-\ncourse. The disease either followed tho\nroad of the great tea caravans, which\nbrought tho high prized leaves from Asia\nto Russia, or it traveled tho usual ways\nof commorco across the Mediteminean\nsea. Wherever n large belt of water\nseparated two countries the epidemio\nmarched from the one to the other in the\nsame length of time that it took n ship\nto sail across the water. Such instances\nwe saw in tho spreading of tho contagion\nfrom the continent of Europe across the\nchannel to England and from Great Bri-ta - i d\nto America. In tho latter case the\ninfectious material is not wafted across\n Atlantic ocean and carried tho long\ndistance by the air. From the moment\nof the outbreak of cholera in England\nabout seven days must at least elapse ere\ntho first case of the disease can happen in\nour country, for the fastest steamer needs\nabout that time to cross tho ocean.\nIt was known, therefore, long since that\nneither in Europe nor America could\nAsiatic cholera develop itself without its\ngerm having been first introduced into\ntheso countries. It was also known that\nhuman intercourse alone propagates tho\ncontagion, and experience has taught us\nthat filth favored and cleanliness pre-\nvented the spread of tho disease. In\nmodern times, whero publio hygiene has\nbecome such an important factor in tho\ngoverning of nations, where publio san-\nitary matters are generally understood\nand highly appreciated in civilized coun-\ntries, the facts just ennmerated have\nbeen made subservient to tho general\nwelfare of the people.
1759726994f3ef9d6bb25eb56db42724 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.1301369545915 29.949932 -90.070116 Having acknowledged the lrst partof the title\nof the abovenamed act to be In strict accordeaoe\nwith its meaning, we are obliged to say that the\nlatter part is just the reverse, aad that, Instead of\n" m o re efeotually leveeing, draining and reolaim-\nfongthe swamp lands in the rer of the oiy f New\nOrleans" (nothing said about the swamp ia the\nrear of Carrollton and Jefferson City) the project-\ned aet will entirely rule our system of drainage,\nbring the river and lake waters within oar doors,\ncut off commniatioon between the front and rear\npartaof our ti ompel s to double thepreset\nhumber of drinlg machlinee, and as the whole\nriver front from Carrollton to the lower part of\nNew Orleans will have no otheroutlets for the dis-\ncharge of rain or domestio waters than the con-\ntemplated oanal, we will. as it is contemplated by\nthe charter of the New Orleans and Ship Island\nCanal, be obliged to drain the whole front lands\ninto the said canal, on such and conditions\nas will be agreed upon between the parties, and\nby these means place the 350,000 inhabitants of\nthe above named cities, for drainage purposes, at\nthe mercy of the seven proprietors of the oharter,\nwho will thus be enabled to accomplish their work\nentirely at the expense of the public.\nTo give a pretext for this new legislation, and\napparently legitimate the appropriation of\n$.,600,000 of thet public money to the New Orleans\nand Ship Island CanalCempany, a clause has been\ninserted in the act compelling the company to\nbuild a levee on the north side of their canal to\nprotect the clties from any overflows from the\nlake or river water. This obligation is simoly ab-\nsuord,as the building of this levee will afford no\nprotection whatever in cue of a hurricane; the\nonly difference for us will be thatinstead of receiv-\ning the waters direct from the lake, we will have\nteem through the unprotected south bank of the\ncanal, and certainly that will not improve our con-\ndition.
7197faec7d5f1b45e1efe27fed15fb0e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.629781389142 39.513775 -121.556359 ELOyITF.NCK. IllC following pas-\nsage, suvs thr Sierra Citiznu U from\na correspondent el the Trinity TVwiev.\nOn tlx* -4th of July, they fastened tin 1\nAmerican flag to the top of a lull\npine; we do nut know how it may\nhe with others, hut the language of\nthis unknown writer semis the hloml\nshivering through t»tir veins ; it is a i\ninspiring as a minute gun at sea, am)\nwe print it for its intrinsic beauty :\nI have seen nhat flag sent aloft\nfrom the deck of many a gallant ship\nand heard broadside after broadside\npoured out in national salute to its\nhonor. I havefollmred that flag for\nmany a weary mile, in the heart of\nan enemys country, and through try-\ning scenes, always with feelings of\ndeep devotion, amounting almost to\nadoration; hut, as I am a living\nman, never with feelings so profound\nas those which filled me on that occa-\nsion. As 1 gazed upon that sacred\nemblem of our countrys greatness,\nI read a lesson there. It spoke to\nme in language far more potent than\nanything that words can say. It told\nme that the men who raised it there\nwere to their country —true to\nthe Union, and true to themselves.\nAlthough removed far distant from\nthe land of their birth, and despite\nof fanaticism and cries of disunion\nthat ever and anon reach us from the\nAtlantic, that their hearts still beat\ntrue to the Union. To those worthy\nminers, who, in their patriotism, plac-\ned the emblem of our country where\nit now so proudly floats, 1 say, keep\nit there, and every morning, as you\nbehold it, take new hope for your\ncountry—swear upon its altar eternal\nfidelity to the Union —eternal hostili-\nty to fanaticism and 'disunion. And\nwhen you return to your humble\nhomes at night, and lay yourselves\ndown upon your humble cots, and re-\nturn thanks to the deity for the bles-\nsings yon now enjoy, forget dot to\nadd a prayer for your country, and\nlet it he, “The Union —oh, Mod! the\nUnion, let it he preserved.” When\nyou rise in the morning, and greet\nthe rising sun, and return thanks to\nMod for being permitted to behold the\nlight of another day, forget not to\nadd the prayer for pour country,\n“The Union —oh, Mod! the Union,\nlet it he preserved.”
1ed289560aa2cdadc068410bad621c12 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.146575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 In yesterday's Pittsburgh LUpHlch is the\nfollowing article of local interest:\nMr. W. G. W. Day, of the Waynesburg\nRepublican, ticket agent of the Washington\nanil Waynesburg Railroad, was in the city\nyesterday, and speaking of the prospects of\nthat road fald "Toe Pennsylvania Railroad\nand Baltimore & Ohio have done a great deal\nof looking about getting control of the road,\nbut.notbingbas been doue as yet. The Bal¬\ntimore & Ohio has a system from this city to\nWashington, Ha., the Pittsburgh Southern 1\nmean, nnd with the Waynesburg road it\nwould have exclusive control of a big area of\ncountry tributary to Pittsburgh, which is\nnow lajgely taken up by the Pennsylvania\nroad by means of t' e Chartiers Valley line.\nAgain, the Baltimore «fc Ohio could take\nhold of the Waynesburg road and finish it to\nGrafton, W. Va., or its main stem, and thus\npenetrate a coal region not inferior to \nConnellbVille section. This,country, betjdes\nbeing rich lu minerals, is ono of the beat dt#\nveloped agricultural districts in Pennsylva¬\nnia and West Virginia. It would give ashort\nroute from West Virginia to Pittsburgh-\nsnorter than any one that I see available to\nany opposing company. Of course that is all\ncontingpnt upon the acquisition of the read\nby the Baltimore & Ohio. The Pennsylvania\ncould do the same tniug."\n"Will the road be extended toward West\nVirginia this summeif'\n"I think it will, without a doubt. From\nWaynesburg there is a splendid route up\nSouth Creek to its source, and tbenoe by an\neasy grade to Biackayille, on the West Vir¬\nginia Statn linn. The people of Monougalia\ncounty. W . Va., refused to vote a subscrip¬\ntion of $00 000 to take the road from Blacks-\nville toward Morgantown. This will be a\ndamper, but the road will go through never¬\ntheless."
09e03ce73b40b9e46f47056782f1958e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.6671232559615 46.187885 -123.831256 The relation of the great chain c\nbays that stretches from the Golden\nGate to the mouth of the Sacramento\nriver is so intimately connected with\niho dangers that threaten that river's\nruin that to investigate and discuss\nthe subject of debris only in connec\ntion with that great stream would be\nto leave the most conspicuous portion\nof the work bnt in part done. He\nwcnld be a dogmatic skeptic "who, af-\nter a trip up the river audits conflu-\nent waters, would attempt to main-\ntain that the obstructions in its chan-\nnels are temporary, aud curable by\nnatural laws. The number of those\nwho, for years, have marked the rapid\nchanges in their progress, is too great\nto be reasonably charged with error\nin judgment The fact that stringent\nlegislation hits been deemed necessa-\nry to control the evil is, in itself, an\nindisputable evidence that the dan-g e- i s\nare not imaginary. It must be\nconceded, then, that navigation of\nthe Sacramento, if uot ruined, is so\nimpaired as to startle the engineer\nwha would be called upon to estimate\nths cost of its salvation. Also, that\n3u.buu bay has been altered from a\ndeep lr.y, in which the largest ships\neould Vide, to a shallow lagoon,\nmust b confessed. These self evi-\ndent piopiwtions have each the same\ncoroh..ry. That corollary that\nwhat has been demonstrated by fif-\nteen years of proof each year mak-\ning Unit proof stronger in Suisuu\nbay and the Sacramento must in turn\nbecome demonstrable of Saa Pablo\nbay and the straits of Carquincz.\nWitnesses, earnest and willing ones,\nthough when unassisted impotent to\ncorrect tho dangers they see ahead,\nare to be found in nearly every slip\non the city frout To bo of value he\nmust have had an observation of more\nthan two or three years, aud should\nbe an experienced pilot or captain\nwho can recall the deep waters beforo\nthey were tinged with the earth that\nhas become as an avant count r to\nwarn off the great army that follows.\nSuch witnesses a representative of\nthe Call has seen and from them\ngathered the testimony that tells of\npronounced and unmistakable chang-\nes now on record on the shores of\nCarquinez straits and tho bay of San\nPablo. From them he has learned\nthat at the wharf of J. L. Ileald's\nAgricultural Works the depth has\nbegun to diminish. At the large new\nmills of Starr fc Co., though as yet\nbusiness has not begun, the yellow\ntrespasser has made its presence\nknown and will before long very de-\ncidedly affect the value of the prop-\nerty, so far as water conveniences for\nshipment are concerned.
27d3f1866e261dbafa7549820c675679 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.1106557060818 58.275556 -134.3925 ent; with the abandon of youth he did\nwhat it seemed to him was right, and\nthough four score years and ten might\nhave been given him, his life might not\nhave contained a larger measure of joy.\nBut, a sad part of the story still re-\nmains untold. Far back in the old\nhome, those who were nearest and dear¬\nest to "Riley," sit and weep. A mother,\nwho loved him as only a mother can,\nmourns for her boy. A mother who\nheld him to her breast, who watched\nthe littlo limbs grow strong aud sturdy,\na mother, whose anxiou9 tears and\nprayers have followed him all his life.\ni Died.At Douglas, Alaska, Friday,\nFebruary 5th, 1004, Antoue Bozovich,\na native of Brijest, Vanjina, Delmacia,\nAustria, aged 23 years. Funeral ser¬\nvices were held from the 'Catholic\nchurch on Sunday, Feb. 7, at 2 o'clock\np. m ., Rev. Father Bougis, S. J.,officiat¬\ning. Interment at the Douglas Ceme¬\n The deceased had been employ¬\ned ou the Islaud for over three years.\nOd Friday last, he was working at the\nReady Bullion mine. A lighted can\ndie, which ho wore in his cap, fell into\na buuch of primers, and an explosion\nquickly followed, from the effects of\nwhich he soon after died, at the St.\nAnu Hospital. The handling of powder\nI is always fraught with danger, and this\nis especially the case where a man be¬\ncomes careless or indifferent. In the\npresent instance, we understand a\nlarge number of men came very near\nto the danger which caused this man\nto lo9e his life. There is always con\nfusion at such a time and numerous\n| stories are circulated. In this case it\nj is stated that Bozovich, realizing the\nmistake he had made, attempted to\ncarry the powder away from his follow\nj workmen, and iu doing so, lost his life\nin trying to save others.
4a1835e650e5d7ac1956319cab32afef THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.7226775640052 40.063962 -80.720915 6th In construction it It both simple and durahie.\nThe hat-dle in nitdo of two wromrnt iron\nrods and so arranged that while it In light, }ct\nhas great strength. The cylinder In whlco a I the\nwork la performed is iron, lined *ltticoi.ier um\nonpor linlnu prertnt*ru*tand mikes »nt little\nfriction. Thta Iron chamber la not su>>m«r|le<l,\nbat placed in the well above the water una jet\nwill work as well nn«l« r aa above the water.\n?.h. It can be used in a driven or b rtd well\nwith the same ease aa a well of larger diameter.\n8th. For Its general adaptability thin Pump la\nwlthont a rival. The Pump may be placed at\nyour dwelling or barn, or within the building,\nand connected with tha well, or spring or other\nbody of water, fifty t r one hundred yard* distant,\nand will work with tho eamue-ieeaa though\nstanding directly over tee water.\nttth. It single acting and pomps only with\nthe down stroke of the landie, and thus avoids »\nthe /uavullftrequina in tteidoubljacting Pnwp.\n10th. By attaching a shun hose, a stream may\nbe thrown fifty to sixty feet and may often be\no«ed to advaniace In watering gardens and lawns,\nwashing windows, cleaning baggies, extinguishI\nlug fires, or elevating water. We recognise the\nfact that it requi.e* more power to elevate water\nfrom a deep than from a shallow well. Betas\nfar as poeMbl* to obviate this difficulty for deep\nwulln, we nianufacturo n smaller chamber, so that\nwhile the volume of water la diminished, the\npower required is not greatly Increased We\ncialm thai by the combination, having all the\nadvantages of atmospheric pressure In combination\nwith force, that tbe Binclaiii Pukp will\nelevate water from a deep well with leaa power\nthan any gubmrrg* or purely /ores pump In existence.\nThis Pninp Is easily adapted to supply
61e05f5fa4dc211c3fd7f558ea04e241 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.736338766191 40.618676 -80.577293 The United Garment Workers of\nAmerica uses the above Label,\nwhich distinguishes the class of\nmerchandise for which Label is\nissued by running through the\ncenter on the face of the Label\nin line type tho word "Clothing"\nas on the above. On others: "Spe­\ncial Order Clothing," "Custom\nMade," "Duck Goods," or "Neck­\nwear." This identification of prod­\nuct is made clear either in lino\nletters across face of Label or\nprinted at one end of same.\nThe United Garment Workers of\nAmerica adopted the Union Label\nin 1891. At that timo tailors\nworked 16 hours per day under the\ntask and sweating system. Ninety-\neight per cent of the tailoring\nindustry was done in tenement\nhouse shops; operators furnished\ntheir own thread and machines\nand it was a common practice for\nmuch of the work to be done in\nthe living room in which the family\nslept. worked as many as\n78 to 86 hours per week. The\nUnited Garment Workers were\ngreatly instrumental in having\nlaws passed abolishing tho opera­\ntion of tenement house shops, the\ntask, sweating system and home\nwork. Wages were standardized\nand increased from year to year.\nHours were reduced until now the\nwork clothing business is on a 40-\nhour-week basis and 36 hours in\nthe men's clothing industry. The\nGarment Workers industry was\none of the lirst to establish the\nfive-day work week.\nMillions of the United Garment\nWorkers' of America's Union\nLabels are used annually. It is\nthe only official emblem in the\nmen's clothing industry that is\nrecognized by the American Fed­\neration of Labor.\nFor further information regard­\ning Union Labels, Shop Cards and\nService Buttons write Mr. I . M .\nO r n b u r n, Secretary-Treasurer,\nUnion Label Trades Department,\nv
18c85a40beb5a6305f98e80f8ddcaeca THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1901.6205479134958 41.004121 -76.453816 wardly to Catharine street, thence\nnorthwardly to sixth street, thence\nwestwardly to Railroad street, thence\na northerly ditection to Fifth street,\nthence in an easterly direction to\nMarket street, thence north to Second\nstreet, thence east to north Street,\nthence to Light Street Road, thence\nby said Light Street road to limits of\nBloom, thence by the public road\nleading from Bloom to Light Street,\nOrangeville, Stillwater and Benton,\nfollowing the general course of what\nis known as Fishingcrcek, through\nScott township and Orange township\nto the limits of Orangeville Borough,\nthence by the Main street of the boro-\nugh of Orangeville trom the southern\nto the northeran limits tnereof, thence\nthrough Orange township following the\npublic road, along said Fishingcreek\nand crossing the county bridge over\nsaid Fishingcrejk to the northeastern\nlimits of said Orange township, thence\nfollowing the said public road through\nFishingcreek township to the southern\nlimits of the 'Borough of Stillwater,\n through the Main street\nof the Borough ,of Stillwater from the\nsouthern to its northern limits, cross-\ning the said Fishingcreek by county\nbridge at a point near the store of\nMoses Mc Henry & Son, thence by\nthe same public road to the line divid-\ning Benton township from Fishing-\ncreek township, thence by the same\npublic road through Benton township\nto the line dividing Benton township\nfrom Benton Borough, thence by the\nsame public road through Benton\nBorough crossing Fishing creek by\ncounty bridge, and the Main or Second\nstreet of the borough of Benton to the\nnorthern limits thereof, returning by\nthe same route to the place ot beginn-\ning with single or double tracks, and\nthe necessary turn ou'.s and switches.\nCapital stock of the Company is\n$120,000, being at least six thousand\ndollars for every mile ot road to be\nconstructed. Stock to consist of\ntwenty four hundred shares of fifty\ndollars' each.
1f7e69d5147b9a9e68e244f402636daf THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.132876680619 29.949932 -90.070116 MRs. ULire.whose visit to the superintendent of\npolice to make an affidavlt of murder against her\nhusband, was recorded in the CasacrcT of yester\ncay. repaired, it seems, on the same day to Re.\nccrder Jachson of the Fourth District, for the\nsame purpose, and also to procure a warrant for\nthe arrest of Victor Huff. who she aserted had\nbeen the only witness of the deed. But as this\nlatter was alleged to have takes place at Pass\nManchac, the recorder of course informed the\napplicant that he had no jurisdiction in the pre.\nui-es. Mieanwhile her husband, who had previ-\nonusly surrendered himself at the Fourth District\nstation, remains in confinement there. He is a\nquiet, totelligent man, neat in appearance. and\nretiring in mien, and, when our reporter called at\nthe station yesterday, was employed in writing\nout bi*sta:tement of thelaffair. Mr. was a\nConfederate soldier, was both wounded and a\nprisoner, and aftter the war served upon the police\nin this city under Mayor Monroe. In Mobile in\n1-,63 he was married by the Rev. Dr. tampson, of\nChrist Church. Arriving in New Orleans at the\nclose of the war, he was employed for five months\non board the steamer Emery. Upon his return he\nfound thathis wife bhadsold all that was In their t\nhouse, and had gone to Texas. She returned,\nb ever, shout the period of the riotsin 1866,\n(at which time her husband was on the police, as\nprevi u"lyalluded to,) and asked him to take\nher back and provide for her. promising to be\nfaithful to him forever. The husband consented,\nasod they went to housekeeping. Shortly after\nthis. being discharged from the police, Mr,Usee,\nat the request of bhs oousnain,
8aa5643ad7252e8039f1c62a1c35819b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.2999999682902 41.681744 -72.788147 fore finances can be provided.\nCity officials are faced with a as- -\nHoua problem of where to obtain\ndumping grounds. The district sur\nrounding the Glen street (rounds\nis In a state of rebellion against .he\nfire and smoke nuisances which are\nan inevitable annoyance wherever.\nthere is a public refuse heap. Thev\nhave demanded of the common\ncouncil. In a resolution received\nWednesday night, that the grounds\nbe closed. City Engineer Philip A.\nMerian, whose public works depart-\nment has the custody Of these\ngrounds, agrees that their complaint\nis well founded, but does not be'\nlieve the nuisance will long con-\ntinue for the reason that tha plot\nhas been nearly filled to its capacity.\nOther officials do not expect to see\nthis dumping ground in service\nmore than a few months.\nMayor Paonessa has already take I\nsteps looking to relief from the\npuzzling condition, and he has \npointed a committee of council\nmembers to look over available\nplots and prepare figures as to\ncosts. It is difficult to say which of\nits two problems will be greater\nwhether it will be harder to find\nlands than it will be ts find money.\nThe Idea of a municipal Incinera-\ntor was first brought up by Chief\nWilliam J. Noble of the lire depart-\nment, who recommonded this im\nprovement in the city's system sev.\neral years ago. The department of\nhealth and the common council\nagreed as to the wisdom of the reo- -\nommendatlon, and the movement\nprogressed to a point where figures\nwere gathered and tentative sketches\nmade for consideration by the board\nof finance and taxation. Dut, then.\nas has been tha rase with many\nother good suggestions. It wa-- j\nthrown on the scales with a dollar\nsign as the counterbalance, and the\nIncinerator movement died.
023f9279324bbeda5596b37799d992af EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6479451737696 39.745947 -75.546589 Fortune for Five Players.\nFifty-three thousand dollars has been\nspent foe five players this season, and\nthis is only a part of the money that\nwill go to pay for players coming up to\nthe majors from the hushes. Its only\na couple of years ago that Colonel Eb-\nbets nearly depleted the Southern\nLeague with the expenditure of $53,000\nbut the price on talent, like living, is\ngoing up. The White Box gave the,\nequivalent of $1S,000 for Cbappell; Fritz\nMaisel, the Baltimore youth, cost the\nYankees $12,000 . The exchequer of the\nGiants is minus $10,000 for Rube\nSchauer. Brooklyn paid $7,000 for El­\nmer Brown and the Yankees gave the\nJersey City Club $0.000 ror Marty Me-\nHale. Any number of players have\nbrought their owners $5,000 , which was\nonce considered a pretty fair price for\na player, but which sinks rnto insignifi­\ncance beside the new figures.\n Big Leaguers Go Back.\nIt is a peculiar feature of these trans­\nactions. too, that some of the players\nwho have cost so much are men who\nhave been tried ont in tne big leagues\nbefore and fajled to make good. Elmer\nBrown was given a chance with fbe St.\nl/ouis Browns and let go because he did\nnot have the qualifications deemed nec­\nessary to stick even to the Browns.\nMarty MeHale, although he has been\nshowing well in Jersey City, considering\nthat, clubs position in tne rare, is a\ndiscard from the Red Sox. In paying\nbig prices for players who have been\nknown to fail on trial it appears that\nmajor league cl\\ibs are nard up\nialent. The recall of MeQuilan and\nVaughn from the minors would seem to\nadd support to this belief.\nThis is accounted for by a number of\ndisappointments met wltn\nleague clubs this season.
057ae56d9fbf1014a304ca2680c16cef THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.1953551596337 40.063962 -80.720915 Al.'pgml Mjmtoiinu* JJlmpjio.nrnncp.\nThe roihlonts of that portion of Culd-\nwell'j run, extending from tho llmo mid\ncement works to tlio toll unto, nro in\nhigh dudgeon, mid nro determined to lot\ntlio city fathers know, with no uncer¬\ntain voice, that soinothing must bo done\nto nijike tlio continuation of Tnonty-\nninth etrcofc at loast passable in muddy\nweathor. Ati indignation mooting was\nheld yesterday evening at tlio school\nhouso on thu other sido of tfio toil gate,\nami appropriate resolutions were passed.\n"Why," said an indignant tax payor\nto an Intei.uubscku reporter yesterday,\n"tlio way tlio city lias treated ua is an\noutrage. When Caldwell's run was\nstraightenedirotn tho old. bond bolow\nthe cement works to tho toll {tuto, tho\nexcavated dirt was thrown into tho\nformer bed of tho run. Tlio old bed,\nthus tilled iH the road wo now have\nto use, and 1 tell you, slio'a a dandy.\nDuring tho muddy woasher suoli teams\nas venturo in the road do so at their\nperil, and it is only by. dint of tho\nstrongest oxortlons, without stopping\nto talie breath, on tho part of tlio driver\nand his horses that tlioy can savo them¬\nselves from being swallowed tip in tho\nmud. Near the coinont works tho road\nlias boon iiinestoned, and wo are duly\nthankful for that much.. Wo want more,\nhowever, and proposo to see if tiiero\nis'nt Bonio way to get it. C'ouiicilliicn\naro very good at handing in resolutions\nto pave North Market strcot, and to put\na eurDstono hero and u crock sewer\nthere, but no ono seems to think that\nwo need anything in our c'ornor of tlio\ncity."
161a3516ad7f47527133be9cfd30a54d COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1865.683561612126 41.262128 -95.861391 will h f.ire Innr ahs-'th all tbe pvtr-'« nf i* should join band- to pot down nar-\nI(^fi»l>*tion. aad you will biive, ia eff cr,\nbut one eonaoli inti-d (jowernment. Fro\nthe extent nf our eaun'TV, its diverttll^d\nint'>r it*. diff'r»nt porwiita aod diff-Tent\nhabit*, it ia too ohvinn" for argument,\ntbat a *ini?le c"n*n!ii]nt<-d Go.vernment\nwooid be wbollv-iaad quata to watch ov­\ner and prmi-ct ita intcrf^tc; aod every\nfriend of our free in.«tit rtiina *hnuld be\nahrav* pr. p -»r'-d to maintain onimpair'^1\nand in foil ri«nr tb« Rights ami Sover­\neignty nf the State*., »nd to confine tb<\naction of the G^nf-ral Oovemment to tbe\n•phere of ita appropriate duties,"\nThe forej^nift? a< Ipctinna from tbe pa\npert of General Jaekaon (rtrnnin; throtjjrb\nib'i eboie pe.rind of ku* poblio eareee).\n H.'Vf^ni qo>»ti:»n bi-i pngi:ion aa a\nKt»t.> Right* man. *nd a true inter of bi*\neoontrv. It wiil not be potnr too far to\n••it that the miiti'mai r*«i|ers of ' The\nCri»i-" will find their time not tbeowc\naway, if they ehoa'd read tbo«e extrweu\nwith attttiiooa sttentionr-and wr|! remem­\nber the wige loaenns they inculcate. It\nhaa heen the practice 01 manv to catch at\norrtain expre^tions in th" South Carolina\nProciamt'i 'n <»s aa bori'v to j iatlfy U»e\nhi-Jif aa-umfttinn of anwarrantfd powerii\nin th* r, ntra' Giv r"in- nt, at tbe ex-\nT«»n#e of S'et» Bt'irhts. Th'iee who think\n•r peeaome th»i*. wi'? find bv careful re\nrontidtratir n^ that th<-ir seal baa not been\n' nccorttinq to knoirledgt;**— and that if\na rr'P^d'nt for arbi:rary doetrigea is
075284d4ef8ddf2e02b30de7977be273 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.905479420345 41.875555 -87.624421 Joseph Mclnerney.\nJoseph F. Ryan.\nPoter Schaeffer.\nWilliam E. Schlake.\nWilliam H. Sexton.\nA. R . Tearney.\nDaniel Ryan.\nAid. John Powers.\nAid. Vincent Swlefka.\nWilliam A. Tllden.\nJoseph Holpucb.\nMaurice Rothschild.\nPeter M. Shaughnessey\nS. B . Stafford.\nErnst Hummel.\nHenry F. Donovan.\nJohn Corcoran.\nFred Rhode.\nEmll Sclpp.\nRichard W. Wolfe.\nIrving L. Shuman.\nPeter 8. Theurer.\nA. D. Welncr..\nJames A. Qul'nn.\nAlbert Nownk.\nFrank C. O'Connell.\nEdward Prlndlvlllc.\nBenjamin M. Mitchell.\nOtto Spankuck.\nMichael Rosenberg.\nL. O. J. Milord.\nDavid Pfaclzer.\nJohn E. Owens.\nFrank Paschen.\nDr. Adam Swajkart.\nFrank J. Skala.\nB. M . Winston.\nWilliam Russell.\nWilliam J. O'Brien.\nJoseph A. Weber.\nMichael J. Prelb.\nFrank Slma.\nWilliam Rehm.\n E. Ericsson.\nMorris Vehon.\nGeorgo A. Tripp.\nB. F . Hubbard.\nThomas Byrne.\nWilliam Lowey.\nGeorgo W. Jackson.\nW. Ssymanskl.\nM. Barnhardt.\nDr. William D. Byrne.\nChristopher J. McGurn,\nHenry Welse.\nHenry Nowak.\nPhilip Klafter.\nMichael J. Flynn.\nD. B . Kennedy.\nO. Edward Treblng.\nCharles Barnes.\nAlbert P. Bauer.\nGust P. Bartlnek.\nPeter Brady.\nAnthony Schroeder.\nMelville G. Holding.\nJohn W. Beckwlth.\nWilliam Brown, Jr.\nMiles J. Devine.\nHarry Goldstein.\nJohn F. Llllls.\nCalvin B. Beach.\nPhilip J. Slebold.\nGustavus J. Tatga,\nFrank J. Adam.\nMichael Schoenwald.\nSimon O'Donnell.\nFrank J. Selff, Jr.\nAnton J. Hojka.\nThomas F. Little.\nFrancis A. Hurley.\nHenry F. Schuberth.\nMichael L. Igoe.\nEdward J. Kelly.\nEdward O. Brown.\nRoy Koehn.
1ef7faa40bf6fd497f97dc0792c98d3f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.1520547628108 40.063962 -80.720915 jy a mow side. It was lirst missed this ,1,\nluo/ming. Men have gone to dig it out and M\nrescue tlic inmates alive or dead.\nAugust Sepli, a prominent Gorman citi- tli\nten, of Jackson, Mich, a oignr manufac*\nurer, shot himself in the right temple with m\ni thirty-eight calibre revolver, yesterday bt\nnorning about 10 o'clock at his residence, cf\nJauso, pecuniary embarrassment. as in- b(\nlicatcd bv a letter written to his wife yes- ai\nerdav, wnich give a list of his debts and\narewells to his friends. ro\nQuite a sensational affair occurred at the t0\nittle town of lUishel, Illinois, Wednesday\nlight, whicli created a great excitement Wl\nimong the citizens of the place. As the\nrain from the west approached the station, Pj\n\\. J Brad Held shot Charles II. Scott, who\n, vas in company with his (BradlhJld's) wife.\nAll had come from Kansas City on\nhe same train, but Scott and Mrs,'Brad- 01\niord did not know that Bradtield was on\nboard until the assault was made. Scott re- 3?\n:eived four shots, hut will recover. Brad- 111\nHeld accuses Scott with belnir ton intimnfn\nwith liis wife ami «hot him to nwni.'e the '*\nwronj: ho hod received. Mrs. Jirudfleld di\n[Ionic* tho intimacy Scott wimn member\nd( the Ann of Scott A Griffith, draggUta ot '»\nKansuCity, which stu|wndc<l two months «"\nIIRO, und liradfleld traveled for Vordo, cl\nBlddlo it Co., of the some city, until the l»t\nof liwt January, since when he bits been\nwith a Chicago tlna. lie was arrested.
10739db1260abc5473270f032a7f15fc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.6452054477422 39.745947 -75.546589 The North Atlantic fisheries ques­\ntion is an Instance in point. Even Eng\nland warned the Canadian Government\nin 1871 that, while the letter of the\ntreaty of 1817 might warrant them in\nthe rigid exclusion of American fishing\nvessels, "except to procure wood and\nwater, to obtain shelter and make re­\npairs," It was nevertheless an "ex­\ntreme measure, inconsistent will» the\ngeneral policy of the empire. Yet the\nCanadians continued to seize American\nvessels, almost precipitating war, until\n1888, when the modus vivendi was\npatched up. In accordance with the\nprovisions of this makeshift American\nvessels must pay a tonnage tax for the\nprivilege of entering Canadian ports\nfor bonding and other commercial pur­\nposes. while Canadian fishing vessels\nhave free entry to American ports for\nlike purposes. This Is palpably unjust,\nand the obstinate unfairness of the Ca­\nnadians was displayed the object\nof driving a bargain with our Congress.\nIt was an attempt to extort entry free\nof duty for their fish, and only resu'ted\nIn nurturing malice and 111 will.\nThe Atlantic fisheries, the fur seal\nquestion, the Alaskan boundary and\nthe reciprocal customs duties are the\nchief questions to be considered, but\nthe reciprocity question presents spe­\ncial difficulties. If the Canadians ap­\nproach the conference in the spirit of\nmutual concessions It is sure that they\nwill have a freer entry to a market of\n70,000.000 people for many of their\nproducts, while our manufacturers will\nfind a larger field among the 5,000.000\npeople df Canada, which Is to-day our\nthird best customer. We augur the\nbest results from the character of the\nCanadian commissioners, who have al­\nways been promoters of more liberal\nIntercourse with this country. The\nLondon Times says:
527bfceb36dd2faab90f1357248010f2 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1908.389344230672 36.620892 -90.823455 Shlrlev. Orrln N. Carter. Eldred P. Oray.\nAdolphAndel, J. H. Jonea, Samuel W. Daw\nson ana t.,ega a. nuoasiue, uieunauown sieira\nand devisees of Sanford B. Kellogg, the un-\nknown heirs and devisees of Nathan T. Porter,\nthe unknown helra and devisee, of laalah K.\nBooker, the unknown, heirs and devisees of\nThomas Slade, ' the unknown helra nd devt-re - e .\nof Robert D. Oolemaa. the unknown hairs\nand devisees ot Helen M. Mayan, the un-\nknown helra and devlseea of John W. Barton,\nthe unknown neire ana aevtsees of Jaaie. rip,\nthe unknown heir and devlaeea of Alden S.\nSwan, the unknown heir, and devlaeea of Cle-\nmens Osteurled, the unknown heir and devi-\nsee of Annls Morris, the unknown heir and\nAtViaMa of John Charles Yost, tb unknown\nheirs and devlaeea of Judls ganclae, the\nunknown heir and devisee, of Thaima Mor-\nris, the unknown heirs and devisee of Ab-\nram Jones, the unknown heir and devisee\n Elisabeth Ann Young, the unknown heirs\nand devisee of Levi Wheeler, the unknown\nheir and devisees of Silas P. Bacroa. tlx un-\nknown hairs and devisees of Addison P. Burn,\ntb unknown heir and devlaeea ofCheoeyHoott,\n(hs nnknAwn helra and apvlseea ot Benaunln\nBhuley, the unknown heirs and slevlsee ot\nStephen lomn, tne nnanown new ana veri\nsees of Myron D. Coleman, the unknown heir,\nand devisee of I. M . Shirley, tne unknown\nhelra and devlseea of William H. Dunnlck, the\nunknown helra and eVertaee of Michael J.\nKyne, the unknown helra and devisee of\nPrank Beilttem, the knowa hair and devl-\naeea of Eldred P. Gray, the unknown heirs\nand devisee of AdoU AndeL, th an knows\nk.in an devlaeea of J H. Jonea the unknown\n' heir and devlaa of Samuel W. Davraou. W.\nC. Cwlbertsoa, and th unknown helm and de\nvisees of W. C . Cnlbertson, defendant.\nNew at thta dar some C. H. Martin, the nisla-
192746a8580ad3b962ad6a68f4a99ed5 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.1493150367833 37.92448 -95.399981 diana ho had but $20 in money. They\nbrought their feather beds and a few\nsuch necessary articles. Ho rented a\nsmall farm of poor land aud in a poor\nneighborhood, aud on this we man-\naged to live for thrco years, then mov-\ned to another place where we remain-\ned somo four years (This brings tho\ntime to 184G). So soon as any of the\nchildren were old enough to be em-\nployed on farms or in tho village they\nwent to work and their earnings con-\ntributed to tho support of tho family.\nAVhen I was twelve years old (which\nwas this year) I took my place with\nthe rest and commenced mj struggle\nfor a living, working on farms during\nthe summer and attending school for\nabout three months through the win-\nter until I was fifteen, when our fami-\nly doctor took a fancy to me and want-\ned mo to come and live with him and\ndo his chores, attend to his horses and\nsuch other work as had for mo to\ndo for my clothes aud board and at-\ntend school while the common school\nwas in session, which was usually\nabout nine months in the year. I re-\nmained with him about three years\nand acquired a fair common school ed-\nucation for the times. I left him then\nin May, 1852, spent the summer work-\ning on farms. In October following,\ncarpetsack and umbrella in hand, I\nwalked one hundred miles into Miami\ncounty, Iud., whero my oldest sister\nlived. That county was newly settled\nand but little improved. Their means\nof transportation was the old Wabash\nand Erie Canal. I made the move for\nthe purposeof securing my first school,\nwhich I did. I remained there about\nten months. During the summer I\nworked at carpentering. In August I\nreturned homo and entered an Acade-\nmy at Richmond for three months,\nthen procured a country school within\nfour miles of tho city. At the end of\ntwo months smallpox broke out and I\nhad to close.
088f793f9c182fdf3a5d212079cb3fb2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.457650241601 46.187885 -123.831256 A fisherman who was caught in the\nsevero galo Wednesday night, had nis\nboat so badly damaged that he was\ncompelled to cast his net overboard\nto keep the boat afloat; to prevent\nthe net being lost he tied it to a trap\nin Baker's Bay: yesterday morning,\nhe, with some other fishermen went\nout to get tho net; in hauling it in\nthey found entangled an other net\nand in this net. the body of a man,\nwho proved to be John Johansen, a\nnative of Sweden, who has been fish-\ning for the Occident cannery this sea-\nson ; his boat was found bottom side up\nfarther tip the bay. When found he had\non bat pants and undershirt, having\nevidently taken off his rubber boots\nand coat before the boat overturned\nthe better to battle with the angry\nwaves: he was known to be a powerful\nswimmer having saved a man from\ndrowning in San Francisco bay, last\nyear; when his capsized he is\nsupposed to have become entangled\nin the net, and thus rendered power-\nless carried to his untimely eud.\nNothing has been heard ot his boat\npuller but is more than likely he also\nhas been drowned. He, Johansen,\nfished on the Columbia last summer\nand for the past two winters has been\nrunning out from 'Frisco in coasters.\nHe was abont 26 years of age and has\nno relatives in this country, xne\nsecretary of the Sailors' Union in San\nFrancisco will most likely know tho\naddress of his parents.\nThe severe storm for the past four\ndays has caused a great deal of\ntrouble to the railroad company in\nbreaking the booms of piles, and pre-\nventing the diver from working.\nAll work along the lino has been\nsuspended on account of the weather;\nthe delay is to be regretted as the\ncompany needs all the time between\nthis and July 1st to get the cara run\nning.
26c49e8342445d1eef916748d759537b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.0315068176053 41.004121 -76.453816 The sounding of the fire alarm,\nthe clanging of the bells ou the hose\ntrucks as they were being hurried\noff in the direction of box 21, from\nwhence the alarm came, the contin-\nued blowing of the adjacent factory\nwhistles, mingled with the shrieks\nof excited men, was the pandemon-\nium of noises which aroused the res-\nidents of town shortly after six\no'clock this moruing. The cause\nof the commotion was a fire at E.\nC. Caswtll & Co's woolen mill.\nThe blaze started on the first floor\nnear the olllce, in the north east\ncorner of the building and burned\nover a large portion of the floor and\nmade its way up through to the sec-\nond floor. All the fire companies\nwere on the scene promptly aud it\nrequired the strength of the depart\nineut to subdue the flames.\nNearly all of the machinery on\nthe first floor well as much of it\non the second floor was considerably\ndamaged. The flames did not reach\nthe third floor, but the machinery\nthere consisting of dryers and some\nother equipment was more or less\nimpaired by the intense heat. The j\nstock rooms, iortunately, escaped j\nany invasion of the destructive el-- 1\nement and no loss will be sustained j\nfrom that source. The floor be-\ntween the first and second stories\nwas badly charred and in some pla-\nces holes were burned through.\nThere are two theories advanced\nas to how the fire started, one is\nthat it was caused by a crossed elec-\ntric light wire and the other is that\nit was the result ot spontaneous\ncombustion- - The latter theory is\naccepted as the most likely.\nThe mill furnished employment\nfor 60 people all of whom will be\nwithout work until the repairs are\nmade.
407bd709d484a179ad2934649907e803 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.919178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 petition and the matter was at once\nreferred to Attorney E. M. Yeomans.\nbankruptcy referee. Attorney Pierce\nwas named as temporary receiver, the\ncourt appointing him to serve until\nsome arrangement can be made for\nsettling Mr. Hart's affairs.\nAmong the items in the\nwhich bring "Mr. Hart's assets up\nto a high figure is a life insurance\npolicy for $8,000. This policy is said\nto be made in favor of the Newton\nestate and was issued to protect the\nformer owners of the livery business\nat the same the selectman acquired\nthe property a few years ago.\nReports that Mr. Hart partially set-\ntled some of his bills this week by\nturning over to certain creditors\nteams which he owned have been in\ncirculation and F. L . Benzon has de-\nclared his intention of contesting the\ntransfers, if have been made, for\nthe Newton estate. He believes that\nall the property will have to be in-\ncluded in the schedule of his asset.3 .\nAlthough Mr, Hart was not at the\noffice in the livery barns today, the\nplace was open and business was car-\nried on seemingly as usual. Expres-\nsions of sympathy are heard on all\nsides for the selectman's business\ntroubles. While it was known that\nMr. Hart was in financial difficulties\nfor some time, the announcement in\nthe Plerald last evening of his inten-\ntion to become a bankrupt was a sur-\nprise to many of his friends, who had\nbeen expecting him to get out of the\ntangle in which he became involved\nowing to a series of unavoidable set-\nbacks and numerous unkind acts by\nDame Fortune since he went into the\nbusiness.
1b1123e84cfc3c094cbf0fe6dcfd2f87 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.8589040778793 37.305884 -89.518148 Coming closely upon the heels of\nBuffalo dispatch was one from a\nfriend in Boston announcing that city\nto have gone for Bryan by a majori-\nty of 7,000 , as against 17,000 for Mc-\nKinley four years ago.\nThe early dispatches indicated the\nloss of Maryland, and this also was r.\ndisappointment, for it had been be-\nlieved that that state was fairly safe\nfor the democratic ticket.\nAfter receiving the earlier returns\nin his library, in the midst of his\nfriends, Mr. Bryan retired to his pri-\nvate apartments, wbieh were con-\nnected with the outside world by a\nspecial wire. Both he and Mrs. Bryan\nwere in cheerful mood, and a person\nunacquainted with the circumstances\nwould never have dreamed from their\ndemeanor tnat they were at this \nthe center of national interest.\nAt eight o clock, when the newspa-\nper men congregated at Mr. Bryan's\nhouse sought to secure a statement,\nfrom him, they were told that he had\njust gone to sleep and could not oj\ndisturbed. When he retired to h:s\nown room he glanced over the re-\nturns with apparent interest, and\nthen, expressing a desire to make up\nsome of the rest he had lost in the\npast few weeks, lay down, and was\nasleep in less than five minutes. He\nhad slept an hour in the afternoon,\nafter which he went for a horseback\nride to the farm. He did not, how-\never, feel fully recuperated, and.\ntherefore, sought additional rest, thus\nmanifesting probably less concern\nthan hundreds oi thousands of his\nfollowers.
265f65ac3f463ed0f737b1b0e5141896 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.8155737388686 40.063962 -80.720915 teCUr?.V«. That Mr. Hutch,n-\nm>q bad proved up against him at New\nCumberland. He said that wben tbe Grot\neight bills referred to in tbe list were voted\non he was prevented by tit-kneed from\nbeing present. On tbe bill to tux incomes,\nhe feaid that be voted for it, and remarked\nthat tbe idea of tbe bili was thic, that if a\nman bad an income of over $2,000, he ia to\npay an income tax, and said that be would\nventure the assertion that there were not\nmore than three or four persons in Harri¬\nson county whom the bill would affect\nAs to most of tbe other hills, on which it\nwas charged that he did not vote, he as¬\nserted that he was paired with Mr. Orth,\nand in quite a number of cases defended\nhis absence by saying that Mr. Garfield\nwasaleo absent. He acknowledged that\nhe voted to reduce tbe tax on liquors, and\nsaid did so in order to protect the farm*\nera, and obtain more revenue by decreas¬\ning tbe tax. He said that it was absolute¬\nly and unqualifiedly untrue that he ever\ndodged a vote while in Congress, in the\nsense of having tliirhed a vote, and as to\nthe assertion tnat he had dodged the vote\non the Ordinance of Secession in the Vir¬\nginia Convention in 1861, he explained\nthat while iu that Convention he bad re¬\nceived from Gov. Johnson and many\nothers petitions asking him to voto for tbe\nOrdinance cf Secession, while on the other\nhand he had received petitions from\nWaldo Goff and others to vote against it,\nand as there were more than enough\nvotes without him to carry the Ordinance\nbe bad asked to be excuHed, and was ex¬\ncused from voting. (In other words, as the\nSecessionists bad the majoritv in the Con¬\nvention, they had excused their timid\nbrother from voting.)
12062dfc5af67738e7c4a0a5980ffdf2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.4863013381532 39.745947 -75.546589 haps the greatest single financial\npower, direct and Indirect, in the\nUnited States Is lodged In the ■>aat\nnumbers of pbllcyholdera. For, as a\nbanker has expressed It, the heroic\nsoul that on the average can and will\ndeny itself indulgence to pay Insur­\nance premiums for the benefit of a\nwife and children will on the same\naverage likewise deny itself further\nIndulgence to pay other instalments\nof other Investments for their benefit.\nIn the United States there are life\nInsurance policies in force to the\ntent of considerably more than $30, -\n000.000,000. Now this does not mean\nthat there is $30,000,000 .000 or half\nof that $30.000 .000 .000. or anything\nlike it, thereby available for invest-1 taken,\nment by tho policy holders. In the |\nfirst place there Is included In that\nmore than $30,000 -000,000 of\nance several billion dollars\ncalled Industrial Insurance, which\nseldom. If ever, represents an \nof any moment In the policy or\nbraces with It borrowing capacity\nthe policy. In the second place, in­\ncluded In this more than $30,000,000, -\n000 of Insurance policies are the poli­\ncies of business and assessment\npanles, which, generally speaking,\nmay be excluded like the so-called In­\ndustrial policies. But If we eliminate\nall those from consideration there is\nvery likely left ordinary insurance\not half of the $30.000,000 ,000. This\nIs not all insurance “value,” except\nIn the case ot death; but If only\nthird of this sum, or one-sixth of the\nwhole amount of Insurance in force,\nwere available fof use by the policy\nholders themselves, hero would bo a\ndirect financial power in their liamls,\nto be exercised in borrowing\ncity, of some $6,000.000,000, not\nspeak ot tho Investing power by\nbeneficiaries of some $760.000 ,000\ndirectly paid out annually In cash to\nthem as policy holders die.
32e5d104d682a5887c011e1a1a151196 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.5259562525298 44.939157 -123.033121 Does not the Oregonian realize that if war with Mex-\nico comes some of the 1500 manly boys who marched away\nfrom Portland, Salem and other Oregon cities, will never\ncome back again; that many will return home maimed and\ncrippled for life, a burden to themselves, their country\nand their families. The horrors of war will be brought\nto our .own doors and what will Geer and Collins and\nthe editor of the Oregonian say then to comfort stricken\nhomes which have lost a father, brother or son?\nThis country is not afraid to fight no matter what the\ncost may be, but it wants a real reason for fighting and\nthe Mexican question may or may not present a real cause\nfor war in the end. It is simply a dirty mess which we\nmay be compelled in time to clean up in order to give our\nborder security and for the general good of the western\nworld. We have always thought it would come to that\nsome time, but endorse the president's course in avoid-\ning it by reasonable means if it can be done. Critics\nwill say that if Huerta had been recognized or if this or\nthat had been done conditions might have been better.\nWe doubt it. There is not and has not been since Diaz\ntime any responsible government to deal with, and the\nbest course to take has been anything but plain. The\npresident has no doubt done the best he could to handle\nthe problem and work out a solution without bloodshed,\njust as Mr. Taft did before him. Just as he has stated\ntime and again in his public addresses we have no reason\nfor going down into Mexico and slaughtering a poor,\nweak, ignorant people who in their own blind way are\nreally engaged in a struggle against centuries of serfdom\nand oppression. There is no reason why a single Oregon\nboy should be sacrificed on account of the Mexican trouble\nunless matters along the border reach such a state that\nthis country is compelled to act, and if that time comes\nnot a soldier boy will, fail to do his duty.
e5b56a7f99145996b53ba738eb73f6ea PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.6980874000708 31.960991 -90.983994 tv. B it the inference so much insisted charge of slander had been so fully refuted\nupon, that I muât have told the same thing, bv the testimony 6f the very enemies of\nto Air. Eiton and other of his political Mr. Clay, they found it received and refu-\nfriemls, is wholly erroneous; for, having ted, not only in the Richmond papers, but\nno authority from Mr. Clay to promulgate in evftrv paper in she District claiming to\nhis intentions, I only spoke of them in the he Democratic or official,\nbosom of a privatp family at two hundred repeated this charge, and the Presidential\nmiles distance from Washington. Since organ here, “the M idisonian,” had copied\nthat period, and especially during the pres- it without any comment', save at the .close\nent summer, I have on several occasions, of the words “True, oh King!” taking\nand sometimes in presence of political from Holy Writ this-expression to pervert\nopponents, when the course of conversa it to the sanctioning of this most in famous\ntien led me to it, mentioned what I knew and unfounded libel. Now, what had this\nof Mr. Clavs early intention to vote for - man, the present Executive, under whose\nMr. Adams; and in this way I came to eye and under whoso hand this charge\nspeak of it again, some two or jjiree weeks was now being repeated, said, in other\nsince, in the house of mv father-in-law,< days, when he had some little regard to\nwhere! had first spoke of it near three truth and justice? Mr. W. read from a\nyears ago, and whence, with some addi < letter of Mr. Tylej of the 14th February,\nlions and variations, without the privity lS28,as follows;\nofanv present at the conversation, it has
0d8125832c5d58880626ed94a49fb3fe EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.8863013381533 39.745947 -75.546589 on a battlefield aud saw a great hero\ndying. She caught the few last drops\nof his blood,' and went back to heaven.\nBut it was not those that God loved\nbist. Off she flew again and found a\nwoman who was dying with grief for a\nlost husband She gathered her laet\nsigh and took It to Paradise, bnt It was\nnot that that God loves best. Then she\nwent away, still searching for the\ntreasure. At last she oame to a man,\ndeep In sorrow and repentance, Yearning\nto sacrifice his life to tue service of God.\nShe canght a tear from his weary sin\nladen eye, and with It flew to heaven,\nwhere the gates were opened unto her\nMr. Bradford talked about "The\nChurchman In His Secular Life ” He\nthinks the churchman bouud to the\nobservance of the church In both church\nand secular life He must clearly dis\ntluguish between right and wrong. In\nhis seoular life there is a constant con\nDieting of the two forces He has\ntemptations to resort to Ignoble methods\nIn business oui politics, bnt on the\nother hand, baa a broad field in which\nto do good, as by his influence other men\nmay be elevated and ennobled. He took\na decided stand against swearing. Said\nit Is revolting, unmanly and wicked.\nInstead of lavishing lo i much on self,\nthe eburobman should render a loving,\ngénérons support to his chnrch. He\nspoke of the rules that should gntde a\nchurchman's secular life and closed with\na recommendation that the teaching of\nthe chnrch should ba applied to the\nevery-day life.
ae248c16ad815427c4b3ad6f59881b8c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0205479134956 39.513775 -121.556359 VVniRttKAS. BY THE JUDGMENT AND DK-\n▼ ▼ CRKE of the District Court of the Tenth Ju-\ndicial District of the State of California, in and for\nthe County of Yuba,entered on the fifth day of\ncomber, A. D 1857, in a certain action therein pond-\ninn wherein Elian Garsl and James K. Galloway,\ncomprising the firm of I tarsi A Galloway were\nplaintiff*, and B. K. Spillman, E H Gould, and\nJames E. Carr were defendants, n certified copy of\nwhich has been delivered to me, it was among other\nIhtngaordered, adjudged and decreed, by the said\nCourt that the plaintiff-* have and recover of the de-\nfendant, B H. Spiihnan, the sum of $4,562 48-106 , to\ndraw Interest at the rate of two ami one-half percent,\nper month until paid, besides the costs of ihis action,\ntaxed at ST'i 18-100, iv <1 that all that certain piece oi\nparcel of land lying and b*dng situate in the counties\nof Viibimnd Butte. Sta e «»i California, on both sides\nof the ninth road leading from the ci'y of Marysville\nin said Yuba county, lo the town of Rabbit Creek, in\nSierra county, and upon the dividing line of the\ncounties of Yuba and Hutto, at a place known and\nrul ed -Strawberry Valley,” which contains one hun-\ndred and sixty acres of land, on which, near its cen-\ntre in A üba County, stands the house known f.s the\nHtolunihv* House,n and which is kept as a house of\npublic entertainment, together with all and singular\nthe tenements hereditaments and appurtenances\nthereunto belonging or in anywise alning. and\nall the right title and Interest which the said oefond-\nant, H. K . Spillman, possessed in and to the same on\n(he seventeenth day of July, A . I), eighteen hundred\nand fifty-six, or which he fins acquired or postes.- ed\nat any time since, be sold by IVm. H. Thornburgh.\nSheriff of Yuba coiinlv, and for such purpose he be\nand is hereby appointor I a Master and Commissioner\nin Chancery, at auction, to the highe Gt bidder, for\ncash, tn like mama rand upon like notice and adver-\ntisement as sales of ronl property under execution\nare required by law to he made, in both Yuba and\nUnite counties : an t that the parties to this action,\nami all persons claiming under them, or nnyoreither\nof them, after the filing fif the notice of the pendency\nof this action in the office of the Recorder of Yuba and\nUnite Comities, be forever barred and foreclosed, of\nall right, title, and equity of redemption in the said\np-emises above described so sold, and every part\nthereof, after six months nun (he ti.ne of such sale\nAnd it is further adjudged, decreed and ordered,\nfhot after the expiration of six months from the lime\nof such sale of the prepe. ly so sold, w hereof no re- ;\ndetnptioti shall have been mads, purs*.ant to law.\nHie said .Master and Commissioner rn Chancery exe-\ncute to the pr.rty or parties entitled thereto, a Der i of\nConveyance of the promises so sold and unredeemed, j\nand that upon the on duction of such Urrd, such
0b31d8a566cea53a9a00ce9a45db0568 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 Spirit of the New York Market.\nNovkmbxb^23..1The Poet's money articl\n88^he recent flurry In the stock exchange i\nnow for the present arrested. The losses en\ntailed on unsuspecting operators In stoc\nmust have been immense, and the total loss*\nof tbepast week are computed at not let\nthan t20,000,000. To give temporary ease to th\nexisting financial pressure Mr. Van Dyck hs\ntills moraine decided that nnvnionla of Hnhi\ndue to the treasury may be* made at the Of\ntion of the payer on compound notes at pa\nand interest.\nThe loan market Is heavy and leas active i\n7 per cent. There is evidently a superabund\nance of idle capital as there has been for\nIons time past, and lenders have difficulty i\nfinding remunerative satisfactory employ\nment tor their balances.\nThe stock opened heavy, becam\nmore animated aud closed steady. Govert\nments are recovering the recent heavy fal\nRailroad shares are unsettled and irreeula\nFort Wayne, Illinois Central and Mlchlga\nCentral being the strongest, and Northwest\nera the weakest on the list. The most actlv\nwere Erie, in which there were heavy tram\nactions, 6300 shares having been sold; Heat\nlng 1070, Fort Wayne 8300, Rock Island 890\nNorthwestern 3100, Pittsburgh 2200, New Yor\nCentral 1800. The last named stock has bee\nthe firmest on the list, as it was held by th\nstrong clique who are reported to have boi\nrowed all the money they want of 6 months\nAfter the regular board the quotations wen\nNew York Central 109>£; Erie 7214; Norti\nwestern 42U; do preferred 70%; Toledo 1115Ohlo\n& Mississippi certificates 27%; Cutnbei\ntaud «6«.
175cf4bfa551faff77ccc37721833c13 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.5273972285643 39.745947 -75.546589 Visitors will be admitted to the\ngrounds under the regulations of the\ncamp. The medical department will be\nin charge ot competent physicians,\nwho will lie In constant attendance.\nNo firearms or explosives will be al­\nlowed on the grounds under penalty of\nexpulsion. The general camp routine\nwill be as follows;\nFirst call. 5.15 a. m.; reveille, 5.30 a.\nm.; assembly for reveille—morning\nprayer, roll-call, drill and setting-up\nexercises Immediately after; recall,\n5.50 a. m.; mess, first call, 5.55 a. m.;\nassembly, 6 a. ra.; sick call, 7 a. m.; in­\nspection tents, 7.10 a. m.; guard mount,\nfirst call, 7.55 a. ra .; assembly. 8 a. m.;\nbattalion drill, 9.15 a. m.; recall, 10.20;\ngeneral assembly, 10.30 a. m.; mess,\nfirst call, 11.55 a. ra .; assembly, 12 m.;\nofficers' school. 3 p. m .; water call, 4 p.\nm.; recall, 5.30 p. in.; mess, first call\n p. m. ; assembly, 6 p. ra. ; dress pa­\nrade, 7 p. m.; first call, 9.15 p. m.; as­\nsembly, followed by evening prayer\nand roll call, 9.80 p. m.; tattoo, 9.45 p.\nm.; taps, 10 p. m.\nThe following is a list ot the officers\nwho are going:\nBrigadier-General F. W . Kakol, Col­\nonel William R. Franck, Colonel Har­\nvey J. Jones, Colonel Henry Mankln,\nLieutenant Atlie Horner. Colonel A.\nH. Bleler, Captain C. N. Branin. Cap­\ntain David L. Swindell, First Lieuten­\nant Adam Abell. Jr.. Second Lieuten­\nant L. Clifton Perkins. Captain Wil­\nliam C. Reid, Captain A. K . Sherman,\nFirst Lieutenant C. A. Pettit. Captain\nJohn P. Geiger, Captain George Cook,\nLieutenant George Hertel, Major B. L.\nBrumer, Captain William Zimmerman.\nFirst Lieutenant Harry Raider, Second\nLieutenant John Glenn, Captain Allan\nFuller, Second Lieutenant Philip Sin­\nclair and Captain George Reamey.
3358586c815bee41f263851d69793018 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.6243169082675 42.217817 -85.891125 MORTGAGE SALE Default has occurred\nin the condition of a certain Mortgage, made\nand executed by Wm. J . (ietty and Letica .f.\n(ietty, bis wife, to Peter P. Van Meet, bearing\ndate 'March 4th, A. D. 18C4 . recorded on the\nCth day of August, A. D . 1864, at C o'clock p. m.\nin the office of tbe Register of Deeds, for the\nCounty of Van Ruren, State of .Michigan, in\nLiber "M" of Mortgagee, on page 529, and duly\nassigned by the said Teter P. Van Vleet to\nDaniel O. Roberts, by an indenture, bearing\ndate Apnl 2d, A. I). 1872, and recorded in said\nRegisters Office, for said County of Van Ruren,\non the 8th day of April, A. D. 1872. in Liber\n"T" of Mortgages, on page 53, by which de-\nfault tbe power of sale contained said mort-\ngage has become operative, There is claimed\nto be due on eaid mortgage, at the date of this\nnotice, the sum ot eleven hundred thirty-on- e\ndollars and eleven cents, and no suit or pro-\nceeding, either at law or in equity, has been in-\nstituted to recover tbe debt secured by eaid\nmortgaf e or any part thereof. Notice is there-\nfore hereby given, that by virtue of the power\nof sale contained in said mortgage, there will\nbe cold at public vendue, to the highest bidder,\non Monday tbe 21st day of October, A. D.\n1872, at one o'clock p. m. at the front door of\nthe Court House, in Paw Paw, in said countv\nof Van Ruren. tbe premises described in said\nmortgage, riz : the west half of tbe north-we- st\nquarter and the south-ea- st
3fb22c833542828078c7c7659c388025 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.7745901323112 31.960991 -90.983994 lo show the extent of these land ( and all ihc Indian country besides was\ngrants, and to expose the fraudulent ; granted away.\nstatements in the treaty correspond- j dred and thirty millions of acres of va«\nence, that only sixty-seven millions of I cant land, there was no vacant! for\nacres had been granted, Mr. B. produ- j even the sterile mountains, and bar-\nced and exhibited to all ptesenta large I ren prairies, had been granted to spec,\npamphlet with a map attached to it, j ulators to seli to the United Sates and\ncontaining the claims ol a single indi- in Europe! and the assumption lo pay\nvidua}, and all ol which were asserted j the scrip debts of Texas, in considéra*\nlobe valid under the tieaty. They ; tion of the vacant lands, was a naked\nwere grants derived fiotn the second oil and fraudulent assumption pay ten\nthe Governments which had granted millions for nothing! and that to stock-\nlands in Texas, to wit1 the States of jobbers who had given two cents, and\nCoahuila and Texas when united as seven cents in the dollar for the claims,\none State, which wa» their condition and whose agents were at Washington\nfrom 1820, when the Mexican Révolu- infesting the capitol, the presidents\ntion broke out. to 1835, when Texas house, and the department of State,\nrevolted. The grants were made to a and doing all that was in their power\nMr. John Charles Beales, an English- to sustain the treaty and to pull down\nman, married to a Mexican woman, or the Senators who despised them and •\nto Mexicans and purchased by him: their scrip. The treaty was a fraud in\nand all obtained lor little or no consid- not annulling the great grants, made
1be344156fdaa7bd680cf79d6e43147e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.78551909406 42.217817 -85.891125 and Mary A. Cagney, his wife, of GobleviUe, Mich-\nigan, to the Michigan Mutual Ufo Insurance Com-\npany, a Michigan corporation of Detroit, Michigan,\nbearing date the --tith day of April, A. D. l'JOl, and\nrecorded iu the ofhee of the register of deeds for\nVan lturen couuty, Michigan, on May I, A. D.\nl'.tol, in liber 71 of mortgages, on page 12, and by\nreason of the failure of said mortgagor to pay the\ntaxes levied on said mortgaged (remises, aid mort-\ngagee was compelled to pay and did pay on July 1H,\nP.M4 , the state and county taxes for I'.KU thereon,\namounting to f.'il.dl, aid default ha been made iu\nthe payment of an Installment of interest amount-\ning to J:7.50, which became due on April IMth, A.\nD. 11HI4, and taid mortgagee, according to the term\nof said mortgage, and on account of said default in\nthe payment of said taxe and said Installment of\ninterest, has elected and does hereby elect that the\nprincipal sum of said mortgage, being the sum of\ntil teen hundr.nl dollars (f 1 ,61X1.1X1), together with all\narrearage of interest thereon, be now due ami pay-\nable, and there is claimed to be due and payable on\n mortgage and the bond and note accompany-\ning the same at the date hereof, and by virtue of\nsuch election, for ptincipal, interest, taxe and in-\nterest, the sum of tifteen hundred and iiintty-ou- e\ndollars, and no suit or proceedings at law having\nbeen had to recover the same, or auy part thereof;\nNow, theretore, notice is hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power ot sale contained iu aid mort-\ngage and of the statute in such case made and pro-\nvided, the said mortgagee will sell it public auction,\ntu the highest bidder, on Tuesday, the first day of\nNovember, A. D. l'.t'U.at ten o'clock iu the forenoon,\nstandard time, at the front door ot the court house,\nin the village of Paw Paw, Van liuren county, Mich-\nigan fthat b ing the building in which the circuit\ncourt for the county of Van Uuren is held), the\npremise described iu said mortgage, tor the pur-\npose of satisfying the amount due as aforesaid for\nprincipal, interest, taxes and interest aud the ex-\npense of said sale. The premises described iu said\nmortgage are as follows: All that ortaln phce or\nparcel o! land situate iu the township of Waverly,\ncounty cf Van lturen.
0aa17be5c7d8874c40423e0ab41b55c3 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1895.6041095573314 40.114955 -111.654923 Passing to the affair on the mountain-\nside noun of City creek Coughlli told\nThe Tribune reporter that when an\nofficer hailed them and asked them to\nsurrender they responded with one\nshot and then ran down Into the brush\nThen he said they came down along\nthe creek through the brush and en\nlured the city in the afternoon walking\nboldly through time streets lie said\nthey weie accosted by an acquaintance\nIn the Canyon road who gave them a\npackage of newspapers He claimit\nthat thereafter they were supplied\nwith the city newspapers regularly\nand that friends kept them advised ot\nthe movements of the officers He said\nthey spent Thursday night In bed in\nthe St Elmo and Friday night In a\nfriends house on Eleventh East\nSLEPT IN THE CEMETERY\nTime statement that they stopped at\nthe St Elmo is not believed A more\nlikely story Is the ona told by George-\nto Detective Sheets that they crossed\nCity Creek canyon went over the hills\nto Dry canyon and went on down to\nMt Olivet cemetery the lat ¬\nter about dark and spending the night\nthere It Is reported that trlcnds who\nwent there ostensibly to decorate a\ngrave met them In the cemetery\nGeorge told Sheets that they silent\nFriday night on Jack GUmers ranch-\nat Eleventh East mind Ninth South\nCoughlln In detailing their move\ninents up to the time they stole fresh\nhorses at Murray on Saturday night\nwas not at all specific lIe claimed\nthat they had roamed about the streets\nat will under the very noses of the\nolllcers He said they kept away from\nthe houses of friends both here and at\nMill Creek because they feared they\nwere being closely watched The of\nficers he maid were on the right scent\nat Mill Creel and that Deputy Sheriff\nIrwln and Detective Franks passed\nwithin a few feet of him Franks\nbloodhound he said stuck his nose Into\ntime brush against Coughllns rifle\nCoughlln said he had a nation to shoot\nFranks but George pointed out time\nfolly of doing so when so many depu-\nties were In the vicinity
188db58a614ddd075cf4eee3171fd188 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1912.700819640508 36.000618 -88.428106 in regard to the fundamental princi-\nples, i. e ., c om men cing at the bottom\nof a road and bringing It to proper\ngrade to use a drag on.\nNow, I would take a road that is not\nsandy, and is dishing in the middle; I\nwould get the center and grade and\nthen I would commence In the middle\nfld plow lightly the first two or three\nrounds, and go a little deeper until I\ngotl the usual depth of plowing, and\nplow the width of 30 feet cross slope.\nI would co this plowing as early in\nthe spring as possible and let it He\nuntil the last of May or first of June,\nif it was sod. But In the meantime,\nI would run a fair heft road drag over\nit occasionally until the last of May or\nfirst of June, to mellow It up Into dirt.\n I would commence outside of\nthe wheel track (providing the travel\nwas In the center of the road) and\nPlow again as far as before, and then\nkeep the road drag In use after every\nrain, and use the ditch cleaner occa-\nsionally. 7ou will have as nice a cross\nslope as you could ask for, and cheap-\ner than any other method.\nOur farmers' Institutes are doing a\ngreat work In our great state of Wis\nconsin, which I have no fault to find\nwith in any respect. But our roads\nought to be first on the list, for we\nare at a place where we have got to\nhave practical men along this line.\nWe are not going to have rock roads\nall at once, because our state Is not in\nshape to appropriate money enough to\nus to build rock roads in one year, nor\nIn ten.
d80f29086ae5f263661cac807a4dc02a PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.423287639523 31.960991 -90.983994 streets, in the town of Port Gibson, thence\nrunning along Main street 98 feet to a stake,\nthence N. 78e, W. 175 feet, to a stake,\nthence N. lôa, E. 98 feet, to a stake in the\n•edge of Walnut street, thence along Walnut\nstreet 175 feet to the place of beginning;\nbeing the same lot of ground sold by Israel\nLoring tô the Bank ofPort Gibson, by deed\nbearing date the 29th Dec. 1838, and re­\ncorded in book T., page 162, of the records\nin the office of the Clerk of the Probate\nCourt of Claiborne county, and being the\nsame lot of land whereon the Banking house\nmow stands. Also, the following lot, piece\nor parcel of land, being the South half of\nLots 4 and 5, in square No. 10, in the town\n«ffort Gibson, fronting 49 feet on Main or\n street, and extending back the same\nwidth on Walnut street, 300 feet to Fair\nstreet, being the same property sold by B.\nHughes and wife to H. N . Spencer, by\ndeed bearing <date the 4th October, 1836,\nand recorded in book P., page 632—also\nsold by H. N. Spencer and wife to J. O.\nPierson & David Bush, by deed bearing\ndate the 14th February, A. D . 1837, and\nrecorded in book O., page 275—also sold\nby Wm. M . Gwin, Marshall, to the Bank\nof Port Gibson, as the property ofPierson &\nBush, by deed dated 12th October, 1840,\nAnd recorded in book U., page 452.\n«property will be sold to pay and satisfy the\namount due to J. B. Thrasher, and the costs\nofexecuting this trust. Such title as is ves­\nted in us as Trustees will be made to the
5c7ca3c5149ff53acfb874a5134792bf THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.7657533929478 41.004121 -76.453816 Tho bea is supposed to havo ncquired\nIts sallno principlo when tho globo was\nin tho act of subsiding from a gaseous\nstate. Tho density of sea water depends\nupon tho quantity of salluo matter it\ncontains. Tlio proportion is genorally\nabout threo or four per cent., though it\nvaries in dliTorent places ; tho ocean\ncontains moro salt In tho southern than\nIn llio northern hemisphere, tho Atlan-ti- o\nmoro than tho Pacific. Tho greatest\nproportion of salt In tho Pacillo is in\nparallels of 225 N. L,, and IS" S. L.,\nnear tho equator It Is less, niuMii tho\nPolar seas it is least, from tlio melting\nof tlio ico. Tlio saltncss varies with tho\nseasons In theso regions, and tho fresh\nwater being lighter is uppermost. Rain\nmakes tho surfaco of tho sea fresher\nthan tho interior parts, ami tho influx\n rivers renders tlio ocean less saltnt\ntheir estuaries. Tho Atlantic i3 brack-\nish 300 miles from tho mouth of tho\nAmazon. Deep seas nro moro salino\nthan thoso that nro shallow, nnd inland\nsens communicating with tho main nro\nloss salt, from tho rivers that How into\nthem; to this, however, tho Mediter\nranean Is nn exception occasioned by\ntho great evaporation nnd Influx of salt\ncurrents from tho Black Sea and tho\nAtlantic. Tho water in tho Straits of\nGibraltar, nt tho depth of C70 fathoms,\nIs four times ns salt ns that nt tho sur\nface. Ercsh water freezes nt tho tenv\nperaturo of illl0 of Fahrenheit, tho point\nof congelation of salt water is much\nlower, Tho lienlthfulncss of tho sea is\nnscrlbed to tho mixing of tho water by\ntides nnd currents, which prevents tho\naccumulation of putrescent matter.
350c400f177c8129cae0f73f8729daad CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1921.9931506532216 39.623709 -77.41082 Armenia, declared Captain Gracey,\nwas not unlike Belgium, but the suf-\nfering In Belgium, as the result of the\nGerman Invasion, was not to be com-\npared with that of the Armenians.\nAnd the Armenians are still suffering.\nIn the autumn of 1914, said Captain\nGracey, the Turks sent emissaries to\nthe national Congress of the Ottoman\nArmenians, then sitting at Frzerum,\nand made offers of autonomy if they\nwould actively assist Turkey In the\nwar. The Armenians replied that they\nwould do their duty Individually, as\nOttoman subjects, but that as a na-\ntion they could not work for the cause\nof Turkey and her allies. On account,\niu part of this courageous refusal, the\nOttoman Armenians were systemati-\ncally murdered by the Turkish Gov-\nernment in 1915. of the\npopulation of Armenia were extermi-\nnated by the most cold-blooded and\ntiendlsh methods —more than 700,000\nmen, women and children. Thousands\nof men, women and children were de-\nported. In this scheme of extermina-\ntion 800.000 died before the deporta-\ntion plan was completed.\nOver 1,000 of the younger men wefo\nhurled down cliffs and killed. When\na river was to be crossed, the women\nand children would be made to un-\ndress and the Turks would then take\nthe jewelry that was concealed about\nthem. It was no revolutionary society\nthat held the Armenians together, said\nthe Captain, It was their religion.\nOne Armenian priest was seized by\nthe Turks and hie Bible burnt, the\nsame fire being used to tear his face,\narms and legs.
071bfd1342f199382ff46b2777b121a1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.1767122970573 39.745947 -75.546589 The Republicans are endeavoring\nto make party capital out of Wheatley's\nsuicide aud confessions, aud as he lay\ndying yesterday the Levy Court, which\nis now under Republican coni rot, adopted\nby a party vote a report making most\nserious charges regarding the uses to\nwhich the county money has been put.\nThe report says that the county has been\nrobbed of thousands, If not tens of thou­\nsands, of dollars. aud charges that\nthrough road allowances $3,000 more has\nbeen spent in election years than in off\nyears for partisan purposes.\nThe Republicans profess to believe that\nthe Democrats have drawn their\npaign funds from tha county treasury,\naud that the money has been used to pay\nthe taxes of delinquent Democrats. They\ncharge that iu 188(1 and 1888 *9,840 of\nthe county s money was used in this way\nin excessive road allowances, and in\nbogus orders issued by the clerk of the\npeace aud that further frauds will be un­\nearthed by Levy Court that is now\nmaking an investigation.\nThe Democrats indignantly deny these\ncharges, and A. P. Robinson, the Demo­\ncratic leader of the county, lias published\na card in which he says that he knew\nnothing of the alleged frauds until he\nheard that Wheatley was dying. E . W.\nTunneil, the clerk of the peace, and lead­\ning Democrats court the fullest Investi­\ngation and say that they fear nothing.\nNever before iu the history of this\nancient county seat of Sussex has any\nevent created such a decided sensation\nas has the suicide of Rufus E. Wheatley,\nthe defaulting ex-deputy clerk of the\npeace of this county. The deceased was\nabout 40 years old, aud had lived iu Sus\nsex county all his life. He was born in\nLaurel, but resided in Georgetown for a\nnumber of years. He was respected by\neverybody, aud had a commanding voice\nin the affairs of Delaware Democracy,\nHe had a wife aud two children, aud was
0e53b995b2c74fe7575982fd1ee0cfe9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.2479451737697 40.063962 -80.720915 rascals liave not been apprehended, and\nit la supposed tbey jumped a train and\nwent on their way.\nSecretary of State Walker has issued a\ncertificate of incorporation to the "Bull\nCreek Booming Company." The prin¬\ncipal office la to beat Waverly, and the\ncharter is to expire March 86,11110. The\nsum of 9300 has been subscribed to the\ncapital stock, 10 per cent, of which has\nbeen paid In, with the privilege of in¬\ncreasing the same to $10,000 in all. The\ncapital is divided into shares of $100\neach, six of which ace held by A, H. Mc-\nTaggart, of WilUamatown; and one each\nby 0. P. Ross, Bufua Oorbett, R. N . Cor-\nbett and R. J, Corbett, of Waverly.\nA report comes from Barbour county\nof quite a serious riot that occurred a\n nights since at Elklns, on Leading\ncreek, Imboden Stalnaker was conduct¬\ning a singing school at that plaoe, during\nthe progress of which a gang of tea or\ntwelve toughs entered the place and un¬\ndertook to break the Behoof up. A gen¬\neral fight ensued and the roughs got the\nworst of it by odds. One of them named\nBonn Hlnkle was hit over the head\nwith a poker, and had his akull frac¬\ntured, The mob made a special attack\non George W. Cunningham and got him\ncornered in a tight place; he then pulled\na knife and cut his way out. In slash¬\ning right and left he cut several of the\nroughs in a painful manner about the\narms and hands, and almost disem¬\nboweled Lew Wool. The roughs will be\nprosecuted.
f97ea5a5d7c810f8a85ee2fe4416fe34 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.1767122970573 31.960991 -90.983994 he, -coming to my aide, and commencing the\nstory, without preface, *is not so troublesome\nand importunate an animalasahorse. He con­\ntinues bis course wiihout stopping, without eat­\ning, without drinking —nothing about him be­\ntrays sickness, hunger, or exhaustion. The A-\nrab, who can hear from such a distance the roar\nof a lion, the neigh of a horse, or the noise of\nmen, hears nothing from hie haghim, but its\nquickened or lengthened respiration; it never\nutters a complaint or a groan. But when na­\nture is vanquished by suffering—when priva­\ntions have exhausted its strength—when life is\nebbing, tbe dromedary kneels down, stretches\nout its neck, and closes its eyes. Its master\nthen knows all is over. He dismounts, and\nwithout any attempt to make it rise, for he\nknows the honesty of its nature, and never sus­\npects-it of deception or laziness, he removes the\nsaddle and places it oh 'the back Of another\ndromedary., and -departs, abandoning the one\nthat-isno longer able to accompany him. When\nnight approaches, the jackals and hyenas, at­\n by the scent, come up and attack the\nanimal till nothing is leit but tbe skeleton.”\nWe are now on the highway from Cairo and\nMecca;4wioe a year thc<caravans go and return\nby tkih route; and these bones are so numerous\nand so constantly replenished, that the tempest\nof the desert can never entirely disperse them;\nthese bones, which, without a guide, would lead\nyou to the oases, the wells and fountains, where\nthe Arab finds shade and water, and would end\nby conducting you to the tomb of the prophet;\nthese bones of dromedaries which perish in 'the\ndesert. If you look attentively you will Ree\nsome bones smaller in size, and of a different\nconformation. These, too, are the wrecks of\nwearied bodies that have found repose before\nthey reached the goal. They are the bones of\nbelievers who desired to obey tbe prophets com­\nmand, that all the faithful shall, once in their\nlives, perform the holy journey; and who, hav­\ning been too long deterred from undertaking it\nby egres or pleasures, commence their pilgrim-
127d43536c4a502f7a0b7bb08dee6fe7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.03698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 thcnco along tho middle of the north*\nern wall of the said brick building In i\nwesterly direction 131 feet and 3 Inches\nmore or. less, to the outside of the wcitem\nfront of tho said brick building; thence\nalong the said western front In a southerly\ndirection 21 feet and 5% Inches, more or\nless, to the middle of the partition will\nflrst above mentioned, and thence alon*\nthe middle of the said partition wall in an\neasterly direction 132 feet and 1 Inch raort\nor less, to the beginning, being the part\nof the said brick bulldlnc which was on\nthe 2oth day of August/In the year 1871,\noccupied by the saldf John M. Mathews m\na warehouse, but Including half only of tht\nnorth and south walls thereof and beln*\nthe same property which was conveyed\n the flrst party and John E. Wilson bji\nthe Merchants' National Bank of Weal!\nVirginia; "August 23. 1871, book 58. paw\n462, and interests In which were subsej\nquently epnveyed to said William B. Simp*\nson, October 7. 1885, book 78, page 169, and\nJune 21, 1889, book 82, page 401. But thl*\n^reporty will be conveyed subject to 4\n?aue to the Wheeling Drug Company,\ndated April 1, 1894, and expiring April l,\n1901. but the lessor's rights, including ths\nrlfcht to tako tho rents under the uld\nlease, wlU pass to tho purchaser.\nTills property Is now subject to a def!\nof trust made by William B. Simpson and\nwife to Alfred Caldwell, trustee, dated\nAnrll 12...1WU, l»nnU J®. n»ir« WW.\nthe provision* of the deed under which the\nundersigned Is acting ho will soil this
0cd91e4b9ef1adf541360329d7b32fbb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.842465721715 39.745947 -75.546589 I. S . Jones, No. 21)9 Coucord Ave« box of candy, stockings and hooks.\nCrank T, Sharpless. No. 1329 Tatnall street, one sail boat, one little\nfolks color kit, box of picture cards, model village building set, one set of\nten pins, one sharp shooters game, one soap bubble game, one clown ten\npins, one set of water color paints, one magnet. Life of Abraham Lincoln,\nanimal tales, and Mother Goose puzzle pictures, several other hooks for\nchildren, and one complete set of boxing gloves for hoys.\nCrosby A Hill Company, merchants, at No. «OS Market street, announce«\nthat it Is heartily In favor of Ihe War Childrens'Christmas Gift movement.\nIt makes a contribution of $25 worth of merchandise.\nN. Snelienburg & Co. are also enthusiastic, and announce that they will\ncontribute as much merchandise ns any other Wilmington mercantile house.\nII, Topkis Hons, merchants at No. 120 Market street, have enlisted \nily in the cause to procure Christmas gifts for the war children In battle-\nscarred Europe. That firm announces I haI It will make a llheral contribu­\ntion of wearing apparel for the war children.\nMrs. A. W . Burke, of No. 1908 Boulevard, sends a box containing the\nfollowing articles, all newt I suits of underclothes, « pairs of stockings, 4\npairs of gloves, 2 sweaters, 3 suits of infants underclothes, 1 infants\nsacque. 1 dolls and 4 iron trains of cars.\nDonald M. Yost, of No. 2420 Jefferson street, sends 2 boxes containing 2\nsuits of underclothes, 1 childs salt. 3 pairs of mitts. I doll, wrapped in an\nAmerican Hag:. 1 pair of hoys suspenders, 1 set of play blocks, a bag of\nmarbles, wrapped In an American Hag. Each gift contains a small Amer,\nlean Hag and a card reading: "Wishing you a Merry Christmas. Donald\nM. Tost.”
20024b25f6ce29099eb27a79d4b07a15 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.3986301052764 39.261561 -121.016059 A dreadful accident occurred this morning,\nat about 10 oclock, at the Scuth Side Tunnel,\nformerly known as the Capt. Man claim, in the\nTable Mountain, near Shaws Flat, by which\n(ire men lost their lives while at work in the\ntunnel, which is driven into tbe mountain about\n800 feet, on an incliue. They struck through\nthe rim of the basin containing one immense\nlake of water which has heretofore prevented\nthe miners from working their claims on the\nfiat above. The tunuul is some 150 feet below\nthis flat and as they struok through, the water\nbaring this immense pressure instantly filled\ntbe entire excavation. The miners were of\ncourse unable to escape and perished in this\nsubterracan river. The water is still flowing\nthrough the tunnel in an undiminished stream,\nand tbe bodies cannot be recovered until the\nwater falls which will undoubtedly in two\nor three days, as it is already forcing its way\nout of tbe mountain from a tunnel some dis-\ntance below. The names of the unfortunate\nmen.are, John Lyonx, Joseph Osborn and John\nCarlyon, Cornish miners ; GreenufT Blutmner,\nN. H . and Albert Glason, Maiue. The miners\nin the Peck tunnul, near by, ten in number, had\na narrow escape. The alarm was given by a\nboy who beard the waters coming and they\nrushed out; the water coming knee high before\nthey got out. Three minutes later and they\nwould have met with a similar fate with those\nabove mentioned. The miners have been ex-\npecting a flood and had purchased a tunnel be-\nlow to drain the flat; but they were entirely\nunprepared for this Rad and dreadful calamity.\nThe tunnels in the vicinity are all flooded by\nthe underground river.
098e18b0c6bb47130c36b0678df5617a THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.7117486022566 40.114955 -111.654923 During a fit of temporary Insanity\nPearson Talley of Wilmington Del\n60 years of age attacked his wife\nhis adopted daughter Edith Johan\nson and her husband Andrew Johan\nson and inflicted such serious wounds\nwith an ax that tho victims are not\nexpected to live\nMlle Mario iblauhe ono of the\nperformers nt the Toronto exhibition-\nwas probably fatally injured last\nwook Her act was to slide down a\nwire stretched from a high pole to\nthe ground hanging by her teeth\nthe polo became loose and she fell\nher spine being broken\nA pilot steamer In tho North sea\nplckeU up a balloon contalnlnr two\nBritish aeronauts named Tonnetl and\nShort The balloon ascended at Bat\ntersea a district of London at 10\noclock at night and was blown out to\nsot When discovered the balloon\nwas closo to tho water\nTho shrunken and bleached oody\nof a woman with evidences of Its\nhaving been covered with quicklime\n been found on tho West Virginia\nshore of tho Ohio river near Wells\nvllle O Tho authorities believe the\nwoman was murdered and an attempt\nmade to destroy the body\nJames Bellows McGregor the old\nest Mason In the country believed to\nbe tho oldest white man in tho Unit\ned States celebrated his 107th birth\nday at Mount Sunapeo N M on the\n5th Mr McGregor can read ordi-\nnary print with the aid of a reading\nglass and Is hale and hearty\nAfter experimenting two years\nwith concrete ties tho Burlington\nrailroad has abandoned them for\nwood Tho officials believe that the\nold material treated with creosote Is\nmore satisfactory A creosoting plant\nfor ties and bridge timbers costing\n270000 Is to be constructed-\nThe Jewelry trade which Is the\nfirst to feel a depression and about\nthe last to got time benefit of return-\nIng prosperity has begun to revive\nFor eight months tho wholesale deal-\ners
092af394e559425c4d23a0ee0c734eb5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7383561326737 40.063962 -80.720915 dy.u}1 M gained aa a spiritual pow¬\ner. The recent loss of tbe States of the\nChurch as a temporal dominion, the\nthreats of Garibaldi on Rome itself, aud\nthe loss of political influence in Aus¬\ntria, in Italy, in Prance; and in Mexico.\ngSr^ST! aPPj*r«nl»y severe blows;\nbut>etitls ull in one senue like tbe\nloss of the farmer in spring, when he\nhas put so many bushels of wheat into\nthe ground as aeed. He lobes ho much\nold and shrivelled up grain, but re¬\nceives a flfty-fold increase of Iresli\npluuip, well developed wheat instead!\nIhe Roman Catholic Church lu thia\ncountry is a hundred fold more thriv¬\ning, industrious, wealthy, Intelligent\nand liberal in its contributions than\nthat In any other country can possibly\nafford or hope to be. "it iH not all va¬\npor, was the quaint aud pleasaut re\nmark of the Pope on receiving the\ntnodel of a steamer in silver, well\nfreighted with gold, through the Ameri¬\ncan Bishops. Indeed, this recent as¬\nsembly to commemorate the ratrttuAj\ndominion of the Catholic Church, seeuia\nto have inspired the Pope and Cardi¬\nnal* with the idea of another General\nCouncil. Heretofore, these assemblies\nhave been dreaded and avoided b\\' \nropes, as supposed antagonisms to the\nI apal authority. Hut this one is pro¬\nposed, and seems about to be carried\nout, with a degree of unanimity that is\none of the best prognostics for good.\nIt is worth being borne in mind that\nas in the I au-Anglli-an Council or the\nr*pisoopal Church, now assembled in\nLambeth Palace, under the auspices of\nthe Archbishop of Canterbury, so in\nrwi^ii V tU,° proposed Universal\nCouncil, American Bishops and Atner-\ncan ideas appear strongly as animat¬\ning the new life inspired into these an¬\ncient aud venerable religious bodies. It\nwas, we believe, Rev. Dr. Channing\nwho first proposed, in Bostos, that the\nmembers of his own aud other Protest¬\nant churches should subscribe liberally\nto aid the Roman Catholics in erecting\na cathedral in that city. The other day\nabout seventy thousand people assem¬\nbled there, to witness and partake in\nthe inauguration services connected\nwith the erection of a suitable buildiuic\nof this kind. It is by kindly and lib-\neral feeling to all, with equal rights\nevery nation must henceforth prosper!\nHow the proper authority of religious\ntruth is to be uuited with individual\nliberty of action in each de¬\nnomination
75d69d92ccfd8a0590a8285d724edc5b THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.493169367284 39.290882 -76.610759 To my fellow working-men I would like to\nsay a few words on a subject which interests\nevery poor man, who wishes to be any thing else\nbut poor in tjiis word. We believe it is the wish\nof all, no matter how low his estate may be, that\nat some future period in his life, he may be in a\nsituation to enjoy some of the many pleasures\nflowing from wealth.\nNow we would ash, if, at the present very\nlow prices given for labor, a man, bj- working\nhard all his life time, either at the last or the\nanvil, can expect to becohie rich? notwithstand-\ning wc are opposed to neither, but we want to\nknow if men must stick to their trades forever,\nas journeymen, how they can possibly expect\nany of the blessings which God, in his wisdom,\nhas given, not only for the lawyer or the mer-\nchant, but for every one who aspires to it?\n the next question that arises is, how\nis a poor inan to commence business? We\nsay, by industry, economy, and credit. And\nwithout the latter, you might as Well try to fly.\nThe rich man may say it is easy enough to do\nbusiness without credit, because lie may want to\nmonopolise all that might be done by tills credit\nextended to the poor man ; but why the poor\nman should be against the very means through\nwhich he alone can ever become rich in this\nworld's goods, is a mystery. Can a poor man\nbe made poorer by it? No, fellow-laborer 5 if\nwe rise at all, it must be by credit; and if we\nwould do well for ourselves .and our children\nafter us, let us unite and put down those who\nwould throw aside the only prop upon which the\npoor man may hope to rise, and enjoy that which\nis given to all men, without respect to persons.
1714b53a6fc242eee920704048224924 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.7027396943176 39.623709 -77.41082 On Saturday evening last when the streets\nwere filled with shoppers and pedestrians,\nfive pistol shots rang out iu the night air\nstartling those in the business section and\ncausing great crowds to hastily gather in Uie\ndirection of the town square from whence\nHie sound of the filing proceeded, where it\nwas found that Lee Weddle, son ol Mr.\nGrayson C. Weddle, a contractor and\nhighly esteemed citizen of our town, had fir-\ned two bullets into MissNellye E'chellterger\ndaughter of George Eichclhcrger of near\nJimlown, seriously injuring her and then\nhad turned the smoking pistol on himself\naud with two more shots took his own life,\na stray or glancing bullet in the meantime\nhaving inflicted a slight flesh wound on\nMiss Maud Davis who iu company with\nMiss Annie Fltz wore companions Miss\nEichtlherger at the time of the shooting.\nDuring the early part of the evening it Is\nsaid that young Weddle met the trio of\nyoung ladies mentioned, nt the corner of\nCarrol and E. Main St. He had been pay-\ning a great deal of attention to Miss Eiclicl-\nticrger and it is reported hail proposed mar-\nriage to her which proposition she had not\nfavored. The boy bad spent last week at\nWalkereville, lieing employed in a canning\nestablishment nt that place and during that\ntime had received a letter from the girl which\nseemed to excite him greatly. The letter\ncited Miss Nellycs displeasmc because of\nthe ntttention he had heeu paying to anoth-\ner girl, whom she had no regard for and for\nbade him to come to sec tier any more.
378a5273dd0675cb3d37c375dcee114e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 Mituy people hml looked upon Gen¬\neral Grant as they would upon a civil¬\nian and. a, politician, and even a candi¬\ndate for civil office. They would seem\nto demand that he should make kuown\nbis political views on the hustings aiid\nthrough the newspapers with all the\narts of the common demagogues..\nThe public had no more right to\nexpect General Grant to speak out\nthan they had to expect Lieutenant\nGeneral Sherman, General Meade, Gen¬\neral Sheridan or General Thomas to\nmake public their political views. The\nGeneral was not in the habit of pro¬\nclaiming himself to the world bj- words,\nbut, like a wise man. had always made\nhis record through his acts. Though\nnot sinking for the public, no man\nwas more frank in expressing his views\non all public matters, was raised\nin the Whig school of politics. His\nvenerable father, so well known in\nGalena, was always an active and in¬\nfluential member of theold Whig party,\nand, alter it went out of existence, of\nthe Kepuhlicau party. .The Geueral\nwas always a Whig, ho far as he was a\npolitician at all) and never belonged to\nor had an.v sympathy at ull with the\nso-called Democratic party. He slated\nthisAS a fact. Had Geueral Grant been\na member of the Democratic parly he\nwould have been in the same position\nas lie now is, and the same as all the\nmost loyal and patriotic men who were\nin that party now occupy. Though not\na voter, in Illinois, in lStiO, yet, after\nMi. Lincoln's administration com¬\nmenced and after llie tiring upon\nSumter there was
3a555afa27defa3eb689146e2d6a454c WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.6789617170107 40.827279 -83.281309 But, since his refusal to become their can\ndidate, this organization, on plan and per\nsistently through years, by agreed suppres-\nsion of truth, by agreed publication of false-\nhoods, agreed distortion of tacts, agreed sup-\npression of testimony, agreed schemes for\nthe investigation of invented wrongs, agreed\nslanders set as preambles for resolutions in\nCongress, agreed assaults upon him in Con\ngress and the public press lor things either\nwholly frivolous or wholly false, it is ar-\nranged to assassinate one other of the na-\ntion's best citizens and its greatest defender.\nI speak now what I know and testify to\nwhat I have Been. And because I do, I de-\nclare solemnly that I doubt whether, in this\nor any other modern government, suen a\nwrong against any citizen, national benefac-\ntor or great magistrate, can be named as that\nnow directed against the President.\nThey declare him destitute of the\nvery rudiments of knowledge, and yet he is\npossessed of all the learning of one of the\nmost thorough colleges of the continent,\nand his acquirements are both solid and\nlarge. They describe him as incapable of\neither comprehending or of staling any im-\nportant affair of government; and yet I in-\nvite an impartial contrast between the mes-\nsages of his predecessors and his, and I af-\nfirm that, in those first excellences of State\npapers, absence of pretension and mere\nrhetoric, and the presence of clear, compact\ncomprehension and direct presentation of\nthe subject; in the justness and practical\nwisdom they evince, and in the simple, un-\nostentatious spirit of the good magistrate\nand the patriotic citizen which characterizes\nthem, the messages of Grant already rank\nwith the best of our own nation, and receive\nthe admiration of the foremost statesmen of\nother nations.
2715a7a5e8a761d7189ae94600326182 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.1547944888382 40.063962 -80.720915 ml in accordance with law an such ci\nlegal vote an an elector for*8amuel\n'ildcn for President, and for Thornaa\nlendricka for Vice President, and t\note cant should be counted.\nTho preilding oilieer asked if the\nere further objections, and there beii\none. he announced that the Hens\nould again withdraw.\nThe whole proceeding only occupl\nntil ten minute* past twelve o'clock.\nA Mew LeglmIiiflic Day.\nWhen all the Senators had withdraw\n10 Chairman announced that the n<\ngislatlve day of Saturday had cqi\nlenced, and the chaplain otl'ered pravt\nThe journal having been read, M\nlymer (Pa.) otl'ered a resolution th\nr the more complete consideration\nle report of the Electoral Commissi!\nthe Oregon case, the House now take\njcess until 10 o'clock on Monday mor\nigMr. Clvmer naked leavato explain 'h\nlotivf lor the resolution, hi\nejection wft* made on the Republics\nMr. Hancock rose to a point of ordc\nud made the point that under the ele\nirallawitwas notinordertotakear\nSB after the Commission had decide\nit that the count should proceed atone\nhere was a clear direction in the la\nlat the county should proceed, and tl\n. nn ne r in which thev should procet\nas detailed. Under the layf the powei\nthe House could not be enlarged, an\nicesses could not be taken at will. H\nIt, as much as any one, themortiticatic\n[defeat; but he hoped that he would in\nme his manhood so much as to advii\nlat the House should not proceed undi\nle law. He held, therefore, that thei\nas no authority muter the law to pr\nastinate the count by a recess at th\nme.
4a7ac43c84d2c5464084ca42622e1431 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.4877048864096 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. J. Picrpont Morgan to cause the answer.\nClad in a mortar board and gown, the great\nfinancier stood up at Yale the other day and had\nconfetred upon him the degree of Learned Doctor\nof Laws. Mr. Morgan accepted it gracefully.\nIn presenting the degree, the professor who\nspoke for the faculty paid high compliments to\nMr. Morgan, recalling his work in building a\ngreat medical school, a cathedral, a hospital and\nother things, besides being a liberal patron of\narts. Especial mention also was made of his ser­\nvice in stopping the panic last autumn. All these\nwere cited as the reason for the crowning of\nMr. Morgan, and fit the same time the professor\ndeclared that in his opinion Dr. Morgan was a\nrich man who by his works had gained a right to\nthe above. The rewarding of Mr. Mor­\ngan show» that the high degrees of the univer­\nsities arc not to be confined to men distinguished\nfor classical learning or literary culture, but the\nhonors may go to those who have distinguished\nthemselves in other lines. Any captain of indus­\ntry may now become a doctor, as Yale has point­\ned the path. The doctors are not to be only the\npreachers, the professors and the statesmen.\nOf course Mr. Morgan is entitled to the degree.\nYale says so, and he is a distinguished citizen.\nThen it will be generally admitted that Mr. Mor­\ngan is a good doctor of the laws of finance. The\nnext interesting incident will be the size of the\ncontribution that Dr. Morgan will sooner or later\ngive towards increasing the endowment fund of\nYale.
37c3fa1df4d899088f54cc5927cc0de6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.7636611705627 58.275556 -134.3925 You arc hereby notified that 1\nhave expended during the year A.\nD. 1S15 one hundred dollar* In la¬\nbor and improvements upon or for\nthe benefit of each of the follow¬\ning named lodo mining claims, to-\nwlt: Hed Diamond No. 1, Kcd Dia¬\nmond No. 2, Red Diamond No. 3,\nHed Diamond No. 4 . Kcd Diamond\nNo. S, Ited Diamond No. G . Ited Dia¬\nmond No. 7 . Hed Diamond No. 8,\nGolden Shield, Golden Shield No. 2,\nSilver Shield, Nevada, Wyoming,\nWyoming No. 2 and Wyoming No.\n3, said mining claims being situat¬\ned on the southeasterly shore of\nDouglas Island, Harris Mining Dis¬\ntrict, Juneau Hecording Precinct,\nTerritory of Alaska, the amended\nlocation certificated for Mild mining\nclaims iieing of record In the office\nof the I'u ited States Commissioner,\nBx-Officio Recorder, Juneau, Alas¬\nka. to which reference is hereby\nmade for a more complete and def¬\ninite description of said mining\nclaims; that the above named lode\nmining claims form a contiguous\ngroup of lode mining claims and are\nknown nnd called the Hed Diamond\nGroup; that the annual assessment\n above referred to consisted In\ndriving a tunnel upon the Hed Dia¬\nmond No. 6 claim, said claim being\na part of the above men Honed\ngroup; that there was expended\nfor said labor and improvements\nabove mentioned the sum of one\nthousand five hundred dollars; that\nsaid expenditure wait necewary In\norder to hold the above mentioned\nmining claims under the provisions\nof Section 2324 of the Revised Stat¬\nutes of the United States and amend¬\nments thereto, concerning the an-\nnunl assessment work upon lode min¬\ning claims, said sum being the\namount required to hold snld min¬\ning claims for the period ending\nDecember 31, 1915. And, If with¬\nin ninety day* after the personal\nservice of this notice upon you, or\nwithin ninety day after the publica¬\ntion thereof, you fall or refuse to\ncontribute your portion of such ex¬\npenditure as a co-owner which\namounts to one hundred and sixty-\nsix dollars nnd sixty rents, your in¬\nterest In said claims will become\nthe property of the subscriber, your\nco-owner who has made the required\nexpenditures, by the terms of said\nsection.
d37cb9cd1e2d95301229df2ff0c45808 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1855.0726027080163 39.560444 -120.828218 The news by the Cortes is of a highly\ninteresting and exciting character. In\nthe New York Times, of Dec. 27th, we\nfind a letter from Kossuth to the editor\nof the London Times, defending the char*\nacter of the Hungarian nation, and dis-\nproving the charge made against them by\nthe Anglo Parisian correspondent ofthat\npaper. It appears that the Hungarian\npeople during the Polish insurrection of\n*IB3O, did not remain a quiescent spectator\nof the struggle, but rendered all the assist-\nance in their power. We do not care to\nsee the liberties of Europe forever extin-\nguished under a despotic system, composed\nby an interlinking of all the European sov-\nereignties. France and England control-\ning and at peace with Russia, are the\nmost dangerous enemies of the United\nStates. Commercially speaking, the in-\nterests of California in all future time, de-\npend largely upon the friendship and in-\nterest of the Russian Emperor. Of this\ninterest, Sitka Ice Company, of this\ncity, is at present a leading representative.\nSan Francisco is to be the gr and depot\nof the Russian Pacific trade. Ex-Col-\nlector Sanders, who went from, here to St.\nPetersburg last year, and has since re-\nturned, was treated with more favor by\nthe Emperor than any Russian subject.—\nThe agent of a company, he was received\nlike an Ambassador. A free and steady\nintercourse with Russia, will insure a sup-\nply of cheap food, and many other neces-\nsaries for California. The great want of\nthis State is a foreign commerce. At\npeace with Russia, we shall soon export\nlargely to the Amoor river, where there\nis a large opening for trade and barter.—\nWe can supply the Eastern Empire of the\nCzar, with the precious metals and all the\ncommodities of life. Russia does not fear\nour policy of annexation. We need not\nbe intimidated on that head by the predic-\ntions ofKossuth.
28d1badd7c03809a518e1554f0ead8fa THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.6352458700162 40.063962 -80.720915 western higher and firm: western mixed, spot\nand August 51a51i<c; September filXoSl&c:\nOctober 51Ka51Jfc. Oara very quiet and\neasier; western white at 34Xo. ftye more\nactive at 80c. Hay firm and unchanged.\nProvisions very strong but without change.\nButter steady; prime to choicu western\npicked 14a20c. Eggs firm at 13c Petroleum\nunchanged Ooflee firm; Rio cargoes. ordi¬\nnary to choice, ISaltic. Sugar firm; A soft\nlOftc. Whiaky firm at $111 >f.\nCincinnati, August 19. Cotton firm at\nllfcc. Flour dull; family$4 50a4 75; fancy\ni500a5 75. Wheat dull and lower; No. 2 am¬\nber 88a90c; No. 2 rod winter 05c. Horn strong\nat41c. Oata firm: No. mixed 29a30c. Eye\nstrong No. 2, 85c. Barley atroug: No. 2\nfall 90a95c. Pork held out of market at IJ6 50.\nLard higher at 8c. Bulk Moats, demand and\npriqea higher and quiet at $6 00a9 00 Bacon\ndemand good and tending upward at $6 75a\n0 OJttalO 00. Whisky dull at $1 07. Butter\n and unchanged.\nTolioo. August 10..Wheat'steady; No.\n3 white Waba»h, spot and August 93&c; No.\n1 white Michigan 96c; amber Michigan Oftjtfc;\nNo. 2 red Wabash, spot 90Kc: Auguai 96Xc;\nSeptember OflHc; O tob»«r 97Kc; November\n98c: No. 8red Wabash 93c; No. 2D.&M red\nuatfc; rejected 83c: No. 2 red mixed 03Ko.\nCorn firm; high mixed 42Xc; No. 2 spot\n41J£c; August 42c: September 42jic: October\n42&; No. 2 white 43c; rejected 41)fc;\nOuts firm; No, 2,28c.\nNkw Yo»k, August 19..Dry Goods.Job*\nbing trade more active and buaiuesa contin¬\nues fair with commission houses. Cotton\ngoods are in steady ceinand and the bfst co¬\noperation makes unchanged in prices. Printa\naro in modorate request Drest- ginghams are\nvery active and scarce. Woolen goods are in\nlight demand. The Bulletin says three hun¬\ndred cases of felt skirts are to be .old at auc¬\ntion Tuesday.\nEast Libbbty, August 19..Cattle.Rc-\n"eipta 1,019 head; closed slow at about yester¬\nday's prices.
09975a67f7174c127b7309e55b9c437e IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.129781389142 43.82915 -115.834394 Tho p rincipal diversion s of h arem\nlife consist in the visits of frie nds and\nof a p ernicious class of trailing women,\nwho hawk about articles of dres s and\ngewgaws from ono house to an other,\nre taili ng tho lato-nt gossip and s candal\nwith their w ares and assisting the\nladies to get into all manner of scrapes.\nWise women, who tell fo rtu nes by\ncards and in cantations, are also in\ngreat demand, and their vaticinations\nare, as a rale, believed in by the ladies\nwith much tho same delightful and\nblind confidence as is given by farmers\ndaughters to tho mysterious prophecies\n(f tlio gypsies. Now and then condign\npunish ment awaits these hags, as in\nthe ease of the notorious Ayeska, who,\nseveral years ago. was cal led for one\nnight, hustled into a carriage under\npretense of vis ting a great harem, and\nhas never sinco been heard of. But,\nas a rule , their sorceries, evil eyes and\nch arms are perfectly harmless, and\nwhen there is nothing better to do\nthey are called in to beg nil e the heavy\nhours. Nor must the men singers be\nleft out in the catalogue of delights \nthe h arem —a delight, noverlhelesi\nwhich is but sparingly indulged in, and\ncan only be enjoy ed to the full when\nthe harems lord is away.\nA notion seems g en erally prevalent\nin Europe th at if only the harem doors\nwere opeuod a ru sh for lib erty would\nimmediately tak e place, and m any are\nthe sympathies wasted on the supposed\npriso ners of the Mohamm edan m ar­\nriage tie. In reality, botn men and\nwomen consid er their st ate far\nperior to that of Europeans. The man\nargu es thus: “You are a slave from\nthe moment you marry. You can not\ngo out to lnneh or dinner or to your\nfriends without taking your wife with\nyou. You can n ot even leav e hey\nalone tor a few hours without giving\nan acco un t of yourself. Such a state\nof things would he unbearable to me.\nI go where I like and she goes where\nshe likes. I pay my s ervants to look\nafter her, and 1 am sure that she is not\nflirting- with other men when I am not\nby her side. You are never sure\nthis,” etc. This is his line of argu-
1ee43faa8fd1caaba9e3407ec461f252 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1878.8315068176053 39.743941 -84.63662 qnite an old town, having been set\ntled and built up by the Engiiah\nyears before the fie volution ary war\nof far famed 1776 notoriety. Near\nit are the Carlisle Barracks, which\nwere built by the English govern\nment for the protection of its frontier\ncitizens. Ihese barracks were burnt\ndown but not utterly destroyed dnr\ning the late war, by a portion of\nLee s army a few days prior to the\nmemorable battle of Gettysburg.\nThe' were rebuilt or refitted by our\ngovernment after the war, and possess\nno little interest from the fact of bay\ning been founded by the English be\nfore our separation from that govern\nment was thought of. Many nnd\ngreat changes have taken place in\nthis noble old town since my boyish\ndays, although many old buildings\nremain as land marks of its former\ndays. The change among its citi\nzens has been equally as great as\nwith town itself, and few of my\nold acquaintances still remain\namong those best known in former\ndavs and who are still living there,\nI will mention a few who will be re\nmembered by all the old citizens\nFirst I will mention the name of\nGeorge Metzgar, who represented\nthat county in the State Legislature\nduring the years of 1812 and 13,\nMis Metzgar is now 98 years of age.\nand possesses an unusual now of con\nversation and his mind appears as\nclear and strong as it did fifty years\nago. Next in order comes my old\nand highly esteemed friends, Judge\nFrederick Watts and sister Miss\nMatilda, both of whom seem to have\ntaken a new lease of life and are as\npleasant, social, agreeable and intel\nligent as they were considered in\nmy youthful days. Judge Watts is\nover eighty and held the office of\nCommissioner of Agriculture under\nGen. Grant, but was removed by
100429a53a6dfd05e0911fdbb447995e PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.5520547628107 40.441694 -79.990086 ISPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCn.\nHauover, X. II. , July 20. Frank Almy, the\nmurderer of Christie Warden, is still at\nlargo, although there are hundreds of men\nand boys scouring the country for some\ntrace of him. Among the searchers are nil\nof the Dartmouth College professors, who\nare spending their vacations at home. There\nwas a brief cessation this afternoon when\nthe victim's body was borne to Its last rest-\ning place. A great crowd followed It to the\nlittle country graveyard where It was burled.\nThere is a strong feeling that this strange\ntragedy is to have another sensational\nchapter. Certain facts have come to light\nwhich lead to the belief that the murderer's\nname is not Almy. His superior education\nand intelligence were those of a man far\nabove the sphere of an ordinary farm hand.\nHe seemed to be certainly in fear of dis-\ncovery. He always carried two large army\nrevolvers in his pockets. When asked why\nho went so heavily armed he would say that\nhe had lived several years in Texas, where\n carried revolveis.\nYet he was evldentlyafraidthnt something\nof his past life would become known. He\nnever talked of his past life, except once,\nwhen he first entered? the Warden house-\nhold. Then ho told Mr. Warden that he was\nfrom the South. He said that his father was\ndead and that his mother married again,\nand that he did not liko his stepfather. The\noutcome was, according to Almy's story,\nthat he struck his stepfather over the head\nwith a chair and then left home. In his re-\nlations to Christie, Almy had only such little\nprivileges as walking home with her.\nA dispatch from Worcester, Mass., says: A\nman answering to the description of Frank\nAlmy, the Hanover murderer, was arrested\nat about 4 o'clock this afternoon at the South\nWorcester depot. He gave his name as\nSullivan, but when asked to write his same\nsigned John Alfred Carpenter. He says he\ncame to Worcester on Friday night from\nNashua and told conflicting stories. His de-\nscription is believed by the police to cor-\nrespond with that given of Almy.
3e52d0dd905424c1c51e78de31d4ec0d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.8866119902348 39.745947 -75.546589 in this State, the next Legislature\nwill have a Democratic majority on\nJoint ballot. Aud as the term of\nUnited States Senator Harry A. Rich­\nardson will expire on March 3, 1913,\nthe Democratic majority on joint bal­\nlot in the Legislature will have the\nopportunity, which no doubt It will\navail Itself of most cheerfully, of\nelecting a Democrat as Senator Rich­\nardsons successor. The Legislature\nwill meet on Tuesday. January 7, and\nassuming that It will organize prompt­\nly, will address Itself to the task of\nelecting a United States Senator by\ntaking a formal ballot in each house\non the second Tuesday thereafter,\nJanuary 21. In accordance with long\nprecedent, the choice of the Demo­\ncratic majority for Senator will bo\nmade by caucus, held previous to the\nday for taking the formal ballot.\nNaturally, there will be many aspir­\nants to the honor of representing the\nState in the Senate of the United\nStates And In making a selection\nfrom among those aspirants, or from\ncllgiblcs who may not bo open aspir­\nants, it will be as much the duty of\nthe Democratic members of the Leg­\nislature to give consideration to those\nwhom they should not choose for the\nhigh honor, as well as those whom\nthey should favor with Mjeir votes.\nFirst, of all, the Democratic mem­\nbers should endeavor to secure the\nmost and best fitted man for tha\nposition He should be a Democrat,\nof course, one who will give loyal\nsupport to the Democratic national\nadministration. And especially he\nshould be one who will stand flrmlv\nfor a revision of the protective tariff\nin the Interest of the people.\nWith these considerations duly sot\nforth as preliminary essentials, It la\nnext in order to take up the aspirants\nto the office.,and decide who should\nand who should not be considered.\nMr. Willard Saulsbury Is consnic-\nuous among the aspirants to the Sen-\natorship, and therefore It is pertinent\nto ask; Is he the one who gives\npromise of meeting all the require­\nments and best representing the State\nof Delaware in the United States\nSenate? Mr. Saulsbury is a leader of\nthe Democratic party in this State.\n*»ot the sole leader, by any means.\nIn this capacity he has done some\nvery good work, but has he not done\nmuch that was not good, but rathor\nwas decidedly detrimental to the in­\nterests of the party?\nAs one of the leaders of the Demo­\ncratic party for many years, has he\nnot displaved numerous evidences of\nunprofitable, unwise and decidedly im­\npractical leadership? Has his been\na leadership that conduces to vie-\ntcr> ? And has It placed tho party or­\nganization on that high plane which\nUsPVhalf?St 8tr0DBly t0 the Pe°Ple
4d2f7566689a85ead73144cf00e0d322 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.395890379249 40.063962 -80.720915 The work of reconciliation has out¬\nrun my expectation. Indeed, it has\nnever had a parallel'ln human affairs.\nWith lntenal commotions aud disturb¬\nances less ^serjous than those which'\nsome tiin^ aitend popular elections in\na free country "in the time'of peace,\nheretofore'disloyal :people of Virginia,\nTennessee, North Carolina, South Caro¬\nlina, Georgia, Arkansas, Mississippi,\nLouisiana, Florida and Texas, success¬\nively, nay, almost simultaneously ..as¬\nsembled and adopted new constitutions\nin conformity with tbe Constitution of\nthe ,United States. They;upturned re¬\nbellion with all its far spreading roots;\nand all its rpernicipus functions, and\nthey accepted and ratified thetheu pend¬\ning congressional a mend mental o.; the\nConstitutlono'Cthe United States," which\nabolishes slavery, thenceforth, forever.\nThe people of"tbese* States have, at the\nsame time, chosen for themselves, by\nfrfee and uncontrolled suffrage?Govern-\noH. -Legislatures, JudfcHurles and mu¬\nnicipal authorities. Between the Fed¬\n Government flnqj those restored\nand reorganized .'State .GovernmentA,\nt;Uere exlst8"now a morei complete and\npractical harmony than has ever before\nprev&ilckl between the Union and1 so\nmany'of lfe members, since It Was firet\nestablished* WitjaTn the same time the\nExecutive Department of the United\nStates has assumedJtsj>lace among the\npeople of those former disloyal Suites.\nThe State Departufent speaks for them,\nwith their consent to the principalities\nand poWers. The Treasury collects the\nnational imposts and taxes there. The\nWar Department distributes ius forces\nwhenever and wherever it seems'neces¬\nsary. The navy of the United States\nrides freely in all thjBlr, reopened ports\nand harbors; the postoflice circulates\nthrough every Stute..the knoweledge\nwhich isthe"reviving flood of a united\nRepublic. The Interior Department\npays pensions, sells lands and defrays\ntheexpensesofjudicial administration.\nThe ALtorney General prosecutes tralt-\niors' and other disturbers of the peace
15e6d9daf4c9a5e21182e7bc1c37ae08 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.7794520230848 42.217817 -85.891125 Sterling Republican Speaks.\nKditok Tijl k Nokthkknkij:\nI was pleaed to notice in the last is-\nsue of the Northerner your words com-\nmendatory of our candidate fur\nto the legislature, Hon. C. C. Phil-\nlips. What you say of him is true and\nto the point, and much more might be\nadded in testimony to his integrity as a\nman and his fitness for the very impor-\ntant position which he holds. I was at\nLansing several times during the session\nof the legislature in which Mr. Phillips\nsat as a member, and was very favorably\nimpressed with his intelligent compre-\nhension of the business of that body and\nwith the persistent faithfulness with\nwhich he attended to his duties.\nI have frequently met representatives\nfrom various parts of tho state, who in\nspeaking of Mr. Phillips always com-\nmended him highly. They represent\nhim being one of the most diligent\nand fair minded men in the house, ono\nwho endeavors to keep himself informed\non all matters before tho legislature and\nto act and vote according to his best in-\nformation and judgment. Without\nquestion Mr. Phillips is thoroughly\nhonest. He is a man to be trusted to\nact in the interests of the people. He is\na man who has and will command the\nrespect of his fellow members. Ho will\nbe far better equipped for useful service\nin another session than he could pos-\nsibly have been in the last, by reason of\nthe experience he has had and tho study\nand attention he has given to tho sub-\nject of legislation. As you justly state,\n"his record was a credit to tho county\nthat sent him," but it is very safe to as-\nsume that on further trial he will be
267ea0c964e0683668b6117fdc52d848 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.7991802962456 41.681744 -72.788147 Ail this took place at a political\nrally where a foreign tongue was\nspoken. What the man said, what he\ntold to his hearers, would not be\nunderstood by those who speak Eng-\nlish. But there were many in the\naudience able to translate the speak-\ner's jargon and diatribe into English,\nalthough not very edifying English.\nSeemingly, the man who was thrown\nout is a recent acquisition to this\ncountry. It is not known whether he\npossesses naturalization papers, but\nhe has grasped the spirit of America.\nHe has learned that he can stand up\nand call the President of the United\nStates anything he wishes to call him\nand suffer only the temporary pain\nof being hurled through a window\nshould he be unfortunate enough to get\nin the wrong party. Had he been in\neither company his remarks might\nhave been received with great \nHe might have been covered with\ngreat honors. Who knows? In the\nold country where this man spent his\nboyhood he probably had to pussyfoot\nhis way about, afraid even to men-\ntion the king's name aloud, unless he\nfell on bended knee and bowed his\nhead. Coming to the land of the free\nhe soon learned that on every street\ncorner in the cities the popular sport\nfor the disgruntled is to decry the\nPresident of the United States. And,\nwhy not? This is a free country, and\nthat is one way to assert freedom.\nThere should be no great blame cast\nupon the man who stood before a po-\nlitical gathering last night and, in a.\nforeign tongue, heaped conelcmnation\nupon our President. He was but doing\nwhat he learned from example. The\npoliticians of the land have given the\nlesson time and time again. In-
3327714107a3d4096d4f1281a6b439d4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2945205162355 40.063962 -80.720915 Antoine Ganther, or Probst, is a na¬\ntive of Htrausburg, twenty-eight yeais\nof age, about live feet eleven inches in\nbeiunt.ofa broad built, muscular frame.\nHe bas no supernuous flesh on bis\nhoilv Is large limbed, has large bauds\nand feet, is round shouldered, and bas\na disagreeable habit of resting bis chin\nagainst his breast, and glaring outfroiji\nhis half-hid eyes. Ho bas a broad,\nsquare face, a head quite flat at the\ncrown, bulging bullet-shaped at the\nbase: very high cheek bones, a florid\ncomplexion, very light brown hair,and\nthe Btubbleof a light mousUiche, recent¬\nly shaved off. His eyes are small, deep-\nset, of a palo blue, vorging somewhat\nupon the grey, and had a cowering\nlook, falling beneath another s gaze.\nHis nose small, concavo anil upturn¬\ning. pbysiognomlcally Indicative of\nfeebleness of character, the re¬\nverse in form of the boldly outlined\nRoman, while bis largo month had flat,\nroughly moulded lips. He was dressed\nin a suit or grey, and wore a large,\nlight-colored slouched hat drawn don n\nupon his low forehead. His expression\nwas stolid and morose, anil his whole\npersonal bearing impressed ono with\nthe belief that he was an Ignorant,\ncoarse-grained mall, unreasoning, pas-\nsionalefdevoid of strength ol character,\nor human sympathy.\nAKItEST OF T1IK AI.I.F-UED MURDERER.\nAntoine Ganther, alias Probst, tho al-\nle«ed murderer of the Dearing familv,\nwas noticed on Thursday evening on\nMarket street, near the permanent\nbridge, in the neighborhood of lwenty-\nthird street. He was suspected by offi-\ncer Dorsev, who was in company with\nollicers Weldon and Atkinson, through\nthe long strides be made in walking..\nOfficer Dorsey stepped up
2112d4796f206e86edc4f9681ad28b5e THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1902.6369862696602 41.004121 -76.453816 The Commissioners and the plain-\ntiff company are unable to agree upon\nthe terms and conditions which (he\nrailway company should perform and\nobligate themselves to do, before be-\ning permitted to construct and oper-\nate its railway across the bridge.\nIt is averred on the part of the\nplaintiffs that the County Commiss-\nioners refuse to give such terms as\nare reasonable while upon the part of\nthe County Commissioners it is\nclaimed that before the engineer was\nappointed and made report, they\ncaused an article of agreement to be\nprepared, wherein was stipulated the\nterms and conditions to be performed\nby the plaintiff company, before they\nshould enter upon the biidge for the\nconstruction of their railway; and that\nthese terms were reasonable; that the\nplaintiff company declined to join \nexecution of the agreement, and ac\neept the conditions therein stipulated.\nThis unexecuted agreement, as pre-\npared, among other things, provides\nthat the railway company shall lay\ntwo tracks for the operation of its\ncars, one on either side of the bridge;\nchat while the bridge was occupied by\nthe railway company it shall keep the\nbridge in good repair, for its own use\nand the use of the traveling public, at\nts own cost and expense, but if the\ncompany shall neglect or refuse to\nmake the necessary repairs, then the\nCounty Commissioners shall make the\nrepairs, and recover the costs and ex-\npenses incident thereto, from the\ncompany; and that the bond in the\nigreement provided for, shall contain\ni clause providing for the securing of\nmch costs and expenses.
1a574b157a89f1b439481a6f53c088b3 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1887.7109588723997 39.745947 -75.546589 The 'squire some future day at dinner.\nHesjlv d to try this pretty sinner;\nHe griev'd su<-h vanity poas -eit her,\nHe thus in serious term addressd her:\n* Madam, the usual splendid feast\nWitb wnlob our wedding day Is «facd\nwith you 1 must not share to-day,\nFor business summons me away,\nUf all the dainties Ive prep\nI be« not any may be spar'd,\nindulge In every oostly dish-\nEnjoy— Us wb*t 1 really wish;\n'•■mi observe one p*obtbltloa,\nNor thin« it a severe condition;\nno one small dish which coverd stands,\nYou must not d*re to lay your hands;\ndo—disobey not on your life,\nUr henceforth youre no more my wlfa.”\nIhe treat was rerv d, the squire was gone\nI he mu in'ring lady dlo'd »lone,\nSbes w wrate'er could graoe a fasst,\nUr charm the eye, or plesse the taste;\nHut while she rangd from this to that.\nFrom v- nsion hauoch to turtle fat,\non one small dlsn she oha&cd to light,\nBy a deep cover hi 1 from sight;\n“Uh! here it Is—yet hot for me!\n1 must not taste, dare not soe:\nWhy pince It here? or why forbid\nThat I so auch as lift ths lid?\nProhibited of this to eat,\n1 oare not for ths sumptuous traat.\n1 wonder if Us fowl or tt<h,\nTo know what's there 1 merely wish,\nIll look—U m, 1 lose forever,\nl( Im bet*ay«;, mv husband's favor:\n1 own 1 thin« las vas.lv hard,\nNay, tyranny, to b» debarr d —\nJohu you may go, the wines decanted,\ni ll ring or call you when youro wanted.”\nNow lest alone she wales no longer,\nTemptation presses more and stronger.\n•Ill peep —me harm can nser De mueh.\nFor too 1 pee; ; 1 will not touch;\nWhy l'm forbid to lift this civer,\n' me glasoe will tell, and tnen its over.\nMy Luabaeds absent, as Is John,\nMy peeplnr never can be kuowa.”\nTrembling she yielded to her wish.\nAna ralt'd the over from the dish;\nShe start-* —for lo! an open pie\nFrom wh en six living sparrows fly.\ndbe calls, she h*-earns, with wild surprise-\n* Has e, John, and euch these birds,” she\ncries.
0ffcd8d72b923505d9e0c46ee94ebfbc THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.9109588723998 37.561813 -75.84108 I wrought up to the highest pitch of fury,\nana aweriuineu to gtiaru, hh tar us pos\nsible, both passes to it, namely, the Ohio\nriver and the old C rab Orchard road,\nBoone's old trace, leading from the south\nern portion of Kentucky to North Carolina.\nThey attacked all boats they had any prob-\nability of being able to take, using all\nstrategy of which they were masters to de-\ncoy them to the shore. Many boats were\ntaken and many lives lost through the de\nceit und treuchery of thCeJudians, and while\nspies employed by them.\n"The day on which the omigrants start\ned was pleasant, and all Nature seemed\nsmile upon the Pioneer band. They had\nmade every preparation they deemed nec-\nessary to defend themselves from the at\ntack of their wily foes. Ihe boat which\nled the way as pilot, was well manned and\narmed, on which sentinels, relieved\nturns, kept watch day and night. Then fol\nlowed two other boats at a convenient\ntaneo. While floating down the river they\nfrequently saw Indians on tiie banks\nwatchinir for an opportunity to \nattack. Just below the mouth of the Great\nScioto, alsngand desperate ofl'ort was made\nto get some of tho bouts to land", "by a white\nman, who feigned to be in great distress\nbut the lute of Mr. Orr and his family was\ntoo lresh in the minds of the adventurers\nto be thus decoyed. A few months pre-\nvious to this time, this gontlenmn and\nwhole family were murdered, being Make\nashore by a similar stratagem. Hut a few\nweeks beforo we passed, the Indians at\ntucked three boats, two of which were\nken and all the passengers killed. The\nother barely escaped, having lost' all\nmen on board except' the Rev. Mr. Tucker,\na Methodist Missionary on his way to Ken\ntucky. Mr. Tucker was wounded in many\nplaces, but fought manfully. The Indians\ngot into a cunoe and paddled for the boat,\ndetermined to board it; but the women\nloaded the riilcs of their deceased husbands\nand handed them to Mr. Tucker, who\nBueh deadly aim, every shot making\nnumber in the canoe less, that they aban\ndoned all hope of reaching the bo.n and
12127d5d0def4a58b46977589c6b22a3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.9303278372292 41.681744 -72.788147 Why should she not have Roy Ni- - j\ncoll as a friend and comrade? Dan- -\nger? What danger? She had not the\nslightest feeling for Nicoll except that\nof friendship. She felt he had the\nsame attitude toward her.\nJanet had a good deal to learn\nabout man and woman psychology.\nShe did not, for instance, consider the\nfact that a man's interest in a woman\ncan appear to be deep and intense,\nwhile it is in reality the most super-\nficial of emotions, coming from ex-\nternal causes alone, running in a swift\ncourse and dying down completely,\njust as the woman's interest is be-\nginning to dawn. In other words,\n"woman's love begins where . man's\nleaves off," as some writer has said.\nNeither did she realize how quick,\nand dry is the tinder of man's grosser\nemotions, how easily it is lighted, how\ndifficult to quench. L,ike most wo-\nmen, she was not easily thrown from\nher poise. Women are emotional be-\nings, easily moved to laughter and\ntears, readily touched by tragedy or\npathos. But when comes to resist-\ning the temptations of the flesh, wo-\nman is far, far stronger than man.\nIt is as if, lacking man's physical\nstrength, it had been made up to her\nin moral force and resisting power.\nJanet found herself looking forward\nto her next meeting with Nicoll.\nEspecially since AValt had said: "I\nused to look askance at your tagging\nout with Nicoll. But I've thought it\nover, and if you enjoy going, I think\ncan be big enough to trust you."\nShe knew Walt could trust her. Her\nwork at the office was growing more\nand more taxing. Duties and respon-\nsibilities were crowding upon her..\nShe felt a positive need for relaxa-\ntion and diversion. Roy and his lux-\nurious car offered the ideal delights.\nShe would insist, Janet told herself,\non having Wralter go, too, whenever\nhe would. That would make it all the\nnicer and jollier for everybody.\nBut somehow it didn't work out that\nway. The next time Roy invited them\nout for a spin, Walt pleaded work\nand declined pleasantly but firmly to\ngo.
293b0d9b8e44627f035111b28d85485d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.4999999682902 39.623709 -77.41082 regard Him as chiefest among ten thousand\nand altogether lovely-, but there are many\nothers who see in Him nothing hut "a rout\nout of a dry ground, who hath no form nor\ncomeliness that they should receive Him.”\nWhy this wide difference of view? It is\ndue to the same difference in receptivity.\nThere arc some who profoundly feel the\nneed of Christ; the sense of sin lies heav-\nily upon them, ami they would fain be de-\nlivered from it. They wait, like aged Sim-\neon in the temple, for the coming of the\nmighty One, and. beholding Him, they in-\nstantly receive Him as the Cod-sent Word,\nearing, “Now leltest Thou Thy servant de-\npart in peace, for mine ewes have seen Thy\nsalvation!” They welcome the message be-\ncause they were waiting for it. Others,\nlike Nathaniel, cry, "Can any good thing\ncome out of Nazareth?” And prejudice\nmust be overcome before they can receive\nHim. Thus it is written, “He came unto\nHis and His own received Him not;\nbut to as many ns received Him to them\ngave He power to become the sons of God.”\nPrejudice is grounded in pride of worldly\nwisdom, and this is the great obstacle be-\ntween the soul and Christ as the “word”\nor message from God.\nThus it lias come to pass that some who\nhave been distinguished for their attain-\nments in certain provinces of knowledge\nhave been wholly blind on the godivard\nside. One cannot forget how Charles Dar-\nwin, niter spending bis life in experiment-\ning along the lines of physical science, died\nlamenting that his spiritual nature had\nbeen starved. In bis childhood be had\nbeen deeply re'igicus, ns lie said, but lie\nhad dwelt so long amid an environment of\npurely material things that God and im-\nmortality had become empty dreams to\nhim. lie railed it "atrophy”—that is, a\nwasting away for want of nourishment.\nAll through his life he had fostered tho\nnatural man, or
1effd8f257f60b61bf8a9ea266b2385c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.8123287354135 39.745947 -75.546589 Inrbes to uptake, a earner of land now\nor late nf Trancl* and Hanson Robin­\nson: ihenoe by »he last mentioned 'and\nnorth fifty-eight degrees west and era*«-\nIng an alley ntnety-aeven feet night In­\nches to a stake, a errmsr of land late of\nThomas Stephens, deceased, en the wert-\ner)y side of said alley eight feet six loche«\nwide: thence by the westerly side of said\nalley and land late of the ee'd Thomae\nStephens, deceased, north thirty-two de­\ngree* east seventy-five feet eight inchca\nto u stake, thence by the upper end of\nsaid alley south fifty-eight degree* east\neighty feet sht Inches to a stake: thenc«\nnorth thlrty-lwe degn»» east, continuing\nby laid Stephens land three feet ♦« a\nstake, and thence south fifty-eight de-\ngrfl-s east eighty-nine feet to the place of\nbeginning, «be free use and nrlVIto««\nof I he said alley tn common with other«\nentitled thereto forever.\nNo. 7. All Miel certain lot nr piece Of\nland situate tn\nhounded and described aa follows:\nBeginning at a point on the northerly\nside of Twelfth street, between Bower«\nand Dnre streets, at the dtstanoe of three\nhundred and «eventy-«even feet easterly\nfrom the easterly side of Bower« »tr«>i;\nthenoe northerly parallel with Bowers\nstreet slxtv feet to a corner: thence sist­\nerly parallel with Twelfth street twenty-\nthree feet to s comer; thence aouthnrly\nparallel with Bowers street sixty fe •« to\nthe a fores* d side Of Twelfth atmet, and\nihence thereby westerly l«ronty-»hree feet\nto the nlaoe of beginning.\nSeised and taken In execution as the\nprnnerty of Patrick Fahey and to he\nsold by
0257e99f85130cc95dd647c3949ddfcd PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1891.001369831304 39.756121 -99.323985 Lien's legs and heads are torn from\nbodies and bodies cut in two. A round\nshot or shell takes two men out of the\nrank as it crashes through. Grape and\ncanister mow a swath and pile the dead\non top of each other.\nThrough the smoke we see a swarm\nof men. It is not a battle line, but a\nmob of men desperate enough to bathe\ntheir bayonets in the flame of the guns.\nThe guns leap from the ground almost\nas they are depressed on the foe, and\nshrieks and screams and 6houts blend\ninto one awful and steady cry. Twenty\nmen out of the battery are down, and\nthe firing is interrupted. The foe ac-\ncept it as a sign of wavering and. come\nrushing on. They are not ten feet\naway when the guns give them the last\n The discharge picks living men\noff their feet and throws them into the\nswamp, a blackened, bloody mass.\nUp, now, as the enemy are among\nthe guns. There is a silence of ten\nseconds, and then the flash and the\nroar of more than 3,000 muskets and a\nrush forward with bayonets. For what ?\nNeither on the right nor left nor in\nfront of us is a living foe ! There are\ncorpses around us which have been\nstruck by three, four, and even six\nbullets, and nowhere on this acre of\nground is a wounded man. The wheels\nof the guns cannot move until the\nblockade of dead is removed. Men can-\nnot pass from caisson to gun without\nclimbing over.windrows of dead. Every\ngun and wheel is smeared with blood;\nevery foot of grass has its horrible\nstain.
0f22c76b5df43dd1986fb008502e8551 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.1379781104533 40.063962 -80.720915 produced, tho average of which is Iron\nright to twotve foet deep over nearly al\nlliu Btato, and is very productive. The\ncrops -were splendid last season.in lact\nthey never wore better. Corn avoragw\nnhout ninety bushels to the acre. Wha\nwould some 0/ your readers think to so\nstalks ol corn twenty feel high, with twe\nwell developed cars so high that the tall\nrat man in old Wheeling could not reacl\ntliemstanding on his toes? Such is tin\nrMc in this county, as I can bring plcntj\nof men of truth and veracity to testily\nbut as a general rulo, corn grows fron\nlourtcen to twenty ieet high. Wheat I\nvery plenty in this portion of tho 8Into\n:u nearly all the farmers had good crops\nWe have oats in abundance. I have\na few stalks of oats hanging in inj\nnlllce which measures six in length\nwhich was raised about eight miles wes!\nof here, on new.'prairie. Sweet and Mil\n|mtaU*a nre croii that never tail. There\nU no doubt but Kansas to-day can com<\n|iute with any State in the Union, as re\nBards agriculture, horticulture, &c. Fruit\n. who lias not heard, of Kansas fruit ? It\nfruit growing Kansas deserves an itn\ninense amount of credit She his dared\nto compete with all the States in thi\nUnion at the Xational Pomological Oon\nvention held in Philadelphia in 1870, anc\nin Richmond, Virginia, last fall, and wiial\nwas U10 result? The result was this, tb<\n"Hold Medal" at Philadelphia and the 1st\nPremium at Richmond was awarded tc\nKansas lor having the flneat fruits th(\nworld ever produced, a fact which the\nKsnsans are justly proud of, and which ii\nit i iviiii hi iuv ji'uiifj uUtW| nuuuci
40bff473eddecc3f786067fe87adf531 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.0698629819888 44.939157 -123.033121 ing. Wasn't sea sick an hour aud never\nfelt better in my life.\nLater:\nHave boen down to the village noar\ncamp. This is my second trip. Some\nvillage. You should see the houses and\nshops. Most of them have been built\nseveral hundred years. We had supper\nin a little Inn where Dick Turpin has\nstayed many times. 8o they claim. The\nbeams are all of oak and have been\nhewn out with an axe. Instead of naila\nthey are put together with pegs. Every\nInn has its little bar whero they sell ale\nand stout and just off the bar are little\nrooms, each with a coal grate. Tho nice-e- st\nplace to loaf you ever saw. Each,\nis presided over by a pretty bar maid.\nBorne are really beauties. am just get-\nting so I can make change in English\nmoney. It is a Bhame that I will have\nto lcurn some other kind so soon. We\nhaven't hud a pay day for almost throe\nmonths, but please dont' tell mother.\nI am afraid she will worry about it. I\nborrowed a pound ($t.80J the other\nnight aud gave a celebration on my\nbirthday. Paul, Glenn and Kay and L\nhad a little dinner. I suppose Ptiul B.\nis in the service by now. The last I\nheard ho was going to shoot the first. I\nwill have lots of things to tell when\nI get home that 1 can 't write. Please\ndrop one a little note once in a while\neven if you cau't get regular answers.\nYour old tilicum,
3f2e8b0512372a0b514e3c3fa779ddb0 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1920.1571037935134 34.51147 -110.079609 It is therefore vital that our\nschools recognize the importance\nand necessity of impressing upon\nthe platic minds of our children\nthat through an understanding\nof Nature that they are better\nable to comprehend whatls good\nand really worth while, and be-\ncome attuned to the Infinite.\nArbor Day therefore has more\nthan utilitarian significance and\nit is meet and proper that these\ndeeper lessons should be dili-\ngently pursued.\nNow, Therefore, I, Thomas E.\nCampbell, Governor of Arizona,\nby virtue of the authority vested\nin me, and in conformity with\nthe provisions of Paragraphs\n2837-2840, Chapter XX of the\nRevised Statutes of Arizona, do\nhereby designate Friday and set\napart, Friday the 6th day of\nFebruary, 1920, as Arbor Day,\nto be observed in the of\nCochise, Gila, Graham, Green-\nlee, Maricopa, Pima, Pinal,Santa\nCruz and Yuma; and similarly\nI hereby designate and set apart\nFriday, the 2nd day of April,\n1920, as Arbor Day for due ob-\nservance in the counties of\nApache, Coconino, Navajo, Mo-\nhave and Yavapai.\nAnd I also recommend that\nobservance of these occasions be\nnot confined to the schools of the\ncommonwealth, but that those\nof older years pause from their\nlabors and with civic pride as\ntheir actuating motive, aid in\nbeautifying the several commu-\nnities in which they live.\nIn Witness Whereof, I have\nhereunto set my hand and caused\nthe Great Seal of the State of\nArizona to be affixed.\nDone at Phoenix, the Capitol,\nthis the 30th day of January, 1920.
102441eda86ee8656d7dc40692865baf PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.408469913732 39.756121 -99.323985 dangers of a still more serious nature.\nThe undersigned members of the com-\nmittee firmly believe that the existing\nsad condition of the interest you repre\nsent nas oeen Drought aDcut largely if\nnot altogether by adverse Congressional\nlegislation, and that it will not again, be\nprosperous until Congress shall reverse\nits action at the last session, and restore\nthe rate of duty to that which prevailed\nunder the tariif of 1S67, bv which for the\nhrst time m the history of this country\nequitable relations wei e established in\nthis industry between the duties on wool\nand those on woolen goods. It can be\nconclusively shown that the tariff act of\nthat year gave to American producers of\nootn wool and woolen goods steady mar-\nkets, a secure expansion of production,\nand through this expanded production\nit gave consumers cheaper and\nwoolens than were ever before known in\nAmerica and brought the prices for all\ngoods of ordinary wear, and of many for\nfine and luxurious wear, lower or as low\nas are known in Europe or elsewhere.\nThe repeal of the tariff of 1867 on wool\nand woolens was not asked for, as has\nbeen alleged, by the conservative busi\nness sentiment of the country, or by any\nconsiderable number of the American\npeople. It was brought about wholly\nthrough the efforts of importers and\nothers interested in securing in the Unit\ned States a market for foreign wools, aid\ned by a few parties who desired to make\nuse of the foreign product as a whip with\nwhich to subdue the American market\nand menace the American producers,\nupon whom they were necessarily com-\npelled to rely for nine-tenth- s
4002b7152120cb788400950500779f51 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.478082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 Professor You Oettiuger, of Prussia, liai\nrecently published u curious work 01\nMoral Statistics aud Christian Manners\nin which Jio has treated ,the sullied o\nsuicide in an exhaustive style. It it to In\nregretted that the same subject has im\nbeen so fully handled in regards thi:\ncounto', for the conditions of lire here d{(\nfer in" some very Important respects fron\nthose oflife in Europe, especially amonj\ntlio laboring classes. Extreme wretched\nness, with no hope of cscuiie from it, sucl\nas may lie daily witnessed in Etiropcal\ncountries, and which is so frnitfhl n cansi\not suicide there, is almost unknown here\nand the very few examples ot' it we uiee\nwith aru those whose own lolly and mis\nconduct liavu brought it upon themselves\nThe statics of Prolcusor Von Outtcngei\narc based upon the tables of Fnuicf\nand Prussia, which are, jierhaps, the full\nest and most accurate of any nations ii\nEurope, the municipal and communal nil\nministrations there being very careful ii\nmaking up their reports. The result!\nwhich lie deduces are remarkable. Tin\nflmi fiirt which L* strlkimr. is that the\nratio of miiciilu to population appears ti.\nincrease laxtcr tlmn the population ilscli\nThus in Prussia, iu 183U, the number ol\nsuicides reported whs 1107, and iu 1805 il\nwns 3219, which was two and a half timet\ngreater tlwn Iho ratio of increase ol' tin\npopulation. In France, the nuuiberf\nduring the same years were respectively\n1720 and 4700, which is more than aim\ntimes the increase of the population. A\npart of this apparent increase is doubtless\ndue to the more accurate reports
4e30d8ea30446f0144f88f25a1de2a75 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.1734972361364 39.745947 -75.546589 Iron Mountain, Car Trift Certificates\nLaclede Gas Light Co., Refunding\nLehigh Coal and Navigation Co.. Stock ..................................\nLehigh and Hudson River Rwy. Co., General mortgage .\nLehigh Valley R. R. Co., Equipment Trust. Serie* "J” .\nLehigh Valley Coal Co., 1st mortgage .....................................\nLehigh Valley Railway Co., 1st mortgage ..............................\nLettish Valley Transit Co., 1st mortgage ................................\nLeh'gh and WlKeaoarre C al Co. F.xtended mortgage .\nLittle Schuylkill R. R. Navigation and Coal Co., Stock .\nLong port. N. J., Improvement .......................................................\nLynn and Boston R. R. Co., lit mortgage .........................................\nMadison Gas and Electric Co., 1st mortgage ,..................................\nMemphis lAght and Power Co., 1st mortgage ....................................\nMetropolitan Street Railway Co., General Mortgage .....................\nMidland Terminal Rwy. Co., l*t mortgage Sinking Fund............\nMill vale, Etna and Sharpsturg Rwy. Co.. 1st mortgage ............\nMilwaukee Electric Railway and Lght Co.. Refunding and Ex-\ntennkn mortgage ......................................................................................\nMilwaukee Gan Light Co., 1st mortgage ..............................................\nMlnehlll and Bchi$UllI Haxen R. R. Co., SJick ..............................\nMinneapolis, St. Paul & Sa.ult Ste. Marie R. . Co., Equipment\nNous ..................................................................................................................\nMinn* a noils, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie Rwy. Co., 1st Consol-\nIdated mortgage .........................................................................................\nMissouri Edison Electric Co., 1st mortgage ....................................\nMissouri, Kansas and Oklahoma K. R. Co., 1st mortgage ....\nMonongahrla Light and Power Öo„ 1st mortgage .....................\nMontreal Light, Heat & Powei Co.. 1st mortgage.........................\nNew Castle County, Trustees of the Poor .......................................\nNew Castle and Delaware City R. K . Co., 1st mortgage............\nNew York Inter-Uiban Water Co.. 1st mortgage .........................\nNew York and New Jeraev Water Co., 1st mortgage ................\nNew York, Philadelphia & Norfolk R R. Co.. 1st mortgage ....\nNew York and Putnam R. R. Co., 1st Consolidated mortgage..\nNew York and Queens Electric Light and Power Co.. 1st Con­\nsolidated mortgage .................................................................................\nNew York and Richmond Gu* Co.. 1st mortgage............................\nNorfolk Railway and Light Co.. 1st Consolidated mortgage ....\nNorfolk Terminal &'Transportation Co., 1st mortgage ................\nNorfolk and Western Rwy. Co., 1st Consolidated mortgage ....\nNorfolk and Western Rwy. Co., Divisional 1st Lien and General
0e5a89fef72c695d898f546bdb0dd9c7 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.891780790208 44.939157 -123.033121 Again but 50 tons have been spread\nout and 300 tons of the straw is still\nstored in tho building where it remains\nin exactly the same condition as it was\nwhen brought from the fields. Owing\nto the unusual hard ruins winch have\nfallen this year it is possible that sonic\nof the straw which was spread out to\nret will receive more water than is goor\nfor it and that it will bo a hard matter\nto dry it but Mr. Kay maintains thut\nthe flux business even this firBt year\nwill return a hundsomo profit to the\nstate as well as providing employment\nfor the convicts who havo heretofore\nbucked in idleness.\nMr, Kay says he has received his in-\nformation relntivo to the condition of\nthe flnx from Eugene Basse, of this\ncity, who is recognized as an authority\non tho growth and preparation of flux.\nAir. Uosse explains that tnero are three\nprocesses of retting tho flnx which is\nthe process of rotting tho outside of the\nstalk from the fibres which lie .within.\nOne process is "dew" rotting and this\nconsists of spreading the straw out\nupon the ground to allow the to\nfull upon it and supply the moisture\nbut this is only successfully employed\nin Countries where there is little ruin.\nThe procoss of "tank" retting con-\nsists of spreading tho stray out in huge\ntanks where running water is allowed to\ncover the straw. This process, says Mr.\nBosse, is the most successful as it is the\nmost easily controlled but it requires\nexpensive equipment.\nThe process in uso at tho pen under\nthe supervision of Mr. Cndy allows the\nrain to supply the moisture but the par-\nticularly moise Oregon climato this tall\nbus supplied rathurmoro ruin than hus\nbeen necessury but in no manner has\nthe straw been ruined. The matter of\nthe flux business was left to the board\nof control and Air. Cady was employed\nto superintend the manufacture, of the\nplant. Governor Withycombo npepnrs\nto be satisfied with the work so fur us\nit has proceeded, Secretary Olcott Is\nnoncom.nittnl on the subject and Mr.\nKay is a strong supporter of the present\nsystem and suys ho can prove his con-\ntentions by showing a good balance on\nthe right side of the ledger when the\nfinal accounts are settled.
80455e5421292464471b73803e8cddfb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9357923181037 39.261561 -121.016059 Nemiiebixo the Streets.—Mr. Herveyhas\nbeen engaged for the past neck or two in num-\nbering the houses of our town. There are many\nadvantages in having ones place of business or\nprivate residence numbered, especially in a\ntown like Nevada, where the streets are so ir-\nregular and crooked. Numbers arc not only\nan ornament, but are very convenient in direc-\nting strangers. For instance, had any one in-\nquired of us three weeks since where the Fash-\nion Restaurant was situated, we should have\nsaid: Follow down Pine street to Commercial,\ndown Commercial to a point nearly opposite\nTallman and Turners and adjoining the vege-\ntable and meat market kept by the “Farmers\nSon.” Now we have only to say, No. 19, Com-\nmercial street, and the thing is did. Again,\nsome inquisitive individual might desire to\nknow the precise location of our residence, and\nwe would have said: Go up Broad street till\nyou come to a large in the middle of the\nstreet, leave the house on your right and follow\non to a point near the grave yard and opposite\na large water tank, a small low house on the\nleft hand side, with a mortgage on it. Now we\nhave only to say: No. 13, West Broad street.\nAnd again, had a person inquired for the resi-\ndence of Judge Searls, we should have said: Go\ndown Fme street to Michael Clines, cross the\nPine street bridge, turn to the right, follow a\nwinding foot trail, cross two ditches, go round\na vacant lot recently enclosed by Charley Kent\nto near the Half Mile House, on theright-hand\nside of the trail, a large two-story house that\nlooks as though it might have had a mechan-\nics lien resting on it in former times. Now,\nwe have only to say: No. 3, Zion street, Piety\nHill. Judge Bolden resides at No. 1, Zion\nstreet, on the same pious elevation.
4b37ba81123ad9cd5a061b01b58db8da THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6753424340436 40.063962 -80.720915 tacky: It abound* In coal, iron, cannel,\nloll, salt, timber, and cattle. No grvat\n'developments have yet bewn mode in\nSits minerals; several mlnsu, however,\nhave been opened, and they are found\nrich and ptodnctlrn. Thv three laat\nnamed riven have all been made navi-\npible, by locks and dams, for SO or 10\nI miles Into tbe Interior; but they arc of\n| very uncertain utility. In consequence\nof the impetuosity and irregulstity of\ntheir currents; no works, therefore, ran\n|be permanently carried on at a profit\nwhose produce depends for Its exporta¬\ntion on the water of these riven.\nWheeling, the present capital of the\nState, la a city of eonalderable import¬\nance; It it the Verminun of the Balti¬\nmore and Ohio railwav, has aeveral\nIron workup foundries, engine \nmills, and ActorM of various kinds.\nAt a commercial entrepot It la trot well\nlocated, Ming sWthe very extreme\nnorthern oohnr>of the State; 4tha* a\nprosperous -and' thriving trade, but\nwhldi isArmare due' to Thb Industry,\npersoverance, snergy, and' InMligsnce\nof its citizens than to its location. With\nall Its smoke, and clatter of its .nolsv\nstroeu, wo like Wheeling. Tliero 1s u\nkind of freedom, openness, nnd cordial-\nIt v pervading all classes of its. society\nwhich Is quite refrwblng; its hotel* an>\ncommodious; the Mcl.ure House Is n\ntine establishment, certainly one of the\nwry best in the State; charges moder¬\nate, with excellent accommodation. To\nthe tourist we would say, do not nils*\nstaving adov or two at Wheeling; you\nill he pleased with its Iswutiftil scene-\n.
7c20aa9185471cc6574041fed244ddd1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.078082160071 39.513775 -121.556359 District Court, Fifteenth Judicial District, in\nand for llutle County, Ftate of California, against\nLvman Bristol, wherein I am commanded to make\ntlie Sum of Two Hundred and Feventy-six ninety-\nfour one hundredths dollars, judgement and tlie sum\nof twenty-seven 15 one hundredths dollars cost and\naccruing costs on said writ. 1 bare seized and levied\nupon ail of the right title and interest of said Ly-\nman Bristol, in and to tlie following described pieces\nor parcels ot land, situated in the Tow n iipiiir,\ncounty and State aforesaid, and more particularly\ndescribed to wit: Lots No. one. 1 two. 2 three, 3\nfour. 4 five, 5 six. seven . 7 eight. 8 amt nine. 8 in\nblock tweiitv-Bve. 23 ou the Map of the Carlton\nTract of laiid. which Map was filed in theRecorder's\noffice of county on the sixth day of October,\nA. D. 1836 Also.aHthat certain piece or parcel ol\nland situated in the Tow n ol Opliir. county of Untie\nand State of California, described as follows to wit;\nLots one 1 and eight, 8 in block twenty-five. 23 a- is\ndescribed on the Map of the Tow n of Oroville. and\nfiled in tlie Recorder s office of theafoiesaid county\nand Stale, together with all tlie appurtenances\nthereunto belonging or to anywise appertaining the\nsaid property, having been heretofore attached by\n▼irtM of a writ of attachment issued in the -aid\ncause, which I will expose to public bale at tue\nCourt House door iu the afore-aid county and State,\non the thirteenth day ot February A. D. 1858 . at two\noclock I*. M. . to the highest bidder for
02dd472c76a340e7a48c311cc324bcd4 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1907.842465721715 31.762115 -95.630789 not decry the dead and the unhappy\nthen left tile stage before the audience\nbad recovered finui the surprise\nThe scandal which touched so many\nmembers of the Ilapsbtirg house did\nnot spare the emperor himself and\nmany stories of his alleged indlscrc-\ntlons have been current for years\nSome of them perhaps are true but In-\nso far as his dally doings reveal his\ncharacter tbe monarch appears to have\nbeen an ascetic rather than a libertine\nEven In bis old ago he rose at 5 Court\nphysicians when ho was nlmost too II-\nIto sit up could not prevent his rising at\nhis usual hour and proceeding Immedi ¬\nately to the buslio s of the state\nThe head or one of the oldest reign-\ning families and master of the most\nconventional of continental warts\nFrancis Joseph hlle never relaxing\nIlls Imperial dignity was still the must\ndemocratic kindest headed of\nkings Every year on Maundy Thurs-\nday the emperor showed bis humility\nby following the example of Christ In\nwashing the feet of the disciples\nTwelve old men piiillMrs all were\nbrought to the palace on the Thursday\nbefore Easier and the aged emperor\npersonally served them with food awl\ndrink then attended by high military\nand church olllcials proceeded to ittch\nold man in turn wet his feel dried\nthem and dismissed the twelve with\ngifts INfwIhy this was too oiteutH-\ntlotis humility but the admiring Aus-\ntrlans did not mi mushier It\nStern but kind ruler of a turbulent\nrealm a king made human by suffer\nbig with nil his faults he deserves tho\neulogy Mark Antony pronounced over\nthe coree of Brutus The ctanuiila\nwere so mixed In hltn that Nature\nmight stand up and say to all the\nworld This was a man
1a4d351b53c796fa07eb9b5978c54125 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.195890379249 29.949932 -90.070116 Mr. Greeley is retaliating slightly on the editor\nof the New York Sun for the hard rubs the latter\nhas been giving him under the pretence of friend-\nly puffery. In the Washington dispatch to the\nTribune, it gravely announced that Mr. Dana In-\nformed his friends in Washington that It was im-\npeossible for him to give the velocipede exhibition\nwhich had been anticipated as one of the most at-\ntractive features of the inaugural ceremonies.\nA. T. Stewart has commenced the erection of\nan immense hotel, having a front of two hundred\nfeet on Fourth avenue, and two hundred and\nten feet each on Thirty-second and Thirty third\nstreets, New York. The first floor will be rented\nfor stores, and the property is to be managed in\nthe interest of the working women. Board is to\nbe furnished as cheaply 3s possible, and the ao-\ncommodations will ;be excellent. Two hundred\nand fifty thousand dollars has been already ex-\n and it is expected that the work will\ncost over $2,000.000 .\nThe New York Home Journal says that "the\nnewest idea in waltzing insists that, instead of\nnclaspirg the lady's hand, or even her finger tips\nthe gentleman shall bend his left arm at about the\nsame angle with which a fashionable girl carries\nher parasol, the lady supporting herself by placing\nher hand against his arm, in the hollow of the el-\nbow. Thus he carries her around delicately, with-\nout any of that contact which condemai the\nround dances. This mode is introduced by a eta-\n0 gular set of exclusives, but its propriety must\ncommend it to all."\n>fWhat was the color of the gloves worn by Grant\nat his msuguration? The correspondent of the\ne HeIrald says he wore corn-colored kid gloves: the\n- + correspondent of the World says he wore canary-\ncolored kid gloves; the correspondont of\nethe Times says he wore straw.colored kid
6a069e6d0056e89572b1b897a12e08a4 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.0315068176053 39.369864 -121.105448 Snow Fleas.—ln onr joiirneyings through\nthis mountainous region, during the season of\nwinter, we have frequently observed on the sur-\nface of the snow, near the roads and trails, a tiny\nInsect knowm here as the snow flea. We have\nmade frequent inquiries as to the true name of\nthis insect, its properties and peculiarities, but\nhave learned little. The snowflea is probably the\nSmallest representative of nature in the world,\nbeing twenty or thirty times smaller than the or-\ndinary flea. In large quantities these insects are\nfound on the snow, generally in fair weather, and\nat first sight they look like minute,particles of\ndark-colored dirt; but upon approachnig the lit-\ntle snow dwellers the quick jump satisfies you\nthat they seek no terms of intimacy with yon.—*\nWe have heard it said that Norway and Swe-\nden, particularly in the densely timbered por-\ntions of those countries, the snow flea is found;\nbut in the Atlantic States, even in Minnesota,\nwhere snow falls to a great depth and the win-\nters are remarkably cold, the snow flea is a stran-\nger. Some persons contend that the snow flea\nforms in a kind of excrescence from oar moun-\ntain timber; others that it descends with the fall-\ning snow; and others argue that it forms from\nthe snow after the latter has been exposed to the\nsun for many days. All these are but wild con-\njectures; and we give them only as such. Is the\nsnow flea treated of in any modern or ancient\nwork on animated nature; if so, what is the\nname of the author? —Mountain Messenger.
061f60d42d43a923ce2b501743d8c49a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.209589009386 39.261561 -121.016059 Gen. Curtis official dispatch to general\nIlalleck, says: The attack by the enemy\ncommenced on tbedib inst., on my right,\nand continued until four oclock on the\nmorning of the 7tb. I ordered an advance\nof cavalry and light artillery, under Col.\nAsterhaus, with orders to attack and break\nwbat I supposed would be the reinforced\nline of the enemys center. This movement\nwas iu progress when the enemy, at eleven\nIn the morning, renewed the attack on my\nright. The fight continued during the day,\nthe enemy having gained a point, hotly\ncontested by Col. Carr, at Cross Timber\nHollow, but was entirely repulsed, with the\nfall of their conamandor, Gen. McCulloch,\nby our forces under Gen. Davis, The plan\nof attack on the center was gallantly carried\nforward by Col. Asterhaus, who was sus-\ntained by Col. Davis entire divisiou, also\nby that of|Gen. Sigels entire command,\nwhich had remained till near the close of\nthe day on the left. Before the day closed,\nI was convinced the enemy had concentra-\nted his main force on my right. I therefore\ncommenced a change of my forward,\nso as to force the enemy where be had de-\nployed on my right flank in strong position.\nThe change had been only partially effected,\nbut was in fall progress, when at sunrise\nmy right and center renewed firing along\nthe whole line. My left, under Slgcl, moved\nclose to the place occupied by the enemy,\ndriving him from the hights, and advanciug\nsteadily towards the head of the hollow. I\nimmediately ordered the center and right\n•ring forward, our right turning the left ol\nthe enemy, cross-firing on his center. This\nfinal position enclosed the enemy in an area\nand a charge of infantry, extending through\nour wholo line completely routed the whole\nrebel force, which retreated in great confu-\nsion, through doep impassable defiles and\ncross-timber. Our loss is heavy. The en-\nemys loss cannot be ascertained lrom the\ndead scattered over our large field. Their\nforco is scattered in all directions, but I\nthink the main body returned to Boston\nMountain. Gen. Sigel followed them to-\nwards Keittsville, and my cavalry pursued\nthem towards the mountains, scouring the\ncountry and bringing iu prisoners.
0478febe2df1d3ce460692c4965cec00 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1899.0698629819888 39.756121 -99.323985 Marion has introduced a banking bill\niu the house. The bill contuius some\nof the features of the Breldeuttial\nbill killed In the mra session. It\nprovides I hat all atato and private\nbanks shall deposit 5 per oeut of the\ndeposits with the state treasurer, the\ninterest on which bhall constitute the\nfund to pay depositors iu defunct\nbanks. It the iuterent at any time\nbe not buflioidnt to meet lohses, the\ntreaurer is authorized to make a levy\nou the banks for the necessary amount\nto be paid back whenever the fund is\nlarge enough to meet the sum levied.\nThe bill cluBsitlas banks as follows:\nGlass A, with b capital stook of $10,\n000; B, from $20,000 to 140,000 O,\nuuder $20,000; D, all private banks.\nThe money paid to the treasurer by\nthe different classes bhall be kept in\nseperate fund, and the banks in each\nclaes sbull stand responsible for the\nlosses among banks of that clans.\nThe fund shall be invested by a board\nto be made up of the attorney general,\ntreasurer, bank commissioner and two\npersons chosen by the state bankers'\nassociation, who also decide on the\nmoral cbaroter and business ability\nof men who desire to go into the bank\ning business, also as to the proper\nolass to which each banker belong".\nThe object of this classification ia to\nprevent the "weak and dishonest"\nbankers from receiving protection\nfurnished by the "strong and honest"\nbankers. The pops may have held\nsome queer notions about legislation,\nbut they cau't come up with the re\npublican idea of ascertaining a mail's\nhonestr and business ability hy meas-\nuring the capital stook of his baukl\nJust as though all the dihlionewty oo- -\ncurred among the little bunkers and\nthe big ones were safe and honest I\nThen again its a heavyweight idea\nthat would allow the bankers' associ
d93725966354739d15d082782e6d4993 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.2561643518518 35.780398 -78.639099 uuu iu jess auu nan in earnest. And realty\nI know not how else to treat it. You are\nobliged to see that it has nothing to do\nwitu the object of the niemoyijjlUts, aoj\nfcrct, ss fcet fortb'in your IfrporC it is cal\nculated to injure them ; aud therefore\ncould not pass over it. As you do not seem\nto understand the history or meaning of\nsumptuary jaws, i will devote a moment\nseriously, to their consideration. And\n1st. It is error to suppose that every law\nwnicu luicntrcs wim what a man eats,\ndrinks or wears, is a sumptuary law. A\nmau chooie9 to appear in public naked !\nbut the law punishes him if ho docs, and\ncompels him to wear clothes. Would you\ncall this a sumptuary law ? The law pre-\nscribes what a prijoncr shall have to \nwhat soldiers shall eat and drink. Would\nyou call these sumptuary laws? If they\nare, then sumptuary laws are not only al-\nlowable, but necessary. If they arc not,\nthen my first proposition is established, that\nis to say, It is not every law which inter-\nferes with what a man cats, drinks and\nwears that h a sumptuary law. What then\nare sumptuary lawe ? t refer you to the\ndefinitions already given. 2nd. It is error\nto suppose that sumptuary laws arc, of\nthemselves, improper. Almost every na-\ntion in the world, that existed for any\nlength of time, has had sumptuary laws.\nSometimes but not often, they have been\nenacted wantonly and without any public\nnecessity. This, of course, was wrong.\nMost generally, they have been enacted\nbecause the public good required it; and\nhub, vi course, was
083b22f46d3105d069dc6a650ce4ba71 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.856164351852 40.063962 -80.720915 commencing at 10 o'clock a. m .. the following real\nestate, that la to soy: lots s ami y in Mjuate si in\nJainca Ilakor and Jainci K. baker's addition to tli«\ncity of Wheeling, situated on the east side of Haiti*\njnoro street; also lota r, 7,«. y, iu. 11, r.', in and the\nnorth half of lota 5 and II In square 12, and also lots\n6, 7,8 and 9 aud north half of lot In miiiare is In\nJohn R. Maker's addition to the city of Wheeling:\nalao (ho fraction of lot 21 in Hast Wheeling, situated\non the southeast corner of luth and Wood itrwti,\nfronting 00 feet cn 19th street and running hack to\nthe dentil of 120 feel toward H heeling (reek; aim\nthe west'20 feet of lot 22, Knit Wheeling fronting\n 19th atreet and running back toward Wheeling\nCreek to the depth of 1'J) feet.\nFractional lot 21, East Wheeling, w|lll« offered\naa a whole and in thioe parcels, cat b fronting\nfeet on 19th atreet, atid sold in the w «y yielding the\nmoat money. On the west one-third of Mild lot ii a\ngood one atory frame house.\nThe lota In said squares 12 and 13 will ho offer*!\nleparately and aa a whole aud told In a way yielding\nthe moat money.\nLota 8 and 9 In aquoro 9 will I* mid separately.\nTitle believed to be good, but selling as trustee I\nhall convey only such title a* Is mud In tiio by\ntho deed of trtut aforesaid.\nTgaNi or Bai.b.One-half rash and the balance of\nthe purchase money payable In one year with
13a5e55e5abd783739994353e6b47e5a THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.717213083131 38.894955 -77.036646 Tim llurstspent jesterilayin his room at\nthe National and was greall improxed\nb the rise from the turmoil aud exacting\nduties of the luill field. President Young\ncalled on his faorite staff member and\ntried to induce him to take a trip to some\nresort that he might rully recover from\nthe attack of malaria, but Tim said s\nso much better that he would finish\nout the season and then recuperate. He\nwill go to Baltimore today and referee\nthe si rics between the Orioles aim Quakers.\nIt now looks like a walkover for Cleve-\nland to .beat out Cincinnati. In tact, the\nlatter club has most thoroughl beaten\nitscir. It has been a case or ipiit since\nthey left borne, over three weeks ago.\nThink or a club leading for the peununt\nup to August 10 and then lose sixteen out\not the net twent plajcd. This is the\nrecord or Buck's Braves, and one to re-\nmember as a record breaker. Cleveland\nhas pegged awa.v , never losing and\nthe result Is that they will get into the\n'letnple Cup series. Boston Globe.\nIntimations are plentiful that there Is\nsomething ixirtentiuus In the hobnobbing or\nsuch National League magnates as Soden\not Boston. FreediiianorNew l'ork. Von Her\nllorst or Baltimore, nnd Kerr of I'iltsburg.\nIl is given out that these magnates-hav- e\nplanned the downfall or the element that\nonce .controlled the league and which is\nheaded at present by Brush and Bvrne. ir\nthere was a fight on any other but the men\nnamed there would i cause tor alarm\nThe two Bsnro able to take care of them\nselves. Pittsburg News,\nThe Providence and the Buffnln roiseliall\nClubs having finished first and second re\nspectively in the championship scries of\n1896 for the Eastern League pennant, are\ncompeting for the Stcincrt cup lu series\nof games scheduled for September 17, 19\nand 20 at Buffalo, and September 2J. 24\nnnd 26 at rrovidence . The umpires se-\nlected to officiate are Gatfnevand Swurt -wo o-
2f7caac62d3bde401e302c5327d5467b THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.5204917716555 40.832421 -115.763123 Inquiry at Army Hcnd-quartcrs to¬\nday elicits the iufornation that 110 of¬\nficial report of tho Imttlo hus been re¬\nceived. Owing to the destruction of\nthe telegraph lines it is being transmit¬\nted overland, and will probably bo re¬\nceived during tho day. No additional\nnews has been received at Head-quar¬\nters. Tho loss is placed at 15 otliccrs\nand 300 men, of wliom 201 have been\nburied, nnd 52 wounded brought away.\nGeneral Custar, Colonels Custnr,\nKcogli, Yates and Cook, Lieutenants\nSmith, Mcintosh, Calhoun, Hodgson,\nltcillv, Porter, Sturgis and Crittenden\nwore killed. The command is at tho\nmouth of tho ltig Horn waiting to re-\ntit. Custnr went into thw battle with\nCompanies C, L, I, P and P., of tho\nSeventh Cavalry ; his staff, and u num¬\nber of scouts, and but one Crow scout\nremains to tho tale. Gen. Terry\nfeels tho loss deeply, nnd the morn\nkeenly as Gen Custar was directed lo\nlind the Indians, huluot'to light theiu\nunless Gen. Terry arrived with the in¬\nfantry and Gibbon's column, llo had\narranged so as to bo at tho mouth of\nLittle Horn on thu evening of Juno\n20th, when Custar was to communicato\nwith hint ami be governed by his di¬\nrections in the tight to follow. Custar\nattacked on the 25tli aud after one\nhours' lighting, no luau of thoso who\nfought so gallantly under hint was left\nto tell the story.\nGen. Terry lias submitted, through\nCol. Smith, his plan of tho campaign,\nto Gen. Sheridan, and tho notion to bo\ntaken will depend upon tho answer\ngiven. Meanwhile Terry will await\nsupplies of provisions and clothing of\nwhich his command is nearly destitute.
15d1aeabb82e1b615af1ec25d0d9ca00 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1891.8041095573312 35.996653 -78.901805 Among apples, as among living things,\nthere are freaks forms appearing to in-\ndividual trees at the very extremes of\nnormal conditions. A member of the\nstate board of agriculture, in one of the\nnorthern counties, has an apple tree that\nhas never had a petaL No one would\never know it was in blossom, yet it bears\nfruit abundantly. This shows that the\npretty rosy parts of the flower, the pet-\nals, are nonessential to fruitfulness.\nSome contend that the brilliant colora\nof the petals of flowers are given to at-\ntract insects, and arrange for cross fer-\ntilization. Others contend that the pet-\nals act as protectors of the undeveloped\nparts, while others believe that, to some\nextent, they have the functions of leaves,\nand prepare food for the younger parts.\n it be, we see by this freak it\nis possible to have apples without them.\nThen there are seedless apples apples\nwith no core. There may be germs in\nthe ovariums, and the germs may be\nproperly fertilized by the pollen, but the\npower to absorb nutrition is weak and\nthe ovaries die in infancy from sheer\nstarvation. Having been once ferti-\nlized, the fleshy part we know emphati-\ncally as the apple grows on and matures,\nthough the seed and core do not. Twins\nor even triplets are often seen in apples,\nas in so many other organisms, and just\nas in other organisms by independent\ngerms coming into juxtaposition in an\nearly stage of development, when he\nstronger body absorbs a considerable\nportion of the other. Thomas Meehan\nin Philadelphia Ledger.
40e96fd9730cc2318eb121468f59e1c9 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.4561643518518 37.561813 -75.84108 is a deal too much of disrespect for honest\nlabor for the healthful maintenance of\neither morals or government. There ob-\ntains a notion among a great class of peo-\nple that when a person is relieved by the\npossession of property, from the necessity\nof arduous toil, it becomes a degradation\nfor him to labor at all. If the habit of\nwork is so fixed that tbe monied man can-\nnot remain idle, he apologizes for it as a\nsort of vice, and refers to habit" much as\nbe would to addiction to opium or rum, as\nsomething to be ashamed of, but which,\nunfortunately, had got the better of him.\nHis children are carefully educated to\n"sink the ehbp" and turn up their noses at\nthose who work for a living. In \nmatrimonial alliances for them he looks\nfor wealth rather than industry, and\nchooses as a husband for his daughter the\nman who has his inheritance in the bank,\nno matter how unfitted he may be to cope\nwith misfortune, rather than the man who\nhas a fortune in his brain, and will win\nhis own way. Idleness and extravagance\nare curses worse than the plagues of\nEgypt to ns; they breed sorrow, wretched-\nness, crime and infamy; send our sons in-\nto drunkard's graves and telon's cells,\nand put our daughters on the streets, in\nto mad houses, and garrets of poverty.\nEvery boy, rich or poor, should be taught\nthat idleness is a crime and girls should\nbe taught it no less than boys. Every\nchild should be taught some trade.
1e2afc29dac9a9f4e8ce79d0e996456f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.2616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 ^1*0 certain tractaof land altnata on Middli\nWheeling Urt«K, in tne lowntnipoi imanuou\ncounty of Ohio, and btate 01 West Vliglnla\nbounded andutocrlbta ufallows, u per the salt\nrecord of the Mia deed of tnut: Tbe first use\nbeginning at a bunch of white walnuts etandiui\nou ttu wt»l bunk of Altddle Wheeling Creek uui\ncorner to Josepn Marlow and Joseph Bianey\nthiuce with Bald Mallow's line down the creel\n%. 9J4 deg. e. 24 pole* lot white walnut; thunct\nb. aodeg. e. 18poiea toa augur tree; Ounce i 6i\ndog. e. 5 pol«a to a poplar; thence W deg. weal\nWpoiesto an aah stump; theuce Mueg. west Si\ntwice to a red oak; thence a. SI wes\n53 polea to a stake; thence i. UH w. bO polea u\nan elm and white walnut, corner to aala Josepi\nMarlowand Henry Bell; thence s. M) deg. wee\n68 polea to an aim; theucen.TO# w. *7poleau\na bunthuf epruce plue: thence up a steep hill\n74ii weat 44 to a hickory, corner to thi\noriginal or Thomas Buchanan; thence wltJ\nThomas Buchanan's line n. 15) deg. east 190 pole\nto a poplar stump; thence n. 65 deg. weat 80 pole\nto an elm, anotner corner to said Joseph Bis\nu j> theuce with his line n. 73* deg. e . lad pole\ntotbo beginning, containing one hundred ani\nsixty-three acreamoreor less; also another o\nsecond tract, adjoining the nrmer, bounded a\ntollows: Beglnulng si u red oak, corner to Alber\nDavis and lieury a>«11; thence north 80 poles U\nan elm standing In a drain, corner to Joaepl\nMariow and Junes Stewart, with said Steward\nlinea 60 deg. w. M polesto anelm; thencen\n7SX deg. west 18 polea to a *ugar tree; theuce s\nS ueg, eaat 40poles to a stake lu the road; thcnc<\n80 deg. e . bU perches to the rea oak, being th«\nplace or beglunlng, containing tl acres aud »\nperches, together with all the buildings and Im\nprovemenu thereunto belonging.
1791dddaf40b1520e7482256b6af39f9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.3164383244546 40.063962 -80.720915 Ex.os.Firm at 12al2%'c.\nNew York.Flour, receipts P.7M barrels; cx-\nI ports7.00) barrels; sales SC.ido packages; market\nI restricted by high asking prices. Wheat, exports\nI 911.000 bush'cls; sulcs r».M.» .OCs) bushels of futures\nand 128.UJ0 tmsbcl* of spot; spot market quiet;\noptions opened stronger, closing at yAc net ad-\nvancc: cash wheat was llrm ami exports bought\n12ti,wn bushels; May closed a; Cl;.e: June <Oc.-|\nclosed at li'r1 .c: July closed at«'».'»!.ic; August'\nctoa-d nl ilVv*. Corn, receipts 2.ihio bushels; ex-\nports l.PO bushels; sales Ifii.UOO busheU of fu¬\ntures and .Vt .OOO bushels of spot; spot market\nquiet; options active, closing at !>it!4e higher;\nMay closed at 52!ic; July closed at .V -Kc; Sep-\ntoinber closed at .r>-'!>e. OaLs. roculpls 23,100\nbushels; exports 2.SW bushels: aales rii.OOO bush-\nelaof futures and bushels of spot; spot mar-\nketllrui; options quiet ami a shnde higher, dol¬\ning at !.c not advance; April closed at 32;vc; May\nclosed at .';j?r<r; July closed at 33ijc. Hay quiet.\nHops fairly steady.' Hides tlrm. Leather llrm.\nHeel firm." Cut meats quiet. Lard lower and\nquiot; western steam closed at S7 10 asked. Pork\ntirm. llutter weaker: western dairy 8i»i:tJ-^r; do\ncreamery r.'al'."ac: factory Salic; Klglns 10J;c;\nimitation crcaiuUT 9a15q: state dairy 8al7}4c;do\ncreamery l'.'! vc. Lggs weaker: state and Pe:in-\nsylvnnia J3,'-air.,<o; western fresh l3al3;^o;south-\ncrn lial 'c. Tallow easy;city 4.%iil"Hc: country"i;^\nI n.'ic. HOsluflrm. Turpcutlne quint. Klce steady.\nMolas.ses steady. Cottonseed oil quiet but firm.\nCollce, options opened lower and dull, closing\nsteady lit unchanged lo 10 points net decline:\nspot coll'cu, HlodulL Sugar, raw llrm; rellned\nquiet.
8021a6b01cbe01f5e15a2ffc5ec12b11 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.5068305694697 39.261561 -121.016059 Tou bare geographically s realm eight hun-\ndred thousand square miles in extent, on which\nthe sun shines and rain falls, without a barren\nspot blasted fur reason of past offenses against\nthe Most High, and capable of sustaining the\nwhole population of the Union ten times told.\nTou hare morally and socially, the domestic\naltar, patriarchal aod conservative institutions;\nthe family circle aronud the beartb-ilone ; and\nmothers, who, like Cornelia. Alia, and Aurelia,\ndevote themselves to the education of their\nchildren in principle, as their chiefest jewels.\nYou bevs politically, republican representa-\ntive systems of government from which corrup\nlion ie excluded, guarded by written constitu-\ntions and written laws, and a rational public\nsentiment, together with an independent judi-\nciary untainted by bribery. You have, com -\nmercially, rivers and barbers scarcely accorded\nby a bounteous Providence to the same extent\nelsewhere on earth, that bear upon their waters,\nannually, more than two hundred millions of\ndollar* of foreign exports. You have ag-\nriculturally, a soil of such various qualities and\nproductive aptitude, that it teems all over, not\nonly with the . ocessaries, but tb<- luxuries of\nlife, so that although your foreign trade were\ncut off. and your medium of exchange restricted\nfor years, yet your people, both bond aod free,\ncould, and would subsist io comfort.\nYou have, aggressively and defensively. the\nmonopoly of the cotton plant, through which to\ncommand peace and alliance with the manufac-\nturing kingdoms of Europe; at the eminent\nhazard of their own existence, while your pop-\nulation reaches thirteen millions, eight millions\nof whom are citizens habituated to the saddle\nand the aims,aod five millions are negro slaves,\nto cultivate the earth, and deeply imbued with\nfeelings and emotions of respect, veneration,\nand lore for their masters. As an independent\nnation, you would rest on a basis the soundest,\nthe purest, the safest and most lasting among\neniightoned communities.
4c66c4d0ad46f9519d2df927161bc016 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.6726027080163 38.951883 -92.333737 happen to be a strangT you drift to one\nside out of the stream 0f incoming\nguests Presently a pretty young girl\ncomes up anil opens conccrsation with\nyou drawing you out finding out who\nyou arc and knowing at once why you\narc there She mentions thai she is one\nof Lady Astors secretaries Then if\nyou want to learn something if you\nwant to question somebody or listen to\ntalk on a particular topic you mention\nit to her and she takes you right up to\nthe authority on that subject presents\nyou and the rest depends upon yourself\nLady Astor and her secretaries dress\nsimply always No woman from any\ncountry ever has a moments- - worry\nabout her clothes when she wants to go\nto Lady Astors She knows that she\nwill find her hostess dressed cither \na black coat and skirt with3 white linen\nor crepe blouse or in j foulard or crepe\ndress with a frilled white net ficlm and\ncuffs The secretaries wire pretty fit\ntic frocks which anyj irl could afford\nThey arc keen and fuIPof laughter anil\nonly one of them ever seems worried the\none who has to make her chiefs appoint-\nments This girl a mere slip of a child\nis always reminding Lady Astor llrat the\nday has only twcniy four hours and that\nshe cant speak in Plymouth and conduct\na pure milk campaign in Birmingham on\nthe same evening\nThe one thing you arc not allowed to\ndo is to frivol about nothing at all\nLook here do yoii think 1 left an im-\nportant division at the House to tush\nhere for this sort of thing your hostess
04efffa87c63432085102e41ae4e77d7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.8589040778793 42.217817 -85.891125 The Treatment of Dyspepsia.\nDyspejsia, or indigestion, both which\nwords mean essentially the same thing,\nis the inability of the stomach to obtain\nsufficient nutriment out of tho food eat-\nen to meet the wants of tho system ; ar.il,\nnot having enough, blind instinct calls\nfor more ; this call or desire for nourish-\nment, is denominated hunger, which is\ngratified ordinarily by ta' ing food into\nthe stomach. But, in a sense, naturo or\ninstinct makes a mistake, and calls for\nmore food when in reality it is not food\nthat is wanting, but the nourishment\nwhich is in the food already eaten, and\nwhich the stomach has not the streng h\nto withdraw ; hence it is that a dyspep-\ntic has a craving appetite, in aggravated\ncases is always eating, and is" always\nhungry. But to eat more under such\ncircumstances is like giving a faithful\nbut invali 1 servant more work to do,\n there really is not strength enough\nto perform what is already in hand ; or\nit is like adding greater weight for the\nnoble horso to draw, when he is already\nso oppressed by a heavy load as to bo\nscarce able to drag it along a single step.\nAll dyspeptics iro weak, they lack\nstrength, the whole body is feeble, : nd\nthe stomach has its share of debility, of\nweakness ; hence tho essence of cure is\nto increase the stomach's strength. But\nall bodily strength comes from the food\neaten, and cannot possibly come from\nany other source ; hence the only cure\nfor dyspepsia is eating. But how to eat\nis the great practical question of this\nage and nation ; for dyspepsia is a na-\ntional disease and a national sin, since\nits one great cause is intemperance in\neating, excessive indulgence of the ap-\npetite, in conn ction with unwise habits\nat the table.
51ae19d517558d0e0e98f6f33e42e3ca THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.987671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 From the decree of the Circuit Court, a\nan appeal hus been taken to the Su- t\npremo Court of the United States, t\nwhere, it is hoped, it may be heard at e\nan early day, even if out of its order, v\nin consequence of the national impor- t\ntauce of the completion of the work, j\nwhich this litigation, through the direct\nagencies of rival interests alone, has so d\nlong delayed. Pending tao litigation t\nbefore the United States Courts, a pro- >\nceeding by quo warranto (also instigated 1\nby tho Pennsylvania Railroad interests) t\nwas instituted in the State Courts of r\nPennsylvania, which it was hoped t\nwould"have, ere this, been brought to a C\nconclusion, and with a like favorable o\nresult as tiie caso before Judges Grier c\nand McCandless. Tlie procrastination f\nwhich bus characterized the course 1«\ntaken by hostile interests, has prevailed i\nhere, however, and it is not now antl- a\ncipated that tho argument of the quo t\nwarranto will take place for some v\nmouths. The result can hardly be 1\ndoubtful. Tho trial Juno last, at 1'\nWilliamsport, before a jury, demon- n\nstraled the utter baldness of the pre- f<\ntensions of our opponents when nub'\nnutted to the test of judicial inquiry, h\nIn tho meantime, the work upon tho 1<\nroad has been pushed gradually tor- a\nward, and tho heaviest portion of it. f:\nthe Sand Patch Tunnel, through the 8\nsummit of tho Allcghanies.is well 1\nadvanced towards completion. But for b\ntho delays which a vexatious and tin- o\nwarrantable litigation has caused, tho s\ndirect communication by rail, between ii\nBaltimore and Pittsburgh, would now t\nbe in actual operation. c\nThe uompany's engineers have loca- t\ntod two routes from the Point of Rocks t\nto Washington.one via Bladensbitrg, f<\nand the second directly into the city of a\nWashington. By the latler route the 1.\ndistance will bo but *112 miles, being a h\nreduction of the distance, compared C\nwith that by the lielay House, of 49 c\nmiles. The latter location was made t!\nby the solicitation of his Honor the o\nMayor, and other leading citizens of ji\nWashington.
0ea149e35da10b074a22cc39b2bf9931 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.6013698313038 40.063962 -80.720915 Immediately after Colonel Jouaus\nwas seated he gave the order to brinj\nIn the prisoner. All eyes were thei\nturned to the right of the stage, besld\nwhich was a door leading to the room l!\nwhich Dreyfus was awaiting the sum\nmons. Almost everybody but the mos\nprominent officers stood on their feel\nSome mounted on benches to obtain\nbetter view. There were subdued crie\nof "sit down," nmld which the doo\nopened and Captain Alfred Dreyfus\npreceded and followed by a gendarme:\nemerged Into the court room. His fea\ntures were deathly pale and his teet)\nwere set with a determined but no\ndefiant bearing. He walked qulckl)\nwith almost an elastic step, and ascend\ned the three steps leading to the plut\nform in front of the judges. There h\ndrew himself up, brought hi\nright hand shnrply to the peak of hi\nkepi, or military cap, giving the mill\ntary salute showing that years of in\ncarceratlon on Devil's Island and a ter\nrlblo anguish of body and mind had no\nimpaired his soldierly Instinct am\nbeating. Tho prisoner then remove\nhis kepi nnd took tho seat p'lacod fo\nhim, faring his Judges, Just in front o\nhis counsels' table and with his back t\nthe audience, liehlnd htm sat a gen\ndarme holding u sheathed sabre In hi\nhand. Dreyfus In a new uniform o\ncaptain of artillery, dark blu# with re\nfacings fixedly regarded the Judgci\nwith Immovable features and wlthou\nstirring hand or foot, scarcely eve)\nmoving his head, during the whol\ncourse of the proceedings, except whei\nhw entered and left the court room.
487912d95e81204ec9cd6beddcc0096d THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.7164383244547 38.894955 -77.036646 party met in the First Ward was draped iu\nmourning at his death! Gentlemen, did not Dr.\nVlagruder go out of his way, in this attempt to casta\ndur upon the American party, when he made theso\nstatements? What had the American jiarty to do\nwith Hughes' keeping a mulatto woman? What\nad t/tat to do with this case? What had the draping\n>f the house in mourning, where the Americans of\nhe First Ward met iu council, to do with this trial?\niVIiy such statements?\nWhat other purpose, than to hritig disgrace upon\nhe American party, hud Dr. Magruder, in making\nhese irrelevant statement*? Mayor, as ho is.pub\nic officer as he is.learned as he Is.witty as he is.\nle is no more than the opinl of Mr. Hughes, in re\nipectwbility, and it will not do for him to aaktil \nnaructer of Mr. llughes, I can assure you! It\nIocs not become him to do it. He is not th* mem to\nio it. You hare heard it said, gentlemen, that it is\nnot proper for " the pot to call the kettle black"'\n1 do not aay whether there he ar.v application in\nthis saying, hut 1 say Dr .Magruder is not the man\nai assail the char acter of Mr. Hughes much less the\n- huructer of the American party.\nWhat if Mr. Hughes were a man of bad character ?\nIocs that affect the character of the American party?\nIf this be the doctrine, God help the part* to which\nDr. Magruder belongs! But, why did he not also\nell us, thul llughes had been found drunk in the\njutters of tin- citv ? or on the benches of the markettouae?
3d456a41e65a054e9dc6dad0ff2c9551 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.6315068176052 39.745947 -75.546589 amended National Defense act of national\n1920, the country today la covered Th ' came\nwith a network of National Guards­\nmen and Reservists of various cate­\ngories. Interested in seeing that\nCongress make the necessary appro­\npriations to carry out provision* of\nthis act. Large numbers of these\nmen are leaders In their commun­\nities and can bring pressure to bear\nthrough the press and through pub­\nlic opinion upon Congress In addi­\ntion to the civilian who belongs to\nsome branch of the citizen-soldiery\nthere are others who for a variety of\nreasons are unable to join who are\nnevertheless interested and who do\ntheir share. The Military Training\nCamps Association, which has re­\ncently held its annual convention at\nChicago an account of which will\nbe found on page 927, is a splendid\nexample of the good which can be\ndone by civilian co-operation. As\nbusiness straightens Itself out the\nbusiness man who had dealings with\nour own or other governments dur­\ning the war Is commencing to be­\ncome Interested In the Industrial\nmobilization side of National De­\nfense act The Assistant Secretary of\nWar's office, with which this is en­\ntrusted. the Army Ordnance Asso­\nciation and the Quartermasters' As­\nsociation are oil making every effort\nto take fullest advantage of civilian\nco-operatioa on this line and «re\nmeeting with considerable euccers.\nThe 250,000 National Guardsmen\nand Reservists of various categories\nwho will be In camp this coming\nsummer undergoing Instruction from\nthe Regular Army furnish « splen­\ndid opportunity to have scattered\nthroughout this country this com­\ning winter 250,000 American civil­\nians convinced of the need of proper\nnational defense and of the essential\nand effective part which the Reg­\nular must play In It.\nTheir advocacy and Interest will\nnot only Insure a greater attention\nto national defense, questions during\nthe winter than Is generally the case\nbut also will help to recruit the var­\nious citizen-soldiery forces, with the\nresult that next summer there will\nbe a atm greater number of civilians\nwho will attend the camps and go\nhome. If properly handled. Incul­\ncated with a proper doctrine.
0c5d627fe18887f606b026f72b35d7ae EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.0452054477423 39.745947 -75.546589 Commission for the time being, shall non-resident he taxed for county and The Commission has labored diii-\nhave authority to administer oaths, niuniclpal purposes at a lower rate gently on the Excise question and has\n1 he State Revenue Collector shall or 0n a lower base than of a resident, endeavored to produce a bill that\nserve all summons placed in his The apportionment of the subjects would be fair to those engaged in\nhands by this Commission Any per- ! 0f taxation between tbe State and its this business and yet raise an adr-\nson so summoned and failing to ap-1 sub-division before referred to, seems quate revenue for the Stale, and\npear shall be deemed guilty of a inis- ; to be attracting some favorable at-| would recommend that the price of a\ndemeanor and upon conviction there- ] tention the country at large and license to keep an Inn or tavern shall\nof shall lie punished by fine or 1m- we have found no sufficient reason to ; remain as at present, and that the\nprisnnmcnt or both at the discretion advoeate its change at this time. This ! special license to sell intoxicating\nof the Court Any false statement involves the conclusion that no State i liquors In less quantities than one\nmade by a witness under oath before , tax should be Imposed upon land or j quart to be drank off the premises\nsaid Commission, shall he deemed I anv class of property now exempted 1 he amended so that thc price thereof\nperjury and punishable as such under I from such fax w hich already bears > shall he Two Hundred Dollars C$200)\nthe law« of this Slate.
152ba12fc2d6dc5475613d19ba98b951 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.3904109271944 39.745947 -75.546589 bis llshility would be created, de­\npending upon a wile range of proof;\naud frequent injustice might be dene to\ndebtors, who as afteu fail to appreciate\ntheir real situation, and 1 onettly believe\nthemselves to be solvent when they a:e\nnot solvent. On tbe waole it is a sound\npolicy of the statute working the least\ninjustice which avoids a preference only\nwhen given under or in contemplation of\nan assignment.'\n“ Th is law not only recognizes but\nfavors and protects a preferred creditor\nwho, In good faith, has thus secured a\njust debt, although it may cover and\nabsorb tbe entire property of the debtor.\n“Therefore, to avoid a preference\ngiven to a bona fide creditor, it must be\ngiven by an assignment to nominee, or\nby an instrument that is in fact as\nsigumeut, under cover of another form.\n“The law then, gentlemen, clearly is,\nthat Jacob II. “Topkis had the right to\ngive Samuel Slesinger and David\nAbramson, or either of them, such\njudgments as he did, if ^he was justly\nindebted to them or either of them in\ntbe sums named, and the judgment was\nhonestly given to “eenre such debt, not\nwithstanding the fact he was insolvent\nor in failing circumstances.\n“In order to avoid these judgments\nyou must be satisfied from the evidence\nIn this case, that, in giving such judg\nment, Jacob H. Topkis did not intend in\ngood faith to secure honest debts; but\nintended or contemplated insolvency,\nsecuring them a larger share of his\nestate in view of insolvency, or Intended\nto hinder, delay or defraud his other\ncreditors
869738223eadd1a57d3f03a50b4e4573 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6095890093861 40.063962 -80.720915 sands of kiffk-toned young men in the\ncountry.all these rebels were high-\ntoned."who meditated, expatriating\nthemselves, and who, when asked why\nthey did not seek pardon, replied that\nuntil General Lee did so they would\nnot." Affecting proof of patriotism!\nHigh-toned evidence of high-toned\npride. When Lee was informed of this\ncock-sparrow braggadocia, Ms eminent¬\nly noble heart swelled with the most'\ngenerous emotions. He would teach\nthese high-toned young fellows what a\nsacrifice could be made by an eminently\ngreat man. How erven a Lee, who had\nperjured himself as an officerof the Uni¬\nted States Army by taking up arms\nagainst, his country, could forgive that\ncountrv for his defeat, and how he could\nlower himself to the attitude of suppli¬\ncation for a pardon for having been |\ngu3tv of monstrous crimes against civ-\n{ligation. Yes, he would show these\nhigh-toned ohmtierlings that he would j\nnot be in their way, and that he would\nremove their objections to applying for\npardons by making application for one!\nfor himself! It was in this spirit of\nmagnanimity that Lee did a violence to\nhis own feelings, the civilized world\nis expectod to stand in stupid admira¬\ntion of the sublimity of theact. Inspir¬\ned by Jthe generous example, sooie of\nthe high-toned young men of the South\nare imitating it. They, too, have done\nviolence to their own feelings, but it is'\ntheir glorv that they have followed in\nthe track of "old Bob Lee." The cor-;\nrespondent of the Express, with solemn\nenthusiasm, savs that the "sacrifice" oft\nGeneral Lee will have; saved ..many of\nour first young men" from exile; a glo¬\nrious consolation indeed, not onlv to\nthe first voung men, but to their "first\nfamilies."" Verily it seems that the Vir-1\nginians have not learned much. They\nmust imagine that Letcher is still Gov¬\nernor, audtbat all the grandiloquent bal¬\nderdash common in the days of slave-\nbreeding is still in fashion. These first\nvoung men are all of them malignant\nenemies of the countrv, and if they are\nfirst in anything it is in wicked animos¬\nity against the Government which is'\nendeavoring to reform them, and which\nmav even grant them the pardons,\nwhich, when they receive they will\ncurse.
0c527cf1dd4cb2a1b08ea1aa2579f525 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.047814176027 41.681744 -72.788147 time. The democrat say that pros.\npenty is the natural progress of sr\nfairs bound to follow after war, no\nmatter which party was in power.\nThe outstanding figure tor demo-\ncratic nomination Is Alfred Em\nmanuel Smith, the speaker said. The\nrepublicans any that he Is a product\nof Tammany hall, that he Is a\nRoman Catholic and that be Is not\nonly very damp, but exceedingly vet\nGovernor Smith has come before the\npublic eye in his message to the\nstate legislature, setting forth the\npolicies of the democratic party and.\nstating what he has accomplished,\nand the public has watched him In\nhis refusal to give stay of execution\nto Ruth Snyder and Henry Gray,\nshe pointed out.\nSome republicans are booming\nHerbert Hoover.\nContinuing, the speaker said.\n"Looking backward over Europe\nin 1927 we find her great problem\none of economics. She has gained \nbetter understanding of war repara-\ntions and war debts. The little coun-\ntries are on a better financial basis,\nand1 the large new nations are now\nable to get loans to promote stability\nand expansion, which shows as\nsurance ot good financial status.\nItaly Is on a basis Where she can\nfeel she is on a sure foundation. The\nonly large nation not having her\ncurrecy stabilized is France. But\nFrance's borrowing capacity from\nthe Bank of France is now seven\nbillions, due to the efforts of Poin- -\ncare who persisted where eight min\nisters had failed. France began to\nreturn in two months and her peo-\nple gained confidence knowing that\ntheir money would work for them\ndoubly at home. He retired part of\nthe America debt by buying the\nSwedish Match Co. at 6 per cent.\nLast year he collected 33,000 ,000 ,000\nfrancs in taxes.
2f0e29f8a5c2dc6c3d6960a6126c4f5a CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1918.0123287354136 41.875555 -87.624421 As tlio visitor ciuno up the gravel\npnth the tiiiin Kcuteri on tho porch kuvu\nu great start and uttered n Klinrp gasp.\nThe woman by ills side stured, scowled,\nnroso to her feet with precipitancy and\nHaunted through the open dour with\nthe words spoken almost virulently:\n"The bad penny has returned; that\nman cannot come Into my house I"\nThe person she referred to had lost\none arm. The clothes he wore were\nfaded, rugged and of coarse fabric.\nHe was unshaven.\n"Well, my beloved untl respectable\nbrother," he hailed Joe Wharton, "I'm\nback. Missed me? Thanks, I won't\ncome in, as 1 chanced to overhear tho\nkind and loving suggestion of your\nhigh and mighty helpmeet."\nThus came Jim Wharton, and he\nsmiled satirically as the other grasped\nhis hand limply.\n"Well, Jim, I don't want to appear\ntoo' blunt, hut I fancy your fam-\nily would cure much to have you hang-\ning around. They are all working\nhurd; clrcutnstauces have forced them\ndown to a system. I reckon they've\npretty nigh forgotten you."\nJim Wharton looked grave at this\nnnd his lips twitched. A certain stern-\nness came Into his face ns he said:\n"And I gties you'd be glad, too. I\nwon't trouble you again."\nTwo hours later Jim Wharton stood\nnt the gate of the home that he had\ndeserted. He curried his battered old\nsuitcase up to the porch, set It down\nnear the cpen front door and peered\nbeyond It. Seated In a room Into which\nho could look Jim noticed that a chair\nwiiif occupied by a woman, who sat\nrocking softly to and fro as though\nthinking or resting.\n"It's make or break," he muttered\ndeep down In his throat.
08261da6ed4e1847bdb6e66ea59b0ba8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0671232559614 41.681744 -72.788147 why should it. not be done? Tt is\ncertainly your right as an employer\nto know such facts and to select\nworkers accordingly. Then shall I\nfind out in a definite way that I can-\nnot get along just as well and com-\nfortably without assuming any of the,\nresponsibility of being an American.\nOf course, I may be employed at this\ntime, but still there is every reason\nwhy your foreman may address ques-\ntions to me regarding my status as\na resident and worker in this city and\nin your factory. And why should you\nnot expect the paymaster, the welfare\nman, the factory nurse, and similar\nagents in your employ to express a\nlike inquiry at each and every time\nlhat: the occasion is offered for doing\nso? This plan is merely making ef-\nfective use of the laws of suggestion,\nand has a real advantage over the\nuse of bonus or of salary increase to\nsecure the same results.\nIf you are a merchant in the city,\nand I am selling fruit or garden\ntruck, you may and very properly\nshould ask me the location of my\nfarm, and regarding my citizen-\nship. Do you do that now? I shall\nsoon come to feel proud to say "Yes"\nand sensitive about saying "No." Per-\nhaps I wish to buy some hardware\nor a suit of clothes and you are asked\nto accept or cash a check. There is\nand there must be no lack of cour-\ntesy in such case if you ask me to\nassure you that I have climbed the\nladder to citizenship. You have the\nsame opportunity to show that your\nAmericanism is dynamic, should I\nhappen to be the iceman, the milk-\nman, the coalman, the freight man,\nor a carpenter and repair man. The\nonly element of doubtfulness involved\nis whether you care enough for the\ncause to "do your bit" in this way.\nYou are making frequent mistakes by\nalways depending on assumption in\nthe matter. There are men with more\nthan thirty years of residence in this\ncity who are not citizens and they\nare not unwilling to be citizens.\nIf you are a city official, you may\nbe employing many or few helpers,\nall of whom are paid by the taxpayer's\nmoney. There are janitors,
11b913abade4796f076e60717954ea0e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1897.1712328450026 46.187885 -123.831256 Some interesting facts relating to the\noperation of some of the great ed\nmonopolies of the country have been\nbniupht out lateiy by the committee of\nthe senate engaged In examining into\nthe affairs of the sugar trust. In the\neunrse of its investigation of the sugar\nrefineries the committee also delved\ninto some other aggregations of capital.\nThe testimony elicited by those outside\ninquiries was very mucin like that given\nby the sugar people. Among others ex-\namined waa Charles W. Flint, one of\nthe representatives of the rubber trust.\nMr. Flint was asked why, 'with the\nmills already on the trust's hands which\nit could not utilize to more tnan 50 per\nrent of their capacity, it acquired addi-\ntional mills at a cost of S12.000 .000 . His\nanswer was that the managers of the\ncompany did so with the idea that a\nlarger centralisation the business of\nmanufacturing and larger economy in\nthe cost of production was possible. In\nother words, the company wanted to\nreap the benefits that came from the\nconcentration of capital. He ateo ex-\nplained to the committee that there is\noften a difference between the value\nof a company's property and the\namount of Us actual stock. Instancing,\nas an illustration, the case of the great\nCtiemlcaJ Bank, of New York City,\nwhose shares sell for over forty times\nthetr original value. Mr. Flint is said\nto have given the crjmmittee a great\ndeal of information about his business,\nbut it was evidently not always of a\nkind the committee seemed to want\nOf special Interest was. bis testimony\nin relation to the effect of large com-\nbinations upon this country's export\ntrade. In ukmes of dpression such as\nwe have been having, he said, the
05e676b9291d8ad5dd73dbd8d03baa83 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.8260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 he told him he thought he (Jake) and me\nhad quit our correspondence. Ab near an\nI con tell after that Kockwoll said to\nJake, "This girl is the one 1 want." Jake\naaid, "You are not going to get her; no\nG.u d.n man thathas two living wives\ncan get her; you are not fit for her." Mr.\nKockwell said, "Mr. Metx, I have got no\nliving wives; 1 hnd n wife, but she is dead."\nJake Mid, "You have two living wivea at\nthis time, and d.d if X can't prove it;\nMr. Kockwell said, "you can't do it; I\nhave no wives;" believe he said it wan a\nlie. Jake commenced curaing, but don't\nknow exactly what words he used at that\ntime. J stepped right in between them\nthua second time and caught of two\npalings. Jake commenced cursing and\nHwearing and tried to push me away; he\ntold me to go away; I told him to go back\ninto the house aud not rnlee a fuss; he\ntried to push me away and get mo ttf go\naway, but I wouldn't do il; he told me to\ngo away or I'd get hurt. Mr. Kockwell\nsaid he didn't come there for n fuBS, and\nthat he did not want a fuss with him or\nanybody else. Jake stepped around then\non the other sido of me; i turned around\nand throwed both arms around hid ncck;\n1 begged him to go in the house and not\nraise a fuBF; he tried to push me away,\nbut J held to him. lie crowded me back\nto the gate, where Kockwell was
1598e96a828c27772099b328acbd801a PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.9931506532216 40.441694 -79.990086 Watertoww, X. Y., Dec. 23 . Three men,\nCharles Benner, Stephen Brocs and Otto\nKris, arrived at Carthage Saturday niaht\nand were glad to get shelter in the village\nlockup. They were not tramps and the\nstory they told was so similar to others that\nhave been heard in this section lately, there\nis little reason to doubt that there is some\ntruth in it. Benner says:\n"Throe months ago I loft Xow York City\nto work on tho railroad near Tupper's\nOur fares were paid to our destination with\nthe understanding that it was to he taken\nout of tho first month's pav. Wo wore prom-\nised $1 25 a (lay and good board and lodging\nat 50 cents a day.. Arriving thero we\nfound that the contractors owned\nthe store and the boarding houses.\nTho latter were cold and cheerless.\nTho only means of heating was a fireplace\ncut in the wall slmplv a large naif circle,\nwithout a chimney. The beds wore bnnks,\nof whioh there wore tiers, one above\nthe other. In each one there was a quantity\nof loose hay and ono blanket.\n"Sunday was pay day. When my name\nwas called I stepped up and was Informed\nthat I was In debt to the company for Ji\nThero were no explanations and we were\ncompelled to submit. I had $12 or $13 with\nme when I went into tho camp. Snon big\nprices were charged at tho company's store\ntnac I waiKea to xnppers jaKe,wuero iitm\nwas a store and purchased what I needed.\n"On tho second par day I thought I surely\nwould receive some money, but on my\nname being called I found that I had been\ncharged $10 for the use of the company's tinv\nware, and that every other man in the camp\nhad been treated tho banle way. There\nwere 70 of us, which made $700 for the use of\ntho tinware, and there was not $100 worth in\nthe whole camp. Wo were all in debt to the\ncompany.
26c9209527cfe48759fe00f5123ed7e0 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.146174831765 37.53119 -84.661888 SINCE our last Issue tho editor of\nthis paper has mado a brief but de ¬\nlightful visit to his brother Mr T R\nWalton In Atlanta Ga Mr Walton\nU well known to many of our readers\nwho will bo glad to learn that ha Is\nprospering In bis adopted Southern\nhome Atlanta has no citizen more\nloyal to her Interests than Mr W\nwho is never happier than when sing ¬\nlog the praises of the Gate Clty\nJust a year has elapsed since the\nwriter visited Atlanta and the Improve ¬\nments during that short time are most\nmarked Greater Atlanta seems to\nbe the slogan of tbo citizens of the\nmagnificent city and they not only talk\nAtlanta but build Atlanta Both tbo\nresident and business sections of the\ncity boar decided evidence of prosDQrl\nty and by the score have\nbeen erected A 16story business\nhouse Is below built corner Marietta\nand Peachtree streets by the Fourth\nNational Bank while the Coca Cola\nCo II erecting one a story higher fur ¬\nthey up on Peachtree Ere long the\nFlrsiBaptlst church will tiulld a 8150\n000 edifice having sold their old church\nfor 181000 and the congregation of the\nFirst Meth9dlst chnrcb have begun\none to cost about a similar amount\nUncle Sam bas bought ground for a\n1000000 postoHlce a new depot to\ncost In the neighborhood of a million Is\na certainty and many other buildings\nare to go up when the weather opens\nCertainly Atlanta has taken on new\nlife and the writer predicts that In 10\nyears the will rival In size business\nand appearance such western cities as\nLouisville and Cincinnati
1c488ea8c3fa60a8a85bf7dde666ec73 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.8674863071747 46.187885 -123.831256 When the American people proceed to\nelect a president they do not seem to\ntrouble themselves very much about who\nhis wife is, or what she is, or what his\ndomestic relations are. Nothing could\nbetter illustrate the character of 0\npolitical institutions than that every now\nand then a president's wife appears who\nhas no social fitness whatever for the\nplace she is expected to occupy. The\nwives of all the recent presidents except\none, Mrs. Hayes, never would have been\nselected to occupy the position they were\ncompelled to assume when they went to\nWashington, ilrs. Lincoln shrank from\nthe ordeal was never at ease while her\nhusband was in the White House and\nnever recovered from the sad effects of\nher sojourn there. Mrs. Andrew John-\nson was a very plain little woman, \nloved her husband as she ought to have\ndone, but who never had a taste for\nfashionable' society. Mrs. Grant is one\nof the most faithful of wives, but her\nside of two presidential terms will be\nforgotten a long time before that of her\nhusbBnd. Mrs. Hayes was the first wife\nof a Republican president to carry any\nstrong characteristics into her reign at\nthe White house. She is n most amiable,\nintelligent lady, and is remembered with\nmany more pleasureable emotions than\nher husband. Sirs. Garfield was a loving\nwife and a good mother, but going to\nWashington came near being as fatal to\nher as to Garfield himself. She was as\nunsuited to the responsibilites of the\nposition she had to assume as Mrs. Lin-\ncoln or Mrs. Andrew Johnson. President\nArthur-
16f3d269eb03a391ae330a1f2c90f489 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1922.0698629819888 41.681744 -72.788147 cinated, such pupils or teachers may\nnot attend, no matter what action the\nchool boards takes in the matter.\nThere is no conflict of law here, no\noverlapping of power. The law places\nthe matter for final decision in the\nhands of the health authorities, where\nit should be placed. They are sup-\nposed to be the. experts In such mat-\nters. The giving to the board of ed-\nucation the power of acting before the\nboard of health acts and of taking\nsuch precautions it deems proper in\nregard to the school pupils, does not\ntake from the board of health the\ngreater power granted over all the\ninhabitants of the village, town or\ncity over which It has jurisdiction.\nWere this interpretation of the law to\nbe given, whole beneficial effect of\nsuch a law might be nullified and the\nlaw never permits such Interpretation\nto stand If It may be avoided without\nstretching the meaning of the\nlanguage used to a ridiculous point.\nThe wisdom of such interpretation\nmay be seen if the case is considered\nwhere a great epidemic of smallpox\nbreaks out in a small city. The board\nof health orders all inhabitants to be\nvaccinated. The board of education\nrefuses to exclude pupils from the\nschools who have not been vaccinated.\nNaturally the disease would attack\nthe pupils alone. If the epidemic last-\ned long enough the situation might\narise where the inhabitants of the city\nwould be safe with the exception of\nschool pupils and teachers, all of\nwhom would be the sufferers.
067bfbefe937ed4e3dab1a01825c1b45 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1885.1410958587012 39.756121 -99.323985 Chicken Fritters. A good way to use\nup bits of cold turkey and chicken is to\ncut them in pieces, of uniform size, if\npossible, make a batter of milk and dour\nand egsr, sprinkle pepper and salt over\nthe cold fowl, and mix with the batter;\nfry as you do any kind of fritters, in hot\nlard; drain well, serve hot. This is\ngood breakfast dish.\nOyster Sauce. Farboil the oysters in\ntheir own liquor, beard them and reserve\nall the liquor. Melt a piece of butter in\na saucepan, add a little nour, the oyster\nliquor and enough milk to make as much\nsauce as is wanted. Put m a blade ot\nmace and a bay leaf tied together, pepper\nand salt to taste, and the least dust of\ncayenne. Let the sauce come to a boil,\nadd the oysters, and as soon as quite hot\nadd the mace and bay leaf. Stir in a\nfew drops of lemon juice and serve.\nOrange Preserve. Some time, when\noranges are plenty and consequently\ncheap, try this old time recipe for mak\ning preserves ot them: drate the thin\nouter portion of the rind, then squeeze\nout all the juice and pulp; put the orange\ninto cold water and let them lie there\nfor one day and night; meanwhile weigh\nthe juice and pulp and grated peel; allow\ntwice their weight of sugar; boil them to\ngether until the sirup looks clear, \ncare to skim oil any scum that rises: put\nthis in a cool place until the oranges\nhave been in the water the required time;\nthen cut the oranges into small pieces,\ndrain them well, put them into some\nfresh water just enough to cover them).\nadd sugar in the proportion of half . a\npound to one pint of wates; when they\nhave boiled in this until they are tender\nadd the pulp, etc., let them boil then for\nten minutes, after which they are ready\nto be put away in cans. Instead of cut-\nting the oranges into email pieces you\nmay chop them very fine.\nBegin with Soup. No doubt in many\nfamilies the prejudice against soup has\narisen irom tlie iact that it is usually\nprepared and served in large quantities,\ninstead of, as at the tables of the rich, in\nsmall portions, though many kinds would\nfurnish in themselves a substantial meal\nfor a growing child. At any rate, the ad-\nvantages of commencing dinners with\nsoup are manifest in the saving of the\nmeat bills, and economy practiced in util-\nizing scraps of all kinds for the making\nof eoups and the comfortable sensation\nexperienced after a little has been taken;\nfor let any person who feels, as the bay\ning goes, too Hungry to eat, swaiio a\nfew spoonfuls of soup, and the feeling cf\nexhaustion w ill quickly pass away. In-\ndeed, a
378d0cc03f9d6d23a9e8f60de84b3591 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.6671232559615 41.020015 -92.411296 William C. Ralston, the lato presi­\ndent of the Bank of California, was a\nman who had, in a comparatively brief\nperiod, attainod the summit of finan­\ncial greatness, and was looked upon\nas one of the leading bankers of Amer­\nica. Ills success bad been won, not so\nmuch by careful calculation as by hril-\nliaut counts in the world of money, by\ndash, by bold and unparalleled strokes.\nHe was a man who risked all to gain\nhis poiut, and who, by nativo shrewd­\nness which gavo him au insight into\nmen and stock operations of the day,\nwas euabled to carry his poiut at all\nhazards. Ho was a man of perhaps 50\nyears of age, aud his early lil'o was not\ncharacterized by any remarkalilo ex­\namples of enterprise such as his later\nyears doveloped. Coming up as ho\ndid from an humble walk, ho pushed\nhimself along by his inherent genius,\nuntil he finally grew to be one of \nacknowledged money-kings of the\nworld. Throughout his career, which\nwas, at best, peculiarly varied iu its\ncharacter, Mr. Ralston has occuplod a\nposition which has been a perfect an­\nomaly, and which has defied a thor­\nough aud successful analysis.\nAs far back as 1855 and 1856, Imme­\ndiately subsequent to the argonautic\ndays which filled the Pacific slope with\na race of adventursome and daring\nmen, he is found in the minos of south­\nern California, okiug out an uncertain\nexistence, either as an employe of one\nof the many mining companios which\nabounded there at that period, or soon\nafterward living in comparative ease\nas a superintendent. Shortly after­\nward, and when the fortunos of tho\nnew state had been established, and ho\nhad won for himself a degree of inde­\npendence, he is to be traced to San\nFrancisco, where ho secured tho posi­\ntion of a purser upon a steamer ofrn-\nby tit? raclfic Mall company Md
04ed63533878b1c61725b470ff5ef062 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.669862981989 40.441694 -79.990086 Iho aches and pains she had in almost every\npart of her body were simply unbearable. Im-\nmediately after eating,, ber stomach would be\nseized with terrible pain ana cramps, which\nwould continue until she would vomit up her\nfood, and the gas that formed would cause her\nstomach to swell as if It would burst. In fact\nall kinds of food except milk wonld cause pain.\nShe bad pain over ber eyes, dizziness and\nnoisrs in her ears. Her moutb would have a\nbitter, disagreeable taste every morning. She\nbad Daininboth sides and across the small\n(of ber back, and in the night if she lay on her\nleit Blue sne wouiu ub seizeu witii me most ex\ncruciating pain, and ber beart would palpitate\nas if it wonld jump out of her body.\nNight sweats weakened ber fast, and she bad\na tired feeling, bnt more tired in tbe\nmorning than on going to bed. While in\nthis condition she consulted tbe above special,\nists, whose reputation for making permanent\ncures has lone since become thoroughly estab-\nlished. She says of tbe matter:\n"Although I had doctored with several phy-\nsicians ana with patent medicines, I got no re-\nlief, but gradually grew worse. In fact my\nneighbors and even I myself thought I could\nonly live a lew mnntns. Heading in tne papers\nhow Mrs. Bratt had been cured of terrible\ncramps and pains by the catarrh specialists\nat 323 Penn avenue I took a course\nof treatment and now I gladly testify to my\ncomplete cure of all my aches and paius as\nabove described. 1 cheerfully recommend\nthese specialists to all suffering from catarrh\nor stomach trouble. Signed with my own hand.
2b0ee2a8b4a781c228e99c10677e2382 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.105479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 lly Virtue of a deed of trust made ami executed\nby Ellen Hhanlcy. wife of Francis K. Mhanley. with\nthesaid Francis K. Hhanley, her binUiutl, to the\nundersigned trustee. hearing date the nth day of\nJanuary. A. D . 1871 nnd recorded In Hie Clerk's\nOffice of the County Cbtirl of Ohio county, Went\nVlralnls, In Dew! of Trurt ltook No. 4, page* :c»7\nAtiUsVt, I will nell at Public Auction, nl the front\ndoor of the ttrnrt House of said Ohio county. In the\ncity of Wheeling, on WEDNESDAY, Uie 17th day\nof February, 1878, beginning at 10 o'clock a. m . of\naald day, the following described rail estate, tlwt I*\nto nay: All of lota numbered eleven and twelve\n(II and I'i) in the addition to the City of Wheeling\nlaid out by Muaea W. Chapllne, James II. Forty th,\nAlexander Wilson and Marcus Wilson, situated at\nthe corncrYftat of Main street and north of Twenty-\nfifth street tfiwmerly called Marshall street) In the\nSixth Waru of add city. Mich of said low \nnfty feet (80 feet)on Alain street, and extend* east-\nwanlly one hundred and twetity-lwo feel (1/2 fret)\nto thealleylnt <Plof aald loin. Mini nil the same\npmperty which was conveyed ti» the mid lillcn\nHhanley as her art* nnrt a'|*erato c*tiUc hv dei-d of\nJacob Pnyder and wile, Unrlin; even date with I lie\nalmve mentloniil deed of trilM; together with, all\nand simpikir. the Improvement* thereon, nmd'tlng\nif a ttrpstory brick dwelling ami a ItiHiloty frame\njuslarm house. with other Improvements '\nTwins or Hai.R. One-fourth of the ptirchaat\nmoney In cash on the day of sale and the residue In\nthree equal aeml-Attnual fnntallments. with lutcreot\ntinoil the deferml invmciit* from Die itrnr of *il»». f\nthe purchMcr iUliw Iwiui with nppnirnl urnotwl c\niwurltr,»ml tiio title* to the pmixrtjr to U> n tnliiwl\nuntil tf»»» |«irfhitw nmtvy J» fully twlrf. Selling n*\ntrtwtre, I will ronrejr the till* which I* mi«T lt«\ntne lijr the nalil tlctu «>f tfUftl The wtno 1% how. »\nerer, IipIIctwI to I** une.twiitlotmhlp.\nJunl'i
190d0cbb728d9f9b3375809a5341f9be THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.04508193559 40.063962 -80.720915 well, yea must let me seo yoar ticket, aik\ndon't keep other passengers waiting," re\nmarked the brakeman, a little impatient\nly. The young lady placed her foot or\nthe step of the car and drew ont from oni\nof her black boee a coupon ticket almcs\na half yard long. "There it is, sir," sale\nshe, with faltering voice. The brakemar\nItave the ticket a hasty glance, assistoi\nthe young woman to the car platform\nraised his hat in a polite bow, and was lef\nto blush alone, while the other railroat\nboys laughed at his expense. "I was I\nbrute," he said..PUUburgh Preu.\nAmolia Barrett, in Auckland, New Zea\nland, wont walking along the beach alom\none evening, and next day hor clothe\nwere found in a heap, but no other tract\nof her except tho marks of hor bare fee\nwhere she walked into the water\nThe police searched along the shore to\nher all the next day, but the waves failed\nto cast up her body, and tho newspape\nsetit down as a case of suicide. That nigh\nshe came home clothed principally in ftiri\nleaves, and said that as ohe was on he\nway home the night before her hat blei\n00 into the water, and, seeing nobodv ii\neight and knowing that no one was likel}\nto come, she had gone in after it. Th'\ntide was stronger and the water deepe\nthan Bhe thought, and when she did man\nage to ge( back to shore it was not at th\nsame spot where she went in. In the dark\nnras she could not find her clothes, an*\nspent the night in searching for them u]\nand down the beach. Just at daylight sh\n*V,«n/l
2221992ce0778718363931dfdc3c96c2 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.0833333017101 43.82915 -115.834394 I bejran to work him to the fro nt;\nwith the inusic of the park ringing,\npealing, li ning in ecstacy , an d the\ntree , shooting backward as if on wings;\npast Walleiton. Glonlwortli and Cam­\neron, over a flight of rails and into an\nopen where the hounds were tumbling\nover the two smaller kangaroo . The\nold man, meanwhile, head erect, leap­\ning, bounding away, co vering at least\neighteen feet at a jump, was gaining a\ngood lead. I passed the hou nds a t full\nspeed with a cheer, aud they, leaving\nthe dead, s pru ng on in chase of the\nliving, their throats w ett ed with their\nkill and eager fo r the nobler game-, so\neager, indeed, that they outstripped\nme, although my was running as\nif iu a finish A short distance ahead\nI saw the dark line of a dried water­\ncourse. At this the old man went-,\nand with a gigantic bound cleared it\nand leaped on undaunted. At it went\nthe hounds —some over, some in-and-\nout. As my turn came I steadied my\nhorse and sent him at it with a shout\nHe rose clear, and in a seconds flash I\nsaw the rocky bottom fur below me.\nWe struck with a slide in front, a\nscramble behind, and a stu mbling re­\ncovery, b u t safely over; and as I threw\nmyself hack in the saddle I saw the old\nman standing high against a gum-tree\nat hay —or, as the A ust ralians have it,\n“ stuck up."
079a183531f5aa0920537a09dfe16608 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.6707649956993 42.217817 -85.891125 Relstlvs to the Prevention of Fires\nSection i. The VilUice of Paw Pw Ordains.\nThai it shall be the dutjr of the village council of\nsaid village, on the second Monday of Afrit iu\neach and every )ear, or as soon thereafter as may\nbe, to appoint s tire Warden, who shall hold his\notrtce fur the term of one year, or until his succes-\nsor shall be appointed and qualified.\nSection s. It shall be the duty of the Fire War-\nden, once in eacli ear, In the month of October,\nand as much oftencr as ua be deemed nccesary,\nto enter into any premises. houe or building, and\nexamine the stoves, furnaces, pipe, chimneys,\nand all heating appatatu and devices therein,\nand all places whtie explosive or combustible\nmaterial or substances aie kept or stored, and\ncause all such as are unsafe, with respect to \nto be pi t in a safe condition.\nSection 3. It shall nut be lawful for any person\nto have in nis or her possesion or on his or ber\npremises, within said vilUtfe. any shaving, wood\nor combustible matei A in such a situation as to\noccasion hazaica or danger of tiie. All persons\nhaving iliu centre! of such material shall comply\nwith Indirections and orders of ttie r ire Warden\n11. relation thereto.\nSection 4. It i:all be the duty cf the owner or\noccupant of any premises to comply with tne or-\nder i,t birectiens of the Hre Warden in respect\nto all matters mentioned in Sections 2 and 3 of\nthis Ordinance, ai.d upon tiieir refusal or neglect\nto do so v iihin I c 1) tul:t hours after such order\nor diicciic n kltall have been crved upon him or\nher, ihe
4bb502028aa31b3d0385651ac20c36e5 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1914.3712328450026 41.875555 -87.624421 Jimmy Archer, as long as ho has\nbeen with tho Chicago Cub team, has\nbeen rather consurvntivu about his\nmethod of catching so cleverly behind\nthe plate. It has not boon becnuso\nho does not want youngsters or other\ncatchers to Icnm his secrets.\nIn Instructing youngsters nbout tho\nart of working behind the batter he Is\nono of tho most liberal In the country,\nand nil tho recruits who have over\nbeen on tho team since Archer linn\nbeen on It have learned tho finer\npoints of the work, writes Oscar C.\nRelchow In Chlcngo Dally News. He\nhas taught "Bubbles" Hargrove a lot\nthis spring, nnd that youngster Is now\nono of the best prospects tho Cubs\nhave had In some years.\nIn tho springtime most catchers aro\ntroubled with stonebrulscs on their re-\n hands becnuso of tho tender-\nness of tho flesh after a winter of Idle-\nness. Archer, when ho begnn catch-\ning, found a scheme to avoid bruises\nof tlint nature, but never revealed his\nmethod to his teammates becnuso ho\nthought they had Bystoms of their\nown. This spring, however, ho ac-\nquired u stonubrutsc, nnd It Is tho first\nono ho has had In years, and It was\nduo mostly to an accident.\nWhllo watching batting practise at\nCincinnati ho was hit on the fingers\nwith a foul tip. To avoid hurting his\ndigits moro ho stuck his hand deep\ninto his mitt and cnught tho ball in\nthe palm of his right hand. This wns\ncontrary to his method. As ho has\nonly an extremely thin padding on his\nglovo the brulso resulted and when
1473b1b3ffc368a3fc2f8ce25969edfc THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.1712328450026 40.419757 -77.187146 visiting her brother, heard the thief at\nwork trying to open the frontdoor, but\ncould not think what occasioned the\nnoise until the villains sudceded in\nopening the door, when she gave the\nalarm, and the thief was frightened\naway before he could secure any goods.\nOn Saturday morning last Mr. Uriah\nOuss and his son Cloyd, who resides in\nTurbett township, went out into a field\non nis larin witli a sled to get some\nwood. After loading the sled Clovd\ndrove back to the house with it, a dis-\ntance of about half a mile. After he\nhad started away Mr. Ouss cut down a\ntree, and was seen doing so by Ner Me-lo- y\nwho was across the Tuscarora creek\nopposite to where Mr. Guss was. Cloyd\nCluss returned with sled in about\nhalf an hour and found his father fasten-\ned by the limbs of the tree and standing\non his feet with his body bent forward\nand down and bis head near his feet. He'\nmade haste and liberated his father ; but\nalas, he wm dead, with his neck, back,\nseveral ribs and an arm and leg broken.\nThe son then made an alarm and se-\ncured the assistance of Mrs. William\nKennedy, by whoce aid the dead body\nof Mr. Guss was placed on the sled and\ntaken to his home. It is thought that\nwhen the tree was cut off, a large limb\nprevented it from going clear to the\nground and that Mr. Ouss then cut the\nlimb off, when It fell and caused his\ndeath as aforementioned.
4e0e0ad1299d52cd4e28340133a4c2f3 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1872.5259562525298 37.561813 -75.84108 Sandy Station derives its name\nfroin being the point from which\ncomes all the sand used in the city\nof Salt Lake. This is not much of\na place in itself, but derives the\nprincipal part of its notoriety from\nbeing opposite the mouth of Little\nCottonwood canyon. It is the point\nat which all the ore and goods are\nshipped to and from the canyon.\nHere we have to take the old mode\nof traveling, that is, the cumbersome\ncoach of our forefathers.\nThere was only twenty two of us,\nand our luggage, and if there was\nnot seme crowding to seat us all in\nthis dry land boat, I would not say\nso. After waiting for near one\nhour, during which time there\nwas considerable swearing by the\npostman and his satellites, and a\ngreat many hard expressions by the\npassengers, there were six very good\nhorses hitched to the coach; then\nafter our had taken a drink,\nth sharp crack of his long whip let\nthe horses know that all was ready\nfor a start up the canyon.\nA pleasant drive of about six\nmiles over a level and very sandy\nroad brought us to Granite City.\nThis is but a short distance up the\ncanyon, and derives its name from\nthe immense quantity of gray gran-\nite found here. This is the point\nfrom which the Mormons get the\nstone of which they are building the\nTemple in Salt Lake City, and when\nthe size of the stone, the distance it\nmust be transported, and the great\nsize of the Temple, are considered,\nthe Mormons have doue wonders in\nrearing the Temple to its present\nheight. However, the completion\nof the R. R . to Study Station, and\nthe ruuniug of a switch to the quar-\nries, will give them greater facilities\nfor the completion of their great\nwork.
0b176f8fc1bd853809598f38c295a77d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.6424657217149 40.063962 -80.720915 A correspondent iu the London Standard\nsay*: "A sow belonging to Mr. James\nLaird, of Kickling, Essex, has existed 133\ndays without food or water. This being no\nunprecedented I have gone fully into the\ndetails of the case, and can vouch for their\ntruth. I live within a few miles of the\nspot, and have known tho owner for many\nyears, whose testimony, and Itliat of his\nmen, has been substantiated by (among\nothers) Mr. John E. Morris, a well-known\nsurgeon, of Bishop Stordord, who saw the\nanimal a day or two after Bhe was found.\nThe facts are briifly these: A barnful of\nbarley was commenced to be threshed on\nthe 8th of March last. When the straw\nwas beiug stacked in the stock yard, and\nwas about a yard high, a violent storm\ncame on, and work was left for the night.\nTne sow, expectcd daily to farrow, crept\ninto the centre of the Btacfc. Next day sever¬\nal inches of snow covered the straw, and the\nmen, standing on the ground, forked a\n quantity on to the stack from the\nends and sides without treading in the cen¬\ntre. Thus the pig was left undisturbed in\nher extemporized bed. The dimensions of\nthe stack when completed were 16 feet\nwide, 3(1 feet long, and 14 feet high. The\nhole the pig occupied was as nearly as pos¬\nsible in the centre. She was not found till\nthe straw was removed on the 19th of July,\njust 19 weeks after her llrst incarceration.\nA more emaciated creature it would be im¬\npossible to imagine, She was full of fltsh\nwhen she was lost, but when first discover¬\ned her bones were barely covered by skin.\nShe had a large sore on the side she was\nlying on. She is not yet able to stand,\nthough gradually gaining strength, and it\nwill be luug era she resumes her normal\ncondition. All traces of the litter of pigs\nhad disappeared. This is, I think, the\nlongeat instance known of a domesticated\nanimal being without food or water, and\nwith an insufficient Bupply of air."
1b57ba3eeaeb959e08bfd875738ac9a1 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.382191749112 41.004121 -76.453816 The Insurance Ilrlberr In Ycsttdnt Ion.\nine insurance committee appointed\nto investigate the $50,000 insurance\nscandal met today for organisation.\nThis committee was appointed some\ntime ago, and there has been consider-\nable speculation\nceedlng with the investigation. It is\nstated that a number of sensational\naffidavits are in possession of two or\nthree members of the senate. The story\nupon which the present Investigation\nwas started was In effect that a de-\nmand had been made upon a large\nInsurance company In New York city\nfor $50,000 to wipe from the calendar\ncertain objectionable bills.\nA bill has been Introduced In the\nsenate during the last week providing\nfor the selection of a site and the erec-\ntion of a state hospital for the Insane\nfor the counties of Luzerne, Lack-\nawanna, Bradford, Carbon Monroe,\nPike, Sullivan, Tioga, Wayne and Wy-\noming, to be called the state hospital\nfor the Insane for the northwestern\npart of Pennsylvania. The bill car-\nries an appropriation of $30,000 for the\nnecessary \nA strong effort is being made by the\nsteam railroad corporations to defeat\nthe Young bill providing a method of\nassessing damages to the owners of\nproperty abutting on highways occu-\npied by electric railway companies.\nThis measure is not exactly an eminent\ndomain bill, but possesses some of the\nfeatures of the right of eminent do-\nmain. That is why it Is being so vig-\norously fought by the steam rivals of\nthe electric companies. Before the ad-\njournment of the house on Thursday\nMr. Young attempted to have the vote\nby which his resolution giving the bill\na special order was defeated reconsid-\nered, but the opponents of the bill were\non the alert, and promptly got in a mo-\ntion to adjourn. It carried, and the\nefforts to advance the trolley bill were\nagain blocked. It Is probable that an-\nother attempt will be made to get this\nbill In position for prompt considera-\ntion.. Should it ever reach a vote It is\nbelieved that the bill will pass,
bc7387b389b2991e0f074e7c6bf4254f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.727397228564 41.681744 -72.788147 Out of the maze of reports and\nrumors resulting from the action of\nthe board of police commissioners\nin holding a "star chamber" meet-\ning at Chief Hart's office Tuesday\nnight, today came only one fact\nCertain policemen who have been\non night duty practically all the\nyears of their connection with the\ndepartment are said to be tiring of\npounding the pavements night after\nnight, and have let the commission-\ners know, either directly or other\nwise, that day beats appeal to them.\nIt was learned definitely today that\nthe commissioners had this situa-\ntion under discussion at the private\nmeeting, which accounts for the\nreading of tho date of appointment\nof one day policeman, to the com-\nmissioners by Chief Hart. It is be-\nlieved that the status of officer\nwas discussed at length, but, ac-\ncording to Chairman I'a.iewski and\nCommissioner Chamberlain, no ac-\ntion was taken on anything except\nthe signal light contract.\nSome months ago, Chief Hart an-\nnounced that he was considering a\nplan of shifting the policemen in\nsuch a way as to give everyone day\nwork at certain periods of the year.\nSince then, nothing has been heard\nof this plan and the policemen who\nhad hoped to benefit by it are said\nto be chafing under fhe delay and\nwant action by the commissioners.\nTho proposed installation of traf-\nfic signals at several central points\nwill, it is believed, preclude any in-\ncrease in the day force for some,\ntime, because some of the traffic\nofficers will be available for beats\nand theaters.
30ed4fd04f8e5e8e95dd9e3cd22a6aa7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.1246575025368 39.745947 -75.546589 bill to Incorporate the Board of Edu­\ncation of Camden, and a bill to pro­\nvide for the teaching of moral and\nhumane subjects in the public schools.\nMoney for Mlllsboro.\nRepresentative Messick will Intro­\nduce a bill to authorize Mlllsboro to\nborrow from $2000 to $3000 for alter­\nations to the public school there. He\nalso will Introduce a bill appropriat­\ning $2500 tor the use of the County\nSchool Commission In redlstrlctlng\nSussex county for school purposes.\nThe original boundary lines of many\ndistricts have been lost trace of, and\nIt Is generally admitted that the dis­\ntrict lines are uncertain and in many\nInstances unknown.\nTo Protect Muskrats.\nRepresentative Beswlck will Intro­\nduce a bill providing an open season\nfor muskrats, raccoons and opossums\nfrom November IB to March In\nother months It will be unlawful to\nago. kill those animals. The bill also will\nprohibit the cutting down of a tree or\ntrunk at any time In an effort to catch\none of the animals.\nRepresentative Garrison will Intro­\nduce a bill to appropriate $1,000 each\nfor New Castle and Sussex counties\nand $1,600 to Kent county annually for\nthe next two years for repairs to\nschool houses for colored pupils, such\nrepairs to be made under the direction\nof the County School Commissions.\nSalaries for tonrt Triers.\nThe House passed Representative\nMarvel's bill putting the court criers\nof Kent and Susex counties on a salary\nof $500 a year,\npensaied by fees.\nOther bills Introduced In the Houso\nIncluded the following: By Mr. Hof-\nfocker to change the annual school
19d74e747f03eea5fdef35752e0b9e3c CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1910.1684931189752 39.623709 -77.41082 her that 1 would send her a box of\ncandied fruit, a lew of which I\nthought she would like every day.\nThen 1 left her to have some medicine\nI intended for her divided between\nhalf a dozen real candied fruits and\nsent them to her with my compliments.\nI called again soon and asked the\nlady who had received me how she\nlaid managed to impose upon the\nyoung lady that I was not a doctor:\nthat It was important tint I should\nknow what story she had told in order\nthat what 1 should say would tally\nwith It. Slip told me not to worry\nabout that; she had given a good rea-\nson for my calls. I asked her if 1 was\nto see the person who had word\nat my office for me to treat the young\nlady, and she said he was away and\nwould lie away several weeks.\nBy the time in* returned 1 had made\nlove to my patient, and she had re-\nsponded favorably, indeed, she sent\nme to him—a mere form, she said—lie\nbeing her uncle, to ask for her hand.\nI did so, announcing myself as the\nphysician lie had asked to treat a\nmember of Ids family.\n"Well," he asked, "did you pull the\nwool over the old girls eyes?”\nI didn't understand what lie meant\nby the "old" girl, but I replied that I\nhad succeeded admirably. I went on.\ntint when I said something about the\nyoung lady he interrupted me.\n"Young Irdy lie hanged! She's fifty-\ntive."
1ead2168e4d949da5caaba210d4b0169 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.9136985984271 39.745947 -75.546589 tion of Dover was organized on\nMonday evening of last, week with\nthe election of James B. Bice as Pre­\nsident, Arley B. Magee as vice-presi­\ndent, Elmer E. Benson as secretary,\nand *William S. ilaman as treasurer.\nThe officers arc aggressive and suc­\ncessful men and wo do not believe\nthat the movement will die through\ninattention or neglect on their part.\nThis movement has our hearty en­\ndorsement and deserves the enthusi­\nastic support of every business man\nand citizen of the community. In\nunion there is strength and in unity\nof effort there Is success. It Is the\nspirit of co-operation which the com­\nmunity needs and we have reason to\nbelieve that this Association which\nhas for its aim the advancement of\nthe business interests of the\nmunlty will keep things moving for\na greater \nChambers of Commerce and Boards\nof Trade have accomplished the mi­\nraculous and almost the impossible\nin looming their respective towns\nand cities. Other similar efforts\nhave been made in Dover having in\nview the advancement of the business\ninterests which have prospered for a\ntime and then died. We hope that\nwithin the next sixty days the mem­\nbership of the Association will in­\nclude cverv business man and every\ncitizen as well who has any interest\nwhatever in the community. A large\nmembership with enthusiasm and\nthe live wires who have been chosen\n■ officers cannot hut do something\nfor the town. Wc hope that there\nwill be a general get-together move­\nment and that everyone will do some­\nthing to help make the Association a\nstrong progressive factor in the deve­\nlopment of the town.
cec3b15f92df2f6833fa9f79d3c96e2c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.3164383244546 43.798358 -73.087921 If the exact number cannot be ascer-\ntained, an estimate will be ot advantage.\nThere are many other items on which\nwe should be very glad to have full re-\nports, such as the state of the libraries ;\nthe benefits they have caused ; the luflu-en- ce\nof the schools on individuals, fami-\nlies, and neighborhoods ; interesting facts,,\nwhether favorable or otherwise, in rela-\ntion to the schools; the state of education\nand oflreligious opportunitifs in the vici-\nnity, &c. &c Suen jreports as these ; vve\nwould gladly receive not only from the\nofficers of auxiliaries and, other societies\nand schools, but from individual whether\nconnected with the schools or: not, and\nwhether friendly or unfriendlandwheth-e- r\ntheir reports be commendatory or the\ncontrary. We especially ask the atten\ntion mixistees, and prominent.; lay\nmen in all the churches, to make free com-\nmunications on these topics and on all oth-\ners connected with our operations j'pnd\nwe hope superintendents and teach-\ners will not only express their views and\ncommunicate facts, but try to induce their\npastors, and intelligent members of their\nchurches, or their neighbors, to act upon\nthis suggestion. If it will be an encour-\nagement to this service, we promise that\nsuch favors shall not be filed away with-\nout notice, but that they shall be used iu\nthe Annual Report, or the Journal, and a\ncopy of the Report, in pamphlet form, be\nsent ft) any correspondent who desires it.\nAll communications on this subject\nmay be addressed to the Corresponding\nSecretary of the American Sunday-achoo- l\nUnion, Philadelphia.
0216dce5cb3a5e819f28f967a2aa7a88 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.9383561326738 38.894955 -77.036646 / they saw it. This roused nulnt mIMiw m*h .u\nV I the enormity of UwTtn, of fhc strengthofthe habit '\nI I which had power the* lo firm* intelligent, respectable j\nf men to degradation and shame. Moved by this\nI spectacle, I ouuaselled and warned them a* plainly\nand faithfully aa I could. With tear* of bitlefne**\nI they ooufcssed the whole and told me I had not heard\nthe half. Oh 1 bow they wept over the agonies of\ntheir wires, told me of their eatreatiea and prayer*\nto them, of the resolution* they bad from time to\ntime made; they felt tliat (hey could lay down their\nIWee. ooin their heart'* blood lo (five peace, comfort\nand happiness to the dear enra whom uod had given\nthem , h it that burning thxrat that within them!\nthey could not stand it, but were compelled to run to\nthe grog shop, and appaeee it! there was neither\nlite or re*t without it Gladly, moat eagerly would\nthey fly from it; but there wee no refuge, and down.\ndown.to a dishonored grave they ninat go! they\nw It distinctly l>el.,re them. In this s tnation,\nwhilst they wet* yet reking with the fnmes of a loo\nhoi, on the. Terge of delirium tremens, I took (hero\nby the band, and told then if they had courage to\nfollow me I would take (hem to a plane of refuge.\nTheir eye* sparkled, and they said lead en and we\nwin follow. 1 took them to aa eatftig house and\nordered s plain dinner of whWi they partook spartawty.\nI repeated to them, ym tmui/oUm* ww
17623d9a6a038eeb3fedcb72fa2db99d NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.0040983290326 40.735657 -74.172367 F.\\7 EED of more effective pure food laws for New Jersey and\nan adequate force to administer them is shown in the an-\nnual report of Dr. Fitz Randolph, of the State health board.\nStartling revelations are made of diseased animals slaughtered and\nplaced on the market and immense traffic in eggs of the “rots and\nspots” kind. The law limiting cold storage has failed to lower the\ncost of living. There was enough food so stored in this State\nOctober 1 last to supply its population for almost a year, including\nI nearly 25,000,000 dozeu eggs, aud yet eggs are selling at five cents\neach. Dr. Fitz Raudolph points out that inspectors have no way\nof determining how long goods have been stored in other States\nbefore being sent to our warehouses, and wants the law amended\nso as to allow the seizure products, instead of, as now, merely\nimposing a fine. There is actually no statute ou thef books to safe-\nguard the preparation of horse meat for food. Conditions in\nslaughter-houses are almost beyond description; tons of oleomar-\ngarine are-sold for butter; the standard of daily herds is deteriorat-\ning; many articles of food are adulterated and, notoriously, local\nhealth boards are indolent or inefficient. The workings of the civil\nservice law combine with the small salaries paid to scientific help\n,to cripple the service, and the Legislature does not grant nearly\nenough money for the hire of inspectors for the proper policing\nof the State. The inspectorial force is ridiculously inadequate. It\nis plain' from the report that our laws dealing with the food supply\nneed a drastic overhauling. Present conditions are a menace to\n.public health and a disgrace to New Jersey.
2cbaef914559a20afa05e9f770c31133 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.532876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 ; First race, July 18, 2.30 trot. Purse\n:j?., $300. —Beroll. b . s . . by Payrole, Sydney\nif Kenney, Philadelphia; Paqulta Bell,\nft b. tn„ by Mobei. E . Vollmer, Trenton,\n|Bn. J.; Belkis C., b. m., by Baron Gn­\nat ward, Harry Rose, Delaware City,\nI* Del.; Flaxina, ch. m„ by Flaxo, R. J.\nBrawley, West Philadelphia; Red\nRock, b. g . . unknown. Harry Lester,\niiffi Bt. Georges, Del. ; Rufus K.. b . g ., by\nSir General Forrest, C. N . Payn, Pitman,\niff N. J. ; Major Villiers, hr. g ., by Vll-\nf-w Hers, J. Bush Price, Philadelphia;\nJ Anna C., hr. m., by Cascade, Pitman\n*i Farm, Trenton. N. J. ; Morlne, b. m.,\n_ > by Möbel, J. Healey, Philadelphia;\nïj. Halloween, blk. ., by Directum Kel-\nly, B. A . Buckley, Southport Conn.;\nm Sim Kohl, b. s.. by Fred Kohl, B. A.\nHn Buckley, Southport. Conn.; Brook\n■ Ti Leonard, b. s.. by Silent Brook, James\nMorris. Philadelphia; Sidney Foster,\n*i b. s., by Sid Foster, H. Dutton, Wil-\nf:J mlngton. Del.; J. C . C„ b. g„ by Frank\n; Fox, H, Dutton, Wilmington, Del.;\nI Baron, Jr., blk. g., by Oakland Baron,\nJr., W. H. Hollett, Wilmington. Del.:\nDuke Chimes, b. g ., by Canby Chimes.\nA. H. Tyson, Wilmington. Del.; Direct\nVista, ch. m„ by Direct, T. H. Tyson.\n: Wilmington, Del.; Silver Reed b. g.,\nby Reed Bisraount, Dr. H. Hecken-\n[ berger, Catasquaua, Pa.; Dell Brook,\nb. s ., by Silent Brok, R. Ratledge, Mid-\n\\ dletown, Del.;
182ca1d68e0f5cfa56ffdf449a0fbcbd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.4467212798522 40.063962 -80.720915 :adinff articles of export to this coantr\nbow that on twenty-two articles the in\nrease has been in the first lour months o\ntiifl vear mnrn than throa and a third mil\non pounds. On the other hand, in th<\nnports of cotton and breadstuHs, the ai\nIcles which we sell moat largely V\nJngland, the decrease has been more thai\nix and three-quarter millions ol pound!\nnuking a difference at both ends of inor\nban ten millions of pounds, or flit; mi!\nions of dollars. Meanwhile, Englandlia\not received from America its last year'\nupply ot bullion, and it contldently look\nor a considerable quantity of gold ver\noon. It Is probable that our merchant\nsho have began to pay up for their pui\nihases in England by extensive shipment\nif specie, will have to continue thi\nnethod of liquidation for aome time t\n:omc. This movement ol gold is largel,\nantrelng in France; first, directly irot\n the nearest supply, and next, it\nlircctly Irom the United States, tbroug]\nSngland. Wo exported last week ove\nour millions ol gold, and the week befor\nlearlyas much. France is gaining neai\ny what England and tho United State\nladlosti'! On Friday, we had a cable teli\n;ram announcing that the Bank o( Franc\nlad increased its coin during tho wee]\niver thrco millions of Irancs. A fact c\nqual Bignificarfco in this connection\nhat our imports lor the ten months of th\niresent fiscal year are $342,000,000,again!\ninly $220,127,381 ol exports.showing\nliiTerence against us of $119,872,019. T\nidjunt this diflercnco gold is now demani\n!u, auu 13 going lorwara 10 mo uamagin\nimount of $4,000,000 per week. All son\n>! bonds bought in Europe have lor som\nime post been buoying this large amour\nif dobt agains' us, but this mode of posi\ntoning payment is less popular now, an\nhe hard cash must go.
0b4fd9d3dd1e82fdc97e3d91b7fc7dda THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.1356164066465 40.063962 -80.720915 Next door to it stands a tvpical old\nfamily mansion which lias escaped this\nspecies of vandalism, lluilt in 1757, it\nhas not beou painted for over seventy\nyears. Tho materials entering into its\nconstruction, as well as the furnishings\nof tho interior, were brought over from\nEngland, lhero is a romance con¬\nnected with its history. Francis Cor-\nbott, a wealthy English gontloinan, was\nto wed a young lady of his own country,\nand tho tortus of ttio mnrriago contract\nrequired that ho should build a mansion\nfor ber in America, lie camo over and\npersonally superintended tho fulfilling\nof this agreement, and on roturning to\nclaim his brido ho found himselt fore¬\nstalled by an unexpected rival. Death.\nHo never returned. The hotiso was\npurchased by tho father of the dcceasod\nlady, and a few years later it passed into\ntho possession of a family named iiond,\na descendant of which, -Margaret Bond,\na white-haired maiden lady oi sevontv\nyears, still occupies it. She"very kindlv\nthrow the homo open for tho inspection\nof the visitors. Wooden mantels ex¬\ntending to tho low coiling, a grand¬\nfather's clock that had tickod awav\na century and a quarter of time,\na mahogany sideboard, various other\n of furnituro of tho same material,\ntho brass knockers on the doors, and\neven tho heavy wainscoating that skirt¬\ned tho rooms were all of London make.\nCuriously onough, the present stylo of\nfurnituro and interior finish seems to\nbo in tho direction of a return to tho\nideas of our forefathers, as horo display¬\ned. This old colonial mansion stands\nin tho centre of tho grounds, tho sor-\nvouts' quarter, which are still intact,\noccupying tho space next to tho stroot.\nIt was in this mansion that twonty-livo\nwomen of Edouton inet during ante-rov-\nolutionary times and ontorod into an\nagroement to drink no moro tea until\nthe iniquitous tax which England had\nimposed upon this beverogo was remov¬\ned. Tho portrait of one of these patri¬\notic women looked down upon tho visi¬\ntors from tho walls oi the house. Miss\nBond has a lino collection of old por¬\ntraits, which she highly prizes. A por¬\ntion of them formed part of an exhibit\nat tho world 9 fair. Tho present owner\nof tho place related inanv reminiscences\nof her former neighbors, tho Aliens.\n. Indge Thurman was not born in Eden-\nton, but it was horo that ho married\nand first wont to housekeeping.
19e5e9c1419b46e9a1abfbbaf3ed7f0b THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.3356164066463 39.24646 -82.47849 of inspection. His report, which,\nwe assume, will be impartial, will\nhave no effect on that body, be-\ncause it will further strengthen th\nPresident's claim to statesmanship.\nTo suppose, therefore, that the\ncommittee of Fifteen, organized\nfor no other purpose than to foment\ndiscord between the South and the\nNorth, would report a plan, policy\nor measure, or whatever you may\nplease to call it, either designed or\ncalculated to be heal thy or healing,\nis to suppose an absurdity that stu-\npidity would' be amazed at. The\ncommittee has made its report. It\nis given to the public this morning\nthrough the telegraphic depart-\nment, It is not, therefore, necess-\nary to rehearse its language. Its\nobject is the disfranchisement of\nthe Southern white people and the\ndenial to them of representation in\nCoigressand the withholding from\nthen of all voice in the election of\nPresident and Vice President in\n18C8. This is what the Radicals\nhave been and are now driving at,\nand it is because the President up\nto this time has refused to become\na consenting party to a so\nnefarious, that they have denounced\nhim in the vilest of language.\nWill the amendment reported by\nthe committee give peace to the\ncountry? Will it reconcile those\npeople to their failure who were\nidentified with the secession move-\nment? Thus far they have with-\nout murmuiing submitted to the\nfate of war. They have decreed\nthe perpetual abolition of slavery;\nthey have repudiated the rebel war\ndebt; most of the States have ex-\ntended to the negroes the same civ-\nil, rights that white men enjoy. Our\npeople have secured far more than\nthey expected to secure when they\nwent to war with the Southern\npeople. They alleged that all they\ncontemplated was the maintenance\nof the Constitution and the pres-\nervation of the Union. With in-\ndignation tlicy protested that Abo-\nlitionism, even in the mildest form,\nwas not an object. Abolition,\nhowever, has been secured. Eve-\nry condition that the President\nexacted of the Southern people,\ncontrary to general expectation,\nhas been complied with. Is there\nno point at which magnanimity\nwill interpose short of their total\ndisfranchisement?
13536813eefda33e72799446d9d6eef2 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.4315068176052 39.756121 -99.323985 central thought of this lesson is the\nwork of the living Christ in the conver-\nsion of souls. Not all have the same\nwonderful experiences, not all have\nseen the bright light or heard the voice\nfrom Heaven that Saul heard, yet the\nessential experience is the same\nLike Saul we have all of us found our-\nselves on the wrong course, and to a71\nof us has come the light showing us\nour mistake. The trouble is we hay\nnot all of us immediately forsake:i\nwhat we have learned to be the wrong\ncourse and decided to do what wa\nknow to be right. It is the universal\nity of the application of the principle\nas well as the striking phenomena of\nthe particular case that makes the\nstory what it is to the Christian world.\nBeyond this it shows, besides the ex\nperience of a single soul, the eternal\nwork of Christ in the regeneratioon of\n lives of men.\nThe Light from Heaven. Jesus is\nnot the Saviour of a few, but of many,\nof all if they will. To every man, at\nsome time or other, He shows Himself\nas Saviour from sin and guide to eter\nnal life. He throws Heavenly light on\nthe course one is pursuing and reveals\nit as the right or the wrong way.\nSaul Converted. Immediately the\nlight is seen, a voice speaks to the\nheart. At once we know it is the voice\nof the Lord, for it is significant that\nwithout hesitation Saul addressed the\nHeavenly guest as "Lord." It is a point\nalso that the intense light blinded\nSaul. It is a common experience that\nthe bursting of a great truth upon th.'s\nmind makes one the slower tocompro\nhend for a time other matters, how-\never familiar they had been. Saul ha\nto be led over the familiar road to\nDamascus.
0a17c8b51ae175b41cac77d8dce57f6c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.3986301052764 42.217817 -85.891125 The question has been asked, why the\nuneveness of the starting and growth of\nnew wood of the grape vine? This con-\ndition is present more or less every\nseason. There is more than one bud\ngerm at every joint. If one is destroyed,\nnature forces another in its place. Cut\nworms or beetles may have destroyed the\nfirst buds, but, whatever tho cause, tho\nfact that they have started at this date\nshould dispel all fear of a light crop.\nWhile we admire the spirit manifested\nand approve much set forth in tho arti-\ncle in tho last issue on "Dust and Liquid\nSpraying," jet wo feel constrained to\ncall attention to a few points and speak\na word of caution lest an expensive mis-\ntake be made. Let us ever bear in mind\nthat one apparently successful experi-\nment should not be accepted to establish\na theory, for it often happens that after\nseveral seemingly successful trials our\nbeautiful theory is suddenly exploded:\nalso, before Hccepting testimonials from\n let us inquire whether they\nhavo formulas or machinery to sell. We\nhave not a word against the dust, which\nis not new in Michigan, or any other\nspray. We want the most elective at\ntho least comparative cost, and drop the\nword of caution lest we give any system\nmoro credit than the facts warrant. It\nmatters little to us what a formula does\nin some other sfction of this wide world,\nunless it does the same thing here under\nour conditions, beyond the fact that it\ngives us something to test for ourselves.\nMr. Johnson of Missouri is quoted as\nhavingjsprayed with du.it eight times\nfor apple vcab with no better results\nthan the liquid spray gave, and gives\nlocal conditions as the cause. It is these\nlocal conditions we must consider. Why\nspray eight times with dust when three\napplications of liquid will do a fairly\ngood job, in Michigan? We are forced\nto take issue with the author on a point\nset forth as a fact, to-wi- t:
183e3be66ce74855e064f715628b0c28 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 at different times before it, said: "The\ndoctrine maintained in.those cases is\nthat the powers granted by the people\nof the States to tlio General Govern¬\nment, and embodied in the Constitution,\nare supreme within their scope and op¬\nerations, and that this Government\nmay exercise these powers in its appro¬\npriate departments free and unobstruct¬\ned by any State legislation or authori¬\nty.; That within.this limit this Govern¬\nment is sovereign and independent, and\nany interference by the State Govern¬\nments. tending io the interruption of\nthe full legitimate exercise of tnc pow¬\ners thus granted, is in conflict with that\nclause of the Constitution which makes\nthe Constitution and Iiaws of the Uni¬\nted States, passed in pursuance thereof,\n'the supreme law. of the land/ "\n"The result of this doctrine is, that\nthe oxercise of any authority by a\nState Government, touching upon any\nof the powers granted to the General\nGovernment, is,/to,.the extent of the\ninterference, an attempt to resume\nthe grant in -defiance of consti¬\ntutional obligations; and mord than\nthis, -if-, .the encroachment or usur¬\npation t6"ariy^diteht Is Admitted, the\nprinciple involved would carry the ox¬\nercise of the! authority of the State to\n even to the destruc¬\ntion of the power."\nThe same Judge then proceeds; The\nconclusive answer to the,attempted ex¬\nercise of State authority in ail these\ncases is, that the exercise is in deroga¬\ntion of the powers granted to the.gen¬\neral Government withinwhich it^'ad¬\nmitted it is supreme. .ThatGovernment\nwhose.powers, executive, legislative or\njudicial, whether .it is a / Government\nof enumerated powers like this one or\nnot, are subject to the control of anoth¬\ner distinct Government,, caphot be sov¬\nereign or supremo, but subordinate and\ninferior to the'other. This is so palpa¬\nble a truth that argument would be su¬\nperfluous. Its functions, and means\nessential to- the ^administration of. the.\nGovernment, and the employment of\nthem, are liable to constant interrup¬\ntion and possible annihilation. The\ncasein hand is an illustration. Tho\npower to borrow money on the credit\nof the United/States;iaadmitted. It is\none of the most important and even vi¬\ntal functions of the general Govern¬\nment, [and it* exercise a zheons of sup¬\nplying the necessary resources to meet\nexigencies in times of peace or war..\nBut of what avail is the function or the\nmeans if another Government may tax\nit at discretion.
8880f20c58fc848cbb1c068616df8e0c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.457650241601 43.798358 -73.087921 idolaters who say, keep your gods and we\nshall keep ours, we might patiently ex-\npound our conviction that there is but one\ntrue God, and one true religion, and plead\n. the consequent necessity laid upon us, to\npress the. universal adoption of that faith\nand fulfilment of that law, which alone we\naccount divine, and acceptable, and saving.\nBat how can we composedly dilate on these\nfirst principles of the oracles of God to Amer-\nican Christians,, who are at the very mo-\nment prosecuting efforts of glorious aggres-iv- e\nbenevolence 7 Such works are to us\nmore expressive than words, and adopting\nthe former as our model, in preference to the\nlatter, we shall extend the same fidelity to\nAmerica as America to other nations.\nWill you not, esteemed Christian friends,\naid ns in this work and labor love 7\nThink what is due to the gospel of Jesus,\nwhich Slavery in all its forms obstructs,\noutrages and defiles. Consider what we\nowe to the subjugated, and, even when lib-\nerated, slUlabjsed negro. Suppose him all\nthat malevolence would pronounce him, are\nwe not equally with an apostle, made debt-\nors to the Barbarians as well a to the\nGreeks, by that holy religion, which pro-\nclaims God to have made of one blood all\nnatjnns that dwell on the face of the earth,\nwhich enjoins to loose, the bands of wicked-\nness to undo tfie heavy burdens to let the\noppressed go free 10 break every yoke: and\nwhose comprehensive commission, as deliv\nered by a once crucified, but then risen Re-\ndeemer, isGo into all the world, & preach\nthe gospel to every creature 7 But many
02f127eb8de6ef9af74659c5e2158000 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.1684931189752 39.745947 -75.546589 cent, aforesaid.\nHolders of preferred stock shall.\nIn case of the liquidation, dissolu­\ntion or winding up of the company,\nand upon a surrender for cancella­\ntion of their certificates therefor, be\nentitled to be paid in full the prin­\ncipal of their shares and accrued\nand unpaid dividends (but no more)\nbefore any amount shall bo paid to\nthe holders of the common stock\nAll or any shares of the preferred\natock «hall, at the option of the\nboard of directors, be subject to\nredemption on any dividend paying\ndate afterdate of issuance at a\nprice of $110 per share plus divi­\ndends accrued and unpaid thereon,\nupon such notice ns may be de-\ntermlned by the board of directors,\nwhich notice may be given either by\npublication or by letter, as the by­\nlaws may prescribe.\nThe common stock shall en­\ntitled to receive all dividends de-\ndared out of the surplus or net\nearnings of the company over and\nabove those payable to the holders\nof preferred slock; upon the dissolu,\ntlon. liquidation or winding up of\nthe company, holders of common\nstock shall share ratably In all the\nassets of th« company over and\nabove those distributable to hold­\ners of preferred stock.\nThe common stock without nom­\ninal or par value may be Issued by\nthe corporation from time to time\nfor euch consideration as may be\nfixed from time to time by the board\nof directors thereof.”\nThat at said stockholders meeting the\nvote of said stockholders by ballot In\nperson or by proxy was duly taken for\nand against said proposed amendments,\ntho holders of preferred stock. Class A\ncommon stock and Class B common\nstock of
0afc9227750f018d394f20966ed00d8a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 A Uncolu county delegate when asked\n(or his opinion said: "1 believe Ur.\nliibson will be uomlnated either on the\ntlrst, et'cond or third Fallot; it nut it will\nbo impoesihlo (or him to hold his forcie\ntogether. Tho Wayae, Lincoln aod Cabell\ndelegations will drop him after the third\nballot, and Hogg will receive four-tilths of\nthese votes, Gibsou is not the choice of\nI bene counties, and upouthe first oppor¬\ntunity we will drop blui."\nTheuo are the counties Gibson and his\nfriends have claimed first, last aud all the\nlime, aud an expression like tho above\nfrom a delegate is somewhat significant.\nJudge Hun Jaokson has not arrived bet\nex-Governor Jacob 11. Jackson is heiu\nworking like an old Jacktoniau. 1C'.\nliogg lias a pleasant smile for ull. His\npleasing address, gentlemany bearing and\nserviced rendered tho Democracy ot this\nend of Ihu Statu have endeared htm to the\nhearts of the Bourbons, ills friends tiro\nsanguine of bid nomination. They claim\n wilt have fiity-alx votes on the firas\nand second ballots, and on the third a\nbieak iu the Gibson ranks will occur and\nhe will receive the nomination. Hogg's\nIriends say further that he is entitled to\nthe nomination because he has been for\nyears one of tboir hardest workers, de¬\nvoting bis time, talent and money to the\ncause of the Democracy, and has been re¬\nwarded with IhooiUceof County Super¬\nintendent ol Free Schools.\nA man well poated on tho situation to¬\nnight gives me Ilia following figures as the\nresult of the first ballot: Gibson, 70j\nJackitio, (10; Hogg, 50. Uayond tho first\nballot be can give no figures,\nAmong the distinguished vlsilors pres¬\nent art*, ex-Governor Jackson, Col. J . it.\nPeyton, of Cabell, Major Collins, of Kaua-\nwua, l)av« Leonard, of Wood, and Major\nChilton, of Lincoln. The last named gen¬\ntleman la loomiug up as a dark homo, but\ndark horses are not ltkoly to be In demand.\nTII15 Tltl-STATK HUUNIOSf.
1c4de748bbf86c17d3356f1f85fd3118 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1902.8342465436326 41.875555 -87.624421 however, there still seems to the statis\nticians to be reason to think that the\nmarriage of minors is lu general a mis-\ntake. What Is true. In Berlin appears\nnow to be true In Loudon. The "splr\nittial and scientific mating and. mar\nriage," which was suggested the othei\nday at a woman's meeting In New\nYork, seems often to be neglected lu\nEnglish affairs of the heart. The con-\nsequence of that neglect Is to bo seen,\nthinks Mr. Brlce, In the large number\nof desertions to which tho police court\nrecords and the census returns hear\nwitness. The number of child mar-\nriages Is In Itself astonishing. In Lon-\ndon, If one considers the total number\nof marriages, 4.5 per cent are those\nof, male minors and 10.5 per cent nre\njtliose or reuintc minors, in tno prov-\ninces 5.5 per cent nro those of mule\n'minors mid 18 per cent those of fe-\nmale minors. It appears, then, that\ntho provinces nre In matter worse\nthan London and tho women worse\nthan the men. In England ami Wales\nthere nro 50,308 married persons who\nnro under age. In London nlotio there\ntire 13,000 such persons. On tho night\nof tho Inst census of those wives\nwhose husbands were not living with\nthem 742 were under age, nnd of those\nhusbands whoso wives were not living\nWith them 2,000 wcro under uge. Also\nof the 850 minors In prison 200 were\nmarried. These things, together with\nmany Incidents that hnvo come under\nhis notice, have convinced Mr. Brlce\nthat the early marriage Is au Instltu\ntlon which cannot too soon disappear.\nThat It Is tending to disappear seems\nto bo Indicated by the history of tho\nlast quarter of a century. In 1871,\nwhich was a kind of "banner year," or\n"high water murk," out of every 1,000\nhusbands and wives 84 husbands and\n227 wives were under age. Since that\ntlmo thcro has becu steady, uninter-\nrupted progress.
fbc496d8dc8c7bcfad2712832531d4f3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.321038219743 41.681744 -72.788147 Nichols, Hartford, today is fighting\nextradition to Connecticut. The Dis-\ntrict of Columbia supreme court has\nset May 4 as the date of a hearing\non Nichols petition for a writ of\nhabeas corpus, one of his moves to\nprevent extradttlon.\nMeantime, Nichols is offering a\nreward of $500 for information con-\ncerning his wife, who is alleged to\nhave taken the money obtained\nfrom Rossi and to have eloped with\nanother man. Mrs. Nichols, who is\na gypsy fortune teller, left her hus-\nband and their seven children.\nDan McCarthy, Hartford police-\nman. Identified Nichols here as the\nman who figured in the swindle.\nThe Nichols family, according to\nWalter M. Shea, assistant United\nStates district attorney in Washing-\nton, aiding Connecticut authorities\nin seeking extradition of Nichols,\nbegan work on Rossi when they\nwere living on Lafayette street, New\nBritain, where Mrs. Nichols plied\nher trade as foreseeing the future.\nRossi was sick and consulted Mrs.\nNichols for a cure. That was Feb-\nruary I. Several treatments follow-\ned and when the Nichols family\nmoved to Hartford February 17\nRossi followed to continue the cure.\nMrs. Nichols Is alleged to have\ntold Rossi that it would bring him\ngood luck to carry out a large sum\nof money in a silk bag, a special\nbag which she made for him, and\ninto which he placed 31,100. She\nreturned the bag to him, ordering\nhim not to open it until he was told.\nHe carried the bag around for two\nweeks. Then after failing to find the\nNichols at the old Hartford
6f4c546a8abbea455818eabb5fdbe27f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 cry CIIIIPU 11, Iinu <11111 uuiunii IM/lUnvj,\nHants'*.and correctly.. But ho was\nwilling enough to accept the popularity\naccruing to blui either as an Irish or an\nEnglishman.unlike tho Dukoof Wel¬\nlington who repudiated hie Illbornlo-\nism.Lord Palinerstoh, however, was a\nMilesian by four generations of Anglo-\nJrlsh descent, and by Ills-mother's sldo.\nAs a Miss Mee, or Meehan (hor father,\na well-to-do Dublin hatter, dropped the\nlatter syllablo in accordance with the\nAnglo-munia of the sliop keepers of\nthe Irish capital, past and present) she\nwon tho heart of the papa of tho lately\ndeceased Lord; hence ram. lie was.\ntherefore, a cross between tho Celt and\nand Naxon, also Iwtwoen the aristocrat¬\nic and trading class. Of lmroly mid*\ndllug sl/e, butvplondid muscular de¬\nvelopment, ;ho moasnred 4H Inches\nround.the cheat up to a very lato period\nof bin life, mid in his youthful days had\na waist like a lady. He waaonco one\nof the best dancers In Englaud and tho\nIntroducer of tho wait® at Almacks.\nHo rode Well, like most Britons, but\nnot very boldly, and preferred Kotten\nHow to the hunting Hold.\nA generous, but apt a groat cater, ho\nllkedwhat was good, confining Ids In-\n'diligence to fruit,of which he was ex¬\ntremely feud. Of lato years ho drank\nonly one kIiimm of sherry nt'dlnner, but\nhe had certainly earned his inveterate\ngout in tho days tho Kogonoy. Prob-\nably he had Immmi a gay liver then, but\nhad ,'pullcd up short when tho lovo of\npleasure began to give place to that of\nambition, and thus secure his longevi¬\nty. Ho never smoked, and, like many\nof the old school of Englishmen hated\ntho smell of tobacco, lie always, as\nEmerson says, put a solid bar of sloop\nbetween each day. let lilni retire never1\nso late. Ho never rought a duo) though\nhe lived In firc*cntliig times, when most\nof his contempoearles had boon "out"\n. he never was a good hater, hut rather\nroinarkaldo for tho warmth of Ida frioml-\nships until his old age, when, following\nDr. Johnson's advice, ho sought to\ngal her "tho boys" about him, ami sun-\nreeded. l»r. Cumining has tried lo\nrepresent him as a model Christian,\nmainly Ikkmiiso ho was vory elvll to the\nreverend doctor, went to hoar him\npreach, and complimented him on his\nsermon, hut tho general conviction Is\nthat, like grandfather fllllcnornmnd, lie\nhad very little belief 111 Ood. He\n"chaffed" original sin, declared that all\nImbles were iairii good and advised a\npuritanic couiiuIsnIoii of "mlserahlo\nsinners" who wanted a day nominated\nfor fasting and prayer to devote their\nenergies to draining and other sanitary\nmeasures thus practically adopting\nthe latter half of Cromwell's famous\naxiom, whatever he may have thought\nof the first.
0b4aad4dbb184d5f0c82e9934da42a39 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.5915300230217 39.623709 -77.41082 seems to sour upon them, and they feel\nthat they are not recognized as they ex-\npected to be. Benedict Arnold was an em-\ninently brave and skillful soldier, and so\nfar as wc know a true patriot, hut he was\na spendthrift, and when ((ingress censured\nhim in various ways lie at length became\nBenedict Arnold the traitor. The truth is\nthat it is very easy to overload all the\njoists and limbers of our soul with these\ndefects, and we may notice in passing that\na great deal that passes for charity is of-\ntentimes a thin veneer over unmeasured\nmasses of selfishness, and we may further\nnotice that sometimes wc have credited\nourselves with very great tenderness and\ngood will toward men. because, for in-\nstance, we wept over the griefs and woes\nof the heroes and heroines of fiction, and\nyet find ourselves (such is the inertia of\n nature) never so much as lifting up\nour hands to relieve the unutterable woes\nthat crowd in human souls all around ih.\nAnother defect of the natural love is that\nit ia simply an unrighteous love; I mean M\n*aeks the quality oi righteousness in that it\n>s a mere kindly affection and desire to do\nkind things to those who arc objects of out\nlove, while at the same time there is uo\nrecognition of that foundation which up-\nholds the whole process of human life, that\nfundamental truth which only can confer\nanv large end permanent well being.\nFinally, this natural love is oftentimes\nungodly. That is to say, it is the recogni-\ntion in man (the children of God) of this\nor that scintillation of the infinite good-\nness, while it withholds from Him who\ngathers unto Himself all conceivable ex-\ncellences, all truth, patience, generosity,\ntenderness,
0824a26988e88e93c0a53e4c1949028b CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1896.9849726459724 41.875555 -87.624421 Aldts, Owen P., Monndnock Bldg,\nnass, l'eraius, i, iw i.n naue si.\nMlalr, Chauncey J 82 Ln Hallo st\nMlock, Wllllard T 100 Washington it\nMrldge, Itcucl W., 012 Chamber Commerce,\nMryan, Thomas II., Monndnock Mldg,\nChancellor. Justus, Major Hloek;\nClarke, John V., Ashland Mlock.\nCole, Georgo P., 80 Dearborn st.\nCoHIn, William II., 11 3 Dearborn st\nCorneal), David E., Stock Exchange Mldg. .\nCorwlth, Charles It., 04 Washington st\nFnrwell, John A., 142 8. Clark st.\nFisher, Lucius G Polk and Plymouth place.\nPltxslmons, Chns., Tacoma Bldg.\nPox, Leo, Security Mldg.\nPullertou,, Chns. W ., OV Dearborn at\nGnrrlty, Patrick L., 12 14 Masonic Temple.\nGaylord, Frederick, 175 Dearborn st\nGiles, William A., Ul Morden Mlock.\nGrove, Charles, "Tlio Pair."\nGreeley, Samuel 8., 822 Opera House.\nHallberg, L. Gustavo, 110 La Bnllo st\nHamllne, John II., The Temple.\nHandy, Henry II., Stock Exchange.\nHarris, Samuel II , 52 N. Clinton st\nHnyne, William J., 423 Dearborn it\nHurd, Harvey M., 02 Washington st\n Chas. L., Corn Exchange Bank,\nJacobs. William V. , N. Y. Life Mldg.\nJohnson, C, Porter, Ashland Mlock.\nLay, A, Tracy. Chamber of Commerce,\nLefens, Tblcs J 172 Washington at.\nLoiter, Levi ., HI Clark st\nLowcntbal, Mcrthold, Security Bldg.\nMcCormlck, It Hall, 84 Ia Halle st.\nNelson, Walter C, 100 Washington it\nPeabodr, Francis B. 104 Dearborn st.\nPerce, LeGrand W 625 The Ilookery.\nPike, Eugene 8., 304, 104 Dearborn st.\nPorter, Washington, Hartford Bldg.\nPrlndlvllle. Iledmond, 617 Stock Ex. Mldg\nIllckcords, George K 107 Dearborn it.\nMosenberg, Julius, 104 Dearborn st.\nIlyerson, Martin A., Cbamlxr of Commerce.\nHeaverus, Georgo A., 1 37 lllalto Bldg.\nHheldon, Theodore, Borden Block.\nHmitn, iiyron I.. , 1 03 La sane st.\nHpooncr, Prank E.. 850 Marquette Bldg.\nHtarbuck, James XI.. Itlalto Mldg.\nStewart, Archibald A., Stock Exchange,\nThornton, Cbarles 8., Major Mlock.\nWalker. Henry II., Tacoma Bldg.\nWheeler, Augustus W Htock Ex. Bldg.\nWllloujfhby. tlharlcs L., 30 La Snlle it\nYnggy. Levi W., Lako Forest, III.
934349ece3d97cb2f4aaaf7610a8a263 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.2753424340435 41.681744 -72.788147 Mrs. T. Fredcrickson and daugh-\nter returned to their homo in New\nBritain yesterday following several\ndays' visit here as the guests of Mr,\nand Mrs. W. H. Payne.\nThe Girl Scouts will present their\nminstrel show this evening at the\nGrange hall. Mildred Williams and\nEdna McCorklc are members of the\ntroupe. Marion Potts and Carolyn\nRead will act as Ushers.\nMiss Anna Nelson, teacher at the\nHubbard school, was confined to her\nhome by illness yesterday.\nThe Boys' club will meet this eve\nning at Community hall. The meet-\ning will be held at 7:30 o'clock. It\nis expected that Leonard Black of\nthe County Y. M . C. A., will attend.\n. The library will be open this eve-\nning for the exchange of books.\nThe state highway department\nwill complete their work today on\nthe repair of the main highway. The\n roadbed from Morse's corner\nto Kelsey's corner has been resur-\nfaced with oil and gravel and the\nshoulders have been laid with oil to\nprevent dust from flying.\nDespite the present quarantine in\neffect on the Berlin and East Berlin\nfarmers, due to the corn borer, a\nnumber of local men plan to plant\nabout the same as last year, con-\ntemplating a market locally and\nhoping that some relief measure\nmay be enacted whereby outlying\nmarkets may ba contacted.\nThe numeration of the East Ber-\nlin area is expected to be cctmplct-c- d\nin the near future. In 1920 this\ndistrict had nearly 800 inhabitants.\nIt is not believed that this figure\nwill show much change. In the en-\ntire town of Berlin should show\nmore than a 5,000 population, two\nrepresentatives will be allotted to\nBerlin. The 1020 census showed a\npopulation of 4,300.
26e6e47535eca5424776aceb8140e9e3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.3647540667375 40.063962 -80.720915 tieorge Wilkes' paper has a three col- a\n- mil review of the Cincinnati ( !nnrnnliitn ..\nembracing one of the moat enthusiastic v\niodoraeoifDls ot Greeley that hits yet up- r\npeared. Concerning the Cincinnati Cou- 8\nvention Wilkes Buys, "Greeley was the 4\nexpressed second choice ot almost every %\n^legation. Wo do not hesitate to declare a\nour own personal observation, as a dele- g\nj*te, thin at no time, from Mondoy morn* a\n;cg till Friday noon, had any of the candi- r\ndates even a shade of a chance lor the s\nPresidential nomination except Harace (\nGree ey. It is true that Mr. Adams led I\nthe balloting at one time, and was within t\ntorty-nlnc votes ol an apparent victory, 1\nbut every delegation sat all the while l\nwith pencil anxiously in hand, ready to s\nrecord a change of vote tho moment I\nVJams rise too high for Mr. Gree- 1\nley's safety. Tho decisive action took u\npi«* on the sixth ballot, at whidh period t\nUie impatience Ot tho Convention could u\nbe restrained no longer; screaming chairmen\nsprang to their feet in all portions of i\nthe hall, anxious to place their delega- c\ntions well on tho victorious record, and v\nthen the Convention got its choice. This ii\ndecision was not the result of any acci- t\ndent or bargain. Nothing engineered lor \\\\\nMr. Greeley except the inherent force of j\nhis own popularity, which constantly f\nworked him ahead, and which burst all v\nbounds and carried him in with a tempest I\nof applause. The peoplo intend to stand t\nby him. The unmistakable response which c\nU now pealing Irom all parts of tho coun- 1\ntry, particularly Irom the entire South, 1\nand conspicuously from tho Irish and
2ed07a32465fe0ccb95377450cd6dbfa THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.5341529738414 39.369864 -121.105448 Lord of the Isles, Earl of Dublin, Duke of Sax-\nPrihbe of Coburg, High-Dum-Diddle— the\neldest son of Her Most Gracious Majesty,Victor\nria, Queen oT Great Britain and Ireland, is ex-\npected soon to visit Her Majestys Canadian sub-\njects, and perhaps take a look Iftttponthe people\nwhom Old Buck addresses as—“Feller-citizens!”\nHe will be escorted by h fleet of six vessels,\nunder Commodore Thing-Em-Bob, containing\na large collection of wild animals from the Zool-\nogical Gardens, among which are seventeeh ring-\ntailed monkies, and a beautiful stuffed specimen\nof a Double-headed Calf, with which he intends\nto astonish and amuse the natives. His Gracious\nRoyalty will be attended by eight Secretaries, to\nnote the events of his reception, and prepare the\nmanuscripts for publication in book form, Bvo.,\nwith spirited illustrations; also by an interpeter,\nwhose duties will npt commence until the Prince,\nDuke, Baron and Lord of the Isles, visits the\n States, and goes among the backwoods-\nmen of the West. This latter individual, to fa-\ncilitate his labors, will be provided with a copy of\nSir Grantlcy Berkleys unpublished work entitled\n“A Hunting Tour in the Far West, Among the\n81-a -u -sted Buffclers [”\nThe Canadians do not intend to signalise the\narrival of the Great Steward of Scotland with any\nextraordinary attempt at display, in deference\nto the title last named, the Governor of the\nProvinces will he at the dock when the flagship\ntouches, to deliver over the key of his Wine-Cellar,\nand make an exhibit of the amount of provisions\non hand; after which the Steward will be escort-\ned to the public plaza, marching to the music of\nthe bagpipes, where the freedom of the country\nwill be voted to him, and delivered in a ma-\nhogany box, after which a general rejoicing will\nensue over a barbacued bullock.
2005b002c098169fb19bdb6044d712df THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.146575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 insertion in tlio nowapapors, I will givo\nhtm all of tliu information tliat ho\nwants. If ho will spoml about two hours\nwith mo, until wo can cut up a beef,\ntrim it and weigh it, and figure up tlio\nrosult. 1 think I can convince him\nthat ho has cortninly boon misinformed\nor ho wnH too smart himaolf.\nAh to tlio cattlo that our farmers\nrai.'o in thh neighborhood, ho In wrong\nagain on thnt point, for when a farmer\nbrings cattlo to our market that aro an\nuooil as tlio cattlo that wo now net from\nChicago ho will got just au much ai tho\nothor cattlo bring, which is from 41 to\n. lie por pound. Over 80 per cent of tho\ncuttlo that aro aluuithlorod in thin city\nat prosout aro woetorn cornfed cattlo,\nand not what Consumer calls cowa ami\ncommon beof. Thoro is no city in this\ncountry that is an choicoabout catttlo as\nWheeling is. If Consuiuor does not\nboliovo this I can bring him In¬\ndisputable facts in this matter,\nand as to tho farmer being per¬\nmitted to brine his own meat into\ntho city, our ordinauco dooa not intor-\nfero with him on that. Ho can bring all\ntho meat that ho want* to, and no person\nwill stop him from selling, but ho \ndo business in a business way. If\n"Consumer" can furnish mo with primo\ncattlo nt 2) rents I will tako all ho can\nbring mo, and thou I will promiso him\nthat meat will bo eoUI choHoor than it\nia now. Ho also says that the farmors\nworo soiling good mutton shoep for GO\ncentH per head. Now ho knows ho is\nsaying something that is not true, for a\nsheep that is not worth moro than 50\ncents is not lit to kill, and should bo\nhaulod to the crematory or quaran¬\ntined; but evon if mutton sheep aro\ncheaper than thoy were a year or two\nago, "Consumer" appears not to bo\naware that one year ayo wo got from\n$l 23 to$l 60 for Delta, and now wo aro\ngetting from 25 to 35 conts apioco.\nWe iiavo no onjoctions to "Con¬\nsumer" and several more of his col¬\nleagues starting shops any place they\nwish to, if there is as much prolit in tlio\nmeat business as he figures.\nllore aro borao figures based on real\ntransactions: A butcher bought a steer\nof Hay ha A Doraey, weighing 1,100\npounds. Cost:\nl .loo lbs nt 4V.Sc .\nDriving to slaughter bous-j 00\nThis steer dressed 003 pounds.\nHide.70lb?,at4C-52\nmS lb', tallow nt "Jlic t 4'\nl.lvcr
35e4acc1e7d4d6751fb5cc66c56edcba THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.1191780504819 37.561813 -75.84108 may give the statement an entirely differ-\nent meaning from what was said, requires\nthis care at your hands.\nihe testimony of an accomplice is also\nto be received cautiously and carefully\nscrutinized, and the law authorizes me to\nsay that you should not convict upon such\ntestimony, unless it is corroborated by oth\ner evidence in some of its material parts.\nhere two or more tersons are proved\nto have been associated together for an il-\nlegal purpose, an act or declaration ot one\nof such associates, in furtherance of the\ncommon objects, while engaged in the\nprosecution ot the general design, is com-\npetent evidence against his associates, pro\nvided the act or declaration be such as to\nimplicate them in the matter, and provid\ned the act or declaration so accompanies\n execution of the criminal intent as to\nbecome a part of the res qestor, or in and\nof itself tended to further the execution of\nthe common criminal intent.\nTherefore, before you can use the acts\nor declarations of either of these defend\nants. as evidence against the other, or of\neither of those jointly charged with\nthem, against them, or either of them,\nyou must be satisfied that they were\ncombined together for the purpose of\nburning Bell's barn, and that such act\nwas done or declaration made during\nthe existence of such combination and in\nfurtherance of its objects ; unless the act\nwas done, or declaration made, with the\nconsent of the personsought to be affected\nthereby, or in his presence, and under\nsuch circumstances as to make him respon\nsible therefor.
0470e32b8327906b1fbe2e0c9c9db1fe THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.7164383244547 38.951883 -92.333737 The Research Laboratories of the General Electric\nCompany began a purely scientific investigation to\nascertain just how fast a glowing wire loses heat It was\nfound that for small bodies the old simple law did not\nhold at all A hot wire 010 in diameter dissipates heat\nonly about 12 per cent more rapidly than a wire 005 in\ndiameter instead of twice as fast as might be ot pectcdj\nThe new fact does not appear very important yet it\nhelped bring about a revolution in lighting\nIt had been found that a heated filament in a vacuum\nevaporated like water and that this evaporation could be\nretarded by inrioducing an inert gas such as nitrogen or\nargon But it had long been known that the presence of\ngas in the ordinary incandescent lamp caused so much\n to be carried from the filament that the lamp was\nmade useless The new understanding of the laws of heat\nfrom wires however pointed out a way of avoiding the\nsupposed necessity of a vacuum\nBy fcrrning the fine tungsten filament into a helix the\nheat loss was made much less prominent The light\nradiated is then about the same as if the wire were\nstretched out but the Jieat loss through the gas is very\nmuch less So the tightly coiled filament was put into the\ngasnlled bulb and a new lamp was created At the\nsame cost it gave more and better light\nThuspure research conducted primarily to find out\nhow hot things cool led to the invention of the gas filled\nlamp of today the cheapest most efficient iUuminant\nthus far produced
ac1fd17c2b4584d7817bfdcd4a907f49 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.5493150367834 31.960991 -90.983994 We copy the following ft ora. the last\nMills Point Herald: “We stop the press\nto make room for the following strange\ndisclosures, which have come to hand just\nas we bad made our form.\nMr. J . C . Dodds, a merchant of Dresden,\nTenn , who has hitherto enjoyed unbound­\ned confidence being a Methodist class lead­\ner, an Odd Fellow, a Free Mason, and\ncounty clerk of Weakly county, has been\ndetected in one of the most bare-faced and\ndaring frauds which it has been our pro­\nvince to chronicle. The following aro\nfar as we learn, the particulars of this ex­\ntraordinary transaction : It appears that\nMr. Dodds applied to Mr. A . G. Holden an\nindustrious and respectable mechanic of-\nDresden, Tennessee, to get him to sign\nhis name to various sheets of blank paper.\nMr. H ., was unsuspicious of any bad intent»\nand having experienced many acts of kind­\nness from said Dodds, signed the blanks\npresented to him.\nIt appears that John C. Dodds filled out\nsaid blanks above Mr. Holden's signature\nwith bills of lading purpoting tobe for va- -\nrious lots of tobacco shipped on divers flat\nboats from Obion river to New Orleans;\nwith these he started to New Orleans and\nthere obtained advances on these bills of\nlading from four different commis­\nsion houses, amounting in all to about\n$3,500, consigning each a flat boat»\nand effecting insurance on the same. He\nthen returned up the river and made out\na protest as though one of the fictitious fiat\nboats bad been lost; returned to New Or­\nleans and demanded the insurance; the\nprotestwas made out informally and the\ninsurance company refused payment. Mr.\nD. upon this went back and made out anoth­\ner protest ; in the meanwhile Mr. Dodds\nonly real fiat boat arrived at New Orleans,\nthe captain of which on his arrival found\na letter from Dodds, in which he gav6 the\ncaptain instructions what he should say if\ninquiries were made of him regarding the\n3 fictitious boats on which he (Dodds) had\nobtained advances and effected insurance.\nIt happened however, that the captain\ncould not read, and suspecting nothing of\nthe kind, he carried the letter to a ware\nhouse man to have it read, to him, and in\nthis manner the whole of the nefarious plot\nwas brought to light.\nIt appears that it was Mr. Dodd»* inten­\ntion to declare the three fictitious flat boat*;\nand their loads as lost; and by obtaining\ninsurance on the same make a neat spec­\nulation. With a view to make out the\nnecessary protests, he bailed two good\nfornothing chaps out of the Dresden jail\nand carried them with him, knowing that\nthey were ready and wflling to swear any-\nth;ng.
1801c4848952d3d251f1f86c7c51a0d7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.395890379249 39.745947 -75.546589 “Many persons." continued the man\nwhose work for international peace\nlargely influenced the calling of the |\nfamous Geneva court of arbitration In |\n1871, "have thought that 1 had a secret\nformula by which I have been able to\nacquire languages, and General Cush­\ning has told me that' many of his\nfriends have been of the same opin­\nion about his mastery of languages.!\nBut 1 want to say to you that there is\nno secret about It.\n“Shall I tell you how General Cush­\ning and Rufus Choate, whose mastery\nof languages was marvelous—who was!\na greater master of Latin and Greek |\nthan either General Cushing or myself\n—became linguists? Each man was I\naccustomed to rise at B oclock In the\nmorning. Each had upon a little table\nby his bedside a grammar of some for­\neign language. Half an hour of the\nearly morning spent In study of that\ngrammar made Rufus Choate one ot I\nthe greatest masters of Greek and\n the modern world has ever\nknown. Half an hour's study before |\nbreakfast made General Cushing a!\nmaster of the Continental languages,\nso far as reading them was concerned,\nand as he has a wonderfully quick ear|\nhe was able, after a few months' travel i\nIn Europe, to speak like a native the\nlanguage he had learned to read in the!.\nquiet of his bedroom.\n"Like both these men, I studied lan­\nguages on arising in the morning, be­\nfore I was compelled to fake up my\nbread-and-butter duties. Like General\nCushing. 1 visited Europe early In my\nstudy ot languages to learn how to\nspeak the languages of that continent\nproperly. And I will say to you that.\nIf you have an Inclination to know the\nmodern languages of the Classics then\nsteal half an hour—yes, even fifteen\nminutes—a day from your pleasures\nor your sleep, and you may, If you\nhave on inborn capacity for languages,\nmaster as many languages as I have\ndone.”
0e13f6b98713ce5c7971e095ab07870f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.4890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 Richmond has been under a terrible\n. train during these days of watting on the\npleasure or convenience of the bloody\nminded duelists. And however ludicrous\nthe business may appear to othSr .people\nit is very soberly regarded In Richmond,\nwhere it has been the all-absorbing topic.\nOar good friend the Richmond Ditpatch,\nwould be the last to exaggerate a matter of\nthis kiud; therefore we give a bird's-eye\nriew of the situation as pictured by that\nexcellent newspaper. "Sunday and yes¬\nterday will long be remembered in this\ncity as days of anxiety and excitement.\nThe people wanted to bear from Mr. Beirne\nand Mr. Klarn. They desired to know if\na duel had been fought; if not, when it\nwould be, and where was Mr. Elam and\nwhere was Mr. Bairns. Wherever there\nwaa one man in position to talk to\nanother he asked about the duelists.\nThe threehhold of the church was \ntoo sacred for the inquiry; nor was ariy\nmart of trade too busy for people to ask\nand auswer the fashionable interrogatory\nof the day. No man said anything about\nthe weather. No man said anything that\nwas not strictly business about anything\nexcept the duel. For a time, Indeed, the\nlamentable stabbing affair of Sunday was\ndiscus *ed, but when it was learned that Mr,\nCrutchfield might possibly survive that was\npassed over, and talk went drifting back to\nthe duel." So that with the unimportant\nexception of a little stabbing affray between\ntwo gentlemen, one of whom is "a very\npopular man," the other having "many\nwarm friends in our community," there\nwas very little talked aboot Of done in\n"Richmond on the Jeems" for two days\nand nights except to speculate on the out.\ncome of this stirring society event Is U\nany wonder that the dad if popular thero-\npbouta?
2ff4cccb84193a06d21d38e0610cce56 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.892076471109 37.53119 -84.661888 Penile Oupld Nancy Bnan Mitt Mar ¬\ngaret Lewis and her pupil Mle Nel\nlie Barren and Harry Elobenberger\nadded greatly to tbe evenings success\nby rendering several mandolin and gut ¬\ntar selections Tbe flrat grade confer ¬\nred honor upon themselves and their\nteacher Miss Lewis by singing a very\nsweet chorus Cot Carters One Leg ¬\nJed Goose was splendidly told by Rug ¬\ntall Brown In Negro dialect Russell\nhas pasted the amateur state A Cln\nolnnatl gentleman pronounced the\nyoung mans dialect version the very\nbest be over heard Villi kens and bl-\nDlnlb a tbadow pantomime by Mletet\nKite Raney and Grace Brady and Mae\ntcra John M Water and Elliott Jones\nwas one of tbe popular features of the\nevening Mite Nancy Yeager acquit\ned herself most creditably In the recita ¬\ntion The Cross Teacher The cli ¬\nmax of the evening was reached when\nthe Sniggles Family was Introduced\nThe following young ladles of tbo High\nSchool composed the cast of characters\nWidow SolggleeLo Grand \nThe CoquetteSara Dunn One Af\nllcted Roea Alcorn The Aesthete\nIda Moore Prima DonnaMary Mob\nIcy PatbetloSoulFulaumeMcGulre-\nElocutnrBeeeie Yantis Graceful Girl\nClaudia Eaton The Giggles Mary\nBurob Miss Lo Grand Jones presided\nover this aggregation of wit pathos\nbeauty and female loveliness with rare\nhlttronlc ability Every part was\ndone to perfection but space forbids\nmention of tbe excellent hits made\nSufllce It to say that the soft was a\npleating finale end climax to an eve\nning of genuine humor Miss Waters\nand Mist Lewis and pupils interspersed\nthe evening program with a number of\nmusical selections all of which thawed\ngenius and training and which were\nfull appreciated and applauded The\nteachers and pupils of tbe Graded\nSchool were highly gratified at the\nIplendld audience which greeted them\nThe receipts amounted to 2130 A-\npart of this sum was used to make tbe\nheal payment on the encyclopedia pur\nbased last year There It now money\nenough on hand to buy a nice book case\nand other equipment for school
48f74c9b488588796a8ebd146ea47cc6 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.4616438039066 41.020015 -92.411296 Every railway is operated under a\nschedule. The duty of the board\nwould be to call for these schedules\nand to examine into and investigate\nthe question as to their reasonableness.\nIf found in any particular unfair or\nunnasonable, the board would sug­\ngest an amendment, and If the railroad\neompanies are as amiable as you sup­\npose, they would doubtless adopt the\nsuggestion aud save all further trouble.\nIndeed,I should hope that the adoption\nof this plan would result in a better un­\nderstanding between the railways and\nthe people, and in the abandonment by\nthe former of all the abuses of whifeh\nthe people justly complain. But if\nthe board and railways should fail to\nagree, which I am sorry to say I fear\nwould happon, the board would revise\nthe schedule by correcting what to\nthem appears wrong and nnjust and\nleaving the company to disregard the\nCommissioners' schedule at its peril—\nthat is, at the risk of being able to\nprove to the satisfaction of a court or\njury that Its charges are nevertheless\nfair and Now it -may be\nimpossible for any boird to determine\nthe question of the reasonableness of1\nthe charges of a railway eompany,\nbutifso, you andIand all mea may\nas well cease our efforts nt legislative\nreform in this direction. If nobody\nbut a board of railway oflteor* oau\never find out what is proper to be\ncharged by these carriers, and if ex­\ntortion can neither be discovered,\nproven, nor punished, all effort* to\nsecun regulation by law must fall. —\nBnt for the sake of the argument let\nme admit for a moment that the board\nwould be uneble to lnquin Into and\ndetermine aa to the reasonableness of\not the schedules, even of the few great\nlines of the country, which eerry the\nhulk of the produce (torn West to\nEast, does it follow that the board\neonld do nothing ? Not at all.\non OUEAT sopacto* txacrtAiirr\nIs the raising of freights in the winter\nseason, when water rotttes are closed\nby ice. A* you well know, the mo­\nment the canals and riven freeze up,\nthefnii
154fe3fc71614cd7f992e6bb60c165e9 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1885.0589040778793 39.623709 -77.41082 Kats are wonderfully clean animals,\nand they dislike tar more, perhaps,than\nanything else, for once it gets on their\njackets, they find it most difficult to\nremove it. Now, I had heard it men-\ntioned that pouring tar down at the\nentrance of their holes was a good rem-\nedy, also placing broken pieces of glass\nby their holes was another remedy. —\nBut these remedies are not effective—\nThe rats may leave their holes and\nmake fresh ones in other parts of the\nhouse; they don't however, leave (ho\npremises for good. I bought J would\ntry another e.\\perimcnt--one I had not\nheard of before. One evening 1 set a\nhuge wire cage trap, attaching inside a\nmost, seductive piece of strongly smell-\ning cheese, and nextjnorning I found\nto my satisfaction, that Ihad succeeded\n. n a very large rat, one of the\nlargest 1 had ever seen, which, after I\nnad besmeared him with tar, I let him\nloose into his favorite run. Th next\nnight I tried again, and succeeded in\ntrapping another equally big fellow,\nand served him in the same manner. I\ncould not follow these two tar-besmear-\ned rats into their numerous runs, to see\nwhat would happen ; hut it is reasona-\nole to assume that they either summon-\ned together all the members of their\ncommunity, and by their crest fallen\nippearance gave their comrades silent\nindications of the misfortune which\nlaid so suddenly befallen them; or that\nthey frightened their brethren away,\nfor they one and all forsook the place\nmd lied. The experiment wits eminent-\nly successiul. From that day, in 1875,\nill now, 1883,.
057e55115f2a538e7034f45586bbf9a5 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.9904371268467 39.743941 -84.63662 in the presence of the two Houses."\n( Vol. 40 p. 1105 Con. Globe.)\nNow, I apprehend there is no\nbetter and no more just rule of con-\nstruction of Constitutional or other\nlaw than that where power is ex-\npressly given by law to an officer to\ndo a certain thing only, that power\nis limited, and a further power to do\nanother thing not expressly conferr-\ned upon him cannot be given by in\ntendment and the very conferring of\nthe power with a limit excludes such\nintendment Now the Constitution\ngives to the President of the Senate\nthe power to open the certificates of\nthe votes, because being transmitted\nto him he has them in custody.\nThere it stops so far as he is con-\ncerned. The votes shall then be\ncounted in presence of the two\nHouses. Why? If the President of\nthe Senate may do in this matter as\nhe pleases, as is now claimed to be\nthe law, and we cannot help our-\nselves, whether it be the great con\nstitutional duty, wrongfully or right\nfully, why, then, should the Consti\ntution compel us to stay here as wit\nnesses to a wrong with the commit\nting of which we have neither the\npower cr right to interfere? Are we\ncompelled to sit here poor, inanimate\nwitnesses, powerless witnesses, mca\npable of good or ill? Now where\ndoes tho Constitution place us? We\nare placed here in joint convention\nto count the votes, or what is the\nS3ine thing, to see that they are just\nly and correctly counted.\nIn view of the provision of the
2eca80c8a44718c9745391ab2e8ec2d0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.6178081874682 58.275556 -134.3925 versify of Washington at the close of\nthe Exposition* and will, during the\nExposition, serve as a meeting place\nand bureau of information for all na¬\ntive Ohioaus. In connection with the\nundertaking a somewhat novel idea will\nbe carried out under the direction of\nthe "Log Committee" of the Ohio So¬\nciety. This committee will secure the\nnames and addresses of all former Ohi\noaus residing in Washington and Alas¬\nka, with their home town and county\nin Ohio. These names will be cata¬\nloged by the Ohio counties, and sub-\ncataloged by cities, towns and town¬\nships. The result of this undertaking\nwill be known as "The Ohio Log,1' and\nwill be on exhibition for the use of vis¬\niters at the Exposition, thus enabling\nany visitor to find the address of any\nformer resident of Ohio with whom he\nwas acquainted. The committee be¬\nlieves that the "Log" will be one of the\nmost attractive features of the Exposi¬\ntion grounds for visiting Ohioans and\nothers who have friends from Ohio in\nthe Northwest, and that it will aid in\ncarrying out the purposes of the Ex¬\nposition by placing visitors in commu¬\nnication with former friends who have\nsettled in the Northwest.\nPrior to the opening of the Exposition\ntranscripts from Log" accompa¬\nnied by "write-ups" on the Exposition\nwill be sent to Ohio newspapers with\nthe idea that the publication in local\npapers of the names and western ad¬\ndresses of former residents of the re¬\nspective Ohio counties, will attract\ngreat attention to the Exposition and\nthe Northwest.\nIt is estimated that there are withiu\nJhe borders of the State of Washington\nalone, fifty thousand former Ohioaus.\nThe gathering of the names of this\nlarge number of people aud pioperly\ncataloging them as planned, will re¬\nquire much time and labor and the\ncommittee believes that the work can¬\nnot be too soon begun.\nEvery former Ohioan now residing in\nthe State of Washington, or in Alaska,\nis requested to send to the "Ohio Log\nCommittee, 1308 Alaska Building, Se¬\nattle, Washington," 1, his or her name\nin full. 2, his or her preseut postotHce\naddress. 3, his or her occupation. 4,\nhis or her former place of residence in\nOhio, giving city, town or township and\ncounty. Married ladies are requested\nto give their christian name, then tfceir\nmaiden name in parenthesis, aud then\ntheir husband's surname, thus: "Mary\n(Smith) Jones, in order that former\nfriends of Mary Smith will not fail to\nrecognize her under the name of Mrs.\nMary Jones.
27e4fefdee626a2b6a9277e6017c4635 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1915.4835616121259 39.456253 -77.96396 James Logle, who Is supposed to\nknow more about Jute than any one\nelse in America, tells In a very in¬\nteresting way liow Jute came to be\nknown to Europe ami the west:\n"In is 10. on a Saturday afternoon,\nthree Iuindt-c Has spinners were walk¬\ning to their beautiful residences in\nBroughty Ferry, about four miles east\nof Dundee. on the banks of the Tay,\nand as usual strolled along the dorks.\nAt that time there were several Clip¬\nper line sailing vessels trading with\nDundee in Indian products, principally\ngrain, linseed, etc.. and on this par¬\nticular Saturday one of these vessels\nwas discharging her miscellaneous\ncargo, and these canny Scots observed\na fibre in some quantity on the dock\nand made inquiry as to what it was.\n"They were told it some Indian\nproduct that had been obtained in\nBengal, and was suitable for the dun¬\nnage of ships. They examined the\nlibre a little more carefully and all\nthought it would be possible to spin\nthe fibre on their flax machinery. The\nresult was that Monday morning they\nmade a bee line for the agents of the\nship and asked what they were going\nto do with this waste material.\n"They got tho reply, 4We propose\ndumping It into the river,' and when\nthey expressed a wish to experiment\nwith it they were told they could cart\nit away from the dock and were wel¬\ncome to It If they paid the cartage.\nThus the Jute industry started.for the\nliber turned out to be nothing less than\nwhat we know commercially today as\n.Jute.' ".Exchange.
4419f1cf91fb955b167e2839639f99f3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.8342465436326 39.745947 -75.546589 Kitnhln, of North Carolina; Van Dyke, I\nof Minnesota; Randall, of California, and ;\nHuddleston and Dent, of Alabama?\nKltchln, as chairman of the Ways and\nMenas Committee, has announced a pur­\npose, well Illustrated Injits leadership,\nof levying taxes sectlonally; Van Dyke\nand Randall were opposed to the war,\nand Dent was so strongly committed\nto pacifist^ that as chairman of the\nHouse Committee on Military Affairs he,\nhud to surrender management of the\ngreat army bills as they reached the\nMouse of Representatives to Julius\nKahn, the ranking Republican member.\n"It would not be surprising If the Re­\npublicans gained a majority In the next\nHouse of Representatives.\n“If by their voles next Tuesday the\nAmerican people express a purpose to\nbo represented at Washington during\nthe ensuing two years by a \nCongress we should say that their de- I\ntermination was based not upon any [\nweariness of the war, not upon lack of\nfaith In the President and not upon any ,\napproval of Rooseveltlsrn and reaction\nin the Interest of trusts and monopolies,\nbut upon certain well grounded objec­\ntions to the performances of the pres­\nent Democratic Congress."\nIt is the 13 per cent. In the Solid\nSouth ruling the 87 per cent. In the rest\nof the nation. It Is the 13 per cent,\ntaxing the 87 per cent. It Is the 13\nper cent, rioting In the spending of the\n87 per cent.s money. It Is the 13 per\ncent, having self-determination\neverything and over everything while.\nIf Mr. Wilson has his way. the 87 per\ncent, shall have self-determination In\nnothing.
1ab9050b501cb0348250c86da51279c5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.3547944888383 40.063962 -80.720915 The erection of other furnaces and\nforges proceeded with great rapidity in the\nSchuylkill Valley. In the sixty years\nthat intervened between 1716 and the\nRevolutionary struggle probably sixty\nblast furnaces and forges were built.a\nrate of progress which was not attained\nby any other colony in the same period.\nAfter the Revolution the manufacture of\niron received a fresh impulse in the Eas¬\ntern part of Pennsylvania, and was farther\nextended in the interior. In 1786 there\nwere seventeen furnaces, forges and slitting\nmills within in thirty-nine miles of Lan¬\ncaster. In 1838 there were 102 furnace*,\nforges and rolling mills within a radius of\nfifty-two miles of Lancaster. The first\niron manufactured w*st of the Allegheny\nmountains is said to have been made in\n1770, in Fayette County, on Georges'\nCreek, seven miles sooth of Uniontown.\nThe beginning of the iron industry at\nPittsburg was a small furnace built on\nTwo mile Run, a place now known ag\nShady Side, in 1792. In 1807 there were\nthree nail factories in Pittsburg. The first\nrolling mill it thst city was built in 1811\nby Christopher »Cowan, an Englishman.\nThe early furnaces were all for the manu*\nfacture of charcoal iron. In 1840 anthra*\nCjte and bituminous coal came into use as\na substitute. After many years of experi¬\nment bituminous ooke cam* largely to be\nused in connection with the conversion of\npig iron into refinrd iron about 1834.\nBlister steel was rasde at a very early\ndate in Pennsylvania. Tho manufacture\nof crucible steel was snocessfully establish¬\ned in the United States first in 1860, when\nthe Pittsburgh firm of Hussey, Well A Co..\nbegan the manufacture of crucible steel of\nthe best quality as a regular product. The\nlargest crucible steel works in the world\nare those of Park Brothers k Co, establish*\ned in Pittsburgh in 1862. The manufacture
01caad4d3c300e44663348bed0a5752a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.9821917491122 40.063962 -80.720915 This Christmas hunt was an event.\nIt wita the year 180-, and, Christmas\nday falling: on Sunday, Saturday was\ngiven as tho first of the holidays. It\nhad been a lino fall; the cover was good,\nand old hares were plentiful. It had\nbeen determined some time before\nChristmas that wo would have a big\nhare-hunt on that day. and tho "boys"\n.that is, the young darkies.caino" to\nthe houso from the quarters, prepared,\nand by the time breakfast was ovor\nthoy were waiting for us around tho\nkitchen door. Breakfast was always\nlate about Christmas-tiino; perhaps the\nspureribs and sausages nnd tho jelly,\ndripping through a blankot hung over\ntho legs of an unturned tablo, accounted\nlor it; and on this Christmas ove it was\nten by the tall clock.in thecornorof the\ndining-room before were through.\nWhen we came out. the merry darkies\nwero waiting for us around the kitchen\ndoor, grinning and showing their shin¬\ning teeth, and laughing and shouting,\nand calling tho dogs. They were not\nallowed to havo guns; but our guns,\nlong old single-barrels handed down for\nat least two generations, had been carri¬\ned out and cleaned, and they were hand¬\ning them around, inspectjng and aim¬\ning them with as much pride as if thoy\nhad been brand-new. There was only\nono exception to this rule: Uncle\nLimpy-Jack, so called because he had\none leg shorter than the ^ther, was al¬\nlowed to have a gun. lie was a sort of\nprofessional huntor about the place.\nKo lord was ever prouder of a special\nprivilege handed down in his family for\ngenerations.
0e0b3574be8dc8d8aac60475500db1b7 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4193988754807 39.290882 -76.610759 LIST OF PASSENGERS IN THE BRITISH QUEEN.\nAO Conies, New York; H S C'arnes, ilo; James Jain-\nieson, do; AF Schwab, do; Gustuvus Utnrncl, do; L\nLorut, do; ANoel, do; Chas Oliver, do; H W Root, do;\nJas IIEUiinan, do; W Leescbigk, oo; Joint Ferguson,\ndo; Geo Combe, do; I'ADelano, do; John Napier, do;\nJosefeth BoUewby, do; J Reach, do; Robt Gillespie, do\nJ Wrigelv, do; If Sebor, do; B F .Marsh, do; J R Kollin-\nson, do; jT Kernett, do; J 1' Kossr ter, do; J AStorm, do;\nDStlasluck, do; A Fridler, do; II I. I'ierson, do; E II\nHowell, do; A B llurand, do; S Whitmore,do; P A Hun-\ntington, do; G Lovett and lady, do; W II Slade, two la-\ndies, child and servant,do;A VV Ilupeden and lady,child\nund Hervant, do; A Chastic, do;Tlieo Valentine,do; Maj\nP S Brown nnd lady, do; J IkR Mahler, do; A Hasluck\nand lady, do; MrHtdl, Boston; GII Shaw, do;Chas Sam-\nson. do; J Knott, do; J II Shorter, Georgia; G Margraves,\ndo; A B I'arvis, do; Mr A Jones, New Orleans; It Bechan,\ndo; Dr I' McAuly, Baltimore; Win Rogers, do; J MJor-\ndan, do; Rev M Vanderwayer, do; Robt Smith, Phila-\ndelphia; 1> Loonie, do; H ' Gritter, do; J It Grceves, do;\nJ Raphael, do; ltobt Watson, Auburn; Kermit McKen-\nzie, Georgia; Win J Jones, Lockporl: J B Waring, Fark-\nett's Harbor; Rev ItGurley, Washington; D Delvarey,\nSpain; A Robert, do; Henry Barclay, England; Lieut W\nGray, do; M Burton and lady; Augustus McKenzie, do;\nMr and Mrs Wilson, servant and two children, do; E V\n do; F Wilbraham, do; L Gosenhofer. do; H II\nCole, 7th Hussars.dn; Thos Kirby, do; Lieut R F Hun-\nter, 71st regtjdo; It Hemniuigway, do; Dr Win Gardiner,\ndo; Coi Shuw and lady, do; T Wood, Jr do; T Weeks,\ndo; John Jones, do; Hugh McCullook, do; Mr Hamilton,\ndo; W J Canfello, Jr. Germany; W J Casti 110 and lady,\ndo; A F Newbauer, Hamburg; MrRauterburg, Germany;\nCol MelkinofTandCol NKrotl, Russian Engineers; Lew-\nis Gayot, France; ELeotilhorn, do; L Courant, do; E\nGrossman, do; A Bastoric, do; J Allain.do; 1" Delamarc,\ndo; A Pava, do; A Delisle, Frenelt Ambassaor from\nMexico; CC Dumville, Upper Canada; J Bogartand la-\ndy, do; A I) Eraser, do; J S Valle, do; Rev 11 Scadling,\ndo; J (isborn, do; Capt Aim-lie. 83d regt. do; Lieut De-\nvingdv, do do; I.ieut NE Harrison, Itoyal Artillery, t p-\nper Canada; Lieut N L Gardiner, (Jo do; John Hughes,\nEngland; Lieut G H .Smith, 11 N; Lieut Henry Smith, do;\nit VV Watson, Savannah; Kdw Blackburn, Mtul'e; J\nProm, Tampico; Chas Bernier. do; Louis Raymond,\nMartinique; AL Goummeez, St Thomas; A Pizarro, do;\nDr J D Lang, N tf Wales; E Donnelly. Ireland; J Green,\ndo; Rev P P Le Fevre, St Louis; Rev J A I.ntze, do;\nBishop Rosati,do; Bishop Niles, Nashville, Bishop Poi-\ntiers, Mobile; 11 Thomas, Bordeaux; Dr Charles Belot,\nHavana; Mis Gen Catlin; Mrs M Clirehugh; Mrs C Solo-\nmon; Mrs Alice Heap; Mrs K Gillender; Miss Bradbrook;\nMiss Emma Lovett; Miss Ann Clougli; Matthew Thorn-\nton and servant. John Charlton and servant; Sarah Hum\nand servant.?Total 163.
161768ee9ff51337cc79bf24b16c2557 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1888.0669398590871 42.68333 -96.683647 Nor are we yet done in the field of\ninvention and discovery. The applica­\ntion of coal-gas and petroleum to heat­\ning and cooking operations is only\ntrembling on the verge of successful\nexperiment; the introduction of tho\nsteam from a great central reservoir to\ngeneral use for heating and cooking is\nforeshadowed as among the coming\nevents; tho artificial production of but­\nter has already created a consternation\namong dairymen; the navigation of the\nair by some device akin to our present\nballoon would also soem to bo prefig­\nured, and the propulsion of machinery\nby electricity is even now clearly in­\ndicated by the march of experiment.\nThere aro some problems we have\nhitherto deemed impossible; but are\nthe mysteries of even the most improb­\nable of them more subt!e to grasp \nthat of the ocean cable or that of the\nphotograph or tho telephone? Wo\ntalk by cable with nn ocean rolling be­\ntween; we speak in our voices to friends\na hundred miles of more from wherewo\narticulate before the microphone. Un­\nder tho blazing sun of July we produce\nice by chemical moans, rivaling the most\nsolid and crystalline production of na­\nture. Our surgeons graft the skin from\nono person's arm to the faco of auother,\nand it adheres and becomes an integral\nportion of his body. We make a mile\nof white priuting paper and send it on\na spool that a perfecting printing-press\nunwinds and print*, and delivers "toyon,\nfolded and counted, many thousands\nper hour. Of a verity, this is tho age :\nofve^tion, nor ha3 "the world reached j
28d8d90ec1f0f923414699fbeb2720aa THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.8890410641807 37.561813 -75.84108 apTrravated bv the presence of scrofulous matter,\nhave been radically cured in uch uumerou in-\nstances, in every settlement in the country, that tho\npublic do not need to be informed here that it ia ia\nmost cases a speeilic and absolute remedy.\nScrofulous poisou la one of the moot destructive\nenemies of our nice. Often, this unseen and uni'elt\ntenant of the organism undermines the constitutiou,\nand invites the attack of enfecblinor fatal diseases,\nwithout exciting a suspicion of its presence. Again,\nit seems to breed infection throughout the body, and\nthen, on some favorable occasion, rapidly develop\nnto one or other of its hideous forms, either on tho\nsurface or among- the vitals. In the latter, tuber-\ncles may be suddenly deposited in the lunira or\nheart, or tumors formed in the liver. These facta\nmake the occasional use of the Sarsapariila & a\nprevntiye, advisable.\nIt is a mistake to supposo that no lony as erup-\ntions or humors appear, there must be no scrofulous\ntaint. These forms of dcraneement may never\noccur, and yet the vital forces of the body be so re-\nduced by its subtle agency, as materially to impair\nthe health and shorten the dn ration of life. It is a\ncommon error, also, that scrofula is strictly heredi-\ntary. It does, indeed, descend from parent to child,\nbut is also engendered in persons born of pure\nblood. Low living, indigestion, foul air, licentious\nhabits, uncleanliness. and the depressing vices gen-\nerally, produce it. Weakly constitutions, where not\nfortiiiea by the most constant and judicious care,\nare peculiarly liable to it. Yet the robust, also,\nwhose turbid blood swells the veins with an appar-\nently exuberant vitality, are often contaminated,\naud on the road to its consequences. Indeed.no\nclass or condition can depend on immunity froia\nit, nor feel insensible to the importance of an effec-\ntual remedy.
1059a60c2cd4053c56d5148d20f0f556 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4808218860985 41.681744 -72.788147 most strongly urged by the commit-\ntee, were wage and the eight hour\nday for all employes.\n"The company told the commit-\ntee that the revenue of the com-\npany had fallen off over 1100,000 for\nthe first five month this year as\ncompared with the same period last\nyear and that it doe hot want to\nask for an Increase In fare unless\nabsolutely, necessary.\n"The trolleymen are now earning\nan average of 6 to an hour, an aver-\nage weekly wage of $36.57 for men\nwho work six day or less a week\nand $42.38 for men working seven\ndays: while many whose rate 1 (9c\nper hour for regular time and\n$1.03 H for overtime, earn a high\nas $50 a week. All trolleymen may\ntake at least four day oft duty each\nmonth. Due to steady work, trolley-\nmen a higher yearly wage than\nworkers In most of the skilled trades\nwhere layoffs are frequent.\n"The company was reluctant to es-\ntablish an eight hour day for all\nmotormen, conductor and shop em-\nployes, pointing out that In various\nfactories the hours are 9 and 10 and\nthat the men' runs were now laid\nout in conference with the local\ncommittees representing the men on\neach division looking towards meet-\ning the wishes of a large majority\nof the men. The company also be-\nlieves that the eight hour day would\nbe unpopular with the employes as\na whole as It would decrease their\nwages from $4 to $9 a week. This Is\nborne out by the fact that the oldest\nmen In years of service with the\ncompany who have first choice of\nruns, generally choose the longer and\nbetter paying runs.
3d9ac4c9bc3a4c060b37879c4c8bee24 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.4671232559615 41.004121 -76.453816 however, I kept losing and winning,\nalways winning more than I had lost,\ntill my opponent owed more than he\ncould pay without mortgaging the lit-\ntle property he possessed. This I final-\nly forced him to do, and when he had\ndone It I won the loan he had made.\nAll this was done within a few\nweeks. Once, and once only, I was\nfrightened from the terrible risk I\nwas running. One of the players while\ntoying with a card fell to rubbing his\nthumb on Its back. Keeling a little\nspeck, he tried to rub It off. With a\nthrobbing heart I gathered up the\ncards, taking the card he wns thumb\ning from him and tossing them to the\ndealer. That card had been marked,\nand I had marked It.\nBefore entering upon these games I\nhad gone to a professional gambler and\npaid him to teach mo how to win. He\nInitiated mo Into a system of marking\nthe cards on the back with little specks.\nThe four suits by this system are des\nignated by the position of the specks\non the back of the cards. Thus one\nspeck in a certain position would mean\nthe ace of hearts, two specks the\nqueen, and so on. But In poker It wns\nnot necessary that the specks should\nbe in any given position. The specks\nwere made by a puncture of a pin\npoint in the and filling the punc-\nture with wax. My instructor told me\nthat to be able to feel them I must file\nthe skin of my thumb down to tho\nquick and wear a kid cap on the\nthumb. This I did, and the slightest\ntouch would give me the denomination\nof the card. As to the pack used, I\nfound packs similar to those Mr. Cor\ndery kept on hand and surreptitiously\nsuDsututea my marked cards for his.\nWell, I won all Mr. Cordery's belong\ningsthey were not large and made\nhim a pauper. I am aware that In\ncases of this kind, especially In plays,\nthe next step would be for the loser to\nput up his daughter for a stake. But\nsince this was a real case no such\nthing occurred. Mr. Cordery borrowed\na small sum from one of the party,\nwhich I promptly won. Then ho bor-\nrowed of me, and I won what I had\nlent him. He borrowed more, and I\nwon that. Finally ho gave up tho\nstruggle and shut himself up for threo\ndays. I was frightened out of any wits\nfor fear he would do something desper\nate. He was thinking about his daugh-\nter's future. 8he would marry no one\nbut me, and if she didn't marry she\nmust go to work. Of two evils the\nleast must bo chosen. The old man\ngave In and told her she'd better accept\nme.
056e869c9c7b6d5d2e53996d6b7b06af CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1914.4424657217148 39.623709 -77.41082 able property in Frederick county a tax\nannually which shall be sufficient to pay\nthe interest on said bonds and provide a\n| sinking fund for their redemption at or\nj before maturity; and said tax shall be\njcollected in like manner as other taxes\nI levied in said County are collected and\nwhen collected shall be applied to the\nj payment of the interest on said bonds\n| and to a sinking fund to redeem said\nl bonds at or before their maturity.\nI Section 3. And be it enacted, That\nsaid bonds shall be made payable at the\nexpiration of thirty years from the date\nof issue and shall be redeemable at any\ntime after the expiration of fifteen years\nfrom the date of issue and they shall la\nsold, after due advertisement, by th*\nCounty Commissioners to the highest\nbidder or bidders; provided, however,\nthat none of said bonds shall be sold for\n than par value.\nSection 4. And be it enacted, That\nthe County Commissioners shall when\nnotified by the Board of County Schoo\n! Commissioners of said County that they\n1 desire to avail themselves of the provis-\nions of this Act and of the amount of\nmoney they will require for the purposes\naforesaid, advertise and sell said bonds\nas above provided to an amount sufficient\nto produce the sum designated by the\nBoard of County School Commissioners;\nbut in no event in excess of said sum ol\nI $36,000 .00; and shall pay over the pro-\nceeds of the sale of said bonds as receiv-\ned to said Board of County School Com-\nmissioners who shall account for the\nsame and the expenditure thereof in the\nsame manner as they account for other\nmonies passing through their hands.\nSection 5. And be it enacted, That\nthis Act shall take effect from the date
1db29a5976104f07144bd9ef99f49fbb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.6561643518519 39.745947 -75.546589 New York. Aug. 28 .— At the Hotel |\nVendôme yesterday John W. Esson (or\nEssln), of Chicago, fired two bullets,\none into the head ami the other into\nthe body of his friend and associate,\nHarold H. Stridiron, and then thrust­\ning the muzzle of the revolver between\nhis teeth sent a bullet through his own\nhead. The suicide expired immediate­\nly. His Victim has a lighting chance\nfor his life. The police .are of the\nopinion that the man who attempted\nthe murder and then committed sui­\ncide was crazed by the extreme heat\nand maddened bV drink and Jealousy.\nBoth men came from Chicago orig­\ninally. Esson, or Essin, is said to have\nbeen a contractor in that city. His\nfriends assert that he came to New\nYork with the expectation of getting\n contract on the underground road\nnow being constructed in this city.\nStridiron went to the hotel Friday\nnight and registered as coming from\nBaltimore. For two or three days\nprior to that time Beson had been seen\nabout the corridors of the hotel in the\ncompany with Stridiron, and It was no­\nticed that both men were drinking\nheavily. On Saturday the suicide reg­\nistered. but for some reason, under the\nassumed name of H. J. Ford. Boston.\nHe was assigned to room No. 258.\nStridiron had room No. 307, on the\neighth floor, looking into Forty-first\nstreet. The two men entered the hotel\nabout 8 oclock yesterday and asked for\ntheir keys. Both were under the in­\nfluence of liquor. On the "way up to\ntheir rooms Esson said to his compan­\nion:
59e882a59605b875cf2103fba3a5ae3b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.3246575025369 41.004121 -76.453816 In this emergency, I thought of my\nkind friend, Mr. Fauntleroy, and went\nto tlio hank, nnd saw him onco moro in\nhis private room.\nThero lie was nt tho samo tablo with\ntho samo heaps of papers about him,\nnnd tlio same hearty easy way of speak-\ning Ids mind to you at once, in tho few-\nest possiblo words. I explained tho\nbusiness I came upon wllh somo llttlo\nhesitation and nervousness, for I was\nafraid ho might think I was taking an\nunfair itdvantago of his former kind -u es- i\nto me. When 1 had done, ho Just\nnudded his head, snatched up n blank\nsheet of paper, scribbled n few lines on\nIt in his rapid way, handed tlio writ-\ning to me, nnd pushed mo out of tlio\nroom by tho two shoulders beforo I\ncould say n single word. I looked at\nthe paporin tho outer ofllcc. It was my\nsecurity from that great banking' houso\nfor the whole amount, and for more, If\nmore was wanted.\nI could not express my gratitude\nthen, and I don't know that I can de-\nscribe it now. I can only say that It\nlias outlived the crime, tho disgraeo,\n tho awful death ou tho scaffold. I\nam grieved to speak of thnt death at\nall ; but I have no other alternative.\nThe course of my story must lead mo\nstraight on to tho latter time, and to\ntho terrible discovery which exposed\nmy benefactor a nd my friend to all\nEngland ns tho forger Fauntleroy.\n1 must nsk you to suppose a Inpsoof\nsomo time nfler tho occurrenco of tho\novents that i havo Just been relating.\nDuring this interval, thanks to tho\nkind assistance I had received at tho\noutset, my position as u man of business\nhad greatly Improved. Imagine me\nnow, If you please, on the high road to\nprosperity, with good largo ollleosand a\nrespectable stair of clerks, nnd picture\nme to yourself sitting alono in my\nprivate room, between four and flvo\no'clock ona certain Saturday afternoon.\nAll my letters iind been written, nil\ntho peoplo who hnd appointments with\nmo had been received. I was looking\ncarelessly over tho newspaper, and\nthinking about going home, when one\nof my clerks came in, and said that a\nstranger wished to seo mo immediately\nou very important business.\n"Did ho mention his name?" I In\nquired.
2c58730f03d117d6cc44c7d234c340a8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.1027396943175 41.681744 -72.788147 net income was $2,000 or more, you\nmust file a return with the collector.\nReturns must be in the hands of col-\nlectors not later than March 1, 191.8 .\nThe old income tax under the Act of\nSeptember 8, 1916, still is in effect, so\nthat the total of your tax will be the\nsum of these taxes added together.\nUnder the Act of 1916 the normal rale\nof tax is 2 per cent, on incomes of\nmarried persons in excess of $4,000\nand on incomes of single persons in\nexcess of $3,000.\nFor example, if you are married and\nyour net income for 1917 was $4,500,\nyouwillpayataxof$60. Thisis2\nper cent, on the amount above your\nexemption of $2,000 under th Act of\n1916. An additional exemption of $200\nis allowed a married person or head\nof a family for each dependent child\nif eighteen years of age or in-\ncapable of self-suppo- rt.\nA taxpayer is considered to he tho\nhead of a family, and entitled to all the\nexemptions allowed a married, person,\nif he is actually supporting one or\nmore persons closely connected with\nhim by blood relationship, relation-\nship by marriage, or by adoption.\nWomen as well as men must pay\nan income tax. The combined net in-\ncome of a married couple in excess of\n$2,000 is assessed. They may file a\njoint return or each file a separate re-\nturn, if desired. If a joint return is\nfiled, either may claim the exemption\nor it may be divided between them.\nA widow, a woman living apart from\nher husband or a maid is assessed on\nher net income above $1,000.\n"Net income'' means gross income\nless certain deductions provided for by\nthe act.
0076c960582f9893c1168d8765412bb5 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.0479451737697 37.92448 -95.399981 In n very novel wny Dr. Tnltnnge In\nthis discniirsv describes whnt limy be\nexjiretotl in I lie next world by those\nwho here bend nil their energies In\nthe right direction; text, 11 Peter\n1, 11: "r'or mi nn etitriuiee kIiiiII be\nministered 'unto jou ubiuiilnntly."\nDifferent styles of welcome lit the\ngate of lleiiven lire here suggested.\nWc nil hope to enter thnt superiiul\ncapital through the grnee thnt Is\nxendy to sue even the chief of sin-\nners. Hut not now. Xo mail lienltliy\nof body nud mind wunts to go now.\nThe man who hurls himself out of\nthis life Is either nu ugiiostle or Is\ndemented or lluds life iusiilTeriiblc\nnnd does not care where he lauds.\nThis Is the best world we eer got\n Into, nud we wimt to st'ny here\nas long nsj (!id will let us stny. Hut\nwhen the Inst ingc of the olumc of\nour enrthly life Is ended we want en-\nrollment In llenvenly citizenship. We\nwant to get In ensily. We do not\nwant to be challenged nt the gite and\nasked to show our passports. We do\nnot want the gatekeeper In doubt as\nto whether we ought to go In at all.\nWodonotwanttobekeptInthe\nportico of the temple until consulta-\ntion is innile as to where we came\nfrom and who we are and whether\nitissafetoadmitui,lestwebe n\ndiscord In the eternal harmonies cr\nlower the spirit of Heaenly worship.\nWhen the apostle I'etor In the text\nnddresses the people: 'Tor so an en-\ntrance shall be administered
335ad18ce8d76a92c9534072b1cb8147 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1869.4205479134957 37.561813 -75.84108 turned his quills against the intruder\nlike a porcupine. A prolonged con-\ntest ensued between these men, which\nattracted notice not only in Kentucky,\nbut in other States. It became per-\nsonal, severe, unsparing. At length\nthe Democratic editor was driven from\nthe field, and Prentice was acknowl\nedged to be victorious. But his con\ntests were not all of an intellectual\ncharacter. A ruffian who had killed\nhis man, and was counted a good shot\nwith the pistol, challenged him to\nmortal combat. lie accepted the\nchallenge, and proposed to try con-\nclusions with the rifle. This choice\nof weapons probably was not agreea-\nble to the challenger. Ho was fruit-\nful of suggestions about conditions of\nthe fizht, made objection to his ad\nversary's choice of his own second,\nand finally the challenge.\nThe correspondence between them,\nwhen published, covered one of the\nfour 6ides of the Journal. Not liking\nthe idea of seeing it in print, the chal\nlenger warned Prentice not to publish\nit, saying if he did he would shoot\nhim in the streets. He even attempt-\ned to execute this threat. The crisis\ncame on in front of the Post office,\nwhere a large number of people had\ncome together. Prentice approached\nthe crowd, ana had pasced beyond it\nwhen the homicide aimed a pistol at\nhis back and fired, the bullet grazing\nhis side. Ho turned upon bis assail\nant, bore him to tbe pavement and\nheld a dagger over him, but forbore\nto strike, while a multitude of voices\nwere ringing in his ears, crying, "kill\nhim, kill him."
1c0968f47a5f8a92af0b799820c10c3a THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1910.3986301052764 40.114955 -111.654923 list published in the papers of a house\nparty at Sandrlpgham of a certain\nwomans name caused some astonish-\nment In general society thero was\nconsiderable tho moro astonishment\namong those in tho inner circles of\ncourt lIfo at tho efforts mado by a\nforeign nmbnacn to suppress any\nmention of tho womans name in tho\nlist of guests who were Invited to\nmeet the king at his country house\nQueen Alexandra herself by a letter\nwhich tho London Times described as\nartless has shown how deeply sho Is\naffected by tho death of her consort\nAuthoritative details of what passed\non the day of Queen Alexandras re ¬\nturn to England show in what regard\nKing Edward held his queen\nOn that Thursday before his death\nEdward was continually speaking of\nher majesty to his entourage In the\nmorning ho announced his Intention-\nto go to the station to her on\nher arrival nnd when ho was forced-\nto bow to the advice of his physicians\nIn this matter ho said ho would at\nleast meet her at the head of tho\nstairs In Buckingham palaco\nFrom tho day rfio landed In Eng-\nland as Princess Alexandra ho said\nhe had never failed to meet her when\nsho came from abroad Ho followed-\nall stages of her journey and as the\nday wore on and his condition became\nworse ho gave Instructions that sho\nwas to bo guarded against the shock-\nof seeing suddenly how changed by Ill-\nness he was There are two doors\nto tho room In which his majesty died\nono facing tho Invalid chair In\nwhich he was reclining tho other at\ntho side lie directed that the queen\nbo brought In at tho side door so she\nshould see him In tho most favorable\naspect
19fb9f8afda7420c10d103492352100a THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.43698626966 37.305884 -89.518148 Introduced bills to the number of 15,- -\n000; and, exclusive of private pension\nbills, less than 200 of the 15,000 have\nbecome laws.\nThe congress haa expended in\nprinter's ink alone, uselessly, about\n$3,000, in the printing of bills. When\na member of congress thinks that he\nIs thinking and believes that he is\nlegislating, or supposes that he is\nplaying politics, he prepares a bill on\nsome subject, and introduces it. Ac-\ncording, to the rules of the senate and.\nbouse of representatives every bill\nthus introduced must be sent to the\ngovernment printing office, and' 100\ncopies of it printed, "for the use of\ncongress," although nobody in either\nthe senate or house of representa\ntives cares about it, or sees it, except\nthe individual who introduces it.\nOf course, a rich and prosperous\ncountry.can afford to spend $3,000 use-\nlessly, just as millionaires can afford\nto throw away tens of thousands; but\nthe sum mentioned is merely used as\na sample of wasteful-\nness in many ways. When you mul\ntiply $5,000 a hundred times, or a\nthousand times, you will see that ex\ntravagance runs into prodigality, and\nprodigality runs into wastefulness.\nBut that is a subject for another\nstory. At present, aside from men\ntioning the useless printing of worth'\nless bills, let us look only at the fate\nof those bills. The congressmen send\ncopies of their bills to the chairmen\nof their county committees, and write\nletters to them, telling what great\nthings they are hoping to accomplish\nfor the good of "the dear people.\nwhen, as a matter of fact, all of them\nknow that the printed bills which\nthey send out will never become laws.\nThey are just bo much cheap political\nclaptrap to delude the sovereigns of\nthe soil into believing their congress'\nman is the hardest working member\nof the body of assembled statesmen\n(?) in the national capital.\nFor example, John Smith, of Chi\ncago; James Jones, oi lies --Moines;
58a2bffce876a1d3057511a38a1f90bc CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1906.9684931189752 39.623709 -77.41082 “In closing, I remark, we are proud of\nour order, for it has elevated mankind\nintellectually, morally and spiritually.\nAnd, if perchance we shall be called a\nsecret society, that shall be no disgrace.\nFor what brother who has soothed the\nundappy, sympathized with misfortune,\nrestored peace to a troubled mind would\nwish his heaven-born deeds cast broad-\ncast before a critical world? What bro-\nther who has used his heart and tongue\nto promote the welfare of his fellowman,\nand rejoicing in his prosperity would care\nto let his right hand know of the munifi-\ncent deeds of hisleft? Thus it iswe form\nfriendships and establish our connections.\nBut while we extol the brotherhood of man\nlet us not forget the fatherhood of God.\nLet us so live that we shall endear our-\nselves men, win the approval of heav-\nen, and merit the confidence of all man-\nkind. Let us ever soar toward the light,\nlet us press on toward that radiant sunset\nshore, till faith shall be lost in sight, till\nhope shall end in fruition, and till chanty\nshall at last sweep through all the corri-\ndors of heaven. And at last translated\ninto the presence of the Supreme Grand\nMaster, our text shall be fully verified,\nfor then shall we live in peace, in unity,\nin harmony, through an endless eternity.\n“In the presence of Jesus Christ the\nRedeemed of the Lord shall waft the song\nto the four-winds, till its rippling cadences\nshall fall upon the cars of the blood-\nwashed throng, till the whole heavens\nshall be filled with the music, with the\nmelody,
0d308f68290e5d9ba8f30c6ff8eef5a5 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9438355847285 39.513775 -121.556359 BaWARKOK IMPOSITION.—In consequence\nnf the wide spread celebrity of I)[>. YOI NO,\nnumerous Imposters have sprumr into existence, pro-\nl» |id;i.jf tu he [HTfisl ntasUir* of the heidhuf art. and\nhave succeeded lit imposing ii|mii a few of the un\nwary sufferer*. Fersons w Uldnif lo e»n*iilt u Phy,i .\nclan, should he very careful how they pul aniiffdenct\nin the published statements of such charlnlai s.for\nthey are it* uiiscrupulotiH in such •lalements as in\ntheir practice of medicine, and tie very tiusrle to\ntrust. They will first deceive you hy false certificate*\nprocured from •drunken loafer*.” who perjure them\nselves to pel money to satisfy Iho cnivimf* of a ills,\near.pj appetite. M hell such Quack uains your con-\ndeuce, he will then do-e you with mercury and other\npolSdoiiJ drug*, nnd after they have robbed you of\nyout.iuoney and Injured your conatition, they will\ncast yo'i off with the clmrKti that you have not fid\nlowed Id* dree ions\nThe only wav lo avoid such Imposter*, is to con\nsuit Dr .1 Vomifr,the Pioneer Advertising Physi-\ncian of California. At a nieeltnk of the Medical rac-\noily of this Hlale, called lo lnve*litfiile itie source of\nmalpractice that hit* caused so much sufferiaulu\nthis country, it was unanimously recommended that\nall the Hllliuud should Consult Dr. Yount:, ns he w-as\nthe only regular physician now adverti-iiiK in Cali-\nfor'.ila, al| others in his line heinc quacks mid Impor-\nters, and are not to tie trusted. The aftiicted will\nplease take notice that there was not a Physician nl\nilia meeting who end ever seen or heard of a , lutie\nuise of malpractice from Dr. Young, while not one.\nof them hut hud seen it namheruf esses hum the\nforeign quacks, whoso vaor.ilngly set fonh their\npretended vluihm ia the punlic prints.\nT-he above lucu should ho borne in mind by cll\n»e< king medical «„i-lnuco\nThank heaven, they are getting thoroughly expos-\ned, and it will not be long heloru they w ill have lo\nfly the country 2“ avoid Ike just indignation of an\noutraged public
1b22b1e114022c3bdacb471e61da0e71 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.7418032470653 40.832421 -115.763123 Mr. G . F. Talbot. in tin- Elko Free\nPrew of this uioruiug. publisher a nnl\nbeginning as follow*: "The organ of\nthe op|«mition knfiiiil appurntly taken\nuic to l««k for not nnrptiag compromise\novertures on the question of the primary\nelection to bo held to-dnjr," etc. The\n"orgau of tlie op]>ositiou" alluded to is\ntiie IsbtriMiixT, bvr.inw iu its issue of\njrr»lfnl*y it |>nUi»bnl, simply oh u mat¬\nter of nrim, that overtures were made,\nwhich Mr. Talbot in hi* card admits\nto be true. The Indkpbsuiwt is pub¬\nlished us u '*news|>ii|>ert" :u»d us such,\nproposes to give to it- readers all iteins of\ninterest it can secure of u nature proper\nto be made public. If the Ixdu-cxuixt\nis uu "organ," its many reailers are the\nbest judges as to whether its utterances\nhave been impartially Democratic or not.\nHut while the Imkei'Hnoen r neither has,\nnor will take any part iu local llepuWi-\ncan contests, its proprietor, like every\nIrec-bum American citizen, with u liberal\nsupply of warm blood in his veins, has\nboth friends aud euemies in all purties,\nand notwithstanding his political predi¬\nlections he claims the right, aud shall\ncertainly exercise it, to a pre¬\nference for candidates for nomination\neven by a ltepublican convention. I11\nannouncing Mr. Talbot's candidacy, the\nIsutrKNUtNT spoke of him iu terms of\nhigh comuielidatiou. and what was quite\nas iniportaut, those utterances were sin¬\ncere; but while isteem was expressed for\nthis studious and perservcriug young\nlawyer, it iu no wise detracted from the\nhigh regurd it entertained for the charac¬\nter aud sujierior legal attainments of\nHou. John II. Itand. Our aojuaintancc\nwith the latter gentleman dates from the\ntime of the organization of the county in\nIhi'.'J, he being then a practicing attor-\nnev and a member of the priucipal law\nArm doing business here. He has ev> r\nsince tiecu an active worker tu his\nparty, spending time, lal>or and tnoccy\nto advuncc its iuterebts. In view of\nthese facts, and iiolwithstanding that we\nhave every two years encountered him\nas a foe iu the political contests, our per¬\nsonal friendship for him has never been\nin the slightest degree impaired, ami de¬\nspising all hy|K>crisy, we cheerfully ac¬\nknowledge that, preferring old and tried\nfriends to the new aud untried, our sym¬\npathies aud best wishes for success are\nwith him.
3a965bdb35b937b56109406807578f8e NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.6753424340436 40.735657 -74.172367 AM that part of the Thirteenth Ward lying\neast of the centre line of Sandford avenue,\nfrom the line of the town of Irvington to\nSouth Orange avenue; south of tho centre line\nof South Orange avenue, from Sandford ave-\nnue to Sunset avenue; west of the centre line\nof Sunset avenue, from South Orange avenue\nto Valley street: west of the centre line of\nValley street, from Sunset avenue to the line\nof the town of Irvington; north of the line\nof the town of Irvington, from Valley street\nto Sandford avenue, shall constitute the Eighth\nElection District of the Thirteenth Ward.\nAll that part of the Thirteenth Ward lying\nnorth of the centre line of South Orange ave-\nnue, from Columbia avenue to the line of the\ncity of East Orange; east and south of tho\nline tho city of East Orange, from South\norange avenue to the former city line, said\nline being one hundred feet west from the\nwesterly line of South Twentieth street; west\nof the former city line, from the line of the\ncity of East Orange to South Orange avenue;\nsmith of the centre line of South Orange ave-\nnue. from (he former city line to the line of\nthe town of Irvington; north of the lino of\nthe town of Irvington, from South Orange\navenue to a line in continuation of the centre\nline of Columbia avenue; east of the line In\ncontinuation of the centre line of Columbia\navenue and the centre line of Columbia ave-\nnue. from tho line of the town of Irvington\nto South Orange avenue, shall constitute the\nNinth Election District of the Thirteenth\nWard.
24fbbcfd9338021f6f3e35c18fee9b0b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1852.7336065257539 47.04502 -122.894872 the immigration have ever put themselves\nto the trUIIIIIC uf looking alter or Incating\none—preferring lojnnrnoy over the wretch-\nc.l trncl; lr ailing into \\\\'i|ln.nt:tto rullt-y, or\nthe CtlUull" mis rahle and ('Onlcl?illiblt\ntrail duu'n tlt : Cnlumnir. This nag-inc! on\nthe [mt of the immigtaliun, added to the\npan. ity itt numbers of the inhabitants of\nthe Puget Sound country, nnd their unwil:\nllrSltEN, and we might add, iuzdiility ltEtElOu\ntom tn pctft-rm llte labor which such at unv-\ndertalJng would necesnrily require,aro all<\nytl'tcient rewua why there is no road across\nthe Cascade: leading into northern Oregon.\nhunt the ttt?ll reliable in?nntation we\nhave been aide to gain of the mountutna, we\nhave noltesilation in saying that a route can\nb . surveyed almost any n'htre through them,\nthat would be preferable the one at preo-\ncnt traversed; and have not the lealtdoubt\nbut that there nre hundreds of gtps and\nopenings leading to dividing ridges, which\nwould make our part of the country com-\nparatively any of access to the immigrant.\nWe are now strong enough in mum and\nnumbzr to iceomplinh this dcsitahle enter\nprise, without experiencing any rerious inA\nconvenience tlterchy. and our territory is\nat. preterit so circumstancnl as to imperative\nly require ita completion in time for the\nnext ycer'a immigration, in order that they\nmay thereby, come directly into (It: Ore-\ngoo. lt ia a project in which all are inter.\ncued—in which all can unite, and by uni-\nting, necure its accomplishment with ease\nand dihpllCh. Who aaya “not” to a sUr-\nvey ol' the route early out Ipring?
18ccdf6a78fb60443c0e05bd6a0ca51d LAS VEGAS MORNING GAZETTE ChronAm 1881.4534246258245 35.593933 -105.223897 St. Louis, .Tuue 13. From all ac-\ncounts of the cycioue in the .North-\nwest, Sunday evening, a large amount\nof property was destroyed, a consid-\nerable number of lives lost aud a great\nmany persons injured. Those known\nto be killed are R. (J. Nelson, (J. E.\nMay Hard, Misa Maynard, Mr. G.\nlloberts and child anda man, lift mo\nunknown. Injured, M8 A. Gee, wid\ndie; Miss Maynard, severely; Wm.\nMiller, seriously' bruised; Israel Wood\nand children, Frank Burk and com-\npany of'fourten persons, injured\nand bruised, John Coliand. family\nand children, since died; Wm. Recks,\nseverely; Mrs. Rolls, fatally; Mrs.\nKichards, right arm and rib broken.\nThe destruction took place at tu-\nnear King City and Flag Sjirings\nLater in the evening another cyclone\npassed north oí bavnnuah, northeast\ninto Nodaway county. From infor-\nmation received it appears that the\ncloud formed iu a field near Loes'ey\nChapel, about right miles northeast,\ntearing timber, fences and trees until\nit struck the large brick house oí Na\nthan Kellogg, situated about six miles\nnorth of town, which it tore to pieces.\nMr. Kellogg and family were absent\nfrom home at, the time. Two houses\nbelonging to Mr. Kellogg in the field\nnear the were found a quarter\nof a mile away, supposed to have\nbeen carried thereby tho wind. The\ncloud then moved cast, and at this\ntime was about 1C0 yards wide. The\nnext building in its way was the resi-\ndence of J. Hall, bituatcd near the\nbridge. It, struck the corner of the\nhouse, moving it oil' the foundation\nand damaging it considerably. W . S .\nWright had CO hogs killed. John\nParks' house, further on, was blown\naway and Mrs. Park severely injur-\ned, lleliirufs house v, a9 carried away\nand the Baptist church torn to piece.\nThe house of Mrs. Laughlin, further\nou, was blown to piece?, and the fur-\nniture, clothing, and everything con-\ntained in tho hou?e,wa3 carried avay.\nFeather beds were torn to pieces arid\nfeathers strewn all through the tim-\nber. Stoves and all kinds of house-\nhold goods lrom the houses were car-\nried through the air, and the owners\nhave not yet found any of them. The\nhouses of Liu 11 Kobcrts and E. A.\nPhillip, near Fish Ford, were de-\nstroyed. From there the storm passed\non to Fiar Springs and King City.\nThe cyclone was about a quarter of a\nmile wide and very violent. Fully\ntwo-thir-
0da6f51c960f31dac247a722a7f8a779 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.8671232559614 39.513775 -121.556359 Importers and Wholesale Dealers in Drill's an t\nMed allies, Surgical Instruments. Glassware, Drug,\ngists Furniture, Quicksilver, Acids. fdiaker Herbs,\nSpices. Essential <>il». Extracts for Flavoring, Al-\ncohol, Mini .Seed, Camphor, tills amt Paints. Damp\nEresh Mops, Soda .Material Corks, lirewe rs Mate-\nrial. I luster Paris. Kosendale Cement, Abdom nal\nSupporters, Shoulder Uraces, Cast Iron Mortars\nPATENT MEDICINES, a largo stock of nearly\nevery kind in use, with a general assortment of all\ngoods kepi in a large and well supplied Drugstore\nWe ipivemade arrangements lor receiving month-\nly shipments direct from tho Atlantic citiost thus\nkeeping a lull and complete assortment of ad goods\nin our line. We intend to deal in nothing but the\nbest quality of goods, so that physicians, surgeons\nand those dealing in our lino may rely upon vetting\npure and unadulterated articles from us W'e have\n the Hrug business in Sacramento since llMt*.\nand expect to continue it hero during our na ural\nlives We expect to build up a large and permanent\nbusiness by keeping a large and well assorted slock\nof the best HOODS, and selling at small profits, so\nthat that those dealing in our lino to call upon us,\nexamine the quality and prices of our goods before\npurchasing elsewhere, ns we feel confident that we\ncan please in both PRICE AND QUALITY.\nArtificial teeth, gold toil, month glasses, turn keys,\nburs, corrundrum wheels, forceps, excavators brush-\nes, drills, with a complete assi.r menl of dental stock\nfrom several of the most highly approved manufac-\nturers in (he world We have the agency for teeth,\nand can fill any order, with sets or odd teeth, at the\nMINERS DRUG tW"KK. I.TU J SPREEf, SAL-\nKaMENTO. by
02d4095574d67ab3816b67195583022e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.5109588724 39.745947 -75.546589 'The execution was to take place\nIn a field perhaps a mile from the Al­\nbany barracks, where this soldier had\nbeen stationed. I walked out to the\nfield with a friend and after a while I\nsaw a wagon coming, In which was\nseated a young man who was bare­\nheaded. He was chatting In a pleasant\nmanner with two men who were seat­\ned beside hlm. I was informed that he\nwas the man who was to be hanged; I\nhad already been told that the young\nsoldier had been convicted of the mur­\nder of the captain of his company. Ho\nhad shot the captain in a sudden heat\nof passion because the captain had\nreprimanded him.\n“ At last the wagon stood behind\nthe gallows which had been extem­\nporized The young man calmly watch­\ned the constables as they adjusted the\nrope. Then, perfectly self possessed, he\nmounted a ladder. It did not seem to\nme to be on his part; his at­\ntitude was that of a soldier who was\nfacing death with intrepidity. The boy\n—for he was scarcely more than a lad\n— had said that he deserved death, that\nit was a crime to attack an officer,\nmatter what the provocation, a crime\nfor which no excuse could be given.\nAs the ladder was twitched away\nand the body fell, the rope broke. Whit\ndid that young man do? He helped the\nconstable to remove the rope. Thon\nhe sat upon a box and advised them o\ngo as speedily as possible into Albany\nand get a strong Manilla rope. He told\nthem that they should have tested the\nrope before using it upon him. And\nwhile two or three constables went for\nanother rope he sat there upon the\nbox, chatting with the guards, and I\nobserved that at one moment he spoke\nconfidentially to a\nseemed to be a sort of spiritual adviser\nto him
af96534751983a3b95d56513e83368d7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.1986301052766 41.681744 -72.788147 Loreto of Agua Prieta, who has been\nconsidered one of the leaders of the\nrevolution in northern Ronora, and\nother Mexican rebel officers today\nsought refuge on the American side\nof the border, after a reported\nbreach between rebel, civil and mili-\ntary authorities at Agaa Prieta. The\nbreach was said to have placed that\ntown In uncertain status In the\nrevolutlonry movement.\nFirst hint that there had been\ndisagreement of the military and\ncivil forces of the city came when\nPresidente Loreton and his com-\npanions appeared on the American\nside of the border and sent back an\nemissary to hold a conference with\nGeneral Ramon Tucupicio In com-\nmand of several hundred Mayo and\nYaqul Indians in Agua Prieta.\nThe Douglas dispatch said tho\nLoreto party "displayed evidences \nutter fear" and declared they would\nnot return to Agua Prieta until they\nhad farther assurances of the posi-\ntion of Tucupicio.\nWhen called on the telephone\nearly today General Yucuplcio ad-\nmitted that there had been a breach\nbetween himself and the provisional\ngovernment at Agua Prieta, headed\nby Presidente Loreto, but denied\nthat he had severed relations wtth\nthe entire rebel cause. He said that\nhe was still awaiting orders from\nGeneral Francisco Manzo at Nogales.\nRumors that Agua Prieta was\nabout to return to the federal fold\nwere circulated late last night when\nit was learned that General Abel\nArdo Rodriguez cf Baja, California,\nhad been in conference here with\nthe Mexican Consul Emiliano Tamez.\nand Robert Y. Pesqueira, special en-\nvoy of President Portes Gil.
35b4782dc10f085af95c09c7483b5966 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.0835616121258 41.681744 -72.788147 The local police were notified yes-\nterday that Crane and a man named\nJohn Crowley would be at the Citi-\nzens' Coal Co. office in this city at\n2:30 o'clock to casji a check, and\nthe Boston authorities requested\ntheir arrest. Sergeant McAvay and\nFlynn were detailed and after wait-\ning at th coal company's office, they\narrested Crane, while Wllkins, who\nwas waiting a short distance away,\nleft the scene when he saw his com-\npanion being taken In the police car.\nSergeants McAvay and Flynn\ndrove about the city In search of\nWilkins, Crane accompanying them,\nbut they suspected that he was not\nsincere in his efforts to pick him out\nespecially when he was detected sig-\nnalling as the automobile passed\nMain street and Franklin Bquare. He\nflicked the ashes from cigarette\nhut Sergeant McAvay noticed that\nthe movement appeared like a signal.\nLater, Officer Delbert Veley arrested\nWilkins In a restaurant at the lower\nend of Main street, having been giv.\nen a description to work on.\nCrane was formerly an employe of\nthe Howe Scale Co. of Rutland. Vt.,\nand from 1911 to 1921 he was a test-\ner, adjuster and salesman of Weight-\nograph machines for that concern.\nHe told the police that he has been\npurchasing old Weightograph ma-\nchines from companies which replac-\ned them with new apparatus, and\nafter repairing and painting them, he\nhas been selling them legitimately.\nIn a room at IB Pearl Court, where\nhe and Wilkins have been living\nsince coming to New Britain, the po\nlice found a number of parts of the\nmacnines.
20fbf09bc40ad4803179153d7dd68685 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.3538251049888 31.960991 -90.983994 If an} European nation entertains any am­\nbitious designs upon Texas, such as that of col­\nonizing her, or in any way subjugating her, 1\nshould regard it as the imperative duly of the\nGovernment of the United States to opposs to\nsuch designs, the iiiost firm and determined re­\nsistance, to the extent, if necessary, of appeal­\ning to arms to prevent the accomplishment of\nany such designs. The Executive of the Uni­\nted States ought to he informed as io ihe aims\nand views of foreign powers with regard to • ex-\nas, and 1 presume that, if there be any of the\nexceptionable character which I have indica­\nted, the Executive will disclose to the co-ordi­\nnate'departments of the Government, if not to\nthe public, the evidence of them. From what\nI have seen and heard, 1 believe that Great Bri­\ntain has recently formally and solemnly disa­\nvowed any such aims or purposes—has declared\nthat she is desirous only of the independence of\nTexas, and that she has no intention to inter­\nfere in her domestic institutions. If she has\nmade such disavowal and declaration, I pre­\nsume they are in the possession of the Executive-\nIn the future progress of events, it is pre\nhie that there will be a voluntary or forced <.\nuration of the British North American posses­\nsions from the parent country. I am strongly\ninclined to think that it will be best for the\nhappiness of all parties that, in that event, they\nshould be into a separate and indepen­\ndent Republic. With the Canadian Republic\non the one side, that of Texas' on the other, the\nUnited States, the friend of both, between\nthem, each could advance its own happiness\nby such constitutions, laws, and meà?ut?s, as\nwere best-adapted toits peculiar condition'.—\nThey would bo natural allies, ready, by co­\noperation, to repel any European or foreign\nattack upon cither. Each would afford a secure\nrefuge to the persecuted and oppressed, driven\ninto exile by either of the others. They would\nemulate each other in improvements, in free\ninstitutions, and in the science of self-govern­\nment. Whilst Texas has adopted our Consti­\ntution as the model of hers, she has, in several\nimportant particulars, greatly improved upon it.\nAlthough 1 have felt compelled, from the nature\nof the inquiries addressed to me, to extend this\ncommunication to a much greater length than\nI could have wished, I could not do justice to\nthe subject, and fairly and fully expose my\nown opinions in a shorter space. In conclu­\nsion, they may be stated in a few words to be,\nthat 1 consider the annexation of Texas, at this\ntime, without the assent of Mexico, as a mea­\nsure compromising the national character, in­\nvolving us certainly in war with Mcxieo, proba­\nbly with other foreign Powers, dangerous to the\nintegrity of the Union, inexpedient in the pre­\nsent financial condition of the country, and not\ncalled for b} any general expression of public\nopinion. I am respectfully,
e605adf908a3e948c49272f7e821d630 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0972602422628 41.681744 -72.788147 With the approach of St. Valen-\ntino's Day, we are submitting a list\nof party stunts which might - omc\nin handy if you are planning a party.\nIf you are arranging for the Ber\nmuda tour or having little Myrtle's\ntonsils taken out, we doubt greatly\nthat these suggestions will fit in\nwith your plans but if you have,\ntor the past week, been busy hacking\ntnid mangling red crepo paper with\na pair of scissors with which\nJunior has just been cutting wire,\nwe know that you will hail these\nwords wilh joj'.\nFirst, it is always good Xorm to\nhave a surprise feature for the eve-\nning, unless of course the party Is\nto take place in the afternoon, in\nwhich case custom decrees that you\nmust have a surprise feature for\nthe afternoon. is always well to\nobserve these customs no matter\nhow quaint as one never knows just\nwho will be peeping in the dining\nroom window and to havo a surprise\nfeature for the evening in the after-\nnoon would make those "in the\nknow" raise their eyebrows In mild\nsurprise. And then what .would you\nthink? Gracious yes.\nThis surprise should be in the\nform of a visit from Santa Claus or\nicecream in the form of shamrocks\nwilh an occasional cannon cracker\nin the consomme. Tableaux are al-\nways fun too as one can dress up\nin such odd things and find out\nlater that the hat that was used In\nthe scene "Help tho Assyrian Or-\nphans" showing the havoc resulting\nfrom the state elections in Assyria\nwas really Mrs. Burgle's very best\nchapeau.
0e1afdecb4004decd82ad4f0b09c8fc5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.3301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 Londo.v, April 30..Tho Old Bailey\nwaaloia crowdod thii morning whoa\ntho court oponod for what was expected\nto bo the luat day of tho trial of Oecar\nW lido and Alfrod Taylor on tho chargo\nof lorioua misdemeanor*, otc. Counsel\nfor tho crown, whon the proceodinga\noponed, withdrew tho charge of con-\nb piracy against Wildo, aaylng that ho\ndosirod to avoid any difficulty in placing\ntho prisoners in tho witnes9 hor.\nSir Edward Clurko, Q. C .t coanaol for\ntho accused, dotnanded a verdict of not\npolity on this count; bat thojudgore-\nfusod to allow it.\nSir Edward Clarke in tho oponing\nspeech tor tho dofenso denounced tho\nconduct of a large eoction of tho press\nsaying that it was such as to prejudico\ntho case of hia client and imperil the in-\nteroats of justice.\nWildo was thon placed upon tho\nstand and absolutely deniod that there\nwas a word of truth in tho charges of\nindecency brought againat him. He\nanswered tho questions of Sir Edward\nClurko in subdued tones.\nduring the examination of the pria*\noner by his counsel it was apparent that\nthere was a remarkable chango in the\ncharacter of thoso attending tho trial.\nIt was ovidont that many of Wilde'a\n were present in court and tho\ncenoral atmosphoro of tho placo was\nless hostilo to the prisoner than upon\nprevious occasions.\nSir Edward Clark, who will be re-\nmemborod ns having withdrawn from\nthe ^ueonsbcrry case, whero he acted\nas counsel for Wiide in tho prosocution\nof tho marquis on tho charge of libel,\nwhich chargo foil to tho ground, made a\nmasterly speech to-day. In it ha\nclaimed that Wildo was a martyr and\nthat ho had accepted a verdict of not\nguilty in the Queenaberry case only be¬\ncause it was evident that it could not\nbo properly tried then. But it could\nnow be dotorminodon a propor iaaue ac¬\ncording tocounsol.\nWhen Wildo was Disced in the dock it\nwas evidont that ho had boen well\ncoached for tho occasion. Ho eeomed to\nhave lost all tho airy swagger which ao\ndisgusted all who witnessed it during\ntho former trial.\nMr. C. F . Gill, on behalf of tho prose¬\ncution, began his cross-examination on\ntho same lines as that of Mr. Ed ward il.\nCarson, Q. C ., who dofended tho Mar-\nqP{?.0?'Queenaberry against the charge\nof libel. He quotod from tlio aonuet to\nLord Alfred Douglass, in which oc¬\ncurred the line:
2096670c3077d22cb9a3980a8dcd8015 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.741095858701 40.063962 -80.720915 his own professions uimlo to them. no\ndeclared in public apoechos that ho\nfavored tho duty on coal and lumber,\nand oven credited himself with having\nsaved tho duty in tho Mills bill, which\nho helped to construct. And yet, when\nho fathered a tariff bill of his own,\nthose groat interests of his stato and\ndistrict wore sacrificed. "Had it boon (\nknown," sava tho Fairmont Index, tho J\nloading Democratic paper in tho .Second\ndistrict, "that Mr. Wilson favored free\ncoal ho nover could have boon elected\nto Congress." If that statement was i\ntruo two months ago, when tho Indox i\nuttered it, why is it not truo now? It\nMr. Wilson's free coal theory, had it t\nboon known, would have defeated Mr. «\nWilson two years ago, what excuse have i\ntho coal operators and minors for voting v\nfor him this yoar? Because Mr. t\nWilson id a groat and good man, i\na national leader? Local prido in <\na man's uamo is one thing; the J\nlocal welfare, tho prosperity of a \\\ngreat industry is another. Against <\ntho aoutiuiontal appeal tho Domo- i\ncratic loaders not to sacrillco "a groat f\nand good matt," stand out tho cold,\npractical business arguments in hold <\nrelief. In thin campaign, in this crisis,\nissues, not men, will be voted for, mid "\ntho peoplo havo had a practical oxpor- {\nionco which has oducatod thorn beyond 1\ntho theorioa of tho scholarly Mr. Wil- 1\nson. fiouio of them might havo for- j\ngivon him in a measure, and might\nhavo boon softened by tho sentimental\nappeals of the leaders, but tho kovnoto *\nspeech dolivorod by Mr. Wilson at tho J\nMartinsburg convention, in which ho .\ngave notice that tho fight for froo trado\nia only begun; that froo coal and fur- c\ntiter tarill reductions will continuo to 1\nbo fought for, was inoro than they could r\nstand. So it is that Democratic minora, c\ncoal operators, tho wool growers, lutn- «\nbormon and farmers refuse to bo moved J\nby sentiment, and hundreds of them\nwill bear in mind, not the man, but t\nwhat ho represents, and his record {\nwith rogard lo their most vital inter-
142e89fb4e6079ccd5efba11a6eb8e0a PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.2123287354134 40.441694 -79.990086 The ordinance was defeated by a vote of\n22 noes to 2 ayes, Messrs. Doyle and Bob-\nertson voting in the affirmative.\nMr. Bobertson next presented an ordi-\nnance granting certain rights to the Ells-\nworth Street Bailway Company.\nMr. Warmcastle moved to take up two\nother street railway ordinances in connec-\ntion with this one and act upon all at once,\nto save time. The call of tbe roll on the\nordinance resulted in a vote of 22 noes to 1\naye. Mr. Bobertson voting affirmatively.\nThe ordinances granting to the Kegley\nAvenue and Eonp Street Bailway Company\nand tbe Central Transit Bailway Company\nwere then taken up separately and disposed\nof, the vote on the former being 22 ijoes to 1\naye, and on the latter 25 noes to 1 aye, Mr.\nBobertson voting affirmatively each time.\nAn ordinance granting to the Pittsburg\nand Birmingham Traction Company the\nright to enter and occupy certain\nstreets, to lease the property and franchises\nof certain passenger and street railway\ncompanies and to construct and operate, by\nmeans of electricity or otherwise,"passenge"r\nand street railways, was then taken up and\nadopted by a vote of 24 ayes to 1 no, Mr.\nBraun voting in the negative.\nSection 1 of this ordinance provides\nthat the Pittsburg and Birmingham Trac-\ntion Company shall have the right to use\nand occupy all streets upon which the Pitts-\nburg and Birmingham Passenger Bailway\nCompany, the Southside Passenger Bailway\nCompany or the Pittsburg and Ormsby\nPassenger Bailway Company now operate.\nThey shall have the rieht to construct and\nmaintain a system of cables or electrical\napparatus, with the necessary conduits or\noverhead wires, for motive power, and to\nchancre its system when desired. Section\n2 gives the company the right to lease\nthe property or franchises of the passenger\nrailway
1dbbbaa28f8405f61803604460c41dc5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.360273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 uo show of ciuise. One morning during\nthe winter after MoFarland bad been out\nnearlvall night in a drunken orgie, lie r\nstruck her a blow across the face, which t<\nmade her reel backward. Although he w\nImd often piuched and hit her in some oi g\nIds llta of drunkenness, he never before a\nstruck her so cruel a blow. Without rais- u\ning her voico she said, "I shall never be ft\nnble to forgive you for such an outrage." b\nBefore that she had shed tear* under his t!\nL-ruelty, and tried to reason with him, but tl\ntint:i niuus, wuini;»i.'i iiu wusiu vuu t»i iin i\nparoxysms, as lie called them, she never d\nmoved or spoke, but keeping self-eon- n\ntrolled us fur tis she could, looking him in b\nthe eye, because she funded it would pre- t<\nvent any mortal violence. She Iiclicvcs U\nnow, as then, her life to have been saved ji\nby silence and self-control, lie some- p\nlimes approached her with his hands ex- b\ntended, lingers bent like claws, as if he\nwere about to clutch her throat and g\nstrangle her, and would sav, "Your lile is u\ntiounu some time to end in tragedy," or c\n'Your blood will be on your own head," w\nur "llow I should like to kill you," and e\nwas only restrained because she looked at tl\nhim without saying a word. V\nIn these lUries would oltcn seize and si\nbreak anything which was at hand. ri\nlamps, glasses, mirrors, and sometimes a\nheavy furniture of the room, crushing c\nthings about the room until it has seemed H\nto her there coidil be no pandemonium tl\nworse than that in which she lived; and a\nall.this he would do without explanation, 'I\nor even a pretext for complaint against .m\nher. Shy knew no more what excited his ti\nIrenzy than a babe, lie would sometimes a\nkeep up this conduct and this', abuse for si\nhours, without a syllable or a motion be- tl\ninginade on her part, and would then n\nburst into tears and beg her purdon, say- si\nIng she wus the best woman thai ever\nlived, and then go to sleep exhausted. She ir\nnever told him after that winter she conld 11\nforgive or could love him, although he d\nsometimes implored her to do so, because ii\nshe could not say so with truth; general- g\nly she told hiui alio pitied him, which was tl\ntrue. Sometimes he said, "your d d p\nsilence irritates more than if you tulkcd," s<\nbut she was sure her course was best, o:\nWhen he struck her this blow in 1802, she tl\ntold Mrs. Cleveland, a sister of Mr. Gree- ai\nlev, the only person to whom she s|K)ke is\nof McFarland, otherwise than in a man-\nncr iiccommg u who 10 hjk:iuv in :i ihw
08dbbd47272ae76b2a51dea615f6a988 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.3575342148656 39.369864 -121.105448 The first and only newspaper of our child-\nhood was printed on a press which, with the\naid of three men, turned off forty or fifty\nimpressions in an hour. When, on the 2Gth\nday of November, 1814, the London Times\nannounced that it was printed by steam,\nwhich made 1,100 impressions in an hour,\nthe whole city was astonished, and the\npressmen themselves looked on in mute\nwonder and admiration. But to-day, through\nthe agencies of Robert Hoe, the English lad\nof IGOS, of the kindly Grant Thorburn and\nhis wife, and Richard M. Hoe, of New York,\nthere are made at the office of the World in\nPrinting House Square, 25,000 impressions\nin sixty minutes. Who can disclaim in-\ndebtedness to those four names? The mer-\nchant who sips his coffee at breakfast and\nreads the latest up to two or three\noclock in the morning, perhaps forgets to\nwhom he is indebted for that pleasure ; and\nso with the day-laborer, who finds time to\nglean from his paper, at a cost of one cent,\nwhat is going on through the habitable\nglobe, ere he sallies forth to his daily toil.\nRich and poor, learned and unlearned, all\nshould remember with respect and gratitude\nthe heads and the hearts to which every day\nmakes them renewed debtors, to wit*;\nRobert Hoe and his son Richard M., to\nGrant Thorburn and his noble wife.\nReader, remember that kind acts pay; the\ninfluence of each for good drifts over the\nsea of time, and will drift till time shall be\nno more. Go'forthwith, then, “while the\nday lasts,” and perform as many as you\ncan. —Halls Journal.
f7edbcf8ab39ef1a3ee2c2b40dea1568 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.8232876395232 39.560444 -120.828218 An Enchantress.—The Sun says Miss\nSt. Clair, an enchantress, arrived on the\nGolden Age, with a valuable apparatus\nfor the exhibition of legerdemain—a pair\nof very bright eyes, we presume.\nAccident at Sears.— Joseph Bean\nand E. Hunnewill, says the Messenger,\nwere severely hurt on the 15thinSt., while\ndrilling out an old charge in a rock they\nwere trying to blast.\nJ. D. Meeker was badly injured while\nblasting rocks at Nelson Creek a few days\nago. Thos. Phene was killed while blast-\ning, by a premature explosion.\nSuborned.'—At San Francisco, in the\ntrial of a case where $25,000 was involved,\none of the jurors received a bribe of-\nsl2oo for procuring a verdict in favor of)\nhis master. Hang the scoundrel. -\nFrom Pike.—Geo. Johnson, aged Itf\nyears, from Pike county Missouri, arrived\nin Sacramento a few days ago, having\nperformed the whole journey on foot.\nCombination.—The organ grinders or\nSan Francisco, have entered into a combi-\n It is said that a delegation, im\nfull regalia, organ, monkey and frau, has-\nbeen appointed to confer with the Steam.\nNavigation Company.\nIt is Said that the flowers on the hills*\nnear San Francisco are beginning to blos-\nsom as brightly as if it were May, “Flow-\ners, wherefore do you bloom”—in the sandf"\nSacramento Theatricals—The Sac-\nramentans have tendered Mrs. F. M.\nKent a complimentary benefit; none more\ndeserving. Mr. and Mrs. Kent will al-\nways be favorites wherever there are peo-\nple of taste; and there arc a goodly num-\nber of such in the City of the Plain.\nMining at Cold SpRNGs. -- The Miners*\nAdvocate says that claims along Weber\ncreek, are paying from seven to ten dollars\na day. The entire flat below Cold Spring:\nseems to have been the bed of a stream.\nNew Diggings have been struck near\nSnake Lake. Prospects have been found\nas high as $3 to the pan.
06d199a0115b8f297e59a0eafc707944 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.9410958587011 41.020015 -92.411296 Sress, but of the people of the United\ntate*, to the cause* and effects of those\nunhappy questions. Is there not a dis­\nposition on one side to magnify tbe\nwroags and outrages, and on the other\nside to belittle them or justify tbem ?\nIf public opinion could be directed,\nviolence and blood shed in resistance\nto constitutional authority wonld be\nrare. I sympathize with the Southern\npeople ;iu their prostrate condition\nandIwoulddoallin mypowerto re\nlieve them, acknowledging that in\nsome Instances they have had most\ntrying governments to live under, and\nvery oppressive ones in the way of\ntaxation for nominal Improvements,\nnot giving benefits equal to the hard­\nships imposed, but can they claim\nthemselves entirely irresponsible for\nthis conduct? They cannot. Violence\nhas been rampant in some localities,\nand further beeen justified or de-\ntiled by those who could have prevent­\ned it. The theory is raised that there\nis to be no further interference on the\npart of the General Government to\nprotect citizens In a State where the\nState authorities fail togiveprotectlon.\nThis Is a great mistake. While I re­\nmain Executive, all the laws of Con-\ngreea, and the provisions of the Con-\nstitutioh. Including the amendments\nadded thereto, will be enforced with\nrigor but with regret that they should\nhave added one jot or title to' the ex­\necutive duties and powers. Let there\nbe fairness in the discussion of South­\nern questions, the advocates of both or\nall political parties giving honest,\ntruthful reports of occurrences, con­\ndemning tbe wrong and upholding the\nright, and soon all will be well.
b9d58163788283def61560b8f535a88a PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.4808218860985 31.960991 -90.983994 Messrs. Reynolds and Brothers, of Kinder-\nhook. Experiments were made with it on\nSaturday, in the Arsenal Yard:\nIt is called a Protecting Engine, and the\nrapidity and precision with which the balls\nwere propelled seemed almost beyond com­\nprehension. The experimental model wa3\nfitted to throw a leaden missel of 1$ ounces,\nand was capable, with the exertions of two\nmen at a crank, to drive these balls through\na 2 inch plank at the distance of 150 yards.\nThe projectile force is obtained by the cen­\ntrifugal tendency of the ball to fly off from a\nhorizontal wheel, while revolving at a very\nhigh velocity, and the engine seems to be\nperfectly manageable, delivering its fatal\nmessenger at any point of the compass de­\nsired, and at the rate of twenty-six balls per\n ! If the sanguine expectations of the\ninventors should prove correct, this fearfol\nengine of destruction will doubtless be of\ngreat service to the Government in the pro­\nsecution of any war, present or prospective;\nand we trust that its powers may be fully\ntested by a competent commission. In the\nexperiments of Saturday, the balls were dri­\nven with much force against an iron target\nat the distance of some seventy yards, the\nlimits of the yard not permitting a wider\nrange. Many of them were beaten flat and\nspread out to the size of a dollar. The in­\nventors state that the principle may be ap­\nplied to shot of any size, and with increased\nproportionate success; the point blank range\nof the engine being as great as that of any\narm now in use.
19e23aec8d13a8ab2a490d6424f49ba6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1900.6972602422627 58.275556 -134.3925 Glacier, and on the same side of the\nprovisional boundary, is in somewhat\nthe same condition. Boulder is not be-1\niug developed as much as Glacier but'\nis attracting some attention. Just what'\nthe British Columbians intend to do\nwith the claims the Americans have\nstaked and what privileges will be ac-\ncorded them I do not know, but I fear\ntrouble will be made. I fear Americans i-\nwill not be treated as they wish."\nA placer strike has been made on\nEast Arm about midway between Gold-;\nen Gate and Taku and it is reported to j\nbe rich. The rush to the diggings from\nAtlin is said to be approaching a genu¬\nine stampede. The discovery was made\nby W. P . Jones of the Atlin firm of.\nRant and Jones, who has christened\nthe creek on which the gold was found,:\nJoe Martin creek, in honor of the ir-\nrascible Vancouver legislator. P. Schar-\nsclimidt, the energetic Bennett journal-!\nist, proinotor, broker and transporta¬\n man, who arrived in Skagway, Sep¬\ntember 2, told the Alaskan that consid¬\nerable excitement had been aroused ov-\ner the discovery. "The strike on Joe\nMartin creek was made some time ago,"\nsaid Mr. Scharschmidt, "but has just\nleaked out. So far the work has been\ndone by panning and with the primi¬\ntive rocker. I am told that the pay is\neasily an ounce a day to the rocker\nwhich is quite rich when the accessible\n! location is considered. On the last trip\nof the Gleaner there was a considerable\nquantity of lumber brought out from\nAtlin and left at the scene of the strike\nfor tho purpose of making sluice boxes,\nMr. Jones, the discoveror, and the oth- .\ners who have been on tho ground are\nenthusiastic over the find. The rush\nfrom Atlin had just commenced and\nwas apparently developing into a stam¬\npede. Joe Martin creek is about 12\nmiles this side of Atlin and directly in\nthe course of tho steamboat lines.'1
2179199a82e0acb4513906ae58b2b775 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1881.0753424340437 41.004121 -76.453816 $3500 out of tho profits, and I thought\nI'd havo my houso painted. Well, I\nhired n man to do tho job, and he went\nat it at $4 per day. Tho first day he\nspent in bringing a lot of old ladders\nand cluttering up my yard with them.\nThe next day he spent in putting them\nup against tho building and taking off\ntho blinds. Having got tho place look-\ning like destruction a rain storm came\nup nnd ho bad to suspend work for that.\nTho storm lasted threo days anil by the\ntime fair weather canw ho was drunk.\nIt took him a day to get sober and he\nput in that day loafing around my placo\nand charging mo for it. Well, next day\nho mixed his paint. It took him ten\nminutes to stir the paint three times nud\nlight his pipe. I had tumbled over his\nladders and going homo niter\ndark till I was mortally sick of them.\nBut I stood it. I had my plans. Next\nday he went to painting. I timed him\non climbing a ladder, and it took him\nsix minutes to mount fourteen rods anil\nthen ho dropped bis brush nud had to\nOo down after it. While I've stood in\nmy yard watching the fiend, customers\nof mine have come along and leaned\nover the feuco and taken the thing in\nand grinned and acted pleased like and\nit almost drove mo wild. But you've\nemployed a painter, sir. You know the\naggravation of tho thing. I needn't di-\nlate. Well at last tho job was complet-\ned. With no complaint I paid his bill,\nthough it about bankrupted me. But 1\nswore revenge. Cold weather came. I\nwatched him. The water pipes in his\nhouso burst. I knew they would. I\nchuckled in glee.
0e2b39572ff5e93cc5aa2381713a07bc THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.8753424340437 37.92448 -95.399981 called the child, from er homo and\npcoplo. They held ho should neier\nlave left her, though sho had ac-\ncused him of no wrong. Burning Star,\nIn Jils jealous rage, hated him, be-\ncause he believed that but for love\nof the paleface Lizette would have lis-\ntened to his wooing, and Folsom's con-\nscience could not acquit him of having\neen her preference and' of leading her\non. lie could not speak of her to hi\nwlfo without shame and remorse. He\ntad no Idea what could have been her\nfate, for the poor girl had disappcire'l\nfrom the face of the earth, and now,\nat last, this day had proved to him tho\nthreats of her lover and her brothers\nwere not idle. He had had so narrow"!\na squeak his life, so sharp and sud-\nden and hard a fight for It that, now\nthat the peril was over, his nerve be-\ngan to give way, his strong hands to\ntremble. Armed with breechloaders,\nlie and his two friends hud been able\nto stand off the attacking party, kill-\ning two ponies, and emptying, they\nfelt sure, two saddles; but little by lit-\ntle the Indians were working around\ntheir position, and would have crawled\nwpon them within an hour or two but\nior Jake's daring ride for help and\nthe blessed coming of the bluecoats In\nthe nick of time, Folsom swore he'd\nmerer forget their services this day.\nAnd as he cantered homeward he\ncould still hear tho distant firing dy-\ning away in the mountains to the\nnorth,
5d448a5a55518ea0b864f6dfabd8723e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.4178081874684 39.261561 -121.016059 Tvuod cf Again.—Tb* celebrated John Wig-\nglue bee recently humbugged tbe editor of tbe\nStockton At gut, with tbe dismal tale of tbe\nmurder of hie wife and children by tbe Indiana\nwhile eroesing the plalne. Tbe account publish-\ned in the Argut is aearly tbe same that be told\nin Nevada last fall, and on tbe strength of which\na benevolent gentleman of oar acquaintance\nfurnished him with money to go in search of\nhis long lost brother. We presume our ears\nwore tbe first to listen to that story of Indian\noutrage and cruelty; we deeply sympathised\nwith him, and wrote out tbe particulars of the\n“massacre,” and an “information wanted” of\nbis brother William Wiggias, who was supposed\nto be residing somewhere in tbe State. Had\nwe been publishing a daily paper, in all proba-\nbility tbe “terrible massacre” would have ap-\npeared in our columns; but it was several days-\nbeforo out paper was issued, and iiv the mean\ntime we went to Mr. Wiggins get some fur-\nther particulars, and became satisfied that the\nstory was a fabrication. Wiggins afterwards\nweut below, and after humbugging tbe Marys-\nville, Sacramento and San Francisco editors,\nsucceeded iu finding his brother, Dr. William\nWiggins, who was residing on his farm in Mon-\nterey county, and who utterly refused to ac-\nknowledge the relationship. This was some six\ncr eight months ago, and we bad supposed that\nJohu Wiggins had retired into obscurity, when\nsuddenly we are startled by reading the account\nof tbe murder of Mrs. John Wiggins, and tbe\nbeating of the childrens brains out on a wagon\nwheel. Tbe story has been somewhat rernod-\ndled to conform to tbe change of seasons, but\nthe essential particulars are tbe same.\nWe arc fond of giving to the public lats and\nreliable inteligence; and had the Democrat been\npublished daily, no doubt tbe heart-rending\nparticulars of the slaughter of Mrs Wiggins\nand all the little Wigginses would have been\nfirst read in our columns.
1f5b08acb6a75f808782968bde57a1a7 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.8538251049888 39.756121 -99.323985 a healthly round of blood in its circula-\ntion would begin its distribution of new\nlife to the injured part and inflamma-\ntion would naturally occur. It Eilison's\nstrength should increase more rapidly\nthan inflammation, amputation of the\ninjured parts would perhaps save his\nlife. Several days after his rescue, Juae\n23, Doctor Green reported that Ellison\nwas threatened with congestion of the\nbrain. The symptoms increased rapidly\nuntil the poor fellow lost his reason. At\nGoodhaven his condition was so critical\nthat the surgeons of the expedition, af-\nter consultation, determined to amputate\nthe feet above the ankle, as the only\nchance to save his life. The sufferer's\ndisease, however, triumphed. Amid\nbleak scenes that had surrounded him\nfor three years in his heroic sacrifice and\nwithin desolute solitude of that region\nof everlasting and snow, Eurrounded\nby his sorrowing comrades he passed\naway. Lieutenant Greely was physically\nthe weakest, but mentally the most vig-\norous of the party. He had lain in his\nsleeping bag for weeks, on account cf his\nkradually Jailing strength, tie was un\nable to stand alone for any length ol\ntime, and wa almost he i pi ess, except in\na sitting position. All pangs of hunger\nbad ceased, his appearance was wild, his\nhair was long and unkempt, and his\nlace and hands were covered with sooty\nblack dirt, nis body was scanliiy covered\nwith worn out clothes, his fjrm was\nwasted, his joints were swollon and his\neyes sunken. His first inquiry was if they\nwere not Englishmen, but when he was\ntold that we were his own countrymen\nhe paused for a moment,
0f677a9b8eadd1ba420a0b26e3dc7b52 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1868.1024589847702 41.004121 -76.453816 powerful speech in tho Senate on the\nReconstruction question, during which\nho produced some statistics which com-\npletely upset several important points\nin tho speech of Senator Trumbull,\nmado bovernl days ago. He also show-\ned by Indlsputablo facts nnd figures,\nthat instead of only C.0,000 Southern\nwhites being disfranchised by tho exist-\ning Reconstruction nets, ns represented\nby Mr. Trumbull, tho number Is actual-\nly not less than 300,000 Mr. D. was re-\npeatedly interrupted dttrlntr tho deliv\nery of his speech, by Radical Senators,\nwho desired to ask questions or make\nexplanations; tints fallowing that they\nfelt extremely uneasy underhls irrefra\ngable logic and scathing condemnation.\nSenator Sherman, of Ohio, in undertak\ning an explanation, lrmiKiy annulled\nHint ho had never avnroved of tho act\nwhich disfranchised tlio whites of \nSouth and entrnncli hed thu blacks!\nYet, Senator Sherman was ono of those\nwho voted for that act when it passed\nuiocjenaiei ills admission now, mat\nho never approved it, is but nnotfier Il-\nlustration of the complacent submh slon\nwith which leading Radicals havo from\ntime to tlincyielded their own convic-\ntions of riL'ht nnd lustlce. to the decision\nor inundate of tho part v caucus I Could\nanything more clearly demonstrate the\ninner iiiiiiiiiess oi uieso men lor the po\nsltlon thev bold?\nl'ronnuent Democrats wno aro hero\nfrom Now Hampshire clvo encotinitro\nment to tho hope that tho Democracy\nmay curry that Stato at tho ci mlng\nelection. Tlio campaign is scarcely yet\nfairly opened, but it Is clearly uvitlent\nunit in mat state, as everywhere else,\nthcro is deep-seate-
18e20c0c3b56e32688b70387c1d0eb19 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.3674863071747 40.063962 -80.720915 The Woman's Foreign fllNNlonarjHoelety\nor the M. JB. C'hureh.The AddreM ol the\nSoclcly to the Uinhopw.\nCoLuums, O., May 13..At today's\nmeeting of the Woman's Foreign Mis¬\nsionary Association of the M. E . Church,\nthe report which haa been prepared for\nsubmission to the bishops and members\nof the General Conference waa read. It\nwaa reforred for publication until sent to\nthe bishops, but the main points of the\ndocument are aa follows:\nThe report declares that the Bociety du¬\nring its eleven years of life haa steadily\nadhered to its flrit purpose and permitted\nno other cause, however brilliant in its\npromise of favor or success to divert its\nenergies or deviate its attention. Limited\nas it has been to voluntary serv¬\nice, and restricted in ita source\nof supplies, it claims that ita stead¬\nfast adherence to its original idea,\nthe conversion of heathen women has\nbeen its cblef cause of success. With the\nconsent of the presentmission board, this\nsociety has undertaken the support and\nsupervision of all work for women within\nthe mission the M. E . Church, and on\neach return of the Diahops from foreign\nfields, the society baa been called to\nenter new fields needing labor of mis¬\nsionaries. This society, the youngest in\nthe pbprch, has siqce 1868 built, provided\nand sustained three lorphanagea, three\nhospitals, ten diapensariea, thirteen board¬\ning schools and eight homes for mission¬\naries. Nearly two hundred national hooka\nand bible women have been employed in\ndisseminating christian truth, and numer¬\nous day and Sunday schools, superintend¬\ned by the wives of missionaries, have been\nestablished and supported in all fields for\nthe maintenance of these enterprises.\nThis Society iiaa paid $800,000 since the\nlast nnadrennial report in May, 187H\nSWS.SV* have been raiawl through the\nefforts to thia Society. Of this amount\n$31,000 have been used for buildings;\ntwenty-six single ladies have been sent to\nforeign fields, and twenty four members of\nthe parent branch. Among the heathen\nwomen 2.201 auxiliary aocietiea, com¬\nprising 00 SOU members, are given aa an\nearnest of the interest taken In the work\nof this Society, i
207b45caf1c25338fce3792d75742960 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.0534246258244 39.745947 -75.546589 36 inclue!\nto 55, Inclusive. 76 to 79 inclusive, 82 to\n96 inclusive,. 100 to 175 inclusive. 177\nto 256 inclusive, 260 to 274 inclusive.\n285 to 288 inclusive, all that portion of\nLo/ 97 lying South of the southerly line\nof Vancouver Avenue; all that portion\nof lot 99. lying north of the northerly\nof Vancouver Jriwyiue: all that por­\ntion of 17« lying south of the south­\nerly line of Dailey Avenue; all that por­\ntion of lot 257 lying north of the north-\nly line of Vancouver Avenu*; and all\nthat portion of lot 259 lying «Buth of\nthe southerly line of Vane\nnue; all of said lots being in Thomas\nV. Wreford's subdivision of lot 5 north\nof Holden Avenue of the subdivision\nof the north part of the east one-half\nof Private Claim .574; lots num­\nbered 7. 8. 49 to 56 Inclusive. 79. 81 to\n86 inclusive, 93. 91, 98, 99. 101 to 107\ninclusive. 121 . 128. 149, 187 to 190 Iti-\neluflive; all of Scrlpps Holden Avenu®\nSubdivision of lot 2 of Plat B” of tho\nsubdivision of the Estate of Johu\nStrong. Private Claifri 574; together\nwith airy a ltd aJl reversionary rights\nin and to any oft the streets or alleys\nabutting upon any of «aid lots.\nPARGET. XV: The interest of tho\nLincoln Motor rompany as Vendee un­\nder a contract of purchase from Fred­\nerick John Ellis. Mahle J. Ellis, and\nAlice Maud Fanny Otto as vendors, of\nlota two hundred seventy-five\ntwo hundred seventy-aix\nhundred seventy-seven (277). two hun­\ndred seventy-eight (278). two hundred\nseventy-nine (279). two hundred eighty\n(280), two hundred eighty-one
035bf84450679a5edbb76376e95fb8de THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.1543715530763 38.894955 -77.036646 Philadelphia. Feb. 25 . The PhikMlelphU\ndivision of Uie Salvation Army hekl a hie;,\nmeeting tonight at the Academy of Mesie.\nfor Uie purpose or raising fnails toward\nthe erection of a honie for fallen women.\nParticular interest was attached to the\nmeeting in view or the dlssenstoBs taut\nhave arisen in the army, owing to the\nremoval from the command la the Uatted\nStates of Ballington Booth and Mrs. Booth,\nand that when the meetfas was arranged\nBallington Booth and Mrs. Booth were\nadvertised to be among the speakeca.\nIn view of the severance of Utefr con-\nnection with the army the two Booths. C\ncourse, did not aiWress the meet Jog.\nNevertheless 2,500 people pahl UHr ad-\nmission to the Academy and rteteaed with\nInterest to the ad rashes of Col. Kiefc\nprivate secretary to Gea. Boota; Briga-\ndiers Evans and Bown of Phifauleiwhfrt aad\nChicago, and other members of the aimy.\nNo reference was made at tae to\nthe trouble in the ranks.\nAfter the meetiag Col. Nlehol reiter-\nated the expression of his belief given yes-\nterday in New York that there would be\nno revolt against the comroaads of Gea.\nBooth and that the United States Salvation-\nists would accept the commander ptaeed\nover them in the stead of BaHiogtonBoota.\nThis optimistic view of the situation was\ndirectly contradicted by an ofricer of the\nUnited States branch of the army and who\nIs very close to Ballington Booth.\nThis officer stated that toe trouble waa\nnot yet ended, and that it BalUogtoa Booth\nraises the standard of revolt from the\nparent organization the men and worsen ot\nUie Salvation Army of the United State\nwould follow his lead almost uaaaintowsiy.\nThis ofricer further stated that when\nthe first news or the removal of Baiting ton\nBooth from the command was received\nseventeen principal officers of the araty\nheld a meeting in Chicago and at its
238e7c6e4fe7b19fa9fce32cc8ca99b4 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4479451737698 32.408477 -91.186777 "'This is a subject to which I confess I have\npaid very little attention. The arms inclosed In\nyear letter are the ame that are used by the\nfamily here' As will be seen. this was a letter\nwritten a decade after the close of the Revolu-\ntionary war, and nearly two decadee after the\nadoptlio of the Stars and Stripes by the congress\nof the United States. If Washington, at that late\ndate, had paid little attention to his coat of arms,\nhe certanly paid ls in his younger days, and\nespecially at a time when he was surrounded by\nenemies, malignantly perseuted by them, and\nwas naturally deeply engrossed In the army and\nthe preservation of the new-born nation. I do not\nfind In al of Washlngto's writints a single allu-\nsioa by him f any of his coatemporaries that \ncoat of arms was used as a model for the fag.\n"The evolution of the flg was gradual and un-\ndoubtedly grew out of the desire of the people\nwho had come to this country to get away from\nthe tyranny of Old World monarchs. Of course,\nthe first flag in this country was the red and yel-\nlow flag of old Spain, brought over by Columbus.\nThe Cabots, with other discoverers of England.\nplanted the cross of St. George up around New-\nfoundland. Pedro Retnal, for the Portuguese,\nplanted the fivwepotted blue flag of that then\ngreat maritime nation. Henry Hudson, coming\nhere tt the Dutch. brought the yellow, white and\nblue flag under which he sailed up the Hudson\nriver. This flag was the flag of the Dutch East\nIndia company. These may be considered the\nfour disovry slgs.
1aa54cff06a4f9b4f05faeb1429cb745 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.443989039415 37.561813 -75.84108 Scrofulous poison is one of the most destructive\nenemies of onr race. Often, this unccn and untelt\ntenant of theoreanism undermines the constitution,\nand invites the attack of enfeel ding or fatal diseases,\nwithout exciting a suspicion of its presence. Again,\nit icems to breed infection throughout the body, and\nthen, on some favorable occasion, rapidly develop\ninto one or other of its hideous forms, either on tha\nsurface or among the vitals. In the latter, tuber-\ncles may be suddenly deposited in the lungs or\nheart, or tumors formed in the liver. These lacts\nmake the occasional use of the SursapanUa ma\npreventive, advisable.\nIt is a mistake to suppose that so long as no erup-\ntions or humors appear, there must be no scrofulous\ntaint These forms of derangement may never\noccur and yet vital forces of the body lie so re-\nduced bv its subtle agency, as materially to impair\nthe health and shorten the duration of life. It is a\ncommon error, alo, that scrofula is strictly heredi-\ntary. It does, indeed, descend from parent to child,\nbut is also engendered in persons born of pure\nblood Low living, indigestion, foul air, licentious\nhabits, uneleanliness, and the depressing vices gen-\nerally, produce it. Weakly constitutions, where not\nfortiried by the most constant and judicious care,\nara peculiarly liable to it. Yet the robust, also,\nwhose turbid blood swells the veins with an appar-\nently exuberant yitnlitv, are often contaminated,\nand on the road to its consequences. Indeed, no\nclass or condition can depend on immunity iroiu\nit, nor feel insbisible to tae importance of an effec-\ntual remedy.
0440f43ecfaa4b06c90707127c1a30ae EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.023287639523 39.745947 -75.546589 The first thing he wants to know Is\n"Where to find a good Doctor.”\nH you direct your steps to the In\ndilution Of Dr. Caiillman, 607 Market\n8t., P hi ladelphia, you will find the\nReliable Specialist you are looking\nfor without wasting time and\nmoney on other doctors.\nWhen you visit him you will find\nthat the Doctor Is vary careful about\ngetting a correct diagnosis of your\nMckn>»ss: that Is, to find out exactly\nwhere you are sick. Hls Institution\n•» equipped with e* cry modern and-\n»cicntlOc apparatus, so that if you\nneed a blood lest or chemical analy­\nsis of the urine. X-ray examination,\nor whatever you may require, he\nhas It on hand for you. With the help\nOf these Tests and hi* vast knowledge,\nof discuses of men. he avoids the\n of making any mistakes.\nThe Doctor will then tel! you vvhat\nsatisfactory treatment. No man need- stay away on account of mcney\nmatters. Any workman can obtain the Doctors help and pay trim by\nthe week or month, as he can afford it, and his fees are so low, oo ac­\ncount of hls large practice, that no sick man need h»»itat»d to go to aim.\nHis institution has evere modem apparatus for treating aies rn**®-\nStatic, c.ahanir, Faradlc and High Frequency Electricity; Oiom Inhala­\ntorium. Electrle Oscillators, and other modem treatments\nTor Blood Diseases the Doctor uses all the latest »crum ibjection^\nas Prof. Ehrlichs No. 914. Phylaeogei»», Nelser Baclerines and Aacclne^\nHe treats all Diseases of Men, such ss Syphjiis Or Blood PoUon. A art-\ncocele, or swollen veins. Stricture, Prostatitis, Orchitis, Gonorrhea\nLosses and Drains and all Weaknesses of Men.\n•
1f2556470f25d9ae1a9df36c87d90a65 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.346575310756 40.419757 -77.187146 found myself alone in the world, with\nonly a tolorable education and my quick\nwits to help me to the wealth I was de-\ntermined to acquire. The road to for-\ntune is a rough one, and few reach it\nwithout the aid of accident or influence.\nI had no influence, so I trusted to the\nchapter of accidents. Nature who had\nbeen so lavishly kind to me, pointed out\nthe way. I was determined to marry\nan heiress ; I had the good fortune to\nattract the attention of Miss Farrell.\nTrue, her reported wealth first drew me\ntowards her and I spared no pains to\ngain her love. In this I was successful\nbeyond my hopes. It was a great tri-\numph for the poor broker's clerk to\nhave gained the prize from his wealthy\nand aristocratic competitors. Nor was\nmy love altogether mercenary, for\n her fortune was the first incen-\ntive to seek her heart and hand, when\nthat heart was mine, my love had be-\ncome so intensified I would have mar-\nried her without a penny."\nIt was strange that this strong and\nwise man of the world should thus pour\nout the very secrets of his soul to a sim-pl- d\nand ignorant woman. It appeared\nto be a relief to John Waldron to let\ndown the mask of placid reserve he had\nworn so long, and make a full confes\nsion. There bad been a dreary monoto\nny all these years in his mind, and It\nwas like opening the windows of a long\nclosed room and letting la the daylight\nit purified his soul. She sat and lis-\ntened without comment, too much, as\ntonished, indeed, to speak, and he con\ntinued: Concluded next week.
267b6f7f05ddc9f7e0795c7ab53c8733 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.8428961432403 39.745947 -75.546589 FALSE STATEMENTS DENIED.\nEditor Every Evening: I notice a state­\nment In print this last week claiming that\nSenator Monaghan and Chauuccy P. Hol­\ncomb should not be elected to office on ac­\ncount of "lack of sympathy with the State\nsanitarium proposition” for 1903, said sani­\ntarium being for tuberculosis. May I be\nallowed to speak of what Senator Monag­\nhan and Mr. Holcomb have really done for\nthe anti-tuberculosis cause?\nThe Delaware Anti-Tuberculosis Society,\nof which I have the honor to be president,\nhas never been In politics. It is an absolute­\nly non-partisan organization. Senator Mon­\naghan is one of Its dir--tors, and a very\nuseful and valuable one, and Governor Pen-\nnewlll la another. I am sure no x Ise edi­\ntor would wish to accuse one, more than\nanother, of being an enemy to tbe cause\nwhich they actually represent.\nThe Delaware Anti-Tuberculosis Society\nwias organized in 1907. It drew up a bill\nproviding for the Delaware Antl-Tubercu-\nlosig Commission, and Senator Monaghan\nundertook to take this bill through the Leg­\nislature of 1909. Mr. Holcomb was one of\nth«» foremost helpers of this bill at Dover,\nthough h(. was a member of the Legls-\nture of that year. The bill passed both\nhouses unanimously. So did the two other\nanti-tuberculosis bills enacted by the Leg­\nislature of 1911. There Is, therefore, no\nSenator or Representative who can be\ncharged with having voted against any of\nthe anti-tuberculosis bills which our so­\nciety has brought before the Legislature.\nBut If 1 were to pick out thc men who had\nmost helped thc bills In the beginning. I\nwould put Senator Monaghan and Mr. Hol­\ncomb very high on tho list. They- were un ­\ntiring in their efforts, and the tuberculosis\ncause has no better friends in Delaware.\nWhat tho State Sanitarium bill was in\n1903, I do not know. I have never even\nheard of It. It was before our society ex­\nisted and before the public was educated on\nthe subject. On behalf of tho society, ona\nof whoso directors and one of whose active\nfriends have becn thus accused of lack of\nsympathy with Its aims, I can only testify\nthat It 1s largely to Senator Monaghan and\nto Mr. Holcomb that Delaware is Indebted\ntor her present progress In fighting the\nwhite Plague.
98f5607271a398890b06a8e46dc903ea CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1921.7301369545917 41.875555 -87.624421 telephone company was right in its\ndecision, while at the same time, the\nadoption of this policy has proven an-\nnoying to many people and has caused\nno end of confusion.\nWe are of the opinion, however, that\nthose responsible for the change from\none telephone directory to two, while\nbelieving they were doing a good thing\nand making an improvement, did not\nstop to think if there was not some\nbetter way to solve the problem.\nAlong with this change the tele-\nphone officials began accepting dis-\nplay advertisements in the directory,\nall of which took up space. It is their\nintention to accept one inch across\nthe page advertisements at the top\nand bottom of every page, and pos-\nsibly across the middle. In the recent\ndirectory, advertisements were accept-\ned in the Chicago directory only.\nThese advertisements totaled approxi-\nmately full width page inches or\nabout enough space to print about 110\npages of names, so it can be seen that\nto have printed both city and subur-\nban together would require only 130\npages additional, if no advertisements\nwere permitted.\nIf the telephone should succeed in\ngetting one inch advertisements to\ncover top, bottom and across the mid-\ndle' of each page, it will have to pro-\nvide approximately 325 additional\npages, which would make a book of\n1,350 pages for the city directory\nalone, and we would be up against an-\nother unwieldy book.\nWe know of instances where people\nendeavored to find the address or tele-\nphone number of the residence of\nsome Chicago business man, only to\nfind it not in the book, and the\nthought never occurred to him to look\nin the suburban directory, where the\nparty lived.
56c7473f7ebd5e9236bf70286187d7eb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.8237704601802 39.745947 -75.546589 WOO workers of the American Loco­\nmotive Company's Schenectady plant\nbad been for some time previously\nout of employment. J. H . Bellingham,\nan employe of the General Electric\nCompany, president of one of the\nlabor unions in the electric Held and\na recognized labor leader, who was\nrunning for office on the Socialist\nticket made a special appeal to these\nAmerican Locomotive Company em­\nployes on the ground of their unem­\nployment. demanding again and again,\nwith oratorical emphasis, of them, of\nthe capitalists and of the whole coun­\ntry wliy these capable workmtn, who\nwore willing to work, whose families\ndesperately needed their wage, should\nnot have w>ork.\nThe answer in this particular in­\nstance happened to he particularly\neasy; the exceptionally high wages\nwhich another specially powerful\nclass qf labor had forced from the\nrailroads, plus the constant strikes of\nother classes of labor in .the \nheld, had so reduced both the rail­\nroads' income and the use to which\nthe railroads were able to pul the\nequipment they had that they were\nat that lime absolutely unable to buy\nthe extra locomotive« which would\nhave^glvcn employment to these men.\nMoreover, it i« not at all necessary\nthat tfie strike be in some big. con­\nspicuously basic Industry liko coal or\nsteel to make a tromendou« dent in\nthe wages of immense numbers of\noutside workers whom the strikers\nthemselves undoubtedly never consid­\nered In the situation.\nA streetcar strike, which In our\nlarge cities often affects millions of\npeople, making it difficult and often\nImpossible to get to and from their\nwork at least for more than a few\nhours a day, but particular burden on\nlabor, because; while sirh a situation\nseldom affects salaries, for every hour\nthat labor loses wages completely\nstop.
2a96f4a044d3b7f97922f29385aab999 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.3410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 As to the total value of buildings o\n»nds, (meaning farms) McDowell, as wi\ne Bfeu from the last statement,still holt\nbe lowest place at over $2,800, and Jeffe\nan the highest at over $848,000, an\nlerkeley following close at over $770,00\nna uropping 10 uarnson wua over *oou\n00, j and Greenbrier over 1501,(X)\nlarsnall over $487,000, Kanawha nei\nrith over $427,000, Ohio $422,000, Woo\nver $400,000, and Hampuhire, Alarioi\nlojton, Muusalia and Preston betwee\n300.000 and $400 000, and Brooke, Hai\nauk, Mineral, Monroe and Taylor b<\ns een $200,000 and $300,000, and in abo(\nlike descending icale to the loweat.\nIn the value of building* on iota M\nowell has none here. Clay is the iowes\neiuK only $080, and Ohio the higher\neibg over 10.000,000; Wood, over $1,000\n»; Berkeley, over $000,000, and Kanawta\nud Harrison, over $000,000; and the tow\n>ta withont the buildings stand: Ohii\nver $3.000 000; Wood, over $900,00(\nerkeley, over $200,000; Kanawna, $000\nX), and Harrison, over $300,000.\nThese tables might be f illowed with h\ntreat in many different ways, whic\nould extend thia paper too \nThere is another point, howeverr,\nery peculiar interest, to which attentlo\ndirected befjrn closing this article,\nhich we refer briefly, ar.d that is the t<\nil taxes paid by each county, and hei\nie disparity is very marked in compar\n>n with their valuations.\nOhio heads the list, as it should, payin\nixes for all purposes, State, count:\nhont. Ai» amounting to over $80.00\nIsrshall nearly $47,000, Maaon $39 OC\nml a fraction, Kanawha $3'J.(XX), Taylc\nSo 000 anil a fraction, Brovke 133,601\nlarrifon <30,050, Cabell $29,347, Fayetl\n28,163, Berkeley $28,035, Wood $21,22)\nutnam $23,822, Monroe $19,880, Braito\n10 083, K ane $10,269, Lincoln $13,53\nVirt $12 221, lireen brier $11,974, B<\nonr, Summers, Tyler and Upshur a 11\ne over $10,000 each. Calhoun, Gran\nlaocock and Welael between $8,000u\n10,000, and on lower to Welwter $2,510.\nHow mmiy ol three coonlirs have bom\nd debts, la not stated. I know that Ohl\nounty on account of the P., W. A Ky. 1\nL paya $22 500 yearly, and Brooke pa]\nn same account about $8,000.\nFrom these d»ta tho reader can dra\nlis own conclusions.
3182badc45033dd09513da798984de68 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.0589040778793 41.262128 -95.861391 President may, at bis will, imprison a\nomc without law, because he believes\nsaeh imprisonment necessary to the pub-\nhe saiefy, may he not, without law, un­\nder a like pressure, put him to death 1" If\nhe mty suspend one of tbese constitution­\nal provisions, he may suspend two, he\nmay suspend all.\nIf, auder the plea of neoessity, the\nPrasident may suspend those clauses of\ntheCoiiBtitution which asaqre to the tit-\nisen* hi* personal rights, so also may bu\nsuspend those claasea which expressly\nluqit bis own power; he mav prolong,\nindefinitely, bis jwn term of ofcer^ on the\npreteoae taat tbe imperiled condition of\ntoe country forbids tqo excitement of an'\nelection or a change of executive officers,\nor that he should submit to impeachment.\nHe may saspend the provision that "for\nany speveb made either House ©embers\nshall not be questioned in any other\npiace;" or that Representatives shall bo\netecteu every two years; or tbat ail leg­\nislative powers shall be vested m Con­\ngress. If be may suspend any clause of\nthe Constitution, or any righs secured by\nit, a fortiori may he suspend the laws of\nCongress, and the rights and remedies\nprescribed, tbe powers granted, or tbe\nduties enjoined br them.\nAnd thus, according to this new theory,\nthe President may supersede entirely the\nConstitution and "the laws; set asjde every\nguarantee of liberty; disregard every\n[imitation upon his own power; abolish\nall the civil institutions cf the land, and\nsubstitute for tbetn his own undisputed\nwill ; he may displace the govemmwoi,\nwhich he has sworn ui preserve, and which\nwe ha\\ e been aeoobtot&ed to beii«ve, and
080440b4cd8c1ffdf0d71dfcb742a88c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.2424657217148 42.217817 -85.891125 during the present year filed with the in-\nsurance department their annual statement\nas required by law; and\nWiiniiEAs.'lt is believed that much evil\nand great loss has been brought upon the\npeople of this Stato by reason of the fail-\nure of such corporations, aud it is believed\nthat tr.ive frauds and crimen havo been\ncommitted by coq orations organized un-\nder the provisions of chapter No. Ml of the\ncompiled laws of 1N71, and by individuals\nconnected therewith; ami\nWm.ni'As, It is claimed that existing\nstatues are wholly inadequate for the de-\ntection and Hippressiun of such frauds and\ncrime; theiefore\nJivtiolrcd by the House of JicprcHrntntivcH\n(tho Senate concurring). That a special\ncommittee, consisting of three members\nfrom the House and two from tho Senate,\nbe appointed, to be known as a \nof investigation, with power to send for\npersons aud papers, t subpu na and com-\npel the attendance of witnesses, to admin-\nister oaths, and to employ a stenographer.\nSuch ecftnraittee may, in their discrtttou,\nvisit tho offices of any or all corporations\norganized under the provisions or chapter\nUl of the compiled laws of 1871, and acts\nsupplemental and amendatory thereto, now\ndoing buMusB within this State, and shall\nhave access to tLe books, files, records, and\npapers relating iu any way to the busiuvss\nof such corporations, and make a report of\ntheir doings to the Senate and House of\nEepreseutatives, with their recommenda-\ntions, on or before May 1.1, 1887.\nItrsolvnl, fuithi r. That the provisions of\nthe foregoing resolutions shall apply to nil\nlife inurance companies doing business in\nthis State.
016282c54a3999a61239d80734e3a6cf OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.89999996829 39.513775 -121.556359 rliedldiseases he g mrantees h cur.i in a few days,\nwltho a inconvenience to the patient or himlmncr to\nhis business. v\\ lien a patient, In re g erl ot Improp-\ner treatment. Ims deteloped the secondary symp.oms\n(if Syphilis, such as li'iboes i r painful swilling' on\nthe Lroiiis, ot nh i rs In the throat and nose. » hich if\nto t checked, destroy tin1 roll parts and enure ihe\n(Mined to mortify sepnrnte and come nw ay. leaving\nIhednlTerer an oljicl hideous to behold: or whi n\nblotches Mild pimples lire.' k out Upon till- el; j11 or\nwhen he has paintul swellings upon the horn s, or\nwhen his constitution Is injur" <1 ro ae In prenispos\nto ciinsniiipthui or other consillotional direasi s, the\nDoctor iruniiintefs i. cure • r a -Its no compensation.\nIn ItllKl M I ISM. chronla or :in IIV.-F N -\nIIKV or 11\\ Alt It HOP A. I" Inis «.ile and elfect i e\nremedies. I'< r the trentineiil el Hie cimseipninces , I\ns- li alinse. inch a* nocturnal emissions, nervousne -s\nllltlidilv, le adaclie. pail •in l! e illicit mi l Imih.. w Hit\ngeneral w enl. ne>.s . loss l memory. iniury to the\nrestlessness, confusion of i-lear, dislike fersociei,.\nand a leebmr ol weiirun -s i.t lib-; with the t itoho\nS\\stem s i excitable that r ight lioi«es shock or - lin" h\ntl.e put bn I. milk* lig his ex i'T 'i.c-' miserable. lori bo\nabove maladies the Doctor w ill guranlee a cur- o-\nisk no compensation. 1 e can lie fon-nle.i In I\ncharge, aid llrvlti all to cal!; a i! wl l co-t tin in no\ntliinif, I'inl may he noicb to llieir advanta.e
1a85e45c3677b363171464a87eb435e7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.30464477712 42.217817 -85.891125 Matthew & llutchiii.\nCHANCERY SAIii:.\nState of Michigan, Ninth Judicial Circuit, in\nChancery. Suit pending in the Circuit Court\nfor the County of Van Buren, in Chancery, at\nPaw Paw. on the 11th day of April, A. 1). 1876.\nHarriet Curtis, complainant, vs. Solomon Cur-ti- t ,\ndefendant. It satisfactorily appearing to\nme. Oran W. Rowland, one of tbe Circuit Court\nCommissioners of said County of Van Buren,\nthat the above named defendant, Solomon Cur-ti- e ,\nis a resident of this State, but is now absent\nfrom his place of residence in said County, and\nis concealed within said State ; on motion of\nUeckert & Ililton, solicitors for the above\nnamed complainant, it is ordered that the said\ndefendant Solonon Curtis, cause his appearance\nin this cauno to be entered within three months\nfrom the date of this order ; and in case of\nbis appearance he cause his answer to tbo com-\nplainant's bill to be tiled and a copy thereof to\nbe served on tue complainant s solicitors within\ntwenty days after service of a copy of said bill\nupon said defendant ; and iu default thereof\nthat the said Liu be taken as confessed by the\nsaid defendant Solomon Curtis. And it is\nfurther ordered tbat within ten days the said\ncomplainant cause a notice of this order to be\npublished in the Trce Nohthehser, a newspa-\nper published and circulating in said Countv.\nand that the said publication be continued in\nsaid paper at least once in each week for six\nsuccessive weeks, or tbat she cause a copy of\nthis order to be served personally on the raid\ndefendant at least twenty days before the time\nabove prescribed for his appearance.
f82f6df9fb747efd475a44b31bca9418 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.546575310756 43.798358 -73.087921 must hi the eifd 7 I he church is the salva\ntion of the world. Remove from these\nUnited States for ten vears all the influence\nthe church, and what would be our slate ?\nWhat was the character of France, when\nshe threw off the influende of religion ? The\nstreets were running down with gore ; and\nthe laws that could be made, could not\nreserve the public pcae. So it would be\nere. Remove the influence of religion,\nand it would not be six months before you\nwould see the evil effects. The bonds of\nsociety would be broken, and passion and\ndisorder and crime, would reign triumphant.\nSuppose all prayer to cease, all Bibles to\ntaken away, all Sabbaths disregarded, all\npreaching discontinued. How long would\nbe, before the country would come to ruin?\nHow long before our streets would be stain-\ned with gore, and our villages filled with\ndead men's bones ? Is every minister\ncaned o i, then, bv all his resrard lor joq.\nall his love to his country, by all that\nconcerns the welfare of roan, by all that he\nvalues the influence of the Holy Ghost, to is\ncrv aloud and spare not, when he sees the\nchurch laboring under the guilt of sin ? Yes,\nwo m me, if I preach not the gospel. God\nhas set me as one of his watchmen, and if\ndo not warn the people, their blood will\nbe required at the watchman's hands.\nOnce more : The church is said to be the\nsalt of the earth. But if the salt loses its\npreserving powtr, it is henceforth good for\nnothing but to be cast cut, & trodden under\nfoot of men. May God preserve the church,\nin all her holiness and puritv, as one body,\nas God's house, the temple of the Holy\nGhost, the world's light and the world's\npreserver.
1712254339a65ce80a681dfd4949e247 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.9303278372292 40.063962 -80.720915 "An accumulation of ice in the Ohio\ncompelled the Washington to remiin at\nthe Falls uu il March 12, 1847. On that\nday she commenced Ler recond voyage to\nNew Orlean*. She accomplished»hi- trip,\nreturned to Shipningport, at the foot of the\nFalls, in forty orie days. The ascending\nvoyage waa made in twenty tivedayw, and\nfrom this voyage all historians date the\ncommencement of steam navigation in\nthe Mississippi Valley. It was not prac¬\ntically demonstrated to the satisfaction of\nthe public in general that steamboats\ncould ascend this river in less time than\none-fourth of the time which the bargen\nand keel boats had required for the same\npurpose. This feat of the Washington\nproduced almost as much popular excite¬\nment and exultation in that region as the\nbattle of New Orleans. The citizens of\nLouisville gave a public dinner to Captain\n. Shreve, at wbirh he predicted that the\ntime would come when a trip from New\nOrleans to Louisville would be made in\nton days. Although this may have been\nregarded as a boastful declaration at that\ntime, the prediction has been more than\nfulfilled, for in 1853 the trip was made in\nfour days and nine hour?.\n"After that memorable voyage of the\nWashington all doubts and prejudices in\nreference to steam navigation were re¬\nmoved. Ship yards began to be establish¬\ned in every convenient locality, and the\nbusiness of steamboat building waa vigor*\nously prosecuted. But a new obstacle now\npresented itself, which for a time threat¬\nened to give an effectual to the spirit\nof enterprise and progression which bad\nj-ist been developed. We refer to the\nclaims made by Messrs. Fulton and Liv¬\ningston to the exclusive right of steam\nnavigation on the rivers of the United\nStates. Tnis claim being resisted by Capt.\nShreve, the Washington was attached at\nNew Orleans and taken possession of by\nthe Sheriff. When the case came up lor\nadjudication before the Pietrict Court of\nLouisiana, that tribunal promptly nega¬\ntived the exclusive privileges claimed bv\nLivingston and Fulton, which were decid¬\ned to be unconstitutional.\nThe same book says; "Wheeling, Vir¬\nginia, is situated on the east bank of the\nUhio river, in Ohio county, and on both\naides of Wheeling creek, ninety-two miles\nbelow Pittsburgh, three hundred and\nBixtv-five miles above Cincinnati, three\nhundred and fifty miles northwest of\nRichmond, and about six hundred and\nthirtv feet above the level of the Ees; lat.\n40° 7', or long. 80° 42' W. The site is a\nnarrow alluvial tract, overlooked by pre¬\ncipitous hills, etc. Wheeling became the\ncapital (county seat) of the county in 1879,\nan4 is celebrated as being the site cf Fort\nHenry, which was bcseiged in September,\n1777, by a party of nearly live hundred\nIndians, led on by the notorious Simon\nOerty. It waa manfully defended by only\nforty-two men, of whom twenty-three\nwere killed; and the Indians, after fight¬\ning all day, were compelled to retire, with\na loss of one hundred. In 1802 it contain¬\ned about seventy-five houses; popu¬\nlation in 1820, one
19cbd40b11e418c637fc03d7e28e5a63 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.760273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 In tho Alabama Convention a Mr.\nTowles moved for an ordinance to ex¬\nclude ftftom tho State all free negroes\nwho were not Inhabitants of tho Stato\nprior, to the act of secession, lie s^lu\nhis object was to exclude negroes from\nthe Froedmen's camps in Georgia, who\nwere committing depredations In tlio\nStato. But the proposition met with no\nfavor, and ho withdrew it. When tho\ngeneral question of felavery caino up\nMr. Colemanj lato n eaptain irt tbe rebel\narmy, objected toany action; ho wanted\nto wait for tho decision tho supremo\ncourt as to tho validity of the emanci¬\npation proclamation, and ho believed\nthat all who had remained loyal, and\nnil who had received pardon would bo\nprotected In their right to slavo property.\nBo believed if they gnvo up slavery\nthey would soon bo compelled to admit\ntho negroes to suffrage. Nobody sus¬\ntained the rebel captain in his views,\nand Judge Foster, a prominent member\nof tho* Convention, mndo a eonclnslvo\nreply, in thecours© of whichhe said:\nThe supreme court has a certain pow-,\n and can control Individual causes,\nbut differences between communities,\nsections and hatioris, must bo settled\nby compromise or by tho arbitrament,\nof the sword, and as a proof of this ho\nwould refer to the case of the National\nBank tho Dred Scott case and the Mis¬\nsouri': Compromise. When there urfc\noases or great interest inyolvodbctween\nnations, courts arc of ho account. In\nthis case the sword has been the arbi¬\nter, and ItTJehooves/iis' t6T>oW humbly\nana ackhpwledgo tho fact with atf muoh\ngraoe as possible. Thero is .no appeal.\nThe institution of slavery, .if not the\ncause of secession, has been tho 'victim\nof secession, and for its.fato thore is no\nappeal. Xheissue was slayery.and the\nSouth took it up, and tbanlc God, the\nquestion has been, settled effectually.; .\nThis fact' is manifested , all over -tlie\nland; slavery has'been effectually de¬\nstroyed, Tho citizens of this .State ad-\nmit it by making contracts with their\nformer slaves, or the former slaves of\ntheir neighbors. Many other evidences\nof- its ..ftito are. lis glaring1'as\nthe ribon^day . sun.
14d04ef17fa532734ebceee0fd9ea3f9 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.1051912252074 44.939157 -123.033121 been on the police force for the past\nyear and when tiie council appropriated;\ntWO for a sanitary inspector made ap-\nplication for this position. The council\nfinally ratified the election of Mr.\nStubbs as deputy health officer hut\nplaced him under tho health officer'\nend chief of police jointly and he will\nreport in duplicate and will servo in\nboth departments doing double duty as\na policeman and as sanitary inspector\nand health officer.\nIt was voted to place two arc lights\non the Turner road, one at 21st street\nand one at Turner street. Tho matter\nof the street cars on Summer street was\ndiscussed and Alderman Huberts de-\nclared that the cars did" not start run-\nning in the morning until 7 o'clock\nand that many workmen wiio began\nwork at this hour were unable to use\nthe Summer street line. He thought the\ncars should start at (i o'clock. A com\nmittee was appointed to investigate the\nfranchise of the company to find out\nif tho company is oldiged to start its\ncars at any certain time.\nA committee consisting of the mayor,\ncity engineer, and city attorney will\ninvestigate the Santiam ditch and find\nout if the franchise iias a clause in it\nthat permits high waters overflow\nthe southeastern part ot the city with\nimpunity. The street committee was\ninstructed to sell the old fire apparatus\nnow stored in tho Kith, street fire sta\ntion to make room tor the storage of\ndrain tile. The old hand pumper is but\na heap of junk and it was suggested\ntiiat it be kept as a relic and the steam\nengine aud hose cart sold. Au ordin-\nance was introduced to provide a li-\ncense fee of .tlil each for the merchants\npatrol which is a private institution\nand not under the police department,\nand the matter was referred to the or-\ndinance committee. The petition for\nimproving Washington street was re-\nferred to the street committee.\nThe report of the books of City Re-\ncorder Klgin and City Treasurer' Rice\nmade by W. 1 . Staley, who audited the\naccounts were received and received\nfavorable comment. The report of City\nRecorder Klgin shows the total out-\nstanding on municipal bonds to be\ntill ,0:" tl, on charter act bonds to be\n$.)0.47".SS, ami on Bancroft Act bonds\nto be $45t!,;t7.03. Total outstanding\nwarrants againsc the office in tho gen-\neral funci for the years 1110(1 to 1315, in-\nclusive, are $7,004.17, in tho street tuud\nfor 1SIUS and 191--
1b2bef7b96b2dc722851f08af1828383 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.457650241601 40.063962 -80.720915 tox. (Applause.) His cKil life has been li\na successful one. lie has been theExecu- r\ntive, re-elected, in the State of Pennsyva- s;\nnia. Ilis character is that of a christian 3\ngentleman. He possesses the requisites t!\nfor an Executive officer, and let me say tl\nhere to you that he has a patriotism as tl\nlarge as our land. It wiU cover every ii\ninch of territory in our land. His name a\nis a synonym of honesty. (Cheers.) You\nhavo pronounce«I ln this Convention over\nand over again that Pennsylvania is not a ''\ncertain State, and let me say to delegates rj\nhero that no single mnn on our soil has\nmore to make her a pronounced Repub- C\nlican State than General llartranft. 8\n(Cheers.) His administration has been\neconomical. No word, no charge of "\ncorruption wrs ever uMeted successfully v\nagainst his acts.- is his rule. P\nThat good economy not false. Economy\nthat would send our representatives to 11\nforeign courts in nankeen ( pants and\nstraw hats, but that good, wiso economy ^\nof administration of government that is H\nthe evidence of statesmanship. And I\nsay here, without detaining you fur*\ntlier, that ho is with us and one ?l\nof our chosen leaders. Nay, our 0\nchosen leader. This nomination on the\npart of the Pennsylvania delegation was\nunsought by him. He never sought it:\nit was placed and thrust on him not of\nhis seeking, but the seeking of the Re-\npublican party of Pennsylvania (cheers),\nand wenslc of you here ty take his claims\ninto due consideration, because all know\nthat he is worthy. He wants in nothing E\nto complete a good, available and ruc> e\\\nceflxful candidate of the Kepublican w\nparty. (Checrn.) G
2f30de8414e9a354d257bb3fe2c7cc83 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.541095858701 41.681744 -72.788147 A large amount of routine business,\nncluding the adoption of building\negulation legislation and the pro\nhibiting of parking cars at the north\nend of the west side of Central Park,\nrvas transacted at the regular mcct- -\nng of the Common Council held last\nevening. A report from the commit-:e- e\non renting conditions was heard.\nThe special assessor, hired by the\ncity, from out of town to take up the\nmatter of property assessments and\nIthe adjustment of the present figures\ns evidently proving more and more\nbf an added expense to the city.be- -\nfyond that which was originally con- -\njtemplated. A request for two more\nHjlerks whose salary should be $1,500\nla year apiece was granted by the\nIcouncil. The assessor, who was hired\nat a stated price ($4,000 a year) and\nwho was two clerks at once\nseems to. be unable to fulfill - the\nearlier expectations of results from\nhimself and therelpers. Three thou\nsand dollars, the added expense, is\nnot much but the four thousand paid\nthe expert, three thousand paid two\nof his helpers, and now three thou-\nsand more is obviously ten thousand\ndollars for the assessing job, provid\ned it takes a year fro complete it. The\nsum' is running into respectable fig\nures for the job and there is no in\ndication that there will not be still\nmore men required. Thus the city's\nexpenditures are added to, little by\nlittle, unnecessarily. The assessor is\ngetting a fair salary for doing his\nwork, let him do it. The ten thou\nsand dollars paid for the extra work\nis in addition to the salaries of the\nregular board.
12a00ce8afa9276da23076b641c4987a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1886.8616438039066 39.743941 -84.63662 Some five years ago a barber accidentally\ncut my lower lip while shaving me. The\nwas very slight and for some time hardly gave\nit a passing tnougnt. finally it assumed\ncondition of a wart, which refused to heal en\ntirely witn all my etlorts iu tbat direction.\nof went to one of the leading physicians in Phil\nadelphia, who treated me three months\ncancer, and sent me home cured, as be said\nBut I was apprehensive. I was told by\nprominent physician of Wilmington that\nwould surely die of cancer. 'About this time\nI heard of the wonderful cures effected by\nSwift's Specific, known as S. S. S. I was\nsuffering with perfect nervous prostration.\nAtter I had given S. S. S . a fair trial this all\ndisanneared. and I felt like myself again.\nI continued to take the Swift's Specific med-\nicine regularly for several months, and before\n could realize bow it came abou t, I was\nnew man again. In fact I was. cured never\nfelt better in my life, and from that time up\nto the present I have never felt tbe least evi\ndence ot a return ot my old trouble. Tne can-\ncer disappeared over a year ago, but I re-\nfrained from making the cure public before\nof tbis, as I wished to be certain that I was\ncured. My condition is perfectly normal;\nhave none of those annoying symptoms which\nfollowed every other treatment used. I hon\nestly believe ihat 1 have been cured of one of\nthe worst afflictions that can be visited upon\nthe human family, and by the medicine known\nasS.S.S. Ido notwish mynameto ap-\npear in this connection, for business reasons\nonly, but you are at liberty to give my name\nand address to any fell ow-s uff ere - r,
9dfd3540adb89d3fb8eef50020b7fedb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.7958903792492 41.681744 -72.788147 New Haven, Oct. 17 . Tale's line\nup- - in the West Point game will re\nmain undecided till later in the week,\naccording to a statement given out\nby the football association last night.\nThis statement calls attention 'to the\nnumerous minor injuries and illnesses\nwhich haVe taken leading candidates\nfrom the field and which have led to\nthe decision, not" to start any player\nwho has not fully recovered.\nThe statement follows:\n"Whether O'Hearn will start the\ngame against the Army is a question.\nIt is known that Head Coach Jones\nand Trainer John Mack will start no\nmen against the Army who are not\nin excellent physical condition. This\napplies to O'Hearn, who has been com\ning on well, but "who has not complet e-\nly recovered' from the attack of hay\nfever which kept him away from the\nfield the first weeks of practice. It also\napplies Harry Cross, the big 215- -\npound guard and to Al Norris, a\npromising candidate for center, who\nplayed on the Freshman team last\nyear. While these men on paper might\nbe first string men, it is nevertheless\nnecessary, in' the opinion of the\ncoaches, for them to be in first-cla- ss\nshape, and to demonstrate their su-\nper! ortyover, for instance, Becket at\nquarter, Landis at center and either\nCruiksTcank or Gurnsey at guard. Yale\nhas not aimed at the army game but\nat Princeton and Harvard, and the\nArmy, while important, from a specta-\ncular standpoint, is looked upon as\nany other early season game.\n"So the week of preparation for the\nArmy game starts out with the lineup\nof the Yale team in no way settled\nlargely because of minor injuries and\n'llnesses which have kept some of the\nmen from developing along,, with the\nprogress of the season."
0e866592098e1b3060ff9f967eae9c72 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.215068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 ioeludliui the town of Gladearilla, and eight bun-\ndred and Ally acrea of coal and iron la ode annexed\nthereto. The dtecriiiiioB and boundariee theiecf\ncan be fully known bj reference to tba following\ndeed* conveying the aald lind to George Hardman,\nail of vhioh are recorded In the office of the Ork\nof the County Court of f-reeton county, Weat Vir¬\nginia, to*wit: A deed for two tract* of land, one\ncontaining 288)f acrea, the other 92acnaand two\npolea, from O. A . and Agnes Idelberg to aald\nGeorge Hardman and Mary fi. Mlllner. dated May\n10th, 1870. and recorded In Deed Book No. 10, pages\nM-V, a deed for n&>; air a from W. H. Hddel-\nbent to aald Bardman, dated May 27tb, 1874, and\nrecorded lo Deed hook No. 40, pege 267; a deed\nfrntn Harmon and Martha A. Tricket to toe aald\nUardman and Mary K. Mitlner for two tracts of\nland, both containing 02U acrea, dated June 10th,\n1870, and recorded In Deed Book No. 83, ui|ee\n9 -4, and deed from John B. hberrard and otters\nto aald Hardman, dated Maj 18th. 1872, and re-\nrordtd In Deed Book No. 41, pagea 2 and Sj a died\nfrom Marcarat, George B., Jarnea V., Julia A. and\nbarab E. Jackaon to aald (W^e Hardman for one\nacre. d«ted March 16th, 1872 and reoorded In Deed\nBook No. 85, page* 484-8; a deed from Wm, B. and\nC. Brown to aald Hardman lor two acrea and 21\nperches, dated March 27th, 18/4, and recorded In\nDeed Book No. 41, 4 and 5: a deed from\n(yrua and Nancy J. Linton to aid bardman tut\n12 acrea and perches, dated June 17th, 1874,\nand recorded in Deed Book No. 41, page* 16 and 10;\na d'Cd from Bucknerand Belecca F.irbx toe 11\nBardman for ISO acrea, dated August iwth, >872,\nand recorded in Deed Book No. 41, paiea 20 and - .!;\nand a deed from John K. and Marj-E. MUlner i*\nthe aald Hardman for four tracU of land, argre\ngating 888 acrea, dated March 18th, 1874. and rr-\ncorded in Deed Book No. 41, pagea 22, 8 and 4.\nThe whole containing In the aggre«ate at leaat 850\naqea, with all the Improvements and apparte-\nnances thereto In any wlaa belonging, Including\nthe luinace and fixtures, and being the aame prop*\nerry conveyed to Thomas Y. Canby and George H.\nMiller, trtuteea, for ibe aald George Hardman and\nwife, by mortgage deed dated November tat, 1874,\nand recorded in Book No. 89, pagee 90 and St, In\nthe office of a id Couoty Clerk of aald Preatoa\najunty#«itiir the .ma property conveyed to the\n. aid Abncr Kvsna, Jr, by Hannibal Forbea. Spo-\ndal Commissioner, and deal la of record among the\nland reeorda of Preatoa county, Weat Virginia.\nTims or Bar.a .Ore-third of the purchase\nmoney, oreucb greater amount thereof aa the pur-\nchaear may elect to pay, caah in hand, the r.aidue\n10 two iqual yearly payments, with lntereit from\nday of aUe, and the deferred payment! to be ae*\ncured by deed of trust on the property add.
06e03c6996583146c4661692e2405df1 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.223287639523 46.187885 -123.831256 The formation is mostly"an unstrati-fie- d\nsandstone, rotten, and not very\nhard, with occasional strata of shale.\nThe same may be seen on Young's\nriver, near the old mill. It is destitute\nof fossils, so far as I have been able\nto discover, which is somewhat singu-\nlar, as it must have been deposited\nwhen lire was very abundant on the\nearth. It belongs either to the cre-\ntaceous or lower tertian'.\nIt is a granite sand containing a\ngood deal of clay, so much so that\nsome of it is almost plastic when\nworked between the fingers. The first\n25 feet of the boring was dug. At\nthat depth they came suddenly upon\na strong body of water which shot\nsome feet above the ground when their\ntools were removed, and has continued\nflowing ever since out of the top. The\n is strongly impregnated with\niron. At various depths small seams\nof coal have been struck, and they are\nnow almost constantly striking these\nsmall seams. At a depth of 100 feet\noil was struck, and they say that now\npockets are being tapped as they go\ndown. There can be no question as\nto its being oiL 1 watched the hole\nand saw the small drops of oil come\nto tho surface and spread out in pre-\ncisely the same way that any oil would.\nWhatkind ofoilit isIamnotpre-\npared to say but am inclined to the\nopinion that it belongs to tho petrol-\neum family. The prospects for coal oil\nand gas are I think good.\nThey will do well if they strike\ncoal under GOO feet I do not think\nthey will get any coal to speak of in\nthepresent formation.
0a516a0f2419a3ead3fc73ecb65159cf PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.505479420345 40.441694 -79.990086 greenhorn can learn to ride in a minute and\nthen write his name in the dust with it in 15\nfeet of spaco, not to mention a speed\ncapacity of two miles in 60 seconds on a good\ntrack, is the astonishing invention which\nVictor Berangor, of Worcester, editor of Ze\nCourricr de irorccster.claims to have produced\nafter two years of hard work.\nLast week, he says, his brother in Montreal\nrode the phenomenon 73 miles in one hour\non an ordinary highway, and that was at the\nrate of much more than a mile a minute.\nMr. Berangcr himself, on a wager of $1C0,\nwill leave Worcester sorao day next week in\nthe presence ol a number of witnesses, so\nho says, nt the same timo the new "Chicago\nflier" on the Boston and Albany Itailioad\nleaves for Boston, he promises to arrive\nat the Hub at least 15 minutes before the ex-\npress train leaches there, notwithstanding"\nthat ho will have to travel 61 miles by high-\nway as against U by rail. If he does it, in\nthe face of tho fact that tho highway be-\ntween Worcester and Boston is in no way\npiepared lor such a lightning trip, " Mon-\nsieur" will have furnished the world tho\nbiggest sensation possiblo short of an actual\nflying machine. 3Ir. Berangor may be an\nenthusiast, but be has made applications for\npatents in fivo countries, una his patent in\nthis country is already assured. Tho new\ncycle will certainly make the fur fly in\n"uiko" circles if it goes, lor it will bo sold for\n$70, and its weight will bo about 15 pounds\nless than the ordinary "safety."
62be6ae80fb85f2babdffa63287ad062 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.8808218860984 41.681744 -72.788147 pany that is building thc new bridge\nand for the second time within the\nmonth, the labors of two weeks was\nswept away by the waters, the ram\nlast night caused the brook to rise\nrapidly and It was not long before'\ntho recent work of the company was\nundone. Although me storm oi last\nnight was not as bad as that of two\nweeks ago, the damage was fully na\nlarge, Largo excavations had be -'i -\nmade and numerous boards put up\nwith the Intention of laying cement\nto make a foundation for the sup-\nports of the bridge. All that, remain-\ned of this labor was a few boards\nthat were floating around on tho\nsurface of the brook. The tempor-\nary bridge was above the water only\nabout three Inches. After the first\nstorm It took nearly a week to pump\n drain tho water away so that\nIhe work could be started again and\nthe same proposition faces the con-\ncern this time. The excavations are\nabout 10 feet wide and 30 feet deep.\nIt is necessary to dig outlets on the\nsldo of Ihe brook and this requires\npractically a.s much labor as build-\ning the excavations themselves. It\nis impossible to direct the path of\nihe brook in any other direction.\nThe proposition of erecting the\nbridge during the winter months\nseem to bo a difficult undertaking.\nKirm ground is needed to erect the\nsuports and, until this part of the\njob is completed, thc bridge itself\ncannot bo constructed. The new\nhighway has been opened for traffic\nbut It is necessary to have two men\nat. the bridge, to direct traffic. The\ncoming of winter makes the propo-\nsition a serious one.
48889d87fe4065fdf1af5e567f6ee3c5 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.0232240120927 41.004121 -76.453816 wick, corner Third avenue and Warren\nstreet, bounded on north by S. B . & B.\nR. R., east by Warren street, south bv\nThh-- avenne, west by land of Berwick\nLnnd Improvement Co.\n91 S. D. Rimby, residence Madison\ntownship. Hotel, situate in the village\nof Jcrseytown, bounded north by E. F .\nJohnson, east by public road leading to\nMillville, south by public road leading to\nWhite Hall nnd west by Geo. S . Lee.\n92 Daniel Roach, residence Conyng-\nham township. Hotel, situate nt Aristes\nin said township, on the road leading\nfrom Numedia to Ashland nnd adjoining\nInnds of James Kostenbauder and the\nLehigh Coal Company, nnd known as\nthe Mountain Hotel.\n93 George W. Remlcy, residence Light\nStreet. Hotel, situate in the village of\nLight Street, hounded north by public\nroad, cast by I. D. Hageiibnch, south\n Peter Zeigler, west by public road\nleading from Light Street to Bloomsbnrg.\n94 Monroe R,'ippe,"residcncc Catawissa\nborough. Dottier, situate on Mill street\nin said liorough, bounded north by Mrs.\nHenry Shane, east by an alley, west by\nMary Walter.\n95 C. H. Reice, residence Orangcville.\nHotel, situate in Orangcville at the cor-\nner of Main and Pine St. in said Boro.,\nliounded eastwardly by an alley, south-\nwardly by Tine St., westwardly by Main\nSt. and northwardly by Main St., and\nknown ns "Orangcville Hotel."\n!IH d. K. Sponetibi'rg, residence Went\nBerwick. Hotel, situate in the thro-\nugh of West Berwick, bounded north\nbv lot of Wesley Pettit, east by Mil\nnfloy, south by lot ol'.M. Levy, west by\nLa Salle street and being known and\nnumbered nH No. 632 La Mnlle street in\nthe borough of West Berwick.\n!" Stegmnier Brewing Co.,
2068315eadee9b93bafe5dfc4c6a8056 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.4658469629123 39.756121 -99.323985 They went in for Maximillian in Mex-\nico, and when Otho was turned out of\nGreece began to look around for another\nPrince to raise to the throne from which\nhe had fallen. It was imagined that the\nBritish colonies were future kingdoms\nfor children of the Queen, and I was con-\nstantly asked by letter, and verbally by\nEnglishmen not only of high position\nbut of more than average intellect,\nwhether it would not be better for the\nSouth to have a monarch than a Presi-\ndent. I humored this idea or fancy, and\nsaid on many occasions to persons whom\nI thought would advantageously echo\nmy words, that the best thing that could\nhappen the Southerns would be for\nQueen Victoria to make them a present\nof her second son and place her third\nson over Canada. This produced an ef-\nfect in certain clubs as I had intended.\nThe Duke of Argyll was strongly of the\nopinion that there be monarchial\ngovernments all over America before tbe\nend of the century."\nI asked whether the Queen "bit" at\nthis. Mr. Benjamin thought she was\ngratified at what he had said. But she\nnever gave him any direct or other inti-\nmation to that effect.\nOn this occasion I asked Mr. Benja-\nmin what his relations with the British\nMinister at Washington, Lord Lyons,\nwere. He said that his lordship resided\na few doors off and that he often enter-\ntained him at dinner at his house when\na member of the Senate. But, owing to,\nhe did not know what reason, a coolness\nwas suddenly shown by Lord Lyons, and\nbefore the storm burstit was quite mark-\ned. Lord Lyons since Mr. Benjamin\ncame to reside in Paris stood aloof from\nhim, and when he was practising at the\nEnglish bar did not take the slightest\nnotice of Mrs. Benjamin, who not speak-\ning English, lived in Paris. Mr. Benja
356eea30bfcede71e7c67127fc14bc09 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.8671232559614 44.939157 -123.033121 Tho question arises, Why should not\nthe Lord grant to us and to all man-\nkind an easier trial than is ours? Why\nshould there be a fallen disposition to\nfight against? Why should it not be\nas easy, or more easy, to do right than\nto do wrong? Why should we not\nhave flesh which should have a good\ncraving merely, and not an evil crav-\ning? And if we must have an evil\ncraving, why are we not at least re-\nlieved of the outward temptations\nwhich excite these evil cravings 7\ntemptations from the world about us,\ninciting to evil rather than to good;\nand, according to the Scriptures and\nour experiences, temptations also from\nSatan himself, and from the fallen an-\ngels, who continually endeavor to in-\ntrude upon us,, to incite us to anger,\nmalice, hatred, strife and the various\nworks of the flesh and the devil?\nThese questions are not unreason-\nable, and God acknowledges this when\nhe shows us that just such favorable\n as these questions suggest\nwill bo provided for the world of man-\nkind during the Millennium. Satan\nand the ovll angels under his captain-\ncy will be restrained nccordlng to the\nBible and not bo permitted to molest\nmankind in evil promptings and sug-\ngestions. We read that Satan shall be\nbound for a thousand years that ho\nmay deceive tho people no more until\ntho thousand years be finished (Rev-\nelations xx, 2). Relief is also promised\nfrom tho Injurious conduct of others,\nIn that wo nro assured that during the\nMillennium nothing shall hurt or de-\nstroy throughout God's holy Kingdom.\nIn that blessed time every evil deed\nwill bo restrained that it may not ac-\ncomplish Injury to another, while even\ntho effort to commit sin will bo\npromptly punished with "stripes:" not\nan immoderate, not an unjust tortur-\ning for centuries for finlto sins, but,\nas the Scriptures declare, a Just recom-\npense of reward will be given both to\nthe just and to the unjust.
096f0202e367b08c1811390b4c8dc1ea THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 The bodiea of about five thousand tl\nUnion soldiers are here interred. The ol\ncemetery is surrounded by a solidstone fr\nwail about five feet high ou the inside, S\nbut varying iu height on the outside It\nIrom the latter elevation to ten and 111- n:\nteen feet, on account of the unevenness 11\nof the Burrounding country. In the ti\nlront for over six hundred feet extends ei\nimn imllno* fpnce. with a beautiful ol\nornamental gateway also of iron, about\ntwenty-five feet in width. ei\nStanding in the midst of the cemetery tr\nthe fading rays' of -the descending In\nsun shed his dying glories over the tl\nsolemn place, lighting up in the dim a\ndistance the far away South Mountain, h\nwhere Lee received his first check in the hi\ninvasion of Maryland, causing him to ei\nretreat and fall back the Antlotam n:\nand make his final and unsuccessful fe\nstand, and halloaed also as the spot ti\nwhere the gallant Keno rendered up hiB\nlife as a sacrifice to his country. D\nIts mellow colors also painted in jo\nvivid hues the continuous chain of the ,L\nMaryland Heights, memorable as being\nthe rendezvous of Old John Brown, o:\nwhen making his preparations for his\nraid on Harper's Ferry. e|\nThe following day I was ofl' in the ti\nearly morning for liagerstown distant n\nthirteen miles by rail from Keedysville. &\nMuch amusement was furnished the te\npassengers in our car by the free and\neasy conduct of a couple who were on n\ntheir way to Hagerstown to be spliced, a\nand who had chosen this early hoar to "i\nconsummate their betrothal. With ten- P\nder and touching affection the enrap-
0d8feaf697bb249e864e9581a06451a3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.9520547628108 39.261561 -121.016059 Haring for the last THIRTY YEARS practiced my pro\nfeseion, and the last TEN in this State, I have consented\nto advertise, to the people of California, my name and\naddress, in order to inform them where they can find a\nRegular Graduate of Medicine in whom they can put the\nfullest confidence, in the treatment of all Private and\nChronic Diseases, such as Epilepsy, Apoplexy. Rush of\nblood to the head, Iiufiamationof its differenttissues, par-\ntial and complete paralysis and insanity, and all func-\ntional derangements, such as loss of memory, aversion to\nsociety, misanthropy, timidity, nervousness from slight\ncauses, selfflstrust. giddiness, headache, ringing in the\nears, confusion of ideas, love of solitude, optical illusions,\ndisturbed «leep and incapacity for labor and study. Also\nin desea »J the lungs and air passages, such as tuber-\ncular diseases, or consumption, pneumonia, or inflamation\nof the lungs, pleurles, or pleurisy, asthma, humoral or\nspasmodic, bronchitis, larinitis, and all forms of catarrhal\naffections. Also diseases of the liver, such as hepatis. or\ninflamation of the liver, abscesses of the liver, calculi in\nthe bladder and ducts, jaundice, and those diseases which\nimpede its functions, such as Panama billious and\nintermittent fevers and the consequences which these dis-\norders leave behind them.\nAlso diseases of the stomach, such as gastritis, or in-\nflamation of the stomach, enterities or inflamation of the\nbowels, dyspepsia in all its forms, which destroy appetite\nand digestion, flntylence, dysentery and diarrhoea. Also\ndiseases of the kidneys annd other urinary organs, such\nas diabetes, or an excessive flow of urine, albuineniaria,\ncommonly known as Brights disease. In this complaint\nphysician or patient oftentimes suspect the presence of\ndiseases until too late. I he most common symptoms are\ngeneral indisposition with dropsical swelling, calculi in\nthe kidneys, urethra or bladder, enuresis or inability to\nretain the urine, cystitis or inflamation of the bladder,\nand all other disorders of the urinary organs. Also di-\nseases of the womb and its appendages, such as irregular-\nity of the MK.Nf -.B H. when excessive, defective, suppressed\nor irregular, prolapsus or falling of the womb, sterility,\noverean dropsy, and other diseases of the parts. In the\ntreatment ofany of the above diseases, the doctor has\nmany new remedies and guarantees and a perfect cure in\nall eases, or the money will be returned.
222a5cacb80cc3ceb5053ff0f7ef835a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.2452054477424 40.063962 -80.720915 by Jolui W. (Mil and wife and Uourga Iiard*\nuan and wife to John N. Zinutar, thence to and\nrith tho lino ofMid Zliamer's lot, south 30yt* weat\n0 |toll* to the south sldo of Webster street; thonco\nrith tho side of Wohster street south east id\nMilut to the east aide of Hlghslesstt thenou with\nho oust sldo of High street south 20' weat 10 poles\no tho Huldiard road; thonco by said road north 86°\nnut 17 polos; south fl#k8 oast 28 polos; south «!-«"\nml H'.j |m>1os; south 87)4° out 78 poles; south 81°\nost 9)ipolos; south 82%* out 6 polos; north Uv east\n3>j polus; south iMK'nut 12 poles; suutb 83^u oast\npolus to tho liuo of tho Hlngloton tract; thence\nnth said liuo south 17,Voastil polos; north 07%'\nust 81 poles; north 40' west 08 poles to coutruof\niVheoling t.'ruuk, and thenco down the centra of\nid croek south 70* west 88 |»los; south 60* west 82\nK»li*»; north 78* west IBpolus; north60" west 14|>oles\no tho beginning: on which tract Is oracled tho iron\nnlll and establishment known ai tho Crescent Iron\nYorks, togother with all and slugulor tho buildings,\nIxturos, englnca, machinery, rolls, lathis, tools,\nuiploiiionta and equipments iwrtnlnlug, or lu nuy\nrise belonging to tho said Iron Works.\nAud also all tho coal or other mlnorals and\nulnlug privileges of, or liolonglng to thu\nuld jmrty of tho llrst iwrt In or under tho hill south\nif Whittling Crook, culled Chapllne's Hill, being\nho coal and other inluoruls und prlvllegusof mining\nho aauio from tho tract horelnlWoro described.\nAud also from a tract adjoining the same and\nfounded as follows, to-wlt: beginning at tho
13fb9a108d79e456349c9a208ec03fbf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.691780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 chine, constructed simply for the purpose\nof aceumulatlnic, money; or tho arts by\nwhich a man of Tact endeavors to inatill in\ninto the minds of his masculine awoci- afl\nates the idea that his wife Is not the stupid yoi\ndowdy she appears to be. Howunllinch- all\ningly they debar themselves from the hoi\naweet triumphs of uttering driginal bon< tra\nmots, and bring forward all their Intel- am\nlectual scintillations as quotations from am\nthe table-talk of their epouaea* With iti\nwhat a charming air ol slnceritv does the coi\nsocial diplomatist present to his hostess aw\ntho regrets othis "toodomestlo" wifo, liv\nand, while his eyes rest in delightful ad- rea\nmiration on exquisite toilettes, and his aisi\nears drink in gracelul compliments paid no'\nin sweetly modulated tones, memory per- to\ntinsflously recalls the picture of a disor- ho\ndcred room, and a woman who, with Ize\nsoiled wrapper, ahabby slippers, and on- <?ei\nkempl.hair, loongtJ in her rocking chair the\nreading a novel, and turned sullenly away\nfrom his parting caress. Even while he ue\nis to his fair companion tho wit- ty\nty speech his wilo made last evening, he if,'.\nIs carrying on a bitter eelf-communing. nj,\n"Good Heavens!" >1)0 rsges Internally,\n"what is mue woman waniBr uoessue ha\nthink I will neglect a dinner invitation on\nIrom Mrs. Upper Tendom to stay at home ml\nwith her in that tossed up room, to crunch w(\nchocolate-caramels and read 'Bed as a ti\nBoso la She?'" But it ia an idle query. no\nHis "too-domestic" wife, aa he apologetl- 9l,\ncally terms her, does not know herself 0n\nwhat aho wants. She ia simply too iudo- Wl\nlent to make a carelnl toilet and ko into ca\nsociety, and too selfish to wish her bus- t>e\nband to go wlthont her. Wl\nIt ia a popular fallacy that one who to\ntries to make everything pleasant lor 0li\neverybody must needs be Insincero. It is hii\nonly persons of unpleasant temper wbo ]»|\nbelieve that to be agreeable requires dls- h,\naimulatlon. "When you enter mr pres- 8h\nence." said a lovely character, "I study ^\nhowIcanwl
b1e13d64fe58f985445bf248f2f9a571 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.4808218860985 41.681744 -72.788147 "July 4, 3 S3u. was a great event\nfor East Berlin. There was a great\ndeal of talent In the town and the\ntownsmen got together and put on a\ntegular wild west, Indian celebra-\ntion. The grove made an Ideal set-\nting for such an event. As the Epis\ncopal church was not built then, that\nwas all wood too. They built a cabin\nin the center and had white people\nliving there. Then they hud Indians\ncome out of the woods and attack\nthem, burning their rahin to the\nground, after which the Indians had\nto be driven back again. This event\nnearly procd fatal, w hen one of the\nactors came within a hair's breadth\nof getting killed. At night they had\na wonderful display of fireworks in\nthe open lot in back of the store.\n"A little might be said of peo-\nple of East Berlin at that time. They\nwere very much like they are today,\nonly they were of greater eMremes.\nThere were all types of people.where.\nas today they are more of th? tame\nc;a?. They were divided Into six\ngroups. First, a few of the native\nsettlers. R . O. Clark being one of\nthese. It was understood among the\nptople that anyone who couldn't get\na job in the Bridge Shop or any\nwhere else might go to ft. O. Clark\nand he would give them a job. The\nfto other groups were as follows:\nthe office force, foremen, mechanics,\ncommon laborers and last but not\nleast tho tramps. It Is said that there\nIsn't one tramp In the country today\nwho can't aajr that he hasn't work-\ned at least one week in the Bridge\nShop of East Berlin."
11d614f24727eddf9f0dde7560086d82 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.8428961432403 46.187885 -123.831256 needed to build up a model domestic\ncharacter could only be met and\nborne as long as there was a living\napprecatiou of the person.il laws of\nduty that underlio all sorts of ideal\nexistence. Tho men who appreciated\nmodel wives and wore in return will-\ning to be model husbands, were so few\nthat the good wives that is, tho\nmodel wives grew discouraged and\ntook to their graves or some more con-\ngenial occupation.\nThe few model wives that aro left\nare cherished by their husbands be-\nyond even their oigara or their horses.\nThe model wife of tho workingmau,\nolerk, or business man has some ap-\npreciation of the ten thousand little\nlabors, petty cares and annoyances\nthat her husband ha3 to go through\neach day in his workshop or office.\nShe considers that such worrying\ncares are a part of the duties by\nwhich her husband makes a living\nfor himself, her and for the chil-\ndren, if there aro any. And when the\nhusbaud comes homo from his work,\ntired, perhaps cross and hungry and\nout of sorts, sho is always ready to\nmeet him with some quiet and gentle\ngood cheer. Her own porson is at-\ntractive and restful to him. She al-\nways has some soheme in mind to\nmake his homo hours delightful to\nhim, and so mako herself indispensa-\nble and a constant joy. The model\nwife does not see how many poor and\nsilly or exacting things she can say\nto her tired husband. If she has any-\nthing to ask she waits until ho is\nrested and fed. She invites pleasant\npeople to her homo, not to show how\nmany rich things she has, but to\nmake her husband's home hours pass\ncheerfully. She knows that if she is\nhalf a woman no other can displace\nher in her husband's affections.
11741f3a9ea902f70da8f814de5b63a9 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.6178081874682 46.187885 -123.831256 as my husband was a poor manager,\nthough he doubtless did as well a3\nhe could. At this time Upton be-\ncame very attentive toward me, but I\nattributed it to a feeling ot kindly\npity that I supposed he felt toward\nme. He was always very good to my\nlittle girl, whose age is now only\nseven years, and seemed to never tire\nof fondling her. I had no idea that\nhe was in love with me, neither did I\ncare for him. Somehow he found\nout that I wauted a different home,\nand one day he broached the snbject\nto me of leaving my husband, and\ngoing to my sister who lives in Texas.\nAt that time I scorned the idea, and\nwould not listen to him, but as time\nwent on, aud the utter hopelessness\nof my situation grew upon me, and\nseeing that my little girl must grow\nup in ignorance rags if T staid\nthere, I agreed to leave and go to my\nsister. 1 had S3G when I left home,\nwhich Sam Upton said would take\nme to Texas. When I gpt to Port-\nland, Upton coming with me, I found\nthat he had shipped my trunk and\nclothing to Seattle. He then per-\nsuaded me to go to Seattle and stop\nwith his sister till he could get mora\nmoney, when he would send me to\nTexas. So I went over, and when I\ngot there he told me that he intend-\ned to kill my little girl to get her out\nof the way, and that if I objected he\nwould kill me. This was the first\nevidence ot violence he ever exhibited\ntoward me. He watched me so close-\nly that I could not turn round with-\nout his seeing me. I managed to\nwrite to my husband, begging\nhim to take
02b2bf0c5e049766a50a91a230d737d1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1857.3082191463725 37.561813 -75.84108 Presently my Lucy came down, a tri-\nfle more carefully dressed than usual,\nand looking all grace and modesty; the\ndog began to howl ai she drew near; she\nsaw him and she saw my clothes, and the\nnotion that I was' drowned (I could see\nit in her expressive countenance,) flash-\ned upon her at once; for one instant she\nlooked as though about to faint, and the\nnext she sped off again to the hotel with\ntb speed of a deer. Gracious Heav-\nens! I decided upon rescuing a portion\nof fny garments, at least, or upon per-is- t\ning in the attempt, and rushed out\nof the thicket for tho purpose; but\nmy courage failed me as I ncared the\nsavage animal, and I found myself (in\nsome confused and palpitating manner)\n in my dry ditch again, with the\nsensation of a loss of blood and pain;\nbut my . treat had not been effected\n(perhaps, because there was nothing to\ncover it) without considerable loss, and\nthe bcat bad bitten me severely. I\nprotest, that from that moment, fright-\nful as my position was, it did not move\nme so much as the reflection of the\nho nors that would be showered down\nupon that vile creature. I knew that he\nwould be considered by Lucy and the\nrest as a sort of dog of "Montargis, an af-\nfectionate and sagacious creature, watch-\ning patiently at his appointed post for\nthe beloved master that would never\nagain return to him.\nPresently, they all came back, Lucy,\nand her mother, and all the maid-s er van -
47aa9c4c26a682df1fa1dff03e2fcd9f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.616120186956 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbo handle Is made of two wrought Iron\nrods and so arranged that whilo It la light, yet\niiss great strength. The cylinder In whlca all tho\n«rork la performed la Iron, lined with copper,the\n»pper lining premtfirujrt and makes but little\nfaction. Thla Iron chamber la not aubmergod,\nbut placed In tho well abovo the water, and yet\nwill work as well under*ap above the water.\n7ih. It can bo need In a driven or bored well\nwith tho same ease as a well of larger diameter.\n8th. For Its general adaptability thla Pump la\nwithout a rival The Pump may be placed at\nfoor dwelling or barn, or within the building,\nand connected with the well, or spring or other\nbody of water, fifty cr one hundred yards distant,\nand will work with the same ease as though\nitending directly over the water.\n It is alnglo acting and pumps only with\nthe down stroke of the t-andle, ana thus avoids\ntho Asowtyl required In the doublsacting Pump.\n10th. by attaching a short hose, * stream may\nbe thrown fifty to sixty feet and may often be\nneed to advantage in watering gardena and lawns,\nwashing windowa, cleaning buggies,extinguishing\nOres, or elevating water. We recognise the\nTact thatltreaniies more power to elevate water\nfrom*deep than from a shallow welL Butaa\nCar as poaslblo to obviate this difficulty for deep\nwells, we manufacture a.smailer chamber, so that\nwhile the volume of water Is diminished, the\npower required is not greatly Increased. We\nclaim that by the tomblnatloa, having all tho\nadvantages of atmospheric pressors in combination\nwitn force, that the bwctaiB Pu*r will\nelevate water from a deep well with less power\nthsn aayjutoura* or purely forct pump In
125eee4dbdb4ef06a75f4194282ac8bc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.7254098044425 41.681744 -72.788147 heavy fog covered the highway and\nit was difficult to see and It was pre-\ncarious driving In the rain. As he\nrounded the curve over Dunham's\nbridge, not being familiar with the\nroad, he saw It branch off and widen\nwhere the gasoline filling station has\nbeen set up. Thinking that the curve\nled around to this and unable to fol-\nlow the road in the tog, he turned\nsharply to the left and was con-\nfronted by two pairs Of headlights\non the oncoming trucks. Reade\nstated that he thought that the\ntrucks were coming on the left side\nof the road and he failed to see that\nhe was on the left side himself. He\nstepped on the gas to avoid a col-\nlision, but before anything could be\ndone, he had driven his automobile\nsquarely into the oncoming truck.\n result being a terrific crash.\nThe touring car driven by Reade\nwas demolished In the front while\nthe truck was badly damaged. both\nin the front where Reade's car hit\nIt and in the rear where the second\ntruck plunged into it. Fruits and\nvegetables were strewn all over the\nroad and it was not ascertained at\nat a late hour if any of the loads of\nperishable goods could be salvaged.\nThe police of Plalnville and South\nlngton were on the scene at an early\nhour, but as the crash happened in\nSouthlngton, Constable Thomas Mur-\nphy of that town started an Investi-\ngation. It is not known if any ar.\nrests will .be made. In foggy weather,\nthe roadway at this point Is always\ncovered with a blanket, of mist more\ndense than at other points along the\nroad.
19ba0cb54fb61585f697851bb883dd07 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.223287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 The inuicationa are that there will not\nbe ao much building done in town tbia\njear ua waa done last. In fact we may\naay, for the preaent demands of trade at\nthia point, there are vnongh buaineaa\nhouses. True many of them could be\ngreatly improved both in appearance and\nin convenience, but the number ia autli-\ncient. As for offices and upper rooma\nthere is a surplus. We do uot mean to\nconvey the impreaaion that business is\ndecreasing, for it is on the increase, but\nsince the erectiou of so many fine, large\nbuildings the town has far greater accom¬\nmodations that ever before.\nLaat Saturday, March 16th, the mu¬\nnicipal election waa held. There were\ntwo ticketa in the Held, one understood to\nbe for and the other against license. The\nresult was a small majority in favor of\nthe anti-liccuae ticket, greatly to the\ngratification the temperance people of\nthe town and community. Many attrib¬\nute the success of the temnerance ticket\nto the address of Mr. Jacob Kern pie, of\nyour city, on the eve of the election. Mr.\nKemple held the attention of a good au¬\ndience for over an hour, and made many\nforcible points which, enlivened by his\nready humor, made the evening one of\npleasure and profit.\nSome of the farmers and cattle mer¬\nchants of thia and adjoining counties are\ninvesting largely in stock this ».pring.\nWithin the last six weeks nearly two\nthousand head of cattle have been un¬\nloaded at thia place, having been purch¬\nased at Chicago and shipped through by\nrail; they are taken ofl, fed and rested\nat Mansfield, Ohio. They wllL be grazed\nhere during the summer and shipped\nEast in the fall. No doubt there ia money\nin this business. C .
0fb4b6ff0437b510d0f93f8f91955b81 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.37397257103 39.756121 -99.323985 regularly culled county convention ol the party\nand it Is recommended that convention for tliu\nelection of delegates to this convention bo held In\nall counties in the statu on the iUlh day of May,\nItj'JI, und that thu primaries for electing delegates\nto said county convention bo held on Tuesduy,\nthoswd duv of May, at such places us may bo\nileNlLMiiitod bv the call lor county convention, It\nis ulso.recuinincndcd that at the county convetlous\nheld for the purposo of electing delogutes to these\nconventions, tho comity central committee for\ncampaign of 18UI bo selected and that said com-\nmittee meet Immediately allot the adjournment\nof said convention, for the purpose of organizing;\nthat tho selection ot th county coinuiilloe bo\nmado tb llrsl ordur of busluuiu in said conven-\ntion after permanent organization. Tho rccru-tar-\nof said county convention will forwurd to the\nstate chairman a list of the delegates uud alter-\nnates together with a list of tho county ccntrul\nconiinitlcu as selected,. Immediately afior the ad-\njournment ot said convention. Ills recommend-\ned that In the selection of delegates to said stuto\nconvention, the several conventions refrain from\nelecting any stale ollicer or slate employee It Is\nfurther recommended thai ull persons. Irrespec-\ntive ot party iilllllatlons, whu believe In\nthe tree and unlimited coinage of silver ut the\nratio of 111 to 1; who bellovo in more money and\nless tuxes; who bellovo In strict economy In gov-\nernment ullis; who believe In a graduated In.\ncome tax; who believe Iu government ownership\nof railroads; who believe In tbo promises mudo by\nthe government to the soldier when ho enlisted\nbo strictly tullilled; who believe that freight and\npassenger rales iu Kansas should bo based on the\nactual cost ot construction and legitimate cost nf\noperating tho railroads, and tnul such rules\nshould bo reduced to correspond with tbo reduc-\ned prices of products of labor; who believo that\ntho wages duo railroad employees should bo a\nllrst lien on ull property of llio rou.l, p lyublo be-\nfore uny oilier claims, whether the road Is operat-\ned by the company 'r by receivers, and that no\nollicer or stockholder of any railroad should bo ap-\npointed receiver thereof, and who believe that the\nlegislation outlinad herein will restore prosperity\nto the country and enable thousand who ure now\ntramping the country In enforced Idleness to se-\ncure prol'tublu einplo) meiit und enjoy the fruits\nthereof, bo invited to participate In the primaries\nand conventions.
0302ab89e5e7d6ca5d51cead19dda721 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.050684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 The Committee of tlie Ohio House of Rep¬\nresentatives on New Counties and Coun¬\nty -Affairs arrived in the city last evening\nin a special car over the B. AO. road, and\nregistered at tbe Stumiu House. The Com¬\nmittee, as has been announced, comes here\nto investigate the question of removing the\ncounty teat of Belmont county "from the\nvillage of tit. Clairsville to the city of Bel-\nlaire," in the language of tbe bill introduced\nby Mr. Wagoner. They will leave for Bel-\nlaire this morning, and after some timespeut\nthere will go up to tit. Clairsville, inspecting\nboth places with a view to their accessibility\nand other recommenuations for the location\nof tbe seat of justice for the connty. .\nThe committee consists of Mr. E . C . Ross,\nof Carroll county, Chairman; Mr. E . P .\n of Meigs, Mr. John Hopkins, of Mar¬\nion, Mr.. W . il. McCullough, of Allen, and\nMr. Osmand Card, of Cuyahoga. Mr. Card\nlives at Cleveland, ami is a cousin of W.\n\\V. Card, Esq. Accompanying the commit¬\ntee on tbe trio are Messra. John F. Locke, of\nLondon, G. 11 . Barker, of Coshocton, C. N .\nVailaudigbaui, of Dayton, F. H . Denbam,\nof Bedford, Cuyahoga county, 1). B . Mc-\nCrory, of Manetieid, Charles Negley, of Darke\ncounty,and David Wagoner, of Belmoutcoun-\nty, the patron of the bill, familiarly known\nat Columbus, from his business interests in\nthis city, as "tho geutleman from West Vir¬\nginia." Thewell known Assistant 8ergeant-\nut-Arms of the House, Col. Fred Bred ISlenk-\nner, baa charge of the party, which is equiva¬\nlent to saying that the members are in good\nhands.
0fccbd99c003586363ebf1c78c2ac9fe THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1892.4357923181037 42.217817 -85.891125 moved Io HoTman's Island, but a large\nnir.nber of passengers wero allowed to\ndepart for their destinations in tl o in-\nterior parts of the country. Thirty of tho\npassengers camo to fifteen points in\nMichigan, having tucceo!od in passing\nquarantine inspection.\nA reassessment of Saginaw will bo\nmade shortly, tho council having made\nan appropriation of $2,000 for that pur-\npose. For many years it has been charged\nthat tho citizen who has tnvestcel his\nsavings in a home worth $'2,000 or under\nis assessed to almost its full valuation,\nwhilo thoso owning $10,000 worth ot\nproperty or upward aro assessed on a\ndownward scale. This virtually means\nthe assessment of tho small property\nowner of much more than his, share. A\nreform in this direction and a more\nequable apportionment of the taxes is\none of the chief results looked for by a\nreassessment of tho entiro city.\nKalamazoo had variablo weather for\nher Memorial Day. Sunshine followed\nby a shower wlfich would have scattered\nan assemblage around an ordinary\nspeaker, but Chief Justico A. 1). Morse\nheld them beneath acres of dripping\numbrellas without a brf ak. The parade\nwas largely an. Impromptu affair, and\nwas much larger than iiual. The exer-\ncises wero held In the collcgo grove,\nwhere tine new Hag was presented to\ntho college by W. E . Wight in behalf of\ntho students, and unfurled amid tho\ncheers of 200 uld veterans and collego\nyells by half as. many students. Chief\nJustice Morse's address was de-\nlivered under great disadvantages,\nyet received with strongest approval.\nHo declared this to bo a country\nwhere anarchy cannot stay, nor foreign\ntyranny destroy her Institutions. This\nis a Government of constitutional liber-\nty and of freedom, where tho rights of\ntho people aro plainly stated and pre-\nserved for all time. No difference in\nmen Is known to tho Constitution.\nCongress shall make no laws respecting\nan establishment of relig"on, or prohib-\niting the free exerciso thereof, or\nabridging freedom of speech or of tho\npress, or the right of people peaceably\nto assemble and to petition tho Govern-\nment for redress of grievances. No legis-\nlature shall pass a law to prevent any\nperson from worshiping Almighty God\naccording to tho dictates of his own con-\nscience, or compel any person to attend\nor support any placo ot religious wor-\nship. No money can bo appropriated\nfor sectarian purposes. Ho sioke of tho\nresults of the lebelllon, and closed with\nllnca which appealed to tho hearts of all\nto forever keep
216aa9ff7af53d0466d6ebd062bb0fbc DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.6188524273932 58.275556 -134.3925 Notice is hereby given, that L. Kane, citi-\neen of the United States, over the acre of\ntwenty-one years, and residing in the Dis¬\ntrict of Alaska, and at Hoonah, Alaska, has\nunder and pursuent to Sees. 12 and 13 of an\nAct of Congress of date March 3rd. 1891, us\namended by Section 10 of an Act of Congress\nof date May 13th, 1898, entitled "An Act ex¬\ntending the homesteud laws and providing\nfor the right of way for railroads in the Dis¬\ntrict of Alasku, and for other purposes," ap¬\nplied to purchase the lands embraced in U.S .\nNon-Mineral Survey No. 6*59, situated on west\nshore of Excursion Inlet, two miles from its\nhead, in the District of Alaska and more par¬\nticularly described as follows, to-wit:\nBeginning at cor. No. 1 M. C . on mean hiifh\nwater mark of west shore of Excursion In¬\nlet, cor. not set; wit. cor. bears west 0.45 chs.;\nU.S.L.M.No. 609bearsN.40 deg.33min. W.\n3.92 chs. dist.; thence west 17.35 chs. to Cor.\nNo. 2, an iron pipe set in ground marked S\n669 Cor. 2; thence north 17.60 to Cor. No.\n3, an iron pipe set in ground marked S 669\nCor. 3; thence east 14.48 chs. to Cor. No. 4 M .\nC.. cor. not set; wit. cor. bears west 1.00 chs.;\na rock set in ground marked S 669 C. 4 W. C.;\nthence meandering mean high tide of Excur¬\nsion Inlet (I) S. 14 deg. 02 min. E. 0 .73 chs.; (2)\nS. 20 deg. 59 min. W. 1.31 chs.; (8) N. 73 deg. 29\nmin. W. 0.87 chs.; (4) S. 1 deg. 52 min. E. 4.28\nchs.; (5) S. 8 deg. 56 min. W. 4.56 chs.; (6) S. 29\ndeg. 35 min. E. ft.70 chs.; (7)S.S8 deg. 43 min.\nE.2.68chs., tocor. No.1 M.C .theplaceof\nbeginning. Area 24.75 acres. Var. at all cor¬\nners 31 deg. 15 min. East.\nAny and all persons claiming adversely any\nportion of said land are required to lile an\nadverse claim with the Register and Re¬\nceiver of the U. S. Land Office at Juneau,\nAlaska, during the period of publication, or\nwithin thirty days thereafter, otherwise\nproof and entry of said land will be made by\nsaid applic&tant.
20ba27ae4e458c84e59b541cca1bd220 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.3849314751394 40.063962 -80.720915 Judge Uarreit then sentenced the pri¬\nsoner nine yeara and ten months In Htat^s\nprison, lie said the prisoner hail been\nconvicted after a fair trial; that he had\nhad every advautaga that a defendant\ncould have, and able counsel, llu bad\nthe servicis of two of the most eminent\nmembers ol the b.ir, one a veteran of the\ncriminal bar, noted for hie p>wer and\nloroH, and another gentleman of equal\nability, whose services werfl ever ready at\nthe command of the poor, uofortanate\nand oppressed. The case was a sad one.\nIt was a humiliating tpectacle that a man\nwho was selected to public oiliou in thin\ncity should have bo helnoiialy betrayed his\ntrust as the priaoner hail, it was humil¬\niating to the people el the city, Ntate aud\ncountry that such a spectacle should be\npresented to a free government a» a per¬\n betraying his trust as the prisoner had\ndone. It wag sad 10 see a man with the\nprisoner's advantage in the position in\nwhich he now was. '¦! could not be un¬\nmoved at the spectacle of your weeping\nwife and brokeu.hearted mother, but the\nsaddest thing about your case ia the doubt\nwhich pervaded many good aud honest\nminds of your conviction. Inere was not\na doubt lu your guilt. It was unlveisally\nconceded when tbe evidence was in that\nthe cssd against yon waa clear, couvinciiig\nand ovi rwhelming. Tbure was no doubt\nol your guilt, but there was a doubt con¬\ncerning the chances of convicting you.\nThe tlrut doubt seems to have arisen from\nu lack of faith in tbe efllcaoy of our jury\nsystem,- the seal of our public prosecutor\nand the eUicieucy ol our police. These\ndoubts will bedUpelled by your conviction.
271d35571c2ae21a759379c093f2f406 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.7082191463724 40.419757 -77.187146 crite!" with various other menacing\nexclamations, cried the friends of Sneed.\nAnd a dozen knives flew from their\nscabbards, and the young minister heard\nthe clicking of a score of pistol locks\nnearly all around him. Not an Instant\nwas to be lost. With the speed of the\nwind, he fled in an oblique direction to\nwhere his horse was fastened, seized the\nbridle, and springing into the saddle\nwith a bound, spurred the noble ani-\nmal to its utmost speed, and, although\nseveral shots were fired after him, he es-\ncaped without Injury.\nThe perils that environed him, how-\never, had only just commenced ; for his\nfoes, also on horseback, set off in hot\npursuit, and the chase continued without\nIntermission for four miles along the\nroad which led to the Missouri river.\nThere, Ellis found that bis enemies\nwere ubout to overtake him, he plunged\ninto the woods, and, making a consider-\nable circuit, at length struck the river\nat a point higher up than he first in-\ntended to reach. Here the bank un-\nfortunately was open, and his pursuers\ncoming in sight, although it was grow-\ning dark, descried him, and, giving a\nmurderous shout, hurried forward to\nsatiate their vengeance in his blood.\nHe had but one alternative to stand\nand be shot down like a wolf, or take\nto the water; but even this latter choice\nwas horrible, on account of the tre-\nmendous rapidity of the fiercely ungov-\nernable stream, which, ln addition to its\nordinary terrors, at that time was thick\nwith floating ice, so that after dark even\nboats dared not venture across.
0ca0cee84b01487097be6b05af63f94b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.6598360339506 40.063962 -80.720915 As I passed through Monroe I stopped\nat Sink's Grove and there I had the\npleasure of meeting Judge A. N . Camp¬\nbell, who Is a candidate for re-election\non the Popocratic ticket against Judge\nMcWhorter, of Lewlsburg. I have a\nstatement to make about what Judge\n. Campbell said to me that I regret very\nmuch to make, yet I deem It my duty\nto so do.duty to the people of this ju¬\ndicial district. Judge Campbell knows\nme as a Democrat, but did not ask me If\nI had become a Popocrat; neither had I\ntime to tell him that I was a sound mon\ney Democrat, as I really believe the\njudge would be If he were not running\nfor ollice, but he called me to on** side\nand among other things he said: "There\nis but one Republican for which I have\nany refpcct in Monroe county, and that\nis Oliver Foster. The rest of them are\nd.d rascals." The judge went on In\nthis strain, especially cursing the \ncrats who had left the party, and wav¬\ning the bloody shirt, until 1. a son of a\nConfederate soldier, was disgusted and\nsurprised almost beyond belief. I had\nmet Judge Campbell before and did not\nthink him so vituperative, so radical,\nand so prejudicial. If I were in this dis¬\ntrict I would not vote for him if I were\na silver Democrat. Much less would I\ndo so were I a Republican. Such pre¬\njudice can surely not go with an unblas-\neu decision in a court room. I do not\nknow Judge McWhorter, his opponent,\nbut if his mind Is as narrow and as bi¬\nased, both should be pulled down and a\nman after the mind and nature of Judge\nGuthrie should be run in their place.\nThe court room Is a poor place for pre¬\njudice and the narrow mind of a prcsld-\ning judge the most dangerous place in\nwhich to lodge prejudice and vlndlctlve-\nness. The judiciary should be above a\nsuspectlve taint of any kind.
1e2dabff023c094a1a1d359e4a698b12 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.5767122970574 39.745947 -75.546589 by others who are Imperfect, we con- parable had been very derelict as a\nti Dually have need to exercise mercy. | servant of God. As a follower of\nbenevolence, forgiveness. There Is i Christ he had come far short. The\nsomething in the human wind which ! time of reckoning came. He realised\nnaturally appreciates justice and j it and besought Divine favor and\ntakes special note of Injustice done I mercy, promising to do all he could\ntoward us It Is also remarkable bow ! to make up for the deficiencies. H«\nmain- people take a delight In meting 1 was beard; the sentence upon him\nout justice lo an offender against the was stayed But when he went forth\nlaw It is this spirit which has been to find a fellow servant who owed him\nnoted In mtdis Men and women and a trifling sum, and would have \nchildren wWk themselves Into a very j mercy upon him. his master was very\nfrenzy, as advocates of justice. In ex-I angry and declared that he, too, must\npressions against a guilty wretch who be harshly dealt with and receive no\nescapes the clutches of (he law and a j mercy, because he had shown none to\nJust penalty, and insist upon taking I his fellow servant. His lord's words\nvengeance Into their own hands It , were, “Shouldest not thou also hava\nwould appear that many of those who ■ had compassion (mercy) upon thy\nparticipate In mobs have at times been : fellow servant even as I had mercy!\nguilty of nearly or quite us great on thee?" And his lord "delivered\ncrimes as those whb h they repre- him lo the tormentors until he should\nbend In another and would punish It pay all that was due."
1263eae0650423ac60be9f40b2b22211 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.319178050482 42.217817 -85.891125 received and amount of each bond.\nThere shall also be kept In the audi-\ntor general's office a register showing\nthe date of the bond, the number,\namount, date each coupon is due and\nthe cancellation of such coupons as are\npaid, with reference to the number of\nthe voucher paying the same. When-\never any such bond shall be paid, the\nsame shall be immediately cancelled\nby the treasurer and the auditor gener-\nal shall also keep a full record of all the\nbonds taken up and paid as provided\nabove. And Immediately after the rec-\nord shall have been made as aforesaid,\nthe bonds so paid shall also be can-\ncelled by writing across the face of\neach bond, which cancellation shall be\nsigned by the auditor general and state\ntreasurer, and such bonds thus can-\ncelled shall be filed with the voucher\na the basis of the auditor general's\nwarrant for their payment.\nSection J. For the purpose of provid-\ning for the payment of the bonds Is-\nsued under this act, the Interest\nthereon, there shall be assessed on the\ntaxable property of the state as fixed\nby the state board of equalization In\nthe year 1S96, and in each year\nthereafter until the several amounts\nlevied under this act shall become\nsufficient to extinguish the debt created\nherein, the sum of v of a mill on each\ndollar of said taxable property to be as-\nsessed and paid Into the treasury of\nthe state In like manner as other state\ntaxes are by law levied, assessed and\npaid, which amount thus levied shall be\ncredited each year to the war loan sink-\ning fund as herein directed: Provided,\nThat should the last levy necessary un-\nder this act produce a credit to the said\nwar loan sinking fund In excess of the\namount required to pay all bonds and\nInterest thereon, such excessive credit\nIf any shall when all bonds Issued un-\nder this act and all Interest accrued\nthereon have been paid, be transferred\nto the general fund upon the books of\nthe state.
196d3c15905ddf56ff3b7ee90fb9d0d2 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1899.1438355847285 58.275556 -134.3925 Our readers will of course pardon us\nfor so frequently referring to the recep¬\ntion of the News. It is a source of\nmuch gratification to us, and especial¬\nly so when we remember how off en we\nwere told, before commencing this pub\nligation, that a paper could not succeed\non Douglas Island. Our last issue was\nnumber thirteen and represents one-\nfourth of a year, and during that time\nevery succeeding issue has brought the\npublishers friends and patronage, until\nour advertising columns are so full\nthat we are frequently compelled to re-\nsort to the issuing ot a supplement\nin order to present our subscribers a\nfair amount of reading matter.\nLast week was a great one for the\nNews, both in Douglas City and in .In-\nneau. The post office news stand at\nthe latter place was supplied on\nWednesday evening, and Thursday or¬\nders came for more papers. One friend\nof the Postmaster left his News to be\nsold, so great was the demand. A clerk\nin one of the stores, who is subscriber,\ntold t?.e writer that no less than six-\npersons had come to him to borrow\nand read the News.\nWe will not take the space to repeat\nthe many kind things that have been\nsaid to the publishers, in fact it would\nrequire columns to do so, but remem¬\nber one thing, the News is going right\nahead and the only changes that will\nbe made are that an enlargement to a\nsix column paper must soon take place.\nOf course occasionally something\nmay appear in the columns of this pa¬\nper that is distasteful to some. It is\nbut natural that such should be the\ncase. We expect this because it is im¬\npossible for it to be otherwise, but so\nlong as the columns of the News speak\ntlie truth we shall, be satisfied with their\ncontents. The day for sleepy journfll-\nism is rapidly passing. We are en¬\ndeavoring to publish a paper with some\nlife and if you have any misgivings as\nto its success, patiently wait, for surely\nyou will see it grow.
0f7a0856cdb5e7bdfbe9695c44b28787 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.9164383244547 46.187885 -123.831256 Washington, Nov. 29. Senator\nMitchell will introduce a bill at the\nfirst opportunity after congress as-\nsembles to repeal all laws, whether\ntreaties or acts ot congress, which\npermit Chineso immigration. This is\ntho bill which ho introduced at the\nlast session of congress. He said this\nafternoon tt at the general impression\nthat his bill would prohibit commerce\nbetween China and tho United States\nis erroneous. It will only iudirectly\nhave a bearing on the trado relation's\nof the two countries, m so far as it\nabsolutely prohibits the coming of\nChinese to this country, except those\nwho come in government capacities.\nJohn Sherman js chairman of the\ncommittee on foreign relations, and\nas he desires to please both the east\nand west in his action on tho Chinese\nquestion, it is not probable that he\nwill go to the length reached by sen-\nator Mitchell's It is understood\nthat saator Sherman is in favor of\nsome amendueuts to tho present act\nwhich will effectually exclude Chinese\nfrom this country, and which at the\nhanie time will not offend the senti-\nments ot tho east.\nSenator Mitchell will introduce a\nbill to protect purchasers of land\nfrom tho Northern Pacific railroad, in\ncase there is forfeiture of the land\ngranted to that carporation between\nWnllula and Portland. He will also\nintroduce a bill to reimburse settlera\non even numbered sections of public\nlaud within the limits of the land\ngrants in ease of forfeiture ot odd\nnumbered sections. This bill is in-\ntended to reimburse those settlers\nwho were compelled to pay $2,150 per\naero for public land within tho limits\not land grants which subsequently be-\ncame forfeited: settlers receiving no\nbenefit by the building of a railroad\nbecause none was built,
076d60d28a883985dbea3655d0a9199e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.1630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 duty of the legislature to enact such a known\nlaw". If it were otherwise, all the ISov- city, as\neminent in tlint State is a usurpation, iiidgewn\nIts officers without authority and social Kelly, <i\ncompact in that State is at an end, that .lolu^ X\nthis Commission must take notice that who wet\nthere is a tiovernmcnl inSouthCarolina, Thomas\nKepubliean in form, since its conslitu* A. 1». 1'\nlion provides for such a Government, and with wlu\nit is,and was, on the day of appointing friendsh\nthe electors so recognized by the Kxecti- senceof\nlive and bv both branches ot' the legisln- must exj\nlive departments of the Government oi us. As\nthe United States, that so far as this Com* perhaps\nmission can take notice of the presence our accu\nof tlio soldiers of the United States, in Possibly\nthe State of South Carolina during the duties, n\nelection, it appears that they were placed oiti/.ens\nthere by the President of the wish tog\nStates In suppress insurrection at there- ing with\nquest of the proper authorities of the years ag\nState. Hut we are also of the opinion that I may\nunder the papers before lis it appears that guida'net\nthe Governor and Secretary of State hav- and will\ning certified under the seal of the State After\nthat the electors whose votes we havede- solved Hi\ncidedt be the lawful electoral votes of to the ill\nSouth Carolina, were duly appointed as ai d, oliie\nelectors, which certificate both by the of his n\npresumption of law and by the certificate with an\nof the rival claimants of the electoral filled wit\nofliee was based on the action of the State The ai\ncanvassers, there exists no power in this and Mrs\nCommission, as there exists none in tin resident\ntwo bouses of Congress, in counting the day wer\nvote to inquire into the circumstances Mrs. Ha;\nunder which the primary vote forelectors the large
1857de8768147b9bc1e6c331ee443f91 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.7575342148655 40.063962 -80.720915 Iron and Steel Company, Bald in i\nto tho article published in Wh\nand Pittsburgh morning papers 01\nurday, concerning Improvements\nmade at the Mingo Junction plant\ncompany, that it first appeared\nBteubefiville paper of Friday and\ned to have hud its origin with son\ndiscriminating collector of all thi\npons as to the intentions of the\ntlon Iron and Steel Company, and\nof the Aetna-Standard Iron and\nCompany, concerning the improvi\nof this property, that had found\nlatlon within a year or more. Wit!\naggregation of rumors of change\nextensions, some of which were\nthought of, others considered\nabandoned, and yet others now in\ntemptation, together with a fertile\nagination, he had framed a statt\nthat us a whole was wild and absu\nMr. Graham said further, that\nprovements were to bo made at\nJunction works such as would mo\n some departments and brinfi\nwhole to the highest possible stai\nof efficiency in the lines of produci\nmanufactured, but that no new\nwere contemplated ut this time;\nthe expenditure of money on thesi\nprovements, while necessarily larg\namount, would be very moderate,\nsideling the resources of the com\nand the advantages to be gained\nwas understood and acquiesced li\nthe stockholders.\nThe directors and management «\ncompany said Mr. Graham, were\nambitious to enter any new flel\nmight have been implied, If not d\nly stated In the Saturday mornlm\ntlele, but were content to continu\nconservative, but progressive \\\nthat lias heretofore proven success\nkeeping their company well towar\nfront amonff manufacturers of Its\ntlcular products.\nThe statements published In the 1\nllgencor of Saturday,and which Mr\nham says were exaggerated were\nnlshcd by u Steubenvllle corresj\n«;nt.
46f55ff563afd5d8ce30ca4c48f5e6bb THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1906.546575310756 40.114955 -111.654923 Londons outdoor man Is the coster\naccording to Outing He Is the Ish\nmael of out gutters A very jolly Ish\nmael it Is true who Is more than con ¬\ntent to acknowledge the tine of de ¬\nmarcation between himself and the\ntrue cockney But nevertheless in a\nmodified twentieth century way ho Is\nstill the wild man whose hand is\nagainst every mans and every mans\nagainst his Ho is probably the last\nremnant of the worlds old race of wan\nflerers tho last suggestion of the\nprimitive man left to the cities He\nIs to us town dwellers what the gypsy-\nIs to the countryside His descent\nseems to spring from the sane roving\nitock And he is regarded from a safe\ndistance with the same contempt by\nthose who dont know him His \nand his impulses still savor strongly-\nof the days when tribe warred against\ntribe and every mans arm was for\nhimself and his clan And although\nhis pitch is below the curb his caravan\na barrow and his beast of burden a\nRussian pony a donkey or himself\nleis as free and as exclusive as any\nother lusty scion of the people who live\nunder the skies Islimaol he is and\nIshmael he chooses to remain And the\nchances are ten to one that whoever\ngoes afishing for Information among\nthe barrows will come back with an\nempty creel or a fine show of fisher ¬\nmans tales For your coster knows\nboth how to keep silence and how to\nuse his tongue picturesquely In defense-\nof his Jealously guarded traditions and\nthe Internal economies of his existence
31cdb101fbbc7ec73d4943f4fa345722 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.3975409519835 40.063962 -80.720915 and 0. T . Caldwell took in the Wet*el\nCounty Convention last Saturday, and all\nbubbling over with material for speeches,\nbut none of them were called upon.\nJohnson saya Tingle left discouraged, and\nCaldwell, who was there in the intereat of\nWilson, says they both left discouraged,\nI while the fact that Wilson only got ten or\nI eleven of the thirty delegates argues that\nJ all three left discouraged.\nThe Art 8ale Last Niout..The sale\nof pictures from the Gale oollection at the\nrooms on Main atreet last night, waa not\nas well attended as it might have been,\nthough the crowd waa a remarkable select\nI one, as will be seen by the names of the\npurchasers below. Onlv a few pictures\nwere sold, the others being withdrawn on\naccount of the Httendance. Among\nthose sold, Mr. J . R . McCourtney pur¬\nchased a small "Bouquet of Flowers,'' by\nC. Goutier, of Paris, a perfect little gem\nof» thing, and a pair of copies after Kaul-\nbocb, "Preparing the Bride," and "Going\nI to Church." These were said by compe-\ntent critics to be as fine as anything in the\ncollection. They brought $68, only a frac¬\ntion of their value. R. G . Jor-\ndan, Eiq., got a scene "On the\nm;,'11"" , River." by Whiting,\nof 1 biladelphia, ¦ very fine thing, for $50.\nTwo Genu of Adriatic Scenery," by M\nAdrian, of Florence, were sacrificed, and\nDr. Bates got whit we regarded as one of\nthe finest things in the collection, a ma¬\nrine. by Wallace, of New York, entitled\n(.'Outward and Inward Booud."
3c5d2e601564556321d69252660764af THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.9767122970572 39.560444 -120.828218 The sentence of Lake, one year in the\nState Prison, was heard with regret by a\ngreat number of the citizens of this place,\nthough every one admits that no jury of\nhonest men could have Drought in any\nother verdict than “guilty,” with the evi-\ndence before them. A. petition to Govern-\nor Bigler, praying for the pardon of Lake,\nis now circulating in this county, signed\nby several members of the bench and bar.\nand if we mistake not, by some of the jury\nwho found the verdict. Many of our citi-\nzens expressed a desire to sign such peti-\ntion; an opportunity is now offered, and\nit is thought that the Executive will re-\nceive an appeal in behalf of that wretched\nold man, so numerously signed by respect-\nable, law-abiding citizens, that he will\nthink the petition worthy of notice, as an\nexpression of popular opinion.\nIt is very far from our intention to at-\n to justify an assault with deadly\nweapons with intent to murder, but there\nare mitigating circumstances in this case\nthat are very different from common street\nshooting or bar rencounters. We have\nnot room to recapitulate the evidence, but\nmust refer the reader to last weeks Citizen\nwhere it is reported at length.\nJohn Lake is an old man, gray-headed\nhas almost reached Heavens statute of\nlimitation, three score and ten years; he\nhas been deserted and dial onored by his\nwife, the mother of his children, and he\nhas brooded over his wrongs until he has\nbecome desperate and crazy. Laboring\nunder a sort of madness occasioned by the\nplausable story of the woman, and this ag-\ngravated by the presence of two helpless\nchildren, who every hour reminded him of\ntheir mothers shame, what wonder that\nhe should seek to be avenged of the man\nwhom he thought the desolator of his\nhearth ?
13cd947ae704aa1a2df91fccf70ddbec EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.160273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 "Yes, I know,” said Mr. Young, "in\nwhat high regard General Grant held\nSheridan for I often heard Grant say\nthat he wag sure that Sheridan had no\nsuperior, living or dead, as the com­\nmander of an army.\n"I remember, on one occasion, Grant\nmet several Americans one evening\nafter a reception, and in the course of\nconversation he was asked what, be\nthought. Sheridan would have done had I\nhe been in command at Gettysburg in-1\nstead of General Meade. General Grant\nreplied practically in these words:\n" There should be very little or no\ncriticism of the manner In which |\nMeade fought, the Battle of Gettysburg, j\nIn a three deys battle there are al- j\nways sure to be some mistskes. What-)\never these may have, been upon ourj\nside, Meade speedily rectified them, j\n" But you have asked mo what Sher-I\nIdan would have done had he been\nthere. Sheridan, as a fighting general,\nwas an combination of\ngreat daring and great caution. His\nJudgments were Intuitive. He believed\nIn very swift, action and In taking\ngreat risks. If the chances were in his\nfavor. He had no patience with those|\nCritics who spoke of a battle as a|\ndrawn battle. He was of the opinion\nthat, every battle was a victory to one\nside or the other, although the ad­\nvantage may have been slight. Now, his\ntemperament, his understanding of\nwarfare, and his methods would, 1 be­\nlieve, have persuaded Sheridau, had be\nbeen in command at Gettysburg, that\nthere was only one thing to do after\nLee began to retreat, and that was to\nfollow Lee so sw iftly that he would he\nunable to reform his lines. I have\nsometimes thought that if Sheridan\nhad been (here, there wouldnt, have\nbeen much of Lees army left, after\nGettysburg was fought. However, I do\nnot say this In the way of any criticism\nof General Meade.*
21033bf65853a11effbb3fe76118e037 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.9438355847285 39.743941 -84.63662 atood by everybody. From January 1 until De- -\ncetnoer aiii win neconnucieu as a newspaper\nwritten in tne Jcngiisu language aua printca ior\nthe wbole people.\nas a newsDaoer.: i mj. csuu DenerES in jreiunK\nall the news of the world promptly, and present-\ning It in the most intelliKlble shapethe shaiw\nmat will enaota its reaaers to Keep wen iDnw ui\nthe ace with the least unproductive expenditure\nof time. The greatest interest to the greatest\nnumber that Is the law controlling lta aatiy\nmake up. Jt now has a circulation very much\nlarger tliaa that of any other American newspa-\nper, and enjoys an Income which It la at all times\nprepared to spend liberally for the benefit of its\nreaders. People of all conditions of life and all\nWMVB vn LlUllaVlllg uuj hiiu itwu inm oun, uiu\nthev all derive satisfaction of some sort from lta\ncolumni, for tbey keep on buying and reading it.\nin its comments on men ana aiiitirs, i naouii\nbelieves that the only .guide of policy should be\ncommon sense, inspired by geuulne American\nprinciples and backed by honesty or purpose, t or\nthis reason it is, and will continue to oe, abso-\nlutely independent of tarty clasa, clique, organ-\nization, or Interest. It is all, but of none. It\nwill continue to praise what is good and reprobate\nwhat Is evil, taking care that lta language Is to\ntne poiut ana piain, oeyuna toe poMioiui) oi\nmisunderstood. It is uninfluenced by motives\nthat do not appear on the surface; It has no opin-\nions to sell, save those which may be ha by any\npurchaser with two cents. It hates injustice and\nrascality even more than It hates unnecessary\nwords It abhors frauds pities fools, and deplores\nnincompoops of evttry species. It will continue\nthroughout the year 1&80 to chastise the first class.\nInstruct the second, and discountenance the third.\nAll honest men; with honest convictions, wheth-\ner sound or mistaken, are its friends. And THE\nSUN makes no bones of telling the truth to its\nfriends and about its friends whenever occasion\narises for plain speaking.\nThese are the principles npon which THE BUN\nwill be conducted during the year to come.\nThe year 1880 will be one tn which no patriotic\nAmerica u can afford to close his eyes to public af-\nfairs. It Is impossible to exaggerate tuf impor\ntanre of the political events which it has in store,\nor the necessity of resolute vigilance on the part\nof every citizen who desires to preserve the
27e66360c9ce7ef980783f161a922ab5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.5532786569015 39.745947 -75.546589 By United Press Leased Special Wire\nLONDON, July 21.— Olympic records\nand world's records went by the board\nto-daü, with American athletes furnish­\ning the spectacular features of by far the\nmost exciting day of the Olympic meet.\nThe high Jump of Harry Porter, of the\nIrlsh-Amerlcan team, 6 feet 3 Inches,\nbreaking the Olympic record and the\nvictory of Melvin Shephard In tho final\nof the 800 metre run In which he estab-\nllahed a new world's mark of 1.63 4-5 were\ntho principal performances that set the\nbig crowd wild. Just to show that he was\nrunning "within himself.” Sheppard con­\ntinued until he had completed the half\nmile, which he negotiated In 1.54.\nWhile Porter won the high jump In his\nsection, the Kangaroo leap of Leahy, of\nEngland, and Andre of France, each of\nwhom cleared the bar at ft feet 2 Inches.\nIndicate that much hard work Is \nof the American before he lands the final.\nAnother New Yorker to get squarely In\nthe limelight was Harley Hillman, who\nIn the semi-finals of the 4ftft meter hurdles\ncleared the bars like a startled deer, the\nwatches catching him In 65 2-5 seconds.\nThis, too. was a new Olymplp record and\nthe great crowd had a mighty yelp of ap­\npreciation with which to greet the happy\nYankee as he mads tor the exit.\nBy far the closest race of the day and\nthe one that brought the wildest applause\nwas the 400 metre running heal In which\nWilliam O. Proutt. of the Boston A. C.\nwon by Inches from Chavasse, the hope\nof the British. Chavasse caught Prout\nhalf way around the stadium and the two\nraced neck and neck almost to the very\nclose, when Prout. by a superhuman ef­\nfort pushed ahead a few inches and\nbreasted the tape first.
120496ad80718c7ee7247c3e609bc9f5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.184426197885 41.681744 -72.788147 Albert Kleh who was arrested last yes-\nterday by State Oincer Arthur K. Cone\nof Hartford, was bound over under\nI5.0"0 bonds for trial at the April\nterm of the Middlesex county superior\ncourt on the charge of arson. He had\npleaded not guilty before Grand Juror\nJohn Gorman but the state olllcaf of-\nfered In evidence a statement sworn to\nby Mrs. fidward Graham, a very close\nfriend of Ulcli, In which the allegation\nWas that Klch set the (ire which de-\nstroyed his home on the night of No-\nvember I InsL The state had six other\nwitnesses' hut their names were not\ndisclosed and they were not called. It\nIs said that a quarrel which took place\nThursday between Mrs, Graham and\nBieh led to the statement which Mrs.\nGraham gave the police under oath.\n Incident created great Interest\nhere last night when it was known\nthat Ulrh had been arrested and was\nto have a bearing and townspeople ex-\npected to be at the town hall when\nKlch was arraigned. However, their\nintentions had been anticipated and\nhearing was held at Grand Juror Gor-\nman's home. Uich appealed to four\ncitizens in tovA to be his bondsman\nbut each declined to serve and he was\ntaken to Haddam Jail.\nThe lire which destroyed I'.tch's\nhome was regarded as mysterious.\nMost of the furniture In It belonged\nto Mrs. Itleh who was In Florida at\nthe time. She had left her husband\nshortly l fore that, it is said because\nol Htch's Mtentions to Mr.. Graham.\nK,rp t.h,( f M,.rlon Ke,t Rnd 8Ut om.\n,.,.r Cone kept on work on the fire case
1d691816a145f25c213f3fff272ad35f PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1906.1109588723998 31.762115 -95.630789 Congressman Longwonh is devoted\nto nut of dout life Is an accomplished\nhorseman boxes fences and plays Imll\ntennis and gulf lie is iot a hunter\nand Usher however and has nctcri\nbeen known to Indulge In any spirt\nthat Involves the taking of life He Is J\na good swimmer and loves the water\nIlls chief recreations however arc so1\nclnl He Ik n familiar figure jit ban i\nquels receptions balls pink tcus and\nother similar functions and Is a favor-\nite whereter he goes He is a member\nof eclusw chilis in Cincinnati Wash\nInglon mid other cities lie Is a mil\nslclau of more than ninnteur ability\nplnjlng well on the violin and pluio\nand even acquitting hiniMlf with ercd-\nIt ns a singer He often gives niusl-\ncnls in his home city which is one of\nthe great centers of America\nRut though devoted to society and pop\nulnr Willi women Ills feminine ndinlr\ners had nbout concluded that be wns\nproof against affairs of the heart that\nIs they had so concluded before his\nntteutious to Miss Roosevelt became\nnoticeable Since then no lover was\neer more devoted The society dames\nearly discovered the direction of the\nwind so that wherever the presidents\ndaughter was invited Mr longworth\nwas Included When Miss Alice would\ngo to euporl or New Yoik he found\nIt convenient likewise to go to Newpoit-\nor New York He even Journeyed with\nher In a trip half round the world and\nback and was so constantly In the\ncompany of the fair one tlmt oilier\nwould be stiilors descried the fluid\nOne of Longworths sisters is the\nCountess de Chambruu At her mar-\nriage
3a79405a0e37670965263b4fb82234df THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.278082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 self, she shouldn't stop under my root, M\nI can see hp,w she looks down upon me, R*\nI can see a great c^jai, Mr. Candle, that\nI never choose to open my lips about.\nbat-1 can't shot my eyes, -Perhaps it th\nwould have been better for my peace of\ninind if lalwayBOOUld. Don't say that, th\nI'm not a foolish woman, and I know sli\nvery, well what I'm saying. I suppose wl\nyou think I forget (fiat Kebecca? I at\nknow it's ten years ago that she lived sb\nwith us.but what's that to do with it? ®\nThings ar'n't the less true for being old, w!\nI suppose:; No; and your conduct, Mr. ©*"\nCaudle, at that time.if It was a hun- a "\ndred years ago.I should never forget. Tl\nWhat ? ItihaUl always be the same silly 1*\nwomant I hope I shall.I trust I shall it\nalways have my eyes about me in my tb\nown house. Now, don't think of going eb\nto sleep, Caudle; because, as you've **i<\nbrought this up about that Rebecca, ot\nyou shall hear me out; Well, I do lo\nwonder that you can name her! Eh? ea\nYou didn't name herf That's nothing t*\natalltodowithit;forIknowjustas\n what you think, as if you did. I pa\nsuppose you'll say that you didn't ne\ndrink a glass of wine to her? Neverf tri\nSo yon said at the time; but I've on\nthought of it for ten long years, and the\nmore I've thought; the surer I am of it. wi\nAnd at that verv time.it vnn nkasA tn sil\nrecollect.at that very time little Jack J|l\nwas a baby. I shouldn't have so much bii\ncared but for that; but he was hardly tie\nrunning alone! when you nodded and\ndrank a glass of wine to that creature, f"\nNo; I'm not mad, and I'm not dream- an\ning. 1 -saw how you did it.and the\nhypocrisy made it worse and worse. I Wi\nsaw you: when the creature was Just bl\nbehind my chair, you took up a glass br\nof wine and saying to me, 'Margaret,' T1\nand then lifting up your eyes at the ly\nbold minx, and saying, 'My dear/ as if ve\nyou wanted me to believe that you spoke\nonly to me, when I could see you laugh K\nat her behind me. And at that time\nlittle Jack wasn't on his feet. What do\nyou say? Heaven forgive me? Hal
0239a7479ed45e969e6d09be47a969e2 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1883.7657533929478 40.832421 -115.763123 The New York Democratic Conrcn-\ntiou assembled nt BafTalo Thursday,\nunder very favorable auspices. Alfred\n0. Cbapiu, of Kinn eouuty btiug limp-\norary chairman. TUs delegalt s arrived\nin a body nod no preferences vm\nshown to any distinct body cn admit¬\ntance. In the roll-call when tlia nirno\nof Samuel J. Tildeu was reached, tha\nconvention greited it villi long contin¬\nued applause. At tha conclusion of\nroll-call tbo Committee ou Contested\nSeats was chosen. A resolution was\ncarried, Aistribnting seats in the con¬\nvention to which tbo conuty of Now\nYork ia entitled, m follows: County\nDemocracy, 38; Taainiuuy. 21; Irving\nHall, 10. A nnuiber of -other resolu¬\ntion won referred.\nTkouiaa C. Benedict, of Ulster coun¬\nty. waa made Permanent Chairman.\nTbe following platform was adopt oil\nunanimously. Tbo Democracy of New\nYork reaffirms tbo platform adopted at\nit* last Slato Convention, whieli baa\nreceived tbe approval of tha people, as\nshown \\>y tbo majority of nearly 200,-\n000 at tbo list election. They espoc'u'ly\ndenounco tbo proposition that tbo peo¬\nple should bo tuxtd to raise a surplus\nfund for tbo Federal Government to\ndisfributo among tbe States. We claim\nwith pride and that every\npledge therein made has been iu good\nfaith redeemed; valuable reforms bava\nbeen wrought, uselojs offices have\nbeen abolished. Civil Serviao has bees\nfreed from tbe degrading and iujerious\ninfluences of partisau manipulation,\ntbo freedom and purity of the primaries\nkavu been secured, political mieiHineuts\nhave been abolished, receivership\nubiues kuvo been corrcctod, tho priuoi-\nplec f local self-goveiuent has been ad-\nhired to, tbe efficiency of (ho National\nGuard bus been increased, taxation for\nthe Mipport of tho government has been\nreduced, a Stats Durcau of labor statis¬\ntics has been « stablislicd, thu rifeliU of\nIhe woikinginan hsvo been furtbor pro¬\ntected, the injurious competitiou of\noonvict lubor has been curtailed and\nbusiness method* have been tho rula ia\ntbo management of Stito affair*.\nOn tbe record thus uiado und to\nwhich it will steadfastly adhere, tha\nDcinocialio parly asks a toaewsl of tho\ntoto of couGdeuce of tho people, W'e\ninvite, with rejson, all friend* of im¬\nproved 8tat<» nilniiui itration, irreapea-\ntivo of patty to j jia with tbo Dimoo*\nracy in preserving and expediting tha\nreforms in progress and in cxtonding\nthem to all bruuebts of tbo State Sir-\nvice.
20333a738eb3b669ec1f5c0b11de49f2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.2827868536228 37.561813 -75.84108 the House, Mr. Staats introduced a bill\nauthorize the village ol Harrison, Hamil-\nton county, to issne bonds and borrow\nmoney for buildine nnrprses. The rules\nwere suspended, and the bill read the second\nand third times and passed. Tbe Committee\nof Conference on matters ot ainerenea Be-\ntween the two houses on tbe Appropriation\nBill reported, recommending certain action\nby the House. The report was agreed to.\nThe select committee appointed to examine\ninto the character of the brickwork: oi tne\nCentral Lunatic Asylum building by F.\nJones k Son, reported that tbey believed\nthere is a balance due to the contractors,\nand ask that tbe matter be referred to the\nnew board of asylum trustees. They also\nsay they believe the character of the work is\nsuch as not to affect the permanency of the\nstructure. The report was amended so as to\nauthorize tbe board to make an equitable \njustment of the claims of Jones & Son,\nand to report to the Uenerai Assemoiy\nnext winter. The report wan adopted.\nAfter some business had transpired, Mr.\nWiltsee's Mitchell avenue tunnel bill was\ntaken np for concurrence, with Senate\namendments. A call of the House was de-\nmanded, and finally a warrant issued for the\narrest of four members. Word was at length\nbrought to the House that the Senate had\nadjourned to Monday morning wiihot t\ntaking any action npon tne nouse resolu-\ntion lor final adjournment on Monday next.\nThis action was taken by the House as a dis\ncourtesy, and under stress of tbe indigna-\ntion thereby occasioned, a motion for ad-\njournment to Tuesday morning at seven\no'clock was made by Mr. Scheble, and put\nand carried with a rush. This action sent\nall unfinished business to the table, where\nit will probably remain until next winter.
21e4cd123cdb43c8310ddbe7d22e8474 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.6205479134958 37.561813 -75.84108 "A gentleman who occupied a larpe\nfarm in Norfolk, finding towards the\nrlORfi ft f the wheut sowing, that ho was\nlikely to have A quantity of bone- du s- t\nleft, if ho continued distributing it at\nthe ordinary rato, directed his foreman\nto increase the quantity. On going to\ntho field tho following day, he found\nthctthe man had doubled tho allowance.\nThe crop of wheat proved a very heavy\none. as well as tho succeeding crop of\nturnips, on that part of tho land which\nwas thus doublo dosed with tho bone\ndust. Now mark what follows. lArxr.n\nyenrt after, tho farmer, on riding with a\nfriend over his land, catno to this field,\nwhich was acrain. for tho third lime af\nter tho above occurrence, under wheat\nOn entering it, he requested his friend,\nif should, in riding down the fur-\nrow, find any difference in tho growth\nof wheat, to point it out. After riding\nn few yards, ho suddenly stopped.\n'What in all tho world have you been\nalter hero?' ho exclaimed; 'this wheat is\ntix inches higher, and as stout again as\ntho rest how Camo this to pass?' Tho\nfarmer then explained to him the oc-\ncurrence we have related, and which\nproves not only the value of bonos as a\nmanure for a single crop, but that by\ntho dolilicrato manner in which they\ngivo out the phosphates in decomposi-\ntion, they possess a moro permanent\nvalue than any other kind of manure."\nIt i:i stated from analysis, that one\npound of hones contains as much phos-\nphoric acid as US pounds of wheat, or\nL'jO pounds- of potatoes.
909ccbec42c9d1a73ea92bcfd0e06c34 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.401369831304 58.275556 -134.3925 omits. the first with the posaoai-lon\nif parts of nix awans, and ho was\nentenced to pay a line of $15 on\nrach count without costa.\nThis was a caso arising from a\nriolatlon of the Migratory Bird\nTreaty Act of July 3, 1918, which J\nnakes it unlawful for a period o(\nen years from the date of tho act\n0 tufce, capture, kill, ahlp, trans-\niort. carry or poasoss cranes, swans,\nurlew, und all shore birds (except\nilover, Jack anlpe and woodcock).\nMr. Leen In May, 1920, sent out\n:o Charles H. Mueller and Company\na Seattle, for a party of six In Cor-\nlova, the breasts of six swans to bo\nnado up. These were In turn sent\nTrom Mueller nnd Company (o a Arm\nn Denver for tanning, where thoy\n.nme Into the hands of the authorl-\ntlea. A short time ago Mr. Munly\nrocolved Instructions from the De¬\npartment Agriculture (o file an\n. nformutlou against J. Loon on the\n- harge to which ho pleaded guilty.\nAfter entering his plea Mr. Loon\natod to tho court that he had no\nKnowlrdgo of the prohibition on the\naforementioned shore animals, and\nhad no intention whatever to vlolato\nthe law, and the court. In passing\nlodgment took this Into considera¬\ntion, Imposing only the nominal fine\nof (ID On each count of the Inform-\nutlon, without cost*.\nIt would bo well for local huntera\ni>i take notice of this casr' and tho\n[-lo*ed season on those birds.\nThe Migratory Bird Treaty Act\nwa* pssifd by Con grew and approv¬\ned July 3, 1 S. pursuant to a treaty\n.ntered Into between the United\nElates and Great Britain for tho pro¬\ntection of migratory bird* In the U.\n3.. Canada and Alaska. l*ndor the\nregulations promulgate!) In pur¬\nsuance of this treaty, the open sca-
4430b3ec57bf148f725a0dad4faa2c50 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5587431377758 39.513775 -121.556359 Nevada Fire.— The most heart-rending\ncalamity ol the present season forconfla\ngrations, is the destruction of Nevada\nand the loss of some ten or twelve lives In\ntire This melancholy announcement has\ncarried a pang to the great heart of the\nState, that will causcit to throb in sytnpa\nthy with the alHicted friends and relatives ol\nthe deceased. The pecuniary loss of itself\nis nothing in comparison. The indomitable\nenergy and perseverence heretofore exhibit-\ned by the people of California, would soon\nrebuild the nourishing town of Nevada ; but\nw 10 shall replace the familiar faces of those\nwho l<>sl their lives in attempting to stay\nthe devouring element?\nMarysville, Ilacerville. Georgetown and\nNevada, have been visited by fire within the\npresent month. The three latter places\nhave been almost entirely destroyed. Oro-\nville, with all its life, and business and bus\ntie, would bo but half an hours sport for\niho devouring element when once kindled\namongst our light frame buildings. Our\ncitizens Cannot be too watchful in their en-\n to guard against tire. Let the l*o-\nlice bo watchful—and let us all act as a\npolice, and guard our town from the fate of\nPlacerville and Nevada.\nWe undcstaud that a meeting was held on\nMonday evening for the purpose of taking\nthe initiatory steps for the formation of a\nfire company. We have not been furnished\nwith the proceedings of the occasion. Hut\nin tho absence of a supply of water, a fire\ncompany with an excellent engine, would be\nof but little service. In our present condi-\ntion, wc cannot put out a fire —it must not\nstart! Our safety is in great care and\nwatchfulness. We do not wish to discourage\nany effort of our citizens to form a tire depart\nmerit, but to warn them to guard against\nthe origin of fire. Before the approach of\nanother dry season, wo can have plenty of\nreservoirs and an effective tire department\nduring tho present dry season, until the\nwindows of Heaven are again opened, the\nutmost care and watchfulness is necessary.
39c8e8c3e5794d6b26af709d5e12ac3f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1907.582191749112 39.623709 -77.41082 Should a list of the ingredients ofP#\nruna be submitted to any medical ex*\npert, of whatever school or nationality,\nhe would be obliged to admit without\nreserve that each one of them was of nna\ndoubted value in chronic catarrhal dll-\neases, and had stood the test of many\nyears experience in the treatment of\nsuch diseases. THERE CAN BE NO\ndispute ABOUT THIS WHAT-\nEVER. Pemna is composed ofthe most\nefficacious and universally used herbal\nremedies for catarrh. Every ingredient\nof Pemna has a reputation of its own\nin the cure of some phase of catarrh.\nPemna brings to the home the COM-\nBINED KNOWLEDGE OF SEVERAL\nSCHOOLS OF MEDICINE inthe treat-\nment of catarrhal diseases; brings to\nthe home the scientific skill and knowl-\nedge ofthe modem pharmacist; and last\nbut notloast, brings to the home the vast\nand varied experience ofDr. Hartman,\nin the useof catarrh remedies, and inthe\ntreatment of catarrhal diseases.\nThe fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis-\nease which is very prevalent. Many\n people know they have\nchronic catarrh They have visited\ndoctors over and over again, and been\ntold that their case is one of chronio\ncatarrh. It may be of the nose, throat,'\nlungs, stomach or some other internal\norgan. There is no doubt as to the na-\nture of the disease. The only trouble\nis the remedy. This doctor has tried to\ncure them. That doctor has tried to\nprescribe for them.\nBUT THEY ALL FAILED TO\nBRING ANY RELIEF.\nDr. Hartmans idea is that a catarrh\nremedy can be made on a large scale,\nas he is making it; that it can be made\nhonestly, of the purest drugs and of\nthe strictest uniformity. His idea la\nthat this remedy can be supplied direct-\nly to the people, and no more be charged\nfor it than is necessary for the\nhandling of it\nNo other household remedy so uni-\nversally advertised carries upon the\nlabel the principal active constituents,\nshowing that Perana invites the Ml\nInspection of the critics.
0f6f007113649fc91c592abadd191daf CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1917.5520547628107 41.875555 -87.624421 Every woman may bo a law unto\nherself In the matter of her coiffure.\nNo particular stylo overshadows other\nstyles or even crowds them In point of\npopulnrlty. The tlmo when one kind\nof hnlrdrcss eclipsed all others seems\nto have gone by for nil tlmo; all fare\nollko now. The only dlscernlblo prefer-\nences nro in the direction of simple ar-\nrangements that look youthful, nnd\neven women of middle age affect them.\nBut It Is becomingness that decides\nthe question of stylo In hnlrdresslng.\nSlnco wo may nil be so Independent\nthis is n good tlmo for experiment-\ning. Except for very youthful fnces,\nexperiment would better begin by wnv- l n- g\ntho hnlr, because waved hair Is\nprettier than straight hair. After this,\nit mny bo combed hack off the\nforehead, or parted or curled about the\nbrow, and tho ends mny be colled high\non tho head, or nt the nape of tho\nneck, or anywhere between. In nearly\nnil nrrnngements the enrs are covered\nnnd tho hair brought forward In front\nof them, where it rests on tho cheek.\nFor youthful faces tho hair Is usu-\nally brought nbout the forehead, leav-\ning It uncovered, nnd this arrange-\nment will subtract years from older\nfaces that can stand It. Hut a good\nmany of them will sncrlflco something\nof good looks by leaving tho brow\nwholly uncovered. For them, waved\nhnlr, parted and partially covering tho\nforehead, and colled high on the head,\nusually gives tho best results. In the\nhigh colffuro tho cars need not bo cov- -
0b818b376ad0fc38f1aa496dc2c47cda THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.2663934109999 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. President what Is the position of\nie United States? It hns to-day the te\n»st business stand on this planet. On P*\nie side of us are 800.000,000 people and\n1 the other side 400,000,000 consumers. V)\n'e are located between these vast pop- In\niations; we have tjie longest seacoast th\nie of any country in the world; we are m\nie richest nation; we consume more Ct\nid produce more than any other nation n«\nthe world; WJth these advantages wj\nid with a proper policy, we should be co\nid will be the greatest shipping and\naritlme power on earth. nr\nMiit u'hnt In nur nrenent condition? As P®\nhave Bald, we curry only II per cent he\nour foreign trade, and thin percent- or\nfe Is growing leas every year. Thin Is th\nlmlllatlng to Americans. Our flag co\nso a myth and not known or seen In\niany Important cities of the world,\notwlthstandlng our greatness, we are be\nsome parts of the world almost an tii\niknown people. Think of It! InlWla to\nily two American 'sailing vessels vis- Cc\ned Liverpool, and during the same L.\near not a single American vessel st<\ninched at the great cities of Glasgow, in\null, Cardiff. Belfast, Dublin, Stock- ar\nDim, Portsmouth. Genoa, Naples, or In\notterdani. The United /state® flag.'was pr\notseenonafhipinanyoneofthose re\nrcat cities of the world in 1895. In in\narcelona only two American sailing co\n>ssels were seen Inst year. No won- he\n' r the Spaniards were willing to as- Hi\nlult and insult our consul. What th\nason had they to believe that we had in\nly flag, or a people capable of defend-
13ba57e79c8c90ff4bbe7f26d76d06d2 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1884.1407103508905 39.623709 -77.41082 Ifall the reform bulls that have been\nput in motion in the county, are to be\nkept rolling, severally, by kicks for-\nward by the one party foot and back-\nward by the other party foot, it will\nnot be long until the people will be\nconvinced that me re pretense is at the\nbottom of the professions of both and\nthat neither set, of men, representing\nthe two parties have much else at heart\nthan the bettering of their respective\nparties in the eyes of the dear people.\nIh it a necessity in order that w hatever\nof abuses exist in this county shall be\ncorrected, that the conditions upon\nwhich they shall be corrected are that\na political party shall he lifted into\npopular favor, else all shall fail ?\nIt would seem ho and it is\nindeed a line commentary upon Hit-\nprofessions of interest in home affairs,\nthat said affairs may go to the denini-\ntion bow-wows, if they may not reach\na much more desirable solution at tie-\nhands, or through the medium of this\nor that party, or political coterie.\nWo de.'-ir® to make plain a point here\nin the matter of political parlies on Urn\none hand and of men and measures on\nthe other. First, we lay down the\nproposition that in National and in\nBute affairs only, do the princij/les,\nmethod* and rncavira of parties deserve\nconsideration; further, in only those\ninstances can there be a difference of\nsufficient importance to be worthy of\nattention, and it becomes with the in-\ndividuals vote in such cases more a
096d6d91bd9fc3e5ec587cc8b63cda7a THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.6616438039066 37.92448 -95.399981 that null would affect the compass.\nTho ship's officers, deceit eil by that\ndistracted compass, put tho ship 200\nmiles oft her light course, and sudden-- 1\nthe man on tho lookout eiied:\n"Lnnd ho!" nnd the ship was halted\nwithin a few jut els of her demolition\ncm Nantucket shoals. A sKponny nnll\nmum near wrceklntr n Cunnrder.\nSmall ropes hold mighty destinies.\nA minister seated Tn Boston nt his\ntable, lacking a word, puts his hand\nbehind his head nnd tilts back his\nchair to think, iinil tho celling fnlls\nand eiiiKhes the table and would have\ncrushed him. A minister In Jnmnicn\nat night, b the light of on insect\ncalled the candle fly, is kept from stop-\nping oter n pieclpico a hundred feet.\nP. W . Bobertson, the celebrated 1'ng -ll s- h\n said that he entercfl\nthe ministry fiom a train of circum-\nstances Htintcd by the bulking of n\ndog. Hud tho wind blown ouo way\non u ceitnln day the Spanish inquisi-\ntion would linte been established In\nHnglnnd. But it blew tho other way,\nnnd that chopped the accursed institu-\ntion, with 7j tons of shipping, to tho\nbottom of the sen or flung tho splin-\ntered logs on the rocks.\nNothing unimportant in jour life or\nmine. Three naughts placed on the\nright side of the figuio one makes\na thousand, and six naughts on the\nright side of the figure one a million,\nand our nothingness placed on the\nright side may bo augmentation Mini.\nItnble. All the nges of time and eterni-\nty uffected by tho basket let down\nfrom a Damascus balcony.
14fcd576ccc81c5b9f8e84231b98388d OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0589040778793 39.513775 -121.556359 A similar resolution was passed in the As-\nsembly, having retereuce to the safety of\nthe room and vault in which the money is\nkept, and authorizing the Treasurer to cm-\np 0 a watchman.\nA lengthy discussion took place in the\nSenate, in regard to the bonds of the Treas-\nurer. which are but $100,01)0, while he has\n$500,000 on hand.\nMr. Moore introduced a bill for the col-\nlection of delinquent taxes in San Francis-\nco He slated there was $150,000 due the\ncounty, and SBO,OOO due the Stale.\nTne Act to change I lie terms of Supervi-\nsors of counties, and tor an election of one\nSupeivisor each year, was recommitted,\nwith instructions to amend it to apply to ev-\nery county whose representatives did not\nobject to such application.\nDr. Wood was again I 1 ought before the\n to-day, and fined £51)0, to be im-\nprisoned at flic rate of two dollars per day\ntill paid He has of course appealed to ths\nCourt of Sessions. It remains to be seen\nwhether the correction of the words of the\nformer sentence comes too late\nMr MerClatchey, of the Bee, insists that\nin 1849, Gen. Sutter stated and swore that\ntic had no claim to laud in Sacramento and\nvicinity and that his (McClatcbeys) evi-\ndence to that effect, given s.mie years ago,\nwas cut troin the records by D K. Biann iu,\nand destroyed. The Bee suites (hat thete\nis a man in the city who was present when\nthe grant and map was gotten up 111 1849.\nMr. Cha t ies Forman has been appointed\nclerk in the Secretary of Slates office, in\nplace <d Dr. »ood— C'uh/urma t*xpress\nTt Ug rum.
0c3ee20fe1de45059c9041fecd06667d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1901.23698626966 41.004121 -76.453816 crowds will have when they visit\nNingars. Falls to view tho scenie and\nIndustrie attractions there. In that\nfavored epot there is already developed\nmore power than Is nsed In many of\nthe large cities, but to this developed\nforce must foe added 30,000 horsepower\nthat Is to be developed by means of\nsix new turbines and sir new gener-\nators, the contracts for which have\nbeen awarded. These new turbines\nare to be tnstaJled In the now whixl\nfit now In course of construction. The\ndesign of the new turbines will differ\nmaterially from the desiga of those\nnow In use In the present wheel pit\nThis change Is significant .of the fact\nthat the Niagara Falls Power com-\npany Intends that the Installation In\nits new plant shall be up to the highest\nstate of perfection known in this open-\ning year of the century. It Is this\nknowledge that at Niagara the most\nmodPfB, the most perfect working pow-\n development In the world, .may bo\nseen that will Inspire visitors 'to the A\nExposition to go there and look upon\nthe wonders that man has wrought\nEach of the six new turbines will\nhave a cipaclty of 5.000 horsepower,\nand ench will be connected to and\ndrive a 5.000 horsepower generator.\nThe turbines now In use were designed\nby Plccard. Pictet & Co. of Geneva,\nSwitzerland, while the new turbines\nare to be built after deslgus prepared\nby Eseher, Wyss fe Co. of Zurich.\nSwitzerland, the plans of which com-\npany were accepted in a competition.\nThe turbines in the old pit each have\ntwo wheels. wlo the new turbines\nore each to have but a single wheel.\nWith these new turbines In place\nIn the wheel pit, the output capacity to\nof the Niagara Falls Power company\nwill be 80,000 horsepower. There will\nbe space In the new pit for five addi-\ntional turbines, each of 5,000 horse-\npower
511bea19b1faa21dcb121cb07da470ce NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.7027396943176 41.681744 -72.788147 It is estimated that of 2,543,434 hec-\ntares of cultivated land in the Phillp- -\n'pine Islands at least 1,130,000 hec\ntares are under cultivation to rice.\nThe production is dependent to a con-\nsiderable extent upon rainfall, and al-\nthough in some sections water is avail-\nable for irrigation, the great bulk of\nthe crop is dependent entirely upon\nthe rains. Thus there is a marked\nvariance in production from year to\nyear and the annual crop ranges from\nabout 600,000 tons up to as high as\n850,000 tons. Yet even at the highest\nfigure of production, imports are ne-\ncessary to supply the demand. Prac-\ntically all of the rioe brought into the\nPhilippines comes from Saigon, the\nprincipal port of French Ind o-C hl n- a.\nFrom 1899 to 1916, both years \nclusive, the total imports into the\nPhilippines amounted to 3,381,886 me-\ntric tons of value of 225,509,495 pesos.\nThe value of the peso is 50 cents,\nUnited States currency. The average\nvalue of rice imported during this pe\nriod has not changed greatly. In 1899\nis was 64 pesos per ton, while in 1916 i\nis was 68.70 pesos per ton. The high-\nest average value recorded in any of\nthe years enumerated was in 1912\nwhen it reached 86.70 pesos per ton\nand constituted 21.09 per cent of total\nimports. The lowest was in 1909 when\nit was 57.40 pesos per ton. The heav-\niest importations were in 1903 when\nthey amounted to 334,339 tons, valued\nat 25,104,764 pesos; in that year rice\nconstituted 37.12 per cent of the total\nimports into the Philippines.
181e3b712d40a77dbad77b188bf20e4c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.7109588723997 41.004121 -76.453816 six to one, Mr. Dillmeyer not voting,\nand Mr. Miles voting against it. Wo\ndesire to stato (Jlstlnctly that Mr. Mc-\nNinch voted Vor this motion, 'hrid'had\nannounced his intention of tlolng so\npreviously. Mr. Wlthlngton's nnmo\nwas then called by ono of tho Secreta-\nries and hp vbted for William V. With-\nlngton, as stated Jn tho official report.\nTho result of'tho ballot was then re\nported and there was.no nomination.\nThe subsequent rirocee'dings bf tho\nconforoiico'appear In tho official report.\nMr. McNinch nnd tho Montdur con-\nferees did riot withdraw from tho con-\nferenco immediately .after' this 202d bal-\nlot a.4 is stajdd by hllm They remain-\ned' for a number, of ballots'; Mr. Miles,\nof Montour, offering n motion after tho\n20CtIl ballot, ''That tho conference ad\njourn to meet nt DIoomsburg, on tho\n115th bf Soplcihber," which was rejected ;\niind Mr. McNinch asking leavo' of tho\nconferenco aflcr tho 208th ballot, to re-\ntire for tho spMco bf fifteen minutes,\nwlilch was granted. Chalfaiit was\nalso admitted upon two occasions and\nmado remarks to tho conference.\nWo havo said that Mr. McNineb's\nvotojwas unexpected in view of thd fact\nthat lie had voted under his instructions'\nfor nearly two hundred times for- Mr.\nDttckalow, whilo n nomination could\n'not bd effected, and that ho wits well\ninformed Just beforo thatvotd wasglven\nthat Mr, Duckalew could and would bo\nnominated during that session by tho\nvotes of tho Northumberland conforecs.\nThis information was conveyed to him\nby Mr. Clark when tho eonferonco inet\nto tako tho 201st ballot. IIo was inform-\ned by Mr. Clark that lib had Just learned\nfrom Mr. M. J . D. Withlngton', conferee,\nthat his brother Mr. Wl P. Withlngton,\n,tho candidatrj, had becotno convinced\nthat his nomination was impossible,\nand that inasmuch ns ho believed that\nMr. Duckalow was tho second cholco of\nNorthumberland county, ho desired\nthat his conferees should Voto for him,\nand that they would presently do so,\nand mako tho nomination.
089fba571cd633e28b8807894a5cbbb8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.346575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 In his sermon to the people of S*.\nGeorge's Sunday, Bishop Burgess did\nnot spare the recreant minister. Tho\neloper was called a traitor and de­\nnounced roundly from tho very pulpit\nwhere he played the sanctified part a\nweek ago. In part the Bishop said:\n"My friends, I have not come here\nto preach to you an ordinary sermon.\nThere Is no use In my trying to forget\nthe incidents of the last week or pass\nthem In absolute silence. Our dear\nchurch, our diocese, your parish are\nsuffering from a staggering blow. 1\nhave come here as tho pastor of the\ndiocese to share your sorrow, your\nIndignation and your shame.\n"Perhaps he was Insane, but I am\nnot of those who believe that Insanity\ncun always be pleaded as an excuse for\nImmorality. Our country has suffered\ntoo much already from the mawklgh\nsentiment which allows murderers and\nadulterers to go unpunished on the\nground plea of Insanity.\nLttle Scandal n Ministry\n“It 1s seldom that a dark scandal or\nhideous shadow or mark of sin Is\nfound among the ministry and that Is\nwhy when such things happen their\nunusualness Is remarked.\n"On the other hand wo have out\nwealthy people regarded with an adul­\nation and sycophancy to a degree that\nturns the stomach of every right-\nthinking and self-respecting man. On\nthe other hand we have an upgrowth\nof socialistic hatred and envy threat­\nening the very life of the Republic.\nThese are the things we are facing.\nChurch is Btterly Assailed\n"Now. have you been true to your\nchurch? The church has never known\nsuch n day as the present. She has\nnever been assailed so bitterly before\nwith Infidelity or^ the one hand and\nimmorality on the other. Dark and\nfearful Is the arraignment that can be\nmade »ff society—the society that you\nspell with a big S."
096a2a3c186c86cdc4e61f231f76a964 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.6953551596337 46.187885 -123.831256 mains of tnul.ling a Cheap Jnhn, one\nhorae railroad, what can be expected\nbut that auch men as II. II. Clatlin\nand other merchant prince and flnan\ndera will heallale before again visit\nIng a place w here not only the promot\ners of the only enterprise that could\nopen the d.wir of a future prosperity\nto It. but hla Malting friends are In\naulled and abuaed. they would heallate\nbefore returning to plant any money\nIn that oMnmunlty. The property own\nera of Astoria will aurely feel the ef\nfect of the tirades made against Mr.\nHammond and the railroad company\nand the auaplcinna engendered against\nall property In the city, by the Infain\noua publication referred to In Judge\nTaylor's letter. I cannot find words\nstrung enough to express my dlaap\nproval of auch methods, and am thor\noughly satlsfled that the time has come\nto apply a remedy to the evil.\n"We all know what work has\nbeen done by the railroad both In As\ntoria proper and at Flavel and War\nrenton. The entire water front from\nFort Stevens to Tongue point haa but\none Interest In common, and will and\nmust be developed on a basis for mu\ntual benefit to both aide of the bay\nI am satisfied that the better clasa of\npnierty owners on the east and west\nsldea of Young'a Hay realise that a\ndollar spent In one place only helps to\nbring a dollar In the other. I am more\nthan pleased to nee the general senti\nment of the business men of this city\nso openly expressed for the mainte\nnance of law and order, and the same\nspirit ullllx.nl In the proper channel will\nset ourselves xtralk'ht before the world,\nvindicate Mr. Hammond, and suppress\nfor the future all such wrong doing as\ncomplained of and push forward rap-Idl- y\nour growth townrdtt the goal of
13983b089f561948a3980d4e4f7fe9eb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.705479420345 41.681744 -72.788147 The Berlin Fair society always\nseems to have a big pull with the\nweather man and it has been several\nyears now since stormy weather has\ngreatly hampered their efforts. It is\ndoubtful, however, if the weather\nhas ever been any better than during\nthe past week for although the nights\nearly in the week were a little chilly,\nthe balmy air of the afternoons, not\ntoo hot for comfort to those trudging\nalong the midway, more than made\nupfor the difficulty.\nNow ls the season of the Indian\nsummer, famed and fabled in press\nand verse. That most beautiful sea-\nson of the year whe'h the blue, smoke-\nlike haze hanigs low over the hills, then\nthe morning and evening atmosphere\nis touched with the first tang of au-\ntumn, when the pumpkins lay beside\nthe withered in the fields\nlike great golden globes, when the\napples in the orchards obtain their\nfirst red tint of fall and when at mid-\nday, the sun, sweeping in its daily\narc through the heavens, beams its\nwarm rays over the countryside, giv-\ning to all a last pleasant warmth, a\nhint of the summer just passed such\nis the New England Indian summer.\nThen comes the autumnal season,\nconsidered by many as even prefer-\nable to the beautiful springtime. The\nwonderful tints to the leaves, the gold-\nen harvests days and lastly but by no\nmeans least, the delightful October\nmoon, known as the Harvest moon.\nOn such nights when the moon pokes\nits big red surface over the eastern\nhorizon, lighting up forest and field\nwith its mellow rays is the time- for\nthe husking bees.
0a4fa7764cf81e17ae799c3b1df979d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.815068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho Chicago Journal appears this\ncning in an entirely new dress.a lac j\nnlle of the old ono before Its destruc- g\nin hv tho i/rnat firn. It wiim m-intnri nn *i\nicw lour-eyllnder press. y\nMany o! tho Chicago bank* located in\no South Division aro establishing 0\nanchea tho West Division, and aro do- T\n} tho sumo In tho South Division.\nl'eter Franklin W. l'eck, one ol j,\no Chicago pioneers, died last even- 0\ni, aged 01 yeara. Mr. Peck came to\nlicago In 181)0, and erected tho first q\nline building and the first brick build- c\n?. lie was one of the wealthiest, If not n\nu wealthiest ol our citizens. Ills property\nnsisted largely of latuled estate, which r,\nleased to parties for a long term, on\nndition ol their improving It. For .\nison his estate hassullereu but little do- jj\neolation by tho great Are. tl\nManager Jlooiey had leased of E. II.\ntddock the lot on which his residence\n>od, northeast corner of Wabash avenue A\nd Manial street, on which in the snrimr ..\nwill crecl a new opera bouse, which\nintends to build first-class. g ,\nThe two political parties of this city f,\nd county, In view of llio present j,\nndition of idlalra growing out y\nthe fire, aro frying to unite upon a tl\nlion ticket lor city and county ofliceni, t|\nbo voted for at tiio election, which t|\nkes place two weeks benco. lioth par- c ,\ns bavo been in convention to day. It j,\nis arranged kitwccn the two that the\nipublicans should bavo the candidate\nr Mayor, City Collector, Police
0678a68bda46f0948c7e1b874078ee9e THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9467212798522 39.290882 -76.610759 A SENSE ofduty to myself as well as to the pub-\nlic, induces me to state that my Panacea has bee*\ncounterfeited to a considerable extent, and that large\nquantities of it have been sold in New York, Philadel-\nphia, and Pittsburg. The bottles containing the medi-\ncine, as well as the stereotyped bills which cover eacli\nbottle, has been so neatly and closely copied by thoee\nengaged in counterfeiting them, that itis difficult to de-\ntect them, and which indeed can alone be done by a\ncritical examination. As to the spurious Panacea, itis\na most wretched and deleterious compound,calculat-\ned to do, as it doubtless has done, great injury to the\nconstitutions of those who may he so unfortunate as to\nuse it. If there be any thing within the range of buma*\naction more immoral or wicked than another, it in\nwhere an unprincipled being jeopards the health and\nlives of hisfellow creatures, as in the instance,\nlor filthy lucre, and palms upon them as a genuine medi-\ncine ot universal reputation for its sanative quality, a\nmost villainous counterfeit, whose constituent proper-\nties, instead of possessing the power of curing, tend only\nto deceive end blight the hones of the invalid, if not per\nmantntly to destroy his health.\nHaving discovered the author and agents in this inju-\nrious fraud upon the public, as well as upon my own in-\nterests. and being influenced by a sincere desire to po\nnish the aggres ion of the former, and throw the pan®\nply of protection around the latter,! caused some week*\nsince suits to be instituted in the U. States Court ftw\nPhiladelphia, against the parties concerned in this nefa\nrious affair; regular reports of which when adjudicated,\nwillbe published for the public information, and to warn\nthe unprincipled against the danger ofdepredating upon\nthe risiitof others, and of periling human health.\nn!2 4t
5dbe84d45b2da87aa24f3456a1b74594 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.03698626966 39.513775 -121.556359 BT VIRTUE OF a DECRETAL ORDER issued\n•irt of She District Court of the Fifteenth Jttdi-\nctxl Dwiricl in awl (or Rultr County ami S-tale of\nCaliforajix. against N. Carroll ami in favor of James\nE Caine for the sum of seven hundred ami fifty and\nfifty -two one hundredths dollars (s7sn 52) priori pad\nwith interest on a dd sum at the rate of three (Si per\ncent, per mooth from the seventeenth (17) day of\nSeptember A.l), 1557 until paid; also all costs of suit\ntaxed in tne sum of twenty four and five one hun-\ndredths dollars (824 06/ toge.her with all the costs\nscenting upon said writ, to me directed and deliv-\nered. coret.landing me to sell all of the mortgaged\npremises hereinafter described to satisfy said de-\nmands. I will sell on the TWENTY' FIRST(6Ist)\nDAY iIF 3 Awl'Alt V A. 1). IS6». at the hour of two\n(2) oelodlP. M of seel day. in pursuance with the\nrequirements of said order, sell a -ale to the\nhighest tedder for rash, the following mortgaged\nproperly described In said order of sale as billows, to\nwit: all the riftil title and interest of the defendant in\nnnd to (bat properly situated in Urotown <d t iroville,\nPiilte county California.and described on the plot or\nsurveyor said town ol Oroville as follows, to win\ncomtnenclngsm the .south side of Bird slr. - et In block\nnumber one (1) eighty'Bo) feet from the corner of\nsaid block on sniil street t»n the corner of Huntnon\nanil bird stree;, thence ronthorly one hundred and\nthirty tw0(1321 feel, thence easterly fifty six (56) feel\nthence northerly one hundred nnd thirty-two (1321\nfeet, thence along the line ol bird street tiliy six <Vi)\nfeet to place of lieginning, together with all and sin-\ngular the tenements hereditaments and appurtenan-\nces thereunto belongh g or in anywise atipertainitig.\nThe nliovesale to take place ill the Court House\ndoor in Iho town of Oroville, county and Stale afore-\nsaid.
45abdd658b84dc3edae3e50ed1634321 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.305479420345 41.681744 -72.788147 "First, there Is Hyman. Ho is the\nprettiest child, looks about five years\nold, has fair skin, pink cheeks, brown\neyes, dark hair, as attractive as can\nbe. He is really nine years old, how-\never, with a mental age of three, and\nhis innocence is only in his appear-\nance. Whenever he happens to feel\nlike going to school, he wanders in,\nan hour or so late, but quite often\nthe lure of the dump heap and\ngarbage pail is too much for him, and\nhe doesn't get to school at all. Look-\ning out of the window one day I saw\ntwo small feet waving wildly from one\nof those familiar green rubbish cans;\nHyman had Investigated too thorough-\nly and had landed head first in the\ncan. He steals books and library\ncards from the other children and\ntears them to pieces. He brings his\nchoice treasures to school every day;\na box of clothespins or flat irons from\n neighbor's back step; a child's hat\nthat pleases him; toys, especially\nbicycles and tricycles. He enjoys par-\nticularly collecting the mail that the\npostman has just distributed. He is\nalways well supplied wiht money, per-\nhaps Ave cents, more likely one dollar.\nHe amuses himself on the way home\nfrom school by chasing little girls and\nhitting them; It is great fun to hear\nthem cry. He runs the streets, lives\nin garbage pails and steals from\nmorning until night. His most seri-\nous adventure, was choking his baby\nsister to death. Yet to look at Hyman\nwhen he is sufficiently clean to war-\nrant inspection, you would never\ndream that ho was mentally defective.\n"Then there is David. He was in\nthe regular classroom until he was\nthirteen years old. He choked little\nchildren in the lines and made himself\nsuch a general nuisance that someone\nfinally wondered If he might be fee-\nbleminded. And he was; his mental
88500c940c973a5d42ed778bcc394086 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.5301369545916 39.261561 -121.016059 A correspondent thus write* to a scientific\npaper :—‘-In a late number of your paper you\nMate, in answer lo some correspondent, (but\nyou lint e no eonQdcnae in the report thatw hen\na man i« leal be will travel in a circle. In\ntbi* you are certainly mistaken; it is a fact\nwell known to all frontiersmen, that when |>er-\nsous are bewildered, they frequently travel in\na |>erfect circle, sometime* keeping Ibe same\ntruck until they make u dozcu equal round*;\nat oilier times tuuking the circle larger or\nsmaller each time. It i* Dot by any means al-\nways the case, when a person i* lost; but it is\nbo Irequeni that it is within the experience of\nevery one who has been much in (he wood*.\nIn calm and cloudy weather, and in a country\nof ranch sameness of appearance, the best\nwoodsmen gel so bewildered as to take the\nciicles. Persons not accustomed to the woods\nwill sometimes do so when the sun is shining\nand a steady breeze blowing. On the level or\ngulf praries of Ibis country, on a calm, \nmorning, uo man can travel without a road.\nIt is an incident of every day occurrence in the\nspring and fall seasons, that men ure thus be-\ncalmed on the prairie a"effectually as are ships\nat sou; nor will a compass mend the matter,\nfor it cannot he carried steadily enough to keep\nits meridian, and the course it points cannot be\nkept for fifty yards; if a man attempts it, he\nwill make a circle and come back to the place\nhe started from. The circle will be large or\nsrnnll generally, in proportion to the density of\nthe fog—sometimes oidy a hundred yards in\ndiameter; at other times a mile, hut seldom\nmore. The circles thus made ure perfect. Thi*\nkind of wandering seem* to arise front an at-\ntempt to go a straight course when there is\nnothing to guide Ih* senses, or when the tisttnl\nguides of sun, wind, or the general contour of\nthe country are disregarded. It rarely befalls\nchildren, who do not attempt to go on a course,\nhut only run Imin one visible point lo uuotber\nequally perceptible.”
032671ee469539be3ab06aa761e05694 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1889.0205479134956 39.745947 -75.546589 WAasniaxov, Je«. 8.— In the United\nfitetes Senate yesterday the resolution re­\nported from the Committee on Foreign\nRelations la reference to the Panama\nCanal was taken up, end Mr. Gray rose\nto make some rsmsrks, but waa Inter­\nrupted by e motion made by Mr. Bd-\nmunds and seconded by Mr. Hoar that,\nin the consideration of that subjeet, the\ndeors be closed.\nThe galleries were accordingly cleared,\nthe doors closed and the Senate (at 19.85\np. m.) proceeded to the discussion of V-0\nsubject in secret seeslon.\nThe secret session continued till 5.40,\nwhen the doors were reopened. It was\nthen found that the discussion had been\ncarried on by Senator* F.diçunde, Sher­\nman, Morgan. Gray and Jones, of Arkan­\nsas and that _tho Joint résolut!\nadopted—yea« 49, naj “ * —\nmodified ao ss to readr\nResolved by tbe Senate and House of\nRepresentatives of the United Stete« of\nAmerica, In Congress assembled, that the\n of the United Stetes will\nlook with serious concern and disapproval\nupon any connection of any European\nGovernment with the construction or\ncontrol of any ship canal across the Isth­\nmus of Darleo,or across Central America,\nand must regard aay such connection or\ncontra] as Injurious to the just rights abd\nInterests of the United 8tatee, end ss a\nmenace to their welfare\nSection 9. That the President be and\nhe fa hereby requested to communicate\nthis expression of the views of the Gov­\nernment . of the United Stetes to the Gov­\nernments of the countries of Europe.\nAt a caucus of the Democratic mem­\nbers of tbe House, held last night for the\npurpose of considering means to put an\nend to the dead-lock, a resolution was\nadopted doclarlng against debating mo­\ntions for the purpose of preventing sus-\nGnslons of the rules, and that the pend-\nX resolution for an amendment of the\nrules be recommitted.
33bf73fb1b0638a5a6e5e0354c281d67 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1879.6589040778792 41.004121 -76.453816 Thousands of the activo men, the business\nmen, the live men of the country, of physi-\ncal and intellectual energy, have been drawn\nto this centre. To foster and encourage this\ninterest by proper and protective legislation,\nthat the producer may reap the legitimate\nfruit of his labor and capital, should bo the\nfirst care of the commonwealth, and yet, we\nare assured by thn appeals comiug from the\npeople of that region, that the great carry-\ning corporations in their discrimination\nagainst the producer and transporter have\nso paralvzed the enterprise of individuals as\nto mako them their servants, 'tho hewers of\nwood and the drawers ol water.\nFor theso wrongs they must hold respon-\nsible the republican party, which has been\nIn full possession of the executive and leg-\nislative branches of tho government.\nTo correct these and many griev-\nances, and the more effectually to guard the\napproaches of corrupt influence upon mem-\nbers of the legislature, a new constitution\nwas demanded. The ring Influence of tbe\nrepublican party arrayed itself in opposition\nto the proposed reforms but the people,\naroused to a sense of its importance, carried\nthe proposition by an overwhelmlpg major-\nity. The new constitution was adopted.\nThe most stringent provisions were incor\nporated in it to curb the encroachment of\nunwarranted corporate power, and seeming-\nly impassible barriers raised to prevent the\napproaches of corrupt influence upon tho\nrepresentatives of the people. The people\nfelt safe In Its apparent protection, but how\nvain and futile were their hopes. Charter-\ned monopolies refused to submit to its re\nquirements, and the poisonous influence of\ntbe lobby again tound Ils way Into the balls\nof legislation,
269dda134df2619928fc689002a43d45 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.4795081650982 58.275556 -134.3925 Cordova is a small town of some\nthree or four huudred people, besides\nwhom there are several hundred of the\nemployees of the railroad company\nand the contractor who have their head¬\nquarters here. All told there are some\n600 men at work along the line of road\nbetween here acd tho Copper Kiver.\nBy the fifteenth of the mouth there\nwill be 27 miles of track laid, extend¬\ning from the wharf at Cordova, to the\nCopper River. This is a very pretty\ncountry, the sceuery much resembling\nthat along Gastineau channel. The\nrailroad is being built along a very\npictu resque route. i*rom Cordova it\nfollows along the shore of Eyak Lake\nfor about four miles, and then crosses\nthe western half of the great delta of\nthe Copper river for a distauoe about\n25 miles, when it reaches the west bauk\nof the river. The delta of the river is\nfifty miles wide, a low, marshy country\ntraversed by scores of email streams.\nAfter reaching the river the route fol¬\nlows upstream. One of the great at¬\ntractions of this route will be the\nopportunity afforded of riding in a\nrailway coach right across the front of\na glacier three miles in width and two\nhundred feet high; in fact, the road\nwill pass between two glaciers, Miles\nglacier andChilds glacier, the faces of\nboth being of the dimensions just\nstated. The icebergs can be seen\nbreaking from the glaciers and falling i\nwith a deafening roar into the river be-\nlow; the view is magnificent, the crack¬\nling and rumbling and roaring is ap¬\npalling.
35f4b1f256f3d5d077970d8cd955b852 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2315068176054 39.745947 -75.546589 Real manhood with a perfect manly strength ie not only nature's own gift, but\naccording to my belief, may easily he within the reach of practically any man Of\ncourae, we all know that it is the huaky. vigorous, vital fellow who attract« both\nwomen and men to him, and it is he, also, who is ever sought out and who achieves the\nreally big thing» of life. Sturdy, vital manhood is, without doubt, the one great ailent\nuniversal power which fascinates us all, no matter how we may argue to the contrary\nTherefore, reader. I «are not what may be your age. nationality or creed, whether you\nare married or »ingle, whether you are a bank president or work on the farm or in the\n• hop. nor do I care how unstrung or nervoua you may feel, or what past acta may have\nleft you debilitated and enervated, I aay to you in all aorioueneaa, if I can show you an\neaay. drugleaa way by which you may treat vouraalf with object of bringing back fu.i\nvigor to your organism, then I will »how you the road to naw hope and now manhood A\nman may he «mail in stature, yet aa strong and attractive as a giant, or he may be big In\nstature yet unstrung, nervous and unmanly. It la all a question of year own vlgorona\nstrength Therefore, let me suggest that yon call or write at one«, then after read­\ning my hook, If yon decide you want to fry out my little vltalirer In yoixr own cue\nand will write to me, saying «o, I will reply to your letter and guarantee to make\neasy proposition which should enable yon to have one of tho vitaliaera at\nevents, you ncod the knowledge that my little book contains, whather yon\nvitalixer or not, ao please call or 811 in and send the coupon.\nNOTE—With spacial attachments my VITALIZES Is used by women u well u\nmen for rheumatism, kidney, liver, stomach, bladder disorders, nervousness and gen­\neral III health.
28bcae56481e5d4de60d3de45a167226 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.4139343946063 58.275556 -134.3925 The usually serene and light running\ndomestic life led by theSt roller has been,\nsomewhat disorganized during the past\nfew months, owing to change iu loca¬\ntion and other unforseen contingencies\nand the result is that he is far behind\nwith his correspondence, much of\nwhich has been yearning for answers\nfor weeks and much of which must\ncontinue to yearo as it is not possible\nfor the Stroller to clear his correspon¬\ndence hook at one sittiug, much as be\nwould rejoice to do eo. As it is, only\nthe most urgent of the accumulated\ncorrespondence can be answered at\nthis time. The remainder will be dis¬\nposed of at a more convenient season.\nTo Student, University of Washing¬\nton, Seattle: . Ciucinnatus was not a\nGreek but a Roman. You are evidently\nthiuking of Socrates, "Old Socs" the\nAthens school children used to call\nhim. Ciucinnatus was a farmer\nuntil chosen by his fellow Romans to\nlead their army. He was plowing for\nspring wheat at the time a delegation\ncalled on bim to take charge of the\narmy and he left bis oxen ctand in the\nfurrow for twelve years while he\nfonght Rome's enemies. Later, and\nwhen he came home and fonud that his\nfamily had become somewhat dlsorgan\nized. during bis absence [his eons\nate pie with a knife and his\ndaughters chewed gum], he loaded a\nscow with maccaroui aud sailed for\nAmerica, where he fouuded Cincinnati,\nOhio. The last time the Stroller was\nin Cinciuuati he met a decendent of\nCiucinuatus. He was selling hot ta-\nmales. He said it was not a noble\ncalling but that, as he had a large and\nrapidly increasing family, he was\nobliged to engage in any honest work\nthat would enable bim to catcha da\nMOB.
1469ede0d10477b8083c8d96d559d851 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.532876680619 40.441694 -79.990086 gheny. I hereby assume command.\nII. Tbe following appointments are hereby\nmade, viz: Lee S. Smith. Adjutant General; w.\nS. Uuselion, M. D., Chief of Staff. They will\nbe obeyed and respected accordingly.\n1IL The following aids have been appointed\nand will serve on the staff of tho Chief Mar-slia- L\nnnd will report mounted at headquarters,\nCitv Hall, at 0;30 A. M., sharp.\nV. Division commanaera will establish their\nheadquarters at the points designated in special\norder, us early as possible on Thursday morn-\ning, July 17, reporting: immediately to Chief\nMarshal's headquarters. City Half, either in\nperson or by aid.\nVI. Division marshals will pay particular at-\ntention toward moving their commands\npromptly, keeping the colnmn well closed up\nand permitting no breaks to occur. Chie\nMarshal's headquarters will be established at\n9 M., at City Hall. Allegheny; in the saddlo\n11 A. If. sharp.\nVII. Bands and escorts The following as-\nsignments of bandi are hereby made, viz.: To\ntbe Chief Marshal, the Grand Army Band; to\nthe Marshal of the First division, the Cathe-\ndral Band; to the Marshal of the Second divi-\nsion, tbe Great Western Band: to the Marshal\nof the Third division. Post 162 Band. These\nbands will report to Professor Zitterbart at\nChief Marshal's headquarters not later than 10\ntA. M. The Grand Army Band and the Great\nWestern Band are hereby assigned for duty in\ntbe parks daring the afternoon and evenirrg,\nunder the direction of tbe musical director,\nwho will be obeyed in all things pertaining to\ntun musical portion of the demonstration.\nVHL Carriages containing orators. Invited\nguests. Councils, Committee on
15d448dc3ae59334eb847e5c891318b0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.0835616121258 39.745947 -75.546589 or association shall transfer or cede, in\nany manner whatsoever, to any com­\npany or association not authorized to\ndo business in this state, any risk or\nliability or any part thereof assumed\nby it, under any form of contract of\ninsurance, covering property located In\nthis state, Including any risk or liabili­\nty tinder any general or floating policy\nor any agreement, general, floating or\nspecific, to reinsure excess loss by one\nor more fires. No fire insurance com­\npany or association shall reinsure, or\nassume as a reinsuring company, or\notherwise, in any manner or form\nwhatsoever, the whole or any part of\nany risk or liability, covering property\nlocated in this state, or any insurance\ncompany or association iy)t authorized\nto transact business in this state.\nSection 3. Whenever the Insurance\ncommissioner shall have or receive in­\nformation, that any fire Insurance\ncompany or association, not incorpo­\nrated under the laws of this state, has\nviolated any cf the provisions of sec­\ntion 1 of this act. he is authorized, at\nthe expense of such company or asso­\nciation, to examine, by himself, or bis\naccredited representative, at the prin­\ncipal office or offices of company\nor association, located in the United\nStates of America, or any foreign com­\npany, and also at such other offices c>\nagencies of such company or associa­\ntion as he may deem proper, all books,\nrecords and papers of such company or\nassociation, and may examine under\noath the officers, managers and agents\nof such company or association as to\nsuch violation or violations. The re­\nfusal of any such company or associa­\ntion to submit to such examination, or\nto exhibit its books and records for\ninspection, shall be presumptive evi­\ndence that It has violated the provis­\nions of the first section of this act, ami\nshall subject it to the penalties pre\nscribed and imposed by this act.\nSection 4. Every fire insurance com­\npany or association shell annually and\nat such other times as the insurance\ncommissioner may require, in addition\nto ail returns now by law required of\nit, or Us agents or managers, make a\nreturn to the insurance commissioner\nin such form and detail as may be pre­\nscribed by him, of ail reinsurance or\ncessions of risk or liability contracted\nfor. or affected by it. whether hy issue\nof
027f47d0315d0c407a18289565514fe8 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.2671232559615 41.004121 -76.453816 So saying, ho gave each man his\nhand, wlillg great tears fell from his\neyes and down Ids cheeks, and his men\nwept with hint. Only llaunes-Jaco- b\nstill hoped to find souio way of escape.\nSo ho brought tho cow,oii whoso milk\nthoy hnd lived, out of thu,stahte,houud\nthe last remaining ham with flax be-\ntween her horns, got tho chaplain of tho\neastlo who win lyln In bed trying to\ndtlvonway bad thoughts, and Imagln-In- o\nthat ho had written tho last ho over\nshould, to wrltu u billet, which ho fast\nened to tho ham and then ho drovo\ntho cow out of tho gate. When tho\nMentzers saw tho cow coming straight\nncross tho valloy In which sho had so\noften, In bet'er days, fed on tho green\nmeadows, they wero astonished; but at\nlast, souio of them caught tho cow, and\nunbound the flax from her horns. Thoy\nfound tho ham tied up In It, nml with\nIt tho billet, which read thus:\n"No moro can you tako tho fortress\nthan tho cow can oat tho ham I"\nThey oponod their eyes In astonish-\nment, nnd brought tho cow and thu\nwriting to their For weeks\nho had beon tired of tho slego, nnd\nwould gladly havo withdrawn long be-\nfore, if overy day ho hail not hoped\nthat hunger would compel the eastlo to\nsurrender. But when ho saw tho cow,\nand read tho billet, ho said:\n"Blow a retreat, for wo shall starve\nourselves beforo they aro out of rations!"\nTho next day they went off down tho\nvalley with bag nnd baggago. Tho\nRelncckers looked on with throbbing\nhearts, not daring to uttci a sound, un-\ntil tho last Mcntzcr was out of sight\nand then Joy burst forth on all sides I\nTho sick wero well tho weak stood\nfirm on their feet, tho chaplain got out\nhis bed, tho conslablo sent a roar of\ncannoury aftet tho, MenlKcrs but no\nshot, lest they might take It for earnest,\nand como back, nnd tho man In tho\ntown blow as If ho would blow his llfo\nout "Aim Dunhcl altc Colt!" Count\nrJtelneck took off his cap and folded his\nhand', until tho strain was ended ; then,\nstroking his moustache, ho said .\n"That was by God's counsel Indeed;\nButasoftenasIhoarapigsquealora\ncow low, 1 shall remember linnncs-Jacob- ,
34cf887516be0c7c4ad5dcdec4741d29 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.1816939574478 29.949932 -90.070116 ing house on Camp street, went home, a few\nnights ago, to find his rather restricted bachelor\nquarters already occupied by an individual who\nhad not yet recovered from the effects of the fee-\ntivities of carnival week. Joint occupation of\nthe premises was out of the question, so our\nfriend bethought him to seek an unoccupied\nroom wherein to pass the rest of the night, which\nwas then already advanced into the smell hours.\nProviding himself with a key likely to fit any\nprdinary door-lock, and a candle, he commenced\nhis asareb. The door of a gallery room was first\n*approached, and the key inserted In the lock. N)\ngo. Another trial on th' second floor with the saane\nresult. Mounting a flightof stairs, he essayed a\nthird door, and inthis Instance the key was met\nmidway of the lock by a key within. Thereupon\noaurfriend the pursuit of repose in his\nt boarding house, returned to his office and speat\nthe remainder of the night upon a sofa and a\npillow of newspapers. While he slept, he was\nuncooncious of the fact that, having aroused the\noccupants of one of the rooms by fumbling at\ntheir lock, the alarm had gone to other apart-\nments in the vicinity that a burglar with a dark\nlantern ard a red or blue light was In the house.\nThe aroused lodgers were immediately astir. One\ngentleman of a warlihke torn armed himself with\na a sword, another with a poker, and, while their\nterrified wives, and the only offspring of one of\nthem, stood-e pale and shivering group-behind\nthe door, their lords advanced along passage\nwa)a and down stairs, in a akirmish line, to the\na back yard. deploing to the right and left of the
23ff7c5481c6c798f39a13fb19b6443a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 of the ninth section of the first arti¬\ncle is devoted to restricting and\nlimiting the powers of the legislative\ndepartment of the Government of the\nUnited States.of Congress; and the\nwhole of this tenth section of the same\narticle is devoted to limiting the powers\nof tho legislative department»of the\nState governments. It was not intend¬\ned at all to restrict or limit the people\nin the exercise of their sovereignty in\nordaining fundamental law. In framing\na fundamental law for a State, the peo¬\nple of a State act in the exercise of their\nsovereignty as the people of a State, and\nare under no constitutional limitation\nexcept that which requires them to give\nto their State a Republican form of gov¬\nernment. And that the right of pre¬\nscribing the qualifications of electors or\nvoters is lodged there expressly by the\nConstitution by implication, you will\nsee by reading the second of\nthis article prescribing the man¬\nner in which the lower house of the\nCongress of the United States is elected.\nThe members shall be elected every\ntwo years, and the qualifications of the\nelectors shall be the same as the quali¬\nfications for electors of the most numer¬\nous branch of' the State legislature.\nThis expressly concedes to the people,\nin the exercise of their sovereignty, the\nright to limit and restrict the right of\nsuffrage, lust as they see proper, and\nthat the clause was not intended atall to\noperate on the people in the exercise of\ntheir sovereignty is obvious from the\nlanguage, "^o State shall pass any\nbill of attainder, or ex post facto law/'\nNow this is not the way we talk about\nordaining or framing the Constitution.\nWe talk about the people framing the\nConstitution, and the people adopting\nit, but we never talk about passing the\nConstitution.
3417c4f8449af914af07d53383b32049 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.064383529934 41.004121 -76.453816 ning free watched by a mounted\nherder, and although a stranger you\nmay walk In the midst of them, pat\nthem on the nose or flank, and they\nwill show themselves as gentle as\nsheep. To achieve such a result prizos\nare offered to those herds whoso\nhorses show the most confiding dis-\nposition on the approach of man. In\norder to promote this quality It is\nmade a rule that each day the colts\nare stroked by the hand, their feet\nraised and In other ways so treated as\nto make them thoroughly familiar\nwith their future masters.\nTrakehnen la situated In the east-\nernmost portion of Prussia and tha\nproperty la about ten miles in one di-\nrection and stretches seven miles la\nthe other. It was the father of Fred-\nerick the Great first pitched upon\nthe place and who converted tha\nswamp, over which the moose roamed,\nwild, into the finest pasture land la\nGermany. Of course the least favora-\nble feature about Trakehnen la Its\ngeographical position with regard to\nIlusaia; and aa a matter of fact it haa\nthree times been exposed to capture\nby invasion from across the eastern\nfrontier, but on each occasion the offi-\ncials in charge of the Trakohnen stud\nfarm have been able to escape with all\nthe animals In their charge.\nWithin a drive from Trakehnen la\nRomlnten, the favorite hunting re-\ntreat ot the kaiser, forests well\nstocked with wild deer and boar, and\nwhere, It may be reniembored, he re-\nceived Count Wltte on the letter's re-\nturn from America on the conclusion\nof the Peace of Portsmouth.
1a07e3ec8a008394043af020eeb4637b THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1865.8397259956876 36.294493 -82.473409 They would sell for less than half\ntheir value, and finally leave the State\nlo pay their bonds, or a large part of\nI In iii. which result is the worst that\ncan huppcii to the Slate if the roads\nare left in tho hands of the companies.\nm nal, then, is tho best policy to\nadopt, and how shall the Slato meet\nthe issue r 1 respectfully suggest that\nthe Siale issue three or four millions\ninure of bonds to run six, seven, eight\naud ten years, the first payment of\ninterest to commence in July next.\nLet theui bo given iu payment of in- -\nlorest now due, upon condition that\nthey are taken at par.\nIt llio Legislature shall think prop\ner, let them be sold on similar condi\ntion, the proceeds applied to tho\npayment of the interest on all out\nstanding bonds, and let there bo a\nturlher lino in favor of the State on\neach road fin' the sum paid for its\nbenefit. Tho first effect of this will\nbotobiing tho bonds of the State up\nto par value immediately, and toplaeo\nthe credit and integrity of the Stato\nabove suspicion Our people are hon-\nest, aud will submit to taxation almost\nbeyond eiiduranco rather than be dis-\ngraced by the brand of repudiation.\n1 ho second effect, however, would bo\nto relieve the people of the heavy tax-\nation now imposed on them, and\nhereafter to bo imposed on them, to\nmeet the interests for which tho Stato\nisliahlo. In the future, when tho people -r ec ove -
126b6a092af8bc847a4406c9e57ad105 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1901.4150684614408 41.875555 -87.624421 The frigate bird Is endowed with\nuiagnlllcent powers of tllght. Ills vlug\nstretch to an oxpnnso of about tun or\ntwelvo feet; Ills body Is about three\nfeet lu leuirth; hla bill Is very powerful,\nand hla feet nro webbed, but very\nsmall; but for theso he has but llttlo\nuse, as his homo Is In the air, hundreds\nof leagues away from the laud.\nHe Is seen souring high abovo the\nocean; but on Its bosom he 110 ver rests.\nWhen ho seek reposo he Unds It aloft\nHis foot rarely touches land, except tit\nthe timo for pairing, making nests nud\nrearing young.\nThe expanse of his wing Is so great\nand bis body Is so light that ho can\nsoar with little or no exertion. Still, it\nU dlfllcult to seo how this would enable\nhim actually to sleep on the wing, as it\nIs believed he does.\nA closer examination shows, how-\never, that his bones nro hollow, ami\nthat there is n largo pouch communi-\ncating with his lungs nud with the cav-\nities lu tho bones. This pouch ho can\nInlluto air, and thus render him-\nself buoyant; tho sustaining power\nthus acquired, ndded to that of the\nwings, Is HUllliicut to keep him up.\nIf his homo Is lu tho air, It' he neither\ndives Into tho son for llsh nor searches\non the laud for other food, whenco does\nhe derive his sustenance? Impelled\nby hunger, ho descends from the lofty\nregions where It Is his delight to dwell.\nWhether tho sen be rough or calm, he\nglides along over tho water, and any\nunwary tlsli approaching thu surface Is\npounced upon Instantly nud swallowed.\nHut thu bird has other resources;\nthough he cannot dive Into tho hcu to\ncatch llsh, lie avails himself of tho la-\nbors of birds that can. IIo watches ouo\nof them; sees It comu out of thu water\nand tly off with Its prey. At unco tho\nfrlgato bird Is down upon him with a\nswoop of torrlllc velocity. Tho fright-\nened diver drops his llsh In midair;\nthe frlgato bird poises himself ngnlu,\ndials down with another swoop, nnd\nseizes thu llsh cro It reaches tho water.\nNew York Ilcrald.
0ccb107cce934556f22e57b543efeaa2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.6479451737696 40.063962 -80.720915 hicaoo, August 23..Wheat.A largo specula\nL' business was agalu transacted and an ex\n:d market at times was witnessed. Fluctua\nns were wide and frequcut, and the marke\nve*oil"higher than yesterday. Corn quite ne\nu within narrow limits and the feeling (level\n>d was a little unsealed. Oats quiet anc\nhous important features of Intercut. Me«'\nk moderately active within narrow range oi\nces-v Flour unchanged. Wheat, cash No.\nLng 31 0CJ<nl 003^; No. 15 spring 07%ca8l 02%\n2 red 811x5}$; August SI 05J4at 0GJ$. closing a)\njCJ4; September 81 (&%al 0f>%. closing a!\nG&; December SI CW^hI 10)4, closing at 810<)%\nn, cash So. 2, I'J^jc; August 4'J^a.V)^cl clos\nat 4'JMc: September 4'j^a50^e, closing ai\n;c; May Mjiawc, closing at 53%c. Oats, casta\n2, 3?%h'.!7^c; August 37a'i7ko, closing ai\nJc: September Sti-)5aJW>>6c, closing at 3ti%c;\np 39%a-i0^£c, closing at 40c. No. 2 rye t»c.\nley 71c. Klaxseel SI 37. Timothy SI 43,\nis pork, cash Sll '25; September 510 C2%ttl0 K$\nling at 910 H5; October 810 75: May 812 G5.\nd, cash 6Z7Mc; September C.30u6.35c, closing\n>.32%c: GM5aG. <0c, closing at G.17>Jc;\nuary G.'XaG.lbc, closing at 6.1MVC. Bncon,\nrt ribs 5.35a5.40c; shoulders 5.75a3.87Uc;\nrt clear 5.70a5.SUc. Whiskey, 51 13. Bullet\nidy; fancy 'iilAc: flue 18>$£Uc; line ereamerlei\nlalfe'e. Eggs lo^c.\nuu.adei.i'itia. Pa., August23,.Flourdull bul\n1. Wheat bullish; No. 2 red AugustSlOGal 00%;\ntember SlCG'^al 07; October Si 07>jal 07%:\nrembcr 81 (8>J. Corn steady; No. 2 mixed\n;kf>8c: No. 2 ml Jed August and Septembei\n, a57c; October 5G%a57c; November 67%a58c.\nk steady; No. 3, 44>£c; No. 2 white August\nI3)4c; September 4i}£c; Octobcr 4'Ja4zJ^c;\nrember 42>ja4',!%c. Butter strong; l'onnsyl\nla creamery extra 22j{c; do prints extra\n. "Jc. Eggs firm; Pennsylvania firsts 20o.\nai.timokr, Mo., August 23..Wheat, westeri\ni; No. 2 winter red spot aud August 81 cu£\nM: September 81 OSat 0"»K; October SI 0G%;\nember Si 10al lo>i. Corn, western quiet:\nced spot .riGc; August and September 55%*\nc; October SSJfrtMJ-fcc. Oats ilrm; westert\nIre 4'Jai5c; mixed 4U» 12c. ltye Ilrm; prime t<\nice 7ca7'.'c. Ilay steady; prime to choire Mm\ny 81100*1203. Butter: faucy creamery 22c\n. u Dvu« -vm»UU Uh
0b3398524f3df9f260f5bad7f3b8584a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1899.5657533929477 58.275556 -134.3925 Beginning at corner No. 1, identical\nwith a corner of location on the North\nend line, Enterprise lode claim of this\nsurrey. Set post 4 feet long, 4 inches\nsq., 2 feet in ground; mound impracti¬\ncable. Scribed "1 S. 'Ill A. lndepen-1\ndeuce.', Miu. Mon. No. 4, bears S. 53\ndeg 20' E. 9737 feet. Thence S. 45 deg.\nW. Var. 27 deg. 30' E. 300 feet to cor¬\nner No. 2, identical with a corner of\nlocation and with corner 5, Enterprise\nlode claim of this survey. Set post 4\nfeet long, 4 inches sq., 2 feet in ground*\nmound impracticable. Scribed "2 S.\n341 A. Independence." Thence N. 45\ndeg. W. Var. 29 deg. 30' E. 6 feet to\ncorners 4 and 5 of Great Eastern and\nGreat Western lode claims S. 340. 15(H)\nfeet to corner 3, identical with a corner\nof location on East side line Great\nWestern lode claim 340. Set post 4 feet\nlong, 4 inches sq., 2 feet ground;\nmound impracticable. Scribed "3 S.\n341 A. Independence." Thence N. 45\ndeg. E. Var. 29 deg. 30' E. 415 feet A\nshaft 6 feet deep, dims. 6x6, bears S.\n45 deg E. 6 feet distant. 6(H) feet to\ncorner No. 4; identical with a corner of\nlocation. Set post 4 feet long, 4 inches\nsq., 2 feet in ground; mound impracti¬\ncable. Scribed "4 S. 341 A. Indepen¬\ndence." Thence S. 45 deg. (K)' E. Var. J\n29 deg. 30' E. 975.5 feet A corner of\nlocation, Shore and Ready Bullion No.\n2 lode claims and Albion mill site.\n15(H) feet to corner No. 5, identical with\na corner of location and post No. 6 En¬\nterprise lode claim of this survey. Set1\npost 4 feet long. 4 inches sq., two feet\nin ground; mound impracticable.;\nScribed "No. 5 S. .'141 A Independence."\nThence S. 45 deg. W. Var. 21) deg. 30' E.;\n'UH) feet to corner No. 1, the place of be-1\nginning.
04a2b611c6ba7f0771d8ade29f6f22d9 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.1410958587012 43.82915 -115.834394 "Oh, hot my little doggy was so Httle\nand so young,” replied th e young woman,\nand I couldn't leave him at home all\nalone, you know. So I told Dotty here to\nput him in a cigar box and bring him\nalong. And he was asleep in the cotton,\n-yon know, and we were both to pleased\nwith the play, you know” (glancing ap­\npealingly at the treasurer) "th at we both\nforgot all about him. ' You eee I tho ught\nshe had him, but it seems she had put the\nbox under the seat and forgot ail about It.\nOh, do tell me, did you find him?”\nThe young woman gazed so earnestly\nInto the treasurer's face th at he relented,\nand asked what the dogs name was.\n“Gyppy. ” she replied, drying a stray tear\nwith a tiny handkerchief. Treasurer Cox\nthen produced s cigar box from under \ndesk, lifted the lid and disclosed a tiny\ndog curled up io a mam of cotton and\nsleeping peacefully. The young woman\nseized the box with a. joyful exclamation,\nand with profuse thanks to everybody in\nsight th at seemed to be connected with the\ntheatre tripped happily out, with the col­\nored maid following behind.\n"Well,** said Mr. Cox, "with ail my ex­\nperience, I never knew sock s curious arti­\ncle left in the theatre before. Women are\nalways leaving things behind them in their\nchairs and boxes, but who would ever think\nof their leaving dogs behind them? Now,\nwe dont allow dogs in the theatre, and she\nbad to smuggle that little fellowin. Why,\ndo you know, she had that cigar box neatly\ntied up in brown paper, as if it were some\npackage she bad got at the store or had\nforgotten to send by express.”
62d6c5328a72ce3e958f99fe6c1b04a3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.2178081874683 40.063962 -80.720915 matches, but Treiber had none, and\nwent into Fjcqrusoa Lrti7.cn s nnu\nbomnved'.snine; look them junfl to\nJack Topper's saloon, unci iVom thereto Inc.\nstable; Trellicr told hiuito light the straw,\nbuthe said 110, Trellicr must doit; and\nthat Treibcr then climbed up into Uie lott\nand set fire to some bundles of straw. He\nsaid Snmmon, Treibcr and himself were\nfirol at ItoleuhauscrW.but did not aay\nwho set Are to'tlie hoiupfj-They vrenlflrom\nthere to the Kevcro Ilouso stable, and\nwent in ami set fire to it; then went to the\nAmerican Houac stable. Attor piun had\ntold ms stbly tnls fHri Treibcr called out,\n"D.n you, don't you know I am hore?"\nThen Sinn did not say any more. Treibcr\nthen callcd me'and naked if he had'.iiot\n"the tlrst cluincc;" that Cavanaugh nmtl\n to sec tlio State's Attorney.\nTrailer wild voluntarily tljat tfcqy tfentto\nI rohlitzcll's stable, on Decatnr street! and\ntried to set llro to it; they tried to get into\nLingo's carpenter shop to get shavings,\nbut Tailed; they then went to the Revere\nHouse stable, and Sinn set tire to it; they\nthai wcntiinW Topper's sAloonj Sinn\nsaid, "Let's go and sec why the damntnl\nthing don't burn;" they mot Mr. John\nShuck on the plutlbnu of the depot; then\nwent over to the AmericanHouse stable,\nand Sinn set fire to it. Mr. White ftirther\ntestified that Sinn stated their reason for\nfiring the houses was that they might bo\nable to take some of the prisoners outj of\njail, and they had intended to make tho\nbiggest On' thill was ever seen in
41ab1837e0aa4f509e11b59f85ae00ba THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.2698629819888 39.261561 -121.016059 Thoughts on Thinking.—It' one would\nrale any particular merit according to its\ntrue valuation* it is necessary to consider\nhow far it can be justly claimed by mankind\nin general. If we go below the surface of\nthings, and observe carefully, we shall per-\nceive that there is not a wore singular\ncharacter in the world than that of a think-\ning man. It is observing them separately\nand distinctly, and ranging them in their\nrespective classes: it is calmly and steadily\nviewing our opinions on every side, and\nresolutely tracing them through all their\nconsequences and connections, that consti-\ntutes the man of reflection, and distinguish-\nes reason from fancy. Providence, indeed,\ndoes uot seem to have formed any very con-\nsiderable number of our species for on ex-\ntensive exercise of this higher faculty, us\nthe thoughts of Ike far greater part of man-\nkind are necessarily restricted to the ordi-\nnary purposes of auimal life; and if we look\nat the favored few who move in much high-\ner orbits, and have opportunities to improve\nns well as leisure to exercise their under-\nstanding, we shall And that thinking Is one\nof the least exerted privileges of cultivated\nhumanity. It is, an operation jof\nthe mind which meets with many obstacles,\nmay be particularly uoted, as being princi-\nples wbicb prevail more or less in the con\nstltutions of most men, and which greatly\ncontribute to keep the faculty of the soul\nunemployed; these two are pride and indo-\nlence. To descend to truth through the te-\ndious progression of well-examined deduc-\ntion, is considered a reproach to the quick-\nness of understanding, as it is much too la-\nborious a method for any but those who arc\npossessed of vigorous aud resolute activity\nof mind. For this reason, persons com-\nmonly choose either to seize upon their con-\nelusions at onoe, or to take them by rebound\ntiorn others, as best suiting with their van-\nity or their laziness. So truth advances by\nslow and difficult marches, aud the most ab-\nsurd theories and systems obtain a wide\ncurreucy; for there is a strange disposition\nin human nature, either blindly to tread the\nsame paths that have been traversed by oth-\ners, or to strike out the most devious ex-\ntravagance; the greater part of the world\nwill either totally renouce their reason, or\nreason only from the wild suggestion of a\nheated imagination.
056e0bb45c2e53216768acbc31bd69b1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.5082191463723 39.745947 -75.546589 “The following is the list furnished by\nthe chief surgeon of some of the wound­\ned officers. AH the official reports from\nregiments are not yet In. Will forward\nthem as they arrive: James P. Haskell,\nlieutenant colonel, Seventeenth Infan­\ntry; Theodore Mocher, captain, Twenty-\nsecond Infantry; D. H . Wells, second\nlieutenant. Sixteenth infantry; H. J.\nHawkins, brigadier general. United\nStates volunteers; John Robertson, sec­\nond lieutenant, Sixth Infantry; !.. U.\nGross, second lieutenant, Sixth Infantry;\nJames E. Brett, captain. Twenty-fourth\ninfantry; A. R . Seyburn, first lieuten­\nant. Eighth Infantry: G. H. Ellis, major,\nThirteenth Infantry; W. S . Worth, lieu­\ntenant colonel. Thirteenth infantry; R.\nT. Eskridge, major, Tenth infantry; Dr.\nPanforth, acting assistant surgeon; U.\n8. Turman, second lieutenant. Sixth in­\nfantry; II. C . Egbert, colon :1,\nSixth infantry; H. C. Ducat, captain,\nTwenty-fourth infantry: Charles B.\nParkhurst, captain. Fourth artillery; J.\nJ. Breveton, captain. Twenty-fourth in­\nfantry; B. H . Llscum, lieutenant col­\nonel, Twenty-fourth infantry; James\nFemaneo, captain. Thirteenth infantry,\nsince died; Zenas W. Torrey, captain.\nSixth infantry: E. C. Woodbury, cap­\ntain, Sixteenth infantry; R. E. L.\nStenoe, second lieutenant, Sixteenth in­\nfantry: A. B. Scroll, first lieutenant.\nThirteenth infantry; Thomas I. Roberts,\nsecond lieutenant, Tenth cavalry;\nGeorge D. Walker, captain, Sixth infan­\ntry; Clarence H. Purdy, second lieuten­\nant, Sixth infantry; W. H . Simmons,\nsecond lieutenant. Sixth Infantry; John\nBigelow, captain. Tenth cavalry: J. II.\nHughes, second lieutenant, Fourth In­\nfantry; J. N . Augustin, second lieuten­\nant, Twenty-fourth Infantry, since died;\nH. G. Cavanaugh, epptain. Thirteenth\nInfantry;
1b1d43cafb0994f8d915d350b346af6d DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.8702185476118 39.745947 -75.546589 Christiana; John Holland, Mill Ore..k;\nOharlee H. Oannon, Whit# G* > Oteek;\nJames T. Veazey, Penoader; Jpreph a.\nKing, New Ua»tle; Harry Ulgtk, Rrd\nLion; Barnnel C. Eitor, Bt. Georges;\nAndrew J. Oalllns, Appyqulnimlnk;\nJame# H. Roberts, Blackbird; Thomac\nE Malin, Brandywine; Puter A. Horty,\nWilmington; Daniel Melarkey, Chris\nttaua; James Springer, Mill Creek;\nGeorg i W. Bradford, White Olay Creek;\nW. Heavolow, Poncoder; Goorge Moore,\nNewcastle; Alfred J. Davidson, Rod\nLion; Albert C Delhi, At. George«;\nNathaniel W. Jones, Anpcqnlnimink;\nEdward Thomas, Blackbird; Robert\nCasey, Jr , Brandy win* ; John M. New­\nell, Wilmington: James M&oklem,\nChristiana; Charles 11. Palmer, White\nU ay Greek; Daniel B. MuMullIn, Peo-\noadtr; Ephraim Sterling, Jl:A Lion;\nGeorge W. Davis, 8t. George»; Charles\nO. Mltohel, Now OaRle.\nList of petit jurors, seoor \\ Tpanel:\n P. Dixon, B *.dy wine;\nGeorge Abels, Wllmngtoiif Tronic.«\nHetheon, Christiana; Wlillau- Ü Mttoh-\n«11, Mill Great: ; William Tt Oasho,\nWhlta Olay Creeh; Thoc.as G. Porter,\nPenoader; John Boyle, New Castle;\nGeorge II. Ford, Rel Lion: Brojamln\nPleasanton, 81. Georges; William Mans-\nfee, Appcqulnlmink; Boott 8. Nallor.\nBlackbird; William Hawse, Brandy­\nwine; William Q Bungb, Wilmington;\nU. F. Sheppard, Christian«; Posey Pen-\nnook, Mill Creek; William H 6 mpere,\nWhite Olay Creek; William M\nPenoader; Jonathan E George, Mew\nCastle; John Book, Red Lion; Jacob B\nO.chrsn, St. Georg:«; Joseph A. Daniils,\nApp.qaluimlnk; Jonas Keiser, Ba^k\nbird; John Wrbcter, Brandywine;\nDantol Haley, Christiana; Emer E.\nCollins, Mill Creek; John F. Brady,\nNow Uastle; JrhaL Deputy, Bed Lion;\nLeonard Û Wndegrlft, St. Georges;\nHenry O NauJaln. Appcqalnimlck;\nWll ltrn J Jone;:, Blackbird.
44a595245af67cfbe1c165c206f55ac6 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.6945205162353 43.798358 -73.087921 vou in promoting the work of revivals\nemploy me." Such'an obtrusion of them-\nselves and of their services Would be an\noffensive vanity, that would defeat its own\npurpose. As from the increased facilities\nand expedition of the intercourse of the\ntwo countiies, it is probable that these\nministerial visits will be more frtquent, itf\nis even very desirable that this should be\nturned to the best account, and be made a\nmeans of stirring up each other's pure\nminds by way of remembrance.\nWhile on the subject of ministerial\nvisits, I would say a word or two on the\nconduct of Christian professors general-\nly, when sojourning in a foreign country.\nSome years ago, when American revivals\nwere more talked of here than they now\nare, because they were of frequent occur-\nrence, our good folks in this land enter\ntained a very high opinion of the avowed\npiety of Christians in the United \nand were. prepared to expct the most ex-\nalted spirituality and marked separation\nirpm the world, .in ait tnose who came\nfront "the country which was so remarka- - '\njbly blessed with showers from heaven.\nlnsome cases their expectations were\nSomewhat disappointed, by exhibitions of\nwdrldly comforniity that surprised us.\nSomething perhaps may be set down to\nthe association of these persons with those\nfriends to wh&m they were introduced in\nthis land whose piety had" not' reached\ntheir standard; but, still,, whatever was\nthe cause,; they appeared to be of less\nstature and strength as proiessorsthan we\nexpected to find them. This was not the\ncase with all Others left adeep impres- -\nsion of their decided and eminent religion,\nand were instructive and edifying exam\npies of the blessed effects of revivals.\nSome ministers also have not been quite\nso cautious as they should have been ; and,\nin the indulgence
3b839ae175742737f9dff076e0d10136 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1867.2945205162355 41.262128 -95.861391 TlieLindeW Hotel to b« RefasUL\nFrom th>St.L>ai*D-a>9tt April2.\nSt. Laata meats dnailers ia a spirit\nthat ao >iitester oaa subdu*. Tho drs\ntrodiiao of Liadeil iioiei oaly arouses a\nmore resolute aod vigorous pablie apirii\ntbaa ever before be»'C maoU sated.\nErerybody says, "The hotel muat be re-\npuilt at once." Mooiod mea th-gao to\ntake ceuaad together for tbi w >rkXefors\ntbe ftrem«o had we^aed to piav upoo tbe\nbs. ring ruio<. Property owaar* ia tbe\nneighborhood r**iis* that they cea better\nafford to give tbousaads eachl> r the ereo-\niioo of a oew bet<ri, thaa to lose leas of\ntbooaaada by the depreeia>i jo io tbe vat\nue of their property. Boaioraa aaa,\nwithout regard to Ioeatioa, eater uito the\nm<«vaffl*oi with a most praiseworthy de-\nteraiaatior>.\n Amta aS»n the groaad atd tk*\naateriala sow aait, whim i* regarded\njus equal to shoal $500,000; Mr Iaaae\nWaiker, it ia reported, will give $30,000;\ntbe Litideil heirs have already subjeribed\na cooaidcrabie ataooot, aod it i* »«id\na bat tbey wiii make op aboot $110,000\n;ib aii; aad otbt r <abacri; tioaa were mad#\n*; the teeettag last eight awouottag Ut\n1(>0 000 marts. The spirit already shorn\ngr?es aaaurasoe that the seeded ma will\nbt* raised at oeee. We may r- .gafd it a*\n»ettled that tbe bot^l ia so be restored.\niMo/e tie ead of the week we axpeet the\np .t?aaare of aaaouoeiog that oe« millieo\nb t» beea aabearibtd te rebuild tbe sptea-\n&. i hot#! that has beea a pride aaa «r-\na*»eat of tbe *tiy.
0fdff011bbeccc9786cb7d6f6c3c440d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.6726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 Kdilort /.In your iiaue of Fridai\nt there appeared a notice headei\nLinen' Strike in Bridgeport," which a<\ntirely miarepreaenta the (acta in thi\nie that in justice to our*elvea am\nler mine managers wo would aek\ntie of your valuable apace to correct i!\nthe first place it was Mated that othe\nnka were paving $1 75 per hnodre\nehela for minio*, whereas we were pay\n\\ but $1 60, and that unlets we ad\nneed our price the othar bank owner\nluld lower their price alio, and that th\nin had quit In the interest of the trad\noeralW, Alio that they were require*\npay their house rent weekly in ad\nnee, and that they received the balanc\ntheir woges iu grocery order*. Th\neta (and which we can at any tiuio null\nintiate) are just these; The men went t\nirk fur ua with a full knowledge of ju«\nlat wages they were to receive, am\nth the underatanding (hat if ut an\nne they grew dissatisfied or could di\nIter they were to take their tools ou\nd quit. Owing to the extreme dutlne*\nthe times ana the very low price w\n compelled to take for coal, we canno\ny more for miniug than our prawn\nice. Ai to other bpnks paying $1 7\nr hundred, the truth o( that is, tba\nere is one bank here pajins that price\nemploys two digger*. We emplo;\nne. It is also a well known fact amonj\niners that the digging in that bank jux\niff is particularly hard. The men d<\ntmakeas muchasoursbyatleast2\nr cent notwithstanding the extra 2\nnta per hundred they receive.\nAs for the house rent question wo be\ntve the majority of the strikers are ii\nrears and have been for some time, am\nwe mistake not the initiators of thi\nlole trouble are by far the most in debl\nir employes havo been paid cash regu\nrly every Tuesday evening since w\nve had tho bank, with the exception o\new who did not have provisions enougl\nlast them until tho next nay day am\ncredit at the stores, and who requester\nders. To thoso we gave them, and tha\nas far as our knowledge of the iisuin;\nnriinru nrtnmla On* «!«»»\n)m $0 to $13 per week. By inscrtin;\nis you will very much oblige
dde0ff22cf6821c637ded4cc4bc92d32 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.9303278372292 41.681744 -72.788147 Slick Crook Works "Envelope\nGame" Master Painters Organize.\nJust w hy the city of Bristol should\nbe burdened with the family troubles\nof persons coming here from Maine\nand Vermont was a problem which\nJudge William J. Malone in the city\ncourt today said that he would like\nto have solved. His remarks were\nmade during the case of Leo St.\nAmand, who arrived in Bristol a\nweek ago, and who was arrested last\nevening upon complaint of his wife.\nMrs. St. Amand testified that she\ncame to Bristol threo months ago\nwith her young daughter and since\nthat time has been working in a\nlocal factory. Her husband arrived\na week ago and for a similar period\nwas employed in a local restaurant.\nShe informed the court that since\n were married, St. Amand had\ndrifted from one job to another and\nthat it was necessary for her to seek\nassistance from members of her own\nfamily to support three boys, who\nare now in a home.\nSt. Amand. in his own defense,\nstated that he had given up the res-\ntaurant job because it paid him only\n$8 a week. He expressed willing-\nness to support his family if he were\ngiven time to get a job in a factory,\nbut Judge Malone believed that the\ncity would be better oft if both St.\nAmand and his wife left the city.\nAt this point, Louis St. Amand.\nbrother of the accused man, inform-\ned the court that he would see that\nthey departed from the city limits\nwithin three weeks.
0196ad5ad88f877758f9e90b6f2c36c5 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.3931506532217 43.82915 -115.834394 congress, who had not been much in\nWashington tor a haif dozen years or\nmore, made his reappearance here,\nand it was not long before those who\nkn3W him of old discovered that times\nhad sadly changed with him. He serv­\ned several terms in congress as the rep­\nrésenta ive of one of the largest cities\noftheWest; a man of handsome ap­\npearance, agreeable manners and of\nmuch more than ordinary culture.\nHe was a bachelor and agrert favorite\nin society. Ilis standing in the house\nxvas such that he was frequently call­\ned to the chair of the presiding officer,\nand for a short period served as\nspeaker by election of thehouse. Aft­\ner leaving congress hegave up his resi­\ndence in the state which he had serv­\ned, and going to New York estab­\nlished himself in a law partnership\nwith an ex-member from New York\nand another gentleman, who had also\ntasted deeply of the pleasures of\nWashington life. AH threeofthepart­\nners wete young, able, well connected\nand with scores of influential friends.\nTheir business for a time prospered\nand the future looked very bright.\nBut extravagant ideas and convivial\ntendencies proved more attractive\nthan the plodding cares of profession­\nal life. Business neglected went to\npieces, the firm was broken up and its\nmembers driLed far out upon that sea\nof broken hopes and wasted oppor­\ntunities, and the one above especially\nalluded to was finally washed ashore\nat the spot of his former glories and\ntriumphs. Since his arrival he has\nperforce been compelled to join the\narmy of “colonels, judges and ma-
1d50e9cf5eb7358d5367f7582f7802fd NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.732876680619 41.681744 -72.788147 plained today that it is going to take\na tremendous amount more of effort\nto put this loan over the top than\neither of the previous ones, as the fac-\ntory corporations are not in a position\nwhere they can subscribe so largely to\nthe loan as heretofore. The reason is\nthat the new excess profits tax will\ntake 80 per cent of the earnings, and\nthe factories have to provide for pay-\ning the taxes, which are going to be\na tremendous burden on them. They\nwill not. have the reserve to use to\nbuy Libery Bonds, as freely as they\nhave before. This means that the in-\ndividuals have got to raise their\npledges, particularly the well-to-d - o\nmiddle class. Many of these people\ndidn't begin to buy bonds proportion-\nate to their incomes, and New Britain\nwill look to them to do their patriotic\nduty, as the corporations have done in\nthe past. Some of the most prominent\ncitizens have failed lamentably to\nsupport the as they should, but\nthere are others who have gone the\nlimit and deserve a great deal of\ncredit. It is the man who can afford\nand doesn't, or rather who hasn't in\nthe past, who will be expected to join\nthe patriotic majority of Liberty Loan\nsubscribers. There is absolutely no ex\ncuse for his not doing it, for if he\nopens his eyes, he will realize that he\nhas more at stake than almost any-\none else. If the Liberty Loans fall\ndown, his investments in which he\nprides himself so much wouldn't be\nmuch use except for bonfires; and an-\nother thing, he is going to be reached\nwhere he will feel it a good deal\nmore, if he doesn't support the loans.\nThe money will have to be raised by\ntaxation, and there is no class , of\npeople it will fall more heavily on\nthan him. From purely selfish rea-\nsons he can figure out where he is\nmuch better off buying U. S . 4
0dac6289cb8b23f2e0db8106cb9db925 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.2808218860985 35.780398 -78.639099 infer that God has implanted this principle\nwithin us for the wise ind noble purpose\nthat our happiness may be increased in every\nrelation and condition of life. If such be the\ncase, any society of persons associated for\nthe good of each, or for the promotion of\nany benevolent object, may with propriety\nset apart days for celebration, or for assem-\nbling, in order that each may more particu-\nlarly give his attention to the cause in which\nhe has engaged. The Jews celebrated sev-\neral anniversary occasions, such as the Passo-\nver, the feast of Pentecost, and the fc&st of\nTabernacles, which were appointed by God\nhimself. The custom of celebrating certain\nevents has been handed down from nation\nto nation since the days of the Jews ; and\nnations of modern have their feast\ndays, or days of celebration, indicative of\ncertain events. We, as citizens of Ameri-\nca, feel gratified with the privilege of cele-\nbrating the anniversary of our country's free-\ndom from British oppression ; and on its\nreturn, how many pious hearts, sensible of\nour exalted privileges as a nation and peo-\nple, in the enjoyment of our free institutions,\nsend up a tribute of thanksgiving and praise\nto Him who ruled our battles and led our\nlittle band of American patriots to certain\nvictory ! While nations follow the custom\nof celebrating certain anniversaries, as we\nhave said, for certain classes or divisions of a\nnation, to celebrate certain events which they\nmay think fit; since such divisions are only\nttu inner iriu oi society united lor the pro- -
42915c42479ac67dbdfd67dcc07695cc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.732876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 even belore that, and tn more States\nban Louisiana. It was when Federal\niffloe holden In the Sooth wen permitted\ns we their authority and prestige as\npower in a partisan conflict, and lbr the\nupport and perpetuation ol a partisan\nHate Government, the most rapa-\nious and corrupt that ever dis-\n;raced a Republican country. It\nras when the keeping ol Southern States\ntas deemed more important than that\nhey should have an honest and Constitu-\nional Government. Nor was that the 1\nnly wrong committed in the South.\nThere was another, and on the other\nido. It waa when the bands of lawless\nuflltcs infested the Southern country,\npreading terror by their cruel persecu-\nion and murder; it was when helpless\nrlsoners were slaughtered in cold blood;\nt waa when neither officers nor volun-\neers could be found to arrest the perpe-\nrators ol such deeds, or no Juries\no convict tbem; it was when the better\nlasses of society contented themselves\n(Hli condemnatory resolutions and pious\nvisbes, instead ot straining every nerve\no bring the malefactors to justice. And\now it is said that many ol the bloody\nlories which reach us Irom the South are\naventions or exaggerationathat may hava\neen, and undoubtedly in some cases were\no. But we know also that very many of\nhem were but too true, and that they\nannot be explained aa a mere delense\ngainst official robbery. And the mnr-\nered victims were mostly poor negroes,\nrhiie the real plunderers went free and\nalo. Wo know also that there is a ruf-\nanly element in the South, whlch^unlesa\nIgorously restrained by all the power ol\nocioty, will resort to bloody violence as\npsstime, especially when il is permitted\no believo itself engaged in parllsan
423ab3956a0daa6ce65cea9b5233e974 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.7164383244547 39.745947 -75.546589 loan to make U a success. Each\ni. oops will work under orders from\ntheir scoutmaster and the districts will\nnot be limited. The plan No. 2 staled\nIn the manual for the scouts will give\nall tho rules for you to follow. No\n•pedal blank applications will be hand-\nad to the scouts. The local committee\nwill furnish applications which will he\nrubber stamped for scout use. Every\ntroop must be registered end make a\nreport at tho close of the campaign\nshaving that every troop In the oily\nand every scout in the troop did his\npart to make the loan a success. De­\ntails for messenger service and the dis­\ntribution of circulars and poster* will\nbe called from headquarters and Ex­\necutive Oreenhawk expects to use the\nInformation brought. In by the ques­\ntionnaires, for available scout*. This\nloan must go over and tho scouts must\n across with the support of past\ncampaign*. The president of the Hoy\nFronts of America has pledged the serv­\nice* of the Seoul* of th* entire conn\ntry and he. as well as the Wilmington\nCounoil, expects the scouts to do their\npart. Remember that we are to atari\nat the first of the campaign and work\nright through up to the end with a\ndetermination to sell bonds and allow\n100 per cent participation, By the sec­\nond plan, adopted in this State or city,\nthe scouts win be required to sell\ntwnoly-flve bonds to enable them to\nreceive the medal offered by the Treas­\nury Department. No hoy not regis-\ntered at this office as a smut will be\npermitted to work nor will be receive\ncredit for any sale. See to It that you\nare properly registered and that a full\nreport is made from your troop.
4d84faa26b9603e9118c0b5f7d358d40 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.746575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 partment Is planned by the board of\npolice commissioners on the strength\nof the Richardson arrest yesterday, ac-\ncording to a statement made today\nly Chairman P. F . King, of the board.\nJVben asked for a statement this\nafternoon, Mr. King said that Rich\nardson had been suspended by Chief\nof Police William J. Rawlinss and\nthat the board could not take any fur-\nther action except confirm the sus-\npension. When asked If Richardson\nwould be fired, Mr. King said, "That\nis a matter which I have not taken\nup with the other members of the\nboard as yet, but my own. opinion\nwould be that it would be better to let"\nhis case rest where it is, as long as\nhe has been suspended, until the court\nRichardson. Mr. King said had not\nheard of any suspicion being directed\nagainst anyone else.\nhas disposed of the facts."\nWhen asked if the rest of the force\nr.r any members of it was under sus\npicion of being implicated in the var-\nious offenses now charged against\n"We are anxious," said Mr. King,\n".hat the complete facts of the case\ncome out and that all its ramifications\nin New Britain be exposed. If it con\ncerns any other member of the police\ndepartment we shall be glad to know\nit, but we have no suspicions of any\none else at this time."\nWhen asked if the board was rbout\ntj Institute an investigation of the\nentire department, Mr. Kin? said,\nwe have not done so, nor do we in-\ntend to do so at this time."
1294e407635b24f7082eb1e6b3ed5b92 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.3027396943176 40.832421 -115.763123 lite grand opening of tl>« Church\nfestival at the old-ncbool building for-\nuiiii/ taken |rixe tb i» wmii^, and a\nfall oitewdaew of the "Lord* of Crea¬\ntion" is cart) eat ly ilniiml. Tb«|iortab\nof the editee will be thrown witleojx-a.,\nand us it coat* notbiug to get in, tbo\npresumption is that the tax in levied\nupon tbo privilege to get out. Through\ntbo industry of tbe ladies, insisted bv\na few benevolent gentlemen, tbe bull\nha* bean oonvcnieutly aud handsomely\narranged ior the disposition of the\nwares and refreshments, and its every¬\nthing bits been donated for tbe common\nbenefit, wo upprehend that a "square\nmeal" cuu be procured nt a very slight\nadvance over regulation prices.\nWe understand that tea and coffee\nuro to bo tbe standard beverages, and\n"quail on toast" will only be served to\niuvalids. Tbo enemy is to strongly\ntutreocbed behind the refreshment\ntables, .whilst n light body of skirm¬\nishers bus been detailed to "ropo" the\nunwary into Jacob's Well ; tbe den\nof tbo sootb-sayer; to conduct distri¬\nbutions through the local Pontofllco aud\nto criticully demonstrate to tbo un-\npracticed eye the artistic beauties of\nthe picture gallery.\nShould iucorrigable subjects bo en-\ncouutorcd, for whom smiles of femin-\niue beauties bis no charm, utul upou\nwhom the humanizing influence of hot\ncoffee nud lobster salad is utiuvailiug,\nthey will at ouce bo turned over to tbo\nallurements of that irresistible depart¬\nment presided over by the Queens of\ntlio evening, in which piu-cushious.\nwatch-pockets, aud g( rgeous pedal\nadornments, furm the staples. Times\nbeing ti little tough, the tax will be\nlight, and gentlemen may with perfect\nimpunity, venture to participate with\ntwo-uud-n -bulf in his clothes.
17697934abb9f8232345458017035421 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 The presents were many and costly,\nand consisted principally of silver, cut\nglass, fine linen, china and. pictures.\nAmongthe guests were: Mr. nimlMrs.\nEphraim Myers. Miss Dora Myers, Her-\nlx*rt. Myers, Miss Kate Myers. Miss Lil­\nlian Myers.Mr, and Mrs. Harvey Lynam,\nand daughters, Mary and Bessie; Mr,\nand Mrs. Edwin Myers, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Miller, Mr. and Mrs. William\nOnrretson. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bratton.\nMias Blsie Ganretaon.Mr. and Mrs. Isaac\nSlaw Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mervlne, Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Miller, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Griffith, Mr. and Mrs. A . O . Long,\nof Wilmington; Mrs. Laura 1. Long, of\nRiverside, N. J.; Edward F. Long, Miss\nAda Qulmby, of Wilmington; William\nM. Price, Enos WilHs, W. H . Stack-\nhouse, Edward Muilta, Mrs, Julia A.\nMiller, Mr. and Mrs. William Turner.\nMr. and Mrs. Samuel White, Mr. and\nMrs. C . B . Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Gil­\nbert Lynam, Mr. and. Mrs. G. S. Quim­\nby, Miss Oora Qulmby, Miss Edith\nQulmby, Mr. aad Mrs. Ephraim Bowen,\nMr. and Mm. Calvin Myers, Mr. and\nMrs. E . Eisenhower, Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Phillip, Samuel Bowen, Mr.\nand Mm. Stacey Bowen, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Bowen, Mis« Mamie Lowe, James\nMcIntyre, Mrs. Joséphine Howcr, Miss\nElizabeth Snyder, all Wilmington;\nMr. and Mrs. Andrew Larson, of Kane,\nPa.; Mr. .und Mrs Alvin Miller, of\nEaston, Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nFitzgerald, of Calvert. Md .; Mr. and\nMrs. John Lynn, of Elsmere; Mrs. An­\nnie Newlln, of Stamten; Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Hartman and family, of Wooddale;\nMr. and Mrs. Samuel Broadbent. David\nBowen and brother, of Marshulltou;\nMr. and Mrs. Alexander Baxter, of Kia-\nmen.si; Charles Hirzel, of Philadelphia;\nMis*: Bessie McKace, Miss Leona Peck\nMies Evelyn Peck, of Chester. Pa.; Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles Hofc-r. of Rochester,\nN. \\ .; Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Lynam,\nMrs. Saille Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Cowen,\nMr. and Mm. Charles Banks. Mrs.\nWeyl. Mrs. Huber, Mr. and Mrs. Ed­\nward Melcholr, Mrs. J . Pllnn. Mr. Wil­\nson and son, Harry Dickerson, J. E.\nConnor. Mr. and Mrs. John Postals, Mr.\nand Mrs. William HaJl. Mr. and Mrs.\nEverett, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Adams,\nDr. and Mrs. Irvine Fl Um, Harrv Hall\nHarry Dure. Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nSlack, Mm. Swltzel, Mr. and Mrs\nReynold Cook Mrs. Hall, Mr. and\nMrs. W . E. Simpson. Mr. and Mrs. W.\nE. Frank. Mr. and Mrs. P. Celta, Mr.\nand Mrs. Joseph Celta.Clarenoe Young,\nMr. and Mrs. Iteslie Calloway. Harry\nBucher. Miss Lucy Watts, Mr. and
7cee90a1dc3a81fdd0463c9605d039a2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 were.excluded in the amnesty proba¬\ntion, but he intended that they should\nsue for pardon and thus realize the en¬\normity of their crime. Ho is in favor\nof allowing thoso negroes who have\nserved in tho army, those who can read\naud write, and thoso who are possessed\nor certain other qualifications, to vote,\nbut does not think it is politic, or that lie\nhas the right to force these conditions\non the white pcopleof tho South, though\nho believes that thoy will ere long con¬\ncede this principle to the freedmen.\nThe President also favors basing rep¬\nresentation in Congress on the numlier\nof qualified voters, instead or in pro¬\nportion as at present.\nNkw York, Oct. 23 . .The steamer\nLilwrtv brings Havana dates to the lhtli\ninst. Mexican advices to tho 15tli had\nbeen received at Havana.\nMaxamilian has issued a \ntion dated tho 2nd, officially announc¬\ning tho departure of J unrez from the\nMexican territory, and saving that the\ncapsc which Juarez had sustained with\nsucli valor and constancy, had at last\nsucceeded, not only to the. national will\nbut according to tho sumo law that this\nloader invoked in support of his title,\nand even tho brigandage into which hit*\ncause had degenerated, wereabandoncd\nbj' the departure of their chief from ids\nnative territory. The eiuperor adds,\nhowever, that lawlessness and disorder\nwere still kept up by several misguided\nleaders, but that the government,strong\nIn its power,would Ih> inflexible in its\npunishment, llo lias also issued a de¬\ncree dated the 3d, containing tho most\nvigorous;measures against parties In\narms, and those aiding them. They are\nto l»e tried by court martial and IT con¬\nvicted, will bo.oxecutcd within twenty-\nfour hours.
000cc4c269a05c81c4c5b3c5386e951d NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.375683028486 40.735657 -74.172367 PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that the\nfollowing ordinance has bean passed by\nthe Boarl of Street and Water Commission-\ners and approved by the Mayor of the City\nof Newark, and Is hereby published accord-\ning to law:\nAN ORDINANCE granting permission to the\nDelaware, Lackawanna and Western Rail*\nroad Company to lay out. construct, main-\ntain and operate, within the limits of the dtp\nof Newark, an extension from a switch or\nelding oh its property to the manufacturing\nestablishment of the Westlnghouee Blectrlo\nand Manufacturing Company, said extenalon\nto start at a point about two hundred and\nseventy feet weet from the westerly aide of\nHigh street, and to paaa over and across said\nstreet at a point on the property of the\nWeetinghouse Electric and Manufacturing\nCompany for a distance of about three hun-\ndred and sixty feet from the eseterly eld#\nof High street.\nBe It ordained by the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners of the City of New-\nark. as follows:\nSection 1. That consent and Is\nhereby given to the Delaware, Lackawanna\nand Western Railroad Company to lay out.\nconstruct, maintain and operate within the\nlimits of said City of Newark a alngio track\nextension from a switch or siding on the\nproperty of said railroad company to the\nmanufacturing establishment of the Weet-\ninghouse Electric and Manufacturing Com-\npany, said extension to start at a point\nabout two hundred and seventy (270* feet west\nfrom the westerly side of High street, and to\npass and cross said street to a point, on tbe\nproperty of the Westlnghouee Electric and\nManufacturing Company for a distance of\nabout three hundred and aixty (360) feet\nfrom the eaaterly aide of High street, on a\nroute and location and according to the ele-\nvations as delineated and laid down on a\ncertain plan entitled "D.. L. A W. R. R. Co. —\nM. & E. Div. Proposed track to serve the\nWestlnghouee Electric and Manufacturing\nCompany. Newark. N. J. Division Engineer*s\noffice. Hoboken. N. J.. December 15th, 1911.\nScale 80 feet—one inch."
078ea1cfa64bba57de4cf97721736fc5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0150272907813 40.063962 -80.720915 "Rooonrao It.".The subject tobedli\ncussed by Mark Twain at bis lecture ii\ntbia city on tbo 10th Inst. will be that c\n"Houghing It." It consists chieliy u\nCalifornia reminiscences, with account\nof new discoveries in the animal, vegeta\nble and mineral kingdoms, glowing de\ncriptions of exquisite scenery and drol\nyarns of Ufa In the bush. The Chlcagi\n! W draws the following pen picture c\nhappy Mark: "A thin man of live Tee\nten, thirty-five or so, eyes that penetrat\nlike a gimlet, nasal pear projecting ani\npendulous, carretty, curly hair aud mus\ntachc, arms that are always In the way\nexpression dreadfully melancholy, hi\nstares inquisitively here and there, am\ncranes his long nock around the bou»\nliko u bereaved Ycrmonter who has jus\nconio from tbo death-bed of bis molhcr-in\nlaw and is looking lor a sexton. lie dif\nped into pathos, rose Into eloquence, kef\nsledding right along in a Isscinating nasa\nsnarl, looking and speaking like an embai\nrasscd deacon telling his experience, an\npunctuating his tardy fun with the inos\ncomplicated awkwardness of gesturi\nNow he snapped his Angers; now he rut\nbed bis hands softly like the catclicr c\nthe champion nine; now be caressed III\nleft palm with bis dexter fingers like tli\nend-minstrel man propounding n cot\nundrum; now ho put arms akimb\nlike a disgusted auctioneer, and uow li\nchurned the air in the vicinity of bis ini\ngrilled bead with bis outspread bands,«\nit be was lighting mosquitoes.once h\ngot his arms tangled so hadlj that seven\nsurgeons were Been to edge their wa\nquietly toward the stage expecting to li\nsummoned, but he unwound himself dm\nIng the next anccdote."\nAm. wool plaids at Just half prico at\nS. Rhodes Co.'b closing out sale.\nTinners Wanted..Tho Baron Mam\nfacturing Company at Bcllaire, wish t\nemploy an additional lorcc of twenty <\ntwenty-five good Tinners. They arc nca\nly ready to remove to their new factor\nwhich, when complete, will run a force i\nabout one hundred men. They guaranti\nsteady work and good wages to stead\nand capable men, the whole year roun\nThey will also take about fllteen boy\nIrtim fifteen to eighteen years old, as a]\nprealices to the trailo. This company hai\nbeen recently grantod another new an\nvaluablo patent on Lanterns, anil will 1\ncompelled to run night and day to g<\nenough tinning made up for the comiti\nBeason. Quite a number of Whecllr\nmen are employed there now, and Ilia\nof our Tenners who have not a sure thli\non steady work, will do well to secure\nsituation with tho Baron Manufacture\nCompany.
164fa670a78f0b8f093560e51c2b84d4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.0123287354136 41.004121 -76.453816 jcrnngp work lis to dispel doubt us to\nUs value. There must be some In-\ncentive to action beyond the bare sense\nof duty In order to succeed In any un-\ndertaking or enterprise. The incentive\nmay not bo the real vnlue or useful-\nness of the prize when obtained, so\nmuch as the spirit of competition\naroused In working to Bccure It. This\nprinciple Is recognized In many wnyg\nand made effective In securing en-\nthusiastic effort In many directions.\nThe prizes In the grange have been\nused for Increasing the membership,\nIncreasing the attendance nt meetings,\nperfecting the ritual work and Improv-\ning the literary exercises. A prize be-\ning offered In each deputy district\nrenders the competition fierce on ac-\ncount of contact and knowledge of\nprogress being made by competitors\n enables the award to be made by\na deputy familiar with all the condi\ntions. The decoration of grange halls\nwith trophies won In these friendly\ncontests for competition Is between\ngranges rather than between Individual\nmembers affords nn Interesting ex-\nhibit to visitors and an Inspiration for\nmore zealous work on the part of\nmembers In future years. No enthu-\nsiastic sportsman decorates the walls\nof his rude camp In the forest or his\nelegant home in the city with trophies\nof the hunt or the chase with greater\nsatisfaction than do the memlsrs of\na victorious grange decorate the walls\nof their grange home with evidences\nof victory In the mental race stimulat-\ned by a well urrunged und appropriate\nsystem of prizes. The cost of prizes\noffered annually Is about $200.
3973368fa205613a2e0441a758b530bb VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.1794520230847 43.798358 -73.087921 at the same place sweet and bitter waters.\nSuch novels ought to be abandoned to th?\nclass for whom they seem to be expressly\ndf signed, and whose numbers they will\ncertainly augment, if scattered through\nhe community.\nIt may be said, that as all novels arc\nnot alike injurious, some among them\nmay be safely read. But why resort la\nthis kind of reading at all ? There is\nsurely sufficient variety Li the existing\nscenes of creation and providence to grat'\nify a rational mind, without having re-\ncourse to fiction. It is, in effect, casting\na reflection on the plans and conduct of\nthe Creator, to affirm that ft is necessary,\nfor the entertainment of the human mind,\nto resort to the wild vagaries of an unbri-\ndled imagination. It implies, that in the\nscenes of nature which surround us, and\nin the administration of his moral gov-\nernment among men, God has not pro-\nduced a sufficient variety of interesting\nobjects for the contemplation, instruction.\nand amusement of the human race ; and\nthat the system of the moral and phys-\nical world must be changed, an I blended\nwith the creations of human folly, before\nit is rendered fit to gratify the diseased &\nfastidious tastes of mankind. But is thi\n ! If we look to th heavens above\nus, or the earth beneath our feet if we\nexplore the wonders of air, earth, and\nsky if we investigate the structure and\neconomy of animal and vegetable lift-- ;\nor, if we contemplate the present condi-\ntion of civilized and savage nations, and\nthe moral scenery of the work, shi!l we\nnot find enough to engige our attention,\nand occupy the short period of time we\ncan call ou r own t Works of biography,\nof voyages and travels, of natural histo-\nry, or of profane and ecclesiastical histo-\nry, present n rich variety of amusing rnd\nuseful reading, which may safely be plac-\ned in the hands of all. From these sour-\nces we can learn something of the attri-\nbutes of God, and the moral and physical\nstate of mankind. But it is evident to all,\nthat no distinct moral instruction can fair-\nly be deduced from events which never\ndid and never can take place. And when\nwe consider the injurious effects of novel\nreading, we think every philanthropist\nmust be willing to throw the weight of\nhis influence into the scale against them,\nremembering that for all these things, cur\nreading as well as speaking and acting,\nGod will bring us into judgment.
0ffeeaa8f08fd2d45c77cd492ae5a96e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1900.741095858701 42.217817 -85.891125 Nothing spoils a good disposition\nquicker. Nothing taxes a man's pa-\ntience like any itchiness of the sljln.\nItching piles almost drive you crazy.\nAll day it makes you miserable. All\nnight it keeps you awake. Itch. Itch.\nItch. With no relief. Just the tame\nwith gezema. Can hardly keep from\nscratching it. You would do so, but\nyou know it makes you worse. Such\nmiseries are daily decreasing. People\nare learning they can be cured. Learn-\ning the merits of Dona's Ointment.\nPlenty of proof that Doan's Ointment\nwill cure piles, eczema, or 11113' itchiness\nof the skin. Head the testimonial of a\nRattle Creek citizen:\nMr. A. G. Ayers, Rook Hinder, of l'J7\nWest Main street, Rattle Creek, says:\n"My hands became so sore from eczema\nthat it was with I could bend\nmy fingers. The skin cracked open,\nlarge scabs formed, and In addition to\nthe spots being tender they itched in-\ntolerably. I tried everything I could\nhear about or get hold of to stop the\ntrouble, but I was unable to do so\nuntil I procured Doan's Ointment. I\nhad heard it spoken about b' several\npeople, but as I thought it would act\nlike all the other preparations which I\ntried I waited some time until I was\ncompelled 'from the condition of rny\nhands to do something. Doan's Oint-\nment cured me. Up to date, and this\nis some months after I stopped the\ntreatment, I have had no indication of\nany return."\nDoan's Ointment for sale by all deal-\ners. Price 50 cents, flailed by Foster-Milbur- n
0afa87b24c4ffcaecda604ea0489dd92 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.0589040778793 39.756121 -99.323985 voters who participated in the last\nelection since the enactment of that\npartisan, unjust aud unfair ballot law.\nTo take measures and decide upon a\nline of policy to circumvent these\nplots and machinations of ourrepubli\ncan opponents, we have deemed aeon\nference representing the entire mem\nbership of our party both prudent and\nnecessary. We must decide whether\nwe will go into a triangular contest,\nthus allowing the common enemy to\ndevide and conquer us in detail and\nrendering success impossible next\nyear or for year. to come, or whether\nwe will plan to continue\nwith those who have been our allies\nduring the last two national contests,\nin working for the overthrow of the\nrepublican denomination and the res-\ntoration and preservation of those\nrights and of which that\nparty has plotted to deprive us.\nVarious plans have been suggested\nby which we can circumvent our ad-\nversaries and the delegate conference\nwhich we have agreed to call will un-\ndoubtedly be able to decide whether\nany of them are advisable, and in that\nway we can make our influence most\neffective for the promotion of those\nprinciples of government to which we\nare devoted. It is earnestly requested\nand desired that in each county the\nconventions to select delegates to tbe\ncoming conference be as largely at-\ntended as possible and that the fullest\nand freest expression as to our future\ncourse be encouraged, to the end that\nthe conference may be able to crystal-iz- e\ntbe thought and wishes of our en-\ntire membership.
11257bf1cffb6e9cf657946f12e78636 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.2315068176054 40.419757 -77.187146 energetic, lie never failed or faltered ;\nand, owning the justice of his fate,spent\nno time in idle complainings, but In the\nsilent evening, and during his hours of\nleisure, his loneliness and isolation tried\nhim sorely. Not a soul In that great\ncity line w of, or cared for him. Should\nhe die there which many as strong and\nyoung as he had done he would be hur-\nried into a pauper's grave, unknown\nand unniissed. Perhaps nt home they\nhad foigotten him; even his little cous-\nin, who was his playmate, and was to\nhave been his wife when she grew up,\nas everybody agreed, nnd as he had un-\nhesitatingly promised when he left her\nat twelve years old, frantic because she\nwas not a boy and could not go to school\nwith him. Hhe was sole heiress now\nand mistress at dear old Hudson Hills;\nher girlish letters, which had continued\n follow him in his wanderings long\nafter their uncle's had ceased, he had\ncarefully preserved, and now pored\nover for hours, trying to picture in his\nmind the new beauties of the place\nwhich she described, and recalling the\nold; thinking of the fair little writer\nherself, the sweet, generous, unspoiled\nnature, sometimes haughty to others,\nalways gentle to him, the lnnocent,dark\neyes, so clear and fearleBS ; the graceful,\nImperious gestures ; the witching, win-\nning ways, the quick, musical tones;\nthe dark curls that danced in the wind,\nand the light, childish figure that flew\nso gayly down the lawn to meet him\nwhen he had been away on short ab-\nsences, and was welcome home. These\nreminiscences could bring only remorse,\nregret, and enervating sorrow, till, vow-\ning against cowardice and useless retro-\nspection, he locked the letters securely\naway, and compelled his mind to live on\nsterner stuff than
20ddcf567274e836c56b7899830f50b8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.1986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 at Allegheny College in the fall, ol 1839,\nand immediately occupied his time in\nteaching school and reading law. Al¬\ntera while ho left his native county\nand went' to Mississippi, where he re¬\nsumed school teaching, and the study\nof law; but he soon returned to his\nown State, commenced the practice of\nlaw in the county of. Marion.aud rose to\na prominent and lucrative practice.\nOn the opening of the Baltimore and\nOhio Railroad, Sr, Pierpoint purclms-\ned some coal lands, and entered large-\ni.. into mining operations and the\nmanufacturing Sf are-brick. It wan in\nthe pursuit of these cuilings that ;his\nminS was flrst turned toward the won¬\nderful manufacturing and mineral re¬\nsources of the Suite of Virginia, which\nare only now.through the downfall of\nslavery and surrounding influences\n. for the flrst time actively engaging\nthe attention of the world, and rapidly\nplacing her in the very foremost rank\namong all the States of the L nion.\n"be long and turbulent period com-\norised between theJolin Brown allair\nand the actual passing of.the Ordinance\nof Secession in Virginia are too fresb\nin the memory of our readers, and can\noulv be briefly alluded to in a sketch of\nthis character. Suffice it to say that,\nduring all this timo, when to be consid¬\nered a Union man was to confront all\n?»?««.» tnnst deeDlv test the manhood\nof an^ndiv?duaf.the risk of property\nnnd life, the overthrow oi ail that was\nloved and valued in the past, the scorn\na id hatred of life-long friends-Gover¬\nnor Pierpoint shone liko a beacon
0bdf97807c14e9ca21205aa89e543313 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.6479451737696 42.217817 -85.891125 Lieut. Col. Malnfleld, of the British\narmy, writes: 4,My admiration for the\nChinese coolie is unbounded; there is\nno man in the world who does the same\npatient, laborious work so cheerfully.\nFarther on, when w came to the moun-\ntainous watershed country, where only\nback loads are possible, I became still\nmore confirmed in this opinion. Often\nafter a long and weary day with the sur-\nveyors, In the course of which we would\nhave climbed up from 5.000 to 8.000 feet,\nand made several such assents and de-\nscents, having, perhaps, been on the\nmove from five In the morning until\ndusk, we would come in. rather Inclined\nto pat ourselves on the back at the\nthought of what a hard day's work we\nhad successfully accomplished, only to\nfind that the Chines? coolies had made\n good time, each man having covered\nnearly as much ground with a load of 100\npounds on his back. This done on a few\nbowls of rice and bean curd, for a wage\nof less than nlnepence (18 cents).\nThen, on their arrival, one might have\nthought that the coolies would have\nbeen glad to rest : but if. as was often the\ncase where accommodation was limited.\nI slept In the same house, I found to my\nannoyance that to retire to bed was far\nfrom their thouchts and that my sleep\nwas often disturbed by the noise they\nmade as they sat up gambling long past\nmidnight, and yrt they would lauain\non the roa l before six in the morning,\nhaving risen to make up thrir loads and\nget their food cooked before five\no'clock."
23cd546a0b9a092e28ff2f0b6e9252a1 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9631147224752 39.290882 -76.610759 out of doors at 19 per cent }per annum, for paper at\nshort date, 10 per esitt per annum for loug notes. The\nstock market has been lately more animated, and eon\nsiderable transactions have been effected al improved\nprices. We quote sain of City Bank at 95; Coinmer\nrial Bunk at 00; Carrollton Dank 40 off. for 100 paid; Im-\nprovement Hank 40 off. for 100 puid; Canal Bank 75\nasked; Citizens Bank 13 per cent prem. nsaed.\nThere was a fair enquiry for Cotton to-day, factors,\nhowever, are holding out for even higher rates than the\npresent enhanced quotations, whilst the large buyers\nare by no means disputed to accede to these demands\nnevertheless, a good business was done, and transac-\ntions Id the extent of about '2,500 bales look place at\nvery full prices.\nAmongst the sales we uot.es Louisiana and Missis-\nsippi, 360 Bales, at 10J; tftW do at 8; 100 do at 79 do a'\n9; and 119 do at87 8. For curiosity's sake, we would\nmention that 14 cents was refused to-day for a part of a\nwell known fancy crop.\nThe Sugar market t day was very active, and abou a\n500 hhds were disposed of, from the Levee, at very full\nptices, within the range of our quotations, which wc\nplace at 4}a Of for extreme qualities.\nThere is a very brisk demand for Sugars on Ptantu-\ntion, and several buyers have gone up the coast to make\ntheir purchases; as yet, however, wc are unable to fur\nnish particulars ofany transactions.\nMolasses continues neglected, nnd prices are droop-\ning. We quote 21 a 22c.\nTile cargoes of the ships Marcia Cleaves and Pearl\nconsisting 0f4,40* sacks coarse and fine Halt, were dis-\nposed of this morning to one purchaser, at $1,55 par\nsack, ail round, which is a slight improvement on pre-\nvious quotations.
2f7d5b4f2027e9c9bdf27ca972246837 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1908.4986338481583 37.451159 -86.90916 In 1S01 a man died In the Catskllls\nwho had been condemned by one of\nthe strangest sentences on record\nRalph Sutherland was born In 1701 and\nlived in a stone house near Leeds lie\nwas a man of violent temper and mo ¬\nrose disposition shunned by his neigh\nLora and generally disliked Not be-\nIng able to get an American servant\nhe imported a Scotchwoman and ac-\ncording to the usages of the times vir ¬\ntually held her In bondage until her\npassage money had been refunded\nUnable to endure any longer the\nraging temper of her master the gIrlII\nran away Immediately upon\nering her absence the man set off In\nan angry chase upon his horse and\nsoon overtook her The poor woman\nnever reached the house alive and\nSutherland was Indicted and arrested\non charge of murder\nAt the trial bo tried to prove that\nhIs horse had taken fright run away\npitched him out of the saddlo and\ndashed the girl to death upon the\nrocks but the jury did not accept tho\ndefense and Sutherland was sentenced\nto die upon the scaffold\nThen came the plea of the Insuffi ¬\nciency of circumstantial evidence and\nthe efforts of Influential relatives\nThese so worked upon the court that\nthe judge delayed the sentence of\ndeath until the prisoner should bo\nninetynine years old\nIt was ordered that the culprit\nshould be released oq hIs own recog ¬\nnizance and that pending the final ex\necutlon of hIs sentence he should keep\nn hangmans noose about his neck and\nshow himself before tbo judges of\nCatsklll once a year to prove that hu\nkepthis
003437d3345bfd8dcdb34613e9bfaf15 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.288251334497 37.53119 -84.661888 tote of Danville Both teams are\nstronger than they have been for years\nand all expect to see Athletic Park\nopened with a fine game Tbo grounds\nare in floe condition having been skin ¬\nned and a grandstand erected that will\naccommodate nearly 300 spectators\nChas Owens a Negro became sud ¬\ndenly Insane Tuesday morning on the\nPublic Square here He ran Into the\nstreets picking up rocks and throwing\nthem at some gentloaien who were\nstanding on the pavement and as tbe\nCitizens National Bank door was open\na rock went through and narrowly es ¬\ncaped Mr Owen Rlgnoya bead Be\nwas finally taken prisoner by Wro\nLawson and Clayton Arnold and placed\nIn jail He will bo sent to Lexington\nto the asylum In a few days\nManager Ware McRoberts of the\nLancaster Athletic Association was In\nDanville Monday In Interest ot the\nLancaster Athletic State Tournament\nwhich Is to beheld here June 22 24\nHe received scholarship for two of the\ncontests from Central and\nCaldwell College Everything looks\nbright for the Tournament and all who\nare Interested will have a chance to\nsee the beet athletes and other coo\ntestants in music vocal oratorical and\ndsclamatory In the State of Kentucky\nTbe people of this town and vicinity\nare distressed at the sad death of Dr\nJ W Grant of this place Ho passed\npeacefully away at his home on Dan ¬\nville Avenue Tuesday afternoon Dr\nGrant was born of a prominent family\nIn Virginia but In later years moved\nwith his family to Lancaster where he\nhas always been connected with all\nthat has been for the good of his town\nills many friends otter their heartfelt\nsympathy to tbe family who survive\nhim Dr H > I Grant Misses LUIa\nIda Lillian and Mrs Grant file re ¬\nmains were laid to rest In the Lancas\nter cemetery Wednesday afternoon\nHon M F Elkln of Lexington\ndemocratic candidate for tbe Senate I\nIn this city Mrs Harriet Price cele-\nbrated
145d8dca29202f246dca72d743a52071 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1896.1379781104533 41.004121 -76.453816 In the current number of Tho Arena\nFrofessor Ely nsks and nnswers tho live\nquostion, "Should tho government con-\ntrol the telegraph?" Ilis answer, which\nis squarely in the affirmative, is strong\nly supported by an articlo from tho very\nable pen of Judge Walter Clark of the\nlupremo court of North Carolinn, in\nwhich the lntter meets and overcomes\nevery objection seemingly which can be\nurged ngninst tho constitutionality of\nsuch public control. Jndge Clark plants\nhimself on tho net of congress of 1806,\nchapter 230, nnd the opinion of Chief\nJustice Wnite in the case of Pcnsacola\nversus Tolegraph company, 00 TJ. S. L\nHe also quotes sparingly from an address\ndelivered to the graduating olass of\nYale Law school June 24, 1805 , by\nJudge Brown of the United States su\npreme court, and published as tho lead\ning article in The Forum for August,\n1895. To my mind reasoning of\nJudge Brown is unanswerable and con-\nclusive, and I therefore reproduce bis\nexact words on that occasion, thus:\n"If the government may be safely in-\ntrusted with the transmission of our\nletters and papers, I see no reason why\nit may not also be intrusted with the\ntransmission of our telegrams and par-\ncels, as is almost universally the case\nin Europe, or of our passengers nnd\nfreight (through a state ownership of\nrailways), as iu Germany, France, Aus-\ntria, Sweden and Norway. If the state\nowns its highways, why may it not also\nown its railways? If a municipality\nowns its streets nnd keeps them paved,\nsewered nnd cleaned, why may it not\nnlso light them, water them and trans-\nport its citizens over them, so far as\nsnch transportation involves n monopoly\nof their use? Indeed, wherever tho\nproposed business is of a public or semi -publi - o
3f05edefe3110297ea9eb693211b94fc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.023287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 ted by thu masses, trouhancs who uo lown\ntiifl mravb, year niter year, and thousands xoi\nthat ahb biconinq conkraied invalids, mlu\nbu restored to Uoalih and happiness, become at\nfal members of society. adern tbc housebol\nthey now mike wretched and preservo the fc\nvicor of lire to a good old aea.\nThe General Practitioner sees but tew cab\nof Paralysis, Epilepsy, Cboroa, Boco-mot\nAtaxia, Ovarian Tumors and many other iori\nof Chronic Diesaae, and yet, In bis blind egotlsi\nho clalmi equal skill withtbo Physician wbo\npractice brines him in contact with hundrb:\nand thousands of thf se diseases every yet\nNo one with ordinary discernment can Call to a\ntub monstrous ABSURDITY of BUCh aprCtenBic\nDr. Lonpdon's Kceord of his patients, Bho<\ntbo case of au excellent young man who \npaid hh whole inoomb fortbabs to four "Rc\nular Physicians," under tbo delusion that\nwas afflicted with a Malionant Disease, wh1\nan examination proved the affection to be a tii\nstums one; which was readily cured with u\nTUAN ONB DIME'S WORTH OF MXDI01NB. XXD\ndreds and thousands arc thus deceived and ma\nthe victibb o* ionorancb all over the land.\ni.'r. Longdon la not a cheap quack doctor who\nconiultatlODB am ran. His professional eo\ncation, acquirements and skill arc all vale\nble, and those desiring his scrviccs must c\npect to pay a reasonable compensation.\nFees for conBultatlon, examination, advice a:\ntreatment, within trb reach or all*\nMedlciues for all Diseases by mail and expr<\nto all part* of the country.\nOfllce Aours-8 to 13,3 to B, and 6 to 8.
0b3aef949a3698548135e672dddeddaf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.2342465436327 40.063962 -80.720915 trds the cost of transportation. The rail- U<\nays are still taking grain and provisions «"\nom Chicago to the seaboard at the same ta\n,tes as to Pittsburgh; but this may be at- jj]\nibuted almost wholly to the unimportant m,\n)lume of that trade here at present On th\njr leading interests Pittsburgh is now a\nftting better rates of freight than ever\njforp. The low rates prevailing between ^\nlis city and the east U an instnnco of that J\n>rt. Another illustration of the improve- i.\nent made is tiio reduction of rates on pig\non from Youngstown, which were $1 SI\njr ton in 1870, and have declined to $185 wj\n;r ton at present. There is much room ih\nr improvement in this respect yet, but\n10 progress that has been made is matter a.\nr congratulation. The importance of the th\n as an element in transportation was /'\nv/er morp apparent than t»P\\y. A romp ,l0\nhlah transports iron to Cincinnati at 80 c*\njr hundred pounds, to Louisville for lOo d«\nid to St. Louis for 12Jc, as tho river is ci\n>w doing, is of almost incalculable value\nour manufacturing interests.\n' lint (lie l'romiNed Lnnil Flowed With.\nLittle children sometimes give strange Iu\nlHwers to questions propounded on tho\nibjcct of tho Promised Land. A Sunday jn\niliool teacher asked: to\n"Who led out the Israelites?" j*\n"Moses," was the prompt reply.\n"And from where did ho lead them?" tit\n"From bondage," answered several.\n"And to where did he take them?" J'\n"To tho Promised Land, sir." in\n"That's right, my little dears. Now what fo\nid that land flow with?" p|\nI!With honor," said three or four.\n"And what elseH
08c2b723d5d7f499849ab27633bc2132 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.0342465436327 58.275556 -134.3925 A letter from Delegate Jame9 Wick\nerehara calls attentiou to II. R . 20105, a\nbill which be ha9 ju6t introduced, ask¬\ning for au appropriation of $750,000 for\nmilitary and post roads, bridges and\ntrails io Alaska. The complete bill is\npublished on another page of this paper\nfor the reason that it is of special in¬\nterest to the people of Poogla9, in that\nit carries an appropriation of $25,000\nfor the Uastiueau channel bridge. Mr.\nWickers-bam calls attention to the fact j\nthat $125,000, the amount asked for by\nthe war department for the use of the\nAlaska road commission for 1915, is all\nthey hare asked for in previous years,\nnotwithstanding the continual com-\nplaiut of Major Kichurd?on that the\nappropriation has been cut short. Rich¬\nardson has repeatedly stated that he\nwas asking for a much larger amouut.\nThe point which the Delegate seeks to\nbring out is that the Major seeks to\nfool the people of Alaska by promising\nbridges, trails, etc., when he shall have\nan increased appropriation for his com¬\nmission, but in realty never asks for\nmore than $125,000, an amouut ouly\nlarge enough to keep the commission\ngoing. the past the people of this!\nsectiou hare passed up the matter of\nmilitary and post roads, and the appro\npriatious therefore as of interest ouly\nindirectly, but now that we have "an\niron io the tire," we are more anxious\nto understand the workings of t his-\ncommissiou on which we have placed\nour hope. Another feature which we\nhad overlooked is brought to our atten¬\ntion by the report of the road com mis\n.ion, and that is that during 1913 the\ncommission had $358,000, or nearly\niljOtO a day. Of course it ouly had\n$125,000 appropriation from the govern\nment, but the report shows that the re\nmaiuderwas that portion of the Alaska\nfund paid in by the people of Alaska\nfor liceu-es outside of incorporated\ntowns. We will remember that it was\nthe tax money paid in by the Tread\nwell Company that furnished the fund\nfor the construction of the Douglas\nIsland road. The bill introduced by\nMr. Wickereham diverts titty per ceut\nof this license money to the support of\npublic schools in the terrritory, aud\nten per ceot to the relief of indigents,\nand the balance still goes to the road\nfund.
1b8c8d29aa3f521951cca39c2ad8e492 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1893.5356164066463 41.875555 -87.624421 them at some port while the vessel\nwas still cruising abgat. One day at\nsea, when all traces of land were\nlost, the birds were released from\ntheir prison. The crew gathered on\nI deck to see what they would do.\nSome thought they would not leave\nthe ship; others expected to sec them\ntake their bearings and then, like\ncarrier pigeons, tiy landward, ah\nwere mistaken, says the Youth's j\nCompanion, for after a joyous sail j\nover the blue ocean they returned\nto their cage and settled down to\neveryday life. They became tame at\nonce and fond of the seamen and\nboys, who led them from their hands.\nThey constantly flitted about the\ndecks, at times even causing annoy-\nance by walking about the gangway\nunder busy sailors' feet. At\nother times they would perch In the\nrigging seemingly content with their\nnautical lives. In port they would\nfly ashore, but always returned at\nnight to roost in their coop. When\nat last the orders were given to hoist\nanchors, for home many of the pig-\neons were out on their daily fly. The\nsails were spread and the big ship\nwas waftea away. The boys and\nsailors all felt very sorry for the dis-\nappointment the birds would meet\nthat evening when they returned\nand found the ship had sailed. But\nbefore night, when the land, like a\ntiny green speck, faded from sight in\nthe twilight, there was suddenly a\nButter in the rigging and the missing\nbirds dropped down and entered their\ncage.
9c4b4a708a5dc75cf6bc8b2e24770400 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1862.1383561326738 37.561813 -75.84108 ized, nnd have no confidonee in their\nleaders, as they charge Pillow and Floyd\nwith deserting them.\nOur troops, fro:n the moment of the\ninvestment of the fort on Wednciday,\nlav on their arms night and day, half\nthe time without provisions, all the\ntimo without tents, and a portion in\nheavy rain and snow.\nThe forces were about equal in num\nbers, but the rebels had all the advan\ntage of position, being well fortified on\ntwo immense bills, with their fort near\nthe river. On the lower piece of ground\nfrom the fort their entrenchments, rifle\npits and abattis, extended up the river\nbehind tho town of Dover.\nTheir fortifications on the land side,\nback from tho river, were at least four\nmiles in length. Their water battery\nwas in the centor of the fortifioations,\nwhera it came down to the river, and\n 9 heavy guns. The rebels\nwere sure of success, and io any other\ncause, against less brave troops, they\ncould easily hold the position against\n100,000. The business of getting dif\nforeot briga lea in poitien, and attach\ning new arrivals to different commands,\ntook up the greater portion of rriday\nnigut. At daylight on Saturday morn\ning, the enemy opened on the Eigh\nteenth Illinois regiment, when all Ogles\nby s brigade soon engaged, which was\nsoon tollowed by Waiiaoos and JMoAr\nthur's brigades, the latter acting undor\nMoCIernand s orders. As a portion of\nthe troops had been changed during the\nni'ht, and Oon. Grant also had been\ncalled away during the night to the gun\nboats, the movements of all troops, ex\noept those attached to MeClernand'a di\nvision, were made without anything ex\nccpt general orders at suggestions from\nMcCjernaad.' Gon.
795f884c9f2dce30efa407486cf483e5 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.3547944888383 43.798358 -73.087921 Tne work entitled " Manhood," is one of the\nfew books now coming before the public on such\na subject, which can lay claim to the character of\nbeing strictly proiessiouai, ai uie same rime mat\nit is fully intelluible to all who read it. The\nmoral and niedioti precepts given in it renJei it\ninvaluable. Magnet.\nThis important work has b.en noticed in the\nHerald before, but we take advantage of the bsue\nof a fourth edition to refer to it again. The su- -\niect is one of unlold importance. The vice c\nwhich it treats is supposeu, oy competent judges.\nto be aenerally prevalent and growing ; it is\nspreading throiun tne community decrepid bod\nIs and decayed miuas, are peopling insane hos\npitals and the grave, borne of the highest medi\ncal authontiea'pronounce it the great. 8coure of\nC1VIIIZ.JIIUU. ills auauiuiciy lerilUC read 1 IS- -\nsol, Deslaudes, and other writers, who hare treat\ned ot the extent of this destructive habit, the fa\ncility wiih which it is contracted in childhood,\nana even in iHiancy, nu us apiorab e tnects on\nbody audsoul. It i a triumph of humanity, as\nwell as moraiuy, mai me vice has at last been\nstripped of ihe false delicacy which screened it\nand that scienunc mn have interposed to rescue\nthe young irom its ruin. Zion's Herald\nFor sale by OTIS, BROAD ERi & Co., 120\nWashington street, Boston; John Allen 139 Nas--\nmu street, ISew York ; J. R Colon. 2024 Chest\nout street, Philadelphia ; R. G. Berford, Pitta\nburgn, r. ; vv . W . Halderman, Louisville, Ky\nH.& E. Phinnev. CooDerstown. N. Y.; T. S\nHawks, Buffalo, N. Y.; and by the principal\nRnnVllr4 in tha TTniaf C,t
1dc9007bd63e5ce754c77bf19dec44b1 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.1657533929476 39.261561 -121.016059 J. 1 . Caldwell, I'lffs Atty—fcbl4 td\nSTATE OPCAL1FOKMA, County of\nNevada, ss. In the District Court of the 14th\nJudicial District of said Ftate.\nThe People of the State of California to II. T. MOK*\nDOFF, Greeting:\nYou are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the complaint of F. J McWoRTin aud B- A .\nHARRISON, tiled against you, A . D . SKll.l.MAN aud\nVOSS, within ten days from Hie service ol this\nwrit if served on vnu in this county, within twenty\ndays if served on you in this District and out of this-\ncounty, and within forty days if served on you in\nthis State and out of this District, in an action com-\nmenced on the 9th day of November, a . p. I860, in\n- aid Court to obtain a decree of this Court lor the\nforeclosure of a certain mortgage, bearing date the\n2tith dav of July 1859, executed by the said defend-\nant H. T. Mordoff, to plaintiffs, and for the sale of\nthe premises therein, and in said complaint particu-\nlarly mentioned and described, and the application ol\nthe moneys arising from such sale to the payment of\nthe amount due on a certain promissory note set\nfortli in said complaint, made and to said\nplaintiffs by the defendant, H . T. Mordoff, bearing\neven date with said mortgage and thereby intended\nto lie securer!, to wit: The sum of $400. with inter-\nest thereon from the 26tli day ol July a. I). 18fttl at\nthe rate of 1 >•£ per cent per month till paid; and if\nany deficiency shall remain alter applying all of said\nmoneys, properly so applicable thereto, then tiist\nplaintiffs mav have execution therefor against the\nsaid defendants also that said defendants and all and\nevery person claiming tlirougti or under them subse-\nquently to the date of Plaintiffs Mortgage and the\ncommencemcniofthis action, may be barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien ami equity of re-\ndemption in and to the said mortgaged premises, or\nany part thereof, and for such other and furtherTre-\nlief, or both, in the premises as may lie just and\nequitable. And you are hereby notified that If you\nfail to answer said complaint, as herein directed,\nplaint iff i will take judgment against you therefor by\nilekult, together with all costs of suit counsel fees\nfcc. Ac , and also demand of the Court such other re-\nlief as is prayed for in plaintiffs said complaint.\nIn testimony whereof 1, John H. latnibcrt. Clerk
1350a04ed080300a25d6e741fcda1109 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.0890410641807 39.745947 -75.546589 Special Correspondence Evening Journal.\nMilford, Feb. 2 .— Mi lford Is at last to\nhave a century x;lub. Through the\nforts of Mrs. J. § . Willis a meeting was\nheld In Grange Hall Monday. Although\nonly fourteen women attended the\nmeeting, several others sent word that\nthey would Join, but could not attend\nthe meeting on Monday owing to the\ninclemency of the weather,\nthought that at least they will be able\nto organize with twenty-five members.\nIt was decided to write to Mrs. A. D.\nWarner, of Wilmington, to come to\nMilford and organize the club. A plan\nwas adopted to have on president, three\nvice-presidents, one secretary and one\ntreasurer. Two candidates were put in\nthe field for each office, as follows: For\npresident, Mrs. J . S. Willis and Miss\nJennie Davis: for vice-president, Mrs.\nJ. W. Causey. Mrs. James M. Hall, Mrs.\nJohn Smith, Mrs. John Abbott, Mrs. P .\nF. Causey and Miss Anna Yardley; for\nsecretary. Miss Clara M. Yarley, Miss\nHelen McKim; for treasurer, Mrs. Sam­\nuel Kinder, Mrs. William !F. Causey.\nThose present at the meeting wero;\nMrs. J. S. Willis, Mrs. Peter F. Causey,\nMrs. John Abbott, Mrs. G. W . Marshall,\nMrs. John W. Causey, Mrs. Wilbur\nHammond, Mrs. John Smith, Mrs. Wil ­\nliam F. Causey, Miss Serena Hall, Mias\nJennie Davis, Mrs, Georg© Davis, \nIda Sipple, Miss Clara M. Yardley .Miss\nPerpignan. The organization will be\neffected in a short time.\nTwo steamers will run between Mil­\nford and Philadelphia this Summer, on*\nthe steamer Endeavor, that ran a short\ntime last Fall, but is not at Pennsgpove,\nN. J ., for the Winter, and will com­\nmence the first of March. The other\nwill be a new boat that is being built\nfor Vineyard Bros., of this town. The\nnew boat will draw four feet three\ninches of water, and be about the size\nof the Frederica, which runs from\nFrederica to Philadelphia. According\nto contract the Iwat will be delivered\nat the mouth of the Mlspillion river by\nthe first of June. Landings have been\nsecured by their agent, Howard Sapp,\nalong the banks of the Mlspillion.\nMrs. Morris,wife of Professor Charles\nB. Morris, of the South Milford public\nschool, died very suddenly at her home\non South Front stret last night. For\nthree or four days ♦ho had been com­\nplaining of neuralgia, but it was not\nthought to be serious. Yesterday she\nsaid she thought she had better stay in\nbed and last night between 7.45 and 8\noclock, while no one was with her, she\ndied of neuralgia of the heart.\nA young peoples guild has been\nformed in the Protestant Episcopal\nChurch of this town.
2192e3ccafea8cbcdf457d26ea575321 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.0863013381531 39.743941 -84.63662 has actually and sincerely retired tee,\nfrom politics. But when it is such\nman as Allen G. Thurman, the crs,\npublic will wish that it had been ing\nsome of its other statesmen, some o\nits farthing dips instead of the great\nheadlight. It is also sometimes the\ncase that the public will not allow\nits serviceable statesmen to retire.\nIndeed, these are the very men it\nwould like to have continue in its\nservice. Mr. Thurman i3 a national\nfigure, whose courage, moral worth,\nand great services are recognized by\nthe Democracy of every State iu the\nUnion. There was a dark hour when, a\nas nearly as a man may be in this\ncountry, where true popular govern\nment exists, he, along witn the noble\nBayard, of Delaware, was almost the\nhope of this country for free popular\ngovernment and a federal system of\ngovernment. No grander figure has\nappeared in the politics of this coun-\ntry than Allen G. Thurman when Jic\nstood as the hope of a little band\nstubbornly resisting centralization\nand an obliteration of States by a\nmad party. In that hour, bceked\nby an almost powerless minority at\nthe North and a sullcd, determined,\nsolid, but inefficient South, greatly\nat a disadvantage, ho was for a time\nthe defender of principles which \nterested South Carolina and Mas\nsachusetts alike. NTo battle was ever\nfought with more determined cour-\nage, wilh sounder judgment, or clear-\ner perception of when aud where to\nyield and when and where to stand\ntirrn as a rock. Iu that he was the\nhope of Democracy, as nearly as a\nman may be said to be the embodi\nment of a great principle. His broad,\nliberal views and his thorough ac\nquaintance with every subject of leg-\nislation, and ability to cast light up\non all subjects gave him power and\nthe respect of political enemies, and\npower was never better used for\ncountry and party. To his credit\nthe only harmful criticism he had\nduring his political career was when\neastern papers perverted, and mis-\nrepresented one of his financial\nspeeches in Ohio, which really was\nno abandonment of his previously\nexpressed views aud no modification\nof them beyond what is the accepted\nfinancial doctrine. When such men\nseek a private station the public will\nwish to spare some less useful man.\nFor himself he has done enough. He\ncan not write his name higher or\nagain wield an influence upon his\ncountry aud his party equal to that\nhe has wielded, but he can serve his\ncountry still, and it may call for\nhim.
1a2a82f4f0612d4b4ef27860e82517b6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.6808218860983 40.063962 -80.720915 lie Circuit Court lor Ohio county met yes\nday morning in Voth parts, Judge Bojn\naiding In Part 1 and Judge Melvin in Par\nJudge Boyd uses the apartment on th\nrth, and Judge Melvin on the south side o\nCourt House.\nt was ordered that the business of till\nm be assigned aud apportioned as follow\nriie Grand Jury will be impaneled au\nuiinal matter* will be heard in i*art\nl> law and chancurv causes will be u\nned to porta 1 and 'I respectively as ind\nted by the dockets already preparetl Tli\nlee judgment docket in part 1 will t\nlied to-day at 2 o'clock p. u . and Uumed\nsly thereafter the issue docket will becallu\nth a view to the assignment of causes i\nid uort for trial on given duys, beginnir\nMonday. September 12.\nrhe criminal and civil dockets ill part\n11 be called on Tuesday, September 0, at\nlock a. H. The chancery docket in j»art\nII be called on Wednesday, the 7th Insl\n9o'clock a. m., andin part 2at 2 o'elot\nm. on the same day.\nIt was further ordered that thirty juro\nr i-uch imrt bo drawu and summoned (\n Heptember 12.\nJudge Melvin delivered the charge to tl\nrund Jury, which then retired to itsrooi\nidge Boyd proceeded to the ratting of 1\njcket, which being uttendeil to hit* purt u\nlimed. The Grand Jury adjourned aboui\nclock until to-morrow morning, witho\niving nearly liuished the work before thei\nThe Mesne about the Court House yesU\nny waa an animated one. The tmiall rooi\nlid corridors were all'crowded with wltuesi\niinnmned to appear before the Grand Jui\nwas suit! that seventy-two bills were p\n;nted against one man for violations of t\nquor laws. The criminal cases catalouij\nuturduv in our columns were a small pi\nf the nusinsss. One of the cases whi\nuused the most uneasiness umong the Is\nf a curtain clans was that of a worn\nliurged with keeping a house of assiguatii\nluiuerous women of shady reputations a\nust young men were kuowiitobesummot\nn tfiis case, und the susponse of certain v\nlosses who were not informed of the ob]\nf their summons was puiuful. A numbc\nlotty crimes and niisdemcunors from\nciuritrv districts brought in the rural jhij\nutioii in force. Altogether it was quiti\nield day at the Court House.
0dc9bdc6405099aab439a0909144c479 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.0751365803987 37.451159 -86.90916 It must be apparent to every one who\nwill look at the drift of American, poli\ntics for the last twenty years, that there\nis danger ahead danger to. our free la\nstitutfons danger to our republican\ngovernment. The signs of approaching\ndestruction to our present form of gov-\nernment are becoming stronger and\nstronger. Dark clouds are already in\nour political sky. Their murky appear-\nance and rapidly increasing proportions\nportend evil at Jio very distant day.\nI am no politician. Never have been\none. Never was a icarm adherent of\nany political party, but for twenty-fiv-e\nyears have leen calmly observing the\npractical working of oar political ma-\nchinery, and am satisfied that there has\nbeen, in that period, a very perceptible\nundermining of our fabric of govern-\nment- I know that many are disposed\nto hoot at the idea of the people of the\nUnited States ever submitting to any\nother than their present form gov-\nernment. But in a certain sense histo-\nry has been repeating Itself in all ages\nof the world, and what is there la the\nAmerican people to prevent the causes\nwhich have crushed the freedom and\nbest Interests of the people in other\nplaces and ages of the world, from do-\ning the same here?\nHuman nature is corrupt. This Is.\ntrue of Americans as well as of ethers,\nand with carelessness upon the part of\nthe people, or blind adherence to party\nwhich is worse, crafty men, in the ex-\nercise ofthe love of power and personal\naggrandizement; may subvert our free\ngovernment, and give us such a one in\nits place as suits them. And unless the\npeople, not the politicians, not any po-\nlitical party, but the people, assert their\nrights assert them In such a way that\npoliticians will be compelled to heed\nthem, such an epoch In our history will\nsoon be reached.
34ba3a072c38ece54f988f97ba191995 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.0589040778793 41.020015 -92.411296 On the first day of last September tbe new\nCode, which had been in preparation tor\nsome years, and wes finally carried into law\nat tte adjourned session of tbe 14th General\nAssembly, took effect throughout the Btate.\nThe code commissioners having the revision\nIn charge performed their duties faithlull y\nand with marked ability. The legislature\nthoroughly and carefully reviewed, and to\nsome extent revised, their report, and gave it\nthe character of law by passing upon each\ntitle iu the ordinary method of statutory en­\nactment. After all the precautious, however,\nwhich were taken to make it as nearly perfect\nas the nature of such a work would admit, it\nwill be found to contain imperfections, over­\nsights, and errors, and will doubtless require\namendments and corrections tn many partic­\nulars by this General Assembly. Bo long as\nthe people are required to know wh»t the\nlaw Is, and are not excused from penalties for\nits violation when they are ignorant of its\nprovisions, it should be plain, and\naccessible %o all. It is otten necessary,\nafter a statute has been amended and perhaps\nreamnended, to have so keen a scent in\nsearching the intricate mazes of an ludex as\nto be able to detect b^ a faint and shadowy\nallusion the connectloh between an amend­\nment and the original act, in order to de­\ntermine what the law Is. If this is so In re­\nspect to those who are practiced in tbe In­\nvestigations of law questions, it ls not diffl-\ncult to see that one unaccustomed to euch\ninvestigations will be left entirrty In the\ndark after a law has passed the ordeal of two\nor three amendments. I would therefore\nrecommend, as matter ot justice and con­\nvenience to the people, that when a law re­\nquires amendment the section amended be\nwritten in full, with the amendment intro­\nduced and occupying Its proper place. Ex­\nperts frequently become confused in matters\nof law, when amendments are enacted read­\ning as follows; " Section
4700a135e8f4dbb317022d719350458c THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.57397257103 39.560444 -120.828218 “There were five more deaths yesterday\non the Libertad. The pestilence has not\nin any degree abated, but still continues\nwith unremitted violence. There were\nabout thirty more cases yesterday, many\nof which have no doubt already termina-\nted fatally. An abhorrence of the dead\nand dying is a peculiar trait in the social\ni ystera of the Chinese, and is so intense\nthat not one of those who arc unaffected\nby the scourge can be induced or driven\nto assist their unfortunate brethren. All\nthe labor attendant upon the nursing of\nthe sick and removing of the dead, has to\nbe performed by the seamen belonging to\nthe ship, and the coroner. The devoted\nmanner in which they have performed this\nact of humanity to the distressed Chinese,\nis worthy of all praise, and entitles them\nto the gratitude of their \nOne of the physicians hi a communica-\ntion to the Commercial Advertiser thus\nspeaks of the miserable victims;\n“It is true we supposed the,well Chi-\nnese would assist i:i taking out the sick\nand dead; but it was with difficulty we\ncould get them to do any tying. They\nappear to have no sympathy for each\nother, and what they did, took them four\ntimes as long as it would have taken\nAmericans to do the same work. Prob-\nably some have died that might have been\nsaved if they had taken the remedies pre-\nscribed. But they believe in signs and\ncharms, and other foolery, and it is neces-\nsary to force them to take medicine.—\nThey crawl out of the way to keep from\ntaking anything but soup made of meat\nand vegetables, and of this they have\nenough.”
17ab139edc618ebae1294b1bdb111cdb DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.0724043399616 58.275556 -134.3925 Wortman & Jensen have received an¬\nother large invoice of stoves. They\nare now supplied with all sizes from a\nparlor cook to a steel range.\nFrank Bach is tearing out shelving,\nmoving counters, and otherwise pre-\nparing to give his store on Front street\na complete spring overhauling.\nDo you need Furniture, Sewing\nMachines, Trunks, Stoves, Granite aud\nTinware, and Crockery? At reduced\nprices, at Fen si's Hardware Store.\nJudge O'Connor, of the Police Court,:\nsays that there is very little doing.\nSince the departure of a few regular\npeace disturbers the town is quiet.\nThe "Glory Hole" is devoted to those\ngames and amusements that develop\nthe physical. If your circulation is\npoor, try the bowling alleys, a game of\nbilliards or pool. It will help some.\nMr. Frank Dodson has to\nsell his property in Douglas and move\nto Vancouver, B. C. He expects to\nleave about the middle of February,\nMr. and Mrs. Dodson are very pleasant\npeople and many will be the regrets\nupon their leaving Douglas.\nClarence William, the infant child of\nMr. and Mrs. Matthew Wittenen, was\nbaptized at the home of the parents\nSunday afternoon, Rev. Thomas Coyle\nofficiating. A corapauy of friends\nwitnessed the ceremony aud offered\ncongratulations to the parents.\nYoung People's meeting in the Con¬\ngregational church Sunday night at\n7:15. Preaching service at 8 o'clock,\nThursday at 2 p. m ., at the parsonage,\nthe Ladies League will hold the sixth\nin its series of sewing contests, and\nthere will be a reading by one of the\nmembers. Juniors meet Saturday at\n2p. m.
10d10fc2c531cc2cb233e8b2a3fc6f95 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1878.6013698313038 39.743941 -84.63662 There is probably no living man more\nprofoundly satisfied with his position\nthan Lord Beaconsfleld. It is impossible\nnot to imagine him delighted with the\nsensation which it is impossible to sup-\npose that he did not intend. He is the\nfirst minister and really the ruler of\nEngland, because it is well understood\nthat British policy is his policy. He is\none of the most conspicuous figures of\nthe time. He is apparently one of the\nmost mysterious and successful of states-\nmen. Yet there is no man about whom\nthere is more speculation and wonder\nand admiration and distrust; and there\nis probably only one thing in which\nthose who dislike and distrust him agree\nentirely, and that is his' inexpressible\nenjoyment in the consciousness of be-\ning precisely the spectacular kind of\nman that he is. We are, indeed, con-\ntemporary with one of the picturesque\ncharacters of English history. There is\nnothing more remarkable than that the\ngrandson of a Venetian Jew of Spanish\ndescent, gsowing up in England socially\nin the solitude of his race, dashing into\nliterature as a brilliant novelist and in-\nto politics as a free lance, should rise to\nsupreme power, and, as a peer of the\nrealm, control her foreign policy at a\nmost critical moment, supported by the\ncourt, the aristocracy, and the squire-\narchy, a Tory of Tories, and restoring\nby what seems sheer audacity the\n renown of England.\nPrime Ministers not native to the\ncountries which they controlled are not\nunknown in European history, notably\nin Spain, which ranks as one of the\nproudest of nations. But the English\nfeeling has always regarded these in-\nstances as those of the amazing success\nof adventurers, who sometimes left the\ncountries that they had ruled, and died\nneglected and exposed. It has consid-\nered both Alberoni and Bipperda as\nCagliostros in politics, and it is this feel-\ning, invincible in the British breast,\nwhich looks upon Lord Beaconsfleld as\na charlatan. The word is openly and\ngenerally used in speaking of him, and\nsome striking articles in recent num\nbers of the Fortnightly Review were de-\nvoted to the political adventures of\nLord Beaconsfleld a cunning implica-\ntion that Lord Beaconsfleld is a political\nadventurer. It is a curious inquiry\nwhether the kind of distrust and aver-\nsion with which this dazzling and suc-\ncessful career is regarded is due wholly\nto the fact of race. It is not mere\nparty spite, because it is not peculiar to\nparty, and it is unique in the history of\nBritish parties. It is not due wholly,\nand perhaps not at all distinctively, to\nthe conviction of want of principle.\nLord Palmerston was not supposed to be\ntroubled with principle, but he was the\ndarling of the exclusively British feel-\ning which now cherishes Lord Beacons-fiel- d.
f6cb7558d7c2733b4643455a5ae3e2a5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.9109588723998 41.681744 -72.788147 "I am submitting a list of names\nof signers of the petition to save\nthe Court of Honor. It is only a\npartial list, as there are several\npetitions out, and I know there are\nmany more names, but these, that\nhave come to my hands will serve\nto indicate that there is a general\ninterest in the matter of a new\nmonument. It appears to me that\npressure of some sort has been ap-\nplied to persons circulating peti-\ntion. In the case of one party, she\nsaid she had been shown the truth\nof the claims for the new monu\nment. She added that she had\nbeen convinced that it would be Im-\npossible to erect the arch at the\nfoot of a sliding hill but sho did not\nquite know how that sliding hill\nmight be made to carry the cast\ntonnage in the proposed new shaft.\nThis person had telephoned to me,\nwithout any solicitation on my part\nfor a petition. To send petitions to\npersons on their own request, pub-\nlish their names, and find a few\ndays later, that they have turned\nentirely against the thing they had\nprofessed to want in preference to\nanything else, certainly fills me with\nan air of mystery.\n"It Is well to know that there are\nsome men circulating petitions who\ndo not appear to dread the pres-\nsure. They profess to know what\n want and they are working to\nbring out in an unmistakable man-\nner that which they believe to. .be\ntrue, viz. that public sentiment is\ntremendously in favor of the Court\nof Honor. In spite of this they are\ntho kind of men who aro willing to\ngive the public what it wants, the\nCourt of Honor or the shaft.\n"I hear many say they feel that\nthe publio that voted down the\nmonument two years ago has some\nright to be heard. They also feel\ncertain that no city official could\ngo ahead and feel that there was\nno opposition. They do not like the\nelement of deceit that has appear-\ned in the form of information to\nthe public, to the effect that it\nwould be a physical impossibility\nto build the court of honor in\nstone; and that if it were possible\nto do so, the cost would be pro-\nhibitive, plus the further fact that\nthose in charge have never seen\nfit to inform the publio just what\nthat prohibitive price might bo.\nThey feel that If they are to pay\nthe bills they should be truly in-\nformed as to both sides of the pro-\nject. It is hard to understand why a\ncommittee would give out one phase\nof the matter and hide the other.\nWe are going to try to get our pe-\ntitions in by the last of this week.
55b37e83e424583e6d2b1ad78d5c8131 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.8123287354135 39.745947 -75.546589 a request before it had reached Coun­\ncil, and he had made some investiga­\ntion and comparislons on the subject.\nHe thought it would be a good thing\nto allow the board the money for the\ninvestigation and believed it would\nbe money well spent. He read from\nthe annual reports of two cities in\nMassachusetts, with a population\nabout, equal to this city, to bear out\nhis assertion that there is something\nradically wrong with the prices charg­\ned by local public service corpora­\ntions and also with the taxes they\npay. He first cited the reports of the\npas and electric light companies of\nLynn, Mass. , a city with» a popula­\ntion of 83,336. The last census of\nWilmington showed a population of\n187,411. he declared, which is almost\n'I the same. In Lynn, Mr. Haney said,\ngas is sold for 75 a thousand\nfeet, while in this city it is 96 cents.\nHe said the local rate is really $1.10,\nbut 15 cents discount is allowed for\nprompt payment. The gas company\nin Lynn. Mr. Haney said, pays $52,-\n874.80 taxes to the city each year.\nMr, Haney said the combined taxes\nfrom all the local public service cor­\nporations is only $33,643^38 a year.\n“That one gas company Is paying\nalmost twice as much as all our\npublic corporations pay altogether\nseems to be the truth.” Mr. Haney\nsaid. "Yet they must be mak^ig\nmoney,” he declared as they declared\na dividend of 16 per cent, on tho\nmoney invested. Mr. Haney believed\nthat if the local corporations were\nto pay the taxes they should right­\nfully pay, there would be uo more\ndeficits in the city treasury.\nMr. Haney told of conditions iV
3712077fdd2c0b2738674b549e992bd7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 The HompQold Kallroad Company, ft at.\nwukitsah, The Uompfldld Railroad Compai\nbv mortgage dated June 37,1855, October 10. lij\nNovember afl. 1856, and February 5, J857. aud di\nrecorded, did urant. and assign unto 'Francis\nDrexei, Joseph Hi Heal and Frederick Klett,\nwhole of tho estate, property, real, personal u\nnilxud, iif Huhl Company, with lt« ftauchijes,\neluding tho cntiro railroad and road bed; n\nright* ef way, together with all tho ImikIh, depc\ndepot grounds, and buildings^ situated betwei\nand at tho corporate termini of the railway\nWheeling, In tho btate of West Virginia, aua\ntown of oreenshnrff, In tho Btato or Pennsyi1\nnia, and, also, all tho franchisca, tolls, Issues,\ncumo and profits or the wild Company heresf\nderived, to Uiem from the iu»o or or travel ou tb\nsaid road, or any part thereof; and, also, all\ncaw, engines, locomotives, tenders, horse cju\nuud ail other fixtures and things and appur\nnances Whatsoever, used In the managements\nUQBinCM 01 urn ma ruuruou, MJ imvu nuu w iiu\nall and singular, tho estate and premises, hen\nItumeutflunduppurtonuncfH thereby granted\nintended to bo, unto the said Trustees or th\nsuccessors In the Trust, nevertheless, Ibr thohi\neflt of the holdors or tho bonds of the Coinpoi\nto tho amouut of ono million of dollars. At\nwhereas, by a ddcreo ontcrtd by thoSttprci\nCourt of Pennsylvania in the above en titled ca\nit was ordered that uatd-mortgages were n\nliens upon tharallroad, tolls, ftauchlses, prop\n iucomo, estate and premises therein month\ned, and it was ordered that in derault being mi\nby The llempfleld Railroad Company In tue pi\nmentof bonds with coupons attached within\nperiod fixed by tho Mid decree,' tho railroad, pi\npcrty, estate, premises, ammitenancea and in\nobisoH covered by the said mortgage should\nexposed to sale hi' public vendue or outcry,\none entire lot, In the city of Philadelphia, by I\nsaid Trustees, to whom all necdfhl authority\nthat purpose was thereby given upou the ton\nand conditions therein mentioned aud herein\ntor set forth. And whereas,'doftult has' bo\nmado by tho said llempfleld Italirood Compi\nin the payment aforesaid. Now, therefore, j\ntico is hereby given, that under aud by virtue\nsaid docaeo, William O. Jlughart, William Wei\nman,' and Joseph n. Seal. Trustees then\nnamed, will, on the TJU1UX/UTU ,dayqfMir,\nA. D., 1871, at twelve o'clock, noon, qxpsao\npublic tale, Vendue or outcry, the whole oft\nKallroad, together Ivlth the landa, .right* of vri\nbridges, culverts, tresselwork, machlueiy, dot\ngrounds and building? altuatc therein, and si\nII tho tolls, iasuos. Income, nrofits. rlirhts. Drt\nleges and franchisee, and 'also all tho cars,\ngiiioH, locomotives, tenders or other things oe\nIn the business or paiuuement of said Uuad u\nIts appurtenances, at tho McrcliantrBiChfcni\nin tho City of Philadelphia. ;The Kail war she\ndescribed ,1a situate In the counties of We\nmoreland, Allegheny and Washington. In Fct\nsylvanto, and cohntvof Ohio In West Virginia
9cfa569e02c4bf9dd6dd2497b4d224ad DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.8265027006173 58.275556 -134.3925 Severe lee condition! along the\nnorth coait of Siberia had effectually\nprevented Capt. Iloald Amundsen\nfrom getting fairly started on hla\ncontemplated Journey nrroai the\nliolar Ire rap up to the laat week In\nVugust, according to Information\nreaching Nome on the Undeberg\nllahlng tug Orion, which returned\nfrom a walrus hunting expedition\nextending a* far to the westward as\n'ape Serge, says the Nugget\nThose on hoard the Orion reported\nIhnt the Maud had been Ice bound a\nshort distance from Tape Serge for\ntome time prior to their arrival at\nthat point. Owing to ita smnl'cr\nsire the Orion was able to make her\nway utmost to the side of tha ex¬\nploration ship and the crew* of the\ntwo vessels exchanged frequent\nvisits. Capt. Ileklla of the Orion\nalso took several moving picturei of\ntho Maud in the ice pack. The Orion\nparty learned that the Maud had\nbeen ahut In bntweeu shore and the\nIce pack almost from the time of\nher arrival off t'apo Serge. The Ice\nlay In an almost solid mass for a\ndistance of approximately one hun¬\ndred miles north the Maud'a posi¬\ntion and moved very little. This\ncondition prevailed for days and pre¬\nvented any progress northward.\nDuring the latter day* of August,\nhowever, the Ico opened alone the\nHhoro to some extent and the Maud\nwas able to make her way to the\nwpNtward. When last Keen by the\nOrion crew she wan steadily work¬\ning her way through the park In\nsearch of an opening to the north.\nThe Orion encountered lee along\npractically the entire distance be¬\ntween Bast Cape and Cape Serge\nand was frequently unable to make\nprogrcn* because of the Ice en¬\ncroaching on the shore. The Maud\nwas the only vessel encountered\nalong that section but It was learned\nthat the Polar Bear was somewhere\nin the vicinity of the Kolyma river,\ntar to the westward.\nReturning the Orion picked up\none of u party of several prospectors\nleft In the Kolyuchlan bay section by\nthe Casco last year and returned\nhim to Nome. He informed those on\nthe Orion that the party spent th<\nwinter and spring in exploring th<\nstreams In that locality, but had\nfound nothing.
0f3842eeb95f2b6abe47c4ff8d0ca488 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.1109588723998 39.745947 -75.546589 About 10 ocCock this morning Mrs.\nFarrity, cf No. 307 Orange ttm;, eent\nwmd to tho pOOice station that her\nhuabinxli. who had jikt gtyUen cat of\nJail, was causing her a great deal cf\nannoyance, and she wanted It slapped.\nCaptain Chambers sent Officer\nTucker to investigate the trouble, and\ntoe arrested Farrity. When he tood him\nto the police station Mrs. Farrity went\nwCto them. Farrity said he wanted to\nhave some (onsuittorAon with hla wife,\nbut she said toe hud annoyed her. His\nwife vent on to say he was wanted,\nhere on a charge anyhow, and Cap­\ntain Chamber» asked her what It was,\nbut at first she would not tel! him.\nFarrity walked over to the ice coaler\naLer water and tois wife then told Cap­\ntain Chambers tbit alte would tell him.\nMrs. then Mowed her hus­\nband and had a few wordu with him.\nShe evidently startled him, because he\ntr.'ied to get cut the door, tut his wife\nshoved the bolt, and told him that he\nshould not leavei\nWhen they went back ta where Cap­\ntain Chambers was, It war, than Mrs.\nFarrity told whnt she knew. She sail\nthat Farrity was Implicated in Nlelds\nrobbery. That he and his pal, earned\nHooper, were the ones who robbed the\nhouse, und made their escape.\nIt will, tie remembered that the tur-\ngiars climbed ever the porch, about\n6.15 oclock in the eve-nitty, and them\nwith the aid of a “Jimmy." forced a\nwindow which led Into Mrs. Nde'.ds'\nroom. They stole a quantity cf jew­\nelry and made their escape.\nHooper is serving a sentence at Nor­\nristown, Pa.,
5ae959fc552bfe4231bba32ad3db338b COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.8260273655505 41.262128 -95.861391 ting in tht; oppression of ;tc onacure in­\ndividual, was considered as another Mag-\nCharta !>j Englishin H) ; ao that it\nmay be noticed that iiagraat abuse of\npower by the Crown or ii* minister was\nalways productiva of a popular struggle,\nstruggle tliat make* ma»ife«t either\nthat the sxercise of that power was con­\ntrary to law, or if legal, restrains it for\nthe future. In speaking of this great\nhabecu corpus act passed in the reign of\nthe Second Chariot, Sir WiLaaia Uiack-\n•tone writing several year* bufore our\nConstitution was formed, and whose in­\nvaluable work had beoo, studied thor­\noughly by the men who framed that Con­\nstitution say* :—" Tbir writ i* of great\nimportance to the public, for if once it\n•ere left tj the power oif any, even the\nhighest magistrate^ to imprison, arbitra­\nrily, whenever he or hi* officers thought\nproper, then th«r« would *oon be an end\nof all other right, and iiatnunities. —\nSome nave thought that unjust attack*\neven upon life or property, at the arbi­\ntrary will of the magistrate, are lees\ndangerous to the coatsuouweiikh than\nsuch as are made upon the liberty uf the\nsubject. To bereave a man of life, or\nby violence to confiscate estate with­\nout accusation or trial Wouid he a* grurt*\nand notorious an act uf despou**> us\nwould at once convey the alarm of tjja-\nny throughout tbe whoile kingdom; but\nconfinement of the peraon by aMretiy\nhurrying him to goal, where his suffer­\nings are unknown and forgotten, is a\nless public, a less stnkiag, and therefore,\na more dangerous engiue of arbitrary\nJovernmett, anj yet whoa tbe State i. m\nanger, even this is sometimes a neces­\nsary measure; but th. happiness of our\nConstitution is, that it is not left tu the\nexecutive- power to deteffmitio wheo the\ndanger uf the State is so great sui to red­\nder this Kieuatire expeditut, for it is tbe\nParliament itily or legislative power that\nwhenever it sees propor can autiioru - the\nCrowu by suspending ta- habeas tortus|\nact for a season, fur a siiort and uiaited\ntime to imprison suspected persona with­\nout giviog any reasons tuvreior."\nAnd yet'with this array of hisUitioai\nfacts-Jtaring taeoi in th- face, wr.h aii\nthese English analogic* encouraging then\nto imitate, if not improve, upou the no­\nbis lessons they should have taught them,\nMr. Bina-y, and the other apoiogiau for\nexe«utive usurpations, endeavor to con­\nvince their readers aflu hearers that tL
19decfff23a20f5989b0c9bb3234db02 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1895.7164383244547 39.756121 -99.323985 father's family, to Portage county In\n1806. He attended school at intervals,\nand helped his father to make a home\nIn the forest. In 1816, determining on\na better education, he made bis way,\non foot and alone, to Yale College.\nThere, with but a few dollars on which\nto commence his college life, he com-\npleted the full course, with no aid save\nhis own head and hands. He graduated\nwith honor in 1823.\nSoon after returning to his home ho\ntook charge of the Congregational\nChurch at Twinsburg, and except for a\nfew years spent as pastor of other near-\nby charges, Twinsburg has since been\nhis home. Ho opened a private school\nthere in 1826, which, growing rapidly,\nInduced him within a few years to. es -\ntablish the Bissell Academy of Twins-\nburg, a place of learning which in \ntime had a wide reputation. Men who\nbecame prominent as Judges, senators,\ngovernors and ministers are among\nthose who received a part of their edu-\ncation at Bissell Academy.\nRev. Bissell was a great friend of\nthe Indians. Hundreds were taught at\nthe academy, and their board and lodg-\ning provided gratis. They came from\nall parts of the west to receive at least\na little of the white man's learning. No\none applied at the academy in vain.\nWhether or not the boy or girl, for\nboth sexes were taught, had money to\npay the way, if an education was asked\nit was given. The enactment of a law\nin 1846 for a public school In Akron\nwas the beginning of the end. That\ncity was the pioneer in Ohio securing a\npublic school, and other towns soon\nfollowed Its example.
12e083f641f6835af82236442f85f3e0 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.2835616121258 41.020015 -92.411296 One of the most singular cases of\nsuicide ever recorded, is that of a man\nnamed Gibson, which occurred re­\ncently at Warrington, Englaad. At\nabout half-past :i o'clock one morning\nho went to a certain bakehouse, and\nrequeeted of the man in chargc, per­\nmission to warm himself, which was\ngranted. Knowles, the baker, having\noccasion shortly aiterward to go ana\neall some help, left the shop for aboat\nten minutes, and on his return was\nsurprised to find Gibson's coat and\nwaistcoat, but not the man himself.\nA eonetable was called, a search made,\nand Anally Gibson') body was found\nin a trough where the sponge had been\nset to rise. He had probably died al­\nmost immediately after burying him­\nself in it, the carbonic acid generating\nin tha fermenting process, hastening\nthe end which he songht. The Lon­\ndon Times, in reportingthe occurrence\nstates that the ow&or of the bakeshop\nsustained a lost of between £3 and\n£4, and fee, of course, gave orders to\nthrow away the dough ia which the\ndeceased was smoihered." In a busi­\nness aspect, the loss is worthy of con\nslderaUon. but statement in con­\nnection with the facts has an air of\ngrotesquoncss.\nThe Lexington iKy.) Gazette thus\ndescribes a "right fnnny soene" which\noeeared the other day at ona of tbe\nstations on tbe Kentucky Central: A\ncouple or negroes cut down a tree\nacross the telegrsph wire and broke it.\nThe operator came oat at onoe,and de­\ntermined on revenge. He qaletly took\nhis seat aud ordered the negroes to\nbring the two en J* of the wire togeth­\ner and mend It. Each seized end and\nend, but the moment they came in con­\ntact there wasa »harp electrio shock,\nand they let go. It waa raining ana\nthe battery wasstrong. However, the\nnegroee didn't kuow where tha shock\nia from, and tried it again. By this\ntime they were «o wet that the onrrent\nwould pass ii tbo clothes of one but\ntouched the other. Frightened and be­\nwildered, they brought the wires to-\nKther again and again; each time, to\nilr great astonishment, aa electric\nshock convulsed them»«gAnd when the\ntrain started there sat that operator\nunder ths shelter of tha depot, still\nurging the negroes to fresh eflprts.
a1ab677f60fac0d19ff36da994752c98 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.001369831304 41.262128 -95.861391 ••Jobnsoa remained ia tbe cbaplhin's\ntent uuui the hour arrivad for bim to taks\nhie pLice, the most couspicaous on* of\nany is the mournful funeral procession.\nThe spot chosen for the itaprvasive scene\nwas a »paoi>>iis ii>*l.i near tbe Fairfax Sem­\ninary, a afcort distance from the camp\nground of me division. Tne troopa fell\ninto line, forming three sides of a square,\niu tb{jord«tr lesignausi in the programme,\nprecisely at three o'clock P, M.\n"In the meantime the funeral pmces-\nsioa was formed at tbe quarters of Capt.\niioyd, Pro*oat Maraual, of tbe Alexandria\ndivision, uoar t&e h^ad(j|»art«ea of Uen.\nFranklin. Jjbortlv after thrive o'clock it\nreach ei the fatal field.\n- The Provost Marshal, mo«B4«>g aod\nweariiig m ctuuiou naul across bus breast,\nled tb» uiourufui corU^e. lie was im-\nmedist iy followed by thy bugler* of tbe\nregim nt* four dismountid. —\nThen caine the twelve men—one from\neach company in the regiment, selected\nby banot— wbo caastitated tbe inns par­\nty. lue arms- Sharp's breecU-loiniing\nrifle-— has| been previously loaded under\nthe dir.- i-iion uf the Marshal. One was\nloaded with a blank catridge, according\nto the- u»aai castom, so tbat aettber of\nthe men «>aid positively state that tbe\nshot frou* bis ntie killed the uafuriitaate\nman. Tfts coSu, which was of pit:e wood,\nstaincj, und without any iuscription,\ncame neit, in a one horse Wagon, im­\nmediate!^ behind followed the unfortu­\nnate jumii, tu an opep wagon. About\ni>e fee: tax inches in Ueigbt, witb light\nbair auti whiskers, bis eye brows joining\neach oilur, Johnson presenteda'mo.^t for-\n•urn t(> ctacle. He was drvsaed in eav-\nalry uniform, with the regulation over-\ncoat and bladt gloves. He was sapport-\nedbyi
41fb45b6ec8e7e7f0d815098305c905a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.4494535202894 39.261561 -121.016059 the Eastern papers have somracnted very se-\nverely upon the appointment of Calhoun Den-\nham. as U. S. District Attorney for the North-\nern District of California. It will be remem-\nbered that Benham acted as Terrys second in\nthe duel in which Broderick fell, and was the\nIndividual who managed the hair-trigger busi-\nness, thus unking tbs work of murder sure.\nThe New York Times closes an article on the\nsubject with this paragraph :\nWe venture lo say, therefore, that, wnder\nsuch circumstances, there is not a man in the\nUnited States, of Buchanans age and standing\nin the community, who, in Buchanans place,\nwould have done for Benham what he has done.\nThe appointment is characterised hy all that\nreckless contempt for morality and decency for\nwhich the Administration which is now expir-\ning has made itself so notorious. Other Presi-\ndeu to have beeu corrupt and time-serving and\nunscrupulous, but Buchanan is, we venture to\nsay, the lirsl to glory iu his shame. What oth-\ners do in scorel. with trembling and blushes, hr\ndocs openly with a smirk and a leer. We \nnot care oue straw for the political aspects of\nthis atfair, and we are fully aware that recent\nexposures prove nor Chief Magistrate to be\nvery much loo old an oflender to make it worth\nthe while of any journal to dwell any longer ou\nhis misdeeds. There is uo chance of his refor-\nmation, and his powers of mischief will soon\nexpire. But it is due to the naliou at large to\nprotest against this latest attempt Invent petty\nspite by means of a gross insult to an or-\nderly Christian community. He began the\npractice of setting the opinion* of the people,\nabout the conduct of their representatives, at\ndetlance long ago. There was an unmistakable\nemphasis as well as impudence in his giving\nGlancy Jones the Embassy at Vienna, after his\nexpulsion by his constituency, hut this perfor-\nmance iu San Francisco is something more than\na violation of Democratic theories, tt i> a slap\nin the face, administered hy the President ot\nthe United States, not to political opponents,\nbut to every man in the community who re-\nspects either God's law or man's.
486a9ca8e6dff0bd3947b3f5e44104e8 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1864.5150272907813 41.262128 -95.861391 surfeit of tbiakiadof '- taagkd" poiitica\naod prayer for iigbt- it is tBao, not OoU.\nwho bia piuaged ui into aur totafortune*.\nIt wae usat>, aot G»d, who eicoted Abra-\nhass Liacoia, the rati splitter, President\nIt was taaa who tlscted our i-oogreatHi^B\nand tbeir Uguiatian looks mseb uk«<\n»«an'* work: a-d rather mean et that. —\nif the p'S)pls bad tarasd their atteoUoo >\nto prayer worthy <»f tbe "Prioce of\nP^aae," before they found the ehip jaajc- <\n««?, it would bare beea of ikt euna»>\ntjosuco- f or guod—uor they are ali WADted\nto bale water and atop the iuaks aod do\nth«tr nrajing while tb#r wurk.\nPoiiticdly, Gea. McCtaiiaa coald not\nbars d ,'iis a nor« ttafortuaete thing for\nhtifatif, nor a saore fortuaats tbiu^ ft r\nthe oi>autry than to bars airaaaed auch\naeatAMKOt* juit at tot# tcac. 8atufied\nfrom aeua&<< beta ia loai, while ao-\nder Governor D jaaison, aad from aii his\naotiofis aaooe, where pointa*! opitiioos\nhad any ouotitx-Uixi witb bia aetioas, that\nhe was asM the u»«u to pluca at the head\nof tbo Democratic party as a poiitical\nleader, we have as tenderij aa oirewm-\nataaoes sroald admit, so indicated. Aad\nwhat bat sBibitioa *&i "paiiej" ever\ne^u««U the «2«t)(5raaf Congress to adopt\nbiia aad try to force him apoa tbe people\nas tbe iitsdar of tbe Deic ^orattc party,\nwe aerer aoal i c >tapreh*sd. Ilia ania-\nliiutv uf character, hia persosai tttach-\niseou to tiic Democratic party, hts soiea-\nti&o odututiia, bis detotoo to th arts of\nwar, aii tbeae are weii enough, for aught\nwe know, hut there are mauy lac-n of fi&s\nacqai' meats who are the moat onfit of\nall men to whom to eutrast tbt liberties
21dca8fb994af6edcf64636972922403 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.815068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 When a big tree falls in tho forest the\nwhole neighborhood is roused by the up¬\nroar. Ono fancies how it must alarm tho\nthousands of quick-eared creatures in the\nwpods. I remember tho fall of a tree at\nnight-fall of an early winter day. The\nplacowasono whore naturo was in her\nwildest mood, which the road running\npast only emphasised. It was as if a doz¬\nen mighty temples had fallen together in a\nhuge shapeless mass; vast unhewn rocks\nhung beetling over the sides, their ledges\nbarmy affording nutriment enough for a\nstunted pine to take root in. The rude\nmajesty of the place almost stopped the\nbreath! A tiny fall of water tumbled\ndown between the rocks, paused at their\nfoot in a natural basin, and crossed the\nroad into a ditch. Across the fields was a\nlong curving line of rugged hills closing\nupthoviow north and south. Tho wee-\ntern was an intense clejjrgold;\nand the saplings of young trees growing\nalong the road were outlined in delicate\ntracery against it A woodman's ax some-\nwhereon the other side of tho rooky hill\nfilled tho lonely, savage place with wild\nechoes; but when the tree at last fell, the\ncrash seemed to shako tho wholo world.\nThe ponderous rocks groaned with the\nconcussion, and the amphitheatre oppos¬\nite roarod liko an angry lion. This sound\nwas thrown back and forth from tho walls\nof stono in a succession of discharges, and\na long series of reverberations rolled from\nclitT to cliff, as if reluctant to die away at\nlast in faint vibrations among remoto hills.\nWhen they seemed to have expired alto¬\ngether, deep, delicate tremors of sonnd\nstill returned. and shook themselves out\nairily in invisible distances. It was some¬\nthing to listen to with bated breath and to\nremember for a lifetime.
3e01a652cd065fa96f1f29c07ea3443e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.7630136669204 39.745947 -75.546589 Kazimir AJkonouskl, 1227 Apple St.\nKlrlmiccz Malinowski, 508 E. 3d St.\nVincent Poclenyk, 1211 Apple St.\nOscar Bradner, C12 Poplar St.\nWilliam G. Beaumont, 3l7 Poplar St\nPowel Wntclechowlcz, B13 E. 3d St.\nThomas F. Hynes, 706 Poplar St\nBen Slutcky, 32« E. 4th St.\nWalter Blllnskl, 624 Townsend St.\nJos. P. Shanahan, 719 New Gastle Ave.\nNell O'Connell, southeast corner 13lh\nand King Sts.\nJ. Ganoy, 300 E. 11th St.\nWilliam Richardson, 625 E. 5th St\nPete Szymctl, 1203 Apple St\nAle* Luczjn, 424 E. 2d St.\nSamuel Bodie, 510 Church St.\nWilliam Morris, 312 E. 7th St.\nClarence J. Hlghllcld, 401 Walnut St. ,\nDelaware City.\nMike Puoclo, 617 E. 5lh St.\nNick Krupe, 832 Townsend St.\nPeter Zagcnckowy, 311 Townsend\nFrank Weisman, 200 Parrish St.\nRobert A. Watkins, 629 E. 5th St\nSam Dublin, 309 W. 2d St.\nAdolph Rose, Poplar St.\nHenry 0. Hay. 1343 French St.\nDaniel Arsenlous, 412 Walnut St\nClarence R. Pyle, 105 E. 8lh St.\nPaul Krlshohlr, 119 Poplar St.\nHubert J. Lannon, 514 Spruce St.\nLeonard Do La Barta, 120 Market St.\nMichail T. Brown, 1211 Lobdell St\nMarucl Navero, 502 E. 3d St.\nWilliam A. Thompson, 1300 French St.\nPreston B. Blake, 1129 A St.\nHarry Szymanskl, 106 Heald St.\nCharles D. Myers, Market and D Sta.\nHoward Nichole, 1305 Wilson St.\nCharles C. Brown, Hotel duPont, City\nPoint, Va. : 325 E. 4th St.\nJoseph Kolbinskl, 109 Claymont St.\nThomas O. Lynch, llffi B St.\nKasjlmlr Va]narawlcz, 1228 Apple St.\nWaclaw Oackowskl, 410 Spruce St.\nMichael Halck, 304 Townsend St\nPetro Orandlllo, 514 Tatnall St.\nOlllberto Oulseppa, 204 Poplar St.\nJoseph H. A . Irwin, 1336 French St.\nJohn W. Pauley, 1353 Chestnut St; 311\nTaylor St.
56dfcb56e813f417e36a927e6404ea0b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.869862981989 44.939157 -123.033121 buzzards occupy the sky to the antiunion of everything else, it Is not their fault\nbut that of the people generally. Individually wo all bow down and pay rev-\nerence to wealth. Colloctivoly wo do the same thing. Tho press plays the\nmillionaires up, ond tho publle breaks its unck to road about them. Hnlfpogo\npictures are printed In tho big city papers when tho daughter of somo million-\naire buzzard is married to or divorced from some nialo buzzard, for no other\nreason Can the parties have great wealth. Wo strenuous Democrats fall for\nthe worship of aristocracy, the only kind we recognize, that of wealth. Charles\nW. Clates was only a young buzzard and he never did anything but fly high\nand distribute big tips, but tho newspapers wro all full of his suddenly drop-\nping from tho social skies, and one would harnly think from tho fulsome and\neulogistic notices of him in the press thet ho wns only a dead buzzard.\nThere undoubtedly lots of rich men who aro also good men. Ooodness is\nno more to tuoaosurod by poverty than by weulth, The Idea wo wish to convey\nis not that wealth Is evidence of wickedness, but that we as ft people handicap\nall goodness, and pretty much everything also by fixing wealth as tho stand-ai-\nby which lifo and success aro measu'ed. It is a false standard and one\nthat wo should get rid of. We should emit the bee typo of humanity aud\ndeprecate the buzzard typo, but wo will not do It, for the simple reason that\nns a people wo look iikii men and moasuiu them by tho size of their bank ac-\ncounts, and this for the simple reason Hint money is what most of us most feel\nthe need of and therefore look upon as the great desideratum of lifo.\nThe bco type Is splendid to contemplate at a distance, but the buzzard\nt; pe Is tho one wo chooso to emulate.
35b4e29df8ad0fc78363f4c19aa43bc7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.8401639028032 40.063962 -80.720915 men liko John Jacob Astor and James ^\nLennox.Democrats in politics, but with c<\na sense of public duty which ia above all fi\ndevotiou to party.when men like these r(\nsign a public appeal for the defeat of the R|\nDemocratic party and the election of Jj\nHayes and Wheeler, tho argument is one fl\nwhich sets men thinking. g.\nThirdly. The exposure of the mon- $\nstrous Democratic conspiracy in Phila- §\ndelphia to steal the vote of Pennsylvania 2J\nby Hooding tho State with fraudulent tax $;\nreceipts. The tracing of the conspiracy ri\ndirectly to Mr. Tilden a personal bureau $;\nin New York City, and the arrest of his m\nguilty agents, have added to the general §;\nrevulsion of public feeling against the\nDemocratic candidate. Men who have\nheard all the exposures of Tilden's tax\nperjuries and other unmoved "j\nnow stand aghast at the idea of a Presi- el\ndential candidate stooping to share in\nthe most monstrous conspiracy known\nin recent politics. It is generally\nknown in New York City that Mr. Til- A\nden has hardly been seen in Albany\nfor a month past, but has given hisentire\ntime to the management of his bureau in oi\nNew York City. They know that this tax oi\nreceipt scheme could not have been orga- hi\nnized and prepnred there without Mr. gi\nTilden's porsonal knoweledge, if not his L\nactive aid and co-operation. The dis- -K\ncovery of this crime reawakens all tho of\nbitterness against Tilden as the manager cj\nof Tammany in its worstdaysof fraudu- tr\nlent registering and ballot-box stuffing, ct\nand this feeling is added to tho general ai\ntide of fientiment which is now so
186efb5ac940551e2adc7d6caf6a0c08 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.8013698313039 39.743941 -84.63662 dne day under the rule. So ordered. The\ncommittee appointed to wait npon the Presi-\ndent reported that it had performed its duty,\nand that tne .rresiaenc naa statea ne wouia\ncommunicate iu writing with the Senate, where\nupon the Dooy aajournea lor tne day.\nOn the 12th Mr. Edmunds called up pis res\nolution containing for the present session the\nstanding committees of the Senate as consti\ntuted last session. Mr. Garland opposed, where\nupon Mr. tamnnas sail ne would not press\nthe resolution lor tne tune Doing. Alter\nshort and, unimportant executive session, the\nbody adjourned.\nMr. Edmund's resolution for the\nment of the standing committees of the last\nsession, was adopted on the 13th, after which\nSenator Logan offered a resolution to appoint\nJudge Davis President pro (em. Mr. Pendle\nton objected to its present consideration, \nin some quarters tne conclusion was lumpea at\nthat the Democrats would make an opposition\nWlltju XL uiu cuine up. ine oenaua neui lubu ex-\necutive session. This session lasted but twenty\nminutes, and as soon as the doors were opened.\nSenator Harris being in the chair, Mr. Pendle-\nton withdrew his objection to the present con-\nsideration of Mr. Logan's motion. A vote was\ntaken, and Mr. Davis chosen, neither he nor\nBayard voting either way. Messrs. Bayard and\nAnthony were appointed to conduct mm to the\nchair. He made a brief speech reaffirming his\nown partisan position, and the Senate at once\nproceeded to other business.\nOn the 14th Mr. Morgan offered a resolution,\nwhich was adopted, calling on the Scretary of\nthe Treasury for a copy of the orders made by\nmm since the zsth or J uly,
3b6298897b91cd697201263a1dce924b NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.78551909406 40.735657 -74.172367 been established by limiting the scope\nof government power, instead of by\nextending it. This statement Is op-\nposed to all history and Is contrary\nto the whole trend of modern de-\nvelopment. The marvelous progress\nthat we are now making is all along\nthe line of extending the powers of\ngovernment. We are enacting pure\nfood laws, setting up government In-\nspection of meat, building the Panama\nCanal, regulating railroads, fixing gas\nfind public utility rates, limiting cap-\nitalization, building vast irrigation\nreservoirs, redeeming immense tracts\nof land, running lines of steamships\nfrom Panama to New York, supervis-\ning national banks, running the post-\noffice, to which we are now adding a\nparcels post and a savings bank.\nAgain the Governor repeats Mr.\nBrandels's charge that our policy of\nregulating the trusts by a commis-\nsion means legalizing monopoly. This\nis a pure assumption. No proof Is\noffered to support It. It Is that\nsome men in and out of the new party\nthink that big business Is here to\nstay, because these huge units can\nproduce more cheaply than smaller\nunits, while others believe that these\nhuge trusts won their position by\nprivilege and not by efflcienecy. But\nthis is a mere opinion.\nNeither Mr. Roosevelt nor the plat-\nform anywhere says that if the con-\ntrol of the market by the trusts is\ndue to privileges that he or we favor\ncontinuing that privilege. On the con-\ntrary, Roosevelt in his convention\nspeech directly declares that he will\nremove privilege as fast as we find\nIt and wherever we find it, and the\nplatform pledges the party to the\nsame principle.\nAll we say Is that we find big busi-\nness here, with manifold and increas-\ning abuses, and we propose to control\nit and Its evils while we gather In-\nformation for further action. This is
11a98edaf9aecb3afec1b31bd8f779a6 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.7575342148655 46.187885 -123.831256 the Prtbtloft plateau Inside the 100 fathom\ncurve. The bottom of the Bering sea\nbasin is composed principally of brown,\ngreen and blue mud and ooze, while ap-\nproaching the plateau on both sides\nfine gray and black send Is found on the\nslopes, mixed wlthi gravel. We found\nseveral new species of marine life and\none new species of fish. A careful survey\nof the PrlbMorf islands and of the rook-\neries was made, a full roport of which\nI wlH soon forward to Wathlngton City.\nI am convinced from my observations\nthat ths rookeries are fast being de-\npleted and that ths virtual extinction of\nths seals Is only a question ot a tew\nrears rf their annual slaughter is per\nmitted to continue as at present. The\ncatch tWis year wIM not vary much from\nthat of last season. I discovered no\nviolations of the and believe that\nthe sealers are generally Inclined to re-\nspect ths provisions. I am unable to say\nat rjresent what our winter's worn will\nbe. We go to San Francisco from here\nand will await orders there."\nThs Albatross has orders from Wash'\nIngton City to remain on the Sound a\nfew days to make surveys of the loca\ntions of flsh traps at Point Roberts,\nLormrtl and San Juan Islands. The or\nder 1s thought to have reference to the\nsuit of ths Lunnml Indians against the\nAlaska Packing Association to prevent\nths cannerymen from using traps or dis-\ncriminating wrslnst Indians In sal moo\nAshtns;, Is violation, as alleged, or a\ntreaty m1s by ths Indians with Gov.\nStevens. II may, however, be only a con-\ntinuation or the work begun by Prof,\nTownsend and MaJ. Alexander, of the fli\nCimhiiI lwi last spring.
2470c428d088be42ffad15aba72478b1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.532876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 wanted me to try It. I told him it was no\nu»e, that they would do me no good; but\nUnally he persuaded me to get Mr. B. L.\nTabor, our merchant, to order some for me.\nAfter taking a few doses I felt better, and\n»gain hope revived in my breast. I continued\ntaking the pills, and continued to improve,\nand now I believe 1 have finally recovered.\nThat is about all of the story. I believe Pink\nPills saved ray life, and I never fall to recom­\nmend them to anyone who is suffering. In\nfact. 1 can tell you of a man that you will\npass ou your road home who has been almost\ncompletely cured of rheumatism after years\nof suffering. Mr. S. O. Bailey Is his name, and\nyou can stop and see him."\nAfter thanking Dr. Porter, and bidding him\nfarewell, the Gazette man started for Mr.\nBaileys residence. He was fonnd on his\nfarm cutting some trees down. In reply to\nour Mr. Bailey said ; "Yes, Dr.\nPorter has told yon the truth. 1 suffered for\nyears with rheumatism, and was only able to\nleave my room in good weather, and then was\nnot able to do any work I saw Pink Pills\nadvertised, and was urged by Dr. Porter and\nother friends to try them, but I had no faith\nIn patent medicines, and for several weeks\npositively refused to try them. They finally\novercame my prejudices, however, and I am\nglad of it, for you can see yonrse f what Pink,\nPills have dune for me Come to the house,\nand I will show you my crutch and cane\nwhich Pink Pills have enabled mo to lay\naside. 1 have also bien giving these pills to\na neighbors child, which has scrofula, and It\nIs Improving right along. ”\nThe reporter next vUlted the store of B. L\nTalmi*, who corroborated the testimony of Dr.\nPotter and Mr. Bailey. Mr. Tabor further\nsaid that h<-had never handled a medicine
14cd829b3898dfa2cec1a1df77e4d51a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.3866119902348 40.063962 -80.720915 New York, May 20..Flour, receipts 18,000 bar¬\nrels; exports 'A000 barrels; market stronger at\n5al0c advance; sales 28.01X) barrels. Wheat, re¬\nceipts 237.000 bushols: exports W,000 bushels;\nnale.s 21.0W.000 bushels of futures and 128.000\nbushels of spot; spot market stronger and dull;\nungraded red S2ca$l 00^: No. 2 Chicago OlJ^c;\nojitions excited, and cloned strong and higher;\nNo. 2 red May 90;^9."^aVJ>;c: June 90%a92Ka\n92>^c; July 91a93!^i93^c; AugustSO^aW^i^J^c:\nSeptember 90a92Jia92Kc; October 93e; December\n93%n9.»Ma95c. Coru, leceipts 57,000 bushels; ex¬\nports 769 bushels; sales 3.830.000 bnshels of fu¬\ntures aud 62,000 bushels of spot; market higher\nand quiet; ungraded mixed 56a02e; May fiOJ^a\n68J4ii5Ji}4[o; Juno 53a55%u55%c; July 51a54a54e;\nAugust 51J-4a53^'aM^4c. Uats. receipts 9S.000\nbusuela; exports 2,(w0 ou9hels; salos 340,000 bash-\nels of futures and 87,000 bushels of spot, market\nhigher; May 3Sc: June 36J<a37>$a37&c: July 36^\na37o37e; August 35%a36Ka:;63£c; spot No. 2 white\n mixed western ;t«a33>£c. Hhy and hops\nfirm. Coffee steady with little change In prices.\nSugar quiet. Molasses quiet Rice firm. Tallow\nquiet Rosin steady und quiet. Turpcutlnodull\nami stead v. Eggs firm: western 16al6%c. Pork\nactive; o'ld mess 89 75alG50. Cut meats firm.\nLanl higher; western steam and May 86 65; July\nJ6 70aG 72; August86 79; Sentomber 86 sj. Butter\nsteadv; western dairy 32»il5c; do creamery 15a\n21c; do factory llal3>^^ Cheese quiet nnd weak.\nPhiladelphia. Pa. , May 20..Flour firm.\nWheat vcrv strong and higher; No. 2 red May\n91u9!Kc: June 93&a9tc;, July 92a92kc; August\n91>4i9l-%c. Corn active and higher; No. 2 mixed\nMay 5la55c; June 52^a53kc; July and August\n5J'^«<c. Oats strong; No. 3 white 3SKc; No.\n. 2 white Mny 5>9%c; Juno nnd July 3S)4a39c;\nAugust 37>£o38}£c. Butter quiot; Pennsylvania\ncreamery extra 20a21c. Eggs steady; Pennsyl¬\nvania tlrsts 16^0.
0eb289f3a325a16bbba1b9e0c3fd37a2 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.8452054477423 41.020015 -92.411296 Iu April, 1873, Prof. McCarty, Su­\nperintendent of the institution in Lee\ncounty, moved up to Eldora with hto\nfamily of 170 boys.\nDuring the year 1873, the 33>) acrea\nwere nearly all enclosed with a good\nboard fence and. divided into eeveral\nfields. Moat of the grouad\nken early in the aeaaon, aad\nproduce waa raised daring that\nmer. AU the plowing aad\nwas done by theiaRMtoe of the\nDurins the aaaw year a barn wascoa»>\nmencea 90x120 feet, but was aot coa*-\npleted uatil the foltowiug season. 4\nframe bnilding waa alao erected for a\ncarpenter and blacksmith shop, with\nthe necessary oat houses, etc.\nDuring the present summer a fourth\nbuilding has been erected, precisely\nlike the laat one built by Mr. Mowei\nat a of $13,lGt>, under the ii\ndtote .saperviaiou of Superiuteadi\nMcCarty, who hired tbe maaoas\ncarpenters by the day, aad worked\nboya and teama belonging to the in­\nstitution, and whioh buiidinge whefi\ncompleted, will not cost the State ovef\n$10,000, being a saving by judicious\nmanagement of $3,000 and over. The\nbuilding is up, endoseil and ready for\ntbe plastering.\nThere aro now 170 boys in the insti­\ntution from the age of 7 up to 22, aad\nthey have accomplished aa immenss\nsight of labor the present aommer.\nThe immaaee bera to crammcd full\nof the products of the eell, there being\ncarefully etowed away 1,500 baaheu\nof wheat, 600 buaheto of eats, 15j0t\nbushels of potatoes, 160 bushels sweet\npotatoes, 00 toaa of hay, the product\nof
280e5d5073c6e732f4f36687da7e1da1 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.203551880945 40.735657 -74.172367 Separate proposals will be received for the\nfollowing work:\nLighting fixtures.\nBronze outside lamps and bronze tablets\nSteel lockers.\nContractors may make a total estimate, in-\ncluding all the work above-mentioned.\nThe plans and specifications for the above-\nmentioned work may be examined at the of-\nfice of the architects. H. J. & J. V. King, 22\nClinton street. Newark, N. J.\nSaid proposals to be accompanied by the\nconsent in writing of two sureties or a surety\ncompany authorized to do business in this\nState, who shall at the time of putting in\nsuch proposals qualify as to their responsibil-\nity in the amount of such proposals and bind\nthemselves that if the contract be awarded to\nthe person or persons making the proposal\nthey will upon Its being so awarded become\nhis or their sureties for the faithful perform-\nance of said work and that if the person or\npersons omit or refuse to execute such con-\ntract they will pay to the city of Newark any\ndifference between the sums to which he or\n would have been entitled upon the com-\npletion of the contract and that which the\ncity of Newark may be obliged to pay the\nperson or persons by whom such contract shall\nbe executed. Bidders must specify in their\nproposals the number of days required to\nfinish their work should the above work or\nworks be awarded to them.\nif the said committee on public buildings so\ndesires, bidders must submit samples of above-\nmentioned fixtures for comparison and ap-\nproval before the award of the contract. Ail\nbids must be made out on blanks furnished\nfor the purpose, which can be had upon appli-\ncation at the office of the city clerk.\nThe said committee on public buildings of\nthe Common Council reserve for themselves\nthe right to accept or reject any or all pro-\nposals for the above work or to waive any\ndefects therein as they may deem best for the\ninterest or the city of Newark.\nBy direction of the committee on public\nbuildings of the Common Council of the city\nof Newark.
203794a94ac6015df3808c1aa0b0613d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.554794488838 41.681744 -72.788147 Fire yesterday afternoon gutted the\nattic in the home of Axel Johnson on\nCook street, and with the addition of\na great amount of water, the damage\nwill probably reach wel4 over $500.\nBedding, clothes and other old pro-\nducts were stored in the attic of the\nbuilding. It is thought that the heat\nof the past days had started the\nsmoldering of fire which, when a\nbreath of air struck it, turned into\nflames. This theory of spontaneous\ncombustion is the only one held by\nthe authorities. Although the fire it-\nself was confined to the attic, the wa-\nter from many buckets and the con-\ntents of four' large automatic chemical\nsprinklers added their flow to tht\ndamaging affair and leaked and soak-\ned through to the cellar. The ceil-\nings were loosened by the water \nare probably a total loss.\nThe fire alarm failed yesterday af-\nternoon and was largely responsible\nfor the headway the flames had gain-\ned. The Bristol Manufacturing com-\npany's plant here has been idle for\nmany months and "steam is not kept\nat high pressure at any time. There-\nfore when the telephone operator in-\nformed the engineer that the alarm\nwas to be sounded, he pulled the cord\nbut the result was only a sickly\nhissing soird which could not be\nheard as far as Central Square. The\nhissing continued for the regulation\nnumber of blasts but the firemen\nwere few in numbers who knew there\nwas an alarm. So word was telephon-\ned to Trumbull's that,there was a fire\nand the blasts on that factory whistle\nsoon had the men scurrying toward\nthe fire house.
8dfa3001425e4602f801cf46f602543f THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.664383529934 40.618676 -80.577293 IT has been an accepted public policy that the bus-\niness activities of the Government shall in no\nway react to the detriment of labor standards es­\ntablished for private industry. The wisdom of\nthis policy is unquestioned. The Bacon-Davis and\nWalsh-Healey Acts are a bar to unfair competition\nin labor standards either in work done by the\nGovernment or let out under contract for the Gov­\nernment. However, during this period of econom­\nic depression, the Government has increasingly di­\nverted public construction projects to the category\nof "relief work." The result has been an enormous\nexpansion of government construction work with\na proportional failure of private construction in-\ndusstry to increase its activity. Until July 1939,\nthe prevailing rate principle protected the workers\non government projects. The new-relief act, ef­\nfective July 1st, accepted the so-called security\nwage and by increasing to 130 per month\ndrastically reduced wages. The result was an av­\nerage reduction of wages for workers on construc­\ntion projects of over 50 per cent—the cost of labor\nwas cut without even a suggestion that the costs\nof the materials on which he worked should be cut\nat all. Workers on these projects have no choice\nbetween work in private industry and employ­\nment on work relief projects. Work which might\nhave been let to private companies under contracts\nhas increasingly been used for work relief. Relief\nprojects, formerly restricted within the $2,500\nlimit, have been raised by degrees to $25,000 and\nare now practically unlimited, as the New York\nAirport construction project, which amounts to\n$40,000,000. The public and even members of\nCongress are confused by the term "relief work"\nthough the workers are in regular public construc­\ntion work.
20d971da78f298a51e06c049f9f9ecb3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.532876680619 41.681744 -72.788147 men who can't play golf at all as well\nas those who hit the ball are rubbing\nout kinks. Because next Wednesday\nfor all day, there's going to be some\nmedal piay, across the greens and in\nthe hay on the Shuttle Meadow links.\nAny golfer, anywhere. Is free to enter\nthis affair, the proceeds go to give\nfivsh air to about 800 chaps. It will\ncost two dollars, nothing more, which\nshould bring out the men galore, to\ntry and get the low gross score or\nelse the handicaps. For the ladles we\nopine, a kickers' handicap will be fine,\nthey'll only go the upper nine and\nshoot the best they might. And when\nthe fray is o'er and done, by way of\njudging who has won, we'll consult\na number known to none that was\ndrawn before flight. So If you\nhaven't already planned to put on\ngreens and splash the sand when you\nweren't lucky in your "land". Just put\nthe day aside. We'll guarantee you'll\nhave some fun, no matter how your\nluck may run and If you haven't when\nall is done, a prize to rest beside.\nAll of which above Is intended to\ncall the attention of golfers in the city\nto the fact that the Fresh Air tour-\nnament day la rapidly drawing nearer.\nShuttle Meadow links, It Is expected,\nwill see, next Wednesday, as many\ngolfers as it may Comfortably accom\nmodate... I tts not thought that the\ncourse will be overcrowded but It is\nhoped that as many as possible will\narrange to play early In the day, as a\nlate hour will probably be the most\npopular.
20b0b55430fe9352a507f3b13dbf820c DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.2808218860985 39.745947 -75.546589 Tbe looomotl ve engineers on the Pitta-\nbarg and Lake Erls Railroad reoently\naeked e redaction In the hours of labor\nand an advanoa in wages. On Monday\ntba General Manager and the engineers\n“arranged a satisfactory settlement.*\nThe Kilmer Wire Bend Company, of\nSohonectady, New York, has come to\nan agreement with the local Knights of\nLabor, and the boycott began against It\nthree month* ago has been raised. Tbe\ntrouble was caused by tbe discharge of\nKnights ol Labor.\nTbe advanoa demanded of McClure &\nCo.'a minora at Oonnellsvllle, Penns.,\nwe* granted yesterday, and tbe man,\nabont 1000 la number, will resume to­\nday. All tbe mlnftfl In tbe ooke re­\ngion are now paying tbe increase.\nThe pnddlere and laborers of the\nPottavllle Iron and Steel Company, at\nPottevllle, atrnok yesterday for an \nvance In wages. Tbe pnddlere demand\n«3 65 per ton, an advanoa of 40 conte,\nand the laborers «7 per week, an ad\nvanoe of |1. The oompany offered tbe\npuddlrra «3 50, but It was refused. Tbe\nstrike will entirely suspend operation*\nat tbe mille, whioh employ between 300\nand 400 bands.\nA oommlttee of tbe Knights of Labor\n;ra*terday called on O. H , McCormick\n: n Chicago and demanded the reinstate\nment of 800 man discharged in the re­\ncent strike, and whose places were\nfilled by non-nnion men. Mr. McCor­\nmick positively refused to to employ\nthe men. Tha committee say they will\nhave the General Executive Board de­\nclare a boyoott against tbe firm.\nMore than 2,000 journeyman tailors\nIn Mllwankee will strike to-day for an\nadvanoa of nearly SO per oent.
1baec7c356f055f24bcf21f040524734 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.7246575025367 39.745947 -75.546589 NEW YORK, Sept. 22. —(11 a. nv.)—\nRe-disposition of the strength of the\nallies battle line is suggested by the\nBerlin statement that an attack has\nbeen resumed against the French iront -\nier fortifications south' of Verdun. The j 1\nGermans have not been reinforced in, \\\nthat area; on the contrary the infer-j i\neiicc recently drawn in this column hasjj\nbeen confirmed that the recent German j i\nretirement on Metz meant the dis|>atch | ;\nof troops from Lorraine to reinforce the!;\nbattle front further west.\nThe French apparently had similarly ;\nweakened their Lorraine frontier corps ;\nto strengthen their line at other points.\nThe Germans, in consequence, seem to\nhave been aille to take the initiative\nonce more about Verdun.\nThe Verdun engagement, however, has\nlittle bearing on the immediate strat­\negy of Hie great battle now \nThe French fortress line should be\nable to hold its own against the weak\nattack necessarily imposed «n the Ger­\nman Lorraine frontier offensive by the\nfar more serious developments to the\nwest. This presumably is the reasoning\nwhich would lead General Joffre to re-11\nconstitute his battle line.\nThe two points of attack at which\nthe allies have been aiming since the ;\nbattle of the Aisne began are tho cen- ;\ntre and the right wing, roughly dlvid- ;\ned by Rheims. To the east of Rheims ;\nthe German center has been moved !\nbackward very slowly, but to the west, |\nthe right wing has held steadily. It I\nis probable, therefore, that if the j ;\nFrench eastern frontier force has been i ;\nlessened, the men are being sent to\nreinforce the allied efforts west of\nRbelms.
63061ac35ba6d137a8d7de74d0b17a24 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.332876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 bravo returned to Missouri and enlisted\nwith the national volunteers about to\nturn their arms against his late patrons\nacross the Kio Grande.\nAn a soldier in Price's regiment he\nserved honorably throughout the Mexi -c si - n\nwar, and upon the return of peace\nwent gold hunting in California in com-\npany with another disbanded volunteer\nnamed Peleg Smith, who, having been\ndesperately wounded in the leg during\nan engagement when no surgeon was at\nhand, had coolly amputated the frac-\ntured limb with his own hsinds. They\nbegan mining together at Placerville,\nthen significantly known as Hangtown ;\nbut Byrnes still preferred the rifle to\nimplements of industry, and presently\nwent out against the California Indians\nus a captain of a band of regulators.\nIn 1H"; he Capt. Harry Love's\ncompany, organized by the Legislature\nto hunt down the notorious Joaquin\nMurieta's band of outlsiws, aud, as the\n"corralling" of the Mexican brigands\non Tulare Plains, had the distinction of\nslaying Joaquin himself, after an ex-\nchange of shots from addle to saddle.\nDiadaining the apodal reward the Leg-\nislature would have conferred upon him\nfor the deed, lis Carried the dissevered\nhead of his slain foeiuan to Ssm Fran-\ncisco as a trophy, and exulted in the ap-\nplause of the crowds beholding it. Sub-\nsequently, while fighting the Piute In-\ndians under the last of their great\nchiefs, WinnemUCOa, he received wounds\nunfitting him for further warfare. Since\nthen, according to all accounts, he has\nled but a shattered existence, ending\nnow in the madhouse.
67e20d83646bac93c3a6e7afc7b92e03 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1851.7739725710298 35.780398 -78.639099 "Lord Acton, Supreme Judge of Rome, assu-\nred me that all or nearly all the crime of that\ncity originated in the use of wine."\nThe following testimony will show, that the\nlfree' and common use of pure wine is equally\ndeleterious to the inhabitants of other coun-\ntries ; and occasions a very great amount of in-\ntemperance among the people. Indeed, there\nuse is actually destructive of life.\n" In the region of Syria, we have the author-\nity of the Rev. Eli Smith of the deadly influence\nof even the purest wine. Of the inebriating ef-\nfects, says he, of the wines of the Mediterranean,\nwe have often powerful evidence. On first goino-t-\nMalta, at the beginning of the temperance\nreformation, with the impression I had received\nhere, that there wa3 no danger from the pure\nwine of those countries, I fell in with what I\nfound to be the prevailing custom, and took a\nlittle wine with my dinner. At length I found\nan intimate friend falling into habits of intoxi-\ncation from using tho common Massala wine of\nSicily. I then up my wine ; and so far as\nI know, all my brethren abstain from the habit-\nual use of it, as atemperauce measure. Iu pre-\nparing a tract on temperance, for circulation in\nSyria, we have included wineicith brandy, as one\nof the causes of iutemperance, to be avoided\nIu the East Indies, the same change is deman- - i\nded, as European customs have there spreads'\nwider and more latal influence in favor of in-- f\ntoAicuiiijg urmks. ine jxev. xjt. ocudaer ot\nMadras says : In India, drunkenness prevails\nin the higher circles ; but it is to be seen in its\nwidest range among the middle classes of Euro\npeans, and East Indians. Half of the natives of\ntins city, we have been told, get drunk daily.\nProbably half of the Europeans who die in the\nhospitals in Black Town, die of intemperance."f\nThese testimonies evidently prove, that in\nthose countries, the purest wines produce intoxi-\ncation; and that when they are freely used,\n(which is the case all over France, fcc.) that\ndrunkenness prevails to an alarming extent,\nand, that the 4
08e2817d22d7fafd9b15b31dfc4726d0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.7520547628108 58.275556 -134.3925 This man of the Lord iu his sermon\nmapped out just what the devil would\ndo if he were in charge of a newspaper\nplant and had with him the oltice devil\naud, curiously enough, his Satanic Maj¬\nesty, accordiug to the preacher, would\nnot make many changes from the man¬\nner in which it is being ruu today. Now\nthere may be something in this minis¬\nter man's talk after all, for we have\nfound that, while claiming no connec¬\ntion with him, we sometimes have a\nderil of a time getting out a paper.\nThat minister painted the vileness of\nthe vocation so luridly that it forced\nus to pick up our little broken looking\nglass and peek timidly therein to ascer¬\ntain if we were not indeed endowed\nwith horns, and with a mighty effort\nwe glanced behind us to ascertain, for\n if we did not have attached to us\na barbed tail aud afterwards peeped\nslyly at our feet to see if they were not\nof cloven shape.certainly the preach¬\ner's outburst will ml&e the editors of\nthe country sorely grieved when they\nbegin to think what a bad lot they are.\nThe good mau got warmed up towards\nthe latter part of his sermon and rapp¬\ned off the followiug final knock:\n"In my humble judgment the devil\nwill not assume the editorial chair iu\nthis aeiiutry for he is too well repre¬\nsented there to care for any change, so\nfar as reform measures aud religious\nteachings are concerned." And further,\n"It would be unfair to say that all pa¬\npers are equally guilty, but of a daily\nthat meets the ethical requirements of\na christian home, the speaker has no\nknow led ge."
1613d9a8cffb95c6e9c9f85d944af191 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1895.6232876395231 42.217817 -85.891125 Extreme cold, as Is well known,\nerts a benumbing influence upon the\nmental faculties. Almost everyone who\nhas been exposed, for a longer or a\nshorter period, to a very low tempera-\nture has noted a diminution in will\npower, and often a temporary weaken-\ning of the memory. Ferhaps the\nlargest scale upon which this action has\never been studied was during the re-\ntreat of the French fromMoscow. The\ntroops suffered extremely from hunger,\nfatigue and coldfrom the latter per-\nhaps most of all. A German physician\nwho accompanied a detachment of his\ncountrymen has left an Interesting ac-\ncount of their trials during this retreat.\nFrom an abstract of this paper by Dr.\nRose, in the New York "Mediclnische\nMonatschrift," we find that one of the\nearliest symptoms referable to the cold\nwas loss of memory. This was noted in\nthe strong as well as those who were\nalready suffering from the effects of\nthe hardships to which they had been\nexposed. With the first appearance of\na moderately low temperature (about\nfive degrees above zero Fahrenheit),\nmany of the soldiers were found to\nhave forgotten the names of the most\nordinary things about them, as well aa\nthose of the articles of food for which\nthey were perishing. Many forgot\ntheir own names and those of thair\ncomrades. Others showed pronounced\nsymptoms of mental disturbance, and\nnot a few became incurably Insane, the\ntype of their insanity resembling very\nclosely senile dementia. The cold waa\nprobably not alone responsible for\nthese effects, for a zero temperature Is\nrather; stimulating than paralysing In\nIts action upon the well-fe- d
1ad3a2d87ef86b8a8ce745f33fdb726d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.815068461441 39.756121 -99.323985 $251.40, and he did not get Handy\neither. The total amount allowed\nthe sheriff at the July meeting of the\nboard was over $1,000. At that rate\nthe amount paid by the county would\nbe over $4,CC0 per year, to say nothing\nof the ccsts in civil cases etc.\nWe have it on good authority that\nJohn Thomas has given money to at\nleast two men in an attempt to hire\nthem to do work for him at election.\nBoth of these men exhibited the\nmoney, one or them ofnenng to turn\nover all, and the other a part of what\nhe had received to the f usionists to\nhelp their campaign.\nThen again we are told by several\nmen who heard the conversation that\nthe county clerk's office is very much\nhumiliated over a wolf scalp irreeu- -\narity. It seems that young wolf\nscalps grow to be old ones immediately\nafter vouchers are assigned to some\none in the clerk's office. At any rate\na man came in and very acjjrily de\nmanded $4.00, and received it. Tuni\nng to Commissioner Brasted ex\nplained that the wolves he killed\nwere young ones, that he filed his\nvoucher for $2.00 assigned it for $1.75,\nbut was astonished beyond measure to\nread in the commissioner's proceedings\nfor July that $0.00 was allowed him\nor old wolf scalps. Of course chang-n - g\na voucher after its assignment is\nonly an irregularity.\nAnother case has been mentioned in\nthe Herald several times Boss Royce\nand two or three of his Fridays bought\nfarm. They conceived the idea\nthat the county needed it awfully bad\nfor an addition to the poor farm.\nThey put it up at a fancy price and\nonly the vigorous protest of Commis-\nsioner Veeh and County Attorney\nBissell prevented the hold-u - p.\nSeveral other cases could be men\ntioned. Ordinarily, these men would\nnot be guilty of such gross irregu-\nlarities, but they belong body and\nsoul to a corrupt boss, so how can you\nexpect anything better. A fountain\ncannot rise above its source.\nWhy not turn the whole gang out\nand have a clean administration of\ncounty affairs again?
2ca60bbc974360367f01824c8c8d55fa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.8397259956876 39.745947 -75.546589 New Orleans, has concluded that the tune has\ncome for action—that the stage of mere talk has\nbeen passed. Taft, in his address, took the same\nview, that the way to get the channel is to dig it.\nPerhaps this is easier said than done, for action\nrequires money, and the problem for the friends\nof improved water ways along the Mississippi,\nas it is for the friends of the Chesapeake and\nDelaware ship canal, is to get the money. The\nNew Orleans convention has decided to send a\ndelegation of five hundred leading business men\nfrom many states to Washington to urge upon\nCongress the necessity of making a large appro­\npriation for improved water ways. These dele­\ngates will act also as delegates to the River and\nHarbors Congress, which meets in December.\nWith these additional delegates, the coming\nRivers and Harbors Congress will be a more im­\nposing assemblage than ever before, and the\n are that Congress will be forced to\ntake action for the improvement of the water\nways. The resolutions adopted by the conven­\ntion urge that Congress shall adopt at once a\ndefinite plan of water ways improvement.\nIt is interesting to observe that in some parts\nof the country there is considerable opposition\nto the entire scheme of better water ways. This\nopposition comes chiefly from the newspapers\nthat speak for the railroad interests, and it is\nthought that the railroad companies are behind\nwhatever opposition has been developed. It is [\nasserted that no matter how many improvements\nwere made to the water ways, the river traffic\nwould not be increased because the tendency is\ntowards railroad transportation. The decline of\nwater travel, it is held, has not been because of\nthe condition of the water ways, but it is the\nnatural result of railroad development, and the\npreference of shippers to employ rail trans­\nportation.
09cffa1632b40bdc068d6389b4567f5f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1894.5493150367834 42.217817 -85.891125 running at a good rate of speed, and\njust as it passed the top grade on the\nhill the engine, tender, baggage and\nexpress car left the track and piled up\nin aheap in the ditch. The fireman,\nThomas Crow, was instantly killed and\ntho engineer, conductor, baggageman,\nexpress messenger, brakeman and two\nor three passengers were badly bruised.\nCrow was thrown nearly fifty feet from\nthe engine and struck his head on a\nlarge rock by the side of the fence. He\ndied without regaining consciousness.\nThere is no doubt this was the result of\na premeditated plan to wreck the train,\nas the fish plate had been removed and\na bolt slipped in between tho plate and\nrail so they could not spring back into\nplace. This is the third time within\nthe past two weeks that the fish plates\nhavo been removed from the rails of\nthe Grand line, and illustrates\nthe extent of lawlessness to which the\npassions of men with a fancied griev-\nance will carry them. It is hard to be-\nlieve that any striker any man who\never did an honest day's work can\nhavo had any part or share in this hor-\nrible deed. It is impossible to conceive\nof a man bred to honest toil engaging\nin such murderous work, no matter\nwhat he might conceive to be his prov\nocation or grievance. Yet, because of\nthe suspicion that tho act is in some\nway tho outgrowth of the strike, it be-\nhooves every man among those who\nquit work to lend their hearty aid in\nbriging tho perpetrators to justice and\nprove to the world that the blood of\nthe murdered Thomas Crow is not on\ntheir hands. Tho officials of the Grand\nTrunk offer $500 for the apprehension\nof the guilty parties.
346acbd310e695798a3125cdf6227212 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.6260273655505 41.681744 -72.788147 Tt has been learned that injuries\nreceived by Frivate Anthony Stempien\nof Company I, 102d Regiment, dur-\ning a battle with the Huns recently,\nare not as severe as had been at first\nreported, and that' he is now in a\ncondition that will assure complete\nrecovery. This information was ob-\ntained from the parents of the sol-\ndier, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stempien\nof 11 Silver street, who received five\nletters from him yesterday. These\nletters came close on the heels of a\ntelegram Thursday, announcing that\nPrivate Stempien had been severely\nwounded in action.\nUndoubtedly one of the letters was\nmailed directly after Stempien had\nfallen during a charge through No\nMan's Land, as he tells of being\nstruck ( dazed, and later taken to a\ndressing station in the rear of the\nlines. The battle in which Stempien\nreceived his wounds, as stated in the\ntelegram, took place on July 24. The\nmost graphic as well as interesting in-\ncident, related in Stempien's letters is\nthat which refers to the charge in\nwhich was almost, killed. The sig-\nnal had been given for a charge, and\nCompany I, containing many New\nBritain boys, leaped over the firing\nline and tore through No Man's Land.\nWhen the Americans were sighted.\nthe German's let loose the best they\ncould, but the charge kept on. Right\nnext to Stempien, a German shell ex-\nploded, a bullet striking him in the\nchest, throwing him to the ground,\nunconscious. He lay there for two\nhours his comrades passing on send-\ning the Germans back to their\ntrenches, many of them falling dead\nin their tracks. Two hours later he\nwas picked up and carried to a field\nhospital, where, upon discovery, it\nwas found that the bullet that struck\nhim in the chest had first hit a steel\nportion of his gas mask which\nchanged its course. That piece of\nsteel alone, it is believed, saved Stem-\npien's life. There is a possibility that\nthe mask was one of thousands man-\nufactured by a l$cal concern, which\ngives added local Interest to the inci-\ndent.
01082aa6637655e39629a29296c840fc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.03698626966 46.187885 -123.831256 San Fuancisco, Jan. 12 . The Sharon\ncase took a most unexpected turn\nIn the course of proceedings W. H. L .\nBarnes, counsel for Sharon, read what\npurported to be a contract betweon Judge\nTyler, counsel for Sarah Althea Sharon,\nand Mr. Gnmpel, who testified as an ex-\npert as to the genuineness of Sharon's\nsignature to a number of exhibits, to the\neffect that if Gnmpel would swear that\nall tho "My Dear Wife" letterc were\ngenuine the latter would pay him 25,000\nif plaintiff won her case. Attorney\nBarnes was then put on tho stand, but\ndeclined to testify how he obtained pos-\nsession of the alleged contract, holding\nit as a privileged communication, in\nwhich position he was sustained by the\ncourt. Tylor then took the stand and\ntestified that tho supposed contract was\n prearranged job put up by him on\nBarnes. That ho had become satisfied\nthat the evidence was being purchased,\nand he therefore desired to find out by\nwhom this was being done. That ho\nwrote tho contract himself, signed his\nown name and that of M. Gumpei, under\nthe instruction of the latter gentleman;\nho then placed the document in his desk,\nand instructed his confidential clerk, Mr.\nMcLaughlin, to approach Barnes and De-\ntective Lees with an offer to steal the\ndocument for them. That Lees and\nBarnes took bait, and after some dicker-\ning paid McLaughlin 23,000 in cash for\nthe document. Barnes admitted that ho\npaid tho money and had been completely\nfooled in the affair, but claimed that he\nwas fully justified in his course. Tho ex-\npose has created a great sensation.
3ae8322468955f282f23eb5f6d6abf11 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.8945205162354 40.618676 -80.577293 Federation of Labor is the traditional practice of\nthe officers and delegates occupying pulpits in a\nnumber of churches on the first Sunday during\nhe sessions of the convention. On these oc-\nasions the labor officials ignore the maternalistic\nwork connected with managing the everyday af­\nfairs of their unions and ascend into the spiritual\naspects of the organized labor movement.\nThis practice was continued this year at Cin\ncinnati, Ohio, the program being arranged by\nJames Myers, Industrial Secretary of the Federal\nCouncil of the Churches of Christ in America.\nThe general theme of the Sunday services was\nthe Chin ch and Labor, with a number of outstand­\ning labor union leaders discussing the subject.\nWilliam Green, President of the American\nFederation of Labor, spoke at the Ninth Street\nBaptist Church; Herbert II. Elvin, Fraternal Dele\n from the British Trade Union Congress,\nspoke at the Madisonville Methodist Church;\nSpencer Miller, Jr., Director of the Workers Edu­\ncation Bureau of America, delivered a radio ad­\ndress under the auspices of the Council of Church­\nes and also preached at Calvary Episcopal\nChurch; Professor (leorge Counts, President of\nthe American Federation of Teachers, spoke at\nthe Lincoln Park Baptist Church; John B. Rob\ninson, Vice-President of the Journeymen Barbers\nInternational Union, spoke at the St. Peters\nEvangelical Congregational Church; Roy M.\nBrewer, President of the Nebraska Federation of\nLabor, spoke at the Columbia Baptist Church; M.\nP. Webster, Vice-President of the Sleeping Cai\nPorters, spoke at the A. M . E . Zion Church, and\nKenneth 1 Taylor, President of the Massachusetts\nState Federation of Labor, spoke at the College\nIlill Presb.vterian Church.
07dc82c86efded15814eb33ccb335381 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1900.6452054477422 42.217817 -85.891125 this thought was suggested a few weeks\nago by what 'Ono of the Sinners' said\nin The Truo Xortherner. A little city of\n3,U00 inhabitants has 10 churches. They\nhave property which is worth 6vi,(XX)\neach, which is a total of 8T0,000. Sup-\npose they pay pastors' salaries to the\namount of ir,00. Tho pastors spend\nmuch of their time running across each\nother's tracks perhaps there may bo\nthree or four of them after one poor sin-\nner, each presenting his branch of the\nchurch, sometimes to tho entire bewil-\nderment of the poor soul. Xow, half of\nthe 6.0 ,U()0 would build two good, com-\nmodious houses of worship, abundantly\nable to accommodate the people, and less\nthan half of tho 15,003 would support\ntwo able men on this field. It does not\ntake keen mind to seo what a waste of\nmoney and talent there is under present\nconditions. Thousands aro striving for\nthe bread of life. Why not unite on the\nBible, the eternal word of God, and give\nit to them? Well, says one, what would\nyou call the church thus brought to-\ngether? Call it a Bible Christianity, call\nit a Presbyterian or a Methodist church,\ncall it what you will, so that it repre-\nsents the divine idea.\n"Division is a legitimate offspring of\nstrife, vain glory and narrow conceptions\nof tho truth. Men 'have founded a sys-\ntem and given their lives to its advance-\nment. They grow blind to their own\nfaults or tho faults of their system, hav-\ning taken it, as they claim, from the\nBible a long way from tho Bible', too.
4142900500997c0a3306a8d02370cd30 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0698629819888 39.513775 -121.556359 ■ »Y VIUTCF, OK A DKCRKTAL OKItKU issued\nCJ3* ouloflhe District ('■ url. Mmh Judicial Dis-\ntrict, In iiihl lor the County of Hullo mid Slate of\nCalifornia, lo mo directed mnl delivered. command-\ning me In make llii' mini of seven hundred mid live\ndollars. |irinci|ml itini interest of debt, together with\ninterest mi Uio same from tin 1 seventeenth day ol\nlincemher, A . I). IS.VI, iiiuil paid, at lh« rato of three\nper coin, jut 111' mill, unit cost* of suit tiixoil. in llio\nmini of |Hcnty-imo twenty one-hundredths dollars,\ntogether with all ilm costs accruing on muiil onli r, it\nbeing a balance due on a certain mortgage stivon by\nA A. Jackson to J. McKinstry Smith and K. M.\nSpark*, wherein Smith Si Sparks are the plaintiff*,\nand John and Junes Andrew Jacknon are the defend\nHtiis ; therefore, in pursuance wiih said I wid\nsoil nl public sale, to the blithest bidder for cash, on\nthe lwoiily-tlr*tday of February A. I». 1H57 at the hour\nof three oclock, I. M .. nil of the above named de-\nfendants rit:fit, title amt interest in an lo tbu billow-\ning described mortgaged property to wit: All of\nthat certain piece or parcel of land, being situated\nand located the town ol Oroville, county of Hullo,\nand State of California, and known ns lot live. (5) in\nblock nninliereighteen, (IS) in said town as uloresaid.\nSaid lot front* on Montgomery street sixty-six feel,\nand runs back toward Feather river one hundred and\nthirty two feel, logvtbsr with alt and singular the\ntenement*, bereditumeßts and appurtenances there*\nunto belonging, or i.x anywise appertaining\nThe above sale to lake place at llio Court House\ndoor, in Hie town of tiruville. County and Stale\naloresmd.
78076c313c32c50f68c3620ec90f9c6b CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1921.6534246258245 41.875555 -87.624421 have sold recently for $15 per barrel.\nCompletion of the new hog barn at\nPeoria district fair grounds, which is\nto house the sixth annual national\nswine show, October 3 to 8, will pro-\nvide 800 spacious pens and full equip-\nment. The work will be done by the\nmiddle of September, and on Septem-\nber 17 the entries, which, it is an-\nnounced, are open to the world, will\nbe closed. College student judging and\nboys' and girls' pig club shows have\na prominent place on the program.\nAfter having been thought the vic-\ntim of a murder plot and to have been\nburied in a lonely wheat field near\nGranite City, Serrena Collins, twenty,\nformerly of the Illinois city, was found\nat Cincinnati, O., by her grandmother,\nMrs. Martlia Hull of East St. Louis.\nThe police immediately wired Granite\nCity authorities and the latter will re-\nlease Thomas Gilliland, whom they\nhad arrested and had charged with the\nmurder of the young woman.\nEqual in authority with men preach-\n and fulfilling all the duties of\noffice, 15 women are serving as pastors\nof the Disciples of Christ church in\nIllinois, putting this state at the head\nof that denomination for its number, of\nwoman preachers, according to an-\nnouncement of the superintendent of\nwomen preachers, Rev. Mrs. Jessie\nColeman Monser of Decatur.\nBy the close of 1922 it may be pos-\nsible to travel by motor vehicle over\na concrete highway between Chicago\nand St. Louis. Two routes are now\nracing to see which will be ready first.\nThe Peoria route, although 60 miles\nlonger, may win out. The Blooming-to- n\nroute, which is approximately 2S0\nmile may not be wholly completed by\nthe close f next year.\nThe university high school will be\nopened at Urbana on September 12 to\na selected group of students, accord-\ning to the dean of the college of educa-\ntion. This will enable the college of\neducation to carry out its plans for a\nmodel high school in connection with\nthe university.
215b95104e204f1cdbc7cd1e21832e32 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.491780790208 37.561813 -75.84108 The obstreperous State of South Caro-\nlina still struggles for independence\nfrom the control of the (ieneral Govern-\nment. Half a century ago she under-\ntook to forcibly nullity the laws of the\nUnited States relating to duties upon\nimported goods; some years later she\nled the way in a general rebellion\nagainst the Government with a view to\nthe establishment of a separate confed-\neracy, and now she is attempting prac-\ntically to nullify the election laws. She\nlooks upon the Federal officers who are\nempowered by law to supervise the\nregistry of voters and to suppress frauds\nand intimidation at the polls and places\nof registration as an insult to a free\npeople. What makes the presence of\nthese officers so very unwelcome is that\nthe amendments of the United States\nConstitution have placed the ballot \nthe hands of a class of persons who be-\nfore the adoption of these amendments\nhad no voice in the Government, but\nyet who constituted a majority of the\npopulation of the State of a voting age.\nTo bulldoze and swindle this class ol\npersons out of their votes, has been the\neffort of the Rourbon Democracy to a\ngreater or less extent in nearly all the\nSouthern States, and South Carolina has\nled oft' as usual in this matter. The latest\ninvention in this direction is for the\nState authorities to throw obstruct ions in\nthe way of the registration of the colored\nvoters. Colored men are forcibly exclud-\ned from the places of registration, and\nthey attempt at the same time to exclude\nthe Government officers from interfer-\nence in or supervision over these illegal\nproceedings.
39c6a8622ffe75975d293e7b0728668c THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.9246575025368 32.612638 -90.036751 Early in the coming year there will\nbe held in Mississippi and all other\nStates and Territories the district ex-\namination for scholarships under the\nwill of Cecil Rhodes. The latest bul-\nletin published by the University of\nMississippi gives most interesting in-\nformation relative to the coming ex-\namination for these scholarships and\nthe methods by which the selections\nwill be made in the United States. It\nwill be remembered that under the re-\nmarkable will of Mr. Cecil Rhodes\nevery State in the American lifhion will\nbe allowed as many as two scholar-\nships at the University of Oxford, Eng.\nland. The trustees of the will have\ncompleted the arrangements by Which\nthey propose to carry out the will of\nthe testator in selecting students for\nthese scholarships The first election\nof scholars in the United States will\nbe held between February and May,\nin 1904, and the scholars elected will\ncommence residence in Oxford in Oc-\n of 1904. The election will be\nmade by a preliminary qualifying ex-\namination, which is to be held in every\nStateand Territory of the Union, or at\ncenters which will be easily and read-\nily accessible to certain groups of\nStates and Territories. This is not to\nbe a competiitive examination, but Is\nsimply designed to give assuranqe that\nall candidates for scholarships are up\nto the standard and fully qualified to\nenter on a course of study at Oxford\nUniversity. The examination will,\ntherefore, be based on the require-\nments for 'responsions" the first pub-\nlic examination exacted by the uni-\nversity from each candidate for a de-\ngree. The Rhodes scholars will then\nbe selected from among the list of\neligible who show proficiency of com-\npetency under this general examina-\ntion. There may be .a doxen or nioce\ncandidates, for example, who will suc-\ncessfully pass this examination in a\ngiven State or Territory, but only two
0e5c63bcc49317bda36bfe1d9c07a6fe THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.4030054328578 42.217817 -85.891125 MILWAUKEE, May 25. The Merchants'\nand Manufacturers' association held a\nmeeting at which it was declared that the\nstreet railway strike boycott had produced\na reign of terror unlike anything known\nbefore in the city's history, and that\nxrethod of forcing a settlement of the\nstrike was strongly condemned. The as-\nsociation called upon all good citizens At\nonce to cease to use or submit to this ob-\njectionable weapon, and to exercise their\nindependence as citlens.\nThe mayor was requested to call the at-\ntention of those responsible for the boy-\ncott to the statute of the state which pro--,\nvide a punishment for this misdemeanor,\nand the civil authorities were asked to ex-\nercise all their power for the detection\nand punishment of all persons guilty of\nviolating the law. The mayor issued a\na proclamation such as \nYesterday was the first .Sunday that the\nMilwaukee Electric Hallway and Light\ncompany operated its cars since tho strike\nwas inaugurated. During the day there\nwero no disturbances, but last night cars\nwere freely stoned and egged througout\nthe city. Severn I motormen and a police-\nman were struck with stones and had to\nle removed to hospitals. At large mob of\nPoles gathered at Ia'V and Bremen streets\nand attacked the cars and officers.\nPoliceman Kruse was stabbed and seven\narrests were made. Several cars were\npelted with bottles containing blue vitriol\nand inurlatic acid and the clothing of\nwhat few passengers rode on them were\nruined. There wero many arrests through-\nout the city; The patronage on airs doe3\nnot improve and there is no improvement\nin the general boycott of business men\nsympathizing with the company.
1cc7bba3ad7417e47b7cb85e9b770dae NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.7390710066281 40.735657 -74.172367 Section 1. That consent and permission\nbe and the same are hereby granted to\nPublic Service Railway Company, Its suc-\ncessors or HMsigns. to locate, construct, nper\nate and maintain connect iona between ita\nnorth westerly' track in Frelinghnysen ave-\nnue southwest to Miller street and its car\nhouse property on the southeasterly aide of\nFrellnghuyferi avenue, in the City of New- ,\nark. County of Essex and State of New Jer-\nsey. the centre tinea of which connections\nare described as follows:\nihi la a connection between its north-\nwesterly track in Frellnghuysen avenue\nsouthwest of Miller street and Ms carhouse\nproperty on the southeasterly side of Fre-\nIlMKhuyHcn a\\cmie, the centre line of which'\nbegins at a point. In the centre Hue of its\nSHid northv eaterly track in frollnghuysen\navenue, southwest of Miller -street distant\none hundred and nineteen feet nnrl ninetv-\nslx hundredths of a foot <110.Oft ft .) north-\neastwardly from the Intersection of said\ncentre with the centre line of Vander-\npool street, extending thence as follows: (1)\nsouth west wardly curving toward the left\nwith a radius of one hundred and two feet\nnnd thirty-five hundredths of a foot (102.33\nft.) a distance of eleven feet and ninety-\none one-hundredths uf a foot (11.01 ft.) to\na point of .compound curve: theme rj> still\ncurving toward the left with a radius of\nthirty-seven feet and thirty-flve hundredths\nof a foot (87.35 ft.), a distance of thirty\nfour feet ntit| seventy-seven hundredths of\na foot <34.77 ft .) to a point of compound\ncurve; thence (8) still curving toward the\nleft with a radius of one hundred and two\nfeet and thirty-flve hundredths of a foot\n<102.35 ft .) a distance of eleven feet and\nninety-one one-hundredths of n foot (11.ill\nft.) to a point of compoimd curve; thence\n(1) still curving toward the left with a\nradius of thirty-scveTt- feet and thirty-flve\nhundredths of a foot (37.85 ft.)
0fa083a7fa7fddc327ac4d68fc49c5e0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.5767122970574 39.745947 -75.546589 Colonel A. L. Conger of Ohio, is talked\nof as the possible successor to Colonel\nW, W. Dudley as treasurer of the Re\npublican National Committee.\nDr. C . F. Rand of Washington pos­\nsesses a carious retie of the Rebellion. It\nis a piece of “hard tack” that formed a\n(art of one of the doctors rations just\nthirty years ago.\nMrs. H. 8. Gould of ^Georgiaia an en\nergetle woman who has built up andprac\ntlcally controlled the Covington and Ma\ncon railroad. At the same time she man­\nages a farm of 400 acres.\nLondon gossip has it that the Em\nperor William was particularly ^struck\nwith the appearance of Miss Green, a\nNew York beauty, and made no secret of\nshowing how much he was Impressed.\nWilliam Hacker, who is dying at Shei-\nbyvllle, Ind., is regarded as the foremost\nauthority in the world on the ritual of\nFreemason ary. He has lived an \npiary life,and at the age of eighty-two is\ndying a tranquil aud peaceful death.\nNo one will be more amnsed than George\nWilliam Curtis himself at his slip of mem\nory in the Easy Chair for August, where\nhe attributes to St. Paul the famous defi\nuitlon of pure and nndefiled religion,\nwhich Is found in the Epistle of James.\nFrank Work is a tall, well built and\nmassive man. but he prides bimself on\nthe smallness of bis foot and the arch of\nhis instep. These may be desideratums\nat Saratoga, bnt they wouldnt bo of\nmuch account If Franks work was in\nthe mortar treading line.\nGovernor Htlle double, who resembles\nhim as much as the late Adam Fore-\npangfa resembled Channcey M. Depew,\nla a man who plays the big bast viol at\nthe Grand Union Hotel in Saratoga.\nMore than one rnrai visitor at the hotel\nhas mistaken the musician for the gov­\nernor.
1cfb01342f06f37b84032e691de6380b WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1915.7082191463724 35.318728 -82.460953 and authority vested In me, the un-\ndersigned trustee, by the terms, con-\nditions and power of sale contained\nin one certain deed in trust duly exe-\ncuted by E. M. Hoyle and J. M. Hoyle\ndated August 15, 1914," which deed iu\ntrust so executed ' is registered in\nBook of Mortgages and Deeds of Trust\nfor Henderson county, N. C, No. 37 at\npage 185, default having been made in\nthe payment of the indebtedness se-\ncured by said deed in trust, and de-\nfault having been made in the pay-\nment of the interest on said indebted-\nness, whereby Jinder the terms and\nconditions of said deed in trust, all of\nsaid indebtedness becomes instantly\ndue and payable and the power of\nsale contained therein becomes opera-\ntive, and the whole of said indebted-\n being now due and owing, ac-\ncording to the terms and conditions of\nsaid deed in trust, and the notes se-\ncured thereby, and demand having\nbeen made upon the undersigned trus-\ntee by the holder or holders of said\nnotes that - the said trustee exercise\nthe authority vested . in him and sell\nthe hereinafter described . lands and\npremises, I, the undersigned trustee,\nwill therefore (five days' notice of an\nIntention to do so having been given\nthe parties of the first part), on\nThursday, the 23rd day of September,\n1915, at 12 o'clock, M., expose for sale,\nat the court house, door in Henderson\ncounty to the highest bidder for cash,\nthe following described lands and pre-\nmises, situate, lying, and being in the\nCounty of Henderson, v Hooper's Creek\ntownship, North-
72c8693e5f269a790ef1dfb70e2258e9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.5657533929477 41.681744 -72.788147 land, New York state and New Jer\nsey, are In Bristol today attending\n'he closing services of the novena\nto St. Anne being held at St. Jo-\nseph's church. Trains arriving in\nBristol carried extra coaches and\ntrolley cars from neighboring towns\nwere crowded with persons desiring\nto have the relic applied. Due to\nthe large number of automobiles\narriving in the city it was necessary\nto have three officers of the police\ndepartment on duty near the church\nto regulate traffic. Special parking\nregulations were made necessary and\nall automobiles were obliged to ap-\nproach the church on Queen street\nfrom the north. No traffic was per-\nmitted on Queen street going north\nbetween Maple and Center streets.\nThe masses this morning were\nheld at 6:15. 6:15, 7:15, 8:15 and\n!:15, the last being a high, mass.\n The rlic was aPP"ed at a11 services\nand continuously throughout the\nday. Many were, unable to gain\nentrance to the church during the\nmasses and were obliged to remain\nstanding outside. A number of\nvisiting priests were on hand to as-\nsist Rev. Thomas Schwertner, O. P. .\nof New York city. Rev. Oliver T.\nMagnell. pastor of the church ana\nRev. William F. Kearney, curate.\nAt 3 o'clock this afternoon a pro-\ncession, in which the priests and\npilgrims attending the Novena took\nrart, wae formed on the grounds\nof the parochial school and marched\nto the church where the final exer-\ncises of the novena were held, and\nthe statue of St. Anne crowned.\n"One Funoh" Quinion Wins\nGeorge Quinion, well known coal\ndealer of North Main street, gained\nan undeniable decision over T C.
2c11ad13660eb5c8de6023ff02f5a543 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.7657533929478 38.894955 -77.036646 "Your fortune, I suppose, is gone; but what . ^\nif that ? It was a trifle.a toy.compared with\nhe blessings now bestowed. A cottage.any\nilace.will bo a paradise to me, possessing the\nleait of my husband, and he a believer!"\n"My dear Julia," said Wcstbury, "my fortune\ns unimpaired. I was in danger of sustaining\ngreat loss, through the embarrassments of my\ntanker in New York, but all is now happily ad-\nusted. Tiie difficulty here was the result of\nnalicv. Eldon was embittered against mo, I I\nloubt not, through the influence of his sinter, of I\nrhoui it is unnecessary to speak to you. HeI\nleard of my difficulties, and, knowing that he I\nihould be |tcrfectly safe, purchased that note I\nigainst me, that he might avouge her, by iucreas- I\ntig my embarrassments. 1 hare beon recently I\ninformed that the unhappy girl looked ou your I\npearls with peculiar malignity. Her feelings were I\ntoo bitter and too stroug for coucealmeut. Poor I\ngirl! I fear that she and her brother are kindred I\nin heart, as well as blood. 1 now look with some- I\nthing like teiror at the gulph into which 1 wished I\nto plunge myself, and from which my dear father\ndone saved me. I can never he sufficiently I\nhankfut for famed, almost by force, from I\nny rash and headstrong course, and for having a\nrife bestowed on me. rich in every mental and H\nnoral excellence, who loves me for myself, undo- H\nterving as I am, and not for my wealth." fl\nIt was now June; and as soon as Julia's I\ntrcngth was equal to the fatigue, Mr. Westbury\nook her into the country for change of air. They I\nwere absent from the city for some months, and I\nmade, in the course of the summer, several I\nlelightful excursions in various parts of the conn I\ntry. A few days after their return to their house I\nin town, Julia asked Mr. Westbury if he had seen I\nor heard anything of the Cunninghams. I\n"I have seen neither of them," said Mr. West-\nbury, "but hear sari accounts of both. Mrs. Cua- I\nuingham is now with.a party at Naha t. She has\nbeen extremely gav, perhaps T might say diss!- I\npaced, during the whole season, and her reputa- I\nlion is in some dsnger. Cunningham has become I\nin iuvetcrate gamester, and 1 am told that bis\nlace shows but too plainly that temperance is not I\nimong his virtue*."\n"Poor creatures," said Julia, "how 1 pity them\nfor their folly.their madness I" i-fl\n"
4165a9293e0878784ce174f8b16d4e28 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.1383561326738 41.262128 -95.861391 fernal re#4»ns i>ad be«i uaehained. and\nwi.Ta agmufli thm^ivea by tryis^c to\nfrighten us poor mortals by their ytiiiag,\nU e stood in breathless fXp' - ctatiun, not\nknowing wb.tt could possibfy be the cause\nof thw di.tbofiou: row. with aii sorts of\nstrange euiijoMiuras tiaahio^ in our atinds.\nNsarer and uearer the yelling aad«>csrssa«^k-\ning approached, and presently the cause\nbecame risible to our aatuoished eyes.—\nSowe ibn+e or foor htmdred yard* to our\nright, upoa the brow of ihaiMii, a«po«i«d\nl-ipard^ (ooinifljfiiy cfiiled in thi> uOaotry\na tig.- r , th.'ugb much niaailer tbau tbe\n|lord of the Indian jungle*; ctune in vi.- w,\n' hovudiag along wiib all tbe spved and en-\nerg) of dusp tur, while close behind fa*TM\nfoLowed an »aorsaou* paoa of baixMos,\nfrom whose throats proc<i*ded the demo­\nniacal sounds that had, a f'-w mxoadt lie-\nfore, so Btartled us. Our excitMnent in\nthftchaae, as you may suppose. *ra* in-\nt'. -tue. Un Went the tiger, i&aknig for the\nriv^r, the baboons follow iryt iiku avestg-\ning demon*, and evideally gaining ground\nupon tb«4r atari j exhausted foe, thoagh\nui sir eiultant yells souoiod eaca laum^ot\nto increase his terror and his spe«>i. Ttun\nreached the stream the tiij'-r still a few\nyards in adran. -e, and, with a tremendous\nbound be oast hiaiaoif into it* r wa-\nt«wB, aad auui>- iar tbe opp >»itc Wua.—\nThe next aaota tu his pursuer*, its aduu-\nra! confusion, were *truggling after biia,\nand «# tb?tiger (n <n fawruHy eiha-Uiited)\nclaiBbered inn the Und again, the lacgast\naad stroagest of Uie baboon* were\nup >n his E.tiii though many of the pack,\n(tke old. the vwy young and the w^akir,)\nmet? *trtiejHh\\g in tbr-water, in\nmtiiBr-ntfl aii btui passed from our sight\nbohiuU vhf brow of liu oppottte bank, out\ntlieir increased yttiling. oow stationary\nbehind the hill, told us that the tiger had\ntnK h» dfKMn, and that their strong arm*\nand jnws wer« tearins turn limb from iisafe.\nAs the er«fiiog was far adranced, and we\nwere stilt aotae miles fro:a home, we did\nnot cross the river to be in at the death ,\nbat, ivxt morning, a few bones, and scat­\ntered frag» uts of fie*h and skin, shewedj\nwhat bad b .<«a the tiger3* fnte. On «mbt <\nreturn home we were toid by same Dutch\ngentlemen, that such hunts axe not un­\ncommon when a tigi-r i* rash enough to\nattack the yooag baboon*, whieh oft*m\nhappen*. AU these creatures for miles\naround, assemole and pursue their enemy\nwith r -Ientli s« fury to hi* death. Some­\ntimes the ch**<* last* for days ; but it ia-
7361b4a40163fbe2f2ca974fcb6043e7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.4808218860985 42.217817 -85.891125 and by the conditions of the law, those w ho buy\non credit for actual settlement are prohibited from\npurchasing thoo lands which aro more especially\nvaluable for timber, mines, salines, Ac. Many\nhundreds of miles of railroads in the vicinity of\nthese lands, both in the Upper and Lower Penin-\nsulas, are already projected, and by the. aid of tin.'\nlibercl (lovernuient Land (Irani, mut be built at\nno distant day, thus eventually making them, a\nto local advantages; by internal improvements and\nby lake and river navigation, as well us for soil,\ntimber, miucs, salines, Ac, among the most valu-\nable and productive that can bo found. Upon\nmost of this vat tract of land, the higher portions\nof it, will grow the largest kind of wheat, corn ,\npotatoes, Ac, and the lower portion, with proper\n anil culture, tho heaviest grass, oat-- ,\ncorn, potatoes, hemp, Ac. The Detroit and Mil-\nwaukee Railroad, now nearly completed, pacs\nthrough inar.y - of these land, making tho third\nrailroad now running entirely through t lit State\nfrom cast to west within a few years, each doing a\nlargo and rapidly increasing business.\nTho Saute- St. Mary's Ship Canal, connecting a\nit docs, by water and by railroad'', Ihe eastern and\nsouthern markets with Ihe untold wealth of ihe\nUpper Peninsula, in its minerals, it splendid\nmarble, it fisheries, its soil and timber, with its\nsalubrious climate, must eventually make it one of\nthe richest, ino.- - t healthful anil desirablo localities"\nin our country. In anticipation of this, we al-\nready see new towin and cities there, liberally\nprojected, founded upon this reasonable and very\ngeneral expectation.
34641b8636f6e2b3f946097653172629 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.0945205162354 40.114955 -111.654923 would never occur to him that he had\nloft all the signs pointing to himself\nand only to himself As long as no ¬\nbody had seen him do it ho would feel\nsafe for he was one of those peoplo\nwho are continually repeating for the\ninformation of their audiences that\nwhat you dont see you dont know\nOfficers wore at onco dispatched in\nseveral directions for tho man The\nfact that he was not at his boarding\nhouse but must have returned to his\nroom from the shop and changed his\nclothes at some time between six\noclock on Saturday evening and eight\non Sunday morning was precisely the\nevidence that the police looked to find\nthere and they found It Flannlsans\nlodging mistress said that on going to\nhis room to put it in order on Sunday\nmorning at eight the usual time she\nsaw that the bed had not slept-\nin and examination showed that his\neveryday clothes hung In tho closet\nwhile his best suit was missing from\nIts accustomed hooks And he had\nnot been seen in the vicinity since\nSaturday morning when he left the\nhouse for his days work To this In-\nformation the police making a search\nof his room on their own account\nadded certain other suggestive items-\nA badly soiled shirt torn up tho back\nas If discarded in a hurry was crowded\nbehind tho bureau a razor unwlped\nafter using and a shaving paper with\ndried lather on it as If tho shaver-\nwas in such hasto that he could not\nstop to clean away tho traces of his\nwork were on a little tablo near the\ngas jet a traveling bag which the\nlodging mistress asserted that ho\nowned was not to bo round thoro was\nno linen in tho bureau drawers
06d08b719bc05440d6ec5e52a30fde74 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.2945205162355 39.745947 -75.546589 very much In evidence in the Démo­\ncratie pa Ht y. They are a • heap lot,\nand are I« tie bougär; at a very low\n(ligure. T.ieir sired ally is the wrongs\nof tihe wurklntgimnn. for whom they\neare nctSi'ing, oxccpit whnlt they -an\ng: : out of him. By posing as a friend\nof labor, I"i%v hope tb are)litre politi­\ncal Influence, wtifich Is a markdab1«\noommrdtty and bringt a tidy sum lo\ntt.iosc who work the game successfully.\nTo bo a capimr.Bst is to be a criminal\nin the eyes cf the dcmagiagne.\neu.p'ltsiliist is reejjowiiMe for all* the\nwoes of labor, he claims. 1 will not\ndispute this, other than lo say I hat it\nis my opinion the demagogue is the\ngreatest load the laboring man has to\ncarry. TJita capitalist iras got to be\nnppressed soraelhbw, and the denva-\nbgiu* the man to db dite trick. Hav-\nug built up a coneMtuency. he at\nnee proceedn to siiippress capital. The\n.invest time 1s now on, both at Wash­\nington nn«l state poiitleal centers nil\nover the country, and capital la alto-\ng'u'.htr in a bad way. The demagogue\nhaving been elected to rfflice by Blue\nvotes of the laboring man, manages\nto ge t himself to the front so that he\necu get a good look at capital, that\nhe may know the gentleman the next\ntime he sees hfm. Having sized up\ncapital and taken the nveaMire of his\nwallet, the demagogue prepares him­\nself for the coming conlliot between\ncapital and labor, the arena of which\nis in ixxme dark corner in close prox­\nimity tb the legislative hulls. Speed;-\nes that were never made are printed,\nand semi to thie ccmstitueius cf Bhe
15808731483c0705ec7bb1f00d3dcda1 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.0698629819888 40.827279 -83.281309 Many horses have the very unpleasant\nhabit of striking the toes of the hind shoes\nagainst the fore shoes. Most horsemen\nwill agree that it is a fault belonging t\nsome of the best, as well as the worst It\nmore frequently occurs with young horses,\nand they often click on the "turf "or soft\nground, and not on the road. It arises\nfrom the too great activity or length of\nstride ot the hind legs ; the lore leet are\nunable to get out ot the way in time\ntherefore, anything which detains them\nsuch as a soft or heavy soil, must assist the\npractice. I he principal .mint to be rem\nedied is the intolerable noise, from wide\nthe evil derivas its name, and this is often\neffected by making the hind shoes square\nat the toe, leaving the toe of the crust\nsomewhat projecting over the shoe, by\nwhich plan the crust receives the blow, in\nstead of the shoe, and does not make any\nnoise. It sometimes happens that from\nthe repetition of these blows, tho crust is\nworn so thiu at the toe as to produce or\nthreaten lameness, in which case the plan\nof shoeing mentioned must be desisted\nfrom, and we must put up with the noise\nto avoid the greater evil. hen a square\ntoed shoe fails in preventing clicking, it\nsometimes happens that a shoe pointed at\nthe toe will succeed, which no doubt arises\nfrom the circumstance or the shoe, having\nso small a surface to come in contact\nwith, it may fail to strike the fore shoe.\nbut may go within, or by the side of it
4b9271935c674a64ee80261a1d0c1d44 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.878082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 ended upon the metaphor» of tho pledge 500,000,000 gold marks If\nrodeo. He llltened the members of | an equal sum could be borrowed\nthe two parties to cattle In a oorril, ifrom abroad, the total to be used\nrushing blindly first In this dlrec- in stabilizing the mark and thus en-\ntlon, then in that, and, of course, labllng Germany to get on her feet\nnot escaping. The third party was [and erränge for feeding her peo-\nto stop the frantlo milling and leadjple. But nobody seems anxious to\nthe dumb beasts calmly and con- step forward to lend 500,000,000\nfldently through a definite, narrow gold marks to Germany. Tho Inter-\npassage. We are sure that ''Powder” national bankers who were so wilt-\nThorapson or any other good cattle- log last year to arrange for credits\nman can explain the flaw In this to Germany have lost their ardor,\ntheory. The best brains of farm because their plan to restore Ger-\nbloo—and they are very good—for many's credit by abolishing her debt\nbetter or worse are hardened maver- to the allies was not acoepted. The\nloke, so far as organization goes, truth Is that Germany has no credit\nThey like the ranges, and the very «tld can not gain any while there\nthought of a brand «ends them into is hanging over her a debt of prac-\na day-long speech In the Senate, tloally unlimited proportlone, ool-\nThey are mighty good for the health lectible In the last analysis by force,\nof Congress, and the Republican |The first duty of the allies and of\nparty Is not likely to die so long os [Germany, for the sake of all con-\nthey remain to keep It stirring. But earned, is to fix definitely the sum\nthey are not the stuff of whloh third j that Germany owes.\npartie» are built__yet.
0d16f19b0fb1ffb65ba9456cf78abf16 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.9630136669202 40.063962 -80.720915 Nome ititeroNlluic KeveliWlou*;Al»out l<\nbo)lA<!e>Koi»(>tli||ifrorft Itciird,\nSpecial Corre»i>ouilencc of the luteUIgeucer.\nCi.akkbuuwi, December 10..In the trio\nof the mail robbers to*day nothing specin\nwas brought out The Government, alto\nexamining forty witnesses, rested its cast\nThere >vere about twenty more on ham!\nbut it was either presumed, that alread;\nenough had been told to convict the dc\nfendant, Albert Price, or that the remain\nini? witnesses were not important.\nThe defense begun the examination c\ntheir wituesses this afternoon. Of thei;\nthere are about sixty or seventy present\nThe principal line of the defense will be t\nprove that the Government's witnesse\nswore falsely, ami an effort will bo made\nI understand, to impeach several of them\n1 am informed that some interesting reve\nlations are going to bo made, and thn\n is going to drup."\nJames II. Brown, one of Price's witnesses\nuuuu.i nuuai; mim IUU rODUCry WaS C0U1\nmitt&d, lias more luiir over him than hat\nEsau of old. Your correspondent measure*\nthe length of his beard to day. The actua\nlength of bis chin whiskers was four fee\nnna one inch, and his mustache was pre\ncisely four feet, and wlien parted ani\nthrown buck over each shoulder extendei\nto the lower end ofa full length frock coat\nlie was a soldier in the confederate army\nand has not shaved or trimmed hii\nwhiakeresince Leo's surrender in lSGo.\nThe jjovernmeut attorneys expect t<\nbIiow that the Red Men's organization, o\nwhich the defendants were "members, ii\ntrying to clear the prisoners. This fact, i\nit'is a fact, will develop further on ih tin\ntrial.
1af5d6141efff280b13b27b2ad1e16c6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.6571037935134 39.745947 -75.546589 county last Sunday In their automo­\nbile, Miss Margaret Tugand, of Dela­\nware City, Mrs. Eva K. Penscl and\nMiss Katie Ponsel, of Coesapeake\nCity were their guests.— W illiam T.\nBoulden, Is confined to his home by\nIllness. — Edward Taylor, spent this\nweek at Atlantic City.— M iss Alice\nHutton, has been visiting relatives In\nNewark.— Mrs. Geo.gc Steele, of\nNewark, on Tuesday entertained her\nneice, Mrs. Claience Perkins, of E.k -\nton, Mrs. William McPherson, of\nPhiladelphia, Mrs. Joseph A. Sloan\naud Mrs. Michael, of Elkton. —M iss\nGladys Hilton, has been visiting her\nmother, Mrs. Charles Hilton, of Baltl-\nmoic. —M iss Jennie Moore, spent Sun­\nday with her sister. Miss Hattie Moore\n—J . Frank Frazer, has been spend­\ning his vacation in Sassafras Neck\nwith his father, Samuel Frazer. \nMrs. Joseph H. Sloan, haa been the\nguest of friends at Port Deposit.—\nD. Warren Wilson. Is at Atlantic City.\n— Mr. and Mrs. William S. Moore,\nhave as their guests Mr, and Mrs.\nNicholas Kessler, of Joliet, Illinois.—\nMiss . Lydia Terrell, has returned\nfrom a trip to Atlantic City.—Mrs. J.\nL. Moore, of Leslie, has been enter­\ntaining her sister. Mrs. Fred H. Let-\nfler and daughters, of Elkton.—Wal­\nlace Ford, of Dcland, Florida, former­\nly of Elkton, is visiting his family\nhere.—Senator and Mrs. Owen D.\nCrothers, Emierson R. Crothers aud\nMiss Mary Andrews are touring the\nJersey coast In their automobile. —\nMr. and Mrs. Malcolm R. Gilpin, are\nentlrlalnlng Cyril Lam-dole of Wash­\nington. —Mrs. Joseph H. Sloan has as\nher guests Mr. and Mrs. William S.\nMcPherson, of Phlludelphla.
29d912e528ee18f419715d0b2c75295f THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.629781389142 39.369864 -121.105448 Count* Finances.—On the 6th of last\nFebruary, as appears by the County Audi-\ntors report of Nevada county, of that date,\nthe total county debt was $143,561 15 ; the\npresent report shows the debt to be $141, -\n372 02—being a decrease of $2,189 13. The\ndebt of the indigent sick has increased about\n$3,300; the general fund ft fh abbot the\nsame condition as it was six nihoths ago;\nwhile the Court House bonds, amounting to\nsomething over $5,000, have been cancelled.\nThe bulk of theprbpdrty tax is collected in\nOctober- and November. Next year there\nwill be a decrease of taxation, to the pfPPunt\nof tWenty-fivedebt? on the hdhdred dollars,\non account6f the Co art House debt; but the\ndebt on the indigent sick fund is itkereasinff,\nand measures trill Lave to be adopted to\n the revenue accruing to that fund.\nThis can only be dojßfri by an.act pf the teg-\nislatuTb fe'rit'firirizing tWeßriard of Supervisors\neither to appropriate A !po.rtion iof the special\nfund for the benefit 6f indigent sics, or else\nto levy a larger tax on that fund than they\nare authorized tOdo by law. The tax now\ncollected f6r the indigent fund is just about\nsufficient, to pay the current expenses,and the\ninterest on the outstanding debt is being\nadded every yepr to the principal. An ad-\nditional fax 6ften cents on the hundred\ndollars for the indigent fund would be suffi-\ncient to pay the currant demands, the accru-\ning interest, and eventually extinguish the\noutstanding debt. Should this course be\npursued, the. decrease of taxation for coftnty*\npurposes Will be oniV fifteen cebts 6n the\nhundred dollars.
19b2290b2f8719db6d48167ff6da3320 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1899.8753424340437 39.623709 -77.41082 A convocation of the ministers of Thur-\nmont was held at the home of Rev. W .B,T.\nMetzger, pastor of St. Johns Lutheran\nChurch of this place, November 7th, 1809.\nThe Rev. G . A. Whitmore was elected chair-\nman. Prayer was offered by Rev. Whitmore\nalter which the following business was trans-\nacted : That we observe the 80th day ofthis\npiesent month as a day of thanksgiving to\nAlmighty Ood for his blessings to us as a\nnation and church during the past year. It\nwas decided that on that day we bold a union\nservice in the Moravian Church. The pastor\nwas ordered to arrange program and Rev.\nDaugherty of the U. B. Church, was selected\nto preach the sermon. We hope to give\nprogram in foil next week. The business\nfor which the brethren had been called hav-\ning been disposed Rev. Daugherty moved\nthat we become a permanent organisttlon,\nknown as the "Ministerial Association of\nThurmont." This was unanimously endorsed\nby ail present, thereupon the organization\nwas effected and the following were elected\nofficers: Pres., Rev. Q . A. Whitmore; Secy,\nRev. W. L. Orem; Treas, Rev. M.F . Oerter.\nRev. Oerter was appointed a committee to\ndraft a set of resolutions to be presented at\nnext regular meeting of the association. The\nassociation accepted the kind invitation of\nRev. Whitmore to hold its next meeting at\nthe Reformed Church parsonage, E- Main st.,\nDecember 4th, 1899. After spending a few\nmoments in a pleasant and profitable conver-\nsation the meeting adjourned with prayer\nand benediction by Rev. Oerter. We shall\nkeep the readers of the Clarion posted from\ntime to time concerning any items of interest\nthat may come before the association.
faec85047a616153338aff7945f0fd70 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.6561643518519 31.960991 -90.983994 my return from the Bottom by meeting on with em now. If any gentleman or lady\nthe road a very stylish light barouche with j wants to try, just step forard and put your\nsilver-plated lumps, drawn by two bob tail finger in my mouth and feel em: Here he\nsorrel trotters, and driven by a negro in liv- : held his mouth open for some time, but no\ncry. 1 now learned that this was the Lav- j ono appearing to care about bavin* their\nellmg equip-.age of Dr. Johnston, who hav- fingers bitten off just then; he shut it”a*ain.\ning acquired by the exercise of his proles- ; it may be well imagined there was a good\nsion a splendid fortune, was now on a tour deal ofiaughter at this extraordinary address\nthrough lexas, accompanied by his lady, which the doctor attributed solely to his\nOnt o! compassion however to the citizens own liicetiousness, and received as a well\nn.1 I;—c> had not scen a real live merited tribute to his oratorical powers. Af-\ndentist for several years, he»graciously con- ter some concluding remarks, he informed\ndescended to tarry for a tune among them, the audience that he would bo ready to\nand to torture the nervous system of any un- ceive the calls of the affleted at seven\nfortunate individual who might require his o'clock the next morning; when tne audi-\nsemces. At seven oclock the lecture be- Cnce dispersed, not however without a pro-\ngan m a large upper room, where a few position to duck him in the Colorado from\nrough boards for seats contrasted agreeably the sturdy backwoodsmen whom lie had at-\nwith the naked rafters of the roof. A row tempted to impose upon. It was finally\nof tallow candles with large wicks were decided to let him go scot-free for his wifes\nstuck round the walls m little tin holders, af- sake and in consideration of the amusement
16ccca1bda8fa85dae4034deacfa002d THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1863.2123287354134 37.561813 -75.84108 atinnnme iryonimnotifyon wna harey\nwoiiin nmi it out rnr her thrr droit eau it l.a. K thay\ntall It nuteo all could know i v.n the Block A1l itlnn lata\naaythat the nlgm inal be frea and thnt la wahat yon\narealliliiglor at thla time nnl hara baen aim the 22d\nv.iy or arpianii"r laat whan ol'l Aha aald that tho nlgor\nmoat ba free and ao your are not filing for tha nnlon aa\nit wna but tomktha cigar eqnol with na whitaa yon\nDid atari to fluht for tha nnlon and that waa the talk\nanitoalmitatfnn of a grant mony hut Hint la nlnld ont\nana now it ia tne nisnr In tne wood pile, ami Ihpy had a\noran nor on tha a ilh nay or October laat and thy\nDruftcda grrat many and all Di'morrata John tietty waa\nDrafted Jeremiah Cnpllnger to and Noah yargerandann\nand they wna agoing to rebnll thar Did mote eorrl\nnighte to flx thing, hut it atopt and an they want, and\nI Hand In my pairr laat nlfiht that there talk ahont\nanother Draft to ho and if thnt ahould com than thar\nwill ba fun at home for It la plaid out to Draft man to\ngr and Sght to free tha nlgor Kainnol. D. W. olf aald\nlha other Day that ha waa in to free tha nljro and arm\nthem to kill tha Democrat ao tha tilgtir oan li frea hut\nI hoo thnt will not coma but If It Doe thar will l\nnme Darned Ahnllilnn will bo acnt home tn there\nfor wa are Inforpeace aaaoona.Itcanbehadfur\nwear tired of kllan our frlan.la and NlKhlora r hut\nbeen and wunld he if they hail a chiiure n:zitin. well 1\nmost coma to aloaa. or yon may think thnt I am a reb-\nel, hut If ynu think an ymi er mistaken nnd no mure at\npreaatit nnlcy Kemninlng ynur friend nntill Death\nDarld Kealer to Adam titiilts and frienda\n1 want ynu to aend ma aoma mora latter If ynn can\nand t will aend you aoutaand aeud rue all the Kewe Jon\nran. D.li,toA.8.
10cc5d9282caac3bd5ab778ec37378ec DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.6890410641806 39.745947 -75.546589 The process of evaporation differs\nfrom, aud is vastly superior to the old\ntime method of drying in the sun, as\nthe fruit Is not only kept free from durt\nor dirt, but the natural tas e and flavor\nare preserved, nothing but the waterj\nbeing taken out, and all that is neces­\nsary when the fruit is wanted for use Is\nto replace this water by soaking from\nsix to eight hours. The hot air for the\nevaporators is furnished by a large fur­\nnace, iu which egg ejal is used, and all\nthe smoke and gas is carried off through\nlarge chimneys, leaving nothing but\ntbe dry, hot air to come in contact with\nthe fruit The products of this evapo\nrator are superior to those generally\nseen, as the proprietors are go-\nahead men, who have spared no ex­\npense to have everything about iheir\nestablishment perfect in every respect\nThe far mers bring the frnit to th\nplace in their wagons, and of course\nthere is some of it, that is too soft for\nevaporating. This is carefully sorteil\nout ami taken to the second floor, where\nit is halve*!, and tho seeds removed,\nafter which it is ground iu a mill and\nthe pomace lightly pressed to extract\nthe juice, which is then bottled hy a\nnew process, which preserves all the\nnatural flavor of tbe fruit. Not a single\ndrop of water is added, and the juice\nthus prepared can be kept, for an inde­\nfinite time. aud is equal to the natural\nirult for flavoring ice cream or other\narticles.
294fdb03bcd0529e1f9704296b0ef788 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.0260273655506 35.780398 -78.639099 and shot him ; the nr.t ball pasted through\nbis right arm aud tdightly wounded hira in\nthe rit hip ; on turning t face his antag-\nonist ho received a second ball in the right\nbreast, from tho effect of which he died the\nfollowing Tuesday. There being no officer\npresent, Strickland was allowed to go off.\nVeircU'a brother, who was immediately sent\nfor, proceeded to Wilmington that night and\ntelegraphed to several points on tho different\nrail road routes, and on tho arrival of the\n"Wilmington cars at Weldon on Sunday he or\nwas arrested and lodged in Halifax jail.\nThey were both young men of respectability\nand have wives, besides a large circle of\nfriends and relatives to mourn this sad occur-\nrence. Ferrell seldom if ever became intox-\nicated, but Strickland, I understand, has\ndrank very hard for a year or two, which no\ndoubt had blunted his moral feelings and\nthus lit tod him for tho commission of this foul\ndeed. Had there been no liquor at tho place,\nboth of them would no doubt havo been well\nand with their now beroaved families. Tho\nliquor traffic has no doubt caused tho loss of\nthese two usetul citizens ot our county.\nThe advocates of Nash brandy and mean\nwhiskey inaj now boast that these ' good\ncreatures of God,' are doing their legitimate\nwork on a liberal scale. Linuor manufactu\nrers. liquor sellers of Nash, ask yourselves\nAm' I inkiest hro ? Receive for an answer\nthe. response ' Woe, woo unto him that put\nteth tho bottle to thy neighbor's mouth to\nmake nun drunken.
0b6c6063da580618b1c1d042b91499d1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.3383561326739 39.745947 -75.546589 It Is a hopeful sign to see the “Unions"\nslowly changing for better and they\nmust continue to Improve and become\nmore luwabldliig If they expect an indig­\nnant public to permit them to exist. One\ngreat deterrent Is the violent character\nof the editor* of their labor papers, who\npersistently misstate facts and mislead\ntheir readers, by highly colored reports\nand comments, that Inflame the minds of\npeople, led too often by their prejudice\nInstead of cool reason.\nBut slowly the Union man Is coming\nlo understand that If he becomes a law­\nbreaker in response to the anarchistic\nsuggestions of Ills labor paper he must\npay the penalty of crime against his\nfellows. When the anarchists, socialists\nand criminals ore either driven out or\nsuppressed, the unions will perhaps then\npattern after tre honored BrofTierbood of\nLocomotive Engineers, and win respect\nfor their members, by honesty, upright­\nness and good citizenship, then the Union\nman will be known\nand high grade workman (the old Trade\nUnion Idea) and the scrubs and pretend­\ners will not be allowed to flaunt a Union\nCard as evidence of their right to abuse\n maltreat all the balance of mankind.\nThe Unions as now made up need an Im­\nmense uhiount of house cleaning and tho\npublic lias been forced by their ugliness\nto demand It. Every right thinking\nUnion man knows this and Is earnest In\nhla desire to have the criminals expung­\ned. for the peaceable members are de­\nnounced by the public for their associa­\ntion with the others.\nIf these high grade men would with­\ndraw from the mismanaged bands of out­\nlaws and set up a union where good\nworkmanship was the test, and then offer\ntheir first-class labor at even higher\nprices than common, with their contracts\nmade legally responsible, and If It be­\ncame known that when a buyer of labor\ndidn't care to purchase, this union would\npeaceably offer Its labor elsewhere, but\nnot go bullying about like a lot of band­\nits and lawbreakers, they would then\ncommand the admiration and respect of\nthe entire community, for people like to\nsee workmen prosperous. Observe the\nhigh position In the minds of the public\nthat tho Locomotive Engineers have won\nfor themselves by just this plan of pro­\ncedure.
b90c44dfdafea6d68ec682c5eee5d9ef SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.7164383244547 35.780398 -78.639099 It was Sunday v morning the sun waj\nshining brightly, and a slight breeze rus-\ntled the leaves which were tbinkly strewn\nover4he ground. We had just finished\nbreakfast, when Charles S., a boy about\n12 years old, entered the parsonage breath\nless jvith haste, and with the tears stream-in- g\nthick and fast down his cheek. Wo\ngathered around him with childish curios-\nity and ready sympathy, for Charlie was a\ngreat favorite among the children ; but he\nquickly, almost rudely, pushed through the\ncircle, calling loudly for Mr. D. My father\nsoon made his appearance, and Charlie, the\ninstant that he caught sight of him cried,\n" Come sir; O, come, my father is dying !"\nMr. D. hurried on his hat and cloak, and\nhastened with Charlie to his home ; it wai\nbut a few steps just on the other side of the\nchurch. We remained standing where they\n left us, astonished.\nThe news soon spread through the Til-\nlage that Mr. T. was dying. Mr. T. was\nknown and esteemed all through the State,\nnot only for his piety, he was an elder ia\nthe church, but he was the Great Tem-\nperance man ; many a man now sitting ia\nhis own house with a happy family around\nhim, but for Mr. T., would have long since\nfilled a drunkard's grave ; they knew it,\nand were grateful. No wonder, then, that\nafter the morning service a crowd collected\nabout the door of Mr. T.'s house, waiting\nto ascertain whether ha was dead or not.\nThe Doctor was standing by his patient's\nbedside, expecting every moment to be his\nlast; when suddenly Mr. T. rallied, he rais-\ned himself up in bed, and said, " Doctor,\ngo out and bring those people all in here,\nI have something to say to them."
16ffd339039d6ff064b26a7df3bd6ca9 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1880.769125651437 42.217817 -85.891125 Uhcn in Italy, on his journey around the\nworld, Mr. Seward was received with great 'con -\nsideration by Cardinal Antonelli,who expressed\nhimself as not surprised that the public jus-\ntice of tbo United States inconsistently allowed\nthe escape of the conspirator, Surratt, whom\nthe Tope bad without previous treaty and with-\nout condition so promptly ordered to be arrest-\ned and delivered ou Mr. Scward'u demand."\nPut to return. General Duleo profcired bis\nrequest for the rendition of Arguelles to the\nAmerican Cousul, Mr. Savage, at Havana, who\nsympathized with the request, but neverthe-\nless replied: "In absence of an extrad.hon\ntreaty between the two governments, and of\nany public or municipal law authorizing tho\nrendition," our government could cot grant\nthe request ; jet ho promised to lay tha matter\nin a confidential way before Mr. Seward, which\ntho Captain -- Genoial desired him to do by tbe\nearliest opportunity. Shortly after, the Span-\nish Minister at Washington addressing Mr.\n succinctly staling the facts, and adding\nthat be was well aware no extradition treaty\nexisted between tbe United States and Spain,\nin virtue of which tbe aurrender of Arguellea\nto the authorities of Cuba might ba obtained;\nyet, considering tbe gross and rcandaloua out\nrage wbicti has been committed, as well as the\ninterest of humanity at stake in the prompt\nresolution of this matter, bo has not he&itated\nin submitting tbe case in this confidential way\nto the United States Government, in order to\nascertain whether an incident bo exceptional\ncould cot bo met with exceptional measures.\nWitbiu a few days after this request reached\nthe State Department, Mr. Seward informed\ntbe Spanish Minister "If the Captai n- Gene r- al\nwill fend to New York a suitable ollicer. steps\nwill, I possible, be taken to place Arguelles in\nbis charge,'' for the purpose of presenting him\nbefore Judge Navarro. Domingo Dulce, re-\njoicing m tho success of bia applis iticc,
60c226860c82b8cb2e1738de2d97d0b7 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1858.305479420345 37.561813 -75.84108 brought in with his eyes bandaged,\nstrongly muzzled, and a cavesson on his\nmouth, held by two men, whose precau-\ntions and tho terror depicted in their\nfaces, would havo made you suppose\nthat they had a mad dog under their\ncustody, nnd were holding on for their\nlives. The brute roared nnd bellowed\nlike n very lion, and his wicked eye lit-\nerally shot fire, when, with tho greatest\ncaution, they at last ventured to uncov-e- s\nhis head. It is unncccsssary to say\nthat he laid about him in all directions,\non recovering the use of his optics, and\nwoo unto tho unlucky wight who found\nhimself within less than a score of\nyards or so of his heels! II is lungo out\nwas terrific. Of this monster of a\nhorse, however, Rarey fearlessly laid\nhold, and seemed, by mere force of will\nrather than of muscles, to drag him af-\nter him into a loose box, where ho shut\nhimself up for an hour with this\nagreeable and amiable companion.\nSome of the spectators seemed to think,\nnot unreasonably, that he would never\ncome out again alive.\nWhat passed between tho couple\nwhile they remained alone together, of\ncourse we, who were not in the secret,\nhuve no opportunity of learning; but\ncertain it is, that in the course of an\nhour, Rarey mado his appearance again\nin the yard, mounted upon tho back of\nStafford, who was all alivo but not kick-\ning, and going along as quiet as a lamb,\nwith nothing but a snaftlo in his mouth!\nFor a boast who was every now and\nthen in tho habit of leaving the marks\nof his heels upon the ceiling of his sta-\nble, and of his teeth upon every one\nwho approached him, this was pretty\nwell; and in fact, those who really\nknew what tho animal was could hardly\nbelieve their eyes when they saw him\nunder this new character.
354286dee638767b5bb7a2e103f63d37 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.3101092579943 39.745947 -75.546589 With the closing of-the month, In­\nterest is being revived In the ad­\njourned special convention of the\nEpiscopal Diocese of Delaware for the\nelection of a bishop to succeed the late\nLeighton Coleman, which Is to be held\nat Dover on Thursday, April SO. There\nIs nothing, however, at this time to In­\ndicate that the majority of Episcopal\nclergymen here have become more de­\ncided In the choice of «uv one man than\nthey were at the convention In St.\nAndrews Church, on February 19,\nwhich resulted In a deadlock. "It is the\nmost absurd and chaotic situation that\ncould bo Imagined,” said a prominent\nrector to-day. "There are not two men\nIn the diocese who can agree how the\nelection of April 30 will result. ”\nTwenty-seven ballots with no bishop\nnominated, but with the Rev. Nathaniel\nThomks. of Philadelphia, many timet\nonlv one vote short of the required\ntwo-thirds majority was the record at\nthe convention In St. Andrew's Church.\nWill a similar situation mark the con­\n at Dover? No Episcopal min­\nister at this time will venture to say\nthat It will not. There will, neverthe­\nless, be significant changes In the com­\ning convention, namely, the absence of\nthe Rev. J. S. Bunting, who was an\nardent supporter of Mr. Thomas, and.\nIn fact, nominated him for bishop, and\nthe,probable presence of the Rev. W .\nL. Wells, of Mlllshoro, pnd the vener­\nable Rev. John McKim. of Georgetown.\nMr. Bunting has left Christ Church.\nChristiana hundred, for a charge In\nGeorgia, and the Rev. Mr. Wells and\nMr. McKim did not attend the Febru­\nary convention.\nOne Clergyman Gone.\nMr. Bunting's withdrawal -will take\none vote from Mr. Thomas, who re­\nceived eleven votes, hut should both\nMr. Wells and Mr, M'-KIm attend the\nconvention, and coupling the absents\nof Mr, Bunting, a two-thlrds majority,\nwould be again necessary to elect.\nShould those who rupporled Mr\nThomas at the convention here vole\nfor him again this month, ho would\nhave ten votes.
2bba2fe88d60ed15319279d84557874c THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1910.932876680619 46.601557 -120.510842 Beginning at a point 60 feet east, 325 feet south of the northwest corner of section 16, township 9 north, range 23, E.\nW, M., running thence south, 23 degrees 42 minutes east, 346 feet to the point of intersection of a 20 degree curve, left;\nthenoe south, 75 degrees 1 minute east, 698.5 feet to the point of Intersection of a 12 degree curve, right; thence south,\n35 degrees 1 minute east 392.9 feet to the point of intersection of a 16 degree curve, right; thence south, 1 degree 59\nminutes west, 689.2 feet, to the point of intersection of a 22 degree curve, left; thence south, 78 degrees 1 minute east,\n874.4 feet, to the point of Intersection of an 8 degree curve, right; thence south, 49 degrees 18 minutes east, 1261 feet to the\npoint of intersection of a 20 degree curve, left; thence south, 84 degrees 9 minutes east, 2230.6 feet to the point of intersec-\ntion of a 6 degree curve, left; thence 77 degrees 53 minutes east, 458.5 feet, to the point of intersection of a 7 degree\ncurve, right; thence south, 88 degrees 30 minutes east, 1076.fi feet to the point of intersection of a 4 degree curve, left;\nthenco north, 81 degrees 14 minutes east, 649-7 feet to the Point of intersection of a 4 degree curve right; thenco south,\n77 degrees 16 minutes east, 584.5 feet to the point of Intersection of a 30 degree curve, right; thence south, 13 degrees\n14 minutes east, 379.4 feet to the point of intersection of a 3o degree curve, left; thence south, 78 degrees 44 minutes east,\n353.6 feet, to the point of intersection of a 20 degree curve, right; thence south, 46 degrees 24 minutes east, 704 .3 feet,\nto the point of intersection of a 10 degree curve, right; thence south, 28 degrees 54 minutes east, 627 feet to the point of\nintersection of a 10 dog Tee curve, left: thence south, 68 degrees 45 minutes east, 427 feet.
078862b720b28a74203c98d46fa9d846 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1895.891780790208 43.994599 -72.127742 A friehtful runaway accident occurring a\nfew minutes after six o'clock last night by\nwhich one woman lost her lite and a man\nwas frightfully injured. Mrs. Frank Kem-ic- k\nmet her husband, where he worked,\nat Ok, B. Palmer's store, and asked him\nit he was ready for supper. He replied\nthat he would oe as soon as he carried\nMrs. Palmer home with the team to her\nsupner.and getting on to the wagon they\ndrove away np Tuird street in the direc-\ntion of Mr. Palmer's home, at No. 45 Fifth\nstreet As they passed over the 1 hird street\nand Chestnut street crossing train No. 61\ndue here at (J 05 was just coining into the\ndeuot and whether from this or some other\neause, is as yet unknown the horse, which\nlias beeu Known as a runaway annnai,\nstarted up Chestnut street and turned into\nvourtn ana men towarus uenirai Avenue.\nAs it did so the wagon struck a tree stand\ning directly in front of Frederick B. Tib\nbets house, No. 21 Fourth street, throwing\nboth out. The horse ran down the street,\n with another wagon and then into\nthe Avenue and up to Fifth street where\nit. came in contact with another tree in\nfront of Mrs. George U. Wen tworth'" and\nthe wagon was demolished, the horse clear-\ning himself and going home. Meanwhile\nthe affair had attracted many people who\nran to the place where Mrs. Palmer and\nMr. Kemick were lying, Mrs. Tibbets\nbrought a light from the house and then a\nsorry sight was revealed. Lying in the\ngutter was Mr. K.'mick with the blood flow-\ning from an ugly wound alout his left eye,\nand very near him was Mrs. Palmer with\nher head upon the sidewalk with a frightful\ngash in her forehead. She was apparently\ndead, but on being raised by Mr. Tibbetts\nmade a noise showing that there was life.\nWilling hands did all in their power for her\nrelief. Physicians were sent for and Mrs.\nPalmer was put into Charles Smith's hack\nand carried to her home. A few min.ites\nlater Mr. Kemick was put into Niles ex-\npress wagon and Fred Urown drove him to\nthe same point.
44ba8861e99704a712daabbfa963dfac DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.3674863071747 58.275556 -134.3925 there" with the pep. and if you ask\nher to do anything you may be sure\nIt will done and willingly, too. Lalna\nis never more happy than when help¬\ning someone, and as she plans to\nteach, we predict that she will make\ngood. She Is a leader In the high\nschool activities and would bo a\nleader In any community. She works\nlong hours and hard, but it is a\ncommon sight to see her enter the\nassembly a few minutes late, and we\nnotice her first glance is always at\nthe clock, with the remark. "Oh,\nmy conscience!" Her smile, her\nlever remarks, and her alienees will\nlie missed hv us all.\nAGNES LIVIK. -Agnes has black,\nvavy hair which never stays where\nshe wants It, baa olive skin and has\nvery dark brown eyes which seem to\nbe smouldering Ilres when she Is\nangry and which always betray her\nwhen she has been up to mis¬\nchief. She Is very active, a good\nathlete and the pride of the school\non the basketball floor. When a\nperson reproves her about anything.\n*ho will say "Well!" In a very In¬\ndignant tone of voire as If you\nhadn't any right to tell her about It.\nand when she is startled she says\n"Oh!" She is clever and will do\nmany a little trick for which she\nwill never be suspected' unlcsa you\nknow her well, but she Is so honest\nshe always has to 'fess up. Douglas\ncane nver boaat of another girl sim¬\nilar to Agnes.\nMARCARET PATTERSON. It's a\nhot day but Margaret has on her\ncort, although rain and the stormi¬\nest of days could not force her to\n¦wear a hat. Have you over seen her\ncoming up the stairs panting and\nthen hear her favorite expression,\n"I'm getting old, girls"? If she hap¬\npens to roam near you when she
0413f88b8b25ec54cc1009957071fff8 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.732876680619 47.478654 -94.890802 State of Minnesota, I\nCou ty of Beltrami. I\nIn Probate Court. Special Term, Sept. 9, 1002.\nIn the matter of the Estate of ArvillaE.\nMilne. Deceased:\nOn reading and filing the petition of Calvin\nC. Doty. Administrator of said estate setting\nforth the amount of personal estate that has\ncome into his hands, the disposition thereof,\nand how much remains undisposed of: the\namount of debts outstanding against said de-\nceased, as far as same can he ascertained;\nthe legacies unpaid, and a description of all\nthe real estate, exepting the homestead of\nwhich said deceased died seized, and the con-\ndition and value of the respective portions or\nlots thereof; the persons interested in said\nestate, with their residences; and praying that\nlicense be to him granted to sell all the real\nestate, except the homestead, of whlcn the\nintestate died seized. And It appearing by\nsaid petition that there is not sufficient per-\nsonal estate In the hands of said administrator\nto pay said debts, the legacies or expenses \nadministration, and that it is necessary for the\npayment of such debts, legacies or expences.\nto sell all of said real estate! viz: Lots 13, 14,\n15and16InBlock 7 andLot6 in Block18of\nthe original townslte of Bemidji in said Bel-\ntrami county, Minnesota, according to the\nracorded plat thereof.\nIt is Therefore Ordered. That all persons\ninterested In said estate appear before this\nCourt on Monday the sixth day of October\n190*2 at 10 o'clock a. m., at the Courthouse in\nthe Village of Bemidji in said County, then and\nthere to show eause (if any there be) why\nlicence should not be granted to said Calvin\n. Doty, Administrator, to sell so much of the\nreal estate of said deceased as shall be neces-\nsary to pay such debts, legacies or expenses.\nAnd it is Further Ordered. That this order\nshall be published once each week for three\nsuccessive weeks prior to said day of hearing,\nin the Bemidji Pioneer, a weekly newspaper\nprinted and published at Bemidji In said Coun-\nty.
1b1c51508bd08cfee6d71e295bf6b408 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1884.4849726459724 39.743941 -84.63662 The traveler of the present day, as he hi\nharried along by the lightning express, in\nits bhffet cars and palace sleepers, seldom\nreverts in thought to the time when the\nstage coach and packet ware tbe only\nmeans of communication between distant\npoints. It is rare that ne of the real old\ntime stage drivers i met with no\nand when the writer recently ran across\nFayette Haskell, of Lockport, N. Y., be\nfait like a bibliographer over the discovery\nof some rare volume ef "forgotten lore."\nMr. Haskell, although one of the pioneers\nin stage driving (he formerly ran from\nLewlston to Niagara Falls and Buffalo) is\nhale and hearty and bids fair to live for\nmany years. The strange stories of bis\nearly adventures would fill a volume. At\none time when going down a mountain\nnear Lewiston with no less a personage\nthan General as a passenger, the\nbrakes gave way and the coach came on\nthe heels of the wheel horses. The only\nremedv was to whin the leaders to a gal\nlop. Gaining additional momentum with\neach revolution of the wheels the coach\nswayed and pitched down the mountain\nside and into the streets of Lewiston.\nStraight ahead at the foot of the steep hill\nflowed the Niatrara River, towards which\nthe four horses dashed, apparently to cer-\ntain death. Yet the firm hand never re- -\nlaed its hold nor the clear brain its con\ncent ion of what must be done in the emer\neencv. On dashed the horses until tho\nnarrow dock was reached on the river bank,\nwhen bv a masterly exhibition of nerve\nand darinjr. the coach was turned in scaroe\nits own lentrth and the horses brought to a\nstand still before the pale lookers-o- n
0a199c48826982834ffa3a2edf77d73c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.889344230672 44.939157 -123.033121 The Oregonian takes certain persons in Portland\nto task for saying at a meeting of the civic league that\nthe vote on negro suffrage was due to principle rather\nthan ignorance, and asserts that ignorance alone was the\ncause, and that the voters were not intelligent enough to\nunderstand the proposition. It may be right but we can-\nnot admit it, for to do so would be to acknowledge the\nvoters of Multnomah county were more intelligent than\nthose here in Marion county. Multnomah voted to re-\nmove the objectionable clause by a majority of 12,771, the\nvote being ,i,vlb yes and 26,144 no. According to this\nMultnomah had a handsome majority in favor of intelli-\ngence. Here in Marion county the vote was yes, 5,500,\nno 5,907 or a majority in favor of ignorance of 407. The\ncomparison is bad for Marion county and the capital of\ntrie state where is supposed to have its head-\nquarters. It makes a bad showing in other ways for the\nproposition lost in the state by the close margin of 143\nvotes. This shows that so far as ignorance and intelli-\ngence go, the good old state of Oregon splits 50, 50. This\nplaces Marion county and Salem considerably below the\naverage in intelligence, a thing the Capital Journal will\nnever admit. It has abundance of evidence to the con-\ntrary in the fact that the voters take the Capital Journal\nin preference to any other paper, and do it in ever in-\ncreasing numbers which is evidence of intelligence of a\nhigh order and also of appreciation of the Journal's re-\nliability in all lines. No, some other explanation than\nignorance will have to be found to explain the reason for\nthe proposition being turned down in the state and\nespecially in Marion county.
37d87531769fd62db57b49ac0f7ce514 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.387671201167 42.217817 -85.891125 Sec. iv. None but jart fill, sober and prudent\nmen shall be employed to take charge of the cars\non the road, and they shall use eveiy reasonable\nprecaution not to injure the teams, carnages or\npersons on foot.\nSec. v. The cars at all times shall be entitled\nto the tracks, and any vehicle or persons on the\ntrie track of said railway shall tut n out when the\ncars come up. in either direction, so as to leave\nthe track unobstructed.\nSec. vi. Said company, its successors or as-\nsigns, shall have road completed within two years\ntroin the time this ordinance takes effect.\nSec. vii. Permits shall not be issued to move\nbuildings, or large or bulky articles on or across\nany of the streets upon which said tracks are, or\nmay be situated, in such manner as to interfere\nwith the overhead or operation of cars\nupon railway, unless at time of making such ap-\nplication the person desiring the permit shall hie\nwith the village cler k the written consent of said\ncompany, their successor or assigns, or the presi\ndent of said village. Whenever the president of\nsaid village shad grant to any person the right to\nmove buildings or articles, or person moving\nsame, shall be required, if possible or practicable,\nto move the same across or along the track of\nsaid railway between the hours of twelve (12)\no'clock midnight and (51 o'clock the next morning,\nthe party in w hose favor the permission is granted\nshall pay to grantees, their successors or assigi.s ,\nany ami all damages aud expenses caused by the\nremoval or disturbance of the wires, poles and\npremises of said railwav, or by the stoppage of its\nC rs.
11f50f42d8b20e0c651776ab4d5401b3 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.1986301052766 41.020015 -92.411296 These are good names, and most of\nthem familliar to the peoplo; but\nWright, Wilson and Shane, positively\nrefuse to bo candidates. Dr. Bal­\nlard is reported to have the backing\nof Kirk wood's friends, presumably\nreferring to his friends as developed\nIn the Senatorial contest lact winter.\nIt will surprise a good many to know\nthat in the bargains and sales made\nin that contest, the Gubernatorial\noffice was among the conditions pre­\ncedent. It remains to be seen how\nmuch foundation in fact there is for\nthe declarations of Dr. Ballard's\nfriends. While this remnant of the\nKirkwood Senatorial leaven is wort\ning to raise Mr. Ballard, it should be\nremembered that another Senatorial\ncontest is approaching, in which a\nsection of the State will have a hand\nwhich can make more noise, pull\nmore wires, and manipulate more\ncombinations, in a given time, than\nany other section I have yet seen in a\nState Convention. Its representatives\nwill come here prepared to trade, and\nwill swap Governors for United\nStates Senators, vice versa. This\nfact Mr. Ballard's friends, with their\nKirkwood attachment, may as well\nunderstand at the start.\nAnother element at work, and\nwhich will have much to do with the\ndecision of the Gubernatorial ques­\ntion, is the temperance question. It\nhas been demonstrated repeatedly\nthat the majority of the republican\nparty in this State is in favor of pro­\nhibition ; but lest peradventure such\na measure as a License law should be\npassed by a bare majority, the tem­\nperance people arc determined to\nplace in the Executive Chair one who\nwill not sign such a law,—knowing\nthat, if vetoed, it could not get a\nmajority sufficient to set aside the\nveto. To this end the State Temper­\nance Alliance has been organized and\nincorporated under the statutes, with\nauxiliaries in every county and town\nin the State. It is proposed to raise\nH100,000, to be so invested as to fur­\nnish an interest fund, which, together\nwith other donations, will be used to\nperfect the organization and carry\nout its plans.
58caa2fb1b3dad6bbeb3c48fa20a668a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8589040778793 40.063962 -80.720915 Walpole amusingly relates, on the\noocasion of this visit, the demetes he had\nto raecomodi?, and the memoires to pre¬\nsent against Touton, Madame du Def-\nfund's favorite dog; "As I am the only\nperson," he says, "who dare correct\nhim, I have already insisted on his be¬\ning confined in the Bastille every day\nafter five o'clock. T'other night he flew\nat Lady Barrymore's face, ana I thought\nwould have torn her eye out; but it\nended in biting her finger. She was\nterrified; she fell into tears. Madame\ndu Deffand, who has too much parts\nnot'to see everything In its troo light,\nperceiving that she bad not beaten\nTouton half enough, immediately told\nus a story.ol ja.lady, whose dog having\nbitten a piece oat or a gentleman's leg!\nthe tender dame, in a great fright, cried\nout, "Won't it make my dog sick?"\n"Touton," the spoilt little favorite,\nwas sent to Strawberry, a legacy to Mr.\nWarpole, whose promise Madame du\nDeffand1 had obtained to take care of\nthe dog should it survive Its doatlngly\nattached mistress. In answer to a let¬\nter from the former to the Rev. Cole,\nthe worthy antiquary remarks: "I con¬\ngratulate the little Parislon dog that he\nhas fallen into the hands of sohumane\na master. I have a little diminutive\ndog, Busy, fall as great a favorite, and\nnever out of iny lap; I !mvt; already\nJn case of an accident, insured it a re¬\nfuse from starvation and ill usage. It\nis the least we can.do for poor, harmless,\nshiftless, pampered animals that have\namused us, and we have spoilt." Tou¬\nton fully justified the character former¬\nly given of him by his behavior upon\nhis arrival at the Gothic villa of his\nne^.master. "Ho began by exiling my\nbeautiful little cat," he writes, "Spon\nwhich, however, we shall not quite\nogree. He then flew at one of my\ndogs, who returned it by biting his\nfoot till it bled, but was severely beaten\nfor It. I Immediately rang for Marga¬\nret to dress his foot; but in the midst of\nmy tribulation,. could not keep my\ncountenance, for she cried, "Poor little\nthing, he does not understand my lan¬\nguage!" I hope Bbe will not recollect'\ntoo, that he is a Papist.'
0240e60929c714ff4e9d93ec0b89a0b8 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.599726744333 46.187885 -123.831256 Captain Paysou. of the United States\nlight houso engineering service, started\nyesterday for Humboldt to pay off the\nmen who have been at work at tho site\nof the proposed light house at St. George's\nReef off Crescent City. The site is more\nexactly known as northwest Seal Bocks\nand is about eight miles off shore, and\nworkmen have made their home in a ves-\nsel near the rocks. The estimated total\ncost of tho lightls $200,000. Congress ap-\npropriated 50,000 for operations the first\nyear and 50,000 the next. The sea breaks\nover the rock even in summer time. In\nwinter it is impossible to work.\nTo get a foothold at first was\na matter of difficulty and danger. The\nsharp point of the rock was blasted off,\nleaving enough for courses of stone to be\nlaid upon, and the sides of the rock were\nterraced. After operations had proceed-\ned thus far and Capt. Payson and sur-\n had succeeded in getting tho\nmeasurements which they desired to ob-\ntain, men were set to work in the quar-\nries back of Humboldt to dig out the\nstone which now forms the base of tho\nhouse. It was dressed in Crescent City and\ncarried by craft to the reef, where with\ngreat trouble, it was placed in position.\nThis work occupied tho entire season.\nIt was supposed that congress, at its last\nsession, would make an adequate appro-\npriation to continuo the work. The sum\nof 150,000 was asked for, but only 30r\n000 were appropriated. It is impossible\nto do much on tho lighthouse with this,\nand it is feared that tho storms of the\ncoming winter will wash away all that\nhas been done. Tho money appropriated\nwill be expended in continuing to get out\nstono at the Humboldt quarries. Only a\npart of the force now employed can be\nretained. S. F . Bulletin.
089779cbfb1a15533fc7da7bf500b66c THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.3428961432403 39.369864 -121.105448 MoujctjuH Gardens.—We are told tbatat Oownieville\nDr. T . R . Kibbe raised 2CO pounds of grapes last year,\nfrom 30 small vines. This Is not more than half a\nday* ride from the summit of the Sfirirk feVaAa,\nthough the town it iritUaffd *<t thebottofti of a profound\ncanon. On the slope near the town, we are further\ntold, several Italians have terraced a number of acres\nwalling up the terraces with rocks, and by irrigation\nand the use of manures have made rich soil and profit-\nable gardens. Can feWther Forbes if we Xfit c<&-\nrectly informed? At Gv-odyear'sBar, below Dowwierille\na few miles, tlferfe are fotir prodWfMVfc ffirdens. From\none, about two acres in extent, 8 S. Clapp raised last\nyear pcrdtice Unit brought him $3,000, nearly hntf Of\nwhich was for pearlies. Apricots do well in that high\nlocality, but Nectarines fail. A tuples 1H I prove the\nbest fruit venture. Quinces and pomegranate* thrive\nadmirably All kihxfs W tulinary vegetables can be\nraised. Even barley hh* dohe Welt Wft'erf IHett in\nsmall patches, and would seed itself doWn and become\na regular spontaneous tyop for pasturage if allowed;\nSpring Odors.—The first strawheraies of the season\nwere handed to ns a little while ago by Mr. T W-\nManchester. They were grown in his pleasant garden\nThey lie on our desk uoW, red as the lips of beauty,and\nas sweet, nestling amid rose buds, lilac blooms and\nbright green eaves—though who brought the rosea\nwhen we were out we do not know Ah what a delicious\nodor that is! Surely the very spirit of the charming\nobjects that exhale it. There is in perfumes, fresh,\nnatural perfumes, just breathed from dewy lips of\nflowers, an influence as subtle and mfeitlhg as that\nwhich resides in music, poetry, painting Bud lovely\nscenery. How the volatile essences diffuse themselves\nthrough the air. and steal through the porches of hu-\nman sense into the v«ty Sahetfiary of the soul! The\norgans of external impressions they make avenues to\nthe inner chamber where life's mystery throbs like a\nreflected star in water— beautiful but impalpable, and\noil! so deep! They fill the brain with ptirple Vapors\nin Which the magician Memory causes Us to behold\nthose dear laces that are gone, to hear the voices that\nare sti I, and even to feel the gentle tdUch of hands\nthat were long since folded as hands are fbldad, but\nOhfce. Ah, well may the rain beat and the Difld bio*\nHnuitta the World;
3d0e6c4bbdf0ec71224ff28d4bbfad31 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5068305694697 39.290882 -76.610759 If any thing could surprise us which appears\nin the Globe, we would be astonished at the ar-\nticle which appears in that paper relative to the\ncharge made by Mr. Allen, of Ohio, that the la-\ndies of Chillicothe hud, during the last war,\npresented a petticoat to Gen. Harrison. Gen.\nMarphy, in no measured terms, it is true, de-\nnounced the eharge as a slander not only upon\nGen. Harrison, hut the ladies of Chillicothe, and\nthat no such thing had ever been done by thcin.\nThe Globe now comes gravely forth with the\nusual high sounding language of Mr. Kendall,\nand endeavors to prove by certificates, that, dur-\ning the war, there were some persons in Chilli-\ncothe, who had heard, not that such a thing had\nbeen done, but that it HAD been talked about!!!\nMr. Kendall iibusy in pouring over old files\nto find something that Gen. Harrison has in\ndisparagement of the militia of Ohio. We beg\nto know whether there has been a commanding\ngeneral, who discharged his duty to his country,\nthat did not, at sonic moment, give offence to the\nmilitia under his command. In the very nature\nof things, they become restless and dissatisfied.\nThey cannot understand the reasons for the de-\nlays incident to a campaign, especially upon the\n.frontier, and become impatient under the fa-\ntigues, delays, and disappointments to which\nthey are necessarily subjected. Was not Gen.\nJackson frequently surreunded by mutiny? Was\nit not with great difficulty that he could keep\nhis troops in the field ? And who does not know\nthat no man was ever more violently assailed\nthan Gen. Jackson for the harshness of some of\nhis military measures? Who has forgotten the\ncoffin hand bills and the doleful Jeremiahs over\nthe six militia men! And Mr. Kendall deserves
0aa8cbe4813abe84fa91f5f78c2d36e2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.042465721715 39.745947 -75.546589 Special Correspondence Evamno Journal.\nGeorgetown, Jan. 16. — January 14\nwas a lively day for this town, owing to\nthe strangers who came to attend the sale\nof C H. Treats real estate. Desirable\nbargains were offered, and a number\npresent, were eager to secure them. Shed-\nraoh Short, styled the “corn king of Sus­\nsex,” was greatly disappointed in not get­\nting the farm known as the Tunnel farm,\nbut the Farmers Bank bought every­\nthing. Tlie property was sold by Sheriff\nWard at the Court House door.\nThe prices paid were as follows: Fac-\nlory and contents, $900. This is an ex­\ntremely low price, as one engine alone\ncost $1,600. Storehouses, $1.050. The\nTunnel! farm $440, the same being sub­\nject to a mortgage of $3,500. House aud\n acres of ground, $880. The interest\nin tbe property in Alburyville, $300, Lot\nin Frankford, $110. The Watson tract of\nland, $500. The Marshall tract of land,\n$160, and the stables, $230. The sale\namounted to $4,390, the Farmer's Bank\nbeing the purchaser.\nThe will of Harheson Hickman, who\ndied recently at Lewes, was probated\nyesterday. His property is to be man\naged by the executors until the youngest\nchild becomes of age. The widow then\ntakes one-third aud the remainder is to\nbe equally divided among his children,\nwith the exception of his Arkansas prop­\nerty, which is left to his wifes nephews\nand nieces in that state.\nSome of the Georgetown citizens who\nare never left, have made gardens, and in\nthem planted all sorts of early vege­\ntables.
096c2219d5022a872b66739c57634885 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1896.8265027006173 46.601557 -120.510842 Whereas, under and by virtue of an order of\nsale, decree of foreclosure and Hpecialexecution\nIssued out of the superior Court of Yakima\ncouuty, State of Washington, on the '20. h day\nof October, lIMKi, In Ihe above eutltled action,\nby which order of sale and decree of foreclos-\narc, tbe above named plaintiff, obtained judg-\nment and a decree of foieclosure against said\ndefendants Matthias Bartholet and Kiiinm J.\nBartholet his wife, iiloiiJudgment aud decree\nwas rendered on the !>th day ol October 1896. for\nthe principal sum of Thirteen Hundred Sixty-\neight aud fki 100 jfUHaU, Dollars, with Interest\nthereon from date thereof until paid at the\nrate of 12per ceut iter annum, and costs of suit\ntaxed at $48.'2 ii; aud lucreaked costs tbereou and\nwhereas, tbe said judgment is a foreclosure of a\nreal mortgage, by which I am commanded to\nmake sale of the following described real prop-\nerty situate In Yakjma State of Wash-\nington, to-wlt:\nAllthat certain tract or piece of ground with\nthe messuages or tenements thereon erected,\nsituate aud being lols twenty-nine !'2o| and\nthirty LHUI In block thirty-two LH2J In the Town\nof North Yakima. Mate of Washington.\nTherefore public notice Is hereby given that I\nwill on the '21st. day oi November IKUS,\nat the hour of *2:'t_ o'clock p. m. of said day, in\nfrout of the court house door, in said couuty of\nYakima, iv the city of North Yakima, state of\nWashington, iv obedience to said order of sale,\ndecree of foreclosure aud special writ of execu-\ntion, sell the above descrllied real property, orso\nmuch thereof as may be necessary to satls'fy said\nJudgment iv favor of aaid plaintiff, with inter-\nest, costs aforesaid aud increased costs, to the\nliighe-r aud best bidder for cash lv hand.\nDated at North Yakima this *21st day of Octo-\nber l»Hi.
51e7e640f1e4348aa9ee7801c49f7696 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.064383529934 58.275556 -134.3925 Hilletcd in the homos of pennant*.\nsquad of Hol<M<>rti probably eom-\nnundoer one room, but they arc\nlirown Into constant contact with\nho household anil the kitchen bo-\notncH the loafing plarc. The family\ntove, built like an old-fashioned\nMitch oven, takes up a thlril of the\nuom, and In the remaining spaco\n>ro proltahly half a ilozcn chllilren\nml six or eight adults.\nThe Krcat. thick Iok walls. with\nheir tlnv double storm windows and\nrltli a double system of doors, keep\nacred the stale, foul air and the\nnyrlad odors of which a circus\nnmltl be proud.\nFor eight months no window Is\nipened and the door is guarded like\ni hank safe. Any daring breath of\nrcsh air that might venture inside\nvould Instantly roll over on its\ntack and expire without a struggle.\nIn the far corner it is possible that\nt cradle Is suspended from tin- end\nif a long so thut the cradle,\nloiinccd by a string up and down by\nind older child, lulls the latest lu-\na ii t asleep.\nThe grandmother deftly pats out\nhe tiny loaves of black bread,\nihootlng them Into the oven with a\n!>addlc like a professional baker.\n\\round the wall bench sit the men\n'oiks, enjoying a gift of cigarettes.\nMost of the women are out of doors,\nlaullng fertilizer into the poor fields\nbut there not being sufficient horses\nto go around, father rests lu the at-\n[uospherc of the kitchen.\nIn Hurh strange surroundings mo\nAmerican soldiers ore llvlnR and\nthriving. Wonderful Is the Russian\nlanguage that they talk, but as the\nAmerican soldiers always adapt\nthemselves quickly anywhere In the\nworld, these hoys are playing big\nbrother to the kiddles and have the\ngrandmother sewing on buttons.\nThe fresh vegetables which the\nration allowance Incks they trade\ncigarettes and sugar for. This Is
23f0f3d9912ebd8b28b2da496aa4d520 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.2123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 London*, March 18..This city lifts for\nti comparatively long timo been exempt\nfrom murdor, but to-day u eonsation\nwhs caused by tho discovery ot u crimo\nthat in ita details uomowhut resembles\nthe notoriouH Gouffo murder that occur¬\nred florae timo ago in Paris. The scene\nof this latest horror was in Grafton\nHtrcot in tho fc'oho difltrict, which is in¬\nfested with foreigners of tho lowest\nclass. It was in tho immediate vicinity\nof tho houso in which tho murder was\ncommitted that tho polico recently\nraided the anarchist's club.\nAn Austrian woman named Mario\nHermann, who is wall known to the\npolico as anight prowler, recontly rontcd\na small room m a house on Grafton\nHtrcot. On Thursday night last sho, in\ncompany with an elderly man, was seen\nto enter tho room. Subsequently loud\nqunrroling was heard in tho room by\nothor tenants in tho houso, but as wordy\nwura woro of froquont occurronco no at¬\ntention was paid to this disturbance.\nA woman named llutchius, who\nlodged with tho Hermann woman, on\nFriday found bloodstains on a sink and\nspoke to tho Ilormann woman about\nthem. Tho latter passed tho matter ofl\nlightly but on Saturday sho chanced\nher lodgings, taking hotter apartments\nin Marylebono streot. Sho took a\nheavy trunk which alio askod should bo\ncarefully handled. In tho meantitno\nthe suspicions of tho woman\nwas aroused, owing to tho blood stains\nsho had found on tho aiuk. In addition\nit bocntno noised about tho houso that\ntho man who had gonoto tho Herrmann\nwoman's room had not been seen to\nleave it. Tho Hutchina woman follow¬\ned tho Horrmann woman when alio\nmovod, and after learning her new ad¬\ndress informed tho polico that aho sus¬\npected that foul play had bceu.\nOfliccrs wcro sent to tho houso on\nMarylebono street where tho Hermann\nwoman bad taken up her residence and\na search was mado of tho apartments\noccupiod by her. Tho trunk which tho\nwoman had boon so careful about was\nin tho room. Tho polico forced it open\nand found tho body of themiaaing man.\nHis head had been battored, evidently\nwith somo blunt instrument. Tho body\npresonted n frightful nppoaranco and\ntho clothing in which it was attired\nwas drenched with blood.\nTho woman wns at onco taken into\ncuatodv on a cbargo of wilful murder.\nTho body has boon recognized as that\nof a well-to-do ox-job master named\nSlovens. IIo was soventy-six years old.\nIt is believed that tho Hermann wo¬\nman had an accomplico in committing\ntho murder, m Stevens was a muscular\nman. It may be, howovor, that ho was\nkilled whilo asleep. Tha priBonor is\nforty-three years old. Sho la ugly, al¬\nmost to ropulsivess.
1769f4616ff719fb0f8fddc0865b9f88 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.3383561326739 46.187885 -123.831256 The decided action ot Mr. Hammond\nIn expressing his disappointment at the\nslowness with which the subsidy and\nright of way deeds are (being turned In\nand hla laying off his engineers with\nthe expressed purpose of Incurring no\nfurther expense and wasting no more\ntime on Dhe railroad until the contract\non the part of Astoria Is completed,\neems to have convinced the publlo\nthat he means business, and that un- -\nHess the Tight of way and subsidy mat\nters are speedily closed up there will\nbe no road as far as he Is concerned.\nIn an interview with a prominent ci-\ntizen who is devoting his entire time\nto the acquisition by Astoria of the\nrailroad, he stated that it might be\nwell to look ait the entire" situation as\nit Is. For itwertty years past efforts\nhave been made on various plans and\n to get a railroad connection\nwith the rest of the world. Astoria\nIs the ortly city in the United States\nof its size which has so large a yearly\nfreight tonnage and so large an\namount of locay wealth without a\nrailroad. In the post all schemes\nto build "a railroad have fail-\ned, even after contracts were made\nand work commenced, because of the\nInability of' the Viontraotors to do the\nwork or their lack of financial support.\nNow that a fair and equitable contract\nhas been made with a man who la\nIndlvldiuany amply able to build tha\nentlre Bne, and who Is all ready and\nanxious to commence the work, a num-\nber of citizens as well as residents\nalong tbaJlns .are refusing to turn In\ntheir pledged subsidy,, or deeds to the\nright of way, without which Ham-\nmond will not
0cc420239b6987714bb06620c28aeb93 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1900.3136985984272 58.275556 -134.3925 >00 ft to place of beginning. Area20.60 Acres.\nMeg. at hoc. Cor. No. 1, .Mugwump Lode,\nWhence U. S . Loe. Mon. No. 4 behrsN.60 20'\nE. 5451 .2 ft dist. post scribed l. S .869, Mug-\nivmnp. Thence S. 55 0 00' E. (51K) ft to post\nscribed 2 S- 369, Mugwump. Thence S. 35©\nJO' W. 600 ft to post scribed 0.S 069, Mug¬\nwump. Thence N.55C 00' W. 15(H) ft to post\nscribed 4.S .869, Mugwump. Thence N. 850\nH)' E. 6tX) ft to post No. J. the place of begin-\nning. Area 20.60 acres. Meg. at hoe. Cor. No.\n1. Extension of Stringer hode. Whence U. S .\nhoc. Mon. No. 4 bears N. 180 57' W. 5450.8 ft\nlist. A Cor8. Nos. 2 it 8 S. Nos.72 A, and 242,\nrespectively bears N. 84 0 is' E. 1229.6 ft dist.\npost scribed 1.S.309, Ex. of Stringer. Thence\ns. 55© 00' E. 1500 ft to post scribed 2 S 369,\nEx. of Stringer, Thence S. 35 0 (M)' VV. 600 ft\nto post scribed 8 S 309, Ex. of Stringer.\nThence N 55 ©00' W. 1500 ft to post scribed\n1 S -809, Ex. of Stringer. Thence N. 85 ©00'\nE. 600 ft to place of beginning. Area 20.00\nAcres. Meg. at Cor. No. 1, Chehalis Lode.\nWhence U. S. hoc. Mon. No. 4, bears N. 90 32'\nW. 5867.8 ft dist. post scribed 1.S.309, \nlis. Thence S. 55© 00* E. 1500 ft to post scrib¬\ned 2.S.809, Chehalis. Thence S. 85© <H)' W.\n>00 ft to post scribed 3.S.369, Chehalis.\nThence N. 55© (Ml' W. 15(H) ft to post scribed\nI S.809, Chehalis. Th«nce N. 85 0 (X)' E. 54 ft\nOpen Cut bears S. 55© 00' E. 75 ft dist.\n000 ft to place of beginning. Area 20.60\nAcres. Meg. at hoc. Cor. No. 1, Wall Rock,\nWhence U. S. hoc. Mon. No. 4, bears N. 50 42 '\nW. 0309.0 ft dist. post scribed 1.S .309, Wall\nRock. Thence S. 55 0 00' E. 1500 ft to post\nscribed 2.S .309, Wall Rock. Thence S. 35©\nJO' W. 0(H) ft to post scribed 3.S- 309, Wall\nRock. Thence N. 55 0 00' W. 15(H) ft to post\nscribed 4.S .369, Wall Rock. Thence N. 35©\nJO' E. 000 ft to post No. 1, the place of begin¬\nning. Area 20.00 Acres. Magnetic Variation\nof all courses N. 29 0 30'E. These claims are\nbounded on all sides by unknown claims.\nAny and all persons claiming adversely\nany portion of said lode claims or surface\n?round are reuuired to file their adverse\nclaim with the Register of the United States\nhand office at Sitka, in the District of Alaska,\n[luring the sixty days period of publication\nhereof, or they will be barred by virtue of\n(he provisions of the statute.
1020a147085aa3854ac654a62e73bec6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.5164383244546 40.063962 -80.720915 u BV.UIL- n uiv.it uucau vi uic win\ni5i, Todd u close third, having trot\nelaat halt milq in 1:09$.\nIn the iourili heat Sensation led to\nlarter pole, with the Girl at his wh\nid Todd live lengths in the rear. 1\nirses came homo in this order, T<\nrniug up at the finish within a lengtl\ne Girl, who was a short length beh\nmsation, who was,the winner of\nat aud race Id 2:28. Summary; Am\nin Girl 1. 2, 2, 2; Sensation $Trl\nenry Todd fl, 8, .1; J. TV. Conley (f\nerly Bepno) 4, distanced. Time 2:\niOJ, 2:25, 2:28.\nThe next race was lor sweepstakes\n100, trotting; beat three in live, to wag\nr which thcro were three entries, ?\nirney Kelly, Ella Thorp, and Lagon\nIn the tirst heat Lagonier took the h\n)m the start, and at the quarter p\nis three lengths in advance of Ive\nbilo Ella Thorp, who scarcely strticl\nH at all, was going farther a\nrther to the rear. Lagonier won\nat by hall a length in 2=43}, Kelly s\nd, Throp distanced.\nSecond heat.Barney Kelly lod, and\ne quarter polo was halt a length ahe\nd at the half mile pole was lour leng\nead, Lagonier breaking badly all\niy to this point, where he settled dot\nit whs never able to catch Kelly, w\nmo in under a pull in 2:40.\n heat.horses got ol! well toge\nbut Kelley took the lead at the\nigonier, however, keeping at his wh\ntil near the } pole where he drop;\nhind two lengths which position\nis not ablo to better, Kelley coming\nnncr of the heat in 2:30}.\nFourth heat.horses started even\nit as they had passed the score Kel\nerved toward the inner fence, brc\nd gave Lagonier three or four leog\nvantage which, however, Kelley nea\ncovered on the far aide when bo ag\nDke and dropped half a dozen long\nhind, at the half mile pole he settled\nirk and when they entered the strei\nwas close up tQ Lagonier and going\nate that threw the latter off his h\nd Kelley came in winner of the h\nd race in 2:50}.\nrhe next race was a running race fo\nQSoiauoD purse 01 fauu, mile teats,\nilch there were six starters, Quart!\nister, Jennings, Kcno, Nick Bak\nicket, and Harry ot the West. Po\nd about even on Quartermaster sgal\n3 field. A good start was eflected, Ji\nlg having the pole and taking the le\nth Rocket next, and Nick Baker a\nlaitermasler tied lor the third pis\nthe first turn Rocket went to the In\nd kept the lead to the end, coming}\niglh ahead in 1:47J, Nick Bakers\nd, Quartermaster close third, Ham\ni West fourth, Kcno filth, aod .lenoli\nitanced.
ea588e538c5c44139819258ac513a71b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.1356164066465 41.681744 -72.788147 lliilld Your Own Bridges\nTraveling in the Interior requires\nmuch patience and precaution.\nThere are many rivers which must\nbe crossed but which offer no means\nof crossing. Consequently bridges\nmust be built. According to tho\nplan most used three or four shots\nare fired Into the water to scare\n:away the crocodiles and then a na\ntive swims across witn a ropo wmen\nho fastens to tho top of a tree. The\nend of the rone is thrown back across\nthe river. The native then cuts\ndown the tree and those on the op-\nposite sldo pull on the rope causing\nlha Ifttet t n full Airnntv iprrtia thtt\nriver, rnus lornung ma nrsi span ui\nthe proposed bridge. The bridge is\nthen mado wider with other trees\nwhich ore fastened to tho first.\nOne of the greatest dangers of\nAfrica is tho of crocodiles,\nDr. Johnson suld. Tho rivers ore in-\nfested with these animals which are\nalways ready to seize those who ven-\nture too near the river side or who\nfall into the water. He said that ho\nhad never seen a crocodile seize a\nwhlto person In this way although\nseveral natives who were with him\nin his travels had suffered this fate.\nShy of Explorer's Camera\nIn relating some of his own ex-\nperiences Dr. Johnson spoke of the\nsuperstition which the natives have\nof cameras. He said that on ono\noccasion shortly afterho had visited\na village with his camera tho child\nof one of the families there died. Im-\nmediately the cause of tho child's\ndeath was said to be tho presence\nof the camera. Consequently, when\nDr. Johnson returned to the village\na short while later all the natives
0f3258110c9e271f858380ec59cdcdfe THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1897.9821917491122 37.305884 -89.518148 ited Washington in March, and there met Sec-\nretary of Agriculture Wilson. I wanted him to\ndistribute among the farmers of Missouri a lot\nof sugar beet seed for experimental purposes.\nHe became interested, and when I returned I\nhad his promise that the seed would be sent.\nHe sent them to me, and I distributed th' m\nabout the state to any fanners who I thought\nwould plant and tend a patch.\n"The results of this planting w;is watclwd\nwith great interest. As soon as the experi-\nmental crop was grown samples were forward-\ned to Washington, ther? to be examined by\nProf. Wylie, chief chemist for the department\nof agriculture. 'He made analysis of hundreds\nof samples, and the result will appear in a bul-\nletin to be shortly issued by the government.\nThese analyses were extremely encouraging.\nThe percentage of saccharine matte contained\nIn the beets ranged from 4'.i to 17 per cent.\nThis a wide range, but it is easily accounted\nfor. In order to raise good sugar beets a farm-\ner must know something about how to culti-\nvate the plant. Few of our farmers possess\nthis knowledge, which accounts in a great\nmeasure for the poor results in some instances.\nBut in some parts of the state, largely popu-\nlated by Germans, I found that many more per-io- ns\nhad cultivated the beet in their own coun-\ntry before coming to America. In these coun-\ntries the best results were obtained; results\nthat really exceed my most sanguine expecta-\ntions. The season was also unfavorable.\n"Few people understand that 60 per csnt. ot\nthe sugar in the world comes from the sugar\nbeet At present the beet is principally cul-\ntivated in France and Germany, where the\npeasantry have found it a lu rative supplement\nto their other crop. In those countries sugar\nsects are profitably cultivated on land that
04d9f019f3316bdd00e9fa050f170310 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1907.546575310756 42.217817 -85.891125 From all parts of the state complaints\nare coming ia with respect to tho condi-\ntion of the oat crop. The last week has\nseen a notable change iu the outlook.\nThe jourg oats iu a large part of tun\nstate have suddenly become as if stricken\nby blight, the outer leaves turning el-lo-\nand afterwards reddish until, after\na little time, the Held appears as if badly\nrusted. A closer examination shows\nthat there are few if any rust pustules\nand the appearance on the surface is\njust enough different from that produced\nby rust to raise a doubt as to the roil\ncaufo of the diiliculty.\nCareful examination with the aid of n\npowerful lens (shows tho culprit to be a\nminute insect called a thrips, very small\nand very quick in its movements, jump\nieg like a llt;t when disturbed and \npcaring completely. These little crea-\ntures have narrow wings with fringes of\nlong hairs instead of tho ordinary form\nof wings. They scrape tho surfaces of\nthe oat leaves and cause them to become\nwithered ai d to turn yellow and die.\nNow, this little creature has never bo-fo- re\nbeen seen in numbers by the writer,\nand it is very diilLult to judge just what\nwill be the outcome of the infestation.\nIf one might judgo by the behavior of\nits relatives, ono would expect tho con-\ndition to improve after one or two good\nrains, since thrips in general thrive in\nhot, dry weather and do not do well\nwhen it is moist. However, it seems to\nbe quite serious in places where there\nhas been a fairly good supply of rain.\nThe larger tho plants are, tho better they\nfare.
3eaab72c05a87cfa4e9db9fe7bd5349e THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.736338766191 38.729625 -120.798546 A Strabos Stoht.—ln a Tillage near\nNewark, England, in an old thatched\nhome, which has been occupied by the\nsame family for nearly three hundred\nyear*, there tires an old man who lias\nnearly completed his 86th year. A person\nwho had occasion to visit him the other\nday, was not a little surprised on hearing\nthe old gentlemen, in course of conversa-\ntion, express his belief that ho was not\nenty going to heaven, but had been there\nonm since bid first introduction into this\nworld. From the account he gives of the\nmatter, it appears that when he was about\neleven Tear* ef ago, he was in an appa-\nrently lifeless state—which he called a\ntrance—for the space of nine days, and it\nwaa during that time he thinks he was\npermitted to behold the glories of heaven.\nIHa parents fully believed him to be dead ;\nthe passing bell was rung ; bis coffin was\nordered and mode ; and on the third day\nhis assembled for the purpose of\nfallowing him to the grave. The clergy-\nbbmb ofthe parish went to look at the sup-\nposed corpse before the coffin-lid was\nscrewed on, and finding it to be warm, he\nat once expressed his opinion that the\nchild was not dead, and after ordering\nthe postponement of the funeral, sent his\nserrani on horseback for a doctor, who,\non arriving at the iiouse, confirmed the\nassertion of the minister, and instructed\ntba beys mother to moisten the boy's\nlips with wine and water twice a day.—\nShe did so ; and on the seventh day he\nshowed signs of life by moving—on the\neighth he could bear the conversation of\npersona in the room—and on the ninth\nday ha was able to open his eyes and rise\nfrom the supposed bed of death. Since\nthat time bis health has\\cen delicate, but\nhw has continued to occupy the grazing\nland adjoining his cottage, and has kept\ncow» after the manner of bis forefathers.
2460195e3e56a85277b5bfd73477301f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.7931506532218 39.745947 -75.546589 Judge and Mr*. E . G. Bradford. Thomas\nF. Bayard, Jr.. A . S. Bortvll, George II.\nBates, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Briughurst,\nJr.. Mr. and Airs. Hamilton M. Barks­\ndale, I >■ v i C. Bird, Mr. and Airs. John B.\nBird. Mr. mid Mrs. Samuel Bancroft, Mr.\nand Mrs. George P. Bissell, Air. ami Mrs.\nJohn Biggs, Airs. William Bush. Mr. and\nAirs. John II. Banning, Air. and Mrs. J .\nDnnferth Bush, the Right Rev. and Mrs.\nLeighton Coleman, Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nAI. Curtis, Air. ami Mrs. Coleman Du­\nPont, Air. ami Mrs. Eugene DuPont, Dr.\nami Mrs. DuPont, Charles 1. DuPont,\nMr. and Mrs. George A. Elliott,\nEugene DuPont, Jr., the Misses DuPont,\nAirs. Victor DuPont, Dr. and Mrs. James\nA. Draper, tlie Misses Draper, Dr. James\nA. Dm tier. Jr., Mr. and Mrs. E. James\nDallett, Mr. and Mrs. John II. Dauby.\nMr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Elliott. Mr. and\nAirs. H. L. Evans, Dr. and Airs. J. A.\nEllegood. Mr. and Mrs. H . L . Fulen-\nwider. H. C. Fritz, the lion, and Mrs.\nGeorge Gray, Andrew C. Gray, tlie\nAliases Gray, Mr. and Mrs. F. L . Gilpin.\nAir. and Airs. S|iotswo(«l Garland, Miss\nGarland, Hon. Ignatius C. Grubb, J.\nC. Gibson. J . Rodney Cause, Air. and\nMrs. W. S . Hilles, the Rev. and Mrs. H.\nAshton Henry, Joseph T. Hilles, (he\nHon. Anthony Higgins. Samuel Isen-\nschmid. Air. and Mrs. Tilglininn J<pin-\nston. Miss Aiadge Johnston, the Misses\nJohnston, Francis B. Kelly, the Hon.\napd Mrs. Charles B. Lore, Mr. and Airs.\nPreston Lea, the Misses Lea. Colonel AA.\nA, LaMotte, Mrs. diaries I, Mellvaine.\nMiss Emily Afellvnine. Airs. David AV.\nMaul), tlie Misses Alnnll, John P. Nlelds,\nColonel and Airs. Benjamin Nields, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ulho Nowland, Robert Peniug-\nton, Mr. and Airs. Charles O. Rnmford,\nSamuel C. Rnmford. Lewis Rnmford. Mr.\nand Airs. Joseph Swift. .Mr. and Airs\nWilliam Swift, the .Misses Swift, the\nHon. AV. C . Spruance, Alp. and Air*.\nAlexander Sellers, Air. aud Airs. A . E .\nSanborn, Air. and Airs. .Murray Stewart,\nAir. and Airs. Willnrd Salslmry, Alis«\nTurner, Aliss Sophie Waples, General\nJames II. Wilson, the Alisses AAilson,\nAir. and Mrs. A . G. Wilson, Alias Natalie\nWilson, Air. and Airs. C. L. Ward, Air.\nand Airs. James P. Winchester. Sydney\nAVinehester, Lieutenant C. C. Williams,\nMr. and Airs. Henderson Weir, Dr. and\nAir. -
29365856711171efdaa7575208ae2416 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.771857891874 58.275556 -134.3925 Lieut. Prosaer, of the signal corps,\nwho has been on a trip of inspection of\nthe telegraph stations between Valdez\nand the Tanaua, reports that Mount j\nWrangell is in eruption and is more\nactive than at any time since white\nmen have been in the Copper river val¬\nley. Wrangell smokes continually^\nbut this fall it is throwing out lava in\nconsiderable quantities. Instead of one\ncrater there are now at least seven\nvents, some of them low down on the\npeak. From these there is a steady\nflow of lava, which can be clearly dis¬\ntinguished with a field glass. This lava\nflow goes down across the glacier fields\non the mountain slope and is causing a\ngreat increase in the volume of the j\nstreams draining that district. From\nKotsina it is reported that the sulphur- j\nous fumes are so strong that prospect¬\nors working near the Kotsina glacier\nare driven out. There seems to be no\nash coming from the volcano, but the\nsmoke and gas are r ising in great quan¬\ntities. Wrangell is only about 130 j\nfrom Valdez, aud about thirty miles\nfrom the settlement at Copper Center.\nIdjtarod, Sept. 30..- The jury which\nhas been listening to the trial of Wm.\nCampbell charged with the killing of\nthe Nelson brothers* returned a verdict\nof guilty of murder in the first degree,\nthis morning after being out since Sat¬\nurday afternoon. Gus and John Nelson\nwere operators in tho Kuskokwim coun¬\ntry about a year ago and it was sup-\nposed t hat they had considerable uion J\ney on them. Campbell was working in I\nthe vicinity and afterwards left rather\nsuddeuly. Some Indians of the vicin¬\nity had noticed the absence of tho Nel- j\nson brothers and started a search for\nthem which resulted in the finding of\ntheir bodies buried near the cabin.\nThey reported the discovery to the\nmaishal who started a search for him,\ntracing him to Ruby City, where he\nwas taken into custody and charged\nwith the murder, which today resulted\nin his conviction. Campbell at one\ntime worked iu the Kluaue country and\nla known in Whitehorse. i
3a2df1641acb99a9bfa958f83a980da4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.2636611705627 58.275556 -134.3925 Quartermaster General Humphrey\nhas announced the several awards of\ncontracts for th9 transportation of\ntroops and supplies from Puget Sound\nto Alaska points during the coming\nseason. Omar J. Humphrey will trans¬\nport all supplies except coal from the\nSound to St. Michael, and all passen¬\ngers and supplies between St. Michaelj\nand Yukon river points in both direc¬\ntions. The Northwestern Commercial\nCompany gets the contract for carrying\nall passengers and supplies except coal\nto Fort Davis (Nome river) and for;\ncarrying passengers from the Sound to\nSt. Michael. The White Star Company\nwill carry all the coal both to St. Mich¬\nael and Fort Davis. The White Pass &\nYukon railroad, operating in connec-\ntion with the P. C. S. S. Co. and with\nBritish steamers between White Pass\n Northern points, bid lowest on\ntroops and supplies from the Sound to\nFort Egbert, and it was proposed to\naward the contract. A protest has\nbeen made against this award, however,\non the ground that the White Pass:\nwould carry the passengers and sup¬\nplies in British bottoms over a part of\nthe route, which is held to be contrary\nto law. It i9 also urged in the protest\nthat it would be necessary to get the\nconsent of the British government to\nallow the transportation of American\ntroops across Canadian territory. The\nprotestants have also called attention\nto the report from Vancouver, B. C.,\nthat the Canadian goveVnment is about\nto put in force a regulation affecting\nshipments between British Columbia\n'and American ports in Alaska similar |\nto our coasting law.
67295e2ac39a03ceb7603ab352c487ae EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.7254098044425 39.745947 -75.546589 The supper served last night by Ihe\nPresbyterian Church women, with\nMrs. S 0 . Hill as chairman, was a de­\ncided success in every way and as\ntho number of people who took sup­\nper on the grounds increased last\nnight over the llrst night, so, It is\nexpected, will the number Increase\neach evening. Suppers ,\nfrom 5 to 7, Tonight SI. Stephen's Lu­\ntheran Churcli, Mrs. 0. W. Ladd, chair­\nman, will serve the supper with tlie\nfollowing menu :\nGold boiled ham, fresh baked li.un,\npolato salad, sliced tomatoes, coin,\npepper sauce, bread and butler, cof­\nfee, sliced peaéhes and cake.\nEvery one of the twenty booths did\na splendid business last night. There\nwasnt an Idle moment fir the work­\ners, all of whom were working like\ntrojans to meet tho immense demands\nmade upon them by the crowds.\nIn spite of the Tact that the weath­\ner is cool, Ice crea.n proved popular\nlast night, in cones, on plates and to\ncarry home in boxes, ties idea others\nwho have dnnalcd Ice cream as pr.-vi-\nously published, it was learned that\nmore dealers announced donations\nlate yesterday. The»» were: Suppléé,\nMbs Edith N. McGonne, '.successor to\n1». B . Jones Co.), (p'orge Hegas and\nLaskaris It is expected lhat other\ndealers will donate ice cream for the\nremaining days, of the week.\nWhile the names of the co.nimilt"cs\nwho are running Ihe various booths\nhave been previously published in\nfnost cases there are a (.-.v who have\nnot been announced up to this time.\nThey Include:\nDelaware Polish Beneficial Associ­\nation: W. Jacubowski, S. Yasik, A.\nDalukl, B. Kanackl, V. Kowelewski,\nMisses V. M . Jacubnweki .11. K Adam-\nowskl. B. Wesnlewski, and M. Yasik.\nCentral Labor Union—Mrs. Mary\nHetaler, Miss Slella Jcstwlck, Mis* Ce­\ncilia Wasik and Mrs. Jennie Bans It.\nKnights of Columbus—H . E. Kalghn,\nW. F . Lynn, Jospeh C. Dougherty.\nHugh Collins, J. A . Spragg, Mrs. IL E .\nKalghn anil Mrs. J. A. Spragg.\nThe bazaar will continue every after­\nnoon, starting at A oclock, and every\nevening to and including Friday night.\nIt may be extended over Saturday\nnight if publie patronage justifies,\nand It now looks as though this will\nbe likely.
67e9267e4eefc32ed9732cad9e0cef96 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.7767122970574 43.798358 -73.087921 other way, that nn unhappy collision had\narisen in the abolition ranksof Massachu-\nsetts, from which m.iny apprehended dis-\naster to our cause. The first indication\nand evidence of the general spi it of Mas-\nsachusetts abolitionism, was the adoption\na resolution, that all persons present,\nwho hel I to immediate emancipation with-\nout expatriation, should be invited to de-\nliberate and act with the Convention.\nThis was evidence enough, that there was\npar.y here. Not a man desired other\ncredentials for the adjudication of what-\never question might come up. The feel-\ning of all hearts was strong, thai our ques-\ntion should be d- - bated nnd decider by ab-\nolitionists as such. Some may apprehend\nincon venit nee or inequality from the gen-\neral adopiio ; of such a rule, in a Conven-\ntion, wbijh is understood to be a delegat-\ned body. Without pretending to decide\nthat point, we only say, that its ad lotion\nthis instaiue, was a most noble expres-\nsion of mutual :onfiden:e in the integrity\nand intelligence abolitionists. And the\nresult has not belied the promise.\nThe subject of the Clerical Protest was\nintroduced on Thursday morning, at the\nearnest instance of a friend of the protest-\ners, who was heard at full length in regard\nthe grievances complained of. But lit-\ntle was Slid in reply, and the resolution,\napproving the doings of the Board of Man-\nagers, and exhorting the auxiliary socie-\nties and all parties to let the subject rest,\nwas adop'ed with hardly a dissenting\nvoice. Thus has a collision, which occa-\nsioned much exultation among our oppo-\nnents, been quietly and judiciously dis-\nposed of, by the good sense and kind feel-\nings of the people. The fears that some\nentertained for the ark of liberty may be\nallayed. The proceedings at Worcester,\ntogether with those at Utica, mentioned in\nanother column, are evidence, that the\nprinciples of Abolitionism have a deep\nfoundation in 'he hearts of the people, that\nit is not an affair of men or of leaders, but\nof truth and human we! ft re.
1901ea25996b556a3d80cc2fc2f3b909 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.0452054477423 40.735657 -74.172367 Bc'ng known as lot No. 9 on revised map of 1\n"Torertv belonging to Catharina Wenzel In the j\nCity of Newark, roto'e by Bortle and Krelner, 1\n•ur v eyors. July Pth. 1907.\nTenth tract—Beginning in the easterly line of |\nAldine street at a point th« rein dlatnnt 313 98-10t) |\nfeet southerly from the southeast comer of the\n'»m« and B-agaw avenue: thence running south\n15 degrees 16 minutes east 100 feet: tl.enc® south\n13 /eg-ees 66 minutes west 26 'eet: thence north I\n!5 degrees 15 minutes west 100 'eet to the a n o- :\nmid line of Aline street, and thence running\nnorth 43 degree* 65 minutes east along the same\n!5 feet to the place of beginning.\nBeing known ns lot .10, 10 on revised map of 1\nproperty belonging to Catharina Wenzel in the\nCity of Newark, made hy Borrle and Krelner, (\nlurveyora. July Pth, 1907 .\nEleventh truct—Beginning In Jhe wester'y line ;\nof Aldine street at a point therein distant J\n146 42-100 feet southerly Pom the southwest 1\n of the same and Bragaw avenue: thence [\nrunning south 43 degrees 66 minutes west 25\nand 28-100 feet: thence north 46 degrees 16 mJn-\nutes west 98 and 66-100 feet: thence northerly 1\nparallel with Willoughby street 25 and 13-100\n'eet. and thence running easterly 98 and 33-100\nfeet to the aforesaid line of Aldine street and\nthe place of beginning.\nBeing known as lot No 11 on revised map of\nproperty belonging to Catharina Wenzel In the\nCity of Newark, made by Borrle and Krelner.\nsurveyors. July Pth, 1907.\nTwelfth tract—Beginning in the westerly line\nof Aldine street at a point therelu distant 320\nand 42-100 feet southerly from the southwest\ncorner of the same and Bragaw av nue: thence\n•tinning southerly a ong the said westerly lino\nof Aldine street 25 feet; thence westerly at\nright angle® to Willoughby street 98 and J3-100\nfeet; thence northerly parallel with Willoughby\nstreet 25 feet, and thenre easterly at right\nangles to Willoughby street 98 feet to the\naforesaid line of Aldine street and the place of\nbeginning.
7f8e47e82797c8909be227233c2172af THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9959016077212 39.290882 -76.610759 It has affordod mo great satisfaction to see, in\nyour paper of the 7th instant, that the subject of\nthe resumption of specie payments has been ta-\nken up, by so able a financier as Mr. L). A .\nSmith. Few men are better acquainted with\nthe principles of banking and currency than\nthat gentleman. His long experience, and the\nclose attention he has given to these great mat-\nters, entitle his opinions to the highest respect.\nRut whether we are content to take liiin as a\nsafe guide at the present moment, as well we\nmight, much has been acconip 1.shed, by awaken-\ning the attention of this community to the salu-\ntary counsels with which he has favored us.\nThe prospects of Baltimore are more auspici-\nous now, than they have been since ISIB. The\nrich products the immense regions by which j\nshe is backed, will, ere long, be pouring their\nwealth in ceaseless s'reams into lier lap. The\nmost sanguine imagination can scarcely grasp\nthe vast amount of trade, with which she is to\nbe favored, and nothing seems wanting to rea-\nlize these bright anticipations,but acontinuance\nof her cau ous policy, and an enlargement of\nher active capital, lier caution has placed hei\nin the enviable state of unindebtedness, in which\nshe now stands, towards the rest of the world.?\nThus happily placed, she is ready for the pro-\nmised harvest, if the proper' implements can he\nobtained, wherewith to secuie it.\nWill the resumption of specie payments by\nlitr banks, add to, or diminish her strength?\nWill that measure snatch from her the golden\nfruit, and throw it into other hands."
06ffc160b51dbb44ffbc6dd71a4c75f2 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.042465721715 58.275556 -134.3925 A press dispatch received by the\nGold Digger yesterday informs us that\nPresident Roosevelt 19 preparing to\ngive the Filipinos a parliment of their\nown, and that Mr. Taft, the secretary\nof war, has been ordered to the Philip¬\npines next March to maxe amaze¬\nments for the election of members of\nthe new legislature, and to turn over\nto them the work done by the Filipioo\ncommission. It would seem that if the\nFilipiuos are able to conduct a terri¬\ntorial form of government that the peo¬\nple of Alaska should also be given a\nsimilar privilege. The Alaskans are1\nquite equal in intelligence to the brown\nmen who wield the bolos aud make life\nmiserable for the United States soldiers\nin the Philippines, aud furthermore,\nthe white American citizens of Alaska\nare well able support themselves, as\nevidenced iD rbe fact that they produce\nper annum more per capita than any\nother class of ceil in the world. Take\nthe Suvvsrd peninsula as an illustration.\nIn the past vcai there has been about\nsit thousand people here, add they\nproduced approximately eight million\ndollars in gold dust alone, an aver¬\nage of about thirteen buudred and\nthirty-three dollars apiece. The gold\nproduction of the whole United States\njs less than eighty and a half million\ndollars, while the population is esti¬\nmated at more than eighty-five and a\nhalf million people. The gold produc¬\ntion of the people of the United States\nin general is therefore less than one\ndollar per capita, as against a produc¬\ntion of thirteen hundred and thirty-\nthree dollars per capita in the Seward\npeninsula.
0c8bd0e576218ee8f213d5fcb05ccec7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.8866119902348 40.063962 -80.720915 To-day H. R. was on deck for sev\nral hours, conversing sweetly, anc\n>oklng like the angel she ife. But hap\nineaa hood flies from me; a ateamei\nme In sight, bound for Sydney. Shi\nIgnalled us to heave to, and sent f\noat. This was done, and the boa\nrought buck a letter for her. It seemi\nley took us for the Shannon, in Whlcfc\naip she was expected.\n'*rhe letter was from him. How be:\naeek flushed and her eye beamed at\ntie took it. And O the sadness, thi\ngony, that stood beside.her unheeded\n"I left the deck; I could not haveosn\ndned myself. What athlng Is wealth\niy wealth, that wretch, can stretch no\niahand across the ocean, and put\njtter into her hand under my very eye\nLway goes all that I have gained bj\nelng near her. while he is far away\n[e is not. in England now.he Is here\nlis odlouB presence has driven mi\nfom her. O that I could a chtlc\ngain, or in my grave, to get away fron\nlis Hell or Love and Hate."\nAt this point, we beg leave to take thi\narrative into onr own hands again.\nMr. Hazel actually left the deck tc\nvoid the sight of Helen Rolleston'i\nashed cheek and beaming eyes, read\nig Arthur Ward law's letter.\nJLnd here We may as well observi\n3 at Tie retired not merely because ih«\njrture was hard to bear. He hail SOmi\nisclosures to make, on -jceaching l£n\nland ; but his good sense told him tbii\nras not the time, or the place, to maki\nlem, nor Helen Rolleston the persot\ni whom, in the first instanoe, thej\nugbt to be made.\nWhile he tries to relieve his swellinf\neart by putting its throbs on pape;\nind, in troth, this is some relief, foi\nrant of which many a less unhappy\nlan than Hazel has gone mad), let ut\ntay by tbe lady's aide, and read he;\nstter with ber.
01404a7008a82d295b92e3b83f9169f8 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.3767122970573 40.441694 -79.990086 Let him who may imagine the effect pro-\nduced upon Geoffrey by this heartrending\nand astounding epistle! Could Beatrice have\nseen his face when he had finished reading\nit she would never have committed suicide.\nIn a minute it became like that of an old\nman. As the whole truth sank into his\nmind, such an agony of horror, of remorse,\not unavailing woe and helplessness swept\nacross his soul that for a moment he thonght\nhis vital forces would give way beneath it,\nand that he should die. as indeed ia that\ndark hour he would have rejoiced to do.\nAnd of those cowards who hounded her to\ndeath, if indeed she was already dead. Ob ,\nhe would kill this Owen Davies yes, and\nElizabeth, too, were it not that she was a\nwoman; and for Honoria, he had dona\nwith her. Scandal, what did he care for\nscandal? If he had his will there should be\na scandal, indeed, for he would beat this\nOwen Davies, this reptile, who did not hesi-\ntate to use a woman's terrors to prosper the\nlulfilling of his lust yes, and then drag\nhim to the Continent and kill him there.\nOnly vengeance was left to him!\nStop, he must not give wav perhaps she\nwas not dead perhaps that horrible presage\nof evil which had struck him like a storm,\nwas nothing but a dream. Could he tele-\ngraph? No, it was .too late; the office at\nBryngelly would be closed it was past 8\nnow. But he could go. There was a train\nleaving a little after 9 he should be there\nby 650
a15f5f2fa6da54658a92285e7976b756 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0616438039067 39.261561 -121.016059 There is nothing in the industrial world\nat the present time more remarkable than\nthe production of petroleum. That great\nlakes of this valuable substance should have\nlain a few feet beneath the surface for thou*\nsands of years, is one among innumerable\nproofs that the intelligence of civilization is\nrequired to enable man to bring to light\nand render available the natural resources\nof the planet which we inhabit. One very\ncurious circumstance in the development of\nthis industry was the tarriness of even our\nenterprising community to direct their at-\ntention to it after it was discovered. In\n182(1 an account of the Little Muskingum\nregion, in Ohio, was published in Sillimans\nJournal, in which the statement was made\nthat in boring for salt water vaBt quantities\nrf petroleum was obtained, which was be-\nginning to be in demand for lamps in work-\ntops aud manufactories, lhe writer says:\n*It affords a clear, brisk light when burnt\n this way, and will be a valuable article\ntor lighting the street lamps in the future\ntitles of Ohio.” Though this account was\npublished in 1820, the discovery was made\n*a 1819, and yet this mine of wealth was\nsuffered to lie unappropriated in the heart\nof this country for thirty-five years. Atten-\ntion was again called to It by the success of\nthe coal oil manufacture, and in 1854 two\ngentlemen in New York, Messrs. Eveleth\nand Bissell, secured the right to the upper\nspring on Oil Creek, in Pennsylvania, and\norgan heed a company to search for the oil.\nThe operations were slow, and tho first oil\nMas struck at a depth of 71 feet, on the\n26lb of August, 1856. The drill suddenly\ndropped into a cavity, aud oil rose within\nlive inches of the surface. A pump being\n. ntroduced the company were soon in tho\nreceipt of one th usaud gallons of oil per\nday.
222ee1e8c4dcbcdbdd6d2697c16046a4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.6315068176052 40.063962 -80.720915 Do not allow your carrlagu to rattle qj\ntike a tbreehlng machine, butaa faatae «\nnutaor bolta Rat looee, tlx them. Waah- ?\nera of aole leather on tbe aptndlee of .\nthe axeltroeu will hIod thn cliutnr num. f .,\nid by loo much "play." A piece of o\nrubber put Id between the thrill Iron £\nnil tbe clip, wlllallenm mature there; ?\nuna a little ooal oil on tbe olrole, or\nII fib wheel, will atop aquaaklng.. el\nWhere note work looee, out a thread\nIn front of tham with a coal chisel, after\nacrewlng them up.tight,\nWhkrk Fruit Grows Tit* Best.. a\nFralt on the hill, flays the Journal oj K\nAfrleullure will not grow ao large aa S\non the rich valley; bat It will elaborate 11\nlie juices and lta quality more. It \nalio last longer.It will be sounder. 9\nIt will be leas affected by lnsecta and 01\ndltease generally. It also reqalrea\nmore cultivation, care of the aoll,etc.\nOn Ibe whole, give ub an orchard on an a\nelevated site. Oa a low, clay-bound B\nplace, It la of the atinoat lmportanco b\nthat the aoll be thoroughly drained, g\nDiaiuaKaorHoBSca..Fortliecuraof al\nring-bone, poll evil or flatula, apply,\nwhen Orel noticed, one ounoe of oil of\npike, one ouuce of oil of atone, and one\npint, aplrita of turpontlna; mix and gj\nWilli aa much gum of camphor aa it\nwill dlaaolve. The hair ought to be p\ncut off oloae, aud apply every oilier day\nfor a week at a lime. If poll evil la\nrunuing or dlacbarglng, probe the lube\nwith verdigris and aplrita of turpentine.
24e1dbcd7d6cbee435b20d078a39ebd8 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.1109588723998 41.004121 -76.453816 without remorse, whenever wo meet\nhim on Ids nightly wanderings V\nAmong tho prejudices cherished by\ntho masses against harmless animals,\nfew nro Htiongor than that felt nlmost\nuniversally against huts, arising pioba-bl - y\nfrom tho simple fact that they aro\nchildren of tho night, and forced to car-\nry on their search after food in dark-\nness. It may be, however, that their\npeculiar hldeousiiess has given addi-\ntional strength to this feeling, for tho\nJewish legislation already declared\nthem unclean and accursed, and tho\nGreeks borrowed their wings for tho\nharpies, ns Christians have done for tho\n! dovil. A poor, lost bat need but lly in\nton room tilled with company, nnd ov\nerybody Is frightened. Superstitious\npooplo tremblo ut their mere preseuco\nns nn evil omen, nud stronger.\nminded among tho fair excuse their\nterror by a pretended fear for their\nhair nn apprehension which could be\nwell foundod only, if tho accounts of\nInsects being hnrborod In their .chig-\nnons should bo verified. It Is true,\nthese children of darkness aro neither\nfair in form nor amlablo In temper.\nTho naked, black ekln o( their wings,\nbtrelchcd out between tholrenormotisly\nlengthened lingers, llku tho bilk of un\numbrella between tho whalebone of\ntho frame, tho ugly claws of thoir hind\nfeet, tho baro appendages which fro\nuuently adorn thoir noses and curs In\ntho most eccentric maimer, and their\nperfectly nolsless, nlmost mysterious\nflight by touch, and not by sight all\ntlicso peculiarities eomblnu to make\nthem unwelcouio guests among men.\nAnd yet they are real public benefac
4cb81bf4722e05bced03ea2efcbf6ad0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.6589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 1(M; Heading 115J4: Michigan Southern 85>\nIllinois Central 12.V'*.\nThe I\\*>t notes the fact of receiving the r\n|x>rt of the London cotton market uptouot\nto-day iHJfore it received that of our om\nmarket up to the same hour.\nThe 'ommerelal's money article says:\nThe stock market continues quiet contra\nto a very general expectation. <Jovernmen\ncontinue very firm; old 5-3)s are in demai\nat 118%(5i;113%; the advance In these api>ea\nto liavp Ik-oii due as much to the corner\nthem as to any Inrge foreign demand. Ye\nterday ami to-day there was a borrowing d\nmand for the l>onds which is supplied wit\ndifficulty. Some moderate orders for Ihiih\nhave l>een received from Paris which caim\nIhj executed at present prices of exchani\nand Ixmds. The orders appear to be fro\nfirms engaged m intnxlucfng in tl\nBourse rather than from investors. Krie\n<|Uiet. It is reported that already the spect\nlative director has his re-election sure throut\n(lie stock in his owu hands and proxit\nMoney is a shade easier than yesterday; cji\nloans are 4(<i5 per cent, the majority of trail\nactions l>eiug at lower lates. The payxnei\non account of tlie tein|K»niry loan has n\nyet produced that extreme ease which w;\nanticipated. Discounts are quiet, the ainoui\nof hills ofiertng being very limited. K\nchange continues very heavy. There is\nlarge excess of bills over the demand; sigl\n(tills draw against 5-20s, and southern bills <i\nParis especially abundant. Some of tl\nleading drawers of sterling are asking 107 f<\nsixty day's bills, hut we hear of no transa\nlions at over UK?*; good bills are otrering\nlOO/alOtt1,.
07ddc2d98555c4c578e2acd1692cba78 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.57397257103 42.217817 -85.891125 MORTGAGE SALE.\nDefault having been made in tbe conditions\nof a certain indenture of Mortgage executed\nbv Stephen Ford and Ada Ford, of Lawton,\nVan Euren Couoty Micbigan, to Anthony Feld-be- r,\nbeiring date tbe fourteenth day of Sep-\ntember, A. D. 1871, and recorded in tbe office of\nRegister of Deeds for tbe county of Vau Eu-\nren in tbe state of Micbigan, on tbe 18th day\nof September, A.D. 1871, iu Liber 2 of Mort-\ngages, on page 372, which said mortgage was on\ntbe 7th day of February, A. D. W7i, duly as-\nsigned by tbe said Feldber to Jaaes G.\n(VDwyer and tbe said assignment was on the\n9th day of February, 1871, recorded in the said\nRegister's office, iu Liber U of mortgages, on\npage 13G. And on tbe 14th day of May 1875\nthe said mortgage was duly assigned by\ntbe said O'Dwyer, to Eben U. Reach, and on the\n4th day of November, A. D. 1875, said last men-\ntioned assignment was duly recorded in said\nRegister's office, in Liber y, of mortgages, on\npage 497; and on tbe 9th day of November,\n1875, tbe said mortgage was again assigned by\ntbe said Eeacb, to Luke r. round, and on tbe\n20th day of Janaary, 1376, tbe said last men-\ntioned assignment was recorded in said Regis-\nter's office, in Liber 9, of mortgages, on page\n541, by wbich tbe power of sale contained\ntherein has become operative, on which mort-\ngage there is claimed to be due at the date of\nthis notice for the principal sum secured by\nsaid mortgage, and the interest and exchange\ncovenanted to be paid, in ail, tbe sum of four\nhundred eeventy-ti- x
0b474a428464f0cbd038e1afd9e39bd2 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.3592895858633 38.894955 -77.036646 The closing session of the Maryland State\nDental Association and the Washington\nCity Dental Society, which began its third\nunion meeting at the Columbian Dental\nCollege building on H street, Friday, was\ncalled to order at 3:30 o'clock Saturday\nafternoon. Previous to this session there\nwere clinics In the upper rooms of the\nbuilding where also a great array of\ndental instruments and preparations were\nexhibited for the benefit of those Interested\nIn the progress of the manufacture of\ndental tools, preparations, and machinery.\nOne of the new things in the art of\ndentistry and one which attracted per-\nhaps the most attention was the Wheeler\nfractional volt selector, which optunda\nsensitive dentine so that the orerator can\nreadily extract without causing pain to\nthe patient. This volt selector is the very\nnewest Improvement In dental machinery\nand can be used from a battery or placed\nou the Edison direct circuit.\nA number or people were present who\nwere operated ou, the various methods in\nmodern dentistry being used. One young\nman who had suffered for a long time with\na defective tooth, one which dentists were\nunable to toucb with an Instrument, had\nthe member removed after the\ntooth hail been treated to a mild current\not electricity.\nThere were a number of women present\nwho also had their teeth extracted.\nThe afternoon session was taken up\nwholly with the reading of papers and re-\nports. Dr. L. C. F . Hugo presented an in\nteresting report on "Pathology and the\nrapeutics, ' which was discussed at con-\nsiderable length.\nDr. Claude of Annapolis read a paper\non "Pathology and therapeutics of dead\nteeth" and a paper on 'Dental legisl-\nation' was read by Dr H.B.Noble, who wa- -\nfollowed by Drs. Sweeney and Grady. Dr.\nCryer made an exhibit of cross sections\nof skull which brought out some remarks\nfrom Ids listeners. It was voted to hold\nthe next meeting In Baltimore.\nAbout fifty enjoyed the splendid ban-\nquet which was served at Freund's Sat-\nurday evening. It was an elaborate din-\nner to which the dentists sat down The\nmenu consisted of nearly a doen Inter-\nesting courses The banquet hall was\ni tastefully decorated and the table arranged\nin the highest style of the caterer 3 art\nDr. B. Holly Smith of Ealtlmore acted\nas toastmaster.
2c163ba0dc1c7922a8b73d70fac6d231 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.050684899797 58.275556 -134.3925 legislature elected by the citizens of\nAlaska is I he question. President Taft\nthinks congress can best do the work,\npossibly through the aid of a commis¬\nsion appointed to investigate the need\nof the country, lie has so expressed\nhimself. Judge YVhickersham, the dele¬\ngate to congress from Alaska, believes\nin a simple form of home rule. He be¬\nlieves that the proplo of Alaska are the\nbest qualified to make their own laws,\nand there i» no doubt that this belief is\nshared by a great majority of the citi¬\nzens of Alaska; but in view of the pres¬\nidents-unequivocal opinion on the sub¬\nject the outlook for home rule is not\nencouraging. The main contention of\nthe famous opponent of home rule is\nth.it Alaska lias not an adequate per\nmaoent population to undertake the\nsei ious business of legislation. By im¬\nplication, at least, it is averred that it\nwill be some before Alaska has a\npermanent population that will eutitle\nit to self government. The allegation\nby so distinguished z personage as the\npresident of the United States will not\nhelp to settle the couutiy, and, above\neverything, Alaska needs homo build¬\ners. The building of roilroads will\ncreate permanent population. J hese\nrailroads will bo an incentive to the\ndevelopment of agricultural resources.\nIf Alaska were granted homo rule it\nwould be a tacit admission of the fact\nthat the country is entitled to a per¬\nmanent population; recognition of the\nfact that in the generations to come it\nwill be the home of countless thous¬\nands. The writer hopes to live to see\nthe day when Alaska will be a state,\npossibly more than one state. Hi the\nmeantime u the citizens of Alaska want\nhome rule, they must fight for it* Noth¬\ning worth while is secured in this world\nwithout a struggle.
114993fc93d3fae7029df4622d2c4ec2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.5986301052765 39.745947 -75.546589 i>au»» after four Physicians lind In­\neffectually Treated tike Case.\n(From the Niagara Fallt Review.)\nBeing told that the eight-year old daughter\nof Mrs. Dorety, Ontario Avenue, hud been\nmiraculously cured of St. Vitus dance, we\ndecided to investigate the case and ascertain\nthe facts. Accordingly\nwhen shcn'swS »he facts as fallows ;\n“ It is hdoiw »wo years and a half since\nMabel was stricken with St. Vitus dance\ncan-cd by the weakening effects of la grippe\nami rheumatism. Three local physicians\nwere called in as was also one doctor of con­\nsiderable reputation from Niagara Falls, N. Y .,\nbut in the face of tho prescriptions of these\nphysicians and the best of care, Mabel grew\nrapidly worse. She could not be left alone\nan insianl and was us helpless as an infant\nas site bad no control of her limbs at all. Sue\ncould neither walk without assistance nor\ntake food or drink. At this stage one of tha\nattending physicians said, “Mrs. Dorety,\nthere I* no use in my coming here any more.\nThere is nothing that X know of can be done\nfur vour little girl.”\n“ Well matters went on that way for ashort\ntime with no better results till one day I was\nsun- the poor child was dying,\nhaving seen accounts of St. Vitusdance cured\nhy;he use of I>r. Williamstiuk fills \nfail- IV pic and I determined to try\nI was skeptical as to the effect and only tried\nthem as a last resort, but was soon agreeably\nsurprised at the result, in less than three\nmouths she was so much better that the dread\ndisease almost entirely disappeared, and ths\npills were discontinued. In a few months,\nhowever, she showed that the symptoms had\nnot beim entirely eradieated from her system,\nso I had liar again commence the uss of the\nfink fills. 1 feel i'ertaiu that all traces of\nthe awful malady will he swept away, for sha\ngoes to school now and wo have not the slight­\nest auTietv in leaving her alone. Dr. Wil­\nliams fink fills are certainly a grand reme­\ndy and I would not h- without them under\nknv eonshl 'ration, far f think they am worth\ntheir weight In gold, as in mv little girl's\ncase they have been true tn all they adver­\ntise. 1 km only too glad tn let others know\nof this m raciil i r- cum through the use of\nDr. Williams fink fills. \nDr. Williams fink fills contain, in a con*\ndnnsed form, all the elements necessary to\ngive new life and richness to the blood and\nrestore mattered nerves. They are also a\nspecific for troubles peenliar to females, such\nas suppressions, irregularities and all forms
542c26d8cb66ec0b709a90e8c1da2ec0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.0808218860984 37.561813 -75.84108 Applitons' Jocbhal gives. In a weekly form, all\nthe features of the magazine. Its weekly issue\nbrings it a more frequent visitor to the family than\nis the case with monthly periodical, while, in\ncourse of the year, much greater aggregate and a\nlarger variety of papers are furnished than are giv-\nen in any of the regular month Ilea. But, for those\nwho prefer it, the Jocbmai. is pat up in Moktsxt\nPasts, and in this form its scope and variety, a\ncompared with other magazines, heroine coospica\nousiy apparent.\nAfpletohs' Jocbmai. win continue to preseat\nhealthful, sound, instructive, and entertaining liter-\nature. It will confine Itself, as a rule, to mm mriml\nnote! at a time; It will contain the best short stories\nattainable; it will give picturesque descriptions of\nplaces, and stirring narratives of travel aud adven-\nture; it will have entertaininr nanera variooa\nsubjects that pertain to the para aits and recreations\nthe people; it will give portraiu and sketches of\npersons distinguished in various walks of life: will\npresent lively, social sketches, having ia special\nview these things the knowledge of which will con-\ntribute to the welfare and happiness of the house-\nhold; it will describe phases of life in all quarters of\nthe globe; it will discuss the important events of the\ntime, and the advances made in art, literature, and\nscience; ft will endeavor to reflect the Ideas, move-\nments, and development of eocistv; and, while hop-\ning to enlighten, will strenuously "aim to entertain,\nwith large abundance of material, all who resort to\npagea for intellectual pleasure. Illustration will\nused sufficiently to give variety and animation to\npages; but the aim will be to make it rather a\njournal of popular high-cla- ss
153a387a635e76b33061b3aa964e4eca THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.4753424340436 39.261561 -121.016059 Statesman is in the habit of resorting to the most\ncontemptible perversion of truth, in order to\ncast oditim upon public men whom it hates\nDuring the discussion in the U. S . Senate, on\nthe bill to repeal the law granting fishing boun-\nties. Mr. Hale, Republican Senator of New\nHampshire, offered an amendment, repealing\nthe laws establishing the naval sohool at An-\nnapolis, and the military school at West Point.\nAmong those who voted for the amendment,\nwas Mr. Broderick, and the Statesman sets this\ndown as an evidence that he is a Blnck Repub-\nlican, and misrepresents the people of Cnlifur\nnin. On the same principle it might tie contend-\ned that nearly all the Democratic Senators are\nBlack Republicans, because they voted for the\nresolution offered by Mr. Seward, who is regard-\ned as the blackest of the Blnck Republicans,\ngiving the widow of Cnpt. Herndon ST/iOO, as\nan appreciation of the services of her husband.\nThe Statesman, in order to conceal the whole\ntruth, omits to the affirmative vole on\nHales amendment. We have taken some pains\nto hunt it up, and find that Pugh of Ohio, and\nJohnson of Tennessee, voted for the amendment;\nthese gentlemen have heretofore heen regarded\nas Democrats, but of course this vote proves\nthem to be Black Republicans ; and according\nto the Statesman's logic. Senators Seward and\nWilson must be Democrats, for they voted\nagainst the amendment. The Statesman has but\none idea ; to vilify and misrepresent Senator\nBroderick, is its highest ambition, and seems to\nbe the only object for which it is published.\nSo far as the naval and military schools are\nconcerned, it is to be regretted that they were\nnot abolished, os they are a disgrace to a repute\nlican government. Tbe institutions are kept up\nfor tbe purpose of educating the sons of mem-\nbers of Congress, at the public expense, and had\nit not been that so many Congressmen were in-\nterested in keeping (hero up, they would have\nbeer abolished years ago.
09a216e4f39bacf4f9d64880ca951967 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8401639028032 44.939157 -123.033121 (Capital Journal Special Service)\nFruitlaml, Novi i. Wm. Donaldson\nhas sold his potatoes to a firm in Pra-tu-\nfor 80 cents a bushel.\nYes, the present price of wheat. 1b\ngood for the farmer for tho farmer\nwho has any to sell. There are hum!\nreds owning small tracts and some who\nown larger who have none to sell. I\ncould count nearly or quite a dozen in\nthis community who 'have none to sell,\nwho have not even enough for their\nbread and some of these did not have\na bushel. And the farmer who has wheat\nto sell gets $1.25 to $1.30 in the Salem\nmarket. A bushel of good wheat wi\nmake 40 pounds of flour. Forty pounds\nof tlour at prices quoted in the capi-\ntal Journal of Monday, Oct. 30 , was\n valley from $1.90 to $2.10 per 50\nrounds. For hard wheat from $2.25 to\n$2.50. This is Salem prices. This flour\ncosts from a little over 4 cents a pound\nfor valley flour, and 5 cents for the\nhighest priced hard wheat flour. Now\nwo can see where the farmer who sells\nhis $1.30 wheat gets off. If he buys\nvallev flour, 40 pounds (what his bush-\nel of wheat makes) will cost him $l.0,\n30 cents more than he got for his wheat.\nIf he buys the highest priced hard\nwheat flour it will cost him $2.00, 70\ncents more than he got tor his bushel.\nStill if ho had no wheat to sell and\nhad to buy his flour he would be hard\nup against it as are we who have no\nwheat to sell.
c04d1d9816437ec0273b354bf24ed2f5 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.8702185476118 31.960991 -90.983994 fWlHE.SE Lozenges have now been in used«\nI the Southern and Western States, up»i:à\nof twelve months, during w hich time them«\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in tli# annals of medicine In over 50,i'-A\nthey have proved an infallible remedy fontu\ndestruction of those reptiles within which in\nthe means of sweeping off hundred* and tw\nsands of the most blooming children and path,\nsevering the cords of affection, and foreverbiut-\ning the fondest hopes of tho parent. Sogt«!\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that th»y\nmay- well bc called the only certain worm di\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest di?-\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kind*\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many due*»\narise from worms, and occasion long *nd in­\ntense suffering, and eveu death, without \never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, whes\none or two dosos of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a coni®«»\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flaturing\n; commendations from physicians, heads of ami' 1\nlies, and the public generally. Much more imp |\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with«-1'3 j\nthey may be administered to persons of ail ag* 1\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude c I\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms,o I\nthe im potency of most of the preparations whim I\nheretofore have been presented to the coinfflu- I
516ed4d50f096f4c916147ec5fe2a2d7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.5438355847286 58.275556 -134.3925 With two gold service stripes and\nthe appearance of a real "boar cat."\n(.rover Kertis. a well known local\nboy. arrived homo^n the Sioux last\nevening. after completing fifteen\nmonths' service In Franco. Kert It\nn as a member of Company !«. 23rd\nKnglneer*. which caw a lot of serv¬\nice rebuilding roads and bridges be¬\nhind the line of advance of the Am¬\nerican troops The company went\nthrough the ofTennlve around Ver¬\ndun. In the St. Mlhlel and through¬\nout the bitter Argonno campaign,\nmost of the tlmo between the artlj-\nlery and Infantry, putting the rosds\nand bridges In shape for transporta¬\ntion. Most of the work was done at\nnight. If poaulble, but tho company\nhad a fairly long llat of casualties.\nKertis was one of the lucky ones,\ngetting nothing In Jho shape of an\nInjury except a sprained knee.\nAfter the armistice was signed.\n company remained near Ver¬\ndun until May 11th. repairing roads\nand helping to clean up the country.\nThe outfit had In charge a detach¬\nment of 1200 Gsrman prisoners, who\nwere assigned to reconstruction\nwork. The Americana got along\nvery well with their former enemies,\nand all prisoners assigned to work\nunder the Yanks considered them¬\nselves very fortunate, as they re¬\nceived far better treatment than\nwhen under the supervision of the\nFrenchmen. The wrongs of the lat-\nter were too frech In their minds\nto pormlt them treating their pris¬\noners to the best In the commissary,\nand It was claimed that the Ger¬\nmans fared but little better than did\nthe allied prisoners In Germany, at\nleast so far as '.he ¦food was con¬\ncerned. None of the Helnlcs over\nattempted to escape from the Amer¬\nicans. though desertions were com¬\nmon occurrence where tho Kronch
0cc25c91bbddc2a7e6914cd4d09d150b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.009589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 United States government. To provide\nthe money for this and to show the\nUnited Stalrfe government that the city\nIs willing to assist, a bill was offered\nfor (he board's couBidoratlcn, setting\nforth that the city of Wilmington\nshould pay ten per cent, of the $609,000\nnecessary for the completion of this\nwork. The will Is so word:«! that the\ncity would have to pay from $10,000 to\n$20,000 a year while the work was go­\ning on, until the full $60.000 shall have\nbeen paid to the government engi­\nneers, which would leave the govern­\nment to pay only $540,000.\nIn discussing the filling up of the\nriver, W. W. Lobdell said that there 1*\nno doubt in his mind that the river Is\nshoaled in a great measure by the\nsewerage, and also by the slipping mud\nof the I «inks. Mr. L) tide II spoke at\nlength on the subject, and cited) In­\nstances in his own experience where\nshoals had been formell both the\nsewers and the loose marsh land. In\nconclusion he said that in his opinion\nthe proper way to remedy this trouble\nwas to bulkhmd the river.\nIn explanation of the bulkheading\nprocess, President I>awton said that it\nwas intended to build a bulkhead along\nboth banks of the river for about throe\nnuke, making six miles of bulkhead to\nbuild at about $10 per lineal foot Mp.\nLawton further said that there is a\nfirm so much annoyed by the sewers,\ncausing shoals to form on its property,\nthat it had threatened to get out an\ninjunction to prevent the sewers fron*\nemptying into the river.\nJ. Newlin Gawthrop sa d that in his\nopinion the shoals formed by the sew­\nerage were formed to a greater ex­\ntent by the sand and dirt washed from\nthe streets than by the actual sewerage\nitself. Mr. Gawthrop also was of the\nopinion that the city should; assist in\nraising the money for the needed\nwork.
be0c0d3812c33f95b237f03a265601be PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.4835616121259 31.960991 -90.983994 But, to obtain true friends, we have apart to\naèt; wé must sKSwouîselves friendly to our ac­\nquaintances arid friends, and those with whom\nwe associate. Most of us are strangers, from\ndifferent parts of the country, in a city of stran­\ngers; and the majority of us are of toe unfortu­\nnate class. Bright was our childhoods future*\nfor then prosperity and happiness encircled our\nfamilies, but misfortune overtakes us, our word-\nîÿ prospects are blighted; then we feel that\nertion is to be made on our part, and thither we\nresort to this manufacturing city.\nMany of us have had our family circles bro­\nken by the Impartial hand of death. We have\nseen a kind father, an indulgent mother, or both,\nconsigned to the silent grave. Many of us have\nreceived the unwelcome tidings of the death \nparents and friends. Unwelcome to us indeed.\nIt is while perusing the pages of the fatal letter\nwhich bore the message, that our hearts are ready\nto burst with grief. Painful thought! that we\nhad not the privilege of standing by their couch\nof pain, and administering to their varied wants,\nor of hearing their farewell advice, nor of see­\ning the last flicker of the lamp of life as it was\ngently extinguished by the hand ofdeath. Then\nhow alleviating to the afflicted soul it is* to have à\nfriend that wifl sympathize with us in our deep\naffliction, and with kind and consoling words\npour in the oil and wine into the bruised heart.\nAgain, if anything transpires, to add happiness\nto the contented mind how brightly that spark\nwill kindle when shared with a true and faithful
2837fd4d76677009b56d0cd2ab50c6e2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.2472677279397 40.063962 -80.720915 tree, corner to Wllli.nu Hu<b>, hauiuel Mcuure\nand Joseph and Mitchell Waddle, thence with »uid\nWaddle's lino north liyA° cast 4i 4-10 pules to u\nstone; thence south 64° (%ut 8 ft-10 po ea >o a stone;\nthence south 17° east 161-1U poles to a stone; thence\nnorth 3 %* east 75 puius to a stone, formerly an ash:\nthencewiih tbe lines of Lavin.a Taylor, a»uUi\nWest 11 MO poles to a aton«, formerly n whlto oik;\ntheneo north 142 8-iQ po ci to u while oak; thence\nnorth 11U° cast 207 poles to a beech snu^, comer to\naili Taylor, W . I*. lirndy and hdward House;\nthenco with Rouse's the south 4GU° weat 42 8-10\npolts to a stone; thence south 24}£6 west 1M |ioIes\nto i atoue formerly a locust, on the north tank of\nshort creek; tlieuce down the several meanders of\nslid creek 193 2-10 poles; thence the creek\nand running with Jesse Wells' lino south 6M40\nwest M 3-10 jioles to n stone In Wells' lino and n\n(orner to liocert Trimble; thence with his lines,\nsouth 25V,n cast 4 poles to a atone, thence south\n45J4" eiat 98}-$ pol»a to a stone; thence south ViW3\nvast WJi poles to a stone; thenee south V east 22\npules to a sione; thence south 23° east 70 poles to a\nstone; thence with said William Rusher's lines,\nsouth Sl^eastd^ jo.es to a while oak stump;\nthence south.weat.polea to a atone In the nad;\nthenco aouth 40)4° east id 4-10 poles to the place of\nbegin nlug, containing 248 acrea, 3 roods and 27\nperebw. more or ieaa, being tbe same real estate\nattached in aaid cause, and the a4tne montioned.in\na deed from David dnodgrosa and wife to James 1..\nDelaplain, dated tho 8ih day of June, 1867, and
3376bee31b808935474d0b96713c06d1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.1024589847702 39.745947 -75.546589 The publication of a flnanolal statsraént\nof the city, waa again the subject of\nmuch discussion last night, at tha meet­\ning of City Council, and It was started\nwhen a joint letter received from City\nTreasurer Rose end City Auditor Rice,\nwas read. These officials stated that It\nwas Impossible to present such a state­\nment, as provided by the city ordinance,\nbecause the books In the city treasurer\nand auditor's office, on account of the !\nsystem of bookkeeping maintained In the\npast, do not contain the desired infor­\nmation. The letter was as follows:\nGentlemen: Our attention having been\ncalled to tha resolution passed by your\nhonorable body on January 30th, we beg\nto state that, with the information con­\ntained in the offices of the city treasurer\nand city auditor, for which wo both sub­\nscribe ourselves respectively. It Is utter­\nly impossible for us to furnish the Infor­\nmation required and designated In sec­\ntion 64 of the city charter. There may-\nhave been in yesrs a published\nstatement, but we fall to see how Council\ncould publish a summary of the decal con­\ncerns of the said city for the previous\nyears, when they have had no authority\nover the various departments of the city.\nWe are now about completing, through\nthe Indiana Mutual Audit Co.. (Mr. W . H .\nGleason, prssldent, who Is personally con­\nducting the work), a complete accounting\nof the city's affairs. This will be ready\nIn the course of a very short time, and\nwill be banded your honorable body, we\nbelieve, through your finance committee,\nwith recommendations requested by you.\nWe do not wish to cause the slightest\nreflection upon our predecessors, for their\nmethods were In consonance with the\nlaws then existing, but since the act of\nthe last Legislature It would seem ee\nthough it Is possible. In the future, to\nfurnish the Information contemplated In\nsection 64. provided the recommendations\nthat will In all probability be made by the\naudit company, are carrl-d out.
08d7b7e8a1f1975b245db75a460ce488 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.741095858701 40.063962 -80.720915 "There," said he, "the tail measures, as\nit lies, just 750,000,000,000 miles, good\nmeasure, and it is all wool; no shoddy or\nbrummagem Kncke stuff so flimsy that it t\nlean ana oreaxs ail up in a couple 01 trips\naround your sun. And look at the head. sl\nIsn't that a dai*v ? Oh, no; I guesi not." j,\nAs he spoke he gathered the comet in I\nhis hand and then, keeping a tight grip on i\nthe head, rose to his (nil height and, rai&- I\ning his hand to hia shoulder, sent the tall ii\nBining through the universe till it floated c\nfar off past Alpha Lyne and past Gemini, s'\ntill its extremity almost toucued Sirius on I\nits way toward the solar system.' Then, af- ^\nter calling the reporter's attention to its £\nsize."We keep them of all sires," he said, c\n"and various brilliances," and then he t!\nwound it up on his forefinger and put it t)\nback in the drawer, remarking as he did 2\nbo that "there must have been a fine case\nof aurora on earth just now."\nThen he continued: "But this is not what J\nyou were sent to interview me about. You\nwanted to know about the universe. Sit\ndown thereon that flocculus and I will tell b\nyou all I know about it. As I was saying,\nall the discrete stsra that you see are in the C\nnebula of which the earth is but a speck, t\nand, indeed, the whole solar system is so\nsmall that if a celestial lapidary were to set j\nit he would certainly have to use a j>air of\nmmnotind dnnhln million tnBonilvlnwl\nglmsesol heitra power just tOBee thegema, c\nYour nebula U in the shape of * disc.\nsomething like a biscuit.and you fellowa 1\nare in it, and it is about evenly atrewn with i\nstars. Sow, imagine this biscuit to lie\non a table, auil each star to be\none speck oi flour. Now, you being ,\nin that biscuit il you look off toward .\nthe edge of the biscuit, of course you ]\nwill see the grains of flour apparently much :\ncioeer together.for there iesueh a
13f7419d91f3734f43da1e29f725c1eb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.3109588723999 39.745947 -75.546589 These mines aro intended for use in\nthe channels that hostile ships would\nhave to sail through, and are formed\nin threes and set closely in tho channel\naccording to plans previously arranged.\nIf necessary, tho sea off the entrance to\na harbor or buy could be well filled with\nthem. These mines may bo exploded or\nmay be perfectly harmless according to\ntho will of the occupant of tho mining\ncasemate, who, with his important ap­\nparatus, is out of reach of shot and\nshell, there being tons of earth between\nhim and the upper air.\nOut from this chamber through a tun­\nnel below low water mark, and hence\nsafe from discovery by tho enemy or shot\nfrom them, run numerous cables to the\nmines planted in the channel or in the\nsea. Within the chamber the operator\nhas an elaborate chart with the location\nof every torpedo or mine upon it. By\ntelegraph or other signals from observa­\ntion stations near by be is kept informed\nof the approach of vessels, tuffs as\nhe thinks best under the circumstances.\nHe may receive word from his stations\nto such effect that with his chart ho\nknows a vessel is directly within a clus­\nter of the sunken mines. Then he can\ntouch a key, and a mine will iustautly\nexplode beneath or near the ves^L If\nthe vessel is a friendly one, however,\ntho operator can disconnect his batteries,\nand the ship will sail in perfect safety\nover the tons of explosive beneath. If\nthe weather lie foggy, or if some other\ncondition unfavorable for locating a\nvessel prevails, and enemies are known\nto bo near, the pressing of many buttons\nwill make every rue of these mines a\ndeadly ferte, and any ship that ventures\nin will strike a torpeuo, roll it over,\nand rr.tr ma tically tie sis an electric cir­\ncuit, which will explode tho mine, and\nthe ship will be sunk or badly shattered.\nThere are various devices for ascertain­\ning that the hidden mines and connec­\ntions are in good working order.
2bf162c300a09cd4efbe2a7060dac485 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.6150684614408 40.063962 -80.720915 ir," aaid Jake, with a amile, which waa ahi\nhild-like and bland, "you want me tell dj\nihat 1 know and think about it." "Both, j\nf you pleaae." "I will be frank with er\nrou. The Marphy temperance mote* his\nent has done more material good for this tha\n:ommunity than all the churchea in the tri\n:ity." "Jiowao?*' "Well, when the ware wil\n:ot to rolling around here it atruck hun- oul\nireda of men who were outside of relig- er;\noua influences.men who neter went to re*\nihurch, doctors, lawyers, merchant#, me- trn\nihanics, laborers and tramps, to ear noth- a*;\nngof women and children. Fortherast it\nhree months there haa been but little ph\njhurch influenco in the work. The re- Ix)\normtd men organized Temjiernnce rel\nuuiunn, nave conuucieu ami controlled ox\n:hem, bare kent tliem alive am] moving; ly\nthe weak and strong have worked aul\ntogether; the/ have braced each otlier raj\nin. Now these Unions are ntill Hour* gu\nisning and doing great good". ex\nTbo public to a great extent think that dei\ntemperance Iim about died out here, fiu\n1'hat is because the excite uent i« over, in\nind the people don't attend the regular slit\nmeeting* of the Unions, consequently doi\nlon't know what is [going on. There are {g\nxotn fiix to eight temperance meetings in bet\nhis city every week, andit would do your yit\nicart goo«l to see tho class of men thnt at* ch\nend them. They aro not gentlemen with the\nihiny plug hats, whito neckties, snobs of\nind parlor knights, but mostly good cot\nlearted poor fellows who had almost ha1\nrrecked themselves from inteiuperancc;\nnit to-day they are changed men, decent- (\ny clad, well fed, bright, manly and
1c50d07c4aaada032539c6e622c27d82 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.8397259956876 40.832421 -115.763123 ACMttlki Vttofa «f m« O-\nIt b aot my d«ir* to v«k« t peraoa-\n. 1 wtifitrt agaiuat Mr. Fitch, my ptM*\nrat political oppeDtnt, aud I bt«« but,\nat any time, iwd* a MDgl« ch«ig« cim-\nctraiDg him or ki« oBciJ ac'ictu, hi*\nthat ihiok tbe record* ol thia coautjr\nshow and which *r» the common pro¬\nperty ««t tr.ry citizen ol the coautjr,\n. nd which ever? mau has lb* r«gbt and\nprivilego ol eiawiuing. Mr. Fi'ch uiid\nhia friends bare issued a circular in\nwhich ihtjr fii'.anll; adui'.t a delin*\nqueucy against Mr. Filch tthro be ra-\nUrrd from ouL:e, but endeavor to avoid\nthe effect ol a partial diacloeure ol the\nfarts by alleging that h« (tad acttlcd\nwith the coauty . Remember, the word\naattled ia a ted. whinh i< a clci) bdmis-\n. ion on hia part that when ha weut ont\nol office ha waa ia aouia niauuer or to\naome extent delinquent to the county,\n. nd therelore a acltleuiepi lx?uiua um>\neaaary. As that circular ciny have a\nteudency to lhot-e wb-> wo not\nlully acquainted with all the frcta, I\ndeaira to atate what aie not only tacts\nbat records. Ou tbe 1-1 c'sy ol May,\n1873, an action wits commen-. -ed iu Ibe\nDistrict Court ol thia county lor col¬\nlection ol the d< liuquency referred .to\niu the amount ol $116 t>i. lic>u«mbtr,\nului, that Mr. Fitch confessed l>jr coin-\nprouiiaiug aud giviug hia nolo to Elko\ncounty lor $150. The uota una plueed\niu the buuda ol the then District Atl'y,\nand viiiiu tbo present District Attorney\nMr. Street came intoofUc, tbe note waa\npassed over to bitn. That note, a copy\nof wliicb it (ji»«u N*low, is the settlu-\nuuut referred to *>y Mr. Fitch and hit\nIrienda. Ttts note, given an a corn-\nplouiiae to prevent further prosecution,\nbus not even been paid, auil Mr. Fitch\nstill hoMa the funds ol the county to\n(but uu.ount. Mr. Fitch has been\nlequested lo pay it. but to (ar bus not\ndon« ao. These ure facta, aud Ut Mr.\nFitch deny them if he uu.
0e2a9a96924a247e8975102f902ae3eb DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.9959016077212 44.939157 -123.033121 The subject of this artlcal is a good\nsized man,probably middle agcd.when\nlast seen vas wearing a blue sultof\nclothes, und has made it his business\nto ylslt the residences of Salem, and\nmore particularly its suburbs, repre-\nsenting himself to bo a kind of re-\npairer. This man has been around\nSalem for about two years that tho\nwriter knows of. Ho acts In a straugo\nand very Insulting manner. 1 do not\nknow his name. I wish to cite an In-\nstance or two for tho benefit of\nthoughtless porsons, and It muy, per-\nchance, save a heinous outrago somo\nday upon some dcfcnscltss woman.\nAs to tho truth of tho following,\nnames of the parties and the circum-\nstances can and will bo cheerfully fur-\nnished in detail to any ono conscien-\ntiously interested.\nOn ono occasion an and Infirm\nlady (00 years) living in Englcwood\naddition, and entirely alone at tho\ntime, was called upon by this fellow\nono afternoon not long since. Ho was\nseen, by tho party furnishing tho\nwriter with this information, to walk\nup to tho door, deliberately open It\nand walk lu. naylng met this man\nbefore, the writer's informant, who Is\na woman, sent two of her children\nquickly over to her neighbor's, with\nInstrnctlons to remain thero until ho\ntook his leave, which ho finally did by\nbeing threatened by several of tho\nneighbors, who came lu later. Once\non the inside of tho house, and alone\nwith tho aged lady, ho offered her\nmoney und made indecent proposals to\nher. She became so frightened that\nsho was dangerously prostrated, und\nhas been very 111 since that tlmo from\nthe shock.
11fe01409c4989aca24349587c470c31 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0205479134956 41.681744 -72.788147 the second district it was 4 mills. That\nshows that the first district is paying\nthe burden of taxation in proportion\nand far in excess of tho benefits it\nreceive?, he said. When first consoli-\ndated, Mr. Kilbourne stated, the first\ndistrict paid taxes on $1,500 and now\nthey are paying on 3 9S.457.57. He fur-\nther gave to the men present a state-\nment of conditions existing in regard\nto taxation. The members of the first\ndistrict he said, pay taxes for police\nprotection but never see a policeman\nor the protection. It also pays taxes\non sewers but has none. Mr. Kilbourne\nsaid he was a member of the commit-\ntee which drafted the original city\ncharter but it has 'been so amended\nthat one would not recognize it. Mr.\nKilbourne was asked by O. F . Curtis\nthe amount of taxable property in the\noutlying district. He was informed\nthat the amount is about $1,400,000.\nProbably one of the most compre-\nhensive talks given on the council\nfloor was that given by Attorney P. F .\nMcDonough. If he talked from a\nselfish standpoint Mr. McDonough\nwould favor the elimination of the\ntwo districts, he said, for he has much\nmore property in the second district\nand would benefit by the change. He\ntalked, however, from the standpoint\nof principle and the good of the city\nwhich would be doing an injustice to\nthe outside taxpayers to consolidate\nthe two districts. On seeing the large\nnumber of men present last night and\nthinking that he was the only taxpayer\nbefore the committee at its last meet-\ning, Mr. McDonough said it evidently\npays to advertise. Mr. McDonough\nthen went into detail to point out to\nthe members of the charter revision\ncommittee the injustice which the\nchange would be. There were several\nstatements which Mr. McDonough\nmade which were strong but he placed\nhimself upon the basis of facts re-\ngardless of how the facts revealed\nthings.
1131d8de6bf7d40c572f8a930372dc5f IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1890.919178050482 43.82915 -115.834394 Brooks. Or., cured of nasal aid throat ea-\nta rh three years ego. Mrs. F. A. Morris\nNewherg, Or., s ays she is cured of asthma\nand bronchitis of ten years star ding; she\n»» ' cured three years ago. Win. M. Col­\nwell, Skamokawa Wash., s ciatic rheuma­\ntism and liver complaint; rettored t .\nhealth; also his brother. Geo. !.. Colwell.\nSkamokawa, Wash, was cured of a numb­\nness of the arm two years since. Mrs. E.\nAhlf, 161) North Fourteenth street, Port-\n|!»nd, cured three years »go, after nine\n,d etors had fsilei, : f gainful menstrua-\ni tioo a d worub trouble in every conceiv­\nable way, general debility, pain through\nth heart and lungs H und-eds of other\n: patient« could be named had we spice to\npublish them.\nThe Doctors are crowded with patients\n m.to8p.m. Drs.Darrinar\nno doubt the hard est-worked men iu Port­\nland. The Doctors have a large country\npractice, and send their electric remedies«\nto any one desiring home treatment for\nany curable chronic, acute or private dia-\neises, » h e i are kept strictly confidential.\nline of the Doctors is visiting different\ntowns in th ■ State to better accommodate\nthose who find it impossible to come to\n“oriland. One of the Doctors will te at\nthe Washauer hole1, Btker City, Novem­\nber 7 to 21; the Umatilla house. The\nDalles, November 23 and 24 the Oregon\nhotel, Ashland, November i6 to :0, and\nEugen" City, December 1 to 6.\nThe head office at70« W ashington street,\nPortland, will run as us 'al. Consultation\nH.d examination free. Ali classes treated\nIfree from 10 to 11 a. M. daily.
78de7367160b7b4f062311a81ff8fd15 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.8647540667375 40.807539 -91.112923 would ask the Honorable gentlemen\nto pause in this mad career of party\nfierceness and persecution, and as far as\npossible retiace their steps. They should\nrecollect the high and distinguished sta­\ntions they here occupy as Legislators of\n^ ^patriotic, free, and intelligent people.\n1hey should recollect their present sta­\ntion is not one to last always, but that\nthey must soon return to their constitu­\nents to give an account of their conduct.\nThey should recollect that a turn of\npopular feeling might place other men in\npower, who not forgetful of the outrages\ninflicted now on them and their friends,\nmight unfortunately be induced to retali­\nate. Their conduct however they must\nor ought to know, will create high poli­\ntical excitement everywhere in the Ter­\nritory. What good citizen desires such\na state of things ? None but those who\nwithout merits to recommend\nthem, hope to rise in the excitement they\nmay create. That impartial committee\nneed not have gone to the foreman of Mr\nEdwards or some other mechanic or per­\nson in his employ to learn what their pre­\nscriptive conduct would lead to. Of the\nentire frustration of their designs any\nschool boy could have told them.\nThe practice of rewarding men in the\nLegislature for partisan services whether\nby giving them office, or printing or\nother mechanical, or manual employ­\nment must if persisted in eventually reach\nthe people at large, and then will come\na war of strife among neighbors, uproot­\ning all moral, and perhaps social society.\nThe Carpenter will not be enabled to\nsell the product of his skill if he disa­\ngrees in religion or politics from the\npurchaser—the farmer his produce, or\nthe laborer obtain employment. But
629ee764cc989c36a30e654e66d96920 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.8068492833586 58.275556 -134.3925 The Sea Wolf has just returned to\nNome from Siberia, where she wafc\nstorm bouud in St. Lawrence bay dur\ning the blow and had a uarrow escape,\npicked up part of a log of an unknown\nvessel. The copy in typewriting tells\nof a bad leak with the water rising in\nthe hold at the rate of four aud one\nhalf inches per hour in spite of pumps.\nThe log also made reference to Cape\nWainwright aud other points nort hei ly\nof Nome. The vessel's log was fouud\nin St. Lawrence bay, and it is the\nopinion it might be one of Stefansson's\nfleet, they being the only vessels known\nto be equipped with typewriters.\nW. C. L . Beyer, known as the "Big\nChief' among the Indiaus, and who has\ndealt with them for years and has prac\ntical knowiege of their and\nmodes of living, believes that the best\nway to stop the liquor traffic among the\nIudiaus is to allow them all the rights\nof other American citijiens, says the\nValdez Miner. "For instance," he said,\n"the present system places a premium\nupon whiskey peddling and the maua-\nfacture of 'rotgut* in illicit stills,\nplaced on patrol duty all the govern\nment officials in Alaska could not cover\nthe wide Isolated sections wherein the\nIndians-dwell. This idea of coddling\nand mothering the Indians is a mis\ntake. Let the Indians walk openly into\nsaloons and get their liquor the same\nas white people and punish them just\nthe same when they get noisy or drun s\nand there wiU be a less percentage of\ndrunkenness among them. The present\nsystem practically forces them to be\ncome the prey of the lowest type of
58011d61fd8a1b1d087461c24ccd92c7 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.4205479134957 41.004121 -76.453816 FitiuAY, May 27. In tho Senate,\nyesterday, tho Appropriation bill came\nup, tho question being on Mr. Drako's\namendment prohibiting tho admission\nofn pardon as a proof of tho loyalty of\ntho claimant in tho Court of Claims,\nnnd establishing a rule prohibiting tho\nuse of such pardon In appeals from tho\nCourt of Claims, and requiring that\nproof of loyality provided for in pro\nvlous acts of Congress shall bo mado\nIrrespective of sucli pardon ; also that\njudgments mado on such proof bo\nreversed iu tho Supremo Court, and\nsuits in tho Court of Claims based on\nsuch proof bo dismissed forthwith\nDebato on tills question was continued\nuntil tho Senato took a recess. At tho\nEvening Session Mr. Drako's amend\nmcnt was finally adopted.\nTho morning hour in tho Houso was\n umcd by a discussion on tho bill to\nrovivo our navigation and commercial\ninterest, tiio racnic Railroad reso\nlution was discussed during tho remain-\nder of tho session.\nSatukdav, May 2S. In tho Senate,\nyesterday, tho Appropriation bill was\ntaken up. Tho amendment giving\nequal pay to male and femnlo clerks\nin tho Departments was agreed to\nyeas 80, nays 20. Tho amendment np\npropriatiug $000,000 for tho extension\nof tho Capitol grounds, after a pro\ntraded debate, In which tho question\nof moving tho capital Westward was\nbrought up, was also agreed to yeas\n42, nays 19. Tho amendment appro,\npriating $100,000 for nn Arctic expedi\ntion oecaslonod a facetious discussion,\nbut was finally also adopted yeas\ndays 23. Amendments wero also\nadopted increasing tlto salary of tho\nChlef-Juitlc- o
1e801c1213f81e000b4f423e4c5f5ceb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8232876395232 40.063962 -80.720915 Iu tho rcccnt season of extreme low wate\nsveral bonis, the hulls of which wcro con\nIructcil at ]K>intH down tho river, were madi\nuftdy for tho upper works, but proven tei\nroin coining up to bo finished. Ah a conse\nuence, us soon as there was enough water t(\n;t them up tho river there arose a sort o\noom iu bout finishing. Hecently the nev\n»wboutof tho Heather! ngtons' was flnlshet\np by tho Sweenies. They aro now puttitu\nii the machinery of a new packet for 0. M\ntarry, who intends her for tho l'arkersbur;\nml Marietta trade. She is called tho "M. 0\nInox, No. 2," in honor of onoof tho lirin o\nIn ox A Sons, of Harmar, who built tho hull\nhis is tho second boat built this season foi\nIr. Harry. Last season ho flnsshed tho M. J\ntricker for the same trade, but only ran\nor for a few weeks when he had a chance tc\n>11 her at a handsome profit, and did so\nlarly this summer he finished a small nas\nmger boat called tho Knox.resembling\ni size and plan tho La Belle. This he \n[most immediately.\nHis present boat is 1*20 feet in length and 21\n>ot bcuni. Hhe will draw about 1H inches ol\nater. Hhe has two boilers, JW inchcs in dl\nmotor and twenty feot long, each with twi\nlies. Tho cylinders are 10 inch, and have i\nroko of four feet Tho wheel is fifteen feel\ndiameter and lias a seventeen-foot bucket\nMr. Harry has already had ah offer for the\noat from parties who contemplate using hei\ni tho llollaire trade. Hho will cost him, when\nnisliod, about$H,fi(K), If ho oumiludonto sell,\no will ot once ho to wqrk on another boat\n>r the same traiTo. 0\nThe Messrs. Sweeney also did part of tin\nork on the machinery of a small tug boal\now lying at Jlellalre, and undergoing tin\nnisiilng touches there. Hho is called the\nood Intent. J . B . Barnhill, of the liellairc\noiler Works, made her boilers, and Sweenej\nSon her other machinery. Sho Is 80 feel\ning and has a IS foot beam, ono double\ntied boiler, a 0 inch cylinder, with a three\nKit stroko, and belongs to Captain Paden, ol\nAden's Island.
0c1341f1c37798f979a62093af7cbbb7 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1895.1027396943175 46.601557 -120.510842 r pi It linot questioned that In every kind\nof fans prndartlou lirlgatlnn will (It* reaalu\nthat cannot be reached elsewhere, audio Yak-\nIma conuty the climatic coudillom arc such\nthat, with Irrigation, a greater diversity of pro\nduct lianlted with a quality so blf h that there\ncan be no qucitlon a)>out the profitable results.\nIf a market m« be had for our productions.\nWlthatlew to getting our farmes to under\ntake diversified farmlnf. and to Induce capital\nto famish the outlet; and to furnishing Intend-\ning settlers with the kind of Information they\nshoaM hare, Mr li. (' . Mi l ls ha* keen asked to\nfurnish Information as to the land resources of\ntba county. This Information will Include tbi\nnamber of acres now under cultivation; the\nacreage under water but not militated, and the\nacreage capable of Irrigation A commute* is\nengaged In getting Information as to the acreage\ndevoted to the different kinds of farmlug ami\nfruit production and stock production: alto the\namount dairy, poultry and pork product*\n•hipped into the state from distant eastern\npoints each year When this Information is ob-\ntained It will furuish the capitalist Information\nas to the advisability of establishing creameries\nand pork parking concerns. It will show the\nfarmers already here so I those to come what\nproducts tbls state in buying from the oHtside,\nand therefore what product* could be raised\nwith protit at home\nIt Is not creditable to our farmer* that thou-\n•mnli of dollan' worth of pork products are an\nniiallyshipped to Yaklma from Kansas CUT,\nChicago and Omaha, aud that money sent out\nof the state annually for butter, oleoiuargan v*.\npork, bacon and lard reaches away up into tbe\nmillions. Ivery dollar of this mouey should be\nkept In the state and millions received from\nneighboring atat*a iv addition: aud we believe\nthat by tabulating the iuforraatlnu we get upon\ntl.es* point* our own county will receive gnat\nand lasting benefits, If proper efforts are mad*\nto disseminate It.
0f8621d8716ef5d15fcaa2b94b64933e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.050684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 TRUSTEE'S SALE..liV VIRTU*\nJL 6f a deed of trust executed by K C. Till\nilruth and S. J . Ilildreth, hi* wife, dated January\nlUth, 18C8, and recorded in Urn offline or the Re\ncordcr for Ohio couuty, lu deed book fifty-four,\npage £19, I will, a* trustee In Mid deed at the\nfront door of the Court Houm of Ohio county\non Satukuat thx iptii.uay oa Psniuuur, UJTO,\nproceed to mcU the following described property,\nconveyed by nald deed, to wit: Parts of loin Hit\n(U) and seven (?>, ami all of lot number nine (V),\nor ho much thereof a4 may bo nts'etnianr, lylu#\nand bclug in the City of Wheeling, HlUiato on\nthe south tdde of Lindsay street, Kant Wheeling\nand being the same property conveyed to the\ntaid i\\ c! llildmlth by the Howard Iron Work*,\nby deed dated January. Utttt . For n mom\nrun lUtu'riiiiinn or Haiti property rerarence i*\nindilH to tin* wild lAtft mentioned deed. The Mid\ndeed wan jriven to cure thu uovuimt of thrwi\npromlxitory noU* math* by wtlil l\\ t\\ Ilildretb,\nttcii fur a,:tu) dollar* with inti-rexl fruui date,\ndated llltti Jatinary. 1Hhh. payable in alx, twelve,\niiad eighteen moutlw after date, renpectivrly to\nthe order nf himself, «Ud iHila* w«ro jjlvcn fur\nthu dufrrri'd utyuifuu uu tho purchase of aaid\nHoward Iron worki. The fntemit mi the amount\niwcumd luw been paid op to the Itth day of Jatc\nuuary, ItfJU, and f*.IW> UK of the principal debt U\npaid, leaving a balance due a* uf tin* day of aalu\nofJT.TOJ W of principal a; .4 $44 ft of Interest.\nTxbhb ur»Aua: -<iao.:>iir«l ca4». the halauce\nlu mIx and twelve nrnita, with liuereat and
1608890e3e74c22af00380fad5c31c4a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.1630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 in question. And, tirat, to his charge\ntliut J. L Nelson, J. II Blair (meaning Dr.\nJ. R Bluir, one of our physician*,) and A.\nM. Poundstone circulated tlie report last\nfall that he, Farnsworth, had sold out to\nthe rebels. Why did he undeavor, in the\nface of the facts, to convev the impression\nthat we three had conspired together to\ncirculate such a report ? Ho knew when\nhe penned this that it was the farthest\nthing imaginable from John L. kelson s\nintention when he made the disclosure; to\nDr. Blair, that the matter should become\ngenerally known. Dr. Bluir was a let-up\nRepublican and this was why the secret\nwas imparled to him. He, Farnsworth,\nknew when he used this language, that at\nthe time referred to Joun it. iseiaun wu»\none of his most trusted ami most faithful\nfriends. information referred to was\nImparted to me on Saturday evening\nOctober 10th, two days before the county\nConvention, and 1 made it known.the\nsame evening to two or three Republican\nfriends. I did not then know whether\nThomas G. Farnsworth was in town or\nnot, ^ior did I care. But what a blunder\nthe gentleman makes in this part of his\niwrfortnance when In; savs, meaning after\nthis re|>ort had guinea some publicity,\nwhich mark, was 011 Saturday evening\nOctober l«th, that "the Republican party\nofthe county became alarmed and called\na Convention for the first day of Court,\nwhich was the 18th of October, lias lie\nthen forgotten that the county Convention\nwas to have been held on the day of the\nSenatorial Convention which was the 9th\nof October, and that owing to the lateness\not the hour when the Senatorial
5c8f901d149ae0b2561698233f03c6ac EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.3410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 Worth, the famous dressmaker of\nthe Rue de la Pal, placed on show at\none of the Paris expositions r, court\ntrain of Moiree Antique, embroidered\nwith gold thread and pearls, a scries\nof flounces in gold spreading out In\nthe form of a fan. At the time this\nrich and wonderful train was valued by\nthe maker at $6000 and several offers\nof $5000 each were refused for it-\nMine. Sarah Bernhardt always has\nbeen renowned for her dresses. A\n^beautiful jeweled gown was made for\nher some years ago. It was an Ivory\nsatin, decorated with valuable stones.\nThe train was Hned with ermine and\non the skirt was a band of 1800 jewels.\nThis dress was worth $7500\nFamous actresses and tl 3 wives of\nmillionaire spend far mere on their\nclothes than do queens and princesses.\nOne of the most expensive dresses of\nmodern time was that worn by Mrs.\nClara Baldwin Stocker at the Grand\n House. Los Angeles, California.\nMrs. Stocker, who inherited $16,000,-\n000 from her father, “Lucky” Bald­\nwin, won for herself the tills of "Dia­\nmond Queen” by appearing gowned in\na gorgeous decollete dress decorated\nwith gems valued at $366,000. The\ngown was made of flashing gold net\nover golden satin, and was slit up on\none side to reveal diamond-studded\nstockings With her diamond-buckled\nshoes and her sparkling diamond\ncrown, Mrs. Stocker seemed to have\nstepped from a fairy book.\nAnother American lady created a\nsensation some little time ago by at­\ntending a ball in New York attired\nin a gown the material of which was\nentirely hidden under gold coins. Her\nshoes wore covered with sheets of\npure gold, while she wore a golden\nand Jeweled crown, specially made for\nthe occasion, which cost $15,000.\nKing (Christian William Ferdinand\nAdolph) George of Greece, who fell to\nan assassins bullet of Salonika, often\nescaped death.
256f45b05b105b68c0e6c28674285125 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 The said real and personal property will\nbe sold free, clear and discharged of and\nfrom all Ileus and encumbrances, including\ntaws and assessments thereon, created by\nor recovered against the said Delaware\nWater Improvement Company.\nThe highest and best bld«lcr or bidders\nshall be the purchaser or t trehasers. pro­\nvided. however, that no bid will be re­\nceived front any person unless be shall flrst\ndeposit with the receivers, a certified check,\npayable to the order of said re<-elvers. In\nthe amount of one thousand dollars\n($1,000), and provided farther, that each\nbidder shall state at the time uf making\nsaid bid, what part thereof is for the prop\nty covered by the Hen of said mortgage\nd what part thereof Is for the prciwny\nnot so covered.\nAfter the bidding la completed, the re­\nceivers will return to the unsuccessful bid­\nders the certified checks deposited as afore­\nsaid, and will retain tbtr said check of the\nHighest and best bidder or bidders, who\nshall, before the property is struck off to\nMm or them, pay to the receivers. In addi­\ntion to the said sum of one thousand dol­\nlars already deposited by such purchaser\nnr purchasers, an additional sum cash,\nwhich, with the said one thousand dollars,\nshall equal ten per centum of bis or their\nhid. In case any purchaser or purchasers\nfall to make good his or their bid, then\nthe said sum so deposited may. In the dis­\ncretion of the fham-cllor be applied to the\nexpense of a re-sale and towards making\ngood any deficiency or loss In case the\nproperty shall be sold at a price less than\nthat tsought at thla sale, either upon an\nImhtedlate re-sale or upon a re-sale upon\na second advertisement.\nThe receivers will make return of said\nsale to the Chancellor, at hla chambers. In\nthe County Court House. Wilmington, Del­\naware, on the nineteenth day of March. A.\nD. 1919, at U oclock A. M.. and the Chan­\ncellor will, thereupon, make auch order\nwith respect to the said return and the\nconfirmation of said sale as shall, to him.\nseem proper; and noon confirmation of\nsaid sale, will prescribe the manner and\nterms of payment of that portion of the\npurchase price not covered by said certi­\nfied check and other payments as aforesaid;\nami any bidder who shall fall to comply\nwith such term« of payment so prescribed\n-
21199ccdc9d623a65fc7bf9fb128206d OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.6205479134958 39.513775 -121.556359 turnout confldt nc' hv the afflicted -%t all hour* daily,\nfrom 8 A. M., unfit h p. M . fCures always guaranteed\nor no pnv repulsed.\nIMPORTANT to Mrsr.Bft. TR.AVKI.KRS, KTC.\nfffil HF.RK I . no milady of deeper importance either\nI In a medical or moral light of view, to which\nthe human family t« more tinhle than that arising\nfrom impure connection..\ny « a medical man it l< 'he luty of ererv physictn.s\nto look at dl«e- «e a. i' effects I f tilth and life, «.id hi.\nsole object should he to mitigate, as tar a. he. in hi.\npower, the bodily suffering. Iliiman iinture at best i#\nbut frail. nil are liable to misfortune.\nOfallihe HI. that affect man none are mere terrible\nthan those of a private nature. dreadful a. It is In\nthe person who contracts h frightful as are its ravag-\nes upon hlsconstllntion,ending frequently :n desirucv.\ni|on and a loathsome grave. it becomes ofstill trrealer\n when it i« transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such being the cr.se how necessary it be-\ncomes that every one navinif the least reason to f, sr\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoil nt once by consulting some physician, whose\nreapeciathilily and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and penc-emt cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity. I> 1? V* UNG f.- c's called noon to\nslate that, bv lona study and extensive practice. he\nhas hakime perfect master of all those die . ses whlch\ncome tinder the denommal ion of venereal, and hav-\nma paiil more attention to that one branch ihan any\nother physician in the ITniled . 'dates, In feels himself\nbe'it rqunlifled to treat th-in.\nFyphilis in all its forms, such asnlcers.swelllna In\nthe groans, ulcer In the throat,secondary syphilis, cu-\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, lertuarv syphilis, sy-\nphilis in children, mercun ai syphilitic affections. gon-\norrhea, gleet, strictures, l .i-i - pas-ag 1-.- ,
0b23abbe9123c2df8305fcf813897b58 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.4315068176052 40.832421 -115.763123 day morning, preparatory l<> giving itii\nexhibition here tu-iluy. Kuipeior, the\nlarge*! elephant ii. their lieril. f < II from\nthe gang plunk leading from the our,\nsustaining iiijmics which threw him inui\nllie lockjaw, from which h ' died in a\nfew hours. The Hiiimitl wuh one of the\nlargest on the road, an>l wuh estimated\nto be worth Moiuc 3>lO,tl00. He liut been\non exhibition some tliirt) -live or tort\\\nyears in this country with ml the bilg¬\nes! shows. Van A ;ubc r^, Warner and\nlluriiiim h'tve curried him. and for some\neight years lie was exhibited at t'cntrul\ni'ark. New York, piunting into the h inds\nof the present owners I n September,\n1SWJ. tlis uge was estimated at al«>nt\n105 years, and he weighed about tour\ntons. His cuie.t- .H and hul- will h pre-\n rveil and placed in the mils um of the\nWilliam Jewell t'o.lege at thin place.\nIt now trainman*-* that nine-tenth* of\nthe contract price to be puitl by She (»ov»\neminent for the de (mtcli bout,\nh.al been |»iinl l » Mr. H .mli before Mr.\nChandler's term as Secretary of the\nNavy had expiied. Secietary Whitney\nin pretty well nadhfi'd (hat the craft is\nin niuiiy re»|>ctt* inferior to the vessel\nstipulated for, but, as in the event of\nher rejection, the money already paiil\nwould be a total loss to the Government\nhe has concluded to aeeept her, in the\nIx bef that tlo* craft is woitb to III <S »\\-\neinment at lea>t a tithe of he a^«r>*^ite\ncoat. Tlier** are in this world two hi .1\npaymiintei a, and one of tin in i.» lie w!«o\nin advance.
0e96e687e908b9d573ddcad9bcc6bef1 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1898.6671232559615 39.756121 -99.323985 I look upon tho campaign Just closed at a\nsuccessful ono in the lilKliutit ileiirce, not only\nIn regard to the milltury operations, but more\nespecially In regard to the ((rent results\nachieved. When we decided to uttucU Simtl-nii- o\nwe looked tor nothing more an Uio lmuia-dl - u\nto fruit of victory tlmn the capture of the\nelty. What lifts been uchlevcd Is the oitpllulii-tici- u\nof the eastern purl of tho province from a\nline at J I burl to the south coast, together with\nthe enemy's forces, amounting to alinoHt 21 0W\nmen. Surely this wh tho moat notubic\nachievement of the cumpuitrn, bcarlnif In mind\nthe fierce opposll Ion wo encountered and the\ncomparatively snmllncNS of our own forces.\nKrom a military point of view, I perhaps\ntook eteps which mlht not be deemed justllla-bl - e\nunder other clrcumstuncoH, but I knew the\ntamper nnd the capabilities of my saldlors and\nthe moral effect of our cooplnu up\ntho enemy within Its own lino Our primary\npbject was to drive Corvora out and next to\ntake the town. We had gradually driven the\nSpaniards back on his lines, circling the city\nand slowly udvundnif duy uy day. Tho enemy\nbepan losing spirit as hoou as our guns had\nbeen placed In a position to covor the town.\nWheu Cervora left the situation was changed.\nTho town was ut my mercy and had I given the\norder for a direct assault, it would have been\ntaken within four hours. I bollevo that with\nthe forces thou ut my command, reinforced ug\nthey had been, I was in a position to tuko the\ncity by force. Hut If I hail taken a step of such\na character what would have bon tho result?\nI estimate that our casualties would have been\n11,000 men nnd tho action I took has had moro\nbrilliant real results without heavy loss of\nvaluablo lives.
05b96461cc772548e91ab5eef8219311 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.1438355847285 40.832421 -115.763123 itig this cvirx truu the tiu« of the\npassage of bald lav, ilad the Treauiry\ndischarged ita a«uru datv iu thi* rest>ect\nther« would have beeu no uccaiiuu ijt\nalarm oa account of the arcumulaCun\nof aiiTer in iU vaults, and (here would\nnot hate been wind enough ia the sails\nof the ulrer ahnsbto to pro|<el their\nrotten craft. The Salt LaLe Tribune,\nwhose attention hast been uitxeted to the\nnew proceeding on the part of the\nTreasury, calls aj-ja ita readers to\n"just luok at the cheek of the proceed¬\ning! A Gurctaxcue- the mightiest of\nthe earth .decries that its mo:.ey shall\nbe gold and silTr, all based on the silver\ndollar of 41 2'« grains. As a conven¬\nience, the Government piles the silver\nin the Irenuiy and issues \nwhich are made payable, on presenta¬\ntion, in silver dollars. And now", as a\nmatter of woii-ler, the fact is telegraphed\nthat a financial .concern actually t«ke*\nthese certificates (a f-vr of them) in pay¬\nment of balances due it fruuithe Govern-\nluent. And the Secretary of the\nTreasury hastens to assure the country\nthat only the most friendly lelation\nexists between the Government and the\nClearing-house of New York. Was ever\nanything morn slavish and degraded!\nWe »u>j>ect that the gold-bugs Lars i«\ngun to grow a little alarmed lest the\ncountry, to stop the present howl, may\n[kiss an unlimited coinage act and p. , ci \\\nsilver on an eveu keel uilh gold. Some¬\nthing must have frightened the grabber*,\nbut it is hardly worth wiring to the\ncountry."
00be02820456da7c7f52b4cc340605ac THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1886.2479451737697 42.217817 -85.891125 the army, OLd that under the projoned\nIncrease to 30.000 there would probably be only\nabout 27.OJ0 effective men. Mr. Teller opposed\nthe increase. It was claimed by friends of the\nbill that the increase w as needed for a fiiecino\npurpose to guard against Indian troubles;\nbut he saw no reason In tho Indian question\nfor on increase in the effective force of\nthe army. Mr, Piatt favored the proioaed in-\ncrease. He said we had no army. It wus a mis-\nnomer to call it tho present "skeleton" an army.\nTho argument that we had no Immediate need\nfor an army was like arguing that because It\nwas not raining y it would never rain. Tho\nhouse passed the Indisni appropriation bill, and\nthen tok up the pestoflice appropriation meas-\nure, (senator Mitchell, of Oregon, addressed the\nHenate on tho Duskin resolutions. While he\n in the majority report in so far as it\nassorted that it was the duty of tho executive\nottlcers to furnish when called upon by the Sen-\nate papers relating to the administration of an\noffice, ho would not insist, he naid, that the\npresence of such papers in tho Senato was ab-\nsolutely necoHsary to the dlpcbargc by tho\nSenate cf Its constitutional duty in ad-\nvising and consenting to proiK)sed removals from\noffice. He believed the Attorney General plainly\nin error in refusing to furnish tht pupe.s called\nfor. Hut, if called rn to vote on the series\nof tho majority resolutions as a whole, ho would\ndo so reluctantly and under positive protest.\nWhile the resolution assettin that tho absence\nof the paiM'is called for would bo ground su\nto warrant the Senate in refusing to act on\nthe nominations referred to, hi
214d6295c1248475ddd2ac825c1493b2 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.7581966896882 40.735657 -74.172367 Bidders are not to state any price for ma-\nierials and work for which there la a fixed\namount provided for in the specifications.\nEach proposal must he enclosed in a sealed\nenvelope, properly Indorsed with the name\nof the b elder and of the improvement, and\ndirected co the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioner* of the City of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices in writing\nas well as In figures.\nBidders must specify In their proposals\nthat, should the above work be awarded to\nthem, they will bind themselves to finish\nand complete the name within the following\nnumber of consecutive working days.\nThird Street— Forty >40) dayH.\nVernon Avenue—Fifteen (15) days.\nTho plans and specifications of the work\ncan bo examined st the olllce of the Chief\nEngineer of the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioner* at the City Hall. Said pro-\nposals to be accompanied by the consent. In\nwriting, of two sureties, or* a surety com-\npany qualified to do business in New Jersey,\nwho shall, at the t me of putting in such\nproposals, qualify a* to the r responsibility\nIn the amount of such proposal, and bind\nthemselves that. If tho contract bo awarded\nto the person or persons making the pro-\nposal. they will upon its being so awarded,\nbecome his or sureties for the faithful\nparronxMtnca of Mid work; and that, if the\nperson or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsuch contract, they will pay to the City of\nNewark any difference between the sums to\nWhich ho Or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract, and that\nwhich the City of Newark may be obliged\nto pay the person or persons by whom such\ncontract shall be executed.\nTho Board of Street nnd Water Commis-\nsioners of the City of Newark reserve to\nthemselves the right to accept or reject any\nor all proposals for tho above work, as they\nmay deem bent for the Interest of the city.\nBidders nnd sureties are hereby notified\nthat under the provisions of the sevqpth\nsection of tho law creating the Board of\nStreet and Water Comm seloners, approved\nMarch 28th, 1801. that the bond or bonds\nto be given for the faithful execution and\nperformance of said public work shall first\nbe approved as to sufficiency, by the board,\nand as io form, by the council of the board,\nand no contract shall be binding on the city\nor become effective or operative until such\nbond is so approved; and the President of the\nboard shall have power to examine the pro-\nposed Tiondsmen under oath. If he shall so\ndesire,
345d5a7914443c88e88508131c44a6ef DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.5423496951528 58.275556 -134.3925 Notice is hereby {riven, that L. Kane, citi¬\nzen of the United States, over the acre of\ntwenty-one years, and residing: in the Dis¬\ntrict of Alaska, and at Hoonah, Alaska, has\nunder and pursuent to Sees. 12 and 13 of an\nAct of Congress of date March 3rd. 1891. as\namended by Section 10 of an Act of Congress\nof date May 13th, 1898, entitled "An Act ex¬\ntending the homestead laws and providing\nfor the right of way for ruilroads in the Dis¬\ntrict of Aluska, and for other purposes," ap¬\nplied to purchase the lands embraced in U. S .\nNon-Mineral Survey No. 669, situated on west\nshore of Excursion Inlet, two miles from its\nhead, in the District of Alaska and more par¬\nticularly described as follows, to-wit:\nBeginning at cor. No. 1 M. C. on menu high\nwater mark of west shore of Excursion In¬\nlet. cor. not set: wit. cor . bears west 0.45 ehs.;\nU.S. L. M. No. 669 bears N. 40 deg. 33 min. W.\n3.92 chs. dist.: thence west 17.35 chs. to Cor.\nNo. 2, an iron pipe set in ground marked S\n669 Cor. 2; thence 17.60 chs. to Cor. No.\n3, an iron pipe set in ground marked S 669\nCor. 3; thence east 14.48 chs. to Cor. No. 4 M .\nC.. cor. not. set; wit. cor. bears west 1.00 chs.;\na rock set in ground marked S 6<>9 C. 4 \\V. C.;\nthence meandering mean high tide of Excur¬\nsion Inlet (I) S. 14 deg. 02 min. E. 0.73 chs.; (2)\nS. 20 deg. 59 min. W. 1.81 chs.; (3) N. 73 deg. 29\nmin. W. 0.87 chs.; (4) S. 1 deg. 52 min. E. 4.28\nchs.: (5) S. 8 deg. ,56 min. W. 4 .56 chs.: (6) S. 29\ndeg. 35 min. E . 5.70 chs.: (7) S. 38 deg. 43 min.\nE.2.68chs., tocor. No.1 M. C , theplaceof\nbeginning. Area 24.75 acres. Var. at all cor¬\nners 31 deg. 15 min. East.\nAny and all persons claiming adversely any\nportion of said land are required to lile an\nadverse claim with the Register and Re¬\nceiver of the U. S . Land Oltlee at Juneau,\nAlaska, during the period of publication, or\nwithin thirty days thereafter, otherwise\nproof and entry of said land will be made by\nsaid applicatant.
059774cb715527e9647d5b82471830c4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.3904109271944 39.745947 -75.546589 The merchants who were interviewed\nto day. including Edward fl. Brennan\nand others,asserted that It was no reavou\nwhy they should be compelled to suffer\nbecause the street car company objected\nIn other cities street car companies used\nsand carts to prevent accidents from\nslippery tracks. This could be done in\nthis city and would be sufficient protec\ntiou from accidents, but at present the\nmerchants have no protection against the\nevils which they must suffer.\nIt is contemplated to prepare a petition\nfor presentation to the Water Depart­\nment, by the merchant',28 etling forth\ntheir grievances and asking for a remedy\nA member of the Water Department\nsays that water is not granted for street\nsprinkling during the day because no\nwater rent is paid for such purposes. It\nis a concession, not a duty, of the coi»\nmissioners in granting it at ail. No\nwater has been denied for use lu a\nsprinkling cart though they are not pre\npared to say that water for such pur\nposes would be granted if a petition was\npresented The rule forbidding the\nwashing of streets was made for several\nreasons, one of which is that in their\nopinion the practice is not con­\nducive to the health of the com\nmunity. It was also considered to\nbe a nuisance by many and is forbidden\nin Philadelphia and other cities The\nWilmington CityRailway Company had\nnothing to do with the matter\n36 of the Laws, Rules and Regulations\nof the Water Department, says: “Wash\npaves are exclusively for washing the\nfoot pavements of the premises charged\nwith the wash pave, and should their\nuse be permitted for sprinkling the\nstreet or sideway it is a concession by the\nWater Department, not a privilege of\nthe owner. ”
1c56592c707df90e91237cef7d2ed0f5 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.1273972285642 40.735657 -74.172367 northerly lino oc ihira avenue; thence westerly\nalong the same to the boundary line between\nNewark and East Orange; thence northerly\nalong the same to the boundary line between\nNewark and Bloomfield; thence easterly and\nnortherly along the same to the boundary line\nbetween Newark and Belleville; thence east-\nerly and northerly along the same to a point\nabout one hundred feet north of the northerly\nline of the Old Road to Bloomfield; thence east\nerly and parallel with the same to the Morris\nCanal; thence southerly along the same, to a\npoint about one hundred and fifty-six feet and\nforty-seven cne-hundredths of a foot north of\nthe northerly line of Chester avenue: thence\nwesterly and parallel with Chester avenue to a\npoint about one hundred feet east of the east-\nerly line of North Sixth street; thence south-\nerly and parallel with North Sixth street to the\nnortherly line of Chester avenue; thence west-\nerly along the same to the westerly line of\nNorth Sixth street; thence southerly along the\nsame to a point about one hundred feet south\nof the southerly line of Chester avenue; thence\nwesterly and parallel with Chester avenue one\nhundred feet; thence southerly and parallel with\nNorth Seventh street to a point about one .hun-\ndred feet north of the northerly line of Berke-\nley avenue; thence westerly and parallel with\nthe same to the westerly line of North Seventh\nstreet; thence southerly along the same to the\nsoutherly side of Berkeley avenue; thence west-\nerly along the same hundred feet; thence\nsoutherly at right angles to Berkeley avenue one\nhundred feet; thence westerly parallel wit\\\nBerkeley avenue thirty-seven feet arid lifty-ont-\nhundredhs of a foot; thence southerly parallel\nwith North E.ghth street two hundred and\nninety-five feet; thence easterly parallel with\nAbington avenue thirty-seven feet an nfty one-\nhundredths of a foot, thence southerly at right\nangles to Abington avenue one hundred' and\nfourteen feet; thence westerly along the north-\nerly line of Abington avenue tu a point about\nseventy-flvo feet east of the easterly line of\nNorth Eighth street; thence southerly parallel\nwith North Eighth etreet to the southerly line\nof Abington avenue; thence easterly along tbe\nsame to the rear line of lots fronting on North\nSeventh street; thence southerly along the same\nto number 572 North Seventh street; thence\neasterly along the southerly line of same to the\nwesterly line of North Seventh street; thence\nsoutherly alon.r the sf^me to a point about one\nhundred and thirty feet south of the southerly\nline of Bloomfield avenue; thence westerly\nparallel with same about one hundred and sixty\nfeet; thence southerly parallel with Roseville\navenue to a point about one hundred feet north\nof the northerly lino of Second avenue; thence\nwesterly parallel with Second avenue td the\nwesterly line of Roseville avenue; thence south-\nerly along the same to '.he southerly lino of lot\nVni n* on the southwesterly corner -of Rose-\nvllle avenue and Second avenue; thence west-\nerly along the same to the rear line of lots\niron
14ef604310aede1cfcf4037897d9bd06 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.6041095573314 43.798358 -73.087921 Electrical Shock from a Sheet\nof Paper. Place an iron jappaned tea-tra- y\non a dry clean beaker glass ; then\ntake a sheet of foolscap writing paper, and\nhold it to the fire until all its hygrometic\nmoisture is dissipated, but not so as to\nscorch it ; in this state it is one of the fin\nest electrics we have. Hold one end\ndown with the finger and thumb, and\ngive it about a dozen strokes wih a large\npiece of india rubber, from the left to the\nright, beginning at the top. Now take it\nup by two of the corners and bring it over\nthe tray, and it will fall down on it like a\nstone; if one hnger be now brought un-\nder the tray, a sensible shock will be felt.\nNow lay a needle on the tray with its\npoint projecting outwards, remove the pa-\nper, and the positive brush will appear.\nIn fact it forms very extemporaneous\nelectrophorus, which will give a spark an\ninch long, and strong enough to set fire to\nsome combustible bodies, and to exhibit\nall the electric phenomena not requiring\ncoated surfacss. If four beaker glasses are\nplaced on the floor, and a book laid on\nthem, a person may stand on them insulat-\ned ; If he holds the tray vertically, the pa-\nper will adhere to it, and sparks may be\ndrawn from any parts of his body, or he\nmay draw sparks from any other person,\nasthecasemaybe; orhemaysetfireto\nsome inflammable bodies by touching\nthem with a piece of ice.\nSteam Boat Explosion. The steam\nboat Union blew up at Hull, England,\nabout the 8th ult., causing the destruction\nof the boat and the loss of many lives.\nThe persons on board of the Gazelle,\nwhich was passing at the time, say that\nimmediately after the explosion, the sky\nwas covered with the fragments of the\nill-fat-
37ddd8b1738ce61e626af43cb25fcada THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1918.4041095573314 35.721269 -77.915539 The Kaiser speaks of "our God,"\ntis not the God we know, our God\nIs reigning up in Heaven, this Kais-\ner's god below; infernal are his hab-\nits and he sheds abroad a blight, the\nBible God in kindness gives to men\nHis love and llgat. The Kaiser's\ngod hates children and would tear\nthem limb from limb, to see them\nsuffer is his Joy, his ordinary whim;\nhe'll cut their tongues out, and their\nheads he'll dash against a stone\nand brag of the great victory he\nthinks that he has won. Sweet vir\ntue is to him unknown, that pure\nthing, so divine; he gives his pas-\nsion fullest sway, Just as he may in\ncline, he has no love for woraanhdod,\nits purity, or name, men's wives and\ndaughters everywhere he'll willing\nly defame; destruction follows in his\nwake, he sacks, he burns, he kills,\nphilosophers are but his tools, they\nwrite Just what he wills. His motto\nis "obey," and those who dare ref-\n he puts to torture in his vice,\nand turns on them the screws; his\nfood is human flesh, his drink is on-\nly human blood, who but the Kaiser\nand his crew could worship such a\ngod. He steals whole cities, nations\ntoo, God' temples he destroys, and\nabject slaves he makes of men, of\nwomen and boys; "Apolyon" is the\nKaiser's god, for no one else could\nbe so cruel, heartless, void of good,\nso full of hate as he; the Kaisers\ngod is king of death, the Christian's\nKing of life. The Bible God is God\nof peace, the Kaiser's god of strife;\nthe Kaiser may proclaim aloud his\nconfidence in God, his confidence is\nin himself, and in his ugly crowd,\nthis pious talk of Kaiser Bill wili\nnever win the war, his prayers go\ndown and never up to heaven's holy\ndoor; no doubt his god will help\nhim out in his deviltry and sin. The\nGod of Holy Writ alone will help the\nwar to win.
0f1ab78b886080103b426e4585092def THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 Ah Aquatic Merchant.-Uitai\nAfloat..At a place called Great Valle\non tko Allegheny river, forty miles hl»\nWarren, In Cataragus county, Now Yor\nis an extensive chair factory, perhaps tl\nmost extensive of the kind inthowhc\ncountry, Alexander & Little, proprleloi\nThese gentlemen turn out about twcti\ndozen per week of their unique chai:\nvery strong, very durnblo, and very cot\nfortablo, suited, and peculiarly Bultcd, f\nstores, counting-rooms, porches, summc\nhouses, and lawns or arbors. The sty\nof these chairs may bo said to bo prln\ntlvo, but tho scats of many of them n\nmade of rattan, a very tough, elastic, at\ndurable material, In these respects sup\nrlor to the old-fashioned split-bottoii\nThe enterprising proprietors liavo co\nBimetal a number of lumber rafts, wi\nwhich tliey started from Great Valli\nwith 160 dozen of these rattan chaii\nThese rnlts hiVe floated with the curre\nof the Allegheny and Ohio, and a\n moored just below the Snspensli\nBridge. Tho raits are covered by an aw\ning, and already one. hundred and thir\ndozen of the cargo havo been sold. Oi\nof tho proprietors, with his family^ is\nboard and will watt upon tho lady at\ngentlemen visitors who visit their tern\nThe stock of chairs remaining unsold et\nbraces sixteen varieties ol rocklng-chaii\nthree kinds of Misses' chairs, high at\nlow backed sewing chairs, parlor chair\nchain adapted for stores and oflta\nand what might bo callcd an cdltoi\nchair. Tho happy possessor ol ono\nthese can have his books or oxebanges <\nthe left hand and wrltlug implements c\nthe right, and rock while he writes at\nwrite while ho rocks. Ordcra will bo r\nccived and promptly executed forfutu\ndelivery,or fornny kind or quality not <\ntho rail. Ladies can {easily and sale\nreach this quoer store houso and find 1\ndies to wait on them.
1850f3edb68287c3dcf14caddfb85df4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.828767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 1 have seen many persons cured with only ono\nomul Iuuk, live and enjoy life to a good ola «««*.\nI'hls is what Bchenck's Medicine will do to euro\ntotunmptlon. They will clean ont thu stomacli,\niwcutvn and strengthen It, gotupagood dittos*\nIon . and glvo nature the aasistanco she needs to\n:tear tho system of all thu disease that Is In thu\nungs, whatever tho form may bo.\nIt i« imp>rtnnt that while using hchenck's\nMedicines, rare should bu exercised not to take\n:o!il; keep In-door* In cold and damp weather;\nivold night air, nnd take out-door eicrclsu only\nn a genial and warm sunshine.\nI wish ll distinctly understood that when I re*\nommend a patient to bo careful in regard to\naklng cold, while using my Medicines, I do so\nor a speelal reason. A man who has but par*\n1 illy recovered from tho effect* of bad cold Is\narmoru liable to a relapse than ono who has\n>ecn entirely cured, and It la precisely the tamo\nn regard to Consumption. Ho long a* the lungs\nro not perfectly healed, Just so long Is there lm*\nnlnent danger of a full return of tho disease,\nlenco It Is that I so strenuously caution pal*\nmm try patients against exposing themselves to\n>11 atmosphere that Is not genial and pleasant.\n,'onflrmed Consumptives' lung* are a mass of\nores, which thu least change of atmosphero will\nmllamu. The grand secret of my success with\nny medicines consist* In my ability to subdue\nntlammatlon Instead of provoking It, as many of\nhe faculty do. An Inflamed Inng cannot, wltli\nlafcty to the patient, bo exposed to the biting\nilaMsnf Winter or the chilling wind* of Spring\nir Autumn. It should bo carefully shielded\nroiu all Irritating Influences. The utmost
7c709e3ddf68e4ec322295045d909c81 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.219945323568 31.960991 -90.983994 tion or corporations for the benefit ol all when any money arising from the assets\nthe respective creditors thereof, accord* of said corporations shall accumulate in\ning to the provisions of the second sec- the hands of any commissioner, officer,\ntion of this act, and to tiiat end the chan agent or attorney, to the amount of ten\ncellor shall have power to determine and thousand déllars, it shall be deposited in\nadjudicate according to law, the order in the safe of the State Treasurer, there to\nwhich such payments shall be made,and remain a special deposite for the purposes\nthe priority ol the payment and lien, il herein provided; ar.d the Governor may\nany such there be, and the chancellor at any lime in his discretion order addi-\nshall be required, at the first regular or tional security for the safe keeping of\nspecial ertn of his court, after the filing the property, money or assets bf said\nof said bill, to determine what priority I corporations, and the Chancellor shall\nof payment, if any, 6aid bond holders ; have the Scyne power in term\nhave, according to law,over other ciedit-\nors of said corporation or corporations.\nSec. 5. Be it further enacted, That\nafter the payment of said bonds as here­\nin provided for, the surplus accruing\nfrom the assets ofsaid corporations shall\nbe divided among the creditors thereof\naccording to their respective legal right,\nand if any surplus shall remain af ter\nthe payment of the debts and liabilities\nof said corporations, the same shall be\npaid to the respective stockholders ac­\ncording to their respective legal rights.\nSlo. 6. Be it further enacted, That\nsaid commissnners, before entering upon\nthe duties of their respective offices,shall\ntake and subscribe an oath faithfully to\nfulfil their trust according to law, and\nshall give bonds conditioned therefor\nwith three or more good and sufficient\nsecurities, payable to the Governor and\nhis successors in office, in the penalty of\nfifty thousand dollars, which said bond\nshall be filed in the office of the secreta­\nry of state; and be approved of by the\nGovernor.
00e2f9ebebde2dd7bfc28c9ebca13a07 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.5095628099068 37.53119 -84.661888 The Journal says the Veranda Hotel\nIn Stanford was closed on account of HI\nhealth of Mrs Coffey Messrs Farris\nk Hardln proprietors of the famous\nSt Asapb Hotel have rented the build ¬\nlog to bo used as bed rooms These\ngentlemen have built up a splendid rep ¬\nutation as hotel men and their con ¬\nstantly Increasing business was crowd\nlog the house Now however they\nhave ample room and If you want the\nbet meal the market affords ora neat\ncomfortable room stop at tbe St Asaph\nand you will get all you are looking\nforLancaster Record\nThe following ts telegraphed from\nLivingston A man giving his name\nas Frank Johcson was arrested here\nsuspected of being tbe person who rob ¬\nbed the ponoBloe a few days ago In\nhis possession were found skeleton\nkeys flop nitroglycerine soap and\nother articles used by the profession\nJohnson seems to be about 28 years ofi\nage and Is a tough looking citizen He\n taken to London and lodged In jail\nto await trial In making tbeentranco\nto the postoOloe a window was broken\nand blood marks on Johnsons hand\nlook as it It had been out by the glass\nMrs Mary A Williams mother of\nR L and Curd Williams died at her\nhome In Wllllamsburg She was former ¬\nly a eltlien of this county having lived\nhere for 46 years previous to moving to\nWhitley county about IS months ago\nShe was about 80 years old and was a\nnoble Christian hearted lady having\nbeen a strict member of the Christian\ncnuroh slnae her girlhood days She\nwits universally beloved by all who\nknew her Her many friends In this\ncounty will bo sad to learn of herdeath\nwhich came so suddenly Her remains\nwere burled In Williamsburg cemetery\nCasey County News\nEditor Walton has been attacked by\na contempoary of the Lexington Dsm\noorat for showing favors to democratic\nmercantile dealora In his official capac-\nity
040b874b20de055f01176ce3e6fc0abf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.905479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 Capt. A si Booth ie one of the most enthu¬\nsiastic »ForUmen her* bouts.. Ho is prepar¬\ning to gooft on ajiudttne latttr'pait o. this\nweek. He will letfVe the Diurnal in good\nhands however, during hla absence.\nTho W.N . Chancellor passed up eta hie\nhour Sunday evenlrgenruute for Pitlaouwh\nf'om tho Kanawha Valley, Capt. £ . P .\nChancellor in command and Ira t$ Huntirr\ntoa in the office. This excellent packet will\npats down U -m0T0W morning, and sbippeis\nwh i ma7 patron'zs her are assured that they\nwill receive sitiafaotory treat men 1.\nThe Andes arrived at 3:80 r. m with a\nsplendid trip and a number of ptSHsnger*.\nThis excellent stem-wheel steamer will leave\nthis afternoon on her return trip to Cincin¬\nnati. She is deservedly one of the poj\nular boats on the Upper Ohio, ar d can to rec¬\nommended to the ;raye ine public witbont\nany reservation. Capt Charlie Muhleman\nis in command, and Mart Noll ami Cherlie\nKnox are in the otiloe. The accommodations\npesfcssed for s^ipr*ers ere first-alas?.\nThe following snags are reported on tho\nUpper Ohio: Ote opposite the Pouieny\nFlour mill; one at the foot of Newbury To>\\-\nbead, one opposi e Hill's Landing, a had tree\ntop at the foot cf Posey's Landing, which\nwould be llkflly to catch towboa's; one at\nthe foot of Grave Creek Bar; cne ipfotlte\nthe Union coal work', above Moundavllle;\none above Kipley, and another below Brad¬\nley's Creel; one, with a huge white bead, o» .\npcslle O.dtown Creek; one below fci.ver Rnr;\na bad stumn above Cnesbire.
231e06360c6a614f9fbd454416bd97bf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.8534246258243 40.063962 -80.720915 they havo foand In hlB own converse- lb\n(ion. his sets done publialy and In K»\nthe face of the community and the le\nfaco of heaven, his own written state- to\nments made under oath and placed on ot\npublic record. Does a guilty man work «1\nhis iniquity iu this wuy'l Does he who ,r\nhae douo wrong willingly offer htinsell dl\nas a wltneBS, submit himself to crosa it\nexamination by legal ability as dlatln- it1\ngulshed as that here employed agaluat It\nlit in, and expose blmaelf lo the possible H*\ncontradictions of these eager prosecut- 01\nlug witnesses, whoso aotlvity for bU\nrain never relaxes? Does tbe guilty\niiinu go further and place upon the wit- w\nnow stand those motti familiar with bis\nhabits and practices aa Superintendent ^\nof (he road and those who, if he be ol\nguilty, must bo his confederate*, and yet w\ntire now without Interest in hi* behalf? I'1\nThe supposition that a guilty man 1)1\noould act in tbls way violate* every *(>\nlaw of human nature, lie whoso deeds n;\nare evil loves darkness; he draws a veil\nof privacy about himself and his aota; pi\nho shuns the gaze and tbe conversation gi\nof his fellow-men. Fraud is, in its na- ki\nture, Bllnnt mid its existence is M\nImpossible in a broad blaze of lightaaoh af\nas hurrounds and reveals lo you every re\nsot and almost fcvery thought of this or\nman's official career. th\nThere is another consideration equal- w\nly inconsistent with tbe supposillouof w\nthiu man's guilt, aud that U tint we pt\nnowhere find intimated against him the tb\nvery offenses of which a man such as at\nthey represent blm would be guilty, th\nTho annual tolls on this road when he i/l\ntook it were $1,300 per year; gradually th\nthey have increased to f4,G00. The pi\nkeepers at the several gates are entirely wi\nunder the control ofthe Superintendent, ra\nthey owo to him their official exlstenco\nand their dHiiy bread. A designing Hu- cu\nperlntendent could put at these gates tu\nkeepers who would be bis mere tools, nc\nand for the last three years might have at\nstolen from $500 to f1000 a year. The ed\namount paid over to tbe State wonld de\nstill have increased slightly each year, pe\nSnch a swindle would have beeu com- bti\nparatively safe, The enormous lucrease Hi\nin tolls paid ovar preclude* any suanl- In\nclous of its practice in this otse. Yet If\nyou are asked lo believe that this dis* hi\nhonest man, ««
0e85c056eb697231f06c690ee6c9ff84 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.0561643518517 39.745947 -75.546589 feature is the dividing of the hollow\nbeams running from floor to ceiling of\nthe room. Into foot-square lockers.\nThese will lie purchased outright by\nclub members, and each will have his\nname carved on Ids locker, forming a\nsort of roll-of-honor of the club. On\neach beam la Inscribed the eoat-of-\narms of the club. At tho top of tlds\ndesign Is the -i'Blue Hen's Chicken,”\na game-cock rampant, bine with red\nwings and tall, standing on a wreath.\nBelow Is a shield In the three league\ncolors, orange, white, and green. On\nthe upper division Is the ship from the\nState eoat-of-arma . In the lower divi­\nsion. the three plowshares, emblem\nof Democracy. This escutcheon was\ndesigned by Mr. Gray.\nOn ths Second Floor.\nThe second floor has a large room\nto be used as a general meeting room.\nThe walls are finished In deep, rich rad.\nand hung with Imported tapestry,\nhunting scenes In quiet, harmonious\n Conspicuous on the black wood­\nwork I» the club coat-of-arms, describ­\ned before. Thera are comfortable easy\nchairs upholstered In red leather, and\ntables for writing.\nThe second room on this floor was\ndesigned particularly as a room where\nvisitors entertained by the club might\nhave a chance for a quiet rest, and a\nroom where various committee meet­\nings and private meetinga might be\nheld. It Is finished and furnished In a\npleasing shade of green, with easy\nchairs. Davenport bed, ami a large\nleather couch. On tho buffet In this\nroom. Is a rare and unique set of\nSmeeda ware, a pitcher and six mugs.\nThe material is lava from Fuji Yama\nand ths background Is grayish-green\nand an exquisite shade of red.\nOn this are quaint raised Japanese\nfigures In white and blue. This is one\nof the proudest possessions of the\nDemocratic League and was purchased,\nns were most of the furnishings, In\nWilmington.
393f225e1a41418055ca2aef6725f107 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7904109271942 40.063962 -80.720915 There is no doubt that a somewhat\nformidable combination of lobbyists,\nspeculators, politicians and whisky\nthieves is orgauizing for an onslaught\nupon Secretary McCulloch aud Com¬\nmissioner Rollins. Col. Wiaewell, the\ndefeated aspirant for Deputy Commis¬\nsioner, swears vengeance against both\nthese officials, and so do the whole gang\nthat eudeavored to prevent Messmore's\nremoval. Another of the parties in the\nring, to wit: Tbe Democratic chiefs of\nNew York city, have made their appear-1\nauce here within a day or two. Colonel\nHillyer, one of the revenue agents in\nthat city seeuis to be their spokesman\nat present. He had a long talk with\nthe President on Saturday, aud anoth¬\ner on Sunday. The chiefs afore¬\nsaid declare that the Metropolitan\nReveuue Board is playing the very mis¬\nchief with the whisky ring over there,\n will seriously interfere with the\nDemocratic programme in the coming\nState election. Money is wanted and\nthe whisky men threaten revolt, uuless\nthe Revenue Board is broken up. The\ncase has been laid before Mr. Johnson\nns plausibly as jKjssible, and it is cur¬\nrently reported that he advises the dis¬\ncontinuance of the Board. The Secre¬\ntary believes that this action wonld not\nnow be advisable, and declines to be a\nparly to anything looking to less effi¬\nciency in collecting the revenues. The\nring thereupon charges to the President\nthat Rollins is a Radical, and McCtil-\nlocb not a true Johnson man. This al¬\nlegation will be repeated day after day\nby the whole gang interested on\n'Chauge, and it is not improbable that\nthey may succeed, afterawbile, in driv¬\ning both gentlemen out of bttice.
4cbf1ce9ab352eb5755134e5f87260da THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.9383561326738 39.560444 -120.828218 Last week we shut op shop and went to\nMarysville; not that we had any business\nthere, but because there are in that goodly\ncity a number of friends whom we would\ngo much farther to see. The elegant lan-\nguage, professional, for such occasions\nmade and provided, to wit:—“made a fly-\ning visit"—will not apply to our exodus,\nor return—we didnt fly. A very sedate,\nwell-behaved mule, generously offered us\nby the Langton Brothers, carried us to\nFosters Bar in excellent time, where we\nwere very hospitably entertained at Whit-\ncombs and the El Dorado Hotels. The\nroad from Fosters Bar to Marysville does\ncredit to the enterprise of the Turnpike\ncompany. Of this road and its continu\nation to Downieville, we will have some-\nthing to say at another time.\nArrived at the Western house, we found\nnot the same weather-boarded crib, where\nMurray was popular enough, but a mag-\nnificent brick building, three stories high,\nspacious enough to accommodate two hun-\ndred persons, but not large enough ac-\ncommodate all Murrays friends and guests.\nEven the parlor floor was covered with\nhombres done up in blankets, who prefer-\ned to sleep there than go elsewhere.\nMurray is certainly a very bad account-\nant, judging from his failure to make out\nour bill—he invariably had a pressing en-\ngagement elsewhere, when we requested to\nknow the amount of our indebtedness to\nthe Western House, tut when anything\nelse was wanted Murray had nothing else\nto do but attend to the request. The\nMarysville papers say that it is a way of\nhis own. The Marysville people seem to\nbe very proud of the Western House, and\nwell they may be, for it is a monument of\nenergy and an unconquerable will. Hav-\ning roof and walls and the savings of years\nof honorable industry, swept away—noth-\ning left but the foundation to build on,\nwith nothing to build with, was enough to\ndiscourage any one less hopeful. But\nMarysville is not without citizens who\nappreciate an honorable man straggling\nwith misfortune—the result isthe Western\nHouse is rebuilt in a style that Murray\nnever dreamed of when he first settled in\nMarysville. Mr. M . and his estimable\nlady will accept our acknowledgments for\ntheir kind attentions, with our earnest\nprayer that another shadow may not fall\non their hearth.
12ee151b7069015fcbeb249e3ebc77d6 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1886.4205479134957 39.743941 -84.63662 were delivered by Messrs. Stanford, Hearst,\naod others, and after a resolution express\ning the sorrow or tbe Senate bad been adopt-\ned, an adjournment was carried at 3:45 n. ul.\nas a mark of respect to the deceased.\nHouse. The conference report on the\nshipping bill was adopted, with tbe retaliatory\nclause inciuaco. Discussion on tne oleomar-\ngarine bill was resumed. Short speeches were\nmade by Daniels of Virginia, and Tillman of\nSouth Carolina, against, and by Butter worth,\nand Hilt of Illinois, in favor, although Mr.\nButtcrworth believed the tax pro oscd was\ntoo high. After a number of amendments.\nintended 1o make the bill ridiculous, had\nbeen ruled out of order, tbe House adjourn-\ned at So. m. An atten-o- t to get a night ses\nsion, for further discussion, was defeated by\nniiDustering.\nWashington, May 28. Senate. A bill was\npassed validating the general laws of Wash-\nington Territory for the Incorporation of in-\nsurance companies. The resolutions offered\nyesterday providing for an investigation \nthe appointment of Indian traders was re\nferred to the Committee on Indian Affairs.\nConsideration of tbe Northern Pacific land\ngrant forfeiture bill was resumed. A mo\ntion to lay on the table van Wyck s amend\nment for a sweeping forfeiture of the lands\ngranted to that road was defeated by 23 yeas\nto 28 nays. After a protracted debate the\nSenate went into executive session at 8:45 p.\nm.. and at 4 :42 adjourned.\nHouse. It was agreed to adjourn over\nMonday next. J une 18 was set apart for con-\nsideration of the Senate resolutions relative\nto the death of the late Senator Miller, of\nCalifornia. Private business having been\ndispenaed with, the oleomargarine bill was\ntaken ud and discussed until 5 o. m. . when\nthe House took a recess until 8 p. m . Tbe\nnight session being for tbe consideration of\npension bills, before the recess several vetoes\noi private pension oms were rcaa.\nWashington, May 28. Senate. Not in ses\nsion.
31da308d81b92bfa3f075ecb61173b6b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5849314751395 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out lor general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian. whose preparatory study tits him lor all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country is flooded witli\npoor nostrums Mid cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in tbe world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should Ire Par-\nTJCCI~*K in selecting Ins physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible fact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nby the best svphilograpbers, that the studyand man-\nagement nfthese complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comonly pursues system of treat-\nment, in mosteases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used by the syph-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without aDy claims to meilical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand. by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters. they induce the unwary to enter their Peter\nPunk "institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, I»r. J. C. YOUNG\nwould sav that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 761 Clay street, opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom Ita. u..to 5 P. m.
11f33e1578a745cb0b39d1c62b8d58e4 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.9520547628108 37.53119 -84.661888 were Instructed to fin with Ume flash In\ncaw It revealed Indians about\nAt last when we were nil In n trem\nbio with anxiety time flash came For a\nfew MiiindM It was us If n great search-\nlight had milieu Impel the desert It\nwas so blinding that every eye was\nclosed for n second When opened\nthey beheld n haul of 10 Apaches on\nbauds nnd knees within 1 fret of the\ntents A volley was fired straight lute\ntheir faces mad n second as another\nflash showed n few lu retreat and\ntime we lay there lu the pouring rain\ntill daylight conic There hind been In\nthe band as near ns we could figure It\nIndians We had tired without aim\nand the destruction wrought was due\nto luck or accident but there were K\nredskins lying dead on time snails\n the camp Among these were a\nfull chief n subchlef and live or six\nnoted warriors Our volleys hind ac\ncomplished more than n years cnm ¬\npaigning with COO soldiers Indeed\nthey brought pence for two years Said\none of the survivors to me afterward\nWe hind planned to kill tho entire\nlot of you We heard the notes of the\ndeath bird nnd knew you would hear\nthem also but we didnt believe ypu\nwould understand the warning Had\nyou not understood mid moved away\nnot n man of you would have escaped\nFor ninny days subsequently oyp\nfor many months nnd ycarsas I was\nposted along the desert or Journeyed\nacross It I looked for the death bird at\nmorning noon nnd night but I never\ngot sight of him Ills mission was to\nfly only nt night and to tell of peril
216e8c31cd470d85a36a6c9268ec598b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.7904109271942 39.745947 -75.546589 CONNOR—In this city, on October 15th,\n)9<19, Francis. Infant son of Francis J.,\nand Catherine Connor.\nRelatives and friends are respectfully\nInvited to attend the funeral services at.\nthe residence of his parents. No. 1011\nWest Second street, on Mondsy af­\nternoon. October 18th, at 2 o'clock. In­\nterment at Cathedral Cemtery.\nDORMAN—On October 15, 1*09. Rodney\nHoyt, son of Thom»» H. and Jeanette\nII. Dorman. In hit 18th year.\nRelatives and friends of the family\nare Invited to attend the funeral ser­\nvices at his parent«' re«ldenc«. Edge\nMoor, on Monday afternoon, October IS.\nat 2 o'clock. Interment at Rlverview\nCemetery.\nHRWKTT—Tn this city, on October 14th.\n1998. Ella Vera, daughter of James \\V.\nand Julia Ella Hewett, In her lllh year.\nRelatives and friends of the family \nInvited to attend the funeral, «ervires at\nteh residence of her parent*. No. 102 North\nScott street, on Sunday afternoon. Oc­\ntober 17th. at 3 o'clock. Interment at SU-\nberbrok Cemetery.\nKEATLBY—In this city, on Oclobcr l>th,\n1909. William J. Kealley. aged 49 years.\nRelatives, friends. Wilmington tamp\nNo. 4. P. O 8. of A.. Fidelity Lodgr. No.\n2*AO.U.W..andemployesofw.&\nN R. r! Co., are Invited to attend the\nfuneral service« at his late residence. No.\n100 Kast Thirteenth street, on Sunday af­\nternoon. October Lth, at 1 £Jock. ln*\nforment nt RlvfrvlPW CPITJOl^ry«\nGAWTHROP. —tn this city. On October\nt«ih Alfred Gawthrop.\nRelatives and friend, are Invited to at-\nfend the funeral from his late residence.\nNo 1Î07 Delaware avenue, on Monday af­\nternoon, al I o'clock. Please omit flow­
06ed76d36cad8568d6fc961e5f841cf4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.7117486022566 40.063962 -80.720915 5th. Impure water from decayed or rotten\npump stock is entirely obviated\n6th In construction it in both simple and dlimbic.\nTbe handle 1» made of two wrought Iron\nrods and so amnged that while it in light, yet\nhas great strength. The cylinder in whlco a 1 the\nwork 1s performed Is Iron, lined with cou| er.Uiti\ncopper lining prerotiirunt aud makes '-nt little\nfriction. This iron chamber is not subir.. igcd,\nbut placed In thw-w/JI abovu tha water, aim yet\nwill work as well unntr aa above the u.uer.\n7 h. It can bo used in a driven or bu.tU well\nwith the eame ease ae a well of larger diameter.\n8th. For its general adaptability tbii Pump la\nwithout a rival. The Pump may bo placed ut\nyour dwelling or harn,or within the .building,\nand connected with the well, or or otb*:r\nbody of water, fifty tr ono hundrei yards distant,\nand will work with the sane cisea* though\nstandiug directly over tiie water.\nttth. It is single acting and pumps only with\nthe dowu FtMke of tho andie, and thus avoida\nthe A/aryty"* required In the doubla acting Puuip.\n10th. by attaching a abort hone, a stream muy\nbe thrown fifty to ilsty feet and may often bo\nused to advantage in watering gardens and lawns,\nwashing window*, cleaning buggies, extinguishing\nUrea, or elevating water. We recognize tho\nfact tbatitrequii«M more power to elevate water\nfrom a deep trun from a shallow well. Butaa\nfar aa possibleto obviate this difficulty for deep\nwells, we manufacture a smaller chamber, so that\nwhile the volume or water Is diminished, the\npower required Is' not greatly increased We\nclaim thai by tho combination.
107d0fb00ebc310949c9a3d73305fdd8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1902.9986301052766 58.275556 -134.3925 Beginning at Corner No. 1, identical with\nCorner No. 1 "Alaska" Lode this survey, from\nwhich corner U. S. L. M. No. 9 bears S. 6 deg.\n14 min. W . 83.5 feet. Thence N. 46 deg. 10 min.\nE.f var. 29 deg. 47 min. E. 1:12.0 ft. center of Ne¬\nvada Creek, 15 feet wide flows north. 300 .0 ft.\nLode line bears S. 62 deg. 09 . min. E. 1500 feet,\nDiscovery point. Quartz cropping bears N.\n54 cleg. 01. inin.#W., and S. 62 deg. 09. min. E .,\n500.0 ftcenter Nevada creek 20 feet wide, flows\nN. 31 deg. E . 000.0 ft to Corner No. 2, identical\nwith Corner No.2 "AIaska;"Corner No.l "Al¬\naska 2;" Corner No. 1 "Bullion 2," all of this\nsurvey. Thence S. 62 deg, 09. min E. var. 29\ndeg. 47 rain. B . 108.0 ft. Nevada creek 15 feet\nwide, flows N. SO deg. E. 298.0 ft. center of open\n averaging 3x4, extending S. 49 deg. 05 .\nrain. W. 610 feet, and N. 48 deg. 05. rain. t. 105\nfeet, 1445.0 ft center of creek 5 feet wide, flows\nN. 17 deg. W. 1500.0 ft Corner No. 3, identical\nwith Corner No. 4 "Bullion 2" Lode of this\nsurvey. A hemlock post 4 feet long, 4 inches\nsquare, set 18 inches in the ground, with\nmound of stone, scribed U. S. S ., 575-3-4, from\nwhich a hemlock tree 3 feet in diameter\nbears S. 10 deg. W., 2 feet distant, blazed and\nscribed U. S. 5?.. 575-3 -8 B. T. Location corner\nbears S,fl2 deg. 09 . min. E. 100 feet. Thence S.\n46 deg. 10 min. W. var. 29 degr. 47 min E. 38.0 ft.\nto center of creek, 5 feet wide, flows N. 34 deg\nE. 800 .0 ft. Lode line. 600.0 ft Corner No. 4. A\nhemlock post, 4 feet long, 4 iuches square, set
08cdc037a67b7fdc7c70b32e91812806 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.8753424340437 31.960991 -90.983994 them; therefore about the first of Octo­\nber vve put them in a Pea field that\n$.herc is water in -if not so, minding\nto give them plenty, before we turn\nthem in the field; we give them as\nmuch Corn as they will cat, then a lit­\ntle every day. As soon as they have\nate the Peas pretty well out of that\nfield put them into another one until\nwe wish to pen them, we then make\nclose pens and floor them, and put\nthem In; we shell the corn that we give\nthem; and soak it from 12 to 16 hours.\nWc keep salt pretty constant in their\ntrough. By this plan we can fatten\nbur Hogs on a great deal less corn\nHian to feed it dry. Wc kill our \nirôm the middle to the last ol Decem­\nber, which is generally a favorable\ntime for saving Poik. The day we\nkill wc cut up and salt lightly down\nUpon a plank which draws out a great\ndeal of bloody water; next day we\nBalt it over again and pack it down in\nlight Hogsheads, minding to have eve­\nry layer of meat covered well with salt\n(and when we arc salting wc rub the\nskin well ;V we let it lie in salt about six\nweeks, wc then hang it up and smoke\nit with green hickory wood,until wc dry\nit properly. In the first of March be..\nfore tho Skipper Fly makes it appear­\nance, wc take down the joints, and put\nthem down in hickory ashes, (or any\ntilfiel?
07fcb440ded2cb420351d9238ceead48 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.0204917716555 46.187885 -123.831256 chair from the routine of priate busi-\nness in a measure ignorant of the imme-\ndiate wants rnd condition of the city,\nand if, from any reason, the annual re-\nport of its officers should fail to bo on\ntime, ho would have verv little reliable\nmatter from which to construct his mes-\nsage. It would be better to relieve the\nma3'or from this difficult dutj when ho\nenters upon the duties of his office, but\nto require him to set forth in full all\nthat may be required at the succeeding\nannual meetings during his official term.\nIn the second place the amendment by\nthe legislature of the charter in October,\n18S0, has not, in my opinion, operated\nbeneficially to the city.\nAs tho law now stands, tho city road\ntax is turned over to the county for gen-\neral disbursement from which the city\nreceives no practical benefit. This should\nbe changed so that this fund, amounting\nto about $3,500, could be expended on the\nstreet crossings in tho city.\nSuch a measure would be of more ben-\nefit to the than the present, and\nwould savo the city additional taxation\nnecessary to keep these crossings in re-\npair, as the money already spent on coun-\nty roads seems to have resulted in no es-\npecial good to either city or county.\nIn view of all of which, and perhaps\nother things which may have escaped my\nnotice, I would recommend that the city\nattornej be instructed to critically exam-\nine the entire charter and report, so that\neach proposed change can be thoroughly\nexamined and put into proper shapo to bo\nbrought before the next legislature by\nour representative and senator.\nAs to tho ordinances, I will say that in\nmy opinion the provisions of ordinance\nNo. 190, unwisely prevents the use of\ndouble terra cotta flues. I would recom-\nmend that this ordinance be so amended\nas to allow the use of double terra cotta\nflues which are less liable to crack than\nbrick chimneys in buildings over the wa-\nter, and in docks where sudden jars are\ncaused by tho contact of steamloats and\nother vessels, and which are considered\nequullj-
409dcfe3094e826c15a219b56b8e363c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.2616438039067 31.960991 -90.983994 importations of free .articles, as well as of\nthose subject to duty. There is another\ncause which may alone have sufficed to\nproduce such an effect—the apprehension\nof a sudden alteration of the tariff) greatly\nreducing the duties, and exposing the im­\nporters to loss and ruin. This was threat­\nened. But, however,all this may be, 1\nsay again, I only invoke a fair and liberal\nspirit of compromise.\nIn selecting a statesman for the Chief\nMagistracy, we should never look for a\nman who agrees with us in all things: we\nshall find no such man. If there is any\ncompetitor for the office, whose opinions\nare moulded by the interests of his ambi­\ntion, and consults the feelings and opinions\nof his fellow-citizens only to get their\nvotes, that man is unworthy of our ronfi\ndence. If there is any competitor for the\noffice, who professes exclusive devotion to\nthe interests of any one portion of the\nempire, who rests his claim to our suffrage\nentirely upon that devotion, whose opin*\nionativeness renders him incapable of any\nconcession to others, and who disclaims\nall compromise in matters of policy that\ncan only be by compromise, that\nman is not fit for the place. I know a man,\nwho has approved himself capable of ex­\nactly that kind of compromise I approve ;\nwho has ever avowed his principles with\nthe utmost candor, and maintained them\nwith independence, and who yet, when­\never the interest of his country has re­\nquired, has been ready to | make the most\nliberal concessions in matters of policy,\nthe opinions, the wishes, the feelings,\nand the interests of others; who, without\nforgetting, much more sacrificing, the in­\nterests of his own part of the Union, ex­\ntends his generous regards to those of\nevery quartet of the empire; and Whose\nabilities and wisdom are equal to any and\nevery exigency of State affairs—That\nman is Henry Clay.\nThe Whig9 of Virginia have thought\nproper to convene us together on the birth\nday of Washington—hoping, I presume,\nthat the memory of that general and\nmagnanimous devotion to the interests\nof his whole country, and that just and\nequal regard fbi every part of it, which\nhe so signally manifested in all his actions,\nmav inspire us with emulation of his il­\nlustrious example.
3068b55928a80e9f6d6da163168855c9 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1871.8232876395232 39.24646 -82.47849 peak in such b'tfti terms of Allen's l.unt? Ital- -\nasm lo day, Mint I Ui iiiitht I would wrilo you\nthe aulistanco of his slul. incDU lie mi a his\nmother, who is now sixty ycars of ac.e, has\nultered with conauni ptiou torseveral years,\nAnd bsa boen under the care of our best pliv\nH'inns, but never received any permanent\n.o u ellil then he resoned to most every kin\nof cough and .lunz balsam that could bo pro.\ncurad ioraSer. but all lo no avail, fhe still\nigrewtrorae, until she waseonllneillo her bed;\nAnd when ah was aeixed with a paroxysm or\nMugliiaz she would lose the power of respira-\ntion, and they were compelled to resort In\nfioua nieana to Teatnre breathing; and while\ntie eoilfthed so hard she could not expeetori\nAte anythiuz. and family and friends had'\ngiven -p all hos of her rcoovery. ller sun\noticed the aUrart'aeuibnt ol Aliens l.unK\nBalaamin tba Christian Advocate, nod they\nthought they would procura and try iu Thev\neommenned fixing tier the Balsam at &\no'oioek P. M , aa directol, a 4os every hoi.r\nUntil midniRht; then ahe took another spell of\neoushini;, auawxpeetoratcd a mouth lull of\nlUrK yellow matter, which was something hej\nhad not been able to do for some time. They\ncontinued Ingiv her the Balsam until mom-\nma, and Lboa ahetesm to exnectnrate freely\nand witbia two hour she bad expe;iorated\nthr piota of nitwoua niattei. w h ich gave her\nimmediate relixf, and aince that time she haa\ncontinued to improve. HIM now tils up all\nday, and can wain about the house and tsao\neoniMder.iltle
2d1f70c3f3cacf3fee298032128ce70d DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.6342465436326 44.939157 -123.033121 Coal operators and officers of the\nUnited Mine Workers who asked tin\npresident to name a eommittee of three\nto execute the Pomerene coal amend-\nment to food control law were told that\na dictator with sole responsibility and\nnot a committee was the favored plan.\nThe president g choice for this tre- -\nemndous power is not known. Robert S.\nLovett, priority hear of the war indus-\ntries board and chairman of the Union\nPacific railroad directorate, is favored\nby the coal operators. Commissioner W.\nB. Colver, of the federal trade com-\nmission is wanted by the coal miners.\nUnder the food law, the coal control-\nler will fix prices from the mine to the\ncustomors bin and will regulate all in\ntermediary steps of distribution.\nRelief of the northwest JNew Eng-\nland, threatened with coal famine, will\nbe among the first steps undertaken.\nA sharp reduction in priees to tne\nAmerican home is expected. The navy\ndepartment today is paying $2.33 at the\nmine for bituminous coal. The rate of\n$3 fixed by the coal operators volun\ntarily at the conference with secretary\nof the Interior Lane last June, is now\nadmitted by operators to be high.\nFigures gathered bv the federal trade\ncommission in its investigation of coal\ncosts, showed that it was mined m\nmanv districts as low- - as 90 cents a\nton. Differing costs with varying sizes\nof veins and mining conditions will be\ntaken into consideration in the tixmg\nof Drices to the consumer. Tho presi\ndent worked on the coal problem all\nday Sunday.
c29fb0882b7133bffe6274321a8a8d3b PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.828767091578 31.960991 -90.983994 There are now three candidates before the\npeople of the State for that exalted and responsi­\nble office, viz: Judge Taylor of Hinds, Jiufoe\nJohn M. Maury of Adams, and General Steph­\nen Cocke of Lowndes. From these three the\npeople must select their Chancellor through the\nballot-box, at the next November election. Now\nbelieve that political prejudice and feeling\nshovld not be made the test of qualification for\nthe office of Chancellor; yet there are to be found\nmany Democrats who will not vote for a whfo,\neven for a judicial office; and many whigs who\nwill not vote fora Democrat for such an office.\n1 hat this is so, is well known by you, without\nthe necessity of proof. *YVe must; in endeavor­\ning to secure the election ofthat one of the three\ncandidates before us who is best qualified to dis­\ncharge its duties, have regard to things as they\nare, and act accordingly. How, then, do the\nthree candidates stand effected by this political\nprejudice and feeling? Judge Taylor is a tl,o-\nrough going the length of Repudia­\ntion, which has been adopted as a principle by a\nlarge majority of the Democratic party in this\nState. Judge Maury is a whig in principle, hav­\ning voted tor Gen. Harrison for President, and\nalso for Mr. Clay; but, although firm and settled\nin his political principles, he is not noisy, or ob­\ntrusive, or intolerant towards those who differ\nwith him in opinion, believing that freedomof\nopinion is one ol the greatest blessings secured\nto us by the great charter of our liberties, and\nthat without its just and proper exercise by the\npeople, our free and republican institutions mu<4\nall into ruins, Gen. Cocke is, like Judrra Tay­\nlor, a Democrat, acting with the Democratic par­\nty in every thing but repudiation. Being a bond\npayer, he does not suit the majority of the Demo­\ncratic partyi and they will, of course, vote for\nJudge Taylor. Being a Democrat, he does not\nsuit a majority of the whigs; and these will vote\nfor Judge Maury. In any event, then, Taylor
09ee78753814db18d5d7be3b3bfa6d77 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1895.7821917491121 38.894955 -77.036646 doing anything for the community in re-\nturn for supplying them with the neces-\nsaries and luxuries or lire. 80 the amia-\nble King Induced a subservient parlia-\nment to make "grants" or land to these\nbastards or his. In order that tbe peasan-\ntry living on such lands should fhercirter\nbe compelled to pay tribute ("rent") to\ntbem lor the mivilcge or living. And\nrrora then till now a period or something\nover 200 years hundnids or thousands uf\nEnglish workingmen, the bone and sinew\nor the land, have been kept In Indigence\nand at hard labor. In order that all their\nearnings above what was suiricient to\nkeep them rrom starving might serve toi\nsupport in idleness and magnificence these\ngentlemen and ladles who trace their lin-\neage back to King Charles' mistresses.\nOTHER EXCUSES FOR \nCharles was a luxurious lUcr, and his\nexpenses were high. Where to obtain\nmoney was a troublesome questlnn. It\nwould hardly be consistent with kingly\ndignity Tor him to go "hoofing lt" over\nthe country, catching a poor peasant here\natid there by the throat and demanding\nof him a shilling or a pound. Sis he did\nthe same thing in a dignified and indirc-c -t\nway. He would conrcr some title of\nnobility nnd a "grant" ot land upon some\nrich man, who would hand over to him.\nin the lump 10,000. the grant authorizing\nthe rich man to demand tribute (rent) of\nthe peasants, who had previously occupied\nthe commons rent free.\nThis, of course, was not the lieglnnlng\nof the present system of land tenure, but\nIt fairly illustrates tho manner of its\norigin.
1167ef7be6f2405bf41f6c4bb6823709 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.4221311159179 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho station or permanent party consists\nof Lieutonant A. w. Greely, Fifth United\nStates cavalry, commander, with, as as¬\nsistants, Lieutenant O. O. Doane, Second\nUnited8ttttescavalry; Lieutenant W. H.\nLow, Twentieth United States infantry;\nHenry Clay (grandson of Henry Olav);\nAstronomer.Orray Taft Sherman, who\nwas connected with the Florence expedi¬\ntion, and astistants George 11. Kohie, W.\n8. Jewell and 0. Aldrloh, of Signal Corps\nUnited States Army; Surgeon and\nNaturalist.Dr. Octave Pavy, who was\nwith tho proposed French expedition via\nBehring Strait; Pbotsgrapher.J. W. Rice\nand fourteen enlisted men as a working\nparty. In addition to theso two half-\nbreeds have been engaged as dog drivers\nand will join the vessel at a place called\nRigolette, on the coast of Labrador.\nA frame house, 21x05 inside, with\ndouble walls, eighteen inches apart, lias\nbeen provided for the accommodation of\nthe whole party. This house is divided\n three rootob.one for the officers and\nscientists, obe for tho other members of\nthe expedition and the third for such\nstores as cannot be keptoutsido safely.\nThe house has a closed porch at either\nend to serve as a breaker or lock between\nthe cold air outside and the hot air Inside.\nFor traveling and sledge parties a liberal\nsupplyof mill tents and others of a smaller\nsue, known as the A tent, have boeu pro¬\nvided. A full supply of clothing for two\nyears has been lsid in, but it is proposed\nto increase supply at, Rijolette by a stock\nof skin clothing ordered last fall for the\nexpedition. Moccasins and mittens wero\nprocured from the stores of tho Hudson\nBay Company. Two whalebosts and ono\nstosm yawl will be left at the station for\npurposes of exploration by water, and six\nsledges, with a complement of dogs for\nland work.
07a7e9516575207fb19e5c4d18946231 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.105479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 The arrival aai departure oi the over¬\nland trains on the Southern Pacilic rail¬\nroad iurniaU the pieces do resistance of\nthe day. Ouce in a while, however,\nsomething elso occurs which temporarily\nrutiles the placid calm of Yuma exis¬\ntence. Thero was an instance oi thia\nonly a few days ago. The railroad\ntracks had been washed out ovor in\nCalifornia by tho heavy rains on the\nPacific slope and some of tho trains\nwero laid up near hore. The travelers\nwere killing time by waudering around\ntown. One of them, clad in faultless\neastern stylo, spick and span from top\nto toe, entered a saloon and, not having\nbeen properly coached in advance,\nwalked up to the bar and confidently\ncalled for a pousso cafe. Now there are\nsome tilings you can got in Yuma as\neasily as you can anywhere else in the\nworld, but a pousse cafe is undoubtedly\nnot one oi them. When a man in thirsty\nin Yuma ho wants something liquid\nquickly; ho don't care to for imxo I\ndrinks'of any kind. Consequently the\nbartoudors get out of practice in that\nrespect. Tho presiding genius ot this\nresort had never no much jis heard of a\npotisso cafe before, aud tho whisky\nbottle which, as a matter of course, ho\nhad lifted from its resting place and\nwan handing to tho stranger dropped\nfrom hiB nerveless grasp with a crash as\ntho unparallolod request was prollerod.\nOver in the eornor of tho room a quiet\nlittle game of stud-horse pokor was in\nprogress, at which tho proprietor of tho\nsaloon wa3 taking a hand. Tho game\nstopped inatautly when tlio stranger's\nwishes were mado known, and the play¬\ners turned to see what manner of man\nit might bo who in this way had violated\nall Yuma tradition and precedent;\nmeanwhile the stranger, iu no wise\nabashed, repeated his request for a\npousse cafe. Tho bartender, who was\nvorgiug on total collapse, thereupon\ncast an appealing glance toward the\nproprietor. That individual was equal\nto the emergency.
33cd4dff20c8a8d21569c7c46f67d5d7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.17397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 ing a permanent public library\nbuilding committee. The list made\nBy the chamber board contains the\nnames of many prominent residents,\nboth men and women. A full discus\nsion will be held on tho library\nquestion at the meeting.\nAt the present time there is a\nlibrary building fund amounting to\nJ 1 3. STC.S6 . the original principal of\nwhich was founded by the Woman's\nclub in June, 1024. when that or-\nganization placed $4,500 in a trust\nfund in the Plainville Trust Co.\nSince that time there have been sev-\neral gifts and the sum total, with\naccrued interest, has reached the\npresent amount.\nThe Mastin property will become\nfully available for a library building\nsite on July 1, 1930. The chamber\ncommittee believes that this, the\nacquisition of a is an im-\nportant step in the history of Plain-\nville and ought to be looked upon\nas a civic duty to the town.\nPlainville has practically every\nbodern facility outside of a public\nlibrary. The Woman's club first\nstarted interest in the erection of, a\nlibrary building and then the Mastin\nproperty was deeded to the town as\na site or such a structure. During\nthe past few years the women of the\nclub have devoted considerable time\ntoward the raising of funds by\nholding annual shows in the Strand\ntheater, card parties, and other\nfunctions. The women have started\nthe ball rolling in the right direc-\ntion, the chamber says, and it Is now\nuptothetownasawholetoco-\noperate with the chamber commit-\ntee and help in every way possible.\nTho Chamber of
06dc57951b08add97e27068cdb740365 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.4890410641806 39.745947 -75.546589 the market women, with their sun\nbrowned and weather beaten faces, clad\nin their market outfits, for the most part\nthick, da. -k stuffs, 1880 shawls and coats\naud 1890 hats and bonnets.Thefiowersthat\ndecorated the same had lost their youth\nand freshness, hat all that was atoned\nfor by the bunches of fresh, fragrant\nverbenas, heliotrope, honeysuckle, brll\nliant geraniums and graceful fuchias,\nand the coquettish Brown Eyed Susans\nadded to the attractiveness which the\nred, green and white of the vegetables\nand fruits set forth in tempting array.\nThen the housewife—busy, bustling,\nthoroughly alert aud wide awake In a\nplain, dark frock, clearing the sidewalk,\nneat bonnet and ample basket, she wends\nher wsy in search of the wherewith to\nsatisfy the appetites aud sustain the\nbodies of her I jRiily\n♦ The good Uo^ewife desires a variety\nof good things on her table, but until a\nweek or so ago she was not satisfied, in\nfact she Isn't quite yet. But the\nmarket people promise beaus and sweet\ncorn In a week or two, then, indeed, will\nher cup be full to overfiowiug.\nVegetables are reaching the top notch\nin point of fullness and davor, and as\nthey become more plentiful the prices\ngrow more moderate\nButter is one thing to be depended\nupon. There is always an abundance of\nIt. even though the price is a thing to he\nconsidered, not touched.\nThe following are some of the prices:\nVegetables—Cabbage, 5 to 8 cents per\nbead ; potatoes, 12 cents per half peck;\nparsley, 1 cent per bauch; carrots, 10 to\n39 cents per dozen : salsify, 10 cents per\nbundle: radishes, 5 cents per bunch; let\ntuce, 5 cents per head ; spinach, 20 cents\nper half peck ; rhubarb, 8 cents per buu\ndie ; salad, 5 cents per head ; beets, 5 cents\nper bunch ; green onions, 5 cents per\nbunch ; peas, 20 cents per half peck.
24e18874522df1ef3417aa296d027e5b RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.5082191463723 36.620892 -90.823455 A courtahlp wt condurUd with treat\ntallantry. Bom would termlnata In a\nmonth, whll othri would ronttnuafor\na whole rear or mora. The engatwnsut\nalter permlulon waa frantod to tba\nmarriaaa bjr tba owneri 'j! both tha man\nand the woman, waa generally not lon-s - cr\nthan a few wteka. Oenerally a alack\ntime In working the crop waa aaleoted,\nthat they might have a larger holiday,\nbut otherwise thetr nnptUUa were cele-\nbrated almost any Saturday aranlng.\nand have Sunday for tha regular recep-\ntion day, attend church and "ahbw out."\nThe firat Sunday after a marriage, tho\nwhite people, aa well as the black, would\nInvariably "abow out" Many persona\nwho were not In the habit of going to\nthurch would attend on "show out" day.\nIt waa customary to give all the ne\ngroes on the plantation where tha girl\nlived a holiday. They spent It In clean-\ning up and preparing the supper, and\nhaving everything In readinea for the\nmomentous occasion. Late In tha after-\nnoon the bride waa dressed in BnesI\napparel, and eat waiting the coming of\nher expected husband. When he arrived\nalready dressed he was ushered into\nthe presence of bis intended, and there\nawaited the coming of the priest It was\nnot quite dark; blocks sawed off about\nthree feet long, stood on their ends, held\nthe pine torches that gave a bright light\nover the yard. The wedding aupper waa\nalready arranged on the table and here\nlet me say that It would rank with what\nwas often seen in the houses of the white\nfolk. Presently a commotion waa noticed\nby the crowd, the officiating priest had\ncome, and Immediately the waiting cou\nple marched out of the humble cabin\nInto the. hall way of the "big house."\nHere the marriage ceremony would be\nperformed with all the dignity and\nsolemnity the occasion called for. The\nvanity of the officiating parson always\ninduced him to prolong the' ceremony,\nand It was bedecked with some rare\nflowers of rhetoric that never failed to\norovoke a smile among the sable uu- -\ndlence.
c219b87b8c7c0853b093c4a331f1fe52 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.546575310756 43.798358 -73.087921 O.ie of the causes of the unproductive-\nness of cold, clavtv, alhesive soils, as\nDavy well remarked, is, that the feed isj\ncoaled with matter impermeable to air.\nThe farmer can coaviuce himself af these\nfacts by the simplest of all experiments.\nLet him merely use bis rake or his hoe\non a portion of a bed of wheat or turnips,\nor any ether kind of crop, and let him,\nin the driest weather, merely keep this\nportion of soil loose by this genile stirring,\nand he will find thai, in it cm J ol prejudic-\ning his crop by letting out the moisiure,\nas is often ignoramly supposed, something\nis evidently let into the soil ; for the por-\ntion thus tilled will be soon visibly in-\ncreased in luxuriance by the mere manu-\nal labor thus ; and in this exper-\niment, whtch I have often tried, I am\nsupposing tbit both portions of the ground\nare equally free fram weed. ; that in ev-\nery other respeu, the treatment of both\nthe tilled and undisturbed .portions of the\nexperimental plot is exactly the same.\nTo a very great extenf, some of the best\nof the English farmers have long found\nout thes facts, and have acted upon the\ndiscovery. The .horse hoe of the east and\nsouth f. England, in the driest days of\nsummer, may be seen at work in the large\nsandy turnip fields of .Norfolk and Suf-\nfolk, with unvaried regularity ; not for\nthe mere destruction of weeds, but for the\nchief and highly beneficial purpose of\nincreasing the circulation of the gases\nand vapor of the air.
1cea11f463f57a8679164e048196848b THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1894.3547944888383 46.601557 -120.510842 In ancient civilization begging waa un-\nknown, the laws of slavery and the sim-\nplicity of life generally having much to\ndo with it* absence. The law* of the\nPharaoh* forebade begging in Egypt\nunder any pretense, and death threaten-\ned all who were capable but unwilling to\nwork. All able-bodied laborer* were em-\nployed upon th.ise huge monument* that\n*re to-day tbe wonder of the world.\nGreece, too, insisted upon the importance\nof work, and established law* againnt\nmendicity, which, at first, wa* punishable\nby death—»drastic remedy, subsequently\nsuperseded by judicial flogging.\nRome in ber early days was free from\nthe evil, but at the height of her power\nand .ichea professional mendicants made\ntheir appearance and under the emperor,\ntbey exided aa a plague throughout the\nwhole of Italy. These miscreants added\nchild-dealing to their misdeed*, maim-\ning little ones who fell into their clutcbe*\nin a mod pitiful manner, and then turn-\ning them loose in the street* and on the\nbridge* to beg. Valtotluian w** the\nlint to make law* againat thia evil, and\nstringent legislation followed, the offend-\n being employed on the public work*,\nsent to tbe galleva or banished.\nDaring the middle ages all kinda of\nroguery flourished, and beggar* abounded\nthroughout Europe. France, Italy and\nSpain were the countries in which thi*\nnefarious business attained the dignity\nof a profestion, from which condition*\n\\u25a0prung oue of the dranged kingdom*\nknown to history, a kingdom presided\nover by an elected monarch, himself a\nbeggar and ruling over hi* beggar sub-\njects. They made themselve* so much\ndisliked that they were hunted down like\nwild beauts and their tril.es broken.\nThe beggar kingdom was organixed for\nthe advancement of roguery, and showed\nita gypsy origin by the peculiar dialect\nspoken by it* subjects, their jargon being\nthe parent of tbe argot used by thieve* in\nFrance at tbe present day. The mon-\narch, who usually redded in Paris, ruled\nover this unique kingdom by virtue of\nuniversal auffrage, and wa* subject to\ndeposition ifunfaithful. Stated council*\nwere held at re.ular meeting places,\ntaxes were paid and lieutenants appoint-\ned who represented the king in different\npart* of the country.
4092735edb1f647dfd52f2a4aa7a06d9 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1906.0123287354136 39.78373 -100.445882 It is urged by counsel for petitioner\nthat, with the statements made by tit? to\nccmplainent excluded, there, is no of\ncompetent proof of the corpus delicti.\nTwo witnesses, C. O. Wilson and A.\nK. .Tones, the deputy sheriff, gave tes-\ntimony relative to an admission\nmade hv the defendant while he was\nbe'i'g taken u'v. n the train from tle of\n?'rce where the offense is alleged ;o\nave been commuted to Hawthorne..\nThat pf 'tion (f the testimony of the\nwitnrss Wnson relative to the ad-\nmission is as fol'owsr\n"This defendant was brought into\nthe car at a place called Shurz bet-\nween here and Reno with Mr. Jones\nand a vnung lady, I afterwards found\nto be Karry Aver'U. and they took pos-\nses ion rf a seat I had un\nto that time. I toon the seat across\nthe ais:e. Seeing the man with\nbracelets on excited more or less cur\niosity and when he came into the car\nthe young lady went in the cor be-\nhind and got another lady which I\nleartfed was her mother. The mother\ncame in and was talking to the de-\nfendant. The mother asked him what\nmade him do it. The defendant savs\nI don't know. The mother was hys-\nterical and she made the remark I\nought to kill you. He assented. He\ndid yes. Well she says why don't I\ndo it and repeated the remark several\ntimes and about that time she fainted\nand swooned away."\nThe testimony of the deputy sheriff,\nrelative to this admission, was suh-s t ant ia -
2006a4b5beca6c839184ce4ac9bb50b8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.6571037935134 40.063962 -80.720915 COflfce. steady; sales 32.280 bags; August\nSeptember 11.20c; October lu. iuaiu.80c; Novel\nher, December, January, February, March, An:\nan<l May 10.imiiiI0.28c: spot Ki«> stronger at\nSugars, raw firm; reilneil easier; C. 1'. 3 -10c; c\ntra i'. 3e; mould A 7kc; standard A 7c; culie* 7k\nMi>hu»e<t ami rlvuuull. Tallow quiet and stead\nTurpentine slow at 86%e. Kggs quiet aud liri\nwestern IGalftc. i'ork active; new mess 818 2\n18 78; olil me*' 81I 2ml 80. Cut meats du\nmiddles very strong; short clear 0^c. Lard, sp\nhigher and scarce: western steam 0.78c; Augu\ny.fiOc; SeptcmlieiO.fOe; October O.JHe; Novcmh\n0.88c; December .vile. Duttcr quiet; weste\ndairy 12al8c; western creamery Ua28c. Chee\nteauy and quiet; western 7a7&c.\nChicago. August 27..Wheat was bearish at tl\nopening lOHiny, Tnoprcniwinruon inrmu v\nslon was during the first hour, when it wild wl\n\\Oi range. Cable reports un cutler fueling in t\nIlritixtx innrketM. Corn moderately active. On\ndull ami lower. Pork stronger. Flour Arm hi\nunchanged, Wheat, cash No. 2 spring W^aWI\nNo. Sftpritiff SSaKWi: No. 2 red Die: August Ml\naUOo, closing at 90c; September 88j^'J0>£c, cl<\ning ot WKc: October 88%a00'£c, closing at t>0>£\nMaylHV6i'.i ."»5aO, closing at Ol%c. Corn, cash 01\nAugust 44%o; tieptomber Malice, cloning at44\nOctober 44c; Maying, closing ut 37KP» Oh\ncash No.'2 ami August 25c; September 24^\nOetobor24?£c: MayS&fa'isl^c, cloning28%c. Rj\ncash No. 2,60c. Flaxseed.No. 1 .8125. Prime til\notbv.secd si 75. Mess pork, §14 25; Augu\nSI427& September 8i:iU5atl 27J-2 , closing\n$14 27& October S14 00al4:K. closing at SI I a\nJanuary Slu 20al:t40, closing at SIM H5. jird. cai\nAugust, ami September l>.35c; October y.VIV .\nJanuary 7.T7J^o, Hacon, short ribs, 8.45c; shoul\nCM 7.40a7.fi0; shortclear H.wOaiMWc. Whisky 91'\nH0Murl%a8}gQ; cut loaf l%c; granulated 7&C.\nCINCINNATI, <).. August 27..Flour stroll\nfamily St 70a3 85; fancy $1 10al 25. Wheat (In\nNo. 2 ml 00c; receipts 20,000 bushels: shl\nincnts 30,500 bushels. Corn dull and heav\nNo. 2 mixed 45c, Oat* easier; N\n2 mixed 2fla2tl%c. Ryo stronger; No. 2 51\nPork quiet ut *14 75, Lard easier and Ann\na.Kto. Hulk meats llrm: short ribs 8.112\nRacon llrm: short clear 10c. Whisky steady\n8114. llutter llrm; fancy creamery £Jc; choi\ndairy 15c. Linseed steady at 4Hu50c. Sugar Art\nhard refined 7%a8)<c; New Orleans finfiVf\nKeg* easier at 14Ufll5c. Cheese Urm; prime\nchoice Ohio Hat 8a%jc.\nliAt.TiMonn, Mp. , August 27..'Wheat, weste\nlower, closing steady; No: 2 winter red spot 95J\nIttJio; September 95)£a»59<c; October OtrKnMi^j\nl)ccember itf^iWc. Corn, western dull ai\nnominal; r"xed spot 53u5.'tj4c; September53)\nWc:year 45%a4Gc.. Oats active: western whl\n;tla33c: do mixed 2ftt31c. Rye steady at BOaRI\nHay quiet but tlriu; prime to choice weste\n517 OQaVJ 50. Provisions firm va\\\\ (airly aell>\nMess pork S15 fiOul'i 75,\nToi.Eno, O., August 27..Wheat dull ai\nlower: cash ami August WJ id September 9HV{\nOctober
010bfa5e93ed3777e6937db4c871afba THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1383561326738 39.261561 -121.016059 We cannot shut our eyes to the fact, that\nthe army is becoming a name of terror and\ndread to the minds of our citizens. The\nnewspapers are still tilled with advertise-\nments of bonuses for substitutes, although\nthe War Department has adopted a rule re-\nstricting the number or substitutions to one\nIn each company. The rates paid for sub-\nstitutes are enormous. We are informed\nthat they average from $200 to $250; and\nwe have been told of a recent instance\nwhere $1,500 was paid for the prompt pro-\ncurement of a substitute to take the place\nof a private suddenly constrained to leave\nthe army. Evidences stare us Id the face\nof the unwillingness of men to accept the\nlife of famine, dirt and vacant idleness in\nthe army. is filled with soldiers\nwho have come out of the hospitals, or who\nhave got here on some pretense or other,\napplying for discharges and striving aud\nwriggling in all sorts of ways lo get out of\nthe army. It was but a few days ago that\na soldier, discharged from one of the hospi-\ntals here, committed suicide rather than be\nconstrained to return to the army.\nThere is no unwillingness arnoog onr\nyoung men to serve their Country. There\nare thousands who would willingly go with\ntheir lives on tbeir slevees to battle with\nthe enemy, and to attest a devoted and\ncourageous patriotism, but who dread to be-\ntake themselves to the wretched, half fed\nlife of dirt, vacancy and idleness in camps.\nThis is the restraint upon volunteering.
1799a273ffcf7902f7046a2d804325b1 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.705479420345 42.217817 -85.891125 Hod knew Pinch, for they wero insep-\narable. An iron gray dog of the Scotch\nterrier breed, he was noted for his sa-\ngacity and fighting qualities. Sunday\nmorning a friend of Hod', for the first\ntime, took the dog into the loom where\nthe remains were. A number of Morse's\nfriends were present tit the time and can\nvouch for the accuracy of the story.\nWhen let in the room Pinch let his\nhead fall to the floor and with slow\nfteps walked directly across to where\nHod's body wa lying. Stopping by the\nbody he raised his head ami began a\nlow, monotonous howl. While uttering\nthese howls, Pinch would from time to\ntime look around at the diflerent men\npresent as if making a mute appeal to\nbe allowed to have access to the body.\nNoticing this, one of the men look a\nchair and placed it by Hod's head. As\nsoon as it was placed in position the dog\njumped upon the chair and with \nfore paw brushed the cloth from his\nmaster's face. After he had removed\nthe cloth he threw one leg over Hod's\nbreast, while he laid his face on that of\nhis master, and rubbing it over a few\ntimes, commenced licking it as if de-\nsirous of awakening him. Seeinf that\nthis did not have the desired effect,\nPinch stopped and looked into Hod's\nfueo for a moment, and again com-\nmenced howling or rather whining in a\npitiful manner. The whole scene, tak-\ning in the surroundings, was a most sor-\nrowful one, and brought tears and sobs\nfrom the men whom the world reg?.rj\nas social Pariahs, but in whom, a this\nincident proved, all the better feelings\nhad not yet been deadened. Pinch\ncontinued his pantomime until seem-\ningly convinced that he could not\narouse his mas'er, when he jumped\ndown and with slow steps left the room,\nnever returning until after tho body\nhad been conveyed to its final resting\nplace in Elmwood.
1dfcf1d407c6e49e38d3cdb0c17b95d4 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.2671232559615 46.601557 -120.510842 ex-Yakima carpenters, arc now of Spo-\nkane, as is also \\V. (i. Simpson, who\nposes as an artistic landscape jrardner.\nMary Lovell, now happily married is\nanother Spokanite. Turn Smith like-\nwise, claims this as his home, and occa-\nsionally bring! his fiddle into play.\nAmong those who live In neighboring\ntowns and arc occasionally Keen in Bpo-\nkiuie arc Jerry Rochford of Colville;\nJack Ally, now of Wardner Idalio, and\nchairman of the board of county com-\nmissioners of Bboahone county, who was\nsteward of the Bartholet hotel when it\nwas conducted by Wallace Atherton;\nAttorney John A. Brown and wife of\nLewiaton, who are now remarried ;\nHarry Spinning and wife of Wardner;\nL, K. Arnold and family, who reside at\nsome town on the Great Northern; and\nlast but not least, Noah 11. Brown, who\n prospering with two hotels on the\nWashington Central and occasionally\njourneys to Spokane to keep in touch\nwith the more active world. Johnny\nMockison is also in Spokane at the pres-\nent writing trying to interest capitalists\nin the Colville mining property in which\nhe has unlimited faith and which is un-\ndoubtedly good, it' reports are true.\nAnother ex*Yakima man is Sargeant\n< teorge. He will i>e remembered by the\nold timers of 1884-6 and again by those\nof 1804, as he spent a year there in try-\nini! to recover his eyesight, which is\nnow permanently gone. He was mar-\nried a few months aj;o to an attractive\nand talented young lady from Minne-\nsota, and they are now building a cot-\ntage home in Forest (irove park, at the\nend of the Monroe street car line.
336a139228a187b890af5a9724cadd96 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1909.9109588723998 40.735657 -74.172367 between Van Buren street and Tyler street, ac-\ncording to the provisions of an ordinance of the\nCity of Newark entitled "An ordinance to pro-\nvide for the construction of a sewer In Nichole\nstreet. between Van Buren street and Tyler\nstreet. (approved July 9, 1909 . has been pre-\npared by the undersigned commissioners, ap-\npointed by the Mayor of the City of Newark,\nand that a report by a certificate in writing,\nwith an accompanying map and schedule,\nshowing che several assessments against the\nseveral owners peculiarly benefited as afore-\nsaid. has been deposited In the office of ths\nCity Clerk of the City or Newark, ior examina-\ntion by the parties Interested therein.\nBald' assessment comprises all lota, tracts\nand parcels of land and real estate liable to be\nassessed as aforesaid, lying on both sides of\nComer alley, from Bank street to Academy\nstreet: on both *ld«e of Fillmore street from\nMarket street to Ferry on both sides of\nFourth avenue, from North Eleventh street to\nthe city line: on both sides of New York ave-\nnue. from Van Buren etreet to easterly aide\nof Garrison street, on both sides of Nichols al-\nls v, from Plane street to Arlington street; on\nboth sides of Nicholson street, from WTlUaxn\nstreet to Augusta street; on both sides of Chel-\nsea avenue, from 8outh Orange avenue to the\nEast Orange line; on both sides of Mercer court,\nfrom about 107 feet south of Mercer street to\nabout 125 north of Court street; on both aides\nof Nichols street, between Van Buren street\nand Tyler street.\nA "Lot” represent* an entire plot of land,\nwhether large or small.\nAll persons interested to said assessment\nmay be heard before said commissioners, on\nThursday, the second day of December, 19#. at\n2 p m.. at the commissioners' room. No. 4 (Sd\nfloor). City Hall.\nDated November 20th. 3909 .
1afe5a1a63d62c194985201e4d43b71e DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.6397259956875 44.939157 -123.033121 week of tho fair, but that th6 city\nwould not recelvo tho $2000' reduc-\ntion asked for He Btated that tho\ncontracting company had made it\nknown unofficially that they would\nhavo no objection to a Bmall reduc-\ntion, perhaps two or throo hundred\ndollars, and ho said that if they of-\nfered to accept a reduction of twlco\nor three times that amount ho be-\nlieved that tho council could be In\nduced to accept tho bridge. While\ntho contract called for a 24- fo- o t\nbrldgo, ho believed that tho claim\nthat tho plans for tho brldgo had\nbeen presented nnd accepted by tho\nlast council was woll founded, nnd\nthnt this might bind tho city to tho\nfull amount of tho contract In a\nenso of an appeal to tho law. Ho said\nthat tho matter had been treated In\nn very careless manner, nnd that tho\nonly thing now Is to mnko best\nof It. Personally, ho said that ho\nwould much rathor havo tho city pay\nmoro tlinn tho full $7000, which tho\ntwo contrncts called for, than loavo\ntho city In tho position of providing\nsuch poor sorvlco to tho visitors\nwho will bo In Salem at tho tlmo of\ntho fair. Ilowovor, ho said that it\nwas cortaln that tho city was not re-\nceiving what It was paying for, nnd\nthat running tho street car tracks\nover tho brldgo pormnnontly was no\nlonger thought of. IIo said that It\nwas bettor to havo tho brldgo with\nout tho rails, and that ho inllovcd\nthe council Is right In not allowing\ntho linos ovor It, when tho brldgo\nI obviously too narrow. Tho city\nhad tho grcntost right to kick about\nthe toundutlon, Ho did not believe\nthnt there was anything In tho\nspecifications to allow tho company\nto build It In tho Inferior manner
13755f06640883939968b263c3d9b332 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.2890410641805 41.004121 -76.453816 progress up tho creek tho nextduy with\nthrco hundred additional troons. Atraln\nWas Sunday selected to nush troons for.\nward to tho proposed sccnoof operations.\nTho Gctirral returned to Bloomsburg\non Tuesday, tho 30th. nnd hud Inn?\nconferences witli leading ltddlcals; and\nduring the night or tho 30th, upon or-\nders from him, troops wero posted at\nvarious points In tlio upper townships\nand nt the break of dav next tntirnlni?\nabout, ono hundred eitlzmis worn nrrnst..\ncdand marched to a meeting hotiso near\nine vniagooi uenton. iicro tney wero\nsubjected to a summary ortlcal nnd in-\nspection, their cases being passed upon\n,oy a bcounurci oiucer in tno puipit up\non whispered consultations with prom-\nlncnt Radicals of tho neighborhood.\nWe say "a scoundrel officer" with good\nreason; for ho was subsequently tried\nby a military court .and convicted as a\nvillain nnd wo liavo besides tho proof at\nhand (which will bo hereafter civenl\nthat ho extorted a bribe from ono of our\ncitizens under circumstances of peculi\n lnfatny. There was no open exami\nnation oi mo cases oi tno arrested men\nnor any opportunity afforded them for\nexplanation or defense Whispered\nconsultations between their malicious\npolitical enemies who wero on tho nul\npit platform or near It, and tho 'miltary\n'satrap whoso will and word stood in\nplace of nil law and justice, constituted\nthe grounds orjudgmentby which they\nshould bo discharged or ordered into ex-\nile from their homes to,bo incarcerated\nIn distant prisons. Finally a part of\nmum wero uiscnargea wunout any rea-\nson assigned for their arrest or. explana-\ntion of their discharge; but, fo rty-ll v- o\nwero ordered under guard to Blooms\nburg, thenco to bo conveyed by rail by\nway of Harrisburg and Philadelphia to\nFort MilUIn on tho Delaware. The\nprisoners wero, nearly.qll driven on foot\niitvu eauie, mu long io nines irom iten-to- n\nto' Bloomsburg, without breakfast,\nand had no meals furnished to them on\ntheir way to Philadelphia.\nAs they werq marched .through\nBloomsburg, a loyal and christian
85db59766afb14e156ba53c0d5c2dbcd PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1848.6871584383223 31.960991 -90.983994 deeply impressed with the delicacy of this sub­\nject, and they treated it with a forbearance so\nevidently wise, that, in spite of every sinister\nforeboding, it never, until the present period, dis­\nturbed the tranquility of our common country.\nSuch a result is sufficient evidence of the justice\nand the patriotism of their course; it is evidence\nnot to be mistaken, that an adherence to it\nprevent all embarrassment from this, as well as\n(rom every other anticipated cause of difficulty\nor danger. Have not recent events made it ob­\nvious to the slightest reflection, that the least de­\nviation from this spirit of forbearance is injurious\nto every interest, that cf humanity included?\nAmidst the violence of excited passions, this\ngenerous and fraternal feeling has been\ntimes disregarded; and, standing as I now do be­\nfore my countrymen in this high place of honor\nand of trust, I cannot refrain from in­\nvoking my fellow-citizens never to be deaf to its\ndictates. Perceiving, before my election, the\ndeep interest this subject was beginning to excite,\nI believed it a solemn duty fully to make known\nmy sentiments in regard to it; and now, when\nevery motive for misrepresentation has passed\naw'ay, I trust that they will be candidly weighed\nand understood. At least, they will be my stan­\ndard of conduct in the path before me. I then\ndeclared that, if the. desire of those of my coun­\ntrymen who were favorable to my election were\ngratified, “I must go into the presidential chair\nthe inflexible and uncompromising opponent of\nevery attempt, on the part of Congress, to abol­\nish slavery in the District ol Colnmbia, against\nthe wishes of the slave-holding States; and also\nwith a determination equally decided to resist the\nslightest inteference with it in the States where\nit exists.”
0f9b8f43cc170f3a1cbee1592c3ac669 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.8808218860984 40.441694 -79.990086 First, that those who get us into trouble\nwill not stay to help us out These ship-me - n\ngot Paul out of Fair Havens into the\nstorm; bnt as soon as the tempest dropped\nupon them, tney wanted to go off m the small\nboat, caring nothing for what became of Paul\nand the passengers. Ah me! human nature is\nthe same in all ages. They who get us into\ntrouble never stop to help us out. They who\ntempt that young man into a life of dissipation\nwill be the first to laugh at his imbecility, and\nto drop him out of decent society. Gamblers\nalways make fun of the losses of gamblers.\nThey who tempt you into the contest with\n, fists, saying, "1 will back you," will be the first\nto run. Look over all the predicaments of your\nlife, and count the names of those who have got\nyou these predicaments, and tell me the\nname of one who ever helped you out\nTHEY AID YOU IN A WBONO WAY.\nThey were glad enough to get you out from\nFair Havens, but when, with damaged rigging,\nyou tried to get into harbor, did tbey hold for\nyou a plank or throw you a rope? Not one.\nEatan has got thousands of men into trouble,\nbut he never cot one out. He led them into\ntheft but he wonld not hide the goods or ball\nout the defendant. The spider shows the fly\nthe way over the gossamer bnage into the cob-\nweb: but it never shows the fly the way out of\nthe cobweb over the gossamer bridge. I think\nthat there were plenty of fast yonngmento\nnelpthe prodigal spend his money; but when\nhe had wasted his substance in riotous living,\ntbey let aim go to the swine pastures, while\n,
8a0b765567310676a66caecf41dabb7a THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.423287639523 39.369864 -121.105448 In common with other mountain sections,\nNevada county contains a considerable num-\nber of indigenous fruit-bearing bushes and\nvines—such as the plum, strawberry, rasp-\nberry, blackberry, gooseberry, huckleberry,\ngrape and cherry. The most plentiful of\nthese is the red plum. The bush which\nbears it, and which is seldom higher than\ntwo or three feet, is found in great abundance\non the ridge between the South and Middle\nForks of the Yuba, growing best within the\nline of deep rrlrrfersftw, and commonly on\nwarm thin soil of recent formation lying\nHose to the parent granite, but thriving most\nluxuriantly cm springy slopes. It constitutes\nin some places almost the only undergrowth,\ncovering many acres together, and has given\nits name to a very pretty valley. It blossoms\nin May and bears prolific-ally, the limbs\nhanging as full of plums as they could well\nbg without breaking. The fruit somewhat\nresembles in color, shape and size, the red\nriver-plum of the Western and Middle States,\nbut has not so fine a flavor—the skin, in-\ndeed, being rather bitter and astringent.—\nYet it is considerably used for sauces and\npreserves, and contains sufficient pectin to\nmake a fine jelly. The skin can be almost\nentirely divested of its unpleasant taste In-\nallowing the fruit to lie in hot water some\ntime, and then cooking it in fresh water.—\nPerhaps two or three waters would be bet-\nter. Unless this is done, it is apt, when oa-\nten freely, to produce catharsis and slight\ngriping of the bowels. For two years past\nthe wild plum has brought into market\nas an article of sale, retailing at from ten to\nfifteen cents per pound. It has even been\nt ikon in considerable quantities to the lower\ncountry, and readily found purchasers. It\nripens from July to September, during which\nseason many -plumming parties" are formed,\nconsisting of men, women and children,"\nwho drive in a wagon to the most prolific lo-\ncalities, spend the day gayly picking fruit,\nand come back at night loaded with plums,\nfreckled and dusty yet jolly still.\nNext to the plum, the most interesting in-\ndigenous fruit is the strawberry. It is found\nall over the country, and, indeed, through the\nentire State, but abounds only in certain lo-\ncalities, generally on hill siles, or flats, near\nsprings or water courses. The fruit is very\nsmall, but sweet and delicious, and is picked\nby the birds nearly as fast as it ripens,which\nis in April and May, or even earlier in the\nmost favored spots and mildest seasons. A\nsuccessful attempt to domesticate and im-\nprove it which was made by one of our citi-\nzens, has already been noticed in the Puess.\nTwo years ago the gentleman alluded to\ntransplanted from the woods to his garden a\nnumber of vines, which this spring exhibit\na much larger leaf, grow in bushy hills, and\nbear fruit four times larger than the unculti-\nvated plant without its original flavor being\nin the least impaired. After tasting it, the\nimported varieties seem rather tart and in-\ndelicate. No doubt it will much improve\nwith further cultivation. The native straw-
a30303d84cac1d1d68fa43caa83706e4 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.1383561326738 43.798358 -73.087921 spent in commuting the canonical books\nto memory ; another six years are requir-\ned to supply them with phrases for a, good\nstyle; and an additional number of years\nspent in incessant toil, are needed to en-\nsure, success. Long before the break of\nday, the Chinese students may be heard\nchauming the sacred books; and late at\nhight, the same tasks are continued. Of\none man it is related, that he tied his hair\nto a beam of the house, in order to prevent\nhis nodding to sleep. Another, more res-\nolute, was in the habit of driving an awl\ninto his thigh, when inclined to slumber.\nOne poor Jad suspended his book to the\nhorns of the buffalo, that he might learn\nwhile following the plough; and another,\nbored a hoje in the of his cot-\ntage, that he might steal a glimpse of his\nneighbor's light! They tell of one, who,\nfearing that the task assigned him was too\nhard, gave up his books in despair, and\nwas returning to a manual employment,\nwhen he saw an old woman rubbing a\ncrowbar on a stone; on asking her the\nreason, she replied, that she was in want\nof a needle, and thought she would rub\ndown the crowbar till she got it small\nenough 1 The patience of the aged fe-\nmale provoked him to make another at-\ntempt, and he succeeded in attaining to the\nrank of the first three in the empire.\nThey say of Shun, (raised to the throne\nby his talents and virtues,) "Shun was a\nman;I,also,am.aman;ifIbutexert\nmyself, I may be as- gre -
c3f138058295a1bef9f9434df53152f9 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6680327552622 39.513775 -121.556359 as there wrs on the evening of the day on\nwhich the Democratic county convention\nmet. With the exception of a few persons,\nit must have been wholly an Omville and\nvicinity crowd—such as turns out at every\ngathering; and yet it must have been larg-\ner than the meetings usually addressed l y\n'he great ex Governor, for he announced\nthat the demonstration would warrant him\nIn saying, that llurte county was safe for\nFillmore and Donnelsnn Monday night,\nwill doubtless make as big a demonstration\nin favor of Fremont, and give tbc llluck He\npublicans just as much reason t o claim the\ncounty for Fremont as Gov. Foote 1>•a cl c>n\nSaturday night, to claim it for Fillmore\nIt was just such a crowd ns Orovillc can fur-\nnish any evening It turned out such n\ncrowd on the occasion of the “presentation;"\nit turned out such a crowd to sec the “Bull\nand Bear fight”—it lurned out such a cn w 1\nto greet Gov Foote and Dr Powell, and to-\nnight the same crowd will be out to hear\nthose advocates of Black Republi-\ncanism. Toni. Cox & Co., and the latter gen-\ntlemen will go away and feel authorized to\nclaim the county for Fremont.\nThe Fillmore men had displayed much\ntaste and some expense in getting up the af-\nfair. The U. S. Motel was festooned with\nevergreens—anvil* fired—and six-twelfths\nof a dozen rockets were sent up from below,\nand then sent up into the immensity of space\nby order of the secretary of the Club—p rob-\n. ably ns a warning to the Nigger-worshipers\nof the manner in which the Fillmore men\nintend to send them up next November.\nThose who have had the honor of listening\nto a political speed), delivered in California,\nby Gov Foote,know what the speech amount-\ned to, on Saturday evening, with the excep-\ntion of slight variation He saved t! c Union\nagain, on Saturday night—that is, himself\nWebster and Clay, lie again annihilated\nPresident Pierce, Jeff. Davis, and the “little\ngiant.” He appeared to be satisfied in his\nown mind, that the only man. who could\nsave the Union, w as Millard F-i-l-/-tn-o-r -i
f19e034db03b0aad3419c6bb32642643 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.9136985984271 31.960991 -90.983994 IS Published in the City of New York, every\nSaturday morning, in quarto form, on a very\nlarge sheet, and afforded to subscribers in the\ncountry at Two Dollies Six copies will be\nforwarded a year for Ten Dollars; Ten copies for\nFifteen Dollars; and any larger number in the\nlatter proportion. Payment in advance invaria­\nbly required, and the paper stopped whenever\nthe term of such payment expires.\nThe Tribune—whether in its Daily or Week­\nly edition, will be what its name imports—au\nunflinching supporter of the Peoples Rights and\nInterests, in stern hostility to the errors of su­\nperficial theorists of unjust or imperfect legisla­\ntion, and the schemes and sophistries of self-\nseeking demagogues. It will strenuously advo-\ncate the Protection of American Industry &-\ngainst the grasping, and to us heightening poli­\ncy of European government, and the unequal\ncompetition which they force Upon us, it Will\nadvocate the restoratioh of a sound and uniform\nNational Currency; and urge a discreet but de­\ntermined of Internal Improvement.\nThe Retrenchment, wherever practicable, of\nof Government Expenditures and of Executive\nPatronage, will be zealously urged. In short-\nthis paper will faithfully maintain and earnest,\nly advocate the Principles and Measures which\nthe People approved in devolving on Whig\nStatesmen the conduct of their Government.\nBut a small portion of its columns will be de­\nvoted to purely political discussions. The pro­\nceedings of Congress will be carefully recorded,\nthe Foreign and Domestic Intelligence early\nand lucidly presented; and whatever shall ap­\npear calculated to promote Morality, maintain\nSocial Order, extend the blessings of Education,\nof ia any way subserve the great cauâê of Hu­\nman Progress to ultimate Virtue, Liberty and\nHappiness, will find a place in our columns.\nN. B. —- Where ten persons club together, end\nremit #15 at one time, in funds not over four\nper cent discount in New York, the paper will\ncost but #P-50 per year.\nSubscriptions are solicited by\nGREELY 4 McELRATH, No. 30, Ann st
2865c6bc63b0fce382e4d37d5fca9086 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.2945205162355 39.513775 -121.556359 Nature never did betray the soul\nthat loved her, and nature t< 11s men\nand women to marry. J u.xt us the\nyoung is entering life, ju*t ns tie tomes\n10 independence and mans estate, just\nas the crisis of his being is to be solv-\ned, and it is to be seen whether he\ndecide with the good, and the great,\nand the true, or whether he sink and\nbe lost for ever—matrimony gives bitn\nballast and a right impulse. War with\nnature, and ahe takes a sure revenge.\nJ ell a young man not to have an at>\ntacbiU'-nt that is virtuous, and he will\nhave one that is viemus. Virtuous\nlove, the honest love «f a mi hi for the\nwoman he is about to marry, gives\nhim an anchor Ibr his heart ; some-\nthing pure and beautiful fur which to\nlabor and to live. And the woman,\nwhat a purple lig 1 1 it sheds upon her\npath; it makes life for her uo ila\\-\ndreum, no idle hour, no sha-\ndow, no passing show ; but something\nreal, earnest, worthy of heart and head.\nHut most ot us are cowards, and dare\nnot think so, we lack grace wo are of\nlittle faith, our inwaid eye is dim and\ndark. The mod in y ting lady must\nmarry in style ; the mu tern young\ngentleman marries a fortune, but in\nthe mean time the girl gr vvs into an\nold maid, and the youth takes cham-\nbers, ogles at nursery maids, and be-\ncomes a man about town, a man whom\nit is dangerous to ask into your house,\nfor his business is inti Luc. The world\nmight have had a happy couple, in-\nstead, it gef s a woman fietiul, m rvms,\nfane!lul, a plague t > ail around her,\n11 ele comes a skeptic in all virtue;\ncorrupter of the youth ot both s> xes ; a\ncurse in whatever d mestic circle he\npenetrate s. liven worse may result.\nBtie may be deceived, and die of a\nbroken heart.
413d02d19ff352fac3396d33557420bf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.732876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 These are the views I held aud have\nexpressed whenever there was occasion\nfor it. It would, however, be vaiu to\ndeny tbat there are a good many Radi¬\ncal Gerinaua whom any attempt or the\nRepublican party to inflict upon the\ncommunity arbitrary legislation en*\ncroaching upon individual rights iu au\nillegitimate way, would induce them to\nsever their connection with the Repub¬\nlican organization, regardless of conse¬\nquence*. Thing* have been done here\naud there which have already gone far\nto effect this result. From all aides we\nreceive sets of resolutions against the\nprohibitory law and similar things,\npasaed at German Republican meetings.\nThe Germans have taken the alarm\nquite generally, and will uot require\nmuch to produce a serious break in\ntheir ranks. It ia beat that our Ameri¬\ncan friends should know this, and if I\ntell you so, you may believe me, that I\njudge from a full kuowlegeol tbe facta,\nand tbat I look at things coolly and\nwithout the least desire to exaggerate\nto myself or to you the danger.\nI am surprised that any sensible tem¬\nperance man in the Republican party\nshould insist so obstinately upou this\nimpracticable scheme, since the statis¬\ntics of liquor consumption and drunk¬\nenness snow tbat it rather aggravates\nthan diminishes tbe evil, while on the\nother hand their attempt to^tbrust it up\non us threatens to divide \nweaken us at a lime when the dangers\nof tbe situation demand tbat tbe loyal\nmen of tbe conuiry should be uiorc\nunited lhau ever. These obstinate at¬\ntempts are, at this time, the more un¬\nreasonable, as their utter futility will\nsoon become so evident to every sane\nman, that after a little while they will\nmost certainly be superceded by a more\nrational metbod ol promoting virtue\nand morality among the people.\nTemperance men commit a most sin¬\ngular mistake when they speak of the\nopponents of the prohibitory law as a\nset of tipplers and liquor dealers. I\nam earnestly opposed to prohibition,\nand yet I pretend to belong to neither\noue nor the other of those two clases.\nYou are long enough acquainted with\nme to know that the entire absence of\nalcoholic liquors from this globe would\ncause no personal inconvenience to me.\n1 am also one of those who sincerely\nabhor drunkenness and intemperance\nof any description. But I am Just as\nearnestly opposed to that class ot legis¬\nlation which, In an arbitrary way, en¬\ncroaches upon the rights of the indi¬\nvidual, which, for this reason, will\nnever besustained by publicseutiment,\nand which will only serve to familiar¬\nize the masses with the practice of law-\nbreaking, tbus demoralizing them, and\nundermluiug the popular respect\nfor the laws in general. I may\nhave occasion,
1becad38eea1ca5351db5947bc0c4429 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.6369862696602 41.875555 -87.624421 mid Wentworth nveni'e may be cited.\nThe Itooks of the water office (trove that\nthe water meter of the Bock Island\nshops for January. 18110 , registered\n771,01)0 cubic feet. This was nltotit the\nregular monthly nvenige for that es-\ntablishment. In Fein nary the meter\nregistration dropped to 510,00(1 feet, n\nloss of 201,000 feet In one mouth, lu\nMarch It dropped to 3.1 ,1 ,000 feet, it fur-\nther loss of 177,000 feet. From this\ntime forward the meter readings were\nwonderfully low. lu December the to-\ntal registration was only 150,000 feet, a\ndroit of (121,000 feet from the January\nfigures. The total for April, 1807. was\nHH.OOO foe t. Then came n new city\nadministration and a change lu the\nwater office. In May the registration\ntook a sudden lump to 005,000 feet.\n figures speak for themselves.\nThey point unmistakably to fraud. The\nfigures for January, 18isi, mid for May,\n1807, furnish a fair basis from which to\ncompute the losses lu the Intervening\nmonths. The water office records show\nthat lu the sixteen months referred to\nthe Hock Island shops Used 42.180,000\ngallons of water. Experts declare that\nthe actual amount consumed must have\nexceeded 72.000,000 gallons. This rep-\nresents a net loss to the city, lu this\nparticular Instance, of $2,500 revenue.\nAnd there nre others scores of them\ncertainly, hundreds of them piohiihly.\nShake up this department of Hie public\nservice; place It upon n civil service\nbasis and order a thorough system of\nrenovation mid reorganization. The\nway to reform It to reform. Go to the\nbottom of this matter Times- Her ald- .
4b36e5558894bc8ba26897959e75d8a9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.8013698313039 39.745947 -75.546589 "I want to tell everyone what a\ngreat blessing Plant Juice proved to\nbe In my mother's case," said Mrs.\nMargaret Krauss, a well-known and\npopular lady residing at\nAvery avenue, Penns Grove, N. J ., In\na recent conversation at the Miller\nDrug Store, 404-406 Market street.\nContinuing. Mrs. Krauss stated:\n"My mother Is 72 years ot age\nand subject to numerous Ills of that\ntime of life.\nfor her meals and the little\ncould cat would cause her to have\ngas and a bloated\ngreat pain—in fact she had such at­\ntacks at times that she thought\nshe was going to die. She had an\noperation for appendicitis\nyears ago and since that time was\nvery weak and never had any ambi­\ntion or energy to do anything: she\nhad great trouble with her liver and\nbowels, being always constipated;\nshe had headaches, pains through\nher limbs and was very Irritable and\ndepressed; she got very little sleep\n night.\nmany medicines she never got any­\nthing to relieve these troubles until\nsome of our neighbors begged her\nto try Plant Juice and told her how\nwonderful It had been In their cases.\nMy mother found it to be all they\nhad claimed, for now her appetite\nis fine; she can eat anything and\nnever has any distress afterwards\nor bloating; her liver and kidneys\nare working properly and she ia\nnever" constipated any more; she\nsleeps like a child. She la so con­\ntented and happy now since she has\ntaken Plant Juice that It is a pleas­\nure to see )ier. Plant Juice is cer­\ntainly a wonderful medicine for old\npeople and we are glad to endorse\nit and recommend It\nPlant Juice Is so\nton at the Miller Drug Store, lot­\nto# Market street; In New Castle\nby E. Challenger & Son; In New­\nport by C. B. White; in Newark by\nW. E, Brown.
281c3484dfb3a5690a0f520e14da4cb2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.3948087115461 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Lyons pleaded that the present\nporvislon be given a trial and where\nrural schools found It a hardship to\nget seventh and eighth grade children\nto High Schools to apply to the State\nBoard for the privilege of teaching\nthose grades in the district school.\nSpeaker Corbit also spoke against\nsuch an amendment.\nMessrs. Brooks. Lloyd and Bunting\nalso thought there should be an\namendment providing for the teach­\ning of eighth grades in the rural\none-room schools.\nMr. Soper supported the sugges­\ntion of Mr. Jester and added that it\nshould not be necessary to go to any\nboard to petition for the right to\nteach eight grades, as the school au­\nthorities should know of such condi­\ntions where children who desired it\ncould not get the upper grade advan­\ntages then should provide for it.\nMr. Hastings of Laurel, stated that he\nrepresented the Fifth district of Sus­\nsex county which district pays one-\neighth of the taxes of that county\nand he considered much of the trouble\nwas with the local boards in not ask­\ning for such advantages where it was\nrequired. He said he had heard no\ncomplaints in his district as to trou­\nble tn transporting seventh and\neighth grade pupils.\nGeorge L. Medill, president of the\nNew Gastle County School Board, stat­\ned that the provision was put tn the\ncode to give country children of\nthose grades the eame advantage as\nthose living in the city enjoyed. He\nconsidered a great mistake would be\nmade by making it compulsory to\nlea oh the higher grades in the rural\nschools.
115930f32ec4932c36ee463fd5aa06ba NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.7383561326737 40.735657 -74.172367 radius of one hundred and two feet and\nthirty-five hundredths of a foo* (102.28), n dis-\ntance of eleven f"et and ninety-one one-hun-\ndredths of a foot (11.91). to a point of com-\npound curve, thence (2) still curving toward\nthe left with a radius of thirty-eight feet and\n•• our hundredths of a foot (38.04). a distance of\nfjrtv slx feet and fifty-nine hundredths of a\nfoot (16.59). to a nolnt In the northwesterly\nelite line of Mouth Nineteenth str^t.\nThe tracks above described are shown on\n•nap numbered 9018-D, attached to petition on\nwhich this ordinance is based.\nSection 2. Permission la further granted to\naid company to operate car* over said con-\nnectlng tracks by electricity supplied to elee-\n•tlo motors on the cars from overhead wires\nwhat Is known as the overhead trolley sys-\ntem, and to erect the necessary wires therefor,\nami for the purpose of supporting eald wire*\nmeet and maintain thirteen poles tn\ntlte locations Indicated by the numbered red\ndot* on map numbered 9918-D, attached to\npetition on which thl* ordinance Is baaed. Said\npole* are to be specifically located as follows:\nPole No. 5 I* to be located within the south\neasterly curb line of South Nineteenth street,\ndistant one hundred and twenty feet (120)\nsouth weal wardly from the southwesterly curb\nline of South Orange avenue produced.\nPole No. 7 Is to be located within the eouth-\n»\\t»terly curb line of South Nineteenth street,\ndistant one hundred feet (100) southweetwardly\nfrom pole No. 6\nPole No. 9 1* to be located within tb# south-\nutterly curb line of South Nlnetsenth street,\ndistant one hundred feel (100; southwestward\nly from pole No. 7.\nPolo No. 11 i» to bo located within the south-\neasterly curb line of Mouth Nineteenth atree*.\ndistant eighty-two feet and fifty hundredths\n•( a fool (b2.50; southwest wardly trem pole\nNo. 9.
b4957588b37905966d63091e840473de CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1922.2041095573313 39.623709 -77.41082 2 big type Poland China, 3 excellent\nO. I.C. Allwill farrowby day of sale\n1 I. H. C. gasoline engine, 6 h. p.,\ngood condition, completed on tnuuc,\nand wood saw; I. H. C . feed grinder\ngood as new, 1 h. p. gas engine, ex-\ncellent condition, new pump jack never\nbeen used, 2 good belts, 7-ft. and 18-ft.\n1 good as new 4-horse wagon, 4-in.\ntread, new 10-bbl . bed; set 18-ft. hay\ncarriages, New Idea manure spreader\nin good condition, 2 good spring wag-\nons, buggy spread, 7-ft. Deering bind-\ner, cut only six crops, 1 Deering mow-\ner, new McCormick 9-ft. iron horse\nrake, 8-hose Superior grain drill\nnearly new, 1 Deering corn planter\nand wire, good condition, 2 Oliver rid-\ning com plows, used threeyears, I\nBuckeye walker,2 2-horse and 1 8-\nhorse barshear plows, all good, 2 15-\n tooth lever harrows, 1 iron roll-\ner and 2 excellent drags, 1 scoring oat\nplow, 1 coverer, 1 3-shovel and 2 2-\nshovel plows,good home-made wheel-\nbarrow, 1 large com sheller, 1 riding\ngrindstone, 1 forge and tools, 1 barrel\ntree spray, 3 triple, 2 double and 12\nsingle trees, 6 jockey sticks, 1 stretch-\ner, 4 log chains, 4 picks, 2 mattocks,\n2 dirt shovels, 2 small scoop shovels,\n1 large scoop shovel, 3 pitch forks, 4\ndung forks, 1 dung hook, 1 sheaf fork,\n2 briar hooks, 1 mowing scythe, 2 gar-\nden rakes, 4 hoes, 2 digging irons, 1\nwire stretcher, grain cradle and flail,\n15 cow chains, 2 sets breechbands good\nas new, 3 sets heavy front harness, 2\npair check lines, 5 bridles, 10 collars,\nset buggy harness, good work saddle,\n2 leather halters, 2 sets breast chains,\n2 lead reins.
3a81dcc0964dd1d2865f07ea7b189fb3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0315068176053 41.681744 -72.788147 in the band. The piercing notes of\nthe cornet even when they were\nsometimes sour were music to his\near. Down at Quantico there is an\nold organ that some of tho men play\nof nights. Always Jiggs was there\nto hear the soothing strains of the\nstaid old instrument. He was, too.\na movio fan, going with the boys\ninto the darkened hall every night\nto watch tho fiickering3 on the\nscreen. Especially, he loved to\nwatch the acting of his only rival in\npublic popularity\nOnce in a while, when there were\npictures of lesser canine celebrities,\nold Jiggs regarded them disdain-\nfully from tho corner of his eye,\nVictor In Fight With Bear\nMost bull dogs are fighters.\nThough Jiggs was a member of the\nfighting marines, he was in only one\nfight in all his career with the mili-\ntary organization. Ho was born too\nlate to see service in the World War\nand thus was never in active com-\nbat, save on a memorable occasion\nwhen the marines out to St.\nLouis to play a football game. There\nhe was nipped by the bear mascot\nof the state university, who was la-\nter sent scurrying to his dugout by\nthe old top sergeant. This was his\nonly scurry and he came out victori\nous. He paid no attention whatso-\never to the army mule or tho navy\ngoat. Though both topped him in\nheight, he seemed to consider them\nbeneath him. He. was a top ser-\ngeant in the marines and they, well,\nthey were just a goat and a mule.\nJiggs had two official caretakers.\nOno of them was a sergeant who\nhas spent 29 years of his life fol-\nlowing the flag. Ho is Sergeant\nJohn Nicholas, a trooper who has\nseen service wherever the marines\nlanded. He was with them in the\nBoxer uprising and has followed the\nHag over tho seven seas, around the\nworld and back again. Old Sergeant\nNick, they say, cried like a baby\nwhen Jiggs answered his last call to\nduty. Iho second caretaker
364915818c919402ded5cb7727808d79 THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1879.1547944888382 44.593941 -72.616505 Scale Works of Cincinnati have just com-\npleted and are now introducing to tho\npublic a handsomely finished Family\nScale, an article that has always been\nneeded in every household, and iu a com\nmunication addressed to the publishers of\nthis paper the proprietors ask us to reter\nthem to some reliable party, to Introduce\nit for them to the people of this county.\nIt is very seldom that a new article steps\nso suddenly Into universal favor. House\nkeepers are loud in its praise, it is always\nready, there are no weights to get lost or\nto bo hunted up, is reliable, and will not\ntret out of order. The description of them\nIs a handsome base surmounted by a col\numn iu which works a spiral spring so\nscientifically adjusted as to weigh any-\nthing up to twelve pounds with perfect\naccuracy; the top of the column is the\nnlatforin on which the articles to be\nweighed are placed, and they have an ad- -\niuslamc indicator so that you can take the\ntare ot any vessel you may use in weigh\ning, giving you the exnt net weight.\nHousekeepers at once see their value In\nweighing fruits, sugars and other ingredi\nents used in preserving, cooking, etc., or\nin testing the weights of purchases from\nothers. The, Scales are made of all brass,\narc highly polished and arc finished in a\nskillful manner. They arc very attractive\nand take tho eye ot every one who sees\nthem. It seems to us that nearly every\nfamily iu this county will want one, and is\ncertainly a rare opportunity for some\nsmart and energetic party to pick up quite\na nice little income during the next lew\nmonths.
363c062c12c13d578ad35572209ae445 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.0808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 After a few days of fruitless balloting, rumors which\nindicated that they probably would succumb to machine\npressure gained currency and were accepted as true in\nmany quarters not friendly to the Democratic boss.\nThe four so-called independents persisted, however,\nIn their declarations that they would stand for a\nKent man, force Saulsbury from the fight, and bring\nabout the election of a compromise candidate accept­\nable to themselves. There was nothing In anything\nthey said that indicated that they had in contempla­\ntion the disgraceful surrender they made to the ma­\nchine yesterday. In view of what has transpired, they\nwould have emerged from their fight with much better\ngrace had they surrendered at the outset and gone\ninto a binding caucus. As it is, they stand before the\nState In the guise of a quartette of cheap and spine­\nless bluffers, who will reçoive no credit from those\nwhose political Interests they betrayed and but little\ncredit from the chief beneficiary of their act of be­\ntrayal. The record of their conduct certainly will not\nconstitute a golden page in the history of their State,\nSo far as Willard Saulsbury, the Senator-elect, is\nconcerned, obtaining an office and its high honors\nby a self-seeking campaign lasting fifteen years can\npossibly bring pleasure, that pleasure Is his. As we\nhave said before, if there ever was an Instance of the\nman seeking the office, rather than the office seeking\nthe man, this assuredly is it. No one who knows this\npolitician and the methods he has employed for years\nto bring about his own elevation will expect that the\nUnited States Senate will he enriched by his pres­\nence or that the people of Delaware or of the United\nStates will obtain any material benefit from his elec­\ntion to an office for which he is so poorly equipped.\nHis whole record is against such a presumption. He\nis a mere politician who has resorted at times to\npolitical short-cuts that would have done discredit to\na Tammany ward worker or the political agent of a\nPhiladelphia, Pittsburgh or San Francisco ring. The\ntreatment accorded toWoodward W. Chcatrs in the early\ndays of Saulshurys Senatorial longing showed to what\ndesperate lengths he and his friends were ready to\ngo to make it possible for him to climb into the United\nStates Senate.
1936131e3eca142b66a593b6c5cd4f28 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1902.8835616121257 37.451159 -86.90916 nable position A small stream or\ncreek whose banks are very steep runs\nat right angles with the river making\nattack from that direction very dUn\ncult The aide next the river isorb baa\nbeen almost a sheer upright wall In\nthe rear a very steep hill cute off any\napproach from that quarter Fifty\nmen within the fort could effectively\nresist an army of bOO approaching\nfrom any direction Eight large monndi\nor flat torrets with Intervening niches\nmark the fort proper Large trees and\nundergrowth mow cover the premises\nhut the outlines df the ancient structure\nare plainly visible It goes by the name\nof the old Spanish fort\nTradition says that many years ago\na band of a thousand Spaniards entered\nGreen river from the Ohio and stopped\na few days at the point where Liver\nmore now stands The greater per\ntlon of this number went on up\nGreen river but 800 of the band entered\nthe month of Rough river and proceed-\ned with the devious windings of the\nstream to the point where this old fort\nis situated and there built the structure\nwhich forms the of this sketch\nIndiana were plentiful In this section\nthen and it was to resist the attacks\nof these murderous marauders that the\nfort was planned and erected both as a\nprotection and a residence Just how\nlong the Spaniards stayed there nobody\nbaa the remotest Idea It is said that\nthey finally received word from their\nbrethren who bad proceeded on up\nGreen river to join them at some point\ndesignated They broke camp and pro\ndon their journey Near Crom\nwell Ohio county at a point now call\ned Dig Bend they struck tents for the\nnight During the day theIndlans had\nbecome informed of their departure and\nhad followed them being reenforced\nnumbers exceeding that of the Span\nlards After night had fallen the Indians\nmadean attack at Big Bend A terrific\nbattle ensued in which many Indians\nwere killed and the Spanish band al\nmost totally destroyed Many Span\nlards were massacred while they slept\nbefore they became Aware of the at-\ntack Nothing was ever beard of the\nSpanish band after that day\nAll this took place it is conjectured\nabout a century and ohalf ago
154831b048d5941d08fd619d1716ee82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.091780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho things to be considered in the build- 1\ning ot a new railroad are: Pint, its me- c\nchanlcal properties and facilities.as for\nexample, its grades, curvatures, etc. Btc- i\nond, its cost of construction and equip- r\nment. Third, Its character as a profitable t\ninvestment for Stockholders. p\nAs to tho first proposition, it has been e\ntho wish of your President, that tho s\ngrades should in no case exceed forty feet c\npor milo, and that curves should be of no e\nlets radius than one thonB&nd feet I t\nhave lound It necessary to go above forty j\nfeet grade in a few instances. One is a c\ngrade of fifty-three feet per mile for two\nand one-half miles on Piney Fork, and n\nono and ono-fourth miles sear Hopedale.\nThese grades X do not consider so very\nobjectionable, as they occur below where\nthe heaviest coal trains will be loaded, £\nNo road now built, or proposed, running\nfrom the Ohio river, has so low a rate ol\ngrades thlB of yours. The Cleveland 4\n& Pittsburgh Railroad has four and three- t!\nfourths miles ol S3 feet grade per mile on I\nthe head waters ol Yellow Creek, and to- e\nday it Is one ot tho most successlul roads g\nIn the Btate. In but one case will we J\nhave to use so short a radius as one thou- I\nsand feet. This cculd be avoided by a c\nshort tunnel, but I do not think it neces- 0\nsary, as it would increase the coat of the ii\nwork without any great benefit The c\nsecond proposition, the cost of eonstruo- ti\nHon, 1 need not discuss, aa you have £\nalready made a contract for the building a\nand equipment of your road with Mr. n\nWalter Shanly, at a price below the aver- p\nage cost of roads in this State. In refer- d\nenco to the third point in view, namely: y\nAs u profitable investment for stock- p\nholders, there may be mentioned lour u\nprinciple sourcea of revenue. d
127781fbe8b3bfad320024d3768053d3 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1897.2726027080162 37.305884 -89.518148 tions of their respective countries will\ntake part in the naval review. It has\nbecome arranged that Admiral Bunce,\ncommanding the North Atlantic squad-\nron, with the foreign ships, will form\nin two columns opposite the Grant\nmonument. The revenue, marine and\nlighthouse fleet, together with the\nmerchant marine, will fall in under\nthis formation and move at the same\ntime that the land parade moves and\npass in review of Admiral Bunee's fleet\nand the foreign ships. As the land\nparade passes in front of the president,\nappropriate salutes will be fired from\nthe fleet which will be anchored.\nThe idea of making April 27 a flag\nday is gaining ground. Mayor Strong\nis so favorably impressed with it that\nhe has determined to issue a general re-\nquest that flags be displayed from every\nhouse in Greater New Y'ork. The rea-\nsons he will give for the request are\nthat the eyes of the nation will be on\nNew York April 27, and that local pride\nshould be incentive enough to make the\nceremonies historic in grandeur.\nThe hope that New York would en-\njoy the sight never vouchsafed to the\npeople of the presidents of two great-\nest American republics riding in the\nsame carriage has been blasted by the\nreceipt of a letter from President Diaz,\nsaying that he can not le present on\nGrant day. lie ran not leave his coun-\ntry while in oincc.\nThere is every prospect that Gen.\nJohn B. Gordon, of Georgia, one of the\ndistinguished fighting generals of the\nsouth, will be here to marshal the con-\nfederate veterans April 27.\nThe problem of seating visitors is\npressing upon the committee. A state-\nment of the arrangements made for the\naccommodation of strangers will be\nmade in a day or two.\nExpert mechanics hare Xtegnn the\nwork oi cutting tiirougli tho steel bars\nand copper case inside of which re-\nposes the rosewood casket containing\nthe remains of Gen. Grant. This is\nrendered necessary in order to remove\nthe casket to the sarcophagus. It is a\ndifficult task, because the steel bars\nare chisel-pro- of
1ea530495d748e75ce44afca20b345a3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.629781389142 40.063962 -80.720915 That afternoon it snowed and contin\n>d to snow all night. Miss Jan\nlought it looked like a heavy storn;\nid when night came she made Dolly a\nmfortable as she could, fed her am\nunt into the house. The next mornin\nie snow was drifted so that poor Mis\nine couldn't get out of her tfoor to gi\nthe she<l. Neither could she see ou\nthe window where she usual);\nitched for "that boy" to go by.\n. She had plenty to eat ami plenty o\nel till she should be shoveled out. Sin\nd not feel worried about herself. Bu\ntor Dolly! who would care lor her\nle fairly cried as noon came on and m\nle came to her relief. .She couldn'\niar any sleigh-bells. She began t'\nink the whole town was buried. He\nic little attic window looked over I\ne woods which were deep with snow\nould no one think of her?\nShe remembered with a sigh how lit\nshe thought of anybody else. Sh<\nujembered that she wanted to liv<\n)ne; that, crushed with sorrow whei\ne by one of her loved ones had died\nd the dear brother was never heart\n»m, she had turned against all tin\n>rld. She had rebelled at her hard lot\ne had moved away from everything\ne ever known aud shut herself u]\nher little cottage with no thought not\ntcrest in anybody else. She knew nt\ne but the minister and."that bov.'\nA kindly feeling ciept over her as she\nmembered the boy aud his heart)\nlollo!" every morning, and then sin\nid to herself: "How glad 1 am I gol\ntoe mittens done. 1 guess lie'JJ bt\nirhtv dad of 'em such a day as this.\nlyway lie will, if lie can get out of tin\nii.su." 1 wonder where ho livea ami il\n's snowed up, too.whul'a that?"\nShe listened, and a merry voice she\new full well called in the distance,\nlollo!"' and Miss Jane screamed back\nfolio!" as loud as she could. She did\nt know if he heard her. She heard\naping and shoveling coming nearer\nil nearer, and before long a lace was\nBring in her window.\n'llolli '."said the bright, cheery voice,\n"Hollo!" said Miss Jane, in just us\neery a one asshecould uiuster, toi the\nrs stood in her eyes.\nrhen Miss Jane told him through the\nin low about uoiiy, uno ui'wi'ti nun iu\nto Dolly to milk and feed her.\n'I can wait," she said, "and you can\nmo out afterwards."\n["lie l»oy nodded. lie evidently wan\nl much of a talker himself, but he\nild work.
55cae0bb6aea9a3b2d141a3ea819abd7 THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1859.319178050482 32.36431 -88.703656 44 feet ; height of wall, from floor to plates.\n14 feet : corner imsts 5 by 10 inches ; aii\nelixir and window iwists 5 by 5 ii1ohe:\nstudding 3 by 5 inches; 2pannel d lam in\nlront end ; 3 windows on each siue pf the\nhouse, and 2 windows in the rear ind. 1\non each side of the pulpit : each window\nto contain 21 glass lights, 12 by 10 inches:\nneat pulpit in the rear end of the bouse,\nsimilar to that in Pleasant Hill Church ;\n23 prs. rafters. 3 by 5 inches at foot end\nanl 3by3inches atton end : 23josta10\nby 2 inches: 3 sills lengthwise the bouse\nami 2 sills width the house, 12 by 1 rrnch-e- s\n: sleepers 2 by 12 inches. At inteuls nf\ntea thrapnala Ahartesir\ncornice on the front end of the boose, and\nlioxing on side ; roof of shingles out\nof the heart of pine or cypress; flooring\nto t? dressed, 01 quartered plank, ana\ntongue and grooved : weather lioardin?\ndressed outside; the weather boarding and\nsills to lie of the heart or pine. There are\nto lie d seats 12 loet long on each side the\npulpit; 10 seats on each side or the bouse,\nleaving an aisle 4 Teet wide from the front\nend to pulpit ; seats to be made of dressed\nlumlier, and are to l.c loxed seats, similar\nto those in Church at Pleasant Hill. The\nhouse to rest on 12 pillars made of stone\nor brick 2 feet high : good steps in front\nof the iliKirs. The whole work to lie done\nin a just and workmanlike manner.\nI lie work will lie t,aid for when the\nChurch is completed according to con- -\ntrad.
371b11a72bb72b81131da67252028388 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.8671232559614 32.612638 -90.036751 AND it is the only revelation of\nGod to man. Ah, yes,' nature may speak\nof a God. As we behold the lilies of the\nfield which toil not nor spin, yet which\nare clothed in a splendor and glory\nwhich Solomon in all his glory never\nknew, we exclaim in rapture, surely only\na God could have made these. As we lift\nour eyes to the stars and behold the\nvastness and splendor and intricacies of\nthe universe, the overpowering thought\nsweeps over our soul that only a mighty,\npowerful Creator and God could have\nmade them and hung them in space. As\nwe feel the throb of life in our own\nveins, as we behold life in its myriad\nforms in the insect and animal worlds,\nwe are conscious of the existence of a\nvital something which must have is-\nsued from a high controlling force and\npower. The thought and sense of God\nare about us. How could it be other-\nwise when everything in the heavens\nabove and the earth beneath and the\nwaters under the earth bear the cer-\ntain impress of the creative hand and\nfingers of God? But, notwithstanding\nall this, man needs the Bible to tell him\nof the God which he discovers all about\nhim. It is not enough that man should\nknow there is a God, he must know\nabout that Qod and the way back to\nHim. The Bible is the only source of\nsuch knowledge. Therein we find not\nonly who and what God is, but who and\nwhat man is, what his need, and how\nGod has wonderfully provided for that\nneed. The heart of the Bible is discov-\nered to be the Christ, about Whom all of\nGod's thoughts and plans revolve, Who\nis the full revelation of the character ot\nGod, and Who redeems back to God a\nsin-ruin- ed
3723fded4832425b7aec78060d71943b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1876.2226775640052 37.451159 -86.90916 In answer to C. F ., on the subject of\norchard grass, it will grow on any kind\nof soiL It should be sown in February,\nif possible, after wheat, rye or barley ;\ntwenty pounds is the right quantity\nper acre; but if sown after oats or\nalone, as soon as the ground will do to\nwork in the spring, follow the harrow\nwith the seed, and then drag a light\nbrush over it But it will do very\nwell to sow it up to the first of May.\nThe best way to save the seed is to\nmow the hay, and save it as you would\ntimothy, and in the winter give it a\nlight threshing with the flail, and then\nyon will have excellent hay to feed\nyour stock. It must cut when the\nneed is in the dough, or the seed will\nlw lost I am glad to sec the farmers\ntaking more interest in this important\ngrass. There should be a field of it on\nevery form. Itun satisfied that, on\nour hill lauds and wet lands, it has no\nequal for sheep. Some farmers say it\ntakes it too long to set It will set\nquicker than any other grass, and af-\nford more pasture than any other\nknown grass, if sown according to\ndirections, twenty pounds to the acre.\nI comply with the request with great\npleasure; as you know, I have been a\nstrong advocate of the orchard grass,\nin the Home Jourxal, the best of all\nagricultural papers that falls into my\nbasket Cor. iarmen Ilmne Journal
206da1e713d09d339bb5229090ceea9b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6434425913276 39.745947 -75.546589 At the request of Quenn Victoria, a\nwreath of passion flowers was laid\nupon the grave of Abraham Lincoln.\nThe Interpretation.\nThe Spanish missionaries thought\nIt to be the most wonderful Illus­\ntration of the cross triumphant In\nthe nature world. The following\nsymbolical Interpretation was given:\nThe column rising .from the center\nof the flower represents the beam of\nthe cross, while the small stems\nabove It represent the nails. Above\nthe column is the corona which sym­\nbolizes the crown of thorns, while Uio\nveil of fine hairs, amounting of 72.\nsignifies the number of thorns.\nThe seed vessel is the sponge filled\nwith vinegar, which quenched Burst\nof the Saviour, and the five, vivid\nred spots upon each of the leaves are\nHis five wounds. Because this,\nthe Spaniards call it the flower of tho\nfive wounds.\nWhat Sepals Represent.\nThe five sepals and the five ipetals\nare the ten apostles, Judas, the be­\ntrayer, and Peter who denied the Sa­\nvior, being omitted.\nThe leaves, being set singly on the\nstem, signify that there Is but one\nGod, but testify to the Trinity by\nbeing triplicate in • form. The bell\nshape which the flower takes when\nopening ami fading was Interpreted as\nmeaning that God does not choose to\nreveal His power until such time as\nHis wisdom deems best. If the plant\nis cut down. It grows again readily\nand this means that no one who bears\nin his heart the love of God, can bo\nharmed by the evil of the world.
094072280dce9ffd9aebab1ba4b1fa26 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.560273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 II anything in the world would stir Phil-\nippi intosometbing like a semblance of ex¬\ncitement, that thing isa slander suit. The\ntown was shocked beyond measure at it.\n1 Nothing like it bad been known, liven\nthe 4'oldest inhabitant' was at fault for a\nprecedent For years tbe town people bad\nbeen as one family. 1t was Tom and Joe,\n. Maty and Jane. "Mister" and .Mad¬\name were terms reserved for stranger*\nand special occasions, tvery man felt in\nduiy bound to defend the character of e\\-\nery other man in the village. No mean\nlittle tcandela were repeated, and a cartful\nBcaicb would have faiied to tlud a mau so\nbase as to talk behind his neighbor a back.\nNowouder ihen, Ibat when it was vtbtt-\nLtrtd with bated breath, that an attorney\nbad dared to call a minister names, the\n1 town was shocked. But now the old time\nouiet reigns and tbe affair is spoken of as ii\nu wire a matterof course. Ljvtrs walkop\n river and stone Irogs uBotold.and the\nbaud plays nightly on the streets. Doors\nare never locked, If would be an luslllt to\nevery man in tbe place if one ulloger\nshould lock iiiB door, it base insinuation\nthat a traitor w.s in the camp. Hucksters\nleave their loads of chickens, butter and\negjsin the street all night /dlbout the\nwatchful protection of even a dog. ibe ex¬\nchanges in the newspaper offices are B*'"i\nLid linen hangs upon tbe cl<otbesi line af¬\nter tbo weekly winning to dry in the night\nair, with none to mil-s' or take it awa} .\nIt is not considered good taste to knock at\nvour neighbor's door. It is an insinuation\nthat vou hesitate to enter for bar the family\ntkeieton has nol In on properly caged lor\nyour arrival. "Walk right in and make\nyourself at home; don't knock, is tho le\ngend on every man's door in Pbillippt.\nVerily tbis is a luudirn inima'.ure bound\nin cloth and gold edition of Arcadia.
20afdcaf87fafbb6683caacd88018970 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.5136985984273 39.261561 -121.016059 IMPORTANT TO FEMALfi9>.WHEN A\nfemale is in trouble or afflicted with disease, and re\nquires medical or surgical aid. the inquiry should be w here\nis there d physician who is fully competent to administer\nrelief, one whose knowledge of the female system is perfect,\nand who thoroughly understands the application of medi-\ncine to disease, and whose scientific attainments in surge\nry have made him pre-eminent in his profession, and\nwhose respectable standing in society, recommends him\nto the confidence of the community. Unless these, and\nmany more questions can be satisfactorily answered, the\nafflicted should pause before consulting any one. Consid-\nering those things in their true light, the celebrated J. C.\nYOUNG, comer of Montgomery and California street*, has\nconcluded to advertise his place of business to the public,\nstating that he been a professor of obstetrics and fe-\nmale diseases for the last fourteen year*, and is fully qual-\nified to administer in all diseases, both medically and sur-\ngically, not in a superficial manner, but in as thorough a\nmanner as years of study and practice—both in hospitals\nand private families, can make : therefore, families can\nrely upon him a* a father All in affliction can find in him\none who can sympathize with, and befriend them in troub-\nle, one in whose secrecy the utmost confidence can be\nplaced. Come all ye that are afflicted and in trouble, and\nyou will be relieved or cured. Apartments privately ar-\narranged so as to preclude the possibil ty of exposure.\nN. B .—All letter* inclosing $10 will receive prompt at-\ntention, and the best advice and instruction.
187e638094ceb854f6e0c6d46440b1b1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.6953551596337 40.063962 -80.720915 From the Buffalo Evening Nowh: If\nyou were to call ut 27 Front avenue\nyou would, And n pleasant elderly lady,\nMr*. Captain H«ne*y by name, whoso\nhusband has hailed the Ink oh for many\na year,'and when In port makes Ills\nliomo in Buffalo, N. Y. Ilcr kindly\ntunlle and JoyouB manner an- to no\nPinall extent duo to thu escape she has\nhad. Her own wonls nan better de¬\nscribe her rescue and one can eaally\nutuVrslnnd her preant happy condi¬\ntion when they realize what she hart\ngone through, Who snys: "About tlvo\nmonlhn ago I bad an attack of sick¬\nness which lasted for a week and since\nthat ttrne 1 have been subject at In¬\ntervals to similar attarks, some of\n. which wore longer hi duration. It Is\nhard Mr me to describe how I suffered.\nThe pain would commence In iny head,\nafter which It would seem to pass down\nmy body and settle In my buck, my\nsides nciied, my buck ached, and 1 had\na feeling of great distress In my bowels.\nTlx* Increased which aeetned to\ncore from lying down, would be al¬\nmost unbenrbK iny facc and stomach\nwould'bloat up and 1 could hardly\nstand on my feet, dizziness mode it al¬\nmost Impossible; this feeling was al¬\nways wltlrme even nfter the violence\nof the uttack passed over. The last at¬\ntack 1 had was the worst, and wan so\nbad 1 would not have have been able to\ntell (bis story but for Doan'a Kidney\nTMlls. As soon an 1 commenced their\nuse I found Immediate relief. The pain\nin my back and hMcs left me and thu\ndizziness went with tt; the bloating In\nmy face and body disappeared and all\ndistress In my bowels was gone. I have\ngreat faith In Doan's Kidney Pills; In\na short time they did a great d«sil more\nfor me than all the plasters and medi¬\ncines wMoh 1 had resorted to in seeking\nrelief and cure. 1 hope always to be\nuble to procure them."\nFor sale by all dealers.price, SO\ncents. Mailed by Foster-Mllburn Co..\nBuffalo, X. V., sole agents for the U. S.
05d2c9e92034a6d2bdd683d3898f254e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.491780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 long the line of a new coal work\ne opened up south of town, us sug\n, ed yesterday, the Independent sayt\nJ. Morgan, who recently purchase\nShaver coal tract south of towi\nImmediately south of the Pitti\njh-Ohlo mine, has contracted fc\nties, tipples, etc., The snme partie\niiahinv thu iron whpW fnr the Hose\ngan mine will put up the iron worl\nJoseph Crow has charge of th\nber work. The mine will be opei\n1 by electrlolty In hauling an\nting and most of the mining will b\nb with machines. The Fennsylva\ncompany is arranging to put 1\ntigs and It is expected the mine wi\nn operation by the first of Octobe\n10 marriage of Joseph A. Cooper an\n9 Eva -Llchtenberger at the home c\nbride's parents yesterday at nooi\na very happy occasion. Rev. E . I\nons, and Rev. . W . Holmes, foi\npastor and now presiding elder c\nStoubenviile district, officiated. Th\nlal pair were attended by Frank\nlutt, of the First National bank, an\ns lyfabel. sister of the bride. Rc\nh'mehts were served and a ver\n>yable time had by principals an\nats until about 3 o'clock, when th\nlal pair were driven to the Bait!\ne & Ohio station, where they too\nevening train for Pittsburgh, fo)\ned by the good wishes of a host <\nndsfieBellalr?, Zanesvllb & Clnclnna\nroad has bought two new engine\nan muny new passenger coachc\nwill soon bo manifesting nil nlon\nline Just what prosperity does fc\nrailroads, as well as for the comfoi\nconvenience of the publlp.\ntmrles Kruger slipped over to Cak\nand was married there to Mi?\nia J. Powell, of- Summerfleld, an\nnews came back before the coup]\nved.
1b51de538f10c57298bd29c54f2e608d THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.1789617170107 46.187885 -123.831256 Cicero, nijmvrot Co., Isix, Sept, 19. 133T .\nThe followlns Is a true account of what your\nS. S . S . has done for our llttlo daughter. Haxe I.\nnow four years old. When 13 months old a\nlunipappcarcd on herheeUwhlch slowly grew\nlarger. The family physician thought It was\ncaused by a piece of broken glass or needle,\nbut railed to bring anything to light The\nchild became feebler all the time, seeming to\nlose the use of her leg, and Anally quit walk-In- ?\nentirely. The middle finger and thumb\nof either hand became enlarged, the flesh be-\ncoming hsrd. Tho hip Joints became lnTolT-cd- ,\nso that when seventeen months old sba\ncould nottanJ, having lost the use ot leg\nand arm. Partial curvature ot the splaa also\nfollowed. The nervous system was wrecked.\nmusc!e3 contracted, and there "was general\nwasting of flesh and muscle. At eighteen\nmontlu ot ago she was placed under the\ntreatment of a prominent physician of Bos-\nton, Mass., but at tho end of ten months she\nI ad declined such a degree that she was tn\na dying condition. This was la April, 13SJ\nWe took tho child away not knowing what\nto do. fa this dreadful dilemma we were\noer persuaded by friends to try "one bot\ntie" of Swift's Specific, which wb did, and\nbefore it had all been taken we saw a change\nfor the better la her symptoms. We kept It\nup, and have done so to this day, and will\nkeep It up. If tho Lord wills, for many days\nto come, for It has brought our dying Hazel\nto lite, to vigor, to strength and health again.\nThe ashen hue of her checks has changed to\na rosy tint. Sha is able to walk anywhere,\nher languor and melancholy have passed\naway, and she Is now a blithe, cheerful, hap-\npy romping child. Should you wish to In-\ncrease your testimonials of proof of tha\nvlrtuo of S. S . a, our names and what we\nhave said Is but a portion of what we owo to\nyou, should you wkh to use them.
1c3b58f72a8c3a73da311e6b95aea486 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.0260273655506 43.82915 -115.834394 “Just before I sat down to dinnerI\nhappened to look ont of the window, and\nIsaw hia son go into the barn with a\nshotgun in hia hand. Hia stealthy man­\nner put me on myguard,and I tookgood\ncare that my gun was within reaching\ndistance. I cannot aay I enjoyed the\nmeal. I quickly swallowed a cup of\ncoffee, took a few mouthfuls of bread\nand slipped what 1 could into my pocket.\nThen I prepared to leave.\n“ But you must seethe blooded stock\nI have before you go,' said Moody.\nProbably I can trade one of the animal/.\nfor a silver watch.\n“But I knew if I ever went into that\nbarn I would never come out of it alive,\nso I made some weak excuse and started\ndown the road, keeping a sharp lookout\nfrom behind. The old man was mach\nenraged at my not falling into the trap,\nand just as I stepped out of view I saw\nhim enter the barn. I determined \nwatch, and went into a grove a little\nfarther down the road, and I stood where\nIcould see what was going on at the\nbarn. I saw Moody and hia son come\noat, each armed with a rifle.\n“ They walked into the woods not far\nfrom where I was hid. evidently mean­\ning to head me off farther down the\nroad. I am certain they meant to lay in\nambush for me and shoot me down as I\npassed. But I made up my mind to fool\nthem, and, instead of going the way I\nintended, went in the opposite direction,\npassing the house in the woods so the\nwomen would not see me. I kept close\nto the road, and when about half a mile\nfrom Moodys I saw two trappers walk­\ning in my direction.\n“ They looked like honest fellows, and\nI confided my suspicions to them. The\nfirst comment one of the men made was,\nI always believed that old wretch was a\nmurderer.
10f2591222b37b1bcd0ab5df5c5190db THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.7773223727484 41.004121 -76.453816 it creditable to tho soldlors of tho lato\nwar that ono of their number should\nbo permitted as their pretended repres-\nentative to spread broadcast over tho\nland n document charging Horaco\nGreeloy with disloyolly ?,' Tho truth\nof tho saying that "tho pen Is mightier\nthan tho sword" Is coming year by\nyear to bo moro generally acknowledg-\ned. In view of tho election or General\nGrant to tho Presidency, and or tho\nfact that ho is a candldato for re-\nelect Ion, thcro aro probably somo mon\nin tho country who doubt Its truth. If,\nhowever, wo woro toadd to thosaying tho\nproviso that tho pen should bo handled\nby a Greoley and tho sword by a Burn-sid- o\nall doubters would disappear. You\nand I, General, know full well that\nwhilo wo wcro In tho fiold fighting for\ntho Union Mr. Greeloy was wielding in\nbehalf of tho samo causo a weapon far\nmoro powerful thrn thoso used by\ncither or us. Wo know, too, that long\nafter wo had sheathed our ho\nkept up tho fight, and continued It un-\ntil ovcry object was accomplished for\nwhich oven tho most nrdnnt abolitionist\nhad over prayed. Ho did not ceaso\ntho fight until tho Union was restored,\nslavery abolished, tho blacks enfranchi-\nsed and all their civil and political\nrights solemnly guaranteed to them by\namendments of tho Constitution. Aud\nyot, aoneral, you havo tho hardihood\nor charging tills man with disloyalty,\nand nro uttcrlug thl3 foolish chargo in\nyour assumed capacity as tho represen-\ntative of all tho Union soldlors or tho\nlaud. You say ho has been guilty or n\nlack or courtosv toward us. In mv\njudgment, nny man who eight years nf--\nicr wio cioso oi a oioouy civil war will\nask soldiers to assemble In convention\nwith a view of controlling their action\nin political matters is a demagoguo\nunworthy of courtesy at tho hands or\nMr. Qrecloy or any other person.\nWhen at tho closo or tho war woUald\ndown our arms, wo becamo cltizcns.and\nwo havo no intorests
2ef7c968e8bb951838bcc624d90286be THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.1106557060818 37.451159 -86.90916 Tennyson succeeded so well that the\ngreat English author exclaimed Enl\nAlfred but youve got the grip of Iit\nHartford has not only got the grip of\nthings but shes got the It of Itand In\nspirit and way that appeals and com ¬\nmends itself to the judgment of every\ncitizen of the county\nDot Im loth to abandon the praise of\nthis good old town where natural and\nacquired excellencies and resources will\nforever maintain her prestige as an ad1 ¬\nmirable capital More than a century\nhas tested her fitness for the position jII\nshe has occupied so long almost h\nfourth of which time It has been the\ngood fortune of the writer to observe\nher in every mood and temper that\nwould betray her weakness or discov ¬\ner her strength from a happy affair\ndamour with many of her fair daught ¬\ners all of whom are absolutely the best\n in the world Mid for whom Id\nstand up even yet inyes in a street\ncarto public worship at the altars of\nher churches from her balls and re-\nceptions to her fairs and celebrations\nfrom the political riotous mob to the\nsweet sanctity of her inner lives as re ¬\nvealed to guest and friend at the in\ncensed altars of her lovely private\nhomes No frozen Finn there no boast ¬\ned wellbred stare that would make\nyou button up your coat in Jnne and\nIm sure if they were forced to call you\nclown Idiot or liar it would bo with\nsuch skill such grace and charm youd\nnever know It In a word andiheaven\nknows this Is straining the limit in\nsearch of the very best things that could\nbe said of any townher virtues are so\npronounced and contagious that even\nher Republicans are nfmort as good as\nher Democrats
4f5f0a622d5353110a196d4ef4782508 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.9356164066464 40.063962 -80.720915 jet of State officers, iu a manner c mtrary\nto the then existing election laws ot that\nStatu. On the lUtti of October, 1874, this\nDonatitution, aa therein provided, was se\nsubmitted to the people for their approval Li\n:>r re jection, and according to the election w\nreturns was approved by a lt»rge majority m\nol tho&c <|uulitled to vote thereon, and hi\nit the 6!ime election persona were chosen to\n[o till ull the State, couuty and township in\nDfllces The Governor elected in 1872 di\nlor the term of lour years turned over his 0\nofiioe to the Governor chosen under the re\nnew Constitution, whereupon the Lieu- su\ntenant Governor, also elccted in 1872 for a;\n* term ot 4 year?, claiming to act as ir\nGovernor, and alleging tint said pro- at\nseeding*, t>y which the new Constitution ly\nwas made and a new set of officers ai\nelected, were unconstitutional, illegal at\nand void, called upon me ad pro- rt\nvided in section 4, article 4 ol the gi\nConstitution to protect the State against vi\ndomestic violence. As Congress is now st\ninvestigating the political »>ir»ira of C\nArkansas, 1 have declined to*interfere, la\nThe whole fubject of Executive inter- re\nferencc with the nlhirn ol a State is rej«ug*\nnant to the opinion, to the feeling e:\nol those who liotn tneir (llhial capacity fn\nmust bo used in such interposition, anil Hi\nto him or those who must direct. Unless at\nmost clearly on the eido ol law, such gi\ninterference becomes a crime, and, with at\nthe law to support it, is condemned with- hi\nout a hearing. I desire therelore tliit all tfc\nnecessity for Executive direction in local si\naflaircjimy bccome unnecessary and ubso- w\nlete. 1 invito the attention not only of it\nCongress, but ol the people oi the United tc\nStates, to the causes and ctlcets of these is\nunhappy questions. Is there not a dis- si\nposition 011 one side to maguify these pi\nwrongs and outrages, and on the other tc\nto belittle or justify them? If the public el\ncould bo directed to & correct purvey of ti\nwhat is right, and to rebuking wrong and at\ntiding the proper authorities In punishing bc\nit, a better etato of feeling would bo in- re\nr.ulcated, and the sooner we would have fe\nthat peace which would leave the mates ol\nfree indeed, to regulate their own do- u\nmostlc alUirs. I believe on the pirt of es\nour citizens ol the Southern States, that o|\nthe bitter pari of them are oi t dlipo- rc
3d12ebc324b587739fc8f1bddc519a3e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.3082191463725 39.261561 -121.016059 Two of the Government camels belong-\ning to Dr. Owen's party were led iuto the\ntown on Tuesday last and attracted consid-\nerable attention. They are rough, rawbon-\ncd, bump shouldered, and generally awk-\nward looking beasts—appearing to be a\ncross between n night-mare nnd clothes-\nhorse. When they lie down they drop on\ntheir knees first—then stretch out their\nbind legs and take a reef in them —then set-\ntle forward again—then behind, till they\nfinish the operation hy shutting up like a\njacknife. They are generally docile and\ntractable ; that is the females, though the\nmales sometimes get into a passion, w hen\nthey have an awkward fashion of catching\na fellow with their teeth nnd then lying\ndown on him nnd “mashing” him. The\n“old he,” on here lias been taken\nthat way several times, once killing a broth-\ner camel, and on two other occasions, a\nman«-tbe horrible “brute!” While here,\nlie seemed in good humor. They wouldn't\nmake a very showy team for a family car-\nriage, or a fancy buggy—but are servicea-\nble on long trips over a barren, sandy coun-\ntry, as beasts of burden. They will leave\ngood grazing to browse on grease-wood,\nand sage-brush, nnd can pick up a living\nwhere a mule would starve. They can ea-\nsily pack seven or eight hundred pounds—-\nin fact, one of them has toted over 2,000\npounds 30 miles, on a wager. Their gait\nseems to be a long striding walk, at which\nthey “hump themselves” with a perfect\nlooseness fur an indefinite period of lime.
1de95ccb84d8375127335ac3aa60fc0e THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.9547944888382 41.741039 -112.161619 carious life In tho hills, where thoro\nwns little legltlinnto work to do nnd\nlittle very, very little money for nny\nnnd all purposes. And he thought,\nwith n renl pity, of tho ninny stnlwnrt\nyoung men idling nwny their time, get-\nting food by hunting or flailing, taking\ndesperate chnnceu, perhaps, In tho\nstills to got Just money enough to\nclothe themselves.\nMany of them wcro ns willing to\nwork as he, and would bravo nny dnn-gc- r\nto possess the modest llttlo ac-\ncount Burson hud In tho snvlugs bank.\nBut hereditary environment Ib hard\nto break, nnd It tnkes a brnvo mnn to\nnbnndon tho hill country, with Its\nwild, free llfo nnd go down Into tho\nunknown plains, where nil Is flnt and\nmonotonous, nnd where people Uvo\nIn houses Instead ot cublns, nnd wear\n"blled shirts" of n Sunday,\nBurson, however, possessing nu un-\nusually adventurous nature, had bold-\nly broken nwny from the tradltlonB of\nhis fathers nnd Invaded this unknown\ncountry. And, ns been stntcd, ho\nhad prospered and been contented\nnnd happy In his now life.\nBut while tho current of his llfo\nflowed on In nil serenity, tho clouds\nwero gathering nnd tho Fates wcro\npreparing to shock him.\nTho first mnnlfestntlon of forthcom-\ning trouble wns when Burson fell In\nlovo with Widow drlggs, who kopt tho\nbonrdlng Iioubo where Burson lived\nwhen ho wns not on u Job which in-\nvolved his living with the fnrmer for\nwhom ho worked, It took Burson n\nlong time to find out thnt ho loved\ntho widow. At first, ho simply experi-\nenced deep content to go homo nnd\nwntch Mrs. Griggs' cheery, smiling\nfnco ns sho bustled nbout her house-\nhold duties, nnd to note her graco of\nform nnd motion. Then ho begnn to\ncxperlcnco strnngo lluttcrlngs within\nIlls brenst when IiIb eyes met hers, or\nwhen Bho siwko to him, or when her\nnnklo peeped out from benenth her\ndress nB Bho trotted nround tho corner\nof tho tnblo.
308055797759b1ec5e88a90247e6df84 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.04508193559 40.063962 -80.720915 As will be remembered, tho Second\nBranch of Council, at its last meeting, ap¬\npointed Messrs. A . Caldwell, F.Goodfellow\nand iiobt. Simpson, as members of a joint\nspecial committee on the subject of a pub¬\nlic park. The resolution failed to roach\nthe First Branch before its adjournment,\nbut will probably bo takon up and acted\nupon at the meeting of tho Brauch on\nTuesday next. it is prolmblothe commit¬\ntee will be completed at that time with an\nequally ollicient representation from the\nFirst Branch, and in view of tho gonoral\ninterest that is manifested in the matter,\nit is to bo hoped such committee will give\nthe project full investigation, and furnish\nthe public with full information thoreon,\nat as oarly a date as is practicable.\nAmusements..The Pathfinders gave their\ninitial performance last night to a tolera¬\nbly good house. This troupe is con¬\nsiderably after tho style of the Saulsbury\nTroubadour?, and in some instances the\nresemblance is striking. "Scraps" was\ntho names of tho mixture presonted last\nnight. It is a history of a little pleasure\nexcursion by wutor, of party of two la¬\ndies, two gentlemen and a tifih wheel in\nthe form of a ludicrous black African at¬\ntendant. When they first appear it is at\nthe steamboat landing, and discovering\nthat the/ have more than two hours to\nwait, they decide to pass tho time in songs,\nchoruses, picuicing and miscellaneous fuu.\nThe two hours and a halfof waiting covers\nthe wholo affair, and the curtain does not\nfall until the cIobo. Kaeli one of,the five\ncontributes a bigarmful of thouieritsof the\nentertainment. The singing and the imi¬\ntations were the chief features. Au inci-\ndental exhibition before tho excursionits,\nbrings in the wonderful acrobats, the\n"Milton Jaspers," who perform apparent¬\nly impossible/eats, and are received with\ngreat applause. The stage Bettings and ap¬\npointments have been caiofully perfected.\nThe steamboat is a mechanical success.\nThis aftornoon thore will be a matinee,\nand to-night will cIobo the engagement.\nPinafore.Havorly's Juvenile Pinafore\nCompany is booked for next Saturday\nnight. This company is moro highly\nspokon of than any now on'the road, and\ntho metropolitan press are profuse-in\nnotices of its excellence.
0899a508d5400dba57720f0b369f4dca THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1865.4534246258245 37.561813 -75.84108 Below we give a list of the Ohio In\nfantry Regiments that are expected to\nreport for paymont and disohsrge at\nthe several camps in this State, desig-\nnated by general orders from tho War fi\nDepartment for that purpose. It is\nnot definitely understood whether the\nveteran regiments are to ba mustered\nout entire or not; the presumption is,\nhowever, that those members only will\nbe discharged whose term of service\nexpires prior to the 1st of October, 1863:\nOrganisations that will probably re-\nport at Camp Chase and Tod Barracks:\n4th veteran, 15th veteran, 20th tetcran,\n23d veteran, 25th vetoran, 26th veteran,\n27th vetoran, 30th vetorab, 31st veteran,\n32d veteran, 40th veteran, 43d veteran,\n45th veteran, 46th veteran, Slat veteran,\n58th veteran, 60th veteran, 62nd voter\nan, 64th veteran, 65th veteran, 6Gth\nveteran, 71st veteran, 73d veteran, 76th\nveteran, veteran, 80th, 81st, 90th,\n95th, 96th, 97th, 98th, 102d, 110th,\n113th, 114tb, 122od, 120th, 173d,\n174th, 175th, 176th, 177th, 178th,\n176th, 180th, 181st, 182.1, 183d.\nOrganisations that will probably re\nport at Camp Cleveland: 14th veteran\n19th veteran, 21st votoran, 37th veter\nan, 3tu veteran, 4ist veteran, win\nveteran,' 55th veteran. 57th veterao,\n67th veteran, 63th veteran, 72d veteran,\n77th veteran, 82d veteran, 100th, 101st,\n103d, 104th, 105th, 107th, 111th, 115th,\n118th, 123d, 124th, 125th.\nOrganizations that will probably re\nport at Camp Dcnnison: 5th vetoran,\n11th veterao, 13th veteran, 17th veter-\nan, 18th voteran, 231 veteran, 33d vet\neran, 36th veteran," 39th veteran, 47th\nveteran, 50th veteran, 52J veteran, 53d\nveteran, 54th veteran, 06th voteran,\n58th veteran, 63d veteran, 69th veteran,\n70th veteran, 74th veteran, 75th voter\nan, 79th veteran, 82d, 89th, 91st, 92d,\n93d, 94th,10Gth, 103th, 116th.
12b8900dd8fe7e8067644b4684e363f7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 "Mr. Stevens has no single quality\nol a statesman, except strong convic¬\ntion and fidelity to principle. He is\nstrictly a revolutionary leader; reck¬\nless, unsparing, vehement, vindictive,\nloud for the rights of conquerors, intol-\nerant of opposition, and as absolutely\nincapable of fine discrimination and\ngenerous judgment as a locomotive of\nsinging. Of a pleasant humor and per¬\nsonal kindliness, he is no more fitted\nfor the task of reconstruction which de¬\nvolves upon Congress than a jovial\nblacksmith to repair a watch, or a butch¬\ner to take up hidden arteries and sunder¬\ned veins in the very regions of the heart.\nYet a Congress which is undoutedly\none of the ablest that was ever asem-\nbled has quietly allowed itself to be al¬\nmost a puppet in the hands of such a\nman anil at such a time. The conse¬\nquence is that Mr. Stevens's crude\nand rash talk is supposed to be tho voice\nof Congress. A legislator who under¬\ntakes to regulate the price of gold by\n is the tacticly acknowledged chief\nof a body of practical business men.\nA representative who sneers at the press\nis a permitted leader in a party created\nand triumphant by free discussion."\nOf Senator Fessenden it says;\n"Among the living statesmen of this\ncouutrv there is none who commands\nprofounder popular confidence than\nWilliam Pitt Fessenden, Senator from\nMaine. Absolute integrity, a certain\nantique severity of character making\nhim sometimes impatient and almost\npetulant in opposition to rhetoric and\nsentimentality, great sagacity, catholic\ncomprehension, strict fidelity to the\nfundamental principles of the Govern¬\nment, and a singular clear and concise\noratory, are qualities which are ap¬\nparent to every man who watches bis\ncareer. No man surpasses him in that\njust estimate of practicability which is\nthe test of statesmanship. 'Ihe duty of\na legislator is to know what is possible\nand to do it. It is to make six or eight,\nif you cAn not score ten. It is to take\nthe half loaf rather than to lose the\nwhole."
280e90a9c422d72541f8ce629a12ba9d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.2445354875026 40.063962 -80.720915 Pittsburgh, March 29..Kivcr 0 feel\ninches and rising. Weather cloudy ai\ncool. Arrived Mallio Kagon fro\nWheeling; Emma Graham from Cincii\nnati. Departed.Graham and Kagon.\nCaiko, March 20..Arrived.Thorn\nboh Dean, from New Orleans; Colorad\nfrom St. Lou in; Grand Lake, from Nt\nOrleans; Bermuda, from Nashvillo. D\nnarted.Liberty, for Clarksville; Bigle\nfor the Ohio river; Parker, for Me in ph\nColorado, for Vicksburg; (irand Lai\nfor St. Louis. River 44 feet 10 inch\nand rising. Weather clear; mercury, 31\nEvansville, March 20..Weathe\nSartly clear since midnight; mercur\nI to 44°; barometer, 29 and rifling; riv\n310-10 feet and rising. Port lint: Dov\n.Robert Mitchell, E. II. Durfee. Up\nRed Cloud, Pat. Cleburne, Rover and to\nBusinesH light. The river is very roug\nWind from tho west.\nMEMrHin, March 20..The rise in t\nriver in very slow, but has almoBt reach\nthe danger line, and reports from abo\nshow that the present llood will \nthat of February or last August, and\nall the tributaries^below are at Hood tic\nthere ifl much anxiety below here^amot\nthe planters. The cut-off made at tl\nDevil's Elbow last Saturday is now a mi\nwide, and all boats go through it. T!\nriver rose an inch, and is now 33 feet\ninches. Weather generally clear ai\nnleasant. Arrived.Alice Brown, Pitt\nburgh; Trader, Peoria. Departed.J\nGenevieve and Carondelet, St. Louis.\nNew Orleans, March 20.. Cle:\nand pleasant. Arrived.Future City ai\nbarges from St. Louis. Departed.Futui\nCity and Jas. Howard for St. Louis; O\nchita Belle for Ouchita river.\nNamiville, March 20..River risir\nrapidly. Arrived.Brans ford from Poi\nIsabel. Departed.T . T. HUlman f\nCairo; Laura L. Davis for Burksville.\nCincinnati, March 20..River 38 ft\nII inches and rising. Weather clear ai\nwindy. Arrived.Chas. Morgan frc\nNew OrloanB. Departed.Glasgow f\nEvansvillo; Arlington for St. Lou\nCons Miller for Memphis; Turner for Ni\nOrleans.
5aeb419d47b5fa41428a221005bbb015 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 lythatIhavenot met a ladyso alto- <\nether lovable, and I considered mysell\nery fortunate In having secured her re- ]\nard and afleclion. Our correspondence ,\nras such aa can only pass between lovers, ,\nnd was uninterupted until the Winter\n063 8, when I obtained a short leave of\nbaence, and visited my intended bride.\nlgain our vows wero renewed, and a- I\nsin we parted aorrowfully, but lovingly, i\nletters were freely exchanged, and (\nothing occurred out of tbe uaual course i\nntil ihe battle of Gettysburg. In\n10 reports of that fight which reached\nio Northern papers it was stated that I\nad been killed. Another report was to I\nio effect that I had been wounded so ]\nirioualv that In order to save my life ouo t\nf my legs must be amputated. Neither\nsport was true, but my intended believed ,\nle latter, and when I was ablo (for 1\nad been wounded) I wrote her a full 1\nccount of the fight, as I participated in '\n;, and described to her the extent of my f\nrounds. I received a very comfortiDg\nnswer, in which was contained these\nrords: "Of course you will consider our\nngagement at an end; for howover much 1\nmay esteem you as a friend, you cannot '\nxpeat mo to marry a cripple." What\nould 1 do or say? I did wash\nery much to tho point. 1 wrote as lol-\niws: "Sou may take yoar Iriendship to\nnother market. I thought I had your\nave; since that was a mistake, it\nrould be exceedingly foolish in me to\nxpect aught else." Now it may be said\nbat I judge all tho sex by a single one.\n)n the contrary, I do not, for I am ac-\nluaintcd with many very excellent\nvomen and model wives; but they aro all\nvivea. I am thirty-four years old, and as\n;ood a specimen of manhood as the aver-\nige, but in all my circle of acquaintance\nit is large) there la no woman who can\n:ommand more than my respect and\nsteem. I frequently am gallant enough\no attend places of amusement with ladles;\nam often present at social entertain.\naents; I am never rude or bearish in my\nonduct toward ladies, and am a general\nivorite among them. Why don't i h\nnarry t Love went out of my heart while h\nlay suffering in the hospital. Faith In l(\nroman vanished with my trust in the one\nbelieved truo. I still respect women\nrbo are worthy ol it, and I suspect the\nlesigns of a groat msjority. I do not ex-\nlect to marry, at least under the present\nspect ol affairs. Without disrespect, I\nnay say I »m learlul of becoming
08a2249c043e279d73d6a66fdbf74c06 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.1849314751396 37.92448 -95.399981 most disastrous mine explosion cer\nknown in the New itlvcr district oc-\ncurred at the lied Ash mine shortly\nnfter the miners went to work curly\nyesterday morning. Although the\nmost heroic work of the rescuing par-\nty wns going on Incessantly nil yes-\nterday it was impossible last night\nto estimate the full extent of tho loss\nof life nnd property. More than CO\ndead bodies have nlrendy been taken\nout nnd the number of dead may\nreach 75 or more. It was thought\nlast night that at least 45 miners are\nyet entombed In the wrecked mine.\nThe Ited Ash mine Is a large drift\nnnd the, explosion occurred near the\nentrance which wns thus closed by\nthe falling slate, entombing a large\nnumber of miners. The scene of the\ndlsnstcr Is between tills place and\nThurmond, on tho south branch of the\nChesapeake Ohio railway, and every\nassistance possible wns rendered by\nthe rnilwny company und by the ad-\njoining mining towns. Hcllcf parties\nfrom grent distances arrived an soon\nns possible. Stnte Mine Inspector\nI'lnckney, with a corps of experts\nand ninny workmen, was on the\nground during the day, rendering nil\nassistance possible and devoting his\nattention more toward relief than\nto an olllclnl investigation of the\ncause of tho disaster.\nThe first successful strike of the\nrescuers wns about ten a. in., when ten\nbodies were recovered. It was found\nthat seven of them were nlrendy dead\nnnd this other three dying. As the\nminers were locnted nt different pla-\nces in the drift and the explosion\ncaused the fullug slate to blockndc\nthe rooms in different parts of the\nmine, the work of rescuing the men\nmet with one grcut obstruction nfter\nanother.
1ee53786044f1cf5ab3d18427b7a7756 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.5696720995245 39.745947 -75.546589 BBBLIN, July 27—According to\nmany Germans, Including the Kaiser\nthe year 1913 is destined to prove\neither of great profit or of eerious\nloss to Germany. They reach this\nconclusion through a calculation\nmade b ya woman reputed to be\ngifted with "second sight.”\nThe prophecy dates originally from\nthe marriage of Prince William of\nPrussia (later the first German Unt­\nrerer) in 1829. The dates of the lead-\nlug events In German history, It is\nsaid, could bo reached by adding to­\ngether the digits In 1829 and adding\nthe total to the* year. Thus 1 plus\n8 plus 2 plus 9 is 29, which added to\n1829 gives 1849, the year of the re­\nvolution which broke the absolute\nfeudal power of the Prussian crown.\nAgain.1plus8plus4plus9is22,\nwhich added to 1849 gives 1871, the\nyear of the defeat of which\nresulted In the acquisition of Alsace-\nLorraine and the birth of the German\nEmpire. Treating 1871 in the same\nway we get 1888, the year of the death\nof the old Emperor William and his\nson and the succ.- slon of the present\nKaiser. Add the sum of Us digits\n(25) to 188 and we get 1913, the year\nwhich almost all Prussians are In the\nhabit of describing as “sohiksalsjahr,”\nor year of fate.\nIt was as a result of this figuring\nthat 1913 was so long pointed to ns\nthe probable year of the final strug­\ngle with England; and as 1912 ad­\nvances apprehension of a great\nstruggle coming next year increases.\nIt Is common knowledge that the\nKaiser, while refusing to give ear to\nthe soothsayers, nevertheless has an\nuneasy feeling about the “schlscksnis\njahr.”
68184fea5da6f005577df2757fd69cae VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.6041095573314 43.798358 -73.087921 conceded by all to be his inalienable right,\ndepends on his connection with the soil, as\nreally and as much as on his connection with\nthe atmosphere. He will not die as soon\nexcluded from the former as from the latter\nbut he will as certainly. It being conced-\ned that life is an inalienable right, it follows\nthat what is necessary for the support of life\nis also an inalienable right. It being wrong\nto traffic in life, it must of course be wrong\nto traffie in what is necessary for its support.\nFor the right to fix one price is the right to\nfix another price. The right to fix the low-\nest price, is the right to fix the highest price.\nThe right to interpose any obstacle between\nthe lungs of our neighbor and the atmosphere,\nis the right to interpose every obstacle. The\nonly reason why the atmosphere has not\nbeen and sold in quantities at\nprices, is the fact that there has not been\npower to do it. They who will monopolize\nthe earth and sell it, would just as soon mo-\nnopolize the air and sell it, if it were in their\npower to do it. Why not? The violence\nto right would be no greater to interpose ob-\nstacles between lungs and their necessary\nwants, than it is to interpose obstacles be-\ntween stomachs and their necessary wants.\nTo say that it would be wrong to monopo-\nlize the atmosphere and traffic in it because\nthere is not power to do it, would be to say\nthat it would be right to do it if there were\nthe power. And no better reason than this\ncan be given for monopolizing the soil..\nThis brings me around to the point to which\nI have been so frequently brought in my ex-\namination of church-and-stat- e
108606e33d346d9f31cb8897da13b25b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.9136985984271 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbe Knul,n paper, pnbllah an >1- jj\njQBt Incredible Btory from Kasalan (|\n. Ithnanlu. The following aocount la 7\nrom the superintendent ol ono of (he 'e\nirgeat eatatee la Ibtt region: <(\nOn tbe other aide of ft little river\nowing by tbe eetate of Berealna lie\nome vlllagea and the foroat of Bolkl. H\nn tbe flelim between tbe latter and the\nlllage of Poole n few women were O\nfuming Ri'imrniBiy towards evening, le\nrhen soddeDly an unusually Urge w\nrolfe sprang oat of the forest and In a\n»w minute* had torn one of the women e\\\n) pieces. The other women, seeing w\n3 1m event from the dlstanoe, hurried to tc\ntie village for aid, but before the men lo\nBlurned the wolf had disappeared,\nhe body of the unfortunate woman tr\nreaented a horrible The tb\nId out of tho peasants immediately In* m\n)rtued the police of the occurrence, as\nnd placed six men In the nolgbbor*\nood of the body to watch over It until ei\n10 officials oame, for a corpse cannot le\ne removed In lluasla before the arrival ai\nf the police. A few hours later, as the w\nion were lying around a lire, the wolf re\ngain appeared, and the peasants made tli\nio best of their way to a neighboring u\nouso on the edge or the forest. One of an\ni» party, a strong peasant, was left w\nehlnd by hla companions, and whb it\nvertaken by the animal and quickly <i<\n>rn to pieces. Immediately afterward a\nib owner or the little bouse, a forest tl\natelier, who was returning, to his t><\nninft WPO salvori Kt»
19eda461a406ba7362749ad2c9e7c2a4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.57397257103 41.004121 -76.453816 Sec. 9. It shall be the duty of the\ncounty chairman to give notice to the\nseveral candidates to be voted for at\nleast ten days ptior to the holding of\nthe primary election to meet at a place\nto be designated by the chairman. At\nsaid meeting the candidates shall en-\ndeavor to agree on watchers not to\nexceed three in number for each dis-\ntrict and in case a majority of the\ncandidates assembled in response to\nsuch notice fail to agree upon watch-\ners, it shall be the duty of the county\nchairman to appoint said watchers.\nThe watchers shall be permitted to be\npresent and watch the receiving and\ncounting of the ballots and tallying\nand reading of the same, to take\nmemoranda of the proceedings and of\nany irregularity they may deem im-\nproper and in all respects to perform\ntheir duties as watchers as in\nthe general election laws.\nSec 10. The county chairman\nshall cause to be published in the\nDemocratic newspapers of the county,\na notice of the time of the holding of\nthe primary election and of the time\nand place of the meeting of the county\nconvention, and of the nominations\nfor office to be made by the conven\ntion for thirty days prior to the time\nof the meeting of the convention.\nSec. 11 . In case of the death, de\nclination or removal of any candidate\nput in nomination by the convention\nbefore the election ; or whenever any\ncandidate shall have had his name\nstricken from the ticket, the vacancy\nshall be supplied by a new nomina-\ntion of a candidate which shall be\nmade by the standing committee call-\ned together for that purpose by public\nnotice from among citizens eligible\nunder these rules.
1a6f07ecdb7cbb2f9c70b0d161fc8eab THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.9438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 ( hicago, December 10..Floor dull And*un¬\nchanged- Wheat, demand active, czclted and high-\ner; opened K*%c higher, advanced lHo then de¬\nclined ly«c, but Hgaln rallied l^c and tiotcd 2a2Xc\nover Saturday: niea ranged: 97atWJ4c, doawl at\nWJic; January 07&99XC, cloned at W#c; February\n94>$ca9l COH, closwl at.«l (OH; May «i O^ial 07&\nclosed at it 071$: No. 2 Chicago spring, 97xa0S«o,\ndoe>ed at 38XaJ£tfe; No. 3, blai^Xc; No. 2 red win¬\nter 98X«99)6c. Corncxriud; opened lxlJCp bUher\nand prices advanced SaShe above the btghwt hat*\nurday, oloied ;ti3J<c abuto tbo cIccIqk of Saturday;\ncaih 59^a6lc dored atto^ifilq Dooomber Wa41o,\ndoted at 6ic; Jrtimaiyt'J^aClV, doied at fllkc;\nFebruary WjiBiftc, do.- a at fli&c; May OtKaMc,\ndefied atOms. Oat*, exdteJ, una. tiled ana higher,\nauh 85a85&c, do»«*l at 85}<c; December 35105k\nclos"d at 8Jc; January 8:^*36Xc, dosed at \nSOKc; *ebmary 8>^tiS6%tf clo^cd at SG^eSfcft\nMaV 8S^*W)4c, Cloaed at -tec. Bye higher at MWu.\nBarley firmer at 66>{c. Flaxseed in fair demand but\nat lower rates at 9I&. lor* very active.and higher;\ncart 513 75S18 87H for old; 9H'0al4 63tf for new;\nDecember 913 7u*t4 00, duscd at 114 W; Jauuary\nJ14 44ftl4 77.^. do«:d at |.4 76-14 77k February\n14 55115 CO closed at 111 93; May IIS 90*15 M, dcaed\nat $1560. Laid, demand octlve,advanced H)a 6c, and\nadvance well suatalned; caali i9Ja9.. Oc, Deoember\n910o; January n92K»9.I2Kc, doaei at 910a'j.l2>ic;\nFebruary 9.10 tU.' 25c. ciorcu at Q.2iks(L26c; May\n9 87Kn9.&7Uc, closed at O.Ma9.57>iC. Bulk moau\nUUfier; aaooldeis C.253; abo.t rlo 7.a>c; abort\ndear7.9Cc. whbkysicady aod uuohanged. Call.\nWheit rUca 2.5G3.00J buihela; December anvanced\nKc; January dedlued Hd February and May de¬\nclined *ac.
22cf0f59cf23c27ccb24660ad4e9dd1d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.0751365803987 42.217817 -85.891125 How much does our estimate of edu\nnation, intellect and character depend\non th use and abuse of two parts of\nspeech -- the adjectives and the adverbs!\nFlain nouns and verbs serve the pur-\nposes of dullness and strict common\nsense, but, w ith these exceptions, to all\nbeneath or above these levels they are\nthe tests. In the tirst place, no man can\nshow himself completely a fool without\nthe lavish use of one or both of them.\nStupidity can impart a sense of its qual-\nity at less expense ; but it is they that\ngive the assurance of actual folly. They\ngive the artist touch, and stomp the\nman on the memory ; with a difference,\nhowever. People may convey a keen\nsense of imbecility to their hearers by\n use of epithets, either through the\nperpetual application of one to every\nsubject and every object calling every-\nthing "peculiar," for example or by a\nmisapplication of many; but nothing\nthat an adjective can dono senseless\nrepetition, no absurdity of application\nimpr. sses us so convincingly with the\npresence Of vacuity, hs does the adverb,\nsingle ami unassisted. We are speaking\nof habits of speech ; it need not in any\nparticular instance be a permanent vacu-\nity, only sue!: to us at the moment : but\nthere is no thought at work when ad-\nverbs are the instinctive resource. The\nrespective value, SI a measure of capaci-\nty of these tWO parts of speech, il shown\nin tlu dialogue between S male and fe-\nmale exquisite recorded in Punch\n'
3ee0bc3b1bd378b1751fd53ef1976892 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.7117486022566 39.261561 -121.016059 Orioin ok Fires.— 1The investigations of the\nNew York Fire Marshal into the tires which oc-\ncur in the city, disclose the following curious\nfacts. In one casu lire was caused by the up-\nsetting of a bottle of Harlem oil on a red paste\ncomposition used for destroying vermin. In\nanother case, a man put a pipe in the pocket of\nhis coat, without putting it out, and hung the\ncoat in a room. The coat took tire, and set the\nroom in a blaze. In another, a young lady\nplaced a lighted lamp on a washstand which\nstood behind the door. Her dresses hung on\nthe door, and as it swung back they caught tiro,\nand were destroyed with other property.\nSmiles and Frowns. —Which will you do—•\nsmile, and make vour household happy, or be\n and make all those youngoues gloomy,\nand the older ones miserable ? The amount ot\nhappiness you can produce Is incalculable, if\nyou show a smiling face, a kind heart, and speak\npleasant words. Wear a pleasant countenance;\nlet joy beam in your eyes, and love glow on\nyour forehead. There is no joy like that which\nsprings from a kind act or a pleasant deed; and\nyou will feel it at night when you rest, at morn-\ning when you rise, and through the day when\nabout your business.—llomc Journal.\nWomen.—Women make their advances as\nTime makes his. At twenty, when a swain ap-\nproaches to pay his devoirs, they exclaim with\nan air of indifference. “Who is he?” At thirty,\nwith a prudent look towards the ways and\nmeans, the question is—“What is he ?
0df73c1ed483e6c975ebc1d1437c0663 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1888.9904371268467 41.004121 -76.453816 It was Just before Christmas day was be\ning ushered In when the fine steamer caught\nfire. Sho had reached a point a short dis\ntance above the town when a negro roust\nabout near the boilers ran aft and cried out\nthat the boat was all afire. John Cullen, a\nStoker, was near tho place at the tune, and\naoelng tho flames bursting forth from big\ntiers of cotton near the boiler, ran hastily to\nthe engine room and gave the alarm. Imme-\ndiately Engineer Merriman took In the situa\ntion, and at once sounded the alarm by blow-\ning the steam whistle and ringing the bells.\nIn an lnstnnt tho names shot through the\ncabin and over the sides of tho cotton, WTap- -\nplng the entire boat in Bra.\nTop Clerk Powell was up stairs at tho time,\nand when ho saw tho names ho heroically run\nthrough the smoko filled cabin and tried to\narouse tho sloeplng passengers. He kicked at\n doors of tlio staterooms, and In a short\nwhile everybody was awako.\nThen there was confusion worso confounded\nand tho frantic persons on the boat ran to\nthe dinerent exits to make their escape, but\nthe boat was piled high with cotton and the\npassageways were tilled with blinding smoke.\nMany dropped before they wero able to get\nto the forward part of tho boat, and were\ndead whon the steamor went down.\nAs soon as the fire was discovered Engineer\nMerriman set the steam pumps working and\ntried to battle with tho Haines, but the Are\nswept through the boat like a blaze on the\nprairie, and tho engine room was soon in\nflames. Then, to add further to tho con\nsternation, tho steam pipe burst and filled\nthe place with scalding steam. Merriman\n5vas forced to abandon his post, and he, the\nstokers nnd others ran to the sides and\nclimbed through the pitman, in order to save\ntheir lives.
597efe801ea153128c299f0e9210656c CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.3794520230847 41.875555 -87.624421 Why aro wo content to hnvo our\nfood prepared for us In secret under\nconditions that to any sauo mind cer-\ntainly suggest fraud and treachery?\nWo aro not obliged to havo theso\nthings If wo do not' want them. The\nremedies nro slmplo enough.\nAs to tho "lumpy Jaw," the tubercu-\nlosis and tho cancer, put n stop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Let nil tho slaugh-\ntering of food nnlmnls Iks done by tho\nStnto In tho light of dny, without nny\nof this dark lantern business, on equal\nterms for nil. Tliero nro very few\nprlvato slaughter houses In England.\nTho cities" nnd towns run their slaugh-\nter houses under medical Inspection.\nHut In England tho peoplo do not care\nto bo poisoned In their meat.\nAnd wo need not worry nliout tho ob-\njection that publicly owned slaughter\nhouses nro an Invasion of tho privato\n of business. When It comes to\nllfo and dentil thero nro no prlvato\nrights of business. No man ha a right\nto saved profits that bo make by\nspreading disease. Wo havo gono too\nfar on tho road to public sanitation .to\nturn back bcauso somo gcntlcmnu's\nprofits nro threatened. Tho State will\nnot allow you to go around with small-\npox or to conceal scarlet favor In your\nhouse, nlthough each may bo strictly\nyour own affair. Compared with can-\ncer, smallpox and scarlet fever are\nnothing. If the Stato can tnko radical\nmeasures to stamp out cholera It can\ntake radical measures to stamp out\ncancer, a million times worso than\ncholera. If It can provldo pest houses\nfor public safety It cau provldo slaugh-\nter houses for public safety. And Its\nduty In tlio ono caso Is at least as clear\nas In tho other.
746baa65ed6c09c89b6581f1d89a07cf THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.0698629819888 39.261561 -121.016059 On all the various forms of Chronic diseases, including\ndiseases of the Lungs, Liver, Stomach, Heart, Kidneys,\nand Spleen,—a cure guaranteed in Rheumatism, Neural-\ngia, Amaurosis, or nervous Blindness. Sick, or nervous\nHeadache, Apoplectic and Congestive fullness of Brain, Ep-\nileptic, 1arylcctic and Hysterical affections.\nCancer Cored without the use of Knife,\nand attended with little or no pain also Tumors, Ulcers,\nFistulas, and all the various forms of diseases pertaiuing\nto the EYE and EAR. Diseases of the reproductive\nor genital organs will receive special attention.\nDr. SNYDER 'S practice in Chronic and Surgical\ndiseases have been extensive, having been many years\nconnected with an Infirmary in which parents were re-\nceived from all parts of the Union, whose diseases were of\nthe most desperate character. Of these he failed to cure\nin a very few instances, in which there was any reasona-\nble prospect of success, he has restored to health and use-\nfulness hundreds who had given up all hope of recovery,\nand who had sutTered for years relief, under the\ntreatment of many of the most distinguished Doctors of\nthe age. Dr. S. will visit in the City or country, those\ncases which require personal examination and Surgical\nHkill—Invalids, living at a distance, who cannot make it\nconvenient to consult l>r. Snyder in person, (although\nhe would prefer seeing the patient at least once,) hv send-\ning a carefully written description of the origin and history\nof his or her case, with its symptoms, and its treatment\nheretofore, with a correct statement of his present condi-\ntion will enable the doctor to judge pretty accurately of its\ncurability, and enable him to prescribe the proper reme-\ndies, and give the necessary instructions requisite to effect\na cure. A volume of testimonials of such cases could be\ngiven, received from patients in all parts of the country,\nwhom he lias cured, and who it was never his pleasure to\nsee. DR. SNYDF.R deals in no secret nostrums—his pre-\nscriptions are prepared in accordance with the latest im-\nprovements in Medical Science.
44f8879c665c4ba3198e49cf2f89f729 FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1918.850684899797 35.318728 -82.460953 Commander Evangeline Booth, lead-\ner of the Salvation Army in the Unit-\ned States, has been suddenly called\nupon to furnish 800 additional war\nwork' women for France. The request\nis contained In a report just received\nby her from Col. William A. Barker\nof the Salvationist forces, whom she\nsent to France over a year ago to es-\ntablish hutment and general war relief\nwork with the American troops.\n"We will do all we can to fill this\ndemand," said Commander Booth when\ndiscussing . the approaching United\nWar Work Campaign, "and the peed\nitself should impress the American\npublic all the more with the absolute\nnecessity for sustaining and enlarging\nthe war relief work of the seven or-\nganizations, besides the noble Red\nCross, now merged for a drive for\nfunds. Each is a vital in a vast\nmachine for human relief, and each is\nindispensible, . serving its particular\nelements In Its own way.\n"The Salvation Army was born In\nhardship, reared in privation and\ntrained to every phase of human mis-\nery and how to cope with it. Perhaps\nthat accounts In some degree for 4ho\nsuccess our work has attained and for\nwhich we are thankful.\n"We are of the common people, and\nwe toil on a practical basis. AVe learn-\nedthelessonofhowtodoItInthe\nBoer war, when we stood at the side\nof Britain's troops and weathered It\nout to. the end. We have been tried\nby fire, and the mothers and fathers\ntof America, as In other countries, trust\nthe Salvation Army to do; the thing\nthey would like to do for their men If\nthey but had the chance.
2d6617ff29aff8fdc5cbdae93fdc7490 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.850684899797 41.004121 -76.453816 Clint A. Kitchen, Jlloomsburg.\nJohn Heavner, Herwick.\nC. M. Smith, Hen ton township.\nA. H. Coinstock, Sugarloaf twp.\nCharles Wagner, Locust township.\nWeltlie Dent. Hemlock township,\nJ. W. Brown, Main township.\nPhilip Itabuck, Heaver township.\nWin. Ilollnmn, Greenwood twp.\n1). L. Hess, Heiiton township.\nEmanuel Yost, Hriarcreek twp.\nSeeley Edwards, Hentou township.\nF. J. 'Hess, Sugurlouf township.\nWin. Hrobst, Hloomsburg,\nLewis Kramer, Madison township.\nW. H. Hess, Jackson township.\nStephen Hartel, Hloomshurg.\nJ. Meenrgell, Orange township.\nJohn Mourey. Konriug Creek twp.\nHurr Albertson, Greenwood twp.\nJohn Oliver, Locust township.\nII. F. Kelchner, (Stillwater.\nM. O. Howman, Miillin township.\nJ one Kostenbniider, Franklin twp.\nC. 1 . Elwell. Hloomsburg.\nW. Jt Miller, Greenwood township.\nJohn Fruit, Main township.\nJerry Vanslckle, Sugarloaf twp.\nHrittalu Hess, Jackson township.\nH. J. Demott, Millville.\nEugene Tewksbury, Cutawissa.\nFurninn Kressler, Seott township.\nHarry Hlack, Greenwood township.\nJohn Lamed, Hloomsburg.\nJohn Oman, Mt. Pleasant twp.\n Shatter, Mt. Pleasant twp.\nG. W. Gordner, Pine township.\nJ. B. Vanuatta, Jackson township.\nJerry Welliver, Greenwood twp.\nJohn Johnson, Greenwood township,\nG. W. Appleman, Orangeville.\nJ. W. Sliumaii, Main township.\nG. W. Roberts, Jackson township.\nElmer Hagenbucli, Certer twp.\nH. W. Watts, Bloomsburg.\nC. T . Brlttain, Berwick.\nW. H . Fisher, Hloomsburg.\nJ. N, Harry, Berwick.\nTRAVERSE J U ROBS - Second Week\nCalvin Crawford, Greenwood twp.\nC. W. Trump, Orange township.\nJ. M. Comstock, Sugarloaf twp.\nC. B. Conner, Jackson township.\nBradley Suit, Brircreek township,\nWin, Baup, Berwick.\nAlbert Frank, Conyngham twp.\nF. 1). Deiitler, Hloomsburg.\nB. G. Keller, Benton.\nSolomon Deaner, Main township.\nAlfred Culp, Berwick.\nW. H. Roberts, Catawlssa twp.\nW. II . Stack house, Berwick.\nElias Utt, Bloomsburg.\nW. H Cherriimton, Roaring Creek.\nJ. C. Wenner, Benton township.\nW. A. Snyder, Scott township\nA. W. Snyder, Mirllin township.\nWarren Allabacli, Orangeville.\nElias Weaver. Catawlssa,
00e95340a0dd41be99d9de165304e963 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.8534246258243 37.561813 -75.84108 " Then we sleeied on the floor, coz\nfather tooked the quilt, an' it wassocold\nwe cried, an' it maked us all tired, an'\ngived Hattie such a bail cough, an' her\nchecks was red, an' she said she was\nhot when it was oh, awful cold, coz the\ncoal was all used, an' we didn't have no\nfire till Tommy an' me got the blocks,\nan' the good man buyed us some more\ncoal. Then when we coined home Hattie\nwas cold like ice when I put my hand\non her face, an' her eyes was shut like\nshe was gode to sleep, an' she was white\nlike the snow, an' when I saiil to mother,\nwhat made her cry, she said Hattie was\neoned off an' leaved us too, an' the kind\nlady told usshe was up in the sky where\nHeaven is, an' never git hungry\nor cold any more, an' when I said she\nwould eet loosed some more bv herself,\nshe said Uod would keep her in his\nhouse, coz he liked little girls, an said\nwhy couldn't I eo there too, an' she said\nsome day if I was good (.rod would take\nme upttierean eive me lots onice things.\nThen the kind lady gived Hattie a nice\nwhite dress, an' the man fixed her to\nbed in a purty little box, an' then they\ntaked her away, an' we all of us cried.\nShe don't come back no more to play\nwith us, only sometimes when I sleeps,\nan' she is oh, so purty, an' has every-\nthing nice, an' says what a nice place\nit is up there, an' when I tries to go\nwith her I wakes up an' she's gode\nawav aeain.
196e1a2a105a8edebb3193b99f739765 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.8232876395232 41.004121 -76.453816 Thero is also muoh to be said abo.ut\nthe different way in which tho letters\nof Vespucci and Clumbus would afftot\nthe literary taste ot the age. As\nnave said, tno tetters ot uoiumbus are\ninfinitely more attractive to tho read\nerof to day, The devoutly religious\nspirit of tho writer, his mingling ol\npractical shrewdness with child-lik- e\ncredulity, his artless relations of the\ndreams and visions which induced him\nto set out on bis discoveries; bis enthu-\nsiastic belief in being divinely appoint\ned to ins work, ms arguments to prove\nthat be bad landod near tho Garden of\nEden, expressed in that simplicity of\nBiyiu which is uiu uuiei graco or tne\nearly voyagers, ad logotb'er form\ncharm for us that superior learning\nand mora coirect rhetoric cannot rival.\niiut at tho tune when wrote\nwe can beliovo that Vespucci a totters\nwould more readily attract attention,\n1 he latter wrote a clear aud succinct\naccount of what he saw, of all ho could\nlearn of the manners and customs of\n'.ho natives) he drew pictorial illuatra\ntionsand diagram ho used somo bits\nuf scholarship effectively; ho quoted\nAristotle and Pliny, and the immortal\nDante, In fact, Vespuooi's letters are\nmore like thoso ot a traveling journal\n1st who is sent out by a daily paper or\na current magazine, to get tho latest\nand best nows und put tho narrativo in\npopular form; Columbus writes likothe\nman of imagination and poetio vision,\nthe true discoverer and seor, who is\nrecognized by the future, rtrely by the\npresent, From "The Christening of,\nAmerica," by Aboy cktge JCtehardson,\nIn The American Magazine.
81733bd1b5b44720fb13ffc4caafc068 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0178081874683 39.290882 -76.610759 Persons igocrgnt of the nature of disease, are not\naware lhai many stages mark its prngres.- fiouftnocom-\nmencement to 1U full dovelopemeot, originating in a\nmost simple form, and through neglect or injudicious\ntreatment, assume a more aggravated stats ol disease,\nand occasion abscess, ulceration, peeudo syphilis, can-\ncer. premature old age; often ending in a protruded in-\ncuralilo state of misnrahle existence.\nThis institution is under the managsnieni and super-\nintendence of Professor Cooke, MD. D. D ., L. L. R. of\nthe city of Albany. N . Y., w ho, alter the experience of\nUlirtyyears uie.uensive Hospitals, in various cliiiiolos\nand Uie British Navy, together withthe niinulesl atten-\ntion to Uie subject in private practice, has discovered a\nmode of treatment for Venereal complaints, by which\nho is enabled to effect a perfect cure, in all stages, tuid\ntotally eradicate ftoiu the system toe most olwouiue ca-\nses in a uTunner which will not subject Uie paUent to\n confinement, orhindrance Iruin hdlj pursuits. And\nall without the use of Me n.ry, tliat baneful poisou,\nwhich is sending to the grave iis thousands annually?-\ntlis best effects of which is but to induce a relapse of\ndisease, and dnaliy, while its victim is influenced with\nUie Joyful prospect of heaiilr, suddenly prostrates bis\nenemies and sends hi in to a premature grave.\nDistinguished as life Chancellor of an University,and\nacknowledged by great professional skill tad practical\nexperience to bo without a rival in hispeculiar province,\nall confidential consultations ami Ihc advice of Profes-\nsor Cooke, formerly from London, with asuperior col-\nligialcjeduealion u. Europe, offet advantages seldom\nderived within the sphere of medical and uitellcctnal\ntalent. Invalids suffering either wilii disease or tllio'\n;he inefliciency of unqu iiified practitioners cf physic\nand surgery, whose years den' equal of portunideo ana\nrxperiouce,are reminded thai the Lock Hospital is an\ninstitution worthy Uicir-patronago anil entitled to their\nc ifidvnce.
7781a5ebef202a1e69d6c68a95af47e8 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.541095858701 43.798358 -73.087921 adds, "is evident: the augmented temper-\nature of t4ie weather increases the intensity\nof two of the most Important stages of\nhectic paroxysm the hot, and the sweat-\ning. To subduslhese, then, becomes pe-\nculiarly difficult How likely they are\nto be peculiarly aggravated by going\nabroad, any well constructed thermomet-rica- l\ntable will tell. Again, if the dis-\nease be latent, removal to a warm climate\nthe most probable means of making the\ncase one of phthisis. In uniformity with\nthese opinions, I fee no anxiety respect-\ning consumptive patients being kept scru-\npulously within doors. Whenever the\nweather permits, they should be allowed\nto take an airing; daily, but by no means\nsuffered to remain so long as to be sensi-\nble of chilliness or cold."\nThe doctor, however, does not pretend\nthat his practice will cure in all cases.\nNo permanent benefit is to be expected\nfrom this remedy when the inferior lobes\nof the contain cavities, or are stud\nded with tubercles; yet, even in this un- -\nlavoratue state, 1 have known relief arise,\nand surprising prolongation of life ensue,\nlrom its employment. I have individuals\nunder my care at this moment, in whom\none lung is almost useless from extensive\ntuberculous disease, and with even well\nmarked pectoriloquy on the top of the op\nposite lung; still, frpm having the rest of\nthe lung on this side in a satisfactory\nstate, and thus being partially susceptible\nof the influence of inhalation, the pro-\ngress of consumption has been arrested ;\nand in more than one instance, the relief\nafforded by inhaling, has enabled the in-\ndividual to attend to the duties of his call-\ning of course, no veryonerons ones.\nIndeed, I.shall feel happy to introduce\nany of my readers, who may entertain a\ndesire to see such rem irkable instances of\nthe virtues of inhalation, to these patients\nof mine."
224016b0bbd42af074956ef9452543cc THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1906.3575342148656 39.739154 -104.984703 prepared fabric on the tread. That * Holding Hack” sensation commonly felt w hen nding on asphalt\nor aoft rchads is overcome by the patent basket Weave tread which' prevents all air from being\n•queered out l<-twren the tire and the mad thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these\ntires is fs v per pair, but for advertising purp<»scs we are making a special factory price to the rider\nof onlv U **» per pair All orders shtpj»cil same day letter is received We ship C.0.1) on approval\nYou do not nay a cent until you have examined ami found them strictly as represented.\nWe will allow a rush discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price *4..* A tier nail 1 if vou send\nnrxx 4'ASII WITH OKDKII ami cncl.»se this advertisement. We will also semi one nickel\nplated brass hand turnipand Satnpvm metal puncture closers on full paid orders these metal\npuncture clcvrs to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy gashrsl. Tires to Ixr returned\nat OTK expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination.\nWe are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is a* safe as in a tiank. Ask vour Postmaster\nBanker, hxpressor Freight Agent or the Kditor of this t>apcr about us. If vou order a pan of\nthese tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear letter, last longer and look\nfiner than any tire you have ever used or .keen at any price. We know that vou will be so well pleased\nthat when you want a bicycle vou will give us your order. Wc want vou to send us a small trial\norder at once, hence this remarkable tire offer
0fcc670e55c27e017cf5bfceb96d87b5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.9139343946063 58.275556 -134.3925 Judge Alfred S. Moore, of Nome, has\nappointed John H. Dunn, formerly I\ndeputy clerk of the court at Nome, to\nsucceed Marshal Richards, pending the\npresident's action after the opening of\nnavigation in the spring.\nArchdeacon Stuck has left Fairbanks\non an inspection of missionary posts,\nthe trip covering considerably over\n1(KK) miles. He goes . to Circle and\n! Eagle, thence back to Fort Yukon and\nby the Chandelar route to Bettles and\nColdfooton the Kuyukuk, thence by!\nthe river to Fort Hamiltou and on to\nRampart, returning from the latter\npoiut to Fairbanks. He expects to\ncomplete the long trip by April 15th.\nMining claims located at any time\nJ during 1903 should have the assessment\nwork required by law completed by\nJanuary 1, 1905. In those cases where\n work cannot be completed by mid-1\nI night on December 31,1904, but is al-;\nready in progress at the end of the j\nyear, the work should be continued\ndaily until completed. Iu this way a\nclaim which is "behind on assessment\nwork" may bo legally held.\nTwo of those convicted at the Skag-\nway term of court will servo time iu\nthe penitentiary at McNeil Island, and\nthe others have been taken to Juneau.1\nCurtis Hubbard, convicted of forgery,1\ngoes to the penitentiary for 2years,\nand R. Blake, of Haines, convicted of\nattempted burglary, for 1% years.\nGeorge Wilder, upon being released\nfrom the penitentiary at McNeil Island,\nafter serving a seveu-year term, was ar¬\nrested for shooting and mortally\nwounding Frank H. Keid at Skaway iu\n:1898.\nI
3d218937063a5820ad2b40bc3510903c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.8534246258243 40.063962 -80.720915 SATURDAY, tho Mth day or Nov., A. D . 1R71,\non tho premises In tho town of Cameron, In Uiu\ncounty of Marshall, Btato or Wnt Virginia, at\n10 o'clock A. m. of that day, proceed to Hell at\npublic nale all tho right, title and Interest of the\naald William Ilosack and Nnncr llosack kin wire\nIn ard'tu tho following described real estate,\nthat Ih to say, all their right, title and Interest In\nand to thft» undivided one-half of lot of ground\niltuated in Houtli Cameron, Marshall county,\nWent Virginia, known a# lot No. (Ill) sixteen;\nalso tho undivided Interest of the *alu William\nIlosack and Nancy his wire In nnd to the follow-\nIng described property situated in tbotown of\nCameron. and houndeu nnd described as follows,\nto-wit: Beginning at a stake, thence ft. 1V dog.\nw. thlrty-ouofeoLtoa stake, thence n. ftl deg. \nsixty-seven root to tho Poplar Springs road,\nthence thirty-two and one-hair feci along said\nroad to a stake, thence s. Rl deg. w . aorenty-\neight nnd one-hair rout tojtho beginning: also,\notic-half of an alley now open Iwtween the lot\nmentioned and another lot belonging to James\nPulton, of the city of Baltimore, Maryland,\nwhich alley Is eight feet, more or less, in width\nat tho front on Poplar Boring road, And runs lwck\nto the rear of lot adjoining on the north belong-\nIng to said James Fulton, and at thereor of said\nlot Is ten Tect, more or less, in width, tho portion\nor said alley hereby conroyed la the one-half\nthereof, to-wit: lotir feet front and fire feet,more\nor less, at the rear, saving .and reserving off ol\nthe premises hereby conveyed, tho right to the\nBaltimore and Ohio Railroad Compauv .to
717f10d293d71344e4ee8e80ab50afed NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.7246575025367 41.681744 -72.788147 tih: ioi,ict: "KXPOstrnK.\nThe Hartford Courant, this mornin?,\nundoubtedly intends to flatter us iy\nquoting from an editorial in last eve-\nning's Herald. On the front page is\na tory to the effect that we are de-\nmanding a police investigation "fol-\nlowing the Co u rant's exposure of\npollen conditions In New Britain." We\ndo k the Investigation It is true, but.\nperhaps owing to our phraseology,\nperhapf to an Intent of the Courant,\nour reasons for this request are dis-\ntorted. We do not wlah the Investi\ngation becaxuse we are satisfied that\nthere is graft or Inelllciency in the\npolice department. We wish to have\ncertain individuals placed omcially\nbeforo tho public in order to clear up\nrumors which have been in circula-\ntion. We have no real and valid reason\nto doubt the honeaty of the Individuals\nif wo hud we should be only to\nglad to make an exposure ourselves\nand believe that they should be given\na chance to clear themselves of the\ntaint that has been cast over them.\nAlso, the city of New Britain is get-\nting a bad reputation throughout the\nstate through the reflections cast upon\nIts police personnel by the Courant\nin particular. Kven Mayor Curtis\nloaned himself to giving1 the city a\nblack eye through the interview which\n granted tho Courant yesterday\nmorning, an interview which ho liaa\nsince denied, by iv fact which has not\nbeen played up by our contemporary\nthis way. We realize there is no rea-\nson why the Courant should wish any\nNew Britain institution to be respected\nIn the home town or In the state and\nbelieve, that wcro there an Investiga-\ntion, the Hartford paper might have\ngive us a fairer report of our police.\nAlso we ask an investigation becauxo\nMayor Curtis is quite evidently dis-\nsatisfied with out force and, he belli,;\nthe head, he should prove or disprove\nwhut ho has to say. Jf any one of the\nforce la dishonest ve should know it,\nIf there are no grafters e should prove\nIt to the edification but not delight\nof tho Courunt and the state. There-\nfore un Investigation U timely.\nIt la not because of the Courant ex-\nposure" that we ask a probe of police\naffulrs. The Courant really exposed\nnothing, that is It merely cave expres-\nsion to a scries of rumors that havo\nlong been going tho rounds, there were\nno definite accusations ntade. But\nIt did cast slurs upon some Individuals,\ntaking advantage of Hit; Winkle mur-\nder to sum up rumor. These things\nmake Intercating reading, it is true,\nbut n loyal
0132c02d94cda2a084ede01514e7c1c3 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.5068305694697 35.996653 -78.901805 had been near the stable with several\nother children, Mrs. Taylor concluded to\nlook there for it. On approaching the\nstable she saw the child lying face down-\nward on a pile of hay, with one hand\nunder it, and the other across its back.\nShe called it, but received no answer,\nand on hastening to the spot, found to\nher horror on raising the child that it\nwas dead. Dr. Charles McManaway was\nsummoned, and did everything he could\nto resuscitate the child, but it was im-\npossible. It was dead. Its sudden death\ncould not be accounted for in any way,\nas it was apparently perfectly well up to\nthe hour of its death, and had been at\nplay with the other children as usual.\nThe case is a paiticularly distressing one.\nA special to the State Chronicle says:\nThe following increases were made in\nthe salaries of North postmas-\nters: Asheville, from $2,500 to $2,600;\nBurlington, $1,000 to $1,300; Durham,\n$2,200 to $2,000; Elizabeth City, $1,400\nto $1,500; Hickory, $1,400 to $1,500;\nKinston, $1,200 to $1,:00; Mt. Airy,\n$1,100 to $1,200; Newbern, $1,100 to\n$2,000; lialeigh, $2,C00 to $2,700; Rocky\nMount, $1,00 to $1,300; Salem, $1,200 to\n$1,500; Shelby, $1,100 to $1,200; Tarboro,\n$1,508 to $l,f.00; Winston, $2,400 to\n$2,500. The only decrease was at Eden\nton, the salary being reduced from $1,\nC00 to $1,200. The salary of the Char-\nlotte postmaster remains at $2,G00, and\nof Wilmington at $2,S00. The increase\nin salaries shows an increase in postal\nreceipts, and this is a good indication of\nan increase in population and business.\nIn this respect Winston. Salem and\nRocky Mount lead the State, the two\npostoflices of the former getting an in\ncrease of $400 in salaries, Salem $300\nand inston $100; while Rocky Mount
0725b5343dd40c61f3d85401549f496b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.215068461441 39.261561 -121.016059 The Mountain Routes.—It is manifestly\nthe policy of the people of this Territory to en-\ncourage, by every means in their power each\nand every one of the rival routes into Califor-\nnia. The people adjacent to and interested in\nthe Placerville, the Henness Pass, the Yuba\nGap, or other roads connecting us with the\nwestern slope of the Sierras, will, as a matter\nof coarse, in their admiration of their favorite\npasses, ignore or underrate the merits of com-\npeting routes. We should carefully avoid in-\ndulging in partizan prejudices in favor of either\nof the roads. Not that a multiplication ofroads\nwill increase the amount of travel, but that oj)-\nposition lines will diminish the expense both of\ntravel and freight, reduce the rates of toll, im-\nprove the grades, and generally prove advanta-\ngeous the Territorial interests of Nevada.\nThe Yuba Gap route has a thousand feet less\nelevation to overcome than the Henness Pass,\nand probably two thousand feet less than the\nPlacerville route; whilst the Placerville route is\nshorter than either, and has been more thor-\noughly worked than the others. Still over the\nthree routes, about the same time can be made;\nfreights and passage will not naturally differ.\nSo long as but one route is supplied, we may\nexpect to pav the maximum price both for pas-\nsage and freight, and at the same time haTe the\nsmallest possible amount expended on the road.\nPut three or four routes in passable condition,\nand supply comfortable means of travel, and\nthe natural result will be to furnish the best\npossible roads at the lowest possible price.—\n[Carson City Age.
d329492816db2fe99c6c5f35e06cda12 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0041095573313 41.681744 -72.788147 lem may assist your commission in\narriving at a solution that will be\nsatisfactory and beneficial to the\ngreatest possible number, and that,\nI am sure, is the goal ot every pro-\nperly functioning governmental body\n"The City of New Britain is great-\nly Interested in u bus line between\nNew Britain and Hartford and be-\nfore a franchise is granted should\nlie permitted to appear before your\ncommission to have its feelings in\nthe matter entered on reord. In all\nbus franchise petitions acted upon to\nthis date, our city was heard. We\nhave not yet, however, had an op-\nportunity to appear before you con-\ncerning the Connecticut Co. petition\nand would appreciate an opportunity\nto do so before final Rction is taken.\n"The press announcements pur-\nported to be official statements from\nthe trolley company, announce plans\nfor 45 minute service and four \nIf tokens are used the fare will bo\nat least 33 3 cents. Another peti-\ntioner heard by your commission\nagreed to furnish 20 and 40 minute\nschedules for a fare of 25 cents per\npassenger. There is no good, sound\nbusiness argument for accepting the\nhigher fare and the poorer schedu'e\nwhen the second petitioner is ac-\nknowledged by your commission to\nbe financially In a position to handle\nthe line and has had a wealth of ex-\nperience In bus service.. Understand,\nhowever, I a mnot interested In this\nparticular applicant, the Mastco Co. ,\nand I have in a previous letter to\nyour board so expressed myself, but\nI do helleve since 25 cent fare and\n20 and 40 minute schedules are\navailable, the patrons of a bus line\nshould not be required to pay S3 3\ncents and contond with a\nschedule.
a2a827e007b8ffb8adf1d09be93b3d33 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.6342465436326 41.262128 -95.861391 liu^e rided gan to dri*« thy taiperlin'-nl\naacoyance wsy, bat without araii ; reb«i\nshote'f«il m tbe »*t« all alsoat Ottawa,\nbat <>ot a MBgi« laataaoe did ih«y auik i\niM;f, The latter paid no au«5®»iuu to\nthe wrathfoi taiutation* ol Somtcr, aot\nto Mouhiic. With the utmost coolaaat\np reiaHMi, U4t afWtr belt waa pitched\ntaw Wagner until it st-ouiad w hate been\nw-o¥*.rcd with aiiiOkc &nd daat. iVa^ocr\noo*i*it>aally r»Mpot^|ed with her tc« inch\nIbmbiid, bat wtt able to accomplish\naothing , fin ely a abet froia th« Ottawa\neither diaisottnled a guiu or blew »p a\nauita *i:iVio< iua^t&tuic ia Vfciigacr. aad\nwot-j up tbi#.»4-rift<,fl, who, ia their rage,\n•prang to t&Mf irm« and opened fire npda\noar storka aod apoc th« Ottawa, aad for\nacoufjitf of huars the fire waa more in-\nteat.: cu,d rapid tbun ever bt fore proceed­\ned f tirii that work. Our batteries id-\ntwi.tiy ruaponded with great rapidity,—\nH»r rebel works oo damaa iaiasd caaghc\nap :i J'jaftnung refraia aad bellowed forth\naaitj » uataiious, while dumpter, Moui-\ntri«.' .i., J iuha»*ja juin-'u its tti.* inf^roai\nehotua , the fir> *u unexampled in rapid­\nity a««l generally in aoearaey. Wagocr\nwaa ctirerai with burtuug tuil and ea-\nveiop 'd is amC'kc aud dati, but the rcbtid\n»too I by their gnne with the greatest\ntlet'linet*. Oar trea«h«j wore r.vaating\n fitful Ires of exploding aA«ilt a«c.i\nthe air uapregsated with taipnaroao\nfum<alive wiu. the whtatie of toltd\nshut, ham of shell, thriek of rifle projec­\ntile- nod all to#', rariety of «traag<; loatsd*\nthnt ^>r«e«ad from a hwadred flying n»i« •\nvdw. Tha wots in oar trenehw a<v«we«-\nrily xlackeood at our men foand it m*m-\ntial to aafatr to take to oo*er rery jre-\naaetitly. Thie tbandering cannonsda\nB »nuna«d aa boar or more, wtran tbwntrw\nironaidua boutad anehor aad moved ma-\njeatitaiif to bur sid poaiUon o8 VV\nwbit'i «0e iwehord and brought her port\nbro.»d»ides to bear on the rebel work# ;\nia * taOMMt «he ired a shot from h«r ri-\niad gas forward, aod getting raag-?. let\ndy braad&ide at tb« i: ort fcuin her Am)\noouit i nits and eleven mob gout. Her\nIre sum opened, eontitiacd with steadi-\nneat und acoaracy, and th* elect of the\nftr« wm a»Oit maoiiif^ii, th« refec. guaa\n, ou«. itier anothac, beoame tiieacad, till\nSnai.v »aly an occitstonal #hot was firvd\n'frotn'teii inch eolumbaid ; at Noble frig­\nate indicated the fact that H»* foft Waa\ntULs occupied. Saa*r irad m'>me «piii>\niut «hotc at the irouaiuc#, mi did not\natriki> ber, Tbe fire from Wagner btiiog\nttibdued, the irootidet et-atM tbeHiog,\nand »bo«t eooo »H waa again «il««t *are\naa oooanoaai #b«ii frots JotHMon, a^t«sh
054aeb33434a3558af9d0a1b2f8c3560 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.7876712011669 39.745947 -75.546589 My extreme intcreni in the «tâte campaign\nnow pending arise« from a conception of it*» Im­\nportance. The fact that it immodiately pre­\ncedes a national campaign in which the vote of\nNew York may be a controlling factor la of it\nself mittirient to enliat the activity of every\nman entitled to claim a plane In Democratic\ncouncils. Resides this, the failure on the part\nof the Democracy of the state to further em­\nphasize it« support of the reforma to which the\nnational Democracy ia pledged, we muât all\nconfess would bo a party humiliation.\nThere are dangers clearly imminent and\nschemes almost unconcealed which affect our\nstate and which can only he avoided and do\nfeated by the strong and determined protest of\nth© united Democracy of New York.\nThe party we opiKisc, routing upon no funda­\nmental principle, sustaining a precarious exist\ne upon distorted sentiment and depending\n iraoneM upon the varying current« of selfish\n■:.’■ I■ •i• ;iud 11npnlii BluoBotytot i—winl\nendure the sight of a community which is in\nclined to withstand ita blandishments and\nwhich refuse» to be led away by ita miarepre\nsentations. Thus, in ita national management\nand methods, it boldly seeks to thwart the lu\ntentlon of voters, if they\nto stifle the voice of the people If they speak in\nDemocratic tone». I am sure it is not necessary\nto remind you in proof of this of th© latest ©f\nfort of our opponents at Washington in this di\nrectiou nor t*» speak of the Democratic con­\ngratulation which spread throughout the land\nwhen by the defeat of the Lodge federal elec­\ntion» bill our boasted American freedom of suf­\nfrage was saved and constitutional rights pre­\nserved through the combined efforts of a Demo­\ncratic senatorial minority splendidly led and\ngrandly sustained.
8a63882928a17087ce324a927f9f9476 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.2917807902081 39.261561 -121.016059 Most old residents will remember tbe hor-\nrible tragedy eommitied at Grass Valley, In\n1857, wbeu Michael Brennan killed hia wife\naud children aod then blew hia own brains\nout. The cause of it was known to have\nbeen financial diflicultics, but their extent\nwas never known. A suit was commenced\nin the United States Circuit Court this mor-\nning, by tbe Mount Hope Mining Company,\nwhose office is in New York, against Andre\nCbevanne, which will throw light upon the\nwhole matter, and disclose some further de-\nvelopments regarding the affair. The com-\nplaint in this case Bays that Brennan made\nseveral mortgages to tbe mines of tbe above\nnamed Company, for which he was acting\nas agent, in favor of Cbevanue, the smallest\nof which was for $3,000— and tbe largest,\nwhich was an absolute deed, though inten-\nded as a mortgage, was for $65,000; that be\nallowed judgments to be obtained against\ntbe company by default, and without oppo-\nsition, and tbe mines to be sold under exe-\ncution to Chevanne until be bad obtained\nfull control over them. It is charged that\nfor these several mortgages and deeds Cbe-\n never paid any consideration, and\nthey were false and fraudulent. Since the\ndeath of Brennan, Cbevanne has been work-\ning the claim, and. they allege, has taken\nout $397,000 from tbe mines, besides other\nsums which he has received. Tbe mioes\nupon his takingpossession of them in March\n1857, were worth not less than $150,000.\nTbe plaintsfl's now ask that they may be put\nin possession of tbe property; that tbedeedB\nmortgages, judgments and conveyances\nmade by Brennan or obtained through his\nconnivauce, may beset aside as fraiiduianl;\nthat Chevanne be made to disgorge this\n$397,000, which he has obtained from tbe\nmine; that an injunction may be issued\nagainst farther operations in the premises,\nand that a receiver be appointed.\nThis is tbe gist of the complaint, which\ncovers over a hundred pages of legcl paper.\nTaking it altogether, tbe amount of prop-\nerty involved, tbe tragic end of Brennan,\nand tbe circumstances connected therewith,\nthis is one of the most important and inte-\nresting snits which has been commenced in\ntbe State tor a long time, aod is likely to\nexcite a great deal of attention.—[8. F .\nBulletin, 14th.
3d561ceaf0a6c891d6a6f9adfaf6da26 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.0915300230217 39.745947 -75.546589 La Calle.— The old negro candy vend­\ners of New Orleans have made this\ncandy famous to visitors to the Cres­\ncent City. To make it take two pounds\nof brown sugar or a quart of black mo­\nlasses and boll It down to almost a\npint of sirup. To this dsrk sirup ad]\nalmost a pint of pecan nuts cut up In\nIrregular sises and a portion of them\ncrushed. When It has boiled long\nenough to pass like a thread between\nthumb and Anger pour Into little Anted\npaper cases oblong In shape, making a\ncake about four Inches long, two Inches\nwide and about quarter or half an J\nInch thick. Let these dry. The cases\nmay be made of stiff writing paper If\nyou cannot get other paper of the\nproper sise and shape.\nMais Tac-Tac.— Take a pint of mo­\nlasses and put It on to boll. When It\nreaches the boiling point throw Into It\nabout three-quarters of a pound of\nparched Indian corn or mais», parched\nto a blossom (popped snow white).\nStir until well mixed and pour Into pa­\nper esses shout six Inches long and\nthree inches wide, making a cake about\none and a half Inches deep. Do not,\nhandle them until they are cool. There\nshould be just enough the alrup to\ncost the corn nicely and bind together.\n. Cream Pecans. — These dainty bon­\nbons are the thing to serve at after­\nnoon tea. Take a pound of the Aneet\npecans and shell them carefully, keep­\ning them In perfect halves. Take the\nwhite of a very fresh egg and Its\nweight tn water, beat together until It\nis creamy, then work Into It wtth Anger\ntips a quarter of a pound of the finest\nconfectioner's sugar, forming a smooth\npasta. Pinch off a bit of the paste\nabout the sise of • small marble and\nroll It Into a hall, place It between two\nhalves of pecan meats, press lightly,\nthen roll lightly In the paste, flatten­\ning the pecan slightly. The brown of\nthe nut meat must show through the\nthin costing- of the paste.\nOrange Pastilles.— First make the\norange sugar by rubbing the rind of the\norange on loaf or coarse esno sugar\nand dry. Take three and a half ounces\nof cosrse white sugar and add to the\norange sugar the strained juice of two\noranges. As soon as U begins to dis­\nsolve stir It with a wooden paddle for\na few minutes, then remove from the\nfire, stirring continuously and drop on\na sheet of paper, cutting off In drops
046f05141db38feb3b91e28ab61e6070 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.9356164066464 41.875555 -87.624421 able of nny people with foreheads Is\nthat they should nllow their supply\nof food to pass Into tho hands of ono\nspeculative Interest, says Charles Ed-\nward Russell In a powerful article\nwritten by him In tho Appeal to Rea-\nson. You can understand how a care-\nless community might tolcrnto n mo-\nnopoly of somo things, how It might\nendure to havo its transportation, for\nInstance, or Its electric light, control-\nled by ono ownership, for men cnu\nlive without sleeping cars or arc\nlamps; but thnt It should tolerate u\nmonopoly of tho primal necessity of\nfood is beyond comprehension and\nwithout precedent Even naked sav-\nages have uniformly been too wlso\nfor thnt, nnd tho only nation that has\never submitted to such a monstrous\ncondition Is our own.\nFrom n thousand Illustrations of tho\nInjuries wo all suffer from this \nurrnngement let us cite one.\nThero is no way of communicating\ndisease to tho human body smer than\nthrough Infected meat tissue. Somo\nof thb worst nnd most destructive ba-\ncilli thnt prey upon mankind nro com-\nmon among the animals ho eats for\nfood. Cows have tuberculosis and\nspread vast quantities of It through\nthe human population. It is so com-\nmon among cows thnt tho wlso nnd\ntho forewarned will use none but ster-\nilized milk. What is "hog cholera"\namong swlno Is merely typhoid fever\nin men. Trlchlnen in bogs poisons\nliumnn beings. Both theso diseases\naro common among swine.\nWorse than alt these, and moro\ndeadly, Is another fact that is seldom\ncommented upon because it is too ap-\npalling to dwoll much upon. What is\ncalled "lumpy Jaw" in cattlo is simply\ncancer. Tbo germs of cancer aro\ncommunicable
1a19dcdd4372921e24d8c3a3e9e45f3c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.0616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 A connecting link between the Eas\nind the West, provided for by nature\nho has hewn the mighty Alleghaniei\no their base, and cut a pathway for th(\niteamboat and the locomotive, fron\nhe Ohio to the Chesapouko. The tradi\n>f the vast and teeming West, barrec\njv the ico of winter, and the heat o\nluinmer, from the Upper Ohio, await\nho spirit of industry and enterprise\no flow through its natural channels t<\nhe East, while the trade of the Eas\niwaits to reciprocate through thegrea\nKanawha valley. The old Dominioi\nind the old North State look hopefully\n>erhaps, but indolently to the West\nmatching with longing eyes and morbi<\nlesire, the golden showers rained oi\nlorthern cities, ttaltimoro, Philadel\nahia, New York and Boston grow fa\njn the trade of the West, while Vir\njinin starve*, ana tier only conaoinuoi\ns her pride and stupidity! We say 1\nn sorrow, for we lov»* that glorioui\nState, and only hate that false pride\nwhich, in homely phrase, iti\nlose off, tospite its face." For Souther?\niride and apathy to-day, injures inoa\nhe South iLself. The labor that woul(\nnake her the garden of the world\nhat aft#*r the war turned Sontbward.\nhas again wheeled by the right flank\ninarching westward, Kxcelsior! Thi\njrent West groans with the tread o\n-uMliing feet; the wilds of Colorado\nN'evada, Montana, and Oregon, yield t<\nhe spns of labor; the snowy peak* of th«\niocky Mountains yield their preciou:\nreasures; the caves of the far Sierra\nire robbed of their glittering ores. A1\nlature conduces to our wealth not\nMeasure, while the sunny fields of th\niouth still lie seared and red with bat\n.les nnd fire; her children poor ant\nstarving. They have our sympathy\n>ut we cannot barter principle for gain\niVe cannot split onr tonguen or mssl\n>ur hearts, and wear false smiles, t<\ntamper their morbid pride. The worlc\n& wide; their'n room enough for all.\nWest Virginia appears to l»e the onl]\nSouthern Slate.originally
0bb741f8d9a87874a220eaff44e029e7 THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.4616438039066 35.072562 -98.243663 Then began an unoflicial\nservice to tho American peo-\nple that has made Bryan\ngreater with each succeeding\nyear, until today he is the\nforemost Amorican. Ho has\nBeen himself beaten twice for\nthe presidency and tho vic-\ntorious party compelled\nthrough the force of public\nopinion to adopt one by oue\ntiiho principles for which\nlie stood and stands today.\nJIo has seen his detractors,\nthe implacable servants of\nthe public romembrnnoo us\nho grow in the love and con-\nfidence of the Amorican peo-\nple. Jiryan needs no of lice\nto make him great. It is\nprobable that he will never\nbe president. He does not\nhave to lie, so long as those\nwho defoat him at tho polls\nare compelled to do \nthings for which he stands\nand it is by no menus silro\ntlmt'ihe ever wants to bo.\nPossibly, he would like the\npleasing compliment of an\nelection to the presidency,\nbut there is1 no man in\nAmerica today whoso ambi-\ntion is more unsplttsh, who\nwires as little for the otlico\nan as much for the cause.\nBryan has matured and\nripened in those years. Whon\nhe was first a candidate for\nthe presidency he was 30\nyears old; on the 19th day\nof last March, ho was\nAnd, as happens to super-\nfine natures, his hard exper-\niences, defouts and fierce\nbattles have made him\nsweeter and kinder and more\nthan over a lover of his peo-\nple rather than embittering\nliini. In
1a05a1815553b97ea3c55993c566f290 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.560273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 If a Convention is held all tho officers\nnow in olllco arc to bo turned out and the\noffices arc to ho mado vacant. Your\njudges will go out, every one of thousand\ntheir right to scats will be tested by a new\nelection. And that Is advocated on the\nground that tho Constitution under which\nthey arc now elected was inado when the\n"Conledcrates" had not the right.when\ntho recently enfranchised were not hero,\nto vote. That is assuming u good deal.\nWhy were they nut here? Candor and t\ntruth answer, thoy wore in tho Uonfodcr- i\nnto service; n large majority were under |\narms. 1 hnvo forgiven tlieni, hut I don't s\nwant thorn to take the load and upturn <\nand destroy nil that the loyal men did t\nwhile they were in arms. I don't think i\nthat is right. We Imvo without dial Inc' i\nlion of enfranchised them. As a\nmany of the Republican party voted\nfor tho Flick Amendment ns of the [\nDemocratic party, lly a common and \\\nmixed vote wo enfranchised them r\nami I think they onglit to accept the sitit- t\nution, ought to take tt as wo bring them <\nin, mid ought not to wunt to upturn nil j\nthat was clono whilo they wcro In arms \\\nagainst the government. I am willing to c\ntake them In, hut I want them to accopt t\nthe situation lor tlio present and let us r\ntest the Constitution as it exists.\nThe Item of expense Is no small matter, t\nI know there in a great conflict on this 1\nsubject of the cost of a Convention; hut |\nwith my experience of conventions It will [\nnot he an InconslderaSlo sum. We have r\nheen taxed heavily, comlne out of tlie t
0bcaa90c9e7aa68a6ff91aaf738cd93f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.3246575025369 41.004121 -76.453816 It was evening and wo wero past\nPortland Bill. The captain Baid wo\nmust go about and run in on the tido\nto mako all the leeway up. The wind\nwas (load on shore. The waves beat\nhigh upon tho Chesil Bank, and if I\ncould ao Bomu duo writing I could tell\nyou about tho curling tops of tho masses\nof water which poured on tho shingle.\niJut tint was nothing to tno next day s\nsea. That 1 shall never lorgct.\nThn Fireily had been sighted and\nconsiderable anxiety had been express\ned about her. Little did I think that\namong tho people who were watching\nus wero (Jharley and Captain Arm-\nstrong, in fear for tho resmt. Charley\ntold mo afterwaid that the captain was\nas cool as ever, and apparently afraid\nof getting wet; so ho hired a cab and\ndrove down through Weymouth to tho\nIsland, leaving Mr. and Mrs. Martyn.\nHenry at the hotel to receive tho party\nif thoy ran alongside tho pier safely.\nAlio evening was deepening into a\nblustering and stormy night, as \nley and Captain Annstroug drove to\nPortland, and our yacht was driving\non. Wo wero still below when tho\neasier motion of the yacht, consequent\non our running beforo thu wind, in\nduced us to go ou deck. Behind us\nwas a limitless tumbling sea, dark\nclouds and rain; in front tho Chesil\nbank, tho island witli its quarries and\nits prisoners, and the smooth waters\nof the roid bovond. Iu an hour or so\nwe should bo riding alongsido tho pier\nor iu tho harbor or pulling ashore to\ncatoh tho train home. So wo said !\nBut how is this? Wo aro not goinc\nfor the harbor direct! Yes, wo are\nwhat is that behind us? a roar, then a\nHash, and, another roar. Blow, blow,\ngood wind, ore tho storm overtake us,\nor wo shall fare badly. Flap! Hap.\nThe wind has suddenly failed us. "Vo\naro iu the centre of a little cyclone!"\nSo said tho captain.\n"Bear a hand, men; wo shall bo tak\nen aback in a minute !" shouted tho\nmaster, rushing to the tiller.
0e78a0f9c5f8db8ef54114fe765f2762 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.1734972361364 40.063962 -80.720915 fact that the only immigration any bodj\nexpects must come front the Xortberi\nami Eastern Slates of the Union am\nfrom toreigu couutries. The Southern\nStates have 110 population to spare\naud it they had, none of it wouk\never couie to us: with this solitary ex\nception, that if our laws made no dls\ncrimination agaiust criminals, many o\nthe rebels of Old Virginia, especially\nr»bel lawyers, would come in here it\norder to escape the rigors of the military\ngovernment in Virginia. We submi\nthat is not the kind of immigra\ntion West Virginia either wants o:\nneeds. Our laws discriminate again*\nnobody who was not in robellioi\nagamst the Government; therefore\nthey do not repel the people of tin\nNorth, the blast, the West, ot Kurope\n Airica, or Ooeaniea, nor of an]\nother part of world civilized or savagi\n. uot even those in the rebellion\nSlates who did uot make war on\nAud even those who did are not deniet\na borne here or any right of a good cit\nteen. They art* simply denied for thi\npresent the exercise of political power\nIf this class of persons stay away 01\ntbis account, it will be all the better fo\nour State, which is not- to be made\nooiHuy Hay lor old Virginia 01 air\noilier part ot the South. This ven\ntact will do as uiuch as any other n\neocourwge the thrifty and enterprlsinj\npeople ot the North ami East, wlios\npresence we so uiuch need, to come it\nand help build up our State.
2696b97e8aff760eeec1122a5442150e THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.3592895858633 37.451159 -86.90916 to condone similar crimes when done by\nRepublican leaders in the name of the\nRepublican party\nThe Evening Post believes in the appll\ncation to the conduct of government of\ncertain fixed principles So does the\nPresident The principles the President\nwould apply are the principles that\nhave always received the hearty sup-\nport of the Evening Post\nBut it does not believe that men in\nKentucky who are calling themselves\nRoosevelt men ate on thet account de\nvoted to these principles On the con-\ntrary we see evidences that the men\nwho are enemies of the President and\nopposed to every principle for which he\nstands are by combination conspiracy\nand the use of Federal patronage secur\ning control of the Republican organiza\ntion in this State We are fighting this\nmovement fighting it here in Louis\nvile and we intend to fight it in every\n of the State and if it succeeds\nwe intend to figbt the organization af-\nter it is made and we intend to put the\nresponsibility upon the men who make\nitCLifetime of Penance\nMiss Susan Deering who passed away\nat Buchanan Mich the other day\naged 70 years lost a maiden sister a few\nweeks ago the two having lived in ab\nsolute seclusion within a couple of\nblocks of the business portion of the\ntown < ortwentysi years\nThe story iis told in the village that\nthe Misses Deering passed their girl\nhood days in New York City that they\nwere very fond of dancing to which\ntheir parents were strictly opposed that\none night the girls were dressing for a\nball when their father interfered and\ncommanded them to remain at home\nI that they disobeyed and on their return\nhome from the dance found their father
022779ea0cff95f3a36e1d64f51a1891 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.0945205162354 39.745947 -75.546589 of work nothing less than the whole\nsubject of educational methods and\ntheir application in school and at\nhome. In these methods there is much\nthat Is new and not well understood.\nWhile the principles of education re­\nmain the same, the need of education\nbecomes more imperative and Its pro­\ncesses become more complex from\nyear to year. Many even of our more\nintelligent citizens are really Ignorant\nof what is being done or attempted in\nour schools. Sometimes in a sort of\nblind- faith In the wisdom of what is\ndone nt school, sometimes with an un­\nreasonable lack of confidence, they\nsend their children to lie educated.\nNeither attitude Is comfortable to the\nparent or helpful to the child. Prob­\nably the best work of such societies\nhas been accomplished in bringing tht\nhome and school into sympathetic re­\nlationship with each other.\nThe plan under considération is to\nform what may perhaps be fitly named\nthe "Wilmington Education Society."\nMeetings will held in school houses\nor In public halls, and will be open to\neverybody. Well-known speakers will\nsometimes address the meetings, but\nan interesting feature will be the fre^e\nopportunity for discussion by parents,\nteachers and Indeed anybody who has\na suggestion to make or a question to\nask. The subjects to be discussed may\nvary from “Correct Habits of Home\nStudy” to “Contagious Diseases” and\n“ Methods of Dusting Schoolrooms. ” In\nother cities It has been found that dis­\ncussions are conducted in a tolerant\nspirit, though school officers and\nteachers welcome any criticism that is\nlikely to lead to improvement.\nAs taxpayers, parents, school-work­\ners. pupils, practically all the people\ncf Wilmington are interested in edu­\ncation, no other society can appeal\nto as many or ns varied Interests. We\nhave more public spirit than is now\nbrought out. It will be the object of\nthe education society to gather to­\ngether the forces of that public spirit\nand- render It effective.
1189aa81852d9b7fd8050dd4d8f540e0 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.9246575025368 37.53119 -84.661888 iAmoall the story writers that have\ncompelled public attention In recent\nyear none have woo more rapidly an\nenviable reputation than has John FoxI\nJr As a reader and lecturer Mr Fox\nhas proven blmkelf a pronounced sue\ncots Hue reading of the mountain dla\nbeet Is simple aoduoaTected and rings\nas true to the mountaineer as does\nThomas Nelson Pages Negrodlalect to\ntbe Negro There Is a quality of svm\npitby In bis voice and a personal mal ¬\nnetism about him that holds attention\nfrom the beginning to the clove of bis\nlectures and readings Of this distin ¬\nguished young Kentuckian James Lana\nAllen says In pint Tbe ranks of\nAmerican story writers and the plat ¬\nform of American readers and lectur ¬\ners have been enriched by acces ¬\nslob of Mr John Fox Jr who at tbe\nvery outset of public career shown tbe\nwealth of hue resources and the ver\nutility of his powers Bis stories have\nbeen widely and wisely accepted as\namong tbo most virile original and va ¬\nriously effective pieces of literary art\nthat have come from the living writers\nof the Soutb Oil delightful readings\nof these stories In New York City\nBrooklyn Washington at Vassar Col\nloge In Loulsvlllo sod elsewhere bare\ndeepened the Impression of their hu\nmor and their tragic Intensity Not\nonly Is ho a very beautiful reader but\nbe Is the first public reader of tbe dla\nloot of the Kentucky and Tennessee\nmountaineers that has yet appeared\nBo lived several years among the na-\ntive
0952f84b2fff24391c82c6e287576f85 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.4330600776664 40.063962 -80.720915 prophets of evil and disaster are tin\n|| What the people see is the Governu\n11 of the Union restored to its ancient f\ning of justice, peace, honesty and\npartial enforcement of law. They\nthe demands of labor and agricull\ny met so far as the Government can n\nis them by legislative enactments for t\n)f encouragement and protection. T\nse othe veterans of the civil war gnu\npensions long due them, to the aim\n** of more than twice in number and n\n58 ly three times in value of those grai\ni- under any previous adruinistrat\np- They see more than thirty-two mil\nie acres of land, recklessly and illcg\nii- held by the grantees of the corrupt\nII publican regime, restored (o (he pu\ni- domain the benefit of honest sett\nn They see the negro, whose fean\n« Democratic rule were played upon\n5 demagogues four years ago, not\nmore fully protected than by his\nli- tended friends, but honored as his\nu- was never honored before, Thoy s\n>o financial policy under which reel\nor speculation una practically ceaseu,\n10 capital freed from distrust.\n10 You see for tho first time an bo\nur observance of tho law governing\n10 civil establishment and the employ\nid the people rid, at last, of the poli\nve highwayman with demand for tnbu\nlis one hand and a letter of dismissal it\nur oilier. They see useless offices abo\nis- ed anil expenses of administrate\nly duced, while improved methods\nb» lifted the public service to high
1f6cd90066daa12620cd8a2aa46b6014 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.200819640508 46.187885 -123.831256 The construction of a necessary\nrailway to secure material for the\njetty at the mouth ot tho Columbia is\nsubstantially a part of the improve-\nment. The secretary of war has au-\nthority to apply the appropria-\ntions for tho improvement of the\nColumbia to tho purpose of construct-\ning the railway. Tho trouble has\nbeen that he has not the necessary\nauthority to condemn the land for\nthe right of way for tho road. The\nmatter was brought to my attention\nlast year, and in the senate committee\non commerce I secure.! an amend\nmerit to the river and harbor bill con-\nferring upon the secretary of\nwar tho necessary authority in all\ncases. It was stricken out in the\nsenate by tho opponents of tho\nbill a3 being new legislation, which\nwas not in order under the senate\nrules, but was restored by tho confer-\nence committee and wonld have be-\ncome a law if tho bill had received\nthe approval of the president. At\n present session the house has\nsent a bill to the senate providing for\nthe appropriation of land for canal\npurposes on the Cumberland river. I\ntopk charge of it in the senate com-\nmittee on commerce and had substi-\ntuted for the house bill a general\nprovision authorizing the secretary of\nwar in all cases to condemn lands\nnecessary for th8 improvement of\nrivers and harbors. The bill as\namended has been reported to the\nsenate and is upon the calendar aud\nIhope to get itupandpassitvery\nsoon. As tho provision substituted\nby me was prepared in the office of\nthe chief ot engineers, it is no doubt\nsufficient to confer authority upon tho\nwar department to condemn the nec-\nessary lands at the month of the Co-\nlumbia river for the jetty and neces-\nsary right ot way for "the railway.\nMr. Mitchell has introduced a bill\nto provide for the purchase of the\nnecessary water front and construc-\ntion of a wharf for light-hous- e
61d95631071bcdba3be409002a84adb8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.691780790208 39.261561 -121.016059 The foreign mails by the last steamer\nwere received at the State department with\nadvices from our ministers. Our ministers\nare confident no movement to recognize the\nrebels as a nation will be made, as long as\nthe Government maintains its forces in the\nrebel States. The feeling on the continent\nis geueral that the North would he aroused\nby the disaster to its army, and that defeat\nhas closed the door to an arrangement with\nthe rebels. British government official* are\nimpressed with the belief that the Govern-\nments defeats only prolong the contest,\nwithout deciding anything.\nWashington City was thrown into excite-\nment tiy the report that martial law would\nbe deolared immediately. The authorities\nhave not decided to take such steps.\nA committee from Boston is endeavoring\nto persuade the President that be ought to\nchange his constitutional advisers It is\nsaid these gentlemen represented the senti-\n of certain prominent money interests\nin Boston, who demand that the heads of\nthe War and Navy departments must come\noff. else they will not risk capital further.\nThis created considerable feeling.\nOfficers have seized six packages of the\nN. Y . Daily News at the American Express\noffice. New York. The publishers finding\nthemselves excluded from the Post office\nand Adams Express, Iioss ii Yanceys agen-\ncies endeavored to employ the American\nExpress which they supposed not watched.\nAt Washington the secessionists are gen-\nerally alarmed at the late arrests. They\nthink the matter growing serious to them.\nThe remains of Gen. Lyon were embalm-\ned at St. Louis and left there yesterday by\nAdams Express under military eseort.\nIt is reporled that the English and French\nfleets on our coasts are ioteoded for service\nat Vera Cruz, for intervention in Mexican\naffairs—the probable desigu of those gov-\nernments.
27b6def732e85db5206fe58c4cb6fd01 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.0178081874683 39.745947 -75.546589 Previous to the discovery of the Post\nproco-B of changing t(he starchy port of\nWhuit and Bai ley into a form of sugar,\nmany ptopte auffetod from wSlat Is\nknown as starch Indigestion.\nThat was shown by gas and all sort of\nstomach aad bowel trouble, (sometime«\nending In appendicitis) brought 011 by\nfihe undigested starch In Wheat; ails,\n«ilUte bread, cake, puddings, etc., etc.\nNature uiUtmteljr punlslhes anyone\nwho continually takes some medicine or\ndrug to smooth over or nullify bad con­\nditions of the body. The only Rife way\nto cure such is to correct or lemove the\ncause. Therefore it Is plain to Mr.\nPort, (In working out his discovery, that\npeople who nhow some weakness In di­\ngesting the stanhy part of food,\n(which Is much the largest part of oil\nwe eat) must be helped by having the\nstarch digested or transformed before\nbeing eaten. And of course the safest\nand truest way to do this would be to\nImitate nature and avoid all chemicals\nor outside and unnatural things. The\nbody dlgecta the starchy food by the\nfollowing process) first it Is mixed with\nthe molstura or Juices of the mouth\nand stomach, thon warmth or mild\nheat from the body grows or develops\ndtetante from the grain. Time la aim\n■an Important and when all\nwork together and the human organs\noperate properly the starch Is slowly\nturned into a form of sugar, as It\nmust be before the blood will absorb\nit and carry the needed energy to dif­\nferent part« of the body Of course If\nthe body fails to do Its work perfectly\ntrouble sets in\nSo In the making of the famous\nfood, Grape-Nuts, moisture, warmth\nand time are the only things used to\n•turn starch Into sugar, thus Imitating\nnature and keeping the.human food In\noriginal purity, free from outside\nthings and Just as Mother Nature In­\ntends it shall be kept for advantag­\neous use by her children The food is\nfully cooked «4 the factories, and is\ncrisp and delicious with a little thick\ncream poured over.\nIt con be softened for 'people with\nweak teeth, but ts most valuable to\noth«« when R must he energetically\nchewed, thus bringing down the saliva\nfrom the gun;« to go to the stomach\nand htlp digest tho entire meal, be­\nsides the use of the teeth strengt tens\nand preserves tlhoni. Nature blest;»\nthe part* of th> boly that ore urod\nand not abused. Grape-Nut« toy 1\nbrings pence, health and comfort when\npeople ate In despair from the alls re­\nsulting from undigested food
4d723f08eea029d56c8caac6223d2d2a THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.8068492833586 39.369864 -121.105448 Leaving Gold Hill and going northward,\nwc*oon came te Virginia city, unreasonably\nknown in California as the Washoe diggings.\nThis is a place of some thirSy houses, seve-\nral of which are constructed of a rough\nblock stone, which here Hes plentifully scat-\ntered on the surface. There are, besides,\nmany emigrant tents. The general scene\npresented Was that of a busy, populous, sav -\nage and dirty mining town. The famous\nComstock, or Virginia lead, everywhere\nknown for its rich gold and silver ore, is on\na slope of the hill facing to the eastward,\nrunning about north-east and south-west,\nand the entire wall of quartz is nine feet\nthick! What the base rock is we could not\nperceive, but presume it was sandstone, as\nthat is the prevalent rock thereabouts. It\nis probable that this entire wait of quartz is\nmetaliferous, bt?t whether it will all pay is\nnot definitely known, though one gentleman\nassured tvs it would. The vein of rich sil-\nver bearing rock, which is leaden-hued, or\nblueisb, and very dense, is in the center of\nthe wall, and is about six inches thick. It\ncontains silver and copper united in the form\nof a lustrous yellow sulphuret, with occa-\nsional crystals of sulphuret of lead and even\niron. of pure mctalic silver arc\nrarely found ; wo saw only two, the largest\nof which was not bigger than a hazlenut.\nQuite the richest ore is a thin vein' of soft\nblackish rock, that can be readily crumbled\nin the fingers and shows no lustrous crystals.\nThe Virginia lead was first struck by a\ndrinking character, whore soubriquet gave\nit a name. He hit upon its decomposed sur-\nface while following up a small raviue in the\ncourse of ordinary gold washing, and parted\nwith his interest in it for a mere song. The\nlead has been traced and claimed for a long\ndistance, but there are only three companies\nwho are taking out money from it< Un the\nnorth end, Hughes, Malgenada & Co. arc\nworking £hc top, using three arastras, each\nof which yields daily about §IOO in gold. -\nThe tailings are carefully saved, as it is be-\nlieved they will yield enough silver to pay\nall the expense of working. This company\nare preparing an adobe furnace for smelling\nthe silver ore themselves, and expect shortly\nto send to fc?an Francisco the first bar of\nWashoe silver. Some of the rock in this\nclaim, we were informed, assayed $2,500 to\nthe ton ; yet they have not reached the rich\nrock!
1a92838e2a9492b3c07a82fb47d781e8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.8835616121257 41.681744 -72.788147 has been returned to the dealer and\na liberal allowance has been made, so\nthat the net cost of the structure was\nbut little to th campaigners.\nFrom the very first, the hut has\ncaused a 'preat deal of trouble. Ori-\nginally it was built to aid in the cam-\npaign and, following simiar- customs\nin New Haven and elsewhere,1 Lawyer\nGeorge LeWitt decided such a build-\ning would add materially to the ad-\nvertising needed to bring the aims of\nthe campaign before the public. It\nwas his intention to have the interior\nfitted up similar to the Y. M. C. A.\nhuts on the firing line and to have a\ngroup of Boy Scouts in attendance to\ndistribute advertising literature and\nassist in booming the campaign.\nIn the first place, however, City En-\ngineer AV. H. Hall Building In-\nspector A. N. Rutherford descended\nupon Mr. LeAVitt for attempting to\nbuild the structure without a permit\nand in violation of the city ordinance.\nEventually the permission of the\nboard of public works was obtained,\nbut the building inspector refused to\nissue a permit, although he consented\nto wink at the building when Mayor\nQuigley suggested that it would be all\nright if it remained standing only\nduring the campaign. Then the work\nwent merrily on and the Boy Scouts\nbegan to distribute their literature.\nAgain what Mr. LeAVitt calls "civic red\ntape" interfered in the form of a big\npoliceman. There is an ordinance\nprohibiting the distribution of liter-\nature in the form of handbills, etc.,\non the city streets and the policeman\ndecided to enforce it. Rather than\nenter Into any other "red tape'
015d875766cb573816e790d31cb307c2 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1905.3438355847286 41.875555 -87.624421 Of all the fvntures In connection\nwith Irrigation upon which a campaign\nof education Is demanded, the propel\nuie of water Is most Important. Sta-\ntistic! show that more water is wasted\nin conducting Irrigation than Is nctu -a ll - y\nutilized. Many an acre of land\nhas been ubsolutely ruined by excess-\nive water, which might become as pro-\nductive and valuable as laud adjoin-\ning where water has been Intelligently\nnud properly applied. Our Western\ncountry Is fast being settled by East-\nern farmers who decide to Immigrate\nto a milder climate, where rich, pro\nductlve soil awaits tilling.\nThey have hoard of Irrigation, and\nconceive the Idea that to have water\nwhen needed, thereby lnciirlng ngalnsl\ndrought, Is n grand proposition, and\nthey are right in so thinking, but like\nall good thing, It niut not be abused.\nThey come West, purchac a tract \nland under some cannl, or adjacent to\nsotno stream, from which water can\nbo elevated by the pumping process,\nand because they have nil the water\nthpy can use, permit it to run to waste\nupon the land, often keeping It Hooded\nand thereby rnMnit Inferior crops of\nfruit, grain or grnsspo, and gradually\nbring to the surface all the salt sub-\nstances In the soli, forever ruining\nwhat had the promise of making nu\nIdeal farm or ranch.\nThe proper definition of Irrigation Is\nto Insure having innltun or water\nwhen needed, ami not to ue It nt any\nand all times because It U at command.\nTherefore, uers of water mint be ed-\nucated cither by experience or Instruc-\ntion, and every irrigated section should\nemploy an experienced and practical\nIrrlgntlonlst, whoe duties would bo\ncon lined to Instructing uers of water\nIn its Intelligent distribution.
b78fce3241f532a6c5b116e3c0ade8e7 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.2205479134957 39.261561 -121.016059 IJcvada fl(M0Cvat.\nSoujikrly Qcautin.— It is the general\nimpression that reckless dare-devils make\nthe best soldiers; but, like a good many\nother general impressions, fallacious. Your\nfurious fire-eaters—your rolicking boys,\nthat would “rather light than eat”—are\nrarely steady and self possessed; aud with-\nout steadiness and self possession no man\ncan be a thorough soldier. The cavaliers,\nwho were scattered like chafl' at Marston\nMoor, and Naseby, and Stow-oo -the-Wold,\nwere fiery to the last degree. They boasted\nof their aristocratic blood—they drank hard,\nswore hard, fonght hard; but they were no\nmatch for Cornwells psalm-singing Iron-\nsides, whom they affected to ridicule as\n“crop eared fanatics and ba9e-boru knaves.”\nIn every fair field, where numbers were\nequal, the plebians thrashed the gentlemen\nriders of the lriuce Hubert stripe to their\nhearts content. Nor were the “Round-\nheads,” as the riugietted cavalry of the Stu-\narts called their short-haired antagonists \nany means deficient in enthusiasm; but it\nwas ot a different kind from that of the\nhigh blood cavaliers. The foes of kiugcraft\nbelieved that they were the chosen instru-\nments of God, and went forth to battle,\nsternly zealous to do what they conceived\nto be His work. “The sword of the Lord\nand of Gideon!” was their cry; and though\nanimated by the pride of caste, nud stimu-\nlated by potations bottle deep of sack and\ncanary, the chivalry of the Stuarts rolled in\nthe dust before them. The courage of the\ntyrant-bating Puritans was sustained and\nrendered invincible by their convictions of\nthe righteousness of their cause, aud an un-\nwavering trust in the Almighty; and with\nsuch odds on their side, it is no wonder that\nthey gave dure-devilism its coup de-gi ace,\nand established the Commonwealth. In all\nsimilar contests the ultimate result will be\nthe same.
01dca379d0e8d875cead4e0f5325e0b9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.2205479134957 58.275556 -134.3925 The Washington (D. C,) Times says:\nResidents of Alaska are indignant, aDd\nthey seem to have excellent reason.,\nWhile Arizona and New Mexico are\nstruggling for statehood, Alaska is ask¬\ning for the ordinary recognition grant¬\ned a territory, and is being ignored.\nIt is not permitted to so much as have\na delegate. The average senator would\ntreat Alaska fairly if the knowledge he\nhad of the subject were other than in¬\nfinitesimal. He is not aware of Alaska.\nYears ago he learned that it was pur¬\nchased of Russia, and ho has learned\nnothing concerning it since. There are\n00,000 American citizens in Alaska, and\nthey are of a high class. The region\nproduces millions annually in gold,\nfish and furs. The transportation sys¬\ntem between Alaska and Puget Sound\n has grown to immense propor-\ntions. The average senator has notj\nconquored these plain facts. To him j\nAlaska is a stretch of wilderness, dot-\nted with Esquimaux sucking bits of\nblubber. It is with a sense of shame\nAmericans learn that their fellows in\nAlaska regret that they are not under\nBritish rule. The Alaskans believe\nfrom their experience and observation\nthat they would under that rule receive\nfairer and more liberal treatment, and\nthat their rights would be better con¬\nserved. This condition does not grow\nout of deliberate intent to neglect any\npart of the domain of the United States,\nbut is due to carelessness that springs\nfrom ignorance. The gentlemen from\nWashington and Oregon have much\nmissionary work to do iu the halls of\nthe Capitol.
13d7f509626d1057a6123a28a4e19671 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.4397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 The llruption In Iceland.\n. Mr. Eirikr Magnusaon* writes to tl\nLondon Times from Cambridge: "Tl\naccounts just received by the last ma\nfrom Iceland assume a far more Hurioi\naspect than the iirst news would have li\none to anticipate. A resident iu llarda\nda I, a valley at a short distance west\ntho locality ot the eruption, write\n'What fearful limea we have had of\nnorth here this Winter! First we wei\nvisited by earthquake*, which, in son\nplaces, terminated nil but fatally, an\nthen came the eruption, with its concoii\nitant dust-doom and fall of ashes. Tl\nDyngjutjoll are incessantly vomiting lir\nevery day we watch the smoke coliim\nrising to an apparently unmeasure\nheight iu the air. The eruption is Hpreai\niug steadily over the wilderness, and\nmay l>e said that the whole region of tl\nMvratn Mountains is one blazing lire\nIt ap|>enr8 that westerly winds have bee\nchiclly prevalent and have borne the aslu\nover the Fast Firths, covering a ver\n area, including tho country sides\nJokiildal, Fell, Fljotada), Kydathiimli;\nVellir. Skriddal Ke.vdarfiord, Nordfiori\nMjoifjord, and Seydisfjord, and man\nmora no doubt, although reliable new\ndoes not, as yet. reach further. On Marc\n2'J the fall of the ashes wax ho excessiv\nthat it covered the eastern countrv Hide\nJokuldal especially, with a coat nix incl\nL'H at its thickest; and all that day, a\nthough it was bright and sunny, the pet\ntile spent in absolute pitch darknes\nFountains and riViiletM were dammed Ij\nthe ashes, and every mountain strcan\ni»lways of a crystalline purity in Kuster\nIceland, where there are neither glacici\nnor moraine, ran dark and muddv lietwee\n>anks covered with drifts of ashes. Tli\n'aimers have lied out of the ash-coverc\nmintry sides with their cattle in quest <\npastures not yet destroyed by the scori'\nnit with what chance of saving their liv\nitock docs not appear. To all appearand\nhe present eruption seems likely to In\n' oiiio a calamitous event for Iceland."
0ff32046e0db5a23cc6caa63ed231649 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.050684899797 39.513775 -121.556359 lIV VIRTUE OF A DKOBK'IAL ORDER issued\nIS out of the I flrlcl Court of the Fifteenth Judi-\n. , l District In and lor Butte County and Slate of\nxlllornln. against N. Carroll npd in favor of lames\nCaine for the sum (I seven Imndred nisi fifty nod\nfly two one hundredths dollars (S7«" 62)princlpa,i\niih interest on s id sum at the rale of thn-e (8) per\nud per month from the seventeenth (17) day of\n•piember A.D 1857 ontil paid; also all costs of suit\nxed ill the sum of twenty four and live one hun-\nredihs dollar* (*24 05, toge.hep with all the costa\n■erutng upon said writ, to me directed and deliv-\n•ed commanding me In sell all of the mortgaged\nremises hereinafter described to satislv said tie\nsuds I will sell on the TWENTY' FIRST (21st)\nAV OF JANUARY A. D 1868, at the hour ol two\n• l oclock P. M of said day. in pursuance with the\nQulretnerts of said order, n public rah- to the\nighest bidder for cash, the following mortgaged\n•onerly described in said order of sale ns lollows.to\nIt-all the rit ht title and interest of the detendniil in\nid to that property situated in the town ol tiroville,\nutte -onnty California.and described on the plot or\nirveyof said town ol Oroville a* follows, to wi :\nunnienclng on Ihe south side of Bird street in block\namber on* (1) eighty.- 80) feet from fhe corner of\nlid block on said strict on the conn r ol Huutoon\nml Blni street, thence southerly one hundred ami\ndrtv two (182) feet, thence easterly fifty six (50) feel\ntence northerly one hundred and thirty two (182)\nel. thence along Ihe line ol Bird street fifty six (an)\nel to place of beginning, together with till and mii-\nitlar the tenements heredilamenls and appurtennn-\n■« thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining\nThe above sale Intake place of the Court House\naorln the town of Oroville, county mid Slate afore-
2b4d2f4b178e9259f74cad3531c02df1 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1906.8342465436326 39.623709 -77.41082 Plowing Around a Rock.\n“I had plowed around a r-ck in\none of my fields for about five years,”\nsaid a farmer, "and 1 had broken a\nmowing-machine knife against it. be-\nsides losing the use of the ground in\nwhich it lay, because I supposed that\nit was such a large rock that It would\ntake too much time and labor to re-\nmove It. But, to-day. when I began\nto plow for corn, I thought that by\nand by I might break my cultivator\nagainst that, rock; so I took a crow-\nbar. intending to poke around It. and\nfind out the size once for all. And it\nwas one of the surprises of my life\nto find that it was little more than\ntwo feet long. It was standing on its\nedge, and was so light that I could\nlift It the wagon without help. "\n"The first time you really faced\nyour trouble you conquered It,” I re-\nplied aloud, hut continued to enlarge\nupon the subject all to myself, tor i\ndo believe that before we pray, or\nbetter, while we pray, wo should look\nour troubles squarely in the face.\nWe shiver and shako and shrink,\nand sometimes we do not dare to\npray about a trouble because it makes\nit seem so real, not even knowing\nwhat we wish the Lord to do about\nit, when if wo would face the trouble\nand call it by its name one-half of\nits terror would bo gone.\nThe trouble that lies down with ns\nat night, and confronts ns on first\nwaking in the morning, is not the\ntrouble that we have faced, but the\ntrouble whose proportions we do not\nknow.
033d85f038fffcdcc59f0cbdea59b97d THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1907.042465721715 37.451159 -86.90916 at once and furnish us as complete\nlist as possible The success of the\nGrain Growers Association i In get\nting better prices than we have been\ngetting depends largely orithe cf\nforts of each local If tie localt\nare prompt In making their reports\nwe can begin looking up a market\nbut if the reports are delayed tin\nsales will be delayed also\nYou as well as many others will\nlikely wish to know what prices will\nbe put on the hay und grain put In\nour hands We know of no better way\nto explain the matter than to call\nyour attention to conditions as they\nnow exist and compare them with\nwhat we can expect when we have\npooled all our grain and hay and put\nit in hands of the directors to\nsell We will take wheat as an ex ¬\nample When we go to our millers\nand ask them the price of wheat\nthey tell us that they will give us\nthe Louisville price If we claim that\nIs not enough they say that is more\nthen we can get anywhere elsewhlch\nisafact forIfwehadtoshipour\nwheat to Louisville wo would have\nto take the Louisville price and pay\nthe freight Hence the price they\noffer being a better price than we\ncan get anywhere else we are forced\nto take It Now this Is the existing\nconditions of today\nThen what do the millers dp when\nthey have used all the wheat they\ntoLouis111t\nfreight it homo at cost of about tea I\ncents a bushel
46b0b015b26533438f681ab2c39ece69 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1904.3702185476118 39.78373 -100.445882 L. R. A. 850, Vt., and under the same\nrule and more directly executors have\nbeen held personally liable for the\npayment of legacies, upon their ag-\nreement or implied promise to pay the\nsame, Davis, Reyner, 2 Lev. 3; Evans\nv. Foster, 14 u R. A. 117 (Wis.) In\nPerry v. Cunningham, 40 Ark., 185, the\nacceptance by an administrator of an\norder drawn on him by a creditor of\nthe estate conditioned to pay "as soon\nas accruing rents of the estate would\npermit" rendered him personally lia-\nble upon receipt of the rents. An ex-\necutor becomes bound personally up-\non his promise to pay the debt of the\nthe testator in consideration that the\ncreditor will forbear for a time to\npress his claim. Bishop on Contracts\n(Enlgd. Ed .) Sec. 1252, 1 Story on Con-\ntracts (5 Ed.) Sec. 361, and the casaa\nthere cited. These principles are also\nreiterated in 1 Bishop on Contracts\n Ed.) 128 and in the elaborate note\nmentioned -- n the brief, 52 Am. Dec,\nbeginning at P. 118.\nThe' objection that the plaintiff can-\nnot maintain the suit because she was\nnot a signatory to the contract is un-\ntenable under Milaini v. Tognini, 19\nNev. 34, and under the decisions cited\nthere and in 9 Cyc, P. 377 to 382. In\nlaat case this court said:\nThe precise question presented is\nthis: Can a plaintiu maintain an act-\nion on a simple contract to which he\nis not a party, upon wnich he was not\nconsulted, and to which he did ont as-\nsent, when it contains a provision for\nwis benefit? Besiues the Statute which\nprovides that "evey action shall be\nprosecuted in the name of the real\nparty in interest," this court has held\nin three afferent cases that the bene-\nficiary named in such a contract may\nmaintain an action thereon in his own\nname."
94d8801e65009f00a0cb6f78d7d06eb1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.3101092579943 58.275556 -134.3925 Last Saturday, I.. S . Ferrla closed\na (leal at Ketchikan whereby be se¬\ncured an option on the Stedman\nHotel find he wll lassume charge of\nlhat place by purchaae about May 1.\nMr. Kerrli a ahort time ago left\nTreadwell with the Intention of look¬\ning over bualnoaa posalbilltle* al\nKetchikan and In the atate of Wash\nItigton. While at Ketchikan awalt-\ntuic a boat to take him farther South\nhe learned that the Stedman hotel\n«'aa In the market, and after exam¬\nining the prtpertv pouted the mone>\nand took an option on It.\nThe Stedman la an old eatabllahed\nhotel In Ketchikan and business la\n»o good lhat patron* are turuM\naway from Ita doors each day. The\nIty Itself la thriving and Mr. Ferris\nbelieve* It has a great future. The\nStedman has been operated by Mar¬\ntin Hugge, part owner with K .\nlleckman In the property.\nMr. Ferrla returned to Treadwell\non the City of Seattle Tuesday and\nlias started packing his personal ef¬\nfects with a' view of getting to\nKetchikan by May flrat If possible.\nL. S . F»rris has for the past eight¬\neen years been connected with the\nTreadwell Company. For the paat\nthirteen or fourteen year* be baa\nbeen steward for the -ompany and\nfor the past two years manager of\nthe Club and employment a«ent. He\nwas married here and haa always\n¦uaile his home at Treadwoll. He\nI* a candidate on (he Republican\nticket In the coming primary elec¬\ntion for the nomination of represen¬\ntative In the Territorial legislature.\nMr. and Mrs. Ferris have been a\npart of the social and fraternal life\nof the laland and they will ho greatly\nmlsaed when they go to their new
1737ae85856bda1a84113c99bfdb4e76 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.6260273655505 40.827279 -83.281309 grass have a struggle to maintain their\nexistence, the young clovtr plants es-\npecially suffering from the beat and\ndrouth. PoEsibly for some weeks the\nprincipal dependence of the meadows for\nmoisture is the nightly dews. If the leaves\nare allowed to be eaten off, this mode of\nsupply is arrestedj. by depriving the roots\nof the shade which they would have af-\nforded. Only a weak growth can then be\nmade, many plants will be totally destroy\ned, and when the fall rains occur, followed\nby nightly frosts, the unsheltered roots are\nthrown out by thousands. A promising\npiece of young clover may thus be com-\npletely ruined and the next year's supply\nof hay be seriously curtailed!. The small\nquantity of feed thus gained is dearly pur-\nchased. The life of the meadows is con\nsumed and their existence threatened\nWe are aware of the great temptation\nthere is to turn stock on to the aftermath\nand stubbles, but, unless in the very rare\ncases where the is rich and the growth\nis too heavy to be eaten nearly bare, it\nwould be a grtat saving of money in the\nend to bite pasture, buy feed, or sell the\nsurplus stock which cannot otherwise be\nled at nome. Un many farms, had this\n; course been adopted for one season, the re- -\nsources for feeding in after years would\nhave been, doubled; but by carrying tx\nmuch, stock on the fields during the\nfall months they were eaten off too\nclosely to stand the winter, and were too\nseriously injured to fully recover. It is\nbecoming more apparent each year, that\nmore stock must be fed on Eastern farms.\nnay, on many Western farms, too, or their\nfertilit) cannot be maintained : but it is\nbad policy to keep too many at the com\nmencement, before the means of feeding\nhave become equal to the demand. It is\nsomething like a man liviug upon his cap-\nital, instead of upon the interest of it,\neachyt-ar- ;
450cea98a6f1eeffa69c661f6b338f57 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.387671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 House op Representatives, )\nWashington, D. C ., May 10,1866. >\nJ. Ii. Parkinson Esq.\nDear Sir: In reply to your favor of\nthe 4th inst., asking me to give the sub-\nstance of a conversation hud with the'\nHon. J£. A . Rollins, commissioner of\nthe revenue, in your presence, in refer-\nence to the appointment of Mr. Leonard,\nof Parkersburg, as assessor of the lirst\nrevenue district in stead of your father.\nI may say, that the commissioner stated\ndistinctly, that the change was made\nwholly for revenue purposes; that there\nwas no objection whatever to your\nfather, and that he bad given entire sat¬\nisfaction to the department. To show\nthat 1 ant not inistakdfl^ 1 quote from a\nnote since received from Mr. Rollins iu\nreference to the appointment. He says,\n seemed best lor revenue purposes\nthat one of the officers should reside at\nParkersburg,(because of the growing\nimportance of that city in connec¬\ntion with petroleum.) So far as\nthe administration of the law is\nconcerned, and the convenience\nit would afford to the people of your\ndistrict doing business with revenue\nofficers. It was for this reason that Mr.\nLeonard's name was substituted for\nthat of Mr. Parkinson. He says in\nthe same connection, "I do noc wish\nthat Mr. Parkinson sould consider it\nany reflection on him, for he had\nproved himself an officer of experi¬\nence and ability."\nI have every reason to believe that\nyour father gave full satisfaction in all\nthe duties of his office, and that the\nchange was made for the reasons above\nstated. Very respectfully, yours,
2070a999e49e7168e43a2a04bcb54462 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.9109588723998 40.419757 -77.187146 gether with fifty or sixty persons, at-\ntended the examination of the prisoner.\nThe girls were separately taken into a\nroom, and they each pointed out the\nprisoner as the man who had committed\nthe assault upon them. The prisoner\nwas then taken to a 'squire's office in\nCambrldgepcrt, nnd the witnesses in\nboth cases sent for, and they in turn\nseverally Identified him as the man.\nOne man swore that he saw the pris-\noner on the 20th of July and had consid-\nerable conversation with him, and that\nhe took considerable notice of him, as he\nbore a strong resemblance to a relation\nof his. He identified the prisoner at\nonce as the man. All the witnesses, to\nthe number of ten, swore that they had\nnot a doubt that the prisoner at the bar\nwas the same person they had seen at\nMedford on the 20th of July, and at\nNewton on the 28th, and who had com-\nmitted these crimes. It became apparent\nthat the only important point in the\ncase was the identity of the prisoner\nwith the monster who committed these'\ncrimes. The counsel for the defense\ncontended that they should prove an\nalibi; that the prisoner was in New\nHampshire at the time the offenses were\ncommitted. To prove this they called\na Mr. Ames, of Keeue, who testified\nthat the prisoner rode with on the\n22d of July, and that he saw him every\nday from that to the 28th, and during\nthat time the prisoner bought a trunk in\nhis store ; the trunk was in court, and\nthe witness identified it at once as the\none he sold. He said that the prisoner\nboarded at the Eagle hotel In Keeue.\nThe barkeeper of the Eagle hotel was\ncalled, and confirmed this, and further\ntestified that he sat beside the prisoner\nevery day frqm the 22d to the 28th of\nJuly ; that the prisoner was constant at\nhis meals, and that he saw him fre-\nquently besides and conversed with him.\nBoth witnesses testified in the strongest\nmanner that they saw the prisoner at a\ncaravan show on the 20th of July In\nKeene. A stage driver testified that on\nthe 28th of July (the day on which the\nassault was committed in Newton), the\nprisoner registered his same in the stage\noffice at Keene for Concord, and that be\nrode on the Beat with him all the way\nfrom Keene to Concord that day and had\nconsiderable conversation with him.\nMr. Stewart, a tailor In Conoord, testi-\nfied that he made a pair of pantaloons\nfor the prisoner on the 20th of July, and,\nfrom a peculiarity of make, Identified\nthose now worn by the prisoner in court\nas. Chose he made.
07580a181095bbfc92337d6215520760 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1913.6808218860983 39.456253 -77.96396 Mi§9 CIar(ce, the eldest of Captain\nCoverdale's enters, tcok special\ncharge of the < dilution of her young\nward, she taught bira the alphabet\nand wbs anasz d not onlj' at his eag¬\nerness to learn, but at hie splendid\nmemory. Twice *he took him\nthrough the A. B, Cs. and then to\ntest his mcmoi)' required bim to\nrecile thirn in the reverse order\nwhich he did with great facility and\nreadiness. Ttieo she tried him with\nwords of two letters, and gradually\nincreased tbem. In 'he hour and a\nhalf that she gave him he was able to\nrecite the Alphabet, spell words con¬\nsisting < f f. cm two to four letters\nand explain their meaning as they\nwere txplainrd to him by his tutor.\nHis precocity, to eay nothing of bis\ngreat eagerness to impresied\nbis preceptree.8 60 favorably tbat she\ndecided to employ a private tutor for\nthe boy, because she felt as &he said\nto her brother at dinner, tbat the lad\nshould have the very best opportun¬\nities possible for bringiog ont of him\nthe latent powers which his trial lea-\neons showed that he possessed in a\nmost remarkable degree, and that it\nwould bo better to place him under\ni\\ malo teacher familiar with the\ntraining up of boys of his age, than\nto undertake the lat-k herself though\nshe was Lot unwilling to do so. She\nfelt tbat in the bst analysis this\nwould bf ibe best courso to follow,\nas the influence of a utern, yet kind\nhearted and sympathetic man noon\nhis futuro would be greater tbaa a\nwoman's. She wanted him to be¬
141c4531a19c9407787e52c8dbab73eb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.2041095573313 39.261561 -121.016059 Article 3d. On the discovery of a vein\nof quartz, three days shall bo allowed to\nmark, and stake off the Bamc, In such a\nmauner, by the name of the owner and the\nnumber of the claim, or otherwise, as shall\nproperly and fully identify such claims.\nParties having claims may cause a map or\nplan to be made, and a copy tiled with the\nRecorder, if deemed requisite to more par-\nticularly tlx the locality.\nArticle 4th. Work to the extent of one\nhundred dollars iu value, or twenty days\nfaithful labor, shall be performed by each\ncompany holding claims, within thirty days\nfrom the dale of recording the same, as pro-\nvided for in Article 6th of these laws ; and\nthe duly authorized representative of a\ncompany making oath that such money has\nbeen expended, or that such labor has been\nperformed, shall be entitled to a certificate\nfrom a County Recorder or deputy, \nanteeing undisputed possession of said claim\nfor the term of one year ; and for a like\nsum of money or amount of labor expend-\ned or performed within the first twenty\ndays of each succeeding year, duly acknow-\nledged as herein named, shall entitle the\nclaimants or company from year to year to\nfurther certificate* of undisputed proprie-\ntorship and possession, and a company hav-\ning a mill contracted for, iu good faith, to\nthe amount of five thousand dollars for the\nworking of its claim or claims, the proper\nrepresentative of the company making oath\nof the same, shall be entitled to receive\nfrom said County Recorder, a title deed to\nthe said claims, guaranteeing to the claim-\nants or company, their successors and as-\nsigns, undisputed possession and propritor-\nship forever under these laws, provided\nnothing in this Article, shall be at any\ntime inconsistent with thu laws of the Uni-\nted State*.
0a9a132a5625fa702766c773d9081f05 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.7581966896882 38.894955 -77.036646 ing tobacco and told me to go ahead and\nlearn the filthy habit If I wanted to;\nand he said I could sass him and talk\nback all I liked. He gimme an old pistol,\ntoo, and some powder, and told me I could\nfire it off at tho risk of my life Just as\noften as 1 blamed phased, and blow my\nhead off If I wanted to.and nobody should\nstop me. He had a bottle with something\nred In it, and he drank out of It pretty\noften, and hollered and whooped and sung\nand cussed aad said ho was a big Injun\nand don't you forget It! O h! you bet your\nneck, me and pa had a big time and\ndidn't give a rip for nothing!"\n"Whilllkins! Your pa is a good man and\nwouldn't do auj thing of the kind; why,h\ntakes up the collections at church! I be-\nlieve you are \n"No, ain't neither. My pa is a good man,\nall right enough, but he Just had to bu'st\nloose! Ho said he was obliged to assert\nhimself or become a nonentity, if you know\nwhat that Is?\n"Aw, jes! It meant some kind of a mar\nried man; I know by the way pa used the\nword. But I'll tell you how It all hap-\npened: Wo named the baby yesterday. At\nbreakfast time ma said we'd name the baby\nwithout the usual fuss and worry; and pa\nsaid all right, we'd name her Alma. Auut\nFurby said there was no use in having\nany bother about it, because she had al-\nready selected the name or Dorcas for the\nbaby. Undo Ricketts said certainly there\nwas no use of having a discussion when\nMary Ann was tbe only decent name for a\ngirl baby. I said Mamie would be a bully\nname for her.
3329e293694b0b348e02b577cbbb788f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.37397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 "We are favorable to a most thor-\nough and complete inquiry into the\naircraft situation," continued the re-\nport, "but call attention to the fact\nthe department of justice which is\nequipped with every facility is now\nmost actively engaged in that work\nand that the Hon. Charles E. Hughes\nhas just been appointed by the presi-\ndent to assist, which ought to put at\nrest any possible feeling that for any\npolitical or other reason a full and\ncomplete investigation might not be\nmade even though the committee,\nlacking authorization, might not con-\ntinue its work."\nThe report said there was no ne-\ncessity of employment of experts and\nassistants as provided in the Cham-\nberlain resolution and appropriation\nof $10,000 which would exhaust the\nsenate's contingent fund.\nWTould Hamper Department.\nRegarding the general inquisitorial\npowers proposed in the Chamberlain\nresolution the minority added:\n"It must be noted that the resolu-\ntion not only gives authority to but\nalso directs the military committee.\n"It is evident the numerous inves-\ntigations specified will cause great\nannoyance and interference with the\nnpfpss.nrv war work now going on in\nthe most important, branches of the\nwar department. If the department\nshould attempt to answer the re-\nquirements which may be made upon\nIt in the terms of the resolution\nmuch of the time of its officers and\nemployes would be required and the\ndepartment prevented from devoting\nthe time and energy required for\nperformance of essential work in the\nactual prosecution of the war so vital\nto the country at this time."\nPresident-Wilson'-
23667aca00a34a4bdd77268da13d99e2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1922.042465721715 41.681744 -72.788147 local men. Among the speakers are\nGeorge T. Kimball, A A. Searle,\nThomas Kelley, and K. W. Christ.\nI'Two Foremen's Nighs have been\nheld in the gymnasium with talks by\nA. D. Rlsteen and Walter Camp, and\nlunch and entertainment. Such\nevents bring men into touch with the\nY. M . C . A. who would not otherwise\nbe reached. The council is also back\nof the bible study program and the\nboys' work. A committee has done\nmuch good in advising the employed\nboys as to their life work.\n"Certain tendencies in the policy und\nprogram of the physical department\nshould "be explained. It was seen that a\nneed existed for a special gymnasium\nclass for older business men as they\nneeded a different type of exercise\nthan they get In the regular\nclasses, so tlie Busy Men's Class was\nadded to the schedule for them, which\nhas been very successful. The demand\nfor leadership in gymnasium work\ncalled for special training of young\nmen qualified for thi3 work and a\nLenders' Corps was organized and\nmeets weekly for bible study, for study\nof Anatomy and for practical instruc-\ntion in gymnasium work. It was also\nrecognized that it was in a measure\nunfair to the membership to deprive\nthem of the gymnasium twice a week\nso that a team could plaj basketball.\nInstead of a represntative team of five\nmen playing, a league made up of four\nteams of members. Is playing and a\nmuch larger number are participants\nthan would be the case under 'the old\narrangement.
0069328027fde01be6d6dd020ae631f3 WEST VIRGINIA DAILY OIL REVIEW ChronAm 1902.519178050482 39.564242 -80.99594 My trouble was nervousness and\nsleeplessne s pure and simple and\nthat In Itself is enough. Lack of\nsleep makes one dull. I was asked\nto try Dr. A. W, Chase, s Nerve\nPills and did so getting them at\nGriers Drug Store and am able to\nsay positively that they are a splen¬\ndid nerve tonic. My nerves grew\nsteady and strong and iry rest at\nnight sound and natural."\nDr. A. W . Chase's Nerve Pills\nare sold at 50c a bcx at dealers or\nDr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co ,\nBuffalo, N. Y. See that portrait\nand signature of A. W . Chase, M.\nD. aieon evey package.\nThe TurU nnO I. Itc I ti*iirrince.\nOi.e man was fjmplaining that be\nhad insured twenty years before io a\nmutual benefit company which prom¬\nised all sorts of things, and now tfce\ntime was up lie received less than be\nWould have done if be bad invested bis\nmoney elsewhere. A wise Turk who\nwas close by said it reminded\nbim of a camel belonging to a friend of\nb:A It was a most intelligent brute,\nui:d t he owner was convinced that If\nbe found a really go<>d teacher it could\nb«.- taught to talk. Presently a Ilodga\nappeared wbo said he was of the same\nopinion and would teach it, but it\nwould take a long time, probably thirty\nyears. The owner was delighted and\nagreed to pay the Ilodga a tixed sum\nper annum and a big bonus when the\nanimal talked. the Ilodga promising to\npay a heavy tine if it did not. A friend\nafterward went to the Hodga and said:\n"What on earth induced you to make\nthat agreement? You know you can\nnever teach the camel to talk." ',Oh."\nsaid the Ilodga. "I know that but dur¬\ning the thirty years either I shall\ndie or the owner will or the camel.\nAnyhow. I am all right, as I have my\nfiled income." . New York Commercial\nAdvertiser.
03aeb5620c24cb2099e099611ac669a3 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1890.3712328450026 38.894955 -77.036646 Trains leavo Wnshlngton, from station, cor-\nner or Sixth and B streets, as follows:\nFonPiTisnono nnd tho Wost, Chicago Limited\nBxprcss of Pullman Vcstlbulod Cars at\n10.M) n m dally; Fast Line, 10.60 a m dally\nto Columbus nnd St. Louis, with Hleoplng\nCars from Pittsburg to Columbus: dally,\nexcept Saturday, to Chicago, with Slooplng\nCar Altoona to Chicago. St. Louis, Chicago\nand Cincinnati. Express, 8.80 p m dally.\nParlor Car Washington to Harrlsburg, nnd\nSleeping Cnrs Harrlsburg to St. Louis, Chi -\ncago and Cincinnati, and Dining Car Har-\nrlsburg to SI, Louis. Western Kxrrross, at\n7.40 p m dally, with Sleeping Cars Washing.\ntone to Chicago and St. Louis, connootlng\ndally at Harrlsburg with through Bloopers\nfor LoulsvlIIo and Memphis, I 'ncluo Ex\npress, 10.00 p m dt lly.for IMttsburg and tho\nWest, through Mccpcr to Pittsburg,\nnnd Pittsburg tn Ctlcago.\nBALTIMORE AND POTOMAC RAILROAD;\nFor Kane, Canandalgua, Rochester and Ni-\nagara Palls dally, except Sunday, 8.10 a m.\nFon Emit, Canandalgua nnd itoohoster dally;\nfor BnOalo and Niagara dally, oxoopt Sat-\nurday, 10.00 pm.wlthslcoplng car Wash-\nington to Rochester,\nFon WittiAwsront, Lock navon and Elmtra,\nui ju.uu u in uiuiy. except aunaay.\nFon WirttAMsronr dally, a.80p m.\nFon PmLADF.LrmA, New York and tho East,\n7.20 . 9.00, 11.00 nnd 11.40 a m, 2.10, 8.15, 4.90,\nB.40 . 10 .00 nnd 11.20 p m. On Snnrtny. 9.00.\n11.40 a m, 2.10, 3.15,4 20, 10.00 and 11.20 p m.\nLimited Express of Pullman Parlor Cars,\n9.40 a m dally, orcept Sunday, and B.OOp\nm dally, with Dining Car.\nTon Philadelphia only. Fast Express 8.10 a\nn,c ck-days ,an-
522e0e7cd83cccf5991e13908477ce80 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.9219177765094 39.369864 -121.105448 TliE FATE 'OF THE CAUCASUS.\nIt is thought that the capture of Schamyl,\nthe celebrated chief, who since his youth has\nsuccessfully warred against Russia, will effec-\ntually admit Russian absorption to all of the\nfamed country of Mounft Caucasus,from which\nsprung the Caucasian or white race of the\nhuman family. The tribes of this wonderful\ncountry exhibit the noblest specimens of\nphysical mankind, arc bold, patriotic and\nwarlike in the extreme; their strongholds in\nthe mountains are quite unapproachable to\ninvaders, and for a period almost indefinite\nthese people have adroitly and terribly de-\nfended the narrow pathways to their homes,\nand sallied forth from their steep and seclu-\nded places to astonish and defeat the bravest\nof Russians and Turks. In the Crimean war,\nSchamyl was a constant and fearful annoy-\n to Russia, but a temporary peace was\ncontracted on account of the fact that a son\nOf the old chief was held a kindly treated\nprisoner in St. Petersburg, and had been\neducated by authority of the Russian gov-\nernment. The Caucasians are taught to bo\nalways prepared to defend their country,and\nto suffer any deprivation for the sacred rights\nof home and in the solemn maintenance of\nthe rites instituted by the sages and prophets- .\nIt is related of Schamyl that when drived\nwith his tribe to a spot where they were sur-\nrounded by foes, be decreed that whoever\nshould propose to surrender would be pmr-\nished with many lashes of a whip upon the\nnaked body. Hunger and thirst began to\noppress the tribe, and the women, headed by\nSchamyls
1749101f9522e49afecbc57f10192246 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4753424340436 41.681744 -72.788147 largest arena, the featuring event of\nwhich would be a prise fight be-\ntween the famous pugilist,. Charles\nSmith, and Kid Bruce. There could\nbe but one outcome to sueh a fight\nso I decided not to aeeept the invi-\ntation. I hated to see poor little\nBruce pounded to a pulp.\n"Weeks later I stopped over Sun-\nday in a beautiful little southern\ntown. There was such a feeling of\nSabbath peace and contentment In\nthe air that I automatically picked\nmy way to the little church. The\nminister was none other than our\nown Red Matulis. His sermon v. as\nfull of pathos and beauty and so in-\nspiring that I am still wondering\nwho wrote It for him.\n"Back home In New Britain one\nagain I found everyone greatly ex-\ncited. Election time was drawing\n and the candidate for Mayor\non the Socialist ticket was Duke\nD'Avanzo who was using for his\nplatform one session day for the\nSenior High school. If I remember\ncorrectly Duke never did approve of\ncoming to school twice a day.\n"This election, however, did not\nattract much attention for New\nBritain was about to be put on tho\nmap for something beside its hard-\nware. Frank McGrath who had for\ntwo terms been governor of the\nstate had bean nominated tor Presi-\ndent en the Republican ticket i.nd\nhad every chance Un the world of\nbecoming President of the U. S .\n"My year' selling books had been\nso successful .(hat I could bow af-\nford to retire and take the advice\nof some of my customers, which\nwas to read the books which I had\nbeen selling."
0aeb1175fe33bb4f5e9545bedb2a8f36 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.7657533929478 46.601557 -120.510842 You are hereby notified that I,P.P . I.aiitcrman,\nam the holder of certificate of delinquency\nnumbered 3847, issued on the 12th day ol July,\nA. D, 1(02, by the county of Yakima, state ol\nWiisliliigtun, (or the amount of fifteen and 3S-\nlOOdnllHrs (116.38), the name being the amount\nthen due and ileliuijueutfor taxes for tbe years\n1896, 1897, ix.is. 1899, I' .KX) and 1901, together with\npenalty, interest and costs thereon, upon real\nproperty assessed to unknown owner, and of\nwhich you are the owner or reputed owner,\nsituate in said county and particularly bounded\nand described as follows, to-wit: Lot fifteen (15)\nblock two hundred and forty-seven (347) of the\nSyndicate sub division to North Yakima, ac-\ncording to the otlicialplat thereof ou file and\nol reconl in tbe county auditor's office of\nYakima county, Washington, and upon which\nI have tiiild taxes assessed agaiust said prop-\nerty,as follows:\nTaxes for the year lsti'i, amounting to l.'i 4 \\u0084\npaid on the l-'th day of July, HUtt, C. K.\nTotal taxes paid on account of said certificate\nof dellinjueuey numbered 9847, 9&4& I all of said\n so paid bearing interest at the rate of fif-\nteen per cent per annum from date of payment,\nmid sHid corliticnte of delinquency bearing a\nlike rate of interest from date of issue, respect-\nively. And you are further notified that 1 will\napply to the Superior court ol the state oi Wash-\nington in and for said county, for a Judgment\nforeclosing my lien against the property here-\ninbefore mentioned] and you are hereby sum\nmoticd to appear within sixty Uays after tbe\ndote of the first publication ol this summons,\nto-wit: Within sixty days alter tbe 9tb day of\nSeptember, 1902, exclusive of said tirst day ol\npublication, iiml defend this action or pay tbe\namount One, and in case of your failure so to\ndo. judgment will be rendered loreclosiug said\nlien for said certificate of delinquency, taxes,\npenalty, interest and costs, against tbe lands and\npremises hereinbefore mentioned, aeeordiug to\nthe demand of the complaint herein which has\nbeen filed witli the clerk of the above entitled\nCourt. Any pleading or process many be served\nupon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff at\ntheaddresß hereafter mentioned.
a14f2327ac0c2dd47011b63e01890722 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.4260273655505 31.960991 -90.983994 provide themselves properly with a supply, or\neven where theÿ h^Ye an abundance, it is not of\nthe first quality. Perhaps a few .hints, on its\nculture, and on the modè of obtaining toe finest\nmay be acceptable at this time. The difference\nbetween large and small asparagus, de\nry much on cultivation; a deep, rich looking\nsoil, and plenty of room between the plants, pro­\nducing the largest growth. Something also\ndoubtless is to Ire attributed to the variety, as by\na successive selection of seed from toe thriftiest\ndants, an ultimate improvement may be made.\nHence, in making a bed, seeds from those plants\nwhich are known to be very large, are to be pre­\nferred, ' If good plants, one or two years old,\ncan be obtained at hand, the bed will of coursa\nbe accelerated one year. A common and a good\npractice preparing an asparagus bed, is to trench\nthe ground two spades deep, and then return the\nearth thus removed, mixed with alternate layers\nof nearly an eqiial quantity of stable manure,\nuntil the top of the bed is six inches above the\nSurface of the ground. But a great improve­\nment on the part of this process is—after each\nlayer of soil is thrown on the preceding of\nmanflre; to intermix it very thoroughly with the\nmanure, with a coarse iroa rake, potatoe hood,\nor other suitable tool. This thorough admixture\nof soil and manure, though scarcely ever\ntieëd, is of the greatest importance,\nlumps of pure manure, and of earth, without Ä-\niftg finely divided and interfused, form but a\npoor material for the extension of the fine and\ndelicate fibres of the growing plants. The bed\nbeing ready, for toe reception of plants from the\nseed heed,- which should be removed with the «\nleast possible injury to the roots, proceed to lay\nofftoe trenches for tberows. One of the great­\nest errors with most cultivators is crowding their\nplants too closely together; they wish' after\nmuch, labor , in the preparation of a fine bed,\nobtain the largest possible supply from it, but der\nfeat their own purpose by the slender and di­\nminished growth resultiug from speh treatment.\nThe nearest possible distance whicli might ever\nbe admitted in an asparagus bed, is one foot\napait m the row, and eighteen inches between\nthe rows. Tims, if the trenched bed js four\nfret wide, only two rows can be admitted, in­\nstead of four or five as usually practiced. This\nmay be seen by the following diagram:
23c57b5f62c074aad4a2f0c57db8201a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1888.3155737388686 42.217817 -85.891125 Sire of Cora Hello, 2:20J, trial 2:24;\nWalter Drake, 2:331, trial 2:30J; (ieorge\nK. Fauth, trial under 2:30; St. Jo, trial\n2:30i; Young Jo, trial 2:38.\nSire Messenger Duroc 100, sire of\nElaine Dam ol Norlaine 2:31$ (fastest\nyearling record ) 2:20, Prospero 2:20,\nCharley Champlin 2:21!, Dame Trot\n2:22, and 12 others with records of '30\nand better; by Hambletoniati 10, sire of\n(Ieorge Wilkes 2:22, Dexter 2:17i, and\n38 others iu 2:30.\nDam Fanny Mapes, by Alexander's\nAlxlallah 15, sire of Goldsmith Maid\n2:14. ranny Mapes is dam of Jerome\nKddy 2:16,, Regulator 2:32, (Ieorge\nMilo 2:33, llattie Mapes 2:33.\nGrand Dam Smith Mare, by Hurr's\nrsapoleon, son of loung Mambnno.\n(treat Grand Dam Hrook's Mare, by\nLong Island, HIack Hawk 24, son of\nAndrew Jackson 4, sire of Henry Clay b.\nHrown Stallion, 10 hands high, whit\nankles behind, weight, the day we\nhoucrht him. 1 .240 \nAlexander's Abdallah is the greatest\nprogenitor of speed Hambletonian ever\nsired, and xanny .Mapes has protlucea\nthe fastest trotter of any dam by Alex\nander's Abdallah, besides being the dam\nof four whose average record is below\n2:29. Kemember, the cry now is "give\nus a sire from a speed producing dam,"\nand in Jo Gavin we have the blood of\none of the great dams of the country.\nMessrs. Dewey & Stewart purchased\nFanny Mapes when she was 14 years\nold and have sold six of her produce,\none as a yearling and two as weanlings.\nfor $31,300. We take the following from\nMessrs. Dewey & Stewart's catalogue of\n1888: "Jo Gavin has never been trained.\nWe have seen him draw a skeleton\nwagon (barefoot) a half in 1:28 and 1:20.\nHad he been trained, it is about a cer-\ntainty he would long ago have been in\nthe 2:30 list.
5ae8f3369f92458478188c634048623e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.5657533929477 41.681744 -72.788147 There remains the. constitutional\nquestion raised by the defendants'\ndemurrer to the compl ;int and re-\nnewed in their answer, that the Act\nis void because not approved by the\nGcveraur until nineteen days after\nthe final adjournment of the Gener\nal Assembly. I he provision of the\nconstitution which defendants urge\nv as violated by the approval of this\nAct more than three days after the\nfinal adjournment of the General\nAssembly is Section 12 of Article\nfourth, which reads: "Every bill\nwhich shall have passed both houses\nof the General Assembly, shall be\npresented to the Governor. If he ap\nproves, he shall sign and transmit\nit to the Secretary, but if not, he\nshall return it to the House in\nwhich it originated, with his objec-\ntions, which shall be entered on the\njournals of the house; who shall pro-\nceed to reconsider the bill. If after\nsuch reconsideration, that house\nshall again pass it, it shall be sent\nwith objections, to the other house,\nwhich shall also reconsider it. If ap-\nproved, it shall become a law.\n"But such cases the votes of\nboth houses shall be determined by\nyeas and nays; and the names of\nthe members voting for and against\nthe bill, shall be entered on the\njournals of each house respectively.\nIf the bill shall not be returned by\nthe Governor within three days,\nSundays excepted, after it shall have\nbcn presented to him, the same\nshall be a law in like manner as if\nhe had signed it; unless the General\nAssembly, by their adjournment,\nprevents its return, in which case it\nshall not be a law."\nIt must be conceded that the con-\nstruction of the last six times of this\nsection present a difficult problem.\nThe State insists that the practical\nconstruction accorded this language\nby all of the Governors since 1919 in\nsigning both public and special Acts\nmore than three days a,ftcr the final\nadjournment is strongly indicative\nthat this course was the correct one.\nIt is true that. "Long settled and\nestablished practice is a considera-\ntion of great weight in a proper in-\nterpretation of constitutional provi-\nsions of the character."
3b1c4d2179db65f2d75bda8dad8b3d93 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.9630136669202 41.681744 -72.788147 neutral ship!" was heard on every\nside. But what was to prevent Ger-\nman sympathizers from carrying any-\nthing they chose under the protection\nof a neutral flag jf that flag forbid\nthe right of search? In three months\n10,000 neutral ships passed through\nthe British lines. Were they let by un-\nmolested all Germany could be fed\nand armed from that source alone.\nSearch at sea has given rise to\nmuch trouble, indignation and states\nmanlike hot air. Before the War of\n1812 the English took advantage of\nthe Right of Search to exercise what\nis called the Right of Impressment.\nFrom American vessels they took all\nmen unable to prove they were Amer-\nican citizens and compelled them to\nJoin the British Navy. Whereupon\nour Navy got busy and settled the\nquestion by Perry with op\nportunity to send his famous "Met\nthe enemy's message.\nOn April 7, 1862 Secretary Seward\nundd Perry's knot by signing permis-\nsion for England to search vessels\nsuspected of being engaged in the\nslave trade. This right was mutually\nextended throughout the world by all\nnations in peace as well as In war.\nFor only two other reasons may a\nwarship Interfere with a well -b eha v- e d\nprivate craft: first, on suspicion of\npiracy; and secondly to execute fed-\neral revenue laws.\nHerein lies another worry' for the\nnaval commander. His presence in a\nforeign port Is usually regarded as\nsufficient evidence that all vessels\nthere of his own nationality are en-\ngaged in lawful trade. Which doesn't\nwork out for a hang when some kind- -\ned
4f7253ce2fd5df15d3f6226a57c833da THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.974043684224 39.261561 -121.016059 SHERIFFS SALK—YVlienns, on flic\n1st day of fWcenil>er, a . D 1860 a linal Judgment\nand Decree was rendered in the I»iatriet Court of the\nFourteenth Judicial District of the State of Califor-\nnia, in and for the county of Nevada, against M. A-\n1: W. P. L. WINHAM, and in favor of W. H. SEARS,\nMARK P1XLEV, and others, for the sum of Three\nThousand .Six Hundred and Ninety-Seven Dollars\nand Eleven Cents, principle debt, with interest on\nthe sum ofTwd Thousand Three iihndtedand Seven-\nty One dollars at the rate of two per cent per month\nfrom the ren diton of Judgment until paid, together\nwith all costs of suit, for the sale of the property\nherein described, to wit: That certaiu piece or par-\ncel of mining land situated in North San Juan\nMining District, County of Nevada, and bounded as\nfollows; Commencing at a piue stumr> at the north-\nwest of tho Hidden Gate Companys giound,\nrunning thence southerly one hundred And eighty\nfeet, more or less, to a stake . thence e&stwardl.v\nthree hundred and twenty feet, more or less to a\npine stump ; thence southwardly one hundred and\neighty feet to a stake- theuce easterly eighty feet to\na stake ; thence southerly one hundred aud eighty\nfeet to a stake; thence westerly one hundred and\nsixty feet to a stake ; theuce northerly one hundred\nand eighty feet; thence westerly along Eureka Tun-\nnel Cos, line three hundred and twenty feet, more\nor less, to a stake ; thence north four huudred feet,\nmore or less, to a stake at the brow of the hill;\nthence east eighty feet to the place of loginning;\ntogether witty all the appurtenances thereunto be-\nlonging or in any wise appertaining. Also, one full,\nundivided one half of the Golden Gate Tunuel, with\nits appurtenances.
30ec4543d8487b134802d28f560a65cb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.7520547628108 39.745947 -75.546589 liie Pennsylvania system Is a fatr tnc construction of new lines and suffering or being otherwise affected\nexample. Its property cost and ma-- branches to serve Uie public and the or Interested.\nkelabb» securities, not including bold- financing, upbuilding and compacting But coal strikes came along and the\nmgs of securities of companies form- of Ihe system. Therefore, 1 can speak American people found the heavy bill\ning part .of the system, exceeds Hie intelligently, and indeed feelingly, for It tacked up on their own coal bins,\ntoi M outstanding securities in Hie about the companys policy and af- Milk strikes came along and Ihe Amerl-\nbands of the public to the extent of fairs. So far as public regulation is can people found the cost stamped on\nover ».i00 .000.000 . If the company, in- concerned, for the last ten years the the babys milk bottles. Railroad\nslriid of following that practice had company has not been allowed euf- strikes came along and the American\ndistributed all its yearly surplus In fielen? revenues to earn 6 per cent, on people found the financial damages by\ndividends, and had sold securities for the cost of property and equipment the hundreds of millions of dollars\nail additions and betterments lo its except In 190!» and 1916. Yet so far as staring them in the face right on their\nproperty and equipment, U would now me management is concerned. long be- own tables every time they sat down to\nrequire »30,000,000 per annum of addi- fore there was any regulation of the cat a meal. Then the American people\nHonal net Income to pay Its 0 per cent, railroads, as we now understand It, the knew the grim truth,\ndividends, or the company's slock Pennsylvania Railroad Companv did) Longbefore this nationalawakening\n-would ha\\e been reduced to a 4 per not distribute ail of its net Income In\ncent, dividend, and its bonds would dividends, but judiciously applied a I\nnave had lo carry a much higher rate substantial portion to promoting, help-\nof inte'est because of weaker credit, ing and upbuilding its feeders and con-I\nIt would- have been impossible for it necting lines, to eliminate grade cross-1\n'to have sold its slock on the market, mgs, and for other similar constructionI\nadd that 'would have been lo the de-
4aa4f7501921798b2a502c8fbc2f2b63 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1920.6707649956993 39.623709 -77.41082 ever, that no sueli intent was olllelnlly\nacclaimed, no alius.on, nor even a sug-\ngestion tn Hun effect appeared in the\nJoint resolution of Congress which de-\nclared the existence of a slate of war\nbetween this country and Germany.\nFor myself 1 left no room for doubt\nof the motives which led me to cast\nmy vote in favor of that resolution.\nIt so happened that I made Hie con-\ncluding speech upon the war resolu-\ntion. from my place In the senate, on\nthe night of April 4. I!M7 . Those were\nmy own words at that time:\n•”1 want It known to Hie people of\nmy stale and to the nation that I am\nvoting for war tonight for the main-\ntenance of Just American rights, which\nis tlie first essential to the \ntion of the soul of Hiis republic.\n“I vote for lids Joint resolution to\nmake war, not a war thrust upon us,\nIf I could choose the language of the\nresolution, hut a war declared in re-\nsponse to affronts: a war that will\nat least put a soul Into our American\nlife; a war not for Hie cause of the\nallies of Europe; a war not for France,\nbeautiful as the sentiment may he In\nreviving at least our gratitude to Hie\nFrench people; not precisely a war for\ncivilization, worthy and inspiring ns\nthat would he; but a war that speaks\nfor the majesty of a people properly\ngoverned, who finally are brought to\nthe crucial test where they are re-\nsolved to gel together and wage a con-\nflict for the maintenance
0c7f1c2e9beb42bbd0b0f447292ca617 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.6945205162353 39.745947 -75.546589 Such is the popular and accepted view of\nyachting, but there is another and gloomy\nside to the picture which the writer, who\nis sometimes inclined to growl, can set\nforth clearly in three distinct statements,\nwith an open challenge to contradiction—\nfirst, that to “go and take a sail” in a small\nboat belonging to some one else and to sail\naimlessly about on the open sea is “an awful\nbore;” secondly, that to go as “amateur\ncrew” ou a rowing yacht uudw 60 feet long\nIs not only a bore, but a hardship, and on\nyachts over 60 feet In length it is not cus­\ntomary to have au “amateur crew,” unless\nan occasional and almost always useless\npassenger can he considered such; and last­\nly, that cruising is a lottery absolutely de­\npendent on the weather. Fogs, calms,\nstorms and head winds are quite os usual\nas free winds and sunshine.\nObserve that nothing has been said about\nseasickness, which makes yachting impos­\nsible to so many.\nThere is no place on earth where the sun\ncan strike down ont of the sky and bleach\nand blister and sizzle os it can upon a\nyachts deck. There is no place that can\nbe hotter or more stuffy or more uncom­\n than a yachts cabin on a hot day,\nwhen there is no wind or when the wind is\ndead aft, and when it is rough, and the\nwater is driving across the yacht's deck in\na sheet of white foam, and the crew are all\nhuddled behind the shrouds, into which\nold oilskins have been stuffed to make a\nscreen, and the man at the wheel has life­\nlines running from the main sheet to the\nmain shrouds on either side of him to keep\nhim from being washed overboard, and the\noil bags are hung to windward to keep the\nwater from breaking, and the fire is out in\nthe galley, and the cook lias been scalded\nby the soup stuck jumping out of the\nboiler, and the lutrometer is dropping like\nmad, and the skylight leaks so that every\nwave « hicli comes aboard sends bucketfuls\nof swash down into the cabin, and when\nevery now and then a wave comes aboard\nand pounds down on her deck like a load\nof pig iron, ami those below are shaken\nabout like corn in u popper, and those on\ndock simply bold on and duck their heads\n— when such is the condition of affairs\nyachting would not he considered u pas­\ntime.
029e9c14f728822dc7de42acff101afe THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.17397257103 46.187885 -123.831256 breath by constitutional limitation; and\nWhereas, Death came peacefully to\nthe heterogenous elements composing\nsaid congress, with its cuckoos, and\nlrresponsKble and Incapable Democrat\nio majority, which by Indorsing- Mr\nHavemeyer, destroyed1 the appetite of\nFrance, Germany and Austria foi\nAmerican meats, and Cuba and South\nern American states for American flour\nand idXd paralyze the lumber, coal and\nwheat growing industries of the state\nof Washington:\nResolved, That this house does felicl\ntate the country upon Its delivery from\nDemocratic dominion In congress, with\nthe attendant evils, and upon he\nbrightening prospect of lmmednatb re\nvival In general business affairs of the\ncountry and consequent returning proa.\nperlty, and does congratulate the coun\ntry upon the return to power In both\nbranches of congress of the grand oil\n party; and be it further\nResolved, That this house In recognl\ntlon of thiait patriotism and Intelligence\nupon the part of the American peoplr\nwhich hurled the minions of misruU\nfrom power do Indulge In silent thanks\ngiving for the space of one minute.\nThe house received a concurrent reso\nlution from the Nebraska legislature\nasking Washington and Oregon to co\noperate for the free coinage of silver.\nThe house passed the following bins\nTo authorize the issue of state arms\nand equipments to G. A. R . posts.\nTo issue deficiency certificates foi\n.e x ce s s road work performed.\nThe senate passed Megier's concur\nrent resolution for a Joint committee\nof six to Investigate all the state insti\ntutions once a year during the lnterlrr\nof the legislature.
4116d212f667c277cbea42f6caa1d7cf OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.4589040778792 39.513775 -121.556359 eighty eight c ids a n inle.est tb. reoil from the\neighthdavofPhriary \\. H.Iktiuntilpaid,at tle\nrate ol three per cent per month, anil costs id suit\ntaxed in llie sum of forty nin • dollars and Uni live\ncents together wilh all the r> Ms a, r-rmi.g upon -aid\nwrit, wli rein Thomas .1. laylor is pbnnlilf and John\nJones ia tile defendant, I ..ave levied upon and w ill\nae|| iif tmhlie sale to the li ghesl ludder for cii'h. en\ntlie doth d yof June A. I> 1*57. nt the hour of ;t\noclock P '1 all if the right title and interest of the\nabove named defenna I in and to • lie follow ing des-\ncribed property to w ii: All ol that cer nin piece or par-\ncel of land lying in Hie city oi (lr vine Unite county\nCalifornia, outside of the plol of said town i s laid\ndown on Hie i iwn plot ofllroville now on tile in the\nRecorder's office ol Rutto coimiy California, nun\nmeiicmg at the N tv corner of l.incoln and font\naireuis, anil running thence in u westerly direction\nfifty eight feet, thence right ang os in ii northerly\ndirecii in 120 lent, thence in an easietlv direciion ■ il\ntool, thence i u somberly direc'ion pill feel to Hie\nplace of beginning, Ii getter with all the tenements,\nhcreduiine is and appr r immces Hereunto belong-\ning or in any way appertaining. Aim. in and lo nil\nof thill certain piece or pare- I of land lying and n-ing\nsilmil-u in Hie city, county aim Slate aforesaid, lying\noutside of Ihe town (Hot ol the town of Oroville\nas laid down on llio plol .*f Hie town of i »rn ille now\non lie in he Recorder's office of Itiillecount > Cali-\nfornia, commencing m Hie N F. corner ol l.incoln\nand Front streets, and running in an easterly direc-\ntion 10.1feet, thence at right angles in a nnilberly di-\nr cion 45 le, t , thence in usouther y direction M feel\nlo the place ol beginning, together with nil of the\nteilimilleiils, lieriditinisnts and npperli minces (here-\nunlo belonging or in any wise appertaining.\nThe above sale t)) nite (dace at Ihe court House\ndoor in Or.iville.eontdy and stale iitoresaiil.\nHaled June 9th, I>*s7.
28b740c86a6ed20cdb9b8d57c48c75d6 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1912.9303278372292 43.994599 -72.127742 Ths court reaches the conclusion\nthat the Union Pacific and the South-\nern Pacific system, prior to the Btock\npurchase, were competitors engaged\nin Interstate commerce, acting in-\ndependently aa to a large amount of\nsueh carrying trade, and that since\nthe acquisition of the stock In Ques-\ntion the dominating power of the\nUnlos Pacifle has oppressed competi-\ntion between ths systems and has ef-\nfected a combination in restraint of\ninterstate commerce within the pro-\nhibition of ths act\nIn order to enforce the statutes,\nths court Is required to forbid the do-\ning is the future of acts like those\nwhich are found to have been done In\nviolation thereof, and to enter a de-\ncree which will effectually dissolve\nthe combination found to exist in\nviolation of the statutes.\nThe decree should provide an in-\njunction against the right to vote this\nstock while in the ownership or con-\ntrol of the Union Pacific company, or\naty corporation owned by it or while\nheld by a corporation or persons for\nthe Union Pacific company, and for-\nbid any transfer or disposition there-\nof in such wise as to conceal its con-\ntrol, and should provide an injunc-\ntion against the payment of dividends\nupon such stocks while thus held\nexcept to a receiver to be \nby the court, who shall 6elect and\nhold such dividends until disposed of\nby the decree of the court.\nAs the court below dismissed the\ngovernment's bill. It was unnecessary\ntherefore to consider the disposition\nof the shares of stock acquired by the\nUnion Pacific company, which ac-\nquisition we hold constituted an un-\nlawful combine in vlolaton of the anti-\ntrust art. In order to effectually con-\nclude the operating force of the com-\nbination, such disposition should be\nmade subject to the approval and de-\ncree of the court and any plans for\nths disposition of this stock must be\nsueh as to effectually dissolve the un-\nlawful combination thus created.\nThe court shall proceed upon the\npresentation of any plan to hear the\ngovernment and defendants, and may\nbring In any additional parties whose\npresence may be necessary to a final\ndisposition of the stock in conformity\nto the views herein expressed.\nAny plan or plans shall be present-\ned in ths court within three months\nfrom the receipt of the mandate of\nthis court, failing which, or upon the\nrejection by the court of plans sub-\nmitted within such time, the court\nshall proceed by receivership and\nsale, if necessary, to dispose of such\nstock in such wise as to dissolve such\nunlawful combination.
0b77b2e9c319a8cc3b3f364143430191 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.1630136669203 40.832421 -115.763123 settlements nnd the j >irt of the river he\nclaims, by ban ls of his tribe.\nAn unusual number of casualties in\nvarious parts of the country occurred\nSaturday. Three dwellings were bur 1\niu l'bil ipelphia, by which five livss were\nlost ; one burnt 1 to death and four others\nlost their lives in jumping from the win¬\ndows. At It tleigh, N\\ C., three small\nchildren of Alice Wilson, u colored wo¬\nman, were burned to death in the build¬\ning in which tlio mother had\nshut thetu alone. At Charlott?, in the\nsame State, nti entire block was con¬\nsumed causing it loss of ?73,<KRt. A\nwoman was al*o burned to death iu one\nof the buildings. In New York. James\nMurray, his wife and four children were\nburned to death in the Kithcfleld build¬\ning. Murray was doing patrol duty near\nthe fire, and he rushed to the burning\nstructure, his first thought being to save\nhis wife r.nd children. He was seen to\nenter the house, has not been seen\nsince, and it is thought he was suffocated\nby smoke nud subsequently burned to a\ncinder. Three generations, in the per¬\nsons of Mrs. Munay, her children and\nher mother, lay dead on the station house\nfloor at the same time.\nFifteen |m*«.enRer* were' injured by a\ncollision of trains near Cincinnati,\nby nn open switch. On the same line,\nnear by, some coaches were thrown from\nthe track by a broken rail, and several\nperson* were seriously injured. A col¬\nlision' on the \\V< st shore road caused the\ninstant death of an engineer nut! fire*\nman and the severe injury of several\nothers, Three engines were torn to\npiece*. On the Krie Western several\npassenger car* were ditched injuring a\nnumber of passenger*.\nWhen nenring Montreal, recently, nn\nengineer of a Grand Trunk train saw a\ngreat dog standing oil Ihe track, barking\nfnriuitsly. The engineer blew his whis¬\ntle, yet the hound did not budge, but,\ncrouching low, ws* struck by the loco-
0d65ec7168f4a1e156d6dea028ba79ac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.741095858701 40.063962 -80.720915 While not caring to talk generally for\npublication, he, however, talked Ireely\nabout himself and his plans. From the\ntalk sime points can he taken without de¬\nparting from his request that the main\nportion of his talk sliould be considered\naa private. To the direct question as to\nwhether he bad mado up his mind about\ngoing back to the cabinet) he replied that\nhe bad not. It waa still an open and un-\ndotormlned question. He had a vacation\nuutll October 1. lie should not abjoluto-\nly decide until then. He might go to\nWashington for awhile, but he certainly\nwould not until after the first. He waa In\nabout the same condition of mind upon\nthe subject that he bad been in all sum¬\nmer. He had let important matters drift,\nsimply devoting himsolf to rest, and, ao\nfar as possible, absence from all care.\nMr. Manning's personal friends arc very\nanxious to have him leavo thecabiuet.\nThey that he Is tbe one member of\nthe administration who is popular with\nhis party aud with the business people\nwithout regard to parly; that he has now\nalt the credit he could possibly obtain\nfrom tbe management of the treasury,\nand that his illness gives him the very\nbest possible excuse for retiring. I gave\nMr. Manning a summary of these stories\nand nsked him directly if any question\nrelating to his political future would affect\nbis decision about going back to Washing¬\nton. He replied In the moat decided neg¬\native: 'I have no political ambllion. I\nhave no desire beyond tny quiet life in\nAlbany among my old friends and neigh¬\nbors. I have workod for years for the\nsuccess of my newspaper, and through it\nhrtliu triumph of the Democratic party.\nWith that success my ambition haa bson\nsallslied. Tho support and confidence of\nmy friends here In my old home are more\nto me than anything elae.'
875c44a37df6ade9d18a287f906a8479 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1860.736338766191 41.262128 -95.861391 Site. 4 And be it further enacted, That\nthi d«rk of the Mid circuit and district\ncourt shall k*ep a alsrk s uSc^fot ««ud\ntoutte m said eitj i txewgioB, *»d mil\nthe records and p«per« ju>pertaining or\nrelating to business in aaia courts hcid at\nCovington shal! bo kept tbereia, and he\nsbaii appoint a deputy clerk of saki o«ur»,\nto imfd* in or Ksar »<ud city.\nSxc. 5- And be it further enacted, That\nthe district judge for said court of the\nUnited States for thedistriot uf Kajtadky\nma? m&m sudh raiaa and recolatious for\ntfc. regulation of the times of holding\n•p< uial terms of said court, and the pro­\ncess Stud business thereof, and ths fees and\ncegte k> be taxed tnereis, a* he shall d» e»\nexpdieat, lfaaa iuoQusis&«Bt with any\nexiaUB^- statute, aad levin* and altar th«\n*a.- wben \n:-ic, o. And be it further enacted, That\nadditiotMl -terms of uid circuit and dis­\ntrict eoam of the United States for the\ndins.net of Keatucksy, sh«tll he held twice\neaeb and every year at Paducdfa, Kentucky,\ncoBi!ticnt*ing at suet times as may be fixed\nby the prcaiditii judge of said court, and\nccntitiuiog twelve judicial days each, if\nt&'. siublk business shall require it; and\ns««>nal ti rms of Mid courtf or either of\ntkett, may be held at Mid i'auacah, at\ns«ch utikcr timee as the diatHct judge of\nthe U aiied States for Mid district of Ken-\ntncky may appoint, and proeess may be\nmitaie returnable to My g«M*al or speci­\nal krm of said district or circuit court,\nat said Paducah, at any sacc^-ding term\nthereof, notwithstanding a term of said\ncourts may have been held elsewhere in\nMM Stat*.
194b015d3a7b22b279d39655d9e077d9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.943989039415 39.745947 -75.546589 Biiihinuham, AIa., Doc. 11 .—T in* city is\nrecovering from the bhock which un Hatur-\nday night shook it on no city in tho south\nha« been ttimkeu nine» tho days of tho war.\nTho ozeitoment which iua<1u fm*« white ami\ndrawn gradually gub*id««l from »beer ex­\nhaustion. \\n the houm wore on tho wln-vt«\nbecame lew and low crow ded, and at *J j». in.\n»Sutxhxy they won» more nearly donertod than\nthey UHually are on Sunday morning.\nThu mental strain had been to«*groat, and\npoopl«» had gone home exhausted,\nthoughts of attempting any further attacha\nupon the Jail were abandoned with the mail­\ning of tho troops, who ha«i been ordered here\nby Governor rtoay, although a crowd of\ncurious (Ms>plc, uumbi>ruig several hundred,\n8t«x*l all «lay, forming a line acrow Twenty-\ntirst Hlruot at ttc<Xiiid avenue, where the mili­\ntary was formed. Thu following is a correct\nlist of thu killed and wounded;\nDead—-Maurice B. Throckmorton, J. H .\nMcCoy, A. B. Tarrant, A. 1). Bryant, C. C.\nTate, c'narks Junk ins, ColUirt Smith, Deputy\nSheriff Brennan, of Gadsden , Charles Bailey\nand au unk now negro. This list was obtain«*!\nfrom Uie durèrent undertaken*, and it U\nthought thati there are two or three «>lbtn»\nfor whom have not been obtained.\nTho wounded are Mr. Berkley, John 11.\n( Merritt, Matt Kennedy, J. W . Owen, J. W.\nGilmore, Albert Smith, W . A . Bin!, Mr.\nKruicbwelu, Uwrenn Pitahugh, A.\nSchide and J. W. Montgomery. In addition\nto thoee there aro a large number of |»enoti8\nwho received «light wounds, and are there­\nfore not rcporteil at Uie hospital.\nCoroner Babbitt, went to work to secure a\njury for tho purpoee of Inveetigating the\nriot, the killing and the causea thereof. He\ndecided to secure f«»r tide purpoee Uie very\nbeat men that could bo obtained in tho city—\nmen of detenuination to do their duty fear-\nleasly, nnirageously and eemubly, and men\nwho would represent the people. After a\nlargo nur.ilmr of citizen* had been summoned\nthe following were «elected: D. M . Drennen,\nC. 1erkina, D»uis L. Sohwarz, George Bains,\nJ. W . McConnel and A. K . BheppanL The\nmen were all sw orn In ov»yt the body of A. 1).\nBryant. The investigation will lie conducted\nin a canAful and systematic manner, and\nevery man that can bo fourni who was pres­\nent at the tune the shooting occurred wUl bo\nbununone«! us a witnetw.\nYewtorday Governor S»«y tehYgrapht^l\nSheriff Smith as follows:
afdfbfe23cf36640dadda1a4e2a86bb3 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1921.2671232559615 34.51147 -110.079609 look for me In the hills east of the\ncity, and so he left me.\nWhen the amphitheater had cleared\nI crept stealthily to the top and as\nthe great excavation lay far from the\nplaaa and in an untenanted portion of\nthe great dead city I had little trouble\nin reaching the hills beyond.\nFor two days I waited there for\nKantos Kan, but as he did not come I\nstarted off on foot in a northwesterly\ndirection toward a point where he had\ntold me lay the nearest waterway. My\nonly food consisted of vegetable milk\nkora the plants which gave so boun-\nteously of this priceless fluid.\nThrough two long weeks I wan-\ndered, stumbling through the nights\nguided only by the stars and hiding\nduring the days behind some protrud-\ning rock or among the occasional\n I traversed. Several times I was\nattacked by wild beasts; strange, un -\ncouth monstrosities that leaped upon\nme In the dark, so that I had ever to\ngrasp my longsword in my hand that\nI might be aeady for them. Usually\nmy strange, aewly acquired telepathic\npower warned me In ample time, but\nonce I was down with vicious fangs at I\nmy Jugular and a hairy face pressed\nclose to mine before I knew that 1\nwas even threatened.\nWhat manner of thing was upon me\nI did not know, but that it was large\nand heavy and many-legged I could\nfeel. My hands were at Its throat\nbefore the fangs had a chance to bury\nthemselves in my neck, and slowly 1\nforced the hairy face from rne and\nclosed my fingers, viselike, npon its\nwindpipe.
8e26b1c2b3acb5e6fba8a85c58dae73f VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.1684931189752 43.798358 -73.087921 Smith, the narrator, is to put up his friend\nfor a comparison with believers. Gibbon\nsays "lie died like a philosopher."\nNothing; can be more affected, more evi\ndently contriyed for stage effect ; or, even\non infidel principles, more disgraceful to\nsuch a mind as Hume's, than the man\nner ot his death, according to the account\ngiven by his friend. He knew his end\nwas near. Whether he was to be anni-\nhilated, or be forever happy or forever\nmiserable, was a question involved on his\nown principles, in impenetrable darkness.\nIt' was the tremendous question to be then\ndecided. Reason and decency demanded\nthat it should be seriously contemplated.\ntiow does he wait the approach of eterni\nty ? Said Chesterfield, (an infidel also :)\nWhen one does see death near, let the\nbest or the worst people say what they\nplease, it is a serious consideration."\nDoes Hume u as a serious consider\nation ? He is diverting himself! With\nwhat ? With preparing his Essay in de-\nfence of Suicide, for a new edition : read\ning books of amusement ; and sometimes\nwith a game at cards I He is diverting\nhimself again 1 With what next ? With\ntalking" silly stnff about Charon and his\nboat, and the river Styx I Such are a\nphilosopher's diversions, where common\nsense teaches other people to be, at least,\ngrave and thoughtful. But why divert\nhimselu Why turn ott his mind from\ndeath 1 Why the need of his writings,\nand his cards, and his books of amuse-\nment, and his trifling conversations ?\nWas he afraid to let his mind settle down\nquietly and alone to the contemplation of\nall that was at stake in the crisis before\nhim? Whatever be the explanation of\nhis levity, it was ill-ti m e-
04a9e5f14a51f83639b47ddfd84e31b9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.4972602422629 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Evarts resumed his urgumont\ntlio Erie case to day. IIo contended t!\nthe case presented was mm Hiihtrnnted\nJay Gould of 80,000 shares of stock\nquestion or at least such dealing will\nby Ulm as had completely extracted fr\nIt Its marketable or saleable quality,\nby mentis of false pretenses made by I\nto the Farmers' Loan and Trust Compi\nand insure the original cerllflci\nbelonging to the receivership, and trn\nterreii that marketable anil saleable qi\nity from the stock of Heath ifc Rapline\nIlls own spurious and until then valuel\nand wholly unmarketable stock. Wl\nMr. Evarts concluded, time was given\ntkoCourtto ullow the opposing connse\nfile their briefs. It was announced\nCourt at the conclusion of Mr. Evnrt's\ngumcnt, that tho Board ol Brokers h\nreceived a notice from the Erie Itailr\nCompany that tho now issue of 80,\nshares of stock would be made at tho\npiratlon of80 days. Tills Issuo, If mn\nit is stated, will violate an injunci\nIssued by the United States Circuit Co\nrestraining the Erio Company I:\ning any moro stock during tho pend\nproceedings in tho II. 8 . Circuit Co\nwlilch proceedings. it is believed, enn\nbo closed within 80 days.\nA most exciting secret meeting of\nEpiscopal General Theological Scmiti\nwas held last evening. A pamphlet\nbeen circulated containing a series\ncharge) against Dr. Forbes, who relur\nto the Episcopal Church from tho Hon\nfaith. Tho subject was brought lie\nthe meeting, and it was voted to lay\nmatter on tho table, whereupon Dr. Foi\nin a great state of excitement, tend*\nhis resignation, and at once left the ro\nA sceno of conAislaH and excitement\nlowed. Ex*Judge Reel, one ot tho t\ntees, obtained tho floor, and while npi\ning with great earnestness on the BubJ\n(ell dead with heart disease. Thlsljmi:\nthe meeting to an abrupt el\nJudge Hell occupied a seat on the bei\nin this city, about thirty years ago,\nwas in tho 70th year or his ago at\ntime of his death. Jin was very nn\nnnnt in all matters allecting the Kpfsci\nChurch.
0a983e0e58cff8cb5c4db0a167b1a73c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1900.815068461441 41.004121 -76.453816 It was a decided step for pood, hon-\nest, clean rovernment, nnd In Justice\nto the members of the last legislature\nit must be s,i!d that even Quay was Im-\npotent In this matter. Kven he could\nnot cause iis defeat, nnd the amend-\nment was carried by both hnuaes,\nQuay, however, had another card up\nhis sleeve the Unnve who represents\nthe Quay machine in the governor's\nchair, and nlthoiifili Governor Stone\nhad absolutely no prerogatives In the\npremises than any other qualified elec-\ntor In the state yet without power of\nlaw. he took upon hlnisolf the respon-\nsibility of vetoing tho nmendment.\nThis nronsod the friends of good gov-\nernment throughout the state, and tho\nmatter was promptly tnlcen Into rourt,\nwhere the question was ably argued,\nand the (luny machine wns Informed by\nthe court that the constitution mint\nbe obeyed, and that Governor Stone\nhad nothing to do with the matter.\nKven then the Quay machine did not\ngive up the struggle to prevent the\nennctment of the amendment. In their\nefforts to prevent any legislation which\nwould Inure to a fair vote ami nn \nest count they stopped at nothing. One\nother of their creatures, the secretary\nof the commonwealth, Is Instructed, by\ntho article quoted above, to cause tho\naame to be advertised. The Quay ma\nchine seized upon tho alleged omission\nof the legislature to provide funds\nwith which to pay for the advertising\nof the amendment, nnd the obedient\nFecretnry of the commonwealth re\nfused to take any official action In the\nmatter. We thus have the delightful\nscene of one Quaylte arrogatlngto him\nself too much power and another Quay\nHe refusing to use the power confer\nred upon him by the constitution.\nAs soon as Secretary Griest made\nknown his decision, refusing to adver\ntise the amendment, the friends ot\nan honest administration of the laws.\nand of a true Interpretation of the con\nstltution, camo to Its rescue, and the\nmatter was again taken Into court, and\nonce more the Quay machine was beat\nen, and as a result, notwithstanding\nthe mnchlnnttons of the Quay machine\nthe voters of this state will have an op-\nportunity of voting for or against the\namendment on the 6th of November,
153a052bde18e5ba8098a7274bd0d482 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.7712328450025 31.960991 -90.983994 ticles have in common with snapping tur­\ntles. If she put in her finger to pull up the\nsides, it was instantly caught as in a trap; if\nshe succeeded in getting one side straight,\nthe other went down; the heel was obstinate\n—- the shoe, in fact, was collapsed, and\nsolved not to be worn. She was determin­\ned; however, not to be conquered, and if\nyou had seen how earnest she was, you\nwould have said with the Scotsman, that it\nwas a “gude sight for sair een.\nwas flushed and her eyes were sparkling\nwith the exertion; she was biting he under\nlip, and every moment shaking her head\nand stamping he foot with the prettiest sav.\nageness imaginable. As for me, I was as\nmuch adsorbed in the transaction as \nI bent down, unconsciously held my breath,\nand said “ah-h” when she did. My fingers\nwere hovering about the shoe and itchiug to\nassist her, while now and then I ejaculated\nshort sentences of advice or encouragement.\nBut the very duce was in the shoe, and\nthe widow at last lost all patience; she flung\nit on the ground, and at the same time\nstruck me in the eye with her elbow. This\naroused us to a sense of the absurdity of our\nsituation, and we laughed at the eagerness\nwe had both exhibited over so trifling an at-\nfair;—we laughed, but my right eye would\nnot join in our merriment, but piped a little\nlachrymose overture on its own account.\n“Was any thing ever so provoking?” she\nexclaimed, becoming quite vexed; “I shall
445b8e31e81c12c89a3d6667f391e77f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.9166666350436 44.939157 -123.033121 p. m . of said day, for tho purposo of\nvoting for tho following city ofllcors,\nfor tho terms specified below:\nFor ono Mayor, for tho term of two\nyears, to succeed F. W. Waters.\nFor ono Recorder, for the term of two\nyears, to succeed N. J. Judah.\nFor ono Marshal, for tho term of\ntwo years, to succeod D. W. Gibson.\nFor ono Treasurer, for tho term of\ntwo years, to succeed John Moir.\nFor ono Aldorman, for tho term of\ntwo years, from tho First Ward of said\ncity, to succeod E. P . Walker,\nFor ono Alderman, fcr tho term of\ntwo years, from tho Second Ward of\nsaid city, to succeed Itusscll Catlin.\nFor ono Aldorman, for tho term of\ntwo years, from tho Third Ward of\nsaid city, succeed Thomas Sims.\nFor ono Aldorman, for tho term of\ntwo years, from tho Fourth Ward of\nsaid city, to succeed W. O. ITubbard.\nFor ono Alderman, for tho term of\ntwo years, from tho Fifth Ward of\nsaid city, to succeed J. W. Young.\nFor one Alderman, for tho term of\ntwo years, from tho Sixth Ward of\nsaid city, to succeod Frank Smith.\nFor one Alderman, for tho terra of\ntwo years, from tho Seventh Ward of\nsaid city, to succeed Ieo W. Acheson.\nTho polling places for said election\nshall bo as follows:\nFirst Ward At E. P. Walker's barn.\nUnion street, between High nnd Church\nSecond Ward At tho Polico Court\nroom in tho City Hall.\nThird Word At Simpson's llvorv\nstable, High street, between Court and\nStato streets.
0519a2b44600d836ed00732f57907572 THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1905.3027396943176 39.739154 -104.984703 The stately creature first attracted\nattention as It beat Imperceptibly\nagainst the wind from the distant\nhorizon, traveling In great circles to-\nward the ship that It always had In\nview, taya the Cornblll. Who can\ngauge the sight of an albatross? The\neyes can be focused at will to pene-\ntrate Incredible ranges, and a frag-\nment of food cast upon the waters will\nrapidly allure It from distances far be-\nyond the powers of human sight. To\nsee the enormous bird thus circle\nround the ship, with wings fully ex-\npanded. though well-nigh motionless.\nIs certainly one of the wonders of na-\nture. The only muscular action vis-\nible Is a slight tremor at the extreme\npoints of the wings, a vibration so\nrapid that It cannot be detected with-\nout the most careful observation.\nThere is no suggestion of force em-\nployed In the flight, but simply that\nmovement which sailors understand\nby the word cant—a tilling o! the\nbody out of the plane—which serves to\nlive both power and direction In\nspace. In very calm weather there Is\na heavy flapping of the wings; In\nratio, however, as the force of the\nwind Increases, so muscular action\n until a gale finds the alba-\ntross poised above the ship In midair\nwith an easy grace which la Inelpllc-\nable- Lying upon my back on the\nwheelbox, I bars with glasses riveted\nthe eyes of such a bird as It hovered\nsteadily above the mast of the ship.\nThe green Irldes showed that curious\nexpansion and contraction which Is\nthe special character of bird sight. Ex-\ncept for a faint tremor, the wings\nmoved not from the horizontal posi-\ntion; the feet were tucked away be-\nneath tbs tail, and an expression of\ngentle confidence gave the impression\nof a friendly, sociable nature.\nDim Ideas of Coleridge sod "The\nAncient Mariner” floated through my\nmind as I gazed in silence; there was\nan easy shot and the rifle was close\nat hand, but the murderous act was\nnot committed. The same albatross\naccompanied us tor days; however the\nwind might rage or the ship toss at\nthe mercy of the waves, It remained\nIn close attendance, conveying a sense\nof perfect rest, though hardly. If ever,\nstill. In this lies the great secret of\nIts attraction, and the evolutions In\napace are followed by the traveler\nwith an Interest that never dlea
1edddc7855f10650ff246ba4a7362a15 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1879.250684899797 43.624497 -72.518794 Hiimnpr (. 'Rtpi'iitcr, aul lUeciitxr ot tliouiit\nulll aml li'Mamunl of Iroim II. Urpnntnr,\nliotli lato nf islil Clitnttr, dccMied, m tlio\nTriiHlni nf nM l)6ffiiilnti\nHald Hiilt liolnh' riuly diiloroil liimld Court At\ntlin lant nioulloiioil Torm .tlicronf. ilio I'l nl n- tll-\nfinii tn !iroemilo tho miiio liyllanryA\nU'c.Kiu. liU AltornesM. and (lodrk'H fj. l'leluu.\nerapprtrml for nid 'I'rutieo, and aliofor\nJullimJ. Jty aiiiI l.eoimrd II. Ilrnwn. who\nentcr h rlAliinntnnf llio fuiuU ln tlio liAiidn\nof Hald 'J'niktoo, nd ' li.prncoodlngH m liad\ntlut tlm fiilt Ik roiillih.'Ml Iu tlio 'i'l iin of HAId\nCourt l'OKiui nnd helJ on llio l irfct 'l'uoi.lj'\nof Docoinbcr A. I). IH7S .\nAt Mhlcli Ui nifiiiliniinil Torm llio prtli\ncnnio a AforonAlil aml littMuaa It U tliowu tn\nHald (Muil tlul no ktvIoii of rald ttll \nIiqoii majo upon nald tlofoiidaiit. aml llul llio\nbaiil Dofmidant U wlilnmt lldit Slaio, no that\npcrHniial rorvlco nf tho amn roiild not ho\ninado upon lilm, lt wm nnkrol hy cald Court\ntliat ho rccolrc notlro of tho iioirJciicy oI'IIiIh\nnuit by tho puhlirallnii vt tlio hiibnlAtico nf\nsaid wrlt h nforfHjld, for throo uoiiicutlvo\nwookH Iu tho Swiiit onur. Aui:, a iionfpa.er\nprlutod nt Wnodhtdck, ln llm County of Wliui -n o- r,\ntlio lant piilillcallon tn h at Utht tivonty\ndajH prolnu to tlio Totm nf nald Couniy\nContt noxt ln bo hold at wld Woodntocl;, ou\ntliofourlhTnoMlaynf May, A. 1 . 1H7U, Rinl\ntlmt tlio tald Dofeii'htil lliorcln bo notifled to\nappoar aud niiHWor to taldHiilt.\nThrrtforr, you, Siimnor C. Carponlor aro\nhoroby notltlod lo appoar at tho naldlast iuoii -tloii c- d
2211082d821dc69727fa6c5b0e6299e3 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.7136985984273 32.408477 -91.186777 We feel somewhat like questioning\nthe titleof this lesson. It can be used\nas a temperance lesson no doubt, but\nto attribute Ben-hadad's defeat entire-\nly to drunkenness is not quite true to\nthe facts. Jehovah's Jealousy of his\nname (v. 13) and the enemies' con-\ntempt for Jehovah (vv. 23, 28) are the\nfundamental causes of the defeat of\nthe Syrians though, of course, drunk-\nenness, as an exhibition of self-indulg-\nence and therefore of weakness, was\na natural accompaniment of that con-\ntempt for God.\nI. Ahab's Predicament, vv. 10-12 . a\nThe Syrian king's contemptuous treat- a\nment of Ahab (vv. 1-7) at last became v\nso great that in sheer desperation the t\npeople refused to listen to his demands t\n(v. P). His forces far overwhelmed t\nthe little army of Israel (vv. 1, 10, c\n27), but one on Ahab's side who d\nhad not yet withdrawn his mercy from f\nIsrael and with whom Ben-hadad could\nnot cope (v. 13; Rom. 8:31; Phil. i\n4:13). Ben-hadad was the. most pow- d\nerful monarch of his time of those na-\ntions bordering upon the Mediter-\nranean. The march of hie army was\nlike "a tempest of hail, an overwhelm-\ning scourge" with unrestrained power.\nThe effect was worse than the plagues\nof Egypt, But Ben-hadad was a drunk-\nard, a habitual one (vv. 12-16).\nSamaria was rich and this king want-\ned it even as intemperance always\nlusts after the wealth of youth and\nthe gold of a nation (vv. 3, 12). Drink\nalways makes a fool of its victim and\ndooms to ultimate defeat all who yield\nto its power (ch. 16:9; II Sam. 13:28;\nProv. 31:4, 5; Luke 21:34; Eph.\n5:18).
0421dfe95eea50c8bbbe97c02cee9847 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1894.6095890093861 37.305884 -89.518148 cloth and quickly wiped off, particu-\nlarly from all corners and crevices.\nDark mahogany, which is now so\nfashionable, is partV nlarlv sensitive to\nsoap and water, arising from the fact\nthat the coloring matter which operates\nto darken the wood through the action\nof light is an acid, so that when the\nalkali of the water is permitted to re-\nmain upon it it will, in reaching the\nacid, for which it has affinity, destroy\nthe polished surface.\nRaw linseed oil and spirits of turpen-\ntine, in the proportions of two-thir -\noil and one of turpentine, is the model\nfurniture reviver. It is what profes-\nsionals re'y on; as a rule they use ne\nother. The woodwork should be first\ncarefully wiped off with a dry, soft\ncloth, and the dust thoroughly removed\nfrom corners and carvings. The best\n'article to accomplish this is a large\npaint brush, usually called a painter's\nduster. The may thet be applied\nwith a smaller brush, wiping off with\na soft cloth and rubbing thoroughly\ndry. It will be found that dents and\nscratches lose their prominence under\nthis treatment: should this meth.xl be\npursued regularly there will lie no\ndifficulty experienced in having furni-\nture retain a fresh appearance.\nWhen a piece of furniture is very\nbadly defaced and dented it should be\nintrusted to some good repairer, who\nmay sometimes find it necessary to\nscrape off the old finish entirely, in\norder to make a satisfactory piece of\nwork. When the wood is slightly\ndented one may sometimes overcome\ntte trouble by steaming the indenta-\ntion with a hot iron and a wet cloth,\nafterward making a small pad of mus-\nlin and rubbing over the surface soma\nthin shellac, just adding a touch of oil\nto make the work easier. Scratches\nmay be treated in the same way.\nLadies' Hjine Journal.
05fbbf2bee19a5dbf4e88fc8f1100d3d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.7356164066464 40.063962 -80.720915 iieports ol the great monetary convu\nsion in New York, and of symp&thet\nJlsttirbancea in many parts of tho com\ntry, continue to fill our news column\nJay by day, to the exclusion oi oth(\nkinds of intelligence. There is no que\nlion that the monetary machine)\nthroughout the country is profound!\nshaken. When New York, the financi\ncenter, is conrulaed as it has now been ii\na week, it is impossible that monied insl\ntutions in all the cities should not be t\nfated. The refusal of Now York bank\nin which banks in every part of the con:\ntry keep balances, to pay currency on tl]\ndrafts of their country correspondcn\nm»kes those drafts temporarily useless f(\nall business purposes, in other citie\nand thus at once embarrasses trade an\ncommerce in tho South and West yer\nseriously. Tho unreasoning fears t\ndepositors bare led them, as it aiway\nin time of aoDrehensiou, to drav\nout their and have con:\npelled tbe banks in most ot the large citi<\nto resort to a partial susperiaion to prote<\nthemselves and to prevent a total c:\nhaustion and locking up of their currenc\nresources. But in New York, from whic\nmonetary all airs in all parts of the countr\ntake their color, there seems to be a bette\nleeling. Failures have ceased and th\nenergetic measures adopted to restoi\nconfidence and relieve the stringency ar\nbeginning to have their effect. Thing\nlook worse in some oilier citics than i\nNew York, because the events of the 1*\ntew days in New York are just takin\netlect in other places. It the improvemcr\ngoes on in New York, as there is rcaso\nnow to hope it will, the country will soo\nrespond to the favorable change; and th\npressure that now threatens to produc\na general stagnation in business will b\nremoved and all will go forward again a\nusual.
8bde6d0b3f05e9374357988966ef53c7 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.717213083131 31.960991 -90.983994 THESE Lozenges haVe now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time »hey have\ngained for themselves a popularly unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhaa their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be. called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense and eveu death, without their\nbeing suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\nor two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasan' to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, .of the safety with which\nthey tnav be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms;of\nthe fhipotency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
3dfd87e6e5c32933072887a8446ff05b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.5931506532218 44.939157 -123.033121 ACCUSED THERE ARE TEN ERRORS TO THE DISADVANTAGE OF\nSOCIETV. .It Is propor that tho rulos of tho gamo as established by law\nwhould bo Htrlclly followed, but no appeal on technical groundj should\nlie allowed, except upon tho cortlfluato of tho trial Judgo, or of tho\nJudge of hoiiio higher court, that In his Judgmont, as tho rosult of tho\norror, thoro has boon a mlscnrrlago of Justice and In nuch cases tho\nfltuto Hho'uld bo grantod all privileges of appeal which aro onjoyed by\ntho uoouaul. Undor our prnetlco a prisoner may bo conclusively proved\nKUllty of orlmo by evidence legally and morally compotont, and yet got\ni now trial by roaHon of orror lir tho trial Judge In admitting additional\nuvtdouoo not according to tho ruloH of procedure Or a now trial may bo\nKol ou hoiiio orror In tho charge to tho Jury, and In dozotiB of othor caais\nin which no mourn right or tho acusod huu boon lost or violated.\nIn all criminal trials tho ono osiontlal point at Usuo Is 'DID THE\nACCUSED COMMIT THE CRIME OF WHICH HE IS CHARGED?" IT\nIS THE DUTV OFTIIE.H'RYTO PASS UPON THAT QUESTION, AND\nWHEN IT HAS DONE HO IT SHOULD BE REGARDED AS SETTLED,\nUYCEIT IN THE RARE CASKS WHEN THE INJUSTICE IS OBVIOUS.\nNo appeal nhould bo allowod oxcopt on an Issue dlroctl Involving guilt\nor Innoconco, a claim that no legal ovldonce BUlllclont to convxlct had\nboon lntroducod, or tho quoton of fact as to whothor. any crlmo lma\nboon ooiumlttod at all. And oxcopt upon a Judicial certlllouto of nroli-ubl- o\neuuHo undor ono or thoso oategorlo the vordlot of tho Jury Bhould\nho Until. Soolaty luu hoiiio rights, and thoy should bo rospootod. Tno\npronumptlon of Innononco doos not axlst after a vordlot or conviction by\nsi Jury Thoro Is thou proaumptlon or guilt.
5e8a05f573774c2ed73075794dea401a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2671232559615 39.745947 -75.546589 There Is now being arranged a ,\ncomprehensive program of papers and “\ndiscussions covering the entire field\nof school hygiene. There will be\nscientific exhibits, representing the\nbest that is being done In school hy­\ngiene, as well as commercial ex­\nhibits of practical and educatlpnal\nvalue to school people. Nor will the\nentertainment of the delegates In any\nway be a minor feature. Plans arc j\nbeing made for a series of social ;\nevents, Including receptions and a I\ngrand ball, a pageant in the park,\nand excursion trips to the great in­\ndustrial plants of Buffalo, a* well n ■\nto the wonders of Niagara Falls, and\nthe Rapids. Buffalo itself has jU.it ,\ntaken up a collection of $40,000 for i\nthe purpose of covering the expens« |\nof the Congress.\nDelegates will from all the j\nleading nations, from every college j\nand university of note in this conn- |\ntry, and from various other edtica- i\ntional, scientific, medical and hygi- !\nenlc institutions and organizations i\nThe Congress Is further open to all ;\npersons Interested In school hygiene.\nMembership may be secured on the\npayment of a five dollar fee. Appli- ■\ncations should be sent to Dr. Thomas I\nA. Stcrey, College of the City of New |\nYork, New York City.\nIt Is greatly desired to decure a !\nlarge membership of the Congress, |\nand to this end, may we not count :\nupon you In spreading the news of\nthe Congress and in calling atten­\ntion to the benefits following the\npresence of all those actively engag­\ned in promoting the welfare of the
0c34407540a1b4c99b49a1c37a512401 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.7876712011669 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Merris Tcylor presented the as­\nsessment for telegraph poles in this city,\namounting to $1,594, and cu his motion\nit was confirmed, and the City Auditor\ninstructed to collect it.\nMr. Merris Taylor also offered a reso­\nlution, which was adopted, instructing\nthe Mayor to request tie resident Judge\nto appoint a commission to condemn the\nland of John CaBsidy on Maple street,\nthat of M. T. Poole on Franklin street,\nand John Murrays grounds on Wswa-\nsett street for park purposes.\nThe following proposals were then\nread for grading Franklin street from\nFront to Fourth streets, and excavating\nabout 1,600 cubic yaid« of dirt: William\nOMeara, 20 cents per cubic yard; James\nMcLaughlin, 18% cents; Patrick Car-\nberry, 20 cents; James T. McBride, 19\ncents; Martin Keogh, 23% cents.\n the evening the following\nbills were passed and orders drawn:\nEvery Evening Publishing Company,\n$117 61; James & Webb Printing aud\nStationery Company, $73 25; George A.\nMaxwell, $10; The Star Publishing\nCompany, $13.34; S. 8 Adams, $10;\nGeorge W. Vernon & Sods, $88.86; The\nMorning News Publishing Company,\n$3 74; Harry O'Neill, $3.50; T Fugan,\n$2 50; Southern Electric Light Co. ,$55,27;\nP., W. Äs B. Railroad Company, 67\ncents; Maurice Moran, $63 75; Davis &\nSimmons, $902 21; F. McKeown, $85;\nH McDowell. $29; James Stidham,$29;\nDavis & Brother, $227 32; James Me-\nKendrick, $410.12; Joseph McCloskey,\n$19; Oswald Untz, $6.75; Martin Keogh,\nJr. , $3610; James Corrigan, $36 25;\nJames H. Beggs & Co., $18.90; Michael\nRiley, $163; Edwin Wilson, $177.50;\nHugh Patton, $70 50; Marlin Keugb,\nJr.,
4ad7c77345135e40cd8542423c360c85 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1914.042465721715 34.51147 -110.079609 10 to 60 higher than a month ago,\nn d finished cattle are now sell-\nLjon a basis that impells com-\nmission men to advise feeders,\nare favorably situated with\naspect to corn and hogs, to hold\ntheir cattle unless they are well\nfinished. At the same time,\npackers claim the cattle are cost-\ning so much that adequate re-\nturns cannot be secured from the\nsale of meat, and they say prices\nwill|do well to remain as good\nas they are. Some commission\nmen do not look for any further\nadvances till after first of Feb-\nruary. and some of them place\nthe starting point for a rise as\nlate as March Ist. Receipts at\nthe combined markets are lar-\nger than a year ago same days\nin and the dealers say\na good many cattle will be turn-\ned loose this month, though\nKansas Citys territory will be\nthe first to show up short of last\nyear. Prime heavy steers would\ngo above $9, but the best here\nthis week stopped at $8.85, year-\nlings at $9.10, middle class na-\ntive steers $7.60 to 8.40, meal\nfed steers in native steers in na-\ntive division $7.20 to 7.50, quar-\nantine oil mill steers $6.75 to\nto 7.90. western pulp fed steers\nworth $7.25 to 8.55, native cows\nup to 7.25, bulls largely at $5.75\nto 7, veal calves up to $ll.OO\nStockers and feeders are selling\nbetter this week, most sales at\n$6.25 to 7.25, a few cattle at $7.\n50 and one or two car lots of
6157834cf182d2c3a8f4f038d042381e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.1794520230847 39.261561 -121.016059 Business during the past week has appeared\nflgther dull on our main streets. But we notice\nthat on Saturday nights and Sundays our\nstreets have their usual lively appearance.\nA substantial church is about to be erected\nat Silver City for the Methodist persuasion; a\nlot has been donated for the purpose and one\nthousand dollars subscribed to it. A school\nhouse is also in the course of erection, and a\nHook and Ladder Company organized lately.\nSeveral new rich leads have been discovered\nin the Devils Gate District during the past\nweek. The Grattan Company, on a lead lately\ndiscovered, have a ledge five feet in width, from\nwhich thev are obtaining very fine rock. An\nItalian company lately discovered a ledge of\ngreat richness, which has created quite an ex-\ncitement in mining circles.\n$ Mr. W. Aldrige has commenced running an\nexpress from Carson and Virginia cities to\n Lake Valley.\nA most complete machine for separating the\namalgamated metals from the sands has re-\ncently been invented by Mr. Almarin B. Paul,\nSuperintendent of the Washoe company s\nworks. The material is first received on a sieve\nwhich separates all the larger pieces, the small-\ner falling through, move on and into a hollow\ncolumn, having within its circle a stirring ar-\nrangement that revolves with great rapidity; all\nthe quicksilver and metals are concentrated and\nprecipitated to the bottom and beyond, further\naction; the separated sands move on into an-\nother opening; and are discharged and allowed\nto run off. This machine will pan out in one\nhours time, an amount of dirt that would take\ntwo men a day to do. This is regarded by all\nwho have seen it work as a labor-saving ma-\nchine truly, and valuable to the miner. A pat-\nent has been applied for.
053da2551383ee315d189a489525ec1d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.9959016077212 42.217817 -85.891125 Colonel Money proposes to request the\ncaptain general to provide hiin with an\nescort and a ilag of truce so that he\ncan go Into the heart of the territory\noccupied by the insurgents with a view\nof finding out what is going on. Col-\nonel Money says that he is determined\nto make as lengthy a Journey into the\ninterior of Cuba as his time will permit,\nand it is understood that he will en-\ndeavor to communicate with the insur-\ngents, whether Captain General Wey-\nler grants his permission or not. Col-\nonel Money realizes that it will be a\nrisky thing for him to proceed on his\nown account If a permit is refused him.\nHowever, he Is so anxious to have trust-\nworthy Information that he vill take\nthe chances, even if he finds himself\n on locked up in prison.\nWants to Know What lie's Dolus:.\nIt is the intention to state frankly to\nthe captain general that he visits the\nisland because it is impossible to pro-\ncure from President Cleveland or Sec-\nretary Olney any official information\nregarding Cuba, and as a member of\ncongress and of the house committee\non foreign affairs he wishes to know\nwhat he is doing before he casts a vote\nfor or against any one of the several\nresolutions pending. Colonel Money\nwas an officer In the Confederate army\nduring the war under General Forrest,\nand his four years service in the field\nwhetted his interest in military opera-\ntions. He thinks his visit will at least\nenable him to learn more than he could\nby depending on the state department\nfor information.
3a4ceaf9b330026400ff30bc3be203b0 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.3136985984272 41.004121 -76.453816 Our first place of amusement to\nvisit was a cobbler shop, the pro-\nprietor of which was a bachelor of\nabout sixty summers. At once we\nbegan discussing the possibility of\nextracting sunshine from a cucum-\nber. Like a flash he was on his\nfeet, his eyes bulging out like tea\ncups, and was ready for trouble.\nBy falling in with his views we\nsoon had him pacified and again at\nwork. The main incident in our\nvisit to the cobbler shop came when\none of the boys put a handful of\nred pepper on the stove. Immedi-\nately the cotbler began a fit of\nsneezing, and at the same time, if\nnot sooner, we took a straight line\nfor the door, being met as we were\npassing out by a fourteen inch file,\nwhich luckily injured none of the\nmembers of our trio.\nOr.r next one to visit was an "old\nmaid," the proprietor of a small\nstore. In order to make a good im\npression each of us bought a\npenny's worth of candy. We then\nasked to see her line of clav pipes,\nAfter very carefully examining\nthem we ' accidentally on pur-\npose," all at the same time,\nleft them fall to the floor where\nthey broke into a thousand pieces.\nThen the storm broke for certain.\nFrom behind the counter came a\nchoice selection of Knglish includ-\ning words the use of which would\nnot be sanctioned by a Sunday\nschool teacher. In her mind she\nthought of nothing else but that\nthe breaking of three pipes, having\na total value of that many cents,\nrendered her a bankrupt : while in\nstead of doing the latter it helped\nher on her way as a lunatic.\nWe next visited two "maidens,"\nthe proprietors of a millinery store.\nWe talked to them for a few minutes\nthen went outside as if leaving for\nhome. We, instead, put a "tick\ntack," an apparatus for making\nnoise, on the window. When we\nbegan operating it by means of a\nrosined string the pair of "old\nmaids" were so frightened that\nthey began to run and jump as if\nrun by electricity. One of them\nrushed to the door and exclaimed :\nI know what you're doing you're\ntaking the shutters off of the house\nThis incident was the climax of our\nnight's experiences.
3be976e8321cd2ea8ed5406076ef65ee THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.5520547628107 39.261561 -121.016059 W« have noticed statements in a number or\nexchanged, in regard to the proceedings of the\nNevada Conntj Convention, which are alto-\ngether untrue. The S. F . Herald of Saturday,\nin speaking of matter* and thing* in general,\neay* that a portion of the delegate* - aeceded,\nand the Butte Record §ay* that the Douglas del-\negate* retired leaving the Leeomptonite* in\npossession of the ball. Neither of these state-\nment* are true. No portion of the delegate*\nseceded previous to the adjournment, and the\nDouglas men remained in the room until they\nbad completed their business; and in fact, we\nbelieve they were the last that did leave. The\nfacts are dimply these : When the Chairman be-\ncame satisfied that be could not preserve order,\nhe put the motion to adjourn tine die, which\nseemed to be responded to unanimously, and\ndeclared the Convention adjourned. The two\nparties bad during the day occupied opposite\ncorners of the room, and they generally retain-\ned their places after the adjournment, notwith-\nstanding the most of the lights were extin-\nguished. About five minutes after the adjourn-\nment. the Douglas men organized by electing\nS. S . Fenn Chairman, and very shortly after\nHenry Meredith was elected Chairman by the\nother wing, each body of delegatee remaining\nin their owd corner. Some five or six delegates\ntook no part in the proceedings of either organ-\n and it is quite certain that neither had\na majority of nil the delegates elected. A cor-\nrespondent of the Union, writing from Grass\nValley, who signs himself “A. L.” says that the\nSecretary refused to declare the result of the\nvote on Caldwell and Callahan. Now it may\nnever have occurred to 'A. L .” that it was not\nthe duty of tho Secretary to declare the result\nof the ballot; that duty devolved on the Chair-\nman. The Secretary did hand his tally list to\nthe Chairman, and said he believed it was cor-\nrect, but was not certain, because a number ot\ndelegates, of both parties, were standing around\nhim and talking while the roll was being called.\nThe Chairman —the same gentleman who was\nafterwards nominated for County Judge by the\nLecompton wing—it seems was of the opinion\nthat a mistake had been made, and ordered an-\nother ballot to be taken. It was while this\nnext ballot was being taken, that a motion was\nmade on one side of the house and seconded on\nthe other, to adjourn tine die. There was a gen-\neral understanding among nearly all the dele-\ngates that tho regular Convention should be\nbroken up, and if there was any secession, it\nwas a scoession of the whole body of drlegatee.\nIn the subsequent organizations, neither party\nhad the advantage so far as regularity is con-\ncerned.
1a041a7a9968ce45138f98d490b0bd74 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.6999999682903 40.063962 -80.720915 There was a continuation of appar\nently urgent liquidation on the stoc]\nexchange this morning caused by cov\nerinff of short stock, which sptedll:\nwiped out the receoveries of Saturday\nand carried prices sharply below th\nlowest level of last Friday for all stan\nHnrrf aiAfflri Ihit nhp nrMcura of llnuid\natlon seeemed to be relieved by noon\nand there was a disposition to plcl\nmock* quietly, and to accord 'suppor\nto the weak spotw, notably St. PauL Thi\ndealing In odd lots of some of the stan\ndard dividend payers also became null\na feature. indicating- a suppjy of mon\ney for investment, notwithstanding thi\nstiffness of the local call money mar\nket. Weakness in- Home of the Indus\ntrial specialties causad the market ti\nease off again before the close, but las\nprices of the were in man;\ncases at sharp recoveries from the low\nest. NeverthcOis®, marked losses re\nsuited from the day's trading;, owini\nto the severity of the pressure early li\nthe day. There was continued appre\nhenslon over the outlook for money, bu\nthe government crop report and" th\nsnow storms in the west-were aiao ma\nterial factors. The crop report, thoug!\nbearish on the corn crop, as a who!\nshowed sharp deterioration for Kan\nsis, Nebraska and Iowa. This, couplet\nwith snow storms in the corn belt, wa\nvery clearly indicated In the weaknes\nof Rock Island, Burlington and Unloi\nPacific. There was no actual develop\nment to account for a decline of appre\nhenslon over the money market outlook\nand1 how far this feeling: was connects\nwith a reported- conference of ieadim\nbankers is not certain-.
115fc9800240c6ea9f69178377ba08b9 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.5986301052765 41.020015 -92.411296 we invite candid, unbiased, but yet\nrigorous judgment. Here is a full\nextract from his speech at Newton,\nla., on the evening of June 20th last:\n"It will be seen that this is true by\nreference to the law. I5y the act of\nJan. 11, 1S7.">, page 17, report of the\ntreasurer for ls7(i, the limit to the\nvolume of national bank currency\nwas repealed, and the volume left to\nbe determined by the wants of the\ncountry. The law of 1871 authorizes\nthe banks to withdraw their currency\nin whole or in part; and by the act\nknown as the resumption act they\nhave the authority to inflate the cur­\nrency to any amount they please, an\nunlimited amount. Now that is a\ndangerous power. In theory we will\nat reject it. This system would\nbe rejected by any business man. We\nhave had it in vogue since 1871. We\nhave had it in operation under a gen­\neral banking law. We have had it\ninee the passage of the law in 1874\ndown to the present time so far as\naffecting the volume of currency is\nconcerned. On page 04! of the treas­\nurer's report for 1S77 we find that on\nthe isth of December Congress passed\na law to regulate this contraction of\nthe currency. The gentleman then\nread from said report showing the\nimiount of contraction of currency for\nthe years '71, '72, '7;i, '71, '75, '70, as\nfollows: 'Destruction of the currency\nfor the year 1871, $21,:? H,017;\n$10,211,720; 187;{, $M,4:M,171; 1874,\n$4i»,!•:«»,G41; 1875, $l:l7,ti'.l7,0iK>; 1870,\n10,0(58.'
54e3f8d07bfd3c3a5b61c512480ba0ec EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.1707649956993 39.745947 -75.546589 “I thought,” says Miss Sweet, “that\nI had learned that piece up and down,\nbackward and forward, Inside and out,\nbut on the great day Itself, when the\nband ceased playing and an awful\nhush felt upon the crowd and every\nface was turned expectantly up to\nmine, It was different I opened my\nmouth—and pauaed. The literary lady\ncreaked forward in her chair and whis­\npered loudly, Soldiers of Lombard'—\n“That whisper went through me like\na knife, but left me still speechless. I\nset my teeth, stepped decisively for\nward and pushed the flag Into the\nhands of the nearest soldier. Then I\nspoke. Every word of that apeecb had\nleft me. but I knew what It meant.\n“ Soldiers of Lombard. I said In a\ndesperate voice that must have been\n to the utmost confines of the\ncrowd, heres your flag! Don't get It\ndirty! Don't tear It! And be aura to\nbring It back!*\n“A about rose from that crowd auch\nas no orator before or aince baa ever\nevoked from a crowd In those parts.\nThe first thing I knew I was riding on\nthe Shoulders of two soldiers, while\nthe whole company pressed about me,\nwith waving hats, and my father was\nleaning over toward me from the back\nof his big horse and colling me bis\n'own original girl,' while the tears\nrolled down bla cheeks with laughter.\n“As long as I lived In the village of\nLombard I never dared to meet square­\nly the vengeful eyes of the literary lady\nwho had written that presentation\nspeech.” —St. Louis Republic.
3411ef004c7f903787529775b68599a3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.7767122970574 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described Real\nAll those three certain lots, pieces\nparcels of land situate in Elsmere, Chris­\ntiana Hundred. New Castle county and\nState of Delaware, and more particularly\nbounded and described an follows, to-wit;—\nTract No. 1 : Beginning at a point in\nthe Easterly side of Brynherg avenue or\nduPont Road feeing the Northwesterly cor\nner of said Harry T. Jonesa land; thence\nby the Easterly side of said avenue or\nmad Noith four degrees and aix minutes\nEast o «e hundred and eighty-one feet to\nthe Westerly aide of the right-of-way of the\nPhiladelphia and Reading Railroad Company;\nthence by said aide of said right-of-way\nSouth thirty seven degrees and three min­\nutes Last two hundred and twenty-three\nfeet to the Northeasterly corner of the\naforesaid Harry T. Joness land:\nby said land eighty-eight degree» and\nfifty one minutes West one hundred and\nforty-eight feet to the place of Beginning.\nContaining eighteen thousand three hundred\nand ninety square feet of land.\nTract No. 2: Beginning at a point in\nthe Easterly side of Brynherg avenue or\nduPont Road, being the Southwesterly cor-\nner of ««id H«rry T. .lore«» l»nd; thence\nby ««id .lone«« 1»nd North eighty-eight de­\ngree« »nd fifty-one minute». E»«t one _hnn-\ndred «nd eighty nine feet to he weeterly\n«ide of tjie right-of w«y of the Philedelphi»\nand Rending Railroad Company; thence by\n■ aid right of way South thirty eeren degrees\n»nd three minute» E««t eixty on# end ffve\ntenth« feet; thence by » new line dinding\nthis from other lands of said Ann B. ror\nman« estate South eighty-eight degree» »na\nflfty-one minutes West two hundred
1091667df5beece69b04733e99e939b3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.6287670915779 39.745947 -75.546589 I. you can see how well our men The committee will meet on Wednes-\nV i00 of the enemy off. Onr cap- day evening. August 22 at the hall, No.\nI told us there was not many 902 Walnut street.\nI d u'ciw, because they started our\nI el's blood boiling, aud ho is going\nIve them all that is coming fed\nI, When they attacked Taal Com-\nIsBandDwereoutona"kick."\nI -est of cur company, eleven men\nI and three-quarters or Company A\nl a two towns, and we kept the na-\nI out. When the colonel said; Who\nI olnnteer to set the town on fire,”\nId not say any more, for five min-\nI;afterItwason Are. It isabig\nI but there was nothing left but\n■jg church. Companies A and part\nI r company and part of Company\n■'re the ones who did the work. We\nI see It burning from this town.\n will teach them a lesson, for it\nli first town burned down here.\nI set fire to one shack, and that\n1*1 the rest. Even a church was\nI k1 down, but our men could not\nlit. for they did not want It burn-\n■ >ut the whole town. There are\nI churches in two towns, but any\nI wo got word they were^going to\nIk It again, but they were afraid\nI it. There are fifty of us here, aud\nly start we will not mind the cap-\nI but burn the whole town down.\nIbesides there are plenty of rich\nlu here, and they have lots of nice\nlands, and we will get sumesof\nI An insurgent colonel is getting\nIviOO house built, aud it is nearly\nIsoifhewantstokeepithehad\nIr keep the natives out or he will\n1.000 out, and that would kill him.\nlie police here have a big club and
0547fa4d4a838f89c1e45c7673723232 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.0753424340437 58.275556 -134.3925 nenibcrs of the Presbyterian cburcli\nit Metlakatla has been and is no*\no provide for their services else-\nvhere. The Presbyterian church has\nteen holding Its services In the audi-\nonum of the public school building\nind proposes, as soon as the way\nipens. to erect a modern church\nlullding suited to Its needs.\n"2. Hut it Is also true that while\nhe members of the Presbyterian\nhurch at Metlakatla disclaim any\njurposo of seizing the old church\n)ullding or forcibly occupying It,\nhoy have precisely the same equity\nrights In the building that the rest\n>f the people have. It happens that\nilx out of the eight elders of the\nPresbyterian church wera at the\n:lmc of their election elders in the\nhrlstian church, elocted by the\npeople by public ballot. There are\nnow 117 members In the Prcsbyter-\nlan church, a fact which seems to\nludlcate that more than a small ma\nlorlty of the people aro Identified\nwith it and these people came with\ntho t-est of the Metlakatlas fropi\nItrltlsh Columbia, contributed equal¬\nly with tho rest In the erection of\n building In labor and materials.\nThey also have had an equal part in\ndeveloping tho other interests of\nMetlakatla. own a large part of the\nstock in the store and other enter¬\nprises and aro as much tho original\nowners In these things as are the\nclement adhering to the old system.\nIt Is also to be said that a large part\nnf the contributions to the erection\nof the church building at Metlakutla\nwere made by Presbyterian donors\nanil tills fact is capable of exact\ndemonstration. However, as before\nsaid, thov lay no claim to the build\nlug beyond the same equity rights\nwhich they have In all the other\nproperty In Metlakatla. In equity\nthey are as much the owners of the\nbuilding as anyone else.\n"3. The position of the Chronicle\nthat the Presbyterian clement had\na right to organize for worship and\nto align themselves with some\nevangelical body rather than to con\ntinue under Independent relations 1s\ncertainly fair. It Is simply too rUht\nof self-determination in religious\naffars which our constitution guar¬\nantees to all of our citizens."
46ac124ea1a6743388a0c6414060fd00 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.1219177765095 58.275556 -134.3925 used of showing fiivoritism. mi we\nwill try to make up for It by HayliiK\nii few words thin week.\nA moil k the prominent ouch over¬\nlooked wan William Miller, who op¬\nerates a barber shop here In the\nspare time he ban when not work¬\ning on his cruiser which ho call*\n"The Wiry Heard" because she In\nsuch a tough proportion. Mr. Miller\nworked on the boat, which Is of the\nopen-faced style, for several month*\nlast year, lie changed engine beds\nami engines several times and called\nill all the gas fyoat experts and cab¬\ninet makers in the surrounding coun-\nto help him solve the problem or\nhow to make It go. He fluuly gave\nIt up quite late In tho summer and\nwent to a cannery to work so he\ncould save money to properly equip\nhis craft. He left the boat here\nwith n tine engine bed In her and\nthe engines scattered around in dif¬\nferent parts of town, lie Is hack on\nthe Job aguln this season und puts\nlu most of his tlmo in the Lawrence\nboathouse putting the engines to¬\ngether and taking them apart, caulk¬\ning seams and painting. He claims\nlie can't this season, as lie\nhas too much time and money In¬\nvested, so he will keep on the Job.\nA I Onrr and Marry Irvine have a\nboat In their new boathouse back of\nthe News office which they are\nas usuul working on. It Is u Hue\ncraft. About the only thing that\nIs the matter with It Is that it needs\na* lot of petting. These two men\nput iu most of their spare time fond-\nling the engine. On account of Sgt\nIrvine having ii severe attack of flu.\nlie lost ii good many hours' work\non the craft, so it is Impossible to\npredict who" her or not they will\nhave the boat out by next Fourth of\nJuly. So I hey are not taking any\nchances by striking at this time.\nMost of th«ir work, anyway, Is not\nso much iu the shipbuilding line as\nIn machinists' work, such as putting\n111 llnoleoum packing around the\nbase of tho engine, cotton batting\nparking around the valves and other\n. ¦Xpert work along those lines.\nSumming up the gas-boat and\nshipbuilding business on the Island,\nsome was hoard to remark recontly\nthat It was "A grout life If you\ndon't weaken."
17d7490a0ca8ddbe27db8bdf12a92fc6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.360273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 "It was almost twenty years ago." ho\nbegun, "whon the club was youug and\nhad more hoi blood in it than now.\nThough we are not quito a 6et of Miss\nNancys yot, I think, lint from tho firat\nwe resolutely kept out men wo wore\nnot willing "our wives and sweethearts\nand .'daughters should know, Somo-\ntltnea such fellows got in in apito of our\ncaro; but they did not often stay long.\n"Aa I have 8aid, tuor'o was moro hot\nblood among us thon. More than ono\nof us knew a horso.and from talking\nhorse we camo at last to starting a race\ncourao. It was very private and very\nselect. But I am ashamed to toll you\nhow much monoy changed hands on\nsomo of our littlo ovonts held there.\n"It was soon after we had started this\n Charley Howard implied for mem¬\nbership in "tho club. You may think\nI am mixing two things up in this\nstory, but you will boo presently how\nthey devotail into each othor. This\nman Howard was of good family, moved\nin the best society and was on termB of\nmoro or less intimacy with several fol¬\nlows in tho club.yet ljo was hardly tho\nman you would want to see with lilt?\narm about your sister in a ballroom.\nAnd ho was black-balled. I guess there\nwua a feeling that ho cared moro about\ntho privilege of the raeo-eourso than for\nany othor foaturo of the club, and that\nhe would utilize to tho utmost the op¬\nportunities it otTored for plunging. And\nsome of us had begun to thing it was\nquito timo to call a halt in that direc¬\ntion.
1b37f7ae1dbd42c67c1d9613577a766d RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.3356164066463 36.620892 -90.823455 inson and Dr. Hume went ap there yee\ntarda) morning to bring her down, but\nafter they started it was found aha waa\ntoo weak to itand tha trip, and they\nstopped at Rev. Carlylce, wher Dr,\nHum and th girl remained last eight,\ntha sheriff coming oa te town. Th\ntact of. th occurrence, a gathered\nfrom th uteris, are about aa lellowt:\nTh girl bad been atoylng at tht\nhomo of John Shalton, a reputable\nfarmer of that neighborhood . for tome\ndayt past, helping with th work, and\nhut Saturday, while Mr. Shelton and\nhi wit were ia town shopping, th\nIsaacs girl gave birth to the child,\ngirl baby, She tat oa the bed rail and\nlot the body ot th child drop to tht\nfloor, and the . took it out into th\nwood aad threw It into a fallen tree top\nnear the road and not very far tha\nhouse. She was alone In tht house\nwith th two mailer children Of tht\nShelton household, Mr. 8heltoa aad\nhia wife did not leave town until lata,\nand it waa along In tha night when tht\neared their home. Passing tha tree- -\ntop they heard th faint aad peoutta?\ncries of the infant, and aot knowing\nwhat it wat drove on to the house, and\ngetting a neighbor with a gun aad aa\nax, Mr. Shalton returned to the tree\ntop, from which th cries still issued,\nand expecting to find oma kind of a\nvarmint, found tht naked, chilled body\nthe Infant. It waa take to th\nhouse, and Mr. Shelton having already\ndiscovered from the condition of the\nIsaac girl that something wat wrong,\neared for it and told the girl to take\noharge of it, hot at first aha denied that\nwaa ita mother, hut at the facte
079495f19516d393f1c200ab53d98ea0 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1885.4178081874684 39.78373 -100.445882 lay them with kindly hands\nthese floral offerings upon the\ngraves of your comrades, forget not\neven those who have fallen in the\nhard battle of life. Take them your\ncomrades by the hand and look\nupon this fair land which the Lord\nour God hath given us. Look be-\nyond that. England returning from\nan unsuccessful scheme of the war\nin Africa; France and China in\narms; Ireland straining her eyes\nfor the dawn of liberty; Germany\nand Austria fearful of social dis\nsensions; the !s.)Uth America lie- -\npublics involved in civil stnte;\nh ranee and Lngland striving tor\nadvantages in Egypt: Russia again\nthreatening Constantinople and en\ncamped at the gates of India. Then\nlook again at the fair American\nheritage say to vourselves, veterans\nof the army, veterans of the life\nservice, veterans in the field and\nschool, these have to us\nthis peace plentv and prosperity.\nFrom this spot and in the memory\nof these lives, our conquest is\nagainst the ancient foes ot super-\nstition and ignorance. We are in\narms against the foes of human\nliberty; we are but looking for\nmore know ledge, more right. We\nfear nothing, we can gain nothing\nsave in guarding and enlarging the\nrights or the citizen ; you have been\nmustered out of the Grand Army\nof the Republic merely to join the\nGrand Army ot Civilization, and\nwe are encamped as the van guard\nbefore the remnant of ignorance.\nsuperstition and oppression and\nthey shall disappear as mist before\nthe breath of dawn.\nThe sighing winds of silver-lan- d\nmuy therefore bring us comtort.\nThe veteran forgets Fihgting Joe\nHooker, above the clouds on Look\nout Mountain. There are no clouds\nto-da- y,
3d71dad465a6e98ca4e32a420f47b383 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1913.5082191463723 39.456253 -77.96396 ii wound* d tier te-l ngs,but in the loin*\nrun, shoo d she Jive, good along all\nother \\vroiu.'S, she will be able to see\ngrow out. or r; from the fact, that ev-\neryt him; done to such refined colored\npeople makes thn nice more friends.\nOur advice jh to all such: "stand firmly\nin the nu'ht, looking to and trusting in\nGod, and your sal vat ion is sure. Anent\nthwci il rights, we should rot grieve\nover its deteat, becae.se it it were fully\nenforced and carried out to the letter,\nwh«n our fairplay rights come to paes,\nit would he said,they reached this stage\nby class legislation. \\ve don't want\nthat, and certain it is, if enforced, our\nglory would not be what it will, by\nunific elToits 10 be men and women,and\nreach the goal. For one, we want no\nc'hss legislation, v\\e do want and\nbadly need true manhood.that will\ntake no backward step, hut stand where\nwe are and keep on climbing.\nTheie is very much fcound advice giv¬\nen by Sir. Vernon H Branson, through\nthe columns of the Union, of Cincin¬\nnati. .Precisely as one civilization fades\nand passes away, another is ready to\ntake its place. Yes our politics and the\nmorals of America are diseased, and\ncoriupt,and becoming more and more\nso, but in days ol' slavery, they were\nworse. It is enly the better class of\nwhite* who are with us, and its our\nduty to stand shoulder to shoulder with\nthem, for as a^es of coiruption come\nand go, so will all classes of people. Mr.\n. Branson declares that no peuple on\nearth have made the progress we have,\nand believes tha't we will domina'e .the\nAmerican civil zation."
a98d2af890f36e37f3f8b8555e11d5b1 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.4890410641806 43.798358 -73.087921 versal. Should the currency of the coun-\ntry be prostrated, and thus the whole cir-\nculating medium be rendered worthless,\nno one could by possibility escape. And\nif to this should be added the calamity of\na scanty harvest, I know not how to meas-\nure the universal misery that would en-\nsue. On the contrary, should our cur-\nrency be sustained, should a spirit oi stern\nand unbending honesty, on the one hand,\nand of kindness and forbearance, on the\notheT, be shed abroad upon our citizens,\nand should the fruits of the earth be abun-\ndant, business will soon resume Jts natural\nchannels, and we shall again enjoy all\nthe prosperity that is really for our crood.\nNow, every one must see that God\nalone by his almighty power can avert\nthe evils which we have reason to dread,\nand bestow the which we so im-\nperatively need. He alone can succeed\nthe labors of the husbandman and the la-\nborer. He alone touches the springs of\nhuman action, and turns the hearts of the\nchildren of men, as the rivers of waters\nare turned. Individuals and nations, eve-\nry moment, from the very necessity of\ntneir being, lie helpless m the hand of\nOmnipotence ; but never was the helpless-\nness more signally unveiled than in our\nown case, and in the present instance.\nWhat then remains for us but to fall, in\nlowly humiliation, before him. As in-\ndividuals and as a nation, let us confess\nwith shame those dispositions which have\noffended him. Let us sincerely repent of\nthat abuse of his favors of which we have\nbeen guilty. Let us acknowledge the jus-\ntice of those judgments which have over-\ntaken us.
0ef3f617c0a1baba3dfbf343bb214964 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1869.0178081874683 40.827279 -83.281309 The time has come when the par\nty in power must boldly clear itself\nfrom any repponsibility for the\ngigantic corruptions which are rife\nin the land no matter whose fair\nname stands voucher for their inno-\ncence and benevolent designs."\nThere never yet was a good cause\nwhich was not burdened with un-\nworthy supporters improving the\noccasion of critical public exigency\nto accomplish personal enrichment.\nIn the crisis of important concerns\nit is sometimes the part of wisdom\nnot to expose weaknesses and\nwrongs, but when the time of dan\nger has passed it 13 worse tnan\nlolly to treat the wrong doers with\nany favor. It involves participation\ninguilt.it nourishes a fester which\nwill spread gangrene and mortifica\ntion throughout the system. The\ncountry looks to General Grant's\nAdministration to see it restore the\nbody politic to a sound condition.\nFor the accomplishment of this\n more than a poultice is\nneeded. Caustic and the knife must\nbe relentlessly employed. The Re-\npublican party must be rid of its\nrottenness or it will perish, and\ngood patriots will thank God when\nit has gone. We believe the hour\nhas come when the honest masses\nof the people who love the republic,\nand the great political organization\nwhich saved it from overthrow\nmust, with one voice, demand that\nthe leaders, in whose selfishness has\nusurped the place of devotion, and\navarice strangled integrity, shall be\narraigned, convicted, degraded, and,\nif possible, punished. In no other\nway car. the morale of the party be\nmaintained, and its usefulnessicon-\ntinned. It is necessary for the\nsalvation of our institutions that the\nintegrity of the great body of the\nneonle shall be aroused as tbir\npatriotism' was aroused in 1861.\nWhen so aroused, hypocrites and\nplunderers will-trem-ble
3209d7eee5281aa5d154c52f84eb40c2 THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1911.878082160071 35.721269 -77.915539 We trust he will do well in Wil\nmington, and Wilmington like other\ncities its size, should furnish a fruit-\nful field for teaching languages, be\ncause Americans are now beginning\nto realize that they have been poor-\nly equipped with languages in the\npast, in comparison with the people\nof other countries. The need is not\nonly felt by those who may be fortu-\nnate enough to travel abroad, but by\nthose at home, because this country\nis being brought . in closer personal\nand business contact with other\ncountries year by year. The need of\nthe German language is frequently\nfelt, and soon the need will also\nbe felt for the Spanish language,\nwhen the Panama Canal is opened,\nand Wilmington gets one of the big\ngest slices from trade cake."\nIn order to show the line of work\nDr. Moench has taken up we repro\nduce the following from the Star:\n"Dr. Moench, a language professor\nof note, will speak at the Bijou Thea\ntre this afternoon at 5 o'clock, tak-\ning as his subject "Practical Chris-\ntianity and Personal Reminiscences"\nDr. Moench has recently returned\nfrom Germany, where he went to\nvisit his old home in Wittenberg, his\nfather being at one time the pastor\nof the famous Luther's church. The\nservice is held trader the auspices of\nthe Y. M. C. A. and because of Dr.\nMoench's popularity among the young\npeople o? the city, a large number\nof young peonle and older people, too\nno doubt, will hear him. This service\nwin oegin the world-wid- e
576f51e90e15ab466750b84516339e8e THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.06420761865 32.408477 -91.186777 Another division of the recruiting ei\nservice training system for officers, ti\nwhich has met witn gratifying sue- n\ncess, is that for tramining chief, engi- ti\nneers for turbine ships, by means of tI\nspecial courses at tne works of com- a\npanies making this type of engine. ti\nEarly in the building program of the e\nemergency fleet corporatilb trouble o0\nhad been experienced on new vessels It\nfitted with turbine engines. In many p1\ncases this was attrinutable to Vie as- C\nsignment of chief engineers expe- hi\nrienced in handling reciprocating en- li\ngies, but unfatll"ar with the basic 0(\nprinciples of geered turbines.\nNotwithstanding the urgent need of ia\ncrews for American merchant vessels at\nduring the war, the aemand for such fr\ncrews became greater with the return ni\nof peace conditions. ' Formed July, ml\n1917, as an agency tor placing in em- tI\nployment on shipboard the graduates at\nof the recruiting servicee schools for ci\ndeck and engineer oeicers, the sea a\nservice bureau had nrst expanded its ci\norganization with the creation of the gi\ntraining service for apprentices in tU\nJanuary, 1918. By the autumn of 1918 pl\nIt was apparent that the sea service ra\nbureau should be developed as a rep- tU\nreseptative national shipping agency, w\nand with a view to such development, $1\nthe shipping board In November, 1918, $1\nauthorised the bureau to take over the cl\nshipplng oces of the division of op- di\neratimons which dumng the war had P\ncharge of shipping crews for all Ve hei\neels under control of the shipping ol\nboard, with principal offices at New\nYork.
09a871b74cd493c714f2adcf293155b1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.943989039415 39.513775 -121.556359 SN the matter of the declaration of certain streets in\nthe Carlton tract to be highways, and to alter tho\nroad to McConnells Ferry, It is hereby ordered that\ntin- present road running from the termination of\nHirl, Kohlnsoti and Montgomery streets in the town\nof Oroville to Hotelier Ranch in wild county, he. and\nthe same is hereby declared vacated as a public high-\nway. And it Is further ordered that the said Itird,\nMontgomery and Robinson streets of said town ol\nOroville. be extended as public highways across the\ntract of land known as the Carlton Tract, ami ad-\njoining -aid town of (froville. Sod continual ions ot\nKir.l, Robins'll and Montgomery street, to bo sixty\nsix feet in width, and extending in directions parallel\nwith each other, according to the (dan or seruty of\nsaid Carlton Tract, made by M H. Earley. And it is\nfurlher ordered that the street marked Fourth Ave-\nnue. according to the plan and servey the said\nCarlton Tract be. and the same is hereby declared to\nin- a public highway—the said Avenue to Is- sixty six\nfeet, in width, and extending across said tract of land.\n\\ud it is further ordered that so mud. of the First,\nSecond, Third, Fifth Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Av-\nenues, ns lie between Robinson and Montgomery\nstreet*, according to the plan or survey of said M. 11.\nFarley of said Carlton Tract now on (lie in the office\nof the county 11-carder of sail cornier, be. and the\nsame are hereby declared to be public highways, all\nof said highways to he sixty feet in width. And it\nis further ordered that the road now- laid out from the\ntermination of the said Robinson street, across\nthe Hutcher Hunch, to its junction w ith the old road\nhe, and the same is hereby declared a public high-\nway, said highway lobe sixty six feet in width.\nAttest the foregoing n true copy.
1ee2e7537db098470c062eb0f8dee4b6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.568493118975 39.745947 -75.546589 The big event of the year among was last heard of through the colums\nDelaware river and Hereford Inlet I of the Wilmington EVENING JOUR-\nyachtamen, the Wilmington to Wild- j NAL. Finder kindly communicate\nwood race for first and second class with the manager of the Seaford\ncruising yachts and speed boats will Baseball club, and receive liberal\nbegin at, 11 oclock tonight when a compensation."\nbig field of second class cruisers will No one seems to know the author\nsail at the drop of the (lag on the of the poster, but it is evident it was\nWilmington Yacht Club pier. The Jokingly written by some one of the\nfirst class cruisers will get away at Seaford baseball fans. Early in the\n6 oclock tomorrow morning and the spring\nspeed boats, kings of the water, will has defeated Georgetown and a \ngo five hours later. Many of the her of other Sussex county towns,\nboats were off the starting line at challenged the Seaford team for a\nGordon Heights this morning, pre- championship meet. Their challenge\nsenting a beautiful appearance. All wa* not directed to the Seaford High\nwill have arrived before night, car­\nrying with them their owners in\nwhose honor a reception will be given\ntonight, by the Wilmington Yacht\nClub. It will be the first big affair\nthe local association has undertaken\nand promises to be a success. Every­\nthing lg ready for the big race.\nDr. Christopher 8. Street, of the\nYachtsmens Club, has charge of the\ndetails of the race. The boats are\nbeing measured todtW by H. E. Darttz-\nhecker, the official measurer of the\nRacing Association of the South Jer-
1f0cee6e3c76b12644416430bc072367 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1913.9109588723998 41.875555 -87.624421 Every once In a while some critic\nor a number of critics conceive the\nbrilliant Idea of a world's series in\nfootball with the champion of the east\nmeeting the champion of the west In\na postseason conflict\nJust at present the Idea seems to\nhave taken a hold In the east and a\nnumber of experts are calling for such\na contest. They declare It would be a\ngreat thing to have a championship\ngridiron eleven and propose a conflict\nIn somo neutral territory.\nThey compare the proposed game to\ntho world's baseball series and de-\nclare a contest between Chicago and\nYale or Harvard and Michigan or\nsome similar meeting would All the\nfargest athletic field in the world.\nIt Is all very well to speak of such\na contest, but the easterners evidently\nhave forgotten a number of objections\nto tho plan. First and foremost, of\ncourse, would be the difficulty of get\nting the faculties of tho schools in\nterested, but granting this to ob- - '\ntalnable, how Is one to determine\nwhich Is tho sectional champion?\nOf course, last yoar produced a well\ndefined eastern leader. Harvard won\nthe premier place In the cast beyond a\nquestion, but could any one pick a\nsimilar leader in the west. Wisconsin\nand Notre Dame had an equal right to\nthe title last season, and to select\neither one would provoko a riot at the\nother school. So far as picking ono\nthis season help!\nThere seldom have been well defined\nchampions either east or west. Of\nlate years there has been no western\nchampion In fact, the honor being\nclaimed by two, three or a half dozen\nteams. To talk of selecting a title\nholder when there is no elimination\nbetween Chicago, Wisconsin, Minne-\nsota, Michigan, Nebraska and Notre\nDame 'Is ridiculous. These teams are\nmentioned because they are usually\nat tho top of tho heap. Every Bcason,\nhowever, sees ono or two "outsiders"\nwith claims to present, such as the
062c74e59c8bf899948361dbc59aeb91 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1887.6260273655505 42.68333 -96.683647 Mr. J. M . Tonnery, of Peoria, was in the first\nSleeper, and said: * I felt tliree distinct shocks\nand then heard a grinding M>UIK1, and on look­\ning out saw that the car in which we were was\ndirectly over the hie, which was slowly bla/iug\non the stringers of the brt igo. 1 got out in\nSafety, and the scene presented to the eve Mid\near wan one I w ish 1 could forever elfaco from\nmy memory, but I know I never can. The\nshrieks of tiie dying and the glaring faces of\ntho dead will ah\\a>K stay with me. To add to\nthe horror itw as pitch dark save for the fitful\nlight of the tire uuder the Bleeper,\nwhich lighted the faces of thoHe about only to\nmake their fear and anguish visible. On the\nmouths of ii,os; of tho corpses could he seen\nfoam, which showed that they died in ugonv.\nAt last we secured some feeb'lo lights, but tlie\nWind blew them out, and uhout -J o'clock the rain\npoured down in torrents on the unprotected\ndead and dying in the hedges and cornhehU ad­\njacent. Our efforts were divided betw< en\ntryiug to put out the lire and seu.m tho\ndying whose cries fi r help were heartrending,\nindeed. Mothers ran wildly about cr\\-\ning for lost chihocn and wives for hus­\nbands. btrong men were weeping over tlie\nforms of their beloved wives. Prayers, en­\ntreaties, and groans filled theair until uaylight,\nwhen relief parties got to work an i removed\nthe dead and wounded from the t«ceiie. The\nbridge was oti fire before the train stru. k . "\nC. l -'nlrotli, who was me of the fortunateonea\nOccupying a berth in next to the last deeper,\nsavs thatt<< put out the lire no water was to be\nhad. All weut towork with awill with such t.x)is\nas could be found <>u the cars to further de­\nstroy and tear away all the wv ^viork pos­\nsible, and with dirt, weeds, dry grass, coats,\nand clothing: in fact anything that would act\nas a weapon againstthe fierce flames. After a\nterrible struggle the fire was* putout.\nIHr. talvorth, on passing one of the coaches,\nWas requested, "1 or God's sake take my child,"\na babe, which he Immediately did, and, leav­\ning it in as safe a place ns could be fouud,\nweut into the car and fount! tho mother,\nMrs.
0a225139475aacde78cba77c72cbb07d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.1926229191965 40.063962 -80.720915 IsnuNArous, Im, March 10,-Tom-\nlinson hall presented nn animated sceno\nat 10:30 this morning when Chairman\nGoudy called tho Republican stnto con¬\nvention to ordor. Tho Itev. l)r, Lucas\nprayod that patriotism and lovo ol\ncountry should bo kept abovo partisan-\nbll^'arrcn 0. Sayor, of Wabash, was\nclioson permanent chairman, and lion-\ncrt Brown, ol Franklin, permanent see-\n^Committees woro tlicn appointed.\nThoroportof the commltteo on resolu¬\ntions was then road by Gonoral I acker,\nand it contains anions other things i\n"Woendorso tho brilliant adminis¬\ntration oi .Benjamin. Harrison, under\nwhich tho country has prosnorod, tho\nriirhtH of American citiions abroad are\nmaintained, and tiic bondod debt of tho\nUnited Statosirapidly extinguished, and\ntho rovenuo collcctcd with diminished\ncost to tho pooplo. and without corrup¬\ntion in any branch of tho public ser-\n^'"Prosident Harrison has discharged\nhis high duties in tho spirit of a lofty\npatriotism and with a conscientious ro-\ninrd for the rights of our people.\nThat such a condition of ntlalra may\ncontinue to prevail, wo urco his re-nom¬\nination by tho national convention at\nMinneapolis. Ho has lifted tho nation\nhiizhor in greatness, power and dignity,\nand wo instruct the delegates tins dav\nelocted to give him their earnest and\nunswerving support by working and\nvoting for his renominntion, bo long as\nhis name is boforo tho convention.\nAlter tho reports had been rcjul ex-\nCongressman White, of tho lwolfth\ndistrict, took exception to the resolu¬\ntions indorsing Harrison. He said it\nthe Presidont had conducted himself\nas ho should there would hiivo boon no\nopposition at this time. At this point\nCaptain White's voice was drowned in\nhisses. Ex-Congressman Cheadlo camo\nto his assistance and told tho conven¬\ntion that Captain Whito was a Republi-\ncan who four years apo rqceivotU'MUU\nvotes moro than Sir. llftrrisun. Captain\n"Whito thon proceeded amid hisses..\n"What has President Harrison dono?\nasked Mr. White.
0e13ffa32e03b7cb21f7610c144e34d6 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.532876680619 46.187885 -123.831256 street, 19 feet; at Squemoque street, 22\nfeet; at the north side of Jefferson\nstreet, 30 feet; at the center of Jefferson\nstreet, 31 feet; at the south side of\nJefferson street, :2 feet; at the north\nside of Astor street, 525 feet; at the cen-\nter of Astor street, 54 feet; at the south\nside of Astor street, 555 feet; at the\nnorth side of .Court street, 915 feet; at\ncenter of Court street, 93 feet; at the\nsouth side of Court strecr, 945 feet; at\nthe north side of 7th street, 1335 feet ; at\ncenter of 7th street, 135 feet; at the\nsouth side of 7th street, 1305 feet; at\nthe northiside of 8th street, 1C05 feet;\nat the center of Sth street, 102 icet; at\nthe south side of Sth street, 1035 feet;\n the north side of 9lh street, 1875 feet;\nat tho center of 9th street. 189 feet, a: the\nsouth side of 9th street, 1905 feet: at the\nnorth side of 10th street, 2145 feet; at\nthe center of 10th street, 21G feet; at the\nsouth side of 10th street, 2175 feet; at\nthe north side of llth street, 2415 feet;\nat the center of llth street, 243 feet; at\nthe south side of llth street, 2445 feet;\nat north side of 12th street, 2085 feet; at\nthe center of 12th street. 2085 feet; at\nthe south side of 12th street, 2085 feet;\nat the north side of 13th street. 2705 feet;\nat the center of 13th street, 2765 feet; at\nsouth side of 13th street, 2705 feet; at\nthe north side of Summit avenue, 273\nfeet
3d3b188b437a6a9b1ca6eb6c024cf45f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5396174547157 39.745947 -75.546589 complaint about the weather,\nfoods, Ilko clothing, should vary with\nthe season; and summer, which sug-\nSests cool clothing, should likewise\nIroot our attention to cooling foods.\nDon't talk about the weather, then,\nbut rather, make yourself over into\na being that is adapted to\nconditions than winter Imposes; and\nnothing I« more important to bring\nabout this transformation than the\nright sort of food and drink.\nThe body needs good, substantial\nfood during tho summer months as\nwon aa during tho winter months\nMeal planning in summer differs from\nmeal planning In winter on.lv In that\nwo select more of the cool, crisp foods\nand less of the heat producing ones\ntor our summer bill of fare.\nKor mal summer comfort, tho pan­\ntry shelf should bo with »\ngood assortment of canned fruits and\ncanned vegetables of reliable brand\nto augment the fresh supply.\nInstead of serving hot soups, give i\ncold fruit juice* or fresh fruit.These\narc Inexpensive, easy to prepare and\nvery appetizing. When opening can-\nnod fruit, saw the excess ol lulce and\nuso it in your oold drinks. For tho-"\nwho do not like cheery* "straight," :\nfor Instance, try blending the cherry I\nwith a fruit luioc you like best, or\ndilute the cherry till It isnt too\nstrong, and you'll like it better.\nBut for those who prefer something\nhot. a cup of bouillon, made by dis­\nsolving a teaspoonfiri of extract of\nhoof In a oup of hot water, will prove\nsatisfactory. This will Induce per­\nspiration and. If
0906bb14995638e684b0a6af13584ca1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.5082191463723 39.745947 -75.546589 The merger is not unexpected. Long ago in\na general article on these matters The Journal\npredicted that it would he only a question of\ntime before there would he some such step as\nthat which has been taken It has been set down\na* a rule hv writers on these subjects that there\ncan be no competition between public service\ncorporations and where there is so-called com­\npetition it is, the exception and not the rule.\nThe new company realize the public concern\nin their doings in the statement which they have\nissued. They practically ask for public support\nand consideration and a fair deal. And there is\nno disposition to give them anything else.\nWe should welcome the new owners ami give\nthem even opportunity. For onr part we think\nthey have a task on their hands owing to the\ncondition of the properties. The new owners\nrealize that improvements and betterments are\nneeded. As thev sa\\ thev have determined to\nrisk their monev in an effort to build up these\nproperties and to make them more profitable\nwhile al the same time the new owners propose\nto give the people better service. Tbit as the new\nowners say, these improvements rannot be ac\ncomplished at once, and there will he no dispo­\nsition to ask them to do the impossible.\nWhile thev as well as others familiar with the\nproperties know the difficulties that confront thé\nnew ow ners, we see no reason whv the properti\nshould not become very profitable to them, that\nis, unless too great a sum is required to meet\nthe interest charges.
0368017c7934e7d1c8efeee9246bd83e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.6534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 lion. John McDoowell, President of the\nPennsylvania Wool-Growers' A6hoeia-\nlion, was in the city yesterday, leaving\nIn the afternoon for Pittsburgh, where a\nmeetiug of the^A&aociution is to be held\nto-day. Among the objects of the meet*\ning is to take action on the false entry\nof merchantable wool as riug waste,\nbeing in fact no waste at all, but wool\nworth sixty ceuts a pound. This com¬\nmodity cheats the Government out of\nits duo revenue and comes iuto direct\ncompetition with Americau wool. Mr.\nMelioowell thus explains this matter of\nluiportuuco to wool-growers:\n"In order to deceive the American ap¬\npraisers the scoured wool iu little rings\nIs mixed with say 10 per ceut of legiti¬\nmate waste so that even an expert can¬\nnot tell the difference between the wool\nand the waste. This sort of doctoring is\nnow beiug done to a great extent in\nFrauee. the view to avoiding tho\nscoured wool duty. I have good reasou,\nhowever, to believe that the Govern¬\nment will grapple with this matter just\nas it bus with others, aud will arrive at a\nsimilar concision. It is determined to\n. xclude everything as waste wheu the\nevidence is sullicient to show that it is\nmanufactured as such to avoid the legiti¬\nmate duty. In other words the Govern¬\nment has made up its mind to close up\nall the loopholes to fraud. iMoreovor.\nunder the present Administration,it will\nhe no longer possible to reship to Eu¬\nrope, waste that has been refused admis¬\nsion ut less than sixty cents per pound\nand have it admitted at auot hi rA mericun\nport at teu ceuts ner pound, us was the\ncase under Cleveland. The attitude of\nthe Government iu this matter is highly\nsatisfactory to the wool dealers of this\ncountry."
15f4ff3f3fa32942e7668c79d57a1ecd THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.2863013381532 39.560444 -120.828218 Opr readers are already aware of the\nvillainous steamboat combination entered\ninto on the rivers of this State for the pur-\npose of establishing and compelling people\nto pay such rates as the company may see\nfit to demand. It is but a abort time\nsince this combination was entered into,\nand yet the effects are felt in every town\non the upper rivers. The design of these\nconspirators against the people are to\ncither purchase or drive off every boat on\nthe waters ofthe State, ami then if any boat\nnot under the control of the company shall\nattempt either to carry freight or passen-\ngers. to put down the rates so low that the\ninterloper will be compelled to haul off.\nBy the new arrangement, passengers do\nnot arrive at Sacrcmeuto until several\nhours than formerly, being com-\npelled to sleep on board the boats, paying\nS 2 for berths. The boats purposely loiter\nby the way in order to force the passen-\ngers to give four times as much for the\nsame accommodations as they would have\nto pay on shore, and this in addition to\nthe increased rates of freights and passage.\nGov. Bigler has transmitted to the\nSenate and Assembly a special message in\nrelation to steamboat and railroad monopo-\nlies, in which he recommends the passage\nof the act modifying and restricting the\nprivileges of Steam Navigation Companies,\nlie entertains no doubt but that it is in\nthe power of the Legislature to pass such\nlawn as will protect the people against\nthis infamous combination of capitalists,\nby whose machinations both merchant\nand miner must suffer.
74b37500eb9a1bb35f047b7da47e11aa THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6205479134958 40.063962 -80.720915 The Wheeling Re*t*ter.Cnpt. Wirti\nmid tlie Aiitlersonvllle FrUonen.\nEditor* Intelligencer:\nI well know that'it lias been your\nconstant habit to maintain a persistent\nsilence upon all things said by or pub¬\nlished in the Register', yet I confess to\nsome surprise that its article of Friday\nlast, chiming in with the Xew York\n2Vetrs,iu asking a suspension of public\nopinion on the notorious Capt. Wirtz,\nshould have failed to elicit some eom-\nmcnt* That article was nothing more\norlcss than an attempt to stay the cur¬\nrent of public opinion sotting so strong¬\nly against the crimes of the man rather\nthan the man himself. It is another of\nmany instances of the readiness with\nwhich the Register takes its cue from\nsuch in famous sheets as the Now York\n paper which, if the Government\nhad been just to itself,would liavo been\nsuppressed before the war was half\n"over. "NVitli hypocritical cant the Reg¬\nister attempts to palliate* the crimes of\nthe Andersonville hell, by alleging that'\nthere were instances ofcruplty to prison-\ners oil both sides, thereby insinuating\nthat there was probably no inoreol it 011\none side than the other. Isn't it pass¬\ning strange that the Register should be\nso charry of the reputation of our Ame¬\nrican blood whenever the crimes of the\nrebellion are touched upon, while it;\nlifts its hands in holy horror, blazes\nwith indignation at the least variation\nfrom the mildest forms of law suited to\nthe most peaceful period of the Repub¬\nlic 011 tlie part of the Government\nto preserve its existence.
c6e45deb1d6608b816f7c16f43b72fdf PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1847.2698629819888 31.960991 -90.983994 I he general would express his obligations to army should take possession, and on the morninu\ntlie officers and men engaged, for cordial sup- of that day Gen. Scott with Ge«. Worth and his\npoifwhci they rendered throughout the action, division; accompanied by the chief officers of\nJtwi.l be his highest pride, to bring to the notice the army and a large representation from the\no. the government, the conspicuous gallantry of squadron, entered and took possession, the\nparticu.ar officers and corps, whose unwavering my at the same time marching out.\nsteadiness more than once saved the fortunes of American flag was hoisted at the plaza, and\nUeday.^ lie would also exprès his high satis- over San Juan de Uiloa, salutes were fired si\nfaction ior the conduct oi the small command multaneously from the* castle, the batteries of\nleft to hold oMfiuo—Though not so seriously the city and the squadron. Scott hnmedi-\nejigagcd as their oornradps their services were ately took up his quarters in the palace, and in-\nyery important, and efficiently rendered. While vested Gen. Worth with the command of the\nbestowing this just tribute to tho good conduct J city, at the same time the command ofthe eas­\nel the troops, the Générai deeply regrets to say, j tie to Col. Belli n, that of Fort Jago, at the sott-\ntliiU there were not a few exceptions. He trusts ; thorn extremity of tbe city, to Major Wright\nthat those vvboned inglorious!v to Bueria Vista, ! and that •<{ Fort Conception, at the northern ex-\nand even to ^aitilo, will seek an opportunity to ! tremity, to Major Scott,\nretrieve their reputution and emulate the bravery\not tiicir comrades, who bore the brunt of the bat­\ntle and sustained against fearful odds tbe honor\nofthe flag.
af4d9dae09acf9746c00069d3a62850b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4616438039066 41.681744 -72.788147 an 18 -- hole play off yesterday, after a\ntie at 72 holes in the open, won his'\ntitle with a courageous exhibition.\nThe score was 76 to 79, but the three\nstrokes were gained late in the day,\ntwo coming at the sixteenth and the\nthird at the eighteenth where it did\nnot mean anything.\nOff In front. Armour, who rose\nfrom private, to staff major In the\nBritish army during the war and was\nseriously wounded, saw his lead shot\naway and finally was forced to stand\nby and See his, youthful rival go two\nstrokes aheadJt The veteran, much\nolder in golf than his years would\nsuggest, staged his comeback with a\nlong putt at the 15th, where he\nsquared the count. His victory seem-\ned certain when he came from the\nrough close by pin on the 16th\nwhere Cooper floundered in a trap\nand finally took five strokes.\nArmour was leading by a stroke\ncoming to the ninth, but he was con-\ntent with a par five there, while\nCooper got down a Birdie lour, mak-\ning the strokes the same for the nine\nholes, 39. Armour needed three\nstrokes to reach the tenth green and\nlost a stroke" to his opponent and was\ntwo strokes behind after the elev-\nenth where his tee shot found a\ncross ditch and his recovery went\ninto a trap after striking the edge of\nthe green. After halving the twelfth\nin par five. Armour regained a stroke\nat the 164 yard thirteenth, where\nCooper was off the green with his\ntee shot and needed two putts after\ngetting on. Armour getting down in\ntwo.
12b1ac9f865dc0807f3deba3464d7a12 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.0178081874683 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho next evening, an ofllcer of his staff\ncame to our boat, and made mo supremo-\nly happy with the dlschnrge ol thu twen¬\nty-one soldiers, who had been reworded\nwith loss of liealtb, and, ns it afterwards\nproved to some of. tlioin, with loss of life.\nBut If I was happy, what shall I say of\ntho poor emaciated fellows, who looked\nfor my return to tlioin as ono looks (or n\nreprlevo from sentence of death 1 Mofct\nof theso men were brought North on bur\nsanitary boat. Ono of thorn died on the\nway, and was burled it Memphis, and\nanother died In Chicago. Ills homo wis\nin Wisconsin and a rldo of four hour\ntnoro would havo taken him to tho arms\nof his mother, who was expecting him.\nBut when wo reached Chicago, Saturday\nevening, tho train for his town left,\nand he was compelled to remain in tho\ncity over Sunday. | took him, to*hotel\nnear tho station from which ho was to\nstart on Monday; and, when 1 hadseen\nhim comfortable in bed, wished to leave\nhim, to telegraph his molherof bli near¬\nness to her,and then go to my own family.\nI promised to send lilm a nurs« In loss\nthan an hour, and to accmnpsny him\nhome to Wisconsin myself on Monday.\nBut ho lagged so wildly that J Would\nreturn mvselfand stay with him, that 1\nconsented, after 1 ilM Informed ray\nfamily of my return to the olty. Hii fol¬\nlowed me to tho door wlthhlsleeoeclilng\neyes, saying, "I hate to have you go. for\nItseemsasfl Ilhould not see you »gak'\nI assured him that I would not lis alisent\nAbove two hours at the furthest, *nd at
3373174d2e51ea7a8c9c037d98ae8ee1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 - " Mr Morrill reported a bill amenda¬\ntory of the law of March 3d, 18<J5,pro-\nviding ways and means forcarrj lug on\nthe Government, which was made the\nsneciai order for Thursday.\nMr. Morrill In reply to a question of\nMr. Stevens said, that tbe commit¬\ntee had not yet acted upon the reportor\nthe Treasury Commission, and, there¬\nfore, had not considered the propoaition\nto reduce the tax on whisky to a dol-\nlaTbeBHouse resumed the consideration\nof the bill that no American vessels\nSM^on Xif^emmedllThf\n8««TyUX\nenlarge the powers of the Freedmen s\nBureau. The House adjourned.\nWashington, Feb. 1 ..The bill in¬\ntroduced by Representative Morrill,\nfrom the Committee on Ways ana\nMeans, to-day, provides as follows:\nFirst, That the act entitled an act to\nSrovide ways and means to Bupport the\novernment, approved March 3d, 1800,\nshall be extended and construed to au¬\nthorize the Secretary of the Treasury, at\nhis own discretion, to receive any\ntreasury notes or other obligations is¬\nsued under any act of Congress, wheth¬\ner bearing interest or not, and also to\ndispose of description of bonds- au¬\nthorized by said act, either in the United\nStates or elsewhere, to such an amount,\nin such manni r and,at such rates as he\nmay think advisable, for lawful money\nof the United States or for any t reasury\nnotes, certificates Jof indebtedness or\ncertificates of deposit or other repre¬\nsentations of value which have.been or\nmay bo issued under any act of Con¬\ngress; the proceeds ^hereof to be used^\nonly for retiring treasury notes or\nother obligations issued under any act\nof Congress; but nothing herein con-\ntained shall be construed to authorize\nanv increase of the public debt, pro¬\nvided, that the bonds which may be\ndisposed of elsewhere than in the United\nStates may be made payable, both prin¬\ncipal and interest, in the coin and cur¬\nrency of th« country in which they are\nmade payable, but shall hot bear as\nrates of interest, exceeding five per cent¬\num per annum, and provided further,\nthat the act to which this is an amend¬\nment shall continue in full force all it6\nprovisions except as modified by this\nact.
0b6c21f76dd2ee2906952c0e394c751a PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.319178050482 40.441694 -79.990086 Chicago, April 26. The C. A . Treat\nManufacturing Company, of Missouri, has\nfiled a declaration in the Federal Court in a\n$100,000 suit against the Standard Steel and\nIron Company.\nThe Standard Company claims to be the\nowner ot East Chicago, Ind., comprising\n1,000 acres. General Torrence, President of\nthe Standard Company, it is said, repre-\nsented to the Treat Manufacturing Com -pa n- y\nthat it had made gifts of portions of\nthe lands in East Chicazo to corporations\nestablishing plants there, and that if the\nTreat Company would movelrom HactJbal,\nMo. , to East Chicago, and erect bnildings\nlarge enough to manufacture 2,000 railway\ncarwheels a day, the Steel and Iron Com-\npany would furnish the site and also give\nthe Treat Company a strip of land 300 feet\nwide 1,200 feet long.\nThe Treat Company moved to East Chi-\ncago, got its land and erected a 65,000\nbuilding. So far it was not dissatisfied, but\nit claims that the officers of the Steel and\nIron Company also gave the Treat Company\nto understand that it had an arrangement\nwith the Michigan Central and the Chicago\nand Calumet Terminal railways by which\nthe roads had agreed to carry freight from\nEast Chicago to Chicago for 53 50 a car.\nThe contract was for 20 years, and the Treat\nCompany could come in under it This is\nwhere the hitch came, according to the\nplaintiff. It claims the Steel and Iron Com-\npany had no such contractand that it had\nto pay the regular rate of $10 a car for all\nfreight shipped to this city.
0a279e4095d0144d70c22688f5d1fd8a WEEKLY CLARKSVILLE CHRONICLE ChronAm 1857.7904109271942 36.527761 -87.35887 Whereas it bath been represented to ns In our\nC'lu t Court of tl'S I'nl'ed Slate, for Ihe Southern\nDistrict of New York, fhtluil as a Courtof Lqui-t - v,\non the part f Orlui.do ft. Potter i nd Nathaniel\nWheeh r, Complainants, tlvct they, theaiid Or\nlando B. Poller and Nathaniel Wheeler, have late\nly cxhlhi'ed their Bill of Cotnlalnt nj!tinet jou,\nIhe "id Joel I'Kase, iue aeienoanr, lo ue reneven\ntouching matters therein roniaiiied, In which bill\nIt Is. anions: other thlncs', set for'h, thai yno, Hie\nsaid delei dant, are violating and threatening to\nviolate certain exc'uxive rights and privilege\nvested iu sad complainants, lor construction.\nmaking, u ln(?. aud vending tu others to be ueed,\ncer sin improvemeita in pw:nl Al u hiues, and\nthut the acting sua doing ot you, uie ai-- i de\nfendant, are contrary lo f oully and ifo.Kj con\nscience! we, Iher lote, In cun derail n of the\npn mle. do trlctly. aud until the turtiier orders\nof th s Uourt, enjoin ana eoinmanu you, me sau\nJoel Chase. and your Attorney, Servants, Agents,\naud Workineu, and each and ever, ono of them,\nunder the penalty th .t my fall thereon ; that you,\nand each of you, do from lieiicuforth, altogether,\nbsolute'y and until the further order of this\nCourt, desist and retrain from directly or iiulueoi- -\nly, constructing, muklng. woiking, Mine, aelimz,\nor putting into praciioe or operation, or id any-v- ,i\ncounterfeiting or Imitating th. invention or\nimprovement belouglc; to said cooiplaiuanta, aud\ndescribed, cl. lined, and set forth I u certain Let-\nter. Patient of the U nltd rita'es,
09622d44aae94d8a04298a13abcaf242 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.6123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 . 11. UM» 8*»oreiujd the Grangers took the lead,\nrbe highest pr ee of the day were, with a few\nacepuons, w.ileln the forenoon, but the galas\njverye«erd*vVbest;flgurej w<*re only fur suiall\n[r*ctfone an 1 nothing In tome cases.\nPrices began to y eld shortly before noon and\nb* iu'«r-et <otitlfi ed moderately active and weak,\n[a th lust boor Ne# Yor< Central. wclcb had sold\nloam from JMoVTvf. was decidedly fever sh and\nfoully uluh"d at #/. Between noon and a little\nifur l o'c'oek N»w Jets«. r ntrnl row from 4HVf to\ni0, Lu-kawauua fr.mi «6W to Wand Delaware &\niu>lk0u from &)% to ni,'a. the highest p Ice of the\nlav In each case. This »uuport was, however, of\nloaval upon the real of the lit, and In the last\nlour the look, mentlounl join In the downward\nnoveinent. Shortly before the close there was a\nactionofKtoK ueroent In Jnauy of tncactive\nlocks butt light Kafiiswera lost la manycssetlu\nhe final sales aua the market dosed ban ly Meady\n cr near the lowest quotations of the day fjr thu\nnost ol i he list.\nTotal sale* were 338,995 shirts.\n0.6.us, 10%:U. H-<V.W*U.8. new 4s12SK;\nsclflo fit of *, 126*f; Ceninu Pacific, 113K; lirle.\nsoonds, 63; Lehigh A Wllkesbarre, of'd, 97;\nottislana Conso^MUseouri fit,10lX; St. Joseph,\nYi*i\\ St. P . A a (j. firsts, 121: Teuntssee fia, old,\n7J4. do new, 47kj: Texaa Pacific Land Grants W;\n0 8I0 Grande. 68: Union Pacific Urate 11M»; do\nand grants, lOT&doBlnking fund, 1Z1X; Virginia\n1, 40; Virginia Connolm extra matureu coupon*.\n7; do deferred, 6; Ad«m« Kxpresa. 141; American\nIxprom. 9>: Canada 8oulhorn, 35: (Antral Pa*\nIdc, n.t",: Chesapeake A Ohio. CJi: do first preferred,\nI; do aeoottd preferred, 7%; 0. 0. C. A L 88:\nlenverARio Grande. 2; Erie, 16ft: do preferred\nI; Fort Wayne 1*614; Kansas & Texas. 2J%- Lake\nIrle A Western, 4&: Lake Shore, 70#; Loultftlle A\naahrille. UH Louisrllle, New Albany A Chicago,\ni: Memphis a Charleston. 8flk; Mlrhiym Central,\n1%, Missouri Pacific. 94. Nashville A
13e23c0eb697733510c92d8d48da4763 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.9164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 stealing a pair of shoes from the store of v\nCarter king, and with attteinpting to\nsteal an overcoat from a l'Jth street\nclothing store. When arrested (Jarner\nappeared to be very mucli under tho in- 4\nfluence of liquor, but just as he\nwm about entering the Court House yard\nhe suddenly sprang away from the officer, g\nand ran down Chaplino street, liaum .\nstarted after liis prisoner, and command-\neil him to stop, but as he continued to run\ntho officer discharged hid pUtol twice in £\nthe direction o( tho runaway. There wan\nconsiderable of a crowd about the Court\nHouse steps, und much indignation wa* .\nexpressed at the conduct 01 tho ollicer.\nMr. liauui in one of the best ollicer*\non the force, and he did just what hut\nbeen done in this city timo and again, and c\n doubt thought he waa doing his uuiy.\nBut there is no authority under the sun\nfor thus making target* of persons arrest- fi\ned for petty offenses, even though it is a\nfact, ns Hinted by the officers, that the\nshootiug is only done for the purpose of\n"scaring" the prisoner. It is high lime a\nthis thing should stop in a civilised city, si\nMayor Sweeney was very indignant at li\nthe shooting, and guvc the officers, indi- I\nvidunlly and collectively, to understand hi\nthat he did uot want such a thing to\noccur ngain. Oarner wa* secured and\nlocked up. Baum was nfierwards arrest- I\ned and taken before Justice Tolivar upon H\na charge of illegal shooting, when he »\nwaived an examination and gave bond\nin (lie sum of $500 for his appearance\nat the County Court to answer.
09181bee3dfb17eec3cae53880b5f36c THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.389344230672 46.187885 -123.831256 Road distriot No. G John Klint.\nEoad district No. 7 J. L . Lewis.\nBend of E. 0 . Nelson and PaciGc\nOadeau for the payment of costs of\nthe survey and view of tho road pro-\nposed between the Elohoman and\nCathlamet in case tho same is not\ngranted. Examined and approved.\nPetitions presented by 39 citizens\nof the Elohoman, asking for a county\nroad aa follows, to wit: Beginning at\nthe county road leading from Eloho-\nman to Cathlamet and about seven\nrods north of the north lino of the\nBirnie, D. C, claim; thence about\nnorthwest to a small gulch near the\nnorth line of "William Spence3' land;\nthence near north down said gulch\nland through a lane and extending\nthrough J. J. Foster's farm to the\nbank Strong's river; thence down\nthe left bank of said river to a small\nisland in said river; thence crossing\nsaid river; thence down tho right\nbank of said river to tho west line of\nR. 0. A. Elliot's farm; thence to fol-\nlow north on said line forty rods more\nor less; thence near northeast to the\nnorth line of said Elliot's farm aud\nto a stake recently driven; thence\nnorth to a stake No. 72; thenco to fol-\nlow the old road near north by east to\nCadeatfs old logging road; thence to\nfollow the base of the hill to the\nsouthwest corner of the southwest\nQuarter of section 24. township 9\nnorth, range 6 west; thence north to\nthe northwest corner of said quarter\nsection and terminating at said cor-\nner.
2470b79724d7f1d43105d67f5cd7011b THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1901.6452054477422 33.031451 -111.387343 rich sulphide in bunches.\nMr. Cutting has about sixty men em\nployed in the development of the two\nproperties under the immediate super\nvision of Tom Kavanauagh, foreman.\nMr, Cutting wants more men. lie is\nemploying all the miners who apply\nfor work, and by September 1 hopes to\nincrease tbe force to one huudrea.\nThe companies at Troy pay $3 for\neight hour shifts.\nIn regard to the erection of a plant\nfor the treatment of the ores, Mr. Cut-\nting stated that the eastern officers of\nthe Troy Copper company had favored\ntaking immediate steps to that end,\nbut they had deferred to his judgment.\nMr, Cutting is conservative ia this mat\nter and if more mining superintendents\nin Arizona pursued the same policy\nthere would be fewer failures to re\ncord. Mr. insists that the\nmines should be well opened and the\ncharacter and probable output of the\nores determined before the erection of\na large redaction works is undertaken.\nThe question of a water supply will\naffect the location of the works, al-\nthough sufficient water has been devel-\noped at the mines to supply a smelter\nof moderate size and a smelter will in !\nall probability be erected at the mines\nbefore many months.\nThe building of a railroad to some\npoint on the Southern Pacific to Troy\nis also receiving consideration from\nthe Troy and Manhattan companies.\nThey are financially able and are will-\ning to undertake such an enterprise,\nbut the matter will be allowed to\nrest in abeyance at least until next\nyear. The future certainly looks\nbright for the Troy camp.
220f5ba7840665cfa737d45ac6091913 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.3794520230847 43.798358 -73.087921 cellent relief in affections of the Liver and Bow\ne!s,as has been proved in hundreds of cases where\npatients have come forward "and requested that\ntheir experience in taking them might be pub\nhshed tor the benefit ot oiners. in uieir opera\nion in 6uch cases, they restore the tone of the\nStomach, strengthen the digestive organs, and in- -\nvigorate the general Junctions ot the whole body\nand thus become to both 6exes (for they are per\nfectly adapted to each) an invaluable means ol\ncreventinz disease and restoring health.\nIn affections of the head, whether accompanied\nwith pain and giddiaess or marked by the griev\nous calamity of impaired mental energy; n pal\npitations of the heart, flatulence, loss ol appetite\nand . strength and the multiplied symptoms of\ndisordered digestion, THE LIFE MED1CIJVES\nwill be found to possess the most salutary efficacy,\nConstitutions weak or decayed in men\nor women are under the immediate influence oi\nThe Life Medicines. Old coughs, asthmas and\nconsumptive habits ate soon relieved and speedi\nly cured. Poverty of blood, and emaciated limbs\nwill ere long meet the happiest change; the chill\nwatery fluids will become rich and balsamic and\nthe limbs be covered with flesh firm and healthy.\nJvervous disorders of every kind and ' from\nwhatever cause arising, fly before the effects of\nTHE LIFE MEDICIJVES and all that train of\nsinkings anxieties and tremours which so dread\nfully affect the weak, the sedentary and the deli\ncate will in a short time be succeeded by cheer\nfulness and every presage of health.\nFor weakness, deficiency of natural - strength\nand . relaxation of the vessels by too frequent in-\ndulgence of .the passions, this medicine is a safe,\ncertain and invaluable remedy.
22c82b59eada4a279f7707432838403d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.4178081874684 43.798358 -73.087921 sending their publications into the South-\nern States, they have excited the appre-\nhensions, and aroused the indignation of\nthe community. Restrictions have been\nimposed and precautions taken, which\notherwise would not have been deemed\nnecessary. Those masters who felt anx-\nious to promote the spiritual welfare of\ntheir slaves, have been impeded in accom-\nplishing their desires, by the efforts of\nthese brethren, whose zeal has so unhap-\npily outstretched their judgment. Their\nlabors, so far, instead of ameliorating the\ncondition of our colored population, have\nresulted to their injury, instead of friends,\nthey have been enemies, so far as the well\nbeing of the slaves is concerned. (12)\nObedience to civil magistrates is most\nforcibly enjoined in the New Testament,\nand subjection to the governing, powers\nand laws of the country. The authority\nexercised by the Roman government over\nthe provinces was tyrannical\nand oppressive yet neither our Saviour\nnor his apostles, denounced it on this ac-\ncount. They contented themselves with\ninculcating the just and equitable princi-\nples of the gospel, with the firm persua-\nsion that if the doctrioes they taagh! and\nthe precepts they enjoined, should exten-\nsively prevail, and be fully practised --\ntyranny and oppression must necessarily\ncease. As citizens of the Union, as pro-\nfessors of religion, when the laws of our\nStates prohibit the intioduction of certain\npublications within their bounds, we can-\nnot see how these abolition Baptists, with\n,a clear conscience, violate these laws.\nThe plea that such laws are oppressive\nand unjust will not avail them. Until\nthey are rescinded they have no right to\ndisobey them. They can find no sanc-\ntion or example for such a course in the\nNew Testament, (13)
0b7830b32507e3b155b0759cbbf365f1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.2561643518518 39.745947 -75.546589 PITTSBURG, April 4.—The commonweal\narmy lia» arrived. At Lower Alleghany it\nwas met with hand« hy the Iron Moltlers\nunion, pattern makers, boilermaker«, link­\ner« ami other labor organizations m,d a\nlarge crowd of people. When ibecity line\nwas reached, a halt was taken for luuch,\nand then the army marched to Exposition\npurl;, where it went into camp for two days.\nLong before the arrival of thecommon-\nweul t he streets in the vicinity of Wood's\nrun were packed with people. Director\nMurphy of the department of public safety\nbecame alarmed, as the crowd was wrought\nup to a high tension uf excitement, und ro-\nfused to allow the army to come into the\ncity by that route.\nA change was then made, and Coxey and\nhis followers marched iu ovtr the Brighton\nroad. Many houses were decorated, aud\nalong the route to the parks the army was\ngreeted with cheer« by the crowds who\nthronged the sidewalks. A feature of the\nparade was 100 bicyclists carrying banner»\ninscribed "Coxey'* Brigade.''\nIt lias beeu that Co y au ! n\nlarge number of his followers liiivedet. -i d fil\nto take a trip through the southern states\nas soon as ids mission to Washington is\nfulfilled. This decision was arrived at a\nday or so ago, and the trip will lie made\nwith a view of converting as many south­\nern people as possible to the ideas advanc­\ned by Coxey. As at present figured out\nby Coxey It will require the liest part ol\ntwo mouths fo- his army to go to Wash\niugton and see the Coxey measure» acted\nupon by congress.\nThen the army, or as much of it as re\nmains intact, will make a trip through\nVirginia aud North and South Carolina,\nbeing joined in the lutter »tute by Frye's\nband of Texas Coxryites. The scheme is\nto wiu the southern farmers over to the\nCoxey Browne-Bmith ideas. When tlii- is\ncompleted, the task of the reformers will\nhe fulfilled, and the army will disband.\nWhile Superintendent of loliu- O'Mura\ndoc« not anticipate the slightest trouble
2d28e610a030d58aad6c8ce18778a09a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.546575310756 37.561813 -75.84108 less valuable woods are very rapid\ngrowers and in a few years make an ex-\ncellent shade. Some of the more valuable\nkinds of timber do not grow quite so\nrapidly, yet it will pay to plant them, as\nwhen the trees require thinning out the\nwood adds to the material for fuel, fences\nand other farm repairs. Several groves\ndistributed upon different parts of the\nfarm will better accommodate the distri-\nbution of the pastures and the different\ndivisions of the land into fields. The\ntrees placed in clusters will do less\ndamage to the crops and occupy less\nspace than when placed along the mar-\ngins of the fields. These trees also have\nmore or less influence upon the meteorolo-\ngical conditions of the country, causing\na more uniform of rain.\nHowever, leaving out of the question all\nthe advantages to be derived from the\npresence of an abundance of trees, ex-\ncept that of the improved condition of\nthe stock produced by the protection it\nreceives from the rigors of the different\nseasons of the year, it pays to plant\nthem. Trees afford valuable protection\nfrom the driving winds of winter, also\nprotection from the scorching sun of\nsummer, and farmers should act upon\nthe principle that stock needs the latter\nquite as much as the former. The burn-\ning sun during the "dog days," with the\ninfliction of the Hies upon the unpro-\ntected bodies of domestic animals, more\nthan counteracts all the chance for gain\nin growth or flesh while grazing upon\nthe best of pastures.
0fbbc46e2fccb01d1243e60205560541 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.9958903792492 37.53119 -84.661888 Tho youngest girls cowered against\ntheir father, who in cousternation watch-\ned tho boundless sea around us.\nAnd night was coming as rapidly as\ntho tide; a heavy, damp darkness. Wo\nremained there half nn hour, nn hour, I\nhardly know how long, looking nt tho\nyellow water which thickened nnd boiled\nand played upon tho reconquered beach.\nOno of tho girls complained of tho\ncold, nnd wo thought wo would go in\nfor protection against tho light but cold\nbreeze which stung our faces. I leaned\nover tho trap door. Tho ship was full of\nwater and wo weio obliged to crouch\nagainst tho stern, which gavo us some\nprotection. Night was now upon us and\nwo drew closer together, surrounded by\nwater nnd darkness. I felt tho shoulder\nof tho young English girl, teeth\nchattered nt times, tremblo against mine.\nI also felt tho soft warmth of her body,\nnnd that wsnnth was to mo as delicious\nas a kiss. Wo no longer spoke; wo wero\nmotionless, silent, crouching liko ani-\nmals in a ditch during a storm.\nAnd somehow, iu spite of all; in spito\nof tho darkness, in spito of tho terriblo\nand growing danger, I commenced to\nfeel happy .t being there, happy at tho\ncold and drnger, at tho long hours of\nagony to bo passed on thoso planks, so\nnear that pretty delicate English girl. I\nwondered why this tensation of joy pene-\ntrated me. Why? Who can say? Was\nit becauso sho was thore? Who was she?\nA littlo unknown English girl. I did\nnot lovo her. I did not know hor. and
6911730055319171fe892dd8811e1dd9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 An election for members of ths\nBoard of Public Education in Wilming­\nton will be held on Saturday, June Tl,\n1921. Polls will open 12 o'clock noon\nand will close at 7 p. m ., standard time,\nand the polling places are as follows:«\nFIRST WARD—School District No. 1.\n204 West Fourth street: School District\nNo. 2, Southeast corner Third\nOrange street.\nSECOND WARD—School District No.\n1, 208 East Second street; School Dis­\ntrict No. 2, School 'No. 18, 422 Town­\nsend street; School District No. 3. School\nNo. 14 . 309 South Claymont street.\nTHIRD WARD—School District No. 1 ,\nSchool No. 22, Second and Justiëm\nstreets; School District No. 2, 802 West\nSecond street; School District No. 3.\nSchool No. 3, 210ft Jefferson streçt;\nSchool District No. 4, 705 West Firth\nstreet; School District No. 5, 500 Jef­\nferson street.\nFOURTH WARD—School District JSo.\n1, School No. 1. Fifth and French\nstreets; School District No. 2, 424 East\nFourth street; School District No. 3,\nSchool No. 7. Fifth and Pine streets!\nFIFTH WARD—School District No. 1.\n621 Orange street; SchJbl District No.\n2, 705 Monroe street; School District No.\n3, Northwest corner Seventh and Jack-\nson streets; School District No. 4. rear\n701 Van Buren street; School District\nNo. 5. 1333 West Sixth street; School\nDistrict No. 6. 1800 West Eighth street;\nSchool District 7. 630 Bayard ave­\nnue; School District No. 8. 823 Orange\nstreet; School District No. 9 , School\nNo. 9. Eighth and Wollaston street»;\nSchool District No. 10 . 800 Monroe\nstreet; School District, No. 11 , School\nNo. 28,\nSchool\nNinth and Scott streets.\nSIXTH WARD—School District No. 1,\n104 East Seventh street: School Distrikt\nNo. 2, Northeast corner Seventh and\nWalnut streets; School District No. 3,\n842 French street; School District No. 4,\n1124 King street: School District No. 4,\n916 Walnut street; School District No.\n6, School No. 5 . 1213 Walnut street.\nSEVENTH WARD — School District\nNo. 1, Southeast corner Eleventh ani\nWest streets; School District No. 2, 110t>\nOrange street; School District No. 3,\nHoward high school. 1210 Orange\nstreet; School District No. 4. School N<*.\n2. Eleventh and Washington streets;\nSchool District No. 5. 605ft West Tcntn\nstreet; School District No. 6, Wilming­\nton high school; School District No. r,\n1023 Gilpin avenue; School District No.\n8. 1212 Pennsylvania avenus; School\nDistrict No. 9, 1310 Gilpin avenue:\nSchool District No. 10 . 1404 duPont\nstreet; School District No. 11. 1718 Gll -\nfin avenue; School District No. 12 . 1823\ncovering avenue; School District No. \\\nSchool No. 13, Seventeenth and Union\nstreets; School District No. 14, 1418\nRiverview avenue; School District No.\n15, 2619 West Eighteenth street.
03d23865b8e95bbb6939cac46eb146dc IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1889.691780790208 43.82915 -115.834394 Edison is in Paris, which outdoes\nherself in the graceful honors paid\nto our loading inventor. Nothing\nhas been better said in his praise\nthan by a writer in Figaro: “ Never\ncan a sufficient tribute of honor be\npaid to him who by telephone trans­\nports speech from pole to pole; who\nby phonograph repeats to our ears\nand hearts blessed words of dear ones,\ngiving them to us with the charm of\ntheir intonation. He has merited\nwell of all countries.” While Paris\nthus generously recognizes his work,\nwe at home remember that the Edi­\nson exhibit is perhaps the most won­\nderful thing in the worlds fair and\nthe one which saves the general inad­\nequacy of contributions from the\nUnited States from being disgraceful.\nEdison was born at Milan, Ohio, \n1847. He began his working life as\na newsboy when about eight years\nold, at Port Huron, Michigan. Five\nyears afterwards he succeeded in pro­\ncuring a contract for the exclusive\nsale of newspapers on the Grand\nTrunk railway of Canada. He began\nthe study of chemistry, prosecuting\nit in connection with his newspaper\nbusiness, and was subsequently an\noperator. In 1867, while living in\nCincinnati, he began experimenting\nwith the view to sending two mes­\nsages at once over one wire, and suc­\nceeded in doing this in Boston not\nlong afterwards. This was the first\nof the many inventions which have\nearned for him and his country im­\nmortal honor. Edison has made\nwealth by his inventions, and is chief\nproprietor of a great factor?' at Menlo\nPark, New Jersey.
91ba0fb0ea9745277ef1b06e5167fead THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.9630136669202 39.369864 -121.105448 It i« a real misfortune to mankind that\nthey are not educated in the lore and\npractice of virtue for its own sake,\nwithout promise of reward or threat of\npunishment. It may do for a certain\nclass who believe in their own moral su-\nperiority, to declare that the majority of\ntheir fellow-beings can be kept from ut-\nter depravity only by threats andpromises\n—by the strong compulsions of rewards\nand penalties; but there is a daily in-\ncreasing class of more humble thinkers,\nwho proclaim the radical likeness of all\nmen, and for whom this easy excuse for\nmental tyranny will not do. These con-\ntend that virtue is intrinsically lovely,\nand that if men were taught to believe\nso their lives would be better than they\never can be under other teaching. The\nloftier the motive which actuates a man\nthe purer his actions are certain to be.\nIf all were convinced as the best are,\nthat a lie carried its own defilement,than\nwhich no prospective and outward con-\nsequences dependent upon human law\ncould be severer punishment, what use\nwere oaths ? It is the fault of educa-\ntion, not of nature, that our motives to\nupright conduct are debased,—that in-\ntegrity depends upon artificial checks\ninstead of springing spontaneously from\n impulses of free souls.\nWe are taught from earliest childhood\nthe false doctrine that vice is more at-\ntractive and easy than virtue; what\nwonder if we are confirmed violators of\nall natural ordinances, hardened stiflers\nof all genial promptings, ere experience\ncomes to undeceive us? Virtue will\nnever hold its proper place in human\nregard until it is inculcated irrespective\nof and above theological creeds which\nare based upon a theory of rewards aud\npunishments,—until it challenges re-\ncognition as the first great need, and is\nliberated from its present subordination\nto arbitrary dogmas. Virtue docs not\nreward selfish worshipers; such are but\nmock votaries of hers; she must bo\nserved for her own sweet sake. Well,\nhas Pitt said: u The single opinion in\nreligion, that all tilings are so well made\nby the Deity that virtue is its own re-\nward, aud that happiness will ever arise\nfrom acting according to the reason of\nthings, or that God, ever wise and good,\nwill provide some extraordinary happi-\nness for those who suffer for virtue's\nsake, is enough to support a man under\nall difficulties, and tokeep him steady to\nhis duty, and to enable him to stand as\nfirm as a rock amidst all the charms of\napplause, profit and honor."
45046ad9aac64c9c73ebc19cb435fedc THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.6013698313038 37.561813 -75.84108 Who afterwards elected Martin Van Bu-\nren President of the United States ?\nAn overwhelming Democratic majority.\nWho gave the negro the right to voto in\nNew Hampshire T\nThe Democratic party.\nWho permitted every colored person\nowning two hundred and fifty dollars in\nNew York, to become a citien 7\nA General Assembly puroly Democratic.\nWho repealed the laws of Ohio which\nrequired negroes to give bond aud security\nbefore settling in'thiS State?'\nThe Democratic part\nWho nasscd a law bv which; in Ohio,\nthe netrro is placed on tbe witness stand\nalongside of the white ma i ?\nThe Democratic party.\nWho voted for a bill in the Ohio\nturo repealing all laws making a distinc-\ntion on account of color in this State? -\nOeorire E. Putrh.\n afterwards elected George E; Tiigh\nto the United States Senate ?\nThe Democratic party.\nWho voted in the Constitutional Conven\ntion of Ohio against a provision to prevent\nthe negroes coming into the estate 7\nKufus P. Kannoy.\nWho voted iu the same Convention to\nnermit neeroes to eo to the salno schools\nwith white chrildren ?\nRnfus P. Rannev.\nWho supported Rufus F. Uanney for Gov\nernor of Ohio in 1859 ?\nThe Democratic partv,\nWho decided in the Supremo Court of\nOhio that mulattoes had the right to vote ?\nReuben Wood, a Democrat\nWho, after the decision, elected Reuben\nW cod Governor of Ohio ?\nThe Democrat ic Part v.\nWho refused in the State Convention of\n1850, to change the rule established by\nthis decision?
14a6f889350fa513c51d95ca9894e627 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.8205479134956 39.261561 -121.016059 Quartz.—The quartz mill erected last sum-\nmer by Mr. Randolph and others, wss started\nto running last Thursday. The mill was con-\nstructed to run by waterpower, and it was sup-\nposed that there would always be a sufficient\nquantity of water ill Deer creek for that pur-\npose. But the nater was unusually low last\nsummer, and on the completion of the mill,\nwas found to be insufficient. The rain of\nWednesday night, however, raised the creek\nenough so that tin' mill was put in motion the\nnext day. Wc learn that the proprietors of the\nmill have had quarried from their lead about\nfour hundred and lifty tons of quartz, which\nwill be crushed this winter. A considerable\nquantity of rock taken from this lead has been\ncrushed at Grass Vulloy, and other places, and\nhas paid from $12 to $120 a ton, and that\n is now ready to be crushed, it is believed\nwill pay from $20 to $30 a ton. The mill is\nlooted iu the Monte Santa District, about half\na mile above the Oriental mill, and is so situa-\nted that the rock can be conveyed to it from\nthe lead with little expense. The proprietors\nthink they will be able to run the mill nine\nmonths in the year, iu the dryest seasons.\nThe American Hill mill, after a suspension of\nabout six weeks, was started again a few days\nago. Mr. Soggs informs us that they have out\nsome three hundred tons of rock, w hich it is es-\ntimated will yield from $-10 to S.IO a ton, and\nthe mill will now he kept running night and\nday until the lot is crushed. The mill lias\ntwelve stampers, and crushes from twenty to\ntwenty-live Ions in twenty-four hours.
8e7460e818773df9268bef2c618e7d0f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.83698626966 41.681744 -72.788147 toilet facilities for boys and girls. At\neach end of the corridor are pro-\nvided fireproof stair towers of steel\nconstruction leading to basement,\nsecond floor and roof. The corrdiors\nfor both first and second floors are\nwell lighted in area and are 12 feet\nwide, giving a well, ventilated and\nspacious appearance.\nThe second floor contains a library\nand the rest of the class rooms, In-\ncluding art and geography rooms.\nThe library is one of tho best school\nlibraries in the city. It is spacious,\nand carried out in very simple but\nattractive style of architecture and\nplanned so as to accommodate li-\nbrary facilities for the entire build-\ning when completed. It is located on\nthe center axis of the building and\ntakes in all the windows the up-\nper part of the portico. Toilet facili-\nties for both boys and girls are lo-\ncated on. this floor, together with\nrest rooms for teachers.\nThe basement includes a gym-\nnasium and temporary auditorium\nwhich in the future will bo convert-\ned into tho girls' gymnasium. It has\nshower facilities ready for connec-\ntion. It has largo store rooms, meter\nrooms, etc. Boiler room is located to\nthe rear of the building, made ample\nto take care of the future boiler and\nadjoining this boiler rlim is a large\ncoal bunker to store 400 tons of\ncoal. Coal bunker is so designed so\nthat the coal can be deposited\nthrough the top roof slab through\ncoal holes. A hydraulic ash hoist has\nbeen provided adjoining the ash\nbunker.
02e0a9323f70fbc9b6298e8f46a0a3cb PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.360273940893 40.441694 -79.990086 It will be a year in November since one of\nthe brightest faces among tho Evening\nLeader's throng of happy newsboys was sud-\ndenly mi$sed from his regular daUy visits at\nthe counting rooms. His rosy cheeks and\nsparkling eyes, fuU of fun and enthusiasm,\nntenslfled by the knowledge that he was\nearning money by hl3 own efforts, made him\na conspicuous figure among his host of Uttle\ncompetitors.\nBy Inquiry it was learned that the little\nbusiness mnn (whose name is GUbert C. Mc-\nDonald) had sustained painful and probably\nfatal injuries by faUing from a fence post,\nstriking, heavily upon his head nnd hip,\nwhUo playing near the home of his father,\nJohn McDonald, at 437 South Ionia street.\nSince that time up to last March the little\nsufferer gradually lost the use of his\nlimbs and body, finally becoming a con-\nfirmed and helpless invalid. In. vain did\nanxious parents seek the medical profession\nfor help; the best talent wns powerless.\nTimes without number were the heart-\nbroken parents and sympathizing friends\ncalled to watch the terrible agony of the lit-\ntle wnsted body, expecting every moment to\nsee their precious one torn from them by\nthe dread destroyer.\nIt was with this knowledge of the case,\ntogether with the fact that this same little\nboy is now a happy youth among his play-\nfellows that the Leader, with a natural in-\nterest for one of Its many newsboys, gives\nIts readers a brief history of his terrible\nsickness and miraculous recovery as related\nby his parents and their neighbors.
1d62cf63c0a0c6940bf33c035125fa19 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.23698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 some of the able men who are mem- (\nbers of that Southern association\nwith respect to the opportunities that\nare ready for Immediate development\nin that section of the land.\nFor some years I have regarded the\nSouth as sure to become possibly the\ngreatest industrial section of the\nUnited States within the next twen-\nfive or thirty years. Certainly it will\nbe as great in that respect as any\nother in the country.\n“I wanted to tell the people of the\nSouth what the especial advantage\nwas which they possess They have\nenormous water power in the South.\nIf there has been any especially great\ndevelopment of the utilization of elec­\ntricity for industrial purposes, it has\nbeen through the employment of elec­\ntric energy for the production \npower both industrial and for the\nhauling of cars.\n"1 made somestudy of water power\nopportunities in the South, and, of\ncourse, I knew something about the\ngeneration of electricity through the\nutilization of water power.\n"I wanted to say to the people of\nthe South that we have at last dis­\ncovered a means by which electricity\ncan be carried for long distances\nwithout any appreciable loss of its\nenergy. That is a strong point in\nfavor of the Souths industrial deveL\nopmeiit. They can, at eomparltlvely\nlow cost, capture enormous water\npower that has been going to waste\nlor years, convert it at that point into\nelectric energy, and then carry the\nenergy to commercial advantage to\npoints as far distant as a hundred\nmiles, even more.
dd0ce9ff574679e7f7f3deaf61ce9ae6 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.132876680619 39.560444 -120.828218 head had gone up. aud as where there is a\nheadthere must also be a caudal extremity,\nI put in. The last day or two has been\npassed in very exciting interviews with\nPoadunk with regard to my last letter.\nThe matter, by the interposition of mutual\nfriends, has been arranged without blood-\nshed, much to my own satisfaction and\nthat of my well-wishers. Fosters Bar is\njust subsiding from the fever of excitement\ncaused by the advent of Meagher, the Irish\npatriot, who delivered a lecture at that\nplace on Tuesday evening.\nI find that there, as well as elsewhere,\nthe Citizen has made its mark, and there\nis but little doubt if you go on as you have\nbegun,your success is certain. I understand\nfrom friend Bob that it is your intention\nto illustrate the forthcoming numbers of\nthe Citizen with wood-cuts. A drawing en-\ntitled the “Return from the Wake,” is now\nin course of preparation, and will be duly\nforwarded to you,as soon as finished,togeth-\ner with a tale explanatory of the drawing.\nThe incidents are exciting, aud the scene\nitself is well depicted by the artist, and no\ndoubt will be acceptable to your readers.\nOf general news I have but little to com-\nmunicate. Law-suits are prevalent; and I\nhave found that the only two articles which\ncommand the ready money at the present\ntime are whisky and and in many\ncases they are dispensed at the same place\nif not at the same time. Here are often\nheard displays of forensic eloquence that\nwould astonish the dwellers in cities, and\nI suspect the upper portion of this\ncounty contains many embryo lawyers, if it\nhas not the good fortune to contain a bare-\nfooted candidate for president. I need\nscarcely tell you that most of the above\nwas written at Fosters Bar, and the pur-\nsuit of knowledge under difficulties is prac-\ntically exemplified here. Around the\ntable are sitting some three or four hom-\nbres engaged in the discussion of almost\nevery imaginable subject under the sun.\nOne, deeply imbued with the Meagher\nfever, is reading short extracts from a\npocket edition of Irish melodies, (not\nMoore's,) and at the same time that 1 am\nentertained with the history of a mascu-\nline duck which was the property of a cer-\ntain gentleman named Flaherty, of Irish\nextraction, done up in most excruciating\nverse, another will give a dissertation on\nthe plunbus unanimouse, which is a latin\nterm, he informs me, for the Constitution\nof the United States. This, with an\noccasional hint thrown in concerning Pre-\nsident's messages, telegraphic despatches,\netc. , are enough to perplex the brain of a\nmuch more ready writer than I am, and\nthis is the reason why the tradition of\n“
21e2450c359d02bc34800497c4df7405 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.8452054477423 39.369864 -121.105448 air is conducted by pipes into the tunnel.\nEvans & Co. arc drifting and hydmulicing\nboth, and running a tunnel besides. Their\nclaims adjoin those above described, and\npresent the same characteristics- We lately\nchronicled a four dollar prospect obtained\nfrom them, fifteen feet above the rock, and\nhave frequently reported weekly yields from\nthem of §5,000. When the earth on Buckeye\nHill is washed entirely by ihe hydraulic pro-\ncess, the regular yields will astonish the\nwhole State. There are no placer diggings\nin California superior to those around Sweet-\nland. Along the bed of the creek are half\na dozen tail sluices, which are important\nfeatures in the resources of the place. They\nhave been described before. Near town a\nfine granite quarry is being worked by Briggs\n& Co. The rock is easily got out in slabs of\nalmost any size, and must some day he in\ngreat demand. We are informed that some\nof it has been used in Marysville. Sluice\nand building lumber is furnished from the\nsaw-mill of the Shawmut Company, which\nhas been many years in operation.\nThe buildings now going up in and around\ntown are substantial and tasteful. There\n several pretty cottages on the hill-sides,\nwhose owners manifest a disposition to\nbeautify their homes and add to the wealth\nof the community by cultivation of the soil.\nThe low, warm hills that surround the town\nare admirably adapted to horticultural pur-\nposes. MV . O. Evans, (whose elegant new\ncottage, situated on a sloping hill amid em-\nbowering oaks, is-a prophecy of what this\nwhole region will yet be.) has a vinyard of\nseveral hundred grape vines, which bore pro-\nlifinally the present season, and will be next\nyear largely increased in numbers and be-\ncome a source of profit. In the same inclo-\nsurc we observed a bed of thrifty peanuts,\nwild cherries and gooseberries much im-\nproved bycultivation,and cabbages that grow\nall winter, the old stumps bearing new heads\nwith the return of spring. By next summer\nSwectland will, we hope, be able to boast of\nmany attractive gardens. The site of the\ntown is eminently adapted for picturesque\neffect, if art will .only come to the aid of\nnature and industriously carry out her beau-\ntiful hints. There is a positive pecuniary\nvalue in such embellishment of ones resi-\ndence which onght alone to recommend It
14c79574d2cd801a9e2389c0ae35e854 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.4424657217148 39.513775 -121.556359 here yesterday am the Yankee-\nLoss or. a (iwNo SAir—The British ship\nKdw*i d Johnston, of Liverpool. Capt. Law-\nson, wailed from the Chnieha Islands on the\ndoth of lost February, bound to Cork, Ire-*\nlaud, formrders with a cargo of guano On\nthe Tib of March, in lal i!U N. lon. 1)3 VV ,\nthe ship sprung.xileak, and after keeping\nthe pumps in operation twelve days and\nnights, u was foun 1 necessary to übuudon\nher, ibeee being four tuid a half tree of wa-\nter Lu the. hold, which was done on the IHth,\nail hands gotting solely on board the Amer-\nican whaleobip Adeline, cf New Bedford.\nCnpt. Tabor. Trwo hours alter leaving\nthe ship, she sank They stiocecdtal m «a.\nving two boats, eighteen barrels ol provis-\nions, one new mam unU foretopmast-\netaysail,turd some few trifles, tin the 2lst.\nfell in with the American ship Slate of\nMaine, bound to Cork, when the Captain,\nti, at arid second .otticers, cu (renter, suilmaker\nand one apprentice, went-on board. *On the\n30th of April in a quarrel between Jcter\nLiineban, one ot the rescued crew, and J.\nBell, a seamen belonging to the whaler, the\nlatter stubbed the ormcr severely in the\narm Mortification ensuing, lie died on the\n3d of March, at sea Tire Adeline arrived\nat Laliaina on the 4th pt May. The crew,\not rfre Efward Johnston, fifteen m u> ruber,\ntiavo arrived in Honolulu, and art at pres-,\nent boarding at the tJailurs House. Jaime*\nBell, the scaur.m who stab-bod Lanehaui, is\nto be sent to the United States lou trial,\nPolynesian.
16904c25bcc466dd192a1c9ef2d66048 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.7144808426938 29.949932 -90.070116 dme weeks ago I telegraphed you that the I\nUemcrratic leaders of the South intended to raise\na new and highly interesting point as to what\nc:Itzeps in the late rebel States are entitled to vote\ntr Jer the present condition of things. in South\ntarolina this point las assumed great prominence.\nfr n tie fact that the central executive committee\nof that State have issued a proclamation anuonuc-\ninc that urder the Howard Constitutional stond\nment no citizen is excluded froi. the right of\neufirage, although a very large class is shut out\nfrom the right of holding ofice. If this view of\nthe question be correct, it is evident the political\nresult can easily be changed in many of the\nSouthern States independent of the negro Demo-\ncratic vote, though, perhaps, it is not of so much\nconsrquecce in the case of South Carolina for the\nreason that in that State the negro population is\nhlgely in the ascendsnt. A slight perusal of the\nthird section of the fourteenth ameadment suftces\nto show that the point is well taken by the Demo-\noratic leaders the South. There is not a word\nforbidding the right to vote. The disabilities im\nposed extend solely to the right of holding\ntfitce, whether federal or 8tate, in all cases of\nper.ons who having previously taken an oath as a\nmember of Congreass, or sman cficer of the United\nbtates, or member of any State Legislature, or\nas execntiv or jndicial offcer of any State to\nsupport the Coastitution of the United States,\nshall have engaged in lInsurrectlon or rebellion\ngseinut the same, or given aid or comfort to tie\nerenmies thereof. Therefore. under this fourte-nth\narticle, no rebels are dsfanh-mbeed. N iw it only\nremisits to see whether the State Constitutions im-\npose tnore severe rstrcltionts.\nBow it may be with other States I am nrot pre-\npared to declare, bAt in 8o:th ('arl;na the ' jec\ntisn reems very clear. The new Cunstituti,n of\nthat Stale, prepared nndes carpet bag infitence.\nsimply providesk" that no person shall be allowed I\nto vote or hold ofce who is now, or hereafter\nmsy be. d1rqna'ifed therefor by the Con'titution\nof C Unitd States. "
029da85d97301f002756ee83a3e100bf IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1881.4698629819889 43.82915 -115.834394 ■ Q V VIKTtJii OF AN EXEODTION ISSUED OUT\nof the District Cour., Second Judicial District\nof Idaiio Territory, iu and lor Ada county and to me\ndirected and delivered, for a judgm ent rendered\nand entered in said Court, on the i .. enty-seventli\nday of January A. D. 188u, in favor of Joseph Per­\nrault, and ugaiuat James Crew and William James,\n1have levied on the following property, to-wit:\nTlios certain mining claims known as Copeland's\ndiggiu s, situated iu lJoise county, Idaho Territory,\nabout eighty miles from Idaho City, i a uortheriy\ndirection, und about four miles from Long Valley,\nand iu the vicinity of what is known as Gold Fork,\nbeing Gill, Bar, Gulch und Creel claims, and loca­\nted and taken up by James Copeland, Jam es How-\nT. .0 . Underwood and George Mozier, und sold\nto Jam es Crew March 23, 1870, by T. 0 . Underwood\n Thoina- Furry. Alsu the main ditch used in\nworking eaid diggings ; said ditch tapping a small\ncreek that empties into tho said Gold Fork about\none and one-half miles above the mouth thereof,\nextending thence along the mining ground, on the\nsouth side of said Gold Fork about throe miles to\na certain gulch, togs her with the ditches leading\nfrom the said gulch to the main diggings, about\none-half mile from said gulch, the said m ain ditch\nbeing about the capacity oftwo hundred and fifty\ninches, m iners measure, together with tho water-\nrights and privileges incident and pertaining to\nsaid ditches, being the first water-right to the wa­\nters of said gulches, with all reservoirs, lluines, etc.\nthereunto belonging or iu any wiBC app naming,\ntogether with all and singular the tenements, here­\nditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging\nor in any wise appertaining. Notice is hereby\ngiven that on the
2552418417588305fd6ec5d29fa1dc49 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.368493118975 32.612638 -90.036751 excavation of two or three feet be\nmade at that side, it will make the\nbridge less steep. This would neces-\nsitate building a wall to come above\nthe ground; but for the sake of the\nstable, it should be no higher. Let\nnone of the other foundation walls\nbe higher than necessary to just\nkeep out surface water and protect\nsills from decay. Woodwork is less\nexpensive than masonry, and will be\ndryer and more healthful for the\ncows. The stable should be at least\neight feet to ceiling, and the stor-\nage part of the barn above the stable\n16 feet to square. If built with a\nhip roof, more storage room above\nwill be had than under a common\npitch roof. A hay hole directly over\nthe feeding alley, and a similar hole\nbehind each row cows, for put-\nting down hay and straw, will serve\nthe additional purpose of ventilation.\nAt least four ventilating flues, of\ncapacity equal to about six inches in\ndiameter, should start about a foot\nfrom the floor, two back of each row\nof cows, and against the outside of the\nstable, made preferably of galvan-\nized sheet iron and end in one or\nmore discharges, well above comb of\nroof. I have made provision for a\nnumber of windows in the cow sta-\nble, where there, should be all the\ngood sunshine and light possible to\nsecure. There are two box stalls\nfor cows to freshen in, or. in case\nof sickness; also, two ca!f stalls and\ntwo silos, as calves from good cows\nshould be raised and they and their\ndams fed good corn silage the year\naround.
31be8e87707c9e88b76764ae000464ae THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.0178081874683 42.217817 -85.891125 Prof. Fowler, iu a lecture uiou tho\nanatomy of man, before the lloyal Col-\nlege of Surgeons, Loudon, discussed\nthe question of his origin on tho Ameri-\ncan continent. He says :\n"Till recently, opinions on the early\npeopling of America had Wen divided\nlxtweeu the views that tho inhabitants\nof this continent were a distinct indige-\nnous people, and therefore not related\nto those of any other land; and tltat\nthey were descended from an Asiatic\nlKple who, in comparatively recont\ntimes, passed into America by way of\nBehring strait, and thence spread grad-\nually over tho whole continent. These\ntheories have had to undergo considera-\nble modifications in consequence of tho\ntliscovery of the great antiquity of Uio\nhuman race in America as well as in tho\nOld WorhL Tho proof of this antiquity\nrests upon the high and independent\nstate of civilization which had been at-\ntained by tho Mexicans and Peruvians\nat the tivno of the Spanish conquest,\n tho evidence that that civilization\nhad lxcn preceded by several other\nstages of culture, following in succes-\nsion through a great stretch of timo.\nTho antiquity of this qu\njKriod is, however, entirely thrown into\ntho shade by the evidence now accumu-\nlating from various parts of North and\nSouth Americ t, that man existed on tho\nWestern continent, and under much tho\nsamo condition of life, using precisely\nsimilar weapons and tools, as in Europe\n'during the pleistocene or quartemary\nperiod, and perhaps even farther back\nm time. Ilecent paleontologioal inves-\ntigations show that an immense number\nof forms of terrestial animal', that were\nformerly supposed to bo peculiar to the\nOld World, aro abundant in tho Now.\nTaking all circumstances into considera-\ntion, it is quito as hkoly that Asiatic\nman may bavo been derived from Amer-\nica as tho reverse, or both bavo had\ntheir source in a common center, in\nsome region of tho earth now covered\nuithsea.
0e7486a2f50b21646a90ffb9bb28b210 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1907.223287639523 41.741039 -112.161619 to tho very laBt thread, so also In solid\ncolored walls, thcro are shoddy walls\nand permanently coled wnlls which\nretain their color down to the very\nlast particle. The Ideal wall contlng\nnovcr rubs off, never flakes nor chips\noff nnd It. always ready for a fresh\ncoat. If thero Is wallpaper on tho\nwall, Bonk It off with warm water,\nthen go over tho plnster after you\nhavo removed tho paper wjth warm\nwater to rcmovo every trace of pnsto.\nHavo tho wnll thoroughly clean for a\nclean wall cannot bo built on nn un-\nclean foundation. If thcro aro any\nparticles of foreign matter adhering,\nto the wall scrape them off with a\nputty knife. Then If thcro aro any\ndlBColorntlons on tho wall, slzo It with\na material made from cheap varnish,\nthinned down with benzine and japan\n for a drlor, then cover your\nwall with your tinting material.\nBe suro your man uses a tinting ma-\nterial mixed with cold water. If he\ncomes to you and asks for warm wa -to - r,\nyou can mako up your mind that\nthero Is gluo In tho material which he\nproposes to put on your wnll, and you\ncan be certnln thnt you aro going to\nhavo n shoddy wall, for gluo means\nshoddy. Gluo menus that it will hold\nits color long enough for tho man to\ncollect his bill nnd not much longer.\nInsist on your tinting material being\nmixed with clear, cold water. Bo suro\nthat your wall Is mado from puro ma-\nterials, then you will havo a perma-\nnent, artistic, sanitary wall. A wnll\nthat will bo a "thing of beauty and a\njoy forovor."
343f32ab56bc8011d13b0daf594d76de THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.6589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 "Bat besides the conforming Protestunt\npopulation, there was in Ireland another\nclass oi iTotealants who shared in some\ndegree the disqualifications of the Catho- V\nlies. To Queen Aune's bill for preventing H\nthe further growth of Popory, a clause j]\nwan added in Kngland and ratified bv the p\nIr.wli Parliament, that none should be\ncapable of any public employment, or of w\nbeing in the magistracy of any city, who b\ndid not receive the sacrament according j,\nto the Kngllsb test act; thus disfranchis-\ning the whole body of Presbyterians. At\nhome, where the Scottish nation enjoyed\nits own religion, the people were loyal; v<\nin Ireland the disfranchised Scotch Pros- pi\nbyterians, who still drew their ideas of e:\nChristian government from the Westmln- m\nster Conlession, began to believe that they tl\nwere under no religious obligation to ren- rc\nder obdience to the British government, st\nThey could not enter the Irish Parliament tl\nto strengthen the hands of the patriot m\nparty; nor were they taught by their faith ui\nto submit in patience, like the Catholic ti\nIrish. Had all Ireland resembled them, si\nit conlil not been kept in subjection, li\nBut what could bo done by unorganized tl\nmen, constituting only about a tenth of ai\nthe people, in the land in which they tl\nhut were sojourners? They were willing to ti\nquit a soil which was endeared to them by b\nno traditions; and the American colonies It\nopened their arms to receive them. They a\nbegan to change their abode as soon as a\nthey felt oppression; and every successive a\nperiod of discontent swelled the tido of A\nemigrants. J ust after the peace of Paris ai\nthe "Heart of Oak" Protestants of Ulster, ei\nweary of strife with their landlords, came n\nover in great numbers: and settlements st\non the Catawba, in South Carolina, dated\nfrom that epoch. At different times in tl\nthe eighteenth century some had found u\nhomes in New England, but they were tl\nMost numerous south of New York, from m\nNew Jersey to Georgia. In Pennsylvania tl\nthey peopled many counties, till, in public\nlife, they already balanced the influence\nof the iiuakers. In Virginia, they went\nup the valley of the Snenandoan; and A\nthoy extended themselves along the
6bced4be7da836e99b5fa13f016bbc5c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.6205479134958 41.681744 -72.788147 "Huggie" Carlson too mound for\nthe Corsairs and held the visitors\nhelpless In all the innings except the\nseventh when Watertown scored\nfour runs. "Hal" Beagle won the\ngame for the Pirates in the last of\nthe seventh when he smashed a long\nhomer into center field with a man\non base. It was a terrific clout and\nfell In the deep grass. "Hal" had\na great day at the bat with two\ndoubles and a homer in four times\nat bat. Both teams played a strong\ngame in the field and fought hard\nto get the verdict. O'Connell put up\na great game behind the bat and\nhandled the shoots of Carlson in\nneat style. McCleary put up a good\ngame at first for the- visitors.\nThe Pirates found offerings\nof Deland to their likening and\ncrashed out eleven hits. In tho\nfourth Begley and Charlow singled.\nThey were followed by doubles on\nthe part of Beagle and Williams.\nThis display of hits netted the Pi-\nrates four runs. The visitors tied the\nscore in the seventh Inning. Two\nhits and two errors were good for\nfour runs. Beagle then won the\ngame with his home run.\nThe Pirates are in the midst of a\nwinning streak and at their present\npace should cop honors in the\nleague. It was their twelfth vcitory\nof the year in fourteen starts. The\nWatertown team filed the bases in\nthe second inning and tried a\nsqueeze play. The locals outguessed\nthe visitors, however, and easily got\ntheir man at home.
1ad07207cecff4ba6496add1a9c3a21b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.7109588723997 40.063962 -80.720915 GUEAT CONFLAU11ATIOX.\n'our lluodrcd Thounnail Dollar Fire In j\nChJcHifo.Uftndy Factor/ Burned.\nCmc iop,Sept. 10 . .Tiio extensive candy\naahufactory 0/ Milton K Pago & Co., Nos. i\n11 and 212 Liko Btreet, io to-day in ruins.\nl low minutes after 11 o'clock last night j\npatrolman, passing along Filth avenuo,\naw flames shooting oat of the first story <\nwindows in tho alley at tho rear of the\nuilding, and in a few minutes the rear of 1\nbo whole interior seemed to bo ablaze.\nThe firo gained rapidly, leaping out of 1\nvery window, frout and rear, bursting ]\nhrough tho roof and illuminating the '\nky bo brightly that one couid see to read J\nlocks away. The structure was soon a !\naaaa of flames, and at intervals heavy 1\nrashes, shooting Ilames, and showers of J\nparks denoted tho falling in of large sec- 1\n of flooring and machinery. 1\nTho fire sproad to tho adjacent building, f\ntio low or floor of which is occnpiod by J.\nu Fay & Co., of which Mayor Kocho is a\nartnor and manager, and the upper floors i\ny Paee & Co. The upper stories were\nQon 1 tl .una and the fire shot through the\nDof, but the firemen prevented it from j\nurning downward, though so much water 1\nus required that the building was de-\niged, a flood running through tho floors 1\nnd ceiling to the basement. Next it ate i\nq way into, the building Nos. 215, 217 i\nod 219, occupied by the Pennsylvania E\n'ubo Works, igniting the roof first and ,\nurning down to the top iloor where it \\\n'as hold by the firemen. 1\nA tall fligstatr surmounted with a huge £\nBglo ran up from tho roof of Page's
1ddeb5fce436835f2aed3335835e72f4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.6013698313038 39.745947 -75.546589 through the mind over matter process,\npartly by massage. I put eome water on\nMr. Winkler's hand and he supposed It\nwas eome powerful Itnnment. I . said:\n/'That will cure you, yes, H will cure you\nwithin thirteen or fifteen days.” and àe\n»apposed that It was some powerful llna-\nment. I used suggestive therapeutics.\nPlenty of the most eminent physicians\nfind thn,t when their medicines and drugs\nfall that suggestive therapeutics proves\nvery efficient in n great many diseases,\nespecially those of a nervous nature.\nWhen such eminent men as Dr. Quacken-\nhoss. of Belvuo Hospital, use and recom­\nmend therapeutic suggestion» In the'r\nwork it cannot ho quectloned but lhat It is\nof great value in many eases.\nX. How did you treat Emma UddelT\nA. She was suffering from hallucina­\ntions brought on by self-abuse, snd I mns-\nsauged her spinal cord, for Is a well-\nknown fact that the nerves from tho\nspinal cord run to the private parts, and\nso I massnuged her spinal cord every lime\nI called there. Mrs. Walters said lhat she\nwas being cured by Christian Science.\nX. Did you eharge Mrs. Reldel (or your\ntreatment of her daughter?\nA. She said that she was poor, and I\ntold her that made no difference to me;\nthat I would do all I could to cure anyone,\nno mutter how poor they were; lhat X wos\nglad to be obie to cure anyone. She only\npaid mo about one-third as much os I\nusually charge. I told her that I would\ndo all I could (or her daughter by thera­\npeutic suggestions.\nHeld In »500 ball for tho next term cf\ntho Court of General Sessions of New\nCastle County. Ball furni^td by Joserh\nL. Carpenter, Jr.
06aac11cace8602ec7534c5665095154 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.2890410641805 42.217817 -85.891125 the otQce of the register of deeds, for the county of\nVan lluren, in the atate of Michigan, on the six-\nteenth day of January, A. I., 1877, in liber 13of\nmortgages, on page 364, which aaid mortgage was\nduly aasigned, on the third day of October, A. I).,\n1HHJ, by it e said Williamson Mason, to Harriet O.\nMason, which said assignment was, on the third day\nof October, A. D., 18h2, duly recorded in the office\nof said register of deodn for said county of Van\nlluren, in said state of Michigan, iu liber 24 of\nmortgages, on page 631, and upon which said mort-\ngage there is claimed to be due, at the date of thib\nnotice, the sum of six hundred and three dollars and\nforty cents, besides an attorney feo of fifteen dol-\nlars, covenanted in eaid mortgage to be paid, ia case\nany preceedlngs should be taken to foreclose the\n aud no suit or proceeding at law, or iu equity\nhaving been instituted to recover the amount so\nclaimed to be due, ner any part thereof.\nNctice Is, therefore, hereby given that cn Satur-\nday the 13th day of J uue, A. D., 1SR3, at one o'clock\niu the afternoon, there will be sold at public auc-\ntion, to the highest bidder, at the front door of the\ncourt house, in th villaro of Paw Paw, in said\ncounty of Van Hurra (said conrt house being the\nplace of holding the circuit court in and for s;dd\ncounty) the premises described In said mortgage (or\nso much the reof as shall be necexsory to satisfy the\namount due on said mortgage) together with interest\nthereon, and all legal costs, Including the said at-\ntorney fee of fifteen dollars, stipulated in said mort-\ngage to be paid ; that is to say the following de-\nscribed lands, situate--
041d832195c3c0fbb3e902e7e88d769a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.905479420345 42.217817 -85.891125 United States District Court of Arkansas ad-- I\nministers what scarcely deeorvos the nome of\nlaw, on account of tho impossibility of two or\nthroe United States Marshals being of much\naccount in an area of 30,000 square miles.\nThe Indian Territory has a population at\npresent averaging a little over one inhabitant\nto the square mile. The unoccupied portions\nof this country are sufficient iu extent to fur-\nnish a homestead to every Indian family in\nthe United States.\nHe believes the need of the following Con-- I\ngressional action to be immediate:\n1. A suitable government of Indians by\nproviding that the criminal laws of the United\nStates shall be iu force upon Indian reserva\ntions, aud shall apply to all offenses, includ-\ning offenses of Indian against Indians, and\nextending the jurisdiction of the United\nStates courts to enforce the same by declar-\ning Indians amenable to the police laws of the\nState or Territory for any act committed out-\nside a reservation by conferring upon the\nPresident authority, at his discretion, to ex-\ntend the jurisdiction of the State courts, or\nauy portion of them, tj any reservation when-\never in his judgment any tribe is prepared \nsuch control ; by providing a sulhcient force\nof Deputy Marshals to enforce law and order,\nboth among and iu behalf of Indians ; by giv-\ning authority to the Secretary of tho Interior\nto prescribe for all tribes prepared, in his\njudgment, to adopt the same, an elective gov-\nernment through which shall be administered\nall necossory police regulations of a reserva\ntion ; and by providing a district territorial\ngovernment or United States court, wherever\nIndians aro iu sufficient numbers to justify it.\n2. Legislation for the encouragement of\nindividual improvement ; by providing a way\nInto citizenship for such as desire it ; by pro-\nviding for holding lands in severalty by allot-\nment for occupation, and for patents with an\nultimate fee, but inalienable for a term of\nyears ; by providing that whenever par SOjrffS\ndistribution provided by treaty has proved in-\njurious, or without benefit to its recipients, a\ndistribution of tho some moy, in the discretion\nof the President, be made only in return for\nlabor of some sort.\nThe Commissioner takes occasion frequently\niu the report to remark upon the volue of re-\nligious infiucuco among the tribes, concluding\nos follows :
1abae9bf45d0fe153b7267219276c3ab THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.1571037935134 29.4246 -98.49514 arrested. Your reporter learned the name\nof one, August Ahr, but tho other four\nnre not accessible and their names can-\nnot bo obtained ut this writing. They\naro all young men and some have fami-\nlies. Tills haul brings up tho grand totnl\nso far to 20, with a certainty of many\nmore, itiey nre lnjait on account or\nlitter Inability to give ball. 'Tho bond Is\nlisted at SC00 for each and every oll'enso,\nand they will have to give nil the way\nfrom $0000 to $12,000 respectively.\nMi.n .nkai'olis, February 20. A special\nfrom Winnipeg says: Hroadvlew advices\nto tho Sun say that Yellow Calf nnd his\nringleaders are on tho way to IEcglna lq\ncustody of the mounted police. All quiet\nnt tho ngenoy. No lighting anticipated.\nstormy sceno ensued upon the arrest\nof Yellow Calf. KUles wero drawn on\nthe polico with threats toshoot. Ono\nbuck wns lust In the not of tiring at\nMajor lleokner, nnd but for the Inter-\nference of ono of tho men have\nkilled him and n general massacre fol-\nlowed. The llrst challenge to surrender\nwas disregarded, followed byn parley,\nIn. which tho Indians agreed to surren-\nder, which they did. The setters nre\nstill excited, hut tho Indians are quiet.\nSan Fiiancisco, Cal. , February 20. He- -\nports come from Auckland that the gov\nernment schooner Julia, which Is regu-\nlarly employed In procuring laborers\nfrom dill'erent groups of the Islands In\ntho Paclllo to work on the Biigar planta-\ntions In tho Sandwich Islands, recently\nlanded at the Island of Nanoral with\nnbout SO returned laborers. They'he--\nlongeu io ine isianus oi xarwa anu\nAplang. In tho same group, the people of\nwhich have been at constant warfare\nwith the Inhabitants of Nanoral. The\nreturned laborers, on landing, seized a\nnumber ofyoung girls and ravished them,\nwhloh provoked a light with tho Inhab-\nitants, who were armed only with clubs\nand spears. Twenty Nanoralns and\nmany others were wounded, while tho\nother party escaped to the Island of
33067594dfc40691cf88db9eaf8ce2e4 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1905.7136985984273 31.762115 -95.630789 swlinootblockN03I21Gtothono\ntho J Reese surrey thence w with\notthoJ Kccsosurreytothenwcor\nn with tho o lino ot tho bwanson\nsurrey to the s w corner of tho N\nsurvey thenco e with s line of said\nhe Nechcs river thence up said river\ne corner of tho N U Walter survey\n1th tho n lino of said Walker survey to\nerotlhoSwansunYartoroughsurvey\nllh the n line of Swanson Yurborougn\nhe n w corner of said survey thence\nw line of the Stranson Yaroorough\nithe s w corner of same Swanson Yar\ntrvcy thenco o with the s lino of said\nYarborougn surrey to the n w corner\nK Pierce surrey thence s o with tho-\nH It Ilerco surrey to tho H bteffy n\nlenco n e with said lino to tho n crner\nsurroy thenco s o with the n e line\ni gteffey survey to tho division lino In\n between Lee Pope and John bkocn-\nw with thedlvjilon lino to thos w lino\nline of tho I Stcffy survey thence a\nI w lino to corner of said Stetfy sur\ncoswwlth then w line of the J Luce\ntho wcorner of said Luco survey\nw with the n o lino ot the Kenedy sur\n>ncornerthenceswwiththonw\nw comer thenco s e with tho aw-\na corner of said Knedy survey\nrw with thonwlinootS HI Wardens\nthe w corner ot said survey thenco s\nsaw line of said Warden survey to tho\nrtof the said Warden survey thence a w\ns line of tho A Atkinson survey to-\nornerof said Atkinson survey thenco\nthe n o line of the J Ulbson survey to\nBtherlands s o corner thence n to-\nDda n e comer thence w to bouther\niw comer thenco s to tho J Ultwon\ne with the said Ulbson llnotoTur
000b109a4f3aafc886a5e4e137bac96f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.9575342148655 37.561813 -75.84108 sooner or later, be followed by a collapse and\na corresponding perlbd of depression. Although\nmere are gratifying indications ot increasea activ-\nity in certain branches of buHineaa in the I'nited\nStates, it must be admitted tbat confidence has not\nyet neen restored to the extent necessary to bring\nabout a general revival, or to pnt the trade and in-\ndustries of the oonutry npon a basis of activity and\npermanent prettpertty, Pier is it reasonable .0 ex-\npect that this will be done until there shall be a\nnearer approach to resumption of specie payuitnt,\nand consequent improvement in the character of\ncurrency. The coustant disturbance of exchange\nand fluctuatioosof values, the uncertaiutiesof busi-\nness, the want ofconfldence between Individuals,\ncorporations, ana communities, which all experi-\nence proves to be the inevitable result of the use of\na medium of exchange powessing nointrinic value,\nrepresenting no 00 insider able amount of labor in its\nproduction, and not convertible into that which is\nrecognised as money throughout the commercial\nworld, are considerations which should claim the\nattention of every representative of the\npeople. However rapidly may be oar increase in\npopulation, wealth and material strength, we cau\nnot take the rank as a commercial or business peo-\nple to which we are entitled by superior natural ad-\nvantages, and the pro iuctive energies of our popu-\nlation, or attract to its the surplus capital of the\nworld, so long as we have fluctuating standards of\nvalue, and such uncertainty n onr ficl legislation\nas makes the assembling of Conaresa and our fre-\nquent elections occasions of anxiety and appreben-nio- n\nnot only with the hold of our securities abroad,\nbut with businessmen at home.\nGreat Britain has keot the valna of her sound\nsterling substantially unvarying for two hundred\nxeara, ana, in conaeoaence or cms steadiness, it nas\nbecome the ba is of the transactions, not only of\nonimn commerce ana traae, but of ail tne world.\nIn all civilized countries government negotiations\nwith foreign money lenders are made npon this\nbasis; and, as a general ruie, the only foreign bills\ncurrent an over me won are thoee wnicn are
5240e0bba63d428782c14fe2a43cf1c1 THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1858.6178081874682 32.36431 -88.703656 11 rely vagfttable, ar fra from any risk of harm. Cares ,\nhav beau anda which avrpsas belief were they not sub-\nstantiated by men ef suck xlted position aad chararter\nto forbid tb auspleioa of utrutkv HsaiyBnaineat\ncleisjBwB and phyaktani hlvs lent their Barnes to certify\nto the pubtic the reliability of my ismeflb. while others\nhave asnt at the sasnrsaiis of their mvictmavthat my\nrrepantlona eoaarlbwU ha tar, ratal ta tba relief of my\nsffiicted, eufkrlog faUow-ntaa-\nTh Agent below Bsmsal kt lliaiia to farniah graljsmy\nAmericaa llisaii,llslalnlngrBrectjffocthrlr oassiid\nCkctlflcata of ttwtr eurss, of tha foUowiag complaiitU :\nCosttvaaess, Riuona Oontplainta, Kbawmatisku, Dropsy,\nHeartburn, llsskkvrb arbtuig from a Ami sifwasch, Nan-ae- a ,\nllidienaUon, Morliid Ittactioa of the Bowels sod Paia\nsruting Oiaretrtiai. yiairuDfjy, boas of AptaAlta, all Ukor-ou - s\nand Cetaneous Pi.issis which rweuire sa \nBkBdiciae. aotofula or Kinr't KvuV Tawy also, by purify\ning the blood and stimulating tbe system, cur many\neomplalnti yhkb K would not be aippoatd they cmiid\nreach, lech k IrMfoeat, Partial BlHkdneaa, Nouraliiik and\nNervous Irritability, Uaran.entente of the lAvaraud\ntroat, and other kind red eompmiuu kri.ni. from a\nlow state of ths body or obstruction of its fanetious.\nDo not bs pat off by unprincipled daalara with some\nother pill they make more profit on. Ask err Avis'a\nPiUA, and take nothing aba. Ko otber they cab give\nyou compares with this In its Intrinsic value or curative\npowers. The sick want the best aid there is for tlrnm,\nand they should have it.\nPrepared by Dr. J. C. AYER,\nPractical slid Analytical Clwniit, Lowell, If an.\nPlica US Cn. ram Box. Frri Box, roa $ t.
310ac3738ea13423a3eefc3a0fc6b81e WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.219945323568 40.827279 -83.281309 " The drink that he did love did prove his foe."\nOccasionally, too, some village oddity\nhas died, leaving no relatives to see that\nhis memory is not made fun of, and over\nhis grave some comic sexton or local poet\nhas caused to be inscribed a more or less\nfacetious account of him. But it is clear\nthat the long epitaphs which are authori-\ntatively jriven to us as coming from this\nor that village churchyard are spurious,\nif for no other reason than that the cost\nof cutting the labored production on stone\nwould be infinitely beyond the purse- powe - r\nor the alehouse poet, who is ordinarily tne\nauthor of the squib. Besides, the parson of\nthe district would, probably, have a word\nto say to any one burlesquing the sanctity\nof the churchyard. It was only the other\nday that the governors of one of the me-\ntropolitan cemeteries refused to allow a\nman to record on a that his\nchild had died "from the effects of vac-\ncination," a singular instance of the man-\nner in which some people fancy they\nought to promulgate their opinions. The\nfunny epitaph would find much more\nstrenuous opposition than the bucolic sat-\nirist probably fancies, if he were actually\nto try to have his composition perpetu-\nated in stone. On the other hand, so long\nas the village poet remains decorous and\npious, uncommon latitude is allowed him\nin the matter of rhyme. A far more val-\nuable collection of epitaphs than the one\nbefore us could be made by one who\nwould take the trouble to wander about\nour village churchyards, and copy the re-\nligious couplets and verses which are pro-\nfusely placed over the graves. The wild\nefforts at getting lines to rhyme are some-\ntimes very amusing. It is said that in\nLambeth churchyard there is an epitaph\nupon a certain "William Wilson, which\nruns thus:
0999d1e8450b162d97fa29e1017c2390 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1878.3136985984272 37.561813 -75.84108 end, Mrs. Jones herself heard it; nnd\nheard, of course, that the author of the\nS'.o ry was the minister's own self.\nThe next tiling to be done was for\nMr. Jones and his family to leave Mr.\nCapers' church and go somewhere else.\nThe clergyman was a good deil\ntroubled about it, and his wife went\nover to see if she could discover the\nfause. Mrs. Jones received her with a\ngood deal of coldness and seemed hard-\nly civil. Unable to endure it any long-\ner, Mrs. Capers asked the aggrieved\nlady frankly w hat the trouble was. Mrs.\nJones as frankly told her; that was\nwell, for now the latter knew exactly\nwhat the matter was, and what it was\nnecessary to do.\nGoing home and imparting the intelli\ngence to her husband, he manifested\nquite as much astonishment as she. Ho\nsat and thought it over a while,\nin order the better to collect hims. lf\nbefore taking a single step, and then\nstarted on direct for Mr. Jones himsei.'.\nHe told Mr. Jones what he had heard,\nand declared the whole of it an untruth\nfrom beginning to end. Mr. Jones\nwent on with all the minutest particu-\nlars connected with the affair, and mak-\ning the most of the case in his power\nagainst tjie minister. Still the latter\npositively denied his guilt, and declared\nhis determination to ferret out the au-\nthor of so base a slander, if itvas with-\nin human possibility. And he hurried\nback home nnd set about it.\nFor some weeks it was a mystery\nstill; he could get no clue to anything.\nIt perplexed him beyond conception.\nFinally, his wife c:inie running down\nstairs one day, her face flushed and ex-\ncited, and said to him in ber unsteady\nbreath:
6f3af1f2866200b6bf3292ce04ee3574 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.2773223727484 39.261561 -121.016059 io. s, tu : Commencing it . stake in th. city and county\nof Nevada, and State of California, in the afreet Wading\nwesterly from tit. Nevada Foundry, thence down laid\nafreet to tha hank of Peer creek, and along the Mme ai\nnaked and blaied to a Sprue, tree, thence acme, aaid\nBeer craek to o Cedar, tli.uce along tb. left hank in line\nto croaa aaid atreaui twice to the head of Stockinga Flat,\nthenca down laid Flat and to an oak blared, from whieb\nit cronei aaid Peer creek to Pleasant Flat, end along laid\nFlat palling dwelling! and blared treoi to Beckwelra Flat\nfollowing a Ton d aero** the aame. thence diverging te the\nleft around a point opposite 'Jovyer'a Pam, to the mouth\nof Slate creek, opponte H. W . McCoy's mill, thence up\naaid McCoy* rood to tb* intersection of the lame with the\nroad leading Nevada city to Sacramento city and\nMarysville, tb* mum being 5.S mil*, more er leu, and\nfrom tbcnce parallel with aeid road down croselug a ra-\nvine to the right and terminating at the weit end of a\nbridge in the towu of Bough 4c Ready; we intend to ther\nouglily macademiie the aame.\nNotice ii hereby given to all whom it may concern that\nwe the underaigned will meet at the United State* Hotel\nin the city and county of Nevada, and State of California\non Saturday the 24th day of April A. D . 1S«0, at 1 o'clock\nI*. M . of said day for the purpose of preliminary organ!-\nration of our Company for the purpose* afereaaid. The\nsale organization to be purauant to an act entitled an act\nto authorize the formation of corporations for the con\nptructiun of 1lank or Turnpike Uoada paasod May 12th\n18W-
217628bf703f2d2f3bbe8c55987aef0f NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.0205479134956 40.735657 -74.172367 Sneyd, aged 13, 64 Wllhorn street, Rah-\nway; Annie Shine, aged 12, 12 Foundry\nstreet; Teresa Smith, aged 12. 40 South\nEighth street; Pauline •Safirsteiu, aged\n13, 55 Beacon street; Fred F. Schantz,\naged 9, 177 Laurel avenue, Arlington;\nBeatrice Schuyler, aged 12. 160 Catherine\nstreet. Elizabeth; Philip Simona, aged\n10, 15 Person avenue; Joseph Speleer,\naged 9, 30 Stone street; Joseph Stinson,\naged 13, Joseph street; Mortimer Slee,\naged 9, 192 Garside street; Edna\nStoeckle, aged 12, Main street, Mlll -\nburn; Margaret Simmons, aged 13, 44\nW'alnut street, Bloomfield; Isabel E\nStco, aged 13, 5 Nicholson street; Louis\nShulman, aged 9. 260 Belmont avenue;\nIsadore Schwartz, aged 12, 314 Norfolk\nstreet; Ethel Sellick, aged 11, Person-\nette avenue, Verona; Robert Shauger.\naged 14 16 Sterling street. East Orange;\nPhilip Simonet, uged 10, 15 Piersons\n“Hey: Helena Stcaners, aged 13, 68 Pitt\nstreet, Buffalo; Sldonia Waltlier, aged\n12, 52 Crawford street, East Orange;\nBessie Windeelter, aged 12, 217 Day\nstreet. Orange; William Sinclair, aged\n8, 82 Dodd street. East Orange; Harold\nGrapel, aged 9, 84 Dodd street, East\nOrange; William Brown, aged 9, 62}i\nSouth Thirteenth street; Blanche Web-\nerbauer, aged 11, 189 Barclay street;\nEdna Webei, 125 Miller street; Alfred\nWalther, aged 10, 52 Crawford street.\nEast Orange; Lillian Witten, aged 12,\n344 Belleville avenue; Alice Wedemeyer,\naged 13, 371 Halladay street, Jersey\nCity; Harry Woolman, aged 11, 80 Van\nNess place; Esther Williams, aged 12,\n177 Warren street; Melville Wettach.\naged 8, Caldwell; Helen De Wyngaet,\naged 11, 99 street; Helen War-\nren. aged 7. Halcyon Park, Bloomfield.\nGeorge White aged 12. 145b Thomas\nstreet; Edna Wilhelm, aged 9, 46 Cam-\nden street; Lillian Witten, aged 12, 344\nBelleville avenue: W'llllain White, aged\n11- 36 Patterson street, Harrison: Ivan\nHagen, aged 9, 18 Prospect place; Helen\nRommel, aged 9. 146 Elm street; Fannie\nG. Witz, aged 12, 149 Broome street;\nCharles Whitehead, aged 12, 411 Chest-\nnut street. Arlington: Florence Weler,\naged 10, 156 Valley road, Montclair;\nJacob Weiss, aged 12, 67 Eleventh ave-\nnue: Helen Walsh, aged 10. 2431 Bank\nstreet; Katharine Wahl, aged 10, 61\nNorth Fifth street; Elizabeth Zaeber.\naged U, 724 South street: Clara Zimmer-\nman, aged 14, 97 Houston street; Anton\nZener, aged 10, 97 Dowy street; Katie\nStumpf, aged 12, 9 Kossuth street; Ar-\nthur Swenson, aged 12, 406 Elm street,\nArlington: Alvin A. Young, aged 10, 403\nSouth Eleventh street; Rosella White,\naged 10, 38 Farley avenue; William Por-\nter. aged 10. 204 Lincoln avenue: Mamie\nCayyello, aged 12. 24 Boston street;\nGrade Carluccl, aged 10, 104 Seventh\navenue; Marv Clark, aged 9, 26 Strat-\nford place; Joseph Carroll, aged 12,\nGrove street, Somerville; Alice Callan,\naged 11. Now street, Orange; Frankie\nConway, aged 10, 109 Barside street;\nJohn Carr, aged 11, 340 Suydam street,\nNew Brunswick; Vivian Collins, aged 9,\nHanford place, Caldwell; Nicholas Tees,\naged ll, 417 Cleveland avenue, Harrison;\nGaston Taliet, aged 11, 5 Washington\nstreet. East Orange; Emile Thomas,\naged 9, 39 Tuyior street; Joseph Taylor,\naged 8. 141 Tlchcnor street; Madeline
0621320e04fda5b58a056f42322e3b90 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1899.8342465436326 58.275556 -134.3925 to state, and only ask an investigation\nto prove the truthfulness of our asser¬\ntion; that we carry the largest and\nmost varied stock of goods, for House,\nHotel, Restaurant, Steasmhip, Saloon,\nHall, Public Buildings and Office fur¬\nnishings to be found under one roof on\nthe Pacific Coast; consisting of all\ngrades of Furniture, Carpets, Rugs,\nMattings,Floor Oil Cloth. Linoleum, in\nPlain, Figured, and the Celebrated in¬\nlaid that will last a lifetime; Draperies,\nWindow Shades, Lace Curtains, Cur¬\ntain Poles, and Fixtures, Fringes etc.\nHeating Stoves, Cook Stoves, and Steel\nRanges for House, Hotel or Steamship;\nTin ware, Agate ware, Granite ware; all\nkinds of Cooking utensils, Crockery,\nincluding the celebrated roll rim hotel\ngoods, China, glassware, both domestic\naud foreign; also a line of Cut Glass.\nEvery thing to fit out a bar; All kinds\nof Table Cutlery, and Silver hollow\nware: LamDS of every description,\nand all fixtures for the same. Clothes\nwringers, Ice Cream freezers, Clocks,\nand required in these lines.\nAlso Blankets of all grades, Comforters,\nSheets, pillow Slips, Table Linens, Nap¬\nkins, and Towels of all grades. In fact\nwe can take any grade of private House\nor Hotel of any size, and furnish the\nsame complete in every detail from our\naverage stock on short notice, and will\nguarantee to give more value for the\nmoney than any other house on the Pa¬\ncific Coast. Wo lately furnished the\nSteamship Victorian of the North\nAmerican Mail Steamship Line, com¬\nplete with everything, except the Life\nPreservers and Piano, and we ask an in¬\nspection of this work.\nIf the People of Alaska would con¬\nsult their own interests, they would\nsurely come and see us. No firm on\nthe Coast has a better reputation for\ncareful packing of goods than our¬\nselves, and rates of freight will be guar¬\nanteed to be as low or lower than from\nany other point on the Coast in the\nUnited States.
09f104f8e9aa3fd4b3608eae28739ded THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.4397259956875 41.004121 -76.453816 "Do you know, Miss Ceswlck," ho said,\nchanging tho subject and addressing tho\nstately old lady, who was sitting smoothing\nher laces and looking rather aghast at her\nniece's utterances, "that this young gcntlo-mn - n\nis going to college, and Jeremy, too!"\n"Indeed," said Miss Ceswick. "I hopo that\nyou will do grent things there, Ernest."\nWhilo Ernest was disclaiming any Inten-\ntions of tho sort Miss Florence cut ia again,\nraising her eyes from a deep contemplation\nof thnt young gentleman's long shanks, which\nwero writhing under her keen glanco and\ntwisting themselves serpentwiso round tho\nlegs of the chair.\n"I did not know," she said, "that they took\nboys at college"\nThen they took their leave, and Ernest\nstigmatized her to Dorothy as a "boast"\nBut she was at least attractive in her own\npeculiar fashion, and during tho next or\ntwo ho got pretty intimate with her.\nAnd so Eiuest und Jeremy went up to\nCambridge, but did not set tho place on flro,\nnor wero the voices of tutors loud In their\npraise. Jeremy, it is true, rowed ono year in\ntho 'Varsity race, and performed prodigies of\nstrength, and so covered himself with a sort\nof glory, which, personally lwing of a modest\nmind, ho did not particularly appreciate,\nErnest did not even do that But somehow,\nby hook or by crook, they, nt the termination\nof their collegiate career, took 6omo sort of\ndegree, nnd then dejiarted from the shores of\nthe Cam, on which they had spent many a\njovial day Jeremy to return to Kesterwick,\nnnd Ernest to pay several visits to college\nfriends in town nnd elsewhere.\nAnd so ended the first little round ot their\ndavs.
13e35cc21752296138f2a624d79aee29 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.9219177765094 39.745947 -75.546589 The following officers were elected\nat the annual meeting of the Delaware\nHistorical Society last night:\nPresident, Hon. Ignatius C. Grubb;\nvice-president. New Castle county,\nGeneral James H. Wilson; Kent coun­\nty, the Rev. Dr. Joseph Brown Turner;\nSussex county, James J. Ross; record­\ning secretary, Christopher L. Ward;\ncorresponding secretary, Daniel Moore\nBates; treasurer, William Bush; his­\ntoriographer, George A. Elliott: li­\nbrarian, Mayor William G. Ramsay.\nThe directors are: Hon. Ignatius C.\nGrubb, Francis H. Hoffecker, Thomas\nF. Bayard, Robert H. Richards und\nJoseph L. Carpenter, Jr.\nMiss Mary Rldgeley was nominated\nfor membership. The president, tho\nHon, Ignatius C. Grubb, reported a\npresent membership of 353; 335 of\nwhom are active members, the mem­\nbership and the financial prosperity\nbeing quadrupled since last. year.\nNearly $8,000 is In hand for the build­\ning fund, he said. Mr. Grubb referred\nto the vault apartment donated by the\nWilmington Trust Company for the\nuse of the society, and where they\nhad stored valuable historical records.\nBrief reports were given by the\nchairman of committees, by Recording\n Christopher L. Ward, and\nCorresponding Secretary H. A. Harvey.\nTreasurer William Bush reported\ndues In arrears amounting to $280,\nand an Income of $366.96 per annum\nfrom moneys Invested. Mr. Bush\nrecommended modifying the by-laws\nso as to allow delinquents two years\nIn which to pay hack dues: now they\nare considered expelled It dues are\nnot paid by the first Friday In Decem­\nber. On motion of Robert H. Rich­\nards, copies of the charter, constitu­\ntion, and by-laws will be printed as\nthey stand on January 1, 1911.\nLibrarian William G. Ramsey\nstated that two boxes of valuable\nbooks had been sent to the Wilming­\nton Trust Company vault. Historio­\ngrapher George A. EUlott reported\nthat no papers or historical reports\nhud been submitted during the year.\nThe Rev. Dr. J. B. Turner, who bad\nbeen appointed to write the bio­\ngraphies of General Kirkwood and\nAdmiral Thomas F. McDonough,\nstated that type-written copies of the\nlife of General Kirkouw were In readi­\nness for the printed. Chairman\nFrancis H. Hoffecker reported briefly\non donations.
ad2b0d076dbbd442dc049825638ae312 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.554794488838 40.618676 -80.577293 ANY LETTERS have appeared in the press\nmanifestly written by l)oys 'over there' con-\ndeniing' John L. Lewis as a traitor for calling\nseveral coal strikes. Since the boys apparently\nare so well informed on this subject, it leads\none to wonder if (hey also know of the thou­\nsands of tons of lautly steel that have been\nsupplied to our shipyards throughout the coun­\ntry; one wonders if the boys know of the hun­\ndreds of thousands of faulty castings and parts\nfor aircraft engines which have been supplied\nto our factories in many pacts of the country;\none wonders if the boys know of the millions\nof dollars worth of faulty communication wire\nwhich was shipped to Russia; one wonders if\nthe boys know that this Country, according to\nreport, has more millions cattle, hogs and\nsheep on foot at this date than it had on the\nsame date in 1912; one wonders if the boys\nknow of the Black Market that has spread all\nover the country in the packing industry, mak­\ning it impossible for the workers of the Nation\nto get the requisite amount of meat necessary\nfor strength and health so that they may keep\nup the high maximum ol' production of which\nthe boys over there are so greatly in need in\norder to win this global War; one wonders if\nthe boys know of the Truman Committee's\nclaims, that is, that the committee charges\nCurtis-Wright with waste of money, fostered\nwidespread loafing of employees, the delivery\nof defective aircraft engines from the Lockland\nPlant, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of\nCurtis-Wright.
205bc5392477307b38fa09d80e88d427 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.892076471109 41.020015 -92.411296 Old Whatley the superintendent of\ntho road, as I guess 1 have aIreadv\nsaid, had a country resiileuce in l.eeds\non a mountain spur, which command­\ned a view of the surrounding country\ntor more than a score of miles. The\nline of the railway could be distinct­\nly seen in each direction tor fifteen\nmiles, and Whatley was wont to say\nthat his looking was worth more to\nthe satety of trains than all tho tele­\ngraph wires on the road.\nWhatcly was a rich old buffer, kind\nenough in his way, but sharp as a\nferret in looking after the road hands\nand determined that every man\nshould do his duty.\nHe had hut one child, a daughter ;\nand Floss Whatelv was the belle of\nthe country. She was brave, beauti­\nful, and spirited, and more than once\n her father had been away, had\nshe assumed the responsibility of di­\nrecting the trains, and she had always\nacquitted herself with credit.\nOld Whatel v was very proud of her\nas ho had a right to be, and kept all\nthe young fellows at a distance, until\nit was said that he intended keeping\nhis daughter single till the C/ar of all\nthe Uusxias came on to mnrrv her.\nThis night in November old Whatc­\nly and Floss were out 011 the piazza\nof their country home, peering\nthrough the gloom and fog for the\nsignal-lights of tbe Golosha train,\nwhich was nearly due.\n"It's devilish strange it doesn't come\nin sight!" said Whatcly, laying down\nhis night-glass in disgust. "It is hard\non ten now! They ought to show\ntheir light round Spruce Pond by\nthi3 time!"
0844079209c65e75e49f96a6f566774d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.1767122970573 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. MANN . 1 do not yield.\nThe man in charge was responsible\nfor doing what, be believed was the\nproper thing to do. We can not de­\ntermine that. If he erred, it was an\nerror which wc ought not to pay for.\nIt is impossible io pay for all (he\nproperly which was destroyed in the\nSouth by the Union Army.\nI used to hear the statement made\nwhen I was much younger that if the\nDemocrats got inlo power they were\nlikely to pay for the destruction of\nproperly In the South. Well, wo just\npassed an omnibus war claims bill,\nmost of the items ot which would not\nhave been considered for a moment\n20 years ago. most of the items of\nwhich the committee would not have\nreported at all 20 years ago, and that\nwas 30 years after the war. When\nthe Democrats were in control of the\nGovernment before, they did not pass\nitems such as we passed by unanimous\nconsent In the omnibus war claims\nbill tonight. These things become a\nmatter of growth and precedent\nWhen wo start in on a certain line\nwe have to follow it up. Do we pro­\npose to pay for the property which\nwas destroyed by the armies in the\n. South dtreelion of the commanding\nofficers, no matter what some man\nmay think now about the order hav­\ning been a proper one or not? You\npay ono of these claims and every\nclaim attorney follows up the matter\nat once. Ho says, "Here is a claim\nthat lias been paid," and he has a bill\npresented, and pretty soon we will\nbe paying all sorts of these claims,\nor else wo will have to stand very\nstrong in order to resist them.\nA few years ago sonic one man­\naged to get a claim paid for a church\nof a Masonic lodge or a city hall, on\nthe ground that they could not be dis­\nloyal as organizations. Now wo are\npaying those claims by the hundreds\nof thousands of dollars. 1 will say\nto you gentlemen on that side of the\nHouse who were responsible for legis­\nlation, if you start in to pay claims\nfor properly which was destroyed by\nthe Union armies in the South, I will\nring the changes on it all over this\ncountry In the North. The war Is\nover. Wo have forgiven and forgot­\nten that, but that does not mean that\nwe are going to pay for the property\nwhich was destroyed as a matter of\nwar by the armies.
0b7988a67377dc59f3c528768bebc99d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.2589040778792 39.745947 -75.546589 1*108 Went Thirteenth St.. 0 room«, bath, poivh and hot air beat.\n2325 Tatnall St., 8 room«, hath, porch and hot air beat.\n1502 West Fifth St.. 13 room«, bath, porch and «tram beat.\n214 Went Twenty-fourth street. 8 rooms, bath, porch and hot air heat.\nl*Ol Vau Buren St., 10 rooms, bath, porch aud hot water beat.\n108 N. Jackson St.. 0 rooms, bath, porch.\n1325 Washington ML, O room«, bath, porch and hot air beat.\n000 Delaware Ave. 11 room«, bath, porch and hot. air boat.\n1814 Washington Ht, 0 room«, bath, porch and hot air heat.\n2311 Boulevard. 10 room«, bath. t><*rch un<* htMl* °Peö ^replace and garage\n010 Broome Sr, a room«, bath, porch aud hot water beat,\nloos Jefferson St . 0 rosins, bath, porch and heat; good location.\n!HH» Shipley St. 9 room«, bath, porch and heat.\n1321 W. Fifth rft., 0 room«, bath aud heat,\n038 Vandever Ave., 7 room«, bath, porch and heat.\n1*25 Kirkwood 8t., «I room«, bath, porch and best.\n1520 Von Buren St.. S room«, bath, porch and heat.\n233 IIiirriHon 7 room«, both, porch and heat.\n1335 Shullrros« Art., 0 room«, bath, porch and heat.\n116 and 118 Brooms St.. 6 room«, bath and heat.\n1453-1455 1467 <'be«tnnt St., 6 room», bath, porch aud heat.\n1124 W. Second St,, 8 room«, bath aud beat.\n1119 W. Second St., 8 room«, bath and heat.\n1328 \\V. Third St., 9 room«, bath, porch and heat.\n1333 ShalliTo»« Ave.. 9 room», bath, ooreh and heat.\n1611 Hancock St.. 6 room», bath, porch and hot air heat.\n001 Hodney St., 7 room», bath, porch and hot air heat.\n117 West Nineteenth St,, 6 room«, bath, porch and hot water neat.\n408 wVst Twenty-fifth St.. « room«, bath, porch and hot water heat.\n2930 Jefferson St., 7 room«, bath, porch and hot air heat.\n237 Broome St., 8 room», bath, porch and hot air heat.\n2**19 Jefferson St , 6 room», bath, porch and hot air beat,\n2015 Jefferson St., 6 room», bath, porch and hot air heat.\n233 Harrison St., 7 room«, bath, porch and hot air\n208 Woodlnwn Ave., 8 loom*, bath, porch aud hot
138f73115f54d4c609a35cd573913b10 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.356557345426 40.063962 -80.720915 Hoard of Public Works..At the\nmeeting of the Board of Public Work*\nHeld on Monday evening the report ol\nD, 8. Thornburgh, Superintendent of tho\nCumberland Koad, for the month, ol\nMarch, wa* appro red. The «uin of $40C\nwait allowed him to meet his estimate ol\nexpenses for the month of April, and\n$334 waa allowed him as salary for the\nyear ending April 15, 1870.\nThe list and pro rata valuation of the\nreal and personal property of the Par\nkersburg Branch Railroad Company foi\ntho year 1870,' which was laid before the\nBoard bv the Auditor at a meeting licit1\non the 4th day of April last, and wtu\npostponed for future action, was agait\nconsidered by the Board. Said list ii\nmade out by William Kcyser, President\nof said Company, showing the total val\nnation of said property, etc.,'in tho Slaw\nof West Virginia, to be $1,037,00ft. Tin\nBoard deemed the list satisfactory, am\n the Auditor to assess the'prop\nerty of the said railroad company foi\nState and jjeneral free school and count]\npurposes, and for free school purpose* ii\neach district and independent school dis\ntrie! through which said railroad runs.\nElection of Directors..At the an\nnual meeting of the stockholdors of thi\nWheeling, Parkersbu'rg and Cincipnat\nTransportation Company, held at theii\noffice yesterday, the following Board o\nDirectors was elected: C. H . Booth\nChan. Muhleman, H.Schmulbach, J. Har\nrisoii and Alex. Hcatherington. N(\ncliange waa made in tho. officers of tb<\ncompany, Mr. Booth remaining Presi\ndent, and Mr. Muhleman Secretary ant\nTreasurer. The Directors decided t(\nchange the time of departure of Parkers\nburg packets to 10} a. m., the change t<\ntake effect pr[ Monday nex^\n'-Transfers of Rial Estate..The foi\nlowing deeds in fee transferring real es\ntate were admitted to record at the o(Tic(\nof the Clerk of tho County Court yea\nterday:
600b00eaa75d689302d03506717aee06 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.7136985984273 39.745947 -75.546589 When questioned today on the sub­\nject, President Bowers said he did\nnot know when the places of those\nmen who had failed to pass would be\nfilled. The commissioners as a body,\nhad not considered the matter. It was\nadmitted, however, that the mental\ntests would not be given those who\ndid pass the physical test on Wed­\nnesday until the entire number is se­\nlected and passed.\nIt was understood today that City\nSolicitor Hastings had not been asked\nfor a written opinion on the legality\nof the resolutions passed by City\nCouncil, authorizing the appointment\nof the eight additional patrolmen.\n“Vacation" for Commlsslondra.\nThat Police Commissioners William\nH. Bowers and T. N. Staylon be\ngranted a vacation for the balance of\ntheir terms in office, with full pay, in\nrecognition of their service to the\ncity in selecting the men they did \nthe police force was the motion made\nby Councilman W. E . Stover at the\nmeeting of City Council last night.\nMr. Stover Incidentally remarked that\nthere are thirteen “boobs"\nCouncil because of having authorized\nthe police department to appoint the\nseven additional men.\nCouncilman Stover brought up the\nmatter by referring to an article that\nappeared in an afternoon paper yes­\nterday relative to the legality of the\nresolution recently passed by Council\nauthorizing the appointment of the\nseven men, which he took for granted\nwas an interview granted by the pres­\nident of the Police Commission. He\nsaid he had spoken to City Solicitor\nHastings yesterday about the matter\nand that there is a question as to the\nlegality of the resolution adopted by\nCouncil. He added that recent events\nhad convinced him that it would have\nbeen belter had the resolution never
28de2b6a417d47d69d5848c968d88402 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.0863013381531 58.275556 -134.3925 Chapel of St. John eontama the tomb\nof archbishop Conrad von Hochstaden,\nwho began the building of the present\ncathedral. Engelbert meant well, but\nwas killed before he had done auythi°*\nand twenty years later Conrad did\nsomething.in fact, he did a great deal.\nHis plan was followed until the cathe¬\ndral was actually completed in 18KX\nThe plan of the whole cathedral as\noriginally drawn is in his chapel. It »\ntorn in two and was lost for years afte\nthe French occupied Cologne. At last\none piece was found in a farm house,\nand the other in Paris, where it had\nbeen takeu by a French soldier. I he\nauthorities had to pay $100 for it and\nconsidered they got it cheaply.\nNext is the chapel- of the three magi,\nor wise men of the East who visited\nBethlehem soon after the birth of\nChrist. For hundreds of years it was\ncustomary taking oaths to swear by\nthe three wise men, or the three kings,\nof Cologne. Their bones were in a\nconvent in Milan for hundreds of years\nuntil 11G4, when Frederick Barbarossa\nbesieged Milan. As the people put up\na good tight he vowed to hang the mayor\nas soon as he took the city. The may\nor*s sister, who was Superior of the\nconvent, went to Archbishop Remold\nvon Dassel (whose tomb *e visited a\nshort time ago), and promised him the\nrelics of the magi if her brother s life\nwere spared. When the town was taken\nthe archbishop obtained permission\nfrom the emperor that the Lady Su¬\nperior should be allowed to leave the\ntown with whatever she could carry\naway. She was a good strong woman\nand hoisted her brother on her shoul¬\nders and marched out with the ban\nplaying and colors flying. The bones\nare now in the treasury.
6ac583110718f5aad4a061cba3ab91ca VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.8620218263004 43.798358 -73.087921 sists of a discharge of booi, often frothy, from\nthe mouth, brought up with hawking & coughing,\n. and is usuay accompanied with difficuty of\nbreathing,' and some pain in the chest, some-\ntimes it is preceded by an oppression at the chest,\na dry tickling cough and slight snooung pains.\nThis disease is aways more or. less dangerous\nThe great danger is that these symptoms may tar- -\nmmate in consumption, and immediate remedies\ncan alone save this end. But Dr. Taylor's BaZ- -\nsam of Liverwort is a sureremedy, and to show\nits unparaeed success, certifies of ernes' from\n421 citizens, and many.physicians, wi" be pub-\nlished in a few days.\nJVERVO US DISEASES Sf WEAKNESS.\nDr. Taylor's Basam of Liverwort, made at 373\nBowery, is assured y an exceWent remedy for\nthese diseases. My . wife has been more or less\nill for ten years. She was extremely nervous,\nand at times so weak that she could not attend to\nher domestic duties. By the use of this \ncine, her strength i3 wholly restored, and she is\nas healthy as I can wish her to be. My address\nis at Dr. Taylor's office.\nCURE OF COJVSUMPTIOJV.Mts? Mar-\nin,, a worthy mambar of my congregation, was\ntaken ill some tfma since. with a cold, pain in the\nbreast and some difficulty of breathing," and i h a\nfew' days thereafter she had a violent cough and\nviolent pain in the sides, which no medicine\nwould relieve. She continued in this way for a\nlong time under the medical care of Dr. Rea, but\nfinally became consumptive, and wa3 evidently\nnear the end of her earthly sufferings,, when her\nbrother persuaded her to try Dr. Taylor's Balsam\nof Liverwort. When she commenced this medi-\ncine it did not seem to agree with her for a few\ndays, but by lessening the dose, she found it an-\nswered admirably : it relieved her cough and her\ndifficulty of breathing instanter: and we had the\npleasure of witnessing her rapid recovery to health.
04d7a162ed66c8633ae148f217be494f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7739725710298 40.063962 -80.720915 I Th« undcrrolgned berabjr girea nolle# that\n\\ will, aa Assignee la Bankruptcy of the eaiate\n1). it Jrwiu t Co,, Bankrupt*. proceed to Mil\npublic auction, ftt the atom room lauly occupl\noy D, K. Irwin aa a Kancy Grocery, on Til lit\nIMr. tto totli di/Af October, I87u, commend.\n\\ at Ho dock, x M., the following property\ny 11 l^ttiM Jf gal, pickle*; 1 dux. M gttJ- plckl*\n7 S do*, pint lobsters; a do*. peppered aauce; J\n> do*. walnut cauuo; 0# do*, quaru catsup; 2\nboxes »ardlnt*; 1 Watar candle*; 1 do*, wl\nplate Jelly; 19X grosa matches; 8 drama flgs;\nboxtk flga; I boxea r&Islns; 1 box fine crackers:\nbundle H. 0 . paper; 1 dux. Halford aauoe; I\ndo*, can grspea; 10 dox. atrairberrlee: l do*, c\npine applet; IS dox. cov« oysters; 10 baxea gl\njfr aebnapps; If bjxea rream rrackem; J<\n** lb. tomatoes; 1 box national biscuit; * barn\nsugar crackers; k krreJ flow, 1ft rana pom\nsalmon: 1 barrel o/stcr cracker#; 53 boxes U,\nconfection candy; 9 dox. 8 lb. tomatoes; M di\npeaclies; 1 brrrel ao<la crackers; JJUX dox. t\noy«t«n»; 4# do*. 1 lb. oysters; 4 dox. whon\nberries; t dox. * lb. tomatoes; X dox. serf,\nbrans; 10 caaea blackberries; 10 cases Ilmabvai\nH'lH do*, blacking: 8W boxea candy; 1 b\nlemon crackera; VI boxea chewing gum; 8 boa\nhoney; 8 itlanaea Jelly; 18 bottle* ustorled pic\nl«a and poichoa; 1 box of cfcecac: 47 ca\ntrachea, tomatoee. Ac.; 7 aacka peanut*: 1 di\nbiking powder; 8 lota of aborted note and a\nof rropty boxes, Ac; alao one aafo, truck, wbe\nharrow, sample ca«»sa, platform scales, deal\nstore, aud uuiuuroua other *mall articles, Inc\ndlug some shelving, JUNKY CONANT,\nocw ^
1985604a8f8033c287962ffbce04d42a CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1903.4287670915778 41.875555 -87.624421 If n cheerful prophet Is to be be-\nlieved, the dread scourge of consump-\ntion will within n very few years be\nentirely wiped out. The limit has been\nset nt 25 years hence for Prussia, and\n20 years later than that for England.\nAmerica Is not In the reckoning. The\ncheerful prophet Is Alfred Hllller,\nwhose article, carefully fortified with\nstatistics, Is causing profoundest Inter-\nest among scientists of Europe, and\nlias Just been republished lu American\nMedicine. Hllller presents n statistical\nchart showing that at the present rate\nof decrease deaths from pulmonary\ntuberculosis will cease In Prussia In\nabout the year 1027. Ily this time, he\nargues, the disease will have decreased\nvery greatly In England nlso, though\ntho death rate from It there will still\nbe about eight per 10,000 . Within 20\nyears more, he says, England, too, will\nbe free from It. The llgurcs \nwhich Mr. Hllller bases his conclusion\ntell a plausible story. The Prussian\nstatistics do not deal with the phthisis\nrate nlotie, but with nil the death1)\nfrom tuberculosis. The decline of this\nrate to nny notable .extent began In\n1880 and has been very rapid slnco\nthat time. From 1870 to 1880 tho rato\nwas ai per 10,000 . In 1887 the drop\nbegan ahd continued down to 1000, the\ndate of the statistical report, when It\nhad fallen to 21 per 10,000 . In Eng-\nland, In tho same period, the drop was\nfrom 24 to 10. The rapid fall In the\nPrussian rate Is ascribed to three\ncauses: (1) To tho precautions against\nInfectious diseases, due to the discov-\nery of the tubercle bacillus. (2) To tho\nImproved conditions of the working\nclasses, due to the workman's state In-\nsurance laws. (3) To the establish-\nment of sanitariums.
21f25f19483485c0da21c9c04dc13b80 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.43698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 mills on Hamilton creek, was ono of\nthem, llis postofllce addross is Leba¬\nnon, Linn county, Oregon, Mr. William\nWhite, hoad sawyer for tho eamo, and\nMr. .Tamos N. Rico, ex-raombor of the\nlegielataro ot Oregon. Weeks went bv\nand months, and 1 lay in bod helpless'.\nWhon my bGd was changed another bed\nbad to bo brought alongside and mo\nslid across on to it. I do not remem¬\nber sleopiug a wink for mouths. Thoy\nused a galvanic battory for months, but\nit gave mo no roliof. i hud them wrlto\nto Dr. Mosler. specialist, Grand stroot,\nNew York, stating my caso. He wroto\nmo ho could not holp me, attor which I\nconcluded that I must die. I had given\nup ail hope. In reading my easiorn\npapers I saw the miracles that a modi-\ncine called Dr. William*' Pink fills\nwore performing, but that itsolt\nwould not havo Induced mo to try\nthem, bad 1 seen tho name\nof Mr. G . T. Fulford, of Urockvillo,\nOnt., connected with them. Thatgavo\nmo hope. I hud known him from a\nlittle boy, and I know that money would\nnot induco him to deceive hifl fellow\nman. I wroto Mr. Fulford to aond mo\nsomo Pink Pills, and before I had used\ntho first lot 1 noticed nn improvement.\nI sent for rnoro, and in a little timo 1\nwas on my crutches, and walking\naround the house. Tho last boxes that\nI got aro doing tho business. The pains\nloft mv head altogether six weeks ago.\nand it is now as clear as a bell. Tlio\nswelling on my neck is gone, and my\nright anklo Is much better. I can get\naround now without any assistance, and\nam heavier than I evor wa? in my life.\nThere are a hundred people about here\nwho will testify to my sicknees and cure\nIf anyone doubts it."
07b49e239b943ec29f4f4f1fc0dd75e8 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1907.4671232559615 36.694288 -105.393021 dened the old cracksman it in no way\nweakened his purpose to have an ac-\ncounting with his false comrade. If\nanything, it intensified his desire, al-\nbeit, he had grace to regret that the\nhonorable calling in which he was\nnumbered a bright light should be\ndisrupted by private hale. He appre-\nciated lhat "Hunch" was playing an\neminently legitimate game iu warring\nupon organized society, yet those four\nyears in Auburn prison could not be\ncried down for the good of the order.\nSo he watched, and one night he\nknew "Hunch" was to make his strike.\nNo sooner had the traitor left his hid-\ning place and made for Long Island\nthan Slinky Bill was at his heels, win-\nning his sobriquet anew by the silent\nmanner in which he kept pace and\ndogged his quarry.\nFirst "Hunch" entered a summer\nhouse, by a few domestics,\nand after rambling over the structure\nut his leisure, reappeared, carrying\nsomething In a small canvas bag that\noccasionally gave fortn a mellow\nclink. Then another house was en-\ntered and the same fruitful exit was\nobserved hv the lone watcher.\n"Fer de love of Say, beau, but\nyouse certainly makin' a real clean up\ndis time," muttered Slinky Bill under\nhis breath, forced to admire the work-\nmanlike way in which "Hunch" was\ncovering the circuit.\nAt last even "Hunch" grew weary\nof well doing and paused undecided\nwhether to take in the big house with\nthe gable roof, or to go home. After\nthinking, it over under a shade tree\nfor some minutes he evidently com-\npromised with himself by stealing\naway to a less pretentious section of\nthn town and halting back of a neat\nframe house.
582f827ff42a3c998f8f59b5827cfb93 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.6999999682903 43.798358 -73.087921 Scarcely a journal arrives from Europe\nwhich does not contain some notice of\nthe Electric Telegraph, which now seems\nto have excited the attention of the scien-\ntific world, as the wonder of the age.\nOur own journals, however, which copy\nthese aotices, seem not to be aware that to\nAmerica belongs the honor of the first\ndiscovery. Professor Morse, of this city,\nomep years agotjgn his passage home\nfrom France, conceited the idea of com-\nmunicating intelligence by electricity, and\nmatured his plan, (the very plan which\nhe has now in operation at the University\nin this city.) The general idea was not\nkept secret by him, but freely communi-\ncated to his fellow passengers of all na-\ntions which were on the ship, and to nu-\nmerous friends on his return, who well\nremember the circumstance, and his de-\ntail of the trulv marvellous results to\nwhich the discovery might lead. There\nhave since been Several notices of Elec-\ntrical Telegraphs in Europe; one sug-\ngested by Prof. Barlow of London; an-\nother by Prof. Wheatstone of the London\nUniversity; one in Germany; and now\na project in Edinburgh, by Mr. Alexan-\nder, to construct a communication between\nEdinburgh and London; and still another\nin London, by an "eminent scientifio gen-\ntleman," whose name is not given. Prof.\nBarlow merely suggests the possibility \nsuch a telegraph. Prof. Wheatstone, by\na few finger stops makes use of 30 differ-\nent signs. Mr. Alexander has 26 wires,\none for each letter of the alphabet, and the\neminent scientific gentleman," mention-\ned in the article we copy below, makes\nuse of five wires, the electricity upon\nwhich deflects needles at the extremity.\nAll these require an attendant to watch\nthe wires. Prof. Morse's telegraph, which\nhas the priority in date, has the priority\nalso in simplicity and efficiency. Mr.\nMorse maltes use of, but one wire to con-\nduct the electricity. This apparatus is so\nconstructed, that a Register records the\ncommunication permanently, and in the\nfullest manner, It needs no watching,\nbut may be leA to itself. He makes use\nof eleven characters only, which charac-\nters are set up after the manner of types,\nand are made to operate on the wire by\nregular machinery, and with as great ra-\npidity as one can set up ordinary types.\nWe have a specimen of this telegraphic\nwriting at our office, Mr. Morse is pre-\nparing a circuit of a short distance, to\nshow to his friends the operation of the\ntelegraph, which he hopes to complete\nsoon, with a riew of securing a patent\nand of offering it to the attention of Gov-\nernment, who have the subject of Tele-granh- s
091dadd517f19845d424d9ab81bed80d THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1885.209589009386 37.561813 -75.84108 the tirst spring laying, which usually\na takes place in i cbruary, are collected\na and put under hens, the maternal love\nof the cormorant being only tecbly do\nvcloned. The vount when lirst hatched\nbeing extremely weak and delicate, and\nprone to succumb to tho slightest chill,\nare put into wadded baskets, where they\ncan be kept at a uniform temperature\nThey are fed with pellets of beans and\nlinely chopped eel, till at tho end of a\n.m o nth, when, having become nearly\ncovered with feathers, they are given\nthe eel alone; at tho end of another\nmonth they are able to eat small fish.\nwhole, and are worth live uo.lars a pair.\nWhen they have got their growth.\nwhich is about live months after they\nof aro hatched, they are tethered by\nstring tied around the foot on the banks\nis of a stream or a pond. Tho trainer.\nstirring tho water with a pole, and\nwhistling an air which the birds learn\nis the signal for "take to the \na throws iu some small lish, which they\nattack with all the more voracity as\nthey have not been too well fed. The\nits trainer then whistles another air, which\nis to bo tho signal for coining back.\nand, that tho birds may not bo mistaken\nas to Us meaning, he pulls at the same\nto tune upon the cord that holds them\nIt These lessons are continued for two or\nthree months, when the scene of tho\npractice is changed to the boats; and\nat the end of another month the cord\ndispensed with. There are, of course,\ndillereuees in the capacity of cormo\nrants as well as of nu n. While the\nto stupid ones are sent to t lie pot, the most\nof sagacious and best trained male birds\nate worth seven or eight dollars apiece.\nfemales less. Tlio period of service\nthe cormorants is short. They begin\nlose their feathers and to go into de\ncrepitude in their fourth year, and gen-\nerally die before they are six years old.
7cf18f3796f7ae0c96829121fe320c39 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1860.4303278372292 41.262128 -95.861391 win it'in less than ball ac hour. Tbe\nperttooa who were willing t<> bet 100 to40\nagainst me before will not let me have it\nunder any i r<juaa taut*, aad it »ti^l aot\nbe forg'jttoii ibat My. Dowimg, who\nshowwl ine »o much fct- r at th last fight,\ni» looked up to by th# boxers here aa the\nnataral protector of the tropin af Old\nEngland, There are a hundred difheni-\ntte* i& the way, a»d the ightiag part »#.\nm; far aa I anT .•oneerciti, tbe !* a«t sine >t\nall. They sow a«T that she government\nwill aurelV interfere to prevent aa if we\nattempt to mw«t again, uid in addition to\nthis, thi-\\ thruat'D to prosetu:*.' u« both\nfor what we b*v,' already don . Eaih«r\ntight on tbe liuerKan people that' an the\nboy# «ay at boatf; and, to U-Uvoa the\ntruth, lis Iliule uneasy that they may\nktwp their word. Under thi* stale of\nthing*, «i#akh*>'t much wood' r to nee\nSayer* airfrted for the first time ; and if\nthat course i* taken, and, bvond oyer\nin a h'-av# num. I .'•hall be told that it is\nnot his £|uk be ournot laeet me, and the\nstake* will be drawn, and he will ktup the\nbelt, f .sii* term w out some time in June.\nTo beofme champion aftt^r that, 1 ahouid\nhare ts# wait till a new belt ia *ub»oribeid\nfor. afi then i would have to Sight for it\nwith i'pianty to the LiMMo-40-fallows\naxouql to help me to win it. However, i\nshall slick to my point m long aa 1 can,\nand .f*» a o«w meeting out uf Sayera, if\nfKMi|rtjle, So, if I do not brinz over the\nr>cii bobody shall nay that I did not take\never f»ir chance to get St. But 1 must\nhJi* up here, tor i nave now written the\niqa^eat letter, almoat, that 1ever wrote\nliiav life.
32dbefade41df020c74d1670b5670b78 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.7246575025367 39.745947 -75.546589 This much accomplished, the com­\npany then proceeded to provide, as\nfar as possible, a substitute for the\ntracks for the benefit of those who\nwere forced to go out of their way In\norder not to violate the company's\nproviso and the state law. To do this\nthe company Instituted a good roads\ncampaign and Interested the state\nhighway department and professors at\nState college. The company furnished\nfree transportation to these men, gave\nthem special trains and entertained\nthem while they were out In the dif­\nferent counties telling the residents\nhow to Improve the highways and\nmake them good enough for traffic of\nall sorts. In any sort of weather. The\nresult has been evidenced In more\nthan one community.\nIn 1905 the number of deaths from\naccidents on the of the Pennsyl­\nvania railroad alone was 887. In 1910\nthere were 685 deaths, showing the\ngood of the campaign.\nClergymen and farmers are helping\nin the campaign. Leaders of congre­\ngations among the foreign population1\nare warning against trespassing. The I\ngood roads trains conducted by the\nPennsylvania railroad through the\nfarming communities of the state have)\naroused the grangers to the Import-1\nance Af the campaign.\nIn addition to the efforts (6 educate\nthe people, the railroad itself is in­\ncreasing Its police vigilance and post­\ning signs of warning. Directed against\ntramps and vagrants, who constitute\na large portion of the victims of tres­\npassing throughout the country, laws\nare urged In every state against al­\nlowing the knights of the road” to\nroam as they please and escape arrest..
0198caf163b71a61b812352232e60a42 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1906.4753424340436 43.624497 -72.518794 Once on the long slope lcndlng up to\nthe drawbrluge, the struggle wns less\nterrlfying, nud Stelln was nble to rub\nthe snlt spumc from her eyes nnd look\nup nt the little liouso perchcd among\ntbe trusses of the mlddle span.\nShe hopeil to see a'llgli. through tho\nstormy twlllght or n faco nt the wln-\ndow. But her stout henrt snnk wlth\nvaguo orebodlngs when there wcs no\ngreeting slgn from the englno liouse.\nThen she had to flght for very llfe ns\nshe galued tbe cud of the brldge whose\niron rnlllug gave no shelter.\nThe northeaster drove wlth a clean\nsweep ncross the roadwny. It plcked\nher up and threw her ngnlnst the rall,\nand lcft her doublcd up, groanlng wlth\npnln and frlght. Cllnglng, sllpplng,\ncdglng her wny nlong, Stelln reached\n foot of tbe iron lnddcr and that\nled to the englne liouse. Her courngc\nfllckered nnd was almost gone. How\ncould she inustcr strength to clttnb?\nSho would be blown away even lf her\nown welght dld not drng her wearlcd\nhauds from the sllppery rungs.\nSho was never nble to recnll how\nshe mado tbe ascent, bnt somcbotv\nsho found herself tugglng nt tho en\nglne room door. She stumbled lnsldc\nand loy there, pnnting nnd sobblng.\nWhen she wqs nble to gropo her\nwny in the sbndows round what\nseemed llke nu cmpty room, a great\nfear clulcbed at her heart. She re\nmembered wbere tbe lampo were kept,\nand found lnntches bestdo them. Tbe\nllght Bliowed ber whnt looked llke n\nbundle ot old Ctothes doubled ln a cor-ne - r .
08822091a4d5fca7d36a516d51e44a0e THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1921.401369831304 34.51147 -110.079609 tite. At times I could hardly do my housework. I got medicine from\ndoctor but it did not help me. I saw Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Comnl\nadvertised in a newspaper and took it with good results, and am now M\ndo my housework. I recommend your medicine to my friends and vm,\npublish my testimonial." —Mrs. Chester A. Ball, R * 15, Fayette, Ohio!l\nAn Illinois woman relates her experience:\nBloomington, 111.—" I was never very strong and female trouble Vent\n¦o weak I had no interest in my housework. I had such a backache U\nnot cook a meal or sweep a room without raging with pain. Rubbin?\nback with alcohol sometimes eased the pain for a few hours, but did not i\nit. I heard of Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, and six bottles I\nhave made me as strong and healthy as any woman ; and I givemvthanu\nit for my health.”—Mrs. J. A . McQuiTTY, 610 W.Walnut St.,Bloomington,\nThe conditions described by Mrs. Cassen, Mrs. Ball, and Mrs. McQuittv,\nappeal to many women who struggle on with their daily tasks in just suchc\nditions—in fact, it is said that the tragedy in the lives of some women is aim\nbeyond belief. Day in and out they slave in their homes for their famil\n—a nd beside the daily routine of housework, often make clothes for the\nselves and for their children, or work in their gardens, all the while suffer\nfrom those awful bearing-down pains, backache, headaches, nervousness,\nblues, and troubles which sap the very foundation of life until there come\ntime when nature gives out and an operation seems inevitable. If\nwomen would only profit by the experience of these three women, and reme\nber that Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound is the natural restorat\nfor such conditions it may save them years of suffering and unhappiness.\nThere is hardly a neighborhood in any town or hamlet in the United Sta\nwherein some woman does not reside who has been restored to health by t\nfamous medicine. Therefore ask your neighbor, and you will find in agp\nmany cases that at some time or other she, too, has been benefited by taking\nand willrecommend it to you. For more than forty years this old-fashioned r<\nand herb medicine hasbeen restoring suffering women to health andstreng\nLydia E. Pinkkams Private Text-Book upon “Ailments Pec\nliar to Women” will be sent to you free upon request. Wri\nto The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.,
312a2560af17e217a1793af10fa0ebec THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.0560108973386 41.004121 -76.453816 Itepublican party, to rlso nbovo nil your\nnnlmnsltoa, lo forget your old sin. Loin\nunlto to repair tho wrong that detract and\noppress tho country. Lot us lurn our backs\nou tho past. And let it bo said iu tho future\nthat ho shall bo tho greatest patriot, tho\ntruest patriot, tho noblest patriot, shall do\ntho most to 'repair the wrongs of tho past\nand to prnmolo tlio glories of tho future.\nLoud nnd sustained npplnuso iu tho Houso\nand in tlio crowded galleries.\nTho crowning speech of tho debato was\ntliat of General Banks, on Thursday. Ho\nmado an eloquent appeal for peace, which\nnlono could restore prosperity, iu placo of\nthe depression which rests upon the country,\ntaking from men their properly, from labor-\ners their employment. From women nnd\nchildren their bread ; which is destroying\nnot only tho welfare of present, but im-\nperiling the hope of tho future. I must\ntako Bpaco to quote this paragraph :\nI prefer ns a guide for myself I u my nction\nhero as n momher of this llouso to lcnvo the\npast nnd look to tlio future. If I should\nfollow tho counsel of tho gentleman from\nSlaiuo nnd his friend, I could change noth-\ning of tho past ; not ono of tho dead could\nbo raised to lifo ; not ouo would bo assuaged;\nnot ouo sorrow or ono sign be diminished by\nanything that can now bo done. Let that\nwhich is past and gone, not lo bo changed\nand affected by anything within tho scopo\nof human power, remain for tho impartial\ninvestigation which Is to como hereafter\nwhich must como hereafter ; let it stand for\nthoso who will bo ablo nnd capable of
6389d15f900eeddc5848ae715ad2f7b4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5219177765093 39.261561 -121.016059 Ilnada JPmocrat.\nCok.Nt.K STUNK UK PlOMvKK HaI.I .— This\nMliKniiHiii ilif ci'Tfiimiiiifk of laying ilif c<>r\n•»**r stone of the new Pioneer Hall, on\nM- ntgonieiy street, iiuar Jackson, were eel*\n« biat<mI. At nliotit II oclock the Pioneers\na-n milled ai ilieulil Hall on Washington\n►•reel. Ai 12 they formed in line, w ith an\nAmerican Ifig in Irout, then tan of the\noriginal 11 nr Amis, ami the banner or the\nSociety, The proceehinu tnai cited lip to\nl)u (Kin t street, ai d countermarch'd In Kear-\nny. where it opened rank!*, and received\nmembers ol the Gland Liaise K. &. A . M ..\nol California, followed tiy < (fleers of the\nsubordinate L<>dg' s of the Sta'e, ami a Ini ge\nnilHila-r of the Masonic fraternity. The\nbanner of the Grand Dodge w as borne in\nlion) of the Masons 'The piocession, head\ned by the band trom the Presidio. tnnrcln-d\ntluniigh Kearny toCalifoinla, to Monigotn-\nery, to the corner of Jackson, when the Pi-\noiieeri* opened rank* and the Masonic fra\ntrinity parsed through and look its position\non the platfoiin which Covers the Innttda\n of the new Hall The stone was ready\nto lower in its place, ami the cm n. w iue and\noil. and ther insignia of masonry w ere in\ntln ir proper places, and the platform, hc\ncoinpatiii-d w ith the representatives of the\nthree great lights of Masonry — three lapeis\nset so as in form a triangle. On ascending\nthe platform Dr II. M. Cray, President of\nthe Pioneer#, delivered a short address, and\nwas billowed by the Grand Chaplain in a\nprayer. The oration was then delivered by\nW II Fnrw II. Esq. After the oration the\ncasket containing the history of the Pioneer\nSociety, i antes of its members, and various\nother articles, was deposited in the cavity\nof the corner stone; and then under the su-\npervision of Grand Master Belcher, of Yu-\nlia county, the stone was placed in position\naccotn; nnied by all the rites of Masonry.\nA vety large crowd was in attendance to\nwitness the laying of l lie corner stone of the\nHall which is to perpetuate the history of\nthe Pioneers of the Pacilic Empire.—[S. F.\nJournal, 7th iuet
aa278c6ee59fcb9032822c5cdb236cb0 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.43698626966 43.798358 -73.087921 trees,all the wood is somewhat carious,\nso that the species cannot be determined\nwith certainty; some pieces have the ap\npearance of black walnut, others of pine\nor cedar. Several pieces 01 grapevines\nwere found that were but little decaved,\nand some had been considerably charred\nby fire. A bone, dug up at the depth of\n40 leet, apoeared to have been sawn asun\nder longitudinally; the surface being\nsmooth and even, as if it had been cut by\nthe saw cf a butcher probably worn to\nthat form by the attrition of some hard\nbody before it was deposited where found.\nAt' tho 'depth of fifty feet the workmen\ncame into a layer of pure clay plastic, ex-\ntremely tenacious, and entirely free, from\nsand. This was almost two feet in thick\nness, and under it was what had evident\nly, at soma former period, been the sur\nface of the earth. Extending over the\nwhole diameter of the well, and closely\nadhering to the superabundant layer of\nclay, was the remains of what had unques\ntionably, been a grassy turf, the grass and\nmoss being in as perfect preservation as if\nthey had not been inhumed but a few\nmonths. And what renders the above\nsupposition probably is, that under\nthis turf there is a black alluvial mould\nsimilar inali respects to the soil on the\nsurface of our bottom lands. From an\nother well, now digging, near the former,\nthe trunk of a tree, six or seven inches in\ndiameter, with numerous branches, was\ncut off and taken out, and also a large\npiece of fossil coal, broken off doubtless\nfrom some distant coal strata, and borne\nthither by the force of rushing waters.\nA question arises by -- what means, was\nthis mighty mass of clay and, sand piled\nabove the former surface, or how did these\nforeign bodies arrive at such a depth in\nthe solid earth 1 Some have supposed\nthat they have been borne there by sub-\nterranean streams; but the nature of the\nsoil in which they are imbedded forbids\nthe possibility of it. They could only\nhave been left there when the clay that\nsurrounds them was deposited. The\nwhole phenomena can only be satisfacto-\nrily referred to that period in the earth's\nhistory when "the fountains of the great\ndeep were btcken up," when " the waters\nprevailed exceedingly upon the earth ;\nand "all the high hills that were under the\nwhole .heayco were coirered."
0acaf5a116c6759c42b2474b2f31e94f THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.974043684224 29.4246 -98.49514 regarded In the opposite light, and par\nticularly me inenusuip mat unncu uim\nto the Duke, lie consequently received\nhim very coldly. On the other band the\nvlndlctlvo Don Gaspardo, who could not\nforget the victory won over him by his\nrival, nor the humiliation Indicted upon\nhis authority, nor the generosity with\nwnicn ue nsu oeen overwueimeu oy si,\nDennis, and knowing the vindictive\nmalice of the Marquis of Valero, com\nplained to tho Viceroy or St. Dennis,\nwho bad tho audacity to pass within\nmusket shot of Coahulla (Monclova)\nwithout reporting or presenting his re-\nspects to such a high personage as him-\nself, lie, In consequence of this, de\nnounced St. Dennis as a suspicious char-\nacter, who cherished some projects hos-\ntile to the crown, as that motive only\ncould have Induced him to undertake\nsuch a trip as that from Mobile to Texas.\nims uenunciauon agrceu wnn some\nImprudent words that had escaped St.\nDennis In his wrath. He had Bald that\nIf he could not get justice done him he\nwould use his influence with the Indians\nto war upon the Spaniards.\nValero having received the letter from\nthe Governor of Coahulla, caused St.\nDennis to be arrested and Incarcerated,\nlie waa ncaln a nrlsoner In the same\nprison where the providential visit of\nbis Irlcnu, me Marquis oi j.arnage, nan\nliberated him. This time there were no\nFrenchmen to be found In the Spanish\nservice In the City of and one\nof the least cares of the Marquis of Va\nlero was to learn wnnr. was going on in\ntho prisons or the Vlceroyalty. Hut In\norder to prevent any disorder from the\npopulation, he had It circulated that, as\na measure or safety, be had St. Dennis\ntaken back to the Presidio, with orders\nto send him to the frontier or Louisiana.\nThis falsehood was known as soon ns an\nanswer to a message that some or St.\n1)01018' friends had sent to the l'resldlo\nwns received. Donna Maria came In\nperson to the city, and publicly de-\nnounced the cowardly treason or the\nMarquis of Valero, The population, In-\ndignant at tho conduct of the Viceroy,\ntook up arms and, having forced the\ngates of the prison, set St. Dennis free,\nto whom Valero was afterwards com-\npelled to pay an Indemnity Hut repre-\nsented double the value of the goods\nthat had been seized from him.\nSt. Dennis' friends In the City or Mexi-\nco, fearing (hot Valero nnti tho Gover-\nnor of Conhulla would try to revenge\nthemselves by causing him to he mur-\ndered nn the road, ollered to furnish him\nwith an escort. St. Dennis refused this\ntestimony of friendship, saying: "To\nescapo from these two scoundrels we\nhave Ihrco things my sword, the In-\ndians nnd the good steed presented me\nby the Duke or I.lnnrez."\nSt. Dennis returned safe nnd sound to\nMobile, nflcr having crossed twice the
56e87f1f83216af29d92d55067a71568 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.8838797497976 35.780398 -78.639099 I have lately returned from the North, having\nbeen prevented from going at the usual time by\nsickness m my family. 1 have unexpectedly had\nthe advantage of buying at a much cheaper rate\nthan formerly, and can sell goods much cheaper\nthan heretofore. Indeed, 1 intend to tell cheaper\nthan any body ele ; and therefore I solicit calls\nfrom ray friends and customers generally, and\nfrom the members of the Legislature in particular.\nVisitors to tne Vitj oi JKaieigh will please call\non me, ana 1 will ceriamiy give them good bar- -\ngain9,.either in clothing of my own manufacture\nor in that ready made ; as I am receiving a large\nassortment of clothing of the best kind, and for\nfurnishing goods none can be found cheaper.\nI also have a large asyortmcnt of Fancy Goods,\nwhich I will sell at a profit, consisting of\nGentlemen's Robes, Fancy Shawls, Cravats, Gloves\nand every thing in the line of a gentleman's wear\nexcept boots and hats. My stock is too lare to\nenumerate, and you will please call and examine\nfor yourselves, as you will be the best judge.\nCall at the wel known house, No. 15, Fayotte-vill- e\nstreet, where you will find cheap bargains for\nyour cash ; as I wish to do a cash business for\nthe future. My terms have heretofore been six\nmonths credit : but it is impossible for me to con\nduct business on this plan, as I have to meet my\npa ments regularly everj.ninety days.\nThose indebted to me at home or at a distance,\nwill please call and settle their accounts, many of\nwhich have been standing a long time. I iave\nmade this call on my friends
acc9dd2a03979b4be783e01be8dfd3cc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.7827868536228 39.513775 -121.556359 litis day il appearing to my satisfaction as\nJudge of the County Court, in and for (tube\ni 'onifty. I fiat the Hoard if Supervisors in nail for said\nCounty, did . on Hie glib day of September. A. M. one\nthousand eight hundred and tifty.siv, deojare (iroville\nto he the Count; seal of Hulte Couidy from and utter\nthe said twenty-fourth day of September /. M. is,Mi,\nin pursuance ol an act entitled Am Act to change mid\nlix the County Seat of Hutto Comity, approved March\n10th. IvV; ai d it further appearing lo my satisfaction\nthat the present buildings n whiidi Ihe said Court has\nbeen liehl, and in \\vliicii iho Records have te en kept\nin the town of Hidwell. lire unsafe us a place ol de-\npository for said Records, and lliilt the same is liable\nto de (ruction by tire, by reason of their being con-\nstructed entire of wood. And it further appearing\nthat there is no building in Hie town ol Hidwell. suit-\nable for hold jui; the terms of tit is Court, and to saf. ly\n its Records from lire or other calamii y. ami it\nappearing Ihal the town of nro'ille is a 111 plaee to\nhind Hie terms of lids Court, and that a safe and com\nmodions brick build ini; in said town tins been ten-\ntiered Hie county as county building*.\nIl is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that\ntiie Clerk el llie County Court.in and for Hullo\nCounty, forthwith remove his office and the Records\nI here-if. to (iroville, in the hulMuin selected by the\nsaid Hoard of Supervisors ns Coiio.y Puddings, and\ni lint he do and I misiict tile liu-ui -ss of ins said office,\nat the town of Oroville. ns Hie County *'eat of Unite\nCounty. And il is further ordered, that the terms of\n»aid Court, from and after the said twenty fourth day\nol Sfptcrnlicr. AII 18 .Mi, hi; fu-b! al tile said town of\ni Iroville until otherwise ordered.\nAudit is fnrther ordered, that the Clerk of tties\nCouidy Conn in ai d for Hulte County, issue an order\nmid-r llie seal of said Court, in conformity with tins\norder.
1ec78f66cbe58f9c6e66e419a5b93bc2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.2773223727484 40.063962 -80.720915 It is such incidents a« these tin\nhave come out in regard to Stev\nart, along with accounts of his syi\ntcmatic smashing out of a rival to hi\nKreat up-town house, that have reache\nthe public and inlluenced the populf\nestimate of the man. Perhaps if he ho\nbeen known as ho really was to the mul\ntitude, he would have appeared togreaU\nadvantage, Ilis grand project to build\nhome for sewing girls of New York\nnot to be forgotten. Ife has spent a vai\nurn of money, built a splendid pile, bn\nwhether he ha* succecded in his aim r<\nmains to the futuro. We have the in\npression that up to this time the schetr\nhas not met expectations. Wo trust thi\nways and means will yet bo found\nmake it a success, for certainly it woui\nbe a blessing to society to such\nhome as Mr. Stewart contemplated fo\nthis worthy class of workers, it was n<\nto he a charity establishment bu\na» immense boarding and lodgir\nhouse, whore for a reasonable price thes\n*omen could secure greater comfort tha\n'hewhere. There will bo great curiosil\nnn the part of the New York public\n* e what his will provides as regards th\nand Jollier great schemes of likechara*\nThe possible contents of his wi\nhave l>cen much discussed for years pas\nHe has no children and it has been take\nfor granted that he would return\nsociety in tho shape of magnlficcr\nbequests, what he received from it in th\n"tape of great riches. Only lately hi\n^plendid house on Fifth Avemys was fir\nj'hed. People wondered why this child\nlei* old man should want to build eueh\ncostly tomb for himself. It seentol t
0d704873e057b59cf0c046fcdf6af347 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1902.987671201167 41.875555 -87.624421 1 ie e flutter 'J'J.\nThe clipping referred to Is from the\nChicago Tribune, and Is as follows:\n"Small reforms, they keep telling us,\nare tho enemies of big reforms. While\nwe spend our time mopping up minor\nevils the sources from which those\nminor evils tlow are allowed to con-\ntinue uiistuiiched. What we need to\ndo Is to proceed to tho sources am)\ndam them up ouco for nil.\n"Tills Is an attractive Idea and holds\nout such n largo prospect of universal\nregeneration that one feels abashed on\ncoming forward to suggest a reform\nwhich will not regenerate anything.\nNevertheless, this reform now iiboiit to\nlm suggested will have its use, Its\nsmall use. It Is a small reform nud a\nmodest one. It does not claim much\nfor Itself, Yet, hi u deprecating kind\nof "way, it asks for attention.\n"Why Is It that tho street names on\ncorner electric lights are so placed that\nat night they cannot ho rcadV , Tho\nelectric light globe Is most cases\nJust below tho metal strips on which\nthu names are printed. Consequently\nwhen ouo looks for tho name one gets\nonly u blinding glare. Can there nut\nbo mi arrangement of light ami name\nwhich will bo less of a mockery? It\nIs at night, when tliero tiro few per-\nsons about of whom Inquiries can bo\nmade, that one particularly needs the\nhelp of tho corner signs. Yet It Is at\nnight that these signs become particu-\nlarly useless. Let there bo a change.\nSociety will not bo uffocted In Its vital\nparts by that change, but many a be-\nwildered and exasperated traveler will\nbo cheered and blessed mid sent on his\nway rejoicing. Hive the small reform\na chance to 110,11 little good In Its own\nhuniblo way."\nThe Eagle desires to add to this that\nIt Is a well known fact to most of tho\ntraveling public that there Is hardly\none street sign out of every six cross- lug- s\noutside" of tho business district,
21e4b5363ff08705a9011ba82edf9b1a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.382191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 Information Wanted..It is beoom\ning a question of some interest to kno*\nwhether anything, and if anythini\nwhat, is being done by the authoritie\nto improve the sanitary condition of th\ncity, in view of the rapidly approach\ning hot weather, and the danger that i\nwill bring with it that dreadful scourg\nthe cholera. The city has what is call\ned (by courtesy> a "Health Officer.\nThis officer is getting pay at the rate o\n§1,500 a year. If he is earning this pa;\nbe U doing it in a very quiet, unosten\ntatious way, for so far as we can ascer\ntaiu by our own observation, or that o\nothers, little or nothing is being done\nThe city we are assured is not in any\nthing like as good sanitary conditioi\nas it was last summer. The preset]\ncool weather cannot in the natnra\ncourse of the season last much longei\nThe heated term will soon be on us\nAfter it begins in earnest it is doubtfu\nwhether a spasm of cleaning up will nc\ndo more to invite pestilence than to wari\nit off.if indeed it be in contemplatioi\nof the city to attempt a thor\nough cleaning up at all. At presen\nit looks as if they were ntterly indiffer\neut to the interests of the city both ii\nmatters of health and business, fo\nl>oth are involved. We can ansur\nthem that if fhrnnt/h thoir unninonnu\naud criminal neglect Wheeling suffer\nthis summer as Cincinnati did last, ou\npeople will fasten the responsibility\nwhere it belongs. The gentlemen win\ncarry the city government now wltl\nsuch exclusive sweep would do wel\nto remember that there are times whei\npower has its responsibilities as well a;\nprivileges. There are several mutter)\njust* now connected with the city gov\nprnment that ought to be dealt with ir\na vigorous and honest spirit and solely\nrrom considerations of the general wel\nfare. It may be too much to hope fo\nanything of this kind from those whc\nnow hold the reins of the city govern\ninent, in ordinary matters of publi<\nimprovement; but we have a right t<\nexpect that where their own lives ami\nbusiness are.involved alike with others\nthe cifcy Council would act upon, tbt\nordinary maxims of self interest and\nself protection.
0e49e0b5ff77685a6b7dce27fe51d988 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.5767122970574 41.020015 -92.411296 NEW YORK, July 28. — Messrs.Tilton\nand Moulton had a consultation yes­\nterday. Tbe latter is aeting under the\nadvice of General Butler It is believ­\ned that when the committee invite\nhim to testify he will not refuse his\ntestimony. Mr. Tilton thinks, bow\never, that only a court of law will\ncompel him to speak. It is stated that\nMr. Tilton expressed the belief that\nduring tho present investigation\nevidence would beadduced that would\n'convictMr. Beecher; that only evi\ndence establishing his innocence will\nbe sought He believes fTom the per­\nsonnel of tbe committee they will give\na verdict tbat in acoordanoo with the\nfacta brought to light during the in\nvettigation they mutt acquit Mr.\nBeecher. The committee, It is laid,\nhave come to the conclusion that Mr.\nBeecher ehould not be called on to\nteetlfy until Tilton'e statements have\nbeen strengthened by something more\nthan his own affidavit\nTbe main points ellcted In the cross-\nexamination of Theodore Tilton are\ngiven below. Mr. Sege, In giving the\ntestimony to the eays the test!\nmony having been published without\nthe knowlrage or constat of the com­\nmittee of investigation, and fragment­\nary and inaecurate reports oChis testi­\nmony under his crossexamination\nhaving been published by means un­\nknown to the committee and without\nits sanction, whereby Mr. Tilton says\ninjustice has been done him, it is fa­\nltered that In all fairness to all parties\nthe whole of Mr. Tilton's teetlmony\nshould be made public at onoe\nThe following are the principal\npoints of interest:\nIn answerto questionsby Gen Tracy,\nTHton said he could net give the date\nof the transaction be said he witnessed\nat Mr. Beecher's house on looking over\nthe engravings. His wife continued\nto attend Plymouth Church after the\nttnneaetlon, but not regulaily. About\nthe time he ceased to be aa editor ot\nthe Independent he made a distinct\nallegation to Bowen against Beecher\nor the offehte he had committed againtt\nhim, and a letter was agreed upon be­\ntween him and Bowou, demanding\nthat Beoeher should quit ths Plymouth\npulpit
1f4ce8afce1a03f2545ce8bea85893a8 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.1904109271943 39.560444 -120.828218 The Austrian Government has again\nimprisoned a man entitled to the protec-\ntion of an American citizen. The message\nof President Pierce is considered decidedly\nwarlike, reviving all the jealousy occa-\nsioned by the Koszta affair. A Vienna\ncorrespondent of the New York Tribune\ngive the following statement of the case.\nIn 1848 Simon Taussig, the person in\nquestion, obtained permission of the au-\nthorities of Prague to travel one year in\nGermany, France and England. While\nabsent from the Austrian dominions, he\ntook occasion to visit the United States,\nwhere he soon after married and settled\nas a shoemaker in the State of New\nJersey, lie took the necessary steps to\nbecome an American citizen; and a full\npassport was given him in the United\nStates, the present year, to return to\nPrague, for the worthy purpose of convey-\ning to the United States a poor widow\nwith several children. On reaching\nPrague his passport was taken from him\nby the police authorities, and has since\nbeen withheld on the ground of his still\nbeing Austrian citizen. Not only this—-\nhe is also threatened with severe punish-\nment for having left his country without\npermission. He of course at once laid his\ncase before Mr. Jackson, the American\nMinister at Vienna. Taussig is charged\nwith no political offense, but, on the other\nhand, appears to be a simple, unoffending\nmechanic, whose crime is so undefined as\nto have found its way only among the\nvagaries of European despotism. Mr.\nJackson brought the affair before the\nAustrian Government and requested that\nTaussig's passport should be restored and\nhimself permitted to return to his suffering\nfamily. The ground of humanity was also\nurged. The unsuspicious character of the\nman, the smallness of the offense commit-\nted, the fact that Taussig is a poor man,\nthat his family is suffering from his\nabsence, and especially the praise-worthy\nobject of his visit to Prague, were all\npresented to their consideration. But\nAustrian diplomacy has a brain of lead\nand a heart of stone, and all considerations\nof the above character are with them\nperfectly lost.
e554cb502b154be49c9677598a3d5e73 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.9685792033495 41.681744 -72.788147 When I was but a youngster, scarcely able to comprehend what\nit was all about, I often sped to the press room of the Herald office\nto watch the big machine in operation( to see the whirring gears and\nallow my ears to drink in the noise of revolving drums of steel. Back\nin those days the presiding genius of the room was "Bill" Flagg. He\nwas the God of the machine. He tended it, fed it with ink and paper,\nclamped on the matrices of metal which spread upon the white sur-\nface the printed words. Active, eager, efficient and loyal Bill had\ngrown up with presses, lie knew them from the bottom up. He knew\nthem, every button, every stud and every bar. He took them Into his\ndreams as he lay in his bed of nights as every skilled and faithful\nartisan often docs with his tools and problems of the day.\nA few days ago, years later, how many does not matter\nnow Bill Flagg still presided in the press room. Several machines\nhad come and gone. He had tended them all with his usual loyalty\nand skill. He had stood shoulder to shoulder with the boy of yore in\nsolving the problems which are bound to arise in connection with\nany mechanical equipment. He had grown up with the boy who ad-\nmired him and his machinery years ago. He had trained that youngster\nin the mechanical part of his profession, a profession in which loyalty\nstands for more than friends, more even than life itself at times, and\nhe had trained him to the best of sterling ability, making him love the\nmachines as Bill loved them. Youth and man, husband, father and\ngrandfather Bill had stood by the Herald, that which was closest to\nthe heart of the boy. who used to admire him years ago. Now the\nman grown.
f61ab7b2f10c821b4f4e2626f397b911 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.160273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 sought at the current session of the\nlegislature by the local water board,\nand although the bonds will very\nlikely remain unsold for a year or\nmore it is expected they will eventu-\nally be used to finance elevation of\nShuttle Meadow dam.\nAbsence of sufficient storage facil-\nity is one of the most serious prob-\nlems of , the water department.\nPumping stations at Forestville and\nprolific sources of water supply at\nother points insure a heavy flow of\nwater during all except extremely\ndry seasons, but there are not suffi-\ncient accommodations for storing the\nsupply for use in time ot drought\nThe pumping station at Forestville\nis not dependent upon ordinary flow-\ning conditions since it can be oper-\nated at all times drawing from un-\nderground sources, and by its use\nthe reservoir could be kept at a\nsafe high point, were the dam raised,\n familiar with the water de-\npartment explain.\nConsulting Engineer Allan Hazen\nlays great stress upon the importance\nof storage. He recommended stor-\nage accommodations of five or six\nbillion gallons, three of four times\nthe present amount. Until this dif-\nference is taken up, in part at least,\nhe fears tributaries cannot be de-\nveloped to their maximum and flood\nwaters will continue to be lost in\ngreat amounts. . le was convinced\nthat Shuttle Meadow with the pres-\nent dam would give sufficient stor-\nage for its immediate sources, but\npointed to the need for a larger res-\nervoir to fully benefit from the\nWhigviUe and Burlington areas.\nDiscussing the Shuttle Meadow\nmatter ho declared himself confident\nthat reservoir could be developed to\nprovide storage facilities, with pipe\nlines from the points of catchment\nto the reservoir. By raising the dam\n50 feet a delivery in excess of
2c11eefe46d473d3aff9acd12575fd44 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.6397259956875 38.894955 -77.036646 he is in authority, can call out the miliary\nauthority whenever he pleases. If this be Bo, wo\nare in a worse condition than any people in ciris-\ntendoro. What is the common 'aw ? To thpf 1\nappeal. I might cite authorities, but 1 am sure it\nis not necessary, to show that the military author!-\nty cannot be resot'ed to until there exists an aver-\nwhelming necessity. That is the common law ol\nEngland and of ererv Slate in this Union exbept\nperhaps the State of New York, where statute: has j\nsuperseded the common law. I repeat, then, that |\nu man has the right to call out ibe military an-\nthority until he has oxhiu«tcd the civil. Is not\nthat principle at the foundation of this enquiry?\nAnd if lean -how thai the civil authority was ad-\nvised o< i-npendli g thing*., and that thoy ins fe no\neffort to prevent a breach of the peace, but I t It go\non, and when It burst upon them, thev rcso t to\nother than tbe ortlin 117 remedies, do I not hking i\nhome to the prosecution that which wv a*. nuie in I*\nour defence, that luis ir a prosecution to shield Ch< it\n wrong ? Am I to shut, out from view the\nfeet liiat tliey knew utltu acre coiniug tioui Huh I-\nmore, and that a poGca magistrate of the city w«e\nadvised of their ai rival, and thut he sent to the\nMayor for the police force which win twice tbe\nnumber of those w!io[cauio fiour Baltimore, and\nthat no effort a a* made to rostrum them ? It Head\nof making a proper disposition of the police force,\nthe Mayor immediately upon the outbreak oP 1 bi*\ndisturbance, without taking a single deposition,\nproceeds to procure the Marines. He goes to the\nNavy Department.wo know that that is tl c\nproper plum to apply to loi them.an ! we ijnow\nthat they were a!te* wards on tbe ground. Are we\nthen to shut out from tin: proof in tbiH caao that\nno cfTor: was made 'o pr>? »>nre the peace by tL*.\ncivil suthwity t 1 agree that when the military\nauthoritiv* am pnipcily Oil led out, and the civd\nofficers ore with them, we arc 10 lick the dn«, and\nbow bcfoic them; that *o are to forget that we\nl ave American hearts.\nWe must also forget that no mac has the right '\n,k.
1cd35d51c567a3b3e9723fc49b28b31e THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8319671814916 38.729625 -120.798546 Celoma—A. 11. Hawley, Inspector ; E. Chalmers\nand R. V. Clark, Judges.\nCoon Hollow— E. H. Evan*, Inspector ; Capi.\nAmes and James Elliot. Judges.\nCayoteville—James Yaylui, Inspector ; M . Payne\nand 6. F. Clark. Judges.\nCave Ville)—Setta Farnsworth, Inspector ; J. J.\nHu-e and W. If . Page. Judges.\nDiamond Springs—J. O. blandish, Inspector;\nDr. G. M . Adams and Sami. Salisbury, Judges.\nDunrombt Store—J. M . Bryant. Inspector ; Juo.\nMeDon ell and 11. K . Gamble, Judge*.\nDu roc House— H. L. Parker, Inspector; John\nK tuber and John Carpenter. Judge*.\nKl l>orado—Charles Meredith, Inspector ; J. W.\nJackson and J. Oordcn, Judges.\nFairplay—A. M . C. Busan. Inspector; J. D .\nRankin and I). F . Caswell, Judge*.\nFrench Town—A. K. Hunter. Inspector ;G,\nWorth and Dr. J . U. Edwards, Judges.\nGaddis Creek—B. A. lamini*, Inspector; J. 11 .\n and W. T. Allen, Judges.\nGaidenjValley—Louis Uuyatt**, Inspector, A .\nJ. Smith and J. C. Richard»*»»», Judges.\nGeorgetown—John Stout, Inspector ; Thomas\nD. Patten and Samuel Curry, Judges.\nGold Hill—John Know land, Inspector t 11. Ham-\nlin and A. Britchta, Judges.\nGreenwood Valley—J. B. Cram, Inspector ; 8. A.\nJaques and E. L Crawford, Judge*.\nGray Kaglc-Z . Faulkner, Inspector ; E. D . Roche\nand P. Thornton, Judge*.\nGriixly Flat—Col Wm. Knox, Inspector; W.\nMcKean and Hulhurd, Judies.\nGreen Valley—J. M . Arnold, Inspector ;C. San-\nders and John Evans, Judies.\nHalf-way House— W. 11 . Bradford, Inspector ; The-\nodore Mass! and 0. W Clark, Judges.\nHenrys Digging*—o. W. Bowker, Inspector ; Rob-\nert Glass and John Lucas, Judges.\nHalf-way House, [Wagon Road)—N. Carpenter,\nInspector ; Chas. Oosvorth and Geo. Bliss, Judge*.\nHendersons Store—J. Barnes, Inspector ; D. Dunn\nand J. Finley, Judges.
0a830e55ddd2a21410c4780aea50dbe3 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1900.4890410641806 47.478654 -94.890802 (b)Theeblef of the fire department or the\nperson acting in his stead, may during any\nlire, cut or break any wire or poles which may\nbe necessary for the protection of property\nand the villas* shall not be liable therefor.\n• (c) The said J. H. Haner, Albort Kaiser and\nAndrew D. Stephens, their heirs, executors,\nadministrators and assigns shall be liable for\nall damages caused by their negligence with-\nout concurring negligence on the part of the\nperson injured, to whomsoever resulting\ncaused by the negligence of the said J. H. Ha-\nner. Albert Kaiser and Andrew D. Stephens,\ntheir heirs, executors, administrators or as-\nsigns in erecting or lepairing said telephone\nsystem and exchange.\n(d) The said J. H . Haner, Albert Kaiser and\nAndrew i). Stephens, their heirs, executors,\nadministrators and assigns, shall furnish\nand maintain for the use of said village of Be-\nmidji and free of any expense to said village\nof Bemidji one (1) 'phone at the village hall.\n(e) If said village shall establish and main-\ntain a fire alarm system, said village shall\nhave the right to use the telephone poles of\nBaid telephone system for stringing wires for\nsaid fire alarm in such manner as not to In-\nterfere with the operation and effectiveness\nof said telephone system and without expense\nto said village.\nSec. Three (3). —Any or persons who\nshall cnt, injure or destroy or displace any of\nthe poles, wires, instruments or property of\nthe parties to whom the foregoing rights,\nprivilege and authority are granted, nsed in\nconnection with the said telephone exchange\nor business, except In oases of fire as herein-\nbefore provided, or shall unnecessarily im-\npede or intertere with the regular woJking of\nsaid telephone system or business, shall be\npunished by a fine of not more than Fifty\n(50) dollars, or less than Five (5) dollars, or\nby imprisonment not exceeding Sixty (60)\ndavs together wl*h cost of prosecution.\nS«c. Four {*).— This ordinance shall not be-\ncome operative until the provisions of the\nsame are accepted by the said J. H. Haner,\nAlbert Kaiser and Andrew D. Stephens, said\nacceptance to be in writing and filed with the\nvillage recorder within thirty (30) days from\nthe date of the passage of this ordinance.\nSec. Five (5).—A ll ordinances or parts of\nordinances in conflict with the provisions of\nthis ordidance are hereby repealed.\nUpon the call for ayes and nays the follow-\ning couEcilmen voted in favor of the passage\nof the said ordinance: J. J. Jinkinsou, Earl\nGeil and Newton Holroyd; those voting\nagainst its passage, none; whereupon it was\ndeclared pa«s»d and earned, and was signed\nbv its president and attested by its recorder.
9068727d98f2c6b2108eff019bf1d489 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.6452054477422 41.681744 -72.788147 F. L. Norton, president of the Ken-\nsington fire district, announced this\nmorning that the next meeting of the\ndistrict will he held at Forester's hall\nin Kensington on Friday evening, Sep-- ,\ntember 2. All members are urged to\nattend this meeting as there is a large\namount of business to be transacted\nbefore the winter months set in.\nThe greatest question of the day\nin Kensington is that of having street\nlights. Arguments upon argument!\nhave been heard on all sides relative\nto street lights and some have appear\ned in this column for and against tho\nproposition. Rev. J . C . Brennan of\nSt. Paul's church is highly in favor\nof the town having street lights and he\ni.i backed by a large number of local\nresidents. Father Breijnan ' ha3 al-\nways been a staunch supporter of tho\nmovement for a better lighting sys-\ntem for the town of Kensington. When\nFather P.rennan first moved into \nsington some years ago. there were\nno lights in the town and arrange-\nments were completed with the Ameri-\ncan Paper Good.i and some few indi-\nviduals for lights, those still being in\nplace in this town. By this arrange-\nment a certain sum of money was to\nbe paid the American Paper Goods\neach year for the upkeep of the lights.\nThis was done for a few years by all\nthose first interested. Later some of\nthe people began to drop out until\ntoday there aro but a few who aro\npaying. Tho system now used is not\nadequate enough for the town.\nTht Connecticut Light and Power\ncompany of New Britain was asked\nby the Kensington fire district to look\nthe town over and give an estimate of\nwhat they thought the district could\nbe lighted for. At the last meeting\nof the district the figures of the New\nBritain concern were thought to be\ntoo high. Mr.
0fda84b09910ff11ccd4e6eece4dcc34 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.7109588723997 42.217817 -85.891125 A gas explosion took place this morning\nin the Otto Colliery.operated by the Phila-\ndelphia and Heading Coal and Iron Com-\npany, one boy being killed and fivo men\nfatally injured. Eleven others were also\nmore or less severely burned. About 430\nmen nnd boys are employed in the mine,\nboth insido and outside. In the new level,\nupon which work has been prosecuted,\nthe coal has been throwing off sulphur and\nthis rose to the upper level, whero a gang\nwas at work. Not loDg before the ex-\nplosion Patrick Kilrain and his son camo\nout with naked lights, but noticed no gas.\nA short time afterward several men came\nout, and as soon as the door was opened\nthere was a terrific explosion. John Lynn\nwas tho name of the killed. The fatally\ninjured were: Thomas Lynn, 27, single;\nburned about the hands nnd face, llobert\nLynn, 21; burned on breast, head, and\narms. John Graham, 30, mirrried, with wife\nand two children; burned about the body.\nAlexander Frew, 0, married, with wife and\ntwo children; badly burned on head and\nbody. John Smith, single, 21; burned in\nthe face and on the body. Tho father of\nthe Lynn boys wus killed by a fall of coal\nin 187C. The explosion created more than\nordinary surprise, because this colliery was\nconsidered more than usually safe. Many\nof the men engaged were employed on new\nlevels, and wero not taking out coal. The\nforce of the explosion was something fear-\nful, and resembled tho report of an im-\nmense quantity of gunpowder.
3ba9bc58c3d5ce2e8425e9405c585c59 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.8890410641807 58.275556 -134.3925 standing thli fart he still had hopea\nand up until the last year or so.\nwhen he bccame crippled up. he ex¬\npected to be ablo to get out In the\nspring to look tor a mine.\nMr. Corblelle was born in Canada\nof French-Canadian parents, but\nmoved to Wisconsin when he was\nvery young. He loft home at an\nearly age. something over fifty years\nago. and was ono of the pioneers of\nButte, claiming to have located\nsome of the mines there that have\nproven to be such bonanxaa. He\nnever roturned to Wisconsin except\nfor one visit from Butte. He Is sur¬\nvived by a sister and some other rel¬\natives who still live In Wisconsin.\nHe was about 67 years old and came\nof a long-lived family, his mother\nhaving died only a fow years ago.\nMr. Corblelle was patri¬\notic and loyal to America. After\nthe United States went to war, al¬\nthough he was crippled In such a\nway that he could no longer work,\nwhat few dollars he could save from\nthe bare ne<ea»llle» of life he in¬\nvested In a Liberty Bond and War\n8avlnga Stamps.\nDuring the last several weeks he\nhas been bed-ridden and was nursed\nby Tom Tracy. He was a pensioner\nunder the I'loncer act of the legis¬\nlature, but always refused to go to\n(he I'ioneors' Home, as he said that\nit would bo only a question of a\nlittle while until hi* health would\nbe so that he would be able to take\nto the hills again and than t>e would\nnot ask anyone for anything.\nThe funeral will be held at S\no'clock Sunday afternoon from th«\nSully I'ndertaklng I'arlors.
118822dfdf7880d66b3d92fd33718b1a THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.368493118975 40.419757 -77.187146 stantly to each other, they stumbled\nalong the whole length of the hotel,\nfrom Fourth to Fifth street, missing the\nFourth street stairs In their flight. Sud-\ndenly, out of the smoke and darkness, a\nfemale voice exclaimed, "This way I"\nand the young couple groped In the di\nrection of the voice, which repented the\nwords at Intervals. Suddenly Mrs. Ber\nrian stumbled over the prostrate form of\na man, and at the same instant her hus\nband's hand struck the banisters. With\na glad shout husband and wife started\ndown toward life, but there was still a\ndoubt as to success and safety. The hor\nrible smoke was stifling them, and they\nceased to be able to speak. Down they\nwent, alone, until they struck the next\nfloor, where they met a struggling,\nshrieking crowd of people, some clad,\nsome with scarcely anything on, and\nothers presenting ludicrous combina\ntions of dress. One man had his hat,\nboots and night shirt on, and that's all.\nDown the pair went until they struck\nfresh air and knew they were saved. It\nwas touch and go, however. They\nemerged from the hotel. John had \nhis pants and undershirt, while his\nwife wore her night dress. One had a\ncoat under his, and the other a pair of\nshoes and a dress skirt under her arm.\nThese they donned, and crying like\nchildren, summoned a passing hack and\nwere driven to the Planters' hotel, where\nthey found refuge.\nUnable to write their names, sick al\nmost to death, they were cared for by\nfriends of Mr. Berrian, who knew of\ntheir presence In the Southern hotel\nthe night before. When they reached\nthe room assigned them, John found his\nmoney and watch In his pants pocket,\nand OIlie found a watch and chain bang\ning to one of her fingers, a faot of whlcb\nshe was not before aware. All else wao\nlost, including wedding trosseau, gifts of\njewels from friends and all. All day\nthey lay, exhausted, but thankful, min-\nistered to by friends. Clothing was pro-\ncured, and as soon as possible the young\npair started for home. All the way the\nbride lived over again the scenes of that\nterrible morning, and called out to her\nhusband as though they still were in the\nsmoke-fille- d
476d50d3962604ea20a166990d22b0a1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.5219177765093 39.745947 -75.546589 Too many able citizens, anxious not the indication from the expression ol\nto offend popular opinion, have submit- publie opinion that American citizen\nte,| to the impudent assaults and ill ship is still too intelligent to counts-\ntolerable prying» of shallow brained nance a declaration that there is nc\njacks in office. Mr. Warburg, who was room in Uncle ham's employment tot\nI not in the ordinary sense a candidate I men as honorable and able as they\nfor membership on' 1 he Federal Reserve have been successful. It may he, ao\nHoard, resents an effort by a commit ice cording!,v, that the sacrifice of Mr. War-\nof the United States Senate to enable burg "ill make it easier in the future\ncertain Senators nf his expense to pose for the country to avail it sell of the\nin their constituencies as toes of Wall resources of brains and experience which\n mid it is swiftly revealed that private life can contribute to the publie\npublie opinion heartily commends him service.\nfor tile sfnmi he takes. There must he j So far a« concerns the Federal Re-\nsome .mighty u noom tortable Senators | serve Hoard and the functioning nf the\nin Washington as they hear the pro- \\ new banking system, we would not\ntests arising all over the country against j care to say that Mr. Warburgs ap-\nthe Senatorial course, of folly which | pointaient was indispensable to the sat-\nlias probably cost the nation the wer j isfaetory outcome of the great expert-\nvices of a man who could render in - 1 nient. What is needed to insure this,\nvaluable aid in ilie establishment and j however, i« a controlling body whose\nearly operation of the new federal re-I average of courage and knowledge\nserve banking system.
1eabfdc61a45e0163288c3209b5237eb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.691780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 mtil the illicit distilleries and their i\nuerous backets and abettors were led\noldlr dcclare that in the future tl\nrould be ready to meet a\nadical oflice holder who mij\notrude himjclf , upon them,\nm speaking of what I know to be tr\nnd when I nay that the responsibility\nhe attempted murder of Mr. Doolitt\nnd hi* maiming for life, rests mail\ninon the Jliinton Jlcrald, I also spe\nrhat I know to be true, and the hon\nlapses will agree with me. No such w\ns that paper made upon Mr. Atkim\nnd his party could fail to show its fru\nn the wounding of Mr. Doolittle. 1\nnly wonder is that all of his men wi\not likewise shot down. Men who s\nematically violate the law as those d\nillers have been doing for the pasttwe!\near. - , cannot stand the patting on\noulder that the Hinton editor cave th<\nn about a dozen issues of bis pai\nl>rough the name number of weeks ti\nallowed our raid in the apring, witht\ntrikingsome one down who might p\nume invade their territory in the\nure. I knew it at the lime, and all\nensible men with whom I convened\nhe subject admitted it also. It is hutr\nlature, and cannot bo gainsaid.\nBut tho Hinton paper praises 1\n)oolittle as a gentlemanly and eflici\niflicer. That is thin. 1 was in bi\naids, and I don't want to draw a para!\nletween Messrs. Doolittle and Atkins\nrhey are both brave men and good t\nera. As to who wxi the bruver and\n>etter officer, I will leave it for the n\niho were with both parties s\nieneral Duval, the chief, to decide,\ntill cay this, however, that there was\nme single act done on the first which ^\ntot repeated on the second raid. 1\nUtrald abused the commander of\nirst a< an assassin and scoundrel, i\nirai-ed the commander o( the last a\ngentleman for doing the same thi\nSow why this discrepancy ? The edi\n>f the Herald knew full well when he i\ntbuaing him as a thief, drunkard i\nicoundrel that Mr. Atkinson has alw\naorn the character of a
7477a6ab8e221132491cb08220f4010c THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.905479420345 39.369864 -121.105448 The future is a store-house full of\ngold, and fame, and toys for every fancy,\nto which hope gives ambition the key.\nOne man justly or falsely praised,\nkindles emulation in a thousand; and\nto this wc owe the greatness of the\nChristian world so boasted of to-day.\nTo-day, to-day; our all is compassed\nin to-day; and what is yesterday to any\nman? A time perhaps mis-spenfc; a\ntime he cannot touch again, or fill again\nwith hope. If happiness was in it, it\nis to-day but as a sweet shadow lingering\non his heart; if it brought him shame\nor sorrow, he would forget it, and in to-\nmorrow look with stronger hope for\npleasure and for profit.\nSo far as it is possible for us to know, .\nwc arc in all scientific arts far, far in ad- r\n of all the ages past combined; but\nthat wc are morally better, or intellectu-\nally greater is a lie—an insult to the God\nto whom we say we owe our being.—\nWhen wc take into consideration the fa-\ncilities which have been afforded man\nsince the days of type, to communicate\nhis thoughts and ideas, good or bad, to\nthe world, great allowance should be\nmade for the many enlightened genera- .\ntions of days gone by.\nSince the art of printing the whole\nsphere upon which we live has been ex-\nplored, and re-explored, and made visible\nto the quick eye of thought, bringing\nlight to the mind, words to the tongue,\nand subjects to the pen.\nBefore, man to man was comparatively\nunknown; now, they shake hands in\nthought from pole to pole, from horizon\nto horizon.
30a21cbe1e340480cbf51bc5d1833a38 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 The proposition to amend is made in\nthe mode prescribed by the people in\nthe Constitution. The last Legislature\nProposed it to the legislature which\nwill assemble In January. One way or\nthe other they Hre required to decide..\nIf they decide favorably, tbeflnal decis¬\nion rests With the people at the polls\nnext fall. If they decide adversely the\nproposition dies In the legislature and\nnever reaches the people directly at all.\nThis question as now placed before\nour people Is a very simple one. The\nattention drawn to it since the amend-\nment was jiroposed, has stripped it of\nambiguity. The people of the State\nhave the full and absolute power to\nregulate suffrage In the State. They\nhave therefore the full power to ex¬\nclude the persons whom the amend¬\n proposes to exclude. Suffrage\nregulations being tixed in the Constitu¬\ntions, it follows that they can so change\nthe Constitution as to effect the purpose\ndesired. We have, therefore, the nuked\nquestion to decide: Do we, or do we\nnot, desire to exclude from the polls (for\na longeror shorter period, as may here¬\nafter seem liest) the persons who com-\nmuted treason by aiding the rebellion\nsince June 1st, 1801 r It is a matter of\nSimple choice for each individual, and\nthat choice Is constrained only by the\nreasons each may entertain rojr prefer¬\nring the one courso or thoother.\nWhat those reasons may or should be\non the one hand or the other, we do not\npropose to consider to-day. Wo simply\nstate the question, and do not argue It\nnow.
6729ef1cea0103112d300a941d2ac3b0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 his wife, an§ also asked t£e consent of\nher mother to the marriage, which was\ngiven. "Several months ago. underprom¬\nise of marriage, he succeeded in seduc¬\ning her, and tin'ce that time has contin¬\nued his intimacy until, about two weeks\nago* they arrived at the .Waverly house\nin tnis citytogether. Although entreat¬\ned by the girl to marry Jier,.; this pro¬\nfessed Christian refused. With the\nfacts from this point up to the fearful\nleap taken by Ellen, our readers are\nalready familiar.\nYesterday morning she formed the\ndetermination to put an end to her ex¬\nistence. She statestthat the thought of\nbeing tried for stealing, coupled with\nthoughts ofshame,to which she had been\nbrought by the heartless man who had\nbetrayed her, made her tried or life, and\nshe resolved to destroy hbrSelf. She,\ntherefore, wrote a lotter reproaching\nNiles with her ruin, stating that she was\nen cienlc by him, and that he had en¬\ndeavored to persuade her to submit to\nthe treatment, of au abortionist, a prop¬\nosition wliiuh she rpfused. She remind¬\ned him of his promise to marry her, and\nreiterating her love liiin. Bidding\nan affectionate farewell tp her father,\nand mother, she instructed the officers\nto search for her body at Clark street\nbridge, as she intended throwing her¬\nself into the river.\nUpon the wall of the room where she\nwas confined she then wrote the follow-\nlowing in pencil:\nThis afternoon I told you 1 couldn't\ngive any account of what money was\nmissing, and you wouldn't believe me.\nNow God be my judgo for He knows I\nam speaking the truth. If you had\npunished mo for that, you would have\npunished me innocently. I could never\naccount for it if I would tell the truth,\nas I promised God to tell the truth, and\nthis is why I coiild not account for it..\nHard hearted as ypu spoke to me this\nafternoon^ it clianges not my love for\nyon. My love, where can I find lan¬\nguage to express tlio love that I have\nfor you?\n"Don't weep fornic.I am gone to rest;\nJust fold my hands across my breast.\nSmooth back tlio locks or my Mattered linlr.\nAnd kiss the pole Ui« of your once intended\ndear."
087ae6260b10c703959a2acda2198c91 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.269125651437 43.82915 -115.834394 An experiment made by cutting u\nexcav ation into grain fields and tha\nturning a stream ol water against ite\nhank in such a way as to wash the din\noff Hie roots of th e plants anil laying\nthem hate without breaking them fi.\nV'-aled th e fact th at the roitg of eui\nwere al mo-t a mat of white liberate«*\ndepth of four feet. In the same »«\nroots of winter wheat were found aedeen\nas seven leet in a light subsoil forty,\nseven days after the seed was eo»n\nWhen ttie entire plant and its roots*«\ntaken up and dried on the last ol April\nthe roots were 40 per cent, of the whuie\nweight. On the last ot May they were\n22 per cent. Of winter rye taken npc®\nthe last of April the roots were 34 per\ncent, of the we ght. These figures show\na part of the importance of usingtiie\nsubsoil plow where the subsoil is likely\nto be too hard for the routs to penetrate,\nbut this is only a part of bene6t!\nThe loosened sniisoil allowssurfacewatet\nto drain off through it more readily\nwhile in tiie season of drouth the roop\ncan extend down to a sufficient depth tc\nfind the moisture they need, or it will bf\nbrought up by capillary attraction tothe\nroots. Where the subsoil is sandyor\ngravelly this stirri ng it with the subsoil\nplow is not needed.\nIt will cost considerable money tohare\nth e mails delivered at the houses in\ncoun try towns as they are in the larger\ntowns and cities. It "will add to the '.ar-\nati on of the country, and business men\nand capitalists will have to pay consid­\nerab le of it. But for many years tbe\nfarmers have been taxed to pay lorde­\nlivery to th e merchants of the cities.and\nit wiii be but fair th at the favor ehonid\nbe returned. And it will not cost a«\nmuch for one man to carry the mail fur\na dis tri ct or neighborhood as it does for\neach resid ent to go to the postoffice each\nday.
3566c0a18ca9fbb938087a5ba1c88b24 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.2835616121258 37.53119 -84.661888 A W Carpenter had in town tester\nday his magnificent Scotch Top Short\nborn Polled Durham bull Marmlon\nHe weigh 2400 and la an exceeding\nline animal Mr Carpenter stands bin\nat the low price of IS\nCicero Reynolds bought of J D Sin\nIcton the old Thurmond Peak farm\non Hanging Fork containing 60 acres\nat 850 On this farm it is claimed lob at\nease and Frank James took refuge af-\nLer robbing the bank at Columbia\nGilt Edge the sorrel stallion former\nIy owned by Mat Sandldgo of the West\nEnd made a magnificent season a1\ninoxvllle last year at 125 to Insure\nHo Is owned by Col Tyson who li\ntaking another season with him\nTbe description and pedlgre r of Mr\nJ K Baugbman Naboth and \nburg will appear next Issue They will\nboth stand at the low price of 110 to In-\nellre a living colt Both are royally\nbred fellows and they have proven\ntbelr superiority aa breeders\nCOURT DAY There were about 3CO\ncattle on the market yesterday about\nbalf of which sold Yearlings and two\naarolds brought 4 to 4c heifers 3 La-\n3Sc butcher tuff21 to 3Jo Mules were-\nIn demand at1100 to 1150 and horse\nwere wanted at almost any figure-\nR H Bronaugb will stand aV T M\neteelarm li miles from Crab Orch\nad on Stanford pike this season at the\nlow price of itO to insure a living colt\ntbe great horse Terra Cotta fa hit\ntbree and fouryearold form Terra\nCotta was ono of the blggett winners
3d5dc08f4afd063f1ca831039d9c7569 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1905.5876712011668 36.694288 -105.393021 sired to return the plate. He pro-\nposed not only to restore his share\nof the prize, hut to purchase the share\nowned by his crew for the purpose of\ngiving It back to the Selklrks. Lord\nand Lady Selkirk were much surprised\nto get this letter, which regretted the\nfortune which caused him to make an\nexpedition against their home. Lord\nSelkirk wrote a reply, but not know-\ning how to get it to Jones, sought the\ncounsel of Lord de Spencer, postmast-\ner genera) of England.\nLord de Spencer was evidently not\nmuch Impressed by the favorable\ntendency of the Selklrks toward\nJones, for he .eturned the letter to\nLord Selkirk with the remark:\n"I cannot help doubting. In the sit-\nuation I am in, the propriety of my\nforwarding a letter to a rascal\nand rebel as this Jones. A letter di-\nrected to him, of course, must be\nopened at the postofflce."\nThe foregoing extracts from letters,\ncopies of which were recently obtained\nfor the navy department by the Amer-\nican embassy at London, Shows the\nview taken of Jones by nearly all the\npeople of England, but it also shows\nthat the persons with whom he came\nin contact were disposed to recognize\nthe virtues which he possessed and\n16 acknowledge the finer sensibilities\nof his character. It would undoubt-\nedly have been a great pleasure to\nJones, who knew the bitterness of feel-\ning against him in England, to have\nreceived the letter which Lord Sel-\nkirk wrote, but which Lord de Spen-\ncer prevented from reaching Its des-\ntination. New York Herald.
4dfbdac9a6218b633d26ff872530a963 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.3986301052764 39.745947 -75.546589 I wish to impress on our dirt road j\nsupervisors the importance of the ]\nwork under their charge. When you |\nconsider that according to the United I\nStates Road Department Report, |\nthere are about 2,200.000 miles of 1\nroad in the United States and only!\n200,000 miles of his improved; and j\nthat in our own County there are j\nover 1,000 miles of road, of which j\nonly 175 miles are improved; which, !\nby tftc way, is a greater per cent, of |\nroads improved than any State or ]\nCounty, except in rural districts of j\nlarge cities, you can readily see that j\nwe have yet many miles of dirt roads I\nand will have for many years to ]\ncome, so that the Supervisors job of j\ntaking care of these roads is locally ;]\nof probably more importance than ]\nthat of tho Supervisors «f the stone I\nroads. The improved roads are ai- j\nways built to form grade, and 1\nthe ditches made, and cun be kept !\nIn condition with the proper amount j\nof money and n good system of main­\ntenance, but the dirt roads w ith thoir I\nrelative values to the community, and |\ntheir many ramifications leading to |\nall parts of the country over hills and\nhollows, some with many farms on |\nthem, others with only three or four |\nand some with only one house on I\nthem, often at the extreme end. is a\nvery different problem, for the one»\nhouse road is of as much importance!\nto its owner as tbh other roads are I\nto theirs, but naturally will not need j\nso much attention, as the w ear and 9\ntear is not so great, and, besides, tho I\nold rule of the greatest good for the I\ngreatest number must be born in1\nmind. These roads require not only!\nmaintenance, but. w Ith their bad D\ndrainage, steep hills, land washes!
0f369120fca09823bcc63d4cd95758af THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.4452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 commcnclug at 10 o'clock a. in. , the following\ndeaerlbed real property, which la described by\nreference to a plat of parcola,' airccta and alley s\nreturned by the aald apeclul commissioners wtih\ntho report mentioned lu the said decree of the\n5th day of December, A. 1). issw. and by that de¬\ncree directed to bo recorded in tho olllce ol the\nClerk of the Couuty Court ol said Ohio couuty,\nlu which ottlco It la now of record, that la to\nany: lot* 15 and 7 in iquuro '.11; lota 25,23 B. 23A,\n21II,21A.11)11,10A,17II,17A.1ftand11inDi¬\nvision B, lota 1 and 5 lu Blvikion 0. lota l, 2. 8,\naud 5 in Blvikion 11. lota II and 12 In Dlvirion\nJ, aud lota 15, 10,17,18.10 and 'JO in DIviMou K,\nlot 1 lu square 28, lota 'JO A and '.'0 B lu Blvikion\nD. lota 38, 30,40 and 41 in-Dlvlstou J, lot '."J lu\nDivision U uud lota 13 and 18 lu Division L.\nThe wild decree of Decembers, A. D . 1888,con-\ntalua the following provision: That the auid\napecial commlahlouerri "in selling lota 15 and 7\nin anuaro 'JO. aud lota 14,15,17 A, 17 B, 10 A, 10 It,\n A, '21 11, £1 A, 'J.I II, uud 25 in Dlvlalou 1), ahull\nexclude u atrip fifteen feet wldooll'of the south-\nem aide or end of each of the kuld loth, and shall\nallow the xaid atrip to remain aud be a portion\nof the atreetor road lying next ninth thereof in\nthoaame manner ua though under tho provl-\naioiia of the auid decree of April 'J3. ISss, tho\nsaid commlaaloncra had hhowu audi atrip ou\ntheir plat to be a part of tho street."\nTkhjih ok Bai.e .Ono thud of tho purchuso\nmoney or so much mote ua tho ptirchusor may\nelect, iu cuali ou the day of mIo, uud tho rcalduo\nIn two equal InslullmenUi payable iu one ami\ntwo year* respectively from the day of wile, with\nluioreat from ihat day, the purchuscr giving bin\nuolea for tho deferred installments, with good\nsecurity, and the title being retained until such\nnotea aro paid, liui If uuy purchaser pay in\nhand one-half or more of tlie purchase money\nfor the properly bought by him, Ida notea with¬\nout poraonul security shall i>e taken for the de¬\nferred luabillmeuta, the title being retained aa\naforesaid until payment lu full.
556684af3cf2a548b150e024dac6672b THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.2336065257539 40.807539 -91.112923 ! ring for the servants, who slept five slo- ing fluid has been used in considers\nvies above lhe affray. They furnished me quantities, for some time past, asank\n; with warm water and dry night clothes, tute for the good old fasioned blacky\n, and I went to bed less exhausted than agi- But it seems lately to be getting oiH\n: tated, and slept but little. When day- favor wilh the public, and deserved!?*\nlight shone in the hall, from the frontdoor We inserted a communication »'\n. to the office door, a distance of 15 feet, weeks since, from a practical cbfl\nI was covered with blood, and in many pla- slating thai the coloring matter usedoj\nces so thick and clotted as to cover the manufacture ol" this fluid, was a do'\nfloorcloth. 1he office chairs were over- poison. We have another objeftio"1\n thrown, papers scattered about and bespat- to make, which many will regardas®'\n! tered with blood. About'20 square feet more serious one. The colors arc'\nI of the carpet was red and about seven permanent, but the writing may be\nI square feet was soaked in blood. Out on obliterated—-by accident or design.\n|the steps lo lhe side walk it was traced in We saw a dav or two since, a\n|streams, and on the opposite Green street written by a gentleman of this city»\ni corner it was renewed, and from there, in mercantile house in New Orleans\nj the centre of Greene street, it was traced veyiug intelligence of a very im]\nto Fourth street, and again in Greene, near character. Unfortunately, the letter,\nI Houston, the position of a man silting part of it had got wet in the mail"\nj was marked in blood.
0920d49f07a4417c83a957f2604f3238 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.8647540667375 58.275556 -134.3925 ¦tay In the'alnoot untracked polar\nregions cast of the Mackenslo river,\nduring which he acquired a renin rk\nable collection of relic* of caroler\nexplorers and numerous quaint and\nodd curios obtained among the little\nknown Ksklmo people designated by\nStefannton as the "blonde Eskimo,"\n('apt. Joe Bernard, whose earlier ex¬\nploits In the far North have already\nwon him wide fame as a voyager\nInto the strange places of the earth,\nreturned to Nome with his stout Ut¬\nile schooner Teddy Bear. Bernard\nand his vesiyel pulled into the road¬\nstead after a stormy voyage down\n(he northwest Alaskan coast. Ber¬\nnard was accompanied on his adven¬\nturous cruise by A. Anderson, who\nla Interested In the venture which\nhas kept the schooner far beyond the\nborder of civilisation for the past\nyean, and also by a male member\nof the so-eallsd Ksklmo"\ntribe whom Bernard brought with\nhim expressly to show to the world\nwhat kind of people they are. The\nname of this example of Mr. Stefans-\nson's much advertised "blonde" Is\nApuktwana. In appearance he Is\nlittle different from the Ksklmo of\nthis section. Ills home Is In the\nbleak region nlong the southern\nshores of Coronation Qulf. He Is\nstout built with a light copper-col¬\nored skin, straight black hair and\npossesses sparkling dark brown eyes.\nThe cut of his clothes Is about the\nonly thing by which he may be dis¬\ntinguished from the local Eskimo\nBernard says he is an average ex¬\nample of the males of (he "blonde"\ntribe. Bernard, like other recent vis¬\nitors to the Coronation Gulf region.\nIs In no degree Inclined to endorse\nStefansson's description of the al¬\nleged blondes and saya while there
27c8c6f7d77d811d0532cac23f0586f0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.4561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 The river at this point was stationary\nyesterday with a depth In the channel ef\n4 feet 12 inches. Iiualneea on the levee\nwas fairly lively yeeterday. At Pittsburgh\ntbe rive)'is on a stand with a depth of3\nfeet 4 Inches In the channel.\nThe hull for Capt. Dode llerry's new\nboat, a little packet that is to run in a\nshort 1'arkersburg trade, will arrive In a\nlay or two and be finished up and her\nmachlnety fitted In by the Hweenejs.\nThey will then have three boat* in the\nprocess of finishing,\nThe Andes bud Jnst 400 excursionists on\nboard Monday night. When Freedom\nAssembly K. of L., of Ilellaire, under\nwhoee auspices the excursion * as given,\ningaged the boat the committee stated\nthat there would not be over 800 excur>\niloniets and that a permit carry 400\nsronld be too large. CJapt, Muhletnan,\nlowever, deoided to be safe, and there-\nore seoured a 400 permit. When he\n¦eached the Bellaire wharf the crowd\nuoked so large that he deemed It best to\nmt a clerk at the bottom of the steps\no check. When 400 were on board he\nrerv properly refused to receive any more\nmil thereby raised a big kick, aa there\nrere about forty to ootno on who had\nIckets and quite a large number waiting\nt the Wheeling wharf. The committee\nlegged and Implored, but Captain Muhle-\naan 1s not . man to take any risks and\nefneed to allow more on. lie took the\nxcnralonlstsun as far as the Hlsten and\nhen down to Oaptlna, and .got back here\nt 3:80 a. k , Everything pmed off very\nleaaantly,
00a39b24bb124cbe82259060f64625db THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.2397259956874 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Powelson said that on February\n26th, Diver Olsen reported to him that\non coming up from below he had fol¬\nlowed the forward and after wings of\nthe V shape made by the bottom plat¬\ning at frame 17, said the forward wing\nof the V the platea ran down on a very\nsteep slant and then turned under and\nout under the starboard side, that Just\nabove where the plates turned to go\nunder the starboard side he found two\ndents as if the plating had been bulg¬\ning between the frames from outside in,\nTho court asked the size of these two\ndents. Mr. Powelson replied they were\nabout two and one-half feet long and\nbulged In about six Inches. He further\ntestified that Olsen again went down\nand came to the surface at o'clock,\nsaying he thought "he had found the Hat\nkeel. Olsen had reported that tho keel\nwas sloping downward about forty-five\ndegrees and to port with the after part\nof the keel uppermost. He said he had\nnot explored rhe. after wing of the V\nand had found a circular hole about\ntwo feet In diameter with rivet holes all\naround it. He said that semi-circular\nhole was about twenty feet from the"\ntop of tho V made by tho bottom plat¬\ning. Ho said the plate presented a Jag¬\nged appearance as If It had been torn\nand that a crack had extended from the\nbottom edge of the semi-circular hole to\na distance of about eight Inches, and\nthat the plates about this hole were\nbent away from the green side of the\nplating.
574ff02324bc11b15f2819f73aa2d9d3 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.5931506532218 40.618676 -80.577293 Not having hospitalization insurance in our social security system, we\nhave tried to build Up private hospitalization plans. Some of these like the Mine\nCross plans are doing line and useful work. Some of the private plans, un­\nfortunately, are not managed well enough or are not free enough from exploita­\ntion to give the kind of protection the members thought they were paying for.\nIn most of these plans the members have had no voice in the management.\nThere is no reason why the good voluntary hospital insurance plans should\nnot continue and even expand when we gel hospitalization insurance in our\nsocial security system. Social insurance does not aim to cover all the hospital\nexpenses, but aims to lighten the burden by meeting the basic c harges. \\\\ >•\ncan carry private hospitalization Insurance to take care of the extra costs n\nwages are increased, .lust as we have increased our private insurance and hn\\«•\nbad more nppreciation of' our union insurance since we have had soeiui\nsecurity, so hospitalization insurance under social security could provide i\nbase for further voluntaiy insurance protection for hospital services.\nHut while voluntary hospitalization covers around 1(1 million people, ho\npitullzatloti under social security should cover something like SO i>>\nHMI million. Social insurance can cover more neople (hail any private plan can\ndo and. by covering more people, can fake in the kinds of risks that goMl\nprivate plans can't alVord to assume. Hospitalization Insurance under socini\nsecurity can cover the entire family. For the same costs it can give more dav -\nof hospitalization because It can operate as part of the going social sectiril\\\nsystem, using the same records and overhead administration. II it covers a !\nlite people who are protected under our old age and survivors' insurance, n\nwill take care of families in small and remote places when1 private hospital\nization plans cannot afford to go. You can get more hospitalization insurant <\nfor the money under Social Security than you can get ill any private plan\nwliicli you join as an Individual; and if you are protected at low rales under i\ngroup plan perhaps through your plant, you are only eligible for that ho\npitalization Insurance as long as you work In thai plant. The reason tli<\ngovernment can give us social Insurance more cheaply is very simple: It cnn\ndo it wholesale.
18ed2f741490564a0fd39eee87c52999 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.9219177765094 39.745947 -75.546589 markets of the world Those who\nbelieve that our Independent free coluage\nof silver at an uuofllolal ratio wilh gold\nof 10 to 1 would «store tb# parity\nbetween the metals aud consrqneutly\nbetween the coins, oppose an unsup­\nported and improbable theory to the\ngeneral belief and practice of other\nnations, and to the teaching of the\nwisest statesmeu and economists of the\nworld both In the past and present, and\nwhat la far more oonclualve, they run\ncounter to our owu actual experience.\n“All history warns us against rash\nexparimenta which threaten violent\nchanges In our monetary standard, aud\nthe disintegration of our currenoy The\npast la full of lessons tesching uot on'y\nthe economic dangers but tbs na'lonal\nImmorality that follows lu the tralu of\nsuch I will not believe\nthat the Ametloan people can be\npersuaded after sober deliberation to\njropardlzs their uatloua prestige and\nproud standing by encouraging financial\nnostrums, Dor thtt thev will yield to the\nfalse allurements of cheap money when\nthey reallzi that it must, result is the\nweakening of that financial Integrity aud\nrectitude which thus far In our history,\nhas been so devotedly cherished as one of\nthe traits of tru* Americanism.\nOnr countrys Ind» bed ness wbetbrf\nowing by <he g< vernment or sxlstlug\nbe ween Individuals, has been oooir act'd\nwith ref. re; c.e to our present standard\nTo Henree by act of Oorgiess that tbes*\ndeb - halt b>' payable In less vsluabl,.\noilate 1hau tb>«e wt hin(hecinternp1a\nlloll Mid Inteil'l'H ot t e us''tes wti-x
053e625a32787230f30950d9222276c4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.0532786569015 40.063962 -80.720915 partment, the pending question being on 1\nthe motion of Edmunds to strike out a <\nspecial committee and insert '"the Com- i\nmittee on Finance." so the investigation\nshall bo modo by the Finauco Committee i\ninstead of a special committee. i\nMr. Sherman said; A Senator speaking i\nin this body about a matter which affect- t\ned the public credit should be exceeding- t\nly careful as to what he says. Any state- i\nment derogatory to our publio accounts c\naffected the public good more keenly than j\nanything else. He denied that there was c\na discrepancy in the public debt to the f\nextent of one hundred millions in 1870, ]\nas charged by the Senator from West Vir- c\nginia, aud said there was no ground for t\nsuch statement. Ho (Sherman) would be t\nglad to have the Senator from West r\nVirginia (Davis) go to the Treasury (\nand examine the '.books there for s\nhimself. He argued that if the Senator ]\nhad read the finance roports and com- e\npared the different statements he would £\nnot have pointed out any such discrep- \\\nancy, as the whole thing was explained s\nin those reports. He read from the li\nfinance report of 1870 to show that the \nsinking fund bonds were not included in 1\none statement, but wero in another. The b\ntotal debt on the 1st of J uly, 1870, after j\ndeducting the coin and cnrroncy1ainking d\nfund bonds, <&c., waa §2,380,y&8,0uy, or t\nnearly $100,000,000 lew Uinn the amount a\ngiven by tho honorable Senator from i\nWest Virginia (Davis), before the ad- c\nministration of President Grant the pub- r\nlie debt statements were very meagre, but L\nwhen his administration commenced and t\nMr. Boutwell entered, the Treasury the t\nstatement* were enlarged for the inform- h\nation of the public.^ Ho desired to say s\nthat if tho investigation should be left to tl\nthe Committee on Finance, that commit- b\ntee would do the best it could, but he v\nwould very much prefer to have a a\nspecial committee appointed and let tho c\nSenator from West Virginia look for a\nhimself. The business of the Treasury ii\nDepartment was extensive and comph- C\ncated. lie had very often heard it said g\nthat the manner of keeping accounts in n\nthe Treasury should be changed, but He h\nthought it would bo a serious matter to r\nimprove on the plan of Alexander Ham* e\nilton, Gallatin, and other noted iinan- n\nciers. c
08056398e75b531ac5420eced34290b8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.5904337582444 39.745947 -75.546589 SAMUEL C. BIDDLE , formerly City Auditor, has\nmade a mistake. In bis eagerness to continue In\npublic office, he has seized upon a technicality and\nplaced Mayor Price and William P. White, the new\nCity Auditor. In an embarasslng position. He should\nlose no time In receding from life attitude he has as­\nsumed. For his own sake, and for the sake of former\nMayor Harrison W. Howell, who originally appointed\nhim and kept him in office four years, he should come\nout at once and relinquish any and ail claim to the\nCity Audltorshtp. Whether Mr. White is a legal incum­\nbent may be left to the courts to settle by an amicable\naction It such an appeal shall be deemed necessary.\nTechnically, Mr. Biddle Is right in his contention\nthat Mr. White was not elected strictly In accordance\nwith the provisions of the city charter. Experience^\nlawyers have joined in the opinion, however, that fhe\ncourts will deprive Mr. White of the office on\nthe strength of the technicality that Mr. Biddle has\nraised, which is that he was not appointed at the pre­\ncise time prescribed by the charter. Hla appointment\nwas made shortly before that time, and it is sate to as­\nsume that it will hold, regardless of technicalities.\nWhen Dr. Howell was elected Mayor four years ago\nhe appointed Mr. Biddle, who is his father-in-law, to\nthe office of City Auditor. In certain quarters he was\ncriticized for his act, contention being made that there\nwere many men equally as capable who were much\nmore deserving of the place. When Dr. Howell was\nre-elected two years ago, he continued Mr. Biddle in\noffice. Once more he was subjected to criticism for\ndoing It. No one Imagined, however, that a man who\nhad done so little to deserve the office for four years\nwould become so attached to It that he Would seek to
08a12fe5cefba08d58048fa939242bd3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.7657533929478 40.063962 -80.720915 A paper was then read by Mr. James\nUexander, of Madeira, N. Y.( on grape\nsalture, Ihe essayist devoting hlaattenlon\nto the cultivation of the Concord\ntrape. This variety, he said, would\n;row well on any soil where corn\nlould be produced. He recommended\nbatthoBoll be thoroughly mixed and\nralverlxed to the depjh of 12 to 15\nnches, for which a large mould-board\n>low should be used. Use a small\n)low to mark out the rows, rannlng\nhem north and south, say 10 feet apart,\ntnd after opening the farrows with a\narge plow some eighteen or twenty\nnohes deep, stretch a line crossing at\n'iRUb lujRies iana set a Rtnke Id\nhe larrow at eaoh angle, planting a\n?lno at eaoh stake; spreading the roots\nn the furrows and covering them with\nhe finest soli, pressing It slightly\nirouod the roots. Clean onltnre is the\n>nly method, and the best way to des«\nroy weeds Is, never let them grow.\nThe method of pruning the viue for\nhe first or second year depends somewhat\non the system training to be\nidopted in the fatnre. One strong cane\nrat back In the fall of the first year to\n,wo or tbreo feet, the two upper ends of\nhis cane to be used the second year to\n(row the main arms. The trellis to be\n?ut up the third year requires only two\nwires to be placed.the one three and a\nlalf feet from the ground, the other Bix\ninda half feet. This is one system;\nhe Fuller system Is considered better\nwith the exception of the principle of\njutting baok the renewals two or three\nludBi by whloh the crop of the next\nroar in euuaugered.\nTo loaure regular crops we should\nlim to grow strong oanes with well\nleveloped fruit buds and no matter\nffhtlnyatpm we adopt In prnnlngthose\njuds should be preserved. In doing\nbit there la danger of leaving too much\nsearlnft wood, which can be regulatod\nit tbe Ural disbudding the following\niprlng. Thla should, bo done u early\nla the buds bare grown about two\nnche* long by rubbing off all and
4e252f6ad96073d1042d96bf6b2a0128 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4357923181037 39.745947 -75.546589 Shaw, chairman of the ilnance com­\nmittee of the Levy Court, the court\nwill hold a special meeting on Thurs­\nday to dlsruss the budget and tax\nrate for the next fiscal year beginning\nJutyd. The present tax rate is 70 cents\non the *100 which Include* county and\npoor tax. in addition there as a 35\ncent re.nl tax In Ihe rural . minty. The\ncourt is anxious to keep the rate down\nIf possible but Ihe high cost of labor\nand material with the fact that there\nwill he Ilf necessity some extra ex­\npenditures next year may make It\nnecessary for the court to make at\nleast a slight Incroase in the tax rate.\nThe county, according to Chairman\nShaw, will end the fiscal year Juno\n30, with a small \nChairman Sharw, in discussing the\ncounty finances this morning, stated\ntho court was anxious to keep the\ntax rate down, but It was Impossible\nuntil the members go over the mat­\nter to iwen give a guess at wtiat rate\nwill be required to operate the county\nnext year. Mr. Shaw said everything\nI* costing the county more now than\nIt dM a year ago. when the present\nrate was fixed, and that there will bo\nmany extra expenditures the coming\nyear. Mr. Sh«w recalled that the In­\ncrease in the county assessment for\nnext year ot about *10.000,000 will\nbring in a large amount of extra\nmonev over this year, and he is trust­\ning that this will be sufficient to\ncarry the county through without a\ntax rate boost.
0a8b06179bd183dcfbd524ed1cfc77d8 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.4808218860985 40.441694 -79.990086 ing a seat in the room and was then invited\nto give ms opinion oi tno ordinance.\nMr. Campbell There is a general impres-\nsion that this thing of putting telegraph\nwires underground is a very simple matter,\nbut that Is wrong. So far as trunk lines are\nconcerned it is a simple enough affair, but\nwhen it comes to tho district messenger\nservice, private wires and branches, it is\nsimnlv impossible. In tho downtown part\nof this city there are over 2,000 district mes-\nsenger call boxes distributed through the\nvarious offices and business houses.\nIt Would Knock Out the CaU.Boxes.\nThe adoption of an ordinance of this kind\nwill simply make it impossible to have mes-\nsenger calls. The reason Is that compara-\ntively few messenger calls are' permanent\nfixtures in offices or stores. man may\nwant a call box for a month, six months or a\nyear but the trade or custom generally is\nonly transient and it would not pay to run\nunderground wires to them. Another thing,\noccupants of the downtown business houses\nare all tenants. If they owned their proper-\nties it would pay us to run a line into their\nbuildings. But from these call boxes 90 per\ncent of the telegrams of the Pittsburg offices\nare sent. If you pass this ordinance you\nplace us in the power of the telephone com-\npanies. We will be compelled to pay them\nto collect our messages. And it's the busi-\nness people of your city who will be incon-\nvenienced. We can put our trunk wires un-\nderground, but there ore 100 local wires to\none trunk wire.
1889938fb8e0280d0813a34a4a7403d9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.7418032470653 40.063962 -80.720915 What in life with the great body o\nmankind, perhaps with all, but it\nphysical joys and the reasonable grati\nlications of the appetites? Hence wis\ndom and justice demand that the necee\nsaries should bear the lightest tax, am\nif possible none at all, and 1 say, speak\ning from all experience, speaking froi!\nthe ages, that all mankind in iul age\nhave used stimulating drink and noi\ncolics and this is proof that they ar\ngraved by the appetite, and becom\nnecessaries. What would bo the resul\nof the total abolition of the tax on frui\nbrandy? Immense anil prolitable 01\nchards, and a comparatively health\ndrink, to supplant the abomiuahl\ndrugged whisky now poisoning the pet\npie. What would be the result of th\nabolition of the tobacco tax? Tobaec\nfactories all over the tobacco States,\nlarge increased consumption, a fai\nprotit aud iucreascd production to th\nplanter, ami cheap manufactured \nbacco. If tobacco is harmful, of whic\nthere is no proof, it is less so than opiui\nand the one 01 the other will be used.\nIf we listen to the opponents of stimi\nlating and narcotic substances, thei\nwould he no tobacco, nor whisky, nc\nwine, nor beer, nor ale, brandy, tea o\ncoll'ee, and men would be turned lotfa\nin the woods like cattle to Hud soim\nthing us substitutes for all these thing!\nin the opinion of the closet philosopher)\ndreamers and impracticable reformei\ndeadly poisons, tiuch, however, is nc\nthe world's verdict, nor the opinion <\nmankind. If all evils and abuses <\nman's blessings are to be eradicated b\nlegislation, wheuce the use of philosophy\nof moral teachings, of religion, (\npreachers? where there is no temptatio\nthere is no virtue, for it is the Btruggl\nto overcome temptation, to subdue til\ndesires that develops virtue and tru\nmorality.
34803b5b4befe2b6842e60ac89baae33 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1909.919178050482 40.735657 -74.172367 L Beginning in the westerly side of Garside\n[street a a* point therein distant one hundred\nand two feet six inches northerly from the\nnorthwesterly *.• rn er of the same and Fourth\nj avenue, said point being exactly In range with\nthe centre or the partition wall between the\nhouse standing on the lot hereby intended to\nto described and the house on the lot adjoin-\ning on the couth; thence running northerly\nalong said westerly line of Garalde street\nfifteen feet six inches to a point exactly In\nrange witli the centre of the partition wall\nbetweefi the house on the ldt hereby intended\nto be describee and the house on the lot ad-\njoining on the north; thence westerly at right\nangles to Garalde -atreot and running through\nthe centre of said partition wall forty-seven\nfeet to the rear line of the main house on\nthe lot hereby described; thence northerly\n with Garalde street four inches to the\nnortherly edge of tho extension of said house;\nthenco westerly along the same and at rigtvt\nangles to Garside street fifty-three feet; thereto\nsoutherly parallel with said street fifteen fett\nsix Inches to a point exactly In range with\nthe northerly edge of the extension of said\nhouse on tlie lot adjoining on the south;\nthence easterly at right angles to Garside street\nand along the northerly edge of said extension\n! fifty-three feet to the rear Une of the main\nj house on the lot hereby described; thence\nsoutherly parallel with Garside street four\ninches to the centre of the partition wall\nbetween said house and the house on the lot\nadjoining on the south, and thence easterly at\nright angles to Garside street and running\nthrough the centre of,said partition wall forty-\nseven feet ter the westerly line of said street\nand the place of beginning.
42d30ed49900bdae9a924daff2a1c12b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 J throughout the country. After having\nbeen proved by toe test of elcveu years, in\nthe New Engiai.d states, where Its merit#\nhave become as well Saown us the tree frun\nwhich, in part, it derives its virtue^.\nTlie White Fine Compouud Cure*\nbore Throat, Golds. Cough*, DlptberlaJ\nBronchitisSpitting of Lio«*i. art! Pulmon¬\nary A flections generally. It is a reruarkabl*\nRemedy for Kidney Coinplaint**, Diabetes\nDifficulty of Voiding Urine. Bleeding trom\nthe Kidneys and Bladder, Gravel, and 'the:\ncomplaints.\nThe White Pine Compound,\n"it was early :n the pring of *?.2 tha- t> jt I\ncompound was originated. A member of my\nfamily was afflicted with an irritat.on of the\nthroat attended with a disagreeable cough. 1\nhad for some months previous thought that\na preparation having for its basis the insidt\nbark of white pine might l<e so compounded\nto be very unefui in diseases oi the thrust\nand lungs. To lest the value of urn thecal\nalluded to. I compounded e «mall quantity\nof the medicine that I had been planning,\nand gave it in tessijooutul doses, The re^uii\nwas exceedingly gratifying. Within two\ndays the irritation of the throat was remov- I\ned, the cough subsided a?jd a speedy cur*-\nwa.» effected. Soon this I sent some to\na lady in Londonderry. N. H., v, ho had been\nsuffering for some weeks rrorn a bad congh,\noccasioned by a sudden cold, and had ratseo\nmucus streaked with bl od. She soon found\nrelief and sent lor more. Sne look about\nten onnr» of it. and got well. J . R . t'larke.\nEsq., editor of the Manchester Dully Mirror,\nmade a trial o? the same preparation in the\ncase of a severe cold and was cured immedl-\nately. He was so highly pleased with the re¬\nsults, aud so confident in success at tending its\nsale*, if placed before the public, that he\nfinally persuaded me to give it a name, and\nw-nd it abroad to benefit the suffering. In\nNovember, ltt.%5 . I first mlvertw-u jt under\nthe name of White Hue . 'ompound. In ivu |\nyears from that time there hud been whole¬\nsaled in Manchester alone onn hundred dol¬\nlars worth, where it took the lead of all the\ncough remedies in the market, and Itstil\nmaintains tnat position. There is good rea¬\nson for this: it is very soothing aud healing\nin its nature: 13 warming to the stomach and\npleasant withal to the taste, and is exceed-\ningly cneap.
9f54744f2402a064d7236fdedb9c0b95 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.7438355847285 41.681744 -72.788147 Added drama was provided yester-\nday in the finals of the third flight\nwhen Banker Noah Lucas, besides\nrunning off the tournament, did a\n"Homans" and won in an extra hole.\nHis smiles, as he came off the ISth\ngreen after the morning round, be-\nlied the fact that Gail Porter had\nhim five down. Continuing to smile\nthrough the after dinner session, Mr.\nLucas gradually picked up holes un-\ntil he was but one down as he drove\nfrom the 30th tee.\nThe shots of each contestant did\nnot go perfectly down the home\nstretch and after the final putts had\nbeen sunk it was found that Mr.\nLuoas' six was good enough to\nsquare the match. Still smiling, he\nvery neatly took the extra hole and\nwon the third flight to his little\ndaughter's satisfaction. A year ago\nshe confided to her schoolmates that\nher daddy was a great golfer and\nnow her faith In his on the\nlinks is without bounds.\nThis faith of one's children in his\ngolfing ability Isn't the worst thing\nin the world. Perhaps It does spur a\nman on to better his game to the\npoint where he can win an occa-\nsional club tournament and improve\nhis game and at the same time riot\nneglect his business. Reducing his\nhandicap by five strokes in a season,\nas Mr. Lucas has done this year, is a\nworth while achievement when golf\nis taken as a recreation and no time\nis given to it for practice.\nAll of which is a long ways from\ntelling how Noah Lucas got to the\nfinals. Another banker, who also is\nenjoying his season on the fairways,\nFred S. Chamberlain, stood In the\npath of the Savings Bank treasurer.\nFriday, he beat Maurice Pease two\nup while Mr. Lucas was winning\nfrom Frank Shield,\nIn the lower bracket, Gail Porter\nbeat Claude Leroux,
230146a16bed7a52d451565f2b54f798 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.0342465436327 39.745947 -75.546589 “Under expenditures will be noted\nthe Item. Court House repairs. $45,-\n286.74 . We feel especial at lent Ion would\nhe given this Hem for the reason that\nnot a bond has been Issued nor a penny\nadded to the tax rale to produce this\nrevenue. It results from in economical\n«^ministration of our county affairs\n•and a careful watch over all expendi­\ntures by the county comptroller. When\nthis office was created the county was\nHugely In debt, but by careful scrutiny\nof all expenditures and the require­\nment, that ail hills presented be llem-\ntzed In detail, a splendid balance is now\nah own an the credit side of the ledger.\nelBirly demonstrating our oft express­\ned opinion that this office, with the\nright man in it. is one vf the best we\nhave In the Interest of the taxpayers.\n“The new Court House or County\n when completed xxjii bp a\nbeautiful and thoroughly convenient\nand up-to-date building for all county\nItses, and that it can he built without\neither Increasing the taxes or issuing\nbonds, speaks well Indeed for those ad-\nHnaistering our county affairs.\n“ Touching the mater of appropri­\nations to towns totalling last year $5.-\n275, the law clearly contemplates that\nthe money thus appropriated be ex-\nJHMfbded only and wholly for repairs to\nrnad-bed or stm t as used for vehlcnl-\nlm travel, and not for repairs to slde-\n—Warns, the purchase and erection of\nstreet lamps, salaries, to street lamp­\nlighters. etc. It has been suggested\nthat there a*T several towns in the\ncounty thus abusing or misusing Hus\nmoney. We sugeg ttttseahb cmf etuf\nmoney. We suggest that Hie Levy-\nCourt lake such action as will compel\nthe proper application of these ap­\npropriations.
c246b0b6ba04238b4ebaadeea456b62a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9385245585408 39.513775 -121.556359 My mind had become so engrossed\nwith the enthralling passion which pos-\nsessed me, that I could not p'-y that\nstrict attention to business which is so\nnecessary to attain success in the legal\nprofession. The reput.tion I had\ngained during the first six months of*\nmy practice was rapidly waning for\nthe want of exertion on my part; and\nI at length opened my eyes to the in-\njudiciouaness, if not folly, of my course.\nThere wore obstacles to onr union 1\nhad not heretofore reflected upon. The\nobject of my affection was the daugh-\nter of a wealthy father ; 1 most he\nthe architect of my own fortune.\nWould it be right, would it he honora-\nble, to draw her down to my own lev-\nel of poverty, with the hare prospect\nthat niy industry and talents w ould one\nday open the way to fame and opu-\nlence] And then, even ghoul 1 1 ovi-\ncomo my present scruples, w u d Mr.\nElton he willing to give his daughters\nhand one who had nothing to offer\nin return but the poor pittance of pro-\nfessional ambit i n and a world of good\nintentions? Reason answered, No!\nAnd yet, how enuld 1 for a moment\nrelease th" jewel that had so enchain-\ned me. The spirit parting with the\nsoul” could not offer half the measure\nof suffering that a separatio n from the\nidol of my heart would produce. Hon-\nor and duty dictated the course which\nprudence sanctioned; love and aff c-\ntioned lured mo on in the current\nwhich the heart approved. I decided\non the moment, to sink the latter con-\nsideration, and res dved to acquaint\nMary, at our next meeting, with my\nreflections, and beg to hi; forgotten.\nRut, alas for human weakness!\n"When next we met, onr heaits out-\npourings were as deeply imbued with\nlove as they had been in our most\nthoughtless days. M hen I said :\n“Mary, T fear our positions in life\nare too widely different to permit the\nhope of a union.
02267dfa3e19cf6aeef9171c746f025c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1901.5657533929477 42.217817 -85.891125 It is somewhat amusing now to read\nof the superstitious dread with which\ntho inhabitants looked upon the build-\ning of these first railroads. Some\nthought the smoke of the continual\npassing trains would cause a pestilence\nor destroy all the crops along the road.\nOthers were afraid to ride on the cars\nfor fear of having their breath taken\naway, and the people in the cities ob-\njected, to the railroad being built be-\ncause they feared the smoke from tho\nengines would soil the clothes which\nwere hung out to dry.\nMany are yet living who looked upon\nthe terrible, screeching iron monster\nwith awe and trepidation. Mr. Nat Mc- Ge- e\nof Ivy, Albemarle, tells a Joke upon\nhimself that when he heard the train\ncoming he jumped from his horse and\ngot behind a tree, where he viewed It\nfor fear of being run over. Mr. W. T .\nProur, who was taking a wagon load of\nproduce to Richmond, when he reached\nGordonville heard the whistle and ter-\nrible noise of tho approaching train,\nand Le and his companions were so\nscared that they sprang out, leaped the\n and ran across the field to a safe\ndistance, leaving the wagon and team\nto Its fate, but when the train appeared\nit was only an engine and one coach.\nThe first roadbeds were formed, as\nhas been stated, by driving piles In the\nground, upon the top of which were\nplaced wooden stringers, in which were\ncut a groove for the wheels to run.\nThese were called "wooden railroads"\nand at a distance appeared like the ele-\nvated railroads In the cities of the pres-\nent day. Tho honor of this invention\nwas contested between John Ilnrtman\nof Scottsville, Va., and John Williams,\nan engineer of Ohio, but It did not\nprove a bonanza to either, for the\nwheels were constantly bouncing out of\ntho groove, and tho piles soon after\ngave place to solid dirt embankments,\nand strap Iron rails were substituted\nfor tho wooden groove. But the grad-\ning was very Imperfect and uneven,\nwhich made riding on one of these\nprimitive railroads like going over a\ncorduroy road in a sprlnglcss wagon,\nwith tho cars bouncing over these\nrough rails to the Jingling music of the\nwindows. Richmond Dlspatcl.
51c66382ca55a45cd193fd767017f737 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.3401639028032 39.745947 -75.546589 It is not probable that a bishop for\n"races and languages” will be elected.\nMuch opposition has been shown to\nsuch a proposal bv the annual confer­\nences. of which there are 131, while the\nnegro conferences associated with tho\nMethodist Episcopal Church have been\nforemost In opposing race bishops.\nThere Is not likely to he any change\nIn the editorial chairs of the church\npublications, as general satisfaction is\nexpressed with the conduct of the\nchurch periodicals and work shown In\nthe literature.\nFor Union of Churches.\nFurther efforts will be made for the\nunion of tlie church North and South.\nOne of the first steps was the adoption\nof a common hymnal, the joint product\nof committees of bishops, but It is be­\nlieved Hat union will be impossible as\nlong as the Methodist \nChurch has negro conferences with\ntheir negro delegates, of whom there\nare more than 100, sitting upon the\nGeneral Conference fleer.\nUpon no question is there likely to\nhe a more Interesting and animated de­\nbate than upon the legislation that pro­\nposes to make the presiding elders elec­\ntive by the annual conferences. These\ndistrict superintendents Eire now ap­\npointed by the presiding bishop, who,\nhowever, usually confers with leading\nministers before making his choice.\nSentiment has been created in some\nauarters for a diocesan episcopacy, but\nnone of the conferences has Indorsed\nthis plan, which would mean a radical\ndeparture from the custom of the\nchurch since Its organization.\nAmendments to Church Laws.\nFour constitutional amendments, upon\nwhich all of the annual conferences\nhave passed, will come hefore the Gen­\neral Conference.
2b7e38060919e08ef7d6bc56a7a13ecd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9356164066464 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho Legislature will assemble to-day,\nwith more than a quorum of both bran¬\nches present. A littlo more than an\norganization of the respective bodies is\nanticipated. J. shall not wait for tho un¬\nimportant proceedings of electing tne\nvarious .officers and the pther leu tares\nusual in the organization of similar\nassemblies. The organization of the\ntwo houses will be readily effected, and\nwithout contest for the more important\npositions. Candidates'tor the subordi¬\nnate offices are numerous, and are\npressing their respective claima wjth an\nenergy -which promises considerable\nexcitement. The Legislature presents\na very fair, average of ability, and\namong its members are many gentle¬\nmen of political and professional repu¬\ntation. John B. Bdldwin, of Augusta,\nwill probably be tho most prominent\nman in either body, and his counsels\nare looked for with very great interest,\nbecause of his well known sagacity,\nhigh character, and established .reputa¬\ntion for liberal and comprehensive\nviews. Information from:reliable sour¬\nces convince mo that a spirit of,uiodera-\ntion will control the Legislature and\nthat its course will be influenced by a\nthrough and cordial purpose to conform\nthe State to the policy of the Administra¬\n and thus accelerate the resumption\nof harmonious relations with the Nation¬\nal Government, on the part of Virginia.\nAmong the earliest proceedings will be\ntho virtually unanimous ratitication of\nthe Constitutional Amendment prohlbi-\nting Slavery. The Alexandria Legisla¬\nture, during the war,adopted the aui« nd-\nment, but it is considered not inappro¬\npriate that the measure shall receive\nwhatever additional confirmation may\nattach to the sanction of the General\nAssembly, now when composed of\nrepresentatives ofthe entire State. The\nrepudiation of the Confederate war\ndebt may meet with exceptional expres¬\nsions of disfavor, but the opposition\nwill neither avail nor signifv anything.\nBoth houses are domposed, to a very\ngreat extent, of men of Conservative\nantecedeuta; moderate sentments, and\nespeciallv anti-secession antecedents,\nother things being equal, having in\nevery instance, in .the late election,\nreceived the preference. Nineteen-\ntwentietlis of the two bodies are Old-\nLine Whigs, which,with the thorough¬\nly Whig character of tho co-ordinate\nbranches of the StateGoverument,places\nOld Virginia, for once in her history,\nentirely in the hands of tho Whigs.\nThe unexpected arrival of General\nGrant iu Richmond,was the occasion of\nsome not unnatural curiosity upon the\nSart
04e1464c6325ebd5aff82eb8470d506f PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.2726027080162 31.960991 -90.983994 “The effacing haodof time.has well night businessr«üdthe operations did not exceed m\nworn away the perishaBle monuments which bales. The market closes firmly at our Vlcb'\nmay have marked the spot where Sleeps 1116*1««»- -tions. The sales of the past three days amour\nored dust. But they still live. TPhey live in to 1 S',900, and those of the week to 30,000 bte, | -\nthe immortal principle which • they tairglh't—in of which the main part has been on English ac-\ntkeenduring institutions wfiibh'fhey established.\nThey live in rememberanee of a greatful ptw-\n•terity: and they will live on through arrime, in\nthe gratitude of unborn generations, who, in\nlong succession, shall rise up and call thetn\nblessed. And shall we, “who keep the graves,\nand bea/ the names, and boast the blood of these\nmen, disown their Church, or cast out as civil,\nand revile their religion? No—by the memory\nof those noble men, bv their holy lives, by their\n principle, their sacred institutions—\nby the sustaining strength which they them­\nselves are still giving to our owft freedom, and\nto the great cause of divft and religious Hbterty\nthroughout the earth—let us not give up ftrê\nreligion of our forefathers. No—never, never.”\nSuch are the lofty principles and sentiments\nwhich possess the bosoms of the decendente of\nthe Pilgrims. In these we have at once the\npromise and the plegde of American greatness\nand enterprise. Atnerrea is uow strong in moral\npower, and so long as she breathes the spirit of\nthe religion of thre Pilgrims, we hope w'èi],ts<St\nonly for the United States, but for Christendom\nand the world. In the great conflict which is\nnow opening on the Church of God, she will\ntakeHhe fresst-ofthc battle, in the effort to com­\npass and subjugate the wbrlfiTo the'Croos.'She\nwilf press into every field of action. -Her eagle\nstands with unfolded pinions*iikdy toCiake her ,
1ca842df15bbada341d6924737f4cd77 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1899.478082160071 41.875555 -87.624421 The City Council should ask for the\nfollowing Information:\n1. The Comptroller shotd be directed\nto report forthwith to the Council, nt\nIts next regular meeting, what, if any,\nreceipts have come to the city from\ngas companies under the provisions of\nany of the gns ordinances; what, If\nany, struct lamps are being supplied\nwith gns by the Ogden Gns Company;\ncapacity of the plant, nud If said com-\npany or any other Is performing the\nlabor of lighting nud extinguishing\nsnld lamps, and what, if nny, contracts\nhave been let tojjas companies for sup-\nplying the city with gns, together with\nthe name, or names, of said company,\nor companies, nnd the amount of which\nsaid contracts have been let, nud by\nwhat authority.\n'.' . The Corporation Counsel and the\nComptroller should be Instructed to re-\nport forthwith to the Council whether,\nIn accordance with the provisions and\nrequirements of the resolution of Feb.\n20, 1S02 , tho franchise of the Economic\nGns Company was duly forfeited and\nIts pipes and equipment recovered to\nthe city, nnd, whether nny penult has\nbeen issued granting any other com-\npany the use of Raid pipes, and nlso\nwhether nny measures have taken\nto recover to tho city Its rights and In-\nterest In the pipes and equipment of\nother gas companies, which, by eva-\nsion and Infraction of their ordinance\nand franchlsa contracts, have forfeited\nsaid franchise nml their plant nud\nequipment to the city, nud what, If any,\nmeasures have been taken by the city\nto recover penal sums on bonds filed\nby any of the above named companies\nas surety and guarantee for the per\nformance of their obligations to the\ncity mid to gns consumers in general,\nunder the' terms of nny franchise\nwhich any of said companies through\nevasion or noncompliance with nil tho\nterms nud requirements of said fran-\nchise have forfeited.\nII. The city gas inspector should be\nInstructed to report forthwith, direct\nto the Council, what, If any, tests have\nbeen mndc during tho past year of the\npower nnd Illuminating quality of gns,\nns required by tho various gas ordin\nances, provisionally granting street\nnud other privileges to gns companies,\nnnd It such required tests havo been\nmade, to state for what company, or\ncompanies said gas was Inspected, ex-\namined aud tested, and where and by\nwhat process said gas was manufac-\ntured.
0f28badebe2b6cc3e94c667be3eb6829 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.878082160071 39.743941 -84.63662 At the request of my family, my physician called in two\nother dotHors of this city, and they, after an examination,\nagreed that my case was hopeltm. They Informed my\nwife that I had better be told thru I could not live, as my\nlime would be very short for arranging my worldly aflatrs\nThey also said that no medicine would be of any nse\nme. The next day my friend, Mr. H. I . Lelth, bearing of\nmy condition, sent me a bottle of your Pulmonic Pyrop.\nthinking it might relievo my cough and make my ex pee -\ni oration easier. I began using it, never even hoping that\nit would cure me, but finding great relief from its t\nWhen the first bottle was gone I sent and got more; so 1\ncontinued it nntil I had used seven or eight bottles. All\nthistimeIwasinbedandwas soweak thatIbadtob\nlifted. This was not a difficult thing to do, however, as 1\nonly weighed about ninety pounds. As I have said, I com\n the use of the medicine with no thought of Hi\ncuring me, but after taking the eighth bottle I would\nsometimes feel a little hungry, a thing I had not before\ndone for many months. I omitted to mention that after\ntaking four or five bottles of the Pulmonic Syrup. I alsc\nbegan taking the Beaweed Tonic, and I also took some ot\ntbe Mandrake Pills.\nIt is needless for me to give yon an account of all my\nfeeling during my recovery. Of coarse it was slow, bat\nit was also sure. I grain ally gained strength, the charac\nter of what I raised from my lungs was changed not being\nso offensiveand at last I was able to get up and walk\nabout my room. From this time my recovery was rapid.\nI gained flesh nut and soon went out doors, and now I am\npiitirelr well, a wonder to all my acquaintances wbo saw\nme when I wan so low.\nI weigh one hundred and sixty-tw- o
113a2804f9697638da3ebe864aa83233 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.146575310756 42.217817 -85.891125 sets of said Returning Board aro void.\nThis was rejected by the following vote :\nj tis Abbott, Uayara, unnora, laeid, uunton,\nPayne, Thurman 7. Xaya Bradley, Edmunds,\nFrelinghuysen, Garfield, Hoar, Miller, Morton,\nStrong 8. A number of other propositions for\nthe admission of evidence were presented ana\nvoted down, the vote in each instance standing\n7 to 8, as nxrded above. The vote on Mr.\nHoar's original motion, that evidence be not re-\nceived, was then adopted by tlie following vote s\nYean Bradley. Edmunds, "Frelinghuy sen, Gar-\nfield, Hoar, Miller, Morton, Strong 8. Kay\nAbbott, Bayard, Clifford, Field, Hunton, Payne,\nThurman 7. Tho following resolution was\nthen offered by Senator Morton, and adopted\nby the same vote : Jit tolwd, That the persons\nnamed as electors in certificate No. 1 were tlie\nlawful electors of the State of Louisi-\nana, and that their votes are tho votes\nprovided by the constitution of the United\nStates, and should be counted for President and\nYice President. Justices Miller and Bradley\nand Representative Hoar were then appointed a\ncommittee to draft tho report of tlie decision,\nwith a brief statement of tho reasons therefor.\nA recess of 'about one hour was then taken to\nafford timo for drafting tho report, which,\nupon reassembling of the comnussion, was\npresented, and after being read was signed by\nMessrs. ililler, Strong, Bradley, Edmunds,\nMorton, Frelinghuysen, Garfield and Hoir.\nTho report is to tho following effect :\nThe Kloctorul Comminitlon, having received crr-tai- u\nccrtinrU and piicra purporting to be ocrtin-eat'- B\nof electoral votes of the btate of Louisiana,\nand certain papers accompanying tho name and ob-\njections thereto, report that it has duly considered\nthe Hamc, and has decided, and does hereby decide,\nthat the votes of William l'itt Kellogg, O. H. Brewter,\nA. H. Levtwo. Oscar Jaffrain, Peter Joseph, J. H.\nKirch, L. A. Sheldon and Morris Marks, named In\nthe certificate of William P. Kellogg, Governor ?f\nsaid State, wliich votes nre certified by said per-\nsons, as appears by certificates submitted to tlie\noomniirmiou, as aforemdd, and marked No. 1 by\nsaid coniiuiHKiou and herewith returned, aro tlie\nvotes provided for by the constitution of the Unit d\nStates, and that tho same are lawfully to be counted\nas therein certified, namely, eight votes for Huthcr-for- d\n11. Hayes, of the State of Ohio, for President,\nand eight votes for William A. Wheeler, of the btate\nof New York, for XUxs lYenident.\nThe eommiHsion alno decides and reports tbat the\neight persons first before-name- d
3b802ec216a4d0e1d7e4ce730f731cf7 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.5109588724 40.827279 -83.281309 security, without uniform value, of local\ncirculation, and endangered by a swarm\nof counterfeits. These State banks were\nspawn of the' extreme doctrine of S ate\nRights. If anything should be national, it\nshould be bank notes. They are the\nblood of the system, and should flow freely\nthrough the system. A centralized bank\nline the old liana: of the United states,\nwas dangerous from its unity and power.\nIt was managed by a few who were encour-\naged to use their power for political ends.\nOur present banks are a unit only in their\nsecurity, form and circulation. They cannot\ncombine. When carefully supervised and\nand reeutated by law, and well distrib\nuted, they form the most convenient finan\ncial agents of the people. In comparison\nwith the old State banns, tney are preter- -\nable in every respect. The only question\nthat can arise in the future about the na\ntional banks, is whether notes issued di\nrectly by the government, and redeemable\n the goven ment, may not supercede the\nnecessity ot bans: notes.\nThis would save to the people the inter\nest on the circulating notes, so tar, good\ni neir credit depends mainly upon the secu-\nrity of the government, and the govern\nment should share in the profit. But, on\nthe contrary, the general objects ot a gov\nernment are not consistent with other\nnecessary functions of a bank. The opera\ntion ot loaning and redeeming notes can\nnot safely be performed by government\nagents, it must be done by private par-\nties, personally interested. Government\nbanks could not be properly distributed.\nEven offices of redemption are subject to\nmany dangers. Without going into detail\nupon tms subject, we can safely follow all\nmodern experience by leaving the busi-\nness of banking, like other business, to the\nfree and interested agency of private citi\nzens. The function of the government is\nfully exhausted when it secures the abso\nlute safety of the no te -holde -
34af0fb098130d61ff1a9a8e20e72d97 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.9904109271943 39.745947 -75.546589 fl-.., unless with the consent of the j accept a state of hotness as the desirable condition for bean porridge, or offer\nchief engineer, or the assistant engi-: a supported view opposed to it, or at least an attempt to show other stages\nn- ep in charge. No Arc company shall or conditions of bean porridge which might have claims to preference over\npermit Its apparatus to be used on a bean porridge hot. There was his naked statement of hts attitude toward\nft ill of skill, or fur testing the power bean porridge, and though my conventional eyes might blink at such unac-\nor capacity of Its engine. Should any customed revelations of bare speech, I must perforce accept the fact of its\nof the flre companies violate this sec- nudity, I could not clothe It myself and closing my eyes would not remove It\ntlon, or refuse lo obev the authority ' from being. What was my procedure to be? That led back In mV thoughts\n lawful commands of the chief engi- for a long distance. To begin with, how DID 1 prefer my porridge? I must\nnear, or of the assistant engineer in know that before I could hope to combat his preference. And if I preferred\ncharge or be engaged In riotous or dis- It a certain way, could I be sure that that was the way I actually preferred\norderly conduct, the chief engineer rn»y I*, and not simply a psychoanalitlc Inhibition which made me think I preferred\nImpose upon such company a flqo of It that way when actually my subconscious and sublimai self preferred It\nnot less than one hundred dollars nor otherwise? And how could 1 determine which was my conscious and which\nr ore than three hundred dollars and I my subconscious ego unless I consulted a psychoanailst ? All this would take\ns iall report the same to the Council, time, and meanwhile Merton was palpably waiting for some comment on my\nFrom the appropriation or
06a97db6a8075e4c162aaed25e59d9a6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.8260273655505 58.275556 -134.3925 iu a desire to learn how to grow vege-\ntablea. Six householders fenced in\nplate of their own and spaded ap the\nsoil. About a quarter of an acre next\nto the sohool house was cleared of\ntimber, the stumpe and roots were\ngrubbed out, and about half of it\nspaded. The sohool children were put\nto work in this gardeu, as well as in\noleaning up around the school house,\nburning the brush, old logs aud rub\nbish. Including the school garden,\nthere are now 10 gardens, which to¬\ngether would cover about three-fourths\nof an acre. Cabbage, cauliflower, po¬\ntatoes, turnips, rutabagas, peas, beans,\nred beets, onions, oelery, rhubarb, spin¬\nach, radishes and lettuce couetitute\nour crops. We are short on seed po\ntatoes, but we hope to raise enough to\nmake this the main crop for the natives\nnext year. We obtained a few pounds\nof native potatoes from Bethel. On ac¬\ncount of the infeotion of the imported\npotato with some kind of a worm or\nbug, we did not plant them. If the\ngardens produce a good crop this year\nthe natives will undoubtedly take up\ngardening in earnest. We have fur¬\nnished the seeds to natives in other\nvillages, as well as to miners.\n"There are 90 souls in the village of\nAkiak, distributed accotdingto age aud\nconditions follows; eight old people,!\ni. e., 50 years or over, three of whom are\nwidows more or less dependent; 16\ncouples aud one widow of middle age;\nfour uumarried young men aud 46\nminors. The entire village is chris¬\ntianized, all of the people being church\nmembers, the members, the majority\nbelonging to the Moravian mission and\nthe rest to the Greek Catholio church.\nThis village was among the first to\nadopt Christianity. Drunkenness is\nunknown, and there is a unanimous\ndesire to keep liquor and white men\nout of the village. Four of our young\nmen are employed as chief herders,\nthree by the government and one by\nthe mission. Six families are in close\ntouch with the reindeer industry\nthrough a son who is either a herder or\nau apprentice aud through a daughter\nmarried to a deer man. One has become\nan owuer of deer by investing in two fe\nmale deer his earnings of the pa9t win¬\nter as a trader. Fishing aud trapping\nare the principal means of support.\nThe opportunity to earn flour, tea aud\nsugar right at home this past year by\nwork on the school house and the sale\nof wood has been a great boon to the\nvillage. We have learned to know the\npeople more intimately, and we And\nthem industrious, tractable and hos¬\npitable.
059d8e9e7070f659f118255e7fb06283 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.736338766191 40.441694 -79.990086 No New Developments at Quarantine A\nCrazy Tramp Invades the Sacred Pre-\ncincts of Camp Low Tlie Very Latest\nCholera Bulletins From Europe.\nNew Yoke, Sept 25. Nothing but fav-\norable reports are heard here on all sides in\nthe city, while at Quarantine and at Sandy\nHook the medical staff are rejoicing at their\nsuccess in stamping out tbe cholera which\nhad taken hold at Camp Low last week.\nThe detained passengers are singing and\ndancing to the music of every song yet in-\nvented. They are the happiest lot of pris-\noners ever seen.\nThe camp, after a quiet and peaceful day,\nwas thrown into excitement by the appear-\nance within tho lines of a tramp whose ar-\nrival is enshrouded in mystery. The man\nhas the appearance of havingiccetved rough\nusage, from the torn state of bis clothing\nand his hatless head. He is a German and\ngave his name as Anton Duda. He is ap-\nparently a lunatic, and tho officers he\nleft New York, tho last time he was shavod,\nappaiently some months since, and that he\nwalked here on the water. He added that\nho had been locked ud for three months lor\nvoluntarily walking into prison. As far as\ncan be learned, the man eluded tbe sentinels\nposted by the Now Jersey authorities at the\nState line boundary, and got on the ground\noccupied by the regular troops at Sandy\nHook, who turned him over into tbe marine\ncamp, whose officers, in turn, ran him oat of\ntheir lines into Camp Low under the impres-\nsion that he was an escaped immigrant\nThe following aro the latest cholera bul-\nletins from Europe:\nVienna It is reported that no fresh cases\nof cholera and no deaths from the disease\nhave occurred In Galicia In 36 hours.\nBrussels The health returns show that\nfive fresh cases of cholera and three deaths\nwere repoi ted in this city and suburbs to- -\nuay.
10de9194b3ab09bab5324561918b7b14 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.8479451737696 31.960991 -90.983994 COTTON. —Our last weeks report left the\nCotton iparket in a very unsettled state, and\nwith a decline of £ a } cents, from the highest\nprices Oi the season. On Saturday, the conces­\nsions made by holders induced purchasers to en­\nter the market more freelv, and the transactions\nof the day reached fully 5000 bales. On Mon­\nday affairs seemed to -relapse again, a general\ndullness prevailed, the generality of buyers keep­\ning back, and operations, which were confined to\nthree or four large purchasers, comprised about\n3,000 bales. On Tuesday the Hibernias advi­\nces came to hand, and representing the Liverpool\nCotton market as depressed, with a falling oft'in\nprice of ^d., the effect was sensibly felt in our\nown market, which became still more unsettled\nu*an jVer Jicdders generally refusing to accept\nihe reduced offers made to them. Sales of \nday only reached 2000 bales. On Wednesday\nthe sales reached 4,500 bales, factors coming\nforwaid rather more freely, though many were\nstill holding oft in the hope that the depression\nmight prove temporary. On Thursday the ap­\npearance of the market was similar to that of\nthe previous day, buyers making low offers, to\nwhich many holders would not accede, and the\nsales of the day reaching 3000 bales. The sales\n-of Friday reached about 4,200 bales, and were\nin smaller lots than the sales of the previous\ndays. Prices through the week have been con­\ntinually tending downward, and establish a de-;\nCline «1 fully $c. since the receipt of the Hiber­\nnia s advices. The quotations below express :\nabout the range oi prices at the close of yester-,\nday- The sales of the past three days are 11,- !\n500 bales.
9d135080993708078897472d7da9c99c THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.595890379249 39.369864 -121.105448 At 3 oclock in the morning the first corps\nunder Marshal DHi! i is begun the engage-\nment before Salferino, and the heights and\nvillage were occupied after a sanguinary\ncombat. By this time the second corps\njoined the column of Marshal Neil, who was\nmarching upon Medoni. The Emperor had\ntaken command of the whole army, lie\ncaused'the infantry and artillery of the Guard\nto advance and carry Sancessiano. Then he\nsent all the cavalry to reinforce the light of\nMcMahons command, which was a little ex-\nposed. Canrobert had been charged to watch\nthe movements of the Austrians on the side\nof Mantua. The whole column advanced in\ngood order—-the corps joining up towards\neach other. The last village was carried\nwith great spirit under the eyes of the Em\nperor, who himself directed the tire the\nartillery. He was seen every where directing\nthe battle, and every one trembled at the\ndanger, lie seemed ignorant of .personal\ndanger. The Jalrie says Napoleon had an\nepaulette shot away. Several Generals are\n■reported dead. The French infantry were\nnearly cut to pieces. The-Piedmontese suf-\nfered so severely as to be incapable of form-\ning in the line of battle. At Paris it is be-\nlieved that the French loss is 10,000. 20 ,000\ncorpses arc said to have been buried. Napo-i\nIcon was in perfect health, and the condition\nof his army was excellent. His headquarters \\\nwere at Vallengra. It is said that the Ital-\nian regiments in the Austrian army were\nvery difficult to manage. Tbe-men desert by,\nscores. At Trieste a whole battallion had\nraised the cry in favor of Victor Emanuel.
040edd7ffc0923d6f050966c6ee82881 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.4315068176052 46.187885 -123.831256 gold the only material In our unit of pay- -\nmem, capable of unlimited legal tender\npower, in 1873, has not, therefore, caused\ngold to be the only money used in trade.\nWhy not? Because the actual use of any\nparticular way of exchanging roods is\nbeyond the control of legislation, and is\ndetermined by the business customs and\nhabits of the community. When the gov\nernment by law establishes the unit of\naccount and represents it by a given\nweigm ana fineness of gold, Its work ends\nthere. It cannot control the value of that\ngolxl, because it cannot control the\nworld's supply of and demand for gold\nnor control the exchange relations be-\ntween goods and gold. That Is clearly\nestablished, Nor can the government de-\ntermine the demand for gold by merely\nmaking it the unit and stating It to be\nlegal tender, because It cannot control\nthe business habits of the country. The\ngovernment In such a case \nonly the standard of payment in which\nprices will be expressed. It cannot even\ninsure the stability of the Btandard,\nsince goods may change In cost and\nthereby change the ratio of the standard\nto goods. But the government, at least,\ncan a li ways, and should always, set its\nface like flint against every suggestion\nto tamper with the standard side of the\nratio. There are ljkely to be changes\nenough rising from' the goods side, not\nto have more ami artificial changes added\nby Tacking up and down the standard of\nmoney chosen bV law. Trade and manu-\nfacturing demand order and certainty for\nte future, so that some provision for\ncoming work may be made.\nSwelling the volume of circulation cer-\ntainly does not result in a better measure\nof value, because a measure changing up\nand down Is a veritable Injury; swelling\nthe volume of circulation certainly does\nnot result in a better medium of ex-\nchange,
1d8041dfab0e7fe74cba4e60d482f884 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.009589009386 39.261561 -121.016059 A gentleman direct from Hurpers Ferry,\nwho knows a good deal ol what is going on\nin Dixie, says that parlies of rebels have\nvisited the dwelling houses in the region\nDear Cliai lesion, and have seized all of the\ncooking Moves for the use of the army at\nMauaseus. No matter bow great the remon-\nstrance. or how urgent the needs ol the peo\npie. they huve turned a deaf ear lo all.\nUnion men. of course, have been the great-\nest sufferers. No one oan conceive of the\nsuffering und distress in that region. I be\npeople have no coffee, tea, sugar—no In*\nuries of nny kind, and are almost destitute\nof the necessaries of life, And now. at toe\nvery beginning of Winter, they are despoil-\ned of their stoves. The rebels have torn \nthe copper gutters from the houses, have\ndug up miles <ff lead f.ipe, and are now\nseizing all the tin conductors—probably lo\nbe used as stove funnels. They have seized\nall tbe bed blankets ol'Unieuiamibes, also\nquilt* mid comforter*. Tiw oncu •inilii»Kt\npeaceful valley of the Shenandoah in ft den-\nolatiou, Tbe spoiling has not been done\nhy the Federal Hoops, but by the rebels.\nThese ure plain fuels, unadorned and iiueiii-\nbcDished. As Dm JonruaI readers, by iln ir\nplea-ant firesides, picture lo tlu-inselves the\nnon trust between Iheirown happy condil ion\nand lhat of the distressed people in the Old\nDominion, they will in some sense be able\nto understand the terrible wickedness of\nthis rebellion which In its very essence is\ndestructive of every element of peace, pros-\nperity and happiness.
042dd43c4935fa58590dafbce24f6666 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.6342465436326 42.217817 -85.891125 M. Odell and Hannah R. Oie 11, his wife, of Pair\nPaw, Van Buren county, Michigan, to Hiram Soy.\nland, of the same ploe, oa the premises herein-\nafter described and which mortgage was duly re\ncorded in the oflice of the RegiUr of DWs, for\nthe county of Van Buren, State of Miohigan, oa\nthe seventeenth day of April, A. D. 1Mb, at 6\no'clock A. M . In Liber D of mortgage, on page\n639 and 540, and which mortgage was duly\nand assigned by said Hiram Buy land to James\nHarris of said county of Van Buren, by an assign,\nment dated the fourteenth day of May, A. D. 1P55,\nand recorded' in the Registers cfBee aforesaid, oa\nthe 14th of May, A. D. 1859, at 3 o'clock P. M.\nin Liber D, of mortgages, on pages 541 an t\nai.d which was afterward assigned by\nsaid James Harris to Henry W. Rhodes, of thu\ncounty aforesaid by an assignment dated the teuth\nday of December, A D 1865, aud recorded in iL\nRegister's offioe aforesaid on tho tenth day of De-\ncember, A D 1855, at half past 1 o'clock P M in\nLiber of mortgages on page 427; and which\nmortgage was afterward duly assigned by said Hen\nry W Rhodes to Jno. C Everet of the county aforesaid\nby an assignment dated the seventh day of July,\nA D 1856, and recorded in the Register's office,\naforesaid on the eleventh day of July, A. D. 1856,\nat 6 o'clock P M in Liber of mortgages on page\n426, and on which mortgage there is claimed to b\ndoe and uapaid at this date, July tb, 1858, the\nsum of one hamdred and fifty-thre - e
2d7b9b0c91194af3b05a1fe16db68281 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.54508193559 39.261561 -121.016059 generally distinguished a* the elite and\nvulgar, tbe superior and the Inferior, the _ high\nand the low, the privileged and the restricted,\ntbo rich and the poor, and finally loto the chiv-\nalry and tbe mudsills, or the ins and the outs—-\na distinction peculiarly well adapted to society\nas organized in California. This distinction,\nby tbe most astonishing instinctive and myste-\nrious arrangement, without any preconcerted\nagreement has so perfected and improved upon\nall others, that where, in them, there might be\ndonbt as to which side an indivldnal should\ntake, because of having some of the traits com-\nmon to both, this decides the matter at once,\nby simply ascertaining if he be entirely devoid\nof moral principle. If so, he is an in, a chiv ;\nbe belongs to tbe upper crust, and is entitled to\nall its immunities. He can club, cut, shoot and\nkill whomsoever he pleases, without the least\nfear of punishment, and the more be clubs, cuts\nshoots and kills, the higher be stands in tbe\nhigh circle to which ho belongs. Of course\nthere most be some pretense of a trial, whenev-\ner one of these little affairs occur, to pacify \nrougbB, the mudsills, the outs, as they are by\nfar the most numerous, and should they object,\nmight disturb the nice arrangements. To make\nsure that this matter all works right, it is nec-\nessary that tbe right man shall be in the right\nplaee to manage them. It was in view of this\nfact, that Governor Weller appointed Jim\nHardy, a District Judge. There was likoly to\nbe some little business of this kind going on\nsoon, and as James had Bhown himself an adept\nat it while District Attorney In this county, in\na certain Varnard case, he was the man ! The\nappointment bas been entirely vindicated ; tno\naffairs of tho order can be safely entrusted to\nhis care, as witness tbe late Terry affair, and\nwe may safely say that there Is not now thc\nleast danger of a slip in any futuro case. Thus\nwe see this important organization duly forti-\nfied against all mishaps by the wisdom and\nforesight of its leaders ; while the other lacking\nall the essential qualities of organization, is ex-\nposed to all the dangers of tho law for the\nslightest offence, showing conclusively its utter\nInferiority.—Sae. Pott.
3f54245bdf3a8990b3556980e5c5f543 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1920.974043684224 38.951883 -92.333737 EJ The approach of the Christmas season\nprompts the Uh'ted Stales Department\ndt Agriculture to issue a warning against\nrating pork unless it is well cooked. At\nnat season, quantities of certain kinds\ndi pork products which many perans are\naccustomed to eat uncooked are prepaid\nin homes and on farms, as well as com\nmercially. Uncooked porjc frequently\ncontains parasites of microscopic size\nknown as trichinae and persons who eat\nuncooked pork run the risk of contract\ning trichinosis, a most painful and dis.\ntressing disease which sometimes ends\nfatally in spite of any treatment.\nIn order to safeguard consumers who\nmay be Ignorant or careless of the dan\ngcrs of raw pork, "the Department of Ag-\nriculture requires that serlain kinds of\nham, sausage, and other pork products\nprepared in establishments operating un\nder federal meat inspection be subjected\nto processes that are known to destroy\ntrichinae. Such processes, however, arc\nrequired only In case ot pork pro\nducts that are customarily eaten without\ncooking. In the case of other products\nsuch as frrsh pork and ordinary varieties\nof ham, sausage, and bacon, which the\nUnited States are customarily cooked by\nthe,consumer before they are eaten,\nsiwli'al processes to destroy trichinae are\nnot used in meat packing establishments\nunder jfedtra! inspection. Accordingly\nit is highly important that the consumer\nmake sure that pork is properly cooked\nbeforeJt is eaten.,.\nIn the case of uncured pork the, thor-\noughness of 'he cooking can be judrcd\nbv"whether tie meat clear to the center I\nI has lost its reddish appearance, and has I\nbecome more or less white in color.\nThe .following rule for cooking pork\nby boiling is based on careful experi-\nments carried out some years ago by s\nDanish investigator:\nCook the meat IS minutes (summer1)\nto 18 minutes (winter) for each pound\nof weight If put into boiling water, keep-\ning the water boiling throughout the\ncooking process. If the water is put Into\nlord water deduct half the time required\nTo bring the water to a boiL\njIn applying ihe rule given above, the\n18 minutes per pound allowance should\nbe followed in summer as well as in win-\nter if the meat is taken from a
16afe0ccc8cee46e1adbc818f66b1c54 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.17397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 Bred among the coldest regions of\nthe Alps, the splendid St. Bernard\ndogs are the largest of the canine\nrace. They are accustomed from their\nbirth to the deep snows which ever­\nlastingly cover the mountain tops.\nWhenever a snow storm occurs th»\nmonks belonging to the monastery of\n8t. Bernard send forth their dogs on\ntheir errands of mercy. Taught by the\nwonderful instinct with which they\nare endowed, they traverse the dan­\ngerous paths, and seldom fall to dts-\neover the frozen sufferer, even though\nhe Is burled under a snow drift. When\na dog 1ms made such a discovery. It\ngives notice by Its deep and powerful\nbay of the perilous stale of the suffer­\ner. and endeavors to clear away the\nsnow that covers the lifeless form.\nTbe monks hearing the voice of the\ndog. Immediately s >t off to the aid of\nthe perishing traveller, and In many\ncares have thus preserved lives. In or-\nder to afford every possible help to the\nsufferer a small flask of spirits U gen\nerally tied to the neck.\nThe following Instance of the affec­\ntion of monkeys for their young may\nbe of Interest to young folks; One day\nas a traveler was passing a bridge\nwhich curries tbe Bohpal railway\nover the Betwo river, he saw n large\nnumber of black-faced “Langur” mon ­\nkeys upon It. The next morning, pass-\nIng the same place, he found that one\nof a gang of workmen had found a\nyoung monkey near the line, and had\ncaught It. He also (Uncovered tbè body\nOf Its mother, which had been run\nover by a train during the night and\nkilled. A large male monkey, however,\nfollowed the man when he took up the\nyoung monkey (evidently Its father),\nwho was seated on the rails about\nthirty yards from na. eagerly looking\nfor the release of the youngster. The\ntraveller told the man to release the\nyoung one, when it ran to the old one,\nwho embraced and fondled It, bolding\nIt with one arm against Its breast. It\nwas a striking sight, especially as the\nold monkey was a male.
2efdb6c6b8f54e30907b3951154b3b04 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.0863013381531 40.063962 -80.720915 Last Thursday the officer* of the £tnt I\nire and Marine Insurance Company of this\nIty, having become convinced that the rep* 1\nmentations made to them by Jamea H. (\nerguaon, at the time of the bnrnlngof the\nWheeling City Mills last March, of which he\naa owner, were falie, and that the mili\naa burned to obtain tlio insurance money.\nonsulted their attorney, who waa instructed\n) start at once and ascertain tho facts, and,\nrovided that tliey were as they supposed, to\nistitute suit or action at law agalust the\nroperty of Ferguson for the recovery of tho\nloney that had been {mid. This action on\nHe part of tho company was, of courao.\nrought about by the revolatious that had\ncen made in connection with the attempt to\nurn, on January 0, the Toledo Flouring\ntill by Watkins & Fergusou, and the\nnbseiiueut arrest of those parties by the\n'oledo police, a full account of which,\n>gether with ono of the trial of Watkins\nnd Ferguson, have been published in the lx*\nklliokkckr. Before starting on Friday last,\nlie attorney represented the following com*\nauies, ull ot which had had insuranco on\nlie Wheeling City Mills and hod paid the\nuiounta indicated: .tttna Firo and Marine,\n1,000; a company which had insured through\nlie ititna, $1,600; Royal, $1,250; Uncashire.\n2,260; Franklin of Columbus, $1,250; London\nnd Lancashire, $1,250; Manhattan, $1,250.\nAfter arriving iu Toledo Cupt. Morse,\nhief of police, was interviewed, and he told\now he had enraged a Cyprian to gain the\nonddencc of Watkins and thus learned the\nlate of affairs, all of which bus been pub*\nshed. Permission was obtained to see
11fb5cdc8bcd0b51f5ca90ef39fe3f1e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.0808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 clasalfUd and divided into\nsta;e and foreign companies.\nDomestic companies shall Include\nonly companies organized under ;he\nlaws of l!il» stale. State rjavpaalea\nshc.il inc.nde every (ire insurance tam-\npany Incorporated under the law» of\nany state of th United Mates tf\nAmerica other than this s'ate.\nForeign companies shall include\nevery fire insurance company incorpo­\nrated under the laws of any state, na­\ntion, government or country othr>\nthan one of the states of the United\nSlates,and shall Include every state or\ndomestic company whose charter shall\nbe owned or a majority of whooc\nstock shall be controlled by or whose\nbusiness shall be carried on In the in\nterest or Por the benefit of any fire in-\nsura net*\nunder the\nnation, government or c. untry, othei\nthan one of the sintes of the United\nScutes of America.\nSec. 2. The president nad treasurer \nother chief fiscal officer of every such\ndimestlc, and state company doing\nbusiness in this state, shall, annually,\non or before the 1st day of February,\nreport under oath to the Insurance\ncommissioner of this suite, the amount\nof gross cash premiums received and\nthe return premiums paid to policy\nholders, for the preceding calendar\nyear, upon or on account of Insurance\neffected upon property located within\nthis state. Every such state ami do­\nmestic company shall pay a percents,g •\nas hereinafter provided upon the net\npremiums realized from insurance ef\nfeeted upon property located within\nthis state, which premium shall be as\ncertained and determined by deducting\nfrom such gross cash premiums re­\nceived. the amount of return pre­\nmiums as shall have been paid to pol­\nicy holders within this state.\nSection 3. The president and treas­\nurer or other chief fiscal officer cf
2f6f134f9776158a082073a6192daa61 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.6178081874682 39.745947 -75.546589 available foy division between labor'ly from social reformers, politicians i In our national history, place Amerl- ! hesitate to attempt to "trade upon\nand capital. Of this total, *1,373, - and representatives of organized la- 1 can shipowners on terras of equality j calamity" as a means of promoting\n422.472 or 66 04 per cent, was expend- bor that labor does not receive in i with foreign competitors in the mat-. their cause No soone* had the ap­\ned for wages to labor, and the bal- , wages its fair share of the product ;ter of operating costs. This consum- I palling news of tile Eastland disaster\nance, $706,176,174, or 33.96 per cent. ; of industry or of the increase of that matlon so devoutly to be wished was. been flashed over the country than\nwas left tor capital, available to? In- product. The increase )n the invest- jwe were assured, to be brought about the charge was made that (here would\n on bonds and other debt, dlvi- ment of capital Is what creates the by applying the standards established have been no loss of life had the sea- I!\ndends. improvement to property, de- 1 increase in the demand for labor; j by the act not only to bottoms under ! man's act been in opera'Jon; and U\npreelation, miscellaneous expenses and, if capital, when Invested in any ! American registry, but to all vessels 1 that statement is persiste din though 11\nand surplus, in 1904. out of n total ■ business, is not adequately rerau- .leaving our ports, regardless of na-1 the experts have declared that\noperating revenue of $1,975,174,091 ' nerated. it will çease to be Invested tionallty. Sea conditions were to be : provision of the La Foilette-Furusetb\nthe hmount divisible between labor 1 in that business, and thereby the in- «leveled upto our standards, not down Maw could have robbed the calastro-\nand capital was *1.392,180,294.
159f53af0d121f3bfa862ca2749c0e8c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1878.8342465436326 41.004121 -76.453816 gard to his nomination or election for Con-\ngress Second, That he has never seen Don\nCameron on the same subject. Third, Tbat\nat the Scranton convention he did not see,\ncorrespond, or have communication directly\nor indirectly with Frank Beamish. Fourth,\nThat General Hoyt and himself never had a\nline of correspondence or a word of conver-\nsation in relerence to the Governorship or\nCongressman, nor any mutual friend between\nthem. Filth, At the Stroudsburg convention\nthe Columbia delegation unanimously voted\nagainst an adjournment on the ground that\nit would lead to strife and dimension in the\nparty. Sixth, That at the Hazleton conven-\ntion, October 16th, the Columbia delegation\nunanimously resolved to leave in a body be-\ncause Robert Klotz would not agree to a\ncompromise candidate nor to Columbia\ncounty's choice. Failing to make the train\n day, they unanimously agreed to leave\nin a body at noon the following day, and in\naccordance with tbat resolution Sheriff Hoff-\nman and himself caught the train and David\nLowenbergund Dr. T. J . Swisher accidentally\nmissed the train. Seventh, it was also unani\nmously agreed that neither himself nor any of\nnisconterees would accept asingie dollar irom\nMajor Klotz or any ot his menus to nomi-\nnate said Klotz for Congress. Eighth, That\n$1500 00 were offered to him or one of bis\nconferees forjone conferee's vote from Colum\nbia county to make tlie ten necessary to\nmake the nomination as required by the\nrule, wblch was then promptly declined by\nhim and each of his conferees : that he di 1\nnot.bave nor show any amount of money at\nScranton but bad to borrow to pay personal\nexpenses.
1262980020e44701fbee474153f7dd5b PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.83698626966 40.441694 -79.990086 yiEWERS' REPORT\nOn the construction of a, public sewer on Euclid\nstreet, from the north curb line of Penn ave-\nnue to a connection with a sewer on Enclld\nstreet v tBanm's northern property line.\nTo the Select and Common Councils of the\ncity et Pittsburg:\nThe undersigned Viewers of Street Improve-\nments in the city of Pittsbnrg, appointed by the\nCourt of Common Pleas of Allegheny county,\nand authorized by n ordinance passed on the\n27th day of February, A. D. 1889 , a copy of\nwhich Is hereto attached, to make an assess-\nment of the cost and expense of constructing a\npublic sewer on Euclid street, from the north\ncurb line of Penn avenue to a connection with\nsewer on Euclid street at Baum's northern\nproperty line, in said city, upon the property\nbenefited thereby under the provisions of and\nm accordance with an act of Assembly of the\nCommonwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled "An\nact authorizing and directing Councils\nof cities of the second class to provide\nfor the improvement of streets, lanes, alleys\nand public highways, sewers and sidewalks, re-\nquiring plans of streets, providing for tho ap\npointment oi a ooara oi v lewers oi otreet im-\nprovements, prescribing their duties, granting\nappeals to Councils and Court, providing for\n assessment and collection of damages and\nbenefits, authorizing the use of private prop-\nerty, and providing for filing liens and regulat-\ning proceedings thereon, and prohibiting tbe\nuse ofl public streets without authority of\nCouncils," approved the 14th day of June, A. D.\n1887, respectrully report:\nThat having been first duly sworn and quali-\nfied according to law, they proceeded in the\nmannor and according to the directions of said\nact, to discharge tbe duties of their appoint-\nments; that, having viewed tbe premise, they\nmade an assessment of said cost and ex\npense upon tbe property benefited, and caused\na plot and statement to be made, as re\nquired by said act, ana caving given\nto the owner of each lot ten days' notice of\nthe time and place of meeting, they met on the\n24th day of October, A. D. 1889, at the office\nof the Board of Viewers, In tbe city of Pitts-\nburg, beard all complaints and evidence of-\nfered, and having made all modifications and\ncorrections which they deem proper, assessed\nthe cost and expense of constructing said\nsewer upon the following property, upon each\nfor the amount'Set opposite the name of the\nowner thereof, viz:\nCaief ot Department of Public Works, state\nment of cost:\n635.2 lineal feet h
40e108e84a77f522c5b7824e43be3365 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.736338766191 41.681744 -72.788147 sent not as an attempt to Inter-\nfere In any way, but rather to bring\nDeiore you suggestions that have\nbeen made to me and ideas that my\nexperience In the general govern-\nment has given me. Tour commit-\ntee has exercised keen business Judg\nment in the past and I have no rea\nson to believe that our city will not\nconttpue to benefit by the technical\nknowledge in school affairs that you\nhave acquired In your personal con\ntact with these affairs.\n"However, there is a matter that\nI would at this time call to your at\ntention. That is with regard to the\npurchase of a school site in the east-\nern section of the city. As mayor of\nthe city, I am the presiding officer\nof .the City Meeting Board. The\nCity Meeting Board as you know,\nhas already gone on record as op\n to the purchase of the school\nsite now being considered by your\ncommittee, and the reasons for such\nopposition struck me very forcibly.\nIt might be of interest to you to\nhave these objections recounted.\n"The question of cost Is, of course,\nan important consideration. As I\nunderstand it, the proposed site\nwould be purchased at a cost of $4,-S 0- 0\nan acre, which Is ranch higher\nthan more adaptable sites can be\nbought for. Then, too, the location\nis not desirable in the opinion of\nsome of the present and former\nmembers of the school committee\nand many others who have visited\nthe site. Surveys of the land, con\nducted by experts, disclose that for\nthe erection of a school building the\nplace is not what the city would\nwant, and the possibility of a repeti-\ntion of what occurred at the Prevo-c ation - al
2f03a10e99b5b7bc5c95e161f6bb7f68 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.57397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 'Nature has prepared the Ohio rlvei\nnd excavated for It a channel capa\nlous enough for the largest steamers\nts bed baa been so admirably sdjustei\nbat no looks are needed to overootn\nib fall except at Louisville. 1th abun\nIsntly supplied with water from 4hi\nlouds to keep It of sufficient depth thi\near round for all the purposea of com\noerce. The only thing required Is t<\n(jual'zs this supply, and kee^ In stor\nlie surplus to make up the deflclencle\nt the volume of water In the dry sea\nons. It Is truly wonderful, on a care\nul analysis of tbe tables accurately\nurnlshed by Mr. Ellet, to notice tti\nnet that, though the river fall\nelow the navigable point man:\nImes during tbe yeas* yet that scarce\ny for a single month during six year\nrom 1843 to 1848 inclusive, wsb thi\nolurpe of water Insufficient, bad i\neen distributed equably during tbi\nlonth, to have kept up a good naviga\nleconditiono! the river: and toleari\nIso that tbe aggregate volume of wate\necessary to supply the deficit and keei\n10 river up to navigable stags, ma]\ne stored up by a feW dams, construct\ni at an Inconsiderable expense, in th\nlountainous regions of the upper trl\nutariee, without damage to private In\ncrests; and that, so far as tbe Allegha\ny River is concerned, the damB con\ntruoted for this purpose would mak\nals noble stream navigable from Pitts\nurgh to Olean, for steamboats an<\narges throughout tbe year. Tbe sue\nlus waters of this great tributary, be\nond what would be required tor it\nwn slack-water navigation, wonli\nulllce to furnish the complement ne\nesaary lor iue uuimerrupieu naviga\non of the Upper Ohio. The Cbea\nLiver seems to have been designed fo\nIlls very object of famishing vas\nBservolrs for storing np its aurplm\nraters. Above Its continence with th\nlonougahela It is a wild, rapid stream\navlng high precipitous banks, betweei\nrbiob, by the construction of a fei\nauiH, an immense quantity of wate\nrould be accumulated, to be dralnei\ntf, as required, into tbe Ohio. In thi\nrut 47 miles, above the Monongabela\nlie Cheat Kivet has a fall of 000 feeL\nReservoirs oould be
226cfa76bfc9e3197e77fca6582823b3 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.3657533929477 39.756121 -99.323985 On Friday May 10, the school term\nof Marvin schools closed, I was spend-\ning the day in this beautiful little\ncity, and aware of the fact that this\nwas school closing day, and that there\nwas to be an appropriate program\nrendered, I concluded that it would be\na proper thing for me to attend the\nsame. Shortly before the noon hour\nnoticing quite a movement of bug-\ngies and teams going to and fro on the\nschool house grounds unloading bas-\nkets, pails, ice cream freezers, etc.,\nand also many people on foot carrying\nhampers wending their way to the\nschool house, taking in the situation\nthat something unusual was going to\nhappen, and following the procession\nto the school house, and after reach-\ning there I soon discovered what was\ngoing to be done. The teachers and\npatrons of the school had arranged to\ngive the schoolchildren a grand din-\nner, and they royally carried out this\npart of the program. A very long\ntable in one of the upper school rooms\nwas spread with a feast of so many\ngood rich and sweet things that\nonly the people of the city of Marvin\nwith the help of of their good neigh-\nbors of the surrounding country can\nprepare, and the school children, par-\nents and all present were feasted in\ngrand style. After dinner had been\nserved to all present, the triangle was\nresounded and all repaired to the high\nschool room where the prepared pro-\ngram was rendered in such an admir-\nable way and manner as to merit the\npraise of every one present, and that\nfurther plainly told, that the pupils\nhad been in competent hands during\nthe school term, and that the good\nwork of Prof. Fallon and his assistant,\nMiss Baum, which they had given to\ntheir pupils was amply showing in\nthe advancements their pupils had\nmade in all their studies and along all\nlines. After the program had been\nrendered the schools were finally de-\nclared closed for the term and all re-\ntired to their . respective homes well\npleased with the exercises' and with\nthe successful manner in which all\narrangements had been carried out.
a5ba15813442007a38507317da40eccb VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.9712328450025 43.798358 -73.087921 on the whole I w ould try to help him, ex-\npecting perhaps not to get one cent. Yet\nafter finishing his work, he wanted to\nknow how much he was owing. I told\nhim, not expecting any pay then, if ever.\nBut he said, I very unexpectedly had\nsome money brought roe last night, and\ncan pay you, and d(4 pay alt I asked him.\nAnother "circumstance I will mention,\nwhere taking nn oath came in contact.\nI once sent some money to pay for corn,\nand before the man who carried it came\nfrom the place, one five dollar bill was\ncondemned, crossed and lodged in the\nhnds (fa justice, and the man called for.\nHe went nnd told the justice the money\nwas not his, but sent by him, and told by\nwho, and so the jifsiice wrote a line,\nthat if I wanted to save the money, I must\ncall upon him. 1 accordingly Went, and\nafter making myself known, asked him\nwhat there was for me to do About that\nmoney. He told me, not nny thing, only\nswear it upon the person I had it of, if I\nknew who it was. I told him I knew\nwho I had it of, but should not swear it\nupon any one, ns I thought it wrong to\nswear. He said, then you can affirm.\nI told him I should not take an oath cf\nany kind, if I lost the bill. He said, you\nare a very strange man t know not what\nto do with you. Well, if you know\nwho you had the bill of, let me hear your\nstory. So I told my story. After hear
55f9279d8372f0612e34e0d812c177e9 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4260273655505 39.261561 -121.016059 The President has relied upon the assur-\nance given his Government by the Allies,\nthat they sere in pursuit of no political\nobject, but simply the redress of their grie-\nvances. He entertains no doubt of the sin-\ncerity of the Allies; and if his confidence\nin their good faith had tteen distorted, it\nwould be restored by the (tank explana-\ntions given by them, that the Governments\nol Spain, France and Great Di ilaiu have\nno intention of intervening to procure a\nchange in the constitutional form of gov-\nernment now existing in Mexico, or any\npolitical change which should be in oppose-\nlion to the will of the Mexican people. In\nshort, he has cause to believe what the Al-\nlies are unanimous in declaring that the\nrevolution proposed to Mexico is solely\nprompted bv certain Mexican citizens, who\nare now in Europe.\nNevertheless, the President regards it a«\nhis duty to express to the Allies, in all\nkindness and that a monarebial\ngovernment established iu Mexico, In the\npresence of foreign fleets and armies, occu-\npying the w aters and soil of Mexico, has no\npromise of secuvity or permanence; in the\nsecond place that the instability ()f such a\nmonarchy would be enhanced if the throne\nwere assigned to a person alien to Mexico:\nthat iu ttiese circumstances the new govern-\nment would instantly fall unless sustained\nby European alliances, which, under the In-\nfluence of the first invasion, would be prsc-\nlicully the beginning ol a permanent poli-\ncy of armed intervention by monarchical\nEurope, at once injurious and inimical to\nthe system of government generally adopt-\ned by the American continent.\n1 Itese views are bused 'upon some knowl-\nedge of the opinions and political habits\nol American society. There can be no\ndoubt that iu this matter the permanent in-\nterests and sympathies of our country would\nbe on the side of the other American Re-\npublics.
32f83cbeec669cbd776e71e445af64cd THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1905.278082160071 46.601557 -120.510842 Notice Is hereby given that tbe olty of\nNorth Yiikinin, Washington, will |rt .t\nc'-itract for the grading of itninier ava*\nPIH' In said city, between tbe center lino\nof Yakima avenue and the center line of\n"C" street. Said grading shall l»e done\nin all respects in accordance witn th?\nmaps, plans, specifications, drnwlnKS imd\nnotes of the city engineer h'Mvtoforp,\nand on March 20th. 1905. adopted by\nresolution of the city council, and now on\nfile in tho office of the city clerk, and to\nthe grades shown therein, all of wh'eh\nare now on file In the office of said city\nclerk, and subject to the inspection of\npersons Interested, and under and pursu-\nant to the provisions of ordinance No.\n437 of the ordinances of said city, passed\nApril 3. 1900. Sealed proposals for the\nmaking of said above described improve-\nment will he received by the city olerk\nof ssiid city up to 7:30 o'clock p. m., of\nApril 17. 1935, the same being the tinr*\nof the next regular meeting of the city\ncouncil of the said city, and the time\nwhen snid proposals will opened and\nconsidered by said city council and said\ncontract awarded. All bidders will be re-\nquired to deposit with their bid a cer-\ntified check for an amount equnl to fl\\c\nper cent, of the amount of said bid. drnwii\nin favor of tho city treasurer on sum*\nbank in the city of North Yakima. Wash-\nington, as security that such bidder will\nenter into a contract for the making of\nsaid Improvement, and furnish bonds na\nrequired by law and the ordinances of\nsaid city within three days after he shall\nhe notified that the contract has been\nnwarded. The bidder to whom the con-\ntract shall be awarded will be required\nto execute to the city of North Yakima a\ngood and sufficient bond in an amount\nequal to the eontrnet price, conditioned\nfor the faithful performance of said con-\ntract, also a bond to the state of Wash-\nington, in the same amount, for the\nprotection of matprialmen and lab.ir^rs\nfurnishing material and labor in the con-\nstruction of said Improvement, ns le-\noulred by law. Dated at North Yakima.\nWashington, this 4th rt.iv of April. 1909.
18250a73d71a166bc652d5b317ea6b41 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1915.478082160071 35.318728 -82.460953 stock holder, I appeal only to their\njudgment and ask them to consider\none thing and one thing only in deter-\nmining : the question of a business\nmanager, and that one thing is this:\nIf they were directors of a private\ncorporation, . in considering the best\nmonitary Interests of their, stock hold-\ners, .would they attempt without ade-\nquate compensation, to run the busi-\nness of the stock holders ,by meeting\nonce a week, or once every two weeks,\nor once every thirty days, and attempt\nto direct the - work of the finances\nwithout a business head.V without a\nbusiness, intelligent, interested, ambi-\ntious head .always on the Job, always\nlinking, always planning, always ex-\necuting the business of the concern,\nunder the direction of the directors? "\nIf any. member of the Board\nof Directors V beHeves that he could\nrun his business by forming commit\ntees and appointing a chairman, with\neach member of the committee ana tno\nchairman himself loaded arid burden-\ned with hb own private business and\nexnect this kind of an organization Xo.\nwisely direct the application of all the\nmoney of the stockholders in a way that\nwould get the jhest results ana inc.\nleast possible loss, tnen ne is jusuna- -\nble in saying that the town's business\ncan be run hy methods which no pri\nvate business has ever or can evei\nadopt, -- and without seeing in advance\nthat bankruptcy would be inevitable.\nMay I ask each individual member: of\nthe board of directors if he can run\nhis business by forming committees\nof men engaged in their private dusi-
ca3d12f2e699eb24c60be8eef8a11402 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.6232876395231 43.798358 -73.087921 as the best remedy for diseases of the\nstomach and lungs. Every family that J\nvisited deemed it an act of kindness, and\nno more than what common civility re-\nquired, to offer me wine, or distilled spirit,\nand thought it n Utile strange if I refused\nto drink. At funerals, the bereaved\nfriends and others were accustomed to use\nstrong drink before and after going to the\nburial. At ordinations, councils, and all\nother meetings of ministers, different\nkinds of stimulating drinks were provid-\ned, and there were but few who did not\npartake of them."\n' The state oj things which 1 have refer-\nred to, among men of my own profession.\ntogether with its manifest consequences,\nbegan early in my ministry, to alarm my\nfears. 1 remember that at a particular\nperiod before the reformation\ncommenced, I was able to count up nearly\nforty ministers of the gospel and nnc of\nthem at a very great distance, who wereA\neither drunkards, or so far addicted to in-\ntemperate drinking, that their reputation\nand usefulness were greatly injured, if\nnot utterly ruined. And I could mention\nan ordination, that took place abovt twen\ntv vears aso. at which i. myself, was\nashamed and grieved lo see two aged mm\nistei literally drunk : and a third inde\ncently excited with slrowg drink. These\ndisgusting and appalling facts 1 should\nwish might be concealed. But they were\nmade public by the guilty persons; and I\nhave thought it just arid proper to men-\ntion them, in order to show how much we\nowe lo a compassionate God for the great\ndeliverance he has wrought."
302491265cddcfb9d6b1fc072d98f6a9 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.9002731924206 29.949932 -90.070116 The paper that runs this huge printing office\ncomes trom various manufacturers, and it is not\nordered by the congressional printer, but by a\njoint committee of Congress. It is ordered 1 I\nreams of five hundred sheets, and sometimes paid\nfor by the pound. In thelatter case from twenty\nto thirty cents is commonly paid, and by the ream\nthe prices vary from eight dollars and a half to\nthirteen dollars. Three thousand reams erme\nfrom BReltimore, ninetean thousand reams and lso\ntwenty thousand pounds came from Manchester,\nConnecticut, four thousand reams from Boston,\nfour thousand from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, one\nthousand from Philadelphia, exclousive of one\nhnndred and sixty-eight thousand four hundred\npounds, and twenty thousand reams from New\nYork. The manufacturer furnishing the bulk of\nthe paper were Jessop, Keeney, Magarge, War.\nren and Buer. The oust of all this paper was\n$636,000, considerably past half a million, yet this\nwas less than the sum paid for five preceding\nyears, the coat of the paper being in 1865 \nthan a million and a quarterof dollars, and averag.\nig forlive years about 8620,000. At the end of\nthis economical year about $224,000 worth of\npaper remained in storage. Government never\ninsures its property, and this immense amoont of\ninflammable matter is stored in sheds adjacent to\nthe priating office and guarded by watchmen.\nThe printing for the executive department of\nthe government costs nearly as much money as\nthe total work done for Congrees. The executive\ndepartments, with the courts, required in 1867\nabout 8757,000 worth of printing, while the House\nof Bepresentatives ran up a bill of 8454,000, and\nthe Senate 8180,000. In addition to this, acts of\nCongress warranted about 8233,000 additional of\nwork done for miscellaneous objects. The Bu-\npreme Court and its satellite. take nearly 615,000.\nThe agricultural department with its huge reports,\npasses $32 000. The treasury leads with nearly\n8300,000, and the war department follows it with\n8148,000. Next come the postofice, navy and in-\nteior departments, ranging from $78,000 to\n862,000.
3382812fec94f7040564d20c841f13c1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.2909835749342 37.561813 -75.84108 After the war was over, Mr. Meeks\nfollowed hiin to this State, and insti\ngated proceeding against him, both\ncivil and criminal. The case was\ntried impartially in the Court of Com-\nmon Pleas, and resulted in favor of\nMr. Wells. Pending this suit, Mr.\nWells went to Kentucky, for the pur-\npose of getting some depositions tak-\nen, but the whole rebel neighborhood\nraised in arms against him, and he\nwas compelled to flee through the\nwoods for his life.\nIt seems that Mr. Meeks, not satis-\nfied with the decision of our Court,\nhas applied to Governor Stevenson\nand got a requisition on the Governor\nof Ohio, who ordered the sheriff of\nthis county to deliver Mr. Wells to\nthe agent of Kentucky. The sheriff,\non Monday, arrested Mr. Wells and\n him over to the Kentucky\nagent, who happened to be no other\nthan Meeks himself, and we presume\nby this time he is safely in the hands\nof a set of men who will be satisfied\nwith nothing less than his life.\nMr. Wells, since his residence here,\nha3 been a quiet, inoffensive citizen,\nand a good neighbor; but this outrage\nhas been committed on him, simply\nbecause he was a loyal man. It is\nsurprising that Gov. Hayes has issued\nthis order, on the representation of\none side of the question, and that, too,\nperhaps from the counsel of Mr.\nMeeks. A dispatch was prepared,\nasking Gov. Hayes to delay iu the\nmatter, until the other side of the\nquestion could be made known, but\nthe wires being down, did not reach\nhim.
012b845acb75352bd969b23d07768dc4 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.0753424340437 44.939157 -123.033121 Woll, today I Baw another 'curiosity.\nA Hindu silk morchant was horo with\nreal Hindu silks nnd linen. It was tho\nmost beautiful stuff I over saw. I In-\nvested, and if I can mako arrangements\nto send you somo, I will sond you a\ndross pnttorn. Mnybo I can Bend a\nwaist as a sample, anyway. Now, don't\nnccuso mo of boing oxtravagant. That\nbeautiful India nnd Hindu silk that wo\npay such exorbitant prices for nt homo\ndoesn't cost any moro horo thnn a good\nqunlity of gingham would cost there,\nso I can afford it. Tell papa to send\nmo tho numbor of his shirt, so I will\nknow what slzo ho woars and I will\nsend him some silk shirts that will mako\ntho community greon with envy, and it\n cost scarcely anything. Thi.\nsamo morchant will ho back boforo long\nand ho will havo a grout mauy shirts\nwith him. ho savs. Ho Is tho queerest,\nmost pleasant littlo man I havo\nscon for somo time. Ho is vory swarthy,\nwith tho dark brown oyos of tho Hindu,\nand bows and smilos and says, "Yes,\nploaso," and "No, please," and talka\na littlo pigeon English enough so that\nho trades with tho foreignora, but not\nwith the Chinese, because, ho told me.\nho couldn't sponk Chinoso. Ho .heard\nmo speaking to Bunling, our house bov,\nnnd asked mo how long I had boon In\nChina. I told him. and I thought ho\nwould faint. He said ho couldn't learn\nChineso. and ho has boon traveling up\nand down the Ynng-ts- o
3dad63a42a80b70aef978c9fc72816fe NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.187671201167 41.681744 -72.788147 achievement in real life, although the ',\nSister Soulsbys and the innumerable\nbusiness women of fiction have many\nliving counterparts. To wrest a busi-\nness concern from threatened bank-\nruptcy, however, generally requires\nmore than an innate business sense.\nFeminine persuasiveness and the ap-\npeal of sex might accomplish much in\nthe circumstances, but the fair in-\nference in this case would be that the\nhusband's difficulties were largely\n"psychological," that technical rather\nthan mercantile ability had made him\nthe owner of a factory, and that the\nwife possessed inherent commercial\nunderstanding which had been devel-\noped and strengthened by domestic\nmanagement. As for the baby, there\nare preternaturally good babies, and\nthere are mothers who hold to the\ntheory that the best way to cure a\nchild of the habit of crying is to let it\ncry until it gets tired.\nIn such a case the union of com-\nmercial ability and mechanical abil-\nity in husband and wife would un-\ndoubtedly result in good team work\n tend to keep the business in the\nfamily. But the argument that hus-\nbands and wives should generaLly\nadopt the same profession, or follow\nthe same trade, if the wife does not\nprefer the domestic routine, is not j\nmeasurably strengthened by this one\nexample. lawyers have wedded law-\nyers and physicians physicians, but\nsuch instances are exceptional. As a\ngeneral thing the professional man\ndesires to free his intimate home life\nas far as posible from professional\nassociations, and we fancy that the\nprofessional woman must have the\nsame feeling. In the art world and\nin letters the domestic disaster re-\nsulting from marriages of artists\nwith artists, writers with writers, is\ntoo familiar to be dwelt upon. Mar-\nriages of actors with actresses have\nbeen common since the modern thea-\nter came into being, but if the two\nare of equal artistic rank discord soon\nflows. The Kendals were rare ex-\nceptions. The art world, however, is\napart from the everyday life of the\nmultitude.'
0bb8af75b2391c81d2f13a403ffdbaeb THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.0671232559614 40.832421 -115.763123 llCn'th alid happim-O^ ofjrt] i4 lilnl\ngroom l>y his ft l! j«r-ht»-t)i^ru If line.\nThe Idaho Avalanche, printed at Si 1\nvrr City, says the wivi# of s me of the\n11a- ' lis of that place have formed what\nthey term un anti-Mason lodge, and meet\nevery two weeks to take into coiisid. r -\nntion the liest niellio/l to compel hus-\nbunds who attend the Masonic lodge ev\nery HatnrdiiV night and remain ther. un ¬\ntil \\erv late at night, to come home ear¬\nlier. They also initiate lady friends at\nnek anting, who tn compelled to ride\nthe goat uud do other things that the\nMason* are siipjHis. -d t.i do. The) tMU-\nally set a lunch after the cxerci-e* and\nhave a good time generally.\nKato CusUletou is Laving a lively \nnee with thr.t husband of hers. At Win-\nui]Mrg, Monday Slight, Le obtained some\nniouey s iit to his wife from Sin Fran¬\ncisco, and -got on a boiling drunk. At\ntlu» close of the lirst ait K ite asked hi In\nfor the remainder of the money, when\nho responded by feliiug lor with a blow\nof his list, which leudere I her insensi¬\nble for >. line time. Afterword he broke\ninto her l<edr"oui, nvolver in hau l,\nthreatening to kill her. Lie was arr. ~ t . <1\nand sjs-nt the tiight ill thP jioliee station.\n. Seven taoosaud «! >11 ir> v.orth of Miss\nt'.uUeton's diaiii ' .. is v. re found ott his\nperson and returned to her. I'Ulllip\nMas l.xib d out, ai.d the whole COUlptiUY\nlelt for the South.
1ec9ed99af1aa4475a5d29529b6ac0c0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.460382482038 37.561813 -75.84108 spiration. Nothing is more simple. Let\nher stand erect throw her shoulders\nback, and the hands behind ; then let\nher inhale pure air to the full capacity\nof her lungs, and retain it a few seconds\nby an increased elfurt ; then it may be\nslowly exhaled. After one or two natu-\nral inspirations let her repeat the act\nand so 011 for 10 or 15 minutes, twice\ndaily. Not only is this simple procedure\na safeguard, against consumption, but,\nin the opinion of some learned physi-\ncians, it can cure it when it lias already\ncommenced. A correspondent of an\nEnglish medical journal furnishii the\nfollowing recipe as a new cure for con-\nsumption : Put a dozen lemons in cold\nwater and boil until soft (not too soft),\nroll and squeeze until the juice is all ex-\ntracted, sweeten the juice enough to be\nalpable then drink. L"se many as a\ndozen a day. Should they cause pain or\nlooseness ot tne Dowels lessen the\nCjuautity and use live or six a day until\nbetter. By the time you have used five\nor six dozen you will begin to gain\nstrength and have an appetite. Of course\nas you get better you need not use so\nmany. Follow these directions and we\nknow you will never regret it if there is\nany help for you. Only keep it up faith-\nfully. We know of two cases where\nliotli of the patients were given up by\nthe physicians, and were in the last\nstages of consumption, yet both were\ncured by using lemons, according to the\ndirections we have stated. One lady in\nuirticular was bedridden and very low ;\nhad procured everything that money\ncould jH'ocure, but all in vain, when, to\nplease a friend, she was finally per-ua d-
08e7550210f3b8aca6c86f46630349dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.023287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 "Paul Kauvar" is stamped with th\nauthor's Individuality. Stooie Mackaye'\ndominant personal characteristic Is vlrl\nIty, and tills very original and powerfi\nstage picture ot the Reign of Terror 1\nFrance, but cchoes Ills own thoughta an\nfeollugs. Historical as It is in theme an\nsituation, ho has wisely refrained froi\nclothing his characters in hlstorlci\nnames. He has depicted with terrlbl\nrealism the frightful sceneB of tlio Rev(\nlutlou. He teaches a historical lesso\nand at the samo time constructs a pin\nwhobo only weakness Is an occasion!\ndisplay of meretricious heroism, ami\ntheatric treatment of situations. M\nMackayo liai clothed bin ldea^ln word\nphrases and ecntcnces that sparklo .lit\nHems. lie hns concentrated his ovoi\nidea of heroism in the character of "I'm\nKauvar." If ho lias over-stopped tl\nHue in the delineation of heroism, I\nhas softened the effect by n ludlcloi\nand oven blooding of clevor villainy,\nfault Is In reality converted into a virtu\nand the curtain' falls ou a scene that f<\nstrength, completeness, and draniat\ntreatment, has seldom been cqunled 1\nan American author.\n 11b.snstt-5iod1.ton oi'eka com pan\nThe Opera liouse Is certain to do\nbill business all next week, and llioi\nwho want reserved floats will do woli\nsecure them as soon as they aro put o\nsale. The attraction will be Georjjo i\nBaker's Bennctt-Moulton comic opei\ncompany at popular prices,- Thocon\npany is said to boa great iinproveinet\non the one Mr. Baker had last seasoi\nthis means a good dual, far It will be ri\nmemberod that tho company lio lui\nhero last season wiis voted by thosowb\nhad the pleasure of hearing it,to be aboi\nthe best and in ovory way most satislai\ntory opera eoinpnny ever heard her\nAh exchange says: "IbechoruB is fu\nnnd strong, the climaxes aro admirabl\ndone, and the general effects charmin\nThe female members aro mora nume\nout) than they wore a year ago and ai\nyoung nnd pretty. They introduce li\nInto their work nnd fully merit tt\npleasant things said of them.'' Winson\nIrene Murphy is still the leading lady\ntho troupe, nnd William Wolf, tl\nclever comedian, is still witb tho coo\npany.
0176602b0b50583655c17b9dcccccabd THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.457650241601 35.996653 -78.901805 prolong 1 fe a few7 hundred years, was a\ngigantic humbug the dream of an idiot\nand the hope of several more idiots.\nBut just the same medical science is\nbobbing along serenely, but it fails to\ndiscover this mysterious thing called\nheart failure. The grave and learned\ndoctors say when a man suddenly kicks\nthe bucket that he came to his death by\nheart failure. Of course he did. It is\npretty generally known, even by those\noutside the books, that when one's heart\nfails to beat the one who owns the heart\ngenerally passes beyond the range. The\nheart is, say the physicians who do not\nheal themselves, a pump. When it has\nno suction when it gets wobblr as it\nwere then is the time to see if your in-\nsurance policy is all and the com-\npany in which you are in is solvent.\nBut what causes this heart failure?\nThat's what bothers the medical profes-\nsion. It appears that the world is dark\nthese days on that. If the blood fails to\ncirculate there is a way to help circula-\ntion ; oh, yes, that has been decided. Iiut\nwithin the past year we have had more\ndeaths among the big fellows congress-\nmen, senators and millionaires and all\nhave died suddenly, and in each case it\nwas heart failure. Senator Plumb,\nstrong and robust, fell dead with heart\nfailure. Of course it was heart failure\nbut there ends the mystery. The case of\nCongressman Stackhoise was pecu-\nliarly and singularly strange and sad. He\nwas a great alliance leader. He was in\nsplendid health. He came to Raleiffh
0a0920411949e6598f5c8b5473bc1bdb CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.5986301052765 41.875555 -87.624421 more easily. He never took n holiday,\nbut was always atteudlug to business.\nThe panic occasioned by the tire In Chi-\ncago caught him carrylug a large load\nof securities. He was In debt to the\ncity for houds sold on Its uccouut, It\nbeing the custom to make payments at\nthe end of every mouth. The city au-\nthorities demanded settlement at mice,\nand, kuowlng that to pay one account\nIn full would be unfair to the balance\nof Ills creditors, Mr. Yerkes snsiienilcd\nand made an assignment. From the\nfact that the law did not provide for\nhis having ikskcsIoii of the city's\nmotley, and us he refused to give the\ncity preference over his other creditors,\nsevere measures were resorted to to\ncomiH'l him to do so. He was llrm.\nhowever, anil Insisted that, ns he hud\ngiven up everything he imssessed, It\nshould be divided to every otie alike.\nThis was tlui most trying period of his\nlife; ami while he and his friends feel\nat wiled with HI action, severe\nstrain he was obliged to puss through\nwas such us few men could stand.\nWhile It made his friends stronger, It\ngave his enemies, for a time, an oppor-\ntunity locust reflections upon him.\nAt the time of his failure he lost a\nlarge Interest which ho had held In the\nHe vent cent h and Nineteenth Htrect\nHallway Company, which hud been In\nhis possession since 18(11. Ills Interest\nwas sold at a great sucrlllce to help pay\nhis debts. In 187!), at the time of the\nJay Cooke failure, he began the recu-\nperation of his fortune. Ills business\nwas rapidly growing at that wrlod.\nami appreciating at once that Mr.\nCooke's suspension meant a serious de-\ncline In everything he sold stocks heav\nily before purchasing. Immense and\nquick protlts were the result, ami he\nsoon found himself well established. Iu\n1875 he purchased an Interest in the\nContinental Passenger Hallway of\nPhiladelphia, and saw the value of the\nstock rise from $15 per share to over\n$1t)0.
02a9540af78d03e79338616cf6566629 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1906.4561643518518 43.624497 -72.518794 grouud what love tbey may have felt.\nrmaeine hnvlu" nn friends of vour\nown age, no pieasures sucu as gins i\nenjoy! Thls girl was linaglnative, too,\naud liked to spend hours at a tlme llv- -\nlng In a sort of dream world where\neverythlng was so dlffereut Thls wns\nher one great pleasure. Of conrse, ns in\nshe grew older, isbe sometlmes thought\nof what lover must be box ber owu\nposslble lover would look but all these\npleasant visions were rndely brougbt\nto an end one day when her grand\nfather told her of a man whom he\nhad selected to be ber husband. She\ndisllked and distrusted tbe man from\nthe flrst, and was most unbappy,\n"But before a marriage could take\nplace an epldemlc of diphtheria\nclalmed as vlctlms both her relatlves, i\nand after thelr death it was found\nthat the suitor had managed to\nget thelr property Into hls hnnds, and\nby mlsmanagement had lost the most\nof it It was a terrible sltuatlon for\nthat glrll No relatlves, no frleuds, no\nVnowledge of the world, no money!\n"She was obliged to work at some\nthlng and selected teacblng as tbe\nonly posslblllry. Tbere was no openlng\nln her own town, but in another, near\nby, she secured a medlocre posltlon\nwhere she taught three years. But\nshe had never learned to make frleuds\nthe perpie thought T er cold. unlnter\nestlng, dull, and one hopeless nlght\nwhen llfe seemed to offcr ber nothlng\nbnt deeoer and deeper uuhannlness,\nshe went to the rlver and w-- j about\nto end the struggle, wben a tniu\nstopped ber. He questlonetl ier klndly.\nand, Indeed, klndness was the doml- -\nnatlng notc Iu ble bearlnf.\n"Toor ittle girl.'
0600154342f6268ce18d69034cdff373 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.4986338481583 40.735657 -74.172367 One thousand five hundred (1.500) square\nyards brick pavement on a six (8) inch con-\ncrete foundation:\nTwelve (12) sets of 18 by 5 inch four cut\ncomers, set in concrete;\nThree hundred (300) lineal feet of new\nheader curb, set in concrete;\nThirteen (13) noiseless manhole covers.\nBids for the above bitulithic pavements\nmust Include a price bid per square yard\nper year for maintenance and repair of said\npavements during an additional and second\nperiod of five (6) years, arid under a guar-\nantee bond by a surety company or a bond\nwith surety acceptable to the Board of\nStreet and water Commissi oner-07 which may\nbe required at the option of the board at\nI any time before the expiration of tho first\nfive years guarantee.\nTHE CONTRACTS FOR ALL THE\nABOVE PAVINGS. IF AWARDED. SHALL\nBE AWARDED PROVISIONALLY BY\nTHE BOARD AND SHALL IMPOSE NO\nLIABILITY UPON THE CITY UNLESS\nfilTCH AWARD SMALL SUBSEQUENTLY\nBE FINALLY MADE THE HOARD;\nPRELIMINARY ASSESSMENT OF PROP-\nERTY SPECIALLY BENEFITED BY THE\nPROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS IS TO BE\nMADE AND PUBLIC HEARING ON THE\nSAME TO BE HELD. AFTER WHICH\nTHE BOARD MAY OR MAY NOT\nFINALLY AWARD THE CONTRACT TN\nACCORDANCE WITH CHAPTER 217 OF\nTHE STATE LAWS OF 1893.\nBidders are not to state any price for ma-\nteria Is and work for which there Is a fixed\namount provided for in the specifications.\nBach proposal must be enclosed in a sealed\nenvelope, properly indorsed with the name\nof the bidder qnd of the Improvement, and\ndirected to the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners of the City of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices In writing as\nwell as in figures.\nBidders must specify in tholr proposals\nthat should the above work be awarded to\nthem, they will bind themselves to finish and\ncomplete the same within the following num-\nber of consecutive .working days:\nFabyan Place resurfacing—Twenty-five (25)\ndays;
655568fdaa23da1c3da3bbca5a86b4da PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.7821917491121 31.960991 -90.983994 A lot of ground in Port Gibson, begin­\nning at a stake on the South side of Wal­\nnut street, 70 feet East of the corner of\nMain and Walnut streets, thence along\nWalnut street 30 feet to a stake at the\ncorner of W. R. Chambliss lot; thence at\na right angle with Walnut street along the\nline of the said W. R . Chambliss lot 123\nfeet, to a stake at the corner of a lot be­\nlonging to the heirs of Samuel Gibson;\nthence at a right angle through lot No. 1,\nin square No 1, 30 feet, to a stake; thence\nat a right angle through said lot 123 feet,\nto the place of beginning, an oblong\nsquare containing 3690 superficial square\nfeet, it being part of lot No 1, in square\nNo 1. Also, another lot of ground in said\ntown, beginning at a stake on the South\nside of Walnut street, at the corner of a\nlot granted by Stephen B. Minor & wife\nto the President, Directors & of the\nBank ofMississippi;thence along Walnut\nstreet 30 feet,toa stake; thence at a right\nangle with Walnut street through lot No\n2, in square No 1,123 feet, to a stake on\nthe line of a lot which belonged to the\nheirs of Samuel Gibson, deceased ; thence\nalong the line of said lot last mentioned\nto the corner thereof, where it joins the\nlot first above mentioned conveyed by S.\nB Minor & wife; thence along the line of\nthe same 123 feet, to the place of begin­\nning, being an oblong square, containing\n3690 superficial square feet, it being a part\nof lot No 2, in square Na 1. Also, 50 feet\nof ground on said Walnut street, adjoin­\ning the above described property, and run\nning back 190 feet East of the lot of\nwhich the particular description is given.\nAlso, lots No 3 and 4 in square No 22, in\nthe suburbs of St. Mary, in said town,\nfronting on College street 93 feet and run­\nning hack 300 feet.
35f32749946a003d99573647a55b048d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.3164383244546 41.681744 -72.788147 of visitors as a master of repartee,\nvarying his nightly refrain of "All the\n'Winners" and "Orribie Murder" with\nironical comments on the world's\nevents and caustic replies to pedes-\ntrians who ventured to bandy words\nwith him as thes' passed.\nPersons who knew Tich Tap ley in\nthe old days would scarcely recognize\nhim now in his khaki uniform with\na "crowned" ribbon on his breast in-\ndicating that he has been twice\nawarded the prized military cross. His\ncomrades of the London regiment,\nmoreover, declare that if he had been\nawarded a medal on every occasion\non which he has merited it he would\nbe covered with ribbon from head to\nfoot of his diminutive body.\nToo small to go into the army by\nthe regular channels, Tich after sev-\neral trials, was accepted a stretcher\nhearer in the London regiment. At\nthe front, he quickly became one of\nthe most popular men in the regi-\nment. On of his officers, in a. report\nto headquarters, said of him, "Cheer-\nfulness, courage, devotion to duty,\nand disregard of danger are as much\na part of his equipment as his haver-\nsack and his water bottle."\nTapley probably looks less like a\nhero than any other man in his bat-\ntalion. But his caustic, good-natur- e d\nhumor, which was little more than an\namiable diversion in civilian life, be-\ncame an invaluable asset in the\ntrenches, keeping up the morale and\noptimism of the whole battalion. His\nofficers find themselves continually\npaying tribute to his usefulnessi in this\nrespect. One of them wrote in a let-\nter a short time ago:
6b978dd77a1124c818bb2e1a20ba7d32 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.568493118975 39.369864 -121.105448 The mind is lost in admiration at the grandeur\nof such an army; and still more, in contempla-\ntion of the fact that it can and will be raised\nwithout a resort to conscription. This blessed\nGovernment of ours has been so beneficent in its\noperations—so impartial in its benefits—so mu-\nxxificent in its favors—so nourishing and cherish-\ning in aTI respects to its own citizens and the\ndown-trodden immigrant population of the Old\nWorld—that all loyal hearts are animated by one\ncommon impulse of affection, of gratitude and\ndevotion. From this honorable sentiment arises\nher independence, her strength and her glory.\nSix hundred thousand men under arms! The\narmies of the Allies, which decided the fate of\nEurope at Waterloo—drawn from England,\nRussia, Austria, Prussia and Switzerland—at\nno time exceeded seven hundred and fifty thous-\nand. Napoleon did all his hard fighting on that\nfamous field, with less than eighty thousand\ntroops. He invaded Russia with only four hun-\ndred and twenty thousand men ; and yet, since\nthe occurrence of those two sublime spectacles—-\nthose two magnificent armies—the world has not\nceased to think of them and speak of them with\nawe, mingled with veneration,for the genius and\nresources and energy which could summon forth\nsuch mighty squadrons. The task, doubtless,\nwas an arduous one. France, nation of war-\nriors, furnished most of her troops under the\nstringent law of coercion. Other European Pow-\ners did the same. But our Government, founded\non the principle of forbearance, cultivating terms\nof amity with all nations, with hardly the nucle-\nus of a regular force, utters a magic word, and\nthe tramp of volunteers, the sound of bugles,\nand the roll of drums, are heard from the farth-\nest western extremity to the utmost eastern boun-\ndary of the Republic. The flash of arms and\ngleam of banners, show that the loyal heart of a\npatriotic people has been touched. The arts of\npeace are abandoned for the grim realities of\nwar. Six hundred thousand men say to their\nChief Executive officer—“ You have called for us,\nand we are here. If the battle of Liberty is\nagain to be fought, we are prepared to meet its\nshock. Let it be brief, if possible; but decisive,\nno matter how how expensive or bloody!”\nWe speak of this force as if now actually in\nthe field. It soon will be there—before the arms\nand munitions are provided with which it is to\nto strike down the foe—and a half million more\nwill as readily obey the summons, when the\nproper time arrives for putting their courage to\nthe proof.
64028a4438564866f2ad1c70af447800 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5356164066463 39.261561 -121.016059 gUfttda gtmotrat.\nCtMiut. Iacihc Raii.hoai>.— The Mock-\nholder* of the Cen'ta! 1ucitic Railroad Co,\nmet in Sacramento on July IO1I1. The ob-\nject ol the meeting was to elect a Hoard ol\nnine Directors, to serve for the ensuing\nyear. The active operations of the past\nyear were cm.lined to the tiling of the nec-\nessary papers to incorporate the Company,\nand to securing a complete railroad survey\nover the Sierra Nevada. This was accom-\nplished last year by T. D . Junrii, engineer\nol the Company. Ilis repot twits printed,\nand with the accompanying maps, was laid\nbefore Congress The fact that a railroad\nCompany bad been organized in California\nntul the survey of u route made by its or\nder. exei ti d a Ini go influence in the pas-\nsage of the Railroad hill. At the\nmeeting on the lOlli, over liircc fourths ol\nthe sti ek subscribed was represented, thru\nthe at tendance of stockholders was rather\nslim. The Directors ol the past year were\nnnunitn uslv re elected. They are; D. W.\nStrong, Dutch Flat; Charles Marsh Neva\nda; h. A. Booth. San Francisco; C. I*, linn\ntiugton. Matk Hopkins, Leland Stanford.\nJumes'Bailev, Theodore Judah and Charles\nCmcker, Sacramento. No action was had\nas to the future course of the Company\nThe bill parsed by Congress has not been\nreceived, and until it comes to hand the\nDirectors are not certain of its specilic\nprovisions. The engineer, too, has been in\nWashington all winter; he is expected to\nreach home shortly, and until his arrival\nno active steps ate likely to be taken.—\n[Sac. Union.
1e77783466e2d30cc18f2d0c4017f63e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.7493150367834 39.513775 -121.556359 taking itself, would thus be compensated, is\ncertainly more than doubtful. Urged by\nthe in«: incts of self-defense, with a view to\ncentralizing herself, Marysville, with her\nknown sagacity, might favor such a rouje.\nsince it wou'd teturd rail communication\nbetween tins town and Sacramento.\nBut can we doubt that the lights which\ncompanies now organizing have before* them\nto guide their deliberations, woui-i hesitate\nto reject a route where the safety to the\nundertaking iiself, to say me least. is prob-\nlematical, the extensive alluvial section in-\ncluded on this route, which in any country\narc highly unsafe for undertakings of so\nponderous a Intruder, subjecting ibetn to\nannual disarrangement and disaster, be-\nsides ibe huge capital, even. In build one\nbridge, ami succcs-fully overcome the engi\nneering difliculties that art* sure to present\nthemselves at points on our liver where the\nbanks are the formation of diluvial deposit\nA reliable history of our State, being con-\nfined to the pern d which we have occupied\nit, iloes not afford data sufficient—our ob-\nservations do not extend over a sufficient\npetiod—to guaiantec the establishment of\nponderous works on ailuual regions\nOroville, from locality, and physical rela-\ntion. -is devoid ot these objectionable feat-\nures, whilst she possesses otner'iuducements\nto railway enterpiise. J refer to the ex-\n coal field- and lime ranges The\nformer are extensive and fair qua ity, and\npromise, with railway proximity, to open a\nvast field lor enterprise This is no vague\nillu-ion, [reused into service to bolster op a\ncause, for without the fear of contradiction,\n1 assert that our coal-fields will greatly and\npermanently advance both local and c unty\ninterests, and de-pito the competition from\nthe mines of Oregon, prove a source of profit\nby extended interior consumption, gieatly\nmodifying the crushing expemliiure under\nwhich our manutactoi ies labor (rum the con-\nsumption of wood as tuel. Their di-c-vt-ry\nis at least the supply of one de-idoi ata oi\nour State-1 refer to coal and him Its\nchief value, however, to Oroville, t- th at it\nwill give her (acuities (or manufacture, and\ninvite railway Mttei prise\nFrom our youthful and undeveloped con-\ndition as a State, great hazard besets -uclt\ngigantic enterprises, that in states that h ivu\nsurmounted the incipient difficulties inci-\ndent Ito development, does not occur, and\nas a natural c n-cquonce economy i puma-\nry capital outl-iy t- tmperiou-ly denmnded\nand would most safely fie c mditi.med to our\npresent interior demands with hooted pros-\n[eeltve txpictation; hence back m retain\nIrieglit is a matter of »hc-derpe-i importance\nto railway enterprises, by ml* appliance of
5aee0f4bb8ea0a3b87709fb9c1cea8f6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.0863013381531 39.745947 -75.546589 Troop No. 1 held Its meeting Friday j«» Jollification Day and Is the anmver-\nevenlng with good attendance. We had, eery day of the Boy Scouts of America\ntwo visitors. Paul Speakman and Irv-1 All other scouts of Wilmington are In-\nJng Lamphe e, who expect to become I v ted to Join us In the hike and will be\nmembers of the troop soon. After shown a day of fun. Those scouts\ntroop matters were attended to we "ho will find It convenient to go fo\nplayed, “Prisoners Base" and “Ougln.” all day will assemble at Bockford Tow-\nIn playing "Gugln,” Scout Edwin Mort- er not later <!han 9.30 on that morning\ntmer tried to put a hole In th; floor and then hike to the Alapocas Woods\n3n the flrst act. After we finished B •* nnlng at 2 oclock a flag will be\nplaying games. Scouts Francis Porwell, | at the camp of Troop No 3 In\nJames Ponsell and Walter McKalg took j the woods and guards posted while ah\nThe second class running test. Troop other scouts present will be sent out\nNo. 36 thinks they have us beat all ■ as real scouts to capture and bring In\nto hollow but they have another think ; any attacking scouts which they may\ncoming, for under the supervision of | find In the woods The fl-st dlst let, un-\nour new assistant scoutmaster. Rieh- der Mr. Quinn, will attack the camp\n.ird Kendall, we sure are stepping up | from the east, entering the woods by\nth; pike. All fellows be out next Frl-lwey of Brandywine Quarry, while th*\nday In full uniform to attend the en-1 second district, under Mr. Bleking, will\nrollment of two new scouts and a good\nJtlme and "be prepa ed" to pass tests.
bab3de93212781c6b34620426e57476a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.2589040778792 41.681744 -72.788147 A fine of $25 and costs was im-\nposed in the case of George D.\nPhelps, 41, of 483 Blue Hills ave-\nnue, who pleaded guilty to the\ncharge of reckless driving on East\nstreet. Attorney Irving I. Rachlin\nrepresented him and assured the\ncourt that rhelps regretted the ac-\ncident he caused last evening and\nwas prepared to settle for the dam-\nage to a car driven by Edward\nToczko of 122 Miller street, which\nho struck with great force and\npractically ruined, according to Of-\nficer Louis E. Harper.\nAssistant Prosecuting Attorney W.\nM. Greenstein told the court that\nPhelps was driving north on East\nstreet near the Hayes Construction\nCo. office about 5:15 o'clock last\nevening and two cars were going in\nthe opposite direction. Daniel Sul-\nlivan of 113 Greenwood street was\ndriving tho first car and Toczko the\n Sullivan, to avoid being\nstruck by rhelps' car, swerved out\nof the way, but Toczko could not\nfollow him and was hit.\nToczko and Phelps were driven\nfrom the scene of the accident by\nan employe of Karl Hoffman, ac-\ncording to the police report, and\nwent to Attorney Rachlin's home\nwhere an agreement was made for\nsettling the damage to Toczko's car,\nbut Toczko balked at signing it and\nwent to the police station with the\nresult that Phelps was arrested\nabout two hours after the accident.\nAttorney Greenstein said there\nwas a suspicion that Phelps had\nbeen drinking but the state was un-\nable to produce witnesses to sub-\nstantiate such an allegation and so\nthe Teckless driving charge was pre-\nferred. Toczko was thrown out of\nhis car through the door by the\nforce of tho impact and sustained\nminor injuries.
1922008119ce1080639167d22280a1c2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.3109588723999 41.681744 -72.788147 A peculiar feature of the decision\nis that the finding. of the jury in this\ncase hall not be binding on the court,\ns, if it is dissat isfied a with the ver\ndict, it may disregard the same and\nrender a decision as if a jury had\nrot heard the case. The decision cov-\nered yome points that were never cov-\nered in previous decisions in this case.\nIn the first place Justice Hendricks\nsaid that it should bo borne In mind\nthat Thaw is not confined as a crim-\ninal or as punishment for crime. He\nhas been acquitted of the crime with\nwhich he was charged and there can\nbe no punishment for one who has\nbeen acquitted. He is confined in a\nstate hospital for the insane as a pre-\ncaution for the public?" His confine-\nment, resulting from the exercise of\nthe police power of the state, which\npermits the restraint of an Insane\nperson who, at large, would be a dan-\nger to the peace and safety of the\npublic, the can only last\nso long as he is insane, and he has.\nthe right at any time, under the law',,,\nto have his sanity determined upon\nhabeas corpus. That sounds sensible\nand those who agree with it are not\nnecessarily in favor of Thaw as a\nman and neither do they in the least\ntry to condone the wickejdness he. has\ndone. There is a question of justice\nin the case now that , was not there\nwhen he was tried for murder. The\nlaw said he was insane then, but it\ndoes not follow that he must always,\nremain insane. Many recover from\nthat ailment and if they do they\nshould not be kept confined in an asy-\nlum. The only way to determine the\nquestion of his sanity is to have the\nmatter tried out in a court of law.\nThe attorney general instead of taking\nan appeal from the decision of the\ncourt should have been the first to\nacquiesce in the decision and should\nassist in having the point at issue\nprcperly determined.
11072ecea118f2de2edfbb78b8325d1d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.3767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 . Sprixg Beekzes.. - ' 'fsj»ri ng has come"\nva» the startling announcement made in\n>ur first literary efforts. Am! our halt\nlozcn linen told of hiossotus. birds, ami\n>uzzing bees, skipping lambs, Ac. If we\nlad spoken our own sentiments we would\nlave sung the praise* of plump little pigs,\nor, although the skiopiiiK was well ex-\n.'cuti-'d, we never could admire the great\niwkwanl leg* out of ull proportion to the\namh's thin little body. Ah the lamb\ncrew in grace and stature, lie grew in\navor in our sight, hut then he had he*\n:oine a sheep, and we didn't want to ap-\ntear sheepish. We hud a model for our\n'compositions," and, like writers of a\narger growth, we gave other |K?oplc's\n)pinioiH instead of our own. Spring\n* as to uk then altogether lovely. It\nncant one long play dav in which\n*e could run, jump ami make all\nthe noise we wanted to, and when\ntired could lie down and rest on\n;hej fresh grass, and make panoramic,\npictures in the lleecy clouds. In that\nfairy land of ours, work ami worry were\nmitrmown mid luiitM' rloaninir woji rare'\n Hroorns and mops were mettlesome\nsteeds nuti ladies' jialfrov. -, ami carpet*,\nitretolled on poles, were wigwams, and we\na w hole tribe of whooping Indian*. But!\nnow, "spring has come" to us in another\niiMjH'ct, us many a frantic woman can cor-:\nlily. Spring to her (means business. Hut\nwlierc must she commence? She don't\nknow whether to work in the garden or\nclean house. She has studied the Floral\nCatalogues with one eve on the hole in\nthe carpet, and wondering which widths\nto rip to make the thin place come under\nthe table, and where she could put the\npatch to have it out of sight; and in trying\nto make out which of her flower-seeds arc\nhardy, which |H>roniual and which\nannual, she ha* become distracted. She\nwants to get her flower-bed# fixed up, /or\nit is getting late, hut the wind Mow* cold,\nand she dare not let the children stay\nout. It is high time to begin cleaning\nhouse, too, hut too cold to havu the stoves\ntaken down. She wishes she knew if it\nwas going to rain, liecanse, if it rained,\nJames promised to help her clean the
d3d1cf2f104db953b81735167a0ce725 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.5082191463723 43.798358 -73.087921 men's sins, our remonstrances might then\nreach the witness for God in their bosoms,\nand our efforts in behalf of our suffering\noutcast brother be crowned with success.\nAnother cause of strengthening the\nchains of slavery, and enlarging its do-\nminion so as to embrace the free colored\npopulation within its crushing influence,\nis found in the cruel and unwarrantable\nprejudice against color, which almost\nuniversally obtains in this country, and\nwhich it is to be fe;ired the members of\nour society are contributing their share to\ncherish and perpetuate. The children of\ncolored parents are not allowed to associate\nwith those of the whites on terms of equal-\nity, either at school or in social inter-\ncourse; and being thus in early childhood\ntaught to regard themselves as a proscrib-\ned race, their intellects are crippled and\ntheir spirits crushed in a degree greatly\nprejudicial to their improvement and fu-\nture charactar; and entering upon\nactive life they find all the avenues to a\nrespectable standing in society closed\nagainst them, and they are compelled to\nseek a livelihood by such employments as\nare only pursued by the lowest claeses in\ncommunity. Finding that no exertions\non their part can enable them to rise above\nthe degraded level to which this prejudice\nhas consigned them, that all their oflbits\nto attain to respectability are rendered un-\navailing by it, they lose one of the strong-\nest incentives to indr.stiy and economy and\ngradually sink to a state of debasement\nand wretchedness; and thus to a superficial\nobserver seem to confirm the unjust and\nimpious sentiment, that the colored race\nwas designed by the Creator to occupy a\nsubordinate rank in the family of man-\nkind; when in fact our own treatment ot\nthem is the only cause of their inferiority.\nThe degraded condition of the free col- -
319e955b93e47a8d9061708729fa40db EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.6150684614408 39.745947 -75.546589 of eighteen miles an hour. It carries j\n2.700 passengers with speed, safety j\nand comfort. New machinery has j\nrecently been Installed at a cost of i\n$36.000, as well as nil modern im­\nprovements. The "President." while j\nnot permitted by the present law to\ncarry over 2,700 people, has often !\ncarried 4,000. and once had on board\n8,000 passengers\nAll the Catholic societies and or­\nganizations of Wilmington arc being\nInvited to participate and make It\nthe greatest excursion of the season\nThe steamer "Thomas Clyde” Is also\nbringing a Catholic excursion from\nPhiladelphia, including the St Ann I\nCatholic Club baseball team, which\nIs to play the Wilmington Pioneers\nfor a silver trophy.\nTho trip down the Delaware bay\nwill be enlivened by the Temple\nquartette, orchestra and hand of mu­\nsic. The band will, likewise, play at\nthe ball game Both shores the\nDelaware otford beautiful and inter­\nesting scenery, Including watering\nplaces, old and quaint towns, great\ncentres of war time activity, and the\ngreat shipping between the ü. S. A .\nand foreign countries.\nThe resort Itself—Augustine Beach\n—is the only salt-water bathing beach\non the Delaware bay. With a large\nup-to-date hotel, new bath house of\n500 sanitary rooms all furnished In\nlatest style] with all modern amuse­\nments for young and old, all kinds |\nof refreshments, shelters from rain,\na large shady picnic grove with per­\nmanent tables and seats. Augustine\nts a ddlghtful spot tor a days rest\nfrom labor and summer heat.\nThe President will leave Augustine\nsi 5 oclock and unload at King\nstreet wharf at 7 oclock,\nets will be at popular prices,\ncents and 25 cents and the receipts\nwill be used for the Catholic Cen­\ntenary celebration of 1916.
037166ab9f94de00e4a3aa34f3d20e91 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1896.7745901323112 43.624497 -72.518794 Tho Brattloboro jclly cunipnuy hus been\nreorgaulzed iulo a stoek company wlth a\ncapltal of 10,000. Elght now menibors havo\nbcor. ndmlttod. It is propoed to enlargo\nthe business and estnbllsh ageacles in othor\nBi.' ctions of tho state.\nK.ra Clark ot Hartford, Ct., dled Suturday\nln his 83d yeur. Jlr. Clark was born In\nBrattleboro ln 1813, but hus llved ln Hart-\nford slnco 1819.\nTlio mlll ot tho Valenllao knitting com -pa n- v\nat Huntington has beeu shut dowu for\ninck" of ordors. Qulto a iiumbor of liands ln\ntho mlll of Holden, Leonnrd fc Co., havo\nalso boen lald off for a tlmu.\nTliu frost of Suptombor 23 was not vury\nsovoro iu most of Vermont, owing to clouds\nand fog. Thoro was snow 011 tho mountniii\ntops 011 tlio 23d. The grass in llolds nud\npnsturcs Is well rootod, and the outlook Tor\nnoxt vcur Is very promlslug. Early siied\nland nlTeeted by drought but luto seod -i n- g\nis oxcollont. Thecrop' roports for tho\nsousoti of 1896 show that tho oold snaps of\nJunuary 4th to 8th, and Fcbrunry 17th and\n18th, kllled practlcnlly all the peach buds in\nNew England, maay of the buds on plutn\ntrces, somo raspberry cauos, and daraagod\ndover llelds to a modornte oxtont.\nTho followlng Vermontorn liavo lieen\nsrrnnted nenslons : Orlglnal, Josnpli K. Dar- -\nllng, Chelsea j Joseph Wllson, Murslillold',\naddltlonal, aiarquis i.aiaycuo muns, jjran-co- n\nj incrouse, Davld K. llambliu, Bristol;\nrels.siie, John liis.sett, North Verrlsburgli;\nEdmund Upton, Worcester ; origlnnl,wldow,\nLuciniln Keeler, Morrisville.\nIn tho oasoof stato vs. Dr. E . Htovons for\nlllognl llshlng, ln Orleans county oourt, tho\nvordlct was gullty and flne S100 nnd uosts.\nTlils wns qulto anlntorcsting casopnrtlculur- -\nly lo thoso wno eujoy usmng. i.nst juuy\nl'fon. Hornuo W. Hniley ot Newbury, tho\nstato llsh commlsslonor, took from Dr.
10d36c9724885eee95f4c1edd392120a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 We can hardly open a page of bistorj\nwhich does not record the rame or some\nbeauty; the Bible has Its Rachel, who\nwas so lovely that twent v years of ser¬\nvice was deemed a light fee for her afloc\ntions; the world was lost for Cleopatra,\nthe beautiful mistresses of French kings\nruled that empire through the hearts ot\ntheir imperial lovers, und even down\nto the time of George the tourth of\nEngland there has always been some\nlady whose charms have been more\npowerful than tho monarch and prime\n'"iiut'Y^tbink tho problem rnny be\nsolved. It is tho difference of dress-\ncostume does it all. Revive the robing\nof bvgone ages, and you will reviV®\ntho'beauty and tho ugliness of those\ndays; for there must have been a gooa\ndeal or ugliness, otherwise the beauty\nwould not have been so forcibly appre¬\nciated. Had there been more pretty\ncirls in the days of Troy, Helen would\nlave had few suitors.aud inhuin might\nhave been standing yet. What I\nto sty is this; in those days people\ndressed so unbecomingly that unless\ntheir features were almost perfect, the>\nwere literally nothing. All tho\ngraces which set off a mediocre Person\nnow, were totally unavailing under\nthat s\\'stem of costume. i\nFor instance, Helen must have worn\na loose lobe, broad girdle, J1".""mi\nsandals on her feet, and hPf hair bou id\nback in those rich magnificent braids,\ntermed to tbisday, "Grecian Plaits.\nBut imagine for u moment all your\n dressed '" 'bis wav.\nWould not tho ma ority be frightfull\nHow few faces, how few copiplerfons\ncould stand that banding back or the\nthick hair; how few torms would show\nwell beneath the simple robe,\nstavs or stiff petticoats; how few feit\nwould bo endurable in sandalB; how\nfew anus would bear tho noon-day sun\narid tho sharp winds which would\nsoon reduce them to tlw pattern and\nform of a wusher-womon s 7\nPerhaps tho old Jewish costumes\nworn by Rebecca and Rachel may have\nb«n a better shade, but there was the\nsame exposure of tho nock and arms,\nwith the additlonaj, disadvantngeofa\nrobe that showed arteg encased in bide-,\nous hose and boots, and that refused to\nSweep with Grecian amplitude around\nthe limbs of the fair wearer.\nCleopatra, who is represented as be¬\ning both dark and stout, could wear\nonly the robes ot white or purple, and\ntho heavy diadem and strings 01 pearls\nthat were allotted as tho garb of fc.gyp -\ntian princes. How dark and uu-\ncomely must have been tthe.,n"Jor1iJy\nher countrywomen may Ii^man\nthe sensation sho made, ihe Koman\nladies were famed for their stately car-\nria«o and somewhat largo but noble\nfeatures* and when to these charms\nthev added regularity, delicacy and\nbeautiful color, no doubt their simple\n"pen coquette" stylo of dress was very\nbecoming to them, but without the lat¬\nter qualification how gaunt.aud coarse\nthey must have appeared.\nWhat can be more lovely ^nn ,
470a7d401b617e946a50b6f3084383b4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.6013698313038 58.275556 -134.3925 The Interior I* evidently experi¬\nencing . groat ulmon shortage the\niam» an the roast region, but ar-\nordlng >o the following from the\nS'enana New*, the raiiHe la the can-\naery at the mouth of the Yukon:\nThere la miirh complaint among\nthe fishermen of tho Tanana and\nfukon rivers be .nine of the scarcity\ntf salmon this "nnson, which they\nattribute to the operation of the\n'arllsle cannery near the mouth of\nihe Yukon. The Ash ware later than\nusual In making their appearance\ninri now that the run has atartcd. a\nleclded scarcity of fish Is noted, os-\nleclally flsh of the larger alges.\nThat there will be ¦ shortage of\ntalmon throughout the Interior\nountry this season Is predicted by\nnearly all of tho local fishermen,\nft-ho declaro that the canaery even-\nlually will kill off practically all\nhe Yukon salmon, causing great\n among the natlvea and\ncaving the towns along the rivers\n1 1 most wholly dependent upon gray¬\ning and whllcflsh for variation of\nllet during the summer.\nSome of tho salmon caught near\nS'enana during the psst several daya\nihow unmlstskable signs of having\niron delayed en route by the nets of (\nhe t'arlisle fishermen at the mouth\n>f the Yukon. The net marks are\nplainly visible.\nThe awclty of which local flsher-\nerinen complain has not ye t been\nnoticed by the general public, there I\nItclng ample flsh for present con <\nitimptlon needs. The shortage. If 1\nluch It proves to bo. will sffect the f\n-ured product nnd the winter aup- i\nl>ly of salmon helllea.\nAt the prevailing prices, a 50-cent I\ntalmon. fresh from the water, will\nprovide two meals for a family of <\ntwo or three persons.
622b99fa7854e87cac5769a41fbcc929 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.4631147224752 41.681744 -72.788147 10 men back to the bench via the\nstrikeout route. He was in trouble\nonly once. The visitors managed to\nescape a shutout in the seventh in-\nning when they pushed over their\nlone run. Springfield had the tying\nruns on the bags in this inning but\nAtwood forced the visitors to roll out\nweakly to the infield.\nMeanwhile Dunbar had been us-\ning a teasing slow ball throughout\nthe first five innings and had the\nlocals popping up to the inlield con-\ntinually. In the sixth inning the Fal-\ncons suddenly found Its batting eye\nand crashed out two doubles and two\nsingles in a row to score three runs.\nOutside of this inning the locals\nfound difficulty in hitting Dunbar's\nslants with any degree of success.\nThe visiting hurler eight\nhits in all, four of the btngles go.\nIng for two bases.\nAn Idea of the superb form shown\nby the pitchers can be seen hi the\nbox score. Counting the men that\nwalked on both sides, but SI men\nfaced the Falcon hurler and only 33\nbatters faced Dunbar.\nKredar shut off a threatening rally\nof the Springfield aggregation in the\nfourth inning when he made a beau-\ntiful catch of McCabe's low liner to\nrentpr field and doubled Shea off\nsecond. Both teams accorded their\npitchers great support, only one er-\nror being committed 1n the entire\ngame. The Falcons had 11 assists\nagainst 14 for the visitors. F .aeh of\nthe six outfielders that covered the\nouter gardens during the afternoon\nhad but one chance each.
1d6a6f8d1a36dc767d73e9622c111618 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8041095573312 40.063962 -80.720915 himself, in one lurm or another, ho\nhas found solace in the drama. It Is bo\neasy a lest Irom care to sit before the\nstage and watch the working ol mimic\ntroubles, and It is a diversion so easily\ncapable ol being turned to exalted-and\nenobling purposes, that among the many\ninstruments by which its work is done,\nreligion could hardly have ioundone more\nhandy than the natural love ol theatage.\nBut the religion ot the present day, the\nreligion ol the Reformation, whleh was a\nprotest against laxity in any thing, and the\nreligion of the Catholics, which has been\nput on its guard by an opposition un-\nknowDbclore, havoaliko maintained an\nattitude of suspicion and defiance, end\nvery olteu an attitnde of open hostility, to\nthe drama and everything connected with\nit. As thu drama steadily flourished\nin spite ol such hostility, aa tho members\nol ttie protasion have steadily arisen in\nsocial recognition and in the sense ot their\nown worth and dignity, would it not be 1\nbetter on tbe whole for the tburcheatp\nrecognize existing facts? to pause and ast\nthemselves whether they cuh|d not tetter\nguide and use thlsnatural instinct which\nthey cm neither abolish nor suppnEte?\nWhy should it not? We will take tbe\nplay ol Samson, as It is played In Italian\nby Salvina, as it has been played in Eog\nlish during the past week by Mr. Charles\nPope, and we dely'the most censorious\ncritic t» And In it a scene, a sentiment, a\nline, that derogates from that respect due\nto the ISiblc. Even it the story of Bamson\nwis an essential part ol tho Christian bu-
18240484cf8ec892a66772e9f7d10ad9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.37397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 Yesterday, about 2 o'clock, I wa\nserved with au oftcial order from Ma\njor General Willcox, prohibiting ii\nLynchburg the delivery of my lectur\non "The Chivalry of the South." Sup\nposing that he had been misinformei\nas to its character, I called upon him\nin company with the Mayor, who cour\nteously accompanied me at my specia\nrequest, and I assured Gen. Willcox tha\nthera was nothing incendiary or xnflavx\nmatory in the lecture; that it was purel'\nan historical subject, and requested bin\nto revoke the order of prohibition. Hi\nrefused. I reminded him that thi\ngreatest latitude of speech had beei\ntolerated recently in Virginia, am\nasked in common justice, that 1 migh\nnot be restrained from delivering ai\naddress on a subject in no way conneclet\nwith the political issues oj the (lay. Hi\nstill refused. I theiefore had no alter\nnative thau to submit to his edict, unti\nI refer the matter to Gen. Scofleld, an(\nin the event of his prohibition, I sbal\nappeal directly to the President of tb\nUnited States, who, I am sure, nobl\nman and patriot as he is, will do m<\njustice, as he did in a former inHtanc\nwhen my paper, the Richmond Kxami\ntier, was supposed by Gen. Terry.\nI cannot see the justice of permittin]\nunrestricted liberty of speech on on\nside, and denying it the other. Wha\na spectacle has there been presenter\nrecently in Virgin a! Hunnicutt ha\nbeen allowed to roam at will througl\nthe State, and deliver himself of th\nmost inflammatory harangues. Henr;\nWilson, of Boston, has taken tin\nstump. The extreme Radicals havi\nheld a convention in Richmond ii\nwhich the taking of our lands by vio\nlence was even openly advocated to th\nnegroes, and the most incendiary senti\nments uttered. Was there any inter\nference here? No! But when a Vir\nginia gentleman undertakes to delive\na lecture in his native State upon\nsubject purely historical, he is forbid\nden! It cannot be alleged, in suppor\nof General Willcox's oflicial{action,tha\nmy lecture was incendiary, for it ha;\nnever yet been delivered to the nublic\nand no mortal eye but my own an<\nthat of two intimate friends have eve\nseen or read it, and bence be bad ni\nright to prejudge it, much leas to bas\nhis official action upon a mere supposi\ntion and inference of its character.\nI am determined to deliver tbis lec\ntui e,and if I am prevented by military\nlaw from delivering it in the Southeri\nStates, I hope there is yet left a lam\nwherein liberty of speech exists, am\nwhere a discourse upon an innocent\nrational and historical subject will I*\nconsidered neither offensive nor dan\ngerous?
080cf31032d6d26de8363ff5e428ef89 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.4123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 £ Ing sun arose amid the booming of can\nnon and the evening sun went dow\namid the ratlin or munKeirj. i«. .«»\nbloody conflict. Those battlefields: the\nwere covered with the dead and the dy\nlog, and the mountain streams even I\nour own state ran rod with the blood c\nour comrades. All this was done t\n[: preserve us a nation. It Is well thes\nobject lessons In patriotism be kept, s\nthat the boys and girls of to-day ma\nknow the sacrifices made, the danger\nbraved and the hardships endured b\ntheir fathers In the great civil strlf<\nEvery man who enlisted In the arm;\ngave hi* life to his country. Just as tru\nly as did those that fell on the battle\nfield or died In the prison pen or th\nhospital. We. my comrades, who sur\nvlved th* sho<-k were but the luck\nones. Shoulder to shoulder and elboi\np to elbow we stood through the flgh\nwith those who fell by the deadly bill\nlet. We escaped, that was all. In th\ngreat Jehovah's plan our comrades wer\nto fall und we have been spared to He\nthe fruits of the great struggle. W\nj. have be*n permitted to live to enjo.\nthe blessingH of lllwrty In the greate*\ncountry on the **arth. Then while w\nlive let up do we can to mnke oil\ncountry better. And young men an\nyonng women, boys and girls, it wll\nsoon devolve upon you to keep allv\nthes* services that we will keep up a\nlong as there lives an old soldier able t\ngo to the rnetery on this day. But th\nyoung'-st soldier Is young no longer an\nthey will soon be gone. One by one th\nboys are falling on our right and on ou\nleft. It was said for a time after th\nwar that a company passed over th\nriver each year. Then earh twelv\nmonths a regiment was mustered out\n1h»^n a brigade every year; soon a ell\nvision yearly passed In review past th\nGreat Captain- Then an army corpj\nwhile last year nearly two corps pitch\ned their silent tents on "Fame's Kternn\nramping Grounds." Ho to you boys an\ngirls, to you are committed the ta«X o\nkeeping alive th^se memories. An\ncomrades, i<»i urtiby our Uvea so Impros\nthnm that when we nre pone It will no\nonly be considerort u duty, hut a pa\ntrlotlc pleasure for them t" do no."\n11f also j«poke of the animosities en\niremlend by the war an dlsappearln\nyear after year, until now Confederate\nnnd Union soldiers Join each other I\ndecorating the graven of our dead a\nthey did yesterday.
69e786ab5c46c7c1ede6b1e3a5ca80d3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.6123287354135 39.745947 -75.546589 ready arrived In Washington consid­\nered yesterday the granting of\nblanket authority to President Hard­\ning to deal with the strike situation\nas necessity may require.\nSuch general authority. It Is ex­\nplained. would give the President the\npower to take over the railroads if\nhe sees fit, or any part of them, any\nnumber of coal mine« necessary to\nprevent a fuel famine, and to use\nthe full power of the Government to\nsee that its mandates ate obeyed.\nThe determination of Congress to\ndealy firmly with the strike, if it is\nnot quickly settled, was supported by\nthe reports of House members ar­\nriving early for the session which\nwill begin on Tuesday. These mem­\nbers bring back word that the public\nis fully cognizant of the danger\nwhich will result from a prolonga­\ntion of the railroad coal strikes,\nand is ready to support the Presi­\ndent In any course he may take.\nThe public, these members say, Is\nlosing patience with any disposition\nto temporize with the acute phase\nof the situation now presented. Vir­\ntually all of the States report coal\nrunning short. They are threatened\nwith industrial paralysis and all of\nthe evidences of returning prosper­\nity promise to be wiped out by the\ncontinuation of the coal strike, ag­\ngravated by the threatened spread of\nthe railroad strike. Among those\nwho brought this report to Wash­\nington were Representatives Roden-\nburg (Illinois). Hull (Iowa) *and\nTaylor (Tennessee.) .\nThese members say the public\nrealizes that not only Is the country\nfacing an industrial slump on ac­\ncount of the strikes, but actual dis­\ntress and possible loss of life next\nwinter.
092ec362aa603c2a24b8123bf4396dd8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.0397259956874 40.063962 -80.720915 - Iiicaoo, Ills., Jan. 14 . .Flour firm and un- ve\nunged. Wheat, active, Ilrm and higher: opened a.\n\\% lower, genenUly advauced. l^c, declined He,\nctuatcd and closed IJ^c above yesterday; re- m\nIpts show a slight falling oil', and exports con- Pi\nme free; sales ranged: January 79%a8$fc, closed 1\nsoke; February 7l%iSlc, dosed at 80%a81o;\nirch 80a81Mc, closed at 81Hc; May 8»&87Hc,\nwed at bVAoi No. 2 Chicago spring 79>f*80Hc, ^\n*cd at 80Ma8O%c; No. 2 red 80Hc. Corn lu lair L\ninand and ruled stronger; January and February\nwed V/mC higher, May tic higher; cash37%a37%c;\nnuary 30Ha38c. closed at 3iTic; Fehruanr SOKa\nclosed at 87|ic; March w%a37%o, closed at\n£a37%c; May 4tf£a41kc, dosed at 4lHc. Oats g\ngood demund aud prices u shade higher; cash\n4a2SHc: February 26kJa2G3^c, closed at 'JOCo: *.\nirch 26Ha2»%c, closed at 2flJ{c; May A\nfttiUHc, closed at W/Zc.. Bye strong at\nBaricy quiet .at OjWsc. Flaxseed iu .\nr 'demand at 91 47H- Pork, demand\nttvo and stronger; prices 2Cc lowct&carly adneed\n27He and closed steady; cash III 80al200;\nbuary til Mol2 03, closed at 912 (&: March\n.90*12 15, closed at91215; May 912 lfial2 42H,\nwed at 912 42H- Lord demand scthe; sold down\nearly advanced 10c and dosed-steady; cash\n7!4aC.K!&c; 8Jt2>{a^87kc, closed at ]\n7} ie; March O.OOaO.V7%c, closed at 6.97Hc; May to\nSa'.lOc,dosed at 7.1&c. Bulk meats lu fairde- ne\nLiid; shoulders 4.90a5.00o; short rib 0.00c; short hu\nar 0.40aG.45c. Whisky steady and unchanged at J\n13. lluttcr firm and uuchanged, Eggs weak at frc\n1. Afternoon board.Wheat Arm and unchanged. Ini\nrn Ilrm cud KaKo higher. Oatssteady; February t\nvancod He. Pork stronger and 7Hal0c higher. 91\nrd firmer and 2Ho higher. 1\nIaltihor*, Md., Jan. 14 . .Flour steady and\nrly active; western superior |280a2 85; cxtro P*\n)0a8C5: family $3 76a4 75; aupcrlatlvo uatent ,J\n75. Wheat, western Irregular.higher aiiadull; ,re\n2 western winter red "spot 89H«i bid; January\nasked; Febru*rr»9l«>l|6j; March 92^a92!fc; 1\nrll WHo bids May WWuKHc. Corn, western =\niher and active; mixed spot 4%o4%c; Janu>\n4M%a bid; February 48a48Wo; March 48c\n1; steamer 47%c bid, Oats firm and quiet;\nitorn white87aftc; do mixed 84a3flc; Pennsyal- A\nla 35a39o. Ryo easier at CSaTlc. Hay steady; p\nme to cholco Pennsylvania 9H OOalo 60, Fro.\nions steady and qulot: mess pork, old, 918 50; I\na, 918 75; bulk meats, shoulders and dear rib\nes paokudfla7Hc; bacon, shoulders 7c; dear rib «">\ncs 8Hc; hams U#al2Hc. Lard, refined h%c. npi\ntterquiet; westora packed lla2Ic; creamer)' 22
3d5709cfc5318be00ba8c901c7ca0b82 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.7082191463724 41.681744 -72.788147 "At the early meetings of your\ncommittee, your committee was\nunanimously in favor of reproducing\npermanently a memorial that should\nhave the general lines of the pres-\nent temporary memorial, namely:\nan arch and individual monuments\nfor each of the dead soldiers. So\nsoon however as we invited propose\nals for such a memorial wo found\namong all of those who came here\nand inspected tho site and desired\nto compete for the memorial the\nunanimous opinion that a memorial\nupon the present site was imprac-\ntical; and after showing them about\nthe city they all concurred in rec-\nommending that the memorial be\nput upon the northern end of the\ntop of the hill in the park.\n"Tho objections to tho site of the\ntemporary memorial arch as set\nforth by Mr. Magonigle in his letter\nof July 31 represent practically what\nwas said all those, whose opinions\nwere asked upon the subject. Mr.\nMagonigle says: 'This silo In my\nopinion offers practically insupera-\nble obstacles to a successful treat-\nment for a pjermanent memorial.\nThe land slopes in two directions\nwith the roadway and with the side\nhill in such a manner that an ex-\nceedingly heavy expense would be\ninvolved in preparing the location\nfor the site. A memorial at this\npoint especially if it took the form\nof an arch owing to the width of\nthe roadway would have to be of\nsuch a height to he nf good propor-\ntion that an arch of 1ho size re-\nquired would demand enormous\na hutments and the. cost would prob-\nably be' more than New Hiitain\nwould be prepared to spend.'\n"In conversation Mr. Magonigle\nenlarged this opinion and stated\nthat an arch placed in that posi-\ntion,
466db4db08decb88c69c7578cdcc1021 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.2616438039067 39.745947 -75.546589 A reception at the arsenal, a luncheon\nat the Kxcelslor, visit to the Duke and\nDuchess of Aosta, at Bapo Dl Monte, auto­\nmobile ride to Posllllpo, v.slt to the Naples\nMuseum, dinner at the Excelsior, reception\nto friends and tho boarding of the Admi­\nral. Eight distinct affairs in eight hours!\nNaples Isn't sure that she could have fur­\nnished enough diversion had Mr. Roose­\nvelt stayed long In the city.\nHailing at midnight nlioard the Admiral,\nMr. Roosevelt Is now well on his way to\nMessina, where he should arrive this af­\nternoon. The exact plans at Messina were\nnot disclosed, but It Is understood that\nMr. Roosevelt will go from the Admiral,\naccompanied by Ambassador Grlscom, to\nthe Re Umberto and there pay hla re­\nspects to the and Queen of Italy.\nBefore the Adltnaii sailed Roosevelt ex­\npressed a desire to sec the ruins of Mes­\nsina and the captain, with a patriotic dis.\nregard for mall schedules, agreed to an­\nchor at Messina as long as It pleased the\ncolonel to remain ashore.\nIn anticipation of Roosevelt's visit to\nMessina, the authorities have taken special\npains to protect him. It la probable that\nsailors from the Re Umberto will go\nashore and act ns a body guard.\nAfter leaving Messina, Ex-President\nRoosevelt hopes for a lull, as he indicated\nto a few of his Intimates that ho has a lot\nof writing that he must get out of the\nway before the African hunt begins. As he\ndraws near the scene of his hunt, hla an-\ntlclpnlon increases.
38a6d4b0ead25b63f5b2b589adfa8820 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.9383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 afford to include more than one coat\nsuit in the winter outfit are nowadays\nvery apt to have one white serge or\ncorduroy, or , mayhap, white velvet,\ntailored suit to wear calling and to\nafternoon teas and receptions. And\nnot only the suit, but hat (at least\nthe trimming on it), shoes, handbag\nand gloves share the same snowy hue.\nEspecially the gloves, for these days\nwhite gloves are almost universally\nworn, not alone with white, or black\nand white costumes, but with dross of\nevery color even to the severest of\nplain black. The reason for the lik­\ning for white gloves was voiced by\none woman lately who explained that\nshe bought no other kind because they\ncan go to the cleaner and be kept spot­\nless, whereas the color is out\nof tan. gray or black gloves in the\neffort to remove the soil. One of the\nfashionable white suits is charmingly\nillustrated in this figure .\nWe have above a jaunty coat suit of\nfine white serge, made in a style\nwhich will be becoming to any type\nof wearer. The unbecoming effect of\ndead white on some complexions is\nrelieved by the Juxtaposition of a\nblack collar next the face. But on\nthe other hand the severity of the\nsolid black Is charmingly mitigated\nby the graceful design with which the\ncollar is braided. Cuffs and pocket-\nflaps also show a touch of the braid­\ning to correspond with the collar.\nWorn with ermine cap, stole and muff,\nthe suit is stunning and in keeping\nwith the best taste of modern fash-
00f319e04c05a5cbf7e3627b6bd96b2e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.7937158153713 46.187885 -123.831256 cratic National Committee had au-\nthority to approach President Seelye\nor any other man with such a propo-\nsition. The gravity of the matter is\nin the idea of a change of candidates\nbeing ever broached, with or without\nauthority. If this story is true it is\npretty conclusive proof that Cleve-\nland himself know of the move, with\nthe probability that he had intimated\nhis willingness to step down and out\nif Ohio went Republican, even if he\nhad not expressly declared that he\nshould do so. If it is false it is mere-\nly in line with an undercurrent of\nfeeling and desire on the part of\nprominent democrats expressed at odd\ntimes since Cleveland was nominated.\nA change of candidates only two\nweeks before the election would bo an\nextraordinary event, a thing without\nprecedent and in direct violation of\nLincoln's axiom about swapping\nhorses when crossing a stream. It\nwould be a dangerous remedy to ap-\nply to an error whose gravity would\nbe acknowledged from the housetops.\nIt would bo such a confession of\nweakness as would almost certainly\ndefeat the substitute, whoever he\nmight be. The only sensible theory\non which it could be done is that\ntheir defeat having become too ap\nparent for even Democratic hope to\nignore, the leaders would argue that\nthey might obtain credit among the\ndissatisfied elements of the party who\nhave bolted Cleveland as represent\ning too many objections, and win\nthem back now, or, failing to secure\ntheir votes November, entice them\ninto the party ranks in time for the\nnext contest by this show of virtue.\nCleveland may shrink from the per-\nsonal reproach that would attach to\nhim if he should remain on the ticket\nwhen it was impossible to escape de-\nfeat. No man cares to be responsible\nfor a condition of things in which\nfour millions of voters should point\ntheir fingers at him and say, "Thou\nart the man!" Cleveland has a big\nbod', but that does not imply an in-\ntrepid soul, and he has never shown\nnerve of a higher order that that re-\nquired to pull a hangman's lever.\nShould he retire he would certainly\nfind the relief from campaign cares\nvery grateful, since the intellectual\nlabor of trying to fill the role of a\npolitical leader must be exceedingly\nirksome to one who would, if elected\naccording to his own words, do only\n"executive" work in his high office.\nIf Cleveland should execute this\nremarkable gymnastic feit it is im-\nprobable that President Seelye or\nany like man would be selected to\nstep into his shoes. It would not be\nlogical, but above all, it would not be\npermitted by Mr. Hendricks. He\nwould be the rightful heir, as much\nin the campaign as after an election,\nand the opportunity would be the\ncrowing glory of his life, whether\nelected or defeated. If Cleveland\nresigns, Hendricks will insist on\nfirst place, or he will resign, too, and\nthat contingency would be too risky\nto contemplate.
e7ab354ac68c2691077a9c5077a772ec VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.0479451737697 43.798358 -73.087921 pressthe warmth of our sympathy w ith\nthem, or the ardor of our desire, that on\nthis great occasion our entire denomina-\ntion may be of one heart and one mind\nBe assured, dear brethren, that the ex\nlinction of oppression, whether of the bond\nor free, is a work which lies with the\nchurches of Christ. They can do it.\nThey must do it. They will be responsi-\nble for the continuance of oppression, with\nall its crimes and horrors, if they do it not.\nAnd as no portion of the church of Christ\nin the United States is more influential\nthan your own, as none has been more\nabundantly blessed with those extraordin-\nary operations which exhibit religion in\nits mightiest energies as none is more\nprompt or more vigorous in all other\n" of faith and labors of love," so we\nentreat you to suffer none to be more for-\nward or more active in this good cause.\nWe know that in the same cause both our\nfathers and ourselves slept too long, but it\nwould be poor evidence that we had been\nawakened, if we were to use no eflorts for\nthe arousing of our brethren. We wish\nto believe that whatever slumber remains\namong you, it is but tha! of inadvertency\nand inconsideration. It cannot be that\nyou will refuse to put away this "accursed\nthing,' when its true aspect shall have\nappeared to you. An enlightened con-\nscience, and a melting heart, will be far\nmore prompt and effectual than our im-\nportunities, and perhaps even while we\nare writing, may be rendering our impor-\ntunities needless.
0813bd4bb46637cc33620e4b7437a9ae THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1891.850684899797 35.996653 -78.901805 People who read of tarring and feath-\nering know that the punishment is a\nvery unpleasant one, but few imagine\nhow terribly painful and dangerous it\nis. In Wyoming 1 once saw a man who\nhad been tarred and feathered, and al-\nthough he fully deserved the discipline\nI could not help pitying him. Hardened\ntar is very hard to remove from the skin,\nand when feathers are added it forms a\nkind of cement that sticks closer than a\nbrother. As soon as the tar sets the vic-\ntim's suffering begins. It contracts as\nit cools, and every one of the little veins\non the body is pulled, causing the most\nexquisite agony. The perspiration is\nentirely stopped, and unless the tar is\nremoved death is certain to ensue.\nBut the removal no easy task and\nrequires several days. The tar cannot\nbe softened by the application of heat,\nand must be peeled off bit by bit, sweet\noil being used to make the process less\npainful. The irritation to the skin is\nvery great, as the hairs cannot be disen-\ngaged, but must be pulled out or cut off.\nNo man can be cleaned of tar in a singje\nday, as the pain of the operation would\nbe too excruciating for endurance, and\nuntil this is done he has to suffer from a\npain like that of 10,000 pin pricks. Num-\nbers of men have died under the tor-\nture, and none who have gone through\nit regard tar and feathering as anything\nbut a most fearful infliction. Interview\nin St. Louis Globe-Democra- t .
225ae828c02607755c4f2a6fa09fe699 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1916.9002731924206 39.456253 -77.96396 In order to obtain the views of all\ninterests affected by the operations of\nthe transportation lines the committee\nhas invited prominent shippers, bank\nera. representatives of commercial or¬\nganizations, railway executives, econo¬\nmists and others to appear before them.\nThe first to be heard are railroad\ncommissioners of various states who\nbegan their evidence today. Their\ntestimony is directed chiefly to oppos¬\ning any enlargement of the federal\nauthority over commerce that would\ndetract from the powers now exercised\nby state bodies. They will be followed\nshortly by officials of railway labor\norganizations who are expected to reg.\nister their opposition to the increase\nof governmental authority over wages\nand conditions of labor.\nChief interest in the hearings ^en¬\nters in the proposals that will be put\nforward by representatives of foe rail¬\nroads. for it is reported that they will\nadvocate an extension of federal au¬\nthority over rates and securities to the i\npractical exclusion of state control of\nthese matters, it is understood also that\nthey will go on record in favor of fed¬\neral incorporation of all railroad lines.\nLegislative Program of Railroads.\nFrom an authoritative source is ob¬\ntained the following outline of the leg¬\nislative program which the railroads\nwill ask the committee to consider in\nits investigation: They will endeavor\nto demonstrate to the commission that\none of the principal defects in the pres¬\nent system of railroad regulation is\nthe lack of coordination resulting from\nthe simultaneous and conflicting regu¬\n by the federal government and\nby the 48 states. They will, therefore,\nask that enflt*e governmental control j\nof the rates and practices of interstate\ncarriers, except purely local matters,\nbe placed in the hands of a federal\nbody so that Interstate traffic may be\nregulated without reference to state\nlines, leading to the state commissions\nJurisdiction only over local matters and\nlocal public utilities. As a part of this\nplan, a compulsory system of federal\nincorporation is to be recommended,\naccompanied by federal supervision of\nrailroad stock a'id bond issues.\nA reorganization of the Interstate\nCommerce Commission will be asked.\n!. order to enable the commission prop¬\nerly to exercise IN increased powers.\nIt Is also proposed that the preparation\nand prosecution of cases against the\nrailroads, shall be delegated to some\nother agency of tlie government, possi¬\nbly the Department of Justice, so that\nthe commission may devote its ener¬\ngies to Its administrative functions.\nWith the commission thus relieved\nof some of Its present duties and equip¬\nped to handle its business more prompt¬\nly, the railroads will urge that the pe¬\nriod during which the commission maj\nnow suspend proposed increases in\nrates be reduced from ten months to\n60 days, with provision for reparation\nto be paid to the shippers If the ad¬\nvance shall be declared unreasonable.\nThey will also ask that the commis¬\nsion be given the power to prescribe\nminimum as well as maximum rates j\nso that In meeting complaints of dis- J
9203afa35872e5b9aa438557130590d8 THE COLUMBUS WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1920.596994503896 31.830337 -107.638526 our ttennrai prosperity, Is tlie honest\nreadjustment. Any unfair adjust\nment simply delay the ultimate pro\ncess and we should reinemlver tho\nlesson of history thai one extreme\nusually leads to another. Wo do-\nrhi industrial peace. We want our\npeople tn havo an abiding confluence\nin government but no adjustment\nmule under reactionary auspice\nwill carry wllh it tho conlldenco of\ntho country. II I wero asked lo\nname in these trying days tho first\nesenuai overs uKrwiiw every oilier\nconsideration, the response would he\nconrMenco In government It would\nbe nothing ls ikm a calamity If\nmo Heat admtaMratkm wore elected\nunder corrupt auapkes. Thcro k\nunrest m Ihn country, our peopto\nnavo passe through a tryhsc eaperl\ncsice, Tho jKuropean war hefarg U\nengulfed us. aroused every racial\nthrob In nation of composite cllt\nxensiup. i ne conflict in which we\nparticipated carried anxieties Into\nevery community and thousands\nupon thousands of homes were\ntouched by tragedy. Tho Inconveni-\nence Incident to tho .war havo been\ndisquieting; the failure of the lie- -\npublican congress lo repeal annoy\ning taxes has added to our troubles.\nTho natural Impulse Is forcet the\npast to develop new Interests,\ncreate a refreshened and refreshing\natmoipnere in lira, we want to\nwar nnd be free from the Irou\nbling thought of Its possibility in\nthe future. Wo want tho dawn and\nthe dews of a hew morning. Wo\nwant happiness In the land, the feel-\ning that the square deal among men\nand between men and government Is\nnot to bo intcrrered Willi by a pur-\nchased Preference.
0f9c0cd4d6e7979c5208e9aa06ed49ae EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.83698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 he, with mock heroism, “I desire to thank\nmy followers in this house for the noble\nmanner in which they have stood by me.\nMy followers in this house have not been\nthanked this session. The senate has re­\nceived thanks, the president has received\nthanks. General Tracey hits received\nthunks, ami Mr. Sherman has received\nthanks. My own sturdy followers have\nmade a noble fight and have gone down.\nThey must make the liest of it, but they\n»hall not be unrewarded. They shall at\nleast have my thanks.”\nWhen he hail finished, good humor was\napparently restored, and the house liegim\nrushing through the routine matters pre­\nparatory to liiial adjournment. Mr. Wea-\ndock of Michigan presented a conference\nreport upon t he bill suspending the statute\none year which compelled work to the\namount of ill*) on all mining \nThe bill bad been amended In the senate\nto exempt South Dakota. The bill was op­\nposed by Mr. Hay of New York, who ob­\njected to the exemption of South Dakota.\nMessrs. Pence of Colorado, Varman of\nMontana, Wilson of Washington and Lu­\ncas of South Dakota supported the bill.\nMr. Pence eeissed the opportunity afforded\nby the debate on this conference report to\nmake an inflammatory silver iqteech, pre­\ndicting dire disaster in the mines as the\nresult of the passage of the repeal hill. The\nconference report was adopted—199 to 3.\nMr. Somers of Wisconsin, who was ab­\nsent when the roll was called, was granted\nunanimous consent to Ire allowed to have\nhis vote recorded in favor of concurring in\nthe senate amendments to the silver bill,\nmaking the vote stand 193 to 94. Then the\nhouse adjourned.
708b523d0dae76023aeb5a48b48483f8 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.6369862696602 41.262128 -95.861391 Sand and across tbe British channel, ani\nof twofiftba or two cuits, to the profit of\ntbe the United Staus ofi«e, indudicg oas\ncent for expense* of transportation acroa*\nthe Atlantic ocean.\nNotwithstanding tfin latt -r ' .a aa sn4\nuntil a contrary deetnioa is taken by coin-\nmou agr«eueBt b«t« t«a tke post <Mboe si\nBelgium and of tbe United States, tb^ di­\nvision of tbe paoduct of the pesrage on *r>\ntides of primed matte? other than aews-\npapers :u>d periodic ti works, aba<. tttke\nplace in tbe proportions hereinafter indi­\ncated, for such of tb< ie articles as ehali be\ncontain>id in tbe mails transported by the\nBritish packet*, vix:\nA. Four- fifths, or torn MRta, to tha\nprofit of tbe Bcigi.ui post o£oe, iueluduiB\nthree cents for exnej.xo* of \nover the British Territory, in the- Bniut\nchannel, and acroas ibe Atlantic ocssui.\nB. One-fifth, <>t one cent, to the profift\nof the United States post cmce for the ti. -\npeos* •« cf traasportation over the terriio-\nry of tb< I nit'd\nNew*f>ap«rK and printed skktterof every\nsort sent agrwatny t tbe above asestiop­\ntioned o>>ndition» shall be subject to tha\nrespective laws and regulations of each\ncoabtry. Those which wall eoctaii dbai*\naoter* of aay kiad traced by the haai\nshall he subject to th • postage of ae orda»\naarf letter of the - . tine weight. Thef\nshall ba seat under s wrapper open at thl\ntwo sides, aod in such a manner that eacB\nnewspaper or artiale of printed\nmay alwayp be separated from iu wrap­\nper.
066b1a718b23c0a515d1a8260ad48dd0 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.8315068176053 39.513775 -121.556359 Importers and Wholesale Dealers in Drugs and\nMo Urines, Surgical Instruments. Glassware, Drug-\ngists Furniture, Quicksilver, Acids, Shaker Herbs,\nspices. Essential Oils, Extracts for Flavooing, Al-\ncohol. Bird Seed. Camphor. Oils nud Paint*. Lamp\nFresh Hops, SoAh Material Corks, Brewers Mate-\nrial. Plaster Paris. Rose mlale Cement, Ahdomiuii\nSupporters, Shoulder Braces, Cost Iron M.iftStrs.\nPATENT MEDICINES, n large stock of nearly\nevery kind in use, with a general assortment of all\ngoods kept in a large and well supplied Drugstore,\nWo gave made arrangements for receiving month-\nly shipments direct from the Atlantic ciliest thus\nkeeping a lull and complete assortment of all goods\nin our line. We intend to deni in nothing but the\nbest quality of goods, so that physicians, surgeons\nand those dealing in onr lino may rely upon getting\npure and unadulterated article* from us Wo have\ndone Drug business in Sacramento since 18-lfi ,\nand expect to continue it bore during onr natural\nlives. We expect lo build up u large and permanent\nbusiness by keeping a large and well assorted stock\nof the best GOODS, and sikiing at small profits, so\nthat that ihoso dealing in our line lo call upon ns,\nexamine the quality and prices of car goods before\npurchasing elsewhere, as we feel confident that we\ncan please in both PRICE AND QUALITY.\nArtificial teeili. gold toil, mouth glasses, turn keys,\nburs, corrnndrum wheels, k weeps, excavator-- , brush-\nes, d-rill*. witfi a complete assortment of dental stock\nfrom several of the most highly approved manufac-\nturer* in the world. We have the agency for teeth,\nand can fill any order, with eels or odd teeth, at the\nMINERS' DRUG STORE 139 J STREET, SAC-\n11AMENT0. by
0100c6a65b7012fef3d4fef8cc877ea0 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.919178050482 40.441694 -79.990086 The last quarter of the preseat moon is on\nDecember i, the new moon comes on the\n11th, first quarter on tbe 18th, and full moon\non Christmas. The age of the moon at the\nbeginning of the year gives us the exact\ncamber, 20, which in the church calendar is\na very important number to remember. The\nmoon is in conjunction with a planet when\nthe center of tbe moon and the center of tbe\nplanet are in the same right ascension or\nlongitude. The moon at that time may be,\nand generally is, north or south of the\nplanet. The conjunctions for the month\nbegin with Saturn on the 4th and end with\nthe same planet on tbe last day of tbe year.\nNeither of these is sufficiently close to attract\nparticular attention. The second conjunc-\ntion is with Uranus on the 8th, but, as we\ncan seldom see tbe planet, this meeting also\nhas bnt little significance, Venus is too\nclose to tbe when ber turn comes, and\nMercury can beincludedinthesame remark.\nDecember 15 and 16. however, there will be\na conjunotion with Jupiter and with Mars,\nand, if the evenings are bright and clear,\nthere will be a very pretty pictnre. Al -\nthough the celestial bodies are not very close\ntogether, their positions in relation to each\nother afford a fine tableau.\nThe full moon in December is high in\nnortnern declination, so that lor two or\nthree nights we shall bave its round, smil-\ning face throughout the night. It was only\na lew weeks ago that in tbe midst of the\npeculiar tint of yellow green so brilliant in\nthe western sky soon after the sun had\ntouched the horizon Venus could be seen\nshining serene and bright, but gradually it\nfaded from view, as getting nearer and\nnearer the sun it was absorbed by the more\npowerful light. Almost the entire year\nVenus has proved the chief attraction of the\nevening planets.
35a580185337d560c789268edf8a402f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1923.0808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 slvc; Wyoming, February 5. tore-1 COmplalned that the highway Im-\nnoon; Camden. Monday, February j provements In the State have been\n5. afternoon; Harrington.^ Tuesday, entirely too piecemeal with the re-\nFebruary 6; Milford. IV ednesday, ( guit tbat some part* of the State\nThursday and Friday. February 7 j -which should have had good roads ■*\nto 9th, Inclusive; Frederica, Satur- j by tj,)e time have been entirely\nday, February 10: Brldgevllle, Mon- i neglected for lack of funds. A plea\nday. February 12: Seaford, Tues- ;wa, made for a speedier construe- «\nday and Wednesday, February 13 ■ tlon program and enlarged appro-\nand 14; Laurel. Thursday, Friday ) priations.\nand Saturday, February 15 to 17,\nInclusive; Delmar, Monday, Tuesday i portance of an Inter-state connec-\nand Wednesday, February 19 to 21 ! tlon with South its import-\ninclusive; Georgetown. Friday and ance to Lewes and Rehoboth a* «\nSaturday. February 23 and 24; Mil- w«n as the whole State, and th-\nton. March 5; Lewes, February 26 j necessity for completing the road\nand 27; Mlllsboro. Thursday, March 1 leading from\n1; Frankford, Thursday, March 1,\nafternoon: Selbyville, Friday and\nSaturday. March 2 and 3.\nTaxpayers are advised to have on\nhand all figures relative to Income\nand expense« during the past year j hotel and garage men.\nIn connection with their occupation, WOuld mean that thousands\ntrade or business, as well as any j visit and stay at Rehoboth.\nother pertinent data, In order to fa- J He pointed out the advantage« of\ncllltate the completion of the re- j Rehoboth as a seaside resort as com- 0\nturn.
001a96e69ba511190336c1501075869f THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.864383529934 38.894955 -77.036646 gressmen to learn that tbo District Is\nexplicitly named la tho bill at all.\njlut Joking apart, the law docs pro-\nhibit, as it now stauds, the acquisition\nIn future of property In tnls city for\nofficial purposes, or nny, by foreign\ngovernments, or their representatives.\nWhen last summer the Swedish Minis\ntor, M. de lteutcrsklold, desired to pur-\nchase a residence hero for himself, he\ncould not (on account of this law) buy\none In his own name, so had to eva le\nlie law, and have the property bought\nfor him by an American citizen, with\nthe understanding that it should bu\nturned ocr to him, which, however,\ndocs not make tbo Swedish Minister's\ntitle to It as good as ho would desire,\nThoso lo whom tho writer has spoken\non this subject, Including some high\nlegal authorities In tho Government\nDepartments and several members of\nthe last Congress, havo with one accord\nsaid It was most desirable to en\ncourage foreign nations to own legation\nbuildings In our National Capital, their\ndoing so being n strong guarantee of\nthilr wish to perpetuate friendly rcla\ntlons with our country, "a consumma-\ntion divoutly to be wished."\nSenator Morrill, when asked the\nquestion at tho beginning of this article,\npromptly denied that Congress had,\ndirectly or Indirectly, forbidden tho\nacquisition of real islato in tho District\nof Columbia by a foreign Government\nfor tho usu of Its legation, or by a for\ntlgn Minister for bis own residence,\nbut when Bhown tho law said no other\nInterpretation could bo put upon It as\nit now stands, nod ho thought the ait\nnould cirlalnly bo amended as soon as\nIhc attention of Congress was called lo\nlis ilTtct, as abote set forth, In thu DIs\nttlct ot Columbia, for certainly no ono\nY,hooledfor thu bill Intended it to\napply In that way,
397269e19c929dede1e8d2db2248f8e0 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.9493150367834 44.939157 -123.033121 In onn and Homotlmos In sovor-n- l\nmunlclpnlltloH or othor minor di-\nvisions "of tho utnto. Hut there are\nmany kinds of taxes whluh can only\nbo levied by tho jfeuorul government\nbo us to product tho beet, roautta, be\ncause anionic othor ronsous, tho at-\ntempt to Impouo them In nuo particu-\nlar statu too often results merely In\ndriving the corporation or Individual\na fleeted to uomo other locality or\nHint. Tho national government has\nlong derived lis ohluf ruveuuu from\na tariff on Imports and from nn In-\nternal or oxoJho tux, In addition to\nthose thoro Is ovory reason why,\nwhou noxt our ayatom of taxation Is\nrevised, tho national government\nshould Impose a graduated Inherit-\nance tax, and. If possible, n gradu-\nated lncomo lux. Tho man of grunt\nwealth owe a peculiar obligation to\ntho state, bocauso ho doiivoa esiioolal\nadvantages from tho moro existence\nof government. Not only should ho\nrocognUo this oblluatlou In tho way\nho his dally life and in tho way\nho oariis and spoiuls his money, but\nIt should also bo recngulxed by tho\nwny In which ho puys for tho protec-\ntion tho states ulvo him. On tho ono\nhand. It is dwslrnblo that ho should\nnssunio hU full and proper share of\ntho burdou of taxation; on tho othor\nhand, It Is quite as necessary that In\nthis kind of taxation, whoro tho mou\nwlio vote tho tux pay but UtUo of It,\nthero should bo clear recognition ot\ntho. danger of inaugurating any such\nsystem, save In a spirit ot cutlro Jus-\ntlco nud moderation. Whouovor wo,\nas a peoplo. uudortako to remodel\nour taxation system along tho lines\nsuggeitod, wo must make It clear be-\nyond poradvonturo thnt our aim is to\ndistribute the burden ot supporting\ntho govorumeut moro equitably than\nat preeont; that wo Intend to treat\nrich men and poor man on ft basis of\nabsoluto equality, and that wo ro -ga - rd
1501cf38eb46db9a8e02d5eb65e4dd7e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.864383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 Mrs. Robert W. Tomlinson—Rev. H.\nG. laine, Newport News, Va.\nMrs K Tatnall Warner—Rev. Ar­\nthur C. Powell. D. D. Baltimore, Md.;\nRev. Robert Boyd. Wheeling. W Vs.\nMrs. W. 8 Weedon—Rev. William II\nParble. Seaford. Del\nMrs Irving Warner—Rev. L. N. Caley.\nD. D.. Philadelphia. Pa.\nMrs. F. A . Wardenbu\nNolktrk. Plttiton. Pa.,\nTurner, Lewes. Del.\nR. G, Woolbrldge—Rev. Dudley Boog-\nher, Martlnsburg, W. Va.\nHotel duPont—Rev. Paul S Atkins.\nYork. Pa ; Rev. George G. Bartlett.\nPhiladelphia. Pa.; Mr. George C. Burg-\nwln, Pittsburgh. Pa.; Mr. Edward P.\nltrlnton. Lancaster. Pau Mr. H. r .\nBlair. Washington. D C.: Mr. Henry\nI Beers. Dover Del.; Deaooness Coles-\nbury, Philadelphia, Pa.; Rev. J . E. Free-\nman. Washington. D. C.; Col. Hopper\nGibson. Centrevllle. Md.; Rev. Homer\n Flint, Pittsburgh. Pa.. Rev. William\nE Oardner, New York city; Mr. George\nw. Johnson. New Castle, Pa; Robert\nD. Lewis. Amherst Va. : Relu Alexan­\nder MacMtllen. Carlisle. Pa. ; Mr. U. M.\nNorth. Columbia, Pa.; Mr. IL L. Rust\nWashington. D . C .: Rev. William T\nReynolds. Newcastle. Pa.; Col K I. D .\nSeldom Oil City. Pa.; Riw. and Mrs C.\nU. Steteon. Washington. D. C .; Mr Har­\nvey H. Smith, Pittsburgh. Pa.: Mr. and\nMrs. Stratton, Heading, Pa.; Mr. and\nMrs' E. S. Shannahun. Easton. Md.;\nRev. John W Suter, Boston. Mass : Rev.\nG. C . Twombley, Lancaster, Pa.; Rev.\nGardner L. Tucker. Houma. La.; Rev.\nC. T. Warner. Washington. D . C .; Mr.\nGeorge N. Reynolds, Lancaster. Pa.\nThe following is a list ot women
2f9e681429e51c8c9d3821fdfcb7767f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.1352458700162 40.063962 -80.720915 truth that God so loved us that he\ngave his son for us, and that Jesus died\nlor us] and redeemed us]from under the\nlaw (including the Sabbath) and from all\niniquity, and put us under grace and love\nto God and man, to purify unto himself a\npeculiar people, zealous of good works.\nLove begets love, but the law begets\nwrath. Tell a man he must keep the\nSabbath law, and he will get mad at you.\nBut tell him the simple goapel truth of\nJesus dying for us, ana. if he believes it.\nit will give him Sabbath or rest, joy.\npeace and love to God and man at aJl\ntimes and under all circumstances \\jhcn\nhe thinks of it. And he will from love to\nGod and man keep the Sabbath or do\nanything else, even leave his life if\nnecessary, on Sunday or any other day.\nThe law was our school master to\nbring us unto Christ, thai we might be\njustified bv faith. But now we are no\nlonger under the school master, but we\nare all the chUdreu of God by laith in\nChrist Jesus. St. Paul always includes\nthe ceremonial law, the Sabbath law and\nthe ten commandments in one word, the\nlaw. And the very fact that we keep the\nSabbath on Sunday, and also tho fact that\nmany Christians pervert the gospel by\npreaching the Saboath law when they\nshould preach tile simple truth that\nChrist died for us, is proof enough that\nSt. Paul includes the Sabbath when he\nsays: "Let no dan therefore judge vou\nin respect of an holy day or, of the
005363cfc1dbe9ebbfa7a4f2e6b00249 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.0587431377758 29.4246 -98.49514 mav be leased with 10 unwatercd see.\ntious, if the latter be within six miles of\nit. The provisions of this section are\nmodified accordingly, as there are two or\nmore watered sections convenient to the un\nwatered sections. The surveyor is to make\nproper plats of the lands. Lessees and pur-\nchasers are to pay surveyor's fee of $2. The\nsurveyor Is to report all sales and leases to\nthe Superintendent at Austin, who is to ap-\nprove or disapprove after 20 days being\nallowed for protests, the Land Board to de-\ncide in cases of protests. Actual occupints\nand settlers with live stock thereon, January\n1, 1884 , shall have preference to lease said\nland at 4 cents per acre, with 90 days'\ntime lo make aflidavlta as to date and charac-\nter oi their settlement. The Supeilntene'ent\nmay require additional evidence when not\nfully satisfied with the affidavit of occupant.\nIn contests between two or more claiming oc-\ncupancy of the same land, the Land Board\nshall deterimeoe rights of contestants, and\nthe oldest have preference. The bill\nfarther prohibits the Uansfer of lease for three\nyears unless the animals placed on the land are\nsold at the same time to the party to whom\nthe lease is sold. Actual settlers on watered\nsections shall not have the rltrht to enclose\nthe water thereon. They are to pay $2 per\nacre fqr an unwatercd section, and $3 for\nwatered sections: or if thev choose, thev mar\nhave 30 years time to pay for the land,\nas in Section 9 of the old law. They are\nlimited to grating not over 50 head\nof cattle upon 160 acres. It is made a\nmisdemeanor to graze upon school lands that\nare not leased, under penalty of a fine In any\nsum not less than $200, The Land Board\nmay prescribe any additional rules and regu-\nlations they may deem necessary to carry out\nthe purposes and intention of that act, or to\nfacilitate the execution of the same. They\nmay direct the Superintendent tu visit and as-\ncertain the true value and rental ol lands, the
38c022e31a17bf1ab8edf3c217eb6e15 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.4822404055353 40.807539 -91.112923 fellow whom we have spoken of as riding; cie currency, that sugar can be produced\nin his carriage in Broadway ; and that as he alleged, for one cent, a pound. He\nwife the same Helen. That daughter— j contrasted this state of things with the\nah, I can tell you a story of her! She is commercial condition of our country, and\nto be married next week to a young man! especially of his own State, where labor\nnot worth a penny — but M'ho loves her, j and capital are so high, by means of a pa-\nand cares not a pin for her father's money,! per currency, that it requires some five or\nconfiding as he does, in his own energies; six times the amount, in comparison with\n— which the old gentleman took care to' Cuba, to command the use of capital, and\nmake sure of before he gave consent, thus raise for the market our staple pro-\nAs to thai' thousand dollars, it has been! ductions. Thus, though labor and capital\naccumulating this twenty years—has been! in this country are raised by paper to a\nadded to constantly by the mother, and' very high value, our products come high\nnow a good round sum—we have it from into the market, at a disadvantage with\nauthority—at least twenty thousand, will those of Cuba, and our commerce is con-\nbe a gift lo her daughter on the marriage sequently embarrassed. Mr W\\ expressed\nday; but we warrant you, she will hear the ardent wish that we might attain the\nthe whole story of ' the thousand dollars,' same happy condition of the Island of\nand be warned not to snspect an honest,1 Cuba, by means of a purely metallic cur-\nhighminded, loving man, of marrying for,rency. His argument was listened to with
154220e165e9f03baa660263ce986613 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.7027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 urnvuu in iuunmilgum iusv\nmorning nbotit eleven o'clock, mount\non a tine looking bay ranre aad wear!\na most woe-beironc countenance. It w\nnot long, however, until he mada hi\nself acquainted with some of our pron\nneut citizens and to them he unmvell\na marvelous tale, interspersing his sc\ntences wltli copious tears and hen\nrending sobs. Tho story in stibstan\nwas about as follows:\nHo and his half-brother. Wllllj\nMnlott, who is employed in Caldwell\nPeterson's factory, in Wheeling, wc\nout on a short vacation to Salem,1\nVn. Karly Sunday morning they start\nout and had gone about n mile and\nhulf when they treed a squirrel. T!\ntree stood in a narrow I10II9W ai\nHeudley went up tho hill on one si\nwhile Jfelotte discharged his gun ai\nin a minute afterward saw his ho\ncome tumbling down the hill.\nHero Heodloy utterly broke a!\nwept bitterly. After ho had recover\nhis composure he proceeded.\nOb reaching Melotte ho found til\ntho chargo from tho gun had torn aw\nabout half his head and death mt\nhave boon instantaneous.\nThis story bo told to Net Koen In nil\nan effective way that Set loaned h:\ntwenty-five dollars on the horse will\nwas ]>ut in Koen'a stable. He said\nwanted tho money to have tho body ei\nbalnmd before taking iVto Wheeling I\nburial. 1 -eaviny tho horso for securi\nwould bo all right under tho circui\nstances, but it developed the next di\nthat tho horse had been stolen, to\nCameron, 0., and a searching party i\nrived in hat pnrsuit of Ueadly,but thi\nb ird had flown. This is not tho fli\ncrooked transaction in which Head\nhas been encaged, and if caught\nshould bo moted 'out the severest pi\nishnient.
059cca7efab3d900a7c5e216e2f2342d SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.9657533929478 37.53119 -84.661888 After Parnell was graduated from Ox-\nford ho was for a time in inoro intimate\ncompanionship with his mother nnd\nsister Fanny than ho had been 6inco\nchildhood. It was tho time when they\nwere enthusiastically supporting tho\nFenian movement, and there is no doubt\nat all that it is duo to the influcnco of\nhis sister Fanny that Parnell'n attention\nwas firs.t called to tho Irish situation and\nhis ambition stimulated. Ho did not\nagree with his mother or sister as to the\nsuccess or advisability of the Fenian\nmovement, but ho spent many montlis\nin practical seclusion trying to solvo in\nhis own mind tho problem. lie decided\nnt last to follow whero O'Connell had\nled, and to attempt to win for Ireland\nby constitutional methods nnd by tho\nprocess of agitation what tho Fenians\nproposed to by arms. Having his am-\nbition stimulated, his opinions fixed, tho\ninherited characteristics of tho man as-\nserted themselves, such as tenacity of\npurpose, great courage and a power of\npatience which was marvelous to thoso\nwho knew him as a rather impatient\nyoungstcr. Ho sought an election to par\nliament, and his career began.\nThose who knew Parnell in his youth\nand college daytj nre not burprised nt tho\nrevelation which has been made of the\nweak siot in his armor: they think that\nhis weaknebs was always in that direc-\ntion, and they narrnto somo rather sub-\nstantial reasons for such belief. Had ho\nbeen as iuvulnerablo to such temptation\nns ho has been to all others ho would havo\nbeen perfectly equipped, his old acquaint-\nances say. to carry on tho fight until he\nwon it
b128233a5b34b393e953b1318218e535 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.6808218860983 35.780398 -78.639099 Mr. Editor: I propose to give you a brief\nepitome ot the character and dealings of a\ncertain Liquor Seller, not a thousand miles\ndistant from the writer ; and by way of giv-\ning him a name, I'll call him ' Captain Joe,' the\nleaving his ' local habitation' to be pointed\nout by those who know such a character.\nThe Captain is said to be rather unscrupulous\nabout v horn he deals with, as well as what\nhe receives in return for his liquor. It is\nsaid that a certain man had employed an\nunfortunate inebriate to labor for. him, but the\nknowing his drinking propensities, his em-\nployer paid him in wheat instead of money,\nsupposing that that would certainly be car-\nried home for the support of his family.\nWhile thus engaged, he was sent to mill with for\nsome wheat, for his employer, but he was\nenticed into Captain Joe's drunkery, and the a\nwheat changed hands the captain.becoming\nowner and the man becoming drunk 1 It is\neaid thatdoth (rom loom of the drunk-\nard's wife, and even the wife's clothes have\nclnnged hands in a similar manner !\nNow, will you believe it, Mr. Editor, this\nCaptain Joe is a Church member! and oc\ncupies the most prominent seat in meeting,\nand to judge from his sanctimonious leer,\none would suppose him the best christian in\nthe world but it is said he will go right\nfrom the Church and spend the balance of\nthe Sabbath in dealing out whiskey to any\nbody that can raise three cents 1\nNow, Mr. Editor, I do not wnsh the Cap-\ntain any harm, but I want him to give up\neither his liquor selling, or his profession to\nChristianity, for they are so manifestly in-\nconsistent that they injure one another. I\nwish he would give up his liquor selling, but\nif he will not, I hope he will at least put up\na sign illustrative of his business, and to\nsave him the trouble, I will furnish him with\nan inscription, as follows V ' Bald-fac- e
1776b0b92039cf10b2f31b073c1b3db9 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.3273972285642 39.756121 -99.323985 The railroad companies want their\nmen to keep out of politics. II. B .\nMorse, a Santa Fe employe at Em-\nporia, was announced as a candidate\nfor the legislature. He has with-\ndrawn from the race because of the\nrefusal of General Manager Mudge to\ngrant him a leave of absence during\nthe session of the legislature.\nThomas J. Price, an old settler of\nLyon county, dropped dead on the\nstreet at Emporia. About three\nmonths ago he was stricken with\nparalysis, and had been weak since.\nTom Price was bora in Ohio 64 years\nago and moved here from Illinois in\n1867. He served in company A,\nFortieth Ohio, during the civil war.\nWillis F. Neff, of Garnett, who was\nconvicted in the federal court at To-\npeka for misuse of the mails, has\nbeen sentenced by Judge Hook to\nfour years in the federal peniten-\ntiary. Herman Johnson, of Topeka,\nwas convicted of making and passing\ncounterfeit moneyNand was sentenced\nto' two years in the penitentiary.\nJohnson counterfeited nickels and\nthe imitation was so poor that it\nwould not work the slot machine.\nJ. A . McCallom, a railroad contrac-\ntor of Strong City, says that 1902\nis to be the most prosperous year\nfor labor that the west has ever\nknown. He also predicts a raise in\n for laboring men of from 15 to\n20 cents a day in the country within\nsix weeks. He attributes the. present\nlabor conditions to the large amount\nof railroad construction work that\nis being done and makes his pre-\ndictions on what is to be done dur-\ning the summer, including the work\nof harvesting crops.\nA recent dispatch from Abilene\n. s aid the central Kansas farmers will\nnot again be caught without rough\nfeed as they were last year. They\nare preparing to put out an unex-\nampled acreage of alfalfa In the Kaw\nand Smoky Hill valleys, and the prob-\nabilities are that next year's crop\nof alfalfa hay will be the cheapest\nfeed in the west.\nG. W. Watson, of Kinsley, has been\nsuccessful with a new means of kill-\ning prairie dogs. He forces steam\nfrom a traction engine into the holes\nof the dogs and they are suffocated\nalmost instantly.\nThe house and senate have passed\nthe bill authorizing the holding of\nfederal court in Kansas City in Jan-\nuary and June, to have jurisdiction\nover Wyandotte county cases.\nAll the railroads of Kansas have\nasked for a reduction of assessment,\nespecially on rolling stock, which, they\nclaim is assessed out of all propor-\ntion to the other personal property\nin the state.
0c810946c70602a959f0f00f1620501d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.23698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 B«r CATixr.Wbolcmlu i-rices being a small\nfraction higher than those of last wo*k. the re-tail\ntrade w.is fair at the op ning, with a shade higher\nrange, but the Improvement did not contluuo till\nthecoso. Tiade heemo viryslow tome ilme be¬\nfore the end. and so continued; tbeimprovementin\nprice* was lost, and In someInstances a ihade lower\nnet of i'(cures was accepted to sell out. About ICO\nhead of thsofferings notwithstanding were left over\nunsold. We quote at |3i)0.i7 00, wl Utmost sales\nmuuo at fft lOao ub per 10U lbs.\nPrlccs of beef cattle ram cd a> follows: Best f6\n87 UO, that KCtiera;ly rated tits, quality |j 6Us6 It,\nmedium or good Mr quality II 3%a& 00, ordinary\nthin steer*, oxen and cows IJ C0a4 00. Kxtrcmo\nrange of prices IS 00a7 00. Most of the salea were\nfrom 15 IW*6 2i per 100 lbs. The cattle received\nwere: 237 head Virginia, 121 from Ohio, 157\nfrom Mm land, and 273 nead from Pennsylvania.\nThe toul receipts fjr the week were 788 head\nagainst 1,303 last week, and 854 head same time last\nyear. Of th« offeringsG19 h ad we»e taken by Bal¬\ntimore butchers, It sold to country Ue»ler». 16 to\nftashiugton city dealers and 27 to hosteru specula-\ntorn. Total sales for the week, 673 he«d agalnu\nl.Ot'6 last we*k, 769 heail same time hut jcar.\nbwiNE.The receipts number unarly the same as\nlast week, aud the quality in some of tho pens Is\nreported a little better, but In most of them\nabout tbe same as then. Trade is Mr only, with\nthe prices unchanged from last Monday's ilgures.\nWe quote common hogs at 9f$al0V,c, and.'better\ngradts jOKalo^c. and extra heavy Chlragoes leper\npouuduet. Arrivals this week 4.889 head against\n4.971 last week and 5,132 head ths same time last\nyear.
1a483f489c1f49cbf3144d7d632d0871 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1891.905479420345 37.92448 -95.399981 But I have now to unveil the chief\nwonder of this chiefest of cities. In\n1663, under the patronage of the En-\nglish government Mr. Wood, the ex-\nplorer, began at Ephesus to feel along\nunder the ground at great depths for\nroads, for walls, for towns, for towers,\nand here it is that for which Ephesus\nwas more celebrated than all else be-\nside the temple of the goddess Diana,\ncalled the sixth wonder of tho world,\nand in 1889 we stood amid the ruins of\nthat temple, measuring its pillars,\ntransfixed by its sculpture and con-\nfounded at what was the greatest\ntemple of Idolatry in all time. There\nhave been seven temples of Diana, the\nruins of each contributing something\nfor the splendor of all its architectural\nsuccessors. Two hundred and twenty\nyears was this last temple in construc-\ntion. Twice as long as tho United\nStates has stood was that tamplo in\nbuilding. It was nearly twice as large\nas St Paul's cathedral, London.\nLest it should be disturbed by earth\nquakes, which have always been fond\nof making those regions their play\nground, the temple was built on a\nmarsh, which was made firm by layers\nof charcoal covered by fleeces of wooL\nThe stone came from tho quarry near\nby. After it was decreed to bnild the\n it was thought it would be\nnecessary to bring the building stone\nfrom other lands, but one day a shep\nherd by the name of Pixodorus, while\nwatching his flocks, saw two rams\nfighting, and as they missed the inter-\nlocking of their horns and one fell, his\nhorn knocked a splinter from the rock\nand showed by that splinter tho lus-\ntrous whiteness of tho rock. The shep-\nherd ran to tho city with a piece of\nthat stone, which revealed a quarry\nfrom which place the temple was built\nand every month in all ages since, tho\nmayor of Ephesus goes to that quarry\nto offer sacrifices to the memory of that\nshepherd who discovered this source of\nsplendor and wealth for the cities of\nAsia Minor. In removing the great\nstones from the quarry to their destined\nplaces in the temple it was necessary,\nin order to keep the wheels, which\nwere twclvo feet in diameter, from\nsinking deep into the earth under the\nunparalleled heft that a frame of tim-\nbers be arranged over which tho wheels\nrolled. Tho temple of Diana was 425\nfeet long by 220 feet wide. All Asia\nwas taxed to pay for it It had 127\npillars, each CO feet high, and each the\ngift of a king and inscribed with the\nname of the donor.
19da9464eb97b836c9fab54f4b9dd537 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.9630136669202 41.875555 -87.624421 Within the pa it month nt least three\nbanks which hnve formerly lieen large\npurchasers of these city warrants nt a\nvery low discount have refused to\ntouch them, claiming that they were\nafraid of Mr. Waller anil could not\nafford to advance money only to have\nhim tie It up ludctlnttely; consequently\nall small contractors will lie barred\nfrom bidding on city work nnd a largo\ncontractor who has the mentis to carry\nthrough a city contract nnd wait for\nhis money until Mr. Waller gets ready\nto pay him will have n monopoly on\ncity work, but he will take care to bid\nhigh enough to protect himself against\nany delay in payment caused by Mr.\nWaller's refusing to pay when due,\nand ns a consequence any small prop-\nerty owner, .Whose property Is assessed\nfor an Improvement under this admin-\nistration, can look, for n tax equal to\nconfiscation of his property.\nMr. Waller has Just returned from a\nthree weeks' trip East, and says that\n city's llnnnccs nro In good shape\nand that Chicago city bonds will And\na ready market In New York. What\nmust New York bankers think of tho\nYellow Kid's Kentucky cousin going\nEast to find if there Is n market for\nour bonds with the doors of our own\nbanks bursting open with so much\nmoney they do not know what to do\nwith It, nnd would be glad of tho\nchance to place any part of It nt 3V0\nper cent.; but no, Chicago money Is not\ngood enough for the eminent City\nComptroller from Kentucky.\nThe following from the Chicago Rec-\nord of Dec. 11 will show how Cousin\nBob can figure interest on 910,000:\n"Stilt for tho recovery of 115,000 was\nentered by tho city ngnlnst tho First\nNational Bank In tho Circuit Court\nyesterday. Of tho amount 910,000 Is\nthe sum represented by tho certified\ncheck bearing Michael C. McDonald's\nname, held by the city as n forfeit In\ntho awarding of the flvc -yo n- r
2e0fc820f69b556960ec0fdf817dd8f9 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.2609289301254 40.735657 -74.172367 amount provided for In the specifications.\nEach proposal must be enclosed In a sealed\nenvelope, properly Indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners of the City of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices In writing\nas well as In figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposals that,\nshould the ab'ove work be awarded to them,\nthey wlU bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within one hundred and forty\n(140) consecutive working days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work\ncan be examined at the office of the Chief\nEngineer of the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners at the City Hall. Said pro-\nposals to be accompanied by the consent, in\nwriting, of two sureties, or surety company\nqualified to do business In New Jersey, who\nshall, at the time of putting in such pro-\nposals, qualify as to their responsib Uty in\nthe amount or such proposal, and bind them-\nselves that. If tire contract be awarded to\nthe peiBon or persons making the proposal,\ntney wfii. upon Its being so awarded, become\nhis or their sureties for tho faithful perform-\nance of said work; and that If the person or\npersons omit or refuse to execute such con-\ntract, they will pay to the City of Newark any\ndifference between the sums to which he or\nthey would have beon entitled upon comple-\ntion of the contract and that which the City\nof Newark may be obliged to pay the person\nor persons by whom such contract shall be\nexecuted.
224b96cbfdf8035f22470ab876b1a74e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.5767122970574 39.261561 -121.016059 In 18.58, when the Lecompton split took place\nin the Democratic party, anti two Conventions,\nthe one Lecompton and the other Anti-Leeomp-\nton, were held, it is charged, on authority here-\ntofore published, that >lr. McConnell agreed to\ngo with the Anti-Lccoroptonites if they would\nnominate him fur District Judge. We are in-\nformed th.it a letter in proof of this allegation\nwill shortly lie forthcoming. Mr. McConnell\ndid not get the nomination for District Judge,\nbut he did join the Lecompton party. With\nthem he remained, until the nomination of\nDouglas for the Presidency, when he took\nground against the Breckinridge faction. Now-\nlie is with them again, and where he next will\nbe we know- not nor probably does he himself.\nTile lot eg.iing is liul Xucliy collect.\nThe facts in the case, as we understand\nlliein, are as follows : In 1858. when the\nLecompton splil took place .Mr. McConnell\nwas understood to far or the Lecompton\nwing, ihoiigti look no active pai t in the\ncam a. -w that year. The next year he was\nanxious to rur. for Supreme Judge, hut be-\nfore the conventions weie held, it b cairn-\nevident that Meredith would carry the coun-\nty for Co igress. and no one supposing that\nthe county could get two iinpoitant offices\nmi the L- common ticket, McConnell wrote\nfioni Downieville staling that he would ac-\ncept the nomination from the Anti-Lecoinp\nloo convention, provided he could gel the\nrecommendation of Nevada county. O ..\nthe strength ol this letter, the d legates to\nHie Anti L cuiupton convention, trom this\nprecinct, were elect'd with the view of re-\ncommending McConnell for Supreme Judge.\nBefore ihe convention was held, however,\nne changed his mind again, and conclud'd\nin try Ins chances before the L- Compton\ncontention, hut the county was carried for\ndetedilh, and we ledieve McConnells naim\nwas not presented in the State contention\nlot Supreme Judge.
a0ec4d78e5ce06c6d9bf9787f6e5ee57 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0397259956874 39.513775 -121.556359 The undersigned, desirous of acquainting iho*e who\nmay la* unfortunate enough to he similarly afflicted,\nwhere a permanent relief of their sufferings may he\nobtained, feels it his duly to thus publicly express\nhis most sincere gratitude I** Pr. h. J . tr.apknv, for\nthe permanent recovery of his henJtn. Horne down\nby tlie distressing m mptoms incMeiil to tlie viciou*\npractice ol unrontrofliible passion In yoiith;depressed\nin hotly and mind: unable to fierftirtn even the most\ntrifling duly imposed upon the dully avocation* of\nlife, 1 sought the advice of many physicians, who at\nlirst regarded my disease as of trifling importance—-\nbut alas; after a few weeks, and in several instances\nmsmhs. of their treatment. I found to my nniißeni-\nhie horror, that instead of relief, the sympiotns he*\ncame m<<re alarmir.g in ihelr torture, and. helngtoid\nby one that my disease, being principally confined to\nthe brain, medicine would I*? of lilt ecou-eqii*nce. 1\ndespaired ol ever regaining my health.strength and\neuerg\\; mid ns n hoi reserf, and with bin a taint\nhope called upon Pr. Fzapkay s* ho, nfw r examining\nmyei.ee pie*crib..d some medicine which almost in-\nstantly relieved me of Ihedull pain and dizziness i i\nmy F.ncouraged by Ibis result, I removed to\nplace my-eft immediately under his care, and hy a\nstrict adherence to his direct lons and advice, my heart\nbecame cleat, my ideas collected, the cmMant pain\nin my back and groins, the weakness of my limbs,\nthe nervous reaction of my whole body on tin* slight-\neM alarm or excitement; the misanthropy and evil\nforeboding*; tin* self distrust and want of confidence\nin others; the incapubi ify to study, and want of res-\nolution; the frit.lt:l nf, exciting, and i:t limes plonsur-\nable dreams at nlglif.followed hy involuntary dis-\ncharges. have all disappeared; and in fact in two\nmonth* a*ter having consulted the Doctor, I fell as if\ninspired by a new life—that life winch, but n short\nlime ago I contemplated to end by my own hand.\nWilli a view to guard the unfortimamlrom falling\n*n(o i In* hands of mcompment quack*, I deem it my\nduty to offer ibis testimony to the merit and skill of\nPr < / ipkay. and rt , ".»mineinl him to all who may\nstand in it* ed of medicnl advice. being assured Ly my\nown experience, taut once under Ida cure, u radical\nand permanent cure will lie effected.
524972693275ddbe69528772ca720b43 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.4945205162355 39.261561 -121.016059 Arrival of the John L. Stephens.\nTbe steamer John L. Stephens arrived at San\nFranciseo, at 9 oclock Monday evening, bring-\ning advices from New York to the 5th of June.\nShe brings nearly 900 passengers, including 343\nwomen and children. From the Journal Rxtra,\nof yesterday afternoon, we extract tbe follow-\ning intelligence of interest:\nThe excitement in regard to British outrages\non American commerce still continues on the\nAtlantic side, and ncuounts of searches are be-\ning frequently announced by vessels arriving at\nNew York, Boston, New Orleans an other ports.\nThe most startling announcement is that an\nAmerican vessel had been Bred into oir Pensa-\ncola by a British cruiser, and one man killed.\nThis statement lacks confirmation.\nIt was proposed to send dewn a force to the\ncoaft of Cul.a , to capture the offending vessels\nand bring them into one of our ports for trial.\nMason and Crittenden took a more sober view\nof the matter which operated as a sort of show-\ner bath to tbe hot blood of tbe Senate. The af-\nfair ended in a gust.\nAdvice* had been received from London\nin reply to Secretary Cass demand for redress,\nbut the Administrstion is confident that Great\nBritain will disavow the acts of the cruisers, and\narc not disposed to make any warlike demon-\nstration after they can have a talk on the sub-\nject. It is quite well understood that Lord Na-\npier has sent a dispatch to th* Commander of\ntbe British West India squadron to desist from\nfurther annoyance to American vessels until\nfurther order* from England.\nThere wa* a story ourrent atN«w York which\nrequires confirmation, that a British officer con-\nspicuous for his boarding operations, had been\narrested aud sent to Jamaica. The British war\nsteamer Styx recently landed a detachment of\nmariners, at one of the port* of Cuba, and\nsearched the plantations in tbe vicinity for ex-\nported negroes. The utTair has caused much\nexcitement on the Island.\nOur government has sent the Arctic, celebra-\nted as the vessel in which Capt. Ilartstein made\nhis search for Dr. Kane, and the ateamer Water\nWitch have been dispatched to the coast of Cuba\nto look after the British cruisers.
5aef58982a3d3dbdb96b1616ef4cb691 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.3246575025369 40.063962 -80.720915 New Orleans, April 28..The Ca\nof the steamer Iberia, in his report tc\nto Mr.' T. Tapper, agent of tho Attai\nTransportation Company, says:\ncoming between Bayon Teche to-daj\ntook on sugar at Oak Lawn, direct\ntho sugar house at Pargery, on the\nol the boat. All the lausse point\nunder water from seven miles above\nIberia. The water of Grand Lake is\nono hundred and fifty yards from flo\nover the Teche from Attachafalay\nNow Iberia. Families are pourin\nfrom all quarters and settling on the 1\nlands. Moat of the large plantations\nbeen abandoned on the east side o\nTecho. Where 5,000 hogsheads of e\nwould have been made they now\nhope to save seed. Portions ol the t<\nof Franklin, New Iberia and Bt. Mai\nville are under water. The watef is\nning over Morgan's Railroad for a\ntance of about twenty-five miles\nBrashear. The streets of the latter\nare covered with water. Three\nwero drowned on ~Manday while cro\n Pearl river, the crossing of the M\n& New Orleans Railroad. Superini\nent Scranton, of this road, says it\ntake thirty days to repair the dat\ndone by the recent flood and get the\nin thorough order. The steamer Par\nis expected here in the morning,\nhas one hundred and ninety-five bsj\nmails, shipped at Vicksburg, which\nsupposed to include New York dates\nthe 10th to the 19th.\nMonbob, La , April 28.Tho rivei\nfallen an inch and a half in 24 h<\nThe wator is receding slowly in the\nof the'city. There was a light shi\nlast night, bntthe weather is clear to\nThe steamer Garry Owen, which\nCamden at 11 o'clock yesterday mon\nreports the river falling all the way di\nThe present-lathe highest water by\nleet ever known above. A planter li\nbelow reports thirteen miles of riVer\nout between Morrison's and Cuba,bn\nrear all under. Below Cuba he rei\nall overflowed. The mails for the\nand West go by Bhreveport.
974c875335a4c99f3b7a39859c476f5a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.941256798978 39.261561 -121.016059 It is well known that so much of the act of\nMay 19th 1853, entitled “an act concerning the\ncourts of justice of this State and judicial offi-\ncers' as conferred upon the County Court juris-\ndiction and power to “enforce the liens of me-\nchanics and others,” fell under the decision of\nthe Supreme Court. It was there held that the\nspecial cases in which the County Court might\nbe vested with original jurisdiction were such\nonly as are the creation of statute,and unknown\nto the general framework of the common law\nand equity. The remedy however in those ca-\nses over two hundred dollars was not destroyed\nby this decision. The jurisdiction of the Dis*\ntrict Court by virtue of its equity powers was\nstill ample to enforce the lieu above that amount,\nbut under the sum of two hundred dollars there\nwere no courts capable of taking cognizance of\nthe sum other than those of Justices of the\nPeace. It was never contended that the power\nbelonging to these courts were such as to war-\nrant them in enforcing a remedy of the nature\nof nn equity proceeding and therefore the law\nas it affected the liens under two hundred dol-\nlars was a nullity. The last Legislature was\nlooked to, to correct this evil. The language\nof the statute of 1856 however conferring juris-\ndiction is not at changed, and we arc stiil\nleft to all the doubts and uncertainties which\nperplexed the proceedings under the former\nlaws. But supposing that it be competent for\nthese inferior courts to take jurisdiction, and\nenforce the lien under the limited amount, there\nis another difficulty which is likely to arise, and\nshould be guarded against by some salutary ]\nprovision. The seventh section of the act of\n1856 prescribing the mode of proceeding to be\npursued for enforcing any lien reads as follows:\n“Said liens may be enforced by suit in any\ncourt of competent jurisdiction on setting forth\nin the complaint the particulars of such demand\nwith a description of the premises sought to be\ncharged with said lien and if the same shall be\nestablished by the judgmentof the court, then\nit shall be the duty of the court to cause a no-\ntice to be published for at least ten days in\nsome newspaper published in the county notify-\ning all persons holding or claiming lions on\nsaid premises, to lie and appear in said court on\na day to be therein specified, and to exhibit\nthen and there the proof of said liens. On as-\ncertaining the whole amount of said liens with\nwhich the said premises are justly chargeableas\nhereinbefore provided, the court shall cause\nsaid premises to bo sold in satisfaction of said\nliens 4c.”
13179b8062934c65a9de8f6965c75e54 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1905.3630136669203 41.875555 -87.624421 commodious residence Is surrounded\nby well wooded plcttircsiUe nnd fer-\ntile lauds, among the most valuable\nIn Juneau County, In which the town\nof Necedah Is situated. Mr. Clark's\nlands are for disposal lu lots of lit to\nWW acres, all located within easy dis-\ntance of the line market town of Nece-\ndah. Through the district Hows the\nbeauHful Wisconsin ltlver, one of the\nmost maiestio mul delightful "treams\nlu the world. Necedah Is located so\nthat thoie desirous of It can roach\nthe far famed dells of WIcoiHn by\nI Hint p.isdug through nil the way\nthe miht beautiful Mciicry Imaginable.\nNecedah lias first class railroad serv-\nice, the Milwaukee - St. 1'aul nnd the\nNorthwestern roads running through It.\nIt Is one of the finest market towns\nIII Wisconsin, lias commodious\nhotels, tlrst class haul;, electric lights\nand ail modern public Improvements.\nMr. ("lurk's splendid acre property Is\nIdeally located as u summer nnd fall\nresort. It gives the Illicit opportunities\nfor hunting and tlsiilug. ami while\nwithin easy distance nf nil the com-\nforts mul luxuries of civilization, af-\nfords possibility of enjoyment of the\npleasures and beauties of primitive\nnature. The property Is regarded as\nnot only desirable hut a most protltuble\nInvestment, a fact that Is being prov-\ned by Its great and rapid development\nand Its growing attraction for tourists,\nsportsmen mid lovers of nature in gen-\neral. Mr. Clark has the high regard\nand respect of his fellow citizens of\nNecedah. and I" bound to be one of the\nmost successful men of affairs, us lie\nIs to-da-
dce6eedf22113a2e4b53fb5453236d8f VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.6178081874682 43.798358 -73.087921 Death. It is not easy to describe the\nsensation which the mind experiences on\nthe first sight of a dead countenance ;\nwhich, when living, was loved and es-\nteemed for the sake of that soul which us- -\ned to give it animation. A deep and aw-\nful view of the separation which has tak-\nen place between the soul and body olthe\ndeceased, since we last beheld him, occu-\npies the feelings; our friend seems both,\nnear and yet afar off. : The most interest-\ning and valuable part is fledjuvay; what\nremains is but the earthly perishmg hab- -\niLitinn. nn I\nYet the features present the accustomed\nassociation of friendly intercourse. For\none moment, we could think ihem asleep.\nThe next reminds us that the blood circu-\nlates no more; the eye has lost its power\nof seeing, the ear of hearing, the heart cf\nthrobbing, and the limbs of movinir.\nQuickly a thought glory breaks in ap\non the mind, and we imagine the dear de- -\npancu suui iu ue arnvea ai its long- wis a- e- d\nfor rest. It is surrounded by cheru-\nbim and seraphim, and sings the song of\nMoses and the Lamb on Mount Zion.\nAmid the solemn stillness of the chamber\nof death, imagination hears heavenly\nhymns chanted by the spirits of just men\nmaus illicit. Ill BUUkUCr lUUIIlCLJl, IDC\nlivid lips and sunken eye of the clay cold\ncorpse, recall our thoughts to earth, and\nto ourselves again. If there be a mom-\nent when Christ and salvation, death and"\njudgment, heaven and hell, appear more\nthan ever to be momentous subjects of me- -\ndiation, it is that which brings us to the\nside of a coffin containing the body of a\ndeparted believer. And while we think\nof mortality, in, death, aud the grave, we\nfeel the prayer rise in our bosom
276094a789dd9d99d86e4976b4a29f17 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5767122970574 40.063962 -80.720915 At the end of a mouth he received a\nfew lines which onened his eyes. The\nGeneral iuformed him that Caroline\nlelt now that she had been mistaken iu\nsupposiug herself so attached to him as\nto make desirable to her a life-long\nconnection with him. He requested\nhim to pardon the inexperience and\nyouth of his daughter, aud not to take\nadvantage of her too sott and pliant\ndisposition, which had induced her to\nbelieve loo hastily that she had given\nhim her atTections. The writer conc.u-\nded by requesting on the part of Caro¬\nline that he would not return to the\ncity at present, as it would be a trial to\nthe excessive sensibility of her feelings\nto meet him again Immediately.\nIn another month Caroline's engage¬\nment to George McFarland was an¬\nnounced, and preparations were begun\nfor the wedding upon a splendid scale.\nEvery article of the trousseau was sent\nfor from New York. When Caroline left\nschool two years previous, her meas¬\nure had been left with the most fash¬\nionable milliners In the city. This per¬\nson, who aspired to the reputation of\nan artist, was already well acquainted\nwith Caroline's style, complexion, fig¬\nure, etc. She was given full liberty to\nchoose whatever she thought most ele¬\ngant, rich and becoming.\nWhen the boxes and trunks began to\narrive the unpacking of each was the\ntheme of conversation with the ladies,\n and old, who loved sight-seeing\nand gossip, in Savannah. All of Caro¬\nline's younz acquaintances and friends\ncame to see them. The wedding-drees\ncould not be so immediately finished,\nbut bulletins were sent on lor the infor¬\nmation of the bridesmaids, concerning\nthe texture, form, laces, trimmings,\nflowers, etc. And the bridesmaids vied\nwith each other, whose dresses should\napproach the nearest to Caroline's In\nbeauty and richness.\nAll her friends flocked to see her and\ngathered around her at this time; all\nHave the family of the rejected lover.\nTo them remained present reminiscen¬\nces of broken faith and promises for¬\ngotten. I know not what were Caro¬\nline's own sentiments. It was after her\nmarriage that our friendship began, and\nthe outlines of these details I heard\ntrom her own lips.\nThe marriage took place. General\nVesey gave away bis lovely daughter.\nAll the fashion aud beauty of Savan¬\nnah were present, and some guests ar¬\nrived even from Charleston and Beau¬\nfort. Immediately after herj marriage,\nCaroline and her husband left Savan¬\nnah for the Virginia Springs. It was\nthere that I met tier for the second time.\nI had been educated at the South and in\ncomparative seclusion. There was still,\nmuob of the shyness of a school girl\nabout my manners, and I was conscious\nof it. I therefore appreciated the more\nthe perfect ease, grace and self-posses¬\nsion or hers.
289bc6bdf01b6fb13d441a679b1299b4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.6999999682903 41.681744 -72.788147 Of course there can be no team-\nwork without regularity and strict\ndiscipline. This is equally true of, a\nfootball or baseball team. There must\nalso be various ranks and degrees of\nauthority. And sometimes this neces-\nsary organization and close regulation\ncreates an impression that the Army\nis not democratic.\nBut the fact of the case is that\nAmerican soldiers accept the reasonT\nable disciullne of the Army readily\nbecause they have the good sense to\nrealize that these things are neces-\nsary. They accept them without los-\ning in the least their real independ-\nence as free citizens.\nFurthermore, American armies are\ndemocratic because the path of pro-\nmotion is wide open. Any man who\nhas a reasonable amount of ability\ncan pracitce,' can study, can cultivate\nthe qualities of a soldier and leader,\nand can work his way up. And this\nis the real test of a democrtic army.\nIn a special sense the National\nArmy is democrtic. A great democ-\nracy must always carry on its affairs\nthrough chosen representatives. You\nare doubtless familiar with this prin-\nciple as it is applied in time of peace.\nNow it is applied in time of war.\nThrough a process of fair selection\nthe National Army has been picked to\nrepresent all parts of the country and\nall groups of the people. Never has\nAmerica sent forth an army so truly\nrepresentative of the Nation.\nThere are always pessimists in\nevery generation who insist that pa-\ntriotism is dead or at least decaying.\nThey hve not been lacking in recent\nyears. The comes a crisis such as\nnow confronts us.
ad1894ba25b044a653df47ca820b2852 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1848.7254098044425 31.960991 -90.983994 and crown with honor their gallant followers.\nAt this, I am sure none rejoice more sincerely\nthan yourself. They were all children of your\ncountry, and the patriot ever rejoices that his\ncountry has so many sons worthy of their sirev\nIt was enough for you to rebuke the vain­\nglorious boasting of the foe; to meet them in the\nopen field, and under their walls of stone; on\ntheir plains and in the gorges of their mountains,\nand to teach them that with every advantage of\nposition, defences and numbers, they could not\nwithstand the discipline and impetuosity of the\nAmerican soldiery.\nThough not present at the battles which our\narmies triumphantly fought from the Gull to the\ncity of Mexico, it was your epir.l r.nii your suc­\ncess, which struck terror to the inmost soul of\nthe enemy, while they fired heart and nerved\nthe arm of every American soldier, emulous of\nyour fame. The gates of Veia Cruz and San\nJuan, the impregnable, fell not at the sound of\nthe trumpet, but shrunk hack affrighted at the\nenraptured shout of our lines, which rose on the\nnews of the glorious Buena Vista. Amid ail\nthe fierce conflicts, in the most beautiful of val­\nleys, Monterey, blazed from the mountain peaks\n— the hand-writing on the wall, and told the in-\nev t ibie doom ol the city of the Montezumas.\nBut, General, we meet and address you not to\nweary you with praise. That we should speak\nof your deeds, is our pleasure and onr privilege.\nWe know how generously you divide the honors\nwith your brave soldiers and officers, and we\nfeei that the division only increases your own\nshare of renown.
231c091f25586601cf59d3dc317ccb81 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1886.6506848997972 42.217817 -85.891125 Two hundred lives wero lost by the\nburning of a passenger steamer on tho R.ver\nVolga, near Sarutov, Russia.\nMr. Ferguson, tho Gladstone candi-\ndate for Parliament in Leitli, wa elected by\nan overwhelming majority.\nIt was announced in Parliament that\ntho Government would oppose all notices of\nmotions and private members' bills, the ob-\nject lieing to insure a nhort session.\nWilliam J, Kendall, of Poston, clad\nin a cork vest, swam tho whirlpool rapids of\nNiagara River. Tho trial was to settle a wager\nof $10,000, mado by Roston parties, ho to re- -\ncoivo $1,000 of tho stakas. Kendall relates\ntho following experiences:\nWhen ho reached tho spot where Captain\nWebb is supposed to have lost his life, tho\nw ater secmeu to go from under him, and a huge\nwuve struck him on the h' ad and shoulders,\nknocking him unconscious for a few moments.\nHe found his swimming abilities of no use\nwhatever, and never expected to come out\nalive. When entering the whirlool ho was\nso benumed he ootild not use a limb, mid\ndid not know w hnt he was doing. The current\nfvok him into the main eddy sucked him\ndown like a Hash, keeping lain under fully fif-\nteen seconds. Uion reaching the undercurrent\nlie wa shot mt of tho pool fully fifty feet from\nthe center. When he reached the surface he\nhad partly recovered consciousness, and know-\ning thero was no time to spare before he would\nlie dashed down the lower rapids, he swam to\nthe shore. While lauding he was so over-\ncome that he again became unconscious,\nand his assistants were fully half an hour oc-\ncupied in reviving him with tho aid of stimu-\nlants and by rubbing. When asked if ho would\never make another trip he said, most emphati-\ncally, "No, there's not enough money in the\nworld to induce me to repeat this afternoon's\nexperience. A child would havo the same\nchance to go through tho rapids and come out\nall right as an cxiert swimmer."\nTho President and his party aro hav-\ning a d 'iightful time in the Adiroudacks.\nA tire at Karlville, X. Y., destroyed\nproperty 1 1 the value of $100,000 .\nIt is claimed that ghouls made an ef-\nfort to steal t'.io body of W. 11 Vanderbilt at\nStaten Island.
0c102b5b22207fbc34350aa428ed520b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1871.223287639523 37.561813 -75.84108 and made an effort to throw off tbe shackles\nwhich they assert have so long prevented\nwoman from tak!ng an active part in the\ndrama of life. Now I believe the sphere of\nwoman to be peculiarly her own, and dis-\ntinct from that of man. The more wo-\nmanly a woman is, the more is her influ-\nence felt. The moment she shows herself\nmanly, that moment she fails to effect tbe\npurest and holiest results of oharacter.\nHer life is of the affections not in its\nnarrowest sense, of selfish and instinctive\nattachments, but where it embraces in the\nwidest sense, everything, animate and in\nanimate, worthy of being loved. Therein lies\nher strength, not her weakness.\nNow I feel a repugnance to the idea of\nwoman appearing in public places, at con\nyentlons, promiscuous assemblies, assert\n her rights, as if she had not more now\nthan she knows how to use. Does not\nScripture teach her that it ia a shame for\nwoman to speak in high places? Is she\nfollowing the dictates of that blessed book T\nLet her do her duty at borne, and en\nlighten others by the light of her own ex\nample. That will conduce more to her\nhappiness than raising a cry about the\npoor, oppressed sufferers, who (I suppose)\nshe thinks have not spirit enough to de-\nfend their own side of the question. For\nmy own part I feel quite satisfied with\nmatters as they are. I am persuaded tbat\nIf we make good use of our means of edu\ncation and usefulness, enough is placed\nwithin our power, and we will leave it to\nthe strong-minde- d
2e6625f30cd743502b0af0cae70e0c0a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.1821917491122 37.561813 -75.84108 Joint Session. At 11 o'clock the Senators\nentered the hall, and the action of each\nhouse on the objection having been read,\nthe presiding officer announced that " the\ntwo houses not concurring otherwise " the\nElectoral votes of Vermont would be\ncounted, and they were, therefore, declared\nas five for Hayea and Wheeler. Then the\ncertificate of Virginia was read, and the\nvotes of that State were annonnced as\neleven for Til den and Hendricks. TacxotM\nof West Virginia were next anneunced as\nfive for Tilden and Hendricks. Then came\nthe last State, the State of Wisconsin, with\nten votes for Hayes and Wheeler.\nThe certificate of Wisoonsin having been\nread, Mr. Lynde presented objections signed\nby Senators Barnum, McDonald, Kelly,\nCooper, and JohnBton, and Bepresentatives\nLynde, Bui chard, Phillips, Tucker, Springer\nBice, Vance, Young, and Morey, ti count-\ning the vote Daniel W. Downs, one\nof tie Electors for the State of Wis\nconsin, because he held the office ot\nPension Surgeon and Examining Surgeon\nfor the Pension office prior to November 7,\n1876, the day of the Presidential election,\nand on the 6th of December, 1876, on which\nday be assumed to cast his vote aa\nan Elector, and that said office was\nan office of profit and trust, and that said\nDowns could not, therefore, be constitution-\nally appointed an Elector for the State of\nW isconsin, or vote ss such under the Con-\nstitution of the United States. That said\nDowns was not therefore duly appointed an\nElector for said State and that his vote can\nnot be constitutionally counted. The Senate\nat 11:25 rt tiled to its chamber, so that the\nhouses might separately consider and deter-\nmine the objections.\nJlouse.
151b935cccea2088c4cd9acc79fe88e1 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.1352458700162 43.82915 -115.834394 Oa the plains to Awimbotn. I found •\nlittle lady in the karger of ihe only tw o\nMoresintheplace, who told meSSt the\nIndian# on a reservation dose by had\nbegun to grow rentITM*, and «rer« mani­\nfesting the: fact by unusual insolence.\nOnly theday before a dozen of the braves\nbad come into tin* store, when she was\nMark alone in it, and liad demanded\nwhbky, a commodity they wsr» not al­\nlowed to touch and no one' wa# permitted\nto lell. She told them she had none,\n■rid they eat, a# Indians »rill, for a long\nUrne, as if to show her they would not\ngo away until tliey gut it Curiously\nenough, no one came to tbe store from\ntbe settlement. By and Irr the Indian»\nproposed to search for the whiskv. Bhe\n at them and told them they\nconld search. They did so, peeping and\npoking everywhere that they could think\nof When tliey offered to go up stairs\nto her bring apartments, »he stood in the\ndoorway and told them tbev moat not\nventure there. Bhe flattened her hack\n•gainst the door and defied them.\nShe was lea» than tbe ordiuarv height,\nand did not weigh ever 100 pound#, bat\n■he qnaiied them «rifh the eye of a brave\nand determined woman, and when, pres­\nently, some white men came to make\npurchases tlie Indians took themselves\noff. Onlya few nights before that tha\n•anus woman had seen a wolf io her\nback yard, and trad gone out and\n“ sliooed” it away with her apron and\nscolding, just as one of our girls might\ndotoacat Ineversawaman
13798c7d7b26e6ea312ab2c46724fc6e CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.8671232559614 39.623709 -77.41082 verse 9 to If. Von have a great picture\npresented to you in this story.\nFirst, the angry crowd.\nSecond, the infinite Saviour. It I ncrc\nan artist I should paint it, and yet no man\ncould ever paint the picture ol Christ, f\nknow of one who attempted it and then de-\ntermined that he would never paint again,\nbecause after working upon the face ot\nChrist no other taoe could he worthy of ins\nskill. I doubt if any man could paint the\ntrembling woman, her face now (lushed and\nnow pale, trembling in every part ol her\nliodv, and yet vou can sec it an as you sto)>\nand think. I know why He was so merci-\nful. You say it was because He was di-\nvine. and that is true without saving it,\nbut it seems to me He must nave been es-\npecially merciful because of the night tie\nfind spmt at the of Olives. I am\nperfectly sure that that man who prays\nmuch with Christ is ever charitable in Ins\ntreatment of those who have gone astrav.\nMrs. Whittemores treatment of Bluebird,\nthe poor fallen girl, who becomes the mis\nsionarv to tho outcast; Jerry McAuley b\narm about 8. H. Hadley and his prayer,\nwhich reveal to the poor sinful man that\nJerry McAuley knew Christ, are but illus-\ntrations of the spirit of which I apeak.\nThe man who has tho spirit 9! Christ,\nia ever gentle with tue erring, and\nnp and down the street* of our cities men\ngo in multitudes longing for just one word\nof sympathy.\nPaid a young Business man to me tins\nweek; "I have been four years in New\nYork, most of the time with a heavy heart.\nNo one lisa ever spoken to mo of 'dirist,\nnor invitc4 me to the church, nor asked it\nlie could
1950a3de0a01c29f450a8e77a46e13ef THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1894.0698629819888 43.994599 -72.127742 Tema is the nam given to a new lawn\ngame. It has been adapted to play on\nfoot from the Japanese form of poio\ncalled dakiu literally, "striking balls."\nThis game is played on ponies in a rec-\ntangular inclosure railed in by a tait\nbamboo post and rail fence about four\nfeet high, except at one end, where a\nboarded fence or screen about eight feet\niigh replaces the post and rail.\nIn the center of this screen is a circu-\nlar hole about 18 inches in diameter, be-\nhind which is fixed a netted bag rather\nlonger than an ordinary landing net.\nThis is the goal. Eighteen feet in front\nof this goal screen another post and rail\nfence is fixed across the inclosure. This\nis the goal barrier, which prevents the\nplayers from getting any nearer to the\ngoal. At the other end attendants stand\nwith a supply of balls and rackets.\nThe number of players is generally\nseven a side, but sometimes fewer. Each\nside wears a distinctive badge, generally\nwhite and red. The balls are also of two\ncolors, white and red, and are unlimited\nin number. The object of the game is\nfor the white players to sling white balls\nand the red players red balls into the\ngoal. When either side has seven\nballs into the goal net, it reaches the\nsecond stage of the game. It has then\nto play with a single ball, white or red,\nas the case may be, with a black zone or\nsome other distinguishing mark upon it.\nThe side which first succeeds in scor-\ning its zoned ball wins the game. The\nracket, or wand, as it has been called,\nused for slinging and carrying the ball,\nhas a light bamboo handle some 3 feet\n6 inches long. At the thinner end a\ncrook of split bamboo is fixed. Across\nthis crook a loose silk net is fixed, thus\nforming a shallow spoon or scoop. Some\ndexterity is required in picking up the\nball and retaining it in the crook. To\ndo this successfully the wand must be\ncontinually kept in motion.\nThe lawn game is of course played on\nfoot instead of on horseback. The in-\nclosure is reduced to about the dimen-\nsions of a lawn tennis court. The wands\nare the same as those used in the Japa-\nnese game, and the balls are of the same\nweight. A more sociable lawn game can\nhardly be imagined, and as there is plen-\nty of exercise it can be played at all\ntimes of the year when the ground is not\ntoo wet.
8ff8f4b8c791d88d3cd721307d565f3c THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1922.3356164066463 37.451159 -86.90916 "All the flubdub this Werder girl got\noff tonight puts me in mind of the\nway I talked that day. I can remem-\nber it aa well as anything ! Wesley\nkept yelpln' that whoever mentioned\na lady's name In a public place was a\npup, and of course I didn't want to\nhit blm for that ; a boy's got a reg'lar\nInstinct for tryln' to make out he's\non the right side in s scrap, and he'll\nalways try to do something, or say\nsomething, or he'll get the other boy\nto say something, to make It look as\nIf the other boy waa In the wrong and\nbegan the trouble. So I told poor ole\nWes that my father spoke lay moth-\ner's name In a public place whenever\nhe wanted to, and I dared him to say\nmy father waa a pup. And all so on.\nA boy startln' Hp a scrap, why, half\nthe time he'll drag In his father and\nmother If there's any chance to do It.\n fix up some way so he can say,\n'Well, that's Just the same aa If you\ncalled my fathor and mother a foal,'\nor something like that Then, after\nward, he can claim he was scrappln'\nbecause he had to defend his father\nand mother, and of course he'll more\nthnn half believe it himself.\n"Well, you take a government It's\nonly Just some men, the way I see It,\nand If they're goln' to start some big\ntrouble like this war, why, of course\nthey'll play Just about thut same old\nboy trick, because It's Instinct to do It\nJustthesameforampnasItIsfora\nboy or else the principle's jjust the\nsame, or something. Well, anyhow. If\nyou want to know who started a scrap\nand worked It up, you got to forget all\nthe talk there Is about It, and all what\neach side says, and junt look at two\nthings: Who was fixed for it first, or\nthought they were, and who hit first?\nWhen you get the answer to those two\nQuestions everything's
5844a3cfdef4b497659e516afc5c38a4 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1870.2123287354134 37.005796 -89.177245 Wo have, upon moro than one occa-\nsion, commended that good sense in tho\npeople of Chicago, that recognizes Cairo\nas thu gateway through which they must\nmaintain their business Intercourse with\ntho South. Instead of foolishly contend-\ning that thoro arc other and hotter chan-\nnels for her commerce with that section,\nutid instead of denying herself thu pro-\nfits of a larje buslncsa because tho same\nbusiness might add something to tho\nImportance of Cairo, Chicago takes fucts\nas she finds them, put3 forth vigorous\ngtlbrts to build up and aggrandize herself,\nat all times willing to "live and let live.''\nThu fruits of such a policy aru seen in\nthe fact that, during the past season the\nlower Mississippi river has scarcely been\nable to furnish tonnage for the vast\namount of freight thu Illinois\nCentral railroad has poured Into Cairo.\nIn one day alone, fifteen thousand bar-\nrels of flour, and ono hundred and seven-\nteen car loads of other merchandize were\ndeposited heru for shipment, by that\nrailway, while hundreds of carload were\nstanding at way stations along tho route\nawaiting an opportunity to come for-\nward. It is safe to say, we think, that,\nsince the 1st day of February, the I. C .\nII. H. has brought to Cairo no less than\ntwelve thousand ton per week, for ship-\nment South, or for salu here.\nLet St. Louis aid and urge forward the\nCairo and St. Louis railroad, bury her\nfoolish hostility for Cairo, and, what the\nIllinois Central Is doing for Chicago, the\nCairo and St. Louis railroad will do for\nSt. Louis.
0286cdbbced8b71310482d6291e1a514 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.7958903792492 40.063962 -80.720915 the custody of uu officer, having been\narrested for the non-payment of his board.\nHe asked Mr. Brewster to advise and assist\nhim, sons to relieve him from arrest, and\nadvise him how to get bail. Mr. Brewster\nreminded him that he did not know him\nand hud never seen him before to his\nknowledge, and because he was a stranger\nto him and because of the peculiar position\nof Mr. Bowen towards the Department oi\nJustice in connection with the Dickson\ncharges, he was the lust man Mr.\nBrewster could interfere to. help\nunder any circumstances. Mr. Bowen said\nhe saw the propriety of that. Mr. Brewster\nsaid he (Air. Bowen) had involved his\ndepartment in a scandal maliciously gotten\nup by the Star route men by attempting to\nbring Mr. Dickson in connection with Mr.\nuameron. uowen saw ne wits very\nsorry but be came from California to make\nit plain. Mr. Brewster tokl him if he hail\nnot come he would have made him come.\nMr. Brewster then suggested that if he\ncould get money from his friends in New\nYork,' where he said he had money,\nhe could easily get it by a telcgraph'io\nremittance, finally Mr. Bowen said\n"Yes, that could he done," and the oflicer\nsaid ho would go with him. Mr. Brewster\nspoke in a loud tone in the presence of the\nollicer and myself and on Mr. Bowen's\nsuggestion that they speak in private he\nrefused, saying there was nothing to be\nprivate about. Before the interview Mr.\nBowen sent in by me the above mentioned\nnote and Mr. Brewster immediately came\nout in the front olfice. 1 was present
17db6a23e4c6116fb6c3cc92b867f838 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.8510928645517 39.745947 -75.546589 From the position of the contusions\non the breast Dr. Bastian, described\nas contusions, such as could have\nbeen caused by nails on the heel of a\nman's shoe. One of the mysterious\ndevelopments yesterday, was the fact\nthat it was learned that the dead\nman« cap, was found some distance\nfrom where the body was and that\nthe cap had considerable blood on it.\nThis blood It Is supposed got on the\ncap before Vansant« head got In tho\nwafer, as it is not thought possible\nthat ho once got up after his head\nwas buried in the water anti sand and\nthen there is no signs of a struggle\nor any blood around where he was\nfound to indicate that ho had walked\naround after being hurt.\nVansant« have been\ntraced from the time that he was in\nNewark on Election day until 4\no'clock yesterday morning, three\nhours before his body was found. He\ncame to Newark and voted in the af­\nternoon and then wont lo the barber\nshop at ihe Deer Park Hotel and was\nshaved. After that he waited around\nfor a short time for a son of Thomas\nCampbell's where he was working\nnesr Head of Christiana Church and\nrode out to the Campbell home. He\narrived there shortly after 6 oclock\nand later had supper. It is under­\nstood that the Campbell family are\npositive that Vansant stayed all night\nthere. Ho said something during the\nevening about getting up early and\nj going to Newark to hear tho election\nj returns.
0753bb8b626a732e3e92748c54219ef4 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.5301369545916 38.894955 -77.036646 green as 011 thlek 1 am, aul 1 know All\nabout jour Kajscnochanplaanl yourSilnt\nHoulette andjrur mltuunnary fclety I\nseen you go In there, and 1 follcrel, anl\nseen jougamblin, aud now alt tho tuunuy\njcu've got Is lu ray trunk, ant I'm gilnc\nto keep it tbero till we land u Way bick\nou kum right back to the tavern with me,\nanl wben 3 ou git out from under ruj thum\nagin jou'll know It "\nShe kept this kind uv talk up bait the\nnlte and wbeu I euLk Intoau onesy doze I\nheord It Bllll like the distant crow n uv\na rampageous nltemare. W e staid In Monte\nCarlo two Mies, but there was notbln In It\ntor me 1 could bear tbe fuo au see whar\ntt was goln on, but that was all, anl I\ndidn't even git a cbanst to win back what 1\nIvhi the fust \nLt this keeps up I'm feared ray trip to\nUroi 0 will bo a falljer.\nMonte Carlo fs such a popcrlar place, too,\nNew xoikersand Englishmen keep It up,\nami the I'rluts of Wales goes there an sets\nrlteduwu with thecrowd and does his sheer\nOne nlte last winter he put 100 franks on t\ntlgger and It kum up In Ibe wheel and the\nrluts got 3,600 franks on his Investment\nBut be dlJn t keep It, like most men woo I\nHo dlvldtd It up amoug everjboly at the\ntable, and then they all prayed that the\nPrints woull be lukky every time It\nwould have been a eatlu graco to meet ho\nbad been there the nlte I was, but hv\nwam't, Mandy was tbero fustll I sem\none little Dutchman that had won 400 000\nfraiks, but he wasn't aallsillo with that,\nand whtu be quit he hal lost 'WI .OOO
141261af51376affbabf4cfb40a98c5b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.6178081874682 40.063962 -80.720915 Hut hla citreur mood cloned; hh borei\n'eet had scarcely touobfd ibe lui\nwbHii a llou was fixed with laugd hii\nHaw* 00 tbe creature'* loltm. Tl\nrider uttered a ory of horror, aud, ft\nbe instant, sat helplessly k^zIiik at it\n>pen Jaw* behind hltu. I hhw tu* Ik:\n(atberlDii up his fl*uk« Tor a hecim\njouud, but the aoldler, a ti^ure ol g\n(autlc elreiiglb, grasping (tin uontril*\nhe monster with one band, with It\n>tUer shortening bin hpear, drove it\niteel, at oue rental leu* thrum, luto it\nlonVloreh'ead. Horse, llou, aud drlvi\nre)l, and oouiluued struKgllug logtnbe\nTbe next moment, a muss of cavalr\nsame thundering down'thri ravin\nrbey bad broken off from-tbeir umrcl\nhrougb ibe accident of rousing a straj\n{ling llou, aud followed him In U\nflddy ardor of (be cbana. The vlgl\nlun UC1UIO IUOIU nu OIIVUHU\nbe boldeel Intrepidity. The valley wt\nilled wiib ibo vtai. herij; retreat wt\n lor tlie'iruoperH came, all\n>ouring in by'the only pans; and froi\nbe Huddeu duaoenl of tbe glen, .borj\ntnd uian were rolled headforeinoi\ni.uong tbe lions; uBlth&r man1 m\nnonster ooold retreat, Tire oot\nllot wm horrible; and tbe beav\nipeartt of ito leglouarlea plunge\nhrough bone and bralD. Tbe lion\nnuclfe more furious by wounds, eprac\nipun tbe powerful boraen, nud boi\nbein to tbe ground, or flew at It\nirooper'a throata,.. and crushed, <\nI ragged H\\vay calraia and bookie\nTbe valley w«a a struggling heap\nlumau aud savage battle; man, Uo\nind charter, writhing and rolling\nigonieA, till tbelr forms were ondlatlr\n(utabable. Tbe groans aud ortee of (L\negloneera, the screams ot the mangle\nlurnea, and the roan and howling*\niie lions bleeding with tbe sword au\nipear, learlUK (be dead, darting Up U\nildes ot the hilla In terror, and rushln\nlowu Martin with it freah ttyrftl'qr gori\njulUdti nil
04ce0afef7c875c2bc7a8b3b2b0adc7d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.9385245585408 40.063962 -80.720915 on a rod above. Another is the poem\nThe Garden of the Heart," printed in the\nvtno style. Tlieso are either fringed or J\nlain. Another novelty is a folding card\nti a (luted satin cushion. Hell sliaped \\\nirds and all appropriate designs are also 1\nichuli'd, Thcv are all real works of art. J\n3/r. MeiakelJ s eto^k of alburns is also\niraer than ever and includes many new\n. y Jes. One i» particularly worthy of no- j,\nce. The card surrounding the photo-\nraph, usually white, in this to of a dark {\n>lor, with flowers, birds and other orna- j ,\n»ci4r1 figures relieving it in gay hues, l\nlie contrast with the portraits is pleasing. J\nrhonR [he novelties in yhaj>e is an oh- t\nnig for cabinet quel pane} pictures, two v\nthe pago, which ie very rj«»t. In auto- 11\naph albums, a|.<jo. soni« of tho loveliest\nid most artistic illustrated ever J'\niSde by the printers' art, are in Mr. 'y\neiskell's stook, together with plain ones i\nall shapes, Ptyioa, sizes and prices. J\n3th kinds of alliumd are >n }>)ush or J\nather of great variety. x\nScrap books in endless varieties, scran n\ncturcs, the latest Issues, ehililrens\n)oks, the popular juvenile annuals and «\nhers, purses, of all kinds, opera classes, ^\ni)d glasses and telescopes of the best J\nakce, the red 'lino poets, family.and u\nHiket bibles of all stylus and nrices, and\nI sorts of books are a few oi the other j|\nirigs which give Mr. HeiskcH's stock *m\nmost endless variety. Fancy and fine\nationery should also be mentioned, and\nto oi the most attractive lines of goods in tt\ne store i» tho new japaned articles, JJ\niper knives of now shapes and fclijj like, 'Sl\ntistically ornamented with delicate 13\nind painting. j'j\n\\i- TTI>5OI.'A1I !...<>
27911afa3b46b352542c8b52fe916f84 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.7390710066281 42.217817 -85.891125 occurrence, of which a real old gray\nrat was tho hero, and the incident\nwhereof took place iu that city, which\nis equal to tho best. A lady who has a\nnumber of tine hens, to which she has\ndevoted a good deal of care and atten-\ntion during the winter, in hopes of ob-\ntaining an early and fair crop of freh\negg, was surprised at the meager re-\nsult ctu;tlly reached. The he s made\nnoise, in singing and cakling, enough\nfor every dy lasers, and yet only occa-\nsionally did she get an egg.\nThe lady at lengih determined to\nwatch operations arid ascertain, if possi-\nble, the cause of failure. She saw the\nhens go upon the nest, but if she was\nnot present when they came oil no egg\nwas found. At length constant watch-\n and waiting solved the mystery.\nA day or two since, while on tl.e watch,\na hen came on tne nest ana com\nmenced cackling. Almost instantly an\nold rat came out of a hole, and running\ninto a barrel, which was tnrown down\nupon its s.cte ana in wnicn was tne\nhen s nest, at once nosed the egg out\nupon the ground, then laid down upon\nits back and getting the egg between\nits fore paws ami nose commenced\nsquealing, when two or three other rats\ncame out, and taking the rat with the\negg by the hind lega, dragged it, egg\nand all, into the hole. The lady iiilirms\nthat she can substantiate the loregoing\nfact by at least three witnesses. If any\none can tell a more remarkable rat sto\nry than this we would like to hear it.
106fdb143bae4a198ebfe36b838baaa4 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.3493150367833 40.832421 -115.763123 A X.RTTKR from St. Petersburg gives a\ngloomy account of (he new Czar's life\nat the castle of Gatschina. thirty miles\nfrom the Capital. Before the Court\nwas removed thither several hundred\nartisans of the Preobrnzinsky regiments\nwere sent to make thf necessary altera-\ntioun. At midnight they were assem¬\nbled iu a church at Gut-china aud were\nsworu to aileuce. death being the pen¬\nalty for violation of the oatb. Ten\nroubles was the | rice of each n an's\nsilence. The alteriitions were marie iu\nforty eight hours. Vodkil whisky ) soon\nloosened the tongues of tbo workuieu,\nsud Ibe following is a dmcription of the\nprecautions agaiust assassination made\nill ?.bo palace of the Czar: A eubter\nraneau passage leads from tbo Czar's\nroom to the viable, where a number of\nhorsea are kept saddled and bridled\nday aud nigbt. Sentinels aru posted at\nintervals of twenty tarda around the\nbuilding. The Imperial bedroom his\ntwo windows, protected at nigbt by mas¬\nsive iron shutleis, vliirb can only be\nreached freiu the outside by passiug\nthrough three spurious aiito-cbnmb< rs.\niu which are posted eighty Cossacss\narmed to tbo teeth. They ato allowed\ntu spuak aud move about iu two outer\n but in the ball adjoiuing the\nCzar's bedroom perfect silence is main\ntained all night. A Getirr.il on duly for\nthe day sits iu au easy chair, his Cos-\nsuoks sitting ou a divan which ruus\nnrontid the whole room. At the Geu\neral's right is a kuob cf electric appa¬\nratus, which riugs a bell iu overy guard¬\nhouse within the palace grounds. Wbeu\nthe Emperor is about tu retire, bifore\nshutting the door, he removes the outer\nhandle so that no entrauce can be\neffected until he himself personally\nopens the door from the inside. Unlike\nhis father, he cannot endure armed sol\nliters in hil bed chamber. Several\nmines were discovered at St. Petersburg,\naud a quantity of dyuamite was seized\njust after it had been introduced iulo\nthe court yard of the Palace of Gstsohi-\nna concealed in a I 'ad of hay. The\nCzarina ia seriously III, bcii g subject to\nsevere nervouu attacks, aud strange hal¬\nlucinations. Messy llelftniiu's illness\nla expected to be brought to a elo«o In\na very short (lino, and it is thought thin\nwill bo Ihn signal for her eieeulioii,\nThe Pari* Iniramigeni declares she lot-\nbeen ruthlessly tortured tince she hai\nfcjon a prisoner,
157322b4317ae40b1e2407252493f382 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.9959016077212 58.275556 -134.3925 Uren buildings, located on the Alaska Tread-\nwell Gold Mining Co.'s Ready Bullion mill\nsite, consisting of a building 26 by 48 feet,\ntwo stories , also a small building 10 by 30\nfeet with shed, including therewith a steam\nboiler and an Acetylene lighting plant, to¬\ngether with an 18-inch Pelton water wheel;\none cabin on railroad track, directly op¬\nposite the Treadwell Club; one cabin on the\nBeach road, directly opposite Smallwood's\nstore; one cabin on the Beach road, on the\nsouth side, about 75 yards west of store ; one\ncabin on south side of Beach road, about 150\nyards west of said store; one cabin on south\nside of Beach road about 200 feet west of\nJones' house; one cabin on St. Anne avenue\ndirectly opposite No. 3 fire-hall on north\nside; one cabin on north wide St. Anne\navenue nearly opposite Catholic church, to¬\ngether with all and singular the tenements,\nhereditaments and appurtenances thereunto\n. belonging or in anywise appertaining; all of\nsaid property being situated on Douglas\nIsland^, District of Alaska, and within the\njurisdiction of this Court.\nNow, therefore, in consideration of the\npremises, notice is hereby given that on the\n21st day of Jan., 1909, at ten o'clock a. m . of\nthat day in front of the Post Office, in the\ntown of Douglas, District of Alaska, I will, in\nobedience to said order of sale and decree of\nforeclosure, sell the above-described prop¬\nerty, or so much thereof as may be necessary\nto satisfy plaintiff's judgment with interest\nthereon and costs, to the highest and best\nbidder, in the maimer provided by law.\nDated the 22nd day of Dec., 1903.
1df5b16af63dc5542747b13feabd27f0 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1899.2808218860985 39.623709 -77.41082 An eren excellence makes tbe good things which\nTHB LADIES HOME JOURNAL promises usasw\nally interesting and strong. The list Is strong and\nsturdy. One series of papers alone would sell the\nnugaxine; that is, the three White House articles\nwhich cJi-President Harrison Is to write. No mao has\ncrer done what General Harrison will do inthese\narticles: show ns what “A Day With the President\nat bis Desk” means in one article: inanother tellof\n•'The Social Lilc of the President,' and ina third ar-\nticle describe “Upstairs Life in the White House.”\nBach of the articles willbe profusely illustrated. An-\nother senes equally fascinating is the one called\n“Great Personal Events,” in which some of the great-\nest enthusiasms which have occurred in America will\nbe revived: those wonderful times when Louis Kos-\nsuth rode up Broadway; when the young Prince of\nWales was here; when fenny Lind sang in Castle\nGarden; when Henry Ward Beecher electrified his\ncongregation by selling slaves in his pulpit; when\n went round tbe world; when Henry Clay bade\nfarewell to the acnate; when John Wesley preached\ninGeorgia, of which so few know. Allthese mem-\norable events and other* will be vividly recalled,\ntold more graphically than ever before, and illustrat-\ned withpictures which have occupied twelve artists\nover a year. A third scries la unique and valuable\nfrom the fact that it will give women scores of ideas\nfor their homes. It willreveal what there is “Inside\nof s Hundred American Homes,” and carefully re-\nproduce pictures of one hundred completely-furnish-\ned rooms In homes in this country—from Maine to\nCalifornia—where taste has gone farther than money.\nTwo new department writers have also been exclus-\nively engaged by the JOURNAL: Mrs. S. T> Rorer,\nwho wilfhcrcafter have charge of thedomestic de-\npartment and give a scries of cooking lessons, and\nDwight L. Moody, the famous evangelist, who is to\nput tne result of bis life study of Inc Bible in s de-\npartment entitled “Mr. Moodys Bible Class.”
03e2f0f21065f3d2bc772a006a98560c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.5095628099068 41.004121 -76.453816 to look Into Bluebeard's chamber.\nIt might havo been tho sight of tho\nsilver on tho sideboard, or tea urn upon\nthe table that first started it. I know\nthat Mrs. Holland was very careful\nabout locking up tho plulo, aud sug-\ngested that somo one should put tho\ntoy of tho sideboard under their pillow\nwhen they went to bed that night. I\nremember, too that Gcrlrudo Haws was\nthe only ono who had courago enough\nto pocket tho disagreeable charge.\nOf all tho tsrriblo things that wcro\nrelated, and I .nn sure each ouo vied\nwith tho other in telling frlghtrul\nstories, nono affected mo a3 did an\no'er true tale" told by C.irolino Mc\nDowell, and vouched for by her cousin\nucy. At lliis date I" do uot remember\nall its details; I only know that r.otno\n uncle, or cousin . of tho family\nrented a houso near the city; that\nwhen thev took nosscsition of it, it\nseemed tho most dolight'iil as well as\ntho most dcsirablo ol places r but when\nthey had occupied it a week or two a\nfeeling of disquiet and unrest camo over\neach member of tho family\nThough thcro was nothing unuiual\nheard, and everything was as q ulot and\nwell ordered a3 In any house, tlioy soon\ngot In thoway of huddling about the par\nlor flro of nights, dreading to soparalo\nwhen bedtime camo, aud looking fear-\nfully over their shoulders as they wont\ninto tho hall and up tho long stairway.\nThough tho houso had a southern and\neastern exposure the rooms grow damp\nnnd cheerless, an uncanny ntmojpltoro\nconstantly pervading them. They did\n...
060f784e956691539d028f1d54f6cacf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.7849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 chicken," said Frances promptly. She\ngot it this timo..Harper's Bazar.\nA schoolboy of incorrigible laziness\nsurprised his parents the other day 011\nreturning from school by proudly* in-\nforming them that ho hml secured the\nprize for English grammar. "Tho prize\ntor English grammar!" exclaimed his\nastonished futher. "Why, I hnvo always\nunderstood that you are the vefv last\nboy in your class." "So I am, father,"\nreturned young hopeful; "and it was\nready Dick Porter who got the grammar\nprize. But ho left it in tho train when\nwo changed at Clapham junction, and'\nso I collared it sharp." .J .omlon Figaro.\nThe way in which a small boy of our\nacquaintance met tho crisis, which, in\ntho language of the nurses, was "to put\nhis nose out of joint," showed at least\n readiness to dispose of a troublesome\nimpediment with a word. The little\nono was taken into his mother's cham¬\nber to seo for the first time a baby\nbrother. Tho three-year-old looked\nthe infant over with a calralv critical\nregard, and then, turning to the maid\nwho accompanied him, he said very de¬\ncidedly, "Jane, you keep that in tho\nkitchen.". Youth*i Companion\nLittlo Nellie was in great gleo over a\npromised visit across tho country to\ngrandma's. She heartily agreed to the\nstipulation that she should get up\nbright and early. When awakened at\n.1 o'clock in the morning sho protested\nagainst being disturbed. "Why, you\nsaid you'd get up bright and early,"\nreminded mamma. "Yes, 1 know," ad¬\nmitted Xellio. "But this isn't bright\nand early. It's dark and early.".\nJlousekeepers' Weekly.
05ae45d19a9c0a238df69f719c50ed9e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1889.5027396943176 42.217817 -85.891125 A paragraph has been going the\nrounds of the papers published in those\nof Mir neighboring towns which are not\nparticularly friendly to our new rail-\nroad enterprise, to the effect that the\nsyndicate of capitalists which was ex-\npected to construct the road had con-\ncluded not to make the investment.\nThe Nouthkknku can say positively\nthat there is not a shadow of truth in\nthe statement. No longer ago than last\nSaturday the committee appointed to\nsecure tin; right of way through this\ncounty received a letter from the head-\nquarters of the company, urging the\ncommittee to push forward its work as\nrapidly as possible, as a committee of\nthese capitalists would I over the line\nat the earliest practicable day. The\nchairman of the committee informs us\nthat everything is moving forward in\ngood shape and that our prospects were\nnever so bright as they are t o-d a-\nAs is well known, the wheat, ryo\nand oat fields all over the country are\nliterally alive with the insect mentioned\nlast week as having been discovered\nin this vicinity about the'JOth ult. As\nto their destructiveness opinions differ\nsome farmers claiming that their\nwheat is already badly injured, while\nothers as stoutly maintain that they\nwill do but damage. Hon. J. J.\nWoodman informs the Nouthkknku\nthat the njihis is neither new to science\nnor a stranger to the wheat fields of\nMichigan. He believes that to reason\nably early sown wheat the dam age by\nthis insect will be slight. Mr. Wood-\nman's views are coincided in by other\npiominent agriculturists in this state,\namong whom may lmentioned Mr.\nWilliam Strong, ofalamaz.oo county,\nwho informs the Telfjniph that he has\nhad his eye on this midge for years,\nand has thus far failed to discover any\nespecial damage from them.\nSay what you 111:13" about the Michi-\ngan legislature, certain it is that it has\nhelped the republican party redeem its\npledges to the people in regard to the\nregulation of the liquor traffic, and the\nstate has now on its statute books two\nus good laws in that behalf as were\never enacted the atson local option\nlaw and the Damon high license law.\nRy the enactment of these laws the re\npublican party has redeemed its pledges;\nplaced itself in the list of sure republi\ncan states, and left the third party with-\nout a mission. The high license bill\nmakes a uniform beer or whisky license,\n.VM); wholesale tax, $tio0; brewers' tax,\nSworn statements must be made
d694ffd7382d2c91cb2cfecf61d7af11 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1863.0123287354136 35.780398 -78.639099 A great many amendments will be pro-\nposed to the lleveuue bill, and, considered\nleisurely, will consume much time.\nThe country wonders at the delay in\nraising trcopsfor State defence. All feel\ndoeply for oi.r people overrun byabeartless\nenemy. But the question is whether we\nshall commit our defence to the Confeder-\nacy, or raise State Troops in aid of that\ngovernment ;' and if State troops are to be\nraised, out ot what part of onr people\nshall thev bj raised ? A larsre maioritv of\nthe Assemblv seems tl favor the raisinc of\na State reserve. Some on the ground\nthat the Confederate Gov't has neglected\nthe State; others on the ground that the\nConfederacy cannot look after all the\npoints ou so great a theatre of warfare,\nand that this State ought to have a reserve\nas well as the ther States of tbe Confeder-\nacy. The difficulty ?hich has caused the\ndelay is this : Shall tbe reserve be raised\nout of those liable to conscription ? out\nof those exempt from conscription ? Some\ninsist that it we accept volunteers from\nthose liable to conscription, we thereby\nnullify the conscription act, and place our-\nselves in antagonism Tith the Confederate\nGovernment ; and to avoid this, they pro-\npose to raise the State troops out of the\nJustices of the Peace, militia officers, those\nwho have hired substitutes, and other ex-\nempts, yielding those lia&le to conscription\nto the Confederate government. Others\ninsist that if the exempts and the conscripts\nboth go into the army, that suffering and\nstarvation must ensuerboth at home and\nin the army ; that it is unjust to the Con-\nfederate government to presume that N.\nC. will not be allowed to have a State re-\nserve, made up by Tohoteering from those\nliable to conscription; wLen all, or nearly\nall, the other Southern States have such a\nreserve ; that there ci'u be no antagjnisra,"\nunless the President shoAld denv in thia\nIfetate what has been conceded U the other
156731b13a2c737c8154e61bb3227b1e CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1900.6424657217149 39.623709 -77.41082 "But my troubles were not ended.\nIt happened that a husky ironworker\nhad chosen shelter behind the fence\njust when 1 went over and my feet\ncame down fairly in the middle of his\nback when I landed. He started to\nswear like a trooper and half rose to\ngive me a short swing when a sky-\nrocket struck the top of the wall im-\nmediately in front of him and stuck\nthere while it sent red and green Halls\nhack up the hill in great shape.\n"That settled the ironworker. Ho\nducked down in a hurry and before\nhe had time to think of mo again I\nhad rolled tea feet away and was\nsticking io the leeward side of the\nwall trying to keep my heart from\nchoking me. 1 succeeded, hut it was\nhard work, and it was really weeks\nbefore the effects of my run and the\nexcitement had passed away.\n"All the men and women who had\npassed me in tho stampede wore\nkeeping as close' to the ns they\ncould, but there others coining and\nthe early arrivals had troubles of\ntheir own. Somehow 1 escaped, but\nfew of the others were .so fortunate.\nThe Ironworker was a notable ex-\nample. Less than ten seconds after\nthe heels of my patent leathers had\nscraped along hla back he suffered\nanother accident. This time he had\nan encounter with a man of near his\nown weight who came over the fence\ndragging a small hoy with him.\n" They both landed on my would-be\nantagonist and he gave a yell that\ncould bo heard above tho noise of the\nexplosions and the cries of those In\nthe crowd. Every one who could not\nsee him concluded that a rocket had\nstruck him and tho women and girls\nscreamed with renewed energy. No\nsooner had tho man and his boy made\ntheir escape than two half grown girls\nplunged over the wall und once more\nthe ironworker yelled. One had land-\ned on his head and the other on his\noutstretched
070bcb46fca806bc73d9b5b4a5835c3d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.37397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 At one o'clock thia morning Turner's\nsplendid opera honsein this city took\nlire and was entirely destroyed. The d\nbuilding was occupied by McKee, a\nWoodward & Weekly, wholesale gro- e\ncers; Block A; Fox,(wholesale china and v\nqueensware; Grover & Baker's] sew- ®\ning machine company, and F. Lauge, ^\nrestaurant and billiard rooms. Nothing r;\nwas saved but a few sewing machines. (J\nThe floe residences east ot the opera ti\nhouse, on first street, of J. Schwab, f\nJoel Kslabrook and A. Kuhus were gj\nalso destroyed. The fire communicated h\nto the buildings south, on Main street, C\nowned by Mr. Ohmer, which were en- J1\ntirely destroyed, including the large {J\nfurniture establishment ol Mr. Obm«r ^\nand grocery store of Sandmier <k Bro. k\nA portion of wall tell on Herman n\nSandmeir, while he was endeavoring to\nsave some of his goods, crushing him\nto the fljor. His brother and several u\nothers endeavored lo extricate him but tc\nit was impossible. He lived in this 3\ncondition tor a while, when another d|\ncrash came, burying him in the e,\nruins. His wife and family were p<\npresent, bnt no humkn power could k\nsave him. The scene was heartrending. H\nThe total loss is estimated at between\nsix and eight hundred thousanddollars.\nIt is supposed to have been the work\nof an incendiary The opera house\nwaa one of the finest in the West, and\nis owned by J. M. it W. M. Turner, 2,1\nThe whole loss will be about f350,000.\nover an above an Insurance ot $43,000
465c58108bb1a70573e38fe0dfcea366 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.4999999682902 44.939157 -123.033121 peared for violating the speed laws. In\nthe car with Commissioner Adams were\nS. Benson, another highway commis-\nsioner, and Herbert Mnnn, state high-\nway engineer. As the car belonged .to\nCommissioner Adams he was arrested\nand cited to appear. He was fined sev-\nen dollars and s half.\nO. II. Tollman, a piano salesman from\nSilverton, aroused the judge's ire par-\nticularly when he started in on a\nsmooth line of talk as if the judge were\na young buck that would fall for such\nstun. He intimated it would not be\nmuch to the judge's credit n he fined\nhim and an appeal was taiien. He\nslathered on tho honey and the soft\ntalk until the judge got tired and told\nhim it made no ditterenee to him wheth\n be appealed the caso or not.\nStill Tallman was not squelched and\nhe-- said he would appeal. The law re-\nquires the fine to be of a certain am-\nount before appeal can be taken, and\nJudge Webster fined him five dollars,\nwhich was within the amount. Tallman\nwent out and got an attorney. The at-\ntorney came in and asked the judge if\nhe could not argue the case. The judge\nsaid he could not as the prisoner had\nalready pleaded guilty, and was fined.\nThen tho fine was paid. Tallman went\naway muttering that he would get the\nofficer's joh for arresting hiin.\nTom Booth was also cited to appear\nbefore Judge Webster. He gave a check\nfor $26.55 as bail and appeared this af-\nternoon and settled his case.
260cff53383adcd4bdb60dff46a93e20 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.0808218860984 40.419757 -77.187146 Amabel was delighted. Bertha was\none of her own fast frlends,and Bertha's\nfather a merchant of standing and in-\nfluence. Aside from this the girl had\ninherited money from her mother. Al-\ntogether, Amabel decided the match\nwould be charming. But a hint to that\neffect met one of Raymond's sternest\nfrowns, such as had never visited his\nface in the old sunshiny days.\n" Never speak of it again, Amabel,"\nhe said. "I am no fortune hunter to\nlive upon the money of a rich wife.\nI'll carve out my own way first."\nBut carving his own way proved\ntedious work till, desperate at his many\nfailures, he accepted a position, offered\nin Jest, of driver to an express wagon.\n" I do understand horses," he said,\n" if I cannot goods or keep books."\nIt proved harder work, however,than\nin the first flush of his desperation he\nhad imagined. Not the work ; that he\nsoon conquered ; but the slights, rude-\nness, and stares of his old friends.\nSome few recognized the true nobility\nthat accepted honest labor rather than\nan easy dependence upon wealthy con\nnections, but these were few.\nA week passed, when one morning,\ndelivering some goods at one of the\nmost fashionablestores on Broadway, as\nhe went out, Raymond saw Bertha\nHaines opening the door of her low\ncarriage. An Impulse made him start\nforward to hand her out, only to draw\nback crimson with confusion, and\ndropping the hand he was lifting to\nraise his hat. The sweet, musical voice\nhe loved, spoke at once :
1f967d31af3f8b329b11fb7a5075e6e3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1886.8616438039066 42.217817 -85.891125 tho "long water" is then put on for\nribout two weeks, deep for four days,\nthen gradually diminishing. After tho\nrater has been drawn oil about a week\nand tho Held is dry, it is\nhoed to a good depth. On tho\nappearance of a joint in the plant\ntho land is lightly hoed again, and\nis thon "laid by," that is, covered with\nwater, to remain thus till tho gram is\nmatured, which may bo two months.\nA few days before cutting, tho water is\nrun off. The rice is cut with a sicklo,\nand carefully laid across the high and\nthick stubbl'o to euro. The next day,\nwhen the dew is off, it is bound in\nBheavos, which aro stacked in small\nricks, and after a week or so put in\nlarge Btacks. Tho is done\nwith a thresher, which iwnarates the\ngrain by tho action of toothed beaters\nrevolving at the rato of M)0 turns a\nminute. Tho thresher does not tako\nthe hulls off; this is done in a milL To\naccomplish this tho grain is first\nscreened, then it passes between a pair\nof heavy stones, which reraovo tho\nouter husk, theneo it goes down into\nlargo wooden mortars aud immense\nironshod pestles, which pound it for\ntwo hours. It is finally passed through\nan inclined rovolving cylindrical wire\nscreen, which, by having its grating\nmuch coarser at one end than tho\nother, assorts tho rico as it passes\nthrough. First tho fiour is sifted out,\nthen the broken grains, next tho\nsmaller, and lastly, tho largo, lino\ngrains, which aro known as "primo\nrice."
24a6905f0a7ce9977f76ffca01784a4d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.201369831304 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. l'ike. of Mnino, asked lenvo to in¬\ntroduce tho following resolution ;\n\\V11 kHkas the Governors of the sev¬\neral British provinces bnvo publicly\nwarned our fishing fleet* off the fishing\nground adjucent to their const, and\nbnvo thus indicated n design to renew\nunreasonablo olainm mucin by them\nprior to the negotiation of tlie recipro¬\ncity treaty and to annoy our principal\ncommerce. Therefore,\nJteaolved, That the Secretary of tho\nNavy be requested to scud a naval force\nto the fishing grounds to protect our\ncitizens in the enjoyment or their rights\nas recognized by tho treaty of 1785.\nMr. Banks, of Mass..I have no ob¬\njections to the resolution being referred\nto tho Committee on Foreign Affairs\nMr. Pike.I wish tlie action of the\nHouse upon the resolution.\nMessrs. Banks, Wentworth and oth¬\ners objected to this.\nMr. Pike.Then I withdraw the reso¬\nlution the present.\nThe Speaker laid before the IlousD a\ncommunication from the Searetary of\nthe Treasury transmitting a spcclal re¬\nport or the .Revenue Committee on the\nrelations or our foreign trade and our\ndomestics industry and internal reve¬\nnue; also a report on proprietory and\nother medicines, perfumery, Ac., as a\nsource of national revenue. The re¬\nports were referred to the Committee\non Ways and Means.\nThe Speaker also presented a joint\nresolution or the Oregon Legislature In\nregard to imposing tax on mining\nclaims, which was referred to the Com¬\nmittee on Mines and Mining. Also a\njoint resolution of the same legislature\nin reference to the annexation of Walla\nWallacounty ofWashington Territory\nto Oregon, which was referred to the\nCommittee on Territories.\nMr. Wlialey. or West Virginia, asked\nleave to introduce resolutions reducing\nthe hours or work in the public Print-\nob|ec?.CS.,°
3b8ddae15f4e2d381ba8333ff4938002 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 lialtiinore Horse nnd Mnle Mnrkct.\nThe horse nnd mule market of this\ncity is and has tor several months past\nbeen very quiet, and the dealers do not\nnow anticipate any chmge until after the\nholidays. The stock of horses on hand\nkt the present time is not only large, but\nthe animals are of a better grade than\nusual for this season of the year. The\narrivals are lew, consisting ir .inly ol\nemail lots from Pennsylvania and West\nVirginia. Tho stables where auctions\nare held are tilled with a large stock ol\npoor horses, and but few good animals\nare ollered lor sale. There is but little 01\nno demand for carriage or buggy horses\nat this season ol the year, and const\nquently thero arc but lew ollered lor sale\nHorses ol this class bring from |200 tr,\n$300 each, according to style, age \nfcoundntss. The driving season being\nover lor this year there are but few road\nstcrs ollered lor sale. No scalo ol pricei\ncan bo given lor Euch animals, aB theii\nvalue is a thing that is to bo determines\nbetween the buyer and seller. First class\nhorses lor general purposes bring from\n|200 to |300 per head, and common work\nhorses are valued at whatever they wil\nbring at public sale; tho prices vary great\nly and can only bo given when the points\nol the animal In question are known\nThere are no heavy dratt horses for sale\nThe mule market is even duller than the\nhorse market, hut for good animals highci\nprices aro found. Mules ol medium siz:\nand sound bring from |250 to $ 300 pci\nspan. For very large mules $350 to t-KK\nper' span can easily be obtained..VMi\nmore American.
007f44033acb13715ce82eb17b61b61f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.1630136669203 44.939157 -123.033121 Capital National bank, the only team to\nhave the undisputed right to occupy\nthat position since the beginning of the\nseries after holding it down for one\nweek only, was last night again forced\nto divide honors with the Price Shoe\ncompany because of having been de-\nfeated by the Watt Shipp company in\nthe opening game of the eries. The\ngame was rough and fast and early in\nthe first half Edw. Socolofsky, guard\nof the Bank, and All Carson, center\nlor the shipps. squared off for a fistic\nencounter when Referee Matthews in-\nterrupted and disqualified both men for\nfurther participation in the game.\nIt was also necessary for the Price\ncompany to win its game against the\nFry Drug team and while it was as-\nsumed that the game would be of little\ninterest and that the company\nwould easily win it was only after one\nof the hardest battles of the year that\nthe Price company was successful in\nwinning from the Frys. Seeley, u re- -\nout addition to the Fry team, is a great\nimprovement and with another week in\nwhich to prepare for the final game\nwith the Capital National Bank there\nis no doubt but that the Draft team will\nirlav the best SHU which it hns nbiveil\nsince the beginning of the series. Cap-\ntain Welborn of the Frys, was unable\nto be with his team due to a severe at-\ntack of tonsilitis. Huuser Bros, defeat\ned the Bishops in the second game of\ntlie evening. Hausers and Bishops each\nhad a percentage of .500 per cent before\nlast night 's contests.\nCapital Nat. Bank. Watt shipp Co.\nHart (4)
016b093072a8065be33dee2b3615b32f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.9002731924206 39.745947 -75.546589 In the New York Steam companys great\nplant in Greenwich and Washington\nstreets, between Cortland and Dey\nutriots, struck at 12.10 this morning\nagainst a reduction of wages.\nThe company employs about fifty fire­\nmen on the fifty-six boilers located\naround the bases of the great chimneys,\nwinch are among the xno*t prominent\nlandmarks of tho city. They had been\nreceiving 25 cents an hour and were\nworking from eight to ten hours n day.\nThe company had announced that here­\nafter they would be paid but 20 cents\nan hour and would lie expected to work\ntwelve hours a day.\nNearly all of them hud been steamship\nfiremen and these said that this reduc­\ntion would bring their wages down\nto a lower figure than they could\nget at sea, especially on American boats,\nsnd all Joined in saying that it was a\nphysical impossibility for a man to fire\nthe boilers of tho steam companys plant\ntwelve hours a day for many days in\nsuccession. Tho steamship men said\nthat the fire rooms "of the plant wore\nhotter than the stoke holes of a modern\nsteamer, whore a man only worked four\nhours at a stretch and was then allowed\nto rest eight hours, to say nothing of the\nlong vacations with full pay when the\nvessel was lying in port.\nThe men at work left their posts one\nhy one. There was not a fireman left in\nthe house and before the men left\nthey had opened the dampers, letting\ngreat volumns of cold air into the fur­\nnaces and bilngiug tho steam pressure\ndown like a shot.\nChief Engineer Clarence, who was in\ncharge, rushed out Into the street and\nheggeIIin«nuntoreturn. but wai met\nwith u peremptory but polite refusal.\nThe strikers were Jubilant at the\nconsternation they had caused.\n1 oclock the steam had falieu from the\nregular pressure of eighty five pounds to\nthe square inch to less titan fifty pounds\nand was still rapidly falling. The eiova\ntors in the Western Union Telegraph\nbuilding at Broadway and Dey street had\nto stop running, snd in this building and\nin tho general post office the electric\nlights wont out as them was not power\nenough to run the dynamos.\nThen- was a gnat hurrying around to\nstart fires beneath the long idle boilers\nof their steam plants and there was\npandemonium in those of tho morning\nnewspaper offices that were caught with­\nout power at the very hour when their\npresses were about to start.\nBuperlntendeut Gaines of the New York\nSteam Heating company at 10 o'clock\nthis morning said that the places of the\nstriking firemen had ail been filled and that\nthere were mure applicants for positions\nthan they coaid employ.\nThe cause of the strike, Mr. Gaines\nsaid, was not so much the reduction in\nwages us the amount of liquor the night\nmen imbibed during and after their\nThanksgiving dinner.
091c3dd69b8b9dbaefe033b93068235b THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1900.83698626966 32.612638 -90.036751 "I remember one we had in this\ncompany some years ago that actual-\nly could count. George was his name,\nif 1 remember rightly, and George was\none of those horses that never did any\nmore work than they were obliged to.\nNot that he couldn't, but just because,\nlike some people you run across, he\nwas opposed to looking for work.\nWell, every company in the fire de-\npartment has a certain district to\ncover on first alarms. Well, sir, we\ndidn't have George many months be-\nfore that horse came to know our dis-\ntrict just as well as any of the men.\nHe knew the boxes we went out to on\nthe first alarm, and it is a fact that\nthat horse got so that he'd wait and\ncount first round before he'd\nbudge out of his stall. If the box was\nnot in our district George would walk\nleisurely to his place, but if it was\none we were due at on the first alarm\nhe would rush down to his place. In\nthose days we had to hitch up on\nevery alarm that came in, whether it\nwas in our district or not, and stand\nhitched for 15 or 20 minutes. George\nknew this, of course, anu that was\nwhy he'd always take his time go-\ning to his place when the box wasn't\nin our district. And it is a fact that\nif he was eating when an outside box\ncame in he'd just keep on eating un-\ntil the foreman yelled out to bring\nhim down to his place.
bf4ec634e58187f5377d3f378ce81ab8 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1855.7520547628108 41.262128 -95.861391 Cuiupouud Fluid Extract Buck!\nt or diseases oi the Baioder aud Kidneys, Secrst\nDiseases, strictures, weakuaas, and all dis\neaaes of the sexual organs, whether in male or\nfemale, from whatever can«e they may haw\norigiuated, and HO matter of how loug stanu\nrng.\nIf yon bare* contracted the terrible disease\nwhich, when once seatrd in the system, will\nsurely go down jrom one generation to auoths;\nuudormniug the constitution and suappiag th*\nvery vital Buids o! life; 00 not trust yoursaif i»\nthe bands ot Uuacks, who start up every day ia\na city likethib, and till the papers with glaring\nfalsehoods, tuo well calculated to deceive tba\nyoung, aud those not acquainted with their\ntricks. You cannot be tvucareful id the selec\ntion of a remedy in these cases.\nThe Fluid Extract nucha has been pronounc­\ned eminent p)i_y .- ,t iaim liie greatest rtnaedv\never known. It is a medicine periectly pleas ­\nant iu its taste, and very innocent in its action,\naud yet so thorough that It annihilates every\nparticle of the rank and pc**MH,ous virus of tiii<\ndreadtul disea-e -f aix.', unlike vtber remedic«,\ndoes not dry up tlie disease in the Mood.\nConstitutional debiiity, brou^it on by self'\nabusa, a most terrible dpse<«se, which has bro'i\ntlious inds of the human race to untimely graves\nthus Hasting the brilliant hopes of parents\nami blighting iu the bud the gi»r*XM ambition\nof many a noble youth, ;an becureu by this iu\nfaliible remedy. Aud as a medicine which must,\nbenefit everybody, from the simply delicate to\ntlie confined aud de.sparing invalid, no e^uai ia\nU> be found acting both as a cure aud praventa«\ntive.
01e5f016188ecfde2eae5ba274b91a93 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.1931506532217 43.994599 -72.127742 M. Brain, who was tried here some time\nago aiid found guilty of tlie murder of\nCaptain Charles I. Nash of Harrington,\nMe., o n board the barkentine Herbert\nFuller, July 13, 1896, on the high seas,\nwas sentenced by Judge Colt in the\nUnited States circuit court here yester-\nday to be hanged on June 18, 1897. The\ncase was one of the most sensational In\nNew England for many years and cre-\nated considerable interest throughout\nthe eouiv.ry. As early as 8 a. m . a largo\nnumber of spectators began to assemble\nIn the corridors leading to the court, but\nShortly after 2 p. in. these were cleared\nby the court official;;, and only members\nof the bar and those connected with the\ncase were allowed in court when the\nsentence was pronounced.\nThe prlsontr was brought from Charles\nstreet Jail early in the day. When\nplaced in the dock appeared more\nnervous and excited than he has previ-\nously been when before the court. His\nface showed how keenly he felt the posi-\ntion in which he was placed, and he was\nso nervous that he could hardly speak.\nJudges Colt and Webb sat on the case,\nand as soon as the formal opening of the\ncourt had been declared, District At-\ntorney Hoar arose and addressed then'.\nHe said it was his duty to ask that sen-\ntence 1)0 imposed. The prisoner was\ncalled and aro.se , leaning on the front or\nthe dock. In answer to Judge Colt as\nto whether he had anything to say why\nsentence of death should not be passed\nupon him he said:\n"I thank you, your honor.\n'I wish to say I arn an innocent man\nbefore God and heaven. It Is not now\nmy will, but God'p will be done. That\nIs alb-J ud-
12f56885b7a79518c6e2a4e7509f0eaf THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1894.932876680619 37.92448 -95.399981 events he was conspicuously unfit for\nthe poot of head of the treasury. His\nrecord as a free silver man was fatal\nto bis chances on rendering acceptable\nservice in that ofliefr. It is true ho\nseamed during the lust year ot his leg-\nislative service to have abandoned\nthe fre3 silver heresj, and tho\npresident undoubtedly thought thit\nthe conversion was genuine and last-\ning or else the appointment would not\nhave been made. Hut this belief was\nillusory before he had been sis months\nin the cabinet. V'hcn the first test ot\nhis finunci.! faith ct.me up in the sum-\nmer of 1S93 he turned out to bo a\nbackslider, and showed tnat he was\nurni'j' joined to his fiec. silver idoli.\nWhen the gold fund Mas first down\nnear the danger line in 1803 it iv-i -\nlearned that intended to pay\nout silver for Sherman notes instaad\nof gold, so as to avoid the necessity of\nbuying gold to protect the rcssrve.\nThat policy, which would quickly havo\nproduced a scrre that would havo FenS\nthe country to a ailrer basis, the presi-\ndent promptly presented. Latsr on\nhe was known to be in favor of tha\ncoinage of the sliver seigniorage,\nwhich the president veco6d. Tho\nseigniorage coinage, of courss, would\nhaye been less destructive than free\ncoinage, in the same vay that xbg\npoison which lrys the patient on his\nback for five or six weeks or months\nis less harmful than that which kills\nhim, but the fact that the head of tho\nfinancial arm of the government fa-\nvored it gave a shock to bitsiness\nwhich it did not reco er from for sev-\neral months.
050854bf3884ec7633f5cc58de72c79c THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.8811475093605 46.187885 -123.831256 Sec. 1 . If any person or persons\nshall carry any basket or baskets, buck-\net or buckets, bag or bags or any other\nthine suspended from or attached to\npoles across or upon the .shoulders, or\nshall carry any rubbish, garbage, swill\nor filth so as to be offensive to pedestri-\nans, upon any sidewalk they shall be\ndeemed guilty of a misdemeanor and\nupon the conviction thereof beore the\npolice court, shall be punished by a fine\nof not less than fire dollars or more\nthan one hundred dollars, or by im-\nprisonment of not less than one or\nmore than twenty days, in the city jail.\nSec 2. If any person shall remove,\ntransfer, or transport through any of\nthe public streets of the city of Astoria\nany swill or garbage, except it be in a\n covered box or apparatus, or in\nsuch a manner as will prevent the con- -\nleiiLS uiurcuL lruui ucin uepusucu in\nthe public street, or from being exposed\nin the open air during such process of\ntransportation shall be guilty of a mis-\ndemeanor and upon conviction thereof\nshall be fined not less than five nor\nmore than one hundred dollars or by\nimprisonment in the city jail not les\nthan one ntr more than twenty days.\nSec. 3 . If any person or persons shall\ncut, saw, or split any wood on the side-\nwalk of any improved street within the\ncity, shall upon conviction thereof be\nfined not less than two or more than one\nhundred dollars or by imprisonment in\nthe city jail until such fine and costs ol\naction are paid, not exceeding twenty\ndays.
2f8a8e106bfbbd78042779046ec18591 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.319178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 Tlio City Councils have passed a join\nresolution requesting the Congressionii\nCommittee 011 the District of Columbia t\nrqwrt and secure if possible the passac\nof a bill for the organization of the pubfi\nschools in the District of Columbia, b;\nwhich all children can bo educated n\ngardless of color, to bo governed by on\nboard of trustees.\nCol. Snence, of East Tennessee, was b(\nfore the Iteconstruction Committee to-duj\nHe vaguely favored reconstruction.\nThe House Committee on Banking oni\nCurrency came to no conclusion on Shci\nman's $4."i,(MH),()00 currency bill.\nThe House Committee oh the Pncifl\nRailroad will this week hear argument\nfor and against the Tnms-ContinenUi\nRailroad Company.\nThe President has nominated to th\nSenate John F. Appleton to be Judge c\nthe United States District Court ot th\nEastern of Texas, vice Wutrou\nretired on full pay.\nThe Senate Committee on Foreign He\nlations held a meeting this morning lii\nthe consideration of the Daricn and Tc\nlituintc|icc inter-oceanic canal treaties\nAdmiral Porter and General Micbler ar\nfi\\ Iwi nriwimt ut »lin nnvt mnntimr In fflv\ninformation relative to the character c\nthe last named route.\nThe Secretary of tlie Treasury sends t\nCongress to-morrow a bill prepared It,\ntlu? Deputy Controller of the Currcnr\nrelative to coinage. It is a codification u\nall the laws on the subjcct, with add!\ntions and alterations required by mintinj\noperations. It proposes to dispense wit!\nthe silver dollar. The Secretary will ret\nominend the passage of the bill.\nThe Supreme Court will not meet agai\nuntil Saturday, when an adjournment fo\nthe term will take place.
058ee26e5e689c8b2a8a8dbdb14fec25 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.7745901323112 40.063962 -80.720915 meeting in front of the Court Home lost\nnight. It vu the most magnificent affair\nan a meeting that has taken place in\nWheeling in this wonderful campaign.\nWe presume there never wm a larger\ngathering of the people of Wheeling than\nthe multitijde that packed Twelfth street\nand Chapline street, and all the available\nopace within the pillars and on the steps of\nthe Court House, to hear General Gofflast\nnight. As an ovation to the Republican\nleader in this contest it was an event of\nwhich he way well feel proud all the rest\nof his life. Oofl's name has a charm for\nthe Republicans of West Virginia second1\nto that of no other man. Ifin record ail\nu soldier during the war, and as an advo-'\ncate and defender, since tho close of the\nwar,of the principles for which he fought!\nin the great contest, have endeared him to\n Union loving masses of the State. His\npresence, even before he said a word last\nnight, wait the signal for n magnificent out*\nburst of enthusiasm from the vast audi*\nence that filled the streets. Cheer after\ncheer rent the air from the mighty throng.\nWhat shall we say of his eloquent\nspeech? It was magnificent. Despite\nthe severe wear and tear to which he had\nbeen subjected in his long and arduous\ncanvass in the Third district, he caught\nthe spirit of the occasion and held the\npeople spell bound for nearly an hour and\na half. No such speech has been heard\nin Wheeling on either side during the\ncanvass. It was largely devoted to State\natldirs, and as an expose of Democratic\nmaladministration in West Virginia was\nlike a knife that divides joints and marrow\nasunder, lie laid open the record\n<of the Democratic party since their accession
1679c1099229529c710374332504676e SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.023287639523 37.53119 -84.661888 tbo trade Is now quietly domiciled In\nDr Alcorns property on Main street\nG M Combcat tho druggist is now\nkeeping house on tho corner of Main\nand Stanford streets Mrs Comboit\nhaving finished bar school near Mln\ntonvlllc and joined him hero a few\ndays ago W D Gooch who served\nhis county for 10 consecutive years as\na democratic justice of the peace has\njust paid his daughter Mrs Lulu\nGooch a three week visit The old\ngentleman is halo and hearty and tho\n75 years that ho will havo rounded up-\non tho 20th should fortune favor d\nnot seem to havo left their Imprint eo\nvisibly upon him as upon many mot\nmuch younger than be Ho spends\nmuch of his time reading and thinks\nthe present scramble for oDlco tho\nsaw tangled democracy in Kentucky\nenough to disgust all honest people\nW C Bryant and family have return ¬\ned from a tofcral days visit to rela ¬\nfives In Illinois and NoW York Mr\nBryant In again at his post at the depot\nand Mr Vandeveer who mado many\nfriends hero in a short time has gono\nto Moreland for the present Rev J\nA Gooch of flutter visited his son\nW D and his brother VStt hero\nlast week Ho is severely aOllctcd\nwith callous nerves of tbo feat and is\nbeing treated by tbo best physician M\nwho say that when well ho will be\nable to walk on a red hot bar of Iron\nand not feel any pain from it Ho Is\nnow abje to walk but not willing to
839b5d8ae77f22a31a54502a200eb738 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.1219177765095 38.951883 -92.333737 All this is one moral of the White\nPaper rivcahng tiic history of the Iiri--\nGcrrnai conspiracy against Britain during\nthe Great War Another affects Irishmen\nthemselves anil affects most nearly those\nIrishmen who really love their counlrv\nandarc neither the agents nor tools of\nboMievism or ti- - Huns Ii is ijiat Sinn\nFew hah brought them and will so long\nit contimes a iiower in their midt\ncontinue to bring them not pcate but\na sword In their own interests and in\nthe vital int rels id their countr they\nneed In destroy the blaik terror of Sinn\nFein andjiut the control of Irish affairs\ninto tins hands of commonsfnsc moderate\nIrWhmen who liavc the will and foresight\nto ur Tlersland what is and what is not\npossible This can lie done and Ireland\ncan secure the greatest amount of self\ngovernment jwsible by the use of\nthe governments just and generous Home\nRule ct which properly and fairly ap\nplied in the right spirit will assuredly\nbring peace speedily and will probably\nprove e ventiiall to be the instrument for\nthe creation cf a limited Ireland free\nand peaceful within the free and peaceful\nempire to which we belong Sinn Fein\nfears such anis6ue and redoubles its\nefforts to misrule bj terror but now that\nthis great and beneficial act is irt and\nparcel d the aw of the realm Irishmen\nCan cure tlieir own ills if ivationahst\nIrishmen have the mind to do so Their\nfuture is in their own bands and thev\nwill lack the commonsense that we cre-\ndit ihcm with if the remain supine and\ninactive and allow Sinn Fein to force\nIreland from bad to worse until it final\nly collapses in a morass of boUhcvism
012fc2e53661bd158151817a953a372e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.7821917491121 58.275556 -134.3925 One night last week a cold blast of\nwind came over the hill from the north,\naud Douglas pioneers hustled to their\nhomes at a lively gait to look up last\nwinter's overcoat, aud kept saying over\naud over, 4*Taku which being inter¬\npreted meaus hell. However, it didn't\nlast loug, but long enough to throw to\nthe ground the old tree that stood iu\nthe center of the Douglas cemetery.\nThis old tree has quite a history that\nis interwoven with the lives of many\nwho are now living on Douglas Jslaud\naud some who have moved away. There\nwas a time, long years ago, when it\nstood, fresh aud green, rejoiciug in its\nstrength, a monarch of the forest. And\nthe Taku wind might blow its hardest, j\nbut the supple of the giant;\nwithstood its hardest blast. Then came\nthe blighting fumes of the chloriuation\npluut, and the green leaves withered\naud the tree died. With its compauious\nlying stretched upou the grouud,it was\nready for the axe of Oslerization. But\nnot so, there were yet to bemauj* hours\nof happiuess which our old friend was\nto witness aud, if nothing more, assist.\nSome good Samaritan encircled its\nbas*» with a beuch aud it became popu-\nlar as a resting place for tho spooney\ncouples who nightly wandered down\n"Lovers' Lane." £t never told the se¬\ncrets that were whispered beneath the\nshelter of its withered branches. It\nnever told of the piuch, or the squeeze\nor the stolen kiss. And so the young\nfolks regard the "Big Tree" as'their\nespecial friend.
1efe8c95bbf2573478271913a8cfa207 WEST VIRGINIA DAILY OIL REVIEW ChronAm 1902.5931506532218 39.564242 -80.99594 A family re union was held at the\nresidence of Mr Ashford Broadwa¬\nter, of this county, near Mole Hill\npostoffice, on Tuesday, July the\n15th. Eight of the tea children of\nMr. Bioad water and many of their\nfamilies were in attendance. Forty-\neight persons in all were present.\nMiss Ida, daughter of Mr. Broad¬\nwater, had a dinner prepared that\nwas all that could be desired or re¬\nquired of anybody. There was on\nthe menu everything that was good\nand all enjoyed the meal to their\nfull extent. As the guests sat down\nthey all felt like praying, "O Lord,\ngive us capacities to enjoy these\ngood things." After the feast was\nover Mr. Broadwater presented to\neach of his children a check for\na good round sum of money.\nAmong those present from a dis\ntance was Broadwater's only\nsister, Mrs Durst and daughter,\nMiss L^ura-of Lonaconing, Md; Mr.\nBankcord, of New Germany, Md.;\nMiss Ella Post, of Clarksburg, and\nMr. a]dMrs.MK.DutyofPenns\nboro Music was furnished by Prof\nW. W . Cain and bis full orchestra\nfrom Pennsboro Mr Broadwater\nis one of ibe oldest patrons of the\nOil Review He is an old and high¬\nly respected citizen of our county,\none of our substantial and prosper\nous business men. His farm, which\nis a very large one, proved to be oil\nterritory, and he is wisely spending\nhis money by making his children\nhappy and prosperous. We hcpsj\nMr. Broadwater will live to have\nmany more family re-unions and\nthat they will all be as happy as\nthis one was. Mr. R Broadwater,\nwho is a son, and bis family, of this\ncity, attended this re-union.
13e387b9217789a8e13af2b8ee398733 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.2609289301254 37.53119 -84.661888 Its a good thing pUll it on I hold\nIn my hand the Louisville Ky Dally\nCourier Journal of Dee 31st and I read\nIn a column article that the Kentucky\nDistiller Association met In Louis ¬\nville on Dec 2930 and decided to lim ¬\nit the output of tho Kentucky distillers\nfor 1004 to 18000000 gallons of whisky\nLast year tho output was over >in000 >\n000 and in 1002 It was about 64000000\nThink of It Just ono third of the\namount 1002 two years ago Is to be\nmade this Year And why Thats\nwhere tho shout comes ic Listen\nThis same aggregation assigns among\nother reasons that the violent itntlia\nloon and prohibition legislation over\nthe whole country especially In the\nSouth and West has caused K decided\ndiminution In demand for liquors\nand the circulars they are tending out\nto the retail trade asking for a cam ¬\npaign say Unless this fanatical op ¬\nposition It chocked and crushed the li ¬\nquor trade of the country It ruined It\nAnd yet tho cry It sometimes rated\nthat It Is useless to contend with the\nliquor power or leek to diminish tho\nproportions of the business Behold\nthe State of Kentucky The mighty\ntwilltub there It growing beautifully\nlest acd as surely at rlgot It right tho\ntocalled fanatical opposition to the\nliquor traffic will continue This quo\ntiao begging epithet thrown at men\nand women will not In thp least divert\nthem from a hlgb and holy purpose\nWrite It down soDlal of Progress\nIowa Contributed by G L CArpeD ¬\nter
01c9f33b194ad5de2a257ae9ff5e3ac6 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1901.8945205162354 41.875555 -87.624421 Thu decision of thu Michigan Supienie\nCourt that bicyclists have a right to\nlido their wheels on thu sidewalks un-\nder proper restrictions Is likely to causu\na great deal of trouble In Mlchbj.iu\ncities ami In those of any other State\nwhich adopts the principle of the decis-\nion. If bicycle riding were permitted\non thu crowded streets In thu business\nsections of a city It would amount to\nan Intolerable uvll. Their total exclu-\nsion from slduwalks of this character Is\nbased upon thu principle that thu sldu-\nwalks, as their uamu Implies, wcro sut\napart for pcdestrlaus, mid that vehicles\nof any kind which would Interfere with\nthe fiee and saro uso of such sidewalks\nhave no right to bu or to bu operated\nthcie, except as such light or privilege\nmay bu granted by thu City Council.\nCity Councils have, we believe, been\nusually disposed to extend this privi-\nlege to slduwalks through spatscly nu t-t - d\ndistricts where thcru were no bicy-\ncle paths, and cither no pavement or u\nvery had one. All tho Just claims of\nthu bicyclist to thu use of the sidewalk\nwhen thu conditions exclude him from\nthe street can bu far better met, with a\ndue legal (I for the convenience and\nsafety of thu pedestrian public, by start-lu- g\nwith tl.c principle that he has no\noriginal right there and must get his\nprivilege from the Council, than by as-\nsuming that he has an oroglnal right to\ngo there mid that the Council cau only\nicstrlct the manner of Its exercise. Wo\ndo not believe thu Michigan decision\nwill he followed by the courts of other\nStates, or that wheelmen generally will\nregard It with favor. As n rule they\nhave no uo for sidewalks where they\nare liable to come Into collision with\npedestrians unless driven to them by\nthe bud condition of the street.
b77523876ca586d9ecb1bcfc3bf71b32 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1938.532876680619 40.618676 -80.577293 the United States, Canada, Belgium,\nthe United Kingdom (Great Britain\nand Northern Ireland), Ireland,\nFrance, Denmark, Bulgaria and Nor­\nway. Compared with the previous\nquarter of 1938, however, unemploy­\nment, the statistics disclose, has de­\nclined in all except the first three.\nThus, in the second quarter of 1938,\nthe statistics reveal, the United States\nhad 11,129,107 unemployed, 2,810,279\nmore than in the corresponding quar­\nter of 1937 and 156,107 more than in\nthe previous quarter of 1938.\nCanada had 110,948—16,525 more\nthan in the second quarter of 1937 and\n26,082 more than in the first quarter\nof 1938; while Belgium had 141,499—\n16,830 more than in the second quar­\nter of 1937 and 5,201 more than in\nthe first quarter of 1938.\nOn the other hand, the United\nKingdom, with 1,778,805, had 381,805\n than in the second quarter of\n1937, but 28,712 less than in the first\nquarter of 1938; Ireland, with 97,571,\nhad 9,091 more than in the second\nquarter of 1937, but 7,258 less than in\nthe first quarter of 1938; and France,\nwith 411,835, had 37,549 more than in\nthe second quarter of 1937, but 32,541\nless than in the first quarter of 1938.\nDenmark, with 93,342, had 19,963\nmore than in the second quarter of\n!)37, but 33,880 less than in the first\nquarter of 1938; while Bulgaria, with\n>,402, had 3,053 more than in the sec-\nnd quarter of 1937, but 9,660 less\nthan in the first quarter of 1938; and\nNorway, with 22,938, had only 910\nmore than in the second quarter of\n937, and 12,373 less than in the first\nquarter of 1938.
3486ff8701299406359fdb7ac7b24aba NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.7712328450025 41.681744 -72.788147 There was little of the unusual in\nthe way of fielding on either side.\nKopf ran out into short left in tho\neighth for a pretty catch on Gandil,\nand Billy made a tine stop in deep\nshort on Schalk a few moments later.\nDaubert made a nice running catch\noff Risberg while hanging over a rail\nin front of some temporary boxes.\nEd Collins Makes Fine Stop.\nCicotte was so effective that he sel-\ndom called on his fielders to help him\nout of hard chance?. Eddie Collins\nmade several pretty stops, though two\nballs went through him, one of which\nwas scored as a. hit. He made, his\nbest, play in the seventh inning when,\nwith Wingo and Rath on base, Dau-\nbert drove a hot grounder so fast that\nit took a hop after Collins stopped if.\nbut he made a. quick recovery and\nand a fine throw tn first. The play\nwas close, but Nallin gave it to the\nSox, though raised quite a\ncommotion over the decision.\nThe two Collins boys finally did a\nlittle hitting, especially Shano. Tn\nformer articles it has been pointed out\nthat the poor work of the Sox in the\nearly games could be traced to the in-\nability of its leadoff men to get on. In\nthe fust six games John Collfns and\nLcibold, who alternate in position No.\n1, had made one hit between them,\nand Eddie Collins made only two.\nJohn Collins broke out all over\nwith base hits yesterday. He got three\none of them a double, while Eddie\nCollins got two singles and a sacrifice\nin five times up. From the time Shano\nCollins opened the series here a week\nago, with a single off Ruether, no hit\nhad been made by the player batting\nin the Sox leadoff position until the\nsame John Collins drove, a single to\ncenter yesterday for the first play of\nthe game. That's a long wait between\nhits.
570cd2e4ddffa793e2ab482a10af38c3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4275955967921 39.745947 -75.546589 Rogers Hornsby, the young Cardi­\nnals' star, tops the National League\nhitters with the percentage of .392.\nI Hog also leads in most basehits w ith\n65. Heine Groh is the leading run\nscorer, with 33 runs. Cy Williams\npoll'd the most home runs. 6; Max\nCarey stole, the most bases, 14; Lee\nMeadows U>ps the liurlers with 5\nvictories and nary a defeat, although\nGrover Alexander, the Cub's star\nhurler, actually leads with 11 wins\nand two defeats. Alex has won Ids\nlast 11 consecutive games. This bet­\nters Alexanders best streak of win­\nning. 10 straight in 1913. Alex won\nIlls 11th victory with a home run\ndrive off Hay Fisher; ibis streak is\nthe outstanding feature of the Na­\ntional League season to date.\nMilton Stock, after a batting \nlasting for 13 consecutive games, quit\nMay 28 to Grover Alexander. During\nhis prolonged hitting streak Milt poled\n2- hits in 48 batting trips for a mark\nof .437 and tallied a dozen runs.\nFat Duncan, after hitting safely in\nhis last 10 straight games, was stop­\nped May 28 by Wilbur Cooper, of the\nPirates. During his stretch of hitting\nPat got 15 hits in 38 attempts for a\npercentage of .395.\n■Players to get four tilts In one game\nwere Eddie Roush, Vernon Clemons,\nArt Fletcher and Clarence Mitchell.\nDave Bancroft, after hitting for .280\nin 6 games straight, was halted May\n30 by Fred Toney.\nRed Causey, after cropping • five\ngames In -a row, ended his losing\nstreak with a victory over the Giants\non May 29.
2c20cb8da75fd43aedbed69606ae9183 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.6972602422627 37.561813 -75.84108 the same intolerance and bigotry that ex-\ncluded the Israelite from all participation\nin the government of the Egyptians. They\nare not willing to exclude either ignorant\nor intelligent rebels. They welcome to\ntheir embrace men whose hands are yet\nred with the blood of our kindred.\nIt is only a "nigger' they would exclude.\nIt is nothing to them that the nigger has\nfought for our country, has been wounded\niu our service, is intelligent, sober, in-\ndustrious; he is a nigger, and therefore\nmust have no voice in public affairs.\nI am fur from admitting that there is\nsuch a marked inferiority among the col-\nored people of Ohio as our Democratic\nfriends assert. There are worthless char-\nacters among them, but through what a\nterrible process have they passed for forty\nyears, ltejected, depressed, excluded from\nmost enjoyments of life, excluded from\nschools, and even from churches devoted\nto the worship of Almighty God, without\npolitical rights, at times without protec-\ntion, either by law or public opiniou ; by\nthe same prejudice that divides the Chinese\nand Hindoos into castes ; the same that\nmakes au Asiatic regard all Europeans as\nbarbarians; the same feeling of pride and\nintolerance enables au aristocracy\nin Great Britain to exclude the laboring\nclasses from all voice in the government.\nWe owe it to our character as American\ncitizens to free ourselves from such preju-\ndices, and to be just to those who are born\non our soil, share in our burdens, and are\nonly different from us in that their ances-\ntors came from a different part of God's\nworld than ours did.\nWhat reasons do onr Democratic friends\ngive for keeping up this ban of prejudice\nagainst the colored race ? The real reason,\nI imagine, is because they have no hope of\ngetting the darkies to vote with them.\nBut they tell us negroes are not intelligent\nenough to vote. And yet they do not\npropose to base voting upon intelligence\nThey do not ask to exclude those who can-\nnot read or write. They do not ask us to\nexclude persons who cannot understand\nour language, and yet, with all these ter-\nrible disadvantages, it cannot be said that\nthey are so ignorant as to be unfit to share\nwith all other men in the right to govern\nthemselves. Take off the ban of prejudice,\ngive them an equal chance, and then make\nthe comparison.
3441e53816537f11ce7178be7bcd73bd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.9467212798522 40.063962 -80.720915 Judge Cardoso yesterday, after hea\nat; the prtDers read In the Kriecase, a\nourned the case until Saturday, issuli\nm order to restrain Receiver Davis\nbe meantime from handling the pr\n»erty of the Krle company.\nIn au Interview with Bun. Wade he\n- cported to have derided Chase at\nSeymour, pitied Blair, and denounci\nit. 11. Dana and tho opponents of Bu\neras aristocrats, who made asses\nhemselves in trying to ape KnglU\niriup OI oirui, auu uvciaieu ivevuru\nTohnson to be a toady. The Bettleuiei\n>r the Alabama claims was easy enou;\nI" we made the bimple proctol. He 1\n,'ortd universal munhoud sutTrage, at\nhe transfer orthe Iudiao Bureau toll\nIVur Department.\nThe Herald advocates the funding\nhe public debt nt a low rate of intere\nind ileady liquidation of the prineipe\nc relera to the increase of the publ\n and says it is the imparative dui\n»t Oougrens to ponder well the gigant\nirojec'.s for robbing the Treasury no\n>efore it in the shape of subsidies ft\nirivate speculations.\nThe Tribune to day gays of the Pres\nlent's message: It is exceedingly d\nlirable that we should hegiu forthwit\nofund our pastdue5lU)satalow<\nate than six percent, but Johnson at\nlis fellow repudiatora sceoi resolvi\nhat we shall never bo able to do «\nPuis message will compel our people\njay many millions in h x per cent ii\nerest which they could have saved ha\nlie President tieen content with ti\nlyrmid of disgrace he had already li\nwriously erected. Only twelve week\nnoro uud the country will be rid\nlim forever. It is hard, but wo can ei\nlure him. Twelve weeks longer than\nleaven, he has only power to disgrat\nis.
600a6c09155b22446b655778288f2695 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.474043684224 39.745947 -75.546589 25JrOU.A.M..gaveMr.andMrs\nAYllllam Smith AVeggenmann, who\nwere married last Saturday morning,\na serenade last evening, at the home\nof the brides parents, on Dalby ave­\nnue. The couple had -just returned\nfrom a week-end trip lo Atlantic City-\nMr. and Mrs. NVeggcnman left this\nmorning, fnr Douglas Arlapna, where\nthey will make an extended visit with\nMr. an<i Mrs. Dennis S. CavendfT- \\\\\ntermination of this vlst, Mr. and\nMrs. Calender will acootmwiny Mr.\nand Mrs. Wegfcrnmann to San Fran-\ncisco, Ca„ to visit relative*. Mr. and\nMra Weggenmann Inttvnd making\ntheir home In Yolo county, CaL\n»• Prof. Rainbow, the Wilmington elo-\ncutionlet, wlio was to have given an\nentertainment last week, under the\nauspice* of the Sunday Setiool class\nof Mrs J. R. Ricking, of the Metho-\niist Sunday School, and wa» post-\nponed on account of storm, enler-\ntatned a large audience last evenuw.\nin Naxareth church. A largsc sum was\nfeallxed for centenary fund.\nMost elaborate arrangements are\nbeing made by local membors of the\nforest for the reception of Brandy­\nwine Forest, No. 2 . Ta|l Cedar* of\nLebanon of Wilmington, on the occa­\nsion of their visit 40 this ctly next j\n•Friday evening. The local members |\n. Jill meet the Wilmington delegation\nat Third and Chestnut streets, at ..301\nb'oloek (daylight saving Dine), and in\nparade formation, will propped east!\non Chestnut to Second street, south\nto Delaware street, where, In front of\nthe olty buildings. Mayor Echlre will\nSveloom« the visitors and turn the key\nof the town over to them. There will\n*e a drill and concert by the Brandy-\nVine Forest band. The Cedars will\nthen march west on Delaware street\nlo Sixth, east on Sixth to South, to\nFifth north to Delaware street and\nthen east to the Masonic Temple,\nix-here several candidates will be ini­\ntiated. An entartainmnt will follow [
4f2c2fffee6345575bdcf9177162d2a5 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.8616438039066 39.560444 -120.828218 and gentlemanly Post Master than is Mr.\nGeruon. Since we have been in the Cti-\nizen office, not a single letter sent by us\nhas failed to reach its destination. Dupli-\ncate letters and papers have been sent to\nus, in the event of one being lost, and we\nhave always received both. It is about\ntime that people would cease to complain\nof the uncertainty of a letter reaching its\ndestination; if the letter be properly di-\nrected, the address written plainly, it is\nnext to impossible for it to be lost, unless\nthe whole mail is destroyed.\nDr. T . R . Kiube has removed with his\nfamily to San Jose. The absence of a\nlady and gentleman so estimable, will be\nvery sensibly felt in our little society. It\nwas our good fortune to be included\namong a few friends at a little farewell\nparty, a few nights before their departure,\nwhere we were all entertained in a manner\nquite in the mountains. Dr. Kib-\nbe is not only a very skilful physician but\nhe is a most accomplished gentleman, and\nhe never appears to greater advantage\nftian when offering the hospitalities of his\nhouse. We trust Mr. and Mrs. Kibbe\nwill find as many and as sincere friends at\nSan Jose as they have left here—and such\nmust be the case when they are known aud\nappreciated as they deserve.\nAV e are pleased to see that Dr. Miles,\nformerly Mayor of Marysville, has located\nat I orest City, as a practicing physician\nand surgeon. It is another evidence of\nthe prosperity of our little mining villages,\nwhen some of the best citizens of Marys-\nville find it to their interest to remove to\nthe mountains. We are partial to Marys-\nville, and feel a sort of pride in claiming\nit as belonging to the Northern Mines,but\nif we can steal away any of her good citi-\nzens, and translate them to “
3c76945cef322894a33fe741a6196a30 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.5082191463723 32.408477 -91.186777 The prohperous favor of the\ncourt did not last long for the\nocendants of Jacob. and a\narose "who knew not Joseph"\nIn chapter 1:7 le see that Isram\n(a) "fruitful. " (b, "increased hi\nberm," and (c) -exceeding\nThis was in fulfillment of God's\nlied blessing ,e-n.12:2. 3). k\ncited the envy of the Egyptla,4\never, and they began to "deal\n(v. 101, see I ('or. 1:19. and\nly Pharaoh promulgated his l-us\ndecree recorded in ('h.1:15-2.\nI. The Child Born, Ch. 2:1, 2.\nraoh's cruel schemc seemed\nadapted to avoid the supposed\nin that it would cripple Israel,\nthem in slavery and effectually\nvent them from escaping from\nHow frequently man is deceivet\nbabe is born in the home of the\nor the great of earth and we s\nupon the possible ensuing c\nhistory, whereas at that same\nanother child is born unhersnli\nsome humble home that God\nup to set aside the schemes d-\nAttention has been called to the\n. lemarritge (v. i) of Amra-\nJochebed (ch. 6:20) and the\nant outcome. No marriage is\n does not appear that to cast\nmale children into the river\nedict when Aaron was born.\nhumbly born Moses was nobly\nand his parents thought more of\nduty to God than the edicts of\nMoses was a "godly child" (v. 2,\n7:20 R. V. marg. and Heb. 11:\nV.). That is, he was without\nwell pleasing to the eye, "lair to\nHis parents must have en\nthe hope that he was to be the\nerer of Israel and taught him\nbelieve, see Acts 7:25.\nII. The Child In Danger, w.\nAt three months of age (Acts 7:\nwas no longer possible to hide\nchild Moses. However, instead\nbeing cast Into the river he is\nupon the river. Jochebed knew\ndeliverance of Noah and it is\nable that her meditation upos\nsuggested to her the adopted pIm,\nshe made her ark somewhat\nthe plan Noah followed, Gea.\nShe also knew of the habits of\nhob'sdaughter and planned\nIngly. It was a perilous risk to\nmit her child to the, crocodile\nriver, but she trusted Jehovah\n11:28) and God honored her\nevents demonstrate.
07f2652d53147820604d38e2d0e77393 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1891.595890379249 39.756121 -99.323985 David W. Horsman and Lucy M.\nliorsman, Uefendants.\nThe defendants David W. Hors\nman and Lucy M. Horsman will take\nnotice that they have been sued by\nsaid Traders Bank plaintiff, and said\nilaiutiu did, on the V.Z day of Julv\n1801, Hie its petition in said District\ncourt, within the county of Phillips\nin the State of Kansas, against the\nsaid defendants, and that the said de\nfendants must answer said petition\nfiled as aforesaid, on or before the 5th\nday of September 1891 or said pet- -\ntion will be taken as true, and a judg-\nment rendered in said action against\nsaid defendant for the sum of Ten\ndollars, with interest thereon at the\nrate of 12 per cent per annum from the\n1st day of May 1891, and for cost of\nsuit; and farther judgment against\nsaid defendants for delinquent taxes;\nand decree lor the forecJose- -\nof a certain mortgage upon tho fol\nlowing described real estate to wit:\nThe south west quarter of the\nsouth east quarter and the south east\nquarter of the south west quarter of\nsection eight bj township five I5J\nsouth, of range sixteen lb west, ly-\ning and situated in the county of\nPhillips in the state of Kansas, and\nadjudging that said plaintiff have the\nsecond lein on said premises, to the\namount for which judgment will be\ntaken as aforesaid, and ordering said\npremises to be sold without appraise-\nment, and the proceeds applied to the\npayment of the amount due plaint iff\nand cost of suit, and forever barring\nand foreclosing said defendents and\neach of them, of and from all right,\ntitle, estate, interest, property equity\nof redemption in or to said premises,\nor any part thereto.
1f342b8df92d38cd116e1bc8969e2d31 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.864383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 New York Herald.\nA sad story of the recent yellow fevei\nscourge in the South has just come to light.\nA few evenings ago a well dressed babe,\nul>out one year old, was left on the door¬\nsteps of a well to do citizen,Mr. Newcomb.\nof Providence, who found it there upon\nanswering a sharp ring of the door bell.\nIt had a tiny gold ring on its finger and a\ngold necklace with a gold dollar attached\naround its neck. By the side of the infant\n(a girl) was u complete outfit of richly\ntrimmed clothes. A letter was also found,\nin which the heartbroken mother who had\nleft it there stated that she had lost her fa¬\nther, mother, brother, husband and three\nchildren by yellow fever in New Orleans,\nand that she tied to Cairo toescapethe\nplague, with her baby; that both were at¬\ntacked with the fever in that place re¬\ncovered, though the writer felt as though\nshe was losing her memory,and, no doubt,\nwould soon l»e a raving maniac. It appear¬\ned she had known Mr. Newcomb and his\nfamily, aud in the letter she stated, that\nfearing she would lose her identity she had\nmade up her mind to give them the babe,\nas she knew they would be good to it. She\nurged them not to look her up as sho was\ngoing to New York on the midnight train,\n"-tlitfre to die unknown." She signed her¬\nself Mrs. Josie Hall. Mr. Newcomb was\ngreatly affected, for he had known the\nlady's* family, who, ho said, stood high in\nthe South, Mrs. -Hall being a beautiful\nand accomplished lady. A letter was re¬\nceived from her the following day, dated\nProvidence, she having written it before\nleaving the city,which simply gave instruc¬\ntions for the care of her offspring.
7d7b3110d12d5dfbd77effa5ef5efbc8 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.050684899797 35.780398 -78.639099 cerning the great enterprise of freeing our\nState from the evils of Intemperance. If\nevery one of our present subscribers would\nrenew, as their subscription years expire,\nand exert themselves to induce their friends\nand neighbors to subscribe, wo should soon\nbe able to reach that point of our great de-\nsire. Come friends, start out w ith tho new\nand plentiful year with the determination that\nwe shall have that Jive thousand! Every\nthing else is bringing high prices, but here is\nthe S nrit of tho Age, a largo weekly paper,\noffered at tho low price of $1 to all club sub-\nscribers of five and upwards ! The price of\nthe paper is as cheap as any can desire, and it\nis universally acknowledged to be a good, in-\nteresting paper ; for the small sum of your\nsubscription you will not only receive far\nmore than its equivalent, but you will help\nto keep open, that great avenuo of (thought,\nwhich is to prepare the way for the success\nful working of the Temperance cause. Thou-- !\n mds who can never hear a lecture upon tem-\nperance, may, by your assistance, receive\nthat which is far more important, a welcome\nvisitor from week to week. Thousands, who\nyvill not be seen in a temperance meeting,\nwill read at home. Tho young, that great\npart of the reading community, will be sto\nring their minds with useful knowledge, and\nthus prepare the way for a complete deliver-\nance from the evils of intemperance.\nWe would most respectiully appeal to the\ntwenty thousand temperance families in the\nState, thus to lend their aid in helping to\nthrow broadcast through the community\nthose succession of facts which shall tend to\narouse the people from their lethargy, and\ncause them to strike one effectual blow for\nthe destruction of the rum traffic. The time\nfor aetivit' among the friends of temperance\nhas fully come. There is a demand for exer-\ntion and exertion of no ordinary character.\nWill the friends of the cause sustain their\njournal? Will they not give one dollar in\naid of the paper when the-
11977d514be20af2eaff98b66f85ed2d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.3428961432403 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, D. C ., MAy 4..Mr. Mai\nDonald, of Minnesota, spoke in oppos\ntion to the protective system, and e:\npatiated upon the injuries resulting t\nthe people by the locking up of a vai\nsurplus in the Treasury. He was n<\nquite satistied with the bill because j\ndid not go far enough. He would plat\ncoal, iron ore and sugar on the free lis\ni^Mr. Guenther, of Wisconsin, said tli\nRepublicans generally were in favor\nabolishing the tax on tobacco, amoun\ning to about £*0,000,000; also the tax o\nspirits used in the arts and manufa\ntures amounting to about $0,000,00\nShould further reduction be necessar\nthey propose to abolish the duty ti\nsugar; and in order to foster sugar pr<\nduction, they would pay a bounty to t!\nproducer amounting to a sum equal\ntho present tax. This would give to tl\npeoplu free sugar, and would not d\nstroy or prevent the extension of ai\nestablished industry. This policy wou\nmake a reduction of about $80,000,0\ncertain |and absolutely instead of pro\nIcmatical like the method propos<\nby the Democratic party. I\nwas in favor of revision of \ntariir, but he wanted it revised by i\nfriends, not by its foes. He wanted\nprotect everything American. lie want\nthe standard of wages kept up, n\nlowered, lie was in favor of restorii\nthe wool tariff of 1807. lie was a lir\nbeliever in a tariff, which not only su\nplied means for the expenses of tl\nGovernment, but at the same time bu\nup and encouraged home manufactun\ndeveloped the inexhaustible rcsourc\nof the country, and gave employment\nmillions of our people. \\\\ bile he tl\nplored the condition of the workii\nmen of the country of his birth, he d\nnot feel called upon as an American\ngive aid to them at the expense of tl\nlaboring people of America.\nMr. Caruth, of Kentucky.now c\nyou 011 the tax of empty bottles?\nMr. Guenther.I'm all right. He\nf are you on full bottles? [Laughter.]\nlii conclusion, Mr. ti uenther express\nhis willingness to allow the people\n* bring in a verdict on the case of protj\ntion against free trade, and he prophesi\nthat the verdict would be toiconsign t\nDemocratic party to a place among t\n1
42146de632a580a5c57c5208a30b4489 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.1520547628108 40.827279 -83.281309 I wish to say a few words to the citi-\nzens of Wyandot county in explana-\ntion of the course that I propose to pur-\nsue hereatter. In the first place, 1\nhave no intention of removing from\nUpper Sandusky but expect to make it\nmy home during my life time. 'Neither\nhave 1 any intention of discontinuing\nthe practice of my profession but ex-\npect to continue that as long as I am\ncapable of doing so, but I have now\nbeen engaged iu the general practice\nof mediciuu for more than thirty years,\nmy time ana what anility l possessed\nhas been at the service tf the public\nnight and day. and without regard to\nroads or weather for that length of\ntime, I have endeavored to battle with\ndisease with the het weapons that I\ncould command and to use with\nall the skill tliat 1 possessed in every\ncase. 1 have had my triumphs and\ndefeats;' my share of commendation\nana censure in looking uacK over\nmy pro less ion alii fe I can recall nosin-g - l\ninstance where I did not do the\nvery host I could for the comfort and\nrecovery of my patients. I can recall\nmany cases where 1 thinlv 1 couia Uo\nbetur now than 1 did then, jainee put\nting on my ' professional armor I have\ntried not to lot it rut. but to ket"p it\nbright by constant reading, observa\ntion, reflection and study. 1 have en\ntirely changed my practice from the\nAlopatiiic to the uouieop ituic system;\nand with twenty years experience of\nthe farmer and ten years ot the latter 1\nam. entirely sattslieJ tnas the change\nins been most
0bfcd0ecd620a940eecca33672140feb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.4342465436328 40.063962 -80.720915 Cole, of Syracuse, stepped up to Hon\nL. Harris Uiscock, a member of the\nlast legislature, and a delegate to th<\npresent sitting Constitutional Couveu\ntion, and charged him with having\ncommitted a criminal outrage upon his\nwife, while he (Cole) was absent In tht\nwar. Following up this charge, he im\nmediately drew a pistol and shot Mr\nHiscock in the head; the ball entering\njust above the right eye, lodged in hii\nbrain. General Cole then turned tc\nthe bystanders and said "he was satis\ntied. This man," he declared, 4,hai\nravished his wife, and he was contem\nwith the deed he had committed." H<\nalso stated that he knew that doatl\nonly awaited him for committing tlx\ndeed. "Ha was ready to die," he said\nHTill Ihpn Pflllwl fnr n i .nlinamun l>im\nself. Mr. Hiscock fell to the iloor, thi\nblood pouring out of his wound will\ngreat profusion. The immense loss o\nblood noon every person tha\nil was impossible for him to live long\nMedical assistance was immediately\nsecured, uud everything that was pos\nsible was done to save him. lie linger\ned about half an hour; but a few miu\nutes pust U o'clock, it was anuouucei\nthat he was dead.\nMr. lliscock has beeu a member o\nthree successive Legislatures, and wai\nlast winter Chairman of the Judiciary\nCommittee of the Assembly.\nEvidence elicited by the Coroner't\njury summoned on the body of Mr\nlliscock is somewhat contradictory it\nregard to the noiut whether Gen. Cob\nspoke to Mr. Hiscock before he tired\nthe pistol or not. One witness declare;\nthat ho told him that he (Hiscock) had\nraped his wife, and that he (Cole) hac\nthe evidence in his pocket, and sho\nhim. Another person standing closi\nby, states that Cole walked up and firei\nthe pistol without saying a word, wher\nhe turned to the bystauders and said
4eeedee79f12a6af773dc119bd3d7486 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.78551909406 40.063962 -80.720915 city with the movement uud declared\ntheir sympathies with Uie government.\nMadrid, October 19..An otlleial dis-\npatch from Ferial, reports thattho Insur-\ngents still hold out, although badly dis-\norganized uud poorly provided with am-\nmunition. The red Republican lite is\nHying lrorn the matt of vessels and over\npalaces seized by them. Troops will\narrive before the city to morrow and will\ncombine with tho garrison in an attack\nDn the rebols without delay. The Qaceta\nBays tho insurgents seized tho steamer\nLadiz, a tug boat and several barks. The\ncitizens seem to look upon the movement\nwith indifference, taking no part for or\nigainst it. The military governor, the\ncommandant of tho post and all officers\nire laithlul to tho Government, and with c\nthe troops of tho garrison occupying stra- i\nlogic points, the Capt. General of Gorunna t\nwith all his disposable forces has marched 1\nor Eerral. Troops have also been dis- r\n thither fromGijou, Santanderand *\nUilabas, and an iron clad has sailed Irom 1\njarihnwnu fnt>thna<>mn\nThe only plioe of importance held by t\nlie insurgents is the arsenal, Iron) which i\nnoy will soon be unable to move. Fort e\nI'hiilip, which u occupied by the govorn-\nnent forces, commands the entrance of i\nhe harbor and prevents the rebel vessels t\nrom moving out. The insurgents are al- s\neady demoralized, and several have de- t\nlerted and surrendered themselves to the\noyal authorities. i\nIn tho Cortes, Saturday, debate arose on\nho elections in Porto Rico and the eiten- I\nlion of electoral privileges to Cuba. Prime\nSinister Zorrila told the Bouse that no\nelorms could bo introduced in Cuba\nvliile a single man remained in arms\nIgainst tho government. As lor Porto\ntico, the government would keep the\niromlses ol the revolution, but would do\nlothing which might Jeopardise tho\nircsarvation ot the colonics.
11d727eececd175c66cbddf9a9b09521 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.8534246258243 39.745947 -75.546589 Your correspondent is authorized to\ngive an absoluto denial to tho reports\nfrom China stating thnt tho remnants of\nAdmiral Ting's licet have lioen patched\nup and are nearly ready to try their fate\nagain with the sea, but ominous messages\nare going to and fro from Port Arthur to\nthe effect that if they venture forth it\nmust not he without proper provision of\nshot and she ! for tho big guns. So great\nhas boon tho rascality of high officials\nthat the vast quantities of ammunition\nwhich were supposed to be stored at the\nnaval stations have given out.\nChinese Bmbiritics Toward Japauese.\nDefinite news is at lust received con­\ncerning the two Japaneso students who\nwere arreste l as spies in Shanghai and\nsurrendered to the Chinese by the consul\ngonorivl of tho United ritates In obedienco\nto instructions from Secretary Gresham.\nOn Uet. 8 I hey were decapitated tn Nan\nkin by order of the viceroy in the pres­\nence of all tho high officials of that city\nand a mob. which kept shrieking, Kill\ntho foreign devils!" from the moment that\nthe condemned appeared the execu­\ntion ground until their heads foil.\nThat tho native authorities of Shang­\nhai are disposed to repeat these proceed­\nings as often as they can is shown in an\nattempt to get possession of Japanese\ntravelers on tho same pretext. Toward\nthe end of tho month they sent a body of\nguards on board an English ship and\nwithout a warrant seized a passenger on\nhis way home to Yokohama, alleging that\nthey acted with tha knowledge and con­\nsent of the British consul general.\nThis assertion has not been denied and\ngains some color from the indifference of\ntho British local officials to the effect\nthat two other steamers under their fiag\nhave been unlawfully boarded by Chinese\nsoldiers and their Japaneso passengers\nbrutally maltreated. These outrages oc­\ncurred many weeks ago, and so far as it\nIs known no reparation has been made.\nIn tho case now referred to tho intend­\ned victim, a harmless missionary, escaped\nthrough tho exertions of a foreign Super­\nintendent of police who was determined\nto prevent tho recurrence of events like\nthat which cost tho two students their\nlives.
1987abe48eb7d9afd0333100a9eaf74f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.703551880945 39.745947 -75.546589 2375, Sec. 18. Game. Open seasons;\n— The open seasons durln« which it\nshall be lawful to catch or kill any\nat the following birds and animale\nshall respectfully be as follows;\nQuail (bob-white partridges) from\nNovember 15 to December 31 next fol­\nlowing; Partridges from November 15\nto December 31 next following; Reed\nbirds from September 1 to November\n1 next following; Hail birds from Sep­\ntember 1 to November 1 next follow­\ning; Goose from October 1 to March\n15 next following; Brim from Octo­\nber 1 to March 15 next following;\nSummer Duek from September 1 to\nOctober 31 next following; other Wild\nDuek from October t to March 15 next\nfollowing; Woodcock from November\n15 to December 31 next following;\nDove in Kent and Sussex Counties\nfrom August 1 to December 31 next\nfollowing; Muskrat in New Castle\nCounty. Skunk, Kink and from\nDecember 1 to March 10 next follow­\ning; Muskrat In Kent and Sussex Coun­\nties from November 20 to March 15\nnt xt following; Fox from October i to\nApril 30 next following; Raccoon\nfrom October 1 to February 15 next\nfollowing: Opossum, from October 1\nto February 15 next following; Fox\nSquirrel, Black Squirrel and Gray\nSquirrel from November 15 to Decem­\nber 31 next following; Frog form duly\n1 to December 31 next followin'«. The\nabove open seasons shall include the\ndays defining them, provided, how­\never, that any person may protect his\nproperty and premises from the rav­\nage and depredation of any wild birds\nor animals protected by law at any\ntime and In any way; and provided\nfurther that landlords and tenante\nand Ihoir respective children may-\ntrap rabbits In the open season on\ntheir freeholds and leaseholds, respec­\ntively.
461209bb96ce5a8877be828a29b232a4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.6287670915779 58.275556 -134.3925 Charlie seuds his regards to all of his\nfriends, and especially to the solo\nplayers, but expends most of his en-\nthusiasm in describing the wonderful\ngrowth of Cordova. He says:\n"There are some beautiful business\nblocks here and more are going up.\nSam Blum put up one last fall that is a\ncredit to auy city, and the Burke hotel\nis a beauty. Judge Ostrander is put-!\ntiug up a building, cost of lot and\nbuilding about $18,000. Mr. Clayson,\nthe Skagway merchaut, has invested in\na lot and building about $28,000; Mr.\nAdams, $20,000; and the Olympia Brew-\ning compauy intends to spend about\n$75,000 here in putting in a branch sup¬\nply station; the townsite compauy is\nspending about $25,000 od street im¬\nprovements; Jack Ross' building is\nabout finished; Herb Wilson put up a\nfine block; O'Brien and Simp-\nson have one of the finest saloons in\nAlaska, and our old townsman Oscar\nBreed man has a good business in the\nMcCormick hotel, Tom Donahue is\nputting up an $18,000 building for\nBilly Wilson of Valdez to occupy, the\nEagles have a fine lodge room, the Elks\nhave an 11 o'Clock Club and give some\ndandy smokers, Harwood and Johnson j\nhave a fine buffet and billiard parlor\nand your humble servant has built\nhimself a nice little cottage on one of\nthe best resident lots in the city."\nContinuing Charlie says that his\nfamily is well, that Tom Price and\nChas. Taylor are prospering, and an-\nnounces that they have made a night\nmarshal out of Red Nels, who sends\nword to Jack McDonald that if he\ncomes up there he will pinch him sure.
191e23bd6775cd30dea7d23ba73a2808 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 Wehaveoa ourtableacopyolawor\nwith the above title. It ia a large an\nbeatilully bound volume, having over\nthousand octavo pages, printed with ne\ntype on heavy paper, and ia abundantl\nillustrated with really finely executed 01\n(ravings. Theee facia about the "get up\nill the book ire revelled by a cursory e:\nsmlnation, while a hasty peruul ol tt\nIndex, and portions ol the one hundrt\nchapters in the book, show thit it U wri\nten in a graphic and readable style, we\nworthy ol the pen ol ita diatlngalshf\nauthor, R. M. Devens, of Maseachosaett\na brother ol ex-Attorney General Devon\nand the author ol a number ol populi\nnarrative hiatoriee. The present vo\nurne is not, aa ill name, un>\ncompanied by any explanation, migl\neem to indicate, a consecutive history\nthe natlon'e first century. It la made u\nof oue hundred separata narratives\nmomentous political occurrences ol al\nrorblng public interest;importantmilitai\na vonLa.bittlee, sieges, insurrections, etc\nbrilliant naval engagements and hero\nexploits; superb achievements of Amer\ncan oratory on national occasions; eel\nbrated criminal cues, trials, trsgedie\nmutinies, duels, etc.; wonderful pbeuoo\nena of earth, ocean and heavens; eztrao\ndinary discoveries and inventions, an\nthe aplendid triumphs of mechanic\ngenius; remarkable reforms, delusiot\nand excitements In the moral and relii\nlous world; appalling public calamltie\ndisasters, panics, etc.; joyous and hspp\nevents, pleasant and sparkling scene\nsensations and national jubilees.\nAs the prospeclusea say, It Is muc\nmore readable than the ordinary \nol the country. It stands in much th\nsame relation to such works aa anecdol\nbiographies do to torinal biographies. 1\nrelates about all the momentous events I\nall (t>o taialWanf Ufa willinnt iltifldanlno th\nwork with uninteresting details of intern\nonly to etudents. The point we moke wi\nhe better understood by some reference I\nthe index. Thus we have a striking dn\nmalic narrative ol the birth ol the Kepul\nlie; the atory ot the Urst American navi\nvictory, that of John Paul Jonea, ot thril\n>ng memory, and hia "Bon Uomm\nRichard," over King George's grei\nwar-ship " Serapia; the wonderft\n'Dark Day" In New England I\n1780: Arnold's treason and Shay\nrebellion: formation of the first Oonstllu\nlion; first Presidential election and inagi:\nration: various Indian wan; the Pennsy;\nvania Insurrection;the death of Washloi\nIon; founding of the National Capita!\nwhipping of the Barbary Slates by 01\nnavy; the Burr and Hamilton Duel, an\nthe Clay-Randolph encounter; numeroc\ngreat Inventions, such a> of the cotlo\ngin, steam navigation, the Morse teli\ngraph, telephone, and ihe electric ligh\nso La Fayette's visit to America, and i\ndu to the Centennial Exposition at PhlU\nilelphla In 1870. Each of these is treate\nIn much the same style as It would be b\na modern journal within whose scone\nhad occurred. The result is a reall\nunique book, which marks a netv era I\nthe preparation of histories for populi\nreading. While the book undi\nsonslderatlon
382e4bf4933aecedfba5a1f0d509b2e9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.5356164066463 58.275556 -134.3925 The disaster that overtook the party\non board the gasoline launch Superb,\non the morning of July 4tb, in the\nwaters of L^ynn canal, only a short dis\ntance from Skagway, with its heavy\ntoll of human life, mauy of the victims\njust enteriug upon manhood, is preg¬\nnant with suggestions for future action\nby not onlv the people of this commu¬\nnity, but of all others where similar\nconditions prevail. Iu the first place,\nit is a ghastly reminder of the inade\nquacy of the marine laws of the terri¬\ntory which, so far as we can learn, pro\nvide no tests of competency, or at\nleast very superficial ones, for those\nwho apply for permission to navigate\nboats in the inland waters of Alaska.\nAnd in the secoud place it is a remind-\ner that for the safety of the public,\nsteps should be taken to present for\nconsideration at the next session of\nthe territorial legislature the draft of a\nlaw that will provide that only those\nwho are competent from actual experi\nence, ns well as through techuical\nknowledge, shall be entrusted with the\nduty of and protecting of\nhuman life. It also brings to mind the\nparsimony of the federal government,\nwhich has provided no funds for the\nburial of people who meet death by\naocideut aud leave no means for their\nown iuterment. And further it leaves\naltogether to the discretion of the Com¬\nmissioner of the district at the point\nnearest to wh'ie the death occurrnd,\nas to whether an inquest shall or shall\nnot be held, which to say the least, is\nilladvised. Ju3t across the internation¬\nal boundary when a death occurs under\nunusual circumstauces, the coroner\nknows it is his duty to bold an inquest\nand inquire into the cause of death,\neven though there is no suspicion of\nfoul play, and he also knows that wheu\nhe gets through the money to compen¬\nsate him for his time and trouble will\nbe immediately available. An instance\nof this occurred only a short time ago,\nwhen the body of a mau was found\nfloating in the river at Whitehorse. A\ncoroner's jury wae impannelled and\nfrom the testimony adduced it was\nconclusively proven that a murder had\nbeen committed.
40f20cc5d1b0462d816c2b8bb6405a94 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1909.8479451737696 43.624497 -72.518794 PETITION FOR DIVORCE.\nSTATE OF VERMONT, i Whereas, Mary\nWindsok County, ss. J A. Watts'of SpriiiK\nfield, Vt, lias duly filed her petltlon to thc\nCounty Court, settlng forth her legal marriaRe to\nCollins A. Watts of Compton, ln tlie 1'rovince of\nQuebcc, that she hath reslded slnce Aprll 1, 1907,\nin the County of Windsor and State ot Vermont,\nthat she hath kept the marriage covenant,\nbut that thc sald Collins A. hath vlolaled\nthe same, for that he hath trcated the sald llbcllant\nwith lntolerable severlty; and for that he hath\nwilfully deserted tho saldlibellant slnce the 6th day\nof Kebruary A. D. 1906 and hath contlnued such\ndescrtlon for more than threc consecutlve years;\nand for that he, being of sufTiclent pecunlary and\nphyslcal ability to provide sultable malntenance\nfor the sald libellant, hath, wlthout cause, erossly,\nwantonly and refuscd and neglected so to\ndo; wherefore tho petltioner . prays forablllof\ndlvorce from the sald Collins A. and that she may\nhave the care and custody of two minor children\nand for allmony,\nAnd whereas lt appcars that sald Collins A. is\nwlthout this state, so that tho summons x( said\nCourt may not be scrved upon hlm.\nIt ls Thereupon Ordered that the sald Collim\nA. be notllled and required to appoar in and\nbefore sald court and make answcr, if any he have,\nand ablde the order and judgment of sald court in\nthe premlses, at the term thereof next to be held at\nMwuusiw.ni 111 iiiiu iur uic .uun(r 01 winasor, in\nthe State of Vermont,on the first Tuesday of Decem - be -\nA D.1900, upon tho first day of sald term, by\nthe substance of sald petltlon, together witli
1594823a478c0c14b9d9b567ddc621ce THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.4863013381532 38.894955 -77.036646 fcrt.4. Carts nnd londtd vehicles Midi! not\nmovo abreast upon any street or avenuo, but\nshall fallow each oilier Inline; and whenever\ntwo or rcore tnrrlnpcj, enrts or wagons nro In\nmotion em nny street, avenuo or a ley within\nthe District of Columbii, nnd followlixr oich\nother, tho drlvirs Unroof shalt maintain a\nclear Interval of not les Hutu fifteen fvit be-\ntween every two roaseeutive earrluir.es, carls\nor wngotis. Including iho animals drawing tho\nsnme, nnd tho drlv er of every men c imago\ntrrt or wagon st all at nil Hints keep either\nlpon ihe sent thereof or at tin head of the\nauimnl or ti nm draw ing tho same,\nfcsc. C, No vehicle shall stop abreast of an\nother vchlcio upon the street lo the obuructlou\nof traffic therein, uor shall any vchlcio stop\nujona sticet crooning or upon the carriage-\nway of a street lnteriectIou\nSt c. 6 Aulhorlzt d vehicles or tho l'olica and\nlire Dipnrtmeiits shall Imvo tho right or way\n the streets over all others, nn I tha sounding\nor the I ell or gong thereon shall constitute n\nwarning and direction lo other vehicle! and\nped i stria ns to elrnr the road.\nSrc. 7. Novchltla shall bo so driven as to\ncollide with any other v chide or with any\nperson, and every vchlcio shall maiio way lor\nredcMrlaus at Ihe street crosMugs,\nSrt, 8. All vehicles travel lug between sunset\nand sunrise shall display lighted lamps on Itolh\nsides thereof, so placed as to be visible from\ntho front, sides and rear.\nSrc fl. No vchlcio shall have loos) articles\nhung on tho side thereof, nor any projcetloa\nbejond the hubs of ihe wheels, or moraUnn\nten feet In the rear of ihe rear axle, wliboit a\nspecial permit from tho Major of o lee. Ino\ntransporting of telegraph and similar poles an\ntimbers upon nny vehicle Is forbidden except\nunder permit from the Major of Police, which\nsbnll prescribe tho route- aud time of such\ntransport.
381cff1950960c8729b65687a1fa6028 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.319178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 not line-looking you could uo^pass the\nexamination of ouattuperintenaant (who\nh a single man); and if yon aro very j\nluMinti/ti! ilm uoFohubHion would bo that «,\nyou would got married Iwfogffhu loarn-\nedtho name* of your pupils. We do not\nthink a nrivatoHchool would gtfcceed, ox- (\neept bdfluid it witt tlio capital l'o build line [\nHtructttre* ami furnish them with the up- *\nparutu* of the modern nchool-rooni.\nAbout getting employment in private\nfumilieii there ix hut one dilRctiHy. The\neonlidouce of our fiuniliex hint been mo of- 1\nten nlmned (lint they are demoralized mid f\nhave Hettled down to believe thoro iH noth- i\ning reliable but a Cliiiinman£ffMtfho can-\nnot lie dejKiiiiled upon abouj>tl|o2timo of J\nthe Chinexo Now Year. 'IwHttifllculty\nlien iii the fact that thefo are;inore of\nthoHo brute# here'called there\naro of (.hose angw called womwrf4and the\nf men have a wav of coaxing which genor-\nally, It) jiImmjI fouf'#eekH, trajJaforniH a]) ;\nKnatern girl.who caine bore- with the\nbent of intention! tn work faithfully, lay\nup a great deal of igdney inn) go back and\nMipport her mother.into a wife, with\nher time divided between presiding over\nher own homo and hunting tfrotlnd town\nfur a Chinaman to do her hoiiHework. If\nthin hint HiigKOHtion in of nuyintcrcHt to\nyou. yop may depdnd upon the minor* llv-\nlug hero and majF know in 'advance that\nanyone of tliena haa more HYirence for\nami tuiprociulionol* worm* woman man\nJ a tlii> 11 Kinitl of lh« youth* of Vermont, who,\nih'injf brought up anion# ko ninny women,\nnever realize that tliev are '-ttfaTly angel*\nin <li*gnise.. Virginia (Nev.)Enterprise.
04cbc10f60dc0d210dbdae3097bf3dbf THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.9630136669202 37.561813 -75.84108 Furthermore, if, on or before the\n25th day of December, 1873, it shall\nbe made to appear to the satisfaction\nof the United btates that the V lrgin\nius did not rightfully carry the Amer-\nican flag and was not entitled to\nAmerican papers, the United States\nwill institute inquiry and adopt legal\nproceedings against the vessel,\nit be found that she has violated any\nlaw of the United States, and against\nany of the persons who may appear\nto have been guilty of illegal acts in\nconnection therewith. It being nn\nJerstood thai Spain will proceed ac\ncording to the second proposition\nmade to General Sickle?, and com\ninunicated in' his telegram read to\nAdmiral Polo on the 27th inst., to\ninvestigate the conduct of those of\nUer authorities who have infringed\nbpanish laws or treaty obligations\nand arraign them before compe\nbent courts and inflict punishment on\nthose who may have offended; 'other\nreciprocal reclamations to be the sub-\nject of consideration and arrangement\nbetween the two Governments, and in\ncase of no agreement, to be the sub\nject of arbitration, if the constitu\ntional assent of the Senate of the\nUnited States be given thereto.\nIt is farther stipulated that the\ntime, manner and place for the sur\nrender of the Yirginius, and the sur\nvivors of those who were on board of\nher at the time of her capture, and\niJso the time, manner and place for\nthe salute to the flag of the United\nStates, if there should be occasion\nfor such salute, shall be subject to\narrangement between the undersign\ned within the next two days.\nHAMILTON FISH,\nJOSE POLO DE BARNABE.
61d07d2ea747e753061ad649bc803be8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.278082160071 39.261561 -121.016059 FgiIT.—The fruit blossoms in this neigh-\nborhood h.ye not as yet been materially injur-\ned by the frosts, and there is still a prospect of\na good fruit crop. The blossoms on some of\nthe early peach trees have been killed, but the\napple, pear, and most of the peach trees, are so\nbackward this spring, that hopes are entertain-\ned that we shall have a plentiful fruit harvest.\nThis is more particularly gratifying, from the\nfact that many of the trees in the valleys have\nbeen destroyed by the overflows, and fruit is like-\nly to be much higher this year than usual.\nThieving.—Last Wednesday night two or\nthree petty thieves broke into the kitchen of\nMr. Hixsons residence, and stole a few pounds\nofflour, some ham, and other articles that had\n prepared for breakfast. They first went\ntothe stable and endeavored to break in. A\nperson sleepiug inside was awakened by the\nnoise, and prepared to give them a proper re-\nception; but they were frightened off by the\nbarking of a dog, and then went to the kitchen\nand stole enough provisions for their breakfast.\nHabeas Corpus. —One Harrison White was\nexamined before Judge Belden, on Thursday\nlast, on habeas corpus. He had been commit-\nted to jail by a Justice of Grass Valley, in de-\nfault of $200 bail, for using threatening lan-\nguage. There being some defect in the com-\nmitment, Judge Belden re-examined the case,\nand required him to give bonds to keep the\npeace, or in default, to be again sent to jail.\nHe gave the bond and was discharged.
00aa01771fcdd6b804d107232b2417ec DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.6561643518519 39.745947 -75.546589 All the carriages and hacks that it\nwas possible to obtain were placed at\nour disposal, and it was a grand sight\nlo see suoh a long line of vehicles, all\nloaded dowu with eld veterans in their\nG. A. R . uniform, taking a free ride\nthrough such a beautiful and produc\nilve country. It made us feel that our\nefforts to save such a glorious country\nwere appreciated. Our ride brought us\nto the old Catholic Misston SantaCAra,\nwhich is one of the oldest places iu\nCalifornia; there is a large college there,\nand it 1b justly celebrated for its beau\nty. We got back to 8an Jose in time\nto take the train and arrived in Ban\nFrancisco at V oclock that nig it, well\npleased with our trip. The next morn­\ning I visited Chinatown, to see the\nsights, and they are many and varied.\nI was told that it was best to take in\n part of the city at night, so I with\ntwo comrades started out again after\ndaik. We hired a guide and made up\nour minds that as weoould not see any\nthing in daylight, we were determined\nto see them at night. Tbe many scenes\nwe witnessed are hard to deseribe, but\nwe went into their dens, and into their\nbon ton quarters, au J even penetrated\ntbe mysteries of their Joss houses.\nI suppose you know that loss is their\nGod, but they have a great many of\nthem; there is the big Jos?, and a uum\nber of smaller ones, all of which aru\nworshipped according to their fancy,\nat least as far as 1 could find out. They\nlavish a tremendous amount of wealth\non thexe buildings, and in thtm I was\nshown some of the handsomest carvings\nI ever saw. There was a great deal of\nthis kind of work, and it seemed to
89a18e4a15f71d83f7c0aa8eec2d8093 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.6999999682903 43.798358 -73.087921 My confidence in the superiority of 'truth\nin 7 r act ice as well as in .theory remains un-\nmoved, aud most gladly will I do all I can\nto induce to a free and thorough investigation\nof moral, as well as phy siological principle?.\nNeither do I hesitate to identify myself, rep-\nutation, interests and all, with the unpopu-\nlar class who are seeking by the power of\ntruth the redemption of the human family,\nfrom the depths of sin and sensuality, into\nwhich a false and erroneous system of re-\nligion has jdunged them. And such a class,\ndo 1 believe the reformers of the present day\nto be, although stigmatized with the name\nof InfiJel. For why are they thus stigma-\ntized? Because they seek io know the truth\nwhich maketh free; and by investig.uing\nand holding up to view the true character,\nat:ributestnd principles, ofthe Divine mind,\nto win back poor fallen man to the blest im-\n of holiness and love. Berause they\n'would have the world sec. ec and acknowl-\nedge, the superior claim of right, over wroni.\nTtie noble beauty and loveliuess, uf purity\nin heart and life, when contrasted with its\ndebasing opposite. The higher claims of\nmind to matter. In short, because they seek\nthe only true way of worshiping Gjd in\nspirit and truth. You would like to know\nthe progress ofthe public mind in Lowell\non reform. 1 cannot tell you of the progress\nI would like to, yet great as is the apathy\nand indifference, the prospect though dark,\nis not discouraging. The darkneis which\nprecedes the dawn is gathering thick and\nfast, and sooner or later muM break way be-\nfore the concentrating rays of Truth. The\nfriends of reform are few but firm. And as\nthe true spirit of Ami Slavery is disseminat-\ning its benignant and saving light aramig us,\nit is preparing the way, slow but-sur- e,
1b50029fe5ad126fccd50275fac9a970 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1868.7144808426938 41.004121 -76.453816 Nor do I know that General Grant or\nany othergutierul, has ever withheld just\ncommendation. I therefore leneal that\nI have no personal gtius'aucu lo redress\nfor myself or for tho troops of my Statu.\nAnd I would havo remained silent on\ntills subject in tho Senate, If the speech\nof thu Senator from Ohio had not iintile\nU necessary for mo to speak ; for I do\nnot deem tho Scnato Chamber tho prop\ner placo for criticisms on tho conduct of\na general in tho field. I think it much\nbetter to presont our personal con-\nvictions' in relation to tho character of\nour generals to thu Secretary of War\nand to President. For myself, I uni-\nformly pursuo this course, aud regret\nthat it bus, in my Judgment, become\nnecccssary to from it in this case.\nl!ut, sir, it is often as dangerous and ns\nwicked to praisothe unworthy and In-\ncompetent as to detract from the meri-\ntorious. If my convictions uru correct\nll would bo 11 crime for mo to remain\nsilent, and biill'er intluetices to oiiglunte\nlu tho Seuutc Chamber which may re-\nsult in restoring a general to an actlvo\ncommand whom I, nml thu people in\npart leprcsent, deem unworthy of such\na trust. Iowa Inn scut to the Held about\ntwenty thousand troops. They havo\nbehaved 1 think, well on every battle\nHeld where they have appearid. As\nfar as 1 know, no Iowa regiment has\never faltered in tho discharge of duty,\nhowever perilous. Their numbers havu\nbeen reduced by the causalities of thu\nHeld and camp nearly
0ff2ee841ff96cfbf0b7d0f93750f9b9 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1889.1356164066465 43.82915 -115.834394 Z TM* t0/, V0“ h8cl03cPersonal\nattention and dir ectly superintend the\ndoings of each agent, would be absu rd.\nHie magnitude and div ersity of the\nwork demand its separation into p arts\nmd the general supervisio n or manage-\nment of each part must be intrusted to\na s epa rate officer. On this business\nbasis, and in accordance with the de-\nsign of the Con stitution, Congress has\ndivided the work among seven ex­\necutive departments, each in charge of\na g ene ral officer o r "head of dep art­\nment, known, res pectively, as the\nSecretary of Stat e, the Secretary of the\ntreasury, tbe Secretary of War, the\nAttorney-Gen eral, the Post master-Gen­\neral the Secretary of the Navy, and\nthe Sécréta y of the Interior; and the\nwork of each department is still further\nsubdivided and distrib uted among\nbureaus and "divisions and minor\n“ offices,” in ch arg e of les-er heads or\nchiefs , designated as “ commissioners ,”\n“superintendents," “directors,” and by\nvarious other general or special titles.\nAn executive dep artm ent , then, prop­\n means one of the grand divisions\nof Government work boldly marked out\nor suggested by theexpress provisions\nof the Con stitution. These grand di­\nvisions readily arrang e themselves.\nThe sovereign relati on s of the Repub­\nlie with foreign powers, and its official\nintercourse with the Governments ol\n. he States at home may be regard ed\nas one d istinct grand division; accord ­\ningly, we have tho D ep artment of State.\nI he coin age, currency , revenue, and\ngeneral fiscal affairs suggest an othe\ngreat branch of work: hence, we have\nthe Department of the Treasury. The\nmention of armi s suggest work that\nin time of trouble is likely to tax the\nenergy of a separate division; thus, we\nvery appropriately have a Department\nof War. The pro secution of offenses\nagainst the Unite I .States, and other\njudicial m atte rs wherein the interests\nof the Republie a-e concerned consti­\ntute a gen eral division, repres ented by\nthe Department of Justice. The postal\nservice, as one of the most intricate\nand important branches of Gov­\nernm en t
068ba53a9e97443e7948f59acea7232e PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1886.2917807902081 39.756121 -99.323985 Junction City Union: Gus. Wingfield\ntold us a timber story the other day.\nHis family settled on the Humboldt in\nthe spring of 1857. Eecentlv Gus con-\ncluded to clear fifteen acres of bottom\nland, the timber on it having grown\nsince his settlement there. From the\nfifteen acres, he has sold 300 cords of\nwood and 1000 fence posts. He has\nstill on hand 100 cords of wood, and\n5000 posts. There are 1,500 worth of\nwood and 600 wortn of posts, or $2,100.\nHe tiliiiks the field will pay better in\ncorn, and he will crowd his timber to the\nhillsides and rough places.\nManhattan Industrialist: This is the\nseason when our manure crop is ripe a\nlittle over npe one would say, judging\nfrom the rank odor it exhales when\nstirred at this time of the year\nit best suits our convenience to haul it\nafield. Our experience, too, is tolerably\nconclusive upon this point, that it pavs\nDest to apply manure in quantity suf-\nficient to make it count as far as it goes.\nWe consider thirty loads applied to one\nacre nearly or quite equal to forty loads\nthinly 6pread over two" acres of ground,\nana base tne idea on reasons similar to\nto those employed in proving large crops\nmore profitable than small ones.\nDodge City Globe : The handling of\ncattle is being reduced to a science and\nthings in the way of expense that have\nheretofore been given no notice, are now\ncarefully considered aud in the future\nevery dollar must take its part and show\njust what it went for.
40418170e5f67db9e6e321a590bd1fb8 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.616120186956 39.513775 -121.556359 SHERIFFS SAFE.—Hy Virtneof ndecretalortlei\nissued out of the District Court, Ninth Judicial\nDistrict, in and for Unite County ami State of Cali-\nfornio, made the 121h day of June. A . I>. 1860, In me\ndirected and delivered, commanding tne to make the\nsum of four hundred and ninety seven fifty one him\ndredlhs dollar* Judgment, and interest on said amount\nof judgment at Die rale of leu per cent, per annum,\ntill paid, ana lue mm of nihety-eight sixty one him\ndredlhs dollars costs and accruing costs ofsahl order\nmil of the pr iperty hereinafter described, to satisfy\nDm afor.isaid judgment, wherein M. Walsh is plain-\ntiff and A. Shinkle defendant, to wit: Com mend nr\non Die Plaza in the village of llidwell. County and\nSialeaf iresiid. at the North east corner of Damp &\nllidas nnd rinming in an easterly direction,\nto the corner of Hie said plaza, sixty feel more or less,\nthence inn snnlherlv direction to the corner on the\nstreet of Messrs. Hoffman, on which their reservoir is\nsituated, thence in a westerly direction to the line of\nI,amp &11 idds Bakery, add thence in a southerly di-\nrect ion to the end ot the space dug out and formerly\nused a ten pin Alley including the space Mligbe-\ntwissn I,amp ft Hidas Lot and the Reservoir of\nMessrs Hoffman ft Co , together with the Billiard Sa-\nloon. situated on said premises, which I will sell at\nPublic Bale at tha ',ourl House door in llidwell, coun-\nty mid mate aforesaid, on the 4lh day of August, A\nD. 185b. at 2 oclock P M.. to the highest bidder for\ncash.
1c10bac87008687c2f2c4546538ec87d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.1767122970573 41.875555 -87.624421 think sho would havo turned Informer\nngnlnst pnpu hod not circumstances look-\ned so bad for herself. This procured her\nsilence. But now sho has seen, or thinks\nshe has seen, tills lover of hers nllvc; and\nsho treats me, In consequence, with oven\nless consideration, tlinn before. Such, my\nmother, Is the woman I hnvo given tho\nproud name of Damlen! However, there\nis only one wny iu which I can bo re-\nvenged. In nu Imprudent moment sho has\nmado mo master of facts which would\nhang her; it is with unutterable pleasure\nthat 1 commit them to writing nnd hand\nthem over to your keeping. Kroin motives\nof caution I hnvo suppressed 'tho names\nin this tragedy, but I know them nil. 1\npray you to keep this paper In n safo placn,\nnnd out of tho rench of my esteemed\nbrother, Victor. Ono day I may ask you\nfor It. For tho present, adieu.\n"I ever your devoted son,\n"REMY ACHILLE DAMIEN."\nI stared nt the paper under my eyes till\nthe words danced before my dnzxlcd sight.\nWas it true? Or wns it a delusion, such\nns'l had experienced before I wns taken\n111? I hold Iu my hand whnt would bo of\ntho very greatest possible tiso to Paul\nI held facts which he would give half his\nfortune to possess! Surrender this docu-\nment to Remy? Never! Not if it cost\nmo my life's happiness!\n"Never," I said, as 1 refolded the pnper\nand restored it to its secret nook; "you\narc given Into Paul's own hands ns soon\nns ever I seo him; and I will wrlto and\ntell him to bo quick home."\nTour days nfter this I wns well enough\nto be downstairs, and wns undergoing a\ngreat deal of petting nt grnndpnpn's\nHands. That afternoon I opened the win-\ndow mid ran across tho grnss to tho nr-iK-
0306bebd9019c4a292de6b67f73691c2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.719178050482 37.561813 -75.84108 every one, from thone formerly of his house-\nhold, to tliiiKe who hud met hiul socially, vied\nin those tokens of frieutbihio that benneaka af\nfection and thought, ami the lung weary months\nof bin sicklies brought uo abatement of their\ntender cure, nor forced one complaining word\nfrom his pal lent lips.\nTo his family, iu its widext connection, bis\nloss is irreparable, while many others will miss\n111s quiet, yet earliest woi k 111 the cause lie loved.\n11. 1 . hurrcrc was the vomneHt son of 1. W .\nKarrere, of New Market township, and the\nbrother of the Hon. Nelson Jianere and Ben\njamin llarrure, of Hillsbtiro.\nVI the live brothera, himself and Nelson, on\nthe breaking up of the old Whig party, identi-\nfied themselves with the Democratic, partv, and\nserved their country and party long and well.\nI'erry lianere, an was familiarly culled, held\nthe ottioe of Justice of tlie l'eace in New Mai kut\ntownsh in for the past twenty or thirty years,\nand while it is an ottiet of 110 rciiinuciative val-\nue, is one of resixuisilnlity and trust, and in a\npolitical way, such a term of office is an evi\ndence of capability and hitcirritv. and iu all hia\nterm of ottuie none of his decisions were revers\ned. Air. bairere was not ft lie oilier of any\nChristian Church, but a firm believer ill the\ntruth and purity uf the Christian religion. He\npusseil away on the annlveiKniv of the victorv\n011 Ijike trie, after wln.se honored hero he ws\nlialii!, and after life's WeU fought bailie, be,\ntoo, rests well. lie haves a wile and three\nchildren, who treasure his meint;ry. and drop\nthe tear of bereavement over his llower-atiev-\ngiave.
1f4c01d98a9303fb6d224d58bf90577d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.3712328450026 40.063962 -80.720915 the drug, nho refused to oontlnuo its\nandr soon recovered. Sho saved gon\nthe medicine, and an analysis sinco\nshows that it contains poison. Rue\nthen took his wife and child up the\nand abandoned them.\n^.ftejr the d^ehiqn Ije traveled eon:\nably the ehgt. Somewhere in New\nhe |»et tW(L E'rty wlioir}' 'lie\nresented to yinslef lycre YOffl}' $-j\neacih. ftc paid opuft to oue of UienjJ\nit Is alleaeu. auifgpsted ,'tO fpinsle'c tl):\nget rid of ill's. Titisler and ooijft\nThey would men marry tno girw, kill\nget tv biji Btako. and go oil' west to\ntho spoils. The fripm^ljjj) beUyeei\ntwo was broken at this., point bv io«*\na confidence'^iime played by ]{udol]\n:i friend'of Tin'sler. Fearing trouble\ndolpfi started for the east, aud Tinsle\nlowing him to tills city, wnsarre3ted o\n but was J soon after released,\nollicer from Akron was called to Ii\nabont a month ago to investigate the ni\nQustiuyglflrjea wijlplj Itijd tujefi njrfcq\nand, regrtrdingTins|cr with somtf sijsp\nhe found Jlrs.Tinslcrut herhonje.and\ntioned her closely., Being a young w\nof good diameter and objecting to he\nband's intimacy with Rudolph, aheto\ndetective that Rudolph was doubtle\nguilty parh'.^nd charging him withrol\npoikoning- rtrtddeaerjin^his wife, ant\nspiring against pther girla to obtain\nmoney. Thus getting oil the track oi\nheinous' .crimca 'than burglary, the i\niyo dropped the cases of:theft, and, j\ninto life confidcnce of Tinsler, induct\nto (tij9i§t fn Jjndolnh'a capture,. By\nnfJ.TWnv'nMnrs fhlJj wuM liLTfimn'\nRudolph returned to*RuMell.a/\\yas nr]\nan^RH Ijeingchnrged byTihaler with\njn't"money rrimp Itliji fills? |?r<\nvvnscoiriinittod tq ail. Tl)e$nind jm\ninfeitiijiiHi t|ie tlnirgo ot wifcrpoi
1f2742b8a99d93a35a7db8c38a429aad THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.5657533929477 40.063962 -80.720915 Tc-iev tho oornoratpre were to meet again\nat the'cilice o! Col. A . Blakely, go Grant\nstreet, but egreed to visit other p-Unta ne'ore\nthe II sal meeting lor organiiition, elecllen\nol 0Blows, ,to., ml week. Meauwhilo the\nplana of th. company tire tlmj outlimtli\nThe seventeen companies already chartered\nwill llrst be consolidated In auoh a. way ss to\nI,. under one management and control. The\nleading spirits are Pittsburgh and B-adlord\ngnutleuieu conversant with the gas develop¬\nment business and »lre»dy pnmsKed In ;np-\nplying the vapor to Bradford, U.l City, Mm-\nleuton, to. There being already four etiai-\ntered companies preparing to furnish gas lo\nPittsburgh aud one I > Allogheny, the prgar.,\nitstlon In question will aim only to supply\nthe aditcent boroughs, towns at-d suburbs iu\nthis countv. Four wells will be drilled this\nfall, one IK or near 8liarpsburg, one betw.ten\nK undfllenflsld, one near the mouth\nof Chsrilers cr.ek, and »o#thpr at MrHeFf.\nport. Ill the event ol the fallt.re of ar y or\nall o! these teste, a pipe line will oe laid irom\ntoe gas distriot already developed at the\nnorthwea eru part of the county- Bul Creek,\nnear Kreeport.In a southwesterly direction\ntowards the pjotltb ol Chartters creek. Down\nthis valley another line fill bring gas from\nthe McOuigau or some oiner gss well yet to\nbe drilled In this promising region. In any\nevent, a aupp'y of gas sufficient to«supply\ndomestic d ollier consumers in all the\ntbiefcly settled suburbs of the city will be ob¬\ntained. Those at tb« fad ot tbp scheme\n6eeoi to be in earnest, and if tb« y can, lu this\nregion Qf pbeBD fuel, convince consumars\nthat gaa is better an.} cheaper than coal, a\nnew era iu fuel will *eBult.
157e8893162c38c71021d4fee0e2ee4f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.6397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 Milford s new hospital each day public much progress can be ac-\nBince its opening six weeks ago has compllahed. We wish Supt. KoHo-\nornonstrated to the Inhabitants of way success in his undertaking and\nis community that it was more predict under his administration\nan a necessity. Within the. short there will be greater progress than\nlength of time since tho institution many pnticipated.\nwas opened, patients have\nbrought to it for treatment where\ndelay was a matter of life and death.\nAutomobile accident victims, rail­\nroad accident victims, and\nwho have been injured in tho ordi­\nnary walks of life have found haven\nwithin the walls of the new hospital.\nIn several Instances, the fact that\ntho hospital was so near has result­\ned in much lessening of suffering,\nas well as saving of human life.\nThe hospital has demonstrated In\na effective and convincing man­\nner the necessity of such an institu­\ntion in this section of the State; but\nsuch places cannot be operated with­\nout funds. It will be well for the\npeople to realize this and to prepare\nto give the necessary financial aid\nshould the trustees ask for it in the\nfuture. Tho counties must reimburse\nthe hospitals for all charity patients.\nIt Is not expected that more than\ntho actual caring for the poor and\nindigent should be paid in any case\nby the counties, but it is only fair,\nthat the public take care of its poor\nby giving service to alleviate suffer­\ning. The Levy Courts are composed\nof men who realize that this is a Just\nexpenditure, of public funds and\nwhere there is a willingness, there is\nalways a way to accomplish a pur­\npose.
32f387796adf586a08633188c1df1f16 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.8401639028032 39.756121 -99.323985 Covering Strawberry Beds.\nMaterial should be laid aside for the\ncovering of the strawberry bed, which\nwork should be accomplished as soon\nas the ground Is frozen hard enough to\nhold a wagon. Caution should be used\nagainst covering too early. Some seem\nto have the Impression that straw-\nberries are covered to protect them\nfrom the cold. This Is not the case;\nfor It must be patent to every one that\nsix Inches of straw or cornstalks will\nnot keep out very much cold. If a\nthermometer were placed above the\nstraw and below it on a winter day the\ntwo would be found to register about\nor exactly the same. The covering\nIs put on to keep out the heat In late\nfall and winter when the plants are\nnot covered with snow. The freezing\nand thawing of the ground the\nthing to be guarded against.\nIf the covering is put on too early\nthe plants may be smothered and\nkilled, for growth Is still going on and\nevaporation Is taking place from the\nleaves. While this is the case, cov-\nering would kill the leaves in some\ncases and in others would encourage\nthe growing on them of mildews.\nWhen the leaves are frozen later on Is\nthe time to cover. Then all growth\nis arrested and the covering cannot\nsmother them. For the same reason\nthe straw must be removed quite early\nin the spring before growth has set in.\nIt is not desirable to use for cover\ning any klu of material that packs\nvery closely. The keeping out of the\nair is not desirable, but the protection\nof the ground from the direct rays of\nthe sun.
3ba763063e4643b5ad3d31e80ca101d9 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1908.3538251049888 43.624497 -72.518794 tho gravo tho second time,\n"When agaln tho sun sank ana no\nhnrm camo to them tho young men,\nbecomlng bolder, roturnod to the\ntown, nnd tho Klng ordered them at\nonce to bo selzed and bound; for ho\nsald, 'Adjulal taught us that on tho\nthird nlght tho bouI Btands beforo Al\nlah and demands lts glft from him.\nWhatever it asks for must bo glvon.\nNo doubt lt wlll tell him what wo\nhave dono, and for his glft wlll 4.e\nmand vengeanco on us. Yot, per\nchance ho wlll remember that wo ,dld\nnot all wish to klll him, and wlll ask\nfor vengeanco only on hla murderers,\nThus the town may bo spared.'\n"They mourned and fasted, then,\nall that nlght and all tho next day and\nin the evening crouched around tho\ngrave. As the sun began to slnk tho\nKlng told Adjulal that he' must not\npunlsh them all for what was dono\nby a few, and tho young men, know\nlng thelr wickedness, had nothlng to\nsay. It seemed long beforo the sun\nwas down, for they feared greatly,\nYet no raln had fallen, nor woro their\nhearts faithful, for many were mlnd-\ned lf tho evll passed over them to\nkeep to the old gods.\n"And 0 whlto man," said tho\nold man, losing hls polltencss ln hls\nearnestness, "seo the greatness of Al\nlah. As tho sun touched the sand\nthere came a movlng and. a sbaklng\nabove the gravo llke as tho top of tho\nwater is dlsturbed when two croco'\ndiles flght beneath the surface. Tho\nsand twlated nnd spun round and\nround and began to form a great pit,\nfalllng away llko tho water falls\ndown a holo in the river bed.\n"Tho people covered thelr heads.\nThey thought that thls was Adjulal,\nwho had obtalned his gift, coming up\nto take vengeanco on his alayera. Tho\nsand llew round and round and tho\nhole wldcned and deopened. When,\naa the aun touched tho plaln, lo! a\ngreat wonder! From tho bottom of\nthe pit camo a vast spurt of water!\nIt fllled the pit and, ovcrflowing,\nrushed down tho valloy,\n"The people ran crylng through tho\ndnrk back to the town. Not tlll tho\nmorning dld they daro to return\nThoy saw thls stream fiowlng peace\nfully, and never Blnce has it dled\naway. They rushed for tho water,\nbut, before any man was allowed to\ndrlnk, the Klng bado all of them\nstund togethcr on tho bank, and in\nthls wlse ho spakc:
282a32392220b81326ba850be8163293 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8456283836774 39.290882 -76.610759 now to have been born a citizen of these Uni-\nted States? The hired soldiery, who plundered\nour property, and made war upon our country,\nare, after a short probation, admitted to all the\nrights of native born citizens. Is it not right,\nthat in view of our altered circumstances, the\nincreased facilities of throwing upon ourshores,\nthe ignorant and pauper population of Europe,\nwe should protect ourselves against their pes-\ntiferous influence? And is it right that you,\nto whom so many privileges have been grant-\ned, should take offence because it is proposed\nto put an end to abuses, which, alt musts*?,\nendanger the public liberty? Arc you not con-\nscious of the increasing evil? Are you not in-\nterested, deeply interested in arresting it? Do\nyou not, in gratitude - .ve it to those who have\nadopted you into the Americas family, to exert\nyour influence to do so; and is it not an insult\nto yourj understanding; is it not disparaging\nyour patriotism, when demagogues to\nyou and to your prejudices, as foreigners, to en-\nlist your influence against a measure, so na-\ncessary for the preservation of public liberty?\nDo I not give a stronger evidence of iny respect\nibr your opinions, and my confidence in your\npatriotism, when I call upon you to unite with\nme in accomplishing thij great reformation?\nTo the people of the United States, I would\nsay, thai this controversy is not of my seeking.\nIt has fallen upon me, in the independent dis-\nchargeofa public duty. It is painful and un-\npleasant. But believing that the present mo-\nment, and the peculiar circumstances of the\ncase, are calculated to promote a modification\nof our existing naturalization laws, I propose\nto do all in my power, as an editor, tc accom-\nplish that end. Believing that a large majority\nof the people of the United States concur\nwith me in opinion, and that the public will\nsustain me in the conscientious discharge af\nthis task, I remain
1de85473af5eba088cc598d92e51f8f2 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.0890410641807 39.261561 -121.016059 Bt-KlMilon of Ueimtor Douglas.\nThe friends of Judge Dougins have good rea-\nson to rejoice in the triumphant re-election of\nthat gentleman to the U. S . Senate by the Leg-\nislature of Illinois. The strenuous exertions\nput forth to accomplish his defeat have no par-\nallel in the history of this country, and never\nbefore has the power and patronage of the Fed-\neral Government been used with such unblush-\ning effrontery, for ignoble purposes, ns iu the\nlate contest in Illinois. Even after the contest\nwas decided, and Douglas had fairly won the\nprize, the agents of the government were al-\nlowed to proclaim in thu streets of Chicago,\nthat a number of the State Senators had been\nbribed, by the offer of foreign missions, to vote\nagainst Douglas, and that the will of the peo-\n would thus be thwarted. The result shows\nthat the material which the Illinois Democracy\nselected to represent them in the Legislature,\nwas not composed of the stuff that could be af-\nfected by the corrupting influences cmcnating\nfrom the Federal capital.\nJudge Douglas has already served twelve\nyears in the U. S . Senate, and his election for\nanother term of six years, despite the opposi-\ntion of the administration, and all the lick-\nspittles that official patronage could control, is\na triumph of correct principle over time-serv-\ning expediency. During the last session of\nCougress, Douglas nobly vindicated the inde-\npendence of the Senate against the encroach-\nments of Executive power, and the Democratic\nmasses, throughout the land, will rejoice that\nthe Illinois Democracy have gloriously sustain-\ned the advocate of the peoplo's rights.
33a51f43179f6f08d66d3a28feac923e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.478082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 nlHE BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKB JJ\nJ will proceed on tbe 15th dat or Jclt,\n1K87. aud thereafter nutll the l*t day of No- .\nvember, 1867, to receive proof of and andit\nsuch claims as the Board are required to\naudit bv the provisions of an Act of the x\nLegislature, passed February 19, 1887, which |\nIs In the following wonls:! tm\n"The Board of Public Works are hereby ti\nauthorized, and tt Is herebv made their duly.\nto sudlt claims against the Slate ot Virginia, ft\nincluding any arivlng under the tr infractions b\nof tlie Board of Public Work* of Virginia, ia\nand including any claim* against any turn- u\npike oompany incorporated on the two and gp\nthree fifths principle that were due and held mi\nby the citizens of »ald State residing within (f\nthe bounds of what in now the Mate of West n,\nVirginia on the day of April, 1861, and ti\nwho are now citizen* or this State.** ct\nAny person presenting a claim to be an- dJ\ndlted by the Board under this Act. is required ai\nto file a plain statement in writing oi such rr\nclaim, setting forth Ita character and the par- ai\nticniars thereof) to which the claimant shall *\nsubjoin his affidavit or its correctness and ot\nJustice, and that the same or any part thereof n\nhas not been paid. But this affidavit d<\nalone is not sufficient proof. It must also be *\nproven by disinterested witnesses, and the 01\ntact that they are not interested mast appear y\non the face of their depositions. U\nIf the claim is based on a written contract,\nthe original must be prodnoed if to be nsd; if\nit it not within the power of the claimant,\nthen a proven copy must be produced if
267e5de76b56b2184d750fb35a8eeb44 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.532876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 The purauitof the sensational and horr\nble, iu the way of news, has led the Sw\nday Leader, within the past few weeks, t\ncommit several glaring and inexcuaabl\nblunders. In its issue of last Sunday\nprinted what purported to be a special dii\npatch from Moundsville, setting forth thi\na murder had been perpetrated in thi\npeacefnl town, which, to quote the word\nof the bogus dispatch, "was uncalled fc\nand malicions." The surprise of the pec\npleofMoundsvillemusthavebeencoinplet\nand overwhelming, and we imagine on\ncontemporary achieved a decided hit in the\nneighborhood. The murder, thus locate\nby the leader, really took place at Cincir\nnation the morning of the Fourth of July\nand tho full details appeared in the Cin\ncinnati papers received in this city o\nSaturday evening. Just how LeutU\nwill apologize for this inaulLto the quit\nand law-ubiding citizens' oTTIbuniisvill\nwe are- curious to know, as tho usui\nrefuge (a blundering compositor) will nc\nanswer in this case.the heading, daU\n"special" line, and, above all, the conspic\nuous position given the article, completel\nforestalling such a subterfuge.\nTho recent alleged scandal case in th\nneighborhood of St. Clairsville is anothe\ninstance in which the morbid appetite c\ntho Leader for the grosely sensational wa\ndiplayed. A simple statement of the ai\nrest of a man charged with a lieuiou\ncrime was so enlarged and tilled in wit\nprurient details as to call forth from il\ncorrespondent a vehement protest, whic\nthe Leader had the impudeuce to print i\nits next issue without a word either (\napology or comment.
0dded32210febff3956543b1dc0fba18 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.842465721715 40.063962 -80.720915 Fram tht, Wtithlngt&l, I'llExaminer..\nWo' sou that Mufiial Mprdock, until\nthe nuthority- of.itbu United States Com\nniui in satisfaction of a judgment obtains\nby the heirs til Mr. Vox, one ol the coi\ntractors upon the Hcuipficld Riiilrotulsou\nyears ngo, offers tlml. "highway ol con\nnierQe" lit public auction. Of tho meri\nol' this movement, or the probaliilily of\nK-nlizing much for the holders of thejuilj\nincut, wo are not informed, but it is neve:\nthcless imporlhnt that those interested I\nthe licmpliold'and in its. completion ciu\nphoqld iglve tie matter some nttentloi\nAlthough tiic' llcni'plfcld appears to h\ncovered about, "forty feet deep" by mor\ngage bonds that it is supposed will tali\nprecedence of nil other debts against ll\nroad, still is it not (lossililc that tlici\nis some kind ol a "snake" in this pr<\nptetjdjpdc, Vldcb is tolie used to fUrtiu\noniMirniss and cripplc the iiempflcld an\nrendor its completiou to an eastern em\nJieciion itujiossiblo? [These mere sii|\ngestinns, and may be without the slighte\nfoundation; but nevertheless the re\nIricnds ol the road should look: to It, us\n(snot the first time that Washington cout\nty has been over-reached in railroad mu\nters liy neglecting its own interests.\nThere Is n larger mass of the citizens\nWashington county interested in liulldln\na railroad which will conncct Wiiccliti\nwith the Connelsvillc road than in. an\nother enterprise oftiiat, description. "S(ic\na road would open up to trafllc and onto\nprise almost forty miles of Washingtc\ncounty territory, and everything cnlcula\ncd to retard such an object is detriment;\nto our local interests. Of tho advuntagi\nof this route, not only to tho compnti\nbuilding it, buttothocoiiiinuully throng\nwhich it would pass, wo need not say an;\nthing at present, as tlioy art] apparent i\nall. But we only make these remarks\ncall attention to the projiosed side, aii\nwith tho hope tliut it may receive propi\nattention.
0df48d7160ffbe3907bbf104a905cd73 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1895.4150684614408 37.305884 -89.518148 stud" in German East Africa. Com-\nmenting on the chances of the success\nof this enterprise Mr. Carl Hagenbeck,\nproprietor of the zoological gardens at\nHamburg and New York, has contrib-\nuted an interesting article to the Ham-\nburger Xackrichten.\nMr. Hagenbeek's paper takes the\nform of a plea for the preservation of\nthe African elephant. But with him\npreservation is merely the necessary\npreliminary to their redomestication,\nfor the probable success in which he\ngives reasons which should be very en-\ncouraging to those now pledged to the\nundertaking. Mr. Hagenbeck writes\nwith authority on the subject. Out\nof two hundred African elephants\nbrought to Europe in recent years he\nhas imported one hundred and seventy,\nand many of these have remained in\nhis zoological gardens at Hamburg and\nin America. With the histories of the\nrest since they passed into other hands\nhe is perfectly familiar. He was re-\ncently able to tell the present writer\n exact number of African elephants,\nand the owner of each, in the different\ncountries of Europe; and he has a\nnational insight into the ways and\nmeans of animal domestication. He\ngives it as his opinion that the general\nbelief that "African elephants are not\nso strong as, are wilder, and less easily\ntamed, and possess less endurance\nthan, the Indian species, is wrong."\nHe maintains, on the contrary, that\nthey are stronger, ami at least as\ntractable, and as useful as beasts of\nburden or to be ridden as Indian ele-\nphants; and he claims to have con-\nvinced the Berlin Geographical society\nthat this view was correct, as early as\n18TS. when he had a number of African\nelephants in that city.\nIt will be quite sufficient for practical\npurposes if a part only of these antici-\npations are realized. If the African\nelephant can be trained and made an\nobedient slave, it will be a factor of\nenormou
0e7a5475ef5d6638bf493183f333d56c THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.1243169082675 46.187885 -123.831256 Notice n hereby given that tho common\ncouncil of tho city of Astoria propose to\nrstubllnh the made on Exchange street,\nIn the eliy of Astnrln, ns laid out anil\nrecorded by John McClure, between the\neast linn of Seventh street to the claim\nline between McClure' and Hhlvely' As-\ntoria at the folic wing hclghlh above the\nbane of grades:\nFrom the east line of the Intersection\nof Seventh and Exchange strwts on the\nnorth of Exchange, strnct lit IH feet and\nut the south line at M feet, thence esst\non Kxchnnge street In a direct Uno to\nthe west Una of Eighth street.\nFrom the east line of Eighth street at\nIts intersection with Exchange street, on\nthe north side at M.f feet and on the\ncouth iM at 60. G feet, thence east along\nKx.'hanue street In a direct line lo Ihe\nv.et line of Ninth \nFrom tho east line of Ninth street at\nIts Intersection with Exchange street, on\nIhe north side at 43 feet and on the south\nside at 4A.fi feet, I hence east along Ex-\nchange street in a direct line lo tho west\nline of Tenth street.\nFrom the cast line of Tenth streot at )f\nIntersection with Exchange street, on th\nnorth sldo at 28 feet and on the south\nslil'i at 30 feet, thence east In a direct\nlinn lo tho west lino of Eleventh street.\nFrom the east line of Eleventh Ftreel\nat tin Intersection with Exchange street,\non the north sldn at 24 foot and on the\nsouth side at 24 feet, thence east In a\ndirect line on Exchange street to the\nwe.it line of Twelfth street.\nFrom the enst line of Twelfth street at\nIts Interrectlon with Exchange street, on\nthe north sldn at 2.'
1e9da3ab3e6458a8923f76ec1338a509 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1884.0259562525298 42.217817 -85.891125 The chopper works npon ono bomled\nknee.. Uel'oro lH'eiiininjr to cut, ho lias\nlooked to kco "which way tho trco is\ninclined. Tor tliis'iio Htops back a\nshort di.stauce to where ho can hoc to\nits ery top. If .lie is in doubt ho lifts\nhis axe by tho ond of tho holvo and\nlets it hang freely suspended. This\ngive him a plumb lino by which he\nmeasures tho inclination of the tree.\nJJut itis not enouhtodeteriinein\nwhat direction the tree will fall most\nreadily. It niav bo that largo trees aro\nstanding right in the way o its falling\non that side, and against these the tree\nwill be lodged. It must be carried to\ntlio one sido or the other, and herein\nconsists one of tho mysteries of wood-\ncraft the skill to guide n trto in its\nfall. He will direct it with tho greatest\nease. Having decided where ho wants\nit to go to avoid tho risk of lodging\nagainst other trees, or of being broken\nby falling on uneven ground, or to have\nit lie that the logs will bo convenient\nof removal, tho chopper first undercuts\ntho tree; that is, he cuts upon tho side\ntoward which he will have it fall, and\nin such a manner that tho line of the\nkerf shall bo exactly at right angles\nwith the lino along which the tree is to\nlie. If the tree stands nearly perpen-\ndicular, and has no inclination to fall\nas he wishes, the chopper cuts a little\nbeyond the heart on that s de. J5y do-\ning this he removes the baso when tho\ntree is ready to fall, and rests upon a\nbaso of but an inch or two in breadth,\nso much from the center of tho stump.\nThe ellect of this w ill bo very great in\nmoving the base so that the center of\ngravity will fall on tho side desired.\nThough he works in so cramped a\nposture, the chopper cuts tho stump so\nlevel and so smooth he thinks his little\nboy could spin his top upon it.\nHaving undercut the tree with the\ngreatest care, tlie woodman
67fb3c8b7a4cfed0455a914cc0ac90d3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.0534246258244 39.261561 -121.016059 A* u medical man it is the duty of every physician to\nlook at disease as it affects health and life, and his sole ob-\nject should he to mitigate, as far a- lies in his power, the\nbodily suffer!ug. Human nature at best is but frail, all\nare liable to misfortune.\nOf all the ills that affect man, none are more terrible\nthan those of a private nature. I trendful as it i* in the\nperson who contracts it, frightful ns are its ravages upon\nIds constitution, ending frequently in destruction andn\nloathsome grave, it becomes of still greater importance\nwhen it is transmitted to to innocent offspring. Such liv-\ning the case, how necessary it becomes that every one hav-\ning the least reason to fear that every one having the least\nreas on to fear that they have contracted the disease,\nshould attend it nt once by consulting some physician\nwhose respectability and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and permanent cure. In accordance with\nthis necessity, J)R. YOtNti feels called upon to state that\nby long study and extensive practice, he has heroine per-\nfect master of all those diseases which come under the de-\nnomination of venereal, and having paid more attention to\nthat one branch than any other physician in the United\nStates, he feels himself better qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such as Ulcers. Swelling in the\nGroins, Ulcers in the Throat, Secondary Syphilis, Cutane-\nous Kruptions, Ulcerations. Tctuary Syphilis, Syphilis in\nChildren, Mercurial Syphilitic Affections. Gonnrlicn. Gleet.\nStrictures. False Passages, Inflatnation of the bladder and\nProstrate Glands, Kxcoriutions, Tumors, Fostules. &c. , a re\nn« familiar to him as the most common things of daily ob-\nservation.
219024bd4dc701aae268404e4821697b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.4808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 any straining titer dramatic effect. 81\nknew, when ohooelog bet work, appi\nrently what few women care to knoi\nprecisely what ihi could and conld n\ndo. She waa not meant to be an artist\nanthor, or eren a teacher par txaiUnc\nbut ahe had an exceptional excesal'\nability and peculiar fltneaa lor managii\nand controlling the young. Bbe made hi\nwork, therefore, the fonndlng and ove\neight of achoola, having under her chare\natone time.three large and incceaal\nseminaries lor girls. ttho haa educati\nanil aent ont hundreds ot teachers, at\nwlvea and mothera In onsnmbered hapi\nhomea cherlab her for her grateful afle\ntlon. The ao called progressive relorme\nwould complain, so doubt, that auc\ntraining aa ben waa calculated to lncrea\nthe number of Domestic Women In II\ncountry; but In one point her teachU\nwaa more broad and catholio than the\nown. Long ago, before humamtarii\ndoctrines became Uahlonable, her pupl\nwere brought cloae to every species ofsc\nfaring in any part the world whloh th<\ncould help to relieve. Whether It wi\nthe Southern alave, the famlnewiati\nFrenchman, or Hindoo, or the needy ao\ndler in Federal or Oonlederate prison, al\nmade them real men and brolhera to hi\nglrla.not vague ldeaa. In her way.ni\nthe newest or moat aclenliflo way, pei\nhapa.she tried to teach these womc\nwhom ahe aent out Into the world a ait\ncere love for Qod and their fellow-man.\nNext week, as we learn, ahe gives u\nthe work which ahe began in early yout!\nand from all parte ot the country bi\nscholars are going back to aay farewell\nher. It haa Men a nuleL ondramatlc llf\nbrought to a quiet, undramatic close, u\nwe should have no right to drag it tht\nbefore the publio, were it not to bint\nother women how large and wholeaon\nmay be tht reiult ol a noisiest, private lit\nwhen It is vitalized by common aenae,aii\ncerity and integrity to the service ot tl\nGreat Matter.
1dd88d5ab885e45057bc389faa58bf17 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1902.1191780504819 36.694288 -105.393021 some, especially as my doctors failed\nto even benefit me, and I had almost\ngiven up all hope of ever being well\nagain. It Is most Interesting, and, In\nfact, marvelous to relate, that the very\nfirst dose of fifteen drops relieved me.\nIt was not long before I was able to\nget up and about; three months from\ntaking the first dose I was enjoying\nbetter health than I had been for four-\nteen years. I continued well until a,\nfew months back, when I was taken 111.\nagain, my troubles being dyspepsia and\nconstipation. I had a doctor attending\nme for a month, but continued to grow\nworse, until I again found myself bed-\nridden, when I bethought myself of my\nold medicine, Vogeler's Curative Com-\npound, which I immediately sent for\nand took In place of the doctor's medi-\ncine; at that time I had not had a\nmovement of the bowels for five days,\nbut Vogeler'b Curative Compound soon,\nput me on my again In fact, com- - '\npletely cured me a second time, but, of\ncourse, this attack was not as bad as\nthe first, yet I fully believe I should\nnot havo been alive today had it not\nbeen for Vogeler's Curative Compound.\nIf I had only thought to have taken\nIt when my last Illness took place, I\nshould not only have been saved much\nsuffering, but a $75 doctor's bill."\nMrs. Nettleton said: "I have recom-\nmended Vogeler's Curative Compound\nfor Indigestion and eczema, and In ev-\nery case it has proved a cure beyond\na doubt. Mr. Swinbank, our chemist,\nhas sent me the names of no end of\npeople who have been cured by Vogel-\ner's Curative Compound. By the way,\nthe proprietors have so much confi-\ndence In this great London physician's\ndiscovery, that thoy will send a sam-\nple free to any person sending name\nand address and naming this paper."\nSt. Jacob's Oil Cu, 2Q5 Clay Street,\nBaltimore, Md.
0b95152a37b27b8e44ced7ecb3c335a0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1902.9219177765094 58.275556 -134.3925 A recent dispatch from Washington\nstates that the lighthouse board rec¬\nommends an additional appropriation\nof $350,000 for lighthouses in Alaska,\nurging that the increased navigation in\nthose waters makes it necessary to con¬\nstruct eight lighthouses besides those\nunder way. The appropriation last year\nwas $120,000, raising the total appropri¬\nation to $470,000. Ten lighthouses in\nAlaska have either been completed, are\nunder construction or are in immedi¬\nate contemplation, besides the eight\nrecommended in the report of the light\nhouse board made public today.\nThe new scale of wages, hours, etc.,\ndemanded by the Marine Engineers As¬\nsociation, which is an affiliation of the\nbody of masters and pilots, went into\neffect on Sunday, Nov. 16th. All work¬\ning days hereafter are to be from 7\no'clock a. m. to 7 o'clock p. m ., with one\nhour for dinner, making a day of eleven\nhours. Sundays and legal holidays are\nto be working days if steamers sail\nthereon. Labor on Sundays and \nholidays is to be overtime at $1 per\nhour. This order embraces captains,\npilots, chief and assistant engineers.\nFor the past four months the Ameri¬\ncan Coral Marble company, with head¬\nquarters at Tacoma, Washington, has\nbeen quietly at work prospecting some\nmarble properties located on the North\nArm of Moira Sound, at Dolomi, and\nto the eastward of the last named place\non Clarence Strait, Prince of Wales Is¬\nland, says the Ketchikan Journal. The\nfirst named location embraces a tract\nof 320 acres, and here the ledge, or bed,\nhas been found to be over 800 feet in\nwidth, the marble being of many colors,\nfrom a sea shell pink tint to an ivory\ncast, including a dove blue and moun¬\ntain shade, which last are choice and\nnoted colors at the Rutlaud (Vt.) quar¬\nries. The ledge is covered by a heavy\ngrowth of moss, removing which the\nstone presents the appearance of having\nbeen sand-rubbed as if by some pre¬\nhistoric hand.
559e48776fc7b0aa16ce89120a050a8d THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1906.2616438039067 43.994599 -72.127742 The former leader is suspended from\nmembership in the church he founded,\nshorn of his temporal possessions as\nfar as they are located in Zion City, the\nhome of his church, and warned to ac-\ncept the situation quietly lest worse\nthings befall him.\nThe active revolt against the leader-\nship of Dowie was foreshadowed Sun-\nday, when Overseer Voliva, who had\nbeen placed by Dowie in charge of the\nchurch while he sought health in Ja-\nmaica and Mexico, announced that he\nwould no longer accept the orders of\nDowie, who had, he declared, grossly\nmismanaged the affairs of the church.\nThe members of the church, including\nthe wife and son of Dowie, agreed to\nstand with Dim.\nThe first move looking to his over-\nthrow was made yesterday by Voliva.\nwho holds a power of attorney from\nDowie. company with several other\nofficers of the church, Voliva hastened\nto Waukegan, the county seat of Lake\ncounty, in which Zion City Is situated,\nand filed a warranty deed transferring\nto Alexander Granger all the real estate\nheld by Dowie in Zion City. lie also\nexecuted a bill of sale to Deacon\nGranger, putting him In possession of\nall the personal property of Dowie, in-\ncluding his horses and carriages, books,\nand even his bed. Later in the day\nGranger conveyed these to Voliva and\nat nightfall the overseer appointed by\nDowie had not only succeeded him as\nthe head of the church, but was thp\nholder of all of his property as well.\nThe following message was then sent\nto Dowie, Informing him of the change\nIn the situation:\n"Dowie, Ocotlan, Jalisco, Mex.\n"Telegram received here and Chi\ncago,
12352077ed378a4a0e18a80e27f353de EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.23698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 Is there any disease more distressing\nthan Nervous Debility? The victim of\nthis terrible complaint is ever upon the\nragged edge of despair. Dyspepsia, Head­\nache, Sleeplessness, Rearing down Pains.\nNoise in the Head, Biliousness. Cono'lpa-\ntiou, Wesi-lnrss, Forgetfulness, Melan\ncboly, Neuralgia and scores of other\nsymptoms are constant attendants of\nthousands ef Philadelphia's tuen and\nwomen. In fact there are very few who\nare not taking medicine, yet with no\npermanent benefit.\nAnd Vim! Simply because they do not\nconsult, a physician who makes a special\nstudy of this disease.\nThere are hundreds of people in this\ncity to day who are suffering with vari­\nous ailments who could be permanently\nrestored to health if they could find\na pbysiesn of experience who could form\na correct opinion of their case and apply\nthe proper treatment. Many of these\npersons have various physicians,\ngoing from one to the other in tbe vain\nhope of being cured only to be disap­\npointed. It is impossible for any physi\nclan to be able to treat all diseases auc\ncassfully. Tbs successful physicians is\nthis day are those who have t-urned their\nattention to the treatment of usp-clal class\nof diseases aud by devoting their\ntime to them bave discovered new reme\ndies and methods of treatment.\nDr Marston, No. 184 South Ninth\nstreet, Philadelphia, is a specialist In tbe\ndiseases above mentioned, and has made\nmany remarkable cures. His patieuis\ncan be seen His endorsers are not\nlocated in some far off oountry ; they\nare right here in this town and will\ngladly testify to hts ability in curing\nthem These testimonials can be seen\nat his office or will be sent by mail if\ndesired.
1d7b395080fc7fe72fff3a553531604f THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1894.5301369545916 37.92448 -95.399981 days more we paddled and drifted\ndown the current of the big river, the\nrain falling almost continuously. On\nSept 2, we crossed the Arctic circle\nand the next day reached the mouth\nof the Porcupine river and camped on\nthe site of Old Ft. Yukon, a fur trad-\ning post abandoned many years aro.\nonJy a few decaying logs remaining to\ntell where it once stood. Here I was\nfortunate enough to find a white man\nby the name of Beaumont, who had\ncome in to trade foi furs with the In-\ndians. I had been in considerable\ndoubt whether I would be able to get\nIndian; at this place to help me take\nmy boat up the Porcupine river to\nRampart House, but Beaumont told\nme that he was expecting soon a party\not Indians from ltampart House \na big boat or "Lighter" to take up the\nsupplies for the English Missionary,\nthese supplies having been left in his\ncharge the previous summer by tho\nsteamboat, and that I bad better\nleave my small boat with him and\nput my stuff in the biff mission boat\nand all go up together. I had to camp\nat this place for 8 days, and in the\nmeantime on Sept. 6, the first snow of\ntne season len. .Finally the Indians,\n9 of them arrived with the boat aud\nafter tho mission stuff had been put\non board, there was still room for my\noutfit and on the 11th we started, the\n9 Indians aud myself on what proved\nto be one of the hardest trips I ever\ntook. The boat with its load weighed\nseveral tons and the river was so
31130defd45eccaed1cda9c4226feb30 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.0314207334043 41.020015 -92.411296 Rv virtue of nn exn-ut i«m t<> nte dirtvtcd fr.>rn\nthe Clrrk of the Cirenit rourl t»f Wupello eoinu \\,\nIowa, on a jndfjment oWnined ir. said < onrt i.u\nthe 2»;th tlfiy of November, IsjT-V in t'nor'of D.\nKami-ky, as plaintirt.aml strainM Jai-oh >*ehworm\nand Kli/iolK'tn schwonu, a* dt ft.ndant<, for th»-\ninn Fitteon Hundred and Sixteen and r>r>«10ti dol­\nlars and c<ish tn\\c*1 at 5fshKl.2*» and aeerning coate,\nI have levied upon the following Keal K>tate taken\nai properly of >aid ilefendant, to ^ati>fy said ex-\n•vMition, to-wit\nA paret-1 of land out of the east halt of tlic\nnortheast quarter and the ea-t half of the south­\neast quarter of Section Thirty (>»), 'Lon nshiiiT'i,\nnorth ot IJan^e |;5 wtsi of the Mil KM.,\nnin< at the point where the east line of said Sec­\n strikes tho north lin*' of that portion of the\nroad from ottumwa to Ajreney oty, re-loeate«l\nabout lvo'J. th4'nee northern *aid Se« tiou lineal\nrO«ls to eonn'-rt themv wr-t 'J7 rod* to a corner,\nthence south W roils more <>r lei* to the north line\nof -aid road, thenee east witii the nortii line of\n<aid road to the jrace of bc^Inninp eontiilninf IV.\naciv* m^re or !e*s.\nAnd will oiler Ihe $ame for sale to the highest\nbidder for ea*h in hand, on tin' litli day of .Janu­\nary, 1*7»», in front ol'thtM onrf House, In ottum­\nwa, Iowa, at the hour of 10 o'clock. A, M., ol'.^aid\nday, wl en and where due attendance will be gi\\» n\nhy the undersigned.\n'Dated at Ottumwa, Iowa, Dee. 14, 1)57".\nT. I\\ ^FILMAN, MheriiT of saul County
23af1fa8d52c422ef92187603604cdb9 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1873.0999999682901 40.827279 -83.281309 Ilia story, bus taaiuca uy m znvm icpuiv\ner, is substantially as follows: On the\nmorning of the terrible Tuesday, a party\nof five men, Charles emeu ana nis Drotn-er - a\nJohn and Stephen, and Hike and\nThomas Holden, started from Beaver\nFalls, Renville County, with five loads of\ngrain for Wilmar market, wumar is dis-\ntant from Beaver Falls about thirty-fiv- e\nmiles of open prairie, twenty of which are\nwithout a settler. Quite early in the after-\nnoon it began to snow, but the wind was\nlight and the party pressed on, anxious to\nreach Wilmar with no delay.\nWhen within about eight miles of Wil-\nmar the wind began to increase, and blew\ndirectly in their faces. They viewed the\nsituation with considerable dismay, and\nabout half concluded to turn about and\nretreat to a house about eight miles in the\nrear, and fortunate would have been\nhad they done so. But, about a mile\nahead, was the honse of a Mr. Meagher,\nand the party finally determined to press\non to this refuge.\nThe storm continued to increase in vio-\nlence, however, and the wind hurled the\nfalling and drifting particles of ice against\nand about them until they were obliged\nto turn their faces from the storm and\ntrust to the instincts of their animals to\nkeep the right direction. Drifts began to\nmeet them, and their horses could\nscarcely flounder through them. It was\nnow too late, and equally too hazardous\nto take the back track, and they pushed\non into the bitter hurricane in the hope\nof reaching Meagher's. But now their\nhorses gave out, and became stalled in a\nsuccession of deep drifts. It was found\nimpossible to extricate the sleighs, and\ntheonly alternative was to build the best
468ef459642894dccd94411b855e9837 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.6013698313038 39.513775 -121.556359 Sec. 11 Tliis art shall besuhmllb-d tothe people of\nfile stale for their ratification, at the next general\nelection, to he holden on the first Wednesday of Sep-\ntember, A. Tl. 1557. and the qualified electors of tills\nStale shall, at aald election, on their ballots for Slate\notllcers. vote for or against this Act: those voting for\nthe smile, shall write or have printed on their ballots,\nthe words “Pay Ihe Debt;” and those voting against\nthe same, shall wrile or have printed on their ballots\nthe words “Uepurllate the Debt •’\nSec. 15. The voles cast for and against this Act,\nshall he counted, returned and canvassed, and de~\ndared In the same manner and subject to the same\nrules as vote* cast tor the Treasurer of Slate, and if it\nappear that a majority of all the votes east for \nagainst this law as aforesaid.or in favor of this Act,\nthen the same shall have effect as hereinbefore pro-\nvided, and shall he irrcpealahle until the interest of\nthe nubilities herein created shall he paid and dis\ncharged, and ihe t.overnor shall make proclamation\nthereof; hut If a majority of the voles so caM are\nagainst this Act. then the bhiuc shall become void\nSec, lb. It shall he the duly of the Secretary of\nStale to have this Act published in one newspaper\nin each Judicial District of this Sla'e. if one lie pub-\nlished therein, for three months next proceeding the\ngeneral election lo tie holden upon the first Wednes-\nday of September next, for which publication no\ngreater allowance shall be made than the rates al-\nlowed by law to me State Printer.\nApproved April 28th. 1557 .
29813129abc5a650d307554e6dba3cb5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.7909835749342 40.063962 -80.720915 Hkuibold's Extract or Buchu..Han\nreds suffer on in silence, and hundreds o\nthen apply vainly to druggists and doctor\nho either merely tantalise them with tb<\nupe of a cure or apply remedies whlcl\n»ake them worse. 1 would not wish to as\nrt anything that would do Injustice to th<\nUlcted.but.lam obliged to say that al\ntouzh 11 may be produced from exccssivi\nthaustion or tbe power* of lite, by labor\nus employment, unwholesome air am\nod, proiuBe menstruation, me use of tm\nad coffee, and frequent childbirth. It Is Jai\nftener caused by oirect irrl tat ion.applied tc\n10 mucous membrane of the vagina itself.)\nWhen reviewing the causes or these tils\nesssug complaints, It is Imostlpalnful t<\nmtemplate tne attendant evils consequen\n|K)Q them. It Is but Blmple Justice 10 tbi\nibject to enumerate a rew of tbe many ad\ntlonal causes which so largely affect the\nre, health and happlnesa' or woman In al\nasses of society, ana wblcb, consequently\nfectmore or less directly, the welfare of tbi\naman family. The mania that exists fo\n- ecociouM education and marriage, can so\nte years that nature designed for corporea\nweloameni to be waited and perverted li\nle restraints or drets, the early confine\ntent of school, and in the un\nealtby excitement of the ball room. Thus\n1th the body half-clothed, and the mint\nadnly excited by'pleasure, perverting li\nIdnlght revel tbe honrs designed by na\nire for sleep and rest, the work of destruc\non Is half accomplished.\nIn consequence of this early drain upoi\n:r system, unnecessary effort la required bj\nle delicate votary to retain her situation li\nnool at a later day, thus aggravating th<\nrll. When one excitement is ovor, ana the\nprospective keeps the mind inorbldh\nnwltlvo to imprcssloD, while the now con\nant restraint or fashionable dress, a two\nitely forbidding the exercise indlapensabh\nthe attainment and retention or organ!\nealth and strength; the exposure to nlghl\nr; the sudden cnaoge of temperature; Uu\nmplete prostration produced by excesslv<\n^ncing.raust, of neoesslty, produce tbel\ngillmate effect. At last, an early marrlagi\nl*.s the climax of misery, and the unior\nmate one, hitherto so utterly regardless o\nib plain dictates and remonstrances of he\n:llcato nature, becomes an unwilling sub\nct of medical treatment. This is but i\nuthful picture of (the experience of thou\nindsof ouryouug women.\nlx>ng before the ability to exercise ttai\nmotions of the generative organs, they re\nlire an eduoailon or their peculiar nervoui\n'
0d7c91d43759b042974d7fc30c8db262 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.2773223727484 39.745947 -75.546589 As a matter of fact, t think that the notion, which\ngenerally prevails, that all necessaries of life are much\ncheaper In European countries than they are with ua.\nts largely over-wrought. Many things are lower In price\nbeyond a doubt, but, to a large extent, Europeans are\na cheaper people, and the quality of many commodities\nwhich suit them would not suit us. The majority of our\npeople are not accustomed to the style of living which\nseems1 to be acceptlble to the mass of the people over\nthere, and la not likely soon to become so. So, when you\nbring them up to our tastes and habits or push us down\nto their level, and even things up, the diversity In the\ncost of commodities may not be as great as It appears\nto be. For example. In times of prosperity, when busi­\nness Is flourishing, work plenty and wages are good, the\naverage workingman—whether with his hands or hU\nhead—In this lives In a decent house, clothes\nhis family respectably and feeds them well. He wants\nmeat on his table at least twice a day, he wants spring\nchickens and early strawberries and the first run of\nshad. Ho works hard and steadily, gets few vacations\nand thinks that he is as much entitled to a good house\nto live tu, good clothes to wear and good things to eat\nas anybody else is, o|id as he earns his money honestly,\nhe Intends to have them and he does have them. If this Is\nextravagant and Improvident, the answer Is, this ts a\nfree country and any man may do as he will with his\nown; and when conditions change—as they always d)\nchange sometime—and business falls oft and work\nbecome« scarce and. consequently, the wage lower and\nthe weekly Income less, or. perhaps nothing. If he has\nlaid up nothing for a rainy day, he pays the forfeit and\nit la his own affair.
67ab1fd097aa34cf2f0cc9d82493c253 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.5986301052765 39.745947 -75.546589 Euphemia, Ohio.—“ Because of total\nIgnorance of how to care for myself\nwhen verging into womanhood, and from\ntaking cold when going to school, I suf­\nfered from a displacement, and each\nmonth I had severe pains end nausea\nwhich always meant a lay-off from work\nfor two to four days from the time I\nwas 16 years old.\n“1 went to Kansas to live with my sis­\nter and while there a doctor told me of\nthe Pinkham remedies but I did not use\nthem then as my faith in patent medi­\ncines was limited. After my sister died\nI came home to Ohio to live and that\nhas been my home for the last 18 years.\n“TheChange of Life came when I was\n47 years old and about this time I saw\nmy physical condition plainly described\nin one of your advertisements. Then I\nbegan using Lydia E. Pinkhams Veg­\netable Compound and I cannot tell you\nor any one the relief gave me in the\nfirst three months. It put me right\nwhere I need not lay off every month\nand during the last 18 years I have not\npaid out two dollars to a doctor, and have\nbeen blest with excellent health for a wo-\nwoman of my age and I can thank Lydia\nE. PinkhamsVegetable Compound for it.\n“ Since the Change of Life is over I\nhave been a maternity nurse and being\nwholly self-supporting I cannot over\nestimate the value of good health. I\nhave now earned a comfortable little\nhome just by sewing and nursing since\nI was 52 years old. I nave recommended\nthe Compound to many with good re­\nsults, as it is excellent to take before\nand after childbirth.” —Miss Evelyn\nAdelia Stewart, Euphemia, Ohio.\nIf rou want special advice write to\nIvdià G. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl.\ndêutial) Lynn. Mass. Yonr letter will\nbe opened, read and answered by a\nwoman and held in strict confidence.
0945d47a92cc8ee6b9bd056bdae46acd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.346575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 to the inspectors of said election any evi­\ndence that he had paid a county tax\nwithin two years, and also said Kyne did\nnot exhibit, to said inspectors, any evi­\ndence that he had paid a school tax for\nthe preceding year ; and also because lib\ndid not exhibit any evidence that, he was\na duly registered voter at city elections.\n“Yonr petitioner alleges and avers that\nhe received a majority of the votes of\nthe lawfully qualified" voters at said\nschool election, and was and is the duly\nelected member of the Board of Public\nEducation from said ward for said term. ”\nThe committee retired and were out a\nhalf hour. Returning, they reported the\nfollowing persons elected and qualified as\nnew members of the board : Charles L.\nSimmons, ward, for 2 years; Pey\nton G. West and David H. Coyle, Third\nward, 1 and 2 years respectively ; Wil­\nliam H. Turner, Fourth ward, 2 years;\nS. IIminiond Smith, Fifth ward, 2 years;\nS. F. Betts, Sixth ward, 2 year; John\nPalmer and Charles Baird, Seventh ward,\n1 and 2 years respectively; James II.\nMorgan, Eighth ward, 2 years; David R.\nSmith and Dr. E G. Sliortlidge, Ninth\nward, 1 and 2 years respectively ; Thomas\nO'Donnell, Tenth ward, 2 years; Patrick\nMagarity, Eleventh ward, 2 years; Joseph\nPyle, Twelfth ward, 2 years.\nThe case of contest between John Pyle\nand William Kyne, as a member from\nthe First ward, the committee had not\nbeen able to decide and referred the mat­\nter back to the board. The report was\naccepted.
1056975cdbb94e3c9a07963bf27e471e THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1896.5587431377758 46.601557 -120.510842 This isa proper time to mention the\nnecessity for naming good men for stste\nand county offices. It is long enough be-\nfore the conventions to strip the advice of\nany suspicion of personal bearing and\nnear enough to the time for action to keep\nthe matter in mind. Tbe general ten-\ndency to nnity on the silver idea which\nprevails in this state makes it highly\nprobable that tbe democrats can name\nthe next governor and a majority of the\nmembers of the legislature. It is prob-\nable because the democrats have touched\nthe chord that is most acceptable to tbe\nsilver men who have hitherto acted with\nother parties. It is the favored condition\nthat comes partly of prevailing good\nsense and partly of the sense that knows\nan opportunity when one looms up in\nsight. At any rate, the opportunity is\nclearly with the democratic party in this\nstate to-day, and I here occurs to us \none easy way to defeat it, and that is by\nallowing the work from now forward to\nbe managed by inferior men in the party,\nin the first place, and by nominating\nself-seeking whiffets in the second place.\nThere are plenty of good men all over tbe\nstats whose very names would bring\nvotes regardless of party—as tbe lines are\nnow forming; and there are men, too\n(and some of them prominent) whose\nnames would drive voters away from any\nticket. It is not to he wondered at that\n•ble men get indifferent to their political\nduties when nominations mean simply\nthe keeping up of an organization, as has\nsometimes heretofore been the case witb\nthe democrats of this state; but it would\nlie indeed strange to see any indifference\nthis year. The best of all tbe good men\nshould Deselected, and there is no danger\nthat they will any of them decline witb\ncertainty of election in sight.
0969e02e48de07ae29bb4bee34886972 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.7445354875026 29.4246 -98.49514 nothing but the wild, In their prejudices\nengendered by part or former party an-\ntagonism, could have so blended the\npolity of Texas, with such madness In\nsuch conduct, to sacrifice your State to\nstriKo (town mat vital interest, sugar\nIs one of the most Important food sup-\nplies to mankind. It is said bo was n\nprotectionist. He was one who believes\nthat the revenues of the government\nshould be raised by tariff, and that tho\ntariff should be so adjusted to protect\nAmerican Industries, not to rob Peter to\nram, inn wnenever mere is n latent\nustrv to be developed. or In tbe land.\nor in the brain of your people, rapablo\nof being developed, it should bo de\nveloped, iney say mat lie saut\ntht Itepuhllcans and Democrats oc-\n the same position, and some\nItepuhllcans have become offended.\nJack Evans got mad because be asso\nciated turn witn uovcrnor Ireland, as be\nknew that Evans or Leader would not\nvote for himself (the sneaker) unless he\nwere a clever man, Leader and Evans\nmust think Ireland a cleverer man than\nhe was. If he had offended cither of\nthem he would take it all back again.\nOf tbe Issues between the Itepuhllcans\nand Democrats distinctively as such be\nsaid there never was any difference be-\ntween tbe Republicans and Democrats\nas to tarlffand banks; the only differences\nbetween them arise from the subject of\nslavery, of putting the white and black\nmen on equality, aim wuen slavery was\nabolished that all the differences be-\ntween the Republicans and Democrats\nwere settled.
33a6461df376a7c39e1b51d202d353ac THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1916.30464477712 42.217817 -85.891125 produce upon the market before his\nneighbors. This is so comparatively\neasy that any one with the average\ngarden out lit can do it\nBuy your .seeds early. Prepare your\nhotbed and get them Started. Maybe\nyou have no hotbed and ierhaps do not\nknow how to prepare one. Let me tell\nyon. The best time to prepure a hot-\nbed is about the beginning of March.\niet n few loads of fresh stnble ma-\nnure, sufficient to cover the space you\nIntend to build your frame uioii to a\ndepth of not less than thirty Inches;\npack down firmly, then place your\nframe on the manure. The manure\nshould extend at least a foot beyond\nthe sides of the frame. Cover the ma-\nnure Inside the frame with six inches\nof sifted soil. The frame will then be\nready for the seeding. Hotbed sashes\nfor covering can be bought for about\n75 cents each and will last for \nNow we come to the real secret of\nearly vegetables. Everything depends\nupon the system of transplanting.\nWhen the young plants are ready for\ntransplanting, prick them off into pots\nor cans sufficiently large to allow of\ngood growth; have the tomato pots not\nless than four Inches across and the\ncabbage and cauliflower and similar\nplants not less than three inches\nacross. This will give them a chance\nto develop into fine, big, healthy plants\nby planting out time. Before planting\nout water well so that the soil and\nplant can be turned out of the pots\nwithout disturbing the soil around the\nroots. The best time to plant out Is\nafter sunset, as at that time the plants\nget no setback and continue to grow as\nthough never disturbed. If this plan\nis adopted vegetables fit for market\ncan be produced at least two or three\nweeks earlier than when grown in the\nold way.
2893b6fd3e0b1e824cd2f4a022b252e3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.2260273655504 39.745947 -75.546589 They have been trying to build a\nfire under Senator Hale In the thirsty\nState of Maine, but the Senators\nfriends déclara that hell return again\nJust as he has for thiity years. Ho\nstands beside Aldrich at the head of\nthe regular organisation In rank but\nnot In Influence. Other members of\nI the old guard facing a contest are\nLodge (Mas*.! and Kean (N. J ), while\nBurrows (Mich.) and Scott (W. Va.)\nsay they will bo here, though they are\nfighting a lively opposition.\nFour of the band of progressives In\nthe Senate arc under fire of the "In­\nterests" and, according to widely cir­\nculated reports, of tha reguuar Repub­\nlicans, but they are fighting on cheer­\nfully with the expectation of putting\nIn six years more at the old stand.\nSharp Fight In Wisconsin.\nLa Follette Is, of course, an object\nof especial and extraordinary\nefforts are being m^de to overturn\nWisconsin, where he has no friends\nbijt tho people. Beveridge, now the\nundisputed Republican leader In In­\ndiana and a strong force in the een-\nate. Is up for re-election. Burkett has\nW. J . Bryan, among other Issues, on\nhis hands In Nebraska, and Clapp\nseeks recognition In Minnesota, where\nthey are up to date and don t have\nmoss on their political doctrines.\nIn the group of those who must be\nbom again as Senators If they are go­\ning to help govern the country and\nadvance the light of civilization gen­\nerally are; Bulkeley , -Connecticut:\nCarter, Montana; Clark. Wyoming;\nCulberson, Texas: Daniel, Virginia;\nDcpew, New York; Dick, Ohio; du\nVont, Delaware: Frazier, Tennessee;\nMcCumber. North Dakota; Nixon, Ne­\nvada; Oliver, Pennsylvania; Page, Ver\nmont; Piles. Washington; Sutherland,\nUtah; 'Taliaferro, Florida, and War­\nner, Missouri.
3035d52feeb174e86796a183cb5e2ac6 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.4123287354134 40.419757 -77.187146 Whether Phil. Durgan, the ugly sec -ou - d\ncousin, had or had not in his own\nperson exhausted the family stock of\nphysical unhapplness, I cannot tell ; but\nI know for a fact, that his sister was as\npretty as Vivian herself. If I knew of\nanything prettier, I would compare her\nto it, but I do not ; and in these declin-\ning days I am not likely to find it.\nWhose is the hand which shall, by the\naid of movable types, describe a pretty\ngirl ? If I say that each of these young\nladles was ravishing, nineteen, and Irish,\n1 have done my best. Like Rosalind\nand Celia, they learned, played, ate\ntogether, and whereso'er they went, like\nJuno's swans, still they went coupled\naud Inseparable. It followed that if\nPhil. Durgan had known as much as\nwas known to his sister Julia, he would\nhave known more of Vivian's likings\nthan he knew. In that case the Ineffa-\nble satisfaction which illum-\nined his foggy features might have\ndimmed a little. Yet, why should I\ntriumph over ugly Phil ? Your story-\nteller is rarely contented unless he flogs\nhis rascals. Dickens, for example, gloat-\ned over the buffets dealt by his popular\nto his unpopular people. With what a\ngusto he flogs Squeers ; how rejoicingly\nhe throws Wegg into the scavenger's\ncart; with what pleasure he tells the\nstory of PeekBnlff's thrashing! It is in\nmy power to administer to Mr. Philip\nDurgan such a horsewhipping as never\nyet mortal man received ; but as I am\nstrong, I will be merciful. Phil, as the\nlate Lord Lytton said of somebody, was\nuglier than he had a right to be. There\nis a certain Irish type of face which\ntrenches perilously on the aspect of the\ngorilla; and Phil, who was naturally\ngifted in this direction, Improved his\nchances by the disposition of his hair\nand whiskers. He had all the graces of\na lady-kille- r,
321c41600e8e1cdb130ccccfa59d29ef THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1905.2972602422628 46.601557 -120.510842 notes of tile City Engineer heretofore\nand 011 February fith. 1906, adopted by\nresolution of the city council, and now\non rile in the office of the city dork\nand tlie grades shown thereon, all of\nwhlcn are now on tile in the office of\nthe said City Clerk and subject to the\nInspection of persons Interested, and\nunder anil pursuant to the provisions\nof Ordinance No. 484 of the ordinances\nof said city, passed March 6, 1906.\nSealed proposals for the making of\nsaid above described Improvement will\nbe received by the City Clerk of Raid\ncity up to 7:30 o'clock p. in. of May\nIst, 11*05, the same being tile time of\nthe next regular meeting of the city\ncouncil of tile said city, and the time\nwhen said proposals will bo. opened\nand considered by said city council\nand said contract awarded.\nThe bidders are Warned that all bids\nwhich are detlcient in either or any of\n following requirement! wilt be re-\njected as Informal: No bidder shall\nbe allowed the free use of the city's\nrock crusher or any other property\nowned by the city. All bids for this\nimprovement must be made upon the\nblank! provided therefor by the City\nclerk, ftids must be made upon every\nItem on tho blanks for proposals pro-\nvided for this Improvement. The prices\nmust be stated both in words and tig-\nures. In the respective columns provid-\ned for the siime on said blanks.\nAll bidders will be required to de-\nposit, with their bid. a certified check\nfor an amount equal to five Is> per\ncent of the amount of said bid, drawn\nin favor of the City Treasurer on some\nbank In the city of North Yaklma,\nWasnington, as security that such bid-\nder will enter Into a contract for the\nmaking of said improvement, and fur-\nnish bonds as required by law and the\nordinances
0c5869b2898aa5a88ee29fca29fe093a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.1821917491122 40.063962 -80.720915 to a thorough inspection c\ntho splendid jail attached to I\no magnificent court liouso of which \\\nlegheny is so justly proud. Chief t\nerk Brown, of SherilT McOundless' of- i\no, took chargo of tho party and kindly :\nd everything explained. Every do-\nrtinont was looked at, including the t\natlng,ventllatingandlightlngsystcms, i\ne kitchens, bath rooms, hospital wards\nd the prison proper. I\nIn the nlternoon Mr. ChnrlrB 8. i\nowoil, uiaun Agent 01 uiu luiumtm'\nOhio lit Pittsburgh, formerly n well- i\nlawn newspaper man both in Hilarity\nd 1'ittabiiDKh, nsaiatod in ontertalnlng\n9 /riondfl by acting as guldo lo the\neatern Pennsylvania Penitentiary, a t\ninBter iuatitution which it noted ua a i\njilel ol Us kind, it bring con- i\nuctcd on the best approved\nins. Warden Wright gave the\naitors a cordial welcome und then\nrned theui over to two ol bla oldest (\nd beat lieutenants, who escorted \nheeling delegation through nil the\nops, alt rooms and other departments.\nlis was one ol thu moat interesting\nacea visited wliito on the trip; the\nstein of heating and ventilating was\npecially interesting. It is the\nmo aa that uaeil in tbo Pitta-\nirgli jail, except that the latter ia not\nextensive or complete as that in the\nnitentiury. Tbo system ia one where-\ntho beating and vontilatiug.ja bad by i\nrciliS heated fresh air into tho build-\ngs, aud 5t the same time sucking out\n0 impure air. A complete change ol\nr is had every seven minutes.\n10 cells in tho "Peu" and the\n11 are built of brick and were much\neferred by the "Inspectors" to the ex-\nnaive ainglo atone floors, walks and\nlllngs seen in the Newark jail. Many\nluable suggestions were made by the\n1 and penitentiary authorities at l'itts-\nirgh, and altogether the day was a\n38t profitable one. 1
b78d72117a5c88972009039b1476cf0b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4178081874684 39.745947 -75.546589 1. 12\nNo 2, School No. 17. Sixteenth and\nClaymont streets; School District No. 3.\n900 Vandever avenue; School Diatrict\nNo. 4. 4 Vandever avenue; School Dis­\ntrict No. 5 . School No. 12 . Twenty-sec­\nond and Market streets; School District\nNo. 6. Thirtieth and Market street*;\nSchool District No 7. 181ft West street;\nSchool District No 8. 507 West Twen­\nty-first street ; School District No. 9.\n2215 Boulevard; School District No. 1ft.\n2235 Market street; School District No.\n11. 408 West Twenty-fourth street;\nSchool Dtstrict Nd. 12, 2504 Washington\nstreet; School District No. 13, 218 West\nTwenty-ninth street; School District\n14. School No. 23, Thirtieth and\nMadison streets; School District No. 15,\n605 H>#i Twenty-fifth street.\nTENTH WfARD—School District No.\n1. 1002 West Fifth street; School Dis­\ntrict No 2. 10<»6 Went Third street;\nSchool No. 3. School No. 15 .\nThird an«l Harrison gtreets; School Dis­\ntrict No 4. 1016 West Second street;\nSchool District No. 5, 107 South Van\nBuren street; School District No. 6,\nSchool No. 10 . Elm and Adams street.\nELEVENTH WARD—School District\nNo. 1 . 427 South Harrison street. School\nDistrict No. 2. School No 19, Oak and\nHarrison streets; School District No. 3,\n8ft8 Maryland avenue; School District\nNo 4. 444 Geddea street.\nTWELFTH WARD—School District\nNo. 1, 1306 West Fifth street; School\nDistrict No. 2. 229 Broome street;\nSchool District No. 3. 1 South Franklin\nstreet; School District No. 4. 1621 West\nFourth street;\n5, 124 Ruth street; School I>istrict No.\n6. 1834 West Fourth street; School Dis­\ntrict No. 7, School No. 25 . Third and\nBayard avenue; School District No. 8.\n2122 Lancaster avenue.
038295717202fdfd20842a60a626096e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.664383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 1 never waz out uv a pet animal\nilnce I kan remember, till now, but I\nlave gone out ov tne trade [orever;\nately 1 dlaoovered tbat It waz a good\nleal like making a whlaaell out ov a\nlata lale, ruining a oomfortable tale.\nind reaping a kursid mean whissel.\nKaokcoons liv lew be 05 years old, if\niiey mlaa ibe eoalety ov men and dogs\nnulT. bat there aint but lew or theui\nlie ov old age; the northwestwn for\nlompany are tbe grate undertaker* ot\nbe ooon family.\n1 feelaorry for coons; for with a trifle\nnoro bralne, tbey would make reapea*\nable pettifoggers btfore a justlaa ov tbe\njeaoe ; bat even this would not save\nbem from flnal perdlsbao.\nNatur don't tuako euny mistakes,\nifter all; she bits tbe bull rlgbi la tbe\n>ye every time; wbeu sbe waata a\naokooon wltb rings biz tule, abe\nuakea him, and when she waata a\njelly rojjger, she knowa how tew make\nilm, wltnoat aplleiug a good coon.\nPettyfogRers, no doubt, hav adeatiny\n, e w lill, and they may eaable a juitlss\n)r the peace, in a cloudy day, tew\nenow a good deal Icbs or ho law than\nle otherwise would; still, for all this, If\nwaz obliged lew pray tor one, of tbe\n)ther, 1 think now 1 should a*y, Qiv\nis a leetle more coon, and a good deal\ness pettyfogger.\nIf the Raccoon would only glv his\nwhole attenshun tew politicks, thar\niln't but few could beat him; he's at\nlome on the stump, and menny on us,\ntld coons, kan reckolekt how, in 1840,\nwith nothing but a hard older diet, he\niwept the country, from the north to\nhe south polo, like a cargo ov epsom\nisalts.
0510a6d509bee7991e5924f462a15b0e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.9057376732949 46.187885 -123.831256 Tho commissioner says, in response to\nnumerous suggestions by members of\ncongross and others as to the practica-\nbility of withdrawing spirits from distil-\nlery warehouses ireo of tax for usa in tho\nmechanical aits, and protecting tho rev-\nenue against fraud by methylating spir-\nits in bonded warehouses established for\nthe purpose, that tho microscopist of his\noffice made experiments for the purpose\nof ascertaining whether fuch spirits\ncould bo demethylatcd. From an ex-\nhaustive report it appears that ho has\nsucceeded in separating methyl, or wood\nalcohol, from the ethyl or taxahlo alco-\nhol, and in deodorizing a portion of tho\nethyl alcohol through tho use of bone\nblack and other chemical substances.\nThecommissioner says further: "It may\nbe urged that if demetbylation cannotbe\naccomplished without the use of a still,\nthe operator is liable to detection\nbecause of the special eurveillauc'e re-\nquired by the internal revenue laws in\nthe matter of stills and distilling; but I\ndo not take this view of the case."\nThe quantity of spirits remaining in\ndistillery warehouses at the close of the\nyear Is stated at 61,033 ,018 boing 4,112 ,251\nmore than the quantity so remaining at\nthe close of the provious year.\nOf 864,701 gallons of grape brandy\nbonded during the fiscal year, 535,583\ngallons were produced in tho first dis-\ntrict of California, 1030 gallons in the\ntenth district of Ohio, and 416 gallons in\nthe fifth district of New Jersey.\nThe quantity of distilled spirits in the\nUnited States, except what may be in\ncustoms bonded warehouses, on the first\nday of October, 1833, was 93,712,919 gal -Ion - s .
05fdb6c342c5ac04f81f0fb667f857cd THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1893.015068461441 41.004121 -76.453816 Once in the nicht an awful yell,\nwhich seemed to come out of the\ndarkness not twenty five yards away,\nchilled the blood in his veins, for he\nwas hunter enough to know that it\nwas the voice of a panther, and he\nprepared for an attack. Crouching\nbehind the big hemlock near the fire\nCampbell waited and watched, but the\nanimal failed to put in an appearance.\nAs soon as daybreak appeared\nCampbell, after a night of untold\nmisery, started up the mountain. Not\nfifty yards from his still smoking fire\nhe came across the tracks of the pan\nther, which had circled about him\nduring the night, and close by were\nthe tracks of still another, which show-\ned that the animal had not been alone\nHe finally reached the top of the\n weak and almost starved,\nand as he stood wondering what dir\nection to take there came faintly to\nhis ears, in the crisp morning air, a\nlong, low sound. It was a locomotive\nwhistle on the road that runs into La\nporte. and taking this welcome sound\nas a guide he started in the direction\nfrom whence it came. It was nearly\nnoon that day when he came upon a\nsmall clearing, on which there was a\nhouse, from the chimney ot which\nsmoke curled skyward. Inquiry at\nthe door developed the fact that he\nwas within a mile of the public thor\noughfare leading to Laporte, and after\ngetting something to eat he continued\nhis journey. He learned that he was\nfully eighteen miles away from the\ncabin, having travelled in the opposite\ndirection.
24af51b08a61fa124d148c96a51957c8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.57397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 Spec.at to The Evening Journal.\nNEWARK, July 29. - Dr. Frank P.\nBachman a member of the General Edu­\ncation Board of New York, gave a talk\nbefore the teachers attending tha Sum­\nmer School both yesterday morning and\nthis morning on the new sohool oode.\nDr. Backman was expert adviser to tha\nState Educational Commission that\nmade the sohool survey last year on\nwhich the code was shaped.\nDr. Backman during his remarks said,\nthe Delaware Sohool Code was planned\non the principle that teaching is a high­\nly specialised task, and that special\npreparation is necessary for every kind\nof position in the school system. In\nother words, ho said tha coda recog­\nnizes teaching as a profession, with\nclear out professional standards and de­\nserving a professional reward. In con­\nclusion the speaker said that unless\nDelaware trains its own teachers pro­\n Is impossible end that home\ntrained teachers should be preferred If\nthe training Is adequate.\nDr. Charles Seymour, professor of\nHistory at Ysle University will give tha\nfirst of a series of three lectures In\nWolf Hall this evening. The other lec­\ntures will be given tomorrow and\nThursday evenings. Each lecture will\nbe on the Peace Conference. Dr. Sey­\nmour only recently returned from\nParis whre ha was adviser to the\nAmerican Peace Commission.\nPlans are being mads for a pageant\nto be given soma time next week by\nthe members of the Clvloe class under\nthe direction of Miss Clark, Instructor\nIn civics. The pageant will portray\nwhat America did In the war.\nThe annual Sunday sohool ptonlo of\nSt. Thomas' Episcopal Church Is being\nheld today at St. Augustine Pier. A\nlarge number made the trip to the\npier In auto trucks.
0a34af741759ed03b5b46a642e4e0e9f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.1543715530763 40.063962 -80.720915 continued day alter day lor six weeks\nin (hose whose duties called Upon them\nlor much physical exertion; aud it is\npossible that we ought not to interpret\nso literally aa this, allusions to the laai-\nmg of ordinary Cbristiaus which we\nmeet with in early writings. Tbe work\nthat is set belore most persons, In\ntn<- providence ol Hod, at the present\nday, makes it quite iui|«>*siuie ror\nlhi.se Who have 111 tlo It, to last every\nday lor six weeks until eventug, or\nevi~.f i to take oue meal only iu the day.\nAud the ordiunry mode of llviug is, or\nshould »>e, »o lestralued auiofig re-\nligion* persons, that such a custom\nwould soon reduce them loan iuvttlld\ncondition, in which they could not uo\ntheir tin tv properly iu the station ol lile\nto which t>. d lias called tinm, whether\nin the world or in the sanctuary. And\nalthough It may seem at lir*4, that men\nought to lie able to last in the Hull\ncentury as strictly ua they did in the\nlii'h, the 12th, or the 3d, jet it should\nhe remembered that the continuous\nlabor of Hie w as unknown to the great\nmajority of persona tu ancient days, as\nit IS «t lie present time the Listen,\nChurch aud in Southern Kurope; and\nthat the quantity and quality of the\nrmsl which now forms a lull meal is\nonly equivalent to what would have\nbeen an extremely spare one until coui-\nnnrniively modern days. The problem\nwhtell the modern Christian, therefore,\nhas in s,> ve iii this matter, is that of so\nreconciling the duty of fasting in Lent,\nand at o'lier times ordered by the\nChurch, with the duty of properly ac-\nCHiiiplishilig tbe work which Hod has\n,et turn to do, that he may fultlil both\nduties as a faithful servant of Hod.\nIt is tin possible to lay down any gen\neral laws as to the amount of absti-\nnence from food whim is tbuacompati-\nhie wnh modern duties, uor can any\none, except a person possessed of much\nphysiological acumen, determine what\nis 11. be ttie rule for auoiher. Hut the\ngeneral rules may be laid down: 1st,\nthat it is possible for all to diminish in\nsome degree the quantity ol loud on\nlasting days without harm resulting;\n21, that many call safely abstain alto-\ngether from animal food for some days !\nin the week; 3d, that food should be\ntaken ou fasting days as a necessity,\nami in quality »*>
20c822100b4b92f030b324bdee48fbf0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 rke Report of General Cuter.Tk\nEiptdllloi ReinriiBf.Tbe Blue\nlitlit BiclM Explored lor Ike Fin\nTime.The Soil, Temperalnrt\nnatural Product!, Ac..tJol\nPouad la Coailderable lluaattitci\n&r. PitTL, HntN, August 2'3..The re\n»rt of General Cotter to the Depatf\nnest Commander, dated at Bear Butti\nSlack Hills, Dakotah Territory, Augai\n5, wat received this morning at Genert\nrerry'i headquarters. After detallln\nill operations and explorations, and th\nInding in one direction of an impauabl\nlarrier, which wai finally circumvented\nhe General tay»:\n"I propote to retnrn by a different, al\nhough perhaps not ihorter ronte thai\nhat adopted In coming to the Blacl\niills. I am induced to make this cbang\nn order to embrace a larger extent of nn\nxplored oonntry -within tbe limlti of ou\nxpiorationi, and particnlariy to enable n\no locate aa much u poatible of that poi\nion of the Little Mitaourl, of which nolh\nog ia now known. I expect the expedi\nion to reach Port Unmtn nn thu Rltt r\nLuguBt. The heallb ol lha command ha\n«n and 1> moat excellent This expe\n entered the Black Hills from th\nteat aide, penetrated through rhe easteri\nnd moat southern ranges, explored th\nujor portions of the Interior, and passei\nat ol the moat eastern ranges whicl\narm the boundary of the Black Bills.\n"Iftom the bet that la all our principa\n1 lichee through the Black HtUa wo bar.\nIken, without sei loos obstacle, wltu m\neavily laden traia ol over one hundrci\nragons, it may,bo interred that tho Blacl\n[ills do not constitute the Impenetrable\negions heretoiore represented. Entcrini\nae Black Hilli Irom any direction, thi\nloat serioui, If not the only obetaclei\nrere encountered near the outer base\n'his probably accounts for the myaterj\nrhich has so long existed regarding thi\nbaracter of the Interior. Exploring par\nes have contented themselves wltl\nlarching around their base, and from thi\nirbidding aspect of the hills, as vlewec\nom a distance, Inferred that an advanci\njwards the Interior would only encouute,\nicreased obstacles.\n"In regard tothe character of thecoun\n7 inclosed by the Black Bills, I cat\nnly repeat what I have stated In
11a444c976937fdfde90d581af34eedc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.0452054477423 46.187885 -123.831256 friend of S. C. Pomeroy. He was al-\nso closely associated with Aloxander\nCaldwell, who was forced to resign\nhis position in the United States sen-\nate because the testfmony was over-\nwhelming that he purchased the\nplace. Caldwell bought the Kansas\nlegislature for $90,000, or thereabouts.\nAt that time $100,000 was considered\na fair market price for a legislature\nin a stato no older that Kansas. Leg-\nate was appointed governor of Wash-\nington territory by President Grant,\nand was confirmed by the senate.\nCharles Sumner of Massachusetts,\nhowever, presented some statements\nto the senate, in executive session,\nwhich induced that "body to reconsid-\ner the confirmation. Grant did not\npress Legato before the senate after\nSumner s disclosure.\nLegate was credited with having\nplaced together with great caro the\nsmall of a letter written\nby S. C . Pomeroy, which the latter\nhad destroyed, after paying a good\nround sum for its possession. The\nstory goes that Legate got all the\npieces together in proper order and\nhad the document photographed.\nAfter that time Pomeroy's interest in\nphotography grow so intense that he\nexpended largo sums of money annu-\nally to advance the science.\nLegato probably knows St. John as\nwell as he knows anybody in the\ncountry, and was very likely commis-\nsioned lo negotiato with him during\nthe last campaign. Mr. Clarkson, of\nthe Iowa State Register, is a square,\ntruthful man, and evidently wants to\nget at bottom facts; but he will get\nweary and sick at heart before he\ngets the truth out of tho Kansas\ngang that surrounds St John.
32fd9e9d8c5f8af0d6ac49fe81eaf7b2 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9657533929478 39.513775 -121.556359 imi*ihit ant To miner*. travkukks, etc\nray II IKK i* no malady ol deeper i inmirl mcr either\nI inn medical or moral lluhl of view, to which\nthe human faVnlly i* more liable than that arlfiii?\nfrom imiiure connei'iion*.\nA * n inedt'nl That* it i* t.hpdiliyof every phyalcnm\nto look al diapace a* it effect* brailh and life, and hi*\nso|r ohjeel fbonld he In miliuoile. a* far a* lira in his\npower, tin- bodily anfferimr. Unman nature at heal Is\nbill frail, all are linMe to mi«forlnne.\ntlf all ill e ill* Ih.;t affrcl m.au none arr mere terrible\nthan llioac of a private na'nrr.—ltreadfnl aa It la in\nlire oemiTi who eonfTiiclalt. iriirhifnl a* are ila ravnc*\nea upon btaconalilulfon,endtntrffeipiriitly In dealruce\nion nwf a l nilhaoimj irruve, il heeomi** of*!ill greater\nImportance when il la tranamilted lo innocent off-\naprini?. Sneli helot? the cr,*P how n"Ce«aary It lie-\ncomea that every orre navini? Ihe least reaaon to fear\nthat they have conlfftCed ttas> dlaenae. ahimld nllcnil\nto il nl once hy conaiilttiH? some phy*iciae, who*o\nreapecinildliu and education enable* Idm to warrant\na safe.»peedy. and petninirnl cure. In necordanro\nwith Una neee*ailv. UR . V<U 7 NU feels called upon to\natnte that, by lon« i*ndy ami exlmoive practice, ho\nhas belome perfect Ki:»*ler of all tho*e di*ea*ea wtiicii\ncome the drnoininatioii of venereal, and liav*\nmi? i>nM more attwblion to that one lirauch than any\nother physician In the United Stales, lie feel* himself'\nbettertpialifled lo treat them.\nSyphilis In all Its form*, such a« nicer*.swrlllm? In\nIlie irrsmtifs nicer In the Ihroiit.secondary syphilis, cu-\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, tertiiary syphilis, sy*\nphillsrw chiMren. mercnrral syphilitic affections. i?on-\norrlufn. elect, strictures, false pnesaees. iiittninatioii iff\nthe bladder and protrale elnnds.excorlnilnn*.tumors\npost Mies. Vic. , aie ns familiar lohim aslhe ntost cmn-\nnionthine* ol dally oliaervutlon.\nTire Ihic'or effects a cure in recent cases in a few\ndays, and finds no difficulty In enrine iho«o of lone\nduration, without sohinittine the patient to sin h tresi*\nmem ns will draw upon him the nliehtesi suspicion,\nor ohliee him lo neelecl liis business, whether wtililn\n(sirs or without. The diet need not he chuneed ex-\ncept in case* of severe infinmnlion. There are in Rail,\nfunds patients (amountini? lo over Iwo thousand in\nthe past yearUbat could iiirnisli proof of this; bat\nthese are* matters Unit require thi nicest oecrosy which\nlie always preserves.\nAil letterseueliedm? .f 10, will he promptly attended\n10. Office hour.* from ft A. M.lo 8 I*. M . Address .1 1\ni. Vo«.\\<;. M . it, Kxpress linlldlm?*, corner of\nMoiiK?oinery and Ualiforninn streets,over Wells .urj\ni?o (v Co.'s Kxpress Department.
337ee712113eb707c131fe07fbb3a5ad THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1908.0095628099068 41.741039 -112.161619 toward tho lake Tho tanglo was not\nbo groat when you know tho way,\nand thero was lndoed, as I had found,\ntho faint suggestion of a path. Tho\nmoon glorified a broad highway across\ntho water; tho air was sharp and still.\nI followed tho wall of St. Agatha's to\ntho gate, climbed up and sat down In\ntho shadow of tho pillar farthest from\ntho lake I drow out a clgarctto and\nwas about to light It whon I heard a\nsound as of a step on Btono. Thoro\nwas, I know, no stono pavement at\nhand, but peering toward tho lake I\nsaw a man walking boldly along tho\ntop of tho wall toward mo. Tho moon-\nlight throw his flguro Into clear reltot.\nSeveral times ho'paused, bent down\nund rapped upon tho wall an\njbject ho carried In his hand.\nTap, tap, tap! The man with the\nhammor was oxamlnlng tho farther\nsldo of tho gato, and very likely ho\nwould carry, his investigations beyond\nit I drow up my legs and crouched\nIn tho shadow of the pillar, revolvor\nIn hand. I was not anxious to Invite\nan encounter; I much preferred to\nwait for a disclosure of the purposo\nthat lay behind this mysterious tap-\nping upon walls.\nDut tho matter was taken out of my\nown hands boforo I had a chance to\ndobate It. Tho man dropped to tho\nground, sounded tho stono baso undor\ntho gato, likewise the pillars, evident-\nly without results, struck a spiteful\ncrack upon tho Iron bars, then r.tood\nup .abruptly and looked mo straight In\nthd oyes.
2ff092511489846fc71c90c35327f3e1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1871.395890379249 37.561813 -75.84108 That the court of common pleas,\nor any judge thereof, in vacation,\nupon satisfactory proof that any\nperson resident of the county where-\nin the application may be made, is\nincapable of taking care of and pre-\nserving his or her property, by tea--\nson of intemperance or habitual\ndrunkenness, shall forthwith ap-\npoint a guardian of the property of\nsuch person, which guardian shall\nby virtue of such appointment.be\nguardian also of the minor child or\nor children of his ward, in case no\nother be appointed; and all laws\nrelating to guardians for minors and\ntkeir wards, and all laws pointing\nout the qualifications, duties, rights\nand liabilities of such guardians,\nand their sureties, in force for the\ntime being, shall be applicable to\nthe guardians contemplated by this\nact ; Provided, however, that in\ncase there shall be no judge of \ncourt of common pleas in the coun-\nty where such intemperate person or\nhabitual drunkard may reside, the\nprobate judge of the county may\nmake such appointments\nSec. 2. At least five, but not\nmore than ten, days prior to the\ntime when the application for the\nappointment of the guardian author\nized by the foregoing section shall\nbe made, a notice in writing, setting\north the time and place of the hear-\ning of the application, shall be serv-\ned upon the person for whose pro-\nperty such appointment may be\nsought ; and from the time of the\nservice of such notice until the hear-\ning, or the day thereof, as to alt\npersons having notice of such pro-\nceedings, no sale, gift, conveyance,\nor incumbrance, of the property of\nsuch intemperate person or habitual\ndrunkard, shall be valid.\nSec. ?,.
01f5787e23d6d943013ee2c82a575b03 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.2835616121258 39.745947 -75.546589 a little more working with gang plow,\nonltlrntor or harrow in consequence ot\nthe rain, bat plowing ln mach the elow-\nt operation of tillage, and all that oan\nbe accomplished In that dlraotiou, laoll\nltates the final seeding.\nIn the operation of plow ng .we trust\nthat there are very few of tea readers\nof 1 he Amerlosn Rural Home, whostlll\nretain the old, olnmsy, heavy drawlrg\nplow« with Iron mold-boards. The\nhard, shilled aurfnoe ot m<ld-board\nnow made by many manufacturers of\nplows turn off tha (arrows with much\nleu frlotlon than the old sorts,\nafter the gronnd Is plowed, there comes\non a long, heavy rain, beating down the\nmellowed soil, a good gang plow will\nagain mellow It in muon lean than half\ntbo time required by a plow and, In\nmany oasee, one of the better kinds of\nharrjws will answer purpose.\nWhile It le not advieable (or farmen,\nespecially those of limited means, to be\noarried away by every new Implement\nInvented, filling tbeir tool hunse and\n(enoe corners with discarded lmple-\nmeuta, still it .a n faot, attested to by\nmany of ont most suooensful farmers,\ntnat a really improved Implement will\noften nearly nave Its oost In the ease\nand thoronghneen with which It will\nprépara tor a single »p lng er tell seed\nlog. Do not let a smooth longusd agtnt\npersuade you Into baying a new Imple­\nment, blindly, but when yon arc oon-\nviooed that a new Implement will do\nthe work mnoh (aster and better than\nthe old, without increase of draft, it\nmay be tba truest eoonomy to buy It.\nIa Bowing these spring grains there In\nprobably as much dlflerenov between\nfood and bad seeds and tn varieties as
33c097931bafc059f303105b8b7e81b1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9877048864096 39.513775 -121.556359 i <;ARp Prompted by nn hom*st desire of my\nW heart, I wish to lay helore the public a case\nihdi deserves a high commendation, not only as an\nI of scientific skill, but that el humanity also. About\no years ago. I suddenly, and from causes unknown\nme, seized with a fit (if epilepsy,which, owing to\ny inability to meet the expenses consequent upon a\ni.rough medical treatment,and the discouragement\nmet with on attempting it, soon became such (us 1\nns men led to believe) ns to defy the skill ofa jdiy-\n:i„n. I was frequently while in pursuit of my call\ng, thrown down lo the ground without the slightest\nanting, and although insensible lo the ngonn ». 1\nt despised the miseries of my life,and soon learned\nlook upon those who would render me assistance\nshelter me from danger us who sought lo\nliking the miseries of my existence. While in this\nale, and having previous to my affliction tasted the\nreels of life, I once more was induced to attempt\neking aid of a physician, and. by recommendation,\nlied upon Hr. 1 . . J. Ocupkai. 1 told him mycir\nimstanres and my Inability to reward him for his\nrvices, regardless of which, however, he at once\nidertook my case, ami w ith the blessing of Hod I\nas once more restored to perfect health. I . liable\nreward him for the boon which I enjoy at present,\nid yet conscious of ray indebtedness. I consider it\nm lo myself ar.d to nil the afflicted to make the case\niblic, iti order that those in need of medical advice\nay find a physician in whom every confidence can\n lililCtttl\nl.s
02d3abf83f002fb650c967f1feb0f044 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.491780790208 39.513775 -121.556359 Sec. 7 Whenever, on tho flr*l dnv of .Imumy or\nJuly in any )■ ar, P re remains, idler the payment of\nthe mien si as hereinafter provhb d, a mn plus ot loi\nthousand dollars or ore, I shall lie tin* dii'y of the\nTreasurer to advertise bir the si no of uni-week In\none daily paper published in Knglish, i .i the city of\nNew York. and lor imr monlli in one daily newspa-\npi r published In I'.nviish at the Statu Capital, lor\nseah d proposals, to Is* opened one inoulh after Ihe\nNXpimlion ol Mich pnldiealiitas by tl.e I r.insurer, in\npresence ef Ihe liovern tor Com]i roller, at the Slide\nCapital for ihe surrender ot bonds issued nndirlhis\nAel, w Inch advi rtisrmei I shall stale I h iniiiiiiit of\nmoney tie has on hand for the purpose ot redemption,\nand they shall nerept the lowe- proposals, at rates\nnot exceeding par value a* may redeem tho greatest\nairiount ol bonds nniil the auuuiie ol ea-li on hand\nfor redemption is exhausted: jra'cfu/, hnirnn. in\ncase a sntfica'iil amount ol such l>..mis shall not he\nottered, a* aforesai ). exhaust the sink inn fund to a\nless uinonnl Him ten IhousHiid dollars, then il is\nhereby mitibi Ihe duly ol the Treasurer to advertise\nin lito neWspapi r*. one in New York and one at Ihe\nCnpiial of the Slate, fur diree mold Its, which mlver-\nliseinents shall *lale ihe an.oilld ill Iho sinking fund\nand tlie number of bonds nutnliering them in the\norder of their issuance, wh ch sucli fm d is set apart\nto pay and disehaige : amt if such fum!«, smiini\nlien d m such lelverlisen eats, shall not ?«t* prescined\nfur payment and euncellation wdhln three months\nfrom ihe expiration ot such publication, then such\nfund shall n main in the Treasury to discharge such\nbonds whenever presented—hut they shall draw no\ninterest after such publication a* la-t aforesaid.\nSec. H . The Treasurer ot State ahull keep full and\nparticular account and record of all his pi-oreedinga\nunder Hill Act, and of die bonds redeeim .1 and s ir\nrendered, Hid he sliall transmit to ihndmi'iom;\nabstract of riT his pro-eedings m.oertin* I. v\nhis animal report, to lie by the Lovernor i.dil !► -I
4c1d66b4b4f4d0b4f7e8e2f8ea039f87 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.5794520230847 39.745947 -75.546589 necessaries of life to a figure that -the\npresent wages and income of the peo­\nple will meet. Should this not he con­\nsidered feasible, we will be forest to\nurge that those whom we represent\nbe granted an Increase In wages to\nmeet the deterioration of the pur­\nchasing power of the dollar, be that\nwhat It may, which can be esrf'iy de­\ntermined by competent authority.\n"This action may be unique and II\nmay be properly termed * pioneer\nmovement in Hie history of laiior or­\nganization in seeking an audience vv.Ui I\nthe Chief Executive of our country\nand,. In a manner suggesting to him I\nthe convening of the members of hisl\ncabinet, or that portion that may be,\nquickly assembled. Moreover, Hie rc-1\n»ult sought seems to us to Justify the\nmoans, and should our efforts in this\ndirection completely fail, then vve will\nbe forced to request for those whom I\n -«present the granting of ao In­\ncrease in wage« to enable them to Hve\naccording to the American standard.\n"We Invite your attention to the fact\nthat approximately T7 per cent, of the\nlocomotive engineers arc American;\nborn citizens, nnd. if . may bo safely\nstaled that the remaining per cent |\nnaturalized oitizens, rnd Hi*'y have,\nof course, a great interest In ^ only\ntheir own Welfare, but in Hie welfare\nof atl the people, and they are not un |\nmindful of your past efforts in behalf\nof the people, and they believe that\nthey should exert every effort not only\nfor themselves but f*rr the country In\ngeneral, as well rfs the administration.\nVet vve lind ourselves today earning\nless money than wc did prior to Hie\nwar. This can be demonstrated by\ns mply taking, as an illustration, a\ndaily wage of *o prior to the\nwhich at that time was worth
1023c5ccd7bea33550c235381238a77c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.2397259956874 40.063962 -80.720915 An American Coittil In Eqaador In-\niall(d-A Flacky llnllnu Captain.\nPanama, March 17..Dictator Vintimilla\ncontinues in hot water in Guayaquil.\nSigBOr Alcides Destruge is Consul at the\nport for the United States of America, for\nthe Kingdom of Italy, and for Venezuela.\nHe had received official communication\nthat fighting would soon occur In the Los\nRios Province, so he asked for a safe con¬\nduct for the Secretary of the Italian Con¬\nsulate to proceed there and warn foreigners\nthat their lives and property might be im¬\nperilled. This suggestion was considered\nan insult, and Mr. Deetruge was informed\nthat he was considered an enemy of the\nGovernment, and that consequently the\nSupreme Gbief had had the exequatur of\neach of his consular patents canceled. Mr.\nDestruge then appealed to the Captain of\nthe Italian man-of-war Caracciolo, which\nwas at anchor in the river at the time, who\nat once informed the Government that\nhe considered himself bound to as¬\nsume the responsibility of representing\nhis country. This communication resulted\nin Captain Ameziga being informed that\nwhen he presented his credentials he would\nbe recognized as consul. Captain Amezaga\nwas temporarily satisfied with this answer,\nbut a days afterward he learned that\nan Italian subject named Antonio Arrata,\nhad been seized for having purchased some\ncartridges from a soldier, carried to one of\nthe barracks, and their tortured in order to\ncompel bim to confess. Captain Amezaga\nat once demanded information on the\npoint, and requested that those implicated\nin this criminal proceeding should be tried\nfor having "reverted to the usages of bar¬\nbaric times." Senor Carbo then answered\nthaa the man had been mistaken for an\nEquadorian.this in palliation of the tor¬\nture applied.that he had been placed at\nliberty, and that trial would take place, and\nthe offenders punished if it proved true\nthat Arrata had been tortured. Oh the\nfollowing day measures were taken to\nprevent foreigners suffering should rioting\nbreak out in the city, and all nationalities\nwere informed that refuge would be afford¬\ned on board the Caracciolo. The English\nConsul also reported that that vessel would\nprotect his fellow-subjects. Shortly after¬\nwards the English Consul entered a pro¬\ntest against the seizure of chronometers.\nsailB, etc., from the English vessel Mysteri¬\nous Star by the Equadorian steamer\nHuacho, and the return of the articles was\nordered and redress promised.
98fa47ae65dd729eca80047b9319218f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.3767122970573 41.681744 -72.788147 "Maybe you men don't know what\ngives me a deep Interest In boys",\nthe speaker said. "It is seldom that\nI tell a group of men the reason for\nmy interest in the coming genera-\ntion but I'm going to tell you all\nabout the boyhood of my own life.\nEvery speaker with an idea to sell\nmust show his qualifications to his\naudience. Here are mine.\n"I was one of a family ot six\nchildren. Mother died early In my\nlife and father was working. There\nwas no parental Influence in the\nhome, little school influence and\nvery little church influence. I ran\nwild, unhampered by any guiding\nhand. At the age of 14 I, having\nread several Nick Carter and Alger\nbooks, decided to run away. The\nlimit of the boundaries of the world\nat that time for me was Bridgeport\nso I hopped a freight for that city.\n"I got as far as West Haven,\nabout four miles from my starting\npoint, when I and freight train\ngot all mixed up together. They\nfound me beside the track with a\nbadly crushed foot. I' was given a\nride back to New Haven in the\ncaboose, a ride which I found much\nmore interesting than the crushed\nfoot At the hospital in New Haven\nthey amputated the foot and, some-\ntime later I becme disconsolate,\nwondering what was going to be-\ncome of me. An angel of mercy, a\nnurse, found me crying In my hos-\npital cot one night and sympathized\nwith me the first Idea I had ever\nhad of what mother love was like.\nShe told me that It was God's way\nthat my foot should be taken off at\nthat time and that it was probably\nall for the better. I formed a re-\nsolve then that tf I ever got a\nchance to aid boyhood, I would do\nall that I possibly eould for their\nbenefit. That's my inspiration.\n"We who are perhaps above the\ncommon level of hum-dru-
288ebc3b9653cb952b407397dc1101bf NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.6999999682903 41.681744 -72.788147 draw as the republican nominee for\nsenator from the sixth district, ha\nsaid. He was unanimously nominated\nat the primaries a few weeks ago\nand is generally regarded the strong-\nest candidate for this office, in view\nof his popularity and the record he\nmade as leader of the house in tha\nlast session of the legislature. The\nrepublican town committee has tha\npower to fill vacancies in the ticket.\nThat Judge Alllhg would also re-\ntire from the judgeship of the city\nand police courts of this city. In tha\nevent of his election as attorney\ngeneral seemed probable today.\nWhether or not he would retire Im-\nmediately on receiving the nomina-\ntion, or wait until after election, yraa\nbeing discussed today. When Judr\nAiling was a candidate for mayor '\ntwo years ago, he announced \nin the event of his election he would\nretire as judge and it was pointed\nout today that he would probably\ndo so in this instance.\nNew Britain's delegates to the re-\npublican state convention will vote\nas a unit for J. Erwln Brainard of\nBranford, for the nomination for\nlieutenant governor, and will be\nprepared to back Judge Ailing of\nthis city for attorney general should\nhe decide to be a candidate.\nThe delegates will leave this eve-\nning for Hartford to be on hand\nfor the convention opening. Ernest\nW. Chrtet is chairman of the dele-\ngation. Tho other delegates are:\nEdward F. Hall, Selma Johnson, F.\nO. RackliiTe, James J. Sposato and\nRuth B. Walther.\nThe delegation has not been in-\nstructed for Brainard, but is 100 per\ncent for the Branford man.
13f0a15a055cc9d60673f70a2b4531f2 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.717213083131 39.513775 -121.556359 and scruple not to make use of the names\nof men who have no affinity with them, and\nwho would never endanger the Union to\ngratify an inoidinatc desire for office. But\nto the extract. Mr. Winthrop says:\n“There is really but one absorbing ques-\ntion now before the people. In the so cum\nni.gmtude of its presence all others are\nflushed. This question is at last presented\nin a tangible form, shall the Union fie pre-\nserved ? or sh ill the first step he taken to-\nwind* the entire disruption of the Stab a off\nthe Union by a severance of the North from\nthe South ? Looking at the political aspect\nof the times, with this question staring us in\nthe lace, we make our clio ce of candidates\nThe nominees of the Cincinnati Convention\nmake preservation of the Union the\nmaitor of paramount interest. Other prin-\nciples are advocated ; but it any principles\nare to be compromised, or if any subservi-\nency is to be made—all others may be com-\npromised, all of them may be subservient;\nbut 4 t'ie Union , it muni hr prim i vrd."\n“On the oilier hand, the pre-ci ration o(\nthe Union is a nnnor and secondary princi-\nple with those who have met in convention\nunder the title »f Republican With them,\nthe preset vat ion of the Union is to be toiei-\nalodasa matter of contingency. Mr Banks\nexamined the iissr overt act of treason in\n• lecturing in the balls of Congress that he\nwas in favor of “letting the Union slide.”\nunless a favorite crotchet of hia own and his\nassociates could, be endorsed
3dbe2921906e5c8ccbd22ccbd500398f NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.3401639028032 40.735657 -74.172367 AN ORDINANCE granting permission to the\nDelaware. Lackawanna and Western Rail-\nroad Company to lay out. construct, main-\ntain and operate, within the limits of the city\nof Newark, an extension from a switch or\nsiding on Its property to the manufacturing\nestablishment of the Westmghouae Electric\nand Manufacturing Company, said extension\nto start at a point about two hundred and\nseventy feet west from the westerly side of\nHigh street, and to pass over and across said\nstreet at a point on the property of the\nWcstinghouso Electric and Manufacturing\nCompany for a distance of about three hun-\ndred and sixty feet from the easterly side\nof High street.\nBe it ordained by the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners of the City of New-\nark, as follows:\nSection J. That consent and permission is\nhereby given to the Delaware, Lackawanna\nand Western Railroad Company to lay out.\nconstruct, maintain and operate within the\nlimits of said City of Newark a single track\nextension from a switch siding on the\nproperty of said railroad company to the\nmanufacturing establishment of the West-\ninghouae Electric ami Manufacturing Com-\npany, said extension to start at a point\nabout two hundred and seventy (270) feet west\nfrom the westerly side of High street, and to\npass and cross said street to a poin( on the\nproperty of the Westinghoustf Electric and\nManufacturing Company for a distance of\nabout three hundred and aixty (360) feet\nfrom the easterly side of High street, on a\nrouto and location and according to the ele-\nvations as delineated and laid down on a\ncertain plan entitled "D., L. A W. R. R. Co.—\nM. A E. Div. Proposed track to serve the\nWcstlnghouse Electric and Manufacturing\nCompany, Newark. N. J. Division Engineer's\noffice, Hoboken, ,N. J.. December 15th. 1911 .\nBeale 30 feet—one inch," and filed in the\noffice of the Engineer of the Department of\nStreets and Highways of the Board of Street\nand IVator Commissioners of the City of\nNewark, N. J.,
d8ed516e22a4128ff4b8e4a57af81061 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.2773223727484 41.681744 -72.788147 He said the sphere of influence of\ncivic clubs is not limited to pleasant\nweekly gatherings, but their duty is\nto help make the community a bet-\nter place in which to live.\nThe proper understanding of the\nobstacles to this work is necessary,\nhe explained. The chief obstacle is\nthat of public ignorance, the speaker\nadded, specifying among the types\nof public ignorance that of congen-\nital ignorance, institutional ignorance\nand high hat ignorance.\nInstitutional ignorance he dismiss-\ned with the brief statement that It\nmeant red tape kind of ignorance.\nCongenital ignorance he said was the\nkind which prevents parents from\nsympathizing with schools, dental\nclinics, diphtheria inoculation and\nother welfare movements because of\npiejudlce. He,,told of a man who\nwas arrested for keeping his children\nout of school. The. man the\ncourt that the teacher taught the\nchildren the world was round when\nhe knew it was Hat, therefore he\nkept the children home.\nHigh hat ignorance or ignorance\nin high places, he described as a\nlack of knowledge of certain subjects\namong the educated. A learned proT\nlessor at a dinner of men all of\nwhom bad degrees for scientific\nachievements, except Mr. Gilmore,\nasked the latter one time if it were\ntrue that sailors toss each other in\nblankets. Advised that he had never\nknown of such an incident, the pro-\nfessor said, "Well, I'm going to write\nto Secretary Wilbur at West Point\nand ask him myself."\nA delegation of 16 or more mem-\nbers of the club will motor to Hert-\nford a week from tomorrow to join\nan inter-clu- b
043f6397be9efe444132c4724f03f151 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.028767091578 38.894955 -77.036646 ileait troubles, at least among Ameri-\ncans, are certainly increasing and while\nthih may be largely due to the excitement\njind worry of American business life, it\nis more often the result of weak stomachs,\nof poor digestion.\nReal, orgamo heart disease is incurable;\nbut not one case in a hundied of heart\ntrouble l.s organic.\nThe close relation between heart trouble\nand noor digestion is because both onrans\nare controlledby branches of thesamegreat\nnerves.theSynipathfticandPneumogastnc.\nIn another way, also, the heartis affected\nby thatform of poor digestion, which causes\ngas und fermentation from half digested\nfood; there is a feeling of oppression and\nheaviness in the chest caused by pressure\nof the distended stomach on the heart and\nlungs, interfering with their action; hence\narises palpitation and short breath.\nPoor digestion also poisons the blood,\n it thin and watery, which irritates\nand weakens the heart.\nThe mo.st sensible treatment for heart\ntroVles is to improve the digestion and to\ninsure the prompt assimilation of food.\nThis can best be done by the regular use,\nafter meals, of some safe, pleasant and ef-\nfective digestive preparation, like Stuart's\nDyspepsia Tablets, which may be found at\nmo.st drug .stores and which contain valu-\nable, harmless digestive elements, in a\npleasant, convenient form.\nIt is safe to say tliatthe regular, persis-\ntent use ot' Stuait's. Dyspepsia Tablets at\nmeal time will cure any form of htomaeh\ntrouble, except cancer of .stomach.\nFull Me packages ot the Tablets sold by\nmost druggists at 50 cents or by mail from\nStuart Co. , Marshall, Mich.\nLittle hook on stomach troubles mailed\nfree. Address Stuart Co., Marshall, Mich.
100027a9d563007ff7d136148e610dd4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.1931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 A I'oatuOlco Clrrk Lucka u ll»nk Ciiahlor\nill the Vuult uud Koba tb« Till.\nWatkutown, N. Y ., March 11..One of\nthe boldest bank robberies that haa oc¬\ncurred in thia section of the State iu\nmany years surprised tho people of Nor*\nwood, St. Lawrence county, Saturday.\nF. L . Smith, cashier of tho Norwood\nbank, was alone in the building about\nnoon when Charlea I'helns, the postoftice\nclerk, eutered and asked lorsomo stamps.\nAir. Smith stunned iuto the vault to get\ntheui, when I'helns quietly closed the\ndoor aud turned the combination, lock¬\ning tho cashier in. The robber then\nturned to the money drawer and took\nall the money that it contained.$278.\nleaving several hundred dollars in silver.\nThe amount would ordinarily have been\nmuch larger on Saturday, but business\nhad boon light that day, aud the rob¬\nber's booty wus probably not uearly aa\nlarito aa he had expected it to be.\nl'lielps had mado arrangements to\nhavo u horse ready, aud with it he\nstarted at once for the Cauadiau border,\nabout ten miles distant. Meauwhilu a\ncustomer entered the bauk aud \nwhat had happened, lie heard the\ncashier calling to him from the vault,\nand being instructed as to the combina¬\ntion, released him, Prompt action was\ntaken to prevent l'lielps from crossing\nthe border, but uothing was heard of the\nrobber until the midnight train arrived,\naud ho was discovered as oue of the pas¬\nsengers. Ho had gone by a circuitous\nroute to Hrazer Falls aud had taken the\ntrain there honing to ride through Nor¬\nwood at miduight without being detect¬\ned, uud then go to Ogdensburg, where\nho could easily cross iuto Canada. But\nparties on the train knew him aud had\nlearned of tho robbery, and upon arriv¬\ning at Norwood he was delivered over to\noliicers. Only about $11 of the amount\nstolen wus found ou l'lielps' person. He\nwas kept iu charge of two oilicere over\nSunday and was taken to the Canton jail\nto-day to iiwuit the action of tho graud\njurp, which meets iu June. I'helns is u\nvoung man, a native of Norwood. He\nlias fallen iuto bad habits of late and is\nsaid to havo become im opium eater.
64df03e962eeb87506787220405fb763 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1944.148907072202 40.618676 -80.577293 3 FEDERATION is taking seriously its re­\nsponsibility for leadership in the post-war\nperiod. We have been inquiring into what the\nproblems will be in order that labor may develop\npolicies and plans for meeting them.\nIt is plain that reconversion will involve half\nour national income, bring work changes to some\nthirty millions of our labor force and that we can\nmove forward to an economy of abundance, with\nabundant employment and without materially\nlowering present national income or the incomes\nof individual workers; or we may follow the path\ntoward depression, unemployment and a national\noutput that does not provide enough to eat or\nwear, nor enough good homes for all tjie people,\nbut keeps large groups in poverty and under the\nlash of fear of want and dependency.\nLabor elects a program for abundance of mate­\n things in order that we may be free to have\na share in community life and do our part in de­\ntermining national policies and problems. Labor\ncan attain its program if those of management\nare willing to cooperate with us and let us co­\noperate with them. If we value free enterprise and\nfree unions we must cooperate. The alternative\nis chaos when the government must take over.\nWe know full well that if private organizations\ndo not take the initiative and assume their re­\nsponsibility, we shall under government regulation\nlose the flexibilities and incentives for voluntary\nadjustments which are best suited to industrial\nneeds. We know further that when the American\npeople perceive the need and appreciate the grav­\nity of situations, they always lay aside differences\nand work together for mutual protection and\nwelfare.
7f36e1c3534e45e00811cc1caf798a03 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.1407103508905 41.681744 -72.788147 who sends money home to Scotland\nor Ireland or France or Poland or\nItaly, or any other country of the\nworld, but what he owes, though all\nunconsciously a personal debt of\ngratitude to this idealist, Elihu Bur-\nritt, who worked with tireless zeal\nto make this two cent or penny\npostage rate a possibility.\n"And the second result of Mr.\nBurritfs efforts is like unto the first.\nIt was his unique contribution to the\nrelief of suffering Ireland in the po-\ntato famine of 1S7. For two weeks\nin that bitter winter, he went about\nfrom village to village.from hovel to.\nhovel, that he might know just how\nappalling was the misery which\ncalled for quick relief. We are' told\nthat his trip of investigation ended\nin his own illness. But he was down\nonly to rise again. pen was con-\nstantly busy sending off appeals and\narticles descriptive of the dire needs\nof the Irish to the American papers.\nIn very short order, his words\nreached the heart of his own people\nat home. Boston sent out to Ireland\n80 years ago a relief ship loaded\ndown with clothing and provisions,\nunder the command of a volunteer,\nCaptain R. B . Forbes. And you may-\nbe very sure that Mr. Burritt was at\nhand at Queenstown to meet that\nrelief ship at the dock. What is\nmore, he took care, to supervise the\ndistribution ot its cargo. Thus, with,\nout personal riches, without any of-\nficial power, did the tender and will-\ning heart of this wist and gentle\nman bring about an act of interna-\ntional friendship, and the untold re-\nlief of awful misery
1039d4dc2418da712c3c42b7b0420f31 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.9383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 vater, provided the child is not too deli- ;i*\nlate to stand it. Do not bo in toi.\ntreat a burry to get to the cool bath jj[\ntraction cornea only when the child ir ,n\nveil, strong, and old enough to generuti T\nmimal heat. A handful of wilt may hi\nbrown Into tho bath. Dry tho child j*\nluickiy and gently, aiM duat tho skin with\ntarch powder that has no accnt In ii )pl\nNothing (or infanta should bo light ami C\nfarm. Through tho earlier years.Bay foi u«\nbreo youra.a child needs plenty ol\nrarinth. Letthefeet,abdomen,andcheai c\nIwaya be healthfully warm. Do not over ,»r\nlo tlda, however, with heavy garment! thai i<\nif ill keep the child In a vapor bath of per- [}fj\npiration. The tlannul clothing, m wel '.ml\na other dress of tho child, must b> f\nri'quently changed to promote health\nIII of the clothing mutt bo looai\nnough to give free play to the vim\nirgana. Bo clean in everything periainlnj |,®\n your rooms, or you will poison tho chili ihi\nou love, not enough to kill it, porlmps\nmt lullicicntly to impair vitality ami inaki .\nt harder for tho child to live. Keep tin ,,\nihild clean or it will poison itself. Ail din tul\nbarges from the body are poisonous.tho* {<\nrom the skin aa well aa others. An un\nileasant smell that la perceived about mon; i«\nlemons and In their apartmenta la known\nis tho odor humanut, or human odor.tliii :(|J\n«, tho smell of dead, foul, poisonous mat 'at\ncr, exhaled through tho akin and nevei '« »\nresiled from the body. Nelthor milk noi r'°\nIrinklng water should be allowod to stnn< tie\nn open vessels where Itmlght becomecon *"\naminnted by the germs ol disease or fron t\nout or infected air from sinks, drain*, cess-\nloola, or other sources. Both milk ono ,\\c\nvater readily absorb tho germs of o greai\nrarlety ol dlacaaee.as, for Instance, dinr ','h\nIkm, dysentery, typhoid fever, diphtheria, *r\n(tc..Ballimon Oatttle. i«*
0d3ec2830670c7ebd447006dc75d65b9 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.9493150367834 40.441694 -79.990086 In Pittsburg at present we bave a very heavy\ncrop of champions in the checker arena. It is\nvery amusing to hear their excuses when de-\nfeated. They were not trying, they say, and\njust allowed the others to win. When do they\nreally play their game? Whit we need at pres-\nent is some good player to visit Pittsburg and\ndo like H.. Z . Wrieht, of Boston. Mass., last\nspring: give us all an unmerciful laying out.\nTben tbe champions will wither like weeds\nhoed in the sun.\nWe see from the Turf that Wyllie's forfeit\nhas arrived to cover ilr. Reed's, and be is going\nto sail late In March or the beginning of April\nfrom Austalia, so by the 4th of July the great\nworld's championship match will bave been\nplayed in Chicago, and, our prediction is, it\n remain with tbe old man. James Wyllle,\nnow 70 years of age.\nH. Z . Wright, of Boston, will In a short time\nmake a tour of Canada. While on his tour he\nwould like to visit Pittsburg and Big Run, Pa.\nWe would like to hear from Mr. Tyson and the\nPittsburg plajers, and will be glad to render\nall the assistance in our power. His last visit\nwas one of great pleasure, although our\nscores were very low with hlic just aa low as\nwith Champion Reed, on his last visit.\nPlayers visiting Allegheny City can find a\nplace to entertain themselves at a game on\nWebster avenue, off North avenue, la Wise-\nman's shoe shop. A great many players con-\ngregate there, and some very interesting games\nareplaved. The proprietor is a good player\nhimself and fond of the game.
32079754cf3219a19e0fa62f667d5e0b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.9520547628108 44.939157 -123.033121 Three dollar shirts at $2.20, $2.50\nshirts at $1.88, $2.00 shirts at $1.48,\n$1.50 shirts at $1.13, and $1.25 shirts at\n88c and a lot of $1.00 shirts at 48c has\nhelped swell our sales. We also have\nheavy tan corded shirts with military\ncollars worth $2.50 at $1.48, and a brok-\nen line of double and single breasted\nflannel shirts that were $1.50 to $3.00\nat 78c to $1.98 .\nUnderwear sales are fine, thank you.\nThe $6.00 kind silk and wool French\nribbed are $1.78 the garment; $5.00\nfancy ribbed athletic neck are $1.63\neach, $3.00 Cooper's spring needle pink\nwool are $1.13, and the Cooper's Aus-\ntralian wool are 98c each; $4.00 extra\nheavy all wool are $1.28, 75c Swiss rib-\nbed cotton are 35c and the heavy derby\nribbed cotton that are sold everywhere\nat 50c are now 35c.\nGray and maroon colored wool\nSweaters that were $2.50 are now $1.48,\nand a lot of $2.00 and $2.25 V- ne-\nsweaters colors red, gray and\nwhite for 98c; think of it.\nThe $2.00 Hats are now $1.12 and the\n$3.00 kind at $1.98 .\nMen's heavy and light weight wool\nsox, the 50c ones at 38c, and our reg-\nular two bit ones are 18c.\nMen's Xmas Ties and Scarf Pins put up\nin fancy boxes, never sold for less than\n75c, are now 38c, fifty and seventy five\ncent neckwear, all new, nifty patterns\nof the latest makes go at 38c, thirty\nfive cent ones are 21c, and you never\nsaw such a line of regular twenty five\ncent Neckwear as we arc now selling at\n19c, put up in fancy Xmas boxes too.\nMen's ties in leather collar boxes that\nwere $1.25 are now 73c\nOnly a few of those Oxford bags left ;\nthey come in three sizes, 15, 16 and 17\ninches, at $2.48, $2.98 and $3.48 instead\nof $4.50, $5.00 and $5.50.\nIde collars, Holeproof and Phoenix\nhosiery are the only lines not reduced.
1bf6a23d5851aca1a37c8c6b0258bd2d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.4030054328578 43.798358 -73.087921 On the question as to the antiquity of\nthe work, we admit that the internal evi-\ndence is strong but that evidence will\ndoubtless be completely sifted by scholars\nfar more competent than ourselves to do it\njustice. Mean time there is a little piece\nof evidence, in addition to the references\nto the book of Joshua and Samuel, which\nseems to have escaped our contemporary\nof the Stir, and which is certainly entitled\nto some consideration. The Apostle Paul,\nin his second letter to .Timothy, third chap-\nter and eighth verse, mentions the names\nof two of the" magicians who supported\nPharaoh in his resistance to the demand\nof Moses." Now the names of the magi-\ncians, or any of them, are not given, in\nthe Old Testament Scriptures, nor are\n mentioned by Josephus, who, gener-\nally following closely the Scripture narra-\ntion, often amplifies from tradition, and\nprobably from fuller copies of ther Jewish\nwritings than have descended to us; but\nin this Book of Jasher the two names\nmentioned by; the Apostle pre given.\nNow, this does 'not prove that Paul actu-\nally derived the names from the Book of\nJasher, because the names Jannes and\nJamb res had been previously menlioned\nby Jonathan Ben Uzziel.the commentator\nupon thg historical and prophetical books,\nbefore the birth of Christ. But this com-\nmentator "calls them' the two sbnS of Ba-\nlaam which , was not very probable,\ninasmuch as Balaam himself does not\nappear on the stage of action until forty\nyears' after the contest of the magicians\nwith ; Moses.
0e3f053f9f9cbb8d5be223139ee164ee THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.3273972285642 40.063962 -80.720915 The board of dlrectors'of the Florence\nCrlttendon Rescue Home present* its\nannual report as fololws:\nThe resoue home board has held\ntwenty-four meetings during the yaar,\nnot Including a number of called meet¬\nings. Twenty-seven girls have been In¬\nmates of the home. Quite a number of\ngirls were given shelter for a short\ntime. Eight girls and a little baby boy\nare now In the home. No deaths have\never occurred In the home. Nine girls\nhave returned to their homes, we trust,\nbetter girls than they ever were. Four\ngirls are now working la'the city, as\nfar as we can Jud^e perfectly respect¬\nable. One girl has gone with the Sal¬\nvation Army from Christian Alliance.\nFour girls sent to the Home of the\nGood Shepherd. One girl sent to con¬\nvent In Pittsburgh. Little Clara sent to\nthe children's In Pittsburgh. One\ngirl In the hospital for several weeks:\noGr home physician operated success¬\nfully upon her. A baby from the hu¬\nmane society stayed for a weke or so.\nA Polish woman with a young bpby,\nhaving been deserted by her husband,\nwas an Inmate for a while. A country\ngirl with.quite a young baby, sta* ed\nuntil her parents took her home.\nWhile results, ns far as human eye\ncar. ace . are not very great, only eter¬\nnity will reveal all the real good ac¬\ncomplished. We hereby extend oui\nheartfelt thanks to all who have In any\nway contributed toward the support of\nour home during tho past*year.' We\ntrust that the generosity which has\ncharacterized our friends In the past\nwill continue still more abundantly.\n"Hitherto the Lord huth led us." We\ntrust Him for the future.
01a533b6385e672667d6a10b8975be20 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8128414984315 44.939157 -123.033121 The Oregonian commenting on a paragraph in the\nCapital Journal anent that paper's indorsement of Cleve-\nland, points out that it at the time indorsed him just as\nit did recently. To prove this it points out and names the\nheadings of several editorials praising him for his stand\non the gold basis issue; also his stand in the Venzuela\nmatter and then asks questions and wants to know what\nif Wilson would have done what Cleveland did in the\nVenzuela case, and if Cleveland would have done as Wil\nson did in the recent Mexican matter, and pauses for a\nreply'!" As for its indorsement in 1895 of Cleveland, it\nwas of his gold standard position only, which was identi-\ncal with .the republican idea, and the Oregonian could not\ntake any other stand without going back on its party.\nThat it indorsed the gold standard and therefore Cleve\nland's position on the same is freely conceded; but that it\ndid not keep up a round of attack on him other mat-\nters is not. As for its questions, we frankly confess we\ndo not know what President Wilson would have done had\nhe been president when the Venzuela incident was acted\nupon; nor do we profess to know what Cleveland would\ndo with Mexico were he president now. Cleveland took\nhis own course and kept us out of war. Wilson with the\nfar more dangerous situation has taken the course that\nseemed best to him, and he accomplished just what Cleve-\nland did, kept us out of war. We being a "Little Amer-\nican" in the Oregonian's opinion, can of course not tell\nwhat other people would have done under given circum-\nstances, but the Editor of the Oregonian being a "Big\nAmerican" can tell what anyone else is thinking about;\nwhat they would do or leave undone, as well as telling\nwhat they should do or should have done, and how they\nshould have done it. Why should it "pause for a reply"\nwhen it knows everything in advance?
39859dd7265ce9a8e46f6d8cec93a41b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.9657533929478 37.561813 -75.84108 nesr. ttieir sympatny with the aitlieted\nfather and bereaved sisters as well as to\nhonor the memory of one of their sous,\nwho through exposuro to camp life, had\ntallen a prey to disease and death.\nThe exercises wero osceedin'ly solemn\nand impressive, and durin;; the delivery\not mo discourse, many were the tears\n.n at leu irom eyes unuseu to weep, at\ntho event that called them together.\n"Vomn the brnrpflt mnrtnl HniMlio (fr\nWliith ulittin un the bier of lHlvn worth."\nAt tho conclusion of tho services at\ntho church, the funeral cortege moved\nin silence to Peters' burial eround.\nwhere tho body was planed in its last\nresting place the grave. The vounrr\nsoldier, who left tho endearmonts of\nhome, to protect tho national flag, with\nhigh hopes beating in his bosom of\nstriking a blow, in concert with bis com\npanions in arms, in defence of the Un-\nion, was arrested in his to glory\nDy the hand ol disease, and beforo the\ncharsro to battle had sounded, and the\nconflict bad begun, was carried to the\nhospital, and bis career cut short by\ndeatli setting Ins seal upon his brow.\nHis death was calm, and his sun went\ndown in unclouded beauty; and though\nburied away from the camp, without\nthe mai tial troad of the company to\nwhich he was attached, with muflled\ndruma following his remains to the\ngrave, and giving a soldier's farewell sa-\nlute over it, ho was followed to his last\nresting place by thoso most dear to bim\non earth, together with thoso who knew\nhim from boyhood boors, and watched\nthe development of mind and body, to\nmanhood's dawn, and who best knew\nhis worth, and could enumerate in full\nthe sum of bis loss. J I is body was laid\naway to quiet, rest, with the solemn\nwords of the funeral service,
2ac1cd9edd85d6e35db35f8f13a8e6fc THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.9713114437866 37.561813 -75.84108 Refuse Hair From Tanneries. A\ncorrespondent of the Rural New Yorker\ninquires concerning the application ot\nrefuse hair from tanneries, and whether\nit is of value for grass lands. The refuse\nhair from tanneries is generally mixed\nwith lime. It is a valuable fertilizer.\nWhen spread broadcast its action is slow\nbut an immediate effect is produced from\nthe lime. The better way to apply hair\nto land is to pour it under or work it in\nthe soil. The late Zadock Pratt, of\nGreen County, New York, well known\nlor his butter dairying experiments,\ngreatly increased the" fertility of his\ndairy 'farm by the application of hair\nand other refuse from his tanneries. Me\nexperimented with it in various ways,\nand found that the best results were ob-\ntained when it was poured or mingled\nwith the soil. We have experimented\nwith hair for turnips and cabbage by\ndigging a hole with a spade and putting\nin a double handful of hair, then cover-\ning with earth and planting the turnip\nseed. The turnips make a great growth,\nfar surpassing that lrom barn yard ma-\nnure. It also makes a cood manure for\ncabbages. The waste from tanneries can\nolten De utilized with great profit by\nfarmers living in the immediate vicinity\nof these establishments, and this refuse\ncan not unfrequently be had simply for\ncarting it away.\nOfficial Report of the Depart\nment of Agriculture. The complete\nreport of the Department of Agriculture\nfor the months of August and September\nhas been issued. It contains the follow\ning important information relative to\nthe crops:
034fdd952b77a6c17bb25e093a73ff4d THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1878.4452054477422 44.593941 -72.616505 searched without success, arrested by\nan able bodied policeman. Liken to\ntho station house, where the officer ac\ncused her of being a common thief;\nlocked op for the night iu a cell, and\nbrought into court the nert morning.\nDuring tho examination, the evidence\ncame out that tho prisoner was a\nthoroughly respectable luur, and that\nshe tried to exn'uin how the blunder\nwas coici'nitted, but was marched off\nn'. iu imprisoned as a well known thief.\nAnother bcautilul lcature oi ims case\nwaa shown when the lady testified,\nthat after much pleading she was al-\nlowed to send for her lawyer. She\ngave the messenger fifty cents for the\nerrand, and he put the money in bis\npocket, put a stamp on the note, and\nsent it by mail, and, if the lawyer litnl\nnot seen a notico of the arrest in tne\npapers, the lady have probably\nsull'ercd through a longer delay. The\nonly ray of common sense connected\nwith the case which has yet penetrat-\ned to the nublic eve, is the emphatic\nin ''ith the judge expressed his\ndisgust at the wte'e proceeding, and\nthreatened the immediate minishnient\nof those through whom the wretched\nblunder was made, branding an inno-\ncent lady with a foul title.\nWhile his physicians ana menus\nhope for the best, it seems probable\nthat before this letter is in print Wil\nliam t'ullen Bryant, the poet and jour-\nnalist, will have passed away. While\nittendin!i the ceremonies in I entral\nPark on tho oceasion of unveiling the\nbust of Mazzini, tho Italian patriot,\nHe stood with uncovered head under\na hot sun. At the close of his ad\ndress he appeared to be sutl'eriiig\nslightly, although ho made no coi n-pl ai nt' - a t
1f07e43ae83136201cb97e35f616f7d5 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.4753424340436 40.735657 -74.172367 Section 5. It shall be unlawful to storp or keep\ngunpowder, firecrackers or fireworks of any de-\nscription In retail lots between July 10 of any\none year and June 22 of the following year, and\nit shall be unlawful to sell at retail or to giv*\naway fireworks of any description except during\nthe first four business days of July.\nSection 6. Permits shall be issued by the In-\nsp*rctor of Combustibles and Fire Risks onlj\nupo.i the payment of a fee of five (5) dollars tc\nsell or keep fireworks in wholesale lots, and fl\nfee of one (1) dollar to sell or keep fireworks\nretail lots. Such permits may be at ones re-\nvoked and canceled upon proof of a violation\nof any of the following conditions and regula-\nl*(a)*No firearms prohibited by ths Bureau pi\nCombustibles and Fire Risks shall be kept Ir\nstock, sold or given away.\n(b) No fireworks shall be displayed or sow\nfrom any stand outside the walls of the bulldlni\nfor which permit Is granted.\n(c) Smoking shall not be permitted In an]\nplace where fireworks are sold or kept in stock\nand signs to effect must be displayed lr\none or more prominent places. No matches\nother than safety matches, shall be kept 1*\nstock, sold or given away In any place when\nfireworks are sold or stored.\n(d) Three palls of water shall be kept eonvs\nnlent for quick use In case of fire in every plao*\nwhere fireworks are kept or sold.\nSection 7. No gun. revolver, pistol, cannon o\nfirearm of any description shall be sold or glvei\nto anyone under the age of fifteen years. N<\ngun, revolver, pistol, cannon or firearm of an;\ndescription shall bs sold unless a record of th<\nname and address Of the person to whom euol\nweapon Is sold shall be kept In- a separata bon\nby such selling agent, together with a record o\nthe manufseturer's number or other marks b;\nwhich such weapon may be Identified.\nSection I. No fireworks of any description\nshall be set ofT, discharged or exploded exoep\nupon the legal holiday. July 4, unless a per\nmlt, signed by the Chief of Police and the In\nspector of Combustibles and Fire Risks an*\napproved by the Mayor, shall first bavs beei\nprocured.
7070c34751280e5e0c8f96dd1c0dce33 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.3520547628107 39.261561 -121.016059 ftwada Jlmorrat.\nTine Civil. War.—ll is now idle to inquire\n“who is responsible for all this?” Revolu-\ntions douol move backward. We must direct\nour attention to the dangers of tbe hour.\nShall this bold treason triumph and its ar-\nrogant leaders trample upon the flag and\nthe Constitution of the country, or shall\nthey, through tbe blood and terror of battle\nbe put dowu? If the present Government\nbe overthrown, what is to be established on\nits ruins? Doubtless the conquerors would\ndictate the form and the substance. Can\nthe nation safely trust men with power, who\nlor such slight causes, rebel against the\nmildest authorities? For our own part,\nlaying aside every personal consideration,\nas unworthy a serious thought in a crisis of\ni-ucb moment, we say. emphatically, such\nmeu are not to be trusted, and their trea-\nson should be crushed to the earth with all\nthe speed and force available. And yet,\n(such is the nature of rebellion,) in doing\nthis net of justice, good must suffer\nmore than the wicked who lead them.\nWe do, however, firmly believe that If\nthe whole force of the Government is at\nonce directed against the rebels, tbe war\nwill be ended in three months, peace re-\nstored to the South uml the whole country,\nmid that the outraged people of tbe seceded\nStates will take off' the hands of tbe Federal\nGovernment, the business of banging the\ninstigators and leaders of this treason. No\nreasonable man can believe, after carefully\nperusing the past three months history of\nsecession, that one-half of the people in the\nseceded Slates favor the movement. It has\nbeen in this us in all revolutions : tbe good,\nquiet and orderly citizens have been over-\ncome by the few plotting, reckless and am-\nbilious demagogues among them. The lat-\nter are stone responsible for tbe saddening\ncntaslroplc of tbe civil war which is upou\nus; we wish they alone could be made the\nrecipients of its ills.—[San Andreas Inde-\npendent.
4227b75373dd7f4c14f1f1137982c6cb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.3164383244546 39.745947 -75.546589 (Special to THE EVENING JOURNAL\nPHILADELPHIA, April 26.—The for­\ntieth anniversary of the founding of\nthe house of N. W. Ayer & Son, a lead­\ning advertising agency as well as the\nsuccessor of the pioneer advertising\nagency, was celebrated Saturday night\nat the Bellevue-Stretford by a banquet,\ntendered by the firm to upward of S00\nguests, comprising their 260 odd em­\nployes and the most prominent men\nof tlm country in advertising circles.\nJournalism anà Immense enterprises and\nIndustries In commercial lines.\nThe immense second-floor ballroom\nof the Bellevue-Stralford, beautifully\ndecorated with a profusion of flowers,\nwas taxed to its capacity to accommo­\ndate the large assembly. Perhaps never\nhas there been a gathering so repre­\nsentative of the three forces which\nmake advertising—the advertiser, the\nagent and the press.\nIt would be Impossible to conceive\nof a more fitting Illustration of the\ngrowth of the advertising Idea as a\nbusiness—its Importance as a factor in\nmodern commerce.\nThe history of the firm thus cele­\nbrating Its fortieth birthday Is In It­\nself a classic, recording advertising\n In America. From Its be­\nginning the firm of N. W . Ayer & Son\nhas blazed the way-devolved and im­\nproved methods and established the\nprinciples which have won for It a\nprestige and which, as a composite,\nhave created the principles upon which\nthe best in the entire advertising busi-\nness Is today conducted.\nFour Members of the Firm.\nThe guests at this notable banquet\nwere seated at about nine great tables\n— one table running the entire length\nof the ballroom, and, projecting there­\nfrom, eight prongs, each one over fifty\nfeet long and accommodating over fifty\nguests. At the head table were four\nmembers of the firm—F . Waylnnd\nAyer, Henry N. McKinney, Albert O.\nBradford and Jarvis A. Wood—to­\ngether with the guests of honor.\nFollowing the Invocation, the good\nthings provided were heartily discuss­\ned. During the progress of the ban­\nquet. speech and pleasantry were In­\ndulged, entirely In an Impromptu man­\nner. rendering the occasion still more\nsocial and familiar in Its aspect. There\nwas no formal program of speech-\nmaking.
082eae5855c9cecc88e082a7d2118b04 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1895.1438355847285 43.994599 -72.127742 The Methodist donation visit on\nWednesday eve must have been a fi-\nnancial success On account of illness\nin the family Mr. and Mrs. Minard\ncould not entertain the people and Mr.\nand Mrs John Smith opened their spa-\ncious house, and the way people poured\nin was a caution. Oysters were served,\nalso coflee, cake in fact a good sub-\nstantial supper. The thanks, yea more\nthan thanks, are due Mr. and Mrs.\nSmith from the Methodist society. It\nis no picnic tor people to open their\nhouses to receive such a crowd, and if\ndonations are to merge into a regular\nfirst class supper with all the fixings,\nfor 25c per adult, the owner of a pri\nvate house ought not to be asked nor\nexpected to turn his house into a church\nparlor, ki chen, vestry, play house,\n hall, pandemonium and what\nnot. However everybody had a good\ntime, as they always do when they go\nto John Smith's. There will be a neck- -\nlie sociable at Mr. Banks' Feb. 27 .\nEsicli lady is requested to wear a neck-\ntie and biing one the same as her own\nenclosed in an envelope. IJefreshments\nfurnished in the usual way. Mrs. Joel\nt'utnain was called to attend the funer\nal of her brother's only son, Allie Gove,\n21 ears old, whosperidied in the flies\nwhich consumed their house aiuUul its\ncontents, also their barn, about two\nweeks ago. i he buildings were new".\nhaving been built only four years, and\nwere uninsured. Young Gove went to\nhis room after awakeniug his mother.\nand it is supposed was suffocated or\ndied from excitemont. The origin of\nthe fire is unknown.
3613087f401e61e4517dad84b544c5bc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.028767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 The speculation in the railways on\nour own Stock Exobanuopenea with\nsome spirit after New Year's day, in\nthe upward direction, but the subse¬\nquent movement was strongly bearish,\nand on a moat extensive sculp near tl>e\nclose of the week. In six or eight of the\nNew York and Western stocks. The\nultimate decline,howover, as compared,\nwith the close of the old year, wnalflfw\nimportant than the magnitude of (he\nshort interest created in New York Cen¬\ntral, Cleveland «fc Pittsburgh, Fort\nWayne, Ac. Including the street sales,\nwe estimate that the entire capital ot*\nthe Cleveland <£ Pittsburgh lload, 100,-\n000 shares or $5,300,000 par value, wus\nsold twice over, in the course of the\nlive business days of the week, and\nthe amonnt of New York Central at\nthe command of the Street, (which is\nnever large in proportion to the capital,)\nwas probably doubled by the sales of\nthe week. The in Pitts¬\nburgh, of late, have been singularly\ncontradictory, but on Friday and Sat<-\nurday the eagerness to press short snlca,\nled to the suspicion that certain parties\nnot long since Bulla in the stock, and\nprofitingby the declaration of the Jan¬\nuary Cash Dividend of fonr per cent.,\nand selling out, have reversed their po¬\nsition and now hope to make as much\nmoney as Bears by getting some one to\nvamp np a claim against tho Company\nas a pretext for enjoining their Dividend\nFund in iVoc York. The trick is not a\nnew one, and the plans in.the.present.\ninstance may have been laid with sharp\nand perhaps lawyer-like shrewdness\nbut there is reason to believe that tlie\nproper tool has not yet been found to\n"make the swear." Even if be should\nbe, the exposure of the motives to the\nscheme will doubtless qualify, if not de-\nteat, the intended effect on the market.
04cc1956044854db6427fe2ff7f368eb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 Gillette from a French play, and is a sore\ncnrefordyspepsia, the blues, or anything\nelse on that order, sparkling like cbam-\np»Kne from one end to the other. An\nold reprobate (Wilkinson) marries two\ncharming young wives, and establishes\none in the country and the other in the\ncity, neither dreaming of the other's ex-\nistence. Bye and byo the old scamp 1\ndies, and the young widows marry again\n(still knowing nothing of each other),\nand drift into the same apartment house ]\nin the city, both having a portrait of her\ndeceased husband. A college friond\nmeantime meete one of the husbands,\nand over a convivial bottle of wine nar-\nrates the details of a desperate flirtation\ncarried on three years before with a Mrs.\nWilkinson. The husband naturally\nsupposes that the lady in question was\n wife, and from that beginning a sue- I\ncession of ridiculous mistakes and mis- 1\nunderstandings ensue, which lasts\nthroughout the piece. The two widows '\nare charmingly played by 8usie Thorn-\ndyke and Henrietta Craasmau, both be- 1\ning remarkably handsome, and wearing 1\nso many becoming costumes that one 1\nquite understands old Wilkinson's biga- J\nmous propensities. A special word of '\ncommendation is due Joseph Holland\n(one of the husbands) for bis distinct\npronunciation, rich and well-trained,\nalthough he overacts the lunch scene to\nsome extent, his only fault. The Irish '\nservant girl is admirably done, and is *\none of the most amusing parts in the '\npiece. Evidently "Wilkinson's Widows"\nwill run as indefinitely as "All the Com- 1\nforta of a Home," which is drawing large <\naudiences at Hermann's Theatre.
1bb571b8044dfa370886f2639585d1a6 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.8013698313039 37.305884 -89.518148 over the divide were ambushed on\nmountaiui trails and shot in the back.\nA Tewksbury household was besieged\nby a dozen members of the Graham fac-\ntion, the opposing party. When an old\nman, Al Rose, went out in the early\nmorning for a pail of water, he was\nshot and. killed within 50 feet of the\ndoorstep. And there the corpse lay\nunburied for three days, in the iu'A\nglare of the summer sun. The men\nin the house, stolid in their suffering\nfrom thirst, appealed for permission\nto bury their dead. It was denied them.\nThis is only a fair sample of the many\natrocities that marked the progress of\nthe feud. The Pleasant Valley war\nended only when all the surviving com-\nbatants, together with most of their\nneighbors, were gathered up and taken\nto Presoott by a squadron of Yavapai\nroiinty oflicers. headed by Sheriff Wil-\nliam O'XeKl. t lie same 'Buckey' O'Xeill\nwho was killed before San Juan Hil!\n his troop of rough riders. A\nsoothing influence was also exerted by\nSheriff Commodore Owens, of A.pache\ncounty, who caught four of the sheep\nfaction in a house at Holbrook. The\nfour men, broke from the house by\nfour different routes, through doors\nand windows, hoping to pot the sheriff\nby a divided fire. All alone he calmly\nstarted to pump his Winchester rifle,\napparentlyheedless of the rain of\nlead. When he had finished, the four\nwere dead, and the coo! little sheriff\nhad not a scratch. At the fast only a\nsingle male of the Graham blood re-\nmained alie. He gave up the fight\nand I'ed to the Salt River Valley, where\nhe married and settled down to a quiet\nfarm life. While marketing his first\ncrop of grain he was shot from ambush\nan the road to Tempe. The deed was\ndone by two unmasked horsemen, iden-\ntified by two young women as Ed.\nTewksbury and his right-ha n- d
3532f16657f2e3d54fcf22ec31723b73 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.478082160071 39.261561 -121.016059 Every Intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regulhily educated physi-\ncian, whose preparatory study tits him tor all the\nduties lie must fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cine-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be par\nTKTI.AK in selecting ids physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible tact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nby mat treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nbv the ia'st syphilogiapbers, that the study und man-\nagement oftliese complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would he competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inex|s>rlenced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comonly pursues one system treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMo** caution, however, should be used liv the syph-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest nil large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to cuter their Deter\nFunk “institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury, lersons living at a\ndistance in the country me more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than c'i/.ens .\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J . C. YOt N'G\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advei lising. who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 751 Clay street. opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom 9a. m..to iP. M.
013205769f3c688868ff1cc8a7a26096 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.1191780504819 41.020015 -92.411296 district be repealed, and that hereafter\ntney be selocted from those best fitted,\nwherever found within the State. —\nThe State has now invested in the in­\nstitution the sum of two hundred and\nsixty-nine thousand and five hundred\ndollars, besides the two hundred and\nforty thousand acres of land, donated\nto the State, and by it held in trust for\nthe^ promotion and dissemination of\nagricultural education, and cognate\nbranches of learning. This land is\nworth at a low estimate, one million of\ndollars. All this vast sum of more\nthan a million and a quarter of dollars\nI* entrusted to tho management of a\nBoard of Trustees, who have generally\nboon chosen on account of locality, anil\nby reason of some local political in­\nfluence, or importance. They come\ntogether two or three times a voar.\nspend a day or two, ratify 'he acts of\nthe Executive Committee or President,\ndraw their mileage and go home, with­\nout roally knowing, or caring to know,\nmuch the Inner workings of the\nconcern. It is, however, proper to\nsay, that when the astonishment and\nconsternation created among the mem­\nbers of the present Board of Trustees,\nby the first announcement ot the de­\nfalcation of Major Rankin had passed\naway, it acted with commendable\npromptness and energy. A special\ncommittee consisting of Hon. II. D\nNoble, Hon. O. H. P . Buchanan and\nHon. C. Close, was at once appointed\nand invested with plenarv power to\nproceed to Des Moines, and secure thp\nfund. In performing this delicate and\nresponsible duty they did all that could\nbe done; they settled with Raukin,\ntook his obligation tor the amount of\nthe deficit, and an assignment of all\nhis real and personal property, except\nhousehold furniture. This was done\nunder the advice of the Governor and\nAttorney General—as we understand—\nand the manner and form may be pre­\nsumed to be correct. The following is\na copy of the obligation taken bv them\nat this settlement:
00549c2167f0bd6906f355d06e6f6406 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.6625682743877 39.745947 -75.546589 The currents of the ocean are the great\ntransporters of the suns heat from the tor­\nrid zone to temper the climate of the polar\nregions. It is argued by some that such a\nstupendous change as that which occurred\nin Europe nnd America in the glaaiul\nperioel xviua caused simply by a deflection\nof tlie currents in the northern hem-\nsphere, whereby iu share of tropical heat\nxvas partly diverted toxvard the south.\nIn the three great oceans—the Atlantic,\nthe Pacific and tbe Indiau—there is to he\nfound u similar circulation—a general\nwesterly movement in the tropics, a fioxv\noxx ard tbe poles along tbe eastern shores\nf the continents, an easterly set in the\nemperute zone and a current toward the\nquator along the western shores. This\nystem thus becomes a grand circular\nnovement, some parts being very slow,\ntut still quite coustant, and other parts\ncry sxvift. There arc offshoots here and\nhere, due to local causes, and perhaps \nlie slowly moving current there muy he a\netnpornry interruption, but taken os a\n«hole the movement is continuous.\nTbe part of this citculalion ffowisg\n1 loug Site eastern .coast of tbe United\ntales is the greatest of all these currents,\nml in faet is the most magnificent of all\natures wonders. This Is the Gulf Stream,\nhe name Gulf Stream xvas first suggested\ny Benjamin Franklin, because it comes\n• om the Gulf of Mexico. While it is a\nortion of the grand scheme of ocean cir­\nulation, and the Gulf of Mexico is in\n,-ulity only a stopping place, as it were, for\ns water, the name is generally applied to\nte current when it reaches the Straits of\nloridn, north of Cuba. In the largi\ntnnel shaped opening toward the Gulf of\nlexico the current is at first variable in\nircetion and velocity, but by tbe time\nlavana is reached it has become a regular\naid steady flow.—Detroit Free Press.
0ae2a62c59dc273b765c5314a84ecf09 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.5986301052765 47.478654 -94.890802 WHEREAS, a certain contract in writing\nwas made and entered into between the\nLittle Falls and Dakota Railroad Company, as\nparty of the first part, and you. F . A . Silver as\nparty of the second part, dated the 17th day of\nAugust A. D . IS<K) under and by the terms of\nwhich contract the said Darty of the first part\ncontracted and ugreed to sell to you. the said\nparty of the second part, upon payment by you\nof certain sums of money and the performance\nby you of certain conditions, the following\ndescribed lands, to-wit: Lot live (5) of Sec-\ntion No. 3 in Township No 147 north, of Range\nNo. 32 west of the 5lh principal meridian, said\nlands being situate in the county of Beltrami\nand state of Minnesota: and\nW111'.REAS. default has been made by the\nsaid party of the second part In the perform-\nance of the terms and conditions of the said\ncontr et. in to-wit:\nFailure to make payments in default as per\nterms and conditions thereof: and\nWHEREAS, the Northern Pacific Railway\nCompany, a corporation, has succeeded to all\nthe interest of the said Little Falls and Dakota\nRailroad Company in and to the said contract\nand the premises covered by said contract.\nand Is by the terms of said contract entitled\nto declare a forfeiture hereof, and to declare\nthe same wholly null and void.\nNOW. THEREFORE, you the said F. A .\nSilver are notified that the said Northern\nPacific Railway Company does hereby elect to\ndeclare a forfeiture of the said contract and\nto declare the same wholly mill and void, and\nto cancel and terminate the said contract, and\nthe same is hereby forfeited, canceled and\nterminated, as provided in said contract and\npursuant to f hu statute in such oases made aud\nprovided, and such cancellation and termin-\nation will take effect on the 22nd day of Sep-\ntember IMS.
3ef7ff2f1e25b13ba25c57192380d3d1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9547944888382 39.745947 -75.546589 rlages will meet train arriving at New­\nark at !».» a. m., B. & U., and 11.36, P.,\nB. & W. Railroad.\nSERGEANT- In this city, on December\n14, 1908, Rachael S.. wife of Albert Ser­\ngeant. in her 78th year.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral services at the residence\nof her husband, No. RV Poplar street, on\nFriday\noclock,\ntory.\nG KEEN—On December 13, 1909. Dr,\nCharles Green, aged 61 years.\nRelatives and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funeral services, at his late\nresidence, Greenville. Delaware, on Thurs­\nday afternoon. December 1«. 1909. ut 3\no'clock.\nLOBDELL—In this city, on December\n14, 1909, Adeline Wheeler Lobdell. wld-\n(tiw of George O. Lobdell, aged 92\nyears.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to \ntend the funeral services at her late res\nIdence, No. 13ÜS W. Fourteenth street, on\nFriday afternoon, at 3 oclock,\nment private.\nKindly omit flowers.\nMURPHY—In this city, on December 13.\n1909. Mary, wife of Joseph Murphy.\nRelatives and friends are invited to äf­\nfend the firner»I from Iter late resi­\ndence No. 1K23 West Fourth street, on\nFriday morning at » o'clock. Requiem\nmass at 81. Thomas Church. Interment\nat Cathedral Cemetery.\nCAVANAUGH—In lids city, on December\n12. 1909. Thomas E. Cavanaugh, aged 40\nyears.\nRe'/Ulves. friends and\nCourt Brandywine No. 1, Foresters of\nAmerica, are Invited to attend the fu­\nneral from the resldemeof his brolher-tn-\nlaw. Alfred B. Taggart. No. J1SS Mar­\nket street, on Thursday morning, De­\ncember 16th. at 8 3« o clock. High mass
22e4653ecbbe0dda418e0a099ceeed06 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.0452054477423 40.063962 -80.720915 lowh the better be will succeed. F\nmust be ready at all times to say sorn\nthing inuuy in regard to Smith's gn\ncerv, or to surround MUs Flounce\nuiiiliuery establishment with a halo\nglowing adjectives. He must be ei\nthusiastic on the subject of hams, ve\nttoae In extolling hardware, and high!\nimaginative in the matter of dry good\nHe must feel grateful when invited\ndine at the* Dogsnose Hotel, and write\nglowing account ot the excellence of tl\nhash and the durability of the bee\nMtoak. If he teelsany sense ofuumlli\ntion In sitting down to a festal gatherii\non tho occasion of the presentation\nn s word to Captain Sankopanxy, or\nnet of silver service to ahorse inspecta\nhe must smother it. and revenge hin\n**»lf on the champagne and cigars, fc\nmust affect to believe that he is invitt\niu purely social way, and not for tl\nMake of havius him write a irood a\nfoont ot lh*> ceremonies, with thr\niHtlumnn of speeches la full, for tl\nnext morning's paper. If he lings\nhis* description of Hodge's premiu\nbull, or 'lets down* in winding up tl\noil indications of Shovedvke's farm,]\nmust take it kindly for beiug reprovi\nfor his shortcomings. In the matter\nnhow the local must always be brilliai\nHe must talk learnedly of panorauu\nwith a liberal admixture of knowii\nwords, such as 'warmth,* 'tone,' 4foi\nshortening,* 'highlights,' 'fore-groun«\n'perspective,* etc; he must be heavy\nconcerts, with a capacity to apprecifi\nMim Squawk's execution ot diffiet\nleats in the 'upper register*; he mc\nb*» ecstatic in praise of double-head\ncitlves, and eloqueut in behalf of\nwomen and living skeletons. All th\nand more, it takes to be a 'localV*
1df5d7f89dbe0b9855c226081576bdd3 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1901.23698626966 46.601557 -120.510842 plat thereof on tile in the office of the\ncounty auditor ot aaid Yakima county,\nand upon which I bave paid taxes as-\nsessed against said property as follows .\nTaxes for the years 1890, 18i»7 and I8»f,\namounting to $19.43 , paid on the Jtitl;\nday "f December. 1899; taxes for tin\nyear 1899, amounting to $7 44, paid on\n10th day of November, 1900; taxes for\nthe year 1900, amounting to $f>;!-' . paid\non the 7th day of February, 1901; total\ntnxeß pti'il on account of said certificate\nof delinquency numbered 1061. $32.19; all\nof hhM sums so paid hearing interest at\nthe rate of fifteen per cent per annum\nfrom date of payment, and said certifi-\ncates of delinquency bearing a like rate\nof interMt from date of issue respect-\nively. And vim are further notified that\nI will apply to Superior court of the\nstate of Washington, in and for said\ncounty, for a judgment foreclosing the\nTiens against the property hereinbefore\nmentioned, and you are hereby sum-\nmoned to appear within sixty days after\nthe date of the first publication of this\nsummons, to wit : within sixty day* after\nthe L'lst day of March, 1901, exclusive of\nsaid first day of publication, and defend\nthis action or pay the stoonal due, and\nin case of your failure *<> to do, judg-\nment will he rendered foreclosing saiii\nliens for. certificates >f delinquency.\ntaxes, penalty, interest and costs, against\nthe said lands and preivises hereinbefore\nmentioned, according to the demand ol\nthe complaint herein which has In ci\nfiled with the clerk of the above entitled\ncourt. Any pleading or process may be\nserved upon the undersigned attorney at\nthe address hereafter mentioned.
0b622208ab107ffb3e7f02ba3a5c4e55 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.6479451737696 40.063962 -80.720915 2%c, and advanced to 72%c. Decern\n»er opened at 74V»®74*iC and udvance<\no 74%@74ftc. At these prices a selllnj\nnovement Btarted that was much to»\nleayy for the demand. Desire to tak<\n>rofits was apparently the prlnclpa\nnotive for most of the liquidation but i\nrreat deal of professional selling waj\nlone when It became apparent tha\nvas easily Influenced, and this featun\nif the market was taken advantage o\n>y professional scalpers several tlmei\nluring the day to hammer down thi\n>rice. The result was a decidedly ner\n*ous market for most of the session\nhough trading at no time was real13\nleavy. Private advices in regard to th<\nlorthwest crop conditions were favor\nible and this Influenced some selllni\n'allowing ns the reports did the recen\nomplaints of wet damage\nSeptember declined to 71$*c. and Do\n:ember to 73%iflj737/<iC. The market wn\nallied by the reports of ft good casl\n>uslncs8 and by export engagement o\ntbout fifty loads, but prices were quick\ny hnmmered down again.\nNorthwest receipts were 281 cars\nigalnst 217 last week and 504 a yea\ngo. Chicago receipts were seventy\nhree rnrs, seven of contract grade. To\nal primary receipts were 640.000 bush\nIs. against 857,000 bushels last yeai\nVtlantic port clearances amounted t<\n34,000 bushels. Corrected figures 01\nhe Price Current made the total whea\nrop 50.000.000 more than first announc\nd. This was the cause of a weal\nipot the figures were given out. Thi\nnarket was on the down grade at thi\nlose, September finishing at 71%c an<\nDecember at 73%c.
149b66a009cf09d3ec47a8888be9175f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1898.3986301052764 41.004121 -76.453816 blotter is to be used on a writing tab-\nlet, and the tablet is to be presented\nto the leading hotel and to be kept in\nthe office for the use of guests who\nwant writing material. When there\nis a call for such material, the clerk\nhands the guest this tablet, and when\nhe opens it the advertisements appear\non the blotter before him.\nGreat scheme, and it costs only\nfour dollars a card. Five hundred\nblotters will be printed, which will last\na long time, and the advertiser will be\ngreatly benefitted. The business man,\nespecially if he be one who has never\nspent a dollar in advertising in the\nlocal papers, sees a great thing in this\nproposition, signs an order for the\ncard, and his caller passes on to\nanother victim. After securing orders\n to forty dollars, the stranger\ngoes to a printing office, makes a con-\ntract for printing, not five hundred,\nbut forty blotters, for five dollars.goes\naround and collects his money, and\nleaves town the same night with thirty-\nfive dollars in his pocket for his day's\nwork. The blotters and writing case\nare presented to the' leading hotel,\nlaid away under the counter, and are\nnever seen by a guest of the house.\nNo man could write on such a thing\nif it were given to him. The adver-\ntiser's money is thrown away.\nAnother fake is the railroad time\ntable man, who works about the same\nscheme, gets up a card with timetables\nlon it, and business cards all over it,\nhas about half as many printed as\np.omised, and does not distribute half\nof those.
323f6787cde0a6b981d508636dc3a91e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.2589040778792 41.681744 -72.788147 When the regiment went over to\nEngland in June, 1915, it was pos-\nsible to have him appointed chaplain\nwith the honorary rank of captain.\nThis was very good news to the men\nwith whom he had served for bo long\nand with whom he had won a place.\nIt was always noticed that the squad-\nron to which he was attached had a\nlittle higher physical and moral stand-\nard than other squadrons, largely due\nto his presence in the ranks.\nHe accompanied the unit to France\nand was there met with the order\nthat all chaplains get to keep out of\nthe front lines but this did not deter\nhim, and when the troops to which\nhe was attached took their turn in\nthe front line, he was always found\nwith them. As the relief took place\nat night he would simply mingle with\nthe men whom he knew so well and\nthus escape vigilance of the off-\nicers. When his presence was discov-\nered the next day, it was much sim-\npler to keep him in the front line\ntrench than to send him back over-\nland, where he would have an excel-\nlent chance of being killed.\nHe did this work constantly, and\non June 2, 1915, he was in the front\nline in the Ypres salient when the\nGermans came aver In some force.\nHe saw thorn coming and immediately\ndetached his chaplain's badges from\nhis tunic, picked up a rifle and such\nammunition as he could find and used\nit effectively. When the ammunition\nwas exhausted he used the bayonet\nuntil he broke it. Then he used tho\nbutt of a rifle until it waH smashed,\nand the last seen of him by our forces\nhe was fighting with his fists. He was\nmade prisoner by the Germans and is\nin a Gerinan prison camp today.
37f4bb2c64b731fdad3bc9a79bff9832 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.5356164066463 41.681744 -72.788147 The "property which the committee\nhas considered as the logical location\nis not so easily to be obtained and it\nis reported that the owner will try\nfor a nice profit if its purchase is\nsought. The town would probably\nhave no trouble in taking the place\nregardless of any pecuniary ambitions,;\nwhich its owner would have as It is\nunderstood that the local officials have'\nthe right of condemnation in a mat-\nter of this kind. The affair could not\nbe taken care of by the school com-\nmittee; it would have to be referred\nto a regular or special town meeting,\nin which the body politic would de-\ncide whether or not the priced asked\nby the owner was excessive; and de-\nciding on the former would, vote to\ninstitute condemnation proceedings..\nThis piece of land with the property\nalready offered the school committee\nwould mako not only ideal location\nbut .lso a tract equal to any increased\nconstruction which might he neces-\nsary for some years.\nWhen such changes come in school\nmatters it is understood that local\nmen have the ambition to give the\nyoungsters a playground worthy of\nthe name. The school yard at the\npresent time ia the official playground\nbut it is closed all day Saturday and\nia not fitted up for, any recreaTional\npurposes. Rockwell field is now in\nfine condition and no complaints have\nbeen heard against the children of\nthe town using it. It has an excellent\nball diamond and the Grammar school\nhas been playing all its games there.,\nIt is probable that its use could be\nobtained permanently during school\nsession by the town officials if a new\nschool is built in that vicinity.\nIt is estimated that at least one-ha- lf\nof the children now in school
044550ee4061051532c8d9e683b920f7 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1921.132876680619 34.51147 -110.079609 Mr. E Isel B. Ford, President.of the Ford Motor Com-\npany, gives out the following statement:\n“The price of the FORDSON Tractor has been reduced\nfrom $790.00 to $625.00, effective immediately.\n“Pais price change has been made possible through\nlower costs of materials and the fact that we are now\nlocated in our nsw Tractor Plant with greatly increase\neconomic minufacturing facilities in immediate connection\nwith our foin iry an i michine shops and large blast furna-\nces wlier- iron is poured directly from the ore, giving us\nmaximum efficiency with the power to reduce cost of pro-\nduction, and down comes the price in line with our policy\nto market our products at the lowest possible figure without\njn any way affecting our high standard of quality.\n“We are particularly pleased in being able to bring\nabut tnis big rel in price at this time because the\nfarmjr nee I iall tm help we cen give him and this big cut\nin price will be the m?ais of placing a vainable power unit\nwithin the reach of practically every one of them, not to\nmention industrial and commercial concerns which likewise\nhave benefited through its use and are already realizing.\nto much greater extent, its value as a power and hauling\nunit. But p irtieularly has the FORDSON'Tractor proved\na most valuable faeter in the saving of farm labor, at tne\nsame time increasing the per acre crop yield as well as\nmiking p)S3ible a utilization of previously uncultivated\nland, to say nothing of removing no end of drudgery.\n“Tnere is no question that*the use of machine power\non the farm is the greatest advancement made in the de-\nvelopment of agriculture,
04ee40d29bbd294eea77ac839b66fa3c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.6707649956993 40.063962 -80.720915 The delegates have stood about In\ngroups all day discussing the political\nsituation, the ayaUablllty of candidates,\nthe platform to be adopted, the advls-\nability of making this organization\npermanent and other, kindred ques¬\ntions, ljut little of a definite ..character\nhas crystallzed. The auijgvstlon of\nWatterson for president* which seemed\nto be in high favor yesterday, seems\nto have gained no ground to-day. The\nKentucky delegation Is pledged to\nBtickner for vice president, and the sen-\ntjment seems to be drifting back to the\noriginal ticket suggested at Chicago.\nBragg and Buckner. The Florida dele¬\ngation to-day shook hands across 'the\ncontinent with far off Washington In\nthe person of Hugh Wallace, who last\nnight launched tho Cleveland boom.but I\nthe president's friends In the Interven¬\ning states set their faces strongly\nagainst all such suggestions. Other\nnames put forward secretary J.\nSterling Morton's, Secretary Carlisle,\nGeneral John C. Black of Illinois; Sen-\n. ator Vilas. Senator Palmer, ex-Con¬\ngressman Outhwalte's and there Is\nstill some talk of Senator Gray, of\nDelaware, despite his firm refusal. Gen¬\neral Tracy, of New York, and the Del¬\naware delegation. Comptroller Eckels\nand others cling to the suggestion of\nVilas, but the Wisconsin senator In- I\nslats that the Badger state Is for Bragg\nand that he does not desire the honor.\nThe Illinois delegates say that lite\nnomination of General Black would in¬\nterfere with their local canvass, as\nthey hafe nominated General Black for\ngovernor. David Lawler. of Minne¬\nsota. Is for Secretary Carlisle. The Ken-\ntucklan's name Is received with favor\nbut there Is an under-current of opin¬\nion that the nomination of any one\nconnected with the administration\nwould be unwise.
754900d8c65715bca663ddcb0d8a5684 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.8456283836774 40.807539 -91.112923 And yet, those men who had the documents\nwere coolly voted out, and the others who had\nno evidence of their right to a seat, were voted\nin, and these latter gentlemen gave their com­\nplacent vote for the Sub-Treasury. Here there\nwas a small row, and much noise and confusion\nat one endof the portico, and a crash xchich soun­\nded like a fight; Irut the reporter could not leave\nhis seat; and could not see what was going on.—\nMr Webster stopped, but some one near the melee\ncried out '•go on; nothing's the matter.'\nGentlemen, I do not forget where I am, and\nupon what soil 1 tread. I shall not forget that\nall these questions have been discussed by abler\nheads than I presume to possess. Therefore, I\nshall not do it. The I am happy to say,\nis come for a thorough reformation of all these\nthings. The public mind is pretty nearly made\nupon these points;and we shall now very soon\nbe enabled to settle satisfactorily all the great\nquestions which agitate the country. Cheers.\nI desire to keep within the line of remarks\nwith which I commenccd. The enemy has re­\ntired to his last citadcl; a breastwork of abuse.\nHe has taken a popular name to himself; and it\nis well for him that he did so, for he has no­\nthing else left, cheers and laughter. If you\nask any one of the thinking portion of our op­\nponents, why ho supports the administration,\nhe says, 'Oh, why I'm orthodox—I'm a demo­\ncrat, and I've always been one, and I mean to\nremain one.'
165d243ca527234a035de155fbac9f8b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.4193988754807 40.063962 -80.720915 We were told that the existence of the\ncountry depended on the aecond election\nof Mr. Lincoln to the Presidency, but\nafter Mr. Lincoln's death, which took\nplace in a month, Andrew Johnson pur¬\nsued the opposite policy, and the country\nstill lives. We were told last autumn that\nthe safety of this State depended on\nwhether Mr. Robinson or Mr. Cornell\nshould 'be Governor. We had a change of\nollicera. 1 do not see any particular diff\nerence. The aun risea at the same hour as\nit did last year, and the tidea set in from\nthe sea with the same strength. Fellow-\ncitizens, while we feel the greater or leas\nimportance of this election, let us quit\nthis crisis business, and feel that God\nbuilt this country to have it stand. I have\nmade up my mind that the Almighty's ca¬\npacity to keep this country on ita upward\nmarch does not depend either on the Cia-\ncinnati or Chicago Convention.\nThere ia a vast difference between men,\nbut the difference between the two par¬\nties is the difference between fifty and\nhalf a hundred. Both parties need radical\nreformation, and by the time they are\nfully reformed one or the other will be re¬\nformed out oi existence. But ia there no\nteat? Are we to have no preferences? So\nfar from paying that, 1 declare that the\nman who does not ia not worthy of\nAmerican citizenship. But do not let our\nvote be a blind submission to party wire¬\npullers. Let there be no kneeling to dem¬\nagogic behest. The question with ua all\nnow is who then shall be our next Presi¬\ndent? Firat, he must be a man of good,\nmoral character. Let me aay aa a matter\nof congratulation that the most of the men\nwho are proposed are of high moral char¬\nacter. You and 1 can remember the time\nwhen some prominent among Presidential\ncandidates were libertines aud tiaiub-\nlers and iutemperate. One of our Vice-\nPresidents was sworn in drunk. One of\nour United Statea Secretaries waa carried\nhome from bia otlice in beastly intoxica¬\ntion. The Congreasional Hall has been\ndisgraced at timea by men too intoxicated\nto walk, yet representing Delaware and\nilliuoia aud New York. But the morali¬\nty or immorality of candidates is rightly\nbecoming more aud more a question. It\nmatters not how talented a man is if be is\nhad. Genius is more than stupidity, if it\nmove in the wrong direction. A nation\nof homes needs over it a man who regards\nthe sauticity of the domestic circle. A\nuation of young men looking up for an\nexample needa in ita highest place of hon¬\nor oue whose morality is undisputed. A\nman who cannot govern himselt can not\ngovern forty-four millions.
1cbb5e17ec4500413637abcc39b0c1b4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.5082191463723 41.681744 -72.788147 London, July 5. Gen. Jan Chris-\ntian Smuts, premier of the Union of\nSouth Africa, left for Ireland last\nnight and was expected to arrive in\nDublin early today. It was under-\nstood here this morning that the pur-\npose of his visit to Ireland was to con-\nfer with Sinn Fein and Unionist lead-\ners of south Ireland preliminary to\nthe resumption of their conference\nnext Friday. The Unionists and Sinn\nFeiners held a brief meeting in Dub-\nlin yesterday, and reports received\nhere indicated that they had reached\nan understanding as to matters to be\ndiscussed at future conferences.\nThe Dublin conference was the out-\nstanding feature in London newspa-\npers . this morning, yearly all treating\nit sympathetically and expressing\nhoje that it would lead to peace in\nIreland. Comment on the meeting,\nhowever, was not devoid of remarks\nthat the conference did not affect the\nprogram of the Sinn Fein guerilla\nwarfare crown forces there.\nSir James Craig, premier of Ulster,\nleft Belfast for London today, and it\nis pointed out he will have abundant\ntime to confer, with members of the\ngovernment and others whom he Tnay\ndesire to consult, pending a decision\nby Eamonn de Valera respecting the\nproposed conference of Irish leaders\nwith Mr. Lloyd George.\nEarl Middleton. one of the foui\nsouthern Unionists who took part in\nyesterday's conference at Dublin arr\nrived in England last night and it is\nassumed he intends to confer with\npoliticians here during the interval\nbetween resumption . of the Dublin\nconference on Friday. Earl Middle-to- n\nwhen interview at Holyhead, de-\nclined to talk of the proceedings ct\nthe conference saying the participants\nmutually had agreed to say nothing\nfor publication at present, adding\nthat,, as far as he, personally, was\nconcerned, he would say there was no\nrason to be dissatisfied with the\nprogress made.
f8505c1f7f1bd579e0691a3aa4857c10 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.932876680619 41.681744 -72.788147 The Bambler (earn after trailing\ntho Pioneers In the Y. M. C. A. Sa\nturday Afternoon leoguo throughout\nthe game staged a last minute rally\nIn the last minutes of tho second\nperiod tying the score ut 19 all only\nlofilng tho opportunity to win when\nMorrelll of the Pioneers in the last\n10 seconds of play 'threw a neat goal\nthat had all the earmarks of u horse-\nshoe shot but nevertheless put tho\ngame on lee for his team.\nThough the Kamhlers were defeat-\ned by a close margin their team and\npass work proved fifty per cent bet-\nter than last week and the team will\ncontinue to Improve and give the\nrest of the teams in the league a\nwarm reception in opening games of\nthe second round of play. \nand Walthers scored most of the\npoints for tho Pioneers with Nelson\nand McArthur ringing tho hoop the\nmost number of times for tho\nRambler's. Both teams were away off\nwhen It came to free tries for tho\nIron circle, the Pioneer caging only\none goal in 11 tries and the Kamblers\n,1 out of 7. Harry Ginsberg though\nsporting a pair of mean dogs made\ntho remark before the match that he\nwould last only about 1ft minutes,\nHarry however manuged to stick\nthrough two periods and came out of\nthe battle in Al condition.\nLeonard Nixon, secretary of the\nState Board of Approved Basket Ball\nOfficials officiated at both games. Mr.\nNixon handled the games efficiently\nkeeping tho players going at top\nspeed besides making his decisions\nclearly and decisively.
1ca2fc989cc429fdad7e5ed293941e98 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.8346994219287 42.217817 -85.891125 With all the wealth of England, and\nthe general prosperity which now pre-\nvails there, the condition of certain\nclasses of the population is really dis-\ntressing to contemplate. A Liverpool\nphilanthropist, Mr. Simpson, who takes\na keen interest in the laboring poor,\nhaa lately instituted some inquiries\namong the seamstresses, and the result\nis startling. The best paid among them\nare the cloak makers, and yet the wages\nof such a one for a day's work of twelve\nhours is only twelve shillings per week.\nFor plain machine sewing tho pay is\nbut seven shillings per week for a day's\nwork of eleven hours. A seamstress\nmaking boys' jackets receives five pence\nfor iour of them, which is a good half\nday's work. One old woman, after\nforty years' practice, earns ono shilling\naid six pence in live days. And there\nare '.till more wretchedly remu-\nnerated. Tho price for making three\ndozen of men's j ants is three shillings.\nBy working steadily for eighteen hours\nhalf a dozen may be finished in a day.\nIn reply to Mr. Simpson, one of these\nunfortunate pantaloon makers stated\nthat she had to furnish tho silk and\nthread herself. Another seamstress,\nwho sews linen cutis and collars, earns\nlive pence a day in ten hours' work. A\ncorrespondent of the Liverpool Albion\nconfirm", from personal investigation,\nthese statements, and adds a descrip-\ntion of the places in which many of\nthese working women labor. In a cellar\neighteen feet long and fifteen wide, nine\nfeet under ground, ho found five ma-\nchines and eleven people at work. This\nis the way in which many feeble women\n''live" in Liverpool, one of the wealth-\niest cities on earth.
25ed48ac9f76a32cc6d4a13dc33978a5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.2336065257539 40.063962 -80.720915 then and now a Senator of the United\nStates, acting ond speaking in\ntheir bphalf, presented a copy of <\nthe proceedings of the Convention,\nand addressed the President of 1\nthe United States in a speech, J\nof which a copy, according to a publish- {\ned report of the same, and, as the re- i\nepondent believes, substantially a cor- J\nrect report, is hereto annexed as a part\nof this answer, and marked "Exhibit\nC." That thereupon, and in reply to\nthe address of said Committee by their\nChairman, this respondent addressed 1\ntbe said Committee so waiting upon \\\nhim In one or tbe rooms of the Execu-\ntlve Mansion; and this respondent be-\nlieves that this, his address to said\nCommittee, is tbe occasion referred to\nin the first specification of the tenth\narticle; but this respondent does not\n that the passages therein set\nforth, as if extracts from a speech or\naddress of this respondent upon said\noccasion, correctly or justly present his\nspeech or address upon said occasion;\nbat. on the contrary, this respondent\ndemands and insists that ir this honor- <\nable Court shall deem the said article\nand the said first specification thereof\nto contain allegation oi matter cogniza-\nble by thiB honorable Court as a high\nmisdemeanor in office, within the in-\ntent and meaning of the Constitution\nof the United States, and shall receive\nor allow proor in support of th« same,\nthat proof shall be required to be made\nof tbe actual speech and address of this\nrespondent on said oocasion, which\nthis respondent denies that said article\nand specification contain, or justly\nrepresent.;\nAnd this respondent, further answering\nthe tenth article and the specifications thereor,
0b03489e7991fa8c5451c287074fdd98 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1868.8265027006173 41.262128 -95.861391 AtkinwaTa ingenuity and inw-tate-\nmenta will uot help Uve laid estitua-\ntion in which tiie pwiplu hold thu\nparty in power. After a pol ticul\nptrty has confessed its corruption, it\nis not within the power of a single\nmember of it to prove it to be pure.\nThe blunders, and errors,snd false­\nhoods of Atkinson were partially\nexjvo^ed In thtiftnancial columns of\nthe Time* on ^atuniay. Douiitless\na uiore crititial examination of hi*\nsiK<eeh woui«l reveal many mistake\nanil some faiseh«K»d> not hitlicrto\npointed out. Tiio^e, however, which\nhave l>cen exprwed abuntlantly war-\nrnrt the conclusion that tiie\nwas intended to U* a whHewaahing\ndocument, atvi th it, in tiie artHnxf*\nment uf its statistics, the purpose\na*as to deceive and mislead.\nAlbeit he l« a RMliml, there Is\nnot a in the United bf&tm\nwhich luis ss|Sikeu more kiudly aod\nrespeetfoHy of Hon, i>uvid Welis,\nCommissioner of luternsl Revenue,\nthan tlw Chicago Tim**. We have i ***• •«\n>4up|)0sed him to lie an honest ami i\nable man, aad ott® who attended j\ns'rictiy to the duties of his office.\nOf iate, however there have been'\nbrought to light several eireum?* so-;\ncaa, to show that Mr. Weils is busy |\nLvxuxictiug 8tati.- s«ic8. and hbluing ,\nothem to com-ot. -t them, to shield the j\nJacobin party in this Prs*Htdenfial ]\ncamttaisrn from the charge* of cur-1\nrupri-iii arid rottennesi whh h that J\nSrtv has again an-i again mmfem&ti,|\nte tietftand for reftwria and ecooo j\nmy iii the latest Jacobin national 1\npm<jlW"ii> is in Met a o&ttfession of i\nanrraption. Atkin«m
002046a137e67986eca99e8702747453 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1850.7767122970574 35.780398 -78.639099 appointed, who are the first to cry aloud for the\ngetting up of memorials and petitions to Con-\ngress for the repeal of the law by which such\nofficers are allowed ? Is a College granted a\nloan by the State, who are the first to create a\ngreat noise about the " union of Church and\nState," and demand a repeal of the law grant\nmg the loan ? Does the Legislature engage in\na great system of State improvement, and in\nvest therein a portion of the public funds in\ncarrying it out, who are the first and loudest in\ndemanding a revocation of the contract ? Is a\nreligious or charitable institution incorporated\nby our Legislatures, from whom proceeds the\ngreat lamentation, that our civil and religious\nliberties are about to be wrested from us, and\nwho make doleful appeals to the people to rise\nup in opposition to these laws, and by memori-\nals, petitions and rcmonstances, endeavor to\nprocure their repeal ? Who, we ask, but the\nvery class of men mat are denouncing the Sons\nof Temperance because they are in of a\nchange in some of our laws, which are carry-\ning death and destruction through the land, and\ntherefore branding them as being disorganize!\nand as being dissatisfied with the government\nunder which they live? If they posses the\nright to seek redress through memorials and\npetitionsTagainst laws which are 'repugnant to\ntheir notions of propriety, without incurring\nany unpatriotic odor, may not ire, as citizens\npossessing the same rights and privileges, exer- -\nthc same prerogative, without expatriating our\nselves ? It is the opinion of most bisots. that\nthose who do not think with them, are the most\ndangerous of men and will not da to be trusted.\nBut if their opponents seek to procure an ob\nject through the very same channel which they\nnave marked out tor themselves to prevent it,\nthere certainly can be no great criminality in\nthe means employed, or else both come in for\na share of the obloquy. If the Temperance\nmen should memorialize the Legislature upon\na subject, and their opponents should send up\ncounter memorials, would not the means em-\nployed be precisely
10fee2ecf1ddba6d533e2c30d7054d75 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.015068461441 39.261561 -121.016059 SHERIFFS SALE.—.By virtue of a Decree\nand order of sale to me directed and issued out of the\nHon. District Court of the 14th Judiciat District in and for\nNevada county and State of California, on a judgment ren-\ndered in said Court, on the 5th day of January, A. D . 1858,\nin favor of EDWARD KKI>KY and*against U. S GREGORY\nAdministrator of (he estate of JOHN YATES, decd. , DA\nV1DS. TA1 .1 .MAN and JOSEPH B. YATES , for the sum of\ntwo thousand three hundred dollars, principal debt, with\ninterest on the saia sum of $2,800 at the rate of ten per\nceut per annum from the rendition of judgment until paid,\ntogether with $15 costa of suit, for the sale of the following\ndescribed property, to wit : All that certain lot or parcel of\nground together with the brick store hou*e thereon, said\nlot and situated on the north side of Commercial st.\ntown of Nevada and county aforesaid, beginning next we*t\nof the brick store house now ow ned by Rosenheim k Bio.\nrunning west ou Commercial street 18 feet, thence north\nat right angles 54!{ feet, thence east 1S>£ feet, thence to\nthe place of beginning 5b feet, together with all and singu-\nlar, the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances\nthereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining\nNotice is hereby given that I will expose to public sale\nall the above described property to the highest bidder for\ncash, in front of the Court House door in the city of Neva-\nda, on Tuesday the 26th day of January, a . d. 1858, be-\ntween the hours of 10 oclock a. x. and 4 oclock r. m, to\nsatisfy and pay said judgment.\nGiven under my hand this 5th day of January, 1858 .
0c9d76bef00fe468938d6399ac79f4b6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.864383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 time, say at 8 26, it will be almost an\nimpossibility for the p\ndistribute ä large mail\npeople here are wondering what is to be\ndone. The general sentiment Is that the\nmail should be sent down the road on the\ntrain which passes here at 6.40 p m., so\nthat the towns below here might also\nhave a general delivery at night. Say\nwhat you please about the progress of\nthe postal facilities, the stern truth Is\nthat the mall facilities of this Peninsula\nare miserable. While little cross roads\ntowns in Pennsylvania and other states\nhave two and three malls each way a\nday, there are flourishing centres down\nthis state that have but one. Take any\ntown below Harrington on either road—\nLaurel, Georgetown, Milford, Seaford, or\nany on the list if you want to reach\nthem to day you must mail your letter by\n0,49 a. ra. Why the evening mail cannot\ncome down early enough to reach these\ntowns is a question that is agitating\nevery community on the line, and as at\nleast a dozen Doverltes made the request\nlast night your correspondent asks the\nEvening Journal to agitate it.\nIn the Superior Court yesterday but\nlittle was done beyond going over tie\ntrial list. The Tatem desertion esse was\nsettled by the young huxband privldlng a\nhome for his wife and babe.\nA lady named Massey, residing near\nDover, gave birth to a fifteen pound babe\nyesterday morning, which was still born.\nGeneral Armstrong and Lieutenant\nBrown stopped here yesterday on their\nway to Laurel. They are on a tour of\ninspection.
107ad6538661a06f57bcbc7c9cec3615 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1899.2808218860985 39.756121 -99.323985 above entitled action, in and by too aoove named\nCourt, aud ot an order of sule Issued on said\nJudgment, to me directed and Uelivered, 1 will on\nMonday, May I, If'.W, ut tbe hour of 2 o'clock p. m.\nof said day, at ile vast door of the court house,\nIn I'billlpsuurK, iu tue county ot Phillies, State\nof Kansas, oiler ut puolic sale aud sell io the\nhighest Idder for cash in hand, the following\ndescribed real property, viz: the west half of\nthe southwest quarter and tbe southeast quarter\nof the southwest quarter and the southwest quar-\nter of the southeast quarter of section nlu (91,\ntownship two (it) rauge seventeen (17i, all In the\ncounty of Phillips, state of Kanasas; Hrst ofering\nfor sale and selling tbe south sixty acres of the\n half of the southwest quarter, ami the\nsoutheast quarter of tbe aoutnwest quarter and\ntbe soutbwest quarter ot tbe southeast quarter of\nsection nine (0), townBhip two t2). range seven-\nteen (17), in PbilUps county, Kansas, and it same\ndoesn't bring eutneient to satisfy tbe claim )f tne\nplaintiff and tbe claim of the defendant, i ad all\ncosts herein, you will immediately oiler for aale\nand sell tbe north twenty acres of the wei-- t half\not tbe eoatbweet quarter of said lection nine 101,\ntowDshlp two W. range aeventeen (17), in biUlps\noooiitT, Kansas. Said property baa been levied\non and la te be sold as tne property of thd above\nnamed defendants.\nDated Ibis 30th day of March A. D. 1S09.\nW. T. cOWAN, Sheriff Phillips County.\nB. FRANK STINBON, Att'y for Pl'tff
1db41928b900bfde67a7e9698bd51535 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.7794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 We call attention to a Philadelpb\nJispatch on our first page annonncii\nthat President Johnson has formal\ninbmitted to his Attorney Genei\ncertain qneations in regard to the leg!\n[ty of the present Congress, it seei\nbe desires to know whether it is "sua!\nCongress as the Constitution requires\nwhether "existing circumstance wou\n'justify the President in sending!\n'next annual message" to it: ai\nwhether he would be warranted In to\nng steps "to secure the assemblage 01\nconstitutional Congress."\nIf this news is' reliable, and i\nlardly think itis, it Is the moat m\nnentous tidings we have published\niny time dnring or since the war.\njetokens a bold determination on ti\npart ol the President to carry i nto efle\nlis suspected programme of recogi\nting the rebel States as entitled to re\nesentntion in Congress without ai\njonditions whatsoever. As such it\nwell to alarm the peop!\nUntil, however, we know more abo\nthe authenticity of the news, we shi\nrefrain from extended comment.\nP. 8 . .Since writing the above, t\nhave received a dispatch direct fro\nWashington, positively1 denyii\nthat there is any truth whatever in t\nPhiladelphia news. We are glad to\niblo to send out the contradicts\nUong with the report. We could n\nrelievo it true, and we rejoice to be a\nmred that It is not. There is, howevi\nsomething connected with the origin\nion of news, so circumstantial in 1\nJetaila, that is unusual, and that stil\nnotwithstanding the denial of Its a\nthenticity, is calculated to leave tl\nmind of the conntrv in a disturbed at\nloubtful condition. It accords wi\nho distrust raiid suspicions that &\nrohnson'a late reckless and disgracef\nit to ranees aroused in the minds of s\nefleeting people.
03d5d0808704d16fa53b80a3a5ed27ee THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1885.03698626966 37.561813 -75.84108 lo rally rapidly nnd interxeuo actively in\nreinforcement, ot the omcers oi the law.\nA limited or iittalilled power miulu also\nuixon to the (iovernor to oiler rewards tor\ntho arrest and punishment of criminal\nwhere the local authorities neyleet this duty.\nsuch rewards to be paid out of the treasury\nol the mil uicipal ti v or count v\nI renew the recommendation of my special\nmessauc of April .., isM. that some provision\nbe made tori lie widowed mother oi upturn\nJohn J. Desmond, killed xvhtie in tho dis- -\nchuiRo ol his dutv durinur the t incii:uati riot\nIhiritur the same disturbance, Israel S. (iot\na private in the rourteeiith I'ejnmcnt, lost\nhis life bv the accidental dischunre of a rifle.\n.losise P. lirush. h private In the Seventeenth\nIteiriment. killed in like manner while in\ntin set vice of the State in the Hoekinu: Val\nlev. and Km i I Kern, a private in the Ktirhth\nItoRimont. died id' t phoid fever, contracted\nduritiR the same service. At Ashland, several\nmen were disabled by pistol tiud run snots\nand blows from brickbats and stone, wh.le\non dutv ut the execution of Horn and ti rib\nbon. 1'or these and other like cases as thoy\nmay occur hereafter, 1 Invoke tho protecting\ncare of the (ieneial Assembly. The officers\nand men ol Iho Ohio National Guard are en\nlisted for five x ears they arc soldiers who\nporlorm delicate and dangerous duties, and\nIhev ouirht to he pensioned, ami their do\npendent relatives provided tor in case of per\nsonal m hi rv or death.
304f069f884954a521d105a2fd853d12 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.0534246258244 44.939157 -123.033121 A numbor of toasts woro responded\nto in a happy manner by II. W. Stone,\ngeneral secretary of Portland; Mr. Mc-\nCoy, of San Francisco; John Fechtor,,\nE. J . Hendricks and Hon. T . B. Kay.\nTho concluding part of tho evening's\nprogram was by no means tho least in-\nteresting,, it being a faculty of Mr. Mc-\nCoy to talk in a. suporbly entertaining\nmnnuor, and his 32 years of experi\nence in thus lino of work gives him a\nhoard of knowledge of tho work ac\ncompiishod. Ho spoko of the first or\nganization of tho work in London 60\nyears ago by a young business man,\nshowing tho picturo of tho room in\nwhich it was started, and said tho rea-\nson of tho rapid growth and substan-\ntial development of tho Y. M C A.\nwork was owing to its having boon or-\nganized by a business man on a busi-\nness basis and with business princi-\nples. Tho men who take tho greatest\ninterest in tho work and who aro at\ntho head of itaro business men! Ho\nalso spoko extensively of tho work be-\ning dono in foreign countries, especial-\nly in China and Japan, and of tho ef-\nfect it has ,ou tho men who conio in\ncontact with it. Tho first organization\noffectod in Amorica was at Montroal,\ntho second at Boston, there being but\na fow days difforonco in tho dates. In\ntho past six years tho work has grown\nmoro extensively in this country than\nin tho 47 years preceding, and now\nthoro is cstimntcd to bo 1800 associa-\ntions in tho United States.
211eb471dc0ec7045fa8b396b5822879 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.4671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 Young Ocr\\tlemen of the Graduating t\nClass and Corps of Cadets ofthe United a\nStates Military Academy :\nWe ai*e gathered together on an occa- a\nslon of peculiar interest and cacredneua. t\nThe liroaHroriJ-fitom youth to the-ur- c\ngencies of manhood is always a crisis c\nin .which "Chp mind looks a fore and t\nafter/1 with 'hope's' and memories, i\nThere is * kind of. solemnity in this\nhour.y Yon remember with what ela- s\ntion you have anticipated the fancied t\nJoys of the time of your graduation; and s\nnow that the moment' lis come, you are o\nsaddled and subdued. And.you will ^\nremember this parting? when you are t\ngrown older, with reflections caught c\nfrom the viciftsitudee"Jdf life, ip which e\nthe images1 of-yotii1 conVpanibtta and \nyour, personal experiences will again t\ntake the ahapea of ahadowa... In this g\npresent interval of- intense oonsoious- a\nne&a the1 past and the future may be t\nburled; but both will have a resurrec- d\ntion so soon as this critical living hour n\nis dead. What, then, does the. past re- *\nveal?, It tells of acadepslo ihstrad^n\nand of knowledge, amid scenes both F\nhistoric and magnificent. Here, on the f\nsnot consecrated by the traditions of r\nthe Revolution, our fathersl|ved. Hero n\nthe bluck crime of .tx&uton watt uo- t\nmasked and cursed forever. Here the F\nvirtues of .patriotism, honor, honesty -U\nand' truth have been inculcated and o\nevinced. Yonder bills have echoed a\nback no sound but that of loyalty and tj\nlaw;'
395b1bb67ab363d4d1ced4962d329bf1 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.1109588723998 41.020015 -92.411296 Yesterday about 3 o'clock i\\ >•., No.\n3 passenger train on tho Chicago &\n•Southwestern Railroad, collided with\npassenger train No. -lata curve, one\nand one-half miles cast of Eldon,\nBoth engines were smashed to\nsmithereens, the tender of one telo-\nescoping the baggage car, pnssing halt\nway through it. Twelve or fifteen\npasscngors were more or less bruised,\nand some had ribs and limits broken,\nbut none were fatally injured. The\ntwo engineers, Messrs Khodcs and\nRice, wcro pretty badly injured. Tho\naccident is said to havo been caused\nby the negligence of Conductor Fox.\nwho had received a dispatch to wait\nat. Eldon until the other train passed,\nbut as it was thirty-five minutes until\ntho other train was due, he concluded\nthat ho could make the next station.\nSuch criminal disregard of orders\nshould be severely punished.\nA NICE HOVE.—Wo recently were\nshown through Dan. Eaton's new resi­\ndence at the corner of Green and Jef­\nferson streets, and thiuk a perfect\nmodel for convenience and comfort.—\nThe Yankee ingenuity of Dan is shown\nin every crook aud corner about the\npremises. He has it so arranged that\nthere is wash stands in all the chambers\nfrom which by simply turning a fau­\ncet, you can draw hard or soft water,\ncold or hot. as you like, :is you can also\nin tho kitchen, dining room and hath\nroom. The bouse is heated from top\nto bottom with a Boynton furnace,and\ntaken altogether is one of the best ar­\nranged dwellings in the city. In the\n•sitting room he lias nn open grate and\nhas it so arranged that tho ashes, in­\nstead of being taken up with a shovel,\ndrop into the cellar furnace flue, and\nare carried out at the same time that\ntho Hue is cleared, thereby saving tho\nhousekeeper a dirty job every winter\nmorning. When wo bnild again we\nwant Dan to be our architect,\nScissom.vos from the O«kaloosa\nHerald:
559fac786c2e1c85b1ee0a2c58154b66 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.3383561326739 39.261561 -121.016059 ng in sight of us, in full sympathy with the\nFederal authority, and now haying num-\nberless corpH of voluuteers forming in her\nprincipal towns to meet the requisition of\nPresident Lincoln, may throw reinforce-\nments rapidly - into the city to aid the\nUnionists in a struggle. On the opposite\nhand, we have a Secession Governor, and\nLegislature favoring secession per se, and\nconstantly exercising their brains how to\ncapture • the arsenal, and thus imitate\ntheir models of the far South. They have,\ntoo, a corps of desperate partisans in our\nmidst and a Secession police and Police\nCommissioners, who have unlimited and ar-\nbitrary authority in the city. They know\nthat the State is without arms for the com-\ning struggle, and that with the possession\nof the arsenal and its supplies she\nwill be all powerful. There is therefore\nthe strongest possible incentive to tuke it,\nand the Union party of the city have no as-\nsurance against a complete expulsion from\ntho State, unless the place is retained in\nFederal possession. St. Louis has the ma-\nterial and the incentive for a fiercer and\ndeadlier struggle In her midst than any oth-\ner State iu either of the contending sec-\ntions. A rumor falsely circulated to the\neffect that an order had arrived from the\nWar Department to put 6,000 muskets at\nthe disposal of the Union party, created the\nmost intense excitement. It was only al-\nlayed by a committee of citizens who called\non the commanding officer, and received\nhis word of honor that the rumor was un-\ntrue in every respect.
0341ed915c2cc3d47864149900d16b50 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1898.7821917491121 39.756121 -99.323985 Baron Hill and Yorktown were scenes\nof his exploits on the field. Ills nld\nto America, however. In this trying\ntime was not confined to valor alone.\nHe was instrumental in securing the\npatriots success In a more material\nway. Through him It was mat tne\nalliance with Frnnce wa finally se\ncured which brought the turning point\nof the revolution. Ln Fayette, by his\ninfluence in Paris, (lid possibly more\nthan nny other ngency to Induce the\nFrench king to take up arms with us\nngalnst tyrannic England. It was\nthrough La Fayette's ngency also that\nthe colonics secured that famous loan\nof 27,000 .000 livres from the French\ngovernment, of which that nntion said\nlater in regard to its payment: "Of the\n27.000,000 we have loaned you we for\ngive you 9,000 ,000 as a gift of friend\nship, nnd when with the years there\ncomes prosperity you pay the rest\nwithout Interest."\nWashington's friendship for La\nFayette continued throughout life,\nand formed one of the greatest exam\npies of mutual attachment in the his\ntory of grent men, and both he nnd\nhis successors until the death of La\nFayette let no opportunity posa to\ndo the noble Frenchman honor. Lpon\nthe occasion of his visit to this coun\ntry after American Independence hnd\nbeen gained he was met with mani-\nfestations on the part of the people\nunparalleled in the records of appre\nelation of a nation. When he returned\nlo these ihorei in 1824 congress gave\nhim an official reception in the hall\nof representatives, and the people con-\ntended with the horses for the honor\nof drawing his carriage. Congress pre-\nsented him with an appropriation of\n$200,000, a township of land, built and\nnamed in his honor a man-of- wa- r .
0d143044542b09707c9b01445f99bf95 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.891780790208 40.419757 -77.187146 vance, Smith rode a horse length or two\nbehind him, and Sheriff Yule rode in\nthe rear. The first streaks or daylight\nwere making their appearance as the\nparty came lu sight of the camp fire by\nthe roadside. Involuntarily they slack-\nened their speed, aud just as they did so\nthe figure of a man was seen to desceud\nfrom the left bank aud move Into the\nroad. It was clearly the intention of\nilils person to hail them, and they ad-\nvanced slowly and cautiously. There\nwas not enough light to make his feat\nures distinct, and he evidently failed to\nrecognize the approaching horsemen,\nfor he stood In the middle of the road,\nand as Albright drew up to him asked\nfor a match. Smith, who, as has been\nsaid, rode close behind Albright, recog-\nnised in the indistinct form the murder-\nous Itallau, and riding his horse close up\nby the side of him said, "Hello Pete."\nThe Italian started, but recognizing in\nSmith a fellow workman, replied " hel\nlo," and extended his hand, which\nSmith grasped with a tight grip, calling\nout at the same moment to Sheriff Yule,\n" cover him George, this is the man!"\nThe Italian held his shot gun loosely in\nhis left hand, and In his right hand car.\nried a rabbit. His pistol, the plBtol with\nwhich he had shot Col. was\nstuck in his belt. He was dressed in a\ncanvass suit, aud wore a soft black hat\nAt the words of Smith Sheriff Yule In\nstantly covered the miscreant with a\nColt's " forty.five," and then riding up\nto him deprived him, by a single wrench\nof his shot guu. The Italian was at first\ndisposed to make fight, but seeing that\nhe was outnumbered, submitted to be\nsearched. The pistol was taken from\nhis belt and in his pocket was found $48.\nHe was then made to mount behind Al\nbright, and Sheriff Yule and Smith\nplacing themselves close behind where\nthey could see every motion, the journey\ntoward Gunnison was begun\nIt was broad daylight when the party\ncame in Bight of the Hoblitzell camp\nThey approached it cautiously, fearing a\ndiscovery of their prisoner. Groups of\nexcited men were Been standing iu the\nroad as they reached the summit of a\nhill commanding a full view of the camp,\nThere was nothing to do but make a run\nfor it. Albright plunged the spurs into\nthe side of his mule and the sheriff and\nSmith keeping close behind, the danger\nous gauntlet was successfully run. The\ncrowd of angry men at the camp were\ntaken too much by surprise to do any\nthing. The three animals and four men\nhad passed them before they recognized\nthe Italian.
03a048bd23af809334a6d73242719142 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 beginning at 9 o'clock A. M ., toll at public auction\nat tho front door of tho Court llou*e of Ohio (/ouutr'\nWest Virginia, tho tract of Und belonging to tha\nNorthwest Virginia Aarlcultural Society, known *«\ntho OLD FAIR GBOUSD PROPERTY, iltutiyj o«\nWheeling Inland, north of Zane street, and writ of\nNorth Huron street, and containing, when mtu'\nurod to the top of the river bank, twenty-two and\ntwelvo hundredths acre#. Tho tract extendi, and\nwill bo aold, fully to tho river *"ua\nUnder tho authority of said decroo, the aald com*\nmlialonorahavo caused tbo property tobo divided\nloto parods, and havo laid off street* and allev.\nthrough tho aarno. A plat showing tho arrange,\nwent of blocks, lots, streeta nud alleys, has been\nprepared, and may be seen at tho olBcoof (icon\nHook, Clerk oi the County Court oi Ohio Count?\nPrinted copies ol aald plat may, ou aud after Oct£\nbor 1st, bo had of tho undersigned,\nTho property will flrat bo oflorod as a whole,\nafterwards In blocks, and then In lots, as ihowu on\nIwinlat* uiul will lui Milil II wlilrti«*n>\n the moat Advantajtoou*. wheu om>rcd in\nblock*, tho block* numbered 8 and C may bo otTur.\ned together, m ono pared. When offered In lou\ntwo coutlguou*' lot* may bo oflbrod together.\nbidder* *o. dcilro II the whole tract bo aold to\nono purcha*er, tho atrect*. alley* *nd lot* mar u\ndl*reg»tded. Ho, lit *uch c**o, become* tho nur.\nchaaeroftho atrectH nud alloy* within tho bound,\narlos of tlie tract. II a»y block bu sold aoparatei*\nto ono purchaser, ho, of caurao, in*y dlirvcard tho\nlot lino* within tho block, but alloy* muit bu\nopened. If tho block* numbered 5 ami 6 bo lold\ntogether to ouo purchaser, the. aircct rumilng be.\ntweonsald block*, nud tUo alley running through\nblock ft, may bo dl*rfganled. at tbo election oliuch\npurchaser, to bo mado and declared at tho tlmo of\ntho purchano. If bo »o clect* to dUrfgard, (and\nclose) aald atroct aud alley, thon llio soutli end o!\nauld*troct where it pawes through blojk 7, front,\nlug on Zino alroet, and extending north totbu\nalloy parallel with Zauo street, will bo »old a* a lot.\nor lot*.
1768ea944aa7574dcf3eee686f3086a4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.001369831304 40.063962 -80.720915 Cincinnati, December 81..'Tho dam- m\nage roughly estimated ns caused at this\npoint, is put at from $150,000 to $200,000. bt\nThere is about 19 feetol a depth ol water, at\nThe flow ol ico slacked about 5 o'clock E\nthis evening, then an hour later common- tii\nced running again, bnt at 0 o'clock the ol\nrapid rising of tho river and retarded\nmovement of tho ico, indicated a gorge pi\nbelow at tho mouth of the Great Miami, pi\nTho chief loss is in coal barges torn loose pa\nat the lower landing, and carried down It\ntho river and probably sunken. The lei\nFilth street lorryboat has been torn loose co\nand taken down the river since dark; her c.\\\nlate is not known. The stern wheel\nsteamer Kate Putnam, was struck at 7 m\nnVWIr nml anntr in tlii» wwtnr In linr hi\ncabin. Sho valued at $15,000, and to\nowned by Capt. Drown; insured lor $0,000\nin Cincinnati and Marietta offices. The T1\nsteamer Daniel Boone has been crowded\naBhorc by the Ohio No. 4, and her cabin Li\nutterly swashed to splinters by the upper\nguards of the latter; damage $2,000. Tlio lai\nstern wheel steamer Messenger, worth hij\n$9,000, had one of her engines badly dam- tal\naged by being crowded by boats lying So\nalong side or her near the current of at\nthe river. Kitty Ileglor has been shoved W\nashore, but tho rise of water is floating her pe\nagain. The bargo Nightingale, worth ea\n$1,000, has sunk. About 100 barges have su;\nbeen torn loose and taken away, their\navorago value being $1,500 each. Some\nof these barges maybe recovered, but it\nis not probable that many will bo saved. Tl\nThey chiefly belong to the coal
3a1ee2adda6a5977ec8d0b919e21bcc2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.3647540667375 39.745947 -75.546589 qualification* of voters in Stales as\nwell as national élections as is in­\nvolved in this amendment. It saainf\nto me that the sound and fundamental\nFederal principle of an Indestructible\nunion, composed of Indestructible\nStates will be violated by the pro­\nposed amendment If adopted, ami\nwoman suffrage be thereby forced In\nSlate» that do not wish It.”\nWilliam I. Marbtiry, attorney of\nBaltimore, has no doubts. Answering\nttie dueslion put to him by Mrs.\nThompson he says:\n"My Judgment is that In voting to\nratify the proposed Anthony amend­\nment to the Federal constitution un­\nconditionally and without leaving It\nto a subsequently elected legislature\nto make the final decision after its\nsubmission to I lie people, a member\nof the Legislature would be voting to\nnullify the provisions of the Constitu­\ntion which he was sworn to support,\nbecause he would be voting for a\nmeasure, the effect of which. If a\n«ufllcient number of others vole \nIt, would be to radically alter llic pro­\nvisions of the Delaware Constitution\nas to qualifications.\n"In all the history of representative\nftovernment, so far as I know, there\ns no Instance In which any people\nVvho have once secured the Incitimanl\nright of local government, and espe­\ncially the right to determine for them­\nselves. by their own voles, who shall\nvole at their own Statu elections,\nami Unit means who shall govern their\nSlate, have ever surrendered such a\nright voluntarily, oif failed to have a\nreckoning with any representative of\ntheirs who ventured to surrender It\nwithout their consent."\nJudge George Gray says:\n"If thera-a power so unlimited, of\n«mending the Constitution of the\nUnited Stales in such form and man­\nner as to destroy the essential police\npowers of the Stale, and cut right un­\nder the Slate's very existence, by al­\ntering the fundamental basis of pollt-\nIral power, then our boasted system\nof
d806e87faac7d98f2e6229a785a1676e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.332876680619 41.681744 -72.788147 SOCIAL HAPPENINGS ABOUT TOWN\nMrs. Philip Stanley is going into the department store\nbusiness for one day only in the interests of the Young\nWomen's Christian Association. On Saturday, May 16, at the\nDavidson & Lcvcnthal store a certain percentage of all sales\nmade will be given to the Y. W. C. A . This is an entirely new\nenterprise in town but spells success from the start, for it is\nevident that the many friends of the well known women\ninterested in the Y. V. C. A. will go to the store to make their\npurchases and the general public will also flock there partly\nfor the sake of charity and largely for the novel experience of\nbeing waited upon by the new sales force which iadudes mem-\nbers of New Britain's social colony.\nMrs. Stanley that the sale will take on the air of a\nsocial gathering, for you are sure to meet most of your\nfriends there. What one doesn't know one can imagine and\nMrs. Stanley is a good press agent.\nInterested in the success of the sale are Mrs, George W.\nTraut. who for that day will act as superintendent of the store.\nMrs. Y. C. Ilungerford is to be head of the information\ndepartment. Mrs. George T. Kimball is the credit manager,\nMrs. E . Allan Moore is merchandise manager, Miss Mary\nWhittlesey will act as a floor manager. Mrs. Louis Reynal is\nto be sales manager. Miss Elora Humphrey will act as the\nadvertising manager. Mrs. Howard Humphrey will have charge\nof the window and store decorations and .Miss Sally Humason\nis to be the elevator attendant.
739bde6b930413ef97dd2d5dedc6147f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 In view of (ho agitation and dls-\nriiHslon occasioned by the attempt lo\nsecure from the Congress now in ses­\nsion legislation which will radically\nchange the national hanking and cur­\nrency law it may he worth while to\nrepeat a conversation which 1 had at\nthe time of the currency panic of 1893\nwith Hie late George S. Coe, who wae\nfor many years one of the great\nbanking authorities, not only of New\nNork, lint also of the United States.\nI asked Mr- Coe If he had ever\nlearned In conversation with John\nSherman or with Salmon I. Chase—\nwho was secretary of the treasury In\nLincoln's administration —or any of\nthose In public, life in Civil War days\nwith whom lie was In frequent con­\nsultation respecting the financial\nmeasure« of the government why it\nwas deemed expedient practically to\n the State luniks and to do\nthat In the only way possible—whieh\nwas by taxing the currency Issued\nby Slate hanks at so high a rate as\nto force the withdrawal of State bank\nnotes from circulation.\n"Vos," he replied. ”1 had many talks\nwith Secretary Chase, and l recall one\nwith John Sherman, who »as then an\nIn tl iiont ta I member of the finance\ncommittee of the State, in which the\nvery difficult and embarrassing ques­\ntion of what should lie done with\nStale bank noie circulation was Hie\nprincipal subject of discussion.\n"I suppose I can answer your ques­\ntion by simply stating that It\nfound, after the national bank system\n»as adopted, that Hie old economic\nrule thaï (he poorest currency would\ndrive the best currency out of circu­\nlation was again demonstrated to lie\na sound rule.
13851f5247af3b1818ffc0a70134b947 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.4385245585408 37.451159 -86.90916 The farmer stood by hi. tooaeiM bed\nWhence all but him had tied.\nAnd .eelng the fly had cleaued 'em up\nlie solemnly scratched hi. head.\nMiss Susan Huutor.of Pleasant ltldge,\nis visiting relatives in Shelby county.\nMiss II. forms quite an attraction In\nthat pleasant town, aud her absceucu Is\nregretted, and her return eagerly looked\nlor by uer many menus mere.\nOur friend w. O. Kiim has recently\nreturned to his former home, aud is at\npresent farming, having unfortunately\nlost his position as mail agent on the\nrailroad by the Influence of some of\nOhio county's meddlesome Republicans,\nwho thought It entirely out of the ques-\ntion for Mr. King, as he is a good Dem-\nocrat, to be honored with a government\nmall agency. Mr. King Is an honest,\nupright and intelligent young man, and\nreceives a hearty welcome among his\nmany friends in this section.\nWin. Troiflanu lias at last awoK to\n interests of his neighborhood, ami\ngone to work in good faith erecting a\nblacksmith stion. We are sorry Mr. i .\ndid not locate his establishment on our\nHill, as It Is the most eeleurated "sang"\nregion in the United States, and would\nbe mure convenient lor ins customers\nthan the nlaee selected. Among the\nmany industrial pursuits that consti-\ntute the glowing prosperity of these\ngenial heights, we may properly at this\ntime mention "sang digging," which is\nchiefly followed by the fair sex during\nleisure hours, as a means of recreating\ntheir minds from the general tedious- -\nncss of domestic economy. There never\nwas a spark of aristocracy existing on\nthe Hill, and in consequence there is\nreal Joy here. It is the young ladles'\npride to be useful.\nThey search the green wood over,\nAnd on among the Krecubrlara Iiiiiik.\nThcr have no Unite for prldo nnd folly,\nHut Keek for honor and for "nam?."
0696519c44d93572a63ff4b2d08cd819 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1899.3410958587012 43.994599 -72.127742 "My pal and I," said a New York\nfruit vender, "started out the other\nmorning with strawberries; same\nstock, bought at the same time, from\nthe same dealer, and we went uptown\nand stalled in, he along one tier of\nblocks' and 1 along another. When we\nmet at noon he had sold every baskets\nI had sold not more than half of mine.\n" 'How did you do it'." I asked him.\n" 'Why, 1 gave 'em a magnifying glass\nwith every basket,' he said. And so he\nhad. The folks would say, as they al-\nways do when you go around with\nthose small little baskets: 'Where are\nthey? llasket's so small I can't see it.'\nThen my pal outs with the magnifying\nglass and hands it over and says: 'You\n take a look at 'em through that,'\nand it brings the basket and the berries\nall up so big that what with the size of\nthem as they now appear, the desire for\nthe early strawberry, and bein' kind o'\ndazed with my pal's cheek, they buy\n'em. And he gives a magnifying glass\nwith every basket, as he can afford to\ndo, the magnifying glasses being cheap\nand strawberries dear.\n"Oh, he's a shifty chap, my pal, with\na head full of wit and readiness, equal\n:o any situation. It's too late for me to\nlo the same thing now this year, for\nthe big boxes have come in; but next\nyear, early, when I starts out with the\nstrawberries in nutshells, I gives a mag-\nnifying glass with every basket."
c434ddef4248df13735f51312eab2725 THE SOUTHERN ADVOCATE ChronAm 1941.0863013381531 33.878167 -90.72732 have prevented that fire or will prevent the next one. It simply\nadcs insult to injury and no encouragement or consolation can\nbe derived thereby. It is indeed poor psychology.\nFuthermore, we think it would have been ap.opos for the\nEditor t have investigated and sought first-handed information\nbefore “gues ing at what we needed then they would have\nbeen told that Mound Bayou has had numerous good-wi;l tours\nfrom many places, and invitations are extended upon every oc-\ncasion for new blood to come to Mound Bayou; and they would\nhave beed advised that almost EVERY advantage has been\ntaken of the FHA., program to build modern > omes in Mound\nBayou and the years 1939-40 brought the greatest building and\nmodernization program iviouna cayou nas seen ior many ycais.\nMo e homes were built or remodeled under government finan-\ncing than ever before: they would have been old an ordi\nnance is now effective requiring all buildings to be erected in\nthe business district to be of brick and modern in construction\nin order to reduce the fire hazards; they would have been told\nthat graders and mowing machines are put into service each\nyear to improve the appearance and ease the transportation in\nour town, (we have some bad streets in our town and some\ngood ones hasnt Greenville, and a 1 1 other much larger\ncities?) The Leader indicated that “we can keep clean that\nwhat we have, and plant flowers and shubbery that will rep-\nresent pride even if we dont have wealth and what we believe\nto be jusstice,”-this is all too true and Mound Bayon has\ntried to set the pace, only last year we launched one of the\nmast extensive clean-up programs in our history, nor was this\nour first clean-up program.
2976c21b38926abc436a101f5c0f9d66 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.8589040778793 37.561813 -75.84108 They used to say to one another\nsometimes, "Supposing all the childfVn\non the earth were tu die would the\nflowers and the Water and the sky be\nsorry ?" They believed they would\nbe sorry. For, said thejr4 the buds are\nchildren of the flowers, and the little\nplayful streams that gambol down the\nhillsides are the children of the: waters;\nand the smallest bright speck3 plajihg\nat bide and go seek in the sky all\nbight, must surely be the children, of\nthe stars; and they would be hII griev-\ned to see their playmates, the Children\nof men, no more.\nThere was one clear star that used\nto come out in the sky before the rest,\nnear the church Spite, about tbe graves\nIt was larger and more beautiful they\nthrjught than all the others; and \nnight they watched for' It, standing"\nhand In hand at the window. Who-\never saw if first cried out, "I see the\nstar j" and often they cried out both\ntogether, knowing so well when it\nwould rise; and where. So they gret\nto be such friends with It; before lying\ndown in their beds they looked out\nOnce again to bid it good night; and\nwhen they were turning round to sleep\nthey would say, "God bless the star !"\nDut while sne was still very yong.\nOh very, very young, the slsier droop-\ned, and became so weak that she could\nno longer stand in the window at\nnight; and theft the child looked sad-\nly out by him.self, and when he saw\nthe star, turned round to the patient,\npale face on the bed and said:
ce37416e2147658617f4d58805eaa3f0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.7794520230848 41.681744 -72.788147 Main Street Curb Crowds\nNot What They Usol to lie\nMuch has been written from time\nto time, and a great deal more has\nbeen said, on the subject of the\nsweeping changes that have been\nmade in the physical appearance of\nMain street and some of the streets\nadjoining it, but comparatively little\nattention has been directed towards\nthe difference that can be noted by\nday and night, in the type of people\nfound all along the way.\nThe average New Britainite a\ndecade or two ago could stroll down\nMain street from North street to\nFranklin square and be spoken to by\nfour of every five persons he met.\nHe would probably be stopped every\nfew hundred feet by someone who\nwanted to shake his hand or Inquire\nafter his health, and if he managed\nto get past Jack Toohey's, Eddie\nEmmons' and some other popular\ngathering places without at least the\nopportunity of refusing an invitation\n step In, he would have Just\ncause for wonder.\nAll along the curbstone he would\nsee acquaintances, and if it was Sat-\nurday night he would not think of\ntrying to shoulder his way more\nthan a, quarter or a half the distance\nfrom end to .end of the long lane,\nbecause time would not permit of\nthe trip. Here he would be called\nto by a fellow worker. A little far-\nther along he would see someone he\nwanted to deliver a message to, and\ntioon until he felt, as he wended his\nway back home, that he had met all\nthe people in town and had been\nseen by them with pleasure.\nNot so today, however. Men who\nconsider themselves well known, and\nrightly so, hustle about tne streets\nmnnv II rue a a ,lnv without hoi 111'\nspoken to by more than a '\nthey walk through Main street at\nnight, which very lew of ..\nsince they acquired
0de75656b6b24d76d8add09b9514ea0e THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.6315068176052 41.004121 -76.453816 all tho members of the Renate, appoint\na Rccretnry of the Commonwenlth and\nan Attorney Oeneral during pleasure, a\nRuperlntendent of Public Instruction for\nfour years, nnd such other officers of the\nCommonwealth as he Is or mny be au-\nthorized by the Constitution or by law\nto appoint; he shall have power to nil\nII vacancies that may happen, in offices\nto which he may appoint, during the re-\ncess of the Senate, by granting commis-\nsions which shall expire at the end of\ntheir next session; he shall have power\nto fill any vacancy that may happen,\nduring tho recess of the Senate, In the\nofflco of Auditor General, State Treas-\nurer, Secretary of Internnl Affairs 01\nBuperlntendent of Public. Instruction, In\na judicial office, or In any other elective\noffice which he Is or may be authorized\nto If tho vacancy shall happen dur-\ning the session of the Senate, the Gov-\nernor shall nominate to the Senate, be-\nfore their final adjournment, a proper\nperson to fill said vacancy; but In any\nsuch case of vacnncy, In an elective of-\nfice, a person ahnll be chosen to said of-\nfice on the next election day appropriate\nto anch office, according to the provisions\nof this Constitution, unless the vacnncy\nshall happen within two calendar months\nImmediately preceding such election dny.\nIn which caso the election for said office\nshnll lie held on the second succeeding\nelection day appropriate to such ofllce.\nIn acting on executive nominations the\nSenate ahall sit with open doors, and. In\nconfirming or rejecting the nominations\nof the Governor, the vote shnll be taken\nby yeas ami nays, and shall be entered\non the Journal.
ac5510e7b74657e217709e906de5f335 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.2835616121258 39.261561 -121.016059 for the sum of six hundred and eighty dollar* and\neighty-nine cents, debt with interest on the said sum of\n♦680.89 at the rate of ten per cent per annum from the\nrendition of judgment until paid, together with $60.30\ncosts of suit: I have levied upon and seized the following\ndescribed property to wit: All the right, title and interest\nof the within named defendants or Company in and to ell\nthat property known as the Monnt Hope Mining Gos., sit-\nuated in Grass Valley, consisting of a Quarts Mill, boilers,\nengine, and all the machinery belonging to the same, sit-\nuated on Massachusetts Hill, together with the machinery\n■for working the pump*, and all out-bouses and sheds, sit*\nuated on. near , and adjoining the mill aforesaid, also the\nmill and machinery situated about one half mile south of\n Mill aforesaid, used for erushing quartz and working\nthe pumps, and raising rock for crushing; with all the\nout houses and all the appurrenances thereunto belonging,\nalso all the Quartz ledges, now being worked by said Com-\npany. situated on Massachuretts Hill, and New York Hill,\nalso a lot ofcord wood lying at said mills and in the woods\nabout two hundred cords more or lea*.\nNotice is hereby given that I will expose to public sals\nthe above described property to the highest bidder for cash\nin front of the Court House door in the city of Nevada, on\nTUESDAY the 4th day of May a. d. 1868, between the\nhours of 10 oolock a. x. and 4 oclock p. m. to satisfy and\npay said judgment.\nGiven under my hand this 13th day of April 1868.\n2*- M
2dabd79e74ae75ddf9037bedf24b6b35 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.9713114437866 58.275556 -134.3925 On onr desk lies a copy of theAlaska i\nTranscript, a weekly newspaper pub¬\nlished at Juneau. Its- editor is John\nW. Frame. There may be people in Al¬\naska who do not know John W., but\nthat is their loss. There are mighty\nlew people in S. E . Alaska who do not\nknow him as the best all around fight- ;\ner in the District. John (we fee) privi- j\nleged to call him John, because we ;\nknow him) is noted for his scrapping j\nproclivities, and especially for his j;\n"solar perplexis" blows. Them is;\nlatin words meaning he bits'em where ]\nthey live.John don't fight just for the\nfun of the thing; he fights because he j\nhas to fight. Whenever John gets <\nafter a dishonest federal otficial j\nname of the aforesaid federal official is\nmud. John may seemingly get the\nworst of it for a while, and have to dis¬\npose of his big daily, and start a weekly\nbut in his fight for truth and right he\nsacrifices it all without a murmer. And\nthat brings us back to what we started j\nout to say, that John Frame and his\nAlaska Transcript are reaping the re- L\nward of true worth, and tbe columns\nof the Transcript are bulgiug out with\nthe ads of the thoughtful business men\nof this community, who know that in\ngiving their patronage to John Frame\nthey are not paying their money to a\nman who will stab them in the back or\nrob their widows and orphans after |\nthey are dead.
3984e0ceaeb8674f9f469df497066f02 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.9330600776664 39.745947 -75.546589 Wray F. Bacon, $4; Walter N.\nBacon. $5; Henry J. Bailey, $26; Wil­\nliam H. Bailey $10; William C. Baird,\n$1: Robert T. Baldwin. $26; W. M.\nBaldwin. $5; John Bancroft. Jr., $40;\nJohn Bancroft, $5,000; William P.\nBancroft $25,000; Fred R. Banks, $3;\nJohn W. Banks, $5; William N. Ban-\nnard, $100; Mary B. Bannard. $100;\nW N. Bannard, Jr.. $50; Nathan\nBaraky $1.000; The Bavarian Brew­\ning Co, $100; C. G . Beadenkopf. $10;\nCharles A. Beck, $20; Harrle A, Hell.\n$10; Bendhelm Bros.. $6; Tom Bent,\n$25; W. H, Berger. $10; William M.\nBergman. Jr, $5; William Herl. Jr.\n$10; James Berry. $25, John S. Bertn-\nlette, $20; J. Berman, $10; John W.\nBettelle. $40; Mildred R Betts, $25;\nAlice T. Betts, $25; Miss Anna W.\nBird. $10; Charles Bird, $200; Walter\nBlackson, $10; P. L . Bocklus, $10; A\nW. Bogin. $2; John A. Booker, $50;\nWilliam J. Booth. $5; Albert, Bothman,\n$25; Mrs Cornelia Bowman, $200;\nFriend. $20; John W. $26;\nHenry B. Bradford, $100; Sidney\nBradford, $10; H. A . Brand, $5;\nFriend, $50; Reba J. Brenneisen, $5;\nJohn Biggs. $26; Elizabeth Bringhurst,\n$25; Frederick Bringhurst, $20; Mar­\ngaret R. Bringhurst. $200; H R.\nBringhurst, Jr.. $25; Brlth Sholem\nLodge, $25; J. B Broad, $20; Rozl\nBreuer, $60; R W. Broedbent, $2;\nJohn Brokaw, $25; Lewis W. Brosius,\n$10; Sarah W. Broughton, $5; W. ( .\nBrower, $26; H, A. Brown, $25; H. F .\nBrown, $60; Mary W. Brown, $1; M.\nBrown. $10; Thomas M. Brown. $60;\nW. S . Brown. $26; Charles K. Brewer,\n$5; Andrew Bryson, $100; W. O.\nBryan. $20; F. E. Bridgewater, $2;\nJoseph B. Burns. $1 ; Walter S. Burris,\n$10; John E. Burrows, $5; Charles\nW. Bush. $60; Henry T. Bush. $25;\nHenry Bush, $50; J. Danforth Bush,\n460; Mary H. J . Bush, $200: Walter\nD. Bush, Jr., $10; George W. Butz,\n$10; Charles C. Bye. $60; Mrs. Ben­\njamin Bye. $20; Joseph C Bird, $2;
08ee7e824cf8ba590c7ea2d1a102c630 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.1379781104533 40.063962 -80.720915 It is a matter of no small gratification to\nus to witness the approval which has greet¬\ned the dfforts of tho EUdrvtyiicrto forward\nthe Bpelling reform. Printers ar usually\namong the most consMMtiv of people;\nbut, so far as we hav nffird any expres¬\nsions of opinion, thev ar, almost without\nexception, in favor of a modification of\nour present outrageous orthografy. More\ngratifying still, we find the numbor of\nthose who "hav the courage of their con¬\nvictions" is growing larger, day by day,\naad journals ar one after anothor adopting\nmore or leas of the corrected forms of\nspelling. Home choose the eleven emen¬\ndations of the American Filological Asso¬\nciation, while others go still farther and to\nthese add rules of their own or conform to\nthose of the Spelling Reform Association.\nA number of leading and influential news¬\npapers.notably the Chicago Tribune, New\nYork Home Journal and Independent, Utica\nHerald, Burlington Hawkye, and others.\nbav taken advanced grounds and set the\nexample of .revolt against the absnrd dicta\nof dictionary and Bpelling-b'ook makers.\nIn this they ar ondorst by nine-tenths of\nthe brains, scholarship, and common-sense\nof the country.\nIt is patent that reform in our ortho-\ngraly must progress slowly; that no\nsweeping change can be made to secure\ngeneral approval, however well the peo¬\nple at large may be prepared to Bee\nsome amendments made. For this and\nother reasons it is desirable that\nsome uniformity of action should be had,\nlest we run Into chaos (which by the way,\nwould be no worse than the "ohaos petri-\nfled" exemplified in our present oriho-\ngrafy). 'Co this end wo invito a confer¬\nence of such journalists as are friendly to\nthe reformed spoiling, with a viow to the\nadoption of some precise and doOnit rules\nto be observed bv all. Of course it may\nbe understood that all ar not bound to\nconform literally to any rules so adopted,\nbut rather that freedom of action may be\nbo had by each individual, while at tho\nsame time deferring in the main to tho\ngeneral Bentiment It is far belter tbat\nhalf a doien journals should together\nadopt a few sensible amendments than for\neach one to run off on a line of his own,\nand all at a variance with each other. A\nunited effort on the part of a few is worth\nmore to the cause of good spelling than\nstraggling efforts on the part of many.\nIll this connection we would suggest to\nthe Western State and District Editorial\nAssociation that thoy could add much to\nthe interest of their meetings by inviting\nsome prominent spelling reformer to af\ndress them upon his favorite theme, with\ntho view of bringing its manifest advan¬\ntages before them. A good speaker on\nthis Bubject can easily be secure^, and wo\ntrust It will be done.
0cf3056bf7e1045d244189f790b2780a IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.2534246258244 43.82915 -115.834394 sweetheart." sighed Pierre, as lie rover\nently replaced the medallion on the lifo\nless heart. For several minutes ho stood\nmournfully by this dead man, but half an\nho ur ago so full of life and ardor, now\nalready stiff and chill It was the first\ntime in his life that he had ever stood by\na dead body, and lie looked on it with\nm ingl ed compassion and shame.\n" lie died fulfilling his duty," he said\nbitterly to himself; "nevertheless he was\nyounger than 1, perhaps he clung to lifo\nev en more fondly, for there is som ewhere\nono beloved woman who at this very mo\nment is watching for news of him, lier\nheart torn by suspense and anguish, while\nI, who have neither wife, sister nor sweet­\nheart to mourn my death, whose only\nmistress is my cold philosophy, I have\nfeared to b rave death. I fled ignomini\nously at first approach of d ang er—\nwhat am I but a miserable coward?"\nHe rose, seized his g un arid ret raced the\nroad. At tho end of twenty paces ho\npaused near a sheet of water on whose\nedge tlie dried reeds rustled mournfully,\nand near which stood the ruins of a lodge\nwith battered walls anil empty window\nsashes. On the opposite side of this\nsheet of w at er a company of Infantry\nwaited under tho shelter of a clump of\nsaplings for orders to open tiro. At the\nsight of this national guard in his green\novercoat who arri ved scared and dis\nordered in their midst, tho men laughed\nderisively. Pierre Manceau felt the blood\nmount to his brow "I doser\nthought; "I look like a coward\nAnd as tlie lieutenant gave tho order\nto his men to remount tho height. Pierro\napproached him and begged permission to\njoin the company.
479e932cdb87b290d7bcaafe65b98158 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.3538251049888 44.939157 -123.033121 Notlco to Improve n Portion or\nWinter Street In City of Snlem.\nNotlco Is horoby given that nt tho\nmeeting of tho common council, hold\nApril 17, 1908, a resolution was\nndoptod to lmprovo Winter stroot In\ntho city of Salem, Oregon, Includ-\ning Intersection, from tho north\nside of North Mill Crook bridge to\ntho Fnlr Ground road In said city, In\nUio following mnnnor:\nFirst, by plnclng In tiling not less\nthan 24 Inches In clrcumforonco\nacross said Wlritor street whoro said\nWinter otrcot is Intcrsoctod by tho\nnorth lino of North street; where It\nIs Intorsoctcd by both tho north and\nsouth lino of Markot stroot, nnd\nwhoro It Ib Intersected by tho south\nlino of tho Talr Ground rond,.\nSecond, by establishing tho grndo\nand by grading nnd filling tho said\nWinter stroet botweon said points,\nto conform to said grado, oxcopt as\nmontloned In pnragraph throo here\nof, with full Intersections.\nThird, by lenvlng or plowing out\na stlrp 12 foot In .width, full length\nof the proposed Improvement along\ntho contor of said stroot to a depth\nof 10 Inches below tho established\ngrado of Bald Btreot and when so\nplowed rolled n steam rollor\nand then filling tho snmo to a depth\nof C Inches with crook gravol and\nthen rolling tho samo nnd upon this\nspread a layer of 1 Inches of crushod\nrock well filled with rock screen-\ning, so tho surface of said Improve-\nment Bhall bo lovol with tho estab-\nlished grado ot said streot.\nFourth, by taking away tho bridge\novor tho ditch vhero Bajd, Wlntor\nstreot Intorsoctcd tho Fair Grounds\nroad and laying tiling In Bald ditch,\nand covorlng enld tiling with dirt In\nsuch n mnnnor that said ditch will\nbo filled full width of said Wlntor\nstreet on a lovel with tho surface\nof Eald street, oavo and oxcept a\nstrip 12 feet in width In contor of\nsaid Winter street, whoro said Wln-\ntor streot Intersects snld ditch at\nwhich point said ditch shall bo filled\nwith dirt to only within 10 lnchos\nof the surface of said street, upon\nwhich shnll bo plnced six Inches of\ncreek gravel and upon said gravol\nshall bo placed 4 lnch03 of crushed\nrock to bo rolled as abovo stated,\nand tho north lino of cald ditch shall\nbo tho north lino of said Improve-\nment,
1408d950efdf55ab992be7002fd9aaf1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 Lokdos, April 12..The loot of the\ncomments on the political criaiiis much\nmore hopeful. The conriction is that\nRussia is preparing to accept the help of\nGermany to get her out of the preeeot\ndead lock bjr inch concessions u will se>\ncure a meeting of the Congres*. Prince\nGortschakofFs reply to Lord Salutary**\ncircular, and the circular to which it was\nannexed, were only published in 8U Pe¬\ntersburg on Thursday.\nAt Vienna Prince Gortschtkoffe replv\ncreated an impression of Bussia'a will-\ningneas to find an acceptable method for\nre-opening negotiations. Thia moderate\nspirit in a great measure ia believed to\nbe dae to the altered tone of the com¬\nment of the German, French and Italian\nprese and politicians concerning the\ntreaty of San Stefano, which point to the\nprobability of Buiwia, instead of England,\nbeing isolated in case of a rapture.\nTbe alleged circular Gortschakoff,\nwhich seema to reply to Austria's objec¬\ntion, is probsbly a atupid hoax of some\nParis newspaper. There seems to be\nsome disposition at St. Petersburg\ntii show Bonmania more conaideration.\nIt is announced that Gortachakoff meant\nthat the stipulation for the passsgeof\nthe Russian troops through Bonmania,\nnot the question of the cessation of Bes¬\nsarabia conld not be aubmmitted to the\nCongress. It is also atated that tbs Rus¬\nsian Commissioner will go to Buchareet\nto treat with the government. Stevtcha\nMibialovitcb, the Servian Minister Pree-\nident, has resigned in consequence of the\nvacillating policy of the Servian Govern¬\nment. It is aaid that Anglo Austrian\ninfluences are now in descsndent at Bel¬\ngrade, and there is a disposition on the\npartcf Servia,Boumania and Montenegro\nto make juint remonstrance to the Pow-\nera against the treaty of San Stefano.\nBCSBJA COVJtBXXG HER BETBBAT WITH
293cd9aa21ecc0db1ccbf15c993d824a COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.9986301052766 41.262128 -95.861391 Every laborer, every cierk, every per­\nson witn a fixed income from mortgages\nor other sources, finds himself to-day de­\nfrauded by act of Congres of one-third\nof bis income. The daily laborer, re­\nceiving ne dollar a day in consequence\nof Mr. Chase's paper money policy now\nreceives a paper dollar worth about sev­\nenty cents ; in other words, he is compell­\ned to give six dayr labor for the price of\nf jur days. <ioid was sold to-day at one\nhundred and tbirty-one, and everything\nthat is necsssary for the support of lire\natid comfort is at lea*t forty per cent.\nhigher than it would have been if Chase\nbad used |w8,00u,U00 of certificates of\nindebtedness instead of •98,i.«Xl1UK) of\nlegal tender note*. The paper-money\npoliticians and thair organs say that it\nwas impossible to carry on the war with­\nout legal tender notes. It is oot true. —\nThese politicises know it is not true.—\nThey koow that is the veriest humbug\nthat they ever attempted to cram down\nthe throats of a credulous nnd too con­\nfiding peop.e . Now let us look at tbe\nquestion in a practical manner. On or\nabout April 20, 1(162, legal tender notes\nfirst made their appearance. It is, then,\nplain that the war bad been carried on\nabout 6ae year without using one dollar\nof them. On Ju»e30, 1&62, according\nto the official statement of tbe Secretary\nof the Treasury, the whole amount of le­\ngal tender notes used was#V8,62V,000 . —\nIf, therefore, tbe banking and fioating\nloanable capital of tb-i loyal States,\nwhich carried in 1859-'60 at feast $300,-'\nQjG,000 annually more commerenii pa­\nper than the? have carried sine - the re­\nbellion, coufd now carry m,630,000 of\ngovernment certificates of indebtedness.\nselling in tbe open market at 99 1-2,\nthen is all this rain an1 suffering am^ng\ntee peopl: whuliv uau u estry. If Mr.\nChase hid ased
f7de97243882b9be86dd685b4449e7a2 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.842465721715 39.560444 -120.828218 Letters from. Major Downie.\nHow swift winged is Time in Califor-\nnia ! Little did I think five years ago,\nwhen I was prospecting, bailing out pot-\nholeand cre.icing along the banks with\nknife and pan. that five years afterwards I\nwould be on the same banks in an old log\ncabin, noting down for you a few inci\ndents of gold hunting on the Yuba.\nBut, man is a shortsighted mortal, and\n»Gsmuo.t tell what a day may bring forth,\nmuoh less read his destinies in coming\nyears. For myself, 1 intend to take the\nworld as I find it; I have become accus-\ntomed to disappointment; this is miners\nlife, and if he brood over every little disap-\npointment, his only reward will be a gray\nhead and premature old age. Sometimes\n. when he imagines that his fortune is just\nin reach, tomorrows sun brings disap-\npointment, and all his visions of wealth\nmelt away to thin air ; another “dead fail-\ntire.” Sometimes fortune comes \nnor can she be always wooed by toiling\n early and late. This should be borne in\nmind, that eactra hard work will not al-\nways make a pile. lam well aware that\nour anxious friends at home, think that if\nwe dont make a “ten strike” in two or\nthree years, that wc are improvident and\nindolent, and dont try. How little they\nknow about it! How many there are,\naye, not far from Downievjjle, who have\nworked hard for months and years—eat\nthe bread of carefulness, and patched their\ntorn clothes by a pine knot fire, and still\nare poor 1 Is it not so everywhere? As\nlong, and wherever there is summer and\nwinter, spring time and harvest, there will\nalways be the rich and poor. But where\nis there another country where honest pov-\nerty, with strong arms and a hopeful heart,\nmay be better rewarded for the labor of\nhis hands. Let our friends at home sus-\npend their opinion until v:c set through
812ee6a6e1e3fdc89caff6b006a2960b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.37397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 Play will be continued tonight in\nthe New Britain Industrial baseball\nleague when three games will be\nstaged, two at Walnut Hill park and\none at Willow Brook park. One of\nthe games wlU be an encounter post-\nponed from last Thursday night\nwhile the other two will be tha\ngames scheduled for tonight.\nTonight's games will bring onto\nthe field two teams in their first\nstarts of the season. They will ba\nthe Stanley Rule & Level and the\nRussell & Erwin teams. They wera\nto have met last Thursday, but ow-\ning to the death of B. A. Hawley,\ngeneral manager of the R. & E.\nplant, the game was put off out of\nrespect to him.\nThe two teams will present strong\nlineups as they face each Both\nsquads have put in steady practice\nsessions for several weeks and a hot\nbattle is predicted. This game will\nbe staged at Willow Brook park.\nFafnlrs is a heavy favorite over\nthe Union Works in the clash sched-\nuled for Diamond No. 1 at Walnut\nHill park. The Union Works showed\nlittle organization in its first game\nagainst the Stanley Works but Faf-\nnlrs will probably be handed a sur-\nprise tonight. The Fafnir team lost\nits first game only after a hard fight\nto Landers last Thursday night.\nTwo undefeated teams. Landers\nand the Stanley Works will clash to-\nnight on Diamond No. 2 at Walnut\nHill park. Both won their first\ngames and ton'.ght's battle will give\nan Idea of the relative strength of\nthe clubs.
2276f88ee3df20a8272b960f2d84fb15 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.57397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 Lkinda* -Attracted to this land immi-,\ngrants from other parts of the world,\nuud froxu.tho: North -will com© to settle\namoi^sMis, because. we have or good\nelimeafwwy under the sun. Our towns\nand villages, instead of going to decay,\nw.Ul' improve, and arts ana sciences\nwill.flourish among us. Suoh, I l>elleve',\nwill be one of,the results. of. this War,\nAnd.not only that; there is another ad¬\nvantage. we .have been vetpr sensi-\ntivoi a people. We .allowed no man\nto, think that slavery was a moral, social'\nor politick evil, ana if any one thought\nthus, he was deemed unsound, and ar¬\nraigned, ibefore vigilance committees,\nliven when Xiord Jolm Russel, in Eng¬\nland took occasion to say that he hoped;\nslavery would be abolished by this re¬\nvolution, our people commenced abus¬\ning him as if. he had trespassed upon\nour. lights. We abused mankind when"\nthey .Mitrered with us, and we carried\nour opposition to. men's thinking as\ntbpy pleased to; such.ianextreme, that\nmen umong us.who dared: to differ ftroin\nlis on this sutyecfc iWere arraigned, not\nfry law, or.before a legal tribunal, but\nbefore vigilan£societies,andpersonally\nabused. Civilisation was almost driven\nfrom the land.law mul order was\nsuppressed by these lawless men.\nHut now we can look over this\nland and pray, as Solomon did, that\nall of Adam's race may be elevated'to\ndignity and happiness. Now every one\nmay, in" the exercise of his eonstitu-\ntionnl rights, advocate slavery, or de-\nl nounce it, surrounded as he is by the\n[power qf the government of the \nStates, which protects us fully in the\noiiJCyiiTent of these rights. Hut, fellow\ncitizens, as I before, remarked, we have\nseverelv suffered from this war. Our\n(towns nave been burned and destroyed,\n'our fields have been laid Waste, ourI\nhomes and cattle have been taken from\nus, and our children have fallen on\nbloodr fields. But notwithstanding\nthis, .there Is hope. It seems, U* be the\noYdcr' of1 "Providence in dealing with\n- n ations as He deals with individuals;\n. that they shall be perfected by suffer¬\nings. We shall come out of this con¬\ntroversy a more glorious ami happy\npeople. The presence of liberty will oe\nwell guarded among 'tis. We shall re¬\nmain a free and united people. In\nlobking down the vista of tlme I see\nGeorgia ten-fold more prosperous, and\nwlidn all our sectional prejudices shall\nhave died away, we shall meet together,\nnorth and south, as brethren, rejoicing\nunder our government, and marching\non to the glorious destiny which is be¬\nfore us. Not only will Georgia increase\nin wealth and population, but the whole\nsouthern country will be more prosper¬\nous in arts, manufactures, wealth and\ncivilization. I see them marching oh ill\nthis new order of things. The whole\ncountt-y, united in the bonds of charity\nand love, must go on prospering until\nthis great nation shall be unequalled\nby any power on earth. This is our\ncountry; these are lior prospects. To\nthis standard I invito you to rally.\nM Tis the star-spangled banner, oh long may\nit wave
049355530ed1827f736852942c8310d3 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1901.7986301052765 33.031451 -111.387343 Var13deg45 minE 3U0fttoV endcrot\ncluiin. identical with location, a pine post\n4x4 inches, 4! 3 ft long, set 18 inches iu the\nground, with mound of stones, scribed W b\ncr C Lytf; 4s8.85ft intersect N side line of Na\ntive Copiier ut S deg 2J 40u.8 ft from the\nNEcoi of said claim;60U ft to cor No. 2 ,\nidentical with N W cor of location, a pine\nPO" 4x4 inches. K ft long, set 18 inches in\nthe ground, with mound ot stoues, scribed\ncor2clbsl. Thence N71deg summb Var13\ndei 45 mm b i5u ftto N side line cr luenticul\nwith locatiou, a pine port 4x4 inches, 44 it\nlong, set IS inches in the ground, with\nmound of stones, scribed N a 1. cr 3 1581 ; 1500\nft to cor No. 8, identical with N cor of loca-\ntion, a pine post, 4x4 inches, 44 ttlong, set\nIS inches iu the crround. witli mound ot\nstones, scrilied cor 3 C lohl. 1 hence S 18 deg\n30minb,IVar 13deg4snun b300fttoend\ncenterof claim, identical with location, a\npine post 4x4 inches, 44 It long, set 18 inches\nin the ground, with mouud of stones,\nscribed EE cr C 1581; 600 It to cor No. 4,\nidentical with with Sb cor of location and\nw ith cor No 3 of the Thomus, a pine post \ninches, 44 ft long, set 18 inches in the\nground, with mound ot stones, scribed cor 4\nC 1581. ThenceS 71des SO miu W, Var 13 deg\n45 min Ej along the northerly side line ot\n1 hoinas 750 tt to S side line cr, identical with\nlocution and with N side line cr of Thoma.. a\npiue post 4x4 inches, 44 ft long, set 18 inches\nin the ground, witu mouud of stones,\nscribed SS L cr C l.iel; liii.041t intersect b\nend line Native Copper cluim at N, 14 deg 40\nmin W137.33 ftfromSbcoranda14ueg40\nmin b 48i.6i ft trom Nb cor; laou it to cor No.\n1 place of beginning.\nTRUMAN LODE - Beginning at cor No\nidentical with SW cor ot location and with\ncor No 2 of Contention, a piue post 4x4 inches.\n44 ft long, set 18 inches in the ground, with\nmound of stones, scribed cor 1 lr l&al.\nwhenceUSLoeMonNo.1brsS19deg 1nun\nb4;47.Sft. Thence N 18 deg SO min V. IVar\n13 deg 45 min E iOo ft to W end cr, identical\nwith location, a piue post 4x4 inches, 44 it\nlong, set 18 inches iu the ground, with\nmound ofstones, scribed W E cr ir Li8l;600\nft to cor No. 2. identical with NW Cor ot locu\ntion, a pine post 4x4 inches, 44 It long, set 18
1ce3dba44710d4ed3919a1da5d9c3c93 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.7575342148655 37.561813 -75.84108 told me once that he lived on a small\nisland out in the Pacific Ocean on\nwhich there was a volcano. And he said\nthat there was an active demand out in\nthat region for watermelons, so he went\nto the business of raising them. And\nhe said one year his whole crop failed\nexcept one melon, and that kept on\ngrowing at such a fearful rate that it\ncrowded him off the lowland and up on\nthe side of the volcano, which generated\nsteam and caused an explosion which\nblew up the whole concern to atoms,\nand shot him four hundred miles out to\nsea, where he was picked up by a\nwhaler. He used to tell me that the one\ngreat mistake of his life was that he\ndidn't drive a plug in the crater of the\nvolcano so as to make it and\nthen slice open the watermelon and come\nsailing home on the half shell.\n" He would lie. He said that once he\nwas cast away on an iceberg, with no\nbaggage but a pair of skates and a\nfishing pole. But he skated around\nuntil he cameactossa dead whale, frozen\ninto the ice. So he took off his shirt\nit was night for six months that year up\nthere tore it into strips for a wick, ran\nthe strips through the bamboo fishing-ro-\nstuck the rod into the fat of the\nwhale, and lit the other end. He said\nit burned splendidly, and the iceberg\nreflected the light so strongly that it\nwas bright as day for forty miles\naround, and one vessel ran into the berg\nthinking it was a light house. He said\nhe sold the iceberg to the captain for
1641867dedd8f89638f8d2638a92b12a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.9467212798522 39.745947 -75.546589 Dr. Henry Patterson swore that he\nattended Mrs. Ewing from January,\n1895, to July, 1890. He first found her\nfoot swollen and tender to the touch,\ncaused by a severe strain.\nDr. Peter N. Tomlinson testified to\nexamining the woman ami finding her\nIn the same condition as Dr. Patterson,\non April 17. He could not ,iy that\ntile foot would never be w< ... but it\nwas very serious. On cross-examina­\ntion, he said that Mrs. Ewing was a\nlittle imprudent in not calling in a\nphysician at the time of the accident,\nbut he thought that the excuse given\nby the woman that her husband was\nout of work was a good one.\nDr. J . H. Morgan testified that he\nhad made a photograph of the ankle\nwith the aid of tlu* X-rays. He \nthat he got a good photograph. Mr.\nKnowles objected to this testimony on\nthe grounds that the physician was\ngiving expert testimony. The court\ndid not sustain the objection, stating\nthat the X-rays was a modern science.\nMr. Knowles then asked' that the pho­\ntograph be brought into court. Dr.\nMorgan, continuing, said that before\nputting the X-rays on the foot he\nfo$nd the ankle swollen, tender to the\ntouch. He said that the negative dis­\nclosed an intlaimnatlon of the oscltls,\nwhich had resulted in the death of u\npart of the bone. At tills point v u.el\nJustice 1 .ore asked Dr. Morgan if he\nwas testifying from what the negative\ndisclosed. He said that lie was. The\ncourt then ordered Die doctor to go\nafter the picture, and Mr. Knowles\nwon l.is point.
6e48621de00cd1f37e04d2fe751454f8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.478082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 a North Main street merchant,\nby Judge S. Ji. Mink.\nRaftel, through hla attorney.\nJudge Joseph M. Donovan, alleged\nthat Baldwin had contracted at a\nflat rate of (GO to make some re-\npairs on the Raff el block. When the\nwork waa completed, he alleged that\nBaldwin wanted more money, claim-\ning that other work had been done.\nIt was the Baldwin contention that\nthe plumbing Inspector had refused\nlo approve the plans for the work\nas agreed In the JGO contract and\nthat it was necessary for the owner\nand the contractor to again agree\non the terms. This lime, according\nto the Baldwin contention, the two\ncontracting parties agreed to follow\nthe layout proposed by the plumbing\ninspector at the cost of the labor\nand materials plus :o per cent.\nDaniel J. Donovan of office of\nPlumbing Inspector Oscar Anderson\nappeared as principal witness for\nMr. Baldwin while David Cohen, a\ntenant In the block, was the prin-\ncipal witness for Sir. Raffel.\nIn his decision, Judge Malloy or-\ndered ltaffel lo pay what the plumb-\ning Inspector thought was a reason-\nable price, which proved to be $145.\nSon lug Assessment Notices\nNotices are being served today by\nSergeant Daniel McGilllcuddy of Ihe\npolice department for a hearing to\nbe held before the city council on\nJuly 7 on the matter of assessments\nof benefits and damages for the\nerection of the North Pond street\nbridge over tho railroad connecting\nPond street with North Pond street.\nThe total cost of the bridge and\nappoaches was J33.8U0 of which the\nrailroad company will nay $3,998\nand the city will Dav S5.ni;:.
0e5a03980672d49f0e126b1ad8fec45f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.678082160071 44.939157 -123.033121 Turner, Ore., September 5. (Special)\nNaturally Turner is unanimously in\nfavor of having the Pacific Highway\npass through that thrifty section. That\nthere is something besides just local\ndesire however is shown in the fact\nthat other points which the highway\nwill not touch are also in favor of the\nTurner route. Among these are Stay-ton- ,\nAumsville and Marion, all of which\nwere represented at a meeting held at\nTurner last night to take action on the\nlocation of the highway. Without a\ndissenting voice every community rep-\nresented and every person present were\nstrongly in favor of changing the route\nof tne highway between Salem and Jef-\nferson, so that it would pass through\nTurner. Turner placed its cards on\nthe table and presents the following as\nsome of tho reasons why the route of\nthe highway should be chanced. As a\npreliminary it is frankly admitted the\nroad will be between two and three\nmiles longer. Against this however it\nis pointed out that all hills will be\navoided and the road instead of being\ncostly to grade will be along a water\nlevel route and can be built, this\naccount, as cheaply if not more so, than\nif located over the proposed route over\nthe hills. The road over the Turner\nroute is practically all graded now, and\ncan with but trifling cost be made\nready for the paving. This will per-\nmit road to be completed cheaper than\nover the hill route. It would prove a\ngreat convenience to, and become the\nmain highway for a large section of\ncountry lying east of the road, that\nwould receive no benefit from it if lo-\ncated on tho line proposed over the\nhills. The latter is so hemmed in by\nnatural barriers that but a small sec-\ntion would be able to use the highway,\nIf thought best, the building of about\ntwo miles of new road, would still per-\nmit it going through Turner, and the\ndifference in distance would then be\nonly about one mile.\nOn the Turner route tourists would\nget a view of all the state institutionos.\nThus not only the citizens of a big\ndistrict will get practical benefits from\nthe change of route, but the tourist\nclass will have something added to\ntheir views.
18419e403dd875631d4b3987898443c2 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.187671201167 37.92448 -95.399981 That laws are needed to control tho\nrailroad corporations, to prevent ex-\ntortion and discrimination, I by no\nmeans deny. The laws of this naturo\nalready on our statute books have un-\ndoubtedly brought good results, and\nthese might be amended, in the light\nof experience, so as to yield yet better\nresults. A bill has been introduced\nin the Lower House of this legislature\nwhich is along this line and which I\nhope will become a law. But I do\nnot believe so severe and drastic a\nmeasure as tho one now under con-\nsideration is needed. Nor do I believe\nit is demanded by the people. The\npeople of Kansas have conferred\ngreat privileges and favors upon the\nrailroads, but they havo received\ngreat benefits in return. The rail-\nroads of Kansas have been, beyond\nall comparison, the most potent factor\nin the marvellous material develop-\nment of this Stato. From the begin-\nning they have been our pioneers, not\nwaiting lor settlement and civilization\nand business to make the way straight\n them, but pushing ahead into the\nunknown and dragging settlement\nand civilization and business after\nthem. Thoy have advertised Kansas\nin every civilized country on earth,\nbringing to us thousands of excellent\ncitizens, and their enterprise has made\npossible in this State a development\nin a single quarter of a century which\nwithout this could not have been\nachieved in twice that period. Not\nonly have the railroads contributed\nin this general way to the growth and\ndevelopment of the State, but thoy\nhavo always been the readiest and\nmost liberal contributors to relieve\nthe distress tbat has at different tim-\nes come upon our people. The people\nof Kansas remember all these things,\nand they regard the railroads as their\nfriends and not as their enemies.\nThoy demand fair treatment at their\nhands, but they are willing to grant\nfair treatment in return. I do not be-\nlieve that they demand a law which\nis practical confiscation of railroad\nproperty, and I shall therefore de-\ncline to voto for this bill.
1e58860002562e57199157771e3f3e7b PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.9630136669202 31.960991 -90.983994 The government in theory know* no distinction paper whatever, as a currency or circulation, I\nof persons or classe*, and should not bestow up- cannot doubt that such a treasury as was con-\non some favors and privilege* whieh ail others templated by the constitution, should be inde­\nmay not enjoy. It was th* purpose of its illus- pendent of nil bankiug cnrp#ration». The money\ntrous founders to base the institutions which of the people should he kept in the treasury of\nthey reared upon the great and unchanging prin- the people created by law, and be in custody of\nciples of justice and equity, conscious that if ad- agents of the people chosen by themselves, ac-\nministered in the spirit in which they were con- cording to the forms of tlte constitution; even's\nceivcd, they would be felt only by the benefits who are directly responsible to the government,\nwhich they diffused, and would secure for them- who are under adequate bonds and~oaihs, and\nselves a defence in the hearts of the people, who are subject to severe punishments anv\nmore powerful than standing armies, and ail the enibexz'ement, private use, or misapplication of\nmeans and nppliunces invented to sustain gov. the public funds, and for any failure in other re-\nernments founded in injustice and opresssion. spects to perform their duty. To say that the\nTho well-known fact that the tariff act of people or their government are incompetent, or\n1842 was passed by a majority of one vote in not to be trusted with the custody of their own\nthe Senate, and two in the House of Ropresen- money, in their own tr< asury, provided by\ntatives, and that some of those who felt them- themsdvas, hut must rely on the presidents,\nselves constrained, under the peculiar circum- Cashiers, and stockholders of banking corpora-\nstances existing at the time, to vote in its favor, tiens, not appointed by them, nor res portsib!\nproclaimed its defects,and expressed their deter- them, would be to concede that they are incnni-\nmination to aid in its modification o* the first peient for selT government\nopportunity, affords strong and conclusive evi-
39225c52162a7c9d773ada69d0e0bccb OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.1383561326738 39.513775 -121.556359 The bill designed to protect property on the\nriver banks above Sacramento and above\nthe mouth of the San Joaquin, by requiring\nthat steamboats navigating those waters\nshou-Vl be compelled to carry spark-catchers,\nwas (Hscu-sed, amended and passed. A se-\nries of resolutions, declaratory of the sense\nof the Senate upon the subject of the State\ndebt—taking the view that the eigtli article\nof the constitution is merely directory, anil\nthat the debt is not uucMistitution.il, was\nintroduced, and after some discu-sioa, or-\ndered to be printed In the Assembly, the\nmost important action had. was the appoint-\nment of a committee to examine and ascer-\ntain the condition of the b a Iw and accounts\nof S. A . McMeans, late Treasurer of State\nIt is stated that there was a decrepancy \nsome $;54 t)80 against the Stats, which need-\ned explanation at least. The committee arc\ninvested with power to send for persons and\npapers, and the result of their investiga-\ntions will he looked forwatd to with interest.\nSeveral hills of a special character were-\npassed, and a large number of it promiscu-\nous nature introduced. Among them was\noue providing lor the removal of insane\nconvicts from the State PHson to the Insane-\nAsylum ; and another to purchase the por-\ntrait of Gen. Jackson. After the morning\nbusiness, the House went into Committee of\nthe Whole on the hill to provide for the sale\nof the swamp and ovorfibwed lands of the\nState It was discussed until half-past three\noclock, when the committee rose and had\nleave to sit again.
34da7695ce1fd8d2857c74ef556586f4 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.7767122970574 35.780398 -78.639099 miscuous, were ot constant occurence and\nthe blood of the combattants mingled with\nthe dust-- ; and drunken songs and rude jests\nmade up an infernal chorus over the bodies\nof those who slept in drunken stupor. Thus\nreigned for one day in Time the rum devil\nat the little village of Woodstock.\nThe polls were closed, and Clayton's party\nand men were beaten. The taunting jeers of\nhis opponents aroused the slumbering spirit\nof fury in Clayton's breast. He became as\none possessed of a demon. His oaths and\nthreats of violence were awful to hear, and\neven those hardened in crime shuddered to\nhear his blasphemous imprecations. Inflamed\nwith rum and half crazed with defeat he\nstaggered, at nightfall, to his home. Jenny\nbad prepared his supper and sat by the win-\ndow looking out through her veil tears at\nthe pale moonbeams trembling on the grass\nand slope that led down to the creek. Little\nCarrie had sung herself to sleep in her little\ncrib and was all unconscious of the troubles\nand trfals of life. Clayton entered the cot-\ntage with acurse, which startled Jenny from\nher sorrowing reverie and aroused little Car-\nrie from her slumber, and she began to cry\nwith terror. At this Clayton became more\nand more infuriated he swore loud and\nhoarsely swore that Carrie should die at\nhis hands, and he snatched the child from\nher bed and slung her round and round by\none arm until her joints creaked. She scream-\ned in the agony of her torture. Louder grew\nthe curses of the demon father as he whirl-\ned his child through the air. A devil pos- se i s-
3fc5ac95b5856baa59db40cd9a884af9 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.7821917491121 40.735657 -74.172367 awarded, become his or their sureties tor the\nfaithful performance of said work, and that If\nthe person or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsuch contract they will pay to the City of\nNewark any dlile»ence between the sums :o\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract and that\nwhich the City of Newark may be obliged to\npay the person or persons by whom such con-\ntract shall be exec ited.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners of the City of Newark reserve to them*\nselves the right to accept or reject any or ail\nproposals for the above work as they may\ndeem best for the interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby .otifled that\nunder the provisous of the seventh section\nof the law creating the Board of Street \nWater Commissioners, approved March 28, ls91,\nthat the bond or bonds to he given for the\nfaithful execution and performance of said\npublic work shall first be approved as to suf-\nficiency by the Board, and ns to form by the\ncounsel of the Board, and no contract shall\nre binding on the city or become effective or\niperntlve until such bond Is so approved; and\nthe President of the Board shall have power\nlo examine the proposed bondsmen under oath,\nf he snail so desire, or shall be so instructed\nby the Board, but the Board will not be bound\nby any statement that may be made by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full power\nsnd absolute discretion in the whole matter,\nind this provision shall be referred to in any\nidvertisemont inviting bids for any such pub-\nic work.
020572d1d2da070b621912dbe2b98df0 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.746575310756 40.419757 -77.187146 scapegrace of this town ; I have led a\nbud, wicked life I know ; but God for-\ngive me I But, your Honor, I can do\none act of repentance ere I die. As I\nhope for mercy from above, I declare\nthat Ned Harrington is innocent of the\ncrime for which he is now being tried.\nMine was the hand that drove the knife\nto the heart of William Roberts. But\nthere, cowering before you, Is the real\nmurderer, Robert Grey ; with my dying\nbreath I swear HI He bated young\nHarrington because be won the hand of\nthe lady whom the lawyer loved. He\nfurnished me with the knife, and told\nme where to strike the blow when he\nknew that Ned was coming directly\nacross that fatal Grey contrived\nto be on the ground with several others\nand thus he entrapped Ned. He knew\nthat Ned had lost his knife, and be\nthought If he could get one made like it\nhe would more effectually fix the crime\nupon him. I visited him upon the night\nof August 6th, and we bad a quarrel\nabout the pay ; he stabbed me, and,\nthinking me dead, carried me down into\nthe cellar, and there left me. Why, or\nfor what purpose that coal miner was in\nthe house, I cannot tell ; he rescued me\nand took me to the house where he\nboarded, and secretly cared for me for\ntwo weeks. But I am dying, and as I\nam a dying man, I've told the truth I\nYes, I'm"
0c4b8eaba3d80b98364dab0e13406ffc THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.382191749112 40.419757 -77.187146 America, at least it has proved itself to\nbe the most fortunate of the seven. It\nwas on Friday, the 8rd day of August,\n1492, that Columbus sailed from the\nport of Palos for the New World. It\nwas on Friday, the 12th of October, 1492,\nthat he first saw the land, after sixty\ndays of navigation. It was on Friday,\nthe 4th day of January, 1493, that he\nstarted on his return to Bpaln to an\nnounce to their Calhollo majesties the\nglorious result of his expedition, and on\nFriday, the 15th of March, 1493, that he\ndisembarked in Andalusia. It was on\nFriday, the 13th of June, 1494, that he\ndiscovered the American continent. Ou\nFriday, March S, 1497, Henry VII of\nEngland gave John Cabot his dispatch\nfor the voyage which resulted In the\n of the continent of North\nAmerica. On Friday, September Gth,\n1505, Menz founded St. Augustine, the\noldest town in the United States. On\nFriday, November 10th, 1G20, the May.\nflower first disembarked a few emigrants\non American soil at Provincetown, and\non Friday, December 22nd, 1620, her\npassengers finally landed at Plymouth\nRock. It was on Friday, February\n22nd, 1732, that George Washington\nwas born. It was on Friday, June 10,\n1775, that the battle of Bunker Hill was\nfought, and on Friday, October 7th, 1771,\nthat the surrender of Baratogo took place,\nwhich event decided France to give her\naid to the Americans. The treason of\nArnold was discovered on Friday.\nYorktown surrendered on Friday, and\non Friday, June 7th, 1770, Richard\nHenry Lee read the Declaration of Inde\npendence to the Continental Congress.
4469081f2128e54b4423cca2ee72e3ac EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.6452054477422 39.745947 -75.546589 Fairy today issued the following rules\nand regulations relative to female alien\nenemies, who are registered regarding\nthe changing of their residences. These\nrules and regulations are provided by\nthe government and read as follows:\n1. Any alien female registered or re­\nquired to register who shall change her\nplace of residence to another place of\nresidence within the same registration\ndistrict shall Immediately report such\nchange to the registration officer of\nsuch registration district, and shall pre­\nsent to such registration officer her reg­\nistration card for the purpose of hav­\ning indorsed thereon by such registra­\ntion officer the change of residence.\n2. No alien female registered or re­\nquired to register shall change her\nplace of residence to a place of resi­\ndence within another registration dis­\ntrict without a permit. Application for\nsuch permit must be made by the alien\nfemale to the registration officer of the\nregistration district In which the alien\nfemale then resides. Tho application\nmust be made in four copies upon a\nform to be furnished for that purpose,\n which form such alien female must\nstate full particulars as to the date on\nwhich her residence is to be changed,\nas to the reason for such change, and\nas to her intended place of residence.\nThe registration officer to whom such\napplication for change of residence Is\nmade shall, If no reason against the\ngranting of such permit be manifest to\nhim, Indorse such permit upon the reg­\nistration card of the alien female, which\nmust be presented by the latter to the\nregistration officer for that purpose.\nThe registration officer shall notify\nthe alien female to whom permission\nis given to change her plae.e of resi­\ndence from one registration dlstrid!\nto another that such alien female must\nforthwith report her arrival In the\nregistration district Into which she\nmoves to the registration officer of the\ndistrict and exhibit to him her regis­\ntration card with permit of change of\nresidence Indorsed thereon; and such\nalien female is hereby required so to\nreport. A change of residence in viola­\ntion of the regulations subjects an\n^
40d858f8505440c44fb89e66bf29e84b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.4726027080162 41.681744 -72.788147 Strenuous efforts are being made\nby a committee under the direction\nof Mioses Elizabeth Johnson and\nAnna Geissler, teachers in the Junior\nHigh school, to inaugurate during the\nfall term a systematic and enthusias-\ntic campaign of courtesy among the\npupils. Tho campaign will be con-\nducted under the auspices and direc-\ntion of the Civic League of the school.\nAccording to teachers in this school\nthere is grave need for such a cam-\npaign among, not especially the pupils\nof this school, but among the youth\nof the pre&cnt generation. As Prin-\ncipal XV. C. French says. "We can't\ntrain the older generation, we must\nteach It to the boys and girls."\nThe predominating selfishness of\nhuman nature in daily contact with\nothers not only in matters of routine\nbusiness and social functions but also\nin teaching the foreign born children\nthe habits and customs of their adopt-\ned country in a correct manner, are\nto be included in this campaign. It\nhad been planned' to Inaugurate the\nnew system at once later was de-\ncided that lt would be better to wait\nuntil the beginning of the coming\nterm, when better opportunities will\nbe afforded for careful training during\nthe term without the intervening\nsummer months to interfere.\nThe league is composed of all the\npupils and teachers connected with\nthe school. lis principal object be-\ning that of teaching the responsibili-\nties of life and the duties of one to\nanother. In the constitution and by-\nlaws of the league is found the fol-\nlowing statement. "The objects of this\nleagrie are to develop a better school\nspirit, to Inculcate respect for tho\nrights of others, to Increase a sense\nof responsibility and to improve the\ncommunity lifo of the school."\nThe pledge to the school, which is\ngiven at every meeting of the league,\nalso fittingly exemplifies the spirit of\nI he league, as follows: "I will be\nloyal to my school, helpful to others,\nand so conduct myself as to be a cred-\nit to my country, state and commun-\nity."
349e973a40764b155e2b6c182cb57ae1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.050684899797 41.681744 -72.788147 There is still a great deal of talk\nabout ridding the country of the Eng-\nlish sparrow. It has been proposed\nat one time or another to shoot him,\npoison him and trap him. Efforts\nhave been made to organize the en-\ntire country in a campaign of exter-\nmination. And some very enthusias-\ntic sparrow opponents have even ad-\nvocated an abandonment of all public\nand private efforts to feed the birds in\nthe hope that starvation would put an\nend to them. Something of that sort,\npossibly, might be achieved by any of\nthe plans suggested. Incidentally,\nhowever a faot that seems to have\nescaped the observation of the spar-\nrow enemies other birds, not regard-\ned as pests, would suffer also.\nThe "appeals" thus far made to the\npublic have met with very little re-\nsponse. Most of us are not at all sure\nthat the English sparrow Is the vll -Ua - n\nhe is said to be. Indeed, there is\nBorne very good evidence in his fa-\nvor. In two or places in Eu-\nrope, for Instance, the English spar-\nrow was driven out completely, only to\nbe imported again when farmers\nfound that with his exit there entered\nan Insect pest that almost devoured\ntheir crops. And most of us are still\naware that birds held only a few years\nago to be without a quality In their\nfavor have since been included in the\nlist of man's best friends and allies.\nHowever, putting aside considera-\ntion of the possibility that the Eng-\nlish sparrow has been misjudged, how\nmany persons really know this spe-\ncies of sparrow from the other nu-\nmerous species? How many, ready to\nshoot, or poison or trap, can distin-\nguish between the English sparrow\nand say, the song sparrow, the tree\nsparrow, the field sparrow and the\nchipping sparrow? The points of dif-\nference, except to the trained orni-\nthologist, are not by any means ob-\nvious. Says an authority on the sub-\nject: "Many species of sparrows will\nat first appear exactly alike to a be-\nginner."
037c6b22aef8f7b6002ead942b87184d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1895.850684899797 39.756121 -99.323985 It requires moro force to sound a\nnote gently on the piano than to lift\nthe lid of a kettle. A German composer\nhas figured that minimum pressure of\nthe finger playing pianolsslmo is equal\nto 110 grams a quarter of a pound.\nFew kettle lids weigh more than two\nounces. The German's calculations are\neasy to verify if one takes a small hand-\nful of coins and piles them on a key\nof the piano. When a sufficient quan-\ntity is plied on to make a note sound\nthey may then be weighed and those\nfigures will bo found to bo true. If tho\npianist Is playfhg fortissimo a much\ngreater force Is needed.. At times a\nforce of six pounds is thrown upon a\nsingle key to produce a solitary effect.\n chords the forco is generally\nspread over the various notes sounded\nsimultaneously, though a greater out-\nput of force 3s undoubtedly expended.\nThis is what gives pianists the wonder-\nful strength in their fingers so often\ncommented on. A story used to be\ntold of Paderewskl that he could crack\na pane of French plate glass half an\ninch thick merely by placing one hand\nupon It, as if upon a piano keyboard,\nand striking it sharply with his middle\nfinger. Chopin's last study In C minor\nhas a passage which Vkes two minutes\nand five seconds to pfay. Tho total\npressure brought to bear on this, it Is\nestimated, Is equal to three frill tons.\nThe average "tonnage" of an hour's\nplann playirrg of Chopin's music varies\nfrom twelve to eighty-fou- r
21f6b2a80745ed7539fc84e1e2d274d7 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.736338766191 39.261561 -121.016059 Surrounded on all sides by gold bearing hills and\ngulches and ravine*; in clo»e communication with\nthe newly discovered mineral country; in an eaty\nand direct lin* of communication with all portion*\nof the Bute, Nevada, the Queen city of the moun-\ntain*, holds a commanding position. Her people\nkind, hospitable and entertaining. Her business\nmen thriving, energetic and honorable; and her gen-\neral appearance prepossessing te a degree, which\ncannot fail to elicit the admiration of all. Nevada\nnow boasts of long rows of handsomely and firmly\nbuilt brick stores and houses, which will be a bar\nin the future to such terrible fires as those in tb*\npast, to say nothing at this point of her splendidly\norganised Fire Department. On both aides of Broad\nstreet, on Main street, and on Commercial, there\nare as tine brick buildings as can be seen in\nany city, and an hundred per cent, more durable\nana better built than nine-tenths of the brick coffins\nereoted in San Francisco. All these stores are oc-\ncupied by busy merchants, whose stocks of goods\nhave been selected with great care, not only in San\nFrancisco, but in the Hast, manv of their goods be-\ning importations direct from the" Atlantic and Kuro-\npean markets. I must confess I saw fewer unoccu-\npied stores in Nevada, than any other place outside\nof San Francisco, that I have been in for a long\ntime. Improvements too, seemed to be steadily\ngoing on. At the left hand side of the upper end of\nBroad street, a large three story brick hotel was be-\ning erected by a Mr. Bailv, which when finished will\nbe a credit to the place.
1f2952ac224a9af3edc7b750e6defe1c CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.7630136669204 41.875555 -87.624421 When desperately hungry In reglois\nwhere deer are not so plentiful tho\nwolves will stick to tho one they start\nwith and follow to a finish, Be It ev?r\nso far. I have heard the accounts of\nmany old Ontario hunters that entirely\nsupports this belief, snys Ernest Thomp-\nson Setoa In Scrlbner's.\nIn my own Journal I find an Instance\nIn point, related to mo by Gordon\nWright of Oarberry, Manitoba. During\ntbe winter of 1805 ho was sbantylng at\nSturgeon Lake, Ontario. One Sunday\nbe and some companions strolled out\non tbe Ico of tho Inkc to look at tho\ndogs there. They henrd tho hunting\ncry of wolves, then n deer (a female)\ndarted from tho woods to tho open Ice.\nHer sides were heaving, her tongue out\naud ber legs cut with tlio slight enrt\non the snow. Evldcnllj ho was hard\npressed and had rim tor soma time.\nShe was coming toward them, but ouo\nof tho men gavo a shout, which cnus.nl\nher to sheer off. A inlnuto later nls\n wolves appeared, galloping on\nher trull, heads low, tails horizontal,\nand howling continuously. They wove\nuttering their hunting ir, bufos soon\nas they saw her they hroku Into a loud\ner, different note, left tlio trail and\nmade straight for their prey. Five of\ntbe wolvei were abreast nnd one that\nseemed much darker wns behind. With-\nin half n mllo they overtook tho deor\nand pulled her down, nil seemed to\nseize ber at once. For n fow momenta\nbe bleated like a sheep In distress;\nafter that tbe only Bound was the snarl\nIng and crunching of tho wolves as they\nfeasted. Within fifteen minutes noth-lu- g\nwas left of tho victim but hair and\nsome of the larger bones, tho wolves\nfighting among themselves for even\nthese. Then they scattered, each going\na mile or so, no two In tlio same direc-\ntion, and tboso that remained In sight\ncurled up there on the open lake to\nsleep. This bnppened at about 10 In\ntbe morning within 300 yards of sev-\neral witnesses,
0c93fffb6464c24cdce4341637c783b4 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.596994503896 40.114955 -111.654923 number of years had entire charge of\nMr Bryans personal correspondence\nand has been what he calls his con\nfidential secretary Just now Mr\nBryans official stenographer who has\nhelped In previous campaigns is a\nresident at Fairview hut this does not\nrelieve Mrs Bryan from looking after\nMr Bryans private correspondence\nShe takes up the consideration of the\nmall Immediately after breakfast\nwhich by the way Is a very early\nmeal for Mrs Bryan as she Is usually\nabout the house planning various lines-\nof work and outlining her duties for\ntho day at five oclock In the morning\nMr Bryan dictates his letters to Mrs\nBryan and as a rule his editorials Mrs\nBryan did not attempt to learn any do\nfined system of shorthand when first\nundertaking this work but Immediate ¬\nIly arranged a contracted system of her\nown which she has found to be ade\nquate In every way About five years\nago she began using typewriter\nand now has become such a rapid\noperator she frequently takes dictation\ndirect on the machine\nMr Bryan mall does not comprise\nall that Is received at Fairview for\nMrs Bryan herself dally receives more\notters than any other woman In the\nland unless It should bo the wife of\nPresident Hoosevelt Everybody who\nhas any sort of n question to ask con\neludes at once Mrs Bryan Is the\nproper person to whom to apply\nMrs Bryan Is an ardent church\nworker giving according to her means\nand always lending her Influence to\nthe smaller organizations whore It Is\nmost needed When site moved to\nFairview she attended the little church\nat Normal but lately a mission church\nwas established In South LIncoln and\nshe and her husband severed their con\nnectlon with the fashionable Mm\nchurch of the city and placed their\nnames on tho membership roll of the\nnew organization known as Westmln\nstem church-
fd1f6a1c1b882b461eedff2092322f4b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.6753424340436 41.681744 -72.788147 The best thing on the City league\nprogram this afternoon is reserved\nuntil the last, the most important\ngame of the year being scheduled for\n4 o'clock on Diamond No. 1 . This\nwill bring the Burritts and Pirates\nto grips in a game which means the\npnenant for the former if they win\nand a deadlock for first place if they\nare defeated. The Burritts have\nplayed real oldtimo baseball all sea-\nson, making mistakes but forcing the,\nbreaks all the way and taking the\nutmost advantage of them. Last\nweek they met and shut out the\nWest Ends in tho first of a pair of\ncrucial games, the second of which\nis carded for today. Last week they\nbroke one of their pursuers and it\nremains to ' o seen' it can dis-\npose of the oth r in the same way.\nThe Pirates are a team which\nmust not be dismissed lightly, how-\never. Only one game behind the\nleaders, they ha o lately developed a\nterrifici batting punch which has car-\nried them to the top of the league\nin hitting. If they can overcome\ntheir nervousness and the resulting\nuncertain fielding they should have\nat least an even chance. Whether\nthe importance of the game will\nmake them work harder or result in\nerratic play is one of tho big ques-\ntions, as the Burritts are sure to play\ntheir usual fast and hard game.\n.Tohnny Hose will probably oppose\nHuggie Carlson in the box.\nAt 2 o'clock on Diamond No. 1\nthe West Ends will play the Rang-\ners.
253e12999cb910c69da2f94acf642e42 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1880.0341529738414 40.419757 -77.187146 invited her minister to dinner, and I'm\nto entertain him when he comes while\nshe dishes up the hash. May old Kick\nfly away with the preachers!" And\nBanBcrlpt kicked the cat through the\ndoorway with such force that the poor\ncreature dislocated two teeth by concus-\nsion with the wainscoting on the opposite\nside of the hall. Puss slunk away lick-\ning her bleeding chops wondering\nwhether the house had fallen ou any\nbody else, while Sanscript banged the\nchairs, and continued his soliloquy :\n" Now, I alnt used to preachers, and no\ndoubt I'll make a muss of It. I'd sooner\ntrim the corns on the hind feet of a mule\nor comb the mane of Uncle John Robin-\nson's boss Hon, than entertain a minis-\nter! What will the old duffer want to\ntalk about, I wonder. If he slings any\nBible conundrums at me I'm lost. I\n did take much stock in the Bible.\nI don't hold a very Btrong hand In relig-\nious learning, and preachers have such a\nknack of setting up the deck that they\ndeal themselves a full hand every time !\nWonder, now, if I could stand pat, and\nbluflfthe snoozeron an ace high I Since\nI come to think of it I'm not so Ignorant\nafter all. It's been a long while since I\nwent to Sunday School, but I recollect\nsome of the prize stories we learned\nthere. Let's see" And Sanscript sat\ndown to think. So intent was his mind\nrummaging around in his bralu for the\ndusty lore of his almost forgotten Sun-\nday School days, that he had never noted\nthe fact that he had sat upon his wife's\ntwenty dollar fall bonnet, which she had\ncarlessly left lying upou the sofa. Let's\nsee, now, mused John tapping his fore-\nhead.
1a5b0bbbe3994c09944d367f270e3502 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.305479420345 40.735657 -74.172367 Chapter CXU. of tho laws of eighteen hundred\nand eighty-six. and the several supplements\nthereof and amendments thereto, lands known\nas iotd numbers one hundred and eighty-four\nand one hundred and eighty-five on block*num-\nber thirteen hundred and ninety-eight, in th*\nsaid City of Newark, County of Essex and Stats\nof New Jnrst-j. as laid down on the block map*\nof the aald City of Newark; which ©aid lot*\nare described by metes and bounds as follows:\nBeginning on the easterly side of Peanliilftoft\navenue south two hundred and twenty-five feet\nfrom the corner of the same and Elm street;\nthence along said avenue thirty-two degree*\nfifty minutes west fifty feet: tJienc© eouth fifty-\nseven degrees ten minutes eaatfone hundred and\ntwenty feet and seven inches: thence north\nthirty-one degrees thirty minutes east fifty fast;\nthence north fifty-seven degree* ten minute*\nwest one hundred and nineteen feet and Rv*\nInches to easterly side* of Pennington |V9>\nnue and place of beginning.\nBeing also designated as lots numbers on*\nhundred and eighty-four and one hundred and\neighty-five on rnup of John C. Jennings (for-\nmerly General Ward, deceased).\nAnd that by virtu© of an order made on th*\nfifth day of March, one thousand nine hundred\nend ten, by the Circuit Court of tho County off\nEssex, you are required to redeem said l»nd*\nfrom said sale on or before tho twenty-fourth\nday of .September, on© thousand nino hundred\nand ten. or to ..bow rau«o on said day be»or*\nsaid court, at the Court House In the a*aJd City\nof Newark at ten o'clock, or ae soon there-\nafter as counsel can be heafed, why a dead for\n•aid lands should not be delivered to th* said\nthe Mayor and Common Council of the City of\nNewark, its successor*! or assigns.\nDated Newark. N. J.,
1d93484c309d4df94c8789d7a6d2417b DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.5915300230217 58.275556 -134.3925 RESTORATION TO ESNTRT OP\nLANDS IN NATIONAL FOREST\nNotice Is hereby itiven that the land*\ndescribed below embracing ."II acres,\nwithin the Toutfuss National Forest,\nAlaska, will be subject to settlement\n¦mil entry under the provisions of the\nhomestead law* of the United States\nmid'the net i if Juue 11, 19U0 (31 Stat.,\n1EE1), ut the United States lund olllce at\nJuneau, AlaskH, on September .'10, 1910.\nAny settler who was actually and In\nKood faith claimiuK any of said lande\nfor agricultural purposes prior to Jau-\nuary 1, 190C, and has not abandoned\nsauie, lias a proforence right to make a\nhomentrad entry for the lands actually\noccupied. Said lands wore listed upon\nthe applications of the persons men\ntioned below, who hnvo a preference\nright subject to the prior right of any\nsuch settler, provided such settler or\napplicant I* qualified to make horne-\nstead entry and preference right is\nexercised prior to September 30, 1!)1G,\non which date the lands will be subject\nto settlement and entry by nny quail\nIlt'il person. a tract or ~m.i- aorvn, on\nA 1niira11y IhIhik) Ht the mouth of\nWheeler Creak, deicribed n* follow*:\nBeginning hi Corner No. 1, identical\nwith Forest Service Monument, oon-\nslatim; of u post nut on thn beach above\nhigh tiilo Ht the eilitw of the dalt gra*»,\nmarked F. 8. M. II. 1, whence h spruce\n1.*) inched in diameter bear* S l(i detf.\nK 2.8,1 oha , the rock point at the east\nend of the cove heart* North. Point\nMarddeii hoar* 8 71 deg. \\V; fTcndimt\nthence by meander along beach N 41)\ndeti. 30 mm. E 12.53 oha., N 71 deg. E\n1,33 cH,i.,~a 8 de« E 3.72 ch»., 8 20\ndeg.W281ch»., N 77 dec.30min.W\n1.72 oho., 8 5 doit. W 1.73 elm .,
0982bd801668a8a18d69cf2e24939051 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.9082191463724 46.187885 -123.831256 the present day. These are supposed\nto have been of early origin. Candle\nclocks were a later method of mark-\ning time. It is rather remarkable\nthat, long before the invention of\nwheel clocks, planetariums, or orrer-\nies were well known. The first\nmodern planetarium in England was\none made for Lord Orrery, whose\nname has been since generally given\nto these machines, and that our fore-\nfathers looked upon the planetary\nmotions as the true measure of time\nmay be proved by the fact that the\nfirst clocks constructed nearly always\nshowed various astronomical phe-\nnomena, in addition to showing or\nstriking the hour of the day. Very\nlittle is known, it would seem, about\nthe tirst invention of wheel clocks,\nno two writers seemingly agreeing as\nto the exact period of their introduc-\ntion. Although some historians as-\nsign it to such an early date as even\nthe sixth century, it is not very prob-\nable that they are the\nwords horologium, horologe, etc.,\nhaving been applied indiscriminately\nin old writings to any machine for\nmeasuring time. It is pretty certain,\nhowever, that clocks driven by\nweights, and striking automatically,\nexisted in the eleventh century.\nThe oldest clocks in England were\nthat of St. Paul's Cathedral, London,\nand one at Westminster, which latter\nwas paid for out of a fine imposed by\nEdward I., in the year 1288, upon Sir\nRalph de Hengham, chief justice of\nthe King's bench, for corrupt prac-\ntices. St. Paul antedated the latter\nby at least two years. From these\ndates the manufacture of clocks\nwould appear to have become a set-\ntled industry in England, although\nthe first authentic description we\nhave of the interior of any wheel\nclock is that of one made by Henry\nde "Wyck, a German, for Charles V.\nof France, in 1379, which has been\nnot inaptly styled the "parent of\nmodern tim e -ke ep ers -
185ed9819bf83c6eacdf85b19d16b2bd NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.03698626966 40.735657 -74.172367 they have so voted if Dr. Wilson had candidly avowed his inten-\ntion? If they had not voted the Democratic ticket would Dr. Wil-\nson have been elected governor? Would Republican and Democratic\nprotectionist voters have given their support to the Democratic\nlegislative candidates with the understanding that a Democratic\nLegislature would send a free-trade senator to Washington to mis\nrepresent this State? Dr. Wilsons candidate has twice been a\ncandidate for Congress, and was twice defeated because of his free\ntrade and free-silver vagarieB. By what miracle has it come about\nthat the people of the State have now called him to a much higher\nand more important legislative duty, where his vote as a free-\ntrader would have a more telling effect in destroying the principles\nof protection in the tariff? By what kind of reasoning have the\npeople of New Jersey suddenly changed their beliefs on the tariff\nquestion and decided that they want in the Senate man whom\nthey dont want in the House of Representatives, a. man whose\nradical views on the tariff, as well as the currency, if carried out,\nwould bring ruin to New Jersey industries and turn thousands of\nwage-enrners out on the highways? Dr. Wilson has thus far dealt\nin generalities. He takes assumptions as facts and treats unsup-\nported assertions as verities. He conveniently ignores the logical\npoints he. is unable to controvert and has failed to give the least j\ncolor to important statements made by him. Silence is a poor\nrefuge for a pleader before the public, and persuasive speech decked\nout with borrowed moralities is neither logic nor common sense.\nManliness demands of men that they shall make no statements or\ncharges affecting their fellow men without evidence, and that when\nthey do so they must submit their proofs. Has Dr. Wilson enacted\na manly role? We leave that question to the cool judgment of;\nmen.
89047ef2ed01dee661cfcafb943c5d70 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.0123287354136 31.960991 -90.983994 er had the honor of an introduction.”\n“But, Edward, consider how peculiarly\nfastidious Elliot is, how jealous of any at­\ntempt to restrain and guide him.”\nAnd just for that reason is it that men\nothis acquaintance cannot do any thing\nwith him. But what are you women\nmade with so much tact and power of\ncharming for, if it is not to do these very\nthings that we men cannot do? It is a de­\nlicate matter, true; and has not Heaven\ngiven to you a fine touch and a nice eye\nfor jus» such delicate matters? Have j ou\nnot seen, a thousand times, that what\nmight be resented, as an impertinent in­\nterference on the part of a man, comes to\nus as a flattering expression of interest,\nfrom the lips of a woman?”\nWell, but cousin, what would yor have\nme do? how would you have me do it?”\nsaid Florence, earnestly.\n“You know that Fashion, which makes\nso many wrong turns, and many absurd m\nones, has at last made one right one, and\nit is now a fashionable thing to sign the\ntemperance pledge. Elliot himself woald\nbe glad to do it, but he foolishly commit­\nted himself against it in the outset, and\nnow feels bound to stand to his opinion.\nHe has too, been rather ludely assailed\nby some of the apostles of ths new state\nof things, who did not understand the pe­\nculiar points of his characteT; in short, I\nam afraid th'at he will feel bound to go to\ndestruction for the sake of supporting his\nown opinion. Now, if I should undertake\nwith him he might shoot me; but I hardly\nthink there is any thing of the sort to be\napprehended in your case. Just try your\nenchantments; you have “bewitched wise\nmen into doing foolish things, before now :\ntry, now, if you cant bewitch a foolish\nman into doing a wise thing.”\nFlorence smiled archly, but instantly\ngrew more thoughtful*
3292ce67842ffbaff77c8261e48feb1e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.9631147224752 40.063962 -80.720915 had for some months previous thought thfl\na preparation havlns tor its bads! the\nY bark of white pine might be so componnde\nas to be very useful in diseases or the thros\nand lungs. To test the value ofit in the caa\nalluded to, I compounded a small quantlt;\noi the medicine Chat I had been Plannlm\nand gave it In teaspoonfhl doses. Ae nraJ\nwas exceedingly gratifying. Within tw\ndays the irritation of the throat was remo\\\ned, the ooogh subsided snd a speedy cur\nwas effected. Boon after this, I sent some t\na lady in Londonderry. N . H ., who had bee\nsuffering for some weeks lrom abadcougl\noccasioned bv a sudden cold, and had raise\nmucus streaked with blood. Hhesoonfoun\nao relief ana sent for more. She took abot\nten ounces of it, and got well. . B, Clark.\nEsq., editor of the Manchester Daily Iflrro:\ng. made a trial of the same preparation in th\ncase of a severe cold and was cured immed\nately. He was so highly pleased with tbes*\n> suits, and so confident of success attending II\nsales, if placed before the public, that h\n0nill v nnrsasded ma to aivn it a nomo an\nBead It abroad to benefit the suffering; I\nNovember, 1855,1 first advertised It wide\nthe name or White Pine Compound. In tw\nyean from that t'mo there had been wbofc\nsalad in tfanchcwter alone one hundred do:\nlan worth; where It took the lead of all tfa\ncougb remedies in the market, and It Btl\nmaintains thatpoeiti*3u- Theroia roodXM\neon for this; it £ very aoothing and bsalin\nin Its nature: la warming to the stamaohan\nRiSS^VSr1*1110 UM,Ul«a>
2e97e3d7985d96a43e5ac8f078d1232f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1906.0315068176053 42.217817 -85.891125 kinds of raw material set mines, mills\nand factories to running overtime.\nThe settlement of extensive strikes in\nthe building trades paved the way for\na phenomenal spurt In residence and\noflice construction In nearly all of our\ncities. Railroads, trolley combines and\nshipping interests went into new and\nvast schemes of extension and Improve-\nment. Lastly, 'but at the foundation\nof the whole structure, was the de-\ncision of our fanners to Increase the\nacreage under cultivation, an exception\nbeing the cotton planters, who made\nsome restriction In order to maintain\nprices. The result, weather favoring\nand Improved methods helping, made\npossible Secretary Wilson's story of\nrecord breaking crops to gladden the\nnation's Thanksgiving day, the total In-\ncrement of agricultural wealth being\nestimated at $0,4ir,000,0(X).\nIn the spring of the year this condi-\ntion of affairs was noticeably rejected\nIn the universal shortage of freight\ncars on all the great railroad highways,\nnotwithstanding that the car \ntion companies had been running full\nblast to till enormous orders for rolling\nstock. The Missouri Pacific and the\nBurlington engaged In a sharp rate\nwar in the rivalry of gulf and Atlantic\nports for western grain last spring, and\nlater in the summer eastern trunk lines\nsuffered slightly from a temporary pe-\nriod of rate cutting. Progress was\nmade toward through trolley lines be-\ntween Huffalo and Chicago and other '\nwestern points. The . management of\nthe Vanderbilt system of railroads was\ncentralized under the single headship\nof President Newman. (Jould became\nsupreme in the Wabash after forcing\nKamsey out. Hill and llarriman reach-\ned a settlement by dividing the north-\nwest between them. Our foreign com-\nmerce as recorded at the end of the\nfiscal year was over lr!ii),:it),0tK), an\nincrease of J?1S l.ooo .Oiio and the largest\non record. This meant prosperity to\nshipping interests, notwithstanding that\nthe trust as such reported a millijii\ndeficit.
10c1ec68ce8aec7ccc67c4d99821e790 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.305479420345 40.807539 -91.112923 iaid Hunter, and also, that with a view ot\n^leasing himself from all liability on the\ninginal contract between him and said Hun\nter, said complainant sold to said Camp, only\nhis interest in the bond, subject to the con­\ndition of the same for the payment of the\npurchase money, and that said Camp was to\npay the purchase money, stipulated to be paid\ny said complainant, and to satisfy said Hun\nter for the same, and that Said Hunter, knew\nthe terms of the contract between said Camp\nand complainant, and agreed with said com­\nplainant to look to said Camp, for the pur­\nchase money, and in consideration that said\ncomplainant should sell and transfer said lob\nto said Camp, he would fully release and dis­\ncharge complainant from all further liability\nfor the purchase money aforesaid, and de\nliver up to said complainaut the note or notei-\nDel'ore refused, and given for the same, to be\ncanceled ; and that said Hunter representee\nliimself as entirely to release saiu\ncomplainant and takj said Camp, as respon&i\nble for the purchase money aforesaid, ane\nsaid Camp, accordingly assumed to pay saic\nHunter, the same, &c. , that said Hunter tolo\ncomplainant he would give him up his sccu\nrities for the purchase money refused for saici\nots, ic., and that soon after the transaclioi\naforesaid, said complainant left the aforesaic\ntown of Alton, and came to this Territory U\nreside, that said Hunter, did not deliver U|I\nthe said notes, and that said complainant in\nclosing his affairs for the purpose of remov­\ning, failed to call upon said Hunter, for said\nnotes or notes, &.c ., and until very recently,\nsupposed the same to have been destroyed oi\ncanceled ; and also that a suit is now pend\nmg upon the common law side of said Court,\nagainst said complainant, by said Hunter,\nupon one of the notes given for the purchasi\nmoney aforesaid, with a view and design li\ndctraud said complainant out of the amount
093e396586ce24e0d1647ef358e7e3f0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.8237704601802 40.063962 -80.720915 All sort® of stories were current\nabout -the affair, one of them being that\nMrs* llryan was struck with an egg,\nand that her carriage was lilt. Neither\nof these stories was true, however.\nThe llrst egg thrown at the parade\ncarno from & boy standing on the side¬\nwalk in front of the Powers building in\nwhich the Metropolitan Business Col¬\nlege is .situated. The egg was to ull\nappearances thrown at tho parade gen-\neraJly and at no particular individual,\nus it was not hurled with any violence.\nA policeman who witnessed the net,\nmade a rush for the youngster, who\ndarted up the stairway into the build¬\ning. A second ofllcer joined the first\nand an tho two ran for tire doorway,\nseveral more eggs were thrown from\nthe windows of the Business College,\nwhich occupies the flftli floor of the\nbuilding. The Cook County Marching\nClub, which was escorting Mr. Bryan,\nreceived tho bombardment and several\nPrince Albert coats and glon.- y black\ntiles were Hpattered with yellow. One\n two egg* struck the sidewalk and\nthe crowd was decorated accordingly.\nLater lit the afternoon a delegation\nfrom the Cook County Democracy de-\nsceuded upon the college with every\nsymptom of hostility and demanded\nthat the students who had done the\nthrowing be turned over to them. They\nheld possession of tho college for a\ntime and Anally left without learning\nwho had done the throwing. The police\nhad no better success and Mr. Powers,\nthe owner of the buiJdlng. who is also\npresident of the college,said that he did\nnot know who had thrown -the eggs,\nalthough he admitted that they came\nfrom students In his institution. He\nwas much distressed by the occurrence\nand declared If lie knew who had done\nthe work lie would have no hesitancy\nin turning him over to the police.\nLater in the day. a . .- reporter for a\nmorning Republican paper "while look¬\ning up the facts in the ¦egg throwing,\nwas severely beaten by a party of men\nwho had taken part In the parade.
26214d11ac719f7407103b446d0b066a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.5177595312184 42.217817 -85.891125 pansion by mere superimposed force\nof our flag and our military authority.\n"The Democratic party afterwards\nguided the country to further expan-io- u\nof this real, free character In the\nacquisition of Florida, the admission\nof Texas as a state, and the acquisition\nfrom Mexico of a magnificent far west\nfit to be made statei in the Union and\ngoverned under the constitution."\nReferring to the quadrennial nation-\nal conventions he satirized that held\nat Chicago last month as one In\nwhich everything was "cut and dried;"\nsaid he: "There are some conveniences\nabout a convention of that sort. One\nof them Is that the temporary chair-\nman knows six or nine mouths before-\nhand that he is going to be temporary\nchairman, lie also knows what he is\nwanted to say, compared with what\nhe wants to say." Dwelling on the point\nhe reviewed the address of Temporary\nChairman Koot. which ho said wa\n"a argument to prove that the\nparty of Koosevelt must, by something\nlike evolutionary process, act as the\nparty or Lincoln and McKlnley. This\nwas necessary In order to disguise tho\npalpable fact that it is not so acting.\n"It was to drawn way attention from\nKoosevelt ism and its volvanic, eruptive\nand reckless character, by dwelling up-\non the fact that at some period of its\nhistory the Republican party has been\na party which did tilings,' ami did\nthem safely. Tho orator hoped to have\nthe country lose sight of the fact that\nit is now in both of its legislative\nbrain lies a party of passivity, of non-\naction, of obstruction to reform and\nprogress in a word, a party whose\nonly sacred precept is the 'shibboleth\nwhich maketh them known, one of\nthem to the other,' a shibboleth drawn\nfrom the gambler's table: 'stand pat\na precept born of cowardice and fear\nto move."
378965c7a8e41774ff099bb44527878a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.683561612126 39.261561 -121.016059 Emissaries.—We are credibly Informed that\nI,h(Ii».ii or Gwin, probably Gwin, has been bu-\nsy lately lending emissaries into riunian coun-\nty, with money to be uied in influencing the\nelection for Senator and member* of the Leg-\nislature. Similar agent*, similarly furnished,\nhave been lent also into varloni portion! of\nthe Stale. A desperate effort ii ta he made to\nsecure the luocesi of the Leeoraptou candidate*\nfur the Legislature, in order to bring on the\nSenatorial election next winter, and thu* se-\ncure the re-election of Wm. If. Gwin to tbe\nUnited States Senate. Traveling agent*, well\nprovided with money, can do much, and it\nwould be well for the people to look out for\ntbeie mercenary individuals, and give their\nword* just such weight a* they are entitled to.\nOne of emissaries ba* lately been ap in\ntbis region, we believe, circulating all sort* of\nmiserable roorbacks in reference to the Doug-\nlas party. They are disproveu almost a* fast\nas they are uttered, but bis fertility of inven-\ntion far surpasses any facility of contradiction,\nand tbu* he spew* out slander after dander,\nand misrepresentation after misrepresentation,\nwith uriintermitted perseverenoe. Persons not\nkr.owiug tbe hireling character of such venom-\nspitting bipeds, might be imposed upon some-\ntimes by tbeir vile falsities, slanders and dis-\ntortions. All that is necessary is ta look out\nfor these imported venders of Lecompton men-\ndacity. Be assured that a man who bas noth-\ning else to do but travel through tbe country\nelectioneering in thia low way for any ticket at\nall, is jHxtd for it.—Marynnllt Democrat.
398a7dc8d290462fb0a1ca8d42030925 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.4671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 The murder by Or. Connelly of bis tw\n- hildren, and hU death by bis Awn bandi\n,-esterday sllernoon, created Intense ei\nitement. Connelly was apparently ii\n;oo»l clrcumstanccs, having a lair prai\nIco, and teemed devoted to bis wife an\n,wn ichildren. Occasionally he w<wl\nirink to excess, and this In time, causei\nlis practice to fall ott, lie become worst\nind was often lor several days under th\nnilucncoot liquor. He finally grew a\n)ad tint his trienda deemed It best ti\nend him to the inebriate asylum, and hi\noturned about three months ugo, appa\nuully cured, lie soon relapsed into nil\n>ld ways, and soon became worso thai\nrehire. IIo had been tor two or thre\nlays on uno or lii.i periodical sprees, oik\nin Baturday and yesterday ho took occa\nional doses of morphine (o quiet liu\nlerves. About 4 j\\ m., yesterday, ho en\nered tho bed-room of himself and wife\nnking his children with him, and locking\n door. Tho police were notified about\nn hour later that something was wrong\nut when they wished to break open th<\noor Mrs, Connelly porsUted that hei\nusband had merely locked him\null up in tho room and had taken ai\nn opiate, and was sleeping off its ellect\n'he door was finally forcctfoijen.and a ter\niblo spectacle was presented. On the bei!\nly tho father aud childreu, all doad and\nterallv bathed in blood. Tho headboard\nt the bed was spattered with blood, and\n10 bed clothing and mattress soaked,\n'he weapon which tho lunatic had used,\niv on the bed. It was a carving knife.\n'ItU a hlado sixteen inches in length, and\nipering gradually toward tho point. The\niroata o( both children bail been cut,\nleir ju^lar veins l>eiug severed. The\niroat ot tho lather was out from ear to\nir, and there were dreadful Wounds in\n10 breast, in the vicinity of tho heart,\nphysician examined the bodies, and
04908e1df57b0c050addafd8f05f8b96 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.3986301052764 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho council committee ou houlth t\nlast evening, Chairman Caddie, Modi\nltichurds, Morniugstar and Unit\npresent. Bills aggregating $1,022 11\nrocommondod to bo paid.\nThere was some discussion regard1\ntho payment of Hamilton Bros, bill\n1803 for crematory repairs, on accoi\nof tho low condition of tho cit\nUnaucos. It was Dually rccominem\npaid. A supplementary bill for\nfrom the sumo lirm for additional\npairs was not passed, but wai li\naside for tho ortisonL huverat otl\nbill* wero laid usido until a uub-ca\nwitleo can .inspect the work.\nA communication from tho und\nlakora regarding tho charge or too c\nloclod bv lioulth OIHcer McCoy\nburial certificates aecurod by them (ri\nhim lor bodioa of poople iroiu outei\ntho city was road, and aevorul of I\nundertakers wore preaent. None of.\nMcC'oy'a prodocoaaora have tuado\ncharge for cortiflcutos, but\nclaim* hohu*a righttodoaouaii\nontaido of hia regular dutioa, und tl\ntho aurno foes are colloctod by t\nhealth ofllcera of other ritiea. X\nundertaker* who wore present wanl\nthe committeo to decide whether\nhud a rifcht under tho ordinance govo\nfritt such matters, to charge tho f\nChairman Caddlo had requested I\npreaence of the city solicitor who si\nthat if the ordinance*' required I\nhealth ollicer to givo tho certilicat\nhe could not charge any feo, it comi\nunder his dutioa for which ho ia paii\nsalary. The coiumittoe uftor consid\nablo discussion decided that it woi\nnot tuke any notion, us it could uni\nthe circumstance* do nothiiig, uuti\ncomplaint againat tho health ollicer\nmade. Tho undertakers will, it ia ui\noratood, hereafter refuao to pay tho f\nou tho grouud of Colonel White's op\nion.
14cb508ecf6d02503452f06d32cfab48 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1892.0150272907813 42.217817 -85.891125 The scaffolding about this building is\ntied together with ropes, the ra.ters\nbeing spliced in this way. Many of\nthe nuts of the southern part of" tho\ncountry have roofs of thatch tied to\nrafters with ropes, and some of these\nhuts havo not a nail in them.\nFew wooden buildings are known in\nMexico. The average house has neith-\ner cellar nor garret, and the fastenings\nwhich wo mako with nails aro ingen-\niously constructed with bricks and mor-\ntar. All classes of building material aro\ncostly here. You havo to pay $. '35 to $40\na thousand for flooring, and glass is\nvery high. A great many of the cheap-\ner houses havo no windows, in tho glass\nsense of the world. The openings aro\ncovered with iron bars and aro fastened\nat night with close wooden shutters.\nIron during past years been largely\nimported irom Belgium.\nIlrcakH Jlu Meek Often, hut Lives.\nAlbert Patterson, tho man whose neck\nliterally hangs by a thread and who h:is\nbeen an inmato of Jefferson College\nHospital since September last, Intends\nleaving the hospital in the course of a\nday or so as comparatively cured, that\nis to say as near cured as he ever will\nbe. When the man entered the hospi-\ntal he had already broken his neck on\nthree different occasions. He showed\nup at the hospital all of a sudden ono\nday and startled Dr. Kgan by saying ho\nhad his neck broken some time before\nand felt a little pain in the back of it\nyet. Dr. Kgan admitted him to the\nhospital, and found the case to be one ot\nthe most remarkable in the annals of\nsurgery.
4cf203616c5fc30892a94f164aafa3ad THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.1493150367833 41.741039 -112.161619 amendments wero ncceptcd, but only\nin ono caBo was a modlllcatlon ngrood\nto that was not In accordance with\nIho wishes of tho managers of tho bill.\nTho exception was on nn amendment\noffered by Mr. Spooner eliminating the\nprovision giving halt pay to members\nof tho naval roservo who havo servod\nless than six months.\nAs passed, tho bill establishes thir-\nteen now contract mail lines and In-\ncreases tho subsidy to tho Oceanic lino'\nrunning from tho Puclflc coast to Aus-\ntralasia. Of tho thirteen now linos\nthreo leavo Atlantic coast ports, ono\nrunning to Brazil, ono to Uruguuy and'\nArgentina, and one to South Africa;\nsix from ports on tho Quit of Mexico,\nembracing one to Brazil, ono to Cuba,\nono to Mexico and threo to Central\nAmerica and tho Isthmus of \nfour from Pacific coast ports, embrac-\ning two to Japan, China and tho Phil-\nippines direct; ono to Japan, China\nnnd tho Philippines via Hawaii, and\nono to Mexico, Central America and\ntho Isthmus of Panama.\nTho bill also grants a subsidy at tho\nrato of $5 per gross ton per year to\ncargo vessels engaged In tho foreign\ntrade of tho United States nnd nt tho\nrato of $5. CO per ton to vessels en-\ngaged In tho Phtllpplno trade, tho Phil-\nippine constwlso law being postponed\nuntil 1909. Another feature of tho bill.\nIs that creating a naval rcscrvo force\nof 10,000 officers and men who nro to'\nrccclvo retainers after tho British\npractice. Vessels receiving subsidies\naro required to carry u certain propor-\ntion of naval rcscrvo men among their\ncrows.
22a2540ac2f9c724b411070ca3c920f0 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.372950788049 39.290882 -76.610759 IIis present facilities for manufacturing agricultural\nimplements, are not surpassed by any other estublis-h\nment in Uiis country, he can therefore atl'ord them on as\nreasonable terms as any other person for the same qual-\nity of work. His present stock of implements are ex-\ntensive both iu quality and variety, to which he would\ninviie the attention ofthose who wish to purchase.\nA liberal discount will be made to all cush purchasers,\nand those who purchase to sell again.\nThe fullowutg names are aotne of his leading articles,\nviz: His PATENT CYLINDRICAL STRAW CUT-\nTER, wood and iron frames, but all withhis patent dou-\nble eccentric feeders, with or without extra knives;-prices\nvarying from ,$33 to SIOO, subject to cash discounting;\nhe challenges the world to produce a brbter machine lor\ncutting long torage; MYKRSVVHEAT FAN and EL-\nLU'OTT 'Is PATENT HORIZONTAL WHEATFANS\nboth a very superior article. Fox & Borland's PAT-\nENT THRESHING MACHINES, and Martiueaiqs\nPATENT HORSE POWERS, also a very superior \nticle. A great variety of PLOUGHS, wrought mid\ncast Shares, of all sizes and prices, Gideon Davis's im-\nproved PLOUGHS, of Davis own make or patterns,\nwhich are sufficiently known to the public uot to require\nrecommendation; 100 CULTIVATORS, also expanding\nCULTIVATORS, both iron and wood frames, and new\nplan; TOBACCO CULTIVATORS.\nF. H. Smith's PATENT LIME SPREADERS, the\nutilityof which has been made known to tbe public; to-\ngether with a large assortment of FARMING IMPLE-\nMENTS, PLOUGH CASTINGS of every description\nand superior quality kept constantly on hand, at retail or\nby the ton; also, MACHINE and oilier CASTINGS ffir-\nnished at short notice and on reasonable terms, this Iron\nFoundery being furnished with the best materials mid\nexiiedenced workmen withample machinery running\nbv steam power for turning and fitting up machinery.\nAlso?constantlr on hand, D. Landretli's superior\nG ARDEN SEEDS- In store, Potatoes and common\nSeed Oats, Timothy and Herd Seeds, all ofsuperior qual-\nity. All orders willbe promptly attended to.
2b8652a38e96aca565bc8bc59e579fb5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.0260273655506 40.063962 -80.720915 in the exercise of their rights,\nnterest which tho people have in dii\niritv of the ballot for Federal ofli- ne\n) be elected by the popular Jvote,\nlie acts of Congress intended to\nthe ballots for Congressional can- »01\na from fraud, justilied and required on\ninstructions. Such were the de- lnl\nrations of domestic violence in\nCarolina a few weeks before the\nection, so defiant and uncontrolla- lo\nthe civil powef, that the Governor\nt State applied uuder the Constitu- WJ\n) the President, stating that lie was W(\nu to suppress the domestic violence M\ntinted in the State; that armed or- P*\nitions contrary to law, known w «d'\nclubs," continually roamed over v<\nuntry doing violence, and that they\niltogether beyond his control.. The\ning up of the peace of the Slate\nhe terrifying ot the citizens, the ey\nation of the Governor, supported by (a|\nevidence from other sources left a]\nresident no choice but to comply\nlis Constitutional by issu- re\nappropriate proclamation and by m,\nng to that State such a military\nis seemed to bo necessary and waa 8l(\nhis control. Tho troops wero not p.\ned to interfere and did not inter* jj,\nith any citizen's right to vote, but\ne contrary their eudeavor was to W(\nit safe for citizens to vote accord- jj,\ntheir political opinions. There is on\nthentic evidence that any man has t0\nleprived of hia right to vote or of Bj|\nfedom of opinion by the presonco of tei\n11 military force iu South Carolina. ^\nspirit of insurrection in South on\nna and in some.other States in th\ncolored voters are numerous fa\nd to be founded on the idea that loi\ntecnth amendment to the Constitu- ot!\nprohibiting the deprivation of du\nis of their right to vote on ac- in\nof race or previous condition of th\nude, was a blunder and that the de\n1 of the South were not bound to in
3fcd5f038acf7d5a55cde48c6027706d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.932876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 of Customs.Frederick Drew, lor the\nDistrict ol Puget Hound; Geo. A . Edes,\nlor Alaska; Millard Warner, Mobile;\nL/'heater A. Arthur, New York. Surveyor\nof Customs.Henry K. Smith, Omaha.\nAssessors ol' Internal Revenue.Joseph\nColy, for Utah; Win. L. Warning, for\nNew Mexico; C. E . IlarriBon, lor tho (Jtli\nDistrict ol Ohio. Collectors ol' Internal\nRevenue.A . King, for Nevada; Kobert\nL). llutton, Ibr the 5th District of Michi-\nSun; Irving Toild, for tho 2d District ol\niuncsota. Appraisers ol Merchandiao\n. E. L . Fabora, Detroit; Thos. W . Bon-\nlett, Indiana; Governor ol Idaho. Marali\nBeddings, Michigan, Governor of Now\nMexico. Frederick Watts, Pennaylvania,\nJommissioncrol Agriculture. Geo. Man-\nToll, New York, Envoy Extraordinary\nind Minister Pleni|K)tentiary tothoGer-\nnan Empire. Georgo W. Grillln, ol\nKentucky, at Copenhagen. Weston\nPilot, of Missouri, at Chin IvioDff; J. W . i\niUciis, ol Illinois, Tuntatall, England,\n'ostmasters.Win. 1'. Forsythe, Jellerson.\niVisconsin; S. Hexwinger, Clurksvillo,\nrennessee; A. C. Vantini, Sandusky,\n)hio; J. 1). Feate, Elko, Nevada; A,\nPowle, Beatrice, Nebraska; G. II. Taylor, i\nJogeman, Montana; Lemuel Baveers, To-\nunwell, Michigan;J. W . Patterson, Hum- [\nmldt, Kansap; Mrs. K . 11. Johnson, Leav- j\nHHvnrlli IvimmiH- W . Wi'lilnn. Inwu Ftill.q .\nown; C. II . Newell, Ulenwood, Iowa; N.\ni. McCormick, Chariton, Iowa; A. F .\n'killips. Kokomo, Indiana; 1). W . Mageo,\n'coriti, lllinoiH; A. C. Vande water, l'anu,\nHinois; 10. N . MeAlister, Champaign,\nllinois; F. C . I'ugh, Decatur, Illinois; 1).\n1. Simmons, Jaeksonville, Illinois; Mrs.\n). K . Smith, Stearling, Illinois; C.\nI. James, S. ClarkHon, Dlm Moines,\nown; C. Taylor, Winona, Illinois. Tlio\nlonate in executive session, continued\nlie nomination of Milton N. Reynolds,\neeeivor of public moneys, Humboldt,\nKansas.
4e3b133140f14c675fd200a548bfe210 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.732876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 Joseph Mclnerney.\nJoseph F. Ryan.\nPeter Schaeffer.\nWilliam E. Schlako.\nWilliam H. Sexton.\nA. R. Tenrney.\nDaniel Ryan.\nAid. John Powers.\nAid. Vincent Swlefka.\nWilliam A. Tllden.\nJoseph Holpuch.\nMnurlco Rothschild.\nPeter M.\nS. B. Stafford.\nErnst Hummel.\nHenry F. Donovan.\nJohn Corcoran.\nFred Rhode.\nEmil Selpp.\nRichard W. Wolfe.\nIrving L. Shuman.\nPeter S. Thcurer.\nA. D. Welner.\nJames A. Qulnn.\nAlbert Nowak.\nFrank C. O'Connell.\nEdward Prlndlville.\nBenjamin M. Mitchell.\nOtto Spankuck.\nMichael Rosenberg.\nL. O. J. Milord.\nDavid Pfaelzer.\nJohn E. Owens.\nFrank Paschen.\nDr. Adam Swajkart.\nFrank J. Skala.\nB. M . Winston.\nWilliam Russell.\nWilliam J. O'Brien.\nJoseph A. Weber.\nMichael J. Preib.\nFrank Slma.\nWilliam Rehm.\n E. Ericsson.\nMorris Vehon.\nGeorge A. Tripp.\nB. F . Hubbard.\nThomas Byrne.\nWilliam Lowey.\nGcorgo W. Jackson.\nW. Szymanskl.\nM. Barnhurdt.\nDr. William D. Byrne.\nChristopher J. McGurn,\nHenry Weise.\nHenry Nowak.\nPhilip Klafter.\nMichael J.\nD. B. Kennedy.\nG. Edward Treblng.\nCharles Barnes.\nAlbert P. Bauer.\nGust P. Bartlnek.\nPeter Brady.\nAnthony Schroeder.\nMelville G. Holding.\nJohn W. Beckwlth.\nWilliam Brown, Jr.\nMiles J. Devlno.\nHarry Goldstein.\nJohn F. Llllls.\nCalvin B. Beach.\nPhilip J. Slebold.\nGustavus J. Tatge.\nFrank J. Adam.\nMichael Schoenwald.\nSimon O'Donnoll.\nFrank J. Solff, Jr.\nAnton J. Hojlta.\nThomas F. Little.\nFrancis A. Hurloy.\nHenry F. Schuberth.\nMichael L. Igoo.\nEdward J. Kelly.\nEdward O. Brown.\nRoy
a4c74bb556984f6c1003b65cbecd0b5c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.4877048864096 31.960991 -90.983994 HESE Lozenges have now been in use, in\nthe Southern afid. Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time »hey have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cofds of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and death, without their\never being suspected. Grown personsf are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\npleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npepperm int Lozenge. Wherever they have been'\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommehdalions from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and fhe public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey mal be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by Worms; of\nthe impotency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
318adc7567e4b8ef0ff5164392f5b620 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.3986301052764 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Schenck snid he had no power\nover the subject now. The bill was\npassed by a vote of 139 to 2.\nMr. Darling, of N. Y ., called for the\nreading of the votes in the negative.\nMr. Clark read the name or John A.\nNicholson, of Delaware, and Lawrence\nS. Trimble, of Kentucky. The follow¬\ning is the bill as passed.\nBe it enacted, Ac., that instead ofnnv\ngrant of land or bounty, there shall be\nallowed aud paid toeach and every sol¬\ndier, sailor and marine who faithfully\nas such in the army, navy or marine\ncorps of the United States, and who has\nbeen or may hereafter be bonoreblv\ndischarged from such servico, the sum\nor tax per month, or at the rate of *100\nper year, as hereafter provided for all\nthe time during which such soldier\nsailor or marine who actually served*\nbetween tho 12th day of April, lsoi. and\ntho 19th day of April, 1865. And in\ncase of any such Roldier, sailor or ma¬\nrine discharged from the service on ac¬\ncount of wounds received in battle or\nin the line of his duty, the said allow¬\nance of bounty shall bo computed and\nEaid up to tho titne of service for which\nis enlistment was made, and in case of\nthe death of any auoh soldier, sailor or\nmarine,whether in theservics or in case\nof bis death after discharge, and before\n end of his term of enlistment is\ndischarged on account of being wound¬\ned, as before provided, the allowance\nshall be made to bis widow, If she be\nnot re-married, or if there be no widow\nthen to tho minor children who may be\nunder sixteen years af age.\nSec. 2 . And be it lurther enacted\nThat in computing and ascertaining the i\nbounty to be paid to any soldier, sailor\nor marine, or his proper represents-\ntlves, under the provisions oi this act I\nthere shall bo deducted therefrom any\nand ull bounties already paid or pa vtf-\nbla under existing laws by tho United\nStates, or by any State, county, city or\nother inunioipul organizations, or by\nany voluntary association, so that in\nno case shall the aggregate amount of\nbounty allowed aud paid from all\nsources exceed 98.33K lor each month\nof actual and faithful service, or at the\nrate of #100 per year, and in the case or\nany sailor or marine to whom prize\nmoney has been paid or is paya bio, the\namount of such prize money shall be\ndeducted, and only such amount or\nbounty paid as shall, together with\nsuch prize money, and other bounty\npaid or payable by tho United States\nor by any State, county, city, town or\nother municipal organizations, or by\nany voluntary association, amount in\nthe aggregate to the sum allowed by\nthis act.
8a9eb43110c17c0cf6647ecc67ad511f VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.629781389142 43.798358 -73.087921 and such as shall herealter become sc.'\nSec. 2 . Makes it the duty of the Treas-\nurer of the Western Shore to pay to the\nBoard of Managers such sum as they shall\nfrom time to time require, not exceeding in\nall, 20,000 for that present year, to be ap-\nplied by them, at discretion, in the work of\nremoval, and in taking measures 'to obtain\nand place before the peopie of color of the\nstale, full and correct information of the\ncondition and circumstances of the colony\nof Liberia, or such other place or places to\nwhich they may recommend their removal '!\nSec. 3 . And be it enacted, That it shall\nhereafter be the duty of every clerk of a\ncounty in this State, whenever a deed of\nmanumission shall be left in his office for\nrecord, and of every Register of Wills, in\nevery county of thk State, whenever a will,\nmanumitting a slave or slaves, shall be ad-\nmitted to probate, to send within five tlavs\nthereafter, (underapenaZy of tendollai for\neach and every omission so to do, to be re-\ncovered before anv justice of the peace, one\nhalf whereof shall go to the informer and\nthe other half to the State;) an extract frora\n deed or will, stifling the names, num-\nber and ages of the slave or slaves so manu-\nmitted, (a list whereof, in the rase of 8wwll\nso proved, shall be filled therewith, by lb"\nexecutor or administrator) to the board if\nmanagers for Maryland, for removing the\npeople of color of said State; and it shall\nbe the duty of the said board on receiving\nthe same to notify the American Coloniza-\ntion Society, or the Maryland Slate Coloni-\nzation Society thereof, and to profwie to\nsuch society that they shall engage, at the\nexpense of such society, to remove the said\nslave or slave so maDumitted to Liberia;\nand if the said society shall so engage, then\nit shall be the duty of the said beard of man-\nagers to have said slave or slaves delivered\nto the agent of such society, at such place ai\nthe said society shall appoint, for receiving\nsuch slave or slaves, for the purpose of such\nremoval, at such time as the said society\nshall appoint; and in case the said society\nshall refuse so to receive and remove the\nperson er persons so. manumitted and offer-\ned, or in case the said person or perron-sha- ll\nrefuse so to be removed, then it shall
5276f4bfb12d945e32d6b62955e15206 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.1383561326738 40.618676 -80.577293 TLTHAT we need in defense preparation is sus­\ntained maximum production. Experience can\npoint the way to policies leading to this objective.\nWhether we are getting- what is needed may\nbe gauged by morale and the existence of ma­\nchinery to deal with problems as they develop.\nThe foundation of all machinery to deal with prob­\nlems is the union contract jointly negotiated by\nrepresentatives of workers and management. One\nof the first provisions in a union agreement for\ncontinuing machinery to adjust matters that\nmight become causes of conflict is the grievance\ncommittee. To this experience, collective bar­\ngaining usually adds provisions for reference of\nunsettled disputes to appeal agencies, to media­\ntion and conciliation and to voluntary arbitration.\nStrikes and lockouts cannot have the support\nof public opinion if the parties have not made\nhonest and sincere use of all such agencies, so\nthat the very existence of such provisions acts\nas a deterrent to shutdowns due to labor disputes.\nWell-organized workers, in disciplined unions\n to exercise their right to representa­\ntion for collective bargaining, become accustomed\nto rely upon the strategy of negotiation instead of\nforce. If a grievance or a problem is not adjusted\nmorale is lowered and production falls. Workers\nare not machines where power can be turned on\nor off by outside control. There is within the\nmind and soul of each worker that which controls\nand modifies his productive capacity. Foremost\nin releasing the will to work is a sense of security\nthat comes from knowing that opportunities for\nappeal and justice are established and available.\nCooperation for sustained, efficient production\ncan best bo maintained by giving workers respon­\nsibility under conditions that pledge good faith.\nWorkers do not want to strike. They want to\n•work and earn. Strikes are a last resort for self-\nprotection. Moral and ethical standards are in­\nvolved in strikes which cannot be dissolved or\nsubmerged by repressive legislation outlawing\nstrikes, setting up compulsory arbitration or even\nby enforcing a waiting period for strikes.
235a1c5d53e2d409e4ec93ba0166dd21 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5177595312184 39.745947 -75.546589 ratted was that of Luigi MoschellUln the same billet with me in the , »re IP og a mjlhdi l/.“ î? ^>arâvti\nIndicted for alleged robbery of a mall Argonne. He had a quart of whisky |»•« Uie inspectors in mur ,<arai.\nsack said to have contained *11.1(8) and 1 and started the Argonne alt over\nsome article» of iherehandise. The again," related Lee Willis, when ar-\nmall sack is said to have been found raignul before Judge Hastings, m\non Ihe railroad track«, near Claymont, (Municipal Court this morning on a\nhv Moschelli. and rifled hy him. Some I charge of drunkenness. He was dis-\niiicrchandisc know n to have been In . missed with a warning not to come\nIhe mail pounch 1» said lo have been 1 before Ihe edurl again,\nfound In the possession of Moschelli Willis said that It was the first\nand his family, bul the money. so far;finir he had gone so far m drinkm."\nas I« known, has not been recovered, liquor, ami that It was only his meel-\nWhen court opened this morning .l .ilng with his former billet companion\nFrank Ball, attorney for Moschelli. that led him to such an extreme in\nslated to Judge Morris -that he had no) this instance,\nmotion to make, but requested a con­\ntinuance of the case uniII Ihe Sep-\nlemher term of court, stating that he\nhad conferred with United Staler Dis­\ntrict Attorney James 11. Hughe«.who\nwas willing Uiat the case be contin­\nued. Mr. Hughes, will, war rn'-8c«l, on\nannounced to Hie court lhal he was\nwilling for the postponement and the\ncdac was ordered continued.
086ad6c9b0776fca03aa4d23052aead4 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.0342465436327 38.894955 -77.036646 other, and It was generally thought that\nthey would both go electioneering when\nthe county conventions fwcre held.\n"The week before that would happen I\nwas one of a party who drove from Minnea-\npolis to a roadhousc on the Fort Snelling\nroad near the Minnehaha Falls, partly for\nthe enjoyment ot the moonlight and partly\nfor a game supper such as the house was\nfamous for providing. Martin was one of\nthe party, and as there were two or three\nother high rollers with us, I had made up\nmy mind that it would be daybreak before\nwe would get back.\n"I was right, but before the night was\nover we had more excitement than I had\nexpected. Wc had had supper and an\nabundance ot good wines with It, and were\nsittlngnround thetablo enjoyingsomcrarely\ngood punch when some one proposed poker.\nNo one objected, and In a few minutes there\nwere two games in progress, for there were\neleven in the party. Six played atone table,\nand Martin and I three others were at\nthe other. The game was a fairly stiff one,\n$10 being the limit, and the cards ran well\nenough to build up some heavy pots. We\nhad all indulged f reelyy enough to give our-\nselves thoroughly to the enjoyment ot the\nhour, though we had not been drinking\nheavilj , and there wasn'ta man there under\ntheinfluence. Altogether It was a delightful\noccasion. Suddenly the door opened, and\ntjilmartin looked In.\n" 'I don't want to "rough In," boys,' he\nsaid, 'but I stopped here to get supper\non the way home, and the landlord told me\nyou were here, so I thought I'd ask you\nto drink with me.'\n"He was greeted heartily, for everybody\nknew and liked him, and a bumper of punch\nwas poured out for him forthwith, his In-\nvitation being peremptorily laid on the\ntable. Then, as a matter of course, it was\nsuggested that he take a hand in the game,\nand he being more than willing, satr at our\ntable.
1fca9aa56db9d74aa7670b976dd4331d THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1880.7472677279397 39.743941 -84.63662 O. If every vote sent np was a legal vote,\nand some more Republican votes were not\nfound, it was very clear that the State had gone\nfor Nicholls and Tilden? A. Yes. "\nThere is your man. Republicans, that you\npropose to place in the chair that Washington\noccupied. It will never be done. No man with\na record nice that ever iook maicnair, ana m tne\nkind providence of an eternal God it wiil never\noccur. He knew by the returns that Tilden for\nPresident and Nicholls for Governor were elected\nin the State of Louisiana, and yet, when ho\nknew that, he says when he got to New Orleans\nhe staid there eighteen aays, ana au that ne aid\nwas to sit in that inner room, where no one\ncould find him except they from tho\npublic hall through another room, and there.\nalone with poor, ignorant witnesses, he pre\nparea interrogatories, ana taiuea witn uiem,\nand that those interrogatories and that talk\nwent to the Returning Board and furnished the\nscoundrels of that board the pretext to\nreturn against the truth that Tilden was beaten\nin Louisiana, uo yon suppose that this man\nwas tn return tn WflRhiiiL'ton and become a\nJuror and decide whether Tilden or Hayes was\nelected, ana to acciae between man ana man\nwhether Hendricks or Wheeler was elected "Vice\nPresident. He Bays, on page 793 ; "I heard of\nnothing of the kind that is, of a decision then\nmade. I don't think any of our party had\nheard of it. for we left in great anxiety as to\nwhat the result would be."
1c02dd7f98dbe7aaae14c1bb9876fe36 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.4002731924206 46.187885 -123.831256 was a mystery at tho time, and\nthey departed as mysteriously as\nthey came. Their departure was\ndue to the fact that tho apprehen-\nded danger from England and\nFrance did not materialize, and\nthen the question arose how Rus-\nsia could be compensated. Presi-\ndent Lincoln had used his war\npower freely, and congress had\nbacked him up, but here was a bill\nfor millions, and he feared that he\nwould be criticised for incurring it,\nalthough it was a wise thing to do\nwhen he did it. While the presi-\ndent was hesitating how to get at\nit, the war closed and the presi-\ndent was assassinated and Mr.\nSeward was left to solve the prob-\nlem. Russia wanted the money,\nbut she appreciated the situation\nand waited patiently. Finally the\nproject of getting congress to au-\nthorize the purchase of Alaska was\nhit upon, and the 87,200,000 that\n paid Russia for Alaska was\nreally in payment of tho fleet bill,\nand Alaska was thrown in. The\nsecret was so well kept that gene-\nral "W. T . Sherman heard of it for\nthe first time in Russia, and he\nkept the story to himself until a\nrecent army reunion. Secretary\nSeward must have shared with\nsome of the congressmen his secret\nof the real reason why he wanted\nAlaska bought, at a time when the\nUnited States government needed\nmoney more than territory, but it\nhe did they guarded well his confi\ndence. The complete history of\nour late war is yet to be written,\nand generations yet to come will\nread with wonder and with admi-\nration of the consummate ability\ndisplayed by president Lincoln\nand his cabinet, no less than of the\nmarvelous patriotism and courage\nthat were displayed on land and\nsea by the army and navy.
1b94d19a5cdc2f1f0fb0480cdef2bd23 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.7356164066464 40.063962 -80.720915 ho construction and placing ol water ii\nnam's and fire hydrants, but tbe water 1\nngineer ol the city, (Chescbrough) as- a\nerts that $2,000,000 can be expended on s\nhat work alone. Henry A. Oakley, Pres. n\ndent of tho National Board, in Bpeaking 1\nin tho same subject to a reporter, said r\nn reference to establishing permanent P\nIre limits co-extensive with tbe corpo- p\nate limits of tbe city, that the Common ii\n'ouncll of Chicago had passed an ordi- b\nlance to that effect, bat tho Underwriters p\niarc very mue commence maul will Da II\narried oat because the execution is left n\no the same persona who have refused to li\no operoto in other improvements. No s\nlusiness law has been passed and nothing r\niss been done with regard to changes v\na the tiro department, and it still remains c\nnder the same political influence. Ten I\nteamers have been added, but this not fi\negarded as a great advantage while the a\nliicipllneol the department remains as n\nt is. This call for increase in Dumber o\nnd size of the water mains is ono which s\nhe board consider very important. The q\nmallest sizes are run through some of the\ncading business streets, Ilydranti are\nlumerons enough but are useless, when\nbe means ol supply are so inadequate. In I\negard to obtaining requirements for the t>\nstablishement ot tho tire Marshals Bu- 1\ncau and the removal of dangerous cstab- t\niihments nothing whatever J has been li\nlone. Underwriters are not in-disposed t\no remain in Chicago, provided that t\nDeans of defence against tire can be had, c\ns all ol them havo largo and valuble f\nlusiness connections which they are now I\n:ompeIled to sacraUcc. t\nL rROTEST FROM HAILROAD IHQINIKR3. ^\nThe locomotive engineers of tho va- !\nlous trunk lines and reading roads bad a
0ee3d960d954d4688e0b90f7745ceaed PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1906.9547944888382 31.762115 -95.630789 When foir years had passed the\nartist thought he might return to his\nhome in New York aud start bis work\nthere lie told himself over aud over\nagain that he was going home to the\nma id en and bis heart beat absurdly\nwith hope of seeing her mid then sank\nheavily again at thought of the change\nthe years might hate made of the es-\ntnmgeuieiit they might have brought\nI Hiring the time he bad been away she\nbad written many storiis and had final-\nly eomiueed the editors of their worth\nlie saw her name in the contents of-\na number of niagazilics The old days\nwere chauged lie would no 1 mger find\nher in the cheap boarding house If\nshe sent him away three jcans before\nshe probably bad almost forgotten him\nin all this time but thought of the\nChristmas letters spurred him to write\nto her and tell her of bis return He\nwould reach New York the day before\nChristmas the annlersary of his leav ¬\ning Would she meet him that evening\nat half past in the little restaurant\nlie would wait for her at their same\ntable in the turner and they would talk\noer old tinn s The nrtM arrUcd in\nNew York on the day be expeetetl and\nall afternoon he wuiidircd about wait\nlug for the h ur of their engagement\nyet li ilf dreading it for fenr she should\nnot come Itut the gM I fairy wjucd\nher wand for him Ibis time for the\nmaiden reall came and she is just the\nsill lie deir sweet maiden as ill the old\ndis olih the shabby clothes are re-\npl ieed
408dfe08231be1cd46ed96f6795c3d59 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.023287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 In connection with tho nows from\nEuropo and Mexico above recorded, tho\nmeeting at Cooper Iustiltlte, New York\ncity, last Saturday night, has m6ro\nthan ordinary significance. Letters\nwere road from tho prominent men of\ntho country.Congressmen nnd Gonorals,\nwho responded apparently withoutdis-\ntinction of party in favor of a "hands\noff" warning to all European powers aB\nrespects this continent. Tho following\nresolutions wero passed at the'meeting:\nWitKitKAs, It was early declared,\nwith a solemnity becoming tho enunci¬\nation of a great princlplo, by a Tresi-\ndent of the United Suites, whoso title to\nimmortality and tho gratitude of man¬\nkind was secured by its enunciation,\ntliat tho Amorioad Continents,' by the\nfroo and Independent positions which\ntliey had nssuhied and maintained,\nwero thenceforward not to W consider¬\ned as subjects for futuro colonization\nby any European Power, and that any\n by European Powers to "ex¬\ntend their system to any portion of (ills'\nhemisphere would bo considered as dan¬\ngerous to our peace and saltoty;*' and\nWhereat, it was equally declared that\nany interposition by any Bnropean\nPower, for the pnrpose of oppressing\nthe Republics of America, whoso inde-\npondonco tiie United States had, with\ngreat consideration and just principles,\nacknowledged, or for tho purposo of! in\nanv way, controlling their destinies,\nwould bo vlewod as tho manifestations\nof an unfriendly disposition toward\ntho United States; and IITiefM*, in\nopen contempt of tho principles thus\nearly laid down, Franco has interfered\nto oppress our sister Kcpubllc.of Mexi¬\nco, and to control It* destiny against\ntho choice of its people; and WArrctw,\nSpain has Interfered to extend hor ays-\nem ovor llaytl, and Is now interfering\nto oppress tlio Kopubllcs of Chill and\nPeru; tlierefbro,
4621bb46f970173a8e7b6a66f0942c08 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1863.1931506532217 37.561813 -75.84108 from Kentuoky, Mr. WicKMrrR. the\nIt would be unwise to disturb the peo\nple of th border Ststes, when it is al V\nmost morally oertain that no good will\ngrow out of an attempt to rocruit slaves\nor freedmen in those States as soldiers.\nBut, sir, we can enlist them in the cot\nton States, and not only at Now Or\nleans, Memphis and Beaufort, but at II\nvery point whero forts are to be erect\ned and garrisoned, roads to be built, or\nany hard work to hi performed, we can\nprofitably use thera in the service of be\nthe country. Whother they make good\nsoldiers or not, if ther are capable of\nperforming, to a certain extent, military\nduties, we ought, as a matter of aoono\nmy and good polioy, to receive all that\noome, and thus deprive the rebels of\nthat number of valuable laborers.\nIf, in time profound peace, the or\nrelstion of master end servant has for\nhalf a century existed, without any in\nterruption by the slaves, it is not very\nprobablo that in this time of war, when\nin every township and in every neigh\nborbood there aro soldiers snd armed\nmen ready to resist any attempt upon\nthe part of the blacks at uprising, any\nsuch result is to be anticipated. Nor\ndo I believe, .if we pass this bill, and\nauthorize the Presidont to receive rcgi\nmenta of slaves or of freedmen in those\nStates, that any of the calamities will\nensue that have been predioted by the\nopponents of thia bill. It may cause\ndesertions from the master, but not ra\npino and murder. At New Orlean\nand Beaufort, and other points where\nslaves have been used as Boldiors, no\nsuch oonsequences havo followed. It is\nnot reasonable that these black men of
65a871682767b358871de7c9497fe49a THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.389344230672 39.290882 -76.610759 His present facilities for manufacturing agricultural\nimplements, are not surpassed by any other establish\ninent in this country, he can therefore afford them on as\nreasonable terms as any other person for the same qual-\nity of work. His present stock of implements are ex-\ntensive bo titin quality and variety, to which he would\ninvite the attention of those who wish to purchase.\nA liberal discount willbe made to all cash purchasers,\ntutd those who purchase to sell again.\nThe following names are some of his leading articles,\nviz: His PATENT CYLINDRICAL STRAW CUT-\nTER, wood anil iron frames, but all with his patent doti\nble eccentric feeders, withor without extra knives; price*\nvarying from #ll3 to SIOO, subject to cash discounting;\nhe challenges lite world to produce a better machine for\ncutting long forage; MYERBWHEAT FAN and'EL-\nLI COTT-' H PATENT HORIZONTAL WHEATFANS\nboth a very superior article. Fox & norland's PAT-\nENT THRESHING MACHINES, and Murtmcau.s\nPATENT HORSE POWERS, also a very superior \nticle. A great variety of PLOUGHS, wrought and\ncast Shares, of all sizes and prices, Gideon Davis's im-\nproved PLOUGHS, of Davis own make or patterns,\nwhich are sufficiently known to the public not to require\nrecommendation; 100 CULTIVATORS, also expanding\nCULTIVATORS,both iron and wood frames, and new\nplan; TOBACCO CULTIVATORS.\nF. H. Smith's PATENT LIME SPREADERS, the\nutilityof which lias been made known to the public; to-\ngether witha largo assortment of FARMING IMPLE-\nMENTS, PLOUGH CASTINGS of every description\nand superior quality kept constantly on hand, at retail or\nby the ton; also, MACHINE and other CASTINGS fur-\nnished at short notice and on reasonable terms, this Iron\nFoundery being furnished with the best materials and\nexperienced workmen with ample macliinerv running\nby steam power for turning and fitting up machinery.\nAlso?constantly on hand, D. Landrcth's superior\nGARDEN SEEDS- In store, Potatoes and common\nSeed Oats, Timothy and Herd Seeds, all ofsupcrior qual-\nity. All orders w ill be promptly attended to.
16d66e50277a0252ef5a986e8a0bcbc7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.1273972285642 42.217817 -85.891125 In answer to the questions in Mr.\nWoodman's article: The South Haven\n& Eastern did expect to complete the\nstandard gauge last season, but like\nmany of our enterprises, capital fell\nshort. The grading and other work\ncost far more than originally calculated.\nDo you want them to widen with\nlight rail as was done for a lime at\nBuchanan? They are financially un-\nable to complete the track and equip-\nment, to say nothing of depots, eleva-\ntors, etc. We know onl too well that\na greater part of the company's means\nwill be diverted to the completion of\nthe Millwakce Benton Harbor & Col-\numbus a far more profitable line. We\ncan look for nothiug but the earnings\nof our present road to be expended\nwithout our aid. As to Paw Paw being\nselected for the answer is to be\nfound in our state statutes. Mr. Wood-\nman infers from his ramark about\n"sand" that, should we not patronize\nour present system, we would compel\nthem to give us elevators, etc. We\nwould compel them not to tor lack of\nmeans. Has South Haven ever doue\nauything for Paw Paw? Let them bail\ntheir owu boat. They are able to. In\nregard to the "moonshine part," is not\nmoonshine better than no uhinc at all?\nWe get out of the woods. Is not that\nworth $10,000? In regard to the taffy\npart, if Mr. Woodman or his followers\ncannot get enough of it out of this,\nlet someone posted in stock raising cut\nhim off a piece. Show him the benefits\nof loading at Paw Paw and the disad-\nvantage of our present system.
86f259d4bab97daee9e379e2b1b0091d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0368852142785 41.681744 -72.788147 Tork and 111 4 West Walnut\nstreet. New Haven, but . had been\ncancelled as of January t, Ittt. It\nwaa apparent, the police say, that\nthe markers had not been turned In\nto the meter vehicle department, but\nhad been used to replace the origin-\nal markers on the coupe.\nWhen Chief W. C . Hart arrived at\nhis office after having been notified\nby telephone of the holdup, he com-\nmunicated with Via local agent for\nthe Cadillac automobile, aad Louis\nBablotsky was seat to the municipal\ngarage to sxaroine the coupe. As-\nsisted by Sergeant McAvay and Of-\nficer Strolls, be opened tbe luggage\ncarrier in tbe rear and found an\nelectrics waxing machine, a paint\nbrush and a small can ot paint, but\nin tbe trunk directly behind \ndriver's seat, he found a bos of .12'\nbullets, a sailor's uniform bearing a\nsecond classc gunner's mate rating,\na full dress suit, and a registration\ncertificate issued to Grace L. Long,\n32 Lorraine street, Hartford, also a\nfull set of tbe original markers of\n1928 Issue corresponding to the num-\nbers on the registration certificate,\nand one other marker of 1818 issue.\nThe engine numbers had been\ntampered with. Mr. Bablotsky found.\nTbe information relative to the\nregistration certificate was sent to\nthe Hartford police at once, and\nword came back that the car had\nbeen stolen In Hartford on January\nt. Mr. Bablotsky told the police he\nfelt certain he saw the car going at\nan excessive rate of speed through\nWest Main street late yesterday aft-\nernoon.
1f8cc1558ac0777928f7b03815ca3255 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Tills is nn important question, and foi\nlong while jwist has been a serious one\nthe minds of many persons whose lm\nness Interests it very nearly concerns. \\\nhave already explained the ca\\ise of U\nunprecedented and inexcusable delay, ai\nmost everybody now understands that\nis owing to tho apparently wanton ai\nreckless negligence of the man who *\nappointed by the Legislature more than\nyear ago to do the work, and who instc\nof doing it, is .going round tho count\ndragging tho judicial crmino of the SUi\nin the mud and mire of partisan politi\nfor the furtherance of somoadilsh schpin\nwhich, it is supposed, lie has in view.\nWe have authority lor saying tliat\nlias lately declared that "lie never won\ncomplete'1 tho Code, and this, too, n<\nwithstanding the lact that time and agi\nlie has written to the Public Print\n"kocping tho word of promiso to the c\nuna Drawing a io.uic nope, assuri\nhim that ho would noon ftirnish the Ind\nto tlio Code, on which Uio publication\nthat work has so long been waiting.\nIt seems to iw that if tho declaration\nJudge is correctly report<\ntho Governor or tho State lias a plain du\nto perioral, and one that should not adn\nuineccaaiy delft)*. Indeed the lir\nwholly unjustitied delay that has tli\n. r occurred may lie taken as prima fai\nevidence of .Twice Ferguson's intent!\nto make good what Is given as lite publ\ndeclaration, that "ho never would coi\nplete" the Code, and ns Imposing on hi\na necessity lor showing cause why\nshould not forthwith Iks removed from 1:\nIKwition by the Governor. Thoactof.Fc\nruary 19th, 18C0,providing for the public\ntion of the Code, says that the "volui\nshall bo prepared for publication by J.\nII. Fkrouhox, of the county of Cabell,\non his failure to act, by such other p\naonastho Govornor may appoint," a\nthe Constitution of the State onume:\ntea as among tho duties of the Goverr\nthat "ho allnil kiko'curo that the laws\nfiilthflilly executed." Wo submit to J\nExcellency'whether under theso provl\nnus bo feels »t liberty to address Jud\nFrhouson such a communication aa V\ncausofliat gentlcmun most cmpbatica\nto underetond lluit lie can lint longer Ui\ntrille with tlie public Interests.
1876d6f4c9b1a68ea01a8495513173a7 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1896.389344230672 37.92448 -95.399981 ISow, what are the terms of the\nsilver question? We now have the\nfree, unlimited and independent coin-\nage of gold, at the rate of 23.22 grains\not pure gold to the dollar. We are\nnow confronted with the proposition\nto liberate silver, and by law to de-\nclare it independent standard money;\nby law to declare that all the holders\nof silver bullion throughout the\nworld, without limitation a to\namount, shall have the right to bring\nit to the Americau mints and have it\ncoined at the rate of 371 grains of\npure silver to the dollar, which would\nbe the establishment of a ratio of 16\nto 1. What would be the result?\nMeasured in terms of gold, 3711 grains\nof pure Bilver are worth 53 cents to-\nday. Measured in terms of silver,\n23.22 grains of gold are worth S1.88.\nIn other words, you can exchange\n23.22 grains of pure gold for enough\nBilver to coin S1.8S, at the ratio of 16\nto 1. Whereas, with 37H grains of\nsilver you can purchase only a suffi\ncient amount of gold to coin 53 rents.\neo that if a citizen should owe $1,000\n had $1,000 in gold coin he could\nexchange it for a sufficient amount of\nsilves bullion to coin $1,880 in silver,\npay his debt with $1,000 of the\namount, aud have $880 as a profit on\nthe transaction. Who believes that\ngold and silver would remain in con-\ncurrent circulation under such con-\nditions as thee? The present price\nof silver the world over is puch that\nit take3 31 grains, ounces or pounds\nto buy one grain, ounce or pound of\ngold; that is, the ratio is at 31 to 1.\nBut our free silver friends maintain\nthat by the United States opening\nher mints to the free and independent\ncoinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1,\nsilver will be raised from its present\nprice, where it takes 31 grains of sil-\nver to buy one grain of gold, to where\n16 grains of 9llver will buy cne grain\nof gold. We maintain that this ratio\nof 16 to 1 will result in drawiug every\ngold dollar out of circulation and\nplace the United States, like Mexico,\nsome of the small South American\nGauntries, China and Japan, upon a\nBilver basis.
bda06572df4efdd125f294f6c80b8883 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.9246575025368 43.798358 -73.087921 Evil Thoughts. When any temp- -\niduons are presented; to us trom without,\nwe cannot per naps, avoid the feeling an\nirregular passion, or motion, or inclina-\ntion stirring within us, unou occasion\nthereof; but yet at that very time it is in\nour power, whether we will comply with\nthose passions and inclinations, or not ;\nwhether we will pursue them further, or\nnot. Now if we do not consent to them,\nbut endeavor to stop, and stifle, and resist\nthem as soon as we are aware of them,\nthere is yet no harm done. Our thoughts,\nhow undecent or irregular soever thev\nwere, are rather to be accounted the infir-\nmities of our corrupt nature, than our\nsins properly so called. And thus it is\nlikewise as to our wandering thoughts in\nour prayers. If we strive againsthem,\nand endeavor to keep our minds in a de-\nvout, composed temper, and attend as well\nas we can to thedutyweare about: Isay\nif we do this, I hope those distractions\nand will never rise up in\njudgment against us. And as for the\nfrightful, blasphemous fancies, which some\neven pious persons are tormented with ;\nas to them, I say, they, of all other irreg-\nular thoughts, have the least danger of\nsin in them, though they be not so solemn-\nly and formally disputed with and con-\ntested against. Because, indeed, they are\nso terrible in their own nature, that nn\nman in his wits, and that hath any sense\nOf uou or iroouness. can h snnnncoH\nconsent to tbem. Thev are indH ,rr.,\ninfelicities, but by no means any sin far-\nther than we approve of them; and to ap-\nprove of them for any tolerable good man,\nis impossible. Archbishop John Sharp.\nExample. A young gentleman who\nrecently committed matrimony in this\ncity, was aided in the "fitting up" of his\nnew domicil by a worthy matron, whose\nobject it was to have every thing in its\nplace, which would in the least contribute\nto the happiness of the newiy-marrie- d
2e80e14c5deeb23807f40409c4efc9ea THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1869.8041095573312 37.561813 -75.84108 spend a summer on King William's\nLand with a considerable party,\nwhoso only business should be to make\nsearches for records which beyond\ndoubt lie buried on that island. lam\ncertain from what I have heard the\nnatives 6ay, and from what I saw my-\nself, that little or nothing more can be\ngaiued by making searches there\nwhile tho land is clothed in its winter\ngarb, for the Esquimaux have made\nsearch after searcli over ail tho coast\nof King William's Land, on either\n8itk' fl'om itf southern extremo up to\nCapo Felix, the northern point, for\nanythingand everything that belong-\ned to the companions ot Sir John\nFranklin, and these eearohes have\nbeen made when the snow had nearly\nall disappeared from the land.\nMy sledge company from Eepulse\nBay to King William's Land consist-\ned of eleven souls, all Esquimaux.\nAlthough they are as untamable as\neagles by nature, yet by their aid\nalone I was enabled to reach points\notherwise inaccessible, and when there\nto gain much important information\nrelative to the fate of Sir John Frank-\nlin's expedition. I tried hard to ac-\ncomplish fur moro than I did, but\nnone of the company would, on any\naccount whatever, consent to remain\nwith me in that country and make a\nsummer search over the island, which,\nfrom information I had reason to sup\npose would be rewarded by tho dis-\ncovery of the whole of the manuscript\nrecords that had accumulated in that\ngreat expedition, and deposited\nin a vault a little way inland or\neastward of Cape Victory. Knowing\nas I now do, the character of the Es-\nquimaux in that part of the country\nin which King William s Jjand is sit-\nuated,! can not wonder at nor blame\nthe Repulse Bay natives for their re\nfusal to remain there as 1 desired.\nIt is quite probable that, had we\nremained as I wished, no one of us\nwould ever have got out of the coun\ntry alive. How could we expect, if\nwe had got into straitened circum\nstances, that we should ncieve better\ntreatment from the Esquimaux of that\ncountry than the one hundred and\nfive souls who were under the com\nmand of the heroic Crozier, sometime\nafter landing on King William\nLand? Could I and my party, with\nreasonable safety, have remained to\nmake a summer search on King Wil\nliam's Land, it is not only probable\nthat we should have recovered the\nlogs and journals of Sir John Frank-\nlin's expedition, but have gathered\nup and entombed the remains of near-\nly one hundred of his companions,\nfor they lie about the places where\nthe three boats have been found, and\nat the large camping place at the head\nof Terror Bay; and the three other\nplaces that I have already mentioned.\nIn the Cove, west side of Point Rich\nardson, however, nature herself has\nopened her bosom and given sepulture\nto the remains of the immortal heroes\nwho died there.
15aea685d283f4a50b1e62d49ddc718e WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.828767091578 35.318728 -82.460953 were Frank and Albert Edwards, who\nentered singly from another door, fol-\nlowed by the groom and his best man.\nJohn Wells Todd, Jr., of Laurens, S.\nC.; who approached the improvised al-\ntar and awaited the bride, who entered\nleaning upon the arm of her father,\nwho gave her in marriage." She was\na vision of loveliness in her soft\nwhite robe of charmeuse, en train,\ntrimmed in Dutchess lace and pearl\ntrimmings and carrying bride's' roses\nand white tulle. Her veil was held in\nplace' with a diamond and pearl pin,\nthe gift of the groom. Rev. A. L.\nStandford, of the Methodist churchy\nperformed the 'beautiful nad impres-\nsive ring ceremony, while Mr. Ed -\nwards softly played "Meditation.",\nImmediately after the ceremony a\nreception was held. Receiving with\ntho bride and groom were Mr. and\nMrs. , W. F. Edwards, parents of the\nbride; . Conway Garlington, of\nSpartanburg, mother of the groom;\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Spratt, of Laurens,\nsister and brother of the groom; Mr\nand Mrs. Morgan Spier. Charlotte, and\nMrs. Ben Barnes, qf Rock Hill, rela-\ntives of the bride. In the dining room,\nwhich was lovely in a color scheme of\npink and white, Misses Mary St. John,\nDell Davis, Lillian Waldrop, May\nClark; of Danville, Va., and Mesdames\nStewart and Clark, of Jacksonville,\nFla., served delightful refreshments\nMrs. Lewis Emmett Fisher and Miss\nFloride Morris presided at the punch\nbowl. Mrs. Harold Feaman, of Chica-\ngo, sister of the bride, and Mrs. Lila\nRipley Barnwell led the way to the\ngift room, where a handsome array\nof presents told of love and popularity.\nNotable among the presents were gifts\nfrom family servants of both the bride\nand groom. Erson orchestra render-\ned lovely music throughout the recep-\ntion.
398be8fef4b673cd16aee87ab32c0396 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.3493150367833 41.681744 -72.788147 amendment condemning the use of\ndisease baeterla In warfare was re-\nferred to the same committees.\nMr. Matsuda said that Japan is\nalready a party to the poison gas\nagreement made during the Wash-\nington arms conference, and avowed\nthat in prohibiting the exportation\nof poison gas for war purposes it\nshould also be understood that such\nmethods of warfare aro forbidden by\nInternational law, He urged the le-\ngal committee to take up this as-\npect of the problem thoroughly.\nThe Turkish delegation heartily\nsupported the American proposal\nbut agreed with the Hungarian dele-\ngation that the rights of states that\ndo rot manufacture gas to employ\ngas If they are so attacked should\nbe respected, and their opportunity\nfor defense should not be removed\nby too rigid a ban exportation.\nBritish Stand Causes Confusion\n"We are confused," was the com-\nment of one delegate to the Inter-\nnational conference on control of\nthe trade in arms and munitions to-\nday regarding the British proposal\nthat warships be omitted from the\nlist of armaments subject to control.\nThis feeling of confusion was ap-\nparently shared by many of the\nother delegates, who learned only\nthis morning of the sensational de-\nvelopment ut last night's secret ses-\nsion of the conferer.ee committee on\nmilitary, naval and air matters.\nHear Admiral Aubrey Smith told\nthe committee that his country fav-\nored taking war vessels out of the\ncategory of armaments which would\n!e subjected, under the present\niraft convention, to a system of li-\ncense when sold by one country to\nanother.
17d5437b5e946ed06341aac8ad485175 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.7472677279397 41.681744 -72.788147 On Monday next the question of\nprohibition will be placed again be-\nfore the voters of Plainvilie and action\ndemanded at the polls, one way or the\nother. The town is to go prohibition\nor to retain its present status. There\nare many folk interested in the out-\ncome. Every citizen who casts a vote,\nbear well in mind certain evident fact.\nTo begin with, property and busi-\nness interests are at stake. The situ-\nation here is different than in many\nplaces because of Plainville's proximi-\nty to neighboring cities where liquors\nare sold. And so, outside of changing\nthe ulterior complexion of things here,\nand causing loss of property to those\nwho conduct tlieir businesses under\nthe law, the effect in morals upon the\ncommunity will be nil and void,\nshould town go dry. It requires but the\nexpenditure of five cents in money\nand fifteen minutes in time for any\nman to reach a destination where\nwet goods are dispensed. Having es-\nsayed such a journey it is but plausi-\nble that the traveller should remain\nsomewhat longer in the companion-\nship of wine than he would were he\nwithin easy reaching distance. It is\nan old axiom that men want most that\nwhich they cannot readily get. So in\nthis case. Once the ban is put on the\nlegal selling of liquid refreshments\nIn this town there immediately\nspring up a demand that may not be\nreadily satiated. Journeying from\nPlainvilie will become the order of the\nday, or night, when occasions present\nthemselves to make the trip incon-\nvenient, the inevitable surreptitious\nhabits will assert themselves and blind\ntigers and other clandestine meeting\nplaces will come into being. Under\nthe present scheme of things the sale\nof liquors in Plainvilie is conducted\naccording to regularly prescribed law\nwritten high on the statute books of\nConnecticut. The men in the business\nhere respect these mandates to the\nbest of their ability, and pay licenses\nto the support of the state, the coun-\nty, and the town. Under a different\nworking order the police records may\nshow a changed community.\nDown in Maine, a prohibition state,\nthere is a little town somewhere like\nPlainvilie. A traveller upon alighting\nfrom the train there immediately\nwent in search of liquid refreshment.\nHe asked the first man he met where\nhe could get a drink. The native\nafter scrutinizing the stranger and be-\ning satisfied with his examination,\ntook the visitor aside, pointed to a\nbroken down shack on the main street\nand said: "You see that place there\nwith the slanting roof? Well strang-\ner, that's the only place in this town\nwhere you can't get a drink!" Plain-\nvilie does not want to be that way.\nAdvt.
039d8b390ad764ffd106ad812cd2ee69 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.9493150367834 37.561813 -75.84108 aeseribes the cataracts in the New' York\nHcrabl: Nearly fourteen hundred miles\nhad been passed. The Congo became\nstraitened by close meeting, aspiring\nbanks of naked cliffs, or steep slopes of\nmountains shaggy with tall woods, or\npiles above piles of naked craggy rock,\nand presently swept impetuously down\nin serpentine curves, heaving upward in\nlong lines of brown billows, sometimes\nas though ruffled by a tempest, or with\na steep glassy fall, or thundering down\nsteep after steep, tossing its waters up-\nward in huge waves, with their crests\ndissolving in spray and mist, or boiling\nround isles of bowlders, which disported\nit into two branches with fearful whirl-\npools, with uprising whirling caldrons,\nand as it varied its wild aspect so it\nvaried its thunder, moan and plaint.\nAt one time rush sounded like the\nswash of sea waves against a ship's prow\ndriven before a spanking breeze, at an-\nother time like a strong tide 'washing\nagainst piers aud buttresses of bridges,\nat another time it overwhelmed the\nsenses and filled the measure of a deep\ngrief with the roar of its fury ; and far\nup on the height of the table land the\ntimorous and superstitions Basundi,\nstraying near the cliffy verge, stopped\nhis ears against the dreadful thunder\nand hurried away as from doom. While\nwe were fighting our tragical way over\nthe long series of falls along a distance\nof over one hundred and eighty miles,\nwhich occupied us five months, we lived\nas though we were in a tunnel, subject\nat intervals to the thunderous crash of\npassing trains.
0a91670bace69805bc4991fec58f0b74 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.7246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 We left Moscow before our dale so as\nto be here and see the reception of the\nFrench President. But before 1 com- i,'j\nmence with St. Petersburg, I must say on\na word yet abouuMoacow. I visited\nwhat they call the poor market, where q)\nthe poorer class go to buy and st*ll and 32,\nthey do buy and sell everything you can\npossibly Imagine. They bargain for old\nclotfreaj old harness and everything un- in\nder the sun. I saw men taking off their hi\nold boots and trading them for a better 9c\npair, or new ones. Old atale fruit, half be\nrotten fish and the refuse of the shopa lei\nare taken there and sold. Often you $1'\nsee parties nuim a nine ure ana cook\nand eat what they bought right In the It)\nmarket square. When the market closes 5V\nthey move them out then they start fo\ntrading on the streets, but as the police In\nwill not let them atop, but keep them fu\non the move, you bee hundreds moving\nulong u street slowly and buying »nd\nselling us they go. It is a queer sight. p<i\nNow I must tell you of the Foundling\nhospital I visited, but I expect you gt\nknow more about it than I. When we er\nvisited It they had over a thousand W\nbalms and as each baby Is supposed to C\nhave a wet nurse, you can Imagine the\nnumber of rrudles, bandages, clothes, R\netc. 1 am told they have had ns high as 14\n17.000 babies in this hospital In a single ro\nyear. A wet nurse gets extra pay if 11\nshe can give sufficient nourishment for 11\ntwo bubles, besides she gets extra ra- C»<\ntlons and beer. a!
188c328a672569c0207f34faeca4173f THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.691780790208 46.187885 -123.831256 Word came from Knappton yesterday\nof a dreadful accident that occurred last\nTuesday night, resulting in the drown-\ning of two men and tho serious injury of\na third. The particulars are very meagro\nand the most diligent inquiry yesterday\nfailed to secure any more than tho mer-\nest outlines of tho occurrence.\nIt appears that at eight o'clock last\nTuesday evening three men left this cit3\nin a fishing boat belonging to n man\nnamed Fitzpatrick living at Skamokwa,\nintending to go to that place. When\nabout half way across the river and about\nopposite Knappton one of the men who\nwas in the bow of the boat suddenly\nlurched forward and fell overboard. One\nof his companions who wa3 in the stern\nsteering made a jump to save his com-\nrade and he too fell overboard. that\nmoment the boom of the sail came round\nwith such force as to partly overturn the\nbo?t, the sail fouled and struck the water,\nthe boat capsizing and throwing the re-\nmaining manlout. About ten o'clock ho\ndrifted ashore about a mile and a half be-\nlow Knappton where bo found assistance\nand was cared for: ho was unconscious\nwhen picked up, and dreadfully bruised.\nNot till yesterday morning was ho able\nto give any account of the affair and ov-\nen then was too exhausted to moro than\ngive the faintest outlines of tho terrible\nfate that befell his unfortunate compan-\nions. To add to the difficulty of getting\nany information about tho matter it ap-\npears that the man who was saved was u\nstranger to tho other two men and was\nsimply a passenger.
35431bc8f0ad2b539084c128d3d25a97 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.3301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 Commencing ut 10 o'clock A. M . of aald tiny, nil thn «\nenal and oilier mineral*, lielonghiff at iinwrat to the »{«\nCreeccnt Imn Coui|«iiy, which arr In and under\nlaud* tiiat wcro ronvovcd to tlio aald (Icow I1"1**\ncrla by the deed of John Wood*, trustee. and Mar* >1*\ntha Kno*, bearing date the Bill day of Juno, IMM,\nand recorded In the Clerk'a offlco of aald Ohio l,|t\ncouuty in Dml look No. A3, jugo 407; excepting\nonlyao nuu l»ofaaldcool u* wu conreredby «ld ,\nOeorgo llobarle and wife to Ktnni* it Carter l»y 1\ndeed dated the l*t day of January, 1870, the nlil\ndeed being a dwd of eichanga lietwceu the R*Jd\nKinma It. (fcrter, of the one part and (lie mid\nOeorgw ltoberl* of the other part, and recorded in\naald C'lcrk'i office Jn Deed lluuk No. 57, pa«e 21. {\nAlto, all tno coal, ways, cow men i*. rights and A\nprlrlleget which by tho aald hut nienlloneil deed\nof extlutnnt wvra granted the Mid Kinma 1L\nOarler to the aald George Roberta; tho ahovo luting\ntha anme coal, mineral*, waya, enacmcnla, right*\nand privilege* which were conveyed by the mid\ntli.lutvla «n«l wtfii In Ihn f*ia» mil lend 'rthininv H\nby deed lieartng dato llio 12th day of July. 1871, m\nand recorded In mid Clcrk'n office In Deed Book\nNo,M, page W. For a more particular and tulnute\ndearrlptlon of tbemetca and »u ml a of tho prutnlar*\nhere ottered lor mle. the courtn of en trie*, and the\ncharacter of oilier Improvement* connected with\nthe mme, reference It hereby made tn a complete\npint of tliemld premiacq nowpoated In thnClerk'a\noffice uf (»hlo County Court.\nTrhm* or Haul.One-fourth of 11* pun-haw\nmoney to I* paldlnnuih on the day of mle, and\nthe realdun of nald purcliAM' money to he (mid In\nfour equal annual ln*tallmenta, with Interest there-\non from the day of Mle; thft pnrrlitwr to give honda\nwith aecurlty, to Im approved hy mid Special Commlaaloner*.
0b37ecba2dd0b072f13e9b42177ad3ed THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.17397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 At a session of the Ways and Means J\n>mmlttce to day the Chairman pro Im 0\nformed all conoerned that Jayno would r\noceed to speak on the points to which\ntention had been called yesterday,\niy moiety law should or should not be 1\nanged. The Committee desired to hear o\nthing more Irom him about particular\nies, and If lie should have to reler to a\nseas Illustrating bis argumenl he would o\nye to do so la a non personal manner, e\nr. Jayne then resumed his testimony, w\nlog over the laws relative to seizure o\nd argusdin favor ol the present system b\nrewards, otherwise the zoveramsnt\n11 lose large sums by frauds, the Corn- £\nssioners ol tb« Boston Board of Trade d\nlowing -with an argument against the \nzuro of books and papers and giving al\nlieties to the informer. el\n3 0. Jayne continued his personal ai\ntement bofore tbe Committee on Ways ai\n1 Means to-day. He used language b\nlilar to that reported yesterday regard- ai\n; some ol the New York merchants, and n\nis stopped by the Chairman, who re- it\nnded him he was present to give his tr\niws as an expert and sot to vindicate c<\nusell as a persecuted or abnsed man. pi\nBeck, one of tbe committee, said to P\n'ply Intolerable!8\nrrlE LEAVES A STATEMENT nSUIKD HIM.\ni. Q . Jayne, who recently resigned the\niltion ot special agent of the United\nites Treasury Department has left with "\nCommittee on Ways and Means a\ntement ol fines and penalties and lor-.
12f694814d4a12438dcc3b894251eb67 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.57397257103 40.832421 -115.763123 ill (be eu»t 1>i>* UNiUiUitl ali«riuiiij pio-\nportjous, ui.d bid. - f^jf ;0 resnll m oao\nof tbo lac^t fearful calamities tliut In;\n. Wall, i, this country. The d.fectii.u\nis rajiiiltjr (spreading until uuw nearly\noil principal roads east of the Missis¬\nsippi river are sffectid by i:s iadniiice.\nTh.o most implAtubls hostility towards\nthe railroad coiuj auiis is xaanift^tvd\nfl& every band; uor is (bo cuiuity con¬\nfined to strik<rs ulonc, for nutnl'cs of\niustunces arc recouUd ia which the ef¬\nforts of (bo military to prevent the de¬\nstruction of raihuad property were baf¬\nfled by tbo assistance ot persons outside\n.of tbc organised strikeis. It is clearly\napparent. that tho sympathies of the\ngreat rnaaa of tbo people in the dis-\nJurbcd districts, are with tbo Mriktts\nill this deadly struggle for bread and\nlife. According to well authenticated\n/statements, (be wages paid employes\nprior to (be late reduction were barely\n rutes, and tbis last oppression by\nthe powerful companies ia regarded as\nhaviug reached tae point beynn I which\n.forbearance ceases to be a virtue.\nThe prexcucc of the State militia has\n.only hud tile fflVct <if esanperatiuj; the\nstrikers, and tuns far even the United\nStates regulars lnivo accomplished\nnothing in the way of raiding the em¬\nbargo upon i he mads. Driven to u\nvery frenzy of desperation, thu mob\nwhich has now become a va. - t army\npoenis fully determined to forco the\nadoption of measures in their behalf at\nall hazards, and if necetsary to the ac¬\ncomplishment of that object, will pro¬\nceed to tbo lust extremity, selling their\nlives as dearly as possible. The loss of\nlifo and property ulriudy incurred is\nfearful to contemplate, and unless\npomething hi the shape of compromise\npr concession is (fleeted speedily, tbo\nmagnitude of tbo disaster can scarcely\nhe concolved.
00a71723eab6f22a97587d6f6b3f560b DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.8483606241145 39.745947 -75.546589 poroh of No. 410, turned and\nUnion street to Funrtb, tbe dlreotlon\nfrom which they had Jail oome, and\nUhalfant and Ortzler reaching Fourth\nstreet, turned np that street to\nof the way of the Italian's\nwhich were fired after them until five\nshots were tired. Looking baok aud\nfinding Workhelser lagging behind,\nthey oalled for him to oome on, not\nknowing ellll that be had been slrnsk\nby a ball. Meeting a man on Fomtb\n«treat tbe two boys returned to the\ncorner of Funrtb and Union street«,\nwhere they found yonng Workbeleer,\nwho complained of being very\nslok. Mr. Dally, who keeps a grooerj\nstore on tbe corner, hearing the shoot­\ning, oame rat. Workhtiser asked him\nhe would allow him to sit down as he\nwas vtry slok. Mr. Dally seeing that\nehe lad was wounded, wonid not let\nhim sit at the door the outside, bnt\ntouk him into his parlor and made him\nlie down on a lonnge, and he and his\nfamily did all in their power to make\nhim comfortable,\nhone wae sought and word was iimne\nlately sent to polios headquarters and\nDr. R G . Bhortlldge and Bpeolal Offioer\nSmith soon responded. Dr. Bhortlldge\nexamined the wonud, and finding the\nlad In a bad predicament had him\ntaken to bis home on a lonnge, reaching\nthere about 11 oolook. The dootor did\nnot probe for tbe ball, supposing that It\nhad lodged in the bowele.\nCrczler and Uhalfant, in speaking of\nthe affair, did not believe that they\noonld reoognlzs the men, bnt Cbalfant\n•aid that he oonld see by the pistol\n(liehe« that the man who ahot was a\nof medium height, wore a flannel\nshirt opsn In tbe front and a red ander-\nshirt
5867d287855d984d2be73ad06183a2db DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1917.664383529934 58.275556 -134.3925 The outlook for u successful school\nyear Is very encouraging. Umlcr\nthe able management of Miss Floy\nTracy, th«« PotiKlas schools hnvo es¬\ntablished un enviable record, not\nonly In scholastic attainments, but\nin the extra-class room activities.\nTih> much cannot ho milil on behalf\nof Miss Tracy and her competent\ncorps of teachers for tho excellent\nmanner In which they have Incor¬\nporated many of the successful fea¬\ntures of modern school practice into\nthe Douglas school system.\nIt is the wish of the now super¬\nintendent and his teachers that they\nmay he uble to carry on the many\nphnses of school work so happily in¬\nitiated lust year und by means of\na Hue esprit de corps engendered by\nthe association of an able group of\nteachers to give to the people of\nItouglas a year of efficient service.\nIn the selection of teachers, the\nboard of directors have held to the\nxume minimum requirements that\nobtain in the large cities, namely,\nnormal training- and one year of ex¬\nperience In tho grades; university\ntraining and two years of experi¬\nence in tho high school. Uy follow¬\ning out such a plan, the board \nbeen able to associate a group of\nteachers with the school who, by\nreason of their experience and train¬\ning. are expected to be able to con¬\ntribute largely to the scholustic\nprogress of Hie student body.\nIt will he the purpose of the In-\ncoming superintendent to devote a\nlarge part of his time in an attempt\ntoward improving the quality of In\nstruction. This he expects to ac¬\ncomplish. first, by limiting the num¬\nber of classes by means of combin¬\ning and alternating subjects, then\nholdiiiK the teachers t o absolute\nmastery of subjects taught u thing\nwhich is impossible when teachers\nare overburdened with curricula as¬\nsignments; second, by exercising a\nstrict supervision over the teaching\nmethods employed by daily observa¬\ntion of the technique and school¬\nroom practice of the teachers. It\nis surely an uxloni that no matter\nhow liuiiteil the stuilciit population,\npupils arc entitled to just as Rood\nInstruction and just as large a corps\nof teacher* as are necessary to do\njustice to the work.\nIt in also a truism that tin* school\n.should offer limitless possibilities\nfor a pupil to Hud himself mid to\nuncover
1f91aa7f9ff6f24440f2412813753efe THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1902.7301369545917 37.451159 -86.90916 OWENSBono Kv July IBtu 1902\nMn ROWAN HOLDROOK Hartford\nKy Dear Sir Your letter of Inquiry\nas to the petition of thd Owcnsboro bar\nto the Legislature on the subject of\nredistricting the Circuit Court District\nhas been received The facts DO far as\nI know them are that some time before\nlastwinter JndgeTtR McBeath hat\nsaid to me discussing the fact that lea\ntime was required for holding the court-\nin his district than was required in ours\nthat he would not object to having Ohio\ncounty added to his district and that\nhis time would be sufficient to hold thi\ncourts of Ohio county This statement\nfrom Judge McBeath I mentioned tc\nJudge Owen and to the members of\nour bar so far as I talked with them\nSome of them I did not interview at the\ntime the petition was drawn and circu\nhated or at any time At the instance\nof some of the lawyers I drew the petl\ntion and presented it to those I met in\none round of the public square my rec\nollection is that somewhere betweet\nthirty and forty subscribed to the\n I did not present It to Judge\nOwen nor to Hon R A Miller whc\nwere then regarded as candidates foi\nCircuit Judge because I thought the\nmight feel embarrassed by signing or\nrefusing to sign the paper relating to\nthe territory in which they were to con\ntest tor Circuit Judge It was the de-\nsire of those of us who petitioned tc\nhave our district reduced to two coun\nties Some of us preferred Dayiess and\nMcLean and others of us preferred\nDaviess and Hancock as the new district\nand the petition so expressed The\npurpose was to reduce the district bj\nlimiting It to Davieos and one small\ncounty BO as to gain as much time at\npossible for Daviess If any gentleman\nwho signed the petition had any idea\nof political1 advantage in the matter\nI heard no expression of it Business\nreasons Induced the efforts to reduce the\ndistrict so far as I know or believe I\nnever heard an intimation from any\ngentleman in connection with this mat\nter that he either desired or was willing\nto have Ohio county assigned to a nee\npublican district
146b9782effca49b8d6850bc74234bd9 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.6479451737696 43.994599 -72.127742 "Then you love me Eliza please.\n"Don't be foolish or impatient That\nisn't really the point at issue. I tell\nyou I have been thinking a lot lately.\nGirls have the hardest . roles to play\nin this Question of choosing mates. A\nman goes ahead from th.e time he Is a\nboy and searches out his natural bent\nand educates himself to that one goal\nin view. He wants to be a doctor, or\nhe wants to be a financier, or he\nwants to build a house and all his\neducation is directed to that end. He\nmarries and he goes right on being a\ndoctor or financier or a carpenter and\nhis wife lives In a realm of doctoring\nor financing or house building for the\nrest of her married \nBut when a girl starts In to edu\ncate herself she has In the back of ber\nmind that though she. would perhaps\nrather live In the realm of doctoring\nor financing than anything else, she\nhad better not become too specialized.\nbecause, after all, the chances are that\nshe will marry. To become too spe\ncialized rather unfits one for marriage\nthat Is, unless one is lucky enough\nmnMe a trvian milSt haa arvrwM CI1 17ri f\nUSe same wav that sle hs. S\nalways goes about , with the feeling\nthat she might marry a lawyer or a\nwriter or a college professor and that\nshe musn't do anything that would un-\nfit her for. anything. So you see a\ngirl wastes a lot of time and mental\nenergy,
cf7f89108a9d75564c1424c601384f4a VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.4863013381532 43.798358 -73.087921 Sv'veral small bo its near the shore , in\nwhich the survivors of the disaster had\nbeen rescued from destruction.\nThe alarm hal been given at Silver\nCreek, as soon as the ffaT.es were perceiv-\ned from the shore, and all the boats that\ncould be found were sent to the rescue ol\nthe sufferers. There were only three\nskiffs, besides the yawl of the Washing-\nton which could be thus used.\nThe North America .took on board\nabout 40 of those saved, many of .vhom,\nincluding all the ladies, remained onshore.\nThere were six dead bodies picked up on\nthe spot those of four children and two\nwomen. One man died of his injuries\nsoon after reaching the shore, and one\nchild was dead in its mother's arms when\ntaken out of the water.\nAfter picking up all the floating bag-\ngage which could beseen, the hull \nwas stiil abie to float the engine was\ntowed into Silver Creek, where it sank in\no or o lert water. The IS. America re\nmained at Silver Creek, employed in this\nmelancholy business, six or seven hours,\nand everything was done by Cant. Ed\nmonds, and his crew, for the relief of the\nsufferers,, Thir prompt and efficient ser-\nvices are entitled to all praise.\nThe ill fated Washington was built at\nAshtabula last winter, and made but one\ntrip previous to her destruction. The fire\ncaught hear the boilers, and had made\nsuch progress when discovered, as to defy\nall attempts to extinguish it. The helm\nwas instantly put about, and I he beat head-\ned for shore, but in a few minutes the\nropts tccre burnt off, and she was render-\ned an unmanajjable wreck. HaJ iron\nrods been substituted, as melancholy ex-\nperience
34e5ba72f415c87f0b2b85e8b5203f5d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.460382482038 41.875555 -87.624421 DlTlsloa aumber; commltteeeaea\nIrst, aad alternates:\n1. Tkoa. 8. Hares; F. B. Carr.\nL W. O. Swing; A. P . Daaforta.\n74. B. H. Jones; E. B. Wait.\nIt, B. L . Piper; J. J . Kllckeager.\nTl. W. W . Carroll; W. W. Doaler.\n1. C. C . Parker; A. J. Frailer.\nIS. O. r. Coaley; J. R. ZoU.\n7. Jaa. W. Flnley; J. O. Paal.\nN. J. M . Kelley; C. A. Watters.\n17. C. P . Bemls; B. 8 . Nichols.\n101. F . 8 . Tkoaias; Jerry MoOaray.\nIN. P . A, Bledsoe; A. J. Doaalaa.\n111. J. L Datls; C. T. Harris.\n111. P . D. Bughrua; W. Brleksea.\n111. F . L . Howard; A. M. Banes.\n117. T . F . Phleger; J. H. Yeas.\nIN. W. . Sheehan; W. H. Derlla.\nman. Dalton; H. B. Holt\nMl. O. O. McCarty; P. O. Boarka,\nIN. Jao. Fowler; M. Inghaat.\nMl. O. C. Craig; R. Trogdea.\n117. L M. Hough; B. F . Bradley.\nW7. B. B. Preach; O. W. Melboarae.\nMl. W. A. Sharps; C. H. Staaley.\nMl. J . L . Lamport; J. C. MoOaaa.\nMl. W. J. Smith; P. H. O'Coaaer.\nMl. D. W . Marshall; T. Nltaoa.\nIII. M . F . Cooper; A. 8. KuykeadaU.\nMl. D. 8 . Craig; J. A Bonbam.\nMl. B. Freed; W. M. Bterensoa.\n111. D. Naney; C. E . Blackburn.\nMl. H. HU1; F. C. Zlel\nMl. A. W . Stewman; W. BL Waaler.\n177. F . P . MUIe; B. B. Flaaagaa.\nMl. B. F . Congdon; J. B . Shortell.
09fab2b2cd822aa36fab432649fe7c48 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.7219177765094 40.063962 -80.720915 Newport, It, I., Sept. 20..A match race\nbetween the Mayflower and the Engliah\ncutter Galatea,.to besalled off Marblohead\nsome day this week, has been arranged.\nThe yachts will prepare at onoe for the\nrace, and as noou as a day arrives on\nwhich the wind is a strong, plain sail\nbreeae, the Mayflower and Galatea will\nsail over a course off Marblebead, proba-\nbly the same one as was tailed by the\nyaohts of the Eastern Club at their regatta\nlaat July. That course was a triangle ol\nfifteen miles twice paised, making thirty\nmiles in all. The yaohts will go in racing\ntrim, and the .match will come off this\nweek if there is wind enough.\nLieutenant Henn, with a countenance\nm red as a beet from exposure to Satur¬\nday's sun, Is apparently very glad that he\nwill an opportunity to show what\nhla flyer can do in a breiaa of wind. "I\ndo not wlah to sail In a hurricane," he\naald to a reporter. I have been misun¬\nderstood by very many people In regard\nto this point. What I would like la a\nwhole sail wind, aa muoh as a yacht can\naafely lug. The wind that now prevails\nhere would suit me exactly. Bo would\nthe wind of Saturday morning before we\nwent out of Newport harbor to the start¬\ning point General Paine and I have\ncomo to a general agreement. The details\nwill be aettled on our arrival at Marble-\nhead. As I understand the matter, we\nare to use three salU.malnqall, foresail\nand Jib. I hops to show what tbe Galatea\noan douader those oircumatanoe*. We\nare all happy over tbe prospect."
11bc2468e3c95800c74abc90dbd306fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.8013698313039 40.063962 -80.720915 rovernment wa^paralyzed becaoso ono ,\nittle measure *could not bo gotton (\nthrough tho senate as rapidly and as (\nhurriedly as its advocates demanded.\nl'ho particular measure ponding before\nthe senate might be paralyzed [laughter],\nbut tho government was not. Taking\nup tho remark of Mr. Mills that ho and j\ntiie senator from Ohio (Mr. Sherman) ]\nwould grasp hands on tho pending bill, ]\ndrew a laughable picture of the senator (\nfrom Ohio, whom he characterized as (\nthe arch enemy of silver, and tho sena- (\ntor from Texas voluptuously embracing j\none another, "and when "the election ,\nlaws are reached, if the government gots\nover its paralysis, and when tho tarill\nbill for revenue only is reached, if it j\nsurvives that paralysis, how tho soaa-\ntor from Texas will rush into the arms ,\nr>f the senator from Ohio and embrace\nhi 111 again and again, becausoof the fact ,\nthat they shaken hands across tho \\\nfinancial chasm." [Laugh tor. j\nHut, Mr. President, tlie age of won- £\nilera and surprises would not end with (\nseeing nio in tlio arms of the senator\nfrom Kansas and the senator from ,\nTexas in the arms of the senator from\nOhio. Wo shall, I hope, live to soo a j\nlong, fond, cordial, gushing embrace\nbetween the senator from Now York, }\n(Mr. llill), and the President oi the\nUnited States. [Laughter.]\n"That would be a picture for tlio\nartist. I low long and lingering and\nloving it will be. [Laughter.]\nMr. Butler closed with an appeal for\na compromise, and Mr. Palmer was ]\nabout to address tlio senate when Mr.\nTeller withdrew his motion to amend (\nthe journal, disposing of the question f\nponding boforo the senate. The journ-\nill was approved and the repeal bill was 2\nthen taken up, for tho first tiuio since\nMonday.
15bae88883a70e4bf36c23ac751d751a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.6945205162353 40.063962 -80.720915 Yesterday morning the bills Ml due, and\nthe lady pupils were to be paid for their\nwork. Collectors and pupils to a large\nnumber were at the studio at an early hour,\nbut Madame Worthington came not. In-\nuuiry at the McLure House developed\nUie fact that she had leiyon an early train\non the Cleveland 4 Pittsburgh road, going\nno one knew whither.\nThe Madame had secured twenty-eight\nortbirty pupils, from each of whom she\nbad obtained $12, and from several con¬\nsiderably larger sums, §he had also run\nadvertising bills ol greater or leas sue at al\nthe newspaper officer and printing bills at\nseveral jjb offices. Two furniture dealers\nwere large sufferers, one having let the\nMadame have a large bill ol (urnitore and\ntbe other several carpela. A prominent\n sold her a gold watch and chain, on\nwhich she bad paid but $20, leaving a\nliberal balance, which was to have been\npaid at nine o'cock yesterday morning.\nHer bill at tbe McLure House bad been\nnald up to September 1, but a week's board\nwas again due. . The rent on the house on\nCbapllne street occupied as a studio was\nunpaid, and only last triday Madame\nWorthington rented a house on Fifteenth\nS£SM3£\nthe carpels above referred to.\nTbe scene at the Mosaic Art Studio yea*\nterdav afternoon when an IxTlLLiax-Vcsu\nreoorter called was a lively one. The par-\niorwss filled with tbe rfsdame's victims,\nladies from fifteen years of age and[up¬\nwards, some of tbem apparently disposed\nto cry some laughing merrily, aid all\nwanting to talk at once.
0c8c3ebf62c5466e5b47b17b8af3e669 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Littlk Hook, May 1..The sltua!\nbere is practically unchanged. Baxt\nheadquarters arc still at the Anth\nHouse, and he has about him somo tl\nhundred men. Brooks still occupies\nState House, with a fores which Is e\nmated at five hundred, mostly coloi\nTho U. 8 . troops still occupy a posil\nbetween the opposing forces.\nIn an address to the peoplo Gen. 3\nFagan, a Major-General in tbe Confei\nate army, this evening assumes comm:\nof the Brooks forces throughout the St\nand calls on his old comrades to rally\nhis standard. Both parties seem to\nwaiting for some definite views fi\nWashington. There arc no additio\nparticulars of yesterday's fight at N\nGascany, Jeflerson county,\nThe following is the Qauttc't accoun\nthe sfldir, taken from the dispatches to\nBixter side on Wednesday: Gen. K\nWhite advised Gen. Newton and a\nof the men of John Mcliayton v\nhad gathered a number or colored n\nat New Gascany, and they being nna\nto procure transportation to Little Ho\ncommenced plundering the citizens\nthat section. He asked permission\nmove a sufficient force to that point\ndisplace them, which was granted, w\ninstructions to protect every body wi\nout regard to color or politics.\nAbout o'clock last night Qene\nNewton received an official dispal\nIrom Pine Bluff. Gen. Wbito had I\nreturned Irom New Gascany and rcpo\nas follows. Ho found about 200 urn\nmen at a corner store at Jefferson.\nsent forward three officers to order thi\nto disperse, but they were fired on wi\nout being heard, anil a light ensued,\nsuiting la the death of nine and twei\nwounded to the Brooks men, with t\ncapture ol the leaders, Murphy and Vi\ndeswde and eighty-two men, with a 1\nto htm ol seven men wounded and thi\nhorses killed and seven horses wound\nHe discharged all the men\ntheir homes after having disarm\nthem Further advices state that thi\nis another Bimilar organizitian ol abi\ntwo hundred men in Lincoln and Arki\nsas counties, and Gen. White has b(\ndirecled to disperse them also. To da;\ncartel for the exchange oi prisoners v\nagreed on between the two parties, a\nall the prisoners were released on be\nsides, and permission given to the c\nzeni to past both lines without moles\nlion. The steamer Battle Is expected\nnight with one hundred and fifty men\nreinforce Brooks' side Irom Fort Bmi\nBaxter's side is also expecting some re\nforcements.
1455fe5261e5701c01f091c2986ac451 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.478082160071 40.441694 -79.990086 Perhaps but few charitably disposed peo-\nple in Allegheny or Pittsburg are aware of\nthe existence of the Home for Colored Des-\ntitute Children, one of the few institutions\nin the country devoted to this good work.\nIndeed we may further say that with tbe\nexception of a similar home in Philadel-\nphia, we know of no other in the State.\nThis " Home " is situated at the foot of\nGreenwood aTenue, Allegheny, and was\nestablished for the maintenance, education\nand training of needy colored children.\nTbe institution was organized in 1880, and\nfor seven years depended entirely upon a\nfew friends who contributed to its support.\nThree years ago tbe State recognized the\nusefulness of the Home, and since then has\nappropriated a small amount yearly. For\nsome years a portion of the " Avery Fund "\nwas given to us for the needs of the chil-\ndren, but two years ago it was withdrawn\nlor use in a training school. We care for\nfrom CO to 60 children in Home, whose\nages range from 1 year to 12. While with\nus tbey are taught the rudiments of a com-\nmon school education, and are also trained\nin housework. We try to find suitable\nhomes for the children when 12 years old.\nbut in case we cannot succeed we are obliged\nto ketp them longer. Owing to want of\nmeans we have been compelled to refuse\nadmission to a number of worth v applicants.\nWe are told that the Colored Home has not\nbeen properly placed before the public, and\nthat manrliberal people have not hitherto\nknown of its existence nnd the good that is\nbeing done. We regret that this should be\nso, and can now only hope that all good\npeople interested in the work will visit ns\nor otherwise investigate our methods and\naimt. We shall be pleased to receive any\nnwuiuuuoiii ironi our irienas. Donations\nmay be sent to the Treasurer, Mrs. R. Mon-\nroe, 174 Sheffield street, or the President,\nMrs. Ormsby Phillips, 344 Ridge avenue,\nAllegheny.
0b8ec49f5e14cfc958c0310f42de4536 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1900.8534246258243 39.756121 -99.323985 After telling of a conversation with\nAttorney Campbell at Cincinnati in\nconnection with the Goebel case, the\naffidavit continues:\nBefore making- my statement to Camp-\nbell, Wharton Golden told me to make\ntt as strong- as possible, as they (referring\nto Campbell and Goebel) would take care\nof me and protect me. I desire now to say\nthat I never had but one conversation\nwith Caleb Powers, and that was In re-\nlation to my goln to Frankfort with the\nmen on the 25th of January and at no\nplace was the name of William Goebel\nmentioned or referred to in any way or\nIn any connection by Caleb Powers.\nI desire, furthermore, to state that\neither upon the occasion of the first con-\nversation with Campbell or the day after\n received from him $10 in cash, and since\nthat conversation I have received from\nboth before and after I was a witness at\nGeorgetown in the Powers case, various\nsums of money, and I have since such\nconversation with Campbell and Arthur\nGoebel received from Arthur Goebel va-\nrious sums aggregating about $300, and\nupon one occasion $10 from Justus Goe-\nbel. The last sum I received was on\nTuesday, October 23, 1900, which was $5,\ngiven to me by Col. Campbell at his office\nin Cincinnati. Just prior to giving me\nthis $5 Campbell had telephoned to Ar-\nthur Goebel to come to his office, which\nGoebel did, and when he arrived at Camp-\nbell's office he went into a private office\nwith Campbell and Campbell came out\nand handed me $5.
47a2e79f1db549ea23a5d488e62d3be5 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1919.541095858701 39.623709 -77.41082 2. That on the 4h day of November,\n1915, an alleged marriage ceremony was\nperformed between said complainant and\nsaid defendant, in Hot Springs, S. Dako-\nta, by a Minister of the Gospel.\n3. That at the time srid alleged mar-\nriage ceremony was performed, on Nov.\n4th, 1915, said defendant was the lawful\nwife of Walter E. Cottom, alive and not\ndivorced; whereby said defendant was\nincompetent to contract a valid marriage\nwith said complainant; tfat said com-\nplainant had no knowledge of any im-\npediment to their marriage existing at\nthe time of said alleged marriage cere-\nmony,.but soon thereafter learned of the\naforesaid impediment, and repudiated\nsaid alleged marriage ceremony and has\nnot lived with said defendant since; that\nsaid complainant was indu :ed to enter\ninto said alleged marriage ceremony by\nsaid defendant who falsely and fraudu-\nlently r ;o him that there was\nno existing impediment thereto.\n4. That no children were born from\nsaid alleged marriage.\nIt is thereupo> this 14th day June, A.\nD. 1919, ordered by the Circuit Court for\nFrederick C mnty, Maryland, sitting as a\nCourt of Equity, and by the authority\nthereof, that the plaintiff, by causing a\ncopy of this order to be inserted in some\nnewspiper published in said Frederick\nCounty, once in each of four successive\nweeks, before the 18th day of July, 1919,\ngiving notice_to said absent defend nt,\nJessie E. Rudolph, of the object and\nsubstance of this bill, warning her to ap-\npear in this Court in person or by solici-\ntor, on or before the 4th day of August,\n1919, to show cause if any she has why a\ndecree ought not to he passed as prayed.\nFiled June 14, 1919.
2b17be982a8aa2a608e4f585ec1e5aca THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.5082191463723 37.561813 -75.84108 th(! l'honnio of Terence, which is a pict-\nure of Oreek and not Roman manners,\nthat, when an ingenua Attica civis was\nleft a destitute orphan it was the duty of\nthe nearest male relative to provide: for\nher if able to do so, or tu espouse her.\nThis humane requirement of the law, or\nat least intended a.s such, included even\nthe paternal half brother but with the\nmaternal, marriages were prohibited.\nAt Sparta it aopears it was the re-\nverse. These regulations probably sought\nby dill'erent means to e fleet the same\npurpose to prevent the accumulation of\ninheritances upon the same person, so\ncontrary was it thought to the true in-\nterests of a republic. At Athens it was\nfeared that the inheritance falling to the\nwife from one father might be added to\nthat which the husband already possessed\nas heir to the other. The reason for the\nSpartan law is not so obvious, but it was\nprobably intended to enable a Spartan\nmother to equalize fortune betyveun two\nsets of children not equally well \nfor At Alexandria such alliances were\nindifferently allowed in either ea.se .\nIndeed if one calculates the descent,\none w ill find that first cousins are really\nas closely allied by blood as half brothers\nand sisters; each having the same an-\ncestry on otio side, and therefore, any\nphysiological or psychological objections\nto marriages between them are equally\nvalid in either case. As to how far they\nare contrary to good morals and decorum,\nd 'pendsmuch on the mode of life among\nthe respective peoples. We lind in the\nearliest ages, and among the most primi-\ntive nations, a common aversion to al-\nliances among those closely connected\nbv blood or nihility. The early Romans\nand the Arabs of the desert had no com-\nmunication with each other, and were,\nperhaps unaware of each other's exist-\nence. Yet each held marriages between\nthose related within the fourth degree as\nunlawful. A like simple and primitive\nmode of life contributed much to estab-\nlishing t his regulation in each case. In\nearly time, and among people uncor -rupte-
26d3d8b8a54e0052c6ab1fac390b813a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.7958903792492 40.063962 -80.720915 The beginnings of co-operation read llko f<\nmanco. Ia November, 1843. a down g\nor weavers met one evoniiie in the back b\nom of a mean hovpl in an obscure street p\nlown as Toad lane, in the manufacturing\nwu of Rockdale, England, to consult to- e\nthoron the best way to hetter their con- t\ntion. The result of that eveuing'a de- g\nlerations was the founding of a society tl\nr co-operative trqdo which has since N\nown into gigantic proportions, and has al\ntcomo the purpnt of 12,000 other litnilar c\nganiaations whlcti now exist in Great *\nitain, the annual profits of which, ct\ncounting to millions of pounds, are di- ii\nded among their membors, mainly com- ii\nised of workingmen. \\ papar was o\nawn up that eyeulng, and signed si\nthese tyelvo rnon, by which thov a:\nreed to pay twenty pence (forty cents), rt\niveek into the common stock. ob'eot ii\ntho society.which W* named the al\njcbdale Society of Equitable Pioneer®. b\nu me pecuniary anu social ueneiit of Its u\nembersi I can give tpy re^d^rs pfl het- o\nr notjon of how poor- those men were si\nan bv Haying that twenty pence was q\nund to ba too much for them to set aside, ai\nid that the weekly sum was putat four a\nnta a week, and then afterwards raised a;\nsix. A room wan chartered in Tosd\nine, and tho Kquitable IMonRQO} tygin >'\nisinww. Tho {tat |U)fk df 'oooas pur* n\niHMjd'rv^m the oommon fund consisted tl\nsome sacks of flour, one sack of oatmeal, A\nhundred woightof sugar, and a firkin of a\nitter. These were divided at the u\nid of the week *qd wheeled'nome a\nwn a barro^ by each member\nnidthe press of a hooting mob of men\nid boys, eagod on by the abopkaep-\n«.
2dfa0781db6b5d5707cfb5ad0a3af61f PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.0177595312184 39.756121 -99.323985 From Farmers' Review: It Is far\neasier for me to raise geese than to\nwrite about them. My experience with\nthem Is that they will do better with\nponds. My reasons for this statement\nis that if you notice a goose on a day\nit is thawing you will notice she will\ngo anywhere that a little water Is on\nthe ground and act as if she was go-\ning crazy to get into a pond to swim.\nThen, again, take geese that are shut\nin yards and only get water to drink,\nwill they not stand about the water\ndish trying to wash until the water is\nall gone? I once saw a goose that\nwas penned and could not have any\nmore than enough water to drink,\nhave what I call a fit, She would go\nthrough the motions she would if she\nwas in a of water, and was un-\nable to stop. After this the goose\nwas allowed to go to the pond and\nwas all right, but as soon as she was\nkept from It any length of time she\nwould be as bad as ever. Then again\nthese geese that have no ponds do\nnot lay as fertile eggs as the geese\nthat do have ponds. If I wished to\nkeep geese and had no ponds for\nthem I should take large tanks and\nsink them in the ground where the\ngeese could get to them and keep the\ntanks full of water at all times. Last\nwinter when the ponds were frozen I\nwould once a week put a tub of water\nwhere they could get at it and I think\nI enjoyed seeing them wash as much\nas they enjoyed It. Mrs. L. D. Cary,\nLake County, Illinois.
1b62eb72a9405deb6ff3cd0e143516b8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.4397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 By a deed dated the 4th day of June, A.D. 1877,\nthe tit Louis French Window Olaaa tompiny, a\ncorporation of the city of tit Louia, Missouri con¬\nveyed t > the underi Uned a lot of ground In block\nseven hundred and fifiy-elght of tne city o! n.\nLouis, beginning at thesoutbesst corner of DcKalb\nann Anna atreeta In aaid city; tbe«e running\nsouthward with the east Hoe ol DcKalb street one\nhundred and twenty-seven fiet six lncba to north¬\nern line of an alley seventeen feet six Inches wide;\nthence eastward with wild alley two hundred feet\nto anothtr tweuty feet wide: tbenco with aaid last\nnamed alley nortnward one hundred and twenty-\nseven feet six inches to the aouth line of Anna\nstreet: thence with aaid south line weft two 1 un-\ndied (net to the beginning; bounded north by Anna\nutreet east and south by an alley, and weat by De-\nKalb street Alao tbe toUowlng described personal\npropelty, goods and belonging to snd bt-\nin< In and on and about tbe above described prem¬\nise*, to-wlt: Two furnacee and ene day mill wed\non aaid preobee above described. Which convej-\nance was In trust to aecure the payment of ceruin\nnotes therein particularly mentioned and described\nas will morefully appeir on reference to said deed\nduly recorded in the dty of tit Louts in book Na.\n670 page 8C7, and Inasmuch aa the flrstofthe notee\nIn said deed described baa fallen due and remains\nunpaid, the unders gned will at the request o/ the\nholder of aaid note and In pursuance ol the powers\ncontained In MJd deed sell tbe piopai ty hereinbe¬\nfore described aaai conveyed to him, for cash at\npublic Tendae at the eait front dcor ol the Court\nHouse in tbw said tity of tit Louts between tbe\nhoursofJOA.m: and4P M., on\nTilUBSDAY, the 27th day of Jane, 1878,\nTo aatlsly coats and expenaea of this trust and tbe\nnotea,
368bd35c56d3ac9bcc155c8fa8f6d3fc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.4221311159179 40.063962 -80.720915 And now, as we regard the carccr <\nthis candidate, wo find to our amnzemet\nhow little it accords with this simple r\nquiremenL Bring it lo the touckstor\nand it fulls. Not only are the C'onatiti\nlion and law disregarded, but the Pros\nJential office itself is treated as little moi\nthsn a plaything and a perquisite.wbe\nnot the former then the latter. Mere di\ntails are ample, shoving how, from the b\nginning, this exalted trust has dropped t\na personal Indulgence; where palace car\nlast horses, and seaside loiterings llgui\nmore than duties; how personal aims an\nobjects have been more prominent Ilia\npublic interests; how the Prcsidenlii\noffice has been used to advance his ow\nfamily on a scale of nepotism dwarfiti\neverything of the kind in our history, an\nhardly equaled in corrupt govcrnmen\nwhere this abuse has most prevailed; ho\nin the same spirit, ofllco has been confe\nred upon those from whom bo had recei'\ned gills or benefits, thus making the coui\ntry repay Ins personal obligations; ho\npersonal devotion to himself rather tha\nthe public or party service has been mac\ntile standard tavor; how the vast a]\npointing power conferred by the Cons!\ntution for the genoral welfare has bee\nemployed at his will to promote h\nschemes, to reward his friends, tu nun Is\nliis opponents anil to ndvanco his elcctio\nto a second term; how all* these nssuni]\nHons liavo matured in personal goveri\nment, semi-military in character, an\nbreathing a military spirit, being a speclt\no! Osarum, or persotialism, abnoiircnt t\nHepublican institutions, wliensubserviei\ney to the President is (he-supremo law\nhow, in maintaing this subservienco li\nhas operated by a system ol combination\nhaving their orbits about him, 80 lha\nlike the planet Saturn, lie is surrounde\nby rings. Nor does the similitude en\nhere, lor his rings, like those of planet\naro held in position by satellites, llot\nthis utterly uurcpublican Cirsansm In\nmastered the Hepublican party and dU\ntated the Presidential will, stalking int\nthe Senate chamber itsuif, while u vit\ndictivc spirit visits good Hepublican\nwho can not submit; how the Presidot\nhimsell, unconscious that tho Prcsider\nhas no right to quarrel with unybod;\ninsists upon quarreling until he lias bi\ncome the great Presidential quarrels
1879d95bcf773531dff2b7e08d934b1b THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.9822404055353 38.894955 -77.036646 "We done got up ter Vermont avenue and\nH street, and Pete he wanted ter go up de\navenue to getter Pierce place, an' cause I\nwudn't drive dat way he said he wudn't\ngo an' got down ofr de box.\n"He had on my badge an I axed him\nftr it, but he wudn't give up. and so I got\ndown. I tole him: 'Go long now. Pete, an'\ngive me dat. I'se got ter hah it when I\nthru In, and you knows it.' He wudn't give\nit ter me. an' I snatched it ofren his coat\nan pushed him away 6o'a I cud get back\nouter de box.\n"1 didn't know dat he fell 'till de man\ninside hollered an' dat made me look 'roun'.\nHe wuz bleedin' an' I took him in de\ncarriage and asked him if he wanted ter\ngo home er de hospital, an" he said.\nBetter ter de hospital, Phillie,' an' I\ndruv c'own dare hard ez I cud.\n"Poor ole Pete. Dey tole me he wuz\ndaid an' I jis broke down and cried. If\nI'd wanted ter get away I cud have done\nit. But it seemed ez though I cudn't go\n' way from dat hospital. Den Policeman\nl'lather came and tuk me down ter de\nstation and dev brought me up here."\nBarber stopped and rati his hand across\nhis eyes. He had told his story without\none thought for himself. It was all for\npoor ole Pete. The iHiliceman went away.\nBarber dropped down m the tench that\nran along one side of the cell. His head\ndropped forwaid on ins chest again. "Poor\nole Pete." he said.\nHe will be held pending an investiga-\ntion of the deatli of Wade.
4fa5fc6c0cb33dcaccbc0e03a005bb6a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.6734972361364 39.261561 -121.016059 Axons ix Petticoats.—A funny correspon-\ndent of the Portland Transcript says:\n•I have recently gin up all idea of women\nfolks, and come back to perlitikal life, I am\nmore at hum in this line than in hunting the\nfair scckts. Aingils in petticoats an kiss quicks\nis pretty to look at. I give in; but darn em,\nthey are slipyery as eels, and when you fish for\nem an get a bite, you somehow or other, find\nyourself at the wrong end of the line, theyve\ncotched yon! An when youve stuffed em\nwith peanuts, candy, and doggerytipes, theyll\nthrow you away as they would a cole tater.\nLeastwise, thats bin my experience. But Ive\ndoue with 'em neow. The Queen of Sheber,\nthe sleepin lioauty, Kleopatrys needle, Pom-\npey's pillow, an Lots wife, with a steam en-\ngine to help em, couldnt tempt me. The very\n of a bonnet riles me all over.”\nCopper Statue op Washington.—The Journal\n<>/ Commerce says that a copper-smith of New\nYork, John Neumann, has recently completed\na life-size statue of Washington, made entirely\nof sheet copper, and by the simple implements of\nhis trade. The proportions of the statue are\ngood, tin' anatomy and drapery very correct,\nand the featurs life-like and expressive. The\nwork lias occupied Mr. Neumann for three\nyears, and some idea of the toil involved in this\nnovel work of art may be obtained, when it is\nstated that the entire face and back part of the\nbond were made from a single piece of copper,\nwhich, by incessant hammering and working,\nstretching in some parts, and compressing in\nothers, was shaped into a countenance not in-\nferior in accuracy of lineament to some of the\nmarble representations of the same illustrious\nsubject
09665da62d5c760b3f25b94ceb7f518e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.9330600776664 39.745947 -75.546589 Dempsey, Jr., and son Thomas, Harry\nMyers Wirt, Mr. and Mr», George\nDempsey. George and Earl Dempsey,\nTrw n Uempeey. Canby Dempsey, Miss\nMary Collins. L Mou* lav, Ml«» Jessie\nMousley, Mis» Çhoehe Mousley. of 811-\nvcrslde; Mr. and Mrs. Oliver T.\nMousley, of Penny Hill: Mr. and Mrs.\nWilson T Smith, of Granogue; Mr.\nand Mrs. T . H . Woodrow, of Ph ladel-\nphla; Mr. and Mrs. William Munis.\nRaynor Munis, Mr. and Mrs. Max\nIhlefeld. Willard Ihlefeld. Mr. and\nMrs Arthur Woodrow, Evelyn and\nRalph Woodrow, Mrs. Victor Buck-\nworth. of Wilmington: Mr. and Mrs.\nWTlam Olandlng. of Camden, N. J.:\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Lynam. of\nNewport; Frank Pellet, Mr. and Mrs\nRavmond Johnston, of Ambler, Pa ;\nOrlflln Robbins, of Easton, Pa.; Mr.\nand Mrs. O W. East Sr.; Miss\nBertha Ka*tburn. Herbert Eastburn,\nMr and Mrs. O W . Eastburn. Jr.. Mr.\nsod Mrs. Samuel Eastburn and son\nSamuel. Mrs Jennie Pierce, Miss Elva\nP'orcr, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Wh teman.\nMr sod Mrs. J B MnoTM M-s I-Nzv\nbefh Moore. Mrs. Katherine Van Sant,\nMiss Nellie Van Sant. Mr. and Mrs.\nHapvev Davis. Sara and Gladys Da­\nvis. Clarence and Raymond Dav's.\nRaymond Dasher. Mr. and Mrs. A T\nBuck ngham. Ralph Buckingham. Mr.\nand Mrs C. M Fs-tt -um M-a F>m>\nWelch. Mr. and Mrs, Howard Croft.\nMiss Ada M'tchell. Mr. and Mrs. Wil­\nliam B. Armstrong. Mr. and Mrs. A .\nS. Walton, Mr and Mrs. Lester 1-am -\nborn Mr. and Mrs. Gllnin Bucking­\nham, Misses Br ta and Elva Buck'ng-\nhan.. Mrs. Rebecca Wirt and Mrs
44f55b77e77e3f343007ef0a753dc613 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.7136985984273 41.681744 -72.788147 Acosta arrived at the court house\nat 11:30 o'clock this morning accom-\npanied by an inspector of the avia-\ntion department. He went to the\noffice of Prosecuting Attorney Wil-\nliam J. Larkin where he talked with\nthe prosecutor for some minutes\nafter which court was opened. He\nwas not accompanied by counsel.\nProsecuting Attorney Larkin in-\nformed the court that Acosta who\nwas formerly stationed at the Beth-\nany airport has made a wonderful\nname for himself as an aviator and\nhas done much to advance the\nscience of aviation in this country.\nAttorney Larkin declared .that while\nAcosta was a brilliant aviator he\nhas done many foolish stunts In the\nair among them the Naugatuck in-\ncident of 1928 when he is said to\nhave tried to fly under a bridge in\nthe center 'of the borough.\nAttorney Larkin the court\nthat Acosta expressed surprise at\nthe presence of the warrant in thej\nnanas or commissioner Frank Knox\nsaying that if he had ever known\nthe warrant was outstanding he\nWould have come back to Connec-\nticut voluntarily and surrendered.\nAttorney Larkin said that both\nhe and Commissioner Knox thought\nthat a nolle should be entered.\nJudge Beardsley said that he is\naware of the fine record that Acosta\nhas made in the promotion o avia-\ntion. The court added that while\nAsfcosta was a man of great ability,\nhe has at times acted as one with-\nout his full mind. Further the court\ndeclared that there were rumors\nthat Acosta had baen paid to do\nfoolish stunts in the air. In conclus-\nion the judge said he would accept\nthe recommendation for a nolle if\nhe was sure that Acosta
108175b25a7dc6cbdb2c3c6f52221704 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.1438355847285 39.745947 -75.546589 Washington, Feb. 22 .—The senate\nyesterday entered upon the considera­\ntion of the Philippine tariff bill. Mr.\nBates, of Tennessee, spoke in opposi­\ntion to the bill. He delivered an ex­\ntended speech. In which he covered\npretty fully the general Philippine\nquestion. Few things had occurred In\nthe senate chamber, he said, more fate­\nful, or involving more delicate issues\nand greater results than the ratifica­\ntion of the treaty of Paris. He as­\nserted that the payment of $20,000 ,000\nfor the Philippine Islands was a com­\nmercial, rather than a sentimental\ntransaction, and was the first step\ntoward a colonial policy, antagonistic |\nto the American form of government.\nWhile he regarded the acquisition of\nthe Philippine Islands os hurtful to the\nAmerican system, as destitute of bene\nfit to the American people and as\nwrongful to the Filipinos, the present\nwas not the time to continue dis­\ncussion or to propose a remedy for tho\nevils that had sprung from the ratifi­\ncation of the Paris treaty. He de­\nclared that it was only after the rati­\nfication of that treaty that the ap­\nprehension arose that the Republican\nparty had “bit off more than It could\nchew.” Then it was that the now idea\nhad blossomed out that only congress\ncould extend the operation of the con­\nstitution beyond the states; and it was\nheld, in addition, that congress would\nnot extend the provisions of the con­\nstitution to the people of the Philip­\npines except with the string to it\nwhich denied equality of administra­\ntion. taxation and citizenship. How\nmany millions of dollars had been ex­\npended in the sensational programme\nof exploitation was unknown to the\nAmerican people, but thus far there\nhad been no money return of this war\nfor trade spoliation.
206782cf7fc6256fdcf12dda77090f04 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.4424657217148 40.063962 -80.720915 Corrapocdroca of the Intelligencer.\nTo a man who baa mora money than\nhe can convenient)? find use for, oothiog\nia eaaier than continental travel in Eo-\nrope, even without the least knowledge\nof any language except the English. At\nall good hotels, thin language is spoken,\naa well aa at mo«t of the larger railroad\nstations. And if one ia anxious to see\nall placee and objectaof interest at every\nstopping place, an English speaking\nguide, or Commissionaire, aa they are\nhere called, can be had on demand. When\na part/ of several persons are traveling\ntogether, both lime and monej are saved\nby employing one of these men, who, if\nrecommended by the hotel proprietor,\nwill be found gentlemanly, reliable and\nfairly intelligent. In addition to these,\n«very street corner in all the Continen¬\ntal cities contains a group of men with\nbig brass labels on their hats, the mean¬\ning of which is,that the wearer thereof\nis anxious to serve you in any capacity\n from carrying your baggage to\npiloting you through the intricate mazea\nof these crooked old street*, or to the\npalaces of kings even, and all other in*\nteres ting objecta. Few of them speak En¬\nglish, and hence they can be of but little\ntervice to travelers unacquainted with\ntheir language. They are often, however,\na great convenience to those who sojourn\nhere for a time, and being in mest cities\nsubject to control by the police authori¬\nties, they are not apt to impose very\nmuch on a wide awake man. In Holland\nonly did I find them at all pestiferous,\nbut there some of them are more impu¬\ndent than a Niagara hackman. On one\noccasion in Amsterdam, in the absence of\na knowledge of any emphatic words in\nthe Dutch language, I was compelled to\nuse my cane on an unusually persevering\niellow who knew about six English words,\nsnd persisted in dinging them at me\nrather more frequently than was agreea¬\nble.
00b9f6a147bef924e2c09fb44f02ddf0 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.4631147224752 41.875555 -87.624421 cse who went forward lu too attempts\nto block the Port Arthur harbor. The\nstrange element In nearly all these\ncomments Is that while they do not\nexpress surprise In words they some\nhow convey tho Impression that this\nfact of bravery was wholly unexpect\ned. There Is not tho least ground for\nthis. Physical courage is one of the\ncommon ntti Unites of manhood In nil\nraces which have evinced capacity for\nprogress, and probably In all others\nalso. The exceptions nro very row,\nir any. Individuals differ In the per-\ncentage of courage In their general\nmakeup, lu Its quality, whether aggres\nsive or passive, and In the methods of\nmanifesting It, hut the quality Itself\nIs present In all save, a few tiiifortu\nunto Individuals. There are wider dir\nfcrcnccs In the degico aggressive-\nness and this Is sometimes shown In\nthe spontaneous net of bodies or sol-\ndiers, ns, 'ror example, In tho some-\nwhat unexpected climb or the Union\nforces up Mission ridge, In what is\ncalled tho battle or Chattanooga, The\nprincipal differences "nong men in\nfighting ctllcleucy tiro differences In In-\ntellectual outfit. In aeiiteness and alert-\nness of perception and of action the\ncapacity to see opportunity, to seize\nIt at tho critical moment and uso It\nwith Intelligence. In other words, It\nIs another ease of tho superiority of\ntho man who "knows how" ami has\nbeen trained to uso Ills knowledge.\nThere Is, of course, tho crush of mere\npreponderance of avoirdupois or mini\nhers, but that is another matter. It Is\nsuperior brains or superior brai n-t rai ni n- g
3f52483b97e684da5d36f46029980574 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.4643835299341 39.513775 -121.556359 uxpiralion ol -m h pnblicillitns fv Dn- Troit'nn r, in\npr. 'em c • f 1In- (ioverii r or Comp rolh-r. id Dm Sint**\nCnpiiai for Dn* siirroiulor of bond* is-nod umli r this\n\\ol, w hich ndvorlmcrnoi t shall *1 m Do- anionnl of\nn m.ov In- has on bHlol for the purpose ol roch-u plion.\njuiit limy -li ill mci pi lln* a• w* - pr..no«iil«, ai rah-s\nlo t oxc* odinif par value a* in iy rodeen 1 Dm ifn-alosl\nnnioiinl ol hoims mini the unhuni ol ca-h on l and\nfor rodotnplloli is ( xhausled ; j fP'iW, /en/.icr. iu\nc.-t'o 11 si.m ion) mi omit *d such I* nds -had ms ho\nolloiod, lis lilorrs ii I. lo exhaust the -hi - . lit; fund to a\n1 loss amount limn h*u Dioii'. - ind dollars, then it is\nhoi-ehv made lie duly id Dn- Ir listrror til nilverljse\nin two newspapers, on" m New York and one ai Du*\n( apinil of the ale. I r Diree imiiilh', which advi-r -\n- 1 11-1 incuts -hall stale Di>' in oinii in Dm sinkinu* I\nland Dm nnmlierot bonds uiiinbvtvnu Diem iu Do\n; order of llmir issu nice, wb eh siic.li Im d is set no,art\nin pat and disjbaiife ; and if s.u -h bonds, so nniii-\nh, -r, ii 01 such i.dverliscn onl*. shall not lie prosenied\nlor piy monl mid cancollalioii w iiliin three nionlhs\nIrom 1 hi* expiration ol -m h im' lieaDnu, Dion such\nfund shall r« mam in Dm Troasnry m disidn.rtie such\n1 hoods whooovio preseiilul —tint they shall draw mi\njI,lores) uimr such piitdiciitoti a* ia-t aforesaid,\ni Sec. rt. The rreasii'er 01 Stutesh.il keep full and\nparticular sc, omit and record of all Ids proeocdloifs\nI umli this Aci, and of Dm Omul- redeemed nail sir\nIr , idered. .ml In* shall linn-nii! to Dm 1 01 venter an\na I isl rui lof ill Ins pro (a-ilihns 11 ider Dlls \\cl.wilh\nhis Hllliioil report, to he I• J Dn- Covereor laid before\nDu- l .eif slalure ; and all l ook- mid paper* pertnin*\nim; in the mall* r- provided lor in Do* u*l. *li all at -ill\n~
04e560c4179c785689ddd45cbcdbc04d SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.842465721715 37.53119 -84.661888 A vote for Gov. McCreary to day is a\nvote against the Force bill, designed by\ntl.o republicans to peipetuatothemselvis\nin power by taking from the people the\nconduct of elections for congressmen and\nplacing it in the hands of supervisors ap-\npointed by partisan judges. It is, as\nReed expresses it, a bill to give the re\npublicans power to do their own regU\ntration, their own enumeration and their\nown certification at the point of the\nbayonet if necessary. A vote for Mc-\nCreary will also emphasize the disgust\nthat every honest man feels for the tarill'\nbill, which 2o years after the war and in\ntime of profoundest peace, raises the\nprice of nearly every necessity of life in\norder that money can be forced from the\npockets of tho poor into the purses of\nthe rich manufacturers and otnere, who\nin turn will repay the party, which has\nlegislated in their behalf, by contribut-\ning even more largely to its campaign\nfund. A vote for McCreary will also\nshow your repugnance for the arbitrary,\nunjust and unprecedented methods \nReed and his mob in disregarding every\nright of the minority and of turning out\nhonestly elected democrats to nil their\nplaces with creatures who have no claim\non the seats except that they will be\npliant tools in the hands of the majority\nA vote for McCreary is protest against\ntho extravagant and reckless manner in\nwhich the public money is being squan-\ndered by which the largest surplus ever\nin a national treasury has in less than\ntwo years been spent and So0,000,000\nmore besides. The republicans are wait\ning with bated breath for an expression\nfrom the people. Let tho condemnation\nbo so loud and bo pronounced that there\nwill be no mistaking its import. Iu ad-\ndition to the duty you owe tho country,\nit should also be your pleasure to com\npliment the man, who has done as much\nns any other singlo member to prevent\nthe infamous legislation that disgraced\nthe session of Congress just closed. True\nho has no opposition of consequence,\nbut that does not matter. Go to the\npolls to -da -
1bdf43a4fb7b04419c182bf5e95ec200 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.5712328450024 40.063962 -80.720915 From tho outsat of tho troublo Groi\nBritain had refused to Intorvona in th\ndiiputo upon tho morlta of which th\ngovernment was not callod upon to o:\npress uu opinion. It had thorcfora coi\nfined itself to providing for tho snfol\nof British livos and interests in Bani\nkok. It was to bo regrottod that son\npersons appeared to suspect that I\ntliogo provisions, which woro none to\nlnrgo to ho taken among an orlont;\npopulation of 3,500,000 porsouB, was 01\ncouraiteuiont to tho biamoso to porei\nvero in a hopoloss rcsistenco to th\nFrench, it was hardly nocossary\nstuto that tho British govornmont lis\nfrom thu beginning assiduously avoitic\ngiving any udvico to Slam beyond tl\noccasions when sho askod for it, bi\nGreat Britain had urgod lior to rani\nterms as quickly as posBiblo hi\npowerful neighbor. Novortboless, tl:\nllritish govornmont was by no moat\nindlUorent to tho ovonts that aro no\npassing in Slam. Groat Britain ha\ntint place in tho great commercial ii\nteresls there, her shipping amountir\nto H7 per cont of tho tonnago and hi\ntrndo to 93 per cotil of tho total vnlu\nFor this reason ho regrottod that Frani\ndeemed that a hlockado was uocossrtr\nThis blockado might raise somo quo\ntions of international law, but Groi\nBritain had not boen formally notiQc\nol its establishment, and porhaps\n««3 not too much to hono that thu n\nenmity ho yot bo avoided. Tho oa\nconcluded by stating that tho papc\nwlilch ho would lav upon tho tablo\ntho earliest posslblo niomont woul\nembrace the negotiations that had bee\ncurried on for tho past tlirao yours.
26595d8e41c349b9a61862e86626f2a2 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1882.5109588724 39.743941 -84.63662 those brought up under the same roof\nwas contrary to decorum and morality.\nThese sentiments appear to have been\nheld long before any sanitary or scien\ntitic observation theories or controver-\nsies on the subject. In this respect, at\nleast, it does not appear that, as the e r\noiutionists contend, the aesthetic and\nmoral sentiments of man have continu-\nally advanced and improved. Rather\nthrough the teachings of false religions,\nthe examples of kings and other promi-\nnent men, the vagaries of fancy, the\ncapricious power of love, and the more\nconstant sway of avarice, the sentiment,\nor as some might consider it, the preju-\ndice upon this subject seem to have been\nweakened and in some cases to have en-\ntirely disappeared.\nCambyses, King of Persia, for an In-\nstance of the power of example, was\nenamored of a sister, and wished to\nespouse her. Desiring the sanction of\nthe law for his action, he called together\nthe royal judges and inquired if there\nwas any law of Persia which authorized\na brother to marry his sister. With\nproper regard law and a prudent re-\ngard for safety, they answered that they\nit found no such law, but they had found\na another which declared it lawful for the\nKing of Persia to do what he wished.\nFrom that time such marriages, though\nhitherto unknown among the Persians,\nbecame lawful, and even frequent. The\ncustom extended to the Egyptians, and\nis was adopted even by their Macedonian\nKings. But wherever the Roman power\nin extended, such alliances ceased, or\nleast were no longer sanctioned by law.\nThe extirpation of this blemish upon\nancient civilization, which the widely\nextended power of Rome in a great de-\ngree accomplished, was completed and\nrendered permanent by the still wider\nway and deeper influence of Christian-\nity. Cousins germaine are, in all Chris-\ntian countries, the nearest relatives not\nwithin the prohibited degrees. Even\nbe reasons of State policy have not been\na sufficiently potent to render alliances\nbetween those more nearly related, and\nRichard III. is probably the only sove-\nreign who, in order to strengthen his\nunstable throne, even wished to marry\nhis niece.
017524e20f4f9bc757c80a357d9cac96 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.3438355847286 39.745947 -75.546589 Many women who aTe not In the\nhaibit of»making frequent use of the\ntrolley cars feel embarrassed when\nthey enter one. The Wayfarer saw\nan instance of 'this sort shortly before\nneon yesterday. A young woman of\ncld've complexion, 'hcT weaith of black\nhair comlbeddloiw'ntowover'her forehead\nand attired in a white chip straw hat\nand 'black dress, entered a Delaware\navenue'Winter ear at Seventh and Mar­\nket streets. There were only three\nother persons in the car. At Eighth and\n'Market streets a middle-aged woman,\nplainly dressed, and whose face and\nhands gave evidence of the fact that\nher life was not one of cascor Indolence,\ngot aboard. She Carried a Market\nbasket, a bundle containing several\ndouble rolls of wall paper, a large\npastCbbard box, filled with biscuits,\nand an umbrella. There were only\ntwo passengers on the side of the car\nopposite tbe Wayfarer ami the woman,\nby taking three or four steps into the\ncar, could have had ten or fifteen fedt\nof room for.herself and bundles. But\nshe was not at ease, and, instead \ndoing so, seated herself between the\nyoung woman in black and a man\npa'sfsenger, and occupied every inch of\nthe intervening space. In her nervous\nconfusion she dropped the box of\ncrackers in the lap of tilne young woman\nand apologized for that. Then the wet\numbrella slipped from 'her band and\nmeasured itself along the young wo­\nman's black skirt. This was followed\nby another apology. To cap the cll-\nnfax, the bundle of wall paper insinu­\nated itself between the two women\nand forced the yOnn'g one to give an\ninch or two. She turned her dark\neye» towards her homely neighbor, and.\nat first, theTe was in. them a gleam Ö?\nresentment, 'but the evident fluster of\nthe womab causing her so mudh an­\nnoyance aroused her womanly pity, and\nshe submitted to it all without a mur­\nmur. When the Wayfarer left the car\nat Fourth and Market street tbe two\nwomen occupied the same relative po­\nsitions, with nothing in common lre-\ntween them but the bundle of wall\n»aper and the wet umbrella.
20d5e2a6418dd7e5de09875ca73c2968 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.443989039415 40.832421 -115.763123 f CaoCTUI».Tlio parties who recently\nrobbed tho Btago near Chicken Creek,\nUtah, were, says tho Tribune, eapturcd\nSunday. Tho robbers give their names\n«a Sam. Willis and Francis 1 linker, and\naro said to bo old offenders from this\nStato, having practiced their profession\nextensively during tho Hush times about\n"White l'ine. It is tinted that Willis\nwas for a term of years an involuntary\nresident of Carson for misappropriating\nbullion. . From the Tribune we id:>o learn\nthat tlio miserable abortion who, n few\ndays since, enticed away a little eight-\nyear-old girl, with tho view of outraging\nher. an account of which wo To-publish¬\ned at tho timo .has been identified by\ntho child; and her father, Isador Mor-\nriss who has been diligently necking tho\nbrute, administered to him retributive\njustice in a prolonged and vigorous\npuuiuieling, which was heartily ap¬\nproved- by all present at the tiino. Iu\nour opinion tho only adeiptale punish¬\nment for such a crime as was attempted\nby this beast, named Lyon, is death on\ntho rack, I>yon had an examination\nand being over to await the ac¬\ntion of tho Grand Jury, iu default of\n$3,000 bonds, was committed to jail.\nFrom tho Virginia Chronicle wo learn\nthat n largo Anti-Chiucso secret meet¬\ning was held at Carson on the same\nevening, and determined resolutions\nworo passed to forco tho Chinese out of\ntho country. After appointing a time\nin tho morning to procccd to hostilities,\n(ho meeting adjourned. In the morn¬\ning Homo 200 armed men took positions\nalong. tho railroad, but up to U o'clock\nthe Chinese failed to appear and the\nmob marched back to town, and when\non tho corner of King and Carson\nKtroets, gave thrco cheers and marched\noffin regular order to a llmno ft mile\nfrom town and drovo off tho Chinese at\nwork there, Tlio Sheriff was prepared\nto arrest tho leaders upon their return\nto town, but tho crowd beat their step3\ntoward Empirer whero, it is understood,\n,tb«y will increase thoir numbers and re¬\nturn to drivo out tho Chinese wood-pil-\ncrtr. Tho mob is paid to liavo been\nprincipally composed of Freueh Cana¬\ndians.
15ba0b53ccd161f3f25009ecb5be2cfd THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.993169367284 39.369864 -121.105448 Dear Press:—Nowdo not fly off at a tangent,\nand misinterpret ray meaning — for Uncle Web-\nster gives several definitions of the little four-\nlettered word with which this epistle is initial-\nized, and I use the noun,\nI was sitting in my little 6X9 the other even-\ning, listening to the fierce blasts without, as\nthey swept past with a dc(a)fiant air, and a great\nbluster—a regular secession blow—may the\nreign of both be short —frightening us poor nerv-\nous creatures nearly out of our wits, and wond-\nering how long we were to be embargoed, and\nwhether, “to use an expression more striking\nthan classic,” eld Boreas would ever “dry up,”\nor at least grant an armistice until after the cx-\npirati cn of the holidays, and so give us an op-\nportunity of ventilating ourselves, as becomes a\nChistian people, and —what do you think\nabout it ? Come now you newspaporial prog-\nnosticators, who give us weekly—what we\nalready know—a statement of the weather past\n—how it has shone, and sweltered and scorched,\nand rained, and blowcd and snowed —cant you\ngive us some little inkling into the future ?\nBut as I was going to at the outset, I was\nsitting, the other evening, in a brown study—as\nPaddy would have it, dreaming w itli my eyes wide\nopen —and indulging in pleasant fancies, while\nthought went skipping from one stepping stone\nto another, and peering away down in the deep\nwaters of the past, for something buried there.\nAnd what think you was brought to the surface ?\nA jolly old-time sleigh! Not one of your modern,\ncity “Great Eastern” kind, where there are\nseats for the whole world and its family, and am-\nple room for the rest of mankind, but one of the\nantique style,'with one seat justlarge enough for\nttvo, in a compressed state. Suppose you step\nin, wrap the large, warm buffalo skin around\nyour shoulders, thrust your feet into the straw,\ngather up the reins, and touch the dark equine\nquadruped gently with the whip. The tin; bells\nring out an overture ; (perhaps another overture\nwill be listened to before you return) and away\nyou go—your heads and shoulders slanting up\nfrom the scat like the letter V—for laughing\neyes are watching you as you depart, and teas-\ning tongues will be wagging at your expense on\nyour return.
2414a8870edfdb4225ba116f362622a6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.4041095573314 39.261561 -121.016059 A Giants Causkwav—Intkkkhtinu Dis-\ncovery in TimrusK.—The Columbia Cou-\nrier given an accouut of a singular discovery\nnear Sonora. The owner* of a claim, while\nhydraulicing a steep bank, about seventy\nfeet In hight, were suddenly surprised by\nthe caving down of an immense amount of\ngravel, limestone, boulders and lava, which\nrevealed beyond, in the heart of a high hill\nsome hundreds of basaltic columns of a dull\nbrown collor, pentagonal in shape and\nstanding perpendicular, from ten to twenty-\none feet high. The open space between\nthose pillars nowhere exceeds four or live\ninches, and rows of them run into the hill\nfrom thirty to fifty feet, closely packed to-\ngether. In some places, at certain angles,\nit is possible to see beyond this colonade\ninto an opening, formed apporcnlly of\nquartz rock, which is certainly exceedingly\nrich in gold; for even at that distance from\nthe observer, in a kind of dim twilight,\nstrong indications of the metal are quite\nvisible. Rays of light seem to penetrate\ninto Ibis opening throngh fissures in the roof,\nsides, or from the rear, although the most\n search has not as yet led to the dis-\ncovery of Hny of them, or of any probable\naveutie through which light could enter.\nThe hill is thickly covered with cbapparol,\nwhich makes the search difficult and unsat-\nisfactory. The well known geologist of\nColumbia has been to the spot and exam-\nined the place with great attention. lie\nreports that the columns are exbecdingly\nhard, usually regular in shape and closely\npacked together ; that their igneous ortgin\nis very apparent; and that on examination\nhe found augite, feldspar, titanic iron and\nolivin in their composition, lie is certain\nthat this is the only in-tance so perfect a\nbasaltic development of rock has been\nfound in California--althongh he bas seen\nas good a developement in the West Indies\n—and be considers it, among all the geo-\nlogical discoveries in this country, as by\nfar the greatest and mo«t worthy of scien-\ntific observation. As might be expected,\nthe whole hill, and one or two adjoining,\nare staked off in claims, and excitement\nand speculation reigns supreme in Colum-\nbia, Sonora and all the surrounding camps.
08d476f7253d1fa00c11c36f7ce29633 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.3456283836774 40.063962 -80.720915 For tba past tvo veeks a lam aortic\noi tbe community, indcdicg duecy the*\nwko advocate temperance, a»d tkcaa vi\ndrink and rend the ardeot, kftre ben e:\nerciied om tbe qaeatioa of "license <\ndo license," vkkk vac pending is tl\nCoonty Cocrt. Altke last term ci 11\nCoostr Cocrt, at vkkk *11 tke Justia\nver* pretest, tbe Cbart adop^d ft rcnoli\ntioo. to tbe effect tkftt license to sell j\nvkoksale or retail, spiritnocs ttqoot\noogkt Dot to be granted. As tbe pcesc\nterm, vitk Jodce Hindman and hit m\nciftte J attic*#, Ccj^nbarer and Brodt c\ntbe bench, ilx. A trill, of Maiden, mac\napplication for a license vkii\nit m agreed among those vl\ndesired tkat lkenseahoold be grar\ncd, and those vho did Dot^bonld be mai\na test cue aod a day fixed to argue tl\nnine; tbe Cocrt expiejwir.y itself ettiffw\nvitk tbe proof of Xr. Arrilft ckaraci\naod tbe MSekoc7 of his bond. Mewj\nDoddridge, Wilson aad Borden appear*\nfor applicant, aod Messrs. Fejgata\nCracraft aitd Smith a* nid carioc. Tl\nfollowing are some of tke propotitic*\nrelied opoo by tbe applicant, which 1\nrire became it is a nord cue: Tkat\nforbid as iodiridoal or da* tbe right\ntbe ecjoToeet or acqnimioa of proper\nic tact a mapper u should be pensitf\nto the community fttlar^vould be tod\nprire tbesa of liberty is particular*\nprimary importance "to their parmit\nhappiness, lor vhkh aa ttprtm <md rperx\nasskritw fthecld besbovn.' That tbe On\nprorided a specific authority for *theiss4\nof license," Oct do astkority for tbe r\nfatal of license. Tkat tbe pover to r\nfate licence for tbe ale ol spiritaoa\nliquor# vould carry vitk it tke Dover\nmate a license to "a hotel. Sock povi\nvould authorise tbe defirocJoc of^*»\nertj ccetrxrr 10 uie proTiEjas w u\nConrtitctioo "that do perwc ahould 1\ndeprired of hij property without d:\nprcceM of law/ ihxi while tbe dectrn\ntioc of property in spiritoooi liquor*, 1\niepririvzu* ownercl
081d855ecdbdfee33f5a5462df8544dc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.3794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 they were all drowned. He bad been out when\nthe fljod came. Further on, and they came to the 81\nHclndoer, where he had heard the boon compan*\nions singing over their graves, for that night *\nlong before tho cock did crow or the day dawn, C(\ntheir mouths were full of water and mad, and\nnot the barley brec. To know thetr fato needed ^\nbut a glance at the miserable, shattered, gutted\nfragment of the Inn that etood. There was a C1\nchimney, a triangular piece of root, a quarter of d\ntbe Inside of one second lloor room, wuh all the\nboards gone, and tbe others hanging down per- A\npendicmarly or sticking up at an angle of forty- i.\nlive. Kvcn on the side furthoat from tho flood, u\nthowator had and plowed away at the m\nwall so doepiy that tho miserable wreck had a\nlagged waist, no bigger in proportion than a "\nwasp's. Between l'oma Bridge and tho first <u\nsuburb of Hillsborough, the place was like a\nbattle field; not that many hid been drowned on It\nthe spot, but those drowned np tho valley by K1\nthe flood at Its highest, thoy hud bcoabroaitht 01\ntown and deposited In tho thick layer of mud A\nloft by tho abating waters. Homo were cruelly\njaahed and manned by tho bard objects with pi\nwhich they had como In contact. Others wore a :3\npeaceful expression, and had color In their\n:heeks. One was a lovely llltlo girl, with her tl\nittlo hands before her face to kocp oat the sight .\n)f dCalh*
0deb9b92dfe269db1621a514e91a12da THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.5520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 Jackson county Democrats aro bard to\nplease. At a convention held July 7,1884,\nthey jumped ou Governor Jackson with\nthiu resolution: "We deprecate the order\nof our executive olliceru (familiarly called\nthe reassessment order) for we regard the\nsume as illegal, unwise and impolitic."\nGovernor Wilson encouraged by this and\nother similar resolutions passed by Demo¬\ncrats elsewhere issued his recent order re¬\nvoking the Jackson order, and now the\nJackson county Democrats in convention\nassembled turn a neat somersault as fol¬\nlows: "We do not approve of thu action\nof our Governor in reference to the assess¬\nment of personal property of this State, as\niu our opiniun it is a question that should\nbe settled by the courts and the Legisla¬\nture of the Stato."\nPersons in Pocahontas aro talk¬\ning seriovsly of incorporating a railroad\ncompany with u view to building a narrow\ngauge road from Huntersville, in that\ncounty, by way of Beaver creek, Anthony's\ncreek and Dry creek, to connect with the\nChesapeake it Ohio railway at Whito Hal-\nphur Sprinud. Thedistunce ioaboutthirty-\nlive mi lee, and tho couutry through which\nthe road would paw is heavily timbered.\nThere aro two luinbor companies directly\nou the line of the proposed road which\nwill be compelled to build somo miles of\nroad to reach points at which they can\nnut their lumber into the Greenbrier rivor,\nThese companies must then run the ilver\nto Konceverto aud pay boomageaud incur\nrisks of a very grave character, and it id\nbelieved that they would co-operato iu\nthe scheme.
62eb09f12124620e665c1c529ef0f4d5 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1922.9767122970572 41.875555 -87.624421 course, but in the main he pays pretty\nwell for what he secures. But of late\nwe have noted a stadium age develop-\ning in football and a winning team has\nbeen emphasized more than the good\nthat the college and players themselves\nget out of this "safety valve" in good\nhard competition in which , the end is\nclean sport rather than a winner.\nStadia cannot be paid for with losing\nteams, so there is a hint at pressure\nto get a winner and attract the big\ncrowds. Not all institutions are so\nhappily favored as Ohio State, where\na stadium was erected by subscription,\nbut our exception here simply drives\nhome the point that In other Institu-\ntions conditions are not always so fa-\nvorable in other words, not many \nleges and universities have a Columbus\nthat is loyal to its teams in lean as\nwell as prosperous years.\nWe hate to see an attitude where\n"What is the attendance going to be?"\nIs a question almost as naturally asked\nas "Is our team going to fight to the\nlimit tomorrow?"\nOne may talk until blue around the\ngills about the evils of pro football\nand they are evils but there are un-\nconscious evils in colleges themselves\njust forming that must be watched.\nThe size of a crowd or what comes in\nat the gate is not the thing. Real\nsportsmanship on the field and a giv-\ning of all a player has under wise\ncoaching Is the thing. A winner is de-\nsirable, but not to pay for a stadium.
00021ac1d645218b2d69315d73089d78 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1897.8835616121257 39.78373 -100.445882 ernment could invest deposits in i\nunueu siates Donas so mat tne peo-\nple would own a share of the public\ndebt, which is now monopolized by\nthe gold trust. If the Government\ndebt was owned by the masses of the\npeople of the United States, as it\nwould be if postal savings banks\nwere established at every money\norder post office, instead of by the\nEuropean gold trust and its Ameri-\ncan agents, Mr. Hanna nor no other\nboodler could collect a campaign\nfund of $16,000,000 to colonize doubt\nful States, purchase votes and stuff\nballot boxes in Presidential elections,\nand hundreds of millions of dollars,\nnow sent to Euiope annually to pay\ninterest on bonds, would be distrib-\nuted among the people at home, who\nwould not care whether London\nmoney lenders and their agents in\nthis country valued our at 43\nor 53 cents each, so long as these dol-\nlars were a legal tender of 100 cents\nwhereever the stars and stripes float.\nA bill is to be introduced at the\nnext session of Congress for the es\ntablishment of postal savings banks,\nand in the contest now being waged\nin the Sixth Congressional District\nof Illinois, which comprises a part of\nChicago, to fill a vacanc' caused by\nthe death of Congressman Cooke,\nthe platform of both parties pledge\nthe candidate to use all honorable\nmeans to secure the passage of the\nbill. The Postmaster General in his\nannual report commends the estab-\nlishment of such banks by the Gov-\nernment and unless the gjld trust\nhas an absolute mortgage on Speaker\nReed there is a probability of the\nmeasure going through both Houses\nat the ensuing session of Congress.
5531e4ae850fd8e297c285fd41267ba3 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9658469629123 38.729625 -120.798546 confined to the hrain. mrdhines would he of little\nron«r«|oenrr. I despaired of ere r regaininf my\nhealth, atrrrgth and energy; and a« a la#t resort,\nand with but a faint hope, railed u|son Dr. Oropkar.\nwho. afW rsamining mr rase, preacrilied aomr mr«l\nlelne which almost instantly rrlirrrd me of the dull\nnain and dirtiness In my he-*d. Rneowraged hy it.*?\nresult. I resolved to piare n.yself tmroedialely under\nhis care, and by a strict obedience to all his dlrre-\nlions and adrice, my head became dear, my idea»\ncollected, the ronsUnt pain In my hack and groins,\nthe weak neat of my limbs, the nervous reaction of my\nwhole body on the slightest alarm or riritemrnt ;\nthe misanthropy and evil forebodings; the self dis-\ntrust and want af confidencela others, the Incapabil-\n to study and want afresolatio» ; the frightful, ex -\nciting, and at time, pleasurable dreams at night,\nfollowed by Inrolwntary discharges, haw* all dbap\npvared ; and in fact. In two months after hating tvo\nsuited the Doctor, | fell as If Inspired by a new life\n~- i hal life which, hut a short time sga, I coak»am\nplated to end by my own hand.\nH ith a rlew to guard the unfortunate frsm fall-\ning Into the snares of Incompetent quacks, I drew»\nit roy duly to offer this testimone la Ike merit aid\nskill of Dr. Cxapkay. ami recami— nd him to all\nwho may stand Hi need ol medical advice, being\nassured by my own exiierirngw, that once wnder\nMs care, a radical and permanent cure will he *f-\nfwi«i.
01225c23d3f75fa4a9a0f1cdc7fab666 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1865.2424657217148 37.561813 -75.84108 NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE\nof March t'dh contains annthot appalling Hat of the\ndead Vnton rrleonera, comprising those who died In\nthe hospital! from the 18th ol December, Ih day upon\nwhich Tita TmnrKK'i corresiionrtonta escaped, nntll all\nthe prlionera id war were removed to Rlrhmotid and\nWilmington for exchange. There were many nimble\nto obtain admiislon Into the wretched hospitals who\nbreathed their laat In their own quarters, and vt whom\nno memoranda whntorer was kept. They go to swoll\nthe Hut of the nameless and nnreeordud dead who havo\ncheerfully given up their Uvea "for our dear eonnlry'i\nake," and w hose memories the Republic wilt ever de-\nlight to honor.\nThe em bunged prisoners who kept and brought\nthrough this record, state that The 5ufis6arr Aii'y\nWnlchmm In announcing the a.cape of Tk Ttiatxa'a\n pronounced the occurrence very morti-\nfying, inasmuch as they wero the moat Important prli-\nonera In the garrison ; but asserted that tboy were cer-\ntain to he brought back within a week, aa scouts had\nbeen sent out fur them and the conntry alarmed In ov.\nsry direction. As tha correapondents hid quietly In\nsliJit of the prison nntll the scouts had gone out, and\nkepi all the lima behind them, It waa hardly strange\nthat their fancied pursuers could obtain do sullsAictory\nInformation concerning them I\nTho tust report which reached the prlaon before the\nnewt of thair aafo arrival In Knoavllle, stated very cir-\ncumstantially that Meaara. Klchardson, Drowno and\nlavlt had been seen going through the mountains on\nhorseback, armed to the tcelh, and accompanied by a\ndeserting Rohol officer, who was also a travelingaisen-al-
0c7499041e898301b0b16367adf3c955 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.5356164066463 39.745947 -75.546589 Among the prominent Delawareans\nin attendance, a number of whom\nwere honorary pall-bearers, were for­\nmer Governor Robert J. Reynolds, of\nWillow Grove; Hon. Levi C. Bird, of\nWilmington; United States Marshal\nJohn Cannon Short, of Bridgevllle;\nPresident of the Senate C. Harry Sal­\nmons, of Summtl Bridge; Speaker\nHezeklah Harrington, of Harrington;\nformer Representative W. F . Davis, of\nSmyrna: Andrew C. Gray, former Reg­\nister John K. Bradford. ex-Judge David\nT. Marvel, former Postmaster Enoch\nMoore, of Wilmington: former Register\nJ. Wilkins Cooch, of Coochs Bridge;\nformer Representatives Nicholas John­\nson, Hon. J. W. Harrington, of Farm­\nington; Solicitor John Biggs, of the\nPennsylvania railroad;Clerk J. Thomas\nBaxter, of the Senate; Superindent E.\nP. Stacey, of the Baltimore and Dela­\nware Bay railroad; Deputy Collector\nof the Port of Wilmington W. Alex­\nander Comegys, of Middletown; J.\nFrank Biggs, former Clerk of New\nCastle County William P. Biggs, of\nMiddletown; Joseph T. Hoffecker, J. O \nJones, William Penn Shockley, Editor\nThomas F. Dunn, of the Index; Editor\nWilliam Saulsbury, of thc Delawarean;\nColonel W. H. Stevens, editor of the\nSeaford News; Henry E. Cain, Post­\nmaster John W. Jolis, of Middletown.\nSupervisor of the Ccifbus Rev. Jona­\nthan S. Willis, of Milford; County\nChairman G. A. Millington, of Kent;\nCounty Chairman E. D. Hearne, of Sus­\nsex; Colonel Armon D. Chaytor, of\nWilmington; Magistrate Peter L. Coop­\ner, Senator Robert H. Lewis, Presi­\ndential Elector D. Mifflin Wilson, for­\nmer Secretary of State John D. Haw­\nkins, Detective N. H. Hutchins, of the\nDelaware iallroad; Ezekiel Cooper, of\nthe Farmers' Bank, all of Dover.\nSecretary of State James H. Hughes,\nof Denver; former State Treasurer Wil­\nbur L. Burnlte, of Felton: former Clerk\nof the House Gcowe W. Spicer, of\nMarshalUon; Acting President John\nHunu. of the First National Bank; Sec­\nretary A. N. Brown, o{ the Delaware\nState Agricultural Society; Dr. B. W.
19a0908ca72fc4425a7e8478edfc6073 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.0342465436327 39.745947 -75.546589 PRINCESS ANNE, Md„ Jan. 13 —\nHen. John W. Crisfleld died at an early\nheur yesterday morn Ing at his resi­\ndence, Edge Hill, near Princess Anne,\nin his 89th year. Though well advunetd\nin years ho was apparently in good\nhealth until Sunday night, when, labor­\ning under «orne excitement, he went\ninto a «lute of stuiior and remained in\nthis condition until his death.\nJohn Woodland Crisfleld was a rep­\nresentative in the Thirtieth and Thirty-\nseventh Congress from the First dis­\ntrict of Maryland. He was one of the\nmost distinguished lawyers in the state.\nHe was born in Kent county, Md.*, No­\nvember 6, 1808. His father, Arthur\nCrisfleld, died when t'he son Was 1C\nyears old. His mother was Elizabeth\nWoodland, who died in 1841.\n Crisfleld was three times mar­\nried-first, to Ellen R. Johnson, daugh­\nter of Geerge Johnson, of Somerset\ncounty; second, to his cousin, Julia\nEthelaide Page, daughter of Dr. Henry\nPage, of Kent county. She was a sis­\nter of the celebrated lawyer, Henry\nPago, of Cambridge, Md., and mother\nof Henry Page, chief Judge of the first\ncircuit and member of the Court of Ap­\npeals of 'Maryland. Judge Page boars\nthe name of his mother« family by ait\nof tbe State Legislature of 1844, by con­\nsent of his father and the urgent re­\nquest of his grandmother, Mrs. Dr.\nPage, mother of Henry Page, of Cam­\nbridge. The third marriage was in\n1843 to Mary W. Handy, daughter of\nGeneral George Handy, of Somerset\ncounty, who survives.
97b2e3ee90ebba276d5b8d37c57eaea7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.042465721715 41.681744 -72.788147 It is always our practice, just as we watch closely the payment of\ninterest on loans, also to watch as closely the payment of taxes upon the\nproperty upon which we hold mortgages. It is of as vital interest to the\nholder of a mortgage upon real estate that the taxes upon the property\nare paid as it is that the interest upon the loan is paid and that the\nproperty is maintained in gcod order and repair. Taxes are a prior lien\nover all other incumbrances upon the property and the accumulation of\nunpaid taxes, to that extent, weakens the security against the loan. At\na recent hearing before a committee of the common council, before whic'a\nour most capable and efficient tax collector was summoned, criticism irai\nmade of him for notifying the banks of unpaid taxes upon property upo,i\nwhich they held mortgages. , I wish to say, in answer to such criticism,\nt'nat the collector furnishes this inloimation because it is sought by the\nbanks and that it is information that they are most certainly entitled to.\nI must say that it was a most amazinr; spectacle to a city official of\nhis capability and efficiency summoned before a committee of the council\nand an attempt made to censure him for having performed faithfully ani\nwell the duties that he makes oath to perform when he takes the office.\nThe item of foreclosed real estate, amounting to $78,257.79, repre-\nsents the "Georgian Apartments" on Walnut street, formerly the property\nof William H. Allen, upon which we held a mortgage for $75,000, anl\nto which wo have acquired title. Th's apartment building is a very sub-\nstantial, modern, fireproof structure, and is equipped with the latest anl\nbest modern improvements. It consists of 21 apartments of 2, 3 and 4\nrooms each. Every apartment is rented at satisfactory prices and the\nrents are being promptly paid. The income is considerably more tha'i\nsufficient to pay for fuel, water, light, taxes, insurance, janitor, and in-\nterest upon the amount at which the property stands us, and we feel\nconfident that the property will eventually be disposed of, so that there\nwill be no ultimate loss to the bank involved.\nTwo loans one for $1,750 and one for $1,000 were foreclosed dur
42932104b94683783daa5d9815303cbd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.3547944888383 40.063962 -80.720915 At eight o'clock to-night the home\neing filled, the Executive Committte de-\nlined to sell further tickets and closed\nhe doors against a thousand persons who\nought entrance. The afternoon was given\np largely to orchestral music,interspersed\nrith solos and duets lrom Mia* Cary,\ntid Messrs. Hudolphsen. Varley and\nWhitney, "The Gipsey Lile'' uud tl.o i\nCherubim and Seraphim," were repeated 1\ny the chorus with better effect than i\nhen first aung. To-night the chief at- 1\naction was the "First Walpurgis Night," J\ny Mendelssohn. This, like the 9th sym i\nhony, has been looked to with interest, I\nle difficulties in the way of its execution t\naving awakenod concern not unlike thut J\nroduced with the symphony. A success [\nttlc lcs3 than wqs attained last night,\n[r. Thomas caused it to be sung in faster c\nmo than ut auy of the rehearsals, but j\nte chorus sang with singular precision c\nid force, and impressed Cue audience as i\nvorably as at any of tho choral eilorts. p\ni this Miss Cary and Messrs. Varley, v\nudolphstn and Whitney also pirtici- 1\nitcd, Hudolphsen acquitting himself so (J\nlat there were bud calls lor him alter r\nic conclusion. Tho tfUd Psalm was\nmg by female voices. remainder ij\nthe cxercises, with tho exception ol ii\nn ImlliMiinh rhorufl. which was render u\n1 with such powerful effect, was Or- h\nicstral. Al tho conclusion of the fiivi t\nirt of tho programme, the Hon. a . y . ti\nRvia uppeaini on the platform and in- v .\noduced Stanley Mathews, who said iu n\new of tho success which now crown* tl\neir efforts, the delight it had afforded 1\nif people, the great profit experienced in b\nfinlngHihe public taste, andthoadvan- 'I\nge of making Cincinnati the ccner of C\n:altcd intlucnce in instrumentil music, *\nstrong desire had been expressed th-»r c,\nia festival should become an annual one. S\nliis announcement whs followed by ei\nemendous applause. When this tul* u\nled, the Judge read uu uddrcss sigued tl\nf a large number of prominent citizens, fr\nid addressed to the Executive Com- it\nitiee, thanking and congratulatiug ci\ncm, tho directors, and tho chorurt f<\nview of what they had accomplished, 1\nid expressing tho wish that the neccs- n\nry steps be taken to make the Festival <j\npermanent institution, lie then asked vs\ne audience it this was their sentiment n\nd desire, to which they responded with T\nad ayes. u
214ad2ff3bd7163e07530d2ece9f0080 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.669862981989 40.063962 -80.720915 firemen came here and 1 showed them thi\nhouse. Afterwards we went and got two oi\ntliTee glares of beer. That was reporteam\nalso that I wasdrunk, which was notso. Afte:\nStiillivHii u*hs bnuncfd I wnmivkcil wlm\nwould iike for hostler, and I iuid Georg«\nButler. lie was a good Judge of horses am\nh Democrat. My friends wanted tue to havi\naRepublicau. Forawhileall wentO. K ,tlici\n1 was told that Sullivan and his friends wen\nworking on Butler aud I must be very care\nfill what I said to him. It ha? always beei\nmy rule to have my hostlers exercise tin\nhorses under saddle. You see right near tlx\niiouco we have the sugar refinery. the glas:\nhouse, Lallelle mill, pottery and 8chtuul\nbach Brewery, all big concerns. Now, if tin\nreel was taken out, the driver could not hea\nour small boll, the reel makes so mucl\nnoit-e. For that reason I always kept tin\nreel in, so ihat in case the horses should hi\nout and an alarm should come in the rce\ncould be jerked out by,hand if any of the es\ntablishmvnts I named should catch tire. But\nler exercised the houses under saddh\nawhile and got them into cxcellen\ncondition- One dayr without saying a won\ntome, he hitched up, threwopep the door\nand drives out with the reel. 1 never said\nword, lie repeated it again and again and\nkept quiet, in fact I finally said nothing U\nhim. except when he spoke to me. It was »\ndetermination on the part of Sullivan t<\ndown me and he has done it. Thai's all."\nSquire Shultjc tojd what he knew abou\nthe Sullivan matter,which was materially tin\nsame as Hose's story.
69e371a16421d0f1becf584944c18f0c SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.1493150367833 35.780398 -78.639099 Weed' Patent Sewing liachines.\nTHIS is the most reliable Sewing Machines ever\noffered in this market, both in ths quality of its\nwork, its durability and simplicity. The opera-\ntion of it is easier learned than that of any other\nMachine, while it works with ease on th finest\nsilk or the heaviest cloth or leather, on either of\nwhich it works in a very superior manner; ma-\nking a straight evenly laid seam, ranch finer than\nordinary hand work, while both sides of the cloth\nare stitched alike, rivaling in beauty the m&t ele-\ngant hand work, it rarely gets out of working or\nder or requires repairing, and is so simple that an\noperator can perform all ordinary repairs on it,\nuntil it is worn out. With these advantages over\nother Machines, ws feel confident Weed's Patent\nSewing Machines will best meet the wants of\nFamilies, all kinds of Manufacturing Clothiers,\nTailors. and Shoe Makers, or any others re\nquiring a seam in their work. Harness and .Sad\ndle Manufacturers will find tbij a .Machine taat\nwill do their work in a rapid and substantial man-\nner, and much nicer than ' the ordinary way.\nFamilies who require much Sewing will find this\nMachine peculiarly adapted to tlieir wants, besides\nsaving laoor enough in a few months to pay for\nit Tailors will find a great s iving by using this\nSewing Machine, besides being always sure of a\nsuperior quality of work that due's not rip easily,\nand that looks much nicer than hand work. Boot\nand Shoe Manufacturers can atve Thousands of\nDollars by using this Machine, while for many\npurposes, the work done on leather by this fia\nchine, is better than if done in any other wsy.\nThe editor o the Cedartowa (Georgia) Patriot\nsays, When we purchased your needs r a tent
057ec53c1af4ee4e2e4e705440c9c0d0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.6260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 Thomas F. 1 -ogan, in Leslies.\nIn the many discussions of unprepar-\nednes», scant attention has been accord­\ned the coast, artillery corps of the array.\nVet here is the most glaring example\nof the short-sightedness of Congress\nwith respect to our national defenses.\nShould there come a war with a mari­\ntime power, the United States is pro­\nvided with approximately one-sixth of\nthe number of trained men necessary tol\nmake the eoast defenses effective imme-j\ndiately- Considerably more than one-,\nhalf of the splendid armament and splen-|\ndid equipment of the const fortifications\nof continental United States is in Ihej\nhands of caretakers,\nauthorized 170 companies of coast artil- [\nlery. The actual strength comprises,\n74K officers and some 17,000 men. Since\n1007 the personnel has not been in­\ncreased, although additional fortifica­\ntions have constructed in the Phil­\nippines, on the Panama Canal zone and\nin Hawaii. The result has been the de­\npletion of the forces at many of the im­\nportant fortifications. At a hearing be­\nfore the. Senate military committee on\nthe subject of national defense last win­\nter, Senator Tbomas, of Colorado, de-,\ndared the situation with respect to thu\neoast artillerv-to he absolutely criminal.!\nSenator duPont, of Delaware; coneurreiL\nin this opinion. Brig. Gen. Erasmus M.j\nWeaver, chief of the roast artillery, told\n(he committee that there were about\n221 officers and 7,000 men now in the!\ncoast artillery in\nproper who are fairly competent to mun-i\nthe coast defense», which have cost\nthe nation millions and millions of dol j\nlar- to construct and equip,\nher is a mere trifle as compared with|\nthe number that would
854fd927e6f39b9b65a704852197c569 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.3620218263004 39.745947 -75.546589 Amoug the speakers for the meet­\ning will be Josiah Marvel, Dr. Has­\ntings H. Hart, Richard MacKcnzU and\nMrs. H. S. Prentiss Nichols, president\nof the Philadelphia New Century\nClub; Dr. R. W. Cooper, Miss W. J.\nRobinson, dean Women's College, and\nPierre S. duPont.\nFollowing is the detailed program:\nThursday, 10.30 to 12.30 a. m., invoca­\ntion, Mrs. Mary Wolcott; assembly\nI singing, "America "; address of wel­\ncome, Miss Winifred Morris, presi­\ndent Dover Century Club; response\nfor federation, Mrs.. A. D . Warner;\nreports of ofllcers, corresponding sce-\nI rotary. Miss F. E. Booth, treasurer,\n1 Mrs. J. R. Eskridge, auditor, Mrs. A.\nE. Watson, general federation secre­\ntary, Mrs. À . E . Watson, credential\ncommittee, report of president; review\nof clubs in New Castle county, Mrs.\nE. G. Robinson, past presideul, \n13; review of clubs in Wilmington,\nMrs. R, B. Rayner, past president,\nWilmington, New Century Club, 1918-\n20; reports arts and craft« committee,\nMrs. J. P. Gann; ouliook committee,\nMrs. H . D . Boyer; general federation\ndirector. Mrs. j. 11. Saulsbury; social\neconomies, Miss E. L. Hughes.\n2.15 to 4.13 — Assembly singing.\n“America, the Beautiful"; reports;\nhome economies committee. Miss S.\nHelen Briggs, chairman. Slate super­\nvisor; education committee. Miss Mary\nE. Rich; addresses: Teachers' Training\nCourse, Miss M. E . Rohr, Women's\nCollege; Our Education Needs in Del­\naware, Dr. R . W. Cooiper; Co-operation\nof tlie Women's Clubs, Mrs. Edward\nW. Buehnor, vice-chairman of educa­\ntion, G. F. W . C.; Extension or ihe\nWomen's College. Miss W. J. Robinson,\ndean Women's College; Constructive\nPlans for Delaware Schools. Pierre S.\nduPont.
6259f8a8d409364092ae04a4be33d9af THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.382191749112 39.560444 -120.828218 This Court has been in session all the\nweek and indictments have been found\nagainst John Henderson for burglary,\nand having burglarious instruments in his\npossession; against John Boyle, alias Hen-\nderson, for aiding a prisoner in attempting\nto escape; against Crary and others for\nresisting an officer.\nResisting an Officer.—We regret to\nlearn that the late row at Pine Grove,\nin which a house of bad repute was de-\nmolished, is likely to involve a number of\nthe people ofthat place in serious difficulty.\nA few days since, the Deputy Sheriff at-\ntempted to arrest some of the participa-\ntors in the riot, but after arresting two,\nhe was waited on by a committee, inform-\ning him that a meeting had been held, in\nwhich it had been determined that he\nshould leave town minus his prisoners:\nmoreover that the men under arrest could\nnot and should not be taken from that\nplace; in fact that all the men in Downie-\nville could not remove them, and that the\nbest thing the Deputy could do\nwas to cut stick. After expostulating\nwith the crowd and finding it impossible\nto obtain any assistance, he was compelled\nto return to Downieville and report non\ncomatibus in swampo!! On Tuesday morn-\ning the Sheriff, with a possee of ten men,\nreturned and succeeded in arresting and\nbringing to this place two of the offenders.\nThe other participators in the disturbance\nhad either left the place or concealed\nthemselves where they could not be found.\nThe people of Pine Grove have been\nheretofore quiet and order-loving citizens,\nand we are surprised that they should so\nfar forget their duty as to interfere with\nan officer in the discharge of his duty. No\ndoubt the citizens generally considered\nthe pulling dowT n of the house an abate-\nment of a nuisance, for which they were\nunwilling to see any one punished, and had\nthey quietly submitted the consequences\nwould have been trifling; but as it is, bit-\nterness and ill feeling has been engendered,\nwhich will be the cause of endless trouble.
01f915e66517b886be8a13b136f25c9e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 it may be, it will not affect the views\nol the people. Precedents are of no value.\nIt is a simple fact that members of last\nCongress were elected, and filled their\ntirno out, on a salary fixed at $5,000 a\nyear. They had most of them, drawn\nthis salary, and the thousand and one per*\nM'liflites, and were within one or two days\nol having completed their labors, for\nwhich this pay was received, when they\nvoted themselves $.1,000 each additional,\nfor those very services. No man\ncan make this even seem to be\nhonest. It rinks with stealing,.\nnothing less or more. It matters not how\nmany times it has been done, nor how\noften it may be in the future, it is stealing\nbll the .same . It is notorious that this\nback feature is what passed the bill.\nThere were many whose terms were\nabout to expiro who would uot vote for\nthe bill without this clause, and this is\nthe tecrct of its passage. The $5,000\nback-pay was put in as u bribe to catch\ntheir votes. We venture that in the ma-\nj-irity of cases of members whose terms\nwere about ending, and who voted for the\nhill, they did it because of the back-pay.\nhi other words, $5,000 was the price of\nthat particular vote. Mr. Bingham will\ndo much better to go to Japan without\nattempting a defcncc. He may state just\nwhat Butler has said already.that there\nwere salary Tgrabs before this, and that\neminent men took their share. But this\nwill not convince the people that it is any\nthe less stealing.
47fffb693d2d5552c000e3ec9edfcfb9 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.908469913732 38.729625 -120.798546 Verv lori}' ago, the tradition says, and\nlong after the Crow had made all things,\nllu-re lived among the Ilydnhs a great\nChief, whose stomach was full of rats\n(coot-seen). These vermin came out of\nhis month to feed whenever he went to\nsleep ; hot when the poor fellow showed\nsigns of waking up, hack trotted the rats,\nand laid down again all snug in his stom-\nach. While the rats were out feeding,\nthe Indians would try and catch them;\nhut they were too nimble to be thus trap-\nped. An Indian once cut off the head of\none of the ruts; when lot and behold,\nthe head and body both ran down the\nChiefs mouth, and the next day came\nout fastened together again, and looking\nas well ns ever. At last, the Indians\nthought they had endured the nuisance\nlong enough, so they called a council of\nthe neighboring tribes, and all the medi-\ncine men and the chiefs came, and they\nsoon fixed up a plan to gel rid of the ver-\nmin. One night, when the Chief was\nasleep, one of Ins relatives laid bits of sal-\nmon all around thuttoor. Pretty soon up\ncame the rats, smelling the dried fish, and\n n they bud all got out, the Chiefs\nmouth was covered, and lie was curried to\na canoe and puddled off to a high rock\nthat stood in the middle of the sen.\nThe ruts attempted tofollow their friend;\nbut were drowned in the atumpt. The\nchief, after the loss of his pots, fell sick,\nand finally threw himself off the high\nrock and was drowned. The Hydahs,\nwhenever anything goes wrong, blame his\nspit it for it. They say that the way their\nforefathers acted toward him, has proved\na curse to the whole race. The tribes\nwhich were formerly all one, first split ;\nsome went one way and some another,\nthen sickness came upon them ; and, what\nis still more remarkable, accidents com-\nmenced to happen and kill off their friends,\nbefore the death of the chief and the rats,\nneither accidents nor sickness was known\namong them. Itut the crowning point of\ntheir wretchedness was the first appear-\nance of the whites with their fire-water in\ntheir midst. Since that lime they have\nbeen gradually decreasing in numbers;\nand the old Indians say it all cornea from\nthe hin) treatment the chief with the belly-\nful of rats, sustained long years ago.
3bbad58d8e472854a429da18d6599f79 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.678082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 tie charges at Now York. The Board tl\npproved the plau lor the route and ap- pi\nointed commissioners to act iu conjnnc- t£\non with commissioners appointed by tfc\ntiter bodies to aid in perfecting the line, ei\nThe commission of United States enpi- m\neers recently appointed by the War Ue- iti\nartment to examine the bridge in process M\n1 construction at this city and report pi\n'bother, when completed, it will bo a is\n;rious obstruction to navigation, held fo\nieir lirst session here to day. The com- p«\nlissiou consists ol General .fumes H. tl\nimpson, General G. K . Warren, General hi\nodtrey Weitzel, Colonel W. E . Morrell C8\nad Major Charles It. Seuter, all engaged sa\ni the river and harbor improvement*, ai\njhu ii. President of the Keokuk n(\n[orthern Packet Company, Capt. Q . W . G\nould and Capt. Hilver made statements w\n» tho board on the part of the river 01\niterest, pronouncing the bridge a serious til\nbstruction, and Colonel Fladenger, of the of\nridge Company, gave testimony In be- b<\nall of the bridge interest. The Board cc\nill.notconfine itself to the statoments\nlado by these steamboat men who op- sti\njsc the bridge, but will listen to all, both in\nir aud against. They will also invite G<\nmerchants and others to give their opin- fri\nin, and to furnish statistics of the river cc\nad railroad commerce ol tho city, and vt\nill visit and thoroughly examine the ai\nrid go themselves. Their sessions will ki\nrobably continue several days.
ba993839a0b2338c10f9181ae1ab2314 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.9684931189752 43.798358 -73.087921 to the commandant of the rifle company\nin his regiment; and upon delivery of\nthe same, shall take his receipt therefor\non the book of records of the regiment.\nSec. 5. The commandant of the. lirht- -\ninfantry company, and the commandant of!\nthe rifle company in each regiment shall,\nupon receipt of any musket or rifles be-\nlonging to the State, forthwith provide\nsome suitable and safe place of deposit for\nsaid muskets and rifles, and shall from\ntime to time examine the same and see\nthat they are kept in good order. And\nsaid arms shall be for the use of said\ncompanies, and may be ued by the offi-\ncers and privates of sai l light-infantr- y\ncompanies, and rifle companies on train-\ning days, muster days, and officers' drills,\nand at no other time; and, when not so in\nuse, shall at all times remain in said \nof deposit, under the charge and care ot\nsome person appointed by the command-\nant of the company for that purpose.\nSec. 6. It shall be the" duty of the re\ngimen ta i court martia!, when setting in\nthe town in which said lijrht infantry\ncompany or rifle company is located, to\nexamine and count said arms and return\nthe number and condition of the same in\nthe Teturn they are required to make by\nthis act to he brigadier general. And in\ncase the said regimental court martial\nshall find the arms in a bad condition, or\nascertain that Ihe requirements of this act\nhave not been complied with, said regi-\nmental court martial shall report the same\nto the brigadier general, who may dis-\ncharge the commission of the officers of\nsaid company, and disband said company,\nand cause another to be raised in said\nregiment.
2a01f3942a9cd207d3044afe4fddd26b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.9246575025368 42.217817 -85.891125 Copyright, 1903, by American Prtm Association.\nThe statement in verse 3 that Solo-\nmon loved the Lord" is about the best\nthing that could be said of him, but It\nit not so grand as that In II Sam. xil,\n24, 25, "the Lord loved him," nor is it\nso great as the significance of his name\nJedidlnh, the beloved of the Lord. Our\nlove to God Is so poor compared with\nIlls love to us that it Is neither worth\nsinging alout nor talking about; It is\ntoo often something like Solomon's,\nwho, though he walked in the statutes\nof David, his father, yet sacrificed and\nburned incense In high places and made\naffinity with Pharaoh. There is little\nwhole heartedness for God notwith-\nstanding II Chron. xvi, 9.\nThe ark of God was In a tent which\nDavid had pitched for It In Jerusalem,\nbut the tabernacle and altar of burnt\noffering were at Glbeon (II Chron. \n3, 4), and thither Solomon and all the\ncongregation had gone to offer sacri-\nfice, and there the Lord appeared to\nSolomon in a dream by night, ami God\nsaid to him. Ask what I shall give thee.\nThe Lord's appearing to His servants\nis a most Interesting and Inspiring\nstudy from the time when He clothed\nAdam and Fve (Gen. Ill, 21) and on-\nward, but as In the olden time so now\nHis usual method is to reveal Himself\nby Ills word (I Sam. Ill, IS). The\nLord's offer to Solomon at this time re-\nminds us of Fst. v, l, 0; I Kings, x,\nKJ; Luke xviil, 11; Matt, vil, 7; xxl. 22:\nJohn xiv, IS. 11; xv. 7; Isa. xlv. 11. 1. c.\nKut what do we know of the power of\nsuch words? How much do wo ask\nand receive, or what do we know of the\ngreat and mighty things of Jer. xxxill,\n.'i?
a4721445336032dada24403a583f2be7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.4123287354134 41.681744 -72.788147 New work being done In Willow\nBrook park and in Stanley Quarter\npark also is of a most impressive\nnature, although it is impossible to\nget a thorough conception of all of it\nmerely by driving through these\nparka in a motor. Williow Brook is\nreceiving an expenditure of mora\nthan 87,000 in new work; Stanley\nQuarter more than $11,000 . The\ngrading of the swamp along South\nMain street, In Willow Brook park,\nis scarcely begun. The improvement\naround the Spanish war memorial\nia most easily observed; but there\nare improvement jobs throughout\nthe entire large expanse ot play-\nground, including playground equip-\nment. The new road under con-\nstruction in the park has for a\nfoundation stone and dirt extracted\nfrom the rebuilt drives in Walnut\nHill park; and when this is com-\npleted It be necessary only to\nput a top dressing upon the Wil-\nlow Brook driveway to provide a\nsmooth new road through the park.\nThis is getting results economically.\nThe new work in Stanley Quarter\npark is likewise impressive. By the\nend of the summer this park will be\nvastly improved in important par-\nticulars. The two tennis courts, the\nextension of the new drive through\nthe park to McClintock road, grad-\ning and extension of the athletic\nfield, not to mention minor work, is\ndue to be completed this' year.\nOriginally it was supposed that this\npark would be primarily for the use\nof people living In that section of\nthe city, but in our day of rapid and\neasy personal transportation families\nfrom every section of the city will\nenjoy this breathing spot along with\nall the others.
29121b540905767ff151a81644a3b4f5 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.2972602422628 37.561813 -75.84108 members elected to each House shall concur\ntherein ; but no such change shall vacate the office\nany Judge. Ihe Court of Common Pleas pro-\nvided for in this amendment shall be the successor\nthe present Probate Courts and Conns of\nPleas in each county. Ttie District Courts\nherein provided for, shall be the successors of the\npresent District Court; and all the books, records,\npapers and business, in or appertaining to said\nCourts, shall be transferred to their successors\ntins ameudment; and the existing Probate Court\nhereby abolished in each county at the cioee of\nterm" for which the Judge thereof was elected,\noccurring after the election of Common Pleas\nires under this amendment, and the Clerks iu\nCourts of Common Pleas and District Courts,\nbe the clerks iu the courts herein provided\ntheir successors are elected and qualified; \nSupreme Court shi! appoint its own reporter.\nIrt. There shall be elected in each county by\nelectors thereof, one Clerk for the Court ot"\nCommon Pleas, who shall hold bis office for the\nof three years, and until his successor shall\nelected and qualitler. He shall, by virtue of his\noffice, be clerk of alt other courts ot record held\ntherein, hut tlie General Assembly may provide, by\nfor the election ot a cierk with a like term of\nohVe, for each or any other courts of record, or\nthe appointment by the Supreme Court ot A\nClerk for that Court.\nSec. N. The several Judges of the Supreme\nCourt, of the District and Common Pleas, and of\nother courts as may be created, shaii\nhave and exorcise such power ail\nat chambers, or otherwise, as may be directed\ntaw.
094fe9dd6eb8edfb45bce039e1bba8da THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1896.943989039415 37.92448 -95.399981 tury. Africa, hidden to other centuries,\nby exploration in this century has been\nput at the feet of civilization, to be\noccupied by commerce and Christianity.\nThe Chinese wall, once an impassable\nbarrier, now is a useless pile of stone\nand brick. Our American nation at\nthe opening of this century only a\nslico of land along the Atlantic coast,\nnow the whole continent in possession\nof our schools and churches and mis-\nsionary stations. Sermons and religi-\nous intelligence which in other times,\nif noticed at all by the newspaper\npress, were allowed only a paragraph\nof three or four lines, now find the\ncolumns of the secular press in all the\ncities thrown wide open, and every\nweek for 26 years without the omis-\nsion of a single week, I have been\npermitted to preach one entire gospel\nsermon through the newspaper press.\nI thank God for this great opportunity.\nGlorious century! You shall not\nbe entombed until we have, face to\nface, extolled you.\nO, dying 19th century! before you go\nwe take the opportunity of telling you\nthat you are the best and the mightiest\nof all the centuries of the Christian\nera, except the first, which gave us\nChrist, and vou rival that century in\nthe fact that you, more than all the\nother centuries put together, are giv-\ning the Christ to all the world. One\nhundred and twelve thousand dollars\nat one meeting a few days age contrib\nuted for the world's evangelization.\nLook at what you have done, O. thou\nabused and depreciated century! All\nthe Pacific Isles, barred and bolted\nagainst the gospel when jou began to\nreign, now all open, and some of them\nmore Christianized than America.\nBut my text suggests that there are\nsome things that this century ought to\ndo before he leaves us.
4874b5567f71e1a7bc94d78340817c0f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.5356164066463 41.681744 -72.788147 charter of this city provides that the\nmayor shall during the month of\nMay appoint a building Inspector, but\nthe mayor appointed one In April. It\nwent along all right, permits were Is-\nsued and the business of the office\nhas been carried on the same as usual\nuntil this morning when the lnspev-to- r\nappeared aB a witness in court\nin a case for violating the building or-\ndinance and the opposing counsel\nasked to", see his credentials. When\nthey were produced It was found that\nthe appointment was made April 25\nand the legality of the proceeding so\nfar as it related to the inspector tes\ntifying as such in this case was ques-\ntioned, the court very properly took\nthe matter under advisement and ad-\njourned the case until tomorrow.\nThis Is not the first time a case of\nthis character has found its way into\ncourt and they have a great\ndeal of litigation when the whole\ntrouble might Just as well have been\navoided. The Herald has raised the\npoint that the mayor and common\ncouncil have made some changes In\nthe management of city business that\nare not permitted under the law and\nmay yet be the means of further liti\ngation in court. The charter and\nordinances are ample for the legai\ntransaction of all city business and\nthere is no reason for any wilful vlo- -\nations in order to do the work which\nit is necessary to have done. It is al-\nways a good idea to hew close to the\nline and not only to obey the law but\nfor those honored by being made pub\nlic officials to set a good example . to\nthe rest of the city, and not have their\nactions be made a subject for judi-\ncial Investigation by the courts. '
48b09dd1b748ad611216edf114319aa2 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.4112021541691 40.827279 -83.281309 Vie are, therefore, not sorry to see\nfarms growing larger, provided those\nwho work them will get nearer together;\nand that is what they ought to do. Any\nfarmer who plants himself and his family\nalone far from possible neighbors takes\nupon himself a terrible responsibility. It\nis impossible that he ana his laniny should\nbe well developed and thoroughly happv\nthere. lie will be forsaken in his old\nage by the very children for whom he has\nmade his creat sacrifice, l ney wui nvto\nthe towns for the social food and stimulus\nfor which they have starved. We never\nhear of a colony settling on a Western\nnrairie without a thrill of pleasure. It is\nin colonies that all ought to settle, and in\nvillages rather than on separated farms.\nThe the lecture, the public\namusement, the social assembly, should\nbe things easily reached. There is no\nsuch damper upon tree social lite as\ndistance. A long road is the surest bar to\nneighborly intercourse. If the social life\nof the farmer were richer, his life would\nbv that measure be the more attractive.\nAfter all. there are farmers who will\nread this article with a sense of affront or\ninjury, as if by doubting or disputing\nthe sufficiency of their social opportune\nties we insult them with a sort of con\ntempt. We assure them that they cannot\nafford to treat thoroughly sympathetic\ncounsel in this way. We know that their\nwives and daughters and sons are on our\nside, nuarrel with us as they may ; and\nthe women and children are right.
18d6a7b65a4856dbaea19d13cc03dd2d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1902.1630136669203 41.875555 -87.624421 or tho love of money Inculcated In\nthe minds of the children for genera-\ntions. Tlio fear of tho law does not\npermanently tefoiii) men. If a man\nhas It in his henit to steal nnd Is de-\nterred by dread or punishment, ho will\nusually scheme around to overreach\nand cheat Ids neighbors In less hazard-\nous ways. In other words, notions nro\nruled by Internals, not externals. What-\never the Idenls or a people are will be\nshown lu the national lire. If they arc\ngreedy and covetous they will want\nconquest. If their elder aim Is mate-\nrial wealth they will reverence nnd en-\nthrone tho man who has most of It. ir\nthey hnvo little regard Tor the rights\nand liberties or others they will be less\nliable to resist oppression themselves.\nit tuey nro corrupt lu their ow.n hearts\nthey Mill wink nt corruption In others.\nIn ract, they are more lenient toward n\nwrong they would commit ir they\nhail the opportunity. The roots of gov-\nernmental wrongs nro In tho peoplo\nthemselves. The reform of tho nation\nbegins nt the fireside. The man who\nwoull get society right must get right\nhimself ami teach others to get right.\nH we would have cleaner politics m --\nmust hae cleaner hearts. The world\nIs Just beginning to understand the\npower or thought and suggestion. Many\na Jailbird would do better If everybody\ndhl not regard and treat him ns n thief.\nMany a woman who has gone M'rotig\nwould get back Into the right pnth ir\nshe had the belt) or it little love nnd con-\nfidence. Let everybody constantly sug-\ngest to a man that he Is a rascal, and\nafter a while ho may get to thinking so\nhimself, and then ho will becouio one.\nKind out what a man thinks or most\nand you will bo able to tell what kind\noramanheIs.
08b3c8bdc4e2aa5bef781219db2d2d3c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.0753424340437 39.745947 -75.546589 "That," said Mr. Atkinson, “is not\nmore nor less than the fore fung of the\nCrotalu8 horridus, tho great American\nrattlesnake, and ono of tho most venom­\nous of serpents known to ichthyologists.\nYou will notice that the fang is shurp\nas a needle at its point ; that it is slit\nfor a distance up the middle, and thnt\nit is hollow. You will also observe that\na flue, amber colored, jellylike substance\nis contained within tho hollow of tho\nfang. That i3 nothing less horrible than\ntho venom of the crotnlidæ, and tho\nrankest poison, tho most deadly of\nagents known to man. A couple of\nscrapes on a man's hand or face mean\na certain and u horrible death—nausea\nand vomiting, retching, convulsions,\nsemiparalysis, complete paralysis, state\nof coma, death in a most horrible form\nand the swelling to horrible \nof the corpse as it rapidly turns black j\nfrom tho virulence of the venom. Yon\nmay take the fearful agent, bake it be­\ntween bricks, freeze it betweeu blocks >\nof ice, and it will still retain its terrible\npower. You may inoculate a rat with\nthe venom, and he will die in a few\nmoments, a dog in five and a man in\nfrom ton minutes to an hour, according\nto the amount received and the oondi- i\ntion of his system at tho time. The blood j\nof the first rat cun be inoculated into 1. |\nsecond, and the blood of the second into j\na third, und so on down through 100—\nyes, 200 subjects—without recourse to\nthe original venom, and the last subject\nwill die as quickly and convulsively as\nthe first, for its virulence is absolutely\nfatal.
5a7a3faaa3aecaf84e7e28595d1f2962 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 New York, Dec. 12 ..A Tribune'?\nWashington special says:\nLast week the Treasury Department\nissued certificates of indebtedness\namounting toone million eight hundred\nand sixty dollars.\nThe resignation of Mqjor Gen. Gill-\nmore, dated the 4th inst., and Brig. Gen.\nEstes, dated the 5th inst., have been ac¬\ncepted. The resignation of Major Gen.\nJames H. Wilson is revoked, and Tie"is\ndirected to remain on duty.\nHon. Fitz Henry Warren, has accept¬\ned the position of Minister to Gauta-\nmala, and is expected to leave for that\ncountry shortly.\nGen. Kllpatrick will faot visit Europe\nas contemplated, owing to a change in\nChilian^ affairs. He sails from. New\nYork for Valparaiso early in Janusry.\nThe trial orM^jor Muhlenbnrg, ofthe\n4th artillery for. riot and conduct sub¬\nversive of good order, is concluded..\nThe verdict is not rendered.\nThe triqil of Mt^jor Riley is progress-\nfile Canadian government offers as an\nexchange for the privilege ofselling t heir\nproducts in our markets, under the\npresent reciprocity treaty, to enlarge\nand deepen the Welland and St. Law¬\nrence canal, so as to admit vessels\ndrawing from 12 to 14 feet of water, thus\nsecuring transportation from Chicago\nto .the Atlantic, and giving the same\nprivilege to American as .'to Canadian\nvessels free of duty. If objection is made\n[to this proposition, the Canadian au-\nthorities propose that this object shall\nbe accomplished by concurrent legisla-\ntion between the two \nThe World's Washington dispatch\n^he Mississippi and !Louisiana dele¬\ngations called upon the Secretary Of\nWar yesterday, in regard to the re¬\nbuilding of the levees where they have\nbeen destroyed or torn away. He at\nonce agreed to send a force to rebuild\nthem, and stated that his authority for\nso doing was that the States were under\nmilitary govern inent.\nThe Committee on Elections has been\ncalled to meet on Wednesday to take\nlip the contested' case of Coflroth and\nKootz, of Pennsylvania, and decide\nwhich Is entitled to take the seat. Nei-\ntber of them is on the roll of the House,\nthe Clerk having refused to place them\nthere on the ground that neither has\nthe Governor's certificate.\nGeorge G. Fogg, late Minister to\nSwitzerland and editor of the Concord\nIndependent Democrat, / was on theJ\nfloor of the House yesterday.\nThe Herald's Dublin correspondent,\nNov. 25th, says:\nIt seems as if the doqtrlnes of the\nFenian 8ociety had. eaten up to the\nsteps of the throne of the government.\nIts extent among the masses of the\npeople in that country renders it equal\nto, if it does not exceed, the society mf\nUnited Irishmen. If it were not for\nthe exertions of conservative men of\nevery shade and creed on the Island,\ntided by the Catholic/ clergy, Ireland\nweuld now be submerged in the blood\nof her people and that of the English\nmilitary.
2470fd6a8a5b7dd826dbcf6f75da80b3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.8123287354135 39.745947 -75.546589 He told ns that the bise of Paskola\nwas artificially digested starch and that\nfor this reason It was a fiesh producing\nfood vastly superior to cod-liver oil or\nany of the nauseous drugs heretofore\nused for this purpose. He stated,further­\nmore, that as we had seen, it possessed\nthe property of digesting other foods In\ntbe stomach, and thus was an active aid\nto digestion. 1 was permitted to sketch\nthe jars after tbe experiment bad been\ncompleted, as reproduced above. The\nsediment shown by tbe shading in jar No\n1 represents the undigested food as when\nplaced in it. We wore told that thou­\nsands of sufferers had used Paskola with\ngreat benefit, and were shown a large\nnumber of letters in this connection,\nquote from a few of them, as follows:\nMrs. W . T Andrews, of Gold Hill, Ala\n that she has been treated for years\nfor indigestion by the most eminent\nphysicians, with only temporary benefit,\nobe began tahiug Paskola four weeks\nago, has already gained eight (8) pounds,\nand now eats steak, chicken, and In fact\neverything her appetite craves.\nR P. Cross, of 74 Michigan avenue,\nHammond, Ind , wrote that be gained\nfour (4) pounds the first week, and Is so\nenthusiastic that he pronounces Paskola\nsuperior lo any medicine he ever saw.\nMrs M. L . Grautz, of Spring Valley,\nN«w York, whose letter was dated June\n28.b, says that she, too, suffered from\nchrenio dyspepsia for years At times\neven a drink of water distressed her.\n. She has been greatly benefited by tbe\nuse of Paskola, and says that sue is now\nconvinced by her general condition that\nshe derives nourishment from food which
217e3b4fbd2744c8af6dc05dc7fcd486 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9685792033495 39.513775 -121.556359 The undersigned. desirous of nc*|unlufinur those\nwho may he iinforliuinte enough to l«* similarly nf-\ndieted w here a permanent relief of their sufferings\nmay ho olumiied, feels it his duly lo thus public.)\nexpress his sincere) gratitude to |»r I. .1 czapkay,\nlor the (lermmn nl n envery of his health, Horne\ndown by the distressing symptoms incident to the\nvicious practices of unconlrollnlde passion in jnnih,\ndepressed in holly and mind, iluahle In perform even\nthe most trillingduty imposed upon Die dally iivocn-\nI inns of life. I sought Ihe advice of many physicians,\nwho at llr-t regarded mv tlisease ot trilling Import-\niince. hut a'as! after a few weeks, and in several in-\nstances months, nfiheir treatment. I found lo my nn-\nnllernlile horror. Dial instead of relief tin- symptoms\nhecaine more alarming in their torture, and being\nHu illy told me hy one Dial lhedi*ease.beingroutine I\nprinciply lo Die liraln, medicines would he of little\nconsequence. I ih-paircd of ever regaining Hi) health\nstrength and energy; and ns last resort, and w ilh\nlull a faint hope, culled upon Dr. Czapkay. who. after\nexamining my case, prescribed some mi dicim*»liicti\nalinnsl instantly relieved me of the dull pain-and\ndizziness in my head. Fnconraged hy this result. 1\nresolved lo place mysell immediately under his care,\nand, hy a strict obedience lo hi* direcD* n« and ad-\nvice. my head liecnme clear, my ideas colli , I .si. Die\nconslant pain in my hack and gnuns. the wenl.ni -s\nofniv llinhs, the nervous reaction *1 my whole sys-\ntem on the slightest alarm or excitement.Die mis-\nanthropy and evil forebodings, the self distrust and\nwant of confidence in o hers, Iho Ineafability lo\nsimly nnd w ant of resolution. Die frightful exciting,\nand at t oe*** pleasurable dreams at night, follow i d\nIn involuntary discharges, have all disappeared, and\nin fact, iu two months after having coinullcd Hie\nD ctor. I ti lt as if inspired hy a row life—Hint life\nwhich, hut a short lime ago. I coiitcniplahd loeiid\nhymyownhand.
167cac952fdb0c7945ec5bf6156adaad THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.801912536683 40.063962 -80.720915 A Drunkard's Trust Demi.\n(From the&ia Fnncljei Bulletin, Oct. 0 .)\nAn interesting question was elacidatt\nby Judge Wheeler thia morning. It a;\npears that on the 29tH of June, 187\njudgment by default waa entered in tl\n12th District Court against Thomas\nLarkin for between $7,000 and $8,00\nand on this judgment ah execution wi\nissued against a city lot. An action wi\nthen begun in the 19th District Court I\nFrank Kennedy, as trustee for T. O . La\nkin and Minnie Larkin, to enjoin Shen\nNuman from selling the property.\nThe facts, as appeared from the pape\nin tho case, were these For many yea\nLarkin has been addicted to excessr\ndrinking to such an extent as to rend*\nhim unfit to carry on business. In 186\ndesiring to provide for the support of h\ndaughter Minnie, Larkin conveyed tl\nproperty to Kennedy. It ia set out in tl\ntrust deed that Kennedy ia to take char]\nof the property, to collect the rents,\npay expenses, taxes, Ac., and to pay tl\nlittle $50 per month during her na\nural life, the residue, after paying e\npenses and the $50 per month, to go\nLarkin during his natural life.. It tl\ndaughter should die before the fatfce\nthen the $50- ia to be paid to him. TJ\ntrust is to continue until the death\nboth parlies, and then the estate is\ndescend to their legal representative\nIn case Larkin dies first the daught\nmay devise her interest by will. Imm\ndiately after thUdeedwas executed Kei\nnedy accepted the trustv There waa a\nother provision in Ihe deed that Kerinec\nmight sell the property if, in his judgmec\nhe could better invest the proceeds.\nThe complaint of Kennedy states thi\nafter Larkin executed the trust deed 1\nincurred the debt upon which the exec\ntion was issued. The debt amounts\nover $7,000, solely for Ijtjoor sold to La\nkin by the glass over a bar. The que\ntion waa whether Larkio had such an i\nterest in the property that the land coul\nbe seised and sold to pay this debt.
27effa3750c7da63947086ff48416f08 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1869.8232876395232 37.561813 -75.84108 fort, breaking all the tendencies, to\ndolence and frivolity, and making him\nan earnest and watchful economist of\ntime! He not only learns how to\nwork, but he also acquires the love of.\nwork, and moreover he learns the\nvalue of the sum which he has saved\nout of his earnings. He has toi'ed fir\nit; he has observed its slow increase\nfrom time' to time; and in his\nmate it represents so many months or1\nyears of practical labor. His ideas ofj\nlife are shaped by his own experience,\nThese natural rflVcts of earning the'\nfirst thousand dollars we hold to be\nvery great benefits. They are just the!\nqualities of mind and body which are!\nmost likely to secure business success:\nti after years. They constitute the\nbest practical education which a man\ncan have as a worker in working,\nworld. They are gained in seasuti for\nlife's purposes, at the opening period.\njust when they are waute when fool-\nish notions are must likely to mislead\nan iuexperienced bruin, and when,\ntoo, .there is a full ...opportunity for\ntheir expansion and development jn\nlater years. Men have but one life to\nlive; and, h"uce, they start from\nopening manhood but one. And the\nmanner in which they start, the pur-\nposes they have in view, and the hab-\nits they 'form, will ordinarily deter-\nmine the entire sequel of their career\non earlh. To succeed, men must have\nthe elements of success in themselves.\nOne great reason why there are so\nmany useless, inefficient or poverty\nstricken men on earth or rather, boys\nseeming to be men consists in the\nsimple fact that they did not start\nright.
0ee42e5ff64cc5aa3c49e440a74672c1 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1910.132876680619 43.994599 -72.127742 Where Payne and Clark Join Hands.\nThe movement for a congressional\nInquiry into high prices is at last tak-\ning definite form. The house commit-\ntee on ways and means has appointed\nRepresentatives Sereno E. Tayne and\nChamp Clark, the majority and minori-\nty floor leaders, a suboorumlttee to de-\nvise a plan. It is probable that the\ninvestigation will be conducted by the\nways and means committee Itself or by\na subcommittee from that body. If\nthis boycott keeps up, however, the In-\nquiry should get busy or there may be\nno high prices to Investigate.\nImmigrants Not So Badly Off.\nThe immigration commission has\nmade a rexirt to congress in which it\nlets forth two definite conclusions as\nthe results of a long and exhaustive\nInquiry. The first is that Immigrant\ncongestion In cities has been \nfied, and the second is that the stand-\nard of living maintained among these\nimmigrants Is not so bad as pictured.\nWhat congestion exists It finds to be\namong those recently arrived that Is,\nimmigrants who have come to this\nrountry In the past five or ten years.\nConditions of nncloanliness It charges\nto municipal Indifference. As to the\nFoale of living. It is a matter that Is\nlargely comparative anyway, and the\nImmigrants are perhaps not In partic-\nularly bad condition according to their\nown standards. Notwithstanding all Is\nthis optimism. It is our standards\nwhich should govern. Since they are\nhere, they are a part of our Ameri-\ncan life. The Inspection of the east\nside tn Iew York, for example. Is not\nthing tt.it brings aamtxed Joy to\nvis has r rfar4 for its kbUL
105a6cbddcacc11c7c0e15ff76c1a89d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.717213083131 39.261561 -121.016059 A Nkw Vikw or tiik Strun Massacrks.—Tho\ncorrespondence of tho Loudon Herald says:\nAs regards tbe massacres no doubt tbo details\nreceived are very painful ; but a great deal of\nsentimental twaddle finds its way into print\nabout our “Christian brethren.” I' Is absurd\nto consider the mongrel Greeks, Jews, Marion-\nites, and tuiJuanl Catholics, as io any degree\nsuperior lo the Druses or Musselman*. In the\npresc it instance, It is by no means proved that\nthe latter were the aggressors. On the contra-\nry, tho evidence Is tbe other way. For the last\nthirty years and more, Lebanon has been pe-\nriodically the scene of such outbreaks as the\npresent. In 1830 Beirut tvaa plundered by tho\nGreeks ; Dayor el Kamar was, six years later,\nplundered by the Drascs ; in 1840, tbe Maron-\nites. whom Sir C. Napier took it into bead\nto patronise, made various successful forays on\nthe Druse villages after the affair at Koraicbo-\nvan. The Turkish Government, however, con-\ntrived to keep them pretty quiet after the de-\nfeat of Ibralmin Dacha, but in 1846, England,\nfoolishly allowed tbe Sultans authority, the on-\nly one which these mountain tribes respected,\nto be reduced to zero. A couple of pachas\nhave been kept up for the sake of show, but\nwithout being allowed a sufficient force to make\nthe authority of the Porte respected. Since then\nthe influence of England lias declined, and that\nof France and Russia increased. We now see\ntlie results. But to make the Sultan responsi-\nble lor these disturbances, after we have de-\nprived him of the means of repressing them, by\ninnking the tribes independent of bis rule, Is tbe\nheight of injustice, as well as absurdity.
0cb5ffd5c4ca406823876846826aad27 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1885.9410958587011 39.743941 -84.63662 and the Tact that it was unoccupied.\nThe church .is a modest brick structure.\nsquare and oblong, but commodious with-\nal, seating nine hundred people, but hold-\ning within its walls, in this instance, fully\none thousand. Its sharply slanting roof is\nsupported on brick columns forihihg part\nof the side walls, but is also sustained by\ntwo tiers of arches which spring from the\nright and left centers of the auditorium,\nmeeting at the apex of the roof. The in-\nterior is naturally dark, being lit by dor-\nmer and narrow side windows all in stained\nglass, a large field of the same filling in\nthe space over the altar in the rear of the\nchurch. The main and side doors were\nheavily draped in black. The interior deco-\nrations were plain but effective, consisting\nof a festooning of crape from the central\n the pulpit and chancel rail having a\ndrapery of white and black intermingled.\nThe central arches were completely drap-\ned, and the sides of the church were panel-\ned in black. On the front interior walls of\nthe church were two large designs of the\nGreek cross, in the rjrevaUinir sable color.\nThe dark shrouding of the interior was re-\nlieved by only three floral pieces, all hand-\nsome in design. On the altar .inside the\nchancel rail was a plain cross composed\nentirely of white flowers, contributed by\nthe ladies of the parish. On either side of\nwe aitar was a sneai or wneac un tne iace\nof the pulpit was a column of white roses,\nwith purple flowers at one side, forming a\nladder. At its base was the inscription\n"September 19, 1816V" and at its top "No-\nvember 25, 1885 ."
2f082ef77f3792b3e7f39ed7f27833c7 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.209589009386 37.561813 -75.84108 2nd. Consnls, to all that exclusively concerns the\nexercise of their functions, shall be independent of\ntbe State in whose territory they reside.\nsra. i ne consuls and tneir chancellors or secre-\ntaries shall be exempt from all public service and\nfrom contributions, personal and extraordinary.\nimposed in the country where they reside, and they\nshall be exempt from arrest, except in the case of\noffences which the local legislation qualifies as\ncrimes and punishes as such. This exemption does\nnot comprehend the consuls or their chancellors or\nsecretaries who may be natives of the country in\nwhich they reside.\n4th. WSo consular officer who is not a citizen of\nthe country to which he is accredited shall be com-\npelled to appear aa a witness before the courts of\nthe country where he resides. When testimony\nof snch consnl officer is needed, it shall be asked in\nwriting, or some one shall go to his honse to take\nit viva voce. If, however, the testimony of a con-\nsular officer in either country should be necessary\nfor the defence of a person charged with a crime\nand should not voluntarily be given, compulsory\nprocess requiring the presence of such consular\nofficer as a witness may be issued.\n5th. In order that the dwellings of consnls may\nbe easily and generally known for the convenience\nof those who may have to resort to them, they\nshall be allowed to hoist on them tbe flag, and to\nplace over their doors tbe coat of arms of thena--\ntiou in wnose service me consul may ne, witn ar\ninscription expressing the functions discharged b\nhim.
13f3d4bf10243fc3cf58d0de272b3075 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.3657533929477 40.063962 -80.720915 Id the foreaoon Larlcawanna Mid down from\n10% to 101J<. and Anally olosing at KB*, a oss of\n1 percent. Delaware <k Huds m closed at a gain of 1\npercent. With the exception of Latkawanna, New\nYork Central wan the weakest active stock and in\nthe fo enoon it fell to 82% and doted at 83#, which\nis a Iom of only }4percent\nGraugen and Gould stocks yielded a fraction in\nthe forenoon. Late in tho afternoon they rallied so\nthat at the close Western Union i« down % percent.\nI'uelfle Mall X aud Northwesto.n »4. while St. Paul\nfs up % percent, Missouri Pacific#. L'nfon Facfflc\nand Missouri, Kansas & Texa< uuehanged. Lake\nShore cloied with a galu of JJ percent.\nU. 8.8s. 103H; u. 8. 4Ks, ll2tf; U. B. new 4i,\n12192; Pacific Ga of *95.12H%: Central Pacific, 112*:\nErie, 61%; & Wilkesbarre, 94)$; Louisiana\nConsols, 74; Missouri 0s, 104; St. Jooeph. lltiX;\nSt. P . A 8. C . firsts 113: Tennessee (to, old, 48; do\nnew, 48; Texan Pacltlo Land Grants, 85; do Rio\nGrande. 62Vi; Union Pacific firsts, lift: do Land\nGiants, 106% do Sinking fund, HV; Virginia 6s,\n89; Virginia Consuls, extra matured coujiom, 49:\ndo deferred. 4; Adams Express, 184; American Ex*\npress, 05; Canada Southern, 26: Central Pacific,\n£)&; Chesapeake & Ohio, 4; do first preferred, 7)4;\ndo scoond preferred, 4: c. C. C . <k L, 29; Denver\n& Bio Grande, 5>j: Erie, 10>,; do preferred 21;\nFort Wayne, 182; Kaunas & Texas, 17ft; Lake\nErie St Western, 5>J; Lake 6hore, 62W; Louisville\nA Nashville, 80%: Louisville, New Albany & Chi'\ncogo, 22; Memphis & Charleston, KG; Michigan\nCentral, 48; Missouri Pacific,Nashville jc\nChHttauoogH, 8i; New Jeney Central.
04345634dcc9161b7b24b125ec4ca424 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1896.5778688208359 46.601557 -120.510842 fallow Darwin ami we how this appar-\nI entJy insignificant creature has changed\nthe face of nature. We will first consider\nthe habits and mode of lifeof the earth-\nworm. As every one knows, the worms\nlive in barrows in the superficial layer\nof the ground. They can live anywhere\nin a layer of earth, provided it retains\nmoisture, dry air being fatal to them.\nThey can, on the other band, exist sub-\nmerged in water for several months.\nThey live chiefly in the superficial mold\nlesa than a foot below tbe surface, but\nin long continued dry weather and in\nvery cold seasons they may burrow to a\ndepth of eight feet. Tbe burrows are\nlined by a thin layer of earth, voided\nby the worms, and end in small cham-\nbers in which they can turn round.\nThe burrows are formed partly by\npushing away the earth, bat chiefly by\nthe earth being swallowed. Large quali-\nties of earth are swallowed by the\nworms for the sake of the decomposing\nvegetable matter contained In it, od\nwhich they feed. The earth thus swal-\nlowed is voided in spiral heaps, forming\ntbe worm castings. In this case the\nworm obtains food and at tbe same\ntime excavates its burrows.\nIn addition to the food thus obtained\nhalf deoayed leaves are dragged into the\nburrows, mainly for food, but also to\nping the mouths of the burrows for the\nsake of protection. Worms are alao fond\n meat, especially fat. They will also\neat the dead, bodies of their relatives.\nThey are nocturnal in habit, remaining,\naa a rule, in tbe barrows during the day\nand coming out to feed at night\nThe earthworm haa no eyes, but is\naffected by strong light if exposed to it\nfor some time. It has no sense of hear-\ning, but is sensitive to the vibrations of\nsound. The whole body is sensitive to\ntouoii. There appears to be some sense\nof smell, but this is limited to a certain\narticles of food, which are discovered\nby the worm when buried in earth, in\npreference to other bodies not relished.\nThe worm appears to have some degree\nof intelligence from tbe way in which\nit draws the leaves into its burrows, al-\nways judging which is the bast end to\ndraw them iv by. This is remarkable in\nso lowly organized an animal, being a\ndegree of intelligence not possessed by\nmany animals of more complex organi-\nzation. For instance, the ant can often\nbe seen dragging objects along traversely\ninstead of taking them tbe easiest way.\nAs we have seen, vast quantities of\nearth ore continually being passed\nthrough the bodies of worms and voided\non the surface as costings. When it is\nstated that the number of worms in an\nacre of ordinary land suitable for them\nto live in is 53,000, wa can imagine the\ngreat effect which they must have on\nthe soil.
1ee4eac5bc5e5c55a56baf6653703ee8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.4753424340436 58.275556 -134.3925 The Northern Light, published at the\nCarcross ludian school, gives the fol¬\nlowing encouragement regarding the\nactivity among the Teelin Indians: The\nIndians seem to hare taken a reason*\nable view of the situation in regard to\nfur. They find that their pelts are still\nworth a fair price considering the con¬\ndition of the market, and so are pretty\nwell scattered, and are following up\ntheir vocation as etrenuouely as in\nprevious years. Some of the natives\nsold a good deal of meat and fish in\nAtlin last year, thus helping to better\nthemselves financially.\nThe dead and practically air dried\nbodies of A.L . Domiuy and Tbos. Boyd\nwere found three weeks ago in separate\nbut adjoining cabins near the mouth of\nSwift creek on the right limit of the\nHootalinqua river about 80 miles above\nHootalinqua post. Joe Brewer, a pio¬\nneer prospector and trapper who makes\nhis home ten miles up the river from\nSwift creek, where he a mink ranch,\nmade the gruesome discovery, having\nbeen requested by the police to make\nsearch for two men, neither of whom\nbad been seen since they left here to¬\ngether, but coch iu his own boat, on the\n31st of August, 1913. - . Wbiteborse Star.\nSecretary Redfleld of the department\nof commerce has announced his oppo¬\nsition to the idea of the Alaska legisla¬\nture controlling the fisheries in Alaska\nwateis. He declares that the govern¬\nment is better able to take care of the\nindustry and his statement is taken to\nmean that the federal administration\nwill from this time forward insist on\ndirectly looking after the fishing inter*\nests. No definite statement has been\nmade as to the opinion of the secretary\non the taxing of the fisheries people. It\nis thought likely that the owners of\ncannories have entered a protest\nagainst the taxation imposed on the\nindustry by the legislature in the ses¬\nsion just ended.
9ac6b0e6788fc31d45669402e60fb44e THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.5136985984273 37.561813 -75.84108 by writton notice, to bo served and re-\nturned by tho sheriff of such county,\nthe same as a summons, is served and\nreturned, and it shall be the duty cf\nsuch trustees, at their meeting at the\naunual spring elections, upon tho ser-\nvice of such notice to select of good\njudicious persons, having the qualifica-\ntions of electors, their apportionment\nof persons to be returned as such ad-\nditional jurors, and shall forthwith\nfurnish such clerk with the Hit of the\nuamo or names required as contempla\nted by the act, and such proceedings\nshall thereafter be had with reference\nto tho drawing; summoning, &., of such\nadditional jurors, as is provided by\nsaid act for jurors, selected at the an-\nnual October elections.\nSection 2. Thns section nine of an\nact entitled "an act relating to juries,"\npassed February 9, 1831, be so amend\ned as to read as follows: when\nsufficient number of grand jurors shall\nnot appear who thai! havo been drawn\nand summoned agreeably to this act,\nbeforo either of the courts at their sta-\nted term, or if it should so happen\nthat all the grand jurors pummoned\naforesaid, shall fail to attend, it shall\nand may bo lawful for the court in ei-\nther ease, to order tho sheriff or other\nofficer, to summon from among the\nbystanders, or neighboring citizens,\nmany good and lawful men fi9 are\nnecessary to form and complete the\npnnncl of the grand jury, or to issue\na special venire facias, to the sheriff,\ncommanding him to summon the per-\nsons therein named to attend forth-\nwith to serve as grand jurors.\nSection 3. That section nine of\nact to which this is an amendment,\nand the same is hereby repealed.\nSection 4. This net to take effect\nfrom and after its passatrc.
1f85f1af9b513595d2363d158e625e1e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.9986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 >le candidate for the Presidency, and will JJ\n10 doubt receive, to some extent, the\nnoneyed power of the East, yet it would p\nlot do to nominate him, as it would cer- &\nainly divide, yea, split asunder the now a\ninited and consolidated wintrs of the [\n;reat Republican party of the United f,\nStates. Your correspondent, in lyour jj\nBsue of December 27th, signed "II. C . c,\n5.," struck the key note, as to the exper tl\nliency or inexpediency of Grant's norni- f(\nlauon in ioou. no gives lacis ana figures n\nbat are sorrowfully fresh in the iniuds of n\n;very Republican reader in the land. The n\nRepublicans well remember, with pained\n:earta, that it wan uj»on this Grant Hoik a\nhat we split in 1872, and it was upon this 0\nirantRock that the brigadiers of there- \n>ellion captured both houses of Congress. }j\n\\ was upon this Grant Itock he made a it\nolid South and a divided North. It was tl\niuoii this Grant Rock that the tidal wave [,\n>1 Democracy and rebellion spread tj\nhroughout the land, and was preferred by C(\nho American people to his (Grant's) ad- n\nninistration. These are a few of the ,,\nterns in connection with those delineated j,\n>y your correspondent, H. 0. 8., as to v\n/rant's greatness as a Republican leader. Bl\nHay your truest and unflinching Republi- t{\n:ans say they cannot and trill not nipfxjrt\nsrant. The Greeley wing will support fl,\n3avard if Grant is nominated, but all are fl'\nwild for Blaine, Sherman, or any good ^\nRepublican that may be nominated by 8]\nhe great Republican party. N . J . B .
27d0a987fc45c2aecc31606e00f28acf THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1880.821038219743 44.593941 -72.616505 The water healed in the reservoir to\nfrom 350 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit, will\nbe forced out through the conducting\nmains, and through the pipes which\nconnect with the bouses, and to each\nconnecting pipe will be attached a water\nmeter. The return pipe will also be pro\nvided with a water meter. Each house .\nis to be provided with a steam converter.\nwhich in general terms is simply a small\nmetal chamber inclosed in a large metal\nchamber. The water leaves the reser-\nvoir at about 400 degrees Fahrenheit, and\nas soon as it enters the inner chamber it\nwill form) steam, for water will form\nsteam, if not confined, at S12 degrees\nFahrenheit, the boiling point. The\nchamber is so constructed that a pres.\nsure of ten pounds will a valve and\nshut off the supply ot water. The steam\nwill force its way through a valve into\nthe outer chamber, whence it can be\nconducted through steam pipes to any\npart of the house and used for heating\ncooking or power, and returned through\nthe auxiliary pipe, back to the reservoir.\nThe steam cooking ovens are coils of\npipe through which the steam passes in -s i-\nof the ovens. Some of the steam\nwill be condensed in the bottom of the\nconverter, and can be ' drawn off and\nused as hot water. The steam mado in\nthe converter is of the s sme temperature\nas the water from which it came, and\nhence cooking which requires a heat of\nfrom 350 degrees to 400 degrees can be\ndone.
119d9a6ce120a32a7a0d7419a42d67f5 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1879.4808218860985 37.451159 -86.90916 exceedingly painful to witness on a Sun\nday. In tho opinion of some, too many\nfacilities are given ior traveling, out\nthey are indeed few. Much as--I prize\nnnd enlov mv tsuntlav rest and svinna- -\nthise with thos who, for the good of\nothers, lose their own, or, at least, a por-\ntion of it; I, for one, would not nave it\nabridged. A passenger train, carrying\nmails, runs, morning and evening, to\nand from the' city, alohg the main lines\nof railway, (there is no goods nunc.)\nFrom Lcith, two small steamboats\nmake three or four trips acrosstlio 1 irth,\n(luring the bummer, to the pretty vil-\nlage of Aberdour, on the Fife coast.\nThe sail "o'er the water" is a great at\ntraction and u great boon to people pent\nup in close workshops and clone streets\nduring the week. The only matter for\nregret is that some take advantage or be-\ning bona fide travelers to indulge too\nfreely, but, after all, these are but sun-\nspots ou tho immaculate purity of our\nScotch Sunday.\nThis is a bold description, but so far as\nit Is intelligible you may rely upon it as\ncorrectly describing Sunday observance\nthroughout Scotland. In small towns\nand villager the day is even more strict\nly observed, but in the larger city of\nGlasgow, however, the balance is on\nthe other side, sfl'hey have more pleas\nure bailing on the Clyde, and,! am told,\nthev run train way cars and onmlbusses\nnow. at certain hours professedly to \ncommodate church goers. Ihavemyself\nseen cigar shops and oyster saloons in\nfull blaze on Sunday nights mere, it is\nnot so in Edinburgh. The door of a\ndrug shop may be seen open, Inside\nstreets, milk shops and sweetie shops,\nand in the Irish quarters you may see\nambiguous looking bacon and other pro\nvisions cxioscd for sale within ft half\nshuttered window, but with these ex\nceptions, as I have already said, every\nplace of business Ls close! as at mid\nnight Places for tho sale of intoxlcut- -\ning drink are closed in Scotland by act ;\nof Parliment from 11 r. M. on Saturday\ntill 8 a. Jt. ou Monday. Hotels only\nare allowed to supply drink to bona -f ld - e\ntravelers, that Is, those who are a certain\nnumber of miles from home. If you\nhave had patience to read this length\nyou will see that the contrast between\nSunday In Edinburg aud Sunday in\nLouisville is tjade enough. Does it ex-\nceed or fall short of what you have heard\nin regard to a Scotch Sunday? Our\nstrictness would perhaiw shock your clt-\nlzens as muen as your laxuy woum eer-\ntainlv shock ours. Strangers visiting\nhere from other parts of Europe, and\neven raigiauu, seem puzzieu to uuuer -\nstand it. and a good deal of criticism\nand ridicule are thrown away upon us\nin regard to it. some say we are\ngloomy fanatics; others denounce the\nsuperstition and servile obedience to the\ndictate of a narrow-minde- d
0df3e858dbbeb2571b7a5898063cc9e8 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1887.6890410641806 39.78373 -100.445882 and temperate fruit. Orange and\nlemon tiees of the most thrift growth\nmay be seen la me gardens ana or\nchards. Grapes, apricots, figs, pears,\ncheirirs, almonds, peaches, and all the\nother fruits to be found in the most fa\nvored localities, reach here the greatest\nperfection. The very earliest fruits and\nvegetables appearing In Hhb Francisco\nand other markets 1 grown In this val-\nley. With respect to early production,\nCapay Valley ranks fully with, if not su-\nperior to, the celebrated Vtca and Pleas-\nant valleys. This fact alone confers a\nverv tilth premium upon the tanas to be\noffered. The orehardist, vineyard ist and\ngardneror Capay vailey can place ripe\nfruits and vegetables In the San Fran-\ncisco and Chicago markets at the hlgn\nrate usually obtainable for earlv fruit,\nand from four to six weeks in advances\nof nearly every ether portion of the\natate of California. Under completely\nanalogous conditions in Vaea Valley,\nlands h ave reached a val uatton of SHOO an\nacre, and have proven highly profitable\ninvestments at tnat price, xoe tanas\nto be offered by the Capay Valley Land\nCompany are in all respects equal in\nfertility, and lie nnder equal climatic\nadvantages with the most favored or\nchard and garden lands or tne state.\nOne of te leading oblects of the \nchase of this land by a syndicate of per\nsona interested in tne success oi tne\nrailroad to be constructed was to secure\nthe subdivision orthe land into small\nholdings. and to promote the density\nof settlement. Keeping this object\nsteadily in view, some of the largest\nan most fert le tracts will be subdi\nvided into ten and twenty --acre lots, and\nIndividuals will be strictly limited to\nthe ownership of a single lot. Town\nsites will be located as ae r to the cen\nter of the tracts as may be fjund con\nvenient or Judicious, and the aurchaa\nera of orchard or garden land in small\ntract will be permuted to purcaase\nnot to exceed nve iota in tne town site\nDlats. In this way It la destined to\nestablish populous and thriving\ncommunities, vb se growth and proa- -\noerity shall be baed upon small hold\nIngsof very fertile and highly profitable\nlands, t en acres or tnis leruie ianu\nIvia under climatic conditions so fa\nvoraole to orchard and garden culture\nmay be made as prontabie and re\nsponsive to intelligent industry as iou\nor sw acres or lana aevotea to tne\nirrowth of cereals. The very early ma\nturity oi I runs ana vegetables aireaay\nalluded to will secure to the cultivator\nthe highest market price,
0f246e1ab7f83ff68bea7166aadb89b0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.8483606241145 40.063962 -80.720915 NEW YORK, Nov. 6 ..Money on call\neasy at 4TiG per cent. Prime mercantile\npaper Gift 7 per cent. Sterling exchange\nfirm and higher, with actual business in\nbankers' bills at St 844&4 81% for de¬\nmand and *4 81(24 81% for (10 days.\nPosted rates 51 81fctf4 82Vi and 54 85®\n4 SC. Commercial bills 54 SO. liar sil¬\nver CI ho. Silver certificates 64*i©6r»Hc.\nThe railway shares as u group again\nt«»-day absorbed more speculative Inter¬\nest than the Industrials, ulthough some\nnoticeable movements occurred In\nSugar. Tobacco and Chicago Gas. The\nmarket reflected the enormous profit\ntaking on the boom yesterday, al¬\nthough the total transaction-* fell short\nof Wednesday's record by about 127.000\nshares, the operations during the last\nhour were as animated, ami upon as\nlarge a scale as on that\nday. Extreme Irregularity character¬\nized a number of stocks, particularly In\nthe Industrials and specialties and the\ncourse of prices trended lower, the de¬\nclines being accelerated by a renewal of\nstock Jobbing rumors of Impending Cu¬\nban complications. I«ondon was not\nnoteworthy factor In the "peculation\nand there was hut little la the way of\nImportant new developments, although\nan coxier condition of the mon«y and\ncommercial paper markets was noted,\ntlmtr funds touching a minimum nf 5\nper cent for all date?. This condition\nwas partly responsible for a further\nhardening In actifol vterllng figures, but\nthe rise was a Ho attributed to the tem¬\nporary Indisposition of loading houses\nto draw blllJ while «»n the other hand the\ndemand from Importers was reported\nsomewhat urgent.
1ec0f3fe4185b6b15816a3f2afbc8886 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.0315068176053 40.063962 -80.720915 The ladies feel a special interest in n\nwhatever is calculated to heighten their E\nappearance, and knowing that they S1\nwill be grateful for any information in J*\nthat particular that we can furnish\nthem, wo condense the following de- ti\nscription of the mode of dressing the h\nhair : The style of coiffu re is decidedly 9\ncloser to the head than has been worn 0\nfor several years. The absurd diagiions s;\n.French lor "waterfall".and rolls at Li\nthe side of the face will soon disappear\nfrom view. The mode most in vogue is ^\nthe empire, which has much of the hair\ndrawn back from the face; has the little sj\ncurls on the forehead, and the high\npuiXs and twists of ancient model. This\nwill be found suited to persons with ^\nmarked features, and good necks to be\nrevealed by the uplifted hair. The\nGrecian style brings abundance of\nwaved low on the* brow, and j\nconfines them in close mass behind, 5\nWomen with straight, regular features a\nmay wear this style with pride, and fas- S\nten" the golden grasshopper on their ^\nbrow, after the old Athenian custom, ^\nsacred to those of pure civic blood. A\nwoman with aquiline features will\nsimply look as it she had forgotten her- F\nself it she wears this coiffure. JJ\nTo dress the head after the empire it\nstyle requires that the front hair bo p\nCarted three or four inches from the\nrow, and turned back in the Chinese b.\nfashion, with a short lock on each side w\nol the face, puffed, through which the ^\nribbon that encircles the head should ^\nbe paused. Five very light short false a\ncurls should be pinned at the middle G\nparting, to the ribbon. The back hair ^\nis to be tied very high, and may then
1412b19eacee48baee7b05aeca1fe712 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1896.0833333017101 37.92448 -95.399981 Abimelech is a name malodorous in\nBible history, and yet full of profitable\nsuggestion. Buoys are black and un-\ncomely, but they tell where the rocks\narc The snake's rattle is hideous, but\nit gives timely warning. From the\npiazza of my summer home, night by\nnight, I saw a lighthouse 15 miles\naway, not placed there for adornment,\nbut to tell mariners to standoff from a\ndangerous point. So all the iron-bo un- d\ncoast of moral danger is marked with\nSaul, and Herod, and Rehoboam, and\nJezebel, and Abimelech. These bad\npeople are mentioned in the Bible not\nonlv as warnings but because there\nwere sometimes flashes of good con-\nduct in their lives worthy of imitation.\nGod sometimes drives a very straight\nnail with a very poor hammer.\nThe city of Shechem had to be taken,\nand Abimelech and his men were to do\nit. I see the dust rolling up from their\nexcited march. I hear the shouting \nthe captains and the yell of the besieg-\ners. The swords clack sharply on the\nparrying shields, and the vociferation\nof two armies in death grapple is hor-\nrible to hear. The battle goes on all\nday; and as the sun is setting Abime-\nlech and his army cry, "surrender!" to\nthe beaten foe. And, unable longer to\nresist, the citj of Shechem falls; and\nthere are pools of blood, and dissev-\nered limbs, and glazed eyes looking up\nbeggingly for mercy that war never\nshows, and dying soldiers with their\nhead ou the lap of mother, or wife, or\nsister, who have come out for the last\noffices at kindness and affection; and a\ngroan roTls across the city, stopping\nnot, because there is no spot for it to\nrest, so full is the place of other\ngroans. A city wounded! A city dy-\ning! A city dead! Wail for Shechem,\nall ye who know the horrors of a\nsacked town!
03df321ad4264e1cfe1b257795bf02b0 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1876.4713114437866 37.451159 -86.90916 all books 1"lau HoaE Talk asd Midicai.\nCoxmox SENsE.whlch contains nearly 1.000 pages\nof original matter, as entertaining as a fasclnatfag\nstorf. llealtb and long life rnado easy for the\nlearned and unlearned. Crammed full of brand\nnoir Idea, which are checrlnc to the sick, and\nintensely enttrtalnlng to those wno are roitnnate\n(noagh to escape disease. It guards the reader\nacainst the pltboles of human snffericp. and\npoint the wajr of deliverance to those who are\nalready cnenlphrd. By all means, find ont all\nabout It. It la for you. It's autbor. Dr. E .\nB. Foots, vt 120 Lexington Atisci, New\nYohk, la consulted by invalid at home and\nabroad. In pctvon and by letter, and baa had the\nexperience of nearly a quarter ofM century\nIn the treatment of long standing and difficult dis\n of every character; hence his ability ts\nwrite practical tiutnaior the In valid reader. Ills\nconsultation are rocs to tbe sick everywhere ;\nhence hlslcinicnso corrrpondenco with the sick\nall over the globe, Yoc, readeti, aiie at lib-ta- ir\nto consult the able autbor of rialn Ilome\nTalk and Medical Common Sense. Writs to hlra\nand you will be struck with hla Common Sense.\nWhatever yoar malady, you villi receive light\nrchlch will do you good, by investing only a\npostage stamp, and writing to Dr. F. Wevtlsh.\nto Interest you In both the doctor and his Im-\nmortal book. The Hook itself, which cites\nsatisfaction to all who read It, can be had of\nagents, or of tbe publishers direct, rialn mus\nlin binding, SSJS, In tbe .English or German\nlanguage. Library binding. In English only.\nS3.1
49b6be62e9962f196ac80aca2266f76b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.9630136669202 41.681744 -72.788147 Inability to hire men or to keep\nthem after they were engaged ham-\npered the street department officials\ntoday in no little degree. There were\ngutters to clean and crosswalks to be\nkept free of slush but there was a\ndisparity of labor. Men who had been\nworking all week since the blizzard\nwere not enthusiastic about turnins\nout in the rain. Many did not appear\non the job at all and the great ma-\njority of those who did go to work\nquit before, the morning was over,\nsoaked thoroughly. By 11 o'clock the\ndepartment had only sixteen men in\ncomparison to over fifty with which\nthe week was started.\nToday's fog and rain turned the\ndeep snow in the streets to a mushy\nsusbtance which made travel for both\nman and beast difficult. Many teams\nand sleighs took advantage of the\nchannel made the car lines but as\nsoon as a car came in view there was\ntrouble getting off the tracks. Sleighs\ncould be seen canted at all angles\nwhile the drivers vainly strove, to, sur\nmount the heaped snow. The electric\npower is again weak and this coupled\nwith the trouble experienced with\nvehicular traffic threw many . of the\ncars off schedule. One of Thrall's\nexpress sleighs became stuck in the\ngroove between the rail and pavement\non Church street this morning and it\ntook some time before the driver was\nable to extricate his outfit. An auto-\nmobile, one of the first to be seen\nin the streets since Monday's storm,\nalso got into difficulties on Church\nstreet shortly after 1 o'clock this aftern-\noon."1 Although the tires were\nequipped with chains they churned\naround in the snow like a sidewheeler\nout of water.
1d96d3c1d6708b94cc132d57f9db5332 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.7609289301254 39.743941 -84.63662 Republican party in power, are in reality\nobsolete. The Republican party, there\nfore, seeks to find strength in adopting-- a\ncry which will revive as vigorously as\npossible the spirit which brought them\ninto power. And this they find in the\npretended danger with which the success\nof the Democratic party threatens the\nsettlement of the questions raised by the\nwar, especially those questions relating\nto the condition of the emancipated and\nenfranchised negro.\nNow, no Republican in his senses be-\nlieves that the Democracy of the North\nhave the slightest intention or desire to\ninterfere with the status of the negro, or\nto repeal the war legislation. The at-\ntempt is to impress the popular mind\nwith the idea that the Democratic party,\nowing its success to the Southern vote,\nwill De controlled in its policy by its\nSouthern wing, and that the Democrats\nat the South are not only determined to\nforce this reactionary policy upon the\nparty, but that they intend by intimida-\ntion and violence, to suppress the colored\nvotes of that section. This cry, and the\nimmense patronage of the administration,\nare literally the only elements which\nfive vitality to the Republican party,\nthey are very powerful elements.\nEvery body feels that everlasting\n" negro" question is worn out, and that\nthe infamous character of the Republi-\ncan statements at the South can not be\nmuch longer defended. But as the pres-\nent condition of public affairs promises\nto either party who may now succeed, a\nlong lease of power, the Republican party\nwill naturally make every effort to hold\nwhat they have.\nThere is but one way in which the\nSouth cam render efficient aid to the\nDemocratic party. This is to prove the\nfalsity of the accusation.\nThe conduct of the campaign in South\nCarolina is of the deepest consequence,\nboth to the South and to the Democratic\nparty ; and we therefore trust that the\npolicy pursued by our friends in that\nState, will be characterized with decision,\nand that that the administration will be\ntaught that unconstitutional interference\nwith States' Rights only knits more\nclosely together those, whether colored or\nwhite, who have been insulted by the in-\ntroduction of the military, and that\nSouth Carolina will shake of the shackles\nthat have so long bound her, hand and\nfoot, in subjection to Republican despot-\nism, and then there will be a probability\nthat the "Solid South" will be no sham,\nbut a stern reality.
207b715bb8adb9e56b9581986a178c6a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.1712328450026 40.063962 -80.720915 Cleveland, March 3 Much excite- en\nment has been created here concerning it\nthe recent Lenten Pastoral of Rt. Rev. an\nDr. tiilmour, the Itotuan Catholic Bishop ry\nof. this Diocese. The document is very to\nbold aud determined in its tone and P(\ncharacter, asserting the supremacy of to]\nthe Church over the State; censuring the cli\npritenl system of public school educa- lie\ntinn, which he claims is very itnper- sa\nfeet, and insisting that Catholic ot\nfamilies shall tend their children to Cath- ce\nolic schools, unless absolutely impractica- so\nble; directing that marriages shall not be hi\ncontracted with persona outaide oi the ot\nchurch, and says if necessary Catholics th\nmust insist upou and demand their rights of\nas citizens at the polls. Societies are not ai\nto be permitted to enter the church ijear- tn\niog regalia unless the church is recognized ci\nbv such a society having a priest at its Vi\nhead. Church properly will not to\nbo> controlled by trustees, but shall bo ds\ntransferred to the Bishop. Tho pastoral nc\nhas elicited much commcnt from tho press to\nol tho city, both editorially and through Pi\ncommunications. cc\nLast evening Hev. Mr. Forbush, Uni- sli\ntarian minister, before a large audience Irl\nmado tho pastoral tho subject of his dis- he\ncourse, and took strong grounds against it. in\nThla morning Bishop Oilman publishes b;\na letter defending and explaining the Pas- su\ntorai at length, and concludes with this a\nproposition to tho school boards; The T!\nCatholics shall build their own school tv\nhouses and place them during school Pi\nhours under tho entiro control of the m\ncnhnnl linnrrl Hnripv tvhirh timfl Tin rP- Pi\nligious instructions shall be giveD, but be- th\nfore or after school hours religious ill- sc\nstructions shall be permitted; the teach- w\nera of saiil schools shall bo Catholics and w\nshall be paid by the school board. -
06496ad1c75463503902fdb48e2f611e DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.4041095573314 44.939157 -123.033121 throughout the country for the past week:\nThe uncertainty regarding the European situation, and\nthe broadening of the scope of the war, .have occasioned\n;ome hesitation in general business and reduced the vol-\nume of trading in the stock and other speculative markets.\nThe effect of this, however, while adding to the underly-\ning conservatism, has not materially changed the recent\ntrend toward normal conditions in the principal industries\nand trades. The improvement has held its own; and as\nthe special advices received this week from ninety leading\ncities clearly show, there is a slow but steady expansion\nin business. Activity is most pronounced in the trades\nthat benefit from the big war orders, but progress also ap-\npears in domestic consumption, especially in the agricul-\ntural sections, which have profited by the high prices for\nfarm products and are now sustained by the prospects for\nlarge crops this year. It is, moreover, to a consid-\nerable extent by the east, whe,re liberal investment of\ncapital has enabled many large loans, both foreign and\ndomestic, to be taken up. Bank clearings and railroad\nearnings have increased. Money continues easy and more\ngold has been received from France. Collections are more\nprompt Exports, while not so imposing, are still heavy,\nthe iron and steel industry making gains, in spite of the\ninternational uncertainties, and urgent foreign buying, es-\npecially by Russia, is supplemented by freer orders from\nrailroads at home. In the dry goods market there is, in\nthe main, a steady distribution and in some lines much\nactivity, while exports of woolen goods are large. The\nshoe trade is moving slowly, but some improvement in\npresent conditions and in prospects is noted. Retail dis-\ntribution in all branches is affected for better or worse\nby the varying weather conditions in different parts of\nthe country.
412483f2268cb41e04f909f67dcb3847 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.669862981989 41.004121 -76.453816 and discussing tho probabilities of thoir\nrunning away if taken to Hong Kong.\nAlter mauing our call, wo returned the\nsnmo way to ascertain tho result of tlio\nsalo. Only tho mother mid tho hoys\nn cro left. Tho debt was only $300, and\n$50 of it still remained unpaid. I huvo\nbeen often told by residents In China\nthat tho parents would us soon tell their\nchildren as a cow or pig. And I had\nbegun to bellovo that .such was tho ru-- o\nupon passing tho group tho first tim.\nBut tho scene had changed. Tho girls\nwere gone, uud now n boy must goalv..\nTho mother sat In tho dirt, with her\narms around tho youngest, walling lu\na most piteous manner, and, as Arr\nHung said, cursing tho men that sold\nher husband a ticket to America at\n$300, which cost them but $10. Tie\nbroker sat listlessly by, fmoklng his\nplpo and twirling cane, lookingns if\nit was tho fninlkfct matter of busino--\nwith him. Tho boys were crying, and\nseemed very much afraid of us, now It\nwus curium mat ono oi mom must go.\nBut wo parsed on, nnd loftlhcmin flu lr\nmisery. Wo never know whether tho\nboy was sold to a childless man, to l.o\ntreated ns a son, ton Porlugueso to bn\nearrifd to tho West Indies, under a\nnominal contract, or to a natlvo land-\nowner, to btcomo his slave. But that\nono of them was sold Into servitudo fur\ntho turn of $50 thero can bo no doubi ;\nTho girls wero doubtless purchased for\ntho vilest purposes, unless thoy had tho\nrare luok to fall Into tho bauds of\nnative in search of a legitimate wife. I\nam told that tho prico of girls has gono\nup within a few months, oiving perhaps\nto tho fact Hint a less number of emi -gra n-
37d8b2a1c49e075d8e992a95485a4e6b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.2178081874683 41.681744 -72.788147 Otis W. Hopkins of 28 Buell street\nappeared before the board to with-\ndraw ils application as he no longer\ndesires to become a member of the\nNew Britain fire fighting force. Kiev-e- n\nmen assigned to come before the\nboard failed to put in an appearance.\nOne applicant when he was Inter-\nviewed by the board was unable to tell\nhis age. He said that he was born in\nIreland but h.id no records telling\nwhen he was born. He though he\nwas about 85 years old as he said his\nslrter thought he was about that age.\nThere are a number of men to ap-\npear before the board on Thursday\nnight when it will meet a second time.\nThose who appeared last night are: J.\nJ. Helsler, 67 Fairview sti et: L. P.\nBarbour, 600 Church strrf; T.\nDunnlgan, 194 North street; William\nJ. O'Day, 26 Lawlor street: J. F.\nKeeverl, C93 North street; James R.\nFlood. 267 Clark street; William F.\nFinnerman, 168 Beaver street; Alvin\nO. Wrlghti 828 South Main street.\nWilliam Smith, 18 Gilbert street;\nJames M. Roach, 28 Winthrop street;\nWilliam J. Green, 61 Laurel , street;\nJames Ray, 221 Washington street;\nWilliam P. Kelley, 38 Prospect street;\nPatrick Duggan, 76 Church street; P.\nJ. Joyce, 446 Church street; Otis W.\nHopkins, 28 Buell street; Richard G.\nCollins, 176 Maple street; Frank\nLoughrey, 41 Commonwealth avenue;\nThomas F. McGrath. 181 South Main\nstreet; Harry M. Timm. 429 Church\nstreet; Charles E. Ronalter, 234 Whit-\ning street; George W. Scarlett, 33 8\nPark street; William J. McMurray, 13\nFranklin street.\nJames F. Boyle, 62 Smalley street;\nAlbert E. Saulnier,
2033ad8ebc576f4d6896286c246661e4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8671232559614 40.063962 -80.720915 right' follow each other in rapid auc-\noesalon, and we'are biaathihg the close,\nand heavy air of a orowded dormitory.\nThe oar lamps bavegone ont disgusted,\nthe little wakefUlneea of the sleepers\nhas subsided, and the dim morningout-\nline of cloak and shawls, and frighten-\ned-looking heads, flecked here and\ntherto, like a troubled sea, with white,\ncompose the landscape; while Over all,\nlike Jtendulums, swing plethoric car¬\npet-bags slowly to and fro, and little\nsatohels, brisk aa mantle cloaks, and\nbonnets made of nothing, dance up\nand down like blossoms in the rain-\nall timed to the motion Qf the train.\nBut'the dim gray Lurjos to an old-eyed\nwhite, and the Dreathihg'bundlea begin\nto stir; out of an egg-shaped paokage is\nhstched a woman, with looka dishevel¬\ned, like Venus from the sea. A throe\nor two, and a rough form emerges from\na cloak and shawl, and ahakea itself\nawake. A shapeless mass turns out a\nman bearded like a pard. A pair \nboots, thrust out like a bowsprit, go\nout of^slgfit as the owner coines In.\nview. One ia sootbinftan irritated bat\nwith ^gentle touchee ofliia elbow; »ari-\nother pulling at his wilted collatv Dis¬\nordered tresses are smoothed with\nhasty touches of the hand, and crum¬\npled into shape. Oue lady has learned\nher le&on froin Grlmalkiq, and makes\nher toilet precisely like a cat.\nThe oold} clear llgntof early morning\nis always trylug to human beauty;\nThere are no tints to be borrowed.no\nsoftening shades to be worn, a plaice\ncold stare that looka one out .of coun¬\ntenance. But, in a railroad train, the\ndisorder Is always appalling. If^n\nface ever looks faded it is then; if the\nb8fr has any gray In it, it is sure to\nsbow^the wrinkles are read, like a sign\nboard, afar ofT.Cglfthere!be discontent\nin the heart it comes to the mouth, and\neverybody- looks like people after a\nmasquerade, or Richard, after he be^\ncattte."himself again*" .
4ac838356fd7661242ed7fa289e3826a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0696720995245 40.063962 -80.720915 turniug over aud "skinning the cat," by\ntheside ropes,iVc. Upward grandly aud\nsteadily rose the balloon, cleaving the air\nlike a mighty bird. At length it looked\nlike a mere spcck in the clouds. 0|iera it\nglasses and telescopes Were brought into h\nrequisition, and by their aid Donaldson t>\ncould still be seen performing his gymnas- u\ntic leats. After rising to a tremendous ti\nheight the balloon huug lor a lew 1110- ci\nments semingly suspended iu mid-air, and n\nthen sailed oil in a southeastern dircc- n\ntion. When the balloon was a mere speck ?\nin the distance, invisible to the nuked r>\neye una aiiuosi llKougn powerim tele- .\ncopes, the man with nerves iif steel iirnl .\nthe heart of a lion repented his daring rl\n feat by hanging head downward ,|\nsuspended by his toes. Such a scene was\nneverbefore witnessed in Norfolk, and\nseldom anywhere in (he world. The\ndescription ol sueli u scene reads like a »\nromance, but the reality fur surpasses the »:\nmost vivid powers of '.word painting," l»\nand we desist from the vain ellort to de- tl\npietil. When the .eriai ship had reached c\nan altitude of about Imlfamile.ilndstrnck T\nthe colder current of air, the xronuut tl\nwas observed to cliiub up to the hoop «\nand get his suit of thick clolhes. Descen- u\nding to the bar he dressed himself, and w\nthen resumed the gymnastic display-ex- b\ncrcising himself to keep warm. Those ii\nwho were fortunate to have telescopes saw,\nthe balloon gradually descending.
08ff13b8c1bc804c3e64864a9bd93f59 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.0260273655506 40.063962 -80.720915 7*OK SALE.THE WELL KNOWN\n; Country Residence of the Into Henry Tlcmnmi,\nccoscd, situate ill 1'lcnsaut Valley,Ohio(Vu.,\nIng on tho National ltoadaud the line of the Kim\novo ISuiirond, three mile* east of tho city, and\nout twenty minute* ride from the Capitol Huild*\ng, containing about Uvo acre* of ground, with a\nm*c of eight fiomn and paiitr>- and summer\ntchon, with a never falling wrtl at the kitchen\nor of a* good drinking water ** there In in Ohio\nuuty: ha* also a 100 barrel cemented cistern fur\nIn water. There arc also quite a number of tho\noieesi of fruit tree* of varfou* kinds on the\nice; aim)shrubbery, Ac. Thi* I*a *plendld op*\nrtunlty for aiiersou retired from business, or ono\ntiding the fr<sh, bracing eouutry air after cluno\nnilnement to the office all day.\nWe also offer for sale a Farm of It ncr* good\nlid, all under cultivation, bordering on Keuiion\nley In tln« town of Kirkwood, Heimont county,\n)io, and running back to the county road, being\ncessihlo both from PeKalh street and Keiiiiou\nley, iu the town of Klrkwood, Iklmont county,\nilo. and alw from tho county road, and having\nwon the land two springs of good water, ono\nar Kennon alley and the other near the county\nid, would mske the fann well adapted /or dairy\nrpouc* or for market gardening.\nIlsn, a good Coal Rink, with o|H-nlug'oti comer\nDeKalb street and Kounon alley; main entry\nId with a good T rail.\nMl of the above projierty if not sold soon will bo\nrent for tho eusulug year.\nFor further particulars call on or sddw.** C. K .\nIKKLorL. J . HAYIIA.at the German Hank of\nbecllng, W. Va., Executors of the Will of John\nwryTlemann. rtcnoaswd.
027055917dfffc647decc7916bbe2cd6 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1901.6616438039066 42.217817 -85.891125 before I will consent to face the world, '\nYou forget the long years of training\nthat must be overcome before I can\nhope to acquire the rudiments of the\nnew life that I must live. Already I\nknow much that you have not told me.\nThe life that I must begin is entirely\ndifferent from the life that I leave be-\nhind me when 1 assume the garb that\nyou wear and appear before the world\nfor what I really am a woman. God,\nhow I hate it! What would happen if\nshould go with you now? 1 would\ndiscover insults in compliments; I\nwould mistake deliberate offenses for\nfavors. Ever since I was old enough\nhold a pistol in my hand I have been\ntaught to resent affronts with bullets.\nWould you have murder your best\nfriends? No; my place Is here until I\ncan go elsewhere with the freedom\nthat knowledge alone can impart. I\nam neither one thing nor the other\nnow. I am neither man nor woman. I\nam a monstrosity a freak a thing!\nHere you respect me; there you would\ndespise me. Here I am master; there\nwould be nothing! Here, for awhile\nleast, I can still be a man; there\nfaugh! Let us go to your father. Then,\nwhen I have talked with him, I will\nride out to meet Craig Thompson."\nMr. Thomas walked out upon the\nveranda with Lisle at her request.\n"Everything has been attended to, or\nbeing done, Lisle," he said, adopting\nthe given name in preference to using\npronoun which he did not know how\nselect.
11c3f4bb4bc329ba1d1d963a824e7ed2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.6205479134958 46.187885 -123.831256 "Only tho actions of tho just smell\nsweet and blossom in tho dust," sings\nHerbert, and when one turns from the\nrecord of the Augustan age to that of\nfifty years service in tho church militant\nsuch as our fellow townsman can show,\ntho contrast for good, for tangible re-\nsults, for that which is won and worth\nwinning, must result invuruuiy iu uiuj.\nIt was on tho 2Uh of April, 1817, that\nDr. Roberts first saw tho Pacific coast;\nho had then been laboring in the sacred\ncalling of tho ministry for twelve years,\nand had been sent hero as John was sent\nalong the banks of tho Jordan, "tho\nvoice of ono crying in the wilderness,\nMake straight tho way of tho Lord.' " On\nthe 2Cth of June, 1847, ho came to Asto-\nria, going up tho river and taking\ncharge of th6 Methodist missions in the\nvicinity of Tho Dalles at n timo when sa-\ngacity and were greatly needed\nto prevent turmoil. How well ho suc-\nceeded, how earnestly ho labored and\nwhat a glorious record of thirty-eig- ht\nyears is his, written on tho hearts of tho\ntens of thousands to whom he ha3 minis-\ntered, is testified in tho record of his\nservices on this northwest coast and is\nhold in affectionate remembranco by\nmultitudes of friends and acquaintances\nwho unite in congratulations to tho rev-\nerend gentleman, on tho occasion which\nwill doubtless attract to tho M. E . church\nin this city as largo a congregation as\ncan bo accommodated within its walls.\nIn honoring Dr. Roberts on tho fiftieth\nyear of his services as a minister of the\nGospel, we but honor ourselves. That ho\nmay long bo spared among thoso to whom\nho has so long been a kindly guide and\nfriend, is the unanimous wish of thoso\nwho know him but to love him and name\nhim but to praise.
0236074876678761dedca4cb6d68cbce CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1876.0560108973386 39.623709 -77.41082 The same agitation is visible in va-\nrious forms in Europe. Mens hearts\nseem strangely stirred as with the\npremonitions of some great future\nevent. Learned divines who have\nmade the prophecies of the Bible their\nspecial study, find the times propi-\ntious for n free ventilation of their fa-\nvorite theories. Others who are loss\nversed iu prophetic fijvfe are, never -\ntheless, led to ponder on the remark-\nable signs of the times as ot myste-\nrious presage, Rev. Dr. Gumming, an\neminent Scottish divine in London, it\nis said gave emphatic expression to\nLis views, in his New Year's sermon,\nthat the dawn of the millenimn is at\nhand. So sanguine and so confident\nis ho in the correctness of his conclu-\nsions that he ventures the prediction,\nthat the second coming of the Saviour\nwill occur not later than September\nof this .year. In support of this pre-\ndiction he endeavors to show that the\nprophecies leading up to the millcn-\nhim have been or are about to he \ntilled. As a part of the millenial pro-\ngramme lie gives it as his view that\nTurkey as a nation will this year dis-\nap| ear from the face ol the earth, and\nthe Jews will he drawn together from\nall quarters of the world into the\nHoly Land. This is hut a theory and\nthe theory of one man. Dr. Gumming\nhas been wri ing on the general sub-\nject for several years past, and it L\nnot surprising that as time goes for-\nward he become more etlectually wed-\nded to his theory. Such men seldom\ngive up such theories. Meantime it\nis not to 1 e disputed that the iurkish\nquestion is regarded with peculiar in-\nterest at this very time. The watchers\nstand very closely by "the sick man,\nas the foehlo Sultan of that magnifi-\ncent empire is contemptuously termed\nhy cotemporanconsmonarchs. But the\nvery disintegration of lurkey wounl,\nhi all probability involve Europe in'\na great war, and the millenium aiuE\nwar arc not associated in our expccta-
068b6bfac9a05c7dc74cbb0e7834dedf NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.3975409519835 40.735657 -74.172367 content to confine their activities to New-\nark, where they have not only defied, but\nhave actually come Into physical contact\nwith the police on various occasions.\nPolicemen have become hospital sub-\njects because of these clashes, and yet\nthe bosses are asked to arbitrate. Arbi-\ntrate what? Do the citUens of Newark\nbelieve that the time baa come when law-\nlessness and open hosltlity to recognized\nauthority should he arbitrated? Or do\nthey not feel that lawlessness should be\nsuppressed and the law upheld as against\nthe actions of its violators?\nThe daily press is, authority for the\nstatemeMa that these so-called strikers\nhave been surging into outlying communi-\nties. away from Newark, even as far as\nElizabeth. Montclair. Passaic and Hack-\nensack. rushing men from work they are\n to do. And the men leave because\nthey fear violence. Is this a condition\nwhich can be treated by arbitration? In\nPassaic, for instance, a ringleader of the\nmob was arrested for cause, and after\ntrial was serttehced to one-year Irv prison.\nTs hU n case for arbitration ? And If Jis\nIs not such a case, why should other vio-\nlators of the law. who have not been ar-\nrested. be temporised with?\nThere Ip a contractors side to the\nstory as well as a laborers side. The\ncontractor has justice on his side, too.\nAnd he has the very he»t of reasons for\nthe stand he lias taken. Every existing\ncontract calling for the employment of\nlabor baa been figured on on the basis\nof existing wage rates, and.
ff9a8a3affcbf72442f37d7f3e8c1b32 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.2205479134957 43.798358 -73.087921 in transferring the word, and not trans-\nlating it. I have some fears on each of\nthese points. My hopes prevail above my j\nicars m regaru iu iue uupusis, ana i irusi\nthey will come forward with a noble de- -\ntermination "neither to add to nor take\nfrom" the words of the book of life but\ngive every word its faithful rendering. I\nsure they are well capable ot supply- -\ningthemeans. You may, perhaps, think j\nis uncharitable in me to doubt whether of\nPedobaptists will be faithful in trans\nferring the term baptizo, after having in a\nsisted upon if so much. I will state to to\nyou a fact, and leave you to judge wheth\nthere is not some ground for suspicion,\nwithout being uncharitable: You know\npains they have taken to prevail on\n transfer the word, and to accommo\ndate them in the 5,000 copies printed for\nthem : we agreed to do so. Well, at the\nvery same time two gospels were ordered\nthe committee here to be printed in I\nHindostanee. On account of the delay\nwhich had taken place in the first, 1\nwas requested by the committee to read\nthe proofs of the second. When I went\ninto their office and asked for a cony of\nthe gospel that had been printed, it was\ngiven m; nnd 1 louna, to my utter as- -\ntonishment, that the word baptizo had not!\nbeen transferred, but translated through- -\nby the term ghosal, which signifies to;\nwash. I make no comment on this, but\neave the fact to speak for itself. If the in\nEpiscopalians, &c. bad let things proceed
223bb1290f10af1f240276f17519e365 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.9958903792492 37.561813 -75.84108 mal as with a person, that a current of\nair striking the body from an open place\nin a floor, will chill quicker than if com-\ning from the side. Indeed, it is contrary\nto the natural laws to have a current of\nair strike the animal body from that di\nrection, as the movement of the atmos\nphere is in a horizontal position if the\nterm may be applied to the atmosphere\nand though it may be considered but a\nsmall matter, a little attention given it\nwill convince any one that it is ot no\nsmall importance.\nWhen building a barn, if tbe means\nwill allow, make a good stone foundation\nand lay a tight floor if double, all the\nbetter and then attend to the ventila-\ntion as the condition of the weather de-\nmands; do not have the points from\nwhich the air is to be admitted either in\nthe rear or close beside the animal, but\nsuch a distance away that the current of\nair will lo3e its perceptible force by the\ntime it reaches the animal.\nThere are certain principles in the\nlaws that govern tbe health and con-\ndition of the animal world that cannot\nbe violated without damaging effects. A\nperson may be moving about in out\ndoor pursuits all day, and not take cold,\nwhile an hour spent in a house where\nsmall currents of air strike the person, a\nsevere cold will be contracted. Now the\ndifference comes, not from a difference in\nthe temperature, but in tbe difference of\nmanner in which the wind comes upon\nthe body. So when studying to protect\nourst-lve- s
111456ba29537ff568a71d61addfcd59 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.7739725710298 40.063962 -80.720915 PiTTHiinioit, Oct. 1)..Tho Oliver &\nRoberts wiro company, oxio of the larg¬\nest ronccrns of its kind in the country,\nmade a request of the creditors to-day\nfor an extension. The amount of itu in¬\ndebtedness could not ho learned as the\nmembers of the firm refused to f,*ivo fig¬\nure?, but it wan confidently said the cred¬\nitors would be paid every dollar. Thenus-\npension were not wholly unexpected aw\nit wan known the firm baa been closely\npressed for several weeks. The plant is\nlocated on the south side and employs a\nlargo force of men, boys and girls.\nWhen seen to-day Gcorgo T. Oliver,\npresident uf tho company,said that sus¬\npension was caused primarily by the re-\ncent embarrassment of an iron lirin of\nthis city, tho head that lirin being on\ntheir paper as endorser for a considera¬\nble amount. This paper is held by vari¬\nous Pittsburgh banks, and moat of it\nmatures during this and next month.\nUnder tho circumstances, ho said, tho\nholders do not feel justified in renewing\nthe paper without additional security,\nwhich they were unablo to give. Tho\nonly course open for them, therefore,\nwas to call their creditors together, lay\nbefore them a statement of their affairs\nand ask for time. Mr. Oliver stated fur¬\nther that their assets were largely in ex¬\ncess of the liabilities, and they expect\nto pay dollar for dollar, with interest.\nThe Oliver Iron and Steel company is\nnot involved in our embarrassment,\nsaid he, and doea not expect to ask tor\nan extension.
3845b1ecc0171549c90ade07ce25570d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.4808218860985 41.681744 -72.788147 offense against his Maker had been\ninfinite, therefore the atonement for\nthis sin must be also infinite. No sacri-\nfice would be great enough to appease\nGod, that was not God itself. So the\nSon of God assumed visible form and\ncame down onto earth. Earth became\na sanctuary, and Bethlehem a Holy of\nHolies. And man at last realized his\nyearning to see his God. By His com-\ning, Chrst broke the alliance man had\nmade with death, and restored the\nhuman soul to its pristine beauty, to\nthe image and likeness of the Creator.\n"Although one drop of His blood\nwould have been sufficient to redeem\na thousand worlds, Jesus Christ gave\nHis life for man to prove His infinite\nlove for him. By His passion and\ndeath mankind was redeemed and the\ntrespasses against God atoned for.\nBut after His resurrection, was heaven\nto be closed to man? No, because on\nthe last night before He died, Christ\ninstituted the Blessed Sacrament and\nthe priesthood so that His own body\nand blood be administered unto\nus as our daily food. His wisdom\ndiscovered the way to nourish is,\nand His humility did not not disdain\nus, and His humility dd not disdan\nto tread that way. Thus earth ceases\nto be a vale of tears, because God\nHimself dwells therein, through His\npriests and His priesthood."\nAfter portraying the Incarnation,\nRedemption, and institution of the\nHoly Eucharist and the priesthood,\nFather McAuliffe said that Father\nDaly had, in his 2 5 years of labor in\nthe vineyard of Christ, lived up to the\nholiest traditions of the priesthood.\nHis early training under true Catholic\nparents had prepared him for the\nministry and his work in other\nparishes. Plainville, Newtown, Sharon\nand Broad Brook attested to his fit-\nness for his sacred calling.\nIt was in a spirit of rejoicing there-\nfore, concluded Father McAuliffe, that\nthe people of St. Joseph's parish,\nwhere Father Daly has labored for the\npast five years, gathered about him\ntoday to felicitate him on the occa-\nsion of his jubilee.
2ca2ca6948594578d87e1f4ece2416a8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8178081874682 40.063962 -80.720915 Official in formal iou from Richmond\nup to a late hour last night, conveys a\nhirong belief that the Convention bad\nbeen carried in the lending towns.\nWhere the newspapers have worked on\nthe people since the late elections in\nOhio aud Pennsylvania, the vole has\nbeen given almost solidly against a\nconvention, but in uiost districts where\npeople have not been subjected lo the:\ncontrol of the Richtnoud influence, the\nwhite vote has been ho divided that\nwith the vote east for the Conven-\nlion, it will be carried. The only dis-\nturbance of any moment was that\nat Lynchburg, where some negroes uu-\ndertook to mob one of their number for\nvoting a Conservative ticket. After\nbring at bis assailants, the military\narrested him aud saved him from the\nmob. The undercurrent of exciteineut\nin Richmond was very great, but troops\nwere kept under arms day aud night,\nand no outbreak occurred. The colored\npeople in all the cities have voted very\nslowly, owiug to questions arising as\nto whether persons otTering to vote had\nreally registered. Many had forgotten\ntheir assumed surnames by which they\nregistered, yet all are allowed to bring\nproof thai they actually registered, un¬\nder the clause of General Schofield's\nelection order, which says no ballots\nwill be received from persons who are\n properly registered, except in cases\nwhere the name of the person applying\nto vote may have been incorrectly recor\nded in the registration list in which if the\notficcr conducting the election is satis\nbed, either from his own personal\nknowledge, or from the testimony ot a\ncreditable witness, that a person was\nactuwlly registered, such person will be\npermitted to vote. It is understood\nthat General Scbotield has declared\nthat the polls «hall be kept open from\nday to-day, till every person entitled to\nvote has had an opportunity to cast\nhis ballot. If the Convention is de¬\nfeated, it will at once appear who is\nresponsible, as General Scbotield\nwisely ordered that the ballots of white\naud'colored voters should be deposited\nin separate boxes, that each white vote\nfor or against a Convention will be\nknown, and so also with the blacks.\nThere was some purpose for ordering\nseparate boxes, aud it was in no sense\na pandering to the prejudices 01 the\nwhites, as has been Insinuated, for in a\ngreat majority of cases iu the Stale, ex¬\ncept where a very large vote was to be\ncast, the boxes have been side by side.\nIf a Convention is called, the registra¬\ntion lists show that there will inevita¬\nbly be a Radical majority of from ten\nto lilteen.
04a16e210f7081963d76f778099d152d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.8863013381533 39.745947 -75.546589 There Is material tor any amount of\nfiction and drama In the predicament\nof the Binghamton woman who, for a\njoke on her husband, borrowed two\nnew babiee, placed them with her own,\nand on the poor mans return present­\ned to him triplets. The Joke was a\nlovely one. but, as Jokes sometimes\nwill, turned itself Inside out into an\nalarming tragedy when the mother dis­\ncovered that the three babies, which\nhad been dressed alike for the hilar­\nious occasion, had got their several\nIdentities Inextricably entangled. No­\nbody could tell which from t'other, and\nthe denouement threw three women\nand a nurse of the usual comic opera\nintelligence into rapid hyserlea.\nThis incident shows the reactionary\nand the cumulative power of a Joke. It\nbegan with a bright Idea, which tick-\nltd the risibilities of three females,\nand ended in a catastrophe\nwhich has engulfed the peace of three\nfamilies. It was staged as a playful\nfarce and develops Itself Into a prob­\nlem play which sheds gloom four feet\nthick. It was intended as a Joke on\none mere man, and now, by the devil­\nish Ingenuity of fate, roils itself up\nInto a Joke on his ingenuous wife, on\ntwo other women whoee uncertainty\nis just as appalling, on one tearful\nnurse, and one three mewling Infants\nwith futures of hideous uncertainty. It\nisj Incidentally, a joke on the father,\nalso, though the Joy of the relief from\ntriple responsibilities has so far kept\nhim from mental anguish.\nWoman's bump of humor never falls\nto astonish man in the limitless scope\nof its possibilities. Her Joke contains\nmore expansive power than a peck of\ndynamite. It is a fearful thing to en­\ncounter.
aa7e30f575704686dcfbd19b00324f19 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.1270491487048 41.681744 -72.788147 Washington, Feb. 16 (ff For the\nthird time in the past seven years,\na move has been launched in the\nhouse to reapportion its membership\namong the several states on the\nbasis of their increased population\nsince the 1910 census.\nFaced by a number of bills pro-\nposing methods for the reapportion-\nment, the house census committee is\nnow engaged in hearings on the sub-\nject and is expected to report out a\nmeasure that will reallocate the\nmembership on the basis of the es-\ntimated 1930 census.\nAlthough it is stipulated in the\nconstitution that the reapportion-\nment shall take place with each de-\ncennial census, all efforts for its con-\nsummation under the 1920 census\nwere deadlocked one group of repre-\nsentatives opposing any increase of\nthe house members while others re-\nfused to accept the loss of any\nstate's representations.\nThe proponents of the reappor-\ntionment claim that the increased\npopulation between 1910 and 1930\nhas led to wide discrepancies in the\nrepresentation of a of states\nas authorized under the constitution.\nIn the bill now under considera\ntion, drawn by the committee chair-\nman. Representative Fenn. of Con-\nnecticut, the 1930 census reappor-\ntionment would make the following\nchanges in the house membership:\nAlabama, loss of one representa-\ntive; Arizona, gain of one; Califor-\nnia, gain of six; Connecticut, gain of\none; Florida, gain of one; Indiana,\nloss of two; Iowa, loss of two, Kan-\nsas, loss of one; Kentucky, loss of\ntwo; Louisiana, loss of one; Maine,\nloss of one; Massachusetts, loss of\none; Michigan, gain of four; Missis-\nsippi, loss of two; Missouri, loss of\nfour; Montana, gain of one; Nebras-\nka, loss of one; Now Jersey, gain of\ntwo; New Mexico, gain of one; New\nYork, loss of two; North Carolina,\ngain of one; North Dakota, loss of\none; Ohio, gain of three; Oklahoma,\ngain of one; Pennsylvania, loss of\none; Tennessee, loss of one; Texas,\ngain or two; Vermont, loss of one;\nVirginia, loss of one; Washington,\ngain or one.
0cca5071e84c6ccf6f1c8fdc3a8ef4a8 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1892.3647540667375 43.994599 -72.127742 and the infuriate decree put to massa\ncre the Albigenses of France, the world\nwould have had fewer illustrations of\nChristian heroism. Be Joseph before\nPharoah. Be Paul before Felix. Be\nDaniel before Darius.\nTHE BEAUTY OF YOUTHFUL PURITY,\nAjrain let the story of Daniel teach\nus the beauty of that youthful charac-\nter which remains unblemished and up-\nright when away from home. Had\nDaniel on arriving in Babylon plunged\ninto every excess his friends in Jeru\nsalem would never have heard of it.\nHis dissipation and renunciation of re-\nligion would not have cast one sorrow\non the family hearth where he had lived\nor the old family Bible which he used\nto read. But, though far away from\nhome, he knew that God's eye watched\nhim and that was enough. It is not\nevery young man who maintains the\nsame character when absent that was\nmaintained at home.\nFrederick watching his father's sheep\namong the inns or thrashing rye in the\nbarn is far different from Frederick on\nthe Stock exchange. How often does\nthe kind, retiring spirit become bold\neffrontery, and the accommodating, self\n disposition once exhibited\namong brot hers and sisters becomes a\ncold and unresponsive selfishness, and\neconomy, wastefulness, and opened hand-\ned charity, tight fisted stinginess, and\nthe keeping of good hours is changed\ninto midnight revelry.\nI probably address young men now\ndistant from their father's house, and\nothers who, still under the parental\nroof, look forward to a time when they\nwill depart alone to conflict with the\nworld and among strangers be called to\nbuild up characters for themselves.\nHappy for you, oh, young man, if you\nshall, like Joseph, be the same when\nliving with the wicked Pharaoh as with.\npious Jacob, or Daniel as pure in Baby-\nlon as in Jerusalem. There is no pas-\nsage in a man's life of more thrilling in\nterest than tho day in which he leaves\nhome and goes off to 6eek his fortune.\nThe novelty and romance connected\nwith the departure may keep the young\nman from any poignant sorrow, but\nparents, who have seen the destruction\namong strangers of those who were con\nsidered promising youths, cannot help\nfeeling that this step is full of momen\ntous importance.
3d11cb7816e26516a1c80b195a2d43d0 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.83698626966 40.827279 -83.281309 In view of the startling crime com-\nmitted at Knoxville the other day,\nand the impunity with which the\ncriminal was permitted to make his\nescape, the question becomes of ter-\nrible importance have we an' law?\nWe kno n that we have criminal courts\nTheir dockets are filled at every ses\nslon with cases. The bar-ke ep -\nwho sells a thirsty friends a glass of\nwhisky on Sunday finds the ministers\nof the la v dogging his steps with re-\nlentless ferocity. The poor man who\nsteals a suit of clothes to cover his\nnakedness, or purloins food to ap-\npease his hunger has not long to wait\ntill the doors of the penitentiary open\nto receive him Bat these courts and\nthese laws are for the poor, the help-\nless, the ignorant, the men without\nmoney, without influence, without\nfriends. Have we any law that can\nreach the rich, the powerful, the influ\nential, the men of good family aud\nhigh social positon ? It would seem\nnot, or if there is its sworn officers\nfear to enforce it. In the case which\nis now so fearfully prominent in the\nminds of this community, the sheriff\nof Knox country gave as a reason for\nnot making auy effort to arrest Co!\nNelson that he too many friends.\nWe are informed and believe that\nfor the more than Spartan heroism of\nthe father of the slayer, not even the\nsemblance of an effort at an arrest\nwould have been made. That grand\nold patriot, stiffiing his paternal\nfeeling before the Majesty of that law\nwhich it is his duty to proclaim in the\ncourt of last resort in this State, sent\nhis own sons to urge the Sheriff to do\nhis duty. It did not reed this to\nmake the people of Tennessee honor\nand revere "old Tom Nelson," as\nthey lovingly call him ; but it should\nserve as a rebuke not all delinquent of-\nficers of the law.\nWhen the law does to make itself\nrespected by all classes alike men will\ntake laws into their own hand. There\ncan be no peace where the laws do\nnot protect all and pun ish all with\nstern impartiality.\nWe have been led to make these re-\nmarks because they reflect the senti-\nment of the common people which\nwe hear daily on the streets. The\nIaw3 are just, but their administration\nis unjust, This is a great evil, and\nmay bring greater evils in its train.\nChattanooga Times.\nThe above is applicable lo other\nStates in the Union than Tennessee .
0f0dca2d87ccc0c436cf926d8bde595a NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.2698629819888 40.735657 -74.172367 In the last two or three years, the bill\nsays, the places of Quong Yuen and Yee\nYick have been raided by the police and\nthe sheriff, and that both of the pro-\nprietors have been convicted of unlaw-\nful practises.\nIt is further set forth that the peace,\ncomfort and safety of everybody living\nIn the vicinity of the building would be\ngreatly endangered and rendered ex-\ntremely hazarded. The case will come\nup for hearing on April 19, when an in-\njunction will be asked for restraining\nthe owners from constructing the build-\ning to be, occupied as aforesaid.\nThe case will raise a novel point in\nthe Court of Chancery. It will be the\nfirst time that the court has been called\nupon to determine whether a person\n cut up his property, against the\nwishes of the other property owners In\nthat section and bring objectionable\ntenants to reside there.\nThe affidavit attached to the bill Is\nsworn and subscribed to by Frank\nMoorfleld, of 35 Columbia street: George\nStlckel, of 40 Columbia street; 'William\nCockfair, of 88 Lafayette street; Mrs.\nA. McEnroe, of 31 Columbia street;:\nMrs. Mary C. Fitzpatrick, of 33 Colum-\nbia street; Franclsque Revlere. of 39\nColumbia street; Mrs. Fannie W. Free-\nman, of 42 Columbia street; Henry S.\nQuinn, of 116 Lafayette street; .Tames\nL. Macker, of 49 Columbia street:\nLouis Levin, of 214 Mulberry street;\nMrs. Ella Maklnson, of 205 Mulberry\nstreet; Mrs Fannv Wlnterbaum, of 207\nMulberry street: Peter Fish, of 203 Mul-\nberry street; Henry Kirchner, of 197\nMulberry street.
0fbbf3f6e1e2c59ea4a38924bd1bb5dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.001369831304 40.063962 -80.720915 ri.l Jjn i y w°Mh«t nefarious sue-\ncom will bo but tho beginning of ruin.\nJ, ropwblje can bo basod on fraud,\ni ills in beginning to bo soon ovon in\nthose states whero bringing tho will of\ntlio voter to naught has become a svs-\nlam. At tho signs of a change to honest\noloctions all good mon rojoico. Tho\nwarning which wai givon by ttio oloc-\nlions in tho oast nnd in tho wost, tho\no octions of 181)3, though thoy includod\nall tho great states,.those horotoforo\nDemocratic as well as thoso who hail\nvoted tho Republican ticket in 1892,.\nwas not in tlio loast heeded. Drunk\nwith tho victory of 18VJ and out of\ntouch with tho roal pooplo of tho coun¬\ntry, tho leadors of the party in power\nwont on in houso of representatives\nto lay up wrath against tho dav of\nwrath. Into details it is not worth\nwhilo to go. That would bo to dig up\ntho buriod whero it is only neodful to\npoint to tlioir last resting-placo. Tho\neenato, which only had a small major¬\nity, under tho leadership of tho senators\nfrom Maryland, Ohio and Now Jorsoy,\nwhilo it did notoxhibit too much sense,\ncortainly showed a valuablo and strik¬\ning contaast to tho executive and tlio\nhouse, and probably saved their party\nfrom annihilation. This, howover, was\nJargoly duo to tho peoplo, who inado\ntuemsolves heard thero when thov\ntailed in the nopular branch. Then\ncarao tho oloctions of last November, so\noverwhelming and so crushing that thev\nseem to-havo sottlod tho future of this\ncountry for many years.
0b4959b7daac7f348e749b4c1d24982e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.3383561326739 40.063962 -80.720915 Some of those eccentric females enu- **\nme rated by Mr. Titnbs, in his amusing\nbook, set all our conventional notions ti\nat defiance. What would our sanitary C\nreformers say to Mrs. Lewson, or Lady u\nLewson, as she was called, who never 11\nwashed herself, maintaining that the °\nperson^ who followed that necessary ^\npractice, as it is usually considered,\n"were always taking cold or engender- ti\ning some dreadful disorder," and yet 1]\nlived through five reigns, cut two new b\nteeth when 83, and died at the age of si\n116! Another extraordinary woman, i;\nwhose adventures are recorded, was a\nHannah Snell, who, having been de- $\nserted by her husband, determined to h<\nset forth in search of him, and with this 7;\nview enlisted as a soldier. Having v\nbeen accused of breach of duty, she d\nactually endured five hundred lashes $r,\nrather than reveal her sex. Some time s<\nafter this she deserted, and having pro- o\nceeded to Portsmouth, enlisted as a\nmarine on board the Swallow, with d\nwhich she was sent to the East Indies, it\nIn the siege of Pondicherry, she re- Ji\nceived six shots in her right leg and u\nfive in her left, beside a dangerous body g\nWnIInil Rho nm*ar tnnnr? haphnahntul a<\nbut on her pasbage home she learned q\nthat the wretched man had been exe- o\ncuted at Genoa for murder. On her\nreturn to England, Hannah went for a w\nshort time on the stage, and afterward d\nbcL up a public house. Her eccentricity p\nturned at last to madness, and she died n\ninsane in Bethlehem Hospital.
10b2d8fe606a89fd21ac96bf963022ae THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.703551880945 40.063962 -80.720915 U«t Mond»y the school b«U tolled the\nknoll ol the summer vacation ol the school\nohllaren. The echo ol the deep tonguea\nbelli no doubt smote unpleusntly upon\nthe ear ol the avenge echool boy and girL\nFor two long monthi they enjoyed the\nfreedom thit summer brings, *nd the oc¬\ncasion and season Invites. The re.lr.lnt\nof the past ten months *« relaxed. The\nterrors ol the due-room were forgotten\nin the simple pleisures ol vacation time,\nand ill wis rosy and bright. But list\nMonday they hunted up their books, the\nforgotten arithmetic, the much ibused\nalgebra, and the well thumbed reader and\nspelling book, and trudged unwillingly to\nschool. We all know how unpleasant it\nwas to leave outdoor sports and joys lor\nthe strict discipline and proper conduct\nol the school room. It is a «ad experience\nwith some, lor frequently they rebel and\ndo what we olten did.' play n001.?-\nThe teschers, too, experience some re¬\ngret in coming back to the trials and fa¬\ntigues that the puolio know nothlngof.\nThe summer vacation to them has own\nthe experience ol the dream of months,\nand they resume their dutlee with some¬\nthing ot regret but a determination t»\nmake the year Just brighter\nand more sueceeitol than the last Their\nlot is hard. The discouragement! and hin-\nderances that arise in the path ol^the\nteacher are, M the common phrase goes,\n"too numerous to mention. >othwith-\nstanding the difficulties in their way they\nare the most patient, csrelnl and forbear¬\ning class that we know ol. They are en¬\ntitled to far more sympathy and encour¬\nagement than ever is expressed. We say\nthis much lor them, unsolicited and un-\nklThen first week ol the school year ii\nalways attended with unsstislactory re¬\nsults. The 'young Tom Sawyer has just\nleft off hi* miniature piratical excursion\nand-like tricks, and the memory ol his\nsummer's joys preveoUhim astudi;\nmisapplication to his.booki, and Bei-ay\n5^ heroine ol Maik Twaiu's inimitable\nstory, has likewise her summer triumphs\nto distract her attention from her boots.\nOwing to these features It is impossible lor\nthe average pupil to get down to hanl aq\nearnest work before the memory ol vaca¬\ntion joys are dispelled by the rismg ambl-\nlion to excel in the years work. Thluking\nthat perhaps an article on the opening ol\nthe schools and the comparison of atten¬\ndance with that ol last year would beo\ninterest to the general public,
19493779a9e555daf060478c2f092869 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.3712328450026 39.745947 -75.546589 If Job were to rise from the dead and\nlook U'i»on the heavens', says Professor\nT. J . J S«i in the May 'Atlantic, be\nwould eeo tho constellations related to\non1? another as of old, but hie 'would\nfind that the pole had shifted its pcsi-\nttan aimor.g tih» «tans, amid if an im­\nmortal could witn'tss the grand phe­\nnomenon which the precession cf the\nequinoxes produces, in about 12,900\nyears he would' find the hita views so al­\ntered that The former aspect couM l»e\nrtroognized only by an understanding\nof tho change» which had 1nti>rv£Red.\nAs Humboldt justly remairks, the htau-\ntiiful and celebrated constellation of\nthe Southern Cress, never seen by the\npresent inbabHomite of Europe, arid vis­\nible in 1ha United States only on our\nSouthern coast, formerly shone on the\nshores of tWe Baltic, and can again lie\neccn in that latitude in about 18,000\nyeans. The will then be vIslbo\non the shores of Hudson's bay. hul at\npresomi', it is gering rapidly southward,\naind in a few thouaard jTars will l»c\ntniviiwible even at live extreme point of\nFtarMüt In like manni r the hrMUant\nstar Canopus, In tho constella Hon\nAirgo, sitnatod some thirty-seven) de­\ngrees scu.th cf Sirius, is now vtrtlbto\nin the southern portion of the United\nStates. In about 12,000 years it will\ncease to rise even in G'rirai America.\nFrom the same cause, if 'Ptolemy wrrn\nto again look from the htavenn at\n. Virx-anriiria,, ho would 'be unaibiie to rec-\nognize Alpha and Beta Oeniti*ii! i, which\nhe eaisily saw and catalogued in the\ntime of Hadulum. At present the mag­\nnificent stars are just visible at the\nIVramkls, near Cairo, and in a few\nmot»* thousand years they can be seen\nby dw;Hors cn the Nile only in Upper\nF^ypt. — )by Atlantic.
02024190901ab3b08b5125b9744cc858 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8510928645517 39.290882 -76.610759 It is true, sir, you tell us that in tire enjoy-\nment of an enviable temperament, your visions\nof the luture are unclouded by fear or apprehen-\nsion. All men cannot be so sanguine. Perhaps,\nsir, in truth, you are not altogether so sanguine\nyourself. With a " sauguuie temperament,"\nspeaking under a -bright October sun," in the\ninidst of ' .e n thousand warm Southern hearts,\nwith every fibre of tlie sensoriunt tingling rap-\nturously under the inttncive of their applause,\nall met for the enjoyment of mutual gr. tola'.inns\non the near pSuspect of a splendid political tri\nuraph: so circumstanced, you can well be excus-\ned for not permitting the warning you hail given\nto cloud the happiness of your delighted audito-\nry. You might well he excused fir expressing\nconfidence not and avowing hopes not en-\ntertained. But, now that the gala days and their\noccasions hare passed, if the rule ml boon-eoin-\npaßionghip is to be extended, so at to exempt\nirom responsibility all language uttered during\nan intoxication from popular applause, it should\nentitle the nation as woll as the friend to a frank\navowal of the serious sober thought. This is\nwhat it has a right now to demand of you. It\nhas a right to Mr. Webster's serious sober think-\ning, in his own private closet, upon that subject.\nIt is matter of exciting interest to the nation,\nwhen such a man, upon the high responsibility\nof such a character and reputation, warns us\nihat there i* any existing peril, which miy limit\nlhe duration of our institutions to le-s than fifty-\nyear*.
10ff2a06a2c7087ab1bba216d301316c THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1906.0890410641807 39.739154 -104.984703 It was iu the melee of blood and\n4word that I saw a sight that touched\nmeWtfply. I noticed two men In ouh\nranks; and later 1 found out tnat the\nyounger of these men came from a\nwell-to-do Samurai family; the older\nman was also from the same place.\nIn fact, the father of the older man\nhad spent all his life in the s *rvice of\nthe family from which the younger\nman came. On this terrific day. when\nthey were within a few meters of the\nRussians, when they fot.ght with\nrocks, swords and anything they\ncould get hold of, ! saw these men\ncling to each other closely. At the\nheight of the bloody exel ement the\nolder seemed to be mlnrfui of the\nyounger always. At one lme n few\nof the Russians actually succt'eded in\nrushing upon a part of our line One\nof the Russians the butt of his\nrifle, about to strike the vounger of\nthese two men. Then I saw the old-\ner Bwlng forward and literally hurl\ndown the Russian with the bayonet\nthrough his body. A little later the\nyoung man was shot in t ie leg and\nfell. I sawf the older man forget him-\nself completely, forsake bis gun. kneel\ndown beside the young friend of his.\nand not finding a piece of cloth, he\ntore the front of his shirt. He stuffed\na little piece of cloth into the bullet\nhole in the leg of his friend. Then,\nnft*r a little while because of the\nllrrrfiiMr of action alnjuf no I lovt\nsight of these nietf When I came\nupoL them a few minutes later they\nwere together, side by a.de As I\npassed I said to the older man, who\nwas naif standing, always <ov» ring his\nyoung master:
0416d68df88aab0bf0d0e27b3b11c002 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.9931506532216 40.063962 -80.720915 "If the situation Is reversed and\noccupy the Hawaiian group we are\nto defend all of our ports from\npoint with one-third of the naval j;\ner that Is even now necessary to ir\njur coast secure against attack. A\nthese great commerelal and marli\nitates have established themselves\nthe coast of China and have partft\ned out that frontier nothing can\nT.ore reaauiuinji. t»xpcuieu in.r.i\nthey, with common consent, will do\nnate u European country or Aal\ncountry t" take and hold poss'-Mido;\nthe Hawaiian Islands. Then It wll\nImpossible for u» to control a c\nrotnmunleatlni? with the Hawaiian\n[midst, from any port of our coast\n:o have any cable communication ac\nthe Pacific ocean. Now all of our c\niMjmrnunlcjitlons with mercantile\nnaval thlps In the Indian ocean o\ntin* western part of the Pacific o<\n:ire conducted by lines that are in\n:ontrol of these European powers.\nWe cannot now send u dispatch\nmy minister we have In Asia or to\n of war we may have upon\n:oast of Asia without the consent\njome European or Asiatic powerjwh\nus, if we had the Hawaiian Island\nour possession, none of those pov\ncotild send a dispatch to any fleet\nship they may have In tho Pacific oc\nait bout our consent. This fact a\nlemonstrdtc's the unavoidable, natl\nnecessity for the occupation ot the\nwallan Islands, and several of t\n[rave expressed themselves as belle'\nthat we had a right to do v)."\nMr. Morgan further said that the\nIcy of th" I'nlted States being Hoi t<\ntutfere with the arrangements! of E'\n[wan and Asiatic governments,\ncountry bad nothing to do in renar\nthv pending changes In China fur\nthan to pee that treaty rights were\nInterfered with. He said lie did not\nprebend that any such direct Inter\n*nce would he made by this gov\nnient. He said he thought this rovi\nment had nothing to do but to stunt\nind protect itself If occasion *hi\nll'lSe.
0f4ca35642145b16d723b7f83845e4b8 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.8647540667375 40.441694 -79.990086 From the monthly Treasury statement\nof receipts and expenditures, issued Novem-\nber 1, it appears that $52,049,000 has been\nspent for pensions during the first four\nmonths of the present fiscal year the four\nmonths lust past since Julyl an increase\nof $16,000 ,000 over the corresponding four\nmonths ot the last fiscal year, 1892. Allow-\ning that the rate of expenditure should re\nmain the same, the total excess ot pension\nexpenditures this venr over those of last\nwould be 548,000 ,000 . The appropriations\nout of which these expenditures must be\nmade, though, are only 512,000,000 greater\nthis year than the expenditures for last\nyear, so that the prospective pension defi-\nciency canuot'well.faU' below 530,000,000.\nAn Approprt3tIonSoonto Be Exhausted.\nThe averase'monthly payments for pen-\nsions on the basis of the first four months of\nthis fiscal year are 513,000,000, and conse-\n the present appropriation would be\nexhausted before the end of the third quar-\nter, or near the close of next March. An\nappropriation to meet this deficiency would\nof course still further swell, by its amount,\nthe deficit already foreshadowed of 552,000,- 0 0- 0,\nthat being the extent of the discrepancy\nbetween the estimated reveuues and the ap-\npropriations made.\nNo doubt the second session of the pres-\nent Corigress would provide an appropria-\ntion lor the pension deficiency, but it is not\nlikely that any steps will be taken at that\nsession to provide increased revenues to\nmeet it. Therefore Mr. Cleveland, when he\ntakes charge of the Government on the 4th\nof March, will be confronted with a de\npleted treasury, and in addition, with a\nbudget of outstanding fixed liabilities\namounting to at least 575.000,000 or 585,- -\nUUO.UUU.
91263dd76be5d48a81bb7453f66de3cf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.769125651437 39.745947 -75.546589 George W. Burris, road supervisa\nI of New Castle hundred, was scrlousl}\n.injured yesterday while repairing th|\nChristiana bridge. )(,. was «truck bj\na plank, suffering a broken colla\nbone, fiietured shoulder blade nq\nurn, and severe lacerations on varloil\nparts of his body. He was treated bl\nDr. Brlre S Vallet and taken to Del\nawtire Hospital to have an X-ray phO\nlograph taken of his Inluries.\nJames McPIkc, local contractor, ra\npaired the wails surrounding the lia\nmanuel cemetery, yesterday.\nTtie Dorcas Society of the New Gag\nHe Methodist Church at a n.eelinS\nheld Tuesday evening appointed in\nfollowing rommiUce* to lake earc a\nthe social functions of the approaots\ning Centennial celchrallon of Methort\nI sin in this city, which Is lo lie hnfl\n- om otin.o next month. Reception\neommlttee - Mrs, Meredith\nMrs. John F, Z. Clayton, Mrs. Georgi\nSwan and Mrs. Albert Clavton. Con»\nir.lttee on lunrheons lo be served h\nthe church dining rooms—Mr*. Ed\nward H. Naylor, Mrs. James Bacon\nMrs. John B Montgomery imd Mrs\nLoomis o. Wise.\nThe Society also announced lag\nevening that they would hold a earn\nIval on Or lober îî and 23.\nMembers of the Senior and Junta\nclasses of the High School, win givs\na bake in the Challenger and So*\ndrug «lore on Second street tomorrow\nmorning. The pastries that will hi\noffered for sole will be made by thi\nHome Economics class. They are do\nIng the work today In the cooklni\nroom of the school.\nAhe AMSGo Athletic Assoclalloi\nwill hold a Hallowe'en ball In Hu\nopera house on Friday evening, oo\nloher *9.
016f8e6dff8d41371de7593cdb19bbc8 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.8479451737696 40.832421 -115.763123 Tueee ia ft innn in this country, Mr.\nKit Carson Frnncljer, who ia ono of the\nseventeen children thnt survived tho\nMountain Meadow Mussacro, Mr,\nFranolier says ho was five yours old\nwhen tho mnnsaero of tho emi¬\ngrants took place, and vividly reccollecta\ntho terriblo ordeal, uiul nays ho eaw an\nIndian or Mormon kill his mother and\nsaw the Indian tlmt shot his father, Ho\nwas uccroted iu a wagon. and on Indian\nnmdo n grnb for him, nnd ho bogged bo\nhard for his life the,', tho Indian releas¬\ned him nnd went after some ouo else.\nMr, Frenchor was taken to Harmony,\nund lived their about six months with\nJohn I). Lee, tho moving spirit of tho\ntiendish crime, and says, a few days\nlifter ho was taken to Lee's lie discover¬\ned a yoko of his father's cattle in Lee's\nhit, and told Lee that belonged to\nhis father, when Leo replied that he\nbought them from tho Indians, Mr.\nFauehcr.s father, mother nnd sovural\nbrothers nnd sisters were massacred,\nnml his ago was all that saved him.\nHe says that he saw his father's skull\niu the possession uf a Mormon doctor\nof Salt Luke City, who knew his father,\nnnd told him it wah his father's skull.\nMr. Fancher and all of tho survivors of\nthe massacre, who numbered seventeen,\nwere purchased l»y the governor of\nArkansas, from tho Mormons, ami\nbrought back to Carroll county, Ark,,\nfrom whence the ill-fated emigrant train\nMulled. We arc glad to statu thai the\n(lends Johll D. Lee, lligbec, llaighl,\nAdair and others are under indictment\nfor this crime, nnd will without doubt\nall be hung, as tho evidence implicat¬\ning them as principals in tho mussucro\nis positive,.¦Cumbirtiinil Itimocriil,\nCoNatii,u>ATisi> Viikiini.v Mink.
2bfc99ee4c960674a7af6dbc34f17c25 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.3986301052764 40.063962 -80.720915 ItulilFculiou Jubilee Yesterduy.\nYesterday was a gula day for our\neolored citizens, and one ot which they\nmay feci justly proud. It was the day\nset tor the ratification of the right of suf-\nfrage bestowed upon them, and was at-\ntended witli all the ceremonies usual in\nservices of like sort. But a day ot such\ngreat importance to so many of our citi-\nzens demands more than a passing note,\nami we propose giving a brief ac-\ncount of the 4ay's proceedings. A - proces-\nsion wus advertised to form in front of\nthe Second Ward Market House at twelve\no'clock, but it was two o'clock and ten\nminutes before the procession was form-\ned and the command to start given. They\nmoved up Market Street, as advertised,\nanil Ui-'IIUVU IUIIUWCU 11112 IUUIC (lit."\nvioualy laid dowu, without a single devia-\ntion Tlx: marshals and assistants took\nthe lead, followed by the Washington\nBrass Maud; which played beautiful mu-\nsic, by thu by, und stuck to it with\na tenacity worthy the cause. After\nthe huud came mounted citizens, theu\nabout forty carriages, containing thu of-\nticersaud speakers of the day and citizens\ngenerally. The whole line was about\nseven minutes in passing any given point,\nami must have been nearly hall' mile long.\n>ne of the notable features ol the proccs-\nsiou was the car, containing the young\ngirls representing the Slates that ratitled\nthe amendment. who were Ueautilully ami\nappropriately dressed. Among thu dif-\nferent mottoes displayed in thu proces-\nsion, we noticed the fallowing "Freemen":\n"
1e4d280e982d91986d100506a40339ab DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.1871584383223 44.939157 -123.033121 What thoughtful man who lovoa\nthis country can viow its condition at\npresent without alarm for its future?\nTho individual freedom of which, we\nformerly boasted is lost, and If wo\ndaro express an opinion b to the\nmerits of any subject that inyolves\ntho public snfoty and trenches upon\ntho Bolf assumed authority of aome\ncombination which is outsldo tho\npalo of legal existence, it must bo\nwith bated breath and In tones so In-\ndistinct that tho "walls" may not\nihear, for fear that dynnmlto mny ba\nsuggested ns a punishment for our\ntemerity. Look at tho criminal rec\nord for tho past year and pondor\nwhothor tho suggestion of tho b'g\nstick hns hnd effect on those victims\nwho hnvo been waylaid on tho stroot.\nWhere now can tho Individual\nlook for personal security oxcopt by\nphysical strength and courago which\nIs of little dofonso ngalnst tho attack\nof n sneaking foe and often Invltoa\n assaults of tho cowardly. If this\nIs not n stato of anarchy, It tronchos\nclosely upon thnt condition nnd wcro\nIt not for tho rural population upon\nwhich tho strength of nil govern-\nments roats, tho right to life, liberty\nand tho pursuit of hnpplnoss would\nnot bo recognized by tho mobs who\nwould ravage tho country.\nOur bonst of being "Tho Innd' of\ntho Tree nnd the homo of tho bravo"\ncould bo parodlzed to read "Tho land\nof tho flcn and tho homo of tho slave"\nIn order to moro correctly describe\ntho situation at prosent. Tho com-\nbinations, political and Industrial, na\nwoll ns tho exposure of tho rascally\noperations of financial Institutions\nduring tho panic from which wo aro\nemerging, rendors tho mass of people\ndoubtful If thoro Is honesty\nnnywhero, nnd makes the Individual\nsuspicious niul raises tho questlons'ln\ntho minds of men who with a bettor\nsentiment wnrrnntod by social cond' - tlon- s
09727a20538a4fcffd4bb11367a58e94 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.941256798978 40.832421 -115.763123 Kate Claxton, nt the preliminary iu-\nquiry of tho Fire Mnrshal, said: "At\nthe beginning of tbo Inst net, just as\nthe curtuiu went up, I heard n rumbling\nnoiso on the stage and two minutes\nafter I saw tho flnmes which seemed to\nbo all on the stage. Mrs. Warren, my¬\nself, Mr. Studly, and Mr. Murdoch,\nwere on tho stage ot this time, nud wo\nfour remained there und endeavored ns\nbest wo could, to quiet the audience nud\nprcveut a pnnic. I said to tho people,\n'be quiet, wo aro betweeu you aud the\nfire; tho front door ii opou, nud tho\npassages aro clcnr.' Tho llames were\ntheu coming down on usj I ran out,\njumping over several pcoplo. Mr. II.\nS. Murdoch, nfter endeavoring to calm\ntho fears of tbo panic-stricken pcoplo,\nwent to his dressing room to get his\nclothiug, and must have been suffocated.\nThe other nctors and nctrcBses es¬\n from tho stage iuto John street.\nJ. NY. Thorn, stage manager, states that\na drop was ignited from a border light,\nby some means inexplicable, as one was\nguarded from tho other; he immediate¬\nly directfd the stago carpenter and su-\npcrnumaries to extinguish tho flames,\nbut tbo difficulty was to rcach tho part\non fire. They assayed to effect this ob¬\nject by lowering tho drop, and in so do¬\ning added fuel to tbo tlames. The lust\nsctno in tho play embraced a ceiled\napartment, and the instant tho burning\ndrop came in contact with" tin inllam-\nablo ceiling it served to spro.id tbo ex¬\nisting flames, nud in a flash tho eutiro\nproperties were in n blnze. Tho usual\navenues of escapo were thus summarily\nclosed at tho rear, nnd an exit, it nt all\npossible, had to bo mado by way of tlio\nbox entrance. All oxcopt perhaps one\nor two thus escaped.
fe9fa8b6f8cbd2ea7e24ad8c26ddebc8 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.2808218860985 31.960991 -90.983994 Isaac Armitage 13 00, a Armstrong est cu°k j*6 ÖÖ, Fno crider 41 37, o Acallen-\n7,25, wm Allison 23 G3, John Barnes 389: der» jr* 36 61, r b Gorman 169 53, wm\n09, Dennis Barnes 9 69, John Rail 6 63, Ferguson 21 80, Henry oreen 173 39, Jas\no wBrazenle 12 00, James nicks 20 00, ® «off249 69,J b sorys 9 00, wm ccr-\nl* r carraway 27, 25, Catharine carraway r*n" 49 50, w it Darks 134 98, b f Griffin\n69 69, Joseph coopèr 40 50, Benja ccoôk 17 13, e conklin 69 29, J w Griffin 409 32,\n474 15, f r cheatham 62 75, airs shafers same 101 85, Josephoocdin 8 80, wmoor-\n5 00, Mary f Defance 75 67, ceo Flinn42 ,nan99 06, Jno Daniel 14 38, saml nughs\n00, Ann b oreen 45 98, james calinet 35 7 93> 8aml » Kennedy 31 13, wiley Kea\n34,twBaugh 4200, b fHolt24413,13*54,wmKelly5651,JJenkins9824,\nThomas Johnson 254 78, caldwell jen- noopes &, Purnell 54 25, J J Hadden. 100\nnings 61 88, curtis jeffers 32 25,wmLin- "> J neudabert J55 20, Jno Jones 42 41,\nginous 169 36, ceo w Laster 88, r d wm Jones 40 24> wm Kelly 220 00, Levi\nMCAneOv 31 25, Edward Lee 185 97, sorrel 32 14, same 43 20, r d M^nally\npleasant MCAnellv 31 63, cnHin Moore 38 45 95> win Noland 4 00, wm Longinor 56\n78, jnoMurpha 20 50, Alex MCLeod 12 00, 41, pleasant M^anlly 34 96, J J MLeborv\nMrs a Mcamland 39 95, w w Neely 8 75, 196 75> Jno smith 27 87, m Rundell 40\nDar.l b Patterson 6 50, saml payne 15 00, 38, e s Thompson 697 00, Benja waîkm»\nMuir, Moore & co. 51 25, chas price 16 22l H» J watkins 743 34, Jno k Deen L*2\n28, wm h pape 5 50, Lorenzo Rundell 35 "> 'I00 Murphae200 50, J c Bartlett 6C2\n88, james f Patton 47 26,v c Rav 40 23. 87 J b Thrasher 73 59, Abraham a Jones\nf Rutherford 19 65, jno stalling 350 87, 350 00, h e Harrington 65 04, J e p bu-\njas simmons 229 07. j b shulds 5 00, j con 420 °°> « w Campbell 1354 79, Ado!-\nsharmon 9 88, jno Thatcher 13 50, docI PhoA
1721f92640b0c5fc28ccc58b8e8d2470 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.6616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 Captain Mathison responded to thi\ntoast "Tho Kniuhts of St. Goorga" ia\nneat and effective mannor.\nTho final response was by Arch\nbishop Katu, and was ono of tho mos\ntouching and fooliug of talk*. IIo fol\ndeeply grutoful for tbo honors that hue\nboon showorod upon him this evening\nand had triod to liston with becoming\nhumility to words of praise and oulogy\nbut ho wat but human and u man. am\nit had boou with un ofTort t hat ho liai\nrepressed somo sontimonts of prido\n"I must confess that I hard\nly know myself, and have boon think\ning that my frionds must bo lookini\nthrough magnifying glasses, though o\ncourso I give thom credit for sincerity\nuud I hope to God that thoir prophicio\nof mv future may bo truo. I have takoi\na prldo in my work us priost and bisho|\nin tho mountains of tho little state o\nWest Virginin, and liuvo had no ambi\n hoyond tho deep revorouco alway\nexperienced attbohuuds of my pooplo.\n"I will say t» my frionds from thi\nbunks of tho Mio'sissippi, that whilo\nbnnur tmflilnnr nf thn nnnlitinfl of thi\nwatora of that atroam, I (lo Unov\nsomething of tho watora of tbo miph t;\nNilo, for aa you know I am an Ejjyptaii\narchbiaUop, and I will say alao tba\nthoro ia nothing moro inspiring thai\nttio Ohio rivor water which wo liav\nboon drinking this ovoning."\n"I thank tho Knights of Saint Goorgi\nfor tho honor thoy bavo done mo;\nthank oil who took part ii\ntho magnificont demonstration; ant\nI thank tho mombors of tho proa\nof Whooiing for tho fairaos\nwith which thoy have roportoi\noar proceedings, and I oxpoct if tho;\nshould visit mo I would bo moro accos\naiblo than I am roportod to bavo boot\non a recent visit there, by tho St. Lou'\npapors. Good byo; good night; Goi\nulofls you."
4a12a416c9865ed21d18a9f0b908b678 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.8013698313039 31.960991 -90.983994 The London Spectator thus speaks of\nthe tricks performed by a celebrated jug­\ngler now in that metropolis:\nAmong other incomprehensible doings,\nhe boils four plucked pigeons in a kettle\nfull of water, suspended over a fire, and\nperfectly isolated, and out fly four living\nbirds from the empty vessel; he returned\nto their owners a score of pocket handker­\nchiefs, washed and ironed, that a minute\nbefore lay soakiug wet in a pail; anu he\nproduces no end of bouqets out of an old\nhat that he stamps upon and turns inside\ncut, each pressure of the feet or squeeze\nof the hands being followed by a fresh\nsupply of ^bunches of real sweet smelling\nflowers from, the old battered hot.\nA young lady near us lent us her straw\nbonnet, and was horrified at seeing it crush­\ned up into a ball; to her great relief,\nit appeared hanging at tho top of her pros­\ncenium, and being brought down by a pis­\ntol shot she found it quite undamaged. —\nA handful of gold watches is flung to the\nback of the stage, and presently they\nappear hanging from the branches of a\nplant that had just before been watered\nand placed under a heated cover for pro­\nducing ihat sort of golden fruit; bunches\nof Keys, that seem not to have been out of\nsight, are found attached to the roots of a\nplant in a flower pot and a head with great\ngoggle eyes, at the summons of a pistol-\nshot, thrusts out a bunch of rings at the\ntip of its tongue, and stares with two gold\nwatches for eyeballs, though one could\nhave sworn both rings and watches were\nunder certain covers.
1ce07ad535d3b74a0b4a0dba6e4855b8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.595890379249 39.745947 -75.546589 ORCHIDS THAT RIVAL THE UPAS.\nSerge Ballaguine, a Russian explorer\nof Brazil, state» tihiat a few degrees be­\nlow t'he equator toe discovered a forest\ncf flowers ttoait prevented tolm from ap-\nproactoiimg them. Witto every deference\nto M. Balagriime, that forest seems to\nhave been 'discov ered before, says Col­\nlier» Weekly. Two yeaTs ago there ap­\npeared In a San Francisco paper an ac­\ncount provided by a bulb hunter re­\nturning from the same region, who de­\nclared ttolat after noticing in a forest\nan odor, vague and e'we.et at first, tut\nwhich increased as he advanced, ulti­\nmately he reached a clearing, and there,\n6i:Tiaight ahead, was a wilderness of or­\nchids. Trees were loaded tirith them,\nundierlbueh. was covered with them,\nthey trailed on the ground, mounted to\nbeckoning contortion», dangled from\nbranches, fell in sheets and elongated\n expanded as far as the eye could\nreach. A breeze passed 'and they sway­\ned with it, moving with a life of their\nown, dancing in the glare of the equa­\ntorial eun, and as they danced exhaling\nan odor thait protected them mere\nsheer1y than a wall. In vain, did that\nhuniter endeavor to approach. Thera\nwas a veil of perfumed chloroform\nthrough which he could; see,\nthrough which, try as he might, he\ncould not pass. Tt held him back mcr.:i\neffectually than barmet», and it was\ntorture for him to see those floiwer3 and\ntio feel that before he could reach them\nhe must die, suffocated by the very\nsplendors of which he was in dcaroh,\npoisoned by floral jewel» such as no\none perhaps had seen 'before. At the\ntime the place was known a® the vil­\nlage of demon flowers.
097006a183c84c9a547c1943efd7695f CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.269125651437 41.875555 -87.624421 Chicago now lias exclusively, tho\nbiggest film company In America.\nWith tho opening of a now studio, tho\nthird on tho north side, tho Essanay\ncompany has chosen Its two outside\nestablishments, one In Nllen nnd tho\nother In Los Angeles, preferring to\nconccntrnto its efforts In Chicago. Ot\nthe four prominent concerns Identi-\nfied with tho film Industry, Sellg, Es-\nsanay, Klclno and American, Essanay\nIs tho only company with a perma\nnent producing plant In this city.\nSellg takes tho pictures at his studio\nIn Chicago Intermittently, while In\nEdentlale, Cal. , he produces plays con-\ntinuously; tho American has Its stu-\ndios In Santa Barbara, Cat., nnd con-\nducts Its business affairs In this city;\nnnd Klclne's producing activities nro\nIn tho Bronx, Now York City.\nTim Essanay studios are. equipped\nwith artificial lighting facilities which\nenable Its producers to stago plays\nIn all sorts of weather, while the day\nof sunshine aro devoted mostly \nexterior scenes. George K. Spoor,\npresident ot the company, has been\nii porslstcnt booster for Chicago on\naccount of Its central location.\n"I have always believed that Chi-\ncago Is the natural distributing center\nof the United States," he said, "and\nfor tho shipment of goods excels any\nother American city for centraliza-\ntion. I closed my western studios\nnnd Increased my Chicago holdings\nbecause I want the plays produced\nby our company to bo as close to the\ndistributing center as possible.\n"It Is not necessary to go to Cali-\nfornia for sunlight; artificial light\nmakes an Ideal substitute, and you\nneed not fret over rain and clouds.\nWhile in the past capital was repre-\nsented mostly in the east, thoro is a\ntrend toward this city In that direc-\ntion. I believe that both manufac-\nturer and distributor of motion pic-\ntures logically bolong in Chicago on\naccount of its central location and\nrailroad facilities."
00cce08ef40a9d91cc32ee6619b5152c THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.6890410641806 37.561813 -75.84108 had accepted the Union as their own.\nBut in the same breath he declared that\nbe was not willing to assert that the prin-\nciples for which they fought had been\nsettled or destroyed. Such talk may be\ndismissed as bravado. But it shows a\nspirit which sensible statesmen carefully\nobserve, and patriotic men do not hasten\nto put the government into the hands of\nmen who make such speeches, nor of\nthose for whom they speak.\nThese are considerations that must not\nbe overlooked, however urgent the finan-\ncial question may be. Obviously, the\nDemocratic policy is to insist that the\nonly question of the election next year\nis administrative reform ; but the South-\nern Democracy cares very little for re-\nform. In other parts of the country what\nsign of Democratic interest in reform\nhas besn shown except Governer Tilden's\nwar upon the Canal Ring in New York?\nIn Ohio, in New Hampshire, in Connec-\nticut, in Missouri, Maryland and Ken-\n where the Democratic party is\nin the ascendant, what evidence of a\ndesire or capacity of reform has it given?\nGovernor Tilden has pursued the Canal\nfrauds in New York. If that proves the\nDemocratic party of the country to be a\nreform party, how much more do Mr.\nBristow's and Mr. Jewell's dealings with\ncorruution and irreeularitv prove the\nnational Republican party to De one of\nreform ! Retorm is the Democratic cry ;\nbut Democratic action does not justify\nit In Ohio, where the party has just\ndeclared for rag money and virtual repu-\ndiation, and where the Cincinnati Com-\nmercial says that there is not a consider-\nable town that has not been for some\ntime in the possession of the Democracy,\nthe same paper adds that it has not\nbeen able, even from a commanding po-\nsition on the fence, to see any reform.\n"On the contrary, things that were bad\nunder Republican rule have grown even\nworse under Democratic rule."
206d7c811b6752afb4e80336840817df PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.0479451737697 39.756121 -99.323985 point of view, but under a sense of\nsworn duty. Insubscribed to the same\noath as did brother Hamilton, and\ncontend that a successor must bej\nelected and qualified. Attorneys and\nand courts differ honestly as to the\nlaw, and as to whether or not the con-\nstitution shall be followed as against\nthe legislative act. Mr. Hamiltou has\npreceded as the law directs, and I\nhave no personal feeling as agaiLSt\nhim for making the claim to the office,\ni appreciate the gentlmanly manner\nin which the proceedings have been\ncarried forward by the contestant.\n"Personally 1 believe had 1 stepped\naside for one moment even, I would\nhave forfeited every right the people\nhad through me to assert the claim to\nan elective judiciary in this district.\n1 have no to hold when I am\nnot entitled, and as soon as tte tu\npreme court passes on this matter,\nshould it finally be determined that\nthe law as passed by the last legisla\nture is good, then not for one moment\nshall I assert a right and claim to the\noffice, nor shall 1 collect one penny of\ncompensation for the time during\nwhich Mr. Hamilton should have\nheld if the law is adverse to me. It\nis not dollars and cents with me. It\ncomes in as an incideut to the posi\ntion. The right to the position comes\nfirst, then, as a consequence, the com-\npensation must follow."\nLater in the day an agreement was\nreached to submit the entire matter\nto the supreme court on an agreed\nstatement of facts.
1f4d12fa9e82ef4135cdbefe34605e88 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 doue to an Inteluoxkcku re]>orter yesterday\nafternoon: "1 think that the celebration\nwill bu a success. Home of the distinguished\nguests whom 1 have invited will certainly he\npresent, and all may, if sulllclently pressed.\nBut some parts of our inteuded ceremony\nwill have to he omitted on account of the\nlack of cooperation on the part of the busl*\nnew men of the city. Wo had in*\ntended having a parade pass through\ntho principal streets, illustrating\nthe various arts and manufactures lu vogue\nut tho time of Kurt Ilenry and the improve*\nmenta in them since. As, for instance, the\nnails then were made by haud; we\nwould have both this method and tho modern\nnail machine shown in the procession,\nand so on through the whole list of our man*\nufactures. Some months ago notice w»i sent\nto our business men that their help would\nhe needed to make the thing a success, and\nthey all promised it. When approached now\nthey all wish it well and want to see it go on,\nand are ull ready to hack us, and that's the\neud of it. To-morrow we are going to call a\nmeeting of tho ladies, to be held at the court\nhouse, nut to sec if we can shame the men\ninto acting, but to put the thing through us\nwe did in the Children's Home entertainment\nsix or seven years ago. Owing to the lack of\nhelp this procession will have to be given up,\nand we will content ourselvea.on this side ot\nthe river with merely marking the site of\nFort Henry, extending from Dr. Wlngertcr'a\nhouse some distance up, by a large piece of\nIcunvuH covered with tho
28e5f802953065ef09afdb9d8c0e8f1c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8041095573312 40.063962 -80.720915 £1JTY OF wiiKfthmu.\nLOAN OF 18814 !-2 PER CENT BONDS.\nHy virtue of the authority vrated In im by nn or«\ndltianco of thfi City of WhcfiliiiK. entitled "All\nOrdinance to provide for tli«- InNiif* uii«l aaleof Nitlda\nof tho city of VVliet'lliiK, to bo known in t»oi)d« of\n18*1, and for the r«Klciii|i(|oti ntid t»nvfiiorit thereof."\npn*od by the Council of tin- «/iid City of IVIieelitiK\non the'lid 'lay of Aiiunnt. 1X.V1, iiml ratified by th»\nqualified voter* of aalii city nt an election lieidoii\ntlio K'tli day of Heptcml>or, IMI, we will oil tliO l*t\nday of November, Ihhi, at tin* Kxchitngo (tank of\nWheeling. In the City of Wheeling. W«*t Vlrtrlnla,\nnoil the bond* laauud under wild Ordinance to tlio\nlilghent bidder for micIi. KacIi Mil mint ?k» In\nwriting and addrcwed the iinderdeni-d at tlio\nofficii of tlio dork "f tin- city of Wheeling. No bid\nfi»r ml<l iMmrtii will be received nt n rate lew tlmn\ntheir |mr value. Paid bond* arc coupon bond*to\nthe amount of SlMtr>00: fTfi.omi thereof are of tho\ndenomination of in*) each; #.:!»,Mm thereof of tlio\ndenomination of yvjoeaeh, and the rcHdue thereof\nof tli*denomination of 91,000, numbered from one\nto ft/) Inclusive. Hold bond* are dated November\nl»t. 1881, anil are payable on or More Novomlier l*t.\nI'M I, at «ald Itonk, and l»oar Intercut at tlio rate of\nfour and one-half tier cent for aiiniim. Tli» City\nnf Wheeling reserve* tlio rlRnt to redeem nt Ita par\nvalue any one or more of mild U»nda on or at an/\ntime alter the liit day of November, in the rear 1891,
148f6adca6ef09193d5ed9cc13c95ec4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7958903792492 40.063962 -80.720915 It is well known that one of the first\nacta of our legislature In tho restored\ngovernment of Virginia, was to pans a\nJaw reducing taxation. The burdens\ntliul the old State lelt us us a legacy,\nwere modified to correspond with our\nchanged condition, and aH far :»H possi¬\nble to relieve the people from all unnec¬\nessary ^expectation*. OurStatetaxation\nat ibis lime is light.lighter, perhaps,\nthan moat of the Suites North or South,\nour county taxation is necessarily\ngreater than the State taxation, because\nol the bounties that were paid during\nthe war to volunteers. In this county,\nin others, those who were unwilling\nor unable to go to the front, accepted\nthe alternative of paying those who\nwere ready to go. In no sense whs the\nagreement lo pay bounty a party or\npolitical movement. It was joined in\nby nil classes of citizens, by none\nmore heartily than those who call tliera-\niwlvca Conservatives^ Tho meeting\nat tho Court House to express\npublic sentiment on tho question\n¦whs addressed by speakers of both par-!\nlien, and the resolutions in favor of\nbounty received the cordial concur¬\nrence of sympathizers with the South\nnot less than the most earnest Union\nmen present at the meeting. It is loo\nlate in tho day, therefore, to attempt to\ndraw it lino on the subject of county\ntaxation. There is no capital to be\nmude tor the democracy out of any\nmich attempt. They cannot go back on\nthe record of their friends in regard to\nthe bounty. It was the shield thai\nstood between them ami an enlistment,\nand they aro in duty bound to speak\nwell of the bridge that carried them\nusfely over one of their great sources\nof anxiety.
129dd92652d7fdc82c5ec507f4b1e5c0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.83698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 That every one of the faithful of both\nsexes, after they come to tho years ol\ndiscretion, shall in private faithfully conless\nall their bias, at least once a year, to\ntheir own pastor, and take care to fulfill,\nto the best ol their power, the penance\nenjoined upon them; receiving reverently,\na; least at Easter, the bacrament ot the\nEucharist, unless, perhaps, by the counsel\not their pastor, for some reasonable cause,\nthey judge proper to abstain lrom it lor a\ntime; otherwise let them be excluded\nfrom tho Church while living, and when\nthey die bo deprived of Christian burial.\nThis case, when it is tried, will no\ndoubt bring out an interesting discuesion\nover the point involved, via, the rights of\nprivate ownership in property the title to\nwhich is vested in a of the\nchurch. The cemeteries of the Catholic\nchurch, like all their other property, arc\nvetted in the Bishop of the diocese in\nwhich they are located. For instance,\nthe late Bishop Whrlah in his lite-lime\nwss the owner of all the chnrch property\nin tuis diocese, and before his death he\nmade a will vesting it all in his sacccsaor\nla .office. Whether such title would\ngive him or any other Bishop ol the\nchurch the right to dictate the terms on\nwhich property deeded by them to other\nparties.as, lor instance, a cemetery lot,\nshall be used, is the question now pending\nat Toledo. If such lot had even been sold\nsubject to tho regulations of the chnrch, it\nis still a question whether the higher law ol\n"public policy" would not come in to
1588629a98dc4a48117977860aaf5408 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1871.3767122970573 37.561813 -75.84108 advantage held to be possessed by the\nSymmes Creek and Hillsboro route over\nits rivals the Ohio River route and\nwhat is called the West Union route.\nNeither of these routes can give the\nChesapeake A Ohio Road anything like\nas short a line to Chicago so the people\nhere assert, and refer to the map. An-\nother great advantage of the Hillsboro\nroute is said to be that grading is more\nthan half done for about fifty miles, ex-\ntending east from Hillsboro to a point\nfourteen miles east of Piketon, this part\nof the line being a part of the old Hills\nboro A Parkersburg Road, commenced\nabout eighteen years ago, aud sus-\npended after about half a million of dol-\nlars had been spent iu grading.\nIn consideration of the above oth\ner advantages put forward, the friends\nof this route are very sanguine of its\nadoption by the Chesapeake A Ohio Rail-\nroad; and tbe people of Jackson, and\nthose of all the adjacent mineral region,\nI am assured, are very anxious for its\nsnccess. The proprietors of the iron\nfurnaces and coal mines are especially\ninterested in the enterprise, and will\nsubscribe liberally, I am told. Mr.\nHuntington, the President of the phesa- -\npeake & Ohio Railroad, was recently in\nthis Stat4 looking after tho Ohio con-\nnection of his road, and it is believed\nhe regards the Symmes Creek line with\ngreat favor, though he "has not yet indi\ncated what route he will prefer, and\nprobably he will not until he has fully\nexamined the merits of tbe several com
da0ada6a27e80b06311e473be1c89427 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.987671201167 43.798358 -73.087921 ncer of the .me grade shall be dischars\ned or theoffice become vacant.. And in\ncase any question shall arise, or any fur-\nther action be necessary to carry into\ncomplete operation the provisions of this\nact, so tor aa relates to the new organiza\ntion of the militia as contemplated by the\nsecond chapter of this act, it shall be the\nduty of the governor, upon application of\nthe said board of officers, to settle said\nquestion for the time being, and issue such\norders in relation to the subiect. as he\nmay think expedient, and report the same\nto the next session of the legislature.\nProvided That . nothingr in this act\nshall" be so construed as to authorize the\nboard of officers to disband any company\nof artillery, light infantry or riflemen\nwhen said company snail consist, at the\ntime of passage of this act, of the num\nber now required by law, and the mem\nbers of said company shall be fully uni-\nformed, armed and equipped ; but said\ncompany shall not be allowed to enlist\nany more men into said company out of\nthe battalion. or independent companies\nprovided ior by this act.\nAnd piovided oso. i hat any company\nof artillery, riflemen, or light infantry,\nwho are at present in full uniform, may\nretain said uniforms until the same are\nworn out: and until that time shall not\nbe compelled to adopt the uniform pre-\nscribed by the board of officers. The\nsaid company may however, at anv reg\nular training, or muster, adopt the uni\nform prescribed pursuant to the provisions\nof this act, by a vote of the majority of\nsaid company attendinsr at said tiainin?\nor muster. .
15825d8ae1ae5ac7134bfccb4815001c THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.6024589847702 40.832421 -115.763123 strong government," interference\nwith home role nnd with the almiuis-\ntration of justice ia the com in of tbe\nBnveral States, interference with elec-\ntioua through the medium of paid parti-\nkhu Federal ofllco-holders, interested in\nkecpiug their party in power nud\ncuring more tor that thau fairness\niu elections. Iu fact the constautVn-\ncroacliun nU which have been made by\nthat party upon the clearly reserved\nright* of the people and tbe States wilt,\nif not checked, subvert tbe libelties of\nthe people aud the government of limi¬\nted powers created by the fathers nud\nend in a great consolidated central gov.\neminent, "sttong" iud»ed for eril aud\ntho overthrow of Republican institu¬\ntions. Th« wise men who framed our\nConstitution knew the evil of "strong\ngovernment" and a long continuance of.\npolitical power in tbe bauds.\nThey knew there was a tendency in this\ndirection in all governments aud conse¬\nquent danger to Repcblicsu institutions\nfrom that cause aud took paius to guard\nagainst it. The machinery of a strong\ncentralized general government can bo\nused to perpetuate the same set of meu\nin power from term to term until it\nceases to be a Republic, or in such only\nin name, and tbe tendency of the party\nnow in power in that directiou, as\nshown in various ways b -si les tbe wil¬\nlingness recently manifested by a large\nunuiber of that parly t^elect a Presi¬\ndent for an unlimited cumber of terms,\nis quite uppareut, and uiust satisfy\nthinking people that tbe time has come\nwhen it will be snfe>t and best for that\nparty to be retired, llut in resisting tbe
2b08d52afc2aeb9712fb69aea12cdc45 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.223287639523 29.949932 -90.070116 forty.evren dollars nd thirty-five cents with 5 per\ncent. interest thereon from the 23d of October,\n1666. He predicates this indebtedness upon am\nalleged contract entered into on the 10th of Feb-\nreary, 1864, by which the defeudants sold to him\n869 balsu of cotton, every bale to weigh 400\npounds, forwhich asewas to pay 25 ceat per lb.\nHe avers that he did pay in cash at the time\n20 cents per lb.. making the sum of $69,620; that\ndelendants delivered the amoun t of $32,672 65\nwe rthof cotton (expenses deducted). That 498\nakles have not been delivered, and from the fall-\nure of the defendants to deliver them, plalatil has\nbeen damaged 25 cents per lb. on the cotton\nwhich hey have me folled to deliver, this being\nthe difference between the price stipulated to be\ngiven and that which it have brought on\nthe 13d of October. 18665 .\nThe defendant Irvine was alone cited. He an-\nswered by specially denying that a partnershbip\nexisted between himself and Bryan, as alleged by\nplaintif, and by charging that at the time of enter-\niagintothin alleged oontract (10th February,1864 ,)\nthe contracting parties resided in opposite sides of\nthe lines between the territory at the time 0ocu-\npied by the Federal and issurrectionary forces du-\nring the late war; that the trade carried on by\nthem was forbidden by law and consequently that\nno engagements that may have been entered into\nat thetime and under the circumstances relating\nto the transactioen now, by this suit brought into\nview, can have any legal or binding effect.\nThere was judgment in the court below dismls-\nsing the action of the plaintiff and he prosecutes\nthis appeal.
57b866c91fd70ab99aab6f38ac61d84b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.0671232559614 40.063962 -80.720915 Dr. Picrco's Favcrito Prescription,\nThe term, however, it but a feeble expression of»\nmost matured appreciation of it* value, based\nactual and witnessed realities. As a close oburvT\n1 have while witnessing its positive results iauwfi\nspecial diseases incident to the separate ornajiesf\nwoman, singled it out as t.ie climax ^rertwntnfry\nof my medical carter. On its merits as a dc«,,v7\nsafe, and effectual rcnicu/for this class of aimiM\nand one that will at all times and under all cJT?'\nstances act kindly and in harmony withthc Uw»wh£i\ngovern the female system, 1 am willing to\nicputation at a physician. Nay, even mort; to corf\ndent am I that it will not disappoint the taostsaaiS,\nexpectations of a single invalid lady who eapSnu\nfor any o( the ailments for which I recoaat*i»\nthat I oiler and sell it under A POSITIVE GUAm*\nANTEE. If a beneficial cffect is not experienced S\nthe time two-thirds of the contents of t&o bonk %L\nused. 1 will, on the return cf.tjie bottle, two-thWuf\nthe medicine having been taken according to dim.\ntions, and the case beiug one lor which 1 recoantad\nit, promptly refund the money paid for it. Had lag\nthe most perfect in its virtues, I could cm\noflet it as 1 do under tlic<c conditions: but haviH«fe.\nnested us truly miraculous cures in thousands ofaitt\nI feel warranted ami perfectly tcfe in nxl\nmy refutation and my mjitev en tftnteriU.\n"Tho following are among those dUeases in »!&W '\nFavjrite l'reunptu i lui worked cures.ai if t,\nnu;ic mid with a certainty never before attained by\n. yiym?Jicinc: Leucorrhuea, Excessive Fte«i«j,Pia. fl\ntul Monthly Periods, Suppressions when front taut.\n>.rat cuis.m , Irregularities Weak Sack, Prohpsotj,\nfilling of the Uterus, Antcversion and Retrcvtma,\nUsarin^ Down Sensations, Internal Heat, Ntmai\nDepression; Debility, Despondency, Threatened Ma\ncarriage, Chronic^ Consc-uion, Inflammation and 1*1.\nceration of the Uterus, and very many other dwsi:\ndisease* peculiar to woman not mentioned b«t,h\nwhich, at well as in the cases which I have meaiioatt\nmy Favorite Prescription works curcs.the numl cf\nthe world. Thi» medicine I do not extol at a curtail,\nI... , i» n>lmir9l>lv fulfills a smelenets of nuraAtj>\na moU perfect spcdfic in all chrome ditwues of :ht\nsexual system of woman. It will not disappoint, nor\nwill it do harm in any state or condition. It u a\nmost I'owr.mx Restorative Tonic to the
1f3fc6d96af27ec15435405811b3b6a8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.6051912252074 39.745947 -75.546589 The funeral train bearing the remains\nGeneral Bberidan passed through\nthis city at 11.55\nen route for Washington,\nwas composed of five oars, two Old\nColony railroad cars, two Pullman eieepsrt\nNo. 870 and 63 and the parlor oarldlewood,\ndrawn by engine No. 93, which was very\nheavily draped in black and was in\ncharge of Engineer B. Waterman. Tha\ntrain was in command of Conductor\nCharles Thompson of this city wbo was\nassigned specially fur this occasion and\nwas brought op from Washington this\nmorning on a special train in order to be\nin readiuess. Mr, Thompson fought under\nGeneral Sheridan, and tor this reason and\nby request he was selected to take charge\nof tbe train over this division.\nOne of the ears was a combination oar\nand In a black draped room of this re­\nposed tbe coffin. On tbe train was the fun­\neral party, o imprising Mrs, Philip H.\nSheridan, Col. Michael V. Sheridan and\nwife, Mias Mary Sheridan, Louisa and\nIrene Sheridan, twin children of the Gen­\neral, Colonel Blunt, Dr. Matthews, Chap­\nlain D. C . Kellog, Kline, tha General's\nbody servant, Richard, the waiter, and A.\nRohrback, the Generale clerk, and severe!\nrepresentatives of the New York press.\nThe train pulled out of tbe Jersey City\ndepot at a28 a. m., arriving in Philadel­\nphia about 11.10.\nUpon the arrival of the train at Wash­\n tbe remains will be met by a mili­\ntary escort and oonduoted to the generals\nlate borne. From there they will be borne\nto the St. Matthews Church, where tha\nservices will bs held on Saturday morning.\nThe church baa been handsomely draped.\nThe New York Herald describes theta\ndecorations as follows: American flags\nfestooned along the gallery front. Tha\nchoir gallery is tastefully hung with Hags\nand streamers of bunting Back o' tbe\nhigh altar and above tbe tabernacle\nsilk fisgs partially furled, the brilliant\ncolors of their folds showing In striking\ncontrast with the chaste white marble of\ntbe altar and its surroundings. Over the\ntabernacle droops tbe headquarters flag of\nthe dead general, who bad unfurled it\nmany times In his Western campaigns. It\nwas Mrs. Sheridans request that in tha\ndecorations of the church It might ba\ngiven a prominent plec», and so it U tha\nonly flig that waves ovsr the altar, its\nouter sesm almost touching the cross on\nthe canopy above tbs tabernacle.\nThe fear that tbe weather will bs very\nhot on Saturday has compelled the pastor\nto limit tbe musical part of the ceremony\nto tbe singing of a simple requiem mast.\nBefore tbs service tbs choir of clergy, of\nwhom there will probably bs 30 or 30 In\nattendance, will chant the "Miserere” and\nat tbs oloes of tbe service tbe "Benedic­\nta*” end "Libera Me."
1260dfcae117ca3edd6af4371b1df9cd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.691780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 ^\\\\hui3oton, \\), C., September 0.. [j\nVssassln (tulteau pa*4c<| his 40th bfrthdav\nn jail yesterday. He called the attention r\n>f the Warden and guards to the fart, and J\nuggesteel that persons sometimes received g|\niresenis on suoh qccaajqn8. No afllrmntive v\nesjKinse was giver). It was, Ijo^eVer, sj|g- ii\ntotal by some one. that the l}6st present ,\nrould boaipider it) lib dumpling. Otii- jj\neiiu is in remarkably good health and is v\nlightly heavier than when he was commit- p\nen on" .Inly 2d, and in hotter spirits tluin ti\nfew diu'g fwf, Me has hy 80)110 means\nearned tnat the President-has been taken\n0 I/mg Branch. When he heaw or sees\ninything that Indicates that the president >\ns fretting better lie states that he in praying jj\nor hi* recovery, but when the reverie is\niei»pj lie intimates thaf Jlje {respiration he\nmd to kill the President was right, and if h\nhe President dies it will be because it was T\n©decreed by Providence. *\nRecently hehasspentmuch (Imoln study- «\ntttf his case,- and evidently, from tils flues' *\n lis \\yllt irv the insanity plea, for 116 is li\ntaking w'h2? bo the efiect of a verdict il\nn his ease should he he declared not guilty a\ni.v reason of insanity; whether, on such o t<\nrerdict, ho would be sent to the insane ti\nisylum for an indefinite period of Oflljr t)H* p\nif the offlcen should pronounce hitij sanu, a\nir whether tlje verdict ron|d not ho os li\n1hoye, with the addition of ihe wofds, "at a\nhe time of ttie commission of the crime," a\nmd in the event of such a verdict, whether d\nle would lint he entitled to his freedom.\nKvery day the lower part of the corridor\nm which Ins cell fronts is given him to ex- .\n»rri«e in. ami yesterday morning for half 11\n111 Ijour lie gave the gqsr<ji wjdenco that ''\nlie was in good condition for walking, J\nivearing a woolen shirt and black pants, t|\nIhe latter rolled alnue his knees, display4\nintf hnrs with mnscles so large as to look |\nouiewhat unnatural, lie rapidly walked\nii|> ami [loan III'1 lloor, Altlmiijili rnther
1a2623144166a550957fe7d2102826e1 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.2205479134957 40.419757 -77.187146 struck, and quite lost her presence of\nmind. Without telling her anything of\nwhat had happened, Mr. Burrows asked\nfor her son, the steward. At first she\nhesitated, then said he was 111 In bed.\n"No," said Mr. Burrows, "be is not\nin bed, but he is safe enough by this\ntime In the Police office; so you had\nbetter Just tell us all about It."\nAt this Mrs. Weevil entirely broke\ndown and confessed all. It is unneces-\nsary to repeat at length what the reader\ncan guess In great measure for himself;\nbut the sum of her story was this :\nThe mother, equally with her son,\nbated Miss Roupel for despising his\naddresses, and took the means we have\nBeen In order to drive each successive\ntenant out of her bouse. Blie also ad-\nmitted that after tbe sudden death of\nMrs. Roupel It was they who bad spread\nthe stories charging foul play against\nthe daughter. In answer to a question\nfrom Mr. Burrows, she confessed that It\nwas she who had played the ghost on\nthe previous evening; but she had\nnever before shown herself to any one\nwho did not at once flee and quit tbe\nbouse. My attempt to get bold of her,\ntherefore, had bo alarmed her that she\nhad great difficulty in escaping and\nnext morning had gone to her son, and\ntold him she durst not play the part of\nghost any longer, as the present tenant\nwas likely to stand her ground, and they\nwould In that way be found out. They\nwere both enraged at thus being at last\nba filed in their long cherished course of\nmalicious practices against Mrs. Roupel ;\nand her son determined to take out bis\nrevenge upon me that night by first\nfrightening me and then robbing the\nbouse, after which they were resolved to\ntake the first opportunity of quitting\nthat part of the country. Their cupidity\nhad been aroused by the sight of some\ntrinkets in Indian jewelry which I\npossessed hence the design to rob me.\nIn order to cover their purpose, the\nold hug was sent to me with the story of\nher sou being ill ; and as he had a secret\nmeans of access to the house, he readily\naffected an entrance after he supposed\nthe family asleep. It was her son who\nbad first put her upon these evil prac\nticeshad brought the old surplice from\nLord B 's house, In Which either of\nthem as occasion offered, was in the\nhabit of terrifying the inmates, and thus\ndepriving the object of their hatred of\nher chief means of livelihood.
0b028aabaa7ff4bf5699f3278c49f201 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1890.8315068176053 43.994599 -72.127742 The school law question still continues to\nDe agitated at Montpeiier ana judging irom\nthe vehemence with whicli its opposers de-- "\nnounce it one would be led to suppose that\nthe State had been preserved from absolute\ndestruction since its passage only by a di\nrect interposition or providence, dui as ne\nvalue of a gun is not determined by its ca- -\nDacitv for making a noise, it is to be pre\nsumed that the violence ot the opposition is\nno criterion by which to judge ot tne law,\nIt was generally acknowledged, previous\nto the enactment of our present law, that\nour common schools were not an honor to\nthe State and that something needed to be\ndone for their improvement atonce. Itwus\nleft to the judgment of men best acquainted\nWilli educational matters to determine and\nreport as to what that something should be,\nThis was according to the principles of\nsound policy, for no one can judge of the\nneeds of a profession or trade so well as\nthose practically acquainted with its work-\nings. After the acceptance of this report\nand the adoption of its main features as a\nlaw, it was almost immediately discovered\nthat it had fallen into the hands of those\nwho intended make it amount to some-\nthing if possible, and a hue and cry arose at\nonce. The opposition to the law is not the\nresult of thoughtful and careful investiga-\ntion of its workings, but the open manifes-\ntations of prejudice born with it. It must\nbe conceded that the prime object of any\neducational legislation is to improve the\ncondition of our schools and raise the stan-\ndard of public education in our Slate, and\nit is the almost unanimous testimony of\nall those best fitted by education and prac-\ntical experience in such work to judge of it\nthat the good results of the operation of the\nlaw in those directions, have exceeded their\nmost sanguine expectations. But the testi-\nmony of such is of little worth now, with\nmanv. whiie the hearsay evidence ot men\nwho 'have not been inside a school house for\nvears. unless to attend some public meet\ning, and have made no honest endeavor to\ninform themselves of the provisions of the\nlaw or of the character of the teaching and\ncondition of our schools is received without\nquestion. The question asked of some such\nrecently was pertinent; "How much of your\ntestimony under these circumstances would\nbe admitted in any court f law ?"
2a5141e3833172edfddde720c411579f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1866.7246575025367 41.004121 -76.453816 ing day, as ho paced to nnd fro, re-\nmained whero ho had east it, though it\nmust havo been displaced by tho slight\nest motion of cither of the doors. Tills\nwas evidence that could not bo disput\ned; and it followed there must be somo\nsecret machinery In tho walls by which\na person could enter. Ho Inspected\nthem closely. They appeared to lilin\nouo solid and compact mass of Iron; or\njoined, If joined they were, with such\nnice art that no mark of division was\nperceptible. Again and again ho sur-\nveyed them, and the floor and the roof,\nand that range of visionary windows,\nas ho was now almost temped to consid-\ner them ; ho could discover nothing, ab-\nsolutely nothing to relieve his doubts\nor satisfy his curiosity. Sometimes ho\n that altogether tho dungeon had\na more contracted appearance that It\nlooked smaller; but this lie ascribed to\nfancy, and tho Impression naturally pro-\nduced upon his mind by the undeniable\ndlsappearauco of the two windows.\nWith intense anxiety Vivcnzlo look-\ned forward to the return of night; and\nas it approached ho resolved that no\ntreacherous sleep should again betray\nhim. Instead of seeking Ids bed of\nstraw, lio continued to walk up and\ndown his dungeon till daylight, strain-\ning his eyes in every direction through\nthe darkness, to watch for any appear-\nance that might explain these myste-\nries. While thus engaged, and, as nearl v\nas lie could Judge (by the time that after\nwnrd elapsed before the morning came\nin), about two o'clock, there was n slight\ntremulous motion of tho floors.
901b03e7bc06d5724399ad094679319b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4698629819889 39.261561 -121.016059 Mr. King discussed briefly the question of\nthe final “subjogatiou” of the South, and\nshowed how rapidly the work of redemp-\ntion and restoration was going on. North\nCarolina wheeling back into line, Arkansas\ntaking the first step toward a revolt from\nthe Confederacy, Texas preparing to hoist\nagain the old flag, all the cooler parts of\nthe Gulf States cheering the arrival of our\ntroops and saluting our gnnboats with de-\nlight—the subjugation question was getting\nstale before it was disposed of—there was\nlikely to be left nothing to “subjugate.”\nBaring this war we had learned two things\nabout our foreign relations—that we have\nno friend in Europe but Russia, and that we\ndont need any! We may thank the con*\nspirators for revealing to the world and to\nourselves the fact that we are inferior to no\npower that can make a treaty.\nWc shall issue, a nation that knows its\nown strength, that appreciates its imperial\ndomain, more bumble, more honest, nobler\ncharacter, with faith in ideas and a believ-\ner in the principles that had been rejected\nby a that knew them to be just.\nIf wc had gone into the business of eman-\ncipation 50 years ago, when all parties ac-\nknowledged its right and conceded its poli-\ncy, there would never have been occasion\nto go to war to put down the “States rights”\npresumption. This emancipation question\nMr. King handled ably and the audience-\nendorsed his views with repeated cheers.\nHe seemed to plant himself on the Presi-\ndent's platform, though it was evident that\nif the President should change his mind\nand approve the Hunter proclamation, the\nlecturer would not take it very ill of him,\nAfter illustrating the change of sentiment\nand the growth of liberty in our country\nwithin the last two years, Mr. King read\nthe stirring poem by Whittier, from the At-\nlantic Monthly for Jane. An allusion to\nParson Brownlow brought down the bouse;\none that qoickly followed, referring to Fre-\nmont, was received with the most signifi-\ncant silence. Tbe lecture was fall of bril-\nliant passages,and it is with great difficulty\nthat we bare restrained ourselves from a\nfull sketch of IL
5d31e283f3f71137066ca6526958f94c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.319178050482 39.261561 -121.016059 fjttvada fJmarrat.\nGkkat Sikuical Discovery.—LEcbo de\nlacilique contains an interesting article,\nfront which we translate and condense the\nfollowing statement:\nAt a recent meeting of the Academy of\nSciences at Paris. M . dArgc reported that\nsince the publication of the remarkable in-\nvestigations by M. Florens, upon the devel-\nopment of bones and teeth, thut gentleman\nhad continued to give the subject the clou\nest attention. The result was the proof\nthat power of reproduction of bone exists in\nthe periosteum, and therefore that amputa-\ntions are worse than useless. IIin state-\nments were doubted, but after many experi-\nments upon animals, the truth of the theory\nwas demonstrated by a successful experi-\nment upon a man. Some time since a work-\nman suffered a comminuted fracture of the\nleg by a fall of stones and scatfolding upon\nhim. It was thought that amputation would\nbe necessary ; but condition of the suf-\nferer was such that the doctors were oblig-\ned to relinquish the idea of an operation.\nHappily, he was under the cure of a tnan\nwho had confidence, lirst in nature, and\nthen iu tbc possibility of the reproduction\nof the thigh. The only requirements for\nsuccess were great precautions and time.\nBoth were employed, and at the end of the\nyear the sick man was healed, and his leg\npreserved so that it was as serviceable as\nit was before the accident. It was neither\nshorter nor longer, notwithstanding that\nmany chips of the hone were extracted\nfrom the flesh. M. Flourens exhibited one\nof the pieces, which was several centimetres\nin length. It is expected that ere many\nyears are passed, no one will deny the re-\nproducing power of the periosteum, and\nampulations will uever be made, or only\nat least in the rarest instances.
1dab696b41d5c8f5ef66da41955f799e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.372950788049 39.745947 -75.546589 General duPont an alternative proposition. Wilming­\nton Is badly in need of comprehensve harbor develop­\nment. The shore of the Delaware river from the mouth\nof the Christiana up to Gordon Heights presents a\nsplendid field for such work. If General duPont will\nshift from the State at large to the city of Wilming­\nton the $2.000 ,000 he is willing to expend for public\nbenefit, this city will hall him as a benefactor and\nnot, as has been the case In some of the rural dis­\ntricts, deride him as a schemer parading In the guise\nof a philanthropist. If Wilmington can get for river­\nfront improvement the millions the anti-boulevard agi­\ntators say the people In the rural sections do not want,\nIt will be the greatest bit of work the Board of Trade\nand the business men of our city ever have done.'\nApril 9— "While the Chriatlana and its needs are be­\ning considered, however, the claims ot the Delaware\nriver front should not be Ignored. Upon the future\ndevelopment of that shore front depends\nlargely the commercial future of our city.”\nApril 11—" The only way for Wilmington to get any\nmaterial part of that deep-sea and coastwise trade is\nthrough the development ot the Delaware river front\nfrom the Christiana river northward. With such de­\nvelopment our city not only would figure as a ter­\nminus for ships «engaged in foreign and domestic\ncommerce, but. also as a port of call for taking on and\ndischarging parts of cargoes.”\nApril IS—" Certainly Wilmington should take steps\nnow looking to harbor development to obtain a fair\nshare of the benefits o* the iraffle moving through\nthat water way. The only way to get it ia to build piers\nand establish a terminal on the Delaware river.”\nApril 27— “That tber* may be no misunderstand­\ning In the public mind as to what follows, we wish\nto saw that THE EVENING JOURNAL has advocated\nfor years the wise and comprehensive development ot\nthe waterfront on the Delaware river from the Chris­\ntiana river up to Edge Moor.”
07ad0ba6d1684165aad699d9305e3730 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.7082191463724 39.745947 -75.546589 •Express trains.\nTRAINS LEAVE WILMINGTON, DEL­\nAWARE AVENUE STATION, Fl)R\n.n e w YORK, week days. *3.13. *9.39,\n*10.24 a. m.; *12.19, *2.3«. *3.59, *5.21, *7.4L\n*11.00 p . m . Sundays. *3.13, *9.39, *11.24 a.\nm.; *3.59. *6.21, *7.41, *11.00 p. m.\nPHILADELPHIA, week days, *3.18 , 5.45,\n. 40, *7.15, 7.35. *8.25. *9.39. 9 .45, *10.24, 11.08 a.\nm.; *12.19, *2.34, 2.45, *3.59, 4.45, *6.21 . 6 .80,\n*7.41, 9.15, *11.00 p. m. Sundays, *3.13 . 7.35,\n8.50, *9.39, 11.24. *11.24 a. m .; 2.45, *3.59, *6.21 ,\n■ 30, *7.41, 9.15, *11.00 p. m .\nCHESTER, week days, *3.18, 6.46. 8.40,\n*7 15. 7 .35, *8 25, *9.39, 9.45, *10.24, 11.08 a. m.J\n*2.34, 2.46, 4.45, *5.21, 6.30, *7.41, 9.15. *11.00 p .\nm. Sundays, *3.13, 7.35, 8.50, *9.39, *11.24,\n11.24 a, in.; 2.45, *3.39, *5.21 . 6.30, *7.41, 9.16,\n•u.ou p. m.\nATLANTIC CITY, week days, *7.15 a.\nm.; *12.19, *2.34, *5.21 p. m . Sundays, 7.35 a\nCAPE MAY, days, 5.46 a. m., *12.19,\n*2.34 p. m.\nm., 2.45 p. m.\nBALTIMORE ANT) WASHINGTON,\nweek days, *4.18. 7.10, *8.34, *11.01 a. m .J\n12.56, *2.09, 3.04, *3.40, *4.67, *«.17. *8.04,*9.11 D .\nm. Sundays, *4.18, 7.10, *8.34 a. m .; *12.66,\n3.(8. 8 .04 . *4.67. *8.04. *9.11 p. m .\nBALTIMORE AND WAY STATIONS,\n10a.m.;3.04p.m. dally.\nNEWARK, week days. *4.18 . 7 .10, *8.34,\n•11.01 a. m.; *12.66, 3.04, *4.57, *6.17, 7.32 . *9.11,\n10.65 p. m. Sundays, *4,18, 7.10, *8.34 a. m .{\n12.66, 8 .04. *4.57, 7.32 , *9.11 p. m.\nPITTSBURG, week days, *8.84 a. m.;\n'6.17 p. m. Sundays. *8.34 a. m. ; *-«.57 p. ra.\nCHICAGO, daily, *8.34 a, m .; *4 37 p.\nCHICAGO via CINCINNATI and\nDIANA POLIS. *8.34 n. in. dally.\nCINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS, *8.84 a.\ntnj *12.56 and *9.11 p . m. . dally.\nTOLEDO AND DETROIT, *9.U p . m „\ndally to Toledo and dally except Sunday\nto Detroit.
4183643f74a71dec9723913c450e1096 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.8401639028032 39.369864 -121.105448 Napdecu to save his sinking empire. The\ngreatest military skill the world ever posses-\nsed, bad been taxed to the utmost during the\nday. Thrones were tottering on the doubt-\nful issues of a fearfully contested field, and\nthe shadows of fugitive kings flitted through\ntfe« smoke of the held of battle. Napoleon's\n■tar trembled in the zenith—now blazing\nout in all its ancient splendor—now paling\nbehind the ominous mists which threatened\nto obscure it in an oblivion of eternity. The\nintense anxiety with which he watched the\nadvance of that column, and the terrible\nsuspense he endured when the smoke hid\nthe battle from bis view, and then the utter\ndespair of his great heart, when the curtain\nlifted over a fugitive army, and the despair-\ningabriek rang out, "T he Old Guard recoils!\nmakes us for a moment forget all thoughts\nof the carnage, in sympathy for bis distress.\nThe Old Guard felt the immense responsi-\nbility devolving upon it, and resolved not to\nprove unworthy of its former well-earned\nfame. Nothing could bo more imposing\nthan its movement to the assault. had\nnever before recoiled in presence of a human\nfoe, and the allied forces beheld with awe,\nIts firm and steady advance to the charge.—\nFor a moment the guns stopped playing, and\nthe firing ceased on the English line, as ,\nWithout the beating of a drum or a bugle\nbote to cheer their courage, they moved in\ndead silence over the field. Their tread was\nlike muffled thunder, while the dazzling\nhemlcts of the cuirassiers flashed long lines\nof light upon the dark and terrible mass that\n■wept in one strong wave along. The stern\nDrouet was there amid bis guns, and upon\nevery brow was written the unalterable res-\nolution to conquer or die. The next mo-\nment the artillery opened, and the head of\nthat gallant column seemed to sink into the\nearth. Rank after rank went down ; yet they\nstopped nor faltered in their march. Dis-\nsolving squadrons and battalions disappear-\ning one after another in the destructive fire,\naffected not their courage. The ranks closed\nup as before, and each treading over his\nfallen comrade, passed unflinchingly on.
eb049ea2b9c2a4d0a89387a09468bf7b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.9493150367834 43.798358 -73.087921 It is obviously important to this branch of\nthe public service and to the business and\nquiet of the country, that the whole subject\nshould in some way be settled and regulated\nby law; and, if poible, at your present\nsession. Besides the plans above referred\nto, I am not aware that any one has been\nsuggested, except that of keeping the public\nmoney in the State banks in special deposite.\nThis j)lan is, to some extent, in accordance\nwith the practice of the Government, and\nwith the present arrangement of the Treas-\nury Department; which, except, perhaps,\nduring the operation of the late deposite\nact, has always been allowed, even during\nihe existence of a National Bank, to make\na temporary use of the State banks, in par-\nticular places, for the safe keeping of por-\ntions of the revenue. This discretionary\npower miht be continued, it Congress\ndeem it desirable, whatever general system\nbe adopted. So long as the connection is\nvoluntary, we need perhaps anticipate few\nof those difficulties, and little of that de-\npendence, on the banks, which must attend\nevery such connection when ecmpulsory in\nits nature, and when so. arranged as to make\nthe banks a fixed part of the machinery of\ngovernment, it is undoubtedly in the pow-\ner of Congress so to regulate and guard \nas to prevent the public money from being\napplied to the use, or intermingled with the\naffairs of individuals. Thus arranged, al-\nthough it would not give to the Government\nthat entire control over its own funds which\nI desire to secure to it by the plan I have\nproposed, it would, it must be admitted, in a\ngreat degree, accomplish one of the objects\nwhich nas recommended that plan to my\njudgment the separation of the fiscal con-\ncerns of the Government from those of\nindividual or corporations.\nWith these observations, I recommend\nthe whole matter to your dispassionate re-\nflection ; confidently hoping that some con-\nclusion mav be reached by your delibera-\ntions, which, on the one hand shall give\nsafety and stability to the fiscal operations\nof the Government, and be consistent on the\nother, with the genius of our institutions,\nand with ihe interests and wishes of the\nreat mass of our constituents.\nIi was my hope that nothing would oc-- ,\ncur to make necessary, on this occasion,\nany allusion to the National Bank.\nTl"'re ;ire r rcust'ces, however, con- -\nnrci;d with the present state of its affairs,\nthat bears so directly on the character of\nthe Government and the welfare of the\ncitizen, that I should not feel myself ex- -\ncusea in uri
0501316fc8af9a6cd651f1844109d384 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.3931506532217 36.620892 -90.823455 The Storr of Joseph.\nThe history of Joseph Is one of the\nmost pleasing and instructive in the\nBible, Joseph was the younger son of\nJacob. His father was so fond of him\nthat his brothers were jealous, and\nwould not speak kindly unto him. H\nbrothers were shepherd. They would\noften change their location to get past'\nura for their flocks and' herds. Jacob\nbeing anxious about them requested\nJoseph to go and see how they were and\nbring h'im word again. Joseph found\nhis brothers in Dothan. When they\nsaw Joseph coming they made the ro\ntiark there comes "the dreamer." aA\nsought to slayhim, but Reuben persuad\ned his brothers not to kill Joseph but\nto 'aire hi coat of many color and oast\nhim into a pit alive, and toll their father\nthat some wild beast had eatsn him\nWhile they were talking 'they taw1\ncompany of Ishmaelite on their way to\nEgypt, nd they sold Joseph for twenty\npieces of silver, Joseph was told to (he\ncaptain of Pharaoh, whore he teired\nten yean. The Lord wa with Joseph\nand he became very prospernus. The\ncaptain was so pleased with Joseph that\nhe made him overseer of all he had\nTwo years afterward the king had\ndream which troubled hlrn, and no one\nin Egypt could interpret it so Jiei\nwa sent for. The prison doors wore\noon opened, and Joseph made haste\nchanged his raiment, and went before\nthe King. Ocd Joseph what to say\nand he said it so well, that it pleased\ntne ttirr ana ne maae mm ruinr nv.ir\nall the land of Egypt. It is not often\nw wad of a prisoner taken from pris\non and made ruler over the land\nJoseph was a poor boy, for he didn\nown anything, he was a slave. Ha re.\ndated! every temptation to dishonesty\nand was true to God. He was pi rseout\ned for rightiotisness sake and cant Into\nprison, Where he acted so wisely that\nhe was taken from prison and made\nruler over Egypt. Joseph was thirty\nyears bid when he stood before Pharaoh\nPWaraoh took off hf ring from his hand\narjd put it on Joseph' hand and put\ngdld chain about hi neck. The word\nof the King is the law . Joteph, who In\nthe morning was a prisoner, was In the\nevening a prince. Joseph went out\nfrom ihe presence of Pharaoh find went\nthrough all the land of Egypt, and in\nseven plentlou year ha gathered up\nan tne iooa in the cities. Joseph gath\nereacomasmesanaoitnetea, n so\nhappened at the time of the famine that\nJoseph's brother came from Canaan to\nbuy corn from the King of Egypt.\nThey didn't know Joseph their younger\nbrother they had told waa the King,\ntill he made himself known unto them.\nWhen be told them that he waa Joteph,\ntneir brother, and asked them if hi\nfather wa living, . hi
08b6d20e30920385cd6c191522f60e36 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1887.3410958587012 39.743941 -84.63662 The popular an eflective "sets in\njet sometimes comprise a panel for the\nskirt, a collar, epaulets, V or plastron,\nand trimming for the sleeves that can\nalso be utilized for pockets on a basque,\nif preferred. Less elaborate sets in\nclude only a collar, plastron, and\nsleeve trimmings, and there are others\nthat have a pointed piece, or plaque,\nreaching the entire length of the back\nand finished with pendants, which is\nmade in the same piece with a collar,\nepaulets, and V for the front This\nstyle is suitable either for a mantle or\nbasque, and Can be so arranged that\nit can be detached from one and used\non the other as necessity may demand.\nMany of the new passementeries are\nin galloon style, that is with straight\nedges, and there are some with picot\n and geometrical designs in solid\nbeads down the center on a ground\nwork of open meshes. Another style\nis a sort of buckle pattern, or oblong\npieces of the shape and about two- -\nthirds the size of a postal card, that can\nbe used continuously,' Or detached and\nplaced diagonally at intervals, or ar\nranged in various effective ways, the\nsame as the passementeries that are\nmade of separate motifs and finished\nwith pendants on one edge. Another\nstyle has one edge straight and the\nother describing points or leaves; but\nthe insertion, or galloon, designs are\nat present most popular.\nVery rich passementeries are made\nentirely of satin andcrape cord, either\ntogether or separately, and are a relief\nfrom the glitter ox jet. lhese come in\nblack, and are made to order to match\ncolored
163d853d738327bee400e408ed664751 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4795081650982 39.290882 -76.610759 Webster, Preston, and other illustrious cham-\npions of the liberty, honor and prosperity of\ntheir country. Again we say, one and all come\nto the rescue of your country, and a hearty\nEastern Shore welcome will meet you.\nTHE GREAT CENTRAL WHIG CON-\nVENTION' FOR THE EASTERN SHORE\nOF MARYLAND.?At a meeting of the Whigs\nof Talbot county, held by adjournment, this ltith\nday of June, 1840, at the "North Bend," in Eas-\nton, the following resolutions were unanimously\npassed, and ordered to be inserted in all the\nWhig papers of the State:\nResolved, That the Whigs of Talbot county\ndo adopt the plan heretofore suggested by the\nState Central Committee, and recently approved\nat a convention held at Centreville, in Queen\nAnn's county, on the 3d inst. for holding a GE-\nNERALW HIU CONVENTION, the Eastern Shore,\nat the town of Easton.\nResolved further, That the Whigs through-\nout the State, and all the friends of HARRI-\nSON and TYLER, be, and they are hereby in-\nvited to assemble in convention, at Easton, on\non Wednesday morning, the 15th day of July,\nat 10 o'clock in the forenoon, for the purpose of\ndeliberating and interchanging sentiments on the\npresent condition of the country, and to listen to\nthe opinions and euunsel of able and distinguish-\ned patriots and statesmen, who shall be called to\nmeet and mingle with their fellow-citizens for\nthe great purpose of reform.\nBe it further Resolved, That Edward N. liam-\nbleton, George Dudley, Spry Denny, Tench\nTilghman, John H. Harris, Joseph Bruff, Thos.\nC. Nicols, Nicholas Goldaborough, William H.\nGroome, Samuel Mackey, Jaceb C. Wilson, S.
167bb58ef128873059e87d4eb25bb894 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.6369862696602 39.745947 -75.546589 oeee in PhUudelpbln yesterday reported\nby the Preen, which enya:\nAt 2 o'clock, atendurd time, yester­\nday afternoon Mrs Bayera of Weal\nPhiladelphia strolled leisurely along\nChestnut street in a truly happy frame\nof mind. Her bounet was just the right\nsize, shape and color, her hair tagged\nproperly above her neck, and her neat,\ndark colored dress was as trim as the\nsails of a racing yacht. A little child\ntrudged at her aide and prattled about\nthe dolls and toys In the windows.\nMn>. 8a>res had just crossed Thir­\nteenth street under the guidance of\npoliceman Kberheart and was looking\nin Wauamaxers wludow, wheu sad*\ndenly her face took on an ashen hue.\nBhe looked four ways at once, quickly\ndecided net to scream or faint, and\nthen with great pretence of mind began\nto work very hard. Bhe had become\nuncomfortably warm and passers might\nhave seen a wreath of »unke curving\nfrom beueath the folds of her dress.\nbhe tarne 1 her toward a large\nwindow and deftly made a grab for ti e\nsmoke. First she brought, out a purse\naud then came a small package or dry\ngoods, a box of candy, a pair of baby\nsocks, a\npapers of hair-pins,a pamphlet\nreform, aud last ol all tire darning and\nincinerated remains of a discreet\nligious Philadelphia weekly newspaper\nthat had been doing duty as a bustle.\nBy this time quite a crowd had gath\nered and helped stamp oat the tire on\nthe sidewalk. But meantime the fire\nhad caught the embroidered garments\naud Mrs. Bayres was in great danger of\nbeing very severely burned. Police*\nmau Kberbait took of! his ccat and\ntried to smother the fiâmes\nThen several ladies slappid, pounded\naud smothered, aud with the aid of a\nlarge pitcher of ice water, brought by a\ncaterer, subdued the confiscation.\nMrs. Barres wardrobe was replenished\nfrom a neighboring store.\nThe trouble was all caused by a\nlighted cigar on the pavement.
338636155dcfa9aa1c6a7ea3d15f3d26 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 The White Pine Compound\n"It was early in the spring of '62 that this\ncompound was originated. A member of my\nfamily was afflicted with an lrrltat.on of the\nthro tit attended with a disagreeable cough. I\nhad for some months previous thought that\na preparation having :or its basis the Inside\nbark of white pine might be so compounded\nas to be very uuefUl In diseases or the ttiroat\nand lungs. To te«t the value of It in the case\nalluded to. I compounded a small quantity\nof the medicine that I had been planning,\nand gave It In teaspoonful dose*. Tlio result\nw hh exceedingly gratifying, wituiu two\ndays the irritation of the throat whs remov¬\ned, the cough subsided and a *peedy cure\nwa* effected. Soon after this, Isent some to\na lady In Londonderry. N. H ., who htui been\nSuffering for some weeks irotu a bad cough,\noccasioned by a suddeu cold, and had raised\nmucus streaked with bl od. She soon found\n and sent for more. She took about\nten ounces of It, and got well. J . B . Clarke,\nKsq., editor of the Manchester Dally Mirror,\nmade a trial of the same preparation in the\ncase of a severe cold and was cured immedi¬\nately. lie was so highly pleased with the re¬\nsults, and so confident in success attending Its\nf^les. If placed before the public, that he\nIlimliy persuaded me to give it h name, and\nsend It abroad to benefit tbe suffering. In\nNovember, 1855, I tlrst advertised it under\nthe name of White Piue Compound. Ill two\nyears from that time therehad been whole-\nsaled In Manchester alone one hundred dol¬\nlars worth, where It took tbe l«ui of ail the\ncough lemedies in the market, and It still\nmountains that position. There Is good rea-\nln itfor this; it Is very soothing and healing\nsous nature; Is warming to the stomach ana\npleasant wltnal to the taste, and 1h exceed¬\ningly cneap.
3169c7194bca3a9b1432abf0716634a4 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.209589009386 40.735657 -74.172367 faithful performance of said work; and that If\nthe person or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsbeh contract they will pay to the City of\nNewark any difference between the sums to\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon' completion of the contract and that\nwhich the City of Newark may -be obliged to\npay the person or person# by whom euch. con -\ntract snail be executed.\nThe Board of Street and'Water Commission-\ners of the City of Newark reserve to them\nBelycto the right to accept or reject any or. all\nproposals for the above work as they may\ndeem best for tht Interest of the city.\nBidder# and sureties are hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section\nof the law creating tHe Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners, March 28, 1-691\nthat the bond or bonds* to be given for the\nfaithful execution and performance of said\npublic -work shall first be approved ns to suf\nflclency by the Board, and as to form by the\ncounsel of the Board, and nb contract 'efiall\nbe binding on the city or become effective or\noperative until such bond Is so. approved;, and\nthe President of the Board shall have power\nto examine the proposed bondsrfien under oath\nif he .shall so desire, or shall, be so Instructed\nby the Board, but the Board will not be bolmd\nbv any statement that may be made by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall;have full power\nand absolute discretion In the, whole matter,\nand this provision shall be referred to In any\nadvertisement Inviting bid# for any such pub-\nlic work.
2854301cfaa68055c9bf9695f8daa17c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.382191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 The spike machines are now in the mil\nand the work of building foundations f<\nthem tire underway.\nMrs. Harden, the aged lunatic, who ha\nbeen in jail hero for some time, was sent\nWeston a few days ago.\nChas. A . Weaver and Frank W. Brow\nwent to Mountain Lake l'ark Wednesdu\nevening to attend tho auction sale of lots.\nJohn Jefferson, Esq., has nt last been pr\nvailed upon to accept the position of Assc*s<\nfor.the First district. A better sclcctio\ncould not lmvo been made.\nThe little child of moses B. Trice's, tin\nwas so badly injured by a kick from a lion\non the forehead last Sunday week, is reco\nering rapidly, and is now aula to be out\nThe County Commissioners met yesterda\nand ordered that a special election bo held o\n 24th of June, for the purpose of allowin\nthe citizens of the counly to vote upon tl\nproposition to subferibe $3,000 to the capib\nstock ol the W., 1'. & C. railway company.\nMr. McCiintock, while working on the No\nrows road below town yesterday, exhume\ntho skeleton of a man, and with it an ol\nfashioned "horse-nistol" and lnrpo Wnif.»<\nthe Louisana Tiger" style of architectur\nThey bore evidence of having been buried\ngreat many years.\nIt is said that the work of putting down\nwell near the mouth of Grave creek to a sutl\ncient depth to fully and effectually test th\nquestion of whether or not we are in tl\n"oil belt," will be commenced atan early da\nalso that another and deeper well will i\nsunk on Col. Thompson's farm across tl\nriver.
88da8b8b34b50da24e87314768413f8e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.987671201167 41.681744 -72.788147 make it. It is in movement, in spite\nof meddling and the mass of legisla-\ntion, additional of which it is self. evi-\ndent will not improve it and which, in\nturn, it is further contended is not\neven the object of this league, the lo-\ncal branch of which, Is but a mere\ncog directed by men who may or may\nnot have the vision to see that they\nare participating In the age old\nprogram of making tho sick the\ncloak for other purposes? How dors\nMr. Connors, a captain locally but a\nprivate nationally, in an organization\nforming simultaneously with the In-\nsertion f full page ads, in the New\nYork, papers, dwelling upon but a\nsingle choice between tax reduction\nand bonus, know that "political or\nother ends" aro not being served?\nDoes not tho more program (double\nshuffle) of legislation, which, it la\nhoped, does not topple over the al-\nready oppressive load, imply tho pres-\nence of lobbyists in the offing and\nwould not assault be committed upon\neven a kind should it lisp that\nwhere lobbyists aro present, plo was\nnot being served? That Mr. Connors\nmay have an Inkling of all this.\nwhich, it Is his duty to know positive\nly, may bo Indicated by the fact that\nhe makes a defense of motives before\nthey aro quoatloned, or, on second\nthought, did the Field secretary for\nall Connecticut, Mr, Gladstone, who\nwas down at tho occasion of the first\nand only meeting, thus far, hand to\nCaptain Connors his Instructions in\ntact, together with a statement of\nglorious objectives, for publication?\nIn this statement there also appeared\nan effusion by tho Field secretary for\nthe Connecticut forces himself. Ths\nHeld Marshal for the Connecticut\nforces Instead of metaphoriealy rolng\nabout his business of gently stroking\nhis sick brother upon the head, In\nwhich event the stricken brother\nwould likewise wish to bo saved from\nhis friend, the Marshal, I say, In.\nstead of going about hls business, said\nsomething about "generic terms,"\nwiden1, tho more It was read, the\ngreater became the confusion.
18bc277536531efd154cadf051e4e8dd THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.3986301052764 46.187885 -123.831256 While the explorers were creeping along\nthe treacherous trail at that point, one\nof the pickhorses slipped over the edge,\nand started for the river. Fortunately a\nfallen tree about 150 feet below stopped\nhis progress, and he was rescued, with\nsome dlttlculty, uninjured except for a fjw\nscratches and bruises. This was thi\nonly really exciting experience the party\nhad, although they were nearly lost on\nseveral occasions. Mr. Meldrum, however,\nproved an excellent guide. While coun-\nty surveyor he subdivided all that sec-\ntion, and he left a sufficient number of\nblazed trees and other marks to enable\nhim to pick his way through the wilder-\nness, The trip In was mostly up hill work\nand required three days, for riding was\nout of the question most of the time, and\nthe explorers had to walk.\n"That portion of the river explored by\nthe party has been a favorite rendezvous\nfor Indiana In the early summtr for many\nyears. An old settler told Protector Mc-\nGuire that the in. former years\npacked out on horses thousands of pounds\nof the finest Chinook, dried and smoked,\nThese fish were easily taken from the\nshallow gravel beds, which make the fin-\nes', natural spawning beds. During the\npast four or five years, salmon have be-\ncome scarcer, as Mr. McGuire thinks, be-\ncause of the obstructions in the lower\nriver. Still, In the opinion of Mr. Hub\nbard, there are enough salmon there now\nto make It profitable to establish a prop\nagating station In that vicinity. The ex-\nplorers did not see any salmon, for they\nare now lying in the deep pools, awaiting\nthe heat of June and July to come out\nupon the spawning beds.\nThe hatchery building Is to be located\nat the mouth of a stream of clear, Culd\nwater, whore everything needful can be\neasily secured. Close by, racks can be\nput In at a comparatively small cost,\nfor the conditions are all favorable. The\nonly difficulty will be In securing lumber\nfor the buildings.
05042f3e771ced4d71ee66978e93bc45 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.0123287354136 40.441694 -79.990086 The photographs flatter the cathedral. It\nis a vast building, and impressive for its\nbigness, but it has a very plain and\ncentral tower. And this central tower\nis taller than the two fine western towers.\nThe pictures do not show that Tbe per-\nspective brings out the two good towers with\nfine emphasis, and sets the ugly tower in\nthe background.\nOver the great west door, as you eo in, are\ncarved figures. The one in the middle is at-\ntired in tbe robes of a bishop. The side\nstatues are in tbe dress of knights. The\nbishop is giving bis benediction, holtting up\ntwo fingers a characteristic attitude, and a\nsignificant one; for what is the chutch lor, if\nnot to bless men? The knights have, eacn\nof them, a big rock in bis band but not to\nstone the bishop. bishop was the\nbuilder of the west front of the Cathedral,\nand these good gentlemen in knightly\narmor contributed the stone from their es-\ntates. Here they are, over tbe great door,\nholding out tbe symbols of their liberality.\nDisappointing From the Outside.\nIf York Minster is a little disappointing\nfrom the outside, all feeling of disappoint-\nment vanishes when you get in. A great\nbuilding, big enough to bold half a dozen of\nour large churches without crowding; the\nroof, loftv like tbe sky, and upheld by im-\nmense pillars: stone everywhere, from, floor\nto ceiling; empty, of course, as the Cathedral\nnaves are, for the most part, but looking all\nthe bigger for its emptiness.\nI stood within a Minster of old time.\nOrnate and mtsnty. Like a mount it reared\nIts moss; front, with ptmiade and tower,\nAngnstly-beautiful-
30ea108bd5552b1c2965eb3559cec96d NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.5356164066463 40.735657 -74.172367 pledges of personal property, chattel mortgages\nor assignments of salary or wages, or power of\nattorney authorizing the execution of such as-\nsignment of salary or wages and fixing the li-\ncense fees therefor.\nHe it ordained by the Mayor and Convnon\nCouncil of the city of Newark:\nSection 1. That any person, or persons, firm\nor corporation who shall propose to engage In\nthe city of Newark in he business of making\ntr giving advancements or lo^ns of money or\nother things of value and of taking or receiving\nas collateral security therefor nledges of per-\nsonal property, chattel mortgages or assign-\nments of salary or wages or power of attorney\nauthorizing the execution of such assignment\nof nnlary or wages, may Ale with the oitv clerk\nof the city an application In writing to \nCommon Council for a license to do such busi-\nness In the city of Newark. Such application\nshall set forth the name or names of the person\nor persons, firm or corporation applying for\nsuch lleonse. the rlace wh»re the business is to\nbe conducted and If the business is to be con-\nducted under a Arm or business name or desig-\nnation. such name or designation shall also be\nset forth In full In »aid application.\nEvery •*ueh avnllcattop -hall l»e *coompanled\nby a certified check upon a Newark bank or\ntrust company to the order of th* city clerk\nof the city of Newark for five hundred dollars,\nthe amount of the ]1r*m** fee an b*re1neater\nAxed. If the llceftse Is refused the check shall be\nforthwith returned to the applicant or appli-\ncants.
089f88b91d17024a379f62392ea235c0 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.7164383244547 42.217817 -85.891125 had more experience with the grants I\nthan any Other, addresses the Patrons\noi Husbandry its follows :\nOur bond of union is the congeniality\nof likt pursuits. The leading purpose\nof the Farmers' College and Farmers'\nOrange, though gained through different\npaths, are largely the same. The grange\nseeks to aid the farmer by multiplying his\nmeans of intelligence, by giving him\nthe mastery of all tho better methods\nand processes of the farm, by quicken\niug, intensifying, and elevating all the\nbetter elements of his social life. The\ngrange would secure the farmer agaiust\nthe torpidity of solitude and the extor-\ntions of monopoly ; would kindle in his\nbreast a readier zeal aud steadier cour-\nage, would touch all tho labors of his\nhands w ith a glow of ; and,\nin short, would do for him what skill-\nfully organized effort has already done\nfor evety other great human industry\non the round earth. All this the grange\naims to do by means which are the most\nimmediate and direct. All this also the\nFarmers' College strives to do by an-\nother method; by giving a knowledge\nto such as seek it, of all those practical\nsciences that underlie tho processes of\nagriculture ; by training and sending\nforth men who may become, as the years\npass, the leaden in the great movement\nwhich the grange has inaugurated. It\nis in harmony with this noble purpose\nthat the college, instead of draining the\nrural districts of their most promising\nyouths and graduating them to swell the\no ver- cro wde- d
0c97a0da6d2dabb94063be5cce68534d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.8589040778793 41.004121 -76.453816 Many pcoplo awkwardly and foolish\nly enough disturb their own peace nnd\nmat of others hy n persistent belief In\ntho piophetlo character of dreams-- all\nwithout tho least knowledge of their\nruo nature, it is not too much tosay\nthat such pcrcons nro not a llttlo super- -\nlilloiH, for lliero aro Instances whuro\nllio dreamer passes many restless nights\ntogether, pining under (be insidious\nlash of a tortured Imagination, which\n10 terribly mistakes for silent prophecy\nor communion with angels or demons.\nFo a sober mind, capablo nf reflecting,\noven ordinarily, a fow fads will Ultimo\ntho entiro subject. Eve ry ono must bo\nconscious of certain brain and nervo\naction as eorresDondlnir lo thoucht.\nfeeling, nnd emotion. This is tho mu- -\nual activity of mind in union with tho\nmdy it Inhabits. When such action is\ngoing on, fully, wo are said to bo awake;\nwo near, wo see, wo feel, wo know our\nsurroundings. Then every ono is con\nscious of another stato In which wo do\nnot hoar, see, feel nnd know of our sur\nroundings, whilst thcro Is no nctlon go\ning on within, neither brain nor nervo\naction transpiring. This is ti stato of\nprofountl sleep, also called deep and\nsound sleep. In this 6tnto is no\ndreaming and no activity anywhere,\nexcept in the process of blood making\nand circulation. Tho person is to all\npurposes dead to tho external world, In\nsuch a stato of lethargy. Now thostato\nwhich Is called dreaming Is contradis\ntinguished from both of the foiegolng,\nand may properly bo termed an inter\nmedlato condition. Drcmis nro clearly\ntho result of mental nctlon, but not in\ntlio fnmo degreo as when tho person la\nawako. The fjet Is tho mind acts but\npartially through its organ, tlio brain,\nnud tho impressions aro strong enough\nto inlliienco memory, but too weak and\npartial tobtarteelf consciousness. Hence\ntho person dreams, knows ho has\ndreamed, and yet not conscious of his\nexistence ns related to tho things sur\nrounding him at tho tlmo of dreaming\nTho vagtio rambllngs of tlio mind\nthrough its Immediate organ, tho brain\naro superinduced by physical causes\nsuch as cerebral oxciteiiiontorlrrltatlon\nuuxlety or unduo emotion. These\ncauses, whatever they may be, are nil\nInternal nnd relative nt tho tlmo of tho\neffects being produced, Heiico It must\nbo clear that thorn is nothing supernat\nural nnd much less premonitory about\ntho state, which soma good, but deluded\npeople Imagine Is allied to eooth -s ay ln-\nand iibtrology.
27994c8978bd7c1aba1b8a364045a06c THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.905479420345 40.832421 -115.763123 J. ami directions contained lu a ccrUlu In¬\ndenture of Mortgage or Trust l)ted uude an J\ncxfcuti^l by the (llobv Swmltiug CVuniauy, a\nbody corporate. organized ami existing under\nthe law* of the State of New York, party of tlio\nfirst part, ami tlie New York Ia>an ami Indemni¬\nty Company, a body corporate, o1j«» organised\nami existing under tho law* of the State of Now\nYork, the iKirty of the #eeoml part. in trust to\nsecure the payment of c* rlalu U>ud« of the *aid\nUlobe Smelting Coin|<any therein meutioni d,\namounting to one hundred ami City thousand\ndollars, and the interest I hereon, said Indenture\nof Mortgv e it Trur»t iVed Inuring date the 1st\nday of Juue, A. I). IS"I, ami recorded in the of¬\nficial records of Elko eouuty, in the State of Ne¬\nvada. in the otUco of thu llecorder of said county\nof Elko, ou the Twe'dth day of Juue. A . 1>. IKtt,\nin Dook 1 of Mortgage*, pages iiO to 1-1 inclu-\nsive; alio recorded in the oflh-lal records of\nWhite line county, iu said State ol Neva la, in\nthe ollleu of t lie Itecorder of Kald county of\nwhite Tine, on tho Nineteenth day of Juue, A.\n1>. 1871, in Liber No. 1 of Mortgage, pages 43C\nto 403 Inclusive; default having been made in\nthe payment of lute real on said bonds, and more\nthan six months having elapsed * I nee such de¬\nfault, by tho term* of sueh Mortgage or\nTrust Heed, the priucipal fuiu of Mid bonds\nhaving bccouio due and payable by reason of\n. ueli default in the payment of Interest, I. the\nundersigned having been by a certain instill-\nmeiit, in writing, bearing date tho Stcoml day of\nNovember, A. 1>. Ib7ft, recorded 111 tho olttco* ot\ntho lleeorders of tho counties of Elko and Wliito\nline, In the said State of Nevada, duly submit-\nled as trustee in tho place and stead of tho said\ntho New York l<oau and Indemnity Company,\nwho had tho eforo rcslgm d, aud having accept¬\ned tho ap)H>iiitiuent of trustee under the *ald In¬\ndenture of Mortgage or Peed of Trust, will ex¬\npose and St 11 at public aiictlou, at tho Court\nHouse, in the town of Elko, in tho County of\nElko, iu tho SLato of Nevada, oil tho Twenty-\nninth day of Incumber, A. I>. Ib'3, between tlie\nhours of'll) a in. and 4 p. in., to wit, at 1*2\no'clock uoon, all*the following tracls, pieces ami\nparcels of land, luiulug ami water rights and\nprivilege*, properties and franchises, ami all tho\nright, litle. Interest aud claim of the raid tho\n(¦lobe Smelting Company iu and to tl id same,\naud every part thereof, situated In tho said\nco uiit lis of Elko aud Wliito 1 inc. in tho State of\nNevada, described iu said Indenture of Mur -\ngogo or Trust iVed a** follow*, viz.:
0b3a186716cd98dbb42b105c652f39e8 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.5493150367834 37.92448 -95.399981 After awhile thee womanly friends\nof Christ will put down their needle\nforever. After making garments for\nothers, some one will make n garment\nfor them; the last robe we ever wear\nthe robe for the grave. You will have\nheard the last cry of pain. You will\nhave witnessed the Inst orphanage.\nYou will have come In worn out from\nyour Inst round of mercy. I do not\nknow where you will sleep, nor what\nyour cpitnph will be. but there wl! be\na lain) burning nt thnt tomb, and an\nnngel of God guarding It, and through\nnil the long night no rude foot will dis-\nturb the dust. Sleep on, sleep on.\nSoft bed, pleasant shndows, undis-\nturbed repose! Sleep on!\nAsleep In Jesus! nicssed sleep\nFrom which none ever wake to weep!\nThen one dny there will be n sky\nrend'ng nnd a whirr of wheels and the\n of n pagennt, armies marching,\nchains clanking, banners waving, thun-\nders booming, nnd that Christian wom-\nan will rise from the dust, nnd she will\nbe suddenly surrounded surrounded\nby the wanderers of the street whom\nshe reclaimed, surrounded by the\nwounded souls to whom she had ad-\nministered. Daughter of God. so\nstrangely surrounded, what means\nthis? It menns thnt reward hns come,\nthat the victory Is won. that the crown\nIs ready, that the banquet is spread.\nShout it through all the 'crumbling\nearth. Sing It through nil the flying\nHeavens. Dorcns Is resurrected.\nIn ISS.'i . when some of the soldiers\ncame back from the, Crimenn war to\nLondon, the queen of Hngland distrib-\nuted among them beautiful medals\ncalled Crimean medals. Galleries were\nerected for the two houses of parlia-\nment nnd the royal family to sit In\nThere was a great audience to witness\nthe distribution
562d0c0987393198a1ad359c3de9cd0c THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1862.7520547628108 37.561813 -75.84108 and the people thereof, in States in which\nthat relation is or may be suspended\nor disturbed; that it is my purpose upon\nthe next meeting of Congress to again\nrecommend the adoption of a practical\nmeasure tendering pecuniary aid to the\nfree acceptance or rejection of all the\nslave States, so called, the people where\nof moy not then be in rebellion against\ntho United States, and whioh States\nmay then have voluntarily adopted, or\nthereafter may voluntarily adopt, an\nimmediate or gradual abolishment\nslavery within their respective limits;\nand that the efforts to colonizo persons\nof African descent, with their consent,\nupon the continent, or elsewhere, with\nthe previously obtained consent of the\nGovernment existing there, will be con-\ntinued. That on the first dug of Janua\nry, in theyear of our Lord, one thousand\neight hundied and sixty three, all person\nlutld at within any State or any\ndesignated part of a State, the people\nwhereof shall be then in rebellion agaisnt\nthe United States, shall be then, thence\nforward and forever free, and the Execu\ntive Government of the United Slates, in\neluding the military and naval authority\nof 'hereof, will recognize and maintain\nficedom of such persms, nnd will do\naci or acis io repress sucn persons,\nany of them, in any efforts they make\nfor their actual freedom; that the Exec\nutivewill, on the first day of January\naforesaid, by proclamation, designate\nthe States, and ports of States, if anr\nin which the peoplo thoreof respective\nly shall then be in rebellion against\nUnited States; the fact that any State\nor the peoplo thereof, shall on that\nbe in good faith represented in the Con\ngreas of the United States by members\nchosen thereto at elections wherein
114b57c4d56365f90d7a3aea5428f915 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.382191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 makers of Chicago are on a strike\nr an advance of 20 per cent. The new\ntes are first-class workmen, §18 a\nek ; second-class $15; third-class $12.\nle brlckmakers at Peckskill, N. V,,\n3 in number, and employed in nine\nrds, have struck for higher wages.\nHaverstraw, N. Y ., another strike\nexpected, the employers having\niuced wages from $2 50 fo ?2 a day.\nle laborers, (300 in number, on the\njrtford and lirie Railroad, are on\n- ike for an increase of wages from\n75 to $2 a day. The contractors have\nnt to Canada for hands. The house\ninters ol Utica, N. Y., are ou strike\nran advance of wages of 25 cents a\ny. The wages at present vary Irorn\nto $2 50 a day. The wood turners of\n)w York city report at $13 a\n>ek. The journeymen plumbers\nportwagesat $375to$tadayof ten\nura'work. The shirt cuiters of New\nirk city report wages as averaging\n)a week, the rate being $15 for shop\nnds, and $25 for first-class custom\n>rk. Tho Brooklyn City Uiilroad\ns advanced the wages of the drivers\nd conductors from $2 to $2 25 a day.\nte men desire an advance to $2 50.\ni the Broadway Koad, of Brooklyn,\na wages have been raised from £1 75\n$2 a day, the new rates to take ell'ect\nJune first. The application of a\nlored compositor for admission to the\nlumbia Typographical Union, of\nashington, IXC., was, at u meeting\nthe Union on May 15, relerred to the\nmmitteo on Nominations, which it is\npected will report at the next monthly\n,'etlng, to be held on June]!).
1c52de5f63f560b69d7413a5e4188167 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.9273972285641 44.939157 -123.033121 trivance, two pieces of any desired\nmatorlnl, ns deulm, cretonne, chintz or\nglnghum, not necessarily ollko If they\nwill contrast well, nro cut to form a\nbag, except that one piece Is cut four\nInches longer than the other and Is\nthen slanted off to a point, this exten-\nsion much resembling the. llnp of an\nenvelope, and coming at the bottom of\nthe bag. A third pleco of white muslin\nis cut tho same slsu ns tho part without\nUio extenslou, and Is placed between\nthe two colored portions.\nThe bag has no mouth, as it Is under\nstood, tho even edges of the threo parts\nbeing baated together, then bound with\na braid or ribbon, sewing up what\nwould ordinarily be the mouth of the\nbag. Tbo sides nro then bound, taking\nlu the three atraight edges, and, lastly,\nthe flap la bound. About three inches\nbelow tho top of tbo bag a of\nrows of stltcblnir nre taken about nn\nInch apart, forming a runner, and\ntnrougu tins is run a short length of n\nwooden kith, acting like a draw strin?.\nJust below this runner In the center a\nvertical silt lr ut on tho two col-\nored nieces, which must also bo hmiml\non their edges. Through these the\npolled clothea nro slipped. Then the\nftan la brought nnwnril In tho inm.\nwny as you would seal an enVebpc\nwere It inverted, and Ts secured bv\nbuttons nnd buttonholes, one ou each\ncorner of the flan. A cord is fastened\nat each end of the Inth and forms o\nbanger. You wtll now discover the\nbag to bo really two bags, the white\nintersection forming a partition.\nWhen It Is desired to remove the con\ntenta of the big all that U necessary ts\nt pea the flaps, and everything lui m e- tKatel- y
128fe9be81fd89cdb6a0eee0504c59c1 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.1383561326738 41.020015 -92.411296 The Commissioner of Internal Rev­\nenue is having printed his newly-pre­\npared instructions to assessors and\nassistant assessors as to their final\nduties under the internal revenue law\npproved Dec. 24, 1872.\nThis law requires these officers to\nclose up and transfer their duties to the\ncollectors and deputies by July 1,1873.\nThe annual tax list will be dispensed\nwith the present year, as the reccnt\nlaw provides thatthe special taxes ac­\ncruing after April 30,1873, shall be\npaid by stamps\nAssessors will require the assess­\nment of all taxes accruing to April 30,\n1873, to be completed, and the lists\ntherefor placed in the hands of the\ncollectors on or before the 20th of\nMay, 1873; and upon the date of the\ndelivery of the lists containing the\nassessment for the month of April, as\nabove, will transfer the books,\npapers, and other property in accor­\ndance with the provisions of said act.\nThese must bo boxed up aud transmit­\nted to the Commissioner.\nOn the day the ^lessor completes\nthe delivery to the collector of the\nApril list, which must not be later\nthan the 20th of May, he will send by\nezptess to the comlssioner the books,\npapers, &c., properly marked for that\noflicer, and will, at the same time, de­\nliver to the collector the property to\nbe transferred to that officer, whereup­\non the colectoc will sign the receipts\nupon the triplicate schedule of the\nproperty transferred to him, returning\ntwo of them to the as->essor, who will\ninclose one of them with the duplicate\nschedules, with a letter of transmittal\nand send them to the office of the Com\nmissioner.
622c9b239adafb808e35772ee8d5b546 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8265027006173 39.290882 -76.610759 retired to civil life, I considered myself author-\nized greatly to narrow the ground upon which\n1 would be willing to resort ta a personal com-\nbat. To the determination which I had pre-\nviously made, to offer no insult or indict any\ninjury to give occasion to any one to call upon\nme in this way?lor, after witnessing the scene\nwhich I have last described, tl,e wealth and\nhonors of the world would not have tempted\nme to level a pistol at the breast of a map whom\n1 injured?l resolved to disregard all remarks\nupon rny conduct which could not be construed\ninto a deliberate insult, or any injury which\ndid not affect my reputation or the happiness\nand peace of my family.\nWhen I had the honor to be called upon to\n the Northwestern, army recollecting\nthe number of gallant men that had fallen in\nthe former war. in personal combat, I deter-\nmined lo use all_ the authority and all the in-\nfluence of my station to prevent the recurrence.\nTo take away the principal source from which\n? hey spring, in an address to the Pennsylvania\nbrigade, at Sandusky, I declared it to be my\ndetermination to prevent, by all the means that\nthe military lawsplaced in my hands, and in-\njury, ot even insult, which should be offered\nby the superior lo inferior officers. I cannot\nsay what influence this course, upon my pari,\nuiay have produced in the result. But I state\nwith pleasure, (hat there was not a single du<>|,\nnor, as far as I know, a challenge given,while I\nretained the command.
5da27e5acac1fe248783abaf47afc5f8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.7219177765094 39.261561 -121.016059 At daylight, the following morniuj,,\n“the firing was again resumed, and half\nn hour utter sunrise the emigrants hr.d\nlost their entire stock, ninountiug to abeeii\n$10,000 in value.\nBeing thus left with their tcatnlcss wag-\nons, and understanding that the Overland\nStages had forsaken the Simpson route wild\nwere running on the northern Halt Lain\nroad, the party started for the next stalioi\nCity Rocks, 27 miles distant, after providing\nthemselves tvilh such provisions as could\nbe carried, for the purpose of putting the\nwomen and children on the stages.\nThey had proceeded hut about 14 wiles,\nwhen they ascertained that the stages were\nnot running in accordance with their c>-\npcclation. Information having been im-\nparted to them that a large train iiad just\npreceded them, four men were dispatched\nfor assistance. The train proved to bo \nof Capt. Brown. On the 12lb day of An\ngust the four men returned to them with\nwith four wagons in which the women and\nchildren rode, the men walking. They\nreached Lapt. Browns train, where they\npurchased the food they were much in need\nof at exhorbitant rates. Some of the party\nhaving no money, pawned their guns, coals',\njewelry, etc., for food.\nThe clothing of the women and children\nwas in a miserable condition, affording\nthem little or no protection, and in many\ninstanoos the women were compelled to nee\na portion of their thick clothing in making\na covering for their feet. On their arrival\nat Ragtown, they were nearly out of provis-\nions, and after attempting to get some, in\nwhich they failed, they sal down to an in-\nsufficient meal, when their eyes were greet-
04a80b0a5eb4201289c9c73796a68593 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.89999996829 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Wilson is a farmer and land-\nowner on the edge of Dover, was for\nyears register of wills of this county\nand has for nearly twenty years been\nan auditor of the Peunajgvanla Rail­\nroad Company. Ho Is a prominent Re­\npublican and a leader in his district.\nThe same meeting of the Board of\nDirectors adopted a resolution eulo­\ngizing Mr. Hayes. A portion follows:\n"Continuously for forty-six years us\ndirector, and for forty thereof also as\nsecretary and treasurer of this com­\npany, Manlove Hayes has, in each\ncapacity, by wise counsel, energetic\nand Intelligent action, and by con­\nsiderate attention to. and conscien­\ntious and efficient discharge of the\nvarious duties and trusts incident to\nhis official relation, uniformly ren­\ndered this company service highly Im­\nportant in character specially i\nvaluable In effect, in properly promot­\ning and conserving Us Interests, which\nthis hoard duly appreciating, desires\nby this initiate to fittingly recognize\nand grateful!# acknowledge.\n"He vvuH a man of broad and dis­\ncriminative mind; of progressive spirit\nand possessing keen perception of the\nright, was conspicuous for inflexible\nadherence to his convictions and the\ncourage to defend and maintain them,\nns well as for his probity In all the\nrelations of life; and he deservedly\nenjoyed, In an eminent degree, the re­\nspect and the regard and the confi­\ndence of all good citizens of Delaware\nwho rightfully recognized him as an\nillustrious type of its ancient and hon­\norable yeomanry whose actions were\ngoverned by conspicuous conviction,\nand who never sold the truth to serve\n(he hour.'
25fd25f50791a4e7dfbb6e281c896825 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1907.3383561326739 43.624497 -72.518794 ones. It Is golng to.take some tlme\nund money to do that, but there wlll\nbe a whole lot of satlsfactton ln lt\nand we wlll proflt by lt from the very\nstart. One man may be sltuated so\nthat he can buy a tew good cows and\na thoroughbred bull to head hls\ndalry. That man wlll start out wlth\na little advantage over the one who\nls handlcappcd by lack ot fuuds. It\nwlll not be long before he wlll begln\nto see results that wlll amaze hlm.\nIt only takes a little vhlle to put so\nmuch new Hfe lnto a hord ot cows\nthat the entlre farm econoray feels\nthe Insplratlon and sets out on the\nroad for better thlnga.\nBut lt a man has not the ready\nmoney to put lnto cholce cows the\nthlng to do ls to begln wlth what he\nhas. It will not cost much to get a\ngood hull calf somowhere among the\nnelghbors. I have known cases where\n waa posalble to trade a good scrub\ncalf for a fullblood wlth a nelghbor\nwho had no use for the calf except\nto mako veal of hlm. That ls a good\nway to begln. Or lt may be we can\nget a helfer calf or two that way.\nIfnot,ltlsamatterofonlyafew\ndollars to buy one, lf lt cannot be had\nby tradlng. That ls a good start.\nThon graft tho new stock on the old\nand see how marvelous wlll be tho\nresult ln a few years.\nIt almost nlwnys .urns out that\nwhen a man has been to the trouble\nof gettlng thls start, he wlll have so\nmuch nmhltlon to mnke a success of\nlt that he wlll take tho best care he\ncan ot tho new calf or the cows ho\nhas bought. That means that a great\ndeal lu the success of the veuture.\nIf I wero asked to tell ln one word\nwhat was the real secret of success\namong the dalrymon I know, I bo-l io -
3968657eff432cc6445143ff9b3cc3e5 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.1410958587012 44.939157 -123.033121 amounted to only eighteen dollar\nIn tko forenoon of tho same dt)\na small Presbyterian church 0'\ntho Bait side, wo enjoyed a\nthat wm the votty nntlthvsls of\naffair gulled off by Rov, Bros\nIn tho evening. Tho pastor was tm\nouont. cultured man, and hi serfl\nwaa full of OhrlsUan lovo and V\nHe dwoit upon the human HH\nCnriot'a charaotor. and broutst\nwith striking foroo and eteaptf\nlosron that Christ was temple\nUo mountain and In the vwflerdl\noven a frail humanity la testa\nfront day to day with the terapUiH\nof ovory day Nfo. thus Inserts\nfoliowohlp with tho sufferings of\nRedeemer In the hearts of bis\ngrogatlon. aad a hopo that they\ntriumph ovor the tamp tor's srare\nwilo wen & jra d. Tbp mis\nspoke of glorious life\nught for tho right, and quoted\nApostle's words. MI have finished\noouree,M as showing that real re\nwas a growth that began at tho\nand ended at tho grave, and\nhis hearers to keep up the good\nto tho very end.\nThat aealous, scholarly godly\ntsier gets 11500 a ymr. while the\nslang monger gets J10OO, and\nthousands hear tho latter while\nhundreds; hear tho former, does\nredound to tho oredlt of Porta\nchurch going pcoplo; but oven a d\ntry Jake newspaper man shouw\nbe surprised at this, for from\nImmemorial a circus has ar\ndrawn bigger orowds that a ch\naad at the centennial saany more\nplo saw the "Hootohle-kootchl- e\ntho Trail than hoard tho lectures\nsermons by moo of national re\ntlon in the Auditorium.
0e7318748835c871740d51a2b408b2a6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.2472677279397 40.063962 -80.720915 CixctxxATi, March 30..Charles Theis,\njr., and Joseph Hitter, two well known\nmen of Newport, Kv., attended a ball to¬\ngether at Eclipse Hall lut night and dur¬\ning the evening Theis wu ordered sway\nfrom the side of a young lady who had\nbeen brought to the ball by Henry Brown.\nSome trouble arose then,but It wu settled\nwithout violence. About 5 o'clock, how¬\never, while goingliome Brown and Kilter\nmet Theis at Jefferson and Moumouth\nStreets and the quarrel wu renewed,\nBrown knocking Theis down. At this\npoint Bitter ran up with a drawn revolver\nand levelling it at the head of Theis fired\ntwice, both balls taking effect Theis died\nis an honr. Bitter surrendered to the\nofficers. Both are young men of good\ncharacter, but both were under the influ¬\nence of liquor.\nThe teetimony at the inquest is to the\neffect that while lev! Meyer and Peter\nBet* were ranged In altercation on their\nway home Theis came in and struck \nMeyer when Brown knocked Theis down.\nSeveral witnesses testify that while he\nwu down Theis drew a pistol and pointed\nit at Bitter. Bitter then said, "yon will\npoll a pistol, will yoq," and then fired\ntwice. Bitter said to the jailor, "I had to\nshoot him or he would have shot me,"\nXX ALKSBOCU XYSTiaV CLEAKXD CP,\nPimamrau, March 3D..Additional facts\nwere developed at the coroner's investiga¬\ntion relative to the murder of John\nGoehring, an Inmate of the Allegheny\nCity almshouse. TLey are u follows:\nThat on the morning of February 0th R.\n& Crawford, in charge of the insane de¬\npartment, found an insane man named\nWansman severely beating Goehring.\nWans man wu locked up, and Goehring\nran'Into the dining room. Crawford called\nCoolhoff, a weakminded inmate, to assist\nhim in. taking Goehring back to his\nroom- Goehring resisted, kicking Cool¬\nhoff in the stomach. Coolhoff, greatly\nenraged, returned the kick, knock¬\ning nim down. While Goehring wu\non
49d0fdafe496825434a0bbebf00403c9 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1909.250684899797 43.994599 -72.127742 She had once stated succinctly, as\nwas Edinonia's way, that the only\nthing about him that remotely suggest-\ned standing up for itself ,was tba cow-\nlick at the back vf a square and other-\nwise Irreproachably groomed head\nThe subject of this rather doubtful ap-\nproval was secretly encouraged in the\nbelief that the cowlick indicated an\naggressive spirit which seemed to be\nthe heroic attribute in the imagination\nof Edinonia's set.\nEdmoula's faintly appreciative re-\nmark bad been inspired In her moth-\ner's attic during the rummaging of a\nrain bound house party, when, upon\nthe discovery of an ancient coat of\nmall, Perclvale had pulled it out from\nunder the eaves and had fallen speed-\nily to calculating how many chain\ndishcloths it would have made for Mrs.\nTurner's carefully ordered kitchen.\nThis was too much for Edmonia. A\nman who could evolve dishcloths from\ntho fabric of romance must be lacking\nIn the most rudimentary Instincts of\nchivalry. It counted for naught with\nher that Perclvale Bonney was evinc\ning a business ability that made his\nfather prouder every day or that she\nhad never bad rival in his loyal de-\nvotion to her.\nShe dreamed of the clash of armor\nand the risks of Joust and tourney, a\nknight who should perform feats of\narms for her sake and rescue her, if\nneed be, from a tyrant's might. In tba\nfree' wbolesomeness of American so-\nciety the tyrant bad not appeared,\nnd to do Edmonia Justice she really\ndid care great deal fur Perclvale's\nallegiance, only she desired a more\ndaring proof.\nIt was therefore incumbent upon this\nthoroughly consistent young lady that\nshe steel her heart against the pleas-\ning picture which a tall, broad shoul-\ndered, sray clad figure, bat off and\nlight hair tossing in the breeze, made\nagainst a morning sky on the first day\nof one of his erratic autumnal visits\nnear her country home.\nShe accordingly let her disdainful\nglance dwell upon his offensively rud-\ndy cheek and Ignored his unaffected\nstare of astonishment at ber modern\nequipage, a brilliantly red automobile\nat a standstill upon the country road.\n"What, ho, Rebecca!" he greeted her\nwhen within speaking distance of\nwhere she sat in the crimson ram-\nbler.
4f272349157f962f494da98d22475a9a PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.2964480558085 31.960991 -90.983994 The physiologist, however, assumes a\ndifferent position in relation to this impor­\ntant point. He recognizes the vegetable\nkingdom as divided naturally into three\ngrand and distinct orders or classes of\nplants, and characterizes them according\nto the different modes or habits of growth\nassumed by the individuals of which each\norder or section is composed, by the dis­\ntinctive appellation terreatial, aquatic and\naerial; the first comprising that extensive\norder, the individuals comprising which\nare indigenous to dry and arable lands,\nand which derive the most important por­\ntion of their pasturage from the soil; the\nsecond embraces all plants to which the\nname ofaquatie may be applied, whether\nthey be in their nature strictly marine\nor submarine; while the third contains\nonly such individuals as are known to de­\nrive a large portion of their substance\nthe whole of it, from the air, and which\nare not, or at least appear not to be sen­\nsibly influenced by the nature or charac­\nter of the soil to which they are confined.\nTo illustrate each of these orders, bva\ndistinct reference to individual plants,\nwould occupy more room than we have at\n to devote, Itwillonlybe for\nto say, that in selecting crops to be turned\nin, those ought invariably to be preferred\nwhich derive their sustenance principal­\nly from the air. A very slight knowledge\nof vegetable physio'ogy will be amply suf­\nficient to direct us aright in this matter,\nand to unfold to us the beautiful system\nof laws by Which the ail-important and\nwonderful economy of vegetable nutrition\nis so admirably regulated and controlled\nNature is a skillful workman, and orders\nevery thing so as best to subserve the\ngreat and important purposes for which it\nwas formed—the welfare and the happi­\nness of man- It may not be improper,\nperhaps, here, to remark, that out of the\nmany crops which are usually produced\nby our farmers, for this purpose, buck­\nwheat, peas, and clover, are propably in\nbest repute. All plants of a calmiferous\ncharacter or which are distinguished bv\nlarge and profuse leaves are those which\nderive the largest portion of their nutri­\nment from the air, those plants, on the\ncontrary, having small leaves being grosä\nfeeders, and consequently much more\npowerful exhausters of the soil.— Maine\nCultivator.
0c61d2d5002758dbd5091bea1c8be73d THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1899.9547944888382 43.994599 -72.127742 "Talking about people being pecul-\niar," remarked an old trainer out at the\nBennings race track the other day, "if\nthere is anything more peculiar thaa\nrace horses I haven't come across it.\nliace horses, I mean thoroughbreds, of\ncourse, are as full of whims as well,\nas a woman, and you've got to humor\nthem just the same as women. I re-\nmember one I trained some years ago\na horse, I mean, of course. He was\na great one, and few of them could\nshow him the way in. Yet that feU\nlow couldn't be exercised in preparing\nhim for a race unless the boy on him\nwas rigged out in the stable's colors.\nYou couldn't fool himi about it, either,\nfor he knew just as well whether the\nboy was fully dressed as we did, and\nif he wasn't you couldn't get the old\nfellow on the track. But when the boy\nput on the duds, why, the old horse\nwould go out and do all that was want-\ned of him," says the Washington Star.\n"Then there was another that I had\nthat wouldn't associate with other\nhorses, and the was that\nwe had to train him by himself. Actu-\nally had to wait every time until every\nother horse was off the track. Then,\nwhen he had the whole track to himself,\nwehadallwecould dotogethimo\nwhen we thought he had been given\nenough. This same one we had to send\nto the post by himself, and when we\ngot him there we had to keep him away\nto one side, off from the bunch. An-\nother one I had was just the opposite,\nfor he wouldn't go on the track, either\nfor exercise or for a race, unless he\nwas accompanied by another horse.\n"Then there is the horse that runs\ntrue as long as he is in the lead, but\nwill stop and give up the fight the mo-\nment another one gets ' near him or\npasses him. On the other hand, there\nis the horse that tries all the harder\nas long as be is behind. Then there is\nthe horse that will not try if the jockey\nhas a whip, while there are others that\nwill not try unless they are given both\nwhip and spurs. But, as I said, they
277ccd60bf5c627204adf6c2e25d8b77 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.2445354875026 37.451159 -86.90916 three little sons to mourn his loss He\nwas one of the countys best citizens\nand hU denies will be regretted by all\nA Good Thing Hartford\nIf there Is any doubt in the mind of\nany citizen of Hartford as to the good\ntheYMCA Isdoingthetown heor\nshe should visit the Association rooms\nwhich they are at perfect liberty to\ndo some Sunday afternoon and see\nwhat goes on He will see a crowd of\nperhaps thirty of Hartfords or the\nworlds future citizens gathered in the\ncapacity of Bible study He will hear\nsongs that should thrill the heart of any\nenthusiastic Christian He will hear\nhalf a dozen of these little boya per ¬\nhaps morelead in voluntary prayer in\ntones of touching tenderness that will\nalmost cause tears to start in love\nfor these brave young hearts\nWhat he will sew anti hear will con ¬\nvince him that there is something in\nChristianity after all and especially\nthatbranch ofitwhichtheY M C A-\nha taken up The advantages which\nAssociation work offers for preparing\nboys for an entrance into good citizen ¬\nship are of the highest character The\nboys of Hartford are our future citizen ¬\nship the ones who will take our places\nwhen we have passed off the stage of\nlifeand it Is of the utmost importance\nthat they be given the right start A\nboy never loses anything by attending a\nY M CA meeting Infact heis\nmore liable to accumulate much of good\nin the way of observation and exper ¬\nletter
1890833455ebf42dcc75a8a168f2daf5 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1901.7931506532218 46.601557 -120.510842 place in that country since I left it years\nago. All that part of Canada known as\nthe peninsular, formed by Lake Huron\non the West and Lukes Erie and Ontario\non the south and east, is the creat fruit\nlection. There are square miles of ap-\nple orchards on the western side that\nfor si/.(. would put to blush the Yakima\nfruit raisers, hut I must say that it does\nnot compare with this valley for surety\nof crop. The crop is light there this\nyear and prices are (food. From there\nwe went to Buffalo to visit the Pan*\nAmerican exposition ; thence to Parit and\nOlney, Illinois. The latter place is my\nwife's old home, where we were married\njust after the war. We then went to St.\nLouis: thence to Barton county, in\nsouthern Missouri. The part of the\ncountry by the drought last\nsummer is not as prosperous as people\nwould like, still at the same time there\nis considerable to keep everybody on the\nham p. I noticed down in Southern\nMissouri the best apple crop of any place\nwe visited. You know that is a good\napple country and it isn't often they\nhave a failure. 1 saw the largest orch-\nard in the world in Missouri. It con-\ntains 2,(KH) acres and is full of market-\nable fruit. I noticed in particular that\nthe red apple predominates in every\npart of the country, but as a yielder the\nHen Davis seems to be the best. There\nare many people back east talking about\ncoming to Washington next spring. I\nencouraged them all I could and left the\nimpression everywhere I went that\nWashington was the best state in the\nnorthwest.
126d79da40cb735c0b317738e8695e86 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.8835616121257 39.745947 -75.546589 A service flag with five and per­\nhaps more stars will soon float from\nthe army Y. M. C . A . headquarters here.\nStrenuous ns are the duties and long\nas arc tho hours of the association\nsecretaries Ingaged In tralnlng-camp\nactivities, the jnllllary environment Iss\nexerting too strong an appeal to be re­\nsisted- by tho young, red-blooded men\nengaged In the great task of minister­\ning to tho various needs of the boys In\nkhaki and a quintet have stepped for­\nward to answer the bugles call.\nThe patriotic Impulse draws upon\ntho headquarters -office Itself for one\nrecruit. Ho Is Charles H. Newman, of\nIthaca, N. Y ., who has been hero since\nthe association work was Inaugurated.\nHe Is a graduate of Cornell University.\nHarold S. Keltnor, of South Bend, Ind.,\nwho has a secretary In Hut No.\n5, left during the last week to Join\nthe navy. Paul Wing, of Little Falls,\nN, V„ has enlisted with tho Twenty-\nthird Engineers, at Gamp Meade, Har­\nrison M. Sayre, of East Orange, educa­\ntional director In Hut No. 6, has ap­\nplied for admission to an officers train­\ning camp. Joseph J. Schenkel, of 2654\nNorth Franklin street, Philadelphia,\nhas enlisted in an ambulance corps.\nJohn D. Rockefeller. Jr.; got-his first\nview of the training of solltters when ho\ncame down from New York yesterday to\nmake the address on the dedication of\nY. M. C. A. Hut No 3. Mr. Rockefeller\nand his father are both personally In­\nterested In the Y.M.C. A. work for the\narmy and have been among tho largest\ncontributors to the support of the move­\nment.
0175f06c33deb0361e55216abfaabbbd RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1917.3383561326739 36.620892 -90.823455 The effilciency of a navy or an army\nIs essctly whst the strategic system\nmakes it Eleven thousand Greeks\nunder Mlltlsdes. highly efficient and\nthoroughly trained, defeated ; 100,009\nPersians at Marathon. A Greek IleetJ\nunder Themtstocles defeated and al\nmoet destroyed a much larger Persian\nfleet at Sslamls. With sn army of less\nthan 15,000 men. but highly trained by\nPhilip of Macedon. his father. Aloxan.\nder, In only twelve years conquered\nten of the most wealthy and populous\ncountries of the world. Cbormv Alarlo,\nAttila, Charlemagne, and ill the great\nmilitary men .from the greatest an-\ntlquItyJIown' to the present moment\nhave trained and organised bodies et\nsoldiers and sailors, under , systems\nsuited to the times, snd then waged\nsuccessful war on peoples less militar\nily efficient Cortes conquered Mex\nico, and.Plsarro eonnuered Peru; \nBritish, French, and Spanish aubdued\nthe Indians of North America, and\nduring the latter half of the nineteen-\nth century nearly all the land la the\nworld that waa "unoccupied" by Eu- -\nropeana or their descendants was tak\nen In possession by European Powers.\nGreat Britain la now mistress of about\none quarter of the land and the popu-\nlation of the globe. Russia, Prance,\nuerman, snd the United States govern\nmost or th remainder. ..\nTbese results were brought about\nalmost aololy by the exercise of mili\ntary force: and of this force, physi-\ncal courage was not a determining\nelement because it waa lust aa evl--\ndent in the conquered as In the Con- -\nquerora. The aaterraln na"e!emnnt\nwaa ftrategy that (under the behest ot\nponry) prepared the military and nav\nal rorres-l -
0d765971fd8c75a622f6217e5b0f0653 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.5368852142785 40.063962 -80.720915 The overpay and false ineasuremer\nof Btonework in this county have stirr\nup tho taxpayers in all parts of tl\ncounty in a wonderful way, and the li\nof a county commissioner is a very u\nenviable one just now. People have t\ngun to make inquiries about how loi\nsuch things have been going on, he\nuny of it finally came to bo discovert\nand othervury pertinent inquirios sui\nas always follow crookedness in publ\naffairs. Tho St Clairsvillo Chronic\nafter giving Mr. Hart's own version\n»i.o nn*ir Mfhnitiini. it to bo true, sav\n"if Mr. Hart has been conducting £\noffice on a system of guess work, it\ntimo he was out. A man who can be\noasily duped is not fit to manage tl\naflairs of Bolmont county, be he tl\nsoul of honesty as far as he knows,\nis no excuse that Berry was into\ndeeper than Ilart Berry should\nprosecuted and Hart retired to privn\nlife, where the burden of his creduli\nwill not fall on tho county."\nAnother batch of the employes of tl\nBellaire stamping company, at Harve\nIlls., camo to town yesterday. The\nwere ten of them and they are expet\ning work in the new estiblishinont\nthat kind But somo of the\nfolks are liable to befooled. Tho ne\nstamping company will organize tie:\nMonday, but it will be a long time y\nbefore thoy bavo the works in actr\noperation, and when they do it will n\nbe tho highest recommendation th\nthe applicants quit elsewhere. l'l\nnew works will be run with the san\nbusiness discipline that has attend)\nthe other enterprises ot the projector\nThere was a rumor" about town ye\nterday, that tho Bellaire nail works hi\nsent for the Amalgamated committe\nbut it could not be verified. The Be\nlaire works will hardly bo readv\nstart for a couple of weeks, oven if tl\nmanagement desiro to, and aa to tl\nprobabilities no one has any authoril\nto speak. It is cheerful, however,\nnote that no one anticipates trouble.\nR. M . Collins, of the St Clalrsvil\ngun club, broke bis record yesterday-t\nbreaking twontv-fivo birds in twent\nfive shots. Dr. McClellan, of the Bel\naire club, broke twenty-tlvo in twent;\nfive successive shots, but not in one\nthe twenty-five shot turns of the club.\nCity Treasurer Frank Williams an\nMiss Mary Eberle were married at tl\nbride's home, in the Fourth ward, yo\ntorday evening. The wedding was quie
540c8500be7c403b140ced1ea5deea43 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1863.5493150367834 35.780398 -78.639099 nuuum lumt uui auu. huutiiuui. iUIb. JjaivCT CamC\nout and and told them there was no man in the house\nexcept Dr. Baker, and ff they would not fire upon\nhim he would como out. They ordered her to go .\naway from tac door or they would shoot her. Dr.\nBaker then pulled his wife in the room and threw\ntho door open. They fired upon him with their guns\nand he returned the fire with his pistols. The Yan-\nkecs present, having exhausted their ammunition,\nthrew their guns, with fixed bayonets, at him he\nthrew their guns back again at them. A number of\nYankee reinforcements then came up with loaded\nguns and fired a volley at him, inflicting two'mortal\nwounds. Dr. B. said to his wife, "they have killed,\nme," and fell; his wife, in endeavoring to support\nhim, fell with him. The Yankees then entered the\nroomoho of them whom had no bayonet on\nhis gun, jobbed him in the mouth with the muzzle\nof his gun: run his bayonet through his\ncheck ; others struck him on the head ; one ruffian\npushed Mrs. Baker aside from her husband with his\nbayonet Dr. Baker asked to bo turned on his side,\nand asked for water. After ho drank, he observed to-th-\ncrowd of Yankees around him that they were a\na cowardly set of scoundrels so many, of them to\nassault and murder one man.\nTwo of the Yankees were dangerously, if not mor-\ntally, wounded. They went on to the next house\nand had their wounds dressed, and safd Dr. Baker\nwas the gamest man they over saw.\nDr. Baker was one of tho earliest of our citizens to\nespouse the cause of the South, and was an ardent\nsecessionist from the beginning. We liave no doubt\npome renegade tory from East Tennessee had giveu\nthe Yankees full information about Dr. Baker's senti-\nments and his activity in tho cause of the South,\nand that they intended to seize upon some pretenee\nto murder him.
0ae7e28afa3da5a3da21e24d85d99fa0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.1082191463724 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Borell was provost of the\nchurches and had Charge of Holy Trin­\nity *nntil the arrival Of Rev. Lawrence\nGireliu8 October 21, 1767, who says on\nthe 25th of October Mr. Borell preached\nin English, but with great difficulty, he\nwas so weak; and this was his last\nsermon, and the last time he wras in th\nchurch until he was carried there and\nburied, after a long anh painful ill­\nness, on the 5th of April, 1768.\nIn the early days of the ehuroh,\nburial within its walls was considered\nthe highest honor and tribute of re­\nspect that could be shown to the de­\nparted. Mr. Bjork relates that he\nburied Church»1Warden Brewer Seneke\nunder his dwn seat, he being the firs\nburied in the church, and also tells us\nthat he buried a son, who died here,\non the south side of the altar, and when\nJohn Hanson Stelman, of Blk River,\ngave up to the church the note for 100\npounds, as a special mark of gratitude\nthey voted him a place of burial on the\nmain aisle of the church. The floor\nbeing of brick and stone, a place was\neasily made for the graves.\nDuring the illness of Provost Borell,\nMr. Girelius had charge of congre­\ngation, and he says, “I preached alter­\nnate Sundays in Swedish and English, aware\nwith very good effect, so that on the\n2d of Easter, I, assisted by Pastor\nGoran son, administered the Lord's sup­\nper to fifteen persons, it being the first\ntime, the holy communion was ever a\ncelebrated in English in this church.\nAfter the death of Mr. Borell, Mr.\nGirelius was appointed pastor, and in\n1770 he says, “I began to instruct the\nyouth In the English catechism, begin\nring 25th cf November, teaching them\nevery day, except Friday, from 11 to 2\no'clock, and followed it up till tho 2d\nof June, and at the same time distrib­\nuted among them small religious bookf\nin English, published by the Society\nfor ihe Propagation of the Gospel, as\nwhich they, by the request of Dr. and membrane« — Charles\nProvost Wrangell, furnished me, to Springer and Alexis I. DuPont. The\ngive out wherever I thought good former, ln the early days of its history,\nmight be done. I also sent a number was the trusty agent, wise counselor\nof the books to the Swedes at Egg Har- and unwearied, worker for ils prosper-\nbor, when Pastors Goranson and Wick- ity from early youth to a ripe old age\nsell visited them.
3fe3d3bc194026859d8c72a4ad2565dc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.9575342148655 41.681744 -72.788147 At the office of the department of\njustice, in Hartford, this morning,\nknowledge that authorities are inves-\ntigating alleged graft on the part of\nfederal authorities in securing release\nfrom the service of Persian-Assyria- n\nmen of this city was denied. It was\nrumored that department of justice\nmen canvassed the Burritt school\nnight school classes Saturday and\nmade an investigation of the record\nof each man of draft age who had\nregistered and had not been called in-\nto the service, or having been called\ninto the service had been discharged.\nAlthough the office in Hartford de-\nnies any connections with such inves-\ntigations suspicious cases are said to\nhave been reported. A well known\nlocal Persian is said to have declared\nthat while he has no personal knowl-\nedge of action having taken\nplacet he is sure in his own mind that\nbribes have been given to secure the\nrelease of men from the service, be-\ncause of that fact that it was a com-\nmon subjet of conversation among\nsome of the people of his nationality.\nHe stated that there are at least two\nmen "higher up" who figure in tho\ngraft the editor of a foreign lan-\nguage publication, and a representa-\ntive c the Persian government, with\noffices in Now York. Amounts rang-\ning from $50 to several hundred arc\nalleged to have been paid these men\nfor their services.\nAbout two weeks ago these men\nvisited this city and a mass meeting\nwas held after which a collection\nsupposedly for French war relief was\ntaken, and $1,000 was raised.
0b63c56d3325a5452d4b85708cf6de7f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.828767091578 40.832421 -115.763123 Mallon's grocery and provision store,\nHarnett's clothing store, Hank of\nCalifornia building, Uauncr Brothers'\nclothing store, John Uillig Co.'s\nhardware store, M. M . Frederick's\njewelry store, Union Market, Columbia\nHouse, Levy Brother's dry goods store,\nColombo ltestauruut, Philadelphia shoe\nstore, Vanoberg's dry goods store, lloos\nBrother's clothing emporium, Block it\nCo.'s dry goods store, Fletcher &. Co.'s\nfurniture store, Magnolia saloon, Cohu\nSc. Isaacs' clothing store, Delta, Wash¬\nington and Assembly saloons, Harris\nBrother's cigar store, International ho.\ntel and saloon, I'alacu saloon, CSobey «V\nWilliams' saloon, Spiro's saloon, Wolf's\ntailor shop, Cook's old Masonic block,\nllerck's dry good store, Tlicile's drug\nstore, City Bakery and ltcfrcshiiient Sa¬\nloon, McMillan x Adam's grocery and\nprovision store, the Masonic building\njust being erected, Cornwell's furniture\nstore, Masel's butcher shop. Cooper's\nhay-yard and lodging house, Dickman's\ngrocery store, along with a host of oth¬\ner buildings and fine residences, includ¬\ning everything combustible, to the last\nhouse on North C street, lletween C\nand D streets, Hlack's b,.ildiug, con¬\ntaining the Jictiiiuy Chrunieh oilier, \nbook store, Mayer's barber shop, the\nTerritorial Kntcr/'riic buiMing au<l\notllee, Hatch Bros., grocery storo ami\nresidence, ltcim's saloon, 1'hitadclphin\nllrewcry, Carson Brewery. I'ostollice\nand building, Mrs. Ford's brick build¬\ning, Engine Company No. f>'s building,\nWeigand's assay ollive and buildings,\nMrs. Emory's lodging house, Washing¬\nton Guard Hall, McCutohan's lodging\nhouse, Kriittclinitt's lodging house turn¬\nkey's «V Smith's lumber yard, Smith's\nblacksmith and wagon shop, along with\nall the blocks of residences lying to¬\nward the northeast portion of tha city.\nOn the cast sido of I) street I'iper's\nOpera House, tho Virginia A* Truckeo\nltuilroad depot building, the Consoli¬\ndated Virginia hoisting works and mill,\nthe new California stamp mill, Haynie's\nlumber yard and the Ophir hoisting\nworks were swept. O11 F and <1\nstreets, tha Episcopal, Catholic and\nMethodist Churches, tho residence\nof Bishop Whitaker, D. Driscoll,\nstock broker, and the whole of\ntho blocks of buildings lying north\nof Smith street, including all of Chi¬\nnatown, and reaching to within a few\nrods of the new C »V C shaft.
b0a72ce9751f1af94c64a72ed3414d80 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.3438355847286 40.807539 -91.112923 Now, could I. appreciate as a compliment\nany thing that could come from the lips', <>r\nthe pen, of an HABITUAL, a notorious, a scour­\nged, and a disgraced LIAR, I should fcel dis-\nposed to consider his Remarks, which I have\nquoted above, as containing thc very.highest\nthat he could possibly have paid to me.\n" Jacobinism," as every political tvro, and\nschool-boy, knows—though he probably may\nnot know it—is a lerm to which TYRANT?, and\nTOIUKS, and FEDERALISTS — words, which to\nsome extent, are synonymous:—have jipver\nfailed to resort, when hard pushed fur an\nargument, and forced to fly to an epithet\nwith which to stigmatize a LIBKRALIST, or a\nRLTUBLICAN, or a DKMOCJIAT, who inay have\nbeen found to bo inflexible in his principles'\nHumble as is my condition in a term\nwhich has been applied successively, and ten\nthousand times—yes ten thousand "times ten\nthousand!—to a Lafayette, a Washington, a\n(cfferson, a Madison, a JacUson, a Van Bu-\nren, and last —though not least—a Benton!\nby the corrupt minions of tyranny, and a\nmoneyed aristocracy, and the cringing lick"\nspittles of po\\ver, carries with it no stinsr to\nmy bosom; but would bc considered by me as\nbefore remarked, as conveying the highest\ncompliment, ir, instead of a double dved hyp­\nocrite, and a poor pitiful creature, wifhout the\nfirst attribute of manliness, or a Kfnffie iust\ntitle to the appellation, it came from a hi<rh\nminded and honorable j>oUtical opponent how­\never imb.ttercd his feelings' or prejudices\nagamst me might be! It was »Jacnbin" that\nthe Tyrants of Europe called Laiavette; it
225164b95888af45509b3f3ed7850d3f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.264383529934 40.832421 -115.763123 IN TI1R 1>1*TR1CT C'OORT O*\nthe Ninth Judicial IHatriet of the Huts of\nNevada. in m l for the County of Klko. Ai««(k\nBenaou Pla ntiff, again*! Aaron ltenanlt\nant. Ac ion brought in ih* district Co«rt oftto\nNinth Judicial I strict of the State of Nevada,\nIn ant! tor the County of K'ko, and thv Cone\nplaint tiled in the oUlce of the Clerk of said\n1 Hut riot Court.\nThe fe'taU- of Nevada tends greeting to Aitoi\nBencon, L>« fendaut You are hereby rrqnirwl\nto appear in an ac ion brought against >ou by\nthe aoov* nsiued Plaintiff, in the hlstrtct Court\nof the Vlnth Judicial l>islrict of the State of\nNe«ada, In and for the County « f Elko, and to\nanawer th- complaint fllc«l therein, within tea\ndaya (exclusive of the day cf surv ce) after the\n on you of thin Huruioona.If senrrd\nwithin this County; or if *er*e«l out of this\nCounty, but iu thi* Matrict. within twenfy\ndaya; otherwise, within forty da>>.or Judg-\nincut by default will be taken against you, ao»\neordtng to « It .. I>rayer or sanl complaint.\n'i he said action ia brought U» obtain a decree\nof tliia Court to dlasohe the bonds of matri*\nniony existing 1>«tween Plaintiff and Defend¬\nant, on the ground of groee aud habttaal\ndrunkenueaa and repeated acta of vloUaeej\nalso for adultry with one Charlotte Hruith, la\nwill more fully appear by refereoc* to the cuoh\nplaint now 011 file 111 my office.\nAnd you Arc hereby ii.tifl.d that If yon fall\nto appear and answer said complaint aa above\nrequired, ihu *uid Plaintiff will apply to tbt\nCoutt lor the reliet demanded therein.
0d75557cdec95834feded85b63df6479 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.0561643518517 40.063962 -80.720915 Levi P. M«>rtou, lus chief competitor, is tju\nvery wealthy banker, socially eminent, lj1,\nbove reproach in^his business relations,\nlid for many years a liberal contributor\nRepublican campaign funds. lie is an\nitiuential member oi the* Union League jj,\nlub, the ricliest in house and member-\nliip of all our clubs, and Evarts is the 10\nresident. Morton's refiidence was one of\nle finest on Murray Hill, until within a Jfl\niw years that the Vanderbilts and a few to\nLher families have erected veritible man- Gt\nons there. Evarts' home is in a curious be\nmnantof social pretentiousness.Stny- ca\npsant Square, where stand the domiciles\nu score of New York families a little less\nlanthe average. Although uroivded on\nII sides hy tenement population, these wf\n>lks refuse to budge the place of cci\nishionablo distinction fifty years ago. no\nIvarts' nigh neighbor is Hamilton Fish,find dri\nlose around him are other proud descen- wi\nants of the original Dutch. His family Co\nlarge, his children numbering eleven, tic\nnd ins daughters figure in circles which\neeui them select and exclusive. IIo has\nmg had a large income form the practice\nf law, and his fee of $25,000 for defending wi\nlenry Ward Beecher in the scandal trial mi\nus not disproportionate to his customary G(\njinnnerutioo, but 14s living expenses pu\nlive also been heavy, and it is not thought\nmt ho has much of a fortune. His mem-\nership of Hayes' Cabinet was costly, in n\n:ie sense that it lessened his income, and £a\nom the Senatorship ho can
09a8f607481ae2b4073cbc7a5027aaac THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5778688208359 39.290882 -76.610759 More recently we have found bottles cast n a mould\nprecisely like our own, but "Swnim's Panacea" New\nYork is blown in the glass, instead of "owaiiu's Pana-\ncea," Philadelphia.\nWe have received related advices from he West In-\ndia islands that our empty bottles are purchased up at\nhigh rates, for the purpose of refilling them with a spu-\noiis mixture: ami ofthe thodsauds of bottles of Swuim's\nPanacea annually sold in our principal cities, we can\ncollect hut verr few of the empty bottles, as they are\nmade use of in" various ways to defraud tile proprietor\ntuid to deceive the public.\nWe have known instances of three hollies being made\nout of one, by mixing a portion of tiarsaparilla Syrup\nwith the genuine Swaini'a Panacea, thereby retaining\nsome of its virtues.\nIn Philadelphia, lately, a large order was received be\na mercantile hou<e for Panacea bottles; a mould\nu exact imitatio. - f of our own was made.and the ordrv\napplied?and recent advices from Brazils inform ustltat\na vessel from Amsterdam had arrived at Rio do Janeiro,\npartly ladn with bottles precisely like our own. We\nhave"also in possession a book printed in Germany, a fac\nsimile of our own hook of cases and certificates.\nFrom all these circumstances it will be seen that he\nguanine Swaim's Panacea is counterfeited mid imitated\nto a considerable uxtent; and as these imitations are not\nonly a fraud upon us. but will necessarily protract the\nsufferings of invalids in those diseases where the genuine\nmedicine might have proved efficacious, we must rely\nU|KUI the public to purchase the \\u25baSwaim's Panacea only\nrom authentic and respectable houses and dealers, who\nobtain their supplies cither from our Labratory in Phila\ndelpiii.i. or from our accredited and General Agent,
524890ece7f0abd57a84cb74a9eba0e4 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1913.9657533929478 34.51147 -110.079609 \\ WILD MAN CAPTURED\nAll places have their periods\n/excitement. Woodruff has just\nad one of these uncommon\nEvents which rouses all, both\nI and young. Not long since\n}ar t Smithson, who has been\nIriving* mail, reported that he\nencountered a wild man who at-\ntempted to take one of his horses\naway from him. A few days\nago John Pearce and one or two\nothers while out discevered the\nsupposed home of this man and\nimmediately came to town, when\nlart was invited to go with them\nand capture him, two or three\nothers going along. Application\nwas made to the justice for a\nwarrant and finally the party got\noff without getting a warrant\nand Bart, whose horse got away,\nwas left to hunt it up. \nuniting the town over he return-\ned just in time to meet the party\ncoming in with the man, whom\nie identified. A large crowd\nsoon assembled to see the crazy\nman, Lon Savage ventured a lit-\nje close to get a better view by\nhe rays of the moon when the\nnan made a ferocious move to-\nward him and Lon fell over, but\nsoon gained his feet and hit the\nligh places for some distance in\nhe opposite direction. The man\nwas lodged in a room and Bishop\nSavages folks furnished him and\n;he guard a lunch, of which he\nate a little. When the crowd\ndispersed it was arranged for\nJohn Pearce and Bart to take\n;he first watch so they were\nest with this strange denizen.
19f7571d79ff1617eb6471f32794a1d8 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1883.5082191463723 39.756121 -99.323985 It is definitely settled that the Den-\nver & Bio Grande will be built from\nDenver to Kansas City by as direct a\nroute as it will be advisable to take.\nFor a long time it has been understood\nthat the Kio Grande management has\nnot been altogether satisfied with play-\ning second fiddle to the Atchison and\nBurlington roads, and have come to the,\nconclusion that the only way cut of the\nmess will Ue to build a direct line of its\nown. This is to be done in connection\nwith' the Chicago and Alton road, which\nit is unoerstood has been fastening a\nlonging eye on tho advantages of Den-fo- r\nsome time past, but owing to the\nnumber of railroads which have pro-\nceeded them, tho Chicago and Alton\npeople h?.ve ever failed to take the ini-\ntial step. It is a settled fact now, how-\never, the Bio Grande and Chicago\nroads have formed a strong coalition\nwhich will result in a new road to the\nEast from Denver. Another fact which\nmakes this appear more probable is that\nlargo corps of surveyors have been lay-\ning out a route just north of the Kansas\nPaciiic and taking in all the country\nwhich is taken in by that road. The\nnew road will take in Norton, . Oberlin,\nBeloit, Concordia, branching at Topeka\ntaking in Atchison and Leavenworth in\nKansas, also St. Joseph, and running to\nKansas City where connections will be\nmade with the Chicago and Alton.\nTk;5 will give the latter line a "direct\noutlet to Salt Lake City, and by the\ntime new line is completed it is more than\nliiely that arrangements will have been\nmade with other roads by which an al-\nmost direct line to California will be es-\ntablished.
19bb60638960a432fb3bfcfe6945b5bf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.0314207334043 40.063962 -80.720915 Capt. Clements was seen aftorwardsacd t\ngraciously consented to talk very freely n\nconcerning what the Baltimore & Ohio o\nwould like to do here. In the first place ii\nit wants to run a double track along the \\\nsouth bank of tho creek to a point nearly o\nopposite the Central glass works, when it 3\nwould cross the creok aud strike its pree- ii\nent trAcks beyond the plass house going 0\ntowards the tunnel. The Baltimore & a\nOhio has already acquired considerable I\nvaluable lands along that route.\nIn connection with this route the com* c\npany wants to put up a now passenger 0\ndepot hero, and it is understood that the n\nsite for that would be between Main and ti\nMarket streets and Twentieth street and h\ntho crook.the property occupied by p\nHoliday's planing mill and other prop- ij\nerty. This depot would boalarge elegant g\nbuilding littod with all modern conveni- c\nences and with offices for quite a force of Q\nclerks. With tho matter, of desired route e\nand now depot settled, the road would tl\nprobably proceed to carry out a long r\ncherished plan.that of making the u\nthrough route from Baltimore to the Ohio\nvia Cumberland and'Pittsburgh, which is ft\nabout eighty miles shorter than by the jj\npresent routo. That idea carried out q\nwould result in all likelihood in the Hemp- fa\nfield being double tracked and a northern\nY built at the eastern end of the Bellaire r\nbridge so that trains could pass right on [\nfrom here West without being obliged to t\nturn around. v
190b6e53bfd68bc1c4e449404309c98d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.905479420345 40.441694 -79.990086 Representatives of the United States of America in\nCongress assembled. That the secretary of War be,\nand hereby is, authorized and directed to sell and\nconvey to the purchaser or purchasers, all the\nright, title and interest of the United States, In\naud to all that certain parcel of ground, belonging to\nthe United States, situate in the city of Pittsburg.\nPennsylvania, at the northwest corner of Penn\naenut( and Garrison alley, in the Fourth ward of\nsaid city, fronting 100 feet on west side of Penn\navenue and extendlne northwardly alonsr the west\nline of Garrison alley, preserving the same width, to\nlow water line of the Allegheny rivcr.subject how-\never, to such public easements as exist thereon and\nthereovcr.Depot Quartermaster's Office. Washing-\nton, D. C. November 7. 1891. Under the pro-\nvisions of the above quoted Act of Congress, ap- -\npruteujiia ;a, lauu, ana oy uirecuon oi tue\ntaryofWar, I will offer for sale at public auction\nat the Stock Exchange the city of Pittsburg, Va.\non Saturday the 12th day of December. 1891 . at\no'clock r. 31., for cash, the property described lu\nsaid act, together with such improvements thereon\nasbelonsrto the United States, snhlert to the con\nditions set forth in said act. and subject also to the\nterms and conditions named in the printed circu-\nlar of this date, copies of which will be furnished\non application to the undersigned or to the Acting\nAssistant Quartermaster at Allegheny Arsenal,\nwhere also n plat of the ground can be seen. The\nright is reserved to reject any or all bids, or to ac-\ncept anv bid or bids subject to the conditions pre-\nscribed in the circular referred to. and to require a\ndeposit of 5 per centum orthe purchase money at\nme umc ox nouncauou 01 acceptance 01 uiu. raj-me- nt\nof the full amount of the purchase monev\nmust be made upon delivery of duly executed deed\ndeed for the property purchased,
062a03d0da91a14400a2ec474dd4ed56 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.5794520230847 39.743941 -84.63662 "Well, I hadnt been on my ridge very\nlong till I heerd three shots, one arter\nanother, as quick as a rifle could be\nfired; and at the first one away I ran\ndown the mountain side to cross , over\nto the other ridge. "Bout half way over,\nwhat should I see coming toward me in\nthe open creek bottom but a huge\npainter, who, as he saw me, stopped,\nnot liking my looks, I thought, much\nbetter than I did his'n? There he was,\nsquatting like a dog, on bis hind quar-\nters, and staring at me with Ms great\nyellow eyes. I aimed for his peepers\nin a hurry, but, to my horror, my gun\nsnapped 1 and he jumps up and comes\na few steps right towards me I eyes\nbegun to water, but x snapped again;\nand once more the horrid varmint come\na few steps nearer, this time twisting his\ntail about like a cat watching a mouse!\nBy this time I was so soared 'tain't no\nuse not to own up that my gun begun\nto wobble, but, as well as I could, I kept\non snapping, without at last aiming at\nall, in my fright, when finally .the gun\nwent off in his very face, and the cussed\ncreature, scared too, turned his ugly\ntail and went off down the hollow, at a\ncralloD. whilst the Great drors of sweat\nstood: on my face, and my ha'r almost\nraised the cap off my head, I do believe 1\nMighty glad, stranger, 1 was, to get rid\nof him.
1d2668ac542c0a7f19f083b4103a7343 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.332876680619 29.4246 -98.49514 The change of the tobacco tax on the 1st of\nMay, and the preparations for rebate on un\nbroken packages, Is occupying a great deal of\nattention, not alone from the head of the\nRevenue Bureau here, but from persons all\nover the country. For how many manufac-\nturers and dealers do you suppose Ihcc are\nin this article in the country? Four hundred\nthousand! Nearly a half million; or nearly\none to every 100 persons. The chanee in the\nlaws makes it necessary to send new stamps\nlor every one 01 tnese ueaiers, and In many\ncases to other classes of internal revenue tax\npavers, so that the other day K tons of\nstamps were shipped by the Revenue depart\nment lor tne use 01 tnese people. You see\nevery cross road stoic in the countiy keeps\nlouaccu, anu, 01 course, must pay us license\ntax for that purpose. Everybody in the \nhas observed the frequency with which he en- -\ncoumers cigar s' .oies and saloons. Well,\neveiy one of these has to have its new license\nstamps and so It is pretty easy to see where\nthe 40,000 stamps go to. The act of Congress\nwhich reduced Uie ta provided that dealers\nwho have on had unbroken packages ol to-\nbacco on May 1st on which the full tax of 16\ncents per pound has been paid may obtain a\nrebate 01 tne amouut paid in excess ol the tax\nunder the law taking effect on that date.\nHence there will be an unwonted activity in\nthe tobacco shop on that day.\n"What do you suppose this rebate will\namount too," 1 asked 01 an ollicial ol the Inter\nnal Revenue. Bureau yesterday.\n"I don't know," he answered "its pretty\nnam iu csumaic. ti win run up into tne mil\nlions, of course."
32a82dbd64677242c7fd9b3a4a216a24 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.2917807902081 41.681744 -72.788147 So far as.the stock market is con-\ncerned, it was the war group of stocks\nwhich led the advance. A number of\nour great industrial establishments\nare employed on large and profitable\nforeign contracts. Concerns equipped\nwith facilities for turning out ord-\nnance and ammunition have been par-\nticularly fortunate and these led the\nrise. Some automobile manufacturers\nhave also secured enormous contracts\nfrom Europe, about 30,000 American\ncars and motor trucks having already\nbeen shipped abroad, with thousands\nmore to follow. Clothing and food pro-\nducers have also been enjoying very\nprifitable contracts. All such activi-\nties are having their effect upon busi-\nness and speculation. They may not\nbe permanent factors, yet while they\nlast they are very powerful and are\nthe prime movers in the present up-\nward movement. They have also\nb'rpught into the speculative arena on\nentirely new set of operators who have\nbeen largely responsible for the recent\nactivities and manipulation. \nably the sensational advance in the\nwar group shares affected the entire\nmarket. It certainly awakened the\ninvesting public in general to a real-\nization of the improvement which for\nseveral weeks past has been develop-\ning so silently as to almost escape\ngeneral observation. Confidence was\nsleeping and a shock of some sort was\nnecessary to shake off the lethargy\nproduced by the onslaughts of war.\nUnder the circumstances, therefore,\nit is pertinent to again call attention\nto the forces of silent recuperation\nwhich have been at work outside of\nthe war group; the' latter being a class\nwhich should be set apart by them-\nselves and judged strictly by the prof-\nits secured or likely to be secured\nfrom the war. This group in reality\nis relatively small, and a due sense\nof proportion should assist in drawing\nattention to home conditions, which\nhenceforth must be a more important\ninfluence for the reason that Uie war
558bac568280a3af3deb37cc5ef9fb8f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 ey aro Idols of hearts and of households;\nrhcy aro angels or God lu disguise;\ni sunlight still sleeps in their tresses,\nlis glory still gleams in their eves;\nthose truants from hoiue and from heaven,\n['hey have mado me more manly and mild\nd I know how Jesus could liken\nPhe kingdom of God to a child.\nsk not a life for the dear ones,\nLU radiant as others have done,\nt that life may have Just enough shadow\nL'o temper tho glare or the sun;\nrould pray God to guard them from evil,\ntat my prayer would bound back to myseir;\nI a seraph may pray for a sinner.\ntat a sinner must pray for himseir.\nc twig is so easily bended,\nhave banished the rule and the rod;\nave taught them the goodness or knowledge,\n'hey have taught me tho gooduess of God;\n is a duugcon or darkness,\nVhere I shut them from breaking a rule;\nfrown is sufficient correction:\nly love is the law or the school.\ntall leave the old house in the Autumu,\n. 'o traverse its threshold no more;\nt how 1 nhall sieh for the dear ones,\n'bat meet ma each morn at the door!\nhall mine the "good nights " and tho kisses,\nLnd thegueh of heir innocent gloe,\no group on thu green, and the flowers\n?hat are brought every morning to me.\niall miss them at morn and at eve,\nTheir song in the school and in the street;\niall miss tho low hum of their voices,\nind the tramp of their delicate feet,\nlen the lessons and tasks are ended,\nLnd death says," Tho school is dismissed;"\n* the little oues gather around me,\no bid me good night and be kissed.
298dd1e4f4c47b46aacedb5ba45739b0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.89999996829 39.745947 -75.546589 he raid that tihe naming of Mr. Byrn*\nwas simply a personal matter.\nThe Evening Journal told this story\nyesterday and the statement simply\nverifies yesterdays news story.\nThe statement follows:\nOn his return to Washington, the\nPresident found that some misappre­\nhension existed as to the reappoint­\nment of the United States Attorney for\nDelaware, and authorized Ui« follow­\ning statement regarding It:\nMr. Byrne was originally appointed\nUnited Stales Attorney for Delaware\nby President McKinley.\nRoosevelt knew him personally. In the\nopinion of the President he had ren­\ndered excellent service for the public,\ngood in more than one direction, and\nhe had been a staunch supporter of the\nPresident when he ran for Governor\nand afterwards. He was reported by\nthe Department of Justice as a and\ncompetent District Attorney, and the\nPresident had entire confidence In his\nability and Integrity. He accepted the\nnomination for Congress. Other Dis­\ntrict Attorneys and Marshals had ac­\ncepted such nominations, without be­\ning requested to resign; but. In view of\ntho factional fight lm Delaware, the\nPresident thought that Mr. Byrne\nshould resign, whltto he accordingly\n^id. When the election was over, the\nPresident reappointed him, without,\nhaving given him the slightest pre­\nvious Indication that such was his In­\ntention. He would have been reap­\npointed without regard to the circum­\nstances under which he ran or tho fac­\ntion with which he was allied.\nJ. M. Carson, the Washington corre­\nspondent. of the Public Hedger, In re­\nferring to the matter, says this morn­\ning:
2cae4fbebbd62cee376b8b5ac40a353d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.8863013381533 41.681744 -72.788147 Mr. Gill of the Bricklayers' Union\nhas frightened some of the subway\ncontractors into stopping work lest\nthey should be sent to jail for em-\nploying alien laborers on their con-\ntracts. The dual subway is being\nbuilt as many miles of subway had\nbeen built, and yet nobody ever\nraised the point beforc.lt is idle to\nask why the point is raised now.\nThose familiar with labor troubles\nmay have an idea, and may marvel\nthat the trouble is not avoided in the\nmanner in which many labor trou-\nbles are settled. Since that course\nis not taken the situation may bo\nserious, although it appears absurd.\nThe lower courts of this state have\ndecided that it is not a criminal act\nto hire foreign laborers, and that\nthe law is unconstitutional.\nMoreover, there is room to \nwhether the dual subway is such a\nwork as the law would apply to. If\njt were a valid law. It is plain that\nthe subway is not a city work in\nsuch a sense as the munlicpal build-\ning, built by the city for the city\nalone. The dual subway is a part-\nnership affair, constructed by two\nprivate companies for their profit in\nthe first place, and for the city's sole\naccount only after prior claims have\nbeen satisfied. No doubt the title\nIs In the city, subject to a mortgage\nbut the first parties in interest at this\nstage are the operating companies,\nthe city being In the background. It\n1s not necessary to accept offhand\nopinion of the law as final. Compe-\ntent authority presumably can sur-Ke- s t\nsome way in which the law may
943ecd254083e078e0fec8e0ff737dc4 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1864.7827868536228 41.262128 -95.861391 If by battering downs tea eso effaet, in\nany material point of view, the military\nsituation of our opposing farces, then I\ndoubt net, Cbrift and a good consciene';\nwould not condemn you for an act of so\nstern and doatractive a duty. But doear\ntroope waver, falter, retreating, or sup­\nplicate yuu, wb«.n yoa sbeil ih . citineBi\nb'.'iploss in their rear? Do tbe blood r-f\noid men, and the mangled forms cf inne\ncent children, or tbe look of help!ess anx­\niety of defenceless women, have any\nother effect than to intensify the resolu­\ntion and steady the aim of our resistant\nforcesV is ui;ytbiog accomplished by it\nbut to aggravate tbe horrors of war, and\nuselessly shed innocent blood ? Does\nnot God, who look* directly into oar\nheart, sea tbat you yourself know this't\nNor do I suppose tbat you justify tbe\nact before God, by alleging that we bave\nhare military workshops, public stores\nand offices. To save yourself from tbe\nexecration of mankind, yon should be able\nto show that you bave resorted tbe daily\nand shelling of a city of non-\ncombatant people only as a final necessi­\nty. Have you ever demanded tbat these\nmilitary uses of the oity ba abandoned,\nand do you not know tut they are not\nexposed to destruction by your gons ?\nWhat would you do under similar cir-\ncuua»t*:.c<esUnl<*sa I mistake your\njudgment, you woruid change your course,\nif en apposing genera! choose to earn the\nhatred of tbe world by ponring upon\nprivate citiiens tbe fiae invited by tbeir\nsoldiers in line of battle before yoa.\nIn your prirate moments, my Christian\nbrother, are you not humiliated by tbe\nreiieouon tbat your course is so success­\nfully opposed that yoar only safi«fication\nis in throwing shells over tbe h«d» of\nowr soldiers lonung your attaot, eadan\ngsriog th# lives aad injaring the tortoaue\nof wumi'o, childrua, and dependent ser­\nvants, wh^ make no war upon yon, and\nare -tinned to tbe protection of\nmanliness and Ctoristain humanity)*\nerai Meado, yoo bave been accredited with\n•ore virtues than are your due, or tea\nmast blush for the ruthleea&saa of this
2af6fc0c1fbe2729c0307047bc886231 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.4972602422629 39.745947 -75.546589 The spot where the gallant. Rey­\nnolds fell directing hlç^ army was th«\nmecca for many wearers of the bin«\nand the gray. He was the first of\nthe ranking officers to fall and the\nmonument that marks the spot* wa»\nfragrant with perfume, of many\nflowers placed thereon by survivors'\nof his own army and men from Hill's\ncorps who opposed him.\nBut the tears shed today were not\ntears of regret. The spirits of the\nveterans were of the highest. The\ndead had given their live* In the per­\nformance of their duty and their\nsacrifice had not been In vain. Than:\nwas the spirit of the entire encamp­\nment. Not a man who wore the gray\nwho would today have changed thw\noutcome of the struggle If he had \npower.\nTears On With Stories.\nThe providential outcome was oni\nevery lip and cheers for the re­\nunited nation came from group after\ngroup as they listened to Impromptu\norations by noted members of their\nown immediate parties.\nFor It was a day of speech making\nand story telling. There were to b«\nformal exercises lat« I»\nIn the big tent erected''for that PUP'*“'\npose, but the real speeWies today\nwear heard In nearly every serijon f>f\nthe open ground. The battlefield pr8N*r.,\ned an Inspiration for those who were\na overcome by their feelings and sought\nopportunity to he heard, Impromptu\ncompany, regimental, brigade and\ncorps reunions were the order of the\nday and one merged Into the other sr»\neasily that patriot! talks came with­\nout effort.
06538088ca91b73e1fd5e1354cb71e0e THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.6068492833588 37.92448 -95.399981 men who nre now forming habits for a\nlifetime. Of what use to a stonema\nson or a bricklayer is a piumb line?\nWhy not build the wall by the unaided\neje and hand? Uccnu$e they oio In-\nsufficient, because If there be a de-\nflection In the wnll it cannot further\non be corrected. Hecnuse by the law\nof gravitation a wall must be straight\nin order to be svnimetrlcnl and safe.\nA young mnn Is in danger of getting\nn defect in his wnll of character that\nmay never be corrected.\nOne of the best friends I ever had\ndied of delirium tremens nt 00 years\nof age, though he had not since 2t\nyears of nge, before which he had\nbeen dissipated, touched intoxicating\nliquor until that particular carousal\nthat took him off. Not iccllng well in\nthe street on a hot summer day he\nstepped Into n drug store, just as you\nnnd I would have done, and asked for\na dose of something to make him feel\nbetter. And there was alcohol in the\ndose, and that one drop aroused the\nold appetite, and he entered the first\nliquor store nnd stnid there until\nthoroughly under tlio power of rum.\nHe entered his home n raving mnniiic,\nhis wife daughters fleeing from\nhis presence, nnd nt first he was taken\nto the city hospital to die,\nHetiu'inber thnt the wall may be 100\nfeet high, and vet n deflection one foot\nfrom the foundation ntlects the entire\nstructure. And If jou "he loo jea."\nand do right the last sn jciirc vou niaj\nnevertlil"s do something at 2U jears\nof nge that will damage nil jour earth-lj- -\nexistence. All jou who have built\nhouses for J ourselves or for others,\nnm 1 not right In sajing to these j'oung\nmen, you cannot build a wall so high\nas to be independent of the character\nof its foundation? A man before 30\nj ears of age may commit enough sin\nto Inst III in n lifetime. Xovv, .lolin or\nGeorge or Henry, or whatever be jour\nChristian mime or surname, snj" hero\nand now: "No wild oats for me, no\ncigars or cigarettes for me, no wine\nor beer for me, no nasty stories for me,\nno Sunday sprees for me. 1 am going\nto start right and keep on right. God\nhelp me, for I am very weak. I'rom the\nthrone of eternal righteousness let\ndown to nic the principles by which I\ncan be guided in building everj thing\nfrom foundation to capstone.
110092203862c6fe19ae715735f1fbea THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.3794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 The principal events of his adminis¬\ntration were the passing of the Irish\nChurch Disestablishment Act (1S69); of\nthe Irish Land Act (1870), and of the\nElementary Education Act (1870); the\nabolition of purchase in the army by\nthe royal prerogative, In consequence\nof an adverse vote by the houso of lords\non the army regulation bill (1871); the\nnegotiation of the Treaty of Washing¬\nton respecting the Alabama claims,\n(1871); the passing of the ballot act,\n(1872);and the Judicature act (1873). The\nprincipal measure proposed by the gov¬\nernment in the session of 1873, was the\nuniversity education (Ireland) bill,\nwhich was opposed by the Roman Cath¬\nolic members, who, voting on this occa¬\nsion with the Conservatives, caused the\nrejection of the bill by 287 votes,against\n284 (March 11.) Upon this Mr. Glad¬\nstone tendered his resignation to her\nmajesty, and Mr. Disraeli was sent for;\nbut as he declined to take office, Mr.\nGladstone, though with reluctance, un¬\ndertook (March 1C) to reconstruct \ncabinet. In August, 1873, Immediately\nafter the close of the session, the cabi¬\nnet was considerably remodelled, Mr.\nGladstone assuming the chancellorship\nof the exchequer, in addition to his of¬\nfice of first lord of the treasury. On\nJanuary 24, 1874, a fortnight before both\nhouses were to have met for the dis¬\npatch of public business, Mr. 'Gladstone\ntook everybody by surprise by an¬\nnouncing the immediate dissolution of\nparliament, and issuing his address to\nhis constituents at Greenwich, In which\nhe promised to abolish the income tax.\nAt the general election which ensued,\nthe votes were, fqr the first time, taken\nby secret ballot. The result proved\nmost disastrous to the Liberal party.\nThe returns, completed on February 27,\nshowed that 351 Conservatives had been\nelected and 302 Liberals, Inclusive, of the\nHome Rulers, who In point of fact, de¬\nclined to Identify themselves with eith¬\ner of the old political parties. Mr.\nGladstone at once resigned, and Mr.\nDisraeli became prime minister.
177a2308d477007a4cf35e956daa99f3 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1905.919178050482 41.875555 -87.624421 This ucatmcut has stood the prac-\ntical tests of cm lug the most hopeless\ncases, as the testimonials from thoo\ncured by this treatment abundantly\nprove. It Is Infallible, safe and Invig-\norating. This cure Is unsurpassed by\nany thing lu the cutlio tango of med-\nical science. At the olllce of the Nor-\numbega Company, somo wonderful\ncures Imvo been pet formed, and pa-\ntients arc mated mid cured so thor-\noughly that they never desire to return\nto their old habits.\nIguoranco can do ns much harm\nwith liquor or drug femcdlcs ns It can\nwith mercury or arsenic. The Norum-\nbega Company Is an Institution of\nhigh standing, that has been curing\ndrunkenness nnd the drug habit tor\nyears, and can cure any case no mat-\nter of how long standing, or how much\nused, llveryono Is an uncondi-\ntional guarantee, If the treatment Is\ntaken us prescribed, of a positive cure.\nInstead of being simply a xpuclllc, this\ncure Is gcueial lu character; It re-\nmoves the cause fiotu which arises the\nwhisky and ding h.ihlt. It has cured\nevery cato of functional nerve disor-\nder to which it has been applied. The\npatient becomes a new person under\nthis tt cat men t. . When discharged his\nhead does not feel us If there was u\nbit, saw lu It; on the contrary, lie Is\nrejuvenated and restored, physically\nand mentally, and his mind Is clear\nand natural, .no bad effects following.\nThis method of treatment has brought\nhealth, peace and happiness to pa-\ntients ever since its introduction, and\nhas a record of positive cures not en-\njoyed by any like remedy lu thu laud.
13f1c0741dec9768f147e4384dbe9f0c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.683561612126 41.004121 -76.453816 At the public sale of fifty-fiv- e\nbuilding lots in what is known as\nthe Neal addition, the entire lot\nwas bid in by C. W. Miller, Ksq.,\nacting as agent for the Blootnsburg\nNormal School. This land lies be-\ntween the Normal School and Fifth\nstreet, and it is understood to be\nthe intention of the school authori\nties in buying it to prevent its being\nbuilt up to the detriment ol the\nschool property, and to hold it un\ntil such time as the school will\nneed it for its own purposes, and\nthis will not be many years if the\nschool continues to grow as rapid\nly as in the past dozen years.\nThis land formerly belonged to\nWill iam McK.elvy and William\nNeal. About ten years ago it was\nsold by I. W. McKelvv, executor\n W llham Mckelvy, and John M.\nClark, assignee of William Neal,\nand was purchased by parties who\ngave a mortgage in payment, and\nwhen they defaulted on the mort-\ngage the land was sold on fore-\nclosure proceedings and the former\nowners had to buy it in, one part\ncoming back to the estate of Wil\nliam McKelvy, and the other part\nto the several persons who had\noriginally purchased the Neal in\nterest, one of whom brought about\nthe present sale by Frank Ikcler,\nTrustee, by proceedings in parti\ntion, whereby a sale was necessary\nIt is very desirable land and the\nNormal School was wise in buying\nnow, as it is not likely they could ev\ner get it again at the same price,\nand it is sure that they will need\nthe land in the near future.
20eb5b19a1ef334564287d3f629b06b5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.3401639028032 40.063962 -80.720915 A landlord will rent a single house in i\na street to a Chinaman, who at once t\ncrowds it to repletion. They take ordin- u\n:iry rooms, say ol ten lect in neignt, pui i\nin n faliie iloor half way up to the ceiling, ]\nand crowd both tloors; thus made, with J\nbunks, and m many human being* as t\nmay t>o pressed into the Hpace sleep there- <\nin. The atmosphere become* fetid and a i\nsickly smell pervades the neighborhood, j\nwhich causes the tenants of the houses to\nthe right and left to vacate. These house#\ncannot again be rented to white persons;\nthe rents fall, and finally the Chinese gel\npossession. This process goes on in each\ndirection until the whole street is aban-\nilonded to.the Chinese. The property\nhas fallen in value, becomes dilapidated\nand offensive, and the street is as much\ndedicated to Chinese uses and lost to other\nresidents, as if it were a in Hon*\nKong. Hotels and churches share the\nsame fate as ordinary dwellings and J\nstores. He said in his excursion in the\nChinese quarter in San Francisco, under <\nthe protection of tho police, ho had pene-\n(rated two stories underground into the i\nopium and gambling dens, whore the\nstench was almost unendurable, reached j\nby passages where a man cannot walk\nerect, between walls dripping with tho\nexhalations of neighboring sewers, and ]\nwhere the filthy waters at tho bottom i\nwere only avoided by carefully stepping\n<>n the narrow, broken planks laid down. <\nHere were swarms ot Chinamen, thick as <\nmaggots In cheese, smoking opium, t&c. j\nNo class of population known to the i\nL'nited States can endure contact with\nthese squalid denizens; the white and tho i\nnegro, the American, Frenchman and c\nSpaniard all seek placet of business else-\nwhere; even the lowest classes Qeo away.\nThe whole street is absorbed and doomed.
98dd1f92e6daf96f2658b8bc95b495f6 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1863.7109588723997 37.561813 -75.84108 thing to life. Notwithstanding this, a\ncrowd of thoughtless men, filled to the\nutmost capacity of tho heart with pre\njudices the most insane, cry out day\nand night against any one who dares\nto say a word in favor of its suppression .\nThe very mon who would profit most\nby the removal of slavery the white\nworking men, whom tho slave power\nhas shut out from the cotton and sugar\nfields of the South are the loudest and\nfiercest in their support of slavery!\nWho has ever seen a laboring man with\na hula of cotton or a hogshead of sugar\nof his own raising? Noons. It is im-\npossible so long as slavery exists. Ho\nmay dig on a levoo, or drive a mulo team,\nor sweep the wharves of a Southorn\ntown, but there bis ambition mast stop.\nTho land belongs, or belonged to the\naristocraoy, and however generous; ac-\ncomplished, refined and hospitable that\naristocracy might been, the poor\nwhite laborer must contemplate from\nafar tho elegance in which ho' can nev-\ner participate There is, then, no rea-\nson on earth why ho should clamor for\ntho restoration of slavery. We can read-\nily understand the strong sympathy\nwhieh binds tho nobility of England\nand Franco to the Confederacy. It is\nnatural the result of tho same ideas\nthe concord of, hearts beating to the\nsmie emotions the helping hand of the\nthrone stretched forth to bring back\nthe repentant children of democracy to\ntho prido and pomp of Great Britain.- -W - c\ncan understand all this, and can\nfully appreciate the cordial regard with\nwhich England has cherished the South\niu their disastrous war; but why the\npoor white man should hold up the\nskirts of the aristocracy in a cause which\nhelps to crush him to tho earth, is one\nof those mysterioB of life whioh baffles\ntho wisdom of the philosopher.
19399cae592f3d99458610db6da5996a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.7931506532218 39.745947 -75.546589 Wllkcsbarre. Pa., Oct. 17 .— The rep­\nresentatives of the coal carrying com­\npanies here wore In communication\nwith headquarters In New York yester­\nday regarding Urn settlement of the\nminers strike. The resolutions adopt-»\ned by the Scranton convention were\nmailed to all the coal companies anti\nIndividual operators. They all bore\nthe seal of the United Mine Workcro\norganization, and there was a request\nthat a prompt reply to the communica­\ntion would bo thankfully received. The\ncommunication still remains on the\ndesks of some of the coal companies,\nunopened. The reason for this Is that\nsome of the operators do not want to\ncommit themselves in any way as\nrecognizing the miners union.\nTo enter Into any negotiations with\nthe officers of the organization would,\nIn the opinion of the operators, he an\n that the operators recognized\nthe union. One operator said: "Once we\nenter into correspondeace with the\nUnited Mine Workern wo are going to\nhave the same trouble the operators In\nthe bituminous region have. There\nwill be nothing but correspondence nil\nthe time, and the owners of a mine will\nnot know whether they are running it\nor the United Mine Workers are run­\nning it for them."\nA press correspondent culled at the\nhome of General Superintendent La-\nthrop, of the l^bigh Valley Coal com­\npany, last night. Mr. Lathrop Is the\nchairman of the organization of opera­\ntors of the Wyoming and Lackawanna\nvalleys, The correspondent was told\nthat Mr. Lathrop was out of town. The\nsupposition Is that be Is In Now York\nIn conference with the presidents of\nthe coal roads.
30a5efec6420b988c2713c1005b59403 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.0751365803987 39.369864 -121.105448 It is evident to every thinking mind that\nthe country cannot stand forever such a drain\nof gold as she has had for these last ten\nyears. Ask every intelligent miner in re-\ngard to the placer diggings—no matter of\nwhat locality—and he will tell you that the\ndiggings are pretty well worked out, and\nthat the}', as a body, cannot make as much\nnow as they have done in years past. There\nis no wr ay of cultivating the ground to make\nthe thing grow. Manure your claim well\nand wash it off; it is not likely to produce\nmore gold on that account. Cover it with\nguano and plow deep, yet you will not find\none speck more gold in it. The thing can-\nnot be made by man, neither can we devise\nmeans to make it grow. Yet, “folks must\ndo something for their bread,” and we have\nthe remedy within our own hands. If \nremain on these mineral lands let us have\nat least two strings to our bow; let every\nminer secure to himself a piece of land that\ncan be irrigated in summer; fence it well,\nand plant it in grapevines; tend to them\nwell, and in a few years they will find that\nthe making of wine is abetter business than\ngold digging. Let us spend our spare cash\npurchasing a few good sheep ; increase our\nflocks whenever we can, and the time will\nsoon come when mining will be a secondary\nbusiness; the people will soon produce more\nwealth from wine and wool than ever has\nbeen made by mining in its brightest day;\nlet every bachelor procure him one of the\nprophet Nathan's Tittle ewe lambs let him\ncarry her to his dwelling; let her feed at his\ntable, and let her lay on his bosom; then\nwill we be a happy and a contented people.
27521817e3e781d8f8db8248781be29a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.0041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 Marshal awakened some of the members 101\nif the council to a sense of their duty, ne\nuid when he presented his bill for the\nprevious month they refused to accept it,\nwherupon the Marshal brings suit against\nbe corporation and obtains judgment\nThe case is appealed to the Court ol\nCommon Fleas. Another month passes\niround, and again Robert Hanson brings\nmit against the corporation for his month- w(\ny fees. The case la tried tp a Jury be- ne\nore Esq. Gill in Bridgeport, and the wj\nIncision is rendered in favor ol plaintiff\n:mmediately the defendant'gives notice ,\nif appeal, and orders a transcript of the du.\njase. That there might be no delay, the\nrtayor, who appeared for the defense, we\nlaid for the transcript. A bond was wi\nilsn ordered. In tbo ten days fol- t0.\nowing the trial of the case the Mayor\nnade three trips to Bridgeport for tho j\nipress purpose of getting the transcript *|\nnd giving security on the Three all\nimca ho was put ofT by the excuses of or\ntill, and the faithful promise that it would Nc\n« ready next time, and was also assured ;\nliat if it was not ready on time he would iv\nonsider the case appealed at any rate. /\n?he last time the Mayor called for the .\nranscript he was on hii way to St. Clairs- nif\nille. Esq. QUI then promised to send it th(\n3 him on the following day, which of nlc\noursc he failed to do. Rut at tho same pr\nme that be made the last promise he\nad Issued an execution on the properly Pi\nf tho corporation of Martin's Kerry in i\nivor of itobL Hanson, and now Bome jt,\n>cuBt posts, a couple of desks and other rlu,\nlrniture, belonging to our thriving village .\nre oflered at constablo Bale. Such to °®\nle best ol our knowledge is a fair and cej\nandid explanation of ''How OhioCily ho:\necame tackled lor debt."
09919f8e787574953b5ad524e87d3eb1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.6287670915779 39.745947 -75.546589 To return to No. 2. I tried cork cut­\nting, putting caviare in my coffee and\ndancing about on my chair, but it was\nall in vain. Then I discovered that the\nman was stone deaf besides being blind\nin one eye. I decided, therefore, to at-\ntaek him through his pocket, and ac­\ncordingly I made a practice of surrepti­\ntiously putting cups, glasses and decan­\nters close to his elbow, ou the blind side,\nand he invariably kuocaed them down\nand hail to pay damages. Every day\nthere was a heap of broken glas« and\nchina on the floor between ns, and every\nday he jmid the cost uncomplainingly.\nThe restaurant keeper profited largely\nby these accidents, for he hud the afflict­\ned guest served with cracked and broken\nware and charged him the price of new-\non its being demolished.\n the end of four years No. 2 had de\nstroyed as much table ware as would\nsuffice to set up iu housekeeping all the\nsavages of Oceanica, those people whe\nhave so few luxuries that one pair ol\ngloves is sufficient to make clothes foi\nten men. Poor No. 2! I pity him now,\nfor 1 have learned that tho reason he\nclung to his post so pertinaciously was\nthat he too adored the lady cashier. I\nhad no mercy on him, however, and be­\ning at the end of my resources had r&\nsolved to put the police on his traek,\nwhen he was one day knocked down\nand killed by one of those butcher»-\nwagons which are allowed, 1 know not\nwhy, to rush through Paris streets at\nfull speed. The nest morning 1 seated\nmyself at table No. 2, where, although
69e1883570db88838536fe010882d6b7 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0671232559614 39.513775 -121.556359 rnm; people of the Slate ol C lifornia, To Phillip\nif Uriel, tin tln c : You lire hereby required to\nnppenr in mi ncti"ii hroiiirl ! luniinM yo i b\\ the\nHimvo named Plaintiff in the iMstnet Court ot the\n1* ifteeutn Judicial h vri, :, in and lor the < onnty of\nHutto, find to answer tin* Complain* Med therein*\n(u copy of wide!i accompanies this Sum mom ,) wPh-\nM ten days (exclusive of the tPiy » f s»cr\\ire. i alter\nrvlco on you oft hi Summons served within\nthin County ; if s* * ve< out of I!■ is t'minty, hut with*\nlathis •! ud ie in I IMstriet. within » ny «h»> *,or if\nout of hh id hi-inrl. then w if lain forty da>«- or judg-\nment. by default will he taken against you.\nThn said action i* to obtain j idffinerd for\nthe recovery of the sum « I Two Hundred m;d Kilty\nHollars, nml interest thereon at Hie rale of im per\nrent per annum from the sdcoml day oi July l*i-l,\nand for u Derree for tbe lon closure ol a certain\nmortimrfe deed, and for the salo of the inortimvred\npremises know n as the Slautchle' Hround of.i , \\.\nIi ill iv Co , iiit l iron* fully described in Plaintiff'*\nComplaint herewith served ; and < >r Execution\nawiiiiHi oilier property of Defend mts, if mid inort.\nunitd preini*eM should 1-e Insufficient to h disly the\njudvni oit Herein, and lor coals of sud, and it you\nfail to appear and answer the said l omplaiet as\nabove requin d, the Plaintiff will apply 'o the Court\nlor the relief In his Loin plaint demanded
0cade9905903550d3fdcbe99b05f8125 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.2123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Moore, of Cleveland ia not seriously [\nirned. He escaped by way of the balcony. ]\nBarry Davia, of Canal street, New York, c\nho is at the Emergency Hospital, I\niyo ho waa in room 101, third iloor, x\nagle street side. He wa3 awakened by a\nle electric bell and got up to t\nrocs, thinking it was a call, as a\na had left word to be called at six c\nclock. It was then 3:30 by his watch. I\nhen he heard shrieks and criea of "lire," t\nad rushing to his door, saw the halls t\nire. He grabbed hia clothes and e\nin out. The flamsa were roaring j:\np the stairway and the corri- t\nora were filled with smoke. Wrapping (\nis head in hia overcoat tumbled down c\nle stairs and fell in a heap on several t\nodies lying on the floor, but picking hirnilf\nup. made his way to tho balcony, 1\nom which ho waa rescued. His burns 1\nro severe. He cannot say whether tho I\nodies ho fell upon were insensible, or t\nhethor they had stumbled like himself. i\nThe injured man at the Fitch Hospital,\nhose name waa given as John Kahn, is I\ndw saidtobeE.A.Kahn,cf 145East(\nifteenth street, New York. He jumped »!\nom the fourth floor to the roof cf the 8\nro story frame building on. Main street I\nljoining the hotel. His right arm is k\nactured and he sustained severe in- t\niries to his spine. He ia also badly t\ntimed about the face and hands.
48ff499deac27db416d999a4cdb3b0fd DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.3712328450026 58.275556 -134.3925 here we are, but home is not like this,\nand the worst is yet to come, but keep\nat work George, I may wire some day."\nO. H. Bernard.\n"Yes 1 mushed all right. I bought a\nticket from the one horse,nickel plated\nstage and . transportation company,\nBartlett Brothers, incorporated, price\n8125, with all privileges. Sucker don't\nseem to spell the word. We left Valdez\nMarch 8, at noon,made Workman's at\nfoot of summit 20 miles out by night,\nand right here all the nickel plate wore\noff the outfit and the privileges shone\nbright and clear of walking behind the\nsleigh and working the outfit through\nthe new soft snow from early morning\nuutil night. We landed at the other\nside of the summit wet, worn out and\nhungry, only ten miles, and then the\nchuck 10 feet deep, for three days\nboys nary a ride, just work aud mush,\nNext overflows and gravel bars for\nmiles and miles. The scenery "was\nbeautiful but the roadhouse3 were bum\nat $2 per for rabbit straight and warm¬\ned over grub. I've been here over two\nweeks and have not got the galvanized\ntaste out of my mouth yet. My little\ncabin home is on Wendel Avonue near\nthe slough, the coffee and bean pots\nare always full, the sour dough can is\nworking over-time and the latch string\nis always out."\nPile Driver Bob Keeny.\n"1 am no kicker boys if I did kick 390\nmiles of trail behiud me, and don't like\nto tell a hard luck story but the facts\nare the trail is lit only for a jack-rabbit,\nand birds to fly over,
3891a45e450372a0a42c9b8ed0935e65 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.541095858701 41.875555 -87.624421 How far tho dllatorlness on tho part\nof the advertising corporation, in pay-\ning these bills, Is attributable to Mul-\nlanoy temperament remains to be\nproved. It cannot bo lack of monoy,\nIt must bo a matter of disposition.\nMullanoy, his ad concern and tho rail-\nroads uro all sound financially.\nOno thing is certain: papers that In\ntho past havo shown up Mullaney's un-\npopularity und his connections as lit-\nerary export, for Republican candi-\ndates at ono timo and for Democratic\ncandidates at another time, havo been\nnotified that thoy would havo to wait\nsixty days for their money for the\nrailroad advertising ordored through\ntho Mullanoy concern. This does not\nhurt tho nowspapors or newspaper in\nquestion. It doos not mako or break\nono or another them. It merely\ncalls attontlon to Mullanoy.\nBut at tho samo time it does not\nmako the railroads any more popular\nthan they wero. In fact, wo are of\nthe opinion that Mullaney's connec-\ntion with them has not done them any\ngood in the way of popularity.\nIn fact, ono prominent Republican\nmember of tho Legislature, not 'afraid\nto be quoted, either, stated in tho\nEagle office during the late legislative\nsession, that ho was against the bill\nincreasing the passenger railroad rate\nfrom 2 to 2 cents per mile, because\nMullaney was tho principal agent\nboosting it. He said that he was\nagainst anything that Mullaney was\nfor and that there were others.\nThe bill Increasing railroad rates\nwas smothered in the Legislature.\nThe 50-ca - r
835ca3732c8a82949d0e4a8f908f5286 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6789617170107 39.290882 -76.610759 It seems to me very extraordinary that a gen-\ntleman of your intelligence should urge this as\nan objection to Gen. Harrison. In the first place\nyou ought to have inquired whether the charge\nof his refusing to disclose his opinions, which\nyou have thus positively asserted, be true; and I\nthink you Wfluld Jjevp found that the charge it-\nself is untrue, and originated in this grossest per-\nversion and injustice. The charge is pretended\nto be founded upon the letter of a committee of\nGen. Harrison's friends in Cincinnati, in reply\nto a letter of one Miles Hotchkiss. In this letter\nit is said that Gen. Harrison would make "no\nfurther declaration of his principles, " than by\nreferring to the opinions he was already known\nto have publicly expressed, which remained un-\nchanged! Now, sir, so far from this justifying\nthe charge of his refusing to disclosp his opin-\nions, it asserts, what every reading man in the\ncenntry already knew be true, that he had\nalready declared his opinions; that they had un-\ndergone no ehange, and that therefore a "further\ndeclaration" was not necessary. And I would\nmost respectfully inquire of you, as an honest\nman, and "not a partisan of Mr. Van Buren,"\nif Gen. Harrison's votes and speeches in Con.\ngress, and his speeches end letters out of Con-\ngress, have not most fully,frankly, and without\nregard to consequences to himself, manifested to\nthe people his opinions on all the subjects of vital\nimportance to their welfare, whick have hereto-\nfore agitated, or do now agitate the country??\nWhether any honest inquirer after truth need\nhave any difficulty in ascertaining his opinions,\nand whether he was not justified in believing\nthat "no further declaration of his, principles"\nwas necessary, but that every reasonable man\nwould be satisfied with a reference to the solemn\ndeclarations of his principles and opinions ahsady\nmade, as the questions arose and occasisn re,\nquired,-'
0237c666ee232d452a45fa937f32d6f5 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4030054328578 40.441694 -79.990086 Tho Coney Island Athletic Cub Offera\n812,000 forSlcAullffo and Slyer.\nNew York, May 25. Special. The Coney\nIsland Athletic Club, through Manager\nLumley, yesterday made a move which\nwould seem to Indicate a square flglit with\nthe Olympic Club, of New Orleans. It was\nIn the shape of an offer to Jack McAulIffe\nand Billy Myer to transfer their contest.now\nbilled for September 5 In New Oileans. to\nthe C. I. A. C . Tho inducement was in the\nform or $2,000 addod to the purse of $10,000\noffered by the Olympic. A side issue in the\nnegotiations between the men is a $1,000\nforfeit which Myer claims on the ground\nthat McAuliffo refused to continue the\nmatch that was bognn by the posting of said\nforfeit. The Olympic Club promised, when\nhe signed the present articles of agreement,\n make this amount good to Myer.\nManager Lumley proposes to make ar-\nrangements such that McAuliffe shall pay\nthe lorleit claimed b3' Mver out of his share.\nThus, if McAuliffe should be beaten by\nMver. he would not get a cent, while if Mc:\nAnliffo should win, Myer would tecelve\n$2,000. McAuliffe sin shew ould rather light\nat Coney Island for the laiger purse. A\ntolegram was sent to Myer in Chicago bear-ir.e- "\ntho new proposal.\nThe Coney Island Club scheme may be as-\nsisted by a notification of Representative\nO'Noil, ot New Orleans, in the Louisiana\nLegislature on Wednesday to the effect that\nthat uinmborof the body intended to intro-\nduce a bill calling for the repeal of all char-\nters or licenses that pcimit glove contests in\nthe State. This action and the collapse of\nthe Fitzsimmons-Pritchar-
749ba1496f9d13daddbf15de26587b76 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1863.7794520230848 35.780398 -78.639099 as bis cousin passed he said, "I can go no\nf rthcr," and lokin after them aaid "eood\nbye, boys," but boo. , I trust, he met one of these\ncoasins in heaven.\nMay 3d. on Sunday, was sent to Chimborazo\nhospital. On the Sth wrote home requesting us to\ncome after him as s.on as we leceired theews.\nI went, but alasl when I arrived in Richmond\nand asked fo? my brother, ,1 received the sat an-\nnouncement ot his death. His spiiit had taken\nits everUstinj flight to realms of glorv. He\njoined the M. &. Church in boyhood and profess-\ned an acceptance wiih Christ some time previous\nto enteriug the service of his country. He left\nhome October 10th, 1861, wii.h his elder brother\nwho fell a sacrifice oathe altar of his country\nnear Richmond. His comrades say "he lived\nthe lite cf a christian soldier and evinced it \nreading his Lible," fur he read.it often. Wh .le\nin the hospital last winter he wrote to his round-\ner brother a? follows: "I hope this war will soon\nclose, so we may afl retsrn home aad live for\nGod. Brother Gamewell, I feel that God is with\nnse and blesses me when I call upon him Iread\nmy bibjeandtry to lire as I should, indlhope\nGod will bless me and take eare of me that I mv\nffetto Heaveu where I shall meet my four broth-\ners and bister who have gone before."\n1 rother Marcus was kind to his parent' broth-\ners and sisters. Thas another ol the once han-p- y\nfamily has joined the circle above,\npear.bro thers, among tke bravest of the brave\nYou sweetly sleep in freemen's gravcB\nNo fo can plague, no pain caa rack\nOh ! parents would you call them ba' k !\ni?j,d.
906b44006ed669619654104271586f0e PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.6215846678303 31.960991 -90.983994 tIESE Lozenges have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\ntheinéansof sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering ihe cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and eveu without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\none ot two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Loienge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthéy may bë administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of\nthe impotency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as ä remedy.
0416713a2669a18e7c76587434b9218c THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1899.4205479134957 33.031451 -111.387343 zona, Land Offle", on March 81, 1893, for the\nHEM Section 25, township 6 south, of range\n6 east, G. 4 S. E . M ., situated iu Pinal county,\nArizona, with a view to the cancellation of\nthe same. Contestant nlleses that the said\nWilliam H. McQueen is now dead, and that\nthe heirs or legal representatives of the de-\nceased have wholly abandoned said tract,\nand failed to cultivate or improve the same\nas required by law, and this the said con\ntestant Is I end j' to prove at such time and\nplace as may be named by the Register and\nReceiver for a hearing in the case, and he\ntherefore asks to be allowed to prove said\nallegations, and that said Homestead entry\n1974 be declared cancelled and forfeited to\nthe United States, he the said contestant,\n the costs thereof.\nThe contestant having filed affidavit in\nthis office on the 25th day of February, 1899,\nsetting forth the fact that after using due\ndilllgence he Is unable to get personal service\nupon the contesteeand asks that said service\nmay be had by publication in the Florence\nTbibckb, a paper published at Florence,\nPinal county, Arizona, the same is hereby\ngranted, and the said parties are hereby\nsummoned to apiiear at the office of William\nB. Reld, a Notary Publio.at his office iu town\nof Casa Grande, Pinal county, Arizona, on\nthe 15th day of J une, 1899, at 10 o'clock a. m .,\nto respond and furnish testimony concern-\ning said alleged failure.\nHearing before Register and Receiver U.\nS. Land Office, at Tucson, Arizona, on the\n22nd day of June. 1899, at 2 o'clock p. m .
17242aa1e747eb5adef79a9c30f09603 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.9931506532216 39.743941 -84.63662 year witnesses greater improvements in\nthe undergarments made for women,\nbut few avail themselves of the relief\nand comfort to be gained by their use.\nLook at the young girls on our streets,\nwith waists so compressed that no artist,\nor any other person with a full realiza\ntion of the true beauty of the female\nform, could behold without a feeling of\nimpatience if not disgust. How many\nof thoso girls when they compress their\nwaists in this unnatural manner know\nthat they entirely destroy their freedom\nof walking ; and that, while they appear\nto themselves to have freedom of motion,\nto others, who watch them, they present\na very comical combination of freedom\nand stiffness ? The upper part of the\nbody being in a vice is perfectly stiff\nfrom the waist up. The shoulders are\nheld in position far above where they\nshoulAbe, and the elbows are at sharp\nangles two or three inches behind the\nline of the shoulders. Loss of grace is\nnot the only penalty. paid. Many girls\ndestroy good voices by this vicious man\nner of dressing. The waist being so\nunnaturally compressed, it is impos-\nsible ' to breathe from the right\nplace. To test this for yourself, plaoe\nyour hand on your chest and take breath\nfrom below the belt, and tine the sylla\n La. Then sing it breathing from\nthe chest, where you are compelled to\nbreathe if the clothes are worn tightly at\nthe belt, and note the difference in the\nsound. Try, for a short time before\nrising, to breathe from below the belt\nwithout moving the chest. In short,\ntry all the time to breathe as low down\nas possible, and watch how the hard,\ndisagreeable head tones for which\nAmerican women are famous will dis-\nappear. Yon will sing without half the\neffort, you will be able to walk without\ngetting out of breath and lose alto\ngether the tired ' feeling from the bhest\nthat so many complain of when walking.\nThis can be tried by all. It is not for\nthe young alone. Many of the fretful,\nnervous women can hold their imperfect\nbreathing responsible for much of their\nfretfulness and nervousness. Think of\nit when sewing, and breathe below the\nbelt. At first, it will seem hard, but if\npersisted in will finally become, as it\nshould have been from the beginning,\nnature itself. Watch ' your husband\nand brother, and you will see their chests\nmake no perceptible movement when\nbreathing, because they breathe natur-\nally. They have not worn their clothing\nso tightly belted that lungs and other\norgans of the body have been deprived\nof room for growth.
3d198cafc3909c8b86670f717659c573 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9357923181037 39.513775 -121.556359 r»V VIRTUE Ol' AN EXKt I'TD'N issued nut\nuS of tlw I»ii>lrict Court. Twelfth Judicial District,\nin and lor I lie county of Min Francisco, Stale ol i al-\nifornm, to me directed and deliverer!, commanding\nme to make the sum of three hundred and ten twen\n(y. |wo onedinndredth dollars principal, witn interest\nthen-oil at Dm rule of ten per cent, per minimi. Iron)\ndale of judgment until paid, and costs oi mil,\namounting to the mm of thirty-four twenty-live one\nhundredth dollars, together with the accruing costs of\nsaid suit; wherein M 1). Lassevell is plaintiff and\n, 1 ,,|,n (I Thompson and George Marquis arc the de-\nfendants. I will, on the t!9tli day of November, A\nll 1856 helween the hours ol two and three oclock\np M , sell at public to the highest bidder for\nca«h, all Ol I lie right, title and interest of said de-\nfendants in and to one building simaled on Mont-\ngomery street, about hy I-I feet in size and one story\nhigh, with a stoop in front. Also, nil that part or\nparcel or lot of land upon which said house is situ-\nled, described as follows to w il: fronting lllty feel on\nMontgomery street and nnminig buck L/J feet he-\nl wren the Trench hotel and Brewster s house, as i,e -\ning part of Lot number 16. and block number Id. as\nmarked on the Town Tint of the Tow n ot Orovide,\nUnite eontv, California, and partlv upon ground not\nim-lndad in said iliit. the same being the house and\nloi now occupied by brown and Peacock, as
356440c12b14f1c1340786832534a61b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.2863013381532 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person mn»t know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacv established by well tested expe\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian, whose prepsratorv study fit* him (dr all the\nduties he most fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums ami cure-alls, purporting to be the\nhost in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways Injurious. The unfortunate should be iur-\nTHXl.an in selecting his physician, as it is a lament-\nable vet incontrovertible fact that many syphilitic\npatient* are made miserable with ruined constitution*\nby mal treatment from inexperienced physician* in\ngeneral practice; for It is a point generally conceded\nby tiie best syphilographers, that the study and man-\nagement ofthese complaint* should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent ami successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted witli\ntheir pathology, coinonly pursues system of treat-\nment, in most esses making an Indiscriminate use of\ntliat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should bv used by thesyph\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising slass. as nine tentlis of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters. they induce the unwary to enter tlieir l'eter\nFunk •institutions,” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. IVrsous living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks tiian citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J . C. YOUNG\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndisease*. Office, 761 Clay street, opposite the 1'laza.\nHoursfrom 9a. m., to Sr.u.
036a9b8cc3555c99be40b3a8542ffa89 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1915.2726027080162 39.456253 -77.96396 One of the problems in West Vir¬\nginia road improvement is road pro¬\ntection. It is often a greater prob¬\nlem to keep up and protect a road\nthan to construct it. This is especial¬\nly true of the roads in the oil fields\nand lumber districts. Many persons\nhauling over the roads do not stop\nto consider that by using the road\nwhen it is wet that in one day's time\nthey can and do cause the road more\ndamage than they could repair on\nseveral days and often more damage\nto the road than the value of their\ntime and the produce they haul.\nMoist or wet earth roads will not sup¬\nport a load of more than 150 pounds\nper square inch of wheel bearing. The\nlongitudinal bearing of the average\nwagon wheel is about 2 inches. Thus\nn wagon with two-inch tires will have\nfour square inches bearing per wheel\nor a total bearing of 16 square inches\nwhich would mean a maximum load\nfor a wet road of 2400 pounds of this\nwidth tire and in proportion as the\ntire is narrower. An inch and three-\nquarter wagon should only be loaded\n2100 pounds a four-inch tired\nwagon could bel oaded 4800 pounds.\nAnother fault that has developed\nwith many persons driving a team\nand that is the habit of using a rock\nto srotch their wagons and then drive\non and leave the obstruction. Soon\nthe road is filled with large loose\nstones and then the road man is\nblamed for not keeping up his road\nwhen if the persons that use the road\nwould only co-operate with the offi¬\ncials much money and time could\nbe saved" and all enjoy better roads.\nIt is the teamsters interest to have\ngood roads as well as his duty as a\ncitizen to help keep the roads up by\nprotecting them. If we are to get good\nroads in West Virginia every one will\nfind a place for him to show his\npatrotism and help. We have 32,000\nmiles of road passing 06,685 farms\nand over which 110,?,44 teams pass if\neach team in the state was used daily,\nbut many teams are seldom on the\nroads, while others are daily passen¬\ngers. If every person that travels\nthe roads would take an interest in\nhelping to ,keep them up, every one\n.
30b4570a19193f86eeae328ec2e56904 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1881.83698626966 43.624497 -72.518794 'l navpr clmll forppt llio Ainnimt of\nmpney it mUw to kppnpn old woinaii\nfiPin prylng lierPlf lo ilptli, Of rourp\nwp wero obllgpd lo subt ofT llio\npnnntry ai vp wont plpnir, nml wp\nnnlurAlly look ppseonlon of a p lilpkon\nrnoli kopt by aii old ldyt lio looil t\nUip front nalp wllli a broom aiuI tlirpt\npiipiI tn Kok aII of HliPnimn's foropi If\nllipy dld not inorP ou, Now, pilkoni\nworo coimldprptl ai ofHperi' me At, smii\nAwoworp infprnally Imngry, vpweni\nforlliotPoM Iipiii iPUyllvply, WIipii\nIip mw llmt lior fiivorllp foHlt woro lw\nln( PAtiglit Aml kllled, hIip kccled rldbt\nnvpr Aml lippu tn ory, I'rpsenlly nlia\nlipgAn tn orpam. nnd llnally you oould\nliear llmt womaiid ydU clcar lo AtUnta,\nm tlm mirKooui in In qulot lior, lmt\ntlipyfailrd, nud tlicn nll tbo ofllcon\nIppk tuni, Imt tlio moro ntlonllon paid\nlior llio moro 1io hnwled, I tlicn got\n nprvoun ovor Uip Infonml nolnp,\nberatuo llio wliolo army would licar ft,\nnnd tlioy mlKlit Aiiiipoo ouif.ioily wn\ntoilurliiK tlio woriiAii. I'lnally Hbetinati\nrodo up ntid Ankrd wlmt m It nll nbout,\naud wlion wo (old lilm lio ald 1 '(llvo\nlier a IminIipI of PonfodeMtn liondn for\nlior lieiin, nnd neo If tlmt won't itloii lior.'\nAoIIiik ou tlilnlilnt, I procpfiled to\nluinlnpipt, Wo lmd wiiturpd a oonfodpr\nnto tmln tho day bproio, wltli 81,00(1.000\nof confodprAlo moiipy, niul I liuntctt un\ntliotniln nt onco. The mnuoy wniwortli\nnbout twn contx nu tlio ilollnr. Wcll, (\nMulled nbnut di'00,000 ln ntiolil cnrind\nanrk, nnd marelied lnln tlm linuso.\n" '.Mndnin,' nnld I, oponlng tlio naok,\nI'lt glvn you 8'W0 tn qult llili nolo,s\nIt wni ah atlll ns dpntli ln a iiilrtiito, nml\ntlinu herfjco pxpnndcd liiubrondhinllo.\n1 l.ild tlio pnrkngoi of monoy on tlio\ntnblo, nnd I novor nnw hiicIi n (lellglilcd
7aebcd3d8b4ddb6bd88448aa29fd681d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.8589040778793 39.261561 -121.016059 An Ordinance providing for the licensing of Dogs. The\nTrustees of the City of Nevada do ordain as follows :\nSkc. 1. From and after the first day of July i. D. 18M ,\nit shall not be lawful for the owners or other persons hav-\ning the charge of dogs to allow them to run at large withii\nthe corporeal limits oft' e town of Nevada except aa pro-\nvided for in this Ordinance.\nSkc. 2. Every owner or o'her person having the charge\nof dogs shall pay for a license for keeping each dog the\nsum of five dollars per year, payable in advance at the\nMarshals office.\nSkc. 3. The Marshal shall provide for each person ap-\nply iiig for a license under tlm.urdinance a bras* tag, stamp-\ned with a consecutive number, which tag shall be securely\nfastened the neck of the dog for which the license it\ntaken out. He shall also furnish to the person taking out\nthe license n receipt for the amount of money paid with\nthe date of the license a receipt for the amount of money\npaid, with the date of the license.\nSki:. 4. It shall be the duty ot the Marshal and watch-\nmen to kill nnd remove all dogs found running at large,\nthe owners of which shall not have complied with the pro-\nvisions of this ordinance; and all person* oistructing the\naforesaid officers in the performance of their duties under\nthis ordinance, upon conviction, may be fined in any sum\nnot exceeding one hundred dollar- or less than ten dollars;\nor. In default id paymmt, by imprisonment not more than\nten days in the city jail.\nPassed June9th, 1868 .
f2dbbc55e4da7ea98d05c19c94b2fd91 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.478082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 To say that the Holy Cross aggre-\ngation was demoralized, is putting It\nmildly. The entire team was in the\nclouds in the first inning. Starting\nwith Krystepa who was selected for\nthe pitching job, he walked the first\nthree men to face him. He was ap-\nparently nervous. Two bad throws\non the infield, and another walk by\nthe pitcher gave the Burrltta a good\nstart. Krystepa was yanked from\nthe box after his fourth walk and\nStanley Partyka went In for him.\nPartyka was in a tight place and\nhe walked the first man to face him.\nA bad threw from second and an\nerrer at third added to the Burritts'\nscore and when the team waa finally\nretired, seven runs were chalked up\nagainat the Farmington avenue crew.\nOn the other hand, the seasoned\nveterans of the Burritt team, took\nthe contest as just another , ball\ngame. Bruno Kania retired the\nHoly Cross easily. A walk by\nPartyka started the second inning\nand an at short gave the Bar.\nritts another run. Then Partyka\nsettled down and staged a pitching\nduel with the elder boxman that\nwould have been a treat had the\nscore been anywhere near close.\nFrom the aecond to the eighth there\nwas no further scoring. Then, when\nit was agreed that tht eighth would\nbe the last inning, the Burritts\ntrotted in five substitute hitters and\nthey scored three runs oA a triple by\nP. Partyka, a brother of Stanley.\nA double by 8. Dalkowski and an\nerror at second followed by a single\nby Star head Budnick gave the Holy\nCross team Its lone two runs in the\nlast half of the eighth.\nThe Holy Cross team had a total\nof seven errors during the game,\neach one of which counted for one\nor more runs. Both teams got six\nhits. Partyka allowed two hits p to\nthe eighth, one of which was a bad-\nly misjudged fy ball by Kredar in\ncent?r field that went for a triple.
887cf5d04916c493767dbf6c518dbbbc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 Administrator of the.Estate of Jefltetson L.\nSangston, Deceased.\nBy vlrtuo of a decree made and entered In\nthis cause on the 25th day of May, 1805, it was\nndjuilgcd, ordered, ami dccrecd thatthlscmise\nlie referred to one ofthe Commissioners of tills\nCourt lo audit, state, aud settle the Adminis¬\ntration account of the said Loring, aud report\nthe mine to Court, and also ascertain and re¬\nport what debts there are against the estate of\nsaid Sangston still unpakl, aud also the reid\nproperty belonging to said estate, describing\nthe separate parcels thereof, aud where situ¬\nate, and what part thereof Ls encumbered by\ndee* Is of trust or otherwise, and the amountof\neach encumbrance, and to whom due, and!\nthat he give four weeks notice by advertise¬\nment thereof, published In some \nprinted in Wheeling, at the time and place of\ntaking such account, aud that he atoo, by like\nadvertisement, give notice to all persons\nc laiming to be credltomof the said estate, that\ntlicy, at the time and place to be named by\nhim, appear before him and produce and\nprove the amount of their respective debts on\npain of having their said supposed debts ex¬\ncluded from payment by said estate, in case\nthey do not respectively at said time and\nfilnce prove the same, and that his proceedi¬\nngs in the premises with any special matter\nhe may deem pertinent, or which he may be\nrequired by said parties, or any of them, spe^\nciaily to report, and that new process or sub¬\npoena Issue against the infiint defendantjolin\nA. Sangston.
41dc6aabb09e0f6cd20a15f3589d2d67 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1917.2424657217148 58.275556 -134.3925 within three months after the pas¬\nsage of this ordinance, on Ilia be¬\nhalf. and on Itehalf of IiIh heirs, suc¬\ncessors. or assigns. file his written\nacceptance of the terms and condi¬\ntions of the Haine with the City Clerk\nand shall, at the time of tlliiiK of said\nacceptance, tile a good and sufficient\nbond or understanding In the huui of\nTwo Thousand Five Hundred (12. -\n500.00) Dollars in favor of the City\nof Douglas, the sureties on which\nbond shall be acceptable and bo ac-\nccptcd by the street commltteo of\nthe City of Douglas, and said bond\nshall guarantee a full compliance\nv It h this ordinance by said grantee,\nbis heirs, successors or assigns, and\nsaid granteo. his iieirs. successors or\nassigns, shall commence to Install\nsaid appliance and distributing sys\ntern by the 15th day of June. 1917.\nand continue work thereon with\n diligence until said plant\nis completed and installed. And It\nis further agreed that said grantee,\nhis heirs, successors or assigns will\nwithin the year 1!»18 complete said\nplant and equipment to such an ex¬\ntent ns to be able to furnish gas to\ntho curb of the streets to all build¬\nings between Treadwoll Post- Office\non St. Ann's Avenue and running\nalong Third to II street, thence along\nII Street to Front Street, including\nall the Intervening territory, upon\nreasonable notice by tho parties de-\nslring gas, and further agree that he\nwill within a reasonable time so fur¬\nnish said equipment and distribut¬\ning system so as to be able to fur?\nnish gas at the curb to residents of\nthe City of Douglas.and agree that he\nw"lll furnish such gas upon reasonable\nnotice of tho pereons desiring the\nsamo; and upon failuro to do or per-
06d98382a35c5a3b559dda78d1a622a0 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.3383561326739 39.369864 -121.105448 Is it possible there lives an American\nwho has voted at the ballot-box ; who has gloried\nin the long list of Revolutionary names ; who\nhas read of that Revolutions battles, of the\ncountrys more recent naval exploits ; who has\nseen the dignity of its flag respected in foreign\nclimes ; who has beheld its offices filled by states-\nmen from the North and the South, and ably\nfilled; who has listened to the soul-thrilling\ntones of Henry Clays voice; who has perused\nthe patriotic pages of Websters Constitutional\narguments ; who has heard the thunder-awaken-\ning belches of heavy cannon on the mornings of\nthe Fourth of July ; who has been reminded in\nthrilling strains from eloquent lips, of the en-\nlarged liberty he was permitted to enjoy under\nthe most form of Government ever de-\nvised by the wisdom of man; is it possible, we\nsay, that one such man lives, who docs not, in\nbitterness and anguish of spirit deplore the evil\ntimes upon which we have fallen ? Is there a\nsoul so dead to all the nobler impulses of a gen-\nerous nature, as to exult over the scenes of\nbloodshed now being enacted, and who would at-\ntempt to excuse the conduct of the aggressors}!\nWhy should the Southern man do so ? Was he\nless respected under the Union than the man\nfrom the North ? Was a full portion of the com-\nmon heritage of glory denied to him or his chil-\ndren ? Did he not share the offices, the trusts,\nthe honors of the General Government ? Did it
f59b338fcdf07a6d4ba2ac2e29bc29ac NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.1931506532217 41.681744 -72.788147 babyish face should have a fluffy bob,\nif she wishes it, but never curly; curls\nhave gone out. For the lady of ad-\nvanced years, the hair should be very\nshort, but not clipped like a man's, of\ncourse; it should be 'set' so that a\nsoft wave is suggested and be brought\ndown about her forehead and over all\nor part of her ears in the way which\nis most becoming.\n"The young business girl doesn't find\nbobbed hair much of a problem. Just so\nlong as it is becomingly cut and well\ngroomed, she is set for the day. It\nis the society woman of many activities\nand the professional woman on the\nstage who find it so full of possibilities.\n"For hunting, as an example, there is\nriding habit and hat to taken into\nconsideration; luncheon in a sport suit\nor fluffy frock requires a slight but\noh, how transforming rearranging; for\ntea or bridge, the chic, slightly pic-\nturesque locks arranged just so; for din-\nner, theatre, dance, ball or night clubs,\nftill another and softer hairdress.\n"In an interview I cannot show just\nhow these transformations are wrought,\nbut the ladies can learn from their hair-\ndressers. The maid3 of the ladies whose\nhairs I dress come to my studio and\nlearn what you call eh, the eh, tricks.\nThen, with the comb and the fingers, the\nrearranging is quickly wrought.\n"One thing I should l.ke to advise\nyour readers and it will give them a\ngood, healthy head of hair and that\nsoignee look which is so necessary for\nthe smart-lookin - g
0343fa8ffbae5fd1926ce8a44676652f DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.5575342148657 39.745947 -75.546589 With the exception of the polling in\nthe Orkney and Shetland Islands, the\n«lections In England are over and we\noan now see definitely the result. The\nmember from the islands named will\nbe a Gladstonian. The new Parlia­\nment will be composed of 317 Con-\n•eiVittvfB, 194 Liberal Home Rulers, 74\nUnionist Liberals and 85 Nationalists.\nThe Conservatives laok 36 of a majority\nof the whole by this computation, bnt\non all Important measures by yielding\nthey can no doubt gain sufficient votes\nfrom the opposition to carry their\npoints. There is no likelihood what­\never that the opposition faotions can\nunit* upon any measure of home rule\nthat would be acceptable to Ireland.\nIn the preceding Parliament there\n•were 252 C jmervatives, 231 Liberal\nHome Rulers, 101 Liberal Unioniste\nand 80 Nationalists. The cffsot of the\nlate election, though not favorable \nhome rale, will not materially retard\nthe growing feeling amongst the masses\nin favor of that measure. The fact that\n194 straight-ont Home Rulers outside\ncf Ireland could be elected on the\nstraight issue of home rule,serves warn­\ning upon England that she must pre­\npare for home rule for Ireland in the\nnear future. The 85 Nationalists will\nin all events effecting home rale, vote\nwith Gladstone's 11*4 foil »were, aug­\nmenting the number to 279, And will\nleave the Conservatives and Unionists\ncombined a majority of only 62 ont of\n620 members. This being the first issue\nupon home rule, Gladstone has no oanse\nfor complaint as he had great prejudices\nto contend with. The working people\nin England, who are principally\nProtestants, were told that the Pope\nwas to be established in Ireland, and\nthat the Protestants won Id be driven
374b55a63e4dffffcd8627380aac91cf THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.132876680619 37.561813 -75.84108 less on his own acount than en that of\nhis good mother, whom he had hoped to\nplace beyond the need of all further\nearthly wants. It will better please the\nreader to learn that he did not yield\nhimself up to despair. His will was\nnerved to plan, his hand to execute,\nanother statue equal if not superior to\nthe one he had already achieved.\nIt will readily be imagined that the\nadvent of such a trial as that now im-\npending caused no small stir in the city.\nThe hitherto obscure life of the young\nsculptor, and the stand he had made\nabout his counsel, very considerably en-\nhanced the anxiety and excitement of\nthe public. Many, unable to restrain\ntheir impatience, visited him in prison\nsome, doubtlens, impelled Dy curiosity,\nothers moved some higher motive.\nAmong these were two distinguished\nlooking individuals, who chanced at that\ntime to be sojourning in i lorence. une\nwas considerably pnet middle age; the\nother (said to be his nephew) was a young\nman, of remarkably handsome counte\nnance and noble figure. No restriction\nseemed to be put either on the frequency\nor length of their visits; while to poor\nHenri, the time thus spent was as gold\nand sunshine in this otherwise dark\nphase of his career. Greatly to the as-\ntonishment of every one, his mother had\nremoved to a handsome loggia in the best\nquarter of the city; her sadness of heart\nand countenance seemed to have van-\nished, and there was a gladness in her\nwhole being, such as none who had\nknown her had ever before seen.
19d33a48a3d8cceb460efa439ea01132 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.2397259956874 39.745947 -75.546589 C. W. Ix>rd, proprietor of tlho C. W,\nIjord & Son's hardware store, ha« sold\nhis trotting horse Tom to John. H .\nJones, of Woodslde. Tho price paid\nfor the animal is $1C0.\nThomas Simpson, of Camden, secre­\ntary ot the trustees ot Camden Union\ntamp ground, has called a meeting of\nthe trustees for May 1, at 2 p. m.. on\nthe grounds between Camden and Do­\nver. The trustees altendioned tho\ncampraeetlng last year on account of\nlack of Interest.\nThe women of the Epworth I»engu«\nof Union M. E. Church will hold a\nsupper and festival this evening In\nUnion M. E . Church.\nTho executive board of fite Century\nClub will meet at the home of Mrs.\nPhlllpl Fleher, at 3.30 oclock next\nMonday afternoon.\nThe marriage Ezekiel Hunn, Jr.,\nof Philadelphia, and Miss Florence\nMifflin, daughter of Samuel Mifflin, of\nCamden, wlhlch will bo solemnized in\ntho Friends Meeting House at Cam­\nden on Wednesday. April If,, is sa,id to\nbe the first marriage performed there\nfor fifty years. Mr. Hunn is tho son\nof Ezekiel Hunn. the well-known crim­\ninal lawyer of Philadelphia. .\nHoly Cross Catholic Cemetery. Do­\nver, will be beautified by the erection\nof a handsome iron fence surrounding\nthe grounds. Tlhe gates will be kept -\nlocked, In order to prevent the abuse\nof the grounds, and each lotsholder\nwill he supplied with a key.\nJohn A. Byrd has accepted tho posi­\ntion of train dispatcher In the office of\nthe superintendent ot the New York.\nPhiladelphia and Norfolk railroad, at\nCape diaries.
1e14d45dee089241cb0dbcad93fd68fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.1301369545915 40.063962 -80.720915 Sue. 1. Taxation shall !>e equal and un\nform throughout tho State, and all nro|\ncity, both real und personal, shall I\ntaxed in proportion to its value, to I\nascertained as directed by law. No or\nHpecies of property from which a tax ran\nbe collected shall bo taxed higher tha\nany other species of property of equi\nvalue; but property used for educations\nliterary, scientific, religious or charitab\npurposes, and all cometeries and publ\nnwimtrlv mnv liv Inw hfi exttinnt fmi\ntaxation, and the Legislature may by la\nauthorize the County Courts, or other ti\nbunals established in lieu of said court\nto exempt* from taxatioh for count;\ndistrict or municipal purposes, agriculti\nral productions grown directly from tl\nsoil, and the produ.cta and increase\nnumber of live stock produced within \nState during the year preceding the fir\nday of April, and remaining unsold on th:\nday, in the possesoiou of the original own*\nor his agent; the produce during thesan\ntime, of mines, Bait wells and oil wel\nwithin this State, remaining unsold in ti\nhands of tho producer, or his agent, c\ntho Uret day of April; and all manufa\nt tired articles antj products of meclianic\nskill and labor produced in this Stute, du\ningthe same time, and -remaining unso\non Jthe first day of April, in the hands\nthe producer or his agent; and househo!\nand kitchen furniture of the value of lift\ndollars may, by law. bo exempted fro;\ntaxation. The Legislature shall lmi\npower to tax, by uniform and equal law\nall privileges and franchises of persoj\nand corporations.
86d0d1808810c58da8d6bfbe9127b6b7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0342465436327 41.681744 -72.788147 ton Bowling Scores Briefs.\nAction by the legislature will not\nbe needed to bring a building code\nInto force In Plainville, It was shown\nat the meeting of the Chamber of\nCommerce last evening, the voters\nof the town having authority to pass\non the matter and adopt regulations.\nThe public acts of 1923 give a town\nauthority to take this action with-\nout further recourse to the assembly.\nThe meeting was largely devoted\nto a hearing on the proposed code\nprepared by tho chamber committee.\nMany representatives of the various\nbuilding trades were present, and,\nwhile some points in the proposed\nregulations as drawn up were not\napproved, all were unanimously in\nfavor of the adoption of some code.\nThe rules originally drawn up were\nthought In some instances to be not\nquite suited to Plalnville's particular\nneeds and situation, and it was voted\nto have President Henry Trumbull\nappoint a commttteo of eight to\n a code with particular atten-\ntion to conditions here and to report\nprogress at each succeeding chamber\nmeeting. The committee is to con-\nsist of one carpenter, one mason, a\nplumber, an electrician, a fireman, a\nsheet metal worker and two busi-\nness men. The members will be ap-\npointed in a few days.\nWhen this committee has complet-\ned its work another hearing will be\ngiven the building trades, and if the\ncode is found satisfactory the cham-\nber will recommend to the selectmen\nthat it be adopted and that It be\nvoted on at a special or regular town\nmeeting. It will then be up to the\nvoters, and, if approved, it is only\na matter of putting it into effect.\nIt was mentioned Incidentally that\nthe same procedure can be taken\nwith parking regulations, the 1023\nacts giving the town authority to en-\nforce rules approved by the voters\nand fine violators of them.
33d59b9cd3366a1ff7877444271324fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.408469913732 40.063962 -80.720915 debate on the tariff bill, and lor hif\npart lie could stay in session until the end\nEtf his term rather than have the Senate\nforced in this way by one Senator to dc\n[hat which it did not wish to do. Ilia onlj\nabject in proposing to restrict the debate\nwas to hasten the public business. He was\nnnxioua to adjourn, and in order to do ic\nit an early day the Senate must attend tc\nthe public business and to nothing else\nthere had been political debate and\nwrangling enough this session, and h<\nhoped there would bo no more of it Th<\nbusiness on hand, was to pass this tarit!\nand tax bill by which the people would\nbe relieved of most of the burdens of tax\naud he wished to confine the Senate to\n The Sei^tpr from Illinois (Tiium\nhull) had charged that this rejolutioi\nwas an attempt to deprive the Senate o\nthe right ot tree speech, and had appealer\nto another tribunal, but he (Sherman\nbelieved the Judgment of the peopta woulc\nbe that when any Senator under\ntook to delay the passage of a'bil\nso important as this one, by re\nhearsing old political speeches on deai\nissues, the Senate had tho right to pre\nteet itself and to confine tho deoato to th\n[lending subject by unanimous consent\nor by rule, or iu any other way. Ilow\never, as there seemed to be a great sensi\ntiveness about adopting this propositi®\nas a rule, he would not insist on that if h\ncould have tho unanimous consent t\nlimit the debate, without such arrangi\nments.
07e37882f5fad555ed057dfae9de9ad2 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.1931506532217 39.745947 -75.546589 Mrs. Alexander» "Sisterhood of Spin- annihilates It, crushed to the earth will\nstera" is a pungent, though good- rise again. As much as possible I in-\nnatmed, piece of satire. The veterau I ujq(1 to ktep tho varied aud multirudi-\nThotuas Powell contributes "A Person- nous attractions hidden from t*epublic\nal Uemlniscmce of Spohr and Mendels- view. I experience a sort of malicious\nsoho,” and Ctmrubiui aud Mercadante delight in piling up gtNjds to spoil\nare ibe subject* of the * Sacred Muriel- my hands. 1 wish it was not so. For\nana, series. The "Glances at Bible I might have an opportunity of dis-\nHistory" and "Christ Teaching by posing of $23,000 worth of tobacoo,\nParable" are continued, and both very cigars, etc., to atlvantage. Phould you\ninteresting; and the venerable c. unten- chance to read this, do not impart it to\n ce of the Rev. Dr. Prime, a represen- yoar friend, it might create a »Wire\ntative religious journalist, accompanies to visit the great temple at Seventh and\na facsimile reduction of the first page Orange. If you wish you can walk\nof the New York Obse.rvor, which ho into No. 6 East Third street, and tat* r-\nhas so long edited. These are only a rogate the graceful Woi. J. Keuton; he\nsmall portion of tlie content» and, In- might present to your oculitttic vision\ndeed, the whole l umber is exception- auch a diversified catalogue of narcotic\nally good. Published by Mrs. Frank lmuries as to prod une an immediate\nLeslie, Ö3, M, 67 Park Place,New York, extraction of your plethoric book aud a\nat 25 cents a uumber, or $3 60 a year »luipie transfer of some of its contents,\npostpaid.
95f1e3ce604f29e5c4fd90567dac73cb PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.3657533929477 31.960991 -90.983994 Remarkable Invention.—During a recent\nvisit in Boston, we were shown specimens of the\nproductions of a wonderful piece ot mechanism,\nwhich were, indeed, truly astonishing. They\nwere miniature busts of Daniel Webster, Abbot\nLawrence, and Levi Woodbury; being perfect\nfac similes of their distinguished originals and\nWrought out of beautiful American marble, and\nby a machine which has been invented by Mr.\nThomas Blanchard, of Boston.\nThis invention certainly establishes a new era\nin the art of sculpture, and promises to dispense,\nalmost entirely, with the deep thought and classic\nstudy, and and indefatigable labor of the artist in\nhis efforts to put life and poetry into the marble;\nfor nature, art, everything tangible, can be copied\nby this machine, with a precision which defies the\nchisel* even when guided by the most skilfnl\nhand, and directed by the most gifted talent.\nThe machine, too,can be graduated so as to give\nreduced copies of any statuary, which shall, in\ntheir miniature, be perfect & exact copies of the\noriginals in everything else but the size; preser­\nving every line, furrow, and dimple, and giving\nprominence to muscles and veins, and every parti­\ncular lineament and feature, in exact proportion.\nBy the same machinery the most correct and\nperfect bas relief profile likenesses maybe cut\non the hardest material, and of any size required,\nfrom half an inch to full life like size. We\na strikingly exact cameo profile of Henry Clay,\n perfect a head of that etateeman as we have\never seen in any of the busts or case to be found,\nand of the fashionable size for a ladys breast-pin.\nAmong the specimens shown to us. too, were the\nheads of several of our acquaintances, cut in\nmeo and ivory, prop er size for setting in pins, the\nfirst glimpse of which called before our minds the\noriginals, as readily as the most perfect daguer­\nreotype or pencilled miniature would have done.\nWe are told that this machine is surprisingly\nsimple in its construction, and is worked with\nvery little care or cost. Mr. Blanchard, ;the\ninventor, is already distinguished for his extraor­\ndinary genius. He was the inventor and pa­\ntentee of the machine for turning irregular forms,\nsuch as gun stocks, &c.,and has produced many\nother remarkable inventions.\nWe are assured that the best of Greënough's\nand Persicos productions which have cost them\nyears of study and effort, can be copied by this\napparatus with most positive accuracy; and the\nblock of shapeless marble put into its power, will\nin a few hours stand forth a perfect copy of the\nmos beautiful and animated statuary the great­\nest sculptors ever produced. And, what is most\nwonderful, this machinery may be readily grad­\nuated to increase or diminish the copy, so as to\nfurnish a colossal or a miniature figure, with\nequal precision, in all respects, in exact porpor-\ntions.
17e28e240ca5961fb8773b341f40208c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1875.0972602422628 41.004121 -76.453816 How They Treat Grasshoppers in China.\nThe local authorities, whether civil or mili\ntary, are held responsible for the stamping\nout of these insects as soon ns their appear-\nance has been reported. They arc required\nto summou a largo body of men, aud at once\nsurround and destroy tho locusts, the expen-\nses of the maiutainanco of the men and com\npensation for crow trodden down duriiitrthe\nchaso being supplied by the provincial treas\nury. Should the local authorities succeed in\nstamping out the locusts within a limited\ntime, their services aro favorably reported to\ntho Euijpcror; but should Uicy fail, and the\nlocusts, spread and do damage, they aro liable\nto bo deprived of their posU, arrested and\nhanded over to the proper board for punish\nment. A certain sum tier bushel is naiJ tn\npeasants bringing in tinwinged locusts, and\nhalf that sum when the locusts aro able to \nwhile compensation is given for crops trod-\nden down lu the chase. The locusts are swept\nwith besoms into trenches dug at the sides\nof tiie corn fields, in which a vigorous lire\nis kept up. Tho best time to capture locusts\nis when they are feeding, at dawn of day,\nwhen their bodies beiiiK heavy and their\nwings wet with dew, they are unable to jump\nor lly. II tho Western States, or any part of\nthem, are to bo visited by the locusts in\nus they have been of late vears. nonie\nsystem of defeuso will have to bo adopted.\nunuer cxistiug circumstances, the use of men\nin large bodies Is impracticable, aud tho in-\ngenuity of Inventors) or scientists is our onlv\nhope. Tho prospect, it must bo confessed, is\nnot very clieering, for the vut uninhabited\nregions allbrd breeding grounds which effect-\nually defy all attcmps at extermination.
04fa8acafa6949b7b5d70ddd31050a29 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.4808218860985 39.745947 -75.546589 on Tharsday afternoon for New Lon­\ndon accompanied by hta son Allan, his\nsister and his physician. He looked\nweak, but his physician said he was\nprogressing favorably, ar.d would no\ndoubt be benefited by a change of air.\nThe strike of the Lake !3hore ewitch-\nat Chicago continued on Thursday.\nPassenger trains were not interfered\nwith, but no freight trains were run.\nAnother attempt to move a freight train\nin the afternoon was aga>n prevented\nby the strikers.\nThe Catholic Total Abstincnoe Society\nof Pennsylvania, in session at Girard-\nville, on Thnrsday, selected WeiIsboro*\nas the plaoe for the next meeting. A\nresolution was adopted expressing sym­\npathy for Home Rule.\nAt Chioago on Wednesday, Reno &\nLittle, coal dealers, reiovered a verdict\nof $35,000 against tbo Pittsburg\nWayne and Chioago Railroad\nsuit for damages, growing out of a (all­\n to oomply with a contract.\nThe trustees of the Shaare Emetb\nTemple, in St. Louis, on Wednesday\nnight deposed their Rabbi, S. H . Son-\nueechien, by a vote of 8 to 4 on account\nof having abandoned, as the chArges\nstate, Judaism for Unitarianism.\nAt Chestnut Hill,near Lancaster,Pa.,\nThursday morning, Charles Green wait,\nemployed at the ore bank of theCbickie\nIron Company, while woiking at tha\nwasher, fell into the machina and was\ninstantly killed.\nAt a meeting of the Regents of the\nUniversity of Wisconsin, in Msdisen,\nWednesday night, Professor John O.\nChamberlain of Beloit, United States\nGeologist, was elected president to suc­\nceed Dr. John C. Baacom, resigned.\nThe sohooner M. Atwater was run\ninto and sunk by the steamer City of\nKingston in the North River, at New\nYork, on Wednesday night. Two of\nthe schooners men were drowned.
0f721ac4e5a7a19d410e848b94b5bcfe THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1899.3630136669203 33.031451 -111.387343 quent discussion in congress, but durine all\nthose years not a thing; has been done in a\npractical way. To be sure, here and there\ncertain "government surveys" have been\nmade with the apparent purpose of giving\nsomebody a job, rather than to arrive at\nany practical preparation for water storage-Th-\nfact is, and those interested In irriga-\ntion might just as well look the facts of the\nsituation squarely in the face, the sentiment\nof the eastern states and their members of\ncongress is against the development of the\narid region, and the majority of the members\nof congress are not In favor of any sufficient\nappropriation that would secure water\nstorage. They will put in a few thousand\nhere and there "for a friend" to make sur-\nveys for purposes already indicated, but\nthat there is auy serious intention on the\npart of congress to help the great arid\n of the west in securing water, no\none who has followed the subject in con-\ngress and in the central and eastern portions\nof the United States, believes for one\nmoment. Let us not deceive ourselves in\nthis matter. It will take many, many years\nof missionary work in the east and in con-\ngress to bring that body to a realizing sense\nof the Importance to the people of the arid\nregion of water stnrnere. and much of that\ntime wiM necesturily he expended in re-\nmoving the prejudice of the east, and in\ncongress, against the development of the\narid west. Theorist rey aids money appro-\npriated for such purposes as an appropria-\ntion to promote interests antagonistic to\ntt.eij own; theytlo not and will not see the\ninaUer in auy w. uer liglit. It will only be the\nclowgrudurtj lusliuLirtt of eastern capital\ntoiuch a point let the t
099685128db700707fc71a8bcce90cd4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.595890379249 39.261561 -121.016059 Occasionally we hear of incidents in the\npresent war that remind one of the adven-\nturous deeds of the Revolution. Of some\nMcb I have been bearing the outlines for a\nday or two past. They relate partially to\nthe Union prisoner found In the Jail at Phil-\njtppi, and released by tbe capture of that\nplace. I learu that a man named Leonard\nJlark, who is well known, and known the\ncountry well, in tbe surrounding couuties,\ntendered bis services ul Parksburg as a\n•toui to tbe Fourteenth Ohio RegimetA.\nadd was accepted. He is an athletic, mus-\ncular, determined and daring young man,\nand would like nothing better than tbe per-\nllrous adventure upon which he entered.\nU appears that, accompanied by Myers,\nwho is a younger mao, and a German from\nClarksburg, lie reached the neighborhood\non Saturday before the attack. They pass-\ned tbe outside pickets without observation,\nmd were gettiug along very successfully in\npicking up bits of usetul information, which\nThey found lyiug about loose. But bold-\nness gettiug the better of discretion, they\nipproacbed too near tbe town, and suddenly\ncame upon a party of dragoons. The odds\nwere too great against them, and being\nmounted, they wheeled their horses and en\ndeavored to escape. The dragoon* gave\nchase, firing at them as they ran. The balls\nwhistled around their heads ; several passed\nthrough Clarks hat, but doing other\ndamage. They dashed madly on, pursuers\n•ud pursued. One of the horsemen came\nclose up to Clark, and he wheeled and shot\nhim dead with a revolver. Another came\nup and seized him by the left arm. He in\nstantly turned and shot ofT the hand. But\nanother and more appalling danger was\nupon them. In the madness of the chase\nthey had not anticipated what might be\nahead, when they suddenly came upon a\nsquad of pickets, who comprehending the\nsceoe, leveled tbeir guns and tired at tne ad-\nvancing fugitives. Tbe balls passed harm-\nlessly by tbe men. but Clarks horse after\nrunning about fifty yards, reared up and\nfell dead. He bad been shot in the breast.\nClark immediately dashed into a thicket\nwhere the cavalry could not follow, and for\na lime eluded bis pursuers. Myers ivas tak-\nken, carried to Phillippi, and a counsel\nheld at once to determine his fate. Two of\nhis fellow townsmen who were present.\nBob Johnson and George Lurty, urged that\nbe should be hung at once and without mer-\ncy, but William Cooper, unolher of his\ntownsmen, succeeded in having it postponed\nuntil the lollowiug morning ut live oclock.\nMyers was at once incarcerated in the jail,\nand nothing saved him but the attack and\nfight Monday morning, at a moment which\nleft him but about hair an hour intervening\nbetween him and the gallows.
171ed769b8f0b2ec7c885751eade454a CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1907.332876680619 39.623709 -77.41082 That which Pharaoh saw in Joseph\nand honored with vice-regal favor\nthe captain of the guard had dis-\ncerned from quite another point of\nview. That which attracted tho at-\ntention of Potlphar and gave him\nconfidence In Joseph also influenced\nthe minds of the keepers of the prison\nand led them lighten tho burdens of\nJoseph and to install him in a place\nof responsibility and authority among\nthe men with whom he was incarcer-\nated. And that which they all saw\nwo, too, see to-day as wo gaze down\nthe perspective of tho centuries.\nJoseph was faithful to Potiphar be-\ncause ho was the child of God. Ho\nwas trustworthy in prison because\nhe was in right relations constantly\nwith God. He was able to interpret\ndreams and unfold them with\nprophetic power and more than com-\nmon accuracy because he kept his\nsenses alert and his whole manhood\nalive to tho ministrations of the liv-\ning God. Pharaoh was right. Jos-\neph was a man in whom the Spirit of\nGod abode with power. If God had\nnot been with him he would have\nbeen overwhelmed with the insistency\nof the importunate invitations of Pot-\nIphars wife. If God had not given\nhim grace he might have used his lib-\nerty in tho prison to havo escaped to\na more hospitable soil. If Jehovah\nhad not vouchsafed to him a more\nthan common ability to understand\nthe mind of God he never would have\nbeen able to have predicted tho fam-\nine that with such exactness came to
17348ed501067cfd9e636d4dbb521bc7 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.7876712011669 40.419757 -77.187146 It was during the stormy times in\nEngland, when the wars of York and\nLancaster were raging, that Sir Thomas\nWyatt, a fierce Laucasterian, was con.\nfined in one of the dismal dungeons of\nthe Tower of London.\nSir Thomas was not very comfortable,\nas you may suppose. He was cold and\nhungry. One day, as be sat there in\nhis loneliness and misery, a cat made its\nappearance In his cell. He took the\nanimal and warmed his numb fingers\nin her soft fur, and laid ber in his breast,\nwhere she cuddled, quite delighted with\nthis kind treatment. Next day pussy\ncome again, and wonderful to tell car-\nried in her mouth a pigeon, which was\nlaid at the prisoner's feet.\nThe next time the Jailer came to visit\nhim Sir Thomas complained of his hard\nfare, and begged for meat. His\nrequest was gruffly refused. If I pro-\nvide the game will you dress it for me V"\ninquired the old knight.\n" That I will," said the jailer, think-\ning himself quite safe in making the\npromise. What was his surprise when\nthe pigeon was produced. But be kept\nhis word and brought it to Sir Thomas\nagain nicely cooked.\nThe cat continued to furnish him\nfrom time to time with these rare bits.\nIt is needless to say that she stood high\nin the affections of the prisoner.\nAfter some years Sir Thomas was re-\nleased. He ever afterward included all\ncats in his love and esteem in memory\nof its benefactress.\nA portrait of the old knight is still to\nbe seen in South Kensington gallery,\nwith bis faithful cat beside bim, and the\npigeon in a pan.
821347c59ed3f50872aed7b746b02dec NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.091780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 Includes two schools, the Pine street\nbuilding and a temporary structure\noff King street In the tract developed\nby the Bristol Brass corporation,\nwhich Is known as the John V.\nWade school. Th latter building is\nexpected to be a center ,of fire to-\nnight as It Is anticipated members\nof tho board of education will at-t e- d\nthe meeting to ask that the\nbuilding be discontinued as a num-\nber of Improvements were recom-\nmended by State Inspector John\nlitzslmmons on his recent visit to\nthis city. The coal bins and the\nheating plant were criticized by the\ninspector and these criticisms will\nbo used In the arguments favor-\ning the elimination of tho school In\nthe King street section.\nThe,King street residents are up In\narms over the suggestion to elimin-\nate the school and declare that tho\nchildren of that section face a men-\nace in the necessity of crossing the\nstate highway on Broad street at\nPierce's bridge. When the John F.\nWade school was erected, It was\nshown that several children had\nbeen injured, one of them fatally, by\nmotor cars. the yoling- -\ncr children living on King and ad-\njacent streets wero given their own\nschool. The school was made possi\nble through the erection of a build\ning by the Bristol Brass corporation\nand by the leasing of land by Park\nCommissioner Albert E. Rockwell,\nthen president of tho brass com\npany, to the school district. This\nlease was for three years' duration\nand according to reports from relia\nble sources, the lease has already run\nits term and has not been renewed,\nthereby presenting more complica\ntions for the district to consider.\nSoma of the property owners favor\nan addition to the present Pine\nstreet structure on land purchased a\nshort time ago off Mitchell street.\nHere no sewer connections aro avail-\nable and another element in the dis-\ntrict wants a new eight room build-\ning erected on land near South street\nextension, known as tho Mountain\nroad, only a stone's throw from the\npresent building.\nShould the erection of a new\nschool be decided upon, bonding of\nthe. district will be a subsequent step\nin order that the plans may bo\nfinanced.
1d429733e9dd21ca34242466d004317e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.332876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 An a rule, the villages liUve tho up.\npearnnee of fortifications, the outside\nwnlls being frequently without doors\nor windows, and the lanes of the villugo\nterminating in mafsivo wooden doors,\nwhich are usually closed at nightfall*\nnr.d guarded on tho inside by tho village\nguffrah, or night-watchmen.\nEach "houso” has usually ono door,\nopening into tho lane, small and low;\nand the few windows, if provided ûtaJl,\nare merely slits in the mud wall, Inno­\ncent of glass or shutter, but ornament­\ned with a lattice of spilt bamboo, placed\ncrosswise during building. Ventilation ,\nthere is virtually none, thesmokeof thA{\nfire of dung or corn-eobS finding Its\negress by tho door, and well-nigh chok­\ning the inhabitants, which include not\nonly tlie fnniily, but chickens, turkeys,\npigeons, goats ami whatever live stock\nthe inhabitants possess.\nEvery effort, to exclude air seems to\nbe made, the houses being too low to\nfeel tho breezes, and the streets too nor- .\nrow to of any air circulation. The\nroofs, covered with piles of rubbish for\nfuel, afford accommodation for a sec­\nond installment of goats, pigeons, cats,\nand especially dogs. One wonders how ;\nlife can be supported in suc.li condi­\ntions; yet the pcopto are well-condi­\ntioned and healthy, living their lives in\nthe fields, and returning to their houses\nonly io eat and sleep. InsecJ life natur­\nally abounds, the Jlgyptian flea partic­\nularly being a prodigy of manly vigor\nand activity; but the fellah hns a hide\nlike a gainoos (the Egyptian buffalo)^\nnnd even travelers like myself eventu­\nally become impervious toits onslaught.\nOutside the village, and almost at their\nvery doors, the filth and offal of the.\nplace oro deposited, resulting in the i\ndevelopment of thut plague peculiar to\nEgyptian life—“fl ics” —d isgusting, but\nvery necessary as scavengers, without )\nwhich nnd the equally valuable rat\nthese villages would quickly become\nuninhabitable. — l i Talbot Kelly, In\nCentury.
12a2d0af19159242fdb4854eadbe8090 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.7794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 ?. l'10. I|ark grounds two years ago\nMr. Schmulbach, Just after the 18U5 b»\nball season closed, will be moved ft\ntlier north In order to give need\nroom for the casino building and oth\nstructure* contemplated In the plana\ntho park association. This does n\nmean that tho track wll be done aw\nwith; on tho contrary the assoclatl\nwill maintain tho llnest half mllo tra\nthat can be built, and It Is not unllkt\nthat It will conduct trotting races, I\ncycle races and other speed contests,\ngrand stand with a seating capacity\nl.uiH) persons Is to be constructed on t\ntrack side, arui In front of this stru\nture, which will be of steel and mode\ndesign, a base ha! diamond Is to be la\nout. Already the association Is In cc\nrespondent* with .Manager Torreysi\nof the Wheeling haso ball club, ai\nwith President Power, of Inti\nstate league, with referennce to havl\ntlio club play at tho new park next so\nson. The site is one that possesses u\nrivaled advantages, a fact that w\ndemonstrated in '95,when Harrows' cl\nwas located here. Thostreetcarfacllltl\nare the best possible, the place Del;\nequally convenient to Wheeling and t\nover-the-river towns. Manager Torre\nson will probably come to Wheeling\na few days nnd take up the matter wl\nthe Belle Isle people. The grand stat\ny tn® way, will have a band stand «u\nponded from the roof.\nThere are to be other attractions, I\neluding shoot-the-chutes, with the lo\ner terminus In the back river; a seer\nra way and many other features th\nwill make the resort popular wtlh t\namusement public. Tho park will\nrun strictly llrst eloss, and no liquor\nbeer will be sold on Sunday. The Hu\nday attractions will I
ddef7cfd20b577f1600e3b9d326eb58d DELAWARE ADVERTISER AND FARMER'S JOURNAL ChronAm 1829.1931506532217 39.745947 -75.546589 subjects of impest, with a view to retenue,\nit would seem to me that the spirit of equi­\nty, caution and compromise, in which the\nConstitution was formed, requires that the\ngreat interests ot agriculture, commerce and\nmanufactures, should be equally favored;\naud that, perhaps, the onlv exception to thlw\nrule, should consist in the peculiar en­\ncouragement of any products of either of\nthem that muy be found essential to our na­\ntional independence.\nInternal improvements, and the diffusion\nof knowledge, so far as they can be promoted\nby the constitutional acts of the Federal\nGovernment, are of high importance.\nConsidering standing armies as danger­\nous to free; governments, in time of peace,\nl shall not seek to enlarge our present es­\ntablishment, nor disregard that salutary les­\nson ofpolitical experience, which teaches that\nthe military should be held subordinate to\nthe civil power. The gradual} increase\nof} our Navy, whose flag has displayed,\nin distant climes, our skill in navigation\n our fame in arms; the preserva­\ntion of out* forts, arsenats, and dockyard»\nand the introduction of progressive improve­\nments in the discipline and science of both\nbranches of our military service, are\nplainly prescribed by prudence, that I\nshould be excused for omitting their men­\ntion, sooner than for enlarging on their im­\nportance. But the bulwark of our dbfencs\nis the national militia, which, in the present\nstate of our intelligence and population, must\nrender us invincible. As. tong as <*** *o\nvernment ts »a*ntnisterea tor tin good of\nthe people, and fa regulated by the r will; s»\nlong as it secures to us the rightsof perron\nand of property, liberty of conscience, and\nof the press, it will be worth defending; and\nso long as it is worth defending, a patriotic\nmilitia will cover it with an impenetrable\nXgia. Partial injuries and occasional mor­\ntifications we may be subject to, but a mil­\nlion of armed freemen possessed of themeans
1c0a2d820ff3d9515bea1a0a086d3f88 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.346575310756 42.217817 -85.891125 High Priest, she fell upon her face and\nwent, and prayed that she micht find\nfavor in his sight, and that she might i\nglean where he gleaned, eat where he ate,\nsleep where he slept, and that she might\nbo permitted to wash his feet, annoint his j\nbeard aud call his people her people, hiv\nhouse her house, so Jon& as their pirii'. i\ndwelt in harmony. Kut if it should come\nto pass that there should arise strife, con-\ntentions or the least warring of their spir-\nits, or if she should behold another man\nmore comely than tho High Priest or one\nlyith a longer beard and the spirits told\nher to leave the High Priest and cleave\nto the other than she would feci con-\nstrained to do so jnasuiuch as she is a\nstrong n;itidcd woinnn and much\nabove her sex, in fcpefvh, manners and\nintellect. Then tho High Priest answered\nand said; arise beautiful virgin for thou\nljast found ivir in my sight go honiu\narray thyself in biidal habiliments, for r\nis tljc cipruss command of the spirits thui\nwe should be united during their pleastiM-an-\nour own. And straightway she nnM\ngrid vent away to put on the bridal dress,\nwhile the Chief Kuler took counsel of\nKcncdicts treatise as to the precise form\nAnd ceremony of & Spiritual Marriage.\nnd it amcto pasthat in a few minxes,\nMary the kinswoman of Chloe appearad\nbefore the High Priest and the Chief\nMagistrate, arrayed in garments of white\n&ik ; ?notlcss as the lilly and a wreath of\nwhite hoses crowning her expansive and\niutcllcctnal brow. Thrn the Chief Il ulc -c om ma nde -
062e22bd2863494b73ac7496e2d70e4e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6506848997972 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their elficacv established by well tested expe\nrience in the hands of a legnlarly educated physi\ncian. whose prej mittnry study tits him tor all the\nduties lie must fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalwav* injurious. The unfortunate should be kar\nticuLoAH iii 8«*lpctin>r hl» phvpicimi, 9S it is a lament*\nable vet incontrovertible bict that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nbv mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nbv the best syphilogwpbers, that the study and man-\nagement ofthese complaints sliould engross t he whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The Inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comonly one system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, sliould be used bythesypli\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume Oerman, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters', they induce the unwary to enter tlieir Feter\nFunk “institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthp lying notices of quacks tlisn citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J. C. YOU NO\nwould say that he is Ihe only regularly educated\nphysician in Catlfornia now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 751 Clay Ftreet. opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom 9a. U..to SP. m.
bce1476b8467d4690b8f2bcc45fa4846 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.368493118975 41.681744 -72.788147 Diamond No. t at Walnut BUI park.\nThe Red Sox are due te meet\nsome stiff opposition In the open-\ning game, which, by . the way. will\nalso be the starting contest for the\nMystic aggregation. The team has\nsigned up several of the stars ef\nthe championship outdt of last ysar.\nAmong these is the battery ef Joe\nBellair, catch and Chappell. pitch.\nThis combination is considered te be\nthe best in that section of the state\nwith probably one eacepUen In the\nbox, Tony West Hewitt, a danger-\nous sticker will he at first base with\nFotte at third. The rest of the team\na as strong comparatively and the\nRed Sox will have to show some real\nbaseball to pull out with a victory.\nManager Tobin ia . outlining\nschedule will make even the\nmost hardened veteran atop and\nponder. The team gees to Canaan\nsoon te meet the team there. Games\nare ready te be closed also with\nthe Wiltona ef South Korwalk. the\nJ. B . Martin and Taftvilla A. A.\nclubs or Taftvllle, the Socony nine\nof New London and the Coast Guard\nClub, also of New .London.\nTomorrow ; night's Workout ' at\nWalhut Hill prk will be the final\none before the season opens 'and\nManager Tobin.. insists .that he will\nchoose his players from among\nthose who turn out for the session.\nThe players will ba put through a\nstiff workout ' as' long as daylight\nlasts and nothing will be left un-\ndone to make, the Man) ready fer\nSaturday. The, workout will start\npromptly at o'clock.
758b76ea21e699176145dc6ef95aa45e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.3547944888383 39.261561 -121.016059 was oitiered and decreed hy the said Cimrf. that th.-\nmortgage net forth in pla'iitilfs complaint umi>u- .\nclosed, and the property therein described, to ait\nAll ami singular that certain tract or parcel of bn,,)\nor possessory claim to public land, Hituxled in Ncvaii*\nTownship, County of Nevada, Male of California\nnear lilue Tent, and about five miles northerly fnmi\ntlie City of Nevada, containing about 8a acres, k,„j\nlaud adjoining the lan J lately owned by J. t ouuer,\nnow deceased, running tlirnce east ami west\nthe nortli line id said land being 1190 yards inleugtli\nruuning 128yards east ot said Cooper's noitli\ncornel to an oak tree, thence north i;50 yards to an\noak stake, and running 181 yards west of Cooper*\nnorth west corner to a sugar-pine stake, thence S6»>\nyards to a pitch-pine stake, llience direct to |lt .\n corner of said land: also, the house and\nlot and garden lot enclosed, heretofore occupied by\nthe parties defendants herein, situated on liopher\nPoint, near Hlue Tent aforesaid, together with all\naim singular the tenements, heicditaiiients, haarbi-\nses, rigiits. privileges, and appurleuanees ihen-fo be-\nlonging or in anywise appertaining. Is: levied upon\nand sold to satisfy said judgment interests and curls\nand tlie proceeds thereof applied to tin- payment of\nsaid sums of money as aforesaid. Notice is hereby\ngiven that I will expose to public sale ail the above\ndescribed properly to the highest bidder for cash, in\nfrout ot the Court House door, iu Nevada, on&Vl-\nUilUAY, T11K tLVk.Nl i I- N IU 1)AV Ok MAY. be-\ntween the hours of nine o'clock, a. si ., and 0 o'clock,\nl\\ M. (Jiveu under mv ham, this 2flth day of Apiil.\na. D., 1802.
0f4bea87af36625e1f264bc3d0b96b32 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.9684931189752 39.743941 -84.63662 ports by Lord Lldon, on what particular\npage, and how many lines from the top\nof the page, I don't know. I never\ntrouble myself with these little matters.\nPeabody has nothing else to do, and he\ncan hunt it up at his leisure."\nMr. Webster became Secretary of\nState under General Harrison in 1841.\nThey had no interview before he was\nappointed. It was done .by correspon-\ndence ; by an officer of the "place on the\npart of General Harrison by letter and\nacceptance on that of Mr. Webster.\nThey did not meet until eight or ten\ndays previous to the inauguration.\ntfeneral Harrison arrived at Washington\nfrom Cincinnati about the time Mr.\nWebster arrived from Massachusetts.\nMr. Webster was invited by Mr. Beaton,\none of the editors of the National In\ntelligencer, and a very warm personal\nfriend of his, come to his house, as he\nwould be more quiet there and less ex-\nposed to intrusion than at a hotel, and\nto stay until he got a house and move\nhis family into it.\nHe was constantly occupied with\nGeneral Harrison on matters connected\nwith the formation of the Cabinet, from\nearly morning until the - dinner hour.\nwhich was six o clock, it seems ne had\npreDared an inaugural message for Gen\neral Harrison. One day, among other\narrangements, he suggested to the new\nPresident, in as delicate way as he could,\nthe fact that he had sketched an in-\naugural, knowing that General Harrison\nwould be overwhelmed with calls and\nbusiness after his election, and he him-\nself having leisure to write. The Gen-\neral at once replied that it was not\nnecessary, that he had prepared his own\ninaugural.
034126d6727a4253a78a4fa568682e0b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.4534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 Tlioro ia given to every man a pow\ni boo ovory whore tlio faco of God, ai\nvorywhoro to rooognizo Ilia holy wi\n"lis tbo light which onlighteni\nvery man whocometh into this world\niut that light may bo clouded by t!\nlists of human passiotis;.that powc\nko ovory impulao of our nature, nee;\n3 bo wisely developed. Now it is t\nrovinco of Christian education to d\nerse those clouds, and to bring th\nIddoii powor to fullest perfection.\nFor years, you, my child, ha'\nittppily been under tho olovi\ntig and sanctifying inliuencea\ntruly Christian education. T\night whiph ovorywhoro rovoala to yi\nho blossod presence of God and tl\nower which ovor bida you bow in lc\ntig submission to lfis holy will, a\nifts far superior to tho most attract!\nracos of body or mind. As tho su\nlowor bonds ill reverent homage to t\nrb of day, so does your heart, train\nn this of Christian ethics, tu\nver to its God. Your lirut principle\n11 for God. Your chiofest happim\n3 in tho lovo of God. Your iitglH\napiratiou ia the possession of Gt\n'our life in all itB details must bo, an\naui sure, will bo so shaped aa to uleti\niod and do His blcssod will. This ai\nnuch more that 1 can now toll you\nmbodiod in your I'm Dm,\nFor God and country. Tho socoi\noiitiuiont of your short but sigtiifica\nuotto is tho ono which, in the hoart\nvory truo Amorican, holds tho no\nilaco aftor lovo of God.namely, lovo\niur country. Nono cherish that sen\nnont with warmer alloctlon than t\nmpiia of Mt. do Chantnl. Whilst tin\nurriculum of studios must nocossari\nmbraco tho goography and history\nitlior lands and othor nations, the groj\nst stress in laid on tho acquisition of\nhat boars on thoir own country, anil\nllustri.ous children, and glorious inn\nutlons.
3a48582b7fb929e65aea98ca72a2b348 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.6980874000708 40.827279 -83.281309 The Collector failed to carry out the sug-\ngestions of the Secretary, claiming that, un-\nder the law and his official bond, he him-\nself was responsible for the safe custody of\nthe goods, and the letter being advisory and\nnot in the form of an order, he would con-\ntinue, as heretofore, unless the Secretary\nshould make an absolute command. The\nSecretary, of course, properly declined to re-\nlieve the" Collector from any responsibility\nbelonging to his official bond.\nAbout a month after this, Mr. Thomas\nMurphy was appointed Collector of the Port,\nbut his views coincided with Mr. Grinnell as\nto the storage business, which continued to\nbe conducted according to Mr. Grinnell's\nplan. Some two months after Mr. Murphy's\nappointment the warehouses of Leet &\nStocking were designated to receive the gen-\neral order goods of the Cunard and North\nGerman Lloyd lines. This appears to have\nbeen in consequence of two facts: First, the\ndefalcation of the firm which, to that time,\nhad the storing of all unclaimed goods im-\nported by these lines. Secondly, Leet &\nStocking had obtained possession of the\nlargest and most convenient warehouses of\nthe city, thus enabling themselves to accom-\nmodate the mercantile community.\nThe policy of requiring the general order\ngoods to be stored on the New York side of\nthe river having been established, the desig-\nnation of Messrs. Leet & Stocking, under the\ncircumstances, a plain business matter,\nwhich would probably have been done by\nalmost every merchant in the citv precisely\nas it was done by the Collector of the Port.\nThis is shown by the fact that upon the\nappointment of Mr. Murphy's successor (Mr.\nArthur) in November, 1871, who adopted the\npolicy of the Secretary of the Treasury, as\nset forth in his letter of June 1, 1870, above\nquoted, and which permitted the steamship\nand other importing lines to select\ntheir General Order stores, the great\nbulk of the business still continued with\nLeet & Stocking. The Cunard and North\nGerman Lloyds, of course, selected their\nown warehouses, but the great bulk of the\nGeneral Order goods discharged in New\nYork is still stored with Leet & Stocking,\nnot because these gentlemen are the proteges\nof the President, as has been insinuated in\nsome quarters, but because their business\naccommodations are the most satisfactory\nand best adapted to the business public\nThus, at once, was the wisdom of the Secre-\ntary's policy vindicated: and that which was\nclaimed as an abuse abolished.\nAnother among the many difficulties in the\nGeneral Order problem was the rate of\ncharges for storage and labor. In the ab-\nsence of any law fixing such rate the present\nCollector called to his aid the Chamber of\nCommerce of New York, and requested it to\nsubmit a schedule of -- charges proper to be
0d0bee48355944ca6509bf7cfc349206 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1897.3849314751394 32.612638 -90.036751 Butwhygosofar? Icangiveyoua\nfamily incident. Some generations\nback there was a great drought in\nConnecticut, New England. The water\ndisappeared from the hills, and the\nfarmers living on the hills drove their\ncattle down toward the valleys, and\nhad them supplied at the wells and\nfountains of the neighbors. But these\nafter awhile began to fall, and the\nneighbors said to Mr. Hirdseye, of\nwhom I shall speak: "You must not\nsend your flocks and herds down here\nany more; our wells are giving out."\nMr. Birdseye, the old Christian man,\ngathered his family at the altar, and\nwith his family he gathered the slaves\nof the household for bondage was\nthen in vogue in Connecticut and on\ntheir knees before God they cried for\nwater, and the family story is that\nthere was and great sobbing\nat that altar that the family might\nnot perish for lack of water, and that\nthe herds and flocks might not perish.\nThe family rose from the altar. Mr.\nBirdseye, the old man, took his staff\nand walked out over the hills, and in\na place where he had been scores of\ntimes without noticing anything par-\nticular, he saw the ground was very\ndark, and he took his staff and turned\nup the ground, and water started; and\nhe beckoned to his servants, and they\ncame and brought pails and buckets\nuntil all the family and all the flocks\nand the herds were cared for; and then\nthey made troughs reaching from that\nplace down to the house and barn, and\nthe water flowed, and it is a living\nfountain y.
0d88ff0fb098fbf2188601280777e845 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1888.9713114437866 41.004121 -76.453816 no county in tho state whero thoy do\ngivo as little. Tho result is that very\nofUio tho county ohatrmati at tho end\nof a oamnaiun finds himself out of\npocket. Thopo who aro defeated for\nnomination will not pay anything, and\nthose who aro olootod. of course thero\narc exceptions, smilu at tho chairman\nwhen ho asks them for funds to pay\ntho bill that he has oontraotod in their\nbohalf. Tbo chairman aires his timo\nand labor for two or throo months, ho\nbiros halls, bands, horses and wagons to\ncarry speakers about the county,' raakcu\nspeccbes lumselt wucn overyooay else\nrefuses, and has all tho worry and ro\nvponsibility without any compensation.\nexcept tho honor,and then at tho end\nof tho fight bin tho bills aro to bo\npaid and he uks for funds from the\nsuccessful candidate?, be is told that\nthey havo no money, or that ho has\nbeen too oxtravagant,or ho is asked what\nhe has dono with all ho has already\nbad, witli an inuendo that perhaps no\nhas not accounted for all of it. Such\nare the pleasures of tho Chairmanship\nof tho domooratio party In Columbia\ncounty. Wo have heard from tho \nof one who was often put at tbo head\nof the party in this county now de\nceased, tho honor of being chairman had\ncost him as high as two hundred doll\nars in ono campaign; wo have heard\nfrom another that ho had lost as much\nas three hundred dollars in tho same\npwition. And this not because money\nwas expended profusely or unlawfully,\nbut because tin successful candidate\n"tfused to pay their assessments and\n.ad the gall to let tho chairman stick.\nThere is no uso of mincing matter.\nTho party organization is kept up for\nthe benefit of those who seek public\noflioe and they are tho ones who should\npay the expenses of tho campaign.\nTho chairman should refuo to contraot\nany bills until ho has sufficient money\nin hand to see him through, and if tho\ncandidates nominated by the county\nconvention do not pay theso assess-\nments in advanco the standing commt-te- o\nshould havo power to deolare the\nplaces vacant and to name other candi-\ndates. That is the way it is done in some\nadjoining counties and if such a rule\nwere adopted here it would no doubt\nhave a good effect
0906fbf1f9249b315e9bb6887c98ee37 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.0698629819888 29.949932 -90.070116 so amended the militia law of Tennessee as to\nremove the restrfictions which heretofore crippled\nit, giving the governor full authority to meet suoh\noutrages with npffici,nt force.\nNow, therefore, I. Wnm.G . Brownlow, governor\nof Tennessee. do call upon all goon anl loyal cti-\naens to enter the ranks of the State guards and be\nmustered into service, and assist in putting down\nShese lawless combinations and proceedings, and\nbIr ging the offenders to justice, so Aiding t, pre-\nserve the peace of this commonwesal.\nThose enrolling under this call will be subject to\nthe rules and regulations, as to rank, pay, etc.,\ngoverning the United States military. Those on.\nrolling in East Teunntaee will be furnished with\ntransportatiotn to Nashv..le, where they will be\narn ed, equipped and distributed, und-r command\nof General Joseph A. Cooper. Coimpanies here-\ntofore organized will be preferred.\nThts pr,clamation will, in due time, be followed\nby enother, designating the counties over which I\nabell declare martial law, the effect of which wilt\nbe to set aside civil law, and turn offenders over to\nthe mrlitary, who will try them, and, upon thelr\nconviction, dispose of them in asunmmary \nThese outrages have long been borne with, in\nthe hope that they would be abated by the publio\nsentriment of the respective communities con*\ncerned. Forbearance has ceased to be a virtue.\nThe executive is not to be brow-beaten, cajoled\nnor terrified out of the discharge of the dutles\ndemanded by existing exigencies.\n.l l citizens who may not enroll under this call.\nare hereby requested and enjoined to use their\nutnmost endeavorsin cor.junctlon with the State\nguards, and otherwise to restore and preserve the\npeace and dignity of this commonwealth, and all\ncitizens are also hereby warned again:st harboring\nthose masked marauders nalled Ku-Klux.Klans,or\ngiving them aid and countenance.\nThe governor is determined to make the State\nGuards soaufficiently numeroes and effective, and to\ncontinue them in the field snufficiently long until\nMiddle and West Tennessee are as orderly and\nseMire, as, happily, East Tennessee is today.\nl'Papers in the State, authorized by law to do the\npublic printing, are requested to copy this pro.\nclamation three times.\nIn testimony whereof I have signue the forego-\ning, and affixed the great seml of the ' ate, this\ntwcntieth day of January, A. D. •v;.
4d188ad4823dc61efbcbba9a98f4bcd1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.5082191463723 37.561813 -75.84108 These phenomena have, in all aires\nexcited curiosity, and in many instan\nces they have produced wonder at\ntheir extraordinary height and fury.\nIt Is related of the soldiers of Alexan\nder the Great, who were natives of tho\nMediterranean shores, that when they\nreached the confines of the ludiau\nOcean, and saw its waters rolling up\nto a great height, and then flowing\nback, twice every day, they became\nalarmed, and attribute! the phenome\nna to a special interposition of the\ndeities of the country which they hud\ninvaded. Various remarkable theo\nries have been advanced regarding the\ntides. Many of these are no truly ab\nsurd that it Is hardly worth while to\nrefer to them. Persons find It difficult\nto understand why the tides are high\ner at one time than another, and why\ntney rise to the height of sixty feet iu\ntlie liuy of Fundy ; forty feet In the\nports of Bristol, England, and St. Malo,\nFiance, and only rise to a few feet in\nheight at New York and other ulaces.\nwhile they are scarcely perceptible in\nthe Baltic and other seas. Descartes\nwas the first philosopher who advanced\ntho theory that tho tides were due to\nthelnfluence of moon, but Newton\nwas the first who worked out the prob-\nlem and discovered the true cause.\nDescartes believed that the moon iict- -\ned on the waters of tho ocean by pres-\nsure; Newton demonstrated that It\nacted on the ocean by attraction: that\ninstead of pressing the waters it rolled\nthem up directly under it, and also at\nits antipodes at the same time, thus\nproducing tho two tides every day.\nThe tides are attractions of both the\nsun and moon. If the earth had no\nmoon, the attraction of the sun would\nproduce two tides every dav. but their\nebb and flow would take i.l.iee lit the\nsame hours, not varying as they do\nnow ; these tides would also bo much\nsmaller than those of the moon. Al-\nthough the mass of the sun is far\ngreater than that of the moon, and\nthough attraction is in proportion to\nthe mass, yet it is also inversely as the\nsquare of the distance. As the sun,\ntherefore, is four hundred times more\ndistant than the moon, tho attraction\nof the waters of the sea towards the\nsun is found to be about three times\nless than those of the moon. There\nare really-tirv- o
0fad44fc738274e367934741e7cc9128 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.278082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 ■DR. REUSE ESREY DEAD.\nChester, April 12. —Dr. Reese Esrey,\npresident of the manufacturing firm of\nShaw, Esrey & Co., »Limited, died yes­\nterday at bis home on Edgmont ave­\nnue, after a lingering illness. His wife\nand two sons survive him, the latter\nbeing connected with their father in\nthe firm, which is an extensive and old-\nestablished manufacturing establish­\nment. Mr. Esrey was born in 'Ridley\ntownship, December 4, 1825, and was\ntherefore in his 7$d year. He came\nof English stock. At the age of 18 Mr.\nEsrey entered a store in Chester coun­\nty and In 1850 purchased the stock and\ncontinued in the business until 1863,\nwhen, In connection with the Me\nHugh Shaw, he bought the Peivnelllon\nMills, in Aston township, this county,\nwith right to manufacture Pow-\nhattan je*ans. About that time the\nfirm employed sixty hands and manu­\nfactured about 400,000 yards of goods\nannually. As the business increased\nground was bought in Chester, and No.\n1 mill was built, into which the ma­\nchinery from the Pennellton Mills was\nmoved. Last year the facilties of the\nplant were increased and the firm was\nrcorganized, the ten years compact\nhaving expired. In 1850, »Mr. Esrey mar­\nried »Margaret Marker, of Upper Dauby,\nby whom he had £ye children, three\nof whom are since dead. He was a Re­\npublican in politics, and at the time of\nhis death he was a director of the Del­\naware County National Bank and\npresident of the Board of Trustees of\nMadison Street Methodist Episcopal\nChurch.
4a1293899a738713399ed3a06843cbca DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.8374316623658 58.275556 -134.3925 As soon as the gatheriug was com¬\nplete the games were started; they were\nthe old games that are linked with\nHallowe'en, most all of them beiug:\nsuch contests that made quite clear\nthe future welfare of the contestants.\nAll entered into the fun of the games,\naud little would you think that this\nmerry company of bright faced people\nindulging in these innocent, old fash-\nioned games were but spooks, who are\ndoomed to walk their weary beats on\nthis tiresome earth forever, but such\nwas the case, for just as the clock toll-!\ned the hour of eleven a great change!\ncame over the sceue; the lights sput-\ntered and went out, aud ghostly figures\nflitted here aud there taking their\nplaces in the march through the cave,\narrayed in garments of the grave.\nThe march kept up for some time,;\nand then a mystic circle was formed,\nand the ghost story contest took place.\nSome very blood-curdling incidents\nwere spoken of,which gave goblins a\nsplendid appetite for the delightful\nrepast of sulphur and brimstone which\nwas served immediately after.\nA ballot was taken after the light\nrefreshments, and Mr. Harry Barrack-\nman, the spook who haunts the Tread-\nwell store, was awarded the prize for\nthe skeeriest ghost story, and Mr.\nSmith, the goblin who makes his abode\nin the Treadwell office received the\nprize for the most ghostly costume.\nAlter some siDging ana pleasant\nconversation the hobgoblins vanished,1\neach one taking up the tangled skein\nof life where they had left off, and each\nspook looked forward to the next Hal¬\nlowe'en and its few fleeting hours of\nhappiness with glad anticipation.\nThe spooks present were: The J host\nand hostess, Mr. and Mrs. James Chris-\ntoe, the Misses Annie and Minnie Mus-\neth, Annie McCormick, Mildred Powell,\nHildur Lily strand, Mary Fox, Zoora\nWeyer; Messrs. Jack, Albert and David\nChristoe, Nate Mullen, Fred Hebert,\nHarry Barrackman, Chas. Fox, Jack\nHenson and Mr. Smith.
09319410999c9cf95010f3883d9fbadd THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1895.7547944888381 46.601557 -120.510842 he sailed in command of a new merchant\nvessel during tbe Napoleon wars, and\ntbe vessel waa supposed to have been lost\nst sea. She bad an elder brother, an of-\nficer on board of tbe war vessel Bellero-\nphon, under laord Nelson; his vessel had\ntaken many prises during tbe war, but\nlike his father, ths family looked In vain\nfor him in vain to return. Daring format\nwars an accurate list of tbs lost was diffi-\ncult to obtain. Mother removed to City\nChester, Chehire county, famous for its\nstone wall around the city; her* she\nlived with a Mr. Brown, a merchant ln\nthe dry goods business, and was a trusted\nsaleswoman until her marriage to (ieorge\nLivesley, of Castle Hill, Northwich,\nCheshire, snd resided on the estate ucUl\nsbout 1841, wben my father took passage\nwitb his family sis children for ths\nwest. After s tedious voyage we arrived\nin New York. Father had supplied him-\nself with plenty of goods, thinking ths far\nweet then s wilderness, baton Lake Erie\nthe anxiety of my parents nearly termi-\nnated fatally. One night wbile opposite\nCleveland another vessel ran into on**, tbe\nlatter began to sink snd would have dons\nso had not the vessels got entangled.\nFather and Mother grouped their child-\nren together and passed them onto the\nother vessel. My younger brother was\nmissing wben the roll wss called. Father\nwent down again and heard the criee of\nBrother William. Tbe water hsd wak-\nened bim up; soon all were transferred,\nbut without clothing. Tbe sailors hsd\norders to cut away, and down went tbe\nvessel and all worldly goods, excepting\ntbe money Father carried in his belt.
87a3a5f65e6e7bca01f602deb1ddb135 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.7418032470653 43.798358 -73.087921 tertain for the opinions, ccc. of the aged ;\n(and these instructions are enforced by\nthreatened punishment on the one hand,\npromised blessincs on the other.\nOf the men, perhaps a majority can\nread, but all their books are of such a\ncharacter that it is a matter of serious\ndoubt whether they derive any real bene-\nfit from their reading. I am not fully ac-\nquainted with their system of astronomy,\nbut, 1 know nothing in it which is true,\nThey believe that the earth is flat, that\nthe sun and moon move round it, &c. &c.'\nThey say that when the sun is eclipsed,\nit is caught by a great Nat (a being supe-\nrior to man,) who lives on an undiscover-\ned planet and occasionally in sport swal-\nlows the sun or moon.\nThe system of 'geography ss as false\nand fabulous as that of astronomy. They\ntell of a great central mount, surrounded\nby four great islands, &c. They live On\ntlie island, which is more than 125,000\nmiles in width. To this, their geograph-\nical knowledge is principally confined.\nIn locating countries, &c, they begin\nwith the great banyan. tree, under which\nGaudama became a gd, and calculate\ndistances in directions from it, by day's\njourneys. They say that it is impossible\nfor the inhabitants of one great island to\npass to another on account of the immense\ndistance between them. Should a child\nstart for Abyssinia mount, he would be\nan old man before he reached it. It is im-\npossible to go and return in one lifetime.\nQn. this account, together with the fact\nthat nsy face is not six ftet longx (as they\nsay the faces of those who live on the\nwestern continent are,) the nations refuse\nto believe . that I .came from America.\nSome days since, I asked an old priest\nwhat was under the earth, fie said air, un-\nder the air fire,, under the fire water, un-\nder tbe water a great stone, and what was\nunderlie great stone no one could tell.\nYu,can judge from the above facts, ot\nscientific knowledge oi tnis people, i netr\nbooks, however, are principally religious.\nThey consist of very fanciful and foolish\ndescriptions "of hell, the Nat country, &c.\nand contain an account of the feats per-\nformed by their gods before they , arri ved\nto godship. Tne Embry's gods-wer- e\nsome such heroes as Gulliver ?tnd Sinbad\nthe sailor.,
0e35bbd7ead229b123c46f20be7c1725 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.392076471109 39.745947 -75.546589 many saw Franre take Tunis. Maria-j Utrecht almost at the end of hi* life. .Peace now means a new war at no\ngascar. expand her West African col-j that he gave over the effort to assert distant date, because the Germans!\nonies into a great empire, rohnd it out | the supremacy of France in Europe, i still believe, and they have every rea-|\nwith Morocco, consolidate In Indo-jlf the terms of peace that Germany | son to believe, that what they have al-\nChina a colony larger than Germany, now offers mean anything they moan 1 most accomplished this time, they will I\nShe saw Great Britain fake the South that Germany, recognizing that she accomplish next time.\nAfrican republics, fortify her position has lost this war. seeks to close out a) This spells a continuation of arma-l\nIn Egypt, develop her South African bad investment before her military j ments. a prolongation of that \nterritory; she saw the British domains power is shaken or her army has lost | tion of armaments, a prolongation of]\nIn Australia and in America growing its reputation for something like in- ) that situation which before the war!\napace in wealth and population. She vincibility. After Waterloo there was t had become only an armed truce. It\nbeheld Russia expanding In Asia and no Napoleonic legend ih France for a means that the Eastern Question will '\ntransforming the wastes of Siberia generation^ hut before Waterloo the I be embalmed in the treaty of peace)\nInto a second American Far West. She defeats of the Empire were insignifi-\nwltnessed Japan more and more open- j cant when compared to the victories,\nly assuming the supremacy in the Far! and France was willing to try once\nEast. She saw Italy take Tripoli, seat | more.\nherself on hoth sides of the Medlfer-
0c0c4c7ba232d4f627a36a38db55f9fd THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.2424657217148 37.561813 -75.84108 " It w as her turn now, and she began\nto question him until he told her all ho\nhad to toll; but 1 suppose he kept back\nsomething, as one is told to leave some-\nthing on the dish, for good manners.\nBut if he did not tell all, it was because\nhe was modest, not because he had\nthings to bide of w hich he was ashamed.\nHo was, ho said, the son of a Lincoln-\nshire clergyman, and he was destined\nto the Church; solemnly set apart, he\nwas, by his parents, and consecrated in\nearly infancy. This made his subse-\nquent conduct tho more disgraceful,\nalthough, as he pleaded, his own con-\nsent was not asked nor his inclinations\nconsulted. The road to tho Church is\ngrievously beset by wearisome bowld-\ners, pits, ditches, briars, nnd it may be\nfallen trunks, which somo get over with-\nout least dillicultv, whereas to oth-\ners they are grievous hindrances. These\nthings are an allegory, aud I mean\nbooks. Now, unlucky Rex, a masterful\nyouth in all games, schoolboy feats,\ntights, freaks and fanteegs, regarded a\nbook, from his earliest inhuicy, unless it\nwas a romance of the sea, or a story of\nadventure, with a dislike and suspicion\namounting almost to mania. In his re-\ncital to Lai, he avoided mention of the\nmany floggings he received, the battles\nhe fought, and tho insubordination of\nw hieh he w as guilty, and the countless\nlessons which he had not learned. He\nsimply said that he ran away from\nschool and got to Liverpool, where,\nafler swapping clothes with a real sailor\nboy, he got on board a Canadian brig\nas" loblolly boy, and was kicked and\na culled all the way to Quebeo and all the\nway back again.
39b01882672832f7bf0fd844eb3f53dd DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.1653005148248 58.275556 -134.3925 WHEN NO PEHSON ALLOWED TO VOTE\nSection 8. No person shall be entitled to\nvote ut any municipal election for members\nof the Common Council of »aid Town of\nDouglus who has not registered according\nto the provisions of this ordinance. The\nregist rutlou provided for in this ordinance,\nhowever, shall not be conclusive evidence of\nthe right of atiy person to vote; but such\nperson, at the polls may be challenged and\nrequired to establish his right to vote.\nTOWN CLEHK TO AOUIMSTBB OAT1IH\nSection i>. The Town Clerk as ex-offieio\nregist ration officer is hereby en powered to\nadministor all necessary oaths in examining\nan applicant for registration, or any witness\nhe may offer in his behalf, in order t«> ascer¬\ntain his right to he registered under this\nordinance, and it shall be the duty of said\nregistration officer to examine, under oath,\nany applicant for registration whose right\nto registration he may doubt or who may be\nchallenged. The said registration officer\nshall explain said applicant the necessary\nqualifications of a voter; and if the appli¬\ncant for registration shows himself to have\nthe necessary qualifications to entitle him to\nvote at the next clccti >n for Councilmen, he\nshall be registered; otherwise he shall not.\nPENALTY FOR FALSE SWEARING\nSection 1ft. If any person shall falsely\nswear, or nllirm. in taking any <>ath nqttirM\nhy this ordinance, or shall fai»ely personate\nanother for registration or procure a person\nso personating another to he registered, or\nif any parson shall represent arid give his\nname to tho registration officer different\nfrom what it is: or cause such name to he\nregistered, or if any person shall cause any\nname to he placed on the registration hook\notherwise than in the manner provided hy\nthis ordinaiK e. he shall he guilt/ of a niis-\ndemeanor and upon oonviotton shall he pun*\nlshed by a fine not exceeding $100.00 or hy\nimprisonment in the town jail for a term not\nexceeding ninety day*, or both.
28dfdcc4e868c78d358327a7b73d1c29 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.2991802962456 39.745947 -75.546589 ! April 20. 1020, at 3.30 oclock. Interment\n! at Frttukliu. Pa.\nLILLRV—In New Castle, Del., on April\n16. 1020. Samuel C. Lilley.\nRelatives, friends and Levi Anderson\nLodge. No. 10. Free and Accepted Ma­\nsons. are invited to attend the funeral\nfrom the residence of his son-in-law,\nDaniel Wright. No. ftlfl Cherry street,\nN»w Cn«(l«, D»L, on Wednesday iifler-\nn<H>n. at 3 o'clock. 8»fTti*cs at Union\nChurch. Interment at Union cemetery.\nHAMA.V— In Mitlritle. N. J on April 17.\nbpi. Ensuia Human (nec Trylingt. wife\nof Muhlon lUmnn. aged S* yearn.\nRelative, and frjrnd, of (he family are\nInvited to attend the funeral «ervl.-èe, at\nthe chapel, at Klvervtew cemetery\nTuesday afternoon, April 20. at 2 o'clock,\n(uterment af THrervtew cemetery.\nSAWIS—tit this elty, on April lft, 1920,\nSusan O., wife nf Le Roy A. Sawin.\nItelatires and friends of the family are\ninvited to attend the funeral \nfrom the residence of her son. Sanford\nw. Sawin. at. Cranston Heights, Mar-\nsballton, Dal., on Wednesday afternoon.\nApril 21, at. 1.S0 oclock, tnteraient at\n« lluilngtou and Brandywine cemetery.\nPRRTTYMAN—Ifl this city, on April 17.\n1020. Lydia A., widow of Joshua B.\nPrettyman, aged 77 years.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral Services at the residence\nof her aon-in-law, John C. Colltson No\n• ■SOI Van Buren tdroet. on Tuesday after­\nnoon. at 2 o'clock. Further acrricei and\ninterment at Head of Chrtatlaaa ceme­\ntery\nCHUMLISH—In this rlty, on April 1«.\n1920, Etta M. Crumliab, daiigbn-r of\nCatherine C. and the tato William H.\nJones, aged 50 years.\nRelatives aud friends are. Invited to at­\ntend the funeral services, at her late\nresidence. No. 121« D street. South Wil­\nmington. on Tuesday afternoon, April\n2A. at H o'clock. Interment at Silrer-\nbrook cemetery.
205e2c15244b9069a2ab004618ba9f2f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 Hot weather is owing in a measure to\nthe great number ol thermometers that\nare manufactured ut this sesson of the\nyear. If we didn't have so many ther¬\nmometers it wouldn't be so hot, least¬\nwise we wouldn't notice it so much. I\nknoiv a man who thought the weather\nwas cool and salubrious until, in an\nevil hour, he listened to the solicitation*\nof his daughters, who were getting\nstuck up. aud wanted a thermometer,\nand so he bought- one . Tue next day\nhe had a stiustroke. Thermometers\nought to be abolished by act of Con¬\ngress. Look at the Arctic region*.\nThe Arctics don't have any thermome¬\nters. What's the consequence? They\ndon't have any hot weather. (Drowsy\nwith the heat, the able writer bad to be\naroused with a heavy blow from a fan.)\nHot weather occurs in the summer for\nthe most part, except in sections where\nthey dou't have any, and then it comes\niu the winter. Its principal produc¬\ntions are Fourth of July, wilted collars,\nlemonade, sunstroke, Ice-cream, bowel\ncomplaint,watermelons,awnings, linen\ncoats, hydrophobia, tubs,straw\nhats, perspiration, watering places,sun\numbrellas, mint juleps, steamboat ex¬\ncursions, long days, hot nights, street\nspriuklers, beer gardens, dulluess in\nirude, heavy washing bills, low water,\ndepression of spirits, musquitoes, and\ntheclosingol theschools. (Heweutto\nsleep again, but was revived by drench¬\ning him with several buckets of water.\nArousing himself with a tremendous\neffort, he began once more).\nHot weather is a veiy old institution,\nold as the world, nearly. Adam and\nEve stayed in the Garden of Eden until\nit got too hot to hold them, and they\nwere dressed for a warm latitude, too,\naccording to all reports. Eve gets the\ncredit for It. Many wives seem to In¬\nherit that unhappy temperament, and\n;uake their homes too hot to bold their\nlords. (Wo suspect that the unhappy\nstranger is suffering from "hot weather"\nat home, hence his wanderings. We\norder an application of warm ice to his\nhead, and he proceeds.*\nIi is easy enough to write *about hot\nweather when there are others to whom\nthese things of which the beat at the\nthe same time.
2c0b34c5f2dc27a5d2b46fa90d65dd38 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.1051912252074 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbe proposition, fixing the legal rate\nof interest at at 7 per cent, instead of P\ne, is very well HO far aa it goes; t»ut it pi\ndoes'not go far enough. We do not ti\nmean that the rate of interest ought to\nlie higher than 7 per cent., but that the ]\nrate should Dot be limited at all. Why ci\nshould not money be as freely dealt in tl\nas any other commodity? audthesume ol\nliberty be extended to borrowers and al\nlenders to fix the price, as is granted to U\nliuyers and sellers of potatoes, pork, or e<\nother articles of traffic? The holders st\nof all marketable commodities are free w\nto sell on the best terms the market af- ft\nfords. Not so with money. The moment\nthat becomes the subject of barter this D\nfreedom of the market is interfered with a\nand this law or and de; Ji\nxnand. which regulates transactions in c<\nevery other species of property, are met ai\nby usury laws, imposing penalties, the a)\nrisks or wbicb have to be paid by the\nborrower, over and above the market ej\nprice. These laws, maintained on the t£\npretext of protecting the borrower, na- SI\nturally work to bis oppression, for tit\n- while tbe lender will never let his\nmoney go under its full market value, w\nhe wiif not incur tbe risk of any penal*\nty without additional charge to cover e]\nthat risk. The Lcdyer has always, from cc\nthe time of its first publication, taken to\ntbe ground that the same freedom\nshould be allowed in barganing g<\nfor tbe use of capital as for tbe pur- so\nchase of corn or cattle, and it Ji\nban always held and maintained ai\nthese views, for the interest of. tbe
18c8c12a7bfe1242c2c27a629dd74c48 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.5931506532218 41.004121 -76.453816 Sec. 9. It shall be the duty of the\ncounty chairman to give notice to the\nseveral candidates to be voted for at\nleast ten days prior to the holding of\nthe primary election to meet at a place\nto be designated by the chairman. At\nsaid meeting the candidates shall en-\ndeavor to agree on watchers not to\nexceed three in number for each dis\ntrict and in case a majority of the\ncandidates assembled in response to\nsuch notice fail to agree upon watch\ners, it shall be the duty of the county\nchairman to appoint said watchers,\nThe watchers shall be permitted to be\npresent and watch the receiving and\ncounting of the ballots and tallying\nand reading of the same, to take\nmemoranda of the proceedings and of\nany irregularity they may deem im\nproper and in all respects to perform\ntheir duties as watchers as in\nthe general election laws.\nSec. 10 . The county chairman\nshall cause to be published in the\nDemocratic newspapers of the county.\na notice of the time of the holding of\nthe primary election and of the time\nand place of the meeting of the county\nconvention, and of the nominations\nfor office to be made by the conven\ntion for thirty days prior to the time\nof the meeting of the convention.\nSec. 11. In case of the death, de\nclination or removal of any candidate\nput in nomination by the convention\nbefore the election 5 or whenever any\ncandidate shall have had his name\nstricken from the ticket, the vacancy\nshall be supplied by a new nomina\ntion of a candidate which shall be\nmade by the standing committee call\ned together for that purpose by public\nnotice from among citizens eligible\nunder these rules.
1cf44aea49eecf49bbd8618610f7c6ce THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.3101092579943 29.949932 -90.070116 mously rich, and built this magnificent me-\nmorial to his wife, of hewn stone, so\nsolidly that it remains even to this day. It\nis a landmark to all the region roundabout, and\nchows not what virtue, but what wealth can do to\nkeep alive the obecurest names. Beyond this the\nappian is one line of ruined tombs. Vast piles of\nbnck succeeded each other for miles, the wayside\nin strewn with broken coumns, headless statues,\niregments of arms and legs, feet and hands, and\nbodies of marble, illegible inscription, bits of\nmarble arabesque, where every curve is full\nof grace, fractured ben reliefs, urns, corloes, and\nwhatever was used by the ancients to preserve\nand honor the naes of the mighty dead. No\nsight can be more pathetic than these multitodln\none memonals of an extnet raeos,themselves also\nhalf extinct. And beyond, on the one side, are\nthe broken arches of the great aqueducts, stretch-\ning far across the plain, like the wreck of some\ngiant temple now all gone to mere tradition, like\nthe religion it was meast to perpetuate. Behind\nthese, the heights of the Alban and\nSabine mountains lt themselves as fresh and\nstrong as when Romulus struck Remus dead on\nthd Palatine, or when Brutus slew Cioar in the\noapitol. God's work alone is stable.\nFrom the Appian the eye also ranges over the\nCampagna far and wide. The landscape s like the\nsea. No other in the world is so like it, except\nthe sea itself, and you can scarcely keep from\nlooking for ships on the deceitful horison. To-\nward Rome you see tt. Peter's dome and the sides\nof historic Jaminiue, and then the rest of the oity\nin its still grand features. Altogether, a day\nspent upon this way is fell of interest, and i.m -\npresses the mind with a seese of Homan greatness\nsuch as even the most famous ruins fall to con-\nvey. The recourees of a peple who built casu-\ntles end palaces for mere monuments to their\ndead. and constructed them so carefully as to defy\nall that "tire and ,pile"' have done to obliterate\nthem, most have been eves beyond our onncep-\nt on of them.
098ea9350a62173f63310a369fc40a16 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.03698626966 40.441694 -79.990086 New York, January 13. Mrs. Jay\nGould, who has been slowly dying since she\nsuffered a second stroke of paralysis on the\n6th of last November, passed away ht\na few minutes after 9 o'clock, at her resi-\ndence, 579 Fifth avenue.\nWhen. .Dr. Jared G. Baldwin called on\nSaturday evening to make his customary\nvisit, he found Mrs. Gould so much worse\nthat he decided to stay with her through the\nnbht. Mr. Gould sat up with him. Shortly\nafter' the Doctor's arrival Mrs. Gould be-\ncame nnconscions, and she remained'in that\ncondition until her death. At 4. o'clock\nthis morning she was so low that Dr, Bald-\nwin summoned the family to her bedside.\nFrom that time on her death was momen-\ntarily expected. Her daughter Helen was\nher most devoted and physical Com-\nplete physical exhaustion was the immedi-\nate cause of her death.\nAll of her family were about her during\nthe last hours, including her husband, Mr.\nand 'Mrs. George Gould, and the other chil-\ndren, and Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Noyes and\nMrs. Dickinson, sisters of Mrs. Jay Gonld.\nHer aged mother, Mrs. Miller, who lives\nnearby, was not told that Mrs. Gould was\ndying. Mrs. Miller, herself, is very feeble,\nnnd news even that her daughter was se-\nriously ill had been kept from her. She is\npast 80. Mr. Gould is much worn with\nwatching at his wife's bedside.\nMrs. Gould was about CO. She was the\ndaughter ot Daniel G. Miller, of this city.\nMr. Miller was a member of the firm of Lee,\nDater & Miller, dealers in prodnce and\ngroceries.
2680d94b711369260c3e5d5b436c7025 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.3547944888383 40.063962 -80.720915 That his success is real isevidenced by the\nthat bis reputation juh man and physh\ndoes not deteriorate, and the fuet that tl\nis a steadily increasing demand for his\nmaratan Nervine proves that itisuonostr\nhut a reliable remedy, lie has repeatodlj\nformed the public t)mt it i# no patent m\ncine, and no patent has ever been asked\nor obtained. Neither does he advertise\na cure-ail. There are hundreds of disc,\nthat he acknowledges it will not cure. It\nbe urged that some of these diseases an\nwidely difl'erent that it seems absurd to\nscribe the same remedy. They may ditl'e\nsymptom*. yet in character be precisely«\nilar; and then we musttuke into consid\nHon the fart that remedies may \\»me$s \\\nous properties. Thus, some medicines\nboth tonic and alterative*, others nv.vj\ntonic and laxative, the properties dillei\naccording to the quantity administered\nthe time and circumstances which dem\nits employment.\nIn tin* manufacture of any pharmnceul\npeparation the purity and strength of\nmaterials used, and the requisite machit\n he employed, are among the chief ex\ntials. The tlrst is insured by purchasing\ningredients in large quantities, whereby\nexercise of greater cure in selecting the\nterials can be afforded; and the second\nonly be accomplished where the busine,\nsullicieutlv extensive to warrant u large\nlay of capital in procuring chemical app\ntus. These facts apply with especial forci\nthe manufacture of our medicines, ti\nouality having been vastly improved since\ndemand lus become so great as to rem\ntheir manufacture in very large quantii\ni nese ideas are not mere speculative\nmurks to mislead the reader, or to imbue\nwith false views of the superiority of\nmedicine. While inspecting Dr. Richmot\nestablishment you would be surprised to\nthe admirable facilities, both chemical\nmechanical, which he employs In the pr\ncutionof his business. Every thin#,' is a rrati\nin the most perfectly systematic order,*i\nwhile to the general observer there seems\nbe no room for improvement, yet new aj\nratus and mcchantc&l appliance arc const!\nly being procured fur the establishment, c
01df129659de1d7b9b2e1228d6a89bbe PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.4315068176052 39.756121 -99.323985 phutieully condemn those, who with the oath of\nollice ou their lips, planned the rebellion, und\nwllh traitorous nanus utiempiuu iu ue troy tne\ngovernment they had sworn to support. They\ncaused this hellish strife, and they uud they only\nure responsible lor the bloodshed. They must\nanswer for it before tied, and il would huve beuu\nbutler for thu nation If they had been called lo\nanswer for treason beforu the courts of ins na\ntlou Instead of turning the government over to\nthem lo run Into rebellion again.\nIn conclusion lot mo suy we should honor the\ndead with flowers and every token of respect, but\nnot abiu here, we owe a duhl lo mo living linn\nthey have lelt us, let us seu thai they do not\nwant. It Is well to strew flowers over the graves\nof the dead and ral e marble shafts comiiiemo\nrate their deeds, hill not well to let their surviv\nors sillier while they live. A little assistance and\na few kind words while one lives Is worth more\nthan cosily marble shafts after death, and K thu\ndead could speuk they would, I think, thank us\nmore for kindness shuwu the living thuu for all\nthe display of altection we can make over their\ngraves. We should bear iu mind luut they died\nfor us, anu uuvecoiuiuitteu to uur cure iiieir mini-\nbus aud the uullon ihuy died to savu. Al a ceme-\ntery in the south an aged man was seen weeping\nover u headsloue that marked the gravu of a fallen\nsoldier, and when asked If a sou was bulled there\nlin answered "Mo:" when usked If a brother,\nhis response wus ".No," lucu usked why be wept\nhe respouaeu "lie uieu tor me.
346ce5716be5575ae4f2a1bb53443885 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0671232559614 40.063962 -80.720915 Talent is something:, but tact is eve¬\nrything. Talent is serious, sober, grave\nand respectable, tact is all that and\nmore too. It is notaseventb scene, bat\nit is the life of all five. It is the open\neye, the quick ear, the judging taste, the\nkeen smell and the lively touch; it is\nthe interpreter of all riddles, and re¬\nmover of all difficulties, the useful in\nall places and at all times. It is useful\nin solitude, for it shows a man his way\nthrough the world. Talent is power,\ntact is skill; talent is weight, tact is mo¬\nmentum; talent knows what to do, tact\nknows how to do it; talent makes a man\nrespectable, tact will make him re¬\nspected; talent is wealth, tact is ready\nmoney. For all the practical purposes\nof lile, tact carries against talent.ten\nto one. Take them to the theatre and\nput them against each other on the\nstage, and talent will produce you a\ntragedy that will scarcely live long\nenough to be condemed, while tact\nkeeps the house in roars, night after\nnight, with its successful farces. There\nis no want of dramatic talent.there is\nno want of dramatic tact, but they are\nseldom together; so we have successful\npieces which are respectable, and re¬\nspectable pieces which are not success¬\nful. Take them to the bar, and let them\nshake their learned curls at each other\nIn legal rivalry; talent sees its way\nclearly, but tact is first at its journey's\nend. Talent has many a compliment\nfrom the bench, but tact touches fees\nfrom attorneys and clients. Talent\nspeaks learnedly and logically, tact tri¬\numphantly.
001992ec47717d01105f6bebb3b0fb2d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.505479420345 42.217817 -85.891125 Clear Creek is a miniature river that\nruns through the eaiion of the same\nname. It descends upon a down grade\not 400 feet per mile, with here and then\na fall over a rocky precipice fifteen or\ntwenty feet in height. Large boulders,\nforty and fifty feet in diameter, and\nweighing thousands of tons, impede its\ndashing progress every two or three\nhundred yards, while its curves are so\nhajp Sm so frequent that the stream\ncan nowhere be seen for a distance of a\nthousand feet. Granite cliffs two and\nthree miles high project over it on either\nside, and give a frightful, romantic, aud\ndangerous appearance to the rushing\ntorrent beneath.\nJust below Black Hawk, on the side\nof the stream, a small reservoir has been\nconstructed, in which is kept an ordinary\nskiff. Last Sunday two little sons of\nMartin F. aged respectively 10\nand U years, got into the boat ami were\nsplashing the water with a stick, when\nthe fastenings gave way and the boat\nwent drifting toward the rapidlv- ru nni n- g\ncurrent. The little boys soon discovered\ntheir daager, but were powerless to\navert it ; they clutched hold of the sides\nof the boat, and, with pallid counten-\nances awaited their doom. Soon the\nboat was caught by the current, aud\nbegan descending at a fearful rate. On\nshe went, the boys' hats blew off, and\ntheir hair stood straight up; over Black\nHawk Hapids they went like an arrow,\nclearing a distance of sixty feet at a\nsingle dash. Lighting again on the tor-\nrent surface the boat seemed to have\ngained a new impetus, and shot by the\nboulders and around the rocky points\nwith the celerity of a sunbeam.
cbfff4eaf0c378a5f576475afcf50e73 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1855.4260273655505 41.262128 -95.861391 _ j betwet-u the Mississippi and Missouri lliv-\nert, Iu Dallas C ounty, Iowa, ou Coon River,\niwenty-eight miies West by railroad from the\nCapital of the Staus, vii. Kt D«s Moines. It ia\nsituated in a healthy and fertile part of the\nState, and on the direct route from Fort Des\nMoines to Goonci Bluff Citv; mio w*y between\nthe towns of Faruhaia ana Wiscotta. There\nare several Mills In successful operation within\nthree miles from the Farm. 1here are about\nTwo Hundred and Sixty Acrcr ot choice Tim­\nber (which joins the prairie, with stock water,)\nconsisting of Black and White Walnut; Whtte.\nBurr and Black Oak; Linn, Cotton-wood and\nHickory, and about Eighty Acres under Im­\nprovements, wi'h good fence, ana other lota at­\ntached to the premlsee. Houses, Stables and a\nfirst rate spring of living water wiihin a few\nsteps of the house. There is a good Mill-site\non the tract, affording sufficient water all \ntime for Mills aud Machinery. Also plenty of\n8tone aud 8tofte-coal Cow^jouiigcattkJ^s,\nfar.ning implements, fcc-,\nThe Proprietor George B Warden wtll^e\nfound at his residence near Irish Grove, McKay\nPost Office, Dallas County, Iowa. Also forsak\nby the undersigned, six hundred and eighty\nacrcs of Land, situated in .Guthrie co., Iowa, at\nBear Grove. This is the old stage-station os\nthe head of Middle River about half-w -iy be­\ntween Ft. De» Moines nnd Council B uff City,\nbeing in township seventy-eight, and seventj-\nuine, langes thirty-two and tnir y-three, a fine\nTavern Stand, and b beautiful stream oflivisg\nwater running through it (four hundred acres of\nuhis tract is firat class timber) which is for sale\nor'rant,(being on the Stale road,; on reasonable\nlerms. It's also ou the Rock Island Rail-road\niroro the Mississippi to the Missouri river, witli\nb plenty of stables snd suitabio buildings fey a\npublic house attached.\nAddress McKay P. O. . DallaaCo.,
0a770c0a78cddd5b0b1b083e90c65387 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.4890410641806 37.451159 -86.90916 Not only have the accusations made\nby the correspondent of the London\nTimes against General Stoessel been\nfully proved hut It bos also been shown\nthat during the whole siege nearly all\nthe oftlcers in time fortress from Gener ¬\nal Stoessel down were in a state of\ncontinual intoxication and that even\nwhile the shells of the enemy were de\nmolishing the walls and buildings of\nthe town drunken orgies and bacchana\nhan revels of the most scandalous kind\nwere going on Incessantly It has also\nbeen shown that n sunny ofllcers had\nbeen bribed by the Japanese and the\nGovernment was robbed of more than\n10000000 rubles The worstt thief of\nthe whole outfit was Stoessel himself\nfind proofs are now in the hands of the\nCzar showing that he amassed a for ¬\ntune which is now safely deposited in\n English bank at Shanghai\nInstances of graft and cowardice\nhave been abundant not only in the\nIlfln pt Jt Qhl the yyand It Is n\nfact that Admiral Kebogatoff would\nnever have surrendered his squadron\nhad he not been forced to do so by his\nintocated officer and crews During\nthe morning preceding the battle in\nthe Straits of Korea large rations of\nvodka and gin were given tOthe men\nwhile the officer were drinking cham-\npagne and burgundy and when the\nJapanese shells struck the vessels the\ngreatest confusion arose Every trace\nof discipline disappeared and olllcers\nand men waved white handerchiefs\nin token of surrender Nebogatoff was\nfurious and with his own revolver shot\ndown one of his officers before he\nfled from the conning tower and bar ¬\nricaded himself in his cabin to escape\nbaingmnrdered by his own officers
0840472cf98213e3555630e17d9b632f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.6653005148248 40.063962 -80.720915 The speech of Hon. C. L . Weems In\nthis city so rattled the silver leaders\nhere that they are still endeavoring to\ncontrovert the facts he presented so\nstrongly. They appealed to the Silver\nI league for help to recover their shattered\nforces, ond will distribute a lot of printed\nallegations to-day with the hope of les¬\nsening the force and effect of the sound\nreasoning for an honest dollar and the\nchance to earn it. The appeal to the\nreason of the voters In this city and all\nthis neighborhood Is bearing great fruit\ndally, and the desertions rrom the heresy\nof free silver are moat encouraging.\nMen have begun to realize the disas¬\ntrous effects of reducing tne purchasing\nJ power of all the dollars we should have\nleft In this country If unlimited coinage\nshould win, and if all the communities\nIn the country are like this section there\nIs not the slightest danger of 60-cent\ndollars. The leaders nre distracted, es¬\npecially the few who love prominence\nas to be willing to sacrifice all else for a\nlittle notoriety. They now resort to the\nuse of billingsgate ns a substitute for\nargument. They have abandoned the\n"crime" cry, abandoned Mexico and\nPeru as examples to guide America, and\nhave? even dropped on the price of wheat\nto the present level, and they hope to\nturn the working people towards the\nscheme of a 50-cent dollar by nome other\nJuggling process. But the solid llnej of\nthe Intelligent workers of the Ohio val¬\nley cannot be invaded by such dema-\ngogry, and there never was danger from\nI the farmers who cultivate the hills of\ngrand old Belmont county. They know\nthe men who are preaching free silver,\nto them. They know, too, why some of\ntherrf are doing It- The people are think¬\ning for themselves, and the fallacy falls\nflat In the light of reason and the false¬\nhoods of the agitator* disappear like\nsoap bubbles every time the truth is uix\n| covered.
049843a4e20e3ef3c946a0139fee1a75 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.3702185476118 39.756121 -99.323985 Plumb has introduced a bill to provide\nfor opening to homestead settlement certain\nportions of the Indian Territory, which pro-\nvides that the lands in the Indian Territory\nceded by the Creek tribe of Indians by the\ntreaty of 1866, and the lands ceded by the\nSeminole tribe by the treaty of 1866, except\nsuch as has been granted other Indian\ntribes by act of Congress, or by treaty, or\nhave been set apart for Indian occupancy\nby executive order, shall be set apart for\nentry under the homestead laws, and that\nso much of the grant lands made to the At-\nlantic & Pacific Railway Co. by the act ol\nJuly 6th, 1866, as lies within the Indian Ter\nritory excepting the grant lor aright of way\nand station purposes, shall be wholly forfeit\ned and theland restored to the public domain.\nIt provides also that the President shall be\nempowered to reduce the limits of any res-\n established by executive order in\ntne xerritory, wnere tne amount or land is\nin excess of the necessities and the rights of\nIndians occupmg same, and that lands thus\ntaken out of the limits of any reservation\nshall be opened to settlement under the\nhomestead law, and that he shall be au\nthorized to remove the Indians from Dar\nhngton agency with their iree consent to\nlands mentioned in the treaty of 1868 be\ntween the Government and the Cheyenne\nand Arapahoe Indians, and that he shall\nbe empowered to open negotions with such\nIndian tribes located in the Indian Tern\ntory as in nis judgement are in possession\noi a greater quantity oi land man tneir ne-\ncessities require, for the cession of their\nsurplus lands to the Government, in trust\nor otherwise, and at such prices as may be\nequitable for the purpose of opening the\nsaid surplus lands to settlement under the\ngeneral land laws.
4c1ce291ac8bcda62910437a0c3de089 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.9986338481583 41.004121 -76.453816 ferently from the oldtlmc rule. No\nono now makes "pound for pounV\nFor a modern pound cake weigh out\ntwelve ounces of butter, fourteen\nounces of flour, dried and sifted be-\nfore It Is weighed, and sixteen\nounces of granulated sugar, and take\nout eight good sized eggs. To this\nrule add two large pinches of pow-\ndered mace or half a grated nutmeg\nand the grated rind and Juice of one\nMessina lemon. Sometimes In mak-\ning this cake the flour and butter\nare beaten together first. Some of\nthe best pound cake makers do not\ndo this now but beat the butter to a\ncream first and add the sugar, beat-\ning the mixture until It is a perfect\ncream. They then add the yolks of\nthe eggs, straining them in through\na gravy strainer, which beats them\nenough to mix In well. After this\nthe flour Is warmed a llttlo, in win-\n and sifted at least three times,\nand the mace or nutmeg lemon peel\nare added the last time It Is sifted.\nThe Juice of the lemon is also stirred\nIn after the flour has been thorough-\nly blended. When the two pans nec-\nessary for this rule are buttered the\nwhites of the eggs beaten as stiffly as\npossible with a whip are folded in\nquickly so as not to break down the\nwhites. Do tills as hastily as possi-\nble and then put the cake in the\noven at once. The oven must i.ot be\nheated too hot at first. It Is a good\nplan, if the fire is at all brisk, to\nopen the oven door and cool oft th\noven a little before putting In the\ncake. This will allow the proper de-\ngree of heat to let the cake rise slow-\nly, so that it will not begin to brown\nbefore it Is fully risen.
0b31a981473c2c6be47fb3cc0650593f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.4178081874684 40.063962 -80.720915 Tb«H|ili>niilil Kqtilpuieut and Improve-\niiii'nIm tilting on n( the Work*.\nOorretpondmict qf the lnUUiQtuccr.\nFrederick, Fayette Co),W.Va., May 2V..\nA mile and a half eaat of Coal Valley is tbe\nmine of Frederick, Faulkner, another gen*\ntleman who from a email beginning has\nwotk^d himself up, In the front hills, up\nan incline of 450 feet in length, one finds\nMr. Faulkner's present opening. Still in\nthe Na 2 gas seam, in'which most of tbe\nmining around here is. done, be finds aqd\nships a rich, soft coal. With an average\nthickness of five feet the seam is easily\nworked* and the entries are all of a good\nheight!). The mine, ventilated by open¬\nings driven, through to daylight, is well\nprovided with air, and but little trouble is\nfound with water. The track is one of the\nbest I have seen, and is in good condition.\nDeside the gas coal, the Beam has one foot\n of splint. All this at present is\nconsigned to the Chesapeake & Obio Rail*\nway for shipment to its eastern market.\nThe land, leased from the Patton heirs, is\nrich in coals other than the one now\nmined. One hundred and ninety-six feet\nfrom the river, surface measurement, an\nopening is being driven into the Eagle or\nWyant eeam, of which Mr. Faulkner has\na slice. His new drum house and plane\nare finished, and work is being rapidly\npushed in tbe entry. To handle tho coal\nw'bich will be mined here necessitated the\nbuilding of a new tipple. This tipple is\nhaving tbe finishing touches put to it, and\nin more than one respect iu the finest I\nhave seen in tho valley. It is 264 feet long,\n20 feet wide and to the "gallows bent" 104\nfeetabovelow water. Handsomely painted]\nit presents a most sightly appearance, and\nits outside is only an index of lhat within.
2fb90e3e3673cb825e59b279dc69c9f3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.7767122970574 40.063962 -80.720915 lishops assembled in Baltimore reprt\nent, not aoniethtog foreiKntpq\\ir (anc\nint a considerable portion of our ow:\nlation. Tt adds to tbe'thtereet'or the Ba1\nimore Council thattheRoman Catholic\nre more numerous .than all other m\nIrIous denominations in the civilize\nrorld, taken together, the total popu\nition nominally connected with 1\nouuting, abgut i 190,000,000, while th\nlopulatlbn nominally; pqnnected wi*\nbe Protestant Beets, number only 05\n00,000,'Wnd'<h*tl «f 'the Greek'Chtlre\nbout1 70,000^600.' - OuUftde 'of obr ow\nountry: it ,1s especially the Catholic\nrho will read the acconnta of the Couu\n11 with intense Interest. Thev trer\nrally know That;'as Louis Ka'poleo\necently. stated Id his manifesto, tb\nImewlll soon come when the Unite\nitates will count a population of mor\nban 100,000,000 of people; that the\nur'country %1U probably number\nauch' larger number of Roman Cathc\nlo inhabitants and of Rbiitah'Catholi\nlishops than any country in the world\nnd that, therefore, In general council\nnd in Catholic conventions, contain\ng representatives of all the countrle\nf the world, the CutholiOs of the Unite'\nItates rank foromost.\nThere in another consideration whlc\nlives tb the meOtlnor in Baltimore\npeclal Importance lbr Catholics an\nion-Catholics, from Americans an\nion-Americans. This is the unre\ntrained freedom with which the Blab\nps of the East and West, of the Sout:\nnd North, and the heads of as man;\nftasohlo orders as'have been establish^\nmong us may meet according to th\nhe call of the Pope, and In accordanc\npith the' laws of the Church..' No pel\nillusion has tb be asked of any Feders\nr Stale authority; no restraint is pu\ntpon their deliberations; ho pledges ar\nsked of them tb obey obnoxious Stat\nliws; and when their resolutions hav\nleen approved by the Pope, they ma\niroclalm them In every tdwh' and vll\nage, and enforce them by means c\nvery ecclesiastical weapon they hav\nt their .command. The difference 1\nhis Yespect between our country tin\nhe countries of Europe is Btrll&tig. I\ni"rance, Italy; Spain, Portugal, Austrii\n'russla, .and Russia; no Mationa\nCouncil could' meet 'without th\nirevlous' permission of the Uo'v\nrnment.
1f9522a21877c2f393f90966236e2288 THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1894.1438355847285 40.8 -96.667821 owing at an early tour. Tte lfo of\nthe president of the Knaas Site Alii\nance presldiog. linn short peeches\nwere tuade atd para read by lidles of\nTopeka and visiting members of the\nAlliance, Interspersed with music upon\nthe piano. The Morgan tisters of\nTopeka, whistlin; pit to shame the\nbestcacaries or mocking birds. The\nmusic furnished by the Morgan sisters\nwas simply super t). Speeches, essays\nand music filling the time to 11 p. m\nThe president announced the name of\nMrs. Lease as America's greatest orator\nMrs. Lease was greeted ty clapping of\nhands and cries of welcome that seemed\nto shake the State House to its founda\ntions. Well may she or any person be\nproud of such a reception. The sub\nsidized press is trying make it appear\nthat Mrs. Lease is kilting herself, the\nAlliance and the People's party. But\nsuch receptions by her on people give\nthe lie to all they say. She is en\nthroned in the hearts of her own f eo-p i- e,\nand the best elements, regardless\nof party, sustain and uphold Mrs Lease.\nWhile the vast audience were cheering\na number of boys and girls brought from\na side room bouquets aud wreaths of the\nmost beautiful iljwers, placing them\nupon the desk befere her, and amid the\ncheers of the people and the musio from\nthe piano, Mrs, Lease in plain dress\nwitbout any attempt at vain show or\ndisplay, humbly bowed her acknowledg\nment of the heartfelt love and confid\nence of those who knew her best.
20013f9d502fc5d39e01ff02eeb189b2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.1082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 'I must,' said Robert Penfold, gas|\ng still. Then he manned himself b\nmighty effort, and repeated with di|\nty, 'I will.' There was a pause whi:\ne young man still struggled for con\n;snre and self-command.\n'Was I not on the point of telling yo\nysadstory? Thenisit fair to sa\nat I should never have told it you\njt, o Mips Rolleston, you don't kno\nhat agony it may bo to an uufortt\nito man to tell the truth. There ai\ncusations so terrible, bo defiling, tha\nhen a man hat. proved ihem lalsi\ney stick to him and soil him. Sue\naccusation I labor under, and\ndge and a jury have branded me. J\ney had called me a murderer, I woul\ntve told you ; but that is such a dirt\nime. I the prejudices of th\narid. I dreuded to see your facealtf\nme. Yes, I trembled, and hesitated\nid asked myself whether a man\nmnd to repeat a foul slander again.'\nmself, even when thirteen shallow\nen^have said it, and made the law lie\n'There,' said General Ko)lesion, 1\nought how it would be, Helen; yo\ntve tormented him into defendin\nmself, tooth and nail; so now wo sha!\ntve the old story ; he is iunocent;\niver knew a convict that wasn't, if h\nund a fool to listen to him. I declin\nhear another word. You needn\n. ouae yourself for changing you\nime; 1 excuse it, and that is enougt\nit the boat is waiting, and we can1\n*v to hear you justify a felony.'\n'I AM NOT A FKL.0N. I AM A MARTYR
0e7bc9995a1f750947aea1a30b678974 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.6890410641806 40.419757 -77.187146 Mr. Editoh t Your correspondent has been\nwaiting for something of Importance to "turn\nup," ao that he might have a little news, and\nhe was amply paid for the delay for a few\nevenings ago, he In company with three other\nboya went on tho Cove mountain to rob a bees'\nnest, and after cutting down a very large pine\ntree five feet more or less In diameter, the writer\nproceeded to business, that Is, steal the honey,\nwhen Ha very suddenly received an injection\nin the upper Up, which caused it to turn in\nmore ways than up, and the next morn I look-\ned as though 1 bad been proded all over the\nface. The day Is one to be long remembered\nby all presont, as all were marked. It was a\n"poor night for honey too," ai we got scarcely\nenough to eat. Mr. D. when you find another\nbee tree send for Dave.\nPenn claims to have a Board of School Di-\nrectors, that for Intelligence and Interest In the\neducation of children In tbe district which\nthey represent, are not excelled, and seldom\nequaled by any other township lu Perry county.\nFour of the preseut members are serving their\n3rd, 4th and 5th terms, showing the confidence\nof people. The Board has had a new house\nerected Instead of the old Santeal" at\nHickory Grove. The old houses are fast dis-\nappearing, and new, beautiful, and comforta-\nble oues taklug their places. When the school\naccount was audited at tbe 1st of June, a\nbalance of over 105.00 remained In the treasu-\nry of the board, the teachers salaries have been\nIncreased from 838.00 a month to $b0.00, show-\ning that they want their laborers to live on\nmore than "sass" or impure air. The teachers\nwere selected ou Saturday evening, 2'Jtb. ult.,\nand are as follows i Miss May Ubler for Up-\nper Cove David Boyd, for Middle Cove ;\nChester Steel, Lower Cove i J. P . Song, 11.\nStewart and Carrie Wilsou for Duncauuon (\nC. O. Smith aud Ida Stewart for Baskluavllle\nSV. J . 8belb)y, Mt. Pleasant ) 8. Green, Hick-\nory Qrove, aud Frank Ellis, Mlchener, and It\nIs thus that another scene Is ended, and if the\nelection was over then we might have peace\nand rest for another year.\nI'm glad that my "tab" dates to '80, so that\nI can send to the post office for my mall, If\nevery one folt as your correspondent, your\npockets would overflow with tbe "stuti," which
0c381bd4917cba249eba4d668d625f2e PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.319178050482 40.441694 -79.990086 was80ldat7c It will be seen that the refined\nmarket has not advanced in proportion to the\nraw article The latter seems to be scarce in\nconsequence of the short crop in Europe, and\nparticularly in Cuba. It would appear tbatthe\nvery low prices ruling for two years past cur-\ntailed production and stimulated consumption.\nWith tbe prevalence of low prices, the growers\nin Cuba and tbe West Indies could hardly get\nenough out of tbe business to live comfortably,\nand many ceased growing cane I suppose that\nthe high price that sugars are now com-\nmanding will, to a degree, check consump-\ntion. That will be something of an offset,\nbut not to a very great extent. It would seem\nthat the market will continue firm till the\nnext crop comes in. That from Cuba will not\nbegin to arrive until next January, and from\nDemerara some time in fall. The beet crop\nI cannot tell about. For several years at the\nclose of the season, during November and De-\ncember, sugars have always been very scarce,\naud I presume tbe same condition will obtain\nthis year. The raw crop is shorter this season\nthan for eight or ten years back, and the tend-\nency In price is upward.\n"I think speculation has a good deal to do\nwith the advance, as well as scarcity. Parties\nwho have crops have sold perhaps half of their\nstocks, and are holding on to the other half for\nhigher prices."\nYesterday's latest quotations to wholesalers\nIn granulated were: 8Jo in Philadelphia: cut\nJoaf, 9Kc: crushed, 9&c: powdered. 9Jc; yel -l o-\n7fc for low grades. The market is still\nvery active, and Indications point to a great\nscarcity of sugars, owing to the increased de-\nmand and falling off In supply.
26a7ee43bbd3a90e683c2c937cc7054e THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1907.1630136669203 43.994599 -72.127742 that Taul was one of the happiest of\nmen because he was allowed to be a\nmissionary of Jesus Christ and that he\nwould have been one of the most mis-\nerable of men had he not surrendered\n11 his energies body, mind and soul\nto be a flaming evangelist of the cross.\nTaul had an absorbing passion to\npreach the gospel because, in the first\nplace, he had a revelation of the divine\npersonality of Jesus Christ. He could\nnever get away from his Damascus\nroad experience. He had felt the\nChrist touch. He had stood face to\nface with Jesus. He had seen Jesus.\nHe had talked to Jesus. He had heard\nJesus talk to him. No sooner did this\ndivine revelation come than there\nsprang up In him a longing desire to\ngo forth and tell to the what he\nbad seen and how his Christ could be-\ncome the world's Saviour. Paul's Da-\nmascus experience was like that which\nsome of us have had during our past\nlives. It may have been during some\nrevival services In the village church\nof our boyhood days or it may have\nbeen during a season of awful sickness\ntr when we buried a little child or dur-\ning the hours which succeeded our\nyielding to a heinous sin that Christ\nappearui unto us. We can remember\nIt as yesterday. Jesus rose up before\nus as he came to Paul, saying, "I am\nJesus whom thou hast persecuted."\nAnd so realistic was the divine revela-\ntion that no argument could ever prove\nto us that Jesus himself did not appear\nunto us as he appeared unto Paul on\nthe Damascus road.
14a38d7c0965236c262fa4341a999f72 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.0041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 operator at the central station. They\nfailed to stady the instructions and\nthought they could “work” the operator\nin the old >tyle, hence their madness.\nSome would keep up a f continuons ring­\ning for exchange and wait for the famil­\niar “well," but they soon realized that\nthe word which rang ent so frequently\nfrom the central station had, like the\ntormenting “through,” died a natural\ndeath and would never be heard again.\nSeveral subscribers were called by No.\n500,; the Evkmno Jovhhai, telephone,\nyesterday and in coming to the telephone,\ngave the customary answering ring.\nThis, of course, broke the connection,\nand correspondence with that number\nhad to be abandoned nmll the sub\nscrlber there had studied the new mode\nof operation. At the central station\nevery effort was used to assist the sub\nscrlbers in becoming acquainted with\n new method, although this was very\ndifficult and kept the extra operators, or\ntelephone No. 800, busy ail the time ex­\nplaining and correcting maay,\nA reporter visited several |\nwhich there are telephones, yesterday, to\nsee how the system worked,and what the\nsntscribers thought of it. The first office\nvisited was that of a physician,\nafternoon, doctor,” said the caller, “may\nI use vonr telephone?”\n“Well, my telephone is In trouble\nto day, and It will not work. I have\nbeen trying to get exchange since day­\nbreak, but bave failed every time.”\nA merchant was asked his opinion of\nthe system and replied: *Tt is the\nd/ingerest puzzling thing I ever heard of.\nMy telephone rang a dozen times to-day,\nhut when I answer the call I may yell\nmyself hoarse to find out who is calling\nme, bat in vain.”
42cb9c7098968b8a2d6fc1e061dff6b3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9219177765094 39.745947 -75.546589 Air. Editor, gladly do X give credit to\nthese two men. ono a Catholic priest and\nthe other a Protestant minister. The aver­\nage clergyman 1» through his Indifference\nor Ignorance an active agent In the spread\nof skepticism. Let It bo clearly under­\nstood that I Write as a churchman. If I\nwere not an earnest believer ln Christ, I\nwould become an Atheist, and then I\nwould Join the physical force Anarchlsta.\nGod reigns. The moral law la In force.\nThere la death. Judgment, and then the\nlife to come snd despite the efforts of\nthe whited sepulchers In pulpit and pew\nwho endeavor to eliminate hell from the­\nology, they will like Dives all meet their\nJust deserts.\nBut the signs of the times indicate that\nthe limit of endurance has been \nThe great mass of men In this trce(7)\ncountry are aliens In their own land.\nFirst—a few own the land ; vast deposits\nof coal. Iron, copper, the supply of oil and\nnatural gas and they are rapidly buying\nthe water. They also control the means\nof transport alien and the telegraph and\n(he telephone. Thou they protect (?) la­\nbor by Increasing the price of «II neces­\nsities of life lift y per cent, during the past,\nfifteen years. Then they protect (?) labor\nsome more by Importing millions of\nEuropeans to drive out American work­\ningmen and then to war on each other.\nThen they order all Americans to give np\nHie labor unions. Then they forbid men\nthe constitutional right of froe speech and\nthe press. Verily the eld maxim holds\ngood.
310977bb7d3722fa84ad49ba88cd257b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.4205479134957 39.745947 -75.546589 Like asparagus nnd rhubarb, winter\nonions (planted last fall) are harvest­\ned at a time when It la comparatively\neasy to get help to take care of them.\nWomen and girls are usually employed\nto clean, hunch and tie them. From\nfour to six onions are put Into a bunch,\ndepending upon the slxe. They ar«\nshipped in flat cases which have a\ndivision through the center. The on­\nions. after they are bunched and lied,\nare cat In lengths about an Inch shorter\nthan the space between the ends of\nthe crate and the division board. In\npacking the hanches «re placed length­\nwise of the crate. By placing the\nbutta of the flrat layer snugly against\nthe end of the crate and those of the\nnext against the division board an Inch\nspace left between «ach layer of\noulona. This apace affords ventilation\nand prevents heating. A crate holds\nten dozen bunches. Onions must be\ncleaned, bunched and packed Just right\nto secure the top price on the markeL\nIf the oases are “slack parked” they\naro docked. If (tacked too full and\nclose the onions are liable to heat\nAsparagus should be cut clean every\nday, taking the small as .well as the\nlarge stalks. To get the moat out of\nasparagus strict attention must be giv­\nen to all the details of cuttlag, sort­\ning, bunching, tying and marketing.\nThe stalks should not be left long la\nthe sun after they are rut. The best\ngrowers make three grades, and those\ncatering to a fancy market use a dif­\nferent colored tie for each grad«, Nar-I
03bcc73271d96a8ce6ddbbab1495b966 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.8342465436326 39.745947 -75.546589 A. Grubb. 500 W. 2nd St.\nW. E . Gunther, A 4 Townsend Sts.\nJ. W . Hamilton. 705 Hudson SI.\nHammond Tea Co., 60!l Madison St.\nJames C. Darkness, 6th and Adams Sts.\nI. Harwitz, 9th end Wilson Sts.\nL. Harwitz, Taylor and Locust Sts.\nP. Herman, 9th and Pine Sts.\nO. Herold, 22 Vandever Ave,\nII. ilirshoul, 22d and Church Sts,\nR. N . Holley, 101 h and Pine Sts.\nB. V Holley, 24lh and Washington Sts. 4\nG. Hooper, 5th and Jefferson Sts.\nHorner 4 Keith, 29th and Talnall Sts.\nHorner 4 Keith, 19lh and Wert St*.\nF. S . Hubbard, 9th and Jefferson Sts.\nGeo. S . Iliirlork, 7lh and Poplar .Ms.\nJas. A. Hurl ork, Slh and Spruce Sis.\nJas. A . Iliirlork, 9lh and duPont Sts.\nJohn C. Jackson, S. E. Cor. Lover.- ng\nAve. and Jackson SI.\nW. W. Jackson. Taylor and Pine Ms.\n Bros., 6th and Franklin Sts.\nS. Jasper, 6lh and Poplar St*.\n4V. Townsend Jefferson, Delaware Ave.\nand Adam* SI.\nAirs. Jolfe, 500 Monroe St.\nE. Johnson, 12th and AAest Sts.\nA. AI. Jones, 81 h and Poplar Sts.\nPeter Kae/ur, 404 Maryland Ave.\nR. W. Karshnrr, 1301 Linden SI.\nD. Kauffman, 51 h and Poplar Sts.\nS. Kauffman. 2d and Poplar Sts.\nJ. Kelley, 337 Chestnut SI.\nII. Krty, 7lh and Springer Sts.\nS. Kirchner, 6lh and Chureli Sis.\nI. Klein, lllh and Lombard Sta.\nF. Kozlrki. 138 Oak SI.\nI. Krasne. 828 Kirkwood St.\nA. I.ainarni. 71 h and Madison Sts.\nLarry 4 Sons, 200 K 22d SI.\nI. J . Landing 4 Son. 700 Jackson St.\nC, F. Lalloniiis, 900 Bred SI.\nThos. J. Lawson 4 Co., 822 Alaekei St.\nJohn It. Legates, 28th and Alarkrl Sts.\nHarry Lrntz, S. E . Cor. 5lh and Mon­\nroe Sts.
053c18ef9414dfc860233989a4af991c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.3301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 Saturday evening the entire party c\nepout aeveral houra at Allbright'a, a 1\nnelghbor'a home, indulging in drink 'J\nand revelry, including card pluying aud 1,\ndancing. When the party loft tor homo\nabout U o'clock all were under the in- a\nllueuco of liquor. Charlea Tibba had\nleft the Allbright place intending to go\nto Bellalre and purchaae a auit; but c\nwhon up town he had encountered c\naome boon companiona and wont to u u\naaloon where ho drank beer for aomo\ntime and then started for the brick row 1\nIn a drunken condition, lu the tutsan- j\ntime, Ura. Tibba, Mrs. McCloud and t\nBam MaCloud had roachod their domi- c\ncile, all under tbo influonco of drink, t\nand in a quarrolaouio mood. It waa v\nnot lonit beloro McCloud aud tlio two j\nwomen became involved in a \nwhereupon Mra. McCloud left the houao c\nand went to a neighbor'a. Ac- c\ncording to the evldonce producod j\nat tho inqueat yeatorday, McCloud went\nout through tho front room of tho c\nhouao occupied by another family, who t\nbad become alarmed at tho noiao und t\nleft, (tone acroaa the atreet to a Haiti- t\nmore & Ohio car, aecurod a big coupling e\npin and returned to the houao with the j\nintention of hurting aome one. At thia i\njuncture Charlea Tibba returned from t\nup town and joinod in tho melee. Mc- I\nCloud and Tibba altnoat imtnodmtoly a\noecamo invoivou in u quarrui, uuu tui; c\nformer struck atTibbs withthocoupllng e\npin, striking him on thu forehead.\nTibDS cliuchod with his assailant and\nBocured thu pin, and it. is ovidout that\nit was thon that tlio murder was
aabd13e362701906c96d14c158bb11cc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.6808218860983 39.745947 -75.546589 Grao« Matson; centrepiece in French\nknots, flint, Mrs. Gracs Matson; secoml,\nMrs. J. p . Jeffries; scarf in French\nknots. Mrs. Grace Matson\nCOLORED COTTON EMBROIDERY\nAND OTHER FANCY WORK\nEmbroidered centrepiece, colored cot­\nton over 27 inches, first, Mj-s C. P.\nNürnberg; seçond, Mrs. M . O. McOrory;\nembroidered centrepiece, colored cottoig\nunder 27 inches, first, Mrs. N . Donohue:\nsiMîond. Missy E. K Vnmlegrtft; em­\nbroidered table runner, Mrs. Grace Mut-\nson; embroidered guest towel, first. Mrs\nM. O . McOrory, second. Anna M. Bcott;\nembroidered scarf, first, Mrs. T C.\nStoopes; second, Miss E. E. Vandegrift;\nembroidered sofa pillow In colored cot­\nton, Miss E. E. Vnndegrift; embroid­\nered centrepiece with crochet edge,\nover 27 Inches, white, first, Mrs. D.\nUauharher, second, Mrs. M. Cobinery;\nembroidered centrepiece with cOföhet\nedge, under 27 white, T M\nLamnson; cross stitch Initials. berthA\nA. Lambson; crlss stitch towel, first.\nMrs. .1. D . Jeffries, second. Mrs. Grace\nMatson; cross stitch initials on bed\nsheet. Berth« A. EambHon; cross stitch\nbag, first, Mrs W. R Smith; second,\nBertha A. T>imb*on; cross switch Initials\non pair pillow cases, first, bertha A.\nI^ambson; second. Mrs. Grace Matson,\ncross stitch specimen, first, Mrs. J . H.\nMcMullen; second. Mrs If. F Weldln;\ncross stitch pillow, first, berth« A.\nlambson; seoond, Mrs. J . ÏT Jeffries,\ncross stitch scarf, first, bertha A.\nLdimbson; second. Mrs. Grace Matson;\ncolored dnmlng on huck, first, Mrs. 10.\nH Pritchard; second. Mrs J. W . Kil­\nlen; embroidered luncheon set. 13\nplaces, first, Mrs. M I* Holsinger. sec­\nond. Miss Nancy Hall; novelty lunch­\neon set, first, Mrs. Louisa Fink; second.
0a309dfa4ba1e5c0b4a2cefa8773876f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.1767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 snow. The engino was not going fast,\nwing to the steep ineiino, and because\nbe driver was afraid of running off the\nails. Consequently when he did run\nnto the drift no great harm was done.\nbe engino and tender were thrown off\nlie rails and sunk into the snow, but none\nf the passenger! were hurt, and though\nriver and stoker were precipitated into\nhe'drift the snow was so soft that they\n30k no harm by their somersaults. When\narrived I found the guard wading from\nne carriage to another with his lantern\nssurinu the passengers that there was no\nanger. Some insisted on descending, but\nIter floundering in the snow they thought\nest to retire under cover again. I went\np to the engiiyj to ascertain what was\nbout to bo done. Au angry altercation\nm taking place between driver, guard\nnd passenger*. The engine was off the\nails and conld not be got on again withut\n Only one alternative seemed\naaaible, and that was for the guard to go\n9 the junction and Bend up an engine to\nake the train bank to the place when it\nlad started, or .go forward to the next\ntation and telegraph for assistance.\nThe passengers objected that they\nranted to get on, not be taken back to the\nilaco whonco thoy had Btarted. Whiio\nlie altercation went on a mass of snow on\nhe bank behind gave way and slid like an\nvalanche upon the lines in the rear, coin-\niletely covering them, so as to render an\nmine<|loto return impossible. There was,\nn the emergency, but one tiling to be\nlone.the guard must go on to the next\ntation and telegraph the state of affairs,\nlid ask that aparty.of navvies mighthe\nent np to'dig out the train. There was\n10 engine and train at tjje feipnorary ter-\nainus, consequently no means of getting\norirard tliat night waa available.
04c6d713f3654023acc768140dc1b2dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.4835616121259 40.063962 -80.720915 The tlL'lltfht ol the people C the ratorn\nto tlio city ol tboae two deTOteil workan,\nMine Jennie Hinlth and Ulaa Abble Hher-\nman, wu «bown I tat ennlni In tha lane\naudience Uhldh «>thare<l at the rink. The\nrain Mioiowhat InUrlrrod with tha aer*\nvi>hut It wit a mo»t Jcllahtlul meetlni\nlliruuithouL UIm Hmllh ir»To one ni bar\nMinple andpowiirlnl Bible reading! and\nfolluwius her Mia. Hhtinnan .poke moat\nintHDtetlnuly ol their tiperlenoea alnoa\nInavini Wheeling and specially ol many\ntouching Incident, ol h«r work along tba\nrailroad line on her war hero.\ni'rubalily the moat tlirlllng part ol tba\nevening'. . |waklng waa the teiUmony to\nthemving powaroi religion given hy Mr,\nl.engdon, the man who wandered into tha\nrink ou the lut evening ol the preHotu\nmeeting*, In a a«d .tale olj.leltrlum. MIh\nHmlth and Mine Hhermau uave had him at\nMouuuia l'ark In tha meantime,\nwhere lie hu been roleemeU (rem tha\niiirae ol liquor, and lael.veolng he.Url<d\nthe audience greatly by Ills vivid account\nof hi. I Xperl.nce. No worda could mort\npowerlully atteet the »Jue ol tha work\ndone in lluae xellgioun elforU. In the\nniter uic< tlnx anumtnrof ae.kera remain-\ncil ami KHUeet prayer, and aonga cloaed\none ol the moet Intereetlng utfetlnga yet\n''"mi'm Hntith and Mln Sherman will re-\nrnnln "ttr Cuurlay. To day earvlCM will\nI,ii hnld in tbe rink, lieglnning at 2 f. H .\nHII.I . .t 7 :.T0 r. M . The opportunity at-\nlorded by theaa aervlcea ol doing good la\nnlin'j"t iinalaaaurable, and It le to Ire\nhop. I Urge nnmbera will be proeent. All\ni;iiri)tlan worker, ol erory church are In-\nVII.. I n take part Tbe rink ought to bf\nlull Imth afternoon and evening.
10cc08a2c38c62c4a5cd33a1ee010b94 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.0835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 "The Stowaway," tho latest and prob¬\nably the moat skillfully constructed ol\nmodem Knieliab molo-dramas, will re¬\nceive its initial receptiou in Wheeling\non Thursday evening, February 7.\n"Tho Stowaway" was originally intro-\ntin cod in London four years ago. and hat!\nsince enjoyed a remarkable degree ol\nprosperity,both in the English metropolis\nand in tho provinces. Its American tour,\nwhich in controlled by Jacob Litt, wan\ninaugurated with considerable eclat at\ntho Walnut Street Theatre, Philadel¬\nphia, September 17, and since then the\nplay has been seen in Boston, Brooklyn\nand Now York. It closed a notably sue-\ncessful two week's engagement at Nib-\nlo's Garden, in the latter city, a short\ntime ago, and will be presented at the\nOpera House in the name complete foim\nthat characterized its production in\n Much that in novel and hril-\nliant in the way of scenic embellishment\nis introduced during tho action of tho\nplay.a full-rigged yacht, in tho fourth\nact, being the jnccede. rcmtanc*. Another\nrealistic feature, aud a most startling in¬\nnovation, is the burglarizing of a real\nsafe by two noted ex-cracksmen, Spike\nHennessy and Kid McCoy. These wor¬\nthies have receutly vraduated at Sin#\nSing, and have transformed themselves\ninto Thespians with a view to making an\ntioncBt dollar. The company that inter¬\nprets "The Stowaway" isono of ability.\nltinclud(« Messrs. I'enwick Armstrong,\nJoseph Slaytor, Mark Lynch, Lewis Ba¬\nker, Henry Hawk, William Lee, R.J,\nMove, and Misses Marion Elmore, Helen\nWeathersby, Leonora Bradley ami\nMario Harriot. Tho signs of -the timet\npoint to big business hero for "Tho Stow-\nuway."
38b0379cef0a878e872b31d74950b5c7 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.6945205162353 41.020015 -92.411296 "Sorry!"\n"¥ es, I have thought it all over; we\ncan never bo anything bnt friends."\n"What!"' exclaimel Frank, turning\nsuddenly, aud nervonsly twisting his\nblonde mustache.\n"Never, never!"said Kitty, in atone\nscarcely audible.\nFrank sat down beside her ou the\nsofa ; put his arm arouud her waist in\nspite of a gentle "don't do that," and,\nletting his voice sink almost to a mur­\nmur, spoke to her—to the proud Kitty\n— u ntil she wept.\n"Kitty," said he, in a tone full of\ntender emotion, "Kilty, I know that\nyou love me, but are proud, ambi­\ntious, selfish! It it;i really your will\nthat I should leav you, speak the\nword, and 1 will gc\n"Go then," murmured Kitty.\n"Have you fully decided?" asked\nFrank, hardly able t< believe his ears.\n"Yes."\n"Then farewell!"\nHe took her hand iu his, looked for\na moment into her pretty tearfal face,\nand then unable to control himself,\npressed her passionately to his bosom.\nShe not only submitted to his em­\nbrace without a but, giving\nway to an irresistabie impulse, threw\nher arms lovingly tround his neck.\nSuddenly, however, recollecting her\nresolution, she loosonul her hold and\npushed him from her with a sigh.\n"Shall I go ?" he scunnered.\nA faint "Yes" fell from Kitty's lips\n—the next moment shelay ou the sora,\nalone, sobbing and weeping. But, lit-\ntlo by little, her grief seetaed to wear\nitself out. Iler tears t eased to fiow,\nand her breathing became more regu­\nlar. Her head rested < >u her arm, aud\nher face was half concealed beneath a\nflood of dark brown t urls.\nThe struggle was over; the paiu was\nstilled. She saw Mr. Wellington en­\nter, and sprang up gaily to meet and\nwelcome him. llis manner pleased\nher, his social position and wesJth fas­\ncinated her. His heart, he said, had\nlong been hers, would she not accept\nhis hand? She would and did. A\nkiss sealed the betrothal, but—it was\nno such kiss as she had given Frank\nand she could soarcely suppress a sigh\nPoor Kitty!
01e57ecffcc0fffaa402b7b06d010247 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.6561643518519 40.832421 -115.763123 unusually pleasant at this season of\nthe year. After briefly viewing the pla¬\ncers at the extreme southern end of the\ncamp, which are now lying idlo owing\nto tho lack of water, we jmslied on\nabout a mile in a northerly direction\nand soon reached the now famous Young\nAmerica Mine, which is in point of ac¬\ncessibility most eligibly situated upon\na smooth and gentle declivity which\nforms one of the low range of foot-hills\nstretching fur out into the valley; the\nworkings npoii the mine being at least\nhalf a mile easterly from the base of the\nmain mountain. Here, according to np-\n|ioiiitmeiit, wo met one of the old-time\nresidents of Lander and White l'inc,\nMr. John Gray, who like ourselves was\nout upon a voyage of scientific discov¬\nery not unmixed with a subdued hope\nthat the knowledge thus legitimately ob¬\ntained might, under the direction of all\nall-wise I'rovidelico, prove the means of\nenriching not only the shelves of nuti-\nijtlurian societies, but also add a few\nducats to a not over-plethoric purse.\nWe were cordially received by our old\nfriend \\\\ eed, the present Superintend¬\nent, and by him conducted through alt\nthe workings of the mine, including both\nextensions. Descending the main in¬\ncline a distance of tifty-live feet we\nreached, and were conducted through\nthe first level which shows a continuous\nvein varying in width from six inches\nto feet of rich ore for a distance\nof .;oinc two hundred feet to the north\nand extending as far as explored into\nthe southern extension. Again <!.- scenil-\ningi the same character of ore was found\niu the second level; the vein being ad¬\nmirably encased between smooth por¬\nphyry walls nnil gradually increased in\nwidth which enlargement continues\ndown to the lowest workings, tho pres¬\nent d.ipth of which is 112 feet at which\npoint tho space between the walls is\ntwelvo feet, two feet of ipiart/. lying\nagainst the west wall; two and a half\nfeet upon the east wall, and the inter¬\nmediate space of 7 . J feet tilled by a\nregular strata of porphyry. Water is\nencountered in sinking but not in sulll-\neicnt ijuantily to prove troublesome us\nyet. This mine so far as explored\ngives most flattering evidence of per¬\nmanency and tho positive richness of\nits oro cannot be gnimmyed. The\nnorthern extension which is down fifty\nfeet shows a thirty inch vein of splendid\nore but unfortunately is involved in lit¬\nigation which will lor a time probably\nretard its development. Dow Hunts¬\nman and 0. W . Frascr, of llattlc\nMountain, owners in the claim, had re-\ncently arrived upon the ground to look\nafter their interests and as tho (Haim is\nlikely to prove a valuable one tlie con¬\ntest between counter-claimants is likely\nto prove a warm one.
1bc8a027e661093fa404440365131f6a NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.1164383244545 40.735657 -74.172367 aged S, 23 Houston street; Virginia\nHarrison, aged 14, 329 Broad street,\nBloomfield; Thomas Humphrey, aged\n12, 27 Frum s'reet. Orange; Irene\nHanzo, aged 12, 729 South Twentieth\nstreet; Samuel Harvey, aged 13, 167\nJcromo place, Bloomfuld; Irene Hur-\nley, aged 12, 380 Forrest street, Jersey\nCity: Walter Hoerig. aged 11. 45 Hud-\nson street; Arthur Kellett, aged 12, 40\nHighland avenue. Kearny; Ray lloff,\naged 11, 30 Plum street; Hettle Hahr,\naged 12. Martinsville, X. J ; William\nHiggins, aged 10, 19 Meeker street;\nMargaret Hllley, aged 12, 19 Lexington\navenue; William llendershot, aged 1\nValley street, Maplewood, N. J.; Vir-\nginia Harrison, aged 14, 329 Broad\nstreet. Bloomfield; Migeres Harrison,\naged 9, 329 Broad street, Bloomfield;\nEmma Hazel, aged 12, 503 Ferry .street;\nViola Hay, aged 10, 291 Jelltff avenue:\nDorothy Hunt, aggd 9, 36 Hawthorne\navenue, Bloomfield; Frederick Heulitte,\nnged 9, 127 South Orange avenue;\nLaura Hall, aged 10, Alorris avenue,\nSpringfield; Gladys Iloagl, aged 10,\nGould place, Caldwell; Mildred Holter-\nmnn, aged 7. Prospect avenue. Wef t\nOrange: Harold W. Heimfiaeh, aged 9,\n42 Jaques str<et. Elizabeth; John Hath-\naway, aged 12, 1.71 Sussex avenue, \nristown: Eugene Hurle, aged I t, 3SI\nSpringfield avenue; Timothy Hoops,\naged 12, 482 South Eleventh street;\nWalter Hickey, aged 14, 384 South\nNinth street; Herman Hailkerln, aged\n7. 229 Court street: Gladys Hughson,\naged 11. 15 Court street; Miguel Har-\nrison. aged 9. 329 Broad street, Bloom-\nfield; Vincent Hellihey, aged 12, 521\nElm street, Arlington; Anna Harrison,\naged 12, 196 Pacific street: Nicholas\nHowath, aged 14. 69 Boston s'reet: Be-\natrice Henderson, nged 11, 28 Morton\nstreet; Mary llendry, aged 13, 543'5 Ful-\nton street, Elizabeth; Frieda Hirt, aged\n14, 516 Eight eonth avenue; John Han-\nley, aged 13, IG8 Ferry street: Clara\nR. Jewell, aged 9, 724 South Fourteenth\nstreet; Pnsqualo Jacoby, aged 10, 177\nNewton street; Ernest Jacobson, aged\n11, 402 Elm street, Arlington: John W.\nJoralemon, nged 9, ms New street;\nGertrude Jaberg, aged 13, 1"5 Cniou\nstreet, Rahway; Elsie Jorgensen, aged\n14. 50 Newark street: Alay Jacobus,\naged 13, 55 Abbotsford avenue; Alar-\ngarei Jewell, aged 7, 724 South Four-\nteenth street; Lucille Ivrapp, aged 9,\n62 Wtllet street. Bloomfield; l'la Kraus,\naged 8. 24 Franklin place, Arlington;\nWilbur Kisling, aged 10, 55
09a2f798f1cc404fba9e3be7bfaac63a THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.0561643518517 29.4246 -98.49514 At that time and for some time after-\nward the Karl was on Intimate terms\nwith the Prince of Wales, as Is shown\nby the fact that the Prince stood nnn.\nsor for his second daughter, who .was\nborn In 1875. It wassoon after the birth\nof this child that the proceedings in the\nuivurie conn were commence", it was\nthen shown that Lady Aylesford had\nconducted an Intrigue with the Marquis\nor Blandrord, Lord K. Churchill's elder\nbrother and heir to the Marlborough\ndukedom. There were facts suMclent\nto warrant the granting or a decree nisi,\nbut the Queen's Proctor intervened. It\nwas shown that tho Earl had been\nseriously misconducting hlmseir with\nlady or high rank nnd as the outcome\nol the I'roctor's Intervention, and on the\nground that there had been collusion,\nthe court refused the order. The hear-\ning or the case occupied the court for a\nnumber of days, and furnished the most\nsensatlonul reading matter for t lit, ihilli - -\nJournals. It exolted the most Intense\ninterest throughout England and on the\neuiuiiiem, owing 10 sianuingor tne\ntwo great aristocratic families Immedi-\nately concerned. The Duke of Marl-\nborough, then the MarqulsorBlandforil,\nand subsequently member of Parliament\nfor the Marlborough family borough,\nbad some eight or nine years previous\nto the action, married Lady Albertha\nFrances Hamilton, the sixth daughter of\nthe Duke of Abercorn. By his marriage\nhe became brother In law to Lord Claud\nHamilton, member for the city of Liv-\nerpool; Lord George F. Hamilton, mem-\nber for the county of Middlesex; Lord\nLansdowne.the present Governor Gen-\neral or Canada; the Earl or Lltchlield;\nLord Dalkeith, the son or the Duke or\nBuccleuch, and the Karl or Mount Kdgip\ncombe. The ultra radical weekly Lon-\ndon press made considerable political\ncapital ont o! the divorce proceedings,\nsarcastically emphasizing the ract that\neach o' the nobl? lords who figured so\nIgnomlnlously In the caso would 1n due\ntlmo take his sent In the House of Lords,\nand that each had In his gift quite a\nnumber of church livings for which he\nwould rroni time to time be cnllid upon\nto appoint Incumbents.
31689c396640bfea96793e6bebc1f150 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1860.5095628099068 37.561813 -75.84108 Union and the Constitution, and to en-\nforce tho laws. That is a common duty,\nbinding upon every citizen, and the\nfailuro to perform it is a crime.\nTo mo it is plain that the approach-\ning contest must be between tho Demo-\ncratic and Republican parties, and, be-\ntween them, I prefer the latter.\nTho Democratic party, by the long\npossession and abuse of power, has\ngrown wanton and reckless; has cor-\nrupted itself and perverted tho princi-\nples of tho Government; has set itself\nopenly against the great homo interests\nof tho people, by neglecting to protect\ntheir industry, and by refusing to im-\nprove and keep in order tho highways\nand depots of commoroo; and cvon now\nis urging a moasure in Congress to ab-\ndicate tho power and duty\nto regulate commorco among the States,\nand to grant to tho States tho discre-\ntionary power to levy tonnago duties\nupon all our commerce, under tho pre-\ntence of improving hurbois, rivers, and\nlakes; has changed tho status of tho\nnegro slave by making him no longer\nniero property, but a politician, an an-\ntagonist power in tho Stato, a power to\nwhich all other powers are required to\nyield, under penalty of a dissolution ot\ntho Union; has directed its energies to\nthe gratification of its lust of foreign\ndomain, as manifested in its persistent\nefforts to seize upon tropical regions,\nnot becauso those countries and their\nincongruous peoplo are necessary, or\neven desirrablo, to bo incorporated into\nour natiou, but for the mere purpose of
1fcbef45fab74bb5de386781c0719fb4 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1884.443989039415 42.68333 -96.683647 but a few years, ami sho used to como\ndown here every noon and bring him\nhis dinner, that tho story commences.\nThey lived in a house on Washington\naventto and had two little children to\ntake care of and they were just m hap­\npy as they could i/c, for Charlie was\nmaking a good living and had Hie\npromise of a bosship in tho fall. Well,\none day at nqpn sho came in with his\nlunch, as was her custom, and just as\nshe got to the gate it flow open and ont\ncame four men bearing the dead body\nof her hnshand, who had just been\nkilled by afaiiingtimber. Dolly fainted\naway at the si :ht aud fell into a fever\nthat did not abate until long after poor\nCharlie had bueu buried and another\nman hired to lake his place in the fac­\ntory. As soon as she got able to go\nout she went to work and scoured up\nthe old dinner pail and put tip a meal\nfor her dead husoum! j;int the samo as\nthough be was it live and working as\nusnal. At fifteen beforo 12\nshe put on her bright new shawl aud\ntray bonnet, and. taking the pail in her\nhand, tripped off down the street and\nknocked at the gate. The men came\nout and she told them that she wanted\nto go in and wait for Charlie and let\nhim have something to eat. They tried\nto reason with her. and told her that he\nhad gone away on a long job, and\nwouldn't require any dinner for many\na day—perhaps never. But sho would\nnot listen to them, and waited thore\nuntil the bell rang for the men to go to\nwork again. Ever since then, and that\nwas nearly ten years aco, she has done\nthe same thing every day that the fac­\ntory has be: u ruu.iiiig. Sundays, holi­\ndays and iu vacation time sue stays at\nhome, but all the rest of the time she\nputs onThe same oid shawl and bonnet\n—they are faded and threadbare, now\n—a nd starts down the street with a tin\npail iu her hand."\n"Does she carry the sameold dinner,\nor is it fresh every day?" asked the\ngirl.
2a1b057ea2b745c223185eead2d2a9d9 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.4808218860985 39.369864 -121.105448 Every substance in nature, when taken up\nby organic life, undergoes a change which no\nchemical analysis nor microscopic examina-\ntion can discover. One grain of potash ob-\ntained from the ashes of a double rose has\nmore fertilizing power than a pound of pot-\nash from the ashes of wood or one thousand\npounds of pure potash obtained from feld-\nspar rock. Substances taken from a higher\nclass of organism are of more fertilising val-\nue to the farmer than those from the lower\norders of nature. One grain of iron from\nthe blood of a man will act as a tonic more\npowerfully than one pound taken from iron\nore. At Hurdstown, N. J ., there are large de-\nposits of phosphatic rock, that are analyti-\ncally the same as phosphate of lime, obtained\nfrom burnt bones. Several years since, some\ngentlemen thought it would make an excel-\nlent fertilizer, and so obtained the certifica-\ntes of Dr. Jackson and forty other chemists,\nthat it was of great value, after purchasing\nthe mine. Prof. Mapes was solicited to take\nhold of it. but he declined, telling the owners\nthat no quantity a pound to a ton con-\ntained any fertilizing matter. It was ship-\nped largely to England, endorsed by the best\nchemists there, and sold at £7 per ton.. Now\nit would not sell for seven shillings per ton\nin any port of Europe, and is oulv used at\nthe Liverpool docks as ballast. N'o chemist\nby analysis can discover any difference be-\ntween this pulverized rock and pulverized\nburnt bones. The one as a fertilizer is worth-\nless, the other valuable. One comes from\nthe lower orders of nature, the other from\nhigher organisms. No plant feeds on any-\nthing in the soil until it is in solution in\nwater. A man who is compelled to feed up-\non lower organisms, has not the ability to\ncomprehend any higher course of thought.\nThe farmer of Vermont and New Hampshire,\nwhose soil is the debris of granite rock, and\ncontains seventeen per cent of potash, uses\nwood ashes as a fertilizer, not because there\nis no potash in liis soil, but because the pot-\nash of the ashes has progressed, and been in\norganic life before. The higher the organism\nthe better the fertilizer.
2628d37cd186481724cc9fbc06e8a898 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.7909835749342 39.745947 -75.546589 Tho city editor lias under his control\ntwenty or more reporters. Some of them\narc rncu who have mado reputations\nwriters and who draw salaries as large as\nthe city editor himself. Tha tendency of\nlato is to employ the best, writers on tho\ncity staff, and the man who can "hustle\nfor nows,” who can take hold of an event\nof any sort whatsoever, find out all about\nquickly, catch its spirit and substance\nand put them on pajier rapidly, graph­\nically and reliably, with keen perception\nof what is material end what too trivial\nto mention, making of the whole "a\nstory.” that is, a tale of fact which is\ncomplete iu that it has dramatic action,\ncause, development, climax, crisis—a\nstory that is short, compact, trustworthy\nand at the same time possessed of\nthat rare and indescribable qual­\nity called readableness—such a man\n tha highest typo of journalist.\nThere are not many such, and the fetv\nthere are command good waged. Some of\nthem work by space, being paid ton\ntwelve dollars a column, and in some\ncases fifteen or twenty, for ell they writo.\nThe manoging editor of Tho Tribune said\nto mo the other day: "There are two\nclasses of newspaper men who are so\nscarce that it is almost impossible to find\nthem. Ono is tho first class reporter who\ncan writo anything, and has at his com­\nmand a dozen different veins suitable to\nas many sorts of subjects. The other is\nthe man who thinks. I can hire five hun\ndred newspaper men to go and do what I\ntell them to do, but I cannot find ono who\nhas Ideas ©f his own. There is a premium\nout for newspaper meu with ideas.”\nSome people
4359369a9ad74ac9a7d048e4d3452fd7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.613387946519 58.275556 -134.3925 Cordova is the sea terminus of the\nCopper River & Northwestern railroad.\nIt is in latitude 60 degress north, situ¬\nated on Cordova bay on the southeast¬\nern portion of Prince William's sound.\nFor the reason that it is from here the\nonly railroad leading to the great\nAlaska interior it being built, Cordova\nis more talked about today than any\ntown in Alaska.\nIf one stops to study the map, and\nto consider the topograph y. of the\ncountry and charts of the sound, as\nwell as the latent resources of the\nvicinity, he will readily understand\nwhy Cordova is the chosen spot. First,\nshe has an excellent land-locked, har¬\nbor, where all sea going vessels can lie\nin safety. The inlands so lie in front\nof her that fortifications could be\nmade impregnable.\nSecond, there is no mountain to\ncross from Cordova to the interior, the\ngrade from the town to Copper river\nbeing only one-half of per cent.\nThis mighty river has cut her way\nthrough the coast range, and by bridge-\ning her twice, an easy grade, free from\nglaciers and mountains has been\nfound, and over it the road is uow\nbeing built as fast as meu and money\ncau do it. 'Tis here that the rail meets\nthe sail, and the copper meets the\ncoal. All the copper ore from Prince\nWilliam's sound cau be brought here\nby inside routes on scows or boats of\nmost any kind, as sea going vessels\nare not required. The coal can be\nbrought by rail from the Bering river\nfields, only twenty miles from the\nmain line of the road up Copper river.\nAll around Cordova, excellent copper\nore in immense bodies has been found\nduring the last year, making the town\nthe choice spot for smelters as soon as\nthe railroad .reaches the choice coal\nfields and the big copper mines of the\nvast interior.
01770232c342afefcb1bf80e473dd780 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1882.9356164066464 43.82915 -115.834394 Lick , one h ouse and impr ovemen ts on\ngarden on the Pettingill road known as\nthe L ick house $100, tax $3 18.\nLynch Charles, poss es sory right in and\ntv 160 acres of land with all im­\nprovem ents thereon, situated on Lowe r\nSquaw cr ee k $100, personal property $510\ntotal $610, tax, $14 32.\nPourcett J M. possessory right in and\nto 200 acres of land on the Middle Fork\nof the Payette, with all improvements\nthereon, $700, pe rsonal property 175. 875\npoll, road arrd hospital tax $10, tax $30 12\nSmyth Thos., per sonal property, $1,155\ntax 24 38, road and ho spital tax $5.\nThompson H. C. one ditch, taking the\nwater of Danskin creek to bars on Payette\nriver, also one taking the water Thomp­\nson creek to same bar, $100 tax $3 18;\npoll, road and hospital tax, 10.\nUnkno wn owner, o ne ditch and water\nright conveying water from Granite creek\nto the old town of Boston, and known as\nthe E. Burson ditch 200 tax 5 37\nYouglin Justin, possessory right to & in\n160 acres of land belonging to the U. S.\nwith improvemen ts thereon, situated on\nthe Id aho and B oise City road 400 dollars,\npersonal property 576 dol. total 976 dols\ntax 21 02, road and hospital tax 5 dob\nVanwinkle G. W. possessory right in\nand to 160 acres of land belonging^to the\nU. 8. with improvements thereon situated\non the South Fork of the Payette 250 dol.\npersonal property 351 dol. total 501 d ols,\ntax 11 95.
34c874267efc1d2b0b2fdb292c4bbde5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.6589040778792 39.745947 -75.546589 BALED HAY AND STRAW—Desirable\ngrades of liay were kept well cleaned up\nat Steady prices. Straw was quit but\nsteady. We quote:\nOld Timothy Hay—No. 1. large bales.\n22.50; No. 1 small bales, $22,00; No. 2, $2-1 .60\n«21.60: No. 3. $10alS; no grade, $12-13; new\ntimothy hay. No. 1, I19a20: No. 2, $17-18; 1\nNo. 3. $15al8; no grade, $10al3. Straw—No.\nJ, straight rye. $12; No. 2 straight rye, $11.\nEGOS—There was a good Inqury for\nchoice fresh stock, prices of which ruled j\nfirm under light offerings. We quote; •\nNearby firsts, in free rases, 22c: nearby\ncurrent receipts, in returnable crates. 21c;\nWi«lern average, choice, in free\n22c; Western, fair to good. 20a21o; South-\nërn 17« 19c; recratcd eggs. 2la28o.\nGREEN FRUITS AND VEGETABLE\n—B lade berries. Jersey, per quart. ll -lSc;\nHuckleberries. Jersey, per quart, "rthc;\nwatermelons. Southern, per car. JISaSM;\noeaches. Del. and Md., per crate. $2 50n3*'i;\n Delaware and Maryland, per 5-8-\nbushel basket, $1.50e2.50; cantaloupes. Md\nper crate, 80ca$l; plums. Delaware and\nMaryland, per 10-pound basket, 50a60c;\npears. Delaware and Maryland, per 8-8- •\nbushel basket, $1.50*1.75: pears, other var.\nloties, per 6-8 -bushel basket, 5«ra$l an; ap-\nnles New Jersey. Delaware and Maryland\nper S-R bushel basket. 30a60c; grapes, N. C .\nDel per 8-basket carrier. $2a2.50; oranges.\nCal per box $3.5iiai>.BO; lemons,, per box\n»75-1 50; grape fml- Fai r-min tererale,\n»dOaS-nO: Jersey while potato»«, prims,\nper basket. 30n26r; culls, per b-sket, 15*\n30c- sweet potatoes. North Carolina, per\nbarrel. $3.25aS.50; sweet potatoes. Eastern\nShore Va., No. 1 per barrel, $3.76-4 .00 on.\nions Delaware, Maryland and Virginia,\nper 34-barrel basket, 90ra$l 00; onions, DM\nMd and Va., per bushel basket, R5-7T.O.\nPOULTRY, LIVE—Fowls. 15Ue; old j\nroosters. 10c: spring chickens, as to quai-\nify 15a 17c; ducks, llallc: pigeons, eld,\nper pair. 2Ja26c: pigeons, young, per pair,
06324884103bcbabccc3536944c24f92 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.1106557060818 39.743941 -84.63662 We most heartily commend this book\nto our readers. It gives a very interest-\ning account Of the Indians of North\nAmerica, from the time of the coming of\nthe white men. The voyage of Columbus,\ntbe explorations of the different nations\nof Europe and the wanderings of the\na Spaniards iq search of gold and immortal\nyouth, are told with graphie powera,,\nEvery step of our colonial history is\ntraced with patient fidelity, and the\nsources of those noble, and we trust, en-\nduring institutions which have made\nour country free and great, are shown with\nremarkable clearness. The causes of our\ngreat struggle for Independence are told\nwith a " logical force and ability unsur-\npassed in any work of the day. Then fol-\nlows a clear and succinct of the\nformation of the Federal Constitution ;\nthe establishment of the Unien; the\ncourse of affairs until the breaking out of\nthe Second War with England ; and a full\nand comprehensive account of that War\nand its results. The eventsof ourcareer\nfrom the close of that contest to the com-\nmencement of the Civil War, follow in\na their order. The history of the Civil War\nis related with intense vigor, and with a\nstrict fidelity to truth ; and the work\ncloses with an account of the course of af-\nfairs since the end of that great conflict.\nThe author writes throughout with the\ncalmness and Impartiality of a historian,\nand pleads the cause of no party or sec-\ntion. He states facts, points out the les-\nsons
025de8b9a2f658096742c6bf8412b3a2 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1869.209589009386 39.24646 -82.47849 ot road. Then, as to paying costs of\nconstruction, fifteen per cent, is to be\nlevied upon the lands within ono mile\nand ten per cent, upon the lands with-\nin two miles and beyond one mile of\nthe road, the remaining seventy-fiv- e\nper cent, of cost to "be levied upon the\ngeneral duplicate ot the county. The\nbridges on the several roaus to be\nbuilt as at present, and paid for out of\nthe bridge fund of the county. The\nbill further provides for the costs ot\nconstruction to be extended over a pe\nriod ol five years ; it provides that the\nlevy on the special duplicate each\nyear shall be such part of the entire\nlevy on that duplicate as the road ac\ntually contracted tor construction th.t\nyear Is of the whole \nThe bill guards carefullv the rights\nof citizens along the line, and pro\nvldes for the adjustment uud payment\nof any and al) damages by reason of\nany alteration or change Iu the pres\nent road ; It provides for the issue of\nbonds but only to a limited amount;\nit provides for the commUsioners ac\ncepting donations In money and prop\nerty for the construction ol said roads\nor either of them. Now, however Im\nperfect the bill may be lu technical\nform or sub?tauce, If our people are\nreally in iavor of the enterprise, let\nthem by proper petition iudlcate their\nwishes to the General Assembly and\nthey will give us a law wblsh will ac\ncomplish what we desire.\nBut the trouble seems to be tnat\nmen would like bread without sweat,
1a58b8a66b9cc81ee03a52327c2903fc THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.105479420345 35.996653 -78.901805 The ivory carvers of this country do\nlittle or nothing in the East Indian or\nJapanese manner, nor do they occupy\nthemselves with figure work. Their chief\nemployment is in producing decorative\ntoilet and stationery articles. The rage\nfor stained and carved ivory is of recent\ngrowth in the United States, and the de-\nmand for such articles is not large, as\nthey are more costly than the same\narticles in silver would be. They were\nproduced to tickle the jaded aesthetic\npalates of the rich and luxurious, and\nonly those who may trifle away what\nthey will indulge themselves to any\nconsiderable degree in carved ivory.\nIn all such articles the cost of the raw\nmaterial is small in comparison with\nthat of the labor. Billiard balls are\ncostly because they contain large quan-\ntities of the finest ivory cut from the\nbest part of the tusk. The labor cost of\nbilliard balls is trifling, as they are\nturned by machinery and rapidly. Thus\nit often happens that a single small arti\ncle, richly stained and carved, will cost\nfive times as much as a billiard ball \ntaining ten times the weight of ivory.\nThe carvers of ivory use much the same\ntools as the wood carvers, but of lighter\nand more delicate make. The work is\nextremely tedious and laborious.\nThe carving is usually done in low re-\nlief, and the subjects are such as are\nsuitable to thi3 treatment Persian de\nsigns in delicate curves, the cactus, with\nsome varieties of palm, and hints caught\nfrom those marvelously simple but ar-\ntistic carvings of the Alaskan Indians.\nThe ivory is stained slightly, so as to\nbring out the design, and is permitted to\nabsorb moisture, which it readily does,\nin order to give it that fresh look com-\nmon in newly manufactured articles of\nivory. The art of staining ivory is a\nsecret guarded well by the carvers.\nSome notion of the cost of ivory carv-\ning may bo had from the fact that, while\na hand mirror framed in plain ivory may\nbe had for ten or twelve dollars, a mir-\nror in carved ivory may cost $ 100 or\nmore. The small articles in carved\nivory cost from five to twenty-fiv- e
27e23545c5d04d1500332fa6916f677b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.332876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 Default having been made in tho payment of\na sum of money sosurod to be paid by an in-\ndenture of mortgage made and executed by\nJoseph S. Tuttle, of Niles, in the couuty of\nBerrion and State of Michigan, to Norman II.\nAdams, of Van Buren County and State of\nMicbuan. bearing dato the fourth day of Feb-\nruary A. D. 1878, and recorded in the office of\nthe Register of Deeds, of the County of Van\nUuren and State of Michigan, on the 29th day\nof April A. D. 1873, at 10) o'clock in the fore-\nnoon, in Liber 13 of mortgages on page 596,\nwhich 8 aid mortgage was duly assigned by\nwritten assignment executed by Baid Norman\nII. Adams to Charles A. Adams, on the 29th\nday of April A. D. 1878. and recorded in the\noffice of the Register of Deeds for said County\nof Van Buren, on the 8th day of May A. D.\n1878. in Liber 18 of mortgages, on page 391,\nwhich said mortgage was duly assigned by\nwritten assignment, duly executed by said\nCharles A. Adams to the Citizens National\nRank of Niles, Michigan, on the 21th day of\nJune A. D. 1878. ani recorded in office of\ntho Register of Deed for said County or Van\nBuren, on tho 2Gth day of June A. D. 1378, at\n5 o'clock in the afternoon in Liber 13 of mort-\ngages on page 419, by which default the power\nor sale in said mortage.contained has become\noperative, and no suit "or proceeding at law\nor m equity having been instituted to recover\nth3 debt seeured by said mortgage, or any\npart theroor, which at this date amounts to\ntwelve hundred and eight dollars 5 1,203.03\nNotice is hereby given that, on Monday the\n2 jth day of May, A. D. 1879, at one o'clock in\nthe afternoon, at the front door of ths Court\nHouse, in the village of Taw Taw, in the Coun-\nty of Van Duron and Stato of Michigan, I bhall\nsell at public auction to the highest bid ler, the\npremises described in said mortgage, or so\nmuch thereof as may bo necessary to satisfy\nthe amount due thereon, with costs and ex-\npenses allowed by law, which said premises are\nall thit piece or parcel of land lying and being\nin tho County of Van Riron and State of\nMichigan, known and described as an undivided\none-ha- lf
8953d74f2f463adf336fe6d891cd7751 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9139343946063 39.290882 -76.610759 Allhistory teaches that, whenever a great and\ntrying crisis occurs, the commensnrate amount of\ntalent, of learning, of wisdom, of zeal, will ne-\nver be wanting; and it has been found eminently\nso during the whole period that intervened be-\ntween the extra session of Congress, and the late\nelections; ?in wuich period, it is not too much to\nsay that, more wisdom and common-sense ?more\nuntiringreal and generous enterprise?more man-\nly independence and patriotic devotion?more el-\noquence, oratory, appropriate information, and\ntalent of every requisite kind, have been mani-\nfested throughout our extensive land, than were\never before, on any occasion whatever, exhibited\namong us since we were a nalion! Should the\nchronicles, then, of so remarkable a period as\nthis, be sufiercd to repose in the fleeting recol-\nlections of the present day?or be left to the\nephemeral and perishable daily or weekly Ga-\nzette? Will not the Statesmen and Politicians,\neven of our ewn times, have frequent occasion\nto refer to the events of the past year??will not\nthousands, hereafter, seek in vain through a\nthousand avenues for the minute details of this\nwonderful canvass, as full of moral sublimity,\nas it is charged with deep political wisdom, and\ncareful researches into and of almost\nevery political topic that has agitated the past,\nand will continue to excite the future? If so, it\nseems to me that a careful selection and concen-\ntration of all that is essential fully to character-\nise that period, must be acceptable to the general\npublic ot the present day?and be thankfully re-\nceived by those who shall hereafter be connec-\nted with the destiny of our great, and I trust,\nprcsperous Republic. With this object, and\nthese hopes, I venture to make this proposal to\nthe American public.\nThat a faithful and livingpicture of this peri-\nod may he preserved, not only for our own day\nand generation?but for many yet to come, eve-\nry lineament, however small, if truly character-\nistic, willbe given?and, whilst repetition will\nbe as studiously avoided as may be practicable;\nstill, every State in the Union must contribute\nits due and relative portion, towards perfecting\nthe graphic delineation, ?so that the great mor-\nal picture of these stirring days, may be educed\nfrom all of these various sources, and thereby as-\nsure all coming times that the volume is no par-\ntizan work of an overzcalous individual, but a\nveiacinus chronicle ot all that may be recoided\ntherein.
7b36c8ab23787c6be66d714db8348b3a THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.5356164066463 40.618676 -80.577293 How altout the taxes to support our social Insurance program? The origlual\nact culled for all Increase In the tax for old-age and survivors' Insurance be­\nginning January 1043; hut an amendment has been passed I'm-zing the tax\nat one per cent of wages payable by the employer and one per cent payable\nby the employee until January, 1!M4. This was done on the pretext that the\namount of money in the reserve Is greater than Is neinled for current payments.\nOf course it Is. It has to be If this system Is to last. We are paying taxes now\nfor protection later when we retire, or for our families If we should die. We\ndon't want to have the system go bankrupt when we most need that protection.\nThis Is an insurance program. We are not asking charity. We want to build\nup riglUs for our families, not get public relief later. We can afford to pay\nour of the cost of tills insurance now. The increased taxes we will pav\nwill come back to us in benefits later. If we listen to those who seek to kwp\nsocial security taxes down, we will suffer in two ways. First, our money will\ntaxed away miyway, because those same p«»ople who pretend they want to\n•live us money will see to It that we pay sales taxes and income taxes on even\ntlie lowest Incomes, and those taxes will not pay for any social security benefits\nU' be returned to us In the future. Second, our social insurance system will be\nWeakened set that either we'll have to pay much higher rates In the future or\nWe'll get little or nothing In benefits. Don't be fooled by the "something for\nnothing" Itoys. It's their own pockcthooks, not yours, tliey are thinking\nalKiut. Worker* *airt Nocial security und are willing to .help pay a fair\nprice to get it
08f725bba2b2b2cb41f6ac29a389aa1a THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1883.8890410641807 46.187885 -123.831256 States. So far as the rule applies to\nUie master, it is judicious enough;\nbut it involves annoyance, delay, and\nexpense wnen one or the mates cues\nor is disabled, and it becomes neces-\nsary to fill his place in a foreign port\nAnother law which Discriminates\nagainst our own vessels in favor of\ntheir foreign rivals is that which lev-\nies a tax of forty cents a month on\neach seaman employed in an Ameri\ncan vessel for the support of our ma\nrine hospital service. This of course\ngives an advantage to English ships,\nhich are not required to pay a hos\npital tax. Under our laws, moreover.\nconsular officers are paid out of the\nfunds derived from fees ei acted fioai\nAmerican ships and merchants in for\neign ports. On the other hand, the\n consular service is mainly\nsupported by Parliamentary appro\npriations, and the charges imposed\nby consuls on English vessels are\nvery'smalL It is also to be noted\nthat while our laws authorize the im\nporraiion, duty free, of the materials\nneeded for the repair of vessels en\ngaged in the foreign carrying trade,\nthey make no provisions for a simi\nlar rebate of duty on ships' supplies\nas do the English laws. Another\nof our existing regulations which\nmust tend to deter American capital\nists from investing in vessels, is the\nlaw making the liability of a part\nowner unlimited. On the other hand\nthe present English law encourages\ninvestments in shipping by limiting\nthe liability of a part owner to the\nproportion of the debt that his indi\nvidual share of the 'vessel bears to
45d35cc6afe62acf12832fb0929875e6 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.460382482038 37.53119 -84.661888 Blackburn Huffman and Miss Eva\nCooper drove to Danville Wcdnesda\nafternoon and were made husband aad\nwife byRev J O A Vaught Alter\nthe ceremony the happy pair drove to\nthe home of the groom where a splen\ndid supper was enjoyed Mr HufTma\nIsatonofMrandMrsOPHuffma\nand Is a clever and Industrious your\nman The bride Is a daughter of Mi\nR H Cooper of the Turnersvllle sec\ntlon and Is an excellent young lady\nFor the first time In the history of\nthis office said Probate Judge Enoch\nof Sedwlck county Kansas a reques\nwas made today for a receipt for the\nmoooy which a groom paid for his U\ncense The young man said he wantei\nsomething to show for It In case the 11\ncenaewas lost before be had occasloi\nto use It Withes straight a face as I\ncould muster I sat down at my desl\ntad made the required receipt aDd\nplaced thereon one of the large oQlcla\nred seals The young man then neemec\nsatisfied and went on his way\nThe wedding of Miss Jennie Penci\nand Mr William J Dozier which wai\nsolemnized at 10 oclock Wednesday\nmorning at the home of tbebrldes par\ntote Mr and Mrs E T Pence wai\none of the most attractive of the sum\nmer weddings charming In Its aim\nplicity It was a yellow and white wed\nflag the entire house being decorated\nIn plumoea smllax and daisies In the\nparlor the windows were hung wltt\nmllax plants were banked on eith-\ner side forming a background for tbe\nbride and grcom The mantels were\ntanked with tbe daisies and tbe ban\nIsters were draped with the smilax tbe\ntowel posts holding branches ol dal\nelca Before the ceremony Mis Jen\nDie Lynn sang Always As the cho\nrus from Lobrengrin was played the\ngroom and his best man entered the\nparlor followed by the bride and her\nbrother whogave her away During the\ncaremooy which was performed by Rev\nP J Ross Miss Lynn played Call me\nTbineOwn Miss Pence was beautiful\nIn her wedding dress of champagne\nvoile with hat to match The brides\ntable was arranged In the dining room\nthe brides cake being tbe central dec\noration It was Iced In white and held\nlarge candy baskets of daisies Tbe\nsilver candle sticks hold white tapen\nwith yellow silk shades The place\ncards were hand painted daisies Mr\nind Mrs Dozier drove to Danville\nhere they took the train for Law\nrenceburg and from there will go to Si\nLouis and on an extended trip West\nfor their bridal tour They were tbe\nrecipients of many handsome presents\nThe grooms gift to tbe bride was a\nllamond sunburst brooch The bride-\nI I a charming young woman exceed\nngly handsome and universally popu-\nlar She Is greatly beloved for her\nmeet disposition and sunny temper\niment The groom Is a stove manufacl\nirer of Nashville a fine business man\naDd a clever gentleman
0e40debdd355f2a8f6f3789b1df12328 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1884.0259562525298 39.623709 -77.41082 The Indian who g®js to a college will\nfind it hard, after the life lie lias led, to\nadopt the ways of civilized college stu-\ndents and become hn.xurs, who practice\ncruelty on hoys who aro physically\nweak. You take a plain, unvarnished\nIndian boy, put on bis head a vis-rlosa\ncollege cap, a collar four inched high, a\ntight coat, cut oil too short at the lower\nend, a pair of pants that ho would have\nto put French chalk inside of, to got\nhis legs in, and long tooth-pick shorn\nwitli yellow tops, and give him a cane,\nand teach him to say, “A h, by Jove,\nyon know,” and lie would lie a\npicture that would cause his trilm\nto weep. Suppose the father and\nmother of the Indian student, thus at-\ntired, should give the muskrats that\n trap, a holiday, and go to the col-\nlege to visit their son, and should find\nhim ns described, and ho should put his\noyo-glas t into hie eye and say, “Ah, gov-\nernor, glad to nee you, you know; and\nnindame, 1 am yours t*ruly,” the aged\nrat trapper would pull his gun and if\nhe could got two of thorn in range ho\nWould shoot them, though lie would\nhesitate to waste a charge of powder on\na single one, while the squaw mother\nwould wrap her blanket around her form\nand go and lean agaim t a fence and be\nsick. The Indian would have too much\nsense, uncultnred though he might be,\nto be proud of such an outfit as a son,\nand in,stead of blessing the day that his\nson deckled to become civilized, ho\nwould curse it.
191a24bb7096bc47b8a696fb853ae91d OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.6753424340436 41.020015 -92.411296 Dyspepsia! Daspepsia! Dyspepsia!\nDyspepsia (he most perplexing of All human\naliments... Its symptoms are almost Infinite ID\nibetr variety, and the forlorn and despondent\nvictims of the disease often fancy themselves the\nprev, in turn, of every known malady. T hi* Is\ndue, in part, to the close symoatny which exists\nbetween the ntom*ch and ihe brain, and In pari\nal-o to the fact that any diaturtianoe of the difen\nlive function necessarily disorders the liver, the\nbowels and the nervous system, and effects ro\nsonic extent, the quality of the blood.\nE. K Hankers Hitter Wine of Ironlsasare\ncure. ThU Is not a new preparation, to he tried\naud found wanting; K has been prescribed dally\nfor many years in the pra tice of eminent pnysl-\nclans with unparaleMediucccss. It is notexpect\n or Intenaed to euie all the dlseaaos to wnich\nthe human family ts snb'ect., hnt is warranted to\ncure Dyspepsia in its most obstinate form. Knn\nfeel's Hitter Wine of Iron never fails to\ncare, symptoms of Dtspepnia a e loss of appe­\ntite, wind »nd tJalngof iQe food, dryness of the\nmonth, hearttinrn, distention of <he stomach and\nbowels, constipation, headache, dizziness, sleep\nlesftiiessand iow spirits Try the grettreme y\nand tie convinced of its merits, (iet the genuine\nTake only Hunkers which 1b put up only In ou\ndollar bottles. Depot, 2->t) North Ninth Street,\nPhiladelphia Pa. It never faPs For sale by all\nDrugging «nd dealer- everywhere.\nA*k for K. F. KunkeTs Hitter Wln« of Iron and\ntake no other. *ix bottles for five dollars, or one\ndollar per bottle.
32ecdeec2013b3967996ff6ec1a53907 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.6561643518519 39.745947 -75.546589 vertised and appraised by a compe­\ntent official. The secretary has can­\ncelled all sales made prior to the time\nthat the new regulations took effect.\nThere were 429 of these deeds, calling\nfor an aggregate payment of $369,000.\nAll these deeds, with the checks, have\nbeen returned to the purchasers, and\nthe prices received on inherited lands\nIndicate that under the new regula­\ntions the prices paid will exceed the\nold prices by from 15 to 125 per cent.\nUnder the law the secretary has con­\ntrol of the land sales, and is able to\nthrow many safeguards around them\nfor the protection of the Indian own­\ners, most of who he appreciates are\nentirely Ignorant of business methods\nand easily made the tools of designing\nmen, whether leaders of their own\nrace or white men. In one case the\nsecretary found during his stay In\nIndian territory that clerks in the\noffice of an Indian agent had taken on\nthemselves the responsibility for de­\nnying a hearing to their national at­\ntorney, who represented some 14,000\nIndians. A favorite method for se­\ncuring the leases is to have the In­\ndians approached by merchants, who,\nby offering their wares in \ncan secure the most favorable terras\nfor them, and the understanding is\nquite general that when control of\na piece of land Is once secured by\nmeans of leasing It will be held by\nsome means until It can be purchased\nat the lessee's own figures.\nThe secretary realises that while\nthere may be shoîtcomlngs on the\npart of some of the government offi­\ncials, there are, on the other hand,\nmany men not employed by the gov­\nernment who have grievances against\nthese same officials and are disposed\nto make all the trouble for them they\ncan. These men he designates as\n“grafters," and the feeling In the de­\npartment Is that any officials who may\noppose their designs Is certain to be\nmade the subject cf the harshest cen­\nsure by them. T'.:o L ioretary announces\nhis determination to protect officials\nwho are doing their duty against the\nschemes of all such people.\nSeveral officials, who already have\nbeen detected In questionable trans­\nactions. have been summarily dismiss­\ned, while the resignations of otherr,\nhave been requested. The secretary\ntakes the position that it does not\npromote the public Interest to pub­\nlia« the names of dismissed officials.
254746571ecbb3b4ff26f4f8c46a7eb5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.8397259956876 39.745947 -75.546589 7. Because we believe that the licensed saloons and hotels are absolutely a necessity for\nthe public at large and if well conducted they should have every good citizens protection; if\nunlawfully conducted, let the punishment be as severe as possible under the law.\nNot many weeks ago Wilmington gave one of the largest public demonstrations in its\nhistory (the great firemens parade); our city was in the hands of strangers; at least 50,000 of\nthem, it is estimated, came here either to take part or witness the great festivities, the parade\nand decorations- Hotels and saloons were wide open, the visiting firemen and marines from\nthe North and South were represented; thousands thronged our streets by day and night, and\nwith all the liberty extended to them by our city, our police department did not have one single\narrest of a serious nature during the three days. Besides our city and State secured\nwell earned acknowledgment and advertisement, which will be of great and lasting benefit.\n8. The German-American Alliance is not the promoter or representative of the saloon\ninterest; far from it. Our motto is and forever will be Personal Liberty. The alliance despises\nlaw breaking and hypocrisy. The alliance is also the representative of the workingman who\ncannot afford to become a member of fashionable clubs and the open saloon is the only place\nwhere he, after his days labor, can refresh himself. The German-American Alliance condemns\nintemperance and believes that the cause of good morals and temperance can be much more\nbenefited by a regular license law than by secret drinking. The alliance favors public saloons\nif conducted according to law and order, because it is the only solution of the much talked of\nTemperance, Local Option or Prohibition question.
2d378c935468da2b89685677b4e6769f THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.7445354875026 39.369864 -121.105448 'lmproved Flume—Dunning's Undercur-\nrent.—Saturday last, in company with Mr.\n•George Mcllardy, of this place, we had the\ncuriosity to visit "Willow Creek, at a point south-\neast of Fosters Bar, to witness the operations\n•of a flume erected by the latter gentleman, after\na manner somewhat novel, and entirely peculiar\nto himself, with Dunnings Undercurrent at-\ntached. We shall attempt to describe it.\nThe-creek for several miles above, and partic-\nularly where it spreads out over a wide surface,\nis filled—in some places to the depth of twenty\n•or thirty feet—with rich deposits of sand and\ngravel,'borne down by the waters from an exten-\nsive hydraulic mining section along the hill-sides.\nThe object of Mr. Mcllardy* improvement is to\n•catch the gold from these deposits, or tailings,\nwhen the rainy season sets in, and the volume\n■of water is sufficient in the bed of the creek to\nset them inmotion. At a point nearly a mile\nffidlow Garden Valley, where the mountains close\nin, and have narrowed the cation to a limit of\n. about 60 feet across, Mr. Mcllardy has erected\na staunch and permanent dam, feet high.\nAlready the tailings have lodged against this\ndam, and filled it in to a level with the topmost\nlog. Anticipating this result, two ohlique wings\nfrom the banks on either side, arc constructed,\nwhich direct the water through a shoot, 12 feet\nwide, directly over the center of the clam. Im-\nmediately beneath this shoot, is placed one of\nDunnings Undercurrents. This consists of a\nscries of parallel iron bars, 8 or 10 fret in length,\nabout a half-inch apart, over which the largest\nportion of the water dashes, and is permitted to\nescape. Beneath the Undercurrent is a trans-\nverse sluice, twelve feet w ide, into which the gold\ndrops, w ith a portion of sand and fine gravel,\nand a sufficient amount of water to form two\ndistinct currents, one to the right and the other\nto the left, which flow into two other sluices, each\n140 feet in length, laid with blocks, between the\ninterstices of which arc deposits of quicksilver,\nto catch and retain the gold. These sluices also\ncontain cross-bars of iron, or “riffles,” to break\nthe force of the waters.
1d792d1579345ca62cba314ca553adba THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.1657533929476 29.949932 -90.070116 No. 19u--State of Louisiana, appellee, vs.\nFrank King, appellant-Appeal from the First\nJustice Court, parish of Orleans- F. King and D.\nC. Labatt, for appellant, and attorney general for\nappellee and the State.\nThe 8tate tax collector has instituted this suit\nto recover of the defendant the sum of fifty dol\nlars, claimed as his license for practicing law for\nthe year lF•4. There was judgment in favor of\ntha.plainuff, and the defenaant has appealed.\nThe defendant bases his defence upon the fol-\nlowing grounds in his peremptory exception :\n1. Because the citation has been instituted by\nthe 8tate tax collector, who is without authority\nin law to do so. the attorney general and the dis-\ntrict attorney being the only persons authorized\nto institute suits in the name of the State.\n2. Because there is no law of the State of Lun-\nisiana a tax or license on defendant's oc-\ncupation, the act approved April 4, 1865, being\ncontrary to article 124 of the Constitution of 1864,\nand article 118 of the Constitution of 1868, and\ntherefore null and void.\n3. Because attorneys at law are licensed by the\ncourts under a general law of the State, and can\nhave no restrictions imposed upon the exercise of\ntheir profession, except as provided by law fol\nsome violation of professional duty; that, as at-\ntorney at law, he has a vested right in his profes-\nsion, and the license originally granted to him is\nevidence of it; that this right caunot be divested\nexcept by due process of law, and any attempt by\nthe state to impose a license or onerous condition\nupon him, for pursuing his profession, is contrary\nto the Constitution of the United States and of\ntLis State.
163b34fad5a94a2ed3e17a2e6d00dd37 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.2616438039067 35.780398 -78.639099 well aS for their energy and unlforai deport""\nment, there you will sorely find, not only\nbrisk and lively trade, but a population free\nfrom most of these fopperies and follies\nwhich arc degenerating and impoverishing\nthe present generation. It is a lamentable\nfact but nevertheless it ia a fact that it\nis a aoramon thing iu this country for nion-ie- d\nsnobs and brainless fops to look down\nupon Mechanics as an inferior class of be-\ning ; and, unfortunately for the cause of\nlabor, many Mechanics encourage, rather\nthan repel with disgust, this assumption on\nthe part of snobbery, because they refuse\nto exercise those nobic elements with\nwhich God has endowed them to rend as-\nunder those tyranical bands with which,\nwhat is miscalled social life, lias so long\nkept them fettered. We would have\nevery Mechanic ia the land feel his\n and to realize that it is the noble\nbrotherhood, of which Ire is apart, coupled\nwith tho cultivators of the soil, that form\nthe great basis upon which all other inter-\nests depend, liecauso your daily toil may\nconfine you within the walls of a small\nroom, it is no reason why you should re-\nmain ignorant of the principles of science\nor the great truths of philosophy. Take\nfor your guide some one of the im-\nmortal names that have gone before you,\nmen who, though passed from the scene of\nactual operations have left their names em-\nbalmed in the hearts of coming generations\nand determine to be Men '\nTo be a good Mechanic the mind mmt\nbe cultivated as well as the muscles, for it is\nimpossible to excel in any branch, however\ninsignificant, without some knowledge of\ngeneral laws.
47de6e5574693291fd35e29f9aac09fe THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.3986301052764 37.451159 -86.90916 theySubliminal\nA vest well known oculist tells of\none case where healing through the\nsubliminal consciousness was really a\nsource of embarrassment to the physi ¬\ncian who was responsible for it Sev ¬\neral years ago when the eye specialist\nhe knows about ears and throats too\nwas studying in Vienna a young girl\nwas brought to the hospital to be treat\ned for some nervous disorder Hypno ¬\ntism or suggestion as onO la asked to\ncall it these dayswas used and sho\nwas brought under his influence by\nthe ringing of a bell After a few\ntreatments she went to sleep or Into\nthe unconscious and receptive state as\nsoon as she heard the bell She was\nspeedily cured and left the hospital\nNext day she was brought unconscious\nroused and sent away The day after\nthat she was in again Indeed\nfor some time scarcely a day passed\nwhen sho wasnt carried in limp and\nunconscious She became a positive\nnuisance to the great neurologist that\nhad hypnotized her andhe finally sent\npersons to watch her It was found\nthat on her way to work she passed a\ncertain church and usually was at the\ndoor at the moment during the cele-\nbration of the mass when the bell rang\nAt Its tinkle she calmly curled up and\nwent to sleep It was necessary to\nsuggest to her the next time she was\nbrought to the hospital that no boll in\nthe world could have any effect on her\nexcept the one rung in the hospital by\nthe neurologist After that she went\nabout the city quite unaffected by the\nbelle and the neurologist drew a breath\nof relief Waihlngton Herald
0837323373f2a689ffc80a69b33ac351 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1896.960382482038 41.004121 -76.453816 the exact wording of the message\nsent by the caucus of Republican\nSenators to King Hanna, it contains\nthe substance and real meaning of\nthe request of the caucus steering\ncommittee, that Mr. Ilanna shall\ntry to "influence" the election of\nSenators who will pledge them-\nselves to act with the Republicans\non the tariff, in several states.\nAmong the legislatures upon which\nthe Republican Senators desire Mr.\nIlanna to try his ' influence" are\nthose ef North Carolina, Kentucky,\nWashington and South Dakota. If\nhigh tariff Senators can be secured\nfor all these, the passage of a high\ntariff bill at the extra session of the\nnext Congress will be assured.\nOtherwise the matter has been made\nvery doubtful, with the chances\nagainst high tariff, by the action of\nthe silver Republicans in declining\ninvitations to enter the Republican\nSenatorial caucus.\nWhile the caucus of Republican\nSenators not by a formal vote\nabandon the Dingley tariff bill, they\ndid what was practically the same\nthing when they referred it to the\nsteering committee and empowered\nthat committee to act upon its own\njudgment. Pressure from the wool-\nen manufacturers may compel the\nRepublican Senators to demonstrate\nby some sort of a vote, not necessar-\nily on the bill itself, that the Ding-le- y\nbill cannot pass, but the bill is\nas dead as Ben. Harrison's force\nbill, so far as any serious attempt\nto pass it is concerned. The Re-\npublicans couldn't pass it if they\nwanted to, and very few of them\nwant to. This was shown last week\nwhen the bill was before the Senate\nfor a few minutes (on Senator Al-\nlen's motion to take it up, which\ncarried by a vote of 35 to 21), by\nthe consternation which existed\namong the Republicans who had
2f253627c03133b3d5c125dedb3bfc3e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.423287639523 58.275556 -134.3925 Secretary of the Interior Department\nLane granted a leave of absence with¬\nout pay, of one month, to Arthur P.\nDavis, chief engineer of the reclama¬\ntion service, in order that he might go\nto Juneau, Alaska, for consultation re¬\ngarding the design and construction of\na high masonry dam which is to be\nbuilt on Salmon creek to develop power\nfor mining purposes.\nFred Church, a young man who com¬\nmitted suicide by taking laudauum a\nmonth ago at Ruby, left the following\npoetic evidence of his mental condition:\n"I'm off on a long journey, some time\nto stay; I'll take a little laudauum and\ncrawl in the hay. If you look for any\nconfession of crime, by the way, you'll\nfind it along with me, buried in the\nhay. My love weut blinder\neach day . on till darkness came and\ncast it away. God bless each sweet¬\nheart that ntood in the door and waited\nyearly for his return once more .'tis\nmy insane prayer."\nRailway and Marine News, the trans\nportation paper published by J. P . Par¬\nkinson, is to have a new editor in the\nperson of Kenneth C. Kerr, he having\npurchased an interest in the paper.\nMr. Kerr has resigned from the posi¬\ntion of industrial agent of the Alaska\nSteamship Company, but will continue\nin the employ of tho^e two corporations\nunder the direction of Vice President\nR. W. Baxter. He haw doue spleudid\nwork exploiting the resources and pos¬\nsibilities of Alaska and has sent tons of\ndescriptive literature into the East, the\nSouth aud the Middle West.
184cf353dec65f0425cb1a62b704d7a9 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.3155737388686 31.960991 -90.983994 The following extracts are made from more\nthan twelve hundred favorable notices of the\nork, in the possession of the publisher.\nTo persons who desire to obtain cheaply,\nsound mercantile knowledge; and who are they\nthat could not be benefitted by such knowledge?\nknow of no other means where so much can\nbo procured at the same expense. You might he\ndeterred from even opeuing, with such a title,\nfrom the supposed dryness and exclusiveness of\nthe subjects. But an agreeable surprise awaits\nthose who take the best means of testing its\nmerits, that is reading a volume, and few will\nread one who will not secure to themselves the\npleasure and the profit of the residue. Tothose\nwho are called upon the very high duty of legi­\nslation on the mercantile policy of the 0. States.\nHunts Magazine may be pronounced unhesita­\ntingly indispensable.— Nat. Intel.\nThe character of the Merchants Magazine is\ntoo well known to require puffing; but to those\nunacquainted with its contents, if any they \nwould say it. is a magazine filled with mat­\nter, compiled with great care and labor, and gi­\nving to the merchant such information as can­\nnot be found in any other work of a similar na­\nture in Europe and America. —N. O. Com. Bui.\nThe Merchants Magazine continues to sus­\ntain its excellent reputation, and to increase\nconstantly in public favor. No periodical in the\ncountry is conpucted with more industry, intel­\nligence and judiciousness of adaytion to the in­\nterest of the class for whose particular bene,fit\nit is published. It took the right ground at first\nand has maintained it manfully. No where else\ncan be in so compendious a form, and such ex­\ncellence of arrangement, so large an amount of\nmercantile matter, and so uniformly valuable.\nMr. Hunt more than redeems his pledges to the\npublic in every issue of his excellent periodical.\n—N. Y. Cour. & Enq.\nThe Magazine is regarded by our most emi­\nnent merchants and statesmen as the best work
9427e4eff8e0fcc1e4af21bce4a8f204 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.0671232559614 43.798358 -73.087921 For the amendment of the Constitution\nof this State assembled at Montpelier on\nthe 4th inst. By lefercnce to the report\nof the proceedings in our paper it will be\nseen that the Democrats have a majority\nof from twenty to thiity in the Conveniijii,\nand of course have availed themselves of ii\nto elect the officeiS from their own ranks.\nThis result was ue suppose purely acci- -\nueiitai, vry tittle interest caving been Mi\nin me election ci tne Jjclegatts. The\nDemocrats probably ev.iov beini? in the as\ncendancy not a little; ft is certainly so long\nsince they wer so before in any of our\nrepreseniaiive bodies, that the situation\nmust have the charm of novelty, but\nwhether, novelty always has its charms\nperhaps the whigs among them will be in-\nclined to From the tone of public\nopinion as we gather it from the papers\nthroughout the Stale, wa are inclined to\nbelieve the Convention will adjourn with-\nout the adoption of any of the measures\nrecommended by the Council of Consors.\nCould we get nd of the Council of Cen-\nsors themselves and adopt the same liber-\nal mode for amending the Cons'itutioo\nwhich generally prevails with. a reference\nof all proposed changes ultimately lo the\npeople themselves, we think Yhe alteration\nwould be a valuable one, but the Conven-\ntion are not at liberty to make such a\nsweeping change, they having no power\nto act upon any mailer not referred to them,\nand approved by the wisdom of a majority\nof the thirteen wise heads tf which the\nCouncil of Censors was composed. Ver,\nVermonler.
36ab2a8c704b9ace2b6160b89299ab3c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.064383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 bound her, as with hooks of steel, to\nbor who had given her life and being,\nin an evil hour elected for herself a\nseparate State organization, with cer¬\ntainly no verr friendly feelings towards\nthose with whom she had been connec¬\nted by finch intimate if not sacred rela¬\ntions. West Virginia is a free and in¬\ndependent State,In the full and success¬\nful exercise of all the functions, organ¬\nization and representation in her State\nlegislature, as well as in the Federal\nCongress, and it is. gravely proposed\nthat an impoverished people, divested\n°LaJ,argo P°rti°n or their rights and\nprivileges, ignorant alike of our. pres¬\nent position and future condition,\nshould earnestly invite her to share our\nfallen state, gloomy prosperity and un-\ncertain fate. If the position and condi¬\ntion*^ the two States wer? reversed,\nthen hiight Virginia, without" any loss\nof selfrrespect ordespehtfrom thejdigni-\nfled position which she has always sus¬\ntained, and in accordance with that no-\nbio philanthropy, disinterested friend¬\nship and generosity, has always\nbeeri chara'ctoristic of her people, invite\nback, and w.ith outstretched arms, re ¬\nceive the wayward daughter. But poor\nand humiliated-as the good old mother\nof us all maybe, she is hot yet so poor\nbut that there are some, and the under^\nsigned claim, to be.of that number, who\nwill still do her reverence, and they\nearnestly protest against her further\nhumiliation by inviting back those who\nwithout just cause, have'becomea sep-\nerate, independent, prosperous, ana,\nperhaps, an alienated people, nntil they\nshall manifest in some formal manner\na disposition for a re-union.\nThe undersigned have not deemed it\nadvisable to discuss the advantage or\ndisadvantage which might result to\neither or both States from a re-union,\nbeing or opinion that it will be quite\ntime, enough for this when a re-union is\nat all. probable. They agree with the\ncommittee as to the propriety and mode\nor settling the debts between the two\nSlates. The undersigned respctrully\nrecommend the adoption of the follow¬\ning resolution:
0e63549e54b705af7e2920909d6877b5 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.105479420345 39.743941 -84.63662 My practice is to excavate in the early\nspring time as many flat turnips as are\nneeded and having nued tne cavity witn\nearth, plant two or three seeds in it\nselecting the best plant, when two inch-\nes or three inches high, to remain,\nand pulling out the others; when it is\ntime to set them in the garden, place\nthe turnip, with its contents undisturbed.\nin a hole deep enough to cover tne tur-\nnip two inches or three inches. Setting\nout in this way, there is no cutting away\nof the roots and little need of water, as\nthe plant has not been in the least dis-\nturbed, especially if inured to the air\nout of doors for a week or two before be-\ning set in the garden. I have started\ntomatoes out so early inat tne plants\nwere in blossom several days before be-\ning set out, not being at all checked or\nretarded in growth thereby. Cucumbers\nstarted in the way l nave nao in\nbloom when set out with the same result\nAfter being put in the ground the tur-\nnip soon decays, furnishing a little food\nfor the plant. If the turnips are to be\nkept long in the house before setting out.\nit will be well to put them in boxes, filling\nthe interstices with moss, sand, or earth,\nkept moist, as too long exposure to the\nhot air of a warm place will cause the\nturnips to wilt the earth in which must\nbe kept moist, whether the turnip is in\nor out of a box. Another point is that\ninstead of being at the trouble of procur-\ning sharpening, and setting stakes, and\npulling and taking care of them at the\nend of the season, I started into growth\nsome sunflower seeds. To prevent too\nmuch shade I cut off the leaves of the\nsunflower as farjabove the tomato plant\nas is necessary to give it all the air and\nsunlight desirable.
25dee6e5b0ee564b0d9a6e518a3f7e0d WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1873.0041095573313 40.827279 -83.281309 A Farts telegram of the 19th says the\nSeine had overflowed in that city. The\nquays were flooded, and the stores near\nthem were closed. All traffic in that quar-\nter was carried on by beats. Beyond Bercy,\na suburb oa the right bank of the Seine,\nhouses in the vicinity of the river were\nstanding in one vast lake of water. Dis-\npatches from Ghent, Belgium, of the same\ndate, report that the streams in that section\nhad risen above their embankments, and\nthe country was Inundated. The water waa\nthree feet deep in some of the streets.\nA crisis occurred In the Spanish Cabinet on\nthe 30th, and the Ministers of Finance, Pub-\nlic Works and Colonies have retired. Senor\nEchegary has been appointed Minister of\nFinance ; Becerra, Minister Public Works,\nand Mosquera, Minister ot Colonies.\nLarge portions of the country in Leicester,\nDerby and Nottingham, England, were sub-\nmerged, on tha 20th, by floods. In some\nsections of these counties the tops of trees\nand hedges only were visible.\nA dispatch from Liverpool on the 20th\nsays that 449 persons, including passengers,\nhad perished by marine disasters within the\nprevious ten days. Thirty persons were lost\nby the sinking of the ship Matchless, off\nNorthumberland County.\nThere was a demonstration In Paris on the\n20th of three thousand students. In favor of\nProfessor Robin, a distinguished member of\nthe Institnte, who had been struck from the\njury list in consequence of his disbelief in\nthe existence of God.\nThe freshet In the Seine was subsiding on\nthe 21st.
24f45365239638b32aafcb1688eb9933 LAS VEGAS MORNING GAZETTE ChronAm 1881.1575342148656 35.593933 -105.223897 on Lincoln Street. He says the peo-\nple will have it run nowhere except\naround by the hotels. (I don't sup\npose it would make any dillerence if\nthe hotels were situated east ot the\nrailroad.on a hill sli.l higher than the\nhill they are situated on. I would\nlike lo know iu this connection who\nconstitute the people. It is the opin\nion ol the writer thai I he Optic has\nin view simply the editor and the\nlandlords of the hotels. I am ceriain\nthat if the road is built (and that it,\nwill be I have no doubt) it will be by\nsome of the best people in the city\nand furthermore that a large major!\nty of our best citizens will be smüs- -\nlied with Iheir judgment in to\nlocation -- and bv the way if Lincoln\nstreet is flooded how is the Optic Sa\nvan I to cross the bridge or even to\nget on o it in order to cross when the\nfact is apparent that both I lie bridge\nand its approaches are lower lhau any\nportion of Lincoln Street and what, a\nplight the business .portion of East\nLas Vegas will be in anyway when\nthe water gets so high. Lincoln Av-\nenue is nearly level aud the road on\nthat line can be operated with a groat\n(ieai less wear ami tear ana conse\nquently less expense and will arcom\nmodate the public, at large just as\nwell at present and much better in\nthe near in ture than the mountain\nroute, and to conclude. Lincoln
671223ce90e017a7b6527ef95db5d824 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.727397228564 39.560444 -120.828218 patch— we then went down a creek which\ncomes in three or four miles above the\nButtes, camped there and tried digging,\nbut could not get a goodprospect of black\nsand—and our onions giving out we broke\nup camp and went round the Buttes for\nmore as we were losing the pork fat with-\nout them; we then put for the Buttes and\nas Mr. R. had returned to the Forks we\nwere left without a compass, so we could\ngo just where we pleased and camp at an\nonion patch every night. We next went\nround the Buttes and camped beside a\nLake and prospected but got nothing.—\nWe then went to the head waters of the\nmiddle branch of the North Fcrk and\nfound gold,but as our supplies were getting\nshort and we were without the range of\nonions we packed up and went back to\nthe Forks. Then the question was “what\nsuccess this time?” Some of the boys\nwho were with me made a pretty fare\nspree out of this trip at the expense of\nthe curious hombres who would get them\nin their cabins, treat them a few times—-\nand then came the “Come\nJoe tell us, did you make anything big\nthis time ?” Jot would give a knowing\nwink as much as to say “lay low and keep\ndark and I will tell you all bye-and-bye.\nbut you must keep very quiet and not let\nany one know it.” “Oh no, I will not tell,\nI am not such a fool as all that—come\nJoe and lets have something to drink;\ncome on Jack and bring in the other\nboys.” Joe would say “come here just a\nsecond" and then he w ould look at him\nearnestly and whisper to him “just Jive\nhundred to the pan.'” and says Joe, “I\ndont know when the Major is going out\nagain, but I am going with him, and any-\nthing I tell, you must keep dark.” “No\nfears of me Joe for whatever you tell none\nshall know—come lets go and drink, the\nother Boys are waiting for us; what will\nyou have ?" and the spree commenced and\nwas kept up four or five days. You will\nbe wondering where I was all the while\nthis was going on; well most of the time\nI was at C. Simmons Store.
1b2b39cf4f0e96258cbc1cb9832891d0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.7027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 KMUUS AnRlVKS ON TUB SCKSB.\nAs she Slid it, Junghaus returned with\nthe beer. While he was out lor it he met\nEmblen, who asked if his wile was at his\n(Junghans').honse, and on being told that\nshe was, said he would go up and see her.\nFiltering the rear door together, Junghaus\ntold his wile to tell Mis. Emblen that her\nhusband wanted to Bee her. Jungbans and\nhis wife say that at this time Emblen step¬\nped towards the bedroom, aBii that Bald-\nwin stepped out into tbo kitchen, that\nboth men pulled revolvers and commenced\nUrine, and that both fell, then rose, anil\nthat kiublen chased Baldwin out doors\nand down the alley; that while the shoot-\nine was iu progress Mrs. Junghaus stepped\n(rom the bedroom into the kitcheuaud\nreceived a shot, bhe affirmed that\nEmblen shot her, although how \ncould have given her the .wound\nshe has, standing where she Bays he did, it\nwould V hard to imagine. JuughauB\npicked up bis little boy and gat out. Baft\ning all the lusilade not a word or cry was\nuttered. The woman went away a ter the\nshooting, but where she went to, they did\nnot know. The above is the substance of\nthe vague and unsatisfactory Btones they\ntold, and no ona was found In that neigh¬\nborhood who could give any more definite\nparticulars, except one man who saw the\nman in his shirt sleeves (Baldwin) knocked\ndown by Emblen as they ran down the\nalloy. The charwtir of Mis. Jungbsgs\nwound could not oe determined before\nthis morning, although itwas believed to he\nserious. Mrs. flmblen, Mr. and Mrs. Jung-\nliana said, bad not called there before for\nfour months.
01732572376c04859f37dbb4d8597df8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.924863356355 39.261561 -121.016059 Suction 1. There shall be, and is hereby levied\nupon all assessed and taxable property within the\ncorporate limits of the city of Nevada, for the fiscal\nyear, ending May 1861 a tax ot fifty cents upon each\nono hundred dollars of assessed value.\nSue. 2. It shall be, and is hereby made the duty\noi the Cftv Marshal or his Deputy, to collect said\ntaxes , tsaid Collector shall forthwith give notice, by\npublication in some newspaper, published in this\ncity, that the city taxes are due and payable, and\nthe time and place at which he will receive the snnu*;\nalso, that the law in regard to their collection, will\nbe strictly enforced.\n8*c. 3. Upon the first Monday in January 1861.\nat the close of the business hours for that day, tlie\ntax collector shall enter upon the tax list or assess-\nment roil, a statement, that he has made a levy upon\nall the property assessed in said roll, and upon which\nthe taxes have not been paid. On or before the third\nMonday of January 1861, the tax collector shallcom-\npletc a list ot all persons and property then owing\ntaxes, and the tax collector in addition to the tax\nlevied, shall collect upon each delinquent, the sum\not one dollar, as costs incurred in preparing and pub-\nlishing the delinquent list.\nSkc. 4. On or before the first of February.\n1861 the tax collector shall cause the delinquent tax\nlist to be published, giving the name of the owner\nof all real estate and all improvements on the same,\ntogether with such a condense! description of the\nproperty, that it may he easily known, and also a\nsimilar condensed description of any real estate or\nimprovements assessed to unknown owners ; and also\nopposite each name or description, the amount of\ntaxes, including costs, duefrom each delinquent per-\nson or property ; such list, with the levy thereon, as\nheretofore provided, shall be published h»r three suc-\ncessive weeks, in some newspajier. or supplement to\na newspajier, published in the city of Nevada. Such\npublication shall also designate the time and place of\nthe sale, which shall not be less than twenty one or\nmore than twt-nty eight days from the first np|tf*ar-\nance of the publication. All real estate shall be sold\nin front of the Court House door, and all sales shall\nbe made by the Marshal or his deputies.\n8ec. 5. The provisions of the Act on titled an Act\nto provide revenue for the support of the Government\nof this Mate, approved Apnl 29th 1857, from Sec. 16\nto Sec. 28 inclusive of said act. shall control, direct\nand regulate the sale, issuance of certificate, record\nand all further proceedings of the tax collector, under\nthe foregoing ordinance.
220d078fe3c753df32827e0f7700d2ef THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.2698629819888 40.832421 -115.763123 In every community, cillier in city,\nvillage or country a good school is au\nitem i f the greatest importance. Too\nlittle nttentiun to this subject is fre¬\nquently the ciiks. H'ucc the unsniis*\nfactory results in uiauy of our public\nschools. No leather, however well\nqualified to tesch nnd govern, can we'.l\nsu .eecil unless patrons and pupils can\nba made to feci that there is au obligi.\ntioti resting on them as well an with tho\nteacher. C'r.ier is Nature's first law,\nand in nny school wheie oriler is not\nuiftiutaiuod thero can bo little if any\nprolkioncy. Tho code of our Ktato\ncluthcs tho teacher with tho power to\nmnko aud enforce Much rule# and rcgu -\nlatioiiH, us are needful for tho govern-\nuicnt of those entrusted in his or her\ncharye, aud tho teiclur who fails in\nthis duty will sulely fail in nil others,\nliut the teacher may fall lu this and\ndeserve ni ci-nsuio. Parents aud guar¬\ndians who lend a listening ear to the\ncomplaints mid whimt if their childnn\nwill soon i ntertnin th* idea that the\nteacher is in fault, aud to express tbrin-\nsolved before their childrtn. From this\nI upils gathi r courage fo resist the will\no( the teacher, and n rupture euancs,\n to tho whole school. Tho\nbent of teachers cannot succce I under\nsuch circumstances. Cut let patrons do\ntheir duty in the following pirticul.us:\nSen lhal their children are regular in\nattendance, that they uro aliv.ijs on\ntimo, and if complaints nro made suffi¬\ncient to justify investigation visit the\nschool. Inquire of thc.teacber. If you\nwish the teacher to ma&o exceptions in\nfavor of your childret., for the beii< fit\nof tho school you could no do hi tier than\nto wi'h Iraw your p'ipils.\nL,< t palioim sustain and cncourage\nthe teacher whoso interest as «oll as\nyours is involved in the success of the\nschool, mid iu spito of tin <lT >rls of Ibe\nmost incorriger.blo and stubborn pupils,\nthe school will move on suoct stlully\nmid smoothly. I. it those who are\nalways seeking for cause of complaint\nagainst tho teacher, place themselvrs\nfor once in his or her situation, and\nthey will so- 11 be conviced that tho\nteacher who can please all is comething\nmorn than hitmen. And the teacher\nwho heeds the unreasonable complaints\nfrom any source, and ao moulds his\npolicy to pleaso, by departing from es¬\ntablished and wholesome rulis, will\nutterly fail in dii'y. hr>/.ard his reputa¬\ntion, mid generally ruin tho school.
32babc220284dfcc60fa35e42e399312 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.878082160071 37.451159 -86.90916 had been corduroyed to allow travel\nover them in winter Mr Sam C\nLancaster persuaded the county of\nflclals that macadamizing these roads\nwould be a cheaper and more last-\nIng Improvement and so It proved Um\nbe Then came a good roads COM\nventlon and the building of a 1000\nfoot objectlesson road It aroused a\nV good deal of enthusiasm but no defi\nnite steps were taken Then came\nthe winter of great mud In 10022\nThe roads were impassable It ra\nquired two strong mules to draw a\nmilk wagon with two milk cans and\nall day was consumed in going a few\nmiles For more than six weeks this\ncondition prevailed No ono attempts\nto pass over these roads except In\ncabe of dire necessity the farmers\nwere locked In and all trade was stop\nped The opportune moment had ar\n A massmeeting of the cIt-\nIzens was called and all those who\ncould get to 9t came In the midst\nof the debate about tho necessary\nbond Issue a farmer arose and said\nMr Chairman lam just a plain\nfarmer and have no business trying to\ntalk in this meeting I am all cov\nered with mud there Is mud on my\nboots and all over my clothes and\nmy hat is all spattered up too I\nwalked to this meeting because my\nhorse couldnt travel the roads 1vt\ngot a little farm and sawmill out on\nthe Poplar Corner road Just a little\nover two miles from town and If I\ncould get up on a hard road with my\ntruck and what lumber Ive sawed I\ncould clear enough In one day to pay\nmy tax on that road but I haven 4\ngot It
4381130c11c565444be4574c6945ec65 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0698629819888 41.681744 -72.788147 City Treasurer George S. Beach,\nwho Is also a momber of the finance\ncommittee, was present and in-\nformed the council that the city can\nstill issue bonds to the extent cf\n$440,000 , and keep within the five\nper cent limit. This is based on a\ngrand list of the city of $56,000,000.\nMr. Beach again recommended to\nthe" city council that somo definite\naction be taken toward the es-\ntablishment of a sinking fund to\ntake care of the $600,000 city im-\nprovement bonds which mature in\n1952 and which were a part of the\n$1,350 ,000 bond Issue floated ln\n1922. The $760,000 balance of the\nbond Issue are being retired at the\nrate of $25,000 each year, but as\nMr. Beach pointed out, unless some\naction was taken to care for the\nimprovement bonds, the coming gen-\neration would find themselves faced\nwith a difficult task In 1952. Mr.\n stated that he had for the\npast few years called this matter to\nthe attention of the council, but\neach year action was deferred until\nthe next budget was approved.\nCouncilman Charles R, Anderson\nsuggested that the finance board\nprepare a table showing just what\nwould be required financially to es-\ntablish a sinking fund whereby the\nentire amount might be taken care\nof on the due dato and also another\ntable showing the yearly appropria-\ntions necessary, to retire half the\namount by the date of expiration.\nThis Mr. Beach agreed to do, but it\nis probable that nothing definite will\nbe done in the matter this year.\nJfew Britain Guards Here Tonight\nOne of the largest crowds ever to\nwitness a basketball contest in re-\ncent years in this city Is expected to\njam its way Into the Bristol High\nschool gym tonight when two of the\nleading contenders for the state
018aa4a90a5a581ae591e1758b9784cd DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1884.8128414984315 39.745947 -75.546589 The anuual session of the Great Coun­\ncil of Dels ware, Improved Order of Red\nMen, convened iu this city yesterday,at\nthe wigwam, Sixth and Shipley streets.\nGreat Sachem George E. Temple deliv­\nered a long talk,during which he show­\ned tbe order to be in a flourishing con­\ndition, ami reported that two\ntribes were instituted during the year,\nWissahickon, No 20, at Selby ville,\nand Nanticoke, No. 21, at Georgetown.\nHe also paid a short tribute to tbe\nmemories of Past Grand Inoohonees\nDaniel W. Carter and Joshua Maris.\nThe long talk of Great, Chief of Rec­\nords, Joseph A. Bond, showed receipts\namounting to $1*,2UK .15 and disburse­\nments o f*i 130.30, leaving a net bal­\nance on hand for the t^rm of $73.05,\nwbich iu addition to tbe amount iu\nbank at tbe commencement of the term\namounts to a total of $775.15 . The net\nincrease in membership has been 337,\nmaking tbe present membership 1,616.\nReports of the subordinate tribes show\nthat the total receipts of the different\ntribes from all sources were $11,868 29\nof which $5,747.73 is invested ami $V\n836.25 on baud. During the year $3,\n829.24 was expended benefits, relief\nto widows, funerals aud other charitable\npurposes. An election of new chiefs re\nsuited as follows :\nGreat sachem, E. B. Riggio, Rossa-\nk aturn Tribe, No, 15, of Laurel ; great\nprophet, Joseph Pyle, Keokuk, No. 3,\nof Wilmington ; gr* at senior sagamore,\nAaron W. Sliaw. Hopockoliacking, Nc.\n11, of Wflmingt n ; great junior saga­\nmore, William A. Moore, Leu ape, No.\n0, of Wllmidg:. m ; grt)at chief of re­\ncords, T. H . It. Mesaiuger, Matiaboon,\nNo. 11, of Wilmington ; great keeper\nof wampum, James S. Moore, Keokuk,\nNo 3, of Wilmington ; représenta lives\nto the great council, Josepu A. Bond of\nIjonape, No. 6, and.Ioublia M. Clayton,\nof Mattahoou, No. 11. After the great\nchiefs had been raised to their respec­\ntive stumps the new great sachem\n:uade the following appointments: Great\nmeshiiieva, William H. Bm ce of Nan­\nticoke, No. 21, of oeorg* tow u ; great\nsannap, George E. Byron, Leuape, No.\n6, of Wilmington ; great guard of th«\nwigwam, B. P . Connor, Seminole, No.\n5, New Castle ; great guard of tbe for­\nant, A. A . Outten, Minqua, No. 8, of\nWilmington.
07b1507ac866209dbc93543d5488cce9 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.7657533929478 44.939157 -123.033121 Dividing the state into four or five\ndistricts with a deputy inspector and\nsealer for each district, to devote their\nentire time to the work and keep con-\nstantly in the field, such deputies to be\nunder the direct supervision and direc-\ntion of the state deputy sealer, is the\nplan which State Deputy Healer F. G.\nBuchtel, of the department of weights\nand measures, has conceived for the\nmore efficient conduct of the work of\nhis department and which he will prob\nably submit for tho consideration of\nState Treasurer Kay for recommenda\ntion to the legislature.\nMr. Htichtel feels that, tinder the ex\nisting law governing the work of his\ndepartment, which vests the appointive\npowor of the county sealers in the coun-\nty courts of tho several counties and\n it entirely within their discre-\ntion whether or not thev will avail\nkkemselves of benefits of the law, tlie\nredj effectiveness of his department\nis greatly handicapped and that it could\nbe materially improved if the work\nwere all performed under one head and\nin a uniform and systematic manner.\nMr. fluchtel hus no criticism to make\nin any particular esse or instance in\nregard to the present county inspector\nilan; neither docs he infer that Mere\nis any intentional lapse of duty upon\nthe part of anyone connected with the\nservice. On the contrary he feds that\neach and every ono of his county as-- l\nistants is doing his duty to the best ot\nhis ability consistent with the time he\nlitis at his disposal ami the amount of\ncnmpcm-ntioi-
3d64f76d2541e692da77dc56768dd42c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.1980874000708 44.939157 -123.033121 The suit of the state of Oreeon\nagainst tho Portland General Elec\ntric company to compol tho latter to\nrender nn accounting of and turn\nover 10 por cent of the amount of\ntolls received from the locks at Ore-\ngon City wns argued at length beforo\ntho supremo court hero yesterday.\nAttorney General Crawford, who\nappeared with Judgo W. P. Iord for\nth0 stato, argued that according to\ntho terms of tho legislative act, which\ngranted tho $200,000 for tho build-\ning of tho locks, that tho 10 por cent\nshould bo paid nnd thnt nt the end\nof 20 yenrs the stato was Jo havo\nhad tho right to purchaso tho locks.\nHo called nttontlon to tho omission\nIn tho brlof of tho defendant to any\nclaim that tho Falls &\nLocks compnny, tho original company\ncontrolling tho looks, should not have\nhad to pay tho pcrcontngo. Craw\nford dwelt strongly on theorror of\ntho dofendnnt in nsaumlng through-\nout tho entire enso that: tho locks\nand rlvor woro In tho naturo of a\nconstructed highway, whereas the\nrivor Is n natural highway and not\nan asset of tho coispnny.\nTho defendant's muln point, ns\nbrought out by Altornoya Frederick\nV. Holman and "Wirt Minor, was that\nthey woro not responsible for tho\nfniiuro of their predecessors, tho Wl\nlamotto Falls Canal & Lock\nand tho Wlllamotto Falls Cnnal\nTransportation company, to pay over\ntheir sharo of tho tolls; also, that no\nclaim hnd been mndo tha thoy had\ntho books of thoso two companies In\ntheir possoselon.
2e0d801073de102583f1e5b773cd8c4a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.3410958587012 40.063962 -80.720915 By virtue of a Deed of Truat made by John Schui\nman and Loulaa Scbuckiuan, hli wife, to me aa Tr\ntee, dated May 7, 1878, recorded in the office of t\nClerk of the County Court of Ohio county, * eat V\nginla, in Deed of Truat Book No. 13, page 620,1 will\nSATURDAY, THE 3d DAY' OF MAY, 1879,\ncommencing at 10 o'clock a. m ., aell at the front di\nof the Court Hooaeof said county, the following\nscribed property, that la to aajr: A part of the lot\nparcel of ground numbered aa lot No. 30, on the e\nride of Market atieet, between Twenty-flth atreet a\nTwenty-alxtEMtreet, in the Sixth Ward of the city\nWheeling, bounded and described aa follows, vie J\nBinning ten feet from the north aldeot lot numbei\n90 and in the centre of the division wall betweeu tei\n numbered 4 and ft, and running thence soti\n1ft feet more or leai to the centre of the dlvlalon w\nbetween tenementa 5 and 6, and running back of t\nuniform width of aald front to the alley in the n-ai\nsaid lot The numbers of aald tenementa begin w!\nNo. 1, on the north corner of lot No. 29, adjolnl\naald lot No. 30, together with all and alngular the li\nprovemenia thereon, and the hendltamenta and\npurtenancea thereto belonging. Title believed to\ngood, but I will convey ontysuch title aa la veated\nme by said Deed of Trust.\nTuua.Two hundred dollars In caah on day of ai\nthe balance in two equal installments at aix a\ntwelve months, promtawn-y notea beating inter\nfrom day of sile to be given for the deferred pi\nmenta. The title to be retained until payment In 11
2a6b8f1502f702a1ac18efa3239286fe VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.7383561326737 43.798358 -73.087921 In some parts of England it is the prac-\ntice to burn the stubble for the safct? of the?\nbenefi' afforded to the succeeding crop by\nthe ashes ; and it is a very common prac-\ntice upon the continent. Considering the\nvalue of straw for litter, this must be t\npractice of very doubtful wifdorn ;' and\nwherethe stubble is nolcutfor litter, it mui,\nwhen plowed down, "ultimately afford to\nthe land alt that the ashes contain, and\nsomething more.\nCoal Ashes are generally available to\nfarmers, and there are few situations io\nwhich they are not beneficial, especially\nto clover and grass crops ; and a consid-\neration of the substances they contain will\nreadily account for the efli ct they pruducr.\nBesides the earthy and imperfectly bu -r n- t\nceaW maltr of which they principal I v\nconsist, also contain sulphate of limtr\nwith some potash, and soda, all of uhieii.\nare known, when applitd separatelvt i\nP'oduee a good effect on clover crops, and\nto favor the produetion of white clover par-\nticularly. They art, in fact, an import-\nant part of the food of all grasses.\nfeat is often within the farmer's reachr\nand whenever it is, may be turntdto a very\ngood account either to burn tor the asbesr\nto apply directly to soils deficient in veget-\nable matter, or for the preservation and\naugmentation of the compost heap. Tbi\nashesof peat differ very much in value, a\nthey are poor or rich in saline matter .\nand in some situations they are the only\nmanure used for the turnip crop, at the\nrate of from thirty to fifty bushels per an?\nSeo must have a powerful l'
052cd48b9b79d58d5bff466ba4ff6efb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.8068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 In his address Governor Hill prefaced\nhis remarks by dwelling on the elections\nbill; the admission of the new states ami\ncalled the McKinley an infamous tariff\nbill, the sum of all viilanios.\nHo said the primary object of a tariff\nwas to raise the necessary expenses of gov­\nernment, and no more should be raised.\nThe place for the surplus was in Ute\npockets of the masses. Kepttblictsns had\nreduced the surplus by unprecedented ex­\ntravagant appropriations, redeeming their\npledges and endangering a deficiency. He\ndenied that the Democrats were ever com­\nmitted to free trade, and asserted that it\nfavored more than any other [tarty ever\norganized protection to American Inlior.\nThe tariff must be high enough to equalize\nwages between countries. He defended\nthe Mills bill ns furnishing adequate pro­\ntection to every laborer and as subserving\n Itest interests of the country.\nMr. MrKtnley Attacked lolltlrally.\nBarring the free list every article on\nwhich tariff reduced in that bill retained a\nsufficient duty to equalize wages. Demo­\ncrats insist that little or no tariff should he\nplaced on necessities or raw material\nfor manufacture. He said it was hoped to\npopularize the McKinley bill by benefit­\ning all a little, hut government should\nhave little to do with business interests.\nMcKinley was the strongest protectionist\never in congress. No monopolist ever ap­\nplied to him in vain. No wages hod been\nraised since the bill passed, and the prices\nof necessities had risen. He acknowledged\nthat merchants Avere taking advantage of\nthe bill, hut charged that the bill furnished\nthe opportunity. He denounced the hill as\nframed in the interest of monopoly and to\nthe injury all other classes.
1ca129736ec897cad42b471fcf73b194 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.0726027080163 43.82915 -115.834394 Day, H. F., im en laud iu Long vail y. 25;\nper pro'ty, 110; tux, costa and pen............ 3 84\nEugstrom, Perry, im ou laud in Long\nley, 50; per prot , 173; tax, costs aud pen 6 02\nEagle, C. C.. Im ou laud iu Long valley, 25\nper pro'ty, 219; tax, costa and peu.... .... G 54\nFenton, John, im on laud ou Jacka*\n4UÜ; per p rj ty, 148; tax, coats and pen...... 14 06\nFanahier, l- .aiah, :ni on laud iu Long valley,\n75; perproiy, 175; tax, costs and pen---- 6 69\nFletcher, Jas.. im on laud iu High valley, 100;\ntax, costs and p en ........................................ 2 98\nGothier, Lewis, im >m land on Payette river ,\n2U0; tax, coats and pen .............................. 5 55\ni>ar\\er, Frank, in* ou laud in Long valley 25;\nper protv 275; tux, costs and pen............... 7 93\nGood, John, on laud iu Long valley 25;\nper pro'ty 28; tax, costs and pen................ 1 81\nGray, Nelson, im ou land iu Long valley 50;\ntax, coats aud p en........ ............................. 1 73\nGage, 51. E ., im on lrnd in Lons valley 25.\nper proty 322; tax, costa rod peu............. 9 09\nHowell. Win., real estate in Spring valley 100;\nim on same 200; p"r pro'ty 215; tax. costs\nand p en .......................................................... 13 25\nHumphrey, Edward, real estate in Garden\nvalley 400; im ou same 150; tax, eoataaud\np e n ................................................................ h 12\nHurt, Wm., im on laud iu Spriug valley 100;\nper pro'ty 347; tax, costs aud pen .............. 11 57\nIlawkina &i Bradley, saw mill ou Big creek,\nLong valley, 7i»0; por pru ty, 145; tax aud\nP « n .... ..... .... ..... ..... ..... ..... .... ..... ..... ..... ..... .... .... 21 41
070c457ed16992ba88bb7a19f57f5af8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.228767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 Samuel McDonald, atlor a week's itckness, ii\niblo to be out again.\nThe "Queen Esther" entertainment netted\nProf. LiUer about WO.\nM lutes Mllleand Dellle Schemp, of Wheeling,\niro the guests ol friend* here.\nThe city wait alive with Italians yestorda)\nitanding around waiting for trains.\nThft trial of tho "Charon" and the "Phillips"\njo in I'm up to day before equlro Roder.\nThoma* Dickcna purchased tbo Dr. Smith\nproperty yesterday. on Ho»o Hill, paying 11.885\nFor «1J additional irolJ in the Fourth ward\nivcr 91W U on the paper. The well hi an assured\n[act now.\nRobert AlexanJer, D . D ..of St. Clalrtville\n3hlo, was In tho city yesterday on hiawaytc\nWoodsQeld, Ohio.\nWillinm Armstrong,of the Fourth ward, died\nresterday of catarrh of the throat. Funeral u>\nmorrow alterneou.\nJ. W . Crow, an insurance man from the eaat\nbaa returned, hta family moving to Phlladel\nphia, Pa., this week.\nM, Gordon, C. & P. ticket agent here, has been\nlppoiutcd Deputy Grand Master Workman ol\ntheA.0. U.W.otOnlo.\nPlatolT Brewer, who waa hurt in tho buck'\ntvagon accident Monday night, in still living\nind the dooior thinks he will recover.\nTne epen mooting held the Good Templari\nlast ulxut waa largely attended. A fine literary\ntud musical programme waa.well rendered.\nUniform Hank K. of P. elected the followini\nDfilcera this week: Sir Knight Captain. v » .\nSmith; Mr Knight Lieuteuaut, L. Linden: Sit\nKnight licMd, 11 . U . Kemple; 6lr Kulght He\ncorder, J. K . Pollock: air Kulght Treasurer,\nMutt Gordon.\nThe election this spring will be of little inter\nest. The ouly imporuut otllcea to be tilled art\nthoso of two School Hoard members. Mr. 11'\nHam nurguudthal and George Yost, whose tcrroi\nexpire, will no doubt be re elected. Ceuncil\nmen, Assessors and constables compieto tho list\nSeveral teama stalled ou tho ferry road yeater\nlay afternoon, but nil got up the bill but one.\nBy douole teamiug the loads failed to budge,\nblock and tackle was rigged to the ferry auil the\nwagon, hora-a and all pulled out of the hole.\n1'hey could uot get up the hill after this mart, so\ni locomotive, stan<)iug on the track at the tqr\nit the hill, waa brought loin requisition and\npulled the wagon to the top of ttie hill amid the\n:heera of several hundred people who witnessed\nthe occurrence.
1d34bd1cd8955f32e9b40330c04a6609 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1878.850684899797 39.743941 -84.63662 The Eev. H. C. McCook. of Phila\ndelphia, describing the ballooning habit,\nor night of spiders, savs the spider seeks\na high position, as the top of a fence- -\npost, as the point of ascent. The abdo-\nmen is elevated to as nearly a right angle\nwith the thorax as may be; a pencil of\nthreads issues from the spinnerets, the\nface being meanwhile turned to various\npoints until it looks in the direction of\nthe wind. The lees are then stretched\nupward, thus raising the body aloft, and\ntne insect gradually assumes a position\nas if resisting some force from above.\nSuddenly the right claws are unloosed,\nthe spider mounts with' a sharp bound\nand floats off, generally with the back\ndownward, but sometimes with the po-\nsition reversed. ' At first the abdomen\nseems to be in advance, but generally\nthe body is turned so that the head in\nfront. The pencil of threads is caught\nbv the feet, and floats out in front.\nLi pon these threads the spider will climb\nupward as though to ad just the center\nof gravity. Meanwhile a pencil of\nthreads floats out behind, leaving the\npider, to ride in the angle of the two,\nor sometimes three pencils. The feet\nseem to be united by delicate filaments,\nwhich serve to increase the buoyancy\nof the balloon: ..The insect is carried\nforward by the wind, riding for long\ndistances in an open space, and often\nhigh up upon ascending currents. Its\nanchorage appears at times to be within\nits own volition, by drawing in with the\nclaws the forward pencil and gathering\nit in a white roll within the mandibles;\nbut most frequently the progress of the\ninsect is stopped by some elevated ob-\nject, or by the subsidence of the breeze.
00e3f5a009e2ad188d83a0dd1a38d92d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.346575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 New York, May 5. - Tbo Times'\nWashington special says that a Count\nOrowaki, the author or three volumes,\nentitled "Count Growskl's Diary ' died\nin this city this afternoon or infiama-\ntion of the bowels.\nIt is not known exactly what amount\nthe government will loseHjy the failure\nof the Merchants' National Bank of\nthis city, but irrespective of the sum\nthat uiuy be lost on account ot the de¬\nposit or Paymaster Paulding, the gov-\neminent would be the creditor of the\nBank of about $122,000. The United\nStates Treasurer holds in his hands to\nsecure deposits $100,000, and $200,000 to\nsecure the notes of the Banks. Also\n$0,000 in gold, being the interest due the\nbank. Against this total amount is to\nbe churged $180,000 of the circulation of\nthe bank and $4,000 deposit. It is un¬\nderstood that Paymaster Paulding bud\na deposit in the bank of over bulf a\nmillion dollars, which is supposed to\nhave been made up of sums drawn\nfrom other depositors and transfered to\nthe Merchants National Bank contrary\nto an order from the War Department,\nwhich directs the disbursing officers or\nthe United States to keep their funds on\ndeposit in depositaries upon which the\n draws in favor of the dis¬\nbursing officers requisitions. The last\ndraft drawn by the United States Trea¬\nsurer in favor of Paymaster Paulding\nupon the Merchants National Hank was\ndated Junuary 4th, I860, for $100,000\nand drafts upon other depositors to the\namount of severul hundred thousand\ndollars in favor of Paulding have been\nexecuted since that date.\nThe Secretary of the Treasury has\nawarded to Denis <fc Roberts, of Boston,\nthe contract for furnishing the Treasury\nDepartment with burglar and tire-\nproof safes for one year at f10 per bu-\njjerticial foot. They were the lowest\nThe House Committee on Claims, out\nofclaims amounting to $20,000,000, pre¬\nsented for consideration, have allowed\nbut 8130,000, including $0,000 to O Ben-\nbausen <fc Co./of New York, for com¬\npound interest notes, lost at sea, by the\nwrecking of the steamship Republic, in\na voyage to New Orleans.\nThe World's special says: A Commit¬\ntee or Conference having agreed withe\namendatory hubeas corpus act, it has\npassed both Houses, and only awaits\nthe signature or the President to be¬\ncome u law. It protects every officer of\nthe federal government, who, acting\nunder orders, made what is known as\narbitrary arrests during the war.
055de0e23915bbac6a5015e8c759a698 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 During the past ten years, says the New\nYork Bulletin, we have exported from the\nUnited 8tatea nearly $500,000,000 more\nspecie than we have imported, much of\nthis having gone for the payment of in¬\nterest on American indebtedness held\nabroad, and most of the remainder in set¬\ntlement of merchandise accounts. The\nreports of exports and imports for the\nfirst eleven months of the fiscal year end¬\ning JuneJ30 warrants the expectation that\nthe balance due the United States on the\nyear's business will be fully $250,000,000,\nbeing an increase of more than $80,000,-\n000 over the balance accruing in 1870-7 .\nAgainst this, large purchases of bonds\nhave been made during the past six\nmonths. The cessation of gold exports\nf;ives material aid in gathering apecie\nor resumption the pro¬\nduct of American mines being very\nlarge, and when not exported accu¬\nmulating very rapidly. It seems inevi¬\ntable, also, that in early autum the im¬\nportation of gold will begin. The heavy\nshipments of merchandise are likely to\ncontinue, and it must be paid for in some\nway. Possibly bonds may be imported,\nbut more probably gold, though the ad¬\nvance in the Bank of England rate will\ntend to prevent the export of gold from\nthere for a while, Even if the bonds\ncome, instead of gold, the amount to be\nshipped each year for interest will be\nthereby diminished, though we deem it\nfar better that, for the present, the debt\nshould be held abroad; leaving American\ncapital free for industrial enterprises\nand other purposes.
2fc5635d4a810550eb5758cf1a70d796 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.8095890093862 41.681744 -72.788147 Switzerland, in Palestine and in\nGreece. You have sent a shipload of\nrelief supplies and a group of devoted\nworkers to northern Russia; you have\ndespatched a commission to work be-\nhind our armies in eastern Siberia; you\nhave sent special representatives to\nDenmark, to Serbia and to the Is-\nland of Maderia.\n"Your Red Cross is thus extending\nrelief to the armies and navies of our\nAllies. We are told by those best in-\nformed in the countries of our Allies\nthat the efforts of your Red Cross to\naid the soldiers and to sustain the\nmorale of the civilian populations left\nat home, especially in France and\nItaly, have constructed a very real\nfactor in winning the war.\n"What the Red Cross may be called\nupon to do in the further course of\nthe war, or with the coming of\nvistory, peace and reconstruction, it\nwould he idle to attempt to phophesy.\n your great organization, in very\ntruth "the moblized heart and spirit\nof the whole American people, has\nshown itself equal to any call, ready\nto respond to any emergency. We\ncannot but believe that this wonderful\nspirit which service in and for the"\nRed Cross has evoked in this war, is\ndestined to become in our national\nlife an element of permanent value.\n"At Christmas time we shall ask the\nwhole American people to answer the\nRed Cross Christmas roll call. It\nwill constitute an unique appeal to\neverv man, woman and child in this\ngreat land of ours to become enrolled\ni our army of mercy. It is the hope\nof the war council that this Christ\nmas membership roll call shall con-\nstitute a reconsecration of the whole\nAmerican people, an inspiring reasser- -\ntion to mankind that in this hour of\nworld tragedy, not to conquer but to\nserve is America's supreme aim.
392d0945dff116b6de72c7dd104c810e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.0915300230217 58.275556 -134.3925 off and die somewnere eise. xnere uru\nonly three ways that a person can meet\ndeath in this town. 1st,suicide; second,\nkilled by electric railways; 3d and last,\nthe police shoot them. At this writing\nthree of the city detectives are on trial\nfor manslaughter. Within four days\nthe coroner hold thirteen inquests over\nsuch cases as I have mentioned. There\nhas not been any rain since last August\nbut the weather man predicts a shower\npossibly before the Fourth of July.\nThere are a great number of cattle\ndying on the ranches, of starvation,\nowing to the long drought. This is a »\nvery high priced town. Eggs sell from\n40 to GO cents per dozen; butter sells\nreadily at 40 cents per pound; ham from\n20 to 35 cents per pound; while fresh\nmeats are about the same as in Doug¬\nlas. House rent is out of sight.from\nthirty to fifty dollars per mouth for a\nsmall cottage. There are two articles\nthat are cheap, and that is fruit and la¬\nbor; also newspapers; some sell for 1\ncent per copy. I intend going farther\n the latter part of February, and\nfrom there we may possibly go East for\na couple of mouths before we return to\nAlaska. 1 wrote Mr. Boyd some time\nago and told him to tell you to send\nme the Douglas News, but as I never\nreceived it, he must have forgotten all\nabout it. Mr. Hunter, formerly of Doug¬\nlas, is running a livery stable here in\nLos Angeles and doing a big business.\nThere is where I "hang out" part of the\ntime. I also met Mr. Gallwas, of Doug¬\nlas, a few weeks ago, but haven't seen\nhim since; he intended going on a\nranch to visit a brother 01 nis 1 Geneve.\nSaloon business in this town is con¬\ntrolled by the breweries and the police\ndepartment. Mercantile business is\ngood; high prices for goods and cheap\nlabor. First class bookkeepers salary\nranges from five to eight dollars per\nweek. However, the town seems to\nprosper, as there is a great building\nboom at present. There are tourists\nfrom all parts of the country here and\nthe hotels are doing a thriving busi¬\nness.
477f3c996c2e8e6103f43d67e8dee846 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.8041095573312 38.894955 -77.036646 And, Mr. President and gentlemen, although wi\nwitness what seldom is witnessed by the people o\nthis country.fortunes that have been built u]\nthrough the hard labor of half a century, swep\naway Eke the dews of the morning, and manufac\nturing and mechanical establishments closing thei\ndoors upon labor, and men wandering away fron\ntheir accustomed places of occupation, sorrowing\nwithout immediate employment, not without fea\nof that which is immediately before them, an<\nlooking upon the dread winter which is oominj\nupon us, for scenes of suffering and sorrow, per\nbaps of starvation, what New England man doei\nnot look with pride upon the order and quiet ex\nhibitod in every part of the State. We ought\nhowever, to recollect, amid these misfortunes, tha\nthe country itself, notwithstanding the oppressioi\nthat rests upon us, never was richer than it is a\nthis moment. It is not the wasted years nor th<\nwasted lives, nor a miscalculating course of con\nduct on the part of public or private men, tha\nhas brought us to the suffering which we now ex\nperience. Here at home, and elsewhere in thi\nthe country, there is an exhibition of thrift, ant\nan accumulation of property, which will at no die\ntant day be added to the country, sufficient to re\nlieve all from \nThe agricultural productions of the country to\nthis year will make a value at the rates of forme\nyears not less than two thousand dollars. Tin\nmanufacturing interest, the seat of which is chief\nly in New England, yet which permeates througl\nall the Northern States, and extends more or lesi\ntowards the South, has an accumulated produc\nthis year of fifteen hundred million dollars. Mei\nof all classes and interests have been closely ant\nsteadily engaged, in the employments of their lives\nand they will yet reap the fruit of that toil, thougl\nfor a moment, from circumstances beyond our con\ntrol, and the origin of which wc can hardly ye\nappreciate or understand^ they have been deprive*\nof the immediate reward of their labor. There i\nno aenaible comparison to be made between th<\ncommercial criaia of this and that of 1837.\nMen wera then engaged in building up papei\ncities, our people have been erecting States anc\nplanting the iron ways, upon which they will here\nafter develope the material prosperity of thoe<\nStates. Then there was an amount of specie it\nthe whole country of170,000,000 only; now then\nis in the United States {289,000,000 gold and sil\ner jn the coinage of the.country. Then there\nwas an irresponsible and irredeemable paper our'\nrency of {140,000,000
240c49302414fca0e7f5e6b2c3b8535f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1875.6150684614408 41.004121 -76.453816 In tho meantime dusk crept on, the sea\nwas running high, and llio sloop was almost\nburied under Iho press of her canvass, groan-in- g\nas sho forced her way on through tho\nrough, toppling sea.\nAl length the mainsail split and went to\nliblious, nnd there being no alternative) but\nto anchor the order was given.\nOn Bounding ifiey found but eighteen fath\noms of water muddy bottom showing how\nmuch ihoy hud drifted into shore, but nbo\nnfliirding foino hope, since their anchors\nwould now hold, thank i to iho mud min\ngled with sand.\nAllowing her to drift into twelve fathoms.\ntho Rosebud's captain let tro both bower an- -\nchuis one backed by tlio studc, Iho other\nliy the hedge at tho same moment and\nveered away whole eablo when she let go\ntho sheet anchor, and veered away a cable\nupon that, so that now ho had fivo anchors\nlown ouch bearing a proper strain.\nTho l"adman in the chain announced that\ntlio anchors held, nnd tho ship surmounted\nouo or two terrific jerks without slar'lni;\nanything. Of CDtirs", in such a predicament\nlittle hilarity prevailed. Tho master, a\nstendy old seamen watched tho coast, nnd\ntaking bearings of tho softest spot to run the\nvessel upon should she dtifl. The sea roared\nas it rolled past, ami sometimes over tho\nsloop; but still she held.\n"Does she drift ?" asked Henderson every\nmiuitto in his accustomed steady tone,\nthough an affirmative would huvo been his\nship's death warrant.\n"Not an inch, sir," was the invariable\nreply.
298922834de11178595203746fdf6db5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.7958903792492 41.681744 -72.788147 clothes, speak a foreign tongue and\nto remain unchanged in manner, sho\nwill be left at homo by the others\nin the family who are adapting them-\nselves to our ways; and that home will\nnot cease to lack the cleanliness, the\nneatness, and the sanitation that\nmark our standards of living. Still\nfurther, we must consider those men\nof their own kin who later coming\nhome from the army and the camps,\nAmericanized, will perhaps feel little\nattracted to these women who have\nneither learned English, nor the bet-\nter ways of living and of keeping the\nhomes, as well as themselves, attrac-\ntive. All this will make for a negation\nof Americanism. Our duty is certainly\ntoo clear for any divsion of counsel\niri this matter. We simply must reach\nthe women of foreign' birth in a sym-\npathetic and helpful way. These wo-\nmen must be helped to understand\nAmerica and the factors immediately\n thqir own lives in this coun-\ntry. They must be instructed in the\nuse of our language. Let it be clearly\nunderstood that the language of the\nhome will not be English unless the\nmother also uses it. These same wo-\nmen who have previously been shun-\nned and slighted must be. made to like\nAmerica and to feel at home here.\nThis will surely signify that they are\nentitled to courtesy, to the necessary\nforms of information, to help and\nsympathy in' their troubles, and to\nthe opportunity for frien,dly hospitali-\nty in the Land of their choice. There\nis the implication here that the aloof-\nness of the highbrow, the barriers of\nprejudice, and the snobbishness of the\npseudo- - cultured, are all as averse. to\ngood Americanism as is the clannish- -\nness, the segregation, .and the- 'ra ci a- l'\ncolonizing of those who happen to\ndiffer from us in the geography of\ntheir birth.
25730967ecd217904877f21128234924 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.2589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 SO rounds, coko at §250 per ton of 5(\nbushels. Wholesale prices vary fron\n93$ cents, nut coal to $L 50 per ton; cokt\nat $2 25 ]>er ton of 50 bushels. The fiv<\nblast furnaccs in tho city, besides man]\nother manufactories and .railroads, havt\nall been supplied with fuel from thesi\nmines, while great quantities of coal ant\ncoke are shipped to Cleveland, Cincinnati\nDayton, Chicago and Logansport, lnd\nThese apparently inexhaustible beds o\ncoal of course brought manufactories\nand in 1873 the Clintou Paper Mill\nowned by Pittsburgh companies, wa\nbuilt. This mill, greatly improved, ii\nstill in operation. Woolen mills wcr\nstarted in 1814 by James Rosa and Ila2\naleel Wells. In 1810 a glass factorv wa\nbuilt. It was owned and worked by A\nJ. Beatty Bro., and is now controls\nby sons these gentlemen. About 12.\npersons are employed at these works, am\nno less than 200,000 tumblers turned ou\neach week. Theso works are not onl;\nsaid to be the largest in the country, bn\nmako more tumblers than all other worki\nof the kind in tho United States. Nai\nfactories were built about 1857 by Fra\nzer, Killgore & Co., afterwards change*\nto Spaulding, Woodward <& Co., who ii\n18G2 built two furnaces for their owi\niron. In January, 1S70, they became\ncorporated company with a capital o\n$S0u,000. About 600 men and boys ar<\nemployed by this company. There an\ntwenty-two boiling and three heatinj\nfurnaces. Twelve thousand tons of gro*\niron was turned out by this company las\nyear. About 3,500 kegs of nails are'madi\nper week. Tho Steubenville Furnca\nCompany, situated in the northern par
417e87e920587e9a9fbb41485af49f3d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.987671201167 41.681744 -72.788147 . and that we have contributed our\nmite to the winning of the war and\ndone our part In demonstrating to\nour country that the maintenance of\na strong navy has not been in vain,\nbut ha.s borne abundant fruit and\nmore than paid for itself.\n"One of the greatest lessons taught\nus by this war is that we must, for\nthe preservation of our country's\nfreedom and honor, for our rights\nand libert. for peace and prosperity,\nbuild and maintain a navy that will\ninsure us these blessings.\n"While there are many other de-\npartments of tho Government, .'is well\nas many civil and private enterprises,\nwhich oontrioutcd most abundantly to\ninsuring a successful end to the war,\nand while all are more or less neces-\nsary and interdependent, without\nan efficient and strong navy, which\nwas ready at the very beginning of\ntho Avar, and which cannot be creat-\ned overnight, this war wovld have\nended far differently from its presnt\nvictorious conclusion.\n"Not only has our navy in the pres-\nent war been largely instrumental in\nbrin.sring about and insuring these\nblessings to us, let us hope for many\nyears to come, but it has done more.\nIt has contributed Its fair share to-\nward bringing about a world's peace,\nand put our nation, our country, in\ntine lead, in the very forefront of the\nnations of the earth, and in that ex-\nalted position to which the eyes of the\nworld are now turned in admiration\nas their friend and guide in making\nthis peace enduring.'"
1871fae75179e2cb407f9ef1da671cb3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.8616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 The question of a reduction or the d\nrate of Interest on the public debt very c<\nnaturally accompanies the (actor the\nreduction of the principal of that debt. h<\nAttention has been more seriously at- ei\ntraded to the subject by Intimations In *\nthe newapaper correspondence from 01\nWashington within a few days, that lj\nthe President's forthcoming message to u\nCongress, and the annual report of the hi\nSecretary of the Treasury will give lo tt\nme country something very explicit 11\nto what may bo done In tbla regard, n\nThe Secretary, In bla speeoh before tbe k\nBlectlon, In this city, Intimated that K\noar prevent debt oould be placed at pur £\nat 4 per cent. The avowal of similar [),\nsentiments have, In substance, been y\nascribed to tbe President. Hoveral x\nprominent members of Congress talk V\nBomewhat authoritatively in the same\nway; and in this connection we 0\nhave a second or third letter on the ai\nsubject from Mr. Charles Bowles, ad- ti\ndressed to the Beoretory of the Treaa* jj\nory. Mr. Bowles la a Paris banker, i(\nnow In this country, and has taken up tl\nthe question of a restoration of our p\nnational credit con amove, and argues it\n point in tbe zeal or a new love, it\nBat Mr. Bowles leaves out of the dls- if\nousslon the main point Involved In It, u\naa have thna far the President, his 8eo» a\nretary, and all their coadjutors. It M\nneeds no ghoat to come from the grave ^\nto tell ua that the Government of tbe !;\nUnited States ought to be able to bor* ^\nrow all the money It may require at 4 £\nper cent.; that the vast resources of u\nthis coantry should give the Govern- {J\nment credit to borrow In any part ol Jj\ntbe world money on untaxed gold-bear- j,\nlog bonds at that rate, and that If this II\nwere accomplished, that the Govern- I '\nment ought to call in its 0 per cent. Jj\nbonds, replaolng tbeui with bonds at £[\nlower rates. 'Tin a consummation de- m\nvoutly desired by all. Its economy m\nand advantage are facts conceded by J\ntsvery taxpayer, and all acquiesce In the J\nforce of the argument tbut the thing {,\nHccompliahed, would furnish gratl- c\ntying evldenue of improved national o\ncredit. But Mr. Bowlen, In zealously,\nund even eloquently, presenting our u\nwealth of resouroes and our growing\nKreatuesa as a nation, leaves out
12ef367b67f1afb286011fc0694ab42c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.6352458700162 39.745947 -75.546589 Employes, of the Street and.Sewer De­\npartment began work this morning to in­\nstall new inlet traps to the sewers at\nFourth and Poplar streets and when the\nwork Is finished the disagreeable odors\nthat have been so noticeable during the\nwarm weather will practically obliter­\nated. When the rest of the traps are In­\nstalled at Third and Shipley, the De­\npartment is of the opinion that all of\nthe odors will be totally destroyed.\nThree traps are to be put in at Fourth\nand Poplar streets and the work will be\ncompleted in a few days. The traps ere\nso constructed as to prevent the sewer­\nage from flowing back In the pipes.\nThe traps will always hold a quantity\nof water and the smell will be kept con­\nfined to the pipes beyond the traps and\nnot rise to the surface as has been \ncase for many weeks past.\nAt Third and Shipley streets the pipes\nare laid In such a way that It wilt\nnecessitate the making of specially de­\nsigned traps, so that the work of install­\ning them at that point will not be done\nfor at least a week or so.\nThis action on the part of the Street\nand Sewer Department, which was taken\nbecause of the large number of com­\nplaints that have been made at the\nBoard of Health Department by resi­\ndents near these streets and particularly\nby the business men who have offices\nnear by, is a welcome piece of news and\nthe long suffering individuals who have\nhad to keep windows down on stiffilhg\ndays because of the nauseating oddr\narising from the sewers, will be able to\nget a breath of fresh air when the work\nIs finished.
23a15f498ce6752bd0e483a69a6de86a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.1024589847702 40.063962 -80.720915 bare 0 tho public g?*. j and you had no\nthe oouiaje to deny, Ac."\nNo, I have neither the courage nor die\nposition to deny the truth, but reaflimanc\nmpbaaiz3 what I said before, viz: tha\nthe fact of the existence in bot£ old par\nties of so large a proportion of liquor mei\nanJ other voters who (as theJudgo de\nclares) care more for party than temper\nanco, would eubject tho (amendmont, i\nadopted, to the danger of typoming a by\nword $nd yeprjacn. lor tho want of\nparty to enforce them. And in thi\nposition I am fully corroborated by th\nable and interesting discuseion nos\ngoing on in the two leading Rapublicai\njournals of the 8tate, the Intelligence\nand Stat* Journal. The Intslm;;en$xb io\neiate thpt re r,l;enay "complete am\nample temperance laws," unexecuted,\nseems to intimate, for want of eincerit;\nand honesty in professed temperance meii\nTo which the Journal replies, citing, fo\nexample, Wood county, where iar the lac\nlyo aieutious nave been nominated fa\nFrQMcuting Attorney H^publicana wh\nwould enforce laws, "but they couldn't b\nelected because" (just as 1 intimated\n"the liquor vote and influence went to th\nDemocratic nominees," and then very pei\ntineutlyasks, "What are terr»pew,nce xti\nnublicar.s to do\\" The afooussioa is ei\nboedinaVy interesting, practical and la\nportant, and we hops the Intell\nQiNcan will respond to tne inquiry\nWill these distinguished journalists a\nlow me to ouanest that there is but o*\nremedv in Ptrto or ITatl^u, una that la nc\n<4 putuug mow wihe in old bottles, but
1016b8b60a332f08f4d41a79f46107be THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.547814176027 42.217817 -85.891125 which Gen. Grant's next administra-\ntion can be measured, than by the one\nnow coming to a close ; and by the\ncharacteristics of the man as seen\nthrough a recent career of twelve years\nof active, responsible, critical, and in all\nrespects huccessful service.\nThat Gen. Grant is a perfect man, we\nby no means claim. That his prosecu-\ntion of the war was without faults, or\nhi administration of tho government\nwithout mistakes, his warmest defender\nwill not urge. But that through all the\ndangerous, difficult, and trying experi-\nences which attended his command of\nthe army, history affords low parallels\nfor his patience, his perseverance, his\ntenacity, hi wUa disposition of hi\nstrength, his successful strategy, and\nhnally, his clearness and wisdom in\nkeeping in vievr the purposes for which\nthe war was instituted, wo may reason-\nably and rightfully claim. In these en\ndeavors Gen. Grant developed a wise\nstatesmanship as well as a consummate\ngeneralship. He did not ttop to nego-\ntiate for peace, while peace was only\npossible as the result of victory. This\nhe left for Horace Greeley to vainly un-\ndertake. He first took Vicksburg, and\nVicksburg was the entering wedge to\npeace; and ho then thundered at At-\nlanta, and he sent Sherman to tho sea,\nand when the rebels fell upon \nknees and sent messengers of peace\nbecause they could no longer prolong\nthe war, they found in Gen. Grant a\nwilling listener. It was then that his\ncountry was in a position to dictate\npeace; and it was apparent to his clear\ncommon sense that never until that\ntime came would peace ensue.\nThe applause of a grateful couutry\nwas the instant reward of their persist-\nent and successful General. The ova-\ntions he received, the laurels with\nwhich he was crowned, the triumphant\nplaudits which greeted his progress\nthrough the country, the eulogies with\nwhich the press were filled, and with\nwhich the tiles of the New York and\nChicago Tribunes of that day abound,\nattest the depth of the impression\nwhich Gen. Grant's services had made\nupon the country. What he has done\n6ul sequently to forfeit that regard and\na continuance of that confidence, it\nwould be difficult for even the two\nnewspapers mentioned above to show.\nThe value of his services as acting Sec-\nretary of War under Andrew Johnson\nwill certainly be gratefully remembered.\nIt is with his administration as Presi-\ndent only that any fault is found, and\nin thu the little weaknesses only are\nattacked which in any but a President\nwould be considered virtues. The im-\nmense reduction of the army which
411ed6058793c0d35c37ba39e3a96fe8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.97397257103 42.217817 -85.891125 In the legend of Gambrinus tho fiend\nis still more ingloriou9ly . defeated.\nGambrinus was a fiddler, who, being\njilted by his sweetheart, went out into\nthe woods to hang himself. As he was\nsitting on the bough, with the cord\nabout his neck, preparatory to taking\ntho fatal plunge, suddenly a tall man in\na green coat appeared and offered his\nservices. He might become as wealthy\nas lie liked, and make his sweetheart\nburst with vexation at her own folly ;\nbut in thirty years he must give up his\nsoul to Beelzebub. The bargain was\nstruck, for Gambrinus thought 30 years\na long timo to enjoy one's self in, and\nperhaps the Devil might get him in any\nevent ; as well be hung for a sheep as\nfor a lamb. Aided by Satan, he invented\nchiming bells and lager beer, for both of\nwhich achievements his name is held in\ngrateful remembrance by the Teuton.\nNo soonerhad the Holy Roman Emperor\nquailed a gallon or two the new bever-\nage than he made Gambrinus Duke of\nBrabant and Count of Flanders, and\nthen it was the fiddler's turn to laugh at\ntho discomfiture of his old sweetheart.\nGambrinus kept clear of women, says\nthe legend, and so lived in peace. For\nthirty years ho sat beneath his belfry\nwith the chimes, meditatively drinking\nbeer with his nobles and burghers around\nhim. Then Beelzebub sent Jocko, one\nof his imps, with orders to bring back\nGambrinus before midnight. Bu t Jocko\nwas, like Swiller's Marchioness, igno-\nrant of the taste of beer, never having\ndrunk of it even in a sip, and the Flemish\nSchoppen were too much for him. He\nfell into a drunken sleep, and. did not\nwake up until noon next day, at which\nhe was so mortified that he did not have\nthe face to go back to hell at all. So\nGambrinus lived on tranquilly for a cen-\ntury or two, and drank so much beer\nthat he turned,into a beer barrel.
4f8a2fb764f3e0ab29c9f8849b52cbc1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5587431377758 39.745947 -75.546589 Special to The Evening Journal.\nNEW 'CASTLE, Jlity ït In an even-\n• ly played contest, the Penn Seaboard\nBaseball loam, according to the de­\ncision of the umpire, defeated the\nAU Star team In an Industrial Twi­\nlight League game, last evening, by\nthe sconu of 'j to 8. it was any-\nbody's game until it vvvis broken up\n• In a wrangle over the decision of Um­\npire “Wally" Weir on Uie last ball\npitched to Barp, winch ho called a\nball. This forced in the tying run.\n• as tho three corners ot the diamond\nwere HI lui. INndir. catcher fop the\nAll Stars, became disgusted, he said,\nand threw tho ball on the plate, al­\nlowing the plavcr on third to BOOiV\n,Empire Weir order d (Binder out of\ntho game. Some said tic did if be­\nfore the, wimnhg run was scored.\n,Wnir said ho gave Uio ord- r Mfb r\nSpence bad crossed tho plate, fti'lils\ncaused ennsidcralble wrangling\nItfilayers and fans against the deci­\nsion. Evi u tin* scorer, who was to\ngo by the Umpire's decision and has\nDO option Ul Uio matter, e.uue in for\noonsiderablo unjust oiilicicm because\n said when ai'costcd by one person,\nthat he would be compelled to abide\nby the deoision of umpire Weir in\n,the matter. Some fans thought Un-\nscorer could use his own Judgment\nIn tho matter of scoring the run.\nRoth umpire andaeor rar- interested\nJin the games only as far as good\n«port Is concerned. It must he said\nnot a single player acted in any un-\ngentlcmanly manner toward either\nthe umpire or scorer. For the benefit\nof all it should be known that the\n•Judgment of the scorer Js only con­\nsidered when a decision is to be. made\nas to whether a ball hill by a bats­\nman shall be record'd a» a hit or\nan error. A very meagre authority,\nand elvntiM not call for any mean re­\nmarks from any fan or player as his\njudgment may err as to which it\nshould be. Both scorer and um­\npires have tven giving their services\nwrithrat charge, and have boosted the\nemnc«o that tho town folk conid en­\njoy a pleasant hour or two in an\nevening recreation Tho unjust crit­\nicisms are hurling the game and\nf-honlct.b'v«topped by those in charge,\nof the teams.
23433eef1fbf9fcf1eef8f37d7f18852 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.1024589847702 41.681744 -72.788147 Leaves New Britain in 1914.\nNine years ago last month, in 1907,\nFather Reagan was assigned to St.\nMary's parish in New Britain where,\nbecause of his command of the Ital-\nian tongue, he was placed in charge\nof the Italian mission. He took a great\ninterest in his church work and it was\ndue to his efforts that the Italian\nmasses were introduced, in which the\nservices are in the Italian tongue.\nAfter being in this city for eight\nyears, during Avhich time the bishop\nof the diocese noticed his diligent\nwork and the results he was obtaining\nin the Italian mission he was assigned\nto East Haven. There was no church\nthere at the time, but Father Reagan\nsucceeded in organizing a strong par-\nish, that of St. Vincent de Paul. He\ntook charge on October 16, At\nthe time cf his death Father Reagan\nAvas working on plans for the erection\nof a neAv rectory in East HaA'en.\nA special solemn mass of requiem\nwas celebrated at St. Mary's at 7:30\no'clock this morning for the repose\nof Father Reagan's soul.\nUnusual honors will be paid Father\nReagan. The body, yesterday, lay in\nstate in the little church, whose first\npastor he Avas, until 8 o'clock this\nmorning. A guard of honor, consist-\ning of members of the Holy Name so-\nciety of the church Avatched the body\nduring the night. Mass was celebrated\nat 8 o'clock this morning at the little\nedifice in order that all his parishion\ners might be present.\nThe chapel being far too inadequate\nto accommodate tho many friends o\nthe dead uastor. a second mass Avas\ns.nVI
dd1e170dec4c9d1b7731d5c8310b92e5 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.401369831304 41.262128 -95.861391 auhdu turn rsry troublesome j bat theee\nfery qualities are a pruty saf j parsunai\nguurr uitee that he has been engaged IB\nao secret plow oT dark conspiracies\nagauist tbe government. We teei en-\ntiiuy safe tu ossamtng that itis ooiy of-\nfec!.- I,-, the vt^uf and vehemence ot bis\noptii attacks on tbe administration in tbs\npoi uc meetings be is iu tbe habit of ad-\nOreaaiug. todesd one of tbe republican\npapers pulituilieU a rumor that Urn.\nBurnaiile dctaiu-d men tltagutssd in Citi­\nzen's dress tu attend a meeting which Mr.\nVsiiandigbam addressed one day last\nweek, with a view to find grounds of\nproceeding against him. Hts arrest ia\ntherefore, for no crime kuuwn to the\nlaws, for oo oonvart conspiracy, for no\ntreasonable correspondence witO tha «n-\nemv, for no dark deaigu which shrinks\nfmni public scrutiny and sbrouds itself\nin secrecy ; but for uttering aloud in the\nface of the world bis bonust opinions.—\nThose opinions may be mistakea or they\n•My not j they may be unpatriotic and\nmischievous or they may not, but there is\nSo rightful power in toe Government to\nsuppress freedom of speech, except with­\nin i'. r; iines of tbe army.\nUntti better informed, we shall incline\nto tbe opinion that the wrest of Mr. Vai-\nisndtgbfiin is the oi Gun. Buruside\nwith ;ut any D'ompting from bis official\nrcpcriors at Wasbtngt'on . it ia posstole\nUi 7 may not thank Gen. Buroaids for\nCurrying hia occuiiar strategy into poll-\ntics. After this general had butveU bis\narmy again and again agaiust the im­\npregnable rebel front ut Fredricksborg,\non the day of tbat msmorabie butchery\nfthich be called a battle, and the? h*d\nagsiu recoiled, staggered, shaken,' shat­\ntered Defore tbe murderous fire of tbe\nenemy, be determined to dash them «uu\ns^ain tbe rebel Works, like pottery against\na stone wall, aad was only prevent**] by\nth • united and vehement protests of his\ngenerals, who had cot, like him, .lost\ntbeir heads. The shattering and recoil\nof tbe Administration party against the\ndnnnglng aad arbitrary at rests, tn the\nelections laat fall in ali the ^reat 6tates\n:>f tbe Union, woajd naturaiiy teach thetn\nnot to again give their opponents eo great\nan advantage of gruund. If Ueaarai\nBamsidt cnooses to hurl them again\nag.'inst imprrgoabU defeuo^s, it » possi­\nble ttiey may object to be ag.- u u iijU to a\nbootless slaughter. If they .tra wisa they\nwii! cause Mr. ValUndigham to bv wa-\ntn« li^tely biomhi before uia judge yd tie\nSouthern District of Ohio, to o« di#-\nf>oscd of by that a£o4r according to the
6eb2be28e354bc2730074579125dd2c3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.9958903792492 39.261561 -121.016059 this Court for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage\nbearing date the 27th day of April, a. n ., 1K9, exw\ncuteri by the said defendants to plaintiff, and for the\nsale of the premise* therein, and in said comply*\nparticularly mentioned and described, and the app|( !\ncation of the moneys aiising firm such .ale to the\nliayment of tiie amount due on a certain promiseor,\nnote s«t forth in said complaint, made ar.d delivered\nto sai'l plaintiff by the detendants, bearing even date\nwith said mortgage and thereby intended to be se.\ncured, to wit: The sum of $710 60 with interest\nthereon from the 26th day of August, a. d .. IhtjO # t\nthe rate of two )er cent, per month till paid; and it\nany deficiency shall remain after ap) lying all of\nmoneys, so applicable thereto, then that\nplaintiff may have execution therefor against the\nsaid defendants, also that said defendantsand all gad\nevery prison claiming through or under defendant*\nsubsequently to the date of plaintiffs mortgage. Ln ,i\nthe commencement ol this action, may be barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim. Hen and equity of r>.\ndemption in and to the .- aid mortgaged premises, or\nany part thereof, and for such other and further re-\nlief, or both, In the premise* as may he just and\nequitable. And you are hereby nnlitied that ifv, M ,\nfail to answer said complaint, as herein directed,\nplaintiff will take judgment against you therefor by\ndefault, together w ith all costs of suit, and also de-\nmand of the Court such other relief as is prayed tor\nin plaiutiffs said complaint.
08a62899c0857db24db3d84c5cbe9948 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.1164383244545 38.894955 -77.036646 Then she tried to make her life fall back\ninto its old placid groove. She did not\nwish this irreparable loa w"hich had ruined\nher own happiness to make others wretched.\nAH the day long, she showed a bright face\nto her little world; it was the night, which\ncelebrated the resurrection of her love.\nIn the day, that remarkable thing called\nRespectability forced her to hide what-\never feeling was not conventional; but at\nnight, her lovely, tender soul indulged an\nobstinate longing for that divine some-\nthing lost out of her life. Yet she did not\ndespair, though not even the "one word"\npermitted broke the silence which had\nfallen between her lover and herself. "The\ntilings of the heart are eternal." she thought;\n"and tomorrow, perhaps tomorrow. One\nnever knows, what God has reserved for\nthe morrow!" Thus faithfully musing, . she\nwould fall into forgetfulness;and,4it last,\nSioep come to comfort her.\nTo fear, to wait, to doubt, to begin\nhoping anew, to say "it is impossible," to\nhave but one thought, and to turn that\nthought a ways, to feel disap-\npointment cankering lire, and to smile\nabove all her suffering; this was now the\nstory of Katherine's life. The "one word"\ncame not from Robert. She blamed, and\nthen excused him. He was, perhaps, sick.\nHe was proud, and had good reason to be\noffended. She did not wonder he disliked\nto write even that "one word" to her\nfather. But, doubtless, he bad a great\nsurprise in store for her. And thus Love\ntrusted and hoped, and if it grieved, it\nalso forgave.\nWhen the three years were nearly over\nthe colonel was near unto death. But\nhe was quite ready to follow, when beck-\noned; and, during these last days, he\nlooked keenly and steadily into the dark-\nless he was about to penetrate. "I am\ngoing to quit my life, dear Katherine," he\nsaid, "I am not ordered out of it. I quit\nit. I give up my spirit to Him who desires\nme; or I should not be willing to go to\nHim. You have been a faithful and loving\nchild, through much sorrow
06590697de67b38c2d46792d8594f66a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.3410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 “Why didnt you tell me that I must\ntake notes, too?” asked Senator Pyle.\n“You take a man into the silent pre­\ncincts of a little 8x10 room, pump the\nlife out of me, and then betray me,\neh?” To this the witness did not reply.\nHe stated that Senator Pylo said that\nhe did not want the money for him­\nself. He said it was a d—n outrage\nthat money was necessary, but you had\nto accept a situation as you found it\nMr. Hoffecker said he knew that his\nbrother had written to the chairmen of\nthe two divorce cases to come to his of­\nfice on that day, and that he expected\nto be called into the office at the proper\ntime. He did not go in when Mr. Mc­\nCullough was there, as a client engaged\nlids attention at that time.\nS. S. White, Jr„ of Philadelphia, bro­\nther of Mrs. Cause, was sworn, but as\nall of his knowledge came through the\nHoffcckers he was not permitted to tes­\ntify, and frankly stated that he did not\nthink what he could say would be proper\nevidence. He submitted a letter, how­\never, which he received from Mr. Hof­\nfecker on February 17, and a question\narose as to whether the letter was writ­\nten with the two in­\nviting Messrs. Pyle and McCullough to\ncome to the office. The letter present­\ned by Mr. White was a recitation of the\nconversation that 'Mr. HofTecker alleges\nthat lie had with John T. Dickey. It\nwas read by Chairman Hazell.\nThomas J. Bowen, Jr., cor re sponding\nclerk for Mr. Hoffecker, testified that\nhe wrote the two letters asking the\nmembers to visit the office, and that\nthe other letter apprising Mr. White o<f\nthe condition of affairs was written im­\nmediately afterward on the same morn­\ning. Regarding the visit of the two\nmembers he said that Senator Pyle\ncame in first and went into the private\noffice. While he was there Mr. McCul­\nlough came in and occupied a chair op­\nposite his desk in the outside office. He\nsaid that Senator Pyle remained in the\nprivate office about ten minutes. On\nhis way out he met Representative Mc­\nCullough. The senator stopped at Mr.\nCavender's desk, and he and Mr. Cav-\nender seemed to be arguing some law\nwhich was down here, but witness did\nnot know what it was. He remained,\ntalking with Mr. Cavender about ten\nminutes, or within about a minute of\nthe time when Representative McCul­\nlough got through with his conference\nwith Mr. Hoffecker.
2624547109c79eba4a311096fa78f43d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1917.0890410641807 58.275556 -134.3925 "That." Mild lie, "Im what I want\nto talk about. It I* true I have in¬\nvented an electric torpedo, the Sim*\nuleetnr torpedo, which wo have Hold\nout to the Armstrong Cuu Company,\nhut it i* not In thut kind of a thing\nthat I take pride. What I want la\nto see Nome foreign country coming\nto attack us on our own ground.\nThat In what I want to see, and I\nthink electricity will play such a\npart In war when that time come*\nan wilt make gunpowder and dyna¬\nmite nit in humble security with the\n. obHolete flint arrowhead. Every elec¬\ntrician, when that time comet, will\nhave III* plan for making the lifo of\nhi* enemy electrically uncomfortable.\n"Here Is one Item of defense which\nI have In mind. I have never written\nor Hpokeu of it before. With 2K men\nin a fort I ran make that fort ab¬\nsolutely impregnable, ho far as an\nuHHault Is concerned, and I should\nonly need '.'ft men to do It. This is\nnot guess work but a matter of sel-\nmitlfic certainty. Some years ago\nwhen the wires loaded with heavy\nelectric charges began to go under¬\n I predicted there would be\ndanger of the firemen receiving a\ndeadly shock by the electricity run¬\nning down the streams of water\nwhich might cross the wires.\n"Ill each fort I would put an al¬\nternating machine of 20,000 volts\ncapacity. One wire would be ground-\nid. A man would govern a stream\nOf water of about 400 pounds pres¬\nsure to the square Inch with whlrh\nhe 20,000 volt alternating current\nwould be connected. The man would\nimply move this stream of water\nback and forth with his hand play¬\ning on an enemy and mowing them\ndown with absolute precision. Ev¬\nery man touched by the water would\ncomplete the circuit, get the full force\nof the alternating current and never\nknow what happened to him. The\nmen trying to take a fort by as¬\nsault. though they may come by\ntens of thousands against a handful,\nwould be cut to the ground beyond\nany hope of escape.\n"Foreign soldiers undertaking to\nwhip America could walk around\nsuch a fort as mine but they could'\nnever get through It. It would not\nbe lie. cfsary to deal out absolute\nilcath unless the operator felt like\nlit.
28ecc78c32a7fb8ccd9409bbf7c8973e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.0342465436327 39.745947 -75.546589 Beginning o-l a «ton«» in a Une of George\nSpringer's land, und in the middle of the\nfilme Stone road; thence north 87*4 de­\ngrees east 41 perches and 5-10 to a marked\ntree; thence south 6 degrees east 43 and\n1-18 perches to a stone; thenoe south «f>U\ndegrees west 16 perches and 3-10 to a\nstone; thence south 6& degrees cast 102\nperches and 6-10 lo a Stone In a line of\nlands formerly of Ithe heirs of Samuel\nLindsey, now of Joseph Mitchell;.thence\nby said lands south SO degrees west 43\nperches and 5-10 lo a stone, n corner of\nWilliam Penn's Manor; thence along said\nmanor line north 5Mi degrees west (0\nperches and 7-10 to a «tone; thence north\nIS degrees east 40 perches to a stone;\nthence north 27V4 degrees east 25 S-10\nperches to a stone In the middle of Ihe\nLime Stone road; thence along said road\nnorth 43* degrees west 28 6-10 perches to\nthe place of beginning, containing about\n34 acres of land, more or less.\nAnd the other tract begins nt a \nIn a line of Joseph Mitchell's land; thenoe\nnorth 4H degrees west 76 9-10 perches lo a\npost In a line of John MclhUres land;\nthence by said land north ?J degrees and\n10 minifies east 5S perches to n stone In u\nline of land of George Springer; thence\nsouth 6% degrees east 10 6-10 perches to\na slump, a corner of the Mrst-mentioned\ntract; thence h> the same south 54 de­\ngrees east 32 9-10 perches, south 29 degrees\nand 10 minutes west 16 perches, and south\n17Mt degrees west 40 8-10 perches to a\nstone, a corner of Joseph Mitchell's land;\nt henceby the same north 8744 degrees west\n57 1-18 perches to the place of beglnn ng,\ncontaining S3 acres. 1 rood and 29 perches\nof land, more or less.\nSeised mid taken In execution as the\nproperty of Thomas L. Baldwin, surviv­\ning mortgagor, and Henry B. Klalr. ad­\nministrator c. t. a . of Mary Jane Bald­\nwin. deceased. inortg;vgor. and Thomas L.\nJ. Baldwin, and Francia D. Baldwin,\nlerre tenant, and to be sold by
8dee1b8718d5d2444eea6cf88925d455 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.5794520230847 31.960991 -90.983994 York and Boston Custom Houses, are proof of\nthe perfidy of the little man of Tennessee.\nMr. Van Buren and Mr. Wright have been\ntreated like children. The appointment of the\nSecretary of the Treasury was a piece of thim­\nble-rigging most contemptible—only equalled by\nthe appointment of Marcy to the War Depart­\nment. It was undoubtedly made to neutralize\nthe weight and influence of the New York demo­\ncracy, while there was kept up a show' of doing\nher justice. In no way—not even had Polk ap­\npointed old Major Noah to the War Office, could\nhe have so effectively humiliated the self-respect\nof the body of the New York democracy, as by\nthe selection of Marcy. Who is Secretary Mar­\ncy? An old defunct linsey-woolsey politician—\ndead for the last eight years, mainly on accodnt\nof his opposition to the Sub-Treasury, which he\nhas never apologised for or retracted, as Father\n has. And, who is. the eulogist of this\nappointment? Old Major Noah; and yet such is\nthe narrow soul of the Secretary of War, that he\nhas not the beggarly charity of bestowing upon\nthe Major an odd parr of old breeches for the\ngrateful puff. There have only been two appoint­\nments made on the recommendation of My. Van\nBuren and Mr. Wright—Hoffinan, Navatl Sur­\nveyor, and Bacon, to the pitiful Consulship^at\nTurks Island. And neither Wright or Van ~\nren have written to Polk since. The shuffling\nof Mr. Polk with the regular recommendation of\nCoddington for Collector, and the appointment of\nLawrence, after having promisea Mr. Wright\nthat Coddington should be the man—has closed\nall communication between the heads of the par­\nty in New York and the head ofthe administra­\ntion at Washington. And had it not been for\nSlamm and Riell, the old White Horse, who was
3cc8b4e2881f0645874ec827ef23dcac EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.3712328450026 39.745947 -75.546589 Lady Beatty, wife of Admiral Sir David Beatty, and\ndaughter of the late Mr. Marshall Field of Chicago,\nhas done, and Is doing, a great work in connection with\nher own War Relief Fund which she administers for\nthe orphans, widows and incapacitated of the brave\nmen who have fought and died in action in the Battle\nof Jutland and other naval engagements.\nThe British and Foreign Sailors Society Inc. , which\ncelebrates its 100th. anniversary next year, and is one\nof the oldest of Seamen's Societies, administered by the\nvery best of men. as wifi be seen by the heading and\nmargin of this letter, hae for the. past two and a half\nyears, had the unhappy -privilege of dealing with both\ncrews and passengers wlno «orne from torpedoed, mined\nor wrecked ships not only around the coast of the\nBritish Isles, but at all active centers. Relief is given\nto the suffering victims, numbering many - .thousands,\nand largely augmented by the inhuman and>-cruel\nmethods of the submarines which have astounded the\nwhole world, many being killed without warning (In­\ncluding American citizens) and survivors left In open\nboats, on (ho high seas terrible weather, to make\nland the best way they can; when they are fortunate\nin getting there, more often than not absolutely desti­\ntute, they arc taken care of W the British and Foreign\nSailors Society, in every possible way, Irrespective of\nnationality, and In any part of the world. At Malta\nalone recently over throo hundred <3f the poor men of\ndifferent crews whose ships had been torpedoed were\nbeing taken earn of at one time, anil the same sad\ntale corner from many other ports far apart, and I he\nnecessities of theso gallant and unfortunate men, will\nenable you to form some idea of the many and urgent\nclaims upon our funds. Ah this great country Is now\nunfortunately drawn Into the war. the strain on the re­\nsources of these societies will now possibly he greater,\nand your own countrymen In all humane probability will\nrequire the assistance which has been\ngiven them unslintingly as occasions arise.\n It has. therefore, been decided to make a very ur\ngent and strong appeal to American hearts and pride\nIn this cause of humanity to help us as generously and\nas wholehearted as possible.
0d10b2ce9a9287f70fb06ff8711a42a3 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1883.1821917491122 39.756121 -99.323985 Several times the pilot w&3 obliged to slow\ndown and take his bearings, even in the bright\nlight of day, as he feared to run into a hidden\nhouse, hank, or clumn oftrepa. Indiana on\nthe right and Kentucky on the left oould\nscarcely be distinguished at times, and it\nlooked as though the boat was running upon an\nopen sea. This statement might appear in-- .\ncredible, but it is true, nevertheless. Occa-\nsionally a high and hilly bank would be en-\ncountered, upon which tbe householders were\nsafe from the flood; but the bunks were gen-\nerally low bottom lan Is. What hills were to\nbe seen were usually on the Kentucky shore.\nAt one point on the Indiana shore the boat\npassed wltbi :i fifty feet of a house half under\nwater, surrounded by a watery waste.\nTwelve miles below Evansville, Henderson,\n one of tbe wealthiest tobacco-ehlppin- g\nports in tbe State, was parsed. It is situated\non a high plateau, and has not been molested\nby the flood. Tbe Indiana bank opposite is all\nunder water.\nThe p lot said he had passed New Albany,\nInd., a nd the destruction there had ben very\nlarge. The water there had receded and the\ncitizens were trying to wash their bouses with\nhose, but tbo water bad frozen as it fell, and!\neverything was coated with ice. The railroad\ntrack was in a frightful condition, being torn\nup and wrenched out of shape by the action of\nthe waves. There was a great deal of suffer-\ning, too, he said, at Lawrenceburg, Ky., which\nhe had just passed. Kot expecting such a\nserious fiood, tbe citizens had urg ected to ve\ntheir household goods to places of safe-
744555d68ac40f545dbcc662088c7608 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.9986338481583 39.261561 -121.016059 rinporfniit to PniiRlrs.—When n Friunlr la\nin trouble or afflicted with di ea e. And requires medical\nor surgical aid. the inquiry should be where is there a phy-\nsician who i- fully competent to administer relief, one\nwhose knowledge of the female system is perfect, awl who\nthoronglily understands the application of medicine to di*\nsense, and who e scientific attainments in surgery have\nmade him preeminent in his profession, and whose re-\nspectable standing in society, recommends him to the con-\ntidenca of the community. Unless these, and man)' more\nquestions can he-n ! i factnrily answered, the nlflided should\npause before consulting any one. Considering these things\nin their true light, tin* celebrated J. C. YOUNG, corner of\nMontgomery and California streets, has concluded to adver-\ntise his place of business to public, stating that he has\nh**ona pro!** snr of obstetrics and female diseases for the\nlast fourteen years, and i- fully qualified to administer in\nnil cases, both medically and surgically, not in a superfi-\ncial manner, but in astliorough a manner as years of study\nand practice—both in hospital- and private families, can\nmake; therefore, families can rely upon him as a father.—\nAll in a Miction can find in him one wlio can sympathize\nwith, and befrien 1 them In trouble, one in whose secrecy\nthe utmost confidence can hv placed. Come nil ye that are\nafflicted and in trouble, and you will be relieved or enred.\nAjmrtmentspiivatcly arranged so as to preclude the jiossi-\nhilitv of exjvHiire.\nN B.—All letters inclosing $10 xvill receive prompt at-\ntention. and the best advice and instructions.
1659794d0ab6c6f56d5cde1e4a6ec91e THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.078082160071 29.949932 -90.070116 our streets are impassable and useless for all\npracticable purposes, is absurd and unonecessary:\nThe city expend. annr .ally over ($400.0() four\nhundred thousand dollars for cleaning and repair.\ning the s'reets, besides the anLount which is paid\nto contractors for the same work. The contract\nfor cleaning and keeping is repair the streets of\neach ward is sold every year, and the city\nrailroads are bound by their contracts to keep all\nof the streets, through which their cars pass, in\ngood order. Yet toe s:reet comulisioner is\nforced to expend for his department alone, nearly,\ni! not more than the amount above named.\nThis is one of the most important features of\ncur city guovrnment, and should engagee the alton-\ntioo of tax-payers more than any other.\n' here ought to be, and there a way to escape\nth:s imnmense tax, and to devote it to some other\nend, It not to leseen the tax upon our people.\nThis way is simply to pave the streets of the\nci y with the best pavement that is known-with\na pavement which will answer all the purposes of\ntrtf'c, and yet afford the highest comfort to the\njpeople-wath one that, while it is durable, will\nrot injure the horses and vehicles--which, wh:le\nit possesses the solidity of rock, does not pro-\nduce noise or dust or mud.\nThe property-owners, as we have asserted, have\nto pay for the whole expense of the paving in\nfront of their property, while the city pays for\nthe intersectiots. But when the pavement has\nonce been laid the city has to keep it in repair\never afterward.
a03602dcfb99a8b0a265f2b2c955d453 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.1821917491122 35.780398 -78.639099 friends and quick to resent an injury. His\nfeatures were of peculiar French caste, rath-\ner too coarse and rigid to be conceded\nstrikingly handsome, yet his smile when it\nplayed on his face was such as one must\nfall in love with when he sees its like. It\nwas not often that he spoke of his parents\neither to his brother or to Mr. Grandon, but\nwhen he did a tear would dim the bright-\nness of his eye and steal its way over his\ncheek. He seemed to live in constant\ndread that his father would learn of his re-\ntreat in the Isles of the South and seek him\nout again. He manifested a desire to learn\nthe condition of his parents but he would\nnot consent that Mr. Grandon should in-\nstitute any enquiries for the of\nhis wish. He was abundantly gifted in the\nuse of language, and it was thrilling to hear\nthe invective he sometimes hurled ainst\nthe sin of drunkenness, as, in burning words,\nhe expressed his horror of the vice and the\ncalamities it had visited upon his parents.\nThere was one trait in the character of\nthis boy that gave Mr. Grandon some fears,\nas from day to day it became more and ap-\nparent. This he strove to change and to\ndivert from its original channel ; otherwise\nhe was exceptional. His affections were\nlinked to the good, his principles aspiring\nclinging to the lofty, his morals without\na blemish, his heart abounding with gen-\nerosity, and an active desire to relieve\nthe wants of the destitute and friendless ;\nbut one principle there was that seemed
184b27ed4d2b67c2422fe6324d830b34 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.9493150367834 41.681744 -72.788147 unanimous decision of Referee Ed\nPurdy and the judges over the best\nGriffiths Chicago ever saw.\nStribling was favored to win by\na knockout, probably because of his\nsensational one round elimination of\nOtto Von Porat in the same ring\nseveral months ago, and he made\nat least one desperate bid to stop\nthe Sioux City youngster. Griffiths,\nhowever, fought a clever defensive\nfight and his left hand, while it in-\nflicted little damage, ruined many\nof Stribling's maneuvers.\nJust before the bout Major Gen-\neral John V. Clinnin, president of\nthe National Boxing association, and\nchairman of the Illinois state athle-\ntic commission, announced that he\nhad recommended that the N. B . A.\nrecognize the winner as champion\nof the world, as Max Schmeling had\nfailed to defend the title within six\nmonths of winning it. However, thj\n must be approved\nby each member state in the N- - B. A.\nThe Georgian, outweighed a pound\nand a quarter by Griffiths, fought a\ncalculated battle after the flrn\nround when the Jowan cut Iooej\nwith a surprisingly effective left\nhand assault, meanwhile keeping his\njaw carefully protected from blasts\nsuch as lowered Von Porat. From\nthere on, Stribling concentrated\nmost of his attack on Tuffy's middle\nand inflicted a lot of damage.\nHe did not quite reach the "Willi 2\nthe clutch" stage, but he kept Grif-\nfiths well tied up most of the way\nand indulged in what many of the\ncustomers considered unnecessary\nroughness. He cracked Griffiths on\nthe back of the neck a few times,\ncausing the tough one to protest to\nthe referee on one occasion, and on\nthe ropes pulled and hauled Griffitns\nabout.
4f917de9d59b9c696d3159cc962ef5d0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.4479451737698 41.681744 -72.788147 'The efforts of the commission tck\nrestore competitive conditions In the\nnews print industry expeditiously and\nto arbitrate and effectively project a\nfair price for newsprint paper have\nfailed. 4 The plan failed for several\nreasons, the principal i reason being\nthat the anrangemont waa voluntary\nand the commission had ho power or\nwarrant under the law to make 14\nesectlve. The manufaotnrers slgna--i\ntory to the agreement notified the\ncommission they would not proceed\nunder such arbitration agreement.\nThe result has been the news print\npaper situation is .'very serious, not\nonly to the consumers of paper but to\nthe publlo generally and to the gov-\nernment of the United States which\nitself. Is i a, large consumer of paper.\nThe commission has reason to believe\nthat situation will be still more\naggravated and serious In the ensuing\nmonths. The demand for news print\npaper is constantly - Increasing and\ngives promise of still greater Increase\nwith the continuance of the war. The\nsupply, of news print paper available\n,to meet this demand Is dependent\nupon mills already in existence.\n"It seems probable, therefore, that\nwith, the demand for news print paper\nincreasing and the supply remaining\nconstant or possibly diminishing there\nwill be a repetition of the panic mar-\nket of last year and the exaction of\nprices that ere entirely out of measure\nwith the cost of production. The\nconsequences to thousands of smaller\nnewspapers and to many of the larger\nones, and. through them, to the read-\ning public, will be most serious.
2d91b715c511e9b55574111208f8bbc0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.5849314751395 41.681744 -72.788147 Now 'that, it has been proven with-\nout doubt that boxing can be con-\nducted successfully in this city, every-\nbody is het up over the outlook, and\nof course every embryo boxng man-\nager has announced his intentions of\nseeking a permit to conduct a show\nin the future. Those conversant with\nconditionr? in the past, know well that\nit has been the fault in the past of\nissuing permits for persons totally in-\ncapable on handling such events. The\nlicense committee can be depended\nupon to use the best judgment when\nthe time comes for the action of ap-\nplications for such permits.\nFor the good of the game in this\ncity, it is to be hoped that some of\nthose with boxing inclinations toward\nconducting exhibitions will be met\nwith a flat refusal when they ask per-\nmission to handle events, where the\npublic asked to put up their good\nmoney. There is no assurance that\nall shows would " be run off in the\nmanner that John Reinas conducted\nhis exhibtion Thursday night. Chief\nRawlings, who is the supervisor of\nsuch events by virtue of the power in-\nvested in him by the license com-\nmittee can also be looked upon as\nhaving something to say, as to who\nshall run boxing here, if there i3 to\nbe any more exhibitions.\nIn the past out of town alleged\npromoters have done much to injure\nthe sport and it is frequentlyrumored\nthat local men might be influenced\nto secure a license for some of this\nelement. Hardly has the sound of\nthe bell of the last successful exhi-\nbition died out, than murmerings are\nheard about bringing world's cham.\npions here. This is fine judgment for\na state that prohibits prize fighting.
12b78811f3300588df535aaffab0fd53 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.4002731924206 39.623709 -77.41082 simplv that to pass (he time we indulge in\na kind ot talk about oit neighbors and\nfriends, the results of which for evil are\ngreater than we may ever know. Who ran\nestimate the reputations that have been\nwrecked, the lives of promise that have\nbeen crippled, the usefulness for good in\nthe world that has been checked by the\nretailing -of evil slander throughout the\ntwelve hours of the day?\nOnce more, think ot the hours consumed\nin the pursuit of merely selfish plcasme\nIndifferent to the hitter cry of outcast hu-\nmanity, callous to the great mors, needs of\nthe hour that come knocking at our doors,\nhow many of lie use up the twelve hours\nin the pursuit of schemes whose one pur-\npose is for self and sell alone. Busy we\nmay he, hut so busy with the affairs ot e.(\nthat we have no time to spend tor the com-\nmon good, for the needs of man, or the\nglory of God. Twelve hours! and all ot\nthem strangled upon the n'lar of self not\none given up to God, to wing its way up-\nward like incense before the eternal throne.\nlook hack npo" the week nat is gone\nwith its treasury ot hours, and what record\nhave they left upon the tablets of the son.';\nHow many hours of Inst week wi nessed\nvou on your knees before (toil? Mow many\nhours did von give to prayer? Mow \nhours did you give to studying the Bible?\nMow many to thinking thoughts of love\nand translating them into deeds of kind-\nness? How many to crucifying self and\nenthroning Ghriat? How ninny? Perhaps\nnot even one. And yet on these hours we\nare building character for eternity; out o\nlhee hours is growing that immortal self\nwith which at last 'ye must stand before\nthe judgment scat ol Ho I. 1 wcivc ho.us\nin tile (fay to work out your salvation, and\nhow many nun are using these twc.vc\nhours in working out their perdition:\nHow, thru, are we going to redeem our\ndavs, make the most ol those twelve hours,\nho that, at last no upbraiding memory shall\nrecall (hem with sorrow nut shame?\nI would not he so foolish as to say that\nthis power to use time aright means that\nwe are to till no each separate hour with\nsome determined, conscious effort, lhat\nwould he impossible, and, even if it were\npossible, it would turn ns into selfcon-\nscions prigs mu. moral pedants. You can-\nnot detach cvcrv hour and sa;., as Frank'in\nsaid in his diary, that this hour will be de-\nvoted to such an such a duly, that In i\nto some other rtutv. and so on. That tvon.d\ndestrov a great deal ol the inspiration ot\nlife and would turn (xisteme into a grind-\ning marl me. No, the hours rre to be re*\ndeemed,
449d9f1ff239d6cd4cfd25f753d0901b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.3237704601802 39.623709 -77.41082 The American colonists were not Ilie\nSist men in tight for independence, hut the\n. n otices that produced the Declaration of\nindependence made their light epoch\nmarking as no other fight had ever been.\nOther nations had given iqi slave)y, but\nno nation wa- ever before called upon to\nfurnish so awful a proof of sincerity of\nmotive in striking the shackles from the\nlimbs of the enslaved. Other nations have\nhad to deal with tin- problem of undesir-\nable aliens, hut no nation ever fell as feels\nAmerica the imperativeness of a course of\naction based upon righteousness and jus-\ntice. Other nations have seized the terri-\ntory ol the weak and helpless, but none\nlia> felt such deep, unselfish solicitude for\na dependent people a- has characterized\nonr runntry in her dealings with a primi-\ntive people committed to her care as the\noutcome of her inter) cut ion in the inter-\nests of humanity. Other nations have had\nto effect adjustments between employer\nand employe, hut no nation ever been\ncalled upon to effect siu-li an adjustment\nwhen the conditions presented revealed so\nclearly the fact that a great principle of\nuniversal importance is involved. The set-\ntlement of tile “labor problem” in demo-\ncratic America nn ins the set-lenient for (lie\nworld, for here the employer of the high\nest type meets the worker of the highest\ntype, and the final resn t will he in keep-\ning with the character of the contestants.\nSo we are learning the !es--m of deliber-\nateness; and one of the must promising\nsigns of the times is tile tendency to deal\nwith great questions cautiously and calmly.\nThe result of this course will he that what\nthe new America settles will stay settled.\nShe will settle, and that for all time, the\nquestion of the rights of inferior peoples,\nthe question as lo the character of the edu-\ncation most to he desired, the question of\nthe relation of employer to employed.\nAmerica is to-day solving the accumulated\nproblems of the ages.
567a4be44d662e317260d627781f9e0a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6506848997972 40.063962 -80.720915 A Horriblb Murder was committed\nat Pittsburg, early on Thursday morn¬\ning.sometime, as it is supposed, be¬\ntween one and three o'clock. The Zh's-\npatch says that nothing liko it in fiend¬\nish atrocity ever occurred in that city.\nThe face was crushed In, as If struck\nwith great violence or with some lieavv\nsubstance.tho upper jaw broken at the\ncenter, one tooth knocked out, and the\nbones of the uoso, also broken. The\nnose and upper lip were laccrated and\nthe eyes much blackened. There ap-\nponrodto be three different cuts upon\nthe throat, one beside the main wound,\n(transversely ucross tho neek) under\ntho left ear. and one ftirther back on\nthe same side. Tho carotid artery and\nwind pipe were severed. An equally\nterrlblo wound was that on tho left slao\nnear the' spliie.' was of sufficient\nlength and depth to admit the four\nlingers of tho physician's hand. The\ncutting of the throat'was evidentlv\ndone after tho infliction of tho other\nwounds, and doubtless when the man\nwas already doad. A lnrgo stone or\nboulder,"stained with blood, was found\nnear the body, and was doubtless used\nin crushing the face of the deceased.\nNo clue to tho murderers has been\nobtained. Tho name of the victim is\nunknown. Tho deed was done on\nBoyd's Hill. The motive for doing it\nis supposed to have been robl>ery.\nMurders are getting to be alarmingly\nfrequent throughout tho country, es¬\npecially in the cities. And strangely\nenough at no period have they seemed\nto be committed with more impunity.'\nIdentification, conviction and puu-\nishinent are rather tho exception than\nthe rule.
0d2cfed829817038498f8a355849a8ee THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.993169367284 39.261561 -121.016059 Skc. 4. Every swine taken up and impounded shall\nbe kept not less than three nor more than ten days,\nand if not reclaimed within that time, the Pound\nmaster shall sell the same to tho highest bidder for\ncash ; and uj>on the payment of the purchase money,\nshall deliver such animal, with a bill of sale, signed\nin his official capacity, to the purchaser. The sales\nshall be held at the Pound, Iwtwoen the hours of teu\noclock a. m . and twelve oclock m.\nSkc. 5. The owner of every swine impounded mnv\nreclaim it and take it away, upon proving property\nand paying the fees and charges allowed to the\nHoundma-ter, which fees and charges shall be as fol-\n1 >ws : For impounding each swine, one dollar ; for\nkeeping and feeding them, twenty five cents each\nper dav during the time they are in the Pound. And\nin addition to the above mentioned feca and charges,\nthe Poundmaster shall be* allowed ten j»er cent, com-\nuiiMiuii mi tlie pale of sucbswinoaa arc not redeemed.\nbur. 6. The Puundmastcr shall keep a book in\nwhich lie .hall enter a partieular description of each\nswine taken up and impounded ; the date it was tak-\nen up , tlie date it nan redeemed, if redeemed, and bv\nwhom, and tlie amount of fonn and charge* for its re-\ndemption ; the time it.wassold, if Bold, and to whom •\nthe price it brought, the ftue and chargee upon\nit; and on tlie firet Monduy of each month, lie Khali\nreport to the Trustees in detail all tlie facta this sec-\ntion reiiiiires him to keep a record of.\n!ckc. 7. After deducting the fees and charges al-\nlowed by section live of this Ordinance, the round-\nmaster shall pay tlie amount accruing fromeaclisale\nInto tho City Treasury, taking the Treasurer's re-\nceipt therefor, and if, at any time, tlie owner shall\nprose to the satisfaction ot the Trustees, that he\nwas the owner of any swine sold under the provis-\nion" "I this Ordinance, he shall have an order drawn\non the Treasurer for tlie not amount paid in by the\nPoundmast.r from the sale ot such swine.\ntsic. S. If any person shall resist, oppose, or in-\nterfere with tlie Poundmaster or his assistants\nwhile in thej performance ot tho duties imposed hv\nthis Ordinance, he shall, upon conviction, be fined\nin any sum not exceeding one hundred dollars or\nbe imprisoned not exceeding ten days, or liy both\nsueli line and imprisonment.\nPKI-. 9. Tlie Poondmaster shall, in consideration\nof the fees aud charge* allowed him, furnish every\nswine impounded with a sullieiencv of food and\nwater during the time it is Impounded.\nSue. 10. This Ordinance shall not he so eons'rued\nas to authorize the Poundmaster to take up any\nswine tlint is in the imnusliate possession or charge\norany person driving it in, through orlrom Uitcitv\nPassed Pec. 29th 1860.
4f4ee483cbc5c18b61eb4123df0cc86e DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.278082160071 44.939157 -123.033121 With tho gold that no man has lied for the gond no woman has made\nTho prise of her truth nnd honor, plying a suamdoss trade\nTho clean, pure gold of the mountain, straight from the strong, dark earth,\nWith no tnng or taint upon It from the hour of Its primal Irlrth.\nThe trick of the money changer, shifting his coins aa hr wills,\nTe may keep no Christ was bartered fur the wealth of our lavish bills,\n"Vet we are a Utile people tee weak for the cares nf stated"\nlot no go our wuyl When ye wok again ye shall And us, mayhap, tut great\nCllieu we lack and gutters where children snatch for bredi\nNumbers and hordes of stnrvdlHge, toiling but never fed.\nSpare pains that would make us greater In the pattern that ye have sett\n bold to the larger measure of the men that ye forget\nThe men who, from trackless for wis and prairie lone and far,\nHewed out the mad where ye sit nt ease and grudge us our fntrwen star.\n"There yet bo won, my masters," though the net that the trickster tllngs\n14es wide en the mud to Its bitter shame, and his cunning parleying\nHave deafened the ears of Justice, that was blind aad dew ef eld.\nVet Time, the last Oront Judge, 1c not bought, or bribed, or soldi\nAad Time nnd the Bnee shall Judge us not a league ef trifKeing men,\nSdllug the trust of the people, to barter it buck a go la\nPalming the lives of millions as n handful of oaay coin,\nWith a dusjie heart te the narrow verge where craft and statecraft Jdn.
1b8360b273de8652a8aee010a2ac08dc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.727397228564 40.063962 -80.720915 The Ifull Ik roomy ahd tastefully fitted\nup. Here we find a good but not extra\nassortment of arls and manufactures.\nAmong the many articles on exhibition\nwe noticed the following as well Worthy\nof mention; .Urs. L*. Robertson and S\nFulton had a magnificent display of\nartificial teeth and dental instruments.\nSanders and Gurry, of Wellsburg, AVest1\nVa.. had on exhibition a model of their\nGrain Separator. This machine is on\nexhibition for the first timo, and to the\ncredltof West Virginia mechanics, it is\npronounced by the judges and by the\nfarmers of this county to be the best1\nmachine ever offered to the public for\nthis purpose. The dirtiest grain we\nhave ever seen, is put in the maehiue\nand the whoat comes out so clean as to\nsuit the most fastidious taste.\nMr. .las. S . Seaman has a tine display\nof marble work, tombstones, <fcc.\nIn tlio stove line there was a full as¬\nsortment, some of Washington, Pitts¬\nburg and Wheeling manufacture. Cul-\nberUion, of Wheeling, seemed to have\n best lot. Adam llecker, of Wash¬\nington, took the premium for grate\nfronts, of which he had a large number.\nMr. J. T. Shaw had a number of\nWheeler «fc Wilson's sewing machines,\nand J)alton's patent knitting machines.\nThe latter were the great curiosities of;\nthe fair. When the old ladies were told\nthat a pair of stockings could be knit,\nheeled and toed in the short time ofi\nseven minutes, they would not l>elievc\nxi untu ilie proor positive was ottered.\nMr. S . sold a large number of his 111a-\nchines during the day. They are sim-\nplo, complete and almost noiseless.\nChristian Horuish was there with\nLamb's patent churn, in which he\nclaims he can make butter in five mill-\nutes. He took a premium. |\nA very large variety of fancy needle-\nwork was exhibited.' A Miss J. Baird\ntook the premium in this class.\nMr. J . S . Young received the reward\nfor the l>est ambrotypes and photo¬\ngraphs, and for the best display of\nsame. In the
40de6b83aa35cde3c3c6afc8574dcae3 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1908.2581966896882 43.624497 -72.518794 STATE OF VERMONT,l Whmu, lUttwS\nWixusor toinnt, ss J Hadler of l.udluw.\nVt, hu duly filed her petlUon to IheCoanljr Court,\nMitine (orth her kgal nurrtage to Flojnf lladl r\npl 1'ljrro.mth in tho Mateuf Vermont; Uu' 'H hath\nfMlded (of tn yrurs in the State of Vetinont j\nthat she hath kec tha marrijge corenant, but that\nth Uhr nnd hatli violatcd the same, (or that It\nluthtreated thIibtillant wtth intolrrableMTerttT,\nand (or tliat, beleg o( suflklent phrsxal and pero -ni ar- y\nabitity to prorlde suiuble nwintnanc for\nthe libelUnt, b hath, Uhout cauw, grtHJlr, wa n-t on- tr\nand cnitllr nglected and rcfuMd $0 to ilo,\nnhcrefore the pstitloiwr prays (or a blll o( divorce\n(roro tlie said l'loyd.\nAnd vrhereas It appears that said Flojrd Hadler\nit without this State, so the summonj o( said\nwoun tnar noi ue serrea upon rum :\nIt Is Theupon Ordered that the said Floyd\nIladlev be notihed and rcra!nl to i DDear in and b\n(ore said Court and maLe answer, 11 an lie have,\nand aMde the order artd Judjrment of said Court in\nthe pnuulses, at the term thereof next to ba held at\nWoodstock in and for the county of Windsor, In\nthe State of Vermont, on the lirst Tuesdar of tune\nA. D.iooS.Dpon'thefirjttlayof said term, bypnb- -\n. wm ng wa suikudcs 01 uiu peuuoouiKifuier\nwith tmtorder. for thrce succesiive vraeVi, in the\nSpint of the Age, a newspaper pubiished ai Wood-tjbe-\nstock. in said countr. the last Dublication\nkast &ix.weeks nriartouid term of court whlcii\nsrall be deemed fuflicient notice te said lIoyd\n. Hadlej.
45e4c30b2d04c31f3ec333e6da0bdd9d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.6424657217149 41.681744 -72.788147 the fall :n exchange, thci limitations\nof the money market, the regrettable\ndelay in ratifying the peace treaty,\nand tho Mexican outlook. It would\nseem as if these drawbacks had been\nsufficiently discounted by the heavy\nfall of the last six wecks, and that\nthe attractive prices af"", which many\ngood securities are offered would in-\nvite good investment Jfiuying. It is\npremature, however, 'to assume that\nthe turn has been reached, when un-\ncertainties are so numerous. As a\nmatter of fact the market is quite as\nlikely to show sudden changes for bet-\nter or worse, as I' is to settle dowri\ninto comparative inaction. And yet,\nin view of the present low level of\nprices, there is really no reason for\ndiscouragement. General business\nwill probaby continue active, unless\nchoked off by unre asoning demands.\nLabor leaders if they push too hard\nwill surely injure their own cause\nand bring on stagnation under which\nthey be the chief losers. If wise\nthey win exercise patience and allow\ntime for business to gradually adjust\nitself to the new level. Profiteering\nwhich is common to all classes is be-\ning rapidly curbed by vigilance of the\ngovernment; and prevention, it should\nbe remembered, will be an important\nif not unseen help in the future. The\nrailroad outlook is not entirely dis-\ncouraging despite tho roads' unsatis-\nfactory physical and firs ncial condi-\ntions. In reality the situation is so\nbad that, it must soon improve; and\nwhether the roads are icturncd to\ntheir owners or taken over by the\ngovernment, something will have to\nbe do no to compensate for the injur-\nies inflicted upon the loads by the\nwar. It would also seem that the\npublic utility crisis has reached the\npoint where the public in its own in-\nterest must see that they have fair\nplay, due protection and be placed\nupon a self-supporti- ng
0e355d28a5199e8e75bfd7b1dbd04321 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1881.6123287354135 41.004121 -76.453816 in my pocket, and a stout heait. Iliad\ncome to seek my lortuno like many\nyoung men before me who found their\nnative jand unkind in enroot them. Al - -\nnost upon my arrival It was taken sick,\nmil beloio 1 had secured any employ- -\nuent a fever seized mo, and when, weeks\nafterwards, 1 camo back to life, my\nuoney was gone and we were in debt\nfor rent. My poor wife had mado a fow\ndimes hero and thcro doing cheap sow)\nnig, but tho nttio biio could do was not\nenough, and much boloro i was able I\nroso from my bed to seek for woik.\nThose wero sorry days for us I can tell\nyou. up and down in tlio streets I wau--\ndered, asking every placo for work, but\n1 was weak and emaciated, anil no onu\ncared to give mo employment. wan\nnot worth it, really, and so 1 wenton for\ntwo weeks, my health scarcely improving\nmy caso necoining moro and moro des-\nperate. Ono day, utterly exhausted and\nliscouraged, leoiing unsociable and sick\nready to die, but for my wife, I sank\ndown upon a box that stood against a\nlamp post on Hroadway. I took my lint\noil that tlio breezo might cool my burn\niug howl, and I guess I so fell asleep.\nAnyway, when I beciimo conscious of\nwhcro 1 was and lelt somewhat rusted,\naroso to put on my hat when some smnll\nonus rolled out upon tho sidewalk, Mv\nheart throbbed as though a miracle had\nbeen performed. 1 picked theso up, and\nloutui otnors in mv nat. Altogether 1\nhad nearly one dollar. There was a trood\nsupper for my wife and mo, and 1 had\nbesides got an idea.
3334ca2645070e9ca1d4b701deccde6e NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.9246575025368 40.735657 -74.172367 ONGRESS is in session and the national election campaign\nof 1912 has begun. The general belief is that the session\nwill be productive of little in the way of important results.\nThere is small prospect of any tariff legislation. President Taft\nis committed by his vetoes at the special session to tariff bills based\nonly on the report of his Tariff Board. The tariff reformers in\nCongress have their own data and will construct their bills on that\nunless the boards figures shall prove acceptable to them, which\nIs quite unlikely. The tactics of 1 he Democrats will be to send\ntariff bills to Mr. Taft, that will not materially differ from the bills\nhe vetoed and thus put him to the alternative of signing or vetoing\nthem. In the one case the President would stultify his action at the\nspecial session. In the other he would again bring down condem-\nnation upon bis head. The trust question, to be discussed in the\nPresident's message tomorrow, will probably let the tariff question\ntake precedence. It is that there will be a new alignment\non that question, as sentiment in important political quarters lias\nshifted. Roosevelts Outlook article has made some radical changes\nof view among Mr. Tafts strongest adherents. Nothing will be done\nin respect to currency reform and the President's arbitration pro-\ngram will find no favor with the Senate. Something may be ac-\ncomplished in the way of conservation legislation, and perhaps\nthe first steps will be taken to carry out the idea of national water-\nways. The most probable1 action by Congress is the enactment of a\nparcels post hill demanded by the people. Meanwhile a number of\ncommissions appointed at the special session will make reports or\ncontinue their sessions, among the latter being the House steel\ntrust committee and the House committee to report on increasing\nthe second-class postal rates for magazines, which are now practi-\ncally subsidized by the government to the extent of $10,000,000 an-\nnually. Charged with all this legislative dynamite, the present ses-\nsion of Congress promises to he one of sensational interest.
2a494abd5b780424ae16f11271a5c962 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.3575342148656 40.735657 -74.172367 Elm street to a point 100 feet north of the north-\nerly line of Elm street; thence westerly 100\nfeet; thence northerly parallel with Madison\nstreet to Lafayette street; thence westerly along\nthe same to Prospect street; thence westerly\nalong Prospect street to the rear line of lots\nfronting on the northerly elde of Lafayette\nstreet; thence westerly along the same to the\nrear Hoe of lots fronting on the easterly side of\nUhlon street; thence northerly along the same\nabout 225 feet; thence westerly and across Union\nstreet and through Hamilton street to a point\nopposite the rear line of lots fronting on the\nwesterly side of Union street; tbence northerly\nalong the rear line of 'ear lots fronting on the\neasterly side of Union street to the Central Rail-\nroad; thence ea|terly along the same to Union\nstreet; thence northerly and across Ferry\nstreet to a point opposite the rear line of lots\nfronting on the northerly side of Ferry ntreet;\nthence southerly along the same to the Central\nRailroad; thence easterly along the same to\nthe Intersection with Downing street; thence\nsoutherly along Downing Rtreet to a point op-\nposite the rear line of lota fronting on the south-\nerly side of Madison street; thence westerly\nalong thft same to the rear line of lots fronting\non the northerly side of Ferry street; thencs\nsoutherly along the same and across Monroe\nstreet to the rear line of lots fronting on the\nwesterly side of Adams street; thence northerly\nolo.ig the same to the rear line of lots fronting\n the southerly side of Downing street; thence\neasterly along the same to Adams street; thence\nnortherly 85 feet to Downing street; thence east-\nerly to a point opposite the rear line of lots\nfronting on the easterly side of Jackaon street;\nthence northerly and across Downing street\nalong the rear line of lots fronting on, the\nwesterly side of Jackson street to a point about\n2.S0 feet north of the northerly line of Downing\nstreet: thence easterly to Jackson street; thence\nsoutherly to the rear line of lots fronting on the\nsoutherly side of Clover street; thence easterly\nalong tii© 6A?ne to Van Buren street; thence\nnortherly and across Downing street to a point\nabout 43 feet north of the northerly line of\nClover street; thence northerly along the rear\nline of lo*s fronting on the northerly side of\nVan Buren street; thence westerly and north-\nerly along the same to the rear line of lots\nfronting on the southerly side of Market street;\nthence easterly along the same to Polk street;\nthence northerly and across Market street to\nthe rear line of lots fronting on the northerly\nside of Market street; thence westerly along the\nsame to thp rear line of lots fronting on the\neasterly side of Van Buren street; thonc© north-\nerly and westerly along the same to Tasealc\navenue at p nolnt about 25 feet east of the\neasterly line of Van Buren street; thence east-\nerly along Passaic avenue to a point 100 feet\neaM of the easterly line of Chambers street and\nthe place of beginning.
3421c53323ac1413a675906afece928c THE ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.7876712011669 35.084103 -106.650985 The arrival of a little gold at San\nFrancisco, and the decline in the rate\nof sterling exchange, give hope that\nimports of specie are near at hand. It\nis argued by the Financial Chronicle\nthat the fall in exchange is largely due\nto negotiation of security bills in ef-\nfect, to loans of foreign capital for use\nia this country. But the bank of\nEngland did not raise its rate last\nThursday, though it lost 82,500,000 in\nbullion, and it probably would have\ndone so had there been reason to be-\nlieve that any considerable movement\nof gold to this country' was at hand.\nThe exports of wheat from this coun-\ntry have bjcome very large, averaging\n3,000 ,000 bushels a week for tho past\nthree weeks from the seven Atlantic\nports, against an average of 1.800 .000\nbushels last year, but the of\ncom and other grain is much smaller.\nExports of butter and cheese, bacon\nand bams and lard, are still much\nsmaller than they were a year ago,\nwhen the movement was much re-\nstricted by the sharp advance in prices.\nExports of cotton last week were 80,- 6- 03\nbales, against 80,757 for the cor-\nresponding week last year, and 134. - -\n000 two yeara ago. On the other hand,\nthe imports continue large; last week\n$3,181 ,793 at this port, against $7,958, -1 9- 3\nlast year. The truth is that the\nconditions of foreign trade are as yet\nby no means satisfactory, though there\nnas been some improvement, and noth-\ning has yet been done to cancel the\nlargo unliquidated balance due abroad.\nWe can hardly count upon a large\nmovement of specie in this direction\nwhile these conditions remain.
0dd57a3fcea413807795ef3407928dfd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.850684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 The second wool: in November is ob¬\nserved cnch year by tlio Young Men's\nChristian Associations nil over tlio\nworld us a special season of prayer for\nyoung men. As heretofore, the associ¬\nation of this city lias made arrange¬\nments to observe the week. Most of\nthe ministers of the eitv will join in its\nobsorvanco by prencfiing either to\nyoung men or about young men at their\nmorning or evening service to-morrow.\nSome oi the ministers will also devote\nthoir Wednesday evening sorvicea next\nweek to thcintercatH of young men.\nKev. A . II . Zimmcrmanu, of Mary¬\nland, a successful evangelistic worker,\nwill spend the week with tlio associa¬\ntion and will address all of the sneclal\nmeetings at tlio association building,\nlie will also preach in Fourth\nStreet M. E . church to-morrow evening\nand in tiio Third Presbyterian church\nnext Sunday evening.\nTlio regular young men's meeting will\nbe held at the Young Men's Christian\nAssociation building this evening at\n7:!50 o'clock. In addition to Mrs.'Zim-\nmormann, E. L. Hamilton, the now gen¬\neral secretary of the Martin's Vorry\nassociation, will take part in the meet¬\ning. The meeting for men at 4 o'clock\nto-morrow afternoon will be an un¬\nusually interesting one. In connection\nwith the interesting address there will\nbo good quartott and congregational\nsinging. Young men's meetings will bo\nheld every night next week at 8 o'clock\nexcept "Wednesday, when the meeting\nwill begin at 8:4."). All young men of\ntlio city aro invited to all of tliese ser¬\nvices.
6dc6b90258768808e445c59bda2c9c8c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.752732208814 39.513775 -121.556359 Hmjacitv in a Norsk. —Some time\nago, a gentleman who hu«l been pay-\ning his devoirs rather freely at the\nshrine of Nachus in u fishing village in\nScotland, was wending his way home-\nward, mounted on his old but trust-\nworthy steed, whoso movements, and\nits ndor hauled either to the larb cud\n■or starboard, in order to carry its bur-\nden on an even bottom, were an amus-\ning scene. Notwithstanding the poor\nanimals endeavors to keep its load on\nan equilibrium, down ho tumbled, and\nthere he lay as flat as a fl .under, fully\ndivested of all his sheet ropes, haul-\nyard, and cables. On feeling the dis-\nmantling and unloading of the cargo,\nthe sagacious animal looked around\nwith a°look of pity and it may be of\nchagrin, as much as to say, All ! \nman, if you would only do as 1 do\ntake no more than what would satisfy\nnatures wants, and abide by the re-\nfreshing draughts of the limpid stream,\nyou would not require my energies\nmuch to keep \\ou on your balance. 1\nmust be content for a tune to share\nalong with you a cold, damp bed on the\nroad, without food, without litter, un-\nuniess some one commiserate oui state,\nand set you again on my back Ac-\ncordingly, as if suiting the actum to the\nword," be natural, kind, and good-\nhearted aui eal, turning cautiously\nround, and bunding Us f-re-legs, ay\ndown besiJ its master, stretching its\njie ck and lead around his caput, winch\nwas divested of the upper covering, as\nif to protect it from the nocturnal dew s,\n;it ihe expense, perhaps,
0cd36091d58312a6326173b08a33eb05 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.9849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 composed of ox-Senator Henry G. Davis,\nSecretary James tr. Blaine. Senator A.\n1'. Gorman, Stephen 1). Elkins and oth¬\ners, have purchased 13,000 acres. A\nPennsylvania syndicate, composed of\nSenator J. D . Cameron, Colonol Henry\nMcCormick,the Ilarrisburg iron man;\nM. Saxman, jr.,a Latrobe coke operator;\nAndrew S. McUroatb. the distinguished\nchemist; E. V . do Invilliers, the well-\nknown geologist and mining engineer,\nand others, have purchased .">,000 acres,\nl'rof.i. McCreath and do Invilliers who\nare connected with the Pennsylvania\nstate geological bureau, liavo also, in\nconnection with Lyman D. Gilbert,\nEsq., of Harrisburg, purchased 3,000\nacres; J. M . Hustcd, oi Uniontown, has\npurchased:',,000 acres; P. Y . Hito and\nothers, o£ Pittsburgh, liavo pbrcliased\n2,000 acres and organized tho Virginia\nand Pittsburgh Coal and Coko company,\nwith a capital -of $200,000 to develop it.\nThe coal will bo opened, at once and\nfifty ovens built. The coal is on the\nmain line of the Baltimore Ohio. The\n expects to begin shipments\nwithin sixty days. it. 1 .. Martin Co.\nhave purchased 750 acre3 on the lino of\nthe Monongaliela River railroad,\nabove Fairmont, aud are opening up\ntho same. Tliev will build fifty\ncoke ovens. Martin is a well-known\nConnellsvillo operator. IVa. II . Play-\nford, Robert llogsott and others, of\nUniontown, have purchased a tract oi\n3,500 acres. Hogsott is one of the oldest\nand most conservative operators in tlio\nConnellsvillo region. The Monongahela\nCoal and Coko' Company owns about\n1,500 acres in this region. Tho chief\nstockholders of this concern aro tho fol¬\nlowing prominent people: Ex-Senator\nJ. X . Camden, of West Virginia, aud\nSonator Gorman, of Maryland; Samuel\nSpencer, late assistant to the president\nof tho Baltimore & Ohio railroad, and\nnow of Drexel, Morgan & Co., tho big\nNew York banking linn ; A. B . Flem¬\ning, Governor oi West Virginia, and E,\n\\\\. Clark <fc Co., the well-known Phila¬\ndelphia bankers.
327719c9da586732671b604a7700154f SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.9547944888382 35.780398 -78.639099 Since last issue. $1 J W Pickard, Shops;\nMrs llrent, Roxboro', for adv.; 2 Rev S\nFronts, Deep Well ; J P Allen, Brittain ; W\nHargrove, Townsville: Iley Dicken, En\n; Thcs Hubbard, Eazleltock ; J Ncwlin,\nSaxsapahaw ; Miss M W L BradleyjCamden,\n5 A J Hall, Whitmcll, Ya.; J L San\nderlin, Camden ; Rease Enoch, Anderson's\nStore; David Elliott, Westminister; 5 Wm\nB'gley, Plymouth; J T A Spencer, Deals\nMills; WH Brewer, Fall Creek; T J Cau- -\nLanesboro'; E P Edwards, Hookerton ;\nShepard Jones, Kinston ; Miss A L Miller,\nMerry Mount; J Allen, Shops; I T Robe\nRowan Mills; A W Cummings, Ashe- -\nville; JJ Irecman, W K Martin, Pacific;\nJ Stanburg, C V Allen, Farmvillc, Va.;\nDNS Alexander, Mecklenburg; G W Alex-\nander, Mrs T A Wilson, Alexandria ; T W\nHart, Hookerton; JR Smith, Randleburg;\nB Annfield, Greensboro'; C Overman,\nCharlotte. Mary Shields, University\nStation ; A M Cobb, Alfordsville ; Capt Jas\nHoward, Norwoods; W. II . Rice, Locust\n; J L Moore, T W McCloud, Franklin ;\nIluckabee, Albemarle, D A Davis, Salis-\nbury : J Ramsey, Mor";anton : Miss S E\nHam, G F College, Greensboro'; G John II\nKinyoun, for adv.; B II Pinner, Bucksville ;\nMrs A M Hill, Mt Olive ; Richmond Hays,\nM Conly, T W Littleiohn, Lenoir; Mrs N\nRobertson, E F Wyatt, Rolesvillc ; Mrs W\nLove, Layctteville ; Miss Thompson, Fay\nctteville ; W1I Murry, Julius May, Miss Re\nbecca Murray, Louisburg ; A P Gomer, liar\ngrove's Tavern ; Martin Shaflner, Albemarle\nW Deupree, Locust Hill; T A Stewart,\nHopewell; Miss Nancy Sikes, Worth Port,\nAla.; Miss Martha JMcCollum, Albany, Ga.\nW Cuthbertson, Monroe ; R B Bcasley,\nTirzah ; 4 Rev P Nicholson, Mecklenburg\n1st installment of pledge given at G. 1)
0aac7277ada48143e6d3bf083cfe017f THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.8205479134956 37.92448 -95.399981 It's All III Wind, You Know.\nWhile the smelters and Joplin zinc\nminers nre at war about the proper\nprices of Jack there nie it good many\npeople who feel a large content, If\nthe prices are maintained by the\nminer" there will be a rich Held\nopened up In Arkansas as soon as tho\nrailroads get tiieto and if tho prices\nare not maintained the Joplin opera-\ntors will have Incurred the eumlly\nof the smelters to an extent which\nwill allow new mines to get on the\nmarket at the same price. Tho con.\ntest has spurred on the railroads to\nput In Hues Into the Arkansas zinc\ncounty and all tho authorities a?reo\nthat when It Is thoroughly developed\nIt will prove to be tho richest zinc and\n producing terrltoiy in the\nworld. All that is needel Is the\nrailroads. And so the Iolu men who\nrisked their money early In the game\non the barren hills of Arkansas uro\nfeeling pretty gooil over the prospect\nand have dreams that within a few\nyears they will hove tho Joy of seeing\nthe product of their own mines\nshipped hore to the lola smelters and\nsmelted. Tho world Is using more\nspelter evory year, and tho Increase\nin electrical machines, which is ,reat-e- r\neach yoar, ho ps the zinc market.\nThe lola smelters havu gas to last\nthem twenty years and then some,\nand tho guurauteo of a good market\nfor their product means extensions\nand continuous operation. And that\nmeaiiB too continuous operation ol\nloin's extension.
1d8d1fe4ccd4a5bc9d69e95ea668814b CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1901.7027396943176 41.875555 -87.624421 given in an old number of the Mer-\nchants' Magazine, dated Oct. 'lo, 1823:\nThe Great Hurry was built by King\nHenry VII. nt a cost of U,0OO and\nwas burned nt Woolwich through acci-\ndent In IBM.\nThough King Henry, ns well ns other\nprince, hired ninny ships, exclusive of\nthose which thu different seaports wero\nobliged to furnish, ho seems thus to\nhave been the first king who thought\nof avoiding this Inconvenience by rais-\ning such a force ns might be at all\ntimes sufficient for tho service of tho\nstate. Historians tell us that he caused\nhis navy, which had beeu neglected In\ntho preceding reign, to be put In a con-\ndition to protect tiic British coasts\nngnlnst nil foreign Invasions, nnd that\nlu the midst of profound pence he al-\nways kept up a lleet ready to net.\nIn August, 1512, the ttegcut, a ship of\n1,000 tons, which was at that tlmo tht\nlargest vessel In the British navy, was\n and to replace It the Great\nHarry, or, as it was also known, the\nHenry Grace do Dlcu. was built In 1515.\nThe vessel, of about 1,000 tons bur-\nden, wns manned by 311) soldiers, 301\nmurines and 50 gunners. She had four\nmasts and portholes oil both decks nnd\nIn other parts.\nBefore the time of her construction\nthe cnnnoii weie placed nbove deelc and\non the prow nnd poop. Ono Dechnrges,\na French builder at Brest, Is said to\nhave Invented portholes.\nIn a list of the British nney ns It\nstood on Jan. C , 1548, the Great Harry\nis snld to have carried 10 brass and 103\nIron pieces of ordnance.\nThe nnnic of the ship is snld to have\nbeen changed In the reign of Kdwnrd\nVI. to Kdwnrd, which, on Aug. 10 , 1C52,\nwas reported to lx still "In good case to\nserve," aud wns ordered "to be ground-\ned and calked once a year to keep It\ntight."
0be39af689eb37fcb7621b04b4e06943 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1892.3456283836774 41.004121 -76.453816 tried to elect the nominee of the re\npublican party and has ever since been\nheaping his abuse upon those who\ndared to vote against him, and if we\nmistake not, he is now a candidate for\nthe Legislature for the third time, or\nfor any other office he can get. The\ninformation, however, reaches me that\nMr. Vanderslice is the author of these\narticles. Whatl Great Goodness!!\ncan it be possible that he has came\nback from Kansas, to write to the hon-\nest farmers of this county, after his\nvote on the Pittsburg riot bill. We\nare slow to believe it, but whrn we\nlook back at the election for Secretary\nof the Agricultural Society in January\nand find that nearly tvery employee of\ntne sentinel omce had been made a\nvoting member of the Society, and\ndid vote tor Vanderslice, it looks very\nmuch as if Mr. Krickbaum had taken\nhim in as a silent partner. It might\nbe that he is hired to write this \nbecause he failed to be elected Secre\ntary, and he has no other employment.\n1 he members of the Agricultural So\nciety were not so considerate, or they\nwould not have defeated him : but then\nthey probably had not forgotten that\nwhen Vanderslice was formerly Secre\ntary he appropriated to his own use a\nlarge number of tickets and distributed\nthem to his friends. I have noticed\nthat Campbe'l, Snyder, and Bucking-\nham have been accused of being ene-\nmies of Governor Pattison. I know\nthat each of these gentbmen made\nspeeches in the County during the\ncampaign of 1890, and that the people\nhave had sufficient confidence in them\nas democrats to elect them to serve\noffice of trust or responsibility. Mr.\nKrickbaum has lately been chosen as\ndelegate to the democratic national\nconvention, and I cannot understand\nwhy he allows these attacks to be made\nupon prominent democrats. It looks\ntousasifitwas a question ofthe\nspoils of the party Democrats for\nrevenue only.
87f9e644e67ab7ab0eb231583d5e794c THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8784152689234 38.729625 -120.798546 There Is something really charming in\nthe cool impudence of the above, which\nwe take from the Marysville Democrat, a\nbolting organ of the first water. Its ex-\ncessive absurdity is only equalled by its\nstupidity or assurance. A paper that ad-\nvocated the election of a Black Republi-\ncan to Congress Is nut competent to teach\nDemocrats their duty. It may be a re-\nspectable organ of a bogus organization\nand teach, as it has been teaching, bogus\nDemocracy, but it ventures too far when\nit presumes to talk to Breckinridge Dem-\nocrats—to Democrats whose fidelity to\nprinciple has been proved in many fierce\ncontests and never been questioned by\nmen who, have abided by party usages\nand sustained party nominations.\n. The Breckinridge party, we are proud\nto say, and the fact is undeniable, is Com-\nposed almost exclusively of the “ Old\nGuard" of the Democratic party, and the\n“Old Guard dies, never surrenders”—\ncomposed of men who have grown grat-\nin the service of their party and country,\nwho have steadfastly adhered to and gal-\nlantly fought for and successfully main-\ntained the principle* of the Democratic\nparty at all times, all places, and under\nadverse circumstances. They may grant\n they neither ask nor would ac-\ncept it. They despise treason 100 sincere-\nly, too intensely to welcome into their\nranks traitors. They have conditions to\nprescribe,—severe and inflexible condi-\ntions—none to listen to. They are sudi\nci-mlly powerful and independent and de-\nfiant to dictate terms to their opponents,\nindifferent whether they be accepted or\nnot. They are prouder in defeat than\nthose who triumphed over them are in\nvictory. Men who are actuated by prin-\nciple and fight for principle and cling to\nprinciple in darkness and defeat, may be\novercome by treachery and numbers, but\nthey cannot be dismayed or conquered.\nParties may change, men may change,\nbut nut principle. The same principle\nthe Breckinridge parly contended for be-\nfore the recent election they arc contend-\ning for now, and will continue to contend\nfur until it shall be indorsed by the Amer-\nican people. They know that it is right,\nreasonable and national, eminently so,\nand they feel cunlident that the masses\nwill so decide. Not a man who voted for\nBreckinridge and Lane on the Oth regrets\nhis having done so. It was a proud, a\nnoble, a patriotic act—one which his coun-\ntry demanded, bis conscience approved.\n“
4b17616acb2294df86d741624d937c0f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5532786569015 39.290882 -76.610759 stances, the opponents of Mr. Clay would adhere\nto (Jen. Jackson, however unjustly they might\nbelieve he had treated Mr. Calhoun.\nThis 1 saw, and this constituted the difficulty\nof Mr. Calhoun's position. The result verified\nmy apprehensions, and Mr. Van Buren's hopes.\nBut that time has gone by?the publie mind can\nnow lookback upon the past, and ro\\ic\\\\ the\nfacts and the part Mr. Kendall took in making\nup a false issue for the purpose of diverting the\npublic attention from the truth of the case,\nwhich should have its influence, and is suffi-\ncient to dio'Veilit what he may now say in rela-\ntion to the great questions now before the country.\nBut 1 beg the reader to pause and see to what\nend the triumph of Mr. Van Buren will bring us.\nHe now has his agents located in every Slate.\nHe has the press organised, so that there is a\nhired editor and a pensioned press in almost every\nimportant village in the Union. The party drill\nis complete; the President has become so power-\nful that members of Congress not only look to\nhim to reward them with office if they should be\ndiscarded by constituents, but they look to\nthe power of the executive to control the people\nthemselves. They no longer ask, "is he honest\nis he faithful" to his constituents? but they\nask, "is he faithful to the President?"\nWhy is this? Is it not because you have sur-\nrendered your judgment to the dictation of self-\nconstituted leaders, who substitute party slang\nfor political principle? I cannot conclude this\nchapter without presenting to your consideration\none fact. Why is it that the party opposed to\nMr. Van Bnrcn have nominated Gen. Harrison\nin preference to Mr. Clay? No one can deny\nthat the leading politicians of the whig party\npreferred Mr. Clay; why was General Harrison\nnominated? Ponder well over this question. It\nwas because the election of Mr. Clay would\nhave been a party triumph over the original\nJackson men. Gen. Harrison was nominated be-\ncause your old political opponents were anxious\nto meet you and me 0:1 grounds that would en-\nable us to unite, as men who love our country,\nand desire to rescue it from the dominion of a\ncorrupt faction. I.oolc around you and sec who\nare the prominent supporters of the people'! can-\ndidate.
3a73f336816b7d5b6b9584b5a958791b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.43698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 Hv the side ol Louis' domain was thai\nof William, the biggest and strongest o\nnil the monitors. He set up, However, 10\nbolflg A very studious and pwlCCAbld boy\nMini made the rest of tlie school helicvi\nlicit he had never provoked a quarrel it\nhislilo. He win riitlici* fbntl or singinj\npsalms and carrying Testament* about ii\nhis pocket; and many of the boys 11 much\nMuster William a bit el a Immbug. lit\nwas as proud as any boy of bis gardeti\nbut he never went to work in it withou\nrusting envious eyrs on two little tlowr\nbeds which now belonged to Louis, tin\nwhich ought by rights, be thought, to In'\nlong to liiui. Indeed it was notorious that\nin old days before rithor Louis or NVillhn\nnunc to the school, one of Louis' prede\ncossors m the garden bad up somi\n- takes which served fur a h umdarv, nn«\ncribbed u piece «»f his neighbor's ground\nFor a long while William had set hi)\nIn-art upon getting it back again; hut Ik\nkept his wishes to himself, and nobotjt\nsuspected that so good and religious n lm'\nmid be guilty ol coveting what was ad\nmilted by tlio whole school to be now tli\nproperty of another. Only one boy, In\nivorite fair, cliil William take into lit\neontldenco in the matter. This was\n"Imrp shrewd hit named Murk, not ove\nscrupulous in what ho did, lull of doe\ntricks ami dodges, and so running that th\n"Id dame herself, though she had the eye\n"t a hawk, never could catch him out\nanything Absolutely wrong. To till\nsmart yoUlh William one day whisperei\nhi* desires, as ihry sat together In th
055a766055b7fa798453df7a7fc92d1e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.7219177765094 39.261561 -121.016059 This time be had hi* agent. Mr. Henry Col-\ncoril, a mau weighing about 136 pound*, upon\nbia back, and bis balancing pole in Ilia band*.\nHe proceeded down the rope very (lowly and\ncaulioutdy, a* if feeling every atep, until he\nwaa about 100 feet from the Canada aide, wbeu\nMr. Colcord dismounted and stood upon the\nrope immediately behind M. Bloudin. They\nbere remained to re*t probably three or four\nminutes, when Mr. Colcord again mounted, and\nM. Bloudin proceeded, still walking very slow-\nly, and stopping occasionally to balance bin\nseif. They stopped live times in crossing, and\neach time Mr. Colcord dismounted, arid again\nresumed his position. He had bis arm* around\nM. Bloudius neck and bis legs rented on tbe\nbalancing pole. He was in bis abirt sleeves,\nand wore a hat. About twenty-two min-\nutes were occupied in accomplishing tbe first\nhalf of tbe rope, and the balance in twenty, mv\nking forty-two minutes from bank to bank.\nFor some Becouds before the American shore\nwas reached, the crowd gathered round the end\nof the rope became very noisy, and a good deal\nof excitement prevailed; and when be reached\ntbe staging ou tbie aids safely tbe vast crowd\n■bouted with the greatest enthusiasm. On\nreaching the landing. M . Bloudin was inocb\nflushed, arid appeared very much fatigued,\nwhile Mr. Colcord was pale, but did not betray\nany signs of fear. It was about half-past 6\no'clock wheu be reached this side, and tbe\ntrains, which had been detained and were\nready, started immediately for their several\ndestinations with probably flve thousand per-\nson*.
296b452bfe05db8bcbcdf0433a8c850b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.3164383244546 40.063962 -80.720915 From the North American Review for April.\nIt is plain that journalism will hence¬\nforth and forever be an important and\ncrowded profession in the United States.\nThe daily newspaper is ono ol those\nthings which are rooted in the necessi¬\nties of modern civilization. Tho steam\nengine is not more essential to us. The\nnewspaper is that which connects each\nindividual with tho general life of\nmankind, and makes him part and\nparcel of the whole; so that we oan al¬\nmost say, that those who neither read\nnewspapers nor converse with people\nwho read them are not members of the\nhuman family that is, not actually,\nnot now ; though, like tho negroes of\nGuinea, they may become such in time.\nThey are beyond the pale; they have\nno hold of the electric chain, and there¬\nfore do not receive the shock.\nThere are two mornings of the year\non which newspapers have not hither¬\nto been published in the city of New\nYork.tho 5th of July and tho 2d of\nJanuary. A shadow appears to rest 011\nthe world during those days, as when\nthere is an eclipse of tho sun. Wo are\nseparated from our brethren, cut oil,\nlost, alone; vague oi\nevil creep over our mind. We feel, in\nsome degree, as husbands feels, who,\nafar from wife and children, say to\nthemselves, shuddering, "What things\nmay have happened and I not know\nit?" Nothing quite dispels tho gloom\nuntil the Evening Post.how eagerly\nseized.assures us nothing very par-\nticular lias happened since our Inst. It\nis amusing to notice bow universal is\nthe habit of reading a moring paper.\nA hundred vehicles and vessels convey\nthe business men of New Y'ork to that\nextremity of Manhattan island which\nmay be regarded as the counting-house\nof the Western Continent. It is not\nuncommon for every individual in a\ncabin two hundred feet loug to be sit-\nting absorbed in his paper, like boys\nconning their lessons on their way to\nschool. Still moro striking is it to ob-1\nservo the torrent of workingmen pour¬\ning down town, many of them reading\nas they go, and most of them provided\nwith a newspaper for dinner-time, not\nless as a matter of course than the tin-\nkettle which contains the material por¬\ntion of the repast. Notice, too, the\nlong line of hackney-coaches 011 a\nstand, nearly every driver sitting 011\nhis box reading his paper.
3748b2f9e6300ba8aac9b36ffd710f62 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1913.7767122970574 39.456253 -77.96396 It was almost like diecoviring a\nnew continent, Here was an alfblfa.\nthat nature, doubtless through\nthousands of years, had inured to\ndrouth and cold. It held hardiness.\nHardinces had been worked into\nit by nature's slow processes as ibe\nplant had traveled with infinite piina\nfrom tbo south word; perhaps in Per¬\nsia, where sa the common alfalfas of\nthe United S'ates Lad traveled an¬\nother way. These weie taken f/om\nPersia to Greece in the Qf:b century\nB. C. Thence they were carried to\nItaly and Spain, and after tbat lo\nSou h America, long after which\nthey were brought to the southwest¬\nern States Tbey had never had an\nopportunity to spread northward\nthrough lODg centuries of time,\nbecoming bardy by infinitely slow\ndeg.Qte, as had those of the part of\nAsia whore Professor Hansen had\njust rondo hia discovery. With the\ndiscoverer's of plant\nhardiness, however, Ibe hardiness of\nthese new alfalfas, could be trans¬\nferred to other alfalfas, end a variety\nboth luxuriant and hardy couHl be\ninvented. That is. if tbi9 newly\ndiscovered alfalfa would not itself do\naa a succesbful forage in the Middle\nWest of tho United States.\nBut the thing to do was to follow\nthis new plant northward, and find\nout the home of tho hardiest of the\nhardy. With this in m;nd h* set\nout. lie followed the irnil aoroas\ncUsorts, &mong wild and forbidding\nttountains, i:loag routes infested by\nbandits, tracing it by caravan for\n1300 miles to a latitude about level\nwilb St. Paul.45 degrees north.in\ntho very heart of Asia. Tho tale as\nbe tells it is one that stirs the blood\nAlong the difficult way be inter¬\nviewed naims, soldiers, and the\nhorses in the markets. Ho and his
3967535ac87157ffe6586addd71390eb THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.8835616121257 37.561813 -75.84108 utes Jones was back from his house,\nbringing with him a large, fine -lo oki -\nThomas cat, well known to possess a\npowerful and cultivated voice, of more\nthan . usual compass and unsurpassed\ntimbre. The cat was put on at the\nshoulders of the steer and drawn steadily\nand carefully backward and downwardL\nThe steer kicked some, but he did not\nget up, although the cat seemed to know\nvery well what he was put there for.\nAgain the cat was planted well forward\nand drawn aft, but the steer paid him\nno manner of attention, and thisor some-\nthing else aroused the wrath of the cat.\nfor, iust as he was putting in his claws\nfor the third drag, he gave tongue if\nthat's a fair word tor it in his best and\nloudest music. The effect was marvelous\nand will be of great value, for the steer\nnot only sprang to his feet with unex-\npected agility, DUt his tale was stiff as\nhis horns as he dashed wildly away home-\nward. No trouble at all with him since\nthat, for at any signs of a balk you have\nonly to begin a vocal imitation of that\ntorn cat, and the strength of the yoke and\nchain is tested instantly. We do not\nthink that any attention need be paid to\nobjections to this operation based on the\nidea that it is an appeal to the super-\nstitious instincts of the lower classes. It\nis rather to be regarded in the light of a\nmusical triumph. We have never heard\nof any extensive employment of the cat\nas an incentive to exertion except in the\nnavy, and even there the one important\nelement of success seems to have teen\nomitted. Beyond doubt a series of care-\nful experiments with refractory mules\nwould be very interesting, the prospect\nof a favorable result being very encourag-\ning with a race who have so great an ear\nfor music.
3a8f9321247a787ae645e0dfae0074f9 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.3374316623658 42.217817 -85.891125 A Paterson, N. J ., dispatch of April\n1.1 , says: "Four months ago one Mo\nClone, who had given himself the name\nof Brophy, hired a houe on tho bunks\nof the Passaic in Paterson. The house\nwas a mere cabin, which had been put\non the old Btone quarry under the hill,\nand in a lonely place on nn unfre-\nquented park or wairon road leading to\nthe valley of the rockn. Shortly a! tor\nMcGlone moved hi family there, his\nwife one night, after clearing away tho\nsupper table, took tho pail and went to\nthe river shore, but a few step away, to\nget water for morning, as was her usual\ncustom. Sho did not return. The hus-\nband was soon afterward told by the\nchildren about "mother" going out for\nwater, and he guessed she would come\nback and tent the children to bed, and\nwent to bed himself ; but the and\nmother did not return, and suspicions\nwere excited .'igninst him, as he tried to\nmake it appear that she had gone oil" to\nIreland. But the family was obscure,\nand after a talk among the neighbors\nthe man moved oil' and the woman was\nforgotten, until the body was found on\nWednesday last, washed ashore oppo-\nsite Tassiiic village, about seven miles,\nby the river, from the town whence the\nwoman was missing. The body was\nwell preserved and bore evidence of\nloul play. A justice ot the peace from\nLodi was requested to hold an inquest,\nbut got a rough box, tumbled the body\ninto it, and, nailing it up, buried it. It\nw:is conjectured that McfJlono moved\nto the lonely spot at the ''swash," in-\ntending to murder his wife, knowing\nthat her cries could never bo heard\nabove the roar of Pasaio falls. The\npublication of the facts led to a disin-teime-
1723e1673fe42e135781f3f63c52e554 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1883.2753424340435 37.561813 -75.84108 applies for a position, the man who hap\npens to need a young man sizes him i\nanil concludes that lie hail rather employ\na Digger Indian, if he has got to reform\nand make clean the person whom hi\nhires. And again, ho will wandci\naround for days and weeks, hang\ning around places where they have\nnomore useforaboythanado\nhas for two tails. He spends one\nday loahng about the depot, expecting\nsome one will como around and oiler\nhira a lino situation at four dollars per\nday and board. Ho will stand nround\nand talk with the baggage man at the\ndepot, or help the' lunch counter clerk\ncarry in coal for his dinner, and in the\nafternoon ho loafs nround some more\nand scrapes the acquaintance of the\nbrakeman in the yard and helps him\ncouple, cars and unload freight, while\nthe brakeman tills him full of tally about\nhow easy it is to get a soft thing work-\ning for a company. The next\nho spends at the police court listening\nto the cases tried, loafs an hour or two\nat the postoflice, awhile in a billiard hall\nand winds up with a visit to a saloon\nAll the time he is fairly aching to have\nsomo one give him a position and he\ncurses the country where a young man\ncan lind nothing to do. When you see\nthat kind of a young man you can set it\nright down that he don't amount to a\nrow of pins. Men don't hire boys from\nunder the eaves of a saloon, and when\nthey are looking for a young man to do\na job of work they do not go through\nthe crowd loafing around the depot with\na search warrant, and pick out the dirti-\nest young tramp among the number. No\none ever heard of a man who wanted to\nhire a young, bright, active, stirring boy,\nwith lire in his eye, energy and vinegar\nin his
78aa9ed5c8b6e9e1c0cc8a6729ad6d06 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.6424657217149 43.798358 -73.087921 why is there not? Every libertine on\nearth labors lo the extent of his ability' to\nhave it thus; and nothing would better\nsuit his depraved soul than this universal\nreign of pollution. In his more inflect-\nive moments, he might coademn thjs in\nthe abstract, yet, does he not labor directly\nto bring it about ? Does he not oppose\nstrenuously every effort for moral reform-\nation? Does he not diligently dissemi-\nnate his licentious doctrines both by pre-\ncept and example ? Does he not labor to\nkeep the licentious still in their pollution;\nas also, to increase the number of deprav-\ned females? And would he not even take\nthe beardless youth, and if possible out f\nthe very bosom of the church, and lead\nhim "the way to hell, going down to the\nchambers of death?" What more could\nhe do, if it were his solemnly proclaimed\npurpose to bring in the reign of universal\nicentiousness, than he now does? And\nyet he is a patriot a friend of humanity\n gentleman a ladies' man with a soul\nas treacherous as a demon's, and a heart\nas putrid as the grave !\nThe Libertine more gallty than hla Victim.\n" It cannot be denied that the treachery\nof man, betraying the interests oi confid\ning and delenceless woman, is one oi iqe\nprincipal causes which furnish the vic-\ntims of licentiousness. Few, very few.\nso far as can be ascertained, have sought\ntheir wretched calling. The most of\nthem have been betrayed by the perfidity\nof a pretended friend ; and when robbed\nand despoiled, they have been abandoned\nto their late. Tales might be told of deep\nlaid schemes of treachery against female\ninnocence, that would make the ear to\ntingle and man to blush for the perfidhy\nof his fellow man. ; Upon his head then\nshould rest the shame and wretched con-\nsequences of his criminal conduct. These,\nalmost exclusively, have hitherto been\nheaped upon the defenceless bfcirig, who\nhas been, in a majority of cases; the vic-S - re
0ea949cd7a379e9af7111f1adcf8a3d2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.1383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 ballot box. Thia example nerved to .how\nthat the Japaneae's sense of humor dif¬\nfered materially from that of the Amen-\nC*The law of humor was eccentricity, or\nrather it. law wa. to have no law. There\nwere no rule, by which it <« go'ern«l.\nIn thin country we had the humor of all\npeople, and of all nation.. " What would\nIt be," queried the apeaker, "without the\nIrbh element ?" "American humor waa\nlike a mosaic, but what would it be were\nthe emerald omitted?' A'ler defining!\nthe difference between wit and humor,\nMr. Cox Mated that Irbh humor showed\nto beat advantage at home. We might\nsee it in the United State, but we .hould\ngo tolrelandto find It in all iu original-\n"ifreland.was only dbtiogmished by that\nwhich made life more pleasant than\nprofitable. Her people, in whatever con¬\ndition, unfortunate or prosperous, were\nalway. humorous and happy. From her\nhovel, and bog. aroae that \naroma of humor which distinguished her\nabove all other nation.. It trane-\nformed mbery into happiness, darkneaa\ninto light. Ireland was the Mark fapley\nof nation.. Ever full of cheer and hope,\nahe never became disheartened under the\nmost adverse circumstance..\nSpeaking of the source. and medium ot\nIrish humor, the .pesker .aid the limit of\na leoture would not permit an investiga¬\ntion of her literatuie. The name, of\nBurke, Curran, Sheridan and Goldsmith\nwere mentioned a. giving lu.tre to the\nnenius of Ireland. Her noveli.U had\ndrawn for their material, upon the gro¬\ntesque feature, of her .ociety Jind poli¬\ntics. A . a people the Iruh were very\ndiscontented. In their effort to seek re¬\nlief from their miaery and degradation\nthey had been led to cultivate humor, in\ngreat source «a. among the common peo¬\nple. Among Ihem a quick sense of the\nludicroua was a. prevalent a. it we. ab¬\nsent in England.
08971c1f9ae0ad1824e93ec13022a75d THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.9246575025368 40.832421 -115.763123 delegation of tbe ripri ttvntutives of\nFrance at the recei.t centennial cele¬\nbration at Yorktuwn arrived on thin\nmorning's train, »»ys tlio Chronicle of\nSaturday, and received an enthusiastic\nreception. The ntmes of tbe party are\nf*B follow*: General Houlonger, Colonel\n1)0(1140, Major Derosey.Comtede Bean-\nmont. Marquis tie 1'Esirade, Captain Du\nla Chore, Captain D'Abbeville, Lieut.\nDeSuhune, G. Dt&abunc, Lieut. Do\nNoailles and Lieut. DcGonville. Tbu\nComstock ban been visited by many\ndistinguished men and by nnmberless\nprocessions of foreign and 1'asteru\ntourists, yet it may fairly bu said tbnt\ntbis parly comprises by far the most\ndistinguished appearing body of men\nwho have ever inspected tbu steiile\nslopes of Mount Davidson. At 11 a m ,\nthe party, with tbo roceptiou committee\nof leading French citizens, some twenty-\nfive in number, sat down :o a banquet\nat tbe French ltotisserio, which proved\nentirely worthy of tbe occasion. A pro¬\nfusion of culinary and liquid triumphs\nwere consumed. Tbe tjasts were \nquint and happily made and received.\nAmong the visitors preieut were J. M .\nTnylor, representing the bonanza firm,\nnnd newspaper reporters. It may bo\nnoted thut there were at tbe tuble four\ndirect descendants of Lafayette, and a\ngrandson of that Freech captain of\nartihery who made so gtllant a stand at\nVorktown a century ago. Col. liossan,\nwho commands a regiment of dragoons\nin Frsuce, which has wju a more than\nnational icnowu, said 'hat their recep¬\ntion here bud bocn matked by a feeling\nand enthusiasm which bad done more\nto convince him and bis party of a\ngenuine spirit of fraternal feeling than\nuuy of the numerous receptions which\nbad been tendered tLtin throughout\ntheir tour. At the ccncluston of the\nbanquet the party inspected the lower\nlevels, by way of the C iV C. shaft, and\ngenerally expressed themselves as more\npleased and interested with their novel\nexperiences here than at auy other point\nof their route.
4566ef6ab89662533becb3e2418a9fc4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.078082160071 39.261561 -121.016059 The Broderick Monument Fund.\n"”,Tbe Peoples Committee, appointed in the\nfall of 1859, to collect money throughout\nthe State for the erection of a suitable mon-\nument to the late Senator liroderick, have\nrealized up to this time a little upwards of\n$6,000, which is deposited with the Savings\nand Loan Society, where it is earning some-\nthing over $60 per month. Numerous\nplans have been submitted to the Commit-\ntee on Models for the proposed monument,\nbut as yet no oue has been decided upon,\nft is the general desire to let the fund con-\ntinue to accumulate, by interest and dona-\ntions, for a while longer. The increase,\nhowever, is but trifling. We have heard it\nsuggested that the Committee should decide\nnot to erect the monument until the year\n1865, and that tho money, being safely in-\nvested, could be compounding interest, and\nwould amount to a large sum by that time.\nThe name and fame of Broderick are histor-\nical with California, and must, at any rate,\nfill a wide space on the pages of our \nchronicles. It needs, then, no particular\nhaste in the erection of a monument. A\nmatter of four or five years is not material\nin the case, and at the expiration of that\ntime the fund may have accumulated enough\nto build a memorial worthier the great de-\nparted Californian than what can now bo\ndone for $0,000. Another plan is to com-\nmence the monument uow, with the funds\nalready in hand, but upon a plan that will\namount, when completed, to $20,000, and\ntrust to public and private donations here-\nafter to complete it, as in the case of Bun-\nker Ilill monument and other public struc-\ntures. Of the two plans wo think the post-\nponement the most practicable. The fund\nwill then be earning money, and donations\nare as likely to be made as for a half-finish-\ned work. Senator Broderick's grave is\nnow surrounded by a neat iron railing, and\nthe coffin has been inclosed in a deep brick\nvault, arched over, and intended to be be-\nneath the centre of the future monument.—\n[Alta.
7bd3c9563248e32072966ee0df93a523 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1630136669203 39.261561 -121.016059 tfcu 2. Upon the second Monday in February,\n18fi2. aftlie close ol the business hours for that day.\nth«*U»x collector shall cuter upon the tax list or\nassessment roll, a statement, that lie has made a\nlew upon all the property assessed in said roll, and\nupon which the taxes have not been paid, 'hi or\nbefore the third Monday of February, 1862 , the tax\ncollector shall complete a list ol all persons and pro-\nperty then owing taxes, and the tax collector in ad-\ndition to the tax levied, shall collect upon each de-\nlinquent, the sum of one dollar, as costs incurred in\nore oaring and publishing the delinquent list.\nSue 4 On or before the first day ol March, 1862 .\nthe tax collector shall cause the delinquen. tax list\nto be published, giving the name oi the owner of all\nreal estate aud all improvements on the same, to-\ngether with such a condensed description of the pro-\nperty, that It mav be easily known, and bIso a simi-\nlar condensed description of real estate or im-\nprovement* assessed to unknown owners; and also\nopposite each name or description, the amount ot\ntaxes, including costs, due from each delinquent per-\nson or properly; such list, with tiie levy thereon, as\nheretoHire provided, shall bo published for three suc-\ncessive weeks, in some newspaper, or supplement to\na newspaper, published in the city of Nevada, Such\npublication shall also designate the time and place\nof the sale, which shall not be less than twenty-one\nor more than twenty-eight days from the first ap-\npearance of the publication. Ail real estate shall be\nsold in front of the Court House d<s>r, and all sales\nshall be made by the Marshal or his deputies.\nSue. f>. The provisions of the Act entitled an Act\nto provide revenue for the support oi thelJovernment\nof ibis State, approveil April 2tHh, 1867 . from Sec. lli\nto Sec. 28 inclusive, oi said act, shall control, direct\nand regulate the sale, issuance of certificate, record\nand all further proceedings of the tax collector, under\nthe ioregniug ordinance.
11190eb111124d87a5d67739f91a283a CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1907.6589040778792 39.623709 -77.41082 directed the work of the railroad on 4th\nstreet; the city had no grade and they\nrefused to give them a grade, hence the\nonly thing left for the railroad to do was\nto establish a grade, taking the condition\nof the street as they found it, which was\nvery bad at a number of places.\nThe Aldermen (old board) from time\nto time directed the changes to be made,\nand when that part of 4th street west of\nBentz was reached with the tracks the\nAldermen were told what would have to\nbe done to bring the tracks to anything\nlike a grade. The work was begun and\nwhen the point opposite the Baptist\nchurch was reached, which was very low,\nthe tracks had to be greatly raised in or-\nder to get a pJoper all the way\nthrough the street. A commotion was\nraised by several people in the vicinity of\nthe Baptist church and from that time on\nthe controversy has continued. These\nfew individuals numbering but about 2\nper cent of the residents on that street,\nattempted to have the old Board of Al-\ndermen require the railroad to conform\nto the street as the railroad company\nfound it, which, from an engineering\nstandpoint could not be done.\nA number of meetings were held and\nnothing accomplished except the railroad\nwas allowed to finish the laying of its\ntracks, which was done, and when it was\ncompleted everyone who saw the street,\n(except the few kickers) said that the\nrailroad company had done the city a great\nservice by establishing such an excep-\ntionally nice grade.
e6c4bf262f7e2d55b2b9492bc96aa416 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.201369831304 43.798358 -73.087921 going if not expressed in tbe same lan- -\nguage did eventually prevail. And this\npatriotic body, in referring to human beings\nin bondage, had the magnanimity to term\nthem persons, not things of traffic.\nIn all the sections of the constitution,\nwhere allusion is made 10 men thus degrad-\ned, the plainest evidence is given, of look-\ning forward to. or providing for, an eventual\nextinction of the evil of slavery, as the most\ndesirable state of things. This view of the\nsubject appears much more rational, and\nconsistent with their views of justice, than\nrecognizing a right to enslave a fellow man.\nAfter all I have said, I am not prepared to\njustify, in all respects, those noble minds,\nwho formed thia section above referred to ;\nfor I judge it as winking too much at the\nin of slavery. They in my opinion should\nhave sternly faced this enemy of all human\nrights, and taken the citadel at once. And\n they possessed as much moral courage\nand light on this subject as has happily fallen\nto the lot of men of the nineteenth cen-\ntury, and i3 now beaming on our happy land,\nI could hardly have found a satisfactory ex\ncuse to my own mind, for their submitting\nfor a moment to any compromise regarding\nthe rights of men, ''created free," tn any\nsense it might be construed, save a full re-\njection of the proposition.\nBut the frailty of human nature is such,\nthat the best of men should be looked upon\nas imperfect beings, and for this reason, we\nshould be radroed to look on our southern\nbrethren, perhaps, with more charitable feel-\nings than we sometimes do, especially when\nwe consider the deep personal interest they\nhave in this subject, which serves to blind\ntheir judgment, in discriminating between\nright and wrong, producing in them a belief\nthat what K is riirht. and what i no- ai nc- t
3cbde41f58866555a58f001c9ab40b0c THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.9438355847285 39.369864 -121.105448 The Wind is blowing round the house,\nwith moan and plaintive sigh; —ah then\nit howled like stricken beast or man\nafraid to die; a thousand tempests seem\nto swell its voice of terror now; the very\nhills are moved, and all their tree-croWn-\ned summits bow. The reeling pines\nfrom upper air give forth a sullen roar,\nlike ocean at the Southern cape or surf\non rocky shore ; they sound the monody\neterne that ever, as we stand upon the\nyellow beach, we hear the sea sing to the\nland. But fixed and still the sky uplifts\nits azure dome in space; the heavens\nbear no mark of storm or cloud upon\ntheir face; with steadfast look of stony\nSphinx they chill us into awe—all fath-\nomless and calm as when the first \nman they saw. With kindling, intel-\nlectual eyes the starry hosts look forth;\nthey catch no whisper of the wind thats\nblowing from the North. Combustion\nfinal might enwrap and whelm the earth\nfrom sight—the stars would still shine\non as now, nor miss our planets light.\nHow silently our lives move on, while\nround us fiercely rave the wild rebellious\nelements that cease but in the grave !\nHow calm a port the soul maintains!\nBut never may she scan the deep enig-\nma man is now and ever was to man.\nThis mystery ofbeing lifts its head above\nthe sands, and of the passing multitudes\nan answer true demands; but aye the\nliving tide rolls on—in silence most pro-\nfound, and aye that stony gaze is fixed\nupon the desert round.
483ebd950b42b8d1a840bf33116e83c5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0342465436327 41.681744 -72.788147 Arabs abandoning her to the desert\nto peribh from thirst and starvation.\nThe beautiful girl is rescued but faces\na death worse than death she is\nsold to a travelling circus as a danc-\ning girl, and finds herself in, the hands\nof a brutal master. Later she be-\ncomes a member of the family of the\nman whose life she saved and be-\ncomes involved in the intrigue which\nis rife in his family. All the passions\nof human nature aro displayed in this\nstirring drama of Oriental and Occ-\nidental life love, hate, jealousy, de-\nceit, treachery and revengeall have\ntheir turn in this gripping and amaz-\ning play. Nazimova rises to the\nheights of her superb emotional art\nin this glowing drama of the east. In\nthe scenes in which " does the\nDance of the Seven Veils she holds\nher audience in the palm of her hand\nliot a sound to break the rapt, at-\ntention with which her work is re-\nceived. It is a picture which arrests\nthe attention and expands the imagi-\nnation transporting the beholder to\nthe heart of things Oriental and mys-\nterious and telling the story of in-\ntrigue and passion, which is not sur-\npassed. Th( audience were on the\nqui vive of excitement and enthusi-\nasm during the entire period of to-\nday's perform ance.\nFox's vaudeville of foui acts if\nheadlined by the Exposition Comedy\nFour. late with Neil O'Brien's Min-\nstrels, who were loudly received to-\nday, as were the National Trio, Jessie\nFranks, the Surprise Girl and Joseph-\nine Leonardt.
08db6f2583cb2be74def18ae3e9c6bdf THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1892.288251334497 41.258732 -95.937873 During tho nesting s anon the male\nostrich seems to be auyU ing but an\nagreeable creuturo. In a paper lately\nread before tho Itoyal society of Tas-\nmania, Mr. James Andrew says that at\nthat period the bird Is moit pugnacious,\nand may only be approached in siffety\nwith great precaution. He resents the\nintrusion of nny visitors on his domain,\nand proves a mast formidable opponent\nills mode of attack Is by a scries of\nkicks. The leg Is thrown forward and\noutward, until the foot, armed with a\nmost formidable nail, Is high in thealri\nIt Is then brought down with tcrrlflo\nforce, serious enough to the unhappy\nhuman being or animal struck with the\nflat of the foot, but much worse If the\nvictim bo caught and ripped by the\ntoe. are known of men be '\nlog killed outright by a single kink, and\nMr. Andrew remembers whilst on a blt\nIn the neighborhood, that on a farm\nnear Graaff Uelnet a horse's back waa\nbroken by one such blow aimed at Its\nrider. If attacked, a man should never\nseek safety In flight) a few yards, and\ntho bird is within striking distance,\nand tho worst consequences may result\nTho alternative is to lie Hut on the\nground, and submit with as much reslg\nnation as possible to tha Inevitable and\nsevere punt moling which It may be\nexpectod will be repented at Intervals\nuntil a means of escape presents\nItself, or tho bird affords an op-\nportunity of being caught by tho nook,\nwhich, if tightly held and kept down,\nprevents much further mischief,
40ccc672f9ebc345185a48ffd7d70405 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.132876680619 41.004121 -76.453816 with flaming letters on the hearts\nof the convicts. In herds of one hun\ndred they are being driven to their\nplaces or labor In the interior, and a\nhopeless life, terrible In Its monoton\nous cruelty, begins for them. They\nnave to cut trees and transport wood.\nProfound silence by day and by\nnight, interrupted only by the whiz-\nzing of the whip, the curses of the\nsupervisors and the groaning of the\nexhausted. When the convict has\nborne this wretched life for a num-\nber of years and, however dulled\nand brutalized, is still capable of\nkeeping up his courage by a faint\nglimmer of hope, he mav. iwrhnn.\nadvance from the third class of con-\nvicts, to which he hitherto belonged,\n10 me second class. This, however,\nmeans only an Inslirriiflciint\nof life; there Is tho hard labor,\nme same surrerlng, the same priva-\ntions, though he has the satisfaction\nof looking down upon others vho\nfare even worse. And after a num-\nber of more years he Is admitted to\nthe first class. And, If during the\nwhole time he has not been guilty of\nthe least Infraction of discipline if\nhis superiors are kindly disposed 'to-\nward him. if all the conditions re-\nquired by law are compiled with,\nthen he may perhaps be recommend-\ned for the dreamed of privilege of\nbeing allotted a small piece of land\nthat, despite hard work, affords him\na scanty existence and at least allows\nhim to breathe freer. But how many\ndream this dream in vain, and the\nonly relief offered them is a small\nspot of earth surrounded with man-g - o\ntree the grave.
016e5174cfab669ecc5ba7379af6f1f4 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.1953551596337 35.780398 -78.639099 A few days since, Mr. Ja3. II. Beadle, of Ilunts-vill- e ,\nAlabama, called on us and gave us permis-\nsion to publish for the benefit f suffering hunani-ty- ,\nthe astonishing cure which had been effected\nin the case of his wife by the use of Dr. Hance's\nVegetable Epileptic Pills. He informed us, that\nat the timehi3 wife commenced using the medicine,\nher system was so entirely prostrated, by the num-\nber of spasms she had undergone, as to reduce her\nweight to 100 lbs. Since she has been taking tho\npills, she has entirely got over the spasms and has\ngained in weight and bodily health. She now\nweighs at least 200 lbs , and declares she is in bet-\nter enjoyment of health than ever before in her\nlife. Mr. Beadle also related case of Mr. Harrison\nLightfoot's of same towa, who has been entire-\nly cured of the worst form of Epilepsy by these\nsame pills. Mr. Lightfoot's was so bad that he\nnever passed a week without having an attack, of\nten falling down in the street. He has not had an\nattack for more than a yar. Mr. Beadle thinks\nthat if the pills ever fail in curing a case, it is for\nthe want of a proper perseverance on the part of\nthe person in taking them, as he feels assured from\nobservation is the case of his wife, that if they are\ntaken for a sufficient length of time, they will cure\nany case. Sent to any part of the county by mail,\non the receipt of a remittance. Address Seth S.\nHasce, 103 Baltimore street, Baltimore, Md. Price,\none box, $3 ; two, $5 ; twelve, $24.
188d30d5a38e066f86b7ebb21e3a53fa DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.6178081874682 44.939157 -123.033121 Will the women of the state, of\nPortland, and even of Salem, be satis-\nfied with the delivery of dry goods\npackages once a dayf This is the\nproblem that has been taken up by the\nCouncil of "National Defense through\nthe Oregon state council.\nDelivery service of the dry goods\nstores can be substantially reduced\neven to one delivery a day if the\nwomen and tho few men shoppers will\nconsent. If there is not the patriotic\nsentiment to feel satisfied with one de-\nlivery of drygoods as well as other\nlines of merchandise, the old system\nwill necessarily continue and just now\nthe Council of National JJctenses says\nthis is a waste of men and energy,\nSalem dry goods men are heartilly in\nfavor of the one day delivery, which\nis to be tried out in Portland beginning\nnext Monday. This has been brought\nabout by the efforts of the Oregon\nState Council of Defense it re-\nmains to be seen whether the patriot\nism of the women in Salem will con-\nsent to this one delivery. For be it\nknow, it is the women who do the big-\ngest per centage of trading by far at\nthe dry goods stores and it is the\nwomen who will decide finally whether\nthe one day system of deliveries will\nbecome effective in Salem.\nThe Mevers department store ex\npresses the opinion that while the pub\nlic is entitled to deliveries at any and\nall times, yet when it becomes gener-\nally known that it is the wish of the\ngovernment as well as the National\nCouncil of Defense to bring about one\ndaily delivery, the people will follow in\nline from patriotic motives.\nKafoury Bros, do not Believe in tne\ndelivery of all packages as the cost of\ndeliveries must be paid and this even-\ntually must be added to the cost of\nmerchandise.
05b502470b8e0b64e022b92627e4fda1 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.8068492833586 46.187885 -123.831256 to support the measure, and the man-\nagers felt assured of a sufficient num-\nber more to bring the number up to\n41, leaving only three more votes ne\ncessary to Insure the passnge of the\nbill by democratic votes. The senators\nwho are holding out against the mil\nare said to be Mills and Vilas of the\nrepeal side and Klrby, of tne silver side.\nSome of the repeal men have not yet\nactually attached their ryimes to the\npledge, but the committee expect to\nsecure the names of all the democratic\nsenators and will rush the bill through\nan a party measure, and without call-\ning on the republicans for help. Most\nof the republicans hope the democrats\nwill succeed In this, for the bill Is one\nthat does not commend Itself to \nthe repeal or the silver factions of the\nrepublican ranks. The repeal men are\npleased only with the clause limiting\nthe silver purchase to a year, while the\nsilver men find In this a reason to hope\nfor a .further extension of the sliver\npurchases, and think It. better tha nun- -\nconditional repeal. The committee's\nrecommendation will be put In the\nshape of an amendment of the Voor- -\nhees bill, and will probably receive the\nsupport of most of the sliver republi\ncans, while. the bill will, as amended,\nbe opposed by them. This Is a prob\nability against the passing of the bill.\nIt seems more than probable If the\ndemocrats get the concurrence of their\nentire party, In the senate, that the\nrepublicans will make no effort at\nunited action.
2eae81ccd9ee6991de0636d4896b89fb OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.5520547628107 39.513775 -121.556359 BY VIKTIK of nu execution issued out of the\nDistrict Court of the Tenth Judicial District in\nand f<r the county of Vubn and slate of California, to\nme directed and delivered, commanding me o> make\nthe sum of two thousand one hundred and fifty-eight\ndollars and forty-nine cents, with interest on two\nthousand one hundred am! five dollars and nineteen\ncents from the 29th day of Way A. D . 1857 at the rate\nof one amt one half per cent, per month until paid,\nand also the coss accruing upon said writ, wherein\nJohn 0. Fall and It. E. Brewster are plaintiffs ami\nAbraham Folck and Bunnell lios-ett defendants. I\nhave levied upon and will sell at public sale to toe\nhighest bidder for cash, on the 27th day of June A.\nD. 1857.at the hour of 2 oclock V. , all of the\nright title and interest of both or either of the above\nnamed defendants Abraham Folck and Bunnell Bas-\nsett in and to the followng descritied property, to\nwit: The one fourth interest to live mining claims\nsituated In Butte county slate of California, and\nknown as Willard & Oo.s claims. Paid claims com-\nmence at a stake on the bank of the West Branch of\nFeather river nt n point about 2 miles above Mill\nCitv on Iho opposite side of me river therefrom,\nthence running on me river 300 feet to a slake.thence\nhack unto the hills v> the dividing ridge. Also,upon\nnil tools sluices and mining implement* belonging\nto or In anywise appertaining to said mining claims.\nPale to lake place at the Court House door, in the\ntown of Oroville, county ard stale aforesaid.
58afc72b8ccdbc8f56c36796777cb8d3 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.4041095573314 39.369864 -121.105448 Extent of the Firmament.—Various es-\ntimates have been hazarded on the number\nof stars throughout the whole heavens visi-\nble to us by the aid of first-class telescopes.\nM. Struve assumes for Herschels 20 feet re-\nHector. that a magnifying power o( 180 would\ngive 5,800.000 for the number of stars lying\nwithin the zones extended thirty degrees on\neither side of the equator, and 20,374 ,000 for\nthe whole heavens. The number of telesco-\npic stars in the milky way, uninterrupted by\nany nebulae, is estimated at 18,000,000 . To\ncompare this number to something anala-\ngons, Humboldt calls attention to the fact,\nthat there are not in the whole heavens more\nthan about 8,000 stars, between the first and\nthe sixth magnitudes, visible to the naked\neye. Thus, the barren astonishment excited\nby numbers and dimensions in space, when\nnot considered with reference to applica-\ntions engaging the mental and perceptive\npowers of man, is awakened in extremes\nof the Universe, in the celestial bodies as in\nthe minutest animalcules ; for, according to\nEhrcmberg, a cubic inch of the polishing\nslate of Bilin, contains 40,000 millions of\nthe silccious shells Galionclhe.\nThe assumption that the extent of the\nstarry firmament is literally infinite lias\nbeen made by Dr. Gibers the basis of a con-\nclusion that the celestial spaces are in some\nslight degree deficient in transparency, so\nthat all' beyond' a certain distance is and\nmust forever remain unseen, the geometrical\nprogression of the extinction of light far out-\nrunning the effect of any conceivable in-\ncrease in the power of our telescopes. Were\nit not so, it is argued that every part of the\ncelestial concave ought to shine with the\nbrightness of the solar disc, since no visual\nray could be so directed as not, in some\npoint or other of its infinite length, to- en-\ncounter such a disc.—W. Y. Century.
03e84d8b8e4a9a48dd3032e41a859e3d THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.541095858701 32.612638 -90.036751 chapter of I Kings. Solomon has just\nbeen called to rule over the Jewish na-\ntion in the room of David his father.\nAmong the first acts of his reign he\nseeks the Lord in sacrifice and worship\nat Gibeon. The testimony of God's\nWord in the third verse of the chapter\nis that "Solomon loved the Lord, walk-\ning in the statutes of David his father,"\nand it is with the deepest reverence and\ndevotion that this young king recog-\nnizes God's claims upon him and his\nneed of and dependence upon God.\nWith lavish hand the king makes his\nofferings before the Lord. The smoke\nof a thousand burnt offerings ascended\nfrom the multitude of altars erected\nthere. The priests and the Levltes have\nbeen kept busy in preparing the flocks\n lambs, and the droves of cattle for\nthe sacrifice. All the nation knows of\nthe religious devotions of the new king,\nand thousands have gathered from all\nover the kingdom to share in the cere-\nmonies. What a revival season was\nthat for Solomon and the nation! The\nhearts of all are quickened and God draws\nvery near unto them. He always does\nwhen the soul steadfastly sets itself to\nseek the Lord. And in the stillness of\nthe night watches during this great na-\ntional religious celebration, God ap-\npears to Solomon in a dream. And the\nwords of the Lord and the reply of Sol-\nomon indicate the burden which was\nmpon the heart of the young ruler. The\nnew and great responsibilities require\nIncreased wisdom and abilities. He did
376e876a8a4322a2e2bcfed0defe02c1 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.97397257103 41.741039 -112.161619 The main work Is now being done In\ntho Culebra cut. It was striking and\nImpressive to see the huge steam shovels\nlu full play, thu dumping trains carrying\naway the rock and earth they dislodged.\nThe Implements of French excavating\nmachinery, which often stand a little\nway from the line of work, though of ex-\ncellent construction, look like the veriest\ntoys when compared with these new\nsteam shovels, Just as tho French dump-\ning cars seem like toy cars when com-\npared with the long trains of huge cars,\ndumped by steam plows, which are now\nIn use. This represents the enormous\nadvance that has been mnde In machin-\nery during the past quarter of a cen\ntury. No doubt a quarter of a century\nhence this new muciilnery, of which wo\naro now so proud, will similarly seem out\n date, but It Is certainly serving its\npurpose well now. Tho old French cars\nfind to be entirely discarded. We still\nhave In use a few of the more modern,\nbut not most modern, ears, which hold\nhut 12 yards of earth. They can be em-\nployed on certain lines with shaip\ncurves, lint the recent cars hold from\n25 to 3D yards apiece, and Instead of tho\nold cluuisv methods of unloading them,\na steam plow Is drawn from end to end\nof the whole vestlhuled train, thus Im-\nmensely economizing labor. In thn rnlny\nleason the steam shovels can do but\nllttlo In dirt, but they work sleadllv In\nrock and In llje harder ground. Thete\nweie some 25 ut work dm lug the time I\nwus on thn Isthmus, und their tremendous\npower und etllcleni y were most Impies-slvo-
17fcfb9bda5cbe956ca85d02cba8a7b1 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.223287639523 39.369864 -121.105448 Mr. Editor As any member of our com-\nmunity may be called upon at almost any time,\nto the neglect of his business, to go to Nevada at\nan expense of from twenty to fifty dollars, as\ngrand juror for the county, I wish to warn them\nhow a faithful performance of fhat duty may\nsubject them to the grossest insults, and even to\nthe imminent peril of their lives. I also wish to\nshow them how a citizen in the discharge of a\nsworn duty—which every good citizen ought,\nwhen called upon, to discharge—may bring upon\nhimself the contumely and menace of those who\nmay happen to be named as remiss under the\nlaws, by him who seeks honestly to perform that\nduty. I wish to narrate briefly what occurred to\nme in Nevada during the last sitting of the Grand\nJury, of which body I was a humble member.\nThe Jury convened on Monday, the llthof\nMarch, when the oath was administered to them\nby the County Judge, requirrhg them to disclose\nanything they might know to have occurred in\nthe county against the peace and dignity of the\npeople of the State, and to investigate and report\nif the officers of the county were faithfully dis\n their respective duties. On the 13th,\nwhile perambulating the city in company with a\nfellow-grand juror from North San Juan, and\nbeing near the Hospital, I proposed to him that\nwe should enter and see how its affairs were con-\nducted. We found every part of the house, with\none honorable exception—the kitchen—in a\nwretchedly filthy condition. The bedding was\nfilthy, and in many casts'unprovided with sheets.\nIn conversation with the patients, we elicited\nfrom one poor fellow, that his bed-clothes had\nnot been changed for the last four weeks, and\nthat when the clothing is changecl* at all, it is\nwhen Visitors are expected ; also, that wearing\napparel remains unwashed unless the patients\nare able to do it themselves. Another said be\nhad been in the Hospital nearly three weeks,\nunable to get out of his bed, the clothes of which\nhad not been changed ; and that, during a portion\nof the time he- .lay on a straw mattrass, with-\nout sheets; and that he had been neglected\nby the physician. Another remarked that he\ndared not tell the truths about his condition, as\nhe was at the mercy of the attending physician,\nand might have to remain in the Hospital for\nsome t>ime yet.
03d2cbba99540dbf0696edce3e1689bd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.1383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho poison of falso doctrines has rap¬\nidly invaded public life and private;\nrationalism, materialism, athoslsm have\nbegotten socialism, communism, ni¬\nhilism.evil principles which it was not\nonly fitting should have sprung from\nBuch parontago, but were its necessary,\noffspring. In truth, If the Catholic re¬\nligion is wilfully rejected, whose divine\norigin is made clear by such unmistaka¬\nble signs, what reason Is there why\nevery form of religion should not be re¬\nfected, not upheld by such criteria of\ntruth ? If tho soul Is one with tho body,\nand if, therefore, no hope of a happy\neternity remains when tho body dies,\nwhat reason is there for men to under¬\ntake toll and suffering here In subject¬\ning tho appetites to right reason? The\nhighest good of mau will then He in en¬\njoying life's pleasures and life's lux¬\nuries. Ami since there Is no one who\n not impelled by instinct and inipulso\nof nuturo to entertain tho desire ot liv¬\ning happily, every man will naturally\nlay hands on all he can that lie way\n| live happily on the spoils of others.\nNor is there any power mighty enough\nto bridle the passions, for it follows that\nthe power of the law is broken and that\nall authority is loosened if the belief in\nan ever-living Uod, who commands what\nis right and forbids what is wrong, is re¬\njected. If the multitude is frenzied with\na thirst for excessive liberty, if on all\nsides are heard the threatening murmurs\nI of proletarians, if tho inhuman lust of\nrich never is satisfied, and if to thoso bo\nadded thoso evils of the same kind to\nwhich we have referrod fully elsewhere,\nit will bo found that nothing can heal\nthem more completely or surely than\nChristian faith.
29b3b56040cc0a259f564d20a8f30892 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.03698626966 58.275556 -134.3925 G. C. Woodward, U. S. vice-consul\ngeneral at Vancouver, B. C., reporting\nto the Department of Labor and Com¬\nmerce on the coal situation in British\nColumbia, has the following to say:\n"British Columbia, especially Van¬\ncouver, has been inconvenienced for\nthe past eight months by a scarcity of\ncohI, cftUfed by the .strike of miners on\nVancouver Island. While domestic\ncoal usually sells for $7.50 per ton, it\nwas difficult, to obtain last winter at\n$10 to 811. By reabou of the strike Se¬\nattle has not only secured a market in\nBritish Columbia for coal of Puget\nSound mine?, which it may hoid to a\ncertain extent, even after the strike is\nended, but it has also secured coaling\nof a great number of vcssls. A num¬\nber of local steamers have also recent¬\nly changed to oil burners.\n"Evidence presented to the govern¬\nment investigating commission by a\ncivil engineer wa? that the price of bi\n coal from the United States\nat Fort William was ouly 85 per ton\ndelivered to the retailer, with duty\npaid, as against the following prices in\nVancouver: Lump, §7.50; uut, $6.50;\npea, 84.50; slack, 83.50; these prices be¬\ning increased 25 to 35 per cent during\nthe shortage. It was showu by the\nTi ades aud Labor Couucil that wages\npaid to Britibh Columbia miners at\nvarious coal producing poiuts were:\nCumberland, 80.82}^ per 2,340 pounds;\nLadysmith, 80 82 per 2,359 pounds;\nNanaimo, in the upper eearn 80.748 per\npet 2,2-10 pounds and in the lower seam\n80 85 per 2,240 poniids, the men buying\ntheir own powder (which costa 80.20\nper pound in Ladysmith, 80.30 in Cum¬\nberland, aud 80.16 in Nauaimo). It was\nal83 stated that it costs the mines 81\nper tou to miue, wash and screen the\ncoal aud that it could be transposed\n40 tuiles from Vancouver ielaud to 'he\nmainland for 80.25 per ton."
0fb1e199440748383b6216e3a53c09fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.5204917716555 40.063962 -80.720915 New Yokx, July 7..Flour, receipts 25,892 pai\nj agea; exports 822 barrel* and 2.780 aacka; m\nact (Uini uimiciiitci), Ktliguuiiux wou. mm .\n1 16,325 barn-la. Wheat, rwelpta 16,540 buahela; i\n3 porta 51,757 buahela; aalea 2,392,000 buahela of\nturea and 137,000 buihola ( apot; optla\natcady; No. 2 red July 88}ic; A uguit\ncloning at 88jfc; September 89J$ayoc, cloil\n1 at 'JUlfC; December 9&a93>gc, cloning at K\nI March ti5jia95j$c, cloaing at 9^c: April 90J\n'JG^c. cloaing at JK%c; May VT^a^/ic, cloal\n; atVT^c. Corn, recelpta 7,900 buahela: expoi\n16,741 buahela; aaloa 3H4.000 buahela of futui\nand 106,000 buabcla of apot; ontiona llrm; u\ngraded mixed 53a.V%c; No. 2 July .V .«<c: A\nguat 665^0; 8«pt«mber 5796c; October 67j£a58>i\ncloning at 58ftc: November S7^a57J$c, cloali\nI at 575ic; December 53^c. Oata. receipt* 58,4\nbuihclo; exiKiru 61; buahela; aalea NO,U.0 buaht\nof future* and 35,000 buahela of apo\nmarket dull; mixed weatern S3ai8<\nwhite do 40a47c. ilav dull: ahlppii\n60af>5c. llopaquiet. Coffee, dull;optlonaHtead\naaletROUObaga; July ll.Ojc; Auguat 10.00al0.06\nSeptember 9j*)c; October, December and Mi\n9.60a9.90c. Sugar, raw atroag; refined atrong at\nactive: white extra C G}&6Kc\\ yellow 5*$\n A G^fic; mould A 7Wc; ataudard A G}fc; co\nfcctloucra A 6jfc; cut loaf and rruahed nc; po<\nderod 7};c; grHUUlatedTJfc; oubcaT^c. Molaas\nArm at 19&c for .r>0 teat. Rice quiet. Tallo\ncaaicr at 3Jic. Koaln dull ftt f 115. Turpentli\ndull at 35c. Egga moderately active. Pork atead\nmeaafl5 OOala i'i for now;tl4 00al4 25 for ol\nCut tueata quiet. Lard flnn; weatern a tea\nJWUSc: Auguat 8.67c; September 8.63c; Octob\n8.57c. Butter dull: weateru 13al9)fc. Chocae du\nand wu»y; whlto and colored Ohio llat 7a8^c.\nChicaoo. July 7..Prlcea on wheat opem\nateady, ami the tlrat move waa a gain of one ceo\nThia wan followed by a reaction, and the lo\nwaa regained before noon, cloaing atrong at ou\naide price*. Corn waa quite atroux. Outa unx\ncratcly active. Proviaiona were traded In to\nmodcrato extent. Flour firm and unchaugc\nWheat, caah No. 2 apring 82aMc; No. 2 r<\n«2Ke; July 8ia82!ic, cloaing at 82!jc: Augu\nXlT^Vlc. cloalug at K2V*c; ijcptember 8uJ\nMV, cloalug at Al%c; December 83Sa84^\ncloaing at K&c. Corn, caah No. 2, 50c; Ju\n<V/jiioHc. cloaing at 50!<c; Auguat 4'J%a50}$\ncloaing at50J4c: September 49J«a51iic.cIoalog\n51c: October
0100eef9a218fef1d65590a7b21bc0a4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.6397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 Court square has a new denizen, and\nnow the peacocks and the squirrels\nstop o\\ib»v now and then to look in\niv.ouder at the spindle-legged crane\nwhich stalks In solemn dignity to and\nfro, says the Memphis Scimitar. This\ncrane, however, is not attracting\nmerely the attention of the other\ndwellers of the park, for every day or\ntwo n large human audience watches\nhis performance. The crane catches\nsparrows and it is the efforts he makes\nto swallow his prey which cause spec­\ntators to gather by the score. The\ncrane stands quietly like a statue and\nwaits. The sparrows fly about fear­\nlessly, not even startled by the strange\nbird. Thejr have seen rags on a slick\nbefore and they are not afraid; oh.noi\nThen one of the sparrows lights very\nnear the crane. The rag becomes live­\nly and his beak is shot out with llght-\nnlngquicknessand the sparrow caught\nright the neck.\nThen comes the fvtn. The sparrow Is\na little large to swallow. The crane\nkills him, thinking the small birds\nlively capers must bo tlie cause ot the\ndifficulty. Death makes the task no\neasier. The sparrow still choke» the\ncrane. The crane tries the sparrow\nhead on. The small birds wings stick\nout and prevent the sparrow from go­\ning down. The crane starts at the\nfeet; but the feathers on the prospec­\ntive dinner arc ruffled the wrong way\nand the second attempt fails. An idea\nstrikes ids eraneship. He walks to a\nsmall tub of water and soaks the spar­\nrow so that the feathers cling closely.\nIt Is still an impossible task to swallow\nthe bird. The crane works and works,\nand finally, by pounding the sparrow\nalmost to a pulp, at last makes a meal.\nThen the audience disperses wonder­\ning at the cranes mr, - velous digestion.
39731d19a391adfa3e41a2f0ca0c3ee4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.80464477712 41.681744 -72.788147 George D. Parker, a letter carrier in\nthis city and a veteran of the civil\nwar, who had the distinction of hav-\ning been the youngest soldier in the\n36th Massachusetts Infantry in which\nhe enlisted at the outbreak of the\nwar in 1861, passed away last night\nat his home, 112 Lake street. The\nfuneral will be held from his late\nhome at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon.\nRev. Lyman S. Johnson, himself a\nGrany Army veteran, will conduct the\nfuneral services and interment will be\nin Fairview cemetery.\nMr. Parker was 69 years, one month\nand nineteen days old and was a na-\ntive of Boston. It was from Hub City\nthat he enlisted at the beginning of\nthe Civil war and as he was at that\ntime a mere boy of 16 years he was\ncompelled to give his age wrong\nwhen he enlisted. He was the young-\n man in his regiment. After serv-\ning in the 36th Massachusetts Mr.\nParker served in the 56th Massachu-\nsetts and also the 21st Massachussetts\nInfantry. Soon after the close of the\nwar Mr. Parker came to this city\nwhere he was for a time employed by\nthe New Britain Gas Light company\nand at the Russell & Erwn factory. In\nOctober of 1892, Mr. Parker was ap-\npointed a letter carrier, being one of\nthe first permanent carriers named in\nthis city. He was always painstaking\nin the performnce of his work and\nall the people on his route were his\nfriends. For many years he delivered\nmail in the eastern section of the city.\nAbout four months ago he was given\na year's leave of absence because of\nill health, but he continued to fail.\nHeart and kidney trouble, together\nwith his advanced years, caused his\ndeath.
7ad5f272f576aa19b287f46d95aff252 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.7027396943176 41.681744 -72.788147 Opinions differ somewhat in regards\nto the radical change the Republicans\nhave caused by their voting at tho\ncaucus Monday night. This is parti-\ncularly directed to the new force of\nconstables which had undergone some\nsurprising changes. Instead of having\nthe names called from the floor as\nhad been the usual rule, the men\nwere named by a committee and re-\ncommended to the chairman, Stanley\nQwilllm. for further nomination by\nthe voters. As it was, the names re-\ncommended by this committee were\naccepted without any contest which\ngoes to show that they were received\nwith unanimous approval The commit-\ntee which suggested the new officers\nwere. Senator John Trumbull, C H.\nNewton and John E. Lamb.\nIn regards to the new officers, the\ncommittee explained that there was\nconsiderable work to be done by the\nlocal constables. Harmonious work is\nlooked forward to among the new\nforce of officers, and although ther-- i\nhas been some change by the Republi-c - n\nticket. It is not expected tht very\nmuch of a change will be seen when\nthe meet tomorrow night\nfor nominating their town officers.\nThe general feeling however, is that\nthe change was made for the best. Tho\ntown needs protection, there is no\ndoubt of this. Again and again the\npresent clock system has been assailed\nand many are made to believe that the\ninstallation of this had been done\nwithout much foresight. An example\ncan be taken from recent robberies\ncommitted during the night.\nThe night constable is not much to\nblame inasmuch as the clock system\ncalls him from his duties about the\ncenter a great part of the time.\nmust visit the clocks at various in-\ntervals during the night. This mean?\nthat when he leaves the center, to go\nto his post at the bank, he leaves\nCentral Square at the mercy of Individ-\nuals while he is absent the greater\npart of half an hour and so it goes\nwith each point on his beat. While at\none end of the town, the other side\nside is open for breaking in. Possibly\nthe new force will have an opportuni-\nty to eliminate this method.
158fadb796ea3c0b7117b05c32a46a00 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.9082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 pkln and along: the table In lrr\neffective lines. With this deco\nmay be used carrot candleholdi\nte are made from large, equal-sl\nots cut off smoothly at the lar\neach to hold a candle sunk li\net cut out for that purpose. Th\nbe four or six of these large 01\nf preferred, a small one, holdini\nII candle with tiny shade, at ei\n». If a few large carrots are u\ncandle-holders, tiny Individ\npklns may stand at each co>\nIng small flowers, or fitted wltl\npaper case in which may be bi\nor salted almonds.\n10 of the most effective table\nements of flowers for the Than\nig board Is the combnlatlon of 5\nchrysanthemums and bunches\nllsh violets. The flowers may\nfled In a mould or In a iarge bun\nat. into a Jar or vase. The viol\nmade Into bunches and tied to\nof a stick in order to be in evidei\ntheir big companions.\n another effective orrangemsnj\nntrepiece of autumn leaves, w\nihades of the candelabra giving\ni effect. These shades may\nht at the shops, or if one has\n& a supply of autumn leaves, It\nto fasten them on whit? shades,\nhose faintly tinted in yellow w\nlly good effect.\ne housekeeper wno nnas neri\n;cd to resort to the use of dr\npkin or pumpkin flour for 1\niksglving pics will And her eft\nsuccessful if sho will brown eitl\nIricd vegetable or the flour. 8pr«\nplate and set In the oven to t«\ndecided color. This process i\nfound to add greatly to the ri<\nand flavor of the pies.\nsome tables, when raw oysters i\n>d, a small napkin is laid over\nof crushed ice, and the shells i\ndown into the napkin. This ho\nlater if the Ice should melt a lit!\nprevents it soiling the table lir\nse the plate is taken up careles:\nie waitress.
53b327d480777cc467f2ec1e5c08756c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.3356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, May 2..A special or¬\nder has just been issued from the War\nDepartment in relation to trials by mil¬\nitary courts and commissions, stating\nthat whereas some military command¬\ners areemburrassed by doubts as to the\noperutton of the proclamation of the\nPresident, dated the 2d day of April,\n180(3, upon trials by courts martial and\nmilitary offences, to remove such doubts\nIt is ordered by the President that here¬\nafter whenever offences are committed\nby civilians, they are to be tried where\ncivil tribunals.are in existence to try\nthem, their cases are not authorized to\nbe and will not be brought before mili¬\ntary courts martial or commissions, but\nwill be committed to the proper civil\nauthorities. This order is not applica¬\nble to camp followers, as provided for\nunder the 00th article of war, or to con¬\ntractors and others as specified in sec¬\ntion 10 of the acl of July, 1802, and sec¬\ntion 102 of the act of March 2,1803, and\noffences cognizable by the rules and ar¬\nticles of war, and by the acts of Con¬\ngress above cited, will be continued to\nbe and punished by military tri¬\nbunals as prescribed by the rules and\narticles of war and acts of Congress.\nThe sixtieth of the rules and articles\nof war provides that all sutlers and re¬\ntainers to camp and all persons what¬\nsoever, serving with the armies of\nthe United States in the field,\nthough not enlisted soldiers, are to be\nsubject to orders according to the rules\nand discipline of war. The acts of Con¬\ngress, to which reference is made, pro¬\nvides that whenever any contractors\nfor subsistence, clothing, arms, ammu ¬\nnition, munitions of war and for every\ndescription of supplies for the army or\nnavy of the United States shall be found\nguilty by a court martial of fraud or\nwilful neglect of duty he shall be pun¬\nished by fine, imprisonment or such\nother punishment as the court martiul\nshall adjudge, and further provision is\nmade for the punishment of persons\ndefrauding the army, navy or oivil\nservice by. procuring false vouchers or\nentering into conspiracy with any per¬\nsons in the employment of the Govern¬\nment with a view to fraud and other\nkindred offences.
366378fbbb37e979e876acd228a23d15 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.7246575025367 39.745947 -75.546589 I should like to have you help us. through the col­\numns of your paper, to belter the public road condi­\ntions in this county If we cannot get the duPont\nBoulevard, which 1 think ninety per cent, of the citi­\nzens of this county are anxious for. then let us have\nthe next best thing. I believe New rustle county had\na bill passed hy the last legislature authorizing a\nbonded indebtedness sufficient to extend, or build, a\npublic highway through New Castle county to the Kent\ncounty line. Kent county had a similar hill passed\nto continue the road from the New Castle county\nline to the Sussex county line. Now Sussex should\nget busy and have a bill passed by the next legis­\nlature authorizing It to borrow a sufficient amount\nof money to continue this from the Kent county\nline through Sussex to the Maryland Une. I saw\nState Senator John P..Moore at Ocean City. Md . . a few\ndays ago. Senator Moore was the lending man In the\nMaryland Legislature to get a bill passed, at Hie last\nsession, appropriating $75.000 to build a stone road\nconnecting with the duPont Boulevard at Selhyvllle,\nand running through Worcester county to Berlin, Md..\nthere connecting with the stone roads running from\nBerlin to Snow Hill snd from Berlin to Salisbury.\nSenator Moore says the Maryland officials are ex­\nceedingly anxious to spend the $75.000 that has been\nappropriated to connect the Maryland roads with our\nState highway. He saya they cannot spend their\nmone' until we build a State highway to the Mary­\nland One as their bill was drawn to connect with the
322cde41a482690de8cd30244dbd6b54 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2178081874683 40.063962 -80.720915 A Nava|« In Ball Boom.\nterun vtuuaui uontaguiiaii renin p\nio» which hu just been played °\nierman painter who is well known I\nParis and Berlin. This clever rntn c\n0 be blase, and at a New Year's £\nIt ol journalists, artists and actors tl\nr popular house "Unter der Lin- tl\nlused a pressing invitation to the D\n"elite balls" of this month on P\nind that he had ceased to care .\nncing. When be bad leltamo'\nlis punishment was proposed and .\nnd the ministration of the van- u\n1 the company was committed to\nnd ingenious comedian. lie call- ol\nlext day upon tbe artist, compli- li\nlim upon his refusal to take part\nilow conventional dances ol tbe §\nworld, and alter a pause invited d\nItend a "divinely amusing enter- p\naa he phrased It, got up by an ».\njterlu called tbe "L'lk Club," and o.\ng of a carnival, at which every »\ns obliged to array himself in "a i\njuant costume." F<\nrear," aald the inviter, "we were &\nta and aailora; but this year we jj\nlived to be Bavagea, redtkini, \nannibaU or whatever a man wills gi\nsort," Tbe artist thought the q|\nould be worth seeing, but bis u\nd him that be would only be ad- g\ny conforming to the rules and g\ni costume suited to tbe company, e,\nill be easily done," he addeu; Mi\nltakealewthingsoutolour £\nwardrobe." Accordingly, tbe it\n(patched to tbe painter s house at\nplote outfit ol a savage chief.a £\nin, diadem of feathers, earrings, u\ng, an elaborate tinselled apron D<\nuhet, while he promised to call [[]\nloo" him on the evening of the ot\nwhen they were to ride to the tg\nn the same cab. 'J\nI fated day the actor drove np, a'\nfriend equipped In the masquer- JJ.\n1 few Unlshing touches to bis ap- ?\nand thBy drove oil together. "I\noduce you to our party," he said, . »\nn hurry across to my rooms to ur\nmyteif." The coach stopped, the t,b\nped the "savage chief" to alight, 0i\nHalts with him, whispered in the 11\ne liveried attendant, and then K>\njack to the cab, saying as he ur\noounye lor nan an nour."
afcdec59abaa92e9c95f217769fa6be1 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1904109271943 39.261561 -121.016059 say that the effect of the operations has\nbeen exaggerated, and that tbe “stone fleet”\nwill not do the permanent evil that is an-\nticipated. We tear that the ingenuity of\nthe Federate will succeed hut too well.\nThe Southern harbors are at all times sub\nject to be blocked up by deposits of sand\nand mud. From this defect tbe harbor of\nCharleston is not free, and the navigation\nis as intricate as iu other ports of this low\nand swampjt coast. What, then, must be\ntbe result of sinking vessels filled with\nmasses of granite? Plainly it will be what\ntbe exulting Northerners expect—that wher-\never a ship has been sunk a shoal will be\nformed, and the channel will he perfectly\nuseless. As long as the hulks last the en*\ntrance will be impassible, and should they\never be blown up or otherw ise destroyed,\nthe stones will sink in the bed of the chan-\nnel, and be as irremovable as tbe founda-\ntion of Plymouth Breakwater. Against\nthis violation of all ibe laws of war we can-\nnot but protest. No belligerent has a right\nto destroy the great features of nature, to\nchoke up tbe avenues by which populations\ncommunicate with the world without, and\nto deprive the mariner for ages of refuge\nfrom tbe perils of the sea. Charleston is\ntbe best, and indeed the only good barbor\non a long line of coast, and to destroy the\nmain to it is a deed which calls\nfor the reprobation of every maratime\nState. When has such an act been perpe-\ntrated by any European power? In tbe war\nagainst Napoleon it was declared that tbe\nEnglish were tbe tyrants of the seas,” lie-\ncause they prohibited intercourse with the\noations with which they were at war. But\nat least this was honestly done by the labo-\nrious blockade of the enemys ports. Dur-\ning years of harrassing warfare, Toulon and\nBrest, and the other ports of tbe French\nEmpire, were watched by onr squadrons,\nand though the task was difficult and dan-\ngerous with tbe old sailing ships of tbe time\nthough for days an effective closing of port\nmight be prevented by a contrary wind,\nf et it never entered into tbe thought of men\nike Jervis and Nelson, and CoTlingwood,\nthat they could save themselves trouble and\ntbeir country expense by totally destroying\nthe port they were set to watch. Yet wbat\nmight England, with her undisputed su-\npremacy at sea, have effected, bad she suf-\nfered herself to meditate such an iniquity?\nIt is plain that every second-rate barbor\non tbe Continent, from tbe Elbe to Bayon-\nne, might have been thus destroyed forever\nby tbe British Navv. But, though strug-\ngling for years against a gigantic adversa-\nsy, we never thought of ruining the cities\nof Europe by a “silent blight.” This sav-\nage innovation has been left to Rapublicaoa
5a8a6714d6a005c7a48a8bf54576b6c1 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.9356164066464 39.261561 -121.016059 J.vxcujxo a Cripple.—A brutal outrage was perpetrated\nnear Pleasant Hill, North Carolina, on the lltli of Met.\nA correspondent of the Petersburg Express gives the fol-\nlowing particulars : Two men, in human shape, but pos-\nsessing the mind of a demon, went to the house of a poor\nman named Simon Ellis, called him out, and asked him if\nhe did not wish to take a drink. Kllis went out to meet\nthem, when they seized him and carried him off to the\nwoods, and, under cover of night, whipped him most un-\nmercifully. They took off his shirt and whipped his bare\nback, lacerating the flesh in a frightful manner. Kllis is a\npoor, pnle, emaciated, and deformed being, and can\nscarcely walk on account of the deformity of liis legs.\nLife Insurance.—Mr. S . M . Holden, of Ann Arbor,\nMichigan, was found one morning, about a year since, on\na vacant spot of ground with a pistol shot through his\nhead, from the effect of which he died some two days af\nterward, refusing or unable to give any explanation of the\naffair. Ho had his life insured at the time in various\ncompanies for $29,000 . wife has commenced suit for\nthe recovery of the insurance, which the companies resist\non the ground that his death was obtained by those hav-\ning an interest in the insurance for the purpose of getting\nit, The decision of the case is looked to with interest.\nMaterial Aid for Mexico.—Wc learn that Dr. E. S.\nBillings, who has been for some weeks in this country as\nthe agent of Gen. Alvarez, making arrangements for send-\ning material aid to the constitutionalists in Mexico,\nleaves here tomorrow in the steamer for Aspinwall, on\nhis return to Acapulco. He lias been quite successful in\nhis operations, and arrangements have been made with\nMr. James R Morgan, of this city, under which General\nAlvarez will soon receive a large supply of niinuic rifles,\nmuskets, powder and lead, and other little arrangements\nof an effective character. With these. General Alvarez\ncalculates to lx* in the City of Mexico in January next,\nand to checkmate his old antagonist, Panta Anna, in his\nnew plans for plundering the republic.—.Vein York Herald.\nRowdyism in Baltimore. —A most outrageous murder\nwas committed in Baltimore, on the night of Nov. 4th.\nA dispatch from that city says :
04f0913174a5323e3891bdc23fad0020 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.3356164066463 39.745947 -75.546589 Rwl of train i. - u,■ 1 :,4' wilm 1 ugtuu 'atlo\nwlthnnt further notice.\nPKPIMU- In this city on Mm 2, III19,\nIjeuiah Jane, widow of rtiarlea C. Pepper!\nKe.athea and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral aervlces. at her late real,\ndeuce, No. 2210 Market street, on Monday\nafternoon May 5, at 2,30 oclock. Inter-\nment at Hivervlew cemetery.\nWEBB— In thlH dry. ou May 3. 1019, Cora\ndaughter of Howard Webb, of No. ll\nKidtile Are., aged Id years.\nDue not lee of funeral will be given.\nKENNEDY In this dry. on April J9. 1917 ,\nWilliam Kennedy, aged Ä4 years,\nllelatives, friends and members of Boiler*\nmakers' Colon, No. 491, lire invited to at­\ntend the funeral sendees, at the chapel, al\nKlveniew cemetry, on Sunday »ftmoon,\nMay f at 3 o'clock. Interment at Elvervie*\ncemetery.\nBKOWN— In Ibis city, on May 1. 1919, Katl«\n sister of Mrs. Allen Ball ami th«\nKev. Solomon Hudson, aged 3S jeers.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral sendees, from (»race A. M.\nE. Zion Church. Third and West itreela,\non Monday afternoon. May R, at 2 o'clock.\nInterment at Mt. Olive cemetery. Remains\nmay b« viewed Sunday from 3 to 10 P. M .,\nfrom the funeral parlors of Mrs. E. O. Rosa,\nNo. 427 E . Eleventh street.\nDON A HOB—In this city, on May 3, 1910,\nWilliam F. Dona hoe.\nRelatives, friends and member« of ths\nK. O. E -, No. 74. are invited to attend tb«\nfuneral from his late residence. No. 321\nEast Eighth street, on Tuesday morning, at\n9 oclock. Solemn requiem mass at St.\nMary's Church. Interment at Cathedral\ncemetery.\nPLINKETT—In this city, on May 2. 191»,\nMary, sister of the late George Plunkett,\npaymaster of United States Navy.
1ce5e8cd3bf4a836e0bcd68152913686 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.2827868536228 40.063962 -80.720915 Ligation, that the public mind has been t\nentirely misled upon the whole subject.\nHe attributes what is supposed* to <\nbo the ravages of the bot to be\nIn reality the work of some inflama-\nlory disease. The natural history of the\ntjot, he thinks, has never been proper- j\nly understood. The bot, he claims, t\nis hereditary with -the horse, and is ,\nborn into the world with him, the colt,\nat the moment of foaling, having the\nLittle parasite in his stomach, in as per-\nTect a Btate aa the horse of six years. ,\nThe author goes on to state that tne bot\nIs found attached to the cuticular or in-\nsensible coating in the upper portion of\nme stomach.not by his head as is [\npopularly supposed, but banging by\nbis tail. For a month he has a little\nDrifice, no larger than the point of a\ncambric needle, with which he feeds\nopon tbe food in his stomach, after it\nhas been softened down into chyme.\nThis tiny mouth he can clese against\nany substance which ofTenda his dainty\ntaste; and being protected by ascaly or\nbony covering, upon which no acid,\ncauatic or poison, will operate, he is\nmuch safer from the action of any\nhurtful element than the horse into\nwhose stomach he if introduced. There\nIb no evidence, says Mr. Stewart, that\n[n bis normal condition, the bot ever\ninjures the horse's health in the least\ndegree. The bot is pronounced to be\nan entirely insect from the\ngrub or worm, with which he has no\nrelationship whatever. The latter la\nthe offspring of the gad fly, and is un-\ndoubtedly, an intruder. It is a species\nof light yellow worm, which passes\naway from the horse in the excrements\nduring the months of July and August,\nand becomes imbedded in the earth\nwhere the chrysalis is formed, whence\nIn time is hatched the fly. The eggs of\nthe fly are deposited upon the horse's\nskin, are bitten off ana flnd their way\ninto the horse's stomach. H»re tbe\nworm is developed in time, and thus\nthe species continues to be -propagated.\nUnlike the bot, the grub never attaches\nitsell to the coating of the stomach.\nDot uvea among the particles of food,\nthe toagh fibrous portions of which it\ndecomposes and in both stomach and\nbowels undoubtedly performs the same\noffice for the horse that worms do in\nthe child. When multiplied in great\nnumbers the grub may occasion much\nuneasiness and irritation but never\ncauses death or even serious disease.\nAs to the popular belief that the bot\ncauses the death of the horse by eating\nthrough tho stomucb, Mr. Stewart\nBays: Although the stomach is often\nfound "completely riddled by the bot/'\nas the popular expression is, there 4s\ngood reason to believe that the work Is\ndone entirely alter the horse is "struck\nby death." One or two facts will go\nfar to prove the truth ot a proposition\nwhich to many will appear
0369917e127b8c2c7ab4690b518a1188 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1908.116120186956 37.451159 -86.90916 Ned Hiukllns parents desiring to In ¬\nfluence their son for what they deemed\nhis good desired that Instead of fol\nlowing In their footsteps as farmers\nIIK should go to college and study u\npriifeM4uii Hut Ned had become In ¬\nvolved with Alum Itlodgetr a farmers\ndaughter aril nllhoiigh slur urged him\nto nil upon lids fathers and mothers\nadvice ho Insisted on AH Immediate\ntnnrrluge which was iMjulvuleut to re\nmaining on tbu rnriii This set bU par\nents to trying to breuk up the watch\nand fiilllng to do so they euntlniied IIni\nwork w 116m view 1to M depuration ot\nthe young married iouplu till they se-\ncured the result they desired\nFive years utter the depuration Neds\nparents wen Troth dead Ned now n\nullzed that II grunt mUtuUii mad been I\nmlJl11 hunt divorced his wire ut\ntheir InIIJII till II mid they bud gone\nto their lung boar I HIIVUK hhn In bis\nloneliness Alma hail ouly irouseutod\nto a divorce nn iondltlou that stir keep\nthe children u buy IIlIdu girl She\nwas n plucky nuinuu nud supported\nherself unit thorn Her husbands fa ¬\nher to secure the divorce hud settled\nu few lhuua lid dulluin on her which\nby thrift iIIll1 good Investments she\nIncreased Hut no sooner hud tbe sep ¬\naration tiikru place than taking her\nchildren she left the locution where\nshe hud Inen made unhappy and gave\nno Inkling us to where she was going\nBoon utter thus death of Lila parents\nNed began to search for Ills wife nnd\nchildren He hunted six years with\nout success Then hearing of the ad-\nvantages
fe5554afbf55ec9b0e795c67166ef7ac NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.3620218263004 41.681744 -72.788147 Men who wait until midnight or\n(hereabouts to attend to their fur-\nnaces have also come to the atten-\ntion of the police in on'official man-\nner. One member of the department\nrecalls receiving such a complaint\nin the middle of winter some years\nago. the aggrieved party claiming\nit was impossible to sleep while the\ngrates were being turned and the\ncoal shoveled in. He could not un-\nderstand why the police could not\nproperly order the offender to fix\nhis furnace earlier iu the evening,\nso that everyone in the house might\nenjoy a full measure, of repose.\nCountless requests come to the\npolice to "speak to" this boy and\nthat man, from complainants who\nare ever fearful that those against\nwhom the complaints are made\nmight learn true source. Boys\nwho congregate around street cor-\nners and their elders who are un-\nduly noisy on late returns from\n"down street" may never learn the\nreason for the sudden activity of\nthe policeman on the beat, but if\nthey knew the truth, they would\nlearn of a gnat amount of "kick-\ning" over the telephone to "SC."\nMany women run to the police\nwith catty tales about their neigh-\nbors, and when their stories are in-- ,\nvestigated, the police often find that\nthe complainants nre at fault. Nat-\nurally, Iho particular officer who\nmakes such a report immediately\nloses favor with the complainants,\nami in some instances, women who\nhave had experience along this line\nask specifically that certain officers\nbe kept off investigations concern-\ning them.
1b7a3448c16002061ac03e579ab79969 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.1027396943175 40.063962 -80.720915 Wheeling to Jiulotig to tho Ohio Huso I{ji!\nLeague.Guoil Gronmln Sucuretl.\nIt has been definitely uotllod at last tha\nWheeling ia to havo a regular base bal\nclub that ohall belong to the nowli\nformed Ohio League, concerning the /or\nmation of which this paper recently ha<\na full account. Thero was r. largely at\ntended meeting cf tho membe'rB of thi\nWheeling Base Hall Association, Saturday\noveninf.- ,' at which negotiations wen\nclosed with Mrs. Fink for her property\nfronting on Fink street, for ono year, fo\n$300, with the privilege of afurfner loas<\nof two years more, at an annual rent o\n$300. Tho ground is 200x420 feet, am\nlies Eouth of the now street opened las\nBummor through tho Zme estate, bound\ned on tho east and west by alleys ruuninj\nparallel' with South and Soutl\nBioadway respectively, it being separate!\nfrom each of thcBO thoroughfares by i\nsolid row of buildings. Tho ground hai\nno encumbarancuB cava a frame stable\nand a fow apple and pear trees and is ad\nmirably adapted to base ball purposes\nhaving just fall enough toward the weal\nand uouth to carry ofT tho water.\nA graud stand will be built, also a 9-foo\nfenco; in addition to the grand stanc\nbenches will be provided. Tho Asaocia\ntion thought it could much better affcrc\nto do tbia than to pay the Fair Aaaocia\ntion J720 for one year and pay the hire o,\nwatchmtin that tho low fence about the\nfair ground would necessitate every timf\na game wa3 played. Secretary W, T,\nEnglish was instructed to at onco make\napplication to the Ohio Loaguo for
a42c80659943a3d2f642ff8febc6217f THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.078082160071 39.369864 -121.105448 The vexed question as to the policy of\nprohibiting Chinese emigration is again\nup for discussion. The prohibitory law\npassed by the last Legislature having\nbeen recently declared unconstitutional\nby the Supreme Court, the whole mat-\nter must be gone over once more in de-\nbate. The press has vigorously com-\nmenced it, and the topic will soon em-\nploy legislators. It is not likely any\nnew. arguments will be advanced in fa-\nvor of prohibiting the dreaded emigra-\ntion, while the opponencuts of this pol-\nicy are afforded a strong one on their\nside by recent international treaties.\nArgument, however, in our opinion,\nwill have less influence in deciding the\nquestion than prejudice. The principal\nobjection urged against Chinese emigra-\ntion is, and always has been, the vague\nfear that the country would be overrun\nby a horde of barbarians,—or, in other\nwords, that our civilization is worth so\nlittle, is so very feeble, that the weak\nAsiatics may destroy it. The fact that\nthe maximum of our Chinese population\nhas never exceeded forty thousand du-\nring ten years of unrestrained emigra-\ntion, and during the most favorable mi-\nning periods, is not considered a suffi-\ncient answer to this objection ; and we\nshall hear it pathetically urged again\nand again. The best argument in favor\nof restrictive measures is to be found in\nthe almost universally existing\non the part of the mining population\ntowards the Chinese. This has led to\nmany scenes of lawless violence, and\nonly last Saturday a disgraceful attempt\nwas made by some forty disguised men,\nto expel the pariahs of the SuUe from\nthe Diamond Springs mines. One sick-\nens at the recital of so much rowdyism\nand defiance of law on the part of Amer-\nican citizens, and it is only because we\nbelieve the authorities will be powerless\nto prevent the frequent recurrence of\nthese, that we advocate the passage of\nrestrictive enactments. Undoubtedly\nhonor and policy both demand liberal\nconduct towards the Chinese on the\npart of our State, and we would not fear\nto let the question work its own solution,\nbut for the dread of a greater evil at\nhome, already hinted at.\nIt 10 lather humiliating to acknowl\nedge the necessity of yielding to popu-\nlar lawlessness, but so long as such a ne-\ncessity seems to exist, perhaps the best\ncourse to pursue is to prevent the entry\nof the Chinese to the mines, where their\npresence seems most objectionable, by\nincreasing the license to a very high\namount. This would have the effect to\ncheck the emigration materially, at the\nsame time that it would uot appear so\nilliberal to the Chinese themselves as\nwould a more radical policy.
b10d10b51eeee0521cd6adb906cefb63 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.395890379249 31.960991 -90.983994 Indeed the argument for the defendant in er­\nror, la founded upon the assumption, that this\ncorporation is subject to the general laiv of the\nland, for it demands the application of a com­\nmon law principle to this contract, in order to\nmake it void. The common law can only be in\nforce in this state, to the extent that it remains\nunchanged by statute. The common law rule\nagainst usury, at the time of the enactment of\nthis bank charter, wasso far modified, that the\ncontract was only avoided as to the interest.—\nThe common law rule making the contract who-\nly void,* was to this extent repealed by necessa­\nry implication. How then can its principle be\ninvoked to operate on the contract?\nBy the words of the charter as above set forth,\nthe Banks, in regard to loans for 12 months, is\nnot restrained by express words from taking\nmore than 8 per cent; there is neither any pro­\nhibition by way of penalty, it follows that there\nis no restiiction at all unless it be an implied\none, or unless apply the general statute of\ninterest to this Bank. This u ould be right, and\nif the Bank has contracted for more interest\nthan is allowed by its charter, it can only re­\ncover the prineipal sum lent.\nThe case most strongly urged against this\nconclusion is that of the Bank of the U. States\nvs. Owens, 2 Petera 527. It has been pressed\nupon us with so much earnestness in support of\nthe position that the contract if infected with\nusury, is utterly void, that we feel it a duty to\nexamine it, and to show why we oannot concur\nin it. The first step in this process is to ascer­\ntain precisely what was in question and what\nwas decided in that case upon this point.\nIn reference to this matter, the court itself\nsays, “ The question here, has relation exclu­\nsively to the legal effect of a violation of the\nprovision in the charter on the subject of inter­\nest, and does not bring in question the operation\nof the statute of usury of Kentucky upon the\nvalidity of the contract.”
06a827f7d768cd2e4f61a8757f4505a1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.264383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 Jictolmt. Tbit dealers bo allowed to sell hulls- 1\ncrlmlmitoly, provided unlm men are not re- *tr\ninlred to perform any laborthcreon.ornounlou Or\nuiau bo required to perform any labor fornny\nnonunion contractor, or any unfair persou, to mi\nwhom nald material Is furnished.\nJUrulfcd, That any employer bo allowed to dls- W(\ncharge a workman for neglect of duly or lueom- hoi\npotency In tho future ft* i» tho putt. IjC\nJictmcil, That on and after May 1 wo will do-\nmaud 'JO per emit advance over present wageA ,,\nand all future domauds ba formulated In tho J,"1\nmonth of December, to take cll'uct April 1 therenfter.\nJU$olval, That all differences and grievances\nbetween employer and employe shall Uo settled\nUnit craft lo which thov belong; lti no cam)\nKhali any workman he called oil' work until till t-n\nntce'sary oudcavors have been to adjust wl\nthe dJfllcnlty. Wi\nA careful examination of tbo two sets "{\nof resolutions will show that the difler- ati\nenceB between them aro not bo great that\nreasonable men, working in the interest 0ii\nof a fair settlement, could not arrive at an\nsuch a conclusion. The first resolution\nwas taken up, Mr. Bernard Klieves 8tj\nmoved that it be modified, providing the oil\nmen be paid hy the hour. Tbo Trades'\nCouncil Committee would not agree to hi,\nthis, claiming they bad tbo power to He\nmodify the resolution, but it would have SJ\nto bo submitted to their body in the t,u\nmodified form before it could be ratified, Or\nand the committee had no right to fix ,Hl\nthe hours and pay without consulting Tc\nthem. That being the case, the Exchange *\nCommittee wanted to adjourn.
0ac52e54233b8e976920c92e777fb175 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1880.7090163618195 39.743941 -84.63662 politicians, who, after hunting down\nthe lion, expected to drink his blood, to\nfeed upon his fame and to rally the party\nhe had saved twice from ruin to their\nsupport. Garfield was better than (the\nhypocrites who, howling civil service and\nholding hp a third term, as they said,\nsought the Presidency only for them-\nselves, after . having been longer in\noffice than four times the length of one\nterm. But I did not know Gen. Gar-\nfield's record ; I had never examined it.\nIt was not my business to keep a list of\nhis jobs. I have not been five times in\nWashington in ten years, and I do not\nknow wkafc aho new leadens uf the\npublican party have done certainly not\ntheir secret work to help themselves.\nTill his nomination for President the\ncountry was almost as ignorant as my\nself. What it is all men know \nand, if I revolted from it, it was because\nI found it different uom what I honestly\nbelieved it to be. Gen. Garfield's ac-\ncusers were not Democrats. He was\nbrought to the bar by his own prty, by\nthe Bepublican press and the Republi-\ncans of his own county ; by the Repub\nlican committees of his own Congres\nsional district, by the Republican Con-\ngress of which he was a member, and\nby a Republican court of justice. Had\nthis record been known at Chicago,\nGen. Garfield could not have been nomi-\nnated. Full information enables me to\nspeak by the book when I assert that\nthere was net a Republican leader of\nany note, equally those on the ground\nto stay and those who came to save\nGrant, that did not admit, on reflection,\nthat Garfield s selection was a blunder.\nand that that blunder was worse than\ncrime.
4b5ff4b35fd431ea076bd9e8214047a1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.3811475093605 41.681744 -72.788147 From time to time the Observer\nhas taken genuine pleasure in cham-\npioning the down trodden pedes-\ntrian. This species of the human\nfamily has been long suffering and\nmeek. He deserves all the encour-\nagement and sympathy he can get.\nHis life has been one hop, skip and\na jump since the automobile was\ninvented. When he leaves home his\nwife always kisses him tenderly\nand sheds tears that have "fare-\nwell1 labeled all over them. She\nnever knows when he will be\nbrought home in an ambulance. He\nhas been abused by automobile\ndrivers until there are callouses on\nhis ears. He has learned how to do\nmore funny steps than professional\ndancing masters have been able to\noriginate. In the mass, while cross-\ning a thoroughfare, he is more live-\nly than the chorus of "Good News"\nshuffling through the Varsity drag.\nThatheisaliveatallistobewon\ndered at. Three cheers and a tiger\nfor the pedestrian.\nBut, here's a word for the man\nwho drives his own car. When he\nstarts from home he expects to\nreach his destination wilh dispatch.\nHis mind is set on to a cer-\ntain point. In the mass, he resembles\nNapoleon's army on tho road to\nMoscow. Does he get there? Y'es,\nbut not with dispatch. And here's\nthe rub. When the driver arrives at\na point at which traffic lights are\nglowing gladsomely, he is usually\nheld up. Not for long. If the lights\nare functioning automatically. Bnt\nwheu they are being operated by\nhand during the busy hours of tho\nday he might just as well get out\nand have a sleep on the curb. He's\nthere because he's there, as the old\nsong would have It if it were writ-\nten that way. And he usually stays\nthere for what seems to be ages and\neons. The pedestrian is crossing the\nstreet, either singly or in a group,\nand the cops who are operating the\nlight controls apparently favor the\npedestrian. Sometime it seems, they\nwait until all the pedestrians have\ncrossed, gone home for dinner or\nsupper, as the case may be, and\nare retnrning. In the meantime the\nautomobillst who has started for a\ncertain destination is wondering\nwhether he hadn't better send a
2afb31fec1da09feed4ea51f626d1899 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.1516393126392 42.217817 -85.891125 There is no doubt, says the Chicsgo\nTribunt , that the ordering of Gen. Cus-\nter to Fort Lincoln is a precautionary\nmeasure suggested by the apprehensions\nof serious trouble with the Indians in\nthe neighborhood of the Blank Hills.\nThe history of the negotiations with the\nIndian tribes for this territory aud their\nreception of the Governmental overtures\nwarrant the apprehensions that are felt.\nA 0OttmiSSion was appointed and went\niii parson to make the Indians an offer\nfor their rights of reservation granted by\nthe Government. The terms proposed\nby the Indians for a cession of their\nrights irere simply preposterous, Thev\ndemanded something like 600,000,000,\nwhich was at least one hundred times as\nmuch as their rights arc worth, leaving\nout the fact that they were in the first\ninstance a mere gratuity from the (iov-\nernment. demand was evidently\nprompter by the Indian trad rs and\nrascally agt nts, with the expectation and\npurpose of swindling the red men out of\nthe Government country. Of course\nthere was no inducement for the repre-\nsentatives of the Government to pursue\nthe negotiations any further, and SS the\nresult proved, they were glad to escape\nfrom the conference with their lives. A\nconspiracy was hatched among certain of\nthe tribes to massacre the Government\nCommission, and it would probably have\nsucceeded had it not been for the loyalty\nan bravery of one or bwo chiefs.\nAt this point the Government policy\nwith regard to the black Hdls was prac-\ntically changed, though the change was\nnot for nial y announced. There had\nbeen before a serious effort to protect\nthe Indian reservation from the invasion\nof miners and speculators.
3f2852f5ff5b11e257f20444483971f6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.4424657217148 39.745947 -75.546589 Among those present were: Senator\nand Mrs. L. Hclslcr Ball, Mayor John\nW, Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Ezekiel\nCooper, Grand Master Workman E. F.\nKane and daughter. Miss Katherine V.\nKane, Mr. and Mrs. William M Norris,\nAttorney-General David J. Reinhardt,\nB. K. Carroll, E. E, Hohman, J. C .\nBickford, H. C. Sessions, G. B . Pretty-\nman, Joseph R. 'Hoffecker, Mr. and\nMrs Charles Verger, Oeonge Carter, C.\nG. Kellam, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sasse,\nMr. and Mrs. Julian G. Walker. Dr. and\nMrs. H. W, Howell, F. S. Mlegs. R. E.\nDickinson. John E. Fahey, A A. King,\nB. G . Beauchamp, R. W . Holland, E.\nL. Gross, Mr. and Mrs. E, J. Moore,\nDr. F. M. Crain, W. T Budd, Mr. apd\nMrs. L. H. Kelly. Charles H. Math-\nlason, Frank Gruse, Mr. and Mrs.\nHarrio T. Price, W. D. Golwals, Z. M .\nDuckworth, Henry Neill, Ezekiel Coop­\ner, Jr, G. C. McCall, H. D Watson, W.\nHoward, Mr. and Mrs. H . W. Allen, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Herrin, George J. Price,\nMr. and Mrs. E. C. Marks, Andrew J.\nMcFadden, A. B Gilpatrlck, W. E. El-\nlerby, R. W. Harrison. Frederick E.\nBeaume, J. F. Hill, J. R H. Potts. Mr.\nand Mrs, A. V . Proudfoot and son. Dr.\nL. W . Fllnn and cousin, C. Maroney,\nSr., and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. 0.\nH. Grier, John F. Frazier, Mr. and Mrs.\nE. F . Danforlh, George Herbert Bishop,\nMr, and Mrs. Charles C. Rhodes. Mr.\nand Mrs. W . B Tucker, Mr. and Mrs.\nFrederick C. Whitmore, Samuel S.\nBlitz, Mrs. Bishop, Mlles M. Dawson,\nMr. «nd Mrs. B . A. Groves, Mr. and\nMrs. John Talte, Daniel Bishop, Mr.\nand Mrs. C . F. Rranfas and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. K . R. Harding, L. J.\nThomas, W. H . Davidson, Dr. and Mrs.\nS H Johns, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood C.\nKillen. P. H . Darcy, Miss C. E. Smith,\nMiss May S. Prettyman. Mr. and Mrs\nA. R . Fleming, and Misses Anne and\nPauline Cooper.
26a79d8b3a0e4d479fddebf41e3f59d7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 . . The present session will be devoted\nmainly to reconstruction. Both Houses\nhave passed resolutions to that effect,\naud the Indications are that the resolu-\nlions will be sustained. If so, tho ses¬\nsion Will be short, not exceeding ten\ndays or two weeks. The President has\nIntimated that ho will decide promptly\non such measures as Congress may pass,\nho that there will be no detention on\nhis part. There is, however, a strong\nminority in each house that favors\ngeneral legislation, composed of ear¬\nnest. positive men, who always count\nlor more than their actual number,\naud whose inlluence has not yet been\nfully realized, so that it may be too\nearly to prophesy as to tho length of\nth«* session. It Is supposed, how ver,\nthai an adjournment to September or\nOctober, by way* of compromise, will\nbe satisfactory, and if that is agreed to.\nihere will be no effort to prolong tho\nHfMsiou, or to Introduce subjects ot legis¬\nlation other than that for Con¬\ngress has particularly assembled.\nThe Democrats were under the im¬\npression there would not be a quorum\non the first day of the session, and as a\nconsequence but few of them answered\nto their names at roll call, though sev¬\neral made their appearance in the Ilall\nsoon aster. One of them, who did not\nintend there should bo a quorum, lin¬\ngered at his boat ding house uutil after\nthe hour, telling them there would be\nno session and that he should nrobably\nt-iart home agaiu that night. But alter\na while he found his way to the Hall.\nRetu ruing two or three hours afterward\nbe was accosted, "Well, Judge, did you\nhave a quorum?" "A quorum !" said\nhe, "they were out en masse." The very\ngeneral attendance of tho members is\nan Intimation tothe administration and\nto tho whole country, that Cougress Is\nfully In earnest in this matter ot recon¬\nstruction, and they will not be satisfied\nwl h any half-way work.
81d8f87edc89985a56c1bf269e2e3321 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.760273940893 31.960991 -90.983994 port-gibson HERAI D.”\nIn assuming tho control of the'Herald, the\npresent proprietor set forthin a brief paragraph,\nmotives and principles by which ho would\nbe governed, as tho Editor of a public journal.\nCommencing at tho dullest and most unfavora-\nb.c season of theyear, and somo time before the\nclose of tho present volume, wo deemed it ad-\nvisable to defer issuing a prospectus until by\nthe publication of four or five numbers, our\nreaders might judge correctly of Our course and\nability, and approvo or reject at pleasure.\nThe first volume of our paper is now nearly\ncompleted, and the success which has attended\nit, warrants the assertion that tho Herald is\npermanently established. In the second volume\n(.soon to commence) it is our intention to carry\nout the principles avowed in our first number—\nto make tho Heuald interesting and useful as a\ncounty paper, by devoting a large portion of ils\ncolumns to general news and agricultural nat­\nters. So far as politics are concerned, wc shall,\nas before stated, advocate and Whig\ndoctrines and Whig principles to the best of our\nhumble ability, and until the ensuing November\nelection, we shall openly war against the odious\ndoctrine of repudiation—believing the defence\nand protection of our State honor paramount to\nnd all other considerations—ashamed as wc\nof tho degraded position which our Stale\nnow occupies—of the contempt and scorn hurl­\ned upon her by honest men of every political\ncreed; but sustained and cheered by the belief\nthat the moral honesty of our citizens is yet un­\ntainted and pure—tbut they have been misled\nand blinded by designing men, we shall spare\neffort in our exertions to enlighten, instruct\nand warn them of the dangerous consequen­\nces of this dishonest doctrine—joining ourselves\nwith the patriot band now warring manfully a-\ngainst it, we will aid, so far as in us lies,in tear­\ning away the veil from this hideous Mokan-\nnah, who, in the sacred name of Democracy,\nhas reared the altar of Repudiation among us,\nand calls upon us to worship at his unholy\nshrine.
21d8b577d6d4904c000059eb3d63d4ab THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.3575342148656 42.217817 -85.891125 MORTGAGE SALE.\nDefault having been made in tbe condition\nof a certain mortgage, whereoy the power there-\nin contained to sell has become operative, exe-\ncuted by George W. Powers and Martha J.\nPowers, of Porter, Van Buren county, Michigan,\nto Albert Wheeler, of Geneva, New York, bear-\ning date the 27th day of January. A. v . eighteen\nhundred and seventy five, and recorded in tbe\nofllce of the Kejiistar of Deeds for the county\nof Van Buren, in said state of Michigan, on the\nfirst day of February, a . d. eighteen hundred\nand seventy five, in liber 6 of mortgages, on\npage 641, upon which mortgage there in claimed\nto be due at tbe date of this notice the sum of\nseven hundred and thirty one and 84 100 dollara\n(1731 83). and no suit or proceedings at law\nhaving beon instituted to recover any part\nthereof, is therefore hereby given, that\non Monday, tbe 21st day of May, 1877, at 12 o'-\nclock noon, I shall sell at publio auction, to tbe\nhighest bidder, sale to take place at tbe front\ndoor of the Van Buren county Circuit Court\nHouse, in the village of Paw Paw, tbe premi-\nses described in said mortgage, or so much\nthereof as shall )e necessary to satisfy tbe\namount due ou such mortgage, with 10 per cent\ninterest and leal cost, together with au attor-\nney fee of fiftj dollars, covenanted for therein,\nthat is to sav, tbe following piece or parcel of\nland situated in Van Buren county, in tbe state\nof Michigan, viz : The north sixty acres of the\nwest balf of the north west quarter of section\ntwenty two (22) town four (4) south of rauge\nthirteen (13) west.\nDated Paw Paw, Feb. 17th. a . d. 1877.
0c91d146ff651b1775d61d14deafff27 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1895.8671232559614 38.894955 -77.036646 "Yesterday another communication came\nfrom Commodore SIcard enclosing n de-\ntailed report on the condition of e ery part\nof thekeel.showingthat cement wascracked\nin about twenty sections, that four plates\nwere buckled or bent Inward from about\na half inch to an inch and a half, and that\nthe Joints to the main drain and suction\npipes were 6tmined. Commodore Slcard's\nreport follows:\n"The distortion of frames 43 and 45 was\nfirst reported to me on the 8th instant at\nfl p. m . An Immediate examination was\nmade by the naval constructor who recom-\nmended the admission of 6lx feet of water\nin the morning, which was done.\n"llie within report was received by me\nat 5.30 p. ni. yesterday, and was the result\nof an examination made In the morning.\nFurther examlnatlontodayshowBnocliange.\n"More water to .eleven feet draft has\nbeen admitted to the dock today, and the\n constructor has been directed to\nmake a detailed report.\n"No delay will result to the work now\ngoing on upon the vessel."\nNAVAL OFFICERS RETICENT.\nExtreme reticence has been observed at\nthe Navy Department, as well as at the\nBrooklyn Navy Yard, regarding the acci-\ndent, and also by all Navy Department offi-\ncials who have been concerned In the con-\nstruction of the Texas, and who should\ntherefore be In position to give uu accurate\nstatement of her defects.\nThe vessel has been singularly unfor-\ntunate for several years In being made\nthe subject for adverse criticism and num-\nerous stories have been printed nbout her\nunsea worthiness, her structural defects, and\nher ceneral unaallabllltv for naval uses.\nHer plans, which were bought in England,\nthrough the naval attache of the legation I\nat London, gave trouble from the first.\nAmong the other developments durui, I\nconstruction,
057372f4a8f232aa122d7b6ceff1fee8 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.3109588723999 39.743941 -84.63662 I further desire to say that I am\nnot willing, so far as I am concerned,\nwhen I make an application of the\nDepartment of Agriculture for seeds\nto be sent to a constituent, that that\nconstituent should receive such a\ncircular as this. I would ak wheth-\ner it is the proper thing for the Com\nmissioner of Agriculture, or any oth-\ner officer of this Government to pass\ncriticism and reflections of this kind\nupon Congress. It is not for the\nCommissioner of Agriculture to say\nwhether Congress makes lavish ex-\npenditures and appropriations in\nother directions or not. Farther\nthan that, I think I know the agri-\ncultural interests of my district\nmuch better than does the Commis\nsioner of Agriculture, and that I am\nbetter qualified to furnish them with\nsuch seeds as they may require.\nThe Commissioner of Agriculture\nsays the law will not permit him to\nrurnisu seeds to members ot Con-\n to be distributed through them\nto their constituenis. Clearly, then,\nfrom the tenor of this circular, he\ndoes not distribute them himself.\nWhat, then, hr.s become of the seeds\nfor the purchase of which the liberal\nappropriation was ma le last year,\nan appropriation as liberal as the\naverage preceding year? The gen-\ntleman from Texas (Mr. Mills)\nstruck the key note when he sugges-\nted an investigation of this Depart-\nment an investigation that shall\nshow its internal workings, its ex\npenditures, whether extravagant or\neconomical, and whether in a direc-\ntion to ' develop and advance the\ngreat interests of agriculture. And\nthis investigation should 'go still\nfurther, and determine whether its\npresent chief officer has the confi-\ndence of the agriculturalists of the\ncountry; for if he does not have, all\nthe appropriations this Congress can\nheap upon him will not tend to' ad-\nvance the great interests he is sup-\nposed to represent.
395f746ed0332847cc48a6e85839a9d0 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.0561643518517 41.004121 -76.453816 A singular accident and one that\ncalled tho greatest excitement in tho\nquiet town of Wlnchostcr, occurred on\nMonday. A man named Wing has been\nemployed a fow days past In repairing\nor rebuilding n well upon tho promises\nor Mr. Cameron. Monday ho was at\nwork about thirty feet below tho sur-\nfaco, at the bottom of tho well, laying\nuncif, with which tho well was to ho\nbuilt. IIo is a man weighing over 200\npounds, of largo frame. Ho was stand- -\nng In tho water and sand at tho bottom\nand, Insensibly to himself, graduallv\nsank until ho discovered th.it his feet\nond legs, nearly to tho knees wero em\nbedded in a quicksand. Ho mado repeat\ned attempts to movo, but found that ho\nwas stuck fast. Those at work at tho\nmouth of tho well wcro Informed of t ho\nfact, and tho ropo was fastened about\nhim and an attempt mado to pull him\nout by the aid of tho windlass at tho\ntop. They wcro tinablo to movo him at\nnil, and tho pain him was so acuto\nthat they wero compelled to desist.\nRopes were then arranged so that ho\nshould not sink any decper.and attempts\nwero tnatio to dig him out. Tho well\nbeing stiioii and Mr. Wing very largo,\nno ouo could get inside tho brick work\nto assist him, and ho has been compell\ned to tlo nil tho dinging himself with\npails or cups, passing them ns ho filled\nthem to somo ono above. Tho sand\nconstantly filled in as ho dug it out.and\nin this condition he remained all tho\nnight. Refreshments ond stimulants\nwero sent down to him, nnd ho was\nalive and In as good spirits next morn\ning as n man could be expected to be\nunder such circumstances. A colored\nman worked In tho well eight hours\nMonday night, assisting tho unfortun\nate man to extricate himself. At about\n3 o'clock the fire bells of tho town wcro\nrung, ami In that way a relief was ob- -\ntained for tho men who had been at\nwork and ou watch at tho well during\ntho night.
16036a42e51f642f1d6070fa84746b14 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.8835616121257 39.745947 -75.546589 An Insect known as the southern pine\nsawyer, which attacks Injured and fell­\ned pine trees, has ben recently studied\nby tho U. S. Department of Agriculture,\nand the conclusions have been pub­\nlished as Part IV of Bulletin 58, Bu­\nreau of Entomology. The beetle Is\nsometimes 1 1-4 Inches In length, Is\none-third as wide as long, and^has a\nmottled gray or brown color. The horns\nof the male are slender, and specimens\nhave ben found 2 1-2 inchs long. The\ngrub has no feet, but is armed with\npowerful Jaws.\nThis Insect Is found throughout the\neastern half of the Unite«! States, but,\nsince It attacks nothing but pine trees,\nit is especially troublesome in the pine\nregions of the South. , Fortunately it\nattacks only those trees that have been\ninjured or felled.\nThe female digs a noticeable egg pit\nthrough tho outer bark, and then de­\nposits her eggs In a circle around the\npit, between the outer and Inner barks,\nso as to be Just under cover of the\nouter bark. The eggs hatch In about\nfive days, and the small grubs begin\nto feed upon tho soft Inner bark, mak­\ning Irregular galleries Just next to the\nwood. In from eighteen to thirty-two\ndays after hatching they mine Into\nthe sapwood, using the holes for rest­\ning places and as protection from ene­\nmies. but to feed upon tha\nInner bark. The chips made in cutting\nare to be found packed between tho\nouter and Inner barks. When the grub\nis full grown, It extends the mine\nthrough the sapwood until the heart-\nwqood Is reached; the gallery is then\nturned back to a point about a quar­\nter of an inch from the surface and\nwhen finished has the shape of a letter\nU. In the bend of tho U the Insect\nspends the dormant period which It\nmust undergo. .After becoming a bee­\ntle It bores Its way out, making a\nperfectly round exit hole about three-\neights of an inch In d'ameter, by which\nit escape*. There seems to be but one\nfull brood In a year, but In southern\nMississippi female beetles may bo found\nlaying eggs at any time from tho first\nof March to the middle of October.\nThe damage Is done entirely by the\ngrubs, and consists In large, unsightly\nholes in the sapwood, even penetrating\nthe heartwood, which cause the lumber\nfrom this part of the log to be thrown\nInto the very lowest grade. Investiga­\ntions made by the Bureau of Ento­\nmology In Mississippi show that from\n75 to 90 per cent of the trees felled\nby storm become Infested by the pine\nsawyer. About 25 per cent of the lum­\nber In each log Infested Is seriously\ndamaged.
b1df9608e6ef8c601c18e3ce63eea33c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.6232876395231 43.798358 -73.087921 thing as sectism in the world, and never has\nbeen any such thing for there is not an in\ndividual among the whole of them who will\nacknowledge himself a sectarian. Another\ntrick of the trade is to stop quarrelling among\nthemselves and join together in exterminat- -\ninsc war upon any who dare point V finger\nat their shameful and pernicious doings. A\ncoalition is now in progress of formation\namong them, exceeding everything of the\nkind that has preceeded it. The union of\nPilate and Herod was a piece of consistency\ncompared with it. I have reference to what\nis going on between the Universalists and\nthe other sects. Formerly the war between\nthem has been desperate. Universalists\nwere stigmatized by the other sects as her\netics and infidels outright. But for some\ntime past the breach has been narrowing.\nThe work of compromise has been going on\non both sides. A few months since, I met a\nleading Baptist priest, whose "praise is in\nall the churches," and under whose preach-\ning I had long been sitting, as the phrase\ngoes, and questioned him as to fire-- a n d --\nbrimstone system. His prompt reply was\n" brother Murray, you never heard me preach\nit.w Thus he backed square out of it, he\nand I being at the time in the street alone.\nMy rejoinder was, that Le stood identified\nwith it, and I could not see how he could as\nan honest man get along without renouncing\nit. Since that time I have endeavored, in a\nprivate conversation with him, to get at his\nviews as to whether God acts impulsively\nor specially in punishing the wicked, or\n.whetbet all there is of it is cause and effect.\nHe pertinaciously avoided committing him-\nself to one thing or anoi her. This man now\nstands at the head of the Baptist priesthood\nin Vermont. Last winter I was in private\nconversation wita a Univerbahst nriest of\nhigh standing, aud asked him if he or the\nUuiversaliits generally held to vicarious\na'onement. He answered no, for himself\nand the sect at large. Aud yet, one hour\nafterwards, 1 heard him praying before a con-\ngregation, to use his own words, " through\nour Lord Jesus Christ."
1551878c77ab7f5207d32fbec8659cbd THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.8342465436326 46.187885 -123.831256 ate hill extending the time for final\npayments on desert land entries. The\ncommittee amended the bill so as to\nextend the time of payment for one\nyear instead of three, and making it\napply only to entrymen who were un\nable to pay. As amended, the bill was\npassed. A resolution authorizing the\ncommittee on agriculture and forestry\nto continue during the recess an inves-\ntigation into the state of agriculture,\nauthorized by a resolution on April\n19th, 1892, and March 3, 1893, was agreed\nto. Blackburn, democrat, of Kentucky,\noffered the following resolution, which\nwas agreed to: "Resolved, that the\nCommittee on rules be instructed to\nInquire and report to the senate what\nrevision and amendments to the rules,\nIf any, should be adopted to secure\na more efficient and satisfactory dis-\n of the business of the senate."\nThe New York and New Jersey bridge\nbill was taken up and passed..\nSenator Palmer, from the committee\non pensions, today reported to the sen\nate the bill for the repeal of a portion\nof the invalid pension appropriation act\nof the present year, which directs that\nno pensions shall be paid to non-r e- s i\ndents who are not citizens of the Unit\ned States, except for actual disabili\nties Incurred In service. Houk, of Ten-\nnessee, introduced a bill authorizing\nthe secretary of war to recognize all\nsoldiers under the pension laws as hav\ning been regularly In the United States\nservice, who enlisted or volunteered\nbut who were prevented from being\nregularly mustered In. Senator Black-hu- m\nsiys It is ills purpesv as chairman
eb89014d361d7c82f0db9d4fd97d2d01 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0232240120927 41.681744 -72.788147 Benny Zippo, aged 22. of 227\nNorth street, and Joseph McCusker,\naged 24, of 618 Allen street, were\nlined $5 without cost for violation\nof the city ordinances in refusing to\nmove when ordered to do so by Off-\nicer Weare. Tho latter testified that\nhe arrested some friends of the pair\nfor drunkenness last night at North\nstreet and Hartford avenue, and at\nabout 11:40 o'clock. Zippo and Mc-\nCusker demanded that he tell them\nhis reason for making the arrests.\nThe officer refused to tell them and\nwarned them that they, too, would\nbe arrested It they did not go home.\nOne of the young men told the off-\nicer that he would not be around\nHartford avenue very long as he\nwould be shot soon. Seigeant Feen-e- y\n that he had given orders\nto the policemen on Hartford avenue\nand North streets to see that the cor-\nner was not made the gathering\nplace for young men late at night,\nand he has had difficulty with those\nwho were arrested because of the\ndefiance of the law.\nHarry JIackcnzle, aged 20, plead-\ned not guilty to two counts of theft\nand was bound over to the March\nterm of 'superior court in $500\nbonds. Through Attorney A. A.\nGreenberg, ho waived examination,\nand no evidence was presented.\nMackenzie, who lives with hi\nwife In a Grove Hill rooming house,\nwas arrested as ho was leaving\nLanders, Frary & Clark's factory at\nnoon Saturday, by Detective Ser-\ngeants McCue and Ellinger, on com-\nplaint that he had stolen
11451abfce58b12aebb7834ce0b37913 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.250684899797 31.960991 -90.983994 .19 °TMC6 t0 l|,e beat oihis skill and ! Sec. 22. De ii further enacted, That if the own- bond for the collection of taxes, in the same\nabilities, during his continuance in office, and j fr or owners of any lands, shall consider him- penalty, and conditioned in the manner now\ns tall enter into bond with two or more good and | self, herself, or themselves, agrieved by the de- prescribed bv law for bonds of tax collectors,\nsutiicieut securities, to be approved by the pres-| termination of said assessor, he, she or they may Sec. 33. Be it further enacted. That for any\ni ont of the board ot police, payable to the Gov- appeal to the board of police within ten daysaf- failure on the part of the board of police to dis-\n?*"n<?r °* ' I 1 ,atef an(* ht* successors in office, tee the return of the commissioner as aforesaid, charge the duties required of them, by act,\ni te pena sum ofonehundred percent, in ad- who shall proceed to determine the same at or an act supplementary to an act to provide for\nmo to I ie amount of the . assessment of the 1 their next meeting thereafter, which decision the revenue of thisState, approved»February 6th,\nesr next preceding, conditioned that he will shall be final: and it shall be the dmy of the 1841, which failure the clerk of pu>bate is hereby\nru y ant aithtully execute and perform all the ; board of police to hold a meeting o^the first required to report to the Auditor, each default-\nu tes required by law to be performed by him I Monday in September next, after the return ing member of said board, in each and every\nrr? r'r c®nl|Iluanc° *n office; whiclt bond . of said assessor under this act, lor the purpose of county in this State, shall be subject, toa line of\ns ~a.
07cb5e58e814e9d92215aecb4aa37f23 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.7308742853168 40.832421 -115.763123 Tlio Commissioners succeeded to¬\nday in bringing Red Cloud ami his\npeople to u council. Among tho\nprominent Indians present, were Red\nCloud, Littlo Wotiud, Swift Reur,\nK«1 Dog, 15c, 1 Loaf, Rlnek Cow,\nWhilo Tail, Sitting Bull, l'relty\nCrow, Euglo Dross, Young-Man-\nAfraul and Quick Roar. Many olli-\nccrw from Camp Robinson attended\nthe council, which lasted two liouist\nRed Cloud in ado tho lirst Hpeccli,\nnnd said that ho and his peoplo were\nwilling to givo up tho lJhick Hills\ncountry, also to have his young men\ntake n journey to seo t fio country\n.spoken of by tho Commissioners in\ntlio Indian Territory, and if they re¬\nport that it is a good country, liis\npeoplo will so consider it; if" they\nreport it bad, they will consider it\nb:ul. Quick Hear said wlieti tho\nyoung men got back from Unit coun¬\ntry tho Indians would want to go to\nWashington with their agents,chiefs,\ninterpreters und have a talk with tlio\nGreat Father before giving up thin\n Sitting Hull said bo had\na judgment against tho Agent; if ho\nissues every ten days promptly, it is\nall light, but if lie don t ho will go\nnorth. Young-Maii-Afntid said: "My\nlather shook bauds with tho Great\nFather on Plutto river, anil was told\nthis country belonged to the Duco-\ntttln»; 1 was brought up in this coun¬\ntry to be a chief; tlio soldiers have\nno concern in this country since; 1\nhave been hero and have tried to do\nright; 1 wish to tell you I have been\nashamed ever sinco the coldicrs came\nhole and set down; X wish you my\nfriends, wllo have brains ami hearts\n"to tell my Great Father what my\nopinion is, and what 1 have said. 1\nagree to the yonug men going on u\njourney, but we are going to ask of\nthe Great Fathcra great many things';\nwe expect to have loot! and 'blankets\nas long as wo live; tho Great Father\nhas not lived up to his promises in\ntho past
183f5e0760ad4f7582d8cc39e249f185 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.6707649956993 40.063962 -80.720915 for open kettle lOtfc; yellow clarified 105i\nMolasses, none here. Bice in good deman\nLouisiana ordinary to choice 5a6&c.\nToledo. September 1..Wheat steady: N\nwhite Michigan 95Kc: amber Michigan ap<\n86Hc; October90#c; No. 2 red Wabash, ape\n95Jfc; September 95fcc; October 96Jtfc; a\n?ember 9iKc; Deccinber 9&)*c; No. 3 n\nWabash 92c: rejected 85c; No. 2 amber III\nnoli $104; No. 2 red mixed 92Kc. Corn qule\nhigh mixed 43c; No. X . 42ftc; No. 2 wbii\n44c; rejected 4ltfc. OaUdall: No.2,29^\nClover need, mammoth $6 SO. Closed.Whei\nsteady; No. 2 red spot -9»Kc; 8eptembe:\nWHc; October 96Xc; November 97Xc. »\nc«ipii: wheat, 181.000 bushels; shipment\n58,000; corn, receipts 48,000; shipments, 8,00\nboabels; oats, receipts 10.00U; sliipmenu\n8,000; cars of wheat on track 237.\nEast Liberty. September I..Cattle.R«\neelpta to-day 1.016 head of through and 561 c\nyard stock. Total for two days 1.182 hea.\nof throbgh and 2,153 head of load stock\nAll good stocka sold oat at Monday's prices\nseveral buyer*" going home short handed\ngood shipping grades in demand; common U\nlight not much so and a thade off.\nHooa.Keceipts to-day 1,815 head; tota\nfor two days 550 head. Yorkers (4 00\nFhiladelphias $5 35*5 45.\nShkei'.Keceiuts to-day 1,100 h*ad; total to,\ntwo days 600. Selling fair at $3 25a4 60.\nNew Yobk, September L.Dry Goons-\nJobbing trade continues active and buainea\nis fair with package houses. Cotton good:\ngenerally steady and unchanged. Prints it\nlair demand. Dress pingluma in briak re\nquest. Dress goods doing well. Mens' weai\nwoolens sluggish. The Bulletin says larg<\nquantities of silks were sold at auction to\nday and brought a rather low price.\nNew Orleans, Saptember 1..Cotton easy;\naomeaale* lower: middling HXc; low midd¬\nling 10#c; good ordinary 9Xc. Net receipt\n660 bales; gross880bales;exports, coastwise\n530 bales; sales 500 bales; atock 82.62U bales.\nNew Yohk, September 1..Metals, manu¬\nfactured copper tirm and unchanged. Ingot\nLake $19 00. Pig iron; American steady at\n|2150a29 00; Scotch unaett'ed $22 P0a35 50.\nNails, cut $3 15*3 25; clinched *4 65a5 60.\nCincinnati. September L.Hogs; common\n$3 90a4 65; light $1 50a4 80; packing $4 75\na5 10; butchers' $5 10a5 15. Beceipts 1,200\nbead; shit ments 1,600 head.\nPiTTsscaon, September I. - ^Prtbolkcm.\nQuiet; crude a shade lower at $190% at Park-\nem' for shipment; at 9tfc for Philadelphia\ndelivery.
199c0fff70944a5328fb7d7e4c8f70bc CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.9767122970572 39.623709 -77.41082 “At last came the birthday which\nwould make it necessary for me to ex-\nplain more to Virgie than I had ever\nyet done. After dinner I was listening\nto Squire Gluey, but at the same time I\nwas moodily thinking over the past,\nwith its terrible memories, when young\nMarvel asked to speak to me. I was then\nstartled to hear him, another Walter\nMarvel, declare that ho had won the\nheart of my little girl. Was it surpris-\ning that I should act os I did aud deny\nhis suit, or that in my auger I should\nblurt out a part of the truth? The events\nwhich followed are too well known to\nneed iteration here. Bo I will come at\nonce to the night of the murder.\n“Iwas sitting in the parlor, ponder-\ning bitterly over my position. I had be-\ngun to realize the fact that if I should\npursue the course which I had begun\n should prosecute Marvel it must be\nat the cost to myself of Virgies love. I\nwas debating as So the most sensible\ncourse to adopt when, suddenly, I heard\na pistol shot and a bullet broke through\nthe pane. I jumped up, hurried to the\nwindow and distinctly saw a man grap-\npling with my dog. The snow had\nteased to fall, and there was light from\nthe moon, which was visible through\nthe clouds as they broke away. Ithought\nthis was young Marvel and that he had\ndeliberately fired through my window,\nin pursuance of the throat made on the\nday of the party. I had seen Virgie pass\nthrough the parlor and leave her pistol\non the mantel; so quickly possessing my-\nself of it Ifired at the retreating figure.\nAt the same moment a second shot was\nfired, this time at me, for it struck mo\non the head, though it inflicted but a\nslight wound.
20b62f4ad7090912bf4208b581fa45e1 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.8945205162354 44.939157 -123.033121 that the defendant should direct where\nthe vessel was to go, and what she\nwas to do, but it does not appear that\nthe defendant was authorized to direct\nhow the service should be performed.\nor how the tug should be managed,\nthe details or navigation being left to\nthe owner, who retained command and\npossession ot the vessel through the\ncaptain and crew.\nClause 6 provided that all expenses\nof fuel, supplies, wages of the crew\nand other expenses were to be borne\nby the plaintiffs who were to keep the\nvessel fully furnished, and In good\ncondition to perform the required du-\nties. They were at perfect liberty to\nemploy thoroughly skilled and com-\npetent navigators for the tug at fair\ncompensation, or If they saw fit to\ntake such a chance, they might em-\nploy less skilled and competent of-\nficers and crew, for smaller wages,\nto navigate the tug. From the evi\ndence in the case, It also appears that\n tug "Sampson" was under the di\nrect control and management of the\ncaptain, who, from the terms of the\nagreement, as well as from the evi-\ndence in the case, we think was the\nagent of the owners, and responsible\nto them, and that the chaner party\nin question did not effect a demise of\nthe tug, but was a mere contract of\naffreightment: Grlmberg v. Columbia\nPackers' Assn. 47 Or. 257 Multnomah\nCounty v. Willamette Towing com-\npany, 49 Or. 204; The Santona, 152\nFed. Rep. 516; Marcardier v. Chesa\npeake Insurance Co., s upra; Adams v.\nHomeyer, 4a Mo. 54:i; Ross v. Charles\nton M. & S. Trans. Co., supra.\nBy clause 7 of the agreement, the\nparties stipulated as to risks or dam\nages to tows, and It is contended on\nthe part ot plaintiffs thnt the defendant\nCarey thereby agreed to hold the\nplaintiffs harmless from all risks or\ndamages to tows, cargo or docks, ma\nrine or otherwise.
1891c7be422af9465b3f08453fb55815 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.872950788049 37.53119 -84.661888 about dark they saw a party in\nkeUIblm\nloud oaths drew a revolver and began\nfiring Mrs W and party badly scar ¬\ned turned homo\nA splendid pair of mules belonging\nto Goo D Weatberford only brought\n1411 at hU sale Saturday where a floe\ncrowd was In attendance and prices re\nallied were In keeping with the time\nGeo Miller Given sold Coffey Bros\nof Columbia a 2yearold elalllon colt\nby Marion Squirrel and out of Nellie\nely by Engle Bird at a fancy price\nThis colt Is the sculptors Ideal model\nas evidenced by blue ties galore that\nbe and Jam have taken\nMiss Martha Thompson of Lancas ¬\nter Is visiting Miss Jessie Powell Jas\nFrye of Lexington came home some\ndays before tbe election with beg lisle\nof figures showing a walkover for Par\nker After voting he staved hero until\nthe returns began In when be\ndisappeared and his friends are anxious\nas to his whereabouts T L Carpen-\nter left last week with a party of\nfriends for Galveston Texas on a bunt\nlog trip D J Newborn left Friday\nfor Mississippi on business for the com ¬\npany be represents\nElbert Harper one of our West End\nboys ot whom we feel proud and to\nwhom the beet wishes of this entire\nlommunlly goes out In no uncertain\nterwt was married on the Oih fast at\njbarpsburg to Mist Marvin Wilson and\nthey ere ep joying a trip to the Worlds\nfair The bride Is a handsome and ac-\ncomplished belle of her section and has\nmany friends and admirers In tbe West\nEnd They will be at home at Saulls\nbury N C Dec 1 where Mr Harper\nIt In business with his brother Ju P\nMay they live long and prosper
713844682d51001b4c7302bf81966465 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.1243169082675 39.261561 -121.016059 Attempt at Mckdeu axd Kobbeut.— A dia-\nbolical attempt was made last Saturday night,\nto murder and rob Sir. A. Sanford, of this place.\nMr. Sanford was sleeping in his store, a one-\nstory brick building near the foot of Broad\nstreet, and about twelve oclock was awakened\nand saw two men standing ever him, one of\nwhom held iu his baud a long two-edged dirk\nknife. About the first words Mr. Sanford beard\nwere a demand for bis money, the fellow at the\ntime bolding the knife directly over his face to\nenforce tbe demand. Sanford screamed “mur"\nder !” and almost on tbo instant, the assassin\nstuck the knife into bis mouth, knocking out\ntwo teeth, and the point taking effect under the\ntongue and penetrating to a depth of about two\ninches. By closing bis teeth, he prevented the\nknife goiug deeper, and grabbiug the blade\nsucceeded in wrenching it from tbe villains\nband. He then got hold of his pistol, but tbe\nrobbers took it lrom him and left, Sanford fol-\nlowing them to tho door. While the scuffing\nwas going on, Mr. Sanford continued to cry\n••murder!” so loud that he was beard iu most\n. parts of tbe towu. Mr. lia> rnoud, who slept in\nthe building on the opposite side of the street,\n was just going to bed wheu be heard tbe\ncry, immediately run down stairs, called out for\nthe night watch, and started towards tbe store.\nIn crossiug over, be saw a man come out tbe\nfront door, and run down Broad street. On\narriving at the store, he met Mr. Sanford com-\ning out, still crying “murder 1” and bleeding\nprofusely. Besides the cut in his mouth, bis\nbund was badly cut while in tbe act of wrench-\ning the knife from tbe assassin. A crowd soon\n■collected at the store, and Dr. U. M . Hunt was\nimmediately called to dress Mr. Sanfords\nwounds. The wound in his mouth is very seri-\nous, but is considered dangerous. Soon lif-\nter the affair happened, Marshal Tompkins and\nofficer Uider arrested Frank Brooks, Andrew\nScola, and Charles Sanford, who were commit-\nted to jail. Brooks w as identified by Mr. San-\nford as tho fellow that siruck him with tbe\nknife, and Scola is supposed to be the other\nrobber. Charles Sanford is a son of A. San-\nford, aud a worthless young fellow. The three\nhare been running together for some time, uud\nit is believed that Charlee Sanford gave Brooks\nand Scola the information which induced them\nto attempt tbe robbery. Thu three are now iu\njail waitiug an examination.
0d98c9b544bb90f9f79844fcfb3e69d5 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.0587431377758 40.832421 -115.763123 A Kiiun'.y thai lia« matte lis Mink.\nSuccess is tho meed of excellence.\nTiie truth of tiiis has never been more\nfoicibly exemplified than by the tri-\nlurphaiit career of Hosteller's Stomach\nbitters. No sooner did the people dis¬\ncover tlio genuine merits of that su¬\npremo invi^oraiil ami corrective than\nthey hastened to stamp it with the seal\nof popularity. Tho press and medical\npiofcssioii speedily followed in the wake\nof the public i.ud emphatically endorsed\nit. Thus fio a tint very outset the suc¬\ncess of Hie lii.tcrs a; a remedy mid pre¬\nventive was an established fact, and a\ndegree of popularity which it often\ntakes proprietary medicines Veais to at¬\ntain was achieved i.lmost at a stride by\nthe then new preparation. Siuco that\ntime eve ly successive year has witnessed\nfresh accessions to the favor with which\ntho Hitters were early regarded, aud tho\n of its popularity is no longer con-\nlined to the liliit.il Stales, but includes\ntho liiitish Provinces in North America\niititl tint West 1 aides, Smith Americn,\nMexico, portions of Europe and Aus¬\ntralia. That is not only a remedy for\ndyspepsia, constipation, biliousness, uri¬\nnary and i- . t - rine complaints, nervous¬\nness and debility, but also a preventive\nof tho u- maladie s to which air and wa¬\nter, iinprt giiati d with miasma, give\nbirth. Inn been nowhere so stiongly evi¬\ndenced os in thoso regions where cli¬\nmatic condition i unfavorable to health\nexist, an 1 where tho lliitcis have been\nlong aud favorably tented. To cill this\nH.ipcrh cordial a remedy that lias made\nits mark, can not, wo t liinrc, bo ri gnrded\nas boasting, since there is probably no\nproprietary remedy more widely known,\nuniversally respected and emphatically\nendorsed than these Hitters.
37679248fa5188d5b0ec8dd53ee16d35 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.7849314751395 41.004121 -76.453816 assist young men in increasing\ntheir earning pewer through study\nin the State School of Agriculture\nduring the winter months. These\ncourses are devoted to practical in-\nstruction in general agriculture,\nhorticulture, dairy husbandry, dai-\nry manufacture and poultry keep-\ning. The student tuay relect any\none of the five courses. The morn-\nings are devoted to lectures and\nrecitations, aud the afternoons are\ngiven to practical exercises, such as\nlivestock judging, corn judging,\nfield study of orchards, greenhouse\nwork, creamery practice, and a\nsc:re of other lines of practical\nwork, each student dealing with\nthe subject in his own course.\nIt is the experience of former\nwinter course students that twelve\nweeks given the as ociation with\nother students and to the study of\nfundamental principles in the care\nof soil, plants, aninnls dairy\npicducts is very helpful. It gives\none a tetter basis for successful\nwork in life. One well- ec pii pp-\nSchool ot Agriculture, which has\n25S men eurolled in its four years'\ncourses, and 77 men in its two\nyears' course, make special provi-\nsion for these twelve weeks' cours-\nes. Our institution is maintained\nby the state because it serves those\nwho want to fit themselves for bet-\nter work. Young men who can\ngive only the winter months to\nstudy of agriculture have the same\nright to aid as that enjoyed by\nstudents in longer courses.\nA free winter course bulletin\ngives information concerning the\ncourses. All people interested in a\nbetter agriculture may do good by\nsending us the addresses of young\nmen w ho should have the benefit of\nthis instruction.
40ac3a6b503bf39d5f4e9b842b7cbf57 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.6808218860983 41.681744 -72.788147 sary ingredients at hand will find\nmany friends who will be delighted\nto drop in and participate in this\nSunday night spread.\nIn order to be ready for emergen-\ncies, the icebox should contain some\nseasonable fruit and vegetables, eggs\nand relishes. After the party inspects\nthe supplies on hand the menu can\nbe made up, and in about fifteen min-\nutes any of the following delicious\nsupper dishes will be ready to tempt\nthe eye and appetite of all who are\nfortunate enough to be present. A\nchafing dish will also prove a boon\nto the merry party, but, of course, in\nthe summer the fruit and vegetable\ndishes will prove most welcome.\nCut cold boiled corn from the cob,\ncarefully removing all shreds of silk\nthat have lingered between \nLine a salad bowl with small white\nleaves from the heart of a lettuce\nhead and then heap the corn in the\ncenter. Pour the mayonnaise over\nthe whole, being sure to have plenty\nof it. The toothsomeness of corn as\na salad ingredient is just becoming\nknown. It is much better eaten\nalone, mixed with a mayonnaise, than\nwhen mixed with other vegetables.\nPut a pinch of salt and a dash of\npepper into a bowl, after rubbing the\nbottom and sides of the bowl with a\nsplit clove or garlic; add the yolks\nof two eggs, half a pint of olive oil\nand a tablespoonful of vinegar. Take\nan egg beater and stir them all up\ntogether briskly, for about ten min-\nutes- Then pour the mixture over the\nfsalad-
b57b3fbac7df7faeb3179d3cf272d452 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.6789617170107 31.960991 -90.983994 HE.SE Lozenges Tiave now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well he called the only certain wotm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and thj greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and.adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, eveu death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasan' to the faste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey mav lie administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms;of\nthe ifnpotcncy of'most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to tho commu­\nnity as a remedy.
49ce08c04df2f10b8b67322b60aa5232 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.3073770175572 40.063962 -80.720915 In order that the circumstances causing\nthe.terrible light above alluded to may be\nUnderstood, we state tho following; On\nthe lltii inst, a white man named J. J .\nKeatereon. liflng'in the Cherokee Nation, <\nm-arthb Arkansas line, about fifty mftes\ntrooi ibi.H city, came to this place and\nillcd Information before the U. S. Commis-\njioUer against one Troctor, a white man,\nami married to a Cherokee woman, for\nassaulting him with intent to kill, lie\nstates that while he was in his saw mill,\nun the liJtk of February last, the atoro-\n*ald l'roctor came in and walked up to\nhis wife, and without provocation, shot'\nher dead. JJo thenpoiuted tho revolver\nit i)un anil nreu. isetore lie could lire i\nagain, Kesterson escaped. A writ was\nIssued, uud the Deputy Marshals instruct- t\ned to go to the court house and remain t\nuntil tlie trial was over, and if he was not\nconvicted U> arrest him on that charge, r\nProctor was known to be a desperado, I\nwd it being in tho neighborhood where\nDeputy Marshal llontz was killed a little (\naver month ago, and where a deputy ,]\nmarshal is shot at almost sight, it was I\nAccessary that a strong i»08se be sent,\nriie party had writs lor the murderers\nat Peputy Bent/., who were sunnmM to\nbe in hat vicinity, and it was proven that (\nthey intended to resist the arrest. On t\nlast Saturday thirteen deputy marshals t\nloft here for tho scene ofactiou. At c\nEvansville they were joined by Riley, t\nWoods and Win. .J. Morris aud a man\nnamed Beck, who is part Cherokee. The v\nCndian Court House is twelve miles west t\nat that place. When within fifty yards of ]\ntho Court House they dismounted and\nwalked towards tho house. lJeck stepped t\naround to the front door and looked in. u\nSeeing a large number ol people inside i\narmed to the teeth, lie turned to come i\naway, nut not neroro no wns urea on una\nwounded in the net of turning, the ball\npassing in near the left shoulder blade\nand lodgiug ugaiust Hie collar bone. At\nthe same instant a volley was tired from\nthe Court House upon the Marshal's force\nwithout, who then commenced t<> return\nthe lire. It appears that Heck, who\nis a Cherokee, had some friends
f72fdbc8d1d8eb2b883335e74e1245a9 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1864.8401639028032 41.262128 -95.861391 W> a«k again, what measures anbeiag\ntakan u> insure * fair vxpri>sjioQ of tbe\npopular wtil on the eighth of November't\nSbaii tbe electivt frauuiiiae, intended as\ntbe people's stiidd against despotism, be\nmade its instrument, and b1 prostituted\nto tbe n*m of an unacr if uloux and dir-\ning tyrant ? It rs not io b>- wondered at\ntb*t \\Ir. Lincoln sne- . 'red at the protest of\nTennesaeo, and ntwinned; in advene -, the\niiwtiieal be>tring of a eonfirmcd despot.\n•*i eipeci," be «aid, "to let the frieoda\nof Uenerai Ueorgn U. JdcCielim manage\ntbeir »ide of sbi-i eoot^at, and I will man­\nage tay side of it ID osy owe way.*' What\nutn r i* Uai* for the Cbt f AI igi»trate\naf a gr«at pifopi« to return to toe rt-pteot-\nfui petiti »IJ of ttie citizen of a ."state, ask­\ning tur a redress of prievaoees ? Ill was\nluture-ised k* th-» i'ri««i<i<tit if lbs Ur.itail\nJit iiy#, and b« aa«wcrstl a, the nvai of\nUour<(e b. McCiviia. He eoui'i not pat\nby, t.veo for a moment, tbe attitude of a\npoiitionl eaoUidate, but, with the MMHST-\na»cr<! o»ift wb s raeivnM to compel tbe\nfruition of oi* aspiratioa*, be boa«u of\ntbe p. »;uli ir ataoagemeot by wbich be\nproposes to oostroi tha eifctiuo. Ha will\n•uinaga tin side of the oontcst in hia owe\nway. What that way ix the action of\nJobnaan in l\\.nosaae« «ad tbe wholesale\nfrauds in tba Indiana election *o£ct«oUy\ndumomtrate. His way is that by wbisb\nLouis Natptdeon asern-iixl to a throws\nVt hutever obstructs that way, srtiether the\nCoasiiititi jn. the law or whatever eUe\nthat gnas security to liberty, be wi.i sur-\nmouui or trample down witb tha racktws-\nneas of one who has d tortni»"i atvon a-\nsurpation. It i* kitentied to mAniyobia*\ntb« ooidient' vote to suit aa? fttntirjj«aev,\nnrni to cancel any pj»«tl>i»» ili<mocratie\nmsjorijjr. lia wili make tba f rav« of\nd ;«>i soldiers eaant Riaek Kfjpubliean\nvoti!<4, if aenesaary. There i* but one\noioaaa of obstructing Mr. Listato'i\n"way," nnd that is, by tbo detevmina>\ntiers of tho people to protect th.- tr bailot-\nhoxna from frand or rioleooe, fr»m\nwbitevt r quarter it may Uireaten ami\nwhatever »«v be the no**»—#, Y.\nWorld,
148d3b2d0cb69a41dcccfd6c3a725fec EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.5301369545916 39.745947 -75.546589 In the four summer weeks ending July\n17, last year, the mortality of infants\nunder a year old iu this itate amounted\nlo 48.2 per cent; uuder two years, 00 per\ncent under 1 years, 04 per cent of the\ntotal motality. The mortality of babies\nunder a year was about equal to the\ntotal average mortality for the whole\nyear of all diseases uuder 10 years.\nThe cold, cruel, statistical proofs\nwhich might be accumulated indefinitely,\nshow only wha1 physicians know too\nwell, that improper diet in the summer\ndestroys baby life iu uncommon uum\nbers. And they prove, also, that it is\nmainly tbe infants who suffer from the\neffects of the season, on this account\nTlie epidemic of bowel affections of\nchildren frequently corresponds with the\nrise in temperature, but the causes al\n lie in unsuitable diet.\nAn nheolutely pure and reliable infant\nfood usd therefore been eagerly sought\nfor years as a substitute for pine\nmothers milk.\nLactated food solved the problem\npletely. It standB to day pre-emiueut\nabove all others Infants fed upon it\nsuffer less, and fewer die, it is now well\nknown, than those fed upon anything\nelse It is used in the big charitable in­\nstitutions for children. It, has saved the\nlives of thousands of infants during the\nhot, dangerous months of summer.\nIt is indorsed by the best physicians,by\nnurses, and by happy, grateful mothers\nin every town and village in the land.\nSugar of milk, the basis of mothers\nmilk, is the basis of lactated food. With\nit is combined pure bailey malt, tbe\nfinest wheat gluten, and the nutritious
702db05deb7a7431cc604691341883b8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.3246575025369 39.745947 -75.546589 WOOD—In this city, on April 28, 192V,\nVictoria Maude, daughter of Somma BL\nand the late Robert Wood.\nPrivate funeral sendees will be held at\nher late residence, 1513 W. Fourteenth\nstreet, this Friday evening, at 8 oclock.\nInterment at Washington, D . C\nROBERTS—On April 27, 1Ö2L David U*\nson of Thomas and Elisa Roberta, la\nbis 18th year.\nRelatives and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funeral from his late re«Id«mos»\n227 Sixth avenue, on Monday, May 2. at\n2 oclock. Services at Old Swedes P. H.\nChurch, at 2AO oclock. Interment a*\nSllverbrook cemetery.\nALDERMAN—In this city, on 2Hh InaL*\nWilliam Frank Alderman.\nRelatives and friends of the family\nrJso Wilmington Lodge. No. 807, B. T.\nO. K. ; The Delaware CInb and employes\nof the Walnut Street Garage, are invitM\nto attend th© funeral service* from his\nLite residence, 313 Kaat Third street, on\nTuesday afternoon. May 8, 1021, at 2.30\no'clock (local time). Remains can be\nviewed on\n of 7\nRlveniew ceraeterv.\nPARSONS—In this city, on April 2»,\n1921. Cephas Parsons, aged 77 year*.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to »\ntend the funeral service» at the residence\nof his daughter, Mrs W. O . Ooffecker. 5\nWest Eighteenth atreet, on Saturday\nevening. April 30. 1921, at 8,30 oclock\n(local time). Further services at the\nPeoples Christian Church, Dover, I>el-\nr.i Sunday, at 12.30 oclock (standard\ntme). Interment at M. E . cemetery.\nSTROUD—In this city, on April 29. 1921,\nNellie D,. wife of John Stroud, in her\n37th year.\nFuneral service* at her late residence, ,\n1904 Jefferson street, on Monday after­\nnoon, May 2, 1921, at 2.30 oclock (city\ntime). Interment at Rlvervlew cemetery.\nWILKINS- In this cUy , on April 29, »\n1921, Isadora, wife of Cleveland Wil­\nkins, aged 40 years.\nDue notice of funeral will be given.\nCHARLES—In this city, on April 28. *\n1921, Florence B. Waldman, wife of\nEdgar F. Charles.\nRelatives, friends, Delaware Chapter,
007f80b7d828fd9eee0122ad3ad8ff27 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.1383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 sendee of which he Is to work while volved seem somewhat forbidding It is Alphonzo dl Camillo from Rebecca J.\nthe war goes on. Self-respect and prop- a little less than 300 miles from Riga to Fincher, smith side of Fifteenth street,\ner Independence shine In the Fédéra- i Petrograd, and about double that dis- 85 feet east of Heald street, $160.\nlion Council's statement of the rights of ; tance from Petrograd to Brest-Citovsk, Sarah Barnes from Caleb E. Bur-\nthose for whom It speaks. “Willing co-jthe late home of "peace” and the great chenal, No. 604 French street, $5.\noperation comes not only from doing fortress which will undoubtedly be Dominick Ricci and wife from Paa-\nJustlce but from receiving Justice. The used fur concentrations co-operating quale Eplscopo, east side of Scott street,\nworker Is a human being," continues ! with Ukrainians, who are to be J134 feet south of Fifth street, $1450.\nthe executive council, “whose life has j "protected.” From her naval bases al-| James J. Nolan and wife from Ezy\nvalue and dignity to him. He is willing ready established on Dago, Oesel and 1 Greenblatt, north side of Third street,\nto sacrifice for an ideal, but not for the Moon Islands, at the mouth of the Gulf 103 feet 11 1-4 Inches west of Lincoln\nselfish gain of another. Justice begets Af Riga, Germany has another clear street, $2150.\npeace. Consideration begets co-opera- roadstead to Kronstadt and Petrograd. Samuel Llpson from John Mote,\ntlon. These conditions are essential to On the sea the Bolshevik! possess the southwest corner Lancaster avenue and\nwar production. Production is neces- defensive inheritance of a few scattered Harrison street, $4400.\nsary to win the war."
272c73968de679b3dc4cdf356bbd3675 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1911.6890410641806 41.875555 -87.624421 peared In Springfield, not even Baron\nYerkes himself, has made such an Im-\npression on the legislature as has Mr.\nRitchie. The beautiful part about it\nall is that he had no selfish motive in\ncoming, that he had no connection on\neither side of tho great fight in short,\nthat ho was Just plain 'William\nRitchie, citizen.\n"Mr. Ritchie, from tho standpoint of\na student, hns mado the street rail-\nway problem a study. Ho stated facts,\nnot what ho believed, nor what ought\nto bo, or what he would llko to see,\nbut what Is and was.\n"Mr. Rltchlo (unllko Mr. Yerkes)\nappeared as William Ritchie, 'cltlzon,'\nwith no axes to grind, nnd no motive\nwhatever other than to placo facts\nand light before the men who were\n to listen to him through inter-\nest, dcspltp tho fact that they wero\nnot to bo swayed by mere facts."\nWhen but a tyro nt tho Chicago\nbar, in 1883, Mr. Rltchlo was ap-\npointed by the Appellato Court to\nserve as Law Examiner to test tho\nqualifications of applicants for admis-\nsion to tho bar. For several years he\nwas chosen by his brethren of tho bar\nas Director of the Chicago Law Insti-\ntute. Ho Is a 'member of the State\nBar Association, as also of tho Bar\nAssociation and tho Lawyers' Asso-\nciation of Chicago. He has been a\nmember of tho bar of tho U. S. Su-\npreme Court for many years past\nIt will be remembered that the U.\nS. Supremo Court decided tho famous\nNinety-Nin- o
06e010de27ac51e7286ab1ef383ed833 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.3246575025369 40.063962 -80.720915 the sect at once concluded that tin\nmidnight at which thu Lord's milling\nwuh expected Was to bo reckoned In Jeru\nMalum time, ami they forthwith muni'\nfested thu liveliest joy. Tito Htorm\npassed. however, an storms generally\ndo, and the anticipatory ceremonial wort\ncontinued. The leader at the feast wiu\nan Klder Thurmau, who had made the\ncalculations on which the prediction ol\nthu dale wax founded. He had npeir\nneveu yearn verifying oil the records In\ntutroilomical observations, and has con\nducted a journal to advocate his views\nAs the hour of midnight approached am\nnature sufl'ured no revolution, Kldei\nThurmau grew despondent, and while hi\nadministered the sacrament he gave vein\nto lilit unguioli in words as follows: "1\nwill not despair to the rising sun,'bin\nhow I can extend the prophetic datci\nlunger than midnight I can not see. I\nhas boon iny study for thirty-two yearn\nmid again ami again, and yet again,' liavi\nI examined nil (lie prophccicx In him\nwhether there could Ik* any mistake, Imi\n1 could find none. And again, lo-day,\ntiHik my hit* mid tried to nee whethei\nby any posulbillty the prophecies miglr\nextend for a day longer, but they ul\npoint to thin day. If there Un inlHtaki\nI am unable to discover it. Whethei\niiirint couios or not, I feel that my worl\nit done. If Jesus doe* not come for\nthousand years, still I shall rejoice tha\nI did prove faithful.I took him at hi>\nword: 'At the time appointed the end shal\nlie.' lean not extend tlio daten, Thin Ik tin\nappointed time. Whether Christ ap|»ear\nor not I must Htlll believe the dates em\nhere. The sartie pronheoies that shot\nthat Jesus Ih indeed the Christ point I\nhiit second advent, to-night. I am unahl\nto hcu how all the prophetic dates hIiouIi\nend April 19 and it be a chance business\nIf, after all, I have deceived you, will vol\nnardon me? Will you forgive me?\nhave done the bant J could, Uod known\n1 wanted to present you to Jesus. I cai\nbear the burden no more. I leave you it\nthe handi* of Uod." When the minute\nt'
083857ead07df8b783630e6d39b7a31e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.6287670915779 40.063962 -80.720915 WASHINGTON, D. C .,Aug. 17. - Ther<\nwere presented <0 tho treasury depart'\ntnent Tor redemption two $1,000 7-3(\nnotes of the Issue of June M, 1865. The\npersons making tho presentation wort\na business llrrn of Louisville, Ky. Upor\nlamination the notes wero found to b<\ncounterfeits, being a part of a verj\nlargo Issue of counterfeit notes which\nappeared In the principal bond market)\nabout ISflf. and 18G7. The Imitation of th<\nnulno 1m so complete that many of th<\nprincipal dealers in United Htates so\ncurltles purchased thorn freely, and on\nlr 'Uncovered that they had been vie\ntimlr.ed whi n the notes wore thrown 011\nby the authoring at Washington. Tin\nl"ss to bunkers nnd dealers throng!\nthis counterfeit amounted probably t<\nii hundred tteuiAtld dollars,\nThe only m.irkod difference \ntli" original and counterfeit Is found ir\nthe red Heal. Tho points Murroiiudlni\ntli" seal In the K' tiiilnr |« broader,mon\n«learly defined, nnd not so lung. Then\niilso 11 «iiiK)it difference in the sign a\nlure of General Hplnner, who was thi\nll' iistirrr of the United Rtatcs at tin\nlime of tint Ikmuo of Iho original nolo*\nIn the Hontllnc note thole In ulso 1\nsmall spot Just below tho bar tie west\ntl»" baskets of tho bilaueo which tin\nfigure of Atnorleif hold* suspended,\nAI the secret sorvb It Im mild Unit tin\npiute from which these not on won\nprlniod whs 1 nplurod November 21, IM?\nfrom W. 11 . Proekway, who n« now m»rv\nIhK 11 ton yiar's term In the Trenton. N\nI. ( ettlienllary* for eounterfeltlfiK IW>\nirold certlflcales.
065b9fa2f2c8decb5fdfdf2d11d1e16a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1885.9986301052766 39.743941 -84.63662 reduced as to be perfectly harmless.\nor that the greatest amount of purifica-\ntion may result from breathing it, can\nnot be obtained in our sleeping rooms\nwithout the adoption of special means.\nThe doors and windows, or a part of\nthem, must be open, or the supply will\nDe constantly deficient, sso consider-\nate person will demand an opening: of\nthese to an extent to produce discom-\nfort, of course, only that a reasonable\namount of air may be secured, without\nwhich one can neither be comfortable\nnor healthy. The most important con\nsideration is the escape of the bad air.\nsince the flowing out of air necessitates\nthe flowing m of some to take its place,\nus it m uiiucuib to sustain a vacuum.\na large amount will now out if a\nwindow is lowered a little on the\nleeward side, while the crevices will\nadmit a similar quantity. know of\nno safer way of allowing the foul air to\nescape if practicable than to open\nthe door leading to the attic, bavins\nopposite windows open there, allowing\na constant current of air to pass up ana\nout, which will necessitate a corre\nsponding flow down, more or less dif\nfused through the whole accessible\nparts of the nouse. Then, there can\nbe no "drafts" of cold air blowing\nairectiy on tne sleepers, wnne tne sup-\nply of good air is increased by having\ntne aoors oi unoccupied rooms open,\nwith windows slightly raised or low-\nered, graduated according to the cir\ncumstances. While it is remembered\nthat this poisonous gas is heavier than\nthe air, it is plain that it first falls to\nthe floor, then down and out, if there is\na sufficient egress. This being true, it\nis plain tnat tne sleepers in the\n"trunaie-De- a
70a9d99bdd3662e25b984c7f5c82b1e6 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.905479420345 35.318728 -82.460953 Jurge Ferguson of the Superior\ncourt of Cherokee county, has refused\nto recognize the orders recently issue\nby Judge James; E. Boyd of the Viil\nted States ndlstrict court, appointing a\npermanent received for the. Cherokee\nTanning Extract company and ordering\nthat the temporary and pennant\nnent receivers, appointed by the supe-\nrior .court, the Bank of Andrews and\nall other parties having funds of the\nbankrupt company, to turn all money\nand property of the. company over to\nthe received of the United States court.\nJudge Ferguson admits that the\ncourts are of different jurisdiction, but\nmaintains that they are equal dignity,\nand on this ground he refused1 to" al-\nlow- the orders of the district court to\nbe carried into effect. He ha' been\nfollowed in this stand by A: F. Fain\npermanent receiver; for the Superior\ncourt, and the Bank;, of Andrews.\nA report to this effect dated: Novem-\nber 18 has been submitted to Judge\nJames E. by Vonno L. Gudger,\nthe payment received named by him,\nand Judge Boyd has signed an 'order\nditiug Mr. Fain and the Bank of An-\ndrews to appear before him In cham-\nbers on the morning of November 26\nand show cause, if any, why the or-\nders of the court shall' not be put into\neflect. In the meantime they are re-\nstrained and enjoined from disposing\nof any of the property of the company\nor of the fund of $1174.29 held in the\nBank of.Andrews. The present situa-\ntion has grown out of the cause en-\ntitled Kanawa Valley Bank, et al. vs.\nCherokee Tanning Extract Company.\nThe respondent company was ad-\njudged bankrupt by Judge Boyd sev-\neral days ago and Receiver Gudger\nappointed prior to this time. In May\nJ. K. Barker had been named by the\nCherokee Superior court as temperary\nreceiver of the company and after the\norder of the companuy district "court\nwas - issued
0e15a7165fb2d4cc4a1d3daf4e7e9aac THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.395890379249 42.217817 -85.891125 Ontario, writes as follows: A short\ntime since, while hunting in tho woods,\nI came across a she bear standing erect\non a log. She looked savage and had\nher ears laid back on her neck. I put\na bullet in her skull, an inch above ono\neye, and she rolled off liko a bundle of\nchips. As the gun cracked up a young\ncedar climbed a couple of yoimg cubs.\nI concluded that I wanted 'em for\npets. As the climbing was easy, I was\nsoon able to reach them. I grablcd\nono by tho back of the neck, when he\nlet go all holds and went to work at\nscratching with a vengeance. The blood\nflew, and you bit I gave him a welt\nthat knocked him as limber as a mop-ra - g .\nI then stuffed him inside tho bosom\nof my shirt, as ho was .e3H:dc?sc, and\ngrabbed the other by the head, and ho\nset up a yell that could bo heard for u\nmile. I quicklv knocked him senseless,\ntoo, and put him on my shoulder and\ncommenced to descend.\nJust this point tho ono insido my\nshirt crawled around on to my back and\ndug his hind claw s into my back, just\nabove tho belt, and put his arms around\nmy body, when both commenced to\nfight me. You bet I got to the ground\nin a hurrv, threw tho one on my shoul-\nder to tlio ground, put my foot on his\nneck, choked him senseless until I\ncould tio him, tho other ono all the\ntime trying to tear all the meat off my\nback. I grabbed him by the fore foot\nand pulled him, but he held on with\nhis hind feet. I then pulled him by\nthe hind legs, but ho held on with his\nfront claws, and I couldn't pull him off\neither way. I then opened my collar\nwido and laid down alongside tho one\nthat was tied. Presently he came out\nand made for a large treo near, but I\ncaught and securely tied him, too. His\nlong, silky hair felt nice to my pelt, but\nhis claws were about tho sizo of a\nraccoon, but could outscrateh saveu\nwildcats.
38b570db67ccc073a6a9e55420d47704 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.0616438039067 35.318728 -82.460953 the only man that did not take a drink\nMr. Moore, president of Board or\nTrade or of Chamber of Commerce In\nmaking his speech stated he hoped\nthe Good Roads of Fulton county\nwould extend to all the Southern cit-\nies, also New York, Washington, etc.,\nand put his hand on my shoulder and\nsaid especially Hendersonville, N. C .\nI cannot go into detail all I've had\npublished about Hendersonville. While\nin San Antonio, Texas, I was enter-\ntained at St. Anthony's hotel, Menger\nHotel and Gunter Hotel, the finest\nhotels in the city, and the papers ad-\nvertised my visit to San Antonio as\n"the great hotel man that built the\nbig hotel for the idle rich at Hender-\nsonville," now known as "The St\nJohn,," one of the finest hotels in\nWestern North Carolina; also was en-\ntertained the St Charles Hotel,\nNew Orleans, and the New Orleans\nnewspapers certainly did write up\nsome nice articles of my visit there\nand my invitation to have all the auto\nowners and auto clubs to meet in At-\nlanta next August to come to Hender-\nsonville from all over the Southern\nStates and Eastern States, Washing-\nton, Philadelphia and New York. Per-\nhaps you noticed some in some of the\nnewspapers. Since my arrival here,\nI've been written up in the Panama\nJournal, Star and Herald published\nin Panama City, also Starlet publish-\ned in Colon, R. P. "the. hotel man of\nthe Great Summer Resort, Henderson-\nville." I've been here at the finest ho-\ntel on the Canal Zone. Tivoli and\nCol. Golthals offered me the Tivoli\nhotel, so have been talked about here\nen the zone as "a , great advertising
1f4cdbaaf92abb1b8f6bf4f656330fae THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1907.9630136669202 37.451159 -86.90916 torles and his oratorical proclivities\nMr Chandler Is perhaps less known\nto the general public but neverthe\nless Is very popular In political cir-\ncles in the North and South It Is\nperhaps quite generally known that\nas a Democrat he was elected Lieu\ntenant Governor of a State whose\nGovernor was elected on the Repub\nlican ticket by a large majority Thii I\nseems to Indicate decided popularity\nGov Johnson is a man of noted\nand extenslVe career Although a\nalIIclasses\ned that in 1900 when Mr Johnson was\na candidate for Senator the Mlnnfr\nsota election returns while giving Mr\nRoosevelt the State by 16100J gave\nSenator Johnson on the opposition\nticket a victory by 7800 Gov John-\nson is for an Income tax an Inner\ntance tax the Initiative and the Ref-\nerendum He stands those prIn-\nciples and ideas which come closest\nto the Interests of the great common\npeople He Is an orator of power and\nability He is as one biographer has\nsaid of him the neighbor of every-\nman and every mans friend\nMr Chandler is a young man of\ncourage and ability who is fast build\ning a career for himself His only\nhandicap seems to be that he is re¬\nputed to be rlcha perquisite howev-\ner of which nobody need be ashamed\nand a very essential qualification\nthese days in a man who essays tc\nrun for office on a large scale The\npersonality of his name would m\ndoubt carry New York and several-\nof the doubtful Northern States and\nhe is also strong in the South where\nhis family have been respected for\nover a century
a3864b1ddef367e3dac4e1f2a5662fec THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.6789617170107 40.618676 -80.577293 Clothes have a marked place in\nschool life, just as they have in other\nkinds of society. Untidy, unclean, ill\nfitting clothes give the school boy or\ngirl an inferior place in his own es­\ntimation, as well as in that of teach­\ners and schoolmates. Unusual apparel\n—clothes unlike those worn by the ma­\njority—mark a boy or girl as "queer."\nYoungsters do not often complain of\nthese things, but they suffer much\nfrom self-consciousness. Let us, as\nfar as our means will permit—and it\nis usually not a question of means,\nbut of understanding and care—enable\nthe student to face the day, his teach­\ner and his comrades, unconscious of\nhis clothes. He will, if they are not\nnoticeably unlike those of his mates.\nYou will want your child, also to\nhave happy, genial outlook on life,\nwith a readiness to help others. Con­\nsider that he can hardly do this, if\nhe hears unfavorable remarks against\nschool, teacher or pupils, at home. It\nwill help him if we welcome—get to\nknow—the friends he brings home,\n) and it will help to keep him at home\nif we manage to have some place—\nshed, basement or garden—where "the\ngang" can and will come to play.\nA quiet, warm, well-lighted place\nand a set time for study will be about\nall the help required of us with re­\ngard to the child's homework. And if\nwe are alert, ready at all times to do\nfor the child all that belongs to the\nhome to do, it is not likely that we\nshall be disappointed with the results\nat school.
24e78df7cedc80b6d1c6be4fdd377498 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.9821917491122 39.756121 -99.323985 On Shumagin Island a Miner Has In\ntroduced a Profitable Industry.\nCaptain O. W. Carlson, a well known\nmining man of the Nome district, who\nis also engaged in raising blue foxee\non Shumagin island, arrived in tho\ncity a few days ago. He is on his\nway south to San Francisco, where he\nwill spend the winter, and in the\nspring he will return to Seattle and\nsail for the North.\nSeven years ago Captain Carlson\nconceived the idea that there would be\nmoney in raising the blue fox for his\nfur, so secured several pairs and turn\ned them loose on the island. Since\nthat time he has made no effort to\ncount them, and has taken very few of\ntheir skins. This winter, however, he\nhas arranged for the of a num-\nber of skins, which he will ship to\nEngland to be treated, and they wiB\nthen be placed on the market.\nBlue fox skins, he says, are worth\nall the way from $5 to $60 each, ac-\ncording to their quality, just the same\nas with other fur skins They have\nbeen quite prolific since they were\nput on Shumagin island.\nThere are not many blue roxes la\nAlaska. In some parts they are hunt\ned for their skins, but not enough t&\nkeep them down, if they were healthy.\nWhat skins are taken are valuable.\nand find a" ready sale. This winter\nCaptain Carlson Intends to take a\nnumber of hides, which will be the\nfirst of any amount since starting the\nenterprise. Seattle Post -Int elligenc - er.
1382837608324b4ca036a348d5e7a287 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.278082160071 39.743941 -84.63662 Mich courts shall be composed of suci.\nnumber of judges as may he (rovided by\nlaw, and shall he held in each county, at least our\nin each year. The number of circuits, snd the\nboundar as thereof, shall be precribcd bylaw.\nuch judges shall be.lectcd iu each circuit by the\nelectors thereof, and at Eueh time and for such\nterm as may be prescribed by law, and the same\nnumber shall be eltcwdiu each circuit. Each\njudge shall ce competent to exercise his judicial\nnywers in any circuit. The general assembly\nmay chance, from time to time, the number of\nboundaries of the circuits. The circuit courts shall\nhe the successors of the district courts, and all\nCSSes, J n4v ments, records and proceedings pendiue\nin said district courts, in the several count es oi\nany district, shall lie transferred to the circuit\ncourts in the several couut es, and be proceeded in\nas though district courts had rot been abol-\nished, and the district courts shall continue in ex-\nistence until the election and qualification of the\njudres of the circuit courts.\nAnd be it further resolved, that at said election\nthe voters desiring to vote in favor of said amend-\nment, shall have placed upon their ballots, the\nwords, "judicial constitutional amendment Yes,"\nand the voters who do not favor the adoption of\nsaid amendment, may place on their ballots the\nwords "judicial constitutional amendment No;"\nand if a majority i f all the voles passed cast) at\nsaid election shall be in favor of said amendment,\nthen sad sections one, iwo and six herein set\nforth, shall be and constitute the sections so\nauiended in said judicial article (four) of the con-\nstitution of the State of Ohio and said original\none, two and six, and also sections five and\neleven of said article, shall ho repealed and an
0b74e40027c490aba472eb26f9b889ed NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.3712328450026 40.735657 -74.172367 great interest felt in the decision by the United States in\nthe Standard Oil case does not lie in its application to Ibis\nparticular trust, but in its interpretation of the Sherman\nanti trust act of 1890, under which the government has been prose-\ncuting the large trusts. That act lay dormant for years, partly be-\ncause corporation lawyers regarded it as of little practical effect\nand partly by reason of indisposition on the part of the department\nof justice under former attorney-generals to invoke the law. The\nperiod of greatest growth of the trusts began after the Sherman\nact was passed. The federal government sat idle, and while its lav\nforbade conspiracy in restraint of trade the government virtually\nencouraged it and permitted the ereetion of an industrial system\nthat it is now busily engaged in tearing down, with a resultant\ngreat disturbance of the business and finances of the country. The\nSupreme Court's decision is in one sense condemnation of a de-\nlinquent government which did not have the fidelity and energy\nto vindicate its own laws and prevent conditions in applying\nthe remedy, might have brought on general disaster. The decision,\nhowever, clears the air. It definitely interprets the long disused\nlaw. It declares it to be an effective engine in dealing with all\nforms of conspiracy in restraint of trade. The framers of the Slier-\nman act builded better than they knew. Not a few men in Congress\nvoted for its passage in the belief that it was of no effect or that it\nwould ho set aside by the Supreme Court in the first test to be made.\nIn the Standard Oil case the test has been a supreme one. All the\nresources of the ablest lawyers of the land were brought in play\nagainst the law, and logic and sophistry were exhausted in the\narguments. Hut there sat in Washington an august tribunal that\ncalmly examined the law and the case, unaffected by specious plead\nings, and the result is this decision, which is greeted by the ap-\nplause of the country and raises still higher the respect and rever-\nence of the American people for their great Supreme Court.
105389d06afa4f414bfba69104191c63 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.769125651437 39.261561 -121.016059 Wtaeu the Hebrew fluancier Rothschild, lived\non Stanford Hill, there resided opposite to him\nanother very wealthy dealer in stock exchange,\nLucas by name. The latter returned one ulglit\nvery late, from a'convivial party ; observed\na carriage and four standing before Rothschild s\ngate, upon which he ordered his own carriage\nto go out of the way, and commanded his coach-\nman to await his return. Lucas went stealthily\nand watched, unobserved, the movements at\nRothschild's gate. He did not lie long in am-\nbush before he heard a party leaving the He-\nbrew millionaires mansion and going towards\nthe carriage. He saw Rothschild accompanied\nby two muffled figures, step into the carriage,\nand heard the word of command, “to the city.\nHe followed Rothschild's carriegc very closely.\nBut when he reached the top the street in\nwhich Rothschilds office was situated, Lucas or-\ndered his carriage to stop, from which he got\nout and stepped through the street, feigning to\nbe mortully drunk. He made his way in the\nsame mood, as far as Rothschilds office, and\nwithout ceremony opened the door, to the great\nconsternation and terror of the housekeepei,\nottering sundry ejaculations, in the broken uc-\ncents of Bacchus votaries. Heedless ot the af-\nfrighted housekeepers remonstrances, he opened\nRothschild's private office in the same stagger-\ning attitude, and fell down flat on the floor.\nRothschild and his friends became alarmed.\nEfforts were made to restore and remove the\nwould be drunkard, but Lucas was too good an\nactor, and was therefore in such a fit as to be\nunfit to lie removed hither or thither.
0d1de51250ace1c9fd6e28543bdac0b1 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.5246575025367 40.441694 -79.990086 memorial was presented from the confer-\nence of the Methodist Episcopal Church,\npraying the convention to incorporate in\nthe new Constitution a clause relating to\nthe strict observance of Sunday, on which\nday no work shall be done other than that\nof necessity or mercy.\nThey also pray that there will be incor-\nporated in the Constitntion a clanse pro-\nhibiting the manufacture or sale of all in-\ntoxicating liquors or stimulants, except lor\nmedicinal or scientific purposes. Joy, of\nPark, offered the following:\nQUALIFICATIONS FOR CITIZENSHIP.\nThat every male citizen of the United States,\nabove the age of 2L who can read and write the\nEnglish language, who had never been con-\nvicted of treason or felony and who shall have\nresided in this Suite one year, and in the city,\ncounty or district, where he may to vote,\nthe six months next prior to any election, and\nno other person shall have the right to vote in\nthis State, provided that nothing herein shall\ndisfranchise anyone who is a legal voter at the\ntime of the adoption of this Constitution.\nBy Hartman, of Gallatin: That perfect toler-\nation of religious sentiment shall be secured,\nand no inhabitant of Montana shall be molested\nin person or otherwiso on account of re-\nligious views; that the people of Montana\ndeclare they will in no wise appropriate any\nunappropriated public lauds that are within\nthe lfmiis of lands held by any Indian tribe,\nuntil such title shall bo extinguished by the\nUnited States: that property owned by parties\noutside the State shall never be taxed higher\nthan the lands of those residing within the\nborders of the State; that
f74a09170111fd10cfe34081a43cdedc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.3630136669203 41.681744 -72.788147 conductors and other workmen, fill\nChinese, walked out. When the\nstrike was finally settled and the\nmen came back to work, they had\nto be treated as green hands. They\nhad been off duty for about three\nmonths, but they had forgot' en\neverything they had learned about\nrunning trolley cars. The conductors\nhad to be taught how to make\nchange and the motormen needed\ninstruction in operating the cars.\nThere seems to be considerable\ncorruption In that land, according\nto the speaker, although Americans\ngoing there have been able to ac-\nquire fortunes. He spoke of one\ndentist who made a fortune over\nthere, came to the United States\nand lost it, returned to make an-\nother fortune and again lost it in\nthe United States. He is in\nChina working on his third fortune.\nThe speaker said that the Stan-\ndard Oil company is deeply respect-\ned by the Chinese and evidences of\nthis firm are everywhere. He said\none can go almost anywhere in\nChina and find a gasoline container\nin use, not always as a container for\ngasoline, but in some capacity.\nHe also spoke of the Philippines\nand how some politicians are get-\nting rich on the desire for freedom.\nApparently the people are not anx-\nious for freedom. The politicians\nwho receive good pay for coming to\nAmerica to argue for liberty, seem\nto be the only ones interested in\nthe proposition and these men have\nno idea what, would happen if the\nPhilippines were given their free-\ndom and the politicians
a1604d3bb7b0afaf193450d62bde4e09 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.664383529934 39.261561 -121.016059 Seo. 35 . As soon as all the votes are read\noff and counted, a certificate shall be drawn up\non each of tbe papers containing the poll-list\nand tallies, or attached thereunto, stating the\nnumber of votes each person voted for has re-\nceived, and designating the office to fill which\nbe is voted for has received, which number shall\nbe written in words at full length. Each cer-\ntificate shall be signed by the Clerks, the Judg-\nes and Inspector; one of said certificates, with\ntbe poll-list and tally-paper to which it is at-\ntached shall be retained by the Inspector, and\npreserved by him at least six months. The bal-\nlots shall be destroyed by tho Inspector. The\nother of said certificates, with the poll-list and\ntally-paper to which it is attached, shall be seal-\ned up by the Inspector, and endorsed Election\nReturns,” and be directed and delivered or sent\nby the Inspector to the County Clerk of the\nCounty in which the eleetion is held.\nSec. 36 . The package shall be deliver-\ned to the County Clerk by one of the Judges or\nClerks of election in person, or may be sent by\nprivate hand, or by mail. If seut by private\nhand, the person delivering it shall, before the\nCounty Clerk, take and subscribe an affidavit\nthat the package was delivered to him by one\nof the Judges, (naming him) that it has not\nbeen out of his possession since it was received\nand has undergone no alteration while in his\npossesssion. The affidavit shall be endorsed on\nthe package. If sent by mail, it shall be mail-\ned by one of the Judges, and the postmasler\nshall make on it an endorsement that he re-\nceived it from one of the Judges, (naming him.)\nSec. 37. No tally-paper, poll-list or certifi-\ncate, returned from any election, shall be set\naside or rejected for want of form, nor on ac-\ncount of its not being strictly in accordance\nwith the directions of this act, if the same can\nbe satisfactorily understood.
14fdc51cb6eeb60110ae8a323a840157 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.8013698313039 42.217817 -85.891125 view with isrigham loung he ap-\npeared somewhat improved, and more\ndisposed to converse on the situation.\nHo laughed upon hearing the sensa\ntional reports sent East, and he averred\nthat there was no quieter or more or\nderly place on the continent. Can\nthere be found, he said, a people who\nwill submit to as much insult and injus\ntice from those sent to rule over them\nas the Mormons? He had not had the\nleast feeling of uneasiness or doubt\nsinco these proceedings against him and\nhis people had begun, lie was pained\nto hear that President drant had au\nthorized this crusade. It was, however,\nf imply the power of the Methodist\nChurch, which, having signally failed in\nits missionary enterprises to the saints,\nnow proposes to destroy them with\nMethodist governors, judges, and packed\niuries of the Methodist persuasion : but\nwho, by the blessing of uod, had totally\nfailed in inducing a single member of\nZion's flock to the faith.\nIt was proposed, he said, to prosecute\nhim, first, for lascivious cohabitation\nunder the Utah statute; then to try\nhim for bigamy or polygamy, and, final\nly, to hold him for the various murders\ncommitted by Bill Hickman and other\noutlaws who were called Uanites, or\ndestroying angels. They were thought\nful to begin gently with him, ''but,"\nsaid he, " I am content to abide by\nevery law that is just, for every law that\nprohibits freedom of religious belief\nmust be decided unconstitutional." The\nverdict would be the total defeat of the\nbad men now seeking to disgrace and\niniure him and his people. If there is\nany trouble, the responsibility will be\nwith these officials who got it up. The\nright will triumph. As in the past, so\nwill it be in the future. The Mormons\nhad met their enemies and vanquished\nthem with their own weapons, and\nwould do so again in the present issue.\n"Although," said Brigham,
3f9d19df43692698bcae0bb37bef48a1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.4561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 Ill the Social and Moral Science ('\njress tho Committee on Permanent C\n: c r s reported the following: Chairni\n?resident Woolsey.of Yale; Vice Chi\nnen, HigUt Hev. bishop Mcllvaine, Pi\ndent Caswell, Uisbop Simpson, Rev.\n1. Campbell, I). D ., Itev. i)r. Mule\niev. T . Cotton Smith, ilussel Sturc\nIon. J. V. Farwell, Geo. Conrad Bal\niVm. Stiekney. A. V . Stout, IIou. Win.\nJuckingham, Hon. .lohu A. Logan, II\n1). Cox, Hon. H . D . Cooku, Win. Hre\nlell.and Jay Cooke; Treasurer, Win.\nlloorehead; Secretary, Kcv. Dr. Call\nriie Congress then adjourned.\nThis evening a public meeting wsis hi\nt tho Church ol Kpiphany, at which\nnumbers of the "Congress delivered\nIresscs on tho principles and objects\nhis Association.\nTho corner stone of the inuin build\n the University of Pennsylvania v\nlid to-day, with appropriate ccrcuumi\n'I'lut rut urn irmni» lw>tu'«u'tl tin* l«\\ir\n,'ityu and Athletics caiuu off hero t\nfternoon, in the presence of3,000 Hp\nUors. Mr. Jiomeisler acted us uiupi\nVhcntho Forest City* went to but tit\nwk tho lend uml kept it throughout t\nnine. In the ?tli inning tin: Athleti\nml reached to within one of u tie; in t\nill inning hotli were whitewashed. T\n'orcst Citys scored ! iu the IHh innii\nlid the Athletics were put out by u\nutcli. Tlio Forest Citys won the |$ui\nliree nheud. The following is the bcoi\n'oroat Citys Id; Athletics 7. The Ai\n. tics sturt to-morrow for Hultiino\n'hero they play the Pastimes the sur\nay, and on Baturduy the Olympics,\n^ashiiiKtou.
0d574524c1c2ad6c8bf1f94f81efefed UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1890.2890410641805 42.68333 -96.683647 In the matter of the application of J.S.Taleott\nioi a Di'igiiist's Permit to sell Malt. Vinous,\nSpM iluou», fermented and oilier Intoxicating\nijipuMS tor Sl'.uical, Scleutille, and Sacra-\nmenial purposes. Noticeof Hearing. Whereas:\nOn the i«lii day ol April,l«i >,i|ic a»ove mimed\nJ. S. laleott, pre^euted to tins Court. Ins peti­\ntion as by law re<|Ulied, lor i >i ugKislx penult to\nsetl ilalt, Viimous, Spirit ions and other lntox-\nleiitinj; l.kpiors lor pur|K>.^es as therein appears\nand it apjiearmn Irani the.said petition\nl ilisi ; That >aid petition i* >i);n<'d by said\napplicant for sai.l iii ovists permit and b» twen­\nty.live repntal'le tiel holders liavi!>(; llie'piuiin-\nesitious ot electorsol the Townshipof KIk Point\nill the County of Union, South Dakota, anil by\ntwenty-live reputable women over l!l years of\naye who are residents ot the said lOwir hip.\nSkoomi: That the business *t| tile saidappll-\ncant is located at the comerof Main and Doug­\nlas Street, in the City of KIk Point in snid State.\nThird: That said applicant is ol x>mh1 moriil\ncharacter, and does not use Intoxicating liquors\nas a beverage and can lieentrusted with the re\nsponsibiliiy of Hellion the same.\nfourth: That said applicant Is a registered\npharmacist under ilu-laws oft his state mid is\nlawiulh and in faith engaged personally\nIII the businessof a druggist its the proprietor\ntiiereolat the said place of business aforesaid,\nand is well versed in the profession.\nFifth: That said applicant..I . S. Talcott.has\nIII sMd business at the place of business afore­\nsaid, exclusive or intoxicating hijuors and tix-\nturcs. astock of drugsof over the value of\nNow Iheri foicon reading and tiling said peti­\ntion, setting forth the facts asherein stated and\npraying thai a permit may be is-ticd to s:,id\nnamed ,I. s. 'l aleott for the purpose of selling\nsaid Intoxicating lihiiors at the cityof k!\\ Poinl\nKIk Point Township, Union Couniv. South Da-\nkola for said purposes as therein specified.\nIt isordered that the said applicant and peti­\ntion lie heard b> the .lodgeof (he Countv < onrt\nIII and for Union f'ounty.South Dakota.'at bis\nntliee iu the cilv of KIk Point, Union Co. Soulh\nDakota on the 17th dav of Mav, A. D . IS'JO, at\n10o'clo<-k a. m . of saidday.\nIt Is further orderedthat dtie notice thereof\nlie given by publishing a copy of this order for\n,'i<)days toilet-a week) prior to said bearing In\nthe I'tiion «'onnty < ihhikh, a wreklv newspa­\nper printed and published insaid county.\nDated April. Mill, ls'jy.\nBy the Court.\n(SEAL)
2671899628c5ebaad3904b3ac9794b23 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1905.4506848997971 46.601557 -120.510842 The proper definition of Irrigation Is\nto insure having moisture or water\nwhen needed, and not to use It at any\nand all times because It Is at command.\nTherefore, users of water must be ed-\nucated either by experience or instruc-\ntion, and every Irrigated section should\nemploy an experienced and practical\nlrrigatlonlst, whose duties would be\nconfined to Instructing users of water\nIn Its Intelligent distribution. Csnal\nand Irrigation companies f-twtlfi not\n_. ? ""> a -iEftr. profitable Investment\nthsn to have tn their employ an offi-\ncial whose duties should consist In\nconstantly conferring with snd In-\nstructing water users as to how snd\nwhen water should be applied.\nIs there any excuse In an Irrigated\ndistrict for. a farmer or rancher to\nsquander enough water during a sea-\nson, if used at one time, to cover\nhla land to a depth of nine feet, when\nhis contract with the canal company\ncalls for only one-fourth of this quan-\ntity? Furthermore, it Is acknowledged\nby sll that one-fourth the quantity Is\nample to secure a crop. Ia there any\nexcuse for the use of nine feet of wa-\nter In one locality and only two feet In\nanother, where conditions are similar\nand where the man using only two\nfeet raises larger and better crops?\nThe only excuse Is negligence, Isck of\nIntelligence snd laziness, and the man\nusing nine feet find when It Is\ntoo late that bis land Is mined snd his\nefforts hays been for naught He will\nprobably seek a new location and\ndamn the country he Is leaving, when\nno one Is at fault except himself. The\nIrrigation of land by means of pump-\ning Is now receiving marked attention,\nand people are beginning to realise\nthat the vast area so located as to\nmake It Impossible to Irrigate by csnal\nsystems, on account of the cost being\nso much In excess of the benefits re-\nceived, csn be reclaimed and made ex-\ntremely productive and valuable.\nIt Is the lrrigatlonlst under this\nmethod of whom we hsve the most\nfear. He la absolutely master of the\nsituation; he owns bis plant, can op-\nerate It when he seee fit, snd Is not\nsubject to even caution or suggestion\nfrom sny company from whom water\nIs purchased. It Is true the expense\nInvolved In cosl, wood, gasoline, oil\nor other fuel may check him to a cer-\ntain extent in the operation of his\npumping plant, but devices hsve\nproved practicable for pumping water\nthat require no fuel or expense In op-\neration. What does tbe possessor of\na device of this character purpose do-\ning? Start hla machine In operation—\nlet It ran night and day, flooding hla\nland until ruined? Or will be exercise\nJudgment—deliver his water Into a raa-
3e0d01ad32403356680a24f1517394dc THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.1849314751396 39.261561 -121.016059 Private Property for Public I'lfl.\nIn the Congressional Globe, ot Jan. 2Gtb, we\nSod the following proceedings in the Senate :\nMr. Broderick—I ask the consent of the Sen-\nate, to enable me to move to take up a bill\nwhich has been long pending, to provide for ta-\nking private property for pubblic use, allowing\njust eompensatiou therefor. The bill wns in-\ntroduced by the honorable Senator from Louis-\niana, [Mr. Benjamin,] just before the adjourn-\nment of the last sessioo, after the expose that was\nmade in regard to a purchase for the site of a\nfort at the mouth of the harbor of San Fran-\ncisco. I hope that this bill will give rise to no\ndebate. I would not urge it at this time, if it\nwere not that I know that the parties owning\nthat property have their agents in Washington,\nwho are trying to urge upon the of\nWar the necessity of purchasing the property\nat the very high price of $200,000. I state\nto the Senate that the amount of property re-\nquired for the fort will not cost more than $5,-\n000, and these parties are askiug $200,000 for\nthis site. By the passage of this bill, the pro-\nperty can be condemned, and the government\ncan go on aud build the fort. I hope that I\nshall have the co-operation of my colleague, be-\ncause this is a very important bill, one that\nconcerns our State vitally. This fraud was ar-\nrested by the prompt action of the Secretary of\nWar duriug the last session, aud I hope that\nthe Senate will pass the bill now, so that it can\ngo to the other House, and pass during the\nweek, and become a law. The araouut of mon-\ney appropriate! cau then be expeuded for the\nfort.
24cc24b70409a5a30a577fea5b2c05d8 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.28551909406 39.756121 -99.323985 "While a coffee user my stomach\ntroubled me for years," says a lady of\nColumbus, O., "and I had to take medi-\ncine all the time. I had what I thougbt\nwis the best stomach medicine I could\nget, had to keep getting it filled all\nthe time at 40 cents a bottle. I did\nnot know what the cause of my trou-\nble was but just dragged along from\nday to day, suffering and taking medi-\ncine all the time.\n"About six months ago I quit tea\nand coffee and began drinking Postura\nand I have not had my prescription\nfilled since, which Is a great surprise\nto me for it proves that coffee was the\ncause of all my trouble although I nev-\ner suspected It.\n"When my friends ask me how \nfeel since I have been taking Postum\nI say, 'To tell the truth I don't feel\nat all only that I get hungry and eat\neverything I want and lots of It and It\nnever hurts me and I am happy and\nwell and contented all the time.'\n"I could not get my family to drink V\nPostum for a white until I mixed it in\na little coffee and kept on reducing thi\namount of coffee until I got it all Pos-\ntum. Now tbey all like It and they\nnever belch it up like coffee.\n"We all know that Postum Is a sun-\nshine maker. I hna It helps one great\nly for we do not have to think of aches\nand pains all the time and can us\nour minds for other things."
2747ca344e41fa3fa914f9240170db7c CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1908.4631147224752 39.623709 -77.41082 Persons of the class that are alwayi\nready with decided and correct esti-\nmates of everybody else's moral condl\ntion pronounced Gifford reformed. He\nwas not in the least reformed, if by\nthat term change of nature Is intended\nto be expressed. Men of nearly thirty\nyears very seldom do change their na-\ntures. I fancy. He was simply begin\nnlng to And out that he had hitherto\nmissed the kind of life which suited\nhim best-the nnintellectual, lazily ac-\ntive, healthy, material life of the coun-\ntry. Wherever he had lived, Gifford\nMohun must inevitably have sunk to a\ntolerably low scale of existence; but\nwhat had been disreputabillty in Lon-\ndon was at Yatton Idling about with\nhis gnu or his rod, and habitually\ndrinking rather more than was good\nfor him—and gambling only when any\nof Ids friends came down from Bo-\nhemia or Belgravia to stay with him.\nJane Grand was, of course, one of the\nhottest supporters of the reformation\ntheory; Mr. Follett, not less naturally,\none of those who looked skeptically\nupon Mohun's change of life; so it\nfell out, after a few rather sharp dis-\nsensions on the subject, that the vicar's\nvisits to Jane's cottage began to grow\nextremely rare and cold. He always\nfound Mohun there when he called;\nand when Mohun was there it was\nsimply ridiculous to think that he could\nbe wanted, too. His fastidious gener-\nosity made him speak well of his rival\n(to every one save Jane): he called at\nYatton at stated periods; he even dined\nwith Mohun, and asked him. In return,\nto the vicarage. But to see him famil-\niarly seated in Janes little room—of\nwhich every object was so sacred to\nhis own heart—to see Jane's eyes ap-\nproving of all he said, to hear Janes\npraises of him when he was gone— -\nwere just pieces of slow torture that\nthe Vicar of Chesterford did not feci\nhimself called upon to endure; and, ns\nIhave said, his visits to Janes cottage\ngrew rarer than they had ever been\nsince the days In which he first began\nto teach her English history when she\nwas nine years old.
a98dca56e54ff503645abe1c8d2b1e23 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.6013698313038 39.745947 -75.546589 In the flrst five months of 1920, the Railway Age adds,\nthe total earnings of the railways were 58)4 per cent,\nmore than in the same months of 1916. The total operat-\n'ng expenses, In spite of the vast retrenchments made,\ncere 109 per cent more than for the same months of 1916.\nfaxes were 80)4 per cent. more . Result: In the flrst live\nmonths of 1916 the railways earned $286.400,000 net operat­\ning Income, while in the same months of 1921 they earned\ninly $117,000,000 net operating income, a decline In net\nipcrating income for these months of over 66 per cent.\nNone of the arguments setting forth why rates should\ng»e reduced makes any reference to the fact that while\nrates are now high compared with the general level of\nprices, railway rates for some years did not increase\nwhile the general level of prices was advancing, and that\nproducers and shippers profited meantime by the fact that\nprices were advancing while railway rates were not.\nThe average railway freight rate was same In 1917\nis in 1913. Meantime the average wholesale prices of\n• ommpartles bail' advanced 76 per oent. In 1920 the aver-\nige railway freight rate was 46 per cent, higher than in\n1913. while the average wholesale prices of commodities\nvere 143 per oent. higher than in 1913. As recently as\nJanuary, 1921, average wholesale prices of commodities\nwere 77 per cent, higher than in 1913. Only since then\nhave freight rates been relatively lower nr compared with\n1913 than wholesale prices. In other words, during tue\nentire six years from 1915 to 1920, inclusive, average\nwholesale prices were from 1 to 143 per cent, higher than\nin 1913, while railway rates during this time were never\nmore than 46 per cent, higher than in 1913, and yet now,\nwhen for less than six months railway rates have been\n•eiatively higher as compared with 1913 than wholesale\nprices, we have a loud and general demand for reductions\nn rates on the ground that producers and shippers "can-\naol stand" the present rates.
8a50da8ed3ada5501358920a5b9ff705 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 Now it seems to us that the foregoing!\nvery explicit clause in the law disposes\nof the legality question, as to the pow-\ner of any State, county or city to tax\ngovernment securities. The exemption\nis direct, explicit aud unmistakable.;\nAll arguments, therefore, looking to\nState taxation must be from a stand\npoint other than legality, for legally\nthere is not a shadow of right. Our\ncotemporics should quote the law, as\nwe have done, jus a preface and text to\nall their comments. We are not argu¬\ning the justice of such an exemption.\nThat is an other view of the case. We\nare prepared to say that the exemption\nis not palatable to us at all. We regret\nit very much. But at the time the loan\nwas created every form inducement\nto make the loan popular seemed to be\na necessity. The mighty rebellion was\non our hands and in full tide of its ar-'\nrogance and strength. We were com¬\npelled to appeal not only to the patriot-\nism but likewise to the cupidity of!\ncapital. We had to tempt it with ex¬\ntraordinary inducement*. We had to\nmake the loan an investment superior',\nto all other investments, either by aj\ngreater rate of interest or by such ex-\nemptions as other loans, private anclj\npublic, did not enjoy. Having thus;\nnegotiated the loan.signed the bond.\nximl plighted our faith, it is too late to\nplay Indian, and go back 011 any of its\nprovisions, be they ever so distasteful\nnow. We must shrug our shoulders\nand l>ear it out "011 this line."
3d70ed064442945338006a8ad94620a5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.97397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 corncr of eaid Lot numbered 242; thenco\nSouthwardly down Eoff street, tho fail width of\nsaid lot on that street, and rnnnlng back with\nibat width to tho depth of fifty Icot, together\nwith all tho buildings and improvement® on said\nLots used as a coal depot, ilc ,\nAIsj, all tho coal and other minerals, wayc, ,\nlasemeuts, rlgh's and privileges, which wero i\njrantol or convoyed by Ceorgo Kobcrts and his o\nwlfj to tho said Orcscent Iron Company, by deed 5\nbearing date the twelfth day of July in the year r\njlghteen hundred and seventy-one, and recorded i\nIn Deed Hook numborcd 18, pago 3G7.in tho {\niforeiatd Clerk's office, togethor with tho rail- f\nway and right of way to and into tho samo from J\nIhe said Crescent Iron Works and establishment, ,\nind tho cars, machinery and tools working ,,\ntho said mines and railway. n\nTho ealo will commonce at ten o'clock in tho p\ntoronoon. Helling as trustee, I will not warrant. S\nTHE TERMS OF HAL it, by agreement of ttc\ncreditor!, will bo.so much In baud as will be £\nsufficient to par tho expenses of advertising /\nind selling, and throe thoarand dollars In addl- r\nlion; and tho residue In six equal semi-annual »\npaymonts of principal; tho deferred payments to i\nbear interest from the day of sale, and at the end {j\n)t each half year tho entire Interest which shall ?\nIhon have accrued to ba paid; tho principal and r\nntercBt unpaid to bo socured by deed ot trust on\n;he property so'd, and by Insuranco against tiro n\n>n satd property to ;an amount satlsiactory to ?\n:he trustee. «\ndcMdtw
0e72d2471782ac62ceadcb6b4609ca6f VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.0260273655506 43.798358 -73.087921 Resolved, That Congress have possessed\nthe power since the year 1803 to prohibit\nthe importation of persons into any Slate\nas articles of commerce or merchandise.\nResolved, That the political condition\nof the people within the District of Colum-\nbia is subject to State regulation ; and\nthat Congress, in the exercise of it3 legis-\nlative powers over the District, are bound\nby the will oftheir constituents in the same\nmanner as when legislating for the people\nof the United States generally.\nResolved, That this government was\nfounded and has been sustained by the\nforce of public opinion, and that the free\nand full exercise of that opinion is abso-\nlutely necessary for its healthful action ;\nand that any system which will not bear\nthe test of public investigation is at war\nwith its fundamental principles ; and that\nany proceedings oa the part of those who\nadminister the Government of the United\n or any of the States, or any citi-\nzens thereof, which are intended or calcu-\nlated to make disreputable the free aud full\nexercise of the thoughts and opinions of\nany poition of our citizens on any subject\nconnected with the political, moral, or re-\nligious institutions of our country, wheth-\ner expressed by petitious to Congress, or\notherwise, by attaching to the character of\nsuch citizens odious and ieproachful names\nand epithets, strikes at the very foundation\nof all our civil institutions, as well as our\npersonal safety ; poisons the very fountains\nof public justice, and excites mobs and\nother unlawful assemblies to deeds of vio-\nlence and blood. That our only safety is\nin tolerating error of opinion, while rea-\nson is left free to combat it.\nHouse. Petitions and memorials were\nthen presented and referred, and those re-\nlating to slavery were laid on the table un-\nder the rule.
0ff80bb1fb23e070998277ba778e892e PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.1410958587012 40.441694 -79.990086 rsrXCIAI. TELEQRAX TO THE DISPATCH.!\nColtMBUS, February 20. The defense\ndid not call the plaintiff, Mrs. Church, in\nthe divorce case this morning as it was sup-\nposed they would, but proceeded with other\nwitnesses. The principal witness was Mrs.\nE. H. Church, mother of the defendant, and\nwho came to this city in 1881 from Pitts-\nburg, where she had previously resided\nwith her son and daughter. Mrs. Church\ndenied in complete form the truth of the\nstatements made on the stand by the\nplaintiff, that she had frequently called\nwitness' attention to the fact that Colonel\nChurch was abusing her and that she should\ntry and have him do differently orshe would\nleave him. The witness said that the sub-\nject had never been mentioned to her but\nonce, and then the wife told her they had\nsome trouble. At this time the mother sat\ndown and wrote a letter to Colonel Church,\nin which she told him that his wife should\nbe petted, as she had been raised that way,\nand if he was to blame he should make\namends at once, and if his wife was to blame\nhe look to a reconciliation at any\nrate. She said Mrs. Church had never said\nanything to her about leaving her husband\nunless lie did differently; that Mrs. Church\non one occasion had told her that the girl\nTeresa was the best she had ever had and\nhe would not know how to get along with-\nout her. Mrs. Church expressed the opinion\nthat there was nothing in the charges as re-\ngards her son and Teresa, and said they\ncould not have happened at the time it is\nclaimed they did, as she was there and\naffairs were finder her management and she\nknew all that was going on.\nSeveral wituesses were offered, one of\nwhom testified to the effect that the Colonel,\nwithin a month of the separation, had pur-\nchased two dresses of value for his wife, and\nwanted to get another, but she would not\nhave it. Other witnesses were examined\nwho were acquainted with "Walter McCas-ke- y,\nthe colored man who testified tot he\nunusual conduct between Colonel Church\nand the servant girl, the import of the testi-\nmony being that McCaskey is in the habit\nof telling fairy stories.
3689f044823147745a9dbe71cf8936f7 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.2472677279397 39.623709 -77.41082 pected to believe that we are an especially\nfavored people in our having bceu permitted\nto enjoy as low if not the lowest water rates\nofany town in the country all these years.\nOil! How we have been deluded—all our\nown fault though. Let us see how our rates\ncompare with those of Washington, the cos-\nmopolitan city of the western hemisphere,\nwhere one needs to hold a lucrative govern\nment position to respectably exist, every-\nthing one consumes or uses being admittedly\nhigher than in any other city or town in Hie\ncountry. Should you live in Washington\nand have water in your kitch n, have a bath\nroom and a water closet in the house, you pay\nfor all this (3 60 per annum, while iu Thur-\nmonl you pay (11 for the same service. We\nare unable to explain difference of (7 50\nuulesss it be that the quality of the water\nwarrants it. No one imagines that these low\nrates iu Washington are made possible by\nvirtue of its water plant being an endowed\nor subsidized concern: rates are made at\nleast sufficiently high to make itself sustain-\ning. Exactly what we purpose doing just so\nsunn ns we hare the mist cleared from the\neyes of a few who seem to be unable to see\na good thing until a brick front falls out up-\non them. Ifmunicipal water works is not a\ngood thing why is it that every town in the\ncountry is striving to have its own plant?\nWe have a number of oilier comparisons\nto make winch will have to be deferred until\nnext week owing to the limited space allotted\nus iu this Issue.
078153e505d5b5d3aa77bee41ad8a784 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1867.8123287354135 41.262128 -95.861391 atatad a faimfeood, whiab he in bta ail-\n. u aaae tbsugat wa^ild injure My. Trala,\naad at tb«s mmm tiaegraufj tba low aad\ngroretiieg i-«ire of it# author-\nIt ia wall kaawa t* aar eutaaaM tkat\n)lr. Traia waa oca of tka editorial ex\n««ra;or. party, wbiob waa tvadarad tba\nkoapitoiity of oar aity, aad wbo waa\n•tada walaaaa at Barkop'a Upara liooaa\naatka idtk iaat. lia lad kaa« wi.k tka\nparty from tbe tiaa it iefi Cbtaago a&til\nita arrival bete, after neitiag tbe uioatt*\ntaiaa at tka «od of tka Pacific Railroad*\nLit bad beta ib telagrapbie aaaatuotoa-\nttoa witb eereral of ear citiaesa dansg\ntbe wbola tiaa, aad wketkar aa editor\nor aot, waa regarded by our eidaeaa aa\naaa of tke editorial exourckro party, and\nbe waa expected here aa tauob aod wa\ntbiak aora tkaa aay otber peraaa m tkat\nparty. lie waa called oat by aar citi\nsaca to aaka a apaaab oa tka avaataf ot\ntba reacptioa, aod aotwitkataadiag bia\ne&rasct appeal to be exoaaed from ap^ ak-\niog tbe ortea for ''Traia i" "Tram i" ba-\neaae more rotiferaaa tooaeat,\nas til ka yielded asd waa ooadaatcd ta\ntkf ataad. Of tka apee«b u ia aat aa-\noeaaary for oa io apeak. Sofiae it to aay\ntbe taceting waa ooe of al aceiai (aad\nmerry taakicg uature, axid bia apeecb\nwaa ia aeoefdaaca witk Ike object »f tka\na aat tog, ud waa raaeired witk aora\nbeany applauta than aay otter apeeob\naade opoo tbo oocaaioa. lie waa rec­\nognised aa.taa guut of tka aity, aad aa\ni task witk otker neabers of tka party\nwaa at tba Paoifia Uouaa from aoaw of\ntba Ifitk iaat. oatil tbe ^aoroiag of tke\nITih ioat., abas be left witk the otker\ntaeabera of tbe party far Cbioago. —\nWbea tke Uoaaittea aa Fiaaace—of\nwbicb S. lima waa ekaiimao aad Ooi. /.\nD- Ta»r a aaabera -aara aettliag tka\nkiiia of tka axeursiootaaa, tba twa, for\naoaa reaaoa, aad apoo tkeir owa aa­\ntbority, refaeod to pay far acy refraak-\naeata ar other tkiac famtabed Mr.\nTraia, aad tbia waa afltr Mr. Traia had\nleft, aader tba vappeaiuoa, no doabt,\ntbat bta bil5 weald be pud with that af I
4a1e723238532dd581768bc2be101b0d OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.905479420345 41.020015 -92.411296 against Walden or for tho. repeal of\nchapter 118, were destined, -ooner or\nlater, to a political burial.\nBut to labor with might anil main to\ndefeat the Republican nominee, Mr.\nJordan, for the Scnatorship ot 1'olk\ncounty, was a Republican virtue ; and,\nif asked why you done it, tell them\nthat you believed thai had he (Jordan)\nbad an opportunity he would have\nvoted for the repeal of chapter 118, and\nalso would have voted against Walden.\nAt any rate you do know thai ho is 'i\npersonal friend of .Tolin A. Kaeson,\nwhich is a greater sin than voting\nagainst Walden and .for the repeal of\nchapter llS; and teil I hem further that\ntho example set by yourself in that\nparticular was followed by some of the\nsmall-fry, which clearly deinonstntes\nthat you arc regarded as tho State\norgan of the party; and tell them fur­\nther, that Mr. Mitchell was a life-long\nRepublican, that he is a gentleman of a\nhigh sense of honor, consequently you\n not loose anything on that score.\nThat notwithstanding Mr. Mithcll had\nalways been a man of honor and that\nho deenmped from the Republican\nparty and joined his fortune with the\nOpposition, is no evidence that ho will\nprove true lo them who nominated\nand elected him. When you have ex­\nplained all these little matters in this\nmanner, there can scarcely be a doubt\nabout your being your own successor,\nif you so desire. Tell them further,\nthat Polk county has, usually speaking,\nabout 1200 Republican majority, and\nthat with yonr opposition and that of\nyour friends, you beat Jordan 500, and\noutside of the Kasson faction thoy will\nthink that a big thing.\nMr. Editors, I have now doubtless\nworried yon beyond endurance, yet I\nwould like to |jay tnv passing respects\nto the editor of the News It would\nindeed be treating him with entirely\ntoo much indifference to pass him by\nwithout a complimentary notice, as he\nhas complimented mo so highly; "a\nrelic of barbarism."
1befaa217bdcfa3200d8fb4b4e22939b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.368493118975 40.063962 -80.720915 Portsmouth, Ohio. She has not yet been M\nshipped to her new owner..Ruraljtiun. ^\nFrom tho Commercial Bulletin wo learn\nthat during the last live years the [\nVirginia peanut crop iias rantfeu from 'i\n225,000 to 780,000 bushel'*.. Tho lowest i\ncrop of Tennessee was 175,000 bushels; .\nthe highest, 305,000 bushels. In North ,\nCarolina the lowest crop was 00,000 bush- *\nels; the highest, 125.000 bushels. Tho r\ngreatest yield of the whole country was in\n1870-77, when it amounted to I,-105,000 i\nbushels. The estimated crop of the com- t\niug season is 1,200,000 bushels, which }\nshows it to be of much greater importance\nthan most people imagine.\nThe Lire Stock Journal says that tho\ncheapest, quickest and in a largo majority t\nof cases, decidedly the best way by ,\na farmer of comparatively limited means r\ncan improve his slock, is by the persistent j\nuse of tho best males he can obtain, in t\nmost cases he will And it best to secure i\nfull blooded animals of the breed which J\nroost nearly corresponds to his ideas, use c\nthese on iho best female he has or can\nreadily obtain, and continue the use of\nequully good and well-bied sires on the\nfemale progeny for the successive crosses.\nAn exchange says: "The man who first\ninvented the mowing machine was Kuoeh\nAmbler, of the town of Hoot, Montgomery\ncounty, New York. Ambler made the [\nrunning gear substantially the sniuo as\nnow, but failed on the sevthe. liislirst\nmachine was made in 18J4, and was put\non trial at Currytown? Montgomery
77a0b453ea03336bba535d27fe5a97ca VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.1926229191965 43.798358 -73.087921 into boundless space, leave that summit\ncold and barren, while those which Dene- -\ntrated into the deep valley, reflected from\none mil side to another, and repeatedly\nthrown from object, to object, impart their\nwarmth and vivifying power, and render\nmost luxuriant the favored sdoU From\nthese and numerous other considerations.\ninier that Uod designed mri to be a so-\ncial being, and to live in society. Ad if\nne aesignea this, then he designed also\nand approves whatever is necessary in or-\nder to the existence and prosperity of the\nsocial state. And I think it can be easily\nshown that men cannot live in society\nwithout human government.\nHere it may be well to consider for a\nmoment the design and nature of civil\ngovernment. From the representations\nof the very candid, reasonable and truth-\nful opposers, we might conclude, that all\nhuman governments area race of fiend-\nish monsters, varying a little in color, but\nalike in nature, whose is mangled\nhuman bodies, whose drink is tears 'and\nblood, whose music is groans and wailing,\nand whose acts are all gratuitous cruelty\nand malignant oppression. But is it so"?\nIn a civilized community, no ?overnmpnt\ncan long sustain itself -- which is not the\nehuice of the main body of the people.\nAre then the inhabitants cf America\nand Europe so beside themselves as ;o\nnourish and defend such monsters for the\nexpress purpose of being crushed and de-\nvoured ,by them ? But perhaps they are\nblinded and do not understand the natiue\nof the thing they cherish. Let us'exam-in- e\nthen the constitution and statute book\nof any government in Christendom, and\nthough all are imperfect and contain ma-\nny unjust principles and unequal laws\nyet all are based upon an undoubted truth\nthe depravity of man , 6V aim at a benev-\nolent object the welfare ojthe community.\nA very targe proportion of the legislative\nenactments\nI ...
14686a5b9386918b826b6cf41f8f91f3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.2827868536228 39.745947 -75.546589 ■ trie lights put in thoii hall. Personal;\nMrs. Thom«» Draper of near Newport.|\nis entertaining her sister, Miss Lillian\nBarton of Marshallton. Mrs. Maggie\nLock, of Chester, recently visited neai\nhere. The Rev, Hamilton B. Phelpa of\nNewark, rector of St. Thom»»\nchurch, i« confined to his home with a\nhad “old. Airs. William Neville ha» re­\ncovered from a long illness. Mrs. Mat-\ntie .1 . Collins, of Union, recently enter­\ntained Mr». Lydia Hagerdy of South\nWood, Pa. Mrs. D. Dunlap, of Wil­\nmington. recently visited Elkton friends.\nMrs. Jordon, mother of John Jordon of\nnear Newark, who has been living with\nher son since the death of his wife, a\nyear ago, is ill. Mrs. James Polk, ot\nHookessin. entertained Airs. E . Hilyard\nof Newport last week. Mrs. James\nMeyers recently visited friends Mrs.\nA. II. Eastburn has lang, spending some\ntime recently with her par nt», Mr. and\nMrs. Robert S. Taylor, near here. Alias\nAlary A. McDaniel, of Kairview, »pent\nthe Easter holiday» with her parenls in\nWilmington. J . AA'. Skinner, of Mary­\nland, was a recent visitor here. Alis»\nMary Keeney, of St. Gertrude's College.\nRidgely, Md., has returned, after spend­\ning a few d»ys with friends here, Mrs.\nJennie Sinclair is quite ill at her home\nnf Kiamenai. .Mrs. Elmer Cornog, of\nWilmington, recently entertained her\nsister, Mrs. f^vigSr Banks. Mrs. Ada\nCollin»,, of Wilmington, was a recent.\nI visitor tu friends here. Mrs. Alfred\nGregg recently entertained Miss Elsie\nand Alis» Helen Kype. of Chadda Kord.\nPa. Mr. and Mrs. William Hann» aro\nentertaining their granddaughter, Atis»\nSara Rhoads, of Pennsgrove. Mr». K. J .
52c55aa8d13a8fc09516a127c087b4f5 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2205479134957 44.939157 -123.033121 The "Easter dress" nnd the "Easter\nhat" of modern times, so widely adver-\ntised by our city mcrchauts are there\nfore not In any way an Incongruity,\nbut emphasize the oplrlt of the day\nquite as much as the "Easter egg,"\nwhich is supposed to typify the germ\nof a resurrect Ion of life,\nSo that ns nil nature Is renewed nnd\nregurmenled lu the spring It Is lilting\nthat mankind should follow. Unable\nto renew the body, man does the next\nbest thing nud dons new garb.\nThe name Easter, according to tho\nVenerable Bede, Is heathen In Its ori\ngin, so called after the Saxon goddess\nEastre, who was worshiped with pe\nculiar ceremonies in the month of\nApril. In the eastern church it Is call\ned I'ascha the holy 1'asch, which\nwill be observed in the. Russian and\nGreek churches this year on April 14,\nthe Jewish pnssover falling on April 22.\nIn the second century there was a\ngreat dispute between the Asiatic and\nLatin churches regarding the proper\ndate for the celebration of the resur\nrection of Christ. As far as the Latin\nchurch was concerned, it was settled\nonce and for all at the council of Nlcaea\nIn the year 324. The fact thnt the an\ncient British church, when Augustine\nlanded, observed Enster nccordlng to\nthe Eastern custom,! urged as a rea-\nson for believing that Grent Hrltalu\nreceived her Christianity from the east\nnnd not from the west, from St. John\nrnther than from St. refer, from Antl-oc -\nnnd not from Home.
89fb65da9f3b4d4f1e9affbb1683402d THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5751365803987 39.290882 -76.610759 At an accidental meeting of a few Tippecanoe\nfriends, at 1-emiuonadt, Montgomery County,\nMd., the following picamble and,, resolutions\nwere presented, duly considered, and adopted\nwithont opposition; Mr. Frederick Duvall, aged\n76 years, keing called to the Chair, and they\nare forwarded with a request that they be inser-\nted in the "Pilot."\nWHERE is, pur people and our country are ina\nmur.h worse condition now, than they were in\nprevious to the great Jackson mania,and for this\nsingle reason, the sovereign people of the nation\nshould change their rulers, which would at once\nproduce a change of measuoes?a change of man-\nagement, and a change in the administration of\nour public affairs?tighten and make fast the\nloose hoops of the treasury of our country, and\nthereby stop all the great leaks thereof, and\ncause better times and make the people of our\ncountry more cheerful, contented and prosperous,\nwe have nothing to do but to go onward, in sol-\nid phalanx unbroken file and ranks, for the\nauspices arc as favorable as wc can desire, the\nwhole country being at this time aroused, and\nanimated with the most determined and indig-\nnant enthusiasm.\nAnd whereas, Martin Van Buren and his pre-\ndecessor have been busily engaged, for the last\ntwelve years, in a merciless wartare, against the\ncurrency of our colintrv, and against Banks, un\ntil thev have succeeded in breaking .down those\nuseful 'institutions, and thereby deprived us and\nour country of an uniformly sound currency,\nwhich was as good as gold, from t!-.e centre to\nthe outlines of the Union; and, notwithstanding\ntheir twelve year's hostility, they have monopo-\nlized, and would lock up nearly all the gold and\nsilver for their own use, thereby working out the\ncomplete ruin of the people and country gener-\nally, for their own selfish aggrandizement, and\nadvancement in wealth and power, and, in the\nlanguage of an able, eloquent and fearless rep-\nresentative in Congress,
0a3612011f2b210eca5f41eef4705e96 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.1219177765095 40.063962 -80.720915 No. 1, K, G. 13., J. A. liaker; Wheeling\nCity Castle No. 2, K. Ci. K., S. N. Hurst;\nGarlield Castle No. II, K. G. K ., Kdward\nMurrins, jr.; Crescent Castle No, 4, K.\n0.1C., Kdward Darby.\nThe olliuorsare ordered to be uniform¬\ned so as to be distinguished, as follows:\nChief Marshal, red sash, trimmed with\ngold; assistants, white sashes trimmed\nwith red; aides, blue sallies, trimmed\nwith white. All stall'ollicers arc order¬\ned to wear uniform caps of their respec¬\ntive organizations.\nThe parade is ordered to form iu Cen*\ntre market square with the right resting\non Twenty-third street, and move west\non Twenty-third to Main, to Twenty-\nfourth, to Chaplain, to Thirty-third, to\nKotf, to Twenty-seventh, to Chaplain,\nto Twentieth, to Market, to Sixteenth,\nto Wood, to Fourteenth, to Market, to\nTenth, to Main, to Fourteenth, to Mar¬\nket and south to countermarch.\nThe order of formation is ordered to\nbo as follows Ohio Valley Council No.\n21; all visiting Junior Mechanics; all\nvisiting Senior Mechanics; Washington\nCouncil No. 1; Hen Franklin, No. 2;\n(Jarlield, No. tt; Washington Camp No. 1:\nJ1. 0 . S . A.; Wheeling Ught Guards; all\n members of K. G . K . Castles;\nCentral Castle, No, 1, lv. G . E . Wheel¬\ning City, No. 2; Garlield, No. II; Cres-\nceut, No. 4; citizens on foot; Wheeling\nCouncil, No. 1, Jr. 0. U. A. M.\nThe order to march will be given at 2\no'clock sharp and organizations not iu\nline at that hour will not be waited for.\nIu case tho tj/iy is pleasant there will\nnrohablv be over eight hundred men iu\nline. Wheeling Council expects to turn\nout not less than 175 members.\nThe charter members of the new\nCouncil of the Junior Order of Mechan¬\nics that h;js ljeen formed here will meet\ntills evening at V :M0 o'clock at Hamuel\nN'esbitt's law oflice, on Market street, to\nsign the application for a charter and\ntransact some other business. This new\nCouncil is one composed largely of\nyoung professional men, and will, it is\nbejieyed, luiye a very rapid growth.\nThe Junior Order of Mechanics js becom¬\ning very popular here, and sis its prin¬\nciples become better known to the com¬\nmunities in which it has been estab¬\nlished, it is bound to grow iu popularity\nand public esteem,
2ce1566e340724127e6d32c948b2f816 THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1868.580601061273 36.294493 -82.473409 morning Mr. Neily walked over to if r. Ir\nvine sf carrying with him his gun, an bntield\nrifle. Finding llr. Irvine in hirHele, nearly\nat tbe 'op of the hill, at work, be called to\nbim, and Mr. Irvine and he seated themselves\non tbe fence, with their gnns (for no man\nnow went without one near them. Mr. Irvine's\nwas a common squirrel rifte. They biid talk\ned some time here when' they became aware\nof a peculiarly musky pdor pervading\nthe air. Tber bad felt it at first, but it did\naot excite their attention until it became\nsickening in its power.' Mr. Neilly looked\nunconsciously to see what conld produce It,\nand there, within, sixty, yards of them, and\njust above, lay the serpent, tbe object of their\ndread.' Their hrst impulse was io run, out\nafter they had involuntarily jumped from the\nfence they thought better of it, and, like \nmeii, as tbey are, they determined to fire on\nit. Tbey laid their guns "carefully on tbe\nfmce, the snake never moving, and taking de\nliberate aim. hred at Bis head. At tbe crack\nof the guns an awful crashing end slashing\nwas heard, and believing tne awiui.creaiure\nwas Upon them, they threw away tbetx guns\nand Bed lor dear life, nor did tbey stop until\nthe, reached the house.\nThe country wai quickly alarmed, and af.\ntera irood deal of careful reconnoitering, the\nspot was approached, to find the serpent\nnun, hut leariiu behind hira. such a great\ntrail ol blood they knew he was badly\nwounded. Without difficulty, they followed\nthis trail, and did not proceed more than two\nhundred yard) down beside the "fenoe before\nthey espied him, perfectly limp and dead.\nRut it look, seveial shots from a distance to\nconvince tbem of this before they dared to\namirnach.
1f33b129658290d9aa9db4885df8c7e6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.7657533929478 41.681744 -72.788147 tary contributions entirely with the\nexception of $250 given by the city\nthe past summer, and to continue the\nwork we need money, for, perhaps\ndue to the Red Cross and contribu-\ntions for abroad, our contributions\nhave fallen off. The work has grown\nso rapidly that two nurses have to\nbe employed and their whole time is\ngiven in keeping In constant touch\nwith our babies and all mothers wish-\ning assistance or advice they are\nready to help, for all this work- 'I - s\neducational and preventative.\nInfant Welfare work is uppermost\nin the minds of England at the pres-\nent day, for, although engulfed in\nwar, she does not fail to realize the\nwork among her babies must be car-\nried on and also poor France is doing\nall she can to save her own and\nfrom our own country physicians and\nnurses are going there especially to\nstudy Infant Welfare conditions and\n alleviate the suffering amongst\nthem. The question arises are we in\nthis country paying sufficient atten-\ntion to the necessity of Infant Welfare\nwork and are we '"doing all we should\nIn New Britain? Of course, with but\none station, we can not reach all we\nshould but they are brought from\ndifferent sections of the city, showing\nthe necessity for It, so let us not for-\nget our babies and, although there\nare those who feel they can not give\nmuch to support it, give your little,\nfor every little helps, and contribu-\ntions can be left with Miss O'Dell at\nthe Milk Station, corner Center and\nEast Main streets, or Miss Whittlesey,\n279 West Main street. Our babies\nwill be the future citizens of New\nBritain, if they are cared for and\nproperly fed now it will help them\nto be healthier and stronger and, In-\nstead of a burden to our city, be a\nhelp.
0379b23bdcac91ecc1e94efe57adf4d8 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.705479420345 41.020015 -92.411296 The action of the Pennsy lvania 'de­\nmocracy,'' in adopting the Ohio dec­\nlaration ot war upon the national\ncredit, is the latest and one of the\nmost significant indications of the vig­\norous growth of the repudiation sen­\ntiment since its formulation hv the\ndemocratic wire-pullers in 1808."\nThough expressed in somewhat dif­\nferent w ays, the propositions of the\n•democracy'in 18f>8 and lS7."> are es­\nsentially the same, ami necessarily "o\nto the same end. The proposition^,,\n"pay' the national debt in unpay able\npromises to pay was of course the\nsame as to pay debt with debt; that\nis. not to pay, or to repudiate the ob­\nligation of payment. The present\nproposition is not to pay the green­\nback debt at all, but. to increase anil\ncirculate it as-money' iu the payment\nof all debts; in other words it is to\npay debt with debt, or to repudiate\nthe obligation to pay at all. The 'de­\nmocracy'have changed their plat form\nof iu nothing but words. The\nsubstance, the meaning, the end pro­\nposed. is now. as it was then, repudi­\nation of the national obligations con­\ntracted ou account of the war.\nOf course, repudiation is not the\nend avowed. As in 1808, the Bourbon\nmanaging men darcil not to declare\nopenly for repudiation of the war\ndebt, so ihey dare not now. Public\nsentiment is no more ready now than\nit was then to swallow the pill with­\nout sugar-coating. The specious prop­\nosition of IKfW to-pay the public debt\nwith public delit styled 'lawful mon­\ney,' which government hail wrong­\nfully forced upon the people iu satis­\nfaction of private debts, was an al­\nluring one to the uneducated anil\nurnliitiking' masses. That bondhold­\ner* who had bought bonds with\ngreenbacks worth only 40 or 50 cents\nper dollar, should take greenbacks in\n'payment,' when they were worth 80\nor 90 cents, seemed fair and just to the\nman witli a loose idva of the nature
1e6e0dfe1c21e907f0887a140432288c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.3109588723999 40.063962 -80.720915 It is estimated tb-»i :he City of Wheel\ning pays about on" 3ix hundredth pai\nof the taxes of tbe (Jnited States. Thl\nis a signiiicmt fact if correct, and on\nthat should awaken borne attention i\nother,localitle», and especially at Was!\nington. Instead of paying tbat nndu\nproportion of the whole amount it\ncalculated that she ought not really t\npay more than one flve-tnousanm\npart, if that much. Her propori/oi\nwould be her ratio of populatioi\nas compared with the whole country\nBut making every discount am\nthe amount of tax falling t\nher equitable share would not be on\nfive-thousandtb part of the whole\nThere is something radically wrong\nor rather rotten, where one communit\nis raked and acraped by the tax-gatt\nerers, and other communities are passe\nover in the most superficial rnannei\nSupposing that every community i\nthe United States contributed to tfc\nGovernment Treasury as this one doe\nIt is estimated our taxes might L\nvery largely reduced, or, if notreducet\nthat the national debt might be rapid!\nHnan anil nntd ntf. The trOUbl\nIs plainly with the kind of assessoi\nship practiced in the multiiudi\nnous district* inlo which the country i\ndivided. All aorta of incapable an\ndinhonest men into these iinportar\npositions. Possibly the ohe-halfofthei:\nhave no proper understanding of th\nRevenue laws and of their duties unde\nthem. Through every variety of Ic\nfluence brought to bear upon them, ml'\nlions and tens of millions of dollar\nescape assessment. They are con ten\nto discharge their obligations in the mo*\nahiily-shally manner, knowing tha\ntheir pay is all the same, be their as\nttesam<»nts little or much. No doubt cor\nruptiou exerfs its share of influence ir\ndi niuishing the returns. For this lasl\ndefect there is ou remedy save in tht\nappointment of better men. But as u\nstimulus in many other cases it seems
0f31354f274f3d920332007bb72bdf0b WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1869.9602739408929 40.827279 -83.281309 U U now over fortr years rinoe this mecMcliie wu\nIffored m ft remedy for Worms, and from that tim\nits reputation has steadily increased until at the\npresent day it is almost mniTersally acknowledged\nthroughout' neatf y all parts of the world to be th\nsovereign remedy. Worm- - Confections, made more\nfor the purpose of pleasing the palate than of over-\nsowing the disease, have been manufactured all\nsrer the country ; but their short lease of life is\nuearljpaxhausted, and B. A. Fahnestoek's Vermifuge\nsontinuos to grow in favor dally. Children often\nlook pale and sickly from bo other cause than\nwwnw, and spasms are most frequently the ressll\nof these hidden sappen and miners.\nTfhen they are Irritable and feverish, sometime\nBraving food and eating ravenously, again refusing\nwholesome diet, tossing restlessly in moaning\nand grinding the teeth, then be assured these symp\nterns are indications of worms; .\nUneasiness and pain in the abdomen, with swell\nlag and hardness, are generally attendant upoa\nthe presence of these hidden sappers and miners.\nA gradual wasting away or emaciation of th\nflesh is one of the most common attendants upoi\nworms. They absorb the animal juices,\nthe nourishment imparted to the stomach by whole\nsoins diet, thereby occasioning a variable appotlt\nand a strong desire for indigestible food.\nTha atom ash has, undoubtedly, a very grew\nsympathy with other parts of the body.. This it\nthe ease with respect to the irritation produced bi\nworms, especially those existing in the stomace\nItself. They give rise to many other diseases, an\npatients often suffer incredibly without being awan\nof the cause.
442b107eb11d012f1ee3f45428bd8e90 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.9385245585408 37.53119 -84.661888 In her apartments lu a New York\nhotel charged with aiding aod abet-\nting a bank oOlolal In erabenUog 112\n60O from the Cttlisns National Dank\nof Ohorlln Ohio A preliminary hear\nleg before a United States oommlasloo\ner will be given the prisoner\nMiss Mary Bell Kirk of Martluoouo\nty a niece of Circuit Judge Kirk was\nfound fatally wounded on a railroad\ntrack over In Weet Virginia In a\nstatement before her death she declar ¬\ned thus Dig Moec Evans a notorious\ncharacter of that ootlon shot her bo\noaue she would sot marry him\nIn an affidavit filed before Judge Ben\nton at Winchester Tuesday Mrs Ab\nrelU Marcum In her suit for 3100000\ndamages aealoat former Senator Alex\nUargl Judge James Hargls Sheriff\nEd Callahan sod B F French charged\ntbat defendants had enticed away three\nof her main witnesses She asked for\na rule of contempt tbe defend ¬\nants and that a special bailiff be ap ¬\npointed to secure the witnesses The\nbatlltl was appointed but the contempt\nproceedings will not be taken up until\nafter the present trial\nThe court of appeal by a majority\nopinion written by Judge Barker and\nooncurred In by Judges Settle Burnam\nund ORear for tbe third time revers ¬\ned the Judgment of tbe Scott olroult\ncourt granting Caleb Powers a new\ntrial At hie last trial he was given\nthe death penalty for conspiracy In\nconnection with the murder of William\nGoebe4 Judges Paynter Hobton and\nNuun dissented Judge Payntor writ\nlog a dissenting opinion which was\nconcurred In by Judge Nunn Judge\nBarker also handed down a separate\nopinion dealing with the formation of\ntbotrlal Jury the alleged Federal quos ¬\nLIDO Involved Id another opinion\nJudge ORear concurs In iLe separate\nopinion of Judge Barker
142d493c55b10323b6a9e94d7692be12 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.6178081874682 40.832421 -115.763123 for nature does nothing in vain; so that\nif a single mouthful more of food has been\nswallowed than the untomptcd or unstim¬\nulated appetite would have called for,\nthere is no gastric juico for its solution,\nnnd it remains to fret nnd worry for hours\ntogether. If the amount cnten is much\nin excess, the stomach, as if in utter dis¬\ncouragement at the magnitude of its task,\nceases its attempts at digestion, and forth¬\nwith commences tho process of cjectiug\nthe unnatural load by means of nausea\nand vomiting in some cases; in others,\nit remains for an hour or more like a\nweight, a hard, round ball, or a lump 01\nlead, an uneasy heaviness; then it begius\nto "sour," that is, to decompose, to rot,\nand the disgusting gas or liquid comes up\ninto tho throat, causing moro or less of a\nscalding sensation from the pit of the\nstomach to thu throat; this is called\n"hoartburn." At length, tho half-rotted\nmixture is forccd out of the moutli by the\n stomach with thathorriblo taste\nand odor with which every glutton is\nfamiliar. In suiiio cases the stcnchy mass\nis passed out of the stomach downwards,\ncausing, in its progress, a gush of liquid\nfrom all parts of tho intestinal canal, to\nflash it, with a flood, out of tho system;\nthis is tho "Diarrhea" which surprises the\ngourmand ut midnight or in tlie early\nmorning hours, ^rheu alateorover-honrty\nmeal has been eaten. 'When sufficient\nfood has been taken for tho amount 01\ngastric juice supplied, hunger ceases, and\nsvery mouthful supplied after that, no\ngastric juice having been prepared for its\nlissolution, remains without any health-\nful change, inflauiiog, irritating, aud ex-\nuausting the stomach by its efforts to get\nrid of it, and this is the first step toward\n"dyspepsia," which becomes moro and\nmore deeply fixed by «very repeated out-\nruge, until at length itremuinsa life-time\nworry to the mintl, filling it with horrible\nimaginings,* and a wearing, wasting lor-\nturo to tho body until it passes into the\ngrave. i
3cfe3d59017e4fad8e676052fbf9a456 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1903.8260273655505 39.756121 -99.323985 for the lambs. As the ewes bring\nthem into the warm stable, where the\npens have already been prepared, ex\namine the udder, draw some milk, so\nthat the lamb will get It more freely,\nclean all the wool and filth away from\naround it, so that the lamb will have\nno trouble in getting hold of the teat.\nIf the lamb is strong, don't be in too\ngreat a hurry to get him to suck, he\nwill soon find the teat, and the loss\nthey are handled the better. If the\nlamb is weak, assist it to the teat,\nholding it up for a few times, or until\nhe finds his legs. If too weak to suck,\ndraw some milk from the ewe into a\nwarm tea cup, feeding two or three\nspoonfuls at a time, until strong\nenough to help itself. If a lamb Is\nchilled and apparently lifeless, pour a\nteaspoonful of gin in a little warm\nwater down its throat, and submerge\nit once, all but head, in warm\nwater, or put in a warm oven. The\nlatter, the hot air cure, I think Is\nmuch the surest plan. I have brought\nround lambs In that way that have\nbeen picked up for dead. Never give\nup a lamb that has been chilled and\nnever sucked, without trying one of\nthe aforesaid methods for its recov\nery; the chances for that lamb living\nare a good deal better than for an\nailing lamb a few days or a week old\nAs the lambing progresses, the shep\nherd will have observed that some\newes are much heavier milkers than\nothers, and that the poor milkers very\noften have twins; put one of the twins\non a ewe with a single lamb and a\ngood milker. The best and easiest\nplan Is to pick out a ewe giving indl\ncations of being a good mother, and\nwatch for her lambing. As soon as\nshe has lambed, and before she gets\nup, place the twin lamb beside the
1a1cc693dc10afb79cb04a60b4b8e57b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.0178081874683 41.004121 -76.453816 places of tho state capital there have been\nposted conspicuously lithographs of the\ncandidates. By tho sldo of Senator Pon- ros - o\nappears a plcturo of Senator Quay, as\nif to add strength to his candidate's causa\nWith tho lithograph of Mr. Wanamaker Is\nseen that of Prosldont Elect McKlnley.\nFlags aro lavishly displayed, and tho city\nI s attired in holiday dress at those points\nat which tho friends and supporters of the\ntwo candidates are gathered. Tho Business\nMen's leaguo occupies an entiro building\non Walnut Ktroot, opposite tho postofllco.\nHero, too, clcctrlo lights shlno forth and\nthe national colors are seen In profusion.\nOn tho first floor of the building havo boon\nplucod rows of chairs to bo usod at tho\nmeetings, and elaborate arrangements\nhavo been completed for tho comfort of \nmembers. Hotels and business housos havo\nput on their gayest dress, nnd there Is tho\ngreatest enthusiasm over the contest\namong the friends of both candidates.\nThere is, as might be expected on an oc\ncasion of this kind, an unusually largo\nnumber of visitors and strangers in tho\ncity, some of them hero as lookers on, oth\ners as participants in the greatest senato\nrial struggle In the state's history. Of\ncourso this condition acts favorably on the\ncapital city businoss man, and ho looks\non complacently and wishos that like strug-\ngles occurred more frequently.\nThe largo park about the state buildings\ngives evidenco that a flcrco strugglo is on,\nand tho placards announcing tho head-\nquarters of both Mr. Penrose and Mr.\nWanamaker are more numerous than on\nany provlous occasion,
00b58dfb40bf927c13a629a515ef64ec THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.7493150367834 40.832421 -115.763123 tlie uiaiutaluii-JCa of the Uuiou? Who\ndisplayed tbe greater pa'.uoism, tli-\nusurer or tha *>ldi*r? Tin United\nS'.utes bouils were purchased at uti av¬\nerage of but little, if n' y. over fifty\nCent* ou the dollar d 1 1 ii;» ille war; that\nis tj way a lunu with SJ'i.llJU iu coiu\ncould extb itig» it fur j> ii»»UGU in green-\nbacks mid exchange th-ui for an equ I\n¦.ui Hint in 0.2 . bonds, tlis ptlucpal ot\nivliicil uras pi) able in rUTelicy, but tb*\ninterest was pay dile in coiu. Iu tiie\nmeiutiuic. tlie aul lier in the Si- Id took\ngrecubaoka at par far li s wagi ». oven I\nwhen lliey aero worth b it f >ity Cents\nou lUti dolar iu coin. About tha\ntime tbo law was passed bnikiug\nttiepriucip.il of Ilia bands payable in\ncoin, a bill was introduced iu Congress\nfur the paysn-'Ut of th*» sold. era an\nequivalent fur the di-cooM they bad\nMiataiue 1 owili^ lo the depreciation id\ngxenliicka. Hut uti; such an idea\ncould not l>a enttrtniiied, but Buy Ac:\n 'okilig t o tbo iuci.a-eof the wealth n(\nthe wealthy waini'O ti meet with ii\nhi arty appro* il. The liniu alia has]\nhi* wealth invested ill stock or n al r>-\ntateis citupell-dtocome up «noliy.ur\nwi.h bis pr-ip.trlion of tas-a . nudtVuu\nthe ex-snldiri*, who perhaps b is 1 i-t a\nluub iu tliu scru.e of bm couLtry, who\nis foitiiunlo Mu.ugU to own a little\npropeity, luuetali) pay his propoitinu\nof tue UpoliUM I f the State and t'ollii-\nty. This is rigid, but wo buhl tbitll\nis not light(or the mail who h s I.is\nw altll tUVrkt -d 111 United ht tas bonds\nto lie exempt from bearing bis just pro- j\nportion of tlixali'ju. We btlleVn that\nthe United S'.utes bonds klnuM le\ntaxail. to the eiai (h it rich auii p >or\nitlikw h i. ill each bear his jilrt propor-\ntioii of i he bur-leus < f taX itlOD, ami\nthus the wuigbt born . by tha poor mid\nlh> sn if moderate lurnna would be ma-\nt-riu ly re luce 1. io-ie should lie no\npr.Vil.- g
07c658569c4398ecaa8587c9417af0fd NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.4041095573314 40.735657 -74.172367 Montclair; William Collier, aged 7, Stu-\nbtn street, East Orange; Alfred Young,\naged 11, 22 Oakland terrace, Newark;\nVictor Jackson, aged 11, 495 Springfield\navenue, Newark; Arthur Kleppe, aged\n9, 187 Ironwood avenue, Montclair; Joe\nSchuh, aged 12, 494) Fifteenth avenue;\nBenjamin Unger, aged 12, 380 Hunter-\ndon street; Jacob Foerster, aged 12,\n784 South Seventeenth street; Jeruld C.\nDuffy, aged 14, Cedar Grove, X. J.;\nRobert Linch, aged 10, 35 Washburne\nstreet, Jersey City; Louis Kugel, aged\n12, 306 Eighteenth avenue; George Re-\ngan, aged 11, 42 Bergen street; Charles\nBreder, aged 11, 754 Fairmount avenue.\nJersey City; James Stokle. aged 0, 234\nEast Kinney street; Harry Lauer, aged\n13, 41 Pierce Htreet; Nicholas Salvatore,\naged 13, 56 Sussex avenue; Harry Rant-\nman, aged 8, 334 Littleton avenue; Mer-\nedith Dowd, aged 14, 76 Berkeley ave-\nnue; Whitney McMahon, aged 12, 1238:n\nBroad street; Harold Henderson, aged\n 847 South Fifteenth street; Alfred\nRose, aged 13, 13 Miller street; Jacob\nWnecht, aged 11, 75 Wall street; C.\nBaxter, aged 8, 817 South Seventeenth\nstreet; Emil Hoos, aged 14, 622 Fulton\nstreet, Elizabeth; Frederick Nessmann,\naged 12, 79 Lincoln place, Irvington;\nLillie R. Rothwell, aged 10, 93 Freling-\nhuysen avenue; Gertrude B£.tallle, aged\n9, Burnet avenue, Hilton; Bessie Wurth,\naged 12, Washington street; Hattie\nCarlson, aged, 12, 162 Sherman avenue;\nEthel White, aged 10, 11 Linden ave-\nnue; Jeanle Stewart, aged 9, 201 South\nThird street, Harrison; Vere Pennell,\naged 11, 22 Baldwin street; Mable Hol-\ncombe, aged 14, 76 Johnston avenue,\nKearny; Grace Appel, aged 10, 341 Lit-\ntleton avenue; Gladys Parsons, aged 13,\n67 Hillside avenue; Ruth Oliver, aged\n13, 559 Market street; Fannie Sachs,\naged 10, 762 Hunterdon street.\nMildred Huckock, aged 10, 701 Hun-\nterdon street; Annie Rogers, aged 8,\n17 Bowery street;
1f67bfc789a9780c3c892e8a2ef27517 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1899.6095890093861 32.612638 -90.036751 Juat as the sun is setting on\nthe nineteenth century it is a\nmatter of suppise how any sane\nman should willingly desire to\nretrograde. Yet here in our\nown state we see some foolish\nnewspapers clamoring for an\nopen field for the quacks and\ncharlatans. However on second\nthought one should not feel much\nsurprise at anything emanating\nfrom some of our little country\npapers which are swayed by\nevery passing breeze and glibly\nrecite some man's views that they\nhave just this morning read.\nAbout a month ago a Canton\npaper had a windy and querel-o- us\neditorial on the subject in\nwhich nc small amount of igno-\nrance was exhibited in stating\nthat the state board, of medical\nexaminers had deprived a large\nnumber of men from making a\nliving by refusing them license\nto practice their profession in\nwhich they were declared com-\npetent by the colleges graduat-\ning them . The writer, said to\nbe a doctor, by the way, also\ninveighs against what he is\npleased to call the illegality of\nany such proceeding and terms\nit class legislation and winds up\nin an appeal to the legislature to\nwipe all health laws off the\nstatute books, and let it be every\nman for himself. First as to the\nlegality, every supreme oourt in\nevery state where the matter has\nat all come up has decided that\nrestrictions around the practice\nof medicine are not only just,\nbut are necessary. The state-\nment that these gentlemen ap-\nplying were all graduates is not\nborne out by the facts, as may\nbe seen by the appended state-\nment:
0695abd5e82c930728bce46579d27d17 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1913.8315068176053 34.51147 -110.079609 months. Mr. Houck had been in\nextreme poor health for nearly\ntwo years, but remained assidu-\nously attending to his official du-\nties at the court house until about\nfive months ago, at which time\nhe was induced by his friends to\ngive up his work and seek med-\nical aid with a view of repairing\nhis health. He took a leave of\nabsence and went to Winslow,\nwhere he remained under the\ncare of Dr. Hathaway for sev-\neral weeks, returning to his work\nvery much built up in both health\nand spirits, but unfortunately he\nhad only a short time to remain\nat his post of duty, as he soon\nfound his health failing him\nagain, and he returned to Wins-\nlow to consult his physician, but\nbefore anything could be done\nfor his benefit he stricken\nwith paralysis of the left side\nand subsequently other similar\nstrokes, which kept him confined\nto his room and finally got the\nupper hand and mastered his\nstrong constitution,\nMr. Houck was a man of un-\nusual ability in a clerical line,\nwhich peculiarly fitted him for\noffice work, and which calling he\nfollowed most of his life, being\nemployed in that capacity for\nseveral years by the Santa Fe\nRailroad company at Raton and\nGallup, New Mexico, before com-\ning to Winslow about ten years\nago, where he was similiarly en-\ngaged until being appointed de-\nputy county recorder by Mr. Hess\nnearly five years ago, taking full\ncharge of the office until the last\ngeneral election, when he was\nelected county recorder, which\noffice he held at the time of his\ndeath.
01f2c578999d27c17c82e62a27deb75d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.732876680619 31.960991 -90.983994 was a lad of nineteen or twenty, in a jacket and 1 We hope these letters will be generally perused\ntrowsers, entirely black, and as ugly and ill j by the people of the South, for they reveal tbe se-\nshaped a negro as you could easily find. His cret °f the great comparative prosperity of the\nhands showed that he had been used to hard i Northern States of our Union over that of the\nwork, and ho had evidently newly arrived ini South, and point out to us the way, and the only\nLondon. The ladies were making a pet of him. | way, by which we can improve our own condi-\nOne caught hold of his arm, and pointed to a tion, and take our stand by the side of our Nor-\nbust, and another pulled him to see a statue and ; them brethren. We have a practical object in\nthey were evidently enjoying the sights only view in the publication of these letters. Wede-\nthrough his astonishment. The figure of the sjre to S^10VV and convince the people of the\nnaked saint, asleep, with the cross in her bosom, South, and particularly of Alabama—vea of our\ndid not seem to shock the but did seem owa L'ûy of Mobile—that if they would promote\nto shock the negro. These ladies were probably their own interests, advance the wealth and\nenthusiasts in anti-slavery, and had got a protege sources of the State, and make Mobile what she\nwho was interesting as having been a slave.—• should be—a place of active business the year\nAt least, this was the only theory I could build round, instead of the dull and deserted village she\nto account for their excessive interest in him— now ,s> during the six long, lazy, loafing months\nbut one need not be an American to wonder at *rom May to November— they must do something\ntheir mode of amusing him. I see daily blacks, besides raise cotton, they must diversify their\nwalking with white women, and occupying seats pursuits, they must engage in manufacturing.—\nin the dress-circle of theatres, quite unnoticed We intend, ere long, to bring the facts presen-\nby the English; but it was a degree too much to ted 'n these letters, and others that are to follow,\nsee a black boy in a fair way to have his taste cor- home to our own citizens, and point out to them\nrupled by white ladies!
04e3c863969eb2e0bdb6118d975f67fe IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.2062841213824 43.82915 -115.834394 J. D. Ilockafellor, of tho Standard\nOil company was examined recent­\nly by the senate trust commit­\ntee. He said the company, of which\nhe is president, has a capital of $3,-\n600,000. He is a member of the\nStandard Oil trust, which is not in­\ncorporated, but based on written\nagreement. He produced the agree­\nment, asking that its contents be kept\nfrom the press, as it contained private\nmatters. From five to fifty companies\nhave entered the trust, but he would\nnot state definitely how many. The\ncapital is 190,000,000. The oil pro­\nduct of the company is about twen-\nty-aeven million barrels a year\nand three-fourths of this is controlled\nby the trust. Certificates aro worth\n♦ 165, par value $100. In 1887 share­\nholders received 20 por cent, more\nstock and in addition a dividend of\n10 per cent. Dividends have been\ndrawn «very three months, tho aver­\nage being 71 per cent, annually.\nTwenty million dollars has been ad­\nded to tho seventy million with which\nthe concern started. This has been\ngiven as stock dividends in addition\nto the regular dividends. A number\nof small refineries have been closed\nand now machinery put in. The num­\nber of refineries has boon increased\nconstantly. Tho trust is doing little\nto prevent production. Tho trust\nonly owns tho stock of small wolls,\nwhose production is about 200 barrels\na while the total production is\n100,000 barrels a day. The trust\nowns ths stock of pi]>e lines, one of\nwhich brings oil to the seaboard\nthrough tubes. About $30,000,000\nof tho trusts capital represents the\nplant of the pipe lines, A majority\nof the stook is held by tho present\ntrustees. A synopsis of the trust\nagreement, which was executed Jan­\nuary 20, 1887, shows a division of\nthose entering into the agreement in­\nto three classes, and the names of\nthose in each class arc given. The\npurposes of the trust are to mine tho\nproduct, manufacture, refine and dual\nin petroleum and all its products and\nall material used in such business, and\nto transact other business connected\ntherewith. The parties agree to form\na corporation under tho laws of Ohio,\nNew York, Pennsylvania and New\nJeisey, such corporations to bo known\nas the Standard Oil company of each\nstate. The trustees are given power\nto purchase bonds and stocks of other\ncompanies. Kaoti trustee is entitled\nto a salary not exceeding $25,000\na year, and the president may be vot­\nai) $30,000. Uookafeller said tho\ntrust had but little to do with produc­\ning oil. Tho business is almost en­\ntirely with refining and transporting\nit. Tho company owned oil cars and\nis interested in natural gas, and con­\ntrols the stook of several such com­\npanies. It employs 25,000 men.
266718c523bfba547dae73ffb0e99457 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.6232876395231 37.451159 -86.90916 Cut a stiff piece of paper into an oval\nor a circle of nearly the size of a com\nmon tea tray Fasten to It two upright\nhandles one on each end both made of\npaper and attach by means of sealing\nwax says the San Francisco Chronicle\nNow take any common tin tray that\nyou may be able to borrow in the house\nand lay it on the top of two glasses\nThese will furnish the Insulation\nWarm the paper disk thoroughly on\nilthe stoye until it Is as dry as it can pos\nAUyHie Then lay it on the table and\nbrush it violently with a common\nclothesbrnsh If you spread a piece of\nsilk or rubber sheet under it so much\nthe better though it is not necessary\nThe friction has made the paper elec\n Lift it from the table lay it on\nthe tray and approach the corner of\nit with the knuckles of your finger or\nwith a sharp metal point A spark\nwill leap out from it immediately\nNow you have an electric battery in\na most simple form By rubbing the\npaper aa often as it loses Itoelectricity\nit ia possible to get enough sparks to\nload a Leyden jar or any other form of\nsmall storage battery\nIA very simple Leyden jar can be madeI\nby filling a tumbler half full withI\nshot and sticking an iron or silver spoon\nInto it By letting the sparks from the\ntea tray leap continually to the spoorI\nthe tumbler jar finally will accu\nmulate so much electricity that it willI\nbe extremely uncomfortable to get a\nshock from it
023a199f82edb65c0e9f930d6d2d1d28 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.8945205162354 40.827279 -83.281309 ommends the following method : " To\nevery one hundred pounds of pork, take\neight pounds ground Asliton salt, two\nounces saltpetre, two pounds brown sugar,\none and a half ounces of potash, and four\ngallons of water. Mix the nlove and\nK)iir the brine over the meat, after it has\nlain in the tub some two days. Let the\nhams remain six weeks in brine, and then\ndried several days lefore smoking. I have\ngenerally had the meat rubbed with fine\nsalt when it was packed down. The meat\nshould be perfeclly cool before packing."\nThe Commissioner of Patents, in his\nannual report, will present an array of\nfacts showing the rapid advancement of\ninventions in the Lnited States, and an\nincreased business of the Patent Office\nover former years. Additional legisla-\ntion will be called for toward bringing\nabout some change in the system now\ncarried out in that office, and the atten-\ntion of Congress directed to the necessity\nof increased accommodations for this\nbranch of the public service. The en-\ncroachments of the Patent Bureau on the\naccommodations of other branches of the\nInterior Department calls for the erection\nof a building exclusively for its use.\nA new mill for grinding wheat by \ncussion, while it is unsupKrted and fall-\ning freely, or being projected through the\nair, is in operation in Edinburg. The\nwheat, in passing through the machine, is\nstruck by a series of bars moving at an\nimmense speed in opposite directions; it\nis thus instantaneously reduced to a state\nready for bolting, no injurious heat being\ncaused, and the flour produced is of much\nsuperior quality to that obtained by or-\ndinary grinding, while the cost of its pro-\nduction is considerably less. The advan-\ntages are, the very light and rarely needed\nrepairs it "requires compared with mill-\nstones ; the fewer men required, and con-\nsequent saving in wages; the exemption\nfrom loss by scorching ; the small ground\nand space occupied ; and the much less\ndriving power needed.\nWarm Cellars. A correspondent\nwrites to Hearth and Home : " If anv of\nour readers wish to keep their cellars\nwarm not warm enough to eat and sleep\nin, but warm enough to preserve their\nstores of roots from frost they can find\nno better way of doing it than by pasting\nfour or five thicknesses of brown paper,\nor old newspaper, against the walls, and\nacross the joists of the floor above.
116ba581cc30c3d445208c217c17a401 THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1893.0123287354136 40.8 -96.667821 though the crops of 1889 and 180\nnearly equaled it. The area as esti-\nmated is 35,554.430 acres; product,\n515.W5.000 buhhels; value, 5322,111 . 881 .\nIn the revision of acreage the princi-\nple changes are made in some states\nin which the decline of the p-i-\ntwelve years has been heavier than\nhad beca reported. There has also\nbeen a considerable enlargement of\nbreadth the past .vearin several West-\nern states. The rate of yield is 13.4\nbushels per acre. The average value\nper bushel, 02.4 cents is the lowest\navers g.? value ever reported, that of\n1881 being 64.5 cents and that of 1887\nbeing 6S. 1 cents. The average of the\ncrop of 1801 was 83.9 cents. The weight\nof measured bushels will be deter-\nmined later, but it is probable that \nacreage above will be equivalent to\nnearly 500,000 ,000 commercial bushels.\nThe corn crop is short, exceeded in\nquantity seven times in the last ten\nyears, and only slightly larger than in\n1883, 1887 and 1890. Its average yield\nper acre, 23.1 bushels, has been ex-\nceeded six times in ten years. The area\nis considerably reduced, the reduction\nbeing very heavy in the corn produc-\ning regions, though offset in part by\nincrease in the Atlantic states and\nthroughout tho entire cotton belt. In\nthe valleys of the Ohio and Missouri\nplanting was retarded andlimited by\nheavy rains which prevented plow-\ning. The breadth, as estimated, is\n70,620 ,858 acres. Tho production is\n1.028,404 ,000 bushels; value $642,140, -03 - 0,\naveraging 30.3 cents per bushel.\nThe estimated acreage of oats is
71e06820f95930be18462d6256b1d878 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.3273972285642 39.369864 -121.105448 “The world will bend the pregnant hinges\nof the knee at the shrine of Mammon, while\nhonest poverty goes weeping to the grave\nwith here and there a solitary friend. Wealth\nis power—and power is the prerogative of\ndespots. The chief object in the establish-\nment of our Democratic sjstem of govern-\nment, was to weaken as much as possible,\nthis oppressive attribute of wealth; therefore,\nwhen we find plain American citizens, either\non steamboats, or elsewhere, making invidi-\nous distinctions among other Americans sim-\nply on account of dollars and cents, we have\na right to denounce those who do it as snobs\nand flunkies. These kinds of distinctions\nare being made continually, both on land\nand water, and itis for this very reason that\nour whole nation is becoming a sort of a\nbogus reflex of wealth-worshiping Europe.”\n honest anger which fires this extract\nextorts our admiration, and must come from\none who would never be guilty of the snob-\nbishness he contemns. Still, we arc not\nconverted from our delusion that mean sub-\nserviency to wealth, amongst Americans, is\nonly a hateful exception and not the rule.\nWo love to believe, with Emerson, that men\nare better than we know, and that it is the\nbest policy in our intercourse with them to\ncredit them with the best traits until they\nprove by their actions that they do not pos-\nsess them. It has been our good fortune—-\nwe say it without latent irony—to be always\npoor, and our experience has certainly led\nus, even in California, to love human nature\nas the very noblest thing on Gods earth; we\nhope to live and die believing it so.
18875ca3252d851430ca9ab4ee6167ea MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1884.4685792033495 39.78373 -100.445882 a long Latin name attached to it.\nThe people of the Territory almost\nas a unit demanded the execution\nof a cowardly, deliberate, thieving\nmurderer, hut the lawyers threw\nthemselves in a body between the\nmurderer and the people, and in-\nsisted on another year's or so de-\nlay until certain constitutional\nquestions could be looked into.\nHow different it was when three or\nfour years ago at midnight the as\nsassin, Hopt, Btole up behind his\nvictim, with whom he had been\nchatting pleasantly a few moments\nbefore, and without a word of warn\ning brained him with an ax. Did\npoor Turner have any time to in\nquire into question of constitutional\nlaw? "Where were all these con\nstitutional lawyers then? At home\nprobably studying up new\ntechnicality with which the statute\nbooks might be encumbered, to the\neffect that the mazes of the law\nmight be made more and more\nwinding and perplexing, and the\nlawyers might charge higher fees to\npoint out the way. It seems every\nyear harder and harder to convict\nand execute murderers. When\nthe crime is fully proven and even\nadmitted and the day of execution\nnamed, a lot of technical lawyers are\nsure to jump in and ask that justice\nbe still delayed. The idea seems\nabsolutely abhorrent to the legal\nprofession that a convicted mur\nderer should be hung. A well con-\nducted and successful . execution\nseems tothemtobe a sort ofare-\nflection upon their capacity for\nwinding red tape about a trial.\nTHE EliKtrWHAb twlE.
16f35ff666889986d4d3943ebdc466c3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.6051912252074 42.217817 -85.891125 A fruit farm of CO acres 43 acres of which is\nimproved and the remaining 15 acres covered\nwith nice tuuDer. with a living stream of water\nrunning accros it. There is an orchard of\n10U0 Fruit Trees on tbe place, 700 of which are\nPeach, principally of the Crawford variety, all\nthe other trees are grafts of the choicest kinds.\nI can truthfully say tbat we are just as sure of\na crop of peaches as they are on the Lake hore\nand I claim 100 per cent, advantage ever them\non sales for the reason tbat our fruit ripens\nfrom ton days to two weeks earlier, thereby\ngiving us a chance to supply the markets before\nthe Lake Shore rush comes on. Another ad\nvantage is that we aro on the Michigan Central\nR. 11. halfway between Detroit and Chicago\nand can ship to either point twice a dav. j\nThere aro 1500 Evergreens on the farm, a por-\ntion of which will bo large enough to sell this\nFail. A meadow of 10 acres ; wheat on \nground that looks well. The location of the\ntarm is beautiful, being but 1 ; miles from\nPaw Paw, over a hard gravel roadand at which\npoint there is a good depot to ship from. The\nbuildings are all new, haviw: been built but\ntwo years, and well painted. The house is\nwoll ticibhed with ail the conveniences iiieide\nand everything to make it pleasant outside a\nsloriug yard in front with nice evergreens to\nmake it beautiful. The buildings at a low\ndiure are worth -- 2000. There aro SC0O feet of\nlumber, mostly pine boards, and 3000 feet of\nfencing. There are two acree of ground in tip\ntcp condition to set out to peach trees m the\nspring. I will make this ofler to anv one tbat\nbuys the place before the first day of Mav, 1372.\nI will put in $10u0 worth of tools aud stock for\n300, also, furnish peach trees to set on the\ntwo acres of ground that is prepared for that\npurpose. The farm ;s free from all encum-\nbrances.
5a3624cdcf4399273b624abdd542655b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.028767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 Dear Ned,-no doubt you'll bo wrprlwd\nWhen yon receive and read thin letter,\nI've rolled iwalnat the marriage »tate.\nBat then, you aeo, I know no better.\nI've met a lovely girl out hero.\nHer manner Ik.well.very winning;\nWe're noon to be,-well, Ned, my dear,\nI'll tell you all from the beginning.\nT «rnnt »n naif her out to ride.\nLust Wednesday,.It wan perfect weather;\nShu wild alio couldn't, possibly,\nTho servants had gono off togother.\n(Hibernians always rush away,\nAt cousins' ftinvralN to bo looking.)\nPica must ho made, and she must stay.\nShe said, to do that branch of cooking.\n"Oh. let mo help you," then I cried:\nTil bo a cooker, too,.how Jolly 1"\nShe laughed, and answered, with a emile,\n"All right! but you'll repent your folly;\nFor I shall bo a tyrant, sir,\nAnd good hard work you'll have to grapple;\nSo alt down there, and don't yon fltlr,\nBut take that kulfe and pare that apple."\n8ho rolled her sleeve abovo her arm,.\nThat lovely arm, ho plump and rounded;\nOutside, the morning sun shone bright;\nInside, tho dough she deftly pounded, -*?\n little Angers sprinkled flour.\nAnd rolled tho piecrust up in manses;\nI passed the most dellghtfm hour\n^Mld butter, sugar, and molusses.\nWith deep reflection, hor sweet eves\nGazed on each pot and ]>an and kettlo;\nShe sliced the apples, filled her pies,\nAnd then tho upper crust did settle.\nller rippling waves of golden hair\nIn one great coll were tightly twisted;\nBut locks would bruak it, here and there,\nAnd curl about where'er they listed.\nAnd then her sleeve came down, aud 1\nFastened it up,.her hands were doughy;\nOh, it did tako tho lougest time,\nHer arm, Ned. was so fair and snowy I\nShe blushed, and trembled, and looked shy;\nSomehow, that made me ull t he bolder:\nTin- omIi Ilnu lnnlfixl an mil Ihnl T\nWoU-buuihtr head upon my ehoultlcr.\nWe're to be married, Ned, next month;\nConic nntl attend the wedding revel*.\n1 really think llint Imholurj\nAre the moi*t tnltteralilo dovlU I\nYou'd hotter go for some glrl'H hand;\nAnd U you are uncertain whether\nYou dare to make u due deinuml.\nWhy, JuMt try conking lile* together.\n. Harvard Advocate.
030102bf3070fcd5e4a8c9b186d5b899 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1888.1106557060818 41.004121 -76.453816 Bolivia is doubtless the richest In minerals\nof any land on the globe, and milUons upon,\nmillions of precious metal have been takao\n.out of her mines by the primitive process\nwhich stiU exists, and must eaist till rail,\nroads aro constructed to carry machinery,\nthere. Every ounce of ore that finds its way\nout of the Andea is carried on the back ot a\nman or a llama, and the quartz Is crushed by\nrolling heavy logs upon it By this method\nBolivia exports from tl3,000,000 to 115,000, -00 - 0\nof gold and silver annually, and th out-\nput would be fabulous if modern machinery\ncould be taken into the mines. The dittita'oa\nfrom Jujuy to the farthest mining district\not Bolivia is TOO miles, and it Is no further\nto the diamond fields of Brazil,\nBolivia offers a grant of twelrtl square\n of land and fW,000 a mil for the ex.\ntension ot the Argentine Northern to Sucre,\nand English capitalists are ready to continue\nthe work as toon as the Argentine govern-\nment drops it at the boundary line. When\nit it built the owners of this road wiU hold\nthe key to a country which baa excited the\ncupidity of adventurers since tha Nsw World\nwas discovered. It has furnished food for\ntour centuries of fable, and armies of men,\nhave died in search of Its treasures.\nA territory as large as that whlsh lies be-\ntween the Mississippi river and the Rocky\nmountains remains entirely unexplored. On\nit borders are the richest of agricultural\nlands, immenso tracts of timber, diamond\nstrewn streams, and the silver and gold de-\nposits ot Cerro de Pasco and Potosl. What\nUea within li the subject of simulation.
025899454993a4d1270146d963466b50 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.0232240120927 29.949932 -90.070116 house was not a very full one, and with the ex-\nception of in some of the proeceniam boxes, there\nwere no full evening dresses in the house.\n" Oliver Twist" on Wallsck's boards, with Wal-\nlack'seast,is drawing tremendous houses--\nnot standing room enough is there for the people\nwho want to witness it. This issoon to be ended\nby the departure of J. W. Wallack and E. L.\nItvenport for Washington next week, where they\nopen a theater on joint account.\n'Ihe papers are urging a very good and chari-\ntable scheme, indorsed by thousands here, to set\napart one skating pond in the Park, where an ad-\nmission fee, of say twenty-five cents, shall be\ncharged and appropriated to some benevolent use,\nthereby benefiting the poor of the city in these\nextremely hard times.\nThe idea has frequently discussed, and it\nwill rest with the park commissioners whether it\nis ca riedout or not. Certainly a simpler form for\nbenefiting a (good object cannot be proposed, as\nthe thousands who go to these ponds to skate.,\nwould not feel the loss of so small a sum for a day's\nsport, and at the same time for those who could\nnot even afford this, there would be three other\nponds where no charge would be made.\nThe skating season has been very materially in-\nterfered with by the "soft: weather we have\nhad for two weeks past,both ice and snow having\nalmost entirely disappeared. To-day, however,\nthe last of another year, Jack Frost appears\nheavier than ever. giving us every prospect of a\nvery seere day for the gentlemen to present t)\nladies their" Happy New Year. "
8e52de7fcaec6d88a71951765cd6478b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.8013698313039 43.798358 -73.087921 carry the West India mails, at least ten\nwill be constantly employed in conveying\nthem on the various lines as traced on the\nmap hereto annexed: and it will ba seen\nby reference to it thai this formidable fleet\nwill beat all limes within tnree or lour\ndays run of our Southern coast. In the\nevent of a declaration of war by Great Bri\ntain against the United States, as she will,\nof course, possess the informntion neces\nsary to enable her to concentrate her force,\nall the steamers in the West Iudia mail\nservice can be collected at any point on\nthe southern coast by the time the declara-\ntion would be communicated to the Pre-\nsident. Those employed on the Northern\nlines to New York and Boston, may com\nmence hostilities before the least prepara-\ntion can be made to meet them. Depots\nof coal are to be established at Halifjx and\nat several ports in the WesjJndies, from\nwhence these fleets can be supplied, and\n prediction made some years since by\nan intelligent and experienced British\nofficer, that their sailing ships of war\nwould become coal carriers to their\nsteamers, will be fulfilled.\nThere are, it is sjicl, at this lime, ten\nthousand black troops in the British West\nIndies, and that Grders have' recently been\nissued to increase the number to twenty-fiv- e\n.thousand... These troops are disci-\nplined and commanded by white officers,\nand, no doubt, designed to form a most im-\nportant portion of the force to be employed\nin any future contest that may arise be-\ntween Great Britain an! the United States;\nand, by reference to the map of thr West\nIndia mail lines, it will be seen that, in\nour present defenceless condition, a force\ncomposed of armed steamers and troops of\nthat description would not only give great\nannoyance to our coast, but most effect-\nually and at once put a stop to all com-\nmunication around Cape Florida, or ibro'\nthe passes of-th- e
7585f78ed61cdbd49c94310a518c2cc7 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.1547944888382 39.369864 -121.105448 The time has now arrived when the\nagricultural interest should receive a\nlike generous encouragement. Without\nthe special protection and privileges en-\njoyedby its rival, it has already become\nof very commanding importance, and is\ndestined to ultimate pre-eminence.—\nDespite of all the uncertainties of title,\nand the fascinating attraction of mining\npursuits, the agricultural resources of\nthe State have been developed to an\nextent which would not have been pos-\nsible under the same retarding circum-\nstances in any other part of the confed-\neracy. The whole amount of land en-\nclosed for all purposes is stated at 1,916,-\n813 acres ; of which 756,734 acres were\ncultivated last year, and produced up-\nwards of ten and a quarter millions of\nbushels of wheat, barley and oats, in ad-\ndition to which were large yields of corn,\nrye, buckw'heat, beans, peas, potatoes,\nhay and vegetables. Thereare about\nthree and a half millions of fruit trees\nin the State, and some four millions of\ngrape vines, besides an immense number\nof other fruit bearing vines and bushes.\nIn connection with this exhibit may be\nmentioned the fact that the aggregate\nnumber of live stock and poultry 1$ es-\ntimated at about two and a half millions,\nthe sheep alone numbering nearly half\na million, and being rapidly on the in-\ncrease. The State has actually become\nself-sustaining in all important particu-\nars, owing to the steady, unaided efforts\nof her agricultural citizens, to which she\nis also indebted for opening a source of\nimmense future wealth in the grape\nculture, alone, it has been not\nUnreasonably estimated, will eventually\nexceed in value the entire gold yield.\nThese facts, while they go to show\nthe capacity of the agricultural interest\nto lake care of itself, yet also prove that\nit is entitled to, and should hereafter\nreceive, the most liberal encouragement\nand assistance. That man must be en-\ndowed with but little foresight who can-\nnot discern that the real prosperity of\nthe State depends upon the growth of\nthis noble interest, together with the\nsuccessful development of home manu-\nfactures. Agriculture in California ex-\nhibits many anomalous features, resulting\nfrom peculiarities of soil and climate.\nThese need to be carefully observed, and\nsuch observation should not be left to\nchance, or to the not always enlightened\nattention of isolated individuals. The\nState wants a thorough agricultural\nsystem, based upon California experience\nand aided by the application of scientific\nfacts. To obtain this, there should be\nagricultural and horticultural associa-\ntions in every county, in connection\nwith the State Society, and agricultural\nschools should be established, aided by\nthe government, on the plan adopted\nwith such encouraging results in other\nportions of the Union. In several States\nwhose agricultural resources will never\nequal ours, these schools have been some\ntime in operation, whilst in others they\nare about to be established,—even Min-\nnesota, the youngest sister in the con-\nfederacy, having made provision for one.\nCannot California, with a yearly revenue\nof more than one million dollars and\npublic land at her disposal, afford to do\nas much ?
4239ea69e6ccd4a8180102d7cf351c97 FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1918.8315068176053 35.318728 -82.460953 Take any of the more common dis-\neases In. which a chill or chilliness is\nan early symptom, such as pneumo-\nnia, acute septicemia (blood poison-\ning from infected wound), childbed\nfever (blood poisoning from uncleanly\nmanagement), erysipelas, quinsy and\nother acute sore throats, tonsilitis,\nbronchitis, typhoid (some cases), ma-\nlaria. Nowadays we know that all\nthese diseases are due to infection by\ngerms or parasites, and that none of\nthem is caused by exposure to cold,\nnotwithstanding the chill or chilliness\nso' frequently experienced at the on-\nset. Indeed, any one who would at-\ntribute malaria or childbed fever to\n"taking cold" could scarcely have a\nserious hearing among Intelligent peo-\nple today. But there remains a consid-\nerable amount of chatter about "taking\ncold" in connection with some of these\n and now is a good time to\nlook into the chatter a bit.\nA man sustains a cut or other slight\ninjury of the hand. He neglects it,\nor maybe he puts on some old salve\nor a "rag" either of which may be\nliterally swarming with germs. In a\nfew days the little wound begins to\ntrouble the man. It smarts or pains,\nor the flesh about it swells and looks\nred, and little red streaks rim up the\narm, and little sore kernels are felt\nunder the armpit, ad the man feels\nchilly, then decides he is getting\n"grippe," whatever that may be, and\nwell, some old fogy happens along ;\nand says, "Why, you've taken cold in\nit!" And sure enough the poor fel-\nlow has been chilly all morning. The I
7419d5647b889e7aec1bf21730d258b4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5438355847286 40.063962 -80.720915 The main topics of discussion by the\nboard of trade convention at Detroit,\nthus far, have been the Niagara Falls\nship canal and the x^eciprocity treaty be¬\ntween the United States and the Can-\nadas. And these are likely to be the\nonly questions which will be attacked\nwith any foree-during the-sessions of;\nthe convention, and it is morethau pro-\nbabloi tlint the main object in calling the\nconvention at this time wa3 to organize\neffort and make preparations for a vig¬\norous attempt at favorable legislation\nupon these two measures at the next\nsession of Congress. Mr. Tjittlejolin, of\nNew York, tried to get a rosolution\nthrough the convention calling for the\nconstruction of the Niagara ship canal\nat Government expense, as a military\nand commercial necessity. A substi¬\ntute for this recognizing the\nimportance of the canal, but declining\nto ask for its construction by the gener¬\nal Government under the present con¬\ndition of the Government linances was\nvoted down, and Mr. lattlejolin's 1110-\nition, with the military necessity part\nstricken out, was passed by a large ma¬\njority, together with a request to Gov-\nernor Kenton to recommend to the New\nYork legislature the enlargement of\nthe locks of the New York canals.\nThat is the expression of the conven-\ntion on the transit question, and istobe\nregarded as an. expression of the need\nthat the West feels of more extensive\nfacilities for getting her products to the\nKast. then as likely to have any practi¬\ncal eileet either upon the construction\nof the ship canal or the enlargement of\nthe Krie canal.
875354eb423eeec2f6a7a4d3b2d3db89 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1860.2800546131855 37.561813 -75.84108 sume a conical or roundish form, screen\ntheir bodies, or main steins from the\nground upward, by side brauches and\nsmall cross twigs, spurs, etc. From\nthese come the recommendations by\nfruitgrowers of forms for dwarf trees;\nfor trees on exposed bleak situations;\nfor cherries in rich soils, etc.; yet wc\ndaily and yearly see applo trees pruned\nwith an utter disregard of all such rec-\nommendations, with a perfect uncon-\nsciousness of all knowledge of nature's\nteachings, or of common sense, in judg-\ning what is requisite to the health and\nlongevity of the tree upon which they\nare operating. The performer, in far\ntoo many cases, considers that pruning\nrequires that all the branches withiii\neight or ten feet of the ground should\nbe cut away, utterly disregarding the\nsize of the limb, consequent wound\nmade by the amputation, a wound that,\nhowever it may be in time covered\nover with new layers of wood, never\nreally heals, as may be proved by ex-\namining trees so pruned, in futuro years.\nAnother performer, generally an im-\nported one, proceeds to take out all the\ntop of the tree, leaving three, or four\nnaked branches with a few twigs or\nspray at the extremities only; this ho\nwill tell you is to open the tree to the\nlight, sun, &o., just as if nature in the\nproduction of her own work did not\nknow better than this bungler, that\nJuly and August, iu America, are not\nmado up of fog, mist and cloud, but of\nclear hot sun, and that instead of expos\ning tho branches of a tree to being blis
07d6abf7567f20d9da7a876d9bcf9d31 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.3246575025369 46.601557 -120.510842 Charles X. Forsytheof Buffalo, N.Y .—\nI came west because I am tired of the\neast, and before settling down 1 shall\nvisit all the important places in the\nNorthwest. What I have seen in the\nYakima valley fully impresses me that\nit will have a prosperous future and will\nbe a wonderful place for fruit raising\nand general farming. I have already\nbeen in Seattle and Tacoma, but I do\nnot like the kind of climate they have\nover there. It is too damp and cold. I\nlike the Yakima climate. It is more\nbrazing ami full of euergjr•giving quali-\nties. I think the Sound will, in time,\nproduce the greatest city on the Pacific\ncoast. Whether it will be Seattle, or\nT coma is hard to tell, Dut everything\nfavors Seattle at present. It has the\nstart over the rest of the cities, and\nnothing now will set it back but a \nAs Seattle grows, so grows the rest of\nthe state. Seattle will be to the state of\nWashington what Xew York city is to\nNew York state. It will be ttie center\naround which everything else in the\nNorthwest willrevolve. As for my rea-\nsons for saying this I have only to state\nthat the Northwest has just begun to be\nappreciated in the east, and another\nthing is the great oriental trade that\nwill develop in a few years. This in\ntime will be enormous, and the port\nfrom which the greatest amount of pro-\nducts of the country will be shipped\nwillbe on the Sound. I came west to\nlook after some business matters and at\nthe same time to look up a place to make\ninvestments. I like the appearance of\nNorth Yakima and the whole valley,\nand it is possible that I may decide to\nhang up my hat here.
1f5b41dba7de996b876e3a0e43db7768 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1905.2424657217148 39.756121 -99.323985 Mrs. W . II . Vincent was joyfully\nsurprised by the Jaaies of the Aid So-\nciety last, Saturday afternoon. The\nfollowing were present with baskets\nladened with good things: Mrs. (J.\nQuanz, Mrs. Phoebe Bell, Mrs. L. O .\nunase, Mrs. a. Aioaugn, n. x. m\nLorimur, Mrs. Wm. Swim, Mrs. J. M .\nBreed. Rev. and Mrs Wardrlp,' Mrs,\nMaggie Viuceut and Misses Anna\nbreed ana Helen uarneu. to Dear\nladles tell it, tbey bad more fun qhan\nthe Jolly Dozen.\nMrs. Nate Garrison and Viva Maj r\nwere 'Burg visitors Mnuday.\nFine programs are being arranged\nby toe soiioul children for the "last\nday," wiildi will be the seveutb of\nApril, everyone invited.\nWe tiave hardly time to answer the\nPout's smart Alex crrepoudent this\nweek, but will decline his \nto be on the Post's stall. The Herald\nis the good paper aud fur it all the\ngood people write; now just 10 give\nyou a good start lu life, Mr. Smart\nAlex Operator, we will invlie you to\nbe the Herald's scribe from Dana.\nBut for many reasons 1 can not join\nPost's staff, even the thoughts of De-\nmocracy make my head ache. Now\nyou just practice writing Items for\nsome time and you will be a Kreat\nDemocratic writer, If you do not see\nthat you are wrong In politics before it\nIs too late Just wait until you hear\none of my stump speeches and you\nwill change your politics.\nRev. A . H. Shelton of Almenai a\nformer pastor of the church here, was\ncalling on friends In Marvin, Tuesday.
114da68b4608bfcbb64c95d45e567eba THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.2698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 In this general belief In a phenomenon\ntranscending experience there 13 noth¬\ning moro inconsistent with evolution\nthan In belief In the separation of the\nchild from tho mother at birth, or In the\nbelief that the grub Issues at a certain\nstage of its existence from Its suoaque-\nous existence and enters.upon a new\nexperience as a dragon fly. In brief,\nevolution 13 not Inconsistent with the\nidea that a living creature In one stage\nof existence Is being prepared for a fu¬\nture stage of existence which will en¬\ntirely transcend the present experience;\non the contrary, that is precisely what\nIt teaches us to expect. The only real\nquestion In respect to the resurrection\nof Jesus Christ Is not. Is It Incredible\nthat the resurrection took place? But,\nla It Jncredlblo that It was followed by\nsuch appearances to tho disciples as to\nbring It within the range of their obser¬\nvation, nnd them tannlble evi¬\ndence that It had taken place? Such\nan appcarance Is certainly extraordi¬\nnary, but It appears to me not at all\nIncredible that either the spirit should\nhavo returned to reanimate the body,\nor that 1c should have given visible evi¬\ndence of itself as disembodied, for the\nvery purpose of converting what was In\nSocrates and Cicero n mere vague ex¬\npectation, Into what has becoipe In the\nChristian church throughout the agos\nan assured and certain faith.\nAssuming that the appearances\nJesus.Christ to Ills disciples after Ills\ndentil are not Inherently Irjeredlble, are\nthey so attested .that we have reason, to\ncredit them?. An adequate anRwtr to\nthl^fluestion cannot be expected to be\ncrowdod- Into a paragraph, when vol¬\numes have been written In answering It.\nI can only say in the briefest terms why\nI regard thoae appearances as nmony\nthe best attested facts of ancient his¬\ntory.
097435104a482be3604dbfffd0ac209c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.6397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Neary asked If Mr. Hastings ad­\nvised that anything that might be in\nthe charter be disregarded by the\nCrmmisslon In ?«,- • nl-1” ' be «ges­\ntion before it. and Mr. H ..stings said\nhe would advise that the charter\nrights be taken into consideration.\nPresident Crosby then launcii°d\ninto a long speocn as to charter\nrights of corporations. Ho ssid char-\nter rights were a contract that could\nnot be taken away. He asked if it\nwould be compilent for him to sug­\ngest that for 30 years no dividend\nwas paid by companies operating\nstreet railways ;n Wilmington. He\nasked it it was competent to suggest\nthat the company 13 required to do\nstreet paving and to ask that it bo\nallowed to pave but on* foot instead\nof three feet along the tracks.\nShall we obtain from this board an\norder to determine that the wages ro-\nrecently Increased are too high, Mr.\nCrosby asked. Shall we obtain from\nthis board an order that action- of the\nboard of directors of the company in\nplacing new cars in town was erron-\nenous and they should bo removed?\nShall we turn everything over to '.his\nboard? “We are sailing on an un­\ncharted sea.” said Mr. Crosby.\nMr. Crosby pointed out that, the\ncompany is required by its charter to\ndo paving and had never evoded an\norder to do it. He said that only re­\ncently the company had obeyed the\nbehest of the company to lay heavier\nrails on Front street, at the station,\nwhen he, a practical railway man, be­\nlieved the rails ordered to be
2256b6c2f98ae455227547d4fd490a6d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.6561643518519 31.960991 -90.983994 ÏS hereby given, that on application to\n*• in») by Trussy Bethea, of said county;\nwho claims for his ward Philip H. Bethea,\nan undivided fifth part of the following\nproperty, real and personal, to wit: “A\ntract of land containing about one hun­\ndred acres, situated in Claiborne county,\nSlate of Mississippi, about two and a half\nmiles North of Port Gibson, adjoining the\nland nf Dr. Samuel Dorsey, on the West,\nthe land belonging to the heirs of Steph­\nen Minor, on the Notth, being the same\ntract formerly cultivated by John Thomp­\nson; another tract containing about one\nhundred and eight acres, situate in said\ncounty, adjoining (he lands of Beh. Smith*\non the South, and the mandamus tract on\nthe West, and the lands owned by the\nheirs ofStsphen Minor, known as the Da­\nniel Lyon tract, on the North; also a ne­\ngro named Polly, aged about 25\nyears, With her two children, Christiana,\naged eight years, and George, aged six\nmonths; alsoa negro woman named Emi-\nline, aged about 24 years, and her three\nchildren, Jerry aged 5 years, Francis ag­\ned 3 years, and Polly aged about twelve\nmonths; also, a stock of cattle and sheep.\n1 have nominated John S Gray, Francis\nB. Lee, and James Redding, commission-*\ners, to divide the said tracts of land into\nequal shares or parts, and to divide the\nsaid personal estate in like manner, if the\nsame can be done, and if not, to make sale\nthereof and divide the proceeds, and uti­\nles« proper objections are stated to me at\nmy office, in the iown ot Port Gibson, on\nMonday, the 29th day of September next,\nthe said John S. Gray, Francis B. Lee,\nand James Redding, will theh be appoint­
c09adee6b19b13fdb91b3785f1a06aa9 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1921.9958903792492 43.994599 -72.127742 Of course, we do not come up to\nMassachusetts in the matter of mak-\ning shoes by machinery, but if the\ncount were taken on the score of,\nfreedom from strikes by the guardi-\nans cf the public safety, where would\nMassachusetts be ? We do not manu-\nfacture as many organs and pianos as\nNew York, but if the count were\ntaken on the score of freedom from\nbomb throwing and mail robbing,\nwhere would New York come in ? As\nTennyson says, we were born for\nother things; we have our own work\nand our own characteristics; we are,\nas we have been, and we are likely to\nbe, sui generic, that is, we are our-\nselves, and we are no more the\nproper subjects for the Rossiterian\nbrand of statistics than are the \nand angels. Size us up, Lord Rissiter;\nfetch on your statistics; but come\nwith the kind that takes account of\nour character and attainments as a\nbucolic people; that takes account of\nthe reserve character, so to speak,\nwhich we have patiently laid up to\nfall back upon in that day of wrath\nwhen the policemen strike and the\nbombs explode and the red flag of\nthe socialists come marching up\nWashington street and broadway.\nGive me the old Vermonter, with\ntwo or three kinds of rheumatism in\nhis gait, if you please; with a green-\nish coat on his back, because the\nblack goods that the Industrially\nAwakened fellow down country has\nsold him does not hold its color; who\nloves a stern duty as much as he\nloves his wife; who has-
f7263bd661a12b8e30d987c07bb671d1 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.5986301052765 31.960991 -90.983994 “Old Single” as he was called,for short, had,\nseveral years previous to the late discussion of\nthe annexation question, with singular cuteness\nascertained the precise line dividing the two\nterritories, and built his cabin thereon in such a\nposition that when lying down—he slept, one half\nin the United Stales, and the other half in Texas,\nfor he lfey at right angles with the line.\nThe anthorities.of both sides had frequently\nfound hrm in that position, but as their separate\nclaims lay severally on the entire individual, they\nwere not content to arrest one half of him at a\ntime. A great deal of courtesy was at times\nexhibited by the officers, each pressing the other\nto break the forms offnternatroeal law by pulling\nOld Single bodily over either side the Tine—éa* h\nwas up to trap, and feared the other wished to\ntrick him, and declined the effort which might\ncfense à rupture between Texas and the Union.\nOn one occasion they were exceedingly press­\ning on the at first politefy sô, then teas­\ning each other, and then daring by taunt, and\njeer, and jibe, until they worked themselves into\nsuch furious excitement, that 'Old #Single,”\ntheir pretended victirri. had to command and pre­\nserve the peace—“Gentle-men,” said he, “you\nmay fun and fret and quarrel jist as much as you\npleasé in my house—but when tha is any licWn\nto be done Üout these diggins, why “Old Single”\nis thar, sure!—so look out boys, ef you strikes\nyou dies:—show your sense make friends and lets\nliker,”—“you,” noding to one, “hand me a gourd\nof water, and” “you,” to the other* “pass that bot­\ntle and Ill drink to yoiir hotter quriintance.”\nThe day passed, “Old Singlê” crosses the\nline, and one of the beauties ori each side his cot,\nall going it like forty at twenty deck poker—a\nsociable game as Sol. Smith says—and as re­\nmarked our informant “the old man was a per­\nfect Cumanchc horse at my game w[jpr they vVas\ncurds.”
d584952621516e9860948374f3b80d42 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1839.8123287354135 40.807539 -91.112923 the savings of the settlers, about 5000 on-:\nly having been furnished by capitalists.\nThe loans were for one year, at fifty per ,\ncent—the lender having the land entered j\nin his own name, and giving the borrow- j\ner a bond to make him a deed On the pay-|\nment of the amount of his note at the end j\nof a year; in default of which the lender !\nmay take possession of the land. Thus |\nthe capitalist is the purchaser from the |\ngovernment at l,*4p per acre, he at the ]\nsame time binding himself to sell to the\nsettler at the end of a year at 50 per cent\nadvance, or 1,87 per acre.\nDuring the first week of the sale Min­\neral Point bank note? were taken by the\nreceiver; but at the beginning of the sec- ;\nond they were refused, in obedience a |\ncircular from the B ink of Missouri, the j\ngovernment deposite bank. The credit j\nof the bank was not impaired by this act, j\nas the Galena branch of the State Bank j\nof Illinois continued to receive its notes J\n011 deposite and give their own for them.\nThe spirit of accommodation manifest- I\ned towards the purchasers at the sale by !\nCol. Dement (the receiver,) is spoken of |\nin high terms of praise, and has endeared j\nhim to every settler. He received the |\nnotes of many banks not named in his in- j\nstructions, thus taking upon himself the ,\ntrouble and expense of converting them :\ninto bankable money at the Bank of Mis- ;\nsouri. The polite attention of the regis-1\nter (Maj. Hackelton,) was equally the\nsubject of acknowledgment and paise.\nWe annex the list of bank notes author­
1e837e22d0b7b1d8f02a3733dce469f0 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.4150684614408 39.745947 -75.546589 The tirst section provides that £1,200\nshall be iranaftned iroui the sinking\nfut d to the appropriation for salarie«,\nand {1,200 additional from the oinking\nfund to the appropriation hr lamps.\nAs soon as this was read, Mr. Murray\nobjected to the ordinance and said that\n{80,000 had been appropriated at the\ncommencement of the year for salaries,\nand that if it had not been for so many\nspecial meetings, which he has always\n'abed his voice against, there would\nhave beeD sufficient of the appropria­\ntion left to pay all the salaries until the\nend of the fisoal year The money\nfrom the sand lot was only to be used\ntoward ibe pnrobueo of another lot, and\nwhatever remained after that was to be\napplied to tbe sinkiDg fund, conse­\nquently it would be illegal to use it for\nany other purpose.\nAt the request of Mr. Hawkins, the\nsection of the act providing for the sale\not tbe Jot aud specifying tbe purpose to\nwhich the proceeds should be applied,\nwas read by the clerk, after which he\nBaid that it was very clear to hie mind\nthat tbe of this on inaDce\nwould lie a direct violation of the law.\nMr. Murray said shore was a law In\nexistence which mode members of\nCouncil personally responsible for any\nillegal expenditure of money, and he\nwarned them to bewaru how they acted\nin thie master. Mi . Menton replied\nthat he had provided against any one\ngetting In a hole in tbet way by obtain­\ning the opinion of the City Solicitor in\nrelation to the ieeality of their action.\nHe also explained that the money which\nhad been rmoaSerresi to the Binking\nfund from the sale of (ho sand lot was\nstill in bank and oonld not be used be­\nfore next year for the purpose of re­\ndeeming bonds, as bondholders would\nnot part with them before they fell due.\nMr. M unsay said that when Connell\nwas boldtng so many special meetings\nin the suburbs and adj*mining half a\ndozen timte during a single afternoon\nhe had objected, and when he called for\nthe ayes and nayB was always opposed\nby the chairman cf the Finance Com­\nmittee, and lie now had him just where\nhe wanted tim.
29b2adfff5e2b956c677704a95ea50ca CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.9630136669202 39.623709 -77.41082 if we could restrain our often 100 ready\ntongues and fiery tempers until the storms\nof human, cvery-hnur and every-day trials\npass over, what shadows we would arise\nthrough!—aye, smiling, as Vo saw them\nvanishing into the distant nothingness of\noblivion. If we could but reason calmly\nand patiently and resolutely with our-\nselves, as we betimes must hear the foot-\nbruises along lifes rugged pathway, and\nbathe them in His heavenly dew of hope\nuntil even the scars leave not a vestige of\ntheir existence ns we gage upon them\nagain with the solacing eyes of eternal\nfaith; if we could only train our human\nears to listen to the tolls of sorrow that re-\nbound upon them as wc pcriorce must of-\nten see the heavy clouds falling upon some\nbeloved breast; if we could only train our\n to thrill with the ecstacv of a higher\ntrust and a supremcr love instead of mor-\nbid human despair when some mortal eye,\nsome hand, some voice in which we vainly\ntrusted, oh! so fondly, desecrates tin* ped-\nestal of loyal friendship and honor upon\nwhich our love elected their endurance,\nhad turned to mock us. or thrown ns help-\nlessly aside, nr traduced ns by i ihnuuv or\ndistrustful suspicions. Ah, yes! if we only\ncould do these tilings how different would\nour lives seem in their passing. But vie\nmust only try. remembering our Saviours\nheavy heart and ero-s wi aried shoulders,\nand His bleeding feet o*l the lonely road to\nCalvary. He also had to reach the immor-\ntal goal of peace through lifes bitterest,\nshadows. He smiled tingolioullv at IBs en-\nemies, and to-day He (¦mis
0d3e7e054bf1b3a8d18176dd9aea381d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.0095628099068 40.063962 -80.720915 Mrs. D . Danford and son aro home from Wuhlt\nton township.\nThe Gnu Opera Company has been drawl:\nuuko crowui u«re.\nTbe ice mashed In tho cargo box ol the upp\nwharf boat yuterday.\nrapt. Prlnoo wii down yesterday looking afl\ntlie auuken wharfboat\n8. C . Mcllhorn passed through the city on hla w\nto East Liberty yesterday.\nAbout f 1,000 has bien paid on the street pavl\nhero on tbe last assessment.\nJohn Mc'.'ormack haa had the bodies of hli re\ntires moved from here to Wheeling.\nC.AP.train No.09,loaving here at 4 p.m. y\ntardiiy, kUIed a man at Mingo Junction.\nOliver Tarbctt and aon left for Hosthorn India\nyesterday, where they will go to farming.\nAbraham Daily, who haa been wotklng here, I\nreturned to hla home in Jacksonville, Va.\nThe streela aud alleys will bo numbered. TI\nIs the first atop toward free mall delivery.\nThe fire department of fiellairo will visit Mi\ntin's Ferry at their water works blow out.\n Jones, tbo miner who was crmhed\nBarnard's coal works, Is not expected to Ilvo.\nJ W.Hhreartr, acuttcr, had his hand badly c\nat the Bellaire Window Glass house yesterday.\nThere will be a conference aud reorganizing\nthe Prohibitloulata at City Hall ou January 10.\nThe peonlu of the vicinity areatill traveling, a\nlarge crowds are coming and going on all trains\nBorne one tried to gain an entrance Into Kn\n8chmklt's saloon Monday night, but was frig!\nened away by Mr. Schmidt.\nDr. James F. Morrison, of this city, sent t\nCrown Prince of Germany a box of his famo\nScottish thisilo cure this week.\nJames Fltton put in the Cleveland 6 Flttsbur\ndepot last night ono of the Improved beacon Ugl\nfor gas burners.\nTbe twages of the window glass blowers ha\nboon advanced tlve percent on account of an e\nvance in the selling scalo.\nThero was a large crowd at tho City Hall at t\nentertainment given by tho ladle* of the Christ!\nfinancially.
378344839ef1b7c98176d9c1afba1be8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8452054477423 40.063962 -80.720915 Matthew at arm's length. i\nMrs. Rivers might be sorry for Bella, 1\nbut she could not help feeling glad that s\nhor niece was provided lor. She could t\nleave the child something when she died, i\nbut the larger piu-t of her income would t\nrevert to her husband's family, and Milly 1\nwas Iter sister's daughter. Ho |apart from J\nhor liking for Mr. Warburton, sho was a\nnaturally pleased that her little girl should 1\nhave secured the best match in Drayford. ]\nNevertheless she had at first objected to c\na positive engagement. She hoped Milly s\nknew her own mind, and would not c\nchange; still sho had a feeling that the I\nhelpless motherless girl ought to have a i\ncertain amount of freedom secured U> her. a\n"Sho is too young," urgued Mrs. Rivers to i\nthe Imperious and impatient wooer. \\\n"only seventeen last February.sho Is too 1\nyoung to bo married.too yoiing to pledge 1\nherself finally. cYpu must give her time." r\nMr.'WirbarlBn "did not see that, nnd \ntried to put Mrs. Rivers down with a 1\nstrong hand. But tho placid lady proved s\nsurprisingly obstinate. i ncn no cnangcu i\nbis tactics, nml made concessions with nn\nlmmenso amount ol fuss nnd parade. Mrs. t\nRivers accepted tliem gratefully, and dis- r\ncovered, too late, that lie bad hardly yield- 8\ned anything at :UI. s\nMiltys, Birthday was tiie lBtli. Sir. c\nWarburum suggested that tlieru could be i\nVio possible' objection to tlielr marriage\nthen. "Lent," said Mrs. Rivers. Mat- I\ntlicwgtilpcd down a strong word about {\nLent. "Well, then," be said, "as soon af- [\ntor Easter as could Ira managed." After "\na prolonged debate, Mi's. Rivers yielded.\nIf, wlicn the New Year came, Millyliad I\nnot changed her mfnd. lt might bo con- t\nsidcred a settled thing.' tAnd if sho-doea, r\nI'm to grin and bear it, oil ?" said Mr. 1\niVarburtun. Y«C-' said Mrs. Rivers,\nlooking up witji# pdQlo ut thoJolly band- t\nsomi?mce?*"vmi must grin,'and bear it." t\nMattbow said it was very bard.,
2ed60d80021b9bb90320b698e9d28be0 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.0178081874683 40.807539 -91.112923 void ; and praying that the same may be de­\ncreed to be set aside and annulled, and for a\nspecific performance, on the part, of the said\nRice, of his contract aforesaid, and for an in­\njunction against the said Rice to restrain him\nfrom negotiating or in any way of disposing\nof cither of said notes given by tho said Mor­\ntimore for the purchase of said lands as afore­\nsaid. And further enjoining both of the said\ndefendants, the said Rice and Ives, and all\nothers, their agents or attornies from selling,\nconveying or in any way or manner of dis­\nposing of any part of said half section of land,\nno. 31, before mentioned. And praying fur­\nther for a writ of Ne Exeat, against the said\ndefendants, if they shall be found in said\nLouisa county, to compel them to give securi­\nty not to leave this Territory, until the fur­\nther order of said court in the premises agree­\nably to the statute in such cases made and\nprovided, and for a writ of Subpccna, to com­\npel the said defendants to appear and an­\nswer the complainants said bill as is usual\nin like cases, returnable to the term\nof said court. And whereas the said Sulipcnna\nagainst the said Rice, has been returned Non\nEst, and the said Mortimore has filed his\npetition in said court, in said cause, setting\nforth, among other things, that he lia£ been\ninformed and verily believes that the said\nRicc has left this Territory, and has gone\nabroad to parts unknown to the said Morti­\nmore, and that he absents himself to avoid the\nprocess of the court in this cause, and that\nprocess cannot be served upon him, and pray­\ning for an order of publication against him\nas an absent defendant as the statute provides,\nall which is ordered by said court. Therefore,\nthe said Levi Rice, defendant in this cause, is\nhereby notified and required to appear 'io said\ncause and demur, plead or answer to said bill\nof complaint, on or before the first day of\nFebruary, 1841, or said bill will be taken as\nconfessed by liim, and a decree will pass\nugainst him accordingly; provided, that a\ncopy of this order bo published in the Hawk-\neye and Patriot, printed at Burlington, once\n•* **reck, for sis successive weeks, before the\nsaid first day of February next. By order,
12025959554a963734a5019eefcdf38f THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.5931506532218 35.996653 -78.901805 The Globe is an independent ne vs\npaper, and it has its little talks about\nmany things in general. It howled and\nwhooped for Gkovek Cleveland be\ncause he proposed to slap the dirty pen\nsion thieves in the face. But it looks\nlike Hoke Smitii, who is Gkoveu's lieu\ntenant in that regard, gets no move on\nhimself. He has chopped off a few, bu\nsuch glaring frauds as Black are allowed\nto remain. The democratic platform\nlike all other political platforms seems\nto be wobbly and was made to catch votes\nalone. The party is pledged to tariff re\nform and yet it is stated that the party\nwill reform nothing. Let us hope. On\nthe money question the platform which\nelected Cleveland reads :\n"We denounce the republican legisla\ntion known as the Sherman act of 1890 as\na cowardly makeshift fraught with pos\nsibilities of danger in the future, which\nshould make all of itssupporters as wel\nas its author, anxious for its speedy re\npeal. We hold to the of both gold\nand silver as the standard money of the\ncountry, and to the coinage of both gold\nand silver without discriminating against\nmetal or charge for mintage, but the dol\nlar unit of coinage of both metals must\nbe of equal intrinsic and exchangeable\nvalue, or be adjusted through inter\nnational agreement, or by such safeguards\nof legislation as shall insure the main\ntenance of the parity of the two metals,\nand the equal dollar of every dollar at\nall times in the markets and in the pay\nment of debts, and we demand that all\npaper currency shall be kept at par with\nand redeemable in such coin.\n"We insist upon this, policy as espe\ncially necessary for the protection of the\nfarmer and laboring classes, the first and\nmost defenseless victims of unstable\nmoney and a fluctuating currency."\nAnd we understand that the congress\nis divided on this question and Cleve\nland himself is a gold bug. But we\nshall see what we shall see in a precious\nfew days.
14ef0e607210ed7bbf352ae19f606f42 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1918.1438355847285 42.217817 -85.891125 terferes with the free play of Inter\nnational business.\nKven such generally observed festi-\nvals as Christmas and New Year's\nDay can't be depended upon by the\nbanker without consulting the Inter-\nnational calendar.\nNew Year's Day Is the only holiday\nuniversally observed. But, alas. It\nfalls on 11 different dates In different\nparts of the globe, and some countries\nobserve more than one of them. An\nexhaustive study of 'these New Year\ncelebrations would give one a pretty\nfair knowledge of the ancient history\nof the world. Curiously enough, one\nof our own states, Massachusetts, does\nnot make this a legal holiday, though\nher citizens generally observe IL\nWhere Chlstmas Is Not Observed.\nChristmas Day, due to Its religious\nsignificance, Is not so generally ob-\nserved as New Year's Day. It has,\nmoreover, only three different dates.\nIt was not generally observed on De-\ncember 25 until the fourth century.\n early church, lacking any au-\nthentic knowledge as to the date of\nChrist's birth, celebrated it without\nuniformity In May, April and Janu-\nary. The Armenian Church still ob-\nserves January 6. Why the Decem-\nber uate was finally selected Is uncer-\ntain. Some see In It u displacement\nof the Iloman Saturnalia; others de-\nclare it a survival of the Feast of the\nWinter Solstice, and still others point\nto its coincidence with the old Ger-\nman Yuletlde FeasL Countries where\nthe old style calendar prevails still\ncelebrate January 7.\nIn the Puritan days Scotch Presby-\nterians and English\nrejected Christmas Day altogether as\n"savoring of papistry," and in New\nFngland Thanksgiving Day was de-\nvised to replace 1L It seems n curi-\nous thing that there are today Chris-\ntian countries where it Is not ob-\nserved legally. Such are Norway,\nPanama, Peru, Portugal nnd the\nSouth African Union.\n"
523d44326686e6c733d2d146564be556 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.2260273655504 40.063962 -80.720915 estimating the number of forms, and mul- c\ntiplying the forms by the number ol copies tl\nprinted, and dividing by the number of o\n240, ascertained tbo number 01 tokens 01 t\npress work. It this plan was followed out b\nby tbe public printer in the Journal of v\n1B73, the number ot tokens of press work f!\nmust have been very heavy. fi\nBut, sir, I will pursue this part ot tbo c\nsubject no firthcr. I now ask the alien- tl\ntion ol the bonrable Senators irom Mason p\n(not in his seat) and Preston to a subject a\ntn which they are interested, and, it my r!\nstatements are not correct, I hope they a\nwill set me right In the early part of the h\npresent session the Senate Committee on ti\nPrinting was called together to consider v\nand fix a price lor tbo of the Sen- ti\nate during the session. The classification "\nagreed upon was as follows: For t) page n\nbUla and Journals, (2 25 per pago.to In- ti\ndude composition, press work and paper, y\nall bills and daily journals abovo 0 pages, g\nto be estimated as book work, and to be v\npaid lor at tbo prico fixed In tbe code of tl\n1868. This arrangement not meeting the tl\nviews'of tbo printer, at his instance tbo o\ncommittee met again, he being present, li\nlie stated that wo should allow him (2 25\nper page up to ten pages, and something\nlor correcting tbe Journals. It was finally\nagreed that he should receive $2 25 per t<\npago up to eight pages, (an octavo form,) 1]\nwhich was understood by'the committee _\nto include composition, paper und press\nwork, and thirty ccnts per pago for cor-
1bf856920a1f35fd7ade747bffb76986 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1884.3510928645517 39.743941 -84.63662 And what a power there is behind\na politician after he gets up among\nthe high muck a mucks of the party!\nHere is Sabin, of Minnesota, who\nwas never heard of until last fall,\nfurnishing to the country a successor\nto Knox, Comptroller of the Curren-\ncy, in the person of another man who\nwas never heard or or heard from, al-\nthough his name is Cannon. The re-\nsponsibility that attaches to this\noffice of Comptroller is simply im\nmeasurable, and the men are few who\npossess the requisite capacity for\ndischarge of the vastly important\ntrusts involved in it. Mr. Cannon\nmay be a most excellent man for the\nposition, but the business men\nthe county, and particularly the\nmen who run the National banks,\nwould prefer to know something\nthe man who is to boss the finances\nof this great Nation.\nThe movement behalf of reve-\nnue reform inaugurated in New York\nthe ether day, has done much to-\nward encouraging Mr. Morrison in\npushing his bill to a speedy, if not\ncompletely successful conclusion.\nThere is no mistaking the fact that\nthe present majority in the House\nare going to do their part toward\nlightening the burdens upon the peo-\nple by reducing to the lowest pissi\nble limit those taxes that have been\nimposed by reason cf the war. It\nmatter of detail only upon which the\nDemocratic members are disagreed,\nfor Mr. Randall himself has repeat\nedly declared himself in favor of the\nidentical propositions embodied\nthe JNew xork resolutions. Pio one\nknows any better than Mr. Morrison\nthat human ingenuity is not capable\nof devising a measure that will sub-\nserve every local interestin the coun-\ntry, and if Ohio wool and Pennsyl-\nvania pig-iro- n
00c600828bb38c183a0c63c00976d128 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2890410641805 40.063962 -80.720915 The interest in the summer and la]\nelections is commencing to crop out, am\nwithin a month .the chance* of the diffei\nent aspirant* for the suffrage of the iov\nereign people will be discussed pro auf\ncon with constantly increasing anim*\ntion. '1 he all potent argument aa to tb\nn probabilities will be the figures c\nat contest, and none will be mor\nearnestly canvassed than those of th\nCongressional struggle, aud this being tb\nfact, the new B. & 0. Bed Book Gongrei\naional edition becomes almost indispent\nable. No publication of political statictic\never made equals it in extent of informs\ntion given, or in comprehensive arrangt\nment. It shows not only the result c\nthe election of 1880, but the result as we!\nof the election of 1878. Thi\nRepublican, Democratic and Greenbacl\nvote for the two elections is presents\n- o»ol.r and nnmnarianna matin of B&in\nor losses of ibe different parties. \nvotes are also the subject of comparison\nand tbia exhaustive allowing is made u\nevery Congressional district in the Unioi\nby counties. The book is one of one buu\ndred and twelve pages, is a marvel o\ntypographical beauty, being printed upoi\nelegantly tinisbed paper, and the cove\nis one of tlie most extjuisite tbinga iu th\nway of artistic desigu issued for many\nyear. The Ked Book is a B &0. publico\ntion intended for something above th\nordinary circulation, and to this end\nsent only where requests are mads to C\nK. Lord, G. I*. A., Baltimore, Md., for\nby mail and enclosing a three cent ularni\nThe Red Book will thus be mailed toal\nwho may write to Mr. Lord for it, un<\ncertainly those who receive it will nr,\npart with it for almost any money, no ea\nceediogly valuable a text book U it for a\n> who are interested in or care augbt fo
3a4674bc4870c371de25cb37ed29db26 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0726027080163 41.681744 -72.788147 for motion picture equipment and new\nfilm features: smaller amounts for\nstationery and writing materials, and\n$208,459 for motor transport equip-\nment, without which wo could not\nserve the soldiers to any considerable\nextent, and we obtain a total which\nshows that our free service without\nrestriction is increasing by leaps and\nbounds. The overseas purchasing de-\npartment, for instance, is preparing\nto ship to France during this month\nof January, 1919, athletic goods\nvalued at approximately $600,000."\nThe list of goods shipped overseas\nduring the month reveals many inter-\nesting details and enormous totals.\nThere are 36 different items on the\nlist of sports equipment alone. For\nchewing gum, $161,182 was expended.\nWith a reasonable allowance for\nwaste, 16,76 2,000 letters may be\nwritten home within the next few\nweeks; that many envelopes were sent\n France last month. The Y. M. C. A.\nhad been buying its stationery abroad\nuntil the signing of the armistic made\navailable the tonnage required to\ntransport tho comforts demanded by\nthe American soldier abroad.\nLady Nicotine, as usual, continues\nto be most popular with the soldiers.\nContributing to shipments valued at\n$495,365.54 in December alone were\n54,473 cigarettes, 770,000 cigars and\n234,467 pounds of tobacco.\nConsigned to the entertainment sec-\ntion of the Y. M. C . IA. were 740,000\nfeet, of film, the equivalent of about\n250 new feature .productions, come-\ndies and shorter subjects. Onsrans toy\nthe hundred, musical instruments and\nmusic by the case and all the talking\nmachine needles that $6,259 will buy\nwore sent across. To keep the boys\nrim there were 2,250,000 cakes of\noap, shoe polish, shaving: kits, tooth
150943cab66b410c7e8adc1238a573c4 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1905.5301369545916 36.694288 -105.393021 questing that the child be helped at\nhome if she wished her to keep up\nwith her clasB. One day after a black-\nboard explanation, the teacher called\nupon the child and found that she\nhad not seen what had been written.\nShe was kept after school and by dint\nof much sympathetic questioning Misa\nC. found that Alice had never been\nable to see what was put on the board\nand that her head had ached so often\nand so hard that she frequently failed\nto hear what was said.\nSuch a condition may be caused by\nlack of proper food, but in our Ameri-\ncan homes it is usually due to the\npoor quality of the artificial light. The\nyellow, Insufficient light of the ordi-\nnary kerosene lamp, with Its smoky\nchimney, Is about as bad for the eyes\nas can be imagined. The flickering\nlight a coal gas jet Is but little\nbetter, and even the electric light,\nbrilliant as it usually is, has an un-\nsteadiness due to variations In power,\nand a glare peculiarly trying to the\ndelicate nerves of sight. The compar-\natively new illumlnant acetylene gas\nproduces as nearly perfect an artificial\nlight as has yet been found. It gives\na clear white, unwavering light, very\nbrilliant yet perfectly soft, and so\nnearly like the rays of the sun that\neven colors appear as In daylight.\nFortunately, acetylene is very easily\nand cheaply produced, and the simple\napparatus necessary can be purchased\nand installed In any home at a very\nmoderate cost, and the acetylene can\nbe piped to convenient points in the\nhouse where a light is needed. It Is\nthen lighted and extinguished and used\nexactly like common city gas.\nAcetylene Is rapidly coming Into\ncommon
176e7c2a79652152b9a31e2a636fc4cf NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.6945205162353 41.681744 -72.788147 "Well, they are still sifting the\nevidence, but Mott says that he has\nno doubt about Miss Moore being\nthe criminal. He says the young-\nsters of today slop at nothing, not\neven at crime. He says she Is mad\n!y in love with Heath, and he agrees\nwith a suggestion of mine, that may\nbe Bunny Moore and Perry were in\ncahoots, and planned the crime to\ngether. Then, either Perry did the\nkilling and Bunny let him out the\ndoor, or he went away earlier, and\nleft her to do it."\n"Oh," Sam Anderson said, in a\ntone of utter disgust at the idea,\n"you know, Cunningham, you know,\nthat infant in arms couldn't\nsimply couldn't do such a thing!"\n"That's where you're wrong, old\nboy. The infants in arms of today\nare not in their parents' arms, by\nany means! a fat lot you know\nabout girls, anyway! I doubt if\nyou've ever so much as spoken to\na girl of the current issue! They are\nOh Lawks! for sure!"\n"Stuff and nonsense!" Anderson\nremarked, coldly. "You're\nAl. You've got that Mott man's\nviews in your head, and you shape\neverything to fit them. Now, if\nyou're going to carry on, you hunt\ndown Heath. That's the first thins\nto do. Am I right. Black?"\n"Why, yes, Sam. You see, I think\nmyself that Heath Is the criminal. I\ndon't care what you all say. I think\nHeath killed his wife because he\nfound her with Inman. Then he\nvamoosed, I don't care about clues\nand evidence, my knowledge of hu-\nman nature tells me that, given a\nman and wife and a Tertium Quid,\nthere's bound to be a domestic trag-\nedy."
0515bb780f8673bcfc1ffd5abe2e469d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.1356164066465 39.756121 -99.323985 stomachs were full. They might have\nheld niorw, but they were really full of\nthe bran and canaille. It looked nat\nural but had an acid smeil. This food\nwas in the process of digestion. Be-\nyond the stomach the large intestines\nwere also filled. I was satisfied that my\nhogs had been over fed not given too\nmuch at a meal, but they had been given\ntoo many meals. They were fed three\ntimes a day, aud the excess of food had\ncrowded the contents of the stomach\nand bowels along in its passage before\nit had been well digested aud assimila\nted, and so the heap of manure had been\nexcessively large without a proportion-\nate gniu in the hogs. Let us see. Their\nbreakfast was between seven and eieht\no'clock, dinner at noon and sapper at\nfive to eig ht o'clock. Wit hin these hours\nit is impossible for this mass of food to\nbo changed to chyle, the incipient blood.\nI am now astonished at my own stupid-\nity in not thinking of this before.\nI found several years ago that there\nis a limit to the quantity of grain \nhorse can digest, and to give it any\nmore is a great injury, and that the\namount a horee should have is less than\na great many suppose. I also have\nfound out and demonsrated that fatten-\ning cattle are usually fed more meal\nthan they can digest, and that there is a\ngreat waste generally iu their feeding.\nI only feed the beef cuttle morning and\nnight, and not more than four quarts of\nmeal at a mess, with roots and hay. Why\nmy hogs, hundreds of them, should have\nhad three meals a day seems now to be\nqueer, for I am sure they never needed\nit, and one meal was thrown away so\nfar aa gain in the growth of the hogs\nwas concerned. I wish Dr. Sturtevatlt,\nand he ie just the man to do it, would\nmake a test of the comparative gain be-\ntween pigs as near alike as possible) fed\ntwo full meals and three full meids of\nthe same kind of food. I have changed\nmy 6ystem of feeding and now thp store\nhogs aud all of those fattening get but\ntwo meals in twenty-fou- r
2d7e26f0839eae7a68e77bad7ae18378 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.2424657217148 39.369864 -121.105448 A story is told upon Rayer, the eminent\nphysician here. He was called in, six weeks\n' ago, to attend a sick child. The child—it\nVas the only child of wealthy parents-, rc-\n'covered its health. A lew days after Rayer\nhad discontinued his visits the mother of the\nlittle invalid called on the Doctor. She\nsaid : “My dear Doctor, there are services\nTendered in this world which money cannot\nrepay. 1 know not how we could adequately\n■reward you foryour kindness, and attentions\n•and skill to poor Ernest. And I have\nthought that, perhaps, you would be good\nenough to accept this little porte-monnaie\n—a mere trifle—but which I embroidered.”\n“Portemonuaie!” roughly replied the Doctor.\n■“Medicine, raadame, is not a sentimental\n.profession. When wc are called in to visit\n•sick people, we want their fees and and not\ntheir gratitude. Gratitude!—humbug! Id\nlike to see gratitude make the boil ; and\nI have not only to make my pot boil, but I\nhave got a horse to feed, madame, anti a dri-\nver to pay, madame, and daughters to portion- ,\nmadame—and gratitude wont aid me to do\nany of these things. Money is what is re-\n•quired—money, madam —yes. money.” The\nlady was, as yon may well imagine, confoun-\nded by this burst of indignant talents, and\nshe could only stammer; “But—Doctor\n'what is your fee?” “My tee is two thousand\nfrancs—and I tell you, madame, there is no\nuse screaming about it, I will not take one\nsou less.” The lady did not scream. She\n■quietly opened the porte-monnaie “I eni'-\nbroidcred,” unrolled the five bank notes in it,\ngave two to the Doctor, placed the other\nthree in the porte raonnaic, and the latter in\nher pocket and bowed profoundly, “Good\n•morning, Doctor,” and made her exit.
234ce69926fd23fde4e7545426882353 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.6616438039066 39.743941 -84.63662 ucb judges shall be elected In each circuit by tbe\nelectors thereof, and at ruoh lime nod for such\nterm as may be preseritved by Jaw, and tht same\nmnnler t.hall le elected in each circuit. Koeli\njudge shall do competent to excrcitte his judicial\npowers in any circuit. The general assembly\nmay change, from time to time, tho number of\nbouudsricsof tbe circuits. The circuit courts shull\nbe tbe successors of the district courts, and all\ncasea, ju4itraeDt6, records and proceedings peudint;\nin said district conrts, in the several counties of\nany district, shall le transferred to tbe circuit\ncourts in the several counties, aud be proceeded in\nas though said district courts hod not leen abol\nished, and the district courts shall continue in\nistence until the election and qualification of the\n the circuit courts.\nnd be it further resolved, that at said election\nthe voters desiring to vote in favor of said amend\nment, shall have pieced upon their ballots, the\nwords, "judicial constitutional amendment Yes,"\nsod the voters who do not favor the adoption of\nsaid amendment, may place on their ballots the\nwords "judicial constitutional amendment JNo;"\naod if a majority of all the votes passed cam at\nsaid election shall be in favor of said amendment,\nthen sa d sections one, two and six herein set\nforth, shall be and constitute tho sections so\namended in paid iodicial article (fourl of tho eon\nfti i in ion of the State of Ohio, and said original sec\ntions one, two and six, and also sections hve and\neleven of said article, shall be
02f8c03b5652012517a6d9f72a1023cc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.8866119902348 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, November 19..The letter\nof Secretary Sherman to Captain Myers,\nof the Columbus Ditpalch, reaffirming his\ndetermination to make the race for the\n8enatorship, has been the subject of a good\ndeal of talk to-day. Following as closely\nas it does on the heehf of tho epistle to\nDalzell, it has set people to thinking and\nhas given rise to the opinion that, in spite\nof all the talk there has been of Sherman's\nbeing retained in the Cabinet, he his qo\nhopes in that direction. The reasoning\non which this conclusion is bssed is that,\nthere being no doubt of Sherman's pref¬\nerence for the Cabinet position, he him¬\nself having expressed such a preference,\nthe fact of his eagerness to notify the peo¬\nple of his State that he is a Senatorial can¬\ndidate be looked upon as convincing\nproof that he has no reason to hope for re¬\ntention in his present position.\nA very silly rumor has been afloat here\nthat one of theobjec's of General Garfield's\ncoming visit is to sco Shetman and offer\nhim the position of Secretary of the Treas¬\nury in his (Garfield's) Cabinet. About on\na par with this is the statoment that tho\nobject aought to be attained, by Sherman\nin writing snch letters as he is doing to\nfriends in Ohio is to scare General Gar¬\nfield into guaranteeing him retention in\nhis present position by alarming him as\nto tue chances tor the Senate of his friend\nFoster. Those who circulate this state¬\nment go on the hypothesis that General\nGarfield is anxious to see Fester sent to\nthe Senate.
034de522ee6365ac4690ba637b1be201 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.9164383244547 39.743941 -84.63662 proportion of that produced is consumed\nat homo. Land in regions long devoted\nto dairying is too costly to devote to\nraising stock, and the majority of dairy\nfarmers desire to sell their cows when\nthey begin to.fail in their yield of milk,\nand to purchase those that are young\nand promising. The demand for good\nmilk cows is increasing rapidly, and tho\nprices paid for them are higher from\nyear to year. As a rule a cow three or\nfour years old, in ordinary flesh, but\nheavy with calf, or with a calf by her\nside, will sell for more than a steer of tho\nsame age that will weight several hun-\ndred pounds more and is in a condition\nof fatness to furnish mess beef. The ex-\npense of raising the latter is much less\nthan that the former. In a part of\nthe country where many animals are\nraised for beef, female calves sell for less\nthan males and are in smaller demand.\nIt will take less food to support them ti'.l\na given age, owing to their smaller size.\nThe steers must be well fed on cora aud\nsmall grain for several months in ordt r\nto tit them for the market. The cows,\nhowever, if designed for the dairy,- wil- l\nrenuire no more exoensive food than\ngross and hay. Again, the market for\ndairy cows is nearer the homes of West-\nern farmers than that for beef cattle.\nBy "selecting bulls of a family of short\nhorns or Ayrshires, noted for the milk-ju- g\nqualifies, there ij no more expense\ninvolved in breeding" c;itt'e for the dairy\nthin for the rla'nghfcr-pcn- .
07c2523be558f41cda4d88f9149a0295 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.1164383244545 40.063962 -80.720915 l'lmples, horns, Ai'lmsniid I'iUiin.\nWliun u hundred bottles of sarsupnri 11a or othei\nprutctitluu« ipeel tics (all to eradlcute in-born\nscrofula or eoniutflous blood pulsou, rctncmboi\nthat li. II . 11 . (IKManlo lllood llalm) has gained\nmany thousand victories, lu um many seemingly\nlucurablo instances. Scud to the lllood balm\nCo., Atlunta, Un., for "book of Wonder*," and bt\ncouvluctid. It Ih the onlytijub i«m>oi» pimiikikh,\n(i. W . . Mutter, 11 owell'ii X ltoadi, (In., writes;\n"1 wo* afl'octed nine years with wren. AH the\nlucdlcluo I could take did mo no Kood. I then\ntried 11.11.!!., aud eluht hot lien cured mo sound."\nMrs. S . M . Wilson, Hound Mountain,-Texas,\nwrites: "A lady friond of mine was troubled\nwith bump* antl ptmnles on her face utid neck,\nShe took three bottles of D. 11.11., and her skill\n[;ut soft aud smooth, pimples disappeared, and\nter health improved greatly "\nJumes L. Jlosworlli, Atlanta, Qa., writes:\n"Home years ngo 1 blood poison.\nhad iio uppetltv, luy digestion was ruined, rliou<\nmutism drew up tuy limbs so I could hardly\nwalk, my throat was cuuterbtcd live times, llol\nSprings gave me no benetlt, and my life wiui oiu\nof tortuio until 1 gave b. b. b . a trial, und, sur\nprising as it may seviu, the use of live bottlei\ncured mo." Logan A Co., Wholesale Agents.\nA luoro glorious victory can not bo\ngained over another inuu this: That,\nwhen the injury began on his part, the\nkindness should begin on ours.\n1IOWDOUTOIM CJON{|UKHDKATII#\nDoctor Walter K. Hammond says:\n"After a long experience I have come to\nthe conclusion that two-thirds of all\ndeaths from coughs, pneumonia and con¬\nsumption, might he avoided if Dr. Ack¬\ner's English Remedy lor consumption\nwere only carefully UBed in time." This\nwonderful liumedy is sold under a posi¬\ntive guarantee by U. It. Gootze, R. 13.\nHurt, (J. Menkemeller, Logan & Co. 2
29dc4f595c674b334a5b44945a1b0aee THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.3428961432403 41.004121 -76.453816 In your last news from the State Capitol,\nyour readers wero given a synopsis of the re-\nport of tho itoom Investigating Committee\nin which charges were preferred airainst Pe- -\ntroff and Lynott, members of the House\nthen, but members uo longer.\nFrom the report of tho committee on Mon-\nday the whole of the last week with tho ex-\nception of Tuesday was consumed by the\nHouse in attempting to find a way out\not the intricate labyrinth into which it had\nbeen led. Ono day the Houso could have\nbeen seen in the position of trying to resolve\nitself into a high court of impeachment.\nThe next in trying to send the matter back\nto tho committeo with instructions to do\ntheir work over again, and tho coup de grace\nof the week's work, on Friday, was tending\nthe boom bill back to the Senate asking\nthe speaker of that body to sign and trans-\nmit it to tho governor before it had been\npurged of the corruption which surrounded\nit and before oven any definite, action iu\nthat direction had been taken.\nOn Monday morning alter a quiet Sunday\nfor cogitation, the House resumed the con-\nsideration of the matter with a seeming\nclearer insight into tho "truo inwardness"\nof tho conduct of its misguided members,\nthan had nt any time theretofore been man-\nifested. A resolution embodying the expul-\nsion of Representatives Petroff and Lynott\n"for conduct unbecoming a member" was\nproposed by Mr. Hays Chairman of the inves-\ntigating committeo and an attempt mado by\nhim to iutroduco it. The friends of Petroff\nhowever insisted on their right to a trial be-\nforo the bar of the House, and the resolution\nwas consequently withdrawn for this pur-\npose.
0408d565f364cbbb882c7c97a6e4cbcd SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.5273972285643 35.780398 -78.639099 ana tne xankee's keen grey eye timkled\npleasantly, for Reginald had let drofi a se-\ncret. Well, Jotham, let's drop the notes ;\nI must go to Portland, for two reascls ; the\nfirst is to get possession of my mone , and I\nmust return the horse of Mangrote, from\nwhom I borrowed him, then if you jfill send\na boat up to Long Wharf I'll saunftr down\nthat way, get aboard and join the brig in a\nshort time. I think that is a good nian.'\nWall, I guess it be so, but take are you\ndon't let that old tartar of an uncli of yours\ncast his grapnels over yer bulwarks, 'cause\nye might be sort o' vexed and bun his peep-\ners, which yer ought'nt ter dew, by no means.'\nNever fearfr mora, l3:an restrain\nmy temper. So good bye" til we meet again,'\nand he sprang upon his lirse which stood\nclose by, and soon the rirging echo of hor-\nses feet was boi j to the hoaeet Yankee, \nstood for awhile seemingly lost in thought.\nAfter some time, however, Jotham" rais-\ned his head and slowly took his way to-\nward the beach, and as he leisurely strode\ntoward his boat, which was in waiting for\nhim, he spoke his thoughts aloud ' Wal, by\nharpoons and sperm whales, ef that ain't a\npratriotic younker, and then when he got sort\no' rumbunc8ious, dew tell! he looks like a\nnatal born king, by smoked herrings he did.\nHe is good pluck, and can handle as good a\npair o' darbies as the next one. Ah ! I don't\nbelieve by a long slip, that that old onwilling,\nclose fisted old white headed rascal of a tory\nbe this younkers Uncle. We will see, we'll\nsee,' he muttered, as he seated himself in the\nboat which was rowed by four young sea-\nmen, and taking the rudder in his giant-lik - e\nhand, and exclaiming 'Give way, lads, be\ncheery, bend like you war going to pull the\ncenter board out.'
3a05c53dd6eef044367afc822e301216 THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1911.2178081874683 35.721269 -77.915539 see a uciauciduu revcuuo ui cuov,\nbut that, is impossible with the Re-\npublicans in control of two branches\nof the government. We will meet the\nexpectations of the people if we put\nthe duties on the necessities of life\nas low as possible, exacting only suf\nficient revenue to run the government.\nThe tariff legislation to be anacted\nI at the special session will not and can\nnot be complete, dui. we must, uui me\nwool schedule, jthe excessive features\nof the cotton schedule, and we must\nput agricultural implements and the\nworkingman!s tools on the free list.\nIn fact, we must make reductions all\nalong the line. Of course, the Cana-\ndian reciprocity treaty will be put\nthrough. We promised the people to\nreduce the cost of living, and we must\npass legislation that will accomplish\nthat result. On such a program I be-\nlieve the Democrats in both the \nate and the House can get together.''\nThe new Democratic broom is tc\nhave its bristles tried on the several\ngovernmental departments,' according\nto plans being made by leaders of fhe\nnext House. Preparations in this di-\nrection are now being made by the\nnew Ways and Means Committee.\nThe primary reason for the general\ncharacter of the investigation is that\nreports may be made to the House of\nuseless offices in the departments and\nrecommendations be made for the ex-\nercise of economy. The Democrats\nhave in mind the statement of C. D.\nNorton, the President's private secre-\ntary, in a speech in Chicago, that\nGeorge Washington ran the govern\nment with 136 emploes, while tne\npresent force is 411,322, and they are\npreparing to go before the country in\n1912 with the pruning knife sharpen-e- d\nand ready for use by a Democratic\nPresident and a Democratic Congress.
4b445e7d1332319e7c2af82c3e806856 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.0863013381531 41.681744 -72.788147 Richard C. Xys'rcn, now a lieuten-\nant in the signal corps, aviation sec-\ntion of the United States army at-\ntached to the Third Aero Squadron\nat Fort Sill. Okla.. has written a\nlengthy and interesting letter to\nMayor G. A . Quigley in which he\ntells of tho intensive training goiner\non at that army post and concludes\nby adding that he would not sell his\nchances of going to France and\nbattling with the German airplanes\nfor all of Rockefeller's millions.\nSpeaking of himself, Lieutenant\nNygren says that since joining the\narmy 10 months ago his general\nhealth and condition has improved\nto such an extent that he now weighs\n183 pounds, where he tipped the\nbeam at only 140 when he enlisted.\nAlthough he has been at the train-\ning camp for 10 months, Lieutenant\nNygren expresses the hope that the\nnext 10 months will see him firmly\nestablished on tho other side with\n belt full of German scalps," Ex-\nplaining something of the work that\nit. being done at Fort Sill, the local\nofficer writes that the men are re-\nceiving especially important train-\ning in observation. map drawing,\nwireless work and infantry recon-\nnaissance as well as pilot work. At\npresent he goes on duty at 7:30 p. m .\nand is relieved at daylight.\nIn this letter Lieutenant Nygren\nsends n message to his relatives and\nfriends in which he says: "I can\nhonestly say that I don't want my\nfriends or my people to feel badly if\nI should come tumbling down out of\ntho clouds, as I go of my own free\nwill and am glad to be fit and able:\nand after all, when everything is\nraid and done, a life is so little to\ngive. I would that I could give more.\nIf thero is such a thing as love X\ncertainly have it for Old Glory."
066a78bc955be26127117668c2fea5c0 THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.9493150367834 37.083389 -88.600048 Tht belt Atlantic running of a Oer\nI man mall steamer IIt now precisely one\nand onehalf knots an hour swifter\nthan the beat run of any British mail\nsteamer And the best passage of the\nPettiest Ilrltlih steamer was mad\nmore than six years ago la June H8S\nruaIwu\nteaming was the swiftest ocean ttetm\ner to far ahead of the bait tailing un\nder any other Sag The Americans\nheld the field tram USO to 1SS8 but\ntheir best boat was never more thai\nhalf a knot twitter than the beat ol\nthe Cunard line Then from litl toI\n1I1t the Cunard liners were the twlft\neel but their belt was never more than\na knot aa hour twitter than the best\nof the German steamers running dur¬\nlug those years From ltC9 to H79 the\nInmaa and White Star linn held\nthe lint place at regards speed but\nthe Ucrmana were ttlll close behind\nthem Thou from tall to Itil the\nOuloa line which might bt called halt\nAmerican tld the lint place with\nteasels which were built In llriuln but\nthe Cunard was close upon lit belt\nTnen the Cunard got Its Innings flit\nKill when the Inaan agila came U\nthe trout with the swiftest German\nabout a knot behind the best Inmnn\nboat Then the White Star tot a turn\nand In 1193 the supremacy lame once\nagain to the Cunard and finally In 1131\nthe Germans triumphed and have held\nthe pet of honor at far at speed II\ncohcerned nor since Uut sever till\nnow hot the difference between the\nbelt German and the beat UrllUh been\naamuch aaaknotand ahaltaahour\nLondon Chronicle
4bbd23ee1646315658c5c05c3c17555f THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.028767091578 37.451159 -86.90916 The Courier Journal says\nW L Haworth formerly of Louis\nville but for time past twelve years a\nresident of Baltimore is in Louisville in\nconference with business men and cap\nitnlisthnbiint Kentucky oil fields Mr\nI In worth is vice president of the Union\nOil Company of Baltimore and Is deep ¬\nly Interested In Kentucky as an oilpro\nducing State Mr Ilawcrth has spent\nseveral months in Kentucky anti says it\nalTordx one of tho most productive oil\nStates in the Union From figures of\nlast years oil output he has computed a\ntable showing that Kentucky oil fields\nare the most productive of any State in\nthe Union with the exception of Texas\nThis table shows that the per cent of\ndry oilwells in Kentucky IIs lees than\nthose of Ohio Indiana West Virginia\nor New York and that the production\nof oil Iis greater by 50 per cent in\nany of the other States mentioned\nOne million gallons of oil were taken\nfrom Kentucky oil fields In 1004 Bald\nMr llnworth as against 600000 gal ¬\nIons fn 1001 showing a development of\n100 per cent in one year No other\nState can wake such a showing I have\ntraveled In every oilproducing State in\nthe United States anti my observations\nlead mo to conclude that Kentucky is\nthe most prodnctive of them all My\nultimate purpose Is to organize In Louis-\nville a stock company that will have for\nits purpose the development the State\noil fields and keep the wealth here\nthat Is going to outside corporations\nThe oil product of Kentucky IIs now\nbeing taken out of the State by outside\ncorporations located in Ohio Indiana\nNew York and Pennsylvania These\ncorporations realize the wealth of oil in\nKentucky and are taking advantage of\nIt
0e2f0ba3236b7992c9f314fe968fdf4a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.547814176027 40.063962 -80.720915 We now turn to the Republican party\nt the timo it came into being, (consider\nsly less than twenty years ago,) thi\n'emocratic party was sunk into a deai\nmservatism anu into the basest servan\nI the slave power. Tho Whig party bo\ntmo the basis of tho Republican partj\notwithstanding it bore quite too mucl\nsemblance to the Democratic party\nlappily, however, tho Whig party al\niwed itself to bo leavened by, the hand\n11 of old uucompromising abolitionists\ni this wise was the Republican part;\ninstituted; and tho condition of its con\nnued existenco and pftwer is that i\nlall continuo to bo a Reform party\nirandlv did it begin its reformatory ca\nxir. It fought for tho lito of the nation\nnd saved it; it fought against the guilt;\nebola ol the South, and tho moro guilt;\nabels of tho North, and conquered botti\nfought against slavory, and killed it; I\n>ught for the rights of tho black mat\nnd won them. And it did all this no\nnly without tho help of the Democrat!\narty, but in tho face of its determine\nnd unrelenting opposition. Its work i\not yet dona what lacking in th\nivil rights of tho black man it must has\nen to supply. I speak not here of socis\nIghts. They must tako care of them\nelves. Tho laws bavo nothing to d\nrith them. Many other reforms ar\nirglng themselves upon its adoption; urn\nnless it shall soon begin to espous\nhem, it will die, because of its ialluro t\nullill the condition of its existence.i\nither words, bccauso ol its failure to cot\ninue to bo a reform party. Ere this tt\nRepublican party should have abolishe\nhe franking privilege. Ere this it shoul\nlave accorded tho ballot to woman. Tb\nvido step in this direction taken in tl;\nPhiladelphia Convention, should bo fc\nowed up without delay. Ero this, to\nho Republican party should have a\nuyed Uovcrnmcnt against tho drao\nshops. For what is the office of Goveri\nncnt but to protect persons and prope\nly? and the sum total ot all other perl\nto persons and property falls short ol sue\nperils from tho dramshops. I ask n\nthat Government shall cspouso the cau\nof temperance, and enact sumptuary la*\n. but I insist that it shall be true to
0340da5ae020367808d5af221b34df33 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.741095858701 37.53119 -84.661888 GInsburg and family Norris Fred\nand family N Gold and family P H\nDavis and family J BIckotT and fami ¬\nly R Robinson D Levin 8 Salo\nwansky Philip user and Abe Pot\nledge Next Tuesday night atonement\nservices will begin and continue till\nsundown Wednesday evening during\nwhich their stores will be closed and\nthe entire time spent in fasting und\npraying After sundown Wednesday\nevening jubilee will follow\nKILLED TRAzMM W Penn a\nmerchant at Rolling shot and instant\nlv killed J L Whitlock also of that\nplace on train No 25 near Lebanon\nTuesday morning The men had been\nat outs for a long time and It Is said\nthat Penn who bad been to Louisville\nmoved to another coach when he saw\nWhitlock got on tho at Lebanon\nWhitlock followed hlmtnaklng threats\nFinally Ponn went into the baggage\ncar and WhItlock pursued him Penn\nthen opened lire with a revolver on\nWhltlook shooting from tho baggage\ncar and following through the colored\nsmoker and gentlemans car and Whit ¬\nlock fell dead In the ladles coach with\nthree bullet boles In his body ono\npiercing his heart J W Strange a\nfreight conductor of Lebanon Juno ¬\ntion received a painful wound In the\nlei by a stray bullet The train back ¬\nod to Lebanon and tho dead man was\ntaken to an undertakers establish ¬\nmont and Ponn was lodged In jail\nNearly two your ago Wbltlock shot\nPenn from ambush Inflicting a serious\nwound Mrs Martha Severance and\nsons Albert H and Sam Walton Sev-
053cd8234048ad641d46bd082f77594e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.6534246258245 46.187885 -123.831256 whom it is believed will die. The acci-\ndent it Is sold Is due to the negligence\nof the tower man at Laurel Hill. The\nInjured are being, conveyed to Long\nIsland City hospitals as fast as the\nrailroad officials can move them, A\ncarload has already been dispatched.\nA number of surgeons have been sum-\nmoned to the scene and these are bus\nily engaged in extending temporary Je- -\nlief to the injured. The particulars of\nthe accident are as follows: The Man-\nhattan Beach train blocked at the\nBrunswick Junction at about 11.30\no'clock, when the Rockaway Reach\ntrain coming at a high tate of upeed,\nran into the tall end of the Manhattan\nBeach train, plowing clear through\nthe last two cars. Everybody In these\ncars was either killed or injured. The\nthird car was completely thrown frcm\nthe track. One man says that eight\nbodies were taken from the wreck ani\nthat ona corpse lay on th.tj of the\nengine of the Rockaway train. ,'Jhe\nphysicians who were on the scene were\nsummoned from Long Island hospital.\n names of the killed, cun n'it be\nlearned as yet.\n3a. m AtthishourItIssaidthat\ntwenty persons at least were Killed in\nthe collision at Brunswicc Junction,\nand it Is thought that this number\nWill 'be Increased before morning, as\nmany of the Injured are reported to\nbe In a critical condition. The locomo\ntive of the Rockaway train, which was\ngoing at full speed, when ner engineer\nfirst sighted the standing train, f.pllt\nthe two last open cars of the\ntrain right through and "urli d llu--\nto the right and left in a wreck. I'heie\nwere nearly 150 persons In the l;iu two\ncars, it is said. Otto Ueiigler cf Kew\nYork, was a passenger n the Vtivlu-wa- y\ntrain with hjs wife and femily of\nfourteen, xne train was luiiiunn ui u\nhigh speed all the way in. He bays\nthey were Just in sight of the Long\nIsland City Chemical Works wen\nthere was a frightful crash and the\npassengers were thrown head over\nheels out of their seats. Men made' for\nthe doors, and women were crushed\nbeneath them.
0570f89f448634ba4bcb0fc6d659a807 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.1684931189752 40.063962 -80.720915 There was considerable excltemer\nhere yesterday afternoon occasioned' b\nthe effort of W. A . VanHorn to escap\nfrom the police. Pre hud had some trou\nble with his wife and was before th\nmayor, who gave him a nominal fln<\nHe had pone out with officers to fin\nsecurity, and while standing on the coi\nner Van Horn suddenly concluded le\nbail was his best play and started o\non a run, but with the officers after hln\nTwo or three shots were llred to fright\nen him, but these only excited him an\nhe continued ahead of the officers t\nthe river. He had evidently lost hi\nhead completely for when he reache\nthe river he made a leap Into the watt\nthat landed him beyond his depth, an\nwhen he came up he was so exhauste\nhe called for help, but went down agai\nbefore help reached him. A fisherma\n Long happened to be near in\nskiff and he got to the fellow in tim\nto save him from drowning, lie wa\ntowed ashore, where Marshal Johnsto\nand Officers Mahone and Shepherd as\nslsted him to the bank. A crowd <\nthree or four hundred people had cor\ngregated by this time along the ral\nroad track. "When Van Horn had res!\ned for a time, they took him to the clt\nbuilding. The officers Old not regar\nthe offense in the first place as a ver\ngrave one, but they did not want a prli\noner to get away from them, and 1\ndidn't. There was considerable syn\npathy expressed for Van Horn, as I\nIs an excitable fellow and was ver\nbadly rattled over his predicament unt\nafter his cold plunge. It Is said he ha\ntrouble with an engineer In Benwoc\nTuesday and was hit with a monke\nwrench.
132bbf9f5a9ec21f4826d34b7956fe3d DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.717213083131 44.939157 -123.033121 (United Press staff correspondent.)\nKl Faso, Texas, Sept. 19. With six\nautomobile loads of ammunition cap-\ntured from the arsenal in the attack\non Chihuahua City Saturday and with\nmore than a thousand reeruitB from\nthe Carranza ranks added to his forces,\nPancho Villa today is reported fleeing\nback into the fastnesses of Santa Clara\ncanyon, entering it by the east mouth.\nDe Facto government troops from\nChihuahua have abandoned the chase of\nthe "fox of the Sierras" in the mean-\ntime new troops from Monterey and\nother points south are being rushed\nnorth to take up the trail of the bandits\nGeneral Trevino, Carranz.a commander\nat Chihuahua City fears to use the men\nrecruited from northern Mexico ngninst\nVilla, as they invnrinbly desert to him\nat the first opportunity.\nMilitary men here do not under \nmate the importance of Villa's attack\non Chihuahua City and declare that all\nnorthern Mexico is now at the mercy\nof the bandit lender. They point out\nthat the city is the strongest military\nfortress in the north and that it was\ndefended by heavy artillery and a gar-\nrison of 7,000 men. Despite this strength\nVilla, after openly boasting he would\nattack the city "independence day"\nmade good his threat, entered the town,\nreleased prisoners nnd withdrew carry-\ning away ammunition and supplies and\ntaking with him more than a thousand\ndeserters from the Carranza garrison.\nma Not DiBturD Americans.\nScores of refugees from Chihuahua\nCity arrived in Juarez last night, bring-\ning first hand accounts of the attack\nand confirming monger reports that the\nillistns overran the city and left it at\ntheir leisure.
9e8dc2610c73ed2a14949d5fe4aa1630 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.732876680619 39.369864 -121.105448 A Few Words About the Grand\nEvent.—We cannot give, neither\nwill any one expect, in a small journ-\nal like this, full details of the sublime\ntriumph over space and the ocean ele-\nments which now fills every mind\nand occupies every tongue. Enough\nthat we have briefly recorded it, and\nthat we hare also recorded our sym-\npathy with the worlds great joy.—\nTo attempt more would be as pre-\nsumptuous, and as useless, as if we\nshould aim to give in our insignific-\nant columns, from time to time, the\nstately history of Gibbon, which has\nbeen well termed “the splendid\nbridge which connects the old and\nnew world, —an office now literally\nperformed by the Atlantic Cable.—\nNeither shall we indulge in the ex-\npression of those enthusiastic emo-\ntions and hopes which inspire every\nbreast that can entertain an unselfish\nfeeling throughout the two continents.\nEvery journal in the broad Union will\npublish its eloquent or its labored\n“leader” on the absorbing topic; and\nwe can best distinguish ourselves by\nabstaining. Our province is tho\nhumble, yet sufficient one of record-\ning local events and opinions: let tho\nworlds great newspapers bear on\ntheir ample pages the records of\npassing history.—So much by way of\nshowing that our silence does not\nproceed from insensibilities.\nThe remark of Emerson, that“ev-\nery great and commanding moment\nin the annals of the is the tri-\numph of some enthusiasm,” is forcibly\nillustrated by the admitted fact that\nthe success of the Atlantic Telegraph\nat this time is largely due to the ener-\ngy? perseverance and enthusiasm of\nCyrus W. Field. But in the enthu-\nsiasm of the people themselves—ia\nthe deep joy that lights up every\nmans face and even moistens so many\neyes—in the universal exultation\nover Mr. Fields success, we can see\nthe germ and promise of a success\nmuch nobler. The bare fact that the\nhard and sordid natures of our utili-\ntarian countrymen can be so profound-\nly stirred as they are by emotions of\nthe most elevated and cosmopolitan\ncharacter, is a grander and more\nnificant event than the laying of the\nCable. A people capable of this\nmust be destined to realize their own\nglorious hopes in reference to the re-\ncent electrical triumph. They must\nbo in earnest when they cry for peace\nand love, and offer to an hereditary\nfoe the grateful sacrifice of heredita-\nry prejudice, whilst extending the\npure warm hand of eager friendship.\nThere must be a meaning in these\nringing bells, and firing cannon and\npyrotechnics, and music, and crowd-\ned streets, and fervent shouts,—a\nmeaning that the future will inter-\npret by a millenium of peace and a\nconfederation of nationalities, for the\nstrong desire of the present surely\nindicates the time to be.
0e32f749a8292e509670e66e17bea450 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.0068492833586 39.756121 -99.323985 ento to pursue with their children is\nalways to be themselves in personal\ncharacter what they wish their chil-\ndren to be. Children should be taught\nreligious truth from their earliest in\niancy. ssoi in ine sense ot reasoning\nabout this or that, but rather in the\nsense of learning the essential truth\nabout God and his commands to us\nOne writer has said: "If not led to\nChrist in early childhood youth is full\nof snares and pitfalls." The elements\nof youth, which, if properly directed\ninside of God's kingdom, are elements\nof power; unrestrained and undirect\ned are fraught with evil. Having\ncome to God early in life it is much\nmore simple and easy to serve Him\nand work for Him than if our return\nwere delayed by years.\nWe are creatures of habit. We ac\nquire habits easily and rapidly and\nsoon they exercise great power over\nus. The child who comes to God in\ntender years is free from these habits,\nnever naving acquired mem, ana can\ndevote all his energy and strength to\nthe service of his King, while the one\nwho in later life has to devote\npossibly half his strength in overcom\ning nis oia naoits. xnose wno come\nin childhood are much more likely to\nbe faithful to the end. Mr. Spurgeon,\na pastor of vast experience, once said\nthat he never had to discipline a\nmember of his church who came to\nJesus in childhood. The wise mother\nwill not seek to find a full grown\nchristian in her child, but rather to\nencourage a religion for a child. What\napplies to a family applies also to a\ncommunity. For what is a communi-\nty but a large family?\nWhat constitutes missionary work\nin a community? Whatever promott s\nprosperity and personal happiness.\nHow can we better do this than by\nour Influence? Some one has said that\nthe life of a true christian should ex-\nert an influence for good over others\nfos a radius of five miles. The heart\nis strengthened by enlarged comrade-\nship, the soldier is invigorajted and his\npace quickened.\nNot the least beneficient aspect and\ninfluence of this great gathering will\nbe found in the christian union that\nit evidences.
3816ad8c9160bb10f6b63e28fdffba85 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.096994503896 40.063962 -80.720915 In the Convention to-day the repoi\nof tbe Committee on Executive Depari\nment was taken up, and the followin\nsections were adopted:\nlat. The Governor shall hold hla o\nflee for four years, and be eligible fo\nthe term next succeeding.\n2d. Providing for counting the vote\nby the General Assembly; in the casec\nties, a vote of the Legislature to elec\n4d. No person shall be eligible to th\noffice of Goveruor unless be has attaic\ned the age of thirty years, been a citi\nzen of the United States twenty vearc\nand resident of Virginia five years nex\npreceding his election.\nA long debate took place over th\nthird section. The committee reportei\nin favor of a two years' citizenship as\nqualification for candidates. It wa\ntinally decided that five years' real\ndence should be required.\nThe committee on the elective fran\nchise and qualifications for office, o\nwhich Hunuicutt is chairman, has sub\nmitted a minority and majority \nport. The majority report confers thi\nfranchise on all males who have beei\nresidents of the State for six months\nwith the following exceptions: idiot\nand lunatics, persons convicted o\nbribery in elections, embezzlement o\npublic funds or treasures, personi\nchallenging or accepting challenges ti\ntight duels, and persons disfranchise!\nby the proposed amendment to thi\nconstitution of the United States o:\nReconstruction acts. All persons en\ntitled to vote shall be eligible to offici\nexcept as restricted by the constitution\nAll persons entitled to vote and hole\noffice, and none others, shall be elig\nible as jurors.\nThe minority report of Mr. Afaddox\n(Republican) disfranchises all who eve:\nheld any United States office and after\nwards engaged in insurrection againsi\nme same, and also the following classes\nPresident, Vice-President, members o;\nCongress, Cabinet and diplomats\nagents of the Confederate government\nand all rebel officers above the rank o\nColonel in tho army or Lieutenant it\nthe navy.
0e4b17bfd1c0fdd476420ccab3b53de4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.2260273655504 40.063962 -80.720915 Both tho Wheeling steel plant lyid\nRiverside's big plant. Were forced to\nBuspend yesterday ,mornlnff, tho water\ngetting ltv their fly pit*. The upper end\nof Benwood,« commonly known as\nWhltemun's, was soon submerged, ;the\nwater being alarmingly deep Jn places.\nIt got on the first floor at John Lublp's\nsaloon'nnd other houses close by:\nOn McMechen street, above and below\ntho "Wheeling steel works,; cellars soop\ntilled up and the water swamped the\nfirst floors of many residences. At\nDeegan's and other business houses In\nthat vicinity, the storekeepers with\nlargo forces of assistants were working\nall day removing their Roods to dry\nplaces. Considerable suffering was ex¬\nperienced by the poorer classes, espe¬\ncially those'dwelllng in shanty boats, or\ncheap structures along the river banks,\nand their plight excited general sympa¬\nthy. Bon wood'was taken by surprise,\nthirty-live feet being thoaght as the\nmuxlmum stage the river would reach.\nAt run the water backed up\nalmost to the school house, formthg a\npretty stretch of water. It was water\nbacking up from the 'sewers that did\nthe damage in the town, that coming\nover the river banks being threatening\nonly to the Ohio River railroad, chlelly.\nLast evening Benwood'a streets in the\ncentral portion of town were covered\nby water, nnd many people were forced\nto keep within their houses. Tho town\nresembled a little Venice, with gondo¬\nlas. or In other words, rafts and skills,\nEliding from door to door. The notlves\nfelt a reasonable degree of alarm later\nIn the evening, n» the back water from\nthe sewers came up. The town was cut\nin two at Seventh street, the water\nstretching back to the hill, and people\non "Kentucky Heights" looked down on\ntheir neighbors with compassion: Bus¬\niness in Ben wood is paralyzed nnd the\nschools will likely be closed to-day.
03c7e2eaf1f93de32b80e82c92e96713 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.4877048864096 40.832421 -115.763123 A Tribune New York special says:\nThere has beeu much speculation about\nTilden's course at Cincinnati, but the\nanrenl which will be prestlit'd to the\ndelegates and cat) have but otio author,\neffectually settles the question of bis\ncandidacy. The appeal was carefully\nguarded, but a copy is at hnnd and is\ngixeu iu full. It coulsini'lj questions,\nwtiieh make these queries: Whether\nTilden was elected in 1870? whether he\nis not dejure President now? whether\nho was not defrauded out of office by a\nconspiracy? whether the House has »o\ndeclared? whether, in this view, a Dem¬\nocratic Convention can justly ond con¬\nsistently accept the nomination? must\nnot the Democratic Convention vindi¬\ncate Tilden and their own rights by\nnominating him? will the Democratic\nConvention nominate another man than\nthe ono their platform must declare\nwas cheated out of tho l'rrsidency? will\nnot Bepublicnu press justly ridicule\nthe illogical position of the Democratic\nConvention? What a grand opportu¬\nnity is presented to tho Democrats,\nwhose names havo been published in\nconnection with tho candidacy, to unite\niu a note to tho Convention withdraw¬\ning their names ntid presenting that of\ntho niau whom the people elected.\nTuk Ward llrflti hears that tho Bill-\nsido has been attached for $10,000 and\nintimates that "there is a job in it." It\nalso says: ''A number of Wardites arn\nstriking out for the Unnnison country.'\nOf tho Water White it says: The tun¬\nnel was driven iu last week nt tho rsto\nof twelve feet a day or 300 feet a month.\nAt ibis rato it will not take many\nmonths lo tup the Paymaster, when\nWard will at least become a steady-\ngo i nu camp or wo shall miss our gues^\ngTMtlT.
42828f1cf3f578803df7d09bfa9ac3ae THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6734972361364 39.290882 -76.610759 GENTLEMEN : I have been honored by your in-\nvitation to attend, ok Tues lay next, at the feast\nto be given in honor of certain distinguished\ncitizens of Georgia and Alabama, by the Demo-\ncratic citizens 01 Muscogee county.\nGenerally speaking, I should feet it wonld be\nmore prudent for me to unite with my fellow-\ncitizens only at the ballot-box, in using my right\nas a member of the Republic, to approve or to\ncensure the conduct of those to whom we en-\ntrust the guardianship of our liberties. On the\npresent occasion, I feel the additional force of a\nmonition given by my brethren at the last coun-\ncil (a few months since) upon this very subject,\nin a pastoral letter. I trust, then, that my re-\nspectfully declining your invitation will not be\n as wanting in courtesy to you. The\nbody to which I belong professes to be one of\npeace and conciliation: should its members unite\nactively with political parties mutually opposed,\nwhile each declares that it seeks only the pros-\nperity of our Republic, their capacity to pro-\nmote peace and conciliation would be at an end.\nVou will feel that the influence of such a minis-\ntry of good will would, in our present state of\nexcitement, be useful, if not necessary, and I am\nsure you will approve of the determination by\nwhich I am bound. I think, however, 1 may\nventure to say that the best remedy for our pre-\nsent unfortunate position is to be found in pre-\nferring industry to speculation, labor to cabal,\neconomy to ostentation, patient and persevering\nfrugality to dissipation.
1f83e8f0d22d3b6c2626f10d8ab45402 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.7109588723997 37.53119 -84.661888 THE proposition to issue graded\nschool bonds referred to In our last\nIssue should be defeated for many rea\nsof What wo sadly need Is a reduce ¬\nflea rather than an Increase of tbo rate\nof taxation The State now collects\n47io on tbe 1100 the county can go as\nhigh as CO cents and with tbe turnpikes\nto pay for and maintain the rato can\nnever be much If any under tbe limit\nTbo town may levy as much as 75c and\nIf the saloons should bo voted out the\nfull amount will be required to run tbe\ncity government Tbo school tax is now\n40c and If the bonds aro Issued 35c ad\nditional may be added making a total\nof e247io that may bo levied on a per ¬\nson In town If all should reach\ntbo limit which Is generally tbo case\nA town man therefore would have to\npay about onehalf of his Income as\nmoney now gone begging at 5 per cent\nHigh taxes ruin any placo and Stanford\nhas already felt their effect Its bank\nlog capital has been reduced from 8450\n000 to 8100000 and every man with\nsurplus dollar Is buying farming lands\nand strange as It may seem some of\nthe most enthusiastic graded school\nadvocates are among tbo number\nMoreover It too bonds should be vot ¬\ned11 wlll ba Impossible to soil them\nwith A suit pending to wit tho validity\nof the graded school election and tho\namount asked for 812000 IH at least\ndouble what It should be Dont forget\ntbo date
9da4a589091c8e236864af8f933df8df THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6178081874682 39.261561 -121.016059 Every Intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian. whose preparatory study tits him for all the\nduties he must fulfill: vet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, puijs.rtlng to be the\nhost in the world, which are not only useless, hut\nalways Injurious. The unfortunate should he pak-\ntkti.aii in selecting his physician, as il is a lament-\nable vet incontrovertible fact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from inexperience,! physicians in\ngeneral practice; for It is a point generally conceded\nby the best syphilogranhers, that the study and man-\nagement oftliese complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comonly pursues one of treat-\nment. in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used by the syph-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising ulass, as nine-tenths ot them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest nil large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Ieter\nFunk 'institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Versons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view ol the above facts, Dr. J. C. YOUNG\nwould sav that lie is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes liis whole time to the treatment f venereal\ndiseases. Office, 761 Clay street, opposi the Plaza.\nHoursfrom 9 a. m..to 3 p. m.
7e8e730cfc42cf0e8392440086739477 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.001369831304 39.290882 -76.610759 The people could derive no benefit irom the\ndistribution of any part of the public revenue,\nunless they were relieved, at the same lime,\nfrom the necesity of paying back a much, larger\namount. But when the advocates of this scheme\nspeak of returning money to the pockets of the\npeople, they mean that it is to be transferred\nfrom their representatives in Congress, to their\niepresentatives in the different legislatures;\nthat, instead of being used for the common ben-\nefit of the Union, it ought to be applied to the\nseparate use of twenty-six States. Under such\na plan of distribution, the proceeds of the public\nlands would be at as great a distance from the\npockets of the people as they are now; and\nwhether this portion of the public revenue be\nclaimed for the people or the States, it is well\nfor both to that while they are ap-\npearing to be the advocates of State rights,\nthey are really conceding powers to the general\ngovernment, which may be extended to every\nobject that requires the expenditure of money.\nThe assumption of State debts would pro-\nbably follow as a consequence of the distribu-\ntion of the public revenue, ancf" would only be\nan application of the same principle to a differ-\nent object. It has already been contended,\nthat the general government has the power to\nassume the debts of the States, not because it\nwas granted, but because it has been exeicised.\nThe precedent, referred to, is the act ol 1790,\nby which Congress assumed State debts, in cer-\ntain propotions, to the amount of tvventy-oue\nmillions, five hundred thousand dollars. But\npayment was not to be made to State creditors,\nifit could be ascertained, that their cirtificates
0aefc69dc1c4e6c1e851fbcac911af34 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.9794520230848 41.262128 -95.861391 named Jacjosoa, aad in eu here, tb*\nw funded man is w Jiwvbsou's hooae, he\nuaa oo* arrow shut tbrougfe hi* nroi and\nanotbar through If* Meaby part of bai\nneck. We remained henra 'J bours and went\noa to Uf'.- «Qw.n a ft.'ry on dam ..s river,\nwber-- we were (t> remain; 1 wa* oc post\nfrom ¥ to 12 j'eioea, and just wbea my\ntime was nearly out there came a himh-\nger from Itaakton, wiUi an or<isr from\nUoioaei Pat tee thai «a wouid iuimadiatetj\ncome to bis assistance at Yank ton, four\nmites from the ferry, but everything was\nquiet when we got there, to we put our\nhurse* up in the stable and lay down on\nthe floor of the barroooi aad slept sound\nuntil near breakfaat time next monwng\nfor we about tired out, having rode\nabout sixty mile* without stopping only\nto feed. N«xt morning after breakfast\nwe went to some of tbe Stores aajl gbt a\nfew things that we wanted, alibdtyjb we\nCould not get much of a vamt), a* tfre\nstorekeepers are afraid to lay m much pi\na stock, on account of tbe Indian\ntroubk-a; Yankton is bcnatifully jftuaWd\nOn tbe Missouri, and n ha* every prospe*£\nof becoming quite an fmportaot place,\nat present nearly all the settlers, ^Xcept\nthose living in town, hav« lejt aud gone\nto tbe States; there are some ?ery fine\nfarms near town, opened, fenced, culti­\nvated and abandoned by tbe claiaant*^\nstill amidst al! tbe troubles tber j ire a\nfew settlers yet remaining, determined to\nbrave ft out to tbe last. tVbile bare weal
106435132f31b9840af5f047d5f64647 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.7301369545917 42.217817 -85.891125 are complainants, ana saui wuuani wuson,\nLevi Wilson and Hannah Wilson were defend-\nants in original bill, and wherein by death of\nsaid Hannah Wilson said William Wilson, Levi\nWilson, and, by revivor, George Wilson, Wil-\nliam Wil&ou, Jr., Jane Anstis and Betsey Bur-\ngees are defendants, directing the enforcement\nof said execution against the lands below de-\nscribed, I shall expose to sale, to the highest\nbidder, at the front door of the Court bouse, in\nthe village of Paw Paw, Michigan, at eleven\no'cock in the forenoon of the fifteenth day of\nNovember, 1875, and in the order in which they\nare named, tbe following deeenbed pareeh) of\nland being in Van buren county, Michigan, Tit;\nLot four (4) block two (3) village of Lawton,\nlot seven (7) block four (4) Dodge's addition to\nto the village of Lawton, lot five (5) of block\nfour (4) L'nion addition to tbe village of Law-t o-\nand a lot five (9) rods by (14)\nrods north of commons in tbe north east corner\nof Bitely's addition to the village of Lawton i\nand also a piece commencing at a point thirty-- 1\nsix (36) rods south and two (3) rods west of\ntne north east corner of the north westquarter\nof section thirty two town three south of range\nthirteen west, running tbenee west eight rods,\nthence north eight rods, thence east eight rods,\nthence south eight rods to place of beginning;\nalso, tbo east halt of the west half of tbe\nnorth west quarter of section twelve, except\none acre off from the north west corner, in\nin town four south of range 13 west, Michigan;\nalso, west half south east quarter of soction\nono. in said town four south also, tbe west\nhalf of the sontn east quarter of section one,\nin Baid town fonr south; also, the east fraction-\nal quarter of section fourteen in said town four\nBoutb, of range thirteen west.
a7bffdc4096c6ea0aff032f0dfaac922 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.7663934109999 39.745947 -75.546589 tion of artificial values through the\nworld can be accomplished, Is a mat­\nter of considerable speculation. Indi­\ncations are now that it will be a long,\ndrawn-out process extending over a\nperiod of at least three or four years\nto «une. The public itself has the\nability to hasten or to retard this\nprocess. If universal thrift hecotws\npopular, as It seems to liavo been do­\ning: during the last montfii or two, the\nirocoss will be hastened materially,\nf. on the other hand, the slight re­\nductions In prices stimulais buying\nto a point of extravagance—u point\nfrom which It has been a long time\nIn moving—Wien financial Indigestion\nwill result, and the healthy condition\nInto which capital seems to be grow­\ning. will receive a setback.\n'Dee future status of labor is dif­\nficult to foresee. It is quite certain\nthat any material reduction In wages\nIs Improbable, certainly not until re­\ntail prices have receded considerably\nbelow the level at which they now\nstand. But even if no reduction in\nwage* Is effected, the combination of\ncircumstances which Is gripping \ndustry is going lo have the i ffect of\nmaking the Industrial laborer more\nworthy of his hire. Individual effee,-\nleney must be increased—even mullii-\nplled—and In many instance* already\nthat has happened. When that condi­\ntion becomes (general, further price\nrecessions may be looked for and\nthen the "vicious circle" will have\nbegun Its backward swing.\nAfter the Civil War St took thir­\nteen years to bring about that situa­\ntion which has started It* accom-\nlishment witthin two years after the\nrent War. It would be absurd, how­\never, lo attempt to draw any analogy\nor to make any serious comparison\nof conditions that obtained after Une\nCivil War and conditions today, be­\ncause then it was the business of the\nUnited States only that was Involved,\nwhile today the financial structure of\nthe entire world is affected. Still It\nis a matter of Interest in which some\npeople may find a more nr lew de­\ngree of encouragement to know that\ncommodity pries« today arc propor­\ntionately cheaper than they were two\nyears after the surrender of Lee at\nAppomattox.
0dd6bebd2b493208a54010a276ef73f7 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.3410958587012 39.513775 -121.556359 Freon this point we entered a wooden\ncountry, through which we passed in a\nstraight line hearing a westeily course to\nthe Lasson Meadows, a distance of about 5\nmiles. Through the Lasson Meadows we\ncontinue the same straight course, a distance\nof three miles, when we otnke the north\nfork of the Feather river. This, it will tic\nnecessary to bridge with a suhstanti ■) struc-\nture of about one hundred feet in length.\nTimber convenient and of excellent quality.\nFrom the north fork we pursue a more\nsoutherly direction through the woods—-\nleaving the old emigrant trail to the right\nthrough which we found a level pass that\ncan easily tie made a good road, and reached\nButt Creek in a distance of about six miles.\nThis creek will also, require bridging\nFrom Butt Creek yon strike a bill through\nwhich a good pass was found. This leads\ninto Soda Spring Valley, formerly known as\nHumbug Valley, a distance not exceeding\nthree miles from Butt Creek.\nFrom Soda Spring Valley, we ascended,\ntiV a very easy grade, to the top of the\nmountain, where we found three feet\nof snow, which was soft, and the only snow\nbetween Marysville and the Honey Lake Val-\nley, on the route we are here describing.\nThe distance over the snow will not exceed\nfen miles, and we became satisfied, from the\nobserve twins we are a tile to make, that a\npood road with an easy grade, can tie made\nttie entire distance without any difficulty\nOver this portion of the >oad, four yoke of\noxen, on the Kith of November last, hauled\nfifty nix hundred pounds of freight in one\nwagon, which freight wa* purchased in the\neitv of Marysville In addition to this, wc\nare advised that stock has been driven over\nthe road during the entire winter.\nFrom this point, where we left the smtw,\nwe proceeded southwesterly, and reached\n('happarel House in a distance of fnnr miles,\nover a good road. In coming tn this house\nwe reached Chapparel Hill. This is the\nworst hill on the route, but an easy grade\ncan he found over it by avoiding the present\nroad The entire distance between Soda\nValley and Chapparel House is eighteen\nmiles.
10a9967752c69d49bdf9d199f303d06b THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1890.3027396943176 38.894955 -77.036646 court room was crowded with thoso who a\nhud come with the expectation of seeing\nthe prisoner, but they were dlsip\npointed, for it was not deemed neces-\nsary that ho should prcsont himself In\ncourt on this occasion. Much discussion for\nhad been indulged In between members\nof tho legal profession as to whether\nbail would bo granted on tho ground of\nJudgo Klncald's Illness or not, nnd\nthere seemed to bo much difference of\nopinion. In conscqucnco of this, con-\nsiderable interest was centred In tho de-\ncision by tho attorneys,\nIt was 10:30 o'clock when Judgo\nBingham presented himself and lie pro\ncccdcd at onco to glvo tho decision,\nwhich was in substanco ns follows)\n"Tho ground of tho motion for ball Is\nthat tho closo confinement in jail will\nresult disastrously and fatally\ntho dofendant, who Is charged with\ncapital offense. It is of llttlo Importance\ntlio (jourt ns to 1110 antecedent st ci c- nes - s\nof tho defendant or tho cause. In\ncases of this description tho Court\nmust refer to tho prcsont and im-- q\nmeuiato future In this caso tho afllda-- 1\nvlts show that Mr. Kincald has a voryV\nweaK physical constitution nnu nas oeen\natlllcted with many serious illnesses. I\nthink tho ovidenco established that a\ncontinued confinement in jail would ro- -\nMilt in serious illness and probably'\ntciminato taiauy. it is ucyonet me\npower of mortal to tell whether it will\nor not. .aicuicai experts is tuo nest au-\nthority on tills. A man chnrged with n\ncilmo of this uaturo must bo presumed\nto bo innocent until proven utility.
0895d33dba903e32597a6e5f0db8b64d WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.5068305694697 40.827279 -83.281309 For example, nearly all the Demo\ncrats in this city who support Gre- e -\n,ey are or have been notoriously\nconnected with the lammany ring,\nWhy is this? Is it because the old\nleaders of the ring are anxious for\npolitical reform ? Or is it not rath\ner because they are plotting to re\ngain their ascendency is this city and\nMate, and see no way of doing in ex\ncept by promising to support Gree\nley for President, providing he and\nbis party connive at their local plots V\nWhich of these two motives is likely\nto prevail with them most ?\nSweeny is working actively for\nGreeley, and has certainly held con\n8uItations with seme of Greelev's\nmends. Suerift Brennan is elisting\nhis "clubs" on the same side. Gov.\nHoffman has a good understanding\nwun ureeiey s managers, tuven so\nrespectable a man as Congressman\nRoosevel, accepted a Tammany nom-\nination only two years ago, was el-\nected by Tammany influence and\nTammany money, and is now frank-\ning heaps of "Greeley documents"\n(including tradesmen's circulars),\nin pursuance of the same line. Look\nround city, and you will find all\nthe old Tammany Machinery in mo-\ntion for Greeley. These are unde-\nniable facts you can only say you\ndo not see them by carefully shut-\nting your eyes. Then, what does it\nall mean? Are these men using\nGreeley, or is he using them, or are\nwe to believe that Sweeny fe Co.\nhave given up all thoughts ofplun-de- r\nand are now intent upon pure\ngovernment and reform ?\nAgain, it is quite clear that all the\nreform measures of the last Legisla-\ntion were defeated by the instrumen-\ntality af Groeley's friends. When\nthe public pressure became toostrong\nand a measure like Mr. Tilden's\nOyer and Terminer bill was forced\nthrough, Gov. Hoffman came to the\nrescue and vetoed it. Gov. Hoffman\nexpects to get the renominaton for\nGovernor, and the Greeleyites and\nFentonites will support him, provid-\ned he uses his influence in favor of\nGreeley for President We shall\nthen see this city handed back to\nTammany rule, and the public will\nbe plundered worse than ever for\nthere will be a year's lost Ume to\nmake up.
116b8baf6a8357a5f618b20789f8fc9c NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.6589040778792 40.735657 -74.172367 within the following boundaries:\nBeginning in the northerly line of Peddle\nstreet, at a point distant about 80 feet weet of\nthe westerly line of Badger avenue; thence\nnortherly and parallel with Badger avenue to\nthe westerly line of the New York Bay Railroad\nright of way: thence northerly along the eame\nto a point about 220 feet north of the northerly\nline of Bigelow street; thence westerly and\nparallel with Bigelow etreet to the rear line of\nlota fronting on the easterly aide of Hunterdon\netreet: thence southerly and parallel with Hun-\nterdon etreet to the northerly line of Bigelow\nstreet; thence westerly along the eame to the\nrear line of lota fronting on the easterly elJe\nof Bergen street: thence southerly along the\nante to the northerly line of Hawthorne ave-\nnue; thence westerly along the name to the rear\nline of lote fronting on the westerly aide of\n etreet; thence northerly along the eame\nto the rear line of lota fronting on the sooth\nerly aide of Runyon street; thence weeterly\nalong the eame to a point about 50 feet east of\n; the easterly line of Seymour avenue; thence\nnortherly and parallel with Seymour avenue to\nI the rear line of lota fronting on the northerly\naide of Runyon etreet; thence eaaterly to the\nrear line of lote fronting on the westerly aide\nof Chadwick avenue; tnenca northerly along the\nsame to the rear line of lots fronting on tbe\nsoutherly side of Clinton avenue; thence weet-\nerly along the same to the rear line of lota\nfronting on the easterly side of Hedden street;\nthence southerly along the same to a point\nabout 450 feet south of the southerly line of\n! Clinton avenue; thence westerly about parallel\nwith Clinton avenue to the rear line of lota\nj
02509e98aac3f7d9c4b0a4e5f48e8082 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.1625682743877 40.832421 -115.763123 having allowed Blade to humbug him.\nHe ibeu held a large slate by one end.\nallowing the reporter to bold the other.\nIll a few luiuntee it piece of peucil got\nupon cud and tumbling back and forth\nwrote aeveral aentences. This trick\nwas explained to the reporter to bia sat\n(.faction and later In the evening to\nMr. Byrne. Otto Greeuhood, George\nDavis and several o tlier ladies and gen¬\ntlemen who called at intervals during\nthe evening. It is nue of lb* oierercst\npieces of legerdemaiu ever invented.\nThe table rappiugs aud ballot testa were\nu|ho given aud exposed nulil everybody\nlaughed at the idea tbat such thin and\nsimple devices could fool everybody. - ! .',\nMr. Garrison nave that Blade in\ntraveling parries 19u0 |>oauda of baggage\nalways checked by a confederate who\ntravels witb hitB, but appears to be n\nstrsnger. He a I bo has . business agent\nwhom some people suppose io be a con¬\nfederate when bo really is not. Iu each\nroom he occupies he leaves four holes\n through the floor to lutftsist him\niu moving furniture. These boles are\nnow to be seen in tbe room he occnpied\nat tbe International Hotel in Virginia\nCity, and no doubt at tbe Arlington in\nthis City. They could easily be found\nin investigation. Tbe simple piue\ntable which Bladu carries witb him is a\nmarvel of mechauism and cost $1,500 to\nmake. As a simple sleight of hand per¬\nformer. he is better than Caseneuve or\nHerrman, and this juggerly euters into\nalmost everything be does.\nAs thu track ii leveled trains over the\nNevada Central Ilailway, says the\nKttrtUr, continues to increase iu speed.\nThe express train that left Battle Moun¬\ntain Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock ar¬\nrived at Dinstuore's ranch abont 9 iu\nthe evening, iucludiug a stoppage for\ndinner of about throe quarters of an\nhour. Cousiderittg that a long stretch\non this eud of the road requires leveling\nthe time made is good, l)y Monday or\nTuesday trains will run to within a few\nhundred yards of Cliftoo canyon.
234b1508e3bf444bb5cc139d0020eeac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.0342465436327 40.063962 -80.720915 inen themselves, seem to be afllict\nwith (be same infatuation. Toall su\nwe say, tbat the moot unwise advi\nyou can Rive to your boy is to encou\nage him to be a clerk or a book-keepi\nAt the >>est it is not 11 well paid occur\nLion: Very frequently it is among ti\nvery poorest. This is the case whi\nthe clerk is fortunate enough to\namployed ; but if he should happen\nbe out of place, then comes the wea:\nsearch, the fearful struggle with tl\nthousands of others looking for placc\nthe never-ending disappointments, tl\nhope deferred that makes the bea\njick, the strife with poverty, tl\nhumiliations that take all the manhoi\nant ot the poor souls, the privatatioi\n»nd sufferings of those who depei\nupon his earnings, and who have i\nresource when he is earning nothin\nNo father, no mother, no relatii\nshould wish to see their boys or kil\nilred wuBting their young lives ill strl'\nIng after the genteel positions th\nbring such trials and privations upo\nthem in after life.\nHow <lo these deplorably false n<\nLions as to choice of occupation ini\nthe head of boys? Why do they <\nheir parent^ consider il more "gei\nteel" or desirable to run errandi\nsweep out offices, make fires, copy le\nlers, Ac., than to make hata or shoes, <\nlay bricks, or wield the saw or jacl\niliint*, or haudle the machinist's til\njr the blacksmith's hammer? We ha\\\naenrd that some of them get these m\nlions at school. If this be true, it\ni sad perversion of the means of educ:\nion provided for our youth, which ai\nnteuded to make them useful, ns we\nis intelligent members of society, an\nlot useless drags and drones. Shoul\nt be so, that the present generation\njoyh get it into their heads that, bi\n:ause they have more school learnin\n»nd book accomplishment than the\n'athers had, they must therefore loo\nlown upon the trades that require ski\nind handicraft, and whose productior\nmake up the vast mass of the wealth <\nsvery country, then it is time for th\nControllers and the Directors to ha*\nhe interior walls of our school housi\n:overed with maxims and mottoe\nyarning them against (he fatal error.
21a7d1c8cf99bec20668a510693d026b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.8013698313039 40.063962 -80.720915 UnJEfTELDB, W, Va., Oct. 19..HOC\nStephen B. Elkins apoko hero io-nigh\nto an audience of some twolve hundroi\npeople. His speech bristled with sharp\ntelling points. He would hit the nnl\nBfjuaro on the hoad every time, an<\ntben drivo it clear homo with tollin\nblows, to the great delight of his iutelli\ngent and enthusiastic audience, who ap\nnlaudod him vigorously. As he had t\noavo for Charleston on on early train\nhe was compelled to bogin speaking a\n7 and closo at 8:80. To show which wa\nthe wind blows, hundrods of his audi\nonce wero composod of workiumon\nrailroad men and minors, and that the;\nmight not miss his speech, they cami\nto the meeting, many of them in thoi\nworking clothes, with dinner pails ii\nhand, and when scats were not to b<\nliau, stood patiently listening to till\ntruths ao and plainly stated.\nAnd now for tho contrast: Sonata\nDaniel, of Virginia, happened here 01\nhis way to a barbecue in Virginia. Tht\nDemocrats at first triod to capture tin\nhall already secured by tho Kopubli\ncans and, failing in this, went to tin\ncourt house. There wero probably 20\nthere in all, part of thorn, doubtloss, tin\novorflow from the Elkins mooting, bu\nthere was no room in thero for tlx\nworkingmnti in his rough clothos. Thi\nroom was mainly filled with tho "aill\nstocking" gentlemen. I listenod to tin\nsenator lor a while, but after ho ha<\nasserted his unswerving devotion t<\nDemocracy, and then began to rccoun\ntho history of iho country, boginnini\nwith tho civil war, and jumped fron\nthat to extolling the great achieve\nmeats of Cloveland, whom he opposei\nin the senate, and donouncod his owi\nfctate, 1 left.
4502c933afdb339c5f7679e91313c6a4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.5849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 The latest news from Itussia seems to various members of the present govern-\ntndtcalo that the Bolshevik govern- rnent took German money. Fanatics or\nment at Moscow has practically driven knaves, they arc now in Germanys\ntho Allies diplomatic representatives power and must more or less do Ger-\nfrom the country. They are reported manys will. Under this arrangement\nns ofely arrived nt Kandalaskn, on the the German dominion over Russia Is\nline of the new Murnian railway, and disguised. But if it Is possible now\nabout 100 mile« distant from tho 1er- to assist the responsive elements of Rus-\nmlnal at Kola Bay, which Is now held sla to organize and the Bolshevik are\napparently by tho Allied forces In com- overthrown, then Germany must take\nblnatlon with the lixcal Soviet govern- mtlltay sleps to protect her control,\n This local government Is hos- 'That Is what she hopes to avoid. It\ntile to the I.enlne-Ttiolxyf autocracy would draw her strength from\nIn the ancient capital. The dispatches western front.\nstate that the alternative of this flight Every report that has rome of late\nof the embassies was that they should I tells of the increasing hatred of the\nproceed to Moscow and there become Russian people for their German mas-\nposslblo hostages of the Bolshevik ters. Will not the Lenine-Trolzky\nleaders. This construction of the mat- reign inevitably terminate when it re-\nlor seem pcrmissahln In view of the\nalternative which was chosen. The only\npossible deduction Is that. In the judg­\nment of tho Allies ambassadors in Rus­\nsia, the Lenlne-Trolszky government\nwas hostile and dangerous.\nIt was well known to the Bolshevik
1481222419e54a2f097cf118f9bf5e11 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.691780790208 41.020015 -92.411296 and the amount would be so great that it\nwould absolutely prohibit many of these\narticles, and we should raise no revenue.\n•Suppose you raised it toa uniform per ceut.\nthen iu gome cases it would be prohibition\nthat is impractible No! The plan\nadopted is tho best, and I consider it the\nduty of every Congressman to represent the\nimmediate interests ol his people, and it\nwould be my duty, if Bent there, to regulate\ntho taiiff in such a way that the burden\nshould rest on the people as lightly as pos­\nsible. Of course it would not lie policy to\nregulate it in such a way that it would\ndestroy our manufactories, and drive those\nengaged iu tliem to other pursuits; for in­\nstance, diivethem all intofarming pursuits ;\nthat would uot do. I have no doubt but it\nis for the best interests of the country that\ntheio should be incidental protection, and it\nwould be my duty to see that these burdens\nshould test aB lightly on you as possible.\nNow, so far us this que*tiou of 1'ateut\nRights ip coucerned, it is not very much of\na question. I am somewhat disgusted with\nthat myself. 1 have tried so many cases of\n rubber scrubbers and other things,\nf we could prevent the issue of patents on\nthese trivial matters, such as rings lor hog's\nheads, patent rubber scrubbers, aud prevent\nthis great flood of patents over the country,\nif that could be .lone, I would be in favor\nof it. So far as the othor question is con­\ncerned—how long the Patents should run ?\nI have this kiud of an idea, that every\nman should live, to some extent, for the\ngood of his fellow-man. If Qod has en-\ndowed him with extraordinary genius, and\nhe has been able to bring forth some useful\ninvention, after reaping a rich reward him­\nself, he should pass it over free to his fel-\nlow«maD, I have no doubt some of these\nhave been protected too long, and have\npiled up millions. I believe this is the\ntrue doctrine, aud so far as this is concerned,\nI see DO difference iu opiuion; both sides are\nin favor of it. Yes! Tho "I'oliticiam," on I\ntho "people'' are both in favor of it.\nNow, he haa got that transposed—the\npoliticians on oue side and the people ou\nthe other, but he will have it all right.\nNow, on this question of Transportation,
14e3c25cb9cf5e5b4990fddf38931bc0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.2452054477424 40.063962 -80.720915 Protestant historical critics. It is easy to\nleny; but when more negative arguments\nas that St. Paul is silent on the subject)\n»re adduced in refutation of a universally\nEmitted fact of history, a child mav sou\nheir nakedness. To none other fs at'\niributed the first preaching of the Gospel\nIn the Eternal City, which St. Peter calls\nn his tiret epistle (5:13), as all the early\nShiistlans were wont to call it -Babylon.\nFrom the timo of Peter's call to the\nApostlesbip, he invariably holils the place\n)f honor. Our Lord gave him a name In?\njigniticantof the high oflice lie should fill\nn the churchfor in the Syro-Chaldaic\nanguago spoken by our saviour, the word\nCrpluu means a rock, and Christ savs\nplainly to Simon: "Thou art Cephas (a J\nrock); and on this (cephns) rock I will 1\nt>uilil my church, and gates of hell\nshall not prevail against it." The reason\nwhy the Kates of hell, that is, error and\nfalse doctrines shall never destroy the\nihurch, is because Christ has constituted\nthe Apostle Peter the firm foundation of\nthe church. As long as the foundation is\nsecure, the edifice built f upon it\nHinnot fall. The meaning is placed\nbeyond a doubt by the words that\nfollow: "And I willgtve to theethe keys\nof heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt\nbind unon earth shall be bound inheavon,\nand whatsoever thou shalt looso upon\nearth, shall be loosed in heaven." Upon\nno other apostle singly did Christ confer\nthis supremo power of "binding and\nloosing"; and to none othordid he givo or\npromise the keys of his kingdom, or\nchurch on earth. To Peter alone did He\ngive this supremo authority.\nForetelling (Luke xxn, 31,32,) tho
31849fc79b971c1a5bd75cbe9f59481f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 Our high-pressure civilization has ita\ndisadvantages and dangers, which It Is\nwell uot to forget. Oue is that the fe¬\nverish activities it encourages are often\ntoo much for the brain, whose flue\nstructure too often yields to overwork\nor undue excitement. This evil is\nalarmingly on the increase, both here\nMud on the other side of the Atlantic.\nl.ast yaar the London Medical Time*\nand Gazette reported that the number\nof the insane iu Euglaud had increased\ntwenty-one per cent. Iu five years,\nwhile the population had only In¬\ncreased five per cent. In Frauce the\ncase was still worse, The number of\nthe insane increased forty per cent, in\nlive years, while the population only\nincreased two per cent. That is to say,\nthe French are twice as crazy as the\nKugllsh. a Frenchman would\nretort as Robert Hill did, when some\nfool asked him what brought him to an\niuMaue asylum: "What will never\nbring you here, sir.too much brains."\nThe J*aU Mall Gazelle takes up this\nsubject afresh, and conflrms what the\nMedical Journal had said as to the\nalarming increase of insanity. It esti¬\nmates that In England mental diseases\nhave gained ou the population to the\nextent of at least three per cent per an¬\nnum siuce 1859. The present ratio of\nthe insane to the popolatiou, It puts at\none to every four hundred and ten. In\nthe whole of Great Britain there is the\ngreatest amount of.Insanity iu Eng¬\nland and the least In Ireland, probably\n1 -ause lu the former there is tbegreat-\nest mental-activity and the most high\nliving.
a59e809cb97bf8f25d0a0882952c14ba THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1859.9986301052766 39.560444 -120.828218 town, Virginia, Madam ; and your mission being merci-\nful and humane, will n. t only be allowed but be respect-\ned, if not welcomed. A few unenlightened and incon-\nsiderate persons, fanatical in their modes of thought and\naction to maintain justice and right, might molest you\nor be disposed to do so, and this might suggest the\nimprudence of risking any experiment upon the peace of\na society very much excited by the crimes with whose\nchief author you seem to sympathize so much ; but still,\nI repeat, your motives and avowed purpose are lawful\nand peaceful, and I will, as far as I am concerned, do my\nduty in protecting your rights in our limits.\nVirginia and her authorities would be weak indeed—-\nweak in point of folly and weak in jjeint of power—if\nher State faith and constitutional obligations cannot be\nredeemed in her own limits to the letter of morality as\nwell as of law. And if her chivalry cannot courteously\nreceive a lady's visit to a prisoner, .e very arm which\nguards Brown from rescue on the one band, from\nLynch law on the other, will be ready to guard your\nperson in Virginia. I could not permit an insult to wo-\nman in her walk of charity among tnyeven though it be\nto one who whetted knives of butchery for our irothers,\nsisters, daughters and babes. We have no sympathy\nwith your sentiments of sympathy with Brown, and are\nsurprised that you were “ taken by surprise when news\ncame of Captain Browns recent attempt.” His attempt\nwas a natural consequence of your sympathy, and the\nerror of that sympathy ought to make you doubt its vir-\ntue from the effect on bis conduct. But it is not of this I\nshould speak. When you arrive at Charleston, if you\ngo there, it will be for the court and its officers, the\nCommonwealth's attorney, sheriff and jailor, to say\nwhether you may see and wait on the prisoner. But,\nwhether you are thus permitted or not, (and you will be\nif my advice can prevail,) you may rest assured that he\nwill be humanely, lawfully and mercifully dealt by in\nprison and on trial.
04a2a3853f4d44a9ba52506b058eecad OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.3109588723999 39.513775 -121.556359 The undersigned, ile-iroiis of aer)unillliug those\nwho may he imhirtuuale enough to be similarly af-\nflicted where n permanent rein t i t their sufferings\nmax he obtained, feels it his duty to thus publicly\neypre-s his sincere gratitude to Hr I .1 Czapkav,\nlor the permanent recovery of his health Homo\ndown hy the distressing symptoms in ident to Iho\nvicious practices of uncoiilrollahli fiiuxsioti in youth,\ndepress*si iii hodx and mind, unable to perform even\nHie most IrilliiigMuiy imposed upon the d illy avoca-\ntions of life. I sought the advice of main physicians,\nwho at tlrsl regarded inv disease o( trilling import-\nmice, tint alu*! idler a few wi . k - and in several iu-\nstances months, of I heir treatment. I found to my uu-\nuttcralile horror, that instead ot relief tin* syinpl\nhecame more alarming in Ilnur torture, and hiuug\ntin dly told me In one lltat Ihedisease I" ing conlliii'd\npriuciply to the hrain, ineiticines would he ol little\ncoiisei|iieuce. I despaired of ex er regaining my health\nstrength and energy, and as a last resort, and with\nlint a hope, called upon Hr. t'/.apkay who. alter\nexamining mx case, prescribed -ome nn uiciue w liicli\naliuosl iiislantly relieved me ol the dull pains and\ndizziness in my head. Encouraged by lids resell, I\nresolved to place mx-ell iminednihly under his rare,\nand, l>\\ a strict obedience to his directions and ad-\nvice, mx head became clear, my idea-collect,id . Iho\nconstant pain in my hack and groins the weakness\nof mx limits, the nervoiiN reaction *f mx whole syss\ntent on Itie slightest alarm or excitement, tfit* mis-\nanthropy and evil forebodings, the sell distrust and\nwant of conlidetice in o tiers. t),e iii*a| ability to\nstudy and wind of resolution, the frgh'lul exciting,\nand at times pleasurable dreams at night, follow ..)\nhy in voluntary discharges, have all di-ippeared, and\nin fact in txvo months after ton mg consulted the\nHoclor, I fell ns if Inspired by it new life—that life\nwhich, but a short limit ago, 1 contemplated to end\nhy mx oxx n hand.\n\\\\ tilt a x low to guard the unfortunate from (ailing\nin o the snares ot incompetent «,«i■ i k-.
03a781b7a26fa67b81f32382aabf5b8a THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.5273972285643 37.451159 -86.90916 Rate Plan That Would SuIt Hull\nTomtit brat Sot thc People\nThe plan of Frank S Gardner secre\ntary of the New York board of trade\nand transportation for regulating rail\nroad rates Is a unique one Briefly\nstated Mr Gardners plan Is to give\npower to the Interstate commerce cow\nmission when It has found that a rail\nroad has made a discriminative rate 01\ngranted an Illegal rebate to declare the\nrate thus made the Kgal tariff for ii\nyear from that slate This It Is polntei\nout obviates the objection to glvln\nthe Interstate commerce commission\nrate making powers The offcndliif\nrailroad Itself makes the rate presum-\nably a profitable one and the commls\nslon merely declares the rate to be the\nlegal tariff for a year The private car-\nlines etc are reached by a clause de\n110 ring theta to be common carriers\nPresident Roosevelt has given a neml\nIndorsement to the plan by requesting\nthat It be embodied In a lull to be pro\n to congress\nBut how would this plan help the\npeople who are charged more than a\nreasonable rate Discriminative rates\nand rebates do not Injure the public\nthey only Injure the competitor of the\nfavorite who receives the advantage\nThe small shipper pays the regular\nrate nnd the public It Is to be pre-\nsumed Is charged no more for the\ngoods upon which the discriminative\nrate or rebate has been allowed than\nupon the goods shipped by competitors\nat the regular rate\nThis plan like others that are being\nInvented Is merely a makeshift be ¬\ncause the railroad that Is charging ex ¬\norbitant rates but Is not granting Ille ¬\ngal rebates would be able to continue\ncharging all the traffic will bear nUll\nthe public would have no redress\nWhat we all want Is reasonable rates\nand the only way to obtain them iIs to\ngive the Interstate commerce commit ¬\nsion power to flx maximum rates be\nyond which the railroads cannot go
19669e82e214dc4b876666233e85ff3e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.7390710066281 40.063962 -80.720915 Philadelphia, September 25..The Re¬\npublican demonstration this evening was,\nin point of numbers, tbe largest ever wit¬\nnessed in this citv. Broad street, the cen¬\ntre of attraction, wasonemaasof humanity\nfrom Columbia avenue on the north to\nEllsworth street on the south, a distance\nof over four milea, with torches, banners,\nand transparencies, bands of music and\nfireworks* The scene forcibly recalled\nRepublican demonstrations in the fall of\n1860. The procession was under command\nof ex-Goyernor Hartranftand was divided\ninto wings. Theee wings countermarched\ntbe whole length of Broad street, and re¬\nturning on Bide streets to Market, were\ndismissed. When the headsof the columns\nwere back within a short distance of that\nportion of Broad street in the vicinity of\nthe Union League House, where three\nmore meetings were being held, they halt¬\ned to allow the police time to clear the\nstreet of the thousands who had assem¬\nbled to hear the speeches.\nAt the main Btand on the balcony of the\nLeague House, in front and around it, at\nleast 13,000 people were gathered. Presi¬\ndent Baker introduced Senator Blaine,\nwho addressed the assemble#e. He was\nfollowed by Thomas M. Marshall, of Pitts¬\nburgh, R. 8tockwell Matthews, of Balti¬\nmore, Wayne MacVeigh and others.\nUpon a signal from the roof the League\n tbe colums moved over this cleared\nspace with fronts of eight. It was the in¬\ntention to clear tbe entire width of the\nthoroughfare to admit of a front of sixteen\nto each column, but this failed. Over tbe\nentire route the columns marched with a\nfront of eight. When the League House\nwas reached, a Brand pyrotechnic\ndisplay took place. The estimate made\nby the managers of the demonstration was\nthat 35,000 men would participate in the\nparade, and it is believed that tbe number\ncame near to thoBe actually in line. The\nprocession waa headed by the Union\nLeague, which on this occasion turned out\nin public parade for the third time since\nits organization in 1861. The parade con¬\nsisted of nine divisions, five of which\nformed the north wing, aud four the south\nwing. These divisions were all made up\nof various Garfield and Arthur clubs and\nother organizations of tbe respective wards\nof tbe city, aud the number of such clubs\nin line was estimated at over one hun¬\ndred. Each ward club was preceded by\nthe veteran organization of that particular\nward, and alow estimate for the numberof\nveterans parading was 8,000.\nA majority of dwellings along Broad\nstreet were brilliantly illuminated. The\nstreets were packed and enthusiasm un¬\nbounded.
863c32d0fcdfbc67c097f495c5bcdae0 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.2452054477424 43.798358 -73.087921 instructing or edifying one another, but\nby special influences, as they were with-\nout law or gospel, this being the Apostle's\nfirst letter to them. See 12.h chap. 1st\nto 11th verse. Again see verse 28th,\nsame chapter, where the Apostle is speak-\ning of the order of these gifts: 'And God\nhath 3et some in the Church; first Apos-\ntles; secondarily prophets ; thirdly teach-\ners; aftrr that miracles; then gifts of\nhealing, &c : are all Apostles; are all\nprophets; are all teachers; are all work-\ners of miracles,' &c, from which it ap- -\npears that the gift cf teaching was not\nincluded in that of prophesying. Now I\npresume that brother Murray will admit\nthat Father Paul, and the Holy Ghoit,\nare quite as good commentators on the\nmeaning of the word prophecy, as Adam\nClaik. If females, then, possessed only\nthe gift of prophecy, they did not possess\nthe qualifications to reach even under in-\nspiration. There is not the least \nancy between my exposition of Paul, and\nthe prophesy of Joel ; for it was only in\ncase of inspiration that females were to\nprophesy according to Joel ; and I do not\nsuppose, as full of the Holy Ghost as\nwas Father Paul, that he at all intended\nto set himself up as dictator over inspired\nbrethren or sisters, who would speak as\nthey, were moved by the Holy Ghost; to\nsay when they should speak, or when be\nsilent. But he is in this letter not only\nregulating the manner of inspired or gifted\npersons, but laying down rules for there\nfuture order in the Church under ordinary\ncircumstances. He speaks therefore, with\nauthority, Lct your women keep silence\nin the churches; for it is not permitted\nunto them to speak,' &c. Mark the word\n'churches,' plural; the rule, or prohibtion\nis not designed for the particular church\nto which this letter was probably sent:\nbut as a standing rule for all the churches.
133b7c0c8ec456b797c1d970825be7ad CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1886.03698626966 39.623709 -77.41082 The trains on the \\Y. M. railroad were not\nseriously impeded at points east oi this,save\nat a point about u half-mile east of J). P. ( ,\nwhere a small drift was found, but between\nthis place and Blue Ridge .summit, the trains\non Saturday evening met tie. ir late.\nThe afternoon freight west managed to\nstruggle through to Sahillasville, where it\nwas side-tracked; the Southern Express\nwhich passes here at 5.30 p . m, got as far as\nLimiz, 4 mil s west of lids place and when\nseveral hundred yards west of that station it\nstruck a drift and stuck fast, although run-\nning “double-header,” it was not able to gel\nthrough and in a very few minutes was un-\nable to back out; the express which passes\nhere an hour later also running "double-\nheader,” got that far and the two engines\nwent into the drift intending to help the\nother two out and they too got fast: the work\ntram which had lieeu laying ofi at this point\n iqi to render some assistance, went into\nthe drift and that engine 100 met the fate of\nthe other four mid there were five engines\nwithin several hundred yards, all victims of\nthat mountain snow drift. The men wo nt\nto work to shovel them out; but the blinding\nsnow and the extreme cold would drive\nthem from their work at short intervals,\nwhen the wind would rapidly replace the\nsnow. About thirty passengers were aboard\nthe two trains and they were compelled to\npass the night in the cars. Tin Fast Mai!\nwest on Sunday morning went that far, hul\njudiciously kept away from that drift; the\npassengers were transferred to that train and\ntaken back to their marling points eastward.\nBv the middle of the forenoon on Sunday\nthe captive engines were all released, hut\nthere was no attempt made to cross the\nmountain as liter; wen other huge drifts\nwhich had first to be shovel* d out and this\nwas not completed until Sunday evening at\n5 oclock.
221da54a3f1004f99068fa67c6c6ebb5 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.215068461441 41.020015 -92.411296 What think you would be the result\nif the earth should stop spinning\naround the sun ? Were you ever near\na large and intricate machine when\none of its wheels became clogged or\nbroken—near enough to hear the grat­\ning, jarring clash, the sudden, deafen­\ning crash? Astronomers assure us\nthat precisely similar effects, only on\nan inconceivable grander scale, would\nbe produced if our earth—one of the\nwheels in the universe machine—\nshould suddenly cease its revolutions.\nIn other words, there would bo a gen­\neral clash and crash of satellites,\nplanets, and systems. What we term\nfinancial crisis are due to similar\ncauses. One of the wheels in the\nfinance-machine becomes clogged,\nperhaps shattered. The terrible\nWall-street "craBh," which follows is\ncommunicated to every part of the\nfinancial mechanism of the country.\nBut analogies do not stop here.—\nThere is that other mechanism, tbe\nmost intricate of all—sometimes call­\ned an organism because it generates\nits own forces—the human machine.\nWhen ono of its members fails to per­\nform its oflico, the whole system is\nthrown into disorder. Members be­\nfore considered unassailable, break\ndown under the unnatural pressure.\nTh3 shock comes, and utter prostra­\n is tho result. Reparation can\nonly be affected by the restoration of\nthe impaired parts and the re-adjust­\nment of its levers,—the physical for­\nces. Thero is one part of the machine\nmore liable to disorder than any oth­\ner,—the liver,—tho great balance-\nwheel of tho machine.\nThe liver being the great depurat­\ning or blood-cleansing organ of the\nsystem, set it at work and the foul\ncorruptions which gender in the\nblood, and rot out, as it were, tho ma­\nchinery of life, are gradually expelled\nfrom the system. For this purpose\nDr. Piorce's Golden Medical Discov­\nery, used daily, and Dr. Pierce's\nPleasant Purgative Pellets, taken in\nvery small doses, are pre-eminently\ntho articles needed. They cure every\nkind of humor from the worst scrof­\nula to the common pimple, blotch, or\neruption. Great eating ulcers kindly\nheal under their mighty curativo in­\nfluence. Virulent blood poisons that\nlurk in the system are by them rob­\nbed of their terrors, and by their per­\nsevering and somowbat protracted\nuse the most tainted systems may be\ncompletely renovated and built up\nanew. Enlarged glands, tumors and\nswellings dwindle away and disap­\npear under the influence of these\ngreat resolvents.
0918477e9f7fde46dd9e0140a66b6266 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1885.0178081874683 37.451159 -86.90916 The President showed his pedagogical\nand reformatory spirit during the ses\nsiou by requesting the members not to\nspit tobacco juice upon the floor.\nOn the second day of the meeting\nJudge Ileckner, of Winchester, deliv-\nered au excellent address ou "The\nEducational Outlook In Kentucky,"\nwhich was frequently interrupted with\napplause. He began by thanking them\nfor the compliment of the invitation,\nHe accepted it not as a personal tribute.\nbut as the expression of their belief\ntjmt he was zealously devoted to the\ncause which, more thau any other,\nshould at the present lime engage the\nattention of the people. He asked\ntheir attention while he brit fly consid-\nered tho etlucatioual outlook iu Ken-\ntucky. The cause of popular education\nhad made most creditable progress\nsince the war. Mouey talked more\neloquently than words, aud the in\ncreased taxatiou voted by the \nshowed the growth of their interest in\ntiie purposes to which itsproceeils were\ndevoted. The State levy was now four\nand a half times as much as it was\nwhen the new era beguu. The cities\nand many of the towns hud supple\nmeuted State aid with local efforts that\nput them abreast with the most ad-\nvanced conitnuuilles in other States.\nEacli General Assembly hud dealt with\nthe question in u friendly spirit at least.\nThe press had doue its duty, aud the\npeople on every cccssion had showu\nthemselves in favor of improved ed\nucational facilities. Even an iuteuse\nprejudice as to the capability of the\nuexro for higher culture had yielded so\nfar that we have agreed to divide with\nhim on equal terms the limited funds\narising mostly from the taxation of the\nwhites. Tho work done by tlio Presi\ndent of the
24201b9e8f06ac2d84ea1cabb9e61ef7 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.582191749112 41.004121 -76.453816 J. H. Mensch, Montour.\nLloyd M. Petitt, lierwlck.\nCharles Hows. Berwick.\nHenry Uottshall, Franklin.\nChnrlesH. Herger, Pine.\nAugustus Hartline, Madison.\n( V. Shannon, JSerwick.\nValentine Heisz, J5loom.\nI. M. Hnrtnian, Cntawlssa Horn.\nGeorge Marts, Cntawlssa I'.oro.\nIsaiah Hageiihueli, Montour.\nJ. C. Sanders, Pine.\nTillman Sadler, Millville.\nJ. Howard Wellivor, I tun ton Twp\nMarvin J. Kline, Greenwood.\nHarvey T. Dunn, JSerwick.\nJiohert Morris, Bloom.\nDavid Armstrong, Bloom.\nH. K. Barton, Bloom.\nC. It. Buckle, Millville.\nDouglas Wright, JJerwick.\nAustin Old, Scott.\nAlfred Ueese, Greenwood,\nO. Jf. Henry, Berwick,\nPktit Jlkoks (First Week.)\nElmer ICline.'Oiaiige Twp\nCluiuncey B. Ikeler, Benton JJoro.\nHenryS. JCeck, Berwick,\nWin. Adams, Briarereek.\nSamuel Weaver, Fishlngereek.\nJlnrrison J.cvan, Mifflin.\nJohn Chnmlicrlin, Madison.\nNeil Maust, Hemlock.\nJvl. G. S tveppenliciser, Centre.\nDaidel W. Martz, J5i iai creek.\nAlbert Kline, Cntawlssa JJoro.\nJohn Meliick, Mt. I'lensant.\nJacob Travelpieee, Orange Boro.\nAsa Hess, Sugarloaf.\nJiobert Vandcrsliee. Bloom.\nW. O. Kaig, Cleveland.\nWm. E . Davis, Centralia.\nHarry J Lultimer, Sugarloaf.\nIsaiah Giger, Bloom.\nCyrus ICanis, Kishingcreek.\nWarren W. Welsh, Orange Twp.\nWm. Heckniaii, Scott.\nWin. Bangs, Greenwood.\nJ. (.! . Cotner, Madison.\nWin. 8 . Ash, Briarereek.\nHenry Hile,\nWm. Smith, Stillwater.\nCharles Bink, Scott.\nFrank J,. Winner, Fishingcreek.\nNorton B. Cole Benton Twp.\n II . Bitner, Locust.\nUriah Chainberlin, Pine.\nLevi Ash, Benton Twp.\nJoseph G. Swank, Mifflin.\nJason H. Mensch, Mifflin,\nB. F. Mather, Sugarloaf.\nPktit Juhoks (Second Week).\nFrank Baclimun, Mifflin,\nJeremiah Bhodes, Jackson.\nJacob F. Oearlmrt, Mifflin.\nGeorge J J. Thomas, Greenwood.\nIsaiah Old. Bloom.\nWin. Bauck. Montour.\nSamuel Lei by, Franklin.\nZerbin Low, Orange Boro.\nGeo. J' Jtlngler, Bloom.\nGideon Shu'tz, Benton Boro.\nW. H. Clewell, Benton Boro.\nD. A. Shultz, Madison.\nWm. Kester. Madison.\nIsaiah Mausteller, Madison.\nAlonzo P. Fritz, Sugnrloaf.\nHugh W. Applenian, Hemlock.\nBruce Freas, Centre.\nBen (older, Sugarloaf.\nLiucolu Boody, Montour.\nCyrus Detnott. Madison.\nPhilip Bider, Madison.\nChas. JO. I'atterson, Orange Twp.\nFlemmington Steward,\nH. F . Bice, Scott.\nChas. T. Berger. Briarereek.\nNelson A. Ilunsinger, Berwick.\nDaniel Voder, J,ocust.\nCyrus 8mitli, Berwick.\nFrank Festcr Ceutro.\nT, H. JJ . Davis, Briarereek.\nBider Smith, Mifflin.\nWin. Law ton, Hlooni.\nAlex. Hitler. Main.\nJames K. Werkheiser. BIimhii.\nA. B. Kresslcr, Mt. Pleasant.\nFranklin P. Haiiuaii. Hugurloaf.\nJiihll S. Kcott, Centre.\nWm. It. Jong, Boariugcreek.\nWebster i:cs, Millville.\nWin. J. Ilidl'iy, Scott.\nJ, S. Grimes, Hloom.\nJeie. O. Fry, Beaver.\nKlmer K. ('reveling. Mifflin.\nPatrick J. Bums, Centralia.\nJonathan Loiviunu, Franklin,\nW. G. Creveling. Fisliinitereek.\nGeo. Everett, Mt. Pleasant.\nJ. I'nxton Creasy, Fislihigcrock..-
0b652ed4ded0ff0ae8205fa8c01a3543 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.1598360339506 40.063962 -80.720915 The city ol Wheeling Is about to lose\none ol its representative financial Inatitn- tc\ntlona in the Ohio Valley Lile Company,\nwhoeepnrpoee to remove its beadqnatten M\nto Washington, D. 0 ., baa already been h|\nnoticed in theae colnmna, which removal jj\nii to be completed this week. At the\nsame time, in the (act that the list of olii- i,,\ncere and director* still embracea the bos- U1\niness mon of thia city who have been ao\nintimately connected with the company\nfrom its organiiition ton y<*rs ago, and to :\nwboee bnslnoee sagacity and foresight its "\npresent position as a leading lile company\nis dne, it remains a v/hoeling institution, '0\nand one in which Wheeling people can in\nleel pride and satisfaction as in the grow* tr\ning career and broadening reputation of a\n who has gone from beneath the roof di\ntree and still cannot, in all its wander* sc\nings, cease to be an object of love and re- m\ngard, one still of thu household. The\ncompany has grown here so gradually and w,\nso quietly, never making undue display ti\nor sounding its trumpet before it in self- ni\nlaudation, that tbo majority of Wheeling\ncitizens are, without question, ignorant of\nhow much it has accomplished, not aim*\nply in other fields, but here at home as "\nwell. Since it began, in July, 1878, it has "\npaid in death claims the large sum of\n$312,000, of which amount $02,000 has ei\nbeen paid in this city and vicinity. Every oi\nclaimant sgainet the company, with legit* ei\nimate claim, has been paid in full and\npromptly. L
0912c06f03261e83f3ac5c975c7565c5 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.2254098044425 37.451159 -86.90916 Will make the season of Dill at my eta ¬\nble one quarter of a mile from Beaver\nDam on the Hartford road and will be\npermitted to serve mares at the very\nlow price of flO to Insure a live colt\nMoney tine when the fact is ascertained\nMr W M Kirby who owned Dr 811\ngo says he Is one of the best and most\nuniform breeders he ever owned He\nsays be has never yet seen a colt by Dr\nSligo that was not a credit to its sire\nand dam Mares may be sent to my\nplace to be bred and will bo fed at 2flo\nper day or pastured on good grass at\nft150 per month Dne taro taken to\nprevent accidents but will not be re ¬\nsponsible should any occur Any man\nbreeding three mares of his own may\n the three for 25 Anyone who\nsells or trades a mare after site is bred\nwill be held responsible for the fee just\nthe same Any breeder not getting a-\nlive cult may return In 1901 or the mon ¬\ney will be refunded to blur just as free ¬\nly as 1 received It bought Dr Sligo\nof W M Kirby of Bowling Green and\ngave 00000 for him He has come to\nstay and do business on tbe square\nHe Is a horse that will get more to do\nevery year for his breeding quality\nwas his great beauty to me He breeds\nnice sixteen hands blood bays or blacks\nDescription Dr Sllgo U a beautiful\ndark bay stallion with star white torn\nfeet and hind ankle a beautiful mane\nand taU which are very long and hen ¬\nvy lie was foaled in ISIMI
764bdc2016b5145853bd5a4ac3b31686 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.4890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 Tilings :\\vill, adjust themselyea and-\nfind a level after while at, ^Richmond,\nand all over iho .south. General Terry,\naccording to the dispatches this morn¬\ning, has issued an order placing blacks\nand wlytes 011 a perfect equality r as\nregards their personal freedom.tlieir\noutgoings and incomings. A good\nmany of the Bourbons, and of their\n"poor white trash" at Richmond, have\nyet to Jearu tluit negroes have 11113'\nrights which Jhpy are boiuul to respect,\nhence the old Curfew Iaw.4, 'shell as\narresting a negro aft^r 9 o'clock at\nnight, ami subjecting him to all sorts.of\ninquisitorial annoyances, as well''as\nsevere punishment, were still maintain¬\ned by Mavo and his police sim-e the new\norder of things. The lesson Gen. Terry\naims to teach the llicll^iiiyujers, and all\nthe natives over there Is, in the lirst\nplace, that slavery is stone dead; and\niu the second J>h*ce, that white men have\n110 longer either the right or tho power\nto brutalize the blacks in any wuy or\nrelation, thatbotli uro pefcft^^free\nand independent as regards each otnpr.\nOur old fricnil, Geii. ITartwufl4, has xvl»o\nissued a timely order lit Petersburg,\nputting xjiii eiKi to; nil the' mummery\nrecontly indulged iin by thd -Virginia\nfarmers at their public meetings,\nwherever they* sought to 'establish an\narbitrary and ex parte control over the\nwork and wages of the negroes, much\nthe same as if the relations of the race\nwere unchanged. Tho burden of their\ndiscussion* have been whether they\nwould pay the negroes five or eight\ndollars a month, and whether the. negro\nHhouid 1h» l>oiind to remidn a year With\nthem or forfeit his wages; thus ignor¬\ning any duality whatever to the con-\ntnfct. It will take some little time to\nteach (ho ancient drivers and ^wners\nthat things are not as they, once were\nwith them; that, in otherwords, their old\nhigh horse has t>ecome a very shabby\nnag, and that in the ftittire tliey must\ngive as we'11 as tako» in the matter of\nlabor.
3de53258fa437023b10eddbd55dc4e50 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.3109588723999 32.612638 -90.036751 tories. Does not this list about\ncomprise them all? Is it possi-\nble that there are no other indus-\ntries that we can enter into and\nrun successfully in th state of\nMississippi? If a town has some\nof thnse industries, has its citi-\nzens so little enterprise that they\ncan not enter new fields to invest\ntheir money, that they must put\nup like additional plants or en-\nterprises o those already in the\ntown, and divide the profits that\nthe owners of the enterprises\nnow make? Will these duplicate\nenterprises, competing with the\nold ones, add any wealth or pros-\nperity to any town? Most cer\ntainly not; but, on the contrary,\nwill detract, and in fact cause a\nloss to the town; for while the\ngross profits of the two competing\nenterprises are no more than the\nprofits of the first one erected,\nthere is now created two expense\naccounts, one for each industry,\nwhich in reduces the former\nprofits and causes a loss to the\ntown. Over this state one fre-\nquently sees abandoned plants of\nthis character, monuments to\nwant of originality in duplicating\niffdustries for investment, also\nmonument to unwise greed, and,\nshall I add, gratification of per\nsonal dislike to the original in-\ndustry? Two cannot live where\nonly one is able to live. Is it rea-\nsonable to suppose that a meal\nsent for one will feed two? Is it\nnot a fact that many of these\ncompeting enterprises are actua-\nted, not with the desire to mske\nlegitimate profit, but are actuuted\nwith the ignoble spirit of drag-\nging the other enterprises down.\nI hope this is not so in our town,\nbut I have seen it illustrated very\nplainly in other towns in our\nstate. This is a deplorable fact.\nThe writer was conversing\nwith a large manufactuler from\nthe north, and among other\nthings be said:
89eee1db59b69d033e88aa57c2e95b75 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.346575310756 39.369864 -121.105448 “Fortune is.not so blind ns is imagined.\nShe is frequently the consequence of well-\nchosen and well-ordered measures, not per-\nceived by the public, which have been the\nforerunners of the event. She is in a still\nmore marked degree, dependent upon natur-\nal character and personal conduct.”\nWe heartily believe this, not because the\nimperial autobiographer says it, but because\nit has the sanction of reason and experience.\nThe popular doctrine of luck, which is noth-\ning less than a species of fatalism, is a very\npernicious doctrine and is pretty certain to\nrender unfortunate all who accept it as true.\nIt docs very well for such characters as the\ngreat Napoleon, or even his nephew who now\noccupies the French throne, to profess belief\nin destiny and attibute their success to luck.\nThe tyrants and leaders of the human race\nhave ever affected to be the special agents of\nfate or the commissioned prophets of Deity.\nSuch claims are part of the moans by which\nthey accomplish their ends. They take pre-\ncious fine care, however, not to trust all to\nfate, or destiny, but to place their principal\nreliance upon such carnal influences as \nknow to be most potent. Wallenstein ob-\nserved that providence, or luck, generally\nfavored the strongest battalions; and the\ngreat Napoleon thought so too, not only by\nplagiarizing the remark but by concentrating\nIlls forces upon weak points in the enemys\nlino. It is just so in the little affairs of life.\nThe man whom gods and men fly to help is\nthe man who puts forth all his strength to\nhelp himself. This is almost a truism, but\nit cannot be too often repeated, and especial-\nly in this country, where so manj' “unlucky”\nfellows are mourning over lost chances with\nno eyes for those which are infinitely occur-\nring. Perhaps there arc more disappointed\nmen in California than in any other country\nof an equal population on the globe, and the\nmajority of them attribute the failure of\ntheir schemes to inevitable “bad luck.” This\nis a spiteful fury that pursues then and can-\nnot be avoided. Weary of her persecutions,\nthey sit down amid their ruined hopes and\nindulge in melancholy speculations. Up, ye\nweary ones! Believe that you have made\nsome mistake and try again, with sturdy res-\nolution for jour aid.
a3e669a140278f20b1a82affda7d8261 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8975409519835 39.513775 -121.556359 1a! Judge of the County Court, in and for (lube\nCounty, Unit the Hoard >1 Supervisors in and for said\nCounty, iliit, on the glib day of September, A. I>. one\nthousand eight hundred and fifty .six, deopire Orovdle\nto be the Count* seat of Unite County from and after\nthe said I wetily-lbarlli day of September A. I>. L '. iii ,\nin pnrMiance ot an act eniitied An Act to change and\ntlx ihe Coiuitv Seal of Halle County, approved '.arch\nloth, ISuh; and it further appearing to my satisfaction\nthat die present buildings iu whiah the said Court, lias\nbeen held, and in which the Records have been kept\nin the lowa of Hidwell, are unsafe ns y place of de-\npository for sail! Records, anil that the same is liable\nlo de.- truction by tire, by reason of their being con-\nstmeted entire »»f w*ood. And it further appearing\nthat there is no building in the town ol Hidwell. suit-\nable tor holding Hie terms of this Court, and to safely\nkeep its Records (ire or other calamity, and it\nappearing that the town ol Oro'dlh* is a lit place lo\nhold the terms of Hits Court, and Hint usufeand com\ninodtous brick building in said town lias been ten-\ndered the county as county buildings.\nit id therefore ordered, adjudged amf decreed, that\nthe Clerk el Hie Comity Court, in mid for Hullo\nCounty, forthwith remove his nffiee and the Records\nthereof, to Orovdle, in Hie building selected by the\nsaid Hoard of Supervisors ns County Huddings, anil\nHim tie do and I ansiict the business of ids said office,\nat the town of Uroville, as Hie County Seal of Hutto\nCon nly. And it its further ordered. Unit Hie terms ol\nsaid t onrt, from and after I tie said twenty te'irtli day\nol September. A It ISati, be held at the said town of\nuroville utilitotherwise ordered.\nAnn It is further ordered, that Hie Clerk of Hie\nComity Court in and for Hullo County, issue un order\nunder Hie seal of said Court, iu conformity with this\norder.
48859eed3fd348c6eb9e564ec128f9a0 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.3520547628107 39.513775 -121.556359 Twd ilitcues :ire in cmi ouij 1if. n (<.r «u\npljing this locality with water—one fiuw\nLost Creek anti the ot ,er trout S»>u t lt Feath-\ner river, at an estimated cost ot «12,000,\nan l 5-4 1,000 refl ectively. The Lost Creek\nelitch i.s, at present, umlcr contract ami will\nprobably be complete i by next October The\nFeather river ditch will not be completed till\nin the following year, and will be, tor i\ngreater portion ol the distance a tlnme.\nThere arc both hill and and ravine dig-\ngings in this vicinity Many claims nre at\npresent paying largely with a scanty and\nirregular head of water, and the. old lashiou\nstyle of working.\nTinder and Alleys hill claim paid or-\nin six days working, fine gold last week.\nMay, and Thompsi ns hill claim pai l\n5»18d in two days working ; the tirst work\ndone him e opening their cl lim The Irish\nclaim on Queen's Creek, is paying from six\nto twelve hundred dollars every two weeks,\nllarrold \\ Co., on Queens Creek, above tbe\nIrish claim is paying from SI- to s-D> per\nday. Denton, Welch .St Co , have run a tun-\nnel into the hill :.SOO feet through solid rock,\nand have struck gravel that prospects IV m\n■j to lid cents per pan. The gravel is from\nforty to fifty fee. in depth\nThe entire ridge between Lost Creek an 1\nSouth Feather river prospects well from the\nsurface to the bed rock, about fifty feet in\ndepth, and with an abun hint supply of\nwater, will pay enormously.
43cea4b34aab139823317529e23be653 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2945205162355 44.939157 -123.033121 At last the annoying dispute ever the building of a\nbridge connecting Marion and Polk counties at this point\nhas been settled. It has been settled right, too, for the\ncounty court of Polk "county has consented to Polk coun\nty's paying her share of the bill. This ends all litigation,\nand makes it possible to get to work on the bridge in the\nnear future. The position taken by the Polk county court\nwas untenable and so far as the average man could see\nhad nothing back of it unless it was animosity toward\nMarion county. However it is well enough to let the dead\npast bury its dead and all concerned get busy on the new'\nbridge. It is only fair to say that the Polk county court\nalso agrees to pay its share of the expense of operating\nthe ferry and maintaining bridge. Outside of the\nbridges at Portland that at this point is the most import-\nant in the state, being traveled far more than any other.\nIt will also prove of great value to Polk county outside of\nits local use, in that it is a necessary part of the purposed\nloop road from Portland up the west side, across the river\nhere and back to Portland on this side. It will be one of\nthe most popular drives in the state, and will bring an in-\ncome to points in Polk county that alone would justify\nthe building of the bridge. Salem of course is deeply in-\nterested because there is a rich territory adjacent to her\nin Polk county, the trade of which naturally comes to\nSalem, and a large section of Polk county is anxious to\nhave the bridge for this same reason.
5796418291f33c6045c032cf120aae45 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.0860655421473 31.960991 -90.983994 IS rublishcd in the uuy 01 r\\ew lorK, e\\erj\nSaturday morning, in quarto form, on a very\nlarge sheet, and afforded to subscribers in the\ncountry at Two Dollars Six copies will be\nforwarded a year for Ten Dollars; Ten copies for\nFifteen Dollars; and any larger number in the\nlatter proportion. Payment in advance invaria­\nbly required, and the paper stopped whenever\nthe term of such payment expires.\nThe Tribun e—whether in its Daily or Week­\nly edition, will be what its name imports—an\nunflinching supporter of the Peoples Rights and\nInterests, in stern hostility to the errors of su­\nperficial theorists of unjust or imperfect legisla­\ntion, and the schemes and sophistries of self-\nseeking demagogues. It will strenuously advo­\ncate the Protection of American Industry a-\ngainst the grasping, and to us heightening poli­\ncy of European government, and the unequal\ncompetition which they force upon us, it will\nadvocate the restoration of a sound and uniform\nNational Currency; and urge a but de­\ntermined prosecution of Internal Improvement.\nThe Retrenchment, wherever practicable, of\nof Government Expenditures and of Executive\nPatronage, will be zealously urged. In short-\nthis paper will faithfully maintain and earnest,\nly advocate the Principles and Measures which\nthe People approved in devolving on Whig\nStatesmen the conduct of their Government.\nBut a small portion of its columns Will be de­\nvoted to purely political discussions. The pro­\nceedings of Congress will be catefully recorded,\nthe Foreign and Domestic Intelligence early\nand lucidly presented; and whatever shall ap­\npear calculated to promote Morality, maintain\nSocial Order, extend the blessings of Education,\nor in any way subserve the great cause of Hu­\nman Progress to ultimate Virtue, Liberty and\nHappiness, will find a place in our columns.\nN. B,—Where ten persons club together, and\nremit $15 at one time, in funds not over four j\nper cent discount in New York, the paper will ! an(j for gaje\ncpst bat $1 50 per year.
2697ae552ebd06e10bd99406177bfd5f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.4561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 Skc. 6 . That if any persons shall,\nwithin the territory or jurisdiction of\nthe United States, increase or augment,\nor procure to be increased or augment¬\ned, orshall knowingly be concerned in\nincreasing or augmenting the force of\nany ship of war or cruiser, or armed\nvessel, in the service of any foreign\nprinco or Slate, or of any colony, dis¬\ntrict or people, or belonging to the sub¬\njects or citizens of any such prince or\nState, colony, district or people, the\nsame being at war with any foreign\nprince or State, or of any colony, dis¬\ntrictor people with whom the United\nStates are at peace, by adding to the\nnumber of guns of such vessel, or by\nchanging those on board of her for guns\nof a larger calibre, or by addition there¬\nto of any equipment solely applicable\nto war, every person so oflending shall\nbe deemed guilty of a high misdemean¬\nor shall bo fined not oiore than 81,000,\nand be imprisoned not more than one\ny<SEO. 6 . That if any person shall, with¬\nin the territory or jurisdiction of the\nUnited States, begin to set on foot, or\nprovide or prepare the tneaus of any\nmilitary expedition or enterprise, to be\ncarried on from thence against the ter¬\nritory or dominions of any foreign\nprince or State, or of any colony, dis¬\ntrict or people with whom the United\nStates are at peace, every person so of¬\nfending shall be deemed guilty of a\n misdemeanor, and shall be fined\nnot exceeding $3,000, and imprisoned\n?ot more than three years,\nSBC. 7 . That the District Courts shall\ntake cognizance of complaints, by\nwhomsoever instituted, in cases of cap¬\ntures made within the waters ol the\nUuited States, or within a marine\nleague of the coasto or shores thereof.\nSEC. 8. That in every case in which a\nvessel shall be fitted out and armed, or\nattempted to be fitted out and armed,\nor iu which the force of any vessel ot\nwar, cruiser or other armed vessel shall\nbe increased or augmented, or in which\nany military expedition or enterprise\nshall be begun or set on foot, contrary\nto the provisions and prohibitions of\nthis act; and In every case or the cap¬\nture of a ship or vessel within the jur¬\nisdiction or protection of the Uuited\nStates, as before defined, and in every\ncase in which any process issuing out\nof any Court of the United States shall\nbe disobeyed or resisted by any person\nor persons having the custody or anv\nvessel of war, cruiser or other armed\nvessel of any'foreign prince or State, or\nof any colony, dwlrlet ^or people, In\nevery such case it shall be lawiul for\nthe President of the United States, or\nsuch other person as he shall have em¬\npowered for that purpose, to employ\nsuch part of the land or naval forces of\nthe United Stau-s, or of the wiUtia\nthereof; for the parpoee of taking pos-
10c0e2d6ddc3b1d75e78d6ecf69fe453 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.7499999683769 40.063962 -80.720915 This letter, as you see, while dated at\nIpringtleld, on tho lower Connecticut, is\nargely devoted to the scenes I have left\nichind rae in tho upper part of the valley,\nstopped otr here for a dav or so to see\nomething of this part of New England, 1\nnd among other things the United b'Uitas\nArmory located here, where Lieutenant.\nColonel A. K. Butlington,- a graduate of\n. Vest Point from the Wheeling district, is\nn command. Unfortunately for me the\nColonel happens to be out of the city just\n. t this particular time, hut through the\nourtesy of his representative I have seen\nnuch to interest and instruct me in tho\namous government works here. - One of j\nhe most charming views I have'enjoyed t\nince leaving Burlington was from the top\n the Arsenal building. The picturesque t\nConnecticut and its rich and romantic\n[alley is seen to its greatest advantage as ,\nt gracefully (lows, broad and deep, to the t\nastward of this beautiful city, wuile the\nity itself,shaded profusely with elms and .\nnaples, i.s like a picture set in emerald\n;reen. These New England elms are only ^\nixceeded in the majestyof theirshape and\nhade hv the grand live oaks of the South.\nVALLEY OF THE CONNECTICUT.\nThis grand valley of the Connecticut is\nif course a famous portion of New Eng- t\nand. Its lands are exceptionally pro- (j\nluetive. They tell rae almst incredible n\nhings of the crops they raise. But after c\ntearing of seventy bushels of shelled t\norn to tho acre on the rocky soil reclaim- \\
2b2560ae706a56f0e2ff1607309db7a1 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.4068492833587 41.875555 -87.624421 voting for their best Interests. He Is\nan honest, fearless and conscientious\nJurist. Judge Tuthlll wan born In\nJackson County, Illinois, and lived\nthere until he was fourteen years of\nage. He then attended public school In\nSt. Louis and In 1863 graduated from\nMlddlebury College, In Vermont. On\nhis graduation he Immediately enter-\ned the army and did service first as a\nscout In a company attached to Gen.\nJohn A. Logan's command. He then\nwas appointed second lieutenant In\nBattery H, First Michigan Light Artil\nlery, receiving promotion to first lieu\ntenant In General Logan's old dlvl\nion, Third of the Seventeenth Army\nCorps, Army of tho Tennessee, where\nhe served until the end of the war.\nHe studied law In the office of H. H.\nHarrison, United States Attorney, at\nNashville, Tenn. In the summer of\n1866 was admitted to the bar, and In\n1867 was elected State's Attorney of\nthe Nashville Circuit. Judge Tuthlll\ncame to Chicago In 1873 and was\nelected City In 187S and\n1876. He was appointed United\nStates Attorney nt Chicago In 1884.\nIn April, 1887, on tho death of Hon.\nJohn G. Rogers, judge of tho Circuit\nCourt, Judge Tuthlll was chosen to fill\ntho vacancy. At his election he had\nonly the opposition of tho Socialists,\nthe Democrats placing his name upon\ntheir tickets. His majority was over\n60,000 . In 1891 he was again elected\nby a large majority, for the six -ye-\nterm, and again in 1807 by practically\nthe same majority. In 1003, the year\nof the Democratic landslide, Judge\nTuthlll was one of tho three Republl\ncans elected, leading tho Republican\nticket by from 15,000 to 31,000 votes,\nonly llvo of the Democratic candidates\npolling a larger vote than he. This\nshows that tho citizens without re\ngnrd to party have always given\nJudgo Tuthlll their support, nnd thnt\nas a member of tho Judiciary ns well\nas In all places, he has been an able,\nn fair nnd just mnn.
11387d9015604843ce20aedf581cfac4 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.409589009386 40.441694 -79.990086 with a pretty mansard roof, which is located on\nthe northwest corner of Eighth and Earp\nstreets, a small thoroughfare jnst north of\nBeed street, but she Is now in the embarrass-\ning position of being a prisoner In her apart\nment on the second floor, and the neighborhood\nis greatly excited thereat\nIt seems that Mrs. Weaver has for some years\nbeen renting a portion of her home, as she had\nno use for so much room; and it is to her ten-\nants that she owes her present embarrassment\nThe first floor consists of a small store and two\nback rooms. A German butcher rents the\nstore, a back room and a bed chamber in tbe\nthird story. Tbe other back room and the sec-\nond bed chamber underthe roof are occupied\nby a journeyman barber his young wife,\nwhile the proprietor reserves for her own use\nthe entire second floor, which contains three\nrooms and the bath room.\nDisagreements arose between the women oc-\ncupying tbe house, and- - one of them locked\nMrs. Weaver In her room. She has friends on\nthe outside wbo put provisions in a basket\nwhich she hauls up. The woman' wbo locked\nMrs. Weaver in, refuses to let her out. Mrs.\nWeaver won't talk much, but says through the\nwindow that she is afraid to come out because\nif sbe does her tenants won't let her in again,\nand sbe is determined to stick it out The po-\nlice were asked to interfere in the matter, but\nas there had been no breach of the peace they\nwere powerless to act, and the warfare con-\ntinues.
0e15b4f82d777e653750468a339a0437 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1890.1219177765095 39.756121 -99.323985 ning of the civil war" said Mr. Edi-\nson, "I was slaving late and early\nselling papers; but, to tell the truth,\nI was not making a fortune. I work\ned on so small a margin that I had to\nbe mighty careful not to overload my -s e- l f\nwith papers that I couldn't sell.\nOn the other hand, I could not afford\nto carry so few that I should find my-\nself sold oat long before the end of\nthe trip. To enable myself to hit the\nhappy mean. I formed a plan which\nturned out admirably. I made a\nfriend of one of the compositors in\nthe Free Press office, and persuaded\nhim to show me every day a 'galley\nproof of the most important news\narticle. From a study of its head\nlines I soon learned to gauge the\nvalue of the day's news and its selling\ncapacity, so that I could form a toler\nably correct estimate of the number\nof papers I should need. a rule,\nI could dispose of about 200; but if\nthere was any special news from the\nseat of war, the sale ran to 300 or\nover. Well, one day my compositor\nbrought me a proof slip of which\nnearly the whole was taken up with a\ngigantic display head. It was the\nfirst report of the battle of Pittsburg\nLanding afterward called Shiloh,\nyou know and it j?ave the number\nof killed and wounded as 00,300 men\n'1 grasped the situation at once.\nHere was a chance for enormous\nsales, if only the x360?! along the\nline could know what had happened\nif only they could see the proof slip I\nwas then reading! Suddenly an idea\noceured to me. I rushed off to the\ntelegraph operator and gravely made\na proposition to him, which'he received\njust as gravely. He, on his part,. was\nto wire to each of the principal sta-\ntions on our route, asking the station\nmaster to chalk up on the black bulletin--\nboard
0ecbb0f13ce0119b2e2acf1be4746656 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.5942622634589 46.187885 -123.831256 the Colombian government seeking\nguarantees of the freedom and neu-\ntrality of the canal at the Panama\nisthmus from European governments,\nand have insisted that all the guar-\nantees in respect of the free use of\nsuch a canal should be from the Uni-\nted States alone. Our government\nhas said more than once in language\nso plain that it could not and has not\nbeen misunderstood, that we cannot\npermit the isthmus transit to be used\nin any event offensively against oar\ninterests as a nation on laud or sea.\nOur government said to the world\nthat an agreement between European\nstates to jointly guarantee the neu-\ntrality and in effect control the politi-\ncal character of a highway of com-\nmerce remote from themrnnd near to\nus, forming substantially a part of\nour coast line and promising to be-\ncome the chief means of transporta-\ntion between our Atlantic and Pacific\nstates, would be viewed by this gov-\nernment with grave concern, and that\nsuch action by European powers\nwhich maintained vast armies and\npatrol the sea with immense fleets,\nwould partake of the nature of an\nalliance against the United States of\nAmerica. The work of construction\nstill goes on, and the senator asked if\nthe United States had any control\nover it, in spite of the doctrine it had\nasserted. Do we propose that this\ngreat work, which exposes our com-\nmerce with the Pacific to the absolute\noontrol of foreign nations, whose in-\n are hostile to ours, and our\nwestern coasts to the mercy of hos-\ntile fleets, shall be consummated and\npass under the domination of Euro-\npean powers? Do we intend to make\nour words good? Suppose our treaties\nwith Colombia are superseded by\ntreaties of alliance and guarantee\nbetween Colombia and European\npowers? What is our government to\ndo? Protest against it? But how\nshall the protest be made effective\nwithout a navy? How strong will\nbe the protest if our coast cities are\nleft defenseless? The State of Pana-\nma is now virtually a French colony,\nand we may expect at any time with-\nin six months, perhaps within sixty\ndays, that the French government\nwill consider it necessary for the\npreservation of French interests in\nPanama to establish military posts\nthere and station troops along\nthe line of the projected canal.\nSchemes for the colonization by the\nFrench of various parts of the United\nStates of Colombia are now in prog-\nress. They have gone so far as to\nchange the name of the towns and\nplaces along the Panama canal, giv-\ning them French names, and that\nwhole region is becoming Frenchified,\nand the Monroe doctrine (so called)\nis violated energetically, flagrantly,\nand persistently by the French every\nday and every hour in the day. It as\na question which I here suggest, How\nlong will this be permitted to con-\ntinue ? Do we intend to stand by and\nsee the French, government in mili
093413b7a928e4d9adc4deabbea352eb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.905479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 Mayor Urubb and thu Hoard of Public\nWorlu were iospeotiiiK a delegation oi\nCleveland oouncllmon to arrive in the citj\nytmurday to leiptct the brick street p*v\niag, they having written that they pro.\nposed to visit Wheeling on such on er<\nrand, with a view to laying aome oi the\njuatly celebrated pavement in the Forest\nCity. Thuy did not arrive, however\nHome time since Mr. Urnhb wrote a letter\nto the L. A . W . Bulletin, the journal\noi the bicyciiaU oi the country,\nin which be referred at some length tc\nthe brick pavement and what a first claai\natreet it made, especially fur wheelmen\nThat letter was published an] since then\nMr. Urubb haa received letters from all\nover the country making iuijnlriea about\nit, ita cut, how it ie laid, ice durability\neto, Many of these letters are Iron\nwheelmen who are in position! connected\nwith munlci|ial government*. Not onlj\nhas Wheeling been advertise! by mean!\noi the letter but the obauces arc that the\npavement will be used in cities that would\nnever have known of it otherwise.\nA well kuown cltiaen, who lias In tht\nput had considerable to do with the\nstreots aud alleys of the olty and who hot\nalways been noled for the Interest he hoi\ntaken in city affairs, in talking recently\nabout the pavement, referred to'tlie fad\n it was becoming widely advertised\nand that all of the delegations that have\ncome bore to inspect it have been highly\npleated with it, and expressed tt as hit\nopinion that the time was not far <1 latum\nwhen there would bs a general demand\nfor the brick block as a paving material,\nespecially lu cities the rise of this,\nSaid he; "X believe there is go.\nlug to lie such a demand that\nit will lie Impossible for New\nCumberland or Hancock county to supply\nit. Now why shouldn't, we mako the\nblocks right here? You are talking about\nnew industries being started here, there's\none that would pay, I am sure. Look ut\nNow Cumberland.in the past si* yeara\nher population has increased rapidly Just\non account of hor brickyards aud the de¬\nmand for their product. I know that\nOapt. John Porter says that the\nfiro clay here Is no good, but 1\nclaim that right in our coal mines\nabout here and in Marshall county\nis any amount of ulay that will make as\ngood, if not better block than the Uancock\ncounty clay; there's more iron in it, and\nI know what I'm talking about. And\nwith Philadelphia and Baltimore using\nthe brick block, you'll dud the demand\nwill be a heavy oua. Oilier cities will be\nquick to follow the txtuiple of the largei\nones."
0ea158fe542cacf810405d49a863318e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.0863013381531 39.745947 -75.546589 swarded, one would undoubtedly go to\nDr. Capehart, whose model presents\nMr. Bayard standing-in his own front\nyard with his hand resting upon the\nsun dial post there. The pose is taken\nfrom u photograph of Mr. Bayard\ntaken by his daughter^ and It is there­\nfore life-line and natural. The position\nis one in which Mr. Bayard was fa­\nmilial to WIlmingtonianH. as it was a\nhabit of his to stand there in that at­\ntitude while chatting with friands, oh\npleasant evenings, when he . was at\nleisure. The likeness produced by Dr.\nCapehart is exceedingly true and faith­\nful to the recollection of Mr. Bayards\nintimate acquaintances. This model,\npresenting Mr. Bayard in such familiar\nattitude to Wilmington people, natural­\nly elicited in Wilmington more com­\nmendation from those who visited the\nexhibition of models than any other,\nbecause more people of this city had\nseen him thus than in the Senate.\n Amatels model is a splendid\nlikeness and presents Mr. Bayard as a\nsenator addressing bis colleagues in re­\nsponse to an address of Mr. Blaiue. Mr.\nAmatels made a bust of Mr. Bayard\ntrim life In 1884, and in order to study\nhim at his best was admitted to the\nprivate gallery at will and thus studied\nhim for many weeks. He was present\nduring the speech cf Mr. Blaine, and\nwith the artists ease watched Mr. Bay­\nard as he closely followed Mr. Blaine;\nand then through bis address in reply\nto the mighty man from Maine. There\nv.-a r. never anything theatrical about\nMr. Baykrd when speaking. He did\nnot gesticulate, except by slight move­\nments of the hands. Nevertheless, he\nwas a forcible speaker. Mr. Amatels\nmade several sketches of Mr. Bayard\non that occasion, and from the one\nmost characteristic the present model\nwas produced. Mr. Amatels had along\nand close professional acquaintance
182bdc8ceff3d16d9c28e94e4177a694 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1878.5082191463723 41.004121 -76.453816 fought with her then husband and had been\nby him worsted, and who had made threats\nto take his (t'inkston's) life, was one of the\npersons jn said killing ; that she was told by\nher said husband (Pinkston) shortly before\nhis death of the circumstances of said fights\nwhile at dinner at one time, and said Pinks-\nton pointed out the said colored man one\nday as he passed their home on tho road ;\nthat deponent cannot at this time recite the\nname of said person, but knows that he\nlived in the neighborhood of Ouachita City.\nDeponent further deposes that she was per-\nsuaded and prevailed upon to testify that\nTom Lyons, a colored man, was with the\nparty who killed her husband and assaulted\nher, but deponent bad no personal knowl-\nedge of the fact other than being informed\nby Cora Williams that said Lyons was at\nher (Cora Williams') house on tho day of\ntho murder. Deponent further testifies that\nshe was brought from her then home in\nOuachita parish and conveyed to New Or-\nleans, and she was instructed to testify and\nlay all the blame of said killing and assault\non the democrats; and that she was further\ninstructed and induced to pretend that her\nwounds were more serious than they were,\nand she could not walk, when in fact\nshe had walked each day considerable dis-\ntances and ascended loug flights of stairs\nsuch as the custom house stairs in New Or-\nleans, without assistance ; and on tho day\nshe was carried in the room of the return-\ning board on a lounge or sofa, sho was con-\nveyed in a carriage, but was able to walk\na part of the way up the stairs to the room\niu which the returning board was sitting and\ngave out, but she was induced to allow her-\nself to be carried in on said sofa or lounge\nin order to produce the impression that she\nwas worn out and could not walk. Depon-\nent further deposes that previous to her\ngiving testimony before said returning board\nshe was visited by Mr. John Sherman and\nothers of the visiting statesmen, as she was\ninformed, and introduced to them as such,\nand that she walked before them aud they\nhad ample opportuuity to see what her con\ndition was and that she could walk about.\nDepoucnt further deposes that during the\ntime she was in New Orleans attending the\nsaid returning board she was constantly giv-\nen money by different republicans and was\npromised a support for life, which last has\nnot been given as promised.
b6a1003e975000d56c534af3423e63a3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.6041095573314 41.681744 -72.788147 cast headed by Walter Scott Weeks,\nVincent Coleman and Robert Perry\nin the principal talking roles did\nwell, the drama itself is a bit under\nthe usual Cohan standard. In brief\nits theme is "once an actor, always\nan actor" and the main plot seems\nto be to prove that a person who\nhas been on the stage finds it Im-\npossible to quit the footlights.\n"The Song and Dance Man" gets\naway o a rather slow start and\ndrags somewhat all the wny through,\nat times giving a sort of "much ado\nabout nothing" atmosphere. There is\ngenuine comedy in the dialogue be-\ntween Bernard Steele, in the role of\na police officer, and Frances Wil-\nliams as a wisecracking theatrical\nboarding house keeper. Mr. Perry\nhas the role of a wealthy young\nartist who to aid his fellow\nmen. and Mr, Weeks' is a theatrical\nproducer with the same ambition.\nMiss Ann Merrick is a struggling\nyoung actress aided on the road to\nsuccess by the aforementioned two\nand Mr. Coleman is her friend and\neven dares prison to help her. The\nromantic theme is somewhat cloud\ned since the show starts strongly\nwith the latter much enamored of\nMiss Merrick, shifts to her engage-\nment to Perry and in the end stops\nabruptly without the audience know-\ning just who has captured the little\nlady's heart. Others in the cast in-\nclude Patsy Ann O'Neal in a minor\nmother role, Adrienne Earle whose\nlines consist of "Yes sir," repeated\nseveral times, Harry Fischer in a\nbreezy bit of dialogue and John\nBurns Jr. and Jay Ray in minor\nparts.
24700033b1ec3c5e030c835e3fc3f9f2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.869862981989 40.063962 -80.720915 Railroad Bos Active and irregular, with\nne largeai transactions in Erie. Mobile and\n)hio second debentures rose 2 per cent. C .\nX A I. C . firsts closed at 82, seconds at 40, ar.d\nflour Cltv flrsta at WJ{.\nState Bonne.Dull. Bids were made for\nSouth Carolina old and consols at 10 per cent\nlecline, but there were no tales.\n8to« k«.The volume of business on the\nStock Exchange was very large again to-day,\ntut there waalesiezdtement and "boom" to 1\nhe market lhan yesterday. Speculation i\nipened buoyant and prices roee K to 5 per\ncnt. the latter Reading, which roee from 73\no 78. Krie, A. ft P. Telegraph, 8t Louis and\nIan Francisco, Chesapeake and Ohio and the\nranger shares lielng a'so prominent in the\nteaHon Subsequently there was a decline 1\nf ii to3J< in the general list, 534 in Reading\nnd 7X in Nashville, Chattanooga and tit.\nxmis, brought about by the attacks of the\nears and the pressure of realizations, induced i\nty the rise iu the rate of tuonev to 7 per cent I\nicr annum and a commission of M6a*-i added. I\nSubsequently money became easier and J\noaned down to 4 cent, whereupon the v\nlock market became buoyant and there was 1\nsharp recovery under large purchases both C\nar long and short account The entire list 4\narticipated in the rise, which ranged from H 4\n3 5 per cent from the lowest point In the a\npward movement at the close, coal stock.* o\nrere particularly prominent, on a statement U\nrom official source* that the output of the E\nnthrocite coal companies for the year 1870 C\nill exceed by tlve and a half million tons 1'\niat of any year in their history, and that the k,\nicrease in the price of coal will give New Jer»\n>y Central alone a profit of $3,000,000 the\njming year after deducting a reasonable\nmount for labor and increased expenses, .\nhkh it claims will enable the company to Jl\nsy large dividends on its capital of 3,180,000\ntares in 1880. Similar claims are made re*\nirding the future prosperity of Lackawanna I!\nad Delaware «fc Hudson. trie was the gnat *\nlature of the dealings and advanced to 45#\na large transactions. Some of the southwest ?\nocks rose sharply, Nashville and Cbatta*\nooga rising 5X per cent D\nTnecranwra
6036a12f4deabb5ab21fb68ea01d7e23 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4658469629123 39.290882 -76.610759 that the idea of his poverty laid at the founda-\ntion of the objection raised against him. Give\nthe old veteran two thousand dollars a year, a\nlo" cabin, and hard cider to drink, and he will be\ncontent, without indulging in aspirations after\nthe presidency. This was the substance of the\nletter, to which the public arc indebted for those\nsubsequent demonstrations of indignation by the\npeople, that have burned lioMi Maine to the very\nverge of the far West. The great body of the\nAmerican people, like those of every other coun-\ntrv. where oppression has not destroyed their sen-\ntiments, are virtuous, and cling with fondness to\ntheir republican principles. They could not,\ntherefore, bear to sec this ungenerous taunt\nthrown out against the brave old soldier of North\nBend, on acoount of his poverty, without return-\ning the poisoned chalice to the lips of those who\nhad prepared the bitter draught for him.\nThe people, sir, without any dictation from\nWashington, or elsewhere, by a simultaneous\nmovement throughout this land, have taken Gen.\nHarrison's into their holy keeping. They\nhave determined that the aristocratic objection\nurged against his poverty, shall not operate to\nhis prejudice; and with that view, are firmly re-\nsolved, by all fair and honorable means, to secure\nhis election; translate him and his "hard cider,"\nfrom his log cabin on the Ohio, to the people's\nhouse at Washington. They know him to be no\n"newly found hero," but one whose maiden\nsword was fleshed in the cause of freedom, forty-\nsix years ago ?one who in peace they have seen\npresiding over immense territories, with a wis-\ndom and moderation that reflected honor alike on\nhis head and heart?one who, in the gloomiest\nperiod of the late war, they had seen leading his\ncountrymen to battle after Jiattle, and victory af-\nter victory. Ifhis deeds in arms are new* to you,\nit is because the malevolent feelings of your heart\nhave blinded you to tiie virtues and high deserv-\nings of all, save those who, like yourself, make\na trade of patriotism, and sell their principles to\nthe highest bidder.
172e231904e24464e92e9619da985539 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.2773223727484 40.063962 -80.720915 Fashion kills more women tliau toll Mid\nsorrow. Obedionco to fashion la a greater\ntianegresjlon of the laws of woman's nature,\na greater injury to her physical and mental\nconstitution than poverty and neglect. The\nelavo women at her tasks will live and\ngrow old and Bee two or three generations\nuf her mlstreaaeB fade and paw away. Xhe\nwasherwoman, with scarce a ray of nope to\ncheer her iu her toil, will live to Beohtr\nfashionable staters die all around Uer. The\nkitchen maid is hearty and strong when\nhvr lady hai to bo nursed like a sick baby.\nIt is a sad truth that fashion-ptmpered\nwomen are almost worthless for Mil the\nends of human life. They havo but little\nforce of character; they have still 1 bi\npower of mental will aud quite as little\nphysical energy. They live lor no great\npurpose in lite; they accomplish no worthy\nonds. They are only doll forms in the\nhands ot milliners and servant;, to be\ndreeaed and fed to order. Thoy writo no\nbooks; set no rich examples of virtue and\nwomanly life. If they, rear \nservants and nurses do all save give them\nbirth, and when reared who aro they ?\nWhat do thoy over amount to but weak\nBclonB of the old stock ? Wno ever heard\nof a fashionablo woman's child exhibiting\nany virtue or power of mind for which it\nbecame emiuent? Head «tho biographies\nof our great and good men and womt n\nNot one of them a fashionable mother.,\nThey nearlv all soraotr from ttBtrnno.mtmi.\nDei woman,"who had about as littlu to do\nwith fashion as with the changing clouds,\nfho trite Baying, "A mail luay eay too\nmuch, even on the beat of subjects, will\nmawer hero. If I had not lilted up the\nitone you had not found the jawel."\nBy lack of open air exerciie, and the .want '\n)f uuillcitint care in the mutter of diet, the j\nwhole physical mechanism often becomes j\nimpaired duriug the winter. Ayer's Baraa* t\npariita ia the'proper remedy to take in the t\n>prlng of the year tupur.fy the blood, invigor* j\nite the system, excile the liver to action, and J\nrestore the healthy tone und vigor.
296bf32e21b5d1720b0a1d67b1ffc102 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.0041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 ers, those to whom we have been accustomed\nto look for counsel and wisdom, that must walk\nthe chalk line* figuratively speaking. This move­\nment has been started in the West with the Uni-\nvesity of Minnesota as its headquarters. The\nregents of that University have decided that all\nthe professors who have reached the age of sixty-\nfive years shall be retired—in plain English,\nfired. There appears to he no provision for pen­\nsioning these worthies or for making them hon­\norary professors with the right to teach once in\nawhile. The old follows may be able to gather\nin a few crumbs from the Carnegie Teachers\nFund, but that matters not to the able regents\nwho, although they have set the limit beyond\nthe Osier age, still think that \\tfhen a man reaches\nsixty-five his usefulness as a teacher vs gone.\nAnd yet the late Senator Morgan, spry and alert,\nat almost eighty, was able to hold his own in the\nSenate, and wasnt it the aged Pettus, of Ala­\nbama, that gave the youthful and aspiring Beve­\nridge a “dressing down." We had stmposed that\nwhile the old fellows were shoved aside in most\nplaces, they Would he able hold on as long,\nas they wished in the ranks of teaching,\nthe Minnesota movement is likely to extend.\nThe younger teachers, the fellows of self-con­\nfidence, of assurance, often of novel notions and\nconsiderable misinformation arc to direct the\n- pfcVWs of the youth. Well, it may he all right\nand it may not lie. We should much prefer the\ncounsel of the elderly in scholarship. Who, for\ninstance, would not take the opinion of a Keen\nof Philadelphia, or of the late Agnew even when\nthey were advanced in years rather than the\nopinion of the “up-to-date” young surgeon who,\nif one hints at a pain in ones side telephones for\nthe automobile and wants to rltsh one off to the\nhospital for an appendicitis operation? Ami then\nwe fancy that some of us would not prefer the\nlegal advice of the younger bloods among the\nlawyers to that of the elderly. There are some\nthings in which age really ought to count.\nOf course the regents of the universities may\nthink that the younger professors know it all. hut\nif they do they dont show that profound knowl­\nedge in the text books or other works they\nwrite.
254bfebd9940f3be794f42c234ebf0fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.8592895858633 40.063962 -80.720915 Los do x, November 8..The Timn re*\nporta that Q'Oonnell, member of Parlia¬\nment for Dangarrlo, has withdrawn bis\napplication for admission to the Land\nLeague because lied path, the American\njournalist, referred insultingly to tbe\nQueen at a recent meeting of the league.\nDublin, November Q.Four troops of\nHurairo wqro t^ispatebed hence for Bal-\nlenrQUo by flpedal traina at two thin\nmorning. Four hundred iufintrv have\njust arrived at Bdlnnrobo, and will eo-\nU4inp near L»ugh tyask. These precau¬\ntions are takoo iu view of the intention of\nViftno'lhern Q anttemen to e*nd Itbuern\nt » harvibt the crops of Mr. Boycott, Lord\nEremea' asent, I tr whom the local pea*-\nautry, at the instigation of the Land\nL^tgue, r« f ised to work. The g *vern ment\nwill protect a moderate force of laborers,\nbat refuse to permit anything approaching\nanued demonatrations, which would cer¬\ntainly provoke collisions. A report U our-\nrent thin afternoon that tht Ohannell\n ia to be prepared to land a bii-\ngade of 2 800 troops at Qieenstown il\nordered to Uo eo.\nIteporta c< m« from all parts of the coun¬\ntry bringing udinga of aota which mark\nthe influence of the L%nd League\nMr. John O'Oallabsn, Secretary of the\n\\Vat«rtor4 brabcb of thmt orgmisttion,\nwas forcibly reinstated by one hand ed\narmed and marked' meu on a farm from\nwhich he bad bevp evicted at Newtown,\non ti e property of Henry Barron, and he\nvraa forced toawear ou bended knees that\nhe would not give up t'ue farm.\nAt Woodlawn a number of armed men\nwent to the h'tuae of Mr. 0. Allen, a land\nagent, and tired several shots into the\nwindow, nearly succeeding iu wounding\nAllen, who ltnmtdiattly took his dtpiri-\nurefrum the town under gaard .( tbe no*\nlioe. Notices were posted on the gales\nwarning Allen not tQ attempt to collect\nrente oil hie waster's property.
7f3dda4bef849e4991fe1a2856f1b952 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9494535202894 39.261561 -121.016059 The Breckinridge General Committee of\nNew York have lately issued au address, in\nwhich they advise tbeir “brethren of the\nSouth” not to secede from the Union at\npresent. A considerable portion of the ad-\ndress is devoted to the denunciation of\nDouglas and his friends, and among other\nremarkable sayings of the astute and far\nseeing gentlemen who compose that body, s\nthe startling announcement that “Mr. Doug-\nlas is, of course, annihilated. This is not\nthe first lime Douglas has been annihilated,\nin the estimation of bis political enemies.\nHe has been completely “used up,” “killed\noft.” and “played out,” at least half a doz-\nen times within our recollection ; but he\nwas one of those kind of men that would\nnever remain killed for any great length of\ntime ; be always “turned up” again, almost\nagainst the hope of friends and to the\nutter amazement of his enemies. Douglas\nhas been defeated before ; but defeat never\nlost him a friend, nor will it in this case.\nThose who voted for him In 1800 will sup-\nport him again in 1864, and his friends will\nrapidly increase in number. The division\nof the Democratic party in the late contest\nhas induced thousands of independent and\nconservative men who preferred Douglas,\nto vote for Lincoln as the only cbauce of\nkeeping the election out of the House of\nRepresentatives ; but in the next national\ncontest the Breckinridge faction will he de-\nprived of the spoils, and consequently pow-\nerless for evil. Douglas, if he lives, will\nugain be the standard-bearer of the Nation-\nal Democracy, and bis election in 1864 uiny\nbe predicted with as much certainty as any\nevent depending on human action.
62e69c81c54580d88fedcd2285a4b6d2 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4890410641806 39.261561 -121.016059 favor ofS M. Gilliam, plaintiff, in each of said nt-\ncutions. to wit: One for the sum ol $132 73. with it-\nterest thereon at three per cent jier month from tbs\n3d day of May, Alb , 1862 , against Peter 0 Tool,\npat White. Joel Witt, and H. A . Ashburn, defen'\nants; one for the sum of $122 50. with interest.1;\nthree per ceht. per month from the 3d day of Mav\nA. P„ 1862, against Pat. White and ieter OT00I\ndefendants; and one for the sum of $109. 97 with in\nterest at three per cent, per month from tbs 3d day\nof May, A . P . 1862 , against Peter OTool, defeddant\nI have taken ii execution and will sell to the high-\nest bidder, for cash, on the premises at .Tones Bar,\nRough & Ready Township, County and State afore-\nsaid, on SATURDAY. JULY 12TH. a. n . 1862 , be\ntween the hours of 12 oclock m 4 oclock T.\nall the right, title, interest and claim of the abort\nnamed defendants, and each of them in. to, and upon\nall that certain lot of mining claims commonly known\nas the Enterprise Companys claims, situa'edonaaid\nJonesBar. commencing at the upjier line of the\nBlack Smith claims and running up the Yuba river\nto the mouth of Rush creek. Also, all the right, ti-\ntle, interest and claim of said defendants, and each\nof them, in and to that certain dam in the Yubarirrr\nabove the mouth oi Rush creek, certain water ditch\nand flume conveying water from said Yuba riverto\nthe claims of said Enterprise Company with therigh\nof water from said Yuba rfver. Also, 2 cabiie.\nwheels and derrick ropes and blocks, blacksmith\nshop and tools, and all hereditaments and appurte-\nnances i» anywise unto said elliims appertaning nr\nbelonging. Taken as the property of said dafcndsnt-\nto satisfy the above demands and anernmg costs 0:\nsuit.
13ecdf778478e35af9b31d05d3817e7a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.06420761865 42.217817 -85.891125 The OwtN Electric Deltand ApruANca Co.:\nGcntlemnSoej in the Interest of others\nTrho are, or may become similarly affected with\nmyself, I venture to offer my experience with\ntho U33 of the Owen Electric 12c It, and that\nI am actur.tcd entirely !y that rcotlve, must be\nr.jjpnrcnt from t!?e fact thct uutil you tee my\nuatio and addresa recorded on this letter you\nhad no knowledge of either. 1 had long been a\nsulTcrer froi caroulc dyspepsia aud nervous\nprostration, contracted or CBgravatcd by many\nycara refcidenco la tho East Indiee. About three\nyenra ago I purchased one of your Belts In the\nhoje that Its use might afford me some relief,\nuDil wore It continuously as directed for about\nfour hours every afternoon for a month crso,\nand the result vfac perfectly marvelous. My\nIndigestion vrith all Its attendant miseries, ner-\nvousness, depression, Irritability and Insomnia,\nfrom which latter I was a great sufferer, have\ndisappeared. I then discontinued the use of the\nDelt (the existence of which I had indeed for\ngotten), until about six weeks ago, when a\nrecurrence of my old trouble very forcibly\nreminded me of it. I again put it into wear\n(after ceasing Its use for over one and one-h al - f\nyears), end with the same extraordinary results,\n again restored to health, strength and\nvigor, after wearing it for only ten days. Under\nthene circumstances I can most emphatically\nrecommend to others buffering from the ailments\nwhich I havo endeavored to describe, the adop-\ntion of the use of the Owen Electric DelU\nI had long been aware of tha curative powers of\nelectricity from what I had read on the subject,\nand on my return to England I purchased from\nPulvermateher of Regent street, London, the\ncombined chain bands, of which he is the\npatentee, for which I paid three guineas, and\nalthough I muftt admit that I derived some\nbenefit from their use, I am bound to say the\ngeneral result did not approach the benefit\nderived from the use of the Owen Delt,\nbesides which its utility is so great an Improve\nmcnt In comfort and convenience; Pulver\nmacheiV being cumbersome and complicated in\nadjusting to the body, besides causing from\nbeing uncovered, blisters end sores, and above\nall not being able to regulate the current as is\nthe case In the Owen Electric Belt. You\nare at perfect liberty to make what use you\nthink fit of this letter, and I shall be glad to\nanswer either verbally or by letter any Inquiry\nmade from me on this subject I am, gentlemen,
0404d6954c0fd574d6f6ddb576a8637b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.401369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 He listened bewitched to the music, and\nwondered why he was so moved. Was it\nreally she? How motionless she sat there!\nWhat music her fingers made! No, it was\nnot the woman he had known ; a transforma­\ntion had taken place.\nSuddenly it o«'Curred to him that ho had\nperhaps been misjudging her. It was at\nleast possible, even if difficult to imagine.\nSupposing that her light, flippant guyety\nwas only a mask, under which the real wom­\nan was disguised! He himself had worn a\nmask. Dike her he seemed to lie what he\nwas not. He had prctend«(d to be a scoffer,\nfor modern society demands that all real\nfeeling and emotion be concealed. If ones\nreal self is seen it is in danger of being ridi­\nculed. It might be that she had only mir­\nrored him. It might be that she, too, had\nserious thoughts which she feared to expose\nto ridicule. Why should she treat him, a\nscoffer, earnestly? And still his heart was\nchilled and his lips wore closed by tbe fear\nof her scornful laugh. Her laugh. How\nmaddeningly mocking it was!\nThe last sounds of the adagio melted away\ninto silence, and the wnsst: 1. Sudden­\nly she left the piano and stood before him.\n“Surely you havent been asleep! Now.\nconfess! I really believe you wire dozing.”\nHer voice sounded just as usual, and that\nbrought him to himself once mere. He ».t\nquite disillusioned now. What had he been\nfoolishly dreaming? No, she had net al­\ntered at all; she was just the same as ever,\nlier seriousness was only one of her many\nmoods, and was entirely superficial.\n“Sleeping! 1 wish I could have slept my­\nself away into nothingness."\n“Wouldnt you rather have dreamed?”\n"No. I would rather sleep the dreamless\nsleep. 1 shall never see yon again. You\nknow we shall not meet after to-night, and\nwhat will my life be without your laugh?”\nShe did not reply, nor did she laugh.\nThe edge of the thick dark cloud was be­\nginning to take a silver tinge, The moon had\nrisen. He had taken his hat, and' as he\ngrasped her hand he said:\n“And now, good-by.”\nIt was his last hope. As he could not see\nher face, he trusteil that her hand might\ntremble. But no, she was self-possessed as\never. Once more he said, gently: "Good-\nby.”
1021e2fd4d44e5b72822e65b52500bf4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.113387946519 39.745947 -75.546589 taining striking arguments why\nshould not be again nominated. H\nthe light of an apostle of defeat. The W orld\nshows how the Democratic party held a firm grip\non the country in 1892, how it went to\nwhelming defeat in 1896 and how it was defeated\nin the last two national elections. By this record\nit judges that defeat would again be the lot of the\nparty should Mr. Bryan be nominated.\nTo be perfectly fair, the World should have\nshown the returns of the election of 1894, whtyi\nthe country passed upon the second administra­\ntion of Mr. Cleveland and his policies, which\nwere so heartily supported by the World. It\nmust be remembered that when Bryan rode into\nthe nomination of the party in 1896 the party was\nwell nigh disrupted and had any candidate other\nthan Bryan been nominated at that time his de­\nfeat would probably have been of larger propor­\ntions than was Bryans. Again, the opponents of\nBryan were given full swing in the presiden­\ntial campaign when Judge Parker was the candi­\ndate. But judge Parker went down to defeat.\nAlthough a boom has been started for Gover­\nnor Johnson, particularly in the Hast, it is by no\nmeans certain that the governor in the Denver\nconvention will have the support from his own\nregion that he is believed by his Eastern friends\nto possess. In fact, a lawyer from Minnesota\nwhile in New York the other day went so far as\nto declare that the delegates from Minnesota\nwould probably be in favor of the nomination of\nMr. Bryan. lie stated that the fact that Gover­\nnor Johnson was being boomed so strongly in\ncertain parts of the East was operating against\nthe governor throughout the West, where the\nDemocrats looked with suspicion upon any senti­\nment created or advanced in the East for any par­\nticular candidate. These Democrats, according\nto this Minnesota attorney, desired the Demo­\ncratic presidential nominee to he free from what\nhe termed Wall Street influences. While the
0cd25b196f7ff78b8cfadefaee928cb0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.6999999682903 37.561813 -75.84108 but he got nary nibble. The boys won t\nbite at such stuff. Tho young fops from\ntown, who wont Into the army to wear\nshoulder straps and lord It over their su-\nperiors In manhood, If not In rank, had\nbetter be in some other employment than\ntrying to persuade the boys who know\nthem too well, from their allegiance to the\nCountry and the friends who stood by them\nIn the hour of their greatest need. Soldiers\nknow their duty, and will do it. Thank\nGod, Vlckers can't command the boys any\nlonger. But enough of Vlckers.\nextoomos another military man, one\nthat has worn the eagles without first win\nnlng them. Tho man who went into the\narmy and stayed there until the Govern\nment adoptod a policy that he saw would\nhurt his frionds, the rebels. So he resigned,\ncome home and Joined with Vallandigham\nand others to stop tho war and his\nfriends. I alludo to Howard, the man who\nclaims to bo a soldier, and yet left the ser\nvice and the boys that ho had got into the\nservlco, in tho hour of their greatest need,\nTho Col. was extremely hoarso from much\nspeaking, yet I believe he succeeded in\nmaking his little audience hear. He first\ngave us to understand that the Democratic\nparty was not Goad, but was now aroused\nand at work. The Democratic party, he\naid. reminded . bin. of tho Irishman that\nhad a habit of swooning away. His friends\nwould nioet to hold tho customary wake,\nprevious to burial, but as soon' as they\nwould get togothar and ootnmenco drinking\nhe would be sure to come to lifo. One of\nhis frionds who was solicitous about the\nmatter, says to hi in, "Pat, how shall we\nknow when to bury you If you fool us so\nmuehT" Tho answer was,-
174cb06f77615e36cd091a258584b29d THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1894.8753424340437 41.258732 -95.937873 tion, with It 4,000 ,000 sympathetic\noters would never have been poaeibie\nif there had not existed grave and\nthicatenlng evils from a violation of\none of the principles on which our gov-\nernment is founded, namely, the com\nplete separation of church and state.\nIvoman Catholic priests and editors\nhave sought by getting up feuds be- -\nween capital and labor, to hold the\nVotestant element of the working eo--\nlo In lino with the plans of tbelr\nchurch, when another policy Is not\nthought more advantageous, and the\nA. P . A. has even been accused by them\nof iH'lng an instrument in the hands of\ncapital to discriminate against the\ntoilers of America. But this charge is\nimpotent. Tho laboring men of this\ncountry have learned In countless\nstrikes that they cannot depend upon\nthe Roman Catholics hold out. They\nhave been betrayed so often that they\nhave found the reason, and that Is why\ntheranksoftheA.P.A.arcmade upof\nthe hard working sons of America\nwho believe that no solution to the\nquestions arising between capital and\nlabor can be effected so long as priests\ncan Darter and sou ana compromise,\n1th both sides to a controversy. They\nare men who love their country and\nwhose lives are ready to preserve it,\nand they have united themselves to-\ngether In a patriotic organization\nhich seeks to perpetuate American\nInstitutions and ultimately effect the\nassimilation of all elements of our peo\nple. The A. P. A. loves justice and\nwould promote prosperity. It favors\neconomic progress and industrial re\nform. It ho'ics that the day may come\nwhen every American home will again\nresound with the mirth and music of
8e00a896f104b4a231d642e2e7521e4f SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.009589009386 35.780398 -78.639099 at other times is stoic and cold in nature as\nan iceberg, will, when sipping tea with agree-\nable companions, become voluble, sentimen-\ntal and throws open the hidden door of the\nheart throws down the fortress wall of cold\nrestraint and lays the prize out for an easy\ncapture. It was sa with the printer ; betore\nhe arose from the table he felt that his fu\nture happiness in life depended on the fair\nAgnes. And Agnes felt the same.\nTho next Sabbath the printer accompanied\nAgnes to Church. This being his first op-\nportunity he was not long in pouring out the\nsecrets of his 6oul before her; he told her\ncandidly and frankly of the new passion that\nher loveliness had awakened in his bosom ;\nhe avowed his unalterable love his devotion\nhis attachment, and that his happiness de-\n upon the manner in which she treat-\ned hira in future. Agnes was eager to catch\nevery word that fell from the printer's lips,\nand she leaned on his arm, softly pressing it\nwith her little hand, while her eyes were\nbent upon tho ground and her heart beat a\nlively emotion. Her reply, the printer nor\nAgnes ever remembered, and the writer of\ncourse cannotgive it, but it was satisfactory,\nand that is sufficient for us to know. It is\nto be hoped that the services at the church\nthat day were profitable to the parties in\nquestion, but it is scarcely probable that they\nthoueht much about. They were accepted\nlovers, and Agnes referred th printer to her\nfather for his sanction, not to their union in\nso .many words, but for his consent to the\nprinter's paying his addresses to Miss Agnes,
16529aa6a0a06cb84357ec03828b187e THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1891.8616438039066 35.996653 -78.901805 Bat for the actor let him storm Par-\nnassus as he will; there are few leaves in\nthe Laurel crown. It is his function to\nrepresent the creations of genius to in-\nterpret them to the public. He has not\nthe thousand inspirations of the author;\nhe has only the suggestions of the glow-\ning words. The actor is subservient to\nthe author, notwithstanding he may for-\nget his bondage for a brief five minutes\nand breathe the free air of genius.\nThere was an age in France, they say,\nwhen actors were provided simply with\nthe framework of the drama and left to\nimprovise the rest. In fact, Goldoni, the\nItalian dramatist, speak3 of supplying\nplots to the French kfng's players from\nwhich they improvise the speeches. But\nwe have no evidence that .the actors rose\nabove the level of the Chinese stage of\ntoday, a similar practice prevails.\nMind you, this opinion is not accepta-\nble to the public. I know it must be\nunpopular of necessity. The public\nlooks upon Siddons, Mars or Rachel in-\nterpreting the grand creations of gen-\nius and regards the actor as the em-\nbodiment of Shakespeare or Racine or\nCorneille. The public shouts with ap-\nplause when the actor trembles with\nfeigned passion, but this same public\nforgets that the words, the action, the\nexpression are all simply echoes of an-\nother genius. In the clamor of approval\n'the creative art is forgotten, although\nthat is the base of the entire structure.\nNo actor brings this genius nearer to\nthe heart of the public, to be sure, but\nat the same time let him remember that\nhe is only the interpreter, after all, and\nthe shouts are really for Shakespeare\nand Racine.
2518273785a874ef9d337a0227156a62 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.8671232559614 41.875555 -87.624421 1 M. Kenna, S.\n2 W. J. Graham, S.\n3 W.1 L. O'Connell, D.\n4 J. M. Dalley, S.\n5 O. McCormlck, H.\n6 J. P. Gibbons, D.\n7 E. F. Brennan, D.\n8 M. P. Byrne, H.\n9 M. Wilson, H.\n10 Frank Sima, H.\n11 A. J. Sabath, H.\n12 A. J. Cermak, H.\n13 M. J. OBrlen, S.\n14 M. F. Maher, 8.\n15 T. P. Keane, S.\n16 J. TruschKe, H.\n17 S. Klelczynskl, H.\n18 J. J, Murray, H.\n19 J. Powers, H.\n20 M. J. Prelb, H.\n21 J. A. Qulnn, H.\n22 V. Scnaefter, H.\n23J,L.GUI,8.\n24 F. F. Roeder, S.\n25 P. J . McKenna, H.\n26 H. A. Zendor, H.\n27 Nell Murley, S.\n28 F. Paschen, H.\n J, Downey, H.\n30 L. O. Milord, H.\n31 M. K. Sheridan, 8.\n32 C. S. Kelly, II.\n33 T. J. Crowe, 8.\n34 Jos. Kostner, H.\n35 W. P. Feeney, 8.\nThe full membership ot the Repub-\nlican county central committee from\nthe city wards Is as follows:\n1 F. P. Braay.\n2 F. P. Madden.\n3 R. R. Levy.\n4 G. J. Feser.\n5 E. R . Litilnger.\n6 Roy O. West.\n7 David Matchett.\n8 W. E . Schmidt.\n9 B. E. Erstman.\n10 Thomas Curran.\n11 C. B . Barrett.\n12 A. W . Miller.\n13 D. W. Clark.\n14 J. A. Painter.\n15 J. J . McComb.\nId J. P . Klnsella.\n17 L. D. Sltts.\n18 L. 8. Rapp.\n19 Chris Mamer.
1b32d81294d326a2008b8688e790d104 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.4589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 New York, Juno 10..Tho impress\ngirding tho trade situation is more lit\nI, tiio result of continuously favon\nHither, good promises for tho crops,\no improved demand forgeasonablo go<\nprehensions that ti crisis >v«s impend\njih to have diminished in tho conti\nition of tho vast sum to bo realized ft\n0 almost unbounded production wli\nseoui now to bo on tho eve of.\n)ney market still continues easy. Sto\n1 rather lively. In tho dry good tr\nnerallysomo dullness prevails, but thi\na not very bad.\nTho grain market is work and tend\nueraliy downward. In wheat there\nen considerable of a deelinej especii\n. l llfiGnntinim. f!nni nn<1 nnln nm in\nible. Tlio lard and pork market is strc\nwool there is nothing of special intei\nnolo. In petroleum, lust week's\novemeat htia dropped rapidly, reach\nq low point of 02c and a fraction\nide oil.\nHie market for pig iror\niet though there is u fair demand\nA'tjrou». The effect* of the strikes\nrdly visible here. There is a goodd\ninquiry for Scotch pig, though us usi\nles are light. Prices lire firm with\nLissure to sell. There is little new hi\nss m iron and steel rails, and there\nLie or no demand for old mils. In col!\nj New York market is slightly impair\nc mainly to local eausos. The consul\no demand is /air, but it is believed\n}\\V of the new urop coining forward t\ntj enormous amount of coffee held\ntrope, that even the present low pri\nnnofc be maintained long.\nriie business failures tor the week\nrtocl to New York are IDA, against\nlast week. ,Knstern States had 13, W\n:» UO, Southern 23, Middle 20, Pac\nites and territories 12, New York C\nd lhooklyn 10. Failures in New V\naugh numerous are not heavy,
331ea5217d82806ba214eb4c1b63ce58 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.4986338481583 58.275556 -134.3925 To the right of the main entrance to\nthe exposition, the approach to the en-\ntrace of the Pay Streak will bogin.\nThlfl approach will be in the form of\nexact reproductions of famous totem\npoles, the one in Pioneer Square,\nSeattle, haring a place of hon¬\nor. There will be a line of six on each\naide of the avenue, each pole thirty\nfeet apart. Between the poles will be\nstretched ropes of garlands, from\nwhich will be suspended Japanese\nlaterne. The reproduction of the\nAlaskan native's family tree will be\nthirty feet high and highly ohromatio.\nAt night the eyes and grinniug months\nwill be illuminated by electric lights,\nwhich win produce an odd effect.\nThe approach will lead up to the\nmain portal of the Pay Streak. As the\nvisitor passes along between the Totem\npoles bis eyes will meet the grand\narchway. This is an original design\ndesign by Champney. It be a\ncombination of different kinds of arch¬\nitecture. Eight tall totem pole col¬\numns will support the archway, whloh\nwill carry an ornamental screen with\nthe official seal of the exposition in\nbright colors in the center. The pag¬\noda roof will be what might be termed\n"Jap-Alaskan" in style of architecture,\nexplains Champney who coined the\nword. The carved roof of the pagoda\nwill be a happy medium between ths\nJapanese and Chinese styles of pagoda\nroofs. The main frieze over the arch¬\nway will be a swastika fret, the Alaskan\ngood luck symbol.\nBetween the outside columns of to¬\ntem poles will be a seated figure on a\npedestal. On one side the figure will\nrepresent an Oriental idol, while on\nthe other the figure will represent a\nnative Alaskan god. Around the aroh*\nway will be laid out a typical Japan*\nese garden, with dwarfed plants, wiat-\nerin vines eto.
166f4b327f9777eaac4de95d80f41ed6 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.3657533929477 42.217817 -85.891125 "Seth," says I, "let's bury these poof\nfellows while we 00&J faff if they're left\nlying here, and mr hunger gets WOTOO,\nwe might be driven to you know!"\nBo We wrapped the poor fellows in their\nblankets, with a heavy stone in each, and\nrolled them over the edge of the ravine\ndown into the water. We buried th"\ngoid, too, and marked the spot, in case\nanything should turn up to save us at\nthe last; and then we lay down again, as\nif W0 hM nothing left to do but to die.\nAnd after that everything seems\nblurred and hazy, like an ugly dream.\nThe trees ;;nd the rocks and the sky\nseemed to goi'oundaiul round in a whirl,\nand old Seth stood up as hill as a steeple,\nand gn at black things came out of the\nbushes and made faces at me; and \nI was sitting under the old tree in the\nchurchyard at home, ami heart! my old\nmother's voice (who's been dead this live\nand twenty years) its plain as print; till\nall at once there were men's faces and\nmen's voices all around us, and 1 felt\nsomebody lifting my head and pouring\nsomething into my mouth, and then I\nfainted right oft\nWe had ben picked up by a party\ncoming hook from the mines, and they\ncarried us down with them to Arica; ami\nwhen we got round again we went back\nand dug up the gold, and Rave 0 lumping\nlot of it to the wives and children of the\npoor fellows that had died for us.\nBut when I got back after that lust\nweek's work my hair was quite gray as\ngray as you set; it now. And that's all\nthe storv.
4b35aa5e3aabf17a67bb43462eddd3e7 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1913.7684931189751 37.451159 -86.90916 "Arguing from this nnd knowing\nHint the rate of cooling of a solid de-\npends on the extent of surface. I found\nthat a baby got cold quicker or warm\nquicker when exposed to n Ore than n\nman; also, as any living body Is high-\ner in temperature thnn the surrounding\nair and has to lose heat continually\ntlie rate of loss depending on the sur-\nfaceIt Is readily seen thnt a baby. In\norder to keep up normal temperature,\nlias to furnish more beat In proportion\nto Its weight than man. and therefore\nlins to eat more In proportion to its\nweight than man. To prove that a\nbaby gives out an enormous amount\nof beat, keep tbe heat from escaping\nby wrapping n heavy blanket nrouud\nIt. In n half an hour the temperature\n the cover will be nlmost unbear-\nable to the band, and the baby will be\nfound covered with sweat.\n"The same knotty problem comes up\nwhen tbe baby Is bathed. You know\nyourself how cool you feel when you\nbntlm in n cold room In warm water.\nbut In very little of It. so that most of\nyour wet body Is out of the water on\naccount of the heat of your body being\ntaken to evaporate tbe water? The\nbaby suffers much worse on account\nof that same, big proportion of surface.\n"Rut I rflnd one encouraging tbing In\nthis peculiar geometrical problem of\ntbo human form. 1 find that If a dress\nIs made for ray little daughter two\nfeet high and one for her mother five\nfeet high. It takes only one-s i xt- b
132ce7424d2b83ea08665b2e62bf9659 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1918.6424657217149 42.217817 -85.891125 Perhaps the most important duty\nthe electors of the state of Michigan\nwill have to perform on Primary day\nnext Tuesday will be the selection of\na United States Senator to succeed\nWm. Alden Smith. We take it for\ngranted that the man who secures the\nnomination on the republican ticket\nnext Tuesday will be elected in No-\nvember, and for that reason, repub-\nlican electors should weigh the quest-\nion carefully, and vote for the maa\nwho will best represent the great\nstate of Michigan.\nIn the opinion of the True Norther-\nner, it would be a shame and dis-\ngrace, and be forever a blot on the\nfair name of our beloved state to send\nthe weak kneed pacifist Henry Ford,\nto the senate. His utterances and at-\ntitude on the war situation should be\nsufficient to eliminate him from the\nconsideration of liberty loving, loyal\nred blooded, patriotic Americans. The\nonly possibility of his nomination lies\nin the fact that two candidates oppose\nhim. This fact makes duty then\nof those who will leave Henry Ford\nin civil life at the head of his great\nindustries, all the more apparent. A\nconcerted effort and united vote for\nthe strongest man in the race will\noverwhelm Mr. Ford, and The True\nNortherner is firmly convinced that\nthe strongest candidate is Tru-\nman H. Newberry. These are stren-\nuous and critical times. Heavy war\nclouds hang along the horizon of the\ngigantic struggle in which we have\njust entered. If ever we needed a\nman with the right stuff in him in\nthe senate, it is now. It is no time\nto take a chance, and we must remem-\nber that even after the war closes,\nthe reconstruction period will be one\nof the most momentous periods in\nAmerican history. Truman H. New-\nberry has been tried. His public\nrecord is an open book and without a\nblot. He is endorsed by Theodore\nRoosevelt, and the years spent in Mr.\nRoosevelt's cabinet is ample evidence\nof his ability and fitness.
00103c814bb3a726a752f9e7525a2acb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.5027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 A uektiko of the stockholders of the West\nVirginia State Fair and Exposition Associa- 1\ntiou was held at the Court House on Satur- (\nday afternoon, at whoih a large majority of t\nthe stock was represented. By an unanimous e\nvote it was decided to issue bonds to the c\namouut of $25,000, for Ibe jmrpoto of fund- t\ning the present debt, Tho bonds will be $500\neach, with twenty coupons attached, and t\nwill run for ten years nt six percent Interest, J\npayable semi-annually, and secured by u £\nliret mortgago on tho property of the Aeso a\noiation. A* soon as these bondsaro disposed t\nui wiu jiitkcin iuijo|;iu;mes3 will uc palU Oil.'\nA c.oot> crowd gathered 0») tljp State Fair\nGrounds Saturday afternoon, uttwteij by\nthe first picnic of the IK 11. 0 . W. Society. s\n orchestra furnished music for the c\ndancer*. For those who did not desire to 0\ndance the ruce track furnished attractions. \\\\\nA trotting race betwoen Seshannocjc and t\nLady Warren, best three in five, mile boats, r\nwas easily won by the former nninial, T|je n\npacing race between Mollio McGnire and I\nDandy Dick was won by the mare. The t\nrace between the trotters of A". Faupleand n\nRobert Kcill, of Beilaire, was won by the 1\nFoupb horse, the puree being$100. The foot n\nrace between S. W . Davis and George Boliu s\nfor $100 a side wm won bv. Davis.\nThe following business was transacted at\ntha recent meeting of tho Board of Reg'etits of °\nthe Bt^te formal Schools: At Fairmont the\npositions of Jlte pickey and her assistant are\nstill left vacant; at lluf-shall College,
09dd7f3f9933f2352fe8277ac31dac1d THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1910.0123287354136 37.451159 -86.90916 troubled us you are I used to strip to\nmy underclotlilnp nnd taking a heavy\nchair In my hands would run about\nmy rooms rnf Jng and lowering the\nchair a hundred times without stop ¬\nping It had u grand effect\nFlorence Insisted upon this for sev\noral days dud got the duke Into a mind\nfor trying It One afternoon when sev ¬\neral eminent n> rsaus were going to\ncall on the toki Florence persuaded\nhim to try the neat remedy The duke\nundressed nn <k seizing a chair bo ele ¬\nvated It aboVfe his head and began\nracing around the room Ha was In a\nAna sweat with his eyes bulging bill\nface red and his veins standing out\nFlorence went tothe office and when\nthe eminent and dignified persons ar\nrived be said to one of them ho knew\nGoing up to see hb grace\nYes said the man\nWell sold Florence Ive been up\nto see him Im afraid hes touch ¬\ned In his head He Is leaping about\nhis room making strange noises and\nbreaking the furniture Como up and\nsee him I think he ought to bo res-\ntraIned nlli family ought to be told\nThe eminent and dignified person\nages accompanied Florence and peep\nlag through a crack In the door saw\nan apparent maniac dashing round\nand round with staring eyes and flush ¬\ned face Then Florence shut the door\nand took them away to tell what they\nhad soon beginning Its very sad\nabout his grace until an impression\nwas gchefal that the Duke of Beaufort\nhad gone mad A few days later Flor ¬\nence hid the dukes clothing and poked\nhis head In at the door and said Run\nry out the hotel Is afire The duke\npresently appeared In the hotel office\nIn a nightgown slippers and a tall hat\nthus confirming the unfavorable im ¬\nI pression of his Intellectuals
20f66e8ec9c1f68b71f19999f9c92b4d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.7657533929478 41.004121 -76.453816 All of the affidavits which form\nthe basis for the granting of the\nstate appropriation to the schools\nof the various townships of the\ncounty having now been received\nfrom the various boards of directors\nby County Superintendent Evans\nsome interesting figures have been\ncompiled which should serve as a\nlesson to the directors of the coun-\nty; a lesson which if properly\nlearned would bring to the tchools\nof the county between $4,000 and\n$5,000 each year which is due them\nbut which they do not get owing\nto the low grade of teachers em-\nployed in many of the townships.\nThe law governing the appropria-\ntion makes the minimum salary of\nthe teacher with onlv a provisional\ncertificate $40 and provides for the\npayment of the difference between\nthat amount and the salary paid iu\n1006 when the law was put into ef\nfect. For the teacher having a per-\nmanent or prolessional certificate or\nthose who are nates of a Nor-\nmal School and have taught two\nyears, it makes the minimum salary\n550 and also provides for the pay-\nment of the difference between that\namount aud that paid in 1906 which\nat that time in most instances was\n$35, making the difference or the\namount paid by the state in the\nlatter case, $15 per month and in\nthe former $5 per month. By em\nploying the former class of teachers,\nthe directors loose a large amount\nof money which they could get by\nsecuring higher class and more ex-\nperienced teachers without costing\nthem a cent more. For instance\nBeaver 110 v gets $315 but there is\na possibility of its getting $735.\nBenton likewise could get $735;\nCentre could get $945; Cleveland\nnd Hemlock, $735; Orange, $425;\nPine, $.sio: and Madison, S945,\nwhile all of the other schools of the\ncounty with the exception of Mou -t ou - r\nwhich is getting its maximum
7a5e97627f4b650d1a1c0183a8860e6c THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.7827868536228 38.729625 -120.798546 Messrs. Editors : Mankind in all ages\nand in all nations of the world—the most\nrefined and enlightened, as well at the be-\nnighted and barbarous—have been the\nsubjects of delusion, superstition pnd er-\nror, and have been and still aro the dupes\nof designing, and the prey of crafty, cun-\nning and unprincipled men, whose solo\nmeans of retaining power and extorting\nfrom the tolling millions the means of re-\nvelling in luxury, case and wealth, was\nand is the spread of delusions in govern-\nment, religion, politics, law, and even the\nnature and mission of man himself.\nFor near three thousand years, accord-\ning to authentic history, Kings claimed to\nrule by divine right, and their claim was\nsupported and the delusion imposed upon\nthe masses of the people through the in-\nstrumentality of a venal corrupt priest\nhood, who, through the “mystery of ini-\nquity,'' bound with the chains of fear and\nsuperstition, the minds of their deluded\nvictims. That despotism should rule an\nignorant people by force, and religious fa-\nnaticism rule the mind of a superstitious\npeople by fear, is not a subject of wonder;\nbut that the most enlightened people that\never lived, and that the most learned, tal-\nented,shrewd and experienced of that peo-\nple should be deluded fora hundred years\nby a Icjul error, is a matter worthy of the\nserious consideration ofthose who believe\nthat mankind are still progressing toward\nperfection in mind.\nFor n hundred years the legal mind of\nEngland and America has been chained by\none of the most absurd and palpable de-\nlusions that has ever disgraced the intel-\nlect of man.
2d3aee99324adde9c600ea185d6883e0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.1849314751396 41.681744 -72.788147 We did not enter the war for selfish\ngain; we have none but the loftiest\nmotives in endeavoring to bring the\nstruggle to a prompt and victorious\nclose. At the same time it is obvi-\nous that the results of the war in-\nevitably will provide benefits of a ma-\nterial character. Before our own par-\nticipation we had already broadened\nout; our more local viewpoint had\ngiven place to one of the widest in-\nternationalism. We had paid back to\nour foreign creditors the debts in-\ncurred for the rapid development of\nour country. Our foreign trade with\nneutral as well as belligerent coun-\ntries had increased by leaps and\nbounds. Dollar exchange was rapidly\nbeing substituted for sterling exchange\nand we were in the first place as the\nworld's bankers. All this was a mere\nfoundation for what is happening\nsince we ourselves were forced to be-\ncome a belligerent. We now are\nbuilding ships on such a scale as to\n that tho American flag will,\nwith peace, once again be seen on all\nthe Seven Seas; we are loaning billions\nto the countries with whom we are\nnow associated in the war. These bil-\nlions, in fact, represent investments of\nour people, for they are the proceeds\nof our own Liberty Bonds, which our\nTreasury, in turn, is loaning at the\nsame rates it itself is paying for the\nfunds. The governments to whom we\nare loaning are placing with our\nTreasury bonds of their own, identical\nin maturity and interest with ours.\nThese they guarantee to pay, principal\nand interest. The real net result, it\nwill be observed, is that our people\nare becoming investors on a scale be-\nyond the mist optimistic dreams of no\nmore than five years ago. Instead of\nsending interest and dividend pay-\nments to creditors abroad, the reverse\non a largely increased scale will be\nthe case. This phase will expand the\nlonger the war lasts.
0ceaa6525adc8e84b893f2d106298ffa THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8866119902348 39.290882 -76.610759 SEC. 3.?And be it enacted, That there shall be a\nmeeting of the members of the said Corporation, in the\ncity of llaltimore, on the first Monday of March annu-\nally, after the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and\nforty one, for the purpose of electing, by ballot, from\ntheir number, a President, Vice President, Socretary,\nTreasurer, and nine Directors, who, collectively, shall\nbe called the Board of Directors; which officers shall\nhold tbeir risspective offices for one year, and until oth-\ners shall be elected to succeed them, except in case of\nvacancy by death, or resignation: inwhich case it shall\nbe the duty ofthe Board ofDirectors to fillthe vacancy by\nan election from '-he members aforesaid,so soon as conve-\nniently may be. Special meetings of the Corporation\nmay be called whenever a majority of the Board of Di-\nrectors shall deem expedient, or upon the application\nof fifty members to the Secretary, in writing, stating the\nobject of such meeting, and it shall be the duty of the\nSecretary to give notice that such meeting will be held\nin the city of Baltimore, at a time by him to be appoint-\ned, which time shall not be more than ten days from the\ntime of the application aforesaid; and all notices of the\nmeetings of the said Corporation shall be given by the\nSecretary by advertisement in at least two of the daily\nnewspapers, printed in the city of Baltimore, at least six\ndays be lore the time ofsuch meeting; and at all the meet-\nings of the 6aid Corporation, and of the Board of Direc-\ntors, the President shall preside, or in his absence the\nVice President, and in case of the absence of both the
1433afa2b8ad5ead20ab1b6ef81125b2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.5986301052765 37.561813 -75.84108 His time is already engfged until\nthe 2tith of August. Ke was ttt\nCincinnati Tuesday and Wednesday,\nand a Gazette reporter suys of him :\n"lie is in capital spirits, with face\nbright and cheery, a good natured\ntwinklo in his eyes, and tho heartiest\ngreetings for everybody. If there\nare such tilings as campaign cares,\nhe doesn't seem to have reached\nthem yet. He talks modestly of the\nsuccess which he has met everywhere\nsince ho started out on his trip, but\nthere's a world of comfort, confidence\nand contentment in the tone of his\nvoice when he tells of tlie kindness\nwith which he has boen every-\nwhere received by tho people."\nJust before visiting Cincinnati,\nFoster spoke at Lebanon, and de-\nscribes his reception as follows :\n"I spoke in a new hall, the Opera\nHouse, and there was, I think, tho f-\ninest looking body of peoplo I ever\nsaw gathered together. A great\nmany couldn't get into hall. I\nwent to Lebanon from London,\nwhere I spoke on Saturday to a\nmeeting which, they said, was the\nlargest held in the town since 18C3 !\nEverywhere I find a great deal of\nenthusiasm among the people, and\nthe Republicans full of confidence.\nI got into Zanesville on two days'\nnotice, and visited the rolling mills,\nand foundries, and machine shops,\nand in the evening I was serenaded.\nThere wasn't a single bill out, the\nonly publication being a simple no-\ntice in the evening paper, yet be-\ntween two and three thousand peo-\nple turned out, and so it is all over.\nI find the clubs and other organiza-\ntions very forward and the peoplo all\nalive. Why, even down in Moxahala,\nin Perry County, a neat little place,\ninhabited almost by miners and\nrailroad men, they turned out 6ix or\nseven hundred people, as many as\nheard me at Straitsvi'le. I couldn't\nconceive whero they all came from."
18ab493dd187a369d121953a2a8a1a7d THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.717213083131 38.729625 -120.798546 with (Kcullar spots spearing before the eyes, loss of\n•igM, wakefulness, dyi|H-psla, liver disease, eni|di«Hi\nupon the face, pain in the back and head, female Ir-\nregularities, and all Improper discharges of boh sex*\nes. It :natlrrf not fromwhat causa the dl«ease orig-\ninated. however long standing or obstinate the esse,\nrecovery Is certain, and In a shorter time than a per-\nmanent cure can L« cfrcled by any oilier treatment,\nev*n after the disease has baffled the skill of eminent\nphysicians and resisted all ihelr means of cure.—\nThe medicines prescribed are pleasant, without odor,\nentirely vcgHshle. causing no sickness, and free\nfrom mercury or balsam. During fifteen years of\npractice,ln Europe, the Atlantic Plates ami Califor-\nnia, I have rescued fr«m the jaws of death many\nthousands, who. In the lust stages of the men-\ntinned dUeases, had been given up to die by Uh ir phy.\n•tclans. which warrants me In promising to the af-\nflicted who may place themselves under my care, a\nperfect and s|*ndy cure. Private diseases are the\ncreatesi rnftr.tr* to health, as they are the first cause\nf Consumption, Scrofula, and many other diseases,\nand should he a (error lothe human family. A per-\nmanent cure Is scarcely ever egeeled, a majority of\nthe cases fall lug into the hands of Incompetent |»rr -\n•ons, who no! only fail to cure the disease, hut ruin\nthe constitution, filili. g the »y»tein with mercury,\nwhich, w ?h the disease, hasten* the sufferer Into a\nrapid consumptu n.\nHut sho•ould the disease and the treatment not cause\ndeath «perdrty. ar.d the vMlm marries, the dtseasc\n*
3068fe4c97553ed1cee3913dd0c72354 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.9301369545915 58.275556 -134.3925 The new food conservation pro¬\ngram of tin- U . S Foot! Administra¬\ntion whs presented to the American\npeople December 1st. "Conservation\nSunday." by u spcciul message from\nI Herbert Hoover, U. B. Pood Admin¬\nistrator. which was read In all\nchurches, and during this week, to\nbe known as "World Relief Wock."\nIt will be presented In all schools,\nfraternal organizations, clubs, soci¬\neties, theatres, and at public meet¬\nings. PollowiiiK is the message:\n"Again iu full confldcnco I call\nupon the American people to set\naside Sutiduy, December first, and the\nweek following, for the considera¬\ntion of America's opport unity for re¬\nnewed service und sacrifice.\n"Last summer when the military\nsituation was acute, we ussured the\nInterallied Food ('(inference In Iajii-\ndon that whatever the war food pro¬\ngram of the Allies required we were\nprepared to meet; that the Confer¬\nence need not consider whether or\nnot we had the supplies, we were\nprcpured to find them; wo pledged\nourselves by the voluntary economy\nof our people to have the reserves\nin food to supply all necessities. The\nending of the war docs not release\nus from the pledge. The same impu¬\ntations must be fed and until an¬\nother summer has passed they can\nnot feed themselves.\n"The change in the foreign situ¬\nation necessarily the details\nof our food program because the\nfreeing of the seac Trora the subma-\nrinc menace renders acceslhle the\nwhole supplies of India. Australiu\nand the Argentine. The total food\ndemand upon the United States.\nIs not diminished, however. On the\ncontrary, It Is Increased. In addi¬\ntion to the supplying of these to\nwhom we arc already pledged, wo\nnow havo the splendid opportunity\nand obligation of meeting the needs\nof those millions of people in the\nhitherto occupied territories who are\nfaring actual starvation. The peo¬\nple of Belgium, Northern Franco.\nSerbliv Kumanla. Montenegro, Po¬\nland. Russia and Armenia rely upon\nAmerica for immodlate aid. We\nmust also participate in the preser¬\nvation of the newly liberated na¬\ntions In Austria; nor can we Ignore\nthe effect on the future world de¬\nvelopments of a famine condition\namong those other people whom we\nhavo recently released from our en¬\nemies. All these considerations mean\nthat upwards of two hundred mil¬\nlions of peoplo In addition to those\nwo are ulrcady pledged to serve aro\nnow looking to us In their misery\nand famlno. Our appeal today Is\nthorcfore larger than the former ap¬\npeal to the 'war conscience' of our\npeople. The new appeal Is to the\n'wjirld conscience' which must be\nthe guiding inspiration of our future\nprogram.
0c73f47f1c1d562cccbf9df00c11c076 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 In deciding to spread tho gospel of\n"votes for women" by means of the\ndrama tho Illinois suffragist loaders show\na recognition of tho groat power of this\nmedium of publicity. Three theatrical\ncompanies will be organized in Chicago to\npresent plays dealing With equal suffrage.\nThey will bo amateur companies, it Is\ntrue, and the quality of the plays to bo\nproduced must bo taken Into considera­\ntion. Has tho suffragist movement as yet\ndeveloped a playwright worthy of tho\nname? But given a strong play, a play of\ntho “Uncle Tom*s Cabin" or "Ton Nights\nIn a Barroom" order, there Is reason to\nbelieve, bearing in mind what Mrs. Stowe\ndid for tho abolition of slavery, what\nBeaumarchais did for tho revolutionary\nmovement In France, and not forgetting\ntho recent example of “An Englishman's\nHome” in fomenting anti-German patrio­\ntism In England, the cause of wo­\nman's suffrage can accomplish much\nthrough tho stage by reaching audiences\nIndifferent to Ua#propaganda from tho\nplatform or by other agencies.\nBut has It a playwright? Has It a Sar-\ndou to evolve a plot turning on tho grant\nof tho ballot to women, n Bronson How­\nard or a Clyde Fitch? No doubt that ver­\nsatile dramatist had he lived might have\nbeen Induced to try his hand In this new\nfield of dramatic exploitation. Tho Wes­\ntern suffragists must not forget tho dread\nalternative of being laughed off tho stage.\nBut It they can secure tho services of a\ncapable playwrlcht and present a “votes\nfor women” drama with an accomplished\nactress In the title role— such a play of\ncourse will demand a heroine rather than\na hero—they ought to be able to do much\nto advance their cause.
104e1fb7346fc4573361e7b0186aa4ed THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1942.001369831304 40.618676 -80.577293 A competent committee represent­\ning all classes of people, including\nlabor, has gone into the situation\nthoroughly, finding it absolutely im­\nperative that the two-mill levy pass\nif Columbiana County is to continue\ntaking care of its needy.\nLabor, making up the greatest pro­\nportion of the population in this coun­\nty, naturally has the greatest num­\nber of cases dependent upon the funds\navailable to the various agencies.\nWithout question it is the laboring\nman and woman who receive the\ngreatest welfare benefits and it is up\nto Labor to get behind the drive to\nput over this levy.\nWithout much hard thinking, each\nand every reader will find that if not\nin his immediate family, at least he\nknows of some case where the county'\nis aiding a family in distress. He also\nknows of other families which should\nbe receiving aid if the county ha<f the\nmoney available.\nWhen the head of a family con­\ntracts tuberculosis, for instance, ways\nand means must be found to send the\nfather to a sanitorium where he will\nnot recei%-e proper care for him­\nself, but will save his wife, children\nand fellow workers from the dangers\nof infection. If the family is large,\nthe mother cannot be spared from the\nhome, so it is necessary to aid the\nmother ami children.\nAt the present time, there are ap­\nproximately 30 cases of tuberculosis\nin this county needing attention, but\nthere are no funds. Some are unable\nto work, while others are dragging\nthemselves to their jobs as often as\npossible, tearing down their own\nhealth and being a menace to their\nfellow workers.\nThe county home has 135 inmates\nwith 35 of this number bedfast. They\nmust be properly housed, clothed, fed\nand cared for. Medical supplies, doc­\ntors and nurses must be provided.\nFunds are badly needed.\nThe same applies to the children\nin the orphans' home and those de­\npendent children in private homes.\nThe blind of the county must be\ngiven care. Artificial limbs are needed\nin many cases.\nWe cannot refuse to contribute our\nshare towards the relief of the suf­\nfering.
0a2aa2483e2c1be3c5036f6252301bcf CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1900.2589040778792 39.623709 -77.41082 one to all who approach those awful\njaws of his. With a body the color of\nmud he geurally lies in the shadow of\nsome rock on tho bottom of the sea,\nwaiting motionless for the approach\nof his prey. He is provided with an\nodd kind of flu Just over the mouth,\nand this is held out in front of him to\ngive warning of the coming of some-\nthing to bo swallowed. One taken\nalive was experimented on, and It\nwas found that if this projecting fin\nwas touched with a stick, even though\ntho stick did not come near tho\nmouth, tho Jaws closed convulsively.\nThis shows that the fin by some pro-\nvision of nature closes the Jaw as\nsoon as it Is touched. The mouth is\ntremendous, growing to the width of\na foot when tho whole fish is \nthree feet long. One of those anglers\nwas caught not long since, and though\nIt was only tweny-flve inches long, a\nfish flften Inches long was found stick-\ning in its throat. Tho angler is pro-\nvided with peculiar teeth set in dou-\nble or treble rows along the Jaws and\nat the entrance of the throat. Some\nof these teeth are a foot long. He is\nnot a pretty fish to look at, but ho\nattends strictly to business and will\nswallow anything that touches his\nwarning fin, whether It is meant for\nfood or not. All kinds of things have\nbeen found in the stomachs of anglers,\nfrom bits of lead and stone to fish al-\nmost as large as the angler itself.\nThis is without doubt one of tho most\npeculiar and interesting fish in tho\nwhole ocean.— N. Y. Sun.
0d0e58cb41b2ee59550d2d03fdaf977e THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1901.1273972285642 33.031451 -111.387343 The Senator from Connecticut, Mr.\nPresident, has just told us about what\nhas been done with oar pubic domain ;\nthat when we bought it from the In'\ndians, through oar various treaties,\nwe did it on the pretense that we were\nto sell it for better prices to the people\nof the United States.\nAh, Mr. President, we might have\nbeen justified in expending many mil\nlions more in purchasing the lands\nfrom our Indiana if we had no other\npurpose than to open them as free\nhomes to the workers of the United\nStates that they might occupy them,\ntill them, cultivate them, and\nmake happy homes. The Senator\nfrom Connecticut would urge that\nsubsidy to a ship flying the American\nflag is a benefit to all the people of the\nUnited States ; and so it is, because it\nstimulates trade, builds up our \nmerce. Our national, industrial, agri-\ncultural, and financial system is of\nsuch a character that the life blood ia\nits arteries pulsates through every\npart, the blood of national prosperity\nflows from every part to. every part,\nand whatever upholds oae hand of the\nnation maintains the other.\nI can. turn and say to the Senator\nfrom Coooeetieut that every home\nbuilt in a Western valley, that every\nacre of land upon our plains reclaimed\nfrom the desert, that every blade of\ngrass made to grow, where none has\ngrown before, that every fruit tree\nwhose spreading shade means shelter\nand comfort for the children, of the\nWest is a direct benefit to every busi\nness and every home and evey citizen.\nof the State of Connecticut.\nMr. President, west of the hundred\nand second meridian in the United\nStates there is a vast territory two
4f78f0d533d98f9a6260269b78143bac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.9303278372292 40.063962 -80.720915 Company has contracted to pay for build-\ningthcroadfsuppoeingthedistanccasbere\nstated only 175 miles) is $1,111,250 in ex-\ncess ol tho engineer's estimate ol cost,\nThat strikes us as a pretty handsome '\nprofit, and Is the first fruit ol that re-\nmarkable expedient resorted to by this\ncompany of putting the road under con-\ntract without a Burvey and before there\nwus anything but a mere skeleton ot a\ncompany formed. Our $300,000 will not\ngo very far towards paying even the pro-\ntits on the job, and all the actual subscrip-\ntions now reported by President Wood j\nfall nearly two hundred thousand dollars I\nshort of it. Where the money is to come <\nirom to pay the actual cost of the road '\nto the contractors does cot yet appear,\nThe ordinance authorizing the i\ntion to the W. A L. E. Co.,providing that\nthe money Bhall bo expended between\ntun cny uua me ran-mnjio roaa ana\nthat the road shall be built into tho eity\non this side of the cast channel, provides\nthis extraordinary "guaranty" to enforce\nthe performance ol these conditions, viz:\nthat the W. & L. E. company shall\nBUDscriDo $wu,wu 10 tnc 810CK ot the\nBridge company, and the city's sub-\nscription to the Hallway Company is not\nto be binding till the latter'a subscription\nto tho Bridge Company "is made" (not\npaid.) But jasl so soon as the agents of\ntilt Railway Company bare signed for\n4,000 shares on tbe stock book of the\nBridge Company, the city is bound for\nher $300,000 subscription to tho Railway\nCompany, whether a dollar of that
17114d4920d3d95496ec56005734caee THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.6972602422627 38.894955 -77.036646 Compound Ulmue Powder*, for Poulticet.\nThis Powder made into Poultices is the most effl\ncocions of any of the various kinds recommended\nand among all tho different kiudB used, I know o\nnone which is equal to this for all inflammations\nwhether of the eyes, face, limbs, or other parts o\nthe body.for Burns, Ulcers, Bore and Inflame*\nBreasts, Erysipelas or St. Anthony's Fire, Piles\nWhite Swellings, King's Evil, or Scrofulous and Fe\nver Sores, and Cuts, Inflamed WoundB, Carbuncles\nAc. It rapidly diminishes pain, heat, swelling, am\nwhere there is any gal tiering of purulent matter, i\npromotes a free and easy suppuration. A better ar\nlicle of the kind is not to be found. Price 50 cents\nDR. BROTHERS' RHEUMATIC PILLS.\nThese Pills are very efficacious in every case o\nRheumatism, whether acute or chronic; and I an\nsatisfied!, from my own observation of their grea\nefficacy in worst and most obstinate cases, tha\nthey are not surpassed, if they are indeed equalled\nby any other pills of the kind in existence; they at\ntenuate viscid humors, remove obstructions, regolab\nthe system, purify the blood, and thu9 enre the com\nplaint. The Rheumatic Liquid used with the Pills\nto bathe the parts affected, will very much facilitab\nthe cure. When the case is very obstinate, and doei\nnot yield readily to the above medicines, a Byni;\nmade from the Alterative Powder, (which can be ob\ntained at the some place with the Pills and Rheuma\ntic Liquid,) muet be taken according to direction!\naccompanying it; but in most instances the Pill:\nalone, or tne Pills and Liquid, will remove the com\nplaint in a ahort time. Price 50 cento.\nDR. BROTHERS' PILE ELECTUARY.\nThis preparation has been found On invaluabli\nremedy fyr the Hemorrhoids, or Piles. It is givci
49141a063bdedb0de77fb7960d418f34 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.2726027080162 39.745947 -75.546589 ably is Bethancourl, two miles south\nof Coucy-Le-Chateau.\nThe French War Office admitted\nthis retirement in its day communi­\nque, but said French artillery had\nbroken up enemy concentrations In\nHmt region later. \\ iolent artillery\nfighting was described uorth of\nMontdidicr In the Paris statement.\nHhidenhurg's frenzied efforts to\n; split the British line In Flanders and\nroll ihc northern fiank back upon\nthe North Sea, opening the way lo\nI the channel ports had spread Into\nBelgium today along a 20-inIle front.\nHaig reported the fighting which\nI broke out early yesterday contin­\nuing between the La Bassee canal\n[ and the Ly* river, while the British\npositions as far north as the Ypres-\nj Coniines canal were under a terrifie\n' 1 bombardment. The Belgian frontier\n crosse» the battlefront at a sharp\nbend in the Lys, about a mile north\nof Armentlrres.\nBetween the La Bassee canal and\nArmenHeres Haig said, the British\nare holding on the Lys and Lawe\nrivers. The Utter stream, (lowing\nnorthward through Bethune con­\nverges with the Lys ot Lagorguge\nless than a mile west of Estaires\nThe Ly* flows eastward In 0 meand­\nering course through ArmenHeres.\nBritish troops, according to their\ncommander, are desperately contest­\ning the crossings at Estaires and\nBnc St. Maur, three miles north­\neast of Estaires.\nFighting already has broken out\nnorth of Armenlieres on the\nfront under bombardment, Indleal-\nIng the Germans are losing no lime\nI In following up their cannonading\nj with Infantry assaults. Thus, the\nactual fighting has been carried
4c48f46ac19faebbe287baea881658f5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.0232240120927 39.745947 -75.546589 Musically, and artistically, Mme. Alice\nNielsen added fresh laurels to her long\nbow ef successes last night as Violetta\nIn Verdi's "La Travlata,” sung by the\nSan Carlo Opera Company at the Grand\nOpera House. Society was out In force,\nalong with hundreds of others for whom\nart was the centre of attraction. Especi­\nally was this true of the large number of\nItalians who occupied seals in the bal­\ncony and applauded the arias and chor­\nuses. The story of tho opera Is founded\non Mon. Dumas' “Dame Ai$p Camélias.”\na play that Clara Morris made famous in\nthis country. The plot deals with the frail\nVioletta's deep and sincere admiration for\nAlfredo, who attends a gay party at her\nhouse; their quiet peiiod of love In a\nrustic cottage; her self abnegation In\nleaving Alfredo free at his fa'ther's de­\nsire; Alfredo's resentment at her sup­\nposed faithlessness when he meets her -a*\na Paris ball; and his remorse when ne\nlearns the truth and finds her dying.\nWhatever the story, whatever the music\nof “La Travlata” it still lives as an epera\nand is among the best of Its class. This\nIs due to the quality of the music, not te\nthe nature of the story. The epera \ntains much of that warm, emotional\nmelodic profusencss which the public\nlikes and which It demands. The popular\nnature of the music, Its freedom from\ntechnical and theatrical perplexities\nwhich the public at largo Is glad to he\nwithout, its ever changing color, varlty\nand expression—all these contribute to the\nvitality of "La Travlata.”\nMme. Nielsen was tho centre of attrac- plays,\ntion; In a word, she was the entire opera is so arranged that its success is not\nIn all Its embodiment. It was hard to dependent upon dramatic situation,\nrealize that this woman, who only a few The playtnay be aptly described as an\nyears ago was singing Victor Herbert to! exquisite little love romance, dealing In\nfame In the “Singing Girl,” and “The( characters of everyday life.\nFortune Teller"—medio operas with grand\nopera leanings, was one and the same\nperson. Encore after encore greeted her\nevery aria and It was applause well\nearned and well placed. It was a charac­\nterization. powerful, striking and subtly\npsychologic and she brought from the\npart all the Infinite pathos of despa r. ■ are types, not caricatures.\nShe was Ip superb voice last night and gome of the reasons for tho unpre-\nshe sang hersêlf Into the hearts of her, cedented popularity of “Quincy Adams
0206fdf8d62d12a384037febd846fa3b THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.7657533929478 40.419757 -77.187146 ed. It now becomes necessary to go\nback five years to the time when this\nsame lady became the wife of Captain\nSargent. They were married at the\nyoung lady's home at Boston, and soon\nafter the event her husband was obliged\nto take his vessel out to Calcutta. Not\nwishing to live alone during Ids long ab-\nsence, Mrs. Sargent left Bostou Just be-\nfore her husband's departure, and went\nto Chicago to live with a married sister.\nIn due time she received a letter from\nthe captain, dated at Calcutta, saying\nthat he was soon to sail for Baltlmoreou\nthe return voyage. Shortly after the\nreceipt of this letter Airs. Sargent re-\nmoved with her sister to Colorado, not,\nhowever, until she had written her hus-\nband telling him of her chango of resi-\ndence, and directing the letter to Balti-\nmore to await his arrival. Months\n and finally the young wife wrote\nto Baltimore, asking If her husband's\nvessel hud ever arrived and to this let-\nter she received a reply that no such ves- s- e l\nhad ever been in that port.\nIn the course of another year Mrs.\nSargent came to accept her widowhood\nas a matter of course, and after a time\nyielded to the importunities f Mr.\nHarris and became his wife. Captain\nSargent meanwhile had received orders\nfrom his owners to take ou a cargo for\nanother foreign port Instead of return-\ning to Baltimore; so it was fully two\nyeurs before he relumed to this country.\nHe then heard to his dismay that his\nwife had removed from Chicago, leaving\nno trace behind her; and after brooding\nover his 111 fortune for a few weeks, the\ndiscouraged captain agujn went to sea.\nAfter another long ab-nc -
326aff68572259fa35d27de6d4deb396 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.9986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 rales paid for digging at three\n:ents per bushel. This amount of coal\nwill yield sixty thousand dollars,\nwhich with the profits to tbe\nawners and operators yield quite a\nmug sum to be added to tbe capital of\nhe oounty. This trade might with u\nudiolotas management and senslblo\njmployment of capital be more than\nihrlbbled at once, and will grow with\nthe advonoemont Jand growth of the\nowns below. The expenditures of the\n>oal business are all with trifling ex*\n:eptloa at home. Manufactory and\nbusiness houses leave only the profits\nimong us, bnt the ooal business leavee\nill the product from sale to be used\naero. Oar ooal Interest on MoMahon's\n3reok, on the O. P. R. K. la gradually\n:>elng developed. Several mines are\nargely profitably worked there,\ntnd as facilities for transportation in*\nsreaae the trade will enlarge,.Bellairt\ncorrespondence of Chronicle\nFbmalb PoaiusM..At a'hop' in the\nmbarbs, a few nights ago, two young\nwomen who had an 'old grudge' be*\nween them, oonolnded to settle It then\nind there. In the midst of the dance\nthe battle oommenced. Bits of hair\nind calico llew all. about the room,\n3ne of the women was armed wltti\narses knuckles, and by Its repeated ap>\nplication, she raised great lumpson the\naead of her adversary, and drew 'first\nalood.' After wrestling for sometime\n30th fell and oontlnued the struggle.\nPwo young men pulled off their ooats\nind noted aa seconds. After enduring\nbe beutly exhibition for sometime,\nuher parties interfered and separated\n;be combatants. Scratched faces,
66a4da01bb03f5041f16df8d9b1b4002 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.6543715530763 39.261561 -121.016059 llis late official station, as a member of the con-\nvention, induces me to notice the stale slander\nwhich he again rapeats, and which l notv pro-\nnounce to be utterly and absolutely false, no matter\nfrom what source it may have proceeded or shall pro-\nceed. 1 never did, upon any occasion, public or\nprivate, whether at the court-house in Lancas-\nter, or elsewhere, declare that, “if J knew I had\na drop of Democratic blood in my veins, I would\nlet it out,” or any words to that effect. 'Hus rid-\niculous story is without a shallow offoundation.\nThe first version of the story was, that I had\nused the expression in an oration which I de-\nlivered, at the court-house in Lancaster, on the\n4th of July 1815. The oration itself disproves\nthis assertion, and then, after Mr. Cox had made\nit the subject of debate the Reform Con-\nvention, in May last, one of the Harrisburg\npapers solemnly announced that the expression\nhad been used by me, on the floor of the House\nof Representatives, in this city, in reply to Gov.\nFloyd of Virginia, and that it could bo proved\nby a gentleman who had formerly been a Dem-\nocratic Representative in Congress, from Penn-\nsylvania. The scene is now again shifted to\nthe court-house in Lancaster, and a certain An-\nthony McGlinn is the witness. He states that\n“a number of years ago, one evening,” whilst\nI was addressing a political meeting there as-\nsembled, he had heard me use the expression\nalready stated “in an emphatic manner, with\nmy right hand elevated above my head.” He\ndoes not state the year this expression was used\nnor the name of any other person who was pres-\nent at this public meeting.
2f985404288779c16a02abc138ca40a4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.1493150367833 58.275556 -134.3925 The Shamrock mine, at Hogan's bay,\nKnight's island, is to be developed on a\nlarge scale, according to M. N . Ma6tsno\nand Gauvoran, who have just returned\nfrom the property. The former i9 a\nwealthy Japanese of Seattle, who has\nacquired a $10,000 iuterest in the Sham\nrock Mining Company, of liogan bay.\nMr. Gauvoran it a well known Seattle\nattorney, who is also interested in the\nproperty..Cordova Times.\nM. Dempsey, a Cherokee Indian, who\nhas lived iu Alaska for sixteen years,\nrecently returned from a visit to his\nold home in Oklahoma. When inter\nviewed at Seattle he said: "Oklahoma\nis all right, but I prefer Alaska. I left\nthe country primarily in search of\nhealth and found it in the North. Also\nI found other things which keep me\ninterested there, and I don't beliove\nthat I would care to go back to\nthe monotonous life of a farmer. The\nNorth suits me and has treated me\nwell, aud 1 iutend to stay there."\nThe new W. P. & V. dock at Skagway,\nto take the place of the one recently de¬\nstroyed by Are, will soon be ready for\nboats to tie up, The new wharf will\nhave a straight front G10 feet long with\na railroad track running down the face\nfor a distance of 520 feet. This track\nwill leave the bluff just behind the\nsmall warebbuse on the approach and\ncross the tourist platform and ap\nproacb, reaching the face of the dock\nwhere the old office used to stand. It\nwill be used for unloading coal, ma\nchioery, hay, and oats direct from boat\nto cars, and tourist trains will run\ndown theie directly opposite boats.
1164373aba1723589a497d07a6346ed3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.5849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 Valuable Island Property.\nBy Tlrtae of a deed of trust made by Georao H\nFaubol and Annie, his wlfp, to tbe untloralsaet\ntrustee, dated tho 28th day of January, 1878, ani\nrecorded in the Clerk'a office of tbe County Court o\nOhio county, West Virginia, In Deed of Trust Bool\nNo. 18, page* 848,849 and 880,1 will, on\nWATUBDAY, THE SOtta DAY OF AUGUST, 1878\nBeginning at 10 o'clock a. m . of aald day, sell at th\nfront door of the Court Home of said Ohio county a\npublic aucUon the following described parcels of rea\nestate. JLhat is to sav: LoU numbered one (1) and twi\n(2) with thslr appurtenances. Said lota nurabere<\none and two are situated on Zane's orWheellni\nIsland. Number one contains alx acre*, one rood am\nthirty-three and fifteen one hundredths poles, am\nnumber two contains two acre*, two roods and fou\nand one-half poles. Said lots are bounded on tho nortl\nby lot numbered three, conveyed by Z. Jacob, Com\nmlssloner, to John Smith; on the west by land of Dan\nlei £. McSwordn; on the south, southwest and eut as li\nshown by the plat and paper* accompanying tbepapen\nfiled In the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court o\ntaidObiocounty In the cause in chanceryin which The\nodore Fink and wife were complainants and Dsnie\nZane's executors and others were defendants, the eut\nline of same being what Is called the track of the rail\nroad panel, together with all the improvements upet\nsaid two lots; also theright of wajrgrauted byagreeinon\nof Amon McSwords. trustee. W . Phillips am'\nwile to said George II. Faube), of record in the Clerk'i\nofflceof theCounty Court of said Oslo county In Deo!\nBook S3, page 298. Alio all tho following described\nreal estate, lying and being situsted on the lowfti\npart of Zane's Island, aad adjoining the loti\nabove named: Beginning at a stake In the line of thi\nIlempfitld and Mariett* and Cincinnati lUilroad\ntract and corner to lauds of John Smith, John Fink\nand said Geore 11. Faube); thence with said Faubel'i\nline south seven and one-quarter degrees, eut twent]\nand one-quarter poles to a stake In tho hedge /enw\nand corner to lands of said Faubel and other lands ol\nAmon McSwords, trustee; thence with said hedge\nfence north eighty degrees, eut fifieen poles to a stake,\ncorner to lanas held by H. W. Phillips; thence north\nnine decrees, west twenty and one-quarter poles to i\nstake; tnquce south eighty-one degrees, west fourteen\npoles to pfcee of beginning, containing one acre, three\nroods and thlrtoeu and three-fourths poles, together\nwith all and lingular the improvements upon said lul\nnamed tract of land.\nThe* above described land is well fenced and\nhu eroded upon it an elegant residence, barn and\nother buildings besides a slaughter-house, Ice house\nand other improvements, and is ail under a high state\nof cultivation. The title to the above, which the\ntrustee will convey, is unexceptionable.\nTxaus ok Sals..One thousand dollars or as much\nmore of tho purchase money u 1b# purchaser may\nelect to pay In cub, and the residue iu, four equal installments
6542673341793e58fa467d2d84609036 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.842465721715 41.004121 -76.453816 Senator Trumiiull, of Illinois, in\na recent speecli at Springfield, In that\nState, dashed to pieces somo of tho pro-\ntection crockery of tho Radical party.\nHo said: "Nothing has tended more to\nmislead tho public as to tho truo char-\nacter of a protective tariff than tho ap-\nplication to itof tho phrases, 'American\nSystem' and 'Protection to American\nIndustry,' and tho denunciation of\nthoso who oppose a protective tariff as\ntho advocates of a 'foreign policy.'\nThere nover was a greater misnomer.\nHow is it protecting American indus-\ntry any more to give a bounty to a lum-\nberman, a man working in an iron es-\ntablishment, or in nny sort of a manu-\nfactory, than if ho wero omploycd cul-\ntivating tho .soil or digging in your\nstreets? not ono sort of labor as\nmuch American as another? Why,\nthen, should a refusal to tax one, and\nmuch tho larger, laboring interest of\ntho country, for tho boneflt of unother\nand a smaller Interest, bo denounced as\na "foreign policy ?" Bo not deceived\nby names or phrasos. That system of\nlaws Is most Just, and affords tho best\nprotection to American Industry, which\ntreats all branches of Industry alike,\nand refuses to burden ono for tho bene-\nfit of another, and especially when that\nother constitutes hut a small portion of\ntho country's Industry. Any tariff is a\ntax on tho domestic industry of tho\ncountry, considered as a whole; nnd it\nis only to particular interests and thoso\nengaged In them that It is over an ad-\nvantage."
ec0587de8d5999b034021b70768b5a9a VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.1410958587012 43.798358 -73.087921 At first, such a sentiment seemed to bor-\nder on the vindictive, and it was difficult\nto approve of it; but when we came to\nconsider it more fully, and to hear the in-\ndividual's own explanation of his mean\ning, the case was somewhat altered.\nThese novel writers.' Slid he. 'bv their\nwrjtings, assist in educating the commu\nnity to the blackest crimes. Far be it\nfrom me to say they do it intentionally ;\nperhapj they think the tendency of their\nworks is quite otherwise. But if so, they\nmake a most serious and unhappy mis-\ntake a'mistake too, for whose consequen\nces they must certainly be held in a great\ner or less degree responsible.\nDo not men know, they who are as\nintelligent as Bulwer, and as deeply read\nin human nature as Marryatt that while\n describe, in such glowing terms, the\ncharacter of the ruffian or the desperado,\nthere are hundreds and thousands of their\nyoung readers who sympathize with him,\nand such is human nature are gradu\nally, in spite of their better judgment, snd\nin view of the fina.1 results, 14 transformed\ninto the same image\nWi could not we repeat it avoid\nthinking there was something of truth fn\nthe views bf our friend, on this subject.\nWhat he says, at least deserves conside fa\ntion. The works of the authors alluded\nto, and others of the same general class,\nhave an amazing influence, at the present\ntime, in this country, as is evinced by their\nrapid sale. Whether they do or do not\neducate to vice and crime is, therefore, a\nquestion of deep and paramount impof- -\ntance.
3e1ef8a1cf08ff28a84d169f21660f3b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1903.6150684614408 41.004121 -76.453816 THE up through the green val-\nleys of southern Pennsylvania and\nre wearledly marching' northward\nto a battltfield somewhere, no man of\nthem could have told where. They\nonly knew that they were tired and\nfootsore and hungry, and the rich\npreen fields they hnd passed had\nbrought no comfort.\nA young soldier took off hia ragged\ncap, wiped the perspiration from his\nface and looked over at a little cot-\ntage with Its encircling vines. It\nmade him think of another little cot-\ntage across the lines, where the vine\nhad embowered his childhood.\nAs the head of the column came op-\nposite the house a girl ran out from\njlhe open doorway to the front of\nthe portico. She had United States\nflag tied around her as an npron and\nshe stepped upon a that the\nwhole army might see it and waved it\ndefiantly at the approaching troops.\nThe leader looked around appre-\nhensively. Some of his men hnd come\nfrom the most frightfully devastated\npart of the south. How would they\ntake the sudden defiant presentation\nof the banner under which that ruin\nhad been wrought? With a swift,\ngraceful movement he wheeled his\nblack battle horse out of line, lifted\nhis cap, bowed to the wurlike maid\nand saluted the flag she bore. He\nturned to the advancing men, waved\nhis hand, and every tattered cap was\nlifted and each man as he paused\nsaluted the enemy's colors. The\nleader rode forward to his place and\nthe long line moved on.\n"She Is a little fighter," thought\nthe boy who had waved his cap to\nher.
086361643daee41d336a51b221686cfa THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1893.2808218860985 46.601557 -120.510842 The universal experience of all coun-\ntries has established the fact that a dry,\nwarm soil composed of a deep, rich,\nsandy-clayey loam, well undrained, is\nexcellent for grapes. Members of the\nVaughn Bay Horticulture society end\nothers have planted quite extensively of\nlate years and some good crops have been\nproduced; but in eastern Washington,\nalong the river valleys of tbe Yakima and\nWalla Walla districts, the finest quality\nof grapes are produced and vines bear-\ning profusely in some instances have\nyielded ten tons per acre.\nTbe list recommended for western\nWashington are Concord, Moor's early\nand Isabella. For eastern Washington\nthe black prince, royal Muscadine, black\nHamburg and Concord; also the Sweet-\nwater, Wonien and Tokay (flame Tokay)\nare recommended.\nThe upland shot clay soils of western\nWashington produce excellent results ol\nstrawberries, as do also the soils of east-\nern Washington. In the rich valley soils\ncomposed of alluvial deposits, the \nare inclined to divert their growth to toli-\nage rather than fruit bearing. Straw-\nberries require very much water, but the\nconsisnt mild rains make tbe uplands es-\npecially suitable for them. Through\npreparation of the soil is the very founda-\ntion of suc< ess, therefore no slovenly sys-\ntem as once plowing and harrowing\nabould be tolerated, but the ground should\nbe cross-plowed, and, if necessary to\nmake loose and friable, eubsoiled. One\nacre prepared in the best manner possible\nwill produce more fruit than three or four\nacres fitted as is usually done. Jn eastern\nWashington, where the soil is loose—a\nvolcanic ash—good crops are produced\nby irrigation. Some of the ever-bearing\nvarieties are giving excellent results In\nWalla Walla county.\nThe list recommended as the best vari-\neties for this state is: Sbarpless, Jessel,\nBubach No. 5, Wilson's Albany, Ever-\nbearing, Monarch and Perry. The Sharp-\nless is recognized as the standard for this
0a58a16f9c1f24ff7b18da8a4b7d1910 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.9221311159179 40.832421 -115.763123 ouoSldilrWs&l to'ilio CorouorT'Off'tf\ntabbi.^oro found two bottloa, which\nhmj .contained laudaniim.'t-Thtv iol-\nlowiug is tho letter to tho Coronor:\nII; It: Bwon, M. D ., Corouor:" Dc.iv\nSir.Tu order to aavo you as lnueh\ntrouble as possible, Iliflg to' inform\nyou that this is a case of laudanum\ntaking witty "suicidal intent " Reas¬\nons ebncorri no one but mycolf; still\nif: nny,,qnq should iusist upon bear¬\ning a reason, you inayaay.I wla driv,-\ncu to desporation by tho 1'residcntinl\nmuddle, und seeing no prosjicct of\nascertaining in this world who was to\nbe tho 'next I'roiidont, weut to the\nnext, where all things are suppoi&d\nto bo known, for tho information.\nPlease exert your itilluonce^ with the\ncity fathers to prevent tho enwtio'n ot\na monument Over uiy remains; but\nif yon should find a wide-spread feel¬\ning on thf) part of tho people to mark\nni}*' last' resting place, you might, let\nMr. Young speak to Mr. Crocker and\nhave' it fenced in. Respectfully,\n[Siffueil: J W. \\V. 'rUscitbiT.\nThe closing .seuteuco roforn to the\nrecent imbroglio hotweon Charles\nCrocko'r and Mr. Young of tho Un¬\ndertaking firm Massoy A: Young,\nwhich ende-d in Crocker's unclosing\nYoung's house, adjoining Crocker's\npremises, with a high wood fence.\nAmong 'tho efl'ects of deceased was\nfound a lettor from his brother, Fred\nA. Bancroft, in Portland^- Oregon,\nshowing that deceased was financially\ndepressed, Deceased was the nttor-\nnoy for the firm of Langford, Lander\nA- Bancroft, 4\\l% California street.\nPrivate advices received herb render\nit probable that the revolution in Lower\nCalifornia, reported yesterday, is tho\nbeginning of un insarrectorary move-\nniunt in favor of Psrfiro l)iaz, which\nwill spread throughout that State.\nScarcely any government' 'frooplt "dfii\nthere to oppose the revolutionists.\nA Poitlaud dispatch says:. Tho Court\ndenies that nuy application lias yet\nbeen mailo for an injunction restraining\ntho issuance of a ccrtilieaot of election\nto Watts. Democrats state positively\nthat such actiou will be tykon, and tho\nKo]iublieait»'Aro confidant that a certi¬\nficate can not be legally withheld.\nft it repotted, on good authority,\nthat Wigijingtou will eontcKt I'aclieeod'n*\nelection in ilie 1th district ii. ibis State.\n'I'lin PorivfcrCtiuiioi'isiou le ft for Los\nAh£< le» yesterday, and will eust in a\nfew days, 'without returning here.
10368600e49920113cd939d60c88f102 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.3931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 issued tbe Bubp<finas early Wednesd\n£ morning and delivered them to tbe f\nlice. 1 also notified tho State's attorn\nof tho time and asked him to bo preaoi\nAt time of trial both State and defe\ndanta were ready and tho trial bega\nWilliams was first examied. Aske\n"Do you recognize these defendanta\nthe two men who assaulted and robbi\n> you Bnuday night last?" ho answore\n"X recognize that one," pointing to llo\ninson. "but! am not sure as to this one\npointing to Gray. When asked tl\nsame question again ho said he reco\nni*ed Gray, becauso ho was conaidt\nably taller than the other one, and th\nho was not certain as to Robinson. 1\nsaid ho first saw tho defendants in a s\nloon on tho corner [Uaudlan'sJ, at\nthen in Sullivan's saloon, lie \n"We had several drinks together in Su\nHvan'a saloon. [Witness never was\nSullivan's saloon at all.] I and t)\nboys drank in llandlan's saloonpvei\nfrom Sullivan's saloon about 11 or 11:1\np. m,; paid thoy would go to u sportin\nnouso; went about four blocks nwaj\nwas then Beized by tho two met), on\ncatching me around tho neck and pul\ning mo over, and the other striking ui\nin thn nfntnni'h thin wnn nlinnt 11 «sn\nfluppose. I fought some, but wbb ovo:\npowered; was bo drunk at the tlmo the\n1 didn't know or rtcollect anytbinj\nThen again I sobered up and knew wh«\nI was about; have no knowledge o\nrecollection of what became of me afte\nthat until I was taken to tho gas work!\nThis was about 3 a. in. Monday morn\nin*."
0d156b313635412f1adf650a2d9f9d34 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1893.8753424340437 39.623709 -77.41082 “In feeding dogs it is quite other-\nwise when wo have tho say. For in-\nstance, wo dont give a greyhound,\nwhoso nature it is to run, food to\nrnako him fat, hut that which wili\nbuild up his bone and muscle and im-\nprove his wind. A bulldog will get\nthe sort of biscuit that will improve\nhis courage and increase his tenacity.\nTho pet dog that gets but little exer-\ncise has to Ih> presented with some-\nthing more tempting than either of\nthe other two, while the puppy which\nis still growing must have that which\nwill form both boue and flesh.\n“In tho manufacture of our biscuits\nall these facts enter largely. In the\ntii-Kt place, the biscuit must be hard,\nso that tho dog cannot bolt it at once,\nns ho usually does witli soft food,\nbut must gnaw at it leisurely, thus\ngiving the saliva a chance to flow,\nmix with his food aud help digest it,\nat the same time keeping teeth\ndean and his gums hard. As to the\ncomposition of our biscuits, we put\nthat proportion of animal and vege-\ntable matter into them which will at-\ntain any desired result. Besides\ncatering to dogs, we make biscuits\nfor cats, aud, by the way, 'i\\ cents\nper day is the average cost of keep-\ning a cat on our biscuits. Then, t(K>,\nthere are biscuits for horses, a very\nserviceable thing in times of a cam-\npaign, when the most food must l>e\ncarried in tho smallest space possible.\n“Prom our experience in catering\nto animals,” sard Mr. Leigh in conclu-\nsion, “Iwill wager that the time will\ncome when the man of sedentary\nhabits will no more think of buying\nthe same kind of food that the man\ndoes who leads an active life, con-\nstantly calling his muscles into play,\nthan Iwould think of giving to my\ngreyhound the same biscuit to eat\nthat I would to my puppy.”—Caterer\nand Hotel Proprietors' Gazette.
17a947a2a6878f8411e1f8141d26b30a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.2226775640052 44.939157 -123.033121 The press, tho grange and commer-\ncial bodies aro nqw making earnest\nprotests to trade managers against\nthe prwaent cpndiUons, and it yet re-\nmains to be seen whether or not It\nIlea within tho power of these rail\nroad officials to bring about relief. It\nthey fall, then It. will be proper to\nexert the power of tho state to crush\nthis monopoly. Railroads, acting as\ncommon carriers, are servants of the\npeople, and In this capacity they are\nIntrusted by the state with the per-\nformance of a public duty and It Is\nwithin the power of the people to\nregulate and control tlrem so that they\nwill be compelled to faithfully and im\npartially perform that duty In the In-\nterest of the whole public. If they\naro now masters ef the people, rather\nthan publle servants, It is the duty\npf the stato to adopt such means \nkWlll oounno them within their proper\nspnare. There Is no statute In our\njstate regulating this subject, but in\nmany of the states aonronrintn uie.\nlatloa has been had to cover this evil\nWe especially call attention to the\nlaws of Texas, Illinois, Minnesota and\nWisconsin which regulate this mat-\nter In their respective states.\nTho common law as applied by an-\nalogy to this subject appears to b\nas fallows: It Is the faty of railroads\nto furnish cars to accomodate the nub-\nile business and to promptly carry all\nfreight offered, aad It l usually no ex-\ncuse that they do sot have sufficient\npars, for It Is within their power to\nget them. Acts of pubJIo enemies\nUnavoidable accidents, strikes, unusu-a- l\nand extraordinary and tenporarr\noccasions which could net be reason\nably forseen. and several other rausea\nAre complete excuses. Railroad man-a ge r- s
2ca17042a6b4769ff22a0a15f702a293 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.7964480558085 39.745947 -75.546589 putants to Washington. After hear ng ty-four, it would unquest'onably have lating here tonight without opportun- business is leasing or furnishing\nthem, he suggested that the railroad been opposed by the railway brother- ity to consider and reflect upon the terminal or transfer facilities to other\nmanagers adopt the eiffht-hour day hoods as much as the railway man- subject matter upon which we are railroads, or are themselves engaged\n"as a substitute for the existing ten- j agers. The legal purpose of the mea«- called to vote, and without an oppor- in transfers of freight between raii-\nhour basis of pay and service,” and '• nre is to make eight hours the stand- »unity to Investigate, for the reason roads or between railroads and indus-\nthat he appoint a small commission ard of a days service and pav in in- that these men propose to inflict a trial plants,\nto observe the results of the change terstafe rai'way operation from Jan- terrible calamity upon the country Section 2. That the President shall\nthe commise on to report the facts to uary 1, 1917. and pending the report it we take the time essential for an appoint a commiss.on of three, which\nCongress and an adjustment on this of the commission of nquiry, which intAiigent opinion upon this subject, shall observe the operation and effects\nbasis to be ultimately reached between ; must be made not later Scptem- They say to us unless you legislate by of the Institution of the eight-hour\nthe railroads and their employes. The her 1, 1917. the carrier Is penalized if 12 o'clock Saturday night, we will in- standard workday as above defined\nmen were willing to accept the Presi-! it does not give the present dav's volve the country in a calamity. Wc and the facts and conditions affecting\ndents suggestion; the railroad man- wage for eight hours of service and will not give you an opportun ty, the relations between such common\nagers ins sied that the acceptance of pay pro rata for overtime bai-ed upon which is ordinarily exercised by indc- carriers and employes during a period\nan eight-hour day as the basis of rail- that standard. These facts are made pendent legislators, to determine of not less than six months nor more\nway operation was itself the vital is- more certain bv the st*»«»".-«,» of t'm whether or not we are right. We de- than nine months, in the discretion of\nsue which should be arbitrated. Dur- Speaker of the House, Mr. Clark, who termine that, and you will legislate the commlslson, and within thirty\nfng these negotlat ons the représenta- ruled out of order as no* ger-nspe <o or we will inflict this calamity upon days thereafter such commission shall\nlives of the brotherhoods sent out a Dtp suhteet of the fteuso h it
14aef4e8faf76fa27b94863501261896 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.356557345426 40.441694 -79.990086 Dallas, the famous pacer owned bv McCor-mic- k ,\nthe Pittsburg horse man, will not ap -rje -a r\nIn public this season. On account of\ncorns, which tho owner has been' unable to\nrelieve, Dallas has gone lame, and yesterday\nit was decided to turn him out until next\nsprinsr. At the closo of last season Dallas\nthreatened tho pacing record, but his feot\nhave been under treatment all winter with\nno noticeable effect The horse is now at\nHomcwood Park. An attempt to jog him\nyesterday developed his trouble, and his\nowner ordered htm to be turned oot fora\nyear in the hopes that the corns will trov\nout. The original plan was to start Dallas\nat the Hoinewood meetings this spiing. Tho\narrangements for tho spring meeting at\nHomewood have been in detail.\nThe clubhouse and grand stands have boen\nrefitted, remodeled and improved, stables\nhave been rernrnished, and the place is now\nmore attractive than it has ever been. The\ncluhhouse is a model of beauty as at present\narranged. It has been thoroughly reno-\nvated. It has been repainted inside and out.\nThe floors aro all covered with heavy brus-sol- s\ncarpet New furnituie has been pro-\nvided, and every possible convenience lias\nbeen supplied. Tho main entrance to tho\npail: has been changed so that the visitors\nenter the park in front of the clubhouse In-\nstead of in the rear as formerly, and, in\nshort, tho whole place has boen trasformed.\nAdam Fulls, the manager of Homewood\nPaik, left last night ior Baltimore to look\nalter horses lor the May meeting.
7983f4f62f0bc00c3e933772ada9ace8 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.2698629819888 41.262128 -95.861391 a sensible man you are! Wheal come\nto tinuk of it, what could I have dona witb\na hog'T The neighbors would have point­\ned us out, and have said, 'Look at those\npeople—all tbey make tbey eat!' But,\nwith a sbe-goat, 1 shall have milk and\ncheese, not to speak of tbe little kids. —\nCome, let us put her into tbe stable."\n"I didn't bring the she-goat with rae,\neither, -' said Gulbrand5 *'I traded hej\nagain, for an ewe."\n"T here! That's just like you," ex­\nclaimed the wife, with evident satisfac­\ntion. "It was for iny sake that you did\nthat. AM I young enough to scamper,\nover bill and dale, after a she-goat? No,\nindeed. But an ewe will yield ME her\nwool as well as her milk; so let as get\nher housed at one 1\n"I didn't bring: tbe ewe either,\nstammered Gudbraad, ONE* more, "but\nswapped her for a gooee."\n" What? a goose! oh thanks a thous\nand times, witb all my heart—for, after\nali, how could I have got along with tbe\newe if I have neither card nor comb, and\nspinning is a heavy job, at best. It is\nfar easier to cut and St and SEW. It's far\neasier to boy ouf ctoth«S ready made, as\nwe've a.wnys DOOE. But a goose—A fat\none, too, NO doubt—why, that's tbe very\ntbiog I want! PRE need of down for our\nquilt, and my mouth bus watered this\ntnanv a day for a bit of roast gooie\ntbe Gird in the p >oicry ooop.''\n"A h I I've not BROUGHT the g00«», for I\ntook a rooster in HI* stead."\n• Good husband!* SAID the wife,"yoo're\nwi*er thiin I would have been. A rooster
3ed94c93ff9467fce5bf7d915d5a0b1b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.0753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 However, Jerry rctrived his cbaractc\nbefore long; (or as wc passed some fan\nhouses on our return, a little terrier cam\nrushing out, and in the most insolent wo\nbegan uarklng and snapping at ourdoj\nBut Jerry, though at first he made\npauso and began wagging his tail by wa\nol salute to the small stranger, yet whe\nbe saw tho other's cantankerous, unlrlenc\nly spirit, trotted gently on again in a dig\nnifled way, moving neither faster nt\nslower than before, and never even takin\nthe trouble to look aside at the barkin\ncur. When a big sheep dug, howevc\nbigger than our dog, and evidently awal\nened by the noiso the little terrier madi\ncame bounding out of tho yard und als\nflew at Jerry, tho tetter's whole demeani\nchanged. At first, indeed, he gave\ngentle wag ot his tall, much as to sa;\n"Now, let us be friends, and don't li\nsilly," but when he saw the sheep do\nalso meant to annoy him, he rusbed o\nhim like lightning, rolled him over, an\nin a moment sent him back again tasti\nthan ho came, and howling from a bite i\nthe leg. After this, and a short pursui\nho resumed his stately trot, while th\nterrier contented himself for tho futui\nwith growling within the gate.\n"Good dog, Jerry I" cried Ned, enrap\ntured at bis friend's triumph. "I can to\nwhat he meant to teach me there, papa,\nhe continued, laughing. "Ho was shov\ning me that a really bravo fellow woul\nnot touch a little boy, even it tho littl\nnnn ia rntlinr imnmlnnt* hut. thn Snatflnt\nbig fellow meddles with him he goes u\nhim like a brick."
042f83e5b1c55b90baa49b0172981894 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.872950788049 39.745947 -75.546589 Newark Center and Intermediate stations,\n740am,1354,833pra.\nBaltimore and Intermediate Mations, 1018\nam,130B.347.445,B0Bp111.1303night.\nBaltimore and Bay Line, 5 23 pm.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 411, 8 01,011,\n1015, Il(II am, 1308. SI 1.1,208,425,523.+Ü03,\n858,740.8B0pm,124Mnight.\nTrains for Delaware Division leave for:\nNewCastle,815,1123ain,250,3Go,4 4ft,815,\n653,«60pm,12(Sinight.\nBewes,815am,437pm.\nHarrington, Delmar and way stations, 8\na in, Harrington and way stations, 50 p ni.\nExpress for Dover, Harrington and Delmar,\n1118am,437pm,li01night.\nExpress for Wyoming and Sun rra, 0 53 p 111.\nExpress for Cape Charles, Old Point Com­\nfort ami Norfolk. 11 Is a m, 12 ol night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad street for Wil­\nmington, express, 3 50, 7 30. 7 37. s 31. » 10,10 20,\n10 ;t3, lllfta m, (13 35 1 30,3 tel, 3 01,3 43, 3 58,4 01.\n441,5ns*517.5;«),55»,ftIT,857,74ft.1118, 23\np in. 12 CKÎ night.\nAccommodation, 6 25,7 41,10 38,11 V> a m, 1 32,\n22H,310,40», 4 40.0 888,1003 1040,113*pm.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wllmlngi\nPhiladelphia, express, 1 lift, 2 .V», 4 20, 8 fit), 0 II),\n1« 05.11 51 a m,l 3M,805,5 04,5 10,.'. 56,6 ots 7 06, 7 26,\n9 12 p in. Accommodation, 7 UO, t> 05 a m, 12 it*.\n145,4(«,520,1»30pm.\n express, 1 55,4 30, 8 50, 9 00.10 05,11 51,\na in. 504,600,706,912 p m. Accommodation,\n700.805am, 1210,145,405,Û20,725,1030pm.\nNewYork, express 1.V», 255,4 700, 850,\n1151ain, 1210, 139,306,405,610, 666,606,\n+621,706,10:»pm.\nBoston, without change, 5 fid p m.\nWest rhester.vla Lam--kin,s 06 a m, 5 30 p m.\nNew Castle, 9 fid p m, 12 06 night.\n(i'ape (harles. Old Point Comfort and Nor­\nfolk, 12 01 night.\nMiddletown, Clayton, Dover, Wyoming, Fel­\nton, Harrington. BriilgevUle, Suafurd, Laurel\nand Delmar, 12 01 night.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 40, 8 01, 10 15\nain,12Off.623, *103,740,M20pin,1249 night.\nBaltimore only, 6 Off p m. 12 13 night\nLeave Philaiitlphia, Broad street, for Wil­\nmington, express, 3 50, 7 21», 9 It), 11 18 a in, 4 41,\n5OH,ff67,740,835,1110,1130pm,1203 night.\nArconftnodation, 8 35, 10 38 a m, 12 36,2 06,\n838,10OBand1138pm.\nFor further information, potioengers are re­\nferred to the ticket office at tho station.\ntCongresalonal Limited Express train?, com-\nposed entirely of Pullman Vestlbalo Parlor\nand Dining Cars.\n•Limited Express trains, composed of Pall-\nman Vestibule Parlor Cars, Vestibule Paaseu-\nK« r Coaches and Dining Cars,\nt H IB. i:. PUGH,\nGeneral Manager. General Passenger Agent,
197c3d56b769eacc1dc57764cd850800 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.519178050482 39.745947 -75.546589 The recent test of the third-rail elec­\ntric system on the tracks of the New\nEngland and New York, New Haven\nand Hartford railroads, between New\nBritaiu and 'Hartford, possesses the\ngreatest Interest as the first serious at­\ntempt at the operation of trunk line\nrailroads by electricity, and may be\nregarded as an epoch-making event in\nthe history cf electric traction. It also\nshows that the management of this\ngreat system is awake to the import­\nance of an early start in electric trac­\ntion, and considers electricity a feasi­\nble and satisfactory agent for operating\ninterurban trains on short runs. The\nexperiment is virtually a continuation\nof that begun at Nantasket Beach by\nthe same company, but upon a larger\nscale, and under more practical condi­\ntions. This third-rail system is not\nadapted to an extension over any large\npart the railway system. The volt­\nage used must necessarily be kept low\non a third-rail system liable to acciden­\ntal contact from workmen and tres­\npassers, and this fact alone shortens\nthe distance of successful operation\nfrom a single power-house. The re­\nturn, in this installation, to the\nmethods used by Leo Daft eleven\nyears ago is noteworthy. There is not\nmuch difference, except in size, between\nthe third-rail system installed at 'Bal­\ntimore in 1886 and that just completed\nin Connecticut; of course the genera­\ntors and motors used are vastly su­\nperior. There seems to be no reason\nwhy this system experimentally inau­\ngurated at Berlin should not be extend­\ned from 'Hartford to New Haven and to\nthe small towns in central Connecticut,\nthus serving a densely-populated neigh­\nborhood in which interurhan travel\nwould be very great.— Electrical World.
006d08af6912575ec4c4abec5dce89e9 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.2424657217148 37.92448 -95.399981 became thereby a nuisance to the\nneighborhood. Ban Franclscnns, who\nhad wept copiously when others snilcd\nnwny, would have seen these patriots\nsent Into e!le without blieddlng n tear.\n"Fvery man of this command will\nyet be needid nnd )ct be sent," said\nArmstiong. So, too, did the veteran\ndivision coinmnnder, nnd the brigade\ntook heart according!) . The last of the\nicgiilurs, with the recruit detach! icnts\nfor ifgimcnts nlreud) in the Philip-\npines, had been shipped to Honolulu,\ntlieie to nwnlt oideis, nnd September\nseemed destined to go by without u\nchange for the better in the piospeots\nof the men still left in cnmp about the\nreservation. The Primes, convinced at\nlast that the boy they sought was not\nto be found In California, had gone to\nSuntn Anita visiting their kindled, the\nLawienccs; and Aimstiong, buckling\ndown to hnrd nnd constant was\nstriv'ing to persuade himself that he\ndid not care that the mornings no long-\ner brought with them the cnrrlage nnd\nthe fnir face of that gentle girl; the de-\npartment commaudcr himself hnd gone\nto take n look ut his new responsibil-\nities in Hawaii; little Mrs. Garrison\nstill held court, though with dimin-\nished retinue, nt the Pirsldlo, when one\ndny, just ns October wns ushered In,\nthere enme a message from the adju-\ntant general In towu. Would Arm-\nstrong drop In nt the ofllce at tho first\nopportunity? A matter of some im-\nportance had come up In the general's\nllist letter fiom Honolulu, one on\nwhich Armstrong's opinion was de-\nsired; nnd the colonel, hoping for tid-\nings of n chance to movo even that fnr\nto the front, made Immediate oppor-\ntunity nnd took the first car for the
09d536fcf9396921aca65cd14e1d59eb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.83698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 George Stuart Dole, son of the Rev,\nGeorge Henry Dole, of this olty, In com­\nmand of a U-boat chaser In European\nwaters, writes graphically to\nfather of the Kaisers palace at Corfu,\nand throws much light upon the nature\nof the Kaiser's makeup. Ho »ays :\n"I drove to the Kaiser's summer pal­\nace and took a few pictures. The Kaiser\nis surely a worshipper of Mars and\nGreek mythology. He has a statue of\nMars forty feet high on the grounds,\nth ; largest there by twenty-five feet.\nHo has statues of Achilles and other\nGreeks. Busts of the Greek prlloso-\nphers adorn the corridors and porches.\nThere Is also an Immense painting of\nAchilles dragging Hector about the\nwalls of Troy. It Is a wonderful piece\nof work. The Kaiser has on\ntho place that represents anything but\nwar. excepting the chapel. The chapel\nforms a small bay In one wing. It being\na room agout thirty feet square. He\nhas Incense burning there at all times.\nA statue Of tho Virgin Is on one side\nof the altar In a niche, and Christ on\nthe other side of the altar. An oil\npainting of the Madonna and the Infant\nChrist is back of the chancel. In the\ndome over the chancel, In stained glass,\nIs pictured Christ hound before Pilate.\nOn the table before the chancel were\nthree cords framed, bearing Latin In­\nscriptions, translations of certain ports\nof the Word. The print was small and\nthe light dim. I could translate only\none phrase, which was in bolder type ;\n“This Is my flesh."
1c3fb11ab39aadf14fb19fbaa03de763 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.8838797497976 41.004121 -76.453816 J. A. Shumaii, Main.\nAllison Essiek, Madison.\nW. Case Richart, Bloornsburg.\nH. W. Kisner, Millville.\nH. W . Paden, Berwick.\nPnilip Hirleman. Jackson.\nJacob Rhodes. Hemlock.\nFrank Met as, Berwick.\nA. R. Kingsbury. Berwick.\nI). E . Hughes, Scott.\nWm. Kasliner, Bliximsburg.\nDavid Uemley, West Berwick.\nI). P . Smith. Briarereek.\nW. D. Quackenlnish. Berwick.\nJohn Thomas, Greenwood.\nXV. S . Luuhaeh, Benton.\n('. W . Sanders. Pine.\nNicholas WelN, (Vntralia.\nJ. M . FairchiM. West Berwick.\nMil tin Bloom. C01 yngham.\nAV. A. Scott, Berwick.\nJacob Steiner. Bloornsburg.\nJ. E . Snyder. Mifflin.\nJ. J. Hess, West Berwick.\nJohn A. Smethers, Berwick.\nEdward Bower, Berwick.\nW. E . Pet en, R'oonislmrg.\nJohn Fry, Bloornsburg.\nHarry Trego, Berwick.\nF. X. SaniN, Mt. 1'lea.sant.\nDonaldson Lester, Silgnrloaf.\nXV. D. Knorr. liloonisliiirg.\nM W. Hes, Fishing Creek.\nJ. M. Rider, Catuwhsn.\nCarson Deilil. Beaver.\n1) C. Weliiver, Madison.\n W. Miller, Center,\nJohn W. Kinkei, Bloornsburg.\nZ. A. Buit, Benton.\nJohn A. Chapin, Benton.\nJames Shelhiimer, Center.\nJohn Slielleuberger, Scott.\nJra Kline. Sugarloaf.\nFrank Kline, Greenwood.\ntraverse jurors, .Second Week.\nRobert Morris. Bloomsburcr.\nJ. W. Wintersteeu, Mifflin.\nc. w. Fran tz. Berwick.\nH J. Pursel, Bloornsburg.\nD. W. Witaker, Convnghaui.\nO. V. Taylor. Berwick.\nD. E. Krum, Bloornsburg.\nC. A. Brittain, Fishingcreek.\nO. E . Suttou, Benton.\nH. H. Laubacli, Sugarloaf.\nJ. B. McClure. Pine.\nJeremiah Herninger, Catawissa;\nJ. H. Blaine, Benton.\nA. T . Lowry, Berwick.\nClark Kressler, Bloornsburg.\nC. A. Marr, West Berwick.\nS. K. Dver. Locust.\nThtw. tintlith, Centraliu.\nS. Creasy, Bl'smisburg.\nI. T . Austin, Fishing Creek,\nDuval Dickson. Berwick.\nH. XV. Miller, Sugarloaf.\nJ. XV. Kelchner. Berwick.\nJ. XV. Rarig, Brla creek.\nJ.C Cry der. Center.\nClark Bower, Berwick.\nAV. XV. Hartman, Briarereek.\nV. P . Bowman, Mifflin.
582d1fa36ba4cce2295cf109ff214256 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.9246575025368 31.960991 -90.983994 In respect to clothing the law requires that ture of Chihuahua by Col. Kearney, and the Gen-\nthe volunteers shall furnish their own clothing, eral had consequently determined to remain in\nfor which purpose it allows to each non-commis- Monclova until furthers were received,\nsioned officer, musician and private three dollars Capt. Davis traveled from Monclova to Monte-\nand fifty cents per month, during the time he rey, distance 266 miles, in six days. He left\nshall be in the service of the United States. In Monclova 2d November, reached Monterey\norder that the volunteers who shall be mustered the 8th, and left on the 11th for Gamargo.\ninto service under this requisition, may be en- He passed from Monclova to Monterey without\nabled to provide themselves with good and suffi- an escort save two Mexican guides. The troops\ncient clothing, commutation allowed for six of Gen. Wools column are in excellent health,\nmonnths (twenty-one dollars) will be advanced At Monerey there was some sickness,\nto each non-commissioned officer, musician and Gen. Taylor and his staff, accompanied by Gen.\nprivate, after being mustered into service, but on- Worth and his brigade, started on the morning\nly with the express condition that the volunteer of the 15th from Monterey, to make a reconnis-\nhas already furnished himself with six months sance with a view of taking Saltillo, which is, no\nclothing—this fact to be certified to the paymas- doubt, ere this, in our possession,\nter by the captain of fhe company, or that the Gen. - Patterson had left Camargo with about\namount thus advanced shall be applied under 2000 men en route for Tampico,\nthe supervision of his Captain to the object con-
43e2ae2f45b430dea1deaa969b0d8877 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.1630136669203 43.798358 -73.087921 Tobacco. Among the numerous pre-\nmiums offered for the publication of\ntracts on special and important sub-\njects, i see none depicting the enor-\nmous evils resulting from the use of the\nnauseous and poisonous weedf called to-\nbacco. Why is it so? And why, among\nthe numerous and well selected Nos. in\nyour Depository of silent messengers of\ntruth, are there ndtie depicting, in true\ncolors, the immense evils resulting from\nthis article ? It is because this is gener-\nally considered a little thing ? One of the\nminor eviis ! Aside from the inconven-\niences, impoliteness, offensiveness, the de-\nleterious effects upon the physical system,\n&c, arising from it3 use, is there" not a\nmoral evil, a deadening influence on the\nmind, attending it ?\nBesides the pernicious example on the\nrising generation, is it not the very hand-\nmaid of intemperance? ,1 make no \nsonal allusions but is it not very seldom\nthat we see a professor in the constant hab-\nit of puffing, chewing 0r snuffing this\nmost offensive and injurious article, who\nis at the same time very sensitive in spir-\nitual things? One whose conscience is\ntender, living in the atmosphere of heav-\nen ? I am aware this practice may be, in\npart, with many, a sin of ignorance ; but,\nsir, the light is shining higher and high-\ner, brighter and brighter. Is it not time\nnow for Christians to lay aside every\nweight, to avoid every appearance of evil ?\nIs there no one among your numerous\nand able contributors who will herd his\nxchole soul to this subject a little while, gra-\ntuitously? If not, your unworthy broth-\ner will be one who will contribute some-\nthing towards a premium, if an effort is\nmade speedily.
11ed41d72006e099e17878a50d7d713d THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.1625682743877 46.187885 -123.831256 Work on the Oregon Pacific railroad,\nbetweon Corvallis laid Yaqnina bay, is\nbeing renewed with much energy. The\nconclusion is forced that now money, and\nplenty of it, is behind the project. New\nmen have also taken charge. The con\npny has purchased the steamer Yaquina\nand tug Favorite, and have a large\nquantity of iron en ronte to the bay. All\nthis requires ready money. Where it is\ncoming from does not plainly appear.\nRecent information points to the Chi-\ncago and Northwestern road as auditing\nthe accounts and sending out the new\nmen. The road being built is not a\nvaluably property in itself, but with im-\nportant connections may be mado so.\nThe bar at the mouth of the bay is said\nto allow the passage of vessels drawing\ntwelve feet, aud a narrow ledge of rocks\nis all that prevents a much greater depth\nof water. The quiet manner in which\nthe work is being prosecuted indicates\nrather more than the work itself.\nThe general superintendent of the\nWestern Union Telegraph Company for\nthe Pacific coast makes announcement\nthat an important reduction in through\nand local rates will go into effect to-\nmorrow. After that date the maximum\ntariff between all points in the United\nStates, now 1.50, will be $L This will\nbe day night rate, the latter beine\nabolished, because it is found that while\nthe day business is very light night busi-\nness is exceedingly hoavy. To equalize\nthe two the reduction has been deter-\nmined upon. The reduction in local\nrates, however, concerns tho night as\nwoll as the day rate. The cut in tins in-\nstance is equal to about 33K per cent of\nthe now prevailing rates. The minimum\nrate will continue to be 25 cents, as here-\ntofore, but the 30 and 40 cent rates are to\nbe reduced to 25 cent rates: the 75 cent\nrate to CO cents, while the 50 cent rate\nwill continue unchanged. Night rates\nare proportionately reduced. It will be\nseen that these rates havo been made to\nconform to the new maximum rata of 1,\nwhich governs eastern business, but, un-\nlike it, they are subject to reduction for\nnight messages. Rates between Califor-\nnia and Oregon and Washington terri-\ntory are excepted from these reductions,\nfor the reason that the company's lines\nwould be incapable of accommodating\ntho increased business which would arise\nfrom a lower tariff. A new line to Ore\ngon is being constructed, and when that\nis finished, which it is expected to be in\nthirty or forty days, the reduction will\nproably go into effect there also.
11070ef5ee0047067a646ddddf5c0eca THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1868.2554644492511 36.294493 -82.473409 tiao f th great multitude of mankind, who\nera can.peled to obtain. tirti by iKt tvtil t)\nthnr orer. I do most rineerrly indulge th\nhope, tbat (he Raili'al Union party in tb\nUnt judicial district, will look well to their\ninterests ir, the approaching election, and se-\nlect a gentleman for the oilice of ' Criminal\nJudge, whose probity and inirgritvef char-\nacter, would ornament and dignify the proud\npoeition be aepires to, and whose legal at-\ntainments are of an order te command the\nprofound approbation ( the public at large.\nI will here refer to the fact, that previous\nte the terrible Rrbejlio which devastated\nand delsged nearly ' I SI r,f the Mouthers\nStates la Wood. Col. Howard was a member\nnf tli great Whig party, which I d not\ntbink ought to be overlooked by th eosntie\nof Johnson and Carter, a large majority of\nwhose cititen, were (II time the un-\nswerving sad steadfast adherents of the\nWhig parly, when its operation were di-\nrected sud controlled by the'powerfal login\nof a Cry (nd a Webster I When (he brlra-hra- d\nof s RsbeUiua was raised lu oar belov\ned country, and w.e urged for In its desola-\nting march of Brnkmniljt Vtmoerny, Col.\nHoward atone took s Bras position amg\ntb friend ot the Union, aad most nobly did\nh oecopi that position astil lbs wm was\nnded and tb Rebellion entirely suppressed\nby th strong arm of th United flutes Gov\nernment. Tbe Ridical Cow party have tb\nconsolation of knowing, that our great Gov.\nernmeot iiul Msec, and that Its life was pra-\nter ted and saved from destruction by their\ngreat and magnanimous eiertions, and ss th\ndark Child of war bas disappeared, and the\nglorious sue light of pease skin forth ia Its\nmajestic etubjrrae
17730de6ff905b01e39e344f324c4a0b THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.4561643518518 41.741039 -112.161619 packing houses, continued his remarks\non tho Uevcrldgo amendment provid-\ning for meat Inspection.\nAsldo from tho objections ho hod\npreviously pointed out, Mr. Wilson\nsnld tho only other serious objection\nwas tho provision placing tho cost ol\nInspection on tho pnekors.\nMr. Nelll wns put on the stnnd nnd.\nho related a parting Interview with\nMr. Dybon, consulting votcrannrlan In\nChicago, representing tho packers. Mr\nDyson, ho said, had suggested that\nNelll and Reynolds go to Washington,\nmnko no report, but Inform tho pack\ncrs of tho conditions found nnd sug\ngostlons for remedies, then to wall\nthirty days and como back and sco It\nconditions had not boon bettered\nThis, ho Indicated, was to prevent In\nJury to tho trado.\nMr. Nelll said ho replied that ho wat\nnot authorized to mako any trado or\ndeal, thnt he did not know whnt ho\npresident's plan wns, but belloved It\nwns to securo adequate legislation. Mr\nNelll followed this statement with a\nlotter ho hnd received from Mr. Dyson,\nIn which It wns suggested n snnltnry\ncommittee bo nppolnted nnd that It ba\ngiven thirty days to accomplish Im-\nprovement, pending which no reports\n he mndo.\nMr. Nelll rather discouraged a visit\nof tho commltteo to Chicago at this\ntime, ns many of tho conditions com-\nplained of woro duo to negllgcnco nnd\ncould hnvo been remedied Immediate-\nly. Mr. Nelll denied tho statement ol\nMr. Wilson thnt tho floors wore\nscrubbed dally. Tho dirt in some ol\nthe rooms wns enkod on the floor nnd\nbad not been washed for weeks.\nMr. Nelll said ho nt first began mak\nIng notes of the conditions, but aftct\nseveral dnys, seeing no change In con\ndltlons from dny to dny ho abandoned\ntho practice. Ho felt justified In say\nIng thnt he dirty floors wns a commor\ncondition. Thero wero somo dlrtj\nand some clean rooms, but a clean\nroom seemed to be accidental nnd\ngnve tho Impression that sanitation\nwas not a mntter that was looked\naftor In thoso plants.\nMr, Nelll said ho remembered in\nparticular ono coomng room wns dirty\nnnd ho remembered walls, particularly\nIn the entrances, thnt wcro sticky with\ndirt and a pillar thnt you could scrnpc\ndirt from with your knife. Thero wore\nrooms with rafters from ceilings\nwhich had not been whitewashed In\nmonths.
62f126e398e3edbde15da87eedb0e440 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.001369831304 58.275556 -134.3925 Yon are hereby notified that 1 have ex¬\npended during the years of 19J0-1911, One\nHundred Dollars ($100), in labor und im¬\nprovements for each of suid years upon or\nfor the benefit of the following named lode\nclaims, to- wit: Red Diamond No. (5 Lode.\nWyoming No. 2 Lode, Ked Diamond No. 4\nLode, Red Diamond No. 3 Lode. Golden Shield\nLode, Silver Shield Lode, Nevada Lode, the\nRed Diamond No. 2 Lode, the Golden Shield\nNo. 2 Lode, the Wyoming Lode, tho Wyoming\nNo. 3 Lode and Red Diamond No. 1 Lode, sit¬\nuated on tho lower end of Douglas Island in\nthe Harris Mining District. Juneau Record¬\ning Precinct, District of Alaska, the amend¬\ned location certificates for the same are\nfound recorded in Book 19 of Lodes in the\noffice of the Recorder for suid precinct, and\nabove named elaims are known as the Red\nDiamond Group and the same constitutes a\ngroup of continuous lode mining claims and\ntho annual assessment work above referred\nto consisted in driving a cross-out tunnel ut\nthe bottom of the shaft situated on the Red\nDinmond No. 8 Lode of the above named\ngroup of «'laims for the year 1910 and \ndriving a tunnel upon the Wyoming Lode of\nthe sai group of claims for the year 1911:\nthat there was expended during each of said\nyears the full sum of Twelve Hundred Dol¬\nlars (S1200) for performing the aforemen¬\ntioned improvements und developments of\nthe Red Diamond Grouii of claims, in order\nto hold suid claims under the provisions of\nSection 2324 of the Revised Statutes of U. S .\nand the amendments thereto approved Jan.\n22. 1880, concerning annuul lubor upon the\nmining claims, being the amount required to\nhold said lode claims for the period ending\non the 31st day of December, 1910, und the\n31st day of December 1911, and if within ty*\ndays after the publication of this notice vobj.\nfail or refuse to contribute the proportioiCE\nof such expenditure as co-claimant, which *\namounts in tho aggregate to $26<).67j the in¬\nterest of the above named estate in said\nclaims will become the property of t iie sub-P\nscriber, who is one of the co-owners with\nsaid estate in said cluims who bus made re¬\nquired expenditures upon .said claims us\nprovided for in said sections.\nDuted ut J tinea (i , Alaska, September 3, 1912,
444c7fb53e695a9a2fe90d2a511811c0 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.1520547628108 40.618676 -80.577293 No war adminstrator can carry out this re­\nsponsibility alone. His initial choice lies between\ncompulsion and mobilizating cooperation—first of\nhis staff and then from groups of citizens—or\norganizing those with whom he works so that\norders issued are effectively put into operation.\nHe explains his purpose and gets his staff to\nthink with him and then explains to the public.\nCooperation is rooted in understanding. The ad­\nministrator who chooses the policy of mobilizing\ncooperation must first win confidence and then in­\nspire sustained will to see the project through,\nlie will seek counsel, for no one has all experience,\nbut decisions must be positive and clear-cut both\nas a basis for efficient administration and as evi­\ndence of his mastery of the problem.\nAn administrator who shows inability to de­\ncide upon a course will not be able to count upon\ncooperation. The administrator who cannot retain\nthe confidence out of which cooperation stems\nwill be obligated to resort to arbitrary orders and\nenforce compliance with the big \nThe current issue in war production is to save\nscarce materials for essential war work and to\nfind over two million additional workers. One\nanswer is the program to reduce civilian produc­\ntion, concentrate it in a few plants and thereby\nrelease workers. This program cuts across vested\nrights and personal interests of both management\nand workers. The program, however, is essential.\nIieal leadership would refuse to be deterred by\nobstructionists and would move definitely toward\nthe necessary end. Similarly with rationing and\nmanpower, the leader-administrator must know\nwhat is necessary and why, and tell the American\npeople. Confidence is essential to cooperation.\nThere's a long, hard pull ahead. Wise and able\nleadership will strengthen endurance and make\nthe task easier. We must not fail to prove that\ndemocratic methods are the most efficient. The\nsame obligation for leadership and cooperation\nrests upon unions and all voluntary organizations\nas upon government administrators, for one is\ndependent on the other. The success of democratic\nresourceful initiative of all groups.
03c20d66c6c95b4a656a2c2551a6ee3c PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.160273940893 40.441694 -79.990086 the other day tried before tba Lord Chief\nJustice at Oxford, England, that tha engage-\nment ring had been changed because It con-\ntained an opal, and opals are considered un-\nlucky. It does not appear what more propi-\ntious stone was substituted; but the talisman\ndid not work, for tbe wooing was happy neither\nin its course nor in its end, unless tha 200\nwhich tha jury gave tbe plaintiff is considered\nby her an ample solatium for all her griefs.\nA novel application of paper pulp has\nrecently been discovered; and consists in tha\nproduction of organ pipes from that material.\nTbo origin of the industry Is somewhat curious.\nCrespi Rlgtuzzo, the curate of a little Italian\nvillage, was desirous of supplying his chapel\nwith an organ, but as tbe commune was too\npoor to find the necessary fund, he and an\nengineer bf tbe name of Colombon hit tba '\nidea of making the pipes of paper pulp, which\ngave such satisfactory results that the patent\nhas been sold in Germany for 2,500.\nTwo gentlemen of Athens, Go. , we nt to\na neighboring town a few days ago on a busi-\nness trip. After they had finished all their\nbusiness they started home In the snow. In\ncrossing a little creek the horses and wagon\nran into quicksand, and in a second the horses\nwent down Into the sand, and were unable to\nextricate themselves. The wagon was Sinking\nfast and foon went In the sand over the hubs.\nThe snow was falling at a fearful rate, and tho'\nwagon and horses steadily sinking. Tbey bf'\nsprang from the wagon to save themselves. asdU.\nfortunately found.several negroes near attan4-- f\nwho went'To' their rescue, and with hard. woikP'\ncut the horses loose from the wagon, and sated\nthem.
15189e2fbd8b69c16def7eaf2b141cb5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.9438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 »nd the history of legislation antecedenl\nto ill passage. The question that it wai\ndesignated to eolve vu not a doubtful\none. The greenback* had been made a\nlegal tender for *11 debt* and demands,\npublic and private, except interest on the\npublic debt and for cuatoma dutiee. The\nqueition had therefore been agitated aato\nwhether the principal of the debt might\nnot be lawfully paid in greenbaoka, and\nto meet this question and to anawer it in\nthe negative the publio oredit act of 1809\nwaa paused. In his opinion the orlgnal\nindebtednefM of the country could never\nhave been liquidated with any other our*\nrency than coin dollara, it would have\nbeen aettled with mere promieea to pay in\nlieu of coin dollara. That aot waa in<\ntended to aettle any queation of paying\nthe principal of theee bonda, and it diu\naeem to him that if it had been contem*\nplated that theae bonds shonld be paid\nonly in gold money it would have been ao\nntuled; that in undertaking to aettle a\ndoubt tbis statute would not nave raised a\nnew one. The act of 1869 declared that\nthe government would pay coin dollara,\nand what did coin mean at that \nNothing was coin in this country\nexcept that which by law might be coined\nas money, and there was on the statute\nbooks at that time another law which pre*\nscribed how many grains of gold tnere\nshould be in gold coins,how many grains\nof silver in silver coin, and from the be*\nginning of the Government down to that\ntime the silver dollar was known to the\npeople of the country as one of our coins.\nHe next nuoted from the act of 1802, the\n6th sec, of which provides that alldnties\non imports should be parable in coin and\nooin bo received should be set apart aa a\nspecial fund for certain purposes, etc., and\nargued that up to the act of 1873, whioh\ndropped the silver dollar from the coin\nof the United States, silver dollars were\nreceived for customs duties and were\npledged for the payment of interest on\nthe public debt fie next quoted from\nthe act of July 14,1870, to authorize the\nrefunding of the national debt and\nsaid it was intended to define with\nthe utmost precision the medium\nfor the redemption of those bonds. The\nmeasures of value of those bonds were\nmost explicitly declared. Tliey were
11d45f537f5dc5c64c94718205bcef61 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1898.4424657217148 37.305884 -89.518148 boidicrs, knowing their weakness in\nthis respect, are loath to undertake to\ncross the Florida straits until these\ndisagreeable visitors have been re-\nmoved from the pathway.\nWithout respect to the character of\nthe strange craft that are said to be\ndodging the blockadersat Havana, they\nwill be removed from the scene of ac-\ntion in short notice, as it is understood\nthat Sampson has been made ac-\nquainted with the situation and will\nbe expected to redeem his promise to\nprovide safe conduct to the army when\ncalled upon. lie has ample force to\nconduct the operations at Santiago to\na successful issue, and still spare ves-\nsels of any power desirable for use in\nthe Florida straits.\nIt was pointed out yesterday by a\nnaval officer that the admiral, \nthe arrival of the marine battalion on\nthe Panther, has had at his disposal\nwhat he may regard as a sufficient\nforce of men to capture Santiago, even\nbefore the troops arrive. The 800 ma-\nrines on the Panther added to the ma-\nrines already with the fleet would\nmake a total of about l.sOO men.\nWithout impairing the efficiemy of\nhis ships. Admiral Sampson could spare\nl.v).i Idue jackets for a lauding party,\nami with this total force of 3.30;) men,\nif tiie insurgents, who have been armed\nby the United States government, do\ntheir share, itseems possible for Samp-\nson to capture Santiago at short notice.\nThere seemed to be a very decided\namount of expectation among the ot li -ti a- l s\nwho are acquainted with the gov-
2129dc6b6bb1770408f55508b55ba1b0 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.491780790208 39.261561 -121.016059 days of close and constant application. It told\nthat the merited commendation and applause\ngiven in the decorated ball, was doubly your\ndue in the plain and bumble school-room ,\nwhere for months you have patiently toiled—-\ntoiled, no doubt, many of you, under great dis-\nadvantages; often without encouragement from\nthe cheering visits of friends hod relatives.\nYour Superintendent fully understands all\nyour trials and sacrifices, and sincerely sympa-\nthies with you. He knows the sorrow of the\ntender bud, leaving a fond and too indulgent\nmother, for the kind yet less indulgent teacher,\nwhere books and duties are substituted for toys\nand pleasures. He understands the sacrifices\nmade by the opening flower, to obtain the just\nmead of praise due to worth and merit alone,\nwhen it would be so readily granted to its beau-\nty and freshness; and also of the impatience of\nthe maturing fruit, remaining concealed by its\nprotecting foliage until its bright and golden\nhue proclaim its fitness for the purposes and\nduties of life. Hut you are now amply re-\nwarded for all these trials and sacrifices, not\nonly by the applause of your friends and rela-\ntives, but by the information you have ac-\n uuder the guidance of your most excel-\nlent teacher, whose satisfaction at your success\nis greater than your own.\nYou no doubt desire and expect your Super-\nintendent to award the degrees of merit among\nthe pupils of the exhibition,—that award must\nbe made, if at all, by your kind aud accom-\nplished teacher. She alone is sufficiently skill-\ned and cognizant of all the facts to justify such\nan undertaking. Your Superintendent must\ndecline making any comparisons betweeu the\nforming, but opening flower, and maturing\nfruit—they are all alike to him of equal and\nabiding interest. Though you should at all\ntimes cherish and cultivate a worthy euuila\nlion, let it never descend to strife, envy or dis-\ncord. Enjoy your vacation which you eojustly\nmerit by your past conduct and industry; and\nwhen your school opens again, show at once\nthat the fears are groundless, that the applause\nof the public will make you vain and idle;\nshow that it has had the opposite effect, of ma-\nking you more orderly and respectful in your\nconduct and that it has increased your industry\naud application—that such will be its effects, is\ntruly the belief and wish of your Superinten-\ndent.
03ab57b0a48ccc2ea7f370d3bd97bc8d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1890.0835616121258 39.756121 -99.323985 Why did you not publish his letter ?\nOne thing is sure, either you received\nno such letter, or if you did and Pratt\nwrites you what you say he did then\nhe has gone back on what he publish\ned in the Norton Champion over his\nown signature. Here is what he said:\nIn regard to the transportation question, con-\ngress ought to pass a law authorizing the secre-\ntary of the interior to take possession of the Kan-\nsas Pacific railroad by virtue of the governments\ninterests therein, and also the main line of the\nI'uion Pacttic from Denver to San Francisco\nThen buy or construct a line from Kansas City to\nChicago, and from there to Columbus, Ohio, and\non to Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, thence to Wash-\nington, I). C, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and thence\nto New York City. The government should aiso\nbnild or construct a line from Topeka to deep\nwater the Gulf of Mexico at Galveston. These\nvast trunk lines of railroad should be operated bv\nthe government at such rates as to pay operative\nexpenses and U per cent interest on mo'ney actual-\nly mvested in the property. As a part of this\ntransportation problem, the government should\nalso own one line of telegraph with ramifications\nto all the larger cities and towns of the union and\nwith rates hxed so as to pay operating expenses,\nand six per Cent on money invested iu telegraph\nproperty. The movement of produce and passen-\nger tratlic is, principally from east to west and\nwest to east, and the trunk lines of railroad above\ndescribed owned and operated by the government\nwould have the effect to force all other lines own-\ned by private corporations and running from east\nto west or towards the deep water on the Gulf of\nMexico, to adopt the same schedule of charges.
e0e72a52e00a5a60b1b73aadaf403bb7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.1082191463724 41.681744 -72.788147 and Miss Manning, and "\n"That, of course, is a lie," Drake\ninterrupted without raising hi voice.\nIn a flash Steven's big fist smashed\nagainst his mouth, and his arm was\nwrenched excruciatingly as he\nwhirled around. He had fallen head-\nlong against the steel bulwarks but\nfor that iron grip on his wrist. The\nbosun and his gang stopped their\nscrubbing to look on in wonder. It\nwas the starboard watch, and Drake to\nhad few friends in that side of the\nforecastle. He, being deck boy, kept\nday hours, working through the day\nwith both watches, and keeping no\nnight watch; but most of his well\nwishers were among the port watch.\nOld Bill Gadgett, the bosun, had\nwarmed toward him when he had\nwhipped Tony, and some of the men\nwere not openly against him: but\ntaken all around the deck scrubbers\n'looked on in secret glee. Mr. Adams\nwas aft, by the wheel, making sure\n the ship swerved no more from\nher course. .Mary had gone to her\ncahin in chagrin.\nWhile Drake sprawled on the deck,\nhis twisted arm held high, Stevens\nstruck him again, so savagely that\nthe very Impetus of the blow made\nhim let go his w rist hold. Drake got\nup with the danger signal In his\nblack eyes, backed against the bul-\nwarks, gathered himself on his toes\nand hurled himself at hi assalltnt,\nwith balled fists working in short,\nstraight uppercuts. Tho men gatped\naloud; Tony groaned in.sympathy as\nthose short punches thudded upon\nthe captain' sacred chin. Mr. Adams\nstepped to the break of the poop, at-\ntracted by the sudden lull in the\nwish of brooms.\n"Carry on with your work, bosun!"\ncried Mr. Adams angrily. He leaped\ndown the poop ladder, going to the\ndefense of his skipper. Steven re-- 1\ncovered himself, lowered hi blond\n(head, and charged, bellowing bull-- j\nlike.
0bd978a51006fc332f5d76d7a8a3a7f7 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1894.0534246258244 37.305884 -89.518148 Michael McCurky.\nJames Smith.\nThey were all employes of the La-r - e l\nHill chemical works, Mills being a\nforeman there. Timothy Gannon, of\n108 Eckford street, Brooklyn, was\nbrought to St. John's hospital, this\ncity. One of his feet was badly\ncrushed, and he was cut about the\nhead. The section of the bridge that\nfell was a draw, thirty feet long. It\nwas built of wood, and rested on the\ncenter abutment, from which point an-\nother section continued on the Brook-\nlyn side. The draw on the Brooklyn\nside was open. It was low tide, and a\ntug was trying to force a schooner\nthrough the draw. It was a few min-\nutes before 0 o'clock, when the bridge\nwas crowded with men from near-b -y\nfactories anxious to get to their homes\nin Brooklyn. Suddenly there was a\ncracking of timbers, and the draw\nbroke in two. The men made an ef-\nfort get off, but the jam on the\nshore end of the bridge prevented\ntheir making their escape.\nThey fell into the water in a heap,\nand then commenced a wild straggle\nfor life. Some climbed on to the\nwrecked draw, while others sought\nsafety in swimming for the shore. A\npassing tug picked np a number and\nlanded them on the Brooklyn side.\nwhere they were attended by surgeons\nfrom Brooklyn hospitals.\nThe work of rescue was a difficult\none, as there were no small boats at\nhand. Ropes were thrown out to some\nof the men, and they were hauled\nashore in that manner. During the\nwork of rescue there were some lively\nscenes in the water. Men struggled\nwith each other in their frenzy to es-\ncape. Some were hauled under water\nand nearly drowned by those whom\nthey were trying to assist.\nThomas Dobbins, of Meeker avenue,\nBrooklyn, reached the scene in a row- bo-
1488fd486f039e3b7087b14d8b0d45a7 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.1931506532217 39.756121 -99.323985 Regina, Assineboia, Canada, January\n10th. At the Agricultural Statistics\nBranch of the Department of Agricul\nture for the Territories, reports are\nnow being received from grain thresh\ners throughout the Territories, for\nstatistical purposes. The reports are\nsomewhat delayed this year, owing to\nthe extensive crop and the delay in\ngetting it threshed. The Department\nof Agriculture is leading the way in a\nnew departure, with regard to the\ncollection of crop statistics. In the\nolder provinces, crop estimates are\nbased entirely on the opnion of per\nsons interested m the gram business\nwho ought to be, and no doubt are,\nwell posted upon the probable yields.\nStill the reports are simply a matter\nof opinion, in which a mistake may\neasily be made. The Territorial De\npartment, however, has the\nsystem of returns of crops actually\nthreshed, upon which to base their\nreports. The accuracy of the reports\ncannot, therefore, he gainsaid, for\nthey represent a compilation of actual\nthreshing results. In this connection,\nit might be mentioned that the De-\npartment is organizing a system of\ngrowing crop returns, which will be in\noperation ' next summer. The infor-\nmation thus obtained, with estimated\nacreage, will be available for business\nmen, banks, railway companies, and\nother interests which have to discount\nthe future in making provision for the\nconduct of their business.\nThe crop reports already to hand\nshow some remarkable cases of ab-\nnormal development. In the Regina\ndistrict, many returns are given of\ncrops of wheat running from 40 to 45\nbushels to the acre.
1fab2e448c2e3ad28ce0f6796f1d5f68 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.8128414984315 40.063962 -80.720915 We have newB enough this morning\nto show that while the large Republi-\ncan ma|orllies of two years ago will be\nreduced, the State is Btllt largely and\nsecnrely Republican. A' careful sum-\nmary of what we now. know shows the\nfollowing general facts, aa we think:\nGen. Duval, the Republican candidate\nfor Congress in the 1st district, is elect-\ned by not leBS than 900 majority. It\nmay be more. Mr. McQrew, the Re-\npublican candidate Id the 2nd district,\nIs elected by a majority whioh will hot\nbe less than 2000 and la more likely to\nbe 2500. General Witcher, the Republi-\ncan nomlneerln the 3rd district, is prob-\nably elected by a small majority. The\nreporis-from'fifteen 'counties, which In\n1866 cast "half the vote of the State,\nshow about ^ thousand Democratic\ngain oyer the vote of 1866 and about an\nequal Democratic loss from the vote of\nlast fall. If the ratio or Republican\nlosses in the rest of the State Bbould be\nthe same, it would leave the Republi-\nKUU Uinjmmjr 1U IUO OIHIH \nnear 4,500. The .Republican losses\nId the outlying.counties may be greater\nin proportion to the vote cast than they\nhave been in the northern part of the\nState, but caii'hardly be less. Oar\nestimate with present information\nIs that the Hepubllcan majority\nin the State will be found to come\nout between 3,000 'and 4,500, which\nwill be a slight general gain on the\nRepublican majorities of lastfall. And\nwhen full returns are received we\nthink it will be found this reduction in\nmajority is not due to changes of Re*\npublicans to Democrats, "but to an in*\ncreased Democratic registration. We\nsoau zjoi> oe surprised to learn mat tlie\nBotlre vole cast is over 45,000, perhaps\nQearer %60,000, As far as reported we\nbave gained a member of the House of\nDelegates (Mr. Scho field of Wirt coun-\nty), and .we do not hear of one lost. The\nPanhandle counties have all done bet-\nter than they did last Fall, (Ohio county\nmore than six hundred better) and\nwith the exception of Brooke, better\nthan In 1866.
08f541491d6b00d8db60f5e1c42dfb9d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.0589040778793 40.441694 -79.990086 The lowest vilest and most violent of man's\npassions are knit across and across the web of\nthe story of the Italian singer. There is not a\nbreath of anything that is pure and sweet in it.\nEven the action of Fiona Tosca in murdering\nthe infamous Scarpia, which seems noble by\ncontrast with its context, is inspired by feelings\nwhich are hideously out of place in a woman's\nbreast except at the last foothold before the\nprecipice. There Is power in the convergence\nof tho direct motives of the plot: several situa-\ntions show the wonderful constructive genius of\nthe dramatist, but "La Tosca" Is not, in our\njudgment a work of high art, because, besido\nportraying life truthfully, the tendency of\nthe dramatic picture should be ennobling,\nelevating and healthful to the beholders.\nIt Is sheer nonsense to think of "La Tosca"\nbenefiting a living soul.\nMiss Fanny Davenport presented Floria\nTosca to a large audience at the Grand Opera\nHouse last night. Miss Davenport possesses\nmany qualifications for the embodiment of\nthis character. She has evidently given all ber\nenergies and great study to the part The re\nsuit is that her acting is finished in detail\nand carefully jointed together. Where she\nfalls to terrify or distress and she has \nelse to do for the spectators it is due to her\nnatural defects and not to any negligence of\nhers. Sne bears her years well and is comely\nto a degree, and pleasing to many. Her great\nefforts occur in the third act where she hears\nand at last saves her lover who is being tor-\ntured in an adjoinlaj room and her anguish\nwas distressing without evoking that degree of\nsympathy tho episode justified in the fourth\nact when she bargains with Scarpia for her\nlover's lite, and again in the last act when she\ndiscovers that her lover is really dead.\nNc doubt the work of Miss Davenport de-\nserves commendation. In some of the few\nlight touches which the character permits her\nto exhibit the quality of her comedy was high.\nIt was so spontaneous. But in the heavier por-\ntions of her work she made the common mis-\ntake of expressing awful emotions with gross\nvocal disturbances. The highest indignation\ndoes not necessarily seek expression in a bel-\nlowing. Nor can a situation be made great by\nslipping through a series of statuesque poses\nstrangely suggestive of sitting for a lithograph.\nAnd it must be said that there is a vulgarity in\nMiss Davenport's .work at tunes which is really\npainful.
6814993e89e9fc39b514aa707bc4d539 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.319178050482 40.618676 -80.577293 IN the past ten years we as a Nation have come\nfar in understanding and providing against the\neconomic emergencies that overtake our citizens.\nWhile our natural resources and free land were\nstill open for settlers, we left unemployment for\nindividuals to deal with, knowing that they had\nalternatives. Now our economic structure has so\nclosed in on us that the jobless person is unable\nto meet his own needs. When Society cannot pro­\nvide an alternative for the jobless we must pro­\nvide relief or assistance. The only lasting assist­\nance that can be given a person who must earn a\nliving is assistance in getting new employment.\nAccepting the basic principle that Society or Gov­\nernment has a responsibility to keep business ac­\ntivity at safe levels, Labor has repeatedly suggest­\ned a division of public works responsible for long-\nrange planning, prepared to time the launching of\nnew projects as private business activity may in­\ndicate the need. Public works should be denied\nbroadly to include other national needs than \ning and construction work. Timing such projects\nto check a tendency to decline in its early stage\nwould save us from many a depression and ac­\ncompanying human misery. In addition such pub­\nlic works would directly and indirectly provide\nwork for many without recourse to relief and tests\nof need. These projects would simply provide new\njobs—jobs that in no way would do injury to the\nworkers desire for independent self-support. Work­\ners would be hired for the fitness for the job.\nStandards of employment and compensation\nshould accord with the best practices and the de­\ncisions reached through collective bargaining.\nThere arc two important provisions that should\nbe provided for the agency administering public\nworks: All planning and financing should be under\nthe supervision of a single agency. The head of\nthis agency should be a career person qualifying\nin accord with civil service procedures and the en­\ntire staff should be civil service appointees. The\nvalue of such an agency depends upon its freedom\nfrom party influences or domination.
3a3dcda7a6cf6742511c4e5ebb8c773d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.5493150367834 39.261561 -121.016059 The Ran Amlreas Independent tells a story of a\nman in that county who shut up a yoke of oxen in\na stable, and forgot what he had done with them.\nAbout a week after he traveled all over the surround-\ning country, in search of them. They were finally\nfound, but not until after they had died. We call\nthis an instance of rather short memory.\nIn the case of Amanda D. Fairchild vs. the Cali-\nfornia Stage Co., the Supreme Court have affirmed\nthe judgment of the lower court, granting to the\nplaintiff #2,250 damages for injuries sustained by\nthe overturning of the stage coach, alleged to have\nbeen caused by the carelessness of the driver.\nM. Dolan and William Rankin, employees of the\nSan Francisco Custom House, were arrested last\nWednesday for goods from the U. N.\nAppraisers Office. A large quantity of stolen prm\nperty was found on their premises. They arc both\nin custody, and their bail fixed at\nOn Monday evening of last week, when the sud-\nden rise in the river occurred, a ferryman at Long\nliar, in attempting to secure the boat was killed.\nIt appears the wheel slipped out of his hand, and\nst nick him on the fore head, cleaving open his skull.\nHe died in a few minutes after tlie accident.\nA letter lias been received at Sacramento from\nCrescent City, stating that the Jmld boys, who have\nbeen confined in the jail there for murder, escaped\nJuly 6th, through some outside assistance. A re-\nward of £500 was offered for their capture by the\nSheriff of Del Norte county.
4b1c4cb82695064effafba28f4d10904 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8592895858633 39.513775 -121.556359 oun'y . that the Hoard it Supervisors in aad lor said\nCounty, did. on the tMlh day of September, A. I), one\nthousand eight hundred and titty.six, deopiw Oroville\nhi tie the ((Mint; seal of Unite County from and alter\nthe said twenty-fourth day of September A. I). IS6II,\nin pursuance ol an act entitled An Act to change and\nlix the County Seal ef Uutte County, approved March\nloth. js.Vi; mid it farther appearing to my satisfaction\nHint the present building* Pi wlilah the said Court has\ntiis-n held, and in which Ilia Record* have been kept\nin the town of llidwell, are unsafe as a place of de-\npository for said Ui cords, and that the same is liable\nto diutrnctlon by lire, by reason of their being con-\nstructed entire of wood. And it further appearing\nthat there is no building in the town of llidwell. suit-\nable for holding the terms of thi* Court, and to safely\nkeep its Records from tire or other calami! y. it\nappearing that the town of Oro-illtj is a lit plane to\nhold the term* of Ibis Court, and Hint asafeand coin\nmodions brick building In said town *has been ten-\ndered the county as county building*,\nll is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that\nthe Clerk et the County Court, in anil, for Untie\nCounty, forthwith remove hi* office and the Records\nthereof, to I trovillo. in the building selected by the\nsaid Hoard of Supervisors as County P.aildings, and\nthat lie do and t aosac.l the business of htssaid office,\nat the town of < •rnvllle, as Hie County Seal of Untie\nCounty. And it is further ordered, that Hie terms ol\nsaid Court, from and after the saidtwenty loiirlh day\nol September. A I) 18511, is- held at Hie said town of\nOroville until otherwise ordered.\nAim It I* further ordered, that the Clerk of the\nCounty Court in tied for Hutto County, issue an order\nunder the seal of said Court, in conformity with this
57a478e1e83c676251cee689777259ec SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.2178081874683 35.780398 -78.639099 Va., the right to make, nse and sell their Patent\nHydraulic Cement Piping, in the counties of\nWake, Johnston, Moore, Chatham, Randolph and\nDavidson, in the State of North Carolina, would\ninform the citisens of those counties tbat one of\nthe partners P. F. Denton may be found in Ral-eig- h\nprepared to undertake and execute jobs of\nPiping. Persons wanting Pipes laid will please\naddress ns at Saunders'Stere P. O., Rockbridge co.,\nt Va., until the first f May, after which tine our ,\naddress will be Raleigh, N. C.\nThis is the mnsX durable and cheap Piping ever\noffered .to the publie for conveying or elevating\nwater for any distance, as pure and clear as it is at\nthe spring. It can be diminished or enlarged to\nsuit the column of water the strength increas-\ned in proportion. The Piper can be either moulded\nin the ditch, just as they are intended to remain,\nor moulded on a yard and when hardened trans-\nported any distance, and the pieces united in the\nditch with cement mortar, and are easily attached\nto the Water Ram or any kind of hydrant. These\npipes have been thoroughly tested, having been in\nuse several years.\nCertificates of their utility can be had on appli-\ncation at this office.\nWe also have the privilege of doing jobs in the\nadjoining counties, to every person wanting work\ndone, we would like to hear from them. This pipe\nis valuable for draining land, as it can be farmed\nover as any other part of the land. It ho been\ntried and answers admirably.
0433347155d23465b0a1a33d0bbbba38 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.1027396943175 39.745947 -75.546589 There i» .. report of the special Io-1 three almshouses i* suggested as Uie\nvestigation of the Delaware iiridian | means of greater economy, provided\nHome and Industrial School at Ham's , a lodging-house be established in Wll-\nIsirner, which has aroused so much I mlnglon for Uiose lenipnrarlly hnme-\neoinment In the press. Thl InvestIga-1 less and unemployed. The board also\nHon was conducted by the Mate ] urges the establishment of a Stale\nBoard of CbaMtle». at the request of ( rarm for women, as them am no\nDinner Governor Townsend. The re- proper fariUUe* for Ibeeare of women\njort shows that an Investigation by m Ihe workhouse or in cither the\nihe board wag entirely juatllhsl.\nHie recommendations and plans for\nHie future of the board Include im­\nproving Ihe business methods of In­\nstitutions through purchas­\ning, planning of farms and Industries,\ntin- exchange of institutional products,\nimproved method in the accounting\nana record systems, belter medical\ncare in the Institutions, the employ­\nment of a physician who understands\nmental ami nervous diseases, and Uie\nfeeble-minded, and to assist the Insti­\ntutions, court», schools and those In\nthe community, by giving advice and\nassistance in coring their ailments:\nthe establishment of institutional\nhome service and the co-ordination of\nparole of persons from Ihe Hospital\nfor Ihe Insane, (he workhouse, jails,\nami industrial schools, so as to reduce\nthe number of employes of the Insll-\ntulions. Slate and counties, which are\nperforming this l«pn of service IV;\nhoard p*1 i*omm*'fids thf* »*slahlis}ini»?nl\nOf this work on a county basis.\nThe consolidation of all of the work
00df51d0d8d47735e287d83cda95e4ee CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1900.1630136669203 39.623709 -77.41082 nature formed that big ditch the lake was\ndrained and the water, in its rush to the\nnorthwest, leveled the stone trees, breaking\nthem off as smooth as if they had been sawed\nThis sustains the theory that the trees were\npetrified where they grew.\nThe fact that nearly all of the fallen trunks\nlie in one direction, and to the northwest'\nsustains the theory that the lake was emptied\nto the northwest and into t,he Grand Canyon\nA few ages of erosion after the draining of\nthe lake brings the forest down to the pres-\nent day, and has left some strange freaks.\nOne big tree trunk protrudes over the brow\nof a cliff, looking like a cannon on a fort.\nAnother has been loft balanced on a column\nol stone, presenting a great T.\n8. J. Holsinger, special agent of the gov-\nernment land office, has recently returned\nfrom the pelrifled forest where lie went to\ninvestigate the advisability of forming a\nnational park nf region. He will report\nfavorably on the project and will advise that\na territory 18 miles by 9 miles be Included in\nthe park In this area lie four different\ngroups or forests of fallen trees, although it\ndoes not include all of the groups of petrifac-\ntions in the valley. Mr. Holsinger says there\nare millions of tons of the ngatized wood in\nthe proposed park territory. Ho measured\nmany tree trunks which were 165 feet long\nand as large as 4 feel In diameter. He says\nthat one group of petrifactions locally known\nas “Rainbow Park," is the most remarkable\nspectacle of color be lias ever seen, and so\ndazzling was the effect of the sunshine on\nthe brilliant confusion of stone fragments\nthat dizziness of his head compelled him to\nsit down At Carrizo, the station on the\nHanta Fe nearest the petrifactions, he learned\nthat the Sioux Falls company had ordered a\ncarload of the stone to ho shipped to the\nfactory —Arizona Graphic.
7eeabd5039e892d72bcb0d925e071593 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.856164351852 40.063962 -80.720915 A conspicuous and notable result ol\nthe Independence, which tbe South as¬\nserted for four years by military power,\nwas the unexampled activity produced\nby the necessity of self-relisnoe, inovita-\nbly Imposed upon those Who adopt an\nexlstenco separate and independent ol\null others. Repudiation of everything\njS'ortAerii, and a denial to ourselves ol\nthe comforts and conveniences, which\nNorthern Industry had previously sup¬\nplied, were the natural sequences ol\naooession. Wo endeavored to be our\nown mechanics, and the producers ol\nthe materials no less Indispensable for\nthe ordinary uses of life, than for tho\nmalntonauco of tho gigantic struggle,\nin which we had involved ourselves.\nThough our success was poor enough\nIn many of tho branches of industry,\nandourlnborabarelysuificedtokecptnc\nexperiment In motion, the Intellectual\nactivity invokod by our situation was\nhighly beneficial, aud promises grati¬\nfying results In tho great work of the\nIntellectual and material regeneration\nof tho South, under the propitious\nauspices of the Restored Union. Es-\npedally In tho fields of literature were\ntho evidences manifested of a thorough¬\nly awakened Intellectual vigor. Books,\npamphlets and publications of every\ndescription, embracing subjects of ov-\nery conceivable character, were issued\nrapidly from tho publishing houses ot\nevery leading Southern and in a\nfew months tho writings of Thompson,\nHope, Tinirod, liayne, tho McCabes.\ntho Holcombes, Rledsoo, Bagby, and\nothers, constituted a very favorable\nbasis upon which tocontinuo the devel¬\nopment of an elevated aud well ordored\nSouthern literature. It is gratifying to\nobservo thut this literary activity lias\nsuffered no serious abatement from tbo\nutter disappointment of tho Southern\nmind in its aspiration for polical lnde_-\npendencc.by tue overwhelmingdeclslon\nof tbe sword, and tbo numerous works\nfrom the pens of Southern authors,\nTMM^in-ooure%of preparation, indicate\ntnittbe BoaWHrlfl not be wanting in\nvaluable contributions to the garnered\nwealth of oar national literature. The\nlate war. with its innumerable and va?\nriort'incldonts, will for u long timo uf-\nford ample omploymont to tbe pens of\nSouthern literatairs, and tho South will\nhave ample opportunity for whatever\nvindication she may be entitled to.\nNotwithstanding the disadvantages of\nher situation as tho dofeuted party, the\ninexorable audi alteram partem ol pub-\nlie opinion, will accord tho same atten-\ntivo consideration to tho commendation\nof her virtues, the palliation of her\nerrors, the claims of sympathy In her\nmisfortunes, as to tho recital of the\nerrors and provocations which finally\nbrought upon her so terrible a retribu¬\ntion.
b4dc816c21c527f539d21d3c41ae4a66 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.395890379249 43.798358 -73.087921 Messrs. Reed, Wing & Cutler Gent.\n1 feel it a duty I owe the public, and es-\npecially to hundreds of my fellow beings\nwho are now suffonng under different dis\neases of the lungs, to give you a statemeni\nof the good effects 1 have experienced\nfrom the use of the Vegetable Pumohary\nBalsam. Having from my youth up been\ntroubled with different complaints of the\nlungs, such as spitting of blood, a dry\ntroublesome cough, frequent hoarseness,\nwith severe fits of couglnn?, and indeed\nall the symptoms of consumption, and from\ntime to time 1 have consulted several emi-\nnent physicians, and have taken much\nmedicine, but I received little or no relief\nand al last they told me there was no help\nfor me; that my case was beyond the\nreach of their medicines. In the spring\nof 1827 was advised by a friend to try\nthe Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. I ob-\ntained two bottles, and on trial I was sur-\nprised to find so sudden and effectual re-\nlief which it gave me, and after using it\nabout five weeks all my complain's were\nentirely removed, and I was restored to\ngood health. Since that time I have kept\nit constantly by me, in case of the appear-\nance of any of the above complaints.\n1 have known a large number of cases\nwhere a II other medicines have failed ol\naffording any relief, the Balsam was at\nlength resorted to, and speedily effected a\ncure, I would therefore recommend to\nevery person that has any of the above\ncomplaints, on their first appearance to\ntake the Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam,\nwhich they will find a safe, convenient\nand positive cure.
104199213635e5db5e1c3df967ccf196 THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.9712328450025 37.083389 -88.600048 education attended the called meeting\nlast night Superintendent UatBeld\nmade his regular report which Lowed\nthat the cold weather had reduced the\nattendance onefourth In the first\ngrades onethird In the second grades\nonebait to threefourth In the fourth\nand fifth gradeaaad from threefourth\nto MTenclghtha In all the other\nCloses At the Washington building\nonly twelve of the first grade pupils\nappeared day before yesterday with\neleven the day before that while the\nn claw pupils at the Franklin build\nIng yesterday Included seven scholar\nnotwithstanding the enrollment li\nabout fiftyfire Taken ai a whole\nthe schools In an entirety have been\nattended by only about nrentyflre\nper cent of the children The inperla\nUndent reported the cue of smallpox\nthat wee removal from the first grade\nat the Jefferson building and which\nresulted In the pupils not hereto-\nfore properly vaccinated being pu\nthrough the hand of the city pbyil\nclan who applied the virus to thirty\nat the Jefferson building and the tame\nnumber at the Washington building\nThe grade from which the afflicted\nChild was removed was dismissed from\nThursday to the following Monday\nin order that the room could be thor\nooghly fumigated and all posslbl\ngerllllkl11cd Superintendentt Hat\nfield stated that all the pupils elthe\nliving In the tame house cr dlitric\nwhere scarlet fever prevailed were ox\neluded from the schools and not al-\nlowed to return until the authorities\nwere completely utlsfled there ex-\nisted no further danger Commenting\nnpon the subject the superintendent\nsaid be had done all in his power and\nbad enlisted the board of health °\nassistance but not much could be
031d0e9c75dfa86d7b8ee3d6621620aa PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.1575342148656 40.441694 -79.990086 could be directed against them than the\nmanner in which they had dealt with\nAmerican fishermen. They had been driven\nfrom our shores and forced to sea when in\ndistress, and the demands of nature said\nthey should be permitted to secure shelter\nin our ports. The narrowest possible con-\nstruction had been placed upon the treaty,\nwhile their vessels had been Seized for some\ntrivial infraction of the custom laws.\nHe knew he would bring down the indig-\nnation of the Conservative par.ty and press\nupon his head for daring to arraign the\nGovernment, yet he cared not for the Gov-\nernment or the opinions of those who might\ndiffer from him, so long as he knew he had\ndone his duty, although the Tories had\nalways considered it treasonable aud dis-\nloyal to attack tbe ministry. The Ameri-\ncan people had been driven to rebellion to\nseenre tneir against the op-\npression they suffered at the hands of a\ntyrannical Conservative Government which\ncontrolled public affairs in England at that\ntime, and it was in the patns'of this Tory\nGovernment that the Tory administration\nnow in power in Canada were following.\nSir John MacDonald replied to Laurier\nin a long defense of the Government's\naction, which he contended had been most\nfriendly toward the United States through-\nout. President Cleveland and the United\nStates Congress in sanctioning the treaty\nnegotiated last year had admitted the\njustice of Canada's contention in the fishery\nquestion, and the interpretations the Do-\nminion Government had placed upon the\ntreaty of 1818. American fishermen in ac-\ncepting the modus vivendi and paying now\nfor the privileges it gives, which they con-\ntended were heretofore their rights, also ad-\nmitted that Canada had not claimed any\nmore than tne treaty gave ner.
2dcfc7f0ea5e714469dc8d83de91cfe4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.9685792033495 41.004121 -76.453816 to perform such prerequisite, itul to b\nqualllled to voto without distinction of ri\ncolor, or previous condition of servlluilo,\nsuch person or oillcor shall refuse er lui\nlugtvntnlt to give roll afreet to Hits socllon\nshall, tor every such offuueo, roifelt nu p ty e\nsum of Ilvo hundred iloll.trs to tho per on .\ngrieved therobv, I o bo recoverud by uuupiIiki\ntho ense, with full costs uud such ultnw.irnv\ncounsel fees as tho court shall deem Just, iv.)\nshnll also, for every such nit onco be iltemu\nguilty or a misdemeanor, aud shall on eoavlc .\nthcreor, bo fined not less thuu five him heil ili..\nlars. or bo imprlsouod not lass than ouo in"iv ,\nand not moro thnn ono yuar, or both, at Hit ihy\ncretlon of tho Court."\nA further supplement to tlio act leUttiu\nclenttnns in this :\n"Suction 19. That mi much nf every not of .\nsoinbly ns provides that ouly whlto rreeni'\nsnail bo entitled to vote or bu reglslerel as tel.\ncrs.nrias claiming tn volo nt nny general\nspecial election or this Commouwealtli, luan\ntho sumo Is hereby repealed; and that here ire\nthnt nil freemen, without distinction of culm\nshall bo enrolled and registered according Inu..\nprovision of th tlrst section of the actupprot\niho 17th day of April, lsi'J, entitled "An ,e\nfurther supplemental lo the act rotating to nit\nelections ol this Coiniuunwealtli," nnd wheii\nolhcrwlcn (luallllcsl under existing laws, bo e-\nntitled to voto at all general uud spculul election,\nlu this Commomwealth."\nGiven uudcrmy hand, nt my olllce, In llloom\nburg this Clh day of Decern her, lu tho year\nour Lord onn thousand olghl hundred uudfcav\ne nt y-tw-
7f8c1096b7d063ba89da2832900f8445 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9467212798522 38.729625 -120.798546 Section 71. Anv person or company hiring\nforeigners, or interested « idi them ns partners,\nor renting, or on shares, or in an v manner con-\nnected with any foreigner or foreigners, in\nworking, or in possession of anv mining ground\nin thin Stale, shall he held liable for the amount\nof license of each and every foreigner with\nwhom nneh person or company is so connected\nor interested : nil mining ground, worked or\npossessed, all tools and machinery used in\nworking suoli ground by said person or eotn-\npuny. shall be subject to sale for the payment\nof said license tax, in the manner provided in\nsection sixtv-aeven of thia net. The collector\nshall have power to require anv person or com-\npany believed to be indebted to, or to have\nmoney, gold dust, or property of any kind, be-\nlonging to any foreigners, or in which any for-\neigner interested, in his or their possession,\nor under Ids or their control, to ntiswer, tinder\noath, as to such imh-htedness or the possession\nof such money, gold dust, or other property,\nIn case a party is indebted, or has possession\nor control of any moneys, gold dust, or other\nproperty, as aforesaid, of such foreigner or\nforeigners, he may collect from such parly the\namount of such license, and may reiptire the\ndelivery of such money, gold dust or other\nproperly, as aforesaid ; and in all eases the\nreceipt of the collector to said parly shall he a\ncomplete bar to any demand made against\nsuch parly or Ins legal representalire, for the\namounts of money, gold dust, or propertv, em-\nbraced therein. Any person or company hiring\nforeigners to work in the mines of this State\nshall be liable for the amount of the licenses\nfor each person so employed.
5aaff17ef77e6a80e764853c7a3247ab NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.7383561326737 41.681744 -72.788147 Revoking a jail sentence of 30\ndays, which was suspended on Mnv\n19, and imposing an additional sen-\ntence of 30 days for drunkenness\nand 30 days for breach of the peace,\n; Judge B. W. Ailing in police court\nthis morning manifested great im\npatience with William Miklocz. aged\n3", of 314 High street, who has been\nbefore the court several times on\ncharges of drunkenness and breach\nof the peace, and has served at least\none jail sentence, yet continues to\ncreate disturbances at his home and\nin his store, according to his wife.\n"Don't have your wife, or vour- -\niself or anyone else come around to\nme, begging to let you off, as you\ndid the last time," the judge said.\nThe testimony of Mrs. Miklocz and\nher daughter was that Miklocz was\nIntoxicated Saturday night and again\nyesterday He makes life\nunbearable for them, they said, and\nMrs. Miklocz said she cannot live\nwith him if he is to continue to\ndrink. He has been drinking all\nsummer and gets his liquor from a\nwoman who delivers it to the store.\nMiklocz attempted to convince the\njudge that he had but one ' drink\nSaturday and was not guilty of all\nhis wife and daughter charged him\nwith. He said a farmer from whom\nhe bought apples gave him a drink.\nHe could not remember the farmer's\nname. Judge Ailing advised him to\nthink of the name without delay,\nbut Miklocz Insisted his memory was\npoor, and he could not remember\nthe names of people he does busi-\nness with, as there are many differ\nent customers," to which the Judge\nretorted: "Yes, and you have been\na pretty steady customer here."
203a48250f599016d7ab6d24370f5493 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.0753424340437 42.217817 -85.891125 I wish to make a few more statements in re-\ngard to ih. ujurder: I nsed to be very fond of\nHunting, and as 1 had nothing e!te in particular\nto do, 1 would frequently go cfl on a bunt. On\ntbe day or the murder, it being a bad day, I had\non an old hat and coat tbat 1 were when bant-\ning. After I met my father in the afternoon I\nwent home to change my clothes, intending to\ngo to the opera 10 the evening. I put those old\nclothes under my bed, where they wie found\nwhen the bouse was searched; but I didn't put\nmy father's boots under my ted, and if they\nwere found there some one elsa must have put\nthem there. Our house was a small one out\none room and I was in the habit of putting my\nelothes under tbe bed to get them out of sight.\nAfter it was understood tbat I was to plead\nguilty, mother was sent to the jail to pump me.\n she done it innocently. There was a large\ncupboard in the room and I suspicioned some\none was in it. but I bad no objection to tbat, as\nI wibed to deceive my mother. I told her that\nI killed Ferris in a quarrel; tbat she needn't be\nuneaey as f ar as lather was concerned; that I\nwould ace that no barm came to him. She told\nme tbat Hanback would come and see me and\nthe wanted me to tell him what I bad told her.\nPhis I did. Hanback was my lawyer.\nIn my former statement, juit before we weie\narrested, yon will see where I made ment'on of\nfather speaking to me of having a job to do to-\nnight. 1 think be intended that night to re-\nmove the body from tbe store.\nI winn for tbeee statements to join the ones\nmade prior to this.\nI, Fred Old, being first dulv sworn, do say\nthat the above confession made by me is a true\nstatement of facta, to help me God.
0b9edd4da6f05e57f1e432982aab0845 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.9822404055353 43.82915 -115.834394 n ot y et become sufficiently promut\nideas t o manufacture constltntioiii—\nf or the American market, and inti*-\nour triumphant tour de force, dM.\nthing «naps, and we vanishfromthe\nbreak down for years, perhapeforth\nIn every community euch “^ * 2\nmay be pointed out on everyside end\neven of our most "sncteesfoPinen.\nconfess they have paid too highT1\nth eir prosperity. Timprizes of\nso great wrth ns, and seemto ben\ntho grasp of all, that praclfealjjell «\nto w in them. Each is uudaggtnjsnd\nless t o himself in his grim nsoln to\nth at f or which he is striving Hsni\nand night, including holidays, endnot\nquently Sundays; he refuses totals ”\nea t his meals properly, and in met.\nless lu xu ry as a vacation heleverir\nindulging; amusement he regard! «\nlous, and as abstracting too much\ntim e from tho prosecution of tbstil­\ning project. Every waking minutehi\nhis brain grinding away over wqi\nmeans, and not improbablytbs boos\na feasible man would devoteto sleeph i\nnatu rally curtatla for tho sameporp»\nsocial competition runs equally higi\nth at o f business. Of conrse, in the\nway ho treads he Jostles and ii josikd\n and in a nature sotenseik\ni11 so groat an endeavor as is Us, the-\n- nd wearing, though almost nope\nplay of tho emotions—as envy, \n.mired, disappointment, etc.-isvtrj\nJecasiunally, utsomo “close shave,"»\nrisis of failure or success, be sip\n. almiaatiug spasm uf feeling thatd\nun i to his very center. Perhaps not '\nv.lh this existence of abnormal sal an\nyienio physical habits and unnatimlv\ni.d emotional strain, once in awhiie,ïf\nno “ racket" becomes too interns tehsi\n;-.o time being endured, he varia th“\n. utony—not ns be should do, witha\nf scene, a quiet, wholesome life, sa:\n. ml rest, but by plunging intoape\nlissipation for tho purpose of drosain\nvend es and cares. But, ruinous atany'\nho effect upon his overworked nava\nlis tracted coostitution of snchacoam-.\n. nturally be greatly intensified. Hi»\ncarcely tnko a more suicidal stop\n••Died suddenly.” How few rssla\n■■••hat sta rtling frequency in this com»!\nreport goes out, Tho strong man :\nfancies he is practically inaccosslt*»\nmeut and death, and so pushes on à hi'\noggerated exiieuditure »f energy\nlate—insulted nature bestows uponte\nlogical punishment he has so p*±h\ncourted. “ VVe do fade as the leaf »
1fa8d492d726c0f420480753fca8b565 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1899.5493150367834 46.601557 -120.510842 lion* uf dull.ns of trad* in butter alone\nawait the Pacific coast as sunn as it\ncan supply tin- demand. The Paciiio\nooail is destined to yet be tie great\nmarket Ol the world. It has the ii, Ii\ncountry and more people iv and aorow\nthe Pacific to deal with.\n"The coast can and will handle all\nof this trade in time, an 1 ll is the ain-\nbititui ol tin- depaitraent that the state\nof Washington shall be one of the liist\nto enter actively into the manufacture\nof butter and tin tans tv export li\nChina, Japan and the Philippine*.\n"Expansion is going to be a great\nthin. f..r the coast. It will mien up\nand develop a market that woakl oth-\nerwise be stagnant fur many years to\n Tli" people ate all beginning to\nsee it in lh.it light. Why, I can say\nthai a .. - rt- .it majority of the people of\nthe states from here eaat an-in favor\nvi keeping the Bag where it is.\n" Ti .e feeling of President McKinley\nami thu administtation regarding tho\nPhilippines is the same aa that which\ntook us to Cuba. I believe it is our\nduty to lea-a self-government to all\ntlio-e whuai we I ai i"'n to come in con-\ntact with, and we came v contact with\nthe Philippines through our war, in\nthe name of humanity, with Spain.\nAguinaldo is a t nt-throat in Luton, ai\nWeyler was in Cuba. He ami Ilia fol-\nlowers must be brought lo a realization\nof what self-government means.
08343253155fffc187dbd6a104fd80f5 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.9712328450025 42.217817 -85.891125 will constantly support him by your\ncontributions ; you tnat mini: you nave\nperfect purity, but have, rather, the\nenamel of purity; ycu that have such\nthings secretly; you that go away by\nyourself to eat scandal, and that do not\nabhor it you, all of you, put your fin-\nger in the sewer ; you like feculent mat-\nter ; you seek to know just what that\ndissipated husband did, and just how\nthat quarrel began and went on ; aud\nthe nastier it Is the more you read it.\nThus you give powCr to papers to go on\nand publish that form of leculent news.\nBut thero ought to be among men and\nwomen a pertect abhorreuce of every-\nthing that is in the nature of scandal.\nAll that filth which the scavenger car-\nries in his cart, or which ycu find in\nnewspapers, as the case may be, ought\nto be abhorrent to you. And like\nit j you read it ; you talk about it; and\nyou damn the man that puts it before\nyou. Is this Christian ? Is this right?\nIs this manly? Is this honorable?\nWhen the market fails, the goods will\nnot be manufactured any longer; and\non Christian fathers and mothers, on\npure men and women, on thriving citi-\nzens, on all who love integrity, and up-\nrightness, and cleanness of hands, and\ncleanness of lips, aud cleanness of tongue,\nand cleanness of heart on them I roll\ntho responsibility of abhorring iniquity\nwith utter loathing and disguit ; so that\nevil in any story,' or book, or paper, or\nperson that comes before you, no matter\nhow brilli tnt the guise, shall ba detect-\ned instantly ris an acute musician will\ndetect a discord among a hun Jtcd in-\nstruments, and so that you shall throw\nit from you with the utmost scorn and\ntestation.
0d01ff02b39fb09069ad1fb2b14e28fc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.4506848997971 40.063962 -80.720915 then said he could get a thousand\ndollars to put in my pocket if I would\nvote for Depaw. I said no, and started to\nleave him. Then he said they had been\npaying only $2,300 on a contingency. He\nthen said he would go up stairs and see\nwhat was the best they could do. I toid\nhim I would not vote (or Depew. I tried\nto eet away from him and. told him no\ntwice. I walked off about six feet and he\nfollowed me up. He did not have hold\nofme buthehad hishandupto theside (\nof his mouth, endeavoring to talk ponfi- j\ndentially with me. I would not than take i\nthe money because I did not want to Bell\nmy vote and I did not want to expose him. (\nIhadmadeupmy mindthatIwouldnot j\ntakeany money unless I took to make an\nexposure. I had thought of talcing money t\nfor the purpose or exposure ever since it I\nhad been generally understood that money j\nwas being used. I made up my mind to\ntake money and expose lc. 1 did not\nwant to expose Mr. Sessions. I told him\nno. I would not take money. I told him k\nwhen he went np stairs to see what he\ncould do he had better go. I have not\nsaid this before; you have brought it to\nmy mind. I was not very emphatic\nin saying this to him. I did jjot tell\nhim that I would expose him became\nit was a great study in my 'mind whether\nI ought to expose htm or not.\nMr. Peckham (Sessions' counsel).Why\ndid you not take $1,000 then aqd expose\nhim with that?
fdcb8ed70335c3c9550f146c48c543e0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8510928645517 41.681744 -72.788147 The above box, tabulated by the Herald presents a graphic picturization of the election\nresults as they were at noon today. The first column gives the electoral vote for Hoover\nbased on his lead in the state at the time of making the tabulation. The second column fives\nthe Smith electoral vote, based on returns. The third and fourth columns give the popular\nvote that each candidate had received up to noon. The fifth column indicates the approxi-\nmate percentage of precincts reporting. It does not necessarily indicate the percentage of\npopular vote that has been counted, merely the number of districts which have completed re-\nturns. The chances are that there will be a smaller vote per precinct than the proportion\nalready reported. The rest of the box is self explanatory. The states which may possibly\nreverse themselves and therefore may be classified as doubtful are Florida, Massachusetts,\nTennessee and Texas. Hoover leads in three of these, Smith in one, hence the electoral vote has\nbeen entered in the column of the leader. There be enough votes in the remaining\nprecincts to upset these electoral returns. Th ere is still some doubt in Montana, Nevada and\nNew Mexico as only a small number of precincts have reported in them. There is the barest\npossibility of an upset in North Carolina, tho ugh Hoover's lead is large with 75 per cent of\nthe state's precincts heard from. However all four of the latter named states have been\nentered in the Hoover column and it is probable that he will carry them all. It will be seen\nthat it is now indicated that Hoover has 444 electoral votes, Smith 87. Eliminating the,states\nof Florida, Tennessee and Texas, which Smith might possibly carry on late returns he is\nmoderately certain of 406. Massachusetts should be eliminated from the Smith column\nunder the same argument leaving Smith 69 electoral votes of which to be moderately certain.\nThese figures are not to be considered final, they are merely estimates. It will be noted that\nHoover's popular vote lead is about 4,300,000 up to noon.
6ff959a90be261e10c638bbede3ab98a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4999999682902 41.681744 -72.788147 will play a trio of hard games over\nthe holidays, meeting the Taftvllle\nJ. B . Martin team tomorrow and the\nInsilcos twice on Monday. The game\ntomorrow will be played in Taft-\nvllle and as the locals are an an-\nnual attraction in the eastern town,\nthe opposition will have its strong-\nest outlay waiting for them.\nMonday, the locals play two games\nin the Central Connecticut league\nagainst one of tho leading teams in\nthe circuit. The Insilcos have a\nfast baseball club and the Sox will\nhave to be at top form to turn them\nback on both ends of the twin bill.\nThe first game will be staged at Wil\nlow Brook park in this city at 10\no'clock Monday morning and the\nsecond contest will be played at\nHanover park in Meriden at 3\no'clock in the afternoon.\nWith Walter Berg back on the fir-\ning line for the local Manager\nJohn Tobin has rid himself of a\nperplexing problem. The big boy\nhas been laid up for several weeks\nwith a broken ankle received in a\ngame, at Willow Brook park in this\ncity but he has been pronounced\nOK by his doctor and he feels fit.\nIt Is rumored around that Berg\nwill do the "iron man" stunt Mon-\nday pitching both games, but Billy\nSchmidt will also probably draw one\nassignment. Riley at third is a new\nacquisition for the Sox and he will\nappear with the team for the first\ntime tomorrow afternoon.\nThe Red Sox have won one and\nlost, one in the Central league so far\nand Manager Tobin is out to make It\ntwo more wins on Monday. The lo\ncal players are anxious to get going\nafter two weeks of enforced Idleness\nand they promise the backers of the\nteam hot fights in the three coming\ngames.
0df2484f9aaedc221b97de229b6286d8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9630136669202 39.745947 -75.546589 Senate, term 4 years,\nJuly 1. Ell !.. Collins, fee »6.00 . Notary\nPublic, term 4 years.\nJuly 13. George W. Bennum, fee »6.00,\nNotary Public, term 4 years.\nJuly 15. John K. Chambers, fee *6.00,\nJustice of the Peace until end next Ses­\nsion of Senate, term 4 years.\nJuly 16, John K. Chambers, fee *6.00,\nNotary Public, term 4 year*.\nAugust 3, Frank B. Newell, fee *6.00 .\nNotary Public, term 4 year*.\nAugust 10. William H. Taylor, fee »6.00\nNotary Public for Newark Trust and\nSafe Deposit Co., term 4 years.\nAugust 12. William H. Gibbons, fee *6.00,\nNotary Public, term 4 years.\nSeptember 7. Roman Tammany, fe# »6 00,\nJustice of the Peace until end next Ses­\nsion of Senate, term 4 years.\nSeptember 7. Roman Tammany, fee *6 00.\nNotary Public, 4 years.\nSeptember 20. Allee W.\nJustice of the Peace until end next Ses­\nsion of Senate, term 4 years.\nSeptember 20, Allee W. Dick, lee »6.00,\nNotary Public, term 4 years.\nBentember 28. Alfred O. Cox. fee *600,\nJustice of the Peace until end next Ses­\nsion of Senate, term 4\nSeptember 28. Alfred\nNotary Public, term 4 years.\nSeptember 30. Clifford V Mannerlng. fee\n00.00. Notary Public, terra 4 year*.\nNovember 16. John O. Boughman. fee\n*6 00. Notary Public for Delaware State\nHospital at Farnburst. term 4 years.\nNovember 16. Barnet Oluckman. fee\n*6 00. Justice of the Peace until end next\nSession of Senate, term 4 year#.\nNovember 16. Barnet Gluckman,\n»8 no. Notary Public, term 4 yeaars\nDecember 3. Henry Ernest Con well, fee\n*6.00. Notary Public, term 4 years.
2e2b57797960afea2e1e9c50a6ade554 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.9849726459724 40.735657 -74.172367 to a point of tangent; thence (4) south\nthirty-two degrees thirty-three minutes (32\ndegrees 33 minutes) west a distance of one\nhundred and ten feet and flfty-flve hun-\ndredths of a foot (110.65 feet) to a point of\ncompound curve; thence (6) southwestwardly\ncurving toward the left with a radius of\none hundred and two feet and th«rty-flvo\nhundredths of a foot (102.36 feet) a distance\nof eleven feet and ninety-one one-hundredths\nof a foot (11.91 feet) to a point of com-\npound curve; thence (8) still curving toward\nthe left with a radius of forty-two feet and\nthirtv-flve hundredths of a foot (42.35 feec)\na distance of fifty-six feet and sixty-seven\nhundredths of a foot (58.87 feet) to a point*\nof compound curve In Beardsley avenue\nsoutheast of North Twelfth street; thence\n(7) still curving toward the left with 8\nradius of one hundred and two feet and\nthirty-five hundredths of a foot (102.85 feet)\na distance of eleven feet and ninety-one one-\nhundredths of a foot (11.91 feet) to a point\nof tangent; thence (8) south fifty-seven de-\ngrees twenty-seven minutes (57 degrees 27\nminutes) east a distance of two hundred and\nten f«et and seventy-six hundredths of a\nfoot (210.78 fest) to a point of curve; thence\n(9) southensfwardly curving toward the right\n a radius of one hundred and two feet\nand thirty-five hundredths of a foot (102.35\nfeet) a distance of eleven feet and ninety-\none one-hundredths of a foot (11.91 feet)\nto a point of compound curve; thence (10)\n•t ill curving toward the right with a rsdlus\nof fifty-two feet and thirty-five hundredth*\nof a foot (52.35 feet) a distance of twenty-\nfive feet and twenty-three hundredths of a\nfoot (25.23 feet) to a point of compound\ncurve; thence (11) still curving toward the\nright with a radius of one hundred and\ntwo feet and thirty-five hundredths of a foot\n(102.85 feet) a distance of eleven feet and\nninety-one one-hundredths of a foot (11.Ill\nfeet) to a point In the centre line of It*\nsaid westerly track In Bloomfield avenue,\nsouth of North Eleventh street, and there\nconnecting therewith.\nThe track above described Is shown on map\nnumbered 10250-C. attached to petition on\nwhich this ordinance is baaed.\nSection 2. Permission is further granted\nto said company to operate cars over said\ntracks bv electricity supplied to electric\nmotors on the cars from overhead wires, by\nwhat Is known as the overhead trolley sys-\ntem. and to erect the necessary wires there-\nfor, and for the purpose of supporting said\nwires to erect and maintain fourteen (14)
1840e21309cacfcfcd0414a525ef3563 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.091780790208 39.745947 -75.546589 “It is always said," remarked Scott\nHendee to the corridor man, “that a\nman's ideal does not exist on this ter­\nrestrial ball; that always it is ethereal,\nevanescent, and can never bo described\nnor painted. I am a painter—not by\ntrade, but by choice—and I really think\nthat I have not only painted my ideal\nwoman, but later still found her. For\na long time I studied over what beauty\nIs in woman and endeavored to vision!**\nmy ideal, I partly succeeded in this,\nfor later 1 painted what I considered the\nmost beautiful woman, measured, of\ncourse, by the standard of my own in­\nclinations and choice. Then I fell to\nadmiring my work and dreamed of some\nday meeting my ideal. About five years\nago I traveled in Switzerland, sketching\nthe glorious Alpine scenery, the natives\n tho pretty women.\n“One afternoon I journeyed, or rather\npilgrimaged, to a rich old bnrgher's\ncountry seat, about seventeen leagues\nfrom Lucerne, to sketch and to visit the\ngraves of some of Switzerland's fallen\nheroes. While there 1 met the owner, a\nstern old Roman Catholic, who could\nfluently speak french. He introduced\nme to his daughter, the fair Emily, in\nwhom 1 found n majority of the char­\nacteristics of my ideal\npainted her correctly. While V ■I\nstudied her face closely, so as to\nto catch tho fleeting expressions ;\nsentiment that I knew my picture\nlacked. Then I returned homo uud\ntouched again the lace with my brush.\nAfter making a very little change I\nfound that the picture was a splendid\nlikeness, and 1 accordingly presented it\nto the family.” —St. Louis Globe-Demo­\ncrat.
36322dc90d078db6e2c726378b793813 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.560273940893 40.832421 -115.763123 Governor Kellogg of Louisianna has\naddressed a letter to the Attorney Gen¬\neral. In the closing report of exports\nappointed to examine into the Vudttor's\noflioo, he says: 'I'll- investigations thut\nhavo taken place before both civil nnd\ncriminal courts and the investigation*)\nnnd reports of the State Examiners dis¬\nclosed gross culpability on the part of\nother persons whose nets have injured\ntlio State and for yeurs east iliscreuit on\ntho Government. I especially call\nyour attention to the record in thut res¬\npect, and request that you will take\nprompt measures to ltring to jusUco all\n¦who have been guiltj- of defrauding the\nState us disclosed by these inquiries.\nTlio Post muster- General shows enni-\nostness in proceeding against mail con¬\ntractors in relation to their obligations\nOn Wednesday he to the\nit so of the Government three certified\ncheeks. amounting to 81,30!), deposited\naccording to law by Muthew Draper, n\nfailing contractor, accompanying his\nbid on routo 30.0% . This is tlio first\ninstance in which the Department has\nconfiscate I such cheeks. Suits have\nnlso'been commenced against the bondB-\nlueit of over -10 failing contractors.\nA spocial to the Chicago Inter-Ocenn\nfrom Washington says the Treasury\nDepartment has roceived information\nthat the bodv of the Deputy Collector\nof Internal Rovenuo, who nccompanied\nltovcnue Agent Beach on a raid aguinst\ntho whisky men of North Alabuinn a few\n¦weeks ago, and who was murdered by a\ngang of illioit distillers, has been found\nin tlio Coosa river. Three of the mur¬\nderers havo boon arrested and confined\nin tho iluntflville jail.
0e5aef06cd092ea01207d1b6594116d8 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.595890379249 39.513775 -121.556359 See. 7 Whenever, on the first dav of Jrnnary or\nJuly in any yi ar, then* remai'is. aher the pay mi nt of\nthe inti rest as hereinafter provi I d, a surjilns ol ten\nthousand dollar* or ore, I shall be the duty of the\nTreasurer fo advertise for the sjiaieul' one week. In\none daily paper published ia F.nglish, in the city ef\nNew York, aiid for one month in one daily iiewsjia-\nper pnbiMied in llngn-li at the State Capital, for\nsealeil proposal*, lo be opt net one month niter '.he\nexpiration ol such publications t»y (I.• Tri a-iin r, in\njin settee of the Govern r orContjrroller. at the Slate\nCapital, fertile surrender i f hen. Is is-u d tinder this\nAct, vvhieti advertisement slmli state Ihe Hinoiint of\nmom v lie has on hand for the purpose ol reileinjitinn,\nami they shall aecnpl the lewis proposals, nj rates\nnot rxceeding pur value as may redeem the greatest\namount of bond* until the annum' ol ca. - h on I.an I\nfor redemption is exhausted; jr'C did, Amcn-er, iii\nease a snffleienl amount o) such bml* shall not lm\no(leied, as nl'ores'dd. to exhaust the sinking fund to n\nless amount thin ten thousand dollars, then i; is\nhereby made the duty ol the Tretnmrer to advertise\n two newepnperH, one in New York ami one at the\nCapital of the Stale, for ■hree months, which adver-\ntisements shall state the amount in the sinking tun 1\nanil the number of bond* numbering thorn in the\norder of their issuance, which such fniul is eel ajiHr!\nto pay and discharge ; ami if such bonds, s .» mini\nbered in such advertiseii t ills, shall not be presented\nfor payment and cancellation within three months\nfrom the expiration ol such publication, then snob\nfund shall remain in the Treasury to discharge such\nbonds whenever presented—but they shall draw no\ninterest utter such publication us last lift res ild.\nHec. H. The Treasurer ot Mate shall keep full and\nparticular account mid record of all ids proceedings\nmiller this Act, and of the bonds redeemed and sur\nrendered, uni be shall transmit to the'.overnor mi\nabstract of all his proceedings turner this Act, with\nhis annual report, to lie by Ihe Governor laid before\nliie l.eg-shuiire ; and nil book* and pajiers pertain-\ning to the mailers provided for in this Act, slmli at all\nlin es he open to the inspection of any pa iy interest-\ned, or the Governor, or the Attorney tiener.:!, or a\ncommittee of either branch of the I.eg.stature, ora\njoint committee of both.
33791e00494227e864695157caeecb8d SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1913.4890410641806 43.624497 -72.518794 plants and asBlst tho bloom. As the\nflower Btoms apprqach bloomlng have\nin readlnosa a quantlty of- - slondor\ntwigs; flx ono to each- plant and tle\nlooaely wlth soft thread. When the\nflowers begln to oxpand, It lt ls deslred\nto havo them qulte perfect, examlne\ntho pods, and if they appear to be\nopenlng more on one side than tho\nother takf a penkntfo and Bllt the\nclQsed dlvtslona equally, but not- - bo\nfar as to let the petals fall down and\nout of placo, At the tlmo tle a small\nblt of bast round Immedlatoly under\nwhero sllt; thla wlll prevent buretlng\nand keep tho flower unlform ln shape.\nIf thcxo bo durlng bloomlng a thin\ncoverlng of mualln.flxed over tho bed,\nand ralscd aufllclently hlgh above tho\nflower, ao as not to rub them, the flow.\nerjng wlll be consldorably prolonged,\nand tbe colora much more dlstlnct and\nclear. Whero lt 1b deslrablo to snve\nsecd and keep tho progeny claso\ncharacter, each class ought to be kept\nseparatoly, and the flowers asslated by\nartlflclal fertlllzation, chooslng those\not the samo clasa, wlth good marklng,\nto hybridlze wlth. Tho plnk is easlly\nforced and is a most doalrablo acqulsl- -\ntion among early spring flowers. The\ncaro requlslte to accompllsh thls ol\nJoct la very llttlo. As soon as plplnga\ncan bo had off ,forccd plants strlke\nthem In pots or pans, ln sand under o\nhand glass In a gcntlo heat. Aftor\nthoy havo stnlck root gradually hardon\nthem off, and plant them out In well\npreparod beds, ln whlch thty wlll\nmake strong plants, roady for Uttlng\nand potting by Octobor; afterwanls\nkeep them In a cold frame. For forc-ln-\ntho Pheasant's Eyo, whlto wlth\ndark eyo; Moss's Red, whlch la later\nthan tho last, and Paddlngton Plnk,\nwhlch ls later sttll, are tho best. In\ntorclng them thoy may be placed ntar\ntho glass ln any houso whero a tempor-atur- o
647292f33f0d7dfd0984b8c2d215bc65 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.9821917491122 31.960991 -90.983994 That I have noted in the spirit of this assor*!\na nee, will appear front the events which have\nsince occurred. Notwithstanding Mexico had\nabruptly terminated all diplomatic intercourse\nwith tlie United States, and ought, therefore, to\nhave been the first to ask Tor its resumption, yet,\nwaivingältreremony, 1 embrace the earliest fa­\nvorable opportunity “to ascertain from the Mexi­\ncan government vvhother'they would receive an\nenvoy from the United States intrusted with full\npower to adjust al], the questions in dispute be­\ntween the two governments.” in September,\n18d5, I behoved the propitious moment for such\nax overture had arrived. Texas, by the enthu­\nsiastic and almost Unanimous will of her people,\nha»! 'profmttncC-d in f.ivor of annexation. Mexi­\nco herself, had agreed to acknowledge the inde­\npendence of Texas, subject to a c-Auittion, it is\ntrue, which she hadno right to impose and no\nptfvtor lo -enforce. The last lingering hope of\nMexico, if she stiff could halve retained any, that\n would ever again become, one of her prov­\ninces, must have been abandoned.\nIiie Consul of the United ötitfes at the city\nof Mexico «yds, thërcfore, instructed by the Sec­\nret:!fv of tire State nn the fifteenth of September,\n1815. lb mike the inquiry of the Mexican ' Gov­\nernment. The inquiry was madel ând on the\nfifteenth of1 >ctober, I84ti, the Minister of For­\neign Affairs of the Mexican Government, in a\nnqte addressed to our Consul, gave a favorable\nresponse, requesting, at the same time, that, our\nnaval force might be withdrawn from VéràCruz\nwhile negbtiatibijg should, be pending. Upoh\nthe receipt bf this-Bore, our naval force «vas\npromptly withdrawn from Vera Cruz. A Min­\nister was immediately appointed, and departed\nto Mexico. Every thing obre a promising as­\npect for a speedy and peaceful adjustment of all\notff difficulties. At the date bf my annual mes-\nsage'to Congress, in December last, nodoubt\nwas! entertained hut that, he would be re—
41fee0a35ad8d6efb3afe381fff522c7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.064383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 Suddenly I was awakened by some\none In the room. I expected to see Mr.\nBrown light tbe gas, but instead it\nwas lighted by a woman. Her back\nbeing turned to me, I bad time to slip\nout of and under the bed. From my\nbiding place I saw the woman take out\na large bundle of bills, count them and\nplace them under her pillow. Then\nshe went to a door leading to an ad­\njoining room, turned the knob stealth­\nily and listened. Finally she turned out\nthe gas and got Into tbe other bed,\nwhich, fortunately for me, was farthest\nfrom the door.\nIt was plain to me that 1 bad got into\ntbo wrong room-, which, I suspected, was\nthe ono next to Mr. Browns. If so,\nthis woman was tbe thief and had ob­\ntained access to his room through \nintervening door. Waiting till I heard\nher snore, I stealthily gathered up my\nclothes and, crawling to the door, un­\nlocked it and went out. Just as I did\nso tho night watchman came along and,\nseeing me stealing out of a room un­\ndressed, took me lu charge. However,\nI succeeded In getting him to let me\nprove the story I told him, and after\ndressing I went downstairs with him.\nTho room I had slept in was found to\nbo next to Mr. Brown's, and, calling for\nthe police, we made the raid.\nThe woman told a very straight story,\nwhich of course convinced no one, and\nshe was ordered to dress and come\nalong, but before we left the hotel the\nproprietor was called up aud identified\nher as one of tbo most respectable pa­\ntrons of the house. Then tbo bills were
202f3e21f09d4e3a94dd6f49375217ad CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1901.5109588724 41.875555 -87.624421 "It It a source of 1egret to the Chi-e-n\nno Telephone Company," he says,\n"that mltttatemeiitt cotitlinie to be\nmade about the rate charged for Its\nservice. The city autliorltle, the\ndally pre and many others who aie\nInterested In the matter have shown\nftom time to time that Instead of an\nadvance In uitcs charged In Chlcngo\ntbeie hat been a contant decrease In\nthe average late paid by suboilbors\ntlnce 1MH1. In the last thiee years the\naverage annual rate paid by thoe using\ntelephone hut been reduced about S.i." .\nDm lin; the lat year and a half the\ncompany ha been cimuged In the con-\nstruction of lx llieproof oxchunge\nbulldliu; and the Itittallatlou of the\nmot modem operating appliances. The\nunderground cable lending from thee\nolllce make It neceary to Include\nsubscribers within the dltrlct of each\n under Its name and number.\nThl tieccarlly results In changing\nsubscribers' numbers when they are\no affected by location. Not only have\nthe electrical nud mechanical appli-\nance for performing the best kind of\ntelephone service entirely ehnnged\nduring the past six years, but for the\ngreater accommodation of the public\nnud the wider 110 of the telephone the\nrate plant have been changed also.\nTen years ago nn annual tent was\ncharged for n telephone without nny\nregard to the ninoiiiit of tic of such 11\nHue. The tmnllest merchant then paid\nJust as much as the largest, although\nthe latter ucd his telephone ninny\ntime moie. To meet the requirements\nof the small liter measured rates were\nIntroduced by the company more tlinu\ntwo yenrs ngo. Under these 11 direct\nHue telephone of the best kind Is had\nat !?".
19dcb6caf199c29979d40584750e7491 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.3547944888383 40.063962 -80.720915 comaeucluj} hi 10 o'clock x, M .( tbo following rcai\nt*Uito, that U to wy:\ni.ot No, 40 on tbo southeast corner ol Main and\nTenth atreeU; Lot No. lBOontho Muthwcti cor.\nnorol Tenth aud Market atreeta: and Lot No. itu\n(routing on tbo weal aide ol Market Meet, adjoin,\nlug said Lot 1*20 on tho aoutb. hald lots tlu and\nI'jff tun back wcatwardly from Market street about\n67 teet. In making Buch nalo, the undureiiitied\nwill oiler wld proj>erty lu auch parcels «* in their\nJudgment will causo the hamo u> mjII tno»t mlvnu.\ntagcoiuly for their trunL ibey w ill lell wld lota\n40 uud la) lu tho nay that will cause them to pro.\nduco tho larjjiMt prico, either lu parcel*, or <u «\nwholo. Tbey vrlil offer tho north two-thirds ol lot\n11V, iruuuug 1i leui uu .uiunci HIWl in Hi ruuuillic\nbuck of uvea width 67 fccis Rial the remainder of\nlot ll'J the »outh ouc-tblrd-belnit 'JI Kit wia«j, lu\n patcula; aud the; Hill acll mid lot tiv iu> *\nwhole or lu iwraraio parcuU, whichever way u^*\nwill produoo tho botf ptico therefor. Thtni low\naroUioMmoou which the "Ukant Iloi'ii'" mid\nlu itAbki formerly «tood. They are mo«t eligibly\nlocated m the heart of the city, and am auougthu\nuuwt valuablo lu tbu city of \\> heellug.\nTKHMd OF MAl.li.Ouo-thlrd ol the purchaw\nmoney, aud u much more tuerooJ m the purcJu*.*\nmay elcct U) |uiy, lu uuh, on tho day y| b*Jo; mj\ntho runduo thoieof lu two t«iu.vl lnitiatltnrnia t«y.\nable rusK'Cdvilr lu ouu aud two year* from Uio\nJky of fculo, wttu luier«.t tliemm Irtuu Umt day\npajablo ajiuually, the purchaser giving tborelur\nnls negotiable pror.iliwiry uoie* to tun order of tho\nundesigned for tno deferred lua.ailiuenu u! tnu\npurchase uioncy, aud the title to tho pro|>erty wld\nto be retained uutll tho pnyment lu mil of tho\npurchase money, aud Uteiuterunt that may accrue\nthereon, u further wxiurltj therefor.
4192246812ca7dc5a45353e736c12120 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1907.7164383244547 39.623709 -77.41082 petro and sulphur were first combined\nand fired in a gun to leave thereafter\nthe stoutest soldier weak indeed who\nshould bo shorn of his powder flash,\nand when Gutenberg divided tho sol-\nid lines of engraved metal into sep-\narate letters or movable types, ns we\n,\\v, did lie suspect, do you suppose,\ntb;- .£ ho was ushering in tho democ-\nracy of learning? As Idg a factor us\ntho types ot Gutenberg, was the de-\nvice made public by Alexander Volta\nin Paris, in the very first year of this\ncentury. This contrivance was a new\nand excellent means ot obtaining a\nflow of electricity.\nPreviously in a "pile,” as this in-\ngenious man, its inventor, called it, a\ncurrent had been derived from a se-\nries of pieces ot zinc and copper,\neach bit of metal separated from it?\nneighbor by cloth moistened in acid.\nVolta hail now much improved this\n by putting each zinc and cop-\nper pan by Itself in a cup filled wilt\nacid. From this “Crown of cups” lit\nproduced a strong and fairly steadj\nstream ot electricity, with the advan-\ntage that it lasted for a considerabb\ntime. Much as tho cup or cell of Vol\nta has been varied and bettered since\nit left his hands, it yet remains es-\nsentially tlie device he created and\nto him, therefore, is due the honor of\nreducing to vassalage tlie gentlest\nand mightiest tlie most versatile and\nthe most terrible force in the strong\nhold of nature. It is the voltaic c4,\nwhich lias taught the electrician 1 Is\nbusiness, with result that steam finds\nItself in largo measures supplanted:\nwhere once it reigned monarch it\nis now merely a partner possessed of\na small and diminishing interest. The\nactual test of a really great inven-\ntion is its fruitfulness.
0f8720ec3dd09496954f4e2366216016 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.6095890093861 40.063962 -80.720915 A UKVIEW OF TIIK MT17ATION.\nMemphis, August 10..The Antlonrhr\niIih morning lin* it lengthy review of the i\niliiiitii.n along tho river in tin1 Memphis .\nlistrict, summing "I1 the cotton already\nn tiie wilier nt '2,000 acres, which the |,\nrriter regards a* :i more hopeful situa-\nion than that of :i few day* since, lie r\nirues constant and slceplcs* vigilance on ,,\nlie juirt of tlmne wlmoo InmU are threat*\nlied. He says tho danger to the planta*\nions on Walnut llend, sixty miles below\nlere i« from the buck water in the St.\n'rnncin, which lui*t week extended up to\nYiltshurg.a distance of HO mi leu,\nA telegram from Vtokshurg thi* morn*\nUK from ('apt. Wake of the Anchor Line v\nays that everything in all right from v\n'hicot to this point, on the Ijoiiininna 0\niile, ami from Hol»ert*onvillc dim, on the \nhe Mi<««ti^^ippi niile forces are at work J\nrherover danger is apprehended, which ''\nontradicts the report of a crevasse at v\ntsliton, Miss., which was puhli-ilicd in M\nhe Vickshurg llcnthl. A well known ^\nilanter of northern Mi*si*«ippi, writing ("\nrotn Atlanta, (Sa., the (Itli iust., to a lirm a\nlere, saysof the crop!*: "Tor sixty mile* "j\na«t of Memphis the erojw have millered\nerv miieh for want of ram. From there {'\no IVcatur tliev are pretty good, Doing\noutli from llrii;hton to Montgomery, the\nlistunceof one hundred miles. and tfiencc I'\nast sixty live miles through the cotton ''\noiintry I have never in my life seen 11\nucli an entire failure of crops. I saw K\niiimlreds. ave, thousand* of acre* which\nrill not make live hu-dicls of corn to the "\nere, and not over fifty poumN of need\nnitnii,
46976e059a218b7b4f1de4cf2bc26dcb THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.9027396943177 42.217817 -85.891125 Liber F. of Mortgages, on page .119; and wheren\nsaid mortgajre waa duly assigned by said Ella 0.\nKinne, to Freeman Hall, of the couuty of Van\nBureu, aforesaid, by assignment dated the 2Cth\nday of March, A. D., 1 8 58 , and duly recorded in\nthe Registers office aforesaid, on the sevcath day of\nMay, A. D., 1858, at two o'clock, V M.. iu LiWr G,\nof Mortgages, on pago 91; on which mortgage\nthere ia claimed to bo due and uupald at the date\nhereof, for principal and intereat, the sum of nine,\nty dollars and seventy. two cents (190 72), and no\nproceedings at law or in chaucery having been in.\nstituted to recover the amount secured by aaid\nmortgage or any part thereof,\nNotice i, therefore, hereby given, that, by virtue\nof a power of salf contained in said mortgage,\n power has become operative by the default\naforesaid, and in pursuance of the statute in auch\ncase provided, the said mortgage will be foreclosed\nby sale of the taortgaged premise therein described,\nto wit; "all that certain piece or parcel of laud,\nsituate and lying iu th county of Van Bureu and\nState of Michigan, and being Lot two (21, in Block\none (1). in Kinne'a addition to the villlage of Mat-t - o\nwan," which will he aold, at public auction or\nvendue, t the highest bidder, bt the Cwurt Honse\niu the village of Paw Paw, in a'd couuty of Van\nBureu, (that being the place cf holding the Circuit\nCourt for said county,) on ttv twenty. fifth day of\nDecember neat, A. D., 18 5 8, at ten o'olotk in the\nforenoon, by the sheriff of oouuty, or his deputy, or\nunder shrritf.
0450e09f872ea783b8976ee60762ca44 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.4561643518518 39.745947 -75.546589 reason presented for a refusal to extend\nthe courtesy of a renomination which\nhas always been accorded their prede­\ncessors. From a political point of\nview there can be no valid objection\nto their renominotlon, because they\nwere acceptable candidates two years\nago and received voles of all Republi­\ncans. It would certainly disturb the\npresent poli that condition to a lees ex­\ntent. than would the effort to select or\nagree upon a new set of candidates for\nthese offices. Tha Union Republicans\nare bound In good faith to renominate\nthem. When they accepted tihem two\nyears ago, they knew that It was cus­\ntomary to renominate the»« officers and\nIn accepting them as Regular Republi­\ncans they were well aware that they\nwere entitled by custom to four years\nin or for the same time the\nUnion Republican candidates, the\nGovernor. Attorney-General and Insur­\nance Commissioner were entitled to.\nBy this arrangement and in all Justice\nand fairness the Regular Republican«\nare entitled to these nominations.\nThey are in favor of the nominations\nof the present Incumbents. No good\nRegular will be a candidate In oppo­\nsition to cither of them. In all fair­\nness can the Union Republican» ask\nthat Union Republicans be nominated\nfor these positions and that the Regu­\nlar Republicans vote for them ?\nthink not. We know that the rank\nand file of the Union Republicans are\nnot opposed to the renomination of\nthese officials ami that opposition is to\nbo found only among a select coterie\nwho are the obedient servants of J.\nEdward Addlcks.
053800e611dba77e885dfd41ce274a17 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.6972602422627 41.020015 -92.411296 ever raised, they come from jhn pock\nets of the people. If the (Jovern\nment pays ten per cent, interest on its\nloans you have to pay more taxes\nthan you would if the rate was but (5\nper cent. If it pays (i per <ent. your\ntaxes are more than they would be if\nbut 4 per cent was paid. Some of\nyou, doubtless, lend money. If\nyou do not you may havesomobody's\nnote for something you have sold him\nI11 either case look at your notes and\nseo if they do not all draw ten per\ncent, interest per annum. Yes, they\nall do. Now you aro taxed under\nthe State law ou account of the mon­\nies aud credits which you own. The\nassessors aro usually very kind to you\nand assess your monies and crcdifs at\nabout 50 per cent of their par value\nSome times it happens that a man\nforgets mention all of his monies\naud crcdi's, and so they escape the as­\nsessor's valuation and return, aud the\nforgetful man don't pay any tax at\nall. Keeping these things in mind,\nlet us state two cases and see how\nmuch real ground there is for the\ncomplaint that G overnment bondsare\nnot taxed to stand on. A has $1,000\nin gold which ho lends to thetiovern-\nmont and receives in return a $1,000\nbond. On this bond the Govern­\nment pays A forty dollars per aunum\nfor the use of the money, 11 has\n$1,000 which he lends to his neighbor,\nat 10 per cent, per annum. The note\nwhich I10 receives ao evidence of the\nloan, if not forgotten when the asses\nsor comcs around, Is valued at 50 per\ncent, or $50'). On this valuation B\npays fax at the rate, say of throe per\ncent. This makes a tax of fifteen dol­
320638d9be4eb6b55f5a4ed295eba3db EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.2534246258244 39.745947 -75.546589 “The Mayor and Council »>? Wilming­\nton,* through the Board of Directors of\nthe Street and Sewer Department, will make\napplication to the Court oi General Sea-\naiona at its regular session on Monday, the\nFirnt day of May, A. D. 1911, for the ap\npointaient of Commisaiouern to vacate all thal\nportion of Grubbn Lane beginning at a\npoint on the wharf line, on the northerly\naide of the Brandywine river, as laid down\non map of the Harbor \\ ommiaaionera of\n1864, where said wharf line ia intersected\nby the eaaterly boundary line of land of the\nWilmington and Edgemoor Electric Railway\nCompany; said easterly boundary line being\nthe weaterly aide of Grubba Lane; thence\nalong said easterly boundary line of the\nsaid Wilmington and Edgemoor Electric\nRailway Company, about 50 degrees and 8\n East, about 200 ft*t. to a point in\nsaid boundary line; thence south 32 degrees\neast, crossing said Grubb's Lane, about SO\nfeet to a point in the westerly boundary\nof the land of the Wilmington Light and\nPower Company; said last mentioned bound­\nary line being the easterly side of said\nGrubbs Lane; thence by said line of said\nWilmington Light and Power Company, south\n5o degrees and 3 minâtes west about 200\nfeet, to a point in said wharf line of said\nHarbor Commissioner! ; thence by said wharf\nline westerly 30 feet to point of beginning;\ncontaining* 0000 square feet more or less;\nthe soid Grubbs Lane being an old publie\nor private road in the said City of Wilming­\nton and Wilmington Hundred.\nHOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE STREET\nft SEWER DEPARTMENT.
09666a8ff6ef2e640792d7ad4d5f393b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1923.2205479134957 39.623709 -77.41082 John Lawson lived In a model house\non the outskirts of the factory town.\nHe whs forty years old and had a Job\nas a clerk which brought him In 835.\nHe was married, but had no children.\nOn this particular ufternoon he was\nleaving early, it was a Friday, and\nby arrangement he hud to stay\nSaturday afternoons. As lie walked\nup the hill toward hls home Ids dog\ncame bounding to meet him, leaping\nup at him. It whs tin old dog—twelve\nyeurs old, and he bud hud it before lie\nmarried. He stooped und patted It.\n“Well, Hunger, old boy, weve gone\nthrough some times together,” he said.\nHe waia little sentimental with his\ndog, because it was all he had to he\nsentimental with. He lit hls \nand he dawdled, so us not to get home\ntoo soon. He was not eager to get\nhome. He wus not eager to meet Ella.\nSometimes ou those Friday after-\nnoons, during the walk home, Lawson\nIndulged In the luxury of bitterness.\nAt such times his past would rise be-\nfore hint. He would remember bis la-\nthers home, from whirti he had been\nexpelled for an act of boyish folly,\nhis struggles, his love affair- that had\nended so disastrously.\nHe lind been mudly In love with\nMary Baines. But he had been a poor\nclerk, and stie had been brought up\nIn luxury. She had promised to wait\nfor him. She had waited a year, two\nyears—three. Then, instead of the\nexpected promotion, Lawson had lost\nIlls Job,
2b94a27c45e47b7ec9cab72dcd3043d6 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1910.1301369545915 41.004121 -76.453816 elected in 1906 should be lengthen-\ned to the first Monday in Decem-\nber, 191 1. Those elected in 1907\nand 1908 to the first Monday in\nDecember, 1913, aud those elected\nin 1909 to December, 1915.\n"All townships, boroughs, ward\nand city officers who were elected\nin 1908, for three years, are pro-\nvided for by the schedule; they will\nserve until the first Monday in De-\ncember, 191 1, and their successors\nwill be elected at the November\nelection of 191 1, and serve four\nyears. The terms of all of the\nclass of officers, who were elected\nin 1909, should be extended to the\nfirst Monday iu December, 191 3.\n"The terms cf all officers who\nhave in the past been elected for\nfour years should be extended to\nthe first Monday in December of\n proper year; those , who weie\nelected in 1907. to December, 191 1,\nthose elected in 1908, either to the\nsame date although this would\nshorten their present term a few\nmonths, or else to December, 19 13,\nwhich would lengthen their term\none year aud eight months. Those\nelected in 1909 for four years are\nprovided for in the schedule, and\nwill serve until December, 1913.\n"The officers elected for two\nyears in 1909 should serve until\nthe first Monday of December, 191 1.\nThose officers whose terms have\nheretofore been either one year or\ntwo years will serve by direction of\nthe schedule until December, 191 1.\n"Through some inadvertence,\nthe terms of office of assessors who\nare to be elected in February, 191a,\nare made to expire on the first\nMonday of December,
1aad89c945f1d03bda31dabf48eb8f9d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.5136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 Joseph UiU, sirorn.Was iu my\ndirectly across the street, fcbout elevt\n1 o'clock, when 1 heard the children ov\nhere crying; I ran over and ran up to tfc\nroom where Evans was on the floor abo\nwhere he now lies. Mr. Flanagan at\ntwo or three women were here tryii\nto hold him and take the pistol away fro\nhim- I tried to take the pistol, they tel\nfag me it was empty, but 1 could nc\nJust then another shot was .lired and\nran out uto'the front Toom In a mi\nment 1 Started out and as 1 patted tl\ndoor of this room, I saw Evans get up ar\nheard him say "It's all gone" and the\nsaw him shoot again. I ran down stai\nand went over to my shop.\nDr. W". J. liaU4, Jr., ttroru.l h'ave e:\namined the body of the deceased. Fin\na wound over the left temple which wi\nevidently made by a pistol ball. I hai\nprobed it to the depth of four inche\nThe bail passed through tLe brain ac\nIs probably lodged against the skull in tl\nback of the head. The wound was suf\ncient to cause death in a very short tim\nBy the powder marks around the- woun\nthe pistol was close to the head, not ovi\ntwo fett cfl, and from the direction tl\nball took the pistol was on a parallel wi!\nthe eye. There is another wound on tl\nchin, which was probably made by tl\npassage ot a pistol ball, which ah\nmade by a pistol held quite closc, as tt\nflesh is somfiwtiat burned. There is ah\na wound made by a pistol ball in the for\nfinger of the left hand. I find no oth<\nwounds on the body of the decased.\nDr. Baguley's testimony was subslar\nusiiy iuc saiuc u ui. umo\nJdi. MeAdam suom.l was on th\nstrctt when I heard the noise; I cam\ninto the back yard and climbcd up ove\nthe shea an J came in the window. Evan\nwas l)irg on the tloor where he now i\nThere* *vas to one in the room; a revolve\nwis lying there near the bed. 1 wet\nout in the hall and to the doer of th\nfront room and as they would not let m\nin I burs: open the door. I found Flan!\ngan and Mrs Dunlap and Bjnd at*\nothers there; 1 arrested Flanagan as lb\nmurderer. He said, "He (Evans) sh(\nhimself and me tnrough the hand."\nW. J . Hope fiA'rn.I was just corals\nin the back door down stairs when I bear\na man fall. After I came up stairs I sa'\nEvans on the floor and saw then bre3\nopen the door to the front room and a\nrest Flanagan. (Mr. Hanna testified t\nthe same facts as Mr. Hope.)\nMn. Bond iwrn-1 came this mornir\nto see Cap:. Flanagan on business Fouo\n1dm on the bed and spoke a lew words i\nhim, when I passed into the front root\nwith my sister, Mrs. Danlap. In a
31f15b2d208c713af2e394e5ac4886eb DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.3510928645517 58.275556 -134.3925 special dispatch from Washington\nto the Seattle Times, April *27, say*-:\n"After sixteen years of labor it is re¬\nported that Congressman Sulzer's ef¬\nforts to obtain a form of full territor¬\nial government for Alaska at last will\nbe successful. For ten years in suc¬\ncession, up to until the election of\nFrank H. Waskey, the first Alaskan\ndelegate, iu 1006, Sulzer introduced a\nbill providlug for home rule for Alaska.\nDelegate Wickersham who came to\nWashington in 1908 and who had in¬\nduced Delegate Tom Cale to withdraw\nthe Sulzer bill aud introduce one\nwritten for him by Wickersham, will\nnot get the credit of passing the terri¬\ntorial government bill. Wickersham\nput himself "in badn with both Demo¬\ncrats and Republicans by his unwar¬\nranted and unsubstantiated attack9\non members of the cabinet. Investi¬\ngation of his territorial bill showed\nthat it was uot by any means a com¬\nplete measure and would have placed\na heavy burden of taxation on the peo¬\nple of Alaska have given them\npractically nothing in return. At a\nconference held last, January between\nAlfred Daly, Democratic uational\ncommitteeman from Alaska; Congress¬\nman Sulzer, Speaker Clark, Congress¬\nman Underwood and Congressman\nFlood, it was deoided to pigeonhole\nthe incomplete Wickersham bill, aud\nto have Flood reintroduce the Sulzer\nbill. The measure has passed the\nhouse but may be held up by the sen¬\nate. As has been stated previously,\nSenator Bristow, an insurgent from\nKansas and friend of Gifford Pinchot,\nintroduced in executive session in the\nsenate committee a resolution provid¬\ning that no action be taken on the\nAlaska territorial bill until such time\nas the senatorial committee can have\nan opportunity to visit Alaska and in¬\nvestigate the conditions themselves.\nPinchot is still hopeful that, with the\nelection of Roosevelt, the resources of\nAlaska will be placed under the super-\nvision of a bureau. The plan is to\nestablish a kind of benevolent despot¬\nism with Roosevelt or Pinchot acting;\nin the capacity of chief despots,
14e61eb0483d3344463e24d38571d167 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.5040983290326 43.82915 -115.834394 ricrlftUon of tho “ Soul-P^>«fc4iés.,,\nWhile the writing-ro om in her own\nkunie is in itself a perfect inspiration,\nicavy with an atmosphere distilled\nfrom a husbands most cultivated\ntaste, a wifes most poetic fancy, sh,\nran sit in a room anywhere with a\ntalk ative lady, two or three chatting\n(iris, a sewing-machine, a trouble­\nsome baby, a singing bird, and no\nonly compose her most intense and\nsoul-s tirri ng verso in the melee, but\nkeep in sympathy with the spirit of\nIhe place." In this, ns all else with\nIt r, people stand first, things af er-\n« ard. She would at any time let her\ngrandest poem fall in fragments about\n!iur feet ra hot' than wound tho feel­\nings of the smalles t child about her.\nSo she answ ers th eir questions, gives\ndirections when helpful, j dits in the\nmirth if necessary to Ihe success of\nihe joke th at she seems pleased\nwith kisses the baby, take\nhold of some millinery or dres s­\nmaking experiment needing “posit­\ning” to a successful completion, am!\n right on with tho poem, from\n'»h oit it must have cost a supreme ef-\nort to turn aside. She neither wrig-\n1,s no r writhes, uplifts her eyes nor\nIrops her head. But for an unusual\nht in tho wine-coiored eyes aida\n.l ightly increasing color, one might\nmagitio her engaged in wri .ing an or-\nlinary letter to a friend.\nThe only gesture which ra n be said\n„ belokett a moving of the con po ing\n-raters s a dainty little thrust of the\n1 ft hand outward, just as you have\n„ en a bird on a porch stretch its leg,\nwith a little kick, on waking. She al­\nways looks at her finger nails, o!\nwhich sho is very careful, on drawing\nt back. This, with a peep at a little\nmirror which she keeps on her writiog-\nable for th s purpose, in variably\n. . rings the word, tu rn s the semence oi\narranges the idea almost as quickly as\n•le a n be written. Sho like; to dres\nlaiutly always, but especially when\nwriting. — Chicago Times.
166e060edae4b6613e7f462d992db0ec THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.9521857607265 40.063962 -80.720915 The uvntlon to Victor Herbert and 011-\nmoro's famous band on their final even¬\ning nt the Ht. Louis Exposition, recent¬\nly. was the moit unbridled nnd vivid\ndemon* trotIon ever witnessed nt a pub-\nlie performance In diet city. It wus thin*\ngraphically described next day by one\nof the members of Gllmore's, nn Italian,\na most intelligent and well-read man,\n(who objects !.» his name being used,)\nIn the soft tntiHlcal ucc/mtn of Southern\nItaly. It wan fervid and unique. Where\nho lacked a word lo express himself\nho made use of a significant loyfc or an\neloquent gesture, that, by suggestion,\nmore than bridged the gap. Bald he:\n"It was a lasa Sat'dy night wo play\nSalnta LouId lus time. I nev Haw nucha\ntime my life. 1 play tiulntn Louis teim\nyearn with Mis' Glhnore an' I nev' saw\n a tlmo like that time. The blgga\nmusic hall ho was a pack.packu. so you\ncanna see. Ze blgga crowd he don' get\nIn at all; lie stay outside In the halls an'\nlooka behind. Too much crowd In music\nhall. Crowd be holler nil a lime on'\ncheer 'Herbert. Victor Herbert,' name\ntime an' nay 'lie greuta man on earth,'\nan 'CI 11 more band ees besta band over\ncoma Salnta Louis. Ees be.ita band on\nearth, too. 1 thlnka crowd ees orar.y\nm'nelf. Then the maiia. a .ze president,\none night he give Mix' Herbert gol' mod-\nla. Oh! magnlflque, splandecd! An the\nlasa (light lill the people they glv Mil1\nHerbert Havers, oh! many flowers\nand beautiful things, I can nota tell you\never thing, and they maka speech again\nand the blgga crowd yell like crazy all\nthe time.
73ffa6e65c7d33713c0789abc4053977 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.89999996829 40.063962 -80.720915 theiM. Bu^ the- national Government\nwill -have. another, duty to perform,\nwhich it must««ot- omit or evade. It\nmust aid In the reorganization of the\ngovernment of every redeemed State,\n,ahd see that it fa, republican .in form.\nFor the performance of this imperative\nddty it cannot impose conditions. It\nmust look only to' the charter from\nwhich it derived its birth and by which\nit continues to exist, with the assurance\nthat it cannot die eatcept by saiclde.\nAs to the so-called .reconstruction, of\nthe Union, tho way to it is plain* and\nwill be easy, when > our .triples have\ndrushed tiie rebellion. I adhere, and\nshall adhere while I have breath, to the\nprinciples developed and acted on, in\nthe re-organization of the government\nof Virginia Lki ^M»t- example be fol¬\nlowed, as Itideed M has "been aud is be¬\ning followed, and all difficulties vanish.\nLet. the loyal men of each redeemed\nStat* reorganise their government, and\nwhen this is done for each and every\none now under tho dominion "of the\nrebels," all that is desirable is' accom¬\nplished.5^ do riot 'counsel that the\ntroops of the Union should bo with¬\ndrawn, or that the, exclusive control of\naffairs should be relinquished to the re¬\norganized governments until, it*can be\ndone with safety to the Union, for such\nsafety it*paramount law; but 1 think\nthat safety wllt.be insured whenever\nthe rebellion .is suppressed; for, as I\nbelieve, there will be found loyal men\nenough in eive#ys State; whether those\nwho through all these bitter times have\nheld fast to their integrity, dr those\nWho have seen the error orjiielr ways\nand renewed their devotion to the Union,\nto whom the administration of the State\ngovernment may be safoly intrusted.\nThe class of persons to whom I have\nalluded may be made citizens by a con¬\nstitutional amendment, and, possibly,\nby an act of Congress; but there are\ngrave considerations lwhich should be\ndeliberately weighed )>efore any step is\ntaken la this direction. There are many\nof them to whom the <rights of citizen¬\nship might-be safely committed, but\nthese are very fkr from being the ma¬\njority. But two, three, or four genera¬\ntions Tiave passed away since the an¬\ncestors of these people were savages of\nthe most-degraded'type. The remark\nof Mr. Calhoun, tdv the effect that his¬\ntory furnishes no record of a race\nwhich naa risen so rapidly from savag-\nism toward civilisation foaybe correct,\nbut the mass are yetveryrar from the\n'goal. This is emphatically true of 4he\nUrge majority of those whom the war\nhas liberated from slavery. Those who\nwere employed i« domestic and farm\niMimiitfli
0fc6ea44566797c880280097484ac782 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4685792033495 39.290882 -76.610759 On assembling in the afternoon, the following\nresolutions were reported by Mr. Alfred Kelly,\nof Ohio, and unanimously adopted:\nResolved, That the achievements of our arms,\nand the reputation of those who successfully de-\nfended our country in times of djtnger, form the\nbrightest gems in the crown of our national glo-\nry, and he cannot be a true friend to his country,\nwho will dim the lustre of the one, or tarnish the\nfair lame of the other.\nResolved, That the gallant defence of Fort\nMeigs against the combined forces of the British\nand Indians, wlneli event we have convened to\ncelebrate, is among the most brilliant efforts of\nour arms during the last war with England.\nResolved, That we have abundant cause for\nthe most fervent gratitude to an overruling Pro-\nvidence, as well for raising up an able and gal-\n commander, in the person of our beloved\nHARRISON, to restore to our armies the repu-\ntation lost by the disgraceful surrender of Hull,\nand to rescue from the enemy the fair country\nlost by that surrender, as for preserving the life,\nthe health and the strength of the Hero to join\nwith the thousands of his fellow citizens, in cele-\nbrating one of bis most brilliant achievements 011\nthe spot where it occurred, and as we hope and\ntrust, to be the instrument of rescuing our rever-\ned political institutions, from the hands of do-\nmestic spoilers.\nResolved, That the same increasing exertions\n?the same disinterested devotion to the public\ngeod, which have been so conspicuous through-\nout the life of the distinguished Hero of Tippe-\ncanoe, of the Thames, and of Fort Meigs?are\nnow due from every true friend of liis country,
10cb87c60e7de23885b5038f5e78cb8e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.6243169082675 46.187885 -123.831256 their joyous nature and love of gaiety,\nthe influx of new life and business meth-\nods on one hand, the slow disappearance\nof men great in the commercial world\nthirty or forty years ago on the other, all\nserve as matter to reflect upon; and few\nstrangers can remain here, even for a\nbrief time, without being struck by the\ncontrasts that they discover here and\nthere as they walk about the charming\nold city. There are incidents of life,\nbits of scenery, and queer characters\nthat even our novelist, Mr. Cable, has not\npainted. On every hand there are nooks\nthat one likes to stand and admire, places\nwhere the sun seems to get in in order to\nsleep away the day. ,Here the gardens\nwith prolific fig trees that never fail to\nyield their lusciou? fruit, flowers in gor-\ngeous tints and tender tropical plants that\nfear the cold. The oranges are as green\nas green can be, but when the exposition\nvisitors begin to arrive in the month of\nDecember, the golden fruit, ripe and\nplentiful, will beautify thousands of the\novergreen trees. Tho banana, too, is no\nstranger tree here, it stands many\na garden wall, stretching its broad, long\nleaves from the ground, seemingly, far\nabove the orange and the fig. By day it\nis a thing of beauty, it looks so fresh, so\ngreen, and cool; at'night, when the nim-\nble fingers of the breezes toy with its un-\nfolded leaves, it emits a rustling sound\nstrange and weird, as if winged spirits\nwere flitting through tho air.\nOnce in a while one may see a palm tree\nbut it is by no means a common object,\neven in the most costly gardens.\nThose who come hero from tho far -aw-\nnorth, find themselves in a recion whera\nto them u new climatio law prevails, in a\nlaud of sunshine where tho fruits of the\ntropics flourish, and where roses bloom\nthe year round in tho open air.\nThe population appears odd and unlike\nthat of any other citv. for it is made uo\nof Americans, French, English, Germans,\nItalians, Spaniards, Chinamen, Africans,\nand in short every nation and tribal di-\nvision of the earth seems to have sent\nsomo of its members hither, as if com-\npelled to contribute to a great ethnologi-\ncal museum.
3e47ec0ecc6b6a48c98e0b619dbe3eca EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.382191749112 39.745947 -75.546589 or the part they are to play in In­\ndustry. Some positive explanation\nis practicable. The Congre«« has\nalready shown the way to one re­\nform which should be world-wide,\nby establishing the eight-hour day\nas the standard day In every Acid\nof labour over which it can exer­\ncise control. It has sought to And\nthe way to prevent child labour\nand will. I hope and believe, pres­\nently And It. It has served tho\nwhole country by leading the way\nIn developing the means of pre­\nserving and safeguarding IKe and\nhealth in dangerous industries. K\ncan now help in the difficult task\nof giving a now form and spirit lo\nindustrial •irganiMUon by co-or ­\ndinating the «ererol agencies of\nconciliation and adjustment which\nhave been brought Into existence\nby the difficulties and mistaken\npolicies of the present management\nof industry and by setting and\ndeveloping newr Federal agencies of\nadvice and information which may\nserve as a clearing house for Ihe\nbest experiments and the best\nthought on this great matter upon\nwhich every thinking man must be\naware that tho future development\nof society directly depends. .Agen­\ncies of international counsel and\nsuggestion are presently to be cre­\nated In connection with the League\nof Nations in this very Add; but\nit is national action and the en­\nlightened policy of individuals, cor ­\nporations and societies within\neach nation that must firing about\nthe actual reforms. The members\nof the committees on labour la the\ntwo houses will hardly need sug­\ngestions from me as to whgl means\nthey shall seek to make ihe Federal\ngovernment the agent of Ihe whole\nnation in pointing out and. if need\nbe. guiding the process of reor­\nganization and reform.
09f9af8f1a3d3c0807fcde737cdd7f2b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.6898906787594 42.217817 -85.891125 Whereas, default has been made iu the condition\nof a certalu mortgage made by Edward M. Caguey\nand Mary A. Caguey, his wife, of Gibleville, Mich-\nigan, to the Michigan Mutual Life Insurance Com-\npany, a Michigau corporation of Detroit, Michigan,\nbearing date the 3th day of April, A. D. 1901, aud\nrecorded lu the office of the register of deeds for\nVan liuren couuty, Michigau, ou May 1, A. D.\nl!ol, in liber 71 of mortgages, on page 12, and by\nreason of the failure of said mortgagors to pay the\ntaxes levied ou said mortgaged premises, said mort-\ngagee was compelled to pay aud did pay on July is,\nP.NI4, the state and county taxes for IWi thereon,\namounting to 931.01, aid default has been made lu\nthe payment of an installment of interest amount-lu- g\nto $37.50, which became due ou April 2Mb, A.\nI). 11)04, atd said mortgagee, according to the term\nof said mortgage, and on account of said default in\nthe payment of said taxes aud said installment cf\ninterest, has elected and does hereby elect that tu\npiincipal sum of said mortgage, being the sum of\ntilteeu htindrI dollars ( 1,600.00), together with ail\narrearages of Interest thereon, be now due aud pay-\nable, aud there is claimed to be due aud payable \nsaid mortgage and the bond and notes accompany-\ning the same at the date hereof, and by virtue cf\nsuch election, for principal, interest, taxes aud in-\nterest, the sum of fifteen hundred and tiiucty-ou- e\ndollars, and no suit or proceedings at law having\nbeen had to recover the same, or any part thereof;\nNow, thfretore, notice is hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power of sale contained lu said mort-\ngage and of the statute in such case made and pro-\nvided, the said mortgagee will sell at public auction,\nto the highest bidder, on Tuesday, the first day of\nNovember, A. V. l 'X'A. at ten o'clock In the forenoon,\nstandard time, at the front door of the court house.\nIn the village of Paw Paw, Van Uureti county, Mich-\nigan (that being the building in which the circuit\ncourt for the county of Van H iren is held), the\npremises described in said mortgage, lor the pur-\npose of satisfying the amount due as aforesaid for\nprincipal, interest, taxes and interest and the\nof said sale. The premises described lu said\nmortgage are as follows: All that o rtaln pUce or\nparcel oi land situate iu the township of Waverly,\ncounty cf Van Huron. Mate of Michigan, known\nand described as follows, to-i - t:
1ef81990bbdf7ca17e71ee163971c6b5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 There being no female iti the family to take\nlarge of little Ada, James conceived the\nlea of indenturing her to ufamilvipSkClairs*\nHe, and on Saturday he had the papers\nrawn up, and in the evening presented\nlem to uis father to sign. This tfie father\nfused to do, and u war of words followed,\nhereupon James, in his anger, struck his\ntlier. us he says with his fist, a powerful\now,felling him to the floor and fracturing the\nuuiai none, oreuiting ms nose, rupturing u\nnull blood vessel, uud causing concussion\nthe brain. He wus rendered iiiMenaible,\nid has remained in tiiut conditiun with, us\nte physicians uiuiui, no possible hope fur\ns recovery. <\nJames ussistcd in caring for his father fur\nU) or three hours, admitting to everyone\nho called tiio circumstances already stated;\nit when he found that lie had in ull human\n'uhubility his uged futher a fatal\now, lie clianged his clothing uud took his\nnurture for purts unknown, leaving the old\nthertobe cared for entirely by strangers'\nmds. (ireat indignation is expressed on all\ndes at tho local officers that no attempt was\nude to urrest Weir, us they were notilled\nlortly ufter tho sud all'air occurred, und\nossly neglected to do their duty, seeming to\nur the dangerous churucter of the assailant,\nliree or four policemen were within one\ntiiulred yards of the Weirs' house, and were\nrgod to mako the arrest, yet never made a\nuvo until Weir had made good his escape.\nU'h olllcers should step down and out, und\nake room for those who are not afraid to do\nieir duty under the plain letter of the law.\nWhen told of the occurrence, (Jeorgo Weir\n[pressed greut sorrow for his father, and' {\nigei against his brother.
104b0b4dcfc9b7bd14ec3b00a4c82a23 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.595890379249 41.020015 -92.411296 otlior aio«t serious charges ifraiu^t Mr\nBt«:chcr, which wlii i>:j t>i'Ojf.ht up in\na trial in rourt. The sensation appears\nonly bci^un. While tho irrnr-rn! pub­\nlican distressed, and haVe been trom\ntbe'comnidncomcnt, over tb« terrible\nsceudal, they say there hat been so\nmuch lying, so much mystery, and so\nmuch contradiction, that thev want to\nsee strict justice done between Mr.\nUcechur and Mr, Tilton. Several per­\nsons,not members oi' Plymouth Church\nbut friends of Mr. Ccecher, say if tbo\ncase goo;) against him tl.fit ho will de­\nstroy himself; tl.st ho has declared\nprivalolv long before this sandal that\nhe believed suicide justifiable tnder\ncertain circumstances. They 1'ccl sure\nho will not survive his good name;\nthat honor is far dearer to hirn than\nlife;thathe ha* never had (be least\nfear ot death. Many members of the\nPlymouth Church arc willing to for­\ngive Beecher even if guilty, while oth­\ners are determined ho shall not quit\nthe pulpit. Kvcry woman of the con­\ngregation is reported to be strongly\nana enthusiastically on his side,\n ho be guilty or innocent. —\nTbey absolutely worship their pastor,\nand arc bitterly hostile toTilton. Alra.\nWoodhull avers that Bccchcr belie TUB\nall she docs, that he has often told her\nso. That if she could examine him in\ncourt she would draw the truth from\nhim. She adds that thousands of the\nbest aud most intelligent people hero\nand throughout the country hold her\nfree-love doctrines, but arc afraid to\nso; that she alone, lioueat and can­\ndid, ba* suffered tor her honesty aud\ncandor by tho bitterest persecution. —\nShe still threatens to speak unreserv­\nedly and without fear. She wllljproba-\nbly bo summoned in court (o tell ber\nwhole story, A great demand ha*\nsprung up for "Griffith Gaunt" aud\n"Tilton's Tempest Toseod,'' particular­\nly since be has declared the character\nMary Vane drawn after bis wifo.\nThe public seem to think the Tilton\nnovel founded on bis own lile and full\nof Irce-love sensation, though it ro&lly\nIs the quietest and purest of romances\nhaving no connection with hia experi­\nence.
5d0afa64a2ddd8df1d8bcc8d0acc52ca NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.2424657217148 41.681744 -72.788147 eight, their love affair had not begun\nto bloom at that time. It took Mis-\ntress Jane four weeks and five days\nto cross the ocean, and she did not\ncome to this part of the country until\nshe was 14 years old. She came then\nwtih her father to Bristol where he\nwas to take charge of the copper\nmines. There she stayed and Was\nhappy and thence she went, 62 years\nago last St. Patrick's day, to New\nHaven to buy her wedding trouseau.\nreturning from that tlirivine eitv\nwnn.n uonars in her pocket, mod-\nest then in her demands as she has\nbeen ever since according to the one\nwho knows her best.\nThirty years ago Mr. Trewhella es-\ntablished a meat market here in ad-\ndition others he was interested in\nin other places, and 20 years ago he\ncamo to New Britain to make his\nhome. A large family has come and\ngone out into the world to make their\nsuccesses and to found other homes,\nwhile "Darby and Joan" remain in\ntheir attractive home at 70 Walnut\nstreet, an inspiration to those who\nwould drop in to see peace and happi-\nness continuing to the day when the\nhair is white. The groom of (52 years\nago sings as he attends to the fur\nnace in the dark hours of the winter\nmornings; the bride of 62 years ago\nsmiles as she speaks a kind word or\ngives a helping hand to those who\nneed it. May they sing and smile for\nmany years to come.
4004ce91c6746f98dd81230a28db9bdc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1246575025368 39.745947 -75.546589 tlons and hearty approval expressed by on with the assistance of five school as an emergency hospital for the epl-\nthe division manager. It Is well nigh teachers who helped In various ways demlo. The local Red Gross Nursing\nimpossible to give a complete story of and one additional volunteer worker. Service was asked to furnish the nurs-\nthc thorough organization of the Delà- and our own staff of one case worker ing personnel, for the emergency hos-\nvvare (Siapter, Its business and execu- and the secretary with only two of our pital at the Country Club, and I was\nlive efficiency and a complete account usual number of volunteer workers appointed as their representative. The\nof the well-organized, sclf-sacrlflcing able to give time. The names of the Hed Cross chapter agreed to furnish\nend untiring work of the members of volunteers who assisted In home vis- the beds bedding complete which\nthe Red Gross, through which tho .-e - King during the epidemic were Miss they had In reserve for such an emer-\nsponse In tills emergency was made Elizabeth Amory, six half days per g,*ncy and to have 23 beds sent out it\npossible. When services given were of w'eek; Miss Alice Satlerthwaile, six once. Miss Jeanette Duncan, Red Cross,\nsuch a nature that the people serving full days per week until she became Nurse, was appointed superintendent o( |\ngave, as in some Instances, no less 111 with the Influenza; Miss Edith Dan- the hospital. On September 28, Satur-\nthan life itself In performing these forth, two half days per week; Miss day, Miss Dunoan, Miss Nellie Living-\nservices, words are. Indeed inadequate Nellie Sawln, throe half days per week; ston, a Red Cross nurse aid, and I went\nand insufficient to describe (hem.
64167a01f36095dab00955f73db43473 THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1865.7821917491121 36.294493 -82.473409 ingly and willfully," lloro I will only\nstato that it was proven beforo tho\nCourt by two witnesses, viz : Capt.,\nKindriclr and Lieut.. Munson, that\nthere was a copy of Gonoral Orders of\nthe war Department, containing an\nurder prescribing tho manner in which\nVeterinary hunieons should bo np\npointed, on fllo in his Office at tho\ntimo that tho appointment and muster\nwero made, and that thn question as\nto tho mannor of appointment was a\nsutijectot discussion in tho itegimcnt.\nSo he must havo known that tho mus\nter was false at tho timo ho mado it.\nFurther, I believe it is not customnry\nfor Courts of Justice to accept the plea\not ignoranco ot the law as an exeuso\nfor its violation. It was his business\nand his to know what tho law\nwas, and tho proof in tho record shows\nthat he had it in his possossion, and\ncould havo known by looking at it.\nBut it appears from tho plea set up in\nthis case that ho was too indolent to\ninform himself. Perhaps, ho found it\nmore pleasant to play cards with pri-\nvate soldiers and others, than toperuso\nsuch dry articles as General Orders usu-\nally arc. Ho spurned the advice of\nothers, and refused lo bo instructed by\noflicors who were more experienced\nin military affairs than himself.\nHo was found guilty of tho 1st, and\n2nd, Specifications under chargo 5lh.\nTheso Specifications, certainly, cover\ntho charge, and I nm not ablo to see\nhow ho can be guilt' of them, and r?of\nguilty of
1e2a14a7c8f1995742d278b23f7bbc02 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.5657533929477 43.798358 -73.087921 cruel disappointment of the hopes of his\nfriends before his death, excited by his con-\ntinued abstinence for some months from all\nthat could intoxicate, on his returning in the\nfirst instance, by the urgent solicitation of a\nkind friend, to the use of a little beer and\nwater, at a period of languor, and then in-\ndulging without limit, stamps the character\nof fermented drink in his case.\nA more marked instance is that of P. F.,\na young man who was for some months in\nthe Temperance Office at Albany, on the\napplication of his personal friends, who are\namong the most respectable individuals in\nLower Canada. We found this miserable\nyoung man in most abject circumstances in\nthis ciiy, and removed him to the Temper-\nance Office, that a more immediate super-\nvision might be exercised over him, and as-\nsistance rendered in his attempt to reform.\nHis habits were found to be those of seventh\nday drinking, and the only liquor he was\nknown to use was strong beer indeed he\nacknowledged to me that this was the only\nstrong drink that he loved. He is a man of\nsuperior mind and cultivated intellect, and\nin his desire and his efforts to reclaim him-\nself, was the fullest manifestation of\nentire sincerity, and the utmost earnestness.\nAfter a few months of effort, during which\nperiod he tell irom his resolutions several\ntimes, although aided by the most unremit-\nting watchfulness and care on the part of\nthose that took an interest in him, we at\nlast abandoned all hope. He was however\nagain encouraged, and now at scarce twenty\nyears of age, after having entered life with\nmany friends, and every thing encouraging\nin his prospects, he is utterly destitute and\nan outcast ; having lately embarked on\nboard a temperance whaleman for a three\nyears voyage in the Pacific Ocean, with the\nhope of recovering his lost standing, and\nhealing the broken heart of his widowed\nmother. Should God in his mercy preserve\nhis life and return him to his country a\nsound man, may no kind frend stand ready,\nto be so unkind, as to offer him a little wine\nor a little beer; for should he, in mv humble\njudgment, he will have to answer to God\ntor a lost soul. The disease ol the drunk-\nard never dies it is ready to spring up and\nrage if indulged in the slightest degree no\nmatter how many years of abstinence in-\ntervenes.
59d66838de3ca624a1bb2178420637e9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.9877048864096 41.681744 -72.788147 Well, that's over, at least until\nnext year. But why invite trouble?\nChristmas !s one time of the year\nwhen even the coolest individuals go\nup In the air about something or\nother. Mostly It's the question of\nhow much to spend. However, peo-\nple shouldn't trouble about that, No\nmatter how many good resolutions\nare made about keeping the expendi-\nture of money for Christmas pres-\nents down as far as possible, the\nusual amount of money will be spent\nand the first of every month will be\non unpleasant reminder of the folly\nof accumulating debts.\nFor instance, this year Christmas\npresented to its the aspect, unpleas-\nant enough, of the winged dollars\nin the act of taking wing. And they\ndft. It certaln'y Is funny how fast\nmoney can leave the pocket, and how\n it is about relurnlng to thc\nfold. There were presents galore\nfor e veryone and these could not be\nbought for a song. Anyway we are\nnot good at singing.\nThen that bane of one's existence,\nthe Christmas card. Nn matter how\ntiie brain is wracked in order to re-\nmember all those to whom cards\nshould be sent, from close relatives\nto thc girl met at a dance back last\nFebruary, there's always someone\nforgotten. And hove badly it makes\na person feel to receive a card from\none whsc name was not on the list\nfor the receipt of a card. Then\nthere is that bustling around to send\none as a New Year's remembrance.\nAfter Christmas th new year\nstretches off Into eternity, a cheer-i .s - s\navenue, an endless street paved\nwith bins.
2f904a6199b45e434af5d68700723c00 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.4972602422629 40.832421 -115.763123 Indians in Northern Idaho is re¬\nported as earned by, anil is directly\ntraceaulo to, tlio iuipriulcnt conduct of\nGeneral Howard nuil Indian Agent\nMunteitlt of tho Koz l'crocH reservation.\nThey are probably dire tiy responsible\nfor tho present outbreak; but bad faith\non the part of tho Government in vio¬\nlating treaties, and tho conduct of iis\nagents in their dealing with the Indians\nthrough a long tierie.l of years, in tho\nprimary cause of the provocation which\nlias led to open hostilities. The earl)*\nemigration of tho whites was wel¬\ncomed and hospitably receive I by the\nvario«3 tribes, which v. - e r e then nuiner-\noir and powerful. Tiny were generally\ndisposed to pence between cacli other,\nhut vised to combine themselves to\nmake war upon the tribes in tho buffalo\ncountry east of tho mountains, or\nagainst tho tribes of the region west of\nCascades and of the Lower Columbia.\nTliero were tho Yukiinas, the Cayusea,\nthe Pidousos, the Klikitats, tho Uuin-\ntilliiH, tho Walla Wallas, the Net l'er¬\nces, tho tiuakes, and father north nud\ncast in the Upper Columbia region, the\nSpokaues, tho Ctunr d'Afencs, the 1'en\nd'Oreilles, the Flatheads and the Kon-\nteunys. Of all these tribes tho Cu*ur\nd'Alcns wcro tho most powerful, and it\nwas not in. til they were brought under\ntbc benign and civilizing iulluvncc of\nthe great "llhick Gown" missionary,*\nFather do Sniet, and linally whipped by\n lato General Wright that tliey be¬\ncame addictcd to civilized life and have\npuraucd a peaceful life. They defeated\nColonel Steptoc's command in 1858,\nand were the sumo year subdued by\nColonel Wright, whilst General Clark\nwas in command of th:U Depart.\nIn lli;i war of 1S">8, C iptain Taylor\nwas among tho first to fall, and iu it\nwcro engaged sovcr.il of the officers who\niu the tival war distinguished them-\nselvea iu either the Union or Confed¬\nerate service. From that timo until tho\nIndian war iu the Owyhee country,\nwhich Grneral Crook quollcd in 1808,\nthere has been poaco with tho Indians\nof that whole region. That peace would\nyet bo maintained wcro it not for the\nconduct of the Government during tho\npast few years, is almost beyond doubt.\nAs it was with tho Modocs so it is 'with\nthe Indians of Jostpli'u band. Tho\nGovernment has not faithfully or at all\nobserved its treaty obligations toward\nthem, and this is the main cause of the\noutbreak. Wallowa valley was assured\nto ( hrtii by I he treaty. It is in tlio pos-\ntan-ion i>f tho whites. It is n rich val¬\nley of Inrgo nros, 011 tho west b.iuk of\ntho Snake liver iu Union county, Ore¬\ngon. In 1H74, the Government author¬\nized n commission of citizens of Oregon\nto t;o there and appraise tlie value of\nI he lauds rcduecd to civilized use by
2965e98083c9cec3776b2ef5d90a7660 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1909.6999999682903 31.762115 -95.630789 month but now you can spend all\nhat you earn and at the end of an-\nother ten years if you do not gather\nthe honey which your 10000 is\nmaking for you you will be worth a-\nittle over 17000 which at six per-\ncent will biing you an Income oi\n85 a month for the rest of your life\nA modification of the above scheme\nan be made to work to the profit of\nany wage earner no matter what his\nweekly earnings may be granting of\ncourse that they are sufficient to live\nipon comfortably For instance if-\nhe man who earns 15 a week could\nsave seven dollars a week for 14 years\nhe would have acquired a little for-\ntune of 5000 This task of saving\nseven dollars a week out of 15 a week\nfor 728 weeks seems stupendous at\nfirst but when you figure itout care-\nfully you will see that it is not so\ndifficult after In the first place\nyou would have to save seven dollars\na week only for the first year just as\nthe man who was working for 10000\nhad to save 1000 for the first year\nonly At the end of the first yean you\nwould have 728 working for you\nsecond year this would have earned\nyou 18 20 at five per cent so that\nthis year you would need to save onlj-\nS3S580 Instead of 304 or 605 a\nweek During the third year yot\nwould have 728 working for pou\nwhich at five per cent would earn\n3640 leaving you 6 30 to save each\nweek that year Figuring in this waj-\nn the beginning of your sixth year\nyou would have to lay aside only\n580 weekly at the beginning of\nyour ninth 4 20 and at the beginning\nof your twelfth only 315 Yet at the\nsnd of your fourteenth year you\nwould have saved over 5000 which\nproperly employed
1f7704248e21c0d819ec31265563a12b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.105479420345 37.451159 -86.90916 We commented some days ago on\nthe movement to turn the tide of Eu ¬\nropean immigration from the over ¬\ncrowded cities of the North to the un\ndeveloped fields and industries of tho\nSouth This would be to the advantage\nof all interested It would benefit the\nNortn which is suffering from the con ¬\ngestion of a large immigrant population\nin its great cities the South by fur\nnlshing it with more labor to develop\nits resources It would be equally ad ¬\nvantageous to the American laborer by\nprotecting him from the competition\nwith tin excess of cheap and unskilled\nlabor which has a tendency to depress\nwages while the immigrant who is\nlooking for work and frequently can\nnot find it in the North and in despair\nreturns home would find plenty to do\non the Southern farms and plantations\nBut while tbo project is so generally\nadvantageous to all we scarcely ex ¬\npected to see it received with such\nunanimous favor The United States\nBureau of Immigration is prepared to\ngive Its ardent support and will do all\nit cau legally do to turn the newly ar\nrived immigrants towards the South\nComrniseioner General of Immigration\nSargent would indeed go much further\nif the law allowed it In discussing the\nmatter with the representatives of the\nSouthern railroads who went before\nhim he expressed regret that the Fed\neral Government had not provided by-\nlaw for the better distribution of aliens-\nn country as its failure had re ¬\nsulted in the building up and mainte ¬\nnance of foreign colonies in the United\nStates which ought to be broken up\nIt was only by proper distribution\nthat the evil could be corrected He\nadded that the practical question was\nwhat shall be done with the hundreds\nof thousand of immigrants to avoid\ndangers that now threaten ust He\ncalled attention to the congestion of\npopulation in New York Chicago and\nother cities the enormous expenditure\nfor tbe support of indigent aliens the\nrecords of the lesser criminal and police\ncourts the alien inmates of hospitals\njails mid reformatory institutions the\ncrowded habitations of foreigners in the\ncities the struggle for bare existence\nby which the sweatshop system has\npassed from one alien race to another\nthe Introduction into this country of\nthe Mafia the vendetta the Black\nHand and anarchist societies and on\nthe other hand the millions of untilled\nacres and the unsatisfied demand for\nagricultural and other manual labor\nAll these evilJ he thought could be\ncured by the diversion of a part of this\nforeign immigration into the agricul\ntural sections of the South\nThe Southern press officials and peo\npie generally have expressed themselves\nfriendly to the movement and as anx ¬\nious to welcome the newcomersthis\nshowing a marked change of sentiment\nfrom the old belief that the settlement\nof European immigrants in this section\nwould do great harm by disorganizing\nthe negro laborer
273e0817c081a5bea1866519db03b3bd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.042465721715 40.063962 -80.720915 sternly; rtcelpU '2<1J,400 buaheU; export* 127,92J\nbushels; isle* 787,000 bushels of futures: 18/,000\nbushel* spot; uugraded l^ais^o; No. B , 4lkal7ko;\nite*iuer47>Ja47^4ii in elevator; -ts^alDo ailoat; No.\n2.50*60^0 iu olevator; No. 2 Jauuary 49^a60|ic,\nclosing at ftOu; February 4^a49o, closing at 48^0;\nMarch 4H%a4h$|fl, dual tig at 4»Ho; April iS>Ja\nl^io; May 48a48^o. closing at 48^o. Oats Ytry\niiulet: receipts vl,two bushels; exports 146 bushels;\nuilxod westernt6>^i38^;o; whitetwc. Hay,demuud\nfair shipping 76c. Hops ciulet and steady. Cofleo,\nspot fair; lUodull at H^o; option* *tiudr;No. 7\nUlo spot C.flOo; sales «,'2to bags; Jauuary\nMOo; February I.6O0; March O.6I0; May fifiOo;\nluuofi6:o; December c.hoc. tittgar, reflued quiet;\noff A 616-16a0j; standard A C)iu, grauulated f"' -\ncube* 615 16c. Mollasscs dull; 60 teat 25o. nice\nsteady and rather quiet. Tallow steady at 4%o.\nTurpentine tlrrn at ;w>ic. Pggs heavy and lower;\nreceipts 2,100 packages; western Ma2GUc. Pork\ntlrui nud moruactive; Nairn at tl0 26ai0t0; clear\nback 112COall60. Urd If*s active: sales: western\n¦team snot 6.42>ia6.4jc; 0 42c; February\nMlo; March 0.t9v; April 6.64o; May 6.6'jaC.61o;\ndty steam 0 32)|,u6.sic. Butter dell end firm at\nfair Inquiry; westeru 12a3lo; Elgin creamery Ula\nBSo. 1 ueese ateady aud qulot.\nCUICA00, Jan. 16,-The strength developed lu\nwheat yesterday afternoon held good during (his\nmorning, May delivery advancing to 8<l>ie, but\nwhen the moreurgent orders hsd been filled, prices\neaaed off yAc, and theu begau to sell off rapidly,\nthe d''dine not being atopi>«d until May had\ntouched 8t)fo. after which a Might reaction follow¬\ned, the market closing tor the day at 8i%o. The\nsharp decline wis iittrlbuted umluly to reports ot\na further largo cold shipment. There was an ab¬\nsence o! exptut uemaud, but tho Interior n>Ulers\nwere itpoited to be buying quite f eoly, which\nhelped to steady the market at tho oloie. Flour\nqulot and unchanged. Wheat HU'>d up %o, but\neased off and Dually docllned l%o from the outsldo\nllgures, cloning l);o under yesterday; Males\nranged: January
24172838283732a08638d3835e81cbeb PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1883.719178050482 39.756121 -99.323985 Advices from all parts of Minnesota and\nWisconsin state that great injury was done\nby the frosts last night and Friday. Weath-\ner reports received at the various railroad\noffices show that a heavy frost formed all\nthrough the northwestern country, and\nfrom every section come reports of great\ndamage to the corn crop. What little corn\nthere is along the Manitoba Railway has\nbeen much frozen, and in many places the\ncrop has been killed outright. Along the\nOmaha Road, where the greater part of the\ncorn of this section of country is grown, the\nweather was not so cold, but still the frost\nwas heavy, and serious damage was done.\nThe crop in the first of the week was iu\ngood shape everywhere.and the only thing\nfeared by farmers was the early " frost.\nOwing to the wet weather in the early\nspring the crop was very much backward.\nIfo estimates of damage done have been re-\nceived, and for a few days it will be im-\npossible to tell exactly how serious it is.\nWheat, oats and crops were in no\nway damaged, as they were pretty much\nall gathered several days ago.\nIn Northern Wisconsin ice formed on\nstanding water. Some corn, much ad-\nvanced, will be saved, but the crop in gen-\neral is backward and will prove nearly a\ntotal loss. Sorghum is a total loss. The\nproprietors of large sugar mills have lost\nacres of standing cane unripe, which will\nnot be worth a dollar. All other crops are\nsecured and unusually good. The oldest\nresidents claim that yesterday was the\ncoldest day ever experienced in early Sep-\ntember, and last evening the thermometer\nsank very close to the freezing point.\nThe frosts of Friday and Saturday nights\nwere the most severe north of this point,\nbut extended over the entire State and\ninto Northern Iowa. Corn has been se-\nriously damaged, and good judges estimate\nthe crop will be short of last year's, and\nwill not go over 10,000 ,000 bushels at the\noutside. In Southern Minnesota corn was\nadvanced so far it was not hurt so badly as\nfurther north.
17a57c49d4b37328a94a4042aca8b5e8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.9330600776664 40.063962 -80.720915 NHW YORK, Dcc. C . -Two of the sail¬\nors rescucd from the full rigged barken*\ntlno Mnry T. Klmbnll, hnvo Just reach¬\ned this city. A third survivor In Htlll In\nft hospital at Liverpool, England. All\nthe other members of tho crow perlsnud\nus a mmiIt of tho Htorm and tho wreck of\nthe whip In September.\nTho Mary T. Kimball left "Mobile, Ala.,\non August 118, bound for Ouantanamo,\nCuba, with a cargo of railroad tlefl. Her\ncaptain wan James Bowers. September\n22, while too miles ofT tho southern coaat\nof Cuba, a heavy gale wao encountered.\nAfter suffering hardships almost Inde¬\nscribable. only three men, named Jeffers,\nCosh and Madison, remained out of the\noriginal crew.\nTwelve days after the wreck of the\nMary T. Kimball, these threo men wore\nrojeued by tho Noi\\veglnn schooner S.\nN. Hansen, Captain Ilasmussen, bound\nfrom Apalachlcola, Florida, to Liver¬\npool, with a cargo of rosin. The ship¬\nwrecked were taken to the Liver¬\npool city hospital on November 28. Jef¬\nfers and Madison recovered quickly, but\nCosh l:s still HI. Joffers And Madison ap¬\nplied to the American consul for assist¬\nance and were returned to this country\non the steamer Umbrln, which arrived\nto-day. Coah will bo »^;nt back as soon\naa lie recovero from his illness.\nThe rescued seamen ure unable to give\na complete list of tho crow of 'the Mary\nT. Kimball. So far as they ar»* able to\ndescribe tho ofllceni and crow, they say\ntbat Jamea Bowers was captain; that a\nman known only as Flood was first mate:\nthat a man known only as "Charley"\nwas second mate. Tho cook and tho\nsteward were Ixrth white. Both wore\nabout Ihlrty-flvo years of ago. The\n(jailors wore all from Mobile. Their\nnames .were given a? Peter Mitchell,\nPeter Madison, Jainos JefTers and Elijah\nCash. All four of the soiloni were col¬\nored.
14d22c0c709506f0aa781624261c5f72 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1899.8041095573312 33.031451 -111.387343 The enterprise, pursuits, business and\noccupation in which this Company proposes\nto enffa&re, is to acquire by purchase, and in\nany other lawful manner, real estate, lands\nand all kinds of property, real, personal or\nmixed ; to lay out, construct and acquire by\npurchase or in any other lawful manner.\nand accept, hold, possess, enjoy, operate and\nuse franchises from any State or Territory\nof the United States, or in any county or\nmunicipal or private eorporutions, wagon\nroads, canals, milld, factories, bouses capital\nstock and bonds of corporations, chattels\ngoods, wares and merchandise, chores in\naction, to transact any and all kinds of busi-\nness which muy be transacted by a natura'\nperson ; to hold, use and enjoy the same and\nto alienate, sell, lease, demise and dispose o'\nsame or any part thereof, as well as of any\n property thiscorporntlon possesses, be\nseized of or be entitled to; to borrow money\nand coutract to repay the same at such time\nor times as its Board of Directors deem pro- -\nper and see fit; and to hypothecate, mort -fraf- fe\nor pledse. all or any part of the prop- -\nerty which this corporation may hereafter\nacquire; to secure the payment of such\nmoney with interest, or to secure the pay- -\nment of any debt of this corporation, with\nsuch interest thereon as it may be legally\nobligated to pny and to conduct a general\nmerchandise and trading business; to buy\nand si ll gold, silver, copper, lead aud other\nmines to form subsidiary companies to\nwork them, and to erect quartz mills, smelt-\ning furnaces or other reduction works for\nthe treatment of all kinds of mineral ores.
0d92040b7b4568a8cd1fae3756ed4104 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.1383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 Charles Waters, an old soldier and a\nprinter, who has passed tho point of\nUsefulness at his trade, hnd his pension\ncut oil by some misunderstanding, and\nwill bo examined by the board horo to¬\nday, his caso having been rooponcd.\nlie is willing to work, but is unablo to\ndo much, and for sovoral weeks past\nlias been a charge upon this county at\ntho infirmary. »vhen the order for his\nre-examination came he was given a\nloiter by the superintendent of tho in-\nfirmary commending him highly for his\nexemplary conduct while there, and\nduring his stay in this city ho was\nkindly eared for by Mr. Goorgo Korn,\nouo of the township trustees.\nFrank B. Wostgate, the fatlior of\nWilliam Wostgate, of this city, who was\nshot robbers in Ilia storo in Clove-\nland oil the hixtli of this month, diod of\nhis wound. Mr. Wosigato engagod in a\nhand to hand fight with one of tho\nburglars, and just as ho got him down\nupon tho floor the othor thiof shot him\nin tho back, the hull passing through\ntho abdominal citvitv. Tho murderers\nhave never'boon caught. Mr. Wost¬\ngate was long a rosidunt of this city.\nTho mooting of tho W. C. T. .U. wil!\nbeheld at tho homo of Mrs.T . A. Kodo-\nfor this afternoon instead of at tho\nchurch, on account of revival mootinga.\nThey will have a Martha Washington\nparty at the A. M . R church Friday\noveuing. and an appropriate entertain-\ninoiit will also ho held at the United\ni'resbytorian church.
2b9cc8e6fd271a45678590025e6d8fd1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.7849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 possesses plenty of speed for a guard\nand. although his weight ts excep­\ntionally large, he is an excellent man\nfor breaking through the opponent's\nline, the department in which Han­\ndys work has been so highly satis­\nfactory. It Is rather late In the sea­\nson. however, for a man to Just, begin\nto get Into condition.\nBill McAvoy Is determined to de­\nvelop a line which can get down the\nHeld as fast as the ends and tackle\nthe opposing backs as they catch the\nkicks. For a long time to-day he had\nhis line running down under kicks\nand tackling. He la looking for speed\nIn the line at present.\nIn the scrimmage Ayerst was again\nat. quarterback, with Taylor. Cars­\nwell and Dean In the back field. Ennis\nsoon succeeded Dean and both of the\nvarsitys gains were made on his\nplunges through the line. The work\nof the varsity was very bu( for\nthe first time this season, the scrub\nused trick plays almost exclusively.\nAfter securing the ball on the -vars­\nity's 26-yard line near the end of the\nscrimmage, they carried the ball 20\nyards for a near score, but were un­\nable to gain further ground.\nCharles Stayton had his head cut\nin last night's scrimmage so that Dr.\nKollock found if necessary to take\ntwo stitches over his left eye. The\nInjury Is not. thought to be serious,\nbut he is liable to be kept out of the\ngame for «'few days. Handy, the\ncrack guard, hart his face cut In a\nhead-on collision with Stayton and\nwas consequently relieved by Behan\nNorris Wright, had his kickers out\nfor a half hour before the rest of the\nsquad Taylor is the best punter and\nSpruance the best drop kicker. Tay­\nlor averaged fifty yards in practice,\nbut Carswell could “boot" the ball bht
140aec776c7d261dc1a0bdd97b32b647 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.346575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 Members of Washington Lodge, No.\n1, Knights of Pythias, and a large\nnumber of Invited guests spent a de­\nlightful hour ln K. of P. Hall last\nevening. The occasion was the annual\nreception of the lodge, and it was pre­\nsided over by George Carter, chairman\nof the Committee on Entertainment,\nwho introduced Henry C. Conrad as\nthe speaker of the evening. He out­\nlined the objects of the Knights of\nPythias, and referred in particular to\nthe work of Washington Lodge, which\nIs creditable In every respect. The talk\nwas exceedingly interesting.\nFollowing Mr. Conrad's address a\nseason of amusement was entered into,\nthe most amusing feature of which was\na pie-eating contest between James\nWindish and "Kid" Johnson, colored\nboys. Windish carried off the honors\nand a $1 bill as a prize. Following this\nthe boys contested for a halt dollar,\nwhich coin was place in a pan of flour,\nFor five minutes the boys envel­\noped in a white cloud, und when It dis­\nappeared Wlmliah displayed the money\nbetween his teeth.\nTwo peach baskets filled with pea­\nnuts were passed among the crowd, and\nthree of the shells contained a dollar\nnote each. The winners were scattered\nabout the room and their names could\nnot be learned. Other prize winners\nwere: Ellis Cobb, a silver tray; MolHe\nWayne, a silver watch; Alfred Murphy,\na silk umbrella, and the booby prize\nwas won by a man who refused to di­\nvulge his name,\nfound a solid gold ring in her mouth\nwhen she started to eat ice ereAm. and\nEthel Wilhelm obtained another ring.\nFollowing the fun, a program of\nmusical, vocal and literary selections\nwas presented. It was: Piano solos,\nMiss Bertha Everett; recitation, “Pyra-\nmus and Thisbe,” Miss Wagner; vocal\nsolo. J. A . Booker; recitation, Anna\nHurd Applegate; vocal solo, Miss\nSaille Croes; recitations, Charles B,\nPalmer.
47ef60f052761d0581c63caca70d2f16 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.924863356355 39.513775 -121.556359 poused and their extraordinary capa-\nbilities as expounders of their views.\nIrishmen arc proverbially eloquent,\nand their rich stores of pea tie thought\nand sentiment and amazing command\nof language, mark them at once as\nthe most brilliant orators and grace-\nful writers in the world. Well and\ntruly have these gifted men battled\nfor the cause of Democracy and the\nUnion during the late contest, and\nnow that the battle has been fought\nand won, most eloquently and touch-\ningly do they utter their rejoicings\nthat their adopted land is yet safe\nfrom anarchy and civil war.\nThe sentiments they speak are\nworthy of them, exiles as they are\nfrom their native land, fur daring t<>\nbreathe them there. Their sincerity\nin the principles they profess is fully\nshown by their adherence to and ad-\n of the true principles of De-\nmocracy. The fanatical precepts\nand ultra doctrines of those parties\nwho call so loudly for freedom, free-\ndom for themselves and in justice and\nwrong to their countrymen of the\nsouth, have no allurements for them.\nThey properly regard them as inim-\neal to the best interests of the Union,\nand shun them as the worst enemies\nof the great institutions they have\nlearned to prize. Their patriotic\nexamples arc worthy of imitation by\nmany of those who have inherited\nthe liberty purchased by the noble\ndeeds of their forefathes. Let those\nwho would “Let the Union slide” for\nthe mere sake of gratifying a sec-\ntional prejudice, learn patriotism and\ndevotion to their native land, in these\nwords of the gifted Meagher :\nOh God! look down upon the land which
11447e63ec0673f0d957c785d93eff69 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.5904109271944 40.063962 -80.720915 r civilization, he will not feel be\nlore bound by a contract made\n;noranae of the value of hti wot\nad by taking advantage of hit n\nsasitlss, than do thoaa who olalm\nave a pnrer religion, and the only tri\nat, and whose claims to political at\nlucatlonal superiority are bo flaun\nigly aet forth. Uundoubtedly tl\nrTce of labor will bil leaaened by tl\nhlnaman coming here; bat it will\ny competition and not by contraot. J\nime way the man who advances tl\n>at of hia oomlog oan be, and will b\nscared the relmoarsement of it, bi\nb can never aecare by this act a lot\nsrlod of fatnre labor at Ohinese price\nbe Chinaman, It mast be understood\na thoroughly intelligent humi\nslog, who Is not able to get along\nrat us, beoauae he Is a strange\na soon aa he becomes familiar wll\nir language, laws, and coarse of bua\nms, which he msy do as readily aa\nermao, if not an Irlahman, he wl\nik equal privileges and get them. Tl\nzy laborer may fear competition wll\nim, the demagogae may make hli\nimu ttiiu iuo uuimuera ma nairea\nitQ as a possible voter, bat the Cblni\ntan-will, if he does bis work, earn h\nages and deserve lo receive them; am\nQless we get rid of the baneful idea\naiversal suffrage, he may be a vote\nit Wft sae no reason wby in tbls vei\nipsolty he will not be Icbs to bo relic\ni than some others. Ue may be a fa\nFdet to them..New Orleans Picayun\nicocm of the Second Trial of the Sn
0b939afe7b60882994651e9d181675f2 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1886.4616438039066 41.004121 -76.453816 transactions. Postmaster General Vilas\nis giving special attention to this class\nof work under him, and together with\nthird Assistant Postmaster General\nHazen, after much careful labor, now\nhavo binding contracts which, while\nthey will doubtless yield fair profits to\ntho contractors, will, at tho samo time,\nbo of great advantago and beneht to\nthe public at large. Tako for iustanco\nthe contract for stamped envelopes\njust made by the Postmaster General\nlor tlio tour coming years.commenclng\nJuly 1st. Ucloro advertising lor pro\nposals for theso envelopes tho Depart\nment had a great deal of preparatory\nwork to transact consisting chiefly of\ngetting tho most suitable paper for the\nvarious styles of tho old ones, and other\nwork ot a similar nature. It is estimat\ned that there will bo ordered by the\nDepartment during tho eioming year,\nb3,2o0,000 worth of stamped envelopes.\nit it should pay tor them on tho basis\nof tho present contract a disbursement\nof over !s950,000 over and above that\nsum would bo required. Tho result\nwill therefore bo a of upward of\na million ot dollars or about 25 percent,\nTake, again, tho contract for supply\ning tho Department with postal cards,\nstamps, tags, registered packages and\ndead letter and official envelopes. This\ncontract was entered into on tho SUM\nof June last and is to run four years,\nTho first year is near enough its close\nto enable a very correct idea being\nformed as to how it has worked bo far\nand how it will work for tho remaining\nthreo years, fiy the last ot this month\nit is estimated that the books will show\norders by the Department for supplies\nunder the contract referred to amount\ning to 1,932,253 ,589 ; and the amount\npaid for them will show a decrease o\nabout 25 per cent in tho outlay for\npostage stamps, about 12 per cent\npostal cards, and 45 per cent in othor\narticles during tho previous fiscal year,\nAltogether the i'oslollico Uepartincn\nunder tho supervision ot I'ostmaster\nGeneral Vilas is making an excellent\nrecord in purchasing its supplies.\nTho leport that
0b9ae0880acce31e97fa5a4adf6fe104 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.8534246258243 58.275556 -134.3925 The stampede of hunters along the\nGlacier trail witnessed many old-\nIme Klondikers and many young¬\nsters hitting tho highways. They\npresented a picture as they strode\nforth. Kvery sort of weapon known\nsince Adam was employed. IUfles\nof the time of the French revolution\nto pcrfcct modern howitzers were\nbrought into play. The road houses\nwere made the bases, and were filled\nwi"> enthusiastic nimrods, who oc-\ncii; led every inch of spaco ut night,\nate everything on hand, und then\nsallied forth and carried on the but¬\ntle during tho day.\nIt is estimated that 200 to 300\n.iribou hud been killed up to yes¬\nterday morning. Some of tho hunt¬\ners uro still ovor there with teams,\nand, as tho Ico has started to run in\ntho river Hlnco thoy loft, they will\nhave to leavo their horses on that\ntilde until after the freezoup. Four¬\nteen to twenty horses are there, and\nwill hav to be supplied with feed\nfrom tho road houses or tho farms\non the West Dawson side until me\nriver Ire Is thick enough to bring\nthe animals across to Dawson.\nSergeants Joy and Dempster, of\nth police, were out with a four-\nhorse team and got tcwouty-scvcn\n They returned yesterday.\nDempster will return today to get\nan additional supply, which the po¬\nlice will use hero and hold in re¬\nserve for emergency.\nPhil Kelly. Billy ltendell and\nGeorge Fulton bagged forty-six.\nKelly was the crack shot of the trio,\nwhile George, with the horse, was\nthe champion yarder-out. Billy cap¬\ntured tho prlzo, for oglllty and fancy\nshooting. His blunderbuss Insisted\non going on whether there was any\ngame in sight or not, and the cari¬\nbou seemed to resent Ills terrific\ndrives, and one of them retaliated.\nA huge buck made tho trouble. Billy\nhad Just sat down comfortably\niiHtrlde the bij; fellow and slashed\nbis throat with a bowle knife when\nMr. Buck decided to demonstrate\nthat there was one more kick In him.\nHe gave a lunge, threw Billy three\nyards In the ^ir, and, as ho came\ndown, biffed him under tho port\nlamp with a sledge-hammer blow\nfrom a mighty hind leg. The big\nboof struck pilly so emphatically\nllo went to sleep for about five\nn'nutes. When lie awakened he ro-\nolved to use more ammunition on\n¦very "dead" caribou. Kelly, Ful¬\nton and Ueudeil are back today with\nnil kinds of exciting tales.
0ae611006faca9d7cfb73a44e0e7c41d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.4986338481583 41.875555 -87.624421 Chicago now has exclusively, the\nbiggest film company in America.\nWith tho opening of a new studio, the\nthird ,on tho north side, tho Essanay\ncompany has chosen Its two outside\nestablishments, ono In Nlles and the\nother In Los Angeles, preferring to\nconcentrate Its efforts In Chicago. Ot\ntho four prominent concorns Identi-\nfied with tho film industry, Sollg, Es-\nsanay, Kleino and American, Essanay\nIs tho only company with a perma-\nnent producing plant in this city.\nSelig takes tho pictures at his studio\nIn Chicago Intormlttcntly, while In\nEdendale, Cal., ho produces plays con-\ntinuously; tho American has Its stu-\ndios In Santa Barbara, Cal., and con-\nducts lts business affairs in this city;\nand Klei'ne's producing activities are\nIn tho Bronx, Now York City.\nThe Essanay studios are equipped\nwith artificial lighting facilities which\nenablo its producers to stage plays\nIn all sorts ot weather, whilo tho days\nof sunshine are devoted mostly \nexterior scenes. Georgo K. Spoor,\npresident of the company, has been\na persistent booster tor Chicago on\naccount of Its central location,\n"I have always believed that Chi-\ncago Is tho natural distributing center\nof the Unttod States," he said, "and\nfor tho shipment ot goods excels any\nother American city for centraliza-\ntion. I closed my western studios\nand Increased my Chicago holdings\nbecause I want tho plays produced\nby our company to be as close to the\ndistributing center as possible.\n"It Is not necessary to go to Cali-\nfornia for sunlight; artificial light\nmakes an Ideal substitute, and you\nneed not fret over rain and clouds.\nWhile In the past capital was repre-\nsented mostly In the east, there Is a\ntrend toward this city In that direc-\ntion. I believe that both manufac-\nturer and distributor of motion pic-\ntures logically belong In Chicago on\naccount of Its control location and\nrailroad facilities."
144333320bc3635e195878f658743c8e THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1907.4863013381532 40.114955 -111.654923 In close games a base on balls Is\nsure to turn the tide and If you look\nover the lto0 battles that have been\nplayed this season you will see that I\num right I have kept my optics on\neight engagements marked by this\nscore In 1907 run off In the National\nleagueuptoaweekagoandifIam\nnot mistaken the lone tally in live of\nthem was started through a gift\nEfforts on the part of kid ctirvors\nto master the moist ball are responsi-\nble for many passes but the trouble\nthis season when twirlers became un-\nduly generous seems to be that when-\na man gets on base they waste a cou-\nple of balls on the next batter in the\nhope that the runner will go down to\nsecond and be thrown out Backstops\n can nail a runner on a strike\nseem to bo almost extinct and as the\nAmerican league receivers seem to be\nsuperior as a class to the Nationals\nmen of the mask and mlt It naturally\nfollows that there have been more\npresentations among the Pulliamltes\nthan among the lohnsonltes At the\nfinish of the fifth week of the major\nleagues season tho figures show that\nthe American league pitchers had giv-\nen away 472 bases on bails anti hit\n07 stickers while the National deliv-\nery clerks were charged with C04\npasses of the regulation variety and\nG8 of the Rod Cross kind Tho Qlants\nhad 107 gifts to their credit anti the\nWhite Sox four less Of the individ-\nual players Hoy Thomas had worked\nthe slabmen for four balls 22 times
192a289106c81ff202c41a251641679d RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1908.5423496951528 36.620892 -90.823455 Doniphan township, who is a candi\nfor th position of Representative\nth General Assembly of th Bute\nfrom this county ha been a resident of\ncounty for mora than 30 years, com-\ning ker from St. Lonis county and la\nthat Urn ha been a good eltisen.\n1 a member of th county court\nbeing at present associate Judge for th\nastern district of th county, and has\nthe offioe for four terms, but not\nsuccessfully, however, , During hi In-\ncumbency of this office h ha mad an\nexcellent official and If b make on\na good a reprvntativ, if nomi-\nnated and elected, a he ha county\nJudge, he will be an honor to the county\nthe state. Hi occupation i that\nfarming, owning a good farm about\nmil east of town en the Oxly road.\na campaigner, locally, be ha few\nequals and, as a rule, ther is nothing\nlikes better during campaign than\npolitical scrap, especially when the\nelection is coming on and hi opponent\na member of the other political party,\nthe opposition always know there\nbeen something doing when the\ncampaign close. He is a native of St.\nLouis county, but eame to this county\nwhen a young man. Judge Harris is\nfasher of perhaps the largest family\nchildren in Ripley county, a large\nmajority of them being boys, and\nthough all of them are not old enough\nvote they are all Democrats. The\njudge's democracy is of the staunchest\nkind and he la always ready to help\nalong the good cause in any .Way he can.\nwill make a creditable representa-\ntive, if nominated and elected, and when\nbecomes acquainted with the met:\nhods of legislative proceedure, will tak\nrank a a strong member of the body as\nhas the ability and adaptabilty to\nreadily comprehend the position and it\nenvironment.
1a7d69a2d72fc5de8ea9967a9bd5b2f4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.3383561326739 39.745947 -75.546589 every seashore cottage in New England\nor farther south along th?T6as^ is en­\ntirely safe from, the danger of bom­\nbardment. A Spanish admiral, even\nif he could get a fleet over to this part\nof the Atlantic coast, would not waste\nhis time and impoverish the Spanish\ntreasury by firing off ?25,000 worth of\nammunition in an attempt to hit a $2, -\n600 cottage on the seashore. Even a\nSpanish admiral has some regard for\nthe fitness of things.\nOf course it is difficult to see just\nhow a Spanish fleet is to get near this\nsection of the Atlantic coast without\nhaving to face a preponderance of\nstrength on the part of the American\nnavy, or without having to run the\ngauntlet ot mines and torpedoes along\nthe line of the Atlantic coast. It would\nalso be interesting to learn how and\nwhere a Spanish squadron coukk \nsufficient coal to enable its vessels to\nmake the unusually long journey, es ­\npecially as the fleet would probably\ntry to sail at full speed and the coal\nsupplies ot the Spanish vessels will\nhardly carry them from Cadiz to Key-\nWest at forced steam pressure.\nIgnoring all these considerations (al­\nthough they can hardly be considered\nas unimportant in this connection, the\nfact still remains that medern ammu­\nnition costs a great deal of money. Any\nforce ot Spanishmarines that set foot\nupon American soil would be anni­\nhilated. Consequently the only way in\nwhich an invading fleet could destroy\nproperty along the sea coast would be\nby bombardment ; and ammunition in\nthese day« costs altogether too much\nto justify any Spanish admiral in try­\ning to pep shots at bati/ houses or\nRummer cottages at Nantasket, Mag­\nnolia or Annisquam.— Boston Adver­\ntiser.
55e573c23441402f7af52e864beb555c THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9658469629123 39.290882 -76.610759 derstand that this is especially the case in the j\nleads on the Mine La Motte track. A few |\nmonths since, a German miner came into the |\nmines and showed the value and manner of !\nworking the dry bone mineral, and such has j\nbeen the success attending the working of it,\nthat it now bids fair to supercede the shafts or I\ndiggings for the blue mineral, entirely. It is j\ngenerally found combined with sand and earthy\n| substances?is submitted to a process of wash-\ning, and upon being smelted in a furnace of pe-\nculiar construction, yields, in proportion to its\ncost, a greater return than the blue mineral. ?\nA company concerned in the Mine La Motte\nMines, have erected a furnace something after\nthe fashion of the cupulo furnaces, to which\nthey apply a blast by steam. In this furnace,\nwhich is s small that lour persons can keep her\nsupplied, have in 45 days, Sundays included,\nwhen the furnace is not run, made rising 350,-\n000 pounds of lead. There is no expense in\nraising the mineral, and it is furnished to the\n at Jit 50 a thousand, at which price it\nis thought much cheaper than the blue mineral\nat 53. The company, we understand, calculate\nthat they can manufacture at their furnace, this\nyear, nearly four millions of pounds of lead, a\nquantity greatly exceeding the product of all the\nmines in any previous year. If the experiments\ncontinue as successful as they have began, there\ncannot be a doubt that the ease with which this\nore is procured, the facility with which it is\nsmelted, must eventually make a great change\nin the supply of the article and its cost."\nMillions of pounds of this dry bone mineral,\nit is said, have at difieicnt times and places been\ndug up and thrown aside as of no value. We\nlearn further, says the Republican, that upon\nthi Mine La Motte track, a miner has lately\ndiscovered a new vein of copper ore, measuring\nabout three feet in thickness, and which has been\ntraced to a considerable distance without any in-\ndication of its giving out. On the contrary,\nevery appearance is that it will improve as it\npenetrates deeper into the earth.
06b684c5c60f04f3a0c3144e5c60de35 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.6506848997972 40.063962 -80.720915 Instead of justifying a man's praise of a c\nitian's Venus, this Scripture declares ]\nlat a man would not possess sncli a libid-\nloos picture. It is under such false quo* t\nitions as this, and under a sickening cant 5\nbout "high art," that Christians are fill- 1\nig their parlqrs with statuary and paint- j\nigs calculated to excite the lowest pas- J\n, ons of the young. There is a natural j\nruriency that is charmed with this dilet- «\nmtism among indecent things asthepo- J\nte distances to which refinement can go j\nl licentiousness. It would be apposite to £\nik how many youth it is unable to re- 1\n:rain within these bounds, after having ins\nfar intlamed their desires. God has {\nlearly shown as that the human body is \\\n) be covered. Art comes forward and 2\neclares in direct opposition to God that 4\nio human body shall be stark naked, \nnnstians leave (iod and follow art. Then T\nhen we tell these Christiana that they are I\n[ding vice, they ridicule our verdancy, a\nad call on the world of culture to join 3\nlem in the laugh. t\nIt ia not the question whether it is poss- 1\n>le to have a white marble nudity that J\nould bo pure to ever}* pure mind. To s\nlat all will agree. But the practical ques- r\non of to-day for Christians to settle as t\nefore God and His Word, is whether they c\nin approve of nudities in every degree of )lor\nto represent life in evefy attitude of v\nantonness.whether in the name of art 3\nicy can meddle with such filthy subjects\ni Leda and the Swan, Danae, Venus and\ndonis, etc., and not be defiled.\nThe French school of art has a faculty c\nir putting vice forward in voluptuous and ^\n[tractive forms to the vouni?. wl»?l«
4476dcb04ffb21a3c3c7d6594bb1cf74 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9549180011638 39.290882 -76.610759 Some correct judgment can be formed of the\nextent and difficulty of these operations, when\nit is recollected that the whole sums which have\nthus been collected,without deducting fractions\nadded to those sums which have been paid ov-\ner chiefly by another class of officers, have ex- '\nceeded the extraordinary aggregate of $360,-\n000,000, and been dispersed over a territory ot\nnearly two million square miles in extent. Itis,\nmoreover, ascertained that the whole losses\nwithin the same time by defaults, large and\nsmall, and in all kinds of offices, will probably\nnot equal half of oue percent on that amount;\nand however official delinquencies may, in\nsome cases, have inevitably been aggravated by\nthe unprecedented speculations of the times,\nand by great revulsions and failures among\nbanks and individuals, those losses will not be\none-fourth so large,in proportion to the amounts\ncollected and pa d, as in seme previous terms,\nwhen the system under a United States Bank\nwas in full operation.\nA few words may proper as to (he ex-\npenditures duriag th# same period. Though\nthey were of necessity augmented by some of\nthe circumstances before mentioned,two Indian\ntreaties only, out of a large number, having al-\nready involved us in the expense of nearly\ntwenty three millions of dollars; yet the aggre-\ngate of all has been much reduced since the in-\nfluences of those causes and the impulses of an\noverflowing Treasury have diminished. The\nexpenditures have "fallen yearly since, 1837,\ntill they are now only twentv-two and a half\nmillions independent of any debt and trusts,\nand are supposed to be in progress to a still\nlower amount.\nThe undersigned has earnestly urged a more\nrapid reduction. He has considered the great\nsafe-guard against a too spleitdid central gov-\nerruent, which would constantly threaten to\novershadow all State independence, and attract\nthe ambition of most of the friends of State\nRights from humbler paths of frugality and\nprinciple into the dazzling vortex of higher\npatronage, honors, and emoluments.
0a1d7cb369237707914bd19142ad1f6f THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1907.2972602422628 43.994599 -72.127742 Many reports are afloat as to\nNiles' condition, but the attend-\ning physician says he is doing\nwell and there is nothing to pre-\nvent his entire recovery. If he is\nindicted by a special jury a spe-\ncial term of Orleans county court\nwill be held in May.\nThe quarterly meeting of the\ndirectors of the National Life In-\nsurance company was held April\nOth at the home office, Motpolier.\nThe directors present were Gov-\nernor Fletcher D. Proctor of\nProctor, J. G. MeCul lough of\nBennington, W. W . Sticknev of\nLudlow, W. P. Dillingham, J. A.\nDeBoer, J. B. Estee and II. M.\nCutler of Montpelier. The deatli\nof George G. Benedict, for many\nyears a director of the company,\nwas announced by the president\nand United Stales Senator W. P.\nDillingham was appointed to\nprepare TP suitable memorial of\nColonel Benedict to be presented\nat June meeting of the direc-\ntors. George Briggs presented\nresolutions on the recent death of\nCol. Fred E. Smith, a director of\nthe company, and the same were\nunanimously adopted.\nDeputy United States Marshal\nF. II . Chapman, of Rutland, lias\none of the best collections of Am-\nerican coins to be found in New\nEngland. He has devoted his col-\nlecting principally to half dollars\nand large copper cents and has\nnearly a full set of the former\nand a specimen of the latter for\neach year they were issued. The\ncollection has been frequently\nsought after by numismatists\nand Mr. Chapman frequently re-\nceives offers for the coins. .The\nhalf dollars are particularly fine,\neach specimen being almost as\nperfect as the day it left the\nmint. There is a half dollar for\neach year they were issued, 1704\nto 1007, except the year 1700\niind 1707 which
701a28e6ae17d9088ae8f6f3f7cad6ed THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9685792033495 39.261561 -121.016059 In fact a stranger is much disappointed,\nwho goes into one of these cash-factories,\nthat be doesn't see the production of dust or\nnuggets fair and clean in some portion of\nthe establishment. When I first heard the\nroar of the stampers of the quartz-mill in\nNevada, and saw men shoveling the rock,\nin pieces like eggs, under tbe crushing-irons\nthat pounded them speedily to powder, I\nsupposed that I could bo taken at onoe to\nthe point in the mill where tbe dust was\nsteadily falling or settling, so that, each\nhour, the yellow profit could be seen. I\nimagined that it was something like the\nYankees machine which took in the live\npig atone end, and turned out sausages\nand scrubbing-brashes at tbe other. But\none may search a whole day through a \nthat is crushicg fifty tons of very rich ore,\nand scarcely detect anywhere tbe color of\ngold. When the stampers crush the rock\nthe powder is mixed with water, and the\nmilky fluid is dashed against the sieve-like\nscreen, through which it passes into a box\noutside that connects with long sluice ways\nleading at last out of tbe mill. Traps are\nset for the gold that is contained in the\nwhite fluid as goon as it passes from tbe\nstampers through the first screen. These\ntraps are quicksilver and blankets. In\nsome mills quicksilver is placed plentifully\nunder tbe huge pestles themselves, or in\nthe first box through wbiab the dissolved\nrock pa»ses, and most of tbe gold is caught\nby it, through chemical affinity, thore. Then\ntbe blankets, spread in tbe sloping sluice-
1ed98d403afd96a7bfc439c3d0b4a04c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.203551880945 41.004121 -76.453816 qiiautltlrs, nnd tho person regain utrcngtn.\nthis Is the tinunnd only plan to eiuo Cotisuinn.\nHon, mid It a person Is very bad, lr the lungs uru\nnot cntltely ifi'stioyed.nr even II 11110 luug Is\ngone, II there lseuuugli vitality IcH In the\nother to heal up, there is hope,\nI hao seen ninny persons cured with only ono\nsound lung, Uvo nnd enjoy lllo tn n g.iod uia nge.\nThis Is what sclienclt's .dedlc'lnes will do to ciiru\nConsumption, They will clean out tho Mom vh,\nsweeten nnd stieuglbeu II, get up u good inges-\ntion, nnd glvoNaturo the usslntnnca sho neeu.s to\nclear tho syntciu or nil tho disease that is lit the\nlungs, whatever tho lorm may be.\nIt Is important that whllo using Bcheuck's\nMedicines, euro should bo exercised not to tttlco\ncold; keep lndoors lu cold damp weather;\nnvold night ulr, nnd take outdoor uxerclso ouly\nIn n genial nntl warm sunshtno.\nI wtiili It distinctly understood thatwhcuT rec-\nommend n putlentto bo cnrelul tn regard to talc-\ning cold, whllo using my Medicines, a do un lor a\nspecial rcasou. A man who has but partially re-\ncovered Irom tho ellVelsorn bad cold is fur mow\nliable to a relapse, than ono who bus been entire-\nly cured; and it Is precisely tho uurno In regard\nto Consumption, So loug us tho ltiugs nruiuit\npcrteolly heiiled.Justbulong Is thero imtnlneut\ndanger of u lull return of tho disease, lionco It\nIs that I so btrenuoiibly caution pulmonary pa-\ntients nimlnst exnoslni: thomsolves Lout. nim\nphero that Is not eenlai and pleasnnt. Coullrm-e- d\nConsumptives' lungs nro a uutrw of sores,\nwhich 1110 icust cuuugu ui mmospner.. will
97a5fd1d0bcc21f99e9d78dae36c114d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.6926229191965 41.681744 -72.788147 two lusty young golfers decided that\nserving ai professionals at a club\nand playing In tournaments a couple\nor times a year was not conducive to\nchampionship golf and they resigned\ntheir positions to start on a "career."\nOne of them. William Meninorn,\nof 8t Louis, Mo., last week,' won the\nwestern open title with a score of\n298 for 7S holes at Calumet Country\nclub and today the other, Leo Dlegel,\nof Washington, has the Illinois open\nchampionship to his credit, having\nfinished four rounds on the Glen\nFlora course at Waukcgan in 294.\nAlthough both had shone well In\ntournaments for several years; neith\ner had been able to finish in, first\nplace In leading events. Dlegel, who\nlearned his golf largely while serv -l n- g\n Walter Hagen at a Detroit\nclub, had been In the prize list sev-\neral times and had won the Canad-\nian open some' time ago. Mehlhorn\nhad done about as well lifter serving\nas professional in Chicago; Tulsa,\nShreveport and Bt. Louis, but today\nthey felt they had vindicated their\ntheory after taking two Important\ncontests within a week.\nThe field in which they came out\non top was composed of some of the\nworld's best golfers, including Jock\nHutchison, formerly British open\ntitllst, and Chick Evans, who still\nholds the record of 286 for the na-\ntional open. In the western, Dlegel\nfinished well up with 304, while In\nwas third with 298. ,\nMany of the professionals who\nhave been competing In the two\nevents-wil- l
8e58e2afff0b1bc7218b8793a242e18f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.957650241601 39.513775 -121.556359 n N the iriattet of'be declaration of certain streets in\nS tlie i arlton tract in be highway». and lo alter Hie\nn id to McConnell* Ferry, Il is hereby ordered that\nIt, • present road running from the termination ol\nit. n|. Robinson and Montgomery streets In Hie town\nor'i iroville hi timelier Raneli in said county, lie. and\nit same is hereby declared vacated as a public high-\nw.y And It Is furllier or,h red that tie- said Hird,\nMontgomery and Robinson sire's ol said town--l\n(Iroville. be extended as public highways across the\ntract of hind known ns the Carlmu Tract, and ad\ny tin tug said low uof t trovd le. Paid cut i n irit iolis id\nbird. Robinsll and Montgomery street to bo sixty\nsix foot in width, and extending in direction* parall, I\nwiih each other, according to the plan or servoy of\nsaid Carlton Tract, made by M. 11. Curley. And il is\nfurther ordered that Hie street marked Fourth Ave-\nnue. according the plan and survey of the said\nCarlton Tract lie. and the sumo is hereby declared to\nbe a public lugliway—the said A venin to be sixly six\nfeel ill width, and extending across said tract ol I uni.\nAnd il is further ordered that so mud. ol the First,\nSecond. Third, Fifth Sixth, Seventh nod I ghtli Av-\nenues, as lie between Robinson anil Montgomery\nstreets, according lo the plan or survey of said M. 11.\nFarley of said Carlton Tract now on Hie in the offi-e\nof the county Recorder of said county, he, and the\nsame are hereby declared to l<e piddle highways, all\nof said highways to be sixty feel iu width. And il\nis further ordered that the re id now laid out from the\ntvrmllMilioti Of the sayp ( Robin*on Street, nines\nHie Butcher Rauch, toils jnnclV.n with itu old road\nbe, and the same is hereby declared a public high\nway,said highway lobe sixty six feel iu width.\nAttest l lie foregoing a true cop).
08b065834ef833510902102e9ba60cdc PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1890.732876680619 39.756121 -99.323985 Saturday if nothing happens and we\nexpect to do a very good business.\nWe like the country full as well if\nnot better than we expected to. The\npeople here are very pleasant and\nsociable, much more so than I expect-\ned to find them. Although there are\nsome men here that have more than\none woman it is not publicly known\nand poligamy is a thing of the past.\nI had a good view of the country\nfrom Ogden to this place and you\nbetter believe that it . makes a man's\nheart glad to see such a productive\ncountry after leaving sunny Kansas.\nThe Jordan Valley, I would judge, is\nabout 12 miles wide and about 40\nmiles long and is irrigated from Utah\nLake, the water taken direct from the\nlake through ditches on each side of\nthe river Jordan. American Forks is\n3 miles off Utah Lake, the lake being\nabout 36 miles long and has no inlet\nwith the exception of a large artesian\nspring in the middle of the lake, it\nbeing sufficient to irrigate the coun-\ntry above mentioned.\nAmerican Fork claims about 3,000\n and I will presume to say that\nthere are that many hay and grain\nstacks within the incorporation. It\nlooks strange to see so "much grain in\ntown but it is here all the same. They\nhave all kinds of grass that I ever\nsaw, but alfalfa appears to take the\nlead as they cut 3 and 4 crops a year.\nAs for fruit there is nearly every\nvariety that is grown in any country.\nI will venture to say that there is\nenough fruit within the incorporation\nof American Forks to fill the Court\nHouse square from the sidewalks\nover the top of the court house with-\nout exageration.\nThe people only work about 4 and\n5 months of each year and not very\nhard then. Everyone appears to\nhave plenty of money and no one in\ndebt, and are the happiest set of peo-\nple I ever saw. About the first thing\nthat met my eye Sunday morning af-\nter I got up was a bulletin displayed\non the church, "A Grand Ball, given\nror tne benent of the Sunday School.\nGood music by the string band will\nbe in attendance."
00ba96e85d4a87f079e8bf4f0bbf40cf THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1899.0315068176053 46.601557 -120.510842 to crOH eoinn larue bodjr of water that ia\nknown for its mu;l:in-H, ami that would\n(five tne the opportunity to (tobb the In-\ndian ocean and perhaps the Red nea,\nwhich is said to he the hottest place on\nthe face of the earth. Then just think\nwhat a vrrnmi trip it would he, very nearly\naround the world ! The major (Weieen-\nburg) of our battalion gayg that our com-\npany hUihlh aa L'"o<l a chance, if not bet-\nter, than any company in the regiment.\nHe sari our company is the favorite\namonx the ranking nHicers. It ih said\nthe Ohio in to carry prinonern home to\nSpain, un I of course there will have to\nbe about two companies X" as ifuards.\nI have enjoyed the voyatrn immensely.\nI have plenty of ttood, interesting\nreading all the time, and 1 think it in the\nbeet May for one to make time pass fast,\nand it has passed fast, too. It does not\nseem two days since we lelt 'Frisco, and\nhere it has been four weeks today lark-\ning one day. ThiM is Thanksgiving day\nto üb, but yesterday was to yon. You\nsee we have passed over the 180th par-\nallel went of Ureenwiih and thereby pass\ning into the longitude PHHt of Oreenwich,\nwhich let Hub one day ahoa 1.\n1 don't suppose I had unite «o Rr.od a\ndinner as you fnlk» bad, NeverthtltW, I\nhail a very good one. We had apple\nsauce, canned j»llip» and what the cook\ncalled "plum hntf," which is a larjje onke\nmade of fruits.
06b82fdb439c4d37f74c254b8fff9701 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.3538251049888 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described real estate, viz:\nAll that certain lot or piece of land\nwith a two-story brick dwelling house\nthereon erected, known a » No. 1033 Pop­\nlar street, situate In «aid city of Wil­\nmington. bounded and describ d «s fol­\nlows. to wit:\nBeginning at a point on the westerly\nside of Poplar street at -the distance of\nseventy-five feet one Inch southerly from\nthe southerly side of Eleventh street and\nat the middle of the brick division wall\nbetween this and the adjoining brick\nhouse on the north; '«hence westerly par­\nallel with Eleventh street and passing\nthrough the middle of said division wall\nsixty-eight feet to -the easterly side of a\nfour feet wide alley running from Tenth\nto Eleventh streets; thence southerly\nalong said side of said a.ley and parallel\nwith Poplar street fourteen feet ten \nches to corner; thence easterly parallel\nwith Che first described line and Eleventh\nstreet and passing through the middle\nof the brick division wall between this\nand the adjoining brick house on the\nsouth, sixty-eight feet to the westerly\nside of Poplar street aforesaid, and thenco\nthereby northerly fourteen feet ten In­\nches to the place oY beginning, bo the\ncontents thereof what thev may, with the\nfree use und privileges of the said four\nfeet wide alloy in common with others en­\ntitled thereto forever. Subject neverthe­\nless to an equitable share of the coats,\ncharges and expenses of keeping »aid al­\nley In repair\nSeized and taken in execution as the\nproperly of David J. Reinhardt, executor\nunder the last wtll and testament of\nHenry M. Butler, deceased, mortgagor,\nunn^Mary F. Butler, surviving mortgagor,\nana to be sold by
2724bdb606eed6d44f9df937d9ef678c THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.2397259956874 40.419757 -77.187146 Washington, D. C, March 23, 1881 .\nThose who are here urging as extra session\nof Congress, hare received several severe set-\nbacks lately in the shape of protests from'\nleading commercial cities of tbe Union to the\nFrealdent, against a called session, it being\nmaintained that it wonld paralyze basinets,\nunsettle va'.aes, and be dlsastrons to tbe wel-\nfare of th country. For several days past\nthere has been a strong Impression that tbe\ncalled session was a foregone conclusion ) but\nlast night it was tbongbt that the probabilities\nin favor of it are greatly lessened, and some\ngo so far as to state positively that the idea\nwas given up at yesterday's Cabinet meeting.\nl tie most powerful arguments thns far given\nfor an extra session has been advanced by\nSecretary Blaine, who puts the question to the\nPresident in this query i Do yon want the\nOreenbackers to go into a campaign with the\ncry that a Republican President vetoed a bill\nIn the Intereits of tbe National banks J Mow\nSecretary Blaine happens to hail from a State\nwhere the greenback element has probably\nmore strength than in any of the other States\nof the Union, and he fully appreciates that\nthis club can be used by them in the State of\nMaine quite effectually. It can also be nsed In\nOhio, Indiana Wisconsin. Of the Cabi-\nnet, Beoi oiry Blaine, it is understood, is the\nmost earnest champion of the special session.\nSecretary Windom, on the other hand, Is quite\nlukewarm In the matter, If not positively dis-\ninclined to the project of an extra session.\nThose who oppose an extra session, notably,\nRepresentatives Robeson and Keifcr take the\nground that If tbe session Is called for the\npurpose of passing the funding bill, that it may\nbe, a bill no better in terms can be got through\nthe House, than the bill vetoed by President\nBayes. Mr. Kelfer is, perhaps, troubled with\na little modesty, for if the session be called\nshortly he will be Speaker.\nWhen.the Senate met yesterday Mr. Voorhees\noffered the following resolution : Resolved,\nThat the hostile attitude assumed by the Na-\ntional banks toward the refunding of tbe\nNational debt at a low rate of interest, and the\nrecent attempt to dictate the legislation of\nCongress on that subject, are contrary to the\nbest Interests of the people, and well calculated\nto excite, their alarm for the future. Several\nSenators raised the point that the resolution\nbeing of general legislation 1 out of order at\nthis time. Senator Voorhees maintained to the\ncontrary and gave several precedents. The\nwhole matter, howover, went over nntll\nat the suggestion of Senators Merrill and\nConkllng.
ef1083c01aeb56c2a5089100b3034d74 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.83698626966 31.960991 -90.983994 The New \\ork Locos. A Van Boren would be giving “hire and salary” for\nmeeting was held in ^he Park, New lork |ayjßg onerous restrictions upon us.----\non Monday week. I he I ribune says that However wise it might be in Congress to\nsome of Mike Walsh s men had taken break up any restrictions that might be\npossession of the stand; and as a Mr. established between the several Stales of\nNewman, n watchman in the custom tj,0 unj0n, did such exist, no one, we\nhouse, attempted to call the meeting to ihink would say that it would be just or\norder, ne was hurled down by some one pr0per for j|,0 national legislature to\nwho nominated C. P.White lor presi- abolish those restrictions in one State,\ndent. He was elected. J hos . N . Carr without doing the thing in all. Just soin\nthen attempted to read a string of résolu- regpect to foreign trade. However wise\ntions, hut they were snatched from him jj might to break up the restrictions\nand torn in pieces, and a general row sue- upou tradCf ag iuioplcd in all nations, it\nceeded. Meantime a messenger was woujd be gross error to repeal them in\ndespatohed to the Plebian office for a new one^ and depriye her of her benefits of\nset. Tranquility was partially restored trade with any of the rest. That nation\nand Mr, Carr read the resolutions. I hey wj|| fajj behind Che rest of the commercial\nrespond to the proceedings of the Syra- world which adopts a theoretical system\ncuse convention,glorify the Sage of Lin- Qf trade, and deprive her legislature of\ndenwold, and speak tolerably well of Mr. power to protect her own citizens for fear\nCalhoun and other Lofocofoco aspirants. 0f infringing upon speculative ideas She\n1 hey were passed by a large majority, wiil sacrifice the dearest interests of socie-\nMr. Carr then attempted to make a spoech tv to a figment of the imagination.\nbut onlv succeeded bv reason of the noise.
3f95afb2a18e4b7856d37e6351301357 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.632513629579 58.275556 -134.3925 Mr. W. L. Brown made a trip to Taku\nInlet yesterday on the launch Pacific\nof Juneau and brought home a load of ,!\npebbles to be used in the experimental\nplant now under construction.\nThe fourth annual ball given by the\nTreadwell Fire Department on last\nMonday evening at the Treadwell club\nwas a perfect success in every way,\neach little detail having been carefully\nplanned and carried out. To the deco-\nrating committee much praise is due\nfor tfce beautiful and artistio appear¬\nance of the hall, which when animated\nby the dancers and strains of most\npleasiug music, made the on-looker\nthink he was having a peep into fairy\nlaud. At midnight it was announced;\nthat refreshments were ready and the I\nguests oue aud all were piloted to the\nlargest dining room on the Pacific\nCoast (the Treadwell boarding house)\nmeasuring forty by oue hundred aud\nsixty feet without pillar or post to ob-\nstruct the view. And behold, the\nmost beautiful, entrancing sight; cell-\ning and sides festooned with bunting,\nand red firemen's rosettes scattered\npromiscuously amoug the Stars aud\nStripes under the subdued glare of \nelectric globes; here was a banquet, a\nspread for fully five huudred people at\none sitting. The guests were ushered\nto their seats by a detailed squad of\nuniformed firemen, where a9 might\nhave been expected from our caterer,\nMr. T. A . Tubbs, a greater surprise was\nin store for them. Mr. Tubbs n»ver\ndoes things by halves but always seems\nto make the present better than any-\nthiug preceding. There was a center-\npiece on erery table, consisting of th«\nregulation miuers gold pan, filled with j\nfruits of all descriptions, a watermelon\neot on end in the bottom of the pan\ntopped otf with a pineapple and ear- j\nrounded by orangey apples, bananas\nand other fruits too numerous to men¬\ntion, among which was interwoven\nAlaska ferns and berries. The picked\nmeat of five hundred and fifty pounds\nof chicken was couverted into one of\nthe most palatable salads ever set be¬\nfore mau. There were also potato sal¬\nad, Alaska grown lettuce selad, sliced\ntomatoes, cucumbers, olives and other\nrelishes, sliced ham, ohipped potatoes,\nhot buscuits, pumperniokle, cheese, j\ncakes, doughnuts, coffee, tea and ice\ncroam.
0bec70605566261c6d32a4db501d3a00 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.7136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 ,lThl8 sophbra derives ranch, perhaps ei\nthe whole, of its currency from the as- w\nlumptlon that there Is some omnipotent G\nmd sacred supremacy pertaining to a L\n9a&.to each State of our Federal Union, ri\n3ur States have neither more nor less ai\npower than that reserved to them in the si\nUnion by ,the Constitution, no one q\n)f ihem ever having been a State\nyut of the Union. The original tl\n>nes passed into" the Union' even before o\n;hey cast off their British colonial de- fi\naendence, and the new ones each came a\nnto the Union direptly from a condition e\n)f dependence, excepting Texas. And f(\njven Tex^is, in It* temporary independ- ft\nrace, was never designated a State. The a\nlew ones only took the designation of v\nStates on coming into the Union. While tl\n;hat name, was first adopted for the old a\n)nes in and by the Declaration of Inde- tl\nsendence. Therein the 'United Colonies' \n* e re declared to be 'free and Independ- n\nant States;' but, even then, the object q\nplainly whs not to deelare-thelr Independ- n\nrace of paet anotl^r, or. of the Onion, but, g\nllrectly the contrary, as their mutual g\npledge, and tbeir mutual action, before, ti\ntt the timn, and afterward, abundantly\nihow. The express plighting of faith by.\nstch and all of the original thirteen, in\nthe' articles of Confederation, two years\nlater, that the Union shall be perpetual, Is\nmost conclusive. Having never been\nStates, either In substanco or in name,\nmttidt of the Union, whence this magical\nomnipotence of 'States rights,' asserting a\nclaim of power to lawfully destroy the\nUnion itself? Much is said about the\n'sovereignty'of the States; but the word, c\neven, ia.not in tba Rational Constitution,\nnor, M la believed, In any of the State\nconstitutions. What is 'sovereignty' in\nthe political soma of the term? Would it\nbe wrong to define it 'a political
1a6ba6aae54e432127d2c9076219af16 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.519178050482 39.261561 -121.016059 Nevada, as . In the 1 istiict Court of the Utc\nJudicial Idstrict of said Stale.\nT he People of the State of California to (5. R .TAle\nLOB. Greeting :\nYou me hereby summoned to fit'] ear and *nt»sr\nto the complaint of S. H. DlKtMAN. filed ngainst\nvou. within ton day a from the service ol this wm,\nif served on you inthis county, and within twntw\ndavs it served on vou in this J istiict and nutoftbu\ncountv. and within forty days if served on jrouu\nthis Mute and out of this 1 isti ict. in an action coin\nmetreed on llie 18th day id April, a. r>. lftll,'s\nsaid t'milt to obtain a decree ol tills Court forth\nforeclosure oia ceriain mortgage, biaiiug datetk*\nlJtli day ol Octi her A p. 185'.'. exicufed l y the w'4\ndefendant to plait]tiIT. and lor the sale of the prem:\ns*s tl eiein. and in satd complaint particularly bus\ntinned mol descriin d and the application of thetrsm-\nevs ailsing horn sutdi rah* to the jay mental tin\namount due on foi r certain pronii-sory netrtet\nPirth in said complaint. made and delivered tooM\n the duiendant hrming even date with\nsaid mortgage nr.d thereby iutended to be recura 1\nto wit: The sum of$1,500, with ii.trrest then*\nfrom the lhth day «>f October a. ii . 1869 . at tin! n«\nof two per cent, per month 1ill yaid ; ai d ifany (idr\nciency shall remain alter u[ plying all ol said mown\npro](:iy so applicable thereto, then that 1 hint!?\nmay have execution therelor against the said dete&c\nant al-o that said defendant ami all and every [«\nson claiming through • r under defendant subMipietii-\nly to the date of plaintiffs mortgage and the cum\nnienccinent of this action, may be barred and foa\nclosed of all right, claim, hen and equity of redemp\ntion in and to the said mortgaged premises, or ar.«\npart tlieieof. and for such other and further wM\nor both in the 1 tertii.- es as may be just and ot/uila\nble And you are hereby notified that if you tail t,\nanswer said coni|daint as herein directed, plaintiff\nwill lake judgment against you then for l>y default\ntogether w ith all costs ot suit, and counselfeesintl»\nsum of $150 ami also de
149cdff609273d19af4232033cb5de8d THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.0863013381531 32.408477 -91.186777 " One of the first things undertaken\nby the bureau was the establishment\nat Bedford Hills, adjacent to the re\nformatory, of a laboratory of social\nhygiene, under Miss Davis' direction.\nIn this laboratory it is proposed to\nstudy from the physical, mental, social\nand moral side each person committed\nto the reformatory. This study will\nbe carried on by experts and each\ncase will be kept under observation\nfor from three weeks to three months,\nas may be required. When the diag-\nnosis is completed, it is hoped that the\nlaLoratory will be in position to rec-\nommend the treatment most likely to\nreform the individual, or. if reforma-\ntion is impossible, to recommend per-\nmanent custodial care. Furthermore,\nreaching out beyond the individuals\ninvolved, it is believed that thus im-\nnortant contributions may be made to\n fuller knowledge of the conditions\nultimately responsible for vice. If\nthis expeMiment is sucessful the prin-\nciple may prove applicable to all\nclasses of criminals and the conditions\nprecedent to crime, and lead to lines\nof action not only more scientific and\nhumane but also less wasteful than\nthose at present followed."\nThat its work might be done intelli-\ngently the bureau employed George J.\nKneeland to make a comprehensive\nsurvey of vice conditions in New York,\nand Abraham Flexner to study the so-\nclal eqil in Europe, and their reports\nare now being prepared. These studies\nwill be followed by others in various\nAmerican citiesl, and it is the hope\nof the bureau that, based upon all\nof them, may be devised a practical\nplan for dealing with the social evil\nIn conclusion Mr. Rockefelle's sttat-
2124d31389866f492f156f56487c2f20 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.6871584383223 39.745947 -75.546589 i'Yenchmon—so it was generally\ncoded—make fairly good husbands in tho\nhands of such exceptionally clover, prac-\nI leid American girls who * know how to\nkeep their husbands perpetually amused\nand at tho sarao time know how to keep\ntheir lord and masters meddlesome family\nconnections at a respectful distance.\nHard of execution as those conditions\nappear, tlie Frenchmen seemed to lip tho\nscales in that they were unanimously de­\nclared to bo well worth scheming for,\nsince they display great resources of wit\nand amiability in their intercourse with\nfair American girls, whom they treat with\nthe same “sans-geno” they are apt to treat\ntheir own married women with.\nBut tho very best men to be courted by\n—a nd yet tho least worth having—it\ndeclared, wore tho scions of tlie old Ital­\nian nobility. Respectfully devoted, ex­\npert in tlio art of ardently expressing this\n without anpearing inane\nridiculous—those were surely gifts not\nto bo treated lightly by girls, no matter\nhow frank or giddy in their talk; but 22\nhusbands. Italians were on tho spot flatly\ndeclared not worth having.\nNever having yet heard aught to tho\ndetriment of Italian husbands and heads\nof families as a class and condition of\nmon, 1 was considerably taken aback by\nauch a sweeping declaration. In consul\noration of my ignorance, however, I was\nforthwith informed by the pertost aud\nmost fascinating disputant of our party,\nthat "Italians were not worth having. ”\nsimply on account of their being a regular\ndrug on tho matrimonial market.\n“Why, liiere is scarce any Italian fruit\nvender to bo found in New York that\nwould not be able to boast of being an\nItalian nobleman; a keeper of a peanut\nstand or a waiter in a restaurant
20322c5e674e5392acef616b7272ac34 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.1926229191965 39.745947 -75.546589 By United Press Leased Special Wire.\nNEW YORK, Marcn ll.— Before\nnight the long anticipated suit will be\ninstituted by Evelyn Nesblt Thaw for\nthe annulment of her marriage to Harry\nK. Thaw, according to statements made\nby Dan O'Reilly, attorney for Evelyn\nand A. Russell Peabody. Thaw's coun­\nsel. The ground for the suit is that\nThaw was insane at the time of mar­\nriage In Pittsburg, April 4, 1906. In\nbringing the suit Evelyn, according to\nto-day's reports has arranged for her\nown future in a financial way. A set­\ntlement of $50,000 will be made on her,\nit is said at once, and when the suit\nis ended an annuity of »15.000 will be\nfixed upon her. Mrs. William Thaw,\nHarrys mother is reported to have\nagreed on this financial settlement.\nHarry Thaw is determined to fight the\nsuit to the bitter end, and this promises\nto make the hearing a complicated one.\nMrs. Thaw, as “next of kin,"\nwill bo made a defendant with her son.\nShe will do all in her power, although\na nominal defendant, to assist Evelyn's\nsuit. Thaws Instructions to Peabody\nto fight to the end are positive and the\nlawyer said today he will carry them\nout.\nWill Be Heard by Court.\nThe annulment proceedings will be\nheard according to present plans before\na justice of the Supreme Court without\na jury. Alienists will probably figure\nprominently as fitnesses and the men\nwho appeared as experts for Jerome in\nThaw's trial will be summoned as wit­\nnesses in Evelyns behalf. The young\nwife will also take the stand, O'Reilly\npositively declares today. Thaw's will,\nwritten the night of his marriage and\nwhich figured as one of the principal\nexhibits in proof of his Insanity at the\nmurder trial will also be introduced.\nOReilly thinks ho will have little dif­\nficulty establlsh'ng facts upon which
b11c59f505f983f57a4ab52a8495e71d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.8479451737696 31.960991 -90.983994 An officer of the U. S . Army, who\nded in the battle of Ressaca de fa Pahna, tells\nthis one to the N. Y . Spirit ol the Times:—\ni here is an Arinv anecdote connected with us\nwhilst in 'Texas which I have never seen in print,\namongst the numerous ones put forth. Whilst\nthe Second Brigade was on the march from Cor­\npus Christi to the Rio Grande, it...\nwild hull, the first of the wild cattle\nseen. Of course all who were mounted at once\nmade chase, much to the chagrin of we who\nwere afoot. It seems that, with the exception oi\nswords, the mounted men were unarmed, so that\nthe bull when tired of running would halt arid\nlook at his pursuers with impunity. Amongst\nthe pursuers was a mounted man, a private "of\nthe 7th Infantry, who had contrived to secure\nCapt. s double barrelled shot gun. loaded\nwith ball and buck, and having brought the bull\nto bay between the brigade and himself, took two\ndeliberate shots right in our faces and eyes,\na matter of course the balls passed immediately\nover the heads of each individual in the brigade,\nand the bull went on his way unscathed.— His\nadversary, however,followed him upclosely, beat­\ning him first with the butt and then with the muz­\nzle, until the animal, enraged beyond endurance,\nturned, and making a couple of plunges over­\nturned horse and rider. Here the dogs came lo\nthe rescue, and the hull took to the chapparel lea­\nving his discomfited prosecutor no doubt relieved.\nA few days after, the wife of our hero (for you j\nmust know he had a wife along) took it into her\nhead to get angry with her better half, and thus\napostolized him.
07999b6fbb61258f37ebb25969c51d52 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.160273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 Savannah, Feb. 28.— There luis been\nlittle work In the business portion of Sa­\nvannah since Tuesday night. It has been\nn ported of continued nervous strain and\nexcitement. Ono thing only has been talk­\ned of, and that the principle of free speech.\nMany telegrams have been received by\nMayor Myers commending him for the\nfirm posit ion he assumed for the protec­\ntion of law anti order and the right of\nfree speech. Slattery has received talo-\ngmms from all parts of the country. Mrs.\nSlattery was booked Ä lecture at Masonlo\ntemple yesterday afternoon. Slattery np-\npllod to the mayor for police protection to\nand from the hall.\nUnder the escort of the chief and lieu­\ntenant of polloo, four mounted aud 12 foot\npolicemen, they were taken to Masonic\nhall. Prior to this the managers of the\nMen's Hebrew association had notified\nSlattery that they would break the con­\ntract and refuse to allow the uso of the\nhall which they had leased, as his lan­\nguage incited to riot endangered the\nlives aud property of citizens. Slattery\nwould not consider the contract broken.\nArriving ut the hall, the |ioUoe refused to\nadmit any ono. Several hundred women\nwere turned away. Slattery and President\nHaas of the Hebrew association become In­\nvolved In a wordy dispute, ami the chief\nput Slattery under arrest, hut released\nMm, as Haas declined to enter any charges.\nAfter Slattery had waited an hour for a\nlawyer It was decided that he and his w ife\nWould go hack to the hotel.\nThe police were ordered In line and the\nmounted officers directed to clear the\nstreets. Hundreds of people ran wildly\nubuut the streets to get a glimpse of Slat­\ntery and his wife. A crowd of women who\nhad been grouped just outside of the curb\non Hull street divided Into halves, one of\nwhich went on each sldo of the linn. As\nthe ex-priest and his wife passed they were\nhissed loudly and spat at. The police had\ntholr hands full to keep the passageway\nclear.
08bba0de2126443591fc82c5212a6a47 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.7904109271942 40.063962 -80.720915 on tbo National Koad at tho extreme end of\nno Held lying eaal of the Kultoa 1'aper Mill, and\noouuded iu follows: Beginning *t the north-\nwo-tcru corner of mid field, thence uutli twenty-\neight and a half degrcoa weal furty-ouo j*)!ei, ten\ntiu»s loaatono, ou the bank of Wheellug Creek;\niheuconortu forty hi von and a fourth degrees west,\nlive jk>1'8 and twenty one itnka to a none; llieuce\nuortli twenty-eUht and a half degree* east, forty-\notio polls to a stako at the fouco by mud road]\nthence loutb forty-nine aud three-fourths dogreea\neabt tlx pole*, aud twenty-eight Uuka to tbo begin*\nuiug, eoutHiiilug one acre, two roads, and t»outy*\n. ix poles, subject, however, to au a«r» etneut be*\ntween Daniel oteeuralaud wife and John W.Berry,\nabout certain slreeta aud roads therein mentioned\nwhich agreement la of record lusaidCouuty of Ohio,\naid leal estate will bo oflcrtd aaa whole, and In\nthree imucoLi, tho tlr*t being the hotel properly\n(routing on tho National Itoad, aud extending\n to a Htreet In the roar; tho toooud being tho\nhomestead uf aald LewiaOrtbs and tbo third the\nfactor/ or slaughter-houao of aald Ortb. extaudlng\nU» Wheeling Creek. A platof said parcels may be\n« i '0 " hi HiiMiflleeof tho Clerk of tho County Court\nof Ohio Couuty.\nTkKjje yjt HALE: Onc-fonrth and a« much\nmote aa the pur hater uuy elect to pay, In caah on\n(Jiodaynf *alc, the bilanooln three emsl Install*\nmenu at oue, two aud throo years, uoUsa bearing In*\ntcrot from uie duy ol aale to bogiveu (or (be ue*\n(erred payment*, and tho title t be retained until\npayment In full. The payment of the purchase\nmoney shall bo further aecurod by personal aocur*\nIty ou tho uotee therefor, to bo approved by the\ncommissioner*, er at tbo elocUon of the purciiaaer.\nby uollclcfl of Insurance ou the bulldlnga on aald\nproperty payable to laid commissioners lu such\namount aa they aball require, and lnued.by com*\npaules to bo approvod by them.
0c882fb2f0521c19478d5322b22f438d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.9219177765094 40.441694 -79.990086 Philadelphia Record ( Dem.): Tbe Presi-\ndent's message to Congress has been composed\nunder circumstances of irritation and difficulty,\nand it is chieflj noteworthy in showing how un-\nable the writer is to adjust himself to the polit-\nical situation.\nPhiladelphia Evening Bulletin (Rep.):\nIt is almost the same message In spirit and pur-\npose, if not in phrase, as that which General\nHarrison wrote a year ago. In this sense it\ndoes not indicate that the President has\nbroadened as a party leader.\nPhiladelphia Inquirer (Rep.): The feat-\nure of tbo message is tho backbone displayed\nby the President. In spite of the Democratic\nwhirlwind ho stands just where he did before\nthe elections, unless indeed, be has advanced a\nstep or two upon the subject of reciprocity.\nNew York Commercial Advertiser (Ind.):\nIf the Congress pays any heed tbe voice of\nthe country as expressed in the November\nelections, little will be done except in the trans-\naction of necessary routine business, and the\nenactment of a few minor bills loft over from\nthe last session.\nPhiladelphia Press (Rpp.): The message\nthroughout maintains with earnestness and\nbroad judgment the policy and principles upon\nwhich tbe administration came into power.\nWhat has been done was in pursuance of that\npolicy, and because it was elected on a platform\nrequiring it to do those very things.\nPhiladelphia Ledger (Rep.): But the\nPresident should not let this point escape\nbis view, nor should Congress either, that the\nFederal election bill is the product of most In-\nveterate partisanship, both as to its paternity\nand as to tbe Houso of Representatives that\npassed it. It would fall by the President's own\ntest.
1d76ba006b7382e87426c130efff528e SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.1630136669203 37.53119 -84.661888 A lively legal fight has been started\ndetermine whether Frankfort Ne\ngoes shall be allowed to build a churcb\nopposite the governors mansion\nAt Columbus Ind George Jarre\na ged 20 killed his stepfather Austin\nlalloy aged G2 with an ax Ho WI1S\ndrunk and bad threatened to kill the\noung man and his mother\nHealer Dowlo In Chicago Is dnfyl\ntbe State of Illinois He says he w1l1lro\nto jail a year before he will make pub-\nlic the affairs of his Zlon Bank which\nIt la claimed IB rotten to the core\nMrs Ann H Todd aged 72 wbo\ndied at Cynthlana last week was the\nwidow of Dr George It C Todd who\nwas a brotherof Mrs Abraham LincolnI\nand surgeon In the Confederate arm\nThe suit to establish tho will of Bry-\nant Nelson In the Russell circuit court\nWI1S compromised the woman in the-\nCl1se Miss J McWIlllams to\ntake 8535 both sides paying the coati-\nJose Seraplo an uncle of Agulnalc\nand formerly an Insurgent colonel haa\nlen appointed governor of the pro\nInce of Bulacan by the Philippine com\nlesion The town of Bulacan was\ncbosen as the seat of government\nSuit was filed In the Pulaskl circuit\ncourt by Commonwealths Attorney J-\nN Sharp Sheriff C M Langdon Jam\ningdon Link Hall J A Warr1l1er-\nand I L Warriner stockholders tbe\nimerset National Banking Company\nagainst tbo president cashier direr\ntors and recelrer of the Somerset Na-\ntlonal Banking Company and tb-\nockbolders of tho old Somerset flank\nfn ET Company of Somerset It attempt\nto set aside the transfer of the awcl\nand relieve the National Bank of all-\ntbo obligations Incurred thereby The\npetition charges that the transfer from-\nthe State to the National Bank wa\nfraudulent that prior to July 2 1000-\nthe
01bd005d9d4cfec9f5130d47d6bc26d1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.941256798978 40.063962 -80.720915 Deputy Constable Joseph Moutor\nwhile riding along tho lovee, came upoi\ntho traces of a terrible struggle, i\nlittle further on he found two deac\nbodies. Investigating tho matter furtli\nor Mouton came upon a man badl;\nwounded and nearly dead. The mai\nwas quickly attended by physicians\nand after a time recovered autficientli\nto tell tho following story:\n"My name ia Stephano. Tuesda;\nnight I and two friends, one naraoi\nAntonio I'aloi, and another whoso nam\nI don't know, met four men at th\nFrench markot. The mon, as far as w\nknow, are Luis Lugio, Sabatto Marc\nand two other#, whose names aro ur\nknown. Paloi, our friend and uiysel\nhad just returned from working in Si\nCharles parish, near Colonia postoffict\nUnder promise of Retting us more wor]\nwo left Now Orleans Wednesday nigh\nand took tho train, chocking our bag\nsiago for Convent station. One of th\nfour inon left party; I don't kno\\\nwhy, but suspect that ho was in th\nplot to kill and weakened. When w\ngot to the Lovoo Luigo asked mo wha\ntime it was. I pulled out my watcli\nand, as I replied that it was 10:3C\nLuigo shot mo in tho back. My tw\ncompanions were standing near in\nat the time. Marew stood by tho un\nknown young man who was with mo, an\ntho sixth man, tho stranger, was b;\nI'aloi. As Lugio allot me the sixth ma\ndrew a knifo and stabbed tlio youn\nman near him. Ho fled with his assai\nant in pursuit. Ho stumbled and fe]\nand the man chasing him cut his throa\nfrom car to ear. While this was goin\non Marew crept near I'aloi and slio\nhim through the head. Luigo though\n1 was doad and ran away. The othor\ndid likewise and I crawled to tho fare\nhouso of Mr. Kihn."
038bd6c49c044f5da449d1a6e71944ea PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.9849314751395 40.441694 -79.990086 not an enjoyable festival any more; that those\nwho celebrate it do not do so with any honest\nand sincere jollity. In a way I agree with\ntbem. I am not speaking ot tbe religious side\nof the day, but the secular, ot;conrse. I think\nthe reason the day is not so joyful as it used to\nbe is partly to be found in the expansion of the\ncustom In giving presents. Of conrse the cus-\ntom in itself under proper conditions is most\nlaudable and thoroughly in keeping with the\nbest traditions of tbe day. Christmas ongbt to\noe the festival of charity, ana as far as it is so\nto day I have no fault to find with it. But is\nthe giving ot presents, when it is merely in\ncomplianco with the laws and customs of so-\nciety, often without regard to the real feelings\nof the donor, charity at nil? Tbo giving of\npresents Christmas bas become in many\ncases I know at best a system of exchange. A\nfeels he must give B a present because be knows\nby experience, or thinks it likely, tbat B will\ngive him a present. Too much money Is spent\non tbe presents also. In the old days tbe pres-\nents were merely emblems of good will; now\nthey are often of tbe costliest character. I\nshould say that tbe cost of celebrating Christ-\nmas in the conventional manner bas become so\ngreat as to lay a heavy burden upon tbe spirit\nof tbe averago man, and thus largely to dimin-\nish his capacity for deriving pleasure from tbe\nanniversary which be celebrates. This explan-\nation, of course, does not fit the case ot the\nutterly destitute, who spend nothing on Christ-\nmas, nor the case of the very rich, to whom no\nexpenditure is a burden. But from tbe level of\ntbe well-to-d- o
117868af001bddf00fc0a50773c8ed52 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.8589040778793 39.743941 -84.63662 Recent Ohio Election.\nDemocratic success in Ohio, as\nevery one conversant with the poli\ntics of the state is aware, is contin-\ngent upon indifference or disaffection\non the part of the' Republicans, and\nis possible under no other' circum-\nstances. In other words, the State\nis uniformly Republican on a full\nvote. ; The Republican vote in the\nmost recent of the "off years" was\n249,105 for West in 1877, and 27i,120\nfor Barnes in 1878. The present\nwas regarded as an "off year" until\nthe tragedy at Washington took it\nout of that category. The shot fired\nby Guiteau was not only "a shot\nheard round the world," but it was\nalso a shot which in an instant\nchanged the whole aspect of the po-\nlitical situation in Ohio, and trans-\nformed a result into an im-\npossible one. The largest vote ca9t\non the Democratic side was 288,328\nfor Mr. Bookwalter for Governor,\nand as against the usual light Re-\npublican vote of an "off year," would\nhave elected him by a handsome\nmajority. But an intensified Repub-\nlican sentiment, born not of political\nreasons, but of a natural humsn\nsympathy, brought the vote for Gov-\nernor Foster the. smallest on the\nRepublican side up to 312,735. In\nshort, it was not so much Governor\nFoster as a deceased Ohio President,\nthe idol of his State and the victim\nof a cruel murder, by whom Mr.\nBookwalter unexpectedly found him-\nself antagonized. It must be sur-\nprising to every one, not excepting\nMr. Bookwalter himself, that the re-\nsult was not even more decisive and\noverwhelming.
022bbf04ce287c143b10e74ef4767caf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.5136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 The amount of wealth accumulated bi\nthe British residents seems something\nfabulous. Although only a few thounam\nin number, they have here numeroui\nmagnificent palaces and stately mansions\nami stores, that in extent and variety o\ncostly goods, will compare favorably will,\nthose of New York and London, all o:\nwhich are supported by a handfull o\nEnglishmen. The jewelry establishment\nare especially worthy of remark. A1\nthough the Englishmen receive the pro\nuw, mo nauve.4 »in»eur 10 cio mo ousiness\nThe Hindoos arc certainly the l*n\ndressed people in tho world, the reputa\nHon of the French notwithstanding\nTheir various costumes are all gracefu\nand appropriate. Tho most cotispicuou\npart of their dress is the turban, which i\ndone up in endlciu style*, combination\nand colors. Kven an unfamiliar ev\ncould detect the difference between tL\nvarious castes, both by their dress an\n The noble;} have refined am\nfeminine features, the merchant clas\nhave bit; heads and intelligent faces, th\nSepoys or soldiers and the Coolies, or th\nlowest claw, were clad in rags and tilt!\nThis is truly a "city of kites and crows,\nfhe crows, or rooks, Rather in screamin\nclouds about the housetops, and it is n\nunfamiliar sight to see one of thcr\nperched, like Poo's raven, above you\n"chamber door," eyeing you with the si\nand knowing look peculiar to thei\nxpecie*. The expression "as black as\ncrow" i« not applicable to these bird\nthe greater part of their bodies being\nlight gray, or almost white. Numeroi\nkun uoai id graceiui circles uirouRh it\nair or swoop with querulous screan\nupon Uie garbage thrown into the gutter\nThere are also thousands of sparrows an\nthe adjutant cranes stalk unmoleste\nthrough the streets.
15fdda7dbbfd590481e7ef10a03849f1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.6095890093861 39.745947 -75.546589 The Sixth ward Republicans held two\nseparate meetings last evening, and\nthere promises to be a lively fight tn the\nward The first was hold In the Young\nMons Hepubl'car. Club and was a straight\naat and-ont Higgins affair. The follow­\ning nominations were made: Delegates\nto the Republican State Convention- F\n0, Stidham, William McKinney, W, S\nUiDes, Simeon Hood and John Williams;\nalternates, George Koloiy, J. T. Parker,\nKlwood Stout, Thomas Postlee ai d Wil­\nliam Wiley. Members of the Republican\nFiret District Commlttko—William fl.\nHanna. Harry C Adams, John Wintrup,\nCharles Loud, A II Uoodnow, William\nP Clayton and William Cariu'chael.\nThe Stewart Gould Hanhy Marlin com\nblnatiou met at its headquarters in the\nHea'd building and put tb i following\nmm in the field against Senator Higgins\nand Chairman Rich : Delegates, Ribeil\nC Fraim, George 1. Riley, L Atwood\nXtblcy, Howard Bice, Peter 8. Kenton;\nalt ruatis Joseph H. C Maty, John\nWilliams, James H. Sowell, U 0. Thomas,\nJ H Pierson; members of the First Dis­\ntrict Charles F Bowers, Sam\nnet C. Virtue, Richard L Rider, Wilson\nHelms'ey, John F. Nickle, I. Atwood\nZ bley There was no Interchange of\ncourtesies between the rival meetings\nDelegat«*, Frank Woolley, J. h . Ains­\nworth, W. H. Johnson, J E Martin,\nDavid Jefferson; alternates,Hourv Robin­\nson, Edward D Spencer, B.mjamiu\nTomlinson. C . W. McOanlley ami Joseph\nH Scansv; committeemen, Robert I\nKimble, George P. Pulllip». W . Frank\nPorter, W. H . Ainsworth, George W\nPhillips, Dr. C . Bussell Jakes. John U\nWoodlane were the nominations made\nby the Fifth ward Republicans; while the\nNinth ward nominations were as follows:\nDelegatej, Dr. E . G . Shortlidge, A B\nMcPherson Johnson, Elmer C Pierce,\nJame-i Lynch, Anson A Maher; First\nDistrict Committee: First district,Joseph\nCargill, William It. Gaodley, A B Me\nPheraon Johnson ; Second district, E G\nShortlidge, George H Turner, and Ed\nward L Turner; Third district, John W\nJohnson, George Bauson: Fourth district,\nFrancis S Bradley and Thomas C. Junks ;\nFifth district, Robert K. Brown.
2fd7055c84333e0e7551a6a3e6815919 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.7438355847285 40.735657 -74.172367 party as well as the government from\nIhe humiliation of having his own party\nrepudiate ills personal assurance ns to\nthe meaning of the plank-aye, more.\nIlls pledge to the people as to what\nshould he done under It, made in his\ncapacity as chosen lender.\n"The Republican national machine,\nhowever, would have none of it. They\nstood faithfully by the trusts, the cor-\nporations and the Individuals who were\ntariff bcnetlclarles and against the peo-\nple. Do you think it was easy for the\ncoke-bearing senators to do this in\nthe face of the earnest and honest ap-\npeal of the President; In the presence\nif Ihe denunciations of other Repub-\nlican senators who tore In pieces the\nflimsy excuses which the Regulars in-\ncoked, at the same time mocking them\nas the of those who would\nreast on the people? Do you think\nthat they did not shiver in their polltl-\n■al boots as they read the demands\nof the press and the piPadings or their\nconstituents to keep the faith and re-\nlieve the people from the oppressive\nburdens that rest upon them so un-\njustly? It presented undoubtedly the\nmost trying situation In their several\npolitical lives.\n“Then why did they do it. do you\nask? 1 answer they did it in obedience\nto the demand of a corrupt national\nRepublican machine which lies for\nyears traded away tho rights of the\npeople in return for money used to\nstrengthen the machine and buy votes\nIn doubtful congressional districts and\nill dose .States, A course of dealing\nlong in vogue, which Is responsible for
033e68a77402e0754d5d6acf2e0fb3da THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.5109588724 40.618676 -80.577293 Harry Haislop, L. U. 98, Chairman;\nElvin Applegate, L. U . 85; George\nGrimm, L. U. 6; W. R. Sheets, L. U.\n98; Sam T. Allison, L. U. 99.\nSanitary Price List Committee\nCharles Zimmer, L. U . 45, Chair­\nman; Albert Davies, L. U . 45; Hugh\nMcCauley, L. U . 45; Charles Temple-\nton, L. U . 45; Elijah Watson, L. U.\n45; Charles O'Neil, L. U . 50; Ray Ice,\nL. U. 77; W. P. Thome, L. U. 77; Gus-\ntav Jacobsen, L. U . 89; Harry Mehl-\nman, L. U. 133; John Smith, L. U. 133.\nGeneral Ware Price List Committee\nJoshua Chadwick, L. U . 12, Chair­\nman; Shell Johnson, L. U. 4; P. H.\nClemens, L. U. 5; George Grimm, L.\nU. 6; Ben Jones, L. U. 9; Charles\nPodewel, L. U. 9; Thomas Cartwright,\nL. U. 10; Fred McGillivray, L. U. 10;\nGeorge Salsberry, U. 12; George\nHeckathom, L. U. 16; Woodrow Cron-\nin, L. U. 17; Fred Ware, L. U. 18;\nWarren Kridler, L. U. 21; Robert Mil-\nby, L. U . 25; William Watkin, L. U .\n29; Charles Laber, L. U. 31; Richard\nReedy, L. U . 42; Clarence Bostwick,\nL. U. 44; R. C. Larkins, L. U. 44;\nJames Green, L. U. 51; Mattie Mc-\nGill, L. U . 53; Abe Edwards, L. U. 70;\nDale Laughlin, L. U . 86; Lida Smith,\nL. U. 94; Sam T. Allison, L. U. 99;\nGeorge Pace, L. U. 113; Hugh Dailey,\nL. U. 121; Arthur Speakman, L. U .\n121; E. C. Armstrong, L. U . 124; Ruth\nSullivan, L. U. 124; Harold Williams,\nL. U. 124; Floyd Jividen, L. U. 130;\nJames Buchheit, L. U. 131; Willard\nGarner, L. U . 132; Harold Neville, L.\nU. 138; Harry Robinson, L. U . 141 .
3e0b360aa67ce2b01d4d03ff2b6597de DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1917.9904109271943 58.275556 -134.3925 I:> the niimo of tho Territory of\nAlaaka, you arc herby commanded\nlo bo nml appcur In tho nbovo en¬\ntitled court holden at Douglas, In\nhiiIiI Division of said Territory and\nanswer tho complaint filed agnlnst\nyou In tho above ontltled court\nwithin thirty dayti after the com¬\npletion of the period of publication\nand service of thin summons upon\n"ou. and If you fail so to appear and\nnti /«*r for want thereof, tho plain¬\ntiff will apply lo the court for the\nrelief demanded In said complaint,\na copy of which Is filed with the\nCommissioner of the above entitled\ncourt. The relief demanded In said\ncomplaint Is for judgment against\nyou for the sum of Eight and G0-100\n($8,611) dollarn for delinquent (axes\non personal properly owned by you\n the Town of Douglas, with Inter¬\nest thereon at the rate of eight per\ncent per annum, from the first day\nof November, 11)17, and for costs\nand disbursements.\nThe ordor for tho publication of\nthis summons wan made and dated\nthe 20th day of December, 1917,\nand the period of publication of nalil\nsummons Is six weeks, tho llrst pub¬\nlication to be made on tho 21st day\nof December, 1917, and the last\npublication thereof on the lfr»th day\nof January, 1918, and the time\nwithin which you are required to\nappear and nnswer said complaint\nIs on or before tho 2Ctli day of\nFebruary, 1918.\nIn witness whereof, I have here¬\nunto set my hand and affixed the\nseal of my court this 20th day of\nDecember, 1917.
126a82b99a84f65994922ea7d7055cb3 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9959016077212 39.513775 -121.556359 The undersigned, desirous of acquainting those\nwho mav be mifonuiiHte enough to fie similarly nf-\ndieted w fiere a permanent relit fof Iheir sufferings\nuni ho olit iiiiied, feels it his duty to llm* pnhlimv\nexpo-v his sincere u'ralilnde to Hr I. I Czapkay.\nfor toe perniniient recovery of til* health Horne\ndown f.i the distressing symptoms incidi lit to tin\nvicimis practices of nnconlrollnhle passion in youth,\nth pressed in hodv and mind, iinahle to perform even\nllm mo*t trillion duly imposed upon the daily o ora-\ntion* of life. I sought the advice of nmiiv phv*irians,\nwho at tir*l regarded rnv di*i n*e ol tri.li g import-\niince. (ml n'.ii*! after a few vi i i k* and in several in*\n-tauces months, • I their treatment. I h mid to n y un-\nutterable horror, that instead of relief the *voiploins\nhecaum more alarming in their torture, and being\ntlli dlv fold me hi one that theili'ease.hcing confined\nprlneiply in the iirnin. metiieine* would he little\neoiiseipiencu. I despaired of ever regaining my health\nstrength and energy. and a* a lasi resort, ami with\nhat a taint hope, called upon Dr. fznpkav.w ho after\nexamining my case, prescribed son e tin dicine w Inch\nalmost insianily relieved me of the dull pains and\nili//.itu“s in mi head, fnemin ged hy Ibis n -lilt. I\nresolved to place wiy*e'f immi'dlately under hi* care,\nand, liv a strict obedience to his direction* tied ad-\nvice. iny head became clear, my ideas collect■■d. the\nconslant pain in my hack and Brmes. the weakness\nof tin limbs, llie nervinis reunion of my whole syss\ntem on the slightest nliirin or exciteini-nl, the mis-\nanthropy and evil forebodings. the self distrust and\nwant of confidence in o hers, the Incurability lo\n*tndv and wind of resolution, the Inghllnl exciting,\nand'at times pleasurable dreams at nigh' . followed\nI, v involuntary di-chm ge*. have tdl disappeared,and\nin fact, in two months after having consulted the\nI), ,t. r
17dd50774a0dc9c24f0cb2d186a5bcc8 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1896.2336065257539 46.601557 -120.510842 The wives, daughters and sweethearts\nof the members of tbe A. O. U. W. pre-\ncipitated a surprise upon the brethren ot\nthat order at their hall in the Allen\nblock on Monday evening. The boys\nwere about closing the exercises which\nmade Chief of Police Backer a member\nof the fraternity, whon the ball was in-\nvaded by the ladies. The remainder of\nthe evening was spent in having a good\nsocial time and the caring for a fine lunch\nwhich the ladies had not overlooked.\nG. Fife, who is largely interested in\nGold Hillmining claims left on tbe west\nhound train, Sunday, aft.r spending a\nweek in the city. Mr. Fife is preparing\nto take in suitable machinery to his\nmines, wbich include both placer and\nquartz, but will transport it the\nwest side, where considerable work hss\nbeen done on the roads. While here he\nexhibited some fine specimens of gold\nwbich be obtained from a few days run,\njust liefore the winter Bet in, last season.\nThe lecture and steropticon entertain-\nment to be given at tbe opera bouse by\nProf. O. M. Hanscom, Friday evening,\npromises to be well patronized. It is\nunder tbe auspices of the public schools\nto which a portion of the proceeds will\ngo. Yellowstone Park is the subject of\nthe lecture and Prof. Hanscom is so well\nqualified to handle it that he has received\nthe endorsement of the press and public\nwherever he has been, while the officers\nof the Northern Pacific railroad speak in\ntbe highest terms of his ability and bis\nsubject matter.
3a3be243542797a29771a7f2645fda68 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.3082191463725 41.681744 -72.788147 The work of the bureau would be to investigate and classify the var-\nious occupations and to tell the young people about them.\nWhere possible someone who had made good In each occupation would\nbe asked to speak before the school. When this was not possible, it Avould\nbe the Avork of the various members of the bureau to look up the neces-\nsary facts about the occupation and present them to the pupils.\nBy the necessary facts, I mean the cost of training and the rest\nplace to get it. The kind of temperament and ability required; the salary\nto be expected; the advantages and disadvantages, and any other facts\nwhich might help each student to make up his mind whether that was the\nkind of work he would like to take up.\nSome of the talks Avould be in the grammar school and some In\nthe high school. The bureau would have to study the situation in its\ntown and decide such matters accordingly. I should advise that the high\nschool talks be given as early as tha sophomore year, as the choice of a\nhigh school course might be affected by a decision of this sort. I required\nan extra year of preparation because I didn't decide what I wanted to do\nwith myself until my last year in high school.\nBesides giving these talks, the bureau would hold itself ready to help\nany student who cared to come to them for further Information.\nI met a woman Avhose daughter is In her last year at high school, the\nother day, and asked Avhat they were going to do with her when she was\nthrough high school.
1378b8c67a887580d6c37f912e10d9c8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.9493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 atemeut nf last week ihowaouly 38U,\nW of lawful mondy in the hauka.\n» ve tliurt a balance ol$&>,l70,000of to\nlat hu lHH*n distributed from New\nirouglmiit the country wince the t\nIng u( August. This has none to the \\\n>e Nouthweat and the Konth\ncilitatiiiK tiie marketing of the t\nDrk nml cotton crops. Th« elllu*\n2nd all precedent; which is rMpiill,\nunited for from the extraordinary vo\nthe product* sent to the Kasterti\nutn and uIho from their cotnnarat\nIgh price*. It in, however, an inrar\niTe that the currency thus wont to tli\nirior.cornea hack to the seaboard «\nle opening ot the new year; nor is\ntuch exception to the rule, if it lm}i\n>at Uio Hales of western and sout\nroducts to the eiu»t exceed the purcl\n! thoso sections in the eastern mar\nir, in that case, the balance drifts hi\nard for investment or teui|>orary oui\ntent. This year the newer Htates\nerritoriea have received an excep\nlly large amount for their\neyond what they are like!;\ni>endatouce; and aa hanking fact\nre very scarce those districts, we\nipect a certain amount of temporar\nividual hoarding at those remote |«\nhis, however, is an exception to the\nf comparatively little important\nurtain aoiouut ia likely to be kept al\nlie larger trade centres of the \\V«\nleetthe rapidly increasing baukin\nuireinenta of those citiea; and th\nreased activity of trade, and the rl\nrices will naturally call for more m\na the retail transactions of the conni\nirge. But making due allowance for\nbsorptloiw, it will be seen that the\nn immense amouut of currency ilea\n} ilow back to tiie chief financial o\n'ithin'a low weeks. The foregoing fij\nefur ouly to lawful money. Iu adc\n} that, however, a considerable sti\nank notes lias been sent to tho inU\nnd some $10,WW,000 hud been add\ntie hank circulation during the\nlonths. Reasoning from all preueC\nre should conclude from the forej\nlets that 1880 will open with extra\nary facilities for tin expansion of\ntreet o|)erations, whether those of a\nf speculative nature or such as rela\nlie inauguration of solid entorn\nrhich just now
0e1763c3112107af20345eff4d3bf247 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.0863013381531 40.063962 -80.720915 r tivc commercial countries, but especially jial\nr here and in England, tho most successful lw\nfinancial men owe much of that perspicu- j\nnus foresight winch is the Beoreioi meir raj\nsuccess to their quick discernment of the tar\npreeiso poiut of time when the safe level tj,(\n1ms been overpassed and when the tide of l0JJ\nflouting capital is rising too high or sink- ^J]\ning too low for the burden of obligations rcc\n> it is required to lloat. Secondly, there is taj,\n110 doubt, and the proofs have olten been j1(,,\nexpounded in our columns, that in this ^\ncountry, during* and since the war, the tjn\nconversion ot floating capital into fixed crs\ncapital has gone on so rapidly jra\nas to bring us at several criti- jmi\ncal conjectures to the very verge of 0f,\na great financial convulsion. Thirdly, so (jl>;\ngreat been ourjecuperativo strength, ajj\nso rapid our material growth, so active jlt\nour wealth-producing farces, and so rich\n: our sources of industrial and commercial tjic\nprosperity; that, notwithstanding our de- jov\nfcctivc financial system, we have always lur\npassed each crisis with # less of disaster fr0\nthan the most Bangui no observer might tur\nreasonably have looked for. Fourthly, it tj,j\nlias often been pointed out that the disas* SL,t\ntrous Euroj)Can conflict which has de- tjic\nl stroyed the work of centuries and kindled j\namong kindred nations the fires of hate VU1\nterror and fury, which may be quenched\niu the blood of i>eoplcs yet unborn, there fac\nlias been lor us a compensative advantage. t0\nTransatlantic wars have not seldom been jt A\nof use to this country. And now, as here- jlU)\ntolore, one of these benefits has been that t|0]\n'
66d8df12a4ab21585928e88c6454ea9a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8479451737696 40.063962 -80.720915 Their Fine Intellectual Tauten.'Their\nNatural Talent* and Acquired At-1\ntalnmento.What they have Achftev\ne<I in Lc^tcrn and Politics.\nLord Macaulay achieved the'highest\nsuccess, both as a debater in tho House\nof Commons, and as an essayist with¬\nout a'superior, a historian '-without un¬\nequal. Mr. Benj. Disraeli (ind Sir Ed¬\nward Bulwer Lytton' were popular!\nnovelists,' before one "became tho finiiri-.\ncial leader of the Tories, and the Other\na Secretary of State. Earl Russell is\nknown amon£ literary men as the bi¬\nographer of Fox,'and ife a'writer on tlio\nConstitution, Mr. Layard, his col¬\nleague/has written delightful books on\ntravel and antiquities; and is better\nknown*to Americans in that light than\nas a minister- of the CahiueU Mr.\nGladstone, tho versatile Chancellor of\nthe Exchequer, commenced his career\nbv publishing an admirable essay on\nChurch and State, has produced several\nworks on-financed anaTs eminent as a\ntranslator and commentator upon some1\nof tho best Greek classics. Sir Rouu-\ndell Palmer, who is soon to be Lord,\nChancellor;, -ihas recently collected a!\nvolume kit fancied poetry. And last of\n the Earl ofDerby, who has long\nbe6n tlie eloquent ana venerated leader\nof the Conservatiyo party, comos before\nthe world with a rendering into English\nblank verse of Homer's I Iliad, which is\npronounced equally,'by friends and ojp-\nnents, to l>e, tue. finest which has ever\nappeared, not'excepting Pope and Cow-.\nper. Besides thesowe have mentioned,\nthere are not a few English Peers who\nare entitled to tho, epithet, ^yhich some\nbook maker has used, of "noble au¬\nthor*.?' Lord Stanhope, .better known,\nto the reading world as Lord Mahon is,\nperhaps, the firiat Of'liviag historians,\nand has ju^t published a most enter-1\ntaining niemofr ot .William Pitt, his\ngreat uncle. Lord Colchester is the:\neditor of the diary, of his father, the\nSpeakor. Abbott. Lord Auckland has\nwritten the life of his father, who was.\na noted diplomatist »of«> "Pitt's time.\nThe Duke of Argyle made an annony-\nmous national reputation when a mere\nyouth, by a pamphlet on some leading\nquestion of-the day.- The- lato!Earl or,\nCarlisle was a pleasant essayist; and\nLord Elesmore was.a poet of no little\nmerit.;
0534e4ad1d94c40d862c1c1aae9ed2ce THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.2800546131855 46.187885 -123.831256 Last Monday the oldest .ion of Mr.\nWm. Bowman, of New Era, Clackamas\ncounty, was engaged in felling some tro, 8\nnot far from the house, lie cut oue\ndown and then started for the house,\npassing by the fallen tree, and was horri\nlied to s&e his young brother, John, aged\n5 years, lying under it crushed to death.\nThe little felloe never spoke.\nWriting from Rathdrum, Idaho, to the\nOregon City Courier, a correspondent\nsays: I left home in Clackamas county,\nthe banner county of Oregon, on the 12tb\nof Fobruary for the Coenr d'Alene mines\nand arrived there on the lr.th of March.\nI found from 1000 to 2000 "broke' men,\nwithout money, grub or blankets, and\nnothing to do, and from one to five feet\nof snow and still snowing, and it will re\nquire inreu montns 10 remove u, ior n is\nvery cold in part of tho country.\nThere are thousands of men there that\nare bound to suffer. In regard to the\nrichness of the mines it is hard to deter-\nmine, for there has not been one pound\nof gold dust taken from a mine up to\ndate. It is a railroad boom and a rich\nharvest for the steamboats and hotel\nkeepers. I would sa3' to nil farmers in\nold Webfoiit, stay at homo, though poor\nit may be, und ou will suffer no loss, for\na rolling btono cun't gather much mos\nI say to all that intend going to the\nmines, tako your team and a couple of\npack horses and take your own grub and\nhaye nothing to do with tho railroad\ncompany, who will skin u out of every\ndollar you are worth. A man starting\nfrom Portland wants from $100 to S100U\nand the more tho bettor.
204def8a7df902ced43cc3d9f7b76e28 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.9219177765094 40.063962 -80.720915 Sugar, stoady; refined steady and\nfair dnmand; standard A 5]c; powdered\n515-10a(l}s; granulated 5}», Molasses\ndull, iticesteady. Petroleum firm; nnl-\ntod closed at 80}c. Tallow steady at 4}c.\nTurp'jntina dull at ,'lfli. Km llrui, de¬\nmand fair; western 23}j24}c.\nPork firm, fairly active at yl0.7o.iU00,\nold;$115041175, new; cut meals, quiet\nand firm. Lard, higher and fairly active;\nWestern steam $0 50«052}; December,\n$0.44)050; January, $048ill53; Februa¬\nry, $(168,001; April, $005;May $U70a\n0.75; city steam $0 35. flutter firm and\nfair inquiry; western, 12.i27c; Elglu\ncreamery, 20a Cheese quiet and lirm.\n1.ead, common, 4Jc.\nIIai.timouk, Mn., Dec 2..Wheat west¬\nern, higher and excited; No. 2 winter\nred spot, 80}h80}", fresh D-ccinber, fiOJa\n87c; January 88}488|c; February Suj*\n80}c; May UI}o bid. Onrn, western,\nhigher; mixed spot, 45] 40'; fresh new\nl)ecember45J i40o;January 40} <40j<!; Feb¬\nruary 47}i47t')i steamer, 44c41}c, Oats,\nfirm; with moderate demauil; western\nwhite, 3oe37c; mixod 33a34c. Provi¬\nsions, steady and qniot. Uye firm. Meaa\npork $1100 Lard rifluqd 7jc. Kggn\nquiet at 24425s. Coffee higher aud firm;\ntttocarifoea ordinary to fairJ2J il3}o.\nCincinnati, l)ec. 3 .Cotton llrui. Flour\nfirmer, 5o higher. Wheat, stronger; No. 2\nBed 70a. Corn, firm; 2 mixed 38c. Oatn\neasv; No. 2 mixed 20c. Uye firm; No. 2\n6IM}c; Pork quiet at$li.60. Lard strong\naud higher at }015. Bulkmeata and\nbacon firm and unchanged, Whisky ac¬\ntive and firm at $1.13. Batter, sugar and\ncheese firm. Hogs, firm; common to\nlight, $.'135a416; packer* and butchers\n$1.0044 30. Becelpte, 8,000; shipments,\n135. Eggs dull at 20c.\nTolbdo, 0.,Dec, 2..Wheat firm, higher;\nCash 81}o; December 81}c; May, 80c.\nCorn, steady and firm; tush 3D; Decem¬\nber 30.i bid; May 44}o bid, Oats, steady;\ncash 20c. Clover seed, steady and du'l;\ncnah, December, $4 50; January, $4 00\nbid; February $4 70 hid.
4904ee00825caad9c4e630b14f85a677 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 affect or destroy fite validity of said bands may call to bis aesMaace the\nballot or cause it to be rejected; and, inspector, who shall, in ihe presence\nprovided, further, that the provisions of the two Judges of election, select\nof this section shall not be construed the ballot which such person desires\nso as to hinder or prevent anyone to vote and place it in the envelope\nerasing or scratching a name or and deliver to one of the judges,\nnames of any of Ihe candidates from who shall deposit Ihe same In the\nthe ballot intended to be voted by ballot box; provided further, that\nhim and substituting another or other any person who Is unable to\nnames of persons regularly nominated with safety without acstatance. and is\nfor the same office or offices, in lieu manifestly unable to reach the elec-\n either in writing or on print- tion room alone with safety, shall bo\n' ed slips, commonly known as stickers, permitted to have any elector (or two\nSection 2. The Secretary of State electors ff the nature of the, diea-\nshall provide the paper upon which LMUy manifestly requires more than\nall the ballots voted at any of Ihe cne. euch as a total dlsablity to walk!\nelections mentioned in Section 1 of of the election district assist him into\nthis Act shall be printed. The paper the election room; n.d when and a-\nshall be white and of such kind and f-oon a* auch person shall have been\nquality as he shall deem best fitted er-sieted Into the election room he or\nfor the purpose, sufficiently thick so they assisting him shall retirehc,\nthat the printing on the face of the ^action officers
50d15e989cf52677f4117e7c784cac92 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.1520547628108 58.275556 -134.3925 The bouts will be six-round at¬\ntain and all the contestants have\nbeen in active training for some\ntime, working out in various train¬\ning camps 011 the Channel.\nThe last match to be arranged\nwas the one between Reuter of Ket¬\nchikan and Hightower. Keuter Is\nthe man who cleaned up all the\nKetchikan boys In the American Le¬\ngion smokers there and also won\ndraws with Chct NefT and Lonnle\nMcintosh, two of the best light¬\nweights on the coast. Hightower is\nfrom San Krunriseo. where he says\nhe has done considerable boxing\naround the various cities on the bay.\nTfcose who have seen him in train¬\ning say he la a fast man.\nAn event tliat will he of consider¬\nable Interest to local people will be\nthe bout between Iligley Col¬\nlier, both of whom nre Douglas Isl¬\nanders and who met for the first\ntime In tho ring at the fire depart¬\nment smol: r hero several weeks ago.\nCollier has laid off from his work at\nthe Perseverance to go into active\ntraining fir the match, while Hlg-\nley la also training at Treadwell.\nBoth At well and Hollmvood live\nat Treadwell, Atwcll working in the\nTreadwell store and Hollywood at\nthe Heady Bullion mine. Rill Man-\nley, who will appear In the curtain\nraiser against A. Ueaudln of Ju¬\nneau. is also a local boy.\nTickets for the smoker are now(\non sale at the lirunswlck and ad¬\nvance sales have proved very heavy.\nIteservatlons for seats can be made\nby phone, and these reservations\nwill be held until 6 o'clock tomorrow
a326a93aa5003fc3edcd1d3f22a60a3a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0671232559614 41.681744 -72.788147 139 Kenyon street, Hartford were\nunited in marriage by Police Magis-\ntrate John L. Coward of Port Ches-\nter. Simmons is a student at Colum-\nbia University, New York, and the\nson of the factory manager of the\nNew Departure Mfg. Co. here.\nMiss Gabb left her home in Hart-\nford yesterday afternoon, stating\nthat sho was to visit friends In New\nHaven. Upon her arrival there she\nwas met by Simmons, three friends\nwho are students at the Sheffield\nScientific School at Yale. Richard S.\nJones, Hal Howard and Albert J.\nMassey, and Jane Hemmings a New\nHaven friend of Miss Gabb's.\nThe party then continued by rail\nto Port Chester, arriving there at\nabout 1 o'clock, where a marriage\nlicense was issued at the office of the\ntown clerk. They went to the police\nmagistrate's office where the cere-\nmony was completed, Howard and\nMiss Hemming attending the couple.\nThe two elopers then proceeded to\nNew York where they registered \nthe Hotel Pennsylvania. Telegrams\nwere dispatched to their parents ad-\nvising them of their wedding and of\nan early return to Connecticut.\nAt the Simmons home last eve-\nning, the parents announced that\nthey were well pleased with the mar-\nriage. Mr. Simmons could not be\nreached by telephone but the bride-\ngroom's mother gave out the fami-\nly's opinion as being well satisfied.\nA call to the Gabb residence brought\nthe information that Mr. Gabb de-\nclined to discuss the matter.\nMrs. Simmons stated that her son,\nwho was a student at Yale for three\nyears prior to his transfer to Colum-\nbia this year, would likely continue\nhis studies until June. Further plans\nwere not completed, she announced.\nThe bride is a graduate of the\nHartford Public High school and Is\nwell known among the younger set\nof that city. Simmons, prior to his\nenrollment at Yale, was a graduate\nof the Bristol High school.\nMrs. Simmons, interviewed at the
60d65e3fed8d4108e99c5430cd52ff95 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.0616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 stances act kin dlyand in liarmony with the U»i »S:\ngovern the female system, 1 am willing to suW* \\l\nreputation as a physician. Nay, even more, H ^\ndent ami that it will not disappoint the mouua^T, \\l\nexpectations of a single invalid lady who eapKiS\nfor any of the nilmcnta for which I reconuntnji tf\nthat I offer and sell it tinder A POSITIVE GUAh\nANTEE. If a beneficial effect is not eaptria»ad£\nthe time two-thirds of the contents of the bottle u*\nused. I will, on the return of the bottle, two-third* n\nthe medicine having been taken according to dim\ntions. and the ca>c being one fur which I tecommea;\nit. promptly refund the money paul for it. Had I hi,\nthe most perfect confidence in it* virtues, I could m\noflei it as I do under the- . c condition*: but havim»7\nnested its truly miraculous cure*in thousands ofcaieT\n/ feel warranted ami ftrj'ectly i<\\fe ih ritMn7£7l\nmy reputation ami my en itt mehtt.\nThe following are among those diseases in which&v\nFavorite Pretcnftwt h.«i worked cures-as if J\nu n tie and with a certainty nes*er before attained by\nany medicine: Leucorrhura, Excessive Flowing ftu.\nI' ll Monthly Periods, Suppressions when from wait'\nur.il cau.es. Irregularities, Weak Back. Prolapnu, ot\nfilling of the Uterus Antcvcision and Ketrovosioe.\nBearing Djwn Sensations, Internal Heat, Nern7,\nDeprc»>ion, Debility, Despondency, Threatened Mu.\ncamagc, Chroni^ Congestion, Inflammation tad\nceration of tho Uterus, and very many other diwsic\ndiseases peculiar to woman not mentioned here, to\nwhich, as well as in the< caves which 1 have meatioaeii.\nmy Favorite Prescription works cures-the mantl of\nthe world- Thi* medicine I do not extol as a cure-all\nbut it admirably fulfills a sindeness ot purpose, beuu\na most perfect specific in all chronic diseasesoftiu\nsexual system of woman. It will not disappoint, nor\nwill it do harm in any stale or condition. It is a\nuost PowEXFi'L Rktohativ* Tonic to the
1277da74eb7969a1ebfb5a020d8a01e5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.2698629819888 41.681744 -72.788147 that the prolonging of hostilities\nwould simply mean a further loss of\nlife, and when Grant wrote Lee to\nthat effect the latter inquired upon\nwhat terms he could surrender. That\nwas the beginning of the end, and\nthe great southern commander was\ntreated to no more humiliation than\nthe occasion absolutely required. The\nmen in both armies were glad when\nthey got word that they were to be\nallowed to return to their homes to\nresume thel duties as citizens' in\ntimes of peace. There were a large\nnumber,' however, of those who enlist-\ned who never came back, and their re-\nmains rest in various, places, having\nbeen gathered up on battlefields as\nunknown, and in Arlington cemetery,\njust outside of Washington, there is\na monument marking the resting\nplace of several hundred \nThere are also hundreds of graves of\nother unknown dead there and there\nare probably many more in other\ncemeteries in the north and south.\nThe implements of warfare were\nnot as destructible then as they are\nnow, but thousands upon thousands\nof men were killed in battie in the\nCivil war, and New Britain contrib-\nuted its share. The anniversary of\nthe surrender at .Appomattox reminds\nus all that there is no north or( no\nsouth at present, that question hav-\ning been settled long ago never again\nto come up in America. That Is the\ngreat reason for happiness and re-\nminds us that we should never forget\nthe men who made this possible and\nwho gave up their lives that the rest\nof us should enjoy a good government\nin an undivided country.
544ab833667daaaa17d33cab6a283830 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.5273972285643 37.561813 -75.84108 ors who gathered so defiantly against\nus, have been overthrown and scatter-\ned, and tho bastard banner of treason\nno longer taints the free air of our re-\ndeemed and regenerated land ; and\nWhereas, The disarmed and van-\nquished traitors of the South, aided by\nthe friends and abettors of treason in\nthe "North, nre now seeking to wrest\nfrom the great Union party of tho\ncountry the conduct of the Govern\nment, and to give It into the hands of\nthat party which hits been the enemy\nof the soldier and of tho country ; and\nhereiis, lu such a strife we, a part\nof the great army and navy of tho\nUnion, cannot be idle or disinterested\nspectators; therefore,\nResolved, That treason ia an odious\nand inftinious crime, worthy of severo\npunishment; that the leaders in re\nbellion have, by thest criminal con\nduct, forever forfeited ail political\nrights, and that thoso who followed\nthem into tho bloody ranks of treason\nshould only be again admitted to tho\nprivileges of American citizenship upou\na full and hearty compliance with the\nand reasonable terms prescribed bv\nCongress in the proposed amendment to\nthe Constitution.\n That thoso In tho North\nwho sympathize with traitors, who\nwere sad when our shouts of victory\nproclalmcu a neeing and discomfited\nenemy, and rejoiced with\nand devilish irleo when tho tido of\nbattle turned against us; who slan\ndered our motives, disparnged our\nachievements, apologized for the bar\nbarities practiced upon our prisoners,\nand proclaimed the war a failure, are\ngreatly more ueserving our contempt\nand loathing than those who stood in\narms against us, and wo hereby pro-\nclaim to them that wo reject with\nscorn their trcucheroui and hypo-\ncritical offers of political fellowship.\nResolved, That in the prewent lead-\ners of tho Democratic party in Indi-\nana, wo recognize tho same men\nwhom wo learned to know and hato\nas the organizers of the treasonable\nassociation at home which threatened\nour firesides with devastation, and\ngave their encouragement to tho des-\nperate enemy in our front.\nResolved, That we repudiate tho\ndemand of the Democratic party for\nthe immediate and unconditional ad-\nmission of Rebel Representatives Into\nCongress, and hold that the people of\nrebel States should only be admitted\nto such representation after they havo\ncomplied with the reasonable demand.-
096557f315a856d29a327bd4c6f03f01 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.0423496951528 40.063962 -80.720915 the' cough subsided' and a~*speedy cure m\nas effected.. Boon after this, Isent a&ne to u\nlady in London derry/N.H ., who hAd been *u\nJTerlng for some weeks from a bad .cough, co\ncaslonedby a sudden oold, and had raised .\nucus streamed with bl>od. She soon found\nlief and sent for more. She took about Ti\nn ounces of It. and got welL J. B. Clarke, in\niqM editor of the Manchester Dally Mirror, it\nade a trial of the same preparation In. the\nm or a ssvere cold and wafcurod itofnedl- P*\nely. He was bo highly pleated with the re^ th\nlitis and so confident In success attending Its Dt\nlen. tf placed before the public, that - he co\naallv persuaded me to give it a name, and te\nnd it abroad to benefit the suffering. In _J\novernber, 1856. I - first advertised <IV under ^\nte names of White PiniCompound. ' In 1 wo Bj\nsftre man that tlmdUjJroTiad been, whole- th\nJed in Manchesteralone one dolt\nis worth, where It took the lead of all the w.\n»uch remedies In the market, and It still\nam tains that position. There is good rca- OI\ni ltiOr this; It is very soothing and healing se\nins nature: is warming to the stomach and v£\nleAxant withal to' the taste, and is exceed- ol\n^j&^r^edy tor kidney complaints the Pl\nfliite Pine Compound stands unrivaled.' It a<\nas not originated for, that pferpose; but a th\narson In using It for a cough was not only |0\nired of the cough, but was also cured ot a .n\nUlney difficulty ol ten yearn standing. Since\nlat accidental discovery many thousands\navemted.lt'tor the same oomplalnt, and\nave been completely cured." ed\nThe above was written by Dr. Poland. In\n(60, since then, as in Manchester, tha ill\nfhite Fine Compound has taken the lead of so\n11 Cough remedies, as well as a preparation\n>r the cureofKidueydlfflcultiesAn every caty ra\nwn.vlllogo and vamlet throughout the\new England States.
159f45a8979823d6a5c292f613705bc6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.3383561326739 40.063962 -80.720915 making rapid progress and will, it is be- i\nlievcd, ultimately prevail the world over,\nthe figures in connection with the liquor\ntrafiic are startling. Scientific experts tell i\nus that alcohol is not food, tliat.there is no\nstrength in it, that a man cannot sitfclv\nadminister it to himself as a medicine, and <\nthat it cannot safely be used indis-\nerlminately, There is no conversion into j\ntissue inn. An analysis of nine gallons i\nof Bavarian beer, the most nutritious bev-\nerago of this nature, shows that its nutri- I\ntive qualities are only equal to that ill the i\namount of flour that can he placed on the i\npoint of a-'knifo. Alcohol does stimulate; i\nIt drives the heart to perform more work I\nthan it is intended t» do. It the\nman for business; bv its use his minil is i\nnot so clear or his judgment so well bul- I\nlanced, and in consequence, ho is liable to\nwrcck and ruin himself in an hour's time,\nThebahitis one tbat grows, and uncon- i\nsciously one lowers himself into n drunk-\nards grave. There is nothing that has I\ncausedsoirauoh ruin, filled so many graves i\nand penitentiaries, built so many scat\nfolds and broken so many hearts as aico-\nhoi. It is'the curse of humanity.a per- j\nnetual torment. It has dragged down tbo i\nhigh and %>w.roon of all classes and sta-\ntioris in lite. How many homes have\nbeen rallied, wives killed, hopes blasted j\nand souls damned by it 1 O, young man, <\n"there is death in the pot" ;
07cee08e36d2d61e8739953d92dbb789 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1895.5657533929477 43.994599 -72.127742 care and awkwardness. His muscles are\nnot yet trained to mechanioal certainty,\nand he moves with caution. One can al\nmost guess the age of those shabby fig-\nures as they move up and down the lad-\nders, never pausing, never shirking, al\nways bearing upon calloused snouiaers\nthe full tale of bricks or the full weight\nof mortar. They fill their hods with al\nmost incredible swiftness and fairly fall\nover ono another to reach the brick pile\nfirst But the steadying effect oi tne\nload is shown in the orderly march of\nthe upward moving hodmen. One real-\nizes that hard times have disciplined\nthe men into giving a full and conscien-\ntious day's work for their pay.\nEven 300 leet away one seems io uoio\nthe difference of dress, movement and\nmanner between the skilled workmen\nlaying the bricks and the unskilled hod\ncarriers. The former are neatly aressen\nfor the most part in whole white \nalls. They move about their work easily\nand gracefully with quick, deft hands.\nAlmost no sound conies irom me wana\nsave the motallio ring and scrape of the .\ntrowel and the tap of its handle upon\nthe brick just set in its bed of darK\nbrown mortar. Now and then an indis\ntinguishable word of direction noats\ndownward from tbe last course of bricks.\nThe hodmen are equally silent. It is a\npantonine of busy labor, almost rnytn-mi- o\nin its movements. Tbe whose scene\nis full of silent grace, and not without\nthe charm of color so often missing\nfrom human activities in America. In\neloquent testimony to the effectiveness\nof the work rise the so far finished\nwalls, with clean right lines, horizon-\ntal nnd vertical, smooth plane surfaces\nand the serried teeth of the brick arches,\nwith the charm of curves never to be\ndestroyed, no matter how rough the ma-\nterial of the structure.
106f0f0a9f5f22fb0daf858e490eb1c5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.1438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 On motion of Mr. Brown, sr.of Kanawha,\nthe House bill tomake"dcribner's Rule" the\nlegal measure of lumber in tbis State, unlets\notherwise specified by contract, was success¬\nively read three times and passed.\nMr! Penny backer submitted the report of\ntbe Conference on the General A ppr< priation\nbill, which was adopted. By this action the\namendment requiring the salary of the clerk\nin the ofliceof the State Superintendent of\nFree Schools to be paid qui of the school\nfund, and that appropriating $600 for a tele¬\nphone at the Hospital for the Insane were\nagreed to. and the tieuftte abandoned the ac¬\ntion outting down tbesalarv of the olerk at\nthe Penitentiary from $1,100 to $1,000, and'\nincreasing tbat of the commissary from $900\nto $1,000. Tbe bill as amended waa tbeu\npawed. It now only requires the signature\nof the Governor to make it a law.\nOn motion of Mr. Burtt tbe were aus;\ndendedand the §enate bill to amend tbe\ncharter of the city of Wheeling so as to en¬\nable tbe Board of Public Works to compel\nowners of property to lay sidewalka iu frunt\nof their premises, was read the first titpe and\nordered tp I'M second reading.\nOn motion of Mr. Gilk<*»on the bill to\nauthorise tbe County Court of Hampshire\ncounty to compromise a claim for taxes\nagainst the Baltimore A Ohio Railroad Com¬\npany, was read the second time, amended\nslightly and sent to ita third reading.\nSenate Bill No. 79, amending the law con¬\ncerning tbe care of iusane persons con-\nlined In county iails, was pawed: alsoj\nthe House Bill to appropriate $1,200 to;\ncomplete tbe copying of the war records in\ntbe Adjutant General's office.\nAfier reading probably twenty bills the\nfirst or second times, the House, at 10.25 f. m.,\nadj iurupd tlil p;§0 p.
38d4ae3f72ab10c3f5abba50cdde9d5a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2452054477424 40.063962 -80.720915 After the revel was done.\nIdly tHey talked of waltz afld quadrille,\nlujy they laughed, like otherrfrls,'\nWho over the fire. when all Is still,\nOomb ont their braids and carls.\nRobe of satin and Brussels Iju e.\nKnots of flowers and ribands, too,\nScattered about in every place.\nFor the revel is through.\nAnd Hand and Madge in robes of white.\nThe prettiest night-gown* under the ran,\nBiocklngle^sllpperletf, sit in the night,\nFor the revel is done.\nSit and oomb their beautiful hair.\nThose wonderful waves of brown and gold,\nTill the lire is out in the chamber there.\nAnd the little bare feet are cold.\nThen out of the gathering winter chill.\nAll out of tne bitter SU Agnes weatner.\nWhile the Ore is out and the house is still,\nMaude and Mad go together.\nMaude and Madge in robes of white.\nThe prettiest night gowna under the sun.\nCurtained away from the chilly night.\nAfter the revel U done.\nFloat along In a splendid dream,\nTo a golden gtltern's tinkling tune.\nWhile a thousand lustres shimmering stream\nIn a palace's grand Haloon,\nFlashing of Jewels and flutter of laces,\nTropical nders sweeter than mask.\nMen and women wltli beautiful \nAnd eyes of tropical dost;\nAnd one face shinning out like a star.\nOne face haunting the dream* of each,\nAnd one voice sweeu^r than others are.\nBreaking in silvery speech.\nTelling through lips of bearded bloom\nAn old, old story over again,\nAs down the royal bannered room\nTo the golden giltem1* t train.\nTwo and two, they dreamily walk.\nWhile an unseen spirit walks beside.\nAnd, all unheard In the lover's talk.\nHe claimed one for his bride!\nO Maud and Madge, dream on together.\nWith never a pang of Jealous fear!\nFor ere the bitter BL Agnes weather\nHhall whiten another year.\nRobed for tiie bridal and robed for the tomb,\nBraided brown hair and golden treat*,\nThere'll be only one of j ou left for the bloom\nOf the bearded lip to press.\nOnly one for the bridal pearls,\nTne robe of satin and Brussels lace.\nOnly one to blush through her curls\nAt tho sight of a lover's face.\nO beautiful Madge, In yoar bridal white!\nFor you the revel has Just begun ;\nBut for her who sleeps in your arms to-night\nThe revel of life is done.\nBut robed and crowned with your sanitly\nbliss.
b07f15e806640dce952484a220dc3118 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.2863013381532 41.681744 -72.788147 came to an end, and the dove of\npeace again roosts over the munici-\npal golf project today.\nThe final hitch In the plans oc\ncurred yesterday when the Cham\nber of Commerce officials declined\nto pay the park department the\nsum of J200, which was the differ\nence between what the Chamber\nclaimed the park department had\nobligated itself for and the amount\nauthorized by vote of the joint com-\nmittee of Chamber of Commerce\nrepresentatives and park represen-\ntatives at the meeting last Thursday\nnight. Chamber of Commerce off-\nicials claim that it is unreasonable\nto ask them to help assume the cost\nof installing a water main to the\ngolf grounds and the cost of altera-\ntions to a building which will be\nused as a club house.\nPark officials that the\nChamber solicited funds for the\nbuilding of a golf course and is un-\nder obligation to turn over all the\nmoney it collects for this purpose\nto the park department. This mat-\nter will be discussed at the next\nmeeting of tho chamber directors.\nThe chamber Saturday deposited 16\nthe park department the sum ot.\n$14,500, which was JL'OO less than\nthe sum of $14,700 voted by the\ncommittee Thursday night.\nFollowing a statement in yester\nday's Herald by Park Commissioner\nA. E . Berg that tho city would not\nsign the contract until all the money\nvoted by the committee was forth-\ncoming, Secretary Ralph H. Benson\nat 5 o'clock telephoned Mr. Berg\nand notified him that tho additional\n$200 had been deposited.\nThe contract was signed immedi-\nately.
071d5c260a8f95e04e42f195b79a9185 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.905479420345 39.745947 -75.546589 New York. Nov. 27.— Samuel Unter-\nmeyer applied to and obtained yester­\nday from Justice Fitzgerald, sitting In\nthe supreme court, an Injunction order\nreturnable on Monday next, against\nthe Count and Countess Castellane, and\nGeorge Gould, Edwin Gould, Howard\nGould and Helen M. Gould, as trustees\nunder the will of Jay Gould, restrain­\ning them from paying to Anna Gould,\nCountess de Castellans, any part of the\nestate In the hands of the trustees, or\nfrom applying any part of the trust\nfund to the debts of Anna Gould or to\nher support hr that of her children un­\ntil the further direction of the court.\nIhe plaintiff in the suit Is Anton J,\nDittmar, who sues as assignee of Asher\nWertheimer, a London bric-a -bracdeal-\ner. The complaint contains copies of\ndrafts accepted In writing by the Count\nand Countess do Castellano, amounting\nto upwards of $285,000, of which $285,-\n000 and are past due.\nU is alleged that Auna Gould has\n$18,000,000 held In trust for her by her\nbrothers and slater and that her In­\ncome Is about $800,000. It Is claimed\nthat $250,000 a year Is all that the\ncount and countess require for their\nsupport, and the plaintiff asks that the\nremainder of the income should be ap­\nplied to the payment of the couple's\ndebts. It la said that over $250,000 of\nsurplus Income has already accumula­\nted In the hands of the trustees which\nought to be used for this purpose. The\npresent suit Is said to be a teat case,\nand, it 1s reported, Is backed by other\ncreditors than Wertheimer.\nA few weeks ago George J. Gould was\nappointed guardian for the Countess de\nCastellane In a proceeding In the\nFrench courts. The creditors claim\nthat the purpose of this proceeding was\nto gel the property of the Countess de
23b3f458882414d58ea03c031fb1c682 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.8753424340437 40.827279 -83.281309 Sanduskv City, U.iyton 5i Cincinnati R.\nR. which runs through the west part of\nthe county, also crossing at forest,\ntwelve miles west of Upper Sandusky,\nmakes eay ot access to tne citizens of\nthis county almost any and every nint\nof importance in the United State. These\nadvantages, when considered in connec-\ntion with thelertility of sod and healthi-\nness of the locality, make Wyandot\nCounty a desirable location in which to\nlive, as well as desirable toLUioc seeking\nsafe and profitable places ior investment\nof means in real estate.\nAt many places in Wyandot County\nthe beds of the streams are limestone\nrock, but, generally, of that character,\nwhich, when expo.ed to air and Irost,\nsoon crumbles to pieces, and, tliercfors.\nis entirely useless for building purposes.\nThere are however, exceptions to this\nas a general rule.\nAt on the Brokcns'.vord and\nnear Upper Sandusky, also, nviy be found\ngood quarries of hard limestone, well\ncalculated for cellar walis, foundations\nfor buildings. and from which excellent\nlime is also produced. Asa rule, how-\never, the whole county is rem irkably\nfree iioin and destituto'of stone, except\nin the north west part, where there is a\nconsiderable ridge, called the - Limestone\nRidge," where it is abundant, and comes\nto the surface. Willi tho exemptions\nnamed there are no banks nor ridges ot\nstone in the lO.inty ; nor arc there any\nalong any of the streams, le lgesi.r oaniis\nof rock. The streams, generally, run\nbetween low, steep banks of black, rich\nmold, and as a consequence, are liable to\nwash out new channels when the waters\narc high, and the more so on account of\nthe'r many short curve-- ,
106ddfdf71bba64b20bf3d96ae5021d1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.5778688208359 40.063962 -80.720915 lion. Gustavus Eoerncr, Liberal cudl- i\nlate for Governor, was the first speaker, t\nLiter alluding .brieily to his early ac- i\nlualntanco with Chicago in 1880, and ex- i\ntreating the interest ho felt for her prog- t\ness, he said ho wished before entering c\nipon tho discussion of the political issues f\nit the canvass, to have certain things dia- t\ninctly understood, viz.: that neither he t\nlor those for whom he spoke wished to 1\nIcpreoiate tho great services of General t\nIrantaa a military loader, or in criticising p\nits course as a civil administrator, to re- c\nlect upon him as a general. Nor do l\nbey, ai had been impndently claimed a\niy some means to cast a stigma upon the' o\nioWc army which maintained the Union a\nn the lute war and preserved tha life of r\nho nation. Ho read from the Cincinnati n\nnu opringueiu iiuerai piauorms in prool (.\nif tliu esteem in which the soldiers were o\nlelil by the liberal party. He depreciated {\nhe appeals which were being made to a\nhe soldiers in a canvass which was eesen- c\n a civil one. He next referred to the d\nlistory of the Republican party and re- 6\n:ounted the measures It had originated t\nmd carried out, and said that he would be a\nbe last man to dispute anv of the claims t\nif the Republican party. He had belong- s\nid to the party almost lrom its inception, c\nincj worked lor its success. If that party g\nvai to bo eulogized fur its work np to tb« a\nermination of the civil war and lor sev- t\niral years thereafter, he might humbly r\n:laim some share in the eulogy, but parties c\n:ould not live upon their IaurelB .alone, t\nSew issues spring up, divisions naturally a\ntrisc among honcaLpcoplc, and old par- [\nies dissolve to make room for t\nlew ones on the leading questions ol the 1\nlay. This was precisely what was pass- f\nng to day, and only the blind or those t\nwho use parties for plunder merely can- I\nlot or will not seo it. t\nHo then proceeded to rcviow tho meas- c\nires of the present administration, which I\nle regarded as objectionable, the
1817d2b5ace5af2bd15610c0e3f82cbd THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.4303278372292 29.949932 -90.070116 an interesting sight now and up to the end of the\nmouth,at thecommand of any sojoqer in Paris\nwiihthree or four bours to sparefor a pleamnat\nexcursion, is the little camp at St. Manr. There\nia at present only between 3000 and 4000men, and\nI nnoderstand there willnot be more. The nearest\nrailway station to it is that of Joinville ie Pont.\nbut trom the donjon keep of Vincennes the walk\nto the camp scroes the grasns i bat a short ose.\nThe tents look very pretty, do'ted about the slope\nat a alight emlntence h-aint the rasetangstead. The\nlocalty is a portion of tire groeod oceupied by\nthe canp on a much larger scale which was formed\nsftirr the Italian war. The troope new under can-\nvas have had a very severe trial. They pithed\ntheir tentadaring a prtouring rain, whtich soaked\nthem through and through before they had time\nto complete their arrangemente. "Ithas ra•ned\nheavily tormany hours every day ad aightstaince\nthtyhave been there. snd slthough the soil is\ncrivelly, there are places the mse step\nout of their tents ankledeep in mud.\nI wase greatly stock, however, with their\nheaslthy and cheerful aptearance. and was told\nt-at the number of sitk does not exoeed the\nawIsge. Every it I gurreneded by a mnt\ntrenchto drpmoff the wter. The men loep\ncontentedly cnstraw, of which they have a vry\nsecantly meare. Most of them have a rag in\nwLich they roll tbemselves, bat no sheet or\nblankets. This morning fatigueas parties were\nht.sy in fetching bag, of l ad from some adjoin-\ningpits, wherewith to send the offiers' tent., A\ncamp bed placed upon this arod,under tolerably\nut.tLer-ti~rht canvas, enables an oflcer to aestle\nhiuelf up pretty comfortably. I tatted the\nreogulation bread, the soup and potatoes, and\nfou.nd them eli very palatable. Every day the\nlnfantry compsanles are marked ie torn to prac-\ntice with the Chassepot rifle at the Vnoensles tar-\ngets, and that I take is the prioncpal reason why\nItey are there. The emperor and empre have\nbeen twice to visit the camp.
021480937d2304899e45802682fea6dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.2041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 On another occasion it ie related of\nhim, when being asked why he did not\nmarrj, he replied, jocosely, that hie\nfather got bit by a woman, and he intend¬\ned to profit by the lesson. Whatever bis\namour* may have been during hi* life¬\ntime, it is not narrated of him that be\never got into any trouble for any of hi*\nindiscretions, and in this he evinced re¬\nmarkable shrewdness. It is the general\nimpression that he left a will, which may\nbe found among bia immeniepileot mus-\nty old papers in hia old trunk, in which\nhe rammed everything of a documentary\nnature. It ia said that in that will he\nleft $100,000 to Dick Floyd. Dick iaa\nyoung man of twenty-three years of age,\nand lives on one of the Springfield town¬\nship tracts. He married about three\nweeks sgo to a MIm Holliday. It ia\nprobable that if no will baa been made,\nthe literature of thia caae way assume a\nmore intereating and aensational charac¬\nter than has been apprehended, and there\nwill be rich picking for the lawyers.\nMr.TuIlia leaves two widowed 'iatera\n. Mrs. Pollock, who lives in Wyoming,\nand Mrs. Reed, who reaidea on Chestnut\nstreet, thia citv. He also leavea a cousin\nnamed A. J . Tullis, an attorney. Mra.\nFloyd had the grace to inform the Com¬\nmercial reporter that Mra. Reed waa to\nhave been married laat week, but the\nnuptiala were postponed on account of\nthe illneaa of Mr. Tullis. These three\npersons, with Dick Floyd, already named,\nwill probably inherit the whole of the\nestate, amounting, it ia thought, to over\n$3,000,000.
12c3ddcd59f86858a55648d4ded5eee7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.8183059793057 40.063962 -80.720915 it in ss not to hurt the full trade of mi\n. e city." Meanwhile, the Democrat re- so\n:*rters hail interviewed Mayor Joseph M\nya nuj the Hoard of UeallU. On he\nIjijicg tbc Stcrenry lor buiuh pox returns w«\nr Muoday and Wednesday; iJr. O'Brien gc\na iaed giving them without an order w<\na the IJavd. A reporter, with u steno- Hi\n"rspliic writer, then demanded access to gn\n>xik3 ns citizens ami tux-payors, and\nif're informed tliut the Hoard declared iy\n:-jtnill pox reports private, and their co\nviiicition inexpedient at present, and Su\n[ore.liner t'> cause a public panic, and in- dr\nrferc with the public trade. lie said fur- foi\nibU Health Ofllccra working day w<\ncJ night t<» overcome the disease, and tai\nJhonftl todwso without notice public er\n- } They liuil just inoculated two aij\nwfer?, and so hoped to secure a supply wi\nif pure vaccine. On going to Mayor T1\ni*n,heacknowledged the right ol the ex\nr.::?fnsto inspect the books ot the De- M\n:irmcnt, but snid this was the first time fai\ni' h&J ever been asked to show them, im\nd declined, as such information was for ioi\nprirpora ol publication. After con- kc\nalffible bluffing he said, and this is the wi\nv'titim report: "I do not disguise the on\n(vet that this may he a terrible vi: itation. bt(\nin prepared to take the responsibility wi\ntitn the time comes, ol declaring the\nJ.*aK epidemic, and when that time\ncwncs n<> consideration as to the cflect\nn the full trade or the business
1684a919f01cb9a049016a8d87fc5bc8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.7062841213824 40.063962 -80.720915 with the help of the Greenbackers will be\nsuccessful there in November. Ia fact\nthere to doubt whether the Democrat* will\nreceive the expected assistance. A fusion\non the Governorship in which the Demo¬\ncrats made all the concessions necessary to\nbring the two partiee in accord, conceding\nas they did the nomination, the manage¬\nment of tho campaign and the whole or-\ngsnization. is very different from a fusion\nin which the Greenbackers are asked to\npractically abandon their own candidate,\nrelinquish control of the machinery\nand 20 into another costly and\nbitter fight from which they have\nlittle to win and everything to lose. If the\nfusion can be maintained, now that the\nGubernatorial contest ia over it is more\ncompact than the best informed politicians\nof either party have ever been willing to\nacknowledge. The very success of yester¬\nday will bo one of the most powerful\ncauses for divorcing this incompatible po¬\nlitical marriage. The Greenback party in\nMaine in the power of the opposition. It iB\nthe bodv of the whole movement against\nRepublican mipremacy, and now that its\nstrength baa been demonstrated it will not\nbe disposed to allow itself to be made the\nplaything of the Democracy. Yesterday\nthe dog wagged the tail to some advantage,\nbut that not prove that the tail will\nwag the dog in November. Weaver, the\nGreenback candidate for President, has\nbeen urging all along that the combina¬\ntion be brokeu as soon as the Gubernator¬\nial election was over and his counsels will\nbe respectfully heard if not blindly fol¬\nlowed now that success has come to their\nbanners. Murch, too, is said to have\nurged the same course, and Solon Chase\nhas allowed hia two steers to grow fat in\nluxurious idleness in sheer disgust of the\nload they would have been compelled to\ncarry during the past campaign. But\neven if the fusion holds out until Novem¬\nber there is no surety that it will again\nwin. Plaisted was an exceptionally strong\ncandidate and carried-a personal weight\nin several sections wtiere Democratic elec¬\ntors will have no btrength. Weaver will\nprobably have his own electoral ticket in\nthe field, and even if he does not a much\nleas number of Geeenbackers will feel an\ninterest in the three Democrats on the\nsuggested hybrid ticket than in Mr. Plai*-\nted, who represented their own ideas, aud\nwho lead them to yesterday's success.\nJust as we were putting the above arti¬\ncle In the hands of the printers, we re¬\nceived the following special from the New\nYork Tribune:
569fe224a7fc5c09852dd7eb956301d2 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1908.5232240120927 43.994599 -72.127742 Sixteen battleships were in line.\ndivided into four divisions and two\nsquadrons. In the first division of the\nHist squadron were the flagship of\nSperry, the Connecticut, and her sister\nsliijis, the Kansas, Minnesota and Ver\nmont. This division, as well as the en\ntire fleet, is under the immediate com-\nmand of Sperry. The second division\nof the first squadron Is commanded by\nActing Rear Admiral Wainwright, and\nconsists of the flagship Georgia and\nher sister ships, the Nebraska, New\nJersey and Rhode Island.\nRear Admiral Emery commands the\nsecond squadron and third division\nand is aboard of the flagship Louis!\nana. The Virginia, Ohio and Missouri\nalso ira In this dlrlaion. The fourth\ndivision; under the command of Acting\nRear Admiral Schroeder, is made up of\nthe flagship Wisconsin and the Illinois,\nKearsarge and Kentucky. The Ne-\nbraska and Wisconsin, formerly of the\nraclflc fleet, have taken the places of\nthe Maine and Alabama of the Atlantic\nfleet, which are en route to Hampton\nRoads as a special service squadron.\nThe fleet auxiliaries preceded the\nbattleships by a week, and are now\nBearing Honolulu, where they will un-\nload supplies and away for New- -\nZealand before the arrival of the fleet\nat Honolulu. These auxiliaries are the\nPanther, repair ship; Glacier, refrigera\ntor supply ship; Culgoa, supply -- ship;\nAjax. collier; Relief, hospital ship, and\nYankton, tender and dispatch boat.\nThe battleships which sailed today\non the longest voyage ever undertaken\nby such a powerful fleet, during which\nthey will completely encircle the world,\nfrom Hamilton Roads to Hampton\nRoads, have a total tonnage of 1HI.100\ntons. The fleet Is capable of steaming\non an average of ten knots an hour un-\nder any sea conditions, and is follow-\ning an itinerary which will bring the\nships to Manila on Oct. 1. 1908.\nThe complete route from Manila to\nHampton Roads has not yet been defi-\nnitely announced, but It is expected\nthat the fleet will arrive at Its ultimate\ndestination during the latter part of\nFebruary. I!t00, when it will be Joined\nat Hampton Roads by most of tbe othet\nships of the American navy then on the\nAtlantic coast and this great fleet of\nwar vessels will again be reviewed by\nIresldent Roosevelt Just prior to his\ngoing out of o 111 cp.
5d6ff5a629a8b89d31394c33e2b290fd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.2698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 QEALED PROPOSALS WILL 3E\nkJ received by the Committee on Water Works\nuntU 1 o'clock, Thar* Bay, April 10. 187J. for\nmaking and dellv- ringllve thousand foot of foar\ninch pipe, mora orlo»i, and two thouaand feet\nof six Inch, with branches and tees aofflclent to\nlay the aamo and street boxea for stop cock#\nthat tho city may want The six Inch pipe to be\n9-lflths thick and the four Inch, # Inch. The\nbranches to bo the eame tblcknoJS aa tho pipes.\nThe pipes to be caator moulded in dry sand and\nIn a perpendicular position; to be of good dark\ngray Iron, so that it can bo easily drilled. Each\npipe or piece to be IS feet four Inches long (bowl\non one end to bo 4 inchcs-long.) The 6 Inch pipe\nto weigh not loss than thtrty-ono pounds to tno\nfoot, and not more than 8*; the 4 tech weigh\nnot le s thin S3 ujtxnda to the foot and not more\nthan 13. Tho pipe*, branches and boxea to be\nmade and delivered on the line of street where\nwanted in tho city ol Wheeling, on or before\nthe 80th day of Jane, 1873 The plpos to bear\nthe teat or 190 pounds hydraulic pressure to tbe\nineh, and to be tested in Wheeling under the\nsup* rrlslou of tho Superintendent or the Water\nWork#and at the expense of tho contractor.\nPayments to be cash on delivery after the toot-\nlng a. d on the Superintendent's order to the\nL'ommltteo The Contractor or Contractors to\nRive bond with good security for tho fulfillment\nuf tho cuntract-tho city reserving tho right to\nrecelvo or rejoct any or all bids. Bids will be\nendorsed "Proposals for water pi pes. branches,\n4c " and to bo left with tho Clark or tho city.
67b084198de58e4a614b4671a64c7ea6 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.0890410641807 43.798358 -73.087921 Messrs. Reed, VVing & Cutler Gent.\nI feel it a duty I owe the public, and es-\npecially to hundreds of my fellow beings\nwho are now suffering under different dis-\neases of the lungs, to give you a statement\nof the' good effects I have experienced\nfrom the use of the Vegetable Pumonary\nBalsam. Having from my youth up been\ntroubled with different complaints of the\nlungs, such as spitting of blood, a dry\ntroublesome cough, frequent hoarseness,\nwith severe fits of coughing, and indeed\nall the symptoms of consumption, and from\ntime to time I have consulted several emi-\nnent physicians, and have taken much\nmedicine, but I received little or no relief\nand at last they told me there was no help\nfor me; that my case was beyond the\nreach of their medicines. In the spring\nof I was advised by a friend to try\nthe Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. I ob-\ntained two bottles; and on trial I was sur-\nprised to find so sudden and effectual re-\nlief which it gave me, and after using it\nabout five weeks al! my complain's were\nentirely removed, and I was restored to\ngood health. Since that lime I have kept\nit constantly by me, in case of the appear-\nance of any of the above complaints.\n1 have known a large number of cases\nwhere aii other medicines have failed ..of\naffording any relief, the Balsam was at\nlength resorted to, and speedily effected a\ncore. I would therefore recommend to\nevery person that has any of the above\ncomplaints, on their first appearance to\ntake the Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam,\nwhich they will find a safe, convenient\nand positive cure.
2505e410665532c3285f8fea671d2769 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.6123287354135 40.832421 -115.763123 Tho spot wns then plainly marked,\nnud early the following morning tho\nparty, with Indians whom they had\nhired to assist in foliowiug the trnil of\nthe fugitives, ngniu took tho trucks nt\nthe point referred to, nud by placing\nthu Indians in tho lend, they wore en¬\nabled to discover tho course traveled\nby the fugitives over ever character of\ngrouud, and oveu their passage ovor\n'rock was not hidden from tho practiced\neye of tho wily aboriginal pursuers.\nAfter consuming the greater pnrt 'of\ntho day in tracking them through the\nRuby range of mountains, tho villians\nwero nt length brought to baj, and\nshowed n disposition to fight, but one\nof the party unmed Hilton managed to\nsccuro n position upon a cliff above\nthem, and bringing a Henry riflo to\nbear, ordered tlicni to throw dowu their\narms and surrender.\nThero being no chnuco for a success¬\n resistance, tho demand waa com¬\nplied with, nud they were immediately\nttikeu prisoners. The party of citize&u\ntheu took tho culprits to thu valley bo-\nlow, and gave them in chnrge to Depu¬\nty Sheriff lloj uton, who went out Jrom\nhero after them.\nUpon tho prcliminnry examination\nbefore Justico Taylor, tho prisoners\ngnve their uamcs as Georgo Davis .and\nJohn Waldo, the former adwittiug that\nli« shot Mr. Henslinw, but could not or\nwould not, givo nny reason for tho con^-\nmission of the foul net. Tho gun with\nwhich tho shooting was done, together\nwith a watch in their possession, was\nat ouco identified as tho articles stolen\nfrom Russell's ranch, below town, a\nday or two previously. tho property of\nFinnk Fernald.\nWaldo claims to bo innocent of nny\nfelonious act or intent. Doth tha put¬\nties. liowover, nro held to await the\naction of thu next Ornud Jury.
2ba103c098047c475d7907fbf9d494ab CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1917.3164383244546 39.623709 -77.41082 dents, caused by a alert dumb-bell\nshaped itieri scoplc vegetable, the pest\nbacillus, it occurs In man la three\nforms, the pneumonic, which has a\ndeath rate of almost UiO per cent; the\nsepticaemia, which is nearly as fatal,\nand the bubonic, in which even with\nthe most modern methods of treatment\nthe mortality Is about 50 per cent. It\nis a disease of commerce, spreading\naround the globe in the body of the\nshlp-horne rat. It is estimated that\nevery case of human plague costs the\nmunicipality in which it occurs at\nleast $7,500. This does not take into\naccount the enormous loss due to dis-\nastrous quarantines and the commer-\ncial paralysis which the fear of the\ndisease so frequently produces.\nThe disease is now treated with a\nserum discovered through the genius\nof Yersln. This is used in the\nsame way ns is diphtheria anti-toxin.\nPlague is transferred from the sick\nrodent to tin* well man by fleas. The\nsick rat has enormous nunihaVfc of\nplague bacilli in its blood. The blood\nis taken by the flea, which, leaving the\nsick rat, seeks refuge and sustenance\nmi the body of a human being, to\nwhom It transfers the infection.\nSince plague is a disease of rodents\nand since it is carried from sick ro-\ndents to well men by rodent fleas, safe-\nty from the disease lies in the exclu-\nsion of rodents, nit only exclusion\nfrom the habitation of man tut also\nfrom the ports and cities of the world.\nThose who dwell in rat-proof surround-\nings take no plague. Not only should\nman dwell in rat-proof surroundings,\nhut he sh mid also live in rut-free sur-\nroundings.
008114c880a30d30619c6c18898fa619 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1892.5314207334043 42.217817 -85.891125 Is sired by Messenger Duroc, No. 106, one of\nthe best sons of Hambletontan 10. His dam is the\ngreat brood mare Fanny Mapes, by Alexander's\nAbdallah, No. 15 . Fanny Mapes is the dam of five\nwith an average of 2:28, besides being the dam\nof six producing sons. No other brood mare liv-\ning or dead ran make such a showing.\nWho savs Joe Gavin does not sire speed? He is\nsire of Ollie Drake 2:25; Walter Drake 2:27;\nFred Drake 2:27; and Cora Hell 2:29. No horse\never stood for service in Van Uuren county that is\nthe sire of as many colts in the '30 list at the same\nage as Joe Gavin.\nTo those who desire breeding road horses at a\nprofit, they will serve their own interests to look\nJoe Gavin over individually, scrutinizing his colts\n and last, though not least, see if his\ncolts have the characteristics we claim for them,\nviz.: They have solid colors; are upheaded, styl-\nish and gamy; have smooth limbs and good action\nand a disposition that subjects itself to the con-\ntrol of man. Can any one doubt that a horse 4 to\n6 years old with the above qualifications will find\na ready sale in any market at a profit to the breed-\ner? Remember, it is past the time when fashion-\nable breeding will sell a horse for a good price, if\nthe individual excellence of that horse is not up\nto its breeding.\nJOE GAVIN will make the season of 1892 at the\nWillard House barn.\nTERMS: 125 to insure, or fij for the season\nwith usual return privilege, if horse is alive and\nowned by me.
b2578c168f113bdb939fa1d5a325b0c5 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.760273940893 43.798358 -73.087921 A few months ago I buried my eldest\nson, a fine, manly boy of eight years of\nage, Who had never had a day's illness\nuntil that which tpok httn hence to be\nhere no more. His death occurred under\ncircumstances peculiarly painful to me.\nA younger brother, the next in age to\nhim, a delicate, sickly child from a baby,\nhad been down for nearly a fortnight with\nan epidemic fever. In consequence of the\nnature of the disease.'l used every pre-\ncaution and prudence suggested, to guard\nthe Oiher members of the family against\nit. But of this one, my eldest, 1 had but\nlittle fear; he was so rugged, and gener-\nally healthy. Still, however, 1 kept a vig-\nilant eye upon him, and especially forbid\nhis going into the and docks near\nhis school, which he was prone to visit.\n" One evening I came home wearied\nwith a long day's hard labor, and vexed\nat some little disappointments, and found\nthat he also had just come into the house,\nand that he was wet, and covered with\ndock mud.. I taxed him with disobe-\ndience, and scolded him severely- - more\nso than I had ever done before ; and then\nharshly ordered him to bed. He opened\nhis lips for an exculpatory reply, as i'l sup-\nposed, but I sternly checked him ; when\nwith a mute, sorrowful countenance, and\na swelling breast.he turned away and went\nslowly to his chamber. My heart smote\nme even at that moment, though 1 felt con-\nscious of doing but a father's duty.
0f04b4c245ea31610f73016b462726c9 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.9684931189752 42.217817 -85.891125 President Marsh read this editorial\nand thanked God for lMward Norman.\nAt the same time he understood well\nenough that every other paper in Ray-\nmond was on the other side. He did not\nmisunderstand tho importance and seri-\nousness of the tight which was only just\nbegun. It was no secret that The News\nhad lost enormously since it had been\ngoverned by the standard of "What\nwould Jesus do?" The question now\nwas. "Would the Christian people of\nRaymond stand by it?" Would they\nmake it possible for Norman to conduct\na daily Christian paper, or would their\ndesire for what is called "news," in\nthe way of crime, scandal, political\npartisanship of tho regular sort and a\ndislike to champion so remarkable a re-\nform in journalism, influence them to\ndrop the paper and refuse to give it\ntheir financial support? That was, in\nfact, the question Kdward Norman was\nasking even while he wrote the Satur-d - a '\neditorial. knew well enough\nthat his action expressed in that edi-\ntorial would cost him very dearly from\nthe hands of many business men of\nRaymond, and still as he drove his pen\nover the paper ho asked another ques-\ntion. "What. would Jesus do?" That\nquestion had become a part of his lifo\nnow. It was greater than any other.\nBut for the first time in its history\nRaymond had seen the professional\nmen. tho teachers, the college profes-\nsors, tho doctors, tho ministers, tako\npolitical action and put themselves\ndefinitely and sharply in antagonism to\nthe evil forces that had so long con-\ntrolled the machine of the municipal\ngovernment. The fact itself was aston-\nishing. President Marsh acknowledged\nto himself, with a feeling of humilia-\ntion, that never before had ho known\nwhat civic righteousness could accom-\nplish. From that Friday night's work\nhe dated for himself nnd his college a\nnew definition of the worn phrase, "tho\nscholar in politics."
9cb597b33ab01c7f2a198892d7ae51f3 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5341529738414 39.513775 -121.556359 The impartial historian, whose object will\nbe to transmit tu ihe remotest times the\ntransactions of previous years, and particu-\nlarly of the latter portion of the eighteenth\ncentury, cannot but award to the founders\nof our Republic the merit of an honest nud\nmost laudab e desire to promote the penei ul\nwelfare of the people, and to permanently\nengraft upon our form of government cor\nrc< t views uf our political rights and respon\nsibilates. It was certainly nut the inaugu-\nration of a new principle, lor we declared\ncertain rights to be inherent and inaliena-\nb e, an I their existence dated almost from\nthe commencement of time nud ihe forma-\ntion of matter. We did not uinaze ami as-\ntonish the world by the promulgation of\nsentiments which were novel in themselves,\nand which were calculated to surprise by\ntheir practical effect; tor the expci ienec ol\nthose nations that had gone before us and\npassed adown the boundless corridor \ntime, had proven the fact beyond the possi-\nbility of disputation that the principles for\nwhich wc were contending and in the behalf\n«f which such incalculable saciifices had\nbeen made, boasted of a paternity ancient as\nthe foundation uf human institutions and\nco-ordinate with human laws and govern-\nment. Uur object was to establish upon a\nfirm and lasting basis those principles which\nevery man's conscience tells him arc right,\nnud winch if properly appreciated are in\nthe highest degree conducive to the moral,\nsocial and political well being of the human\nrace. Had the aim and purpose of our lore-\nfathers been to enact a form of government\nleas liberal in its features, intended merely\nto serve a temporary purpose, and designed\nto subserve selfish ends, the world w. -uid\nnave witheld its praise, and those nations\nUnit have bent-fitted by the results of their\ninestimable achievements, would have dete-\nrioie J in a degree which is incapable of com-\nputation
45bc4aadda8926cb95bb5f6fc6e70082 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2397259956874 32.408477 -91.186777 their eyes would instinctively seek it\nin its old place; always with a little\nmoving of the heart. Yet no one\never alluded to it to the principal;\nand no one, not her most trusted\nteacher, nor her best loved pupil, had\never heard the principal speak of it.\nThe name of the pictured soldier, his\nstory, his relation to Miss Wing; Miss\nWing's nearest kindred and friends\nknew as much about all these as the\nschool-end that was nothing. Never-\ntheless, the school tradition reported\npart of a name on the authority of a\nsingle incident. Years ago an acci-\ndeat happened to the picture. It was\nthe principal's custom to carry it with\nher on her journeys, however brief;\nalways taking it down and putting it\nback in its place herself. On this oc-\ncasion the floor been newly pol.\nusbed, and in hanging the picture her\nchair on which she stood slipped and\nshe ell, while the picture dropped out\nof her grasp. One of the girls, who\nwas pasing, ran to her aid; but she\nLhad crawled toward the picture and\nwod bave It in her hands before she\nalowed the girl to aid her to rise--a\nonumastance, you may be surb, not\nlikely to escape the sharp young eyes.\nNeither did these same eyes mis the\nfurther eirmstance that the Jar had\nshifted the carte In the frame and a\nline at writinas, hitherto hidden, was\nstarnlg out at the world. The hand\nwas the sharp, minute German hand,\nbut the words were English; the girl\nteek them in at an eyeblink, as shre\nLaded the plcture to Miss Wing:\n'Thlne far ever, Max."
0c43ecf3cd93cb0938d4346d59aa025d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.0205479134956 41.681744 -72.788147 Just what caused the controversy\nwhich resulted in Lawyer Danberg\nbeing informed that his services aro\nno longer required is somewhat of a\nmystery. Lawyer Danberg states that\nyesterday afternoon Secretary Robb\nnotified him that the second exemp-\ntion board had voted that his services\nwere no longer required. Pressed for\na. reason, Mr. Robb explained that it\nwas up to Lawyer P. F . McDonough,\nwho is chairman of the legal advisory\nboard, Lawyer Danberg states. When\nLawyer McDonough was approached\non the matter, Lawyer Danberg says\nthat he assured him that it was not\nthe result of any personal feeling be-\ntween themselves and was tho action\nof the second exemption board.\nLawyer Danberg, however, appeared\nas usual at his desk in City Hall this\nmorning assist any who needed help\nin tilling out their quest ionairrcs.\nAlthough he feels keenly the action\ntaken by those over him, he states\nthat nevertheless he feels that they\nhave no right to discharge him and\nthat it is his duty to remain at work.\nAccording to his views, he was ap\npointed by Governor Marcus II. Hoi- -\ncomb and President Wilson as a per\nmanent member of the legal advisory\nboard and, as such, cannot be dis\ncharged by the subsidiary exemption\nboard. Lawyer Danberg further states\nthat when he took oath as a member\nof the legal advisory board he swore\nthat he would assist in this work and\ndo it to the best of his knowledge\nand ability, and he intends to stand\nby this.
37e7899e8ed4c531cbe256d55d61ddd2 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.8616438039066 40.114955 -111.654923 Tho injurious action of Coffee on the\nheart of many persons is well known-\nby physicians to bo caused by caf\nfelne This Is tho drug found by chem\nists in coffco and tea\nA woman suffered a long time with\nsevere heart troublo and finally her\ndoctor told her she must give up cof\nfee as that was tho principal cause-\nof tho trouble Sho writes\nMy heart was so weak It could not\ndo its work properly My husband\nwould sometimes have to carry mo\nfrom tho table and it would seem that-\nI would never breathe again\nThe doctor told mo that coffee was\ncausing tho weakness of my heart Ho\nsaid I must stop It but It seemed I\ncould not give it up until I was down-\nIn bed with nervous prostration\nFor eleven weeks I lay thero anti\nsuffered Finally Husband brought\n somo Postum and I quit coffee\nsad started new and right Slowly I\ngot well Now I do not have any head\naches nor those spoils with weak\nheart Wo know It is Postum that\nhelped me Tho Dr said tho other day-\nI never thought you would bo what\nyou are I used to weigh 92 pounds\nand now I weigh 158\nPostum has dono much for mo and\nI would not go back to coffee again\nfor any money for I believe It would\nkill mo if I kept at It Postum must\nbe well boiled according to directions-\non pkg then It has a rich flavour\nand with cream Is fine\nRead Tho Road to Wellvlllo found-\nIn pkgs TboroB a Reason\nlaver rend the above letter A new\none npprnrn from time to time They\nlire Krnulne true and full of human\ninterest
119dc6b287574054fb05aa3d3a34cffe THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.0890410641807 37.561813 -75.84108 graceful slopes being adorned with fine\nold timber, i'he palace itself is an enor\nmous building, or block of\nOne huge squwe stone cditice occupies\ntho center, and from it branch out on\neither sine circular wings which serve\nas galleries to connect the main edilice.\nand two smaller but substantial annexes\nthat face in the same direction as the\ncentral portion, and form projections\nthe ends of the general semi -ci rc ul-\nfront. In the central block are the state\nand larger reception rooms. The wing\non the lett is occupied by the imperial\nfamily. In that on the right are the\napartments for members of the house\nhold. Visitors arriving are conducted\nto the central entrance, and, except un\nder the most safe conduct and after\nsearching examination, no one is allowed\nto approach that portion of the palace\ninhabited by the Czar. Thus the general\narrangement of the buildings, Desides\noffering the advantages of accommoda-\ntion to be found in a large mansion, af\n special security for tho personid\nsafety of the Emperor, whose apartments\nare completely isolated and unapproach\nable except by narrow passages that are\nstrictly guarded. The galleries at Gats-\nchina have long been famed as contain-\ning lnagnilicent artistic collections. One\nwhich leads to tho Knfferor's private\nrooms is called the Japanese gallery,\nand here are assembled a number\ncuriosities of the highest value, which\nhave from time to tune been presented\nto the great White C.ar by tho rulers\nChina ana Japan. Iho Japanese Min-\nister, who was lately presented at Gats\nchina, and who is a great collector\nboth European and Asiatic bri c-a -br-\nstated that there was nothing in the East\nto compare with this Russian collection,\nand that it would be impossible to re\nplace many of the ancient and extremely\nvaluable artistic objects that adorn tho\nimperial gallery. In addition to the\nAsiatic curiosities, the lover of antiqui\nties hnds at Gutseluna magnuicent spec\nimens of the most highly- worke -
1defccc7f46ad5c98f1adb3102b3fa1b PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.7904109271942 39.756121 -99.323985 their whole time. The state tax\ncommission is to have general super-\nvision of the county assessors, with\npower of removal if any county as-\nsessor fails to do his duty.\nSitting as the board of equalization,\nthe state tax commission has greatly\nenlarged powers. It may not only\nraise or lower the gross assessments\nof any county, but it may raise or\nlower the valuations of any class of\nproperty. It also hears and deter-\nmines all appeals from the county\nboards of equalization, affirming or\naltering the action of these boards.\nThe state tax commission assesses tel-\nephone and telegraph property, ex-\npress companies, pipe line companies\nand, having the wide power and equal-\nization above mentioned, may thus\nmake all property bear its rightful\nshare of the expense of government.\nTelegraph and telephone companies\nare assessed upon the proportion, the\nlength and value of the lines in Kan-\nsas bear to the length and value of\nall the lines of the company; \nthe market value of the stocks and\nbonds of the company as a basis. Ex-\npress and pipe line companies are as-\nsessed in the same way. Railroad\ncompanies are assessed upon both\ntheir tangible and intangible prop-\nerty; that is to say, upon the physi-\ncal value of their branches, and after\nthat the market value of the stocks\nand bonds of the company is to be re\nported and considered. Banks are as\nsessed the same as now upon their\ncapital, surplus and individual profits.\nStreet railways, electric light- compa\nnies, waterworks companies and all\ncompanies possessing public fran\nchises are taxed upon the full value\nof their tangible property.\nAll other corporations are assessed\nupon the full value of their property\nexactly as individuals are. Merchants\nare assessed upon the average value\nof their stock, taking as nearly as\npossible the amount of the value of\nthe stock in each month of the year\nadded together and divided .by 12.\n'
19f3b28f0f5cca9977c38e0f43b865cb THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1885.3273972285642 39.743941 -84.63662 gerous infections or communicable disease\nexist in any State or Territory, and is liable\nto spread from such State or Territory into\nany other State or Territory, the Commis-\nsioner of Agriculture will designate one or\nmore officers or employes of said bureau,\nwhose duty it shall be to proceed\nimmediately to the locality where\nsuch infectious or communicable disease\nis reported to exist, and to there establish\nquarantine regulations to prevent the spread\nof said disease, or to assess the valuo of any\nanimal or animals which it may be found'\nnecessary to destroy in order to extirpate\nsaid disease and to employ both measures,\nif noceesary, for the extinction of the same.\nIt shall be tbe duty of such officers or em-\nployes detailed for the purposes aforesaid,\nto report the Commissioner of Agriculture\nthe number of cattle they have found it\nnecessary to destroy, with names of their\nowners and the assessed value of said cattle;\nand said officers or employes shall de-\nliver to said owner or owners certifi-\ncates of the number of cattle so killed and\nthe assessed value thereof. Upon receiving\nsaid report the Commissioner of Agriculture\nshall examine the same, and if he approves\nthe proceedings of said officers or employes\nand the assessments made by them, he may\norder the payment of the amount so assessed\nto the respective owners of the cattle de-\nstroyed, and if he shall disapprove the\namount so assessed he may order paymeut\nto such owners of such cattle as he may\ndeem just and reasonable compensation for\nsaid cattle.
1d37ebdb587c382f1cf6e8334926203c THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.9301369545915 40.832421 -115.763123 r «ei\\ed from Al. Cage, a f'»riuer v. el -\nku'iwn N« v:r!a», the following letter <ia-\nt*d at 11 tiley, l^l.tLo Nov. 21,\n. .Since uri'mg to y« u I have been\nthrough Northern Idaho and Noiih-\n*e-t«rn Montana. They aie pretty\ng»od countries, hut it najuir*--* «-*piti«\nto do rtli\\ tiling, nliil cold w* li 1 can't\ndo tie nuhj'Ct juntice. Jiiht imagine\nyourself crawling out of the I'lmkcio\nkotue morning, the thermometer mark¬\ning 4.S degrees helow* z»*r*», tho t»now\nthree feet deep jh I thr«-e Cold, hungry\nhordes waiting (<»r you to <otue nn<l\nhhovol the "beautiful" off the tie id gr-.'is\nko that thy canget alute t» eat.\nWell, if yon dou't think of every two-\nI it piece you Hef »peut foolcdily, you\nare made of dilleient material that\nmixed up in my composition. Thi-*\nplace financially in very ijuiet. In fuel\nhu ordinary graveyard uould l»e coiisid-\nrrol n hu*tlin^ commercial mart iu\ncompanion aitb St. Aft a proof that 1\nam not "drawing a Low,** it Uih two\nh.i*e hall club*, and any Ulllliher of\ntune* that need clubbing mine smong\nthem for coming here. Ketchum, 1*2\ntulles north of llailey, in a pr« tty good\nSuinmer camp, when they have any\nSmuttier to CMiup on. Laying all joking\naside it is the best town iu I laho, has a\nnumber of good mine* an 1 a bost of\nubole-HoUted, rustling business men.\nIf yon know of any one that can tell\nyou niut'h about two big Territories on\ntbi« last half-sheet of paper he's a\ntrump, that's all.
29008fe9072b8fa58d29c84f36e09503 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.878082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 folk, Va., to-day, and it promises to be one of\nthe mast important gatherings ever held by the\nAssociation. Wilmington is particularly inter­\nested, as the first project urged by the Associa­\ntion is the building of the Chesapeake and Dela­\nware Ship Canal. This city has always occupied\na high position in conventions of the Association.\nThe Association has made rapid progress. A\nfew years ago there was but the slightest dis­\ncussion of the water ways problem. The Asso­\nciation has taken up a mass of scattered senti­\nment in favor of improving our water ways and\nwelded it into a powerful organization which is\nMire to exert a strong influence on legislation at\nWashington. The Association has planned an\nelaborately linked inner water way system\ntending from Boston to Galveston, and as a\n of its work the last* session of Congress\nprovided (or a survey of/the entire route along\nthe Atlantic and Gulf coasts. Much of this sur­\nvey has bccu made. The Association, however,\nHai>-ntuch-to accomplish, and the thing most\nneeded now is to agitate for the ship banal, lo\nmake an energetic beginning of actual construc­\ntion. This canal, as is well known, would con­\nnect the upper waters of the Chesapeake with\nthe head of Delaware Bay, and would shorten\nthe route from the port of Baltimore to the ports\nof Europe by more than 300 miles. No wonder\nthat Baltimoreans have been deeply intereste,!\nin the project. Think what the canal would\nmean to the western shippers of coal and iron\nand stecL this cutting off of three hundred miles\nby means of the ship canal.
18eb37f286784694519614c660ee332c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9602739408929 39.513775 -121.556359 13KWMM' "k I M I*' tsrnf'v. ftl c mseeiieiico\nIS of the wide spread celebrity of I * 15. Y'M v>,\nnainerou- imposiera have sprung into existence, pre-\ntending to Im perfect mi-lt rs of the hen ling an. and\nh ive succeeded in imposing upon a few id theun-\nw ary sullen rs. Versons w idling lo consult a I tiv-i .\neian. Jiouhl lie very careful how they pul aonlldeiK'n\nin the published statements of such charlatans, tor\nthey are as un-crupuloiu in such statements as it)\ntheir prac* ice of medicine, and ae very un*ate to\ntrust. They will Drat deceive you by fal-e cerlitieale*\nliroctind from •drunken loafi rs, who perjure them*\nselves lo get money to satisfy I tie cravings of a dis.\neased appelile. \\\\ hen such Quack gains your con.\ndeuce. In- will then dose you with mercury and other\npoisnon* drugs, and after they have roldetd you of\nyour money and injured your coiistitton, they will\ncast you off wilh the charge that you have not (ol\nlowed bis dree ions.\nThe only wav to avoid such importer*. Is to con\nsuit .1 . l'. Young,the Pioneer Adverlisii g I'hv-i-\n- cimi >fi a! forma. At a inoeung of the Medical i tie-\nnily ot Ibis Male, called lo invesligtde Mir source of\nmalpractice that Ima caused so inticli suffetingiu\nIbis country, it was unanimously r»*ci nimended Mist\nall Iheafllicled should c ii»”lt Hr. Young, as he was\nthe only regular physician now advertising in Cali-\nfornla, td| others in hi- line lx ing qouckt and impos-\nters, and are net to tie trusted. The afflicted will\nplease lake notice (hut there was tint a Ihvslcinn at\nllie meeting who hud ever seen or heard of a a uglj\nCase of in a Ipractice from Ur. Voting, while not oeo\ni f tin in but bad seen a number of cases Pom tho\nforeign (piecks, whoso vain lingly set forth their\npretended virtues in the puolic prints.\nThe above facts shoul l ho borne in mind by ell\nseeking medical io. -isUmre\nThank heaven, Ihev are getting thoroughly expos-\ned, and it will not he long beloru they will have lo\nliy the country *o avoid Mil) just Indignation of an\noutraged public
a21e09a9d9910c436aa460731dd98f9f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.4726027080162 41.681744 -72.788147 "Some few weeks ago, no doubt\nyou saw in the press where it was\nstated that a truck had drawn\nout on the Peace bridge and un-\nloaded the ale down on the bank\non the American side by tying a\nrope around the cases and lower-\ning them to the river bank. As\na matter of fact this ale waa un-\nloaded from one of the rum\nboats plying between here and\nBuffalo, right under the Peace\nbridge within a few hundred yard-o- t\nthe customs house.\nV.. 8. Officers Helped Them\n"Our officers who check thcs:\nboats out were informed by one\nof the rum runners that they had\nno trouble in landing their cargo\nas they were assisted by officers\nof the dry squid on the \nside, and it would appear that\nsuch must be the case when sev-\nen or eight boata will leave here\nand land their cargoes, sometimes\ntaking them three hours to un-\nload, without any casualties.\n"These boats are loaded direct-\nly opposite from the United States\ncustoms office at Black Rock. You\ncan stand by the window in that\noffice and look across and see\nevery case that ia loaded on the\nCanadian side. I know if condi-\ntions were reversed that we would\nhave all these boats tied up in\nJgat than a week, and if the of-\nficers on the American side wish\nto put a atop to this business\nthey could do It in about tho\nsame length of time.\nThat is signed by F. T.
02b06c00cbfbff8f386ac6903f73c877 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.4534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 ^The Irish aro different. The£_Jr\nnaTtily workTog people, "coming ovt\nsearch of an easy life nnd^Tluck\nlenny.. The women Vastly outnnmtn\nhe men, and while there are excej\nions, the great mass come wuhoutluj\n;age and less mouey, but great expe\nat ions. Very many lfeQD4Bil<ts0f *he\nlorne over through the generosity\nheir friends already hettj Whose con\nn* they anxiously look Tor.\nThe men come.tq.dig. ^\nThe women to work mi servant*.\nThey vfoa*L thank you for a goc\ntome out of the city,but prefer totaxti\ninspitallty of their generous relative\ns bard-up, perhaps, as tliemselve\nor a shelter-end a bite. II it were m\nar the iniobunded hospitality of ou\nfiah population these emigrants woul\nirt>Ve,a1treinend6tis burden upon tb\nIty; as it is, they tind friends easil:\n'he men are drawn off into channels\n labor, and the women ai\niken by tbeir friends to -intoliigen<\nffices for service. And here it may I\nrell to say that under the care ao\nbarge of (he Commission is a we\negnlated intelligence office, where ee;\nants, fresh,as the earliest dawn, ca\ne procured at any time. The name <\nlegitl, the name of the ship, the nam\nf the employer anditbe rate of wag«\nromised, are carefully noted and ref\ntared, an that in case.of trouble or lit\nation ample evidence can protect th\niris from a'1 sWlndle; The'" girls, a\nbough green, find in their old friend\napable instructors, and are soon initii\netf into the mysteries of exorbitant di\noands, "privileges," "Mays out," &6\ntc. , bo that, although the supply\nver fresh, the demand for untainte\nervanta can never be filled. *«
58387d123ebc66d729c4ee296d1d41dc OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.3109588723999 41.020015 -92.411296 ing the ca-e where it is sfrowu ou\neLroug ground, making a large stalk. —\nThis can he remedied by sowing thick,\nand thus getting a tiuc-stemmed crop,\nalso .shorter iu length, the stalks vary­\ning from !."> to 20 inches, according to\nthe ((tialify of the land, theseason, and\nwhether pianiei ha- been ic-ed. Bnt\nthe poiut is. to sow thick—from ten to\ntwelve <)uaru per acre, evenly scatter­\ned on even, mellow »oil, aud brushed\niu if sown with -pring graiu. This\nforms a dose growth, and must be cut\nlietore it iodiresmuch, and this is gener­\nally about the time of flowering, tlse,\nif lodged badly, and permitted to re­\nmain so for sOtnc time, it will partially\nrot and lose much of its qualit\\ as a\nfeecl. But harvested iu time and well\n there will be no deterioration of\nthe high value which this plant has\nobtained among our best dairymen.\nThree ions per acre may thn« be real­\nized : and if the season'is ti good one,\nthe amount may be doubled by two\ncuttings ; and clover should always be\ncut twice, each time at about the blot-\nsoming period. We prefer the me­\ndium size or June clover, as H is earl­\nier and finer »t«mmed than the large\nkiDd. aud less apt to lodge, snd always\npermit ottwo euMtings. On poor land\nclover may be grown successfttlly, im­\nproving the land. But It may be rais-\nnd on the richest of land with tbe most,\ngin ti tying results ; onl y get It clo»e so\nas to have U line tieuiinecL mmI cnt it\nit time.
88575cc23aea872556f3c87317440a7d THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1865.4726027080162 37.561813 -75.84108 to Surgeon Granger and other\nOfficers of the Regiment.\nCOLUMBIA, TENN, June 5, 1865.\nMr. Editor: Uaving just read\notter in the Highland News, by J. P .\nShalt, our Chaplaio, dated April 6th,\n1865, I deem it my duty to enter a few\nexplanatory remarks for the benefit\nthe many readers of your paper; though\ndo not wish to slander any man, nor\nhonor any man more than he it worthy\nof, but desire to express the general\nfeelings of the 175th Regiment in re\nHard to Medical Offioers, which are oer\ntainly different from tho said letter's in\nformation, by a majority of four - fi fth- s\nof the regiment. It is true R. A .\nDwyer is Mujor Surgeon; end why . so?\nonly beoause he has been in servioe\nlittle longer than Bonj. D. Granger,\nthe most popular Medical Offioer, and\nbest physioian in said regiment, who\nnow, aod has been since the 16th day\nMarch, Post Surgeon. He was ap\npointed Post Surgeon by Lieut. Col\nDan. McCoy, (now Brigadier General,)\nho is a worthy field offioer, and who\nhas won the affections of his regiment\nalmost unanimously, by bis good man\naeemcnt and kind treatment, oargeon\nGranger has won the affections of the\nregiment likewise. The following named\noffioers I commend highly, vis: Cap\ntains Hiestand of Company B, Wolf,\nCompany O, Posegato, Company E, and\nseveral other Captains whom I will not\nmention, but mast speak of Lieutenant\nBundy, for the interest he has taken\nthe welfare of the regiment.\nPlease circulate this letter in
42cdd26775d7e44077a28f480f61c2a8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.582191749112 41.681744 -72.788147 Saxe, chairman of the general com-\nmittee, and Arthur E. Berg, clerk\nof the board of park commissioners\nwhose activities in faver of a muni-\ncipal golf course more than a year\nago is said to have been the real\nstart of the project.\nThe club, with many of its mem-\nbers out of the city on vacation has\nmade a record to date of 54.4 per\ncent; the Rotary club comes next\nwith a total subscription among its\nmembers of 39.3 per cent, while the\nLions club has reached 37.5 per cent.\nThe Exchange club has made a start\nwith a percentage of 20.6.\nMr. Lamphier slates that the com-\nmittee in charge of the drive finds\nthe cooperation of the clubs gratify-\ning and he believes that the ultimate\nsuccess o the will be due to\na large extent to the foregoing re-\ncords He points out lhat this is an\nincomplete report from each club.\nNo Reports From Captains\nWith no reports coming in from\nteam captains, because of the fact\nthat no meetings have been held\nsince last Friday it is impossible, ac-\ncording to Ralph H. Benson secre-\ntary of the Chamber of Commerce,\nwho is handling the mechanical\npart of the drive, to tell how much\nhas been subscribed to date.\nThe drive so far as produced at\nleast four fairly large subscriptions.\nOne check for $1,000 and three for\n$500 each have been received, in\neach case donors who probably nev-\ner wil play on a public course.\nOther contributions range all the\nway from $1 up, although the aver
01ba4c67ada878d0baf20070b10b8367 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.6215846678303 46.187885 -123.831256 Astoria. August 14th. 1888.\nCHIEF OF POLICE bALE.\nNOTICE is hereby given that Ity vir-\ntue of a warrant issued by the Auditor\nand Police Judge of the City of Astoria,\nin accordance with an order made by\nthe Common Council of the City of As-\ntoria, by Ordinance No. 1047, entitled an\nOrdinance ordering the Auditor to is-\nsue warrants for the collection of as-\nsessments remaining unpaid ou West\n9th 'street, between Water street and\nBerry street, approved July 25th, 1888,\nsaid warrant bearing date (he 25th day\nof 'July, 1883, commanding me to levy\nupon the N orth of lot No. 1, in block\nNo. 11G, in the City of Astoria as laid\nout and recorded by J. M . Shively, to\ncollect an assessment of thirty dollars,\nwhich assessment was made for the im-\n of West 9th street, between\nWater street and Berry street, by Or-\ndinance 1045, entitled an Ordinance de-\nclaring the probable cost of improving\nWest 9th street, from tho South sjde of\nWater street to the South side of Berry\nstreet, approved Juno 20th. 1888 , J have\nthis day levied upon the North $ of\nlot No. 1, in b'ocfc No.UG, in Shively's\nAstoria, and on Friday, the 14th day of\nSenteinber. at 10 o'clock a. m of said\nday in front of the Com t House door in\nthe City of AMoria, Clatsop County,\ngon, will proceed to sell the North f\nof lot No. 1, in block No. 11G, in Shive-\nly's, Astoria, to tho highest bidder\ntherefor, to pay said assessment, costs\nand expenses of sale. Said sale to be\nun u'. o.kuiu ruin.
01c1ae23fba5b9b1b779f775c0cd800d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1884.561475378213 42.217817 -85.891125 but at any rate be determines to start\nwell provided with the necessary imple-\nments for killing Indians, whose reek-\ning scalps ho intends to express to\nhis parents as trophies of bis prow-\ness and bitter reminders that their\nharshness and bitter cruelty forced him\ninto this bloody occupation.\nThis lad with whom we talked had no\nidea of foreign lands at all. His soul\ndidn't hanker after sailor yarns told in\ntho fo'castle, nor did ho yearn to bo\nrocked to sleep on tho masthead.\nsoothed by tho sea's wild lullaby. He\nthought, though, that if ho could bor-\nrow a pistol and run away from home\nhe could induce conductors to let himi\nride fr,ee on the railroads, and perhaps\nmake himself solid, as ho expressed it,\nwith a Pullman porter, who would give\nhim a bunk in tbe sleejer nt night, un-\ntil ho could reach a section in tho West\nwhero Indian shooting was most abund-\n when of course he could tako care\nof himself, as wLat boy couldn't, who\nwas any boy at all? Tiring of that\nfor ho supposed the novelty of killing\nand scalping red men would wear oil"\nafter a frme he might write a play, of\nwhich ho was the hero, gather up a\ncompany of Indians to help to play it,\nand como Kant to star it as "Antelope\nJake," or something liko tbat. It all\nBounded very queer, but wo realized\nthat fashions in running away from\nhomo change like everything else.\nHappy youth, that can live and revel\nin the land of "way off," whether it bo\nreached o'er stormy seas or by tho per-\nils of modern railroading. Dream of\nit while you can, with the dr.'ed tears\non your cheeks, wrung by h mo wrongs,\nreal or imaginary: for tho timo will\ncome when you will realizo that there\nin no retreat m tins world that-wi- ll\nI
21de52977612d71edf5ec9066f49753c THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.215068461441 40.832421 -115.763123 Alto, what la known aa the IIu»><7 Tannel.\nsltaaled ineald HaIIroad Minium District, and\nrunning fron the maath af said tunnel lOit\nfee* la a southerly 4lre<*A»n into the moan-\ntain, claiming all velne and are# that mar be\ntapp«*l by .aid tannel, net located [irniaai\nto said tunnel, to a distance of OUO fee* on\neach side of the center of said inn nel local loa.\nBeing recorded In Book B, p. U>sf MltHag\nRecords o! said Mining District.\nAlso, what la known as the Last Chance\nTannel, situated in aaid ilailroad Mining DIs-\ntrkl, andruunlng 2,606 feet from the head of\nsaid luuoel iu a southeasterly dlrectloa, and\nclaiming all ores and veins which may be\ntapped by said tunnel, not located previous\nto said tunnel. Kald location being recorded\nla the Mlnlug Itooords of said Mining District\non the Sfch day of October. 1871.\nAlso, all of thoae certain ledges or devoslts\nof mineral bearing rock, situated In the said\nMining District, knawn as the Lour Lode, the\nTrue Loda and ihu Red Jacket Lode, and be¬\ning the same oauvered by W . llussey tothe\nEmpire City Mining Company by deads dated\nrespectively Ai»rll 6lh, !*?-£,' and April 1Mb,\nIK1 and recorded May I" h, 1872, In the Re¬\ncorder 'n office of Elko County a foresaid. In\nBook 4 of D* eds, commencing on pages -ID and\n42. respectively.\nAlso, all of what Is known as the Empire\nCity Mine, sltaato In aaid Railroad Mining\nDistrict, con tain lug 1WW linear feet on aaid\nvein, which location Is recorded on page 134\nIn Book B of paid Miuiug District,\nAlso, that certain smelting fUrnace, situate\nin the town of Bullion, in said couutv and\nState. known as the Empire City Mining\nCompany's Furnace or Smelter, together with\nall engines aud machinery (hereto belonging\nor in anywise appertaining.\nAlso, all of tho:«e certain pieces or parcels\nof property situate In tlie said town of Bul¬\nlion, known aa the Empire City Company's\noffice ami a»sav oftt^.\nAlso, a certain set of platform scat* e, situ\nated In said tou u « ( Bullion, and known as\nthe Empire City Miuing Coiupauy's platform\nscales, and
2067da74c51515ca814ceece15648639 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.8013698313039 41.681744 -72.788147 Peonies can be planted at any time\nfrom early fall to early spring.\nSeptember is considered the earliest\nmonth, and by some It is thought the\nbest, but October is Just as good. The\nrootg are dormant and they will get\nwell settled and established before it\nfreezes up, if planted any time before\nthe middle of November. The roots\nshould be set deep enough so the\ncrowns are Just beneath the surface,\nand the roots should be deep as they\nwould naturally be, without crowd-\ning them or spreading them more\nthan natural. Pack the soil firmly.\nFor general planting I would re-\ncommend the mixtures in colors clas-\nsed separately, as mixed reds, mixed\nwhites, mixed pinks, and mixed pur-\nples. The whites will range from clear\nwhite to cream and light blush, and\n with some petals marked with\npink or red. The pinks, reds and\npurples are varying shades of these\ncolors. Get the doubles, of course,\nand you will not bo disappointed with\nthe flowers. They are much cheaper\nthan the named sorts and for the\nfarm garden they are practically as\ngood. The flowers are very large,\nvery double, and the colors are good.\nThe plants are even more hardy than\nthe general run of fancy sorts.\nPeonies should be planted where\nthey can remain for several years,\nfor they do not like to be disturbed.\nAs a general thing they will not\nbloom for one, and sometimes two\nor three years after they are trans-\nplanted, though I have usually had\nsome flowers from good, roots that I\ntcught the first season after I planted\nthem.
66f722c864b1913634e85135696c7b02 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.1931506532217 39.369864 -121.105448 Infinitesimally small as arc the micro-\nscopic animals, they are generally clothed\nin coats of mail, or cased in shells con-\nsisting of the most lasting materials.—\nHence their fossil remains extend be-\nyond the entire period of mans history,\nand constitute a great portion of the\nearths covering of soil. Entire moun-\ntains and plains are composed of them,\nand the smallest fragment of earth or\nrock is often but an aggregate of millions\nof minute organic remains.\nIt is absolutely impossible to set a\nlimit to the variety and extent of life.\nOn our globe the subtile principle, by\nmeans of an infinity of individual forms\nwhich are all connected from the lowest\nto the highest by the nicest gradations,\nis disseminated everywhere with the\nuniversality of chemical elements.\nIn view of these astonishing facts\nwhy may not a drop of water or a grain\nof sand be a microcosm, or minute rep-\nresentative of the whole universe ?\nthe globe itself, with its endless forms\nof life, be but as a drop of water compared\nto the inconceivable aggregate of peopled\nworlds that move through limitless space?\nMan loves to consider the wonderful\nbeauty of his own being as the culmin-\nation supreme capacity in the creation\nof sentient existences; and has even\narrogated to himself, on the ground of\nhis assumed superiority, a title to spirit-\nual immortality. He witnesses in the\nlower animals exhibitions of the most\nexquisite intelligence, yet complacently\ndenies them the possession of reason,\nwhile demanding and receiving services\nthat only reason, in some degree, could\nenable them to render. He proudly\nsurveys the green planet on which he\ndwells—“the brave oerhanging canopy\nof heaven,” with its myriad glistening\norbs, through which, as through kind-\nling eyes, looks forth the soul of the uni-\nverse ; and pronounces himself master\nof the eternal mystery—the confidant of\nOmnipotence—he for whom all things\nwere made, and beyond whose limited\nsphere no form of life exists. More\nnoble would it be to meekly seek to\nlearn and not pretend to know the secret\nof creation. There is no limit to in-\nquiry, and may be none to knowledge.\nThe fields of nescience, or of the impos-\nsible to be known, seem however, to lie\nalways before us. We have received\nbut a mere hint concerning the globe .on\nwhich our own history began in obscu-\nrity—and shall we now pretend to Om-\nniscience ?
109ef9b191fe91834d7093b2a2a7eff3 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1897.5027396943176 39.78373 -100.445882 widows and spinsters having taxable\nproperty eligible to vote for school\ntrustees except in cities governed by\ncharters. In 1861, Knss giro\nschool suffrage to all women. In 1869\nEngland gave municipal sfiffraee to\nsingle women and widows, and Wyo-\nming trav. full suffrage t all womn.\nSchool suffrage wa granted in 1875\nby Michigan and Minnesota, in 1876\nby Colorado, in 1878 by N w Hamp-\nshire and Oregon, in 1879 by Mass-\nachusetts, in 1880 by New York and\nVermont. In 1881, municipal suff-\nrage was extended to the single women\nand widows of Scotland. Nebraska\ngave women scnool suffrage in 1883,\nand Wisconsin in 1885. in 1886, Ne-- v\nBrunswick and Ontario gve munici-\npal suffrrge to single women and\nwidows, ami Wahingto'f pave school\nsuffrage to all women. In 1887 muni-\ncipal suffrage extended to all\nwomen in Kansas, and rhol suffrage\nin North and South D kkota, Montana,\nArizona and New Jersey. In 1891,\nschool suffrage was grantel in Illi-\nnois. In 1892, munijipal suffrage\nwas extended to single women and\nwidows in tha Province of Q tehee.\nIn 1893, school suffrage wis granted\nin Connecticut, and full suffrage in\nColorado and New Zealand. In 1894,\nschool suffrage was grmted in Onto,\na limited tuuuiei jal suffrage in Iowa,\nand parish and district suffrage in\nEngland to women both married and\nSingle. In 1896, full suffrage was\ngranted to women in Utah and Idaho.\nThe question is how pearling in\nSouth Dikota, Washington and in\nseveral of rhe British provinces. The\nlast Nevada legislature declined to\nallow the people of this State to ex-\npress themselves on the subject.
029fd8fea94d43778a1edb5199e33108 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.719178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 Beginning at 10 o'clock a. m ., tho following do- *\nscribed real estate, situate In tho city of Wheel- «\nlog, and Btate of west Virginia, that la to fay:\n1. A part of a lot or parcel of ground on Union\natreet. In aald city, being a portion of lot No. HI,\nand which part Is bounds as follows: Befllnnlnc\nat the corner of an alley running from Union *\natreet, thence with aald alley northeastwardly 4fl .\nfeet to the cornerr of tho smoke house rrerted on '\naald lot: thence by a line binding thereon at a\nright anglea to aald alley, and parallel with\nColon atreet. westwardly ,43 feet; thence by a i\nline at rltht anglea to the aald last (mentioned '\nline, and parallel with aald alley, 48 feet to Union\natreet; thence with Union atrwt 13 leet to the\nplace of beginning, being the aame property con-\nveyed to said Bherrard Clemena by Isaac J\nMitchell and wlie. by deed dated October 10\n1845,' and recorded In the Recorder'* ofllce or\nOhio couaty In deed book No. 97, page *81.\nI. The Interest of said Bhorrard Clemeni being\nan undivided fonrth of an undivided half of lot\nNo 187, at the corner of Union and Fourth\natreeta. tho same being Kft foot on Fourth atreet,\nand running the aame width 131 leet on Union\natreet to a thirty foot alloy. p«r a more partlcu-\nlar description of aald lot, reference la made to\nthe deed by which John Ritchie and wife con-\nveyed the aame to J. W . Clemena, dated Jnne 14,\n18»7, and recorded In tho it««cordcr's ofllce of (\nOhio county, In Deed Book No M.pago 1W.\nT*MH or Bali-One-thtrd of tfi« purchase 1\nmoney, and such further sums as the purchaser I\nmay elect. In hand, the balance in equal Installment*\nat elx and twelve months from the day of
10f47e3cd8c599ffc01b87a6b64026db EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.4890410641806 39.745947 -75.546589 As one way to better dlsqem the may soon be, also, that, while con-\ntrue character of the Socialist move- tinuing to declare, as they should,\nment (as distinguished from the par- that our present system does contain\nty). let It be considered as the bar- an Inevitable class struggle, yet in-\nblnger that It Is. Then If we can dis «tead of proclaiming themselves\ncover what must be a distinguishing “committed” to It, and endeavoring\ncharacteristic of other signs which, to accelerate It by inducing the work-\nwill indicate that the new era Is at j ers to become class-conscious—\nour very doors, we may expect to lind j that Is. to consciously, deliberately\nthe Socialist, movement also posses- . wage the “war"—the Socialist party\nses that characteristic in common. members will adopt the attitude of\nwith them. An evil, former genera j deploring this class war, and\nlion, seeking a sign, received only I deavor to accelerate the Socialist\nthe sign of the prophet Jonah," | movement In work of bringing\nwhich they did not understand. But j about reconciliation. Unless the party\nthere are indications la several quar-.does come to accurately Identify and\nters that the sign wo may expect to j properly represent the Socialist\ngive us the first thrill of the Joy that. movement. It may soon become 8«\nis to come will bo the clear appearing i far estranged from It as its predeces-\nof Reconciliation. There shall bo thw sor. the Socialist Labor Party, now is.\nturning of* the heart of the father toj But whatever may or may not he\nthe children and the heart of the j the course of the party, It should at\nchildren to thelt fathers, before the. once be recognized that the Socialist\n( omlng of the Day. Jew and Chris- party Is not the Socialist movement,\ntlan shall also be com« reconciled and that as a “class war" party it\nwhen “the fulness of the Gentiles is cannot truly represent a peace move-\ncome In.”
4d94d0ff3d19ab877ffdd2e7a4567d03 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2123287354134 39.745947 -75.546589 that the approaching session of the I Dr. Garner, rector of Susquehanna\nWilmington M. E . Conference is like- Parish. Perryvllte, has resigned to be-\nly to witness a good deal of scramble 1 come rector of a large parish in West\non tho part of several preachers for j Virginia. Dr. Garner has also been\nappointment to the Elkton M. K . holding services in old St Marys,\nChurch. We are informed that tho North East and St. James, Port Do-\npresent paster has been located hero posit. The resignation of the Rev.\nonly two years and under normal con- | william Sobouler, of Trinity parish,\ndînons, would not bo likely to move; Elkton. leaves every parish in Cecil\nthat in fact be hart been invited to re- county without a rector,\nturn. Rut it seems that some of the\n"brethren”--in fact, quite a few of\ntho “brethren" •— have come to feel\nthat the reputed matrimonial pickings\nIn this pariah ought not to be mono­\npolized by nay ON f! of their frater­\nnity, for long at a time.\n report has become current that\ntho Elkton station can be made to af­\nford a preacher some several thou­\nsands of dollars ier year from wed­\nding fees alone—and that (it is said)\nhas set a lot of min.sterial mouths to\nwatering. The story goes that one of\nthe ministerial brethren has declared\nthat if they will jist let him bo ap­\npointed *o Elkton for one year, be will\nthereafter retire entirely from the\nministry. Evidently he knows, or\nthinks he known, what a harvest\nawaits him here. Under the circum­\nstances it was not mich a far-fetched\nsuggestion on the part of a city dally\nthat the Elkton M. E. Church might\npul its pastorate up at auction to the\nhighest bidder, Instead of bothering\nlo "raise a preachers salary.\nOf course, the fellow' who made that\nsuggestion was utterly wanting in\nchurchly graces—but as a matter of\npure, cold-blooded .thrift. it v»»s not\nso bad. Meanwhile Conference ap­\nproaches and we await the outcome\nof tlie "s< ramble."
09d8be73c474737b4e4703ed33e5d3fb THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.8534246258243 46.187885 -123.831256 able as any in the history of England\nand of America, and for the purpose\nof recalling more vividly than is\notherwise possible the first days of\nthe Quaker movement in a time when\nit attracted the notice of the whole\nKnglish people. While on most days\nnotliing can exceed the rural peace of\nthe place, whatever be the time of\nyear in spring, when the hedgerows\nabout are full of primroses and tho\nwoods and coppices which abound in\nall these Bucks bottoms are blue with\nwild hyacinths, or in the autumn\n(the season of all others to wander\nabout this country), when the beech\nwoods glow with color and the cherry\norchards seem to be masses of crim-\nson trees on the first Thursday in\nJune a gathering of Friends from all\nparts is held and due honor is done\n the great Quaker.\nA.t times some American travelers,\nwith tho energy of their nation, will\nfind their way from "Oxbridge up the\npretty Misbourne Valley to this place\nand spend a few moments by the\ngrave of Penn. Once, with an amus-\ning absence of any feeling for the\ngenus loci, it was proposed to carry\noff the bones of Penn to America;\njust as if they were something which\nwould be pleasing or beautiful to see,\nand as though the interest of Jordans\nlay in the dry bones themselves\nwhich repose under the grass. But\nin this little valley they are, and are\nlikely to remain; and "those who can\nfind pleasure in things which may\nbe seen without rushing from capital\nto capital will not do amiss to wan-\nder, before winter comes, among the\nclematis-covere - d
338e97e596b3d1bac3547ebd89e96e2f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.0342465436327 37.561813 -75.84108 be collected for the same purpose the\nautu of $808,826.C1, or $561,275.51 less\nthan was collected last year.\nA large proportion of the taxes col-\nlected from the people are for county,\ncity, and other local purposes, and do\nnot pass thn u,'h the State Treasury,\nbut are disbmsed within the counties\nwhere they are collected. During the\ncurrent year the taxes, exclusive of de-\nlinquencies, to be collected for all State\npurposes except for the Common\nSchool Fund, amount to $2,542,025 27,\nwlnl.f $18,187,400.92 are to be collect-\ned for local purposes.\nThe foregoing statements, from the\nreport of the Auditor of State, show to\nthat the taxation of this year for State\npurposes, other than for payments on\nthe principal and interest of the State\ndebt, exceeds the taxation of last year to\nfor the same purposes by the sum \n$609,601.50, and that taxation for lo- - it\ncal purposes this year exceeds that of\nJast year for the same purposes by the\nsum oi $1,005,725.38. The local taxes\nthis year are about 44 per cent, greater\nthan they were threw years ago, and\nare 10 per cent, greater than they\nwere last year.\nThe increase of taxation for State\npurposes is in part due to the amount\ncollected for the Asylum Buihiiug\nFund, which exceeds the amount re-\nquired last year lor building purposes\nby almost $300,000. Making due al-\nlowance for this, the Important fact re-\nmains that both State and local taxes\nhave largely increased.\nA remedy for this evil can only be\nhad through the General Assembly. is\nThe most important measures to pre-\nvent this rapid increase of taxation,\nwhich have heretofore been recom-\nmended,
412686ec4f54c33d415621f2211f7ba4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.891780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 Two hours after Baroness Huard\nhad abandoned her chauteau. General\nVon Kluck and his staff of officers\nmade her home their headquarters.\nThey remained at her residence ap-\nproximately nine days.\nThe baroness and her party crossed\nthe Marne river, cold and hungry.\nThe country for miles around had\nbeen devastated by the refugees that\nhad gone before. All night long they\ntrudged and in the morning they de-\ncided to sleep in the warm rays of the\nsunshine. Being refreshed by her sleep\nthe baroness decided to seek a notary\nin a nearby town with whom her hus-\nband had been very friendly. She lo-\ncated the man and was received by\nhim and his wife with much hospital-\nity. Upon learning that she and her\nservants and five youngsters were flee-\ning from the invading hordes they ex-\npressed much' surprise. No sooner\nhad she finished her tale than a squad\nof French soldiers rode up to the door,\nof the notary's home and commanded\nthat they make room for them. They\nalso said . that the women must re-\nport for Red Cross, duty at once. The\nbaroness here saw the first men\nwounded in the world's conflict. First\ntwo were brought into the\nhospital, then two more were carried\nin and then they were brought in by\nthe hundreds. That night the baron-\ness, while strolling through the\nstreets, saw a sight which she said she\nwill never forget as long as she lives.\nA white horse covered with blood gal-\nloped through the streets and stopped\nnear her. On the back of the animal\nlay a soldier with his arms entwined\nabout "his charger's neck dead.\nDeciding to leave this town and\ncontinue on her journey the baroness\nand her party came across a party of\nFrench soldiers setting- ready to hide\nin ambush to slaughtor the Hermans\nas they rushed by. one of her serv-\nants, ;i boy of '). pleaded with the\nbaroness to remain and witness the\nsight. When she declined, he asked\npermission to secure some pictures for\nher. After much pleading she con-\nsented. Some of the snap shots taken\nby this boy were flashed on the\nscreen last evening and showed the\nbloody fight. In one picture the boy\ncould be seen standingxdirectly in the\npath of the Huns as they were charg-\ning. How he escaped with his life is\na miracle, the baroness explained.
284c82e8685e8efc42b6e12073b76dbd THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1882.705479420345 42.217817 -85.891125 urists who have tried it say that they\ncan plant their corn earlier; it is not so\nliable to rot in the hill; drought does\nmuch less injury : tho crop is so far ad-\nvanced before chinch bugs and other\ninsects appear that it resists their de-\nstructive ravages. The yield is 20, 40,\nsometimes GO, per cent, greater. Secre-\ntary W. I. Chamberlain, of the Ohio\nHoard, says he has seen land improved\nby drainage to such an extent that the\nfirst subsequent crop was so much\ngreater than the average that the sur-\nplus more than paid tho w hole cost of\ntilo and putting it down.\nBig Corn Yiklps. The editor of tho\nNew Er.'jlatul Homestead devotes a\npithy paragraph to the usual way of\nmeasuring cornfields and estimating tho\nyield by picking out the best square \nm the field, counting the ears on a\nnumlter of stalks and gauging the total\naverage yield from the data thus ob-\ntained. Yet, he adds, the agricultural\nsocieties frequently award premiums on\ncorn measured in this way. This is not\nright,, nor does it encourage farmers to\nraise better crops. They become dis-\ngusted with the deceit employed in tho\naward of the premiums and refuse to\nconqx'te for them. To get satisfactory\nresults, the total crop of corn should\nall be measured or weighed at husking,\nand theu the real yield can be ob-\ntained, and the premium awarded ac-\ncordingly. Tho prize should not be for\nthe most stalks but for the most corn,\nand it should not be awarded until the\nyield has leen properly ascertained,\neven if it takes all winter to do the\nhusking.
82534cca9a3bcfc143b3f7dcded36e1a SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1862.9164383244547 35.780398 -78.639099 J7'i AccomPanied by all the wagons, the\nwhole of us crossed the Black Water and\nwent on for several miles, and the mysterv\not our trip was unfolded to us by the train of\nwagons being escorted to a large plantation\nand soon filled with forage and other essen-\ntials to .camp. One division or squadron of\nour cavalry guarded the wagons while anoth-\ner jvanced beyond Carrsville.\nWe had completed loading our wagons and\nturned them towards camp, when a courier\ncame up m double quick from the advance of\nour Regiment, stating that a body of the en-\nemy was advancing. So in a very short time\nthe 11th Regiment and the remaining por-\ntion of the 59th, and Capt Graham's cele-\nbrated yankee bone breaking battery, were\nsoon on the to assist our boys in beating\nback the vandals in our front When the\nadvance squadron saw the enemy approach-\ning they concealed themselves on the road\nside to give them a surprise reception, but\nthe yankees being rather thoughtful of con-\nsequences, sent two men ahead to feel the\nway and two very nice looking yankee cav-\nalry boys came up, and of course surrender-\ned. On questioning the captives as to their\nforce advancing, they could not tell, or at\nany rate would not out the yankees missed\ntheir front men, and halted, until the remain-\nder of Col. Ferebee's Regiment came up,\nwhen Capt. Graham threw a bomb or two\nover in that direction, at which time ihey\nput their spurs into active service towards\nSuffolk. We skirmished thfi wnnIc rA
21744b4fd93f5f2267d2b76408807e6d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.0560108973386 40.063962 -80.720915 nent gradually, and thus not inflate \\\nbe currency to such an extent as to i\n- e nder it worthless as a measure valne. \\\n\\s I have been misrepresented on this I\njoint, I reiterate, that money good £\ninough for the farmer, the mechanic, I\nhe soldier,' or the laborer, is good %\ntnough for the bondholder or any e\niody else. You have been told that X >\nim in favor of paying off the five- I\nwenty bonds in gold. It is false, and t\n[ don't want anynody to go away from 1\nlere to-night and repeat the story. If i\nle does, he will deceive somebody if t\ntoy body believes him. c\n"Why this is Democratic doctrino." c\nSot at all; this is the doctrine of com- 1:\nnon sense, common honesty; and I b\nlefy yon to find a modern Democratic r\n)oiiticiau who advocates either honesty I\n»r good sense. They make no provision t\nor the gradnal payment of this debt, c\nChey say, in their Sth of January reso- f\nutions, that *'thoy are opposed to ex- t\nending the time payment." They i\njropose to throw away the option stip- t\niluied in the bond; giving the Goverur j\nnent/rom five to twenty years to pay t\nhe debt. They propose to force the a\nmymont, to throw upon the country c\nrom fifteen to twenty huudred millions j\n>f currency that will not bo good for a\nhe bondholder, not good lor the farmer,\nlot good for the mechanic or laborer;\nt will be worthless to «11 alike. But ,\nrou say, "It will* pay debts." No, it a\n?ill not. It may swindle thd creditor t\n>ut of his just due, it may cancel the i\nlebt; it will not pay it. It will prevent H\nrour running in debt after its Ibsuo, for c\n10 one will trust you, and b6:c6mpblled v\no take such worthless trash In ex- /\nihange for his property. But they say, t\n'It will pay taxes;'1 Suppose your c\naxes are ten dollars, when 'gold and J\ngreenbacks are of equaL value. How t\nnucli currency will it require when r\ntne gold dollar is worth ten. paper j\nlollars? Just ten times as much.
1e3ad293a926cd726a1bf973fc67527b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.5778688208359 39.745947 -75.546589 Spectal to THE EVENING JOURNAL\nNEWARK, July 30. — Residents of\nNewark were terrified late yesterday\nafternoon when one of the most eevero\nstorms in tho memory of the oldest\nresidents passed over the town. It was\naccompanied by a wind that did a\nlarge amount of damage, and reached\nthe proportions of a cyclone. There\nwas also a terrific downpour of rain,\nwhich, with the wind and a heavy hail,\nlevelled corn in many fields and did\na great, deal of damage to produce.\nHundreds of person« were caught out\nin It, and while there were several\nnarrow escapes no one was seriously\ninjured. Reports from the stirrounding\neountry would Indicate that the storm\nwas the most severe. In the vicinity of\nNewark and the old P. B. & W. depot.\nThere seemed to be two different\natorniB which met over Newark.\nIn the neighborhood of the railroad\nstation several trees blown down\nand the passenger shed at Pencadcr\nwas demolished. It was lifted clean\noff Its foundations hy the wind and\ntwisted Into hundreds of pieces, some\nof the timber being blown several\nhundred feet down the track.\nThe new grandstand erected early\nthis season on the grounds used by\nthe Newark Tri-County League base­\nball club was also demolished.\nIn Newark many old and valuable\nshade treea were blown down or large\nlimbs twisted off. Main street was\nstrewn -with limbs and trees. Many\ndwellings were also partly damaged\nby sections of the roofs being blown\noff or trees falling on them. Reports\nfrom the country districts are that\nseveral barns were blown down. A\nlarge tree In front of the Newark\nAcademy wa* twisted off about ten\nfeet above the ground. Two large wil­\nlow trees on the grounds of the Wal­\nter Curtis property were practically\ndestroyed.
3bb4ed35b3ce1850eca9a82d1fa2a833 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.146575310756 35.780398 -78.639099 be a hoard to value land and town lots.\nThose district boards are to perforin their\nduties, and make return to a county board of\nvaluation, to meet on the second Monday of\nJanuary, after the appointment of thedis-tric- t\nhoard, said county board to be compos-\ned of the justices of the peace who were\nmembers of the different district boards. The\ncounty board is to examine and compare the\nlists, and re assess when necessary, and make\nreturn to the clerk of the county court. The\nmembers of these boards to receive not more\nthan $2 per day, while engaged in the dis-\ncharge of their duties. The takers of the\ntax lists to receive such compensation as the\ncounty court may allow. The following sub-\njects shall be annually listed, and taxed as\nfollows: Real property, with the improve-\nments thereon, (including entries of land,)\ntwenty cents every hundred dollars of its\nvalue ; every taxable poll eighty cents ; eve-\nry toll gate on a turnpike road, and every\nion oriuge, rive per cent, on tne gross receipts,\nand every gaU' permitted by the county court\nto be erected across a highway, fifteen dol- -\nlars ; every ferry one per cent." on the total\nreceipts of tolls during the year : every stud- -\nhorse or jackass, let to mares for a price, he\nlonins: to a resident of the State, six dollars\nunless the highest price demanded for the\nseason for one mare shall exceed that sum, in\nwhich case the amount thus demanded shall\nbe paid as tax. This subject shall be listed,\nand tho tax paid in the county in which the\nowner resides ; every dollar of net interest,\nnot previ usly listed, received or accrued.\n(whether dcmandahlcor not,) on or before the
7f281aaeabeba8c1a15151a0620be144 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.478082160071 41.262128 -95.861391 i« it poagible ;b"y ne«d eocodr i^-iaiiit io\nMoapbie, wber»r, for Beariy a year yoa\nbare been insid" tb^ federal Ub4m? where\nritvrj ntgbt tattoo is »ub*ttiuted fsc\n"iiunbr a* babf?, don't you cry." and a*\nrmriila "flail Colombia" aroeiM tba.\nfeopl'j to a ootMciuasne-n of the great\nteruniy which rs affbrJ' tJ to ;ho> property\nof tbe toyal p>e®ple in MempbU tod "au\ntbs eeuntry roofld tbat (political) Jor­\ndan V'' How can you or I 4*. oeoorag-\ntba loyal" wbett our matehlaaa Pretident,\ntbe lat<* Ooe^reae, bit tage eoufleeiort,\nnnd tat-» p«eriea« military Sdbordtaatee,\nhare already done and promitud all1\nwbi<-h wi«doa can ao^geat, wbicb oar\ntarred (Junatitutioa aatborizec, aad wbicb\ntbe Ohriaiiaa religion tolerate* aad ap-\nprovea? There remains aothing for a«\nto Jo tmiesn it ie 10 ob»y our in.ompara-\nbic Preeidao; in all bia wtte m Atartt tu\noonquwr a glorious peace. True, we bare\naai'ing u» croakers and Copperb. adt—til-:\nir, brat;, wl u>.<a—who are aouuwite aod\nunpatriotic aa to tja ;«ttOB tbe wisdom of\n*«r ia*i»frtt^abie Preardent. If yoa\nba*e any atiob in tifispbT*, yoa »hoaid at.\nonce d«n(ja»oe tbeui aa Id symp ithy witfc\ntb« retiM- ^ »ou thou id «eod them u\ntheir friuit'l# <,dowa S.iutb,** or tbe Dry\nTortu/a*, wbioh u nadenitood by maay\nti> be a place wbt-re aeeryuody is torturrd\nwitb tiwrat ft>r ridp wbiakfy, and not a\nirop caa be obtained. No go;>d CFnioa\n wiii oowpiain uf tbs conduct of the\nwi*e mea whu direct oar pablic afftira.—\nI b«y »bould be tau^bt to reraani'>er that\ntcntuhdnm magna hint Wa« foraerly a\nnigh crtar*—tt i» a ia®*? haiofoa" •xff*n»e\nii'rw — sad nirtbfn* Can tare «ach c >pp«r\n#4or««l wrHteb^i bat tb* iJbriatiaa cban*\n.y uf our im»«t piou* Fre»i icat.\nAt too ' pff-ptmed me^tiost yoa tbould\n«m> afrauge aitn-r^ na to war* 1 fitt of\ntli who fail to ait nd <n smrtt to readw a\n«uiuble apoiwgy, and yoa ahouil adopt\nr -iwiiatioon •>{ tb .* »"»#t "toTti" kiad. —\nAllow a • t" «agg-tt tbat tb? c imiaittctr\ntin raaa.uu ,n« t»e »elc?et»d froa eontrsitA-\nars »„J o#o»>-b«ld-ra . I purtjoalariy\nwt£?c*l <h» ' Coop r, wbo bn be.T r cent\nly appoMitsff »a»4.<»aor for tt}< lirg'?, rfub,\ni;id p puiou* di"tnot of W. -itt T-noja-\n1 o. il» w.t» atiifuiuilf fraia N w York.\nI'mbt? «. *'-r w ia ta VV.at\nuRtti s^iii from tUw uity ou bta uS^isd\nrraa l, hat bo aa d"«bt koowa by iiHui-\ntiiKi ibt! ttua Taiutf uf Ute good* aai\nchatt< it, laod^ and teii^meat't, Aa., Ao.,\nA a peopii) he auret ka«w, aula aow.i-\ntry ia wbioii be a-uer lirud, Bw^ be it\nto loyal - ao Biucb ao that, i doabt bo; b<-\nia bcUer tiled fvr cbu ofic«s Uiaa aay af\ntbe satire-born *aB*. or brotbera, #r\nfatbi<r« of th. -
069f34dcba7763c814770c06743be0e5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.6369862696602 58.275556 -134.3925 Editor News..In your issue of July\n31st I find tfcis item: "The reported\nstrike on the Kebenia river below\nHaines has proven to be cultus." This\nwriter baviDg quite an interest on that\nriver would like fir>t rate to have your\nreporter give the public the benefit of\nhis knowledge. Has he proven the\nstrike to be cultus, as he has said in\nhis report? Has he examined the\nground in person so as to be able to\nspeak advisedly in the matter? If he\nhas not done so, then we would suggest\nthat he perhaps has been a little hasty\nin his report. By certain classes of peo¬\nple the Porcupine, Atlin, and Bear\ncreek districts were pronounced "no\ngood," fakes and frauds, and Porcu¬\npine and Atlin have proven very rich\nand Bear creek prospects well. And\nalthough some are leaving those places\nyet and prouounce them humbugs, let\nme assure you others are going in, and\nin numbers that prove that people have\n in all of those places. I do\nknow there is gold on the Kehenia (or\nKatsahene) river, but whether in pay¬\ning quantities or not I do not know,\nand I do not believe that your reporter\ndoes either, for he could not kuow un¬\nless he has thoroughly prospected the\nriver and gone down to bed rock. If\nhe has done that all who are interested\nthere (and their name is legion) would\nbe glad to have the benefit of bis ex¬\nperience. We do not wish to influence\npeople to go there if there is nothing\nthere. And if it should prove to be as\nrich as King Solomon's mine we do not\ncare whether people go there or no. We\nare not running a steamboat, nor are\nwe in the mercantile business; neither\nhave we any claims there for sale at\npresent. If they prove to be rich we\nhave a plenty, and if they prove worth¬\nless, we have three claims too many.
0acbca9d2fe4047f2324bd3858be898e THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.8397259956876 37.305884 -89.518148 Bight she would get so nervous I had to sit and hold her. I tried several doctors, but I hey did aot\ndo her any good. I did not find anything that would help her until I tried Dr. Greene's Nervura,\nblood and ncrre remedy. She is now, by the use of this medicine, cntiiely cured."\nC. ft. Bailey, Esq., of Waterbury, VL, writes :\ntin more than triad to write about mv little dauehter. Until a short time aso she had al\nways been a eery delicate child and subject to sick spells lasting weeks at a time. She was eery-aerrau-\nand our family doctor said we would never raise her, she was so delicate and feeble.\nWe tried many remedies without the least good. We felt much anxiety about her, especially a\nno doctors could benefit her, and had great fear for her future. Learning of tbe wonders brine-don- e\nby Dr. Greene's N errors blood and nerve remedy. I determined to give to her. She soon\ncommenced to improve under its use, snd rapidly gained in every respect. She eats and sleep\nwell, and her nerves sre strong. The medicine has done wonders for her and it is tbe best wo\never knew. I recommend Or. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, to everybody.'\nMrs. J . Learmonth, cf 776 Broadway, South Boston, Mass., says:\n"At ten years of sre my dsnffhter became affected with a nervous condition which soon de-\nveloped into St. Vitus' dance. It was pronounced by tbe attending physiciaa to be s very severe\nattack, Tbe month would be drawn spasmodically far to one side, the hands aad arms were rot-le- as\nsad constantly twitching. Her limbs also were weak; her ankles bent ander her so that tt\nwas almost Impossihle to walk. She was so nervous that she would scream almost like a maniac\nand then have fits of crying. After two months' treatment without a cure. I concluded to trw-Dr-
426ef1dcb1d4104afd1dc371e7ebdff2 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1855.5794520230847 41.262128 -95.861391 'J'he length* model speed, power and tonnage\nef each bout, where uud by whom built, the\nSame of the boat, with the trade she is iu. .Al ­\nso, th" name of the captuiuti and 'officers, her\nage, «fcc., <fcc., The Directory will contain a\nHistory of t?teanfcboats and rfteamboating on\nthe western watehi, 8inc« the uj)plication of\nstea 111 : aif<>, a sketch of the first boat built for\nthe Ohio river, with the name of the builder,\ncommander and owner.\nThe River Directory Will contain a liat acd\ndescription of all the Steamboat Disasters that\nhave occurred on the wentein and southern wa­\nters, beautifully illustrated, with a list of all\nthoxti who have perished by their burning, sink­\ning and exploding, o;i the wesleru and south­\nern waters. The Directory will contain Maps\nof the Ohio, Missishippi, Missouri, Illinois, Ar­\nkansas, White, Jit-d, Ouachita. ^ ozoo and oth­\n rivers, with the towns and cities laid down,\ncorrect distances; aiso, many other river and\ncoijiuioreial items of iuteret.1 to the people at\nlarge. Tl*v Uook will contain the cards of the\nvarious U. S . if ail bouU;, with the tra<^» they\nare in, Ac* The Directory will also contain a\ncomplete list of all responsible Steamboat Li -\ncensed Otlicers, their places of residence, ifcc.,\nthe new Steamboat Law, its requirement?, with\ncomments, showing wherein it benefits the in­\ncompetent otfi :er, iiud injures the competent\nodicer, &c., Ac., aud all the important IF. S .\nSupreme Court Steamboat Decisions up to date!\nthe Kates and Commercial Privileges, bills ot\nlanding, important decisions of the various II.\nS. Courts iu regard to freights lost|and damaged,\ni$-c,, &.C ., with many other things of Interest.\nThe Directory will be illustrated iu the best\nstyle, aud printed in the best tnauuer.
142f51d8481ecc7959f1897ec8c1c189 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 postage-stomps were used ns inoncv\nnnd it was not always easy to part with\nthem, in consequence of the gum on\ntho back. For a long timo past, how¬\never, notes for as Hinall a rum as three\nconta(lJid.) have boen in circulaUon,\nand tho stamps have consequently dis¬\nappeared. During tho war tho prices\nof evory commodity rose, and trades¬\nmen apparently find it to their Interest\nto keep them where they are. Tho cu¬\nrious circumstance is, that nobody\nseems to bo seriously inconvenienced\nby the oxpenso of living. Tlte hotels\nare always full, and ruinous as it is to\nllvo in them in New York, tho stranger\nmust go to a watering place to see a\nsystem of high prices nourishing, in\nfull glory. Hero, for instance, at Now-\nport, whore 'all the world' America\ncomes at this season of tho year, tho\nunavoidable expenses nro such that a\nrich man in England would feel somo\nreluctance to pay them. In tho hotel,\nfor two moms, decorated with fkirni-\nturo which must have been brought by\ntuo first settlers, and never mended\nsinoe, the charge is f2Q a day, (£4.) Sup¬\nposing tho guest mnkes himself content\nwith a sort of closet far away above\nearth as a bedroom, he can get off for 85\nnAn?'.(^'") Uis meals must be token\nat tables common to the whole com-\n2ES7'ho particular on tho\nsubject or cookery ho will very soou\nstarve. There Is no doubt a variety or\ndishes, but us they all tasto precisely\nalike through being cooked in the oven,\nprobably it is, immaterial which tho\ncnixit miiv i.l .A»i,n
667717cfe47ae735fef7b97842623b16 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.3356164066463 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies banded out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well testrd expe-\nilence in the hands of a regularly educated phvsi-\ncian. whose preparatory study fits him tor all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country is fhasled with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, hut\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be pak\nticiLah in selecting his physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible fact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable w ith ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nbv the best syphilographers, that the study and man*\nagemi nt oftliese complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The ine.V|«rienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, pursues one system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mcrcurv .\nMore caution, however, should be used by the syph-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physician- of\nthe advertising cias*. as nine-tenths ot them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest ail large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Deter\nFunk ••institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury, lersons living at a\ndistance ia the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J. YOUNG\nwould say that lie is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 751 Clay street, opposite the llaza.\nHoursfrom9a. m..to ip. M.
2cb71ecd2fde5eeca0989ac83f969800 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.519178050482 39.369864 -121.105448 The Colorado Desert is thus described by\na correspondent of the S. F. Times:\nLeaving San Felipe, which is about one\nhundred miles from Los Angeles, the en-r\ntrance to the Desert is a descent of a fcarfhl\nhill, about an eighth of a mile long, at the\ntop of which we are greeted by a perfect\nhurricane, blowing hats, shivering canvas\ntops, rattling chains, and certainly confirm-\ning the bug-bear stories. Once down this\nhill (this was about 5 p. m. the sth day from\nSan Francisco,) the air was mild and pleas-\nant enough. And now, truly, we are on the\nfurious Colorado Desert. The sand is whltS;\nlike that on the Beach, back of the Ocean\nHouse, and much deeper. The horses strug-\ngled, and now and then raised a trot. There\n no sign of life for 150 miles, save at the\nCompanys Stations. The vegetation con-\nsists of a few musquite bushes and cactus\nplants : some of the latter bearing gorgeous\nflowers. Carissa Creek runs through the\nDesert at a distance of forty miles from San\nFelipe. At Pilot Knob, within nine miles of\nthe Colorado, found harder ground, and the\nhorses traveled well; but foi- forty miles the\nsand is so deep that the best the animals can\ndo is to walk. This is not the popular idea\nin California of the Overland Mail,but there\nare many places where, for miles, stages\ncannot get along any faster. From Pilot\nKnob, the road struck the bank of the Colo-\nrado, and with the moon shining upon the\nwater, the ride thence to Fort Vuma was\ndelightful.
74e2ecf430a19a2eaddab5a101ada2bc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.5273972285643 41.681744 -72.788147 he was received by congresb Tith\nevery mark of distinction. The. baron\nexplained that he did not demand\neither rank or pay and congress sent\nhim to Valley Forge where the\narmy was in winter quarters.\nTo bring raw recruits to the point\nwhere they were accustomed to the\nutmost precision of movement and\nmanagement of arms and to yield\npunctilious obedience to orders was\nthe difficult task assigned to this\nGerman volunteer. He was obliged\nto instruct the officers as well as the\nmen all of which he did despite his\nhandicap of being unfamiliar with\nthe English language. Once when he.\nhad ezhausted his small vocabulary\nhe called an officer named Walker\nto swear at the awkward troops for\nhim. "I can curse dem no more," he\nsaid sorrowfully.\nA department of inspection was\norganized and the baron placed at\nits head. Whenever troops were\nto maneuver Steuben rose at 3\no'clock and sunrise found him on\nhorseback ready for the day's work.\nWhen the baron had been with the\narmy only a few weeks. Washington\nwrote to congress: "I should do in-\njustice, if I were any longer silent\nwith regard to the merits of Baron\nSteuben. His knowledge of his pro-\nfession, added to the zeal which he\nhas discovered since he began upon\nthe functions of his office, leads me\nto consider him an acquisition to the\nservice, and to recommend him to\nthe attention of congress."\nFollowing receipt of the letter,\ncongress appointed the baron a ma-\njor general and gave him a salary.\nAfter this Steuben was sent to Rhode\nIsland to assist General Sullivan. In\nhis spare time the German wrote a\nmanual on military science for use\nby American officers. While in
03d8a3c8ae3bd225efb4430b638a55c7 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1869.305479420345 37.561813 -75.84108 The Bluebird builds its nest in a\nhollow tree, when such is at hand ;\nbut It seero3 to be pleased with, and\nreadily occupies, a box prepared for\nIt8 use A very neat and pleasing ef-\nfect may be produced by hanging\ngourds In the orchard trees, with holes\nin them just large enough for the birds\nto enter. They will soon find and\ntake possession of them, and, having\nonce occupied them, they will return\nto them year after year. But he Is\nnot always a conscientious observer of\nthe rights of others. This is proven\nby his taking possession, as he often\ndoes, of the Martin house in the ab-\nsence of its legal owner. This looks\nbad for the morals of the Bluebird.\nBut as I do not fully understand the\n"Constitution", of their government,\nI cannot say that is illegal in bird law\nPerhaps they have a "Bureau of\nabandoned boxes," under whose sanc\ntion they proceed. However this\nmay be, the Martins do not always\nsubmit quietly to the arrangement,\nand furious fighting ensues. But\nhave never known a case which\nthe intruder was ejected after he had\nobtained possession.\nHe has another moral defect which\nmay possibly have been imbibed in\nconsequence of his neighborhood to a\nmore lordly race of beings. He is no\ntoriously jealous of his mate, as may\nbe seen by his actions at any time af\nter pairing,. Whether Madam- gives\nhim any cause for his jealousy I am\nnot prepared to say, nor what lectures\nshe may give him in private. So far\nas the public can judge, she is a model\nof fidelity. You may see Mr. Blue\nbird any day, after one of his jealous\nfits, and a contest with his supposed\ninjurer, making up with his indignant\nspouse by offering her the nicest kind\nof a big fat grub, and caressing her\nwith more than a lover's devotion.\nCould this foible be the effect of his\nimitative faculty, and his facility for\npeering through glass windows?\nThese beautiful little birds.I believe,\nare not charged with doing much\ndamage to the farmer or gardener, and\nfor this reason, as well as for their\nbeauty and their-merr-
54c0d3cfb956a7717cf99ccd282388c3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.505479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 The preparations for the celebration\nof this day throughout the loyal States\nare perhaps the most formal and exten¬\nsive ever known in our history as u\nNation. This is natural under the cir¬\ncumstances in which we find ourselves\nas a j>eople. The great rebellion, which\nall of us supposed would at least en-j\ndure throughout the present summer,\nhas unexpectedly and entirely closed in\na military way, and throughout the!\nlaud there Is no where any armed re¬\nsistance to the Government. This\nhappy, speedy and unlookcd for ter¬\nmination of our great struggle has re¬\nlieved tens of thousands of bravo sol¬\ndiers who for years havo been absent\nfrom their homes at the front fighting\nthe dreaded enemy of the Nation, and\nnow that they have returned, the dis¬\nposition everywhere prevalent is to\nwelcome them with open and\nprofuse hospitality to the circle of do-\nmestic and social life. This Fourth\nof July has been set apart, as it were,\nin their honor, and to-day they will\nreceive dinners and hear speeches and\nmusic, and all sorts of compliments,\nall intended to attest the gratitude of\nthe people towards those to whom they\nfeel they owe everything pertaining to\nthe sacredness and porpetuity of the\nNational anniversary. The Soldiers of\niho Union and tne Fourth of July are\none in the estimation of the people, and\nthey will continue so to be regarded by\nthis generation. Two of the crowning\nvictories of this war were completed on\nthis day,.or on the evoofit,.Gettys¬\nburg and Vicksburg, and certainly if\nour Nation was born on tlioove of the\nFourth of July, 177G, it was saved on\nthe eve of the Fourth-of July,
086dd31eb6f0ebea672378e00e1ca962 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1858.842465721715 37.561813 -75.84108 from facts th'ut have come under our own ob-\nservation, and if faith is to be placed iu the\nconsentaneous declarations of the thousands\nand tens of thousands who have tested its prop-\nerties in this country and throughout tlie\nworld, there can he no doubt that It is a specific\nthe only specific for scrofulu and cancer.\nThe late war in t'.urope afforded a grand op-\nportunity to ascertain lis value as a dr suing\nfur flesh wounds, fractures and contusions,\nand it appears from tlie published ofliciul re-\nports of the army surgeons, that its applica-\ntion in such cases wus followed by very remark-\nable results. The pain and inflammation of\nthe parts nipidly subsided, and healthful reac-\ntion ensued. Injuries for which the ordinary\nrecipes were the tourniquet, the saw and the\namputating knife, were cured without difficul-\nty by the use of this powerful recuperunt.\nProbably no class of our countrymen better\nunderstand the value of Ointment\nthan the denizens of the far west. It is\nin fact their "salve for every sore," whether\noccasioned by accident or tlie result of hard-\nship and exposure. The Southern planters re-\ngard It us au indispensable item iu their plan-\ntation dispensaries, and use it almost univer-\nsal ly as a remedy fur the eruptions and glan-\ndular diseases so common among thoir negroes.\nIn New Knglaud, where inventions and dis-\ncoveries are generally at the outset looked up-\non witli distrust, the Ointment has attained\nan extraordinary degree of popularity, Hnd the\ndemand for it In tlie Htules of New York and\nPennsylvania has been quadrupled within three\nyears. In faet.lt has no rival in public es-\nteem among the remedies of the age, if we ex-\ncept the celebrated pills for internal diseases\nIntroduced by its world renowned inventor.\nIu tlie uldon time, the law awarded to every\nRoman who saved the life of a fello w-citize -
118be1cbcc508481e78aa681c416da84 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.7219177765094 40.441694 -79.990086 These hills extend 20 or SO miles either way at\nthe least; twice as far, for anything I know.\nThey contain scores of kraals; I don't suppose\nI am far out when I say hundreds. We have\nburnt three or four, have marched a mile or\ntwo into the woods, have killed perhaps 100\nKaffirs at the outside, and have lost in killed\nand wounded about 50 of our own men. I sup.\npose altogether there are 15,000 or 20,000 Kaffirs\nthere. Thev have no end of places where our\nfellows can't possibly penetrate. There's no\nholding such a position as that. The columns\nmay toil on through the woods, skirmishing all\nthe day, but they only hold the ground they\nstand on. Why, Sergeant, it will take a dozen\nexpeditions, each made with a force three or\nfour times larger than we have now, before we\ncan prodnce much effect on the Amatolas."\n"I am afraid it will. Blunt," the Sergeant\nsaid, "before we break down the rebellion.\nThere is one thing, they say that the Kaffirs\nhave 20,000 or 30,000 cattle among the hills.\nIf we can drive them off we shall do more good\nthan by killing Kaffirs: the chiefs care but\nlittle how much their followers are shot down,\nbut they do care mightily for the loss of their\nwealth. Cattle are the one valuable possession\nof the Kaffirs. Shooting them has very little\neffect on those who are not shot; as for driving\nthem out of one part of tho country, it makes\nno difference to them one way or another.\nThey can put up their kraals anywhere. The\none point on which you can bit them is their\ncattle. A chiefs consequence depends on the\nnumber of bullocks he owns. A young Kaffir\ncannot marry unless he has cattle to buy a wife\nwith. Putting aside their arms and their\ntrumpery necklaces and bracelets cattlo are\nthe sole valuables ot the Kaffirs. You will see\nif we can capture their cattle we shall put an\nend to the war, but any amount of marching\nand fighting will make but little impression\nupon them."
20d513c92beb24789cd6854d5b5f7472 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.8265027006173 40.807539 -91.112923 audience, and I feel, I confess, somewhat\nEmbarrassed as to what I shall say to vou.\nIn a certain very orthodox paper, with\nwhich most of us are acquainted, I have\nseen it stated, that I have been deputed,\nby Tippecanoe Club No. 1, to go to Mas-\n] sachusetts and there to negotiate a rnar-\nj riage between the Slates of Massachusetts\nj and Virginia. I declare to yon, that I had\nnot been before apprised of this duty's\n: having been imposed upon UIP, and I will\n! venture to affirm that the honorable gen-\n|tleman from Mass. had as little knowledge\ni of it as I.— Nevertheless, if such a mar-\n|riage was to take place, I should be very\n|happy to have my share in the matter.—\nj But according to our usual views, both\n! States equally female; and before a\n: marriage could take place belwpen them,\nj it would be necessary that one should be\n! acknowledged as the husband and the oth-\njer as the wife. Now as you all know me\n' to be a very zealous Virginian, I should\nj insist that Virginia should have the .su -\n• premacv; and understanding something of\nj ihe holy matrimonial relation, as it exists\nj in Virginia, «tul especially on Shockoe\nHill, it. is vpry nahml I should therefore\n; insist that Virginia be the bride and ;V]as-\n1 sachnsetts the bridegroom, (a laugh)—but\n\\\\ henever it came to that point, depend\nupon it, 1 should have a very serious con­\ntest with ihe gentleman from .Massachu­\nsetts; and he would be quite right; for if\nhe should not do his best to make Mas­
493b0fb4ca80b660a16654e1af245229 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.1051912252074 39.261561 -121.016059 Eds. Democrat:—Both Houses of the legisla-\nture had an exciting debate on Friday, over a prop-\nosition to adjourn every week until Tuesday morn-\ning, whereby the members would have an opportu-\nnity of visiting San Francisco on Saturday, without\nbeing compelled to ask leave of absence for Mon-\nday, which would enable them to draw their pay for\nthat day without having it entered on the journals,\n“absent on leave and as some of them pride them-\nselves, and make it a boast that they have not been\nout of their scats a day during the session, the prop-\nosition, of course, met with considerable favor, but\nwas finally voted down after a great deal of useless\nand nonsensical talk and much valuable time thrown\naway. The legislature regards the payment of some\nten thousand and odd dollars monthly, for the sup-\nport of the State Prison, as something monstrous,\nand cry out vehemently for reformation in that quar-\nter, but they never for once take into consideration\nthat they are squandering ten thousand dollars ev-\nery week, of the peoples money, in idle and frivol-\nous talk upon silly and unimportant motions with a\nvain attempt to be funny, and an abortion upon wit\nor smartness. It is really sickening to see mem-\n of a body, whose deliberations should be char-\nacterized with dignity and decorum, avail them-\nselves of every opportunity that offers, to say some-\nthing which they imagine to be very funny, think-\ning that by so doing they establish reputations for\nbeing “smart fellers.” Such conduct, let me assure\nthem, only lowers them in the estimationof all men\nof sound sense and good judgment, and the sooner\nthey reform this habit the sooner will they deserve\nto be called respectable msn, and decent legislators.\nWhile they are seeking to reform and curtail the\naffairs of the State Prison, let them look a little at\nhome, finish their business and adjourn. They\ncould accomplish all that is required of them within\nthirty or forty days at the outside, and then adjourn,\nand by so doing they would not only save a large\namount of money to the State, but be entitled to\nthe everlasting thanks of the present and all future\ngenerations. Nearly all the business that has been\nbrought before cither House, up to the time of the\npresent writing, partakes almost exclusively of a\nlocal character, which docs not relate to the masses\nin the least; and the number of special acts intro-\nduced for the relief of private individuals is truly as-\ntonishing.
1737ed224d950fcb2c60c73017df8f5e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7876712011669 40.063962 -80.720915 . . If the continued reaction, as shown\n111 the rereut elections, ia interpreted\npurely » demonstration in favor of\n'he old-time democratic party, it will\nnot only lose its real significance, but\nwill he likely to do.iulleaamuch harm\nas good to tbe country, Ihe strong\npoint which it established is that the\nmass of the honest people, who are not\nbound In party chains, are sick of rad¬\nicalism and fanaticism in politics, and\nin favor of the Constitution, law and\norder, and an early restoration of\nunion, fraternity and proeperlty,\nthroughou' the country. Ihe detno-\ncrats may come into power, but they\nmust show less corruption,.selfishness\naud devotion to party than has marked\nihe course of many of their prominent\nmen hitherto, if they are long accepted\nas exponents of the will of the people.\n truth is, adds this paper, that the\nRepublicans became too strong, their\nlenders felt no check, and extremists\nthought they could lead the nation with\nthem. It anticipates that "olllco-seck-\nl.ig radicals" may rush over into tbe\ndemocratic party and seek to guide it,\nand if so the country will not bo auy\nbetter oil". As for Impartial suffrage,\nthe Journal of Commerce says:\n"Had more moderate councils pre¬\nvailed, the enfranchisement ol the more\nenlightened and better educated portion\nof Ihe race might have been secured at\n. ill early date. The persistent efforts to\nextend the elective franchise to the Ig¬\nnorant masses Just redeemed from bon¬\ndage, without names, home or habits of\nself-restrain!, has diminished the pros-\nnect of any favor In that direction\nduring tbe existence of tbe present gen-\nuratiou."
267219a0a7c21fbf2c86e4ad973b19e5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.424863356355 40.063962 -80.720915 ten-horse-power engiue I can till the\ntank of such a shell with compressed\nair with a pressure of 100 lbs. to the square\niuch for a trilling cost. The valves aro con¬\nnected with the reservoir tank and by a\nlink motion regulate the pressure of air\nwhich forces thfulciying rods out and the\nexhaUBt which draws them in again. The\npower 1b communicated to the mechanic¬\nal oarsman by another rod attached to a\nshaft.. In the Interior of the figure, in the\nplace of stomach and lungs, is what 1\nterm 'a double-link motion/ and which\nprojects and drawa the arms and turns\niho wrists in pattering, and altogether\nsimulates the rowing of a live oarsman to\nperfection. Now, here you have all the\nmotions of rowing. The stroko can be\nregulated by a turn of a thumbscrew at¬\ntached to tlio interior link, and yon can\nhave the long stroke of 34 to the minute\nor the 40 to minute of tho Shoe-wae-\ncae-mettes. This comprises all the move¬\nments of rowing. To balance the boat\nproperly in case of wind or waves I use\na triangular governor in the waist of the\nboat Tho governor balances equally\nwhen the boat is steady, but when the\nboat leans over from any causo the weight\nin it moves to the over-balanced side.\nThat, sir, is my invention and I assert that\nit will revolutionise this stupid professional\nrowing." Who can doubtit? Having no\nheart, this honest oarsman will never be\nfrigbtoned. Having no mind, he will\nnever sell a race. Having none of the pas¬\nsions of man, ho will be an impartial\nvehicle for the bets of all lovers of rowing:\nand one race or a dozen races will be all\nthe same to him. Early application for\nthe use of the patent should be made by\nall publicans and sinners interested in\nsheets of water and summer resorts gen¬\nerally.
1eff9c33f26c8c63116ab40ba34f7e1c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 Even the ttaltimoro Ohio hu no\nithstood the effects of the distrust o\nlilway necurities which has l>een grow\nif? fop the past three yetrs, and which\nas not been stemmed by the determioec\nnd combined ctl'ort* of managers, whe\nnew that their roads were justly enlitlet\n»the fullest confidence. That the jial\nmore tfc Ohio has csraped being drawr\nito the maelstrom is due entirely to th<\n»ct that speculators in the Monumenta\nity generally confine themselves to con\nnd grain and let the roads that carrj\nreadstufli alone. Eighteen months agi\nbis stock was up to 173, with l'ennsylva\nia 112J and New York Central at 105\nt full ,,tV mnro ,*,.1,11* V,, .\nuriog the year, dropping 8 per cent ii\n»e firit quarter, while Pennsylvania belt\na own and New York Central went ti|\n0 per cent. In July it had dropped t«\n51, with Pennsylvania at 100 and Cen\nral at 108. At the end of the year it wai\ntill there, with Pennsylvania 19 per cen\n8', and New York Central the same\nutsince then Central has only droDpet\n) rent, Pennsylvania haa been uriv\na down -10 per cent on increased earn\nigs and an 8 per cent dividend, but Bal\nmore & Ohio, with a 10 per cent divi\nend, has receded almost SO j»er cent\nhe sales well illustrate the ad\nanta^e of blind report* and secret ac\njunts. With sales of 10,000 shares, tin\neariah influence can depress it littli\nlore than 1 per cent, while after fivi\nlares of Baltimore & Ohio sell at 84\nle next eleven go at SO, and the nex\nifent v-live at 70. Such a decline as thi\nould put Third street in an uproar am\nirow Wall street into a panic whiel\nould t>e felt all over the country. Th\ntaction is quite as sharp. With fiv\nlies, aggregating only sixty^five share?\nlie stocks bounds from 80 to 03, an ail\nance of $11 in a day. And yet a major\nty of the slock is owned by three partie.j\n'here could not be a plainer illustratioi\nf (he battledore and shuttlecock actioi\nf the stock market and its utter worth\nsitiess as an indicator of values.
0a051cc747b0366dd2050e354c78aef3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.7794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 Cancer ofjoneue!\nA Cue Resembling that of General Grant.\nBorne ten years ago I had * scrofulous sore on my\nright hand which gave me groat trouble, and uu-\nder the old- time treatment was healed op, and I\nsupposed I mu welL I found, however. It had\nonly been driven luto the system by the use or pot*\nash and mercury, and In March, 1881, it broke out\nIn mv thr.iit. aiid coiiefntraU-d in what iumi) nf\ntho doctors deujmtrut d cancer. I was placed\nunder treatment (or thU dlw awj. Some fix oc\nseven of tbc befct physicians in tne country bad\n00 at different time* unJer their charge, among\nthem threespecialists In this line; but oue alter\nanotner would exhaust heir skill and drop me,\nfori grew worxe continually. The cancer had\neaten through my cheei, destroying the roof of\nmy mouth and upper Up, ihun attacked my\ntongue, nalato and lower Up, the palate\nand tinder Uptntlrtly and rmlf my touMoe. eating\nout to the top of my fo't cheek bone ana up to the\nleft eye. From a hearty robust womau of 150\npound*, I was re <need to a mere framw of tkiu and\nbones, almost unible 10 turn mvself In bed. 1\ncould not eat any solid food, but subsisted cn\nliuulds, and my tougue was so far gone 1 could not\ntalk. The anguish of mind and tlie horrible suf\nfering* ol body which 1 experienced never can be\nrevealed. Given up by nhylcian to die, with no\nhope-wf-recovery upon the part of friends wbo sat\naround my bedside expecting every moment to be\nmy last; iu fact, my husbaud would place his hand\non me every now and then to cee whtther I was\nalive or not, and at one time all dcclded thatli'e\nwas extinct, and my doath was reported all over\ntheoountry.
1d6a7e86bdfc4901797b2412e5bfe279 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.372950788049 40.618676 -80.577293 As individuals workers are powerless to present\ntheir claims to an employer and get cosideration\nthat would result in a mutually satisfactory con­\ntract, to equalize the bargaining power of wage-\nearners and employers, wage-earners have been\ngiven the right to organize in unions to choose\nrepresentation to bargain collectively for tin\ngroup. When Congress wrote into laws a federal\nguarantee of wage-earners' right to collective bar­\ngaining, a new era in labor relations was inaugu\nrated. Workers tok advantage of this right to or­\nganize and unioti organization proceeded at an un­\nprecedented rate. Until the courts ruled upon this\nnew legislation there was still uneasiness anc\ndoubt. When the highest court in the land uphelt\nthe statute the danger seemed past. Then a\nstrange thing happened. From the administrative\nagency Labor had a right to expect maintenance\n their new l ights, came an atack to rob them of\nthe fruits of their victory. A division within the\nDepartment of Justice began systematic attacks\non unions. Proceding under anti-trust law and ig\nnoring the purposes of union activity, the Depart\nment seeks to deal with union activities as conspi­\nracies. Selecting such judicial opinions as fitted\ntheir purposes, this division in written statement\nand formal proposal announced its desire to nil*\nupon standards for Labor and industry in fields\nwhich have been under private control. Here w<\nhave an example of administrative aggression\nwhich would defeat the will of the lawmaking\nbranch. Congress never intended that the right\nto organize in unions for purposes of collective bar­\ngaining should be supervised by anti-trust division\nof the Department of Justice with power to fix\nstandards for exercising this right.
2470f23abd6b8f888f1157db6dfd0bff THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.664383529934 42.217817 -85.891125 MOHTGAGE SALE.\nDEFAULT having been made in the condi-\ntions of a certain mortgage, whereby the power\ntherein contained to sell has become operative,\nexecuted by William F. Kent and Caroline E.\nKent, his wife, of South Haven Michigan, to\nRufus M, A. Barstow, of Burlington, in tbe\ncounty of Chittenden, aud state of Vermont,\nbearing date the sixth day of July, a. d ., eight-\neen hundred and seventy one, and recorded in\nthe ofiice of the Register or Deeds, for the\ncounty of Van Buren, in said state of Michi-\ngan, on the eighth day of July, a. v ., eighteen\nhundred and seventy one. in Liber two, of\nMortgages, on page three hundred and fifty,\nupon which mortgage there is claimed to be\ndue at the date of this notice, the sum of\ntwelve hundred and twenty three dollars and\neight cents, and no suit or prceedmgs at \nhaving been Instituted to recover any part\nthereof, Notice is therefore hereby given, that\non Tuesday the 23d day of October next,\nat ten o'clock in the forenoon, I shall aell at\npublic auction, to the highest bidder, sale to\ntake place at the front door of the Van Buren\ncounty Circuit Court House, in the village of\nPaw raw, tho premises described in aaid mort-\ngage, or so much thereof as shall be necessary\nto satisfy the amount due on such mortgage,\nwith ten per cent, interest, and legal costs, to-\ngether with an attorney fee covenanted for\ntherein ; that la to say, the following pierce or\nparcel of land, situated in Van Buren county,\nin the state of Michigan, viz : Lota eight, nine,\nten, and eleven, in Block eleven, of Dyckman\nand Woodman's Addition to the village of\nSouth Haven, according to the recorded plat\nthereof.
308b0f6dcdbbb062fe1880f570bc6f34 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4303278372292 39.290882 -76.610759 THE UNDERSIGNED respectfully reports:\nThat being about to proceed under the authority\nof the act of Assembly of Maryland, entitled an act\nrelating to Mortgage* irt the City and County of Balti-\nmore, to sell at Public auction to the highest bidder a\ncertain parcel of Ground with the appurtenances par-\nticularly mentioned ami described in an indenture of\nMortgage and Trust between Edmund Gibson and wife,\nand John Glenn, hearing date the nineteenth day of Oc-\ntober eighteen hundred and thirty five, and recorded\namong the Land records of Raliimore County Court, in\nLiber T. K. No. 253, folio 3GG &c., he did on the fourth\nday of November eighteen hundred and lliirty-rine, give\nbond to the State of Maryland in such penalty and with\nsuch security as were approved b the Honorable John\nPurviancc, Associate Judge of Baltimore County Court,\nin relation to the sale of said property, and did on the\nday last mentioned file the said bond in the office of the\nClerk of Court, pursuant to the directions of the act\nof Assembly aforesaid, passed at December session\neighteen hundred and twenty-six, Chapter 192. That\nhe did then give more than twenty days notice of the\ntime, place, manner and terms of sale by advertisement\nin the American, Patriot and Pilot,-?three of the daily\nnewspapers published in the city aforesaid, that is to\nsoy, that the same would be sold at the Exchange in the\nCity aforesaid, on the thirtieth day of April, eighteen\nhundred and forty, at one o'clock, P. M. that the terms\nof sale were as prescribed by the deed aforesaid cash,\nbut the Mortgagees ha<l consented to extend the credits\nas follows, to wit: one fifth illcash at the side, and the\nresidue in equal instalments at six, twelve, eighteen and\ntwenty-four months, with interest, and undoubted se-\ncurityWould be required on said credit payments, and\nthat at said sale John Gibson became the highest bidder,\nand purchased at and for the sum of thirteen thousand\ndollars.
0ef32c1873e3a04a9a1f9ea1301c050a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.678082160071 44.939157 -123.033121 wns whiter, his walk slower, his voice\nfiled thinner. IIo croaked louder whei:\nho rose or sat. Old always from lib\nbo;, hood, he hud In tho turn of a liiii.d\nhrnnme aged. Rut such things come\nnnd s'icli things go. Aftor eighty there\nare tips nnd downs. People fading\nway otiP week bloom out pleasantly\nthe next, nnd resiliency Is not at all a\npatent belonging to youth alone. The\nmaterial change lu Mr. Arp might have\nbeen thought little worth remarking\nWhat caused Peter Bradbury, Squire\nBuckalew and the colonel to shake\ntheir heads secretly to one nnother iiurl\nwonder If their good old friend's mind\nhad not "begun to go" was something\nvery different. To como straight down\nto It, ho not only abstained from all\nargument upon the "Cory murder" \nthe case of Happy Fear, refusing to\ndiscuss either lu any terms or under\nany circumstances, but bo also declined\nto speak of Ariel Tabor or of Joseph\nLotidcu or of their affairs, singular or\nplural, masculine, feminine or neuter,\nor lu nny declension. Not n word com-\nmittal or noncommittal. Nonol\nAnd his face when lie wns silent fell\nInto sorrowful and troubled lines.\nTho voices of tho fathers fell to the\npitch of ordinary discourse; the drowsy\ntown wns quiet again; tho whine of tho\nplaning mill boring Its way through tho\nsizzling nlr to every wakening car. Far\naway on a quiet street It sounded faint-\nly, like the hum of a bee across a creek,\nand was drowned In tho noise of men\nnt work on tho old Tabor house.
0eac6b436fe75e9188d7225404abef55 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.9904371268467 39.745947 -75.546589 Philadelphia, Doc. 2ft.— The brigantine\nJosefa, which arrived at this port on i lumlay\nfrom Montego imy, Jamaica, brings nows of\nan outrage suffer«! by that vessel at tho\nhands of the Hpauish government.\nWhile discharging cargo on her outward\ntrip from Now York at Arroyo, Porto Rico,\nthe Spanish customs officii Is discovered that\ntwenty packages of corn starch which\nmarke 1 on tho vessels manliest were missing.\nAfter an extended search the goods could nut\nis. found, mnl tho vessel wa-s seized by the\n.Spanish authorities, who held her until u flue\nof *4,000 was paid, although the value of tho\ngoods did not exceed »20. Tho master ami\ncrew were forced to suffer many indignities\nat the hands of tho governor of the island\nand officials acting under his authority. Tho\nauthorities offered to settle the matter if the\ncaptain satisfactorily explain tho\nwhereabouts of tho missing packages.\nAfter tho fine hud been paid it was\ntalnod that tho missing goods were delivered\nby mistake onboard tue ship J.wephus, which\nlay next to the Josefa in New York, but were\n[tlm'ed on tho Joscfa's manifest Explanation\nwas made to tho Spanish authorities, and\nthe return of the fine was requested, but was\nrefused, and tho vessel left Porto Rico to\nloud a cargo elsewhere for this city.\nJames Brett, of New York, managing\nowner of the Josefa, has filed a complaint\nagainst tho Spanish government with .Sucre-\ntary Bayard, and asked that bis immediate\nattention shall bo given to tho matter. It\nwill bo urged that the war ships Galena and\nVantic shall bo ordered to continue their\ncruise to Porto Rico, and summarily\nredress for the imposition suffered by tho\nJosefa.
142b907b1aa403c0d31d873f44778206 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.042465721715 39.745947 -75.546589 Section 1. Every person who shall\nreceive or accept, or offer to receive or\naccept, or shall pay, transfer or deliver,\nor offer to premise to pay, transfer\ndeliver, cr shall contribute, or offer to\ncontribute, to another to be paid\nused, any money or other valuable\nthing as a compensation, inducement\nreward for the giving or withholding or\nin any manner Influencing the giving\nor withholding a vote at any general,\nspecial or municipal election in this\nstate, or at any primary election,\nvention or meeting held for the\npose of nominating any candidate\ncandidates to be voted for at such gen­\neral. special or municipal election,\nwho shall make or become directly\nindirectly a party to any bet or wager\ndepending upon the result of any such,\nor who shall by the use or promise of\nmoney or other valuable thing, or\notherwise cause any officer of election\nor registration officer to violate his of­\nficial duty, or who shall by the\npromise of money or other valuable\nthing influence any person to be regis­\n or who, being an officer of elec­\ntion or registration officer, shall know­\ningly and wilfully violate his official\nduty, shall be deemed guilty ofti mis­\ndemeanor and shall be fined not less\nthan one hundred dollars nor more than\nfive thousand dollars, or shall be im­\nprisoned for a term not less than six\nmonths nor more than five years, or\nshall suffer both fine and imprisonment\nwithin said limits, at the discretion of\nthe court, and. if a male, shall further\nfor a term of ten .years next following\nhis sentence bo incapable of voting at\nany such election. No person, other\nthan the accused, shall in the prosecu­\ntion for any offense mentioned In this\nsection he permitted to withhold his\ntestimony on the ground that It may\ncriminate himself or subject him to\npublic infamy; but such testimony\nshall not afterwards be used against\nhim in any Judicial proceeding, except\nfor perjury In giving such testimony.\nThe remainder of tl\\p committees\nreport, which is being taken up seri-\natum, has not yet been adopted.
529d728bdc7e134508221c252205c90e DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.828767091578 44.939157 -123.033121 ladv. "I have no' children in the\nschools. I am all alone here and I want\nto sl?n a pledge card and do all I can\nto help win this war against ' those\ncruel Germans. ( My neighbors have\ncards all around me and it looks to\nother people as though I was not pa\ntriotic and I want cveryDoay to unuer-\nstand that I am just ae partiotic as\nanybody else and anxious to dp my\nshare and I am just as much entitled\nto a card as anyone."\nThis is the disposition that is being\ndisplayed everywhere throughout the\ncitv. Nobody need worry, however, for\nall xamilies it the. city win De yiBiteu\nand given an opportunity to join this\nbig and vitally important movement\nwithin the next day oay or So, so an\nthey need do is' to wait patiently. If,\nhowever, your home has not been visit\ned before Thursday evening call up\n302 on the phone an investigation\nwill ue made as to why you nave Dcen\nmissed. If it is through no fault of\nthe workers you will be notified and\nwaited upon promptly.\nIf vou or any member of your fami\nly who would be authorized to sign a\npledge card are not going to De at\nhome tomorrow or Thursday and the\ndistrict workers - have not visited your\nhome yet it would save lots of trou-\nble if vcu would leave the name at\ntne next door neighbor s, together with\ntho information as to when the head of\nthe' family can be found at home and\nthe workers will look you up later.\nGreat enthusiasm is being displayed\nin all parts of Marion county in the\nfood substitution campaign and the\nindications arc, according to reports be\ning received from all sourecs, that Ma\nrion county will come out strong, if\nnot unanimously in favor of the food\nsaving and waste elimination
1ff354cc2d32ee0f3403adebef851267 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.7904109271942 40.063962 -80.720915 Geo. McOomtw, Win. Kirapie, jocoo rw»,\nUex. McCombu, Thos. McConnel, Jon. Jen- k\ntins, Martin Kuhn. Thcw. McComlw. David\nHabere, Richard Gosney, Geo. McComba, t\niienry Hood, J. W . hnyder, L. McComb*, Jo*.\nH. Siulth, Krnenton Johnson, Elijah Crlswell, c\njoyd orum.Thnn Kay, Jai. Downey, IH. Hu- U\nenncraft, Dau'l McConnel, Daviu Keller, o\nkVm. Hmlth, Jos. Marple. Ellla MnporH, Wm. ,\n"lemmlriK. Jna. Hlake, Thon. Crlawell, Ham'I '<\nVtxgera, Win. L . Kennedy. Lewis CrlHwell, "\nfohn Caldwell, Alex. Caldwell, Oliver CrliM s\nveil, Jos. McComlw, Jm. M . McCombH, Loyd\nJrUtwell, Martin Caldwell, Valentine Hlooin, #\nfnn. CrlMwcli, E H. Bird, Jaa. HhllllnR. Ill- u\nurn McComba, L. D . Walt, Jno. Wm. Walt, a\ntenj. Marplo, Atnoa Biggie, Jos. Marple, Jon.\ndcComlw, ifeterOrutn, Abner Black, John %\nSokey, Nlchola* Dawler, Hiram Hmlth, Jno. >\n John Kerrigan, Wm.Kemkey.JoH.\nirlmm, Thoa. Kuvenwrafr, Franklin Metz, F\nlame« Hmlth, Wm. Marple. Geo. Hooth, K\nMex. F .Hkey, Jaa. Gmney. Jno. McCombH, I\nfno. BIM, JuHtlco Flnnlry, Geo. Marple.\nWo auk you, fellow ciuju-iih, doea this look\nim if the "whole thinfc wan a trick on the part\n>f Mr. Reed, and the balance of those who c\nind tieen defeated before the oounty oonven- h\nIon?" Weuaauro you It was not, and fur- n\nher that the meeUna wait neither gotten up tl\n»»««r onnf riiihii \\tv afr. Reed In any manner. »\ntfe havo brought out Messrs. Heed and Jonea\nis candidates and respectfully rcxjiiosi you to\nlive thecu your support on electmu day and\nfro guarantee old Union will give them a\nun<e minority over ull oilier candidates.\nULIVKK (.'RIHWEX.L, WILSON ALLKN,\nJohn Makpm,
0e4fc36135db3c2ec45d84d903f5e1c0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 Th« governor cart an instance ot the «\ntimei br recalling an old farmer whom a\nhe met in Xebraaka, in ISK, who p\nwanted free wool. Whan he waa oat A\nthere a few weeki ago ha met thii aame ai\nagriculturist.carrying a banner In a I\nRepublican procession, lie bad got a\nvery near to free wool.ha had sold bli o\nclip for fife centa a pound. t<\nIn speaking of the tail that la coming w\ninto Qalveaton at ballast and taklof\naway the market ot the Kansas salt 11\nmen, the governortorned to Mr. Elklns. ci\naddressing him ai "Senator Elaine." d\nThis sot the crowd into a state of wild ii\nenthusiasm, and the ax-war secretary u\nbad to acknowledge the compliment p\n"Whatdoei all thla meant" continued d\nthe speaker. "If continued it means\nthat we must come down in our stand- 6\nard. Will we? [A chorus of noea.} \nThen see yon rote that war. All this a\nshoaling means nothing unless it la fol- 0\nlowed up in November. There is one ei\nthing X wish you lo carry home and e:\nthink over. Nothing la cheap to the\nAmerican people that comes from a\nEurope, if it enforces idleness among a\nour own workingmen. It ii not cheap a\nif it enforces a day's idlenen on thii side V\nof the soa. What we want is good w\nprices for our producta and good wages a\nfor American workingmen. One means n\nthe other. You have this fall a chance \\\nto change tbe political complexion of a\nthe bouts of representatives. What tl\nwill you do? Will you elect Mr. Miller u\ntoCongreaa? [A chorui ol affirmative it\ncries.] Do yon me»n it? Then I want\nyou to aend me telegram to tbat effect o\non the nightof the sixth ol November." b
1455d5a24eeb8ab33fb2822f6ed7cb92 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.2972602422628 40.063962 -80.720915 him on Sunday at my own bouse; he call-\ncd there: wo wcro speaking in reference\nto lils father's cue.In reference to pre-\nparing it; I told him, from information\nand opinion, who wa9 the seducer of his\nsister; I told him about this paper, and\nwhat his lather had told me; my sources\nof information, upon which I based my\nopinion, were trorn the lather, tie lumily,\nand outside parties; I gave bim the names\nof Mr. Win ilcKuig and Judge JJcarre- I\ndo not think that my name appears on the\ndocket as counsel at the October term; I\nwas counsel for his father; it was between\neleven and twelve o'clock when he was\nat Boman's house; I saw him on the Frl-\nday morning before, when the jury came\ndown in the Franklin Coal Company's\ncase; Black, Mra. Roman, my and\nmyself were at Boman's house on Sunday;\nyoung Black was reading the letter in an\nante-room loinlng the bed-room; then I\nalterwards read it in his presence; I had\nnever read the letter before, but had heard\nof it; did not call his attention to pencil\nmarks on it; alter I read it I did not\nchange my opinion as to the seduction; I\ndo not know of my own knowledge who\nhad handed it to him, or where it came\n!rom.only hear-say; I knew Mr. McKaig\n(or three or four years I don't know\nwhether ho was a man of good education\nor not; when I expressed my opinion to\nhim (Black) I had not read the letter at all;\nl»ad only heard of it.\n}nUiamf!.I/eniAait~l lire at Franklin\nMines; Black reached the mines either on\nFriday evening or Saturday morning
10818501ef29ac0996f299da47ef30bc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.4643835299341 39.745947 -75.546589 waste of power caused by flies from the\ntime of the plague in Egypt to the pres\nent day. He mentioned the power de­\nveloped in flv time by tbe swishing of the\ntails of cattle, horses and other four\nfooted animals. That of swine could be\ndeducted because it was small. But the\nunharnessed power developed by\nof America which caused a swishing of\ntails for ten hours a day three months in\na year, ten times a minute, lifting a\npound each time he left for some mathe­\nmatician to compute.\nMan had always been a barbarian until\nthe iron age. Then the Smiths devel­\noped. After a witty comment on their\nnames and number, Mr. Cox disposed of\nthem by saying, “When I look in the\nNew York directory and find 2 000\nSmiths, I never will, as long as I run for\nCongress, speak 111 of the Smith family.”\nMr. Cox spoke of the power going to\nwaste in the unharnessed motions of the\nhuman jaw. Speaking of the amount of\niron in the blood he said “I never under\nstood why they tax iron imports, but\nallow people to come in free at Castle\nGarden with iron in their body."\nInclosing his address Mr. Cox said:\n“We may not know the origin of al!\nthese movements in matter, although\nthese take place perpetually. All\nteach affinity, and that our system is the\neffect of an intelligent cause.”\nProfessor Goldey presented the diplo­\nmas to the graduates with a few remarks,\nreccommending them to the favorable\nconsideration of the business community.\nAs the names of the graduates were\ncalled they took their places in a line on\nthe stage. After the diplomas were\npassed Job H. Jackson was introduced.\nHe delivered the address to the gradu­\nates, speaking in part as follows;\n“In speaking of success I do not wish\nto be understood as advancing the idea\nthat the only success in life to be coveted\nis to make money and gain wealth. A vast\narmy of good men and women are bless­\ning this earth to day by their lives, who\nhave but little of this worlds goods.\nWhat is success? It is holding the tbrot\ntie as the locomotive plunges on to do-\nstructien. It is the throwing overboard\na valuable cargo to save strangers. It is\nrefusing to catch the outstretched hand\nof snecor, preferring to remain on the\nfrail support with wife and children and\nbe swept on by the floods of the Cone\nmangh to certain death. Over every\ndoor may be seen the sign, Good Men\nWanted. Enter, seek. Aud now may I\nventure a few suggestions after you\nenter?
2498f3a02843c85307f1193c82475939 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 and was greatly taken down when ehc\ntold him that she could't thlnl: of such a\nthing. Charles then sought to liavo the\nold lolks put in a good word lor liim, but\nthey declined to Interlcro. He continued\nhis visits, perhaps hoping to soften the\nRirl' heart, but Thursday evening the\ncrisis came. IIo went to tho house with\na bottloof acid in his pooket, prepared to\nr spoil her beauty if eho did not give him\na lavorable answer. There was no ono at\nhome bat the girl and her mother, and\nPcrrln first wanted the girl to take a walk\nwith him. Bh.e rctuscd to go, and he\nasked to see her alone. Bhe also refused\nthia request, and tho lover had just got\nI ready to draw tho bottle Irom hia pockol\nwhen something bit him. Ho thought 11\nwaaa dog, but It wasn't. The cork\nhad worked out of tho botilu and\ni his coat-tails were turning brick coli al\ni lb] rato of a yard a minute. Tho acid\nwas not content with tho coat-tails, bul\nBtruck out lor flesh and in about a min\ni ute tho young man wob dsnclng around\ntho houso as 11 to cscapc a ballet. Shout\nlog and whooping, he got oat ot doors ant\nj Ihrow ofl moat ofliU clothing and rollec\nI la tho mud, and it was somo time belon\nany ono could find out whether ho hai\n! snakes in his boots or had sat down on i\nbrad-awl. He was so badly burned tha\nt two men had to help him to his boarding\nI honso on Fifth street, where a pbysiciai\ny dressed tho burns. There if a good dea\ne of laughing at bis expeneo and if hi\na makes his appearance at tho home ogair\nhe will bo arrested, as ho told ono of hii\ni- friends in advance that ho mi'aut lb\nq acid for tho girl.\ns
190b2c75328c88a2beb90383c9457b5a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1882.1109588723998 42.217817 -85.891125 aro farmers, and live in tho same neigh-\nborhood in tho town of Tecnmseh, .Len-\nawee county. Their residences aro con-\nnected by a lino of telegraph about one-ha- lf\nmile long. IX. J. W. Bowen takes\ntho Detroit Free I'rcttB. When ho got\ntho news of tho result of tho assassin\nOuiteau's trial, ho telegraphed it to W.\nB. Keyser. Thus tho news was tele-\ngraphed from Washington to tho Free\nPrcxs ; that paper brought it by mail\nto 11. J. W. Bowen, nnd ho sent it by\ntelegraph to W. B . Keyser. Is thero\nanother lino in tho world operated by\nfarmers? Who says farmers are not\nprogressive ? Detroit Free J'rcss.\nA correspondent o$ Marquette gives\ntho following particulars of tho defalca-\ntion of tho Treasurerof Marquette coun-\nty : A profound sensation was created\nhero by the report that Col. John E.\nWard, Treasurer of Marquette county,\nwas short in his cash $18,000. He\nturned tho ofiico over to County\nBoard, admitting himself indebted to\ntho county in tho amount named, which\nho was unable to make good, and as-\nsigned all his property to W. H. Hood,\nof Ishjcniing, one of ins bondsmen, in\ntrust for tho benefit of that gentleman\n.ind others associated with him on tho\nbond. It appears that tho County Board\nbecame suspicious at the fall meeting,\nas tho cash balance shown by the looks\nwas not represented in the county treas-\nury by a corresponding number of dol-\nlars, and an investigation was decided\non. Yesterday when tho committee to\nwhich it was intrusted met hero the\nTreasurer found that a disclosure could\nnot bo any longer staved off. Ho there-\nfore admitted tho shortage, resigned\nhis oilice, und immediately afterward\nmade a transfer of his property to pro-\ntect his londsruen. As they are all god\nthe county is amply secured from "loss.\nTho property turned over by Ward is\nroughly estimated as worth $8,000,\nwhich
2fc4324838b4415e2591d4469d44a45d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.6188524273932 39.745947 -75.546589 LONDON, Aug. 14.—The Franco-\nBritiah exhibition grounds were rocked\nas by an earthquake and hundreds of\nwindows in ths beautiful buildings\nwere broken today by the terrible ex­\nplosion of the huge balloon of Captain\nLovelace, an American aeronaut, who\nhas been giving aerial performances\nat the exhibition. Two persona were\nkilled outright by the explosion, a\ndozen frightfully burned in the mass\nof llamas that engulfed the crowd when\nthe big gas bag burst and scores were\ninjured by being trampled upon In a\nmad rush for escape. Captain Love­\nlace is in a dangerous condition, his\nInjuries, grief and ths excitement at­\ntending his personal supervision of\nrescue have left him on the verge of\ncollapse. His secretary it missing and\nit is feared she may have been one\nof the victims of the explosion.\nThe disaster is the worst that has\nyet attended the exhibition and an in­\nvestigation be made in an ecort\nto fix the responsibility. A week ago\nCaptain Lovelace met with a serious\nmishap with hla balloon. He climbed\nup the rope covering to adjust a tangle\nin the ropes when he fell through a\nrent in the bag and was nearly dead\nfrom asphyxiation when taken out.\nCaptain Lovelace, who is a resident\nof New York city, came to London in\ncompany with Dr. Julian P. Thomas,\nof the aero club of America. He is\ndevoted to aeronautics, in the pursuit\nof which he has many thrilling adven­\ntures. In a trip with Dr. Thomas in\nthe German Balloon Pommern In the\nInternational race at St. Louis. Cap­\ntain Lovelace climbed from the basket\nup the netting around the gas hag and\ntook a position at the top of the great\nsphere in order, better to direct the\ncourse. This was in a trip from New\nYork to Philadelphia.
1372d3b2de87b8f9cdaf13953b88e153 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.7090163618195 46.187885 -123.831256 The Republicans of lb l ulled Htiilcs.\nassembled by their representatives In '\n.National Convention, appealing for the\npopular and historical Justification of\ntli.lr claims to the matchless achieve-\nments of thirty years of Republican\nrule, earnestly and confidently address\nthemselves lo the awakened Intelli-\ngence, experience and conscience of\ntheir countrymen In the following dec-\nlaration of facts and principles:\nFor the Unit time since the Civil\nWar the American people have wit-\nnessed the calamitous consequences of\nfull atol unrestrained lvmiertlc con-\ntrol of the Government. It has been\na record of unpurnllcd Incapacity, dis-\nhonor and disaster. In administrative\nmanagement it bus ruthhssly saerlllo-e- d\nIndlspenslble revenue, entailed an\nunceasing deficit, eked out ordinary\ncurrent expenses with borrowed money,\npiled up the public debt by .1.rtO0,0o0\nIn time of forced an adverse bal-\nance of trade, to a perpetual menace\nhanging over the redemption fund,\npawned American credit to alien syn-\ndicates and reversed all the measures\nand results of successful Republican\nrule. In the broad effect of I's policy\nIt has precipitated panic, blighted In-\ndustry and trade with prolonged de-\npression, closed factories, reduced work\nand wages, halted enterprise and crip-\npled American production w hile stimu-\nlating foreign production for the Amer-\nican market. Every consideration of\npublic safely and Individual Interest\ndemands that the government shall be\nrescued from the hands of those who\nhave shown themselves Incapable of)\nconducting It without disaster at home\nand dishonor abroad, and shall be re\nstored to the party w hich for thirty\nyears administered II with unequaled\nsuccess and prosperity.
2d057d3f9c465e1d59e3ea8e1539584d SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.4945205162355 35.780398 -78.639099 The attention of the public is particularly called,\nto this stock of goods. Great bargains will be\ngiven to pu. chasers. The subscriber would also\nsay if the goods are not sold out by August Court,\nhe will dispose of the remaining at public sale, as\nhe is determined to close the entire business by\nthe Erst of September.\nHe would say to his numerous friends and cus-\ntomers, that the business in all f the different\nbranches, will bo conducted as heretofore, and by\nstrict personal attention to the different depart-\nments, he hopes to give entire satisfaction to a\ngenerous public. Call at the well known house.\nNo. 15, Fayetteville St., for good bargains. The\nbusiness will be conducted on the cash principle,\nuntil further notice is given, or if required, terms\nmade known at the ounter- -\nJThe subscriber particularly invites the at-\ntention of those that are indebted to this house,\neither by note or acc't, or otherwise, to and\nmake an immediate settlement, as there will be no\nlonger indulgence giveu ; and if not attended to\nimmediately they will find their claims in the\nhands of au officer. And he would call the atten-\ntion of those that reside out of the State to this\nnotice, and also the young gentlemen having left\nthe University of North Carolina, and ask that\nthey will please forward the amounts justly due\nthis house, (which has been long standing) or\ntheir accounts will be put in the hands of a collec-\ntor, as above stated\nThe subscriber would add .a word in regard to\nthis positive call on those that are indebted to\nhim: Owing to long indulgence to his customers,\nhe has sustained heavy damages, and is now com-\npelled to make this demand, to enable him to meet\nhis liabilities. He hopes this will be sufficient, as\nthere will be no farther notice given, and the\nabove statements will be positively carried.out.
0efeb739bc1ae47eab5c60fa404c83ef DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.1356164066465 39.745947 -75.546589 “ 21 J. Bradford, New Oastle Hd.\n“ *2d G. W . laawB, Penoader Hd.\n“ 23 Margaret Maree,White Olay Ck.Hd\n*• 24 Joseph Irving, Ked Lion Hd.\n24 James McManon, New Castle Hd.\n” 24 Lore A Emmons, at Court House.\n44 26 E. K . Green, Cnrlstlana Hd.\n44 25 E. L«. Clark, Ked Lion Hd.\n44 26 Mr*. Press, Christiana Hd.\n44 26 Thomas G. Bird. Brandywine Hd.\n44 26 D. B. Ferris, Penoader Hd.\n44 26 William J. MoGarr,New Castle Hd.\n44 26 OrumllBh property, olty.\n44 27 Crumllsh furniture, cliy.\n14 27 O. F. Welch, city.\n44 27 G. W . Price, New Castle Hd.\n44 28 Geo. W. Price, Penoader Hd.\n44 26 Frank Neley, olty.\nMar. 2 M. F. Powell, New Castle Hd.\n44 2 J. Ourtl* Clark, White Olay.Ok . Hd.\n44 S Mr*. Weldln, Brandywine Hd.\n44 3 E. (Sheppard, Mill Creek.\n44 4 K. M . Gibson, olty.\n 4 Clark, Brandywine Hd.\n44 6 Ellas Loüand, New Castle Hd.\n44 6 John (Swan, Red Lion.\n44 6 John Brown. Mill Creek Hd.\n44 7 H. L . Brown, Brandywine Hd.\n44 7 H. Brown, Brandywine lid.\n4* y John F. Allcorn, Mill Creek Hd\n44 9 James M. Nlvln, New Castle Hd.\n44 9 A. Guthrie,Mill Greek Hd.\n44 lo M. W. Sheldon, New Castle Hd.\n44 lo Mrs. Hendnckton, Christiana Hd.\n44 10 .1. S. Beeson Brandywine Hd.\n11 Samuel W. McUaulley,Court House\n44 11 George E. Vvelden, iota and Union.\n44 11 Husbands & Stirling,H'dy^wine Hd.\n44 11 John F.Thompson, P ncader Hd.\n44 12 Joel Greenman, Now Castle Hd.\n44 12 W. 8. Moore, Christiana Hd.\n44 12 Peoples tt Donolio, Christiana Hd.\n44 13 Nall\n4* 14 Jos. Hanby, Hrauiywino Hd.\n44 16 John Cozzons, Brandywine Hd.\n44 21 Eagle A Hro., New vJastlelld.\n44 21 E.H .nderer, 11th waru.
1492cf0607abeea78c1618089b19f5ed IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1881.9958903792492 43.82915 -115.834394 One abutment tobe constructed on East\nside of rive r above highw atc r mark, and a\nbent, in side of same; one center piece t ob e\nraised above liigliwater m a rk: on tlie west\nside a pier should be built similar to tlie\ncenter pier, with bent same as the one on\nthe East side. All of said piers sho uld be\nfilled to the top with stones. Th ere are\nsix pieces of timber- 12 x 12 inches, requi­\nred, two (*n each pier, to support 3 bed\nplates o f timbe rs ol the same dime nsions,\nthat will extend lengthwise unde r tlie\nstringers at their connecting points. Three\nstri ng ers 28 feet long on the East side,\nthree st ri ngers 100 feet long, on c en ter;\nthroe stringers 00 feet long, near main span,\nand three stringers to the West shore 40\nfeet long : all st ri nge rs to be 12x10 inches.\nTwo spa ns will require each 3 cross pieces\n26 feet long (one unde r each pe rp endic u­\n post), to extend 7 feet on the outside ol\nstringers, u nder the stringers, and be held\nin place with iron stirrups; said stirrups\none by three inches, and a rod If* in c i\niron ; the rod of each center stirrup to lap\npost and co nnecting beam from each cross\npier to the p st above it a brace 8x8 inche s\nwill be required, a nd braces txitween\nposts, o f timbe r 10x10 inches. All limbers\nused for posts cross pieces, be nts and\nbeams to bo 12x12 inches. Ea ch span will\nrequire cross-ties to be dovetailed on tlie\ninside of outsifie st ringe rs, and set into\nc enter stringe r, 12 feet ap art, and braced\ndiago nally with 6x0 inch timb e r; cross­\nties of same size. The flooring to consist\no f 3-inch planks, spiked to tlie stringers.\nAll of the wood work of tlie bridge to be\npainted with coal tar, a nd prop erly sand ­\ned above the piers, and the^utirestructure\nto be two feet higher than bridge now\nthere.
030d44e1f30ba45e141acb6722de7583 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.5136985984273 43.82915 -115.834394 Elkhoru Mining Company (a |\ncorporation) Defendants.\nUnder and bv virtue of an order of sale\nand decree of Liens issued out of tile Dis\ntrict Court of the Third Judicial District\nof Idaho, in and for Boise county on the\n21st day of May, 1891, in the above enti­\ntled action, wherei n the above named\nplaintiffs obtained each a several judg­\nment and decree against the Elkhoru\nMining company (a corporation), defend­\nant, on the 15th day of May, 1891, which\nsaid decree and judgment was, on the\n25th day of May, 1891, recorded in Jude\nment Book 2 of said Court, at page 549, I\nam commanded to sell-\nAll that certain mining property known\nas the Elkhoru vein, lead or lode, situate,\nlying and being in the Mining\nDistrict, County of Boise and State of\nIdaho, and more particularly described\nas follows, to-wit: Situated on the west\nsiele of Elk creek, iu (lie milling district,\ncounty and state aforesaid, commencing\nat said Elk creek and running in a north­\neasterly direction eighteen hundred feet\nand fifty feet on each sid e tr om the center\nof said Elkhorn vein, lead or lode, being\nnine claims (including the discovery\nclaim) of two hundred lent each and fifty\nfeet on each side from the center of the\nvein or lode, together with the improve­\nments and appurtenances, including the\nmill aud mill-site, water rights, ditches\nand canals necessary to aud used in oper­\nating said mine.\nNotice is hereby given that oa\nMonday, tie 13th Day of July. 1891,
33a2ca2b5c33499c94e2739855742ae8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.5767122970574 41.681744 -72.788147 So as to inform any who wish to\napply for the probation officer 'job\nin Plainville as to the duties con-\nnected with the position, the Her-\nald is printing the state statutes in\nregard to the office.\nAs yet no appointment has been\nmade by Judge Meritt O. Ryder of\nthe town court. The duties of a pro-\nbation officer shall be: To investigate\nthe case of any person brought or\nabout to be brought before the\ncourt, under whose direction he is\na probation officer, for any misde-\nmeanor or any delinquency render-\ning such person liable to be com-\nmitted to any humane or reforma-\ntory institution, or any crime not\npunishable by imprisonment in the\nstate prison; the object of such in-\nvestigation being to ascertain the\nhistory and previous conduct the\nperson so arrested and such other\nfacts as may show whether he or\nshe may be properly released on\nprobation, and after an arrest such\nprobation officer shall whenever pos-\nsible have opportunity to 'confer\nwith the accused before his ar-\nraignment in court.\n2. To report to the court the\nfacts so ascertained. 3. To pre-\nserve complete records of all such\ncases investigated, including de-\nscriptions for identification, with the\nfindings of the court, its action in\nthe case and the subsequent history\nof the probationer, in such form as\nmay be prescribed under the pro-\nvisions of the probation law. Sucn\nrecords shall be a part of the reords\nof said court and shall at all times\nbe open to the inspection of all off-\nicers of the court. 4.
3eec9385fda99556606077112a9e8141 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0534246258244 39.513775 -121.556359 Wk finJ >n the New York Weekly News, a\nInter from the Flon. Hubert J. Walker,\nPresident of the Southern Pacific Railroad\nCompany, defending himself ami company\nagainst certain charges contained in the\nWashington correspondence of tlic New\nJOik Herald, llie correspondent states\nthat Mr W alker was interested in securing\nthe passage of a bill appropriating land to\ndifferent railroad companies, to aid in the\nconstruction of a railroad to the Pacific, and\nafter refuting the statements of the corres-\npondent, and Che conclusions -deduced there-\nfrom hy the Herald, Mr. Walker proceeds to\nfurnish some valuable and interesting in-\nformation concerning the prospects of the\ncompany of which he is a member. As this\nis a subject in which Californians are deeply\ninterested, wc have drawn upon Mr. Walk-\ners communication, tor such information\nus shows prospect and progress of the\nCompany now constructing u road upon\nwhat is termed the Southern route to the\nPacific. Speaking of the progress already\nmade upon that route, Mr. Walker says :\n“Under the able guidance of the eminent\npractical and scientific engineer, Horatio Al-\nlen, of the Novelty works of New York, so\nwell and favorably known in flits city,\nnow at the head of our company, and who,\nagainst opposing European opinions, was the\nfirst to propose, in his great report of 1329,\nto the Charleston and Augusta Railroad, the\nuse of locomotive engines upon railroads, we\ndie prosecuting the work successfully thro\nTexas, and will carry the road eight hund-\nred miles hrough that State from its east-\nern to its western boundary at El Paso,\nwithout any grant of hind or money from\nCongress
2d5b97adbfc7b513235c2ecc8a0d4558 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.760273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 Council Meetlnc TonLghl\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nthe city council will be held at 7:30\no'clock thus evening ln the city hall\nand a number of important matters\nwill be brought tip for discussion.\nA hearing will be given property\nowners on Central street, Forestville,\nto show cause why the street line\nshould not be reestablished.\nAn open hearing will also be held\non the matter of changing the divid-\ning line between the third and\ntwelfth school districts. This matter\nwas discussed at some length at the\nlast gathering of the city fathers,\nthe matter having been brought up\noriginally by a petition received\nfrom property owners on Crown\nstreet that they be taken back into\nthe third district by the restoration\nof the original district line. If their\nrequest Is granted, It will tend to\nrelieve the congestion now existing\nin the little school house on Fall\nMountain In the 12th district and\nit is not believed that there will be\nany opposition to the change.\nThe matter of a sewer crossing on\nthe property of Martin Loughlin in\nthe rear of his building on Main\nstreet will also up for con-\nsideration. A notice was sent to\nMr. Loughlin to attend the meeting\nand show cause why the present\nlease should not be. renewed. In the\nevent of failure of both parties to\nagree. It Is understood that the city\nwill start condemnation proceedings.\nThe matter of the railroad afford-\ning additional crossing protection at\nFederal street will also be brought\nup by Councilman Homer H. Judd,\nwho first broached this subject sev-\neral weeks ago. following the fatal\naccident to Philip Jannelle of North\nMain street. Tho last heard from\nthe railroad authorities was about a\nmonth ago when they promised to\nlook into the matter and advise la-\nter, but no communication has been\nreceived from them since that time.\nThe building code committee will\nalso submit a report on the adoption\nof the code as prepared by a special\ncommittee appointed by the cham-\nber of commerce and It is believed\nthat It will be accepted with but\nslight changes.\nBulletin Issued on Fire Prevention\nKarl A. Reiche, superintendent of\nschools, has Issued a bulletin in con-\nnection with fire prevention week,\nwhich Is being observed, throughout
2c3fc93dfe81368e30a7dcf2f9f88d80 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6734972361364 39.513775 -121.556359 the ex-Covcrnor in the race of eloquence.—\nWe arc not speaking thus, because we are\nprejudiced against the one, or because we\nincline to favor the other. Wc judge from\nthe efforts both have made within the last\nfour days. Wc are opposed to both. Some\nof the finest passages we have ever heard,\nwere delivered by Col. Baker, on Monday\nnight Although he was talking Republi-\ncanism; to our notion the very quintessence\nof sectionalism —his speech was more nation-\nal and less of party, than that of the Union-\nsaving and Union-loving Foote. It was a\nsource of regret, that a man capable of ac-\ncomplishing so much, should be exerting his\ntalents in behalf of a party, organized upon\nsectional issues alone—that a man who can\nwin the unbounded applause of those who\nare opposed to him, should waste his talents\nand his eloquence, upon men and measures,\nwhich are calculated, although presented\nwith an eloquence peculiar to himself, to\narouse feelings of jealousy and hatred be-\ntween different portions of Union, Ih-\ndoctrines are abominable, and unworthv oi\nhis eloquence. It was painting the de' il in\na beautiful frame, in the hopes that the pub-\nlic, "dazzled by the frame, might overlook\nthe hideousness of the picture ”\nThe speaker was not alarmed about a dis-\nsolution of the Union He never found a\nman wive was going to dissolve it He seem-\ned to forget that he was doing it himself,\nby talking about it, and by familiarizing it\nas an act, possible of accomplishment. This\nUnion can never be dissolved, until the peo-\nple shall become familiar with the term,and\nwhen such men as Col. Baker, devote their\neloquence to discussing its probabilities and\nridiculing tho idea; they arc paving the way\nto U»dissolution, by leading the people to\ncontemplate the subjewt, without the fear of\nits consequences, and by inducing men to\nbelieve that there is no danger.\nWe believe with James Buchanan, that\n“Disunion is a iconl udiich ought not to he\nbreathed amongst us, even in a whisper.
180bd46041efae9f2dd23eba9b64fb12 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.2753424340435 41.681744 -72.788147 shore and intend to build as soon as\npossible. Between 10 and 15 parties\nappeared yesterday afternoon to try\nto get one rent that was vacant.\nIt is very evident that something\nwill have to.be done very soon to\nmeet the housing problem in Plain-\nville. The lead in this movement\nwill probably be taken by the manu-\nfacturing interests as it is the em-\nployes of the. local factories who will\nhave to be accommodated if local in-\ndustries are to keep on their feet. The\nBristol Brass company bought a large\nnumber 6 f ten ts about two years a.go\nand the employes lived in them dur-\ning the summer. The colony became\nknown as "the Tent Citl" and was an\nobject of curiosity to visitors and to\npeople passing through the city, as\nthe tents were erected beside the main\nroad. While is not probable that\nsuch action will have to be taken in\nPlainville. it is certain that some dis-\nposition will, have to be made to\nmeet" the situation. The majority of\nthe prqmineht business men of Plain-\nyille have been considering the ques-\ntion seriously for some time.\nThe Trumbul Electric Manufactur-\ning company erected a number of\nhouses for its 'employes on East Broad\nstreet or Broad street extension, as\nit. is sometimes, called. These arc pract-\nically, .all occupied and still there are\nemploj'es of the company who desire'\nto locate their homes in Plainville\nwho cannot be accommodated. The\nTrumbull Klect'ric company was the\nfirst. local factory to begin this inno-\nvation as it has taken the lead in vari-\nous, other progressive movements and\nmany local . people look to the\nfim to take the initiative in further\ndevelopments
0baadc7c4a01eef87135ddf38b324039 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.8671232559614 41.020015 -92.411296 William that he was buying cattle on\ncommission. He stayed three or four\nweeks, and would bo gone a few days\nat a time, always reporting on his re­\nturn that he had bought and shipped\ncattlo. lie was introduced around\nthe neighborhood, and wherever he\nasked and inquired for cattle, was al­\nways wanting to buy, and always\nrepresented that he had some to sell.\nLast Thursday three weeks ago he\nwent away and came back the Sun­\nday following early in the morning,\nwith a mixed lot of steers and heif­\ners, yearlings and two-year-olds;\ntold William that he had bought them\nthis side of Iowa City, Aud that he\nhad bought them with bis own mon­\ney, as he got them cheap and his em­\nployer would not take such a mixed\nlot. He hired William's little son to\nherd them aud staid around all week.\nOn Saturday following he sold\nfive of them to William Scranton, ton\nof them to Rev. Darbyshire, and gave\none to hik brother William, saying he\nwould board it out with him this\nwinter. In the meantime Mr. Critz\nand F. Welland, of Riverside, from\nwhom the sixteen head ot cattle had\nbeen stolen, had been following in­\ngenious reports of stolen cattle and\npostal cards forged on responsible\nmen all over Johnson and Louisa\ncounties. Day before yesterday they\nfound their cattle, the samo that were\nsold to Scranton et al. On prelimi­\nnary examination William Kerr to­\nday was discharged. He told a\nstraight story and his neighbors all\nbelieve he was duped by a profes­\nsional, and begins to doubt that it.was\nreally his brother. The thief is red\ncomplected, of moderate height, and\nmay be now playing his game in some\nother part of the country.
1afd5f4cd0d199f1f098c838cfd66346 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.2479451737697 37.561813 -75.84108 The Best Way of Pruning Stand-\nard Rope?. A very successful rose\nculturist says that in pruning standard\nroes every shoot of last year's wood\nshould be shortened to three or four buds.\nIf not pruned in this secure manner the\nhead will become straggling, the shoots\nweakly, and the flowers small. Only as\nmany "shortened shoots should be left for\nblooming, as will keep the head properly\nsupplied without crowding ; hearing in\nmind that each of the three or four buds\nleft, will produce a shoot. Attention\nmust also be paid to have the head pro-\nperly balanced. Where the head of a\nstandard has been improperly treated,\nand, in consequence, the shoots of several\nyears, now old wood, are too extended,\nthen cut the shoots of the old wood bark\nto within afew inchesof their and\nso form a new head. The portion ot old\nwood retained, will push shoots, which\ngenerally bloom the following season\nand if they should ntrt, they will not fail\nto do so every subsequent one, if properly\ntreated. Severe, but judicious pruning,\nis essential to secure success in blooming\nthe rose. An annual dressing manure on\nthe surface of the bed should be given to\nbe washed in by the rains and thaws ol\nwinter and spring.\nWhich Fowls Eat the MosT.- T - his\nquestion has been asked and answered\nmany tunes, but nowhere, as yet, in\nprint, have I seen it to my satisfaction\nWriters invariably try to solve this\ntion so as to make it an argument for some\nparticular breed, and that one is gen\ncrally the breed in which they are con-
d22f0736619cc21cb3f9638b7b554724 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1845.6178081874682 43.624497 -72.518794 clearly shown by documentary facts that\nwool has becn thc highest when thc Tariff\nwas the lowest. By tho priccs current\nof ihe Boston papcrs, wool brought from\n55 to G0 cts. per Ib. in 1818, and in 1819\nfrom 55 to 58, and in 1821 from CO to\n85; yet the dutv on wool was only 15 per\ncent. By the 'TarifT of 1824 a duty of\n30 cts. per 1b. on all above 10 cts. was\nimposed, from thnt year to 1828 thc aver-\nage price of wool raged from 25 to 02 cts.\nBy the Tariff of 1823, 40 per cts. and 4\ncts specific on all wool over 8 cts per lb.\nunder 8 cts. duty free; yet wool in 1828\naveraged from 30 to 50 cts. per lb. aud\nin 1829 from 25 to 45. By the of\n1842, 30 per ct. and 3 cts specific on all\ncosting ovor7 cte per lb. and under\n3 mills per Ib, yet in 1 842 wool aver-age- d\nfrom 18 to 38 cts, nnd in 1843 it\navcraged nbout 27 cts. and in 1844 from\n25to40,andin 1845itisfull10 ctsless\nthan in 1844. By this it will be secn that\nwool brought in 1818 9, and 21.ncarly\nor quite doublc what it is ot thc prescnt\ntime, yet there was then only 15 per cent\nduty on it now there is a duty cqual to\n40 per cent. Common senso should tcach\ntho editor ofthe Crow thnt dcmand and\nsupplv rcgulntes thc price of wool as\nwell as every thing else, and although it\nhas been the highest when tho tariff was\ntho lowest, it was no doubt so in coiise-quen- cc
14450b883bbecb5538ccbaae522fe1e4 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1896.3101092579943 39.756121 -99.323985 According to tho narrative printed\nIn the Ohio nowspaper, referred to\nabovo, this "Thomas McCarthy" was\nnot Thomas McCarthy fit all, but Mrs.\nPhilip Whalen, whose mission it was to\nfind her son, who had left homo be-\ncause of his stepfather's ill treatment\nnnd for whom the mother worried un-\ntil she could no longer restrain her-\nself and she then started out to find her\nboy. Tho story declares. that the poor\nwoman's life had been made miserable\nby her worthless husband, who wanted\nto live without work, expecting his\nwife nnd stepson the latter aged 10\nyears to earn the nveiinoott. uecause\nthe young man objected to this, Whalen\nbecame abusive and drovo the boy\nfrom home. Before marrying Whalen\nhlB wife was a Mrs. McCarthy, and\nit was a happy life tha she and her\nfirst husband led. Their only boy had\nbeen christened Thomas, after his\nfather, and he was the Joy of tho house-\nhold. When McCarthy died he cheered\nhis wife by Baying that she yet had\nthe lad to her. Two years after-\nward Mrs. McCarthy married Philip\nWhalen, at Cleveland. As staled, mat\nters In the new household were far\nfrom pleasant, nnd In the latter part of\nNovember last young Tom ran away to\nescape the wrath of his stepfather and\nto seek his fortune In the wide, wide\nworld. Two weeks later Tom wrote\nfrom Pittsburg, saying that he was\nworking his way eastward. Before\nleaving Cleveland he had been em-\nployed In a rolling mill, Rnd his moth-\ner calculated that he would naturally\ndrift into cities and towns where this\nsort of industry was In operation.\nYearning for her boy made Mrs.\nWhalen sick at heart. She thought\nmore of the lad than she did of her\nhusband, and thus It was' that she de\ncided to find her boy. She was fearless,\nphysically strong and possessed an en-\ndurance of steel, which, backed by the\nCeltic determination to win, Mrs.\nWhalen quickly laid her plans for ex-\necution. Donning a suit of her hus-\nband's clothes, she made herself into
04fd2bdcccbfe2f96741b2cba641c65d OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.7904109271942 39.513775 -121.556359 Sir James Clarke, of England, lias assail'\ned with considerable force the doctrine that\na change of climate is beneficial to persona\nsufl'ering with consumption ; and a French\nphysician M. Carriers, has written forcibly\nagainst it. Dr. Burgess, an eminent Scotch\nphysician, also contends that climate has lit-\ntle or nothing to do with the cure of con-\nsumption, and that. if it had, the curative\neffects would be produced through the skin\nand not through the lungs. That a warm\nclimate is not in itself beneficial, he shows\nfrom the fact that the disease exists in all\nlatitudes. In India and Africa, tropical\nclimates, it is as frequent as in Europe and\nNorth America. At Malta, right in the\nheart ot the genial Mediterranean, the ar-\nmy reports of England show that \nof the deaths among the soldiers are by con-\nsumption. At Nice, a favorite resort of the\nEnglish invalids, especially to those afflicted\nwith lung complaints, there are more native\nborn persons die of consumption than in any\nEnglish town of equal population. In Gene-\nva the disease is almost equally prevalent.\nIu Florence, pneumonia is said to be marked\nby a suffocating character, and by a rapid\nprogress towards its last stage. Naples,\nwhose climate is the theme of so much praise\nby travelers, shows in her hospitals a mor-\ntality by consumption equal to one in two\nand one-third, whereas in Paris, whose cli-\nmate is so often pronounced villainous,, the\nproportion is only one in three and one quar\nter. In Madeira, no local disease is mors\ncommon than consumption.
9f4b59950e1aa2a7d1e6a692524a17ef THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.7082191463724 39.560444 -120.828218 While at work on toy claim, Dr. E\ncalled at my camp to see whether I knew\nanything of certain rich diggings twenty\nmiles North, somewhere near the Bald\nMountain and the Lone Tree. I would\nlike to see an old settler who has not heard\nmarvelous tales of these landmarks; I\nhave listened to stories about the Bald\nMountain and Lone Tree, round the camp-\nfire, until I was heartily sick of them, and\neven after I had rolled myself in my\nblankets to sleep, I have dreamed about\nthe infernal Bald Mountain and Lone\nTree, until I saw the whole hill-side\ncovered with gold. Many a Will-O-the-\nWisp chase has been afterthe rich diggings\nsupposed to be there, and there are people,\nwho even now believe in their existence.\nI think myself that there are rich placer\ndiggings in the north yet undiscovered,\nbut I rather the existence of gold\nquarries. One thing I am convinced of\nby observation; when you leave the Dow-\nnieville range, you get out of the best dig-\ngings in the northern mines, and as you\nfollow that same range south, it grows\npoorer; whereas to the north it is justthe\nreverse. To be convinced of this, you\nneed only refer to the hundreds who go\nsouth every fall, and almost invariably\nthey come back next spring flat broke; on\nthe contrary whoever goes north stays\nthere. The winter is harder to be sore,\nbut when the miner is taking out gold\npretty fast he cares little for the snow and\ncold, and shovels it away about as fast as\nit falls. In the winter of 1850,1 became\nreconciled to the cold, for I was taking\nout gold at a rate you would not believe\nif I were to tell you.
191ea58a16d999b6cf15e63a3a3aa2ef DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.7547944888381 58.275556 -134.3925 The question as to whether or not the\nmunicipality is responsible for the care\nof sick and indigent Indians who wan¬\nder into Skagway from their tribal\nhabitations, is one that the city council\nproposes to probe, says the Skagway\nAlaskau. The matter came up last\nnight, and was introduced by the fact1\nthat Walter Hill, an Indian, is in the\nrailroad hospital suffering from con¬\nsumption. While the city has not\nacknowledged responsibility in the\ncase, it is understood that tho sick\nIndian is regarded as a charga against\nthe municipality. Mayor Shaw stated\nthat bethought the city should appeal1\nto Gov. Iloggatt, who has been desig- (\nnated as superintendent of Indian af-1\nfairs, to ascertain the exact status of\nmatters. He bolieved the federal gov- ]\neminent and not the city fespon- j\nsible in the premises. The council di¬\nrected the clerk to lay the matter before\nthe governor. In the course of the dis¬\ncussion over this matter it was pointed\nout that the city could very easily be-\ncome bankrupt if it elected to care for\nall the consumptives among the Chilkat\nIndians. Dr. Norman, it was stated,\nhad informed the council that he is\nbesieged daily by indigent Indians\nseeking medical attention. Mr. Mc-\nGrath called attention to the fact that\nthore is danger of lifting the floodgates\nin this matter of caring for the indigent.\nHe said only a short time ago the city\nadmitted responsibility only when\nthere was danger from smallpox or\nsome other contagious diseases. Now,\nthe city has some one on its hands\nnearly all the time.
38899c2ed34b9bd7c6221b32ee195265 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.4726027080162 44.939157 -123.033121 Nollr of Sewer AsiessmeaL\n"Notice Is hereby given that the\ncommon council of the city of Salem,\nOregon, will at or about 8 o'clock, p.\nm. on the 26th day of June, 1911, or\nat such time thereafter as may ba\nconvenient, at the common council\nchambers at Salem. Oregon, proceed\nto assess by an ordinance upon each\nlot or parcel of land deemed and\nconsidered by the council to be di-\nrectly benefited. Its proportionate\nshare of the cost of the construction\nof the Union street sewer, and all\npersons interested therein are here-\nby notified that the assessment roll\nhas been prepared under the dlrec--\nuun 01 me council and Is now on\nfile at the office of the city recorder\nsubject to the inspection of any per-\nson or persons interested luereiu.\nand that such assessment roll con-\ntains the property proposed to be as-\nsessed for the cost of construc-\ntion of such sewer, and that said\nproperty Is generally Included with-\nin the following limits:\nCommencing at the intersection of\nNorth Mill Creek with the Willam-\nette River in the city of Salem, Mar-Io-n\ncounty, state of Oregon; thence\nalong said North Mill creek easterly\nblock two (2) In Reed's Addition\nthe city of Salem, Oregon; thence\nalong Thirteenth street to block six\n(i) in Robert's Addition in th\nSalem. Oregon: thence eauterlinn\nChemeketa street to Fourteenth\nstreet; thence easterly through the\ncenter of the alley between rnrt\nand Chemeketa streets to Mill creek;\nthence easterly on Chemeketa street\nthe state lands; thence southerly\nalong the said state lands to Mill\nCreek; thence along Mill Creek to\nstate street; thence westerly on\nState street to the Wlllamett river:\nthence northerly along the east bank\nthe Willamette River to the place\nbeginning.\nHowever, all Dersona tntnTaatoit\nsaid
3083d3a1b89c4e6f4abac89c48c3f032 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.57397257103 58.275556 -134.3925 In the Nizina country provisions are\nplentiful but high: Flour, percwt.845;\nsalt 850; sugar 875; beans 845;. bacon 875;\nmilk per can 75 cents; cream 81; ham\n875 per cwt.; fresh beef 8100 per cwt.;\n\\ picks 85 each; axes 83 and 84 each;\nshoes 812 per pair; boots 814; gloves\n82.50 and everything else in proportion.\nThe Ketchikan Journal says that the\npipe for the water mains to be laid.by\npermission of the courts in the sweet\nbye and bye, if not sooner.by the\nCitizen's Light, Power and Water com-\npany, is all on the ground waiting, as\nare the people of Ketchikan generally,\nfor the dissolution of that blankety\nblank injunction.\nA half breed named Ermia Balanio-\ntoff, charged with killing Captain Ross-\ning, on the fox island known as Chow-\niet or South Semidi island, and a white\nrnau named A. Watts, charged with\nkilling a fellow workman named Ben\nDennis, at a fisherman's camp near\nChignik are in custody at Valdez await¬\ning the action of the grand jury.\nA United States mail route has been\n| established between Skagway and\nHaines. The service on the route will\nI begin September 14, the postmas-\nter general is now advertising for bids\nto carry the mail on the route. The\nbids will be received by the second as-\nsistant postmaster general until Aug-\n| ust 10 to do the work, between Septem-\nber 14,1003 to June 30,190G.\nGeorge F. Stone, acting assistant\npostmaster general, gives out some in-\nteresting information in regard to the\ntrouble and expense of the mail ser¬\nvice between Washington City and\nPoint Barrow, Alaska. A letter sack\n! starting at the latter place travels to\nWashington, by reindeer, 650 miles; by\ndogs, 1,630 miles; by horses 412 miles;\nby steamer, 1,000 miles; by railroad,\n13,212 miles. Total 6,904 and a total\ncost for the trip of $2,329.\n"Truth may happyfy life," according\nto Mother Eddy's Christian Science\nview of it, but for real "happyflcation\nof existence," the best recent example\nwas probably afforded by the "spring\nclean up" of the Bella bench on the\nleft limit of Dry Creek in the vicinity\nof Nome, says an exchange, when the\nAlaskans took out sixteen pounds of\ngold from 4,000 pails of dirt, at a valua¬\ntion of two hundred and fifty dollars a\npound.
33e3071c74ae1a55f680f564922bcffb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.278082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 Within a month after tho volun­\nteers of the spring of tSfil were on\nthey way to the front, or had arrived\nthere, quite as Important\nsure as that of securing an army for\nthe Union was under discussion at.\nWashington and at the chief financial\ncenters of tho North,” said the late\n•lohn Thompson to mo shortly beforo\n♦ ho second Inauguration of Grover\nver Cleveland as President.\nMr. Thompson, prior to the Civil\nWar, was known to every hanker in\nthe United States, not so much because\nbe was himself a banker of New York\nCity, hut because he published every\nweek an Invaluable guide to Amerlean\nbankers, since it reported all cases of\ncounterfeits of State bank notes, of\nfailures of State hanks, and of the\nrate of exchange charged by Ihe banka\nfor collecting the notes of State banks.\nAt the time 1 saw Mr. Thompson,\nhe was one of tho most quaint, dryly\nhumorous and entertaining of all Ihe\nmen associated with hanking whom I\nhad ever met. He was about SO years\nof age, and a little man, and though\nvery rich he seemed to be almost\ncareless about hts dress,\nlug. were precisely similar\nhomespun stockings which he wore\nwhen a child. He In his waist­\ncoat pocket a leaf of tobacco, from\nwhich he tore off from time to time\nlittle strips, using them In place of\nthe customary fine cut or plug quid.\nHe wag a devoted friend of sllv\nmoney metal and to the day of his\ndeath predicting that the United States\nwould be compelled sooner or later\nto accept ft at a fair ratio with gold\nas a money metal.\n”1 should say that It was In April,\nISfil. that t had a consultation with\nK O. Spalding, the subject of which\nwas the best way of providing much-\nneeded currency for the Federal Gov­\nernment." continued Mr. Thompson.\n“Mr. Spaulding, who was named for\none of the Vice-Presidents\nUnited States, Elhrldge Gerry, being\nof the Flhrldge Gerry family, had been\nfor several years and Was then\nher of Congress from Buffalo. N . Y.\nHe was a brilliant lawyer early In\nhts life, and he gave up law for hank­\ning. It seemed to me that he was\nJust Ihe man, because of his legal\ntraining and hla financial and hanking\nexperience, to draft the bills which.\nIf they became laws, would relieve\nthe Government- surely entering upon\na great war with a bankrupt treasury\nand disorganized
9471d5e20af2329c10de2b67fb771c53 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.0589040778793 41.681744 -72.788147 Several acts of vaudeville will fea-\nture the entertainment program at\nthe Community elub banquet tomor-\nrow night at tho Community ban-\nquet hall. Julius M. Augur, head of\nthe Hillyer Institute of the Hart-\nford Y. M. C. A., will be tho prin-\ncipal speaker, telling of his 15 years\nspent in tho Philippine Islands.\nDancing will be enjoyed at the con-\nclusion of the program. The ban-\nquet is expected to be attended by\n150 or more members and friends.\nMany from this place attended the\nMethodist group meeting in Meri-\nden last evening, the service being\nheld at the Methodist church in that\ncity. Rev. K. Stanley Jones of India\nwas the speaker. Those attending\nfrom East Berlin wera Rev. and\nMrs. A. L . Burgreen, Theodorn\nCams, W. H . Payne. Mr. and Mrs. K.\nV. Read, Miss Kdith Northrop, Miw\nFlorence Cams, Miss Mabelle Barnes\nand Miss Winifred Barnes.\n comedy will be staged at Atnl-ti- c\nhall within the next month by a\ngroup of local young people, rehear-\nsals now being under way. Th- - play\nwill be for tho benefit of the foot-\nball team, the proceeds to be used\nto put a team Into the field next\nfall. Several members of the team\nare included in the cast. Royal\nHolmes, who managed the team last\nyear ,is assisting in staging the play.\nMuch of interest pertaining to\nelectricity and Its uses will be heard\nThursday evening at the Parents- -\nTeachers' association meeting. L . V.\nClark, electrical engineer nnd as-\nsistant manager of the Connecticut\nLight and Power Co.. will (peak on\nelectricity and its present day appli-\ncation in industry and in the home.\nMr. Clark will answer questions per-\ntaining to the subject. There will\nalso be a short entertainment pro-\ngram. The meeting is called for (\no'clock.
2d669528b0cf2ad855ad07fea09a61c7 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.5383561326737 39.623709 -77.41082 The Citizen from time to time urges the\nfarmers to haul stones and make roads. It\nseems to be the settled policy of The Citizen\nto advocate, specially, this general plan of\nroad making; in fact, wc do not recall that\nany "good roads” proposition has ever ap-\npeared among the original matter of The\nCitizen, oilier than that in which the farmer\nis put under obligation to haul stones off his\nfarm aud therewith make a good road. Now,\nnot only has the farmer other things at which\nhe can work to his own profit, but the sug-\ngestion that he use his spare time, gratis, for\nthe benefit of the public is somewhat akin to\nthe proposition that The Citizen utilize its\nspare space for the publication of county\nadvertising, gratis; that it always has spare\nspace at its command is proven by the cir-\ncumstance that regardless of the extent or\nsuddenness of demand upon it, space is al-\n available for "New Ads."\nIf The Citizen will make plain just why\nthere should be a distinction made between\nthe revenue producing time and labor of the\nfarmer and the revenue producing columns\nof The Citizen; why the former should give it\nfor the public's benefit, while the latter shod\nnot be expected to do so; if The Citizen will\nmake it reasonably clear that each mile of\npublic road is strictly a local interest in\nwhich those Hying elsewhere in the county\nhave no intercut, then will it have secured\nThe Clarion as a disciple of the doctriue\nthat the farmer whose “visible property”\ncovers bis entire holding, ns a rule, and is\ntaxed for "all in sight,” should, ia addition,\nmake roads for the benefit of drummers,\ntourists and trumps, the first doing business\nfor big firms outside the county, the second\nhaving their capital invested in non-taxed\nnational, state or municipal bonds, the last\nnot taxed.
153d9942d3738d9ad7074d3cc7c73e38 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1895.8123287354135 39.756121 -99.323985 paragraphs in this album of the heav\nens. We will see the same stars, the\nsame sky record, which tho generations\nbefore the flood gazed on and tried to\nread. The men who saw the evenings\nof nearly 1,000 years looked up at these\nsame golden eyes that now look down\non us. The splendid Orion of which\nJob speaks has not lost a single jewel\nfrom his belt, nor has his bands been\n"loosed" by the long yenrs of his rls-\nlng and setting. The seven stars the\nlittle Pleiades also mentioned in the\nBible were there when the first man\nspent his first evening on our earth\nYou enn all locate the big Dipper in the\nconstellation Ursa Major, with its four\nstars forming ths bowl of the Dipper,\nand the three others forming the curved\nhandle. You can see it these evenings\nabout 9 o'clock, in the northwestern\npart of the sky. Something else which\nyou may not know will help you find\nit, which Is: the upper right hand star\nIn the bowl of the Dipper always points\nto the North Star. Now when you have\nfound the If you will look a lit\ntle south and west of the last star in\nthe handle farthest from the bowl you\nwill see a bright star, one of the pret\ntiest twinlders In the sky. This star is\nArcturus (also mentioned by Job; sec\nchapter Ix, 9) nnd is In the constella\ntion Bootes. Next week I will tell you\nwhere to find another or two. I want\nyou to begin to look up into the blue\nstar spangled sky above you; to make\nthese star fields a part of your home.\nYou may drift far away from your\nchildhood's home and you can take\nnone of the familiar home scenes on\nthe earth with you. The old home\nstead, the trees beneath which you\nplayed, the mountains, the hills, and\ntho brook, all of which were your com\npanions, you must leave behind, but If\nyou will study the stars, learn to call\nthem by name, and associate them\nwith all the other objects to which your\nhome affections cling, then you may\ncarry your home, with you tho world\nover. Then Orion, Arcturus, Syra, the\nDolphin, the celestial companions
40d119e3ec5700ee563baeb8b4440bfe SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.6287670915779 37.53119 -84.661888 John ChadwIck is visiting his Irand\nparents at Taze well TenD The Irleode\nof Mrs J D Pettus are glad to koow\nthat she la able to be out again alter\nher severe Illness Misses Florida Glb\nson and Jennie Mason are guests of Dr\nEdmiaton and family Mrs Morris J\nHarris and slater Miss Lillie Edmlsto\nof Louisville have returned home af-\nter a delightful visit to relatives aod\nFriends here They were accompanli\niy pretty little Blrdlo Perkins Hev\nWool ford and family of Lancaste\npeat several weeks here recently Dr\nllcklo has returned and Is teacblng\nour public school Dr Cllnkscalcs Is a-\ngues of the Gover Hotel George Bro\nlaugh has returned from the West aod\nIs now with his hometolks Miss Mat-\ntIe Beazloy was over from Lancaster\nlast week with friends Miss Bettl\nJoFall Is here her uncle Mr\nVm Stuart Mrs Laura Moore Is re-\nported greatly Improved Her Bone\nJeorge and Hal came to see her duro\nlog her lllnesa Mr Adam RIchards\nrlenda regret that his health la so poor\nthat he ia confined to his home Mei\ndames Robert Collier and James Hoi\nman rented the house of the late Dan\nloltnan and have been hero for son\nimo to use our medical waters Llttl\nVlllle Holman la with them and cas\nbeen quite sick Charlie Holmen Is\nhome on a visit his mother Mr\nClaudia Holman He has Just recover-\ned from a spell of fever His brother\nNewman has gone to Alabama to get a\nosltlon Miss Maggie Pleasant w11\nleavo shortly for Lexington to ooter\ntho Good Samaritan Hospital to Sear\nto be a tralned nurse Her many frIends\nwleh her success
0411f54fbce065e3013b6b86541c56f9 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.4671232559615 42.217817 -85.891125 Having seen an editorial in the lb r\nOld opposing the Order of Patrons of\nHusbandry as wicked and tyrannical,\naud many times having had iuy atten-\ntion culled to the fact that others of like\nImport had appeared, I write you. it\nis evident that you are not aware what\nour order is. The discussion of parti'\nMUl politics is forbidden by our consti-\ntution, yet we believe that we as men,\nnot as l'atrons of Husbandry, should as\na duty scan ery closely the acts of the\npublic servants ; that we as producers,\nwhile we furnish food for the millions,\nlight our nation's battles, defend its lib-\nerties in time of danger, should of a\nright have an equal share as such is the\nmaking of those laws by which all are\ngoverned ; that we have a right to de-\nmand that in all things, whether politi-\ncal or ot herwise, the principles of com-\nmon honesty shall not be w holly ignored,\nand to place ourselves in a position to\nenforce that demand. We acknowledge\nthe fact that mind will always triumph\nover matter, and that an active mind\nwhose whole thought is to gain the\nprofits of our toil will always be success-\n so long as we, like the ox, depend\nonly on our muscular power ; but we\nfind that the great Kuler, has given us\nbrains also, and if he has given us them\nit was that we might use them. True,\nwe have men of active minds, ami of\ngreat wealth arrayed against us, but we\nbegin to realize the fact thai they can-\nnot eat their money, and hope that ere\nmany T0SJ1 pa- - away we will be able\nto snow the great kings of monopoly\nthat there is in our order a most noble\nconception, that a principle is about to\ntie born that to him or to her who labors\nbelongs the pay. Yes, even fanners are\nbeginning to believe that they can in a\nmeasure fly their own kite, and yet, per-\nhaps, soar iis high and continue as long\non tin wing as though we should con-\ntinue to hang at the tail of the kites of\nothers. We see a vast river of wealth\ncontinually flowing from the hands of\nthe needy into the hands of the few\nwho already possess t heir millions. Now,\nwe mean to stop thone waters by legis-\nlation, if We can ; if not by some other\nhonorable means.
1831bdece35f42fbd2c818683d1bf98c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0532786569015 40.063962 -80.720915 of the question' at lasuef Of course not.'\nThis quotation from Governor Walker'i\nmessage fairly exhibits the spirit in wliicl\nhe has seemed to view not only our owi\nefforts to carry out the object ol oui\nappointment, but llkcwlto tuo sincerity\nand good faith of tho Legislature ol Wcs\nVirginia, in providing for the appoint\nmetit of such a commission by youi\nExcellency. And yet, while tills is th<\nease, it is nut to tie forgotten that Virgi\nnla hcraell initiated this method ol at\ntempting to ailjuHl the debt question\nAnd thu language of the Governor wouli\nseem to bo all the moro gratuitous it\nBUch u connection Iroui the facnliat It\nhis annual message of December Till\n1870, ho considered It worth while U\nallude to the political change that bat\n place in this State at the preceding\nOctober election, und bespoke in so man}\nwords for tho "uuw administration" at\n"opportunity of manifesting its intentloni\nand its appreciation of honesty and fall\ndealing." And yet notwithstanding tlili\nlanguage by himself thus voluntarilj\nemployed on our behalf, and notwith\nstanding also the fact that one of tb<\nearly acts ol the "now administration'\nwas to respond to tho policy that Vlrginli\nherseli had initialed, and before it win\nknown in this State that she had cliangei!\nthat policy j and'while the appointee!\nunder the response were in Hlclimoml\nseeking in vain from tho proper authority\nof Virginia for such Information as every\ndebtor is entitled in law to receive trom\nhis creditor, saving nothing of that spirit\nof "fair dealing that was so
0441cb2faf708627faac5ad6a742746f THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.6953551596337 29.949932 -90.070116 throoph the country soueathof Grenada, that the\narops in that region are much better than was ex-\npected. The worms have damaged the cottus\nvery little, and the corn has far exceeded the hopee\nof the most aangune. But we learn from ageste-\ntan in the neighborhood of Grasport thrt the\nbloom worm a rapidly desiroylog all the top\ncrops, while the lower is dying saddropplg o\nfor want of the un. He seems to tthink that the\narmy worm would be of advantage in stripping\nthe leaves, and admitting thea swOmIe. "\nThe Baton Bouge Advseate of the 7th says :\nThe caterpillar is at work in the ootton, and is In-\nfltcttng conederable Injury. The late rains have\nrapidly developed them and also caused the plant\nto shed a large portion of its boils sad forme.\nThe prevalent cool nights and morningu sad fae\nweather may check the ravages of the worm, buat\n crop has already ansufferedgreatly, and the\nyield willn t prove ner aslargas wasezpeeted.\nIt was reported Sunday tha several p'antatloasom\nthe plank road were being stripped by the worm,\nand there are few fields in which they are not eat-\nin the leaves to a greater er less exte\nThe following is from the Courier of the Teche,\nof the 5th inet: The extensive rains which have at-\nmost incessantly prevailed for the past two months,\nstall continue. Far fromdoinu any harm to the eaue,\npotatoe and rice crops, they have on the contrary\ndone them an Immeasurable amount of good. The\n.s ame c an not unfortuately be said of the cotton\ncrop. It has been grealy damaged, and a con-\ntinuance of wet days will but injure It more aod\nmore. We have been assurd that the eaterpillar\nbad made its appearance at Petite Ame. The\ncorn crop is safe and is very abadauLt.
49fa162c3ec2f012dd4bf12bd7e92862 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1915.3273972285642 42.217817 -85.891125 The railroad magnates left word in\nLansing before their departure on\nTuesday last that they would at once\nembroil the State of Michigan in a\nnumber of expensive law suits to test\nout the present 2 cent fare law; there\nfore when this Bill as introduced by\nChairman Henry came before the\nHouse on Thursday last, a few of the\nmembers inquired into the advisability\nof apponting a Commission to investi-\ngate the rate matter if it were a fact\nthat we were standing on the verge of\na multiplicity of lawsuits in the Feder-\nal Courts; the position taken by these\nmembers, myself among them, was that\nthis investigation would be an unwise\nexpenditure of at least $100,000.00, as\nwhatever report the Commission might\nrender would be useless to the State if\nthe Federal Courts took the matter\nfrom our hands which they have the\npower of doing if the evidence war-\nrants; no part of this commission's re-\nport could be used in the litigation\nwhich is threatened; the State wrould\nbe compelled to introduce a second and\nentirely new investigation into the\nCourt in order to support its conten-\ntion; it would have to employ experts\nand students of the rate question \nbring them into trial of such Rate\ncases as may be instituted.\nI told the members of the House\nwhile the matter was being debated,\nthat while I was not opposed to an in-\nvestigation, in fact I favored one, still\nI thought it unwise to have an investi-\ngation of this kind if it were a fact that\nthe Federal Courts were going to\nassume control of the situation by in-\njunction; if the railroads of the State\nhad confidence in their position and\ntheir contentions, they ought, it seem-\ned to me, to be willing to await the re-\nsult of the investigation by the State,\nwhich would be only a short period of\neight months, and then if the increased\nrate was found necessary, the Legisla-\nture could be convened in special Ses-\nsion and the increase granted; in reply\nto this, Representative Peterman, spon-\nsor for the railroads on the floor of the\nHouse immediately replied that the\nRailroads would not wait and that re-\ngardless of whether or no the State had\nan investigation, the Railroads were\ngoing into the Courts; it appears to me\nthat the railroads fear the results of an\nindependent investigation on the part\nof the State.
221c4eec1d4c3a86c47dc0b3b6aca514 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.1821917491122 39.743941 -84.63662 Deaf Smith, as I remarked before, was\none of the most extraordinary men ever\nknown in the West. He appeared in\nTexas at an early period, and resided\nthere until his death, which occurred\nover a dozen years ago. He had many\nardent friends, but nothing definite was\never learned regarding, bis former life.\nWhether he ever acquainted Houston\nwith it was never known, for the old hero\nnever enlightened anyone, as far as I can\nlearn, upon the matter.\nWhen Deaf Smith was questioned upon\nthe matter he laid his finger upon his\nlips, and if pressed, his dark eyes gave\nsuch a rebuke that no one dare question\nhim further. Although deprived of the\nfaculty of hearing, nature, as is often the\ncase, seemed to compensate him by giv-\ning him an eye as keen and\nas an eagle's, and a smell perfect as at\nraven s. He could discern Comanches\nbo far on the prairie that they were in-\nvisible to the eye of the most experienced\nrangers, and his friends declared he could\nscent a Mexican when miles away.\nGifted in this extraordinary manner,\nit will be seen that he possessed just the\nqualities to make him a successful spy;\nand his services to Houston during the\nTexas war for independence were inval\nuable. He generally went alone, and\nvery rarely failed to obtain the informa-\ntion required. He had many erratic\nhabits. No persuasion could induce him\nto sleep underjthe roof of a house. With\nhis blanket wrapped about him he loved\nto lie out in the open air, under the star- -\ngemmed firmament. When not engaged\nas a spy he lived by hunting, and was\noften absent for months on his excursions.
22d6ebc8498b894e91d2e8d240067f59 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.4753424340436 39.745947 -75.546589 who urged the appointment in face of I\nthe fact that he knew there were'\nplenty of Democrats who were hung-i\nering to be appointed postmaster at |\nNew York was Dorman B. Eaton, the |\ncivil service reformer. He told me\nthat If I would reappoint Mr. Pear­\nson postmaster at New York I would\ndo more to advance the cause of civil\nservice than 1 could accomplish in a\ndozen recommendations to Congress.\n"Mr. Pearson, Mr. Eaton told me,\nhad been the executive head of the\ncivil service system in the New York\nPostofflee from the time of Its incep­\ntion, both as assistant postmaster and\nas postmaster under Arthur. He fur­\nther told me that It was largely\nthrough the success of the civil ser­\nvice in the New York Postofflee that\nhe had been able to induce Congress In\n1883, to act favorably upon the first\ncivil service bill ever presented to j\nCongress. That was the bill champion-1\ned by George H. Pendleton, of Ohtoj\nIn the Senate. Mr. Eaton drafted that\nact. though It came to bear Senator\nPendleton's name, and It was Eaton\nwho largely kept the members of Con­\ngress who were fighting for the pas­\nsage of this civil service bill supplied\n arguments and moral courage.\n"But that was not all that Mr. Eaton\n♦old me, " c ontinued Mr. Cleveland\n"He did not hesitate fo remind me\nthatasIwasknowntobeawarm\nadvocate of civil service. It would be\ndifficult for me to make,my public ad­\nvocacy of civil service consistent with\nmy conduct If 1 were to Ignore Post­\nmaster Pearson, who had done so\nmuch for civil service, and give his\noffice to a Democrat. On the other\nhand, Mr. Eaton went on to say, that,\nIf 1 were to reappoint Mr Pearson\nPostmaster, Republican though he\nwas. I would thereby show how con­\nsistent and sincere my attitude upo-i\ncivil service was.\n"That was a line of reasoning that\nIt was hard to escape from, and so I\ndecided to nominate Mr. Pearson for\npostmaster, and I did. I had some of\nthe party leading barking at me. one In\nparticular criticising me severely for\ngiving one of the best offices at the\ndisposal of the president to a Repub­\nlican. But I never regretted making'\nthat appointment; and I am certain J\nthat the makifig of it did much toi\npersuade the public of the sincerity of\nmy advocacy of the civil service. ”\n(Copyright, 1911, by E. J . Edwards. All
0f3f4457fb1467030bd70adadd7a6c61 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1868.4631147224752 41.262128 -95.861391 brought in to be feasted, rested, and\nloaded down with presents. Thus\nthe government has fed aad fought\nthe Indians for the last five years,\nand has exercised the exclusive\nprivilege of this sport, without any\nbeneficial results. (JUT proposition\nIn u; let the people of the W<fc? go in\nand have a free fight without the food\nwith the Indians, and to kill all who\narv not peaccable until the Indians\nwill iiiakc peace witout being paid\nfor making it. Uader these feed and\npay peaces made there wm no secu­\nrity, for when they got hungry, oar\nhad worn out their blankets, they\nagain went upon the war path for\nthe purpose of mure feed and more\npay. Perhaps the Regitier is una­\nware that grsnd-motlier Sherman\nha* issued strict order* to prevent\ntha kilimg of Indian* by any one not\niu the military service, and that he\ntrie* drum-head court-martial and\nimpriaious men found guilty of kill­\ning hottik Indiana, if such persons\ndid aot belong to themilitary service.\nThere is, in our opinion, but oneway\nto make Indians peaceable, and that\nway is to fight theaa in the same\nmanner that they fight our people—\ni. e., when you find them, like Gen.\nHarney,kill all you find —th w ih?oa\nno quarter -follow them up and kill\nagain and again until they sue for\npeace, und then you \\»iil haveu last­\ning peace. We fought Black Hawk\nand his band for twenty years, off\nand on, and never had a permanent\npeace untU we caught him at Bad\nAxe, and went In and killed all we\ncould find, without regard to sex or\nage,, until they cried for quarters\nand surrendered. From that day,\nnow over thirty-four years gone by,\n»e have had peace with Black\nHawk's band.
162621a5b398903a327b093e4b46412a OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.3219177765093 41.020015 -92.411296 Fort Madison has a romance, which\nshows the dangers of getting married\ntoo often. Tho following dispatch\nfrom Foit Madison tells the tale:\nSome eighteen months ago a family\nby tho name of Oaks lived happily to­\ngether iu G rccn Bay, a few miles above\nthis city. During the first of the\nwinter of 1873-1, they had a boarder,\nJohn Gardner, who was treated as one\nof tho family. In duo time the head\nof the family took It into his head to\nshake ofl'this mortal coil. The bloom­\ning widow then collected her funds\ntogether, and moved to this city, and\nin a few days was married to Gardner,\nscarcely one month having passed\nsince the dccoase of Oaks. River nav­\nigation opened, and tbe newly wedded\npair moved to LaCrosse. In about a\nmonth Mrs. Gardner camc alone,\nwith the Btory that her liege lord had\ndeserted her, taking all tho ready cash\nand leaving her destitute. Then news\ncame that he had died, and that she\nwas again a widow. Another man be­\ngan to pay her attention, and they\nwere soon engaged, with the day set\nfor the wedding. But Gardner in the\nflesh appeared last week, and desired to\ncontinue their former relatious, but\nshe was not in favor of reconstruction.\nAt this he became wrathy, and declar­\ned that if they wore married he would\nshoot both of them. Then followed\nan exciting scene, which ended in her\ngoing to a justice and swearing her life\nagainst him. In the meantime he de­\nparted for parts unknown, and the\ngushing grass-widow and her intended\nhave gouo io Burlington to permanent*\nly reside.
196edd0a442569230ccfdf085f207159 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.5849314751395 46.187885 -123.831256 way to Maine, to settle in the home of his\nboyhood, lie had passed the previous ten\nyears in the western mining country, and had\namassed a fortune. If YOU haveany of the\nsymptoms given in the following testimonials\nyou should lo::enotimo in seeking relief.\nFrom John L. Roberts, Slatington, Pa.:\n"I liavo sullered with palpitation, irregular\npulse, fainting and mothering ipellt, pain in\nrn'iottlders, side, and arms for over forty years.\nFor twelve years have been treated without\navail by prominent physicians in my neigh-\nborhood and in Now York. Growing con-\nstantly worse, smothering spells followed one\nanother, 60 my life was often in danger and\nI needed constant care. As my son had been\ncured by Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure, he sent\nmo three bottles. The first dose gave me\n relief. Before using the last bottle\nI w;iM completely cured. Although seventy-liv- e\nyears old I feel twenty years younger.\nclaim my cure to bo almost a miracle."\nJIcio U a letter from Mrs. John Kolges,\nof Cleveland, O.: "I had been troubled with\nmy heart tind stomach for years, but for six-\nteen months had lieen confined to my bed.\n1 liitd four of the best doctors in the city, but\nnone oflliem could benefit the weakness of my\nheart. I also had dropsy and rheumatism.\nI never took medicine that relieved me at\nonce ns Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure does. I\nam much stronger. My appetite is splendid.\n1 gain strength with every dose. I have\ngained more in six weeks from your treat-\nment than in sixteen months from all the\ndoctors."
a9fa8c69b16b04cabbe6799c88222a41 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.960382482038 39.261561 -121.016059 On Monday last Dr. Overton of our city made\nto the Board of Supervisors a proposition lo\nprovide for the indigent aickjof the county which\nin every respect commends itself to the favora-\nble consideration of that body. If the dictates\nof humanity require us to take care of the un-\nfortunate, and if any provision is to be made at\nalt fbr them, we believe that the plan proposed\nis the best for the interests of the county and\ncertainly will insure more comfortable treat-\nment of the class of destitute persons who nre\nforced to seek relief, than lias heretofore been\nextended to them. In this county from several\ncauses, instead of there being an indigent sick\nfund, as contemplated by the laws of the State,\nthere is a debt now outstanding In the register-\ned scrip of the county of over $5,000. It is\nnext to a worthless drug in the market, and as\nthis indebtedness can only be discharged from a\nfknd arising in a certain way it is not likely to\nimprove iu value for some time to come. The\nconsequence is, that no one is willing to accept\nIt for services rendered to this of persons,\nexcept for medical treatment, and they are left\nat an inclement season of the year without the\ncomforts so essential to their condition.\nDr. Overton proposes to procure a comforta-\nble place for their accommodation; to attend\nthem professionally, provide a nurse, lire, lights,\nfood, furniture, medicine, and everything neces-\nsary for a hospital adequate lo the number of\npersons likely to need relief, and to take the\nscrip payable out of the indigent sick fund, at\nthe following rates: for the first four patients\nand under that number, at five dollars each per\nday; for each additional patient over four, at\nthree dollars per day. In order to secure the\neounty against all abuse, from unworthy objects\ngaining admission to the hospital, and to secure\nthe dismissal of such persons when convales-\ncent, he also rccemmeiids the appointment of\ntwo disinterested physicians to whom all per-\nsons seeking admission shall be referred. Up-\non examination if found worthy, the Certificate\nof these physicians shall entitle the person to\nenter and receive the benefits of the establish-\nment. Those physicians are also to visit the\nhospital and to exercise a supervision over its\nmanagement.
bc8534ff7927e9d49a98a176034e1e20 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1847.1356164066465 31.960991 -90.983994 The Secretary having read the resolution,\nAir. Sevier said the gentleman from Tennessee\nwill perceive that I am right.\nAir. Jarnagin—Exactly wrong, sir.\nMr. Clayton desired to know the grounds of\nobjection to tiie capitulation.\nMr. Sevier was not disposed to enter upon\nthat subject at that time.\nAir. Crittenden said it scerr.od to him, from the\nremarks of gentlemen on the resolution, that\nGen. Taylor was regarded with somewhat of\nthat party spirit which infused itself into every\nthing in relation to every body who was at all\nconcerned with the pojiticsoflhe country. —T hey\nought not so to regard Gen. Taylor. He was\nnot a politician. lie was their countrys leader\non the battle field—not in party strife. I lis suc­\ncess was lor the cause of the common country;\nand he ventured to say that if his views and fee­\nlings were known, gentlemen would not enter­\ntain such party-like feelings towards him. The\nwhole country greeted the genera! and the army\non the great and splendid achievment at Alonte-\nrey; and now, when they were about to give ut­\nterance to those sentiments of high approbation,\nthey were about to drug the cup of thanks wi\na slv censure. Such act was unworthy ol\nthe dignity of the United States Senate. He\nspoke not of the motive of the gentleman who in­\ntroduced the resolution or the amendment, but\nonly of the ellèct which it would have upon the\nworld, when tliey read the doings of Congress on\nthe subject. Air. C. here entered into an elabo­\nrate vindication of tire conduct of Gen. Taylor\nand his associate officers and men engaged in\nthe storming of Monterey. They showed judg­\nment, humanity, and policy in the capitulation,\nby which they gained a little breathing time of\npeace, by which they saved thousands of women\nand children in Monterey from all the horrors\nwhich would have attended a sack of that city.\nNo, there was no occasion fur blame on the part\nof Gen. Taylor or his officers. How, he would\nk the gentleman from Arkansas, would the\nbrave officers engaged in that memorable conflict\nlook upon the action of this Senate, if they should\nadopt that resolution? How would the army re­\nceive it? They were conferring it as a testimo­\nnial not only of regard for past good conduct, but\nan inducement fora repetition ot valor. Yvould\nsuch be its effect? Mix up your thanks and
020df9a43fb37d946575eedf5e034462 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.392076471109 40.441694 -79.990086 class of 40 girls lu a Boston school was questioned\nthe other dav, and more than half the number\nwere conscious of loss of sleep and nervous ap-\nprehension on account of their school work."\nA remarkable ease of suffering, that will find\nmany a parallel here, has recently come to light In\nDetroit. It Illustrates the necessity of attending\nIn the right way to any of those Ills among chil-\ndren, as well as adults, that result from Impaired\nnerves and Impure blood.\nMrs. 51 . V. Uouln Is a devoted mother, whoso\nfour beautiful children (a Hkcnes3 of whom ap-\npears above) arc watched over with the most ma-\nternal affection. When the youngest was six w eeks\nold a terrible eruption broke out all over her. Sev-\neral physicians were consulted, and. while opin-\nions varied, the disease was generally regarded as\nsalt rheum. Yet the usual remedies failed, and the\nchild grew worse Instead of better.\nAbout that time the papers an account of a\nase that had been cured by the use of the famous\nremedy discovered by Prof. Phelps of Dartmouth\ncollege. Mrs. Gouln obtained some and commenced\ngiving It to the baby. The result was wonderf nl,\nfor In two weeks the sore3 were entirely healed,\nand tho little one Is now entirely well. This was\nsolely due to the learned professor's discovery.\nPalne's celery compound.\nThis was not all, and Mrs. Gouln. in a letter to\nthe physician of that city who reported the case,\ntells additional proofs of the marvellous curative\npowers of this compound. She wrote:\n"My chlldrtn had the grippe last fall, and were\nweak and ailing all winter. 1 tried physicians' pre-\nscriptions and everythlngmy friends recommended,\nbut without effect. I was fairly discouraged, for\nthey were so weak and feeble.\n"But Palne's celery compound gave them\nstrength, a good appetite and made them strong\nand well, to that they are now the picture of\nhealth."
01ecbba0547ceaa63f92eaf147a1f4b3 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.4330600776664 29.949932 -90.070116 recent emotion had passed away, and Laura\nsmiled as she thought of the free young heart\nwhose griefs were so transitory and evanes-\ncent. but there were depths of passion, of\nstern, determined will, inthat girlish nature\nthat Laura never dreamed of. It only lacked\nthe occasion to c'llit out. When once it\nbecame aroused, like the impetuous violence\nof a swollen stream, obstacles might lash it\ninto foam, but could not intercept its way-\non, like the torrent, she would hold her\nresistless course, ruthlessly sweeping from\nher path the unfortunate agents that might\nseek to intercept or restrain her. But neither\nLaura, nor Zera herself, knew of these ele-\nments in her character. They might never\nbe called into action-they might liedormant\nthrough her life, and, at any moment, they\nmight receive that impetous which would\ncause them burst the bounds of restraint.\nliut we will not detain the reader with these\nspeculations. Character in itself is the creature\nof circumstances, and events might mould\nthe In(st timid disposition into a tyrant who\nwould ruthlessly tlunpple on the rights of\nothers. Our lives are thrust out upon the\nworld, like a plank upon the sea. Without a\nrudder the n inds and waves are liable to wash\nit into any port-a haven of rest, or one of\nwal fare. Nor can our own unassisted guid-\nance always direct our own destinisa in the\nlaths of virtue and peace. The shoals and\nbillows of life's great sea are around us, and\nwithont a moment's warning we may be\nd~shed upon the breakers, while our less un-\nfortulate neighbo)s float off into a calm,even\ncurientt, and thus ride into a happy haven.
023db159dc4c7ba6f3694b38a70153db PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1895.1219177765095 39.756121 -99.323985 Along with those staple chestnuts\nabout the tyranny of the motlior-lu-la-\nand woman's inability to financier\ncomes tho Incvltablo winter witticism\nou the gigantic theater hut Now, Just\nhero wo wish to remark thnt the worn\nan who wears a big lint to the theater\nand keeps It on is as greatly in the ml\nnorlty ns tho man who leaves the wom\nun he is with to go out between acta.\nManners at places of amusement have\nso vastly improved that It is only the\ntradition of the humorist that makes\ntho Htntcmcnts about the chnpean and\nthe cntr' acto libations nt all permlssl\nble. Certainly, In Philadelphia thea\nters, but a very feeble protest is neceS'\nsiiry against either of those nuisances,\nfor women have learned that hnndsome\nIs handsome docs in the matter of\nthe wearing of suitable headwear, and\nthat a tiny crown piece or a total ab\nsence of millinery mnkes them far moro\nlovely to behold than if they wero\ndecked out In the smartest Gainsbor\nough that could bo bought for money.\nMen, likewise, have gained iu cour\ntesy, and if they do go out between tho\nacts they urc to be seen pacing in the\nlobby or corridor enjoying a whiff of\nfresh air or a brief smoke, and they do\nnot return chewing cloves and painful\nly redolent of spirits. The lady and\nthe gentleman, using the term in its\ncorrect sense, will not wilfully offend\nagainst good taste or good breeding,\nTo hide the view of a dozen or two\nbecause a wide-brimme- d
538ccae5bb223e3b28f77f99bb1bcf84 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.2041095573313 39.261561 -121.016059 Until payment in full, the proprietor is to retain pos-\nsession. but such payment may be made at any time.\nThe cash payment was made, and the gratifying intelli-\ngence has lately reached us that the instalment of $57,000\nwas duly met ; thus securing the contract, which allow*\npayments to be made, in sums not less than $5,000 , a*\nsoon as collected, thereby arresting the accrual of interest.\nAll efforts, therefore, are now turned to tlie collection «f\nfunds for the payment of the deferred instalment* at the\nearliest possible day. thereby savings large amount of\ninterest, and realizing the cherished hope of at once ob-\ntaining possession of Mount Vernon.\nTo this noble cause, the Women of the Union, deserting\nfor a season the seclusion of domestic life, have brought\ntheir talents and all their energies. Amidst the discord of\nsectional atrife, they bid us gather around tlie toinb of\nWashington as children of a common heritage, there re-\ncall his moderation of spirit and pure patriotism, and lay\nto h eart the solemn warnings of his last public words.\nThey know, that standing on that hallowed spot, the pil-\ngrims gathered from the wide expanse of the Republic,\ncan feel but one sentiment —reverence for hi* teachings,\nand devotion to the Union he so loved.\nMen of high station and intellect—among whom Everett\nstands pre-eminent—are lending their influence and their\neloquence to the cause. twenty-one States of the\nUnion, the good work goes bravely on, and California i*\nnow invited to do her part. Youngest of her sister*, she\nyields to none in reverence for the name of Washington\nand devotion to the Union. Animated then by these sen-\ntiments and by a just iStato pride, let her people bring\ntheir offerings to this common altar of patriotism. Shall\nthe gold of her glittering soil be poured alone into the lap\nof Commerce, and none be devoted to preserve and guard\nwith sAcred care the Groves of Mount Vernon? I.et all\nthen vie in generous rivalry, to show that California lacks\nnot the heart to sympathize, nor the hand to help in this\nwork of patriotism.\nTo the Women ol California, this appeal i* especially\nmade. Your Sisters of the East have assumed this hon-\norable duty and claim your zealous co-operation. Our\nState will do her part liberally, if you resolutely take the\nmatter in hand. On you, therefore, will it depend wheth-\ner sho shall respond to tlie call.\nAlthough contributions to any amount are solicited. ?•*\nthe price of membership is but one dollar. Concerted and\nsystematic action, therefore, must be adopted to canvass\nthe State from the Sierras to tho Pacific. Tho dutyo*\nsuch organization devolves on the Vice Regent, and *■*\npropose* the following plan as simple and also effective,\nif seconded by your hearty co operation.
2c0aa04b3fc9e4b308bc67261d7ffb4e THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.8123287354135 32.408477 -91.186777 scribed by law, all the right, title, and\niSinterest of Chalmers M. Wlliamson,\nSr., in and to the following described\nproperty, tV-wit: One undivided\nfourth interc-. t in and to the follow-\ning described lands, situated in the l\nparish of Madison and the State of Lou- c\nismana, to-wit; Thatcertain tractknown\nas the Ezra 1Rundell tract composed of (\nthe south fractional half of section 7,\ntownship 17 north, range 12 east; lots\n2, 4. and 5 (north-east quarter section\n12) south-east quartersection 12, north- t\nteast quarter and lot six of section 13, 1\nin township 17 north, range 11 east, a\nand containing in the whole tract 802.50 I t\nSacres, more or less; that certain other t\ntract or parcel of land known as the t\nAlf Rundell tract, composed of the i\nwest of section 17, the south-east\nquart^r of section 18, and west half ofi\nsection 18, all in township 17 north,\n"range 12 east, and containing in the t\nwhole tract 780 acres, more or less;\nand that other certain tract of ground: I\nknown as the Goodrum place, composed a\nof the south-east quarterof section 17, t\nnorth-east quarter of section 20, the\neast half of the north-east quarter of\nsection 19, and the north-west quarter\nSof section 20, and the fractional west R\nhalf of the north-wLst qgt-ter of sec-\n. tion 21, all in towns.ip 17 north, range i\n12 east, and contam:, g in the whole\ntract 572.86 acres, more or less, and in a\nthe aggregate, twer.ty-one hundred and\ntifty-five and 48-1(~) z15o.4a) acres of\nland, more or less, seized in the above\nsuit.
299cf707151430e84db8d6f9d17ebc69 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.5904337582444 41.681744 -72.788147 ; Undoubtedly the sports ccats makes on\nf the most important garments of the\nteason. It is worn notalone for tennis,\nlor golf and for occasions of the sort,\nbut also upon the piam, for the $trpll\npon the beach or at the mountains and\nindeed for any occasion when such a wrap\nIs needed. This one is as simple as it is\nimart and so easy to make that any horre\niressmaker can. undertake the task with\nissurance of success. The shoulders are\nIropped a little and that means that the\nileeves are easy to fit, for the coat other-vis- e\nis loose, the sash confining it suf\ntciently at the waist line. In the picture,\nt is made of striped taffeta and that\nnaterial is a new and a favorite one but\n colored glove or Jersey silks are\nnuch liked for coats cf this sort, taffeta\nn various colors and in various effects is\nised, faille also is seen and the model also\ns an excellent one for serge, gabardine\nmd the like. The fronts are faced and\n:he collar is made double and the lining\nind the facing can be made of the same,\nr of contrasting material, also the sash,\nan match the coat or be made of a dif-\nferent material. It is simply a straight\npiece, passed around the waist and\ntnotted. Cretonne is one of the newest\nmaterials for sports coats and is handsome\nrith collar and cuffs of black velvet.\nFor the medium siie will be required 5\nfds. of material 27 in. wide, $H yds. 36,'\n(I yds. 44, with
204cd92183df54a6a62b4bab82d789b5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.6707649956993 39.745947 -75.546589 “While l was thinking about this\nand had, In fact, partially worked out\na plan by which the leading New\nYork newspapers could combine to\npay the expenses of collecting and\ntransmitting telegraphic news, and\ncould then get. some of their ex­\npenses back by selling this news Ho\npapers outside of New York, tho war\nwith Mexico began.\n“I immediately made arrangements\nto secure dispatches from Mexico by\nway of steamer from one of the\nnorthern ports to either New Orleans\nor Mobile. Thence the dispatches\nwere to be forwarded by the nearest\nrailway communication. Even by the\nmost expeditions methods the news\nwas slow in reaching New York. I\nlooked the field over again and made\nup my mind that by establishing\nsteamer service from a Mexican port\nto Mobile and then utilizing steam­\nboat service from to Mont­\ngomery. Ala., I could save sometimes\nas much as a day, occasionally as\nmuch as two days. For at Mont­\ngomery I would begin to reach rail­\nway communication. Yet this was\nvery expensive.\n“Then the idea suddenly occurred\nto me (hat I would lay my plans be­\nfore the proprietors of the other lead­\ning New York papers for the pur­\npose of Inducing them to combine\nso that the expenses of transmission\nof this news would be greatly reduced\nfor each paper. It would cost no\nmore to carry the dispatches for five\npapers than If would for one.\n"I was a little apprehensive that\nmy plans would not lie approved, but\nthey were very cordially approved,\nand this system was establisred with\nvery successful results.\nIt showed the.New York newspaper\nc.omMnation to the collection and
bcec7baf41af63d41eeb1d9c3391c5be NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0205479134956 41.681744 -72.788147 The annual session of the salary\ncommittee of the common council\nwhich started this week and which\nwill conclude next week, when the\nreport to the council will be drafted,\nagain focused public attention on\nthe methods employed to handle\nthe salary question, and, Judging by\nthe comment that is heard in places\nother than City Hall, the recom\nmendation that has been made fre-\nquently to improve the modus\noperandi is as far from adoption as\nit was when originally made.\nA few years ago, Tax Collector\nLoomis appeared before the com-\nmittee and requested that the time\nallotted him for a hearing be spent\nin his own office, directly across the\ncorridor from the hearing room, and\nhe would be pleased to explain in\nas great detail as the members wish-\ned, tha system of handling the busi-\nness, the varioua bookkeeping re-\nquirement and tho duties of the col-\n and his assistants. The offer\nwas not accepted, and tho formal\nhearing was held, with the custo-\nmary questions and answers. On an-\nother occasion? the registrars of vot-\ners made a similar request, hoping\nto impress' the committee with the\namount of detail in their office and\nits importance, but the committee\napparently was not interested.\nIt is said some individual mem-\nbers have made it their business to\npersonally investigate the work of\ncity officials and employees for\nwhom salary increases have been\nrecommended, but the practice of\nconsistently keeping in close person-\nal touch with the work of the de-\npartments and the individual per-\nsonnel has yet to be adopted. The\ncommittee could conduct these in-\nvestigations very handily and with-\nout submitting tho members to an\nunreasonable tax on their time, and\nthe result would be advantageous\nto all concerned.\nUnder the present system,
05f1f1b2bed1f6498018e3b42c6a6fce THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.1356164066465 40.063962 -80.720915 yesterday and neither was started. Tbe\nKorthwood Glass Works shut down on\nrueulsv nliht and the fluckere tester-\nday moraine. The Eiaon did not run\nalter noon. The iMt work done at\nSpence, Baags & Co.'a foundry, Hann'i\nfoundry. McDermott'a tool worn and\nMen's keg and box factory and War'\nwood's tool works waa on Tuesday\nnight. Tbe *Ktna and Standard milli\nhad to ahnt down yesterday. At tbi\nBuckeye and Konhwood glass factoiiei\nand tbe two foundries men worked ai\nnight Tueeday moving and getting read;\nfor tbe'fbod, and many worked hard al\nday yesterday. A vast amonnt of wort\nwas doneattbece places. Fpance, Baggi\nA Co. were obliged to owe most o\ntbtir basks in boats.\nThe water entered Birney McEitee'i\nsaloon on Second street about 2 p. m\nHe immediately moved upstairs am\nopened out on tbe 0. & 1*. railroad tract\nas formely, the track being several fee\nabove tbe kigh water. high boari\nfence put npby the railroad company an<\nsecurely fastened with sheet iron stripe\nstood in front of Barney's door when u<\nopened op in the new stand, but Mc\nKotee did not mind a little thing iik\nthat, and quickly made a twentyfoo\nopening in tbe fence.\nThree or four barns and coal shedi\netc., were caught by Martin's Kerr\nmen. Three bales of bsy were found ii\none barn. One man saw a Hue larg\nchicken on some drift wood and rowe\nout and caught It. He will keep tb\nchicken aa a reminder of the 'ill ihoc\nIn the inundated parts there has baei\nconsiderable sirkness and some of Ih\nsick were removed. At Don Mra. Job\nUlrich is tick in bed In the second etor\noi uer reeiueucp. iub water ib wen u\nin the lirst story and Dr. Fisher, the a\ntending physician, was taken to an\nfrom the house tn a skill*.
117e146aedacf21210d9c88e41d864f4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1890.3712328450026 41.004121 -76.453816 ance after receipt of tho letter.\nIt U not, however, withdrawn until a\nnotice of withdrawal reaches B. This is\nthe important point Thus if A in' Bos\nton writes to B in New Orleans, offering\na certain price for a hundred bales of\ncotton nntl the next day alters his mind\nand writes to B withdraiving his offer,\nIf the first letter reaches B before the\nsecond, although after tho second wa3\nwritten and mailed, B has n right to ac\ncept tho offer before he gets tho letter\nwithdrawing it, and, by his acceptance,\nbinds A; but if B delays his acceptance\nuntil the second letter reaches him the\noffer is then effectually withdrawn.\nIt may llkowiso bo withdrawn by n\ntelegram which reaches B before he has\naccepted tho Offer; but if n telegram or\nletter revoking the offer for any reason\nfalls to B his ncceptanco will liind\nA although made after the timo when\nin due course tho letter or telegram re-\nvoking tho order should havo reached\nhim. The principle underlying this rule\nof course is that A selects his means of\ncommunication, and If it falls him he\nmust of courso bo responsible.\nIt is a tufilcient acceptance on the part\nof B if he writes to A declaring his ac-\nceptance and puts his letter into tho post- -\nofnee, if the offer was by mall; or If he\ndelivers to the telegraph company a mes-\nsage declaring his acceptance, if tho offer\nreached him by telegraph, and tho nc-\nceptanco in either case is binding upon\nA, although the letter or telegram may\nfail to reach him. The ncceptanco is\ncomplete by depositing tho letter in the\npostofflce or tho message at the telegraph\noffice.
35339c82f66365bd937ad2a183abbbc2 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.568493118975 44.939157 -123.033121 The complaint further states in ef-\nfect (6) that pursuant to the con-\ntract Enos. as the Pacific Well Drill\ning company, purchased and shipped\nto plaintiff certain personal property,\nparticularly describing the articles\nthereof, whereupon plaintiff paid out\nas stipulated the sum of $2,500.00;\n(7) that no part thereof has been re-\npaid, except about $300 though the\ntime for the payment thereof has ex-\npired; (8) that all such personal\nproperty was placed on the leased\npremises and was used by the Pa-\ncific Well Drilling Company In sink-\ning the well thereon until March 17,\n1908 when plaintiff, according to the\ncontract, took possession of the ma-\nchinery and thereafter held it; (9)\nthat by the consideration of the cir-\ncuit court of Oregon for Wasco coun-\n the defendant John Marsh as plain-\ntiff secured a Judgment against the\nOregon Drilling Company, a corpor-\nation, the Dufur Oil Company, a\ncorporation, the plaintiff herein and\nW, H. H. Dufur as defendants, for\nthe sum of $725 and an execution\nbavins been issued thereon was de-\nlivered to the defendant Chrisman\nwho "undertook" to levy the writ on\nthe personal property described in\nthe complaint and he claims to have\ntaken actual possession thereof and\nthreatens to sell the same and will\nput his menace into execution unless\nrestrained; (10) that the Oregon\nDrilling Company hnd not at any\ntime any interest in or rip'jt to such\npersonal property or any part there-\nof; (11) and that plaintiff has no\nplain, speedy or adequate remedy at\nlaw.
19bb53deacc2903987c28dcf6325bbdf THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.8835616121257 37.083389 -88.600048 District Court of the United State\nfor the Western District of Kentucky\nla the matter of th libel of Ottoma\nBar tad Olanno Ocher\nWhereai O n the Uth day of Octet\ner Ittif here valflkd la the clerk\noffice of the dblriet CVrttri el the\nUnited Slate for the Western tilttrle\nof Kentucky a petition and libel of\nOttomAf Sees r and Clarence Coke\nowner of the lUauef Oily1 Ooloon\nda in a cause of limitation of IlaMU\nly by mason of accident to lalo iteam\nor 09 lb ltth Jar of August Itol\nand whereas on Monday lb Slit ta1\nofOctobtr IDOl at a sated term of\nthe dUlrict courl of the United State\nfor the Western District of tfnfn6iy\nheld In the federal building In thi\ncity otLouliTille Ky an order wee\ntoads In the abofS styled matter bJ\nthe Honorable Walter Erani fjnVJg el\nsaid court that a monition admir\nally tune pursuant to the rule of th\ncourt and the supreme court In Ihe\nabove named suit and that pnblii\nnotice of laid monition be given bJ\npublication In a newlptptfi dally Jor\nthe spas of fourteen days and three\nafter once In each week until Sri\nMonday In February HOJ and whit\nmonition li in lubitanoe ai follows\nThe president of the United Sate\nto the Marshal of ibe Waters Dlitrlel\nof Kentucky You an hereby there\nfore commanded to cite f O flu\ndolph Admr of Kellle Hogan of\nLnclle Roian of Wallace Hcgan and\nof Ont Hogan W V Eaton Alter\nof D Jackson and W V Eaton\nAdmr of Oeo Saniberry alias Wash-\nIngton and all persons cUlmlng dam\nagei for any loti damage Of Injurj\noccailoned by said accident to appear\nbefore aid court and mate due proof\nrat their respective claims before W A
0766571c5f79854d678f90d210295b45 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0589040778793 39.290882 -76.610759 more titan seventeen years since we, a mere boy al the\ntime, commenced the publication of the New York Mir-\nror; and, under all its changes and improvements, thou-\nsands of its early friends and subscribers have udkered\nto it with a constancy so less flattering to ourselves than\nit is complimentary to their permanent attachments.\nWe aow nr.ke *u imporianlchange, viz: a esmuiencs-\nment of our nineteenth year, on this second day of\nJanuary, 1841. In making this change, we are only\nfollowing the crample of many of our cotempsraries,\nwho, after publishing their papers for several years, were\nunder the necessity of adopting this plan, that their sub-\nscribers might not thereafter be confused about the be-\nginning and ending of the publication year. But the\nmore important part of our change is, our intention of\ngiving en "legant stoel plate engraving every mouth, ma-\nny of which we have already selected, and have engra-\nvers employed on several of them.\nIn consequence of the disappointment we have met\nwith from one of our engravers, was to have fur-\nnished our January plate, we have been under the ne-\ncessity . sending one only as a match to what we have\nformerly furnished. But having, now a number of en-\ngraver at wotk, that we may eventually have the\nplates engiaved and printed at least three months in ad-\nvance, we shall soon be bcyondthe roach of disappoint-\nment, and send them to our subscribers so well dried\nand seL-c ned as to be almost released from fear of th' ir\nbeing injured in the mails by carriage. The plates we\nhave now in hand are such as have never been produ-\nced inany periodical in this country, and cannot he\nsurpassed in the world; at least so says a number of per-\nsons to whom we have shown the twelve already se-\nlee:d: and we have not the shadow of a doubt that our\nsubscriber* will say the same when they see thein.?\nWe also intend to give, monthly, n wooden repre-\nsentation and description of the latest fashions of Eu-\nrope.
06e6f907911bd2928a2726594c39a51e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.43698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 Oats.No. 2 , 25(ff'2r>VAc; No. 2 whit\nHGc: No. 3 white 27iitfi>29c.\nRye.No. 2, 60c.\nHurley.No. 2 . 3GTJ371&c.\nFlaxseed.No. 1 , SI 02; new $i 04.\nTImothyseed.Prime, $2 30.\nMess Pork.Per barrel ?7 250)8 20.\nLard.Per 100 lbs.. 54 87^(«5 00.\nShort Ribs.Sides (loose) 54' 4f»@4 75.\nDry salted shoulders (boxed)\nShort clear sides (boxed) $4 9005 00.\nWhiskey.Distillers' finished good.'\ner gallon, 51 26.\nSugars unchanged.\nButter-.Firm; creameries 13%<0)lSc\nairy 10@lGc.\nCheese.Easy at 7%iff.SVjC.\nEggs.Steady; fresh 12c.\nNEW YORK.Flour, receipts 21.0C\narrels; exports 14.GOO barrels; sale\n700 packages; market dull and barel\nteady; winter Jow grades 52 4">fl2 55.\nWheat, receipts 40,000 bushel!'; ex\norts 43,200 bushels; sales 2.975,00\nushels futures; 422.000 spot and out\norts; spot riulet; No. 2 red 82',6c; spo\nnd to arrive f. o. ti. No. 2 re\ntftM tnt-vciior; upuons ojienea wea^\nnd closed weak ut %@%c net decline\nules included No. 2 red July cloned a\nW*c: September closed at SOc; D-^ -em\ner closed at Klc.\nCorn, receipts 177.4f>0 bushels; export\n),000 bushels; sales 115,001) bushels fu\nures: 000,000 bushi-ls spot arid out\norts spot steady; No. 2, -lO^c f. o. t\nloat and 40'~e elevator; option mat\net opened easy: closed firm at %c ne\ndvance; July closed at 39%c; Septem\ner closed at 39%e.\nOats, receipts 20S.500 bushels; export\n1,000 bushels; sales 250,000 bushels spc\nnd oulpoi'tH; spot market dull; No.\n)'/2c; No. 3, 30c: No. 2 white 32,/ac; N<\n30c: No. 2 white 32^c; No. 3 whit\nlc; track mixed western 30@3lV..c\nrack white western 31^37c; trac\nbite state 31$£37c; optiom quiet an\nLeady.
376baf4ea6e95d32810fef6452304ed6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.3301369545916 58.275556 -134.3925 After finishing his education at Fort '\nGarry, uow Winnipeg, McDonald visit-!\ned in Outario where he was articled as (i\na bank clerk in the city of St. Thomas. (\nThat however, was too slow for his\nwild blood, aud in I8IC he drifted to\nNew York and shipped before the mast.\nThe 6bip reached Japan which was\nthen a closed land, in which no foreign-\nor was allowed to set foot. McDonald\nremembering the stories of his ship¬\nwrecked schoolmates, begged the cap¬\ntain to put him ashore where he would\nmake it appear as if he were a cast¬\naway, which Capt. Lawrence B. Ed-'\nwards reluctantly did. The Japanese\nbelieving iMcLionaia 10 oe u<« oui> uuo\nof a ship'a crew left alive, while tbey\nimprisoned him did not illtreat him.\nHe was kept in prison teaching\nthe English language to Japanese,\nstudents, and several hours a day was\nspent in this manner for many mouths.\nMcDonald's pupil9 were thus the\nfirst Japanese to speak Euglisk and\nwhen some years after Commodore\nPerry arrived, and opened Japan to the\nworld, the pupil9 of McDonald con-\nducted the negotiations, and translated I\nthe offers and speeches of the Ameri-!\ncans to the Japanese government.:\nWithout this assistance, the work\nPerry was able to accomplish would\nprobably have gone for uaught.\nThe years of McDonald's prime would\nfurnish material for a hundred stories,\nfor he spent two score of years in\nforeign and little known countries only\nreturning home in his old age to die nt\nFort Colvillo near Spokane, where so\nlarge a portion of his boyhood was\nspent.
76a9d01511700de3ed72929200c19234 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.4150684614408 43.798358 -73.087921 6. How often is the garden irrigated ?\nIf the soil inclines to sand, every week,\nif not, every three or four weeks.\n7. What climate in the United Stales is\nbest adapted lo such cultivation ?\nI should think the Middle States as\nthe staple productions of Oorooniiah re-\nsemble those of the Middle States, being\nwheat, rice, cotton and tobacco.\nGrapes and melon 3 are used as food by\nall classes in Ooroomiab, and particularly\nby the peasants, even more than plums\nand apricots. There are as many as\ntwelve kinds of grapes in that district, and\nseveral of these are very superior.\nFox the vine, the soil is first piepared\nwith lhe plough in. the same manner as I\nhave described for the orchards. The\nvine is set in rows. The space about\n15 feet wide between the rows, is sown\ntwo years with cotton, the ioil being pre\npared with the plough each year. The\n( lird year, that in which the vine begins\nto bear the soil is thrown up into ridges,\nabout tbree , and a bait feet high. The\nrow of vines stands usually on the north\nside of the ridge, that it may be shielded\nfrom the concentrated heat of the sun.\nThey run up over this ridge and the\ngrapes lie on the top and the opposite\nside. Vines near the high mud walls,\nwith which- - many of the vineyards are\nsurrounded, often run up over the side\nand over the top, affording striking illus-\ntrations of the Scripture allusions, where\nJoseph is compared
0055a1584b85214c1ed004ae50ef8486 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.7281420448796 40.063962 -80.720915 mmmencing at. 10 o'clock a. m ., the following\nlescribed real Oiiate. xituated in Ouio county.\nA'mt Vlnrlnin nmi known naa Dart of tho Chorry\nII111 Farm, and described as follows: Beginning\nit u wild cherry tree on Shore creek. corner to\nand* of Mitchell Waddle uud William Busby;\nheuco with soidBusby's Hue south 4S*i° west\n12 |Mile« to a stone: thenco south 26y? west\n0 7-10 poles to a Mono; thence south 683 oast\n11-10 poloj to a stone In the run; thenoe lip Raid\nuu with the me indurs thereof, south 24" west\n4 MO pole*, and south 50^ west 22 2*10 polos to\nMono in the line of lands of George kawtoll;\nhence with his line south 80>£o east 68 6-10 poles\no a stono in the county road corner to other\ntnds of Robert B Wayt; thenco wUh sold road\nlorth 27&° oajit 12 4-10 poles; thence north 4\n;iut thenco south 80%' oust 209-10\nroles; thence north 80° east 12 3-10 polos; thonco\nionth 3tH4-oast 252-10polet: thence south 40%'\non122 5-10 poles; thence south 71%° oast 15 8-10\n?oles; thenco south 76J$° cast 12 poles too point\nu said road, from which a marked beech on the\nlorth sido of the road bears north 5* west 21\ninks; thouco leaving said road south 859 west\npolos to n stone, formerly a lynn. corner to\nandnof Augustus Ridgcly; theuce south Tl%*\n;axt 90 poles to u stone, formerly an elm stump,\nn the line of lands of Mitonoll Waddle. on tho\nloutn branch of Short creek: thonce down said\nreek, with said Waddle's lino, north 41 west\n4 9-10 poles to a stone; thence north 18J43 east\nV 6-10 poles to a utono; thenco north ft0 west\nK 4*10 polcM to a stono; thonce north 12® west\n17610 jioloe ton stone, formerly near a
30c3e12467489ce271d4ba1628874991 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 wit and lmmor, and it was not unfre- K\n[}iiently the occasion of it in others. On [\nane occasion he hud an important case in \\4\nwhich ho appeared for the defence in a i<\n"Quo Warranto"against Robert Buchanan, w\nEsq., President of the Commercial Bank of »\nCincinnati, and which at the titno was the M\nJuly ban If the city. It involved the {!\nquestion of tho right toexeroise at.the same y\nlime tho office of President and Director N\nof the llank. Mr. Hammond informed his S\nclient that tho law was against him, but x\nhe would do tho best he could. "Yon."\nsaid Mr. Hammond, "Need not appear in u\nCourt.'' iff. Buchanan did not appear. «\nWhen the case cajno on, Mr. Ifummond J\nuioved lor a postponement, vociferously 1\nbut not with purpose to accomplish it. »\nTho ftpnoslte counsel perceiving tho feint, I\ninsisted as Hammond thought ho would J!\non iinmediato trial, and carried his 41\npoint. So tho trial was gono into f\nand now said Mr. Hammond to his $\nadversary: "Bring your wit- n\nnesscs." lie brought them forward and {\nproved all he could, but there was no one *\nexcept Mr. Buchanan himself by whom to r\nprove the corpus delicti, and he being ab- £\nsent, the case was necessarily dismissed, c\nAfter his success his client called "upon r\nto settle and pay him his fee. "How much J\ni» it?" he inquired of Mr. Hammotjd. . 7\n"Fifty dollars," replied the latter, "but 1 r»\ngained the ease uy a little pettffogging, u\nwhich I don't like at all." Mr. Buchanan\nhanded him his check for ono hundred J\ndollars Hammond took it and looked at B\nit, and then exclaimed. "What is this «\nfor?" Buchanan replied, "For yourself {\nand Vour partner, the pettifogger." Ham- t\nmom! laughed and took the check, saying, \\\n"J shall dissolve with that scamp and have 1\nnothing more to do with him hereafter" J\nWhen'. Mr. Hammond retired from the ;\nbar in 1838, |ie left behind him many who\nwero indebted to him for kindnesses snown\nand sympathy extended when most
08cf6bc5e5f3cacb478298cf596719e9 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1902.409589009386 32.612638 -90.036751 The General Assembly, which was\nin session in Jackson during the past\nfortnight, was a grand assemblage.\nDuring its deliberations many great\narguments were made and wise de-\ncisions "reached. All these have gone\nabroad through the telegraphic re-\nports in the press, and our readers\nare familiar with them. But there is\none thing the gem of the whole oc-\ncasion, so far as appropriateness, wit\nand brilliancy goes and that is the\nspeech of Hon. p. H. Alexander in wel-\ncoming the great body to Jackson.\nNever did an audience evince greater\ndelight or more thorough appreciation\nthan did his hearers, and for the sake\nof that great multitude in Mississippi\nwho was raised on the Shorter Cate-\nchism we believe our readers of other\nfaiths will be glad to yield this space:\n"It is natural to associate a Presby-\nterian assembly with the Shorter Cate-\n If I have any slight qualifica-\ntion for the art assigned to me to-\nnight, it is the fact that I once had\na smattering knowledge of that little\nbook. I was raised on the Shorter\nCatechism. I shall never forget it\nnot the catechism; I have already for-\ngotten that but the raising. I began\nto study it very soon after I was born\ninto 'an -- estate of sin and misery,' and\nthen I began to realize that I had\n"been born into that estate. I was\ntaught more about the estate of sin\nand misery than I was about the State\nof Mississippi. That catechism made\nan impression on me. It made fre-\nquent impressions on me. It made\nvivid I had almost said livid im-\npressions on me. I took it internally,\nbut chiefly externally. The fact is, it\nwas administered to me in a 'corporal\n--
52db872623e150c5bd56bcee4191d954 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1913.6342465436326 37.451159 -86.90916 The next trip the drag should be start-\ned a little nearer the middle, and the\nlast trip over the road the drag should\nwork close to the middle itself. Small\nridges of earth will be thrown In tho\nhorse track nnd smeared by the round\nside of the log smoothly over the road.\nThe smearing of the earth by the drag\nis called puddling, and It tends to mnko\nthe surface smooth mid hard nnd turns\noff the water, especially after the sun\nDomes out and dries It thoroughly. Tho\nroad Is always drugged after it has\nrained and not when It Is dry. With\ni good strong pair of horses und a well\nbuilt drag one man can drag about\nthree or four miles of n road a day.\nThis is the best posslblo way to main-\n good, earth roads. In every coun-\nty some farmer nlong each four miles\nof road should own n drag and drag\nthe road when It rains, and ho would\nfind the road in good condition when\nbe goes to market.\nTho necessity for dragging the road\nromes nbout from the fuct that water\nitays on the road surface because It\n:annot drain nwny Into the side\nflitches. If the road has been properly\nBragged the water will run off the sur-\nface. Then If the ditches are properly\ntaken enro of the water will drain\niwuy and leave tho roadway in spien-Jl - d\ncondition. The crown of the rond\nihould be nt least ten Inches higher\nlhan tho outside. Italn on a properly\ncrowned road will run quickly to the\ntides and not sonk Into the surface.
188d1f8fb3b5cc7388b4e26ebf299a3b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.6434425913276 42.217817 -85.891125 they be agreed ?" It is in morals a in physics,\ntwo bodies, except they draw against ;each\nother, draw together, and everv hour approach\neach other, till they as inevitably become one\nas thero is a law which governs action. Equal-\nly certain is it that the strongest determines\ntho point of the union and tho direction of the\nresultant force. History and reason alike\nteach this. Two bodies with one head is moro\nof a monstrosity than one body with two\nheads, and neither ever did livo longer than to\ndraw a wondering, gaping crowd after it.\nTho organizations represented by Mr. Gree-\nley are, therefore, substantially tho Demo-\ncratic party, and can only support their claims\nto tho public confidence by titlo which that\nparty shall be able to present. It is a very\nsiugulax feature of this claim, that it is built\nentirely upon professions. Nothing in the\npast record of tho party is brought forwaul\nto sustain it. Whatever is good in tho Cin-\ncinnati platform upon which it stands, has\nbeen borrowed from tho Republican creed,\nand is in direct conflict with tho past record\nof the party now for tho first time embracing\nit. Turning its back upon the work of its\nlife, and taking a new departure for the sake\nof success, it can give no other security for\ntho fulfillment of its promises its own\nnaked word, uttered in tho same breath that\nconfesses the falsity of its past lifo. This of\nitself should bar its claim. Works meet for\nrepentance can only inspire confidence. But\nan the Democratic party, stronger than tho\nLiberal Republicans, will be sure, if they work\ntogether, to swallow thorn rather than be\nswallowed by thorn, so that party, in turn, is\nsuro to find its own course ami character de-\ntermined by tho strongest of tho many inco-\nherent elements of which it is composed.\nMr. Dawes then called attention to tho\nfact that tho Southern element of that party\nhad determined its present course. Renst-anc- e\nhad como from the North and from its\nstrongest men here, but it had been in vain.\nHe then asked what was to be expected from\na party whose controlling men aro not only\nfresh in professions not six weeks old, but\nwho como up to their mpport out of a line of\nhospitality, not only to tho principles they now\navow, but to the very life of tho republic itself.\nIt is madness to intrust tho destinies of the\nnation to such hands. He believed in the hon-\nesty of his old political associates, now desert\ning to those new leaders ; but he had a right\nto demand of them, before deserting with\nthem, the grounds of their new-pl ac -
1c9fd94e281b742c88a1c303bdf29667 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.752732208814 46.187885 -123.831256 Tho provisions of the act are to ap-\nply to all persons of tho Chinese race,\nwhether subjects of China or other\nforeign power, except Chinese diplo\nmatic or consular officers and their\nattendants; and tho word "Chinese\nlaborers" wherever used in this act\nshall be construed to mean both\nskilled and unskilled laboreis ami\nChincso employed in mining. Tho\nmaster of any vessel arriving iu tho\nUnited States from any foreign port\nor place with any Chinese passengers\non board shall, when ho delivers his\nmanifest ol cargo, and it tuero be no\ncargo, when he makes legal entry of\nhis vessel, and before landing or per\nmitting to laud any Chinese person\n"unless a diplomatic or consular of- -\nhcer, or attendant of sucli ollicer,'\ndeliver to tho collector of customs of\nthe district in which his vessel shall\nhave arrived, tho sealed certificates\nand letters as aforesaid, ami a sopa\nrate list ot all Chincso persons taken\non board his vessel at any foreign\nport or place, nnd of all such persons\non board at tho timo of arrival as\n Such list shall show the\nnames of such persons nnd other par\nticulars as shown by their certificates,\nor other evidences required by this\nact, and such list shall be sworn to by\nthe master in tuo manner required by\nlaw in relation to manifest of cargo\nTho master of any vessel shall not\npermit any Chmeso diplomatic or\nconsular officer to land without hav\ning been informed by the collector of\ncustoms of tho official character of\nsuch officer or attendant.\nFrom and after the passago of this\nact no Chinese laborer m the Unitcu\nStates shall be permitted, after hav-\ning left, to return thereto unless- he\nhas n lawful wife, child or parent in\ntho United States, or property therein\nof the value of $1,000, or debts of a\nlike amount due him and pending\nsettlement. Marriage to such wife\nmust havo taken place at least a year\nprior to tho application of tho laborer\nfor a permit to return to tho United\nStates, and must have been followed\nby continuous cohabitation of tho\nparties as man and 'wife.
18f27ec292c2d1e89b4be9c9fa6f29dc THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.8232876395232 37.561813 -75.84108 sheep without lambs. These sheep kept\neverything down as smooth as a barn\nfloor. The next year I put on the same\nnumber and kept them on until time to\ncome to the barn. They were not taken\nfrom the field at any time during the\nseason, neither did they have any grain\nof any kind, but were in splendid con-\ndition. They were grade Merinos.\nIn the spring of 1867 I noticed that\nthe field looked green the last of April\nand the first of May, so much so that in\nconsulting with my neighbors I was in-\nduced to keep off from it and let it come\nup to grass for the scythe. The field in\nthe meantime had been sowed over with\na light dressing of plaster, about one\nbushel to the acre, and a small quantity\nof grass seed, timothy and red top.\n.Nothing else has been done to the field\nin any shape up to the present time.\nNow for the result The first year\nafter taking the sheep off I had the great-\nest yield of grass that I ever had from\nany of my fields under other treatment,\nand of best quality, a mixture of\ntimoth?,, red top, white clover and some\ngrass that I cannot name. Hardly a head\nof white weed was seen on the field.\nBut what is the most remarkable to me\nand my neighbors is, that the field has\ncontinued to produce bountifully up to\nthe present time, which is eight years\nsince the sheep were taken off; and to-\nday (August 2d) the field is tented thick\nwith bunches of the very best hay, aver\naging over one ton to the acre. I have\nsince sold the field to one of my friends,\nand asked him if he expected to get\nanother crop from the field without dress-\ning it again. His reply was, " Yes, I\nexpect to get several more yet."\nSoil Inexhaustible. We read and\nhear a good deal about the'inexhaustible\nfertility of the soil, that the idea of ex-\nhausting the fertile prairies of the West\nis too much like trying to dry the ocean\nwith a spoon, etc This doctrine may\ndo very well for visionary theorists to\nteach, but the actual facts stand out in\ntoo bold relief to justify any such ground-\nless assumption.
3b785650e7f260734c22bb03eeebeca7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.2472677279397 39.745947 -75.546589 compllahed with Bon-Opto not only astonish crate and opticians too willing to pre- glaases. Eye troubles of many\nmyself, but also other physicians with ! scribe glasses, wJrtte neglecting the wimple may be wonderfully benefited\nwhom I have talked about It. and I «d- formulas which form the basis of Bon- manner. Go to any drug store and get a\nvise every thoughtful physician to give Opto, which In my opinion, is a remark- bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Dissolve one\nBon-Opto the same careful trial I have and able remedy for the cur« and prevention tablet In a fourth of a glass of water and\nthere Is no doubt In my mind that he will of many eye disorders. Its success ln de- use from two to four times a day. You\ncome to the conclusion I have, that It opens veloping and strengthening the eyesight should notice your eyes op percent-\nthe door for the cure of many eye troubles will soon mako eye-glasses old-fashioued ibly right from the start and'Inflammation\nwhich have heretofore been difficult to and the use of Bon-Opto as common as that and redness will quickly disappear. If you*\ncope with. I have had Individuals who of the tooth brush. I am thoroughly eyes bother you even a little, It is your\nhad woru glasses for years tell mo they convinced from ray experience with Bon- duty te take steps to «ave them now w-\nhave dispensed with them through the use Opto that It will strengthen the eyesight fore It Is too late. Many hopelessly blind\nof Bon-Opto. In my own practloe I have at least 50 per cent, in one week's time In : might have saved tbelr sight If they bad\nseen It strengthen tne eyesight more than i many instances.”
582e5e407bd6e9779b19b85a62d29b82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.3794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 Ik? coalition ticket ti\n"The election passed off very nulctly In\nIlls city. The negroes voted without mo- ti\nnatation excent in one or two Isolated n\nuses. In the lower wards several negroes b\nvere arrested for repeating." S\nThe Sun says: "The election in this city t\nnut a farce and a mockery. It is safe to t<\ns*ert that of ever}' fifteen votes ca9t four- si\necn were fraudulent. Almost every poll L\npas entirely under the control of corrupt tt\nnspcctora, and organized hands of repeat- si\nro, paid by the Tammanny nng at the g\nute of Irora five to fifteen dollars per ei\ninn. The police, seemingly acting under fc\nucret instructions frofti their superiors, tl\nided and abetted the conspirators und tc\nxhibitcd no inclination to check the w\n- auduluut votes. k\n"A system ol repeating and ballot-box \nlulling was carried on upon a scale more si\nxtenslvc than ever. In one of the wards v,\nbout eleven hundred negroes were\njgistcrcd, but when the newly outran*\nhiaed came to the ballot boxes the repeat*\nrs had already voted upon nearly five\nundred of their names. Full scone was\nHorded for repeating by tho condition of 11\nic registry. Ever)'body who had chang- tl\nil his residence since last election entered n\nis name anew, but as a general rule none\nf the old entries were erased, then of gi\nnurse a large number of really new names is\nere now registered including a consider* 01\nble body of colored men. This swelled iv\nic registry to 184,417 names, and of al\nnurse afforded ample opportunity for the vi\nungs of repeaters that shamelessly pre*\ntubuiatcu tuo streets irom mormng nil ui\night."
a9486e7115984647a2587895557b3851 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1944.0724043399616 40.618676 -80.577293 We are lighting for justice as \\vv English-speaking people understand and\nadminister it. Our conception of justice in this country is that no man, no\nmatter what his race, color or creed, shall be deprived of his life, liberty or\nproperty without a patient, and fair hearing before an impartial Judge who\nwill decide his cause according to the law, without dictation or suggestion from\nanyone, high or low; and ibis law, according to which decision will be made, is\na law binding upon everyone, including the .ludge himself.\nIf the common law which we administer has any significance, it is funda­\nmentally the opportunity to be heard, to bo heard patiently and courteously,\nto be heard without prejudice or bias, with a full opportunity to present the\ngrievance or the right and to have a decision after full hearing by a Judge\nwill not be influenced by tear or dictation from without.\nUnless there be this attitude upon the part of tiie judiciary and upon the\npart of government, id' which the judiciary tonus a we are no better than\nthe enemies we are lighting. Our law books, the reports of the Court of\nAppeals, of the I'nited Slates Supreme Court and all the lower courts of lesser\njurisdiction amount to nothing, and the knowledge of them is emptiness and\nfutility unless we first have as the fundamental the open door to free access of\nthe humblest or the greatest to a full and patient hearing, without favor to\nclient or counsel, and the decision as the .Midge sees .the law to be.\nHow the nations of the wot Id are crying out today for justice! What In­\njustice in the name of the law of force, is being inflicted upon men and women\nand children outside the English-speaking count rieSi If the democracies have\nanything to offer to the world, it is not, in my judgment merely the right to\n•led executives and legislators or even .Midges. It is in the fair administration\nif iaw--or justice—- which means a patient hearing before an impartial tribunal\nmd decision without fear or favor.
0f57a3e95b66bfb6d9d3b8ffda3d8889 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.6260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 breaking tho bout previous price for\nseaHon by ttyc n bushel. All day\nmarket was In a nervous. erratic coi\ntlon with quotation* moving vlolei\nover a range of about 2<: n bu.v\nShorts were completely demoralised\nthe scarcity of offerings and abundji\nof bull news and their excited mov.\noven up was one of tho features of\nday. At times realising wales rear\nproportions sufllcleiitly large to In\nprices sharply, but tho market's In)\nent buoyancy caused a prompt rallj\neach occasion! and the close was \\\nArm, although unsettled, at 2H(\nnet advance. Foreign houses adde<\nthe general bull feeling on ehai\nThey bought In all about fifty load*\nwhich sixteen loads <»f guaranteed\n2 rod were for France. On top of\ndemand was a strong sot of EriK\n ami a decrease of 1.120,000 hi\nels In the English visible, (»pei\nParis cables came higher, but a\nholiday proven ted any later news\nlug received. Many traders eonnei\nthe French demand to-day with tho\nported loworllig of duly In that en\ntry. To-day September wheat ope\nat OMic, agalnnt SO Vie on flaturday,\nvaneod In 02V»o, then easing off a II\ndosed at ftlMiC. Transactions wevn\nheaviest In many days, reaehlng II.'\nIKK) Imi: li< Im. ('iihIi wheal was <|uolot\nfrom W»Wto toWP^e for No. 2 red, aec»\nlug to delivery f. o . I>. afloat.\nThe total stock of wheat In Now V\nis 7M1.WI8 bushels, »f which about\nbushels Is eontraet Tho slrengtl\n(dher markets of the country all ha\nbearing on local prices, particularly\nChicago advance.
23de8424dab89deb582c7c081b8b2f7f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.0999999682901 40.063962 -80.720915 Returning Board surmounting a final t\nReturning Board, to sec whether their 1\nreturn* justify that certificate, that at i\nonce you find that it does and that the 1\ndefacto title and possession is complete, i\nand that nothing but a jurisdiction that \\\nconsists of defacto title and possession t\ncan begin, or can find the case for begin- j\nning the consideration ot the question of t\nright and this quo warranto suit. If it 3\nbecome* a subject of evidence, the mat- \\\nterof evidence that declares absolutely\non the petition of Tildcn electors, tlm't L\nHayes'electors are in the possession of |\nthe faculty of that office, and what not, 1\nand are exercising it, and then asking I\nthat an inquiry may then proceed in due I\ncourse of law, bringing them in only by y\nprocess on the J 8th of December, long i\nafter the vote, to inquire whether that .\nposcssion and thatexercise as a matter i:\nright between them and the Haves elec- t\ntors in or is not according to law and t\ntruth. We have the Governor's certiii- n\ncate and he is the very man that passed *i\nfor the State on that question, which fur- I\nnishes the right to meet and act; that c\nthis is the list of men that were appoint- a\ned. These certificates under the State law t\nform no part of the return to the Presi- c\ndent of the Senate, but whom the same\ngovernor executes under the Federal law s\nthe same duty under the same evidence; i\nwe have the certificate without the pro- a\nduction of the antecedent one; now what *\nare we to gather in respect to the stage r\nof this transaction or deposit of the Feder- a\nal vote for President by the qualified g\nelectors, it is their own vote and they are 1\nnot delegates to make the vote according t
02c0671a7cbb9f9751506330853afedc THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6945205162353 39.261561 -121.016059 rff ALL BRANCHES OF BOTH THE\n1 arts and sciences, as well as the Medical Profes\nsioo tptcialtiy has ever been recognized by men ot\njudicious reduction, as both piogre-sfcve and iteilr.ua-\ntive for it is a perfectly well demonstrated fact that\nany individual, however astute tie may be, attains\nto an infinitely greater degree of perfection by a\nthorough and persevering cootiauity teoaebaentb\nofart, science, medicine, or mechanic*, than If he\nattempted to Accomplish hall n doz»D—as iu the 'ut-\nter case he would he likely, nine times out often, t<*\nobtain at most but a very superficial knowledge of\neither. In the practice of medicine or surgery, it un-\nravels, simplifies, and makes clear to the arduous\nstudent, the mysterious complications (implicated\non account of the numerous causes which produce\nthem) which diseases of any Wind take upon the Hu-\nman system; operating, as they do frequently, both\non the mental and physical o>gans. It seeks to re-\ncuperate and restore the functions to their Dapural\nand proper status, as well as to neutralize all antag-\nonistic influences to which the system is continually\nsubject. Certain it is, that while the busy affairs of\nlife seem toexhaostall onr time and attention, the\nincipiency and progress of disease, sometimes of dan-\ngerous and fatal character, approach us uu-\nnoticed. Slow in Its progress but insidious in its\ncourse, * disease, or even the simi le disturbance of a\nsingle function, frequently becomes an aflair of im\nm inent danger when least expected. To this the at-\ntention of the physician of SjvciaHHe* is always ear-\nliest given. With pr per perceptive powers, added\nto ample experience, he is necessarily able to arrive\nwith unerring certainty to a correct conclusion as to\nthe character of the ailment and the proper appli-\nances for its cure. Tills 1 have never found to fail.\nA remedy properly administered, and at the proper\ntime, is sure to accomplish the object ofits mission,\nprovided it be directed by the hands of a skilKul\nphysician, who knows his business. I need not re-\niterate the old adage, that • Health is the endorse-\nment of Divinity.” sent to us for onr own benefit,\nand that we should not for a moment disregard the\nsecret admonitions that tell us to beware lest we faII\nimperceptibly into a lay by nnth from which it will he\nmuch more difficult to escape than if we had given\nproper attention to ourselves before venturing so far.\nConsult your physician before it is too late;'eontide\niu him, and you will save yourself an infinity of suf-\nfering.
0e903e9c2040613910175f57989aadf8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.9849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 What was doubtless the most enjoya­\nble entertainment of the year was given\nlu the M. E. Church last evening, by the\nmembers of the primary and adult Ban-\nday schools. The church was handsomely\ntrimmed and drearated for the occasion,\nthe work having been done finder the\npersonal supervision of John I '^ning,\nJr., whose tact and skill in tb.Hk •\nalmost inimitable. Friends of t T chil­\ndren srowdsd the gallery and body of the\nchurch. A delsgatien of musi­\ncians from the Hushebeck Orehes\ntra furnished martial mnsio and\naccompanied the school. J . B Man love,\nchorister of the school, directed the sing-\ntog, which was foil of spirit and volume\nRev. T. E. Martindale conducted the\nexercises Mrs. Challenger, superinten­\ndent of the primary department, directed\nthat band of 100 little ones, all arrayed\nIn holiday costumes, in the rendition ef\na most attractive and amnaing program,\n the little people themselves seemed\nto enjoy as much aa the audience. After\nthe exercises Santa Clauss chimney was\ntorn down and each member of the school\nreceived a treat Gifts were exchanged\nand Dorie Atkinson, who is now the\nchurch organ pamper, received a hand­\nsome black cheviot, suit of oUthes\nThe children of Immanue 1 parish held\ntheir Christmas festival in the church on\nChristmas eve and the event was enjoy­\nable to both the entertainers and their\nfriends. Laurel and mistletoe bang from\nevery corner and were festooned from th#\nceiling all over the historic structure An\norchestra of four pieces with Thomas K\nLancaster, cornetlst, furnished excellent\nmnsic. A feature of the evening was the\nsinging of & numerical song, written by\nRev, J. H, Hopkins, by the little msm\nhers of the school. Candies, nnts and\nfruits were distributed among the little\nfolks after the exercises.
05b99b4f94f8dbf37064891137021202 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1889.5931506532218 39.745947 -75.546589 persons a chance to bury their friends at\nabout one-half the ratos usually charged.\nThe company has branch offices In all\nthe principal cities. Thus far the\npnuy has issued about 8,000 contract* In\nCamden, 4,100 in Philadelphia and\n8,000 others have been Issued from the\nbranch offices located In dltlereut parts\nof the country.\nThe office of the company In this city\nIs located at No. 1 . East Eighth street.\nThe office was opened April 1. II .\nGraham of Ktnnctt Square,Pa., Is mana-\n, and J. A. Thompson of No. 836\nMorrow street Is fuunal director, aud A.\nT. Wingate is general solicitor for the\ncity. 8o far the company has about 3U0\ncontracts and has had 14 fuuerals.\nThese gentlemen were all\nmorning by a representative ol tbe Rk-\nronnicAN and asked in regard to the\nport ol the Times. None of them knew\nanything about tbe lulluro. It was ad­\nmitted, however, that the company was\nnot receiving euougb cash\nIt« as their contracts reui\ntime to settle. As for the company burst­\ning, they thought tn re was no »langer of\ntimt, but It might change hands and be\ncarried on more vigorously. The Stand­\nard Oil Company, It la said, has been for\na long time trying to get the company\nunder its control, and the change, 11 any\nis made, will be to that company.\nThe geutlomen eated that when tho\nprinciples and plans of tho compauy were\nthoroughly understood the people who\nhave been outrageously imposed upon by\nexcessive funeral charges will uot waut\nthe compauy broken up. One of tbe\ngentlemen said that not long a :o ho paid\nan undertaker In this city $25 for a\nchilds csskot that the company sells for\n$10, at a good profit. Of course, said\nMr. \\\\locate, this little llurry will be tbe\ntalk for a while, but It will only adver­\ntise their company, that cannot fall to\nbecome popular when It is properly un-\ndetstood.
319b8b7658872545e03073080e0aa44c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.7246575025367 39.261561 -121.016059 bis health. Borne down by the distressing syinptqnjs in,\ncident to the vicious practice of uncontrolable pa*|i#ft in\nyouth: depressed in body and mind; unable to perform\neven the most trifling duty imposed upon tho daily avoca-\ntions of life, I sought the advice of many physicians, who\nnt first regarded my diseaso as of trilling importance—but\nalas ! after a few weeks, and in several instances months,\nof their treatment, I found to my unutterable horror, that\ninstead of relief, my symptoms became more alarming in\ntheir torture; and, being told by ono that my disease, be-\ning principally confined to the brain, medicines would be\nof little consequence, 1 despaired of ever regaining my\nhealth, strength, and energy; and, as a last resort, and\nwith but faint hope, called upon Dr. Czapkay, who. after\nexamining my case, prescribed some medicine which al-\n instantly relieved me oi'the dull pain and dizziness in\nmy head. Encouraged by this resiiR, 1 resolved to place\nmyself Immediately muiev hP care, and by a strict obedi-\nence to all bis directions and advice, my head became clear,\nmy ideas collected, tho constant pain in my back and\ngroins, tho weakness in my limbs, the nervous reaction ol\nmy whole body on tho slightest alarm or excitement, the\nmisanthropy and evil lorboding*. the self-distrust and want\not confidence in others, the inability to study and wont of\nresolution, the frightful, exciting and at llvm** pleasurable\ndreams at night, followed by Involuntary discharges, have\nall disappeared; and in fact, in two months alter having\nconsulted the Doctor, I felt as if inspired by a new life—-\nthat life which, but a short time ago, I contemplated to\nend by my own hand.
efbff0cc32faec353b1d37438ec779d1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.6945205162353 41.681744 -72.788147 This is the beginning of the sixth\nyear of this program in New Brit-\nain and at the end of this year the\ngroup of boys and girls who went\ninto the third grade of the Week\nDay Religious School six years ago\nwill graduate from that school so\nthat for this reason it will be a par-\nticularly interesting year. The dif\nferent religious organizations are\nalive to this opportunity to implant\nmoral and religious principles in the\ncharacter of the coming generation\nand their leaders are working hard\nto continually raise the standard of\nreligious tducation as better means\nand methods are being provided.\nThe Wjek Day Church school\nseason will open Wednesday Septem-\nber 17th for children of the third,\nfourth, fifth and sixth grades and\non Thursday, September 18th for\nstudents of the seventh and eighth\ngrades. The customary cards will be\nplaced in the hands of the students\nof these grades this giving the,\nparents their opportunity to express\ntheir will whether their children\nshall be given the benefit of this\nextra hour of religious education or\nnot. The pastors, directors of religi-\nous education, Sunday school super-\nintendents, and others interested in\nthe work are making canvasses in\nthe various churches urging their\nconstituents to see that the cards\nare returned requesting the school\nauthorities to release their children\nfor this purpose. The movement ha\nthe support of not only all religious\nleaders but the leaders in secular\neducation and still more significant,\njudges, probation officers and other\nleaders in public life who are con-\nstantly in contact with youth and\nwho agree that boys and girls thor-\noughly grounded in religion make\nby far the best citizens.\nOne is inclined to wonder what\nRobert Raikes would think were he\nto walk the streets of New Britain a\nhundred years after his experience in\nGreat Britain
1a6f16224e54199edc53a0a02601f211 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.1931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 titne, as will, when added to the qiian- T\nitv shipped by parties other than our- si\nlefves, give your line one-third of tbe It\nihipuienU to New Vork by the wiid trunk hi\nines, or 21 per cent of the whole amount is\n(hipped to flic three cities above named h;\nyy tne said trunk lines; it being under- di\nitood that in stating the number of' bar- w\nel4 for the purpose of making this divi- b;\nlion of or carrying out any of the other ill\nitipulations herein contained, the barrel m\nif 4o gallons of crude shall be tho unit.\nin<l that such barrel of the usual size of Fr\nefincd oil shall be couuted as equal to\n3-10 barrels of crude. oi\nSecond. It having been agreed, as wo\nre informed, between your company and Tl\n Baltimore and Ohio Ituilroad that of ar\nbe remaining 37 Der cent of the total te\nhipments aforesaid you should bo enti- m\nled to transport by lines owned and con- as\nrolled by your company to Philadelphia tit\nnd Baltimore SiO |ier cent, and the Balti- dc\nlore and Ohio Railroad Company to Bal- fu\nimore, by its lines, U per cent, we agree, na\nntil Iheso proportions are ihangi'il by by\nIUIUU1 tUllD«Ul| luoiiij/ OUl'II l(UikIUllIL'3 IU w\nliiladclphia and Baltimore by lino owned no\nnd controlled by your company us will, so!\nrhen added to ehipinonts of parties other fa*\nlian ourselves, give for transportation by or\nour lines to Philadelphia and Baltimore wi\n[i per cent of the total shipments by the foi\n>ur trunk lines to the three sea shore an\nities above named. tai
087876680ed5434619afb7c912d7d397 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.0368852142785 40.063962 -80.720915 The White Pine Compound, u\n'It was early in the spring of *82 that this fr\neomponnd was originated. A member of my\nfamily wa« affllcte«l with an Irritation of the\nthroat attended with a disagreeable cough. 1 ol\nhad for some months previous thought that ai\na preparation having for its basis the inside rr\nbark of white pine might be so compounded r~\nas to be very useful in diseases of the throat D<\nand lungs. To test the value of it lu tbe case n«\nalluded to, I compounded a small quantity io\nof tbe medicine tliat I had been planning, fQ\naud gave it in teaspoon ful doses. TheresuTl n,\nwas exceedingly gratifying. Within two !\ndays the irritation of the throat was remov- rl\ned, the cough subsided and a speedy cure tl:\nwas effected. Soon after this, I sent some to bi\na lady in Londonderry. N . H., who had been <r\nsuffering for some weeks from a bad oougb.\noccasioned by a sudden cold, and had ralbea ni\nmucus streaked with bl tod. 8he soon found \nrelief and sent for more. She took about si\nten ounces of It. and got well. J . B . Clarke, h\nEsq., editor of the Manchester Dally Mirror, u .\nmade a trial of the same preparation In the\ncase of a severe cold and wan cured lmmedl- e>\nately. lie was so highly pleaded with tbe re- b>\nsuita, and so confident in success attending Its 01\nsales. If placed before the public, that he u\nfinally persuaded me to give it a name, and ,\ns»'Wi it abroad to lienefit the mi tiering. In "\nNovember, 1S.V5, I lirxt advertised it under HI\nthe name of White Fine Compound. In two ct\nyears from that time there'hud been whole- a ,\nsr. led In Manchester a lone one hundred dol-\nlars worth, where it took the load of all the\ncough remedies In the market, and itstin\nmaintain* that position. There is good rvain\nit:«ir thin; it is very soothlug and healing\nsou* nature: la warming to the stomach and\nf>!easantwithal to the taste, and is exceed- I]\nn^iy cneap.
2fea4665682be4b6a101a93b745e59c0 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.8013698313039 41.020015 -92.411296 Sell no corn in the ear; have all yon\nsell shelled. A hand shelling machine\nwill answer it your crop is a small\none; if large, get one to be worked by\na horse-power. Neither will cost *\ngreat deal, and we are very certain\nthat the cob. if crushed, steamed and\nled to your cattle, will be worth moro\nto you iu a single winter thau the\nprice of a corn plieller. whether you\nget a small or large one. We believe\nthere is one-third as much nutriment\niuahughol ot cobs as thereisin a\nbushel of graiu, and wc do know that\ncows or oxen fed upon three pecks of\nthe steamed or crushed cobs, in addi­\ntion to tho usual quality of hay or tops\nof fodder, will keep fat Then why\nhaul your cobs to market to be given\naway/ It costs much to carry a\nbushel of cobs to the market as it docs\na bushel of corn. Shell your corn,\nleave your cobs at home to nourish\nyour cattle, aud through them your\nland: and where you now send one\nbushel of corn, you will be able to\ntransport two for the same money.—\nLook this subjcct fair'y in the face,\nconsult economy, consult tho comfort\nof your rattle, consult the wants of\nyour soil, and you cannot fail to take\nadvice. Tho above from the vl inen'ran\nI 'armer,stato* the cob question rather\nstrongly. There is no doubt, uutri-\nmcnt enough in the cob to pay for\ngrinding it lino, with the corn, and the\nprice is usually enough better to pay\nfor shelling; but tho cob has never\nbeen placed, by analysis, at morn thau\nten per cent, of the value of grain.
4a455e8d34dd722a51cd20d7bc990a90 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.1352458700162 43.798358 -73.087921 inasmuch as he has avoided it. But he has\nendorsed the doctrine that duty requires\ntaking life for life. I only wish to turn\nattention to this sanguinary position, and\nsome things that it inevitably involves, and\nleave it for the contemplation of the reader.\nIt will be seen at once that if friend Cur-\ntis' doctrine be correct, all those human\ngovernments which have abolished capital\npunishment are in open rebellion against\nGod in the matter. Now I would noi be\nunderstood as undertaking to test the sound-\nness of his docirine by the practices of\ngovernments. Far irom it. I only wish to\ncall attention to the position which he occu-\npies, and to the construction which he puts\nupon scripture. For if he is found putting\nconstructions on some passages that will\nnot bear, he must be looked to in his con-\nstructions of other passages. But if the\nBible leaches the imperative duty, to all\nmen, of all generations, and under all dis-\npensations, of taking life for life, then\nsurely those governments which have done\nwhat they have esteemed to be the more\nenlightened and Christian thing, to blot out\nthe bloody clauses of their codes, are"uiltv\nin so doing, of an enormous violation of\nGod's law, and friend Curtis ought by all\nmeans to be forthwith preaching repentance\nto them therefor in unmeasured terms. But\nthis is the fiist word or intimation I have\nheard from him against the high misde-\nmeanor of these governments, in rejecting\n important a command of Jehovah!\nAgain: If such a construction is to be\nput upon this passage of scripture if it is\nto be understood and expounded as incul-\ncating the imperative duty of taking life for\nlife, what is to be done with those plain\npassages of later date, which teach the\nduty of punishing with blow for blow, eye\nfor eye, and tooth for tooth? Is it to be\nanswered that the former was given to\nNoah, and the latter to Moses? If these\nlaws are alike in their nature and their ori-\ngin, and there can be no other reason given\nto show why the one is not precisely as\nmuch as the other adapted to all generations\nand conditions of men, I am. sure that no\none claiming to be rational and candid will\npretenu mat Uod's glVing the two to two\ndifferent persons, servants of his, at differ-en - t\nperiods of time, is a good reason for\nholding to the one and rejecting the other\nespecially for holding to lhe stronger, and\ngiven earlier, in a ruder state of society,\nand rejecting the milder, and lven ia\nlater and improved state of society. Does\nany one reply by saying that the latter of\nthe two laws under consideration was abro-\ngated by the express teaching of the Sav-\nior, the Prince of Peace himself? Be\ncareful, I say to such a one, how you de-\nstroy your own foundation for defensive\nwar! You will be a Non-Resista- nt
00b842f2aceed728d0d7ab8d3a7f2488 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.5219177765093 39.745947 -75.546589 Nevytlielcss. It was a mistaken)\n,vlew. fn the last twenty years—even Temperance Inion\nIn the last ten years—the country has monthly meeting In headquarters at\nbecome educated up to the saner, ron -|5 otflock tomorrow afternoon,\nstructlve theory of regulation. Con-1\ngiess, the place in which outgrown _\nprejudices persist longest, has recent '\nly begun to w aver. President. Wilson •\nhas shown himself responsive to lib-'\neral Ideas. Even tho shippers, as a\nbody, are earning around to the bo-\nlief Iliât their interest lies less in in­\nsisting on very cheap freight rates\nthan it does In securing better service\nand Increased facilities and paying\nmore for them. The Interstate Com- j\nmerco Commission is drifting away]\nfrom Its old beliefs. It Is a sign of\nthe passing of old dogmas when out of\nthat body ran come so clear a state­\nment of the true theory of regulation\nas is contained in liar\nkin's recent opinion.\nThe Tribune has criticised Mr. Har­\nlan In the past, when he. too, was a j\npartisan of tho narrow school of regu­\nlation. It is all tho more pleased to I\nquote from his dissenting Judgment !\nsuch enlightened sentences ns these; |\n“What the county as a whole needs |\nIs much larger terminals, more tracks, |\nmore ca:s, more locomotives. This en­\nlargement of facilities is not required j\nmerely to meet the exigencies grow­\ning out of the war, but to keep our\ntransportetion facilities up to the\nmeasure of the country» growing\nvolume of business,\ntlon should be laid without delay for\na definite plan for the development,\nand bulldi ig up of our transportation\nsystem. * * * Our population and j\ncommerce have largely expatNi''d , but ■\nthere ))as been no expansion, relatrie-\nly speaking, in our transportation fa-1\nduties. »
058f8b8af6a8160fec21999ac371830d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.57397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 The crop and farm statistic! of Bel\nnont county us just completed at th\nuditor's otlice make such a handsom\nbowing that it la a wander thoro ar\nny calamity howlors among the ruro\nlortion of tho population, Tliiiucroag\nif wheat harvoated this year, flgurin\nin tho aaino basis of yiold as given iai\noar, will uinount to over a quarter of\nniliion dollars at 51) conta por bushel\nvhilo the meadow vlcld, reckoning ha\nt $12 per ton, and it will avorugo mor\nhan that, will bring in over hail a mill\non dollars to tho farmors, and the cor!\nrop at only SO conta per bushel wil\niritiK in uioro than another bull mill\nn. Oats, rye, potatoea, ajiples am\nther fruits besides the product of th\nairies add a million or two nioro to th\noturns of tho farming community o\nbis county, oven at the low prices not\nirovailing, according to the ollicia\ngurea, a study of which can not fail ti\nonvinconny one that the farming com\n of tills county Ib very comforts\nily provided for, notwithstanding tin\ntringency in other linos of business,\n'lhoro is trouble on the Contral Oliii\niviaion of the 1). & O. railroad just Ho*\nbat is bojji - examined into, but thi\nlatter ia-Kept so quiet that itis hard ti\net any information. Aa tho Btory runs\ncvorul ongiuuors aro having n vacation\nnd this much is known to be true. 1\n9 statod that a timekeeper at Newarl\ntood iu with some of the men on tin\noad, and whether they worked oi\nlaved their time and salaries went on\ntiJ in season tho tlmekeopor reapei\nis roward. Tills is euid to liavo boot\none for a long tlino, but latterly tin\nliicer in charge manifested such a dis\nnallinn In (tfinlr thnt hiffilnf official\nould not aolvo tho problem ol hojv hi\nould par gueh bills, unci quietly so\nbout mi investigation, discovering on\nonrce to bo as stutod. Tho wholo mul\nor will probablo be out in a ulior\niine.
317ab1f11a8c6713f375d28d5a29a936 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.2808218860985 39.745947 -75.546589 Baseball fans will be given the scores\nthroughout the season by THE EVEN­\nING JOURNAL. Arrangements have\nbeen made whereby the scores of all the\nleague games will be furnished to THE\nJOURNAL by the United Press Asso­\nciation, and they will be posted on THE\nEVENING JOURNAL'S bulletin board\nTho scores will include the American\nand National League games, the At­\nlantic League In which Wilmington\nwill have a team. When the Trl-State\nseason opens the scores of Its games\nalso will bo posted.\nTHE JOURNAL posted the result of\nyesterday's American League games,\nand Wilmlngtonlans thereby learned\nlate In the afternoon how the Ath­\nletics had carried oft the opening game\nbefore a record-breaking crowd, and\nhow Washington had trimmed the vac-\nclouted Highlanders at Washington.\n service which THE JOURNAL\nhas arranged for the sport-loving pub­\nlic Is the moat complete Wilmington\nover has had. The United Press has\nexerted Itself to gather and transmit\nthe results of games as early as pos­\nsible, and they will bo bulletined on\nTHE EVENING JOURNAL'S board at\nthe corner of Fourth and Shipley streets\nwhere everybody can see the results.\nPersons telephoning for tho scores\nshould pee U. and A. phone 500 or\nOelmarvia phone 1808 only. Scores\nwill not be furnished on any other\nphones by THE JOURNAL. Score*\ncan he learned by telephone up to 6\noclock In the evening, when tho tele­\nphone service will cease. So If you\nmust phone use I), and A. 600 or Del-\nmarvla H08. THE JOURNAL will do\nthe rest.
3da840d643580c8b817b390b5aa35114 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.06420761865 39.745947 -75.546589 NOTICE — TO\nJudge» of the Court of General Sessions\nof the State of Delaware, In ahd for New\nCastle county;—We. the undersigned free\nholders and respectable cltlsens of the\nSecond ward, In the city of Wilmington,\ncounty of New Castle and State of Dela­\nware. do hereby certify that Mary A.\nPlubkett, the tenant and occupant of the\nhouse situated at Nos. 108 and 110 Mar­\nket street, in the Second ward, city\ncounty and State, aforesaid, and de­\nscribed in her application, and whn\nis an applicant for a license, on Mon\nday, the 2nd day of March, 1908. being tit*\nnext term of said court, for the sale of\nintoxicating liquors In quantities not ess\nthan one-half gallon therein, not to bo\ndrunk on the premises, she being a li­\ncensed retailer of goods, wares and mer­\n the aggregate cost value of her\nstock constantly kept on hand for sale it\nnot less than five hundred dollars; she l*\na woman of full age. of sobriety and good\nmoral character; that such sale of intoxi ­\ncating liquors at said place Is necessary\nto accommodate the public: that she is\nthe tenant and occupant of said house,\nand the true rental value is five hundred\ndollars; and the following respectable\ncitizens of said ward, at least twelve or\nwhom are substantial freeholders of said\nward, recommend the aald application\nviz:\nChas. O . Rex.\nHarry Fisher,\nSlegnmnd Werner,\nJohn Rex.\nIsaac Miller.\nJoseph S. Scherer,\nIgnatz Roth.\n1,. A . Hllllsohn,\nSamuel Harris,\nOtto Scheu .\nWm. Rchnenhaar.\nJohn J. Clark.\nJohn D Parker,\nJoseph Moltery,\nJ24-3t
3426181c8e843030f65130395fe63b56 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.6753424340436 42.217817 -85.891125 In 1670 an inventor, who responded to the name of Porelli. if he\nheard you distinctly, constructed a flying apparatus that looked like a\ngigantic pigeon. A great crowd gathered to see it fly. But when it\ncame time to scoot, it would just shudder a little and jump up hi the air\nlike a goose after a fly. Mr. Borelli then mounted a chair and stated\nto the audience that he had been requested to postpone the exercise until\nafter his bird had learned to fly without something to stand on while do-\ning it. In 1859 a soarist named Bright said he could sneak out into the\nsky any time he wanted to. He proposed to do it by sprouting an arti-\nficial growth of wings on his shoulders and legs, but on his first\ntrip awing he made too close connections with the top of a tree where\nJic cast anchor and was then assisted to the ground by kind hands.\nIn 1874 a man named May built an airship which was kind enough\nto carry him high in the, air before it broke down. Mr. May was ship-\nwrecked in midair, and, glancing overboard, he was surprised sec\nthe earth coming up to meet him. But he finally succeeded in reaching\nland after many a peril, but his landing facilities were poor and he almost\nruined a good piece of ground. When they ran to him they saw that\nhis health was completely ruined and he expired in a few minutes.\nIt will thus be seen that aerostation all the way along has been\nmore successful in strewing the sands of time with the wrecks of so-ca l l- ed\nflying machines and stabbing a false wing into the chest -pr ot ect- or\nof an aeronaut and out through his pistol pocket, thus greatly debilitat-\ning his nervous system, than it has been in affording us a means of fli-\ntting from place to place. What it will all come to no one dare fore-\ntell. Perhaps the time will come when we can climb into an airship and\ngo through to the moon without change of cars, and perhaps it will only\ncontinue to stove up an aeronaut once'in awhile who has sailed up into\nthe air and then has hastened back in a great deal more of a hurry than\nhis health would permit.
11b423fa4ca78c74668b0f3c88983942 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.664383529934 40.441694 -79.990086 New York, Aug. 29. The stock market was\nextremely active, tho transactions for the\ntwo hours of business being the largest\nseen for that time in more than a year,\nexcept dnring tho November panic of last\nyear. The list displayed' tho most pro-\nnounced strength, and, notwithstanding\nthat realizations in the advances of the\nweek were unusually large, the demand was\nsuch that prices baited only lor a short\ntime and then resumed their upward move-\nment all along tho lino. The buying was of\nthe best quality, and was Very marked in\nvolumo for both foreign and domestic oper-\nators, the bullish feeling running very high\nand carrying nil boforo it.\nThe bank statement showed a farther loss\non surplus rcservo, but it had no effect even\nfor tho moment, and the triumphant ad-\nvance met with no check after the first half\n trading.\nThe opening was strong at fractional ad-\nvances over lastnight's figures, and the early\ndemand sent the list further on its upward\nmarch. The realizations here caused a tem-\nporary setback, bnt the buying was then\nresumed in earnest and prices began a for\nward movement which lasted until the close.\nTho market finally closed very active and\ndecidedly 8troue;at tho highest prices for the\ndav and the week. The trading reached the\nunusual total of 252,118.\nRailroad bonds kept paco with stocks in\ntho amount of business done, though prices\naro unchanged and business not so evenly\ndistributed. The total reached $2,474,000 .\nThe following table shows the prices of active\nstocks on the ew York Stock Kxchanjre yesterday.\nCorrected dally for TnE Dispatch pj V, hitnet A\nBTErtiENSON, oldest Pittsburg members of the\nNew york stock ixcnange, 57 fr ourtit avenue:
0977a87b3c62d989f8eb487c59dba5d5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.252732208814 58.275556 -134.3925 " I t la necessary. however, that\nAlaska's aettlera be men and women\nacclimated to Northern conditions.;\nlid not deterred by the obstaclea\nand hardahlps of the frontier. This\n"""try has many auch men and\nwomen, and they should be encour¬\naged to make homes In Alaska.\n"The committee* will, I believe,\nrind that any conatructlve policy to\n. 'ring about these results must bei\nadministered In Alaska. Thla In no]\nwise will conflict or Interfere with\nthe territorial affairs of the Alaskan\npeople. It simply coordinates the\nAdministration of federal activities\nin Alaska, now directed from Waah\niiigton. In a federal organization\nvlth an organization In Alaska, an\n'ionization eharged with the ra\nlonal development of Alaska, plan¬\nning and building for a prosperous\nnd greater Alaska\n"The time. In my Judgment, for\notislructlve result* for Alaska nev\nr was more favorable. Our strong\nWashington delegation la now In a\nposition power, due to length of\nhervlie of Its dlder members, tu\nlirlng to (he support of Alaska a\nlarge end Influential following. The\nwork of Congress Is done largely In\n. o m mlttee, and It Is only through\nlength of aerrlce that chairmanship\n°r ranking position on the Important\n<>mmlttces may be secured.\n"Alaska Is extremely fortunate In\nhaving Senator Harry New and\nongresman Curry as chairmen of\n.lie committees on territorlea. Sen¬\nator New visited Alaska flftoen years\nigo and has a personal knowledge of\n"onditlons. Chairman Curry was a\npioneer citzen of Seattle in 1876,\nand knows the obstacles and diffi¬\nculties to frontier development.\n"Both are strongly of the opinion\n1 hat the effort of the Individual and\nthe capital requisite to the success\nof his efforts should receive all pos-\nilble encouragement: but that every\nsafeguard should and will be provld-\n" d against monopoly and explolta-\nHon.
0f63d21c9414c565f6e884162164db07 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.8342465436326 40.063962 -80.720915 fjxcirtl Cormvoiviencf. of the InUlHaenttr,\nPink Gkovk, WktzklCcuntv, W.Y.\nOcLUO..TIih only John 0. l'ondlott\norntod here to-day. The country I\nmiles wround had been thoroufihlybilli\n(or the performance, and personal eoli<\ntationa bad bjen used to IjkIuco tl\nDemocracy to come out and givo tl\npontiff mau a "rouainc reception," bu\nwhatever muy be Bald of tno Wet7.\nDemocracy, thoy "know wheathoyha)\na cood thing," and were generally coi\nipicuouB by their, abaeuco. The aud\nmce conaisieu oi 07 wen, woman au\nhildren, There wore 33 voters nreson\nme-third of whom wero Republicans.\nDr. Stone introduced the speaker t\n'tho gentleman who was legally electo\n,o CongreBa two years aco." Tho nj\n)lau90 which followed this declaratio\nionaiated of a sarcastic smite on thopai\n)f Ben Earnt-lnw. and an approving uo\nrorn Hon. John 0. Pendloton, who in\nnodiately took tloor aud began th\namo old speech which has delighted (\\\no tnany audiences.\nIt waa soon npparont that thero wa\nlot much enthusiasm and even John'\ntest jokes were unappreciated. Job:\nlecamo deeperato, and linally conclude\no try the effect of a littlo profanity upo:\nho audience. One "cubs" elicited\nlint ripple or applause.lie used two\nnd the applause was louder, and whei\ne finally managed to work iu thre\nBwearfl" in a story thero waa "loud ap\nlauso."\nTho "Bobber Tariff Barons" am\nProtected Monopolists" were used uj\na liis usual happy (?) Btylo so familia\nj the citizens of Wheeling.\nJohn was evidently not iu "goo<\nina," and the almost total absence o\nvidences of approval by tho audiene\nas enough to discourage anybody. Hi\nroatment of the tariff question was ovei\n'oalrur tlion in flin inink
26fd83a140cc8720591d127dd588c3c2 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.3904109271944 40.735657 -74.172367 terrific left and a right cross he sent\nthe dark battler to the floor for what\nlooked good for the count. The referee\nI was quickly to the rescue, and when\nDavis again regained his feet lie was\nsent sprawling. When he had sufficient\ntime to recover he managed to last out\nthe round, but the dazed condition of\nhis eyes showed that he was injured\nand merely holding lor a chance to get\nthe cold water dash from his seconds.\nThe second round still showed that\nDavis was suffering from the punching\nof the tirst, but he was unable to keep\naway from the stiff right which Alberts\nwas working to advantage.\nIn the next round the Sailor tried\nhard to come back. He watched for an\nopening, but the foxy kid from Eliza-\nbeth knew' of the "Sailor's ” punching\nability and would not l.t him set for a\nblow. Davis was better in this round,\nbut gained no advantage. The last ses-\nsion brought all present to their feet.\nTile terrific onslaught made by Davis\nwas squarely met and the surprised\nones were all satisfied that the boy\nwhom all had thought would have such\nan easy time was compelled to trail\nalong a poor second.\nAnother of the star bouts was that\nbetween Pete Adubato and Kid Len-\n Kid Lennox, as Davis had done,\nfinished second. Adubato was in fine\nfettle. He forced the fighting all the\nway and when Lennox attempted to\nstart one of his rushes Adubato used a\nright uppercut that settled the ideas of\nLennox trying slam-bang w'ork. During\nthe fight Lennox failed to land a good\nclean blow, but received some that\nmight with small gloves have put him\nto sleep. He is a tough boy, neverthe-\nless, and fought gamely.\nBanty Lewis, who mixed it up for\nfour rounds with Charles Burnett, had\nall the better of it. Lewis is a boy who\ncan use both hand3 and had Burnett\nguessing all the w'hile. Burnett, too, is\nclever, but was outclassed. Jimmy\nLynch and Young Hichs gave the fftns\ntheir moneys worth. Lynch used a\nstraight left to advantage and had a\ngood lead at the finish. Hichs, too.\nmadj a grand rally.\nThe preliminaries were all good.\nNick Ferris bested Young Burge, while\nWillie Mack and Young Miller fought\nevenly. Young Krasgrow w'as out-\nclassed by Young Marquard and tho\nbout was stopped in the third round.\nNext week Willie Baker will meet Ar-\nthur Conley, while Banty Lewis wdll\nhave as his opponent Young Diamond.\nThe star bout will be between Carl\nHealy and Young Kelly. This ought to\nbe fast.
05a836055aa7bf4e42fffe9df62dfc3c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.9547944888382 39.745947 -75.546589 To this Mr. Lawson made the follow-1 Mr. Murphy, who tenants the farm ad-\nlug answer: "The sound and fury of I Joining that of the. Farra, weal to ihe\nthe coming developments 1 refer to will I home of the 'Farras, and paid a bill of\nfill Boston with Just a trifle more I $1 for corn and hay. Thorn was in the\nn oise than the foreign gentlemen who) house at the time and saw Murphy pay\nare handling the New England gas I Mr. Karra the money,\nand coke scheme contemplate, and the! Supper over, the children, Willard\n nothing which Mr. Whitney refers to land Malad, gathered around the cosy\nwill develop Into 'something' to make I fiersldc with their school-hooks and\nthese foreigners seek new fields more studied the lessons for the day. In one\n to their peculiar characterls-1 corner of the room sat Thorn, his face\ntics, und I reluctantly predict that the bidden deep In a book. On a lounge lay\nnothing Mr. Whitney refera to will Mr. Karra. About 8.20 oclock the chll-\nforce a legislative investigation of Bos- dren went to bed. Sleep soon came to\ntongas affairs,a receivership oftheBos- them, and all was quiet within the\nton gas companies, the taking away | home,\nfrom behind the Boston United Gas\nbonds the Bay State Gas Company of\nMassachusetts, a reduction of the divi­\ndends of the Brookline Gas Light Com­\npany from 10 per cent, to nothing, and\nthe consequent adding of millions to\nthe assets of the Bay State Company,\nof Delaware, and the disappearance of\nDominion Coal as a stock market fac­\ntor.”
3ed25daee99ea21f93e08acd5eba144a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 her companion so cheerlul, thai sue could\nnot help blushing, and at times, despite\nher troubles, ber small steel-gray eyes\nwould sparkle wllh mirth, when they\nsat down to breakfast, the hunter thought\nhe had never'seen so charming a creature\nas Mary, and somehow she never seemed\nto mind the great brown eyes constantly\nfixed upon her. Strange she should not\nhe afraid, for she waa alone with the must\ndesperate man ol the West; but, so far\nfrom (earing him, she thoroughly believed\nhe was her best Iriend and protector.\nAfter breaklasl she told the hunter ber\ntale, and again claimed bis protection.\nHe listened respectlully and attentively,\nand, whin she was done, said:\n"Ho you thought you could trust me f"\n"I did." reniied Marv. while tho hot\nblood rushed to her temples.\nFor a moment the muacies In tbo (ace\not tbo worked convulsively, and,\nrising, be went to a small' cupboard and\ntook from it two daguerreotypes,.tbe\none or a young girl, and tbe other of a\nmiddle-aged woman. Opening ibem, and\nplacing them in Mary's lap, wbile a tear\ndimmed bis eye bessid:\n"These are tbe pictures ol my dear\nmother and darling sister, and I swear to\nj?ou by them I Will always be to yoa as a\nMary held out her hand and, as he\ngrasped it, two hearts met in that clasp,\nnever to be divided on earth.\nThe banter told Mary that she mast go\nback at once to her mother, and, now she\nbad placed heraelt under bis protection,\nshe need not fear Long Ned or any one\nelse. Placing heron bis pony, be walked\nby her side, and led the little brute, wbo,\nnot being used to sticb a burden, was
6c4fa93932b756adc1755db0e4cec16e CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1913.5082191463723 41.875555 -87.624421 dients result from distrust of legis-\nlatures. They are based on the as-\nsertion that the people are' not faith-\nfully represented in their legislative\nbodies, but ere misrepresented. The\nsame distrust has led to the encum-\nbering ot modern state constitutions\nby a great variety ot minute limita-\ntions upon legislative power. Many\nof these constitutions, instead ot bo\nlng simple framework of government,\naro bulky and detailed statutes legis-\nlating upon subjects which tho people\nare unwilling to trust the legislature\nto deal with. So between the now\nconstitutions, which exclude tho legis-\nlatures from power, and the refer-\nendum, by which the people overrule\nwhat they do, and tho initiative, by\nwhich the people legislate in their\nplace, tho legislative representatives,\nwho were formerly honored, aro ham-\n shorn of power, relieved ot re-\nsponsibility, discredited, and treated\nas unworthy ot confidence. The un-\nfortunate offect of such treatment\nupon the character ot legislatures and\nthe kind ot men who will bo willing\nto serve in them can well bo Imag-\nined. It is the influence of such treat-\nment that threatens representative\ninstitutions in our country. Granting\nthat there have been evllB in our leg-\nislative system which ought to be\ncured, I cannot think that this Is tho\nright way to cure them. It would\nseem that tho true way 1b for the peo-\nple of the country to address them-\nselves to the better performance ot\ntheir own duty In selecting tholr leg-\nislative representatives and in hold-\ning thoso representatives to strict re-\nsponsibility for their action.
1a76da1faea8d6322e39a119b463f279 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.0616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 sylvania is a Republican atate, and un\nless there are some serious reasons \\vh:\na regularly nominated candidate of th\nRepublican party in the state should no\nbe elected it is usually safe to predic\nthat he will win. More than two-third\nof the Republican members of the gen\neral assembly are already publicly com\nmltted to him. No one can honestly o\nfairly question the regularity of th>\nnomination of Senator Quay. The cau\ncus was regularly called and properl;\nconducted. Stalwart Republicans gen\norally throughout the commonwealtl\nhave accepted him as the candidate o\ntheir party and want to see him elected\n"The conspiracy case 'brought agains\nhim In the heat of the campaign ha:\nbf.oi> fully ventilated and the polltlca\ncharacter of the proceedings is thor\noughly understood by i\\e people. Th\nargument of Attorney Watson befor\nthe supreme court clearly demonstrate*\nthat ther^ was nothing in the bills o\nIndictment against Senator Quay nor ii\nthe testimony showlr.n him to have vlo\nlatetl any law. Tills has been mad\nplain to all, as has the fact that thl\nprosecution was Inspired and Institute*\nfor the purpose of influencing vote\nagainst Senator Quay In his senatorla\ncanvass. 11 ia rot my purpose! or In\ntoution to quarrel with any one who 1\nopposed to Senator Quay. That is hi\nright privilege. Hut I do say tha\n1 believe that way down in the heart:\nof nearly one-half of u million RepublJ\ncans of Pennsylvania who voted for m\nfor governor at the last -election ther\nis a, feeling of sympathy for Senate\nQuay in the present contest. He ha:\nbeen a brave soldier in the hour of hi:\ncountry's trials, he has been a gallant\nable and victorious flehl marshal of th\nRepublican party, not only in local am\nstate campaigns, but in one of th>\ngreatest and most bitterly fought na\ntlonal contests ever waged In America]\npolitics. To him more than to any oni\nels?, as chairman of the Republican na\ntio.nal committee, did we owe the elec\nHon of General Benjamin Harrison v\nthe. presidency. As a. member of tin\nUnited States senate he has watchfull:\nand zealously guarded the great Indus\ntrial, manufacturing and commercial in\nterests of our commonwealth. His In\nMuence was potential, ntft only in ma\nterlally aiding in the passage of thi\nMcKinley hill, but with the Democrat\nIn control of Congress, through his closi\nrelations with his colleagues on botl\nsides of th£*hou^e and his ^tate^lnanliki\ncourse on the floor of tfie senate. In\nsaved Pennsylvania Industries from ruli\nby the amendments he had inserted li\nthe Wilson bill for their especial pro\ntec: Ion.
1c64e9ab80065b23f35bd6caf5d29228 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.023287639523 40.735657 -74.172367 regard the so-called primary vote as an expression of opinion on the\nquestion of the Senatorship. From my personal knowledge on the day of\nthe primary and from investigations that I have made since the primary\n; was held, I am satisfied that the declaration I made to Governor-elect Wil-\nson at Princeton on the occasion of the interview between Dr. Wilson and\nthe Hudson delegation regarding the vote in North Hudson is a conserva-\ntive statement. My assertion was that of the 4,500 votes cast for James\nE. Martine in the seven municipalities of North Hudson, which is the\nimaginary Assembly district that I have the honor to represent, there were\nnot forty-five Democrats who knew, cared or considered that there wa*\nany such man as Janies E. Martine on their ticket, or that they were pass-\ning upon the question of a choice for United Senator. I might sdd\nthat on election day there were 11,088 votes cast for the Democratic As-\nsembly candidates in the same municipalities.\n“i have been to considerable trouble to ascertain what the true drift\nof sentiment is among my constituents on this question and was surprised\nto find that aside from those who have mistaken newspaper clamor for the\npopular will there was a unanimity of opinion that the election of James\nE. Martine would be a mistake bordering on a crime, barring, of course,\nwhat some considered as the humorous feature of such a contingency.\n“As evidence of the sentiment that prevails in this community in\nopposition to James E. Martine the following resolutions, adopted by ths\nEmbroidery and Lace Manufacturers Association of New Jersey at a meet-\ning in West Hoboken on December 30, is a fair sample. These resolution*\nread as follows:
0d84e1030413a05a4669a60f88277c1f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.1898906787594 40.063962 -80.720915 and the honor of the country; nol\nfor its safety at the cost of its honor.\nWhile carrying on the war, they upheld\nIts safety because the people believed\nthey would uphold its honor, and thej\nlittle dreamt that after standing Lhii\ntest, its honor was at last to be yielded\nto far minor considerations; the clamor!\nof a section, the needs of a party, ortht\ncomfort of the tax-payers. Wha\nwould be thought of a guardian, who\nafter defending his ward's estau\nagainst attacks, to the necessary injurj\nof her property, should then seek t<\nprostitute her as a way of procuring c\nwedding outfit; or of a man whopleadi\nthe statute of limitation against a jusi\ndebt, that he may distribute the pro\nceeds among his children. The illus\ntrations may seem harsh, but there \nmore truth than beauty in them.\nIt is high time t(iat the American\npeople should wake up to the dishouoi\nthai is maturing against them. If tb«\nwest, which once held the debt anc\nfought to give it value, has nuw con\nverted it into stock and implement!\nand uuincumbered farms, that Is n<\nreason why it should wish to repudiate\nit, when others have come to own It\nand if those who hate to nay taxes, d<\nclamor for repudiation, that Is no rea\nson why a noble party which carrlei\nthe country through the darkest day\nshould defile itself by assenting to thi\nfrand, as a price for continued power\nBetter, far better, be defeated, aud giv\nup the control, than join in a piratica\ncruise, merely to hold the helm on\nvoyafca of infamy.
b0968761fcaee5187caf958978d1325f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0342465436327 39.290882 -76.610759 I am not the enemy of foreigners; but the\nopinion expressed by thejionorabie Senator from\nNew York is one of im-nens* practical import-\nance; for, if I am not greatly misinformed, Pre-\nsident Van Buren owes the vote of one State of\nthis confederacy, I mean the State of Illinois, to\nthe fact of unnaturalized foreigners voting in\nour late election, and casting tlicir votes for him.\nI will not, however, enter on that subject, ahd I\nhave adverted to it now, merely lhat no conclu-\nsion may be drawn from my silence that I ap-\nprove or" tolerate the doctrine advanced by the\nSenator from New York. I here publicly cx\npress an opinion decidedly opposite. 1 think lhat\nthe exercise of the elective franchise always im-\nplies citizenship, though citizenship does not im-\nply the right to the exercise of the elective fran-\n I hold that a voter, whose voice may af-\nfect or change the entire policy of the country,\nmay alter or subvert the Constitution and laws\nof the country, is a component part of the politi-\ncal power of the country. I hold that the pow-\ner over the subject of naturalization has been\nconfided by the Constitution exclusively to the\nGeneral Government, and that no State can\nconstitutionally exercise that power; and that,\ntherefore, no State can confer those privileges\nand immunities, or grant those rights which pro-\nceed from natura ization. This is my opinion,\nand I advance it here merely as a omnter-pro-\njet to that expressed by the Senator from New\nYork. When a foreigner has once been natu-\nralized, I regard him as a brother, as a member\nof our political community, and as entitled, with\nsome few constitutional exceptions,
aa19dce087c92df759f7de161963378e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.1712328450026 41.681744 -72.788147 With the withdrawal of tho peti-\ntion that had been presented at the\nmeeting of the Town Plans commis-\nsion, for tho establishment of a build-\ning line on the east side of Whiting\nstreet, last Monday night, a new one\nhas been made out to take its place.\nThis one has been started by Henry\nTrumbull and other prominent busi-\nness men of the town, and calls for\nthe establishment of a liffeon both\nsides of Whiting street,' from the\nNeri block at Central Square to Broad\nstreet. The petition was prepared to-\nday and will be presented to the peo-\nple interested in a few days. The\nproposition of establishing a building\nline started some weeks ago when\nthe new addition to the Tani block\nacross from the postoftice began The\nstreet in that section is very narrow,\nnow being 58 feet wide, and plans are\n way to establish a line that\nwill make it 73 feet across This will\nnecessitate the moving back of sev-\neral buildings, but the mainyobject is\nto govern the erection of buildings in\nthe future. When there ii no definito\nline by which houses being built may\nbe guided, the tendency is to crowd\nthem out towards the curb and make\na ragged appearance, it is argued.\nThe Town Plans commission is un-\nable to take action on the establish-\ning of a building line unless , a peti-\ntion to that effect is brought forward.\nMany of the residents think that the\ncommission has the authority to place\nsuch a line when the proposition is\nbrought before them. Tbisls not so,\nand therefore matters brought to the\ncommission on street lines must be\npresented by petition only. Only\nthen can action be taken by the\nboard.
01199bbd1f246987edd8e7eb8de31130 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.3849314751394 41.004121 -76.453816 very prudentiiilly Informed tho appli\ncants for ofllco that thu responsibility\nwas a weighty oau, and desired tlicin\nto get tlio endorsement of tho people to\ntheir appointment by way of petition\nthat ho might bo justified in his action ;\nho furthermore desired to consult witli\nUlysses and very strongly intimated\ntho appointment of his (Ulysses')\nchoice. Now I assert that ho violated\nevery pledge in tills respect that ho over\ninado to Mr. Fortneror his friends, not\nWithstanding his conscientiousness to\ntlio contrary. Mr. Portlier, who was an\napplicant presented his petition with\nover ono hundred and forty names to It,\nevery ono of them Bcpublicans and\namong which wero tho most prominent\n(and generally influential) of that viein\nity. Ho also bad a letter from Mercur\nrecommending his appointment. On\ntlio other hand Maybcrry had at least\nseven signers from Catawlssa, besides\nthe names of Charles, Joshua, Jeremi\nah and others from tho Bloom District\nAnd Charlio said in addition unto Sam\nuel, notwithstanding Benjamin should\nhavo tho appointment, that wishes\nof tho people bo gratified, yet as ho did\nnot consult wltn us neither ask our us\nslstanco, (who monopolize tho dlsposl\ntlon of officers in tills County) ho must\nnot bo appointed. Mayberry is near to\nus and has dono all theso things, there\nforoItismy wish andImakoitintlio\nnaturo of a Hat that ho receive tho suf\nfranco at. your hands. And Samuel\nanswered and said, Charles inasmuch\nas It Is thy wish It shall bo done, and if\n1 havo to violato all tho solemn vows\nand promises I hnvo mado to tlio con\ntrary. I acknowledge tho power nnd\nlniluenco thy wealth glvcth theo and\nungrateful would I be, (knowing thut\nyour good wishes and all'ectlou aro with\nmo) should I In tlio least disregard thy\nmandate. It matters not to mo nor\ntho peoplo of tills County, how unmer\nited and unworthy tho appointment, or\nobnoxious tlio Individual, whom you\nrecommend, yet thatyoursllghtest wlsl\nmay bo gratilled Is tlio height of my\naspiration. Oh Consistency thou art\nJoivcl Yours, Ac,
34942875826641e759bed55026780f08 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.3183059793057 37.53119 -84.661888 The Quarterly meeting of this an ¬\ndent and honorable medical society\nwas convened In Walton Opera House\non Thursday the 21st at 11 oclock A\nM with the president Dr Caldwell of\nPerry vllle In the cbalr We say an ¬\ndent and honorable order why The\nassociation was organized at Danvlllo\nIn the office of Dr John D Jackson on\nMarch 24th 1871 with delegates from\nthe counties of Mercer Boyle and Lin\ncoin At a subsequent meeting Gar\nrard county was added to the list The\ncharter members wore Wm Powltog\nthe first presiding officer W B Har\nlab H Brown 8 P Craig George T\nIrwin John D Jackson N D Price\nARMcKeeRWDunlap DC\nTucker J M Meyer Thos Kyle M\nL Forsythe J T Bobon and Henry\nPlummer Of this number but three\nor four remain to tell the tale the\nothers having gone over the great dl ¬\nvide to rest under the shade of the\ntrees With Its life of 33 yearsltbe as ¬\nsociation has embraced In Its member ¬\nship many men of eminence The\ndistrict society as It Is commonly\ncalled has furnished professors In\nmany medical colleges and Cabout a\nhalf dozen presidents to the parent so¬\nciety The Kentucky Stato Medical As ¬\nsociation and more than one has aspir ¬\ned to position In the Federal govern ¬\nmoot As a medical organization It\nhas done well fulfilling Its purpose ad ¬\nmirably that of extension of medical\nknowledge aod tbo advancement of\nmedical science the promotion of\nfriendly Intercourse among physicians\nand the upbuilding of the Interests\nhonor and efficiency of the medical pro ¬\nfession
16722748af20ec0e39179aab720ddff5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2424657217148 40.063962 -80.720915 ness in this State, I ofTer for sale the fol¬\nlowing described tracts of land, viz:\n1. My old homestead farm, on BuHalo creek,\nMarion county, W. Va., containing by sur¬\nvey 252% acres, one hundred and fifty of\nwhich is under improvement; lias on it a\ncomfortable dwelling house and out build¬\nings, Ac.; a tanyard with good bark house,\nshops, Ac.; two tenant houses, with gisxi\norchards near them, and one orchard near the\nimUn dwelling of choice selection of fruit,\nsuch as summer, fall and winter apples,\ndwarf pears, plums, Ac. Tills farm is well\nadapted to the growth or the cereals, or to\ngrazing purposes, is situated on the B. A O. R.\nK., the creek separating the farm therefrom:\nis two miles Irom Fairmingtou Depot and\nfive miles from Farmont.\n2. A Iso, one tract of 2514 acres, one mile be¬\nlow Fairmont, on the Railroad; acres ol\nwhich is cleared, and Is excellent river bottom\nland; the balance mostly under-laid with a\nnine feet stratam of the celebrated Fairmont\ngas-coal. All of this tract is rich and fertile,\nand well adapted to the growth or the grape\nand the cereals,.racelng the morning and\nnoon-day sun. Also,\n3. Pine Cottage, my present residence, con¬\ntains 0 acres and 28 poles, with comfortable\ncottage houseand out buildings, convenient\nto which Isan excellent spring or pure water;\nthe lawn well >«t with shrubbery and ever¬\ngreens; an excellent selection of fruits, or most\nkinds common to this country. 1 his proper¬\nty is situated in the suburos of Fairmont, a\nsufficient distance for repose and yet near\nenough for the advantages of the town, a\nmacadamized road passes by the gate to town.\nIt Is altogether the most desirable and Con¬\nvenient residence in the neighborhood of\nFairmont.
023320f991eef8b7b218d66b8d624b52 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.0178081874683 39.745947 -75.546589 Sheriff Schadt was then turned over\nto the miners for cross-examination.\nTo the surprise of most persons, Mr.\nMitchell took up the cross-examina­\ntion. It was the first time that Mr.\nMitchell had attempted cross-examin­\nation to any extent. In answer to the\nquestions of the mine workers leader,\nthe Lackawanna county sheriff said ho\nhad employed about 40 or 60 deputy\nsheriffs and admitted that they were\npaid by the coal companies. Lead by\nMr. Mitchell, ho said he could not say\nthat a general state of lawlessness ex­\nisted In the county, but In answer to\nanother query said there was a reign\nof terror In existence In some locali­\nties. Among other things he said that\nas a rule crowds dispersed when he or­\ndered them to do so, and that striking\nmine worker» whom he knew obeyed\nhis orders the same as other persons.\nHe also admitted that tho second con­\ntingent of troops sent Into his coupty\nwas ordered there without hts request.\nThis appeared to satisfy President\nMitchell, and General Wilson took tho\nwitness In hand and asked him why\nthe county did not pay the deputy\nsheriffs. The sheriff replied that tho\ncompanies had made the request for\nprotection, and counsel for the witness\nexplained that it was the law in Penn­\nsylvania that the company asking for\nprotection was compelled to pay for\n1L explanation rather surprised\nChairman Gray, who, as he straight­\nened himself up in his chair, said; ”1\nam not fomlllnr with auchan un-Amer­\nican law. When the county or state\nrelinquishes the duty of maintaining\norder and protecting life and property\nand keeping the peace, then they are\nopen to criticism.”\nTwice during the proceedings Attor­\nney Darrow tried to get an admission\nfrom witnesses that they did not em­\nploy the lawyers representing the non­\nunion men before the commission.\nTho miners claim that the attorneys\nare employed by the coal companies,\nvirtually giving the operators two sub­\nmissions before the commission. Coun­\nsel for the operators in each case ob­\njected to Mr. Darrows line of examin­\nation. and the objections were sus­\ntained by Chairman Gray for tho com­\nmission on the ground that It made no\ndifference who were employing the at­\ntorneys, so long as the commission got\nthe Information It desired.\nWhile the entire day was taken up\nIn hearing the stories told of intimida­\ntion, boycotting and personal violence,\nthe commission learned nothing new,\nthe evidence being mostly cumulative;\nIt was stated by a member of the\ncommission that It is possible the\nhearings of the commission may take\nup not above two more weeks. The\nlawyers for the operators met late yes­\nterday afternoon and arranged matters\nso as to expedite the hearings.
7b108e9933ac0149c10f620f95c9ef00 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.4193988754807 43.798358 -73.087921 met the obligation T As if our own\nnends were groaning under the lash ?\nif our kindred, our sisters, mothers,\ndaughters, were gathered in the in- - ior\nfiumanizing mart bought; sold, degraded,\nbrutalized T Alas! No. We should not\nhave hesitated; we should not then\nhave temporized I but hand, heart and soul\nwould have risen, with simultaneous ac\ntion! and our friends, our brethren and\nsisters, had been free! Let us not think\nsufficient to pay the tithes ot mint, anise\ncummin, and neglect the weightier\nmatters of the law, judgment, mercy and\ntaith. Let us not care only lor 'the out-\nside of (he cup and the platter I' Let us\nbe 'whited sepulchres,' lest we hear\nfinal denunciation 'I was a hunger\nand ye gave me no meat; thirsty, and\ngave me no drink; naked, and ye cloth-\ned me not; sick, and in prison, and ye vis\nited me not. Will it be said, that the\n of the slave are all supplied ?\nNevertheless, I tell you that they are fam-\nishing for the bread, of life' thirsting for\nthe living fountains of waters unclad\nwith the garment of praise' strangers\nfrom the covenant of promise !' Their\nwhole 'soul is sick, and their heart faint;\nand while they are 'prisoners of hope,'\nthey are, literally, cast into prison! Yet\nwhile we hold the 'Bread of Heaven,' and\nthe Waters of Life,' we see them perish\nwith hunger and thirst, and fear to m inis-\nter unto them ? Should these things bel\n'Let your light shine before men.'\nLight is, in its very nature, diffusive. One\nafter another will catch a glimpse a ray\na beam. The darkness of midnight\nwill give way. The dawn will brighten\nthe morning star arise the sun appear,\nthe sun of truth, peace, liberty; making\nglorious the day of equal, universal\nFreedom! This is no idle, no poetic\nspeculation.
14bda9792ec52c64d488bdd706e263e0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.0726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 Two daya later it replaced him by Smith,\nand next determined to avtytft bit efforts\nto buy out the landlords. The Tory mem¬\nber! aud Tory outsiders here raised a\nstorm at the delay aud weakness. The\nl'ory Slaiulartl voiced this last evening.\nThe Tory St. Jama strenuously attacks the\nCabinet iu a loader eutltled "Misfortune\n>n Misfortune," utid tauuUid it as being\n'afraid ol putting forth its hard strike at\nthe Irish conspiracy," aud concluding,\n'¦Deeply do we deplore the lack and grasp\nol coulidence aud courage which the Min¬\nisters have displayed." Similar language\nIs heard everywhere among the Tory rank\nand Hie. A change ol trout Is the theme\nol every morning newspaper. The l'ar*\nuellitnH, ort passing through the lobby\nalter the adjournment ol the House, look\ndelighted. The test case is toou coming.\nTuey guttered their first defeat last\nalght when an amendment went to a\ndivision, asking legislation to secure culti¬\nvators of the soil and to Improve the con¬\ndition^ tenure. Thegovernmontopposud\nthis during the debate. The l'umellites\nHeld a pilrate meeting and decided to\nvote the amendment, but the govorn-\nmeut won, joined by llartingtou, Ooechor,\niX-Attoriiuy (ienir.il James, and four\nliberals. 1'be government got a majority\n)I twenty-eight It would havo been a\nmajority even If these had voted with\nheir fellow Liberals. Vet it wai a thin\nhouse, IIIH members dividing. Amongst\n(he absentees were Gladstone, llarcourt,\nDilkc and llrlght.\nTho Timet rejoices that "The govern¬\nment have hastened lo repair the error\nwhich had already lost them both times\niho credit," and thinks it ligniUouit that\nPartington and flosnher voted with the\n(overnment. The AVws laughs at Salis¬\nbury lor "having decided to abandon u\npolicy only just Initiated," and predicts\nlhat the government will lo "out In »\nweek," which la the title, of Its leader.\nThe Tory Skmdart fairly smiles In typo\nLhat its criticisms on ministerial timidity\nhad taken effect.\nair Micnaei Uicks-Ueacb, referring to\nthecnseol Mr. Bradlaugli, said the gov-\nsrnmont was not prepared to oppose that\ngentleman's right to sit and vote in the\nHouse of Commons. The appeal of Mr.\nBradlaugli Is still before the House of\nLords.
9a01865c144f6a5f5638c7c7f87e721c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.148907072202 41.681744 -72.788147 that time, in response to a question\nput to him by the writer, stated that\nhe did not know what the next step\nwould be although it was probable\nnothing definite would be done until\nthe report of the public utilities com-\nmission had been made public. The\naccident on the night in question oc-\ncurred at 9:33 p. m . or 33 minutes\nafter the gateman had gone off duty\ntor ine nigut. Tne crossing is pro-\ntected only between the hours of 6\na.m.and9p.m.\nIn addition to the Forestvllle\ncrossing, it Is probable that the sub-\nject of Federal street crossing will\nagain be brought before the meeting\nof the council by Homer H. Judd. a\nmember of that body. Several\nmonths ago, one person was killed\noutright at spot and at that\ntime Mr. Judd Insisted that some-\nthing be done to safeguard both\npedestrians and motorists at this\npoint After several Interviews with\nrailroad authorities, the matter was\nshelved temporarily and has since\nremained there.\nDoolittle's crossing at the north\nend of the city Is protected by both\nflagmen and signal devices and plans\nare now in the works to put Into op-\neration a tentative scheme whereby\nthe crossing proper would be nar-\nrowed on the east side and the\nsignal lights replaced where they\nwould be more clearly visible to both\npedestrian and vehicular traffic. It\nis believed, however, by some city\nofficials that the only solution at\nthis point Is the elimination of the\ncrossing entirely and the building of\nan overhead bridge.
917471c740a89564300ce75db45357b5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0122950503442 41.681744 -72.788147 The program was remarkable.\nmore through the fact that the par-\nticipants were separated by the\nwidth and breath of the country\nthan by the quality of the entertain\nment. Will is a talker and he was\nright at home. He was the best part\nof the program, to our way of\nthinking. His pungent wit and sly\njabs were clever and his humor was\nrefreshing. His Impersonation of the\npresident of the United States, while\nnot in especially good taste, was\nlaughable because when he changed\nhis voice It bore a remarkable re\nsemblance to that of the gentleman\nat the White House and because be\ndealt so caustically with several\nrather Important matters. And there\nare some who actually believe that\nthe president spoke. Fred and Dor-\nothy stone did not show up to good\nadvantage. Fred's humor was forced\nand the the songs were not \nly well presented. Al Jolson, down\nin New Orleans, sang in his char\nacteristic manner and his program\nwas excellent, except for the fact\nthat transmission from that point\ndid not seem to be especially clear\nor sharp. His voice sounded rather\nmushy. The president of the con\ncern sponsoring the program deliv\nered a short talk in which he de\nscribed the new car, out today. His\nvcice Is well adapted to broadcast\ning that he excels moat of the New\nYork, announcers, even. We were\nmore interested In listening to his\nperfect enunciation and In his clear.\nconcise delivery of remarks, than we\nwere in what he had to say. Paul\nWhiteman presented Gershwin's\n"Rhapsody In Blue" in a truly de\nlightful style. Clarity helped the or-\nchestra to a great extent and that\nweird and unusual number was of\nfered In a colorful manner.'
355932185b9bc28d10914a71830d618d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.4904371268467 41.681744 -72.788147 hsa not been engaged.\nAttorney Wallace Moyle of New Ha-\nven, yesterday entered an appearance\nin the case as counsel for the Ma-\nsonic Charity Foundation, which is\nnamed as one of the beneficiaries of\nthe will. Other heirs are not expected\nto be represented by lawyers.\nThe Masons under the terms of the\nwill, are to receive the residue of the\nestate after bills are paid and the\nother legacies distributed. As any ex-\npense entailed in preventing a break-\ning of the will will fall on the estate,\nthereby reducing the value of the resi-\ndue, officers of the foundation be-\nlieved it would be well' to have a\nlawyer look after their interests.\nAttorney P. F . McDonough of New\nBritain, will appear in the interests of\n Neal and Albert Bradley, first\ncousins of Judge Neal, who were not\nremembered in the will and who are\nexpected to contest its admission.\nRepresentatives of the trust com-\npany claim they have no idea as to\nwhat grounds the disappointed rela-\ntives hope to advance as proof of the\nillegality of the wlil They declare that\nthe document itself will show the men-\ntal condition of the testator to be per-\nfectly sound and they claim to have\nplenty of proof that it was properly\nsigned and witnessed.\nChief among the witnesses for the\nexecutors will be Dr. J. C . Tanner,\nJudge Neal's physician and one of the\nsigners of the will, George D. Mastin\nand George Fait. They also attested\nto the genuineness of Judge Neal's\nsignature.
05e081cf1a2bd1b91c8f990db64e972e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.0397259956874 39.745947 -75.546589 No. 1. With the threo-story brick dwelling\nthereon erected. Beginning on the northeas­\nterly side of Delaware avenue between West\nand Washington streets at the distance of one\nhundred and thirty-two feet from the north­\nwesterly gable of William W Forbests dwell\ning house at a line ot laud of Vincent C. (Li­\npin, deceased, thence with said Gilpins line\nnortheasterly at right angle» with Delaware\navenue one hundred feet more or less, to the\nsoutherly side of Eleventh street, thence with\nthe said side of Eleventh street westerly twen-\nty-fourfeet more or less to a stake at the dis-\ntance of twenty-four feet measured at right\nangles to the first described line ninety-one\nfeet more or less to the said side of Delaware\n«venue and thence thereby southeasterly\ntwenty-four feet to the place of beginning, be\nthe contents thereof what it may. Deed Rec*\nord K, vol. 8, page 308, etc.\nNo. 2. beginning on the northwesterly side\nof Delaware avenue between West end Wash­\nington streets at the distance of one hundred\nand twenty-two feet the northwesterly\ngable of William W. Forbests dwelling, ana\nat a line of land conveyed to James W. Ware,\nthence with said Wares line northwesterly at\nright angles with Delaware avenue, one hun­\ndred and four feet more or less to the south­\nerly side of Eleventh street, thence with the\nsaid side of Eleventh street westerly ten feet\nmore or less to a stake at ten feet at right\nangles from the first described line, thence\nsouthwesterly and parallel with the\nfirst described line one hundred feet more or\nless to the said side of Delaware avenue, and\nthence therewith southeasterly ten feet to the\nplace of beginning, be the contents withi:\nthose bounds what they may. Under and sut\nJeet, nevertheless to restriction, upon the sai\nMaximilian L. Litchtenstein, bis heirs an\nassigns never to erect a building of any kin\nwithin twelve feet of the building Hue of th\nsaid Delaware avenue aforesaid.\nSeized and taken in execution as the pro\nperty of Maximilian L. Lichtenstein, and t.t .\nand to be sold by
1453fed63805df982a159e13e9ba4246 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.368493118975 39.261561 -121.016059 A gentleman of this city, just returned\nfrom Winchester, where he lias been to look\nafter some relatives of his. w ho had bowed\nto the knee of Jefferson Baa), reports a\nscene of desolation utterly indescribable.\nHe says the country looks much like the\ndesert between Cairo and Suez. There are\nnooks, however, out of the way of the main\nroads, in and about Winchester, and the\nsarueiis true of the region around Leesburg,\nwhere the toot of the destroyer did not get,\nbut they are few and far between. The\nslaves are tapidly making their way out of\nbondage, across Maryland into the land of\nfree labor. Nobody is found to distrust\nthem any longer. Lurge squads of them,\nconliscated by our generals in front, under\nthe act of Congress, are famished with evi-\ndence of their freedom. A few days ago\n99, of all ages and sizes, passed through\nthis city in charge of an * flieer to Philadel-\nphia, from General Hanks division. They\nwere surrounded a' the cars by hundreds\nof their ow n color, who poured their scan-\nty oiferings into the hands of the redeemed,\n general tejoioing. It was a most\ntouching scene, for there were in the group\ntwo aged women, bowed down with the\nslave tori, and they evinced great emo-\ntio i at their deliverance. Another squad\nof some hundred or more went through\nFrederick last week to Pennsylvania,where\nthere is great demand for farm labor. Hun-\ndreds are daily released by the generals iu\nfront of Washington, in the advance.\nThe father and son of a Union family\ntook to the woods to avoid being impressed\ninto the rebel array. They were fed and\nsubsisted by the wife and daughters as best\nthey could. One day one of the daughters,\nbeing at the upper window of the house,\nespied the approaching Union forces. She\ntan below stairs, crying out to her mother,\n“The Yankees are coming, the Yankees are\ncoming!' The whole party rushed to the\nlookout, and sure enough the gleaming\nbayonets of our soldiers saluted their glad-\ndened eyes. They shouted und wept lor\njoy. In a short time their hidden father\nand brother were at their bouse door to\nwelcome our inea, and they did it with a\nwill.
31930406aeb065704abb3a7eaaf665cf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.7246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 The ubove item, which has been goin\ne rounds of thepresp, is of no upeciu\n^liiilcunce other tliun to the persons\nfends of Mr.'Dooth, except that ft bring\nlight a truth of the greatest importantthe\nworld. Few peoplo pass throng]\n;e without the nflliction of a eougli a\nmo |>oiut in th< Ir career. In most case\nis is considered the result of a cold or th\n'ginning of consumption, and thousand\nivo become terrified at tlili revelutioi\nid hare sought by a change of air am\ne usu of cough medicines to avert th\nspending disaster. It may safely b\nid that more than half the coughs whicl\ne afllicting the world to»day do not hav\neir origin in tho lungs but otb tlie resul\nmore serious troubles in other organ\nthe body. "Liver coughs" are exceed\ngly common and vet are almost wholly\n Arising from a disorders\nite of the liver they show their results b;\nngesting tho lungs. In fact, tho effort\nthe liver to throw oil tho disease\noducu coughing, even when the lung\nemselves are in a healthy sUte.\nHut it Is a mistake to suppose that sucl\nlicate tissues us the lungs citu long rernnii\na healthy condition when they are be\nX constantly agitated by coughing. Siicl\nheory would beabsurcd. Consumption\nlich was feared at tlrst, is certain to taki\nace unless something is done to checl\ne cause. This must be plain to even\noughtful mind. It stunds to reason\nercfore, that the only wayiu which "live;\nughs" can bo removed is by restoring thi\n'er to health.\nIn this connection another (act of grea\niportance becomes known, which cat\nst be explained by tho relation of ar\ntuul event. Mr. W
0f740b27b934ab0e8e2de79b4c80f4be THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1902.0041095573313 41.004121 -76.453816 Section 2. Thnt sali work shall bo done\nunder the supervision of tho proper Borough\nauthorities, and the services of the Borough\nfnglneer when called" npon by Council In this\nbehalf shall be paid by the said W. R, chnnln\nsnd ( 'hnrles J. Rogers and T. W. Haines or their\ngrantees or astlgns.\nSection 3. That, the snld pipes, Joints, con-\nnections, etc., shall not be laid or constructed\nso as to obstruct, impede or Interfere with the\nfree now or passage of wafer, In, through, over,\nor upon any gutter, drain, sewer, culvert, pipe,\nor wa'er coure; nor so as to Intertero with or\nobstruct the convenient uso or tho streets,\navenues, lnnes and "Keys of the snld Borough,\nnor so as to Interfere with or dnmage private\nproperty, or or any corporation In snld Borough.\nWork to be begun by snld grantees within six\nmonths nnd the snld water and plant to\nbe In tun operntlnn within one year rrom tho\ndate of the passing of this Ordlnnnce or tbe\nfranchises herebv granted nro forfeited.\nSection 4. Thnt, the said W. H. cbnpln and\nChaMt s .T Rogers and T. W . nnlnes or thefr\ngrantees or assigns, shall renalr snd make good\nall damage or Injury to the streets, avpnnes,\nlanes and alleys of the sild Borough, and Mdo\nwalks thereor, and shade trees thereupon, used\nby them ror the purposes nforcsnld.\nSection 5. That tho snld W. R . Chapln and\nCharles .T. Rogers and T. W . Hnl"es or their\ngrantees or asslgnf, shall so lav nnd tralntaln\nthlr pipes. Joints, connections, etc , so ss not\nto Interfere with the pipes. J"lnts, connections,\netc., of the citizens and the municipality, now\nhaving pipes. Joints, connections, etc., nndPr\nthe several streets, lanes and alleys of trie said\nBorough.
0b5df1409485e11a4d29a010f9fb7691 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1900.9465753107559 58.275556 -134.3925 News is getting scarce iu Killisnoo.\nTbe lishing lias stopped aud the facto¬\nry where they manufacture fish oil aud\nguano in such quantities, has closed,\naud on the steamer Cottage City, which\narrived today most of the white men\nwho were employed there will return to\nthe Sound. From now until May the\nvillage will be very quiet. Many of the\nIndians who live here will take their j\nfamilies and go to the woods some few\nmiles away to cut wood for the factory\naud store for next year's use. Coal is\nso high iu Alaska that they use wood on\nall their boats, and also in the cooper?\nmachine and carpenter shops. To live\nin the woods in a tent for three mouths\nduring an Alaska winter I should think\nwrkiiiii h« worth more than $2.50 per cord\nof wood. That is what they receive.\nWe had a treat the other day iu the\nway of seeing a fine two-mast brig from\n Hawaiian islands. She came to San j\nFrancisco loaded with sugar, discharg¬\ned her cargo, loaded again with coal,\nsailed for Sitka, left it for the marines;\nfrom there came to Killisnoo and took\nbetween eight and nine hundred tons\nof guano back to Hawaii with her. Her j\ncrew was composed of 13 men (the un¬\nlucky number) captain, three mates, six\nsailors, oue cook, cabiu boy and a rous-1\ntabout,.! believe they call the man who\ndoes a little of everything. The cap\ntain was a very good christian, so Fath¬\ner SobalefF told me; allowing no work\ndone on the Lord's day; no profanity\namong his men. I was very glad to\nhear that, for so many captains are very\nprofane themselves, and of course you\nmust expect to find it among their\ncrews. It always was a query to me\nwhy men who are always iu such dang¬\ner of being called into eternity at any\nmoment should be so indifferent re-
2d8f61f667e351c28d5829b3403a526d PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1907.9109588723998 31.762115 -95.630789 means attractive In appearance Pinm\nthing lu the shape of the head anil tin\nbreast Is relied on by the rationalist\nscientists ns explaining the delusion\nbut one Is at a loss to understand how\nthis can account for the clrcumstan-\ntlal descriptions that have come down\nto ui Coevals of those old writers\nhave proved t us by their paintings\nthat they held very much the same\nviews as to what constitutes feminine\nbeauty as wc have and we should\ncertainly not discover In the dugong or\nmanatee anything vhuteer to suggest\nin the very falutcst degree the idea of-\na pretty woman Vet there Is general-\nly the Implication of comeliness In the\nverbal pictures the old writers give\nof their mermaids though Columbus\nwho reported that he had seen two \nthree admitted that he saw no beauty\nin them The seal explanation perhaps\ndoes the leant violence to ones tradi-\ntlonal Ideas as wbntever may lie\nthought of Its resemblance to a wo-\nman It Is hi Itself graceful and its face\nand eyes are pleasing\nThere Is at any rate a rather sug-\ngcstlro coincidence In the view that\nthe mermaid of action Is the seal of\nfact fur closely allied If not Identical\nwith mermaids were the seal maid-\nens of a thousand fables The at-\ncepted tradltlou was that these maid-\nens assumed the form of seals which\nthey could relinquish at any moment\nby divesting themselves of the seal\ntfclns Only If while they were dis-\nporting themselves In quasi human\nguise their keal Integuments were stol-\nen
5ab22d5ce7494851a444da23fc2b4d36 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1906.223287639523 36.620892 -90.823455 emergency It !s necessary to have\nhot water, and tht ijulcker it can be\nhad, the better. In rates of croup, for\nInstance, it attacks the child suiidcnly\nin the night, without warning, tuid\nsomething tftust be done quickly. To\nget the child into hot water as soon as\npossible is generally the first thing ad-\nvised, says Medical Talk for the Home.\nIn country homes, or homes where\nwood and coal are the only mtans of\nproducing fire, there is always more or\nless precious time lost in trying to kin-\ndle a fire. Sometimes the wood won't\nburn, and the fire goes entirely out or\nsmolders in a most cinsportlnp manner,\nwhile all the time the sic'.; c'uiid's condi-\ntion is growing worse. Any father or\nmother who has been aroused in the mid-\ndle of night by the sudden sickness\nto which children are so subject, the\nwhole house cold, not a bit of fire any-\nwhere, wculd appreciate, more, periiaps,\nthan anyone else, an alcohol or an 11\nstove that can be lighted simply by\nstriking a match, and In a few moments,\neven before the fire In the cook stove\ncould be kindled, the water will be hot\nand relief brought to the sick one.\nThese gtovea are so Inexpensive that\nIt seems as though every home should\nhave one. They are so convenient for\nmany things. Breakfast, or the even-\ning meal, can be prepared with one of\nthese stoves. You can poach eggs, make\ncoffee or tea, cook rice, oatmeal, any of\nthe cereals, make an oyster stew, and\nmany other things can be very earlly\nand conveniently prepared
68c384430153660a35903ef206fad19f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.546575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 tory over the mighty Willard who. had"\nnever before been knocked from his feet. In .\nthis battle Dempsey displayed a dynamic.\noverwhelming strength and power never\nbefore known in the history of the ring;\nand now again in his phenominal victory\nover Carpentier he displayed that same in-\ndomitable force" and nerve never before\nseen in any human being. The fact that\nDempsey took Nuxated Iron as\nhis training for both Willard and\ntier is convincing evidence of the\nimportance he attaches to keeping\nhis blood rich in 6trength-givin- g\niron, and the high regard in which\nhe holds Nuxated Iron as a master\nstrength and blood builder.\nIn a statement made at his headquarters\nin New York after the figrht Jack Dempsey\nsaid;" A couple of years ago In preparing\nfor my big fight with Jess Willard I took\nNuxated Iron, and after I hart taken it\nfor a short while I was pos jvo I could\nstand harder strains with less fatigue\nthan before; and I firmly believe that\nNuxated Iron put power behind\nmy punch and helped me to whip Jess\nWillard and thereby win the world's cham-\npionship at Toledo. After that time when-\never I felt rundown I used Nuxated Iron to\nhelp build up my physical condition; and\nwhen I started to train for the international\nchampionship bout against Carpentier I re-\nsumed the refrnlar use of N uxated Iron, feeling\npositive that it would help give me that nig-\ngard strength, endurance and power that is\nof greatest importance in contests of this kind,\nbecause, other tilings being equal, victory\nalways goes to the strongest man. In this I\nwas not mistaken as Nuxated Iron again\ncame to the front at the time I most needed\nIt, and.I am sure that it played an important\npart in getting me into such fine physical con-\ndition as to enable me to win so quickly and\neasily in my battle with Carpentier. Before\nthe flght I bad beard so much of Caronti.r'a\ngreat skill and the ease with which be had\ndefeated all the noted hcavyweightsof Europe
341f076ab414a6c9ec8b26020fe9a85f THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.6506848997972 40.419757 -77.187146 An Inquest indented and taken in\nWatts township in the county of Perry,\nthe 17th day of August, in the year of our\nLord 1H70, before A. E . Howe, Esq., one\nof the justices of the peace, in and for\nthe county aforesaid, upon the view of\nthe body of Samuel E. Albright, late of\nBuffalo township, county aforesaid, then\nand there lying, on the oaths of Jacob\nWagner, Thos. M'Elvy, Harry Wright,\nGeorge W. Frank, Isaac Straw and H.\nM. Shrauder, good and lawful men of\nthe county aforesaid, who being duly\nsworn and affirmed and charged to in-\nquire on the part of the Commonwealth\nwhen and where and how the said Sam-\nuel E.Albright came to" his death, do\nsay on their oaths or affirmations, that\nthe said Samuel Albright, not hav-\ning the fear of God before Tils eyes, but\nbeing moved and seduced by the insti-\ngation of the devil, on a day unknown\nin the year aforesaid, at an hour un-\nknown, at Watts township, at what Is\nknown as Glrty's cave, and being then\nand there alone, with a certain revolver\nof the value of $15, which he placed to\nhis right temple, then and there with\nthe revolver aforesaid, voluntarily and\nfeloniously, and of malice aforethought,\nshot and killed himself; so the jurors\naforesaid say that the said Samuel E. Al-\nbright then and there in manner afore-\nsaid as a felon of himself feloniously,\nvoluntarily and of malice aforethought,\nhimself killed, shot and murdered him-\nself against the peace and dignity of the\nsaid Commonwealth.
384fc8208d33f7f3a11cc1ef9f76f490 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1904.8183059793057 46.601557 -120.510842 number of times to give more in-\nformation in regard to the existence of\ntyphoid in the city of North Yakima\nand vicinity, and incidentally it has been\nC limed roundly for giving the conditions\nany publicity at all. There are those\nwho think tnat the way to deal with an\nepidemic or threatened epidemic is to\nkeep Mtliel all information in regard to\nil. and that a town is injured by pub-\nlished report* of the existence of dis-\nI'ii-i1. To these, and those who may cri-\nticize It, the Herald has this to say: We\nbelieve that the public welfare and the\ninterests of cvi rv individual in Yakima\ncounty demands that the fullest public-\nity possible be given to the findings of\nDr. Bebb. the bacteriologist working vm-\nder the direction of the state board of\nhealth. The theory that the town will\nbe hurt by a publication of facts,\nis silly: everybody knows that the ex-\nisting conditions will not last forever,\nand that they are due to faults that\nought to l>e and will be corrected when\nthe attention of the people are called\nto them. But if a few people living\nelsewhere are so easily scared that the\npublication of these facts will cause\nthem to stay away from North Yak-\nima temporarily, or if their bodies are\nin such condition that they are extra-\nordinarily susceptible to the attacks of\na disease that is not sweeping the people\nof the valley down like the waving grass\nbefore the scythe of time, let them stay\naway: the town can better afford to\nworry along for a little while without\nthemthanitcantogoonina waythat\nnifely will bring serious trouble upon us\nall if persisted in.\nSince Dr. Bebb began her work here\nshe has had submitted for her examina-
60015825c5c79a1597383c57146cf2a5 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1914.842465721715 37.451159 -86.90916 Static electricity seems to be every-\nwhere. Wo are quite surrounded by it\non all sides. It is In the earth, thcnlr,\nIn our clothes, on the books, the rug\nnnd tho walls. It sticks the papers to\ngether on the desk. It nttracts feath\ners and bits of lint to metal and glass.\nIt leaps from our fingers when we\ntouch metal objects. Now and then a\ncrackling noise will be heard when the\ncoat Is being taken olT. A woolen sklrt\nor sweater drawn quickly over the\nbend will produce crackling sparks. By\nshullllng the dry feet over the carpet\na considerable s.p .'irU can bo obtained\nfrom the lingers.\nRear in mind that static electricity\nIs not the kind that is used to light the\nelectric lamps In tho house. Very lit-\ntle work has ever been found for static\nelectricity. It is a worthless vagabond\ndelighting In mad pranks. In the form\nof lightning it dashes down the\nsky, scaring honest folk nearly to\ndeath, often doing considerable dam-\nage. It frequently visits the press room\nIn large printing establishments and\ntlcl;s the sheets of paper together un-\ntil the presses have to be stopped. It\ngathers on the yarns und threads In\ntextile mills, knotting and tangling\nthem, and Is always In mischief.\nIt is easy enough to prove the pres-\nence of static electricity. Rub a bit of\namber, glass, hard rubber or sealing\nwax with a silk linuderchlef or a\npiece of woolen cloth, and It will at-\ntract bits of paper and small particles\nof metal. When we stroke the cat's\nhack this static electricity collects very\nrapidly. It snaps and crackles and\nHashes as it discharges Tcotwoen our\nlinger and the animal's fur. This dis-\nplay of static electricity is nothing\nmou or less than a miniature thunder\nshower without the rain. From Har-\nper's "Iioglnnlng Electricity," by Don\nCameron Shafer.
08038c4c29001fd88be7b89f5f9169c1 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.4698629819889 39.756121 -99.323985 There is on record in the annals of\nthe state of New Jersey a season when\nthe people actually suffered for want\nof food. It was in the autumn of 1687,\nwhen the failure of crops caused a\nfamine that prevailed all over the\nstate and afflicted the people of cen-\ntral and southern New Jersey sorely.\nThey were driven to eating roots and\nnuts. The Indians were disposed to\nbe kindly to the people and gave them\nmuch assistance and taught them how\nto make the best of the natural re-\nsources of the country. They. showed\nthem how to gather and prepare the\noysters and the clams and make the\nstrange potpourri that this generation\nknows as Clam chowder. They taught\nthem the planking of all kinds of fish\n(shad were not then obtainable). \nIndians were short of maize and in\nthe same predicament, but they being\nnative to the forest were more re-\nsourceful. Conditions were better in\nthe upper part of the state, because\nthere was more direct trading.\nThere are no records to show that\nanybody actually perished during the\nperiod of the famine. The facts of the\nterrible condition in the Jersey col-\nony reached the sympathetic pilgrims\nand puritans, and early in the spring,\njust as many, worn by the hardships\nof winter, were despairing, a ship\nload of cereals and preserved meats\ncame up the Delaware river, and its\nargo was generously distributed. A\ngeneral thanksgiving followed. The\ncrops of the following. summer were\nunusually good, and it was never re-\ncorded again in history that New Jer-\nsey had gone hungry.
432d0a9963b35875a178fd9e42fa0386 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7219177765094 40.063962 -80.720915 without anv recollection of tho Idea\nattached to tlio expression. 8 . A\ndrop or wntcr fulling on tho brow\nsuggested a dream or Itnty, great\nthirst, tilul n draught of Orvietto..\nII. A light, surrounded by u rod pnper,\nlib ireaSruKl or it storm of lightning,\nwhicli reproduced a violent uunpest\nwhich he had encountered botwoon\nMorlnix nnd Hnvre.\nThat dreapift are iiot quite independ¬\nent of the will, apixtars from (lie singu¬\nlar qaso of thomas Kohl, of Edinburg:\nDREAMS NOT INDEPENDENT OKyilK WII«L.\n"About the ago of fourteen I was al¬\nmost every night unhappy in iny sleep\nfrom frightful dreams. Sometimes\nhanging over a frightful precipice, and\njust ready to drop down; sometimes\npursued for iny life, and stopped by a\nwall, or.by a sudden loss of all strengt h;\nsometimes ready to'be devoured by. a\nwild beast. low long I was: plagued\nwith such dreams I do. not now. recol¬\nlect. T bolii'vo It was. JfprjfiT 5*iunr.or two\nat least; and I think they had. not quite\nleft m'e before I was sixteen.' In those\ndays 1 was. much given to what Mr.\nAddison, ill one of his Spectator^ calls\n'castle-building;' and In my evening\nsolitary walk,.which was generally all\nthe exercise I took, my thoughts would\nhunry me into some active scenoL-wliere\nI generally acquitted myself much to\nmy own satisfaction; and lit these scenes\nof, imagination I "performed many a\ngallant exploit. At, the same time in\nmy dreams I found myself the most\narrant coward that ever was. Not oqly\nmy courage, but my strength failed me\niii every danger; And I ofteii >rose from\nilly bed in the morning in sudli d panic,\nIkllU Ib.lUUIV WJIIIO UIUU
1e8c3b0d645831983c6653400967207b THE CRITTENDEN RECORD ChronAm 1905.2452054477424 37.332829 -88.081135 whether the king Maid that Jtint to wnk\nlad up. raime dud hud a grand army hut-'o - n\non hla coat, but dad choked up a lit-\ntle, and then began to explode, a little at\na time, like a bunch of flrecrackerx. and\nAnally he went off all In a bunch. Dad\naald: "Look a here, Mr. King, aoma\none haa got you all hailed up about that\nnar. I know, because I wan In It, and\nnow the north and Ihe south are United,\nand t an whip any country that wanta to\nllht a champion, and will go out and\nget reputation, by goah!"\nThe king laughed at touching dad off.\nand asked dad what waa the matter of\nAmerica and Great Britain getting to-\ngether and making all tialiona know\nw hen they had heller keep ibelr places\nmil talking about lighting. Iiad\naaid he never would toiiaenl to America\nand Great Krlt al ti get ling together to flKht\nany country until Ireland got JiikIIcp and\nwaa ready to come Into tamp on au\nquality, and the king aald he would an-\new it for the Irishmen of Ireland If dud\nwould pledge the Irishmen uf America,\naiine we had about as many Irlahnn u\nIn America as he had In Ireland, and dad\naid if the king would give Irelund what\nshe asked for, he would see thai ti n\nIrMtmen in America would sing (ind\nSave the King I guess dad and lh\ning would have sell led the Irish ques- -\nlo in about fifteen inliiuiiH. and sigi.i d\n1 In ut). only a rrvanl luoiiglit lu a\ntwoiiuart lintil" of champagne, and\n:tdandth kit Imiln'1 dranka ti 1
30ecd421b5e244f3065b8f8032a7b086 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.0999999682901 40.735657 -74.172367 Section 1. That Public Service Railway Com-\npany he and It 1h hereby authorized and re-\nquested to Install u cross-over between the\nnorth and south tracks of Its atreet railway n\nThomas street, east of Pennsylvania avenue, !n\nfhe City of Newark, County of Essex and State\not New Jersey. The centre line of said cross-\nover la described as follows:\nBeginning at a point in the centre line of tlie\nsoutherly track In Thomas street, distant fifty-\nnine feet (59) eastwardly from the intersection\nof said centre line with the centre line of\nPennsylvania avenue and extending thence nm\nfollows: (1) eastwardly curving toward the\nleft with a radius of one hundred and two feet |\nuni thirty-five hundreds ».f a foot (102.85) a :\nllstance of twenty-four feet and forty-four I\nhundredths of a foot (24.44> to a point of tan-\ngent; thence (2) south seventy (70) degree*\nseventeen (17) minutes east thirteen feet an<l\n hundredths of a foot (]f.(F7) to a i\npoint of curve, thence (8) curving toward the\nright with a radius of one hundred and ♦wo\nfeet and thirty flv; hundredths of a foot (102.35)\na distanco of twenty-four feet and forty-four\nhundredths of n. foot (24.44) to a point In the\ncentre line of the northerly traok In Thomas\nstreet *»ast of Pennsylvania avenue snd there\nconnecting therewith.\nSec. 2. The rails of the track composing sail\ncross-over are to be laid on each side of and\nequally ch■ tftnt from the centre line above!\ndescribed and to be of a gauge off four feet I\ntight and one-half inchee (4 ft* RVa In ).\nSec. 8. Permission is further given to said\ncompany to operate .cars over said cross-ovor\nby electricity supplied to electric motors on\nthe cars from overhead wires by what Is known\nas the overhead trolley system.\nSec. 4. After said crow-over has been con-
084ed49ca47d960b3c80e7b4b57783af THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.4549180011638 39.743941 -84.63662 I have discovered since I com\nmenced this letter that it is utterly\nimpossible to describe the Centenni\nal, or even give an idea oi its im-\nmensity, and must refer your read\ners to the beautiful illustrations\nprintel on the outside of the Demo\ncrat some weeks since.\nI am pleasantly located in an 8x\n10 room just opposite machinery hall,\nand I am lulled to sleep nightly by\nthe thumping,' fizzing, whizzing and\nbuzzing of a thousand different noisy\ninventions which are running day\nand night, interspersed with all the\nordinary screams tT steam whistles,\nand a large number ot newly discov\nered noises that some inventive ge\nnius has adapted to "go" by steam,\nBut every apparent annoyance has\nits compensation, and I can thank\nthe of these distracting\nsounds, that they prevent my hearing\nthe buzzing of the' myriads of mos\nquitoes that seem to have engaged\nmy room prior to my arrival and in\naddition V this advantage, after I\nhave once gone to sleep amidst all\nthese difficulties, I defy any numbe'r\nof centennial bed bugs to disturb\nthat slumber. For all these com\nforts, including the amusement fur\nnished by a family of about 80 Japan\nese, who .have rented the bacK yard\nupon which my front window opens,\nas a camping ground, I pay $18 per\nweek with breakfast thrown in. Af\nter availing myself of having one of\nthose breakfasts "thrown in," 1 reit\nthat it was worth $18 per week to be\npermitted to get my meals where I\npleased.
2251a6b7a63875b55ead6d8e2682cad2 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1904.7663934109999 43.994599 -72.127742 linger a little longer at the breakfast\ntable. Then the sweetest music of the\nworld would begin to sound. The old\nvillage bell would send its silvery notes\nrolling down the valley. Then, after\nmorning prayers, the horses were hitch-\ned up, and father and mother and all\nthe children rode to town in the same\nbig wagon. Then the pew was a fam-\nily pew, and all the members were\nthere. Then came the sermon, then\nthe Journey home, then the quiet yet\nbountiful dinner, then the afternoon for\nreading or restful quiet then the sing-\ning of the hymns around the old fash-\nioned piano. No Damrosch's orchestra\nor Theodore Thomas' stringed Instru\nments ever had such enthusiastic au\ndiences and participants as those old\nfamily oratorios about the piano, where\nour sisters played and our fathers and\nmothers and the rest of the family all\nJoined In the singing. Then the even\ning church service again or, If the\nfarm was too far away, the evening\nprayers and early bed. You know, O\nman, that old fashioned Sabbath \nmeant more than mere cessation from\nworldly work. It meant quiet com-\nmunion with God. It meant Bible\nstudy and sacred readings as well as\nmere rest. Do you wonder that such a\nSabbath as our fathers observed was\nthe very foundation of church life, of\nChristian home life, of Bible reading\nand of consecration to God?\nAJongside of this beautiful Sabbath\nday of rest I want you to place the\nmodern Sabbath, with its so called lib-\neral Ideas. First, where do we find the\nvestibule of the Sabbath ? Namely, Sat\nurday night. To bed early? Oh, no\nSaturday night has come. In our large\ncities the street cars are crowded,\nWhere are the people going? Some to\nthe theaters; others, alas, to places of\nstill more evil resort! Men and wom-\nen, tired from work now, are turning\nthis Saturday night into the hardest\nkind of work. They are dissipating for\npleasure's sake. To the nonchurchgo-\ner, as a rule, Saturday night is only\ntoo often a time for free indulgence of\nevery desire that Is bad.
0067550ddf5521df133c82bf5b4bc64a PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.091780790208 40.441694 -79.990086 Inspector Trimble Say That If Mabnrnelte\nla Proven Gallty He 'Will be Decapitated\nIn Remarkably Short Order.\nMr. "W. F . Trimble, who is a. member of\nthe Board of Prison Inspectors, was seen\nat his home on Vermont street, Allegheny,\nlast evening, and asked for his opinion in\nregard to the matter. He said:\n"I have no opinion to express until I hear\nboth sides of the story. To my mind\nit is only a question of veracity, and the\nboard will have to find out who is lying\nabout it Dr. Maharneke has dented the\ncharges, although not under oath. When he is\nput on oatn he certainly will swear that he is\nnot guilty. One good point in his favor is that\nhe asked for the official investigation. If he\nwas guilty he certainly would not be the first to\nwant the case investigated. The prisoner who\nhas given his testimony against Maharneke,\nhas nothing to lose, while Maharneke has ev-\nerything be owns in the world to lose. When\nMaharneke swears that he did not accent thn\nmoney there will be a fine where to draw\nthe line and determine who is lying. If Mrs.\nMair can produce the receipt she claims to\nhave had In her pa session, then I think that\nwill settle it and Maharneke must get out We\nwill chip his head off quicker than it could be\ndone with a meat ax if be is guiltv.\n"In case Dr. Maharneke is found guilty of\naccepting a bribe, aiding prisoners to escape,\nand discharged, will he be prosecuted for try-\ning to effect tbo escape?"\n"I do not know what will be done If he is dis-\ncharged. I suppose any citizen could make an\ninformation against him and have him tried\nfor the offense. I have not heard any expres-\nsions of opinion from theothermembers of the\nboard on this point To sum up the whole situa-\ntion, Maharneke is innocent until he is proven\nguilty. I do not know when the other side will\nbe heard. We did not adjourn the meeting\nthis morning until 2 o'clock, and we were then\nso tired out that we conldn't hear Dr. Mahar-\nneke's version of the affair."
30e53505de128bb1a6e087df51cd55d5 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.7794520230848 31.960991 -90.983994 The confiding people have evidently\nmisunderstood the lords of repudiation, by\nlistening too much to their loud profes­\nsions of democracy, without looking suffi­\nciently close to their works. If the tree\nis to be judged by its fruit, never were\nthe works of the most despotic tyrant\nmore inimical to the honor and interests\nof any people, than has been the works of\nthe repudiating aristocracy, to the honor\nand interest of the people of Mississippi.\nOn the other hand, the anti-bond lords\nhave certainly mistaken the people, in\nsupposing that they can coax them into\nany excesses whatever,by merely naming\ntheir lordly, speculating, unjust and mon­\nstrous measures, democratic measures. —\nBriscoes bill, if understood, is enough to\nopen the eyes of the people to the start­\nling truth, that whatever may be the in­\ntention of anti-bondsinep, its legislation\ntakes from the good and gives to the bad.\nThe people have only to look at the acts\nand doings of the anti-bond junta, and\nthen refer to the fundamental principles\nof democracy contained in Jeffersons in­\naugural address, to be able to vote under­\nstanding^ at the approaching election.\nIn a question involving high moral con­\nsiderations, where private rights, party\npolitics and public weal are commingled\nand seem to dash, an orthodox \nto mete out to the several interests invol­\nved, their due measure of justice, is cer­\ntainly desirable. Such a standard I have\nfound in certain resolves of my native\ncounty. I sent it to the late July conven­\ntion, to which body 1 was elected a dele­\ngate, but the anti-bond caucus members\ntrampled it under foot. The resolves,\ncontaining the standard alluded to, were\nunanimously adopted by a public meeting\nFairfax county, July 18:h, 1774, at\nhich George Washington presided as\nchairman, Benjamin Harrison, father of\nWilliam Henry Harrison, acted as secre­\ntary; and George Mason, of revolutionary\nmemory, as reader. It was resolved at\nthe said meeting, “that if the destruction\nof the tea at Boston be regarded as an in\nvasion of private property, tbat we (the\npeople ofFairfax,) shall be willing to con\ntribute towards paying the East India\nCompany the value; but as we consider\nthe said company as tools and instruments\nin the hands of the British government\nand the cause of our präsent distress, we\nshould forbear from dealing with them;”\nand “that all tea, now in the colony, be\ndeposited in a store house, until a suffici\nen t sura of money be raised to pay the\nowners the value, and then to be publicly\nburned and destroyed.”
2b23c8cd2c8795c1a943bbd2d8e377d5 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.4315068176052 39.24646 -82.47849 ed to answer the same purpose was\nin full torce; its provisions seemed\nample; there was no complaint on\nthat score from any quarter, it was\nto expire within a year after the\nclose of the rebellion. If the ob\nject of this new bill were only to\nextend the time, a single section in\ntwo lines would have been suffic-\nient. If in any one point enlarged\npowers were needed, another sec-\ntion, equally brief, would have suf-\nficed. But neither of these was\nthe true purpose of the bill. Its\nmain object is explained in the\neighth and ninth sections. The\neighth section provides that in all\nStates where the jurisdiction of\nthe civil courts has been suspend-\ned, and wheie, by reason of any\nlaw, custom prejudice, the same\ncivil rights which have been accor-\nded to the white man, have not\nbeen accorded to the negro, the\nPresident shall "extend to all .cas -\nes relating to persons so discrimi-\nnated against, military jurisdiction\nand protection," and the ninth sec-\ntion declares thST'the agents of the\nFreedmen's Bureau shall under the\ndirection of tho War Department\ntake cognizance of all cases of this\nnature, and shall try, and if guilty,\npunish by fine and imprisonment,\nall State officers who enforce any\nsuch discriminations created by\nState laws "All cases relating to\npersons so discriminated against!"\nWhat does that mean? Did you\never consider it? All cases, crimi-\nnal and civil whether to punish\ncrimes, or to enforce contracts, or\nto compel fair dealings.
42e4acddddc43020a91b13bd5713bd5a THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.8863013381533 39.369864 -121.105448 There are other men, again, who\nwould fain recall each successive year\nthat has come and gone since those first\ngolden ones. Theirretrospective glances\nfall upon splendid opportunities, rare\nchances, certainties thrown wilfully\naway; but, in the present, they discern\nno hope, no incentive, no prospect of\nsuccess. Yet when this very year,\nwhich now seems so barren, has been\nnumbered with its predecessors, it\nbecomes radiant like them with lost\nchances. And thus it will continue;\nfortune will modestly court them every\nyear, and they will never know it until\nshe is dead, or has thrown herself into\nthe arms of less stupid admirers. The\ntruth is, there never were better chances\nfor the willing mind and arm than there\nare in California to-day. Wealth can\nnot be so easily picked up on the rivers\nbank or from the ravines where nature\ndeposited it, but the more legitimate\nmodes obtaining it are far from being\nexhausted. The various kinds of pro-\nductive industry, the useful arts which\nminister to mans wants or promote his\nenjoyment, are hardly yet entered upon\nin this State. We have all been too\nbusy raking in the earth for jewels—-\nseeking buried treasures, ready to our\nour hands—to think of pursuing the\nordinary healthful avocations which\nalone can build up private and public\nprosperity on a permanent basis. After\nten years, we are awaking to the thous-\nand advantages afforded by a new coun-\ntry, and some are improving them. But\nthe class of chronic croakers to whom\nallusion has been made have their eyes\nset in the backs of their heads, and only\nsee the advantages that belonged to the\npast. They even ridicule the patient\nplodder who begins some apparently\nunpromising enterprise, until he hushes\nthem into wonder by his complete suc-\ncess.
35c2f368055613dc000dbdee4c0fcea3 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2068492833587 44.939157 -123.033121 more congregnted to witness tho prom-\nised coniliat, but Officer Whito advised\nthem to sturt nothing of tho kind in\nSalem and if they wanted to fight, to\ngo across tho river.\nDetermined to pnmiliol each other,\nt no men repaired to the west end of tho\nWillnnietto bridgo nnd tho fight com-\nmenced. I'ivo of tho men In tho party\nbegan fighting all nt oneo when Oeorgo\nflosser, deputy sheriff of Polk county,\nintervened. No pulled tho men npa'rt\nand partly restored order when ho wa\nndvised that Noel Heed, n fellow with\na shady history in police circles hoth in\nMarion and Polk comities, drew a re-\nvolver upon John Sumner. Mr. Oosser\napproached Heed nnd the latter whisk-\ned his hand to his back pocket and\nwnrnod the officer to keep away. Oos-\nser made Hoed throw his hands, how-\never nnd searched him. Ho found ni\n but nfterwnrds learned that Heed\nslipped the weapon to his brother, Tom\nHeed, who was holding it in his hand\nwhen scorched by Oosser.\nNoel Reed was convicted by a jury in\nMarion county circuit court of nssault-in- g\nn limn in Salem. His conviction\ntook place on March 27, 1911, and on\nApril S, 1911, the convicting jury rec-\nommended leniency to the court nnd'\nIteed wns given a fl."0 fino ami tha\ncourt, after remitting this fine, sus-\npended scntenco during good bohavior.\nRecords nt tho police stntion show that\nthis man 1ms been arrested twico on the\ncharge of carrying concealed wonpons.\nNotwithstanding Heed Is a man witli\na pnlico record, ho was released on his\nown reengniznncn by Justico of tha\nreneo Webster this morning when hn\nwas brought before him on tho charge,\nof larcenw of a revolver from a locnl\nlodging bouse.
6f6bef49d9381b510f73765e5e593edd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.9767122970572 39.745947 -75.546589 stallion, while her father-in-law. gUbf0 and f„trntd w|th a *maii chaill,\nJohn K. Biddle, of Hartley, charged Escape teemed to be impossible but in\nThompson with the larceny of a gome manner during Thursday night he\nThe testimony heard In City mBnaged to break a section of the\n( ourt today showed that Thompson chain that fastened him and made his\nhad swapped two mules he bought for\n$28 with John W. Biddle for the two\nbay horse*, which were valued at\n$300. Biddle drove the horses to this\ncity last Friday.\nWhen the case was called today. J .\nFrank Ball represented Thompson.\nMrs. Biddle was the first witness, and\nrelated how her husband came homo\nwith a pair of mules about 1.30\noclock last Saturday morning in a\ndazed condition. After several hours\n revived him enough to drive back\nto this city with the mules, which\nBiddle did not know how he got. Mrs.\nBiddle said that when they reached\nthe city limits they allowed tho mules\nt> go for themselves, and they went\ndirect to Thompson's stable at Front\nand Hawley streets.\nThompson was coming from his\nhome at tho time, and Mrs. Biddle\npaid she asked him to give her the\nhorse*, as they were not owned by\nBiddle. Thompson replied that the\nanimals were In Jersey. Mrs. Biddle\nthen complained to tho police and\nUter that day she\ndriving one of the horses, she\nWhile Mr. Ball waa examining Mr*.\nBiddle, she looked at Philip L. Garrett,\nher attorney, and Mr. Ball »topped her,\nsaying: Dont look at Mr. Garrett,
31a82e644df13ac70e9256bf9bdccfda EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.9030054328578 39.745947 -75.546589 pointed out today by Republican lead­\ners ihat ap-iculturc is the biior st and\nmost vital business In this country,\nand farmers have been caught in a\nfinancial crisis.\nAn earnest ffort will be made to\nextend the assistance 0f Ihe farm loan\nact to b nant farmers and a more lib­\neral policy by the Federal Reserv*\nsystem toward stockmen and others,\nfend som»> system of personal rural\ncredit will he advocated.\nLeading farm) rs ami farmer age»,\ndes claim that the, presmt adminis­\ntration has brought on great eeonomf«\n««•orders which are now affectinrt\nlit. whole nattrm. Ttr-y contend that\nthe agricultural production of Amer­\nica is threatened with a serious col­\nlapse because of 'niquitous laws and\nthe abs nee of others.\nA short while ngn the farmers mad*\nfrantic, but futih, appeals to the Sco­\n ary of th: Treasury and the Comp­\ntroller of Currency for relief from\nthe stringent regulations of credit, hi\norder to p t fund- lo market the crops\nto advantage. When |hc Federal Re­\nserve Hoard establish'd its ruins to\nrestrict cr .ft In an cfTnrt to cut dow»\ninflation and reduce the cost of living,\nthe farm rs were hard hit, for It has\nbeen their custom In go to the banka\nand secure loans on crops just hare-\nvested or in Ihe ft Ids. The new mkl\nblocked that courtesy, leaving the\nf irne rs in desperat pl'ghts for fnnda\nto provide for fertilizer, machinery\nand other farm nerds.\nIt was estimated by experts bet\nttbr dhop In prices of farm product*\nbetween July 1 and September i cn*rt\nthe farmers of th) United States not\nj ss than «1.782
1872b7068024c3e3d4eb86572343bfc3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.0452054477423 39.261561 -121.016059 During the recent snow storm, a mail carrier\nby the name of lolk, started over the Salmon\nmountains with the mail, and not reaching his\ndestination within a reasonable time, it war\nfeared, and in fact so reported, that he had per-\nished. A few days later, however, his friends\nwere very agreeably surprised by his arrival\namong them. He missed his way in the storm\nand wandered around several days, suffering\nfrom the cold and getting his feet badly frozen.\nSeveral new quartz ledges have been stiuck\nrecently near Oro Fino, which prospect so well\nthat arrangements are being made to erect i\nmill in that vicinity next spring. It is to he done\nby a joint stock company who have capital suf-\nficient to carry it through and make a safe ami\npermanent establishment of it.\nAs I expected, the reported lode dis-\ncovery, near this place, which I mentioned in\ntny last, turned out to be a hoax. A couple of\nMexicans, while prospecting for quartz, struck\na vein of sulpliurets which they pronounced\nsilver ore; they brought some of it to town and\nsonic sensation fellow got a piece of it to have\nassayed, but in its stead he sent the assaycr a\npiece of genuine Washoe silver ore. The re-\nturn, of course, was astonishingly rich, and the\nresult a number one excitement, which soon\nsubsided on the facts becoming known.\nAn enterprising individual is about to estab-\nlish a broom manufactory at the village of Fort\nJones. A little determination and perseverance\nwill, I have no doubt, make it a profitable con-\ncern, for that indispcnsiblc article can certainly\nbe manufactured ut home cheaper than they\ncan be imported.
2098a94eb8326aa8f7c4eaacd4c3db60 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.1027396943175 37.92448 -95.399981 EniToit CAitniNTnit:\nIt has always been a groat mystery\nto mo why so many pcoplo aro so much\nopposed to tho laboring class of tho\nhuman family organizing themsolves\ninto Unions for tholr benefit mentally,\nmorally and socially. I can very\nuoll understand why tho largo rail-\nroad corporations and tlio big manu-\nfacturing establishments might think\nit to their Intcrosts to keep tho work-\ning men's wages down, and prevent\nthorn from educating themselves to tho\npoint whoro thoy may form somo idea\nof tlio vast profits thoy inako from tho\nwork of their employes. If tho rail-\nroads could got their work done for\nnothing thoy would not reduco tho\nprico of passenger faro nor tho rate\nof froight, and tholr prollts would bo\nIncreased to tlio amount of tho wages\nthoy now pay tholr employes. So,\nalso, with tho big manufacturing en\nterprises, for they would not reduco\ntheir any, as tho prices are al-\nways in proportion to tho demand\nBut why should tho mor'chants also\nobject ? Tho monoy tlio workinginan\ngets for ills work goos into their bank\naccounts, and If tlio workinginan gets\nonly i!). 00 or $(1.00 per weok, ho can\nonly spend thatumount; but if ho got\nS12 00, or $1") ,00 per week ho would\nspend that amount with his local mer-\nchant. It Is not so much tho working-ma- n\nwho is bonollted by good wages,\nit Is tho merchant. If a carpenter gets\nSO. 00 per week, ho must llrst look out\nfor his rent which is from $3.00 to\n$1.00 per week, and then ho can take\ntho little that is loft and go llrst to his\nL'rocer for provisions. And ho mils t\nof necessity estimate very carefully\nwhat ho can afford to invest in tlio\ndifferent necessaries that ho must pro-c uro f-
2664354d5ce6a2f824d0a38bf642178f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.4671232559615 41.681744 -72.788147 Congress is considering a proposal\nto extend the draft s.ge to provide\nample man power so that the Presi-\ndent's program of an army unlimited\nin size may be carried out at once.\nHeretofore, Secretary Baker has\nopposed the idea, his contention being\nthat sufficient men for present needs\ncan be raised under the existing reg-\nulations. The reason for Mr. Baker's\nobjection to a change in the draft '\nage was his fear that to extend the\nage might prove injurious to vital in-\ndustries. It is just as necessary, he\ndeclares, to keep such industries as\nthe railroads and the steel industry at\ntheir highest, efficiency as it Is to mo-\nbilize an adequate army. Secretary\nBaker thinks the minimum age\nshould be nineteen years. The maxi-\nmum may be placed as high as 4 5.\n the proposal meets with favor in\nCongress, and is made a law it' will\nfurnish us with the "unlimited army"\nwhich President Wilson favored. The\nfact that men who have opposed an;\nproposal to extend the draft age are\nnow advocating such a move, is proof\nthat the lawmakers and officials of\nthe nation are rapidly awakening to\nthe neds of the hour. It is also fair-\nly good evidence that they intend to\ndo as President Wilson "suggests."\nIf, as Provost Marshal General\nCrowder has indicated, it is not the\nidea of army officials to call on men\nin classes other than one this year,\nunless it appears that they hare been\ngranted deferred classification erron-\neously, then it will be necessary to\nextend the draft age very soon. At\nthe rate we are now sending-
072c17e1dd084599a7aa17fc0a6badd9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1900.3520547628107 58.275556 -134.3925 Thence S. 55 5 00' E. 1500 ft to post scribed\n2.S .869, Snoqualmie. Thence S. 35 0 00' W.\n600 ft to i>ost scribed 3.S .369, Snoqmilmie.\nThence N. 555 00' W. 1500 ft to post scribed\n4.S .369, Snoqunlmie. Thence N. 35 0 00' E.\n600 ft to pluce of beginning. Area 20.66 Acres.\nHe^r. ut Loc. Cor. No. 1 . Mugwump Lode,\nWhence U. S. Loc. Mon. No. 4 bears N. 65 20 '\nE. 5451.2 ft dist. post scribed 1.S .369, Mug¬\nwump. Thence S. 55 5 00' E. 1500 ft to post\nscribed 2.S .369. Mugwump. Thence S. 35 5\n00' W. 600 ft to post scribed 3.S .369, Mug¬\nwump. Thence N. 55 5 00' W. 1500 ft to post\nscribed 4.S .369, Mugwump. Thence N. 855\n00' E. 600 ft to post No. 1, the plnce of begin¬\nning. Area 20.66 acres. Heg. at Loc. Cor. N'o.\n1, Extension of Stringer Lode, Whence U. S .\nLoc. Mon. N'o. 4 bears N. 135 57' W. 5456.3 ft\ndist. & Cors. Nos. 2 & S. Nos.72. A, and 242,\nresj>ectively bears N. 345 18' E. 1229.6 ft dist.\npost scribed 1.S.369, Ex. of Stringer. Thence\n2s. 55 2 oo' E. 1500 ft to post scribed 2.S..369,\nEx. of Stringer, Thence S. 35 5 00' W. 600 ft\nto post scribed 3.S .369, Ex. of Stringer.\nThence N. 55 5 00' W. 1500 ft to post scribed\n4.S .369, Ex. of Stringer. Thence N. 35 5 (H)'\nE. 600 ft to plnce of beginning. Area 20.66\nAcres. Heg. ut Cor. No. 1, Chehalis Lode.\nWhence U. S . Loc. Mon. No. 4, bears N. 95 32'\nW. 5867.8 ft dist. post scribed 1.S.369, Chehu-\nlis. Thence S. 55 5 00' E. 1500 ft to post scrib¬\ned 2.S .369, Chehnlis. Thence S. 35 5 00' W.\n600 ft to post scribed 3.S.369, Chehalis.\nThence N. 55 5 (X)' W. 1500 ft to post scribed\n4.S .369, Chehalis. Thence N. 35 5 00' E. 54 ft\nOpen Cut bears S. 55 5 00' E. 75 ft dist.\n600 ft to place of beginning. Area 20.66\n,
075932e94d6c4c10147133a9b10e70b9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1630136669203 39.745947 -75.546589 posed reconstruction commission would which was to reopen a naturalization\ntake over the State Council of Defense\nwork. The Woman's Committee ask for\n$50,000 a year for two years for child\nwelfare work. This will Include health\ncenters, milk stations, clinics, and edu7\ncaflonal features.\nMrs. Miller said that the legislative\ncommittee did not hold out mpeh hope\nfor such an appropriation. She asked\nthe women present to go home and ex­\nert all their influence to bring pres­\nsure to bear upon the legislators.\nMrs. Theodore W. Francia was ap­\nplauded when she declared that she\nwould be glad to exert her influence\nwith one member of the Legislature,\nwho happened to bo her husband.\nShe said the death rate for babies\nunder a year old in Delaware was\nhigher than in the of Chicago.\nShe had urged the legislative commit­\ntee to spend money ujton the States\nchildren If only for the commercial\nvalue of their lives to the Stale, senti­\nmental reasons aside.\nThe Childrens Bureau of 68 members,\nwhich are elected to it from fifteen or­\nganizations, adopted a resolution urg­\ning passage of the reconstruction com­\nmission bill by the Legislature.\nW. H . Wentzell, who remarked It\nwas his last day as probation officer\nfor the Juvenile Court, suggested that\nthe city needed a dental clinic, more\nplayground facilities, and a definite\nbudget for Uie $50,000 appropriation\nasked by the Woman's Committee.\nMrs. Miller said eight months had\nbeen taken up in the preparation of\nexactly such a budget, and there would\nbe dental clinics if the appropriation\nwas granted.
13b7f77e84861c6dd12ee930b37e40f1 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1878.387671201167 42.68333 -96.683647 Whisky under ordinary circumstances\ncsn, and does, do a great deal of mischief.\nBut, when you desire to see thc devil do\nhis beat work at torturing poor humanity,\njust call and see him when he has turned\na lot of long and limber tongues loose in\na community. This ia a class of creatures\n—hes aud shes—things that are neither\nmen nor women—they gorge themselves\nto tbe full on the foul and feted false­\nhoods that continually ooxe from ths\nslimy and stinking sewers of each other's\nmouths. Their daily food is falsehood\nand filth; aud, thc more nauseatiug and\nnasty, the more nourishing aud nutritious\nto these gloatiugghouls. Their dantiest\ndish is served up in its most savory\nmanner when two or tbrec of them meet\nto bandy bawdy lies about some good aud\nvirtuous girl or womau. These be harlots\nof hades are always happiest when spread\ning the spawn of their lecherous lies over\nthe sainted name of wife or mother, for\nby BO doing the devilish ichor dripping\n their tilcerous lips will cat through\nand poison the whole family. Thc she-\nscorpions are the samples which satau's\ndrummers have located in each village,\nto show to mankind the meanest thing\non earth or in hell—a tell tale termagant.\nShut your eyes and doors against them.\nLet these filthy fiends feel that you loathe\nthem as yeu do the sow that is fresh from\nher wallow. If the long eared and long-\ntongued hound comes into your presence,\nbid hin> begone and return to his vomit\nKick these skunks of society from your\npath. Make them feel that they are no\nmore welcome to your homes or in your\npresence than is the bedbug or the pole­\ncat. Show these veimiu that there is no\nplace for them iu deecnt society, any\nmore thau there is for thc buzzard, or the\nbawd, or thc house infested bat. Sooner\nwould we welcome to our humble home\na slimy snake than one of these babbling,\ntattling, scandal serving cess pools that\nbefoul society.
06d4c13521caffb9263c4476b8baf8a9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.2062841213824 40.063962 -80.720915 no doubt of that. They said, "You arc a\njreat agricultural country j you ought to\nmlse agricultural products, and we ought\nto make the manutactured articles',"\n"Well," I said, "1 tind that you bought\nthirty-two million dollars' worth of wheat\nlast yeaivand only eight millions of it in\nthe United States. I And "that you\nbought millions of dollars ol corn, atid\nonly a lew tliousaud dollars of it in the\nUnited States." 1 asUed them if they\nwould give up their agriculture if we\nwould g;ve up our manufactures, and tliey\nsaid thtir agriculture was worth a great\ndeal more than their manufactures. They\nname right to tliajxjiut, for they could\ntell D'.a truth on the subject in England;\ntheir friends do not like to tell it here.\nThey said: "The price of labor is too high\nin the United States. You pay too much\nlor labor. It has a bad effect. It \nJ great many of our laboring classes to go\n:» the United States to seek better wages;\nt makes those discontented who remain\ntt home; they demand higher wages, and\nwe have had to pay higher wages in this\n:ountry this year than ever belore."\n'Well, I said, "that does not hurt my\nfeelings a great deal. I am very glad\nthey get good wages in the United States;\nI rejoice that the tolling men and women\nover here are getting better wages."\n1 saw everywhere I went, especially on\n:lie continent, women engaged in the\nroughest and hardest work. Womon\nlave to bear heavy burdens there. I saw\nn'omeu doing all kinds of hard work.\nVou have heard a great deal aaidjiy our\nwomen's rights people.ot whom I count\nnysclf ono.about the right of women to\nvork. They have that right in the Old\nlYorld to their hearts' content. [Laughter\ntnd applause.]
1b69a39d2e01bb5ac1ab9ce696242bcc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.2991802962456 46.187885 -123.831256 The Democracy of the state of Oregon,\nin council assembled, declare:\nFirst That we favor the forfeiture of\nall unearned railroad and ;vagon road\ngrants and the opening of the land to\nsettlement and occupancy by those en-\ntitled to the benefits of the various land\nlaws of the United States.\nSecond That we are in favor of the\npassage by congress of laws made in the\ninterest of tho people, regulating inter-\nstate commerce, and'also state laws, con-\ntrolling and regulating fares and freights\nupon all transportation lines, and pre-\nventing discrimination in favor of or\nagainst persons or places.\nThird That we look with alarm upon\nthe unauthorized assumption of power\nand jurisdiction of United States courts\nin interfering with officers collecting the\nrevenue of the state of Oregon.\nFourth That we nre in favor of the\nlaotianta tax law. nnd believe the pnn\nciplc of taxation enunciated therein is\ncorrect and ought to be sustained.\nFifth That we favor the passage of\nsuch laws in relation to the assessment\nand collection of tares as will make the\nassessment and taxation of property\nequal and uniform throughout the state,\nand demand the strict enforcement of\nsuch laws when enacted.\nSixth That the power conferred by\n federal constitution upon congress to\nenact tariff laws was given for ;the sole\nand exclusive purpose of deriving reve-\nnues for the suppoitjof nucu government,\nand thst the cnucliug of any tariff law\ntor any other purpose, such as taxation\nof one class of people, is as entirely un-\nwarranted by the constitution as it is re-\npugnant to justice and inimical to the\ngeneral welfare, and we therefore favor a\ntariff for revenuo, limited to the necessi-\nties of government economically admin-\nistered, and a gradual but persistant re-\nduction of the existing protective duties.\nSeventh That the improvement of our\ncoast harbors, the Columbia river and its\ntributaries, is of vital importance to the\ncommerce of the whole state of Oregon,\nand we earnestly ask that an adequate\nappropriation be made by our present\ncongress to begin the work of tho Colum-\nbia river bar improvement, already too\nlong neglected. We also ask such appro-\npriation for the Cascade locks as will in-\nsure their speedy completion; also, we\nask of our representatives in congress a\nunited effort to secure a liberal appropri-\nation for the improvement and continua\ntion of the work of improving the har-\nbors of Yaquinc bay, Coos bay nnd the\nCoquille river.
1729919903a141dfbf918cb6b184ea54 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.7520547628108 46.187885 -123.831256 said to have been created by\nThaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylva-\nnia, then the leader of his party in\nthe national house of representa-\ntives, for the purpose of making\nan official place for a personal\nfriend, who had distinguished him-\nself as colonel of a Pennsylvania\nregiment of volunteers at Gettys-\nburg. It was named after Wyo-\nming valley, Pennsylvania, a des-\nignation entirely inappropriate and\nalso confusing. It should have\nhad a name suggestive of its local-\nity aud which would have been en-\ntirely distinct from the distant aud\nfamous valley. This similarity has\nbeen the cause of no end of trouble\nin postal matters, letters for the\nterritory often going to the Penn\nsylvania valley and vice versa.\n"When the territory of Wyom-\ning was formed its boundaries\nwere parallel lines and were, of\n irrespective of mountain\nranges or the courses of rivers.\nThe southwestern portion of Da-\nkota had abutted on Idaho, which\nterritory in its boundaries followed\nthe mountain ranges, giving it a\nsort of log of mutton shape, the\nthree upper counties, which prop-\nerly belong to Washington terri-\ntory, being the bone handle. The\npeculiar formation of Wyoming\nand Idaho left between them a\nconsiderable area of land. This,\nfrom oversight, still belongs to\nDakota, though separated from it\nby an organized territory, and so\ndesignated on the maps of the\nUnited States land office of the\ninterior department. It is, how-\never, without laws as it is not\nembraced within the jurisdiction\nof the district or county courts of\nDakota and is outside of those of\nIdaho, to which it is more proper-\nly assignable.
2b36ee22269db5ad4258729a2ed4f17a PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1911.0753424340437 39.456253 -77.96396 kind in mind at present where a\nyoong fellow worked for a prominent\ndoctor for a number of years and tbe\nBame week of the physician's death\nthis yonng sport was trying to eell e\nderby bat to get a bot stewed beef.\nIt is amusing to see these mis\nguided youths drop down tbe pike,\nbot when you come to tbfDk abou\nit the pictore is a very sad one. Here\ntbey come, bockborn handle walking\ncane, peg leg pants with collars at\nthe bottom, imitation studs, rings on\ntheir fingsrs, and if it was conven¬\nient tbey would bavs bells on their\ntoes to attraol attention; more on the\nbead than in it. With a cigarette\nor cigar, whose smoke tbey proceed\nto puff into most anybody's face,\nwithout ceremony. Yoong sports,\n are stepping bigb, but back of\nthat step are tbe dim forms if yoo\ncould but see them, of the unborn\ngenerations who must take up wbere\nyon leave off and enter into tbe com\npetition of the world. They most\nmake their tools out of the material\nthat yoo leave for them or tbey most\nforge them out of nothing. Glad to\nsay, however, this is not trns of all\nWe bave several yoong men and boys,\ntoo, rigbt bere who bave bank eo\nooonts, who are buying homes for\ntheir families and aged paren's.\nThese same fellows are not trying to\ntear down the virtue of oor girls\neither, In tbe years to come tbey\nare tbe men npon wbose shoulders\nthe burden of tbs rsoe must rest..\nWestern North Carolina Advocate.
0b8f95b60d972c46233918acaca3c6ea THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.6342465436326 39.261561 -121.016059 The California Regiment at Manaiu i.\nThe 32d regiment of M. Y. volunteer!, be*\ning composed mostly of old Californians, is\ncalled ibe California regiment. It in com-\nmanded by Col. Roderick Mathetoo, and\nat the battle of Manaseas was among the\nregiments in tbe reserve. Col. Mile** who\ncommanded the reserve, was too drunk to\nknow wbat was going on during tbe day, but\nat 5 oclock i*. m. be did order Col. Matbe-\nsons regiment forward to support tbe N. Y.\n16th and 31st in a movement to stem au ad*\nvance of Virginia Cavalry. They succeed-\ned in taming tbe Cavalry to tin right about\nand then tbe 32d, in tbe absence of further\norders, beld its position to reuder such aid\nas it could towaros tbe protection of one ot\nour batteries which was playing upon tbe\nenemys horse. While tbe 32d was in tbi*\nposition, the 16th and 31st having passed\nwithin its rage, a youthful Orderly rode up\nto Col. Matheson to inform him that the\nBlack Cavalry, sheltered from bis observa-\ntion by a piece of woods, were coming up\non tbe right, and if be would take a out\nacross the fields, they would be turned back\n tbeir errand. Tbe evolution was per-\nformed, gave tbe protection that was desir-\ned, and the Black Horse gave up its pur-\npose in that quarter. While the regiment,\nhowever, was adhering to tbin position, the\nsame youth who had imparled tbe previous\nsuggestion rode np to the regiment again,\nand told Ms heson be bad better fall back\non Centrcville, as his duty at that spot had\nbeen thoroughly performed. As this was\nabout tbe first sign of orders (with one sin-\ngle exception) be had received daring tbe\nentire day, Matheson felt some curiosity to\nknow who this young Lieutenant was, and\nwhence these orders cauio; be therefore\nturned shtrply on the youth, who he now\nperceived could not be more than 22 or 2S.\nand said, “Young man, I would like to know\nyour name?” The youth replied that he\nwas the son of Quartermaster-General\nMeigs. “By whose authority do you dclii-\ner these orders?” was the Californians\nnext inquiry. The young man smiled, ami\nremarked, “Well, sir, tbe truth is, that for\nthe last few hoars I have been giving all\nthe orders for this division, and acting as\nGeneral, too, for there is no General on the\nfield.”
170cb6667804d20a841b26f922bb3d8c THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.1109588723998 29.949932 -90.070116 &zturday. Feb. 6. -- Buyers who relned to par.\ncbhase yesterday seemed to regret it to-day, as the\nLiverpool and New York advices were stll more\nfavorable for factors and holders. Asking prioes\nware again advaneed this mornig, ad with a\nlimited supply sad steady demead sales of 12,000\nbales were effected at an Improvemat of eo. O\nlb. opon nearly all clasuliations.\nlonday. Feb.7 -There has been a eneral let-up\nin the market to-day. Buyers sad sellers stood aloof\nthroughout, and theo movement has bees to time\nbetter than nominal. In fact the total male. for the\nday amounted to only 2000 bales, and the market\nclosed unsettled at slightly easier fuore.\nTuesday, Feb. 9 . -W ith advices of a decline In\nrates at Liverpool, on hand early to-day, the mar-\nket hasb been at nearly a standstill throughout.\nOffering prices were so far below the views of\ntractors that most of the latter covered up their\nsamples refused to eutertais frther over-\ntures as the day advanced. In fant the total ales\namounted to oly 26500 bales at theo subjoined\nAgures, which disclose no general quotable varia-\ntion on previous rates, viz: Ordinary 260206o.,\ngood ordinary 27@27i)c., low middling 27*\nI284., middling 28g29c. and striot middling 29c.\nThe total sales for the pastthree days amounted\nto 16,500 bales, against 17,600 bale forthe corrones-\npondling time last week. Thbe set reelpts were\n11,87l bales, agalnet 14.978 bales last week,\nshowing a falling oft of 3161 bales. The raggregate\nexports footed up 6933 balas, against 8929 bale\nlast week, and the stock on hand and on ship-\nboerd, not cleared this eveaniog, is 162,010\nbales, against 147,295 bales Tuesday evening, the\n2d int, uand 156,434 balesh on Friday eveninsagthe\n5th finst. The exports for the past three days\nhave been divided as follows, vis: 1200 bale.\nfor Barcelona, 283 bales for New York and 2450\nbales for Hamburg.
972539471be6f56039692f71fe298c3d THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.919178050482 40.618676 -80.577293 The man with whom you talk is an enlisted man who lias been selected for\nIds job in the same way4 you will be selected for yours. lie will try to put you\nat ease so tljat you can give the best and most accurate account of yourself.\nThe interviewer will-ask questions about your education, the kind of a job\nor jobs you held in civilian lite, what your hobbies are. He's going to try to\nget down on a card Unit: will follow you through your Army career all the\ninformal ion that the classification ntlicer needs to determine where your\ncivilian hack-ground Ills, best in the Army, lie will try to determine the degree\nof skill you possess in ope or more vocations or avocations. In other words, if\nyou have been a specialist in some field, the Army wants to know it.\nThe Army also wants know whether you have had vocational training.\nM particularly wants lo know if you are one of the thousands who have taken\nadvantage of Ihe pre induction training offered in local communities.\nThe training will provide prospective inductees with backgrounds that will\nmake I hem more valuable to Ihe Army and afford tlieni opportunities to win\nratings as specialists. At the same time, many war workers who take Ibis\nI raining will be able to obtain higher job classifications thai will help them to\nimprove their earnings while they are still civilians.\nThe Army considers vocational pre induction training so important that the\nAdjutant <ieneral ha- issued a directive to Commanding Officers of Recruit\nReception Centers ordering thai a record of any pie-induction vocational train­\ning he entered on the permanent record of the inductee, and that such training\nIte taken into consideration when the recruit is classified.
6018d8c6358fb245d736a09c672540b7 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8674863071747 39.513775 -121.556359 R J.f/.APKAV, RATE IN THE HUNOa;\nrun Uevoluthinary War. Chief Physician to\nthe linth regiment of Motived*, Chief burgeon to the\nMilitary Hospital "I Pesth, Hungary. ami Into Reclu\nror on Diseases of Urinary organs and diwMrt of\nwomen and children, has oj>ened till institute\nfor liie euro of all form, of private diseases,\nsuch ns syphilis, gonorrhea, nocturnal etuis-\nbloiib. and all tho i-ousequeiice- of self-nhnse, In Hie\nfirst stages of gonorrheal ibseu-i ■* In - guarantees a core\nin a few day*, without inconvt uieiice to the patient,\nrr hindrance to his business \\V hen a patient, by\nneglect, or Improper treatment, bar develop' d the\nsecondary symptoms of syhiliz. such as buboes, or\npainful swellings on the groin*, or nicer, in the throat\nand none, which, if nut checked, destroy the soft\nparts ami cause the bones to mortify, separate and\ncome away, leaving the .offerer an object hide ms to\nhetiold; or when splotches and pm pies break \nnjion the skin, or when helms painful swellings upon\nthe bones, or when hisconstllullon is injured so as lo\npr.slisptme to consumplion or other constitutiona,\ndisease, the Iloctoj guarantees a cum or u-ks norom'\niiensinioti. in Rheumatism, chronic or acute; in\nDysentery, or Diarrhoea, tie has safe and effeeiual re.\ntneilies. For the treat mem of the cons quenres of\nsell-abuse, such ns nocturnal emissions, nervousness!\ntimidity, hendache. pains In the hack and limits, with\ngeneral weak lie * , loss of apjtelile, loss of memory,\ninjury lo the night, restlessness, confusion of Ideas,\ndislike for society, and feeling of weariness of life;\nwith the nervous system so excllenhle that slight\nnoises shock or startle the patient, making his exist-\nence miserable. For the above maladies the Itoclor\nwill guarantee a cure or ask no compensation, lie\ncan lie consulted ree of charge, and invites all to\ncall, os it will cost them nothing, and may he much\nto their advantage.
6aba950061e73950530228dff1af7e0a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.3155737388686 41.681744 -72.788147 ing rink in Stanley Quarter park\nwere both put in while I was in the\noffice of Mayor. No one knows bet-\nter than I do what the attitude of\nthe present superintendent was to-\nwards these very much needed im-\nprovements. When I saw the thous-\nands of children making use of and\nenjoying the pool and the rink I felt\njustified in the hard fight it was\nnecessary for me to put up to get\nany degree of cooperation from Mr.\nWainright and I want to sax ris;ht\nnow that, judging from his actions\nand his remarks, there would be no\nswimming pool and no skating rink\nif Mr. Wainright had a free rein.\nHe made the claim that the soil in\nWillow Brook park would not hold\ntho water I found that it would.\nHe claimed the water was danger-\nously impure Dr. Pi found that\nit was not Impure. I had difficulty\nin getting the cooperation I was en-\ntitled to demand in Stanley Quar-\nter park and it was necessary for me\nto do much of the work Mr. Wain\nright was getting a fat salary to do\nin order to make that pond a reality.\nWs stock the pond so that chil\ndren could fish in safety and near\ntluir own homes. I believe I am not\nmaking an unfair statement when 1\nsay it is because of the superinten\nding that the children have been de-\nnied this enjoyment. During my ad-\nministration we had planned to put\nboats in this lake, we had planned\nand provided for baseball diamonds\nand tennis courts for Stanley Quar-et- r\npark, but two years have now\npassed and I have seen nothing of\nthe layouts, to say nothing of the
2ab9721c4faf9eb6b4234515c0224612 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.1762294765736 58.275556 -134.3925 It will be of Interest to many\nicopie here who are acquainted at\nPetersburg to read the details of the\n. erent deal whereby the Petersburg\nParking Company sold Its commer-\nnl holdings to the Petersburg\nTrading Union.\nThe story Is taken from the Pet¬\nersburg Report:\nA deal has been concluded, with\nlie exception of minor details,\nvhereby the Petersburg Packing\nor|>or«tion will transfer to The\nTrading Union, Incorporated, a large\njart of their property, Including the\nlarge store and store building, the\nvliarf, several warehouse buildings,\nilx iota In block 2 of the town of\nPetersburg, two floats and water-\n'ront holdings In front of the pres¬\net store building. The considera¬\ntion is understood to be between\n"Ighfy and one hundred ihousand\nlollari. according to the value of\nhe goods in the store.\nThis will give The Trading Union.\n* bidi (s h co-operative \normed with local stockholders, one\n)f the most valuable pieces of prop-\n. rty in Petersburg. The store has\njecn closed for several days while\nin inventory I* being taken, and Im¬\nmediately following the final ar-\n.angemerls will be concluded. If\n>rcxcnt plans do not miscarry. The\nTrading Union, Incorporated, is cap-\nulized at one hundred thousand\nIc rs and at present has dose to\nin hundred stockholders. The first\nImard of directors of the new con-\n. e r n consists of Jack Hanseth. Jacob\nlinos*. Erlck Ness. K . L . Skoog and\nK. L . Stcberg, who will serve until\nthe first general olectlon to be belrt\n>11 July 1st. Itis expected that the\nnew owners will take charge about\n'lie first of April, but no announce¬\nment has been made yet as to who\nwill be manager of the store Nmd\nbusiness for the Trading Union.
0c587d29f6a1b61f5e2bcf5af2f235da THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.0808218860984 40.063962 -80.720915 State and poisoned the fountains of its '\nprosperity, is banished, wo hope, forev- K'\never. Let her now arise to the dignity ai\nof freedom and address herself to the\ntask of undoing the evil intiaenccs\nwhich have so long kept it a terra in- b\neognita, and sparsely inhabited a large B\nportion of its fair domains with an in- °J\ndolent, ignorant and often vicious peo- J]\npie, who compare lamentably with \\\ntheir competitors of the inclement Cc\nNorth. The existing Legislature could,\nas the guardian of the interests of the ^\nSlate, do it no better service, than turn 5^\nits attention to this subiect: a matter' t.\nof iutinitelj- more imporiauco to the or\nState of Wtet Virginia, than is the par- /*«\nticular point at which its seat of Gov- 2*\nernmeut shall at present 1m# located, it\nis a matter or most vital, interest, if\nto speedily render available the rich 111\nand varied resources of the Slate, and\ntill it with an euterprising. virtuous c *\nand intelligent population, are inter- ll\n vitally important.\nIn order to accomplish this, some- I?\nthing however is requisite precedent to\nthe work pointed out by Mr. Daddow, ea\nand without which all other measures fn\nwill fail. That something is the speedy tr\nand etlectual settlement of the titles to\nreal estate. While speculators may be hi\ninduced to purchase lands with ques- vc\ntionable titles, and risk a lifetime of. bs\nlaw suits and an indefinite amount ol H3\nexpense, enterprising capitalists and J,,\nskilllul and industrious working men, p«\nwho are the only builders of a stable ni\nprosperity and wealth, will seek only\nsuch locations upon which to plant V\nsolid capital and expend their labor, as ri,\nwin w jorewr wunuut risk of dlstur- P .\nbailee. That a large portion of the 111\nmore* secluded and valuable portion of tu\nthe lands of West Virginia, referred to\nby Mr. D.'i communication, are of w\nquestionable title was very clearly and U\nforcibly pointed out iu a late series of A\narticles in the Intkluosncer over the\nsignature of "G. P ."
0c05b517ef422ee8162346d7da7905c9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.2991802962456 41.004121 -76.453816 I lay quiet tor a ninttorof halfnn hour\nor moro, nnd then searched my trou.\nsers. Tho sovereigns wcro gone, sttro\nenough ; but tho silver was loft. Thero\nwas uot much, Indeed; for I had paid\nmy scoro over night, nnd had stood treat\nnt tho waysldo public houso besides.\nNextIwenttohavonlook atthojaron\ntho shelf, nnd found that it was full of\nsoft soap. Evidently, my host was not\nso boldtv roguons J had thought for;\nand if I hnd shown myself to bo awako\nhe would probably havo mado an ex-\ncuse, and let mo go off with my money,\nslnco lio was so careful to provldo\nagainst my suspicions. For I supposo\nhis idea was this: If I took tho mat-\nter pretty easy, content to bclievo\nthat I lost my money somehow1,\nand that ho know nothing about it,\nwell and good. If I mado moro fuss, ho\nwould invito mo to havo n search, nnd\ndefy mo to find any gold in tho house\nlor ho had owned to being very low in\ntho poekot Just then ; but if I proved\noutrageous, and threatened tho law, he\nwould havo conveniently discovered\ntho soveroigns in tho Jar of soft sojp,\nand .declnred I must have put them\nthero for security over night, and had\nbeen too drndk to remember anything\nabout it in tho morning.\nThat was tho way I iuterprotod tho\nmatter. Sol determined just' to tako\nmy money back, walk off.and say noth-\ning about It; not being particularly\nnnxlous to havo to stand in n witness-
00934e4b09a1ce41ff4c906ee7be5224 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.236338766191 39.745947 -75.546589 ineon of No. 2% was allowed pay for\nTuesday, tba 13tb, aa abe was prevent­\ned reaching the robool by the bh izard,\nalthough sho endeavored to do ac.\nTbe Oommittse on High School sub\naaltted tho following report;\n" Your commlttoe would report that\nthe Olrla'Higb Cehool is progressing,\nsad from the reports of the last exam­\nination there appears to be a gradnal\nIncrease In the average of tbe pnflia\nfrom the lowest olrsa. Tbe average of\nthe fifth grade Is 67.7; that of the\njuaior Acr suoond term senior is J7.1,\nshowing a gain of 11B per oent.\n“The Committee on Boys' High\nSchool boa leave to report that Obe\nschool Is In a prosperous condition.\nInstructions are regularly given to all\nof tbe olaesse. Tbe »aminations w\nfinished on February The genersl\naverage of the boys examined waa\nabout 80 pev cent. Of the 77 pupils in\nthe fifth and sixth grades, 50 were pro\nmoted, ovor one half of tbe 77 being\nempt from examination, owing to theit\nhaving a term average of\noent. Four of the junior class and\nthreo of the middle class failed of pro­\nmotion. Frew observai loos made by\nthe committoe since being assigned to\ntbe High Ochool, they are of tee opin­\nion that thj whole recent difficulty\narose from the nuwllltugness of the\nfirst assistant to recognise the principal\nas snob In matters pertaining to the\nmanagement of the sobool."\nDr. BhortHdge wanted to know If the\nroles In reference to reading, writing\nand spelling were carried\nMr. Hajos replied that It had slnoc\nthis session.
25de8d676608679ce104f24126c31c48 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0561643518517 39.745947 -75.546589 not believe there is a member of this\nbody who would serve on a eom-\nmlBrtiua where Italy would ask them\nto iilek what they would audit. Any­\nbody who knows a Hung in the world\nabout auditing a......unis, knows you\ncould not prosumo to limit It.\n•picture what might happen. Your\ncommisalon puts auditors to work on\ntho highway department. They say\nwe think we can get through for\nHJlOn. They then put auditors on\nyour school funds ami they say wo\nIan got through that for fô.ilOO. They\ngo on and pick dvc or six depart­\nments to be audited. Your auditors\nuotoworkatsomuchaday.\nthey get about half done and have\nno (rial balance the) Und possibly\nthe amount has been expended and\nthey must slop. Your commission\nhas no authority to spend any more\nmoney mid yon will have absolutely\no isle'd the 110.000 you are supposed\nspend and accomplish results w ith.\n"I myself am In favor of a proper\naudit of stale accounts. I submitted\n10 this Senate this resolution and\nthe Senate passed It. The Mouse in\na dilatory manner, after two weeks of\nthe 00 days gone, makes tills amend­\nment. The report of the auditors Is\nno good If It conies back a day after\nyou have adjourned. II Is a <|Uestlon\nin my mind whether today It could\npossibly he done. 1 . for one, am go­\ning to'try from now the next\nsession of the Legislature, through\n(he press and through my speech, to\nplace the Marne where It belongs. If\nyou gentlemen take my advice you\nwill absolutely kill this amendment.\nYou will then call for a committee of\nconference and ask for diilek action\n"There is not a man in that body\n'the House! who knows how much In­\ncome the stale has or where it comes\nfrom. They do not know how much\nwe collect from everyone of our tax\nschemes because they do not have It.\nThey will be a4ke<| for money lo\nmake appropriations and they will\nprobably make them and still they\nare not willing to spend a few dollars\nto see how much our Income Is: how\nmuch It was in 1920; how we spent It\nand what the estimated revenue Is for\n1921, so they can act Intelligently,'\nIn conclusion Senator Allee said\nIho auditors office has no authority\nlo make such an audit as Is proposed\nami that all that office can do is to\nlake the vouchers that conies to II\nand on which the State money Is paid\nout He referred to the audits that\nare made during each session of the\nLegislature by inexperienced men ap­\npointed by the Legislature and says\nall Such an audit amounts to is to\nplace an official G K n n those using\nSlate funds and thereby lull the pub­\nlic In sleep.
03e48290608fd2801080e73a07d600bd PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.080601061273 40.441694 -79.990086 The foreigners wpre both buyers and sell-\ners in the market, Louisville and Nashville\nbeing specially pressed lor salo by foreign\nhouses, and that stock is the only one of tho\nusually active raili oad shares which scoied\nany material loss for tho day. The selling,\nhowever, had more, or the appearance of\nprofessional pressure for effect upou the rest\nof the market than of genuine liquidation of\nlong accounts, and the slight influence\nwhich it had on tbe rest of the list indicated\nthe temper or the holders in general.\nAs usual of late, a few stocks monopolized\nthe marked movements, smd while a few-we r-\nveiy stioug, others were equally weak.\nTho feature of the forenoon's trading was\nthe unusual activity and strength in Den'er\nand Bio Grand-- preferred, w hich scored a\nhandsome advance and held it throughout\nthe day. Rumors were afloat to account for\nthe movement that the load was about to\nbecome a part of a now line, but it\nis understood that tho affairs of the com-\npany are now In bettor shapi than for years,\nand"tho time has come for a movement in\nthe securities of the road.\nLackawanna was also a strong point, but\nits piomir.ence in the market has been\nheavily diminished during the last two\ndays. Tho movement in Manhattan seems\ntoiiavo reached its limit, and that stock\nfurther rctited during the day, while among\ntho specialties Edison Electric camo to the\ntront with a larso advance on light trading.\nThe weakest stock, however, was Distillers',\nwhich steadily lost ground all day long, and\nshowed inci cased animation on tne decline.\nThe rest of the market was quiet all day,\nand traded within narrow limits.\nThe close was quiet and steady to Arm at\nsmall losses inmoststocks. Distillers', how-\never, is off 2i Louisville & Nashville, 1,\nand 3Ianhattan,l per cent, while Edison rose\nV; Michigan Central, 3; Denver and Kio\nGinnde prelcrred,
083592083d1b4c161fc129659ddca06b PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.2808218860985 40.441694 -79.990086 "All the higher mental faculties are lo-\ncated in the frontal lobes of the brain, and\nthese naturally have a direct proportion to\ntne lengtn anu Dreaatb ot the forehead.\nJust back of this region are the muscular\ncenters and the centers for cutaneous sensa-\ntion. The muscular abilities of a person,\ntogether with all of his intellect in which\nthere is a muscular element, are directly\nproportioned to the size of this part of the\nskull. In a person who has been par-\nalyzed on one side of the body in infancy,\nthe skull is flattened on the opposite side\nand these muscular centers have disap-\npeared. This might be called the middle\nregion of the skull, that part over the top of\nthe head between the ears. Directly behind\nthe ears and a little above are the for\nremembering that which is heard, and here\narc undoubtedly located some of the muscu-\nlar faculties, for instance the wonderful\nmemory of musical compositions such as\nwas possessed by Blind Tom.\n"The memory o( everything seen is stored\naway in the posterior lobes of the brain:\ntherefore, people of great perceptive power\nand who well remember all their perceptions\nwill be found to have a large development\non the back oi the head. It has been noted\nthat in people born blind this part of the\nhead is smaller than it should be. In con-\ntradistinction to quack phrenology the per-\nceptive cower is located here in place of\nGall's pbiloprogenitiveness and bump of\namativeness. Gall located the perceptive\npower immediately over the eye behind\nwhich is a cavity in the bone containing no\nbrain.
1e7d439a6215e095362ffcd63b10dfc0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.0505464164644 58.275556 -134.3925 such <iuestions to the person challenged as\nmay be necessary to test his (nullifications\nus u voter at that election. The Judge may\nhear »ucli other testimony and consider such 1\nother evidence as is proper on the question.\nA majority of the Indues shall decide the\nmatter If the challenge is decided against\nthe person offering to vote, the ballot offer¬\ned must, without examination, lie destroyed\niu the presence of the said person by a Judge\nfir Judges of election: if determined iti his\nfavor the ballot must be deposited in the\nproper bullot box. If the itenioii so chal¬\nlenged refuses to answer fully any questions\nput to him touching his qualifications as a\n\\<>ter, the Judge* must reject the ballot.\nThe election board must cauae one of the\nclerks to keep a list showing: First, the '\nnames of all persons challenged ; second, by\nwhom challenged; third, the grounds of\nsuch challenge; fourth, the determination\nof the board upon such challenge,\nCANVAtiSINU AND KETUHNINQ TUB VOTE\nSection 23. As soon us the polls are finally\nclosed on the evening of the day of election\nthe Judpes shall open the ballot boxes\ncontaining the votes cast for Councilmeii\nand commence counting the votes, and when\nthese are counted and the results ascertain¬\ned it shall be checkcd with the poll list, and\nall hit llots replaced to be counted again as\nprovided for In section 24 of this Ordinance.\nThe Judges shall then open thi< ballot boxes\ncontaining t lie votes cast for members of the\nSchool Hoard ami proceed in the same man¬\nner, In no case shttll the boxes bo removed\nfrom the room iu which any election may lie\nheld until all the ballots are finally counted.\nCOUNTING OK II A LLOTS TO BE PUBLIC\nSection 24, The counting of ballots shall in\nall cases be public. Ballots, after having\nbeen counted and checked as provided for in\nsection 2i above, shall be taken out carefully\none by one by the Judges of election, who\nshall open thenf and read aloud the name of\neach person voted for and the office for\nwhich every such person is voted for; pro¬\nvided thut no more ballots shall !>e drawn\nfrom the box than enough to check with the\npoll list.
1621389a9786111c1c93ce3fa57bcf30 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.3246575025369 40.063962 -80.720915 of horses are kept aaddled and bridled\niay and night. Sentinels are posted at in*\nervals of twenty yards all around the\nluilding. The Imperial bed room has\nwo windows, protected at night by mas*\nlive iron shutters, which can only be\neached from the outside by uassiug\nhrough three spacious ante-chambers, in\nvhlcb are pouted eighty cossacks armed to\nhe teeth. They are allowed to speak and\nnove about in the two outer rooms, but iu\nhe hall adjoining the Czar's bed room\nlerfect silence is maintained all night,\nrbo general on duty for the day aits in au\ntasy chair, his cossacks sitting on a divau\nfhlch runs around the whole room. At\nhe general's right hand is a knob of an\nilectric apparatus, which rings the bell iu\nivery guard houae within the palace\n;rounus. When the Emperor is\nibout to ({tire* before shut*\ning the door he removes the outer\nlandle so that no entranco can effected\nintil he himself personally opens the door\nrora me losiae. unuxe uis laiuor, ue\nannot endure armed soldiers in bis bed\nihamber. Several mines have been di»\nomeil at St. Petersburg. A quantity of\nlynamite was seizsd just after it bad been\nntroduced into the court yard of tbe\n>aUce of Oatscbina, concealed in a load of\nlay. Tbe Czarina is seriously ill, being\nubject to seme nervous attacks anu\ntrange hallucinations.\nHessy Holfmann'e illness is expected to\nis brought to a close in a very short time,\nrid It fa thought this will be a signal lor\nier execution. The Paiis InttansigicaiOe\nleclares that she bis been ruthlessly\nortured lines she became a prisoner.\nOn Eiater day revolutionary proclama«\nInns from the Lnnd and Liberty partv\nkere found enclosed in Kister eggs, dis*\nributed in the streets ot Moscow. The\niroclamstion urges the peasantry to seizs\nftuds and refuse to piy taxes or eerve in\nhe army.
1c16e4271c289a97b11a8210a1d31ca0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.7520547628108 41.681744 -72.788147 east to the first cross street, also\nbuilding and veranda lines on Tom-\nlinson Avenue from Park Street\ncast to the first cross street.\nThe recommended lines cover a 50\ntt. wide street with a 24 ft. building\nand 16 ft. veranda line on Tomlin-so- n\nAvenue from East Street east to\nthe east side of the first cross street\non both the North and South side.\nAlso, on Tomlinson Avenue from\nPark Street east to East Street a\n35 ft. building and 27 ft. veranda\nline on the North side and a 30 ft.\nbuilding and 22 ft. veranda line on\nthe South side. The street curve at\nthe intersection of Tomlinson Av-\nenue and East Street at Southeast\ncorner of Stanley Hart lot is to be\nmodified to 10 ft. radius. These\nlines will replace the present 25 ft.\nbuilding line from the street to\nthe outside of the front cellar wall\non the South side and a 35 ft. build-\ning line from the street line to the\noutside of the front cellar wall on\nthe North side of Tomlinson Avenue,\nPark Street to East Street, which\nlines were recommended and adopt-\ned by the old Town Plan Commis-\nsion on Sept. 2, 1919.\nAll of the above layout of street,\nbuilding and veranda lines is shown\non the two sheet map of Tomlinson\nAvenue dated Sept. 20 , 1930, drawn\nby Engineer J. N. McKernan, signed\nby J. E . Lamb, chairman of the\nTown Plan Commission and filed\nwith the Town Clerk of Plainville.\nAll Interested parties are hereby\nnotified and warned to be present at\nthis hearing to discuss the recom-\nmended street, building and veranda\nlines as described above and shown\non the map.
08d12c82f8982994da41942366ad7013 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.878082160071 37.92448 -95.399981 fused to listen to the warning.\nIt was supposed that a man who as-\nsumed tho position of prosecuting of-\nficer for the government, charged with\nthe duty of seeing that the interstate\ncommerce laws are enforced, would lose\nno time in putting an end at least to his\nactive participation in railroad affairs.\nIt was taken for granted that Mr.\nCleveland would insist upon this.\nAt the recent meeting of the stock-\nholders of the Boston & Maine railroad,\nthe system which has absorbed nearly\nall the lines north of Boston, Attorney\nGeneral 01ne3 was reelected a director.\nNot only that, he was present in person\nand took fin active part in the discus-\nsion of the road's affairs. It wa3 evi\ndent that his interests are identical\nwith those of the road.\nBy his continued and unblushing nc\ntivity in railroad matters, Mr. 01ne3has\nnot only destroyed his reputation as a\nman of delicac3 and honor but he has\nbrought additional discredit upon an\nadministration which had nlready a\nload greater than it could carry.\nThe feeling in New England i3 ex-\npressed by the mugwump Providence\nJournal in its comments the presi-\ndent's failure to demand Olncy's resig-\nnation from tho directory of the road.\nThe Journal says:\n"In not requiring this of Sir. Olney. the pres\nident has Bhown himself indifferent to tho hlj?h-e- r\nreputation of his administration, and no\nmore anxious than any common politician to\nprotect the public servlcs from suspicion on\nthe point of integrity and from the possibility\nof disgraceful scandals. The Olney affair, add-\ned to the Van Alea matter, tho letting of tho\npost offices and the comutar servlco and other\ntilings of that sort, must make plain to tho\ndullest observer what some tlmo ago becamo\napparent to the teener students of politics,\nthat Mr. Cleveland has given up all pretense of\nconforming to exceptionally high standards of\npublic life, or of especially consulting tho Ideas\nof the more decent and honorable people of tho\ncountry. In view of theso things It cannot ba\nsurprising that, as was painted out in theso\ncolumns yesterday, roputablo and Intelligent\ncitizenR are day by day showing a 'growing in-\ndifference' toward President Cleveland and hi3\nparty associates. He might almost be said to\nhave already become totally indifferent to\nthem."
151d5b7f936c2e6abd196b4524054af0 THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.6068492833588 35.072562 -98.243663 como within Mmo. Nordlca'u fortune,\nbut whllo bIio will bear a good aharo\nof It, and has nlrcady mado tho Initial\noutlays, such as tho purchase of tho\nland, etc., It Is bollovcd that tho Amer-\nican public will join In tho financial\npart of tho undertaking. It la tho In-\ntention to mako tho opora season\nand this season will, utter tho Insti-\ntution Is woll undor way, continue tho\nyear nround, including tho summer\nnot only a high social function, but\nto havo Included In It days when pop-\nular prices of admission will bo\ncharged, so that all lovera ot classic\nmusic may havo an opportunity to\ngratify their tastes. Rut tho social\npart will bo ono of tho leading fea-\ntures of the musical festival.\nArrangements havo been made for\ntho salo of 16 boxes at $25,000 each,\nregular admission prices to bo charged\nto tho occupants of tho boxes. Threo\n theso boxes havo already been sold,\nund It Is bollovcd tbero will bo no dif-\nficulty in disposing of tho others.\nWhen tho opora Is In full oporatlon,\nIt Is bollovcd It will be\nThoro will also bo a musical collogo\nIn connection with the Institution and\nbnl .dings will bo erected for class-\nrooms and dormitories for tho pupllB.\nIn short, tho entire plan theoretical-\nly and practically will bo carried out,\nnlong tho lines of the musical Institu-\ntion at Hayrouth. It will probably re-\nquire an endowment fund of about\n$3,000,000 to aid in carrying on tho\nschools and othor departments.\nMmo. Nordlca will dovota tne re-\nmainder of her llfo to this project. Sho\nwill bo tho activo managor, of tho en-\nterprise and will tako a' prominent\npart In tho conduct ot the school and\ntho opora fostlvals, Blngtng in lending\nroles, and attending to many of the\ndetails.
146dbfd6091a8788e116198849eabc4c PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.0479451737697 39.756121 -99.323985 In piirsiinncc of an order mndo by tho board of\ncounty commissioners of the county of Phillips,\nIn tbe state of Kansas, In regular session on the\n51 b day of Juuuury, A. D. lMli, notice is hereby\ngiven thut Jehu II. Thonius mid others, house-\nholders of suid county, residing in he vicinity\nwhere it is proposed to lay put upd cstubllsh the\nroad below mentioned, have presented to said\nhoanl their certain petition, praying the laying\nout and establishment of a public roud In suid\ncounty us follows: Commencing nt tho south-\neast corner of sectlen 1(1, town 5, range 19, west\nof the Uth P. M . Hunning thence west on sec-\ntion line between sections In and 15, I) anil 1(1.8\nand 17, 7 and 18, to the lauge line between ranges\n thence north on the ran ire line one\nmile to the southwest corner of section 5, town 5,\nrange 10, thence west on section line between\nsections 1 and 12 and 2 and 11, to the quarter sec-\ntion corner between sections 2 and 11, town 5,\nrange 211, to Intersect a north and south roud run-\nning through sections 2 and 11 on the quarter sec-\ntion line; suid roud to be laid on the sectina Hues\nas near us practicable. Said road to be laid sixty\nfeet wide; and that F. C. Albright, 0. C . I.appin,\nand E. Anllmun, viewers duly appointed, will\nmeet at beginning of said roud, with sttrvi yor, on\nthe ' .Hi day of February, A. D. 1H01 , and proceed\ntn view said road, and to give all parties u htar-in-
0d51929eaa0d91dc429b6624ba4dc811 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.0122950503442 41.681744 -72.788147 Vigorously Opposed Expect Re-\nnewal of Lighting Contract\nGrangers Install Officers.\nAlthough there is but little talk\nconcerning the business to be tran\nsacted, it is expected that the ad-\njourned annual town meeting to be\nheld Monday night will develop into\na lively session, particularly because\nof a probable dispute over the adop-\ntion of a tax rate for the fiscal year.\nApparently no plans have been made\nfor concerted action either to raise\nor reduce the rate but the usual dif-\nferences over what revenue the town\nrequires to carry on its business are\nexpected to bring about some lively\ndebates at the session.\nEstimates of the expenses of the\nvarious departments are now being\nprepared and at the meeting of the\nboard of selectmen tomorrow eve-\nning a budget'will be made up, mak-\ning it possible for Chairman Johnson\nto give the voters an idea as to hoAV\nmuch money the town will need. The\nassessors are hurrying the work on\nthe grand list, hoping to get far\nenough ahead by Monday to estimate\nthe total. With this information the\nvoters will be able to act intelligent-\nly on the tax question.\nTown officials seem to be of the\nopinion that the will show\nthe need of raising the rate now in\nforce. Any effort, however, to force\nan increase will be stubbornly con-\ntested, according to leaders of a\nfaction which heretofore has fought\nfor a low tax rate. They had plan-\nned some months ago to make a fight\nfor a twelve and a half mill rate but\nit is thought that they have aban-\ndoned the idea. At least they show\nno indication of having organized to\nwork against a continuance of the\nfourteen 'mill rate and while they\nmay question the necessity of raising\nas much moey as these figures would\nproduce, it is not likely that they\nwill very vigorously oppose It. Should\na higher rate be suggested they are\nexpected to put up a hard fight against\nthe adoption of the idea.\nThe principal item cited as a rea-\nson for an increase concerns the tak-\ning from the town of the state appro-\npriation for schools. As the grand list\nis now over $2,000,000, Plainville is\nnot entitled to share in the distribu-\ntion of the money Avhleh the general\nassembly appropriates for educational\npurposes and as a result the expense\nof the schools will have to be borne by\nthe town.
0fb42415b0096e42d73894e893b55c46 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1893.3246575025369 41.875555 -87.624421 Humphrey B. Kendrick, a former\nresident of Santa Barbara, Cal.. who\nhas just returned to San Francisco\nafter a residence of several years in\nJapan, gives the Examiner an inter\nesting description of a little mountain\ntown named Nara in that country;\n"Everyone, or almost everyone In\nNara has a deer," said Mr. Kendrick,\n"and they are as plentiful there as\ndogs in an American town, while\naround the temples are great num-\nbers, all sacred to the Japanese. And\nthey are very tame, coming up even\nto the stranger and almost begging\nfor gingerbread, of which they are\nvery fond, and which the tourist is\nexpected to buy for them.\n"When the Emperor, a great many\nyears ago, came into Nara, and Nara.\nyou know, was the first capital of\nJapan, he rode on a white deer, and\nthat at once made the deer sacred,\nand at the same time it became fash-\nionable to own one, and now they\nare the most common thing to be seen\nin the place, unless it tie lanterns,\nwhich are actually without number,\nand every kind and quality. A\nlantern in Japan is very different\nfrom one here, for there they are\nstone pillars, although there are\nsome of metal, and made to be sus-\npended. I saw some of bronze in\none of the temples which had been\nbrought from Holland long ago. But,\nwhile there are so many, the Japan-\nese will never count them.\n"That would be a very wicked t hing\nin the sight of the gods, who keep\nthe number a careful secret. And\nthough sacrilegious foreigners have\nmade the attempt no two of them\nhaveever counted the same Another\nfeature is the goldfish ponds no\nSUCb fish as you see here, bllt - and\n14 inches long, and of such a deep\ncolor, darker than orange even. And\nthose with the faritails are beautiful.\nAll of the ponds and lakes are full\nof them, and as the water is very\nclear it is a marvelous tiling to stand\non the shore and watch them dart\nthrough the ripples, and when out in\na boat the very bottom assumes a\ngolden hue."
0f276f38810aa4a333f0e153b515c402 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.7575342148655 40.063962 -80.720915 Although their quarters are in the heart of\nthe city they don't use the city water from\nthe city water works. I went through a\nkitchen and somo devious pasgBge ways\nabout eighteen inches wide and not higher\nthan some of the tall ones of our party\nneeded, and was ushered on to the stage\nof the theatre, having been conducted\nthrough the dressing rooms. This theatre\nis (square built, with a gallery, and was\nabout two-thirds full of Chinamen, with\ntheir hats on, looking as sober a9 though\nthey were at prayer meeting. The seats\nwere very close together and there were no\naisUsleft either through the centre or at\nthe sides of the building, but was appar¬\nently one mats of Chinese. They have no\ndrop scenes but approach the stage from\nthe dressing rooms through doors at either\nside of tt\\e "Orchestra" which sits in the\nrear and middle of the stage. The doors\nhave curtains suspended betore them. One\nof the curiainB I saw was of tlue silk and\nhad the head of a dragon embroidered on\nit. In place of a drop curtain there was a\nbox ti or 8 feet long, with a seat cut into it,\nwith a poet at either end of the box abont\nfive feet high, with a wiro stretched across,\nfrom which depended a curtain. At\nthe time we entered there was a Chinese\nwoman sitting on the box behind the\ncurtain. After we had arranged for the fee\nfor admission one of the "an pee" advanced\nto the front of the box and pushed the cur¬\ntain aside with his hands and she stepped\ndown and began a harangue, or address,\nand although I listened very attentively 1\nmust confess I couldn't get the drift of her\nremarks. Her voice was
65e55541550599742a023a556ae3f3aa THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0123287354136 39.290882 -76.610759 SIR: 1 have the honor to acknowledge the re-\nceipt of your letter of the 26th inst. in which, in\nreply to a letter which 1 had addressed to you\nen the 13th, you acquaint me that the President\nis not prepared to comply with my demand for\nthe liberation of Mr. Alexander M'Lcod, of Up-\nper Canada, now imprisoned at Lockport. in the\nState of New York, on a pretended charge of\nmurder and arson, of having been engaged in the\ndestruction'of the piratical steamboat "Caroline"\non the 29th December, 1837.\nI learn with deep regret that such is the de-\ncision of the President of the Uuited States, for\nI cannot but foresee the very grave and serious\nconsequences that must ensue if, besides the ijnu-\nry already inflicted upon Mr. McLeod, of a vex-\natious and unjust imprisonment, any further harm\nshould he done to him inthe progress of this ex-\ntraordinary proceeding.\nI have" lost no time in forwarding to her\nMajesty's Government inEngland the correspon-\ndence tnat has taken place, and I shall await the\nfurther orders of her Majesty's Government with\nrespect to the important question which that cor-\nrespondence involves.\nBut I feel it my not to close this commu-\nnication without likewise testifying my vast re-\ngret and surprise which I find repeated in your\nletter with reference to the destruction of the\nsteamboat Caroline. I had confidently hoped\nthat the first erroneous impression of the charac-\nter of that event, imposed upon the mind of the\nUnited States Government by partial and exag-\nEcrated representations, would long sinco have\neen effaced by a more strict and accurate exam-\nination of the facts. Such an investigation must\neven yet, lam willingto believe, lead the Uni-\nted States Government to the same conviction\nwith which her Majesty's authorities on the spot\nwere impressed, that the act was ope in the\nstrictest sense of self defence, rendered absolute-\nly necessary by the circumstances of this occa-\nsion, for the safety and protection of her Majes-\nty's subjects, and justified by the same motives\nand principles which, upon similar and well-\nknown occasions, have governed the conduct of\nillustrious officers of the United States.\nThe steamboat Caroline was a hostile vessel\nengaged in piratical war against her Majesty's\npeople, hired from her owners for that express\npurpose, and known to be so beyond the possibi-\nlity of doubt.
187ddcec41129007c61a99844fe207ab THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1869.478082160071 37.561813 -75.84108 The leather should be kept fairly\noiled, but the harness should first be\ntaken apart and washed with soft\nwater, and the oil may be rubbed in\nwhile the leather is moist, care being\ntaken that the application is thorough-\nly made. For this purpose n cats foot\noil is considered the best. If the har-\nness also needs blacking, a little lamp-\nblack should be added to the oil, and\nthe rubbing should be continued until .\na white cloth may be used in wiping\noff the harness without being soiled.\nLeather varnish should never be used\non name's. In cleaning the plating,\nrotten stone or whiting may be used,\nbut generally an occasional rubbing\noff with a woolen cloth will be all\nthat is necessary.\nThe first thing to remember in\ncleaning a carriage is that the mud\nwhich may accumulate is not to be ta-\nken off by rubbing ; if it is dry, (and\nit should never be allowed to become\nso if it Is possible to prevent it,) soak\nit well and let it get soft, so that !y\nthrowing on water it will run off.\nAfter the carriage has been thus thor-\noughly rinsed off, the corners\ncleaned out, the work may be finished\nwith a pail of clean cold water and a\ngood sponge ; if the sponge Is not\nclean it will be likely to scratch the\npaint. After washing, a piece of cham-\nois skin should be used to rub all the\npaint and polished work until it is\nthoroughly dry. It is hardly necessa-\nry to say that no one who cares at all\nfor a nice looking carriage will ever\nleave dirt in the corners.\nThere need be no fear of washing a\ncarriage too often ; if washed every\ntime it is run out, and dried well with\na chamois skin, there will generally\nbe less trouble about the cracking of\npaint. But the care of a carriage does\nnot end with the washing. A suita-\nble room to keep it in is always a very\nimportant consideration. A coach\nhouse that is not protKTly ventilated,\nor in a damp place, where steam of\nany kind passes through it, will, in it\nshort time, furnish the opportunity\nfor destroying the best painted car-\nriage ever made ; in theje cases it is\ntoo common to attribute the fault to\nthe painter.
126e67fafdbcc996862e8f2eda6cfe87 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.3811475093605 46.187885 -123.831256 F. 8 . Webber, north 44 feet of lots 11\nand U, block 14, Sblvejy Astoria, ISS.SU;\nihe sum of Kto on the 10th day of June,\n1. and the sum of t6.t& on the loth day\nof Juno In each and every year there-\nafter for nine years, together with Inter-e- at\non the total amount unpaid at the\nrate of t per cent per annum, said Inter-\nest to be paid at the time ot the pay-\nment of each ot sild Installments.\nO. Zlglcr. lot 11 and 12. block 111\nBhlvely's Astoria, fcxi.60: the sum ot\nto be paid on the loth day ot June. lsiL\nand the sura ot Jb.U to be paid on the\n10th day ot June In each and every year\nthereafter for nine yean, together with\nInterest on the total amount unpaid at\nmo raw 01 per cent per annum, said\nInterest to be paid at the time of the\nPayment ot each ot said Installments.\nAbble A. Doiutlass. lot 7. hi\nShlvely's Astoria, J150; the sum ot J15 on\nuie lutn aay or June. 1SW . and the sum\nof $15 on the loth day of June In each\nand every year thereafter nine years,\niHifemer witn interest on the total\namount unpaid at the rate of 8 per cent\nper annum, said interest to be paid at\ntha time of the payment of --och of Bold\nInstallment.\nW. L . Gibson, south 60 fee tof lota 11\nand ii, block 14. ,71.40; the sum of T.1\non the 10th day of June, 1896, and the\nsum of 17.15 on the 10th day of June In\neach and every year thereafter tor nine\nyears, together with interest on the total\namount unpaid at tho rate of 8 per cent\nper annum, said Interest to be paid at\nme lime or the payment of each of said\nInstallments.\nNancy Welch, lots 4, 5 and ( of block\nIS. Bhlvely's Astoria, 246.30; the sum ot\nS24.C3 on the 10th day of June. 1S96, and\nthe sum of C4.6J on the 10th day of June\nIn each and evey year thereafter for nine\nyears, together with Interest on the total\namount unpaid at the rate ot 8 per cent\nper annum, said Interest tobe paid at\nthe time of the payment of each of sn'l\ninstallments.\nNancy Welch and James W. W\nlots 4, 6.
19710084e3651051789b0441513171f5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.050684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 he disgrace of it! The shame of\n>Vhat course the Federation\nChurches, together with the hundn\nif citizens who are backing them, m\nake in this matter from this time\nre do not know, but If our council 1\nmy pride in the good name of our ci\nt will, of its own accord, redeem its\n>y taking the Waterhouse resolut!\nrom the table and passing it by\norge majority. One of our papers\new days ago. stated that this might\nlone. Possibly this was simply i\n>ther wild guess. I -fully agree w\n'Solon" that this matter cannot a\nnust not rest where it is. Our c\nannot afford to have it rest here, 1\nire in a serious crisis. The law brei\n>rs of this community never h\nrreater encouragement in their nefi\nous work than the arguments h>\north in the "reply" of the mayor a\n;hlef of police to that most reasona\nind respectful petition of the mlnlst\nind the 1,100 other citizens. That\nvas necessary for this matter to co\nlefore council at all, was disgraceful\njegln with: for If our mayor and ch\nvere Inclined at all to do their sw(\nluty, and If they had shown due\nipcct to the 1.100 leading, law-abldli\nespectable' cltliens, who In the m\nespectful language, asked \njanlsh the gambling with Blot n\nrhlnea trom this city, this questl\nvould never have appeared in cour\nit all. But when they flatly refused\ntrant the prayer of that petition a\nlo that for which they were elect\nhere waa little left to do but to '\nlouneil to demand of tho chief and\nlepiillea, to do their sworn duty.\nBut the most disgraceful part n\nkppMtrs. The council, as It now appei\nn the eyes of the citizens of this cl\nmd other cities, whose eyes are up\nis, appears to sanction the negloct\nluty on the part of the city officii\nind, worst of all, its action virtue\nmcourages the violation of city law\nhe part of habitual law-breakers w\n10 fear of punishment, except the lit\neml-annual "pull" for revenue only.\nThese remarks do not apply to 1\n'althful councllmen of both branch\nvho, through sense of duty and In 1<\nilty to the best Interests of our ci\nroted In favor of the Waterhouse rei\nutlon. We have nothing but words\n)ralsc and commendation for them, a\nt Is reported that some who vol\nigalnst the resolution, would vote d\nercntly if they had the opportunity\nlo so. The slot machine question\n>y no means settled yet. I believe\n**aa Abraham Lincoln who said,
78dc99987d47fc7619b75fa770941a61 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.864383529934 47.04502 -122.894872 rise to the tumors which have prerhiled ol'\nthe existence of white Indians in the Batin.\nThe Moipiis have probably assisted na-\nture in levelling the top of the mountain as\na site for their villages. They have cut\ndown the rock: in many places, and have\nexcnrated out ofthe solid rock a number of\nlarge rooms, tor manufacturing woolen\ncloth. Their only arms are bows and ar-\nrows, although they never war with any\nother tribe. The Navajo“ carry of their\nstock without opponition. But unlike al-\nmost every other tribe of Indians on tho\ncontinent, they are scrupulously honest.“\ntnpt. Walker snyn the most attractive and\nvaluable article: may be left exposed, and\nthey will not touch them.\nMany of the women are beautiful, with\nforms of faultless symmetry. They no\nVery neat and clean, and dress in quite a\npicturerquo costume of their own msnutac-\nture. They wear a dark robe with a red\nborder, gracefully draped so as to leave\ntheirt right arm and shoulder bare. They\nhave most beautiful hair, which they ar.\nrange withgreat care. The condition of I\nfemale in: be known from her manner \ndressing the hair. The virgins part their\n.hair in the middle behind, and twist each\nparcel around I hoop six or eight inches in\ndiameter. This is nicely smoothed and\noiled and fastened to each side ofthe head,\nsomething like a large roaettec. The e?'ect\nis very striking. Tho msrried women\nwear their hair twisted into a club behind.\nThe Moquil farm in the plain by day\nand retire to theiryillagel on the mountain\nat night. They irrigate their land: by\nmeans of the sinnll streams running out of\nthe sides 0! the mountain. Sometimes when\nitfail: to mow on the mountains in winter,\ntheir crops are bad. For this reason they\nalways keep two or three years provisions\nlaid up, for fear of famine. Altogether\nthey are a moot extraordinary people, far\ninadvance of any other aborigines yet dis-\ncovered on this continent. They hue\nnmr had any intercourse with the whites.\nand of course their civilization originated\nwith them lrca. What a ?eld in here for\ntho ud?'ll?mult?volol ! We have rarely\nlistened to anything more int-rating than\nCspt. Walkers plain, unaffected story of\nhis travels in the Great Basin.
34930efb9e43751a043d73e90fff0aa4 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.0860655421473 40.827279 -83.281309 a list oi voters iu the county (Knox)\nto whom he was requested to send\nhis paper, payment being furnished by\nthe parties . who brought th list\nThree hundred papers were thus sent,\nwithout payment of postage. Some\nof Hip persons to whom the papers\nwere thus directed declined to re-\nceive them, and there was no pretense\ntha' the parties addressed had been\nconsulted. Tha case came before the\ncourt through the prosecution of the\npublishers, and the question arose\nwhether people provide i with papers\nwithout being consul'edj and espec-\nially those refusing them, could be\nconsidered subscribers. Judge Suek\nmam said he would not hold that the\nterms "bona fide subscribers' in the\nact granting free transmission of pa-\npers in the county wlier. thv wer\npnblished were to be constructed so\nstrictly an only to embrace person\n by their own act have made sub\nscriptions. or have subsequt ntly rat\nified the act of an authorized auent\nHe thought it quite plain that no one\ncould be a subscriber unless he h.nl\nS'ibscnhed himself, or otherwise rat\niGe i the subscriptsion. If parties en.\ngaged in a political campaign were\nallowed the freedom taki 11 by the\npublisher of the Banner. f he m-i - ls\nwould he liable to be loaded down\nand be pervnrted from an instrumen\ntalitv for tne publir goodto a cheap\nscheme tor personal or political spec\nulation T ie fudom said to pevail toa\na considerable extent, of sending out\nspecimen copies of a paper with out\nprepayment, n as also illegal. I he de\ncision of the lower tribunal conVietinp\nMr. Harper was affirmed, anda fine f\n$.0 and cost imposed. Ciuciunatti\nG:iz'tle
31df66bfc0f79c085093b01b34f812f6 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1868.8483606241145 41.004121 -76.453816 Where tlio timo for tlio expiration of\ntho loaso is specified, and tho teim.it\nholds over, tho landlord may treat him\nns a trespasser, or as a tenant by suffer-\nance, and turn him out without nolle".\nBut lio has nt tho samo timo tlio opti n\nto treat him as tenant for another y '.\nshould ho prefer to do so, upon\nsamo terms ns In tho original lease, so\nfar as they nro applicable. There i.\nboth reason nnd authority for this. O lio\ntennnt knows when his lease will i\npiro; it is liisdtity to move out by t. it\ntime, nnd surrender tho premises to Hie\nlandlord ; and if ho docs not it seems\nrcnsonnblo to consider his conduct ns\ncvldenco of his assent to contlnuo te 'i-a n- d\nfor nuothcr year, which is the\n.Imo tho law ordinarily Implies. 1 lie\n'oes not remove, tho landlord maj e\nmaterially injure). Ho is provened\nfrom providing nnollier tenant, nnd is\nleft nt'tho mercy of who stay. nr\ngoes as it suits him, It is but Ji- t,\ntherefore, that tho landlord should bo\nat liberty to take him nt his oiler, and\nconsider his remaining nn assent on his\nparttocontlntio; nndsuchnnagreomoi t\nis implied by the law in that case Tho\nnature of so Important n relation ought\nnot bo left to tlio caprlco of ono party,\nto retain tho possession of nnollier\nman's estato or lcavo it, withuut his\nconsent.. On tho tenant holding over\nafter tlio' end of his term, tlio law im-\nplies an agreement that ho should pay\ntho same rent, nnd at tho samo time,\nwhich ho had originally agreed to pay,\nand bo bound by tlio samo covenants, so\nfar as applicable. Generally, when n\nlandlord suffera n tenant to remain in\npossession nftsr tho expiration of Hie\ntenancy, nnd receives rent from him, n\ntenancy from year to year is establish-\ned ; and if no agreement is entered in-\nto, tholaw will presume, from tho
18795f98ae63ce5960c8408b4c85990a VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.3547944888383 43.798358 -73.087921 safe. Short of it, you are not. Perhaps\nsome of you may ask, are you not willing\nwe should enjoy the same privileges you\nonce wished for yourself? I answer, not\nin all respects. I sunnose von mpnn tho\nprivilege of getting drunk. No but we\nwant the liberty" of drinking when we\nplease, and we dont get drunk unless by\nmere accident. That may be ; but you are\ntravelling the same road I once travelled,\nand if you do not stop, you will most as-\nsuredly arrive at the point I had attained.\nI ask you therefore to proceed no farther.\nSuppose while in a fit of derangement vou\nhad procured a cord, had noosed one end of\nit around your neck, and with the other end\nfastened to abeam, you had suspended your-\nself. A neighbor chanced to see you im-\nmediately, and proceeded to cut the cord\nYou to prevent him. But he\nsucceeded. You was saved from death,\nand soon your reason was restored. You\nsoon saw one of your neighbors in the same\nsituation in which you had been. Would\nyou not feel it your duty to use all the\nmeans in your power to prevent his mittinr\nan end to his existence, although he should\nstrive to resist you ? I trust you would\nfor you would judge, and rightly, that the'\nman was deianged, else he would not take\nthat course. Now I hold that when appe-\ntite gains the ascendency over reason in\nany man, that that man is deranged. His\nmental powers are out of order, and he does\nnot fully realize how fast he may be going\nto destruction. He may be likened to a\nman launched out into the centre of a\nbroad stream, whose current is strong, still\nthe surface appears-
76a4f3a463998abae163c13cb4ee3c8e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.669862981989 40.063962 -80.720915 rnF.NTlKRS HIST1IANKHTO AM. THOHK\n1 who have favored him with their roufl-\ndence and potrouagn, and would Inform his\nfriends ana the jieople generally, that he will,\nthe coining year, oeetipy hi* old ofllce on !id\nstreet, near Heed A Kraft's Drug store, t'entre\nWheeling, W. Va..whefe ho may be consult¬\ned la reference to theirdi*eiiMc, the nature and\ncharacter of which the Doctor I* able nt nil\ntimes, and under nil circumstances, to describe\nand Jo assure of the probable result and dura¬\ntion of treatment. lie' practices the Eclectic\nSystem of Medicine,, using mild but effective\nremedies, supporting Instead of depremlng\nthe Vital PowerA. TPlio medicines used by\nhim aoo prepared and put up In his own\nofllce. Besides the treatment of Acute Dte-\ncases,D*. Klsnerwlll give his attention to the\n all varieties of Chronic disease.\nTliat scourge of the human rnce, Scrofula, in\nnil its varied forms, viz: Purulent Discharges\nfrom the liar, so prevaleut among children.\nPurulentOpihnlinia, Ozena, Knlarced (ilands\nUlcerations, Cancers and all verities of Skin\nDiseases, will receive liissi>eclnl attention..\nDiseases of the Throat, I^ung and Heart. IJv-\nr»r Complaints,X>iarrlKPaJ)ysenteiy and Piles,\nDiseases of tlie Urinaiy Oranns, Syphilis, &c.\nKervona and Spinal 'Affections, Epilepsy,\nIilieumatlsm rud Paralysis, Diseases of Fe-\nmnles, Dy«>mcnorrhen. beucorrheu, Prolapsus\nUteri, and all Painful irregularities and Ner¬\nvous Diseases to which, they are subject, he\ntreatssucressftilly. The treatmeut of (*HIL-\nDRKN wlllrecelvetliesameattention as here¬\ntofore. AU..consultations and communica¬\ntions strictly confldentlal, and will receive\nprompt attention. Nlghtcnlts cheerftilly an-\n«weml. Ofllce hours from 9 to 12 A. M., 1 to\nI and0to9 1*.M*
3b5e329bf2e9787a5eabf07f3324cc73 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.7418032470653 58.275556 -134.3925 Dawson's ball players have joined the\nush to the Tanaua and a number of\nier crack players have gone on the last\nx>ats for the now camp where they will\nlenceforth look for golden nuggets in¬\nstead of water-soaked baseballs.\nTrust to the excursionists to damn\nho country and circulate the most\nslanderous stories. A specimen of this\nspecies of humanity who .vas aboard\n:he Roanoke gives the press the follow-\nng: "Valdez has no excuse for exist-\nug. Still it is a compact, well built\nown, many of the buildings being two\nstories in height. It is built on a gla-\n;ial deposit and some day it will be\nswept into the sea.".Valdez News.\nAll the property of the Pacific Pack-\nug Navigation Company will be sold\nit public auction, the date to set at\ni date to be determined upon in the*\nlear future. This property is now in\n;he hands of receivers. It consists of\nmany salmon canneries in Alaska and\nseveral vessels of different sizes and\nmakes. The assets of the Pacific Pack¬\ning & Navigation Company are esti¬\nmated to be worth between 34,000,000\nrnd $0,000,000.\nIn discharging Isaac Burpee, who\nvas acquitted early thi3 mouth at Daw¬\nson ou the charge of embezzlement,\nJudge Macaulay said that since the\ngovernment had brought him from St.\nLouis to Dawson, probably it would be\nincumbent ou the government to re-\n;urn him there. The Judge was not\nclear as to the duty of the government\nn this matter, and said the question\n. vould bo looked into and determined a\nlittle later.
04325d17180ea97ab2cc1baa28584062 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.8972602422627 43.82915 -115.834394 The Practical Farmer mivs: We\nshould at-k what qualities du these men\nwho sire sm-ce. -siul t'uiuieis por-m* that\nhave made them so? Are liiev nut men\nof great energy, wide-awake and alert-\nmen who always keep ahreust <*i (lie\ntimes? Are they not men of an unflimh-\ninir déterminai ion, who trnmple ti|wn\ndifficulties, and who ever pats onwjml\nand upward? Are they not frugal and\nsober? Do they not read and think?\nDo they not love their calling? Iam\nacquainted with a farmer, win» ai*ont\neight years ago bought a farm. He had\nnothing to begin witli but energy, cliar-\narter and abilitv.and to-day he isalmost\nout of debt. Ilia money is all unnle\nfrom hi» farm products, and lie even\nsells corn, oats and hay—crops which\ntake off much plant food ; but this plant\nlood is always returning by copious ma*\nmiring. He follows general farming, but\nit is intensive farming. He docs no\nmore than lie can do well. And right\nhere is where so many Limiers make a\nmistake. They undertake entirely too\nmuch. Agood farmer once wrote that he\nnever plowed moreground than he could\ncompletely cover with manure. That'3\n good plan. 1 can imagine that that\nfarm er was successful. By plowing no\nmore than what can he completely cov­\nered with manure one is not likelyto\nplow more than what can he thoroughly\ntilled. An able writer on agriculture\nwrote some time ago that prodigy need,\nprodigy fertilizing ami prodigy tillage\nwill bring prodigy results. Now, iDeeuw\nto me that any farmer who has reason*\nably good land can obtain astonishingly\ngood results by using the best seed, by\ncopious fertilizing ami by thorough ti l*\nage. All th a t is needed is enterp"-*)\nconstant planning and push. Thelroubw\nwith a great many farmers is they ft,e\ns atisfied too soon. When they»*101**\ncrop that is slightly above lhe ayenise\nor somewhat better than that of their\nneighbors they think they are doing'vvj\nenough. This should not he. W\nshould strive each vear to surpass l,ie\nwork of the year before. Thev shone\nset before themselves a high ideal *>!\nthen strive to their uttermost to attuiu\nif. I spurn the desire of maintaiou'g\nfertility. That desire should find no\nlodgm ent in any progressive far,,,e1!.\nmind. Increasing the fertility shou\nbe the aim.
2bda2528bb5ce9439d7a8699f12c23a5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.0260273655506 58.275556 -134.3925 "With difficulty thoy got over the\nbroken bits of Ice on to larger floes.\nTo gel ashore, thoy had to swim from\npiece to piece, so had to throw away\nill their clothing, except pants and\nshirt. The Inspector snyB It took\n. hem Trom 8 to 10 hours to reach\nshore, and by that time they were\nall exhausted. Cornelius wont daffy,\nand wandered off by himself, coming\nto when he strayed Into an Eskimo\nAsh rump two dayo later. Doak\nswooned upon reaching land, having\npiloted the other In swimming all\nthe lords. Only the Inspector seemod\nnot to lose bin HeiiHes. Two days lator\nthey wore picked up by Alexander\nMien, who happened to be pasr.lng\nalong the coast In his schooner, and\nbrought hero. Then a search was\norganized to And Cornelius, who \nlocated at the fishing camp, and\nbrought bark. All the men wero III\nwhen thoy got bore, and had to go\nto bed, but are now fully recovered.\n"We, In the Tlllyak. wero more\n'ortunato. When we Hightcd the Ice\nbarrier. Instead of facing tho wind\nih did the pollco, we went outside\nthe Island, and got to the harbor\nwithout difficulty, but Thomas, our\npilot, came vor.v nenr drowning, for\nho was knocked on the Jiead and\noff tho boat by the boom of tho\nmainsail, in tho same gale that\nbroke tho pollco boat.\n"Sergt. and Mrs. Clay camo down\nwith us on tho Tlllyak. How fortun¬\nate they did not go In the whale-\nboat with the othors. I could have\ncarried anything else for them, but\nthey thought the whaleboat quite\nsafe."
17bb729403d027802e4f25bc68589e0a WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.736338766191 40.827279 -83.281309 hitherto shown, the real significance of\nthe Greeley movement is developed. It\nis the overthrow of the Republican party\nand recovery for the Southern States of\nall that can be recovered. In the North\nern States the Liberal Republicans con\nduct the camDaign bv denouncing the\ndishonesty of the Administration. In the\nSouthern States the Democrats declare\nthat in Mr. Greeley's election "there is a\ngleam of hone" for the overthrow 01\neaual suffrage. He must be a very fool\nish or a very angry man who sees in such\na situation hope for greater prosperity\nand truer harmonv.\nIt was natural that tne course 01 tne\ncampaign should be lust what 11 nas\nbeen. At the close of every Administra\ntion there is always great disappointment.\nand discontent of all kinds, honest and\ndishonest. It chanced, moreover, that\nat this time there were three or four Re\npublican leaders who were alienated from\nthe Executive. The Republican \ntent and the Democratic desperation offer-\ned an opportuity for a bold stroke. The\ncrv of reform, always attractive, was\nloudly raised, and tne uincinnau conven\ntion met. Some of its supporters, in a\nkind of ecstasy, supposed that the ideal\nhour of politics had arrived. But when\nthe rosy cloud vanished, the situation\nwas clear and tne alternative simple, ior\nit was merely a question of Democracic\nrestoration. Forced to a decision, the\nideal discontent that went to Cincinnati\nprefers General Grant and Republican\nascendency to Mr. Greeley with the North-\nern and Southern Democrats and the class\nof Republicans who still cling to him.\nThe hurrah of the Greeley nomination,\nthe surprise of the Baltimore action, the\nimpulse to "run for luck," have disap\npeared before the steady question. Is it\nwise to intrust the Government to those\nwho, as a party, have made the Demo-\ncratic record of the last twenty years?\nHarpers Weekly.
136f66e7696dffe70cc29882856c3d4b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.4139343946063 40.063962 -80.720915 with the peoplo whom tho President\nhas disappointed. I do not underrato\nMr. Blaino9 popularity with tlio masses.\nBecause the opponents of tho President\naro unablo to unite upon a candidato\nthey now tako advantage of Mr. Blaine's\npopularity, and are undertaking to force\nhim to ignore his solemn observation\nthat his name will not go beforo the\nconvention. I do not believo that Mr.\nBlaine has given encouragement to this\nproposed use of bin name. To nominate\nMr.TJlaino now is to run tho risk of his\ndeclination, which, if it comes, utterly\nrtiina all hope of party success.' It\nseems to mo that an acceptance by him\nafter the struggle that will have to be\nmado to obtain tho nomination will\neurelv make him a weak candidate.\nThe time has been when Mr. Maine\ncould have had tho nomination by sub-\nstaatinl unanimity. Tlie President has\nnot been so desirous for the nomination\nas most people think, lie haH per¬\nmitted liia name to bo used because\nsincoMr. Blaine's declination it seemed\nto him that he was largely tho choice of\nhis party, the only condition that in¬\nduced him to consent. Can any \nman now doubt for a moment that he\ncan re/use fhrtlior consent to tho use oi\nilia name. 1 believo he has a majority\nof tho convention, and 1 hope, notwith-\nstanding all tho noisy demonstration\nagainst him, to seo him nominated by\nacclamation. The only argument used\nagainst tho President is that ho cannot\nbo elected, yet all admit that his admin¬\nistration has boon a complete success,\nHo lias succeeded in securing\ntho confidence of his countrymen\nof all shades of opinion to a greater ex-\ntont during his administration than\nnine-tenths of tho presidents before\nhim. Every interest, great and small,\nfeci perfectly safe in his hands. Tho\npublic knows that he ia honest and pos¬\nsesses ability of a vory high order, ilo\npassed tho ordeal of ono campaign,\nwhich began without much enthusiasm,\nbut which grew daily. His utterances\naro always romarkabln fur good ponso\nand admirable statement. Wo know\nthat lie will strengthen himself, if that\nbo possible, by overy utteranco ho\nmakes. Wo koow ho will emerge from\ntho struggle without a blundor. Toll\nmo, if you can, that such it candidate is\nweak in anv sense.
6ddbcc99dc2a8879e716bcf878c1f10e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.8428961432403 43.798358 -73.087921 the motion to lav on the table ; and Messrs.\nBeard, Li! lie, Sdbin, Chandler of W.,\nFlebard, Hodges, Warner of N., Cutts,\nWarner of B. and Cleveland, opposed\nboth this motion: and the reception of the\npaper, until presented in the usual form\nof a minority report. The motion of Mr\nRice of Somerset was rejected, 123 to 62.\nMr Vi!a3 moved that the paper be read,\nand called for the aves and noes rejected,\n144 to 53. The question then recurred\nupon receiving the paper : Mr Bard called\nfor the ayes and noes : . he said the p'aper\nwas an illegitimate one, and the author of\nit might as well have presented a; last\nyear's almanac. Mr Buckmaster said he to\nunderstood that the committee had con-\nsented to receive this piper as a minority\nreport. Mr 5 wilt (ot committee,; said\nhe did not so understand it, and that on by\nthe other hand, it had been suggested in\nthecommiUee that it would be altogether\nimproper to present the paper in its present\nshape. BIr Rice of S. said he did not\nconsider the paper ns coming in a proper\nshape, but as the House had refused to\nlay the motion of reception on the table,\nthat it might come up properly, he should\nvote to receive it now. Mr Chandler of\nW , said he was against receiving the pa-\nper on the sole ground that it was wrong\nin form. Mr Vilas thought that if the\npaper was not now received, and permit-\nted to lie until the Teport of the majority to\ncame in, it could never come before the\nHoue. Afttr further discussion by\nMessrs Backmaster, Beard, Warren of N.,
17058d15480732e39c78b72fd617aa90 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.3547944888383 40.735657 -74.172367 the proposal, they will, upon Its being so\nawarded, be :ome hi# or their sureties for tho\nfaithful performance of raid work; and that If\nthe person or perrons omit or refuse to execute\nriioh contract they will pay to the Cltr of\nNewark any differences between the sum# to\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract and that\nwhich the City of Newark rray be obliged to\npay the person or persons by whom such con-\ntract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners of tin City of Newark reserve to them-\nselves the right to accept or reject any or all\nproposals for the above work, m they may\nde>*Ti best for the interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties a**# hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section\nof the law cresting the of Ptre**t and\nWater Commissioner?1, approved March 2.1 . 1801 .\n(hat the pond or bonds to he given for the\nfaithful execution and performance of aw'd\npublic work shall fir*t be approve*! as to suf-\nflci-*ncv to- the Board, and as to form by tl,e\ncounsel of the Hoard, and no contract shall\nbe binding or the city or become effective or\noperative until such bond I" no approved: and\nthe President f the Board shall have power\nto examine the proposed bondsmen under oath,\nif he shall so desire, nr shall be so instructed\nbv the Board but the Board will not b<* bound\nbv anv statement that r.tay be made by such\nproposed bon Bitten, bm ahall liav« full power\n.ind Absolute discretion in the whole matter,\ntnd this provision shall be referred to In «ry\nadvertisement Inviting bids for any such pub-\nlic work.
1ae71cc3d1a7ab57e973e6211237b89f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1866.4178081874684 41.004121 -76.453816 regularity of conduct. Usually from\neight or nine o'clock in tho morning\nuntil near midnight there is a perpetual\nstream of visitors to tho President, in-\nterrupted only by meals and Cabinet\nconsultations, and tho amount of ques-\ntions passed upon and business transact-\ned, in any singlo day, is very great, and\nif fairly stated, might seem to many al-\nmost incredible. Dozens, and often hun-\ndreds of persons visit tho President\ndally, and converso and transact busi\nness with him. And yet no human be\ning, of all tho many thousands who havo\nhad sueli personal intercourse during tiio\npast year, lias ever discovered tho slight-\nest sign of Intemperance in ids conduct\nor conversation. In short, this calum-\nny can bo moro thoroughly disproved in\nIds caso than in thatof almost any other\nperson, whether in private or public\nstation. Tho imputation in his caso lias\nnever been noticed by him or by ids\nfriends. It lias been very properly\ntreated with silent contempt. Hut tho\nmalleo of faction knows no limit of de\ncency or truth, and safo quarters oC'\ncaslonally Indulges itself in tho mean\nand malignant falsehood which wo havo\nhero noticed, and which, whenovcr ut-\ntered, should.bo met by an iudiguant\nand Hat denial. Whllo wo are upon this\ntopic It may bo well to refer to tho al\nIeged conduct of tho President upon In\nauguration Day, In March, 18G5 ; for wo\nsuppose tho statement then published\nconcerning him has been the foundation\nof all tho subsequent imputations In dis\nparagement of his character as a tern\npcrato man. Ho had then Just arrived\nfrom Tennessee, having risen from a bed\nof sickness to perform tho Journoy to\ntho Capital. In the forenoon of tho 4th\nof March a largo mass of persons with\nmusic called upon him at his lintel, and\nInvited n speech. Ho complied with\ntho request, and spoko to them somo\ntime in tho open nir, until ids voico\nnearly failed him. when ho retired.\nmmedlutely nfterward ho aceoinpan\nnl tho Commlttco of Arrangements to\n10 Senato to bo Installed as Vice-Pre- sl\nit, and tuero, under Ids circuinstan
00e923ad7190854c36111f1fece55a7d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.3410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 Survivors of 23d New JcrMy Enter­\ntained at Edgewater Park.\nCamden, N. J ., May 5. —The 40th\nnntilversary of the battle of Salem\nChurch, Va, was celebrated at Edge-\nwater Park, N. J ., the beautiful coun­\ntry home of General E. Uurd Grubb,\nby a reunion of the survivors of hie\nold regiment, the 23d New Jersey Vol­\nunteers. Of the 1040 men who left\nBeverly In September, 1862, for tho\nSouth only 126 remain. The spacious\ngrounds were thrown open to the old\nsoldiers and visitors, and Burlington\ncounty was there en masse. The sol­\ndiers of tho old 23d, all of them born\nand raised in tho county, have the\nhabit of calling General Grubb “Colo­\nnel," and they have never given him\nany higher title, he gained\na generals uniform during the latter\npart ol the civil war.\nThe exercises opened with an ad­\ndress of congratulation to General\nGrubb by tbe chaplain of the Regi­\nmental Association, "Dominie” Ab­\nbott, which was responded to by the\ngeneral. This took place on the front\nporch of the mansion, and after the\nformal ceremonies were over the sol­\ndiers and guests dispersed over the\nlawns and made themselves comfort­\nable in a variety of ways.\nMrs. Grubb entertained tho wives\nof the veterans. Among the guests\nwere General John V. Brooke. U. S.\nA., r etired; Governor Murphy, of New\nJersey; Captain Groome, of the First\nCity Troop, and Mrs. Groome; Mr.\nand Mrs. Alexander Van Rensselaer,\nMr. and Mrs. Stewart: of Glen Ridge,
35521cbbeb4d5d0014deca82442e3122 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.6260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 The means of taking these flsh about today, with the hand-enanvled line, final host of the parasite. As a rule,\nforty or fifty years ago, when they lightweight reel, hooks snooded on gut, the worms located between the muscle\nwere first Introduced Into eastern leaders of. the same material, minnow layers are fiat worms. If there were\nwaters, were crude, compared with 1 buckets filled with live bait or a large no water birds on the lakes and streams\nthe up-to-date, tackle which 1s now In assortment of artificial halls, such as most of Hie parasites of fish would dis-\nI use. The outfit of most anglers in the wooden minnows and files, to choose appear. Doubtless you have often ob-\nI those days were very simple and con- ; from, all of which Improvements and served black specks under the skin of\nslsted principally of a hand-throw1 Innovations have been the result of the ; of Hie bass and perch. These\nline about tho weight of those now i labors and experience of the anglers of ; caused by small encysted worms, and\nused for salt water fishing, snqpled years ago, many of whom are stil found the attack comes from the swimming\nhooks were more of an exceplon than ; on the streams and ponds and who. 1 larvae of certain worms which are\nthe rule, being fastened to the line by 1 while equipped with all the modern hatehd from eggs voided by water,\nhalf hitching. The rost of bamboo outfit, will show the pride of the old The birds feed on the fish which are af-\nrods, snooted hooks, leaders, reels and hickory rod and accessories which gave ferled by parasites. The Immature\nprepared lines was so great as to be such valiant service In years gone by in worm develop and lay eggs in the bird,\nbeyond the reach of all but the few.
25527b55cc12a88f67d843abf215e22f THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.752732208814 29.949932 -90.070116 country, the average time made bealg aboot\nthirty-Ove miles an bhr. The differert roads\nnamed form a through line, whi is mader moot\ncompetent mansagemet. Aoeidents are naheerd\nof; end travelers joreying to the Northern\nfrostier easeot choose a better roote. At Cleve.\nland I changed cars, which was no trouble, as the\nchange is made in a magnicent union depot.\nOut going tralts are placarded so that the traveler\nneeds ask no questions as to whieb traa he shall\nembark on to reach his destaNtio. My trai\nconsisttang of a "perfectly splendid" ongne and\npalatial car was already backed up ad waiting\nfor her precious eargo. The " all sabard" of\nconductor Briggr wasn oon heard, sad after a de-\nlightful ride over the Cleveland, Palnseville aed\nAshtabula, and the Buffalo sad 5rie rrllroade, ad-\njoncts to the great Michigan Southern through\nroute, which is most ably represented ia this city\nby Otis Kimbal, Esq., general egeat, I arrived\nhere 10:40 r. i., as little fatigued as though I\nhad been sitting and lounging about in the cabin\nof one of our Missislppi steamers.\nBuffalo is situate at the foot of Lake Erie, and\nis quite an Important and flourishing city. She\ndoes a heavy grain trade, and ship-building is car-\nried on to a very large extent. Vessele are built\nalong the banks of Buffalo Creek. a stream navi.\ngable for the largest steamers and ships for some\ndistance above its month. Propellers and sailing\nvessels of great capacity and elegant and spa-\ncious passenger steamers are builtuanosily on the\nbanks of the creek. Elevators, almost with-\nout number, line the northern bank of the\ncreek for a long distance from its mouth, and the\ncheerful snort of the steanm-lag towing vessels in\nand out of the harbor is cootantly heard. Buffalo\nis a pleoeantplace in summer. buola eater ldd\nthan "Greeninad's Icy moentaas "I have been\ntold. The population is 100,000.
b3bb2229a6a5c42944872647eafc6241 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.8428961432403 39.261561 -121.016059 The allied forces having advanced from Man-\nagua, Gen. Walker ordered the Garrison at that\nplace, amounting to 350 men, to fall back im-\nmediately in Granada, in order to allow the en-\nemy to occupy the place. This they did and it\nwas the unanimous wish of every American in\nGranada, that their apparent success would in-\nspire them with sufficient courage to attack\nGranada. Such an attack could be followed\nouly by the result, or a disastrous defeat. The\ncitizens, tliat is the persons not belonging to the\narmy, but engaged in trade and attending to\nthe civil business of the State, formed them-\nselves into a company to assist in the defense of\nthe city, and participated in the glory of a vic-\ntory. As the allied forces would not advance,\nWalker having been re-iuforced with men and\ntwo mounted Howitzers, advanced to Massaga\nto give them battle. The Americans entered\nMassaga by the way known the middle road.\nThey had scarcely appropriated to themselves a\nplace to spend the night, when the enemy began\nto shoot in the direction in which our soldiers\nwere encamped. Random shooting was kept up\nfor about two hours, but there was not any\nAmericans killed, although four were wounded,\none only of whom is dangerously so.\nAbout daylight in the morning of the 12th,\nthe battle began. The American forces were\nstationed on an eminence. The enemy were in\nlarge numbers at a distance of 500 yards. They\ntired upon us with a large gun and it seemed\nthat it was too dark to determine their motions\naccurately, but they were supposed to be ad-\nvancing under the cover of its lire. A bomb\nfrom one of our howitzers fell with nice pre-\ncision in their midst. When the smoke cleared\naway there was not one of them in sight. The\nhowitzers continued to throw shots until they
187d86a24e81d2f2c487f6e04f8001a8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1901.6808218860983 42.217817 -85.891125 Nothing" spoils a good disposition\nquicker. Nothing' taxes a man's pa\ntience like any itchiness of the skin.\nItching piles almost drive you crazy.\nAll day it makes you miserable. All\nnight it keeps you awake. Itch. Itch.\nItch. With no relief. Just the same\nwith eczema. Can hardly keep from\nscratching it. You would do so, but\nyou know it makes you worse. Such\nmiseries are daily decreasing. People\nre learning they can be cured. Leani\nng the merits of Doan's Ointment.\n'lenty of proof that Doan's Ointment\nwill cure piles, eczema, or any itchiness\nof the skin. Read the testimonial of a\nBattle Creek citizen:\nMr. A. G. Ayers, Book Binder, of 197\nWest Main street, Battle Creek, says:\n'My hands became so sore from eczema\nthat it was with difficulty I could bend\nmy fingers. The skin cracked open,\n scabs formed, and in addition to\nthe spots beiig tender they itched in-\ntolerably. I tried everything I could\nhear about or get hold of to stop the\ntrouble, but I was unable to do so\nuntil I procured Doan's Ointment. I\nhad heard it spoken about by several\npeople, but as I thought it would act\nlike all the other preparations which 1\ntried I. waited some time until I was\ncompelled from the condition of my\nhands to do something. Doan's Oint\nment cured me. Up to date, and this\ns some months after I stopped the\ntreatment, I have had no indication of\nany return.\nDoan's Ointment for sale by all deal\ners. Price 50 cents. Mailed by Foster- -\nMilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents\nfor the U. S . Remember the name\nDoan's, and take no substitute.
20e9d28b88ce3b0055b473844817e3f4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.0041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 St. TitiL, Jan. 1 . .Governor Hubbard\nhas pardoned a bigamist In whose case\ntwo continents have an Interest. He la\nThomas McAfee, allaa Gerald Moore, who\nwas sentenced In St. Paul last fall to three\nyears' hard labor In tho Penitentiary.\nMcAfee deserted his flrst wife In Dublin,\nIreland, and came to New York, where\nhe engaged in bualneai. On the voyage\nfrom the old country he met and fallTn\nlove with his second wife, who waa known\naa Oountesi Von Mutasnbacb. Not long\nalter arriving In New York the two were\nmarried. Ono day In the street McAfee\nmet Tbomaa Lodge, the brother of bta « I\nformer wife, and to escape suspicion he\nstarted at once for the Weat. lie came to\nBU Paul, where, under the nlme of Gerald\nMoore, he enraged in tbe atatlonery busi¬\nness. Lodge followed him up, discovered\nhim here and had him arreated on the\ncharge of bigamy, MoAfee pleaded guil¬\nty and did not atand trial.\nSince his incarceration MoAfee has\nsaved, aside from the allowance for\ngood time, aoms 125 a month, earned as a\nbookkeeper. According to her own story,\ntbe Countosa Von Matienbach is ^daugh¬\nter of Commodore Meade, of the United\nSlates Navy, and a niece of Gen. Meade,\nUnited Slates Army. She waa born In\nIMS: At the age of IB she married 0.\nLnudle, Vlneland, N, J., but some years\nafter their marriage ahe waa divorced\nfrom him and went abroad. At Nice, In\nI87K, the met the Baron Von Mutsinbach,\nand waa married to him. He died shortly\nafter thia and In the spring ol 1880 she\nstarted baok for America. On her voyage\nhome the met and loved McAfee, After\nhis arrest In 8fc Panl she lived here for *\ntime, oared for by the Women of the Home\nfor the Friendless. After bla Imprison¬\nment she went to Stillwater to be near\nhim. Last spring McAfee's Urst wife ar¬\nrived In Minnesota and made her home\nwith her brother, Thomas 0. Lodge, In\nMinneapolis. 11s it itill McAlee't wife,\nbat wlllieeka divorce.
0a15fb7620c4518680e0781c65794815 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.6434425913276 41.020015 -92.411296 "The dog's his friend, sir," was the\nneighbor's answer, "and he won't\nlive long when his master's gone."\nAnd these word* were prophecy.\nI sent for a doctor, a nurse, and lor\nnourishing food, to battle against\ndeath: but our efforts were useless.\nThe miser lived a week, and upon\neach of the seven days the dog went\nout, according to his habit, with his\nbasket round his neck, and remained\nout for ten or twelve hours, till dusk.\nSometimes T followed hi in from\nmorning till evening; seeintr which\nand remembering my face"as that\nwhich stood daily by his master's\nbedside, he wagged his tail at my ap­\nproach and consented to walk at my\niieels. flue night the miser died, and\non the morrow Jim did not go out.\nHe had missed his master the night\nbefore, and guessed that they had put\nhim in the long black box that stood\nin the middle of the room. When\nthe men came to carry away this long\nblack box, the dog went after them\nanil cried. He followed the cotlin to\nthe cemetery, where he and I were\nthe bnly spectators beside the curate,\nthe sexton, and the undertaker's men.\n the earth was thrown in he\nlooked at me plaintively to know\nwhat, it meant, and when the burial\nwas over, he wished to remain near\nthe open tomb, waiting until his mas-\nter should rise. I took him homo\nwith me but he would not eat, and\nthe next morning at sunrise he howl­\ned for his basket. It was no use\nkeeping him, so I tied the basket\naround his neck nnd sent him out.\nThat evening, forseeing what would\nhappen. I went to the cemeterv. The\ndog arrived at nightfall, with iiis bas­\nket full of pence, and I turned them\nall out upon the grave. "Come, .Tim,"\nI said, with tears rising to my eyes;\nbut he whined mournfully and tried\nto scratch up the earth. Twice more\nhe went out like this all day. and\nbrought back money for his muster:\nbut on the third evening, finding that\nthe pence on the grave remained un­\ntouched, he suffered nie. without re­\nsistance, to take off his collar, and\nlay down at full length near his mas­\nter's last sleeping place.\nThe next morning lie did not go on\nhis rounds for he was dead.— Enqlish\nPaper.
158eb0928d202fe10c77de5932d71184 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.8205479134956 39.745947 -75.546589 NOTICE. —TO THE HONORABLE\nJudges ot the Court of General Hesslons\nof the State ot Delaware, In and for New\n astle county. We, the undersigned, re­\nspectable citizens and substantial free­\nholders ot the Third ward ot the city of\nWilmington, do hereby certify that I Bury\nUamsbergtr. Hie owner nnd occupant of\nthe store, situated at the southwest cor­\nner of Madison und Sixth streets, In the\nThird ward, city, county and state afore­\nsaid. and described In his application,\nend who is an applicant for license, on\nMonday, the 21st day of November, A. U.\n1898, being the next term of said court,\nfor tho sale of Intoxicating liquors In\nquantities not less than one-half gallon\ntherein, not lo be drunk on the premises,\nbe being a licensed retailer goods,\nwares and merchandise, the aggregate\n■ ost value of his stock constantly kept on\nland for sale Is not less than 8500. He Is\na man of full age and sobriety, und good\nmoral character, that such »ale of Intoxl-\n> atlng liquors at said place Is necessary\na accommodate the public; that he Is the\nowner of said house, and the following\noepeota.ble citizens of said ward, at least\niwulvc of wlfflfi are suimiami.il freehold­\ners of said «fora, recommend the said ap­\nplication, vis: I\nGeo. H . Huber.\nGeo. H . Lewis,\nJohn T. Bprogg.\nJames Monaghan,\nHugh McGlnley,\nj. J . Schrude,\nHorry U. King.\nJohn Spragg,\n1 '©ter McCloskey,\nFrank Stahl,\nWin. II . Rlghter,\nAlorz Schneider,\nFred. Piepenbrtng,
166d42b59ee19f7450ed98f5937ad1a9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.4945205162355 41.004121 -76.453816 Loon ripened tho inatUr In my Iuukh, and I\nwould spit up moio than n pint of ollens.vo yel-\nlow lualter every morning ior n long time.\nAs soon ns that began to subside my eoush,\nfover, p.ln and night nweatsall began to leave\nme, nnd my nppctlto becamo m greai that it was\nwith I'ltllculty that I could keep from eating to i\nmuch, 1 soon gained my strength, and hau\ngrown lu llesh ever since.'\n"I was weighed shortly nfter my recovery."\nndded tho Doctor, Mt hen looking llkonmeroskil-eto- n\n; my weight was only nluutysevcn pmmds;\nmy present weight Is two hundred and twenty-llv- o\n(Ii?) pountls, nnd for years 1 havo enjoyed\nuninterrupted health."\nDr.Hchenck has dlsconllnued his profession- . -\nvisits to New York nnd lIston. llu or his son,\nDr. J. ILHcheuek, Jr., still continues to see pa-\ntients ot their oilU'c, No. Ti ninth street,\nPhiladelphia, overy Huturday Irom t) A. M. , to .1\nv. m. Those who wish u thorouth cxainhmtloti\nwith the Ucsplionieter will bo charged!. The\nltesplrometer declares tho exact condition of the\nlungs, nnd patients can readily loam whether\nthey uro curable or not.\nTho directions for taking Iho medicines am\nndaptedto ttio intelligence oven of n child. Kid\nlow theso directions, and kind Nature will do the\nrest, excepting that in somo cases tlio Mandrake\nTills nio to bo taken lu Increased doses; tin\nthrco medicines need im other act ompanlmeiits\nthan tho ample Instructions that accompany\nthem; rirstcreato appetite. Of returning health\nhuugerlsthemost welcnmo symptoni. When it\ncomes, us It will eomo, let tho despairing at once\nboot good cheer. Uood blood at unco follows, the\ncough liwsens, tho night sweat Is abated. In a\nshoittlmo both of theso morbid symptoms nio\ngo no lorever.
02263b730dfe1fae778d11a3fa8a103a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.850684899797 39.261561 -121.016059 There nas mo immense crowd at the recep-\ntion at the depot, but no indignity wa* put up-\non the guests, A few boys, moat of them in\nthe newa buoineaa, found it difficult to keep\ntheir tongue* etill, but the spectators stopped\nthe little rascals, and the prisonerswent with-\nout inault to their quarters. A few persona\nwere allowed to enter the prisoners qwtjera\nduring the day ar.d converse with them. Moat\nof them were in excellent spirits, and all in\ngood health. They appeared to bare only one\nidea, that there was but one folly committed on\neither side, and that was that the North and\nSouth should have fallen out. A very intelli-\nSent one among them said he was now in\nopes that the two great powers—England and\nFrance—would intercede and settle the \nas he thought the North would now be willing\nto compromise. When told it was too late to\ncompromise he could not understand it. He\nasked “ Why f” When answered that because\nthe South wished to settle the whole matter\nnow and forever, and she would not consent to\ncompromise, he appeared to be amazed. We\nlearn there are several among them who have\npreviously lived in Mobile fer several years.—\nOne of those we had a conversation with, but\nto the last he denied his identity. As an ins-\ntance of how Southerners treat ther prisoners,\nwe will state a fact. There were some two or\nthree of them barefooted. An Alabamian rais*d\na subscription and gave them money to buy\nshoes, and also a nice little sum to distribute\namong the most needy.
8b1babd4044be83ff786439c03fc7379 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6106557060818 39.745947 -75.546589 I This government believes In a united men! of Ihe l'oiled Stales to meog-\nI free and autonomous Polish stale, and aize the posent rule« of Russia as a\nPthe people of the United States are government with which Ihe relations\nI earnestly solicitous for Ihe malnlen- common lo friendly governments can\nI ance of Polands political Independ- be maintain'd. This conviction has\nI cnee and territorial integrity. From nothing to do with any particular\n■ this attitude we will not depart, and political or racial structure, which\n■ the policy of this government will be the Russian people thems"lves may\n■ directed to the employment of all see fit In embrace. It rests upon a\nI available means In render It effectual, wholly different set of facts. These\nI The government therefore lakes no facts, which none dispute, have con-\nIexception to the effort apparently he- vineed the government of Ihe United\nI ing made in some quarters to arrange against its will, that the exisl-\nlan armistice between Poland and |ng regime in Rusais Is based upon\nI Russia, but it would not, at least for the negation of every principle of\n■ the present, participate In any plan honor and good faith, and every usage\n■ fog the expansion of the armistice and convention, underlying Ihe whole\n■ negotiations Into a general F.uropean structure of international law. the\n■ conference, which would. In all proh- negation in short of every principle\n■ ability. Involve two results from Upon which It is possible to base\n■ both of vvjiieh this country strongly harmonious and trustful relations.\n■ rel-oils. vfz.. the recognition of the whether of nations or _individuals\n■ Bolshevist regime and a settlement The responsible leaders of the re-\n■ of Russian problems almost Inevlta- Kim(. have frequently and openly\n■ hlv upon the basis of a dismember- b0astid that they are willing to sign\n|mHit of Russia.
1eb9ccdc53524b4e9b30236dc44b6647 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1863.9794520230848 37.561813 -75.84108 ernment still continues tha subscrip-\ntions now amounting to nearly 'two\nni i. lions per dsy.\nThe advantage of these Bonds, as an\nnvestment of permanent capital, over\nother stocks and bonds, lies in tho fact\nthst the interest is payable in gold,\nthus making them now about nine per\ncent, stocks, and they are not liable to\naxation in any shape, or by any au\nthority. For full particulars as to the\ncharacter of tha loan, the attention of\nthe reader is called to the card of Jay\nCooke, the subscription Agent, which\nill be found in another eolamn. We\nfully endorse the following remarks of\nthe Philadelphia North Amerioan:\n"It is greatly to be cro litsd to the\nGovernment that its loans, of all tha se\ncurities dally dealt in on the markot,\nkavo maintained their integrity of price\nbetter than almost anything else. Its\nFive Twenty yoarsix per eent. loan,\ntheiatereat on which promptly paid\nn gold, has beea subscribed to, all\nthrough the pressuro in the money\nmarket, at an average of more than two\nmillions por day. And what is not the\ncsst gratifying faot in oonneotion with\nthe large daily subscriptions to this\npopular loan, scarcely any of it is re\nturned to tha market for sale It is\ntaken for investment, and is held with\nnnfaltering confidence in its reliabili\nty. And why should it not bw? It his\nseen that the Government now, aftor\ntwo years of the most gigaotio war that\ntho world has ever known, experiences\nno difficulty in commanding tha neocs\nssry means to nrosecute it, or io psying\nregulsrly the interest in gold as it falls\ndue. If this can bu done while the war\ns being wsged, who osn anticipate any\ndifficulty ia readily accomplishing it\nwhen tho war is ended? What better\ninvestment then, for capital, than the\n"Five-Twenty-
1775a52d90233f997c7f400de2beb01a THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1895.0068492833586 46.601557 -120.510842 P. v vlrtveof a writ of execution, ord'Tef Rale\nand decree of foreclosere, Issued out of the Mid\nsui*rinr court in the above entitled action on\nthe 7th day of /lecrmber. MM, In favor of said\niilaintlilami avalust the iiald defendant Jnhu\nk ration for the principal aum of teveuteeu\nhundred and seventy-fivedollars and sixty cents\n(tlTT&tt) wlih interest thereon fnim ttie date\nthereof until paid at (he rale of eight per cent,\nj.iraiiium. mi.l lift) dollars (f." iO> attorneys' feet,\nMilt)costs of niiit amounting to one hundred ami\neisht dollar- and twenty five cents (Iliw .' ." >) and\nin n-axeit <Hi«t«, and conimauditiK me to levy\nupon and make xale thereof; and whereas the\nsaid judgment it a foreclosure of a real estate\nmortgage ki yen by the said defeudant John K.\nI'attnn and Flora a I'atton his wife, now de-\n to Darius ('. stone, plaintiff herein, upon\nthe following described real e»tate situate iv\nYakima county, stme of Washington, to-wlr\nlx>ts numbered one 1. two j, three 3 and four\n4. Ivblock seven 7, Iv the city of North Yakima,\nVtaabingtou. according toihe official plat there\nol of record In the nmce of the county auditor\nof said Yakima comity.\nNotice iv hereby given that In obedience t/i\nsaid command. 1 will, on Saturday the twelfth\nday of January, M5, between the hours of nine\no'clock a. m. ami four o'clock p. in. , to-wit —at\nthe h uirof twoo'clock p. m. of said day. at the\nfront door ol the court house Iv the city of\nNorth Yakima. Yakima couuty. state of Wash\nlugt'iii .sell at public auction to the highest\nbidder, for cash, all of the above tiMrrltwa real\n•
0314210a7d5e3617c8e2c7aa7f8c0f31 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.6369862696602 39.745947 -75.546589 It was like the departure of an army\nat the P , W & B. station this morning\nwhen the 8 13 Delaware train pulle I out,\nonly a trifle late, with six special day\ncoaches coutalulug the cream aud skim\nmilk of tbe Republicanism of Wilmington.\nThis is the day agreed upon for a state\ncouveuttou of the Republican party of\nDelaware at Dover, at 11 o'clock a. m ,\nfor the purpose of uomiuating a caudl\ndate for gnver or and a candidate for\nrepresentative in Congress and members\nof tbe State Central Committee.\nThe convention at Dover const its of\nHid delegates apportioned among the\nseveral districts of the state as follows:\nForty from the first district, thirty\neight from the second district, forty\nfrom the third district, two from\nthe fourth district.\nSince last evening prominent politicians\nhave been wending their way toward\ntho state capital and General Manager\nBacb loft last night very soon after bis\nre-election as chairman of the First\nDistrict Committee Accompanying him\nand a number of other Rrpuolicau\nhustlers were the distinguished-looking\nGeneral James II Wilsou, who as state\nchairman failed in his attempt at a lUuk\nmovement with his party lu Delaware at\nthe last election, but is willing to try\n«gain; and tho young aud smiling\nSecretary Hugh C Browne\nBefore 8 o'clock this moruiug there\nwere crowds around the station aud at\n8.10 Hyatt's Military Baud with gltateu\nlng red uniforms aud shining silver In­\nstrument* marched down French street\nto the btattou playing lively martial\nmusic.
37ceaede137c65c5295bde7e76083fa2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.3493150367833 37.561813 -75.84108 The popular feature of a copiously Illustrated\n"Christmas number" will be continued.\nTo possess such a valuable epitome of the art\nworld at a cost so trifling, will command the sub-\nscriptions of thousands in every section of the\ncountry ; but, as the csefulncss and attractions of\nThe A tdine can be enhanced, in proportion to the\nnumerical Increase of its supporters, the publishers\npropose to make "assurance doubly sure," by the\nfollowing unparalleled oner of\n. Premium Chromos for 1873.\nEvery subscriber to The A Mine, who pays in ad\nvance for the year 18T3, will receive, without addi-\ntional chanre. a pair of beautiful oil chromos. after\nJ. J . Hillt the eminent English painter. tTbe pic-\ntures, entitled "The Village Belle," and "Crossing\ntne moor." are 14 x ai incnes are printed rrom zs\ndifferent plates, requiring 23 impressions and tints\nto perfect each picture. The same chrdmos are \nfor $30 per pair, in the stores. As K is the determi-\nnation of its conductors to keep The Aldine out of\nthe reach of competition in every department, the\nchromos will be found correspondingly ahead of any\ntnat can De ouerea Dy otner periodicals, jsvery\nsubscriber win receive a cernncare over tne sign:\nture of the publishers, guaranteeing that tbe\nchromos delivered shall be equal to the samples\nturmsiiea tne airem. or tne monev wui oe retunaea.\nThe distribution of pictures of this grade, free, to\ntne suoeenners to a nve aoiuir periodical, wiu mara\nan epoch in the history of Art ; and, considering\ntbe unprecedented cneapness of tbe price tor The\nA tdine itself, the marvel falls little short of a mira-\ncle, even to those best acquainted with the achieve\nments of Inventive genlna and unproved mechanical\nappliances. (For illustrations of these chromos,\nsee jtovemper issue ot i nc Ataine.)
00b2d630935e230e2c6959221d22ea05 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.5383561326737 46.187885 -123.831256 the improvement of the Columbia\nriver, are invited aud urged to\nsend delegates. The governors of\nOregon and "Washington, the Ore-\ngon senators, Oregon's representa-\ntive in congress, the territorial del-\negate to congress, the United\nStates engineers and other impor-\ntant personages have been espec-\nially invited to attend, and it is ex-\npected that the gathering will be\nlarga and notable and in the high-\nest degree representative. The\nvoice of such a convention upon a\nmatter of publio policy ought to\nhave weight with congress.\nft is beliered that the chief pur\npose of the waterway convention\ncould best be promoted by the or-\nganization of a permanent river\nimprovement society, and the plan\nto this end, suggested at the last\nmeeting at Vancouver, will be\n up as the first busino.v of\nthe meeting at Astoria. It ought\nto bo possible to form a society of\nten thousand, or perhaps twenty\nthousand members, whose sole ob-\nject would be to urge the river\nwork. Such a soctety could find\nmany ways of useful effort. It\ncould keep our representatives at\nWashington supplied with infor-\nmation, and by its zeal and con\ntinued interest, stimulate them to\nenergetic work. It could impress\nevery influential visitor to the\ncountry with our needs, aud upon\noccasion send commissioners to\n"Washington to urge our claims.\nIt would at least be a standing\nillustration of pnblic feeling here.\nBy all means let the proposed or-\nganization be formed, and let it he\nmade as general and popular aa\npossible.
03d4210defa6da9aab4604ebc3f5b4dd THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.932876680619 40.832421 -115.763123 finally adjusted, aud the fnuher issue\nof legal tenders, oxcept in extreme\nemergencies, is regarded r.s without\nConstitutional warrant, and in violation\nof sound 1'maiieml priucipala. The\nmaintenance of the laws providing for a\nsinking fund sufficient to extinguish\ntho nauouul debt within a limited peii.\nod is recommended. Touching tho\nlaws for the suppression of |>olygaiity,\nit is ur^ed that biucu the Into decision\nof the Supreme Court of tho United\nSintos, there is no legal bar to their en¬\nforcement and they should bo flrtn-\nly oxecuted. For tho protection of\nthe right of sufTerngo, tho intelligence\nof tho people Is invoked, and it is\ngravely noted IhnfMho elevation and\npurification of tho Chll Service by the\nGovernment will bo balled with ap¬\nproval by tho whola people. (bully\nfor It. H . H .J With a retrospective\ncast of his weather optic Iho President\nmildly touches oh expensively delicalo\n Ihnaly: "It tuny not be easy\nand may never, perhuprt, bo necoasary\nto defiue with p' reision the proper limit\nof political uction on part of Federal\nofilccrs) but whllo their right td wholly\nand freely express their opiuios cannot\nbe (iiieationcd.it i* very plain that they\nshould neither he allowed to devote to\notlnr subjects tbe limo needed for the\nproper discharge of thoir duties, nor to\nnso the authority of their oflioo to eu-\nforoe their own opinion*."\nAfter announcing our relations with\nforeign countries ns peaceful, attention\nif called to tho reports of tho Secreta¬\nries of tho Treasury and Navy, and\nwith a few recommendation* upon sub¬\njects of tnlnor importance, tlio 1'resldont\nattaohes lii.i signature. There's no\nparticular fault to fiud wf'h tho doott-\nuiuul, and If Iho {'resident bad only\nJfrHMiced us lie preaches, thcro would\n; have beetl much ksa occasion to llnd\nfault with hint.
4235e8d67a004ff7bea5254a75175e59 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.1079234656447 40.735657 -74.172367 and that If the pet son or persona omit or\ninfuse to execute such contract they will pay\nto the city of Newark any difference between\ntne sutiib to which ne or they would have\noeeu entitled upon completion of the con-\ntract ana that which the C1& of Newark may\ni/e ob.igeil to pay the person or persons by\nwiiom uuen contract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commis-\nsi onero of the city ot Newark reserve to\nthemselves tne right to accept or reject any\nor all proposals tor the above work, tie (hey\nmay deem best for the interest of the city.\nihdueis ana suietk-s are hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section of\nme law cieating the Board or Street and\nWater Commissioners, approved March 28. 1891 \nthat the bond or bonds to be given for the\nfaithful execution and performance ox said\npublic work shall first be approved as to suf-\nficiency by the board, nnd as to dorm by the\ncounsel or tho board, and no contract shall be\nbinding on the city or become effective or\noperative until such bond Is so approved; and\nLite president of rhe boaro ahail have power tc\nexamine the proposed bondsmen under oath, If\nhj shall eo desire, or shall be so Instructed by\nthe board, but the board will not be bound by\nany statement that may be made by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full power\nend elieojute discretion in the whole matter,\nand this provision shall be referred to in any\nadvertisement inviting bids for any such pub-\nlic work.
25e427b78dc7ce90384aeb17fc51ace6 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.3292349410544 44.939157 -123.033121 Tn view of the fact that the law was\npassed as the result of the Insistence\nof the Roosevelt forces It Is easy to\nrealize that the movement for the colo-\nnel has tremendous strength. There Is\nevery reason to believe that Massachu-\nsetts will give him the same rousing\nmajority that Illinois gave him a few\ndays ago. in spite of the machines in\noperation In Rhode Island and Connec-\nticut and the fact that no fight what-\never has been made In either of these\nstates for the colonel's candidacy there\nIs u great deal of Roosevelt Hentlment.\nThe New England situation Is highly\nsatisfactory from tho Uooseveit point\nof view ttufl equally unsatisfactory\nfrom the Taft standpoint. Tho six\ngreut states of the northeast, with the\nexcept lou of New Hampshire woro be-\nlieved to he the stronghold of conserv-\n and Senator Oallinger, the ally\nand supporter of Senators Penrose,\nCrnne and Lorlmer, was coufident that\nNew Hampshire could be brought into\nline for Mr. Taft. Senator Dillingham,\nwho also belongs to the senate ring and\nwho for the second time has vindicat\ned Lorimer. assured the president that\nVermont would cast its vote solidly\nfor him. Vet Mr. Taft has obtained not\nsingle Instructed delegate from Ver\nmont. If it had been suggested Bever- -\nBl weeks ago that Colonel Uooseveit\nwould carry Maine aud that the presi-\ndent would uot get u single Instructed\nvote from that state nor the state of\nVermont the man responsible for tho\nsuggestion, if living In Washington,\nwould have been conveyed at once 10\nan insHue asylum. Yet Muine and Ver\nmont Jiave refused to place a single\ndelegate lu the Taft column.
0a1e8980f5a833febeb620998ef49d0b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.346575310756 46.187885 -123.831256 aro invited for reparing the roads leading\nfrom the wharf road to the Center and Left\nBatteries, Fort Canby, Mouth of the Colum-\nbia River. The roads to be repaired agg c- ga- te\nabout 200 feet in length and are locat-\ned as shown In the accompanying drawing\nbeing tho road from "A" to tho "Left Bat-\ntery" and the road from "B" to "C." They\nare at present unpaved and are approxi-\nmately graded. Tho road bed Is to be about\n10 feet wide, with not moro than four turn-\nouts. The work to be done Is (l) the prepar-\nation of tho road bed, including placing box\nculverts where necessary, and thorough\nditching, the latttr being necessary upon\nonly one side for the greater part of the\nlength of the road ; (2) tho of the\nbroken stone. Stone can be obtained upon\nthe mlllitnry reservation, near the wharf\nand in other places, or it may be obtained\nelsewhere by the contractor. The amount\navailable for this work Is Sl.700.co and pay-\nment will be made upon the completion and\nacceptance of the work. The work to be\ncompleted on or before life 20th of June 1S83.\nA penalty of $10 00 per dav Is to be forfeited\nto theU. S. Government for each day after\nthat date until the work shall bo completed.\nBidders should state the amount of work\nthey propose to do upon this length of road\nfor the amount given above, or a smaller\none, giving their own specifications in detail.\nThe bid accepted will be the responsible one\nspecifying the nest road bed. The U. S.
7d0744db31546a0854ce296e1f9fd752 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.1630136669203 35.780398 -78.639099 was dead, the snow drift being about ten\nfeet 'ligh. The horse probably strayed away\nwithout a driver.\nWe have despatches from Ilarrisburg and\nPittsburg, which state that the storm is very\nheavy there also.\nAcquisition of Cuba. Tho Washington\nStar says an impression is rapidly beginning\nto pervade the minds of public men at the A.\nCapital that we are destined ere the close of\nthe present session of Congress to receive\ntenders from Spain for the sale of Cuba. This G\nidea is based on the belief that tho talked of J.\ncoup d'etat at Madrid will surely soon come\noil ; to be followed by anything but very\nfriendly relations between Spain and Eng\nland tor some time, and by such a state ot\naffairs throughout that country, as will ren-\nder it necessary for the concentration at home\nof nearly all the troops the new bpanish\nGovernment may have at command. The\nnew Government, too are expected to want\nmoney, while it is well known that at this\ntime Spain cannot borrow a dollar from any\not the capitalists ot tno Uld World. It is\nalso conceived among members of Congress,\nthat really revolutionary governments there\nwill find it even more difficult to obtain funds\non tho other side of tho Atlantic, while the\n of European stockjobbers run so\nstrong against violent changes in governmen\ntal affairs any where.\nIt is added also, that the dread of the final\nsuccess of American filibustering, backed,\nor rather preceded by tho unanimous efforts\nof the Cubanos to throw oil the bpanish yoke\nis supposed likely, greatly to incline the ex\npected new Spanish government to the sale\nof the Island to the United States. These\nare views which members of Congress are\nadopting, obtainingthem through intercourse\nwith intelligent gentlemen residing at Wash-\nington, who are connected with various Eu-\nropean legations of embassies.\nA man named George Ayrhart, a tailor in\nPhiladelphia, was committed to jail on the\n3rd of February by his landlord for an as\nsault, because he had resisted tho ejection\nof his family a blind wife, a son and a daugh-\nter, and a nephew and a niece into the\nstreet in the storm. There was a dispute of\nof the ownership ot the house, and he had\nrefused t pay the rent by legal advice. The\ndisgrace of the arrest and anxiety about his\nhelpless family prayed so upon his mind that\nhe hung himself the next Sunday. How for-\ncibly the line of Burns atout man's inhuraan- -\nlty to man comes nomc to us as we reausucn\naccounts,
27171272996599251f33de4f82eef1ce THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.89999996829 40.063962 -80.720915 not the very best, ever held iu Wheel\nlnp,nl I tirov D. Brown, Bobool Commie-\nsloner of OhL, who la already well known\nto \\Vl <?ilin« teacher?, waa Introduced by\nMr Moruao, and epoko on tbo bubjeut,\n"Bohcolroom Tactlci," inaklngthe follow-\nlng points: He said that the teacher\nrnnit bo a tactician, a drill eer^oant. II one\nnlcBflp in order to tin right habits in tho\nEupTs and if the h»blls through the pu-\ndUs can reach the parents, so much the\nUiot Tact in the teacher requites good\naenao and good manners; tne teacher\nmust be a perfect laily or a perfect jjentle-\nman. tiuod seiuro Is an inherited M ,\nbut good manners can bs ac'tttired by ob-\naervltlon, travel, study, and even attend-\ninir iublitutes mly coutilhnte somewhat\n«8tt A teacher must have tact enough\n'to visit parents pre parly. Tho teacher\nmust bo a good housekeeper; noatnees\nand order are necessary In the cchool\n Is the tone of the tchools of to¬\nday. Thoroughness and neatness are ab-\nnn&telv neoessarry to success in teaching.\nIIu said a good Sany other good thing.,\nall ol which were weflrece ved.\nAlter another song, Dr. W.U. Venaote,\nthe celebrated author ol Vonables His\nlory, waa introduced. His opening talk\nwas on United States history. The\nsneaker exhibited an original chart abow-\nli» at a slence the principal oventa in the\nblatory of this country Irom the year 17(5\nthe present time. 'Ho gave ail Idea o\nthe urincipal adminiatrationa, a history of\npolitical parties, tho lives ol the grea\njL. of the century and tho diflerent\nvara all ol which were portrayed on tho\nehart and wsa very interesting to the an-\ndUi ce lllis Ella P'l)pn followed on the\nsut'iict ol elocution, making a nutjiber of\ngood points that were attentively 11>U\n"rhe'aiternoon aesBlon was opened at 1\no'clock. A well selected choir fiom tho
13ff941d24ad7b9da7675e6b2bd461d9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.0753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 fur which liugl.iml Iiujhm kIio bus u faith\nTul ally In tlmu of litH-'il, Hut Varaberj\nsays, correctly enough, thut where a mat\nwill tell bis sympathies In "oue cue foi\ntwo-pence, lis willhesitate to sell\ntliuni next day lor double tho amount,'\nthat Is, if be sera advantages from tli<\nchange. Russia already exerts great in\nfluence tn Afghanistan, at least aimyif\nthe disaffected portion ol the population\nVambery charges the English with liav\ning made aiuistako in their whole policy\nas regards the |>ossc8sion u| this land\nespecially in not securing Herat, the gate\nway to and from India, which in thi\nhands of doublfltl allies, may at any tlmi\nbe open to invading armies. During tin\nAfghan war, which cost England somi\n$100,1100,(00, the English authorities belt\n idea that fortifying thoKhyberpas\nwas sufficient for her protection, but Vain\nbery suys that Herat ougkt then to hnvi\nbeen sccurcd, and made a bulwark of be;\ninterests. While England has been con\ntent witli a "masterly inactivity,"-and at\napparent disregard ot Russian movement\nin Asia, Russia s troops have been steadily\npushing southward. First, the Czar's out\npoets stood on the banks of the Jaxartes\nsteamers built in Ut Petersburg were trans\nported thither, and in these, small contin\ngents wercecnt into the Interior, fortrcsse\nwere constructed,and trading routes cstah\nlished; and all without a word of tbesi\nevents finding its way to EnglUb cars. Bu\nRussia's sudden appearance in Khokani\nberan to alarm the statesmen ol Calcutta\nand London. After taking possession o\nHagrctl (Turkistan), tho first place of
2f1c12ba9abbcdabba64bfb2a11f2d47 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1916.7226775640052 39.623709 -77.41082 the vaccine register of said school the\nnames of those pupils who may produce\na certificate of a regular practicing phy-\nsician of the county or city, as the case\nmay be, certifying that the pupil has\nbeen successfully vaccinated, and also\nthe names of those pupils who havo been\nenrolled at any previous term in any\nschool of the county or in the city of Bal-\ntimore, as the case may be, as success-\nfully vaccinated pupils, whenever any\nsuch pupil shall present a certificate of\nsuch enrollment from the teacher of any\nsuch school. If any person shall apply\nfor admission as a pupil in any of the\nPublic Schools of this State who has not\nbeen successfully vaccinated, the teach-\ner shall give the parents or guardian or\nother person having control of such pupil\nan order directed to any physician in the\ncounty or city, ss the case may be, and\nrequiring any regular physician to whom\nit may be presented to vaccinate such\npupil and return a certificate of such vac-\ncination when successful to the teacher\ngiving such order. The County Commis-\nsioners of the several counties and \nMayor and City Council of Baltimore city,\nas the case may be, shall pay or cause to\nbe paid to the physician performing the\nservice on such order the sum of fifty\ncents for every such successful vaccina-\ntion on the presentation of the order and\ncertification of the teacher that such vac-\ncination has been performed; provided,\nthat in the counties or in the city of Bal-\ntimore, when vaccine physicians are ap-\npointed or contracts made with certain\nphysicians by the proper authorities for\nthe vaccination of all children or persons\nwho may apply free of charge to the\nperson applying, the provisions of this\nsection providing for the payment of\nphysicians certified orders of teachers\nshall not apply. Any teacher neglecting\nor refusing to comply with the provisions\nof this section shall, on conviction there-\nof, before any justice of the peace hav-\ning jurisdiction over said offense, be fined\nten dollars for each and every offense.\nAnd no Public School Trustee or Com-\nmissioner shall grant any permit to any\nperson who has not been successfully\nvaccinated to enter as a pupil any Public\nSchool under the same penalty.
48d46c55e09470d4e591d508da6610ca SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1861.7904109271942 35.780398 -78.639099 And as he thus was musing, the evening\nstole insensibly away, till the sun had gone\ndown upon the western horizon. Approach-\ning night was fast drawing his sable curtains\nround this old revolving world, that its wear-\nied millions might enjoy another season of\nrefreshing repose r and Alonzo was returning\nto bis place of rest when he saw a mansion\nall brilliantly and unusually lighted up. And\nfrom thence the voice of joy and gladness up-\non the vibrations of the evening air came, to\nhis ear, and thither his attention was directed,\nand there he saw familiar faces the genteel\nand the wild the professing Christian and\nthe hardened daring sinner ; but all seemed\ngenteel and happy : And there he saw a\nfriend to whom "Dame Fortune" had handed\nover a goodly portion of this world's wealth,\nand he seemed enjoy the scene delightfully.\nAnd then he looked around for another friend\nto whom the old Dame had not been so liber-\nal, but whose presence had been acceptable\nin adverse circumstances in days by gone, and\nwho had done what he could to alleviate the\nsufferings of friends and neighbors around\nhim when the hand of affliction was heavy\nupon them, while other friends, fearing dis-\nease and death by contagion, came not to\nperform the office of a friend to comfort and\nconsole-t - o cool the fevered brow to bathe\nthe languid limb ; and watch through long\nweary nights around the bed of sad affliction\nbut he saw him not there. And then Alonzo\nsaid to himself had that friend only possess-\ned a few tracts of fine land and a goodly\nnumber of sable , sons and dau enters of old
e285de4281b0ec6e853a2f827bbe95a6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.423287639523 41.681744 -72.788147 starch are Identical in their chem-\nical constitution, but are different\nin form, just as water and ice are\nidentical except in form.\nQ. What did John Adams do\nafter he retired from the Presidency\nof the United States?\nA. He withdrew from public\nlife and his last years were spent\nwith his books. He lived for a quar-\nter of a century after leaving the\nWhite House and saw the day when\nhis son was inaugurated President.\nStrangely, he died on the 50th anni-\nversary of tho Declaration of Inde-\npendence and on the precise day\nwhen his great political foe, Thom-\nas Jeff ersoti, passed away.\nQ. Who issues National Bank\nNotes, the bank or the government?\nA. Upon deposit of certain pre-\nscribed United States bonds bearing\nthe circulation privilege, in trust\nwith the Treasurer of the United\nStates, any national bank may issue\nnational bank notes. The amount of\nnotes issued may not exceed tho par\nvalue of the bonds so deposited, or\nthe amount o the capital stock of\n issuing bank actually paid In.\nEach bank is required to maintain\nupon deposit with the Treasurer of\nthe United Slates lawful money\nequal to five per cent of Its ncte\ncirculation. This fund is held and\nused for redemption of the notes.\nNational bank notes are not legal\ntender but are receivable for all\npublic dues, excepting duties on im-\nports and may be paid out by the\nGovernment for all purposes ex-\ncept Interest on the public debt,\nand for redemption of the national\ncurrency. The notes are actually\nprinted for tho banks in tho U. S.\nBureau of Engraving and Printing.\nQ. Can you give me a recipe for\nmaking apple butter In which\nplums are used?\nA. Use one measure of plums to\ntwo measures of peeled and sliced\napples. Wash and cook the plums\nand rub through a trainer or co-\nlander to get out the pits. Cook the\napples Into sauce, add the stewed\nplums and continue rooking an\nhour or two or until of the right\nconsistency. When two-thir-
0efa10481f95e2d0b4d076d7b032f49b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 The Ohio State Fair closed yesterday.\nTim receipts amounted to $1(5,000.\nAt the request of If number of promi¬\nnent citizens the Mayor has called a\nmeeting for to-night to make arrange¬\nments for the reception of Gon. Grant\nwho is expected to arrive next week.\nThe City Council bos tendered the hos¬\npitalities of the city.\nThe European capitalists arrived at\nChicago last night, and were met by a\nlarge committee of tho Hoard of Trade.\nArreMed and Kent to Washington.\nBaltimore, Sept. 10..A telegran\nwas received yesterday iit the Provost\nMarshal's oiUco from Gen. Haker, iu\nWashington, to arrest. G . T . Garrison,\nof Accomac county, Va., and send him\nto Washington, with the property com¬\nmitted to his charge by Oapt. Winder,\nconsisting of watches and other prop¬\nerty taken from the Andersonville pris¬\noners. Garrison left on tlie Baltimore\nboat yesterday, in charge of Captain\nHitchcock, Washington, in obedi-\noneo to the orders received by telegraph.\nThe Norfolk Post says tho press of\ntho country have been extensively sold\nin regard *to tho reported recovery of\nthe safe of tho frigate Cumberland, con\ntaining a large amount of specie. The\nonly money recovered, as wo suited at\nthe timo, was A $20 gold piece.\nAppointed to Treat With the Indiana.\nFort Smith, Ark., Sept. 14. .Colonel\nParker and Secretary Irwin leave here\nSaturday for Bluff Creek, Colorado;\nwhere tlioy will meet other commis¬\nsioners appointed by tho Secretary of\nthe Interior, to treat with tho Arrapa-\nlioes, Chovennes, and other Indians on\nOctober 4th. General Sanborn, Super¬\nintendent Murphy* Kit Carson, and\nWin. W . Burt, will also bo there. Tho\nWachetas and a. portion of the Choro-\nkees signed the treaty of peace to-dnv.\nDelegations from the Camanches, and\nalso delegations from Armstrong s\nAcademy, arrived to-day.
0b07a7f8ed35df04d6cbd77df8668089 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.741095858701 31.960991 -90.983994 port-gibson herald.\nIn assuming the control of tho Herald, the\npresent proprietor set forth in a brief paragraph,\nthe motives and principles by which he would\nbe governed, as the Editor of a public journal.\nCommencing at the dullest and most unfavora­\nble season of the year, and some time before the\nclose of the pNfeot volume, we deemed it ad­\nvisable to defer issuing a prospectus until by\nthe publication of four or five numbers, our\nreaders might judge correctly of our course and\nability, and approve or reject at pleasure.\nThe first volume of our paper is now nearly\ncompleted, and the success which has attended\nit, warrants tho assertion that the HkraLt> is\npermanently established. In the second volume\n(soon to commence) it is our intention to carry\neut the principles avowed in our first number—\nto make the Herald interesting and useful as a\ncounty paper, by devoting a large portion of its\ncolumns to general news and agricultural mat­\nters. So far as politics are concerned, we shall,\nbefore stated, advocate support Whig\ndoctrines and Whig principles to the best of our\nhumble ability, and until the ensuing November\nelection, we shall openly war against the odious\ndoctrine of repudiation—believing the defence\nand protection of our State honor paramount to\nany and all other considerations—ashamed as we\nare of the degraded position which our State\nnow occupies—of the contempt and scorn burl­\ned Upon her by honest men of every political\ncreed; but sustained and cheered by the belief\nthat the moral honesty of our citizens is yet un­\ntainted and pure—that they have baoo misled\nand blinded by designing men, we shall spare\neffort in our exertions to enlighten, instruct\nand warn them of the dangerous consequen­\nces of this dishonest doctrine—-joining ourselves\nwith the patriot band now warring manfully a-\ngainst it, we will aid, so far as in us Iics.in tear­\ning away(the veil from this hideous Mokan-\nnaii, who, in the sacred name of Democracy,\nhas reared the altar of Repudiation among us,\nand calls upon us to worship at his unholy\nshrine.
7cad1b0f728e2507b0480922c96c3cf0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1864.3811475093605 37.561813 -75.84108 Uut about tho Lima Ucan\nthe chief of all my favorites. - -\nDid you, friend "Editor, ever\nknow, any one to get Lima\nBeans earlier by trying any\nprecocious plan whatever? 1\nnever did. I have sown them\nunder glass, and dibbled them\nout sown them on pieces of\nsod and set them out grown\nthem awhile in pots, till they\nalmost flowered, and then put\nthem out; but tho ones sown at\nthe right time, beat them all.\nThe great thing with the Lima\nBean, is the right time, for the\nleast cold or dampness, whilo\nthey are germinating, will rot\n(hem. But the 'right time"\nmay be much accelerated by a\nlargo hill of sand on which to\nsow your Lima Beans rich\nsand a soil that will not only!\nkeep your bean and dry,\nbut give it something to cat;\nworth eating, besides. There j\nis no use trying for early beans,\nwithout large hills of light soil;\nwith them vou are all ri:rht.\nOf course the holes should be\nfilled with the poles before the\nhills are made; but, about these:\npolos, they are often much too'\nlong. A bean will bear earlier'\non a short pole than on a long!\none. The reason why, I can- -\nnot tell, but it is the logic of;\nevents. Again, the sooner you\ncan train a shoot from one plant\naway across to the pole of the\nother, the sooner it will bear. I j\nknow this to be a fact also, be-- :\ncause I have done it, and doing\na thing well, as the old phrase\nhas it. is believing.
326b8731f2fddcd9b3ea6f85d098d56f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9438355847285 44.939157 -123.033121 history and tho biographies of many\ncelebrities; can talk fluently on cur\nrent topics; is an accomplished mu\nsician, and literateur; and would be\na most desirable addition to any so-\ncial gathering, except for tho deplor\nable fact that his or her. breath is so\nextremely offensive that persons of\nrefinement, good breeding and dell:\ncate sensibilities do not care to\ncome irito contact with them.'\nAnd very naturally, too, for an ob\nnoxious breath taints tho very at\nmosphere, and affects tho persons\nsurrounding tho affiected one in a\nway which is positively nauseating.\nThere is no longer any excuse for\na person, however foul and offensive\ntheir breath may be, of Inflicting its\nobnoxlousness upon tho delicate nos-\ntrils and olfactory nerves of others\nCharcoal, tho great absorbent, is\ntho ideal remedy for conditions de\nscribed herein, and in \nCHARCOAL LOZENGES we have\nthe very best form in which charcoal\nmay bo taken. Theso little lozenges\nabsorb one hundred times their own\nvolume in foul gases and tainted\nbreaths and besides deodorizing and\npurifying tho breath and rendorlug\nit sweet and agreeable, they also act\nas antiseptics and cleansers of tho\nstomach and Intestinal system, ab\nsorbing all offensive gases which\nmay be present there, desthoylng dis\nease germs, poisons and microbes,\nand putting a stop to such morbid\nprocesses as fermentation and de\ncomposition in cases of chronic dys\npepsia, and intestinal indigestion,\nDon't allow yourself to bo kept\nout of company of your friends bo\ncauso you may be so unfortunate as to\nhavo offensive breath from any cause.\nUse Stuart's Charcoal Lozenges and\nyou may rest assured that your\ntrouble will bo removed thoroughly\nand rapidly.
35dcfe6decf89a3740b2b49f65cfa418 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 Minerve adds: "The Confederate agents\nin Canada, whose answer we also hold,\ndeclined the proposal, and the minister\nthen resorted to a private attempt. If\nneed be, we could give his name, tbe\nplace where he is ut present residing,\nin one ot' tbe Northern States, in a city\nwell-known, wbeie he occupies an im¬\nportant post and is respected." If the\nMinerve hold documents of this charac¬\nter, implicating a Protestant clergy¬\nman, wo should Imagine it would not\nconceal them long. We therefore echo\nthe words of ita Protestant antagonist:\n''Iu tbe name of justice, honesty, Cana¬\ndian honor and public morality, let the\nname at once be given to the world, and\nthe innocent be spared."\nA wealthy Frenchman, who lately\ncommitted'suicide, left the following\nscrawled a bit of paper:\n**A life stupid, but strewn with en¬\nchantments, harpies conspiring against\nyour pnrse; a thousand vain preten¬\nsions sustained incessantly 8nd badfy;\nconversation with listeners who bore\nyou to death. Equipages, laquevs, car¬\nriages innumerable, uniforms of all\ncolors, with swords nearly always in¬\nnocent of battle; women pretentious\nand tattling; literary men vain and des¬\ntitute of talent; contempt, secret embar¬\nrassments and hotels enormously dear;\nfraudulent and tricky business transac¬\ntions. Lies at discretion; pig-headed\nlawyers; snares of all descriptions, de¬\nmolitions, mud and dust. Invalids of\nall classes; breasts covered with decora¬\ntions; noblemen with contraband titles;\ndissimulation everywhere. From my\npoint of view such is Paris.or rather,\nhell! I have had enough of it, and I\nabaudon it for eternity
7c4ab0f776ec6bee24d0851fa2e9173e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.8265027006173 39.261561 -121.016059 Demonstration ok the Sacramento Democra-\ncy.—We learn from the State Journal of Monday\nthat the Democracy of Sacramento turned out\nIn their majesty on Saturday evening last. It\nwas the largest gathering of the campaign\nsome two thousand persons having assembled.\nIt had been arranged that the meeting should\nbe held at the Forest Theater, and a brilliant\npyrotechnic display noted the hour of assem-\nbling. The Theatre was densely crowded, ev-\nery seat being occupied, and the lobbies being\nalso completely packed with human beings.\nCol. Sanders was chosen to preside on the oc-\ncasion, and in a speech of some hours duration,\nhe eloquently advocated the merits of our great\nand glorious cause, and riddled the opposition.\nAt the conclusion of his address, the people were\ninformed that some two or three hundred per-\nsons had been compelled to go away, owing to\n inability to find even standing room in the\nTheatre, and a motion to adjourn to the front\nof the Orleans Hotel was put and carried, with\nloud huzzas for the Democracy.\nThe meeting having re-assemblcd on Second\nstreet, Mr. V. E. Geiger took the stand, and\nmade one of the most eloquent speeches of the\ncampaign. His vindication of Stephen A. Doug-\nlas from the assail'ts of the K. N . politicians of\nthis State was a masterly efTort,and was receiv-\ned with rapturous applause.\nAt the conclusion of Mr. Geiger's speech, vo-\nciferous calls were made for Mr. Ferguson.—\nThat gentleman mounted the stand, the crowd\nmade the welkin ring with their applause, and\nduring the delivery of his brilliant speech he\nwas continually interrupted by the deafening\ncheers of his audience.\nThe meeting concluded with tremendous\ncheers for Buchanan and Breckinridge.
3182935230c00f3ea1b910e8d0f4f2eb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.478082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 HERE are »0 many attractive bordered ma­\nterials to be had just now that many women\nare on the outlook for suitable designs. Here\nis one that is charming. The skirt is a simple,\nstraight one that can be joined to a belt or to the\nyoke. The blouse is made with straight fronts\nthat are adapted to this use and with a collar and\nvest of a contrasting material that are charming.\nHere, they are made of handkerchief lawm. hut\nthe sleeves and the back of the blouse are of plain\nvoile, cut from the flouncing used for the fronts.\nAt the waist, there is a novel girdle that is made\nof a bright colored ribbon, but if a finish of the\nmaterial is liked, that girdle can be omitted, the\nblouse rut a little longer and shirred to form its\nown girdle with an extension over the skirt that is\nvery charming on many figures. As a matter of\ncourse, any bordered materials can be used treated\nin just this same way. it is silk, cotton\nor linen and plain or flowered materials can be\ntrimmed on their edges if a bordered fabric is not\nliked. There are lovely flowered voiles that make\ncharming dresses after this model with the edges\nbanded or finished with hems or hem-stitched or in\nany such way. Bordered taffeta and bordered\nfoulard are pretty made exactly in this manner.\nWhite créoe de chine would be very charming with\nbands of black velvet ribbon for trimming or with\nruches or ruffles or with bands of the taffeta for\ntaffeta and crêpe de chine combine most charmingly.\nBoth long and three-quarter sleeves are being worn\nthis summer and the pattern allows a choice, but\nmost women will prefer the long ones for this\nmodel, with the frills that fall over the hands to give\nan exceedingly becoming effect.\nThe blouse as illustrated will require lljj yds. of\nbordered material 44 in. wide, with yd. 36 for the\nvest and collar, and the skirt 2J4 yds. of flouncing\n4] in. wide.
10058f445cbcdd085fde9bb88383f35b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.3082191463725 39.745947 -75.546589 county and of every commissioner thereof tion, after whicb be shall bg elBcted hig\naud of evervjotker person having posses bond shall be #10,000: it shall be hla\nsion or control of any reoords, books, duty to audit the accounts of the\npapers or o hsr property relating to the missloners and countersign orders for\nbusiness of * he Levy Court of lbe sa d money. he 8ball ,U8aect thKe fccnba once ,\ncounty on or before the first Tuesday In mou,h. Section 18 provides for sdver-\nJannary, 1893. to surrender and deposit Using for bids for work requiring\nthe same with the clerk of the peace of |500, and 'seallon 19 provides for the\nt.“’.4.'T15'' w.h0,8h k*?p «•office fixtures of tbe new cffialala.\nsubject to the control of the Uvy Conrt The remaining five sections provide\nCommissioners to be elect**! under this that the receiver ot taxes and county\n*" .A^.d Incase ,hç said or any treasurer shall receive a salary of (4 000\nc.mmlasloner thereof,or any other person and the comptroller $2,000. The\nhaving possession as aforesaid, shall comptroller may employ legal counsel\nneglect or refuse, on dsmand of the said aad cierlcal a88i8tane*, ja December\nL*vy Court Commissioners, to bs elected eacb V8ar tbreo f.eeholders shall be ap-\nunder this act, to deliver up and sur- polnW to Inspect the tcconn's of the\nreader any of such records, books comptroller and receiver of taxes, and\npapers or other property, each and these officers shall make a general etaU-\neveiy person so neglecting or refusing as menl. The act shall not annul any\naforesaid, shall be guilty of a mlsds- cfficla, bond of flfflcg vacated b ltg\nmcaaor, aud upon conviction thereof «revisions\nshall forfeit and pay a flue of (500 and\nbs imprisoned for tbe term of one year\nor until the said records, books, papers
14012fc15bcb197901fbacf541192c6d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.1136985984272 39.745947 -75.546589 It is a pretty little attempt at a petty\nrevolution which the 19 year old Khedive\nof Egypt, Abbas II, made last week. He\nIs surrounded by foolish advisers who do\nnot like the strong hand of England;\naud without consulting the British rep­\nresentative, Lord Cromer, better known\nas Sii Evelyn Daring, he changed his\ncabinet, putting at its head a worthless\nman who was hostile to England. How\nmuch influence French, or Russian, or\neven Austrian diplomacy added to pro­\nduce this action of Abbas, we cannot\ntell; It may have been solely palace in­\ntrigue. But Lord Cromer is not a man\nto be played with. He gave the boy\ntwenty-four hours In which to undo his\nact; aud at the end of that time Fakhri\nPasha had resigned aud a new and ac­\nceptable prime minister had been ap­\npointed. The Khedive had learned that\nhis post was only one of splen­\ndor and not of power. This is\nnot the first time Lord Cromer\n had to assert himself. From his in­\nfancy Abbas had played with Lord\nCromers children, and the latter had\nbien most familiar with the future\nKhedive. Shortly after his accession lis\ndeclined to receive Lord Cromer, who\nhad called informally in street costume,\namj published next morning a notice\nthat tbe Khedive would graut no\naudience unless applied for twenty-four\nhours in advance, and made in court\ncostume. A few hours later Lord\nCromer called In ordinary attire, brushed\nhis way past all the chamberlains, and\nwalked upstairs into the presence of the\nfoolish boy, and gave him such a lecture\nthat the notice was recalled the next\nmorning. This last act of Lord Cromer,\ntaken with the approval of Lord Rose­\nbery, shows that the English have no\npresent Intention of leaving Egypt. They\nwill hold It and they must do so. It\nmay be fortunate that the French are so\nmuch engaged in their domestic difficul­\nties that they could not embarrass the\nEnglish representative.
1c457278b6e7104b0ea60dc4e3035e86 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.2698629819888 39.745947 -75.546589 two great partiel in Amerloa, the\nDemooratlo and the Republican. A\ncood omen for tha future. [ Cheers. ]\nA« to tba bill before the Hanes, while\nreserving bin full expression of opinion\nnntll he bad seen the bill, Mr. Parnell\ncongratulated the Hooee en the fact\nthat there wae edll I Wing an English\netateeman who ci aid derole ble atten­\ntion to thin important matter, and\nbegged to thank Mr Gladatonefor wbat\nwould not only prove a beneBoial men­\neur© from tbe Irteh point of rlew, bnt\nwhich he (Mr. Parnell) bellered would\nbe found to be of equal benefit to Eng­\nland. The bill, nevertheless, contained\nbiota which the Iriab reproeentatlrea\nwould do tbelr beat to remore. One of\ntbeee waa to be found in tbe financial\npropoeale of tbe which he regarded\naa very unfavorable to Ireland, ee*\npeclally in regard to the Irieh tribute\nto tbe imperial exchequer.\nHe alao complained of the propo-\naitlon relative to tbe two ordera in­\ntended to conatitute tbe Irieh Parlia­\nment, on tbe ground that the firat order,\noonatatlng of peera not anbrject to the\ninfluence of the popular rote, would\nbare the power ef hanging ap meat urea\ndemanded by the peopieand their repre-\naentatlrea for two or three yeara. On\nthe whole, however, apart born three\ndefecta, he believed the meaaura.wonld\nbe oheerfully accepted by the Irieh\npeople and their repreaentatire aa a\nsatisfactory eolation of the long atand-\ng dispute between the two coontlea,\nid aa tending to prosperity and peace\nin Ireland and to satisfaction in Eng­\nland. [Oheera.]
07b36fb763df2b765e2cd9fcf13312b3 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1893.83698626966 46.601557 -120.510842 Among the many favorable newspaper\narticles that have been published about\nthe exhibits of the state of Washington,\nis the following paragraph taken from an\nextensive article in American Tid Bits,\npublished here i.i Chicago:\n" When anyone begins to brag about\nbeating the whole worlil, he U at once\nlooked upon with suspicion, for this world\nis a h'x place, and proofs must be submit-\nUd before such statements are credited.\nHut the people of Washington claim to be\n•world tieaters' in many of their exhibits.\nTor example, they say their Hug stall' is\nllio tallest id the world. There is a red\ncedar vase, six feet high and four feet\nacross the top, turned from a single block\nof red cedar, which is said to be the\nlargest piece of wood turning in the world,\ncertainly there is nothing equal to it for\nsize on the fuir grounds. The skeleton of\na mammoth, wan found near Spo-\nkane, Wash., and purchased by the Chi-\ncago Academy of Science, who loaned it\nto the WaxhinKton commissioners, is 13\nfeet hitfh, and is the largest skeleton of the\nkind yet unearthed. There is in this\nstate Imildint! a single block of coal\nweighing over 50,000 pounds, which has\nnever had its equal taken from any mine\nin the world. There are two unequalled\nand phenotmnal yield* of grain shown in\nthis building. One is of wheat, 101 bush-\nels from a single acre, and the other is\nof oatH, 156 bushels from a single acre.\nBoth of these wonderful yields are backed\nby the strongest kind of am'davits. So it\nis seen that the new state of Wa«hin»ton,\nin making her bow to the world at this\ntreat exposition, can afford to take her\nplace among the front ranks with no fear\nof being called too impudent for one so\nyoung."
1370c84160db366ee65c80d4f506a18c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.5301369545916 39.745947 -75.546589 PHILADELPHIA. July 13.—B READ­\nSTUFFS—Trade In flour was quiet and\nprices ruled weak. We quote; Winter, ex-\nitraa, 83.40a3.60; Pennsylvania roller. Gear,\n83.75a4.i»; Pennsylvania roller, suralght,\n84.30a4.36; Western winter, clear 83.75a\n4.10; Wentern winter, straight, 84.25a4.50;\nWestern winter, patent, 84.6Ua4.90 .\nBALED HAV-The market for hay weg\nquiet, with liberal offerings at the late\ndecline. Straw was In moderate supply\nand steady. We quote: Timothy Hay—No,\n1, large bales, 823; No. 1, small bales. 822 50\na23; No. 2 . 820a2t.50; No. 3 . 817U8.50; no\ngrade, 813al5; unsound, musty, stained,\netc., ISal2. Clover Mixed Hay—No. 1, 819 50\naUO.SO; No 2, 816alS.\nBUTTER—Supplies were well cleaned\nup and prices ruled firm on desirable\ngoods. We quote: Western creamery, ex-,\ntra. 26V»c; Western creamery, firsts, 24a\n26c; nearby prints, fancy. 28c; do., \nage. extra, 27c: do. firsts, 25a26c; Jobbing\nsales of prints, 29a32c.\nCH EBBE woe In fair request and firm,\nwith light offerings. We quole: New York,\nfull cream, choice, 18)»al3)4c; New York,\nfull cream, fair to good. 12)4al3c; part\nskims. 8al0c; dorm-otic Swiss, old. No. 1,\n2Ia22c; domestic Swiss (new, No. 1, lS)»a\nITc ; domestic Swiss, new, No. 2, 14al5.\nF3GGS— For »trictly fine stock there wa*\na good demand at full price*, hut medium\nand poor eggs were plentiful and dull.\nWo quote: Nearby, firsts, In free ( a-ee.\nISc; current receipts, in returnable crates,\n17c; Western, firsts In fro* case«, ISc;\nWestern, fair to good, 16«17c; Southern.\n14/*alfic; re-crated eggs. 19%a21Hc\ngrf;b:n fruits and vegbtabi.es.\nStrawberries, New York, per quart. !2al«c.\nRaspberries—Red. per pint. 7a8c. Black­\nberries—N . C
3fe4143bd3f1bc170588de62de1b4403 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1911.741095858701 39.623709 -77.41082 along tbe road In a pony cart driven\nby one of Hasbrooke men.\nThe dear girl sprang out and over-\nwhelmed me with greetings and praise.\n"It was us easy as thatl" she cried\nand waved her pretty hands lightly\nwith a sort of dancing movement.\n"All those men chased after you and\nMiss Hasbrook in the car, and when\nthey were gone 1 slipped out with the\nprecious documents and run—ah. I\nflew—but no one pursued me. It was\nnot yet S o'clock when I came to the\nfarm, and there was Mr. Hasbrook in\na great (tersplration. And when 1 told\nhim that It was all your plan by which\nhe now had the papers which he de-\nsired so much he cried: 'By Jimmy -\nneddy. that man is a peach, and 1 will\nmake his before 1 get through\nwith him! Aud theu he asked me if\nI liked you very much, and I said-\nwell, whet do you think I said? Mever\nmind. I will tell you what Mr. Has-\nbrook said. It was that he would\ngive you and me a house to live In."\nWell, he did. and a good house too.\nAnd I walked right up through the\npolice deportment like a man climbing\nan easy flight of stairs. So now I am\nchief, and Ill do Mr. Hasbrook the\njustice to say that lie has never ask-\ned me to do n thing that wasnt on the\nsquare. Suppose he should? Why. I'd\nsimply have to show him away to do\nthe same thing lu an honest and legal\nmanner. Just ns I did lu the matter of\nthose documents.
33a2656441065e6fd9fb29a64750f08b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.0808218860984 37.561813 -75.84108 The regular Murphy Temperance meet-\ning last Sunday afternoon, was largely at-\ntended, and some very important action\nwas taken in favor of the "Local Option"\nbill recently introduced in the Legislature\nby Mr. Quinby, of Clinton county, to ena\nble the people of any township in the State\nto vote for or against the sale of all intoxi-\ncating liquors as a beverage, including ale,\nbeer and wine, at the ensuing April elec-\ntion. We publish the bill in full in anoth-\ner column, in order that all may read and\nunderstand its provisions.\nJudge Thompson addressed the meeting,\nand prefaced his remarks by reading an\neditorial article from the Cincinnati Daily\nGazette of last Saturday, in which the\nstartling fact is stated, that the amount\nannually expended for intoxicating drinks\nin that city, is nearly ten miliums of dollars\nmore than is expended for bread, gro-\nceries and meat! Judge T. then referred to\nthe "Local Option" bill of Mr. Quinby,\nexplained its objects and provisions, and\nexpressed his strong conviction that it was\nthe best and most practical Temperance\nmeasure yet presented to the people of\nOhio. He urged that petitions he imme\ndiately circulated in and\nthroughout the whole county, praying the\nLegislature to pass Mr. Quinby 's bill, so\nthat the voters of every township in the\nState can have an opportunity to vote di\nrectly upon the question at the ensuing\nApril election. He stated that he had had\na numbet of petitions printed, which are\nin the following form:\n"To the General Assembly of Ohio:\nThe undersigned citizens of Highland\nC'ountv, Ohio, respectfully prav your Hon\norable Bodv to enact into a law House\nBill No. 019, bv Mr. Quinby. of Clinton\ncounty, now pending, to secure to the citi-\nzens of the State of Ohio Local Option in\nthe Sale of, or Prohibition of the Sale of,\nIntoxicating Liquors, Beer, Ale and Wine,\nexcept for Medicinal Purposes.\nThe following Executive Committee was\nappointed, to see to the immediate circula\ntion of petitions in town and county:\nJames W. Doggett, A. W . Thornburg, J.\nC. Rittenhouse, G. R . Tucker, Josiah Stev\nenson, J. L; Boardman,J. R . Marshall,\nMrs. J. W. Weatherby, Mrs. M. R. Orr,\nMrs. R. R. Waddell, Mrs. W. J. McSure\nly, Mrs. J.'K. Pickering, Mrs. C . C. Sams.\nThe Executive Committee held a meet-
262b4aa5074061a0365c5ac5d710b91f THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.1767122970573 32.612638 -90.036751 It must be apparent to every one that\nQualities of the highest order are neces-\nsary to enable the best of the products of\nmodern commerce to attain permanently\nto universal acceptance. However loudly\nheralded, they may not hope for world-wid- e\npreeminence unless they meet with the\ngeneral approval, not of Individuals only,\nbut of the many who have the happy\nfaculty of selecting, enjoying and learn-\ning the real worth of the choicest prod-\nucts. Their commendation, consequently,\nbecomes important to others, since to\nmeet the requirements of the well in-\nformed of all countries the method of\nmanufacture must be of the most per-\nfect order and the combination the most\nexcellent of its kind. The above is true\nnot of food products only, but is espe-\ncially applicable to medicinal agents and\nafter nearly a quarter of a century of\ngrowth and general use the excellent\nremedy. Syrup of Figs, is everywhere\naccepted, the world, as the\nbest of family laxatives. Its quality is\ndue not only to the excellence of the\ncombination of the laxative and carmin-\native principles of plants known to act\nmost beneficially on the system and pre-\nsented in the form of a pleasant and re-\nfreshing liquid, but also to the method\nof manufacture of the California Fig\nSyrup Co.. which ensures that uniformi-\nty and purity essential in a remedy In-\ntended for family use. Ask any physi-\ncian who is well informed and he will\nanswer at once that it is an excellent\nlaxative. If at all eminent in his pro-\nfession and has made a special study of\nlaxatives and their effects upon the sys-\ntem he will tell you that it is the best\naf family laxatives, because it is sim-\nple and wholesome and cleanses and\nsweetens the system effectually, when\na laxative is needed, without any' un-\npleasant after-effect- s.
4e68dee9f4dac12298a8828bdffb3a85 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1861.6561643518519 35.780398 -78.639099 We copy the following unanswerable state-\nment from the Richmond Examiner, as well\nfor the strong and just light in which it\nplaces the action of Virginia, as for the com-\npliment it pays to North Carolina:\n"The State of Virginia has furnished the\nConfederate service $"0 companies, uniformed\nand equipped, according to law. The aver --\nage humber of men in these companies, is 75\nto each. They make an aggregate of 55,250\nvolunteer soldiers from the State of Virginia,\nnow in the ranksof the Confederate army and\nactually in the field. Besides this corps, this\nState has furnished the temporary service of\nlarge masses of militia, many thousands of\nmen for home defence, and a great number\nof persons who have employed themselves in\nguerilla warfare, and in tending the wounded,\nwho are not numbered on the rolls of the\narmy. The actual numbers Virginia troops\non those rolls, we repeat, are neither more\nnor less than 55,250 privates and officers.\n" So much of manhood. In money the\nState has not been less liberal. The Conven-\ntion appropriated the sum 7,000,000 of dol-\nlars to the public defence, and 6,000,000 of\ndollars have been actually advanced by the\nState Government to the Confederate service.\nSuch is the official statement. The contri-\nbutions of the various counties and of pri-\nvate individuals cannot be stated with the\nsame accuracy. But . they are sufficiently\nwell known to enable us" to say with authori-\nty, that they exceed 4000,000 of dollars.\n"But while the State of Virginia has thus\nmagnificently justified her great renown, and\nmade these munificent contributions to the\nConfederate service, they are the least of her\nsacrifices to the war. This State deliberately\nmade itself the chopping-bloc- k
5fec2399a4f43b9c31d8ba78bdd77ce8 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.001369831304 31.960991 -90.983994 IF F Boyakin, Pastor of the Baptist Church.\nThomas Harrison, Minister M. E Church.\nJohn Reynolds, Ex-Governor of Illinois.\nWin McClintock, Clk Commissioners Court.\nJohn D Hughes, Probate Justice.\nRichard Hay: Recorder St. Clair county.\nIV C Kinney, Clerk St. Clair Circuit Court.\nJames Mitchell, Post Master.\nJ L D Morrison, Rep. in the Legislature.\nSell» Catlin, Rep. in the State Senate.\nL D Cahsnnee, Proprietor of Steam Mill.\nThis is to certify, that we have used Dr.\nChampions Vegetable Ague Medicine, und also\nhis Vegetable Anti-Bilious, Anti-Dyspeptic,\nPurifying and Cathartic Pills in our families\nfor several years, and have also learned much\nof (heir celebrity and good effects from great\nnumbers of pprions lliat have used them in their\nfamilies. We do think them very efficient and\nvalutible medicines for the cure ol diseases for\nwhich they are recommended, and consider\nthem well worthy the higliesr recommendation.\nMaj Pearson, Twigg county, Georgia.\nIra Dufrce, M D, Marion county,\nJ Matlock. Merchant. Cuthbert,\nCol John Dill, Fort Gaines,\nIV 11 Rawson. Merchant, Lumpkin,\nRobert Ware, m d, Columbus,\nIV S Middlebrooks, Planter, Jones,\nAlex Lowry, m d, Jefferson,\nA G Holbcrt, J P, Dorrville,\nMaj J McGufly, Cayuga,\nJ I Louis, merchant, Auburn,\nCol IV F Dillon, Oakley,\nS B Simmons, Planter, Rosclaiine,\nCStancill, merchant, Carrollton,\nG Stancill, merchant, Greenwood,\nG IV Lake, merchant, Grenada,\nJ Thompson, m d, Greenwood,\nJudge Carbry, Coffeeville,\nB B Arnold, Planter, Graball,\nJ B Meek, merchant, Louisville,\nJames Lowry, merchant, Raleigh,\nD F N Turner, P M, ilfonticello,\nSami T-iyne, P M, Brookhaven,\nE B Taylor, merchant, Gallatin,\nED Ward, Druggist, Canton,\nM C Cay ce. merchant, Sharon,\nW Anderson, P M, Sumpter county, Alabama.\nG H Shelden, merchant, Gaston,\nW M Gilmore, Planter, Pickens co.,
1322929c8d1a13ae5b416b360a4bcaa2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.2068492833587 39.745947 -75.546589 Capt. Boscos Swimming Cats.\n“I read a description the other day\nof the retrieving cat owned by a\nsportsman on Hetaire Ridge," said a\nplanter from the south coast, "and.\nwhile the case was certainly remark­\nable. tt Is completely eclipsed, in my\nopinion, by a family of swimming\ncats owned by Capt. Bosco, of Tarpon\nisland. Capt. Bosco is well-known in\nNew Orleans, where he occasionally\ncomce to do some trading, and is im­\nmensely popular with the crowd that\ngoes down lo the Tarpon Club for per­\niodical outings. He Is the kingpin\nfisherman of Bay Adams, and as quaint\nand original a character as you could\nfind on the whole coast.\n"His swimming cats, about which I\nstarted to tell you, belong to a feline\ntribe that has Ih'ed at the captains\nplace from time out of mind. There\nare. perhaps, at present,» dozen all\ntold, and they have apparently lost\nevery vestage of the natural antipathy\nof species for water. They will\nwade, unhesllatngly, through the shal­\nlows on the beach, hunting (or small\nfish, and three or four will actually\nswim out to nearby luggers to get oys­\nters. Like all cats, they arc very fond\nof that kind of food, ami when the cap­\ntains lugger comes in from a visit to\nthe beds several of them are certain\nto jump off the landing,and swim to\nwhere tt lies at anchor. It is very\nstrange to sec them come scrambling\non board, mewing und shaking them\nselves and seemingly as indifferent\nto the wetting as setter puppies.\n"How they developed such an extra­\nordinary trait. I dont pretend to say,\nbut it has probably been a matter of\ngradual evolution. Capt. Bosco don't\nremember when his cats began to\ngo into the water, but it was many\nyears ago, and with each generation\nthe natural aversion uvi-u have be­\ncome fainter and (»tu'er. It wouldn't\nsurpri." re If
2e86aebbc26a6973005a1f9c82102b46 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.7301369545917 37.561813 -75.84108 [From Senator Sherman's Columbus Speech.]\nThe next object we ought to have in\nview is to return to a specie standard as\nrapidly as practicable. Now, I know\nupon this point there is a wide tlifference\ndf opinion, and we must hdt be intoler-\nant with each other when we differ. Still\nbelieve the intelligent voice of the peo-\nple is that we can not attain real pros-\nperity, when no man can be cheated with\nfalse values, until our labor and produc\ntions are measured by the gold standard.\nWe had monthsof weary talk on this sub-\nject in Congress, and although we took\nno positive direct step toward a specie\nstandard, yet we did prevent, and I trust\nforever, any retrograde step in the oppo-\nsite direction. The general result is that\nno measure can be adoptcil that will lead\nus from a specie standard, while we wiU\nin due time agree upon sonic decided\nthough moderate measure to hasten the\ntime when the dollar of our paper money\nwill buy as much as a dollar of real\nmoney. Nor will this result, when pro-\nduced, deprive us of the useful agency of\npaper money, whether in the form of\nbank notes or United States notes, or \nboth but only that it will make this\npaper money what it promises it is an\nequivalent to coin and when the onl;T\ntest of the quantity of the paper money\nwill be the amount of it that can be\nmaintained at" par with coin. On this\nquestion, though, I am sorry to say, we\nas Republicans are not entirely agreed,\nbut we are far better off in that respect\nthan our adversaries. The law of the\nlast session of Congress, though not what\nany one hoped for, has and will result\nbeneficially and is in the right direction.\nThe long stantling sectional complaint\nabout the distribution of National bank\ncirculation has been honorably settled.\nNow banks may lie established in any of\nthe Southern and Western States, and\nthis not bv the increase of depreciated\nnotes, but by the transfer of circulation\nfrom the East, where they had more than\ntheir share, to the West, where they had\nless. Our grievance was not that we\nneeded the circulation, but that we were\nunjustly deprived of our right to it. l ins\nlaw also settled the dangerous power\nclaimed by the Secretary of the Treasury\nto increase the volume of paper money\nto the extent of forty-fou- r
4d2536340dc35f458ed8ebda75dac862 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.613387946519 39.745947 -75.546589 near the window, climbed on top of\ntho coal bin and atter-ipted to raise\nthe window, and a load of shot was\nfired at him knocking Hm off the roof,\nand before we could get around on the\noutside ho had disappeared In the dark­\nness. One revolver, «cme buck saws\nand a broken whiskey bottle were\nfound near the window. I at once re­\nquested tho Police Department to look\nout for any person who might ask for\ntreatment for a gun shot wound either\nat the police station or ut the hospital,\nand about 1 a. m. wee Informed that a\nman had been sent to the Delaware\nHospital, who had been wounded In a\ncrap gamp near Marshallton. The nexj\nmorning I went to the hospital and saw\nthe man who claimed he had been shot\nIn a crap game, and recognized him\nto ho an ex-convict from the wo-k-\nhouse. discharged two days before—\nname, Fred colo-ed— sent her«\nfrom Sussex county in April, 1907.\n"After talking with h'm for some\ntime he admitted that ho was shot at\nthe workhouse, and was shot while try­\ning to raise the window sash. After\nmaking a careful Investigation I find\nthat this was one and the same Blot\nfor certain prisoners to make their\nescape when the opening In the wall\nwas finished, but Allen did not got cut\nas soon as he expected, neither was the\nopening completed. ”\nThe report of the treasurer, Joseph\nL. Carpenter. Jr., showed that there\nwas due the workhouse from sundry\naccounts the sum of 111?" 87. Receipts\nshowed a balance of 31fi?".97; due from\nTjevy Courts. ITf.OO .RO; Oppenheln and\nCompany for labor, 31309 68, and from\nother sources, totalling 398M.lt.\nThe matter of purchasing a «He on\nwhich to start a mill where flour con'd\nbe manufactured was d.scussed. but\nthe board took no definite action.
85b476e38a121255174e0d8ea29090d2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.4494535202894 41.681744 -72.788147 voiced vigorous protests for nearly\non hour last evening at the meeting\nof the'ooard of public works against\nthe petition of John M. Toohey for\npermission to conduct a gasoline\nstation at S2 West Pearl street.\nOwner alter owner of properly in\nthe district took the floor and in hot\nword.s expressed his disappear a I.\nMany societies and churches owning\nproperty in the district had repre\nsentatives Dresent at the hearing.\nJudge William F. Mangan, repre-\nsenting Mr. Toohey, opened the\nhearing by presenting the appli-\ncant's points before the board. Mr.\nMangan claimed that the applicant\nj was entirely within his rights in\nasking for permission to erect the\nstation as the street was in Zone B,\n'which, according to the law, permits\ngasoline stations. It is also in the\n'business section, said Mr. Mangan,\nland residents of the street have no\nlegal right, to object to the station,\nj He also that business comes\nfirst and the people must make way\nfor progress along business lines,\n(especially when they are living in\na. business district. He requested\nMie board to view the site of the\nproposed station. Mr. Mangan said\nthat a gas station would eliminate\nthe blind intersection at this point,\nMr. Toohey has a house on the sdc\nwhere he proposes to erect the sta-\ntion, and by tearing down Ihe house,\nhe would eliminate the blind corner.\nOppnoffion States Its l'ao.\nEdward R. Ramage took the floor\nand stated a number of reasons why\nhe and other members of his fam-\nily oppose the. station, He claimed\nthat it would injure property, and\nincrease the fire hazard. He told of\nalleged dangerous conditions at the\nspot due to the narrow streets ex-\nplaining that every night he 'wit-\nnesses numerous accidents and nar-\nrowly averted accidents as he sits\non bis veranda.
0b714af87ca993d40881ff33c648ff55 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1909.97397257103 40.735657 -74.172367 connection to the easterly' track in Mount\nProspect avenue, the centre line of which I©\ndescribed as fojlows: Beginning at a point in\nthe centre line of the easterly track of Public\nService Railway Company'© street railway In\nMount Prospect avenue, distant forty-five feet\nand twelve-hundredth* of a foot (45.12) south-\nwardly from the Interaection of said centre\nline with the centre line of Verona avenue, and\nextending thence as follows: (1) Northwardly\ncurving toward the left with a radius of one\nhundred and two feet and thirty-five hun-\ndredths of a foot (102.35). a distance of eleven\nfeet and ninety-one one-hundredths of a foot\n(11.01) to a point of compound curve: thence\n(2) still curving toward the left with a radius\nof forty-two feet and thirty-five hundredths of\na foot (42.35) a distance of fifty-six feet and\nslxty-sever . hundredths of a foot (50.67) to a\npoint of compound curve; thence (3) still curv-\nlng toward the left with a radius of one hun-\ndred two feet and hundredths of a\nfoot (102.35) a distance of eleven feet and nine-\nty-one one-hundredths of a foot (11.01) to a\npoint of tangent in Verona avenue; thence (4)\nparallel with the centre line of Verona avenu©\nnorth ©ixty-eight (68) degrees nineteen (19) min-\nutes west one thousand and thirty feet and\nforty-three hundredths of a foot (1,030.43) to a\n\\ point of curve; thence (5) curving toward the\nright with ft radius of one hundred two feet\nand thirty-five hundredths ot a foot (102.36) a\ndistance of eleven feet and ninety-one one-\nhundredth© of a foot (11.91) to a point of com-\npound curve; thence (6) still curving toward\nthe right with a radius of forty-two feet and\nthirty-five hundredths of a foot (42.35) a dis-\ntance of fifty-six feet and sixty-seven hun-\ndredth* of a foot (56.07) to a point of compound\ncurve; thence (7) still curving toward the right\nwith a radius of one hundred two feet and\nthirty-five hundredths of a foot (102.35) a dls-\n—
20f1b66f9074f3ebcca3fc9ec6ec9fc6 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.8041095573312 40.827279 -83.281309 From the Journal of the Telegraph.\nThe press dispatches from Europe\nto iSew 1 oi k during the last tour\nweeks numbered abort one hundred\nthousand words. New York has\nbeen better posted on the isue of the\nwar each day than London, Paris\nor Berlin. Ihese dispatches have\nilinost whol y been sent by a single\ncauie, lull one third ot the whole to\na single daily paper, aud with mar\nvelous rapidity and accuracy. Finn\nlhar as we are with the work of the\nteiegrapn, it Has been a marvle to\nus. lo hundieds of thousand of\nminds the whole price is aud has\nbeen a deep enigma. Here is a man\nsitting in a dark room at Heart's\nContent. The ocean cable terrni\nnates here. A fiue wire attached\nthereto is made to surround two\nsmall cores ot solt iron. As the\nltctric wave, produced by a few\nie.:es of copper and zinc at Valen\ntin, parsed through the wires.\ntnese cores became magnetic enough\nmove the slightest object. A\nlooking glass, half an inch in diam\neter. is fixed on a liar of iron one\ntenth ol an inch sqare and half an\ninch long. On this tinv\n is made lo glare so that li!n\nis reflected on a tablet on the wall\nI'Ue language of the cable is denote.!\nby the shifting of this reflected light\nfrom side to side. Letter by lettt\nthus expressed in this fit iug\nidiom ill utter silence on the wall .\nThere is no record made bv the ma\nchine except as the patient watcher\nu'es out to a comrade the trauslat\nI Hashes as they come, and w hich\nhe records. It seems a miracle of\npatience. There is something of\nawe creeps over us as we see the\nevidence of a human touch 3,9;0\nmiles away swaior that Vines nt\nlib. iy sucn a delicate process\nis tins, and alter being repeated\nfrom line to line five times before\nits ultimare copy is in New York,\nhave the late great battles been re\ncorded in our daily papers with\ngreat particularity and sent through\nout the Union. Nothing like it has\never before been accomplished. The\nnterpnse ot the New loik prss, of\nsingle press in xvew York, has\neclipsed that of the wealthiest and\nablest presses in Euriioe. It is\nharacteristic of the nation to do\nits work grand'y and well.
12c66eec8207b5746288a53c9a9a519f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1883.0123287354136 41.004121 -76.453816 permits the bayonet to becomo tho\nultima ratio in disputes between\nemployor nnd employee is ndisgraco.to\nthe commonwealth, nnd an intelligent\nlegislnturo ought to find no difficulty\nin improving it. But this is n great\nquestion and cannot bo disposed of in\na hurry. The tax laws .need revision\nbut the subject is so large nnd thero, is\nso great a diversity of opinion in re-\ngard to it that an entire session ot tho\nlegislature might be consumed in con-\nsidering it. Probably tho wisest thing\nthat can bo done in regard to that\nmutter is to lop off such taxes as aro\nmost oppressive and can bo safely\nspared. For instance the tax on per-\nsonal property, amounting to somo\n$400,000 per annum, might bo abolish\ned without injury to tho financial\nsystem of tho state. It is in somo\ndegree an inquisitorial tax and is very\ninequitably assessed; if this cannot be\ndone it is not likely that any important\n will bo effected in the tax lawn\nnt tho approaching session.\nIf the legislature could find timo lo\nconsider and pass a general law simpli-\nfying tho collection of county and\nmunicipal taxes and reducing its cost nn\nonerous burden would bo lifted from\nthe shoulders of the people. Whatever\nmay bo said of delinquencies in stato\nadministration it must be admitted\nthat the severity of county aud munici-\npal taxation touches moro nearly tho\npopular mass. The stato revenues are"\nderived chiefly from taxes on corpora-\ntions, while counties nnd cities mako\ntheir levies on tlio property nnd labor\nof all. To say nothing ot tho. absurd\nmethod of assessing county and innicl-p - al\ntaxes gepcrally in vogue tlio sys-\ntem of collecting such taxes practiced\nin most of the counties and cities is\nnot ouly costly but ineffectual. Col-\nlectors are appointed who are generally\npolitical partisans nnd who nro treated\nwith the greatest indulgence by the, ap-\npointing power.
1a91620c27b3d300ce22b84229c52b14 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.4534246258245 58.275556 -134.3925 curing some of his cases.\nThere is an old castle at Kumamoto\nand its outer wall* are about four miles\nlong. It stands on a steep hiil, and to\nmake the hill impossible to climb they\nhave built a stone wall at all tbe doubt¬\nful places, aud in some places this\nstone wall is 500 feet high. There are\nthree walls and two moats. There are\n10,000 Jap soldiers stationed here.\nThat eveniug I had a number of officers\ncall on me. 1 saton thefloorinmy\nstocking feet (I had to tike off my\nshoes before going up to my room; and\nleaned against a pile of silk cushions,\nfor although everything in the room\nwas rich, the cushions being covered\nwith silk, 1 had no chair. They bad\nheard in the castle that 1 was in\ntrouble, and one officer after another\ncame to help me out. Each one knew\nfrom ten to twenty words of English,\nbut by the time 1 had got through with\nall them 1 had my bill of fare laid out\nten days ahead. For dinner I to\nhave soup, fish, chicken, beefsteak, po¬\ntatoes and some other vegetable; for\nbreakfast, toast, tea, beefsteak, eggs,\nfl3b and so on for days, so you see 1\ndid not go hungry. I bought a bottle\nof beer each time an officer called,\nam very sorry, but they do not drink\nbeer well. At bedtime two girls came\nin with a pile of thick silk-covered\nquilts. They spread one on tbe floor,\nanother on top of it and another until\nit was about two feet high. They\ntucked or turned one down at the head,\nrolled another up for a pillow and\nstarted to undress me. I remonstrated;\nbaid it was indecent, that Nick King\nwould not like it if he heard of it, but\nthe gills did not understand English.\nI bad to strip and get into a kimona.\nIf 1 had not, those infernal girls would\nbe there yet and so would I. 1 got into\nbed and they piled on quilts until they\nhad me several feet, not under ground,\nbut under quilts. But the rest is unin¬\nteresting.
06521141bb3353c82e78dc48b86c0213 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1898.1109588723998 47.478654 -94.890802 Of all the interesting points on\nwhich Mr .Dixon touches in his "Curi-\nosities of Bird Life" perhaps none is\nmore remarkable than the strange\nantics in which some birds indulge,\nespecially at the pairing season, says\nthe London Daily News. With what\nodd gestures will a smartly dressed\ncock-sparrow, for instance, endeavor\nto cut a good figure in the eyes of his\ndemure and sober-tinted lady-love!\nWith drooping wings and tail raised\nhigh in the air, he shuflles along the\nground or sidles toward his mate as\nshe sits on the edge of the rainpipe,\nwhile he utters, instead of bursts of\nsoul-stirring melody, strange, inartic-\nulate sounds, intended, no doubt, quite\nas honestly as the noble music of the\nsong-thrush to express the depth and\nfervor of his passion. To a similar\nperformance, though with more of dig-\nnity and action about it, the black-\ncock treats his wives, for, unlike the\nbetter-conducted though often much-\ncalumniated sparrow, he is not satis-\nfied with a single mate. One of the\nmost characteristic of spring sounds on\nExmoor, as evening darkens, or, still\nmore, in the early hours of the morn-\ning, is the challenge of the blackcock.\nIn the month of April he who is abroad\nearly enough may watch, upon the\nrusset slopes of Dunkery, a little par-\nty of blackcock at one of their recog-\nnized and probably ancestral meeting-\nplaces, by one of the little moorland\nstreams, or on the wet edge of \nswampy hollow. Each bird crouches\non a hillock, in the oddest of attitudes\n— its head down, its wings a-droop, its\nbeautiful tail raised—and utters at in-\ntervals strange, almost weird notes,\nsometimes suggestive of the purr of\na turtle-dove, and sometimes more like\nthe cry of chamois. Presently an old\ncock, grand in his new black coat, will\nget up and march backward and for-\nward with his neck stretched out and\nhis wings trailing on the ground. Now\nhe leaps into the air, sometimes turn-\ning right round before he alights, and\nnow again he crouches close upon his\nhillock. It is said that in places where\nblack game are few a single cock will\ngo through all this by himself, or at\nmost with only his wives for witnesses.\nBut if there are more cocks than one\nthe proceedings generally end with a\nfight. Where the birds are numerous\nthe young cocks, who are not allowed\nto enter the arena with their elders,\nhold unauthorized celebrations of their\nown. There are many birds which\nthus, like higher mortals, have their\nfits of madness in the days of court-\nship. But there are some, such as the\nspur-winged lapwing of La Plata,\nwhich are, like the lady in the song,\nso fond of dancing, especially of what\nthe natives call their serious dance,\nmeaning a square one, that they in-\ndulge in such performances all the\nyear, not In the daytime only, but even\non moonlight nights.
24f70b03898a4284e99f224c70f02729 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.0616438039067 41.681744 -72.788147 Bamforth, who will soon be 70\nyears of age, spoke against compul\nsory retirement, his contention being\nthat physical or mental inability\nshould be the basis on which to regu-\nlate retirement. Others brought out\nthe point that men at 65 years of\nage might be competent to perform\ntheir duties and also be in circum-\nstances that would not permit of re-\ntirement on half pay without serious\nembarrassment from the standpoint\nof livelihood. The argument was also\nmade that to retire a number of\nmen at 65 years would cause a se-\nvere drain on the pension fund,\nwhich is in need of bolstering. The\nfour members of the department\nwho will be affected by the pro-\nposed regulation voted against it.\nChief W. C. Hart voted in favor of\na retirement age of 70 years and\nwhen it was defeated he voted for\nthe 65 arrangement.\nThere was a discussion of the pro-\nposed widow's pension but no ac-\ntion was taken because the pension\nboard has not gone into it as thor-\noughly as the members wish to, and\nmore informtaion than is at hand at\npresent will be obtained before an\nattempt is made to include it in the\nregulations. One policeman suggested\nthat if the widows are to be pro-\nvided for, the assessment against the\nmembers of the department be in- -'\ncreased, but the suggestion did not\nmeet with favor.\nThe action of two members of the\ndepartment on the complsory retire-\nment age regulation will be reported\nto the board of police commissioners\nat the next meeting and it is prob-\nable that the necessary steps to in-\nclude it in the charter of ordinances\nwill be taken. It is proposed to have\nit effective April 1. 1930.
0d8c3e45af7ca86ee99d4b55e33c773e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.5259562525298 46.187885 -123.831256 We have observed that when an in-\ndependent newspaper denounces a\nnomination party drummers in "the\nrural districts disccover that its cir-\nculation is falling off with destructive\nrapidity. When it bolts a nomination\ninformation cornea from all parts of\nthe American hemisphere to the ef-\nfect that ancient subscribers are wad\ning through mud and water for ten\nmiles to stop the paper before an-\nother mail can get in. If these vera-\ncious bugle blowers were to be be-\nlieved 'the combined independent\npress of this country would be able\nto work off its daily editions on a\nhand press. Yet what is the fact?\nIn every city of considerable size in\nthe United States the newspapers\nhaving the largest circulation, the\nmost extensive and beat paying ad-\nvertising patronage, greatest\namount of public respect and the\nmost influenoe are those whose inde\npendence of all party trammels\nmost pronounced. Tne newspapers\nof small circulation, indifferent ad\nvertising patronage and no popular\nesteem are the truckling organs of\nparty which never step out of ihe\nbeaten path of machine politics.\nNext to a free press the most im\nportant thinis an independent press.\nA newspaper which is shackled to a\npolitical organization becomes the\norgan of that party whether its ten\ndencies are good or bad. Its busi\nness is to misri present and mislead\nand its trade is false pretense and\npresumption. It can thrive only on\nthe ignorance and prejudice of the\npeople, whom it knowingly deludes.\nThe independent newspaper appeals\nto the intelligence and decency of\nfair-mind-
4c0ce6205602bc542873aecdaa6cf831 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1919.001369831304 37.451159 -86.90916 In Kentucky and like a crank, not\nhaying had my clothes off for sever-\nal days haufed everything off but\nmy thin underclothing and tho next\nmorning when I woko up 1 wag a\nllttlo sick and by night I had loB\ndegrees of fever and In a room with\n35 moro.but wo all pulled through\nbut ono, he died after wo left for an-\nother placo, that was called a rest\ncamp but In nil my rounds I havo\nnover seen anything like It, for cats\nwo hnd water thickened with onions\nto about tho thickness of batter nnd\na bare rib to rattlo In tho can, and\ntho coffeo made you vomit to drink\nIt on account of the water It was\nnmdo of. Dut tho most amusing\nthing (to look back at or tell) vra\nour bath, Fracno Is rathor on tho\nbath business and thoro was only\nono bath houso In tho camp for\nabout 50 thousand people so each\nunit had to put In a requisition for\na bath hour nnd t might be any hour\nIntho24'andourscameat4A.M\nI bad just gotten up from being sick\nbut I wanted bath to bad 1 wont\nwith the bunch, about 5 until 4 wo\narose, took off all our clothes and\nslipped Into our overcoats and clad\nIn "September Morn" atttrq mado a\nrun for tho bath house about M. of\na milo away 1 happened to get In\nil.. front b'usch so got hot watsr\nbut tho boys Is tho rear got pure old\nlco cold stimulatn. I know you would\nhave laughed at us could you havo\nseen us slipping through tho dark-\nness on a run with our baro legs\nshowing below our overcoats and It\nseemed that my logs were tho long-\nest ones in the world and that my\novorcoat had chnnged to a dross\ncoat. Finally our stay at tho rest\ncamp was over and ye wero ordered\nto Alleiey, down by tho Swiss bor-\nder and wo went out lato one even-\ning and hiked back over tho same\nroad we bad gone over before, back\nto tho railroad at Brest and the\n'tiaius, goodness thoy aro no more\nthan a toy to ours, and all troops\nhavo to ride in box cars, the box\ncars are about
01129479faaf4381423c161701a813a2 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.305479420345 44.939157 -123.033121 Taft and Wilson both sought by every means within\ntheir power to prevent a clash at arms, although their pa-\ntience was at times severely tried, and they were subjected to\ncriticism from many sources. The act of Huerta's faction,\nwhich finally led to warlike measures was of such a charac-\nter that it could not be overlooked, if the United States expects\nto retain the respect of the nations of the world. The insult\nwas planned and executed undoubtedly with the object of\nforcing this country to act, since Huerta might have smoothed\nover the arrest of the uniformed sailors by a prompt and offi-\ncial disavowal of the responsibility, which he had every op-\nportunity to do. The dictator evidently desired war with the\nUnited States, for what reason yet remains to be seen. Prob-\nably he hopes, in this way, to overcome the rebellion by uniting\nhia people a foreign power, or, at any rate, realizing\nthat he ia. near the end of his power, would drag his enemies\ndonw to defeat also by forcing a foreign power to step in\nand dominate the entire situation. But no matter what the ob- -\nject of the dictator may have been in precipitating the war,'\nthe responsibility to act could not be shirked by this country,\nand action has been as prompt as it will be effective.\nThose who are most familiar with the situation in the south-\nern republic have realized for two years past that the state of\nanarchy existing there must sometime be settled by the\nUnited States that intervention on part of this country was\ninevitable. That a country of such great natural resources, in\nwhich large Bums have already been invested in development\nby foreign interests, should be left indefinitely to the prey of\n"
101a6b907459563201a5edfc6d9f1827 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.5712328450024 40.832421 -115.763123 ihil for llio C.unly of Klko.\nP. M . Mcl'IIKTIIK*, Plaintiff, attain*! KM MA A.\nMi -I'll KTIlKH. Iiefendanl. Action l.r<»li<l>t lit\nthe Dlatrlcl Court of III* Nlulb Judicial IM»-\nIrfcl of tli* Hlale of Knvada, III mul fur Dm\nCounty of Kilo, afid (he Complaint O'cd III\nlli<> i'Br« H llin Cwik of »«lil DUlrli-i Court\nTil* State of Nevada aruda Kreitln,! (0 . lirfti.i\nA. M< Phrtrea, IWi'iidatit. Yon are hereby re-\nipilfiil In apiiear In an a< llmi lirotiKliI aitaltial\nyon l»y the almv* named flu ItilllT In lb* ItlirlrK-l\nCourt of (li<- Ninth Judicial Ulatrlrl of lb* hui«\nof Nevada, In and for (It* Cmintjr of I Ik . ami to\nattawar Ibr ronplalnl ninMhrroln, «r|ll,!n trti\nilaya |i xcI*mit« of lb* (lay of arrvlrti) afU-r llill\narrvloe (fl fo>t of llil* amiimona. If ai-rTfil\nwltbln Mill CWIftlT I or, If a»-irr<J out Ibla\nCninly, but In Ilila Ulatlrict, within Iwantf\nilayai olb»r»la*, wltbln forty ilaya . or J ml.,\nmrnl tf* tlrfanll will b« taken aval nal yon, M!.\nerfilltilf I" 1 1»' prajrf of Mill complaint.\nTlif Mil arllon It brotialit In obtain a riiwrtrt\nof thla Court loiHaartlrr lb* bomla of nialrimo.\nny now vilatltia brtwivn I'lalnlllf rfiil\nDrfmilant, on Im Kroiimt of atlullry, at-\nl»K*"l I" "»*.¦ b«»iicomiiilti»t by itpfrinltiil wit It\nntm William Moody* liflfcriMi (bn 1*1 ilay of\nJanuary, IN7*. and thi' lllli day of April in»«,\n. a will fffifx fully appoar by ref*TMir« to Hi"\nr/implahil ofi nin In tny offlrr, * ertllft«il copy\nwf wMIKli accompanlMa Inla wrll.\nAmi ymt .rn b»r»by noim«| tfftt If f»n fall\nl« apj*»r and auawrr aal.l romplallit »a alwir*\nr<M|nlml, llm uld I'lalntir will apply lo tba\nOonrl lot tb* r*ll*f fbrr*ln lUtnamlnl,
19ab418a50660d07c0ea670939a64586 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.987671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 was no happier family circle in th\nty on Christmas day than that enclose\nithiit the classic walls of tho Wheelin\nemale College. Several of the young h\nlea live too fnraway.to render visits hom\nuring the holidays practicable,and amon\nte number who remained were the tlire\nnnll daughters of Hon. II. 8 . White, c\nelton. 1 tie idea of a Christmas tree ha\ng origin in the desire of Miss Taylor an\nmie of tho girls to make Christmas u\njinelike as possible for the«u three littl\nrU, and to make the plan a success ever\n)dy in tho house lont a hand by cot\nibuting all their presenls, whether frot\nline ur elsewhere, to hang upon tho tro<\n!io result was a veritable old-fashionei\nliristmas tree, gorgeously adorned as wel\nIfeavily laden, and tho inspiration c\ne generous purpose that originated thi\nijticular celebration, tonother with al\no usual softening intluuuces of tho day\nementoes of atrection from distan\niends, testimonials of love from thos>\nesent, tho general banishing of care\nid the welcoming of joyousness an<\natitudejall these feelings .had sway ii\ne bjeasu that formed this little cfrcli\nid into a genuine glov\nhappiness. The parlors wen\nindsomely decorated with holly, pint\nid the usual Christmas belongings, whet\nsix o'clock tho doors were thrown opet\nid curiosity, which had all day ran high,\nis ut length satisfied as the brilliantly\nuinincd tree met the gar.e . As eacf\nline was called and tho happy individua\nvanced to receive sotno souvenir th<\npresslons on the several /aces indicatei\nat the times of "wumI ol««w»r «n.l « «».\nmis" nre found sometimes within col\n,t) wnllrt as well m iu the private home,\nwould be too long to *ive the preaenta,\nit we cannot forbear to mention one 01\no. Prominent among those we noticed\nm one for .Mi* Tajlor, which had come\nIghted with the love of all her scholars,\nhandiome table.Italian ratrblo top.\nro pott it 4'wo boys," oovered "with a\nr Trench RlaM~ettB;tho whole being\nlien up In Mr. llutohlns' best style. A\neasy chair, looking aa tliough it held\nrant amount if cemtort in Ita depths,\nod by. Un the whole, Chriitmaa at the\nlege wm a succee*, and an occasion\niK iu im ruuieiuiwruu uy mi me pariicl<\nII to.
2c6f90d814c288202ac606b49a10ff97 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.3027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 A Mtstibt..The small trade boat\ncaught ou Wednesday of last week, net\nBellaire, belonged to one John Burd. I\nseems that the boat lay tor several day\nunder the stern of one ol Armstrong 6\nCo.'s barges, up at the crib. Mr. Buri\nhad several times come aboard the Moni\ntor in tbc evening to talk with the mei\nwho stayed on board at night On Tuei\nday night last, ie csme aboard the Moni\ntor, and alter talking a little while, uke<\nMr. Blatter, the fireman, it he hai th\nmerging paper. Blatter went up stair\nand got him the paper, alter which, leav\ntng Burd in the engine room, he went ol\nto cover the fires under the boiler.\nWhen the fireman returned Burd hai\ngone. A short time alter Blatter was ou\non barge and called to Burd, but get\nting no answer supposed he had gone ti\nbed. On Wednesday morning the Moni\ntor shoved out very early, and run dowt\nto Benwood. About 8 cr 0 o'clock I\nsmall boat was observed floating dowi\nthe river right in the pathway ot au u]\nsteamer, which whistled several time\nwithout attracting any attention Irom th\nlittle boat One ol Captain Armstrong'i\nmen then took a skill and rowed out an<\nfound it to be the little boat tha\nhad been lying at their landing\nOn procuring keys they succeeded ii\nopening the door ol tbc boat and found\nlamp sitting on the table and burning\nbut no one on board. Cap'.. Armstroni\ntook possession of the bo it and trough\nit to his landing, from whence it hai
146b78ead934331e715aac6b88fe5de0 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1890.9438355847285 39.756121 -99.323985 colors and more delicate tints than those\nwhich bloomed beneath the sun.\nThe rays of light which were grad\nually penetrating the forest from the\neastward, and casting faint shadows on\neach side, were here and there obstructed\nby fallen trees which broke the light\nand cast shapeless shadows In its path-\nway. At first, and this was not long\nafter Dorothea had strangled her\nbabe, the rays of light which were going\nstraight upward for the sun beneath the\neastern horizon merely made gray the\ndarkness between and beneath the great\ntrees. Gradually the light increased and\ngray paths grew between the trees, bor-\ndered by shadows on either side. The\nsun rose higher and the brook was en-\nlivened by its rays, and danced in morn-\ning glee. How gayly the water dashed\nover an obtruding stone and how mer\nrily it rushed around an obstructing\nbank. The birds, too, were waking up\nand rendering distant chirps through ttie\n For, was not the whole world\nmerry again? The sun had risen, and\nthe brook and the birds were free.\nThe light shining through the woods\nwas broad at the entrance, but gradually\ntapered to a point like a great white fin\nger stretching along the ground. It was\nlike the finger of God pointing from the\nline between heaven and earth, through\nthe woods to Sagnauck.\nIn Hillary's cabin there was a finger of\nlight, too. The baby fingers were still\nand stiff, and the cruel hand which had\nstilled them was at rest in sleep. Eg'\nbert, too, was still sleeping Jn his chair\nby the table when the rising sun sent its\nrays through the forest.\nWhose finger was it that was pointing?\nThrough the cabin window came the\nfirst faint rays of the morning. A light\nthe breadth of the window fell upon the\nsill and cast a faint gleam upon the floor.\nThe sleepers slept on.
2080f3ea3ea2568ac29442c71df67900 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.4452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 Money.The sndden change In th\naspect of the money market this after\nnoon formed the prominent feature o\nWall street, and turned while the spec\nuldtiou was on stock exchange frotr\nbear to bull; once more early in th\nday the demand was very pressing, am\ncall loans made as high as %a% pe\ncent per diem in addition to the lega\nraie per annum in currency. As threi\no'clock drew near, however, there wa\na sensible abatement in the deiuant\nand loans were made at 7 per ceut coil\nand currency, before the batiks closed\nwhile afterwards money was offered a\n7 per cent currency in excess ot thi\nwants of brokers, who liud delayet\nmaking bank accounts.\nSterling.Firmer; market bare o\nprime bankers bond and commercia\nbills; 1095s asked for 60 day bills, am\n109% refused.\nGold.Active and buoyant; opeuet\nat 139: closed at 139%, on private tele\ngrams quoting 5 20s down 79%a79;t\nIn London, and rise in sterling to 1\npoint close to specie shipping rates\nrumors of further riots in France alsc\nhad an effect. Carrying rates 7a7% pel\nceut; also 1 16a3 Its per cent, per day\nClearances $74,000 000.\nGovernment Stocks.Lower, bu\nclosed steady. Coupons '81, 121al21 U\ndo. r62, 122al22%; do. '64,116%all7; do\n'Bo, 118%all8%; do. new, 119%all9%\ndo. '67, 119%all9%; do. '68, llS>%all9%\n10 40s, l(.8il0S%; Pacifics 106%al07.\nStocks.Pacific Mail 84%; Westeri\nUnion Telegraph 40%; New Yori\nCentral 190%; Erie 29%; Hudsor\n107%; Harlem 140%; Heading OS\nTerre Haute 37; Wabash 7o%; St. 1'au\n75%; Ft. Wayne 157; Ohio and Missis^\nsippi33; Michigan Central 132; Michigan\nSouthern 106%; Illinois Central 144\nPittsburgh 97%; ltock Island 120%:\nNorthwestern 90; Chicago and Alton\n155; St. Joe 122%; Columbus, Cincinnati\nand Indiana Central 41.\nExpress Shares.Wells, Fargo .i\nCo. 31%; American 40%; Adams 59;\nUnited States 07%; Merchant's Union\n14%.:
63d54ec179c4967a131b452d96bea34f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4506848997971 39.745947 -75.546589 To the 5tToHcholden of\nSANTA RUSANA OIL CORPORATION.\nPleaae take notice that at a apeclal meet\nIng of the board of directors of the Santa\nSusans Oil Corporation, duly called and\nheld on June 1, 1021, the following reae-\nlotion wan unanimously adopted:\n“Resolved, That In the Judgment\nof Ita board of director®, it le advla-\nrble and moat for the benefit of Santa\nHunana Oil Corporation, that aaid\ncorporation should be dlnnolved;\nand to that end and as required by\nlaw, that a meeting of the stockhold­\ner* of said corporation to take ac­\ntion upon thia resolution, be and it\nhereby la called to be held at the\nfirincipal office of aald corporation,\nocated at 7 West Tenth atreet. In\nthe city of Wilmington, county of\nNew C-aatle, and of Delaware,\non the 12th day of July. 1021 . be­\ntween the houra of 10 o'clock In the\nforenoon and 3 o'clock In the after­\nnoon. namely, at 12 oclock noon of\nthat day, and that the secretary of\nthla corporation be and he hereby la\ndirected within ten day* after the\nadoption of this resolution to cause\nnotice of the adoption of thla resolu­\ntion to be mailed to each stockholder\nof aaid corporation residing In the\nl tilted States and also beginning\nwithin ten days to cause a like uo-\ntlce to be Inserted in a newspaper\npublished In the county of New Caa*\ntie, .State of Delaware, at least three\nweeks successively, once a week next\npreceding the time appointed at afore­\nsaid for aaid meeting of atockhold
32b94c515e4d55e5cd26b8d50521db97 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1905.7657533929478 41.875555 -87.624421 laundering, but us they only nttend to\nthe rough work, such as running tho\nmachinery, stoking, attending to tho\nengines, etc., they receive wages which\ndo not average inoro than $10 to $12\nn week all tho year round.\nA abort tlmo ago tho liend women\nof certain factories and laundries In\nTroy arranged a mammoth entertain\ninont nnd dance, which was unique in\nIts way. It took place lu tho biggest\nhall in Troy aud was attended by\nabout 4,000 girls nnd somo 500 men.\nEach girl contributed $1 toward the\nentertainment, which entitled her to\nbring a gentleman friend If sho chose.\nOnly ono girl in eight, however, was\nable to bccuro an escort, and It is do\nclnred by those who ought to know\nthat somo men received ns many as\nthirty or forty invitations.\nIt not infrequently happens that a\nwedding takes place lu Troy und then\nwhen tho bride comes from ono of tho\nbig or laundries thero Is a\nbig turnout, for theso marriages gen-\nerally tako place on Sunday.\nWeddings havo taken place lu Troy\nnt which 100 bridesmaids havo been\npresent, while thirty or forty is a very\nordinary number. Fortunately for tho\ngroom's pocketbook, gifts to tho\nbridesmaids nro not customary, while,\non tho other hand, it is very unusual\nfor n girl to accept an invitation to\nattend the ceremony without provid-\ning somo little present.\nIt is computed that tho laundry nnd\nfactory girls of Troy aro paid closu on\n$200,000 n week, or $10,000,000 a year,\nnud so It is not surprising to learn\nthnt many of them who nro of a saving\nunturo have comfortable llttlo fortunes\nto their credit in the various dime\nsavings banks and other institutions.\nThey are, moreover, well looked after\nby their employers, llvo In comfortable\nquarters, havo tholr own clubs nnd "so\nclctles, work regular hours nnd lend\nhealthy, pleasant lives.
25479ba9d563ee336c63dbb20e500ac9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.582191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 Z.Mctiwords; on the south, southwest and east is Is\nihown by the plat and papers accompanying tbe papers\nSled In the office of the Clerk of tbe Cnreult Court of\naid Ohio county In the cause in chancerytn wbkhThexlore\nFink and wife ware complainants and Daniel\nKane's executors and others were defendants, the east\ninoof same being what Is called the track of the rail*\noad pared, together with all the improrenxnts up«n\naid two lots; also the right of waygranted byaireement\nif Amou MeSwords, trustee: Hans. W . Phillips and\nvile to said (locate H. Fan be), of record in tbeClsrk's\nirace01 uMuouaiT uaun ouut ualo county In Deed\nJook 53. PCM 296. Alio til the following described\nval estate, 1ring tad being situated on tbe lower\nirt of iane's Island, s°d adjoining tbs loU\ntbove named: Beginning at a stake in tbe line ot the\nIsmpBrld and Marietta and 'Cincinnati Itailraad\nractand corner to lands of John Smith, John Flak\nmd said Geore H. Faubel; thence with said Faabel's\nins south and one-quarter decrees, east twenty\nmd one-quarter poles to a stake in the hedge fence\nnd" cornerto laada of said Faubsl and otbsr lands of\nLtnon Med words, .truster, thence with said hedge\nsnee north eighty degrees, east fifteen poles to aatake,\norncr to lands hsldbr H. W. Phillips; theaee north\nline degrees, wast twenty and one-quarter poles to a\ntake; tEenceaoutheighty-one degrees, west fourteen\noles to place of beginning,.containing one sere, three\noods and thirteen and three-fourths poles, together\nrltb all and singular tbe improTsmsnts upon said last\named tract oi and.\nThe! above described land Is well fenced and\nas erected upon it an elegant residence, barn and\ntber buildings besides a slaughter-house, Ice bouse\nod other improvements. and ia ail under a high state\n[ cultivation. . The tlUt to the above, which the\n- ustee will oonvey, 1s unexceptionable.\nTon OF Sal*..One thousand dollars or ss much\nlore of the purchase money as tbe purthsser mar\nlect to pay la cash, and the reaidne In four equal Inailments
047b0769db68f5e8c3b6eaaf7489323a PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1893.0698629819888 39.756121 -99.323985 All taxation la neoessarlly burdensome, and\nshould be Imposed ns lightly as Is consistent\nwith ofllclent publlo service and good govern-\nment. That system of taxation Is best that\nshall distribute most equally the necessary\nburdens on all persons according to their ability\nto bear thorn and the measure of protection\nthey receive from them. One class or proirty\nshould not be taxed while another Muss\nescapes. It Is true In this state, and perhaps\nin an ut'uura, Mini, m largo proportion or per\nsonal property escapee taxation, and IU owner\nthus iihlrks his share of the publlo burden.\nThis Is especially true ot moneys and credits.\nIt Is difficult to see any justice In a law which\ntuxes the owner or real estate and allows the\nholder or a mortgage, whether residing In this\nor another state, to hold a mortgage on It and\nescape untaxed; and this, too, when theso un-\ntaxed mortgages may Invoke the aid or our\noourts to enforce payment, and thus add\nlargely to the ex pernio of govornment. lioal\nestate enoumborud with mortgage should be\ntaxed less than Its value In proportion to tile\namount of tbe resting thereon ; the hold-\ners of mortgages should be subjected to their\nJust proportion of taxes,\nSeotlon four (4) of article thirteen (13) of the\nconstitution of California Is said to offer a sat-\nisfactory remedy for this double taxation, and\nreads as follows:\n"Bsltion 4. A mortgage, deed of trust, con-\ntract, or other obllgatlou by which a debt is\nsecured, shall, for the purpose of assessment\nand taxation, be deemod aud treated as an In-\nterest In the property affected thereby, Ex-\ncept as to railroad and other quasi publlo\ncorporations, In oase of debts so secured, the\nvalue of the property affected by such mort-\ngage, deod of trust, contract, or obligation, less\nthe value of such security, shall be assessed\nand taxed to the ownor or the property, and\nthe value or such security shall be assessed\nand taxed to the owner thereof, In the county,\nolty or district in which tbe property all'ected\nthereby Is situated, Thetaxosso leyled shall\nbe a lien upon the property aud Becurlty, and\nmay be paid by either party to such security.\nIf paid by the owner of the security, the tax so
1800412ee7cac56e1e2502d398b5e9e8 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.6150684614408 38.894955 -77.036646 All this before tho murderous blow\nfell. It takes time to tell these thoughts\nof his, but they nil flashed through his\nmind in tho spaco of n breath. As It\nfella wild, cor splitting jell startled\ntho assailant und assailed alike. John\nHarmon wheeled In his tracks, and tho\nblow, grnIng his check, had forco to\nknock him down. Ho was up again on\nthe instant, up in tlmo to catch Stevo\nBrady as the rulllon flung him off\nafter tho briefest struggle for Stevo\nas weak yet nnd no match for tho\nburly villain whose flight ho had tried\nto Intercept to catch him and break\nthe deadly forco with which ho was\nhurled hind first against the will\nThat set to had the effect of sending\nSieve bock to his bed again Ills hca 1\ntroubled him ami he rival about roses\nnnd sand clubs aud DjIIv, until one\nday he found himself looking Into\nDolly's own blue, tearful eyes.\n poor fellow i' she cried\n"Oh, to think jou cared so much for\nmet But how bravo of joutosavo\nhlmwheii vou were sick nnd Jealous\nand all "ou needn't say a word, for\nJohn Harmon has told mo even thing,\nbut the idea of jou believing that I\nthat I could like him tho best "\n"Dolly," muttered poor Steve, hardly\nknowing It ho were really awake, "do\nyou mean you choose mo? "\n"You and jou only," murmured\nDolly, who would have been vastly In\ndlgnaut hud anyone hinted that honest\nJohn Harmon was more worthy to be\nglorified by that simc heroic light with\nwhich she had Inicstcd btcie\nIt mado no dlffercnco when Steve\nconfc"ed his temptation to her after\nword. What womm will not forglvo\na man who errs through loving her?\nThoso roses wcro never lutended for\nDolly, after all. They were meant tor\nn lllllo lamo orango girl who was fast\ndying of consumption.
1c57309e3943263e957652fb1b1d995d NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.5942622634589 40.735657 -74.172367 Section 15. Be It ordained by the Com-\nmon Council of the city of Newark that\nall that part of the said city of Newark\nbounded aa follows:\nBeginning at the interaeetlon of the cen-\ntre line of New atreet with the centre lins\nof High street; thence along the centre line\nof High atreet to the centre line of Orange\nstreet; thence easterly along the centre line\nof Orange street to the centre Une of High\nstreet running northerly from Orange atreet;\nthence along the centre line of High atree*\nto the northerly line of the Delaware. Lacks\nwanna and Western Railroad; thence a Ion*\nthe northerly line of the Delaware. Lacka\nwanna and Western Railroad to the Morris\nCanal; thence along the Morrla Canal to the\ncentre line of Orange street; thence along\nthe centre Une of Orange street to the cen-\ntre Une of street; thence along the\ncentre line of Fifth street to the centre lins\nof Central avenue; thence along the centre\nline of Central avenue to the centre line\nof Warren atreet; thence along the centre\nUne of Warren atreet to the centre line of\nMorris avenue? thence along the centre Una\nof Morris avenue to the centre line of New\natreet; thence along the centre Une of New\nstreet to the centre line of Wilsey street.\nthence along the centre line of Wilsey atreet\nto the centre line of New atreet running\neast from Wilsey street: thence along the\ncentre line of New atreet from Wilsey atreet\nto Ihe centre Une of High atreet and place\nof beginning, shall constitute the Fifteenth\nWard of said city.\nSection Ifl. Be It ordained by the Com-\nmon Council of the city of Newark that ail\nthat part of the said
ec5d963dc9c5aa774645492f9c0f3934 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.5493150367834 40.618676 -80.577293 "That this Congress, in view of the latest in­\ncrease in the unemployment figures and the gen­\neral intensification which has characterized all\nforms of production in industry, instructs the Gen­\neral Council to take immediate steps to influence\nthe Government to bring into being the Forty\nHours' Week on a national basis without re­\nduction in wages, together with the most drastic\nrestriction and regulation of overtime."\nTurning to the problem of continued and in­\ncreasing unemployment, the Congress declared:\n"That this Congress, reflecting the anxiety of\nthe trade unions and of the people generally over\nthe continued existence of large-scale unemploy­\nment, calls for more determined action by the Gov­\nernment to remedy unemployment and its ac­\ncompanying social evils. Congress expresses\nalarm at the fact that the figures of \ncontinue to rise even in the midst of intense in­\ndustrial activity due to the armaments programme\nand provision for national defense, thus demoting\nretrogression in normal industrial activity, and\nforeshadowing an industrial depression more se­\nvere than the country has ever experienced\n"Congress, while appreciating that unemploy­\nment is an economic evil inherent in a capitalist\nsystem of production, nevertheless believes that\nbold action by the Government now could material­\nly restrict the magnitude of the problem. It urges\nthe Government to act without regard to private\nbusiness interests where these are in conflict with\nthe public good, and demands that it apply the\nsame concentration to the production of goods and\nservices of permanent social value to the com­\nmunity as it does to production for the Defense\nServices."
fa6a4fc2716e3281a78622c9a28b7084 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1847.078082160071 31.960991 -90.983994 • Well, Judge Brown returned home, and to this eight thousand men now assembling\nin 1843 did meet the celebrated “Lodi in different parts of the conntry, and we will\nPolk” beforethe people of Madison county, have assembled somewhere, about the 1st\nat Jackson, and charged him with duplicity of March, twenty-thousand men! Now,\nand prevarication to his face. And he supfiose we abandon Monterey, Saltiilo,\nproved by the record what he asserted. Matamoros, Chihuahua, Tampico, Coimur.\nWhereupon Mr. Polk stoutly denied that he go, and the different intermediate depots,\nhad, when there on a firmer occasion, sta- and assemble every man of the twenty thou-\nted that he voted, on Verplancksbill, to re- sand for a march to the city of Mexico, ei-\nducc the. tax on tea and coffee, and that a ther via Vera Cruz or San Luis Potcsi,\nhigh duty existed on those articles at the those familiar with such subjects, well know\nlime. But Judge Brown proved that he did after deducting the necessary force fo keep\nso state, over and over in his speech. One open a communication the seaboard,\nof the witnesses was Mr. Joseph Talbot, the actual force embodied in the field could\nthe chairman of the meeting at which Mi. not exceed\\fifteen thousand troop*! But\nPolk spoke. Other upt ight ad intelligent will not abandon Monterey, Saltillo, Mata*\nmen, of Mr Polks own party, heard him moros, Camargo, Chihuahua, Monclova,\non the occasion, and some of them have etc., and it follows as melancholy fact, that\nnever voted for him since his denial of what ten to twelve thousand men, is the extent of\nhe had proclaimed so distinctly in their hear- the army with which the Administration in-\ning. Mr, Joseph Talbot, however, good, tend to march to the city of Mexjeo and con*\neasy, pliable Locofbco,* after enjoying a quer a peace in the presence of an army of\n“talk” with Mr. Polk bn the sftbject, came thirty-five thousand men under the command\nto the conclusion that he must have been of Santa Anna, with the whole Mexican na*\nmistaken, and that he probably misunder- tion roused to resist an invasion of their\ntood Mr. Polk!
214f0a96bf6c3fbb7e7e6b0d37bd16b4 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.0479451737697 37.005796 -89.177245 the year Eighteen Hundred nnd Sixty-nin- e .\nHtc. 3 . That for atich portiona of mid Intercat aa nro\ninadojpayablo without thebtnteof Illinom, ho aliall,\nunder inn iwlvlcc and direction of tho tlnanco commit-te- o\nof thl. lioard, nrmneo with aomn Innklng Institu-\ntion In good credit in the city of Now York to pay out,\nupon presentation of the pri.pi r i tmpoiia, nid portionn\nof said intereal mud which uru niiilo pnyuble lu anld\ncity, or which may Ui iniyablt, etuhero without thu\nllmlta of thoHtateof Illinoin, and which tho parties\nentitled to reeelvo It are willing to receive Inanidclty;\nand it la hereby nude tho duly of tho city comptroller\nto obtain from tho city treaurcr nnd remit to anld\nbanking Inatilutlon auillelenl fundato pay aald Inter-e- a t\nat leut fifteen daya before tho aatnti falls due, nnd\ntogio notice fur n like perl to piirtlcs lioldlnK cou-\npons for interest, at what placo wild coupon muat li\npresented for payment; Provided, that .whatever bal-a n- c o\nt)f aald intereat fund may remain In Ihn handa of\ntho city triwitirer after provisional abovo\npeclnel,for Hit' luiyiiieiit of interest falling due out\nof thoHtato of Illinois, .hall Int tiepoaited itieoluo enfo\nnml reliable Kiiikinglnatitiiliuii 11 Ihiacity which will\npay thehlghest rnto of Intereat 011 unld depail.\ntr.c. n . Tlialiioniucertainlngthi)uiiiountreiiulrtl\nto pay the Intereat llon tho Ixmdcd Indebtediieaii of\nthtt city for tho ) ear ImW, and lh reservation of tho\nnmo out of the interest fund u .av on hand in the city\ntreiiattry, tho Imlaticeof said interest fund chall btt\nand la hereby wit aido and C'ntlluted nnd declarttl\nto a sinking fund for tho redemption of thu lsuded\nlndrbtetlneasof the nlty now past fine.\nhi.o4. That immediately upon tho pasag of thli\nordinance Itahall bo the tluty of tho city eomplroller,\nunder tho ndtlco and tlireetion of the tiii.inco etnnmit-te- e ,\nto advertise In the newspaper publisheil in tho\ncltyofCalrothenmounttifthf sinking fund on hand\napplicable to the payment of the Ixunbil indebtodner\n1. film oily, nntl Kivc n.illen In elil itwrt".rs f T tIi\ntlay that, at a tune and plare to Infixed In :ml no-\ntice, he will receive oral projw-al- a
aca0ec6e81f1dd1bc75d430eb2643c7e THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.250684899797 39.369864 -121.105448 The California Volcano. —Dr.\nWozcucraft lately stated that he had\nseen, in a secluded portion of Shasta\ncounty, a burning mountain which he\nbelieved to be a volcano. A. reference\nto Trask s Geological report confirmed\nhis statement, and Mr.C . Jackson of\nPetaluma now furnishes the Journal\nwith a circumstantial description of a\nvolcanic mountain which is probably\nthe same as that seen by Dr. Wozencraft.\n3lr. Jackson locates the mountain,\n(which he discovered in 1851 while\nprospecting with several companions,)\nat a point distant some forty or fifty\nmiles, in a N. or E. N. E. course from\nLawsons Butte. The Journal remarks:\nTheir attention was drawn to it by\nobserving for three successive nights,\nwhat first appeared to be a dim light,\nbut as they neared it it assumed more\nthe appearance of a column of fire about\none hundred feet in hight. Upon reach-\ning base of the mountain, "umevous\nhot springs were diseovered, so hot that\nthe party boiled coffee by immersing\ntheir kettles in them. On the summit\nof the mountain, the party discovered\nan opening, forty to fifty feet in diameter,\nfrom which issued an immense column\nof what appeared to be intensely heated\nair. With such force was this emitted,\nthat Mr. J . says stones weighing fifteen\nand twenty pounds, upon being thrown\ninto the chasm, were hurled upward in-\nto the air to a considerable bight. Of\nthe depth of the crater, Mr. Jackson\ncould form no just conception, as the\nintense heat of the escaping gas utterly\nprohibited approach nearer than fifteen\nor twenty feet. The sides of the moun-\ntain, coated in some places to a consider-\nable depth with lava, gave'unmistakable\nevidence that this volcano had at some\nday presented a more active and terriflic\nappearance.
35c712eeeaf58c917fff52ee165cd596 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1903.7547944888381 41.875555 -87.624421 "I wna very much ntiiUNOil nml very\nmuch Instructed recently," wild u umu\nwho lives In the country, "by the un-\nties of n mother squirrel In my section,\nnml whllo I have grown up, ns I might\neay, niiiong squirrels nnd cypres,\ntret'H. It wna n revolution to ine. Tho\nsnulrrel luul nested In n low, dumpy\ncypress tree close? to the edge of u hike,\nand the nest wns probably thirty or\nforty feet from I ho ground. The\nmother squirrel happened to bo In the\ntree nt tho time, although I hnd no\noccasion to notice either the old squir-\nrel or her young until something trag-\nical happened In the family. In Nome\nway oiio of tho little fellows scrum:\nblcil over the edge of the nest nml\nfell to the ground. I heard the noise,\nnnd, looking In the direction of the\nsound, I saw the baby squirrel\nsquirming lu great agony nnd\ntotally unable to get mi Its feet. The\nmother squirrel rushed down tho sldo\nof the eyprecs like n streak, ami al-\nmost In an Instant she was by the\nside nt her oft spring. She took In tho\nsituation at n glance, and set to work\nto set the youngster back In tho nest.\nShu switched the body around and\nturned It over ami then grabbed It\nwith her teeth Just under the smaller\nportion of the back. Instinctively, I\nsuppose, the young squirrel threw Its\narms around the mother's body, and\nafter she mnde sure that tho hold\nwas good she started cautiously hack\nto the neat. She reached there safely,\nand .1 saw no more of tho distressed\nmother uor the youngster. I was very\nmuch Impressed with the gentleuess\nami skill she displayed In handling the\nInjured baby squirrel, nud really it\nwas nn Inspiring scene."
3751b5146f95f279f03ae7f35638dd8c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.04508193559 44.939157 -123.033121 Ed. Journal: Seeing an inspired\narticle In your Issue of tho 3d pur-\nporting to como from a young at-\ntorney named WInslow, I beg space\nto make a correction. This tirade I\ndeem unnecessary to answer and\nshould wholly Ignore the gontlcman\nonly for the fact that ho gives mo\ncredit for an artlclo which appeared\nIn tho Capital Journal of Dee. 31\ntaken from tho Solo News editorial,\nono of tho brightest llttlo papors In\ntho Btato, and I don't want Bro.\nDuggor to think for a momont that I\nhad garbled and placed to my credit\nono of his best editorials.\nHad Mr. WInslow used ordinary\ngood Judgmont ho could havo easily\nseen that I was not tho author of\ntho nrtlclo and thus Baved some of\nhis vnluablo tlmo and energy. I\nwould hero say I nm a common\novory day farmer trying to nmko a\nliving for my family at clover rais-\ning and dlvorsined forming. I am\nnot a lawyer seeking cheap notorlty\nby rtishlnK Into print. While It Is\ntruo I, In my fcoblo way, perhaps\naeslatud somo llttlo In bringing this\nvery unpopular munsuro to a vote\nof tho psoplo and having accomplish\ned this I nm wllliug to allow the\nvoters to decldo this very Interesting\nappropriation nt the ballot box. No,\nMr. WInslow, I have never by word\nor othorwlso ndvoonted the "elimina-\ntion or all high schools," "Oregon\nAgricultural college" or the ilUtte\nuniversity nnd never at any time\nhavo I poised ns nn onemy to higher\neducation, but have often expressed\nmysulf In favor of bettor sustained\npublic schools, high and prefatory\nschools and tho col I eg- -,
2886ed0739b16dfebf8ca3f5c0a98a9b THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.1926229191965 40.832421 -115.763123 Tho report of the testimony implicat¬\ning Secretary llelknup in the mutter of\nthe kuIo of the office of Post Trader at\nFurt Sill is tho theme of comment every¬\nwhere in this city today, Gon, Bel¬\nknap lias resigned. IIo lmnded a let¬\nter to the President, tendering his res¬\nignation, and asking that it be accepted\nwithout delay. It is stated at the White\nHouse that the resignation was prompt¬\nly accepted, lint the exact language of\nthe President's reply lias not yet been\nobtained. General llelknup Ium re¬\nmained r.t his private residence to-day,\nnot haviug visited tho War Department.\nHo says thero aro complications to bo\nexplained to the committee, and that ho\nhas, therefore, requested be allowed\nto make a statement before it. The dis¬\ncovery of this circumstance in General\nllelknap'rt administration of tho War\nDepartment occasions tho most intense\nsurprise, and tho Cabinet officers and\n of all grades declare tlieir ab¬\nsolute astonishment. Throughout the\ncity thero has been tulk of the impeach¬\nment of tho ex-Secretary for the offense\nof corruption, and opinions have been\ndivided, even among the Cabinet offi¬\ncers, as to whether a trial can 1>e had\nafter an offending official is nut of\noffice. The preponderenco of opinion,\nhowever, is that it could be. Tho At¬\ntorney-General said, in conversation\nupon the matter, that ho was not pre¬\npared to give an opinion, for it lins not\nbeen officially asked for. Several\nfriends of Itelknap called upon him to¬\nday, but lie had nothing to say, except¬\ning that, us lias been here mentioned,\nho designed to make a statement before\ntho committee. It is rumored this uf-\nternoou that the President is inclined to\nwithdraw his acceptance of the resigna¬\ntion, to await the investigation of the\ncharges against llelknap.
1ba00c0a015b14ad7f747fad6a104af8 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1905.305479420345 31.762115 -95.630789 You are hereby commanded to summon w 1-\n1F Caryby making publication of this citation In-\nKOmene spaperpubli > hed In Anderson county It-\nUiere be a newspaper published therelnbut If not\nthen In any newspaper published In the Judicial\ndistrict where the following named suit Is pend-\nlngbul If there be nonewspaperpubllshed In such\njudicial dlstrlctthen this citation shall be pnblloh-\ncd In the nearest district to thedlstrlct w here the\nsaid suit U pending once a week for four\nconsecutive weeks previous to the return day\nhereof to bo and appear before the Honorable\nDistrict Court of Anderson County Texas at the\nnext regular term of aid court to be holden at the\ncourt house In the city ot Palestine In Anderson\ncounty Texas on the 13th Monday after the first\nMonday In February A D 1803 the same being\nthe1stdayotMay A D 1X6 then andthereto\nanswer petition of Mrs Virginia F Cary\nfiled In said court on the 8th day or April A U\n1905 In a certain cau u therein pending wherein\nsaid Mrs Virginia F Cary Is plaintiff and the said\nWIIF Cary l defendant and numbered on the\ndocl ct ot said court 72CI the nature of plaintiffs\ndemand being a suit for divorce the allegations\not her petloo being In substance that at the time\not filing her petition she was an actual bona fide\nInhabitant of the State of Texas and had resided\nIn Anderson county for six months next prior to\nthe tlllne of her suit and that the defendant Is a\nnonresident of the State of Texas but Is living\nIn the city of BankoV In the Kingdom of Slam\nthat plaintiff and defendant were lawfully mar-\nried In the City of New York on the ttli day of\nJanuary 1
429eec1306f8562b3c4391b302bf7e0c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6188524273932 39.513775 -121.556359 SI IK IIII''I"A SACK.— Uy Virtue of a decretal order\nlilted out ot tin-Hi-'net Court, Ninth Judicial\nHint rid, in and for Hutto County and Stale of Cali-\nfornia, made tin- 12ih day of Juno. A . H, 18511 , ta me\ndlroclod and delivered, eonnniinding me to make the\nrum of four hundred and ninety vevenfifty one him\ndredlhs dollnra Judgment. and interest on said amount\nnfjudc'ment at the rate of mu per cent, per annum,\ntill paid, an i tno mm of nihr iv-eight sixty one him\ndredUis dollars cosl« and aceruitu costs of raid order\nnut of the properly hereinafter described, to satisfy\nthe nfn-.isaid judgment, wherein M. Walsh is plain\ntiir. and A. Skinkle defendant, to wit: Commencing\non the I'laiain tin- villaim id Hidwell, County and\nStale aforesaid, at the North cast corner of Camp &\n11ida's nml miming in an easterly direction,\nto tin* comer of the sailt pla/a. sixty lent more or less,\nthence in a sontlierlv direction to the corner on tho\nstreet of Messrs. Hoffman, on which their reservoir is\nsituated, thence iii a \\vc terty direction to the line of\nhump ,V Hidas Hakery, add thence in a southerly di-\nrection to iheend ol tin- s(iacedtu( out and formerly\nuseil a let! pin Ail v including the space h ini'be-\ntween I,amp & Ilida's Hot and the Reservoir of\nMe-srs Hoffman it Co. , together with the Hilliard Sa-\nlooii, situated on said premises, which 1 wall sell at\nPublic Sale at ilia 1 onn 11on so door in Hidwell, coun-\ntv and Statu aforesaid, mi the 4th day of August, A\nH IB.VS. at -2 oclock I M„ to the highest bidder for\ncash.
14c10e999b5e15d82177731ef8d283e1 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1875.8616438039066 39.743941 -84.63662 And this is but one item of the\nyear s product, mere are wheat,\nrye, barley, oats, potatoes, hay, to-\nbacco, fruit, hemp, and other various\nsmaller items, to say nothing of cot\nton, sugar and rice. Leaving out\nthese three articles last named and\nwhat an enormous aggregate is pre\nsented ! We have no means of ascer-\ntaining even the approximate totals\nof the grain crop; the wheat crop of\nthe country, alone not the exporta\nble surplus, but the entire yield\nwould certainly come very near the\ncorn crop in actual value.\nIn the days of the discussion over\nthe various aspects of the slavory\nquestion, the cotton crop was exalted\ninto great prominence, as to value,\nbecause the bulk of it was exported;\nbut the census returns were invoked\nto show that the hay crop ot tbe\ncountry was equal to it, and excelled\nit ia value. The hay was con-\nsumed at home, and hence did ne\nenter into the statistics of produc-\ntion to any extent; but its actual\nworth was as great as that of any\nother product. We may infer, there-\nfore, that the various crops which\nenter but little of not at all into the\nexport trade are none the less of im-\nmense importance iu computing the\nactual value of the total agricultural\nproductions of the country.\nThe capacity, the productiveness,\nand the real wealth of the. country\nhave never yet been fully compre-\nhended; and it is only when we get\ndown to the details of such a crop\nno the corn crop, for instance, that we\nget a glimpse of the actual facts. The\nno countty is rich, beyond all question,\nin the "immensity of its productions;\nand a country possessing such abund-\nant sources of wealth has no good\nexcuse for not being prosperous.
44904c2f9620b8c0eb0395195e285076 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.919178050482 44.939157 -123.033121 As the result of tab present county\nroads, or main roads, becoming ade-\nquate to accommodate tho many now\nhome builders in former isolated dis-\ntricts as far as roads are concerned,\nit is probable that the matter of a\nstraight road through the county\nfrom north to south will be agitated.\nA straight county road through the\ncenter of the county was talked of\nseveral years afo, but no definite con-\nclusion was arrived at. It Is con-\ntended that by creating such a road,\ntho farming district of Marlon County\nwill have greater excess to the main\nroad than to carry on the construc-\ntion of now roads through farms and\nprivate property. At the present\ntime the county has six loading roads\nor main, highways, by which the far-\nmers and residents in the counrfy can\ngain admittance to the city, although\n of these main roads are con-\nsiderable distance from many of tho\nfarms and the only way loft for thoes\nfarmers Is through a crude roadway\nbroken by themselves and almost Im\npassable during the rainy season. In\nthe north part of the county near the\nSt. Paul district the roads are not lo\ncated so that the residents can ap-\nproach the main highway. The coun\nty court thought that matter could bo\nImproved by creating a county main\nroad a few miles west of the old\nstage road which passed down east\nof Chemewa. As in this way, resi-\ndents located nearer to the stage road\ncould take that routle, while those\nresiding farther toward tho river\ncould handily reach the highway by\ntraveling a few miles west.\nThe first general road meeting will\nbe made the starting, and the expi-ditin- g
10315056d7cd6fb7342274bade9ebfcd THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1867.3356164066463 36.294493 -82.473409 ions of this act, or so much thereof\nas may be applicable to said city of in-\ncorporated town to tbe county Super-\nintendent of Common Schools of the\nrespective counties in which the said\ncity incorporated town is situated.\nNor shall it bo lawful for the County\naupermtondent to pay over any por\ntion of th Common school Fund to\nany local Treasurer, school' Agent,\nHoard of Education, or other ofllcer\nor person of any civil district, city or\nIncorporated town, until the report\nspecified m this section shall have\nbeen tiled with the County Superin-\ntendent of the proper oouoty.\nSeo. 81 . There shall be elected at\ntbe rogular biennial election for Gov-\nernor and members of the Goneral\nAssembly by tho qualified voters of\nthe State, a superintendent of Com\nmon Schools, who shall hold his office\nfor the terra of two years, and till , his\nsuccessors shall be elected and quali-\nfied, who, upon entering upon the du-\nties of his office, shall tako an oath\nto support the constitution of the\nState of Tennessee, and if by resig-\nnation, death or dismissal, the office be-\ncome vacant the Governor shall fill the\nvacancy by appointment, until tie\nnext regular olection thereafter ; and\nuntil the first election, provided for\nby this section, shall bo held, the gov-\nernor shall appoint said Officers, by\nand with the approval or the Sonato,\nDCTiiaos Tun suraaiRTBsnxsT.\nBsc. 32 . Tbe State superintendent shall\ndevote his time to the care and Improvement\nof common schools, and tbe promotion of the\ngeneral Interests or education In tbe State.\nHe shall carefully Investigate tha operation\nof our school laws, celled Information in re-\ngard to the arrangement of school districts,\ntbe location and construction of school\nho'isei, consult and advise with Countv su\nperintendents of Common schools on tha se\nlection of books adapted to the wants of\nschools, and ou tbe methods of ascertaining\ntbe qualification of teachers, and of visiting\nand examining schools, add Inquire Into the\nmoat approved methods of teaching.\nSte. 31. Re shall spend at least ten days In\neach judicial district or the State, suprrln\ntending and encouraging county superintend\nentsand teachers, conferring with theCivllDis-\ntrict Boards of Education and other school\nofficers, Visiting schools, and otherwise pro-\nmoting the interests of popular education.\nWhenever the superintendent of Public In\nstruction Is satisfied that a eoonty superin-\ntendent has persistently neglected to perform\nbis duties, be may withhold his ordr for tbe\npayment of the whole or any part of such\nsuperintendent's
26356c09fd526092a870cbad6861a1f9 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.1383561326738 32.612638 -90.036751 Old John Adams, John Quincy Adams,\nhis son Charles Francis Adams and\nnow this Charles Francis, his son,\nand he is 70 years old and has\nbeen 40 years finding out that we had\nthe right to secede and they had no\nright to free our negroes without pay-\ning for them. Besides all that, this\nAdams took charge of a whole regi-\nment of our runaway negroes to fight\nus with. Lew Wallace did the same\nthing. Yes, he did worse. He was\npresident of the court that tried Wirz\nand convicted him and hung him on\nperjured evidence. The longer I live\nthe more I am convinced that as a gen-\neral rule the smartest men are the\nmeanest especially the politicians.\nThink of Henry Ward Beecher preach-\ning from his pulpit that Sharp's rifles\nwere better than Bibles convert the\nslave owners of the south, and so his\npeople bought the rifles and the am-\nmunition and told old John Brown to\ngo ahead. But the niggers were loyal\nto their masters and wouldn't burn\nnor kill nor destroy. And hence Lew\nWallace and Adams and many other\narmed all they could muster up and\njoined the grand army and marched\nthem down upon our helpless women\nand children. At that time there were\n30,000 runaways up north fugitive\nslaves the meanest of the race, and\nnobody but an unprincipled dog of a\nman would have led them against us.\nDown further south the negroes mixed\nwith gentlemen and were true and\nfaithful during the war, and as Gen.\nHenry R. Jackson said, they ought to\nhave a monument built to their loy-\nalty as high as the stars.
2eb572e3246e7d6ad4b3ed92e40b68e0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.3410958587012 37.561813 -75.84108 Sec. 87. It is hereby made tho duty\nof the several county treasurers of this\nState, immediately on tho receipt of any\nsuch statement or account, to proceed nnd\ncollect tho samo of the person ho charg\ned with said "taxes nnd per centum, for\nwhich services he shall be allowed the\nsame fees that county treasurers are now\nallowed for collecting delinquent taxes,\nby process, to bo collected of tho per-\nson against whom sai l taxes are charged.\nSec. 83, For the collection of nil\ntaxes, penalty and costs, mentioned in\nthe preceding section of this act, the\nseveral county treasurers of this State\nshall have the samo powers that are\nnow or hereafter may bo given by any\nlaw of this State fur tho collection of\ntaxes; and all taxes collected pursuant\nto the provisions of said section by any\ncounty treasurer of this State, shall be\nby him remitted, in the safest find most\nconvenient way to the treasurer of \ncounty to which said taxes belong; nnd\nt the satno timo ho sliall forward a\nStatement to the county auditor of said\ncounty, stating tho amount so collected,\nand of whom; und in case ho'shall be\nunable, front any cause whatever, to\ncollect the same, then and in that case\nhe shall return the original statement,\nor account, to tho county auditor of the\ncounty from which it was sent, together\nwith tbe cause or causes why said tax-\nes could not be collected, certifying in\nhis official capacity to the samo.\nSec. 80. It shall be tho duty of the\nseveral county commissioners in this\nState, annually, at their September ses-\nsion, to cause tho deliuquent list of per-\nsonal property to bo publicly read on\nthe second day of said session, and said\ncommissioners may, at any time, direct\ntheir county treasurer to proceed to col-\nlect, in the manner prescribed in this\nuet, nny delinquent faxes Juo their\ncounty.
40d5bdae7106523b3a332a2638189bd9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8945205162354 40.063962 -80.720915 The lawful cures ol those ofSandomlr\nmd Cracow have been, at the caprice of\nLhe government, sent from^ne parish [\\\nbo another,' their classification changed\nand replaced by others. The edifipes of\nihe'diooesa'h training school for young 'J\nprleate-atPiock have been confiscated,\n»nd the bishop compelled' to -send the ,\nsodeslastics into' the monastery which\nbelonged to the Franciscans outside the\nrails. All liberty or communication\nMug besides refused to the priests who\nam no longer go morathsn a mile from <\ntheir residences to have any oommaoi-\nsatiotts fctnongst themselves, the Inter\nworse oftfaefalthful with thfe Apostolic i\nSeels thus interdicted and suppressed\nby the ttftmi'firartilMiit' with snch\nseverity thai we have oeased absolutely,\n. 0 the grt^tgHef <pf oi»r soul, to be able\n:o:give the cares of onr apostolla mints- <\nry to that -cherished portion of the <\nLord's fiOck^orto afford any suooor to 1\nndlvldual sufferings. i\nWould to that the sad news\nwhich has recently reached as may not 1\nBe oonftrmed, that the Blshopof Chelm <\nind the larger part of the canoos of the\ncathedral have, by order of the govern- 1\n- nent, been transported into unknown\nregional We do not apeak of the ruses,\nvtificeM and effort* of all kinds by which\nthe Russian 'government endeavor* to\noar her eon*from the bosom of the church j\n>ad to draw Item with all iU force toward\n'Jt* mostfatal of schisms; we say nothing 1\njftha prisona, exile and other punish-\nments'With which the bishops and\nrttaer holy ministers, as well as the\nreligious bodies and the simple faithful,\nlave been painfully visited tor their\narm attachment to religion and the\nietfenwrtSujeriBbtaAfthe church. All\nJjis Will be more manlfeatly proved la :\nthe detailed aooonnt of the fkcts which\nweliaveotdfcred to be printed and to be\nspeedily laid before jox\\ with the
a978e2910ad4ea2811bb03e6ad79670e THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.209589009386 40.807539 -91.112923 said county, his certain Bill of Complaint,\nrepresenting iu suostance, that Samuel M.\nLambard on the bth day of May, 1S40, was\nindebted to the said complainant in a certain\nsum then due and owing, &c., for the re­\ncovery of which the said complainant insti­\ntuted an action of Assumpsit iu said District\nCourt, and at the same time sued out of\nsaid court, a writ of attachment against the\nlands, tenements, goodj and challcls, tec., of\n. aiu .^aiiiuci M. Lambard, which said at­\ntachment was personally served on said Lam­\nbard and levied on the lltli day of May,\n1840, on lots No. C95, and 696, in the city\nof Burlington in said county, and on the fol­\nlowing described piece or parcel of laud,\nsituate in said county, to wit : Lot No. 2, in\nSection No. 5, of Township 69, N. Range\nNo. H west, beginning at a point 16 rods, 6\nfeet fiom N. W . corner of the land convey­\ned by Benjamin Tucker and wife, to Richard\n Barren, which said beginning point, is N.\n7 degrees, 10 uiiiiules east of Barrett's corner,\nthcnce N. 7 degrees, lu minutes, east 20 rods,\ntlienec west 32 rods, thence north parallel\nwith first mentioned lino, 20 rods, thence\neast to the place of btgiuuinir, and contain­\ning lour acres. And also, that at the Octo­\nber term of said court, 1640, said complain­\nant recovered judgment against said Lam­\nbard in said action lor §39J,aO, together with\ncosts of suit, &c., and that at tlie time of\nthe rendition of said judgment nor since, had\nsaid Lambard any property or effects in the\njurisdiction of said court, that could be\nreached by execution. And also, that the said\niots, 695 and 696, attached as aforesaid, as\nthe property of said Lambard, have not been\nsold under execution aforesaid, judgment in\nconsequence of the said Lambard not having\nany title nor mUrcst in the same that could\nbe sold, the title to llic same, stiil being in\nthe Government cf the United Slatfcs. Ami
117109d33f685a9b219dc34d93cb1412 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.8232876395232 41.004121 -76.453816 "llaw do they work?" asked one ol\nthe maidens with deep interest.\n"I didn't make any inquiries about\nthem, but I gathered from the an-\nnouncement that they hud specially\nprepared forms for the use of youug\nmen when proposing. Tho institution\nguarantees that the proposer is pro-\nposing In good faith, nnd In the event\nof a breaking off of the match by the\nyoung man it agrees to pay the girl\nso much money. That is what I un-\nderstand by It, and it etrlkes me ns a\ngood thing. Vhen the r'an goes Into\nfull effect no young man will think ol\nproposing to a girl without presenting\nono of these bonds, properly made out,\nas a gun ran tea of good faith. I sup-\npose that they ore to bo had In differ-\nent proportioned to the .love t bo\nyoung man feels, and the value of the\ngirl In hlo estimation. The more he\nloves her the higher will be the bond\nhe .will offer when seeking hor hand.\nOf course ho has to puy for these\nbonds himself, and If he entails loss\nupon the guarantee company by refus-\ning or neglecting to fulfill his matri-\nmonial engagement that company will\nmark him and he will be posted us un-\ntrustworthy. He will lose his busi-\nness standing, and that Is something\nno man will do If he can help it. Von\ncan easily see, my dear girls, what an\nadvantage It will bo to become en-\ngaged to young men who are backed\nby these bonds, for those engagements\nwill be kept In nine hundred and ninety-se -\nven
4b9e1a23ef2c57f473417af2d0234f7a COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.1164383244545 41.262128 -95.861391 i>;caKA£{»>s no PXOPLX'S TAXW.— The\nRepublicans in Congress are determiaa!\nto weigh the people down with intolerable\nburdens in the shape of high taxes. A\nfew days ago a bill passed both bouses of\nCongress, increasing the tariff upon tea,\nsugar, coffee and molasses. If the object\nof the Republicans in Congress be to pre­\nvent the poorer classes from using these\narticles they will probably succeed. Un­\nder the new bill, the tariff on these arti­\ncles is to be as follows:—Tea, of all kinds\n20 cents per pound,- Coffee, 5 cents j Su­\ngar, from 2 1-2 to 8 centa ; molaaoes, 6\ncents per gallon. The old Whig doctrine\nused to be that the duty upon an artick\ndid not increase its price. Tba people\nwiil have a good opportunity now to test\nthe truth of this doctrine. If this tariff\nupon tea, sugar, coffee and molasses, \nhave the effect to lessen the prices of those\narticles, the poor will have ruaton to re­\njoice. But if, on the other hand, as will\ncertainly be tbe case, this increased tariff\nshall have tbe effect to raimi the price of\nthese articles, the poir will have reason\nto curse the day they roted for Lincoln.\nUnder Democratic administrations, if they\nhad nothing else, the people had cheap\nt*a» sugar, coffee and moiaatcs. But they\ndecided last fail that they wo'd rather have\nLincoln than any of these things, and they\nhave got just what they wanted—perhaps.\nIn the next campaign let the Republicans\nsome out in their ir«e colors, and inscribe\napon their banners "no lea, coffee, surer\nor molasses for the poor"no anything for\nthe white man—nothing but freedom for\nthe nigger! As that is their policy, let\nthem avow it, lik* honest ntso.— QiiHum\nHtraid.
001cdc4b2e4a6e2733c78068aed8e048 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.8479451737696 44.939157 -123.033121 When we sny that God is now select-\ning n special class to be jolnt-helr- s\nwith Christ and that he has deter-\nmined that this special class shall con-\nsist exclusively of the snnctlflcd. let us\nbo misunderstood to mean by this\nthat In the next age God will accept to\nhis favor the unsauctllled. tho wicked.\nThe conditions during the Millennial\nAge will bo much ensler for mankind\nthan nro present conditions of tho\nChurch, the elect, the saints, Now we\nmust wnlk by faith; Mien we will wnlk\nby sight, because Satan and sin and\ndarkness will have passed away, and\ntho light of Truth will flood nnd cover.\ntho whole earth, so that, as the prophet\nsays, "They shall teach no more every\nman his neighbor, snylng. know the\nLor.d; for they shall all know me, from\ntho least of them unto the greatest of\nthem, saith the Lord (Jeremiah xxxl.\n3D. The rewards for obedience to the\n requirements In the Millennium\nwill bo the earthly rewnrdt. eternal\nlife or the earthly restitution plane.\nThe reward proffered to those who\nnow walk the narrow way by self-sa - c\nrifice is n spiritual one. glory, honor\nand Immortality on the plrlt plane.\nlike unto the holy angels and higher\nthan this; like unto our Lord Jenus In\nhis glorified state: an seen Uy the Apos-\ntle. "Shining above tho brightness of\nthe sun at noonday" (At is sxvl. 18).\nWo must guard also against the\nthought that the total number of God's\noleet would be a umall a number ns\nthe cnleudnr of the nulnts recognlxcd\nby moine of our Christian friends might\nImply. We hold that none la uble to\nJudge definitely on this aubject, except\nthe Master. He hn given us general\nIntimations ot the linen of his decision,\nhut he hits not permitted us to deter-\nmine the inn tier, saying. "Judge noth\ning before the time."
09bef70f1a2e21e60fcd0ca86a87730d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.3767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 NEW YORK, May 17.. -Major Conor.*\nHenry, U. S . V., until recently milltar\ngovernor of Porto Rico, arrived in th\ntransport Mcpherson from San .Tuai\nHe was accompanied by Mrs. Henr\nand his daughter, Mrs. Benton. Tli\nparty will remain in tills city until ne>\nMonday, when they will leave fc\nWashington. General Henry is entlu\nelastic about Porto Rico, its people an\nits possibilities.\n"It is a wonderful country," he sail\n"but we will have to go slow in brint\ning about reforms. Capital investe\nwill bring large returns. The gener;\nconditions are very encouraging. Ovc\nin,000 men arc at work on public in\nprovements and we are spending ovt\n$100,000 per month In this way. This\nmore money than the men received froi\nSpain all their lives.\n"The children are thirsting for know\nedge, and the great need is good school\nGeneral Eaton Is doing line work in thl\n When I left San Juan I wa\ngiven a reception in the theatre at Sa\nJuan, In which over 2,000 school chjldre\ntook part. They sang American patr!\notic songs and several of them delh\nered addresses In English. The saw\nthing took place at Ponce, where thei\nare live r.ngusn teachers.\n"The Porto Rlcans are anxious for\nterritorial form of government, but th\nquestion Is how they are going to g«\nmoney if the customs duties are wipe\nout. We are spending large sums, an\nI introduced a water supply In Sa\nJuan In five weeks after I took hol<\nThe Spanish had been at work for lift\nyears on the same thing. Sun Juan\nas clean now ns any city of the Sout\nAmerican republics. The people loo\nforward to being Americans.\n"With the exception of a few dl;\ngruntlea politicians the Island Is frc\nfrom all 111 will toward the Unite
4cd1535cbc5bd98eb4f03a41ee9fb2a7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.0999999682901 41.681744 -72.788147 nlfd children may be arraigned in the\nsuperior court and placed on proba-\ntion for, say a month or six months\nand if they violate it any time before\nthe time expires they can have their\nliberty or can run away and there is\nno authority to interfere with them\nuntil the court meets again and as\nit is in session only once in every\nthree months it can be seen that the\nprobationers have a fine opportunity\ntc escape the sentence of the court.\nThe proposed bill provides that a per-\nson who violates probation can be\nbrought before a judge of the superior\ncourt at any time, when the original\nsentence can be revived and the ac-\ncused fined or sent to jail, whichever\nthe case may be. Thejje was no op-\nposition to the measure and the com-\nmittee will in all probability make a\nfavorable report on it during the\ncoming week. The fact that only one\nperson appeared before the commit-\ntee in favor of the bill is not by \nmeans an indication of any lack of\ninterest in it, on the contrary lawyers\ngenerally, as well as probation off-\nicers are strongly in favor of it and\nhave taken for granted that there\nwould be no opposition and that the\ncommittee would make a favorable\nreport on it. It is believed that this\nproposed law will not only strengthen\nthe act, hut that the effect will be a\ndecided change for the better in the\nprobationers, for when they see that\nthey must keep their agreements with\nthe courts or go to jail there will be\nless violations of that particular law.\nIt will have no effect upon the cases\nin the local courts because they are\nin session every day, except Sunday,\nand violators can be arraigned prac-\ntically as soon as apprehended. The\nprobation system is not thought very\nv ell of in Hartford or New Haven,\nwhere some public officials have been\noutspoken against it, but they could\nimprove it if they had any particular\ndsire to do so.
14db77860f7abeace966cf3a5a7a09b9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.7821917491121 39.745947 -75.546589 Most of the papers comment unsym­\npathetically upon the suggestion. The\nLokal Anzeiger says that It raises\nother difficult problem which will\ncaslon long negotiations, and the Ber­\nliner Tageblatt understands that of­\nficial circles regard It\nrather than ns a formal proposition.\nGermany looks upon the report of\nthe death of the empress dowager\nnew Chinese Intrigue. It is supposed\nthat she Intends to disappear tempor­\narily In order to escape responsibility\nfor the misdeeds of high officials and.\nperhaps, to prepare another antl-for-\nelgn movement.\nA high official of the foreign office\nasserted today that a telegram had\nbeen sent to the Chinese government\ndemanding direct Information us to\nwhether the empress dowager is dead.\nNo reply has been received, and the\nforeign office draws the conclusion that\nthe Chinese government is kept In­\nformed as the plans of Tcze list An.\nThe German foreign office Is not sat­\nisfied with tho list of culpable»\npiled by the Chinese government.\n“The list is notoriously Incomplete,\nsaid an Influential official, "as It omits\na score of prominent persons\nwere active leaders In the massacres\nof foreigners. This is borne out by\nall the legations and by the consulnr\nreports from China,\nby Mr. Congers statement.\n“Germany, however, is not disposed\nto insist upon the punishment of all\nthe guilty. What she demands is that\nan example he made of persons of high\nrank In order to show the Chinese,\nstrikingly and convincingly, that the\npowers have enforced a severe expia­\ntion for misdeeds and to teach a whole­\nsome and lasting lesson—the lesson\nthat the lives and property of foreign­\ners must be safe In China "
5313b31b15239cef9cdac7e3bf0ad2aa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.2499999683769 39.745947 -75.546589 Whereas, The President of the United States In the performance of\nhis constitutional duty to give to Congress Information of the state of\nthe Union has advised Congress that the war with the Imperial German\ngovernment has ended. Resolved by the Senate and the House of Repre­\nsentatives of the United States of America In Congress assembled that the\nstate of war declared to exist between the imperial German Govern­\nment and the people of the United States by a Joint resolution of Congress\napproved April 6, 1917, Is hereby declared at an end.\nSection 2: That In the Interpretation of any provision relating to the\ndate of the termination of the present war or of the present or existing\nemergency In any acts of Congress, Joint resolutions or proclamations\nof the President containing provisions contingent upon the date of the\ntermination of the war or of the present or existing emergency, the date\nwhen this resolution becomes effective shall be construed and treated a*\nthe date of the termination of the war or of the present or existing\nemergency, notwlthlng any provision in any act of Congress or Joint\nresolution providing any other mode of determining the dale of the\ntermination of the war, or of present or existing emergency.\nSection 3: That with a view to securing reciprocal trade with tho\nGerman Government and Its nationals, and for this purpose It I* hereby\nprovided thkj unless within forty-five days from the date when this\nresolution becomes effective the German Government shall duly notify\nthe President of the United States that It has declared a termination of\nthe war with the United States and that It waives and renounces on be­\nhalf of Itself and its nationals any claim, demand, right or benefit against\nthe United States, or Us nationals that It or they would not have the\nright to assert had the United States ratified the Treaty of Versailles, the\nPresident of the United States shall have the power, and It shall be his\nduty, to proclaim the fact that the German Government has not given\nthe notification herein before mentioned, and thereupon and until the\nPresident shall have proclaimed the receipt of such notification com­\nmercial Intercourse between the United States and Germany and the\nmaking of loons or credits, and the (jirnlstilng of financial assistance or\nsupplies to the German Government or the inhabitants of Germany, the\nUnited States, shall except with the license of the President, be pro­\nhibited.
038fde8f5699f0b512cbc891e39dcd6e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1899.0863013381531 58.275556 -134.3925 2. No joint stock company or corpo-.\nration shall be entitled to take out a\nfree miner's certificate unless the same\nhas been incorporated and not simply\nlicensed or registered under the laws of\nthe province, and unless such company\nor corporation is authorized to take out\nI a miner's license by the lioutenaut gov¬\nernor, in council, the word "person" in\nthis section shall include only such\ncompanies or corporations as aforesaid.\n3. A miucr's license taken out by)\nany person not authorized so to do by\nthis section shall l>e null and void.\n1. This section shall not affect free\nminer's certificates issued before the\ncoming into force of this section, and\nin case any jwrson or corporation not\nailowed under this section to tuke out\na free license has prior to the\ncoming into force of this section ac-,\nquired any interest or any claim under\nthe provisions of the placer mining act,\nsuch license may be renewed from time\nto time, but such renewed license shall\nnot entitle the holder thereof to hold or\nacquire any interest in any claim under\nsaid placer mining act, except such in¬\nterest so acquired prior to the coming\ninto force of this section.\n5. No free miner after the coming\ninto force of this section shall hold any\nclaim undor said placer mining act, or\nany iutercst therein astrust.ee or other\nwise for any person who is not a British\nsubject or for any corporation not au¬\nthorized to take out a free miner's cer-\ntificate as above provided.\n""
2cfb5ba6ac4bed31718f18bf09565a04 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.568493118975 39.513775 -121.556359 Where he fan hr consulted vntslv and with fh*r\nlitmus? confident* 1* hv the (flirted a* nil hours linHf.\nfrom 8 A. M > nnlll 8 I. M. (Cures always guaranteed\nor no pay renulred.\nIMIt>HT \\NT TOMTNKfI*. THA VRI.HTH*, KTr*.\nTMKRR ts no malady of deeper Imtxirt.- inoe either\nin a medical or moral light of view, to whirl*\nthe human family la more liable than that Musing\nfrom impure connections.\nk* a medical man (t t« the duly of eeorv physician\nIn liMik at disease ns It effects health and life, mat hit*\nsole object .ho lid tie I o mitigate, as far ie»ltesin his\npower, the Imdily -niTV-rlne. Human i.nfun- at best is\nbut frail, all are liable 10 misfortune.\nOfnllihe ills that affect man none are mere terrible\nthan those of » private nature.—ltremlful as it is it*\nthe perron who contract* it. friffhtfnf as are its ravag-\nes upon his Constitution.eudingfrespiotitl.f In destru\nt|on and a lonlhsome grave, it becomes of still greater\nImportance when It is transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Pilch being the ersehow neeessjtry it h\ncomes that every one reiving (he Icu-t mason to fesr\nHint they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntn it nt one* by consulting some physician, whoso-\nrespectathillty and education enables iiim to warrant\na safe, speedy, and poroteiu nl cure. In occordancw\nwith this neees.itv, ftll feelscalted upon to\nstate that, by long study and extensive practice, h«\nhas belomo perfect masterttf all those diseases whirl*\ncome under the denomination of v« i*creal. and havs\ning paid more attention to Hint one branch than any\nother physician In the United Slates, he feels himself\nbetter qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such ns ulcers, swelling In\nthe groans, nicer in the throat,secondary syphilis, cu-\ntaneous eruptions, nicenil ions, lerPmrv syphilis, sy-\nphil's in children, niercnn sl syphilitic nffot-tions. gon-\nnrrt ea. gleet, strictures, false passages, intlarualiun of\nthe bladder and protrnte giaiids, excoriations. tumors,\npoMtiles.&lc. , m e us familiar tohitn aslhe u;rst coin-\ntooti things ol daily observation\nThe Iloc'or effects a cure in recent cases in a few\ndays, ami finds no difficulty in curing those of long-\nduration, without submitting the pnii.-nt in mo h treat-\nmein as wdl draw upon him the aliglrtesj sttsplrinn.\nor oblige him to neglect his business whether within\noors tir without. The diet need not he changed ex-\ncept in caws of severe iiilhunalion. There are in Iall\nforniu patients (amounting to over two thousand in\nthe past year) that could furnish proof af this; but\nthese ure*mailers thol require till nicest eccresy which\nliO always preservi s\nAil letters enclosing SI 0, will be promptly attended\nto. Office bourn from !* A.M IoHP M.
1c4e5ae23fc2e698430764b3ef80e720 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.0479451737697 40.735657 -74.172367 road and general public utilities com-\nmissioners. Compensation, $5,000 each.\nNo member of the board to have any\nofficial relations with or liokl any sto.-k\nin any company subject to the jurisdic-\ntion of such board. The total expense\nof the board each year limited to\n$50,000. Board to have general supervi\nsiou of all public utilities corporation.,\n.Shall receive and hear complaints in ad\ncases relating to service, rates, discrita\n.n ation,carelessness,properly und equip-\nment of any public utilities corpor-\nation; shall see that the laws of tho\nState are obeyed bv such corporation\nand may cause actions to lie brought\nfor the Violation of the law. The attor-\nney-general to be the legul adviser of\nthe board. Shall Investigate ail acci-\ndents and shall recommend improved\nservice, property or equipment. May\ndirect any corporation subject to tlm\nact to make rates, fares or charges rea-\nsonable and uniform. Orders directing\nrailroads to continue service shall bo\nImmediately Other orders t<*\nbecome effective thirty duys after serv-\nice of sucli order upon the corporation.\nAppeal may be taken from the order to\nthe Supreme Court. Appeal sliull not\nstay operation of the order appealed,\nbut court may grant a stay In its dis-\ncretion. Failure to comply with order\nshall subjtet corporation offending to a\nfine not exceeding $100 per day.\nThe third bill is a repetition of the\nMartin utilities bill,which caused no end\nof (lurry at the last session. The Mar-\ntin bills wore Introduced by Mark .Sul-\nlivan, the minority leader, who liaa\nagreed to to the chaperoning of tho\nMartin measures in the House during\ntlie session. The former assemblyman,\nWilliam Purmenter Martin, \\vms,con -\nspicuous in the House, and, upon* mo-\ntion of Assemblyman Terhune, of Essox.\nthe privilege of the tloor was extended\nto lilm. He has already been character-\nized uy tho regulars as the "reform\nwatchdog of tiie House. "
5710230e865eb1665431d7cdca6f5a2f THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.869862981989 32.408477 -91.186777 The recent election on the constitutional o\namendments demonstrated very clearly that '1\nthe political leaders in New Orleans control i(\nthe policy of the State in all cases in which ti\nno general upheaval has been precipitated. c'\nWhile this condition exists because of the 0\nlarge vote in the city, neither alarm nor re- c\nsentmentshouldbe felt. Political conditions h\nthere have changed in the last few years to S\nsuch an extent that the most casual observer\nmust know that the vote of New Orleans c\nmeasures up in patriotism and intelligence v\nwith the vote of other sections of the stake. v\nThe old time ward leader has passed out and s\nhas been succeeded by a higher type of c\nleader. The vote on the constitution amend- t\nments showed that there exists in the city a\nstrong political organization, and at the i\nsame time it shows that the voters indivi- e\ndually evidenced a full understanding of ti e t\nmeasures submitted to them and that they I\nvoted for the best interests the state. It t\nhas been recognized for years that thee, t\nexisted in the country parishes a strongl!\nsentiment against any political combinaticn C\nthat was affiliated with the city leaders, cr\nbosses, as they have been called. We le- (\nlieve that great good can be accomplished in\nthe ensuing campaign by laying aside this 1\nprejudice and meeting New Orleans half e\nway in making up the next ticket. The\nfriction heretofore existing has not worked 4\nout well for the state, and with the changes I\nin the personnel of the leaders we hope to\nsee New Orleans and the country leaders\nwork in full accord. This course will ac-\ncomplish one thing, if nothing else, the\nelimination of these so-called reform move-\nments, with which the people have been too\noften humbugged. Heretofore the political\ndemagogue,whoby chance was reared in the\ncountry, has made a campaign against the\nward bosses, aroused bitter feeling and rode\ninto office on the issue. After his election,\nhis first step was to make alignments with\nthe bosses.
0a9d28f5d4e69b73a3f9333cb1eef29a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1884.5040983290326 39.743941 -84.63662 Michael Ryan, of Cincinnati, then got\nthe floor, and from the stage said:\nMr. Chairman : I know, as my friend from\nthe First District nas just remarked, tnat it Is\nhot red hot, in fact therefore I don't pro-\npose to detain you very long, except to offer\nhere what I think is a most important amend-\nment to the report of the Committee on Reso\nlutions. The amendment is this:\n" Resolved, That this convention instructs\nthe delegates at large and requests the dis-\ntrict delegates to cast the vote of Ohio as a\nunit in the National Convention."\nThe delegation that you will send from the\ngreat Commonwealth of Ohio to represent us\nin the Chicago Convention has a most impor-\ntant work before it. Ohio fires the first gun in\n campaign, and Ohio will be an important\nfactor in determining the nominee of the Na-\ntional Convention. Gentlemen, we have\ntaken a back seat long enough, now\nlet us come to the front. I do not propose this\nin the interest of any one candidate, nor do I\npropose it in the interjst of gag law, but I do\nso in o: der that a few bolters in that delega-\ntion shall not obstruct the sovereign will of\nthe people of this State. If judgment and\ndiscretion and unanimity are exercised in our\nOhio delegation we may perhaps have the\nproud privilege of putting an Ohio man for-\nward as our standard bearer in November.\nLoud cheers.\nGeneral A. J . Warner, of Washington\nCounty, followed, speaking as follows:\nMr. Chairman: I hope that that
0baaa66520a3cfadc0923cf6a62b69ad THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1900.7219177765094 42.217817 -85.891125 wrought so marvelous a change in the\nshort period of three years and a half.\nOn the 4th of March, lt07, the scepter\ndeparted from Judah and the inaugu-\nration of a republican president oc-\ncurred. For four years under demo-\ncratic rule the land had been frescoed\nwith misery and fringed with distress;\nwith the advent of a republican admin-\nistration the horizon so long curtained\nwith despair at once brightened with\nhope and the air so long heavy with\nthe anxious entreaty of enforced idlers\nasking of compassion the crumb of\ncharitj' became vocal with the happy\nharmony of requited toil, factory and\nforge, forest and farm joining in the\ngrand anthem, filling the heaens with\nthe din of a nation's industry. The\nprogress we have made as a nation since\nthe inauguration of President McKin-\nley is without parallel in history.\nThe republican party came into\npower pledged to the policy of protec-\ntion to American enterprise and Amer-\nican toil; that pledge was fulfilled on\nthe 24th day of duly, IS'jT, by the enact-\nment of th1 Dingley tarilT law, which\nnot only reestablished the policy of\nprotection, restored confidence and\nwooed back departed prosperity, but\n the same time clothed the president\nwith power to enter into reciprocal ar-\nrangements with other nations, for the\nenlargement of American markets.\nUnder the operation of the new tarilT\nlaw idle labor finds abundant em-\nployment, manufactures have in-\ncreased, ample revenue has been\nsecured, and as a nation we have\nentered upon commercial conquests\nunprecedented in all time; in 1S9S,\none year after the law became op-\nerative, our exports for the first time\nexceeded the domestic exports of\nGreat Uritain, and a year later, in 3S99,\nour foreign trade was the largest we\never had, exceeding in the aggregate\nthe sum of $2,000,000,000. the balance\nof trade in our favor reaching nearly\nSSCO.CW.OOO. and will during 1900 ex-\nceed $5X0,000 ,000 .\nDuring the three years of the present\nadministration from March 1, 1S9T. to\nMarch 1, 1900, the excess of exports over\nimports has been nearly or quite four\ntimes greater than during the entire\nperiod from the organization of the re-\npublic down to the end of Mr. Cleve-\nland's first term, and still the good\nwork goes on, as the report for 1900\nwill show an Increased export trade,\nand that one-thir- d
452430266b9b20c90b32c87a3a1c40e4 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5696720995245 39.290882 -76.610759 avoid calling to mind how we ran through all\nthe changes against poor Mr Adams, for furnish-\ning the East Room ?bow much political capital\nwe made out of it?liow we turned up the. whites\nof our eves with holy horror at his old federal\nand aristocratic extravagance ?what speeches\nwe made at Tammany?what resolutions we\npassed against such royal demonstrations, v. lien,\nin fact, the poor man had actually done nothing\nto that great barn of a room, excepting furnish-\ning it in the plainest Nevv England style. He\nsuffered for the sin of omission; Mr. \\an Buren\nis in a fair way to suffer for the sin of commis-\nsion. But let us glance at the speech, and make\na, few amusing extracts in this hot weather. Mr.\nOgle, after going over the original cost of the\npalace, and expenses in arranging the grounds,\nshrubbery, Sic. Sic. says:\n"And now, Mr. Chairman, taken a\npromenade through the President's garden and\ngrounds, let us enter his palace, and survey its\nspacious courts, its gorgeous banquctting halls,\nits sumptuous drawing rooms its glitCenng anil\ndazzling saloons, with all their magnificent and\nsumptuous array of gold and silver, crimson and\norange, blue and violet, screens of lonic columns,\nmarble mantles, with Italian black and gold\nfronts, gilteagle cornices, rich cut glass and gilt\nchandeliers, suspended by beautiful Grecian\nchains, gild eagle -headed candlebras, French\nbronze gilt lamps, with crystal globes, bronzed\nand gilt French bracket lights, gilt framed mir-\nrors of prodigious sixc, large Italian club man-\ntel glasses, French gilt bronze mantel time-pieces,\nmnhogany gilt mounted and rosewood piano\nfortes, giit mounted bureaus, superb mahogany\nwardrobes, mahogany gilt-mounted secretaries,\ndamask, satin and double silk window curtains,\nwith gilded eagle, stars, and ornamental rays,\nroyal Wilton and imperial Brussels and Saxon\nCarpets, gilt and satin settees,
7250a1d693314f1a2c33597d95fa36fb THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.4589040778792 39.560444 -120.828218 The Russian tongue is almost iasor-\nmoun'able to a foreigner, and to master\nit, sufficiently for literary purposes, would\nbe in itself for such a person the labor\nof a life. Excepting the Chinese, there\nis, perhaps no language fraught with so\nmany difficulties. In the first place the\nRussian alphabet contains nine more let-\nters than the English, and is made up of\nGreek, Homan, and Sclavonic characters.\nIn 1663 the first RussiarTbook was print-\ned at Amsterdam, and it was about the\nyear 1704 or 1705 that Peter the Great\nhimself m id c many alterations in the Sla-\nvonic letters, for the purpose of assimila-\nting them more nearly to the Latin one*;\nand the first Russian journal was printed\nwith this type at St. Petersburg in 1705,\nfour after the foundation of that\ncity, from a font which had been cast for\nhim by artists brought from Holland.\nIn the old Sclavonic there are forty-six\nletters t but the in idem Russian language\ncomprises only thirty five. In all matters\nhowever of theological nature, the antique\nform is even now retained, and this con-\nstitutes the difference between the Gzerk-\novuoi and Graslidaaskoi, or the civil and\nchurch alphabet. This in a great meas-\nure m ist explain the difficulties which a\nforeigner would have to contend with, in\nattempting to render himself master of\nthe Russian language ; but if it were\npossible for him to do so perfectly, ho\nwould discover an extraordinary copious-\nness, a delicacy and beauty of expression,\nt.at would indeed surprise him. —North\nAmerican.
3887bd73f45a7432ea427d8b7327f8bd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.815068461441 39.745947 -75.546589 BUCKALKW-On October 24, 1909, Wal­\nter Buekalew, aged 82 years.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to\nattend the funeral from the residence\nof his uncle, Charles Rlgdon, northeast\ncorner Tenth and Bennett streets, on\nWednesday afternoon, at 2 o'clock. In­\nterment at Sllverbrook Cemetery.\nROACH—In this city, on Octobe\n1909, Mark Roach.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to\nattend the funeral from his late resi­\ndence, No. 1118 West Fourth street, on\nThursday morning, October 28th, at »\noclock. Requiem mass at St. Paul's\nChurch. Interment at Cathedral Ceme­\ntery.\nRIDGWAY—In New Castle hundred, on\nOctober 34. 190jj Isaac P. Ridgway,\naged 73 years.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to\nattend the funeral services at his late\nresidence, on Wednesday. October 27, at\n1 o'clock. Interment at Mt. Salem Cem­\netery. Carriages will meet train leav­\ning P.. B. W. station at 10.44, for\nFarnhurst.\nMARTER—In this city, on October 24th,\n1909. Daniel S. Marter.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to\nattend the funeral services at the resi­\ndence of his daughter. Mrs. Saille Bailey,\nNo. 610 Poplar streeti on Wednesday\nevening. October 27th, at 8 o'clock. In­\nterment at Florence, N. J., o n Thursday,\nOctober 2«th.\nBuprllngton, N. J .. papers please copy.\nADAMS—In this city, on October 23rd,\n1909, Maggie, widow of Jacob Adams,\naged 63 years.\nRelatives and friends of the family\nare Invited to attend the funeral ser­\nvices at the residence of her son-in-law,\nJoseph Maxwell, No. 1823 Gilpin ave­\nnue, on Tuesday afternoon. October 26th,\nat 2 o'clock. Interment at St. James'\nP. R . Cemetery, Newport.\nKUNZ—In this city, on October 24th,\n1909, Albert Kuns.\nDue notice of funeral will be given.
3287a1cb575bf017bcb83f22a6dd8a8f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.7964480558085 44.939157 -123.033121 most entirely by peace rumors and war\nincidents. The first caused weakness on\ntli a li ntr' ilinf nmi a iirtll nnmnnl n\nslowing down of important industries,\nowing' to tho necessary cessation of mu-\nnition orders and the demobilization of\ntrade from war to a peace basis. Peace,\nit is argued, will reverse forces which\nhave been pushing prices to a very high\nlevel, nnd values' must consequently re-\ncede. The second cause of weakness was\nthe outbreak of submarine activities\nnear the coast of the United States,\nwhich revived apprehension of difficul-\nties between this country and the cen-\ntral or the allied powers. These two un-\nfavorable developments struck hard up-\non a market technically weakened by a\nprolonged rise and loaded to the break-\ning point ,with big profit. Extensive\nreali.iug was inevitable, the result be-\ning a weakened and unsettled market.\nFortunately, the home' situation has\nchanged but slightly, if at all. Industry\nis prices arc rising, nnd the\nstrictly home outlook is certainly good.\nBut the foreign situation, still the prime\nfactor, is full of threatening possibil-\nities; besides which we arc now in the\nmidst of a presidential campaign which\nis likely to daily grow more tense nnd\nirritating. I'nder such circumstances\nthe obstacles to a further rise at this\ntime were insuperable; and the financial\nsituation, investment as well as specu-\nlative, has been cleared and strengthen-\ned by reaction, which might possibly\nbe carried still further without serious\ninjury. On the other hand, the specu-\nlative spirit has been .'thoroughly\naroused, many operators with newly\ngained wealth and big resources are in\nthe murket ready to take advantage of\nevery shift in the financial current. A\nstrong undertone of confidence exists in\nthe financial districts; and any favor-\nable development will be quickly re-\nflected in security values. As yet no\nsymptoms of lessened activity nre in\nsight.
2af730fb7e80b4739c09e0b72e9aeb0f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8013698313039 40.063962 -80.720915 Bannon loft Bayou Bara in a boggy for\niho purpose ot speaking at Jackson to\ntake place at 13 o'clock that day. Col.\nGrifflH and Recorder Morgan, of Point\nCoupee, were in a buggy following cloae\nbehind at the time ot the attempted assas- g(\nsi nation. At 11:30 a. m, when within\nabout one mile ot Jackson, in the parish pj\nol West Feliniana, the unknown assassin, ar\nconcealed in the buBhea, fired with a rifle a3\njuat aB the buggy passed near enough to m\ngive a lair view ol Gair. The ball grazing\nCapt. Bannon'a neck, he being next\nto tho assassin struck Gair on the left\naide ol the head, back of the car, passing\noutside .ol the carotid artery aud rangiDg\ndown the cheek. Tho ball was extracted H\nneur tho mouth by Drs. Jones, Curruth 8'\nand Marsh. Tho wound is a bud one but E\nnot dangerous. About 2 o'clock p. m . P'\nWeber |and Breaux arrived from Bayou m\ntiara with a squad ol men armed with P|\npistols, guns and rifles and paraded the di\nstreets of Jackson, some ot the Weber 111\nmen mado a remark about 4\nhence a riot commenced about 4 o'clock si'\np. m . Seven colored men, one horse and P1\na mule were shot; also, George Bwazey,\nof Bayou Bara, was shot in the thigh, le:\nCol. Griffin says none of the people's party\nparticipated in the riot, as the disturb- cc\nance was exclusively between the wings t°\nol thoIV?publican party. Daring the even- P"\niug Perkins Toadviae, who waa drinking, pi\nat the time, speaking confidentially to a\nIriund, was overheard by Bherift Riy and re\nothers to say that ho shot Gair, and that of\nWeber waa to p*y him for it. Toadvinc, CI\nstating that ho intended to leave the\nparish iu five days, the sherill and a th\nposse arrested Toadvine and brought him 01\nto Clinton and put him in jail. Colonel\nGrillla says a posso ol Weber men were *r\nabout to attempt to rescue the prisoner, 8a\nbut tho sheriff left for Clinton with the\nprisoner without tho knowledge ot the\nrioters. Capt. Bannon says ho does ndT in\nthink Toadvine the real assassin of Gair,\nas he met him coming from an opposite tta\ndirection a few minutes before the
0874038d48886a813e9d8269e186cefc PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.3904109271944 40.441694 -79.990086 circulars were signed Charles Luther & Co.,\nNo. 165 Fifth avenue. Pittsburg. Tbey had\nsamples of fine cloth attached, and contained an\noffer to mako to order a suit of clothes worth\n$25 for II Full directions wero given as to how\nto ; order tho goods desired, and a blank on\nwhich to give measurements was inclosed. The\nperson desiring to obtain a $25 suit lor $4 was\ndirected to sond H with the order, and receive\nthe suit and a guarantee. Care in getting the\nright meaturoments was advised. In many in-\nstances money had been sent, but no suit came.\nThe bargain was only open till May 3L\nInspector McAleese yesterday morning de-\ntailed Detective Shore to look tbe matter up.\nHo learned that Luther was a journeyman bar-\nber, and lived at 13U6 Mecond avenue. had\nhis mail directed to 185 Fifth avenue, which Is\na Doarding house, where be left word to send it\nto his borne on Second avenue. He had been\nrecelvlnc postal notes, registered letters.\nAdams Kxpress Company orders, etc, from all\nDans of tbo country. Ileteetlva Sbore tben\nstarted to find Luther. He was away, and It\nwas midnight before he was finally captured at\nhis home and taken to the Central station.\nLuther is about 25 years of age, and married,\nbut has no children. lie told tbe officer he\nwas in bard luck. Ho couldn't make a living\nas a barber, and bad to ralso money somehow\nwben tbo tailoring idea struck him. He com-\nmenced operations on May 7, and sent bis\nprinted circulars all over tbe country. He was\nlocked up for a hearing.
0dd8340c1a0feac170ca6148035622c7 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1876.3811475093605 39.623709 -77.41082 Sue. 3. And he it enacted, That if the\nsaid President and Directors cannot agree\nwith any of the proprietors, owner or own-\ners of any land, that may be selected and\nrequired hy them in constructing the said\nroad, outhorized by said original Act, ol-\nio extending the same as authorized by\nthis Act, or for any material, such as stone,\ngravel, timber, Ac , required for the pur-\npose of constructing or repairing said road\nas authorized hy said original Act, or in\nextending the same authorizdd hy this\nAct, or in case the owner or owners I here-\nof are minors, feme eorert or non cam/ias\n•mentis, or not resident of the County ot\nFrede.tiek, it shall and may be lawful on\napplication of said President and Direc-\ntors, for any Jn-tieo of the Peace in and\nfor Frederick county, to issue his warrant\nto the Sheritl of Frederick county, requir-\ning him to summon twenty persons quali-\nfied to act as jurors, not interested in the\nproperly to be valued, meet at or near\nthe properly to be valued, on a day mimed\nin said warrant , not less than ten nor more\nthan twenty days after the issueing o| the\nsame, and if at the the time named in said\nwarrant any of the said jurors summoned\ndo not attend, the Sheritl'shall immediate-\nly summon as any more qualified to act as\njurors may be necessary, with the jurors\nin attendance, to form a panel of twenty\njurors, and from them each parly or his\nagent, or either parly he not present in\nperson or by agent, the Sheritl', for such\nparly, shall strike off four jurors, and the\nremaining persons shall net as the jury for\nthe inquest of damages; that before Un-\nsaid jury shall proceed to act, the Sheriff\nshall admjaistei - loearli of them an oath\nthat theyfptvill justly and impartially value\nthe damages which the owner shall sustain\nby the 'condemnation of said property re\nqniaed by the said President and Directors\nfor the purposes aforesaid.\nSkc.
270ad7e6039f5879b3036ebe0f5deed6 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1865.5876712011668 41.262128 -95.861391 manacled like Atxerott, drassed\ntbe navy pagts and collarless shirt he\nwore daring the lonz trial. So iustinct-\nive is tbe admiration which men feel for\nany taan wbo ia tbe last hour rn»et* un-\nmovfd tbe kityr of terrors, that tbi* youth\nwith tbe buh neck and close ^hav^n crown,\n«hort face and quiet blue eve, drew more\n•ympaiby than tbe fears of a thousand\nAtxerotts roold ever evoke. On he went\nto the ttep«,*id<} byjside wub tbe wiini-ifer\nof hit choice, Mr. (Jillett. Checked in\nbis jtMf, but setminfly un?mbarrsssed.\nhi? readied the platform and sat down\nnear to Mrs. Surratt, nod tbere be remain­\ned Raxing, as he u**d to da in the court\nroom, through the bars at the white fleecy\nclcudt that shifted before ths intense rsv«\nof a sun that gilded with all pomp of\na summer noon one of tho most solemn\nscenes eTer exbibited in tbi« land, so free\nhitherto from such crimes. Payee, (we\nprefer tbe nnrc generally known name)\nto;.«£«:d neither to tbe rijjbt cor to thsleft.\nbut straight forwards and upwards. It\nwaa evident that to bim the crowd was\nnothing, UU umn thougbts evembinfr. —\nHis face might be likened to that of a\nbuilder cf castles in tbe air. Fear there\nwas none, no more than on the face of a\nsleeping infant; brse~ad^cio. or tbe mor­\nbid vanity that so oiti u euprlies courage,\nwat not to be read in the quiet, dreaming\neye, where tbe old w;Mn*»s alone had\nfled, and as tbe snu fae~d him as trafr as\nbefaecd it, tbe photographer whose* in\nslramerit stood is a window of the w?»t-
15d8aa4f5f6fb93e3f6f4482a73b7a95 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.2890410641805 40.832421 -115.763123 JH TBI DISTRICT COl'nT OF THK\n. fv»n h J ad rial District. of U»* 8tit« of\nXaviiU. In Md fur the County of Elk i.\nElizabeth A. Mltchel . Plaintiff. igalua\nArthur U. Mitchell. D . fendant.\nAction brought In the Dittricl Court of the\nB«vmUi Judicial Dlatrlct of tb« M»U of\nNevada, to ami for tbr County of Klko, and the\nCo tu plaint filed Id the utile* of the Clerk of\naald Dlstiict Court.\nThe State of Nevada eemla greeting to A.tbar\nH. Ml- hell, Defe cLint.\nYou are l»r ebj reqnl M t» appear In an\nactlcn brought against jrou t y the aU've named\nPlaintiff In the District C«*urt of the Seventh\nJudicial District of the State of Nevada, in ant\nfor the County of Klko, ami to answer the\ncomplaint fll> d therein, within trn days texrlu\n.he of the day of aervlce) after the a» rv lee on\nyou of thla Summons- arrved within thla\nCounty ; or. If served out of this Count.-, but\nId thla i>l«trlct. within twenty days: otherw lae,\nwithin forty days. or Judgment 1 y default will\nbe taken against yon, according to the prayer of\naald con.plalnt.\nThe aald action la brought to obtain a\njudgment and dverve of this Court dissolving\nthe bond* of matrlmon.* that ril«ts Itetweeu\nthe Plaintiff and Defeudsnt, aud that the ru*-\ntinly of the minor chll , the ls-ue of aald\nmarr age. be awanied to pe l'lslutifl herein,\nan I for auch other and further ml f aa lo the\nCourt luay seem fit, aa will t* o e fully npicar\nby referrnee to the Oomplalnt now i>n Air in\nmy . lllce. And von are hereby * otlAed that If\nyou fall to appear and auawar said t oiuplaiut\naa above rv julred. the aald plaintiff will apply\nto the Court for the relief demanded in the\nCoinylaiut.
16441bef900903dc4ef295472471834e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.3410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 Since Saturday last this city has been\nflooded with counterfeit $2 greenbacks of\nthe “Hancock" set lee Many complaints\nhave been lodged with Chief of Police\nDolan from persous on whom the notes\nhave keen passed,\nDuring the past week Patti Bright,\nproprietor of t he Union Tea Company,\nThomas McHugh, No. Ill Market street,\nand Wiluier Palmer, of the Pennsylvania\nR ill road Company's freight office, have\nbeen victims of these hills. The bills\nwere presented at the Union National\nBank for deposit and were immediately\ndetected by the bank tellers.\nWhen they wore detected the bank\nte'lers tore one corner, returned aud took\nthe name of the pelton presenting It.\nThe hank officials not Kiel the Treasury\nDepartment In Washington immediately\nlu the meantime the notes were deposited\nwith Chief Dolan by the persous on\nwhom they were passed.\nThis morning a special agent from the\ngovernment service department\narrived In this city. He paid Chief\nDolan for the notes In genuine money,\nand took the counterfeits with him.\nAfterwards the specisl agent visited all\nthe national banks bnt failed to find that\nany more of the bogus notes bad been\nnrtsented for deposit, txcept at tho\nUnion National.\nEvery oily that Forepaughs circns has\nvisited on its present ttip has been\nflooded with these bogus notes. Balti\nmore aud West. Cheater have been flooded\nfor a week. It is supposed that some\ncounterfeiters are following tho circus\nand passing the notes when they can.\nThe counterfeit is what the govern­\nment terms an imitation of the “Han\ncock" series. It Is a fraction of an inch\nless in width than a genuine note, while\nthe eugravlng is a most a perfect fac\nsimile It Is printed ou ptper similar\nIn color to that used by the government.
001d362bc2e2da467584eaccb1f99d4c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.3794520230847 41.004121 -76.453816 Tho lu'llon of thu Radical Legislature\nIn defeating tho will of tho pcoplo, and\ndeclaring Jewell Governor, Is ono of\ntho most daring abuses of power yet\nperpetrated outsldo of Washington.\nTho purpoio to commit this fraud nnd\nto consuinmnto tho result was clearly\nforeshadowed from tho hour In which\ntho returns elected Knolish. Tho only\nquestion was, how could It best bo nc.\ncompllshed? First, It was proposed to\nglvo Jewell votes lu Cheshire, which\nhad been rejected. As that plan would\nnot work, then tho expedient of reopcib\nlng tho boxes In tho Fourth Ward of\nNow Ilnvon was adopted. And when\nit was found that tho ballots gnvo Jew\nEl.LlOO less than was returned, by count,\nIng two packages of CO each as 100 each,\nthoy fell upon tho despcrnlo resource of\ngoing out on tho highways and gather\nIng In enough swift witnesses to swear\nthey had voted tho "Radical ticket'\nnot for Jewell, but tho ticket.\nAlthough, with this hnrd swear-\ning, tho number of 100 was not mado\nout, still tho Radical candidato was\nelected by tho Radical Lcglslnturo, Just\nas members of .Congress havo been\nelected by tho Radical Houso of Rep\nresentatlvcs, whllo they wero In n ml\nnorlty at homo of many thousands.\nIt Is worthy of nolo, tjiat lu tho pro\ntended Investigation, no Democratic\nwitnesses were examined or wero allow\ned nny part In tho proceedings. It was\nallfjmrc, nnd against tlio constitu\ntion and laws of tho State, which pro.\nvldo tho formal modo of declaring nud\ncontesting elections. Tho wholo course\nof tho majority, from tlio beginning to\ntho cm! of this business, has been revo\nlutionary, nnd, In that respect, consls,\ntent with tho conduct of tho Radical\nparty hero and everywhere. They de-\ntermined to gel possession of tho Gov\nernorship, by any fraud, however bold,\nand nny violence, howovcr extreme.\nThis scandalous outra''o has already\nproduced n great
526a5ad065ca9443159ceb506bb39e4e SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1848.4166666350436 43.624497 -72.518794 1 miiat here eapecially remarlc, inat tlio\nrcnort, No. 1)0, thoiiuh forwarded the night\nof its datc, (July 25,) Beems lo have mia- -\ncarned. i'erceivii.g, anout INov. iii, tliat\nit was not acknowledged by the tlepart\nineut, I caiiHed a duplicato to bo mado,\nsicned it. and scnt it oll by the samo con\nveyancc with my dUpatch No.JSC, and the\nohnrges again.Ht lsrevnt Wajor Oeneral\nWorth. Mamr General i'lllow, and urevel\nLictit. Col. Dunc.in, togethcr with iho np\npeal ngainst mo of thc formcr. All lliesc\nare uekiiowledgnd by tho departinent in\nthe sauic letler (Jau. 13) tliat recalls me.\nIt was that hiidgcl of papers that cnuacd\nthe blow of powor, bo lon! sufipcuded, to\nlall on n devoied head. The three arrest\ned nflicurs, nnd ho whn had eodcnvored to\nenforco a noccssary discipline against\nthem, all to bc placed togeiher before\nthc stimo court; iho inuoccnt nnd the\nguiliy, the nccuscr and iho nccused, the\nintlffe and his priaoners aro dcall with n - -\nlike. iMosl inipartial juaiico! liut tliorc\nh a discriiniiintioii with a vengennce!\nWhile iho pariics are on trial if iho ap\npcuier is in ue irieu nt all, wliicli seeins\nduiihtful -- two arc restored to iheir corp\none of them with his brevet ronk nnd\nI am depiived of my coinmand! Thcre\ncar. he hut ono ftcp moro in tho samo di- -\nrection; throw the rules and nrtiules of\nwar inio the lire, aud loavc all ranks in\niho nrmy free lo engage in denunciations\nand n general scraniblo fur precedence,\nauthiirilv, and exocutive l.ivors. J he nro\nmtnciamenlo, nn the part of my factious\njuinois, ia inost triumphani.
3afb28ac5de4c9ce1d79d957475edf7b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.0863013381531 41.681744 -72.788147 New Britain General hospital to In-\njuries received in the crash. He had\nbeen In a critical condition at the in\nstitution since Sunday, suffering\nfrom a fractured skull, a fractured\nleft leg and internal injuries. Wed-\nnesday evening pneumonia set in and\nhis condition gradually grew weak-\ner. Hope for his recovery was\nabandoned yesterday afternoon.\nMr. Bell was the driver of the car\nInvolved In the accident While driv-\ning In the direction of New Britain\nnear the railroad underpass in Ber-\nlin he lost control of his car when\nit skidded on the icy pavement Aft-\ner turning a complete circle, the ma-\nchine crashed Into a. truck owned\nby Joseph Arbour & Son and operat-\ned by Wllford Remmiel of 228\nWashington street Jacob Zwick \n69 Farmlngton avenue was almost\ninstantlv killed while his brother\nPhilip Zwick of 66 Commonwealth\navenue, was taken to the hospital in\nan unconscious condition. He passed\naway Tuesday. Mrs. Jacob Zwick.\nthe fourth person In the car, escaped\nwith minor cuts and bruises and was\ndischarged from the hospital afjer\nMr. Bell was 43 years old and was\na life long resident of this city. He\nwould have reached his 44th birth-\nday had he lived until February 17.\nHe was the son of Fred Lyman Bell\nand Helen Augusta Hurlburt Bell.\nMr. Bell was secretary of ; the\nHitchcock Printing Co. where he\nhad been employed for 23 years. He\nwas well known In business circles\nand hi death1 proved a shock to\nhis many friends.
0dabc6fc86b9a10dbf1b97071921c162 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.5696720995245 40.063962 -80.720915 The enthusiasm attending tho nomi¬\nnation. despite the emphatic protest that\nhe would not accept without his running\nmate. Arthur Sewall. whom the Popu¬\nlists had displaced with a man of their\nown choice, Thomas Watson, of Georgia,\nwas on a scale almost equalling that at\nChicago. The trend of events early In\nthe day indicated his nomination, the\nuntls having apparently shot their bolt\nand expended their strength In the vic¬\ntory of the day before. There were\ncheer* and hurrahs for the Nebraska\nchampion of silver at short Intervals\nfrom the very beginning of the day's ses¬\nsion until It culminated In his nomina¬\ntion several hours later, following the\nreally eloquent address of General Wea¬\nver and the unusual sight of a woman\nmaking the main seconding effort.\nPerhaps the most remarkable scene\nwas that following appearance of\nthe Imitation cross of gold with its\ncrown of thorry. bringing forcibly to\nmind Mr. Bryan s dramatic utterance at\nChicago. As It was carried forward to\nthe stage desperate efforts were made\nby the Middle of the Koad men to spot\nits progress, and many exciting and\nludicrous Incidents followed, the most\namusing of which was the loss, by Ser-\ngeant-at-Arrns McDowell, of a portion\nof Indispensable attire, end In the tem¬\nporary dispossession of which he sought\nrefuge from curious eyes behind the\nfriendly shelter of a state':; guidon.\nThe confusion and uproar. Interspersed\nwith jeers of derision from the opposi¬\ntion, which were almost drowned out by\nthe cheers and yells of the victorious\nPopulists, singing of patriotic songs nnd\nmarches and counter-marches up and\ndown the aisles, ci>ntlnu*d for about\ntwenty minutes.
30cf975436ed96c0c386dedf832e48bd THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1905.8205479134956 39.739154 -104.984703 If you happen to have a little mush\ncale some night and a picture should\ncome falling from the wall or a statue\nshould totter and tumble from its\nbase when one of the soloists reaches\na high key don't be alarmed or re-\ngard the incident as an evil omen,\nsays the Brooklyn Eagle. It is only\na freak of music. Several thousand\nyears ago a similar occurrence took\nplace, only of course, It was on a more\nextended scale and made a great deal\nmore talk than the falling of your pic-\nture or your statue would make. The\noccurrence In question was the fall-\ning of the walls of Jericho when\nJoshuas soldiers marched around\nthem and blew their trumpets. A good\nmany people class this as a miracle,\nbut scientists say was simply one\nof the many phenomena caused by\nmusical notes. They refer to a paral-\nlel case that happened not long ago at\nHelligenstart, near Lelpsic. A music\nmaster of that place was organizing\na brass band. One day, as usual, he\ngathered his musicians for practice In\nhis garden, which was situated at the\nfoot of the ancient w'alls of the city.\nSuddenly, while the trumpets had\nreached their highest notes, the city\nwalls fell with a terrific crash and\nthe musicians scattered In a panic.\nThere Is some scientific reason for\nthis, but nobody seems to know Just\nwhat it is. It is not the forceful vi-\nbration of air currents for the detona-\ntions of cannons does not have the\npower in this respect that is exerted\nby light musical notes.
1ce98e37259eb9c271d3a581171f2f0f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.37397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 original censorship section sent to The Heiiate must vote again on the to many. In the established com- Soudan bad decided to lay a railway\n< ongress by Attorney General Greg- muzzle provso, and them ia a chance panics the premiums are heavy and, into tho wilds, and. of course, many\nory sought to subject to imprison- that even if the vote duplicates tho the man who is thrifty and conscien-I blacks were employed In its construe\nment without trial any one collect- victory for common sense won on ttous enough to keep them up de. | tlon\ning, publishing, communicating or Saturday the conference committee serves encouragement, not a fine in\nattempting to elle.lt information re- on the espionage bill may yield to the guise of a tax. The Government\nlatlng to the public defense which Administration pressure and frame a surely does not want to discourage gram\nmight bo useful to tho enemy, the new gag. Yet every division in Con- efforts of men to save their faml-\nsole judge of the usefulness to the gress has sho»ii a stronger senti- lies from becoming charges on the\nenemy of such information being the ment against putting an extinguish- public in the event of the wage earn-\notficial who felt aggrieved at its pub- er on free speech. Free speech was crs death.\nIlcalion or even by attempts to elicit never more needed than it is today. Wise nations arc themselves pro-\nit. This draft, if adopted, would have To sacrifice It would merely bo to vlding insurance at cheap rates for\ncompletely abolished the freedom of Intrench incompetency in office in a their people. Tho United States alone\ntho press, as guaranteed by the Con | crisis in which the nation cannot af- contemplates taxing the insurance fa\nstitution. It would have made the i ford to condone or tolerate incom- ditties that now exist\npress a servile instrument of the 1 pelerfcy.
19bcab67c9c6f2ebb283f9627886e401 THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1868.1407103508905 36.294493 -82.473409 took him three days nnd a half to ac\ncomplish it. John Brown is buried\nwith foot to the rock, with his bead to\ntho west! in a" line with the two op\nposite corners of the lot and tbe house.\nThe head stone is of coarse granito,\nthree leot eight inches high twenty\ntwo inches wide and two inches\nthick. Jt was procured and letter\nod a long time ago in Congress, for the\ngravo of Captain John Brown: but,\nas it did not suit his children, it was\nnoccr erected there, bnt romained\ntill his son who lies horo, brought it\nto Westport, and there left it. When\nMrs. Brown was with her husband in\na Virginia prison, as I understand; he\nexpressed a wiah to be buriod near his\nhouse in North Elba, and havo this\nstone placed at his Allhoneh\nother inscriptions aro upon it still on\nly one body lies here.\nHero and thus as Ihave described\nlies tho body of one who, by a\nsingle daring deed, shook tho world\nas with the suddenness of a thunder\nbolt. And hors mY thoughts natural\nly ran upon tho great evonts that this\none deed hastened," modifiod or pro\nduced I have nover been a follower\nof John Brown, but standing by his\ngrave and looking of! and around, I\ncan truly say how wondderfull! In\nthis high region is tbe rock that I\nhave described. To' appearance, for\nseveral milos each way from this\nrock the earth is comparatively level\nmotion undulating and beaut ful v\ndiversified by lakes nnd streams and\ngroves. All around beyond this dis\ntanco tho earth rises into hundreds of\nmountains and hills, rearino-
155b73d3ffd8cbc864802b7e0afda11c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.146575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 Sherman did not leuvo Chuttuuoogu\n(or Atlanta without knowing all about\ntho routo ami its obstructions Ilia\nspit-H and scouts pinned ovor uluiost ovory\nmile of tliu distance, ami inula lull anil\naccurate reports. i waa ouu ol the laat\nsout out aiul tbe laat to return, unil I\nbad a closo ahavo of it. Information\nwaa required which obliged luu to outer\ntho Confederate camps and aoe with my\nown eyes, anil aa two or three of our\nspies hud been,captured and hung, I\nneeded something more tlian a diaguiae.\nAfter cuitvussing the mutter lor a while\nI adopted the suggestion of a regimental\nsurgeon to play the roll of u "dummy."\nI was to be deuf and dumb, and carry\npeueil and pupcr, and do my talking\nthat way. I was provided with u bun¬\ndle of stationery, somo tobacco, a lot of\nreligious tracts, articles of cheap goods,\nand u fetv spcclultics, and I left the Fed¬\neral outposts one dark and rainy even¬\ning in gooil spirits. Obstructing \nman's advance wasHhe mountain har¬\nrier culled ltocky Face ridge, l'ho main\ngup, through which raiiroud and high¬\nway ran, and still run, la called Bui-\nzard's ltoost Gaii. Our scouts and spies\nhud reported this gap bo Btrongly forti¬\nfied that Hherman felt ho could not\nforce it. Further south is Snake Creek\nGap. One of my objcctB wits to ascer¬\ntain how this gap was defended.\n1 waa well within the Confederate\nlines before midnight, and at about thut\nhour 1 fuund shelter in u barn, anil slept\nuntil two hours after daylight. When 1\nturned out no ono wua in sight, und 1\nhad walked fully two miles ulong the\nhighway before 1 met any ono. Then I\nencountered a purty of ubout thirty cuv-\nulrymen going to tliu front. I waa in\ncitizens' clothes, had a puck on my back,\nand, of course, expected to he stopped.\nThe troop wus comuiaudcd by a lieuten¬\nant, nud us he came up he ordered a halt\nnud queried of me:
4921f908de54b321bd23a8e94cb5895f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.3866119902348 39.745947 -75.546589 the fallowing described Real Estate, vlx;\nAll those two certain lots or parcels of\nland situated In th# city af Wilmington\nNew Castle county, and State of Dels\nware, severally bounded and described at\nfollows, to wit;\nNo 1—Beginning an the northerly side\nof Sixth etreel, at the distance ef ane\nhundred feet from the westerly side of\nRodney streçl ; thence northerly parallel\nto Rodney street one hundred and twenty\neight feet to a stake; thence northerly\nparallel to Sixth street twenty-five feet I\nto another slako: thence southerly parai I\nlei with Rodney street, ane hundred andi\ntwenty-eight feet to the said side of Sixth\nstreet and thence thereby easterly twen-\n♦v-flve feet to the plane of beginning. B«\nthe contents thereof what they may.\nNo. 2 —Beginning on the westerly aide\naf Van Bnren street extended at the dis­\ntance of one hundred and etghfy-ftve feet\nfrom the southerly side sf Beech street\nand af the Intersection ot the ssld side ot\nVan Ruren street extended with the\nsoutherly side of a new street laid silt\n feet wide parallel with Beech street\nand leading from Van Buren street ex\ntended to Harrison street extended: thence\nwesterly along said aids of said forty\nfeet wide street and parallel with Beech\nstreet, one hundred and seventy-five feet\nte a stake; thence southerly parallel with\nVan Buren street extended seventy feet\nta another stake: thane« easterly parallel\nwith Beech street one hundred snd fifty,\nfour feet more or less to the northwester\nIv side of Maryland avenue (formerly\nNewport Turnpike); thence northeasterly\nalong said aide of Maryland avenue thlr\ntv-alx feet more or lese to th* said side ef\nVan Ruren street extended; thence north\nerly along said side of Van Ruren street\nextended forty-one and a half feet, more\ner less to the place of beginning. Bs the\ncontent* thereof what they may.\nSelxed and taken to execution *a the\nproperty of The Equitable Guarantee and ^\nTrust Company, a corporation of ths\nState of Delaware, administrator, c. t. a,\nof Fanny Camnbell. deceased mortgagor,\nand Thomas Campbell, surviving mort­\ngager, and to he sold hv
39719667c0a1e581d3f926897676c6ef NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.7090163618195 40.735657 -74.172367 street and Nos. 431-433 Hawthorne avenue\nand Nos. 4-6 Edmunds place: on both sides\nof Grafton avenue to the depth of nbout 10ft\nfeet. Including the properties In the rear of\n76 to 92 and 131 to 13B Grafton avenue, from\nRiverside avenue to De Grew avenue: on\nboth sides of Washington avenue from a\npoint about 150 feet north of the northerlv\nline of Grafton avenue to a point about 150\nfeet south of the southerly line of Grafton\navenue: on both sides of Summer avenue\nfrom a point about 125 feet north of the\nnortherlv line of Grafton avenue to a point\nabout 125 feet south of the southerly line of\nGrafton avenue; on both aides of Woodslde\navenue. Mt. Prospect avenue, Clifton ave-\nnue. Ridge street, Parker street. Highland\navenue. T-ake afreet, from a point about. 100\nfeet north of the northerly line of Grafton\navenue to a point about 100 feet south of\nthe southerly line of Grafton avenue; on the\neast side of De Oraw avenue from n point\n100 feet north of the northerly line of Graf-\nton avenue to a point about 100 feet south\nof the southerly line of Grafton avenue; on\nboth sides of Oraton street and Riverside\navenue from a point about 650 feet north of\nthe northerly line of Grafton avenue to a\npoint about 650 feet south of the southerly\nline of avenue; on both sides of\nGrove terrace from Irvington boundary line\nto West End avenue, on both sides of West\nEnd avenue and Carolina avenue from about\n200 feet north of the northerly line of Grove\nterrace to Lindsley avenue. Including Noh.\n149-151 West End avenue, on both sides of\nMelrose avenue and Vermont avenue, from\nGrove terrace southerly about 300 feet, on\nboth sides of Isabella avenue and Columbia\navenue from a point about 800 feet north of\nthe northerly line of Grove terrace to the\nboundary line between Newark and Irving-\nton; on both sides of Runyon street, between\nMilford avenue end Hunterdon street; on\nboth sides of Boylan street, from about 169\nfeet south of the southerly line of South\nOrange avenue to the present terminus about\n279 feet south of the southerly line of\nAblnger place; on both sides of Clifton ave-\nnue. from Bloomfield avenue to Ballantlne\nparkway, on both sides of Ablngton avenue\nand Second avenue from a point about 100\nfeet east of the easterly line of Clifton ave-\nnue to a point about 100 feet west of the\nwesterly line of Clifton avenue, and have\nfiled their reports of said assessments for\nbenefits in the office of the clerk of the Cir-\ncuit Court of the County of Essex, and that\nthe judge of said court has fixed Tuesday,\nthe seventeenth day of September. 1012
213f29f696b2ae5aa00e7de77cd4b8b9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.8205479134956 58.275556 -134.3925 The troubles of Alaska democrats j\nhave culminated in open warfare. The\nouthreak came over Short bill. VV . W .\nSborthill holds the position of secretary\nto Gov. StroDg. He held the same po¬\nsition ander two preceding governors\nand it is very probable that by this\ntime he knows more about the governor J\nbusiness than either of them. Short-\nhill is au old timer and knows his Alas¬\nka well. But a democratic gentleman\nuamed Edward I. Wade, who came\nnorth a few weeks or mouths ago, with\nhis shirts and socks and democracy\nneatly doue up iu a carpet bag, discov¬\nered the terrible state of affairs exist¬\ning in this section, and be also discov¬\nered about the same time that he him¬\nself, coming from a long line of demo¬\ncratic progeuitors, should by all the\n| rights of the game, be given ShorthiU's\njob. So he wades right in and writes\n letters to President Wilson about\nit. Letters that the beloved President\nwill hardly have time to read, now that\nhe is so busy courtin'. But what was\nmore to the point he prevailed upon a\nJuneau paper to publish the strictly\nprivate letter he bad written to Woody.\nIn this letter Wade calls attention to\nthe very false statement that the dem\nocrats here have not brains enough to\nfill the good paying jobs, and an¬\nnounces his arrival. He iutimates rath\ner that Governor Strong is not a Ken-\ntackian, but a Canadian, and any way\nthat that mau Sborthill, who pulls\ndown something like $4,000 a year, is a\nrepublican and should be fired. In re\nply to the attack, Mr. Sborthill shows\nclearly.to the gratification of all con*\ncerned. that he is a democrat of long\nstanding; voted for Bryan in 1896, just\nbefore coming to Alaska, and voted for\nBunnell last fall.
600a47c28199c01ca68e1fbc0b2c8988 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.250684899797 41.262128 -95.861391 The waj to Miasoori was defend^ by\nthirty thousand of tb« ea<Moy, and we had\nUttle more than one-third tb* number to\ndu>put« tba perilous paasafe. On tbe\naoutb wert tbe Boa too mountain*. To tbe\nor west we coald not go. Were we\nnot bemmed in by nature aad the enem} ?\nCould we louger raeiat't Could we say\nwe were contending only for victory when\nthe ahadowa were lengtbeou^; and deep­\nening on our hearts ?\nGen. Qarr'a diriaMm waa seat bj OfB.\nCur us to force tbe enemy from their po­\nliticly aad about tea o'clock in the Burn­\ning u>e battle waa renewed witb increased\nardor, and aoon Uic batteries from both\nediica were replying to each otber with\ndeath de&ling vjic^. Thi main action\nto the morning mm to the right oi oat\ncocampment, aad for seven hour* \nfield waa Lvjtij contested.\nGfn. Carr made a spirited and heavy\ncharge upon the enemy un4er McC-uuo Hi\nand Price. The musket and ride firing\nwaa very abarp, and ever) few seoon«U\nthe Loom of tbe batteries burst acroaa th«\ncountry, and the iron hail awept jowa tba\nstream of life, and filled the surging and\nnoby waves with apectrai corpses.\nThe rebels reeled a* We west against\nthem, but their oolumn did not break.—\nTbe charge was repeated. Stiii tbe foe\nstood firm, opening a galling fire frum\ntwo batteries wboae presence BAd sot be­\nfore b-ien known. Our troopa weru throw*\ninto coufuaiou, and three companies of\ninfantry and Col. Hilts' cavalry were order­\ned to silence tbe destructive guns-\nLike lightning <Jur men leaped forth\nprompt to tbe word, and raged aooat the\nrebd bauiiria* a* ravenous wolves arooad
01759217e51f392e595c6fde3c1bbd3f THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1897.5109588724 46.187885 -123.831256 The present dispatch wlU doubtless be\nregarded In England as offensive In tone\nand manner, and Us publication will\nprobably cause a display of feeling across\nthe water, but in the I'nlted States Mr.\nMcKinley's course will doubtless ht\nwarmly approved.\nThe latest diplomatic fencing between\nthe two countries arises out of the long-\nstanding fur seal controversy. It wRl\nbe remembered that after this country\nhad asserted exclusive Jurisdiction to the\nwaters of Behrlng sea and Great Britain\nbad resisted this contention, the mat-\nter was referred to a tribunal of arbitra-\ntion, wliich sat In Paris. That tribunal\ndecided aganist the United States so far\nas It related to tu cen ten tlon of exclu-\nsive jurisdiction, decided that certain\nseizures of British sealers made by Amer-\nican Meet were illegal, and awarded dam\nages to the owners of those vessels, the\namount to be determined later by suffi-\ncient proof, and made certain regula-\ntions for the preservation of seaj and\nthe prevention of Illegal sealing, which\nwere to be Jointly enforced by the Unitea\nStates and Great Britain. The United\nStates on Its port proceeded In the fullest\nspirit and letter of the law to prevent\npelagic sealing, but England. It Is assert-\n has not lived up to Its agreeisenf,\nand Intimation to that effect la now con-\nveyed to the British govern merit by order\nof President McKinley.\nIn the course of a few days, perhaps\nearly this week, the presidVnt will trans-\nmit to congress batch of correspond-\nence bearing on this question which has\nrecently passed between the two govern-\nments. The correspondence Is somewhat,\nvoluminous, the most Important dispatch\nbearing date of May 10 last and being\nin the form of an Instruction .from Sec-\nretary of State Sherman to Colonel John\nHay, our ambassador In London, a copy\nof which Colonel Hay was directed to\nleave with Lord Salisbury.\nIn this instruction, which covers six or\neight pages of the usual state department\npaper, the efforts made by the United\nStates and Great Britain to carry out\nthe terms of the Pails award are .re-\nviewed at length, and while It Is claimed\nthat this country has lived up to the\nterms of the findings of that tribunal,\nthe Insinuation Is made that Great Brit-\nain has been guilty of bad faith.\nThe dispatch Is nominally signed by\nMr. Sherman as secretary of state, but as\na matter of fact It Is the Joint work
14a0837b588249b1333f70fc57cbe4e2 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.8013698313039 40.832421 -115.763123 It ia every day bNomim ator* and\nmora apparent that the Republican\nparty of tbia BtaU la andar the control\nof the Boaaaim Mine owners and tha\nRailroad Companies. Among other in*\ndieationa of that fact ia tba eirenmatnoe\not tba Legislative dtltgalln of Storey\noonnty baring been nominated without\nany pledge* whatever being mad* in\nreference to tba Bullion Tu question.\nIt ia wall known that tU leyiUiua\nBtata Convention at Knreka adopted a\nplatform containing a reaolutioo oppos¬\ning any change iu tha present law on\nthat subject. It is also known that, by\nwhat tbe Republican party tnanagera\neali a mistake, that reaolution was left\nout of the published proceeding*, and\nthe Storey County Couvontion adopted\nthe State platform which did not con¬\ntain anytblug in regard to the Bullion\nTax question and consequently tbo\nLegislative delegation nouiiusted by\nthat Convention stands unpledged. For\nalthough tbe plstform as it h»s sinco\nbeen corrected, and is now published,\ndoes contain resolution opposing\nauy change in the Ballion Tax Isw, yet\nthe candidates for the Legislature can\nwith perfcct truthfulness say that they\nare not bound by a resolution which\nwas not oontained in the platform which\nthey indorsed when they were nomina¬\nted but has been added to the platform\nsince that time.\nAnother evidence that it is the spirit\nof the Bnuunzs firm that inspires this\ncampaign, is tbe bitterly vindicitive snd\nreckless manner in which they assail\nGovernor Bradley. In reading the vio¬\nlent tirades of the Republican papers\naguiuet the Governor a person is forci¬\nbly reminded of the celebrated speech\nof Surgeant Buzfuz in the esse of Bur-\ndell vs. Pickwick. It will, however, re¬\nquire more than tha eloquence of a\nBuzfuz, or for that matter of a half a\ndozen of them, to shake the couvictiou\niu tbu minds of the people of the per¬\nfect houesty aud integrity of our stand¬\nard bearer L. R . Bradley.
0fd802412833be632809c6f416017747 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.7794520230848 42.217817 -85.891125 made and a triumphal arch of evergreens.\nAt Racine flsgs could bi seen flying over tho\ntown a milo away. At smaller stations all tho\ncountry population roundabout was in wait\ning, and even tho plowmen in tho fields had\ntheir horses bedecked with flags and ribbons.\nAt Milwaukeo an elaborate reception pro\ngramme had been arranged, and was duly\ncarried out An immense crowd was waiting\nat the depot, and the streets along the lino of\nthe procession were packed closely with peo\nple. Mayor Wallbcr deliverod an address of\nwelcome and tho President replied as follows:\nI am very glad to have on opjwrtunity, though\nthe time allowed is very trier, to meet the peo-\nplo of Wisconsin's chief city, hicce we left\nhome, and in passing through different States\non our way, there has been presented to us a\nvanetvof physical features characteristic ot\nthoir diversity in soil conformation. But\nthw people we have met at all points have been\nthe same in their energy and activity, in their\nlocal pride, and in that twculiar trait of Ameri-\ncan character which produces the belief, firmly\nadhered to by every Individual, that his iar\ntlculsr place of residence is the chosen ad most\nfavored spot which the world contains. This con\ndition creates an aggregate of sentiment invin\ncible in operation, furnishing the motive power\nwhich has broti ght about the stupendous growth\nand development of our country. Hut there\nhas been another element of character dls\nplayed among tho people everywhere on our\ntravi.'s which has been universal, and not dis-\nturbed or changed by any difference in place\nor circumstance. No Ktate lines have circum-\nscribed, no local pride has distinguished, and\nno business activity has In the least stifled the\nkindness and cordiality of the people s wel
2c7d2f8687f5baa27bdd822879e30354 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.6013698313038 58.275556 -134.3925 The Santa Cruz arrived Monday\nnight with a cargo of powder.\nA tire broke out in the Ready Bullion\ncoal bunkers last Wednesday afternoon\nat 4:30, which proved the most trouble¬\nsome of any the firemen have had to\nhandle for some timo past. The salt\nwater pumps were immediately putin\naction, and a large stream of water kept\nplaying upon the smouldering coal\nwhich appeared for some time to hold\nthe fire in check. It burst out suddeuly\nhowever, the blaze spread into the\nboiler room, disabling the boilers and\nthus crippling the sea pumps. As soon\nas possible the full force of water from\nthe Treadwell ditch was turned into\nthe new Bullion water way, and with\nthis immense volume of water at com-1\nmaud, extinguishing the fire was a\nmatter of a few minutes. Had such \nfire broken out at auy time before the\nbuilding of the new ditch to the Ready\nBulliou, it is likely that the mill audi\nperhaps all the other buildings would\nhave been destroyed, as the wind was:\nblowing in an unfavorable direction,\nand the crippling of the sea pumps\nwould have left them with only a small\nhose to depend upou. The building of\nthe ditch, however, assures the Bullion\nof ample water power for coping with\nany blaze that may occur. The prompt,\nand active efforts of the firemen wore:\nof inestimable value in checking the\nadvance of the flames,Mexicans in par¬\nticular covering themselves with glory.!\nThe Douglas firemen kindly turned out\nto give their help but the fire was ex¬\ntinguished before their arrival. Spou-;\ntaneous combustion is the supposed j\ncause of the fire.
03a6e6b8b11775ed56a70a8b62690b73 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1884.561475378213 39.78373 -100.445882 In your issue of the 14th inst.,\nyou published a letter from a cor-\nrespondent at Tahoe, in which the\ndestruction of the forests on the\nmargins of the Lake is discussed,\nand in which also incidental refer\nence is had to the timber lands on\nthe Georgetown Divide. Your cor-\nrespondent bewails the destruction\nof the forests on the margins of the\nlake, and very properly deprecates\nthe detraction from the beauty of\nthat locality such denudation has\noccasioned. Sharing sincerely the\nreeret of your correspondent, that\nthe beauty of this lake should have\nbeen impaired by the vandalism\nreferred to, I at the same time beg\nleave to call your attention to the\nfact that the Forestry Commission\nof the State attempted to arrest the\ndestruction of the timber on the\nmargins of the lake, and in pur-\nsuance of the object, proposed to\ncause a bill to be introduced in the\nUnited States House of Represen\ntatives providing that the Govern-\nment land should be withheld from\nsale and to the State for the\nDurnose of a park, and that the\nrailroad lands on the borders of the\nlake and contiguous thereto, should\nbe exchanged for land of like value\nselected from the even -num be r- e d\nsections within the limits of lands\neranted in aid of the construction\nof the overland roads. The quan\ntity of land under consideration\nwould not have exceeded 10,000\nacres, perhaps much less. But the\nproposition met with uo encourage-\nment from the press. On the con-\ntrary the Forestry Commission was\nset upon most fiercely by certain\nSan Francisco papers; was de\nnounced as being in the interests\nof vast lieu land schemes, which, it\nwas charged, originated with the\nrailroad company. In fact, the\nrailroad party had no part or\nlot in the proposition made by the\nForestry Commission, and express\ning itself as satisfied with it, mere\nly made a concession to that body.\nThe nroDOsition never received any\ncandid consideration at the hands\nof the press, or the people.
2b22581f7110f858a1899706a4cf172f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.0396174547157 37.561813 -75.84108 The Tobacco crop is being greatly dam-\naged by wet weather.\nMr. Gardner, of iligginsport, O., was in\ntown last Friday, looking lor property in\nwhich to start a tobacco warehouse.\nMiss Adda Collins arrived at home last\nSaturday from Bufialo, W. Va., where she\nhas been visiting her brother James, who\nis mayor of the town.\nProf. IIugo Nulle is spending a few days\nwith his parents, who reside about two\nmiles east of town. He has been teaching\ninstrumental music at Bethel and Felicitv\nduring the past year. Mr. Nulle received\nhis musical education at the conservatory\nin Vienna, Austria. He came to America\nabout four years ago, has gained a fair\nknowledge of our language, and proved\nhimself a thorough musician.\nThe "boom" of the Telephone has stmick\nus,and it promises to be a bigone. Telephone\ncommunication has been" established \ntween West & Pence's dry goods emporium\nand the Depot, also from" Mr. Feike's otbee\nin his store to the Depot. This make it\nvery convenient for Mr. Feike (who con-\ntrols the C. oi E. R . E.) to give orders di-\nrectly from his office.\nMr. Lawrence is stopping at the Cincin-\nnati & Eastern Hotel. Tie landed there\non his first visit to our village some three\nyears since, and seems more than contented\nwith its accommodations. And whv should\nhe not be? The landlord, N. S. Dunn, is al-\nways the same genial gentleman, and with\nAunt Jane as landlady, it is indeed the\n"traveler's rest."\nDeputy Grand Master S. J Murray met\nthe I. O. O. F . at their hall and installed\nofficers for the comirg term, last Friday\nnight. The lodge appears to be progress-\ning finely.
2792e95f90a9333f65a603427f09b0d1 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1879.864383529934 37.451159 -86.90916 of tlie counties in the Purchase, and\nother localities. Two ctiiyes coutril\nuted to this result: The more genenms\nuse of fertilizers, and more careful cul\ntivation. Of course the latter half of\nthe the season was favorable to its tx;r\nfeet gniwtii and maturitv. Planters\nnave wisely concluded tiiat there is\nmore money in raising rive acres of sii- -\njxjrior tobacco, that in all senses comes\nup to a mil stauiiani in quality, than in\nraising ten acres ludilierently cultivated\nand carelessly handled. Evervthlng\nshould be subnnlinated to quality. The\nacreage planted siiouid be such as to nut\nthe crop clear outside of the range of\nneglect1 from the setting of the plants\nuntil the crop goes into the buyer's\nbands. The value of no crop raised Is\nsoileixitident on its nualitv its valuu\nand Is at tlie same time so dependent\non its culture and handling from tlie be\nginning to the end for Unit quality,\nThe fail has been so exceptional as to\nnave put to fault all reasonable caleula\ntions. An early frost naturally created\napprehensions that both the late tobac-\nco anil late corn were in danger of be\ning caught and injured, and. acting up\non reasonable probabilities, some tobac\nco wits cut to green, ami or course all\nsuch must be of light weight and of\nlow grade. Most planters, however,\ntook the chances, and waittsl for their\ncrops to fully mature. Most of the to\nbacco being cut during the unusual and\nprotracted warm spell that followed\nfrom bring overcrowded lu the bams\nwas to some extent house-bu rne -
21dd613397de7e62454c73190c575767 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.532876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 By general law, section 5,.'S1, druggists\nare1 permitted to sell liquors for chemi-\ncal, scientific, medicinal, mechanical or\nsacramental purposes only. A druggist\nis required to file a similar bond to that\nof the retail dealer, with the additional\nclause that he will not sell liquor to any\nperson to be used as a beverage nor to be\ndrank on the premises; a druggist must\nalso keep a record of all sales, which\nshall contain the names of all persons\napplying for liquor for lawful purpose,\nthe date of sale, the amount and kind of\nliquor sold to each person and the pur-\npose for which such liquor was purchased,\nsuch book to be open for the inspection\nof all persons during business hours. The\npenalty for violation of this section by a\ndruggist is a fine of cot than a c'100\nnor more than 8500 and costs, or impris-\nonment in the county jail not less than\n1K3 days nor more than one year, or both\nsuch fine and imprisonment, in the dis-\ncretion of the court. In local option\ncounties, however, the supreme court\nholds that actions against druggists\nmust be brought under the provisions\nof the local option law which is the law\nunder which all illegal sales made in\nVan Buren county are punishable. The\nlaw prohibits the liqflor traflic, but per-\nmits druggists to sell for lawful purposes\nunder the restrictions and requirements\nimposed by the general liquor law, and\nwho are required to send to the oflice of\nthe prosecuting attorney weekly reports\nof all sales of liquor made by them.\nThe penalties imposed by this law are\nas follows:
55358b3b6645d6244a64138b0b9ffbad RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1906.9301369545915 36.694288 -105.393021 A man who has been rifling the mall\nboxes of at least one city has been\ncaught. He was apprehended as he\nsought to cash a check he had found\nin his loot. The fellow deserves a long\nsentence, for In this peculiar form of\ncrime there Is a contemptible mean-\nness absent from some petty offenses.\nTo steal a letter with money or a\neheck within may be no worse than\nother forms of larceny, but there are\nconcomitants that add to the gravity\nof the act. The mail thief does not\ndiscriminate. With access to a bag or\nbox, he takes whatever packets come\nto band, and those that are worthless\nto him he casts avay. The letter that\nnever comes may lead to the tragedy\nbroken friendship, It may Impair\neredlt. In It there may be some mes-\nsage of priceless import. Happiness\nand prosperity may depended\nupon its safe delivery. About all thess,\nthings the thief has not a care. Mis-\nsives perhaps more precious than their\nweight In gold are to him rubbish. In\ndestroying them he may be doing a\ngreater actual harm than in diverting\nnegotiable property. Everybody Is in-\nterested In the safety of the malls no\nless than others those who never In-\ntrust to them anything but written\nwords. When a letter has been prop-\nerly stamped and deposited, says the\nPhiladelphia Ledger, the sender has a\nright to be secure in the belief that\nit will reach Its designated place and\nnot be rilled by a wretched thief. If\nsuch a thief Is caught the necessity of\nmaking an example of him is obvious.\nCompared with him, the ordinary pick-\npocket seems almost a desirable ele-\nment of society. He Is the lowest type\nof criminal vandal.
19eea99ebe9f52d881ee7b5091d39e25 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.264383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 " The convention was not up to tho\nusual Addlcks standard, because the\ntrue Addlcks spirit was suppressed for\na purpose. Even J. Edward himself\nwas unusually subdued. The declara­\ntion against the elimination of Ad­\ndlcks was about the only real expres­\nsion ot the true sentiment of the con­\nvention permitted to creep out This,\nof course, was necessary for the en­\ncouragement of "the old man.”\nboastful statement that they could\ncarry the state against both the bolt­\ners and the democrats' was not borne\nout by the action of the delegates, they\napparently did not feel that way.\n" The antl-Aduicks union republicans\nwere recognized very liberally, to keep\nthem in line, and for fear they might\ncause trouble In the convention. The\nturning down of State Senator Penac-\nwill, one of Addlcks most loyal and\not)edicnt supporters by the Sussex dele­\n in favor of Dr. Hiram R. Bur­\nton. who has not been considered one\nof the Addlcks “elect,” we hope, may\nIks considered as a proof that Addicks\nand his lieutenants can no longer com­\npel all the union republican to blindly\ndo his bidding.\n"Republicans should feel greatly en­\ncouraged. There is something wrong\nin the Addlcks camp. They are on the\ndefensive. The old boastful spirit is\nchilled. It bears the stamp of a lest\nca.ise, and that the adherents feel it\nis very apparent from their half heart­\ned actions. It is a good sign for re­\npublicanism in Delaware. As soon as\ncertain misguided republicans\nweaned from their idol, Addlcks, and\nwake up to their true responsibility to\nthe republican party, the sooner will\nrepublican success be accomplished in\nDelaware. The elimination of Addicks\nfrom Delaware is only a question of\ntime.
1a76f849acd5476318505309542bd75d THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1887.4589040778792 43.994599 -72.127742 Prolmbly the moat remarkable will ever\nmado was drawn up by Aldermuu Hurtman,\nof ntuuurg, ou luumilay, rub. 17, 1887,\nThe testator, Ambrose Kotuurge, who is 53\nyean of ujro, after discing of 10,000 in real\nestate, turocu as follows:\n"I direct that my body be taken to St.\nMichael's church, and, after the proper re-\nligious services are performed, that it be\ngiven iu charge ot my family, who will con'\nvey it to Samson's crematory and there have\nit burned to ashes, the agues to be put In\nsmall bottle and given in charge of the German\nconsul at Pittsburg. This gentleman will\nthen forward my ashes to the consul at Now\nYork, who will give them in charge of the\ncaptain of the German steamer Elbe, who\nwill place them in bis ship for the\nocean voyage. When at mid ocean I direct\nthe captain to request one of the passengers\nto drees In a seafaring suit and ascend with\nmy ashes iu his hand to the top of the top-\nmost mast, and, after pronouncing a last\nbenediction, to extract the cork from the bot\ntle and cast its contents to the four winds of\nheaven. I direct, also, while this ceremony\nis being performed, that it be witnessed by\nall passengers on board. After the Ellie bos\ncompleted her trip and relumed again to\nNew 1 oik. I want a full statement of my\ndeath and the scattering of my aches iu mid\nocean published in the Pittsburg papers, so\nthat my f rleuds in this city shall know my\nburial place."
7206d985de00d23b0c1eaebff38020fc THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.7986301052765 39.261561 -121.016059 It is incoote8tible that there is much\nmore passion and ardor among the officer*\nof the Southern than among those of the\nNorthern army. It is insisted in the Secess-\nion camp that this ardor, this disinterested\ndevotion to the common cause, are shared\nby the soldiers ; that iu the South they serve\nthrough honor and conviction ; that among\nthe Federals the soldier knows no other al-\nlurement than pay, no other impulse than\nthat of want—the best recruiting officer\namong the populations of the large cities.\nCertainly it is going to far too generalize a\nfact which may be true to some extent.\nIndividual bravery is incontestably super-\nior in the Confederate camp ; but the Union\narmy makes up for this disadvantage by a\nmore advanced military organization and\nknowledge, at least among the soldiers, so\nthat matters being almost equally balan-\nced, it is dfficult enough to foresee towards\nwhich side the fortune of war will incline.\nIt is true the victory of Bull Run is of a na-\nture to excite the highest pitch the con-\nfidence and enthusiasm of the Southern men;\nbut I find it impossible to see in tbe result\nof that battle one of those solemn judgments\nwithout appeal, which condemn one side to\nbow the head beneath the irresistible ascen-\ndancy of the victor. These men, after all,\nare nearly of the same race, or the same\nmixed races, and, despite tbe divergence of\nopinions, they have a common fund of ideas,\nmanners and feelings, which does not per-\nmit a line to be drawn through the thirtieth\ndegree of latitude, and to have it said :\nAll that is north of this line is inferior to\nall that is south of it.\nTo estimate tbe event of July 21, we must\nleave a wide margin for the local incident*,\ntbe chance and unexpected enoounters on\nthe field of battle, tbe unforeseen events\nwhich take hold of the imaginations of the\nmnsses—all secondary causes which operate\non the war by so much the more as the\narmies have less experience, discipline and\nknowledge.
c4b5a082bd0405072b7e0242ec6b8e50 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.3027396943176 43.798358 -73.087921 For weakness, deficiency of natural strength\nand relaxation of the vessels by too frequent in-\ndulgence of the passions, this medicine is a safe,\ncertain ami invaluable remedy.\nThose who have long resided in hot climates\nand are languid and relaxed in their whole sys-\ntem may take THE LIFE MEDICINES with\nthe happiest effects; and persons removing to\nthe Southern States or West Indies can not store\na more important article of health and life.\nThe following cases are among the most recent\ncures effected and gratefully acknowledged by\nthe persons benefitted:\nCase of Jacob C. Hunt JV'ew Windsor Orange\nCo. JV Y. A dreadful tumor destroyed nearly\nthe whole of his face nose and jaw. Experienc-\ned quick relief from the use of the Life Medi-\ncines and in less than three months was entirely\ncured. Case reported with a wood engraving\nin a new pamphlet now in press.\nCase of Thos. Pus cell, sen, 84 years of \nwasafflicted 18 years with swellings in his legs\nwas'entirely cured by taking 42 pills in 3 weeks.\nCase of Joan Daulton, Aberdeen Ohio rheu-\nmatism five years is entirely cured has used\nthe Life Medicines for worms in children 8f found\nthem a sovereign remedy.\nCase of Lewis Austin periodical sick head-\nache always relieved by a small dose now en-\ntirely free from it.\nCase of Adon Adams cured of a most inveter-\nate and obstinate dyspepsia and general debility.\nCase of Aduh Ames Windsor Ohio rheuma-\ntism gravel liver affections and general nervous\ndebility had been confined seven years was\nraised from her bed by t.iking one box of pills &,\na bottle of bitters a most extraordinary cuie\nshe is now a very healthy and robust woman\nattested by her husband Shubel Adams.\nCase of Mrs. Badge r, wife of Joseph Badger-nearl- y\nsimilar to aboveresult the same.\nCase of Susaipoodarant, a young unmarried\nwoman
01eb947c603d189cf22891ec7d99d286 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.2534246258244 58.275556 -134.3925 The Maine: Beginning ut cor No. 1, identi¬\ncal with cor No. 4 S?419-B, Green Mountain,\nwhence cor No. 1 S-419-A Maine Lode bears n\n30©57minE2702ftdist.U. S. Mon. No.4\nbearsS20O 42 min w 1673.40 ft dist; thence n\n22© 45 min w 400 ft to cor No. 2, identical with\ncor No. 3 Green Mountain millsite: thence n\n71© E526fttocorNo.3;tlienceS24©45minE\n380 ft to cor No.4 on shore line of Copper Har-\nbor: thence S 59© w along meander hue Cop-\nper Harbor at mean high water mark, 85 ft\ncross E side of wharf 2-10 ft long, and S E cor\nof store-aud boai'ding house, 30x40 ft 115 ft w\nside of wharf and S \\V cor of store and board¬\ning house 135 ft S E cor of sawmill, 30x40 ft,\nbears1130©w10ftdist191fttocorNo. 5;\nthenceS73©15minw353fttocorNo.1,the\nplace of beginning. Containing, 4.91 acres.\nThe Monterey: Beginning at cor No. 1,\nidentical with cor No. 4 S419-B Maine, whence\ncor No. 1, S-419-A Monterey Lode bears u 3©\n59 min E 5292.20 ft dist. U . S. Mon. bears S 310\n46minw2076.50ftdist:thenceu24©45minw\n380 ft to cor No. 8 Maine millsite. 400 ft to cor\nNo. 2: thence u 70© 05 min E 560 ft cross creek\n6 ft wide,course S 656.70 ft to cor No.3 on the w\nside line of Sola Lode claim: thence S 45 min\nE 363 ft to cor no. 4, identical with cor no. 1\nSolaLode; thence S49© w46ftto cor No. 5,\nhigh water mark Copper Harbor line;\nthence S 65© 1.5 min w 30 ft cross creek 8 ft\nwide, course S 462 ft to cor No. 1, the place of\nbeginning. Containing 4.98 acres.\nThe Sun Francisco: Beginning at cor no.\n1, identical with cor No. 2 S-419-B, Brooklyn\nmillsite. whence cor No. 1 S-419-A San Fran¬\ncisco Lode bears n 4 o 21 min E 3993.10 ft dist.\nU.S . Mon. No.4 bears S45© 12 min w2431.90 ft\ndist; thencen 41 © w 175 ft cross creek 15 ft\nwide, course S \\V 325 ffto cor No. 2, identical\nwith cor No. 5, Monterey millsite; thence n\n49© E46fttocors1 &4,SolaLodeandMonte¬\nrey millsite, respectively, 185 ft, whence nw\ncor cabin, 20x30 ft, bears S 41 o E100 ft dist 226\nft cross creek 10 ft wide, course S E 580 ft tt>\ncor No. 3; thence S 43© E200 ft cross creek 8\nft aide, course sw 408.80 ft to cor No. 4:\nthenceS570 w 600ftto cor no. I,theplaceof\nbeginning. Containing 4.93acres.\nThe Brooklyn; Beginning at cor No. 1,\nwhence cor no 1, S-419-A Brooklyn Lode\nbears n 1 © 25 min w 5866.20 ft dist: U.S31on No.\nj4 bejrs S 52O 55 min w 2886.60ft dist; thence n\n33 0 w 327 ft along meander line Copper Har¬\nbor mean high wuter murk, toeor no. 2, iden¬\ntical with cor no. 1. San Francisco inillsite:\nthence n 570 E 600 ft to cor No. 3, identical\nwith cor no. 4, San Francisco millsite; thence
26497337208601576f96fa00548b4536 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.0342465436327 42.217817 -85.891125 Whereas default has been made n the conditions\nof a certaiu mortgage made by James Dale and Isa-\nbella Dale, his wife, of the township of intwerp.\nVan liuren county, Michigan, to Elvira C. Hendrick\nof the village of Paw Paw in said county and state,\nwhich S'iid mortgage is dated August 21, A. D.\nlyiO, and was recorded in the office of the register\nof deeds for said county on the 2 2d day of August,\nA. D I'.too, on page 23 in liber fill of mortgages, and\non which said mortgage there is claimed to be due\nat the date of th s notice, for principal aud in ten st,\nthe sum of two thousand s veil hundred and ninety-eig- ht\nand 2s loo dollars, besioes an attorney's fee\not thirty dollars etipulated in said mortgage to bo\npaid iu case ai y proceedings should be taken to\n the same.\nNow, therefore, notice Is hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power of sale iu said mortgage con-\ntained, aud of the statute in such case made and\nprovided, I shall sell at public auction, to the high-e- nt\nbidder, 011 Saturday, the 11th day of January,\nA. D. r.!.", at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at the\nfront door of the court house in the village of Paw\nPaw in said county ofVanlJuren (that being the\nbuilding iu which the circuit court for said county\nis held) the premises described in said mortgage, or\nso much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy\nthe amount so claimed to be due ou said mortgage\nfor principal and inter st, together with said at-\ntorney's fee and the costs of said sale.\nThe prem ses described in said mortgage are as\nfollows: The north-eas - t
355c7a7d3241e329e2c2054cb75cad6d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.5493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 Tub Tun Back.On Saturday evenin\n'he suspension bridge, and both banks (\n[he river a full half-milo below, wer\ncrowded with men, women andchildrei\nIhe river was nearly covered with boal\n01 evaiy description. A tub race ha\nbeen announced to come cfi at 7 r. >\njetween Fritz Kilter, aliai "Mick Whil\nlea," and Robert McClelland, aliai "Ca\n:awissa Bob." Shortly after the hoc\nmentioned above the conteatanta appeal\nid in skifli just above the euspensioi\n>ridge, and prepared for the raci\nJuiie a flatter was created anion,\nthe ladies on the bridge as "Nick Whif\nlea," immediately underneath, debt\nlately pulled oil bis abirt. Several but\nIred feminine eyes were turned da\noath, but only for a moment, as we no\niced many furtive glances at "Nick\n>eforo be bad balf completed bis \nions for the battle. The race course wa\nrom the suspension bridge to tbe Na\n3ity boat bouse, nearly a ball mile. Bot\nnen were stripped to the waist. The tub\nfere large-sized wash-tubs, and each mai\ntsed two short, wide paddles. Tb\naba started from tbe bridge abou\nlalf-past seven o'clock. From th\ntart "Whiffles" gained ground, and wa\nbout ten yards ahead ot bis ccmpetito\nthen the latter fell out of bia tab near!;\nppoaite the St. J nines Hotel. Th\nrieoda of "Catawisaa Bob" assisted bin\nato tbe tub, but be again upset at th\nloath of the creek, from whence h\nwarn to the stake boat "Nick Whiillea'\name in ahead, making tbe distance ii\nbout fifteen minutes. The race was ven\nmusing, and the thousands of spectator\neartily enjoyed it
15f75426afd5ed4694b7d82286b3345f THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.5273972285643 39.743941 -84.63662 Sec 16. There eh all be elected In each'\ncounty by the electors thereof, one Clerk of\ntne iouit or toramoo neas, wno snau oxua\nbis office for the term of three years, and un- -\ntil his successor shall beelected and qualified\nHe snail, bv virtue of his office, be Clerk of\nall other courts of record held therein, but\ntne ienerai AssemDiy may proviue, oy iaw\nfor the election of a Clerk with a like term of\noffice, for each or any other of the courts of\nrecord, or for the appointment by the Su- -'\npre me Court of a Clerk for that Court.\nSec 18. The several Judgesof the Supreme\nCourt of the District and Common Pleas, and\nof such other courts as may be created, shall\nrespectively nave ana exercise sucn power\nana jurisdiction at chambers, or otherwise, as\nmay be directed by law.\nThe term of office of all Judge of Common\nPleas and District Courts for in this\namendment, shall commence on the first '\nMonday in January next after the making of\nthe apportionment provided for in section\nfive of article four, and the term of office of\nall Judges of the Courts of Common Pleas, in\noffice, who were not elected as Judges under\nims amenament, snau men expire.\nNo chance shall be made bv this amend'\nment in the Snoreme Court, or in tho office or\nterm of any Judge thereof. The first election\nof Judges of Common Pleas and District\nCourts under this amendments shall be held\nat the general election for the election of\nState officers next after the making of said\napportionment for District Court distriota by\nthe Legislature, but nothing In this amend-\nment shall be construed to change or alter\nthe Constitution or laws imtil said annortion- -\nment is made. Section seven of Article four\nIs hereby repealed, and section twenty-tw- o\nshall be numbered section seven.
06467e6c7fdbad5b2e0a57d7a9545e52 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.0808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 basts of $2.26 a bushoL\nIs the Untied States Government, then,\nbecause it must pay the farmer 82.26 a\nbushel by contract, going to make the\nAmerican consumers eat their bread on\na $2.26 basis, when there will be wheat\nIn this our own country to burn?\nWheat, mind you, sold to the Ameri­\ncan consumer at famine prices cannot\nfail to make Inordinate prices for corn\nand all other foodstuffs. Keep wheal\nJarked up on the 12 26 basis and all\nother grains will be put up at a corres­\nponding level. Then because the cattle\nand sheep must be fattened for market\nwith grain, beef and mutton must con­\ntinue at sky high prices. Because poul­\ntry must be fed on grain It will con­\ntinue at high prices. Likewise eggs,\nmilk, butter, cheese.\nAll those prices hang on wheat. \nmatter what the government has to\npay to the farmer—and to preserve Its\ngood faith the government must pay\nthe contract price—President Wilson\ncan decree that this year's prodigious\nwheat crop, after the government has\nbought it, can go on the market to con­\nsumers at prices determined by the law\nof supply and demand. That will be a\nnormal, even a low price range. When\nthe American people are eating bread\nat normal prices the stock raisers of\nthe country will be feeding grain to\ntheh- steers and hogs at normal prices,\nthe dairymen will be feeding grain to\ntheir cows at normal prices, poultry-\nmen will be feeding grain to their\nchickens and ducks and geese at normal\nprices. The American consumers will\nagain be biiying not only their bread\nbut their other main food supplies at\nnormal prices.
6a3d6c4e177751af43e18928d64a782d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.4479451737698 43.798358 -73.087921 From Barbadof.s . Advices to May 4th\nconfirm the important decision of the. Le-\ngislature to abolish the apprentice system,\nand admit the 80,000 slaves on the Island\nto immediate emancipation, which is to\ntake place the first part of August next.\nThis important experiment will thus again\nbe tested as in Antigua. Boston Press.\nIn an address by M A Public Officer,' it\nis stated that at Antigua abolition answer\ned the just expectations 0f the country, and\nwent beyond the anticipations ot its best\nfriends. It had so far proved itself good\nby the close of 1835, as to induce the late\nPresident of the Island (a gentleman of\nvery liberal principles in general,) "to con- -\ness that he had never been a convert to it\ntill then. It is no less to be remembered\nthat there were only twenty policemen to\n 20,000 of the peasantry."\nThe address goes on to state "The\nbone of reward sweetens labor." savs the\nold proverb, and so it was with the work-\ners. A gang of one hundred was em\nployed on a Saturday to hoe a six acre\npiece of stiff soil. They completed it by,\nsunset and received two shillings curren-\ncy each. The same work would have\ncost sixty pounds in the time of slavery.\nWjen I visited the Island last November,\nI found a greater quantity cf cane land\nthan I had known for twenty years previ-\nously. In anticipation of the 1st August,\nand is rising in value, and the fact that\nthe future laborers will also be consum-\ners, and thus increase the trade of the\nIsland, and that emancipation will be ben\neficial to all classes, causes general joy to\nprevail.
1fc6c8f9a6337090f1b92e4573b6073d THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.4123287354134 32.408477 -91.186777 ored to get up. bent, apparently, upon\nperforming some fancied duty far\naway. Agatha soothed him, talked to\nhim as a mother talks to a sick child.\ncajoled and commanded him; and\nthough he was restless and voluble,\nyet he obeyed her readily enough\nAs the rain began to descend, Aga-\ntha bethought herself earnestly as to\nwhat could be done. She first per-\nsuaded James to drink a little more of\nthe milk, and afterward took what was\nleft herself-less than half a cupful.\nThen she set the bucket out to catch\nthe rain. She felt keenly the need of\nfood and water; and now that there\nwas no one to heed her movements,\nshe found it difficult to keep up the\nshow of courage. She still trusted in\nHand; but even at best he might "yt\nbe several hours in returning; and\ncold and hunger can reduce even the\nstoutest heart. If Hand did not return\n-but there was no answer to that if.\nShe he would come.\nThe soft rain cast a pall over the\nocean, so that only a small patch of\nsea was visible; and it flattened the\nwaves until the blue-flashing, white-\ncapped sea of yesterday was now a\nsmooth, gray surface, touched here\nand there by a bit of frothy scum.\nAgatha looked out thirogh the deep\ncurtain of mist, remembering the\nnight, the Jeanne D'Are, and her re\ncent peril. Most vividly of all she\nheard in her memory a voice shouting,\n"Keep up! I'm coming, I'm coming!"\nAb, what a welcome coming that had\nbeen! Was he to die, now, here on\nher hands, after the worst of their\nstruggle was over? She turned quickly\nback to James, vowing in her heart it\nshould not be; she would save him if\nit lay in human power to save.\nHer hardest task was to move their\ncamp up into the edge of the brush-\nwood, where they might have the\nshelter of the trsees. There was a
9becb38ffaa02f2944a64e963e97cab8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.2726027080162 41.681744 -72.788147 There was an unofficial opening\nlast Sunday, when the warm weather\ndrove many thousands to the resoit,\nbut the formal opening of the re-\nsort, when all concessions will be\nplaced in operation, will probably\nnot take place until Decoration Day.\nI'iiiicihI of Captain killell\nThe funeral of Caotain Kitt!i\ncaptain in the Bristol fire depart-\nment who died suddenly last Mon-\nday morning, was held this nurniini\nat St, Joseph's church at 9 o'clock.\nMembers of the department attend-\ned the services in a body, and r\nsquad of firemen acted as pall peso\ners. The high mass of requiem wu\ncelebrated by the P.ev. William f,\nl.aflin. Burial was in West cemete"jr.\nTraffic Lights I'iay Antics\nSince the installation of the new\nelectifmiatic traffic signals on North\nMain street and at tho junction of\n and North Main streets, motor-\nists have been mystified at times by\nthe queer antics of the lights. Tho\nlights have been known to hold One\ncolor for an unusually long time, or\nelse they have chanced from nnn\ncolor to another and baok again\nwitn a rapidity which was evidently\nnot due to the regular mechanism of\nthe apparatus. The cause of the\nmystery has been revealed in a num-\nber of cases when it was fnunA m\nsmall boys and irresoonsihle vmm\nmen, have discovered that by Jump\ning up ana down upon the trip\nwhich is placed in the street lhv\ncan make the. lights perform for\nthem. This Is happening many times\nand it is believed that the matter\nWill be bronchf In the nHentlnn A\nthe police and possibly arrests will\ntoilow.
61932f3797eb6c54420b4bf76e4a3cb7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.9467212798522 41.681744 -72.788147 One of the witnesses in the case,\nJames Walsh of 131 Main street, was\nbefore Judge Benjamin W. Ailing In\npolice court this morning on charges\nof drunkenness and breach of the\npeace as a result of an episode Wed-\nnesday night with Policeman Thom-\nas Rouskl. Walsh was fined $10 and\ncosts on the charges.\nPatrolman Lee Is reported to have\nsaid that an attempt is being made\nto frame him by Walsh and his\nfriends because he has called them\nto task for their actions on the\nstreet. Lee is reported to have up-\nbraided a friend of Walsh's for ac-\ncosting a girl on Main street, and the\nfriend did not take kindly to It\nLater on in the night, according to\ntestimony given by Patrolman Daniel\nCosgrove at the hearing by the dis-\ncipline committee Monday night, he\nmet Walsh and two companions In\nan Intoxicated condition.\nAlleged Threat To tee\nThe men told Cosgrove, according\nto his story, that they did not like\nLee as he was a "skunk," and they\nwere going to "get" him. After\nthis, they are alleged by Patrolman\nRouskl to have met him about\no'clock In the morning and offered\nhim a drink of liquor, which he re-\nfused. Walsh and his friends are\nthen alleged to have tried to coax\nhim to take a drink, saying "go\nahead, it's all right, we Just gave\nTom Lee a couple of shots."\nAt the hearing Monday night, the\nmen denied this Incident saying that\nthey had never given or offered a.\npoliceman a drink of liquor. In\npolice court tills morning, Walsh\nsaid that JV, had offered the liquor\nto Rouskl and the patrolman refused\n1(, saying that he would take a drink\nof wine If they had it Rouskl de-\nnied that he said he would take\nwine.
0528b2cc3beb80ca8e09809b2a72adaa THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.1164383244545 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, D. C ., Fob. 11 ..Th6\nhomo committee on ways and means\nhold another conforouco ovor tho Presi¬\ndent's bond mossago to-day mid again\nad|ouriiod without reporting any con¬\nclusion, btit with n brighter prospoct\nfor agreement uhuad of it.\nTo-morrow Secrotary Carliilo will ap¬\npear, it is oxpcy.od, with the contract\nfor tho Halo of tho forthcoming bond\ninitio to soUlo a queetion which uroae\nto-day. Democratic members of tho\ncommittco prophocy that the Republi¬\ncans will unite with theui upon a plan.\nThis belief is baiod on no dotinito state¬\nment from the opposition, but on tho\ngeneral demeanor of tho Republicans\nand the sight of Mr. lioed in conference\nwith Mr. Cockran for an hour.\nMost of tho timo was consumed in a\ndiscussion of a plan o.ierod by Mr.\nCockran to meet tho present emergency\nand possible exigencies of the future,\nwhich would confer large discrotionary\npower* upon the exeeutivo branch of\ntho govornmont.\nHe niado it a verbal proposition, but\naftorthe meeting reduced the plan to\nwriting and will present it to-morrow in\nthe following form:\nWhenever it appears to tho secretary\nof tho treasury that an additional hud-\nply of gold or silver id necessary to the\ntroasurv to enable it to maintain tho\nparity between tho various coins, and\nforms of mouey of the United States as\nrequired by law, the said secretary is\nheroby authorised to procure such gold\nor silver as may bo necessary for that\npurpose. by issuing therefor obligations\nof tho United conditioned for the\nreturn of a liko quantity of tho satno\nmetal ns may have b»en thus obtained,\nanil for the transfer to tho holder of such\nobligations of an additional amount of\nsaid metal not to exceed 3 per cent of\ntho wholo amount thus obtained.\nMr. liynum withdrew his resolution\nin deteronce to Chairman Wilton's plan,\nwhich covers in part tho same cround,\nand Mr. vS ilson had atnonded tho form\nof his resolution by adding a clause\nwhich stipulates that none of the pro¬\nceeds of the bond issue ehall be used to\ndefray current expense* of tho govern¬\nment. Tho chaniro was desiimod to\ntne«t tho objections uttered by Repub¬\nlicans nt tho former meeting, but their\nviews upon it were not elicited upon it\nduring tho session. Another change\nwas made in Mr. Wilson's resolution by\nleaving biank the term of the bond, and\na question was raiseil wbother the con¬\ntract with the bankers did not stipulate\nfor a thirty-year term.\nEarlier in the meeting, Mr. Cockran\nmade a speech in iavor of his proposi¬\ntion, claiming for it that it did not dis-\ncrimiuato ngainst either metaL Mr.\nBrynn, of Nebraska, asserted that its\nintent was solely in the interest of gold.\nAmong the Democratic members of tho\ncommittee who were listed as doubtful,\na conciliatory feelimr made itself mani-\nfeit. but it nuv not result in an agree¬\nment. Republicans say that their\ncourse cannot be decided upon until the\nDemocrats present some definite meaa-\nuro to thorn.
255a5f9d462e8cd4c7bf2277115eccaa THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8068492833586 40.063962 -80.720915 "I think truly the Ijuly C'oryphane\nhath the bluest of all their blue eyes."\nThen suid she, "And 1 think truly by thine\nanswer, Severity, that thou lovest me not,\nfor else wouldst thou have known that\nmine eyes are iu blue as Coryphune's."\n"Nay, truly," he answered; "for my heart\nknoweth well that thine eyes are blue, ami\nthat they aro lovely, und to me dearest of\null cye«, hut to say they aro the bluest of\nall eyes, that 1 may not, for therein should\nI bo no true man." Therewith was the\nludy somewhat shamed, und seeking to\ncover her vanity did answer und suy,\n"It may welL be, sir knight, for\nhow can I tell who seo not\nmine own eyefj, and would therefore\nknow of thee, of whom men say, Home that\nthou speakest truly, other some thut thou\nHpeaketh naughtily. Hut tho truth us it\ninuy, every knight yet suith to his own mis*\ntress that In all things she is the purugon\nof the world." "Then," quoth the knight,\nJ "she that knoweth that every man suith\nso, must know also that only one of them\nall suith the thing thut is true. Not will*\ningiy would I add to the multitude of the\n» lies that do go nbout tho world!" "Now\nJ verily am I sure that thou dost not love\nme, cried the lady; "for all men do say\nof mine eyes." Thereat sluifctuyed words,\nund suid no more, that he might speuk uguin.\n"Lady," said Sir Verity, and spake right\nJ solemnly, "as I said before, I do suy uguin,\nund in truth, thut thino eyes to mo are\nclearest of all eyes. But they might be the\nbluest or the blackest, the greenest or the
aed1768e5426b63da98e47b13d9d3567 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.478082160071 39.560444 -120.828218 o supply the demand onthe Pacific for the\nnext thousand 'years. It is of the kind\nand quality of that used in the front of\nthe banking house of Adams & Co. This\ngranite lead belongs to the Messrs. Mer-\nedith; and when the railroad is completed,\nthey will be able to furnish ail tbegrauite\nthat may be needed in this city or San-\nFrancisco for building purposes. Its\ntransportation wllf furnish to the road\nthousands of torts of freight per annum.”\nGrouse Shooting. —This is the most\ndiscouraging of all sports to the uninitia-\nted. About sunrise tneir peculiar thump-\ning sound may be heard at the heads' of\nravines near the tops of the hills* where\none single Mrd would cause the inexperi-\nenced hunter to suppose that at least a\ndozen were close by. They seem to possess\nthe power of ventriloquism!. The sports-\nman hears their call in a tree\nor grove, and feels sure of bagging at\nleast three or four, but on creeping softly\nup to the tree and narrowly scanning ete-\nry limb, he hears the bird in another di-\nrection, send ten to one if he find it at all\nafter an hour's search, although the pro-\nvoking thing is within gunshot all the while,\nand keeps up its discordant notes very\nmuch to its own satisfaction*. We have\nspent hours hr looking for a grouse oti siti\nisolated tree, knowing very well that the\nbird was somewhere in the branches, but\nwere compelled to give up the search and\ngo off in a very bad humor, disgusted\nwith sporting in general and grouse shoot-\ning in particular. They arc usually found\nclose to the body of the tree, where they\nare easily mistaken for a knot, and it is\nonly the practiced eye that can detect\ntheir whereabouts.
ad8efd00a4885396cae3712abe3e1365 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.3246575025369 58.275556 -134.3925 Stroller that he was rorrectlv In¬\nformed nnd that "His Honor" knew\nwhereof he spoke.\nThe Stroller has not mingled with\nYukon governors since aridity or\npartial Aridity struck that country\n;md he wonders Just how they make\ntheir callers feel at home. free and\nraay. They may say '"Ave a pipe"\nbut that would not be natural, nor\nwould It savor of the old days when\nthe "long glawsc" was very much\nin evidence and ranked high as a\npromoter of social life and hospi¬\ntality In Yukon tho same as It\ndid nearly a century ago when the\nKovernor of North Carolina made a\nremark to the governor of South\nCarolina that has since ranked with\nthe great sayings of great men (jf\ntho world. Legendary history gives\nthe following as the occasion and\ncondition under which tho remark\nwas made: Thcro was a dispute as\n the boundary between the Caro-\ntinaa and much III feeling had en¬\ngendered. The matter was discussed\nby the legislatures of both states\nand It was Anally agreed tigon by\nboth to leave the final aettlement\nwith their respective governors. A\nconference was arranged to bo held\nat Kalctgh. the capital of North\nCarolina, to which place the gover¬\nnor of South Carolina Journey from\nhs home at Columbia, tho capital of\nhis state. Each governor was seated\nat tho sldo of a table facing the ono\nthe other. Between them and In tho\ncenter of the table was a Jug of hard\nstuff, llkewlce two tin cups. The\nsocial amenities had been observed\nseveral times and discussion of the\nquestion at Issue began. Kor a time\nit "waa very amiable but as It pro¬\ngressed It waxed warmer and warm¬\ner until finally tie lie was pasted
368ca903904519e1bbc9e125e44de4d4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2726027080162 40.063962 -80.720915 which they favor, but there is surely no\nreasonable ground fof belioving that\nthey are hostilo to the Union or Gov¬\nernment. Their views of the true\ncourse to pursue may hopelessly differ,\nbut certainty while their Intentions are\nbeyond suspicion tlio difference of their\nviews may be discussed without acri¬\nmony. Tho situation is entirely with¬\nout precedent, aud denunciation, insin¬\nuation, and tierce partisanship merely\nconfound the confusion and exasperate\nhonest differences.\nIt is as unjust to assert that Congress\nis hostile to the loyal men at the South\nas it is to insist that the President is\nanxious to have disloyal men ait in\nCongress. It is ns inaccurate to declare\nthat Congress means to sustain a pau¬\nper class of freed men at the expense of\nthe Government as to argue that the\nPresident intends to betray the freed-\nraen defenseless into tho hands of those\nwho hate them. Itis as untrue to say-\nthat tile course of Congress violates the\nConstitution as that tho policy of the\nPresident overthrows it. The truth lit>s\nbetween all these extremes, as may be\nseen by looking tho last point we\nhave mentioned. If, for instance, it bo\nalleged, in defenso of what is called the\nPresident's policy, that tho war was to\nprevent secession; that it was success¬\nful; thnt-'secession' was therefore pre¬\nvented; that tlie States are now, as be-\nforo, in I he Union; and that, conse¬\nquently, Congress has no constitutional\nright to prohibit their representation.\njt is no less true that if those States are\nin tho Union they word equally so in\nMay last, and that the President has\nno constitutional right to appoint a\nProvisional Governor of a State in tho\nUnion. The truth is, that tho President\nacted from the necessity of tho case; and\nthat must bo the principle of action un¬\ntil reorganisation is complete. Then\nand not before, the authority which is\ncalled the war power ceases, and the nor-\nnuil habit of theUnion is resumed. The\nargument is by no means euded, us\nSenators Doolittle and Johnson taeem to\nsuppose, when it is proved that the late\nrebel States aro not out of the Union\nThey were not out of tho Union a year\n2S°-.,
728143f405340efe44653b62575f3953 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6598360339506 39.513775 -121.556359 A New Vmk correspondent wiling to im\nexchange, gives the follow tag description i f\nthe Floating Battery which Inis betn for\nseveral years in course of construction\n1 suppose you are aware that a large iron\nfi oiling battery has been bin hi mg in New\nYork lor some years past. This tact, how-\never, is nut genera ly known Several\nmonths ago, I believe the Secretary of the\nNavy s»nt an ii tel igent naval othcer to in-\nsped the battery and report progress. This\nrepott is now on tile in tic Navy Dep.ait-\nment. It is an interesting document at this\ntime, when gun-boats and all sorts of de-\nfensive and offensive modes of warfare arc\nbeing developed.\nToe iron vessel, so mysteriously decked\nand hid from public view, has already been\nfourteen years under way, and of course\nconsiderable progress has been made in her\nconstruction, and she could be finished, it'\nnecessary, in one year. .She is four hr. ml red\nfoot long, and thirty orforty feet in breadth.\nShe is built entirely of wrought iron plates,\nand each plate seven inches in thickness;\nthese are attached to her iron frame work\nShe will have eight steam engines, and is to\npropelled by two screw paddles, one on each\nside ot her stern post. In smooth wator she\nw.ll run, it is expected, from twenty to\ntwenty-five miles per hour; and as she is\nintended solely for harbor defences, she will\nhave smooth water to run in at all \nShe can, by her double propulsion power,\nby reversing one of the screws, turn in her\nown axis, or in a space of four hundred loot\nShe is to be mounted with twenty guns, of\nthe heaviest calibre and longest range.\nThe dock where this wonderful floating\nbattery is now lying is very mysteriously\nguarded. Owing to the extreme length of\nthe vessel,'rocks have been excavated, and\none of the steeds of Hoboken has been tun-\nnelled to admit one end of the monster\nWhen Mr. Hubert 1,. Stevens died, he left\nmodels to enable Mr. Walker, the superin-\ntendent (d her construction, to complete the\nvessel in accordance with his original con-\nception. She has rust the Government thus\nfar, over halt a million of dollars, all of\nwhich has been expended, and lately the\nwork has been earned on out of the private\nfunds of Mr Stevens.\nThis vessel, or two or three like her, will\nguard New York from any force that may he\nbrought against the place. She is perfectly\nimpervious to shot or shell, from Lancaster.\nIaixhau or Colunibiad. The iron plates of\nwhich she is constmeted are each thorough-\nly tested by cannon shot before bc : ng fasten-\ned to the frame of the vessel. Her machinery\nis nil below the water line and out of harm's\nway. Her speed will make her e<|unl to\ntwenty or thirty gun-boats of the modern\nstyle. W ith two or there such vessels, New\nYork would indeed be impregnable.
09665a6e42fffc027c43cf02327593c2 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.5931506532218 41.004121 -76.453816 mount, could see how terrible was tho effect\nthat raking fire, delivered as it was, not\nby raw English boys, who scarcely know one\nend of a rillo from another, but by men, all\nof whom could shoot, and many of whom\nwere crack shots. All along the lino of the ,\nUndi companies men threw up their arms\nand dropped dead or staggered out ot the\nranks wounded. But tho main body nover\npaused. By and by 'they would come back\nand move tho wounded or kill them if they\nwero not likely to recover.\nSoon as tho raugo got longer tho flro began\nto bo less deadly, and Ernest could see that\nfewer men wero dropping.\n"Ernest," said Alston, galloping up to him,\n"I am going to charge them. Look, they will\nsoon cross tho donga and rcacli the slopes of\n mountain, and we shan't be able to follow\nthem on the broken ground."\n"Isn't It rather risky!" asked Ernest, some-\nwhat dismayed at the idea of launching their\nlittlo company ot mounted men at the mov-\ning mass before them.\n"Risky? yes, of courso It is, but my orders\nwcro to delay tho cricmy as much as possible,\nand tho horses uro fresh. But, my lad" and\nho bent toward him and spoke low "It\ndoesn't much matter whether we aro killtd\ncharging or running away. I am sure that\nthe camp must be taken ; there is no hope.\nGood by, Ernest; If I fall, fight the corps as\nlong as possible, and kill as many of those\ndevils as you can; and If you survlvo, re-\nmember to make oft well to the left. The\nrcglmonts will have passed by then.
51c582de120fa4781ac07c7abaf8f358 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.7438355847285 44.939157 -123.033121 families where It is treated as sucu,\n'and at least one aumur 01 Kieut\nability, Isben, whose avowed theory\nIs that marriages are more content-\ned and satisfactory where the ele-\nment of Ideal love Is left out. It is\nan honest source of pride to Ameri-\ncan that there Is a larger proportion\nof love marrlaces In this country\nthan elsewhere; this arising partly\nfrom the fact that the comparative\nnewness of our civilization leaves\nyoung people a little- freer than\nwhero a more fixed social order prer\nvails. A curious picture of the point\nof view largely recognized In Eng-\nland may be found In a capital Eng-\nlish story, called "Mr Smith," by\nMrs. Walford, In which the hero is a\nmodest man of middle age, as unim-\npressive In appearance as In name,\nwho buys n homo In an English\ncountry town whero a family consist-\n of a mother and four or five\ndaughters, goe3 systematically to\nwork to entrap him ns a husband.\nThe remarkable fact Is not so much\nin the story Itself as in the apparent\nuttni. unpnnsolniisness. both of the\nauthor and the English critics, that\nthere was anything unusual or de-\ngrading In the demeanor of this fam-\nily. I once had an opportunity of\nstudying tho same thing nearer, in\ntho case of a young Englishman,\nwhom I knew Intimately, In one of\nthe chief American watering places.\nHe was an Oxford man, highly edu-\ncated and of great promlso, ho had\ntho highest standard In all respects\nbut one that ho scorned to tlunK it\na perfectly legitimate thing to look\nout for a rich American wife, and\nhad tho candor to frankly say so. It\nwas this frankness of speech which\nspoiled his purpose. Ho actually bo -ca -
017c0497aa7f4b8ffadbad546e3fde5b THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.943989039415 29.949932 -90.070116 7Ietltion if Oficers.- On Wednesday night this\ncompany be:d their annual election, and chose the\nfollowing list: President, Geo. Delamore:* seo-\nretary, C. F. Seemann; treasurer, M. E. (;arvey ;\nforeman. D . Blumbrecht; first assistant foreman,\nJno. Hynes: second assistant foreman, Jos. Lane.\nDelegates to the Firemen's Charitable Assooia-\ntion: *(eo. Delamore, Jan. May, M. E. Garvey.\nSubstitute delegates: Joe. I.age, D. 81ambrchbt,\nF. Warren. Finance committee: D. Slumbrecht,\nJoo. May, H. Geers. *Re-elected.\nYIE•TRDAY, Fon THs FIrasTTIMI,the maps and\nplans for the portion of the New Orleans, Mobile\nand Chattanooga Railroad to be constructed be-\ntween this city and Moble were exhibited at the\noffice of the company, in Gallier Court, for the\nbenefit of those who may desire to make propo-\nsals for contracts prior to the 20th prox. Iestirous\nof giving the public some information relative to\nthis long talked of enterprise, the reporter for the\nCasorariw was among the visitors, and gained\nmuch interesting information concerning the road.\n map sixteen feet long, representing the New\nOrleans division of the road, (i. e ., from here to\nMobile.) and drawn upon a scale of 4000 feet to\nthe inch, is exhibited, and affords in one glance a\ncomprehensive view of the region lying between\nthe two points, includg the marshes, the Itigo-\nlets, the asatring place villages, the oyster and\nsand banks, and the piny woods beyond Pseca-\ngoula, where turpentine orchards do abound.\nlIv a bee line Mobile las disteant Irom na 132\nmle--by the propose, d line of the road 1;d miles,\nmtna-uring from the loot of St. Joseph street to\nDauophine Wsy. From this city to the Rigolets,\nan unbankmentabout six feet high will be thrown\nup by dredging machines for the track, the exca\nvation forming upon one side of the track, a canal\nuseful for dannage, sad which will be about\ntwenty five feet wide. The company have, we\nlearn, e belt of about two hunded feet in widt
08f217f82d41f961bdea378531637836 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1892.4030054328578 41.258732 -95.937873 iiiit i .:m un in i.im; ni.iiu y oi iin.nrti b\ngreat work of art.\nWhy, oh, why are there so many\nsuperfluous people in tho world? If the\nground would only swallow thorn up!\nTliero in tho corner sat a verv old fel\nlow, etrango to say. Ho hail fixed his\neyes on tho entrance as if ho wore ox\ntiecting some ono, A alow of exnect\nancy shone in his eyes. As yet ho had\nnot even glanced at tho iiaintiiiu. to\nwhich ho had turned his back, and he\nhimself looked like an artist or some\nthing of tho sort, thought Klsie.\nMinute after minuto passed by, and\none quarter of an hour after another,\nbut tlio expected one camo not.\nThe visitors in tho art gallery came\nand wont iiko the pictures in a kaleid-\noscope; only Klsio and "odd fo-\nllow" did not move.\nKlsio would havo gone long before.\nbut sho was full of curiosity to sen\nwhom tlio stranger awaited. Jielook-o- d\nas if life and death depended upon\nthis expectation. Klsie, too, hung her\ndear little head despairingly. Him was\nbitterly disappointed. Ho she had in\nvain felt feverish all that forenoon,\nhad not eaten a bit of luncheon. In\nvain sho had spent, two long hours up-\non hor toilet, and had told hor sister\na falsehood about a friend's sudden\nillness. And now all terrible doubts\nas to love and sincerity camo back to\nhor. Alas! how desolate this world\nand how insipid was life!\nHuddurily sdo noticed that she rnd\nthe stranger remained alono all t he\not her visitors had left, Hho had just\ndrawn the letter from her pocket to\nd
33af1dee9b68c35424c7102d881b2121 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.382191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 'I'm Sgnuniu Lonx Exammox..\nSaturday lut we boarded the train at\n,li*.foot of Elevmth street, to visit our\n«i iter dtyof Steuben vi lie. Hiring arrived\nihere we dropped In on mine boat, Rom\nMosagrove, who greeted us with hla usual\npleasant nolle, and thenlte strolled aero*\nthe street to (lie Court House building, in\nwhich the Steubenvilllana are holding\ntheir Loan Exhibition. We mounted one\npair ol stairs to the seoond floor, on which\naro located the China, and Glass depart-\nmerit, the Avairy, containing birds irotn\nall climes, the Cnlnwe department, the\nQuriosity department and the Main Hail, j\nIn which is served lunch and refresh-\nmerits. In all Iheae departments the\nimillsg laces of the ladles greeted us.\nand kindly explained and ahowed\nus around until we hardly knew\nwhere we were. Kelt we started\nlor the third floor. On this floor local-\ned the Floral department, the Art Gal-\nlery, the.dcparfment of Italics of .the I.ite\nWar, the Home Art department and the\nTextile Fabric department i\nThe attendance at tbo loan Exhi-\nbillon li growing, and the intereet\nincreasing, with each succeeding day.\nThe receipt* for tickets to the close on\nSaturday night footed up (000 85, and net\nreceipt* lor lunch, etc., $j0, making atotal\not $740 85. It would take a number of\nvista to simply make a hasty examination\nof the treasures contained In the various\nrooms, to say nothing of the entertain-\nments, musical and otherwise, offered\neach evening. The conceit given by the\nchoir olSt. l'eter's Church, Saturday night,\nwas most cordially received, and the per-\nformer* wire heartily encored. Last eve-\nning the laughable farce, "Loan of a\nLover," won given by local talent\nThere are several very creditable
0e8e47e6961f8b4d612c6269c613b031 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.2315068176054 29.4246 -98.49514 have been constructed ns Is provided fur\nIn Section II of this ordinance, it shall be\nthe duly of tho City Clerk to correctly\nestimate tbo cost or the construction,\ngrading or tilling up or said sidewalk\nfronting each lot, part of lot or block\nalong tbe line of snld street, nnd be shall\nenter Into a book regularly kept for that\npurposo opposite each lot, part or lot or\nblock, the estimated cost or the con-\nstruction of said sidewalk directly front-\ning each lot, part of lot or block along\nthe line of said street, the correctness of\nwhich estimate shall be npproved by the\nMajor and attested by the Clly Clerk,\nwhose duly it sbnll be to certify the same\nto the Clly Collector for collection.\nShe. 11. Tho Clly Collector shall, \nmediately upon Ihe receipt of the list\nprovided for In Section 10 of this ordi\nnance, notify the owners or agents, If\nknown, or any lot, part of lot or block In\nfront of which sidewalks have been con-\nstructed In accordance wllb SectUn'J or\nthis ordinance to cnll at bis olllce within\ndays from nnil after Ihe llrst publica\ntion or such notice and pay the cost or\nthe construction of snld sidewalk and Ihe\ncost or collection, which notice shall be\npublished In any newspaper In theCltv\norSnn Antonio for W days; snld notlcs\nshall be sufficient, If It conlnln a general\ndescription of the property, nnd he shall.\nupon the application of the owner or\nagent, furnish a statement duly certified\nto, showing the amount due by such\nowner or agent.
955b5e61e0b056c125806d55088629f8 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.760273940893 40.618676 -80.577293 WAGES FOR THOSE ON RELIEF ROLLS\n''THERE is something seriously wrong' when im-\nportant legislation is jammed through under\nstop-watch control and against the protests of\nthose concerned. For seven years unemployment\nrolls have not fallen below 7 millions of persons\nand the reserves of those on relief have steadily\ndiminished. Employment in private industry and\nin jobs that may be regarded as normal, is not\navailable. Our government has tried to meet the\nproblem by providing work for as many as pos­\nsible but we gave it the name of relief work there­\nby creating opportunities for difficulties. So long\nas the prevailing rate of wages principle governed\npayments for such employment, there was the\nleast possible disturbance to prevailing standards\nin industry and in geographical districts. Flexible\nprevailing rates and standards were geared with\nprivate industries so as not to hinder recovery or\nundermine labor standards unnecessarily.\nThe 15)39 Relief Act, however, attempts to fix\nwages 011 relief work by legislative fiat. The law\ndirected the Federal Hoard to fix a monthly earn­\ning schedule for all persons employed on work\nprojects financed by relief funds which would not\nsubstantially current "national average\nlabor costs per person of the Works Progress Ad­\nministration. Each person employed is required\nto work 130 hours per month for earnings equal\nto the present national average for his classifica­\ntion. Applying this formula the Works Progress\nAdministration fixed wages for its two million\ntwo hundred thousand employes (2,200,000). The\nformula fixes a national wage with 5 wage classifi­\ncations varying by 3 geographic regions and A\ntypes of counties. The wage classifications are:\nskilled, intermediate, unskilled, technical and pro­\nfessional labor. The three regions are roughly\nthe northeastern states; the central and western;\nand the Old South. Types of counties vary from\nthose in which no town has a population of 5,000\nto those in which the largest city is over 100,000.\n"Under the prevailing rate principle the hours\nof work per individual were llexible, though in­\ncome earnings were restricted. This formula pre­\nserved standards of payment. Standards deter­\nmining income are one of the most valuabU\npossessions workers have. Undermining stand­\nards means destroying the results of years of\nstruggle and achievement. It undermines morale,\nfor standards are the achievement of life en­\ndeavor.
0cc04a2b627dfd7da5a834f1057f1226 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.9112021541691 43.82915 -115.834394 The Btate Department is disposed to\nhav e more respect for Venezuelas posi­\ntion i n the cnee of refugee Mijares since\nthe announcement by Senator Pietrie\nthat General Crespo intended to hold\nthe consignees of the Philadelphia re­\nsponsible for her Captains refusal to\nsurrender Mijares. It is clear to the of­\nficials th a t the Venexuelan au thorities\nhave a good case, otherwise they would\nhe disposed to allow the matter to drop.\nAn official admitted that the Venezuelan\nauthorities would have a perfect right to\narrest and punish the consignees of the\nPhiladelphia if it should transpire that\nM jares was a criminal under the com­\nmon law. The department heretofore\nhas figured from the assumption that\nMinister Scruggs had prim a-facie evi­\ndence th at he was a political refugee,\nand th a t the charge of cattle-stealing\nwas simply tru m ped up to get him off\nthe steamer. In this light he would un­\ndoubtedly be upheld by this government,\nand the arrest of the consignees would\nprobably result in a protest.\nSecretary Fost er and those t reasu ry of­\nficials who have intimate knowledge of\nthe receipts and expenditures of the\ngovernment are giving much thought\nand attention to the Bubject of a prob­\nable deficiency in tiie rev ues for the\nn ext fiscal year. This qu es tion comeB\nup naturally in considering what the\nprobable reve nue of the govern men t will\nbe, so that the Secretary may submit to\nCongress, as lie is by law r eq ui red to do,\nthe amount of revenue expected. The\nestimate of the Secretary of the Treasury\nmust be taken for their action as a guide\nby CongresB upon their appropriation\nbills. In arriving at this estimate, the\naverage receipts from cus to m , internal\nrevenu e am i i ncid ental sources of reve­\nnue iiave to be taken into consideration.\nTiie receipts from internal revenue will,\nit is expected, continue to naturally in\ncrease with the growth and population,\nas no legislation has been passed to af­\nfect it. But it is not so with customs\nduties. With no disturbing element to\naffect them, they would be stable, sul>\nject only to the law of supply and de­\nmand and the condition of the money\nmarket, but with a new administration\ncoming int o power, ex pected to lower\nduties on a number of articles and to\nput others on the free list, a state of un­\ncertainty is created that prevents a close\nestimate of tiie revenues from tiie tariff\ndut i es collected.
054c22356d53094eaca1979084212781 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.4193988754807 38.894955 -77.036646 London, June 1. The match between\nKid Lavigne and Dick Burge. the light-\nweight champion of England, was rought\ntonight at the National Sporting Club and\nresulted in a victory Tor Lavigne iu the\nseventeenth round.\nIn the tirst round Lavigne made a dash\nat his opponent and landed heavily on\nhis body. Be tried the same tactics the\nsecond time, but Burge dodged and La-\nvigne went headlong against a ost. strik\nins his race and injuiing himself badly.\nTin", however, did not prevent him from\nforcing the fighting.\nlie rushed again at Burge and rapidly\nlanded several blows on his bedj. Burge\nwas driven against the rope. 1 hereafter\nhe traveled all over the ring, meeting\nseveral rushes in good stjie, but was kept\nvery buy in deiending himself.\nIn the second round Lavigne resinned his\nrushing, but Burgc held him orr and d dged\ndeverly. Then both became cautious and\nneither did any scoring for some lime.\nThen Burge lauded heavily with his right\nand left on Lavigne's eve and mouth, the\nlatter responding heavy bodj blows\nASSUMED THE OFFENSIVE.\nIn the third Burge assumed the orrcnsive\nand landed several times on Lavigne's\niao. but his blows lacked force, ami did\nne harm. Then Lavigne began to again\ncut out the work, and punished Burge\nseverely on the chest and other parts of\nthe body. He then aimed a blow at Barge's\nhead, but missed him, and his sparring then\nbecame wild, and he received a couple of\nblows in the face.\nThere was a series of good rallies in\nthe fourth round which ended in Hurge's\nfavor. The supporters of the English\nchampion were now jubilant at the pros-\npects of their favorite.\nIn the firth round burgc was cautioned\nfor holding to Lavigne. Fast righting fol-\nlowed und llurge was still improving.\nIn the sith round Lavigne forced the\nfighting, pressing his rival to the ropes\nand putting iu several heavy body blows.\nIn the seventh and eighth rounds neither\nman had much advantage.\nBurge came up very cool in the nirth\nround nnd repeatedly Jabbed his opponent\nseverely.
164f0ac71efd7e5fc00809b12d872795 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 The record of prisoners sent to th\nState prison and penltontlsiy' by the Cit\nJndgo Bedford, during the present montl\nIs unequalled. Fifty-nine were sent t\nthe State prison for burglary and gran\nlarceny for an aggregate of three hundre\nand three years, and nineteen were sen\nto tho penitentiary for an aggregate ten\nof sixty-eight ycare.\nThomas Donahue who was shot, as h\nalleges, by John J. Scannell, Is recovering\nfrom the clfects of his wounds. He wa\nable to sit up yesterday, and though hi\nphysicians iinvo not extractoil the milt\nthey express every hope ot his recovorj\nDonahue is certain that1'Scannell she\nhim. Scannell Is still at largo.\nThe Frcnch gunboats Bouquet, Cap!\nFraucquet, and the Lo Banehe, Captaii\nTreville, are lying off the Battery, block\nadlng tho Hamburg and Bremen stcamert\nBoth steamers are screw propellers, mak\ningfromten to fourteen knots au'lioui\nunder a full head of steam. Tho orma\nments are heavy four pound howitzer\nand one rifled sixty-pound deck gun caoli\nTlie German steamer Frankfort, \nwas to have sailed yesterday did ndt do si\nIn consequence of the Frcnch gunboats.\nFive cents will bo tho /aro on the cit;\nrailways afternext Monday. The govern\nment tax of one-eighth per cent on tbi\nfare expires by limitation on that day, an<\nthe companies have concluded to exac\nsix cents no longer. Tho President o\nthe Third Avenue Railroad having beei\nInterviewed on tho subject, testifies tha\nthe company will lose nine hundred dol\nlars per diem by the reduction, am\ntho loss can only be met by cut\nting down the wages of th\nemployes. An attempt will first be made\nhowever, to get reliet Irom the Legisia\nture. Horrible revelations continue t\ncome up from Jersey Olty about the man\nufacture of sausages. It is now certaii\nthat dogs, cats, horses and diseasod hog\naro chopped up for saussage meitt In th\nlarge establishments In that suburb. Jus\ntieeBeriney has issued'orders forth\narrest of the perpetrators of these out\nrnges, and the names and particulars ari\nforthcoming.
1602f0232414a6a8c09b229d9b3ec2c8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.1273972285642 40.063962 -80.720915 Stau.strn, Va , February 15..The trial\nof George Amiss for the murder of John J.\nBurner was commenced in the Hustings\nCourt to day. A jury was empaneled. Tho\ncourt room was jammed. The only witness\nexamined was Lelia I .ester, the keeper of\nthe houfe in which the tragedy occurred.\nShe testified that Amiss went into ths room\nwhere Hurnor was, kicking the door open;\nthat a sen III* ensued, and that Fanny\nLewis, the woman w ho wa* in the room,\nthrew herself lietwecn the combatants ami\nbegged Amiss to desist. Witness saw a\npistol, hut could not tell which of the men\nhad it. Burner told Amies to let him\nalone and he would go away. Amies pushed\nthe woman across the bed, saying, "You\nhave caused this." Burner then came out\nof the room and told witness he was shot\nin the bowels. Witness helped Burner to\nthe hotel. Just about the close of the\ntestimony an extraordinary scene\noccurred in the court room. Mr. White,\nsenior counsel for the defence, was stand¬\ning on the outside of the railing, and his\nassociate, < ieneral Skeen, was seated near\nhim. The judge suggested that counsel\nshould be inside of the enclosure, and Mr.\nWhite slated tlinl owing to deafness he was\nunable to hear from his chair. The Judge\ntold him to remain where lie was, and Mr.\nKchols, prosecuting attorney, said, in an\nundertone, "I suppose General Skecn is\nalso deaf." Mr. White asked him to repeat\nthe remark, which Mr. Kchols did. Mr.\nWhite, in a very excited manner, declared\nthat he would have nothing more to do\nwith the case, grasped his hat and left the\ncourt room. Several sharp passages had\noccurred between the counsel before, but\nexplanations w< re made and the dill*ereiicc\nwhs settled. The court adjourned until to¬\nmorrow, when, it is thought, Mr. White\nwill aguin appear.
018d33cce636276d8e2662fa5345bedb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.23698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 interesting to the parent# and those in\nsted in "our school. Friday's exercise,\nbe the most interesting.\ninday about 1 o'clock burglars enterei\nstore of Joseph Medill and carried awn;\ndollars i» change, and underwear of dii\nnt kinds and tobacco and cigars to thi\nHint of thirty or forty dollars.\n)hn Nichols, who lives on Fifth street\n. xt 11 o'clock 8unday night, heard a noisi\ner his house, and upon examinatiot\nid a man then*,whom )je ordered off. Th.\n>w ran for a short distance, then, druwin]\nvolver, turned and commenced firing a\nn, several shots being fired without effect\nman who did the shooting is describee!\neing a big man with light pants. \\\\\\\nider if it was the same man who assaultet\nco.orcd men on Hammond street, oi\nr way church, and when they un\nook to get out of his way drew his revoj\nand ordered them to stop. We say to tha\nthat ho had better be a little careful\nhe fall into the huuds of the officers, am\nenuired to contribute to the corporatioi\nti or devote a few weeks to the stone pile\nlie Democrats held a convention in tlx\nn Ilali in Bridgeport yesterday after\nn, and put in nomination the foliowinj\n: e rs : For Trustees? John Greer, a Repub\nn, of Martin's Ferry, John I'. Mitchel\nSamuel Wilson} Clerk, Thomas Irwin,)\nnor Oreenbacker, of Martin's Ferry\nisurer, Rockwell Mitchell, a "sirnor\ne" Democrat; Assessors, Levi Jones\nluruus rerry.anu \\ym, iTunIer, of Bridge\nt; Constable, Robert Hanson, of Martin*:\nryi und endorsed Mr. Joseph McCou\nghy, a
1c9dce9aefaab167206c2809ed264125 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.408469913732 40.063962 -80.720915 It was foand that a mixture\nlitharge, or oxide of lead aad lim\nmade iato a paste with water, faraisbc\na coaveaient means of effecting th\ndyeing rapidly. It was seen that if ha\nwere dan bed with the paste over nl^b\nand secured In an oilskin bag to n\ntain the blabkenlng gas, then ne:\nmorning, on brushing away the pov\nder and pomading, the hair would 1\nfound to be black. I am told that tl\ndiscovery of this mode ol treatmei\nwas uiDuo u_j OKJLUX3 onuau uiiinui\nhorse doctor, whose name has merge\nand been lost io the efflax of tlai\nThis is a pity, seeing that the discover\nis ingenious and does him credit,\nam informed that many of the horses o\nwhich onr household troops aremoun\ned, notwithstanding the immaculai\nbeauty of their lustrous black coats, ai\nvery prone to have tails of less unin\npeachable jet. Wherefore again, I ai\ntold, the practice atil prevails <\ndaubing these defective tails wit\nthe leadpssle above described, an\nthen enveloping them.not In ol\nskin bags, but in green cabbagi\nleaves. Whether applied to skin <\nhorse, or manor woman, any lead con\npound is objectionable because of i\npoisonous nature; objectionable in tl\nhighest degree, however, in propo\ntlon as the seat of its application\nnearer to the brain. When this lea\nblackening has been produced, \nwhatever modification of the proces\nwhat are its advantages and what i\ndefects, to pronounce in artiatic sens*\nThey are many. The blackness is n<\nof that special tint which belongs 1\nany naturally black hair. It is a heav.\nharsh sort of blackness, neither bege\nting reminiscences of the past nor ha\nmonizing with the skin tints evolvt\nby age. The result is a violation\nnature, hateful and odious. The a:\ncelareartem, that glorious canon, m\nbeing within the artist's reach, he hi\nmissed it. What he has accomplish*\nleaves the poor candidates for youthfi\nappearances a mere disguised old in8\nor woman, a phenomenon to be stare\nat, a butt to be laughed at.\nif the problem of dyeing the ha\nblack Involves the simplest case, at\nif its accomplishment be so difficul\nwhat have we to say about brown tti\nchestnut in all their delicate varietie\nOnly that tho task is more difficu\nstill the result more incomplete. 1\nthe visual appreciation of such peop\nwho are content with a sort of sinot!\nered black as the sufficient represent)\ntlons of browns in all their varietie\nthe effect of ordinary lead dyes used I\nthe particular manner may suffice. \\>\ngenerally find it specified in the dire\ntionB for using black hair dyes th\nmay be caused to impart a brown ti:\nby a little modification of practice.
0e2d2f171b29c79ceb33c76ccfc8a458 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 'tAnd why couldn't you say, like a\nman, you were going to Greenwich \\\nFair when you went out ? It's no use\npour saying that, Mr. Caudle; don't tell\nine that you didn't think of going;\nvou'd made your mind up to it, and\nVon know it. Pretty games you've\nbad, no doubt! I should like to have\nbeen behind you, that's all. A man at\nyour time of life!\n"And I. of course, I never want to go\n3Ut. Oh, no! I inav stav at hnine\nwith tbe cat. You couldn't think of\n:aking your wife and children, like any\nDther decent man to a Fair. Oh no;\nyou never care to be seen with us. I'm\nsure, many people don't know your\ntnarried at" all; bow can ibey? Your\nwife's never seen with you. Oh no;\nanybody but those belonging to you!\n"Greenwich Fair, indeed! Yes.and\n3f course you went up and down the\nhill, running and racing with nobody\ntnows who. Don't tell T know\nwhat you are when you're out. You\nion't suppose, Mr. Caudle, I've forgot-\n:en that pink bonnet do you? No; I\nwon't hoTd my tongue, and I'm not a\nfoolish woman. It's no matter, sir, if\n:he pink bonnet was fifty years ago.\nit's all the same for that." No: and if I j1\nlive for fifty years to come, I never will\nleave off talking of it. You ought to\nt>e ashamed of yourself, Mr. Caudle,\nHa! few wives would have been what\n['vebeen to you. I only wish my time\nwas to come over again, that's all; I\nwouldn't be the fool I have been.\n"Going to a fair! and I suppose you\nlad your fortune told by tbe gipsies?\nYou'needn't have wasteti your money.\nI'm sure I can tell you jo'ur fortune'if\nyou go on as you do. \\es, the jail will\ni>e your fortune, Mr. Caudle. And it\nwould.be no matter.none at all.if.;\npour wife and children didn't buffer'\nwith you.
2e3746c81bc5004a2fcfa2e5041c1a70 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.4713114437866 42.217817 -85.891125 Peach, principally of tho Crawford variety, all\nthe other trees are grafts of the choicest kinds.\nI can truthfully say that we are just as sure of\na crop of peaches as they are on tho Lake shore\nand I claim 100 per cent", advantage over them\non sales for the reason that our fimt ripeos\nfrom ten days to two weeks earlier, thereby\ngiving Ui a chance to supply the markets before\nthe Lake Shore rush comes on. Another ad-\nvantage is that we are on the Michigan Central\nR. R. halfway between Detroit and Chicago\nand can ship to tuner point twice a day.\nThere aro 1500 Evergreens on the farm, a por-\ntion of which will be large enough to sell this\nFail. A meadow of 10 acres; wheat cn tho\nground that looks well. The location of the\nfarm is beautiful, being but i miles from!\nPaw Paw, over a hard gravel and at which\npoint there is a good depot to ship from. The\nbuildings are all new, La vine: been built but\ntwo years, and well painted. The house is\nwell finished with all tho conveniences intide\nand everything to make it pleasant outside a\nsloping yard in front with nice evergreens to\nmake it beautiful. The buildings at a low\nfieure are worth $2000. There are 8000 feet of\nlumber, mostly pine boards, and 3000 feet cf\nfencing. There are two acres of ground in tip\ntop condition to sot out to peach trees in the\nspring. I will make this offer to any one that\nLavs the place before the first day of May. 1972 i\nI will pat in fiooo worth of tools and stock for\n500. also, furnish peach trees to set on the\ntwo acres of ground that is prepared for that\npurpose. The farm is free from all encum-\nbrances.
0b42bfcd85a9412740b03425d5114105 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.9221311159179 39.745947 -75.546589 years connected witli tlie Jackson and cided to open a ticket office in tho centra\nSharp Company, died at Lis residence No. of tlie city, and accordingly have selected\n1103 Adams street, yesterday morning at H. E. Frist as agent of the company. The\n10 0 clock. Mr. Merrill was born at office will be at, 313 Market street. Tick\nSalem, .Mass., seventy three years ago. ets can be purchased there for Baltimore\nIn the year 1856 he removed from Savin ! and Washington. Information will he\nto Philadelphia, and entered the employ j courteously furnished regarding the fast\nof the car firm of Kimball & Gorton, car ( and vestibule (rains between this and\nbuilders, as an upholsterer. Twenty three those cities. Baggage can be ordered from\nyears ago the firm closed its business and the new office for any point of destination\nMr. Merrill came to this ami entered on tlie B. & (). or its connections Fast\nthe upholstering department of the Jack I express trains now leave the Delaware\nsou and Sharp Company. At that time ! avenue station for Baltimore and Wash\nthe firm's business was so smui) that the j ington at 12.46 . 8.35 and 11.37 a m ami\ndeceased did all the work of upholstering, j 5.38 and 7 4« p. in., daily These Grain s\nlie continued iu charge of that branch | me unsurpassed in their uceommodati ns\nmit» his death. The deceased was highly ; for the travelling public and in addition\nrespected by those with whom ho came in : to tickets, seats and bertha\ncontact, both iu a business and social cured in them irom th\nway. He left a wife to mourn him,\nonly daughter having died about\nyears ago. Drs Krumbaugh of Kenuett
0369a6201063c70d60451ed9b04531b1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.752732208814 58.275556 -134.3925 To the estate of Thomas J. Wilson deceased;\nto L. R . Gillette, administrator of the es¬\ntate of Thomas J. Wilson, deceased, and\ntq, the heirs of Thomas J. Wilson, de¬\nceased, greetings,\nYou are hereby notified that I have ex¬\npended during the years of 1910-1911, On©\nHundred Dollars (>lt!i>), in labor and im¬\nprovements for each of said years upon or\nfor the benefit of the following named lode\nclaims, to-wlt: Red Diamond No. 6 Lode,\nWyoming No. 2 Lode, Red Diamond No. 4\nLode, Red Diamond No. 8 Lode. Golden Shield\nLode, Silver Shield Lode, Nevada Lode, the\nRed Diamond No. 2 Lode, the Golden Shield\nNo. 2 Lode, the Wyoming Lode, the Wyoming\nNo. 3 Lode and Red Diamond No. 1 Lode, sit¬\nuated on the lower end of Douglas Island in\nthe HarrisMining District, Juneau Record¬\ning Precinct, District of Alaska, the amend¬\ned location certificates for the same are\nfound recorded in Book 19 of Lodes in tho\noffice of the Recorder for said precinct, and\nabove named claims are known as the Red\nDiamond Group and the same constitutes a\ngroup of continuous lode mining claims and\nthe annual assessment work above referred\nto consisted in driving a cross-cut tunnel at\nthe bottom of the shaft on the Red\nDiamond No. 3 Lode of the above named\ngroup of claims for the year 1910 and in\ndriving a tunnel upon the Wyoming Lode of\nthe said group of claims for the year 1911;\nthat there was expended during ench of said\nyears the full sum of Twelve Hundred Dol¬\nlars ($1200) for performing the aforemen¬\ntioned improvements and developments of\nthe Red Diamond Group of claims, in order\nto hold said claims under the provisions of\nSection 2824 of the Revised Statutes of U. S.\nand the amendments thereto approved Jan.\n22, 1880, concerning annual labor upon the\nmining claims, being the amount required to\nhold said lode claims for the period ending\non the 81st daj' of December. 1910, and tho\n»lst day of December 1911, and if within 90\ndays after the publication of this notice you\nfail or refuse to contribute the proportion\nof such expenditure as co-claimant, which\namounts in tho aggregate to $266.67, the in¬\nterest of the above named estate in said\nclaims will become the property of the sub¬\nscriber, who is one of the co-owners with\nsaid estate in said claims who has made re¬\nquired expenditures upon said claims as\nprovided for in said sections.\nDated at Juneau, Alaska, September 8, 1912.
138981861cc3035c1d842a7dff464a59 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1857.3657533929477 37.561813 -75.84108 worse than the other, or than any of tho\nmultiform and multiplied misrepresen-\ntations of icy opinions nnd lny words\nwhich have been published during the\nlast, third en years.\nI said, what I have always said, in\nChicago, in Kentucky and in Ohio, that\nif Kansas in a free convention, chosen\nw ithout fraud or force, framed a Repub-\nlican Constitution, Congress was bound\nby every consideration of equality among\nthe States, nnd by every obligation to\npreserve domestic peace, and to guard\nthe Union, to admit her w ith or without\nslavery, ns the Convention might de-\ncide. That the People of the Territo-\nry, in forming a State Constitution, had\nthe same right to determine that ques-\ntion, which the people of Kentucky or\nOhio bad in forming new Constitutions,\nand that no one doubted that any State\nhad t right to abolish, or admit domes\ntic slav,'crv. I to the ground\nwhich 1 had understood that Mr. Gree-\nley of the New York Tribune had taken\nin relation to the matter. I had not\nseen the Tribune, nnd so stated. The\nground I understood to be this: that tho\nIhee Soil party and the opponent-o - f tho\nKansas and Nebraska bill, should plant\nthemselves upon the Constitution fram-\ned by the Topcka Convention, and in\nthe elections about to be held under tho\nlaw authorizing the holding another\nConvention, the Free Soil party shall\nnot vote, but let a slave constitution\npans by default, nnd make the contest in\nCongress upon the application of Kan-\nsas for admission, inasmuch as the\nConstitution has not made it imperative\nupon Congress to admit a new State,\nbut has left it discretionary with the\ngovernment, by the terms employed:\n"Congress shall have the power to ad-\nmit new States into the Union."
13fde992483385e58a9d04a72946022c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.099726744333 39.745947 -75.546589 Special Correspondence Evening (Journal'\nEi.kton, Md.. Feb 3. —Anovel trottiDg\nrac3 of a three-mile heat took place yes­\nterday afternoon on the track of the\nCecil County Agricultural Society for a\npurse of $20, between two borses to road\nwagons, belonging to Tbnmas Magowan\nof Elkton, and James Nandaiue of\nSingerly. Despite the cold and\nthe race brought forth quite a crowd aud\nwas won by Magowan's horse. Time, 15\nminutes and 8 seconds.\nIntelligence has reached Elkton from\nWest Chester, Pa., that W. Smith Camp­\nbell of Fremont, has been acquitted at\nWest Chester of a charge of attempting\nto bnrn a house. The case of the State\nvs Campbell, who in conjunction with\nhis couslD, Frank Campbell, was charged\nwith the burning of a barn belonging to\nMary A Robert?, was continued.\nA corps of nine of the Lan ■\ncaster, Oxford and Foithi r i and the Balt:'-\nm >re aud Ohio railroads, inclndlng the\nassistant of Chief Engineer Douglass, of\ntbe latter road, are at work driving the\nfiual stakes of the proposed route of the\nLancaster, Cecil and Southern railroad,\nwhich ij to connect with tbe Lancaster,\nOxford and Southern at the Maryland\nand Pennsylvania line. The new road\nwill connect with the Baltimore and Ohio\nat Childs and have its terminus at Elk­\nton. It Is said the work of grading the\nroad will be commenced Boon and the\nroad pushed to an early completion.\nThe proposed buildings for the Jacob\nTrmc Manual Schools at Port Deposit\nwill be co nmenced In the spring. The\nwork will he pnt cat by contract, and\nwill be pushed to completion as speedily\nas possible.
116504f089a993e97cad6f6edd3f9782 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.2315068176054 40.063962 -80.720915 Knox, beorinif dato tho 8th day of Juno, Has,\nml recorded In thn Clerk's office of mid Ohio\nlinty In Deed Hook No. M, iwgo 407} excepting\nily m much of mild coal a* was wintered hy mid\ncorjto lUilxn-lK nnd wlfo to Kmmn If. Carter hy\nwd tinted the let dny of January, 1H70, tho raid\nBed belli# n deed of cxchnnKo between tho uld\niiima II. Carter, of tho ono part nnd the mid\neorgo Roberts of the other part, and recorded In\nlid Clerk'* offleo In Deed Hook No. 87, 1«K« 21.\nA ho, all tho coal, way*, easement*, rights mid\nrlvileaes which liy thn *ald la*t menlloncd deed\nexchange Weregrnhtcd hy tho aald Kmma II.\nurtcr to the «nld Oeorae Rol«rt*; thoabore being\nin Mine coal, mineral*, way*, casement*. right*\nml privilege* which i-ontpyed by tho mid\nohert* and wlfo to Iho Crescent Iron Company\nr deed tienring dato the I'ithdnyof July. 1871,\nid recorded In mid clerk'* olTlco In Deed lfcmk\no. AS, |«ko '"W". Kor a more particular and minute\nwt-ripllon of the metes nnd hounds of the premium\n>ro ottered lormlo, tho course of entries, and the\ninractcr i»f other Improvements connected with\nie mine, referenced hereby made to a complete\nntof the mid |ircml*Mriow|KMtod'ln the Clerk's\nnee of Ohio County Court.\nTrrms op Sai.*. .One-fourHi of the purchase\nonoy to lio paid In Cisli on tho day of sale, nnd\nio resliluo of mid purchase money lo lie paid in\nnr otpinl annual Installments, with Interest there-\nfrom tho tiny of mle; the purchaser togive lionds\nIth security, io lie approved by said flpoclal ComImloner*.
355f283e23c49661c3224634f21a635a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.9931506532216 40.063962 -80.720915 To report these proceedings ''in fall"\nmeans, we presume, to report verbatim\nthe debates In both houses of the Legisla-\nture und Convention, and the arguments\nin Court, with everything .else just ns it\ntranspires. It takes "Hrst-class steno-\ngraphers" to do such work, and thero are\nnot many in the country equal toll. Wo\nhave seen (or rather heard) the House of\nDelegates dons much talking, many a\nilay, as the Jlouso of Representatives\ndoes in the same time, It is the amount\nof talk, not the magnitudo of the\nbody that makes the work of\nthe reporters. Five short hand renters\nare constantly employed in the House of\nRepresentatives, and when debate is pro-\nlonged they have amanuenses to help\nthem out. At this rato the Daily, for its\nthree deliberative bodies, would need\nabout fifteen "lirst-class stenographers,"\nand three or four more for court. This\nis assuming that the report of each day's\nproceedings is to apj>car next morning.\nNo "first-class stenographer" will do such\nwork this for less than ten dollars u\nday, for ordinary hours; hut under such a\nheavy demand the price would likely be\nmuch higher. Indeed, "Hrst-class" re-\nporters'areable to command pretty nearly\ntheir own prices; they are so scarce. The\n(Unto reporters, who arc paid by the\nquantity, often cam several times ten\ndollars a day. Hut suppose the Daily\ncould engage its men at the lowest rate,\nit could hardly employ such a corps as it\nwill need for less than #'200 a day. To\nsetup such a report for the next morning\nwould require somej 50 or 00 composi-\ntors, and to print it all would 111! each\nday a dozen or lliteen sheets liko the lhtily.\nTo carry on such work as this would re-\nquire an immense printing establishment,\nworth not much less than $100,000. The\ndaily bills for composition could hardly\nfall below $1100.making daily expenses\nat least $500 for composition and report-\ning, saying nothing of pajter, press work,\nwear and tear of materials, «fcc.
1b82a40f27b1c8a4bb9a4e22f8607e47 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1900.719178050482 39.623709 -77.41082 night were falling fast" as we returned to the\ntown hut we took time to visit the Univer-\nsity and see the class rooms and the lecture\nand assembly ball, We also saw the prison\nwhere refractory students are kept. The\nwalls are decorated with numerous drawings\nm the production of which the youths while\naway the time spent in durance vile. There\nwas a young man imprisoned whom we called\nto see; he was apparently enjoying himself\nvery much, smoking and reading. One of\nthe peculiar features of this university Is the\npractice of duelling which obtains here.\nThe code only allows a blow with the broad\nblade ol the sword which is sharp at the\nend, and as the rest ol the body is protected,\nthe fare hears the brunt of the attack. Con-\nsequently one secs a number of with\nscarred faces in this part of Germany.\nOn Saturday morning we started for Weis-\nbadeu. Reaching Mayence we found it gaily\ndecorated with bunting and flags and were\ntold by an attendant at the station that we\nhad arrived at a fortunate hour aa “our\nEmperor” was there and would pass over a\nbridge near by in half an hour. Notwith-\nstanding our desire to see Wilhelm we were\nobliged to forego the pleasure in order to\nreach W. on time. We found it quite a\nwatering place and a great many people of\nall nationalities were there in pursuit of\npleasure and health. In the afternoon wc\nvisited a mineral spring which seemed to be\nboiling and looked like lemonade. I tasted\na glass but as I was "on pleasure beut" ami\nnot seeking health, I passed it. There was
550fd60cdeeae98c731aba097f149985 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.2726027080162 39.745947 -75.546589 To the Members of City Council.\nDear Sir«: I hand you herewith\na copy of the opinion delivered on\n7th instant by the court in the\nease of tho City vs. Nathan Barsky.\nThis case arose oiit of the at­\ntempt on the part of the assessor\nand collector for the Northern Dis­\ntrict to collect the taxe» due on a\npiece of property on\navenue east of Jackson street. No\ntaxes have been paid on this prop­\nerty since 1002, and there arc\neleven years tax»-» * now due,\namounting to $130.10 . The prop\nerty was assessed to George M. Gal­\nlagher and to George M. Galla­\ngher estate from 1003 to 1000,\ninclusive, and from 1010 to 1013,\ninclusive, it was assessed to Na­\nthan Barsky. it appears from the\nrecord that Barsky deeded this\nproperty some months ago to Julia\nA. K . Adair, but that deed was not\nplaced on record after these\nproceedings were begun.\nI prepared the certificate that\nthat was made by tlie assessor ami\ncollaetor in this ease, under Sec­\ntion 0i of the eity charter,\nlatter part of that section provides\nthat on the first Saturday in Sep­\ntember of each year the assessor j\nand collector shall advertise in two\nof the daily newspapers in this city\nthe name» and a brief description\nof all the property on which the\ntax for the preceding year has not 1 I)\nbeen paid, and shall within two 1 AT\nweeks thereafter make a certificate\nand deliver it to the city solicitor,\nw ho shall file it in the Court House\nand proceed to sell the\norder that the tax may bo col­\nlected. In the\nease it was not alleged that th©\nproperty had been so advertised.\nMy reason for not doing this was\nto ascertain from tlie court whether\n»neb advertisement
114098926e7d20d38f656837bb1c410c WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.132876680619 40.827279 -83.281309 But let us look again. Was it not\nfor this tariff you would have saved\nthe 83,000,000 paid on iron, not to\nthe Government, but to the "Iron\nMaster." You would have saved the\n85,000,000 lost on your wheat,mak-in- g\nin all 88,000,000 saved, which\nadded to vour 82,000,000 would\nmake 810,000,000 kept in Ohio, in\nstead of the 82,000,000 !\nWould not that be worth some-\nthing to us as a state and a people ?\nBut says the Protectionist, "with\nout a tariff, hign tariff, how can we\nraise Revenue and pay our great\ndebt?" I have already said that\ngovernment gets no revenue from\nthe 83,200,000 tariff on iron. How\nis this i why, dear reader, duty, or\ntarift.is only paid on goods brought\nfrom other countries into this. \nmade in the United States costs no\nmore to make with than it doe3\nwithout a tariff. But with the tariff,\nat 820 per ton or iron, enables the\niron Master to add just that much\nmore to his former prices, which,\nwith the former profits go, directly,\ninto his pockets !\nNow let us see about this. Eng\nland can make a ton of iron say for\n20 00, add freight, handling &c. to\nand at New York 5 00,makes it cost\nat N. Y. 25 00, now add the tariff\nEngland must pay, 7 00 per ton and\nthe cost of her pig iron to Ameri\ncans is 33 00 per ton.\nAn Iron Master in Tennessee re\nports to Mr. Wells, Commissioner\nof Internal Revenue, that he can\nmake pig-
0914a97e327f1f1575aa5e2a3fb124b9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.0041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 But tho Republicans realize thatevon\nthon a very great deal will be nocesaary\nto bo dono boforoaflairs will be righted\nagain. They aro oxpocting to bo obliged\nto ro-open tho tarit! question to a cor-\ntain extent. Thia will grow out of tho\ndiscussion rospecting bond aaloa and\ntho maintaining of tho gold resorvo in\ntho troaaury. Tho Republican chargo\nis that bonds aro being sold to supply a\ndeficieucy croatod, first, by tho throat\nof, und thou by tho operation of, tho\nnow taritl law. Tho troublo, theroforo,\nr-s they boo it, is with tho tariff law,\nwhich fails to supply the govornmont\nwith sufficient rovonuo to pay its run¬\nning oxponsos. How shall this bo mot?\nUpon what now article shall a duty bo\nimposed? Or upon what articles now\nbearing u duty shall the raio of that\nduty bo incruasod ? Thoso are tho ques¬\ntions likoly to recoivo attention first at\ntho hands of tho now CongrosB.\nThen will como tho groat and difficult\nquestion. What changes aro nocoaaary\nin tho curroncy lawa? Tho Ropublicau\nlenders noithor undervalue this \nnor expect to loavo it unsettled. They\naro dividod on it now, and aro advisod\nof tho nocoasity of gottiug togothor. In¬\nformal conforoncns aro alroady in pro¬\ngress. Tho oast wants a free aud fair\noxprossion from tho wont, and tho wouL\nasks tho same at tho handa of tho oast,\n¦tho quostion on the ono hand h, how\nfar do tho froo coinage mon roally ox-\npoet to go? On tho othor liand, tho\nquestion is, how much will tho existing\npowers bonofit by logislativo action?\nJ.ho tm> wings of tho party, It is in¬\nsisted, aro roally not ao far apart us\nthoy appoar to bo, and may bo brought\ntogothor by good gonoralship. The\ngroat liopo of succoss Jios in tho claim\nthat whatovor plau ia finally agrond\nupon will bo cordially upprovod and as¬\nsisted by tho huftinoss intoroats at large,\nwhich havo withhold thoir sympathy\nfrom tho Democracy bocause of its ox-\ntromo nltitudo nn to silver. As buainoss\nIs ho much involved, tho co-oporation of\nbusings intoroBta is oxpootod to bo un\nimportant factor in tho light.
6d7c598f361d12c2b9681da505f69b7c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5657533929477 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacv established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian wbnse preparatory study fits him for all the\nduties he must fulfill; vet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbeat in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be par-\nTicri-AR in selecting liis physician, as it is a lament-\nable vet incontrovertible fact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nby the best syphilographers, that the study and man-\nagement of these complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would hecompetent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, conionlv one system of treat-\nment. in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used by thesypli\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising glass, as nine-tenths ot them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medicalknowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Peter\nFunk “institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks tliau citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Pr. .1 . C. YOUNG\nwould sny that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 751 Clay street, opposite the Plaza.\nHonrsfrom 9a. m..to3P. M.
2689c5b7ac484010862ade8e05f9f7d2 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.7438355847285 37.451159 -86.90916 The necessity of a popular medium for th\nrepresentation of the productions of our great\nartists has always been recognized, and many\nattempts have been made to meet the want\nThe successive failures which have so invariably\nfollowed each attempt in this country to estab-\nlish an art journal, did not prove the Indiffee\nenoe of tho people of America to the claims of\nmgn art. bo soon aa a proper appreciation or\nlha want and an ability to meet it were shown,\nthe publis at ones rallied with enthusiasm tt\nits support, and the rcult wa a rrtat artistla\nand commercial triumph THE AI.DINE.\nIts Amine wnue issued witn all or ma regu-\nlarity, has none of the temporary or timely in-\nterests ebaraeteristie of ordinary periodicals.\nit is an elegant miscellany or pure, light, ana\ngraceful literatur, and a collection of pictures.\nma rorcsfc vuuccuoa vt arusiie smiii, in viae\nand white. Although each succeeding number\naffords a fresh pleasure to its friends, the real\nvalue and beauty ol The Aldina will be mi st\nappreciated after it Is bound up at the close if\ntbeyear. While other publications may claim\nsuperior cheapness, as compared with rivals f\na similar class. The Aldine is a unique aail\noriginal conception alone and nnapptoached\nabsolutely without competition in price or\ncharacter. The possessor of a complete vol\nnme cannot duplicate the quantity of' pa-\nper and engravings In any other shape or num-\nber of volumes, for ten timet lit eott; and 'In,\nthere it tie ekromn, letiiet!\nThe national featnre ot The Aid ne must be\ntaken in no narrow sense. True art is cosmo-\npolitan. While The Aldina is a strietly Amerl-ra - n\ninstitution, it does not confine itself to the\npeproductien of native art. Its mission is tn\ncultivate a broad and appreciative art taste, on\nthat will discriminate on grounds of intriosia\nmerit. Thus, while plesdingbefore the patrons\nof The Aldine, as a leading characteristic, tha\nprodue'ions of tha most noted American artists,\nattention will always be given to specimens\nfrom foreign masters, giving subscribers all tha\npleasure and instruction obtainable from home\nor foreign sources.\nThe artistic Illustration or American rcecery,\noriginal with The Aldine is an important fea-\nture, and its magnificent plates are of a sita\nmore appropriate to the satisfactory treatment\nofdetails than can be afforded by any inferior\npage. The judicious interspersion of landscape,\nmarine, figure and animal subjects, sustain an\nunabated interest, impossible where tae scope\nof the work confines tha artist too closely to a\nsingle style or subject. The literature of Tb\nAldine is a light and graceful accompaniment,\nworthy of the artistic features, with only so eh\nteehnieal disqutriiions as do not interfere with\nthe popular Interest of the work.
1155c4f70dde79a52fc8d51bcc723bcb THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.2254098044425 40.832421 -115.763123 The tax levy in White Pine county\n(or the present year U ¥3.45 oa the $100\nvaluation . satne as last year.\nIn the hieroglyphical language of the\ntramp, the aign of a I on a gate-post,\nsiguities danger to the fraternity and no\ngrub at that place.\nAgent Brooks of the Central Pacific\nrecieved notice here to-day that the\nKurtk.i & Palisade road is now again\nopen for business.\nThe Appeal says the North Canton\nmine bu recently been jumped by Vir¬\nginia City miners, and that eJforts to\neject them will soon be made.\nThe thrill of satisfaction and relief\nwill electrify the American Nation _>o\nlearn that liisiuark haa invited Sargent\nto dine with liiiu and tbut the latter baa\naccepted the invitation.\nThousands of shoal water C»h were\nfrozen up in Washoe lake daring the\nWinter, uuil the ice enclosing them bur-\ning thawed, they now lay in piles, \ncomposing along the shores.\nJust received and for mile cheap for.\ncash at the Po6tOlftcc News Stand: Ada¬\nmantine base-bulls, clubs of the same,\nglosa-cyes, wax-fingers, bridges for brok¬\nen noses, plaster* for burked shins, etc.,\netc. Call and examine before purchas¬\ning elsewhere.\nIt is a remarkable fact, say* the Wood¬\nland Iiemocrat, that although wages\nhave gone dowu to 05 tents u day in the\ncoal regions, the pi ire of the coal is still\nkept up to the regulation staudard. It\nbrings us high u price now ns it did wheu\nwages were at $1 75 j>er day.\nAl>out 150 miles north of Missoula,\nMontana, a region lias been discovered\nby an exploring party in which are twen¬\nty-two cascades over 500 feet in bight,\nand a true glacier with a mile of front¬\nage uud 500 fett fall. It is said |o.be a\nmore wonderful region than the Yellow¬\nstone.
0576b8ff71718139768276c4bd83daa3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.3794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 Coughlln, of Homarrllle, KM, la an remark- yt ill\nable that we beg to aik (or tha att«>tion ef\nour reader*. He aays: "In Iba fall of 1870 )\nwaa taken with avloleut bleedlnguf the lungs, p\nfollowed by a severe cough. 1 aoon begin to L\nloom my appetite and Saab. I waa ao weak\natone tlmettiatl could not leavamy bed. Ia\ntha rammer of 18771 waa admitted to the City FOB\nHoapltal. While there the doctora aald I had «|l\na hole In my left lung aa big as a half dollar, Jr.\nI expended over a hundred dollara In doctora wllt\nand medicines. 1 was ao far gone at one time ami\narmwrt went around that I waa dead. 1 tare thxl\nup hop*, but a friend told me of Dr. William JJ""\nHall's Balaam for the Lunga. I laughed \nmr friends, thinking Uiat my caae waa incur- lu)ei\nable, but I got a bottle to satisfy tliem, when\nto raj surprise and gratification I commenced\nto feel batter. My liope, once dead, began to ..\nrevive, and to-day 1 feel In better aplrlta thin CQ'\nI hare for tha past three years. 2,\n"I wrlta this hoping you will publish II.\nao that every one Inflicted with Diseased rin\nLungs will be Induced to take Dr. Wm. Hall's JL I\nBalaam for the Lungs, and be convinced that Aitdt\nConsumption cab be cured. I have taken two !lil\nhnlllaa ml r»n nmltlVfllr MT thlt It hill\ndone mora good tCan ill tna other niedlclnre BE\n1 ban taken dcoe uir alokhem Mr cough »i\nhu Inioet entirely disappeared lind 1 (lull >-« "\neoon beable to go to werk." Bold bjdrug-
14f13d72c7201175006b251480241568 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.3767122970573 39.261561 -121.016059 You are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the complaint ol S. H . H1KEMAN, filed against\nyou. within ten days from the service of this writ,\nif served on you in'this county, and within twenty\ndays if served on you in this District and out of this\ncounty, and within forty days if served on you in\nthis State and out of this District, in an action com\ninenced on the 18th day of April, a. n . lHtil, in\nsaid Court to obtain a decree ot this ttourt lor the\nforecloaure of a certain mortgage, bearing date the\n12th day ofOotnber A. D. 1850 , executed by the said\ndefendant to plaintiff, and for the sale ot the premi-\nses therein, and in aatd complaint particularly men-\ntinned and described and the application of the mon-\neys arising from such sale to the payment ol the\namount due on four certain promissory notes set\nforth in said complaint, made and delivered to said\nplaintiff by the defendant bearing even date with\nsaid mortgage and thereby intended to be secured,\nto wit: The sum of $1,500, with interest thereon\n the 12th dav of October a. n . 185P. at the rat.\nof two per cent, per month till paid ; ai.d if any defi-\nciency shall remain after applying all of said moneys\nproperly so applicable thereto, then that Plaintiff\nmay have execution therefor against the said defend-\nant, alao that said defendant and all and every per\nson claiming through or under defendant subsequent-\nlv to the dale of plaintiff's mortgage and the com-\nmencement of this action, may be barred and fore-\nclosed of all right, claim, lien and equity of redcmp\ntion In and to the said mortgaged premises, or any\npart theieof, and for such other and further relief,\nor both, in the premises as may he just and equita-\nble. And you are hereby notified tlial if y ou tail to\nanswer said complaint as herein directed, plaintiff\nwill take judgment against you therefor by default,\ntogether with all costs of suit, and counsel fees in the\nsuin of $150 and also demand of the Court such oth-\ner relief as is prayed for in plaintiff s said complaint.\nIn testimony whereof, 1, John S. Ijmbert, Clerk
1b41888dfa7345aa6b33c3beef2e63dc THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.5383561326737 42.217817 -85.891125 Tfca newspapers aro making a great\ntSoabont tho log cabin of Joaquin\ntlttlex, The fact that tho "Child of tho\nSierras" prefers to livo in a cabin mado\nof logs, vrith common clay pasted in\nthe cracks, rather than in a ecven-stor- y\nflat, has interested several million peo-\nple. Tho poet is a deceptivo man. Ono\nwho reads his writings and hoars the\ngossip about him would expect to moot\na primeval child of tho forest, wander-\ning around tho city, clad in bear- sk in - s\nand reticence. They would find Mr.\nMiller a civilized man. When ho camo\nto Now York a few years ago it is truo\nthat ho appearod in a bluo shirt, with\nlong yellow hair flowing around Ms\nshoulders and a strangling beard drop-\nping to his waist. He was somewhat\nerratic then. I remember once, in a\nsudden freak, ho engaged a negro valet,\nwho a striking resemblance to tho\npugilist known as tho Black ' Diamond.\nThis fellow followed Mr. Miller around\nlike tho ghost of a blackened past. It\nwas .said that Miller employed tho\npowerful negro to hold his victims\nwhile he read his poetry to them. This\nrumor was never substantiated, howover.\nMr. Miller now wears his hair of\nreasonable length. He has a poetic cast\nof features, and wears tho r.mstacho\nand imperial of a Prussian grenadier\nif there aro any Prussian grouadiors.\nHo is good natured and clever, and\nnever talks poetry unless ha has been\ndining lato. To hear him convcrso at\nhis best, ono should casually remark\nthat McKoo Rankin who stolo ono of\nhis plars is a gentleman. Tho poet\nof tho Sierras will riso then and deliver\nhimself of a few sentiments that will\nblow the ga3 out and mako tho china\ndan co on tho table. Brooklyn Eagle,
c03c8f2fa9ddccf7fb17ed30da2a29eb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.2068492833587 41.681744 -72.788147 Turmoil Follows Interruption\nDobrowolski's talk centered prin.\nclpally on disputes ho had with\nFather Bojuowski. At one tlms\nwhen he was telling of a disagree-\nment with the priest during a\nchurch service, a listener interrupt-\ned with the epithet. "You pig."\nImmediately there was an uproar\nand men from every part of th\nhall rushed and pushed themselves\ntoward the heckler.\nThe interruption almost caused a\nriot until the heckler was rushed\nout of the hall, peace reigned again\nand the speaker continued his talk.\nAlthough there were no further\nactive demonstrations it was appar-\nent that all present were not in\nsympathy with the movement. On a\nvote the majority present did not\nvoice themselves either way.\nCommittee of 40 to he Named\nIt was voted to begin work for\ntho new parish church and ap-\npoint a committee of 40 to mak\nplans for tho venture. This com-\nmittee will meet at the home of Do-\nbrowolskl at S9 Farmington avenua\nMonday evening at S o'clock and it\nis expected that further plans will\nbe made at that time. Questioned\nby newspaper men after the meet-\ning as to whether they would fro\nahead with the construction even\nthough they did not receive permis-\nsion from the bishop, leaders said\ntin y would not do so.\n"You did not receive permission\nto go ahead with this project, did\nyou?" they were asked.\nMr. Nicmlerczki. tho secretary,\nsaid: "He didn't say yes and he\ndidn't say no when we asked him."\nA part of tho committee follows:\nMnoenti W. Dobrowolskl. who will\nprobably be the chairman, Stanas- -\nlavs Symolon. and the Messrs.
38bd3c785aa323f3f2c190f635b75fc3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.7027396943176 39.261561 -121.016059 Tk* Work on the Washington Monument.\nThere now seems lo be a fair prospect that\nthe work on the Washington National Mono-\nineut will be resumed at uo distant day. The\ncorporate authorities or other cities are giving\nthe subject of contributing earnest attention,\nand will uo doubt, follow the example of this\ncity by voting au annual appropriation for the\nMonument fund. The States, too, at the ensu-\ning sessions of their Legislatures may follow\nCalifornia in appropriating annually a certain\nsunt to aid the work, while the various beueB-\ncial societies throughout the land will soon be\nrending in their mites to swell the amount.\nOo Saturday we gave the correspondence be-\ntween the Postmaster General and Lieut. Ives,\nthe etTect of which is to request the Postmasters\nthroughout the country to aid the enterprise\nby placing boxes their respective offlees\nfor the reception of contributions, and forward-\ning the returns to this city. As we slated then,\none cent per dny contributed to this object at\neach post offiee in the country would, in the\nyearly aggregate, amount to $109,000 . The\ngeneral average would be much more than that.\nBy this means alone the monument could be\ncompleted in a few years.\nThis novel plan originated by Lieut. Ives,\nwill commend itself lo every one, and doubt-\nless be one of the must important steps—inaig-\nniticant as it may now appear—which has been\ntaken to aid in the completion of the monu-\nment. lu order that a financial view of the\nmatter may be had. we will state that the obe-\nlisk is estimated lo cost $.>32,000, and the whole\nwork, including obelisk and pantheon, $1,122,-\n000.
230328e52915345e2d2dca04355fe5e9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1880.941256798978 41.004121 -76.453816 A woman with a will can make her\nway iu the American world. In I'lster\nc unity. New York, there is a woman of\nreal grit who itihciitcd foiuteeii years\na largo eslato, consisting piiueipally\nof farming propcily,heavily encumbered\nwith debt. It was the old homestead,\nand she could not bear the idea of see-\ning it p iss into tho hands of strangers,\nand was determined that it should mil.\nAlthough then only twenty four years\nold, and with no more practical knowl-\nedge ol life than an ordinal y country\nlass, she assumed sole charge of the es\nlate, determined to clear it of debl. I lav\ning an old mother, si.ly two years of\nage, a half sister, also helpless from old\nage, the two orphan children of a do\nceased brother, and a brother in tlie last\nstages of consumption to provide for.\n made her link doubly hard. A lit-\ntle expel ieiice taught her that it was ini\npossible to snppoit her large family and\nkeep up the interest aiising fiom the\nheavy indebtedness of the estate fiom\nthe resources of the farm. She decided\nupon school teaching. She was engag-\ned to teach in her own neighborhood at\n$H per mouth and her salary in a shott\ntime was raised to S II) per month. She\nlias continued school teaching ever since\ndiiecting tho wolk on her farm.and dur-iti-\ntho summer vacations going into\ntlie harvest li"lil with the farm hands to\npitch on hay, rake, bind, etc. She has\nenrnod from teaching school over $.V0(l\npaid off the debt on' the old homestead,\nand greatly improved the propel ty.\nShe has been an extensive stock raiser.\nHer wheat crop averaged thisvear forty-tw-\nbushels to the acre, tlio largest
0b613dfbd4066883dc0ff6d1ae339f3c THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.599726744333 29.949932 -90.070116 boly of Lawrene COlli*awho was stabbed at a\ndance-house at the Triangle Buildings on the 11th\nult. and who died at the t harity Rospital. Too-\nmey, who is accused of the deed, was arrested on\nbuaday last. The follow,ng statement was made\nby deceased and a verdict was rendered In so-\ncordance therewith, vi :\nLaiwrencr •ollina, sworn-I came from Texas\nabout fve weeks ago. I was at the house\nof Redal on Saturday last. Came down from my\nboarding house to see the dancing. I saw a good\nmany there. I would recognize them if I saw\nthem now, but only one by name, and that was\nThomas Toomey, the man who stabbed me; don't\nknow whether the proprietor of the house had\nanything to do with the stabbing; I am positive\nthat Thomas did the cutting; I think the\nstabbung was done by Toomey under the impres-\nsino that I had money. I had been drinking, out\nwas not intoxicated. I was sitting on a beach on\nthe banquette, and spoke in a friendly manner to\nToomey. I then got up and wanted to go in to\nsee the dancing. At that moment I was out. I\nlaid my hand on the wound and halloed for the\npolice. Thomas Toomey ran away. The polloe\nsrrived immediately, and brought me to the hoe-\npital. The police asked me who cut me, sad I\ntold thenmit was Thos. Toomey. The house where\nthe stabibing occurred is frequented by rough\ncharacters. I did board at No. 231 Front Levee,\nwith Pat Hughes. The stabbing took place at\nabout 11 or 1 o'clock at night.
283bfb8660850809ff323e368e78da84 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.6972602422627 41.681744 -72.788147 prove of nearly everything that the\nleague has done. The nations acting\ntogether in the peace conference nt\nParis constitute the same nations,\nrepresented in the same way, as the\nLeague of Nations. Many people re-\ngard as dishonorable and wicked the\naction of these nations in the league\nin the peace conference giving Japan\ncontrol of Shantung. They do not\nlike the proposal to give Greek set-\ntlements to our enemy Bulgaria, as\nadvocated by our representatives in\nthe conference, and yet they advo-\ncate the League of Nations, presum-\nably because they think that while\nit does wicked things in its inception\nand formation, at some time in the\nfuture, by some process of regenera-\ntion, it will do good things. The good\nthings that it will do in the future\nare imaginary, whle the bad\nthings that it has done and is doini-i-\nthe present are actual.\n"A former attorney general of the\nUnited States infected with (he league\nof nations disease says we must sign\nthe league without amendment, and\nthen appeal to the league for the pro-\ntection of American institutions. The\nman who advises the surrender of\nAmerican institutions to foreign con-\ntrol and the dependence upon the\ngood graces of that foreign control\nfor the protection of American insti-\ntutions is a traitor to his country.\n"The cry of partisanship is raised\nas though the defense of the consti-\ntution and of the independence of this\nnation were partisanship; while the\nproposal to transfer by some process\nof political party reasoning is said\nto be entirely non-p art is a -
26e7daecca342b7a63bdc470a65ebc8f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.2068492833587 39.745947 -75.546589 mers' Institutes of Delaware, and In­\ncreasing the appropriation for pur­\nchasing Judiciary reports; IIouso bills\nappropriating certain moneys out of\nthe State treasury to pay State offi­\ncials for the protection of habitual\ndrunkards; authorizing the Bevy Court\nof New Castle county to borrow S175,-\n000, to be known as the New Cnstlo\ncounty workhouse loan, payng out of\nthe State treasury expenses for the\ngovernment of the State.\nThe Senate held up the Committee\non Claims' Allowance bill.\nSenator Sparks offered resolution\namending hour of adjournment, so that\ncallms against tho Slate could be acted\nupon until tomorrow at 11 o'clock.\nMr. Bancroft laid the floor of tho House\nfrom 4,15 o'clock yesterday afternoon un­\ntil 10 o'clock this morning, when a resolu­\ntion laying ail bills on ttho tabie was\npu.Hstd. During this tlino ho yielded for\ntho pusage of all paper bills, but wan\nready do start, with his argument and\nreaching of authorlUce Wie moment any\nripper or any business of that na­\nture appeared.\nThis morning itho Joint resolution appro­\npriating $2.50« to caicuurago emigration\nof farmers to the Stalle was passed, Mr,\nShaJIcross was allowed tho privilege of tho\nfloor and stated that Uhc farmer« hud\ngnat trouble to got help and were very\nanxious for the pannage of tho bill.\nKcpreseiHatllve Warren said rthart It was\nnot a question of wages, us ttho farmers\nan- w illing ito pay good prices, but It Is\nlinpocalblo to get men. Ho ataited that\nthere Is more fruit of Hill kinds planted on\nuho Peninsula khan ever before and would\nlie ready lor picking rum 'this time on.\nMr. Bhulleross asked If the members\nwanted to see tho luscious Delaware\nIleaches, the host tin tho world, go to\nwaste. If they wanted to sou hts fine, big\napples to rot on tho trees. If not, than\nthey would pass that Will. He wound up\nby quoting some verses about the farmer.\nThe hill was unanimously passed.
023162838110b03a7e0672f1abc10992 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.0259562525298 29.4246 -98.49514 while I would gladly undertake the duties and\ndo my best for saccess, yet I could not, with\nsue regard to my amy to tne constitution and\ncolleagues in the Senate, resign my position\nas Senator, nor could I, while Senator, act as\nrresiaent ot me company,"\nNew Yomc, January 9 Lieutenant John\nJ. Augur, of the United States navy, escaped\nfrom the Bloomingdale iasane asylum last\nnight during a terrible storm, and this morn.\ning his body was found in the roadway.\nDsath was due to cold and exposure. The\nfather nf the dead Lieutenant is General\nAugur, United States army, in charge of the\npost of Fort Leavenworth. Lieutenant Augur\nhad been in the navy since 1870. He was\none 01 ine omcera sent out upon the expedi-\ntion in search of the Arctic eiDlorinr steamer\nJeannette. The hardships then experienced\naffected bis mind. He had been off duty\nsince last summer, and was placed in the\nasyium on December 14 last\nNew York, January 9. A trial of the suit\nof Bridget Cronin the Rev. Father\nMcCarty, of Brooklyn, to recover $30,000\ndamages for alleged attempted assault In the\nparlor of the parsonage, has been resumed\nFather McCarty testified that be had heard\nMiss cronin s statement on Ihe witness stand,\nand these was not a word of truth ia it. He\nhad known her seven or eight years. She had\nocea an orcaoni 01 ine cnurrn ror seven\neight months, and he dismissed her on April\n22 She made no complaint then of assault.\nThe witness was ordained as clergyman 13\nyears ago, ana nas been assistant pastor ol 5t.\nCecilia s church during that period. The\nwitness denied that he was giving his evidence\nunder any moral reservation\nGalveston, January 9 In the Republl\ncan circles of this city there is now quite\nripple of interest over the selection of the del\negates to the Slate convention, which In turn\nis to tend delegates to the National conven\ntion at Chicago. No call hat been made yet\nfor the convention, but, nevertheless, the sub'\niect is eagerly
11acd5c63c5384bf920dba9961462990 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1896.0423496951528 39.756121 -99.323985 Calandra grannrla. Tho larva, that la,\nthe form as It comes from the egg, Is\nshown at b. Tho pupa form is shown at\nc. At d Is seen another Insect, tho name\nof which Is Calandra oryza. Oryza is\nLatin for rlco, and thi3 Insect Is poular-l - y\ncalled tho rice beetle, because ho was\niirst discovered In this grain. There Is\na striking similarity between this one\nand tho one at a, but the reader will\nnotice that the thorax of a is longi-\ntudinally punctured.\nTho Granary weevil Is not an Insect\nof recent discovery. It Is about as old\nna history, and we hear of It anterior to\nthe Christian era. It probably onco\nused Its wings, but after many centu-\nries of sojourn in the granaries of man\n seems to have lost that feature. Its\nwings remain, but he has not tho\nstrength to uso them. Tho head is pro\nlonged in front Into a long snout, or\nproboscis, at the end of which are tho\nmandibles; the antennao are elbowed\nand attached to tho snout.\nThe lava is legless, considerably\nshorter than the adult, white in color,\nwhile tho perfect Insect (a) Is of a\nshiny chestnut brown color. The pupa\n(c) Is also white, clear and transparent.\nTho report of the secretary of ngricul-tur- o\nthus describes their habits:\n"The female punctures the grain with\nher snout and Inserts an egg, and from\nthis Is hatched a larva which devours\ntho farinaceous interior and undergoes\nIts transformations within the hull. In\nwheat, barley and other small grains, e
0c979ade6954ab6e8468a0cc61ec56fe EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8401639028032 39.745947 -75.546589 A. That argument was used extensively by rival\nsalesmen in former years and is now ancient history,\nthough i^ occasionally crops up by some hard-pressed\nsalesman who loses sale after sale in Royal competi­\ntion, and who does not understand the superior merit\nof the Royal spring system. You know that on every\ntypewriter made there is a spring for every type bar\nto bring back the bar quickly after the type has\nprinted and to keep the bar from rebounding when\nit falls back in its place in the head rest,\nstandard machines use coiled springs for this purpose,\nsome compression but mostly extension springs are\nuseb, extension springs being admittedly the best\nsprings for this purpose. Except on the Royal,\nsprings varying from 15 to 27 coils are used, their me­\nchanical being such that it is impossible\nfor them to use longer springs, and being of 50 few\ncoils and having the same work to do as the Royal\nspring, an adjustment screw is required on every one\nof those springs to take it up when it loses its life.\nThe Royal springs for this purpose are 204 coils and\nmade of the finest piano wire, having a tensile\nstrength of IDG pounds. The pull is only 3-8 of an\ninch, the pull being so slight in comparison with the\nnumber of coils that you cannot see daylight through\nthe spring when pulled out to its full. Over 8 years\nof constant use on over a quarter of a million Royal\ntypewriters proves this to be the best and strongest\nspring made. No adjustment is ever required.
7e93e2d332cda9424b44885704ebdf2b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.5136985984273 41.681744 -72.788147 teams were presented with plenty of\nchances to win, but both blew them.\nThe Burritts held a lead for sev-\nen innings, but the Pirates tied the\ncount at three all in Ihe last half\nof the seventh frame. The Burritts\nscored three runs in a spirited rally\nin the first half of the eighth and it\nseemed that they had won the\ngame. The Pirates, however, came\nright back to score three in their\nhalf and the score was tied. The\ngame ended here because of the i\no'clock rule which makes way for\nthe second game.\nThe Burritts secured a big handi-\ncap right in the first inning when,\nwith Dalkowski on base through a\nsingle. Joe 1..uty crashed a terrific\nhit to right field for a home run.\nThe Tirates got one of these two\nhack in their half of the but\nthe score remained this way for the\nnext five innings.\nThe Pirates had two men on in\nthe third and fifth innings but\ncouldn't bring them around.\nThe Burritts got one more run\nin the seventh on a walk to "Wesoly,\na sacrifice by Walicki and Sokolos-ki ' - s\nerror at second. In the last half,\nthe Pirates proceeded to tie the\nscore. Brooks was out Zembko to\nBudniek. but Pokolski was hit by a\npitched ball. He stole second and\nwent to third on a wild pitch. Beg-le- y\ndrew a pass and stole second.\nSchmarr struck out but Beagle\ncrashed a single past first base and\nthe two runners scored.\nLuty opened the eighth with a\ndouble to the tree In right field.\nStub Budniek followed with a single\nto left and as Luty held third, Bud-ni c- k
0ff85fcd2e40a138cfd86ccdbe5270c4 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.9849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 Temperance Meeting *1 Mew Castle\nA very enthusiastic temperance meet­\ning was held in the Methodist Episoo-\npal church, in New Castle, Del., on\nTuesday evening last. Tbe meeting\nwoe held nnder the auspicee of the W.\nC. T . U. of the town, and the society\noccupied seats in front of the audience,\neach wearing the badge of the society, a\nneat bow of white ribbon. The exer\ncises were opened by singing " Beeone\nthe Perishing,” after whloh Mrs. T. E .\nTerry led the congrega Ion In prayer.\nThis was followed by singing " The\nSigns of tbe Times,” after whloh Mrs.\nA. E Davidson, the President of the\nsociety, introduced to tbe audience\nMtss Henrietta Moore, of Ohio. Mies\nMoore has recently been making a Iso­\nlating tour on the Peninsula, or rather\nthroughout the State of Delaware, lec­\nturing in behalf of the W. C. T, U.,and\nshe concluded her labors among us with\nher leoture In New Castle on Tuesday\nnight, starting for her home In Ohio on\nWednesday, and If her lecture here woe\na fair sample of what her labors have\nbeen elsewhere, a vast amount of good\nmust have done by her. For an\nhour and twenty minâtes she held the\nundivided attention of her audienoe,\nwith arguments that, mast have con­\nvinced the most skeptical of woman's\nduty, and also of her importance as a\nfactor in the great moral reformation\nthat is destined at last to dethrone King\naloohol. Seldom, If ever, bos so large\nan audience assembled In New CaBtle\nto listen to any lecturer, and not one\nwas heard to say anything bat words\nof praise cf the lecture when It was\nover. The best wishes of the entire\nandlenoe will follow the speaker to her\nwestern home in the Bnokeye State.\nThe local anion here is doing a grand\nand noble work, having organized In\nconnection with the Union a Dorcas\nsociety, and at their regular weekly\nmeetings they spend a season In sewing\nfor the poor and otherwise providing\nfor tbelr comfort. Mies Moore, in ad­\ndressing tbe society on Wednesday\nmorning before ehe left,said that in her\ntravels through the State she did not\nthink she had found a local union any­\nwhere that was so well organized and\ndoing saoh noble work as the one at\nNew Castle.
02a4a1ac9f79d2b678785a59196ffa4b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.2753424340435 40.063962 -80.720915 You cannot have failed to notice th\nrapidly increasing use of steel as a subst\ntute for iron in many of its forms. By tli\nBessemer unci open hearth process,"ste<\nran be produced at a cost not much in e:\ncess of the cost of iron. In the manufai\nture of these steels skilled labor forms bi\na very small part of the cost, and tin\nlabor does not include any boiling, an\nhut little heating and rolling. The liig\ncharacter of steel makes it a cheap subst\ntute for the higher grades of iron, such t\nbridge iron, plates, sheets for stamjnnj\nhoops, wire and small irons of all kind\nWe thus find that the only iron on wliic\nfor some years there has been any profit\nbeing crowded out by steel, and 'the proi\npect is that the future will be worse i\nthis respect than the present. It rest\nwith you delay the complete introdm\ntion of steel, and to retain thereby a muc\nbetter opportunity for employment.\nAtfflin. we would rnminil vnn *hn» nri\nlor (roil have declined for* the past fiv\nyears, until, at the present time, iron i\nwold far below what it ever sold for befot\nin the history of the iron trade of thi\ncountry. For many year* it trait a /trincip\nrccogniztd and amrteil by you that naga ghoul\nbear a relation to the gelling vrice ofiron. Tht\nis a principlo of the gliding scale, whic\nwas so useful in the past, we ask you, i\nall candor, with this before you, are* wage\nthat are fair when bar iron is selling i\n$50.00 a ton fair when bar iron is sellin\nfor less that $40.00? Or, should we pa\nthe same wages when competition compe\nus to sell nails at $1.90 per keg as when w\nwere getting $3.25?
1000598a62a8a9d0e69c1875ac69a08c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.305479420345 44.939157 -123.033121 Land suitable for npplo culture costs\nfrom $50 to $100 per acre, aud, as it\ntakes several years before tho trees\nbear, it will bo seen that tho busi\nuess cannot be entered into profitably\nwithout considerable capital. Colouel\nHenry E. Doseh of tho Oregon Horti\ncultural society, now director of ex\nhibits at the Lewis and Clark exposi-\ntion, has nitulo exhaustivo inquiry of\nsuccessful orchardists m several parts\nof tho state with a view to finding out\ndefinitely what is the cost of nn or\nchard up to its sevonth year.\nA prominent orchardist near Grants,\nPass iu Josephine county, southoru Or- -\nneon, fimues that the total cost ofi\nan acre apple orchard up to tho sev-\nenth year, counting cost of plowing and\npreparing ground, cost of 09 trees, and\noxppiiso of planting, cultivating nnd\n is $55.(53. From this sum ho\ndeducts the rnvonuo from 09 boxos of\napples one box for each treo at 50\nconts-- ti box, making tho not cost of an\naero planted to apples, up to tho timo\nwhon it can be relied on to bear profit-\nably, $21.23 . Aftor the tree is nine\nyears old, says this authority, it\nshould bear ten boxes a year, yoar in\nand year out, making 090 boxes an\naero, equivalent at 50 cents per box,\nwhich is certainly a reasonable price,\nto $345 per acre. The cost of cultiva-\ntion, spraying and pruning will never\nexceed $10 per acre, so that tho not\nprofit ought to be $325 per aoro each\nyear. This sounds pretty rosy, but Or-\negon orchardists do not consider it nt\nall wonderful. They are used to such
0a2888fde5b9433b1b173c01fb9780e9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.4494535202894 41.681744 -72.788147 sponsibility are the only days that\ngive test of quality. They are the only\ndays when manhood and purpose , is\ntried out as if by fire.\n"I need not tell you intelligent men\nthat you are not like an ordinary\ngraduating class of one of our uni-\nversities. The men in those classes\nlook forward to the life which they\nare to lead after graduation with a\ngreat many questions in their mind.\nMost of them do not know exactly\nwhat their lives are going to develope\ninto. Some of them are conjecturing\nwhat will be the line of duty and ad-\nvancement and the ultimate goal of\nsuccess for them.\n"There is no conjecture for you.\nYou have enlisted in something that\ndoes not stop when you leave the\nacademy, for you then only begin to\nrealize it, which then only begins \nbe filled with the full richness of its\nmeaning, and you can look forward\nwith absolute certainty to the sort of\nthing you will be obliged to do.\n"This has always been true of grad-\nuating classes at West Point, but the\ncertainty that some of the older classes\nused to look forward to was a very\ndull certainty. Some of the old days\nin the army, I fancy, are not very in-\nteresting days. The ordinary life of\nan ordinary officer at a western post\ncould not have been very exciting\nand I think with admiration of those\ndull years through which officers, who\nhad not a great deal to do insisted,\nnevertheless upon being efficient and\nkeeping their men fit for the duty\nto which they were assigned.\nPossibilities for Class of 1916\n"But in your case there are many\nextraordinary possibilities,
09ce8039cfe23b04da0212528108d7ae PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1882.8178081874682 39.756121 -99.323985 tomatoes, half a peck of onions, one pint\ngrated horseradish, half a pound white\nmustard seed, half a pound of unground\nblack pepper, one ounce sack of cinna-\nmon, cloves and tumeric, and two or\nthree heads . of cauliflower; tie the pep-\nper, cinnamon and cloves in a thin mus-\nlin bag, place all the ingredients in a\ngranite ware kettle, cover with vinegar\nand boil until tender; can while hot in\nglass fruit jars. N. Y. Tribune.\nBaked or roasted onions should be\nwashed, but not peeled. First boil them\nfor an hour in water which is well salted.\nWhen they are tender drain off the\nwater, let them stand for a few minutes\nand drain, then remove the skins, put\nthem in a dripping pan, put a\nlittle lump of butter and some pepper\nand salt each one; let them remain in\nthe oven until they are nicely browned.\nServe while very hot. Nl Y. Post.\nLand3 are not drained simply to add\nto the quantity and quality of the crops,\nor to place your lands in condition to be\ntilled by the least possible expenditure of\ntime and means. These would indeed\nbe commendable objects, and might well\nengage your earnest and constant atten-\ntion. But you do more than this; every\nfarm well drained has gained a partial if\nnot entire immunity from certain dis-\neases, and every farmer who builds him\na home, where he may. eat and drink and\nrepose "under his own vine and tree,"\non well drained land, takes thereby an\nextended lease of life, and adds security\nto the happiness and health of wife and\nchildren. Drainage Journal.
0d7f24188cc6914fcfb574e1eb61b1e3 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1858.6890410641806 37.561813 -75.84108 stant professions of Democracy, as among\nthe things gono by, we should, at least"\npay somo regard to tho appearance of\nconsistency in the eyes of tho world.\nWhen Paine addressed his work on the\nRights of Man to the people- of Eng-\nland and Europe, ho dwelt most elabo-\nrately on tho cost of kingly and aristo-\ncratic government, and appealed to tho\ncommon sense of the people, against a\nsystem which extorted the fruits of their\nlabor to expend on tho lust, of dominion,\nthe pleasure of favorites, or the pride of\nthe government. He told tho people\nof England that two millions of pounds\n(ten millions of dollars) per annum,\nwas more than sufficient for the support\nof the government of England. This,\nhe said, was moro than the expenses un-\nder the profligate Cii.vblkh the Second.\nThe argument of Paiho was ono of great\nforce; but, looked at from our point of\nview, he must be regarded as a mere sim-\npleton, to have supposed that the pos-\nsessors of America would imitate the\nexample of Sparta, when they \npursue the splendid career of Imperial\nHome. Had Paine understood the na-\nture of man as well as his great oppo-\nnent Ri mke did, he would have arrived\nat more practical results. As it is, he\nhas left behind him a most admirable\nargument in favor of simple, economi-\ncal government, without any nation to\npractice upon it. Our own government\nhas, since hi: day, increased its expen-\nses thirty fold, and its people about ten\nfold. ' In other words, great as is our\ngrowthour national luxury and extrav-\nagance is greater. We aro not among\nthose who aro disposed to complain of\nliberal expenditures. On the contrary,\nhad the government expended even more\non science, education, or the encourage-\nment of commerce, we should be pleas-\ned with it. The money expended on\nuseful objects is never lost. Tho Coast\nSurvey, the National Observatory at\nWashington, the Schools of West Point\nand Annapolis, the Japan Expedition,\neven the Pacifio Explorations, (costly as\nthey were,) we regard as well spent, in\npromoting tho national knowledge and\nthe national elevation.
496072512a79e692ad5ff591a4bd49f4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.2123287354134 39.745947 -75.546589 If you suffer from indigestion after\neating and find that instead of the one\nlittle pepsin or soda pill you used to\nfake, it now needs two or three to\nstop It, Its time you called a halt and\ndid some hard thinking.\nThe plain truth Is that there are\nthousands of men and women in this\ncountry whose stomachs are dead or\ndying from lack of exercise while they\nthemselves still live. They cant go\non this way much longer. Its won­\nderful to think that powerful drugs\ncompressed Into a pill will even for a\nlittle while do the work of a human\nstomach. But no pill was ever made\nthat could do It for long.\nA dead stomach can't bo brought to\nlife, hut a slowly dying stomach can\nand must or ils owner soon fol­\nlow. Years ago a famous physician\nwrote the prescription for Ml-o -na\nStomach Tablets and thousands owe\ntheir very life to them (oday. Most I\nstomach remedies work on the food\nand digest, it. Mi-o -na works on the\nstomach and digests nothing. Ml-o -na\nTablets strengthen the stomach walls,\nstimulate the stomach muscles and\nvitalize the stomach machinery Into\nInstant and normal action. The stom­\nach starts at once to churn Its food\nand normal, painless digestion fol­\nlows. Chas. H . Scarborough and many\nother leading druggists hereabouts\nsell Ml-o -na Tablets, agreeing to re­\nfund money In any case where it\ndoes not do these two things. First,\nIn ten minutes give relief from heart­\nburn, gas, belching, acidity, sour ris­\ning, etc. Second, in thirty days com­\npletely renovate,
05bf294855b0a7fd6abb03115b47d526 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.4166666350436 38.894955 -77.036646 The assertion Is repeated toda that the\npolice were on the scene Insufficient! strong\nnumbers at an early hour to handle the\ncrowds It is a fact that there were only\na comparatively few of them present at 6\no'clock in the morning, at w hich time the\ndisaster occurred. There w ere then about\na thousand attendants engaged in dis-\ntributing the gifts of the czar to the im-\nportunate mob, and to them the calamit is\nindirectly attributable.\nSo great has been the jjish of visitors to\nthe hospitals today in search of missing\nrelatives and friends that the work of\ndoctors and phslclans was serious! inter-\nrupted This afternoon, therefore, the au-\nthorities gave orders for the tr msfcr of the\nunclaimed bodies to the Vogankoffsky cem-\netery, where they will remain for a time\nto enable them to be identified if possible.\n feeling of the moujlks was ery bitter\nagainst the authorities, whom they held\nhad not taken sufficient precautions to\nguard against an affair such as occurred.\nAs a matter of fact, however, the authori-\nties were in no wise to blame.\nIt was impossible for them to foresee\nthat such a great multitude would be\npresent at such an early hour, but, at any\nrate, the precautionar measures adopted\nwould hae been sufficient had not the\npeople become 60 frenzied. After the\ndisaster the large force of military and\npolice had the greatest difficulty In re-\nstoring even a semblance of order.\nThe czar's promise to help the bereaed\nfamilies, coupled with the published ex-\npression of his intense grief and deep\nsympathy, has allajed the bitter feeling,\nand the people are warmly grateful to him\nfor his action.\nAlthough the official report places the
3eae584973a0abf8b62d28dd980051b0 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1914.869862981989 41.875555 -87.624421 proved and forwarded to tho City\nComptroller for payment. Lawrence\nE. McGann, n member or the commis-\nsioner nnd Commissioner of Public\nWorks, snld when tho question of the\nstono measurements enmo up that ho\nwould not bo party to approving any\nmoro estimates of tho Great Lakes\nCompany until thnt was cleared away.\nTho voucher has not reached tho office\nof John E. Traeger, City Comptroller.\n"It Is truo that tho piling under the\npier has moved," said Mr. Shanklnnd.\n"Wo watched It very closoly and still\nnro watching It. Thu movement has\nceased; It only continued for two or\nthreo days and was comparatively\nslight. I should say It was not more\nthan nine Inches in any place. I do\nnot anticipate any more, but feol thnt\ntho pier has settled into place\n"Tho slight movomont of tho piles\nwas to bo expected. It was caused by\ntho sudden tilling In by tho big orange\npeel and mnrlno dredgos. When tho\nImmonso weight of tho material they\nthrow up was dumped between tho\npiles, naturally thoy gnvo n little. Tho\nIdeal way would havo beon for tho\ndredgos to work back and forth from\n end of tho plor to the other, put-\nting In a layer at a time. That could\nnot bo done. Tho outer end Is Just\nbeing closed now.\n"Tho plies aro tho stralghtcst that\nhavo ever been brpught to Chicago.\nThoy aro between fifty and sixty feet\nlong and driven straight. In some\nspots tho soil of tho lako bottom Is\nsofter than others. In thoso tho piles\nhavo bulged a llttlo. It Is natural In\na plor 3,000 feot long and 300 feet\nwide. It was only a matter of Inchos\nIn any place and nowhnro nro tho\npiles tipped outward."\nTho most serious chnrgo mado\nagainst tho pier construction, accord-\ning to engineers, is thnt tho big struc-\nture out in tho lako Is not stnblo. As\nyet It has not boon buffoted by tho\nelements In nny sovoro storm, but\nthoy say that oven with tho unusually\nfavorablo weather so far oxperlonccd\ntho entlro underwork 'of tiio plor Is\nspreading out llko trnVslda of an Im-\nmense overloaded box. Lines nro bo-I n- g\nquietly run dally by the Harbor\nCommission nnd contractors to deter-\nmine tho oxtont of this movomont.\nTho
548fedb0b7e5af1a370e6173b7a2da50 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.1027396943175 41.681744 -72.788147 lt year. The board of Finance and\nTaxation faces a difficult problem,\nhowever, as it is safe to say that no\nmatter how they may prune the es-\ntimates, no matter how low they put\nthe rate there will be a wall of protest\nand a determined attempt made to re-\nduce this rate. Let us hope that the\ncity income will not be cut below a\nfair figure, one which will give a\nmoderate amount for the develop-\nment of the city and the repair of\nour streets and civic utilities. But\nJust the same let us sincerely hope\nthat it wil be found out that our bills\nmay be made and an adequate al-\nlowance made for the future city work\nIn the rate that Is ultimately adopted.\nA demonstration of the fact that\nthe tax rate is of im-\nportance to everyone, whether or not\na property owner, may be found in\nthe action of the property owners who\nhave announced higher rents. Un-\ndoubtedly some of them are profiteers,\nready to take advantage of any op-\nportunity that the time offers to en\nrich themselves. At the same time\nwhen the tax rate goes up the land-\nlord mtTM -- obtain more money from\nhis rents to pay this higher rate. If he\nincreases until the amount paid in\npays his taxes and yields him the\nsame net Income as before he may\nnot be branded as a profiteer. Un-\nfortunately he usually does far more\nthan that and the homekeeper has\nlittle choice but to meet the higher\nrent. While rents aTe greater in\nnumber than a year ago. they are by\nmeans .a .
796cb70ca97b6128da4778c041af23a1 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.6598360339506 38.729625 -120.798546 Tax Yr.*as Ano.—ln a contenaliim with n\ngentleman, Iheolhct «la», who was then in Ila-\nfcrrille fur the Hr*t timo Since 13-V), hr re-\nmarked i " Thing* h»Ve thonged here eery\nmuch IB the piul ten year».* lie «a* correct\n—things hare changed very much, and in eery\nmany reaped», during the pani ten yearn. Ten\nyears ago, JUangtuwn, an the place urna then\nVailed, was hot a popolini* and thriving mining\nCnnip, built up *llb (citta and canvan, and\nahake" ahunliea. Everybody thought a year\nf>r two would suffice to work out the niinen—-\nflic creek and gnHica «eie the only placca\nW liert people haikcd “or gold Ihcn,—alid con-\ncluded there would be nothing left utter that\ntiud been nccnmplialied, to aupport a putiubi-\nlion, or I<l render the “ Ravine 1' a desirable,or\nVv»n bearable of reaidencc, for the while\nman ; and that, in his Stead, the Digger would\nsgola reigrt Cupreine in our dearrted mansions,\nand bold high rcVel on pounded Acorns and\n(rrosa-hopperk, with no while man to molest or\ntaiake him afraid ; 111*! Digger beauties would\nlinee again gire iuld the pellucid waters of\n11ungi own Creek, and arrangi their toilet of\nbenda and willows, at of old, without the aid\n<T innovating looking glass, and gaily sing\ntheir lore ditties, to the notes of theit mothers,\nl»w Ihcr prepared theit dainty dishes of abori-\nginal delicacies for their ahscHl loni* and lovers.\nf*ince that time, however, Yankee energy lots\nbeen busy at the development of our bmlhdless\ntrkuutecs, with a suctvas that has dissipated\nthree romantic prophecies to the winds. The\nmountain's brow has furbished labor to the
291cf7087c7a2f764add94fb76e8455f SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.0396174547157 37.53119 -84.661888 Mil Thomas E Wood one of the belt\nwomen In this lection breathed her\nlast and tbo spirit returned to the God\nwho gave It An aged husband and\nfive children John W Wood of Gar\nrard Mre B G Fox dt Danville Ceo\nT Wood of this county MrI J 0\nLynn of this oily and Chief of Police\nLogan W Wood of Danville aro loft\nto mourn tbo loss of a loving wife and\nGodly mother and In their Irreparable\nlots they have the sympathy of friends\neverywhere Mr Wood was 02 year\nold and bad been a member of the DIp\ntilt church for many long years In\nher palmy days she was a splendid\ncburcb worker but 21 years ago the\nsuffered a stroke of paralysis and since\nthen ibe bad not had good use of her\nleft side and was compelled to sot aside\nher active duties In church anti at\n Lator she suffered another\nstroke and the third and fatal one came\nabout a week ego Deceased was a\ndaughter of Mr John and Aunt Nan ¬\ncy Pope of Boyle county and she was\na kind hearted charitable woman\nThose wbo know her well lay a boiler\nwoman never lived and that to know\nher was Indeed to love her There\nscarcely ever lived a more affectionate\ncouple than Mr and Mrs Wood and\nnow that bU life companion the true\nwife In prosperity and adversity has\ngone hence the splendid old gentleman\nIs crushed by the blow which we fear\nwill materially shorten his days May\nthe good Lord give him abundant\nstrength to bear tho blow ho baa re ¬\ncalved The remains wero taken to\nDanville Wednesday afternoon and at\n2 oclock yesterday afternoon funeral\nservices wore held at the home of Mr\nBGFoxbyRevOMHueyThe\nburial followed ID Bellevue cemetery
2f5ca8e01dcb1851b5bcb49ae42097bd THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.3975409519835 37.561813 -75.84108 idea that the ordering of small bodies of\ntroops to the Texan frontier to prevent\nthe depredations of Mexican Dandits\nmeans war on the part of the Adminis-\ntration, as one of our morning contem- -\nporaries suggests, is absurd. There is no\nreason for supposing that tbe Adminis-\ntration wants war with anybody. It is\nnot in warlike mood, nor would a war be\npopular with anybody but contractors\nand adventurers. The people have too\nmuch sympathy for Mexico to want to\nfight with her, and have already annexed\nso much of her territory that they do not\ncare to conquer more. It would be well\non some accounts to readjust the boun-\ndary between the two republics, but this\ncan be done without blood spilling. But\nthe bandits who commit depredations on\nour frontier, stealing horses and cattle\nand sheep, burning barns and houses af-\nter pillaging them of their contents, have\nno mere regard for Mexican authorities\nthan for our own. They rendezvous in\nMexico only because in the present dis-\n condition of that country they\nare safest on that side of the line. They\nare not soldiers, but thieves ; not citizens\nof Mexico in any real sense, but peats\nwhich the Mexican Government could\nwell afford to pay well for having cap-\ntured aud punished. And if, when once\non the track of a body of these lawless\ndepredators, our cavalry drive them\nacross the line and administer summary\njustice on the other side, Mexico will\nprobably be too grateful to notice tne ac-\ncident It would be a fine thing to get\nher consent beforehand, but civilized na-\ntions are not apt to confers their own in-\nability to deal with their own offenders,\nand it is to be hoped that the United\nStates has not cheek enough to ask her to\nmake a public acknowledgment of her\nweakness. The only way to get some\nthings done is to do them, and this is one\nof the things. It is a great deal easier to\napologize for an act of self-d efe n-
4b869c4037e2d2df7c95e384e6794fc6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.6178081874682 41.681744 -72.788147 New York, Aug. 14 . The coming\nfall season promises to be a satisfac-\ntory one for the United States, which\nis benefitting by Its own good fortunes,\nplus the misfortunes of others. The\nstrongest and most pleasing basis of\nconfidence is the enormous harvest\nwhich we are on the threshhold of\ngarnering. The latest Government\nreport indicates a crop of wheat of\n966,000,000 bushels, or 76,000,000\nbushels more than last year's record\ncrop. Corn promises a crop of 2,918,\n000,000 bushels, or 207,000,000 bushels\nless than the record crop of 1912. But\nthis difference may.be materially re-\nduced by favorable weather. Oats\npromise 1,402,000,000 bushels or about\n17,000,000 bushels below the bumper\ncrop of 1912. For hay, the outlook is\n75,000,000 tons, or two and a half\nmillion tons greater than the record\nyield of 1812. Nearly all our \nwill be larger than last year.vthe im-\nportant exception being cotton. For\nour grain crops profitable prices are\nassured because of tne certainty of\nlarge domestic and foreign dema"nd.\nPrices may not' rule as high as last\nyear when the war seriously Inter-\nfered with supplies; and the fall of\nConstantinople, when it happens, will\nhave to be taken into consideration\nbecause Russian supplies, which have\nbeen accumulating in the Black sea,\nwill be suddenly released. The only\nimportant drawback in the crop sit-\nuation is cotton, the yield of which\nwill be considerably reduced by the\nsmaller acreage and lessened use of\nfertilizers. The South is apparently\nsomewhat disturbed over derange-\nment caused by the war, yet less so\nthan newspaper accounts suggest.\nThe possibility of Great Britain de-\nclaring cotton contraband, naturally\nconfuses the situation and the
2453eba74f13a5687e6f4276bf9d81fe DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.83698626966 58.275556 -134.3925 A member of the crew Gx the revenue\ncutter Tahoma is authority for the\nstatement that the revenue cutter Ta¬\nhoma has been assigned to duty in\nAlaskan waters during the winter, with,\nheadquarters at Seward. She is to ren¬\nder aid to ships in distress, if the oc¬\ncasion presents itself.\nWriting to a friend at Seward, a doc¬\ntor of iditarod City says: The camp ie\nshowing up very good, but it is very\nhard indeed to lay your han<is on any¬\nthing that is tangible or Kood. The\ncountry i- flooded with prospectors,\nminers and speculators, and mauy won¬\nderfully large deals were made during\nthe last few weeks. I said 'wonder¬\nfully' in reiation to a new camp that\nthe 'dust,1 or 'scales' barely have\ndropped off its eyes, For example,\nthree men secured a lay on a claim; an¬\nother man came along and took the\nclaim under option $100,000 and he\npaid the lay men $33,000 to release it.\nAnother man paid $4G,000 to secure s\nlay on 1,000 feet up and down the\nstream, by 1,320 feet. This took place\non Flat creek, which will be tho banner\nof the district. Perhaps the news of a\nKuskokwim strike may reach Seward.\nThe strike is a genuine one. While\nthere is good pay gravel, the extent of\nit is not yet kuowu. The :-t-rike is on\nJ ulien «reek, a tributary to Vunilnuk\nriver, that empties into the Kuskokwim\nriver at Georgetown, 250 miles front\nBethel by river, Julieu creek is about\n15 miles from Iditarod City. About\n2,000 iieople are in camp aud during\nthis coming winter thor6 will be na\nwork in the mines . no drifting, but\nouly proepectiug. The camp 19 here to\nstay. Quite a num-ber count on going\nout next winter by trail through Sew¬\nard."
027d09b439c2ad0ae2d37f3494efa8c5 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.1707649956993 39.369864 -121.105448 No country ever had ?o bright a future\nopening before it as beams on California to-\nday. She has mines which enable her to\nexport fifty or sixty millions of gold every\nyear. Independent of the exhaustless trea-\nsures contained in these mines, and the per-\nsonal investments therein—and beside her\nmines of silver, mercury, coal and iron, her\npopulation of six hundred thousand own\nproperty which has an assessed value of\nmore than one hundred and thirty millions\nof dollars. Within her borders are seventy-\nsix million acres of tillable and grazing\nlands —all cf it probably fit for cultivation,\nand millions ot acres of the finest timbered\nland in the world. Her soil produces more\ngrain to the acre and larger fruits and vege-\ntables, with loss expense, the difference in\nwages considered, and in a shorter time,\nthan that of other State in the Union.\nTo crown these material blessings, her cli-\nmate is balmy and wholesome, and so mild\nthat roues bloom in the open air of winter,\nand strawberries ripen during the same sea-\nson. Her skies of seldom-clouded, deepest\nblue, bend over every variety of grand and\nlovely landscape. The scenery of Wales\nand Switzerland is equalled by that of the\nSierra Nevada; the rolling foothills with\ntheir orchard-like groves of oak and spring\ngarment cf many-lined blossoms, have a\nbeauty of their own ; while the level valley\nat their bases, stretching for hundreds of\nverdurous miles north and south, and dash-\ning its waves of grains and grasses against\nthe far purple wall of the Coast Range—who\nshall describe its delicious beauty, or that\nof the sea coast and bays lying “glassed in\ntheir own loveliness" far beyond?
e4fb9c33d1036f770ef0a77142eb3327 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1922.1438355847285 37.451159 -86.90916 For a long time uiutheniatlcs and\nGerman had been about equally re\npulsive to Ramsey, who found himself\ndally In the compulsory presence of\nboth ; but he was gradually coming to\nregard German with the greater hor-\nror, because, after months of patient\nmental resistance, be nt last began to\ncomprehend that the German language\nhas sixteen special and particular ways\nof using the Gerntnn article corre-\nsponding to that flexible bit of a word\nso easily, managed In English the.\nWhat In the world was the use of\nhaving sixteen ways of doing a thing\nthat could Just as well be done In one?\nIf the Germans hnd contented them\nselves with insisting upon sixteen use-\nless variations for Infrequent words,\nsuch as hippopotamus, for Instance,\nKan. bey niltl-- t huve 'thought the affair\nunreasonable but not nectssarlly vi\ncious it would be easy enough to\navoid talking about a hippopotamus\nif be ever had to go to Germany. But\nthe fact that the Germans picked out\na and the and many other little words\nin use all the time, and gave every one\nof them sixteen forms, expected\nItumsey Mllhollnnd to learn this dlsffiy\nIng uselessness down to the Inst\ncrotchety detail, with "When to employ\nWhich" ns a nausea to prepare for the\nfinal convulsion when one didn't use\nWhich, because it was an "Exception"\nthere was a fashion of making easy\nmuiters hard that was merely hellish.\nThe teacher was strict hut enthu-\nsiastic; she told the children, over and\nover, that the German was a beautiful\nlanguage, and her fnce always hnd a\nglow when she said this. At such\ntimes the children looked patient ; they\nsupposed' It must be so, because she\nwas an adult and thelp teacher; and\nthey believed her with the sume man\nrer of believing which those of them\nwho went to Sunday school used there\nwhen the Sunday school teachers were\npuxhed into explanation of various\nmutters set forth in the Old Te.tu\nment, or gave reckless descriptions of\nheaven. Thnt Is to say, the children\ndid not. challenge or deny; already\nthey had been driven Into habits of\nresignation and, were passing out of\nthe age when childhood is able to re\nject alult .nonsense .
256755b979c44d38581451de1cf2cbc2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.4643835299341 40.063962 -80.720915 5,000 Ite blood. tBc; 11.000 Ite tub, 00c; «,UA) Ite\nrfoTl pulled, 45<tf47»4c; 9,000 BHCoarse washed.\n:t5^j.*Kc; 20,001) Ite line WBslied, - Writ 12c; 2,000 Ite\ncommon.nOc; 1/JUO Ite Jersey, otkaU)c.\nBaltimore, June IS..The market is fairly\nactive, under considerable receipts of the uew\nclip, and prices have improved. We quote\nunwashed at 27(3.t0c; tub-washed at 40a$4Sc;\npulled :i2ft4-15c; pulled Merino at 40@45c, and\nfleece at 40c for common nnd 4-Va'jOc for flue.\nBoston, June hi..The wool market con¬\ntinues quite active, considering the small\namount of staple now available here, and at\nall points on the seaboard. Prices are flrzu\nfor all grades, and for very desirable lottf,\nwanted for immediate use. a slight advance\nupon previous rates Ls easily realized. Kales\nof domestic for the week foot up some\n at a rang.) of 4&.j75c for tleeco, and\n40<<t72,,£c for the various grades of pulled. In¬\ncluded are lots of medium and good westeru\nat 50@57c: Indiana and Michigan at 55m00c;\nNew~York and Vermont at tx%(c*ej2V*c, Ohio,\nmedium nnd flne, at OO^ftsr; numerous small\nparcels of Ohio nnd Pen tisyl van la choice and\ndouble extra at 05(u75c, and .'WOO Ite Very se¬\nlect do at SiXr; l »,ttw tte Kentucky combing\nwool sold at 02>,c. In California, sales of\n57,000 Ite old clip. Inferior, at 24{g2Sc; 30,U)0 lbs\nnew clip at 10c, and 50,000 Ite do ut a range of\n32(ui 42%c. I u Texas wool. sales of 135,01)0 tte at\nprices ranging from 2S^.*50c |>er lb, as to quali¬\nty. In Oregon wool, sales of 10,000 lbs tit 4oc\nper It- .
180da795664f6820203de0e6ff4d5481 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.0260273655506 39.756121 -99.323985 railroad business, but I had not for-\ngotten the tick language, and I had a\nroom in a hotel in Chicago which had\na party wall with a boarding house\nadjoining. In this boarding- house\nlived a mighty pretty girl who was\nattending a commercial college in the\nnext block, wheTe there was also a\ncourse of telegraphy taught, and I\nguessed by seeing the books and pa-\npers she carried that she was taking\nthat course. You see, I was watch-\ning her rather closely, for I was in-\nterested from the first time I ever\nsaw her on the street.\n"She was a stranger in town, and,'\nof course, there wasn't any chance of\nmy being introduced to her, and as\nfor flirting, she showed no more signs\nof it than a sister of charity would,\nthough I gave her every opportunity.\nI found out by a careful study of\nwindows that her room in the board-\ning house was next to mine in the\nhotel, and that only made me feel\nworse so near and yet so far, \nunderstand. I knew she would not\nbe in the school much more than\nthre months, and as half that time\nhad gone by and I still had made no\nprogress, I begun to grow desperate,\nfor I couldn't bear the thought of\nlosing her. You know a romance like\nthat makes a deal more impression on\na fellow than the real thing.\n"One Sunday afternoon I was in my\nroom and she was in hers, and I could\nhear her driving a nail in the wall\nand a great thought came to me sud-\ndenly. The next minute I had caught\nup one of my shoes and was pounding\nits heel on my wall, but I wasn't driv-\ning nails. Not much. I was making a\ntelegraph call. It wasn't anything in\nparticular, only an attention' call,\nand after repeating it till I was about\nto give up in despair, it was answered\nfrom 'the other side. Then I tele-\ngraphed: 'How do you do?' and that\nwas answered, a little bit slow, per-\nhaps, but answered all richt. and thm
0595416f8309b4344d67bb1f95d4d163 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.3136985984272 39.745947 -75.546589 and more lasting finish without In- Pairs. The carburetor is a Sehebler,\ncreasing the cost or effort. It Is not ; an<l Ignition is by tho Atwater Kent\na baking procès. The physical and System, well known to Wllmlngton-\nehemlcal changes resulting the var- Ians. Both sets of brakes are equal-\nnlsh and paint becoming solid and h»d and act on the rear wheels,\nhard, are substantially the same in\n■ these dry rooms as outside of them,\nj Hut Inside the dry rooms, they oc-\n| cur In positive continuous order with­\nout the slightest loss of lime. Outside\ni of them, they occur Irregularly, one\nI might say occasionally, as surround- j\nI In g conditions may permit\nj The weather conditions do not af-\nj feet the working of this system. Tho\ndry rooms, in operation, have j\nno connection with the outside, and\nI work being done inside cannot be In-\nj fluenced by climatic or atmospheric\nI conditions. Neither the drying time\nrequired nor the degree of hardness\nobtained is any different summer or\nwinter, rain or shine.\nThe value of this drying system in\nthe Pierce-Arrow paint department\nIs very apparent, for with these dry­\ning rooms, definite promises can ho\nmade and kept on the time It will\ntake to do the painting of any car and\nwhen completed, each individual coat\nIs known to have been thoroughly\ndry before the next one was added.\nThere Is no guessing or trying need­\ned. the dry rooms do the wtyk on\nlime and results are equal to those\nobtained w ithout them under the most
0d68b9daffa63d3f7fa8ad04a01a3a9a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1191780504819 39.261561 -121.016059 On Sunday last three seamen belonging\nto the American ship T. W. Sears, were ba-\nthing alongside, when one of them was\nseized by a shark. The monster first seized\nhim by the shoulder, but tbe force with\nwhich he rushed on his victim caused him\nto lose his hold, driving the unfortunate\nman several feet out of the water. The\nshark again seized him by tbe back and\nfinally by tho neck, and disappeared with\nhis prey. All this happened within plain\nview of bis shipmates, who immediately\nlowered a boat, and after taking on board\ntbe two other men, proceeded to drag for\nthe body. They had been occupied in this\nway for some time, when the shark was ob-\nserved to rise at some distance from them,\nstill with the body of the hapless roan id bis\nmouth, shaking it, as is described, as a dog\nwould a rat. The mate of tbe vessel armed\nhimself with a boarding pike, and rowed\ntoward the spot, and shark was so much\noccupied with bis victim that he allowed\nhimself to be stabbed several times before\nagain disappearing. Thinking the animal\nbad received his death wound, the boat re-\nturned to the ship, but scarcely bad sbe ar-\nrived alongside, when tbe shark reappeared\nas before. A “harpoon was now taken into\ntbd 'boat, and tbe shark again afiewed him-\nself to be approached sufficiently naar to be\nstruck, when he again disappeared. Line\nwas now paid eut, and tbe boat was towed\nsome distance, till assistance arriving, tbe\nmonster was killed by repeated stabs of tbe\nlance. Most of the contents of bis maw\nwere disgorged while being hauled la, on\nbeing opened some fragments which were\nunrecognizable, and an eight pound tin of\npreserved meat, wwe all that was found.\nThe shark was of the species known as\nthe ground shark, and about ten feet in\nlength. The girth of tho body was Itnmeuse\nand is stated to bave been eight or nine\nfeet.
2e5ba76d8d341a1cd479fc98e6ea1c0a THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.5794520230847 40.419757 -77.187146 Meanwhile Bell Upton had been so\nbewildered by that sudden, fearful cry\nshe had heard, and the Budden plash of\nthe bodies in the water, that, not until\na boat was lowered, and the lieutenant,\nwho had been struggling in the sea, was\nbrought aboard and into the cabin, to\nexplain in a faint voice how he had sav-\ned her life, did she clearly comprehend\nall that had happened. Then she threw\nherself down by the prostrate form of\nher lover, and hung over him in agony,\nfearing that he was fatally injured.\nSoon, however, the doctor gave cheering\ninformation to the contrary.\nThe young man had sustained a fear-\nful shock from his contact with the Hin-\ndoo's body, but as that body had offered\nbut little resistance to his downward\nprogress when he it, being sl m - pl- y\ndriven before him into the sea, his\nlower limbs, although partially par-\nalyzed for the time, were not broken.\nHe had, however, fallen dangerously\nnear to the rail. A roll of the ship to\nthe other side, ere he let go of the top-\nsail yard to descend, would have caused\nhim to fall on the bulwarks, when, of\ncourse, he would have been killed.\n"Never before," said the doctor, " did\nI hear .of such a daring performance."\n" Ay I" exclaimed Major Upton, "God\nbless him I Here, Bell.he shall have you,\ngirl, for he has earned you."\nHe put both hands of his daughter's,\nwho had clasped her lover's neck, in the\nlieutenant's, and turned his head away\nto hide a few tears upon his bronzed\ncheek.
2d62ca45b9601c413cd0af6df0c4ee90 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.4260273655505 58.275556 -134.3925 Beginning at Cor. No. 1, a post marked\nU. S. S . 728*1, whence U.S. L.M . No. 9 bears N.\n76 deg. 58 min. E . 807 ft. dlst.; thence S. 29 deg.\n51 min. W . variation 80 deg. 85 min. E . 600 ft.\nto Cor. No. 2 identical with Cor. No. 1 of\nCascade No. 8 and Cor. No. 4 of Cascade No. 2\nLodes; thence N. 89 deg. 09 min. W. variation\n80 deg. 35 min, E. along line 1-4 Cnscade No. 3\nLode 1365 ft. to Cor. No. X identical with Cor.\nNo. 4of Cascade No. 8 Lode: thence N. 29 deg.\n51 min. E. variation 30 deg. 35 min. E. 000ft. to\nCor. No. 4, a post marked U. S. S . 723-4; thence\nS. 39 deg. 09 min. E . variation 85 min.\nE. 277 .1 ft. intersect line 8-4 Copper Stain\nLode, Sur. No. 724, N. 46 deg. 10 min. E . 234.9\nft. from Cor. No. 3 of that survey, 1178.2 ft.\nintersect line 2-3 of the same claim, S. 54 deg.\n01 min. E . 912.4 ft. from Cor. No. 8 of that sur.\n1865 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning.\nArea 17.558 acres, less area in conflict with\nCopper Stain Lode Sur. 724, 2.421 acres, leav¬\ning a net area of 15.182 acres.\nTotal area embraced in tho Lode Claims in\nthis application is 71.658 acres.\nThe adjoining claimH are the Copper\nStain Lode, Sur. No. 724 on the Northwest\nnnd Eagle Bird Lode on the West and South¬\nwest. On all other sides the claims are un¬\nknown.
4d23f00a368882579414e9624d829363 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0068305694697 41.681744 -72.788147 READ THIS FIRST:\nLily Lexington, only daughter of\nthe Cyrus Lexingtons, is engaged to\nmarry a rich bachelor named Staley\nDrummond. Then she falls in love\n"at first sight" with a taxi', driver\nwhom she sees on the street He\ntakes her home, and on the way he\ntells her his name is Put France\nand that he owns his own cab in a\ncompany headed by his friend, Koy\nJetterson. He adds that he is going\nto sell it to finance a piston ring\nthat he has perfected and wants to\nput en the market.\nHe and his cab vanish from the\nstreets, and Lily misses him so much\nthat she decides she cannot marry\nDrumnioni. feeling about I'at as she\ndoes. Hut about this lime her\nmother announces the engagement,\nand plans for the wedding are made.\nAbout a month before, Mrs. Lexing-\nton hires a new chauffeur, and when\nhe comes he Is Pat France! From\nthat moment o.i, Lily knows she\n marry Staley Drummond.\nand she throws him over and mar-\nries Pat. The young couple go to\nlive with Pat's parents and his sis-\nter, Florence, in their little house\nnext door to their grocery store, and\nLily finds that she is expected to\nhelp with the housework. But she\nhates housework, and one night\nwhen Sirs. France has asked her to\nwatch some biscuts in the oven she\nlets them burn. Mrs. France scolds\nher and Lily insists that Pat take a\nilat, where they can live alone, so\nhe does. Put after they are in it, Lily\nlias a hard struggle to make herself\nio the work that has to be done in\nit. The summer passes, with her\nhaving a duil time in the tiny place,\nand Pat working all day and some-\ntimes late at night in the machine\nshop where he and Roy Jetterson\nare trying to turn out the piston\nring. Then, in he fall. Sue Cain,\nwho has-bee- n
059c925d5e11fbdb178f871a6185a837 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.9958903792492 39.623709 -77.41082 public reason for this is given as the\nbelief of a number of Senators who\nhave heretofore been indifferent to-\nward annexation that the acquirement\nof a big slice of China by Germany and\nthe probable acquirement of Chinese\nterritory by England, France and Rub\neia has changed the situation and made\nit almost an absolute necessity that this\ncountry should own Hawaii, in order\nto protect its interests in the Pacific.\nA reason giyen privately is that some\nof the Senators who had themselves\nplaced in the doubtful list merely did\nso to increase their chances for obtain-\ning desired patronage, and that having\nsucceeded they have informed the\nPresident of their willingness to vote\nfor annexation. There is still another\nreason, too. Prominent democrats in\nvarious sections of the country have\nbeen arguing with the democratic \nators for the purpose of convincing\nthem that in view of the previous atti-\ntude of the party toward the acquisi-\ntion of territory by the government,\nnot to mention the present popularity\nof annexation, it would be a grave mis-\ntake to have the democratic party dis-\ncharged with the responsibility of de-\nfeating annexation, and, it is said, that\nsome of them have been convinced.\nWhile China would unquestionably\nbe more than glad to have the United\nStates become her ally and call a halt\nupon the apparent determination of the\ngreat European powers to divide China\namong themselves, it can be stated up-\non the highest official authority that\nUhina hue not asked the U. S. to be-\ncome such; and it can be lurtber stated\nthat the request, if made, would be ut-\nterly useless,
07c87592e69d63695e63702d88da2620 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1901.2342465436327 37.451159 -86.90916 Mad Parents Kill Children\nGOLD DKOOK Mss MarcIa M\nMr Lizzie Naramore while in a fit of\ninsanity this afternoon killed her six\nchildren at her home a farm house half\na mile from this village and then tried\nto take her own life The children\nranged from ten years to a babe of ten\nmonths 11 nIl their lives were taken by the\nmother with un az mill n club She IIItl\nthe bloodstained bodies on the beds\ntwo on one bed and the other four UII\na bed in another room mid then at\ntempted to take her own life by cut\nting her throat with n razor When dis-\ncovered she was in the bed on which the\nbooties of the four children were 1lying\nAlthough she cut n deep gash in her\nthroat and suffered the loss of mucl\nblood it is believed she will recover\nFrank Naramore the husband nnt\nfather left his home at the usual hour\nthis morning to go to his work at a saw\nmill and at that time lila wife did not\nattract attention by acting strangely\nDuring the evening a number of \nneighbors were toM by Mrs Narainon\nhow she had killed her six children She-\nsaid she had killed them in different\nrooms nnd OK she killed one child the\nhotly was placed on n bed\nMrs Narnuiore appeared rational this\nevening awl displayed1 signs of sorrow\nfor the deed she had committed nl\nthought she was unable to give any reas-\non for killing the children\nCLINTON ME March 2 ITalob\nDearborn Marr a faruiir living eight\nmiles from this village killed his three\nchildren Alice M aged lii years Elwin\naged nine and Helen aged seven with\nan ax shortly after the family hail risen\nfrom the dinner table today Miter had\nbeen despondent for sonic time but his\nactions were not such as to make hits\nwife believe that he haul any serious\ntrouble to brood over\nThe eldest daughter was washlii\ndiehoH at the sink when her hither went\nbyhertotheshedandgot anax lIe\ncame back into the kitchen anti struck\nthe girl u single blow on the head kill\nhug her Mrs Marr saw this and rail\nscreaming to the house of her husband\nfather Samuel Marr
339f90f9a5f5569ff93e31efccdaa541 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.4808218860985 39.513775 -121.556359 See 14 Tin* net wlmll lie submitted lolhe people of\nthe Slate for their rinilh nlion. HI Ih. next tfeneral\nelection, to tie hidden on the tlr*i \\Ved'ie»d iy ol Si (e\nleintier, \\ l>. 1 ■*. '•“ anil the ij 11 •1 1Hil elector* ol lion\nMule shall nt n id election, on their hfllht* for Slide\nofficer*. vole for or iivrii.nart this \\ t; those votiiur for\nthe n.diie, nhnll write or have prinlei) on their hiillol*.\ntin* word* “Iny the Ieht;** 11ml lln»*i* votinif . 'i(pilii*l\nthe *mni. shall w roe or have printed on then ballot*\nttie words ltepu Hide the Held \nSec. li The vole* ca*t for and mrnin*t lid* Act,\nwlmll t>e counted, relumed nml ennva—ed nml <le-\nelared in ihe same iimnner and subject to tne •nine\nrules as voter ca*t lor I lie Treasurer ol Stale, and if il\nappear that 11 11111 J rily ol nil iln voter furor\nagainst tin* law a* alore* Id.or in lav- r ol ihi* \\ri.\nthen Ihe'snnie *hall have < Ih ri a* hereinhefot* pro\nvnleil and shall li” iri.pealittle inti) the inlere-l of\nlive liabilities herein created shall he paid nml ill*\nchanted, and lie toivemor shall make prm imii.ilion\nthereof ; toil II a inajoritv of the Vole* so end me\nuunitist till* ict, Iln*n the smile -hall liefollie . 'old\nSee Hi. Il shall he the duly of Ihe Secretary of\nStale to have this Ai l published 01 one Newspaper\nill Illlli Mplliilll District of il.ls Sure, if line In* pah\nlishi-d linn in. for three months next pr. , eeuinir the\nif. Herat eh cl ion to II” hidden noon the llr-l V\\ ■■ ms\nday of Sept mher in vl. for which publication no\nIfreale'llllowanco sirill Pomade than the rales al\nlowe dby la to Hie Slate Printer.\nApproved April iiSth. is ,7
199662ce1b48c6787a33ba92023138f1 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.4205479134957 37.53119 -84.661888 Tho prophets who predicted that 1002\nwould be a year of disasters were cor-\nrect They havo been In the habit or\nuttering these prophecies year ofter\nyear without result but this year thoy\nhave been verified though but I1vo\nmonths have passed If one only\nprophesies patiently and pcralstentl ho\nwill assuredly be right as the almanao\nIn the country In which bad the legend\nAbout this time expect rain Nature\nhas not been so busy with her force or\ndevastation for mapy years past as aho\nhas been during the first five month of\nthe present year Volcanlo eruptioDs\nand earthquakes have destroyed JSJ O\nlives storms 701 tornadoes 410 ey\nclones 220 floods 333 avalanches 228\ntidal waves 103 snow elides 39 and t va\ntor spouts 12 a total ot 50505 lives de-\nstroyed by natures elemental dhtur\n If to this total were added tbo\nlive lost by agencies over which man\nbas more or less control such as firea\nmine disasters explosions railroad ac\ncldoots and vessel wrecks It would be\nIncreased to over 00000 and this takel\nno account ot Individual live lost In\nthis country which would bring tbo\ngrand total up to about 100000 1Ivelolt\nIn the abort period of five months\nIn the presence ot these great natur-\nal convulsions man Is powerless and\nprobably always will be As to tb\ndisasters occasioned by human Igno\nranco or carelessness or neglect the do\npair of the situation Is that the catas\ntropho of today is a sensation for th\nday and tomorrow la generally fang\nten It has Its lesson but It Is not or\ntoo read Even It read It le rarelJ\nheeded Chicago Tribune
55aad14f6d05c421a7d881249367edc6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.7827868536228 41.681744 -72.788147 The attention of the visitor now is\ndrawn to the view. A panorama of\nrolling farm land, houses, forests,\nroadways and moving traffic extends\nacross the valley to the hills in the\ndistance, fading into a misty horizon\never the hill tops.\nFrom the spot where the visitor\nand guide now stand, it is planned\nin the near future to run a roadway\nor graveled walk, winding through\nthe trees to the open portion of the\npark fronting on Stanley street.\nThis roadway was the dream of for-\nmer Park Superintendent Ralph B.\nWainright. It is an ideal site for a\nlog cabin or some rustic building.\nThis would be the place for a tour-\nist camp site and there is no doubt\nIn the mind of the superintendent of\nparks that New Britain is losing out\nevery day by not affording a wel-\ncome spot for rest and recreation of\nmotor campers.\nOn Blake road toward Stanley\nstreet, the scene gradually changes.\nFrom an open road flunked on the\n side with the dense pine trees,\nthe visitor and guide now rind them-\nselves in a woodland with tall white\nbirches and tall pine trees vying\nwith each other to join branches\nacross the highway. Autumn leaves\nllutter down and rustle along the\nditch beside the road. The roadway\nundergoes a change. The dusty high-\nway takes on the appearance of a\ngravel road, ruts do not seem quite\nso deep, foliage is thicker and the\nsky sometimes seems almost lost to\nsight. The bright autumn sun Is\nshaded and a comfortable woodland\ncoolness is felt. The road grows\nmore crooked. It climbs up and\ndown and winds around. Now it\ncrosses a brook. One can imagine\nsquirrels and chipmunks scampering\nthrough the underbrush or dodging\nfrom the branches of birch trees to\nthe background of oak and myrtle.\nSuddenly one comes to the brick tool\nhouse, the fish pond bursts Into\nviow, the travelers again are back\non the paved highway and the visit\nto the forest is over.
2c6abe06509a2776cc7f0f786ff66ddd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8095890093862 40.063962 -80.720915 river. The accident occurred about two\n3'clock. The eflects of the explosion\nwere tearful, instantly sinking the boat\nand killing a large number of persons.\nThe steamer Cub* was a short distanco\nahead oi the Brooklyn and picked up\nnearly all of the survivors, who were\nlanded hero, the irjured being sent to the\nhospital. As yet no complete list ol the\nlost or saved can be obtained. The agents\nhero stato thit tbero wero only seven\npassengers on board. Others say there\nwero at least ten. The crew numbered\nabout twenty. It is thought that at least\nhalf ol those on board wero killed.\nThe passengers killed are Mrs. Bobbin\nand child, Oswego; a lady from Cleveland\nand two Frenchmen from Ogdensburgh,\nnames unkuown as the stewards books\nire in the sunken wrcck. The crow killed\n John Morley, first cook, Ogdeneburg;\nsecond cook, unknown, Oaweso; William\nllilliard, secaud engineer, Ogdensburg;\nJames Rnnaine, wheelsman, Michael\nHack and James Phillips, tiremen, Cape\nVincent; Mike Ilanley, deck hand, Samuel\nAnderson, porter, Hensaeller Falls, N Y.\nThe saved passengers arc Capt.\nBoardman, Chicago, head injured and\narm broken; James Mullin, Green Bay,\neriously injured; F. W . Btevene, New\nRaven, leg broken and head cut; Riley\nFranklin, Lodi, Ohio, shoulders sprained\naud cut in the bead. The crew saved are\nCaptain Harvey Brown, unirjured; First\nMate Daniel Rider, arm broken; Second\nMate Abner Mcllen, cut in the leg; First\nEngineer Win. Stoddard, fatally hurt;\nAntoine Parker, wheelman, slightly hurt;\nGeorge Meade, lookout, uninjured; Mary\nBrown, chambermaid, leg broken; James\nGibbons, cabin boy, unhurt; AmoB Nelson,\ntoot hurt; VVm. Plumsted, steward, unhurt;\nFred. Valley, deckhand, slightly
001d57758b2edad5851f3f190ce6ff2c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.0726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 «ist powerful one, and at its close the\naltar rail was filled with penitents. The\nmeetings will continue throughout the\nweek, In the Sunday school rooms.\nAt tbe First Baptist Church t«ogood\nsermons were heard. Rev. Mr. Camb-\nrou's morning discourse was a continua\ntlon of a series of sermons from St.\nMark's gospel. In the evening the\nchurch was nearly filled and Mr. Camb\nrou delivered an address to the working\nmen, tbe latter being well represented in\ntbe congregation.\nAt Immanuel Church no evening ser­\nvice was held. The usual moruiug ser­\nvices were held and the Sunday school In\nthe afternoon. The chapel at Clayton\nand Ninth streets was reopened in the\nevening. A choir composed of young\npeople of the church furnished music.\nTwo children were baptised. Rev. P . B .\nLigbtner made a few remarks on the\nhandsome little place of worship aud said\nthat nearly all the improvements made\nhad been done gratuitously as gifts to\nthe church. On Sunday next, the first\nSunday In the month, the Holy Com­\nmunion will be celebrated at 10.30 a m.\nOn the first day of the month, Saturday,\nMr. Ligbtner will meet the young men\ncommunicants of the church in Sun­\nday school building.\nNo services were held In the Presby­\nterian Church to-day, but In tbe chapel\nadjoining prayer services were held both\nmorning aud evening. Rev. Mr. Patter­\nson, pastor of the church is ill.\nThe unabashed organization known ;as\ntbe Echo Cornet Band, which is com­\nposed of colored performers, aud is about\ntwo months old, will make another\nstrenuous effort to gain a solid footing on\nThursday evening,\nwill be given in the Red Mens Hall for\nthe benefit of the baud.\nThomas Harding of Wilmington, will be\npresent with his famous band, to\nfurnish music for the occasion.\nNew Castle has thus far borne her foil\nshare of the affliction caused by the rav­\nages of La Grippe. In many cases the\npatients would get out into tbe air too\nsoon, taking a heavy cold causing pneu­\nmonia to set in. Not one person out of\nmore than fifty that have been attacked\ndied, end to-day there are but a few who\nare suffering from this fatal disease. Tbe\nloathsome measles has now put in an\nappearance and has gone into several\nhomes, striking down the little ones.\nHundred Assessor William J. Hunter\nsat in the uiayer'e office on Saturday
0b9942748130f93b5c2bdca86742693a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.4890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 oin t he date of his discharge. Shortly nfte\na arrival at tho prison ho made an attomp\nscape by wrenching oir some iron bur\nlat served as a gratlnR to an opening in th\none floor of the water closets at tho enstor\nall of the prison enclosure, and crawlin\nirough into tho covered hewer loading undc\nic wnll, and to a marsh and ravine in a\n(joining Held, lieforo entering the sewn\n3 had supplied himself with an extm suite\nolhes and a small steel "pinch bar." Aftt\naking his way for boiiiu distance throng\nle noisome filth with which tho sewer wu\nirtly tilled, and gaining a point outside th\nall, his further progress was checked by ai\nvlng at a place where the sewer had parti\nivcil iu. Tho sewer was of brick and th\njarters being-so close and limited, an\nle foul gasos having nearly overcoiu\niin, ho was unable to make any eiroi\niward eirecting an escapo through the opet\nig of the sewer, and was barely able t\n his way back to the opening at the wi\nir closets. The tewcr near where he wc\nroughl to a stop was so small that hto' wa\nnabfo to turn around, ami ho was compel\n1 to "craw llsh" a conyideroble distance. It\nlis timo he had becomc so exhausted tin\nwas only by almost superhumanjcfforl\nint ho was enabled to keep his head abov\nic 111 th. and prevent a horrible deal!\n[eanwhile he had been missed froi\nle yard, and the removal of the bars soo\nlade known to tho olllcere the means of hi\nlit. Armed guards were immediatel\n'lit out along the line and to the mom\nthe aewer, so that even if he had been abl\ndig out or pass through the sewer, li\nouid have been captured, lie came out\nhorrible plight, and oncof the worst di\n;ist-d prisoners ever seen. He afterwari\niaui* *' > cjui uiiciiipia uj csui|ii;, ui jnt-jnii;\nons /or escaping, all of which, lioweve\nere discovered before he attempted lo pi\nlem into execution.
3e6071b5700878bf717cb9a8ed34377f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.3292349410544 58.275556 -134.3925 To Whom It May Concern:\n(Meaning Defeated Caudldatos. )\nThe Stroller does not rare to II*-\n'en to your atory as to how It hap¬\npened. Ho knows exactly how and\nwhy It happened and anything you\ncan say will not convince him other¬\nwise. Had any women been "In the\nhands of their friends" and defeated,\nthat would be different and they\nwould have^been welcome to weep\nout their troubles on Ihe Stroller's\nshoulder* provided they came one\n»t a time. But to the 8troller there\nis nothing more dlsinterestlng than\na defeated male candidate. He is a\nlast year's almanac, a pony that\nwent lame on Ihe flr*t quarter. Per¬\nsonally, the 8troller would like to\nhave aeen all of you nominated. That\n<* one thing he likes about himself,\nlie always wants people to what\nthey go after and never enjoy* see¬\ning anyone disappointed. Bit there\nwere too many of you for the num¬\nber of pluma and somebody had to\nbump the bumps. You were IT, so\nlon't go around oozing your storlee\nto innocent, well-meaning people.\nHad Ihe majority wanted you. the\npersimmon would have dropped into\nyour receptacle and been your* to\nhave and to hold. But the majority\n<ald "Nay. nay," and there you are.\nThe Stroller is sorry for you. but\nbuttonholing and telling him your\ntrouble* won't serve lo mitigate the\nrigors of the situation In any way.\nOn the other hand. It will only serve\nto harrow up hi* feeling* and that\nIs just what he wl*he* to avoid. Do\nlike Demosthenes Is said to have\ndone: Go out aud hurl your burn-
053257c09e832bbff9f958f8ca33e34d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.6232876395231 40.063962 -80.720915 oke, Fit* Lee, (33), 150; Gaus, C. C\n(39), 149; Vogler, Argonauts, (14)\n; Gordon, Argonauts,, (it), *149; Jack;\ni, K. K. K., (42), 149; "Wise, Bowlers\n), 148; Clark, Argonauts, (35). 148\nrver, Argonauts, (44), 147; Miller\nrltans, (36), 147; Jones. N. E. L. & A\n(45), 146; Bycott, K. K . K.. (38), 146\nintz. Old Cronies, (44), 146; Kromrick\nAlike, (21), 145; Amdt, All Alike\n). 145; Marte, Slgsbee, (27), 145\ntrader. All Americans. (33), 144; Rich\nIs, Bowlers, (36), 143; Falck, Bowlers\n), 143; Brown, Argonauts, (18), 143\nIson, Argonauts, (28), 143; Cochran\nC. C ., (42), 143; Reed. Flgtfbee, (15)\n; Handy. SlgSbee, (21), 143; Henning\nsvlers, (36), 142; "Wood, K. K . K ., (18)\n; Dick, C. C . C ., (14). 142; Heiawinger\nrsbee, (24), 142; Old Cronies\n), 142; McDonnell. Argonauts, (27)\n; King. Slgxbee. (27), 141; Horatman\nx Lee, (3). 140;Wood, Argonauts, (17)\n; Kraft. All Alike, (33), 139; W\ninch. All Alike, (42), 138; Rader, A1\nlerlcans, (30), 138; Falck, N. E . h . &\nA., (39), 138; Acker, Puritan*, (42)\n; Kane, Puritan#. (27), 133; B. Welty\nC. C., (29). 133; Ray, K. K. K., (30)\n; Zimmerman. All Americana, (30)\n; Cardona, Ml Americans. (28). 132\n:Elroy, K. K. K.. (2t>. 133 QOrgc\nritan*, (9). 132; Bremson. Fit* Jjoc\n), 130; Gardner, All Atnerlcans; (15)\n; J. "Welty, C. C . C., (13). 120; Bueter\nK. L . A A. A., (39), 128; Miller, Olf\nin Ire, (25), 128: Brett. Pit* I^eo, (15)\n; Hall, All Alike. (12), 126; Rns*,.01<\nante* (18), 124; 8mlth, N.
066b3ec3cdde19db99e3213896cb221b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.2041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 Where there Is lack of snow to aid\nthe tracker la translating the thls-wny-\nnnd-thnt of a caribou trail a ounutuff\nlike that exercised by Kipling's Mow-\ngll In the story of the “King's Ankus”\nIs quite necessary for success. Being\nextremely restless, the caribou, even\nwhen eating or drinking, is not content\nto glean his fl]I from one place, no mat­\nter how abundant the food. It Is a\nnibble here, a slip there, and so on un­\ntil rods and sometimes many acres are\ncovered lu satiating a mild »hunger.\nThe natural food Is a moss which Is to\nbe found on bog land from Maine to\nthe limit of vegetation In the north,\nand the ash gre«-n, boardllke moss pe­\nculiar to spruce tops In the big woods.\nThis latter sustenance comes to them\noffer logging operations or when a\nhurricane tears through the solitudes\nand lays flat scores of trees.\nBecause of his restlessness the In­\ndians colled him the wandering\nand that's what his Latin name\ngests. His natural gait Is a trot, a\nlong, swinging, tireless trot which eats\ndistance with the soreness and steadi­\nness of brook flow. Hero today, he\nmay be fifty miles away tomorrow\nand back again tho following.\nUnlike the deer and moose, the cari­\nbou never plans to yard up for winter.\nHis feet ore large and deeply cleft, his\nankle Joints flexible, and when ho\nwalks In tho snow his dewclaws touch,\nthe whole spreading out Into a kind of\nsnowshoe. After tho light, fluffy snow\nof a heavy storm packs and settles the\ncaribou can go over It fast enough to\nprevent being run down by n huuter\non snowshoes, and his winter hoof Is\nso constructed, with updrnwn frog and\nsharp edges, that be can make full\nspeed on glare Ice. The caribou Is.gre­\ngarious In his habits, not Inclined lo lie\nquarrelsome with his fellows and. be­\nsides being a wanderer. Is extremely\nshy. AVhon a herd bivouacs for a rest\nIt U usually In a woody opening or on\nthe windward side of a bog. This\nscheme of precaution permits of eyes\nto open and nose to cover, and. bclug\nboth keen of Eight, subtle of scent and\nacute of bearing, nothing more tangi­\nble than a cloud shadot4ft-an approach\nwithout being seen, heard or scented.\nCuriosity sometimes brings serious\ntrouble to the caribou, as. for instance,\nwhen being trailed. Long before a\ntracker walks to view the autmal
0a2fb17b5b65724a475a765845563cda THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7986301052765 40.063962 -80.720915 Girty referred, in a boasting manner,\nto the great force at bia command; and\ncalled upon them as loyal subjects, to\ngive up in obedience to the demand of\nthe king's agent, and that uol one ol\nthem should be iniured.\nAlthough the whole number of men\nin the fori did not exceed ten or a do¬\nzen, still there was no disposition to\nj'ield; but, on the contrary,a fixed de¬\ntermination to defy the renegade, and\nall the power of King George.\nGirty having finished his harangue.\nColonel David Shepherd, thecommand-\nant, promptly and in the most gallant\nand effective manner, replied, "Sir, we\nhave consulted our wives and children,\nand all have resolved.men, women,\nand children, sooner to perish at their\nposts thau place themselves under the\nprotection of a savage army with you\nat the head; or abjure the cause of lib¬\nerty and the colonies." The outlaw at¬\ntempted to reply, but a from the\nfort put a stop to any further harangue.\nA darker hour had scarcely ever ob¬\nscured the hopes of the west. Death\nwan all around that little fortress, aud\nhopeless despair seemed to press upon\nits inmates; but still they could not and\nwould uol give up. Duty, patriotism,\npride, independence, safety, all re¬\nquired that they nhonld not surrender,\nand forswear the cause of freedom.\nUnable to intimidate them, and find¬\ning the beselged proof against his vile\npromises, the chagrined and discomfit¬\ned Girty disappeared from tho cabin,\nbut in a iew miuutes was seen ap¬\nproaching with a large bodj' of ludians,\nand inBtantly a tremendous rush was\nmade upon the fort. They attempted\nto force the gates, and test the strength\nof the pickets by muscular effort. Fail¬\ning to make any impression, Girty\ndrew off his men a few yards, and com¬\nmenced a geueral tire upon the port-\nholes.
16730dc3f86b5e3e9cb728d8e458527a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.6013698313038 39.745947 -75.546589 When lightship 52 reached Wllming\nton last evening aud put Into tbe Harlan\nand Hollingsworths yard for repairs her\ncrew pnt on tbelr shore togs and pro­\nceeded to bave a little fun ashore. Two\nof them wandered Into Lizzie Wain\nwrighta place on Orange attest and pro\nceeded to make themselves at home\n8o well did they succeid that Officer\nKelleber, who wag passing, was obliged\nto caution them to make less noise,\nwhereat one of tbe pair greeted him with\nlanguage which savored\nsulphur tbau salt. This morning abont\n5 3) o'clock, Officer Keileber was again\nnear tbe place nad heard tbat the men\nwere raising a rew In the house. He\nwent there aud after putting the nota\nout, advised them to go aboard tbslr\nship Shortly afterwards cue of them\ncame t o him aud asked to be directed to\nthe police station. Th« two went there\naud claimed to bave besn robbed of $7,\nand accused the officer of not helping\nthem get It They weie locked np and\n morning wire arraigned.\nTo Sergeant Dnrusy liny gave the\nnames of Joseph Dczauski and William\nAndereou. Wuen arraigned the furmeT\nsaid his name was John Johansou, bnt\nlater admitted that hla right name was\nCharles Reese aud that he was fireman\non the lightship. Anderson Is a sailor\non the same Reese said be bad cashed a\ncheck for $40 aud intended seudlug $30\nto his wife He spent last evening\naround tbe city, aud not being familiar\nwith the way bick to his ship,\npanied some of his chauce acquaintances\nto Lizzie's, where be stayed all night,\nafter giving L'zzie $39 to keep for him.\nThis morning he got back bis $30, but\nfound himself $7 ont aud hud some\nwords with her abont it.\nJudge Bull suggested to the men that\nthey had had an experience tbat should\nbe worth at least $7 bnt decided tbat as\nthere was no very serions charge against\nthem they could go He warned them\nto be careful where they went and how\nthey acted,
217314762edfeed7ef9239b208499e8d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.1027396943175 39.261561 -121.016059 If the Alabama delegation goes out on\nTuesday. Mr. Biglar will be Chairman of\nthe Committee on Commerce, and will re-\nport favorably for Mr. McIntyres confirma-\ntion. Alabama may not Recede till the 4th\nof February, in which case the delegation\nwill remain. Every withdrawal from Con-\ngress adds to the chance of the passage of\nthe compromise measures, and to-night the\nconservatives hope that measures will be\ntaken during this week to insure the con-\ntinuance of the border States in the Union.\nMr. Sewards speech was in priut before\nit was delivered. It is stated that it was\nnot his iotention to Bpeak before the end\nof next week ; but the terrible progress of\nrevolution in the Southern States, and the\nseizure of forts and other Federal property\nin Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Flori-\nda, have brought him out sooner than he\nwished himself. The disunionists do not\nlike his speech, as it will injure them in the\nSouth, lluntcr, especially, who made an\nundisguised secession speech the day before,\nseem» to have been overthrown with his ar-\ngument. The entirety of Union loving\nmen praise Mr. Sewards efforts, expressing\na hope that be will yet assent to the adop-\ntion of the Crittenden resolutions. Some\nradical Republicans denounce Sewards\nspeech in vehement terms.\nIn the Senate, ou »he 16th, Mr. Rice, of\nMinesota, introduced a resolution providing\nfor the appointment of a special Committee\nof seven by the Senate, with instructions to\ninquire into the expediency of passing a\ngeneral act for the admission of States and\na re-adjustment of the limits of California,\nMinnesota and Oregon.
488b85d65cc126776c825d98ab71c922 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.0123287354136 39.261561 -121.016059 As a medical man it is the duty of every physician to\nlook at disease as it affects health and life, and his solo ob-\nject should be to mitigate, us far os lies in his power, the\nbodily suffering. Human nature at best is but frail, all\nare liable to misfortune.\nOf all the ills that affect man, none are more terrible\nthan those of a private nature. Dreadful ns it is in the\nperson who contracts it, frightful as are its ravages upon\nhi* constitution, ending frequently in destruction and a\nloathsome grave, it becomes of still greater importance\nwhen it is transmitted to to innocent offspring. Such be-\ning the case, how necessary it becomes that every one hav-\ning the least reason to fear that every one having the least\nreason to fear that they have contracted the disease,\nshould attend to at once by consulting some physician\nwhose respectability and education enables him to warrant\na wife, speedy, and permanent cure. In accordance with\nthis necessity, DR . YOUNG feels called upon to state that\nby long study and extensive practice, he has become per-\nfect master of all these diseases which come under the de-\nnomination of venereal, and having paid more attention to\nthat one branch than auy other physician in the United\nStates, he feels himself better qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such as Ulcers, Swelling in the\nGroins, Ulcers in the Throat, Secondary Syphilis, Cutane-\nous Eruptions, Ulcerations, Tetuary Syphlliw, Syphilis in\nChildren, Mercurial Syphilitic Affections, Gnnorhea, Gleet,\nStrictures. False Passages, Inflamation of the Bladder and\nProstrate Glands, Excoriations, Tumors, Pustules, Ac., a r e\nas familiar to him as the most common things of daily ob-\nservation.
2c5e9c8c12272193f31b1cd852d74b0d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.678082160071 58.275556 -134.3925 In one house the mother aim one\nchild were found dead with the dla-\nease and three other children found\nhalf starved and cowering in. fright.\nThey were taken to the orphanage\nand given over to the "White Wings"\naquad. The bouses were all cleaned,\nscrubbed and disinfected by the men.\nAfter stumping out diaeaae at Un-\nalaaka the t'nalga steamed for\nDutch Harbor, where every Inhab¬\nitant yras found down and out with\nthe exception of the wireless oper¬\nator. Thirty persona were foun<l\ndead at thla place. The wirelen*\nman taking III. the wlrelesn win\nhandled by the ship's Instruments\nA doctor and four men landed lit\nthe place, Riving It a thorough clean\nIng. An officer and four men were\na'so stationed at the home of the\nAlaaka Commercial Company agent,\nwho waa down with the flu and the\nplace waa converted into a base hos¬\npital. Throe other officers with de¬\ntachments were sent to the native\nvillage, where conditions were found\nto be Indescribable.\nAfter keeping up the light until\nJune 16th, Capt. I>odge wirelessed\nto Washington for additional help.\nThe Marblehead arrived on June 17.\nand after consultation between Drs.\nScott, Johnson and Capt. Dodge, It\nwas decided to ateam east to Nusha-\ngak and other peninsula polnta. The\nMarblehead tranaferrod four nurses,\nthree doctors and five hospital corps\nmen to the Unflga and several tons\nof supplies, after whleh the gun¬\nboat proceeded to N'aknck and -the\nUnalga. o Nushagak.\nCapt. Hodge and a crew of men\ntook rowboata and proceeded up the\nKvlchak river to lllamna lake, pull¬\ning In all about S00 miles and re¬\nlieving numeroua cases of distress.\nThey found the native villages prac¬\ntically wiped out. corpse-i lylnn\nabout on the ground, many totally\ndevoured by the dogs and others\npartlaly devoured. Skulls and bones\nand fragments of human fleah lay\n*11 over the villages: and In the\nhouses the corpse* were so putrid\nthat It was necessary to roll .them\nwith shovels into sheeting and tie\nthem up before they could be han¬\ndled. Detachments In rowlxmt* went\nis far as Wood river. Ih some of\nthe villages here all were dead, in\nother a few survivors were found,\nall In a starving coudltlon and bar-\nred In their homes to keep from be-
017c98b73c6aff4f689573500a01c323 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.7499999683769 29.4246 -98.49514 he was nominated. For days before tho\nconvention met ho had his letter written\nrefusing this nomination, and In the\nhands of his law partners at Austin, and\nyet ho had his friends put lils name be\nfore the convention, and that conven-\ntion gave to him what of honor it was\nIn Its power to give, and now ho has\ndishonored tho members of that con-\nvention by Hinging back tho girt as an\nempty honor. So let It be. If Mr. Rec\ntor does not enro to put himself In tho\nposition to take what the convention\nollered him, he probably can get along\nwithout Republican votes. He certainly\nwill so far as the western portion of tho\ndistrict is conoerned, If I read aright\nthe signs which show so \nI think It very probable that many\ngood Republicans would prefer to vote\nfor the Democratic nominee, rather than\nfor Mr. Rector, slnco he has chosen to\nset himself up as greater than his party.\nfor I believe he claims to bo n Republi\ncan still. Hut they are not forced to do\nthis, for they can, If no better opportu\nnity oilers, refrain from voting, and let\nMr. Rector elect himself as best he can.\nI think, however, that tho Republican\nCongressional Executive committee will\nfind a worthy man, who Is not ashamed\nto bo a Republican standard bearer, and\nwho will not play Into tho hands of the\nfew Federal olllclalsln this district, who\nare now and have been continually using\nthe power placed in their hands\nto prevent
1dbfafe3bae7b4d1560cfe762432deef OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.5520547628107 41.020015 -92.411296 WASHINGTON, July 17. —The unan­\nimous report to the Commission ex­\nonerates Agent Savillc. and declares\nthat the charges against him aro mean\nin spirit and origin. It says that some\nof tho affidavits which soeni to reflect\nmost upon the character of tho agents\nwere such partial statements that thoy\namounted t<> culpable su/ijire-iio rcri,\nand some of tbc testimony on which\nwere based the most damagiogattackB\nupon their administration was tho tes­\ntimony of a well known deserter and\nthief. The facts cited to tho discredit\nof the agents which wcro gleaned at\ntho agencies during their absence, and\nwhicli they then had no opportunity\nto account for, were, when brought to\ntheir notice, satisfactorily explained.\nIn the peculiar circumstances in\nwhich these Indians wcro placed ir­\nregular practiccs wcro shown to bo\nunavoidable, and apparently suspici­\nous actions were shown to havo been\ncharacterized by entire good faith, and\narc to have been mistakes of\nmen new in office, and who could learn\nonly from experience. The Commis­\nsion endorse tho action of these agents\nin all material points.\nRespecting the charge against Sec­\nretary Delano, of complicity with\nfrauds at Red Cloud Agency, the\nCommissioner says it is but the\nsimplest act of fairneBS for him to\nstate that be has no knowledge of any\nsuch complicity on the part of that of­\nficer, and knows of nothing that tends\nto show it. On tho contrary, so far as\nho knows, the action of tho Secretary\nin all matters pertaining to lied Clond\nAgency during the present yoar has\nbeen only tho ordinary official routine\naction of tho Department upon mattors\nsubmitted by tho Indian ofiice. genor-\nally approving the suggestions of tho\nCommissioner, and never in any way\ndictating, or even making suggestions\nas to purchases, contracts or pecuniary\ntransactions ot any sort.
2d40afb752a0e6a5f8f4fc2d7317739f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9958903792492 39.745947 -75.546589 then«« Kouth eighty-iix «legre«**, eunt\nabout t«'n pen ha» in a point. In land*\nof Mary Ann Baker, opposlt* the\naouthciiy eml of th* weatfrn lino or\nlan«i» now or formerly of Sarah J. Gur­\nren;- thence along subi Mary Ann\nBaktT N land and the land of ti»e raid\nSarah J. Gurren and parallel with tha\n»aid Old Ferry road, north «eventy-one\nan«l one-Murih degree*. e«*t live hun­\ndred and »ixty-nlne feet and one andj\none-half Inche*. more or le**, t«» « point\nIn the Noulherly line of the right of way\nof the WllinlngUui and Northern Rah*\nr«Aa«l Company; thence port her ly along I\nthe Noutheiiy line of »aid company *\nlight of way. three hundred and *lx feet,\nmore or le»», to a point In th«* southerly\nHid« of roter Miller * lane; thenco along\nthe flouthorly Hide of «aid north\naaventy degree», went five hundred and\neighteen fe«t, more or le»». I«» tho plaça\n«»f beginning, on it»« na|d Old Ferry I\nraid, containing within »aid bound*, j\nabout twelve acre*, more or lew.*, be the\ncontent* thereof what they may.\nBeing tho same land* and premise*\nwhich Mary Ann Baker granted and\nconveyed unto ihe »«Id Hamilton Park\nCompany. It* auccetaorn and assign», by\nIndenture, bearing even date herewith,\nand recorded In the «»fflee for the Re-\n«'ordlng «»f Deed*. Etc., In and for New\nCa*tlo county, It» Deed Reconl------ .\nVol ------ , page ------ , etc., to »e«^ure «\nportion of which purchase prlœ thl»\nmortgage lx given. Huhject, however. t«>\na thirty feet right of way through an«J\naero»* the nhove-«le*«Tlbed la ml* and\nf»remise«, grunted unto Sarah J. «Mirren,\n»er heir* and «»sign, by the Raid Mary
0acb5f7881cd2d41cd3ccfe683ebf23d THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1907.5027396943176 46.601557 -120.510842 DtACRIPTIOII, Made in all sires. Itis livelyand easy riding, very durable and lined inside\nwith a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small rmuctuies\n•a ihout allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating\ntl at their tires have onlybeen pumped up once or twice in a whole season. They weigh no more tt- -in\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers o? thin, specially\np epnred fabric on the tread. That "Holding Back" sensation commonly felt when riding on asohalt\nci soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from bei'iur\nwnrezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these\nti. es is |X so per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the ruler\nof only |4.h0 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received: WeshipC.O.D on approval\nViu do not pay a cent until you have ezamiued and found them strictly as represented\nWe will a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 84,55 per oairi Ifvrn, \\u0084. , 1\nFULL CASH WITH OKDEK ancTenclose this advertisement. We will also send one _icl,l\np ated brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers en full paid orders (these meta\np iii-iurecloaers to be used in case of intentional knife cute or heavy gashes) Tires to be returned\nat OCX expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination\nWe are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask yeur Postmaster\nB nUrr. hxpress or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a oair of\ntl.ese tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and lr«.k\nfi ier than any lire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you willbe so we 11 pleased\ntliat when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. We want you to send ua a small trial\norder at once, hence this remarkable Ure offer.
50bc65f43c75e02ecba976d6a71b8b91 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.0479451737697 40.063962 -80.720915 Uvansvillb, January 17..Cloudy and\nvery cold; mercury 14 to 10. River bas\nrisen three inches; covered with a sharp\nthin ice, danger of closing again.\nSt. Louis, January 10 .The river be-\ngan to rise quite rapidly this morning, j\nAt about half past two this afternoon the\nice gorge above tho bridge piers broke\nwith a tremendous burst and rushed down\nwith irresistable force and great velocity.\nRiver men say that no such amount of\nice ever ran down the Mississippi river in ,\nthe same length of time. The river is (\nnow bank full ol ice and moving with\ngreat rapidity on a six foot rise. With\nthe exception of the sinking of the boat ]\nWild Duck, at the lower levee, no dam- |\nage is reported so far. From a dispatch (\nreceived it supposed that the ico in the\nMissouri River has broken as high up as\nKansas City, and the Mississippi an far\nup as Lousiana,?Mo. i\nLouisvillk, January 17..River has\nrisen 7 inchcs, and is still rising; 7 feet 11\ninches in the canal, and Sfeet 11 inches\nin the chute. Weather cloudy aud cold,\nwith slight snow at intervals. Mercury\nranged from 14 to 17 degrees, and it is\ngrowing colder to-night.' Considerable\nnew ice was made, which, with tho shore\nice floating down tho harbor, filled tho ,\nriver. Tho ico is not sufficient to inter- :\nIcro with navigation.\nPiTTsnuBon, January 17..Weather ,\ncloudy. Mercury 22 degrees. At five\no'clock the river was rising gradually; ,\n18 feet 2 Inches in the channel. Tho rise\nsince eight o'clock this morning baB been ,\n4J feet.
94f498791647dfd7785bfc6177011a2c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.2068492833587 41.681744 -72.788147 Chapman Swaggers To Seat\nThe prisoner was not handcuffed\n'when ho appeared in court ait\nwalked with a swagger as he strolled\nover to his seat. He appeared much\nless concerned over the proceedings\nthan did his guards. The only thing\nabout him that gave the Impression\nof cool cunning for which he if\nnoted, was his keen, penetrating eyo\nthat shifted about the courtroom\napparently taking In every detail.\nSeated outside the pen, in the sec-\nond row containing witnesses, was\nWalter E. Shean, the partner in the\nburglary, who will be the star wit-\nness for the state against Chapman.\nBeside Shean was a young woman,\nabout whose Identity there was con-\nsiderable speculation. She was con-\nstantly engaged In conversation with\nShean, and accompanied him in and\nout of the room during the reeesses.\nOne story as to her that\ncame from an apparently authorita-\ntive source was that she was Shean's\nformer wife, who divorced him\nshortly after the local crime. The\nreport was that a reconciliation had.\nbeen effected between the couple.\nChapman Prefers Trial By Jury.\nState's Attorney Hugh M. Alcorn\nwas the first to address the court.\nHe moved that Chapman be pre-\nsented before the bench to declare\nhis preference for trial by court or\nby jury. Judge Jennings then order-\ned Chapman presented and the pris-\noner was ushered before the bench.\nHo was asked by the clerk to an-\nnounce his choice and after about a\nminutes whispering with Attorney\nMurphy, the latter announced that\nChapman chose trial by Jury. Chap-\nman never said a word aloud. After\nthe choice was made, he was taken\nback to the pen where he remained\n... .
3f58e3ccaf619acd2a21dbb77fd466bc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.7958903792492 41.681744 -72.788147 know whether the committee intends\nto store the potatos 'and stand possible\nloss but as yet the committee hasn't\nstated any definite policy. It has been\na matter of pure guesswork from the\nvery start and we've had tc work to\nget any information at all."\nTo this statement the mayor re-\nmarked that as yet the commttee has\nnot been asked for any report but has\npromised to give a report as soon as\nthe potatoes are harvested, preferring\nto wait until then so that any figures\ncan be backed up with facts or to be\nmore exact with potatoes.\nMayor Predicts $3.50 Potatoes.\nCouncilman Gorbach spoke briefly\nas champion of the municipal farm\ncommitee ana advised relying on their\nJudgment. The mayor called Alder-\nman A. M . Paonessa to the chair and\ntook the floor to orate concerning po-\ntatoes. By this time the air was, figur-\natively speaking, full of potatoes. In\npart the mayor said: "You seem to\nlose sight of the object of buying and\nraising potatoes. The few thousand\nbushels the committee has been able\nto get not supply the city. If we\ntake all these potatoes and distribute\nthem now it will not give a peck to\neach of the 10,000 families here, may-\nbe a bushel. It would have no bearing\non the price. The object is to have\nthis supply in reserve so when the\nspeculators try to force the price over\n$2 a bushel the committee can unload\nand if necessary come back to the\ncouncil for permission to buy more.\nThis supply is to be used to try and\nmaintain a balance and to keep the\nprice around $2. It is estimated that\nbetween twenty and thirty thousand\nbushels are already in the cellars and\nwith the 10,000 the committee has the\ncity will need twenty or thirty thou-\nsand more and I believe that these\nshould be held in the balance to con-\ntrol the local market. The commit-\ntee knows what it is doing and it is\nnot wasting the people's money. If\nyou force this committee to sell now I\nventure to predict that in December\npotatoes will be selling here at $3.50\nper bushel."
5b4aa24be1025a9ac57932e129fd473d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0452054477423 41.681744 -72.788147 this remarkable production will giya\ncredit to little Ben as being" wholly\nworthy of the order of merit and the\nwar cross for bravery.\nThis little chap accompanied Mr.\nGriffith and his company to France\nand to the battlefields, where, within\nactual range of the giant guns,\nproved himself as brave as any of hla\nolder associates, acting his beautiful\nscenes often during bombardments by\nthe Germans. In one scene especially\nthis tny youngster risked his life to\nhelp in securing a. very vital situation\nin the story. In this scene, by a for-\ntunate circumstance, little Ben was\nunharmed when buried under a:i ava-\nlanche of plaster and laths. When\naudiences look upon this scene and\nsee the tiny actor bmied under the ,\nwreckage, there is a catch at the\n strings, for to many it appears\nas though lie were caught in the aw-\nful holocaust. When the dirt i dug\naway and his little form moves, the\naudience sighs with relief on seeing\nhim blink through the dust and filth.\nAnd when he looks up and smiles,\nshowing that he is unhurt, there is a\ngeneral feeling of gratification.\nAll this and more is brought out so\nremarkably by little Ben that it ia\ndifficult to believe he is of such tender\nyears. His emotional acting is equal-\nly unusual, and he never falls to\nbring tears to the eyes of his audienca r\nwhen, with his own little cheeks wet\nwith the tears of sorrow, he bids fare-\nwell to his big brother who is going\nforth to fight for France and for
1b29f4508db4de733b1ec52b0c1b305a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1884.1789617170107 42.217817 -85.891125 Although It na been nearly two months\nsince the termination of the Emma Bond\ntrial, public intcreet In the case has not\nabated. The mystery is still unsolved, and\npeople wonder whether the guilty will ever\nbe brought to Justice. As Is well known,\nthe jury has been condemned in scathing\nterms for aeqmttlng Montgomery, Tettis,\nand Clement!. The verdict was and is\nstill considered a second outrage. The\njurors themselves have bad a hard time sinoo\nthe trial. They have been hanged in efflgy,\ncharged with bribery, and at times their per-\nsonal safety threatened. Only a few weefcs\nago one of them was attending a big publlo\nsale In this county, and as soon as his pres-\nence was known the crowd became so infuri-\nated that trouble was only avoided by the\nJuror's hasty departure. Tho fact that some\nof the Jurors havo aiologizcd for their ver-\ndict only serves to intensify the bilter feel-\ning toward him. One of them is reported as\nsaying that bo would give thousand of dol-\nlars If he had never had anything to do with\nthe case. He talks about the trial con-\nstantly, snd looks ten years older than ho\ndid since ho sat in tho jury box. Another\none weeps a great deal of the time, can't\nsleep at night, and seems sorely afflicted in\nbody and mind because the was not\nreceived with favor. Tho Juror, Peter L.\nDavenport, looks much older slneo tho trial,\nans had almost become a hermit, rarely leav-\ning his bouse, and avoiding people us much\nas possible. But the greatest misl'ortuno has\nbefallen Boono Isaacs. Ho was engaged to a\nhandsomo and accomplished lady of this\ncounty, but sho has discarded him since tho\nverdict, and he refuses to be comforted. Mr.\nBond has succeeded in getting the names of\nthe live Jurors who voted at ilrst for convic-\ntion, but were subsequently induce d to voto\nfor acquittal, and is alter them with a sharp\nstick. In fact, all of them have trodden a\nthorny path fduce the trial.\nJudge Je.pe J. Phillips, who tried the ease,\nhas not eacaped tho torm of public indigna-\ntion. He has been hanged in cllisy at Pana.\nTaylorvIIlo, nnd Vandalia, and has received\nnumerous threatening letters from all parts\nof tho country. It is paid that his connection\nwith tho case will probably injure his politi-\ncal aspirations in the fiuture.\nTho lato defendants, Montgomery, Tettis,\nand Clcmenti, havo been practically ostra-\ncized since their return to their home in\nChristian County. Resolutions declaring\nthat their names le dropped from tho\nroll of decent society havo been passed,\nand merchants and business men havo re-\nfused to havo any dealings with them.\nIn retaliation Montgomery
153260c72b71cc7a92bcd397211be26d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.568493118975 40.441694 -79.990086 CHAPTER VII. The Veedict.\nThe trial of Bonald Mervyn for the mur-\nder cf Margaret Came was marked by r\nnone of the unexpected turns or sudden\nsurprises that not frequently give such a\ndramatic interest to the proceedings. All\nthe efforts of the police had failed in un-\nearthing any facts: that could throw a new\nlight upon the subject, and the evidence\nbrought forward was almost identical with\nthat given at the Coroner's inquest; the\ncounsel asked a great many questions, but\nelicited no new facts of importance'the only\nwitnesses called for the defense? were those\nas to character, and one after another the\nofficers of Mervyn 's regiment came forward\nto testify that he was eminently popular,\nand that they had never observed in him J\nany signs of madness".\nThey said that at times he got out oi\nspirits, and was in the habit of withdraw-\ning himself from their society, and that on\nthese occasions he not infrequently went for\nlong rides, and was absent many hours; he\nwas, pcrhapc, what might bo called a little\nqueer, but certainly in the slightest\ndegree mad. One servant of the family,\nand many neighbors gave testimony to the\nsame effect, and Dr, Arrowsmith testified\nthat he had attended him from childhood,\nand that he had never seen any signs of in-\nsanity in his words or actions.\nButh had escaped the one question which\nshe dreaded, whether she had seen anything\nin the room that would afford a clue to the\ndiscovery of the perpetrator of the crime.\nShe had thought this question over a hun-\ndred times, and she had pondered over the\nanswer she should give. She was firmly re-\nsolved not to tell an actual lie, but either to\nevade the question by replying that when\nshe recovered her senses she made straight\nto the door withont looking round; or, if\nforced to reply directly, to refuse to answer,\nwhatever tbe consequences might be. It was\nthen with a sigh of deep relief that she left\nthe witness box, and took up her station at\nthe point to which the policeman made way\nfor her. Aa she did so, however he whis-\npered:
22c60caf61879db831efebdefc8b2b6e THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.0945205162354 40.807539 -91.112923 man from l)u Buque. I am. sir, aston-!the supervision of Mr W. though the last to bear in mind that the receipts and pay- testimony was not interspersed among\nished that such a paper should have been [sentence is formed with such caution as rolls alluded to, are the vouchers to ac- the remarks which form the first part of\noffered to this Housej as the result of in- ;fo allow an escape provided it should be- count fur the expenditure of the vast a- the report, then he is correct. Very little\nvestigatibns at Iowa City. Astonished j come necessary. The majority after mount of money drawn from the Treasti- of the testimony is reported twice in tint\nthat a man, acting under the solemnity of |staling the amount of receipts {'.»r the ry—that they are in lact the burthen of manner. One answer only of Mr DruTy\n oath, a sworn guardian of the interests 'same time, (August, Sept., and Oct.) to the whole story; nnd if they are unsat- is referred to in our remarks upon his\nof the people, should come into this j be the same, the minority also state that isfactory where are we to find any evi- connexion with the Commissioner. But\nHouse, and make statements, such as are 1 the expenses under Mr W., according to dence that the money of the people has sir, on pages 22 and 23, fourteen answers\ncontained in the minority Report. It is j his pay-rolls, for the same time amount been ju licioitsly applied to the objects of his are reported, embracing everything\nto my mind an additional evidence of the to only 1964. 31 -100, giving the precise designed by law? Hut, sir, from the same he said relative to the object for which he
046ab1a548ec9e02567f23aa2e347128 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.0778688208359 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. John Call, who has boon working\non u now process mill atMajorsville, W.\nVa., a village on tho lino of this road,\nsituatod on Wheeling creek, and just at\ntho Greono and Washington county\nlinov arrived hero Friday evening,\nbringing tidings oi the' movements o;\ntho surveyors. lie said thoy luid word\nfrom tho surveyors every few days. On\nThursday last they were about a mile\nfroui Majorsville, and a member of the\ncorps engaged boarding for them at\nSamuel T. Alley's, and tliat they would\nbo at his house Friday evening.\nThov spent Sunday in Jlajorsvillo,\nand the last wo heard from thorn they\nwere at Thomas Steele's. Monday, oil\nAckley creek, in Kichhill township,\nabout one and one-half miles from tho\nBtato lino. They were heading for .:ck-\nley's, and v;ero making about a mile a\nday. Thoy expect to spend Sunday at\nthat point. It will bo romerabered that\nwhen this corps of engineers wero put\non tho lino they were given instruc¬\ntions to find tho most practical line to\nWaynesburg. Four surveys liavo been\nmade which center at Ackley's, three of\nwhich go through this county. /Which\nway they will come by tlio Brushy foil:\nof JSrown's fork or Gray's fork of Ten\nMile remains to bo seen". The former\nis by way of Nineveh and the latter by\nway of Kogcrsvylle.\nWe aro informed that work being\ndone is very thorough^ and the stakes\nplaced with great care, it is the opinion\nof soino that it is a final survey, and\nthe road is being located. Tho work is\nso accurate that it has taken tho sur¬\nveyors about four weeks to do the work\nfrom film Grove to Majorsville, a dis¬\ntance of twolvo miles. A part of this\nlino had never been run before, how¬\never. After the lihoha3 been intersect¬\ned in this county, tho work will, doubt¬\nless, not bo so tedious, as the company\nalready has a very accurate survev anil\ncomplete drafts as made bv the South\nPenti about nine years ago^ and also a\nsurvey made by trick & Mellon about\ntwo years ago. We may expect to see\ntho surveyors pulling 'into this place\nsoon. Our informant said that it\nwas talked freely in that section, and\nwith seeming authority, that tho\nwork of construction would commence\nabout April 1. This, however, is mero\nconjecture, as tho company would not\nlikely mako public any such informa¬\ntion until tho right of way had been se¬\ncured and the route, adopted. It is fair\nto presume, however, that tho road will\nbo built this year, but over what routo\nis the question. The Waynesburg route\nis tho most practical, anil is by tar the\nmost beneficial to tho business interests\nof Wheeling,
0eaf1a9475bc0e98f6c80911c1d24a3a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.8592895858633 58.275556 -134.3925 You are hereby notified that I\nhave expended during the year A.\nD. 1915 one hundred dollars in la¬\nbor and Improvement* upon or for\nthe hcnollt of each of the follow¬\ning named lode mining claims, to-\nwit: Red Diamond No. 1 . Ited Din-\nmood No. 2, Ited Diamond No. 3.\nIted Diamond No. 4, Ited Diamond\nNo. 6, Ited Diamond No. 6, lied Dia¬\nmond No. 7 . ited Diamond No. 8,\nGolden Shield, Golden Shield No. 2,\nSilver Shield, Nevada, Wyoming,\nWyoming No. 2 and Wyoming No.\n3, said milling claims being situat¬\ned on the southeasterly shore of\nDouglas Island, Harris Mining Dis¬\ntrict, Juneau Recording Pyeclnct.\nTerritory of Alaska, tin" amended\nlocation certificated fur said mining\nclaims being of record In the olllce\nof the United States Commissioner,\nKx-Ofllclo Recorder, Juneau, Alas¬\nka, to which reference Is hereby\nmade for a more complete and def¬\ninite description of said milling\nclaims; that the above named lode\nmining claims form a \ngroup of lode mining claims and are\nknown and called the Ited Diamond\nGroup; that the annual assessment\nwork above referred to consisted In\ndriving a tunnel upon the Ited Dia¬\nmond No. 6 claim, said claim being\nn part of the above mentioned\ngroup; that there was expended\nfor said labor and Improvements\nabove mentioned the sum of one\nthou»and five hundred dollars; that\nsaid expenditure was necessary in\norder to hold the above mentioned\nmining claims under the provisions\nof Section 2324 of the Revised Stat¬\nutes of the United States and amend¬\nments thereto, concerning the au-\nnual asaewment work upon lode min¬\ning claims, said sum being tho\namount required to hold said min¬\ning claims for the period ending\nDecember 31. 1915. And, If with¬\nin ninety days after the personal\ngervice of this notice upon you, or\nwithin ninety day after the publica¬\ntion thereof, you fall or refuse to\ncontribute your portion of such ex¬\npenditure as a co-owner
23026e40c56949699ce920186954dc46 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.6808218860983 37.561813 -75.84108 2nd. A person shall not be considered to\nhave lost his residence, who shall leave his\nhome and go into another State or county\nof thisState for temporary purposes merely,\nwith the intention of returning.\n:td A i.erson shall not be considered to\nhave caincd a residence in any county of\nthis State into which he shall come for tem-\nporary purposes merely, without the in\ntention of making such county his home.\n4tli. If a person remove to another State,\nwith an intention to make it his permanent\nresidenae. he shall he considered to have\nlost his residence in this State.\n5th. If a person remove to another State,\nwith an intention of remaining there an in\ndefinite time, and as a place of present\nresidence, he shall be considered to have\nlost, residence in this State, notwith\nstanding he may entertain an intention to\nreturn at some future period.\n6th. The place where a married man's\nfamily resides, shall generally he considered\nhis pface of residence; but, if it is a place\nfor temporary establishment of his family,\nor for transient objects, it shall be otherwise.\n7th. If a married man has his family\nfixed in one place, and he does business in\nanother, the former, shall be considered his\nplace of residence.\n8th. The mere intention to acquire n new\nresidence, without the fact ol removal, shall\navail nothing; neither shall the iact ol re-\nmoval without intention.\n9. If a person shall go into another State,\nand while there exercise the right ot a\ncitizen by voting, he shall be considered to\n:
2c64ecf748d4724cfffb423009b6d557 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.9219177765094 41.681744 -72.788147 Baltimore & Ohio R. R.; S . F.\nGates, American and Cuban Steam-\nship Co.; W. E . Bilger, traffic\nfreight agent, Norfolk & Western\nRy.S Howard G. Pierson and M. J,\nLoydon, Lehigh & Hudson R. R.;\nM. J . Connoly, Nickel Plate road;\nC. B. McManus. New York, Ontario\n& Western1 R. R .J Nat Duke, Dela-\nware, Lackawanna & Western. R.\nR.; L. W. Honer, Jr., J. W. Bates\nand Ralph P. Bird, Clyde Steam-\nship Co.; J. H. Butler and J. R.\nRrennan, American Railway Ex-\npress Co.; William P. Libby, Ply-\nmouth Cordage Co.; George P.\nSpear, Corbin Screw Corp.; John W.\nGhent, Woodland Transportation\nCo.; W. J. Bryan, local superintend-\nent, Connecticut Co.; F. F . Johnson,\nNew England agent, C. B . Q., R.\nR.; C. F. Nye, New England agent.\nPennsylvania R. R.;' Mr.iB&lI, gen-\neral freight agent, Pennsylvania R.\nR. ; J, ii. Trimble, general eastern\nagent, Missouri Paclnc R. .R .; G. C.\nWoodruff, general freight agent,\nNew York Central R. R .; G. C.\nDuller, J. A. Beahan, J. O. Halliday,\nE. E . Regan, J. J . Suavely, Curl\nMitchell and George P. Vennart,\nNew Haven road; G. C. Hinckley,\nDollar Steamship Co.; O . P. Cald-\nwell, Luckenback S. S . Co.; J. F.\nMahool, Intemational Mercantile\nMarine; C. II. Emery, general man-\nager, American Railway Express;\nC. A. Candee, New England repre-\nsentative I. C. C . service bureau; G.\nM. Wood, freight traffic manager,\nNew Haven railroad; C. IL Walker,\nGreat Northern railway.
07d4fe0beb0d6e51f037ccd66b475ccb THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1894.5301369545916 43.994599 -72.127742 Burned Zulus Dreaded the Ice.\n"The natives of tropical countries\nare seldom so much astonished as they\nare when first introduced to Bnow and\nice," 6aid E. A. Forester of Chicago.\n"While the World's fair was in prog-\nress I saw a joke played upon two mem\nbers of a Zulu band which was greatly\nenjoyed and appreciated by all present\nexcept the Zulus themselves. The man\nager of their tribe, whom I knew inti\nmately, knowing that none of the Zu\nlus had ever seen any ice, thought it\nwould be great fun to see how they\nwould act when brought in contact with\nit He accordingly told two of them\nthat he wished them to go down town\nwith him. He informed me what he\nwas going to do and invited me to ac-\ncompany him, which did. We stopped\nat the office of one of the large brewer-\nies, and after explaining our errand\nwere readily granted permission to go\nthrough the icehouse.\n"On arriving at the door or the ice\nhouse we all entered, the Zulus, who\nwere barefooted, following close behind.\nAll along the walls inside great cakes\nof ice were piled. My friend, the man-\nager, climbed up on top of tho cakes\nand told the Zulus to follow him. They\nobeyed. When the cold chill of the ice\nstruck their bare feet, they didn't know\nwhat to make of it. They looked at one\nanother for a minute and jabbered some\nthing in thtir outlandish tongue. They\nstood it for about a minute, then, giving\nvent to a yell, they sprang to the ground,\nand rushing to the door threw theni-wlv- es
0fa2b62eacf3c1be671e018c2473e99b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.7547944888381 40.063962 -80.720915 MUUVV1, nuuic, IU IUU luionov UI XJUlICr.\n[ well know that Butler with all\nIhe power he bus will endeavor, as his\nirtlera have Btated, to crush mo, but fear- ^\nessly 1 givo the public these ficts and hold Co1\nmyselt personally responsible tor what 1 vie\nny. X have received money from United '\nSlates Marshall Usher and other Butler Chi\nnen to carry on the nefarious work of Peo\n3utlerism. While in New Bedford just 0°'\nJeforo the Butler caucuses last year 1 Vlr\neceivcd money Irom the hands of his J},\nwrtner to carry the caucuses there and No1\nheir money was used lor that purpose. Ass\nreceived money Irom Usher to go to ^ 1\n?all Hiver and back tho caucuses for P"1\nSutler. I stand ready as a young man, l°<-{\normerly a strong Butler man, to take the Elli\nHump in any place between the hills ol J'0'\n3erkshiro and tho shores of Provincotown ["1\no proclaim and state the rottenness of \niorruptlon that fills to repletion Jj®'\nhe Butler organization. I well\nmow that I shall be accused ol JJr.\nreachery and falsehood, but I stand roady\n0 meet any Butler man ou any platform Tro\nn any place in this Btato nod discuss the «lt\nuerits of Butlerism. They call me Insane, a'c:\nlerhaps, but every man who knows mo\nind knows my tecord as a soldier and citi- 7\n;en will say 1 mean just what I lay, and j0j],\nlave the conrageto back it up at any time t|,0\nml in any place. I hold myself personally ani;\nesponsible for every word I utier, and it ar0\n1 my earnest wish to Bpcak bolore the [enc\nleople of Halem as soon as poseibieon this\nlatter. X shall be attacked on every side\niy Butler men who have been my friends;\nlut with tho trnth on my side, and pos- S\neasing tho pluck to speak, I dely them P°ii\nII anu I now throw down my gage.
183fd3b50e431202ec23edc0a877426d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.932876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 L'he Secretary earnestly urges the *\njprlety of commencing at once the b\ntiding of sea-going iron-dads, sulta- a\n>to cruise on foreign Htatlona, and t\nle to protect our commerce and vln- u\nate our principles in any emergen- b\nThis will ultimately require tl\nless than ten, and without at- u\nipting to build them all at onoe, u\nshould oommooco Immediately f.\nfour,.one for the Asiatic; one li\nthe Pacltic, and two for the 1>\nropoan squadron. He recommends i\nit the plans for boilers and engines p\nthese vessels be submitted by per* tl\nis outside of the Navy, the beat of fi\nIch may be adopted. These, with v\nno additions to our wooden vessels n\n1 the proper employment of such o\njctlve ships as we uow have, and fi\nth our monitors and torpedoes lor tl\n defence, will give us a Nuvy t<\nlieient to command respect abroad «\ni to afford time In case or a stubborn U\nr to organize and apply the resources a\nour people. The Secrotary also tl\njes that the monitors be provided «\nth additional armor and late im» tl\nivementa in ordnance for harbor de- tl\nice; that means be glveu for the per- b\ntiou of a system of sub-marine tor- o\nJoes; that the largo uuinber of vessels I\nl! large amount of machinery on o\nnd uuadapted to the naval ser- tl\n» be sold; that Inducements should tl\nheld out to our merchants and ship ii\nUders to build ocean ateainers on u\nius approved by the Navy Depart- n\nmt, subject, in case of necessity, to t\ntaken by the Oovernmeut at an an- a\ntised value. il
15d42eb6908b952512d1b05518547fc4 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.03698626966 40.441694 -79.990086 street, was again on fire.\nThe fire three weeks ago gained little\nheadway before it was extinguished, but\nnot so with yesterday's fire. It started in the\nsoutheast corner of tbo basement, and, before\nthe firemen had it nnder control, bad cleaned\nout the basement and first floor, and a good\ndeal of the stock, consisting of lamp?, glass and\ncbiuaware wis destroyed by the force of the\nwater from tbe bose.\nTo make things more exciting, L. H. Layton,\na member of the firm. as soon as ho appeared on\nthe scene emphatically declared that the fire\nwas an incendiary one, and Lut a repetition of\nan attempt to burn tbo building three weeks\nago. While the firemen were working on the\nfire. Inspectors McAleese and McKelvv. Assist-\nant Superintendent of Police Roger "O'Mara,\nSpecial Officers Fitzgerald and Carrigan and a\nnumber of other members of the police \nment commenced looking around for anything\nto substantiate Mr. Layton's statements and\ncatch the fire fiends, if such there were.\nChief Steele soon saw the lire was going to be\nan ugly one, and engines answering the second\nalarm were soon on the ground and tbe men at\nwork. The hose was turned right into the\nfront of the building on the different floors,\nand tho smashing of costly glassware and\nchinaware sounded like an infantry fusilade.\nIt was just 5:10 when tbe fire was rung oat and\ntbe time of reckoning came.\nThe building occupies Nos. 213 . 215, 217 Mar-\nket street, and is owned by the Scnenlev estate-N- o .\n217 is of three stories, and Nos. 213 and 215\nof four stories. The firm of T. G. Evans fc Co.\nis composed of T. G. Evans, F. E . Kvans and\nL. II . Layton (father-in-la-
04acdc96de6048798243ceddae435d1b PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.7575342148655 40.441694 -79.990086 guardian of Charles E. Canghey. Filed August\nNo. li. Final account of E. P . Young, admin-\nistrator d.b. n. c. t. a. or estate of b. C. Young,\ndeceased. Filed August 1J. 1890.\nNo. 14. Final account or busan Mackey. admin-\nistratrix of estate of Diana Logan, deceased.\nFiled Angnst M, 1890.\nNo. 15. Final account or John Mcntzer. admin-\nistrator of tbe estate of Annie Mary Mentzer, de-\nceased. Filed August 15. 189C .\nHo. 18. Final account ofFhlllp J. Jacob, ex-\necutor of will of August Kim, deceased. Filed\nAugust 13. 1390.\nNo. 17. Final account of TltnsBerger. guardian\nor personal estate of Lizzie Spain, now Lizzie\nKletzte. Filed Angnst 13, 1890.\nNo. IS . eecond aeconnt of James B. Jones, ex-\necutor of the will of James Archibald, deceased\nFiled August 18, 1390.\nNo. 19. Final account of John Strattman. ex-\necutor of the will of Barbara Wagenhaueser, de-\nceased. Filed August 18, 1890 .\nNo. a). First account or Michael C. Collins, ad-\n or tbe estate or Henry Collins, de-\nceased. Filed Augnst 18, 1890 .\nNo. 21. Final account or the Safe Deposit Com-\npany of Pittsburg, guardian of estate of Wm. W .\nWilson. Filed August 18. 1890.\nNo. 22. Final account of Thomas Lyons, ex-\necutor of the will of Owen Lyons, deceased. Filed\nAngnstIO, 1890,\nNo. 23. Partial aeconnt of William Peekman\nand Wm. l'flnmm. executors of will of Francli\nHeumma, deceased. Filed Angnst 21, 1830.\nNo. 24. Final account of Charles A. Anderson,\nadministrator of tbe estate of Joseph N. Ander-\nson, deceased. Filed August 21. 1890 .\nNo. 25, Final account of George W. Blair, ex-\necutor orthe will of James Blair, deceased. Filed\nAngnst 21, J80O.\nNo. 29. Account of John Francies. executor of\nthe will of Thomas MeCoubery, deceased. Filed\nAugust 23, 1890.\nNo. 27. Final account of W. C GnndelSnger,\nexecutor of the will of Jacob Schweitzer, de-\nceased. Filed Augnst 25. 1890 .\nNo. 28. Account or W. C. Gundelflnger.
04ca85c29e09dfa476177b0dc17eae51 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.5027396943176 41.875555 -87.624421 Aldls, Owen P., Monndnock Bldg.\nBass, Perkins. It, 140 Ln Salle st.\nBlair, Cbnuncey J., 83 Ln Bade st.\nBlock. William T., loo Washington st.\nBridge, Reucl W., 012 Chamber Commerce.\nBryan, Thomas It., Monadnock Bldg.\nChancellor, Justus, Major Block.\nClarke, John V Ashland Block.\nCole, George E., 80 Denrborn st.\nCohln, William II., 1 13 Dearborn st.\nCorneal!, David E., Btock Exchange Bldg.\nCorwltb, Charles It., 01 Washington st\nFarwcll, John A., 142 B. Clark st.\nFisher, Lucius G Polk nnd Plymouth place,\nritsslmous, Chns., Tacoma Bldg.\nFox, Leo, Security Bldg.\nFullcrton, Chns. W., Of Denrborn st.\nGnrrlty, Patrick L., 12 14 Masonic Temple.\nOnylord. Frederick, 173 Dearborn st\nGiles, William A., 0 4 Borden Block.\nGrove, Charles, "The Fair."\nGreeley. Samuel 8., 822 Opera House.\nHnllbcrg, L. Gustavo, 110 La Salle st\nHarallne. John II., The Temple.\nHandy, Henry II., Stock Exchange.\nHarris, Samuel 11., 52 N. Clinton st.\nHay lie. William J., 423 Dearborn st\nHurd, Harvey B. , 0 2 Washington st.\n Chns. L ., Com Exchange Bank.\nJacobs, William V., N. Y. LI to Bldg.\nJohnson, C. Porter, Ashland Block.\nLay, A, Tracy. Chamber of Commerce\nLcfens, Tblcs J., 172 Washington st.\nLoiter, Levi Z.. 81 Clark st.\nI.owentbal, Berthold, Security Bldg.\nMcCormlck, It Hall, 84 t Ballo st.\nNelson. Walter C, 100 Washington st\nPeabody, Francis B. 104 Dearborn st.\nPerce, LeGrand W., 623 Tho Rookery.\nPike, Eugcno 8., 304, 104 Denrborn sb\nPorter, Washington, Hartford Bldg.\nPrlndlvllle, Itedmond, 617 Btock Ex. Blo\nIllckcords, Georgo E., 107 Dearborn st.\nRosenborg. Julius, 104 Denrborn st.\nIlyerson, Martin A., Chamber of Commerce.\nHenvcrns, George A.. 137 Rlalto Bldg.\nHheldon. Theodore, Borden Block.\nSmith, Byron L., 103 La Ballo st.\nHpooncr, Frank E., 650 Marquette Bldg.\nHtarbuck, James M., Rlalto Bldg.\nStewart, Archibald A. , Btock Exchange.\nThornton. Charles H., Major Block,\nWalker, Henry II.. Tacoma Bldg.\nWheeler. Augustus W., Stock Ex. Bldg.\nWlllouskby, Charles L., 3 0 La Hallo st\nYnggy. t .ovl W., Lake Forest, III.
db1873da6f941ee4b87ad842e86fa4a8 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.3931506532217 35.780398 -78.639099 of such a law has been questioned by\nmen of high legal and political standing.\nBut after a thorough examination of the\nquestion, I do not entertain the slightest\ndojibt that such a law is not unconstitutional\nthat it does not conflict any provision ei-\nther in the Constitution of the United\nStates, or of this State, and that it does not\ninterfere in the least, with any natural\nrights which may be supposed to exist, pri-\nor to and superior to any constitution or law.\nExperience has abundantly proved, that if\nthere is any law on the subject it should\nbe stringent and effectual. Any attempts\nto legalize the sale of spirituous liquors,\nand then regulate and control it by fines,\npenalties, or other punishments for a viola-\ntion of the rules only aggravate\nthe evil, which it is designed to cure. Any\nlaw, to be effectual, must necessarily con-\nfer upon the proper auhoritiesj. the. power,.\nto seize,'condehlTand destroy the offend-\ning articles. It must authorize, under rea-\nsonable rules and restrictions, a search for\nit in stores and dwelling houses, where\nthere is actual or presumptive evidence to\nshow that the law has been violated it\nmust authorize the use of presumptive evi-\ndence, when positive proof cannot be ob-\ntained, or however penal it may be in oth-\ner respects, it will soon become a dead let-\nter. The first enquiry is, therefore, wheth-\ner such a law is or is not constitutional.\nThe clauses in the Constitution of the Uni-\nted States, which have been urged as an-nu li - ng
a08215bc68e464ead35b8830ce24d38d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.6734972361364 58.275556 -134.3925 Valentino, Judge Wtckernham and 0.\nI*. Itubbard? .I heft your pardon,\nSenator, (or overlooking you Will\nl)aii do that, or will he fight tho se¬\nlection* made by Jock McBrlde?\nNow, when lie comca here In a\nvoik or two, you Republican* are\nintercnted In that, and I want you\nto And out from him, and have him\nome up here oir tho platform and\nloll you, too where you can all hoar\nIt, anil where tho newspaper* can\ni>ubllnh It »o that It can he sent all\nover the Territory, bccnuno I have\ni;ot to go all over th* Territory, and\nwant to get word of what Dan Is\ndoing, and which aide he Is going to\ntake of tho laiiucH that may eomo up\nIn the event of Republican success.\nThere are a horde of hungry Wlck-\n around tho Territory who\nwill be interested ,and I want to\nknow whether Dun la going to play\nto them, or whether bo In going to\nplay to tho organization of Repub¬\nlican! headed by Jack MeBrldo,\nwhom you elocted aa your National\ncommitteeman In the laiit election,\n>nd I have a right to know that, and\nhave a right to know It tiocauac\nwe want some political control in\ntila territory and do not want to\nlie haraiuicd with party bickering*,\n(intention* and atrife over appoint¬\nments for the next four yearn.\nHarmony in Democratic Ranks\nYou hnvo had a reaaonablc amount\nharmony In the Democratic party\niiurlng their Incumbency, and you\nwill havo it In case of Democratic\nMlcrctm, because I know 1 can got\nlong with our National Commlttco-\njiuan; wo will have harmony our
1567f7cea854e6540b7c9bc277dd3027 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.382191749112 41.004121 -76.453816 thu tirao of Georgo tho First (hero was\na man who, in a fit of religious enthusi\nasm, tried to maintain n Lenten fast of\nforty days and forty nights. Breakintr\ndown in this resolution after n few days\nno tool; rcvengo on himself by becom\ning an enormous eater, devouring large\nquantities of raw flesh with much avid\nity. Somewhat over a century ago a\nPolish soldier, presented to tho court\nof Saxon as a marvel of voiaclty, one\nday ato twenty pounds of beef and half\nof a roasted calf. About tho same time\nn youth of seventeen, apprentice to a\nThames waterman, ato flvo pounds of\nshoulder of lamb anil two quarts of\ngreen poas in fifty minutes.\nAn aehlovementof about equal glut-\ntony was that of a brewer's man, who,\nat an inn in Aldersgato street, demol-\nished a roast goosooi six pounds weight,\na qua rtern loaf and three quarts of por-\nter in an hour eighteen minutes.\nEarly in tho reigu of Georgo thoThird,\na watchmaker's apprentice, nineteen\nyears of age, in threo quarters of an\nhour, dovourcd a leg of pork weighing\nsix pou nils, and a proportionate quan\ntity of peas and pudding, washing\ndown theso comestibles with a pint of\nbrandy taken off in two draughts. A\nfow years afterwards thero was a beggar\nat Gottlngen, who ou moro than ono\nocc asion ato twelvo pounds of meat at\na meal. After his death his stomach,\nwhich was very large, was found to\ncontain numerous bits of flint and other\nodds and ends, which nature very prop-\nerly refused to recognize as footl. In\nfact, set tlngnsitlo altogether tho real or\nalleged o ating up of a wholo sheep or\nhog, tho instances are very numerous\nin which u joint sufficient for a largo\nfamily has disappeared at a meal with\nin the unworthy corpus of ono man.\nAll the lew Jlotmil.
6499d09dfe81887a8d05e89f5a22beb2 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.941256798978 40.807539 -91.112923 f • From the St. Lo«i« Republican. .\n/ We did intend to-day to have given a\nfull* description of the Illumination on\nWednesday night and of the various mot­\ntoes and devices which the taste and inge­\nnuity of our citizens suggested as suitable\n/or the occasion, but the truth is when we\ncome to the task we find it a more peculiar\none than we had anticipated. Below we\ncopy the Pennant's as the most graphic:\nAt an early hour —long before ihe time\nagreed upon—the impatience of the citi­\nzens broke forth, and lights began to blaze\nalong the windows in Main street. In an\ninstant, as if by the enchantment of an\nEastern tale, a Hood of light broke sud­\ndenly out—around—above. To describe\nthe scene would require a pen dipped in\n and we can only say that it\nwas glorious—a scene to make the heart\nof the patriot swell and throb with high\nand holy emotions. We spent an hour\nin walking through the dense masses of\nladies and gentlemen that thronged the\nstreets. Beginning at the upper end of\nMain street, the first object that arrested\nour attention was the transparency at the\nBank Exchange billiard saloon, represent­\ning "a match Game between Kinderhook\nand North Bend." Old Tip had a spot\nball, and was running the game out in\nsplendid style, while Henry Clay, who\nofficiated as marker upon the occasion,\nwas looking most quizzically at the dis­\nconsolate Matty, and pointing to old Tip's\nscore. It was altogether a well got up\nthing, and attracted a great deal of atten­\ntion and admiration.
aa4395b7defc2fcf05cd74382d5a815f THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.6863013381533 39.261561 -121.016059 Lbttkr from Sin. Cummings.— During the l»te\npolitical canvass, the T.ecompton papers harped\nconsiderably upon a statement made by Mr. U.\nCummings, in the late Republican Couveutian,\nwho detailed a conversation which he had had\nwith Mr. McKibbin. Mr. Cummings was at first\nmisunderstood, and he took occasion afterwards\nto correct the false impressions, but as the Le-\ncorapton papers continued to misrepresent Mc-\nKibbins conversation with Cummings, the lat-\nter gentleman, in a letter to Hon. C . H. Bryan,\nof Marysville, gave a true version of the con-\nversation. As a matter of record, we give the\nfollowing extract from Mr. Cummings letter :\nOu Friday morning, July 6tb, the questiou\nof the nomination of candidates came before\nthe Convention. The names of John Currey\nand O. L. Shatter were presented for the Judge-\nship. A debate sprang up in relation to Mr.\nCurrey, who had just been nominated by the\nAuti-Lecompton Democratic Convention; the\ndebate took a wide rauge, covering the whole\ngrouud of the nomination of the candidates of\nof that Convention. I took part in that debate\nand was opposed the nomination of Meters. Ourrey\nand McKibbin, instead of for it, as the Express\nstates. In that debate, which was somewhat\nearnest and exciting. 1 stated that one reason,\namong others, why the Republican Convention\nshould not nominate Mr. Currey and Mr. Mc-\nKibbin was, that McKibbin did not desire th* nom-\nination qf our Convention, for he bad so stated to\nme the evening previous. He said in substaoce\nthat, -be did not wish the nomination of the\nRepublican Convention, he wished them to let\nhim alone, be was in the midst of a fight with the\nAdministrationparty, who had read him and his\nfriends out. aud cost them overboard, he stood\nupon the Cincinnati platform, while the Admin-\nistration had left it; it was war between them and\nbe was confident of victory, believing that the\npeople of California would tuitam Aim; if the Re-\npublican Convention approved of his course in\nCongress, and wished to endorse it in a resolu-\ntion, and to vote for him at the poll, it would\nbe gratifying to him, but he did not with them to\nnominate him.”
13f60843fd2e9bc244d6c6d22165e77d SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.8890410641807 37.53119 -84.661888 I amilttlng tonight In the room of\nThe Ltttla Red Building whore the\nbloody murder of William Ooobol Is\neald to have been plotted and arraogt\nI ia r the grave of the victim tc the\nFrankfort cemetery this afternoon stili\nunmarked by stone or enroll and un\ndistinguishable from hundreds of otb\nore save by those who loved him In\nlire and yet eeek out hit resting pll Cl\nIn death Tbo farther the public mind\ngot away from this aseacalnatlon the\nmore brutal cold blooded and horrlblo\ntho crime stands out One of two tblo\nli certain William Goebel was eltber\nkilled In a cool Inhuman detcrmlnat\nto defeat his election to the govern\nship at nil coats and hazards or ble\nmurder was the culmination of a dam-\nnable conspiracy to rid the Stato of\nhim that certain Interests joined bande\nwith the republicans In carrying to Itl\ntragic ending Of William Goebel bin\ncalf there Is now left only a sorrow\nmemory and the duty tbat justice owes\nto tbo good name ot the State Out of\nthose who compassed his death aDd\nslow the mm they could neither UIO\n intimidate only onoa weak fool\nprobably the least guilty of a score\nbehind the bars Out the end Is not\nvet Mark these words and see bat\nthe next 12 months brings forth The\nmanhunt tho assassin hunt the hunt\nfor the murderers of Wm Uoebel haa\nnot yet really begun Ere the Inow\nGlee before advancing spring there will\nbe a rattling of drv bones that wl1l\nshako the Commonwealth from one cod\nto tbo other and the world will stai\naghast at the horrors of the tale that II\ntold Men in high places will pray for\nthe mountains to fall upon or flee to\nthe mount to save them and the long\narm of stern unrelenting justice will\nroach up and drag them down to the\ndoom awaiting them and tbat shnull\nbe meted out to all criminals There\nwill be much and grave business tan\nacted In the lath judicial district In\nthe next good year of our Lord and\nBob Franklin the brilliant eloquent\nprosecutor and Judge Cantrlll the In\nlexlble but just and able judge will\nbe busy men Praise God they art\nequal to the treat work before thorn
392000e395c78556d90fff4d9d4113e1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6024589847702 39.513775 -121.556359 Wagon Hoad AcroHtbr Plains.\nThe California wagon Hold BUI intro-\nduced in the Senate by Mr. Weller, has\npassed that body without amendment or ob-\njection. The bill appropriates for the pur-\npose the sum of 8300,000, and provides for\na Military road from Missouri to California,\nvia Salt Lake. A correspondent of the Bul-\nletin says that the fact of the bill having\npassed the Senate, must not be taken as an\nauguaryofits ultimate success, and inti-\nmates that it will be defeated in the House.\nAt this particular time the Black Republi-\ncans claim to be the particular friends of the\nPacific Railroad, and notwithstanding they\nhave a majority in the lower House of Con-\ngress sufficient to elect a Black Republican\nSpeaker over the most litter opposition,\nthey still acknowledge that they cannot\npees the Wagon-road bill through the only\nbranch of the national legislature controlled\nby their party. They roust be the very par-\nticular friends of the Pacific Railroad, in-\ndeed, if they do not immediately pass the\nSenate bill. The people of California arc\ndeeply interested in this wagon rood ar\nrangement. It will test the soundness of\nthe Black Republican professions on the sub-\nject of a Railroad. It is a necessary\nmeasure to precede the Railroad. It will\ntend to the advancement of California al-\nmost as much as the Railroad itself. It is\nnecessary that we should have Military road\nwhile the Railroad is being constructed.\nThe demociatic Senate have passed the bill\nproviding for its construction, and it will\nreceive the sanction of President Pierce the\nmoment it passes the lower House of Con-\ngress. That body is largely Republican\nLet them now make good their professions,\nor California should place no confidence in\nthem. It is no excuse for them to say that\nthere are democrats enough in the House to\ndefeat the measure. There were not demo-\ncrats enough in the House to prevent the\nelection of a Republican Speaker. It will\nnot do to say that it is too late to pass any\nbill of the kind before adjournment. Let\nthe Republicans pass this Military Road-\nBill or California will remember their\nrailroad professions r.s so much gammou\nand electioneering buncombe. The action\nof the Senate has committed the democratic\nparty to the measure. Let the Know-Noth-\nand Repqblicans in Congress pass the\nSenate bill, if they would give force and\neffect to their Railroad professions.
0a4a1c3cff94acaa56f2888d08406aa7 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1884.047814176027 41.004121 -76.453816 It is a source of great satisfaction to\nnotice as wo havo within the .last half\ndozen years the improvement which\nhas been making in the appearance of\nfarm dwellings. It is being done in\nvarious ways and after various plans.\nIt seems that every one, no matter\nwhat the exact measure of his means\nmay be, is doing something in beauti-\nfying bis home. It makes no differ-\nence what is the particular naturo of it,\nthe aim is to add to its attractiveness,\nand in this effort it has tho support and\nass.stanco of the wifo and daughters,\nwhoso share in tho work is given free-\nly and ungrudgingly, and all equally\nenjoy tno happy result. How mucli,\nfor instance, docs a neatlv fenced in\nfront yard, filled with flowers of vari-\nous kinds, with trellises for climbing\nvines, add to tho general appearance t\n houso should havo a comforta.\nble porch or piazza, which Is a protec-\ntion against sun and rain, and in sum-\nmer evenings, when tho entiro family\nis game red ttiero, it proves to no the\nbest room in the houso I Every dwell-\ning, howover humble, should also havo\na little parlor, nicely furnished, though\nit may take years to eompleto it, which\nshould bo opened daily whether used\nor not. It is tho prido of the good\nwifo and daughters in increasing its\nneatness and beauty, as well as in re-\nceiving in It on special occasions their\nneighbors and mends. In a word, to\ninoreaso tho attractiveness of one's\nhomo is a real labor of love, and it can\nbo done at such times when other du\nties aro not pressing, whilo tho expense\not it is so trilling us not to be felt.
09ffeb42c29ab630eadd23acbabdf9c9 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.7164383244547 37.451159 -86.90916 The Company has taken extra pains\nto afford the public something new and\nnp to date in the way of a Fair treat\nThe music will be extra good perhaps\nthe best we have over had here It will\nbe furnished by the celebrated Third\nRegiment Band of Ocvenaboro which\nhas won much distinction as one of the\nbest bands in the whole country It is\ncomposed of 18 well drilled musicians\neach an artist with Mil Instrument and\njust to tit and listen to its continuous\nconcerts will be worth the price of ad ¬\nmission There will be side attractions\nof various kinds both to interest and\ninstruct The lady who will wake the\nthrilling slide for life in the grand\nspectacular feat of sliding from a\nhigh elevation of feet suspended on ¬\nly by the hair other head is something\nnew and a sight which perhaps you\nwill never witness again There will be\nother features equally as thrilling and\nInstructive The numerous special at ¬\ntractions warrant the belief that the\npatrons will receive more for their\nmoney this year than ever before It\nwill be a clean and moral exhibition\nthroughout and nothing to offend the\nmost fastidious tastes will be allowed\non the grounds It will be Instructive\nto the children amndng to the young\nfolks and entertaining to all who attend\nThere will be something of interest to\neveryone no matter how particular his\nor her taatrs may be\nWe have every reason to believe that\nthe Fair this year will be of much great ¬
29e3eaf78e8d5213d9799183a85a0e7e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.0452054477423 40.063962 -80.720915 At tba front doorol the Court Hauwof aald county,\nthe following described property, tbat U to My:\nThe nut half of lot numbered thlriy-alx, situated\non the aoutbtldsof Man laud street, theaume Ulna\nIn Zana'a lalaud adaltlou to tha Lltyof Wbuvlu,*\nat laid out by Hsury Moot*, twalao tor K(*t,< ier\nZana, and localad on Zane'a Island. At the uiu«\ntime, by the commit o! the aald Mary J. and 1>. k .\nBell, will baaold tbe wast ball of aald lot, l*o x,\nalb the rvatdenee o!aald M. J . and 1). K . Ml, ami\ntba sppurtenanccs thareto belouvlng. The im.\nprovemeuU consist of a two atoiy tnav duelling,\nbuilt In tha moat substantial manner, wub six\nrooms, ball, cood cellar, water in house. 1 be lot\nis well act«(111 grope arbor, fiult trees and flow \nThe aalo la ouTy made to doae an estate. Tim\nabove property uuleaa previously disposed of at\nprivato aale, will bo aold a* a whole or in acparata\npart* aa will best auit purcbasute. It la located ou\ntht hl|Uoat Kround ou the laland, far abovo hlxh\nwater, and In a moat axcellent neighborhood and\nwlthlu half a square of tho Street KnJlway,\nTha tftfo fa believed to bo unquestionable, and it\nsold as a whole. a deed will bo made from the own*\nera direct, but II sold separata 1 will couvey only\nsuch title aa la vested In me.\nTwta or hau..Ono thinl and aa murh morcaj\nthe purchaser may elect In cash, on day of aale, tho\nbalanco In two aqual liutallmeuta oi one and two\n| years, with Interest from ilay of sale. ih»
2299a212afa435d8708196e6107a49ff COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1868.7117486022566 41.262128 -95.861391 to consciousness,\nl»oy, was found dead on the floor,\nbound with cords as they had left\nhim, and the dead body of Annie,\nthe little girl had been dragged from\nthe yard into the back stoop, un­\ndoubtedly for the. purpose of hav­\ning all traces of their guilt oblite­\nrated by the fire which they\nhad set. It Is supposed tiiat the mis­\ncreants were alarmed by the ap­\nproach of the horses of Mr. Appleby\nand his men, and fled into the ad­\njoining woods, from which they scat\ntered to their homes before mornin)?.\nThe whole country is aroused, and it\nwill be difficult for all of the perpe­\ntrators of such a diabolical deed to\nescape. The negro who pretended\nhe had a letter was recognized by\nMrs. Orally, the work woman, as\nBill Batson, the recent negro and\n candidate for the Legislature\nfrom that district. He was not to be\nfound the next day, and his wife\nsaid he was gone to Miiiberry, to a\nnegro meeting. He is probahiy se­\ncreted either in the woods or in the\nhuts of some of the rest of the g. ng;\nbut it will b« hard for him to escape,\nas .he whole country is aroused. No\nnegroes were found absent from\nhome for five miles around, except\nBatson, and, unless he is caught It\nwill be very dlffknlt to fbrret out the\nm irderers," on account of the secret\norganisations known to exi*t among\nthem. Life and property are at the\nmercy nf the blacks in nearly the\nwhole Sooth. They refuse to work.\nand being fed by the freedman's Bu­\nreau, arft allowed to >ive in idleness\nand per(><<rate their fiendish out-
47ff1bf84b256b17babda1db3aad6c99 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.9630136669202 32.408477 -91.186777 As I lay there thinking, I naturally\ndwelt upon myself and my situation.\nIt was unparalleled, undreamed-of,\nthat I, Humphrey Van Weyden, a\nscholar and a dilettante, if you please,\nin things artistic and literary, should\nbe lying here on a Bering sea seal-hunt-\ning schooner. Cabin-boy! I had never\ndone any hard manual labor, or scul-\nlion labor, in my life. My muscles were\nsmall and soft, like a woman's, or so\nthe doctors had said time and again\nin the course of their attempts to per-\nsuade me to go in for physical culture\nfads. But I had preferred to use my\nhead rather than my body, and here\nI was, in no fit condition for the rough\nlife in prospect.\nThese are merely a few of the things\nthat went through my mind and are\nrelated for the sake of my-\nself in advance in the weak and help-\nless role I was destined to play. But\nI thought, also, of my mother and sis-\nters, and pictured their grief I was\namong the missing dead of the Mar-\ntines disaster, an unrecovered body.\nI could see the headlines in the pa-\npers; the fellows at the University club\nand the Bibelot shaking their heads\nand saying, "Poor chap!' And I could\nsee Charley Furuseth. as I had said\ngood-by to him that mbrning. lounging\nin a dressing gown on the be-pillowed\nwindow couch and delivering himself\nof oracular and pessimistic epigrams.\nAnd all the while, rolling, plunging,\nclimbing the moving mountains and\nfalling and wallowing in the foaming\nvalleys, the schooner Ghost was fight-\ning her way, farther and farther into\nthe heart of the Padific-and I was on\nher,
1a2fc1c23de899af33838b7bffdb3ec4 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.1849314751396 39.369864 -121.105448 Over §3,01)0 Stolen.—About two weeks\nMiice, the house of Michael Casey, situated on\nFlume street, was broken into in the night time,\nand over §.' 3 .000 in gold coin extracted therefrom.\nAt the time, no one was in the house except\nMrs. Casey and her daughter. Mr. Casey was\nperforming night work in a mining claim near\ntown. There is something strange about this\nrobbery which needs explanation. Some months\nago a gentleman, a resident of Grass Valley, and\na relative of Mr. Casey, deposited with the latter\nfor safe keeping, a purse containing §800".\nCasey advised him to bury the money under his\nhouse, and pointed out a spot beneath the floe r,\nas a safe place to make the deposit. The advice\nwas taKen and the money so buried. Some time\nafterwards, another gentleman, residing at Grass\nValley also, deposited with Casey a sack con-\ntaining §1,500 ; and subsequently a further de-\nposit of §425 was made Casey, by a third\ngentleman—all of which money was buried in\nthe same spot, making in the aggregate, includ-\ning Caseys own money, §450, oVcr .§.,3000. On\nthe night in question, an entrance was made by\nsome party or parties, and the money stolen.\nThe entrance to the house was made by cutting\nthe hinges of the door, which were of leather, and\nby tearing up the floor immediately over the\nplace where the money was concealed. The\ndoor was fastened inside with a rope, and was\nthus found ill the morning after the robberv.\nBoth hinges were cut, but one of them not en-\ntirely off, and therefore it is inferred that the\nrobbers could not have entered in that way.\nI hat the money was taken, however, there is no\ndoubt; but who took it, how the thief gained a\nknowledge of where it was secreted, and how he\nobtained access to it, arc matters entirely hf con-\njecture.
1867f38be73709d56f8827955068a20e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.2041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 This system the President meani\nbreak up, he believing that it is a grosi\nerversiou of the Constitution to have\n10 appointing power virtually exercis\n1 by {Senators and Representatives. H(\nels that he i« reportable for the charac\nir of all Presidential appointees am\ntat it is his duty to use his best effort\n> sccure tho service for the governmen\nf the most competent and honest men\nhis is a duty, lie holds, which he hns in\night to delegate to others; nor is he wil\nng that, under.the plea of custom, other\nmuld take itout of Jus hands,\nTlicso ideas, although usually receive!\n1 thn liroMnro i\\t Ihn PvAuSilant u-itl\ncquiescence, can not be naid to meet will\ncneral favor among tho members o\nongreas. There are a few who warml;\npprove them, and who would really \\x\nlud to he relieved of the business of get\nng ollices for their constituents. They\nowevcr, are men of such influence tha\nley look upon (he distribution of pa\nronnge of no advantage. The major\n:y of the member* of both houses thin\nlie President's theory la Quixotic, an<\nropheav its a needy abandonment. I\nliey believed that it would l>o put ii\nracticc, they would be more earnest ii\nlieir expressions of dislike and oppoai\nion than they now are. It is easy t<\nredict from the President's firmneaj\nowevcr, that uo amount of opnoaitioi\ne is likely to encounter from Congresi\n'ill divert hiui from bin purpoae of mak\ntig ^ thorough reform in this regard.\nPresident Hayes appears unuaully de\njrmincd not to have his time taken uj\n'ith hearing entreaties of office aeekerr\nrho throng tho ante-rooms at the Whit\nlouae cyory day. Ilia private secretary\nlakes himself a break-water to protec\nis chief Against the assaults of them\neople. They are referred to the head\nf the departments. From these higl\nHiciuis they get little encouragement, fo\nie rules of making no removals excep\n)r cause now prevails in all branches o\nie public service.
083819455534eb764f5ce65c9f3e7a8b PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1888.7226775640052 39.756121 -99.323985 Philadelphia special: The Times\nthis morning publishes the report of\nthe operations of the steamship City\nof Loug Branch, which is now anchored\noff Cape Penelope, searching for the\ntreasure which went down on the Brit-\nish sloop of war De Brook in May,\n1798. The work is being done under\nthe direction of Dr. Seth Pancoast and\nCapt. Charles A. Adams, United States\nnavy, who has been detailed by the\ngovernment for the work. After going\nover the bottom of the ocean for a mile\nsquare from the point at which Pilot\nMcCrackin's notes said the De Brook\nsank, a mound five teet high, 100 feet\nlong and forty feet in width was found\nin sixty feet of water. When the grap-\npling irons caught on this mound the\npoints showed light traces of verdigris.\nDiver Penrick was sent down to make\nan examination and a probo, which he\ndro.e into the mound, was brought up\nwirh its poih covered with virdigris.\nThe record shows that besides the\ntreasure the De Brook had seventy tons\nof copper in the hold when she sank\n was copper acove the water line.\nChe City of Long Branch is fitted out\nwith all modern machinery for raising\nsunken vessels. The diver while ex-\nploring the mound, found his probe im-\nbedded in a soft piece of wood. He\nsignaled for a rope and while waiting\nfor it to be loworad his hf:nd came into\ncontact with another piccj of wood\ntbout live feet long. The pieces were\nsent to the surface and dried. On the\nlarge xiece several bolts of the style\nused by shipbuilders of 100 years ago\nwere found, Diver Edward Pickman\nagreed wtth his colleague Pedrick, who\nsays that the mound could be pumped\nout in five days if they could work at\nit steadily, but as they can only work\nfor about three hours a day, it will\nprobably take a week to find out just\nwhat is there. Both Capt. Adams and\nthe divers feel satisfied toat there is\nthe wreck of a vessel under the mound.\nYesterday a big suction was sent down\nagain and the pump started. Suddenly\none of them called. "Here's wood."
1978b749ad6a668bf92d101622313d3b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.2452054477424 42.217817 -85.891125 o'clock, Mrs Woodman will give an in-\nformal reception in their honor, and will\nbe pleased to receive all her friends.\nTheodore E. Hendrick, formerly a\nprominent citizen of Paw Paw, died in\n1ST2, leaving an estate valued at about\n810,(XK). Ho disposed of his property by\nwill, and after certain legacies were paid\ngave everything to his wife, Elvira C.\nHendrick, and appointed her as execu-\ntrix. An additional clause of tho will\nprovided that if anything remained at\ntho death of Mrs. Hendrick, it should bo\ndistributed among certain of his heirs\nnamed in tho will. In 18S3, tho execu-\ntrix having closed up tho will was, by\nJudge Hilton, then probate judge, dis-\ncharged from all further liability. Mrs.\nHendrick rocently departed this life,\nleaving an estate of about $10,000. The\nHendrisk heirs onco claimed the same,\nalleging that they were entitled to it as\nthe residue of the Hendrick estate and\nprocured tho appointment of Wra. Kille-fe- r\nas administrator de bonis non. Pre-\nvious to her death, F. It. Bassctt had\ncharge of Mrs. Hendrick's business as\nher agent. Her heirs procured Bassett's\nappointment as administrator of her es-\ntate and laid claim to the property left '\nby her. Killefer made demand on Bas-se- tt\nto surrender such property into his\npossession, which, of course, was refused.\nKillefer then filed a bill in chancery set-\nting forth tho claims of the Hendrick\nheirs and making Bassctt defendant, and\ntho court will bo called upon to construe\nthe will. The case is an interesting ono\nand one that is likely to end only in a\ncourt of last resort.
60081770073aa57b199270afeefb4cde OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.042465721715 39.513775 -121.556359 mg wherein Mias (>arst and tVanie* K (litlioway,\ncomprising the firm ol Carat A Callow nj' were\npl. - intiir*, and I). U s-pilunan, E 11. Could, mid\n.lames 1.. Carr were defendant?, a certified cepy ot\nw Inch Inis been d<hvered to me, it w as among other\ntiling#ordered, adjudged and dec ret d by the said\nCourt that the p ainii.T - have and recover of the de-\nfendant B K. Spillman, the sum ol $4 562 48-118), to\ndiaw Inter* si nl the rate of two and one-halt p« r rent,\nper month until (»aid, henid* 9 the costs of his action,\ntaxed in 873 is Um. a d that ail that certain pM« e nt\nparcel of land lying and h. lug situate in the coun'ies\nol \\iihaand Butte • r i eof California on both tides\nof the main road leading Iron* the el'y of Marysville\nin tend \\ aha county, to the town of Babbit Cr**ek. iu\nMerra county, ami upon the dividing line of the\ncounties ol Yuba and Bade, at a place know n and\ncal ed ••Strawberry Va U y,” w hich contains one hun-\ndred and sixty acres ot land, on which, near Ha c**n-\n in \\ uha County. Hands the house know n i»> the\n•Columbus House,” and which is kept jish house ol\npublic entertainment, together with all and singular\nthe tenements bendltament* and appurtenances\ntberounlo belonging or iu any wise npper a.it nc. and\nall the right title and interest which lies . i«l n« fa:»d-\nant, 11, U Hpiilnian. possess* d in and lo the moio* on\nthe v\\t nieenlh day » I July, A. D el jI. teen hundred\nand BHy-»ix,or which he has acquired or possessed\nat itny time since, l>e sold ny M in. B. riiornhurgh\nSheriff of Vuh * cuntv, and l*»r s ich purpose he he\nam) is in reoy appoint;*.} a Master and t ommi-doner\nin rhaucery, at auction, to the highe t t»ldder, for\ncash, ui like manner amt upon like notice and udver-\nu-en»enlHs sales of real properly under exe<*uiion\nare retjuireil by law to he made, in both Vuha and\nButle colludes ; nn 1 that the parties to ihisac-iot;,\nand all per»on* claiming order them, or any or either\nol them, altar ihe filing ot the notice of the pendency\nof this action in the office of the Recorder of uha and\nButt**
e699cea93045888d075898308c0cad97 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.6260273655505 31.960991 -90.983994 In assuming the control of the Herald, the\npresent proprietor set forth in a brief paragraph,\nthe motives and principles by which he would\nbe governed, as the Editor of a public journal.\nCommencing at the dullest and most unfavora­\nble season of theyear, and some time before the\nclose of the present volume, we deemed it ad­\nvisable to defer issuing a prospectus until by\nthe publication of four or five numbers, our\nreaders might judge correctly of our course and\nability, and approve or reject at pleasure.\nThe first volume of our paper is now nearly\ncompleted, and the success which has attended\nit, warrants the assertion that the Herald is\npermanently established, fn the second volume\n(soon to commence) it is onr intention to carry\nout the principles avowed in our first number—\nto make the Herald interesting and useful as a\ncounty paper, by devoting a large portion of its\ncolumns to general news and agricultural mat­\nters. So far as politics are concerned, we shall,\nas beforo stated, advocate and support \ndoctrines and Whig principles to tho best of our\nhumble ability, and until the ensuing November\nelection, wc shaltopenly war against the odious\ndoctrine of repudiation—believing the defence\nand protection of our State honor paramount to\nany and all other considerations—ashamed as we\nare of the degraded position which our State\nnow occupies—of the contempt and scorn hurl­\ned upon her by honest men of every political\ncreed; but sustained and cheered by the belief\nthat the moral honesty of our citizens is yet un­\ntainted and pure—that they have been misled\nand blinded by designing men, we shall spare no\ncjfort in our exertions to'enlighten, instruct\nand warn them of the dangerous consequen­\nces of this dishonest doctrine—joining ourselves\nwith the patriot band now warring manfully a-\ngainet it, we will aid. so far as in us lies.in tear­\ning away the veil from this hideous Moran-\nnah, who, in the sacred name of Democracy,\nha* reared tho altar of Repudiation among us,\nand calls upon us to worship at bis unholy\nshrine.
5a1662c4055eef0772e5db59ade574f9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1027396943175 39.745947 -75.546589 As Is generally true throughout the tendance In Delaware as It now Is. it\ncountry, the teachers are mostly new would lake children of the Incorpor-\nto the system. Good school wok In- aled districts on the average about 1Ü\nvolves a knowledge of community years, of rural districts something\nneeds. Newcomers are at a dlsadvan- over 15 years and colored children\ntage In this respect. Of the 651 teach- about 20 years to complete a standard\nera under consideration, 160, or 25 per elementary course. In consequence,\ncent., entered the system this year, the average child In Delaware actually\nOnly 38 per cent, of the entire nurubci complete* nothing like a full element-\nof those regarding whom we obtained ary course of study.\nInformation have been In the system Expenditures Too Luw.\nfive years or more. Conditions may ho The expenditures, State and local, on\nsomewhat unusual at this time, hut In public education In Delaware are fai\nany case the annual loss Is large. The (00 to aoeure good facilities or\nnumber of new while 'teachers (Includ- good teaching Even In the highest per\nIng Wilmington) In 1916-17 is stated to cap)ta expenditure In any county or\nhave been 158, 35 In the Incorporated district Is, compared with what other\nand 123 In the rural districts. Again states do, really low. Delaware nuys\nthe tenure of teachers already In Uif a low and cheap brand of education,\nsystem Is short and shifting of posl- probably not more than seven other\nlion Is common. While 160 of the states spend so little on education as\npresent leaching force are new, 24 .» Delaware. It Is. however, still true\nhold new positions, 109 are In their that Delaware pays high for what It\nsecond year In the same position and gcts. indeed. It Is difficult to see how\n68 In their third. Ihus, within the a state could get less for Its money,\nsystem there Is constant Oux, unfavor- Oppoptlonlnn NUto Funds\nab'« 1° continuity of Instruction,
0e41710b377713968e5b27c5b797483e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.7909835749342 40.063962 -80.720915 moderate dexterity may Jf 10 "\nserre almost any imaginable purpose. '\nThe inferences suggested by Messrs. l>un, I\nCarlo* 4 Co. as at least probable are, j\nfirst, "That failures are more nomer- <\nbus among the smaller class of f\ntrader*, and fewer large disasters t\nire reported; ami second, that tHe c\nline* of credit bare been eradually less- 1\njned-and indebtedness reduced, as there !\na certainly lea* lost by bad debt* in pro- 1\nlortion to the number who succumb." i\nUter all, ho wuver,the data thus rendered i\nelate to the past, which is of leas inter- i\nat to a business man whose head remains 1\nibove water than the promise of the im- j\naediate future. It is satisfactory, therie- i\nore, to know, that the estimation of i\nhese interpreters ot mercantile events, 1\nhe indications of an improv- t\nd condition of trade are decided t\nind general. Increased activity, with 1\nin improvement in values, is noticed in i\neveral of the great staples of business; c\nmd we are assured that uall the conditions 1\norm a very considerable movement" in i\nhose forms of trade which rest upon the t\nlecessities of the people. A sensible t\nearning is uttered against the danger of «\nxaggerating the hopeful indications of i\nSeptember, but making proper allow- \\\ntnce* in this respect, enough remains to (\nnatify the conclusion that the disastrous c\nidehas spent its force, and that a steady t\nhough gradual improvement in business i\nnterests may be anticipated. f
172721d6aac16d7c035657b96234eb09 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.678082160071 39.261561 -121.016059 The Philadelphia Pies* gives Home iuter\neating particulars of the late engagement\noft Charleston, between the U.S . Innate St.\nLawrence and the privateer Petrel, (for-\nmerly the reveuue cutter Gov. Aiken:)\nThe officers ot the St. Lawrence wisely\njudged that many pr.iateersmen would not\nknow Ut-r true character, and to still fur\nitiwr kvr ktiMmuut and ntyi-oi. the |«irt\nholes were kept closed and her men pat nut\nof eight. She cruised lor a mouth along the\nAtlantic coast, between Ctpe Henry and\nSavannah, and on the morning ol the 1st ol\nA igiist, while just outside ihc haibor of\nCharleston. espied a lung rakish schooner,\ntilled with men. and mourning 3 nr 4 guns,\nsailing rapidly down upon her. Tlie port-\nholes were sinl shut, nut the flag was at\nthe peak, and (he St. Lawrence looked not\nunlike a great lumherly merchantman be-\ncalmed in a strange laitiinde, and too un-\nwieldy In* any purposes save the buhiiiig of\na big cargo for ihe.avance of gu enemy to\ncourt and a dating pm ateer to secure\n the sirauger came down, the St. Law-\nrence huiried all sail and aft cted to la*\nanxious lo get out to sea. In reality, bow-\n•ever, she was edging closer mi shore, and\nmukiiig art angemeuls below to receive the\nreckless visitors w ith appropriate larg* sh.\nDirectly a shot came skipping over the\nwater, falling in<n the sea a lew rod* ahead\nof the tngat**; and a no in Iter followed in\nquick succession, but nearly all either stri\nking beyond or pas»ing over. The final dm-\ncnarge consisted ot grape and cauuisli-r ,\nwhich m ide Mime little dalliance with the\nfrigate's rigging, ai>d admonished the com\niiiander that the piny wbh growing serious.\nAt this time die vessels were within apeak\nmg distance, and a man in uniform was seen\nmounted upon the pnale's deck* who shou-\nted to ilit* Si. Lawrence to lay to and send\nover a boat. The crew were distinctly seen\ntlnurishiug their cullas-es. and the guuners\nramming and pointing their gnus. She car-\nried three guns, supposed to be titled can-\nnon.
039b4df1da5bc2995df8f9721e7387fb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.568493118975 39.261561 -121.016059 In the country of Thibet, at the foct of tb«\nmountain on which the Lamasery stands, and\nnot far from a Buddhist Temple, in a great\nsquare inclosure, formed by a substantial brick\nwall, stands the “'Tree of a Thousand Images,"\nso well known, at least by report, to all travel,\ners, ns one of the sacred olyects of worship of\nall faithful Buddhists. M . llue, ia his “Travels\nin Tartary, Thibet and China,” mentions the\ntree and describes his visit to it in the follow-\ning words:—“Upon cutering, we were able ta\nexamine at leisure the marvelous tree, some of\nthe branches of which bad already manifested\nthemselves above tbe wall. Our eyes were\nfirst directed with esrnest curiosity to the\nleaves, and we were filled with an absolute\nconsternation of astonishment at finding that,\nin point of fact, there were upon each of tbe\nleaves well-formed Thibetian characters, all of\na green color, some darker some lighter than\n(he leaf itself. Oirr first Impression was a sus.\npicion of fraud ou the part of the Lamas, but,\nnficr a minute examination in detnil, we could\nnot discover the least deception. The charae.\nters all appeared ns portions of the leaf It-\nself, equally with its veins and nerves. Tbe\nposition was not the same in all. In one leaf\nthey would be at tbe top of the leaf; in another,\nin the middle; in a third, at the base, or at tbs\nside. The younger leaves represented the\ncharacters only in a partial state of formation.\nThe bark of the tree and its branches, which\nresemble that of the piano tree, arc also cov-\nered with theso characters. When you remorn\na piece of old bark, the younger bark under it\nexhibits tbe indistinct outlines of characters In\na germinating state, and what is very singular,\nthese new characters nrc not tinfrcqucntly dif-\nferent from those which they rcplaeo. We eg,\n“iniued everything with the closest attention,\nin order to detect some traoe of trickery, but\nwe could discover nothing of the sort, and the\nperspiration absolutely trickled down our faces\nunder the influence of the sensations wliioh this\nmost amazing spectacle created. More pro-\nfound intellects than ours may, perhaps, be\n“hie to supply a satisfactory explanation of\nthe mysteries of Ibis slugulnr tree; but, as to us,\nwe altogether guvo it up.”
d709ce19b4ad8030f49200408ffda4f7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.6953551596337 41.681744 -72.788147 Washington, D. C, Sept, 11. The\nfour radio broadcasting stations in\nConnecticut will be placed at a dis\nadvantage through the assignment of\nauthorized frequencies and power\nordered effective November 11 by\nthe federal radio commission in its\nannouncement today.\nThe four Connecticut radio broad-\ncasting stations are W1UC, Eastou,\noperated by Bridgeport broadcasting\nstation; WT1C, Hartford. Travelers\nInsurance company; WDKC, New\nHaven, Doolittle Kadio corporation,\nand WCAC, Storrs, operated by the\nConnecticut Agricultural college.\nAll four stations, excepting WT1C\nat Hartford, have been allotted f.Ou\nwatts power, the same as all four\nare using at present, but each has\nbeen assigned a higher frequency.\nThe power of WT1C is to be in-\ncreased to 5,000 watts.\nWICC's frequency is to be In-\ncreased from l.iso to 1,430 kilo-\ncycles; WTICs from 600 to 1,060.\nWDRC's from 1.0C0 to 1.330 \nWCAC's from 5G0 to 1,330. Federal\nradio commission officials explained\ntoday that the most desirable fre-\nquencies range between SCO and 1,.\n100 kilocycles, and that frequencies\nabove 1.1 'in kilocycles are not so\nclearly receivable on sets used by the\nlistening public.\nAll four Connecticut stations have\nbeen ordered to share time with\nother stations whereas only WTIC\nand WCAC are now splitting time\nbetween them. Station WICC is to\ndivide broadcasting time with WBBL\nat Tilton, N. H. ; WTIC is to split\ntime with WEAL, Baltimore; WDRC\nat New Haven which now has un-\nlimited time is to divide time with\nWCAC at Storrs, w hile WCAC which\nnow eplils time with WTIC at Hart-\nford will divide with WDRC at New\nHaven when the commission's order\nbecomes effective November 11.\nThe commission in addition to au-\nthorizing WTIC,
03ae138847a7d14a3a10a188597e5358 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.9136985984271 39.745947 -75.546589 Although some classes of business\nmen are complaining that "limes are\ndull” the roul estate dealer, the con­\ntractor. and the property owners are\nrejoicing that at present times are\nparticularly prosperous.\nAmong the real estate brokers this\nis exceptionally truo as they are busy\nas can be In negotiating for clients,\nthe sale, purchase or rental of houses,\nand for the past ten months their busi­\nness has been on the increase steadily,\nin reply to a question upon the sub­\nject. a représenta live of Une yuui.se of\nHawkins & CV>. sold:\n"Our business is all that could lie\ndesired and 1 believe it is the same\nwith all other brokers in the city. For\nthe past ten months it has been on the\nincrease steadily and I do not believe\n zenith has been reached. The\ncondition of the market is exception­\nally good and is muelhi more satisfac­\ntory than It was at this time last year.\nA number of houses have tuen erected\nreeenltly and many more are nearing\ncompletion. We have an unusually\nlarge demand for the smaller class of\nhouses and 1 believe we have at least\nfive or six applicants for each email1\nproperty wc have control of. The de­\nmand far exceeds the supply. I at­\ntribute ith Is fact to the genera; prosper­\nity of the country and also that work­\nmen In the many manufacturing\nplants throughout the city are making\nan effort to obtain homes of their\nown. No one in our class of business\nh«o any reason to complain as far as\n1 can sec.”
0c1dd0ce4a45341334f50c89dd2d5891 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.7849314751395 37.561813 -75.84108 greatly amused, but did not dare to laugh,\ndid not dare even to look at each other.\nThe poor man had lost his spectacles, and\nwe hunted a long while for them in the\ngrass. When they were found, and the\ndoctor had put them on, he eyed us\nboth severely for a few moment. Then\nhe nirkecl on the frnptnents of the bowl\nand threw them into the brook, and told\nus to go and take up more nests.\nAs we did so we saw him rubbing sev\neral spots on his face and hands with\nsomething out of a small vial that he\ntook from his pocket. We succeeded\nin capturing several nests for him, the\ncombs from which he carried home\nwrapped in some big swamp maple leaves.\nHe said nothing of his misadventure at\nthe house, and it was a long time before\nNed and I dared to speak of it.\nThe district schoolmaster and school-\nmistress in those days used to be objects\nof almost as a we as the doctor and\nhis trunk. And no wonder. The mas-\nter was usually some grave and magiste-\nrial young man, who was either prepar-\ning for college, or was in college", and\nwho spent his winter evenings translat-fn- g\nVirgil and Xenophon; and the mis-\ntress some prim damsel who, though liv-\ning in a rustic community, yet felt it be-\nneath her dignity to join in rural sports.\nFor once, however, we had an excep\ntion. Miss Emmons was as merry a\nyoung lady as ever handled a ferule.\nWe actually came to call her Kate, the\nfirst week of school ! She boarded at\ngrandfather's, and one summer evening,\nafter school, Bhe, with several of her\nschool girls and three or four of us boys,\nwent over to the meadow to pick some\nrunning raspberries, a fruit that the\nteacher liked very much.\nThe borders of the meadow were over\ngrown with the raspberry vines. I re-\ncollect that we gathered a si x-qu a- rt
16f70f63e8a531c797cc1c84b13e5198 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.6232876395231 39.743941 -84.63662 subject is clear and correct. It is not\nimmoral PBB se to traffic in liquors or\ndrink them. Tho wrong consists in\nthe abuse. Liquors are manufactured\nlor wholesome and legitimate pur-\nposes, and every person has a natural\nindefeasible right to properly, use\nthem, and whenever a legislature at\ntempts to take this right awav from\nhim, it is sailed sumptuary legisla-\ntion opposed by the Democratic par\nty winch is prescribing what aud\nhow much of any thing a person shall\ndrink. But when a person drinks too\nmuch abuses his right transgresses\nthe laws of the land, offends decency\nand morality, tis right to punish him\nDo the Republican4 regard the traffic\nin liquors immoral per se? Do they\nregard the Scott law as a finality, or\nis it a 6tcp toward prohibition? Is\n$200 the maximum of the tax or is it\nthe minimum? The law is of extreme\ndoubtful constitutionality, but of\ncourse we must all run to the decis-\nions of that august tribunal. A man\nis taxed according to the amount of\nbis property. An importer of goods\npays duty on the valuo of goods im\nported. A man who owns $10,000\nworth of property pays ten times \nmuch lax a9 his neighbor who is worth\nonly $1,000. Besides the inequality\nand unjustuess of the law Judge Okey\nin his dissenting opinion says, "as the\nAct oflSSS provides, in cflcct, that\ntlio persons who submit to a tax of\n$200 a year, and give real estate sc\ncurity for its payment, cither as own\ners or by written consent of the own\nere, shall have the exclusive right of\nselling alcoholic liquors to be drank\nas a beverage at the place where sold\nwhich was tho oulv privilege se\ncured bv a liquor license under li\ncense laws such act is plainly and\nnecessarily a license law, and as sucl\nunconstitutional, and the inlinnitv\ndestroys the wnolc act. It operates,\nat least, as a license, and it "the con\nbuiuuouailty oi a statute uepchcls. up\non its operation middled, and not on\nthe form it may bo made to assume\nas the Court decided in the case ot'thc\nState vs. Hipp, it is clearly nncousti\ntutioual and should have been so held\nThe constitution declares "no license\nto traffic in intoxicating liquors shall\nhereafter be granted in this Slate, but\nthe General Assembly may provide\nby law against evils resulting there\nflora."
26b1632c504db5702b1f6821d3287515 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.4123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 tie folks hml a royal time crowning tl\nQueen, who on this occasion was Miss Loi\nItchier, a charming daughter of C. If. Belli\nJ2-q . She was most hccomingly attired,\ndelivered an address to her subjects in\nmost queenly manner. The crowner\nMiss Hydia Donovan, aud the position\nscepter-bearer was gracefully taken by X\nMaggie Ferrel. The four seasons were HI\nby Julia McAndrews, Mary Jepson, An\nMeredith and Mamie O'llare. Clnra C\nningham was Faith, Katie Jordan Hope, i\nMamie Gribbons Charity.\nThe fairies were Fannie Tadden, Jen\nBelt?., Gertie Meyers, Annie Donohue, An\nBailey. Tillie Boss, Annie McAndress, M\nEllen Kenny, Katie O'Garrell, Mary Mai\nret Hellenuan and Mollie Scally. All tl\nvoting misses were very prettily dressed,\nthe cxcrcises wero very interesting.\nmusic was under the direction of Miss Bui\nAt the conclusion, the Bishop made a\nshort remarks in his happy style, after wli\nrefreshments were served and the remain\nof time given to the children to en\nthemselves as they pleased.\nThe I>ny Wc" do not .Cclcliratv.'1\nYesterday was notobserved in any man\nby the old soldiers or others of Wheeling,\ncan scarcely be regarded as creditable to\nfatriotism of the community that it wasi\nt is a strange commentary.'on our revere\nfor the memory of our dead heroes when\npatriotic men of a neighboring town ma\ninto our borders and pay the only tributi\na slain comrade that is tendered, as was;\nterday the case. The Grand Army boyi\nMnrfin'a Fnrrtr mow»li«w1 \\IT\nCemetery and decorated with flowers\nBrave of Colonel Thoburn, for whom tl\nl'ost was named, borne patriotic per\nplaced two beautiful Moral wreaths on\nSoldiers' monument, at the Capitol, also,\nthere was nothing like a publieobservanc\ntht; day, nor anything to indicate that Win\ning knew what day it was, if wo except\nfew flags displayed by merchants at tl\nplaces of business.
21c253db0a2058d929a565de029b0194 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.9221311159179 29.949932 -90.070116 Price. Mn: James L Plynson; W W Sohey and\ntlre,N Y; F A Noel,. t Louis; E Richardson, A\nIt heading. Miss; B W Bussey and wife. Columbia,\nGa: JobhnJ Cuke, Ky; J M B MONan. New York:\nWalter 1 eldon, San Antonio: W J Hitchius,\nHouston: 8 H BSmden, N 0: Mia Williams,\nThilodenx: E A Collins, coast; C BHMorrison,\nMrs Coply. Miss Coply. Mo; Dr McKevey, N 0;\nGeorge A Johnson, coast; J HH wa:d. St Louis :\nDr N Green, John Van Horn, Louisville: a B\nTebbltti, La.: J Ma'on, Baltimore ; D W Drake,\nNY ; PC Bethell and lady. Tens; Mrs W D\nBethell and two children, St Mary; Taos L Brans-\nf,,rd. cl'r: T B Dobois, N Y; John Ariustrong.\n(fty lihlt-Fred Zweifre, Joe Mailer. N Y: B\nV asendotoff, Capt G Atkinson, C D Mamitt,n.\nW\\ J Crazier, Texas; Saml H Askew, Ala; P M\n(Goddis. Miss; W A Kaigler, Dewitt ooonsy,\nTexas: TI A Curtiss. Kansas City: F H Bishop,\nHesk, Texas: Z M P Moliy and servant, do;\ntheo Nichols, do: J A Suppington, Rt Loois;\nDr It B Barrett, Port Hudson, La: Miss T A\nitrntrt. du; M Cults, Shreveport, La; T S Mo-\n('od. Tex~s: H H Leswis city; Mrs J Wilson,\nIndiana; Less ;Iaalroll, kd: Wm L Thompson,\nSt Helens. La: W Ryan, do; Jno B Wells, Jr,\ncity; C N Lewise, Shreveport, La; R T Yon~g,\nvlesi.s; ('I. Catelang, Texas; J T Hager, Miss;\nL Evans, H C Nioatt, Texas; (Geo Packwood,\n('llnton, La; Mrs Coper and family, Mrs Capt\nJno Beanon and famly. La;;E McKendy, Iberia,\nN. J'l,,, s
0a647c38f9d6892cc6b86b47073f3f45 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.5751365803987 44.939157 -123.033121 startled Uy tho newsthaMhe Spanish\nhad blown up our gallant battleship\nMaine In Havana harbor. Captain\nSorcho was In Baltimore, M J., conduct\ning his exhibition. Ho wau doing an\nenormous business and was under\nheavy bonds and Ironclad contract to\nplay a Beason of two months, but\nwhen he heard of the great disaster\nand knew his country needed his aid,\nho throw up the contract, paid the\nbond, closed up the show and within\nfourhours after the news had been\nbrokon proponted himself to the United\nStates authorities at Washington. He\nwas at once accepted as the most ex-\npert submarine engineer la the coun-\ntry, and within five days ho was de-\nscending in tho dark slimy waters of\nHavana harbor amid the tangled\nwreckage of the strloken battleship.\nWhat others dared not attempt he ac-\ncomplished' with the greatest ap-\nparent case and skill. From out the\nfrightful charnol house of death he\n body aftor body of gallant\nsailor men until the hearts ot those\nabout his stckoned. Day and night ho\nworked In that dangerous twisted am\ntorn mass recovering tho dead, and\nwhen the last body that could be got-\nten out had been sent up ho turned\nhis attention to tho wreck and It was\nhis tq tlmony and Investigation that\ngave tho court on Inquiry Its first\nproof that her magazines had not ex-\nploded as tho Spanish claimed. Tho\nestablishment of this fact by tho In-\ntrepid captain Bent a wave of Indigna-\ntion across tho continent, which grew\nand grew and finally broke In tho bays\nof Santjago and Mania! to tho destruc-\ntion and confusion of the Spanish\nfleets. It was the captain to whom\nthe credit won due and it was to him\ntho credit was given. Tho greatest\nnaval and army heroes of the country\nshook hla hand and thanked him for
33a6fb79d880342b9b720d385c71221f NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.1630136669203 40.735657 -74.172367 the southerly line of Wright street, thence\neasterly a ong the same about 50 feet, thence\nsoutherly and about parallel with New Jersey\nRailroad avenue to the southerly line of Miller\nstreet, thence easterly along the same about 60\nfeet, thence southerly and parallel with New\nJersey Railroad avenue about 100 feet, thence\neasterly and parallel with Miller street about\n25 feet, thence southerly and parallel with\nAvenue A to the northerly line of Polnler\nstreet, thence easterly along the same to a\npoint about 100 feet east of the easterly line\noi Avenue A, thence northerly and parallel\nwith Avenue A about 190 feet to the rear line\nof properties fronting on Vanderpool street,\nthence easterly and parallel with Vanderpool\nstreet for a distance of about 475 feet east of\nthe easterly line of Avenue B. thence north-\nerly and parallel with Avenue B to a point\nabout 100 feet north of the northerly line cf\nVanderpool street, thence westerly and parallel\nwith Miller street about 225 feet, thence north-\n and parallel with Avenue B to a point\nabout 100 feet north of the northerly line of\nWright street, thence westerly and parallel\nwith Wright street to a point about 100 feot\neast of the easterly line "f Avenue B, then-e\nnortherly and parallel with Avenue ,B across\nEmmet street to a point about 100 feet north\nof the northerly line of Emmet street, thence\nwesterly and parallel with Emmet street to a\npoint about 100 feet cast of the easterly line\nof Mulberry street, thence northerly and\nparallel with Mu'berry street to the southerly\nline of Thomas street, thence westerly along\nthe said southerly line of Thomas street to\nthe point or place of beginning; and have tiled\n! their reports of said assessments for benefits\nin the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of\nthe County of Essex, and that the judge ot\n«aid court has fixed Saturday, the fourth day\nof March, 1911. at 10 oclock in the forenoon,\nIn the Circuit Court room at the Court Hour*-
12ca06773ce41808c89ea52a19138871 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.582191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 "talks bark.'' tod be has one of that kind\nIAbit htdsTevtt alnoe'Ee waagarrlSf. -\nThe London "Ltntca" i'J« » bio* on\n(be ear haa often ruptured (be drum, aid\nwarns parents againt boxing children'*\nears. You can get more music oat of a\nchild by applying 'he dipper a ooopie of\nfeet below the "drum."\nTbe farmer who lent bUeon to tbe city\nto become n clerk now wrlwe and uki\nthe merchant U there la "any thing in the\nboy ?" "Yea," replied the merchant, "just\nafter he bae been Uklhe aafoon."\nThe conundrami about tbe pins ia well\nenough, but who breaks all tbe needlee ?\n"A"aloglfc ^afto^f'fti'lWdditfciii'Bnglarifl,\nturna out between 6,000,000 and 7,000,-\n000 of them each' week,'or about 350,000,-\n000 a year, which Li equal to one-third of\nthe population of the globe. With all\nthe factories in the world going, who\nbreaka then million* of needle*?\n young woman went into tbe Portland\nBlock at Chicago tbe other day to anawer\nan advertisement She entered tbe ele¬\nvator, and when aho found it moving\nupwardl gave a.yell and jumped through\nthe opening above tbe entrance, landing\non the ground unhurt, though deoioral-\nlied. She then, according to the atald\nTribune, gave "a wild whoop and canter¬\ned up Dearbornstreet."\nMary Medlll, « comely white girl of\nsixteen, waa'on Thursday of lail week\natripped to the waikt, lied to tbe Eliza¬\nbeth City, Va, Court House whipping\npost and giveu 25 laches with a rawhide,\ntbe master of the cat-o'-nine-taila being a\nnegro eomtable, big, burly and accus¬\ntomed to hard knocks. The girl had stolen\na pair of shoes. Tbe constable .barely\ntouched in his strokes, but it ia said that\nall concerned in ihe whipping were mis¬\nerable at the time, only executing the law\nunder proteet
2964d768b31499bb5c85c4129e1bd8e0 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.4795081650982 44.939157 -123.033121 wild confusion over tbe ground, my\ncomrades bad disappeared, and close\nto the smoldering ashes of oiir fire the\ngrass was stulned crimson with a hide-\nous pool of blood.\nI was so stunned by this sudden\nshock that for a time I must bave\nnearly lost niy reason. I have a vague\nrecollection, as one remembers a bad\ndream, of rushing about through the\nwoods all around the empty camp,\ncalling wildly for my companions. No\nanswer came back from the silent\nshadows. After a long period, during\nwhich I sat In bewilderment, I set my-\nself to try to discover what sudden\nmisfortune could have befallen them.\nTbe whole disordered appearance of\ntbe camp sbowed that there had been\nsome sort of attack, and the rifle shot\nno doubt marked the time when it bad\noccurred. That there should have been\nonly one shot showed that It bad been\nall over In an Instant The rifles still\nlay upon the ground, an one of \nLord John's bad the empty cartridge\nin the breech. The blankets of Chal-\nlenger and of Summerlee beside tbe\nfire suggested that they had been\nasleep at the time. Tho cases of am-\nmunition and of food were scattered\nabout in a wild litter, together with\nour unfortunte cameras and plate car-\nriers, but none of them were missing.\nOn tbe other band, all the exposed pro-\nvisionsand I remembered that thero\nwere a considerable quantity of them\nwere gone. They wero animals, then,\nand not natives, who had made tbe\ninroad, for surely tho latter would\nhave left nothing behind.\nSuddenly a thought came to me and\nbrought some little comfort to my\nheart. I was not absolutely alone In\nthe world. Down at the bottom of the\ncliff and within call of me was waiting\nthe faithful Zambo. I went to the\nedge of the plateau and looked over.\nSure enough, be was squatting among\nbis blankets beside his fire In his little
4a1b2c2cccc2176d50d1f243d9bb1ea7 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.7657533929478 39.261561 -121.016059 Oueidk—Thb New Substitute for Goi.d.—\nThe mauufacturs of this new metal, says the\nNew York Tribune, under tha French patent\nof II. Migcon, granted March 3d, 1857, has been\ncommenced on a large scele in Watsrbury, Ct.,\nand it will undoubtedly soon be in use, as it is\nalready in France, for various articles of do-\nmestic economy and all sort of ornamentation,\nand it bears a relation to gold similar to that\nof German silver to pure silver, like German sil-\nver it may lie used in its original condition or\nas a basis for gold plating. It bears so strong\na reserablence to pure gold, that when manufac-\ntured into articles, such as we have been accus-\ntomed to see made only of pure gold, we are at\nonce convinced that the articles we are hand-\nling are made of the genuine gold, when in\ntruth it is made of a metal that costs 80\ncents per pound as it comes from the furnace.\nThe Oreide is not a uew metal—being only\na new compound of old metals, so refined in the\nprocess of smelting as to have done away with\na great part of their disposition to oxydise, as\nit oaly tarnishes in about the same degree as\nsilver, and though solution takes place if tested\nwith nitric acid, it does not leave a black spot,\nso that it can bis easily cleaned with aeid with-\nout damage, which would destroy brass or cop-\nper. That it is a valuable improvement in the\narts there is do doubt, and that it so much re-\nsembles gold as to make it neoessary for our\nLegislatures at once to require, as in France,\nthat all articles should be stamped “oreide” to\nprevent great frauds, which will probably bo\nfound out after a great many people have been\npretty severely cheated
0b2460e7106d807e2bd8e8b0344580ca IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.160273940893 43.82915 -115.834394 Our delegatea to the Bimetallic\nConference at Washington arrived\nthere all right and have got down to\nbusiness. Well have to wait for\nDemocratic administration to decide\nwhat the result will be, and aa the\nDemooraoy is conceded to be a party\nof donts, it dont look very hopeful.\nWe ace by one of the resolutions that\nthe League denounces the attempted\nrepeal of the law of 1890 for the\nmonthly purohase of silver. They\nwant no repeal of this law unless a\nlaw for the free and unlimited coin­\nage of silver is substituted. Now\nwhy not modify this hill by cutting\ndown the purchase of silver one-half\nand adopt free coinage of silver for\none year, confine it to American pro­\nduction, and put a dollar's worth of\nsilver in a dollar? I notice quite a\nlengthy article by Senator Stewart, in\nwhich he contend* that the cost of\nmining silver is $1.50 for every ounoe.\nTtie Senator may think he is way up\nin figures, and I know he is, for I have\nheard him talk, but if he had said two\ndollars in labor and cash he would\nstill have been below the actual cost.\nWhen you come to take into consid­\neration the time spent by the thou­\nsands of prospeetors, at a reasonable\nrate, for the past thirty years, \nthe thousands of holes sunk and not\na dollar ever realized from them, then\nyou can begin to realize where the\nooat oomca in. How many men are\nyou acquainted with, Mr. Editor, who\nhave given the best portion of their\nlives to add to the world's treasure,\nand for all these sufferings and hard­\nships could not realize for all their la­\nbor enough to give them a decent\nburial? Such is the gratitude of this\ncold, ungrateful world to the miner.\nSome of the eastern people seem to\nbe under the impression that a per­\nson can locate a twenty acre tract of\nland anywhere in the mountains and\ndig out the ore as you would pota­\ntoes, take a cart load to mill and just\nsee what an enormous profit they can\nrealize. They donr unterstand that\nwhere afewmines declare a month­\nlydividend a great many are not pay­\ning expenses. Its truo that in the\nearly d a y s of California—sav f ro m\n1860 to 1855—gold was taken out in\nlarge quantities and many miners did\nwell, whilst others went broke. Since\nthat time they have found that gold\ndust doesnt grow on hushes. 1 speak\nsomewhat from experience, as I com­\nmenced mining in Southern Oregon\nin 1851; was out several thousand\ndollars in lime and money. Result
00708deb971a032b0ea1355c403341dc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.2452054477424 40.063962 -80.720915 prlng 70o: No. 2 red 77c; Marcli 7fiJ4a77kfl, cloning\nit 77 MCo; Mav 82Jf^wS3c, cloMng Ht si » 16c; Juno\nU%sHl)>io. cloilng at 80!£c; July hOtyiWtaj, closing\nit &0>Jo. Corn, easy: No. 2, 37^i3\\]*c; ilarch 3l%a\nilfto, closing at3l)ic; May 3V;Jia^o. closing at\nyjuj; Juue 40)ia»lJ^c. closing at 10 7-lCc: July 41 vi\nill>ic, closlug at 41 7-10o. Oats, cash No. 2, 27Ka\nHia; March 2$£a£S%c. closing at *354c; Mar 'in%\n,a);c. closing at 2i l-loc; Juuc'^frtfJC, dosing ai\nJc Itye, ca*h No. 2 . Wsc. Barley. No.'J, ftljic.\nflaxseed, No. 1,8l W l'rlmo timothy s,cd 81 74.\nJe« poik, cash, <20 26a20 60: March 8^0 CO; Mar\n,nd Juue 82100. tard, cash 7.32Jvs: M«rch 7.85a\n. 87%c,closing al 7,37Wo; May 7.4i^4ftll."io,cloning\n. 17 430*. June7.60c. Bacon, afinrt ribs8.10c; shoullers\nG.OOaS 26c: Short clear8 30a.s 2*>r. Whisky,811?.\nlugara, cutloaf O^a&J.c; grauulited CJii; standard\nifyiv, Butter steady with liberal orders; creamry\n24>{a20c; dairy 17a21>£c. fcggs, lie.\nCincinnati. O ., March SO..Flour quiet. Wheat\nti fair demaud; No. 2 red Slavic: rutelpW 6,COO\nlusliels; shipments 4,600bmhcls. Corn tlnn: No. 2\nnlxcd 3V){a3!#{c. Oats lu good demand Riid\nIrracr; No. 2 mixed 33a30>^o Uye llrui; No. 2 61c.\n'ork quiet at 517 26. Lard curio jt nmko\n. 26c. Bulk meats firmer: short ribs 8.00c. Hacou\nn moderate demand aud unchanged. Whisky\nctlve and firm at Si 13. Butler, sugar and cheato\nirm. liggs lu good demand at liallj^o.\nBaltimokk, March 30..Wheat, western higher;\nJo. 2 winter red sjkjI 90Ua9Ic March'J9%c as xcd;\nlay 'JlKa'Jl^c; Juno 'jIJ^&'JI);'!. Corn, western\nteady and quiet; mixed hj>oi i'*5ilnl5>4u; March\nGc asked; April 46%a!Gc; May 4u>iai7c; steamer\ni>!ac: bid. Oats higher; western while 36a38e: do\nilxed 3la36c. Provisions quiet aud steady. Me**\nork 8;6 6<aI5 75. Lard, rellued 8a8V.»c. lvgjnl!\njwcr ni isx%i4C. collec nominal; Klocargoca\nrdluary U> fair 14%al5c.\nFHiuiDKU'Kii, Pi., March SO..Flour BtCAdy\ntill demand light. Wheat Him; No. 'i rwl March\nJ)4c; April 'JOaOOJ^c; May 'Jla'Jl^c; Juue 'JlaDl^c.\noru steady; No. 4 mixed 4l}£c: No. 3 mixed 4t«;\nio. '2 mixed 4Ga4G>$c; April 4G>gu4^ic; May 47a\n7^c; Juue 47>iM!>e. Oat* steady aua demaud\nlulerate; No i mixed 3«%c; No. '1 while 36>$c;\n. iturei quiet aud uuchiiigeu. i\nToutno, a?arch 30.Wheat dull aud weak; cash\n2c; May tit%c; Juue K3c bid; August oj%c. Corn\nuiel aud steady; caMi ^JXc; May 40J-ic Clover*d\nweak; March 83 Wa4 0U;Aprll 53 DO bid, 4 Cf2%\n»ked.
0fc0f57bc0cc682c77a2f605c178aaa5 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.7308742853168 35.996653 -78.901805 A clever piece of detective work,\nwhich must appeal with sad and crush-\ning snggestiveness to the crook frater-\nnity, has been done in Toledo. A barber\nfor some time missed cigars from the\ncase in his shop. At first only a few\ncigars were taken, but presently tho\nthieves became bolder and took whole\nboxes. A watch was set and detectives\nwere employed, but all in vain. At last\nthe barber struck on the idea of having\ntn automatic detecter fixed in the shop,\nand he called in an electrician. A cam-\nera was arranged so as to cover the cigar\ncase, and a flashlight apparatus and the\ncamera were connected by wires with\nthe sliding door of the cigar case, so\nthat when the door was opened the wires\nwould be brought together. The circuit\nthus formed would produce a flash and\nsecure instantaneously picture of the\nthieves. For twelve days the cigars\nwere unmolested, but on the morning of\nthe unlucky thirteenth the thieves were\nprompted to try their hand again.\nThe plate was taken from the camera\nand developed, and on it was seen a\nunique and interesting picture, contain-\ning the likenesses of two juveniles who\nwere in the act of stealing the cigars.\nEvery detail in the shop was distinctly\nseen, the clock showing the time at\nwhich the youngsters' little operations\nwere interfered with, and the mixture\nof cunning and caution on the face of\nthe boy who was evidently taking the\nactive part in securing the booty was\nintensely amusing. The boys were at\nonce recognized, were arrested, tried\nand sent to a reformatory, and the judge\ncommended from the bench the ingenu-\nity of the means of detection employed.\nNew York Telegram.
57da4b095f2088500a7cc957c321ad09 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.7520547628108 37.561813 -75.84108 death by which he has been taken unto that\njudgment, it becomes us, as weak and sin-\nful mortals, fast hurrying after him into\nthat same mysterious hereafter, to hush the\ntongue of criticism, and forgive and for-\nget his mortal infirmities. Let us, concern-\ning these things, remember that .Christian\ninjunction of the Savior, "Judge not, that\nye be not judged."\nIt was my fortune to know Judge Sloane\nwell. I knew him for a number . of years,\nand in a variety of relations. I think the\nmajority, of even this community, where he\nlived and died, never knew him except as I\nfirst knew him and by all sach Judge\nSloane was not really known at all. For I\nfirst knew him only as a great, intellectual,\nlegal giant, upon whom, when he went\nforth into public places, I, in common with\nothers, was at liberty to look, 'and he\nehanoed to pass my way, the compliments\nof the day might, perhaps, be deferentially\nexchanged. Closer than this I Xelt tbat I\ndared not, and I know that I desired not,\nto go. For there seemed to be a kind of\nIshmaelitish coldness and bitterness about\nthe man, that rendered him uninviting to\nall except his personal friends, who knew\nhim well, or such aa might stand in need of\nhis splendid talents.\nIn short, as I have already stated, I\nthought him only a cold, selfish, ambitious,\nintellectual giant, and had I never come\ncloser to Judge Sloane his loss would not\nnow concern me much. For I have long\nsince learned that there are giants in these,\nas well as in those days, and that the places\nof giants, simply, are easily supplied.\nBut I shall always be glad that it was\nwithin God's providence that I should
3751e780fc31aa5e5c555a19b9e6250c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.7090163618195 42.217817 -85.891125 Whereas, default has beeu made iu the condition\nof a certain mortgage made by Edward M. Caguey\naud Mary A. Caguey, his wife, of Gobleville, Mich-\nigan, to the Michigan Mutual Life Insurance Com-\npany, a Michigau corporation Gf Detroit, Michigan,\nbearing date the 3th day or April, A. D. 1W1, aud\nrecorded iu the office of the register of deeds for\nVan Itureu couuty, Michigan, on May 1, A. D.\nP.XI1, iu liber 71 of mortgages, ou page 12, aud by\nreason of the failure of said mortgagors to pay the\ntaxes levied on said mortgaged premises, said mort-\ngagee was compelled to pay aud did pay on J uly 18,\np.)4, the state aud county taxes for l'. K)2 thereon,\namounting to (31.61, aLd default has beeu made in\nthe payment of au installment of Interest amount-\ning to $.17 .50, which became due on April 2oth, A.\nI). l'.04, and said mortgagee, according to the terms\nof said mortgage, and on account of said default in\nthe payment of said taxes and said installment of\ninterest, has elected and does hereby elect that the\npilncipal sum of said mortgage, being the sura of\nfifteeu hundred dollars (f 1,500 .00), together with all\narrearages of Interest thereon, be now due aud pay-\nable, and there is claimed to be due and on\nsaid mortgage aud the bond aud notes accompan-in- g\nthe same at the date hereof, and by virtue of\nsuch election, for principal, interest, taxes and in-\nterest, the sum of fifteeu huudred and niuety-ou- e\ndollars, aud no suit or proceedings at law having\nbeen had to recover the same, or auy part thereof;\nNow, thereiore, notice is hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power of sale contained iu said mort-\ngage and of the statute in such case made and pro-\nvided, the said mortgagee will sell at public auction,\nto the highest bidder, on Tuesday, the first day of\nNovember, A. 1). l '.K H. at ten o'clock iu the forenoon,\nstandard time, at the front door of the court house.\nIn the village of Paw Paw, Van Dnreu county, Mich-\nigan (that being the building In which the circuit\ncourt for the county of Van llureu is held), the\npremises described in said mortgage, lor the pur-\npose of satisfying the amount due as aforesaid for\nprincipal, interest, taxes aud interest aud the ex-\npense of said sale. The premises described in said\nmortgage are as follows: All that certain piece or\nparcel ot land situate in the township of Waverly,\ncounty cf Vau ltnren. Mate of Michigan, known\nand described as follows, to -w- it
4d3e33ffb43c9395f41dd1de0d03c1ba THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.305479420345 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well testpd expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian. whose preparatory study fits him for all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country Is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be rAit-\nTICll.AR in selecting his physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible tact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from Inexperienced physicians In\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nby the best sypliilograpliers, that the study and man-\nagement of these complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competentandsuccessful\nin their treatment and core. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comonly one system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should Iki used by the syph-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, nr other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knnTish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters. they induce the umvarv to enter their Peter\nFunk “institutions,” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn" view of the above facts. Dr. J. C. YOUNG\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 761 Clay street, opposite the l'laza.\nHoursfrom9a. m., to8p.m.
62fe6f3e5de91c42aa696b747f114e00 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.382191749112 40.807539 -91.112923 woidd be v.tm to attempt to pom*) uie to hi.11. luua.ie ui.u t.io unsullied man i the c,unp and on the battle lield. But he measure of the spirit of Heaven,—\nbereaved feelings to those before whom he was.. It set htm above reproach. It was not made for a warrior as warriors\nit immediately passed. Out the emotions raised his integrity beyond suspicion. Allusually have been; and I think all the bel-\nthe event has excited have in a measure fair men among his opponents have ac- ter of'him that he was not He had not\npervaded the community. The sudden knowledged that he was an honest man. I enough of the contentious and destructive\ntransition has added to the task of sym- With him a trust would he safe as far as! spirit for that. Nevertheless his hieh\npalhising with the general feeling, and at he could know how to it. He could; moral sentiments led him always to act\nthe same time, avoiding the danger of look with 110 complacency upon any\nexaggeration. If I may but succeed in wrong. The highest would not escape\nsome hmnbl-J approach to this, difficult censure-were if deserved, and the mean\nline by a few brief touches of his charac- est would lose no right it was his toclaim,\nter, as to mc it has appeared, with such I err greatly if this was not a strong fea-\nreflections as may arise upon them, it ture in the character of him whom we la-\nj will be all I ought to hope, and more meut;—and a fitting trait it was for one\nj than I can reasonably expect to accom- whom the people had led up so high,\ni pli.sli in the present discourse. I shall; Close by this, and well associated v
28571f2c755a480b016a794eddb960aa THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.1109588723998 39.261561 -121.016059 Mr. Dbuglas replied—saying he bad no fault\nto And with the Senator from 1eunsylvnnia for\nmaking a series of uttacks ou his consistency,\nwhile emitting to answer his arguments. Some\npersons had presented him with the records of\nthe votes of Senators ou the Wilrnot Proviso,\nand some former speeches relative to Kansas\nmatters. He knew not whether those were true\nor false; but what had they to do with the ques-\ntion now presented? lie did not uuderstaud\nthe motives forrausackitigall the public records\nand newspapers, uud picking up every little\nscrap to see what his course had bceu twelve\nTears past on the subject of slavery. Suppose\nit was true that, in 1848, he was ia favor of ex-\ntending the Missouri Compromise lino to the\nPaciSc Ocean, as recommended by Mr. Bucban-\nan in his letter preceding ; and suppose it true\nthat, in 1854, ho introduced a bill for the repeal\nof that compromise, of which the President says\nhe now approves? All these things are uot\nmaterial to the argumeut. True, the issue was\nwhether popular sevreiguty, to which the Presi-\ndent and himself were pledged, should be vio-\nlated in Kansas. He thought the Senator from\nlenusylvauia showed a want of candor and\nfairness in quoting from his Springfield speech,\nand oruittiug to quote what he said on the same\nsubject the other day, which was perfectly in\nharmony with previously expressed opinions.\nHe thought Gov. Walker was authorized to say\nwhat he did in his inaugural address by \ntions of the President and the Cabinet, to de-\nmand that the Constitution should bo submitted,\nand, unless submitted, that it should be regard-\ned null and void, lie was not awaro that Gov.\nWalker hud interfered in the slightest degree,\nexoept in pursuance of these instructions.\nlie never supposed that the ageut was to bo\ndenounced for obeying his instructions, and the\nprincipal applauded for giving them. He ad-\nmired the manliness of thu President in assum-\ning the responsibility to give them, and regret-\nted that the President proposed, from motives\nof expediency, to accept the Constitution w ith-\nout ratification by the people, although ho ad-\nmits that it ought to have been submitted. Let\npolicy and expediency taka rare of themselves,\nlie complaiued that the Senator from Pennsyl-\nvania seemed disposed to put him in a false\nposition. The true test is, the Constitution\nmust be endorsed by the populur will, uud it\nnot, it must be rejected. The only true way of\nascertaining whether the Constitution is accep-\ntable or nut, is to present it to the people.\nMr. Bigler explained that he did not say that\nMr. Douglas maintained the ground that au on-\nubliug act was necessary in all cases; but that\nlie had taken the ground that it was necessary\nio tbo case of ifausas. The Senator bus dispos-\ned of his own argument by saying that be was\nnot always cousistunt, and that a wise man will\nalways change his views weenever he thinks\nhimself wrong.
9d48beb1d277e1da7cabf05452a81442 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.7520547628108 39.369864 -121.105448 more or less, the ditch itself being\nfifty miles long. Its capacity is 800\ninches. Grizzly Canon affords suffix\ncient water to fill it until late in the\nseason, and when that fails, supplies\nare drawn from the lakes. One of\nthese lakes is stated to be six mile\nlong by three miles wide, and being\ndammed to prevent its overflowing,\nconstitutes an immense reservoir.\nAnother lake connects with this, but\nit is considerably smaller. The same\nditch supplies Humbug, and other\nmining localities along the ridge.\nThe Last Oveklanb Mail arrived\nsafely at Plaoervile on the 29th alt.\nThree passengers came in the stage\nfrom Salt Lake. The city is said to\nbe losing its saintly quiet character.\nGambling, drunkenness, and rowdy*-\nism prevail to an alarming extent. A\ngentile named Beaty has been licensed\nto keep groggery at $20,000 per\nannum, and his daily receipts are\n$250. The presence of an army is\nnot favorable to the morals of any\nplace, and even the Mormons, much\nas has been said against them, are\ndisgusted with Uncle Sams troops.\nCapt, Hawes command of 100 dra-\ngoons and 50 infantry are on the way\nto the Shoshone country. Gen. Hunt\nand Dr. Forney accompany the ex-\npedition with a large stock of pres-\nents for the Indians.\nCel. Andrews was at Thousand\nSpring Valley cn route for Oregon\nw:th 950 men, 150 wagons, and 1,000\nhead of mules. They took the Cali-\nfornia route to avoid the deep snow\non the Oregon mountains. They will\nprobably rendezvous at Benicia, says\nthe Union , taking Sacramento in tbeir\ncourse, and thus making an overland\nmarch across the continent.
2692a98896310f264e7a5d6854e9de7d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.1931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 Cattle-Receipts 5.000 head; shipments 3.004\npnd. Active and firmer, but not quolablj\nIghcr; export? $5 00a5 70; good to cholet\ntipping $4 75a5 85; common to fair $4 2Ai\n(PI; butchora' and cannlngsteady; cows$20(\n150; bulls$2 80ti4 00: veal calves 15 OOaO 50\nockers' and feeders' demand active at $3 21\n125. Calves per head $0OOal2 00.\nSheen.l!eceipta4 400 head; shipments2,(XX\nead. Market faster but not quotably lower\nilea at $3 80a0 00; fair to good $4 00a5 00,\nBALTtMORS, March 11,.Flour active tym\neady. Wheat, western dull and lower\n0. 2 western winter red, »t>ot and Mard\nI 17Ua} 17K; April $1 18^al 18X; Mai\n118Kal 18X: June $1 17Hal 17«. Corn\nesteru tfteady and Inactive. Oats scarce ant\nrm; white western 40a; mixed 43o. Ryi\nIghnr at $1 07al CO. Uay steady. Pro\nisiofia llrm and very moderate Jobbing de\nmnd; me*s pork, old, $15 25; new, $1U 25\nulkimats packed ((I 00a* 87Hi shoulder\n[1 76; clear rlh sides $9 50; hams $11 OOj\n200. l«tird $1 OJM. Butter quiet\nirrfs firmer at 17c. Petroleum nominal\noflee dull and easier; Hi jcargoes lOMallikc\nCimcirhat!. March 11. - Cotton dull a\nMfe. Flour, family 14 80a810; fancy $S 25i\n76 Wheat demand fair and market firm\nio. 9 red winter II 06al 06. Corn strong\nIn. 9 ml ted 4la44Jlo. Oat* qul*t;No. 2 mlxei\n1J<a37J<ft. lite easier: No. 2, $>18. Ilarle:\niron?; No. 2 fa'l tl 03al OS; eitra No.\nanada $1 OTial OR. I'urk strong and hlghe\nt $15 Mali Kfl. Lard strong and higher a\n10 CO Bulk meat* stronger: shoulder\nfl 00; pl»ar nb 18 00. llacoii In good demand\nhonlders ii <17 ft: clear rib 48 7d; clea\nfl OS. Whisky active, but lower at $1 Ofl\niutter strong and unchanged\nTolbdo, March 11.-Wheat ateadfj ambe\nflchlgan and May $1 (OH: No. 2redWabaal:\npot $1 OSJi: May $100)4; July »1 03K; No\neu ttBUMil 91 u»; no. a rrn mixeu «t u,\n!nm otendy: hlsti mined 44W<s: No. mpt\nilnrcli 44c; No. j
41f84afc09d074132e1df83af1711669 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.2041095573313 41.681744 -72.788147 Y. M . C . A. Boys' Department\nConsiderable comment has been\nmads on the boys' department or-\nchestra. The boys gave a concert\nat the Men's Bible Class supper on\nlast Thursday night and the music\nwas well received. None of the fol-\nlowing boys who are in the orches-\ntra are over 15 years of age. Thy\nare, piano, Lewis Chernoff; violin,\nWalter Arendt; first cornet, Wil -\nliam Peterson; second cornet, Paul\nThlencr: clarinet, Dick Beebe;\nbanjo, Wilbur Baker; drums, Bob\nBcebe. Walter Carlson, a member\nof the Screnaders and also well\nknown as a saxophonist and drum-\nmer, is voluntarily coaching the\nboys and under his teaching the or-\nchestra Is rapidly developing.\nA pool tournament was held in the\nboys' department on Saturday after-\nnoon and over boys spent the\nafternoon trying to win the mono\ngram and box of candy which was\nthe prize for the winner.\nJoseph Potts finally managed to\ncome out as the winner with Wil-\nliam Jones a very close second.\nOn Saturday of this week a hike\nwill bo conducted by the boys' sec-\nretary. The boys will leave the\nY.M.C.A.at10o'clockInthe\nmorning and the entire day will bo\nspent playing games in the woods.\nUpon retsrning to tho Y. M. C . A.\neachr hiker will be allowed to go\nIn the tank for a swim.\nAny boy In the city of 13 years\nor over Is welcome to go on this\nhike and each boy who foes Is ex-\npected to bring his own lunch,\npreferably something to cook over\nan open fire.
0a69f2109a6195422ec64357ec8c9265 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.001369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 Lord Kitchener. In a dispatch to tho\nway office dated Pretoria, Dec. 31. say«:\n“A small portion of the enemy's force\nwhich entered the colony to the east\nbroke away in a southwesterly direc­\ntion and crossed the railway at a point\nbetween Bangor and Sherborne. They\ndid some damage to the railway. The\ncoinn;n under Williams will be in tom b\nwith this body today. Tho force which\nentered the colony to the west passed\nthe road from Carnarvon to Victoria\nWest at 7 yesterday morning. They\nwere going south, and closely followed\nby Tliorneycroft and De Lisle. Very\nfew recruits from the colony joined the\nenemy. Hertxug's men are already\ndropping their worn horses.”\nIt Is now escertalned that the Boers\nwho trekked westward from Vryburg,\nand who were supposed to be going to\n arc making for the Prles-\nku district of Gape Colony.\nTho Boers held up a train near Rr.a-\nraead which had GO of tho Prince Al­\nfred Guards on board, who were re­\nturning from the front; and about 40\npassengers, women and children. The\nBoers numbered 200. with supports\nthat could be seen In the distance. The\nsoldiers defended themselves until their\nsmall quantity of ammunition was ex­\nhausted, when all were subsequently\ncaptured, though subsequently releas­\ned. The passengers had narrow es­\ncapes. as the bullets of the Boers per­\nforated the carriages. An officer and\nthree soldiers were severely wounded.\nThe railway traffic has been stopped,\nbut tho Boers do not appear to have\nInjured The permanent way. The au­\nthorities at Rosmead have sent the\nwomen and children away to Cradock.
1c3c45fe944094c1d5e1f5610e448d09 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1893.223287639523 39.756121 -99.323985 man revolution of 1818. Down\ntown, ut the corner of Twelfth\nund Olive Street, slundsa statue ofOen.\ntlrant, the hud one that has been put\nup in the citv. Several of these\nstatues ni'c of heroic si.e, and all\nire made by noted sculptors?\nThere seems no louder any doubt as\nto the success of the Micas Ship enter-\nprise, wl.ljh involves the runuing of\nspecially constructed steamers from St.\nLouia to Mexico and other Spanish\nAmerican points. The patent under\nwhich the ships are to be constructed\ninvolves tho building of a vessel which\ncan ply on the Mississippi even at low\nwater, but which can cross the ocean\nsafely. In many respects it resembles\nthe plan so successful" y adopted in\nocean racers of the City of Paris \nand experts are of the opinion that the\nnecessary variations to enable the ship\nto ply on the river at low water will\nnot impair the efllcience. The success-\nful establishment of this line of steam-\ners will revolutionize trade to a great\nextent and will result in a large In-\ncrease in business between St. Louia\nand intermediate points with the Quit\nports. A large quantity of stock has\nbeen placed in St. Louis, Chicago and\nother cities and active work on the first\nship is about to commence.\nFor years it has been the custom in\nSt. Louis for the Sons of the Fatherland\nto celebrate (I erman Bay some time in\nApril by a street parade and the pub-\nlic feast afterwards in one of the large\nbeer-garde-
59493b6f41e9415bc6eed3153c333b77 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.395890379249 39.745947 -75.546589 have secured the services of the Rev.\nWilliam N. Thomas, who will sing at\nthe morning service.\nThe case of Mrs. Josephine Pryor,\nof Chesapeake City, formerly of Elk­\nton. against the Chesapeake and\nDelaware Canal, and the town of\nChesapeake City, for Injuries received\nbv falling In a hole along the canal\nin that town, has been removed to\nQueen Annes County for trial.\nPersonal. — Mrs. Richard Reese, of\nWilmington, spent Thursday with\nfriends In Elkton.— Mrs. Clinton\nBiggs, of Town Point, visited friends\nhere on Sunday.— Mrs. Elizabeth\nJones, of Philadelphia, has been the\nguest of friends in Elkton.—Mr. and\nMrs. Alfred S. Spence have had as\ntheir guests. Mr. and Mrs. John L.\nBender, of Baltimore. —Mr. S. U. Low-\nman, of Wilmington, was an Elkton\nvisitor on Wednesday.—Miss Mae\nDavidson, of Chesapeake City, spent\nSaturday in Wilmington. —Robert\nFerguson, of the first district, has\n spending a tew days with An­\ndrew Wilson, in Elk Neck.— Mrs.\nDaniel Bratton is entertaining her\nsister. Mrs. Claude Wilson, of Berk­\nley, Harford County. —Mrs. Martha\nPorter, of Wilmington, is the guest of\nher sisters, the Misses Terrell. —Del­\nbert Hague, of Wilmington, is spend­\ning a few days with his mother, Mrs.\nThomas Hague, of this town.—Miss\nLouise Davidson, of Philadelphia, is\nvisiting her sister, Mrs. Benjamin D.\nWilson.—John Abel, of Cherry Hill,\nhas a new Reo touring car. —Mr. and\nMrs. W. Palmer McFadden, of Sin-\ngerley, were in town on\nMiss Maida Grace Campbell, Superin­\ntendent of Union Hospital, lias re­\nturned from a trip to Pittsburgh, Pa.\n— Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Lewis, of\nPhiladelphia, are the guests of\nfriends in Elkton. — Frank Rhodes\nsuent Sunday at Town Point.— Dr.\nGeorge H. Grapp. of Port Deposit,\nbroke his arm while pranking an\nautomobile.
1b46a847ca2ef3012f057c0951f4b1da THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1894.932876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 It is perfectly and palpably plain that\nthe only way under present conditions by\nwhich this reserve, when dangerously de-\npleted, can be replenished, is through the\nissue and sale of tho bonds of tho govern-\nment for gold; and yet Congress lias not\nonly thus far declined to authorize the\nissuo of bonds best suited to such a pur-\npose but there seems a disposition in some\nquarters to deny both tho necessity and\npower for the issuo of bonds at nil. I can\nnot for a moment believe that ony of our\ncitizens aro deliberately willing that their\ngovernment should default in Its pecuni-\nary obligations or that its financial op-\nerations should be reduced to ft silver\nbasis. At any rate I should not feel that\nmy duty was done if I omitted any effort\nI could make to such a calamity.\nQuestions relating to our banks and\ncurrency are closely connected with the\nsubject Just referred to, and they also\npresent some unsatisfactory features.\nProminent among them are the lack of\nelasticity in our currency circulation and\nIts frequent concentration In financial\ncenters when it Is most needed In other\nparts of the country. Tho nbsoluto di-\nvorcement of the Government from the\nbusiness of banking is the ideal relation-\nship of the Government to the circulation\nof the currency of tho country.\nThis condition cannot bo Immediately\nreached, but as a step In that direction,\nand as a means of securing a more elas-\ntic currency and obviating other objec-\ntions to the present arrangement of bank\ncirculation, the Secretary of tho Treasury\npresents in his report a scheme for modi-\nfying present banking laws and provid
186e925c6e746f1a7f52f9849be8016e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.491780790208 39.745947 -75.546589 The brave young Iron Borough sol­\ndier Is a member of the First Infantry,\nA. E . F., and he participated In the bat­\ntle at Cantlgny on May 2k. In which\nthe American forces routed the Ger­\nmans northwest of Toul and look the\ncity from the Huns after one of the\nbitterest battles fought In thst sector.\nThe Americans were congratulated by\nthe French and English War Depart­\nments for their bravery and coolness\nunder»flre. Major Theodore Roosevelt,\nJr„ who Is In command of the First\nInfantry, was cited several days ago\nfor a French war cross for bravery.\nAlthough blinded by gaa he refused to\nleave the field and remained with his\nboys until the close of the engagement.\nPrivate Frederick Is receiving treat­\nment In a French and Is ex­\npected to recover. The following letter\nwas received yesterday by John Edgar\nfrom the young man:\n' Did you read In the papers what we\ndid at Cantlgny?\n“WeB, I almost saw It all, missed\nabout the last 350 yards, but had a\ngrandstand seat under a bush to see\nthe rest of the boys finish what was\nleft of the boche.\n"I am In the hospital now, recover­\ning from gas wounda. My fare and neck\nare burned Mack and the boys have a\nnew one on me—Smoke.* If you could\nsee me you would believe It.\n"I lost my sight for five days and\nthought I never would be able to see\nagain, but) some French physician\nfixed them up. I am pretty weak and\ntired.
07302e58edbc447f25052aa473c41cfc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.4068492833587 40.063962 -80.720915 been set aside for the use of the special p(\nlice force to be organized by tlie couinanie\nIt will be placed in chargo of (Japtui\nBenjamin Hancock, an ex-Con federal\nsoldier and one of the officers of a reg\nniont of militia raised in Baltimore rturin\nthe riots of 1S77. Captain Hancock is no'\nrecruiting his command in Baltimore, an\nwill bring two hundred men here on Mor\nday. The force will be uniformed iu blui\nwith brass buttons and black slouch hat\nland armed with revolvers and musket\nMilitary diEciplino will be enforced, an\nevery ellort made to impress the striker\nThe companies have decided on a mast(\nstroke of policy, which will at once protet\nthe new men and prevent them from bein\nfrightened or persuaded into stopping wor\nafter they begin. The barracks and polic\nheadquarters at Hckhart are located immi\ndiately in the viciuity of the mouth of tli\nmine, and the companies have given ordei\nfor the erection of a heavy fence arouu\nthem. The will patrol inside <\nthe fence. No 0110 will be allowed 1\ncmcr who is not provided with ji pus\nThis will cut oil' all communication hi\ntween tho strikers and the new miners, j\nthe latter will not be allowed to leave tl:\nenclosure. Another great advantage whic\nthe companies possess is the control of tli\nEckbart railroad, running from the mout\nof tho mine to Cumberland, over which tli\ncoal mined can quickly be gotten to ma\nket. Engineers, firemen and trainme\ngenerally will be brought here to opera!\nthe roai'l, as the regular employes are 1\nsympathy with the strikers. Tho ne\nminers, many of whom como from Peni\nsylvania and Now York, will be broughti\na* special train, heavily guarded, from Rn\ntimore to Cumberland and thence by tl\nEckhurt road direct to the enclosure aroun\ntho mouth of the mine. In this euclosui\nthey will work, eat and sleep for an indel\nnite period, and any one going outside wit!\nbut permission will not be readmittei
06e95578813111ecc4b4737fa3a1bedb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.4945205162355 40.063962 -80.720915 fame and cheering vision,. The scholar\nsets the marvels wherever time h»s\nwrought,the signs ot tht times anil that\ntho fonUslei of the pout are tho realit¬\nies of the prenenL Two men, a acholai1\nand an uneducated man, can stand and\nlook at a field of uroivlnn (train. Tho\none aeea in the grain visions of clothlnjr.\nfood and luitenance, but the other sees\nfar lieyotid and drinks In lt« Inllnltfl\nbeauties and mesnlngs. The atream\ncannot run higher than It* aource.\nTne new scholars will mingle In\nworldly affairs. Evils .con only be sot\nright, the icholar of the ncfw school\nkno«.«, only mingling In politic*. Dr.\nRaymond Instanced Arnold Toynbee's\nwork In tho coniieMed districts of Bast\nI<ondon, and tho different Institutions\nIn tho larger American cities devoted \ntho work of lifting mankind to a higher\nand purer level., Like Blr I,aunclval In\nthe quest of the Holy Grail, the only\nreal happiness can be secured by alms\nand assisting less fortunate brothers.\nTho new aristocracy will be one of\nheroes. It will be the roal .nobility of\ntheenrth. First must be secured a broad\nliberal education. Can a man or woman\nsay they can't get It In these days\nof free education? Can they afford to\nstand still, when their fathers went for-\nward with less advantages? They must\ngo on, not dreading lo cut loose from\nold ideas and customs. They should\nhave courage and lot dreams of success\nbanish thoughts of faltering. After a\nbrilliant peroration along this line, Dr.\nRaymond concludod amid enthusiastic\napplause.
24c61cfc522db14550fcf349effc4591 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.6068492833588 39.623709 -77.41082 AN ACT to amend Section 1 of Article I of\nthe Const Hutton of Ibis Slate and to provide\nfortho submission of said amendment to\ntlio qualified voters of this Slate for adop-\ntion or rejection.\nSUCTION 1. He ttenacted l>y the General As.\nlembly 0/ Maryland (llirec-Hflhs of all Hie\nmembers of each of the two Houses concur-\nring), that the following section bo and the\nsame Is hereby proposed as an amendment\nto Seel lon I of Article 1 of the Constitution 01\nthis state, and If adopted by Hie legal and\nqualified voters thereof, as herein provided,\nitshall supersede and stand 'n place and\nstead of Section 1 of said A 1 tide 1.\nSection X. All elections by the people\nshall bo by ballot. Every mole citizen of\nthe United Slates, whether native born or\nnaturalized, ol the ago of 21 years or up-\nwards. who lij*hresldsc! In this rttato for one\nyear and In the Legislative district of Balti-\nmore city or in the county In which he may\noffer to vote for six next preceding\nthe election, and who moreover Is duly reg-\nistered as a qualified voter, as provided In\nthis Article, shall be entitled to vote in the\nward or election district In which he resides\nat all elections hereinafter to be held in this\nState; and In case any county or city shall be\nso divided as to form portions of different\nelectoral districts for the election of liopre-\nnentatlvcs In Congress, Senators, Delegates\nor other officers, then, to entitle a person to\nvote for such officer, ho must have been a\nresident, of that, part of tlio county or city\nwhich shall form a part of the electoral dis-\ntrict In whlcn ho offers to vote for six months\nnext preceding the election, but a person\nwho shall have acquired a residence in such\ncounty or city, entit ling him to vote at any\nsuch election, shall be entitled to vote in the\nelection district Irom which ho removed until\nho shall have acquired a residence m the\npart of the county or city to which he has\nremoved.
5cfa7fb7edb95748a12ea948d9166778 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.8808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 have been perfected by the officials of | counties. Delaware, and adjacent coun- j tbo 8Ui,ject 0f the address of Dr. J . E.\nDelaware College for entertaining the ( tje8 jn Maryland, by armed guards em- ( Spingarn of New York in Wilmington\nNational Grange delegates and their ployed by the Delaware Live Stock ; on Sunday evening, November 22, in\nfriends on the occasion of their visit i Sanitary Board, it is thought that all j Bethel A. M. E. Church. Dr. Spingaro\nhere tomorrow. The delegation will i avenues for the further spread of the is the chairman of the laiard of direo-\nleave Wilmington at 2.4R oclock to- i f00[ and mouth disease are stopped, tors of tlie National Association for tlie\nmorrow afternoon In special coaches | -pijp action of guarding the county Advancement of Colored 1coplc, which\nprovided through the courtesy of the j ]jnes was taken after it was reported i has been active in fighting segregation\n railroad and will arrive • jbai infected cattle found at Ridgely, in federal departments ever since the\nat Newark at 3 04 oclock. They will iyjd _ bad been shipped from that State, first rumor of it was made public over\nbe met at the station by automobiles >pbe railroad officials are keeping a a year ago, and he will have much ot\nand will be taken to the Womens strict watch on all trains for dogs, interest to say in regard to this (ignt\nCollege. Here they will be served and within the past two days, eight and its results.\ntea and punch by the faculty and stu- dog3 shipped to tills State by Pennsyl- Dr. Springern, for twelve years\ndents of the college. From the Worn- Vania gunners have been taken from Professor of Comparative Literature\nen> College the delegation will bc trains at French street station and re- in Columbia University, author of\ntaken to Delaware College. Because turned to their owners.
1e2d8eba310b1414a9c171df8b2c3338 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.360273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 "That he will not at any time under ni\ncircumstances or on any occasion wha\never, permit any lewd women or girls\nany females of bad reputation to enter h\nsaioon, and that he will not sell or gli\ndrinks to any such women or harbor\npermit them to loiter about, or under at\ncircumstances to enter Into or remain\nhis saloon or any part of his building. I\nfurther promises as a condition precede;\nto his obtaining the license, that he w\nwaive all his rights to notice or to a hea\nlng In case the said city shall at any tic\ndesire to revoke his license."\nI am asked for an opinion as to tl\nbinding effect and forre of said agreeme:\nand also as to the effect of a special boi\ncovering above Questions. A licen*\nholds his license subject to the laws tl\nstate and the ordinances of the city\nwhich the license is executed. The ord\nnance of the city of Wheeling embrac\nthese questions completely; the ordlnan\nprovides that the person conducting\ncoffee house shall not permit women\nthe character mentioned in the said agre\nment to enter the licensee's saloon at\nupon a violation after a second convlcth\ncouncil, upon notice and a hearing glv<\nthe offender, can revoke the license.\nIt is my opinion. first, that the agre\nment of said Wilkie and Fish with tl\ncity would be improper for two rearon\nFirst, that these questions are alreai\n.provided for by th«? ordinances, and se\nondiy. because It would establish co!\ntractual relations between the llcens;\nand the city, which. In my opinion, ougl\nnot to exist. As to the waiving of ar\nnotice and henrlng upon a violation of tl
0005f62e695a998dc09541a452336275 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.4863013381532 40.441694 -79.990086 ducer. Their graveyard well is so small\nthat it will not pay to operate. E . Work-\nman & Co., on the David Shakeley, is good\nfor ten barrels a day.\nQueeksiown Fisher & Co.'s No. 7, on\nthe Fisher farm, is light. Crawford & Co.'s\nwell, on the Crawford, is dry. Wally &\nCo., on the McGarvey, is dry. J . C . Widger\nhas finished a duster on the same farm.\nPittsbnrg parties have completed a gasser\non the Morrison farm.\nGallery Aiken & Hayes Bros. No. 1\non the George Marburger has been shot and\ncleaned out and the production increased\nfrom 5 to 35 barrels a day.\nZelienople The actual production of\nthis field is 645 barrels a day. There are\nfour wells drilling and three rigs up, and\nthere have been lour wells this\nmonth. The Zelienople Oil Company's\nNo. 4 on the West farm has made 35 barrels\nin the"last 24 hours.. They will clean out\ntheir old No. 1, which was abandoned, and\ngive it another test. The Hebrew Syndi-\ncate's No. 2 on the Allen is in and dry.\nHarmony One dry hole is the record of\niKis field for the past month. The daily\nproduction is only 114 barrels a day.\nPeteksvtlle Dale & Thompson's No.2\non the O. Kader is down 800 feet. Wuller\n& Co. are ready to start their No. 2 on the\nsame farm. Hovis & Bedd are ready to\nstart their No. 4 Blakely. Black & Co. on\nthe Nicholas heirs are 30 feet in the sand\nand showing for a fair well. The Oak Oil\nCompany Has shot and cleaned out their
0184dc62a2f826c1f96e10bac7d5c891 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.209589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Speaker—"And no one elsa la\nopposed to it that I know of.\nMr Hanby— “ While that bill la founded\non a good principle there are certain bad\nfeatures about it. We will take A and\nB, They work together. B is too stingy\nto bay whiskey and A will buy It A\nwill give It to B. There may be a dis­\nturbance between the two families.\nMaybe B's wife will find oat that A gave\nwhiskey to her husband She may have\nhim arrested. There la plenty ot each\npeople In Delaware and In all other com­\nmunities I\nof the State of\nenough if they are only enforced\nthey are never enforced, and that is\nwhere the trouble comes In. If B gets A\narrested for giving him whiskey, what\nredress fats he Many arrests are mads\nsimply as the result of family quarrels\nK we continue in this way of legislating\nwe have as binding and oppressive\nlaws as those of Eagian 1 on Ireland\nJustices of the peace are always ready to\nmake money, and the constables get tbs\noffice to make money. Dont give them\nauthority to cast these people In a felons\ncell and to brand the m as felons In their\ncommnnlty. If a man gave a son of mine\nwhiskey, I would be willing to do almost\nanything to him, bnt there are cases\nwhere the law wonld be used to satisfy\npersonal spite Let them enforce what\nwhtsKey laws they have and If they cant\nget along on them lets give them a\nprohibitory law aud pat a slop once and\nfor all to their coming here year after year\nasking us to pass hills amendatory of ths\nrestrictive laws we now have in onr\nstatute books. You cant find a temper­\nance man In New Caatle county who will\nenforce the law we now have.
25a77e42ec77c33b82de81c8aad8d3b3 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.0778688208359 37.561813 -75.84108 and submitting the queation of its adop-\ntion to the citizens of the several town- -\nS ships of the State of Ohio.\nSection 1. Be it enacted by the Gener\nal Assembly " tne btate of Ohio, That\nwithin the limits of each and every town\nship within the btate of Ohio, the sale of\nspirituous, vinous, malt, or other Intoxi-\ncating liquors, is prohibited, except for\nmedicinal pnrposes.on the written prescrip-\ntion of a regular practising physician, and\nexcept also for medicinal, pharmaceutic,\nand sacramental purposes: and any person\nwho shall sell, barter, offer for sale, or\ncive away any such intoxicating liquors.\nor shall employ any shift or device ta\nevade tne provisions of this act, snail De\ndeemed guilty of a criminal offense, and,\nupon conviction thereof, shall be fined not\nless than twenty nor more than fifty dol\nlars, and the costs of prosecution, and be\nimprisoned in the county jail of the county\nnot leRS tnan ten nor more than nity days,\nand thereafter nntil such fine and coats\narc paid, Becured to be paid, or he or she\nis otherwise legally discharged. And no\nphysician shall make or sign any such\nprescription except the person for whom\nit is made is actually sick, and such liquor\nis aotuauy required as a medicine, and\nany physician who makes or signs any pre-\nscription for such liquors, exoept as pro-\nvided for in this act, shall be deemed\nguilty i f a violation of this act, and, \nconviction, fined one hundred dollars for\neach offense, and pay costs of prosecution.\nSec. 2 . The Probate Court shall have\nconcurrent jurisdiction with the Court of\nCommon Fleas in all cases of violations\nunder the provisions of this act, and in no\ncase shall an indictment by a grand jury\nbe required, but it shall be the duty of the\nProsecuting Attorney, on notice from any\ncitizen that an offense has been committed\nunder the provisions of this act, to imme-\ndiately file an information, accompanied\nby an affidavit, in said eourt; setting forth\nbriefly but distinctly, in plain and concise\nlanguage, the offense charged ; and there-\nupon said Probate Court shall forthwith\nissue a warrant, directed to the Sheriff of\nthe county, for the arrest of the accused,\nand upon such charges such person shall\nbe tried, and if the defendant pleads guil-\nty, or does not demand a trial by jury, the\nJudge of said Probate Court shall pro-\nceed to try the issue; but if the person or\npersons charged shall demand a trial by\njury, then a jury shall be drawn as for the\nCourt of Common Pleas, and such court\nshall issue a venire for such jury to attend\nforthwith, or on a day the court may fix for\ntrial of said cause, which venire shall be\ndirected to the Sheriff of the county, and\nby him served and returned in the sameman- -\nner as a venire issued irom the Court ol\nCommon Pleas.
55fbacdf9922d5402de8d34991bd85f7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.7630136669204 39.745947 -75.546589 Only the Initiative and Referendum\ncan do this, as the problem of the em­\nployment of labor Involves the prob­\nlem of land titles and land tenures, of\ntransportation, and of finance. Edward\nTregear, minister of the Department\nof Labor for New Zealand, observes In\nhis report In 1894: "Hold what theory\nwe may, hide the facts In what casuis­\ntry we may. It lemalns that the wage\npayer ts the m ister of the wage earner,\nthe land holder Is tho master of the\nlandless, and the owner of machinery\nLa the master of the machinist. ”\nThe whole history ot the United\nStates shows that vested Interests\nwould be entirely safe should the whole\npeople become practically their own\nlawmakers, as they would toe. should\nthe Initiative and Referendum be made\nthe law of the land. It Is under our\npresent system that the corporations\nhave acquired boundless power.\nThe Swiss people decided In 1901 that\nall the railways in the Swiss Republic\nshould be taken over and operated by\nthe government. This was done by a\nreferendum vote, and though It was\ndecided the affirmative. It had been\nvoted down when the question was de­\ncided toy popular vote several years\nbefore. As William Jennings Bryan\nhas come before the people ns nn advo­\ncate of government ownership of all\nrailways, and as the question Is likely\nto he widely agitated In this country\nsoon. If may toe of Interest to know\non what terms the Swiss railways be­\ncame public property, since It has boon\nestimated by skilful financiers that the\nrailways of the United States could\nbe built complete for about one-quarter\nof the slocks and bonds on which they\npay Interest and dividends.\nWhen the railway companies of Switz­\nerland received their charters from the\nLegislature, a clause was inserted pro­\nviding that the government should\nhave the option of buying the roads\nat any lime by paying the companies\nowning ihem twenty-five times the an­\nnual Income. This Income was ascer­\ntained by finding the average Income\nfer the past ten years and multiplying\nIt by twenty-five. The Swiss Republic\npaid $145,000 .000 for the railways which\nhad been operated by private corpora­\ntions.
3bd053e700b08f1bc30c84dcd01d5f2c THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.684426197885 39.290882 -76.610759 religious sect shall combine and throw their\nweight, in a body, in behalf of any political can-\ndidate, it is an argument why others, differing\nwith them in opinion, should be opposed to the\ncandidate whom they may thus combine to sup-\nport. And if it should so turn out that, under\nthe influence of Bishop England's letter, or\nany other cause whatsoever, the Catholics, as\na body, should unite in behalf of Mr. Van Bu-\nren, it wiil become the duty of every Protest-\nant to unite, not only to resist Mr. V au Buren,\nbut to resist Catholicism. And it fortunately so\nhappens that the Catholics live in communities,\nand if it should turn out, upon examination of\nthe vote after the Presidential election, that\nCatholic neighborhoods and Catholic counties\nhave given their votes for Mr. Van Buren, it will\nbecome the duty of every Protestant throughout\nthe country to exert their influence to resist\nthe increase of a capable of combining and\nproducing such important political results.?\nShould it so turn out, Bishop England will find\nthat he has inflicted a blow upon Catholicism\nmore fatal to its progress than any persecution\nof ours, if we were disposed, as we are not, to\npersecute his Church. He will find that he has\ndestroyed the kind and liberal feeling which has\ninduced many Protestants to place their children\nin Catholic schools. And one object with us in\ncalling public attention to it, and in speaking of\nhis letter as we have done, was to fix.the attention\nof the Catholic clergy throughout the country\nupon this as the inevitable consequence of Mr.\nVan Buren receiving a large Catholic vote.\nWe are aware that, with a large body of the\nCatholic clergy, the propagation of their reli-\ngion, and what they believe to be the true\nfaith, is of much more vital importance, than\nwhether Mr. Van Buren or General Harrison is
aedff304ef5ab51504ccc7bf29f9edc5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.856164351852 41.681744 -72.788147 He said the city should Obtain,\nby purchase or condemnation, at\nleast one sizeable place in the north\nend and another in the south end and\nmaintain them for the accommoda-\ntion of local motorists who come Into\nthe business district and residents of\nr.earby places who trade In New Brit-\nain. It is not enough to lease spaces,\nhe said, because eventually the\ncrowth of the city will demand that\nall centrally located property be\nutilized , for business. He doubted\nthat any merchant on Main street\nwould seriously object to an increase\nin taxes because of the establishment\nof parking places. Personally he\nwould not consider an increase of\n$500 per year in his taxes unreason-\nable because there is no question\nthat the accommodation and con-\nvenience of the public at large de-\nmand that the situation caused by\nlack of parking space be met.\nCouncilman W. S . Warner, who\nIntroduced tho resolution for ap-\npointment of the special committee,\nsaid available parking .space is\nrapidly disappearing and he believes\nNew Britain should take steps to\novercome the stuation that is fast\nbecoming serious. It is impossible to\nfind parking space about the center\nof the street Saturday night, and\nat other times, especially in the\nafternoon and evening, motorists\ndesiring to patronize tho mercantile\nestablishments or attend to business\nin the banks and other business\nhouses are obliged to leave their cars\nsome distance from the city or take\ntho alternative of riding around\nMain street in the hope that a space\nmay be found along the curb.\nCouncilman Warner said the city\nproperty on Washington Place might\nbe combined with nearby property\non Washington street and space pro-\nvided for a sizeable number of cars.\nThere is a large space between Elm\nand Main streets, behind the school\nproperty, which might be utilized,\nand ho also mentioned the space n\nthe rear of the New Britain Trust\nCo. property on West Main street.\nHo said the city charter does not al-\nlow a venture such as he has In\nmind but he favors discussing it\nwith a view towards obtaining the\nnecessary authority if the proposal\nconsidered to have sufficient\nmerit to warrant Its adoption. The\nparking charge and gasoline con-\ncession price could be worked out\nwhen the proper time arrives.\nAlderman W. H. Judd said a\nmunicipal parking place, to bo worth\nwhile,
428aae6006025b63b9dabc47a5b859fb DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.7281420448796 58.275556 -134.3925 "I bought a 40-acre tract just out of\nLos Angeles. It was a beautiful loca¬\ntion. Rosea were everywhere and their\nperfume filled the air. I built a beau¬\ntiful little bungalow. My land was un¬\nder nn irrigation ditch and I did not\nhave to worry about rain. And this\nwhs so far well, l^or it never rained.\nAs I walked over those acres I was »ur-\nrounded by a halo of dust. It got into\nmy hair and the pores of my akin. I\nhad the use of the irrigation ditch for\n24 hours once in so often and was re¬\nquired to make the most of it, for my\nneighbor must have it next day, and bo »\non. During those 24 hours I labored\nevery minute, directing the How of the\nwater. The dust became mud, into\nwhich I sank to my kuees. I had to\nuse a big mat in ray work which I car¬\nried folded on my shoulder from place\nto place. The mud and water streamed\nover my olothes. I waded about in\nmud. The dust every day and the\nmud. of the irrigation days made me re¬\npulsive to my wife and the occasional\nvisitor. Each day I waa dead tired and\nwent to bed at 8 in order that I might\nget up at 4, as 1 found it necessary to\ndoif1 was to make asuccessofthe\niittle ranch. The blazing sun of every\nday dried up the juices of my system\nand a cloud in the sky was like the\nsight of an angel's wing. At the end of\nthe season, by much dickering with the\ndealers, I sold my crop for enough to\nlet me out even. That disposed of, I\nbought a ticket for the North. My wife\nI left in the bungalow to look after it.\nI sailed from Los Angeles by sea that I\nmight get to the oool breeze without\nloss of a moment. I soaked myself in\nthe ram at Tacoma. it was a clean wet-\nting. 1 am l eveling in the cool winds\nof Skagway. To have the sun covered\nup a bit is paradise. I am going back\nto Dawson."
0ee832bf5f060a5e05ce4a58a8eabca9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.5027396943176 41.681744 -72.788147 of us were away. I had a chance to\ngotoatownIhadneverbeentobe-\nfore, and so asked for the trip. We\nstopped at a wonderful chateau. It\nis owned by a countess. There are\nmany nice walks around it, shrubbery\nand flowers. I told the doctor who\nwas with me, he could leave me\nthere for the duration of the war.\nAnd what meals! I had three eggs,\nsteak, toast, tea, potatoes, etc. It\nsure is one fine place. It was an ideal\nday for riding too, nice and warm.\nWe drove about 150 kilometers and\ngot back about 10:30 P. M . We have\nnot had any mail for several days.\nOn account of the drive the trains are\nnearly all taken off. One of Madame's\nsons is home on permission and so\nwhen I have time at night we go out\ntogether. He is a lieutenant in the\nengineers. East night we went to a\nmovieattheY.M.C.A. Thisisthe\nfirst movie I havt seen for a long,\n time. It troubles my eyes. As\nhe cannot speak a word of English,\nI had to translate all the headings in\nthe picture. Believe me this was\nsome job. They only show a minute\nand so much slang is used that it is\nnecessary to change the slang into\nEnglish and then the English to\nFrench. I sure had my hands full,\nnow I can tell you. Yesterday one of\nthe most popular men at the garage\nwas taken to the hospital. We think\nhe has had a stroke he is paralyzed\non one side. He is an Englishman\nand was an inspector for the Pierce\nArrow people in the States. The news\ntoday about the drive looks lots bet-\nter. It is only to be expected that the\nFrench would be driven back a little\nwhen 5 5 Boche divisions are thrown\nin at once. The reserves are up now,\nand the Boches are being held. It\nwill merely be another case of 'the\nMarne'.
13101e5e651580756dd157f0a792a950 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.7383561326737 46.187885 -123.831256 San Francisco, Sppt. 28 . The 'keystone\nIn th arch ot Durrant's alibi crumbled\nand fell today. Tho witness upon whom\nthe 'attorneys for the defense depended\nmost to sustain their contention that\nDurrani was attending a lecture at the\nCooper Medical College at the hour when\nBlanche Lamont wajr murdered, gave\ndisappointing: testimony. Instead of tes-\ntifying that Durrant waa present at the\nlecture, ss Attorney Deuprey said Dr.\nCheney would do, Uio doctor axid tie had\nno recollection of seeing the youny man.\nTo oWset this revrje, tho defense made\nbut one point, admission as an exhibit\nof the roll caCl ibook at the collego In\nwhich Durrant 'woa recorded present at\nthe lecture given on the afternoon or\nApril 3. The proswiutlon holds the roll\ncall book In little esteem, from the fact\nthat it will p'.a c e witnesses on the stand\nto prove that Durrant frequently asked\nhis classmates to answer to his name\nwhen he was absent and that they com-\nplied with 'his request.\nThe crush In the corridors at Hie\n to the court room was greater\ntoday than upon any day since the trlat\nbegan. Men and women fought for ad-\nmission while the sheriff and a score of\ndeputies struggled as desperately to keep\nthe crowd back. Judge Alurphy summon-\ned the sheriff and ordered him to clear\nthe corridors. If the sheriff's force was\nInsufficient the judge said tie would can\nupon the chief of poCice for a squad of\nmen to execute the order.\nDr. W. F. Cheney, ot tho Cooper Med-\nical College, who was supposed to be\nthe mainstay of the defense, said the\nlecture on April 3 began'at 3 o'clock and\nlasted until 4:15, at the close of which\nthe roll was calCed. The witness did\nnot know whether Iurrant was present\nor not, as the roll was called by Dr. V.\nP. Gray. Dr. Cheney , was temporarily\nexcused and Dr. Gray summoned. Dr.\nGray did not know whether Durrant was\npresent or not, but assumed that he was\nfrom the fact that lie was not marked\nabsent on the roll call.
2771b56c809c977d4997a5456a75e81d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.4260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 Chicago, June 3..It is stated on\nutliority ol some of the iron workers t\nliere is .now $500,000 in tlie fund of\nssoeiation. The constitution of the ru\niation provides that, in order to creat<\nmid for the support of such inemben\nnay be engaged in strikes, it is requi\ntint every member shall pay theVinaw\necrelary the sum of twenty-five cents\nlonth, this money to bo held by\nreasurers ot tho subordinate lodges, v\neposit it in bank, subject to the cal\nlie President of tho National Lodge\naso of a strike. It is provided, howei\nliut any member who is flick or out\nrork for one month shall be exempt fr\nuying this twenty-five cents per montl\nlie protective fnnil until he finds empl\nlent. Tho constitution also provides t\nny subordinate lodge entering int<\nIrike in the manner provided by the c\ntitution shall receive from the protect\nunci tho sum of $-1 per week m aid\nach. member engaged in tho strike, j\n he lias held membership in the as\niation lor six months, and is not\nrrears, and tho lodjo to which ho\n)ngs is in good standing in tho Natio\nassociation. It is further provided, he\nver. that no member shall be entited\nLriko benefits until two weeks after\nLrike has been legalized, and no bene\nr<i allowed for the fractional part of a we\n'iiia sum of $500,000 looks largo and\nirge, but it does not go very far when <\nouaiders how many men will have to\nupported out of it. It is estimated, thot\nis probably an exn^eratiou, that 40,<\nlen are now on a strike west of theJA\nheny Mountains. Should each of th\nlaitn $4 a week, the fund would last a\ne over three weeks. If, with a generof\nrhicli is not customary, the unmarr!\n>en should ask fat nothing, and leave o\njoso who are married aad havo famil\ni derive benefit from the fund, it wo\nist, at the most, about eoven weeks.
2ada3545bf21934bc9bf48734fa4f447 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.821038219743 39.261561 -121.016059 SHKRIFFS SALE—Wliereax. on th,,\n13th Hay of October, A. d. I860 a final Judgment\naud Decree was rendered In the District Court of the\n14th Judicial District of the Stateof California, inand\nfor the Countv Of Nevada, against A. COE am! EL-\nLEN COE. and in favor of A. P. TOWER , for the sum\nof Twelve Hundred and Seventy Dollars, principle\ndebt, with interest on the principle at the rate of\nthree per ceut per month from the rendition of judg-\nment until paid, together with all costa of suit; for\nthe sale of the following described property, to wit :\nAll and singular, that certain tract, piece or parcel\nof land, situated, lying and being in the Towhsldp\nand County of Nevada, S ate of California ; bounded\nand described as follows, to wit: Commecing at a\nstake on the upper side of A. T. Laiids water ditch,\non the read leading from the town of Nevada to Red\nDog, running along said ditch to a stake on\nthe rear ot Jones laud, thence west to a stake at a\nfence, two hundred feet, more or less, thence south\nalong said fence two hundred feet, more or less, to a\nstake in a ravine, thence southeast to Little I>e*r\nCreek thence northeast to Murchas line, thence\nnorth to the Red Dog road aforesaid, thence west to\nthe place of beginning, containing one hundred and\nsixty acres of land, more or less ; together with all\nand singular the tenements, hereditment, rights,\nfranchises, privileges, improvements, fruit tree*,\nwater right and nppurtenauces thereunto belonging\nor in anywise appertaining.\nNotice is hereby given that I will expose at public\nsale all the above described property, to the highest\nbidder for cash, in front of the Court House door in\nNevada city, on TUESDAY the 13th day of November, .\na. P . I860, between the hours of 9oclock a. m . and\n4oclock P. M.
121d97ad0c4a9d143e30dbbc4757f96c THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.0342465436327 37.92448 -95.399981 and the house then took u recess.\nIluring the noon recess a peace was\npatched up between tho two shies of\nthe houso. Mr. llrown is to make an\napology to the house and say that ho\nacted hastily and no doubt in\nthe heat of debatu said more than\nthe facts warranted. This will be\nsatisfactory to the mnjoritv and the\nmatter will be dropped Mr. llrown\nexhibited the letter to a number of\npopulists and it turns out that it was\nnot written by any employe of tho\ngovernor or by any person connected\nwith tho stuto administration in an\notlielal capacity.\nTho senate bill reducing the fees of\nthe state printer viae passed by tho\nhouse without amendment or debate.\nThe law will take olTcct upon its pub-\nlication in the ollicinl stuto paper. It\nwill eateli the present state printer.\nThe author, benator Cooke, estimates\nthnt the law will cut thu priuter's\nprofits about SKI. 000 annually.\nAnother eltort made in the\nhouse to pass the Itreidenthal guaran-\ntee fund bill, but only fill votes could\nbe mustered for It.\nThe seiuitu passed Representative\nUarbaugli's bill authorizing any num-\nber of persons, not less than 50, to\nform an association for mutual Insur-\nance against loss or diimngo to grow-\ning grain by hail.\nTho senate passed the bill author-\nizing stato insurance of school district\nproperty. County commissioners aro\nrequired to leavy a tax of ono per\ncent, of the insured value of tho school\nproperty In euch district and deposit\nthe funds In tho statu treasury for tho\npayment of losses.\nThe senate passed tho bill prepared\nby XV. U Hush, secretary of state,\nwhich will prevent the Incorporation\nof the hundreds of wildcat concerns\nwhich annually tako out churters In\nthis state The only fee now paid for\nllllng a charter Is SI, nnd nn uver-ag- e\nof 1,000 charters aro Issued\nTho new law llxes tho fee at
f5a19749edfdb88c62bebf21cd055d2c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.8863013381533 41.681744 -72.788147 tain the feeling of the people on the\nquestion of the memorial to veterans\nof the World war, will be made by\nGeorge V. Hamlin, president of the\nMen's club of the Stanley Memorial\nchurch within a week, according to\nstatements made by Mr. Hamlin at\na meeting of the club last evening.\n"After talking with hundreds of\npeople, and at the request of many,\nI take this step because I believe\ntho public of New Britain wants to\ntetain a permanent court of honor.\nrather than a monument on top of\nthe park," said Mr. Hamlin.\nWhile other action is contemplat\ned, which may delay the erection of\nthe monument proposed by the com-\nmittee, Mr. Hamlin's first step ho\nsays is to focus tho attention of tho\nchurch people on the court of honor,\nbecause he claims he has found the\npublic desires that the present tem\nporary memorial be made perma-\nnent, rather than a monument be\nerected according to plans adopted.\nIn his talk Mr. Haojlin said:\n"Six years ago whep. I came to this\ncity, knowing no one and having \nfriends here, one cold rainy Sunday\nmorning, wandering about the city I\nobserved the entrance to the Walnut\nHill park. Fearing that I might be\ntrespassing upon private property I\ndid not venture closer investigation\nuntil inquiry disclosed the fact that\nit was the entrance to a public park.\nThere between those rows of posts\nfor more than an hour I was held\nspellbound and paid my respects to\neach individual post.\n"So great was the influence of this\nmonument upon me that I have\nnever ceased to speak In its praise.\nI never approach it or pass through\nit without paying this same silent\ntribute to those who paid the last\nfull measure of devotion in order\nthat we might now enjoy.\n"A committee of 12 seems in spite\nof all that the public expresses a\nwant to have, to desire and to im-\npose upon us a monument of an\nother type. Teople from all over\nthe world, people who have traveled\neverywhere , who have noticed me-\nmorials to our soldier dead, includ-\ning even the costly tomb of Na- -
10385eecaeb4f4e4e3c3a264f24d8847 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.2390710066281 40.063962 -80.720915 The monopoly issues lmvo introduced\nan element of uncertainly into the stock\nmarket wiiieh calls for special caution\non the part of investors and speculators,\nif not for specific precaution 011 tlio part\nof the exchange itself in 'admitting in-\noiscriminnlely'so-called securities to its\n¦ list. Public opinion is bocomingjnore\naim more decidedly ho.lile to whatever\nform of organization conspires to defeat\nfree competition. -. Congress and tho\nstato legislature find it necessary to\nrespect this determinoa attitude,\nof the people, n'nd at no distant\ntimo the laws will bo so framed that\nnowhere in this country will any form\nof corporation which aims to exorcise\nthe powers of a monopoly be able to\nexist under the tegia' of tho law.\nTnc attempts -of the trusts to\nevade the penaltien of their\nillegality by organizing under tho\nloosest form of to be found\nunder state laws will become futile. The\nprocurement of control of a svstem of\ncompeting railroads, under sjich ex¬\npedients us have been adopted by tho\nPhiladelphia and Heading, will b'o de¬\nclared illegal, because contrary to pub¬\nlic policy. The law will be constructed\nw ith a siniDlo. purpose of preventing\nthe defeat of competition by monop¬\nolies; and that form of prohibition will\nhe made to apply to any and cverv form\no: organization. Of this there can be\nno reasonable doubt; for the present\ndrift towards monopoly is so wide¬\nspread, so utterly revolutionary in\nevery sense in its character, and so\nthreatening to vast interests that to sup¬\npose it can be much farther tolerated\nwould bo to assume that American citi¬\nzens hal lost their regard for freedom\nand their sense of sell respect.
0e4c57a385c53222a545757d77fc9314 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1897.368493118975 33.031451 -111.387343 'receipt' given by two parties who have\nbeen in the valley for the past ten days\ntaking 'orders' for enlarging pictures.\n"The amountmentionedin the receipt\nwas previously paid by the holder un-\nder the supposition that it was 'pay-\nment in full' for the portrait, but as\nthe amount named had been paid to a\n'.solicitor' the 'receipt' shows that a\nlike amout is to be paid by the 'bearer' a\nto the 'agent,' who, presumably is the\nman who delivers the portraits, if in\nfact any delivery is to be made at all.\n. "The paties canvassing the valley\ng ive their names as Johnson aud White\nbut their 'receipts' bear the signatures\nof 'I. R . Johnson,' I. R. White,'. 'J. R .\nWhite,' 'G. White,' 'J. R. Johnson,' 'J.\nR. J. and White.'\nThe man Johnson sighed the above\nsignatures according to his fancy,\nwhenever he delivered a receipt to his\nvictim. There two were\narretted a.t Pima for obtaining. money\noa false pretenses and Tuesday last io\nJustice Merrill's court. District At-\ntorney Jonc prosecuted the case 00\ncomplaint of I. E . D. Zundel, who in\nan unsuspecting moment had been\nmulcted in the sum of twelve dollars.\nAs "portraits" appeared to be "cheap"\nwith a chance to get in on the "ground\nfloor," Mr. Zundel went in for "whole,\nsale rates'" A large crowd of women\nwere present as they were mostly the\nvictims and were determined that the\ncase must be vigorously prosecuted.\nOver a dozen witnesses were present\nand testified, the prisoner being tried\nby court without a jury. The court\n"hung" in the case all night but\nfinally came to an "agreement" at 8\no'clock Wednesday morning finding\nJohnson guilty and discharged White.\n"Johnson was fined $35 and given six-\nty days in the county jail. An appeal\nwas taken to the district court."
00d7cdd6903695fc9e4b44ecb5fa941a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6808218860983 40.063962 -80.720915 ThR atranger in Boston who is ho\nfortunate as to have the entree of the\ncharming apartment which Messrs.\nTick nor A Fields have titled up for the\naccommodation of their literary friends,\nin I heir store on Treuiont street, urny\nhave observed, among the half dozen\ndistinguished gentlemen who, at al¬\nmost any hour of the day, are to be\nfop ml there, an erect, spare, venerable-\nlooklntr niau, not far from sixty, with\nstriking features, aiid thin, irou-gray\nhair, seated at the long table that runs\nthrough the middle of the room, and\nintently occupied in the examination of\nsome of the many recent books aud\nnewspapers witb which the. table la\nloaded. His modest neck-tie, and plain\nbrown coat, with ita stiff, upright col¬\nlar, proclaim him a Quaker, and a\nglunce at his thoughtful face, and ex¬\npansive forehead, shows that he is no\nother than that most distinguished of\nliving Quakers, John G. Whittier.\nNext to Longfellow's, Whittler's books\nhave a larger circulation than those of\nany of our poets; the tirst edition is\nuniformly ten thousand copies, and his\nlast two volumes are said to have\nreached the enormous sale of twen¬\nty thousand, each, within a month\nafter their publication. This ex-\nceeda the circulation of much of\nthe popular prose and fiction, and\nIs the more remarkable as the \nof most American poets seldom reach a\nHale of Ave thousand copies. Whittier\nis emphatically a self-made writer.\nHis early life was passed on a farm in\nsevere manual labor, and nntll he was\neighteen he had no educational advan¬\ntages, but such as could be derived\nfrom a few wioters' attendance on the\npublic* school of his native district. At\nthe age of twenty, however, he bad\nmanaged to secure two years' tuition at\na town academy; but then he left\nschool to work his way In the world,\nand what he has since learned he has\ngathered from contact with actual life,\nor by solitary study in his own library.\nMr. Whittier was, we believe, never\nmarried; but, till within about a year,\nhe has been blessed with the most de¬\nvoted of sisters, who has l»een his con¬\nstant companion, ministering to his\ndomestic needs, and sharing his\nstudies. She was a woman of line lit¬\nerary tasteH, aud herself wrote some\npoems that were quite equal to any or\nher brother's productions. She died\nabout a year ago. greatly .lamented by\nMr. Whittier, who has since lived a\nvery secluded life in his quiet home in\nAmesbury. He is now, however,\nspending a few mouths at the Isle or\nShoals, for the benefit of his health.\n[.'(.;ossip About Writers," iu the New\nYork Gazette.
205cffb61305875fc44d5eae1bf38428 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.4166666350436 39.743941 -84.63662 the night ; he dfessedwhile asleeppwrnr\ndown to the cellar, drew wine from a cask,\nwalked back, undressed,' went to bed\nagain, and knew nothing about it in the\nmorning. Once, when he did this, he\nwoke in the cellar, and found more diffi\nculty in retracing his steps in the dark\nthan he had when asleep. Simply walk-\ning in sleep is a common phenomenon ;\nbnt working, acting, or doing, as well as\nwalking, is more rare. A man dreamed\nthat he saw a child fall into a river; he\ngot np, threw himself again on his bed,\nas if in the act of swimming, seized hold\nof a bundle of clothing at the end of the\nbed, treated it as if it were the drowning\nchild, held it with one hand, while seem\ning to swim with the other, and. put it\ndown as if landed on the river\ntide; he began shivering and teeth-cha- t-\ntine, and said out audibly: . "It is freez\ning cold 1 Let me have a little brandy.\nand finally returned to bed again. A\nyoung military officer in the citadel of\nBernstein was seen by his brother officers\nto rise from bed in his sleep, go to a\nwindow, open it, clamber to a roof by the\naid of the window cord, seize hold of a\nmagpie's nest with its young, descend to\nthe room, wrap the young birds in a\ncloak, and go to bed again. An Italian\napothecary frequently rose in his sleep\nand compounded medicines. A very re\nmarkable case is that of an English stone\nmason who was told by his employer, one\nevening, to go tne next morning to\nneighboring churchyard and measure the\nquantity of work done to a wall.
60af94ac797fac5822ada86169aded0a THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1913.0205479134956 37.451159 -86.90916 able extent, and these short or lung\nwnves nro differently reflected, accord-\ning to the dimensions of the grains of\ndust that they meet us they descend\nto enrth The flue dust reflects only\ntho shortest waves, the blue. Dust of\nmedium thickness reflects the yellow\nand the greon waves, while tho coars-\nest dust reflects nothing but tbe red\nWe owe tho blue of the sky to the\nfine dust In the atmospheric heights,\nwhere the nlr Is purest When the\nwind sets the dust In motion the blue\nturns to grny. The smoke of a cigar\nis blue ns It Issues from the cigar,\nwhile the smoke Issuing from the\nmouth of the smoker Is whitish grny\nbecause the particles of the gray\nsmoke hnvo Increased In volume by\nfixing water vapor. blue smoke\nof a burning olpir Is like the blue\nsky, nnd ns the wnter vnpor Is lixed\nby the smoke close to the mouth of\nthe smoker so the vnpor risen from\ntho seas Is condensed on the particles\nof atmospheric dust\nWithout dust enrth could hnvo no\nrain. Not a drop of nil the water\nevaporated from the oceans could\ncomo to earth on anything but the\nbearer of Its condensations, the dust.\nWore It not for atmospheric dust there\nwould bo no clouds, no fog, no rain,\nno snow, no splendid sunsets, no azure\nskies! Tho stirfnee of tho ground,\nthe trees, tho houses, men nnd animals\nwould bo tlio objects on which wnter\nvnpor would condense. The clothing\nof umn nnd the fur of the nnltnnl\nwould drip with water.
018a7df1abd32f408c93dd6f11ad830e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.2745901323112 40.063962 -80.720915 f iiu ujBrnra maies wiu wear ooonets ai\npioflt exclusively tbia spring the clotefittinj\nstylus monopolizing the market Air. Kic\nhas ft Plyle of his own, which he calls tb:\nTerry, after JS'len Terry, the act rets, fti\nvary ucfcL The new balscro nearly all mad\nwith high, l«peri#K crowns, in Alpine shapes\nand most of them are very pretty. Feather\nwill ba tiBRd on bals and jhwers cu Igounets\nla feathery tbo plume heu nearly baniahet\ntips. The new nnadea most popular this yea\nlire silver gray, mushroom, beige pnd Hsvai\nbrown. Very natural mushrooms ?re mau\nfor oruatnentirg bonnets cf this ahi eb.\nThe pekn bonnet, tho popular horfesho\nbonnet and the high wide crowned lints ar\nentirely imsdng from the rew styles. Mr\nItice says yesterday's opening was the moa\noaccssfeful the firm ever bad. A majority o\n styled VSJ? ^old during the day.\nSlny drnilu Feitiltnl ui PlKK^nr^i,\nThe Festival coming off on May 13, H am\nlG:h In tho Fifth Aver.tie Music Hall,'Pitts\nburgh, promises to be the greatest musico\neveut in tho hator/ <f ;bc Sniofcy City. Th<\nprincipal ariiats will bo tLe gf«-at Wagne\ntoloisu?, Mutf-run, Spuria and \\Viakplniaan\ndirect from VioniiHj Vtidam GbriaUpp Nih\nson, Beinmcr.'Z; Foeit, Toch and a nnmher'c\nothers. Theodora TbotncB' entire orcbestri\nwill la^e tb« inMrunmnlal par-s, -Hnjl thi\nPittsburgh Musical Union will furniali,\nchorus of 400 voices. Mr. J3. P . Yonriy\nManager of tilt? p»8tivnl, wjis here yesterday\nand appointed F. \\V. Baumcr fgent hen\nfor the tale cf ns rved ss-ita :o any of th<\ncoucert*. Th<{ j,\\!o of seison tickets com\nmeuces April IVth and qinyle tioku.a will hi\nsold on and after May i,
2089998828ace193bbdbae5c0d7f560b THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.6369862696602 47.478654 -94.890802 Lots twenty-nine, thirty and thirty-one of\nBlock No. four, in Lake Park Addition to the\nvillage of Bemidji. Beltrami county. Minne-\nsota, according to the recorded plat thereof\nnow on tile and of record in the office of the\nRegister of Deeds in and for the countv of\nBeltrami and state of Minnesota, except that\nportion thereof which is described by metes\nand bounds as follows: to-wit:\nBeginning at the southwest corner of said\nlot twenty-nine and running east along the\nsouth line of said lot a distance of thirty-seven\nfeet, thence north at a right angle with the\nsouth ilne of .said lot a distance of fifty-one\nfeet, thence In a northeasterly direction\ntwentv-flve feet from and parallel with the\neast line of Bemidji avenue a distance of\nabout twenty-live feet to a point of intersec\ntion with the northern line of said lot thirty-\none, thence in a northwesterly direction along\nthe said northern line of said lot thirty-\none to the eastern line of avenue a\ndistance of twenty-five feet, thence in a\nsoutherly direction along the said eastern\nline of Bemidji avenue a distance of about\neighty-eight feet to the place of beginning, in\nBeltrami county in the state of Minnesota,\nwith the hereditaments and appurtenances;\nwhich sale will be made by the sheriff of said\nBeltrami countv,at the front door of the court\nhouse in the village of Bemidji in said county\nand state on the 30th day August. 1902. at two\no'clock p. m . of that day. at public vendue to\nthe highest bidder for cash to pay said debt of\nTwo Hundred Fifty-three and 9:1-100 Dollars\nand Interest, and the taxes, if any. on said\npremises, and twenty-five dollars attorneys\nfees as stipulated in and by said mortgage in\ncase of foreclosure, and the disbursements al-\nlowed by law; subject to redemption at any\ntime within one year from the day of sale, as\nprovided bv law.\nDated this 12th day of July, A. D . 1902.
058eefcbf35f6af35cafd32a4e78c7dd CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.4057376732949 41.875555 -87.624421 We nro nil familiar with the system\nof pensioning soldiers for disabilities\nacquired In tho service, and are aware\nthat officers of tho army and navy\nmust retire on half pay when they\nreach n given age. Thoso who live In\ntho cities are familiar, also, with tho\npractice of allowing policemen and\nfiremen who hnvo served 20 or lit) years\nto retire on u pension. Indeed, in Now.\nYork all teachers, when they accept\nemployment, agree that a small per-\ncentage of their salaries shall be re-\ntained by the Hoard of Kducatlon to\nswell tho pension fund. The pension-\ning of government clerks, common in\nI'urope, has not yet been approved by\nthe American people. It has been\nsuggested, however, as n way of re-\nlieving the departments in Washington\nof old men who nro Incapacitated\nbecause of their infirmities, In order\nto make room for younger mid more\nelllclent men. Tho nntlonal civil serv-\nice commissioners hnvo recently taken\na census of tho clerks In tho executive\ndepartments, with their age, status un-\nder the rules, length of service, mid\nmilitary service, If any, so that those\nconsidering the matter may have the\nfacts ut hand necessary to the draft-\ning of n bill to meet the situation.\nThere seems to ho no disposition to\nturn out tho clerks who havo grown\nold and feeble. Tho civil service com-\nmissioners think that they ought to bo\ntaken euro of In some way, and manj\nCongressmen agree with them. What,\never disagreement has manifested It-\nself Is chiefly upon tho method to bo\nemployed.
05994eaeaaa80c8dc021c1bb6fac2c46 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.0095628099068 39.261561 -121.016059 "FBLLOW-ClTtznNS! You who have always been\ntrue to the constitution and the South—who have\nnever degraded yourselves to the level of the Africsn\nrace, as the dirty fVcesoilers do—you are awaro that\nthe borders of Virginia have been profaned bv the\ntread of the freesoil asaassin. The South looks to\nit* Irish friends in the laiye free citiee to elfrct a\ndiversion in its favor; and for this pur)x>se the Uni-\nted Constitutional Irish Association has been form-\ned, of which some of you are (and doubtless all will\nbe) members. In the great cities, prominent frcc-\nsoilere and abolitionists own large factories, (tores\nand gramme*, in which vast sums (made out of the\nSouth) are invested. This fact furnishes a means\nof checking their agressions on the South; and the\nIrish friends of the South are relied on to make the\ncheck effective. Property le proverbially timid.—\nWhenever a haystack or cotton gin is'burned at\nthe South by freesoil emissaries, let a large factory\nor a plethoric store, or an immense granary, in New\nYork or Boston, be to the flames. To make\nthis course safe, your Association mutt be true to\nitself and its principles; method, caution, your\nduobte scores) , will insure the safety of it* actors.\nSouthern gentlemen will be constantly among you,\namply supplied with means to remove those whose\npatriotism has subjsctrd them to suspicion. Besides\nmany friends will be found both among Southern\nsteamers' crews, railway conductors snd the police.\nIn fact, you will find friends snd funds on every\nhand. Be energetic, therefore—go at once to your\nforeman and ses if he cannot introduce you to the\nAssociation, if you arc not already a member.\nIt was suggested in some quarters that this\ndocument was got up by the Abolitionists as a\nnue. but the fact that the copies received were\nmailed in lbs Southern cities precludes ibis\nsupposition. The circular was doabtless the\nwork of some hot-headed Southerners and die-\nunionists, who tenUt North, not with any ex-\npectation that the atrocious recommendation\nwould be carried oat, bat for the purpose of\nadding to the existing sectional excitement.
4c93e660af51c610dc6288ba90c8263a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0068305694697 40.063962 -80.720915 I'msmitou, January 2..Weather\npleasant. Monongahela U feet 0 inches\nand rising. Allegheny river full of heavy\nice, but it will run out belore morning.\nThe coal licet having nil hitched up will\nleave at daylight. The run will be a largo\none as other boats are getting ready, and\nthere is good water. Arrived, Arlington,\nCapt. It . ( .' . (Iray. The new boat Iron\nMountain has arrived. She will have six\nsteel boilers. This boat is for liray's lino\nCairo, January 2..Arrived (Jeorge\nS. Weeks, from St. Louis, at S i\\ m 11.\nYeager, from New Orleans, at U \\. si\nCity ol Cairo, from New Orleans, at 4 a.\nm.; City of Alton, from St. Louis, at 11 a.\nm. Departed: lien Alford, for St. Louis,\nat S r. m Will S. Hays, for Memphis, at\ns e. m Robert Mitchell, for Ciucinnati, \ni) a. m Ada Ileilman, for Memphis, at 11\na. m W. .1. Lewis, for Memphis, at 11 a.\nm ; Heaver, for St. Louis, at!» a. m City\nof Quincy, for New Orleans, at 11 a. m .\nWeather misty and growing wurmer with\na south wind. Kiver rising.\nCairo, January 2..The steamer City\nof Alton struck a snag last night and\nbroke forty timbers. She will rcship and\nreturn to St. Louis for repairs. The river\nhas risen six inches. Weather cloudy.\nThermometer H deg.\nNasiivu.i .k, January 2..The weather\nin uh'iiwy huh uiuiit-niiu. wvrr rihull^.\nMemphis, January 2..Weathercloudy\njuitl dump. River rising slowly.\nSt. Loins, .lunimry 2..Tin: river lias\nfallen ten inches since Motuluy morning.\nIt is now about live and a half feel lo\nCairo. Weather cloiuly with indications\nof rain. Freights to all southern ports me\ndeclined.
409052f0f2678d6713f96a47f0212fac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.3301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 William T. Robinson. Defendant.\nPursuant to two several judgements at law\nand orders of sale thereunder, rendered an tb«\n*bove entitled causes br the Circuit Court «\nOhio County, on the 30th day of October,\nand amended by the Circuit Court of OhK\nCounty. State of W^st Virginia on the 9th daj\nof March. 1S6S. on the law side thereof.\nI shall proceedto »ell at public sale at tbt\nfront d^ior of the Court How oCOtao county\non Thuwday, the Sd day of May, ISefi. at 10 o'¬\nclock. a .m_ to the highest and best bidder, tix\nfollowing described property, viz: Joe hall\nlot of ground nnmbe. - vd one hundred *nd\nrwenty-*hrer-{I2S* situated onfijetastdoe a\nMarket street, between Madison and Unk>c\nstreets, in the city of Wheeling, topetber wlti:\nall the buildings and improv*anents theretc\nbelonging, oonsisiing of a good three storj\nbrick budding. 122 ieet in leneth, the from\npart tlie building being SS feet, and tbe\nhack part 25 feet wide, containing 96 cham-\ntwns nantwm. tngcace room, parior. larce\ndiningrocon and kitchen, and a good dry cel¬\nlar under three fourths of the building, and\nwhich building is now occupied by John M.\nBall as ahotek also part of lot ofground num.\nbered one hundred and thirty-oneflSl) S3 fee:\nwide and IS2#eet in length, fronting on fourth\nstreet, and situated In that part of the city oj\nWheeling called Noah ZaneV addition, wiib\nthe improvements on tbe same, consisting o)\na pool stable; said pans of lots of ground\nnumbered 12$ and 1S1 abutting each other and\n; extending from Market to Fourth street.\nTerms of sale.a credit of six, twelve and\neighteen months, the purchaser giving bond\nwith approved security, bearing interestfrom\nthe day of sale until paid, the title to be re¬\ntained until all the purchase money iv paid.
db8e48d4071054c91dd484d8e5eed955 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.9467212798522 40.618676 -80.577293 That is an insidious argument, baseless and\nfallacious. This country has not reached econ­\nomic senility. It has met great crises in the past.\nIt has survived storms which threatened to de­\nstroy it. It has won through, not, by shelving\ndemocracy, but by making democracy work hard­\ner. It has kept always to the principle that\nstrength comes out of freedom, not out of slavery.\nIt has known that wealth and power are best\ncreated by free men, working under a free sys\ntcm which makes the welfare and happiness of\nthe individual the nation's first concern.\nWhat has state socialism ever accomplished?\nThe world has watched it in many forms for lonj>\nyears—in Russia, in Italy, in Germany. Has it\nmade the common man and woman happier and\nmore secure? Has it raised the standard of liv­\ning? Has it produced abundance and wealth for\nall? Has it advanced the causes of art and cul­\nture? Has it made for great progress in th(\nfields of science and medicine? it given the\npeople freer, fuller lives? To all these questions\nthere is but one answer, and that is No! In the\nlands where socialism and dictatorship rule, the\npeople fear to speak their minds lest they be im­\nprisoned or executed. Disease increases. Mai\nnutrition is commonplace. Men work long hours\nunder inhuman conditions for pay barely suffici-\nnt to keep their families alive. Only the ruliiu\nclass is rich—only the ruling class lives well-\nonly the ruling class has inalienable rights.\nIt is the first duty of those who believe in this\ncountry, in this system which we call democracy,\nto oppose socialism in any and all forms. When\nsocialism takes command, real progress ends.\nWhen men are enslaved, they are no better than\ndumb brutes, responding mechanically to the\nwhips of the masters. Socialism, as we see it in\nthe modern world, means death to all that men\nhave fought and bled for during a thousand years\nof history—a thousand years of striving toward\nthe light of freedom.
5d02771b587f2a56d20aa5d5d3e604fb THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8702185476118 38.729625 -120.798546 d ;i. h«r|y and n Hid. unaHr to itreformevru U.e\n*"•1 triti ll# «Itily iriifboM d un l|,r daily avnaSlious\nof life. | aoiiflil the adtice of ma'» nhysn tan*. «1...\nat lU*t rrgard* d my diaraar of inSt. g itnyßortao. r\n—toil ala*' afirr a fr« «rrk». end in see. raJ in.\n•tame*, motilità, of thrir lr. atm. ni, I fout.d to n y\narmi, rat U l.orr .tr, lka« m«trad of ra hrf. ihr *jrm|s.\nterns he. imr more alani mg m their torture , and,\nh. .ng («4.1 hr our ihut tot liiffrau. King (trtioip*!»?\ne nured I* thr brut», innln lia. Would hr of |iit|v\nrt.r .*«uu.*»»rr. I dra| a rrd of rVrr regaining my\nla aid.. r . i gth and vr.tigr. ai d«• « l<«*4 n—rt.\naio) «uh »hii a fa.nl hope, « alh-d o|m.n Hr CSa| kar,\n•I" atrr riainu.ing mr ra*r. r rr«rr hrd mnn nod\nt mr «huh almost instantly nitrirti me of the dud\n ••! and ticßtnr.s mmy he*d lùi. ouragtd hy ih i\nrrauti.l reaoisrd lo |dacr fcyarlf immediately «i.dv-r\ntu* rare, and by a *tHrt ohrtlirnrr to all hi* dim •\ni»«*n* and advtre. mr head incanì* clear, air ideas\ntoM.rlrd, the eouetai.i nati. | n my hack and groins,\nihi « . ak nr#* of my limb*, thrnrrv.ai* fraction af my\n«I «4r body on lh« sligt.irM alano or rßcitrmri.i.\nIhr mÌMiiihr..| .y and rtil fort boding*; «lie srlf-di*.\n• ro«f and «ani «>f coi.fnlrnr. inothm, the incapahil-\nily i« study and «ant of n solution, thrfrightful, n •\n« »i*nr. and at time* fd«*«* .rahlr drram* at night,\nftiih.vetl l.y in«.diutlary diecharge*. hare all di*ap-\n(K-art d ; and in fact, in two month* after having cm, •\npull.d ihr lOM'lor, I fill a* if ik*|.irvd by a l»r« Ilf»?\n—that Jifr «lot h, but a short unir ago, 1 cunt, iu*\n|d«(td lo rn»l by my . «n haitd.\n"litia»»•• toguardthr
3510ab16c6efc21273981cf5c50360f8 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.195890379249 40.832421 -115.763123 The speaker's manner was visibly agi¬\ntated, and we waited in silence Ihc ex-\nplunation which lie seemed ready to give.\nMastering his emotion, as if in answer to\nour looks of impiiry, lie continued.\n"Twenty years ago I was a young man,\njust beginning life. Few had brighter\nhours. An attachment, dating from\nchildhood, had ripened with it* object.\nThere had been no verbal declaration and\nacceptance of love . no formal plighting\nof troth; but when I took my departure\nto seek a home iu the distant AVcsl, it was\na thing understood, that when I found it\nand put it in order, she was to share it.\nLife iu the forest, though solitary, is not\nnecessarily lonesome. The kind of soci¬\nety atVorded by nut tire, depends much oil\none's self. As forme, I lived more iu the\nfuture in the present, and hope is an\nev.-r cheerful companion. At length the\ntime cntuo for making the Jlnal payment\non the home which i had bought. It\nwould henceforward be my own; ami in\na few more mouths, my simple dwelling,\nwhich I had spared no pains lo render\ninviting, would lie graced by its mistress.\nAt the Innd-olllee, which was seme six¬\nty miles oil", 1 met >ny old friend 0. lie,\nloo, had come lo seek a fortune iu the\nWest; niwl we wore both delighted at the\nmeeting, lie had branch! with him, lie\nsaid, a sum of money which he desired to\ninvest in land, on which it was his pur¬\npose to settle. I expressed n strong de¬\nsire to have him for a neighbor, and glive\nhim a cordial invitation to accompany\nme home, giving it as
8f8b71c52a3920ad7856ba5ba399086c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1920.5915300230217 41.681744 -72.788147 London, Aug. 4 . Postponement of\narmistice negotiations between Poland\nand soviet Russia is viewed here as\ncreating a difficult and anxious situa-\ntion likely to involve the abandonment\nof the proposed conference between\nrepresentatives of the Allies. Poland,\nthe Russian Bolshevikl and the Rus-\nsian border states for the settlement\nof the Polish question.\nJondon newspapers take widely\ndivergent views regarding the Bolshe-\nvikl attitude in demanding negotia-\ntions for peace coincident with ' the\narrangement of an armistice. Some\ndeclare the action of the soviet gov-\nernment is perfectly justifiable and\nreasonable, while others indignantly\ndenounce it as evidence of a deter-\nmination to allow the Bolshevik\narmies to reach Warsaw and there\ndictate terms equivalent to a complete\nsurrender of the Poles and the en-\nforcement upon them of soviet form\nof government. In the latter quarters\nit is stated one of the soviet armistice\nconditions was that the Poles must\ndisarm, give guarantees they would\nnot receive military aid from the\nAllies and undertake not to "renew\nagjrression against Russia."\nThe British government has issued\nno statement on the situation nor has\nIt indicated in any way how it will\nact but the report is current it will\nsuspend negotiations for the resump-\ntion of trade relations with soviet\nRussia. The cabinet held an urgent\nmeeting yesterday and Premier Uoyd\nGeorge has further delayed his al-\nready postponed vacation.\nIn the meantime fighting continues\nand the Bolshevikl apparently are ad"\nvancing successfully. It is reported\nhowever, that the Poles may deliver a\nblow which may alter the present\nmilitary position.
0ed61992b5635046f350e3f985591c36 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.1630136669203 32.408477 -91.186777 capitalization of $5,000 , since in-\ncreased to $11,000, the par value of the\nshares being $50 each. Under the\nrule each member must have one\nshare and not more than five.\nThe fruit of each member 's gath-\nered b) itself and after sorting is\ntaken to the warehouses of the asso-\nelation, of which there are five. Here\nthe fruit is re-sorted and properly\npacked under the direct supervision\nof the general manager, and the dis-\ncarded fruit is taken away by the\ngrower and consigned to the drier or\nvinegar factories. For the services of\npacking the grower is charged five\ncents per barrel. In this way all fruit\nexported will be of the highest stan-\ndard and will command the highest\nprices. In packing, color as well as\nsize and quality, is strictly observed,\nas the European market demands fruit\nof high quality It is for this\nreason that the Rhode Island Greening\nand other apples of like color are in\nlittle demand on the continent, All\nthe fruit of the members is shipped\nby the ssociation. Some 600.000 bar-\nrels of fruit were handled in 1912.\nThe organization aims not only to\nhandle the fruit of its members, but\nalso to assist them in the purchase of\ntheir principal supplies, such as bar-\nrels, boxes, farming implements, twine.\nseed, nursery stock, fertilizers, and in\nfact all the necessary appliances for\nfruit growing. Last year growers\nw•re compelled to pay very high\nprices for barrels, as much as 40 cents\nper- barrel in some instances. This\nyear the members are paying 23 to 28\ncents for barrels and about 16 cents\nfor bushel boxes Very few boxes are\nused. Later the association expects\nto make its own barrels and boxes.
01380a4330414274d2f2833bf66f9132 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.129781389142 40.063962 -80.720915 I need not assure the readers of tl\nIntelligencer that I never my lot\nstanding relations toward thein wil\nregret. Ou an occasion like this I na\nurally revert to other days when a vei\ndifferent state of things surrounded tl\npublication of this paper. Almost wit,\nout acquaintances and with scarce oth\nresources than a desire and carne\npurpose to labor and succeed, Mr. Jol\nF. McDermot and myself undertook\npublish a journal upon the basis\nliberal political principles. I do n\npropose to recount our experienc\nSSufiice it that we encountered the dif\ncullies that naturally attended such i\nenterprise in the days .of the old pr\nfclavery regime. Perhaps 1 may s*\nthat the experiment was saved fro\nfailure at one time by the timely lot\nof a hundred dollars, and ke\nafloat afterwards only by the most u\nremitting personal attention and eco:\nomy. Looking back over tbedaysth\nhave elapsed since then I cannot bi\ncongratulate those who wero tl\njriends and patrons of the Intell\ngencrk, tbat both they and it ha^\nlived to see the full triumph of the prii\nciples which at that day could scan\nbe uttered above h whisper. I hai\nthe faitb to believe that the triumf\nof those principles will not be turnc\nto ashes, like Dead Sea apples, in tl\nhands of (he loyal people of the natioi\nbut that wisdom, moderation an\nstatesmanship will so rule and contri\ntbe ultimate disposition of our nation;\n?mbarrah»nients as to insure to tl\nwhole land the best possible results «\nour costly .struggle.
011343120ae5f50dbdce1c460105d3f0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.7136985984273 39.745947 -75.546589 The Democrats at Saratoga have done\na quite ineitlmable service to the state\nin annihilating the political power of\nï avid B Bill, and another scarcely less\nvaluable to the country by taking the\nmoat advanced and uncompromising P"si\ntion against sliver free coinage that, has\never been taken by any assembly of\neither party. The Saratoga Convention\nwill be remembered and honored in polit­\nical hiatorv for the manly and effective\nway iu which it has dealt with these two\npublic nuisances. If Mr Fassett were\nnot carrying Mr Platt upon his back he\nwould defeat Mr Flower, we think. He\nIs so-much the more presentable candi­\ndate of the two, he could be fought\nfor with so much more heart and spirit\nand genuiue pleasure, and he has\nsuch especially valuable qualifications\nfor the office that the contrasts of the\ncanvass would work unifoimly and\npowerfully in his favor. * « » Then,\nMr. FloweiS party has gone much fur\nther than Mr. Fassetts In its opposition\nto free coinage. The platform's utter\nanoe on subject will be a source of\ngreat strength. The question for the\nvoter, for the voter, that is, who asks\nany questions at all. Is whether be and\nthe state and the community would be\nbetter off with Mr. Flower as governor,\nunder the daily guidance of some in­\nformed and discreet mentor, or with Mr\nFassett as governor, open not only to the\nadvice but subject to the direct com­\nmands of Mr Platt—and Plattlsm is a\nmonstrous thing.\nNew York Morning Advertiser.\nMr. Flower is a whole-souled, genial,\nold-fashioned citizen, with something of\na pod sugar attachment, rough and even\nuncouth at times, but strong in his hold\nupou rural people, who love to talk of\nthe days when they went barefoot and\nwarmed their stone-bruised heels of\nmornings in the frosty clover fields\nwhere tue kine had slept. He is a rich\nman, but his wealth was honestly ac­\nquired, and a large share of it has been\ndevoted to furthering the cause of Democ­\nracy, as he understands it. Mr. Flower\nloves the Constitution.
198d18332691bcd628278d98e5f01154 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.1164383244545 40.063962 -80.720915 New York, February 11..cotton anlet and\nsteady at 11 (MtJall 18-10c; futures barely c\nsteady. Flour steady and unchanged; re- v\nceipta 18,000 barrels; ex ports 41,000 barrels J]\nWheat, kfttfcbetterwltli an active business r,\nand speculative account; receipts 88,001) busli- 0\nels; exports jj-IO.OUO binhels; rejocted spring\n9lo; nnj-TQiled do $1 00*107; Ko. '£ Chicago\nquoted at$1 15delivered; ungraded red $1 06 ®.\nal2&,No.3do$115tf;No.Sdo$1I7«u tl\n1 18>^; mixed winter $1 15^; ungraded white\ntl I'.'ttl 16: No. 1 do sales 20,000 bushels, at q\n|1 lft)ijrtl 10; No. 2 red February, sales £0,000 o\nbushels, at $117al ) / X; Vlarcli, sales £(i8.000 d\nbushels, ut II 17h1 IH^s Anrll. sides448 (K,'Q u\nbushels, at $1 Iflftal UO; May, sales 200,800 »i\nbimhelt*. at II 18%al li)&. Corn atrongor; re-\nceipta 40.0(H) husheii; exports 171,000bushels; »\nungraded P6Ma?8c: No. 8 GOotOtfc; steamer P\nfiUMfa No. 2 f« Wi»ft7c; old do 67a88o; store and Dl\natloat. No. 2 February, 66Ko50Mo: March,\n April, 66Kc; May 64^a54tfc.\nOats Ko better; receipts 2),000 bushels; west- jT\naril mixed 43a4flXrj white western 4ta4l>c.\nIlay demand fair and market tlrm. Hop* u .\nquiet unit unchanged. Cn|Ic»e, fair demand H,\nand weuk; Klo cargoes qtint^d at lUalStfc; ,i,\njob lots lOftuMto. Sugar quiet and steady; .\nfair to good refining 7^a7^o. Molasses quiet n,\nund nominal: new crop to arrive 60c; lint ,ij\nquoted At 20*800. itice steady and in good do- m\nmsnd. Petroleum firm: United HOXo; crude nr\n7a8J*o; refined Uc. Tallow firlu at Oj^cU^c. (j,\nllosiu quietaud unchanged. Turpentine dull t,,\nat40J<al7c. Kggs stronger nt2Mf8J{c. Pork ||,\nquiet nnd hold nigher: old mesj quoted $14 25 m\nat4 37^; now mess $15 60. Beef demand n,\nfair and market firm. Out meats strong "lid u\nhUher; prime steam 25; short clear 37ft. nr\nLard, strong and higher; prime steam $10 Ota iP\n1010. Butter dull and unchanged at 13a28c.\nCheese firm for choice at lUalUc.
2371e11694835ad0cc0a9514f9dc2d94 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1894.760273940893 37.92448 -95.399981 laugh even in church when I see her\n, co ming. The worst looking bird on\nearth is a peacock when it has lost its\nfeathers. I would not give one lock of\niujr uiu iuuuici a Kr"Ji "tir lur uu.uuu\nsuch caricatures of humanity. And if\nthe life of a wordling, if the life of a\ndisciple given to the world is sad, the\nclose of such a life is simply a tragedy.\nLet me tell you that the dissipations\nof social life are despoiling the useful-\nness of a vast multitude of people.\nWhat do those people care about the\nfact that there are whole nations in\nsorrow and suffering and agony, when\nthe have for consideration the more\nimportant question about the size of\na glove or the tie of a cravat? Which\nof them ever bound up the wounds of\nthe hospital? Which one of them ever\nwent out to care for the poor? Which\nof them do you find in the haunts of\nsin distributing tracts? They live on\nthemselves, and it is very poor pasture.\nSybaris was a great city, and it once\nsent 300 horsemen in battle. They\nhad a minstrel who taught the\nhorses of the army a great trick, and\nwhen the old minstrel played a certain\ntunc the horses would rear, and with\nther front feet seem to beat time to\nthe music. Well, the old minstrel was\noffended with his country, and he went\nover to the enemy, and he said to the\nenemy: "You give me the mastership\nof the army and I will destroy their\ntroops when those horsemen come from\nSybaris." So they gave the old minstrel\nthe management, and lie taught all\nthe other minstrels a certain tune.\nThen when the cavalry troop came up\nthe old minstrel and all the other\nminstrels played a certain tune, and at\nthe most critical moment in the battle,\nwhen the horsemen wanted to rush to\nthe conflict, the horses reared and beat\ntime to the music w ith their forefeet,\nand in disgrace and rout the enemy\nfled. Ah! my friends, I have seen it\nagain and again the minstrels of\npleasure, the minstrels of dissipation,\nthe 'minstrels of godless association\nhave defeated people in the hardest\nfight of life. Frivolity has lost the\nbattlo for ten thousand folk.\nYou know as
2399c95162b3eb0b4fe04242040dc3e4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.9931506532216 39.261561 -121.016059 The entranoe into society may bo said to take\nplace after boyhood has passed away, yet a\nmultitude take the initiative before their beards\nare presentable. It is a great trial either at a\ntender or tough age. For an overgrown boy\nto go at a door knowing that there are a dozen\ngirls inside, and to knock or ring with absolute\noertainty that in two minutes all their eyes\nwill be upon him, is a severe test of courage.\nTo go before these girls and make a satisfacto-\nry tour of the room without stepping on their\ntoes, and then to sit down, and dispose of ones\nhands without putting them into ones pockets,\nis an achievement which few boys can boast.\nIf a boy can get so far as to measure off ten\nyards of tape with one of the girls, and cut it\nshort at each end, he may stand a chance to\nEass a pleasant evening, but let him uot flatter\nimselr that all the trials of the are\nover. There comes, at last, the breaking up.\nThe dear girls don their hoods, and put on\ntheir shawls, and look so saucy, and misobiev-\nous, and unimpressible, and independent, as if\nthey did not wish any one to go home with\nthem. Then eomes the pinch, and the boy that\nhas the most pluck makes up to the prettiest\ngirl, his heart in his throat, and his tonguo\ndinging to tbo roof of his mouth, and orooking\nhis elbow, stammers out tbe words—“Shall I\nsee you home T” She 'ouches her fingers to\nhis arm, and they walk home a foot apart, feel-\ning as awkward as a couple of goslings. As\nsoon as she is safe inside her own doors, he\nstruts home, and thinks he has really been and\ngone' and done it. Sleep cemes to him at last,\nwith dreams of Caroline and calico, and he\nawakes in the morning and finds tbe doors of\nlife open to him, and the pigs squealing for\nbreakfast.
0f316fad05577d74362788cf3ee33ca9 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.5520547628107 46.187885 -123.831256 Cass Street Grade Notice.\nNotice is hereby civen that the Com\nmon Council propose to establish the\ngrade of Cass street in the City of Asto\nria, as laid out and recorded by jonn\nMcClure and extended by Cyrus Olncy,\nat Heights above the base of grades as\nestablished by Ordinance No. 71, as fol-\nlows, to wit: At the wharf line when\nestablished 17 feet: at Cheuamus street,\n18 feet; at Squemoque street, 19 feet; at\nJefferson street, 20 feet; at the north\nside of Astor street, 28 feet; at the cen\nter of Astor street, 2a feet ; at tne souiii\nside of Astor street, ' .10 feet ; at the noith\nside of Court street, 54 feet; at the cen-\nter of Court street, 53.5 feet; at the\nsouth side of Court street. 57 feet: at the\nnorth side of 7th street, 9G feet; at the j\ncenter ot 7tn street, yr.5 ieet; at me\n side of 7th street, 09 feet; at the\nnorth side of 8th street, 149.5 feet; at I\nthe center of 8th street. 149.3 feet; at\nthe south side of 8th street, 149.5 ieet ; at\nthe north side of 9th street, 1.T3 feet : at i\nthe center of 9th street, 135 feel; at\nthe soutli side of 9th street. 133 feet ; at\nthe north side of 10th street, 172 feet; at\nthe center of 10th street, 173.5 feet; at\nthe soutli side of 10th street, 175 feet: at\nthe north side of 11th street 220 feet; at j\nthe center of 11th street, 22L5 fee; at\nthe south side of 11th street, 223 feet ; at .\nthe north side of 12th street. 2G9 feet; at\nthe center of 12th street, 270.5 feet; at\nthe south side of 12th street, 272 feet ; '\nand unless a remonstrance signed by\nthe owners of t wo-t hi r-
1fa56cb89e0045860145c55d9ebcded6 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.908469913732 29.949932 -90.070116 to the bondholders, that they might conplete It.\nNo action was, however, then taken, and the bjnd\nIliders decided to await the action of the board,\nto abide by its action,and not to press it. Messrs.\nPt ice & Clouteau, about March last, proposed to\nlease the road, and build it through. But they\nwould notundertake the payment of the past due\ncoupons of the road. and their proposition was\ntherefore refused. The board made many en-\ndeavors to get the road built through. Mr. Coch-\nrane also, about the same time proposed to buy or\nlease the road beyond Berwick's Bay, and com-\nplete it. But he also woou'd would not pay bark\ncoepos,. and his proposition was also rej-cted.\nMr. Cochrane recentlyrenewed his proposition,\nstatingthat his essocialQ5 were large bondholders\nand he. him-elf, had $200 O()Oin cash to invest.\nA committee had waited upon Mr. Morgan as\nthe large st bondholder of the road to ask his\nviews. Mr. Morgan had stated that he wonl•id\nnever press theroad, that be had refused t t j ,in\ntie other bondholders when they foreel,sed. and\nthat he would always do what he could to ease\ntheroad through. In July Mr. Pike. Mr. BUyley\nand the wituesa proceeded to New York to\n, I deavor to obtein tans or to make negotiations\nof some sort, either to or lease, or by other\nmeans, so as to relieve the necessities of the\nroad. No definite proposition was then made, for\nno one would make any Investment until the elec-\ntion xas over, as they thought there was no se-\ncorty for life. property or capital in the S,nth at\nthat time. They all said that after the election\nthey would invest. A majority said that unless\nGrart were elected they would not invest under\nany terms. Now that Grant is elected witness\nthinks that there would be no difficulty at all in\nobtaining what assistance the road wants. All\nthe Northern capitalists said it would prove the\nbest payhlg stock in the United States. Vari-us\nDrorositit ns were now before the cmpannv: that\nif Mr. Adarns and Gen. Fremont, that of Mesars.\n('houtean & Price. of at. Louis, and of others.\nThe witness know, of the indebtedness of the\nroad; has investi:ated the condition both of that\nreadand of others In the State. The witress was\na,ked by Mr. Cohen if he thought the roa attiv\nnot. Mr. Billings, counsel of Mr. Tacker, objected\nto the question, contending that the witness\nshould statefactsand not opinions. The judge\nruled thatthe opinion was not admlssible, hot that\na statement of facts was. Wi'nesn stated th,,\nassets asd liabi!ities of the roid t) be as fol-\nlows:
90152db9f0179dceab02d7f93d6391bf VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.6397259956875 43.798358 -73.087921 pledging their territory in case of non-\nperformance of their promise in four\nmonths, they changed their minds and\ndeclined to proceed any further. The\nGovernor, thereupon, was resolved not to\nlet the matter p;iss "without a prompt and\ndecided expression of disapprobation."\nThe meaning of which phrase is that, his\nchief military man. Col. J. J. Roberts,\nwhether white or black, we know not,\nwas sent up to Bassa with an armed force\nand took formal possession of the count) y\n"Accordingly on the of April, I de\nspatched other commissioners, accompa\nnied by an armed escort of 70 men, under\nthe command of Col. J. J. Roberts, to\nTenew the endeavor of an amicable ad\njustment, and in the event of failing to do\nso, to take forcible and formal possession\nof the country in the name and behalf of\nthe Am. Col. Society. On the arrival o\nthe commissioners at Bassa they were ior\neight days amused by the same course o\nequivocation and evasion, which in this\nwhole affair had marked the conduct of\nthe natives, and on the eighth day they\ntook formal in the name and\non behalf of the American Colonization\nSociety, in right of the agreement, entered\ninto by the natives in relation to the debts."\nIn this conquest made in the name and\nin behalf of the American Colonization\nSociety, and which from the patronage\nextended towards this Society by the Unit\ned States, may involve us in a conflict\nwith those people: it appeals that the\nnatives themselves have also been subju-\ngated as well as their country. In the\nsame kind of tone of mock sympathy,\nwith which we are familiar in the historv\nof the early settlement of this country,\nwe are told in the Liberia Herald, that\nthese colored subjects who have been made\nto pass under the yoke of the black gov-\nernment pre are erecting in Africa\nWill be allowed to remain and pursue\ntheir peaceable callings and legal traffic\nas here. Whenever a settlement shall be\nformed there, they will be required to\nconform to the laws and usages. At pres-\nent no alteration will be made in their\nla'fts, customs and tiaffic, but in that re-\nlating to slave-trade-
2aff4b8533106f529b0e7c4b5e74c7e5 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1920.408469913732 41.875555 -87.624421 from n baseball standpoint Is shown In\nfhe lack of young ball players comlna\nup from the minor leagues. Of all the\nrecruits taken south by the different\nmnjor league teams but very few nro\nto be seen on the tenni now that the\nchampionship scasny Is under full\nsway. The scarcity of young boll plu .v- er - s\nIs a good thing for the veterans,\nfor It will keep them In service long-\ner, but It means that It will grow more\nand more dlfllcult to recruit the big\nlencue teams unless there Is n greatly\nIncreased Interest In minor league ball M\noh played In the smaller cities.\nThe war killed off most of the small-\ner leagues, thus lessening the crop ot\nyoung ball plajers to be purchased\nnnd drafted. For two yenrs the minors\nwere either not operating nt all or do-\ning so on n xery small scale and with\nInferior plners. Most of the boys who\nwould have been starting out on a\nbnseball career were In the army In\nthose days mnny of them will nev-\ner go bnck to baseball. The supply ot\nbaseball talent was almost entirely cut\noft for at least two years and the re-\nsult Is that most of the major league\nclubs nre shy of recruits and are going\nahead with their veteran plners.\nThe present condition nmong the\nminors Is much Improved so far, es-\npecially ns the larger leagues go, but\nIt Is not nt all like It was before the\nwnr. The reason for this Is that sal-\naries and wages In other positions nre\nno vnstlv Increased that a lad of any\nreal skill or ambition can do much bet-\nter by sticking to his Job than he can\nby playing In n minor league of lesser\nclassification. It used to be that a boy\noff the lots looked upon a snlnry of\n$150 a month as pretty good money\nfor starting out with a ball team. Now\nho can earn much more than that by\nstaying at home and playing on Sun-\ndays and holldas with some Indepen-\ndent tenni.
055992cd42ba643729a20c1142efdf2a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.8674863071747 44.939157 -123.033121 Editor Jouknal: As the election\nis over, and bimetallism is defeated\nfor the present, I thercrfore desire to\ncall attention to some of the many\npromises made by the Republican ad-\nvocates of the single gold standard.\nThey promised the Americau people\nthat if they would elect Major McKin-le- y\npresident, and adopt the single\ngold standard, that universal prosper-\nity would bless the people of this\ngreat country. Now it Is a fact that\nat the close of President Cleveland's\nadministration, which is a single gold\nstandard one, lias brought on the peo-\nple the greatest depression ever known\nIn the history of this great country.\nHow then is the Republican party\ngoing to bring the much mooted pros-\nperity, when it has adopted the flnan\nclal policy of President Cleveland\nThe Republican party lias promised\nthe people prosperity if it was brought\nback into power, and if It falls to\nfulfill that promise to seventy million\npeople, it has assumed a re\nsponsibility. The Republican party\nhas made great promises to the old\nsoldiers, that if they would aid in the\nelection of Comrade McKlnley, that\nthey would be greatly benefitted by\npension legislation. Now comrades,\nwe can only judge the future by the\npast. The present house of congress\nhas a very large Republican majority,\nand Col. John A. Pickler is chairman\nof the committee on invalid's pen-\nsions. Many large petitions were pre\nsented to Col. Plckler's .committee,\nurging It to introduce a bill to pension\nall soldiers, who had served for a\nperiod of nineiy days, at eight dollars\nper month. Did the committee re-\nport the bill? I answeremphatically,\nno' Tho limbless soldiers petitioned\nthe'same committee tOfc'rant them a\nsmall Increase of pension, to aid then)\nto weather the storm o life In thelF\ndeclining years, but it heeded them\nnot. But that august committee did\nreport, and pass a large number of\nprivate bills, giving large pensions to
168b321fc74edde2591e22497a33679c THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1883.2178081874683 37.561813 -75.84108 riages for me continually, but I must stay near\nher. The doctor has just ordered me to write\nto B'idii' friend. He scolds me for my dis-\ntracted state as If I could bo less overcome by\nthis alljiction than am. I will open my heart\nto you my dear old friend. Jane, God is pun-\nishing me for my sins. Jack will not admit it,\nbut 1 know it well. The linger of God could\nnot write it plainer upon my heart. We were\nhappy oh, so happy! in our dear old Mount\nHope cottage, for we were serving God by\nlabor for our own and all those around us.\nThe wilderness about our home we made blos-\nsom like the rose. Uirdie grow strong and\nbeautiful every day. O. those days when we\nwere really rich! for all we had waa ours by\nhonest right, not gained by aomp trick of\nspeculation. Our simple food was sweeter\nthan all the banoueta of our grander state.\n waB lomptea by his old friend to go into\nwhat he called and the world calls legitimate\nbusiness. They were finally two of eight men\nwho bought 4n all the hour In the market, or\nenough of ItfJane, to make every starving\nchild's loaf of bread cost its wretched parents\na penny more; for they held on to this Hour\nuntil It went up und up. Then tbey sold and\nJack became a rich man. Jane, the grand\nTorricelli you so much admire was built with\nsuch money as that. I frit that Jack's busi-\nness was an uunxhteous one, but I allowed\nmy instincts to be argued down. . There was\nmy great sin: but, O Uod, icy punishment\nseems greater than I can bear, be witness,\nyou, my cousin Jane, for hera I solemnly\naweartbatlf my Heavenly Vather will spare\nmy oeio ed cniid l will retrace my steps and\ngo back to my simpler and nobler life, llut 1\ncan write no more.
0cff76cd52087d7cd58fb133734cf09a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.6013698313038 40.063962 -80.720915 Tothe ZWot qfitU Inidlignctr.\nSue.Tbe article In Monday's Ixtkl-\nliuknckb from "Qailp" in relation to tbe\nmanagement of tbe Hospital for tbe In*\nsane, bas created a stir in thii section of\ntbe State. Berkeley county bas ten or\ntwenty patients iu tbat institution, there¬\nfore it is reasonable to suppose tnat she\nhas an interest in its management Of tbe\ninstitutions in tbe State this one, above all,\nshould be so conducted as to leave no\nroom for fear on the part of tbe friends of\ntho inmates that their unfortunate relatives\nwere not as safe in tho care of the State as\nat home. From the writer's personal\nknowledge of Dr. Bland, be believes his\ncharacter for morality and Christianity is\nunimpeachable. But if in the goodness of\nhis heart he has misplaced bis confidence\nin others to such an extent as to cause\nground for "charges of the grossest im¬\nmorality'" and especially if they "will be\nmude and sustained oy the most\npositive proof, he should at once be re-1\nmoved. If ou the other hand Dr. Bland\nhas done all in his power to protect the\nlives and persons of those in his care.he\nshould have the opportunity of exonerating\nhimself, and that immediately. Delay in\nsuch a matter aud under these circum*\nstances is a crime. The State can endure\nmismanagement of its University or of\nsome other of its public institutions But\nthe people should not rest for a day with a\ncloud upon tbe administration of this most\nsacred trust, the care of the insane. \npeople here, and I doubt not all over tbe\nState, are greatly stirred by these charges,\nand demand that the most rigid and far\nreaching investigition shall be made at\nonce. If anything wrong is found it must\nbe corrected without hesitation.\nThe management of the hospital should\nnever be made a bone of contention be¬\ntween political parties, much less between\nfactions of either party. This factional\ntight which bas been going on at the\nAsylum ever since the present administra¬\ntion came into power, should net be toler¬\nated longer by the people. Governor Jack¬\nson's policy of putting none but Bourbons\non guard in tbe State institutions is\nopenly denounced by leading Democrats\nand Republicans alike. If the Governor\nis determined to wreck every State institu¬\ntion in order to build up a strong party of\npersonal supporters it should be known.\nTho people of all parties will not be slow\nto express themselves, and in a way that\nwill not be misunderstood. West Virgin¬\nians regard their humane institutions and\neducational system above party ties, and\nabove 111, they will not tolerate such a\nstate of affairs in the insane asylum as is\nsaid to exist. For the credit of the State,\nfor the sake of the poor unfortunates help¬\nless in the hands of their keepers, in the\nname of humanity these charges Bhouid be\ninquired into by the State officials imme¬\ndiately. The State would better be rav¬\naged by the Asiatic Cholera than cursed\nby mismanagement of her Insane Asylum.\nMartimburg, Auquti. 7 .
6dc86990f0325678213c74a383321d67 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6589040778792 44.939157 -123.033121 FRANCISCO has just held an election for the purpose of voting on\nthe matter of issuing bonds for tha construction of municipal street\nrailways, and the bonds carried by a vote of four to one. There wore\nseveral reasons for this. One waS) that the Geary street road in opera-\ntion lees than a year, has shown a net profit that will for the year be\nabout $100,000 . Another reason was that the United Railways, the company\nowning the city's street car system haj 0st the most valuable asset any com-\npany can have the good will of the public. It was run and managed by Pat-\nrick Calhoun, a man who was Indicted when Mayor Schmitz and Abe Reuf\nwere convicted. He was charged with bribery in connection with the secur-\ning of franchises for his road, and while Schmitz and Reuf' were sent up for\naccepting these very bribes, Calhoun Was finally, by the grace of money and\npull, cleared. Since that time he had a strike on his hands and boasted that\nhe broke it, he did. Since that "victory" he has run the United Rail-\nways on "The People Be Damned" principle, thinking ho was larger than all\nof them put togother. The building of the Geary Btreet line by the city, and\nits phenomenal success, coupled with the proposal to vote the bonds and extend\nthe system made Patrick suddenly wak0 up to the fact that he was about to'\nget what was naturally coming to him. H0 tried to dodge by a pretended sale\nana a stepping down and out, but that dodge was too old to take, and so the\nbonds wore carried and tho end of the reign of Calhoun and his gang is in\nsight. Hod ho stopped out, and stayed out a, year ago, it is likely tho smash-\ning his road got Tuesday would have passed him by. Ho stuck to his place too\nlong, and when only throe or four days before election he made a pretended\nsolo of his interests, he got only the horse laugh and the everlasting whaling\nthat he and his gang deserved.
1425c441d1ff3f978640026a56616952 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.0753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 Edward Wyman, E. F. Cutter. T. C. H.ftaili,\nJoaephDavis, Thomas Purler, William N.U»\ncellor. late Special Receiver, ap|x>lnt«nl l>j iW\nCircuit Court o[ Wood countr, 111 s cerula id\nIn chancery therein depending lrtw«a ml\nEdward Wyman and K. F. Culler, n»\nplalnanta, and Joseph Daria and T.C . H Paid,\ndefendants, and John W. Willi, fci«rml If\nceirer, appointed by aaid Court In mUoh,\nDtieodanta.\nIn the Circuit Court of Ohio county, Wat 1>\nglnta. in Chancery\nTo tho above* named parllea, plaintiff ltd *.\nfendanta: Tou will take uotlv that <bt aim\nentitled cauae wu referred to uie.oneoltMC*\ntulaalonen of the Circuit Court of Wuud coctfj.a\nthe Decernt*r term. 1877, for tho pnr|a*ulat¬\ntaining and reporting to Ibu Court renala ka\nparticularly required by aaid dccrte ol rWms*\na copy of which la In myoBicvatiduwhlcIja\nare referred for particular ataiemfnt of w\nthing to be examined Into and n-|wneU u|«kf\nthe Commiaaioner. In accordance with tbtvU\nof reference aforeaald, I haro fixed u|»« tU n-\nteenth day of January, 1878. letween ilii b*m4\nV o'clock A. M. and 8 v. x. 01 sUdday.stmjcAa\n47)4 Court street, lu the city of hukenUa"\nthe county of Wood, Bute of Weal Vlrrl*h,»\ntake the testimony of all the parties toaiiJaraa.\nIf deaired and deemed necewary, and willwatM\nthe aame from day to day and time to time, If we\neaaary, until all the teailuiony and the mot J\nthe underlined li completed at rnjulred tj m\norder of reference.\nYou are commanded, In the name of tb<w\nof Weet Virginia, to be and appear Ware*,*\nobedience to this notice and to protect jocr ia«r\neats In relation to the matten before wis*\nreference.
091604da35a84074b4b9f8827e7e9525 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.6516393126392 37.561813 -75.84108 cries for aid summoned, ti. drive them\nfrom the room. The window was then\nclosed, and cats of all sizes, colors, ages,\nand of both sexes, jumped on the w in-\ndow sill, sprang against the glass, wiUi\ntheir eyes blazing and their fur all stand-\ning the wrong way. Finding they could\nnot force an entrance there, they went\nto the roof and endeavored to tearolT the\nshingles; got under the iloor and sought\nan entrance. Their screams, yells and\ngroans in the meantime were frightful\nto hear, and so scared the watchers that\nthey were almost paralyzed with fear.\nThe ghoulish lieasts failed to effect an\nentrance, and the watchers foit relieved.\nBut it was soon discovered tluit they\ncould not stay in tho house with all the\nwindows closed, as the odor was too of-\nfensive. The window was again raised,\nbat not high enough to admit a cat.\nThen the window was again assailed,\nand it seemed to the guardians of the'\nremains that there at least a hundred\n trying to Io:e an entrance. Flinn\nstood at the window w ith the poker and\nlat them on the head, but they persisted\nin the effort to effect an entrance. Fi -\nnal! v some of them got part of their lnd-le- e\nthror.gfi. anil the win.iow was cium--\ndown on them, two powers heated red\nhot, and the fiendish beasts burned in\nevery possible way, the young people,\nthinking it would drive the others away;\nbut it did not, and the fight was kept up\nat intervals till after daylight. The\nwatchers kept the window down as long\nas they could possihlv stand the stench,\nand when they could" do so no longer, it\nwould be raised and the war waged on\nboth sides. It was a remarkable occur-\nrence, the like of which was probably\nnever known in this part of thcj'ouiitry.\nThe faithful watchers looked in the\nmorning as if they had had a long sjiell\naf sickness and said they would not\npass through another such ordeal for the\nworld.
18981533ab3239404c542be4a8f918d4 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1898.7630136669204 39.756121 -99.323985 Washington, Oct. 1 . A. P . Mitchell,\nacting comptroller of the treasury, has\nrendered a decision on the question of\nreimbursement of governors of states\nand territories for costs and expenses\nwhich they may have incurred in aid-\ning the United States to raise a voluu\nteer army, lie holds:\nIf, upon tho cull of tho president for volun\nteers, tho governor of any state or territory, in\naiding the United States to raise a volunteer\narmy, called out any part of tho mllltla of his\nstato or territory In ordor that It might bo en\nlisted as such Into tho volunteer army, and\nany of its organized militia were afterward ac\ncepted iuto tho rolunteor army of tho United\nStates, suoh governor muv bo reimbursed\nunder tho not of July 8, 1S93 , for reasonublo\ncosts, charges and expenses which he muy\nhave incurred by making proper payments\nto them for service from tho \nthey entered tho service ai such mllltla, In re\nsponse to the cull of tho governor, to the day\non which they wore nfterwurd accepted Into\nthe volunteer army, and tho rate of pay pro-\nvided by tho laws of tho various stales for\ntheir mllltla must be held to be reasonable\nwithin, the meaning of said act of July ft, 18H8.\nFor all payments made by the governor to\nsuch militiamen as pay for sorvlce rondired by\nthem prior to the time they had tholr names\nenrolled for service in tho volunteer arm; and\njoined for duty therein, no charges or deduc\ntions should bo made by tho pay department\nof the United States ugnlnst their pay. The\ngovornor is In no instance entitled under said\nactof JulyS, Itm, to bo reimbursed for any\npayments made by him to volunteors for sorv-\nlce by them after their acooptauc9 Into the\nservloe of the Unit id States
475979c8a528e8d25416c7b23c7d9fb2 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1906.015068461441 39.78373 -100.445882 It is urged by counsel for petitioner\nthat with the statements made by tiia to\ncrmplainent excluded, there is no\ncompetent proof of the corpus delicti.\nTwo witnesses, C. C Wilson and A.\nN. Jones, the deputy sheriff, gave tes-\ntimony relative to an admission\nmade bv the defendant while he was\nbeing taken 'upen the train from th'2 of\nplace where the offense is alleged 'o\nLave been commuted to Hawthorn.?.\nThat portion of the testimony of ihe\nwitness Wiison relative to the ad-\nmission is as follows:\n"This defendant was brought into\nthe car at a place called Shurz bet-\nween here and Reno with Mr. Jones\nand a young lady. I afterwards fou id\nto be Harry Averill. and they took pos-\nsession of a seat I had up\nto that time. I tooK the seat across\nthe aisle. Seeing the man with\nbracelets on excited more or less cur-\niosity and when he came into the car\nthe young lady went in the car be-\nhind and got another lady which I\nlearned was her mother. The mother\ncame in and was talking to the de-\nfendant. The mother asked him what\nmade him do it. The defendant says\nI don't know. The mother was hys-\nterical and she made the remark I\nought to kill vou. He assented. He\ndid yes. Well she. says why don't I\ndo it and repeated the remark several\ntimes and about that time she fainted\nand swooned away."\nThe testimony of the deputy sheriff.\nrelative to this admission, was sub-\nstantia-
78f224e6430a3b6a98cfdf1db86d696b COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.1356164066465 41.262128 -95.861391 to tbe Uaivaraity ahaii hereafter tak-!of b>a county ; at wtleb tim- sad place he\npiaceT uaieax ta« <*aiae sbali br decided!shaii nrtke the examiaatioa required in\nat -. i regular ai-*'iisiK j! Li.t . B >ar<i tb' pr.x-e iwg secttoa, Saiu axamiiiation\nTraaMen, or at oat calta# for that par- j shaii be pubiie. and tbe Superintendent\ntmuiar purpoae, and thaat oaiy ia th*-1 !>b«ii eaasc ootie>s of the- same 10 be pai»-\ninanntsr, upon tbe notice, aad on tbe Uiahed in th*; various newspapers pnbliab-\nu-rma which the Board shaii j;n-aonb' : j tjd in bis county, at leaat two weeks prior\nand no member of the Boara shall h-jto the time <i hoitling ea<ih >f said >*xarn-\neithor dtrijctiy or indirectly iowre««d in inations ; provided, toat wh 11 a T sach-\nauy pwobase of such iauds aaie ; J ra' institute u to he b -id in anr eoanty\nand it shall b« lawful for tbe Boari to 1 for any year, one of said exaniinntion^,\nm»e«t aay surplus income, which ta not jao Uae Sap-friatenicot may determine,\nimmediately^ r-uuired f >r the psirpo#® of]ahaii be held at the tisM and piace of\ninstruction, in tb-- United State*, or otb- ' holding such institute; and the i'oaatr\nm iDtcmat pay1at State Stoeaa, and to j Superintendent shall give due notice of\nbold tb MUbe far the Uuivcraiiy, either ] tbe time aad place of holding aach in*ti-\naa a perpi-iu«i fund or aaan in^<Eue to de- ) tute aad such ex tEaination. Said notice\nfray current expt-as* a, aa aaid Board of jto be given at least two w««tt prior to the\nTruatoee may de^jtf expedient.
1adf2b6b308ec7dede80b9d87066f0d5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.8428961432403 40.063962 -80.720915 Cleveland, November 3..Seven hun¬\ndred of the etudenta of Oberlin College\nvisited Mentor to day, the first deputation\nto congratulate Gen. Garfield, who said to\nthem: "Mr. President, Ladies and gentle¬\nmen, this spontaneous visit is so much\nmore agreeable than a prepared one. It\ncomes more directly from the heart\nof the "people, .. who participate\nand I receive it as a greater\ncompliment for that reason. I do not wish\nto be unduly impressible or superstitious,\nbut thongh we have outlived the dav of\nthe augurs, I think we have a right\nto think of some events as omens,\nand I greet this as a happy and\nauspicious omen that the first general\n£reeling since the event of yesterday\ntendered to me by a venerable institn\ntion of learning. The thought has been\nabroad in the world a good deal, and with\nresson, that there is a divorce between\nscholarship poiitics. Oberlin. I be¬\nlieve, has never advocated that divorce,\nbut there has been a sort of a cloistered\necholarship iu the United 8tatea that hat\nstood aloof from active participation in\nEublic affairs. I am glad to be greeted\nere to-day by the active, live scholarship\nof Ohio, and \\ know of no place where\nscholarship la* touched on the nerve\ncenter of the public so effectually as Ober¬\nlin. For this resson I am e*peciallv grate¬\nful for this greeting from thn faculty and\nstudentA of Oberlin College aud its vener¬\nable and venerated Present. I thank\nyou, ladies and gpntlemen for this visit.\nWhatever the significance of yesterday's\nevent may be it will be all the more aig-\nnificant for being immediately endorsed\nby the scholarship and culture uf my 8tate\nI thank you, ladies and #«Qtlemen. and\nthank yoyr President for coming with you\nand you are cordially welcome.
31ac383445ebcb9206b54814561d1814 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.5204917716555 35.780398 -78.639099 Byron looked around tbe small chamber,\ntrying in vain to break the spell of awe,\nwhich the scene threw over him. An ap-\nparition from another world could pot have\nchecked more fearfully and completely the\nmore worldly and scornful under current of\nhis nature 1 He stood with his heart bea-\nting almost audible, his knees trembling\nbeneath him, awaiting what ne prophetical-\nly felt to be a warning from heaven.\nPropped with pillows, and left by her\nattendants, the djiog girl turned her head\ntowards the proud pct and noble, standing\nby her bed side, bile a smile of angelic\nbeauty stole through her lips. In that smile\nthe face reawakened to Vs former loveliness,\nand seldom had he who gazed breathlessly\nupon her, looked upon such incomparable\nbeauty. Tbe spacious forehead and the\nnoble contour still visible ot the emaciated\nlip, bespoke genius impressed upon a tab-\nleau all feminine in its language ; and in\nthe motion of her graceful there was\nsomething that still breathed of surpassing\nelegance. It was the shadowy wreck of no\nordinary mortal passing away humble as\nwere the surroundings, and strange as had\nbeen his summons to her bed-sid- e .\nAnd this is Byron !' she said at last in a\nvoice bewilderingly sweet, even through its\nweakness : 'My lord, I could not die with\nout seeing you without relieving my soul\nof a mission with which it has long been\nburthened. Come nearer for I have no\ntime left for ceremony, and I mustsay what\nIhavetosay anddie!\nShe hesitated, and as Byron took the\nthin hand she held tohim, she looked stead\nily upon bis noble countenance.\n'Beautiful !' she said, 'beautiful as tbe\ndream of him which has so long haunted\nme ! Pardon me, my lord ! pardon me,\nthat a moment so important toyoursclf the\nremembrance of an early feeling has been\nbetrayed into expression.\nShe paused a moment, and the bright
0b8f69d9969f1d2a1983e1a9181cd2ad CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.3575342148656 39.623709 -77.41082 Tests of seed corn made by the farm-\ners in accordance with the method ur-\nged by the agricultural missionaries on\nthe "corn special” have surprised many,\nThe custom among our farming people\nhas been to select for seed the plump-\nest, fattest ears without regard to any\nother test. It seems now that this test,\nthat of appearance, is not enough.\nThere was published in the Sun recent-\nly some letters giving results of experi-\nments. Mr. Horace L. Smith, of Bal-\ntimore county, wrote to Mr. C. Bosley\nLit tig, of the Chamber of Commerce,\nwho was largely instrumental in send-\ning out the "porn special,” that he got\nfrom a Harford county farmer a lot of\nthe finest looking seed corn that. could\nbe procured. This corn he proceeded\nto test with the following result: Out\nof 240 ears only 100 sprouted, and of\nthese only 25 sprouted vigorously.\nMr. T . Murray Maynadier, of \ncounty, tested 200 ears and 12 failed to\ngerminate, and these 12 were among\nthe finfst looking of the lot. Miss\nGrace Riddle, a Baltimore county school\ngirl, heard the talk from the "corn spe-\ncial and made some tests, finding that\none-half the ears were poor seed. About\n12 good ears it is said, will seed an acre.\nThe work of testing therefore for the\noidinary farm is not great, and it would\nseem that it will pay any farmer to do\nit. For a farmer to plant bad seed,\nplow and cultivate it and get nothing,\nor at best not a full crop, is but lost la-\nbor and a wise man will avoid working\nfor nothing if he can. Those public-\nspirited people who have called the at-\ntention of farmers to this subject are\ndoing a great service, and it will result\nwithout doubt in increased corn crops\neven with the same cost of labor and
b9a368c7fae559e21cecfc840ee32034 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.8292349410544 41.681744 -72.788147 The method of splitting votes, as\nexplained by the machine demon-\nstrators, Is not difficult or intricate.\nThe elector stops Into the , voting\nbooth enclosing himself by pulling\ntho handle affixed to the curtain\nfrom left to right. Before him, he\nfinds three party levers on tho left\nside of the machine, the first being\nthat of tho Republican party, the\nsecond the Democratic and the third\nthe Progressive or third party. If\nhe wishes to vote a "straight ticket,"\nhe. pulls the party lever of his choico\nto the right and downward, then\nleaves the booth by pulling the cur-\ntain handle back, the motion being\nfrom the right to the left. If, how-\never, he wishes to split his ticket.\nthe operation Is slightly different.\nAfter he has selected the lever of\nthe party whose presidential electors\nhe wishes to vote for. he pushes up-\nward a small metal tab directly un-\n tho name of tho candidate he\nwishes to "cutf' from his vote, and\npulls down the metal tab under the\nname of tho corresponding candidate\non one of the two other party tickets.\nTho movements In "cutting" out a\ncandidate is to push the metal tab to\nthe right and upward, and in voting\nfor one candidate on another ticket\nis to push the tab to the left and\ndownward. If it is his wish to vote\nfor the local, county and state can-\ndidates on one ticket and for the na-\ntional candidates on another, he may\npull the party lever of the party\nwhose presidential electors he wishes\nto vote for, then slide upward all but\nthe first seven tabs, which represent\npresidential electors, and slide down-\nward the tabs of other candidates,\ndistributing his votes among all\nthree parltos if he wishes, but voting\nnot more than once for any one of-\nfice.
7a88db488765a77c042af65b4154bc08 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.613387946519 43.798358 -73.087921 in Jamaica, as a subscription to the pur\nposes oi the convention. Application\nwas made by Mr. Buxton on behalf of\nhimself and friends, to be heard on the\nobjects and plans of the African Coloniz-\nation Society. A long discussion ensued\nthe personal character, purity of mo-\ntives, and integrity of principle of Mr. B.\nwere conceded, but being already a mem-\nber of the Convention, it was thought he\ncould not be recognised in the double\ncapacity of a delegate from another Soci-\nety, and of a member of the Convention.\nMr. Guriity, in the name of Mr. Bux-\nton and others, requested leave to with-\ndraw the request, which was given.\nMr. Turnbull, after reading a lonr\nletter he had addressed to the Secretary of\nState on the subject of African Slavery,\nand the remedy proposed for its re\nmoval, adverted to what was said of his\nsuggestions in the Westminster Review,\nMr. T. could not understand whether Lord\nPalmerston approved his plan or not.\nMr. Sturge understood Mr. Turnbull's\nplan to be, that a system of registration\nshould be adopted in slave countries, which\nwould throw the onus ptobandi upon the\nowners of slaves, to show the slave was\nhis, and not (hat the slave should be oblig-\ned to prove his freedom. (Cheers.) Judge\nJeremy, of Ceylon, spoke highly of Mr.\nT, but he doirbted the success of his plan.\nDr. Bowring thought the subject "well\nworthy of consideration, though he doubt-\ned whether the Convention were prepared\nnow to address governments on so impor-\ntant a subject. A committee was appoint-\ned to examine and report on Mr. Turn-bull'- s
0bd9c891010be91232bed974a04f8c05 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.7109588723997 41.020015 -92.411296 you hare secured uomfortablo homes and have accu­\nmulated wealth ; you camo before there was a rail­\nroad iu the State; you had all tho inconveniences of\nthe settlement of a country without railroads. But\nnow you goon the railroads, even to the Far West,\nto make liion^y. You go in a palace car. Look at\nthe North I'acifir niln»<l ftju •>:!»<,\ndestitute of population. Now population follows\nIhejrailroad*; whenyou camehere railroads followed\nthe population after many years. You are the Inst\nof tho old settlers! Take the Indian Territory,\neven,- set apart for the Indians,—and there is the St.\nLouis fc Galveston railroad, runuing clear through\nthe territory, and two other roads plump up agaiust\nit, asking to get. through!\n"It requires uo great amount of pluck and courage\nnow to emigrate to tho Western country. It a man\nin la/.y, he can ride aU the way in palacecar. You\nall kuow the hardships wo endured. The rising\ngeneration think they have hard times, and perhaps\nthey have, but it is different from those early days\nYet we bad onr good times.\n"Those fifty Indian ladies whom I had the pleasure\nof seeing and being somewhat acquainted with, they\ndid not have any panniers, Saratoga tip, or chignons\nThey seemed to be happy—neither had the white\nwomen, and yet they teemed to bc happy ; yet they\nwere well dressed, just aa woJJ drosscd as any of\nyou,though perhaps,in a little different style. When\nthoy went to "trip the light fautastic toe," they had\nfloor of puncheons and a three stringed tiddle.\nwhich made as good music for dancing asany of\nyour tine bands, The only trouble was when a tall\nman—such as Judge Hendershott—wont into one of\nthese cabins, and went to strike the " pigeon toe,
245843daccf961f9830a797ce5145dd2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.5246575025367 39.745947 -75.546589 The biaze proved to be one of the\nhardest the local department has had to\ncombat for some time and it required an\nhours work before the blaze was under\ncontrol. The roar portion of the store\nwas gutted and what stock in the front\nof the store that was not seared by the\nHarnes was ruined by smoke and water.\nThe tire was discovered a few min­\nutes after ti oclock by Olan Pierson,\nwho whs passing the store. Pierson ran\nto Box 212 at Third and Tatnull streets\nand sent in an alarm. Within a few\nminutes five fire companies were on the\nscene. In the meantime men in the\nneighborhood had run to the stables of\nH. C . Morgan adjoining the store and\nremoved 40 horses, although the stable\nproperty was not damaged but was\nfilled with smoke. Word of the fire\nwas sent to Mr. Tollin, who had just\nreached his home, he having left the\nstore at 6 oclock- When. Mr. Tollin ar­\nrived on the scene he fainted.\nShortly after the firemen arrived Sec­\nond Assistant Chief Edel Maloney, a\nmember of the Phoenix Fire Company,\n his left arm, when it went through a.\nlarge glass window. The blood spurted\nas if a vein had been cut. He was com­\npelled to seek medical attention. Rob­\nert Coliison and William Green, mem­\nbers of the Weccacoe Fire Company,\nwho had dragged a line of hose into the\nrear of the building, were caught under\nfalling rafters. Coliison was knocked\nunconscious but Green escaped injury.\nColiison was dragged from the building\nand after being revived, went to his\nhome. Numerous other firemen had their\nhands cut by failing glass.\nMr. Tollin is at a loss to understand\nhow tlie fire started. He says there was\nno fire in the, building when he left.\nFrom the appearances of the store prop­\nerty, the blaze started in the rear near\na stainvay among dry goods, which were\nstored on shelves. Mr. Tollin said the\nfire was ail the more suspicions because\nabout two weeks ago, while be was sit­\nting in front of the building he smelled\nsmoke and found a fire burning In ihe\ncellar. He extinguished this himself\nwith a few buckets of water. He did\nnot know how it started.
05b4fbdcbc84fc932d87ec5e23f3cc3e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.869862981989 40.063962 -80.720915 Sakdy Hook. Nov. 18..The steamer\nCity of Washington, Liverpool 1st,\nQneenstown 2nd, has arrived here with\nfour days later news.\nIt is stated that Spain Intends taking\nenergetic measures in the suppression\nof the slave trade.\nLiverpool, Nov. 4 .7 a. m . .Cotton\ndeclined Id, closing with an upward\ntendenoy. Provisions steady. Pro¬\nduce quiet and steady. The markets\nwere closed on Tuesday.\nLosrooN, Nov. 2 ..Consols for money\n88K*88: V. 8 . S -20's 63Ka64; Erie shares\n52Xi Illinois Central SOXoSOK.\nThe British government has ordered\nall restrictions on American vessels of\nW%ePeui"wrrespondent of the Morn-\n'"fl^intSd'ed withdrawal of the\nFrench from Mexico has lately\nHunled a more decided character.\nThe Rest says ii can scarcely be sup¬\nposed byany. that the United States\nGovernment coald wish and implore\nsuch a government to return to repub¬\nlican. confusion and anarchy.\nIn the course of time public feeling\nin America will acknowledge the\nliberal sovereign now endeavoring to\nraise Mexico toicivillzatlon.\nThe proprietor of the "Irish People\nIs attempting to bring actions against\nLord Seent and other authorities for\nthe suppression or his paper.\nThe French journals denys that\nFrance made, any effort to exercise\nmoral influence in Austria's policy to¬\nward fVtokfort.\nOn 28th a respectable looking\nman; giving his name as Lieut. Job.\nHenry Sater, of the 9th Conn. Vols.,\nwas arrested at Dhblinpn the arrival of\nthe steamer froni Ll verpool. The pris¬\noner. was found to have in his posses¬\nsion-a rbarrelled revolver. 200 rounds\nof rifle,'patent, ball cartridges, said to\nbe poisOneji, a box.of patent percussion\ncaps, ibur-military, drill books, four\ncommissions, bearing -his name, to\nserve in the Conn. Vols, from Lieut, to\nCol:, and also the.sumof 38 pounds in\ngold, supposed to be for the purpose of\nFenianism. .- He stated that ne returned\nto the Island to see an uncle and inten¬\nded shortly to return to America. He\nwas remanded for further enquiry.\nThe Bourse on the Slst was flat; rentes\nclosed at 6811 *\nThe Italian elections have proved\nhighly favorable to the government..\nGen. pansier is appointed PUpal Miu-\n^Holstlne it ifij?ald will be convoked\nandthat Schleramg will be incorporated,\nbut Germany aud the confederation\nwill pay the expenses of the late war.\nLiverpool, Nov. 1 ..The visit fof the\nPrince and Princess-of Wales to Liver¬\npool, having taken plaoe on the 31*t,\nbusiness wuS totallj^suspended on that\nday, and. the commercial report conse¬\nquently, is only onfc day later than by\nthe Cuba.
11af04ada016a251a23a3954a63c6c46 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.6024589847702 39.745947 -75.546589 issue appeared fo hinge over "Buddy"\nAndrews, aged 5 years, who had voted\nat every election In the colony since\nhls birth. A . N. Andrews, father of\nthe child, a prominent member of the\nHouseholders League, which was\nvoted into power in the colony last\nyear by the children's vote, opposed\nthe franchise restriction last night\nDuring the discussion on the ques­\ntion, Mr. Andrews pointed out that\nthe proposed amendment to the col­\nony constitution allowed an Imbecile\nof any age to vote, whereas a child\nwith a developed brain and capable\nof voting Intelligently on any sub­\nject at 13 years of age was fo be\nbarred. When the motion to restrict\nvoting to all colonists IS years nr\nover was put. It was carried by a vote\n 48 to 31. The majority of (hose\npresent did not vote, however.\nJ. Frank Stephens, a trustee of the\ncolour, and one of the founders, declared\nhimself hi favor of the unlimited fran­\nchise. Others siigpeafed that only those\nof the attained 21 year* should be al­\nlowed to vote. At times the discussion\non the subject waxed warm.\nAnother subject before the meeting\nwas the report of the Board of Asses-1\n«ors, TTiis provided for a readjustment\nof the taxes on proj* rty in the colony.\nIt was explained that the assessment\nof nropertics facing on two roads had\nbeen increased over those facing on u\nsmall wood path. It was said that\nwhile the change increased the taxes in\n«orne instances, it lowered them in other\neases. No action was taken.
24bc10e797efb6fe0a4d27ceeb58c87b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.2397259956874 39.261561 -121.016059 Nevada §rw0trat.\nCapt. J. W. Spraoik, Seventh Regiment\nOhio volunteers, gives the following ac-\ncount of the impression produced at Charl-\neston by the taking ot Port Royal, while be\nwas a prisoner in the rebel jail:\nThe shock produced in Charleston by tbe\ntaking of Port Royal was very great, it\nproduced tor a time a great panic, one cu-\nrious effect of which was a marked differ-\nence in the deportment of citizens in refer-\nence to the prisoners. Previous to that\nevent tbe Yankees were not noticed except\nwith manifestations of hatred and contempt.\nOverlooking the jail windows were tbe gen-\neral houses, and from the windows of those\ndwellings no friendly sign, no token of re-\ncognition was ever given. The roost sacred\nfraternal ties were ignored by those who\nwere brought in contact with the prisoners,\nand the ministers of the Gospel\nhad no more compassion upon Chaplains of\ntheir own creed, in sickness and distress in\nthe jail, than upon dogs in the street.\nWhen, however, the capture of Port Royal\nwas announced, the ladies in tbe honses re-\nferred to altove la-gan immediately to wave\nwhite kerchiefs from their windows toward\nthe prison, and to kiss their hands toward\nthe prisoners. A marked change was par-\nceptible all around, the people beiog under\nan impression that their city would soon\nbe attacked and was liable to be captured\nby the Yankees. Information was convey-\ned to\\he captives by the guard, many of\nwhom were Irishmen; and Capt. Sprague\nsays that if Col. Corcoran could have been\nat liberty in Charleston twenty four hours\nhe could have raised a full regiment of\nIrishmen in that time to fight tor tbe Union.
0e0bdbb770f3ef9ae1451e08a9ee2940 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1889.387671201167 38.894955 -77.036646 successois will not uavo ns difficult a tlmo\nas I did lu becoming familiar" with their\nduties. I remember tho first caller I had\nafter Inking tho oath of olllce. Ho wautcd\npermission to keep cows luhls back) aid.\n1 saw no reason why ho shouldn't, nud I\nreadily gao him what ho asked for. It was\nhis back yard and tho cows belonged to\nhim, and I told htm I was surprlsod that ho\nwould asu lor such a permit, mil n low\nda)s after this a lot of letters nnd callers lu\nregard to thoso cows flooded tho ofilcc, and\nI becon to sco that tho Ufa of n Commis\nsioner was not altogether a happy one."\ntlaUlff M. A. Joyce: "Tho execution of\nNelson" Colbert reminded mo pt au net\nwhich I.uko used to do In' tho circus\nring. It was. very popular, but I havo not\ncccn It for many )cais. Ho would tako a\nrope, inako a nooso lu it, and SttJng by the\nucek from au clovatcd platform two or\ntbito times across tho tent, llo would\nthrow his neck to onn side so as to keep his\nhold on the ropo mid tho effect was so much\nlike an execution by hanging that tho pco-\nplo w ould (builder as they looked at It. It\nmight havo hung him suro cnouirli If It had\nnot been that ho did not allow a bit of slack\nin tho ropo. Any ilmp might havo severed\nIds citclra.' ns clcanl) ns it It bad been tho\nwork of a hangman, but ho was always\ncuieful about that."
30bebbdfcd2625932b70ba764e8ad507 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.382191749112 39.261561 -121.016059 On the 29tb of March, Col. Lockridfe with\nfour hundred men arrived within pistol shot of\nFort Castillo, un*een by the enemy, and a coun-\ncil wa» held. The result of the council was not\nknown, but tb* fort was not attacked, aod on\nthe 31st the main body started back. Col.\nLockridge with one hundred volunteers started\nto force their way by land to join Walker, or\nmake a diversion in bis favor by carrying the\nwar into Costa Rica. They asceuded the river\nin the steamer Scott, and when about two miles\nabove Seripiqui, and whilst the Scott was bead-\ning up the stream to,land the men for breakfast,\nthe boiler burst, shattering the boat to pieces,\nand blowing many of the men into the water.\nThirteen were killed and twenty-five wounded\nby the explosion. This catastrophe caused the\nabandonment of the expedition, and the men\nstarted for Grcytown. where the main body ar-\nrived on the 6th of April, ten of the wounded\nand sick having died on the passage down. On\nariving at Grcytown, Col. Lockridge mustered\n men and disbanded them. They were after-\nwards received on board the British men of\nwar, to lie taken to the United States.\nTiie information In regard to Walkers posi-\ntion aod prospect* is meagre, and not very re-\nliable. Col. Cauly, an officer in the Costa Rican\narmy reports that his force at Rivas was reduc-\ned to 230 men, fortified in two adobe houses, on\nwhich the allies were bringing their guns to\nbear. Dates from Rivas to March 28th, an-\nnounce that fighting bod continued for four\ndays, but no successes on either side are record-\ned. But little dependence can be placed in this\nreport, but it is useless to disguise the fact that\nWalker and his men are in a critical position,\nand the next steamer may bring us news of their\ncomplete overthrow. Walker could have with-\nstood the united force of a!! the Central Ameri-\ncan States, but the combii.ation of New York\ncapitalists, by cutting off bis supplies, has prob-\nably been successful in accomplishing bis ruin,\nand that of the American cause in Nicaragua.
0cae5371e8ff0be83e729627660213e1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.8315068176053 37.561813 -75.84108 You have been well nware that a\ngrand naval expedition was about to\nsail from this point. As an old resident\nof Chicago, I take a few spare moments\nto give you a brief account of all that\nI know oonocrning it. The 8(.h Michi-\ngan Regiment was ordered from Wash-\nington, (where we bad been but eiuht\ndays in camp.) last week, and found at\nAnnapolis a number of regiments, who\nare now on board the various vessels of\ntho fleet, and wo shall soon sail, (Jen.\nShorman in command. As to our des-\ntination, we know nothing, except that\nit will be southward. As nearly as I\ncan estimate, about thirty thousand\nmen will compose tho corps. The well\nknown vessels, Yonderbilt, (Gen. Sher-\nman's headquarters,) Daniel Webster,\nOcean Queen, Great Republic, Atlantic,\nic, are already laden with men, horses,\nprovisions and ammunition, and are all\nanchored within a mile of tho Va nd or-\nbit t. I have just counted fifteen of these\n vessels, and several will join on the\nway down the bay and at other points\n"Doestioks" is with us, as correspondent\nof the New York Tribune. The New\nYork. Times also has a correspondent\nwith the expedition. Sherman's Batte-\nry, also the New York 79th, Cth Con-\nnecticut, 7th Connecticut, 50th Penn-\nsylvania, the Roundheads (Pa.,) 4th\nNew Hampshire, 3d New Hampshire,\nand many others are with us. Wo are,\nso far as I can observe, in good health,\nthough necessarily very much packed,\nthere being, for iustance. ubout 1,800\non the Vanderbilt, 7,0u0 barrels of\nflour, full rations of hard bread, pork,\nic, for fifteen days, with a larure quan-\ntity of shot, shell and ammunition. A\nfew days will show us what particular\nwork wo are to engage in. If with\nyour peculiar interest in tho northwest,\nyou have a vacant line for news from\nthe sea const I shall be happy to nost\nyou an occasional word from the expe-\ndition.
0703decb1973d1a705e88080e29472a4 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.7356164066464 40.735657 -74.172367 Section 1. That the Postal TclegrapbCabls\nCompany of New Jersey, its successors and as-\nsigns, be and It Is hereby authorized and em-\npowered to construct and maintain for the\nuses and purposes of its business, one 2 way\n•day duct with the necessary manholes, suon\nduct to be burled not less than three (3) feet,\nand the manholes to be uot less than five (5)\nfeet In depth and four (4) feet In diameter\nfrom the pavement surface under and along\ncertain streets In the City of Newark, a® fol-\nlows, to wit:\nBeginning at a point on Market street where\nCommerce streets Intersects Market street;\nthence along and under Market street to a\npoint where Halsey street Intersects Market\nstreet; also from tho manhole nearest the\nPennsylvania Railroad depot under and across\nMarket street Into the depot building; also\nfrom the manhole noarest the Newark News\nbuilding under and across Market street Into\nsaid building; also from the manhole nearest\n 180 Market street under and across Market\nstreet Into said building; also from the man-\nhole nearest Wilbur alley under and across\nMarket street and Wilbur allev to the first\npole on Wilbur alloy; and also from the man-\nhale nearest Halsey street under and across\nMarket street and Halsey street to the first\npole on Halsey street.\nSection 2. That the said company shall, at\nIts own expense, restore all streets, avenues,\nalleys and sidewalks and the pavement, curb-\ning or gutters thereon, disturbed by It for\nthe purpose of laying Its conduit to a con-\ndition equally as good as before said conduit\nwas laid, and all surplus dirt, due to the lay-\ning of said conduit, shall be removed.\nSection 3. That the laying of said oondult\nand the restoration of the streets, avenues,\nalleys and sidewalks shall at all times be sub-\nject to the supervlBon of the Board of Street\nand Water Commissioners of said City of\nNewark.
295c7da0331488ed2633466805182ade NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.9246575025368 41.681744 -72.788147 rolled up side of us as we were\nwaiting to cross the street at the\n. slightest break in traffic. She was\ndriving a new car with several\nscratches along the fenders and a\ndented hood but she was still game.\nHer conversation rippled out at us\nas she stopped the motor.\n"MY DEAR. I bet you Were sur-\nprised to see me driving my own\ncar weren't you? I Just got it tho\nother day after I had finally learned\nhowtodriveacarandIamju3t\nWILD over the idea. I mean I never\nknew what a lot o fun driving was\nuntil I begun driving my own car.\n"Poppa got me this car last week\nand tho agency sent the cutest little\nman out to teach mo how to drive\nand we had lots of fun and he was\ntho cutest thing except when he got\nmad when I forgot ,to push in the\nclutch or whatevcr.it is you\npush in and then he would get all\nred in the face and swear AWFUL-\nLY, but as soon as I began to catch\non we got along all right except\na couple of times.\n"At first I didn't novi the FIRST\nTHING about driving a car and I\nspent twenty minutes one timo try-\ning to start the car without the\nIGNITION turned on and then I\ndrove about ten miles with the\nEMERGENCY BRAKE on and I\nhad to laugh of thinking of driving\nwith the BRAKE on. Wasn't that\na HOWL? But at that I did pretty\ngood with only seven lessons and I\ndidn't hit a thing besides the rear\nof n, stone truck and it was HIS\nFAULT really because he should\nknow better than to stick out his;\nhand and then STOP with an inex-\nperience" driver like me. behind him\nandItoldhimsoandhesaidhe
49faf6fc8ab1e500ecc5f07f1b06123b THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.891780790208 39.24646 -82.47849 There is nothing about our town\nto command the respect of stran-\ngers, or to encourage people to\ncome here to settle. From Novem-\nber to May it is a serious task to\nattempt to get to town, or away\nfrom it. The "old hack," it is true,\nplunges through the mud and mire\ntwice a day to the station, but it is\na doleful trip to undertake, at best.\nThe age of improvement is up-\non us. Time is money. Will we\nput ourselves in communication\nwith the outer world, or will we re-\nmain as we have for ten years\nspending as much time, patience,\nlabor and money to get to the Sta-\ntion and back, as it would take to\ngo fifty miles if we were at a de-\npot? The Scioto and Hocking Val-\nley Road to McArthur is almost\ngraded. A very little outlay will\nprepare it for the iron. The Ports-\nmouth train lays by nearly four\nhours at Hamden every day. It\nthe road wao built to McArthur\nfrom McArthur Station, that train\ncould run up here and remain the\ntime that it lays at Hamden. Have\nwe the nerve and money to build,\nor aid in building, that road? Let\nsome of the men of our town, who\nare interested thousands in the\ncounty seat question.answer wheth-\ner they are willing to do something\ntor the public and their own good\nI have looked over the grotnd,\nA show of public spirit can alone\nsave us, it question comes up-\non us, as it certainly will.\nMadison, Brown and Knox town-\nships are interested in the removal\nto Zaleski : Vinton and Wilkesville\nand Swan are hugely interested,\ndirectly ; Clinton, south part of\nRichland and Harrison are interes-\nted by tho railroad convenience.\nJackson and Eagle will not be\ngreatly discommoded or benefitted,\nand will care but little about the\nmatter. The public buildings will\nbe but a small item with the Zales-\nki people, and the matter of taxa-\ntion will not be a question.\nMany people will vote for the county\nseat to remain here. If they see a proper\npublic spirit inanifeFted by the people of\nMcArthur, and n disposition to do some-\nthing to command respect. While those\nvery people will vote for the removal If\nwe remain idle and sleep away our day of\ngrace. Sonn old fogy may think I ani an\nalarmist, and am trying to frighten the\npeople of McArthur into putting money\ninto a railroad scheme. I have only to\nsay that I am baiely awake to tho inter-\nests of my town and vicinity, Prompt\nmeasures may save us; but nothing short\nof that will. Tho people of McArthur\nflatter themselves that some of the Zaleski\nCompany said at one time that thev did\nnot w ant tne county seat. Albnv me to\nsuggest that the people of Zaleski are\nwideawake to their interests; they have\nbought lots and built houses, s tor e-r oom - s,\nshops. Ac. and to- d-
3aa3ecb67c87db04aa066ea8a5264a77 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0808218860984 40.063962 -80.720915 The Starving Poor of Richmond.\nWHEELiita, W. Va., Jan. 29,18t>6.\nMessrs. KdUors:.Vermit me to thank\nyou for the kind manner in which you\nrefer to my efforts in behalf of the suf¬\nfering poor; Of/ my. own city. It is al¬\nmost impossible for you, who are so\nrichly blessed with all that a people\ncould desire of prosperity and comfort,\nto have any. adequate conception of the\nterrible sutferings to which many have\nbeen brought by the overwhelming ca¬\nlamities which have befallen, the citi¬\nzens of Richmond and the surrounding\ncountry. Heart. broken widows have\nadded to all their other sorrows thnt of\nhaving to hear little ones cry in vain\nfor bread. Many whose" hands have\never been ready to minister to those in\nwant, have seen every vestige of their\npossessions swept away and they them-\nsolves become the of charity.\nThus it is that we appeal for aid to the\nfriends ot suffering humanity. This\nappeal' was not made, however, until\neverv effort had been put forth by our\npeople at'home/ We dare not be silent\nwith such heart rending scenes before\nus. IXeel.under lasting obligations to\nthe good peoplo of Wheeiing'for the no¬\nble manuer in which they are respond¬\ning to this call.. In the days of pros¬\nperity. which we hope are yet to be en¬\njoyed by our city, what Wheeling is do¬\ning wiili be; tenderly borne in inlnd,\nand, it may bo, that in sotno way, at\nsome time, we may. in some practical\nmanner testify our appreciation of this\nIfotlieiW desire to aid this caused they\nwill pleaso seud in their contributions\nto the city pastors, or to myself at the\nMcLure Mouse.. Yours, Ac.,
127b504b591fcb3e0c080a316cf9e7d7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1895.105479420345 42.217817 -85.891125 VTATK OF MICHIGAN. The Circuit for the\nO County of Van Karen In Chancery.\nIn the matter of the voluntary assignment of the\nAmerican Bank, Dwiggins, Starbuck & Company,\nfor the benetit of creditors.\nOn reading and tiling the petition of Napoleon\n13. McKinney, the assignee under said assignment,\naccompanied with his hnal account, and praying\nfor reasons set forth in said petition, that a day\nmay be assigned for the hearing of said account,\nand that it may be examined and allowed, and his\ncompensation as assignee tixed and determined;\nthat he may be directed by this court upon what\nbasis the claim of William C. Niblack, asreceiver\nof the Columbia National Hank, should be paid,\nand what dividend said claimant is entitled to;\nthat be may be further directed as to what, if any,\nset offs, it is bis duty to allow certain debtors of\nsaid American Hank, who are also creditors there\nof, that he may be further directed as to the dis-\nposition to be made of certain notes in his hands\nclaimed to be woithless; that he may be further\ndirected what dividend shall be paid by him to\nthe creditors of said American Hank out of the\nfunds in his belonging to his said assignor,\nand that upon the payment of said dividends, his\ntrust may be closed; that he may be discharged\ntberefrom, his bond cancelled, tnd his sureties\nreleased from the obligation thereof, and that\nsuch other and further relief may be awarded in\nthe premises as to the court shall seem to be meet\nand right and in accordance with the statutes of\nthis state regulating voluntary assignments.\nThereupon, it is ordered, that the sixteenth day\nof February, A. D. iHus at the opening of court on\nthat day, be and the same hereby is assigned for\nthe examining and allowing of said account, and\nthe hearing of said petition, and that all creditors\nand other persons interested in the matter of said\nassignment are required to appear at a session of\nsaid court then to be bolden at the Court House\nin the Village of Paw Paw, in said County, and\nshow cause, if any there be, why said account\nshould not be allowed, and why the relief prayed\nby said petitioner in and by his petition should\nnot be granted, and said assignee discharged from\nthe duties of his said trust, his bond cancelled,\nand the sureties thereon released from further\nobligation.
18a88c3f8e541a9e33087dd204c2103e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.278082160071 58.275556 -134.3925 The Atlin Claim says: "A special\nmeeting of the Atlin District Board of\nTrade was held at the court house ou\nThursday evening last. The object of\nthe meeting was to meet Mr. Charles\nGoldstein of Juneau, a delegate from\nthe Juneau chamber of commerce to\ninterview the Atlin District Board of\nTrade and inform them as to what the\npeople of Juneau were prepared to do\ntoward constructing the American end\nof the Atlin-Juneau road, and to ascer¬\ntain what action the people of Atlin\nhad taken in the matter. Staudiug\nroom only in the court house went far\nto show the great popularity of the\nscheme. The president of the Board\nintroduced Mr. Goldstein to the meet¬\ning, who then made a few remarks and\nasked to be informed as to what steps\nhad been taken in the matter. The\nsecretary stated it was our inten¬\ntion to get a survey made at the earliest\npossible date and that he had been as¬\nsured that the Provincial Government\nwould make an appropriation for that\npurposo. Mr. Goldstein then rose and\nstated that Congress had passed a new\nlaw which provided that all non-incor¬\nporated towns could appropriate 70 per\ncent of the taxes collected by them, for\nroad construction; and that he was\nauthorized to state that the Juneau\ncitizens were ready to build their end\nof the line ao soon as they had the as¬\nsurance that the Atlin people would\nbuild the road. Mr. Goldstein said that\nthe total distance from Atlin to Ju¬\nneau was only betweemOO and 100 miles,\nand that there were no formidable ob¬\nstructions from Juneau to the forks at\nthe junction of the Kateenar and Na-\nkina Rivers.
13ca0961f665fa22f18ebc85498cda41 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.875683028486 41.681744 -72.788147 Dicky roundly, made me nervous.\nDicky, on the contrary, was in high\ngood humor. Having relieved his ir-\nritation at me for my delay in the\ndressing room by one of his charac-\nteristic exposures of temper, and hav\ning outwitted 'in. her rush for a table\nthe woman who had rebuked him,\nDicky felt very much satisfied with\nhimself, and proceeded to prove him-\nself a valiant trencherman in his at-\ntack upon the viands put before him.\nWhen I had left the upper deck I\nhad been really hungry, but Dicky's\ntemper and my worry over the travel-\ning' bags effectually 'took away the\nzest from my appetite. I ate what\nwas put before me, but for any en-\njoyment of the meal I might have\nbeen dining on bread and \nWhen I had fini?hed and Dicky had\npaid our check, with a liberal tip, the\nwaiter brought a bag and handed it to\nhim. Ididnotgetagoodlookatit\nuntil we were almost out of the dining\nroam, and then, with a horrified little\nthrill, I realized that the bag the\nwaiter had given Dicky, although al-\nmost identical in appearance with\nours, was still not the one we owned.\n"Dickv!" I srasped. "wait: that man\nj has given you the wrong bag."\n"If you say another word about this\nbag," Dickv rejoined irritably, "I'll\nthrow the blasted thing overboard.\nDo you suppose I don't know my own\nproperty when I see it?"\nI shut my lips tightly and walked\non after him, grimly repeating my\nformer resolve to sav nothing, no\nmatter what happened.
078e4f358bd8d5168108f81ba09a6602 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1903.3657533929477 39.756121 -99.323985 "Will jour seed corn grow?" This\nquestion every farmer should be able\nto answer for himself before the corn\nslanting season arrives. The question\nIs very Imperative this year, because\nthere Is every Indication that a great\ndeal of the cribbed corn of last year's\ncrop, which furnishes the greater part\nof the seed corn planted, will not ger-\nminate tbia spring. The conditions\nduring the past winter have been Very\nunfavorable for the maintenance of\nvitality of seed corn; the late matur-\nity, the sappy condition at husking\ntime, with consequent Increased mois-\nture in the cribbed corn, bas made it\nmore susceptible to the past winter's\nfreezing and the result Is a very large\nper cent of corn low In vitality. Corn\nhusked early and stored carefully\nwhere It became thoroughly dry be-\nfore cold weather, Is not damaged and\nwill germinate vigorously, from the re-\nsults of a number of careful tes.ts\nmade our germinating laboratories.\nOn the other hand, samples taken\nfrom covered cribs this spring have\ngiven very low per cents of vitality. In\nsome cases only the root part of the\ngerm was killed; in others the root\ngerminated while the stalk was dead\nand in the majority of cases the ker-\nnels sent forth very slow- growi n- g\nweak sprouts. Frequently It has been\nfound that the kernels on one side of\nan ear would grow while on the other\nside they would not It Is very neces-\nsary therefore, for the farmers who\nare depending upon their cribbed corn\ntor seed, to make sure that their seed\nwhen planted will sprout at least 95\ntimes out of 100 in a very vigorous\nmanner. To make a test of the germin-\nating power of you? corn, take kernels\nfrom near the butt and tip, and middle\nof the ear from opposite sides as near-\nly aa possible.
2e7f50c71318210fcd9f19b3f7793769 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1913.5219177765093 39.623709 -77.41082 It is right, then, that following the in-\nstincts of faith and piety we should doze\nsuch an occasion as this to manifest out-\nwardly the reverence and love which we\nhave in our hearts for one who has labor-\ned so long and well in Christs vinyard.\n1 see here our Right Reverend Auxiliary\nBishop, the representative of the vener-\nated and venerable Cardinal Archbishop.\n1 see here brother priests coming from\nfar-olf fields of labor; 1 see here in good-\nly number members of the laity who knew\nand appreciated Father Tcagesserin oth-\ner fields of duty. It is fitting indeed that\nFather Tragessers ecclesiastical superi-\nors and his priestly brethren; and his old\nlime faithful friends among the laity,\nshould join you, parishioners of St. An-\nthonys, in honoring one whom you and\nthey have found worthy of honor.\nMay 1 be permitted to intrude my own\npersonality just a little at this moment?\nThere is not one here who knows your\nfriend and pastor well as I know him.\n1 knew him as a little child in St, John's\nschool in Baltimore, as an acolyte in St.\nJohns Sanctuary, as a student in St.\nCharles College and St. Mary's Semin-\nary. During his absence in France and\nCanada I lost sight of him for a while.\nLater, from the beginning of his priestly\nlabors in this archdiocese to the present\nhour, none knew him so well as 1. Some\nfruitful years of Father Tragessers\npriestly life he spent with meat St. Rauls\nin Baltimore, and 1 cun truly say that\nnever did priest labor more zealously,\nmore faithfully, more devotedly. He\ntruly made himself all things to all, that\nhe might gain all to Christ. The people\nof St. Pauls who are here today will\nhear me out when 1 say these things; and\n1 can say, moreover, that no associate\nhas ever shown a pastor more unselfish\ndevotion, more unswerving loyalty and\n1 have learned to know and appreciate\ndevotion and loyally.
2ea454989843dd0c4c87cd4078d7a548 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.4452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 The papers of New York State havi\nthe largest circulation, averaging 7,41!\neach iasue. Massachusetts Is second, will\n5,700 average; then comes the District o\nColumbia with 4,82fl. Nevada has tin\nsmallest average circulation, only 51(1\nwhile Florida averages 010, Arkansas (WC\nTexas 710, and Mississippi 75IV» Tho avor\nago circulation of all daily papers pub\nllshcd Is 2,717, of tho weeklies 1,508, am\nof tho monthlies 4,081. The averagi\nedition of all the papers printed is 1,842\nwhich multiplied by 0,4118, the entir\nnumber of oublicatlons, gives 11,858,701\nas tho number ol copies in which an ud\nvertlsement would appear II Inserted onci\nIn all. Tho same advertisement, If con\ntlnued one year, would bo printed tin\nenormous number ol 1,400,022,210 timet\nThe total number of publications prinU'i\nIn cntlro year In North Carolina wil\nBupply only lour copies to cacb Inhabit\nant, equivalent to one paper to every sou\noncc In three months. Mississippi, Floi\nhiu anil Arkansas tlo but llttlo butter, Air\nnlshlng S copies per year. Alabama\nMinnesota, South Carolina, Texas am\nWest Virginia all print less than enougl\nto give each Inhabitant a paper once u\nlivo weeks, while California gives 82 copie\nper year, exceeding every other State ei\ncept New York, which prints 113 copie\nper year for every soul within its borden\nAs New York papers circulate ever)\nwhere, while those of California do not g\nvery much ont of tho State. It Is evlilcii\nthat tho papers issued there have a bcttc\nlocal support than In any other Blato t\ntho American Union.
8b4db31c0725bc3ed8c72436cb41f9f2 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.560273940893 43.798358 -73.087921 io comenuea inai tney have an equal right\nwith males and that thev are enuillv in'\nterested in the result. If thev have' the\nright to confer office on others, I see not\nwhy they have not the right io hold the\nsame office themselves. They cannot of\ncourse confer on others that which thev\ndo not possess or which does not of right\nbelong to thja. Admit then the right,\nand we admit the claims of females to the\npastoraj office and also that cf deacon or\nin fact any office in the church. For my-\nself 1 have no personal interest in this\nsubject, but wish to try every thing by\nthe law and the testimony ;" if the gos-\npel furnishes us with the authority to ad-\nmit females to the pastoral office, or that\nof any other, or to elect persons to fill such\noffices, then let us know it and call them\nforthwith to exercise their I\nthink no one will pretend that Christ con-\nferred a commission to preach the gospel\non females; and certainly none can con-\nsistently take upon them this honor but\nsuch as are called of God, as yas Aaron,\nand when St. Paul speaks of the qualifi-\ncation of bishops and deacons he express-\nly con6nes himself, to males. Besides\nthis he distinctly opposes the idea of fe-\nmales being even suffered to speak in the\nchurch, and requires them to learn in si-\nlence with all subjection. Will any charge\nthe Apostle with denying that women\nwere persons, or of being afraid of their\ninfluence? Who does not perceive that\nhe evidently designed to assign to them\ntheir appropriate sphere in the economy\nof Providence. I trust none, who bear\nthe christian name would designedly\nabridge the rights of the female sex, but\nfeel it their privilege to give them the\nhonor due to the " weaker vessel."
0e4ffa36fc280983ccc4da112d1ca5ec THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.319178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 Early last spring I was severely afflicted with\ntorpidity of the kidneys end enlargement of the\nliver, and tho Kldoe/ disease came upoa me ao fait\nand suddenly that b?fore I was scarcely aware of\nthe cause of my trouble I became badly bloated,\nand my body and limb* very much swollen, 10 that\nIt waa with great difficulty and severe pain that I\nwu able to walk any. I becamedreadfully troubled\nby being thnrt breathed, ao that even a alight exer\ntlon or a little ezerciae would tire me almost to ex-\nhauatlon. and I wai ao distressed whan I retired\nnights that I could not al*ep, aud waa very rest¬\nless. One of my llmba e»podally bad a very revere\nnervoui pain, which always reamed to be more se-\nveroatnltht than at any other time, and would\nfrequently ache aoiharply aa to arouse mo from\naleep. 1 waa very nervoui anl uncomfortable all\nthe lime, ani Uluicdo-tored. and taking all\nkinds of mrdlcine for thle complaint and that and\nthe otber, but all to no <ood purpose until at about\nthe time when 1 wu tired out and aome what dia\ngutted, and almoit dlacouraged with medlciuea and\ndoctors, a relative and highly eataemed friend j-er-\n. uided me to try Hunt a tUrnedy. 1 began to uke\nIt a few daya ago, and am happily disappointed by\nthe wault, for before 1 had used a boltie of it I be-\ngan to feel relieved, and soon commenced to s'ecp\niplendidly; the aevero nervous pains in my limb\nwhich I had to handle ao tenderly do not appear\nany more, my headache and bickache bavedlaap\npeared. I feel well tvery way. and reat we'l at night.\nThe awslllng has diatppeired 'rom my body and\nllmba. I am now able to do my housework cjm*\nfortably and easily. Hunt'a Remedy has certainly\ndone wonderi for me.
0bd4fcafdc77af6ec678a24f957ef224 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.1246575025368 37.92448 -95.399981 Tho Inrgcst whisky bottling estab-\nlishment in the world is located in\nSouth Carolina, says tho New York\nHerald. There aro cxtcnslvo distil-\nleries and immenso bottling works\nscattered throughout tho country, ns\nmay bo noted by tho advertisements\non tho dead walls of tho city. But\ntho palmetto stato concern towers\nabove them all.\nIn tho 11 months of tho year 1000\ntho month of December not being\nconsidered in tho fiscal arrangement\n.tho commonwcnlth, in its capneity\nof barkeeper to nil Its citizens, dis-\nposed of $2,481 ,810 .28 worth of drink-\nables. This sum was in advance of\ntho entire preceding 12 months by\n$750,000. For tho cntlro year of 1000\nthe Increase has been $1,000 ,000 , sug-\ngesting a romnrknblo advance in tho\nthirst of the people of South Caro-\nlina. December wns naturally tho\nheaviest month of all tho sales\nnt tho various dispensaries scattered\nthroughout tho state. All tho coun-\ntry nnd his brother appeared to be in\nwnnt of a bottle during tho month\nof tho great holiday, nnd thus tho\nsales roso $250,000 in 31 days.\nSouth Carolina's experiment in\ndrink so'ilng has proved unuBunlly in-\nteresting. The system was put in\nprnctlco in 1894, nt which time tho\nBtato advanced $50,000 for "stock."\nThis $50,000 has long since been re-\nturned to tho trensury, and tho state,\nthe counties nnd tho cities have been\nmaking money ever since.\nOut of tho sales last yenr the profits\nto tho state wus $170,012 , and this\nwill bo used or the improvement of\ntho public schools. Tho remainder\nof the total profits of $474,178 Is to be\ndivided among tho towns nnd coun-\nties In whoso districts aro dispen\nsaries.
2c635d168abfc771e231981cc3b8d453 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.2397259956874 40.063962 -80.720915 by John W. y III and wlfo aud Oeorge llanl-\niiihii mill who 10 *1111111 «. Ainiliiur, uibiiuo tu mm\nwllli ilio lino or Mill Zlminor'a lot, aiutbUOk* west\nID |xi1qa lu tliu aoullt side of Webster itrool; thence\nwIUi tlio (Ids of Welater street anulh w° nut 18\npoles to the MUt nlJn of High atoeet: thence with\nthe uwt nttlouf lli||h atreot auuth 20* went 10 imloe\nto tho llublmrtl mail; thonco by Mill roml north 88°\nnut 17 iHilor, miiiIIi GO'i* Mil 28 |»)lcs; auUth 48k°\n«wt 8W |iilos; aouth wk* caat VA polo"} eoulll nl8\nuut %>!«; *011(11 KV,'mi0 polMj north ftp«ut\n15% |*)1oh; south iW>£° nut 12 pules; south 83k esat\n0 iiolcs to tliu lino of tho Hlngluton (reel; (hence\nwith said lino ninth 17%cmiU1 polos; north 87^'\noaat 81 point; north 46° west 08 polea to centraof\nWhittling Creak, ami thonco down the contra of\nmid creek aouth 70" went m ihiIwc aouth hv9 wuat\n32 polos; north 73° went 18 poles; north 60' wont 14\nliolea to tho beginning; on which la ereetod tho Iron\nwill and latabllilinionl known ia theCroseent Irou\nWork*, together with All and singular the buildings,\nfixtures, 'engines, machinery, roll*, lathes, tools,\nImplements and oqulpmonta pertaining, or In any\nwlao liolonging to the aaid Iron Works.\nAmi aim nil tho coal or other minerals aud\nmining privilege* of, or belonging to tliu\nmid potlr of tho Unit tart Inor under tho hill aoulh\nof Wlieullng Crock, wiled Uiapliuu'a 1(111, lielng\ntho ooel and othor minerals and prlvllegeaof milling\nthe rnino from tho tract horelnlwforu described.\nAnd sIno from n tract adjoining llm aamo and\nbounded a* follow*, lo-wll beginning al tliu
0b2f91136730a84fc87fa12cfbd97575 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1872.9275955967921 37.561813 -75.84108 The popular feature of a copiously illustrated\n"Christmas number" wfH he continued.\nTo possess such a valuable epitome of the art\nworld at a cost ao trifliue. will command the sub\nscriptions of thousands in every section of the\ncountry ; but, as the usefulness and attractions of\nif as jitatne can De euuanceu, m proportion to tne\nnumerical Increase of its supporters, the publishers\npropose to make "assurance doubly eure," by the\nollowiug unparalleled otter of\nPremium Chromoa for 1873.\nEvery subscriber to The A tdine. who pay in ad\nvance for the year 1873, will receive, without addi\ntional charge, a pair of beautiful ofl chromoa, after\nJ.J. HUL the eminent English painter. The pic\ntures, entitled "The Village Bells," and "Crossing\nthe Moor." are 14 x 10 indies are printed from IS\ndifferent plates, requiring 15 impressions and tints\nto perfect picture. The same chromoa are Bold\nfor $30 per pair, hi the stores. As it is the determi\nnation or its conductors to keep 1 he A taint out ot\nthe reach of competition in everr department, the\nchroaws will .be found correspondingly ahead of any\nTthat can he ottered by other periodicals. Every\nsulMcriher will receive a certificate over the signa-\nture of the publishers, guaranteeing that the\nchromoa delivered shall be equal to the sample\nfurnished the agent, or the money will be refunded.\nThe distrilmtiou ot pictures of this grade, free, to\nthe subscribers to a five dollar periodical, will mark\nan epoch in the history of Art ; and, considering\nthe unprecedented cheapness of the price for T hit\nAtdvnr. itself, the marvel falls little short of a mira-\ncle, even to those best scqnainted with the achieve-\nments of inventive genios-an -
1368376108d2f118e29e3ee3f0aaf6e7 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1892.7663934109999 37.92448 -95.399981 Kinley tariff proved to be a robust\nchild. It early began to walk and then\nto run, and before six months liad\npassed wrts in hot pursuit of the slan-\nderers of its helplessness. One by ono\nit has run them down and silenced for-\never their slanderous tongues. Now, a\ngiant warrior, it stalks abrontl. and no\nsooner does a McKinley tariff liar show\nhiuiself than he receives a rap over the\nhead which puts him to sleep for good.\nDuring the last month our Mckinley\ntariff warrior has wrought fearful de-\nstruction among his enemies. With the\ntin plate report of Treasury Agent Ayer\nand the senate report on prices and\nwages as war clubs, he laid about him\nright and left, cracking the skulls so to\nspeak, of the Millses, the Vests, the\nVances, the Springers, the Wellses, the\nCampbells, the Warners and the scores\nof others of his maligners. Then he\nsei7ed in one hand much, we suppose,\n Sampson seized the jaw bone of the\nass the report of Labor Commissioner\nPeck, with its proof of increased wages\ntnd product, and in the other the re-\nport of the superintendent of the bank\ndepartment of New York, with its re-\nmarkable showing of increased savings\namong the working people, and with\nthese two formidable weapons he is\nstill laying lustily about him as we go\nto press. More power to his arms and\nstrength to his heart, and may he never\nseek rest while a single McKinley\nprices, wagesor tin plate liar is abroad\nwith an unbroken sVculL In his weak-\nness they attacked him and showed not\nmercy, "with malice in their hearts\ntoward all the people. Will not tho\ncountry be well rid of the slanderous\ndemagogues? Now that the day of\nretribution has come, mercy is only\nanother name for treason: so press for-\nward, mighty warrior, and heed not tho\nguilty, te rror-s t ricke - n
01c8e91407c02a02e39dc99723d2873b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.1191780504819 40.063962 -80.720915 left off with an improvement of 10£\n12^c; lard 5@7^c, and ribs Mc.\nLight receipts and continued colt\nweather gave wheat a strong starl\nMay opened 3,£c higher at 73@73%c, cm\nas Liverpool quoting v&d advance, not\nwithstanding yesterday's decline 011 thl\nside was an unpleasant surprise for tra\nders who went home short last night\nthe price was bid up quickly to 7,"!rf\nChicago receipts were 77 cars, of v. hicl\nonly live graded were contract. Mir.\nneapolls and Duluth received .'111 car?\ncompared with fiO'J cars a week ago. Th\naggregate number of bushels receivei\nat western primary markets showed\nmarked falling off. amounting to onl;\n461,000 bushels. Atlantic port clear\na noes on the other hand were large\nequalling S1S.OOO bushels, and Brad\nstreets reported 5,870,000 bushels fron\nboth ccasts for the week. Crop damagi\nreports were numerous and this u-ndci\nto keep the feeling nervous, especiall;\nwhen another cold wave was said to b\n the way. The market was fairly ac\ntive, but the ranpe rather narrow, wit!\nMay hesitating around 7.'!fa7.11,4c nios\nof the day and closing: at 73@73«£c.\nCorn was very strong: and did mud\nto sustain wheat in times of depression\nThe increased amount of corn tha\nmust necessarily be consumed on ac\ncount of tin? severe cold was a strength\nening inliuence. Considerable Ion;\nproperty was accumulated by severs\ncommission houses. Under such buyinj\nthe market broadened and coniidence ii\ncorn was more openly talked of tha!\nfor some time. Receipts were 4SI cars\nMay opened Uc higher at :fi»*@.TP .iCan<\nadvanced to 'J7%c, the closing price.\nThere was an excellent demand fron\nthe outside in oats and the market wa\nvery broad. The cash demand wa\ngood and shorts covered freely. Th<\nadvance, however, brought about con\nsiderable realizing by profits by scalp\nors and a slight reaction took placc\nReceipts 20S cars. May began\nhigher at
1c404a3f6dc4f0a284d0b8fa813cac71 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1902.7383561326737 41.875555 -87.624421 At a conference Tuesday between the\nsuperintendent of schools and a score\nof principals who heretofore have had\ncharge of tho night schools, tho propos-\ned changes In the courses for tho pres-\nent year wero discussed. It was de-\ntermined to Introduce at least six new\ncourses. These will be household arts,\ntypewriting, stenography, bookkeep-\ning, commercial law and mechanical\ndrawing. Under this plan It Is believ-\ned the students that attend tho even-lu- g\nschools will have more hetiellt than\nfrom mere Instruction lu tho regular\nbranches of study.\nThe advisability of classifying tho\nnight school pupils was also discussed\nand a division of classes will bo made\nalong certain Hues. A committee of\nPrincipals Itosseter, Hitch and Arm-\nstrong was appointed to make an In-\nvestigation of the conditions and re-\n a plan to Superintendent Cooley\nfor classifying the students.\nA lentutlvo list of tho night schools\nhas been prepared by Superintendent\nCooley to bo submitted to the Hoard\nof IMucatlon for Its approval.\nTup Kaglo has tlmo nud again urged\nupon tho Hoard of Education tho adop-\ntion of such useful measures as the\nexpanding of tho scope of tho night\nschools, the maintenance of the kin-\ndergartens nud other projects of a sim-\nilar nature, and It Is now glad to no-\ntice that these Ideas aro being taken up.\nThat the plans referred to will bo\nfar reaching and beneficial to tho pub-\nlic, If carried Into execution, there can-\nnot bo any doubt, and the Hoard of\nKdiic.itlou which undertakes and car-\nries them Into execution will have tho\ngratitude of tho entire people.
1092a13d4a480119f59b9250ed935663 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.7547944888381 38.894955 -77.036646 vigor, vitality, or wide awake component parts.\nTwo boys playing in a barn in Detroit (onnd a\nrat in a tub of water, into which he had fallen while\nV trying to drink, and after poking him under several\nI timet", left the tub, when a new actor appeared\nB on the ftage in the person of an enormous old rat,\nI and a SsigaefonR one, for, after sundry frantic eflbrts\nI to reach down and claw the sufferer out, he fairly\nI ! turned fnil, and firmly Si tting his claws into\nB the board, extended his appendage down into the\nI water, thtis forming a means of escape, which the\nI rat in the water quickly availed himself of. Ho sot\nI his claws snd teeth into it, and held on like grim\nB death, while the old lellow started down the board\nB by which ho had a-cended the tub, and tugged like\nI a drsy horse, he brought his companion to\nI the top,- when the two scampered off, seemingly\nI highly pleased with the result of the experiment.\n1 Long Prayers..Not long boo a good PresbyI\nterjan preacher, who, lik«f Presbyterian preachers\nB generally disliked long prayers, went to a meeting\nI at which a Methodist minister was officiating. ITe\nB entered with his overcoat on, as the worshippers\nB were, about going on their knoes, knelt hard by the\nstove. Which happened to bo pretty hot. The\nI pnyor coratueaccd. The supplicant waxed warm,\nI ana so did our Pri»bylcrian friend by the stove.\nBThe prajcr wont on, end the perspiration\nrolled down the face of the Presbyterian gontlc\nlnaii, who, SI It nelly aiesc, deliberately drew off\nI his overcoat, und then went down on his aching\nImarrow bones again, raying itv a low but very deI\ntermiuid voir > as he did so to his long-winded\nI Methodist brother,
16c87ca28d69b469d204af7f3f42a58c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.932876680619 44.939157 -123.033121 plaint has been against tho Zelaya\ngovernment of Nicaragua which has\nkept Central America in constant\ntension or turmoil. The responses\nmado to the representations of Cen-\ntral American republics as due from\ntho United States on account of Its\nrelation to the Washington conven-\ntions have been at all times con-\nservative and have avoided, so far\nas posslblo, any semblance of inter-\nference, although It is very appar-\nent that the considerations of geo-\ngraphic proximity to tho canal zone\nand to the very substantial Ameri-\ncan interests in Central America\ngivb to tho United States a special\nposition in the zone of these repub-\nlics and the Caribbean sea.\n"I need not rehearse here tho pa-\ntient efforts of this government to\npromote peace and welfare among\nthe republics, efforts wnlch aro fully\nappreciated by tho majority of them\nwho are loyal to their true \nests. It would bo less unnecessary\nto rehearse here tho sad talo of un-\nspeakable barbarities and oppres-\nsions alleged to havo been com-\nmitted by tho Zelayan govornmont.\nRecently two Americans wore put to\ndeath by order of President Zelaya\nhimself. They wero the organized\nforce of n revolution which had con-\ntinued many woeks and was In con-\ntrol of about half of tho republic,\nand as such, according to the mod\n! orn enlightened praotlco of civilized\nnauons, mey wyro uuuuuu iu u\ndealt with as prisoners of war.\n"At tho date when this message\nIs printod this government has ter-\nminated diplomatic relations with\ntho former Nlcnragunn charge d'af\nfaires, and is lntondlng to take such\nsteps as will be found most consls\ntent with Its dignity, its duty 10\nAmorloan interaejs and Its mors I\nobligations to Central America and\nto civilization.
03f2415bb62e624cf5fbb9634c28cdac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.1246575025368 40.063962 -80.720915 when its independence is recognized\nby theUnited States. The fact thnt this\nenthusiasm exists not among the mass\nof the people but in spots, and that the\nnoisy champions of tho " cause" are, with\nfew exceptions, newspapers whose virtue\nis not above suspicion, gives somo color\nto the idea. It ought not to be supposed\nthat Senators of the United States could\nbe subject to such influences, even iudi-\nreetly or remotely; but enough is known\nto show that men do not cease to he hu.\nmuu when they become Senators, and\nthat their official acts on public questions\nmust not always Ihj attributed to a too'\nseverely virtuous statesmanship. There\nis a certain amount o( suspicion in the\npopular mind when Sherman brings Jbr-1\nward any new financial scheme, that it is\nsomehow remotely connected with Wall\nstreet; anil accordingly-when lio brings in\nhis recognition of Cuban belligerency, we\nmay not actually think of Cuban bonds,\nbut we look at the York quotations\nto see its influence on the gold market. If\nit was meant to intluence the gold market\nit seems to have failed; if it was meant to\noperate on the Cuban bond market, the\neffect cannot yet be ascertained. But\nwhatever it was meant to do. it is sua* not\nto pass either House of Congress without\nmanful resistance. j'resuicni urnni ami\nhis Cabinet who know better than all\nothers the precise Hiatus and magnitude\nof the Cuban revolt, «tul who understand\nthe effect on our relations with Spain that\nwould result from according belligerent\nrecognition to the insurgents, are earnestly\nopposed to this movement. Secretary\nFish thinks the passage of Mr. Sherman's\nresolution would simply result in a war\nwith Spain, as the recognition of an actual\nstate of war In Cuba by this government\npermits the Spanish government, under\nthe treaty of 1795, to make u search on\nthe high seas of all American vessels;\nwhich right they undoubtedly would
0bafa23a0e806ea8799e5b7ebb55e0de NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.9465753107559 41.681744 -72.788147 A slippery, ice covered surface,\nsteep slopes on the banked curves and\nan absence of skid chains spelled de-\nfeat for a number of truck drivers;\nand motorists who tried to manipulate\nthe trip between New Britain and\nHartford this morning on the Stanley\nQuarter road. The accidents, which\nresulted in the stalling of a score or\nso of trucks and automobiles, were\nnot fatal to any of the chauffeurs.\nA laundry truck, owned by the New\nEngland Laundry company, of Hart-\nford, was completely overturned and\nconsiderable damage done to the\nmachine when the driver attempted\nto round the curve near Ibell's cor-\nner. The small truck skidded to the\nside of the road, and striking the\ndirt bordering turned turtle.\nEspecially hard to maneuver was\nthe steep curve beyond Ibell's cor-\nner where the Corbin Motor car\nsign stands. For several hours this\nmorning a line of trucks and ma-\nchines, which had skidded into the\nfence on the lower bank of the curve,\ncame near tying up all traffiv over\nthe thoroughfare. An automobile, try-\ning to take the turn "on low" would\ngradually begin to slide down into\nthe . ditch despite all efforts of the\ndriver, and only by keeping two\nwheels, oh the narrow dirt border of\nthe highway was it possible to com-\nplete the turn.\nMany of the drivers caught on the\nturnpike, and with no prospect of get-\nting out until the ice thawed, sent in\nhurry calls for skid chains artd other\nmachines to help pull them ,out of\nrte. gutter, and until afternoon today\nrepairmen were kept busy answering\nthe signals of distress.
26c4ad914b5e6c13b4b4a17832897a58 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.2068492833587 40.063962 -80.720915 Wasiiinotok, 1). 0 .,; March 10..In Ike\ntonato this afternoon Mr. Cullom look tho\nlloor to speak upon the Kdmuads' rcsolu-\ntlona, but gave way to Mr. Morrill, who\n;ben addressed the Bennts upon tbeio roso-\nlUtlona. Ills remarks were very brief, and\n»hen he concluded Mr. Cullom took the\ntloor. Ho said tbe refusal of the Attorney\nUenernl io furnish the papera called for\nby tho Senate was a denial of the right of\nthe Senate to Inquire Into tbe manage-\nnont of a public oflloe. The Attorney\nGeneral waa an officer of the law j his du¬\nties were defined by law, audHf was\nlila duty to obey the laws whether 4t\noost him his olttce or not. Tho prominent\n(act waa that when either branch of Con¬\ngress had called for any Information It\niiad usually been furnished, that In\nmceptionln cases, In which ltbad not been,\ntho refusal waa not based on tho constitu¬\ntional prerogative of tbo President. When\nthe President suspended Raskin he did\nit under the tenure ef olllce aot, sr> the\ncase stood, that the President proposed to\nob»y the law In getting men out of\nofllce, but questioned its consti¬\ntutionality when ;the Senate under\nthat law said It had a right to inquire into\nbis act of suspension, and to do tliat Intel¬\nligently needed all tbe papera on file. The\nPresident used law in suspending men\nfrom ofllce, anil then In a volunteer men-\ntage intimated that tbe Senate was at¬\ntempting to interfere with his high and\nmighty prerogative as Chief Executive.\nVerily consistency waa not a Jewel con¬\nspicuously worn In thus* daya of Jotter-\nsonlan simplicity.
0d0f84f657e605bb065ec34192cf6eca THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1910.9575342148655 35.721269 -77.915539 and allow its luminous waves of ef-\nfulgence to ripple through and bright-\nen, with its streams of splendor\n(Selah) its columns once again. You\nnote we use the editorial prerogative\nof "we" as personality is so repug-\nnant? and so reprehensible, and so\ninimicable to the tastes and inclina-\ntions and custom of this venerated old\nscribe. And with the foregoing as a\npreamble, we announce that we visited\nseveral sections in Nash county re\ncently and were much impressed with\nthe marvelous developments and im-\nprovements that were so surprisingly\nand agreeably discernible on every\nhand, for where the briars and the\nweeds one grew in the dense wilder-\nness of neglected opportunities, we\nfound the luxuriant flowers of agri-\ncultural development and educational\nprogress growing in richest and\nsweetest fragrance, beautifying every\nscene with their tintings of bright\ncheer, and sweetening every breeze\nwith their odors of delight. The first\nsection we visited was the Tom Powell\nneighborhood, near Gold Rock, and on\nwhose fine farm we saw such eloquent\nevidences of intelligent agricultural\ncultivation, for in everything we saw\nthe ripened fruits of applied knowl-\nedge and scientific application. And\nby the WTay, Tom Powell is the finest\ntype of loftiest citizenship, for he is\nhonest, upright, incorruptible, and\ntruthful, and all these virtues are\nadorned with the sweetest Christian\ngraces. And in his cozy home we\nfound a shrine of comfort and delight,\nfor he has a most interesting family,\na most excellent wife with the finest\nattributes of womanly character, for\nin her gentle
28698974223a70598a8fc15eceef9dd1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5273972285643 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, July 10..The impeach-1\nment question, or rather the doings of\nthe Impeachment Committee, got iuto\ntbe House this afternoon, and come\nnear making a row. The Chairman,\nMr. Wilson, in obedieuce to instruc-\ntions by his associates, rose to a rjues-\ntion of privilege and said be was direct-\ni>d to state that tbe Committee had not;\nyet concluded their investigation, and\nwere not ready to report in full at tbe\npresent session, but would do so any\ntime after the middle of October.\nMr. Boutwell followed with a resolu¬\ntion proposing an adjournment from\nblank day, to the lGlh of October. Iu\ntbe course of a few remarks he said the\nimpeachment question had reached\nsuch a stage that it must soon be\nbrought before the House for a deci-\nsion, and he earnestly desired that Con-\ngress might meet at the time he had\nnamed to take the matter up and get it\ndisposed of before tbe time for the be¬\nginning of the regular December ses¬\nsion. He wanted a definite adjourn¬\nment. and would not agree to such a\nconditional adjournment as was made\nin April last, because be believed it'un-\ncoustiiutiounl.\nMr Spaldiug doubted if the majoritv\nof the House would agree to back\nin October to consider tbe impeachment\nquestion, and said he wanted, if it were\nallowable, to move to table Mr. Bout-\nwell's resolution.\nMr. I'iKe was opnosed to a conditional\nadjournment, and did not believe it\nbest to come here again in October, and\nwanted a definite adjournment to tbe\nsecond Monday in November.\nMr. Stevens was opposed to an Octo¬\nber session unless the impeachment re¬\nport was uiade now and sent to the\nprinters, *»o that it might be in the\nbauds of every member when tbe\nquestion comes up for discussion.\nMr. Boutwell said tbe debate in the\nHouse would probably occupy several\nweeks, and lie deeply felt the impor¬\ntance of coming here as early as the\niniudio of October, and thought the\nSenate ought to consent to do so.\nMr. Stevens repeated that he would\nnot adjourn to that date unless the re¬\nport and evidence were now submitted.\nHe thought the committee had made a\ngrave mistake in the manner of their\ninvestigation. They had l»een taking\nevidence for six months when tbe rea¬\nsons for tbe President's impeachment\nwere patent to everybody. He would,\nat tbe proper time, submit a resolution\ndirecting a report to be made next\nweek.
0d722df136185694f3b454a9aeface77 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.5778688208359 39.745947 -75.546589 toe means adopted, wonld bring disgrace\nand reproach upon the hitherto fair name\nof the state—never to be forgotten, b it\nto remain a blot and a stigma forever\nand forever upon her unsullied name.\n“It is a campaign from a national\nstandpoint wh<oh ealis for thought from\nevery thoughtful man and women from\none end of the land to tbe other—• cam­\npaign where friends of the government\nul onr fathers must stand together, ra-\ngardless of past political ties—where\npopulism, socialism, repudlstlan, bank­\nruptcy, disorder and dUsolntlou must\nfollow m tbe event of success upon the\none side, and where the fair name of tba\ngovernment—the honest payment of Its\n. debts, dollar for dollar In Bound money\n«quel to any money in tbe koown world,\nthe retaining of the best banking system\nknown to civilization, the proteotlon of\n and securing to the laboring man\nau honest dollar to bny an honest dollars\nworth of goods, or to pay him In honest\ndollars for bis days tot:, will be seenred\nfinally and forever.I trust, by the suooess\nof that party heeded by William Mo\n)£lnley of Ohio—and end, forever, and In\ntita death knell of Ttllmanism, Altgeld-\nIsm, DebLm, Coxeylsm, middle of-t .he-\nroadlsm and every other “ism” that now\ngtalss abroad in the land, seeking for\ngometblng to devour, under the mask of\nfree stiver, and all hoarded together\nseeking to nproot and destroy tbe ftbrlo\nupon wnich rests tbe independence de­\nclared by onr fathers aud the Constitu\nyian framed and ordained by them as onr\nguide for our fnture safety. We promise\n■»ott to stand with yon, and work with\nÿuti to* tha good of the state."
148342bbca79dadf54db1b208b47a13c IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.6434425913276 43.82915 -115.834394 Monday the Sheriff was informed\nby the mail carrier that a man gave\nhim a horse worth 135 or $40 to\nbring in from the Big Butte, a dis­\ntance of about twenty-two miles, and\nhe thought it strange.\nAbout 11 oclock, a short time after\nthe passenger train had left, Sheriff\nSmith was in the depot office when a\nman came in and enquired when the\npassenger train would leave again.\nFrom what he had heard of the theft\nof certain warrants at Hailey he im­\nmediately suspected this man, and\nconcluded to watch him. He went\nover to the bank. The Sheriff fol­\nlowed and saw him exchange about\n$800 in gold for bank bills. He left\nthe bank and started towards the de­\npot, when Sheriff Smith hailed him\nand asked him his name. He re­\nplied it was Clark. Sheriff Smith\nsaid: “ I think your name is Cooper,\nand that you are the man that stole\nthe county warrants at Hailey.”\nHe persisted he was not the man.\nThe sheriff took him to his and\nexamined him, finding $846 in money\nand $1534.50 in county warrants,\nan envelope addressed “Ed. Cooper,\nHailey,” and a small pass book with\n“Ed. Cooper” written on it. When\nthe book was taken out of his pocket,\nhe said: “I might as well own up; my\nwife wrote that.”\nHe then told the sheriff that he\nrode to Arco, then traded his horse,\nwhich had got tired out, for another,\ngetting $15 to boot, rode on to the\nBig Butte, and there gave his horse\nto the mail carrier to take him into\nBlackfoot, arriving there about 4\noclock Monday morning, and being\nvery tired went to bed and slept till\nafter the passenger train had left.\nImmediately after his arrival here\nin Hailey he was turned over to\nSheriff McPherson, and lodged in\njail, where no one has been allowed\nto interview him, except his attorney.\nThe warrants found on his person\nhave been compared with the list of\nthe numbers and amounts of those\ntaken from Griffiths safe and were\nfound to agree exactly.
0fd97be3a01a48b505892af9124d5c30 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.4561643518518 37.53119 -84.661888 drop the L J a few lines The last\ntime I wrote Ixas stehhiboatlng oni\nthe Cumberland but as tbe boating\nseason only lasts about half a year on\nthe Upper Cumberland I was soon out\nonly being on the boat four weeks I\nleajlOll\nexperljeoce\nFrellrbt1Alleot\ncarries with It more authority herd\nwork and responsibility then remuner ¬\nation However I am only here tem ¬\nporarily being an extra derk tilling\ntbe place of a young man just now coo ¬\nvalescing from spell of typhoid fever\nI may be here one two or three weeks\nyet or possibly longer I have already\nbeen here four weeks and will have\nlust gotten fairly started and on to\nthe work when I will here to surren ¬\nder my position end there aro no va\ncancles tbe various departments all\nhaving their full quota Had I been a\npermanent fixture hero would have\nhad to have begun ht the bottom\nwhich I would not mind to do at pro-\nmotion It lure In time If I could only\n to wait Board atone coats more\nthan the salary paid to a Ole clerk It\nIt work work work here work all\ntbe time I have worked from early\nmorn till a late hour at night and the\ngreater part of Sunday Yot tbo work-\ns Interesting and hat Itt facloatlon\nand I believe I would like railroading\nthe ofllco work of course I think II\nwill try to get In with tome other big\nroad permanently Dont know what\nI will do when I am relieved hero am\nterloutly thinking of going home and\nresting up a couple of months during\nthe heated season bellevu the change\nwill be both enjoyable and beneficial\nIf not remunerative though I can make\npin money writing for tbo metropoll\ntan dallies which I shall surely do\nRobert Kceney and Van Roy form ¬\nany of Mlddloburg have lucrative po\nsllloos with tho L A N at Montgom\nerr Ala Edgar Miller Is firing an\nocglne on the Lake Shore and Michi ¬\nJan Southern O R Jones It with tbo\nChicago and Hock Island
3bdcd9868da72d6d378dd93feac7fe42 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.6543715530763 40.807539 -91.112923 PRICES OF LABOR IN EUROPE.—A table [ tration. The following reasons we deem\nwas prepared not long since by the British sufficient to satisfy our former political\n>cretary of State, showing the wages ofj friends for the course we have adopted,\nday laborers m various countries. From ! We do not believe a pational debt a na-\nt S' it appears that in France, the rate of; tional blessing. We do not believe the\nwages !3 from 10 to 30 cents a day; Cor- j price of labor in this free country should\nsica 22 cents; in Germany from 9 to I4| be reduced to the standard prescribed by\ncents; in Hollanaand Belgium 10 to 40, despots in foreign countries. We do not\ncents: Trieste 24 cents; Lombardy 16 toj believe in an exclusive metallic currency,\n20 cents; Genoa 10 to 16 cents; Tuscany J 0r a standing army aa a safe protection in\n12 1 hose who advocate thereduc-j a republican government; but on the con-\ntion of the rates of labor in this country, (trary, that they will endanger the liberties\nstate that in those European countries the j of our country. We do not believe in a\nprices of all necessary articles of consump-i subtreasury, or in placing the sword and\ntion are proportionably low. Such argti- j purse in the hands of the executive, nor\nments always recall to our mind an anec-j that officers of the government should re-\ndote we once heard of an Irishman, who,| ceive all the gold and silver, and the peo»\non coming to America expected to find'pies paper.\neverj? thing cheap, and to get a great pricej We do believe Wm. Henry Harrisoa\nfor his labor. On asking a shopkeeper! to be an honest, enlightened statesman—\nI?1®? ofaome article he wished to pur-| having ui the various stations which he
0186f9c7806a3616ca66f373ab4df01e NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.4479451737698 40.735657 -74.172367 street to South Thirteenth street; east of the\ncentre line of South Thirteenth street, from\nEighteenth avenue to Sixteenth avenue; south\nof the centre line of Sixteenth avenue, from\nSouth Thirteenth street to 8outh Tenth street;\nwest of the centre line of South Tenth street,\nfrom Sixteenth avenue to Springfield avenue,\nshall constitute the Beventh Electloh District\nof the Thirteenth Ward.\nAll that part of the Thirteenth Ward lying\neast of the centre line of Sandford avenue,\nfrom the line of the Town of Irvington to\nSouth Orapge avenue; south of the centre line\nof South Orange avenue, from Sandford avenue\nto Sunset avenue; west of the centre line of\nSunset avenue, from South Orange avenue to\nValley street; west of the centre line of Valley\nstreet, from Sunset avenue to the line of the\nTown of Irvington; north of the line of the\nTown of Irvington, from Valley street to\nSandford avenue, shall constitute the Eighth\nElection District of the Thirteenth Ward.\nAll that part of the Ward lying\nnorth of the centre line of South Orange ave-\nnue, from Columbia avenue to the Hoe of the\nCity of East Orange: east and south of the\nline of the City of East Orange, from South\nOrange avenue to the former city line, said\nline being one hundred feet west from the\nwesterly line of Soutfl Twentieth street; west\nof the former city line, from the line of the\nCity of East Orange to South Orange avenue;\nsouth of the centre line of South Orange ave-\nnue, from the former city line to the line of\nthe Town of Irvington; north of the line of\nthe Town of Irvington, from South Orange\navenue to a line in continuation of the centre\nline of Columbia avenue; east of the line in\ncontinuation of the centre line of Columbia\navenue and the centre line of Columbia ave-\nnue, from the line of the Town of Irvington\nto South Orange avenue, shall constitute the\nNinth Election District of the Thirteenth\nWard.
61b1bdf00a64fe19a2ce804bff8a48d9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.360273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 lu September, 1871, the Polaris entered I\nwiuter quarters, and left August 12,1873. I\nThe ice was very heavy, and set in a t\nsouthern direction. She was forced south, c\nslid so continued drifting till Capt Tyson [\naud parly were driven from her. The e\nsledge party crossed Kauu's Polar Sea: (\nwhich they pronounced to bo a strait\nabout flttcen miles wide. There was an <\nappearance of open water to the north.\nThe rescued party sullered very much\nIrotn hunger and cold during their dreary \\\ndrift. For the last two months they ate x\nraw seal and polar bear as they tould get t\nit. When met by the Tigress they showed ii\nevident aigus ol their great sufferings, but a\nluring the nine days that they have been s\n>u board, they have improved vastly to\nand are now in fair health. The party is s\ni.i charge oi the United States consul and s\nwill arrive in St. Johns on Monday next. \\\nThe following statement is furnished by 1\nt'apt. O . Tyson. "On tho 21th of Au- d\ngust, 1971, we left Teslnask aod went t\nthrough Smith's Sound, wc succeded in i\ngetting as lar north as latitude 32, 10 I\nwhen we returned and wintered at Polaris s\nBay, latitude 81,38, longitude 01,44, we ii\nwere frozen up until the tilth of Septem- s\nUr. On the 10th of October Capt. Hall a\nstarted on a sledge journey north, and rc- li\nturned the 24th when ho was taken I\nsick aud died on tho Bill ol November, t\nlie was buried on the 11th. The attack t\nthat carried him oil was said to bo apo- }\nplexy. Wc passed the winter at Polaris t\nBty. On the8th of June, 1872 wo attempt- 1\nnl north with two boats, wo lauded our f\ntiter boat on shore and returned by over- t\nmil on tho 8th of July. Wo started for I\nhome on tho 12th ot August and on the c\nl'tli were beset with ico in latitude 80, i\nwe drilled from there down to latitude\n31 where wc encountered heavy south* 1\nwest gales, tho ship being under heavy\nt>reuuro. On the night ol tho 15th wc <\ncommenced landing provisions on the\nice the vessel being reported leaking very\ntally nt times, we continued lauding pro-\nvillous (or two or tbrco hours. When the\npressure ceased I went on board the ves-\nel and asked the sailing master if the ves-\n»el was making any raoro water than\nuiual, he reported that she was not, I\nthru went to tho pumps and ascertained\nwas not making uny tnoro thau she\n*as doing in the summer, I went on the\nagain aud shortly alter it began to\neraek, and a few minutes alter wards it\nbroke in many pieces. The Teasel broke\nl'"tu her fastdnings and was soo:i lost to\n"<tit in the darkness and storm. On\nHie broken ice were most of our
315887f36de349273f2217ff06cce2b4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.2609289301254 41.004121 -76.453816 upon n retrenchment of our expenses.\nwas dally annoyed by duns. 1 had\nborrowed money in every available\nquarter, and a wall: in the public streets\nwas literally denied to mo by tho fear\nof encountering some onn to whom I\nwas Indebted for my housu expenses.\nReturning homo lute ono night, JaUod\nby n listlets stroll through tho town, I\nfound tho junior member of tho Arm\nwaiting for me. Tho house had received\nintelligence, nfter business hours, of a\ntransaction eutcred Into on thciraccount\nwhich required tho immediate trans-\nmission to an isolated inland town of\nseveral thousand dollars, together with\ncertain papers and statements necessary\nto concludo tho affair. It wns too Im-\nportant an affair to bo intrusted to the\ndelay and uncertainty of tho mail at\ntho time. Upon a consultation of tlio\n I had been selected to perform ihn\nnecessary two days' journey. I accept-\ned tho mission with alacrity, for tho\nreason, among others, that It would bo\nsuch a recreation as would divert my\nthoughts for a timo from tho perplex-\nities of my miserable condition.\nWith tho usual foresight of tho firm,\neverything necessary to my prompt\ndeparturo had been prearranged. Tho\nneedful papers and accounts, and tho\nIndispensable money requisitoto finish\ntho transactions, wero placed in my\nhands in an envelope addressed to tho\ngentleman who had acted ns agent of\nthe concern lu tho matter. A letter of\ninstruction was likewise enclosed.\nI remember well tho bright Septem-\nber morning on which I started on\nhorseback and nlono on my jouruoy, of\nwhich I accomplished half tho first day,\narriving at a farm-h ous -
38956a9f9309088df8774755c8bbc491 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.9246575025368 39.745947 -75.546589 In the past Wilmingtonlans have lent a sympathetic\near to deserving appeals for aid. no matter from what\nquarter they have come,\nthis time, when a whole nation that has been crushed\nto the earth through no fault of Its own la crying for\nfood, there will be any holding back by the people\nof our city when the contribution of a few cents or a\nfew dollars, easily spared, will spell the difference\nbetween life and death to those Ill-starred Belgians\nwho have been stripped of their all by a military tyr­\nanny that has shocked the civilized world by Its all-\nconsuming and all-destroying ruthiessness.\nThe women who, as workers auxiliary to the Bel­\ngian Relief Committee, are making this ten-day cam­\npaign for funds, do not ask for much from anyone. Un­\nder their plan the Individual contribution will be\nsmall, but the aggregate will be large,\npeal is that each man, and child in our city\nshall give at least ten cents to support the work of\nsaving the starving Belgians. If the money be forth­\ncoming, the Wilmington women, in deference to buy-\nat-home sentiment, pledge themselves that every cent\nof It will be spent In Delaware, and that the food­\nstuffs. and not the money, will be sent to Belgium.\nSurely, no man. woman or child who professes to have\na heart pulsing with human sympathy can fall to rec­\nognize both the imperative necessity for and the rea­\nsonableness of the life-saving and comfort-bringing\nterprlse that these Wilmington women are foaterlng.\nTen cent«, given now. may save a human life,\nis a thought for all who are hesitating in the matter\nof making contributions to keep in mind. One dollar,\ngiven now. may save ten lives\nimportant and impressive t'.ought\nThink It over and let your answer be in dollars and\ncents!
06d8153a5df755ffa412d04eb57ae023 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.741095858701 41.681744 -72.788147 Dr. Brown, a member of the board,\nwho is at present reorganizing . the\nBridgeport health department, said\nthat this difficulty could be overcome.\nHe said that New Britain's best in-\nterests would lie in securing a highly\ntrained man from out of town, since\nno local doctor is prepared to handle\nthe job. Dr. Brown, who is familiar\nwith this work, said that such a man\ncould be secured at. the Harvard\nschool for public health doctors. There\nphysicians and others who wish to take\nup public health work take a special\napplied course and graduate with a\ndegree of public health doctor. Dr.\nBrown declared that a man with two\nyears' practice as a medical man and\nalso a graduate of this school could be\nsecured. He even offered to go with\nDr. Reeks to Harvard College and\nthere select a man for New Britain,\nand it is likely that the local health\nboard will see fit to adopt this sugges-\ntion, since it is now assured that Dr.\nReeks is to leave. Regarding the sal-\n paid the local superintendent of\nhealth, Dr. Brown said he felt sure\nthat a capable man could be secured\nfrom Harvard at this salary. He\nthought that such a man could be\nsecured to come here for a year or\ntwo at least to continue the present ef-\nficient health department organization\nand apply new theories and practice to\nthe department.\nThe members of the state board of\nhealth explained to Dr. Reeks that the\nnature of his new work is such that\nhe will be doing the state a greater\nservice than by staying in New Brit-\nain. However, they explained that\nwhile they did not feel that they could\nrelease him from his contract, never-\ntheless there were no chains on him\nand he could refuse to accept the po-\nsition if he saw fit. Such action, of\ncourse, would be impossible for a man\nof Dr. Reeks' integrity and honor, and\nsince he has previously kgreed to serve\nthe state he. will do so, now that he\nhas been assured that he cannot be ex-\ncused.
0945639d2a592345ea10b8986aef4b1f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1880.3866119902348 42.217817 -85.891125 did not thank God for what we have.\nWhere in the world will you find so\nmuch preaching of real gospel so\nmuch circulation of the Pible and sound\nreligious literature so much money\nand labor bestowed on efforts to do gotid\nso much care for life and property\nso much thought for the sick and the\npoor and the aiMicted so much liberty,\nand yet so much obedience to law\nso much outward morality so much\nfamily purity where, I ask any one\nlot iking at the map of the globe, w here\nwill you find so much as in our own\ncountry? Xo doubt there are plenty\nof abuses and defects among us. I\nneither deny, extenuate nor palliate\nthem. Put at any rate we have noth-\ning to compare with the Nihilism of\nIlussia, the Socialism Germany, the\nrestless, revolutionary spirit and Com-\nmunism of France, the brigandage and\nassassination of Italy, or the lazy, ig-\nnorant superstition and Sunday bull-\nfights of Spain.\nAndwhyisit? How isitthat hu-\nman nature in our little island is under\nst much restraint, and develops a less\namount of corruption than human na-\nture in other lands? I answer boldly\nthat one great cause of the difference\nis our English Sunday. Look at a Sun-\nday in London, with its 4,000,000 of in-\nhabitants. See how the immense ma-\njority of shops through miles and miles\nand miles of streets are shut up and\nbusiness suspended. See how postoflice,\nand banks, and exchanges, and law\ncourts, and theaters, and museums, and\npicture galleries are all closed. See\nw hat hundreds of churches and chapels\nand Sunday-schtHil- s
0a66390d608e1a19461e8ff79d28b6f3 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.7937158153713 44.939157 -123.033121 According to the morning paper in Portland those\nwomen on the Golden special did not come to Oregon to\ntell women how to vote but only to ask them to help those\nwho did not yet have the ballot. What they did tell them,\nhowever, was how to vote and whom to vote for, and that\nwas Candidate Hughes. If that was not what they came\nfor why did they do it, and why did the republican "cam\npaign committee" pay the expenses of the trip? The\nOregonian is simply telling what it knows is not so, and\nis deliberately doing so. Regardless of whether they are\nwealthy, or the train paid for by wealthy women, they\ncame here to tell the Oregon women, who by their own\nefforts achieved the ballot, how to vote to help them by\nvoting tor Mr. Hughes. A sense ot decency would have\nsuggested that instead of coming here to instruct, they\nwould have come to sit at the feet of the Oregon women\nvoters and learn from them how to win the ballot. In-\nstead, having failed in their own fight for suffrage, they\ncome clear across the continent to tell the women who\nmade a successful fight for the ballot what they should\ndo with it. It is the barefaced assumption of superority\nof eastern women that is galling to the sensible,\nsoild Oregon woman voter. It is the assumption that the\nwomen of Oregon did not know enough to vote without\ninstruction from these social and settlement workers,\nthat galls. Yet here in Oregon was the leader of the suf-\nfrage movement. A woman so far above these eastern\nvisitors mentally, as the sky is above the earth. A woman\nwho was battling for suffrage when some of these would\nbe advisers were in leading strings. And what could they\ntell our Oregon women, that they did not know? Could\nthey give any reason for the women of this state support-\ning Hughes as far as the suffrage movement was con-\ncerned other than that Mr. Hughes had repudiated his\nparty's platform and had announced that personally he\nwas for national suffrage? Was it necessary to travel\nclear across theconainent to deliver such a message? The\ntruth is the party was sent here to work for Hughes and\nnot for suffrage; and the members of that party are\ndeliberately trying to deceive the women voters of the\nstate when they make the assertion they are seeking help\nto get the suffrage for themselves. They are hired spell-\nbinders working for pay just like any other crowd of\npolitical word -m on ger - s,
0408a00e8cc11c3f413f9e5a0acd3a8b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.6424657217149 40.063962 -80.720915 commencing lit 10 o'clock a. m . the following do*\nscribe property, that Is to any: All that iurt of\nlota numbered niueatid tea in Chnpllne and fcofl'i\naddition to the illy of Wheeling, bounded and\nmore particularly dcaorltcdaa follows- Ueghmi&f\nat a polut and at thu centre of thu brick division\nwall un thu no.therly aide of Twcnty-tnlrd street\naud seventy-ono \\7ii feet eastwsnlly from the N. K .\ncorner of W a or and Twenty-third atreeta; tbeuce\nnorthwardly and parallel with said Watir street\n122 feet to thosoutherly aido of a ion foot alley way,\nand with thu said aldo of the wild ullevaay out¬\nwardly sixteen aud elght-twelfttia(108-12) bet jo\ntho lowmeml Hue, aud with bis lino southwardly\nand parallel with Water street seventy-two ami\nulno-iwclfthi (7i B-12) feet: thence outwardly and\nparallel withTweuty-thlrdstriotslxtO io t; \nsouthwardly aud parallel with Water atreet lortr-\nuluo and thioe-tweiftha Mil 8-121 feet mi the north¬\nerly lluo of Iwenty-third a root, and with the name\nweatwardly tweuty-two and clght-twel tin U28-1J)\nfoet to tho beginning, 'Jogether with all the ap-\npurteoauces un o tho said laud belonging or in\nant wlae.appcrUlulng.\nTERM Or 8ALhr-One-thIrd of tlifl pnrclia*\nmoney, or io much more as the putrheser msr\nelect to pay, csah lu hand ou the day f a»le, ai.'i\ntho residue thereof iu two equal Instalment", |wp\nable in one aud two years respectively from toi\nday of aaie, tlio purcha cr to glvo hit* noli * bearing\nInterest from the day of s ilo, TuUreit pavab.e ?end*\nannually, with good personal aeeurity for the de¬\nferred payments, and the legal title to be retained\nax further security.
11f88cae1b336150ea325d75034c0873 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.2991802962456 40.441694 -79.990086 The annual tea party at Trinity Ii. C\nChurch, corner of Center avenuo and-F ulto-\nstreet, commenced last night. It will\ncontinue this evening, the party always\nlasting two days. The party is given in the\nschool hall. The two rooms on the lower\nfloor aro used as supper rooms. There are\nlace curtains at the windows, relieved oy\nbright green lambrequins, which show up\nvery effectively under the chandeliers, and\nwax candles on the tables. The tables last\nnight were tastefully arranged, with a pro-\nfusion of flowers, si! ver and glass, all glow-\ning, glittering under tbe softened lights.\nAs usual, there were crowds at the tables,\nand tbe ladies in charge were kept busy Tor\ntwo hours in satisfying the require-\nments of the guests. They were equal to \ntask, however, and no one was sent away\nwithout being fully satisfied. It was de-\nclared by all who took supper that they had\nnever sat down to a better prepared or De-\nfter served meal. On the second floor tables\nfor the entertainment of the gentlemen are\nprovided with cards, etc. The dancing hall\nis on the third floor, whero arc also the\nlemonade and flower booths. All were well\npatronized last night, nnd the probabilities\nare that the ci owds will be much larger this\nevening, Judging from the expressed deter-\nmination or those present, to --come and\nmake all their friends come for the closing\nnight or the lair. Tho fair Is a decided\nfinancial success so lar. The proceeds will\nbe devoted to tho benefit of the school.
eae9851990234634d39a0ffe45472949 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.8510928645517 31.960991 -90.983994 crockery, which would not spoil by Be­\ning wet; but the upper part of the car­\ngo was bales of dry goods and linen, so\nthe captain was very anxious that they\nshould work the pumps before the water\ngot higher: the weather was very fine,\nfhe sea smooth, and the wind, although\nfair; was light, /fell, the seamen were\nterrified, and thought they were lost;\nthey asked for liquor; and refused to\nwork at the pumps; they said it was\nno use, the ship was doomed, /Fell\nthe captain he got very angry, he went\ndown info the cabin, loaded his double\nbarrelled gun, and swore that he would\nshoot (he first man through the head\nwho refused to wotk at the pump-.\nThe men knew that he was in earnest,\nfor he was a violent sort of fellow, and so\nthey set to. IVedidnt gain much upon\nher, I thought we did a little, but the\nmen said no. The captain declared\nthat we did gain considerably, but it\nwas supposed that he only said so to\nencourage the people, [fell the cap­\ntain ordered the mate to take up the\nhatches, that might see the state of\nthe cargo. This was done; the dry\ngoods, as far as we could make out,\nwere not injured, and the men pumped\nspell and spell until the evening, when\nthe captain gave thorn a good allow­\nance of grog, and an hour to rest them­\nselves. Jt was a beautiful moonlight\nnight, the sails were just asleep a»»d no\nmore: but the vessel was heavy, from\nthe water in her, and we dragged slow­\nly along. The captain, who had gone\ndown below with the first male, came\nup from the cabin, and said to the men,\nNow, my lads, well set to again, when\nsuddenly there was a loud, melancholy\nmiazu! which terrified us all. /Fe look­\ned from whence the sound appeared\nto come, and th« re cn the launch turn­\ned over amidship, we beheld the ghost\nof the black tom cat, so large, so black,\nwith the broad moonlight shining cn it:\nand so thin, it was the skeleton of the\ncat, only it looked as black as ever: its\nback Was humped up and its tail curv­\ned: and as it stood out in the broad
17641fc6e2670cb9ed4083ece1f269bd NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.146575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 Despite the fact that at least SO,.\n000 workmen will be engsged In\nthe construction of tho tunnel, it is\nestimated that it will take at least\nfive years to complete at a cost of\napproximately 1170,000,000. The\nEnglish terminus of tho tunnel will\nbe Pover and the French terminus\nbetween Calais and Boulogne near\na place called St Raphael. The un-\nderground passage will be about 40\nmiles in length, while the greater\npart of ths trasks will be sub-\nmerged about 45 yards under the\nbottom of the English Channel. The\npassengers will be taken to the sub-\nterranean stations by means of ele-\nvators, where they can board the\nelectrically driven trains and make\nthe distance between either term-\nini within 40 minutes, a saving of\nanywhere from six to eight hours.\nHundreds of engineers during the\npast years have studied the problem\nthoroughly and all agree that there\nare no great technical ibstacles to\novercome. The land under the chan-\nnel of a chalky composition\ntherefore giving little resistance to\nthe huge dredges. There remains\nhowever, one great material draw,\nback that of ending England's\ncomplete isolation by connecting\nher with the mainland. To overcome\nthis, the plan contains special means\nby which the tunnel could be com-\npletely inundated, or filled with\npoisonous gases within a short space\nof time, if there was reason to close\nthe passageway between the two\ncountries. In case of war between\nthe two countries, England could\nIsolate Itself anl become an "island"\nagain without much difficulty. This\nmeans of finding protection for\nEngland was material in winning\nthe assent of many leading English\npolitical men, who were heretofore\nvery much opposed to the project.\nUntil a few years ago the plan\nwas not thought of seriously. There\nwas talk of building not one, but\nfour tunnels. One of these was to be\nused entirely for motor vehicle traf\nfic, to enable business men, bankers,\ndiplomats and the like to
1d7a748de950c8478c21262f1fd75433 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.560273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 Cleveland, Canton A Southern llnei\nhave been acquired, nearly doubling thi\nmileage, and Dame Rumor has it tha\nthe Zaneavllle & Ohio River and Llttl<\nKanawha railroads may soon enter th<\nWheeling & Lake Erie fold. The In\ntelllgencer man learns on excellen\nauthority that one of the officials of thi\nLittle Kanawha company, who was li\nWheeling Friday night, said in conver\nsation with another railroad man tha\nhe expected soon to see the control o\nhi* road and its extensive rights o\nway and holdings of valuable coal landi\nin Interior West Virginia, togethe\nwith the Zanesvllle A Ohio River rail\nroad, to pass into the hands of th<\nsame eastern people who recently re\norganized and took the Wheeling 4\nLake Erie out of the receivers' hands\nand acquired for the latter the Cleve\nland. Canton & railroad, i\nglance at the map will show that thi\nCleveland. Canton A Southern (Cleve\nland to Zaneavllle); the Zaneavllle 4\nOhio River (Zaneavllle to the Ohio), ant\nthe Little Kanawha (Parkcrsburg t«\nInterior and mineral West Virginia)\nfrom a combination the p«»«slbllltl»s o\nwhich are enormous aa they are stud\nled, realised. If such a deal goe:\nthrough. It would not be unreaaonabli\nto predict a continuation of this nortl\nand south line further south, posslbl?\nto the South Atlantic or gulf seaboard\nCleveland hns no north and south 1Iq<\nso extensive at present, b«ing unllki\nCincinnati with Its Queen & Crescent\nChicago with Its Illinois ''entral, o\nLouisville with Its Loulsvllb* Ac Nash\nvllle. Pittsburgh nnd Wheeling, ai\nwell, would be Interested fully ns mticl\nas Cleveland in such a north and soijtl\nline through West Virginia. Nov
05d590e0f412e3a068942fb407af8ca6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 crisis was approaching. Under these cir- {|;\nimmstances tue downward course of prices \\v\nivn.s arrested and for a time higher ligures\nwere attained. During thu afternoon the tj\nmarket was irregular and unsettled, and y<\nfrequently swaying to aud fro between u,\nlirmness and depression until near the g,\nI'losc, when stocks became lirmer and ],\nprices recovered }-£ to 2*Kpercent fropj the K,\nlowest point of the afternoon. Through' \\\\\nout the day many liquidations occurred,\n;md considerable stock held as collateral Kt\nfor loans sold out as the market would take w\nthem. The market at the linal close was ,u\nictiv- with abetter feeling. The trunk tj,\nlines were strengthened by a rumor from c(\nChicago that the managers of the railroad\nlinf and of large vessels on the lakes have th\nliad a conference, at which they agreed to jr(\nsustain freight rotes,and will not be allowed c<\n drop below 'Joe per cwt. The banks aud\ntrust companies, which hold considerable ej\nipuuiUtiei of Northwestern common and hj\npreferred and Northwestern gold bonds, \\\nilso Hock Island aud Winona and St. Paul\nbonds, as security for loans to II. Kennedy gj\nIs; Co., have decided not to throw them on ..\nIhe market. James R. Keenc, a California n\ncapitalist, was a buyer of Hock Island to- P\nday to the extent of 10,000 shares, and\noilier prominent speculators were also _\npurchasers to a large extent. In the Stock |\nKxchange thcie seemed to be a genuine\ndetermination t" sustain this security at\nihout present prices. Western Union wns\nexceptionally strong throughout. The\ntransactions* aggregated 253,(XK) shares, of 1\nwhich S0,0<)0 Were Pacific Mail, IS,000 Western\nUnion, 16,000 Northwestern, 39,000\nHock Island, 19,000 St. Paul*, 3:?,000 Lake\nShore, i",00t) New York Central, 17,0001\n. mulligan * cnirai, 4V,uuu Delaware,
ae02ad5c4a49c9f885ebe736e40cf5ba THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.727397228564 40.618676 -80.577293 Why should trade unions in particular be concerned with the\nimportance of underwriting the efforts of America's aimed forces?\nIf we stop to ask the reason for buying bonds, it is the same as\nsaying, "What are we lighting for?" The answer is found in the\ndestruction of organized labor in every country which has fallen\nprey to the Axis military machine: Labor is fighting for its life.\nArguments are put forth every day through every possible\nchannel of communication urging the purchase of war bends as\na means of preventing inflation, and investing in the future of the\nUnited States. The irresistible logic of such appeals cannot be\ndenied, when they are coupled with the fact that the alternative\nto the voluntary purchase of an increased quota of war bonds is\nskyrocketing taxes and some form of forced savings. If bonds\nare not sold in ever-increasing amounts, the payroll savings plan\nwill give way to withholding tax that will make the present\nrevenue provisions seem trivial by comparison. If more bonds are\nnot bought because citizens fail to do their part, money will be\nobtained by compulsory means to pay the staggering cost of keep­\ning the largest military force in our history equipped and on the\nmarch. If labor unions fail in their participation in this program,\nor slacken the pace of their purchase of these bonds for freedom,\nthey will be selling the future of organized labor short.\nUnion reports of past and future purchases should be filed at\nheadquarters. This information is necessary so that the National\nBrotherhood of Operative Potters can proudly announce to the\nnation that pottery workers have not forgotten the last message\nof Samuel (tampers that "a union man carrying a card cannot be\na good citizen unless he upholds American institutions," and that\nthey are upholding our democra\nbuying of War Savings Bonds.
0d17275a23666a4765a1e10457817029 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.1191780504819 40.063962 -80.720915 that or a blackguard. Th\n[ouao, us appears from the state\nlents of several members, did no\narticipate la the disorder so generally\n3 it appeared to do, as quite a numbe\nho were shouting orilor were direct! ii|\njeir calls at the ones who were eu\njuraging J tut lor, and not Joining witt\nje legislative rowdies in creating gen\nral coufusion. The whole scene wai\nprung upon ev.ery one so suddenly am\nnexpeotedly last evening that no hur\nled accounts oonld do justice to it. J\nras worse than most reports made il\nnd in fact it would be mild to say tha\n:u Burns's rat pit had been transport\nJ to the area in front of the Speaker1\nesk, or had JSen Duller stripped him\nalf there" for a prize light, the scene o\njo language nsed would not of neces\nity have undergone much cbangt\nuch is the very general verdict, mad\np without regard to the merits of th\nuse and solely upon tho conduct oftli\nisorderiy ones.\nThis morning debato opened In ai\nrderly manner upon the merits ol th\nuestlons Involved. The sontiment las\night ran so strong againBt Butler's res\nlution, declaring the action of the Men\nte through its presiding oflicer,a gros\nlolation ol the privileges of the House\nmt he, to save himself, adroitly cbang\nil it to one much more in il\n;rnis, and of far milder character an\nis wnoie purpose auu ium ui uia «puj\ngists Las seemed to be throughout tb\nay to retreat behind Ibis modified res\nlulion, and attempt with It to cover u\nlie intended insult of tlie first one.\nThe debate was opened by Mr. She!\nibarger, who made a legal and coiiBtl\nHlonal argument, which was regard\n,1 us one of the strongest etlorts of hi\nareer. It was very severe upon But\nrand his co-rioters, and ns strong i\ns defense of the presiding officers c\niie two houses. Old Governor Tbomai\nf Maryland, startled the House l>y hi\nstation of a similar scene when thirty\nuree years ago he acted as teller t\nsunt the votes, and when, as he saic\nobn C. Calhoun answered then to tb\nliscliief-maker of yesterday. Judg\nWoodward argued that after the resc\nation had been passed in part by Bui\n»r's vote, both he and the Honse wer\nound by it, and Mr. Wade would bav\neen liable to censure had he give\nray to the Butlerites. Mr. Bingham\nI Ohio, followed in a speech wblc\n:>r telling effect be has never exeellec\n'he denunciation he hurled at Butle\n>r his revolutionary conduct am\nrords was terrible, and bis scathin\nBView of the insulting language usei\ny Butler toward the Senate equal 1;\no.
2089dbbd848c72b6d1666401465fdc8d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.223287639523 39.745947 -75.546589 I "Wo have to-day the same book of the\nj law. The hostile critics, who style them*\n! selves Biblical experts, are scrutinizing\nj every section of the old volume and mak-\ning a liberal use of the penknife and fire\nwherewith to eliminate those passages\nwhich do not comport with their pre-dc\ntermlned theories as to authorship, his­\ntoricity and trustworthiness. Meanwhile\nthe enemies of truth, the lovers of the\nworld and the whole mulUtude of the un­\ngodly stand by. looking on. Karnoatly they\n' Ion gto hear that the. Scriptures have been\nj discredited. The moral precepts of this\nI book they will not follow. But they would\nI be more comfortable In their sins could\n] they be assured that t lusse precepts were\nAnally found to bo untrustworthy.\n“But suppose all the Bibles could be\nburned? Would wicked men be any better\noff? The bare, bald facts of man's Intuitive\n! consciousness would remain, but these In-\nI tuitions would be robbed of the grateful\n! light which the revelations of Scripture\nthrow upon them. Man would still have an\nI Intuitive Idea of some InAnite power out-\nI side of himself. From design he \nI argue a designer. From the order he ob-\nI serves In the world lying all about him\nJ he would reason back to an arranger. Man\nwould still have a conscience wherewith\nto determine between the worse snd the\nbelter reason. Even where the Bible has\nnever been heard of men are conscious of\nhaving offended the Tower not themselves\nthat maketh for righteousness.' To dis­\ncharge their Intuitive obligations to this\npowerful Being they bend the knee and\nkindle Ares under their sacrlAclal altar».\nIf there were no Bibles men would still\nhave the Intuitive Idea of Immortality. The\nhuman soul Is Instinct with Immortality.\nThe Egyptians wrapped their dead loved\nones In byssus bands, cherishing the fond,\nhope that the deserted house of Aesh\nmight »gain be Inhabited. The Arabs\nburled the Rhlek's horse close by him\nthat In the happy land the master might\nnot be without hla faithful war steed.\nWithout the Bible these pagan people bava\ndreamed of immortality, but alas, they\nhave only cherished thé dream. We have\nthe light ef God's word upon the problem\nof the future life. Our hope of Immortal­\nity is not a dream but a reality.
1ff811ecb2e13bd489379a71c83f6ed1 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.0835616121258 37.92448 -95.399981 A man's hair begins to whiten, nnd,\nalthough ho may havo worn specta-\ncles bfore, now he asks tho optician\nforNo.14orNo.12orNo.10. When\nho gets n cough nnd is almost cured\nho hacks and clears his throat a good\nwhile afterward. O yo who aro In\ntho fifties, think of itl A half cen-\ntury of blessing to be thankful fot\nand n half century subtracted from\nnn existence which, in the most\nmarked eases of longevity, hardly\never reaches a whole century. By\nthis time you ought to be eminent for\npiety. You have been In so many bat-\ntles you ought to be n brnvo soldier.\nYou hnvo mnde so mnny voyages you\nought to bo a good sailor. So long\nprotected nnd blessed, you ought to\nhnvo a soul full of doxology. In\nBible times In Canaan every 50 yenrs\nwns by God's commnnd n of\njubilee. The people did not work that\nyenr. If property hnd by misfortune\ngone out of one's possession, on tho\nfiftieth yenr It came back to him. If\nhe had fooled it awny, it was re-\nturned without n farthing to pay. If\na man had been enslnvcd, he wns in\nthat year emancipated. A trumpet\nwns sounded loud mid clear nnd long,\nnnd It wns the trumpet of jubilee.\nThey shook hands, they Inughed, they\ncongratulated. What n time it was,\nthnt fiftieth yenrl And if under the\nold dispensation it wns such a glnd\ntime, under our new nnd more glo\nrious dispensation let nil who havo\ncome to the fifties hear the trumpet\nof jubilee thnt I now blow. Thnt wns\nthe allusion made by Mr. Toplady, tho\ngreat hymnologlst, when he wrote:\n"Illow yo the trumpet, blow\nThe Kindly solemn sound;
19b1c9b59133c2963ded289c7265ad00 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1898.7630136669204 39.623709 -77.41082 This magnificently illustrated, rkhiv filled,\nand scholarly volume gives a complete and\nauthentic, history of the Spanish American\nWar from its lieginning to its close. Its\naultinrsnre three widely known men, Hon\nHenry B Russell, the distinguished historian;\nHon. Redfleld Proctor, Senator from Ver-\nmont and cx secretary of War, and Hon. J.\nM. Thurston, Senator from Nebraska.\nThe subject naturally divides itself into\ntwo parts; first, how we got into the war\nwith Spain; and second, how we got out of\nit and with w hat results. This volume tells\nthe whoc story, makes dear all the causes\nof action that led up to and culminated in\nthe conflict, gives pen pictures of those who\nfigured in it, and relates many exciting inci-\ndents, bravo deeds and Ihiiliing adventures\nconnected with the struggle. The mutler-\nings nt the distant war cloud, the indigna-\ntion and upi islng of the people, North\nand South, when Ilie veterans of the Blue\nand ilie veterans of the Gray took their\nplaces side by side behind the same flag, the\ndeparture of fleets ot powerful modern war\nships, the march ot hostile armies, the strife\nand carnage of battle on land and sea, the\ndeeds of valor and heroic sufferings of our\ngallant soldiers and sailors iu field and hos-\npital,all are portrayed with consummate skill\nEvery event is placed in chronological\norder, and the fullest and most authoritative\nstatistics arc given. As might be expected\nfrom the high positions filled by its distin-\nguished authors; the war and navy depart\nmeats and other branches of the Government\nextended every possible aid to make this\nvolume not only a Standard and Official\nhistory of the war, but the most complete,\nwell rounded and elaborate record of the\nstruggle that will probably cter be written.
163b3a7541597d7ccf8722f3300e81a3 THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.760273940893 37.083389 -88.600048 vavea In say given aorta Ucr op\nTiwUMy la nine the dinereae IU\nrarely If ever enough even to Manta to\naocoiat for the daeaiathat sue tar ¬\nticular wave among lbw csiaj harm\ntar out often does Omtera on the\nbridge of the Teutonic deaplU1 the\nsharp witch ahead whleh tk y were\ndoubtless keeping taw no notable as\nrelation of water arprnacMnctbssi\nand the reason they did pct wM that\nthere was none to rte atiya the Nx\nYork Times What they did notice\nwas a lively sea with the usual tart\nitioiia In the distance between tat ele\nrations and depresloni Thou the\nvessels stem chanced to strike cent\nthe largo waves lust at the la\ntint when the item chanced to oe\nraised by pother larger wave and as\na natural consequence a lot of water\ncame aboard Dot It didnt rush aft\nas mot of the accounts say The water\nconprlting wave has no horizontal\nmotion though the form of the wave\nhat oust what rushing alt there\nwai beyond the not very fierce in ¬\nclination of the shipped sea to find its\nlevel on the decks was altojether due\nto the rushing forward of the steamer\nThe Teutonics speed In ordinary\nweather averages somewhere la the\nneighborhood of eighteen knots and\nwith a vessel moving at that rate a\nlarge mass of water though dropped\nstraight downward on her forward\ntenon reaches the stern or some In\ntermedlate obstruction In a very min ¬\nute period The mjilja IIs In most\npart only apparent hot the elTecU are\nthe same as though tke water moved\nInstead of the ship end the coast ¬\nquences Mr piwenser + d deck Iliac ¬\nturn while often serioui are not In\nthe slightest degree mysterious dlant\nwanA like tidall ward are only\nencountered by vessel Iven rtdly\n5005peg
0c94f829c8d4976529280ef072c68915 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.2589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 Agriculture, like all other of the arts\naud scienccs, has seen wonderful advancet\nwithin the last century in the line of toolr.\nImproved machines and mechanical de¬\nvices of many kinds have greatly reduced\nthe farmer's manual labor, and made an\nimmense increase in the power of produc-\nlug with a given amount of labor. The\nuiuwiug machine has almost supplanteu\nthe scythe, aud the lUil is fast becoming\nan investing relic. Yet, ae late as 1830,\niu some pantiles ul Euglaud, the laborer.\nwent about destroying every horse power\nthreshing machine they could And. Little\nprejudice now remains against labor-sav.\ning farm machinery, and the farmer it\nthought behind the limes if he mows with\na scythe or threshes with a flail. The\nmodel farmer now mows, spreads and\n<u*ea tils hay with the mower, tedder and\nuorse-rake, auu then lifts It irom the hav\nlack to burn lolt with n horse fork. Hi\nplows, in the West at least, with a sulk} |i\nplow; then uses a harrow, cultivator ahu\npulverizer all in one, ami sows his seedt\nwith n mechanical seed sower. When\nmanuring time comes in fall or spring, he 11\ncan use a luauuro spreader If he wishes.\nWheel hoes save thu farmer's back ol\nstlichee, or a horse hoe can ho used.\nOne ol the devices that id now no longer\nthought a luxury is the windmill. Any\none who rides through New. Jiugland with\nins eyes open kuons how mauy of these\nare in use. borne are utilized lor cutting\nwood, hay aud roots, anil for uthei\nmechanical purposes, but they are as one\niu it hundred to these used lor pumping I\nwater, there is almost>no limit to the\nueigbt which water.can bo raised by the\nwindmill, and It needinot be put directly\nover tne well; in tact it may be many feel\naway, provided the vertical distance be\nnot great. Old I'robs says,and experience\nproves, that hercaoouts the wind blows\nabout one-third the time, so the tank used\nlor storage must hold at least tnree times\nas much as the amount reijuired in any\nono day. Thus water cau be stored to\nsupply the house, barn or Holds, and the\nfarmer can be almost independent of rain.\n1'he smallest mill put up, with fair winds,\nwill store irom '250 to 400 gallons ot water\nan hour. Such mills as farmers ordinari¬\nly use cost Irom $lifo to $400, and the pur¬\nchaser can, If he wishes, easily erect them\nhimself.
0595e756027a9cb4d2bc42d0d8152c7a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.7301369545917 40.063962 -80.720915 Granting tlmt lite Is worth saving.con¬\ncerning which, as to aomo liven there may\nuo A difference of opinion.Mr. Edward\nOhadwick, the eminent English sanitar¬\nian, made very impressive calculations in\nthejeourse ol his remarks at the annual\ndinner of the association of publio sanitary\niiiBpoctcra in London a short time since.\nTaking £2,(XX),0U0, tbo cost of one big ship\nofjwar, as the basin of his estimate, and\nthe cost of bringing a constant wator sup.\nply to the door of tho internal dlslrlbu-\ntory apparatus, Including the water closet\nand kitchen aink and the soil-cleaning\nhouso drains, and for self-cleaning sewers,\nat the actual tixures at which such work\nhad been, he went on to itaw that the\nexpenditure of £2,000,000 at 6 percent, the\nwisi of the big ship, would be equal\nto tbo sanitation .of 00,000 houses, or, at\nfive inhabitant* per bouse (thnsubniban\naverage;, it woulu serve lur 33'l 333 \n. ante, bupposo the expenditure effected\na reduction of the death-rate by only live\nper 1,000 (and on the average of the towns\nwhere this work has been done ft Is nine\nper 1,000), the saving ol life would be\n1,000 per annum. Hut to oacli case of\ndeath there aro at tbo least twenty cases\nof bed-lying sickness of adults, so that\nthere would be a total annual saving of at\nleast 33 330 cases of sickners for each big\nship. For the decade the eavllig would\nbe of 10,007 lives and 333,333 vases of sick¬\nness. And it is noted that this accumu¬\nlation of civil life and forco and economy\ngoes on from the deterioration of the ap¬\npliances of war and tbo progress of inven¬\ntions. It costs much more to kill a man\niu wer than it would be to save Ills life and\nmake it decent and cleanly in peace,
1b85bd094f3e88c80fbc0b6f05707af2 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.7219177765094 39.745947 -75.546589 Mrs. Margaret, the wife of William\nForreat, who was bnried yesterday\nafternoon, was born in 1815 in County\nTyrone, Ireland, and came to this\nccuutry in 1832. Shortly after her\narrival she came to this city, and was\nmarried to William Forrest in 1835.\nHer health has been failing for several\nyears, and during the past eight years\nshe spent the summers at Atlantic City.\nAlthough she was quite weak aud de«\nbilitated she insisted on taking her\nusual trip this past summer, and was\nbrought home quite ill only two weeks\nbefore her death. At that time her\nstrength had failed so greatly that she\nwas unable to walk, and had to be\ntaken in a carriage, or carried, from\nibe cars to the ferryboat in making the\ntransfers between Atlantic City and\nWilmington, and af.er reaching her\nheme continued to sink until her death\nlast Friday morr.ing, She was the\nmother of twelve children, eight of\nwhom are living, and her descendants\nreach down to tbe third generation, as\nthere are fifty grandchildren aud four\ngreat grandchildren.\nThe funeral took place yesterday af­\nternoon from the residence of her hus-\nbaud, No 712 Buttonwood street, and\n one of tbe largdst that ever took\nplace in tbe eastern p rt of the city,\nthere being about 2,000 persons in at­\ntendance The head of the procession\nhad entered the Old Swedes Church\nbefore the last of the friends had left the\nhouse. The remains were encased in a\nhandsome and costly oaaket, and the\nservices in the church were conducted\nby the rector, Rev. Jesie Higgins, as\n► iated by the Revs. Charles E. Murray,\nCharles Breck and ----- Brown, of\nMaryland. At tbe close of the servi­\nces, which were of the most impressive\nnature, the remains were laid to rest in\ntbe family lot In the oemetery adjoin­\ning the church. The entire funeral\nand all the arrangement! were in\ncharge of Joxdan A. Wilson, funeral\ndirector, and although there were so\nmany persons present there was not the\nslightest confusion or crowding. A\nnumber of the immediate relatives re\nturned to the house after the iuter-\nuieut, and eighty, all of whom are de\nHcendantsof Mr. and Mrs. Forrest, sat\ndown to supper. Mr. Forrest, who is\nseveral years older than his wife, Is\nalmost prostrated with this tad and\nsevere bereavement.
3362b2baa9c3bdabaeeaf3429ffdd85a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2753424340435 40.063962 -80.720915 bush; exports 10,000bush; uiuradeo'VaSic; No. 3\nA3a No. 2, K'XiiXi*! for new. KIKhKSq for old; No. 2\nwhitfOic; No.2 May 8iaSI%c;closing atSlkc; June\n8(^sa3lj4c. closing at bljhc; July eloain<;\nat Ktkc; Aukjc, 8laHtXc,clo:l»natKlkc. Oata\nunsettled and liulc lower; recolpta HM.lOo bnshela;\nexport 57.000 bushels; western mixed ftfuiUk;; whlto *\nw« «tern :.y.i61>ij*. Hay In Rood demand at fiT»a70c.\nColfcetii'iel and uuchiuiKed. Mi^ar linn and fairly\nactive fair \\o good refiuirg 77-if>a7^. MoIiusm-b\nquiet Hud linn. Hire llrnicr and iu eood demand.\nPetroleum unlet, but ltrm? iT«.it..«r nn/«.\nCtoi7He: rutfiicil 7%c. Tallow il> nr. pitme city\nRosin quiet and linn ut S242)£a2 W. Turpentine\n&V. F(?k*. western fresh dull mid lower ut 17c.\nl'urk higher; now mess $17 tv^ul7 7>. lkuf, quiet\nMini lit in. Cut meats quiet mid stronger, loiijf\ne'ear 8k 25; fhort clear ill) 02%al0 05. Lnrd stionu;\nprime steam 811 50. Hotter (lull anil drooping ut\nba^Jc. Cheese quiet, but steady at Sali&c*\ncit'.cano, April 10.- Flour quiet and i,eartv; common\nto choice weste .i spring fi 60ad29; crouton to\nflinty Minnesota S5 tool Ui; imtcntH fi 75a» 25; (nir\nto choice winter wheat* to UU7 CO; low uindet\n$4 7f»u 50. Wheat unsettled but generally higher;\nNo. ' 2 Chicago spring 81 S# cash Hud April: 81 \nill 'JO May; fc) 2!ul 'J4% June; ll 21 Xlrf,\nJuly; (1 0-ul 0-sJi August: «l 02J4 year, No. a, 51 uwv\n110%. Corn unsettled but generally higher and\nactive at <sy&i72{,'c cash; t.ukc April; «4c May:\n72a72,»e June; 72" ;e July: 5Ca50|4c year, reject d\n7le. oats generally unchanged but wma «Ue*\nhigher at 46fcc e»h mid April; 4fc&c Way; 480\nJune; 41July; COWe Augnat; JttKc year.\nRye easier ut «.e. lfarivy steady at Si 06.\nFlaxseed, steady und In fair demand; damaged\nSt merchantable Si 36; fine Russia sewing\nseed SI Ct. Butter steady and in fair demand;\ncreamery «!a:We; dairy, fair to Hue, aua3Sc. E«g« de-\nmuwi :<ihh and tending upward ut K'kl.'t^c. I'ork\niniHlerutely active and higher at Sl7ft<ai7 CO cath\nand April; 117 60ai7«2K May; 117 b0al7 82K June;\nSlHto Julv. Lard fairly active und a shade higher at\n511 17'iatl -JO cash and April; 811 22}$all 25 May;\nJil B'Uall 10 June; ill 50aU WJ; Juiy: Si 1 to!#*\nU 05 August. hulk incuts moderately active and\nhigher; shoulders 87 CO; short rib 8101U; abort dear\nBio 35 Whisky steady and unchanged at SI 10.\nt'all.Wheatai .lve, tlrtn and h'gl cr; 61 8-!)i April:\nI\\'XV» May; 91 25->f June; SI 21>< July; llUtJf.'\nyear. Corn iiresular,
15d7a9942ff1a4942fa83469c0162fe0 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1888.5887977825846 41.004121 -76.453816 a une not exceeding threo hundred dol-\nlars and undergo a period of imprison\nment not exceeding tnroo months.\nSection 4. If any person not quali.\nfied to vote at a goncral election, shall\nvote nt a nominating election held by\nany political party, or if nnv person\nshall procure, advise or induce Buoh\ndisqualified person to so vote, or if nny\nperson snail vote at moro than ono\nelection district, or otherwise voto moro\nthan onco on tho samo day for tho\nnomination of a oaudidate, or shall\nfraudulently voto moro than ono ticket\nfor tho same candidate at tho same\ntime, or if ony person shall udvioo or\nprocure another so to do, he or thoy\nshall bo guilty of a misdemeanor, and\non conviction Bhall bo fined not ex-\nceeding sura of two hundred dol-\nlars and imprisoned for a terra of time\nnot exceeding threo months.\nSection 5. In all oases where a nor.\nson is elected or chosen or shall act as\na dolegato to n convention to mako\nnominations for offices, and shall ro\ncelve, acocpt or solicit nnv bribe in\nmoney, goods or thing of value, or any\noflico or position as an inducement to\nmake or join in any nomination for\nany person to bo voted for ns an ofll\ncor or candidate for ollice. or shall, in\nlike manner and for like reason, niree\nto abstain from voting for any partic-\nular person, Bhall bo guilty of a mis-\ndemeanor, and on conviction shall bo\nsentenoid to pay a fine of not moro\nthan one hundred dollars and be
1492313eb76b65250d2d2a0e9eefe2af NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.7876712011669 40.735657 -74.172367 Great applause was aroused by his\ncondemnation of the Aldrich-l ayne\ntariff, which was doing a great deal to\nmake the high cost of living possible at\nthe present time. He made a discrim-\nination between a protective tariff and\nthe operation of a protective taritf.\nclaiming that the. present tariff, which\nhad been repudiated by the larger part\nof the Republican party, was framed in\ntlie interest of certain manufacturers,\nanti they were boing afforded illegiti-\nmate protection by the leaders of the\nRepublican party. Payne he described\nas an ancient line patriot, while Aldrich\nrepresents an immemorial line of poli-\nticians. These leaders of the stand-pat\nclass in Congress had betrayed the Re-\npublican party and the nation, he de-\nclared. and they could not stand against\nthe rising tide of indignation which was\ncoming in on them from all directions.\nHe decried the typical political ha-\n which was calculated to inflame\nparty passions and appeal to party\nfetishes, and stated that the people are\nInterested in this question of the tariff,\nand he imagined there vvould be a num-\nber of changes in the congressional\ndelegation from this State noxt month\nto register the dissatisfaction of the\nvoters who have been betrayed.\nLaughter greeted bis statement that,\nthe State issues hardly needed discus-\nsion, as tlie people had been fully in-\nformed what tho things were that the\nbody of citizens in this State wont.\nMr. Lewis had been formulating a per-\nsonal platform during the last week,\nadding plank after plank to it, until he\nstood for all the things, personally, that\nthe Democratic platform guaranteed,\nand it was no longer a difference be-\ntween the candidates, but it was a\nquestion which of the two parties could\nbe trusted to perform their promises.
02c9f1e3ea9885b94030ba472ea837c6 THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1905.97397257103 39.739154 -104.984703 step. The varigated flowers, the splen\ndor of the bright lights together with\nthe guests in their delicate and ex-\npensive costumes forming a half circle\nwith the bridal party, Rev. Ford in\nthe center, made a spectacle wonder-\nful to liehold. Scarcely, at any time\nbefore, has there been assembled such\na representative gathering of Denver's\nbest business and professional men\nand women of old cifzens and new\ncomers to honor such a rare occasion.\nWhen Rev. Ford pronounced the hap-\npy couple man and wife, a silent yet\nperceptive snide seemed do dance up-\non the face of Mrs. Heuston as if to\nconceal her gladness, while nowand\nth-n the broad smile of Mr. Heuston\nbetrayed his efforts to suppress bis\njoy. For at that moment the long\n of the guests was broken by\ncongratulations. Then Mr. Johnson\nof Baltimore, gave the kind of gleeful\nmusic that made appear as if the wed-\nding bells were ringing in the whole\nof D-nrer, while the refreshments\nwere being served with such regulari\nty and smoothness that the hospitali-\nty of Mr. and Mrs. Fisher, and the\ncongeniality of the guests marked an\nadditionalfeature to this affair Rice\nand old shoes together with other\ngood luck eiub'ems were much in evi-\ndence as the party began to depart.\nThus ended Hymens ceremony. The\nStatesman extends its heartiest con-\ngratulations to the delighted couple\nas they ride ovar lifes uneven jour\nuey. Let clouds come and let clouds\ngo, but let sunshine be ever present\ni i the home.
0865377d2e218224d01d40efa0038130 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1894.3356164066463 46.601557 -120.510842 "Come here, leopard."\nWithout fnrtber hesitation, and with\nthe corners of his eye* fixed upon the up-\nlifted whip, tbat brute actually came to\nme and curled himself up at my feet.\nThe whole thing struck meM so absolute-\nly ridiculous that I felt no more fear of\nhim than I did of the two German blood-\nbounJs who were prancing about the\ncage. Keeping my whip extended over\nhis head, I slowly knelt down beside the\nleopard, patted bim on his head and then\nsmoothed bis beautiful spotted fur.\nTbe novelty of this situation and my\nflatterir.g success m an animal charmer\nhad by tbis time made me absolutely for-\ngetful of all fear. Iwm lost in wonder at\nfinding myself on such familiar term*\nwith the beautiful creature at my side,\nand I should probably in another moment\n hugged that leopard, had not Pro-\nfessor Stalder shouted tlie word of com-\nmand, which wm unintelligible to me,\nbut which to the animals mesnt thst tba\nfinal grand closing spectacular act of the\nperformace wm to take place.\nAt this word, which I have now forgot-\nten, every animal leaped forward, rushed\nto tbe big pyramid in the center of the\ncage and took his position. Not knowing\nwhat else to do, I followed on, and in\npassing Big George, tbe lion, I ran my\nfingers through his shaggy mane, took\none of hia paws which was on the floor of\ntbe csge and lifted it up to the pedestal\nwhere It belonged. I tapped him gently\non the noM with my whip, stepped out to\nthe front of the cage, bowed to the audi-\nence, and tbe performance wm over.
193eb164a091effdf22d8bf39925a89c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.8945205162354 40.063962 -80.720915 was abolished by act of Congress.\nMany persons suppose that the famil]\nol brothers known as tho "Fighting Mc\nCooks," were also natives of New Lisbon\naula, uunCTVl, IS UUb lUU iBUfc. lUL'UI\nmilitary brothers who, with their father\nMajor Daniel McCook, a brother ol lb\ntwu doctors bp [ore spoken of, figured e\nprominently in the iato war, were bori\nand raised in Carrollton, the county sea\nof Carroll county, adjoining this count\n(Columbians) on the southwest. The bi<\nlory ol this lamily is too well known t\nneed any repetition here. BnflicoUto\nnay that the last tragic chapter in the put\nlie family history was the murder, torn\neighteen months or two yean ago, ol Be\nwin, theyoungtst son, at Yankton, Da\nkola, while holding some official poeitio\nla that Territory. lie was cousin to th\nGovernor ot Colorado before mentlonei\nThis was also, 1 believe, the placi\nand certainly the early home, of til\nlate Hon. C . L . Vallandingham.so prom\nnently iadeutifled with the political histo\nry oi the country, immediately precedio\nand during the war. His father, th\nUev. Clement Vallandlnghsm, camo t\nNew Lisbon at a very early day, as til\nII rat pastor of the Presbyterian Church c\nlhat place, which relation he continue\nto sustain during a long period and up I\nthe time of his death. His memory\nstill warmly chorished' by all who knei\nhim, as well as by those who have learne\nfrom others ot his sterling virtues an\nworth. All the Vallandlnghsm famil\nnow liviog, except one son, still ri\nside here. A nephow ol the Hon. C . I\nVallandlgham is editor and publisher <\nthe Ohio Patriot, a weekly paper publisl\ned here, and almost co equal in ago wil\nthe town itself.
07c7488becc40bc2b62128e6e1bbfff3 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.727397228564 46.601557 -120.510842 James pickles and Albert Sutton, and a'l net\nsons unknown, if any, having or claiming\nto hava an interest in and to the real prop-\nerty hereinafter described. Defendant*.\nThe state of Washington to said James fickle-'\nand Alhert Button, Defendant!\nYou are hereby notified thai 1, V P. I .antcr-\nman. urn the holder of certificate of delinquency\nnumbered 2269. loaned on the 2nd day of June,\nA. 1. . IUO2, by the i-otmt\\ ot Yakima, state 0/\nWashington, lor the amount of Nine and 32- lUO\ndollars (99.34), the same being the amount then\ndue and delinquent for taxei for the veais ls'-<i.\n1897, lHiw, 1809,1900 and 11)01, together with the\npenalties, Interests aud edit* thereon, upon n-ai\nproperty asM-**ed to unknown owner, and ol\nwhich you are the owners, or reputed owners,\nsituate said county, and particularly bounded\nand described as follows, to wit: Lot nine (9)\nof and in hioek one hundred eighty-nine (189)\nof the eastern addition to the city of North\nYakima. Washington, according to the plat of\nsaid addition on tile and of record in the Office\nof the county auditor of Yakima count v. U ash\ningtou. and upon which 1 have paid taxes\nassessed against said property as follows\nTaxes for the years IVJI-J M 4-.'>. amounting to\nIU.7S, paid on tr c second day of .bine, 1902, 1 -\nTotal taxes paid on account of Mid Certificate\nof Delinquency 1 numbered \\u00a3208, $11.75.\nYou are further notified that I, K. IV I .auter\nman. am also the holder of Certificate of De-\nlinquency numbered •JJTO, issued on the 2nd "lay\nof June. A I).,
1d3cc7256bd1eacc0ecf1f58f86ad7d6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.4068492833587 40.063962 -80.720915 "Yes, there they were." at the bottom,\nwith a crowd of little fishes rubbing their\nnoses against them, and Dill wishes to\ngoodness that his nose was us elosc for\none second, llis beautiful teeth that hud\ncost so much, the show coming on, and no\ntime to get another set.and the widow\nand young Sackrider. Well, lie must try\nami get them some how, and no time to\nlone, for some one might come nnd ask\nhim whnt he was fooling around there\ntor. IIo hnd no notion of spoiling Ids\ngood clothes by wading in with them on,\nand besides if lie did that he could not go\nto the widow's that night, so lie took a\nlook up and down the road to see that no\none was in sight, and then quickly tin-\n putting liincloinon mine\nbuggy to keep them clean. Then lie ran\naround and waded Into the almost iov\nwater, hut his teeth did not chatter in Iiia\nhead, he only wished they could. Quietly\nlie waded along no an not to ntir up the\nmud. and when he got to the right spot\nhe dropped under tlio water and camc\nup with the teeth in hi* hand and\nreplaced them in hi* mouth, Hut\nhark! What noise in that! A wagon!\nand u little dog is harking with all\nhis might, and hi* home i* starting.\n"Whoa! whoa!" Haul Hill,an he splashed\nand floundered on through mud and\nwaters "confound the horse. "Whoa!\nwhoa! Stop you brute you, stop! Hut\nstop he would not, but went ofT at a\nftiianklng pace with the unfortunate
f47594c4c64913d25ee6591647fe1946 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.8232876395232 41.681744 -72.788147 which at the time was the center of\nthe small Jewish population, was im-\nprovised as a synagogue, and for the\nmore impressive rituals of the Jew-\nish religious calendar a hall in Cal-\numet building on Church street was\noccasionally rented. This was usually\nfor the services of the Sabbath. The\nJewish population and its congrega-\ntion advanced under the guidance of\nRev. Mr. Rosenberg until in later\nyears the synagogue at Elm and\nChestnut streets was erected and be-\ncame the center of worship. For\nmore than a quarter of a century\nhe was the only clergyman of his\nfaith in the city. In more recent\nyears others have come here and as-\nsisted by lifting the burden of the\nincreasing duties incident to the in-\ncrease in population.\nEnjoyed Affection of His People.\nHe enjoyed an extensive acquaint-\nance throughout state, frequently\nassisting in the rituals of congrega-\ntions elsewhere. Not only among the\nexponents of the orthodox Jewry, but\nalso among the more modern clergy\nof his own and other faiths, his re-\nligious zeal was recognized and re-\nspected. Profound respect and affec-\ntion marked the attitude of the en-\ntire Jewish population of New Brit-\nain toward their religious leader.\nRabbi Rosenberg was a member of\nthe board of education of the He-\nbrew school. Ho was a member of\nthe Hebrew Free Loan association\nand active in the benevolent work of\nthat organization. Fraternally he\nwas a member of the Foresters. B'nal\nB'rith and the Zionist organization.\nFor many years he served as can-\ntor of the Brotherhood Sons of Is-\nrael, and when Tephereth Israel\nCongregation Jewry was formed he\nalso served as cantor for that syna-\ngogue.
2556714b284f76e2ead99c10552fc9d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.878082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 or below the foot of the inland, received a\nhail from shore warning him of the recent\nwing daiu extension, the existence of\nwhich he was until now entirely ignorant;\nhe immediately stopped the engines, sig-\nnaled a boat in the rear, which proved to\nbe the Baltic, to keep back; he now ships\nui) and backs until within a few minute*\nof '.he collision, llcr position is now\nquartering, her wheel pointing towards\nthe Ohio shore. To the best of his\nknowledge the licet did not strike the\ndam; was not on it at the time of the\ncollision. In his statement Mr. Smith\nis sustained by the evidence of the Big-\nley's crew, and in part bv that of Henry\n,J. ileal, ol .Marietta, unio, who lesunes\nsubstantially that on the morning of the\ncollision between the hour* of two and\nthree o'clock, he was on duty warning\ndescending boat* of tho dam extension \nthe foot of the inland, of the existence of\nwhich, it leeiUH, duo notice had not been\ngiven by the proper authorities. About\nthe hour cif four o'clock, lie observed the\ntowing boat Joseph II. Migley descending\nwith a coal fleet, the forward end ol\nwhich had passed the point of the isl-\nand, and wax pointing toward* the dam.\nlie hailed and told tier to bear over, a*\nthere wax not hullicieiit water onthodaiu\nto pass over with safety. She at oncc\nstopped, and with three or four blasts of\nhersteum whistle warned a descending\nboat in her rear of the situation\naliuoHt simultaneously therewith, ship-\njK'il up, and backed until Iter\nheadway was about checked. My tliis\ntime she had passed a considerable di*-\nlance below the wharfboat and still\nmaintaining a quartering position, he\ndoes not know whether or not her licet\nwas on the dam at the tiino of the
2641faa4ae0d48f857596b847e1accf6 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.5356164066463 40.735657 -74.172367 award the contract In accordance with Chap-\nter 217 of the State laws of 1825\nBidders are not to state any price tor ma-\nterials and work for which there 2s a fixed\namount provided for in the specifications.\nF^tch proposal must be Inclosed In a sealed\nsnvelope. properly indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners of the City of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices In writing a*\nwell as In figures.\nBidders must specify In their proposals that,\nshould the above work be awarded to them,\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following number\nof consecutive working days:\nBloomfield Avenue Repaving—Fifty i50i day* .\nMalvern Ktrpet Paving— Seventy (70) days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work can\n examined at the office of the Chief Engi-\nneer of the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmlesloners at the City Hall. Said proposal* to\nbe accompanied by the consent In writing of\ntwo euredca, or a surety company qualified to\ndo business In New Jersey, who shall, at th»\ntime of putting In auch proposals, qualify as\nto their responsibility In the amount of such\nproposal, and bind themselves that. If tlio\ncontract be awarded to the person or person*\nmaking the proposal, they will, upon its being\nso awarded, become his or their sureties for\nthe faithful performance of said work; and\nthat If the person or pwisons omit or refuse to\nexecute such contract they will pay to *he city\nof Newark any difference between the iume to\nwhich ho or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract
0c8f14c180fd6460db03a61ff0efac3a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.864383529934 37.561813 -75.84108 my fate is sealed, and my future misery is\ninsured. I shall go abroad, to Jericho ; there\nI have a friend a painter of somber sub-\njects, lie will sympathize with me. He is\nengaged in painting a picture of a man who\nfell among thieves, lie will, figuratively,\npour wine and oil into my wounds. He will,\nprobably, avail himself of my expression for\nthe countenance of the wounded man him-\nself. If I were not aware how excellent\nyour nature is, how lightly you esteem what\nthose who haven't any of it call dress, in\ncomparison with moral worth, and how great\na sin you consider idleness, I would add, as\nif in my favor, that, though I am not rich\nexactly, yet I have a considerable independ-\nent income. However, knowing as I do,\nyour noble opinions as to the dignity of la-\nbor, it might tell against me rather than for\nme if I were to suggest that my income of\none thousand five hundred dollars a year\nwould enable us to scrape along (it 1 might\nuse the expression), without the neeessitvof\ndoing anything menial or otherwise, for a\nlivelihood ; but I may surely say that such a\nposition, being regarded by the world as an\nadvantage, would give you a certain means\nlikely to be of assistance to yoa in your ef-\n to obey the generous instinct I have\nalwnva crreatlr admired in vou. External\ngraces to recommended me, I am fully con\nscious l nave none; my looking glass tells\nme with cruel plainness, and I fear that I am\nequally badly off for any kind of personal\nmerits, unless, indeed, there be some small\nmerit in having recognized and devoted my-\nself to the best, the liveliest, the sweetest of\nher sex. Oh ! tleanor, have pity upon me,\nand make me happy forever. Each hour\nwill be a hundred years as 1 wait for the fatal\n8th. I shall have my luggage all ready ; and\nif by the morning ot the sin l receive no\nletter from you, I shall accept my destiny in\nsilent despair, and start forthwith for\nJericho. I shall return, if indeed I do re\nturn, by way ot Africa, where, if I do not\ncourt, I shall certainly not shun, the deadly\nweapon of the savage, and the deadlier fever\nof his climate ; and should we meet in future\ndays, pray behave to me as if this long let-\nter had never been written, as if there had\nnever been anvthiiigbnt friendship between\nn. Believe me to be, in v dearest Eleanor\n(for I must writ it again ), your most passion\nately attached ana uevntea admirer, lover,\nand in any case lrienu,
0bc63cee7b24425b861d0fd134128d6e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.3164383244546 39.745947 -75.546589 Gen, Weaver added that President C'eve-\nland encouraged all their improvements, and\nif the United Htatcs military had not lieen\nswayed by political forces, the strip would\nhave been free of cattle (tarons mul opeu to\nwhite settlers today. The ex-o mgrossmans\nwords were received with rens'ng ehe rs, and\nhundred» of mon are leaving Oklahoma to\nfollow his advice. It Is estimated that 3,090\nhomesteaders have broken soil in tits strip.\nThree companies of cavalry are now out\nK'outing w ith orders to remove them to Ki\nmis or Oklahoma, ami It looks ns if ^liey will\nhave employment for several mouths Income.\nKansas CtTT, April 3(5, — A Times special\nfrom Kmgflsner says that three more com­\npanies of infantry have lsien ordered there,\nto lie commanded by Un; I». An man, Cava­\nnaugh and Chance. There 1» no disorder,\nand the troops are sent merely a» a precau­\ntionary measure.\nThe first baby wn» born Wednesday. It\nfirst saw the light of Die world in » wagon,\nand »ns christened Oklahoma lewis- The\nparents are from Texas.\nA number of settlers have claimed the\nnorth half of this section os a t wn site and\nhave named It Kingfisher. They have elect­\ned n mayor and council and are running op­\n to the original Kingfisher.\nJohn A. Blair, secretary of Ihe Cherokee\nLive Stock association, and three others,\nhave entered a section Isitween here and the\nstrip line, It is said that the K ck Island\nrailroad will build a depot on the site. One\nof the Blair party who pa hi {3100 for a lot\nwas chased off by a settler who had tlrst\ntaken ixisse-iston. The settlor was armed\nwith nT.ntehet.\nThere aro throe or four contests on nearly\nevery claim, and the land lawyers ore pre­\nparing for a harvest. Reports of murders\ncome in, but none of them have been suie\nstantiatod, and it Is believed that nut a man\n1ms been killed\nI |Aukanbas Citt, April 20. —Gen. Merritts\nreport Is believed here to he ridiculous. There\nare tietween 50,000 to 75,000 people now In\nOklahoma. Guthrie has fully 15,000 Inhabi­\ntant«. Gen. Merritt has made hi- headquar­\nters from tho llrst at Oklahoma City, which\nbn» only about 8,01X1 people, and has not been\nable to bear from Kingllshor or Purcell.\nThe first natural death in Oklahoma oc­\ncurred at Oklanoms City Wednesday. Thomas\nONeill, n young unmarried man from Marsh­\nall, Mo., died of a congestive chill brought on\ntiy exertion and exposure. Many cases of\npneumonia are reported.
0152c77bdf6931a1fa295a9ff9c6fd19 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.8342465436326 43.82915 -115.834394 stands p art of a tree hollowed into\na mo rtar for pounding certain grains,\nand there a bedded, coarse-grained\nstone, on which the family meal is\nground. Everywhere arc to be ob­\nserved evidences of the th rift and in­\ndustry which distingui sh the Sou­\ndanese household. Unlike the domes­\ntic establishments of most Moham­\nmedan parts, there is no pampered\nlaziness or voluptuous ease. Wife and\nslave alike are busily engaged in\nhousehold duties, or work which will\nbri ng money to the workers! Here is\ncotton being teased and cleaned, then\nwith spindle and wheel turned into\nthread. Food simmers or boils on the\ntire in the various savory, if oily,\ndishes for which tho Haussa women\nare famous. We note that no heavy\nor unwomanly task s are laid upon the\nfemales. * • * In the store-rooms\nand masters apartm ents are to be\nseen a g reat variety of objects heaped\nto gether or lying about without any\natt empt at order. Here may bo found\nthe owners weapons of war—many\ndouble-odgml swords, with scabbards\nhandsomely ornamented with leather\nand brass, and suspended by elaborate\n botasselled silk ropes, daggeis in­\ntended to be attached to the wrist hy\na leather band—th e cross-shaped han­\ndle when thus carried almost lying\nin the palm of tho hand—beautiful long\niron spears neatly ami prett ily inlaid\nwith brass bands, and generally\nbarbed, revolvers and pistols of the\nmost obsolete types, as W'oll as flint­\nlock guns, which look as if they would\nbe as dang erous to the user as they\ncould possibly bo to an enemy. Such\nare the offensive weapons. But there\nare also to be seen war dresses of enor­\nmously thick quilts, intended spe­\ncially as a protection against poi­\nsoned arrows. The warrior when en­\ncased in these cumbersome garments\nlooks the most unwiehlly und barrel­\nlike of African Falstaffs, as ho can\nneither mount his horse nor dismount\nwithout assistance, and if unhorsed he\nis perfectly helpless. Many of the\nwealthy chiefs have also very beautiful\ncoats of chai n armor, with head-gear\nto match, which are probably of old\nMoorish workmanship, und aro said\nby tho natives to be as old as David,\nami are accordingly valued at a g reat\nprice.
bf1d63efb6aae1506d7ef5b4d7eca2d8 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.6753424340436 39.369864 -121.105448 plained—seems simple enough. It\nappears from this gentlemans account\nthat early in 1853,ChristopherKentz,\nwho discovered the diggings on this\nhill, and Edward Skiff-—who still re-\nsides here—together built a cabin\nwhich is still standing, on the lower\nend of the hill, near the “King Cut.”\nOne evening, when this cabin was\nabout ready for roofing, and the buil-\nders had started on the way towards\nSweetland (where they were then li-\nving) Mr. Kentz turned to look back\nat the pioneer edifice—the first one\non this hill—-and laughingly remarked\nto Skiff—“Why, it looks like the Cas-\ntle of San Juan!” (de Ulloa.) The\nnext morning, when they started from\nSweetland to complete their work,\nthey jokingly observed that they were\n“going to San Juan;” and this face-\ntiously applied name they and others\ncontinued to employ until became\nthe fixed title of the whole hill, and,\nsubsequently,of the town which sprang\nup around them. What increases the\njoke is the fact that, so far as wo can\nlearn, neither of the above gentlemen\nhad ever seen Vera Cruz or its fa-\nmous castle, and that their log cabin\nno more resembles it than a hen coop\ndoes a meeting-house.\nMr. Kentz afterwards, when he\nthought a town was sure to be built\non the hill, erected at great expense\nthe building now knownas tho Half-\nway House, which is situated about\nmidway between this town and the\nquiet village of Sebastopol; expecting\nthat it would be the nucleus of tho\nembryo settlement. But there it\nstands alone to-day, surrounded by\nsluice tailings, and off the now trav-\neled road, a monument of mistaken\nenterprise.
7ef0a4082409b17a4a78b32817c09221 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.0177595312184 39.369864 -121.105448 lies in a northeast by southwest direction,\nbetween the large ravine where the town is\non one side, and the Yuba river on the other.\nIt is partly bisected by a small gulch. The\ngravel- which is vbry coarse ahd busily\nwashed, but for intermediate strata of “pipe\nclay” and indurated sand—is not less than\ntwo hundred feet deep, has an inclination\ntowards the river, and rests Upob ttap rOck.\nwhich is highest next tbe stream. The first\ndeposition upon the rock is a stratum of\ncemented blue gravel, deriving its color and\nhardness from iron sulpburets, and very rich\nin gold worth $lB 30 per Ounce. Overlying\nthis is a thick stratum of indurated clay or\nSand—for it Varies in character—containing\nsome gold but indissoluble except after being\ncut up and long exposed tU air atkl Water.\nThe bill!? gfavel beneath Has to be drifted\nout, and is washed seVbfai times in succes\nsion, through sluices, the tailings being saved\nby means of dams and allowed to "slack.”\nAbove the clay stratum the gravel yellow\nand grey, very coarse, crumbling down\nreadily beneath the action of one hundred\ninches of water forced against it from hose\nand pipe. This top-gravel, as it is called, is\nfrom one hundred to one hundred and forty\nfeet thick, and is washed off entirely by the\nhydraulic process The auriferous particles\nare not distributed through it uniformly,but\narc found most plentifully in “streaks,” or\nthin strata following the plane of the bank.\nSome of these strata, lying fifty and one\nhundred feet aboVe the bed-rock, have Be'cH\ndrifted and paid from five to ten dollars a\nday per nrian. The gold in the top gravel is\nremarkably fine in quality,commanding from\nsl9 20 to sl9 50 per ounce from buyers;\nand assaying as high as 987-1000;\nThfe diggings Were discovered about eight\nVeafs agd by parlies following tip ravines\nfrom llie river. One of these ravines Con-\ntained a great deal of earth that yielded one\ndullal- to the bucket. The blue gravel in tbe\nhill was much better. As an instance of
003c6b048b3ae4af8a934c08aa0b108b THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.8452054477423 43.994599 -72.127742 lived in this town and moved from here\nwest where they hurried their onlv\nchild, Mrs. Lizzie Bates; from there\nthey moved to Vineland where Mrs.\nPage died a few years aim. Mr. Pane\ncame here a few weeks every summer\nto visit his only sister, Miss Calista\nPage. His cheerful face will be missed\nnext summer as well as at the present\ntime. lie was a man respected bv all\nand had many friends here. He leaves\na sister and two grand children to\nmourn his loss. We extend our - deep\nsympathy to them.\nA Cheat Hunt. On Fridav. the\n22d of October, the people of Orford\nhad their annual town hunt which\nproved to be one of the greatest and\nmost successful occasions of its kind\never known in this vicinity. J . I).\nCross and W. S . llorton were chosen as\ncaptains, each twenty men. It\nwas decided that the losing side should\nbear the expense of a supper. At the\nappointed time nearly every man was\nfound at his post and the marked inter-\nest and enthusiasm manifested by every\nhunter to excell his opponents was\nsurely worthy of note. Each one seem-\ned to realize the necessity of doing his\nbest, although at times fate seemed al-\nmost against them. Early in the morn-\ning the noise began and continued un-\ntil late in the day and in the evening\nthe glimmer of the hunters' lanterns\nshowed that their woi k of destruction\nwas not yet done. However, Captain\nllorton and his men were the victors\nol this tight their score being ,'2M\npoints, while Captain Cross came close\nifter them with a score ot 7, l.0. I he\nscores were rat nor low, due to the\nscarcity of game.
02c994c3c37129e52d83856c939dcc97 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8041095573312 40.063962 -80.720915 their |aaW* like aoidiera ot a down\ncampaign*. cieiling and loading tin*\nride* of their huabanda, brother-, and\nlovera. Such women were worthy the\nlove and devotion ol melt like llieae.\nNo timid ahrieka escaped them; no\nmaidenly fear* oauaed them to ahrink\nfrom their aelf-luipoeetl and moat otter-\noua taak. Such were the pioneer\nmolhera of ihe weal—women whoae\naoula and laallea were aorely Irleil in\nthe tipriv fire cf our Indian war* .—\nThrough tlie whole uf that long aud\nterrible night, without lood aud with-\nout rent, did llieae brave aud noble\nwomen atand to Ibetr duty, regardlea*\nof fatigue, but nerving llielr heart* lo\nIhe coiiteal, mid animating Ihe uieu\nwith hofte aud courage. The Ureek\nmatron, who urged her eni\\to the con-\nflict, charging him lo return with hi*\nshield or upon it, dlaplayed uo more\nxeal,devotion,and true courage, than\ntheae lioro-women of the iliatory\nIS full of examples nl female heroism.\nIsrael had her Judith and liebonih;\nFrance glories In her Joau and Lava\nlelte;—two of them liuaexed them-\nselves in Ihe excitement ol hallleFolie\ninglorloualy stained her ham!* lu bu-\nmru gore, and the other had nothing lo\nlow by her auccetwful effort*; lint the\nwestern heroines, without the relal (it\nfemale warrior*, diaplayed more tr e\ncourage throughout the long and\naturniy day* of our Iudiau warlare.\nand exhibited tuore of tlie true aplrilul\nheroiaui, than any example in aucienl\nor,modern hiatory.\nAt an early hour in Ihe evening the\nludians descried the |ien>gue already\nreletrrd to, aud at ouce resolved to try\nllie aport of canuoiiadiiig. Procuring\na atom log of autncleiil size and length,\nibeae aliuple uilnded tuenapiit It open,\nand having cut oul tbe centre with\ntheir towahaw ka, fastened the part* to-\ngetner with iron baud*,
16388ae48282687630b77ed0228576c4 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1894.9712328450025 41.258732 -95.937873 Cairo. 111 .. Dec. 15 . 1894. Editor\nThe American: As Americans only\nwill be elected here next April, it\nmight be well to say In advance that\nthere will be a fine opening here for\nhospital, and some good American who\nunderstands that business could do well\nhere, as the city has none of its own\nHeretofore the city has been managed\nby Romanists, and an American could\nnot make bis rent here. It was tried\nby Dr. Elrod, who had to give It up.\nIt has been the custom for years, if\ncase was to be treated by a certain\nphysician, the patient had to go to St\nMary's hoppital. I know a case where\na little finger had to be amputated, and\nhe ordered the patient to St. Mary's\nhospital. It a Protestant lady.\nHer husband is a very poor man, who\nmakes his living by working at his\ntrade that of a carpenter. II s wages\nwere low, and he did not work half tbe\ntime. He had to pay 18.00 per week for\nhis wife while there. After she came\nout It was not long until this same lady\nhad to be examined, and the family\nphysician again ordered her to be taken\nto St. Marv's. It was then that the\nProtestant carpenter saw his pretended\nProtestant family physician scheme to\nbleed him for the benefit of the sisters,\nand ever since that the Protestant (?)\nohvstclan has been watched. The case\nmentioned here Is just one of hundreds.\nBut that physician with a Roman wife\nhas lost about all of his American
33073967593cc6b072c20b489d5b1709 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8866119902348 39.513775 -121.556359 mifiW this day it appearing to my satisfaction as\nIn! Judge of the County Courl. in mid for Untie\nCounty, that the Hoard d Supervisors in and for said\nCount v did, on the g4th day of ife|ttiMubvr, A. 11 . one\nthousand eight hundred and lifty.six. deopire Oroville\nto he the Count; seal of Unite County from and after\nthe said twenty-fourth day of September A. 1). 1\nin pursuance of an net emilied An Act to elntlige and\ntix the Comity Seat of Unite County, approved '.arch\n10th. IS .- ju; aiid it further appearing to my satisfaction\nthat the present buildings ri whi.di the said Court has\nbeen held, and In which the Uncords have been kept\nin the town of Uidwell, uro unsafe a-s a place of de-\npository for said Records, and that the Mine is liable\nto destruction by Hre, by reason of llieir being con.\nsiruclisl ehliro of wood. And il further appearing\nthat there is no building ill the tow n of Uidwell. suit-\nable for holding the terms of this Court, lv\nkeep its Records from lire or other calamity, and it\nappearing Hint the town of Oro-ille is a lit place to\nIne.d the terms of thin Court, and that a stile mid com\nniodioiis brick building ill said town has been ten-\ndered the county ns county buildings.\nIt i* Iliereloreordered, adjudged and decreed. Hint\nthe Clerk ct the County Court.ln and for Untie\nCounty, forthwith remove his oltice and the Records\nthereof, to Oroville. in the building selected by the\nsaid Hoard of Supervisors as Coiimy Uuiidings, mill\nthat he do mid t ansact the business of his said olliee,\nat the town of Oroville. a* tho County -teat of Unite\nCounty. And it is further ordered, that the terms ol\nsaid t ourl. from and after the said twenty lotirlti day\nof {September. A I) Dv'fi, he held at the said towuof\nOroville until otherwise ordered.\nAmt it is further ordered, that the Clerk of the\nCounty Court in nrd for Unite County, issue an order\ntinder the seal of said Court, In conformity witli this
3ae7ab2b4c5a3093e179539121d5bba8 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.4534246258245 40.618676 -80.577293 COME live from moment to moment, j»ettin£ what\nsatisfaction they can from whatever comes\ntheir way. Others have a definite idea of what they\nwant to be or do, and plan everything to that end.\nThe first group live by chance and have little\nchoice in the shaping of their lives. The second\ngroup considers and discards opportunities that do\nnot lead to the desired objective. This group makes\na deliberate choice at every step and may make\ntheir lives count for the advancement of others.\nThe principle applies both to public and private\nliving. The father who determines to give his\nchildren a living, will shape the whole family life\nto that end, choosing a residence in a locality\nwhere standards of work and life are high, schools\nare good and the environment is planned to pro­\nvide for the needs of children. A nation that has\nfounded its institutions on democratic principles,\nmust its institutions and customs in accord\nwith democratic ideals. A constitution and laws\nto provide the opportunity for representation in\nthe political agencies are necessary to a democ­\nracy, but do not automatically provide it. Democ­\nracy is a way of living, with representative agen\ncies and practices in every relationship of life. Rep­\nresentation is possible only through organization\nand organization in turn requires planning and re­\nsponsibility on the part of the membership. Since\ndemocracy is a way of living, representative prac­\ntices must pervade social, economic as well as po­\nlitical relationships. Unless those who believe in\ndemocracy take part in deciding policies, those\nseeking special privilege may turn the direction of\ndevelopments to serve their own interests. Main­\ntenance of democracy requires great care in the\nSelection of representatives as well as continuing\nresponsibility on the part of those represented to\nmake sure they are getting the results they want.
08aa4be227ed3f497c8e025d3ae44ba9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.0123287354136 40.063962 -80.720915 To the lititor of Ihe InUUiocnecr.\n8iii:-On'Wednosdny there nppoarod in\ntho iKTBixtoKNCKit a card from Dr. S . L .\nJepson. Although it was nut addressed\nto inu direct, yet It contuiuuil un attack\nupon tuo no personal, that I vory.much\ndoubt if Dr. Jepson is as patriotic a\ngentleman ns iio claims to bo.\nllo admits tliat our city government\nlias fallen into an unhappy coudition, and\nthat reforms aro roueli needed, but for¬\ngets to obargo tho present Republican\nCouncil witii having prostituted their\npower and having brought our city to its\npresent deplorable condition. The Doc¬\ntor mentioned several Democratic gentle¬\nmen for whom ho would gladly vote,\nhail either of them been nominated.\nWhat Is tho matter with his own party?\nArt; there no honorahlo men |n it, win)\nwould muko a crcdiUthla mayor? 1 cer¬\ntainly have more confidence in the make\nup of the Republican party than Doctor\nJcpson seems to have; hut that may be\nowing to my ideas being based \nprincipltu somewhat more liberal than\nthose displayed by him.\nAs Dr. Jcpson has mado suggestions\nto tho Democratic party, I suppose I may\nbo allowed to do likewise to tuo Repub¬\nlican party, and upon thjs suggestion I\nmake thu claim that I inn a more patri¬\notic cititen than tho Doctor. I suggest\nti) the Republicans meeting in conven¬\ntion for tile purpose of nominating a can¬\ndidate for Jfiiyor of tub pity oj Wheel¬\ning, timnamoofan honorable physician,\none who will not disgrace tho ticket nor\nthe city, who will wield so much power\nover tho City Council that ho will "lift\ntho city out of tho i|nl|appy cpndlt|on\ninto VMph it lifts fallen and institute\nsome much needed reforms."\nThu gentleman to whom I atludo is\nDr. 8 . L. Jcpson. Then let the people\nspeak at the polls. And as ho ennuot\nvote (or me, as I am not an honorable\nmerchant, I will bo more liberal, anil so\nnow pledge lnysolf tovotoforDr. Jcpson
52e857628a8618b5143d44fe19b7879a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7767122970574 40.063962 -80.720915 We alluded yesterday to the proposed\nattempt of the disaffected people in Jef¬\nferson county to hold an election under\nthe laws of Virginia on thepretenseand\nunder the claim that they have the right\nand that it is their duty to do so. They\ntake upon themselves the decision of\nthe mooted question whether Jefforson\ncounty is or is not a part of West Vir¬\nginia. It suits theirpredilections tode-\ncule that she is not, and therefore they\nmeet In public assembly, appoint com¬\nmittees, and In disregard and defiance\nof the officers and laws of the State of\nWest Virginia, proceed to arrange for\nan election on the 12th, to-morrow.\nMr. Andrew Hunter, a returned rebel,\nand one of the leading and moat re-'\nsponsible sinners connected with there-\nbellion in the Valley, heads the move-\nmen*, having presided as chairman of\nthe meeting held at Charlestown on the\nwit. In the true Virginia style a\nvast amount of words are uddnced be¬\nfore the meeting to ahow that what they\npropose to do is all right, and that no\nperson can in tulrness except to their\nIdea of choosing whether they wiil live\nin old or new State. Thooilygain-\nmonof Mr.Hunter flows vory smoothly,\nand HO doubt pleased his rebel friends\nand neighbors very much. But he will\nfind that what he propones to do requires\nsomething more than words, and that\nthe administration of this State does\nnot intend to play tho role of James\nBuchanan over again, by whlning~and\nprotesting against what is being done,\nand yet doing nothing to prevent It.\nIf Mr. Andrew Hunter and his ool-\nleagnes persist in their seditious move¬\nment, they wiU be dealt with summa¬\nrily. On that point they can bet their\nmoney. Gov. fioreman will not play\nwith them gingerly. If the John Brown\ngallows ha4 been taken down at\nCharlestown another one can be put up.\nIn the meantime, as we are glad to\nknow, Gen- Emory has repaired to the\nscene or the proposed election, and lie\nwill take charge of the. ballot-boxes\nwhich Hunter and his friends think oC\nopening to-morrow. It will be well for\nthe rebels to accept his presence among\nthem as a finality to their efforts in a\nseditions direction. And if they are\nwise they will give over any farther\nattempts.
04b233fa3bbfdb3efa1d06989a1ef96f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.2534246258244 39.745947 -75.546589 that he could have gotten home had be\nbeen allowed hie liberty, but Judge Ball\nth ugbt differently and fixed bis flue at\n$2 or twenty days\nSergeant Shields found Frank Filz\nPatrick and William Short allas Soutt,\nsluing on a morocco factory step In the\nWest End ye tnday\nand getting drunker by draughts from a\nbottle of whlaxey The bottle\nsample one. and of rather better quality\nthan I» supposed to fit the drinkers and\nit was suspected tbat they stole It This\nwas discovered to be wrong, however\nPrank bet not been In jail since Septem­\nber and Scott has managed to k-ep clear\nabout as long, so they both got off with\nfines of $1 and costs aach.\nEdward Bl.ck. 0 do ed. charged with\nassault on Henry Boter, colored, was\narraigned Ha er plained that he and\nHenry were playing, and when they\n■ clang to e oh other.” Henry bad his,\nEdward's, thumb In hla month, and he\nse >.ad his ear to make hlm le' go Then\nE twaid Henry and the piece came\nout of the ear. Fined $26 and costs\nAnnie Carrou, colored, was charged by\nJohn Chase, colored, with disorderly\nconduct They have lived together and\nJohn withdrew the charge, paying coats\nJudge Ball said to City Solicitor Elliott:\n"In the Now York courts a plan prevails\nwhich I think could be used to advantage\nhere It Is that whenever the prosecut­\ning witness withdraws a charge, he or\nehe mast sign a paper stating that it was\ndone without any consideration, threats,\netc This relieves the city solicitor and\nthe officers from any blame ”\nThe citv solicitor thought it a good\nplan and said he would adopt It.\nFrank McKeon, arrested Monday\nnight on a charge of assaulting a man at\nMaryland avenus aud Linden, with\nIntent to rob, was arraigned, but as the\nprosecuting witness bad not been\naecnred, the case was continued till\ntomorrow. When the arrest was made\nthe officer was obliged to chase Frank,\nand as a conséquence the witness got\naway. He Is known, however.
4007ce8f4c5d24fd252a5a48b0d6ffde DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.7684931189751 58.275556 -134.3925 . Competent engineers declare that\nAlaska coal is as valuable for bteam\npurposes as any coal from the East,\nyet the government sends enormou«\nquantities to the coast, paying for the\ntransportation twice the value of the\ncoal itself, and often more. Tnis ie\nbad economics, not to speak of thb\nstrategic aspects of the question. At¬\ntention has been drawn anew to thin\nauomally in national manaKemeut by\nthe recent increase in the shipments ol\ncoal for naval stations iu California\nand at Hawaii. If the^vast deposits in\nAlaska were made available by suitable\nrailroad dovelopment, there would bb\nau enormous saviug. A oheap coal\nsupply would immeasurably stimulate\nmanufacture there aud would con¬\ntribute not a little to the decrease in\nthe cost of living. The obstacles result\nfrom a mistaken application of con¬\nservation principles and the popu'ar\nfear that will profit by the\ncommercial development of Alaska.\nPrivate initiative is praotically barred\nfrom the territory, aud the government\nwill neither develop the territorial\nwealth itself nor permit any one\nelse to do so except on terms practi¬\ncally prohibitive. This is a disastrous\nperversion of the wise principles ot\nregulation which reflects discredit upon\na nation which prides itself upon its\naptitude in utilizing its natural ad¬\nvantages. There are enormous deposit*\nof hard and soft coal in Alaska which\nare untouched, and they oannot be\ntouched until congress oan overcome\nits reluctance to do one thing or the\nother. It ought either to modify the\nterms under which the commercial ex¬\nploitation of the riches of the territory\nis now retarded, or it should take\nsome positive action to encourage the\nrailroad development which is the .vlto.\nfactor iu the problem.
216d465fb7867aa937bcfc7bc667d297 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.1079234656447 40.063962 -80.720915 There may be a dozen reasons for tho\nrejection of your manuscript. Tho article\nmay be too long. Tho subject, however\ninteresting it may bo to you, may not be\nof sufficient interest to tho public at the\nmoment to mako it worth tho editor's\nwhilo to publish the article. Or it may\nbo upon a subject which is outside the\nrange of topics tho editor wishes to deal\nwith. Or.lor there aro many construc¬\ntions to be put upon tho words.tho stylo\nin which you huve written may not suit\nthe tone of themagazino. You may bo a\nwriter of brilliant ami profound genius, a\nThackeray or a Carlyle; but even\nThackeray and Carlylo were as familiar\nwith these wofds, "Keturned with\nthanks," as the rest of us. TJmckeray's\n"Yellowplush Paper" were, in their day,\namong the must sparkling contributions\nto Fratrr't Magatine. But Thackeray, writ¬\ning an article to the Edinburgh Review in\nthe style of tho "Yellowplush Papers,"\nhad to submit to a revision at tho hands\nof the which made his recollection\nof the Edinburgh Review, even witlr the so¬\nlatium of a handsome uheek, anything but\nploasant. Francis Jeffrey used to cut and\nslash at Carlylo's manuscripts.dash out\nand write in.till Carlyle must have been\nmore than mortal if he did not use strong¬\ner langusge than he put upon paper; and\n. ven after all this Jeffrey apparently came\nto tho concltiHion that "Carlyle would not\ndo" lor the Edinburgh Review. I have had\nmsnuscripts returned again and agaiu,\nbut they have always fouud a publisher\nin the end, and 1 have an impression\nwhich is, I believe, shared by many public\nwrl ers, that the best articles are those\nthat are returned the oftenest. I know\nthev aro sometimes the most successful,\nand. to compare small things with great,\nthat it is notorious this has been the case\nwith two or three historical works and\nwork* of fiction which, before they were\npublished, were metaphorically scored all\nover by the publishers' readers with these\nWords; "K*turned with ilianki."
230bda571c60b1dfceaa98f1017fd8c3 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.4945205162355 40.735657 -74.172367 dred and aeventy-flve feet from the intersection\nof the same with the easterly side of Vail\nstreet, which point is the southeasterly corner\nof lot No. 72 on a map hereinafter mentioned;\nthence along the easterly side of said lot No. 73\nnorth seventeen degrees sixteen minutes east\none hundred feet to the rear of lots fronting\non Finley place; thence along the same south\nseventy-two degrees forty-four minutes east\ntwenty-flve feet to the westerly side of lot No.\n74; thence along the same south seventeen de-\ngrees sixteen minutes west one hundred test to\nthe northerly side of Kenmore avenue aforesaid,\nand thence along the same north seventy-two\ndegrees forty-four minutes west twenty-flve fest\nto the point or place of beginning.\nBeing lot No. 73 cm map of BalmoraL\nSecond tract—\nBeginning at a point in northerly me of\nKenmore avenue distant easterly two hundred\nfeet from the Intersection of the same with\nthe easterly line of Vsil street, which point Is\nthe southeast comer of lot No. 74 on map\nhereinafter mentioned; thence along the east-\nerly line of Jot No. 73 on said map north\nseventeen degrees sixteen minutes east one\nhundred feet to the rear of lots fronting on\nFinley place; thence along the same south\nseventy-two degrees forty-four minutes east\ntwenty-flve feet to the westerly side of lot\nNo. 76 on said map; thence along the same\nsouth seventeen degrees sixteen minutes west\none hundred feet to the northerly line of\nKenmore avenue aforesaid, and thence along\nthe same north seventy-two degrees forty-four\nminutes west twenty-flve feet to the point and\nplace of beginning.\nBeing lot No. 73
367deb76e80908e26c2b5cc73d87ff23 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 New Orleans.M in Proposition l<\nRemove «overnor».His Aiuiiimr\ntlon not Mo»Uined*~ ien. Boiler'\nCbarce.Nominations, Ac.\nWashington, April 5..Genera\nSheridan has not yet sent a report v\nthe President of the causes that in\nduced him to remove Messrs. Herron\nMonroe and Abell, at New Orleans, no\nhas be asked any instr actions a boa\nhis actioa under the reconstruction aci\nas has been alleged by newspaper cor\nrespondents. The Secretary of Wa:\nto-day laid before the President a copj\nof correspondence between Genera\nSheridan and General Grant, respec\nlively, of the 2d and 3d instant.\nGeneral Sheridan says that Genera\nGriffin, of Texas, recommends the de\nposition or removal of Governo\nThrockmorton, of tbnt State; that hi\n(Sheridan) agrees with Griffin. Sheri\ndan thinks he will have to removi\nthe Governor of Louisiana. Hi\nfutber says he will commence\nthe work of registration as soon as hi\nreceived a certified copy of the law; tha\nhe (Sheridan) himself equal to th<\nrnolf imnnswi unon him hv the law. ant\nwill perform bis work with credit to th<\nmilitary. General Sheridan conclude*\nby saying: '*1 shall make bat few re\nmovals." General Grant replies that i\nwonld not be proper to remove Gov\nernors; that the subject is now nnde\nconsideration, and it is not believed tha\nmilitary commanders have the power\nand removals can only be made by ac\nof Congress, or by trial, under thesixtl\nsection of the law.\nThe testimony taken before the Ju\ndiciary Committee a few days ago\nupon General Butler's charge agains\nthe President that certain deserter\nfrom the army were pardoned by Mr\nJohnson to enable them to vote in Wea\nVirginia last October, completely re\nfutes the allegations made by Butler\nSurgeon McEwin and others who ha<\nanything to do with the transartioi\nhave been examined and the evldenc<\ncorroborates my dispatch on the sub\nject a lew days ago.
169699692db4e78ae9d6b4744f75d1c3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.7109588723997 40.063962 -80.720915 The war U oxer. The true sign of this la\nthat another is wuntod right now.us is\nthe case in every land each twenty or\nthirty yeara. Another and more pleasing\nsign is thut in their magazine urticles the\ngenerals (and their duly constituted at¬\ntorneys In fact, the stuff officers), who\nhave converted their swords into that\nmightier weapon, tho pen, display no ani¬\nmosity to their former enemies, but di¬\nrect all their assaults uguinst hojuo co¬\noperating general on their uwu «!de.\nSometimes tho magazines have "Itecol-\nlectiona of a Private;" but this puuges uu».\nIn the first place, It requires a great deal\nof journalistic enterprise to And a private.\nIn tho secoud place, I dou't see how u pri¬\nvate can have uny recollections of tlo\nwar. I was a private in tho campaign of\n18tW through northern Virginia uiul .Mary¬\nland, and in every light, and 1 must say\nthat I never saw a single buttle or had thu\nfulutest ideu of whut wus going on or\nwhat were tho results until 1 wus told of\nIt afterward or suw it in a paper. 1 wus\nthree duys at Second Munussus and thou\nslowly made up my mind thut there\nwould probably be a genuine engage¬\nment next duy. When wo rebels began\nto move tho night Sliurpsburg, I\nhad an idea thut it wus with a view\nto open a buttle in the morning, uud when\nwe got to the Potomac und sturtod in I\ncouldn't comprehend why wo budu't tried\na light first. Fighting, us wo generully\nwas, with a long lino over miles of front\nIn woods for the most part, uud over hills\nand valleys, I don't believe that a private\never saw more thun u small part of a but¬\ntle (except ut Fredericksburg) or knew a\nskirmish from a generul engugemeut, or a\nreconuoissunco from an attack.\nAn artillery duel at Shepherdstown was\nmuch worse to me uud every member of\nmy company thun wus tho grout battle of\nSliurpsburg tho day beforo. There wo luy\nall day on tho bluff of the Potomac with\nImpounder Purrotts fur away ocross tho\nriver und beyond our reach, liriug with\nsuch precislou thut it seemed to mo thut\nthey could huvo knocked in tho heud of a\nbarrel about the third trial; Indeed, I was\nnot sure they couldn't huvo driven u spiko\nat tho dlstanco of throo milos. Wo woro\nou our faces muking impressions in tho\nground, from which I felt sure accurate\ncasts of our countenances might huvo\nbeen molded, and those iiO-pound shells\nweto shingling our buck hair all tho alter-\nnoon.
2f260e047c06e821acf731d4e360810a THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1859.395890379249 32.36431 -88.703656 the harp. A very large number (we do\nnot know how many) study Latin and\nFrench. The department of drawing and\npainting we do not believe is surpassed in\nany school in the South. The oil paint-\nings on which many of the young ladies\nwere engaged, made the large room look\nlike an artist's studio, and exhibited deci-\nded proficiency and considerable talent.\nIt is certainly a commendable feature of\nthe institute that it lays stress upon this\ndepartment and undertakes to cultivate\nthe taste of the pupils.\nThe philosophical apparatus is a very\ngood one. The Chemical Laboratory is\non the most improved modern scale, em -\nbracing samples of all the chemicals called\nfor in the text liooks, and the means for\ntrying the experiments. In this Labora-\n a feature (not ef it but to it) which\nwe think other institutions should imitate.\nIt is a full and admirable apparatus for\nthe study of Anatomy and l'hysiology a\ncomplete human skeleton a fine set of\ncharts hanging on the wall, etc., etc. Our\nchildren should be taught more of the\nnature and laws of their own liodies; and\nit is a false delicacy which has prevented\nthis study in some female schools and\nwhich we are glad to see this Institution\nhas had the good sense to rebuke.\nTne Geological Cabinet 19, we have no\ndoubt, the most extensive and l?st ar-\nranged one (thanks to lr. Stillman of our\ncity) in this part of the country. A gen-\ntleman from Tuscaloosa, a graduate of the\nUniversity of Alabama and familiar with
1c55057bf5356ab345e2c978a53bbac8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.6123287354135 58.275556 -134.3925 F. Seligson, registered at ttie uon-\nnely, is the gentleman who for four\nyears past has held a monopoly of the\niishiug privileges of Lake Lebarge, on\nthe upper Yukon, says the Tacoma\nLedger. Having surrendered his val¬\nuable privileges this season for a due\nconsideration, he is about to make a\ntrip to the Eastern seaboard, probably\nlater to return and engage in other\nbusiness in the North. Said Mr. Selig-\nson last eveuiug: ''The lake supplies\nseven-eighths of all the tish that is con¬\nsumed at Dawson the year around, aud\nfor that matter by the entire Yukon\nsettlement. It never needed legisla-1\ntion for the protection of the fish, as\nfrom the time of Noah it has been\ncovered with ice from October of each\nyear to the middle of June, and the ice\nwas protection enough. The traditions\nof the iudians say that there used to\nbe a population on that lake of 30,000\nIndians, and that they were almost\nexterminated, and the rest badly scat¬\ntered by au invasion of the Klinkets\nfrom the coast, bent on war to the\nknife in return for fancied damages.\nThey declared that from time immem¬\norial they the Klinkets.had collected\ntribute at the of the Chilcoot\npass, and that the Lebarge Inians were\nevading the tribute by secretly carry¬\ning their furs around by other passes.\nI am reminded of the story by the past\nwinter digging up' what appeared to\nhave been an immense burying hole on\nthe banks of the lake, almost opposite\nthe Stobin river. I was preparing to\nmake a camp, and was preparing the\nfoundations when I uncovered a skele¬\nton. I avoided the spot fof the build¬\ning, and this spring reported the thing\nto the mounted police. They dug into\na mass of hundreds of the skeletons\nbefore they tumbled to what it was.\nIt was at first thought a murder mys¬\ntery was being uucovered, but enough\nludiau relics were discovered to estab¬\nlish the nature of the burying ground.\nThe Indiaus yet there have no history\nof the bodies, having themselves or\ntheir forefathers been driveu afar, and\nonly returning to the lake since the\nwhite man's occupation." h'rom Mr.j\nSeligson it is learned that the catch on\nthe lake last season was forty tons of\nfish, netting the fishermen $8,000, as\nthere was no rivalry permitted, and a\nmoderate informal fee being all that\n"was required for the privilege.
34204a35d01ebe6bd768e4f49402a29d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.3849314751394 39.745947 -75.546589 volume of Irafflc Is something I general will find the polltcal pres- been made against the postofllce serx-\nserious, a large percentage of loss on [sure of government operation loo pow- ice and to suggest, if possible, wa>s and\ns large volume of business. Is some- ! refill for him to overcome. lie will incans of Improving same.\nUilng calamitous. For s road to base never be able to gel all the useless men After a conference with Mr- English\na fffll) of a million tons of Irafflc, fort off the payrolls. Nobody.nnd«r govern- snd an examination of the conditions\nexample, means going to the bad by invent ownership would be able to g«t ni the poslofflee, the committee rc-\n200,000 lions. For the same road lo ' them off. Nobody under government ported to the board of directors and\nlose a tit ini of a million and a half tone 1 ownership ever be able to gel made sundry recommendations for Ihu\niff traffic mean* going to the bad by lout of the men, If there wasn't one betterment of the service.\n500,000 ton*. For It to lose 40 per ,M-nt. loo many on a Joh, all Ural was In' nue of the chief causes for the con-\nof two million tons of traffic means go-1 (horn. The men couldn't get It out of j dlllona which have caused crlticsms of\nIng to the bad by 800,000 tous. And this i Ihemsolvea If they wanted to. Govern- j tpc service has been the fact that It has\nIs the very mischief which Is working I ment Jobs do not Inspire the 'workmen peon Impossible to keep a full cotnple-\nogalnsl Wie business, the earnings and and government rewards do not go to j ment of trained clerks, duo to the\n•the solvency of the railroads.
13509e5c4a871929056998c2bcf6d192 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.2178081874683 40.441694 -79.990086 rested immedlatelyaftertheshootingby Officer\nShaul, and taken to the Central station. He\nmade no resistance, and did not seem to care\nwhether he bad killed tbe girl or not. She was\ntaken to the Homeopathic Hospital.\nMonroe talked to Inspector McAleese after\nhis arrest He said ha bad fired three shots at\nthe girl, bnt did not know how many had taken\neffect His story of tbe trouble was tbat Belle\nJones had come to this city from Cleveland\nabout two weeks ago. Monroe at tbat time was\nliving with a woman named Alice Palmer,\nkeeping bouse on Poplar alley. When Belie\nJones came she was taken in charge by Will-\niam Christy, a friend of Monroe's, who\nbrought her to Monroe's hovel. She\nbegan at once to ingratiate herself\ninto Monroe's favor, and caused be-\ntween Monroo and Alice Palmer. About a\nweek ago Monroe says he went home one night,\nand lonnd his clothes and those o,f Alice\nPalmer thrown ont into the street. He foresaw\ntrouble, and thonght tbe best way out of it\nwas to give the Cleveland girt money enough\nto take her back to ber former home. This he\ndid the next day, and supposed she had gone,\nuntil yesterday he was told that she was still in\ntown, and living at the house of Madame\nBrown, in the Yellow Row. Upon going there\nhe met the girl on tbe sidewalk in front of the\nhouse. He asked her why she had not gone\nback to Cleveland as she had agreed, and he\nsays she gave him a very exasperating reply.\nHe drew a
22c6b1959fd142ad5bc94de49c370960 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1863.683561612126 35.780398 -78.639099 could have bean spared from other points of\nmore importance. And it may well be doubted\nwhether the means at the command of the\nGeneral of the Department of Norfolk were\nsufficient to have saved Koanoke Island. Cer-\ntain it is, that he was then regarded as a gen-\neral of 8knl, andall the available means of\nthe Government were placed at his disposal.\nWith the lights which experience has afforded,\nand with even tha scant means' then at com-\nmand, these places might, possibly, have all\nbeen held, bnt it is human to err, and we haw\nno reason to suppose North Carolinians (cer-\ntainly not the parties whose sentiments weare\ncombating) are exempt ftom the common\nfrailty - A lare and productivearegion of our\nState by those disasters has fallen into the\n of the enemy, and been occupied by\nhim, but to show conclusively how factious\nand unworthy of North Carolinians is this\ncomplaint, we have only to point 'to the fact\nthat the largest and most opulent city of the\nSouth ha8 fallen into the hands of the enemy,\nand the fortified towns ef the Mississippi had\nto be yielded o him, opening tha whole of\nthat State to his ravages. Is there any faction\nin Louisiana or Mississippi' that co'mplains\nthat New Orleans or Vicksburg or Port Hud-\nson were willfully neglected or surrendered?\nAnd can it be supposedfQiat the President of\nthe Confederacy, has deliberatelv .chosen to\ninflict by his neglect greater injuries upon ha\nown State and paople than upon even the popr\ncast off people of Mortk' Carolina No-- !
004e977ad659120f695c173eef254f79 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.0259562525298 44.939157 -123.033121 fect with the clerk of the supreme\ncourt. The petition asks for a rehear-\ning in the case but actually desires on-\nly a further interpretation in the mat-\nter and additional argument by attor-\nneys may not be necessary.\nState Highway Engineer John H.\nLewis stated today that he would join\nwith the board in petitioning for a re-\nhearing as he desired that the matter\nbe entirely cleared up on all points in\nthe interests of efficiency and harmony J\nin tne department.\nTh petition filed asks for a rehear-\ning on three points as follows:\nFirst Admitting the repugnancy\nof the latter part of section 3, chap-\nter 387, laws of 1915, to section 20,\narticle 4, of the state constitution, yet,\ndoes the former portion of the statute\nremain a complete and constitutional\nenactment ? commission and its at-\ntorneys hold that the court's opinion\ninfers the constitutionality of the form-\ner portion of the law. This is the por-\ntion that gives the commission power\nto construct the state highways and the\ngovernor, as its chairman, power to ap\npoint a highway engineer who shnll be\nscientifically educated in road building.\nSecond Considering both chapter\n337 of the laws of 1915 and chapter\n339 of the laws of 1913, is the duty\nof the actual road construction im-\nposed upon the state engineer ? The\ncommission holds that it is not.\nThird Is the deputy state engi-\nneer responsible to and under the di-\nrection of the state engineer, or is he\nthe creature and answerable to the\nstate highway commission) The com\nmission holds that the later is the\nmeaning of the law.
1209d61a749a69a89cf77f8ffff69434 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1892.0942622634589 39.623709 -77.41082 Tut: Meeting ok Jupiter and Venus\nEverybody must have noticed during the\nDust few weeks the gradual drawing togeth-\ner of the brilliant planets Jupiter and Venus\nin the western sky. Outshining all the oth-\ner stars, they have added greatly lo the beau-\nty of the evening sky. During the present\nweek they will continue to approach oue\nanother, until on Saturday morning they\nwill lie so close that to the naked eye they\nwill actually seem blended into one. Un-\nfortunately, the hemisphere of the earth\nwhich we inhabit will he turned away from\nthe place they will occupy in the sky at that\nlime, so that we shall bs unable to witness\nthis interesting conjunction. But on Friday\nevening the two planets will already have\ndrawn so near together that their aspect will\n that of a most splendid double star.\nThe observer will notice at once the un-\nquestionable superiority of Venus to her\nclant brother in brilliancy. This, of course,\nis an effect of distance, for although appar-\nently so near together that they almost touch,\nthe two planets are really more than four\nhundred millions of miles apart, their con-\njunction in the sky arising simply from the\nfact that Venus, in swinging around its or-\nbit. happens to come almost exactly into the\nline of sight from the eanii lo Jupiter. Ju-\npiter is more than 1,400 times as large as Ve-\nnus, and if it were really placed side by side\nwith Venus it would he at least 130 times as\nbright as the latter is. In short, it would\nresemble a small hut dazzling muon.
1e36f00c36c6f682c33e942a79828be1 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1915.387671201167 39.456253 -77.96396 Next comes the brewing by which\nthe malt is »oonverted into beer. The\ncrushed malt is extracted Ln hot wa¬\nter, when the diastase completes its ac¬\ntion in changing the starch to dextrin\nand maltose. One part of diastase is\nsullicient for 200,000 parts of starch.\nAfter the malt has been sufficiently\ntreated the solution is drawn off and\nthis constitutes the wort. The remain¬\ning grains are subjected to a careful\ntreatment with water to obtain as\nlarge a portion of soluble matter as\npossible, the worts are united, boiled\nhops are added and the wort is com-\nplete. It is then rapidly cooled to the\nproper temperature, the yeast is add-\ned and fermentation proceeds. Dur- j\ning the fermentation the yeast devel- i\nops. attacks the sugar and liberates j\ncarbonic acid gas and.alcohol. The\nrise of the carbonic acid jlfas through\n liquid causes motion and the liquid\nis set to work. In fact, the name fer- |\nmentation was originally given to any\nchemical reaction in which gases were\nliberated in the liquid, as for example,\nwhen a piece of marble is dissolved in\nhydrochloric acid solution When the\nfermentation Is complete the beer is\ndrawn off and stored in suitable ves¬\nsels. in which subsequent slow fer¬\nmentation takes place and the liquid\nbecomes clarified. The sediment of\nthe yeast is found in the bottom of tto©\nvessels in the case of lager beer, while\nin the case of ale the yeast is found\nin the form of scum at the top. This\nleads to the fanns "top fermentation"\nand "bottom fermentation" or "ober-\ngaerung" and "unterga erring." I might\nadd that the difference is partly due\nto the temperature at which the fer¬\nmentation takes place.
5e8e1340ba9e800d5a260631a3c05b7b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 Our Eastern .Shore “neekers,” as a a note of the dale and set his hou •\nrule, believe In ghosts as llrmly as did In order, th inly believing ho would\ntheir ancestors 201) years ago, and the : die on that particular day.\nharvest of them physically are afraid\nof apparitions. Kew of them arc !\nstout-hearted enough to pass at night\nOy graveyards or lonely graves. The\ninknown drowned, whose bodies are\ncast ashore are, as a rule, burled in\ndie bank of the waters where they\nare found, and such graves are gen­\nerally avoided even In the daytime.\nA wild goose hunUT some years\nvgo used his knowledge of tills fact\nto his advantage. This man had no\nfear of ghosts. An important feature\nof the winter hunting for him and\nhis neighbors was shooting wild\ngeese on their feeding ground near\nthe by crawling down on them\nin the dark as stealthily as an Indian ]\never trod the forest until tile feeding\ngrounds were brought within gun-1\nshot. Prospecting one day, our hero \\\nfound signs that the geese were feed- |\ning at night in Plney Point flats.\nBroad creek. He dug a grave on the\nhank, put a log in it. mounted It, put\nhead and footboards to jl, and caused\nthe report to be circulated in the\nneighborhood that a strange schooner\nhad anchored there, brought a dead\nman ashore and buried him. one\nSunday a crowd of people went to\nPlney Point to verify the rumor, and\nthere, sure enough, was the grave\n\\o goose hunter, except the man who\ndug the grave, went near that spot\nthat winter. He had all the gunning\nto himself and killed 59 wild\n■luring the season.
0b68f163a6a6bbcff329abd6b5328d8c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6543715530763 39.745947 -75.546589 The advantages of this system\nwould be that only those standing\ncommittees to which business haM\nhern referred to be obliged to meet\nWednesday night, or any time most\nconvenient for that matter, and\nrould consider the specific qucstioirt\nbefore them in much\nwith greater ease and concentration.\nTime and again members have ehaf.xl\nin the meetings of the committee of\nthe whole over the delays caused by\nIhe discussions straying far from the\nsuhiect in hand, and at the time wasj-\nby by story-telling by certain mem­\nbers who apparently have nothing\nelse better to do.\nCouncilman Charles Forwood, chair­\nman of the finance committee wras\nasked yesterday how far advanced he\nthought Council would he with Its\nwork on the yearly budget and on khe\nordinances relative (o licensing of\ntrades and professions had the sub­\njects been discussed entirely in c<>m-'\nmlttee of the whole.\nMr. Forwood shrugged his shoulders\nand replied he doubted if the ques­\ntions would be finished cvep now. He\nthen expressed his own feelings In\nfavor of a rhangc to the method of\nreferring minor questions to the\nstanding committees for report. In\nthis, C. S'mmons, clerk of\nCouncil, who was formerly an active\nmember of Connell, agreed Vr.\nSimmons further railed attention that\nuntil within reeenl years Council's\nbusiness had been transacted though\nthe »landing committees.\nII Is a eurious fact that the busi­\nness transacted by Council Wednes­\nday evening in committee of the\nwhole is not legal or binding, burin\nreality is merely an agreement be­\ntween Ihe members as to what action\nthey Will take Thursday evening In\nregular session. Thus Ihe Wednesday\nnight sessions are little more than\nmere private confabs, and it was with­\nin Ihe province of President I.yqn to\nthreaten, as he recently did, when\npiqued by an article in a newspaper,\nthat he would order the doors closed\nto newspaper men. He could not,\nhowever, close the doors to the reg­\nular Thursday night sessions.\nThe feeling In the membership\nagainst the meeings of Ihe commUtco\nof the whole has been aecnmulatlirg\nfor weeks, and it will not be surpris­\ning if some action to simplify the\nsystem, expedite business and save\nhours of wasted time Is taken hefniA»\nCouncil buckles down to Its fall and\nwinter grind.
333f428f4c7e375ce5809595107faa50 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.17397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 been holding campaigns in many of f„i t0 Keep the windows open tho\nthe large cities. You will hear re- he didnt like It. it was cold so he\nports of these meetings In America would get up and walk around the\nbut you w-ill not hear of (he great room while I recited. He had a small i\nwork of preparation before Mr. Eddy fine-tooth comb which he would draw ]\ngoes to a city. Both men and women forth from the recesses of his pocket\nwere In training two months ahead and use upon his scanty whiskers. All\nto be able to leach the Bible classes the older teachers have long finger\nwhich would bo enrolled. Also a nails which makes It rather difficult\nlarge uunibsr of personal workers for them to handle things. 1 have\nj were prepared to help in the meet- had my first examinations In the\nings. Chinese people came to the language. These will come every si*\ncity, some from a city up the river weeks throughout (he year. I study i\n400 miles distant. Since most of our in school but not at home in the\nChinese teachers at the Language evening. We go to bed early in the\nSchools are non-Christians we hud no Orient and rise accordingly.\n that they might attend the Last night 1 attended my first mis-\nmeetlngs. Tickets had been distrib- slon meeting with tho bishop prese­\nnted beforehand to the ladies of offl- ing. He has been In town a few days\ncial families (called lai-tale' for and wf met last night to talk over\nChristianity is now making its up- problems and plans, for there are\npeal to Chinas educated classes. The many of both. China is far more\nmeetings were held in the old the- beautiful than I had expected and at\natro on the exposition grounds—a the same time more poverty stricken,\nbuilding which held 2.000 people. But 1 do love the people. They are\nThat first day of the w omens meet- a wonderful race. Each day I am more i\nings when I got there half an houi thankful I am here where opportunl-\nearly almost all the seats were tuk- ties and responsibilities are great. I\nen. There were mission and govern- ask all who read this to pray for j\nment school pupils and teachers, of- (his nation. They are in a crucial i\nticials w lves and some poorer wo- period and sorely need God. Pray for\nmen, but of these a small number. I us who live here that we may ever
47a2fba17cda90378196a31d94e8c15d DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.932876680619 44.939157 -123.033121 one of the most vnluablo parts of tho\norganization and if thero wero more of\nthem tho commission would be nblo to\nkeep closer track on tho small con-\ntractor who is dodging the law.\nAnother great drnwbnck with the\npresent manner of collections is the\nmanner of "coaxing" the remittances\nfrom the people that have boon so un-\nfortunate as to have been numbered on\nthe original list as coming under the\nhead of employers of labor under a\nhazard. I have known cases where the\ninrty in question has not employed\nlelp for years and yet has received a\nnotice under the attorney general's\nform stating that ho is required to pny\nthe commission the sum of twenty-fiv-\ndollars, and I know of cases where\nthis amount has actually been paid er '\nwhere the commission have written\nback that the amount will credited\nto his account should he nt any future\ntime engngo in this occupation.\nOf course we all realize that the law\nis in its crude form and thnt no doubt\nin time it will ad iust Itself to tho con-\nditions of this state, but I fi\nlieve thnt in order to make it a success\nin Oregon that some system will have\nto be worked out whereby a closer\nrheck will be kept on construction work\nthroughout tho state and where report\nwill Lave to be undo tho comminsion\nbefore protection will be allowed on a\ncontrnot or building and in caso the\nsame is not applied for and no report\nhas been received by the nec.l''\nmission the BartT onnrttt.no will ha de\nprived of all protection, of course some\nof you will say that the expense of\nXeeplrg a representative on the ground
d7db6a53140418453c883de31444caa8 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.1712328450026 40.807539 -91.112923 Also—That the fractional parts of township\n69, N. range 4 west, and 69 N. range 5 west,\nba constituted one organized township, to be\nknown by the name of the AUGUSTA\nTOWNSHIP, and that the first meeting of\nthe electors of said township be held at the\n" Iowa Inn" in the town of Augusta.\nAlso—That township 70, N. range 4 west,\nbe constituted one organized township to be\nknown by the name of the DANVILLE\nTOWNSHIP, and tiiat the first meeting of\ntlic electors of said township be held at the\nHouse of Hiram .Messenger.\nAlso—That township 70, N. range 3 west,\nbe constituted one organized township to be\nknown by the name of FLINT RIVER\nTOWNSHIP, and that the first meeting of\nthe electors of said township be held at the\nHouse of Jonathan Morgan, Esq.\nAlso—That township 71, range 2 west,\nand Fractional township 71, range 1 west, be\nconstituted one organized township to be\nknown by the name of TAMEY TOWN­\nSHIP, and that the first meeting of the elec­\ntors of said township be held at the House of\nMatthew W. Latty, Esq\nAlso—That township 74, N. range 3 west,\nbe constituted one organized township to be\nknown by the name of FRANKLIN TOWN\nSHIP, and that the first meeting of the elec­\ntors of said township be held at the House of\nJohn Lorton, Esq., in Franklin.\nAlso—That township 71, N. range 4 west,\nand 72, N. range 4 west, be constituted one\norganized township to be known by the name\nof PLEASANT GROVE TOWNSHIP, and\nthat the first meeting of the electors of said\ntownship be held at the House of John New-\nland, Esq.
4dd54786d4d1a279026c7fd0c31e748a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.042465721715 40.063962 -80.720915 Sam Fbakcisco, Jan. IB. .Yokoham\nadvices ot Dec. 8ill, slate tbat Harabus\nYoshmato, one ol the under Becretarie\nof the foreign office and recently Envo\nto Corea,hai been commissioned to repre\nsent Japan at St. Petersburg, and wil\nstart to-morrow lor hli post. He la tape\ndaily entrusted with tbe Saghallen qua\nlion. Tbe arbitration ol tbe Maria tine:\nease will not come up (or discussion unu\na jeer benco, wben other agents will b\ndispatched in tbe Interest ot Japan.\nHarabtua's rank is First Secretary c\nLegation. The office of Envoy left vacan\nby (the death ot Sana, remains unflllct\nThe Japanese Foreign Office has receive*\nan intereating dispatch from China in re\nlation to Garcia, the Peruvian Emperor\nTbo Chinese say he will be received witl\nthe courtesies and attention due a Minis\ntcr, but they will make no treaty \nPern until tbat nation aball have releasee\nand sent back every Coolio now held bj\nthem, and pledged itself to discontinui\nthe Coolie importation in the future.\nConsiderable discontemnt is expressed\nIn Japanes official circles over tbe facl\nthat Garcia was allowed a favorable treat;\nd; tne lato head ol the loreign office\nSayezimo. Charles Walcolt Brooks re\nturns to San Francisco by the China tc\nresume bis functions as Consul lor Japan\nP. M . Wilson, Esq, formerly BriUab\nCharge D' Amirs, and more recently thi\nfirst Secretary of the Legation atYeddo re\nturns to Eogland next week, having beoo\ntransferred to Copenhagen He carrieswltb\nhim the most comprehensive treatise\nupon education in Japan that has yet\nbeen prepared to be presented to the pub'\nllsher by his government.\nConsiderable speculation has arisen\namong foreigners over rumors of a
4dc7b5a872eb076e71a4f3b97ab13237 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.0972602422628 39.261561 -121.016059 SHERIFFS SAKE—Whereas, on thi\n7th day of January, a. d. 1861 , in the IHstric\nCourt, In and for the county of Nevada and State o\nCalifornia, FRANCI8 SMITH recovered Judgmea\nagainst ARTHUR M. HENRY for the aum of Sever\nhundred and ninety-two dolhtre end twenty-one eta.\ndebt, with interest on the Mid sum of $70$ 21 fron\nthe 0th day of August 1800, at the rate of ten pei\ncent, per annum until paid, together with $66 0<\neoets of suit; 1 have levied upon property which wai\nheretofore levied upon and attached August 0th I860,\nat 3 oclock and 05 minutes r. x., to wit: AM tb<\nright title ami interest of the shove named defendant\nof in and to a certain set ot mining claims or minin|\nground, situated upon San Junn Hill, Nevada county\nCalifornia, and known m A. Henry ft claims\nbounded on the north by Farqohar ft Co. * claims,\non the east by the Go-Ahead to,a claims, and on\nthe west by the Starr Co.s claims, together with all\ntho appurtenandss thereunto belonging. Alao, all\nthe right title and interest of the shove names) dofen\ndaut of in and to a certain set of mining claims oi\nmining ground, known as Henry ft Rtdabaws back\nground, and bounded on the west and north by the\nStarr Co.s claims, and en the east by the Henry A\nCo.s claims, and situated upon San Juan Hill, No-\nvada county, California. Abo all the right title and\ninterest of the above named defondant ot In and to a\ncertain set of mining Halms, known ai the Go-Ahead\nclaims, together with all sluices and Humes thereon-\nto belonging, situated upon San Juan Hill, Nevada\ncounty California.
07f4239337a24a6a8df1a7f416d8c3f1 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.4534246258245 39.369864 -121.105448 The Police of England. —Wherever you\ngo in England, Ireland or Scotland, the police\nare sure to attract the admiration of the\nstranger. They seem to be everywhere the\nsame class of men, all dressed in the same\nuniforms, each of the required height of six\nfeet, drilled to walk erect, with a military\nstep, and to maintain an air of respectability\nand authority that gives character to them\nin the community. They are dressed in\nblue swallow-tailed coals, and pants of the\nsame color, the coat being buttoned up to\nthe throat with metal buttons. Their hats\nare of fur, with oil-cloth tops, and they\nwear their numbers on the hatband in silver\nfigures. The fact of their all being of uniform\nbight, and of erect, manly carnage, shows\nthat they are picked men, none of them\nseeming to be forty years of age or \nthirty. They are never seen without white\ncotton gloves on, or with the slightest\nevidence of negligence in dress or personal\nappearance. They move about with their\ncleanly shaved faces and neat appearance\nlike so many walking statues, always alert in\nthe performance of their duties, and when-\never they have occasion to interfere, it is\nwith a voice and air of authority that no one\nwould dare to dispute. They are not allowed\nto lean against lamp-posts, smoke\ntalk on the corners with acquaintances,\nenter taverns except on duty, or to slack\ntheir vigilance for a moment under any\npretence. To the stranger, their services\nare invaluable, nod they will, with the\npoliteness of a Chesterfield, impart whatever\ninformation may be required, or direct him\nto pass on to the next officer, wfaa will point\noat the locality be i? in search of.
547b74fc589955b2778f85159a1420c6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0753424340437 39.261561 -121.016059 A document, entitled “The Army of the\nPotomac, and its Management,” has been\naddressed to Congress by Charles Ellet, a\ncivil engineer of Philadelphia. The author\nholds that Gen. McClellan is unequal to his\ngreat duties ; and as he discusses the sub*\nject rationally and intelligently, and has\nan intimate knowledge of the topogrophy\nof the country occupied by the two armies,\nhis remarks are deserving of attention. We\ngive an extract from the document:\nThe Commanding Genernl is the armys\nbrain. We may accumulate hundreds upon\nhundreds of thousands of brave and loyal\nvolunteers ; rich in all the science and art\nand mechanical skill of the abundant land ;\nwe may provide our proud army with bat-\ntery upon battery, and squadron opon\nsquadron, and pour accumulated comforts\nupon it, until invention is exhausted, and\nthe railroads groan beneath their ceaseless\nloads. Yet that army, of which all the in-\ndividual tire, intelligence and skill are sub-\nordinated by the rules of military service to\nthe assumed superiority of an incompetent\ncommander, will either rest idle in its camp",\na helpless burden upon the country, or be\nmoved, if moved at all—as recently on the\nUpper Potomac—to its own destruction.\nSuch is now the unfortunate position.\nThe army all that the ardent patriot could\nwish it to be—brave, loyal and ready. But\nlbc General at its head, thogh respectable\nas a man, isnot a superior man, and therefore\nunequal to Ids great duties.\nTtiere have been periods during Gen. Mc-\nClellan's presence here on the Potomac,\nwhile his army was resting in camps before\nthe Capital, when opportunity upon oppor-\ntunity for annihilating the rebellion in Vir-\nginia, at a blow, was suffered to pass by him\nunseen and unimproved.\nThere have been weeks in succession, this\nsummer and autumn, when the transfer of\nonly 10.000 men—entirely useless here—to\nthe region drained by the Great Kantmwha,\nwould have enabled a General who under-\nstands the topography of Western Virginia,\nand the elements of military strategy, to\ncapture the entire forces under Lee, Floyd\nand Wise, without the necessity of a single\nbattle to adorn bis triumph in blond.\nIn fact, the w hole rebel army in Western\nVirginia placed itself recklessly in our pow-\ner; while our commander here, wholly un-\nconscious ofthe opportunity inviting him\nprompt action and to a bloodless victory,\ncontinued his daily parades, with unbroken\nself-applause, apparently satisfied with the\ndisplay of his impatient troops aud the bar-\nren, amusement offered to an admiring\npublic.
0af72030fdb17837b8da3aa784b0e02a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1896.5259562525298 39.745947 -75.546589 He went up the Hudson river, by\noanal to Ibe great laker, tbenee by the\nOhio caual to the Muakeegon river,\nthence by the Mlasloslppi to the gulf.\nFroth the gulf Captain Payne came North\nby the Inland waterway Through the\nOhio canal the little htat lost six pro­\npellers the water being only 80 Inches\ndeep while the boat draws 43 Captain\nPay no ssys Lhat every well regulated\nOhioan living along the canal considers\nIt his duty to throw Iuto it anything\nthat be wishes to get rid of.\nCaptaiu Payne stopped at every point\nof Interest ou the way, the trip being\nentirely for pleasure. Ho spent some\ntime in Florida but was not at all favor-\nlmpr***-d with that state.\nUe o»ys they e»u raise uotblng what\never there except oiangen aud water­\nmelons. They have no pork or beef or\nmilk or auy vegetables worth eating.\nHe says that newspapers have for years\nbeen buncoing people into going to\nFlorida and many of them who bave\nspent their last cent to go there uow\nfind no means of returning and are\nnnable to make a living.\nUe laid up bis boat at Peneoeola last\nSummer and returned to bla home by\nway of the steamer to New York. On\nthe steamer were a midister aud his wife\nwho were returning from Florida after a\nresidence of several years. Tbe minister\nhad resigned his charge there. In re\nspouse to a question by Oaptaln Payne\nae to why he had left, the miuteter eatd;\n“Ther oau raise nothing iu Florida but\norange) As a result of the heavy frosts\nthere will be no orange crop for eight\nyears Do you think that people with\nout any rneaus of subsistence have any\nuse for a mlulstert*\nFrom WTlmlugtou the Do will go\nto New York by the Inland passage. She\nis very tastefnlly fitted up and has\nevery conveniei ce. A canvass roof pro-\nt«C-S the cabin from tbe weather.
6aa0335fd81c78cdd897e466ea8ed110 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.7904109271942 43.798358 -73.087921 the nctual effect of weakening the impres-sio- n\nof his testimony. This suspici6n ef-\nfects, in a more remarkable degree, the\ntestimony of the first writers on the side\nof Christianity. In opposition to it, you\nhave no doubt, to allege the circumstances\nunder which the testimony was given;\nthe tone ot sincerity which runs through\nthe performance of the author; the con-\ncurrence of other testimonies; the perse-\ncutions which were sustained in adhering\nto them, and which can be accounted for\non no other principle, than the power of\nconscience and conviction ; and the utter\nimpossibility of imposing a false testimo-\nny on the world, had they even been dis-\nposed to do it. Still there is a lurking\nsuspicion, which often survivrs this\nstrength of all argument, and which it is\ndifficult to get rid of, even after it has been\ndemonstrated be completely unreasona-\nble. He is a Christian. He is one of\nthe party. Am I an infidel? I persist\nin distrusting the testimony. Am l a\nChristian ? I rejoice in the strength of it ;\nbut this very joy becomes matter of sus-\npicion to a scrupulous inquirer. He feels\nsomething more than the concurrence of\nhis belief iu the testimony of the writer.\nne caicnes me iniection oi his piety and\nma morai senmnems. in addition to the\nacquiesence of the understanding there is\na con, amore feeling both in himself, and\nin his author, which he had rather been\nwithout, because he finds it difiicut lo\ncompute the precise amount of its influ-\nence; and the consideration of this re-\nstrains him from that clear and decided\nconclusion, which he would infillibly have\nlanded in, had it been purely a secular in.\nvestigation.
8cab2a43753c15e43f25f00cf3c794f2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.532876680619 41.681744 -72.788147 Each team got six hits but the\nWashingtons made the most of their\nWngles. Misplays by the Smith team\naided the team greatly in its victory.\nIt was in the first five innings that\nthe winners showed their best cards.\nThe Smith team became dangerous\nin the eighth but their rally was cut\nshort by Tuczkowski who steadied\ndown and retired the side.\nThis was the only inning in which\nthe Washington twirler si owed any\nsigns of weakness. In the other in-\nnings, he breezed his fast ones past\nthe Smith batters and mixed up his\ncurves in good style. He struck out\nnine batters. Argosy, Smith twirler,\nwaa wild and gave 10 free tickets to\nfirst base. He struck out seven.\nThe Washington team went on a\nhitting spree in the fifth. Four\nsingles paved the way for the scor-\ning of seven runs. The first \nwere made by Washington in the\nsecond when they got two. Two\nwalks and a long single by Tucz-\nkowski gave them a lead. Smith\ncame back in the third to score a\nrun without a hit. Lynch was walk-\ned, went to second on a wild pitch\nand came in on an infield error.\nThirteen batsmen stepped to the\nplate in the fatal fifth and all the\nruns were scored with two out. An\nerror and two successive walks filled\nthe bases. A long single scored two\nruns and again the sacks became\nloaded. Three times with the bases\nlilled, a batter hit one on the nose.\nAnderson here took up the pitch-\ning burden for Smith and he worked\nnioely, holding the winners without\na hit and scoreless. Sapko was the\nbig hitter for the Washingtons with\nLynch doing good work for Smith.\nThe summary:
0fed8c52bd58c743ada0628501fbd200 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1902.2808218860985 39.78373 -100.445882 The firm enjoys a protective tariff of about $9 a ton on steel\nrails atone, and is protected throughout. Not content yet, it asks\nCongress to pay ships subsidies so as to enable them to carry the\nfirm's products cheaper. How is Nevada affected by this tariff?\nAt the present time we want a railroad through Carson, and over\nthe hills by Woodfords; we want another road to Tonopah, and we\nwant to extend the C. & C. to Mojave on the southern route. A\nfew roads are projected in the eastern part of the State. The\nSouthern Pacific is engaged in vast improvements, and heavier and\nbetter rails are being constantly relaid. The mere statement of\nthese facts ought to convince Nevada that it would be greatly to its\ninterests to take off that $9 a ton on steel rails. rails cost\nabout $27 a ton, with a tariff, and they could be had for $18 a ton,\nwithout the tariff. The difference between $27 a ton and $18 a ton,\nmay well be conceived to be the exact difference between a road\nthrough Carson over the hills to the Ocean, and no road; and the\nsame remarks apply with reference to all the contemplated im-\nprovements in Nevada. The difference in the price of construction\nalso creates higher rates of fares and freights, and the difference in\nrates of fares and freights may be the exact difference between our\nability to ship products or our inability to do so at any profit. It is\na very plain proposition, that if a pair of boots costs $3, and a man\nhas only $2, that the difference to him is " cold feet."
1b3ffaa931ff0ea7d192fcd0c7b0bf8c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.4260273655505 39.513775 -121.556359 Torn Horeahs or Northern Lights, Af\nthe time when he »i nessed the spec-\ntacle he was King in asb dgc of too\ncountry, traveling towards a place\nnamed llonpnrandu. Ho » iys :\nThe night had long set in, with a\nclear sky, 13 deg. below z* ro, and a\nsharp wind blowing. All at once nu\nexelatn ition from l»rai>ted (the driver)\naroused me. I opened my eyes as I\nlay in his lap, looked upwards, and saw\na belt nr scarf of silver tiro stretching\ndirectly across the zenith, with its loose\nfrayed t nds slowly swaying to and fro\ndown the slopes ol the sky. Presently\nit began to waver, b* tiding back and\nforth, eioiii* times slowly, some times\nwith a quick, springing motion, as if\ntesting its elasticity. Now It took the\nshape of a bow, now uudulat« d into\nII 'garb's line of beauty, brightoiiing\nand failing its sinuous motion, and\nfinally formed a shepherds crook, the\nend of which suddenly begin to separ-\nate and fall oil, its if driven by a\nstrong wind, until the whole licit -hot\naway in long, diiftmg lines of fi“ry\nsnow. It then gathered again into a\ndozen dancing fragments, wnicli alter-\nnately advanced and retreated, shot\nhither and thither, against and across\neach other, blazed out in yellow and\nrosy gleams, or pd d again, playing a\nthousand fantastic pranks, as if guided\nby -nine w ild whim.\nWC lav silent, with upturned faces,\nwatching this wonderful spectacle.\nSuddenly the scattered lights ran toge-\nher, as by a common impulse, j uned\nllieir loiglit ends, twisted them tiirouh\neach nttier, and f 11 in a broad, lumin-\noiis curt .in straight dow nw aid through\n•he air until its inng'd hem swung ap-\nparently hut a lew yirds above our\nheads.
0b060f2ac7cb2964b638c4de4d8d5dc3 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1901.6589040778792 46.601557 -120.510842 enchance their supremacy at home.\nHut the Mime economic causes which\ndeveloped capitalism are leading to\nSocialism, which will abolish both the\ncapitalist class and the class of wage-work-\ners. And the active force in bringing\nabout this new and higher order of socie-\nty is the working class. All other class-\nes, despit their apparent or actual con-\nflicts, are alike interested in the uphold-\ning of the system of private ownership\nof the instruments of wealth production.\nThe Democratic, Republican, the bour-\ngeois public ownership parties, and all\nothes parties which do not stand for the\ncomplete overthrow of the capitalist\nsystem ot production, are alike political\nrepresenatives of the capitalist classes.\nThe workers can most effectively act\nas a class in their struggle against the\ncollective powers of capitalism, hy con-\nstituting themselves a political par-\nty, distinct from and opposed to all par-\nties formed by the propertied classes.\nWhile we declare that the develop-\nment of economic conditions tends to\nthe overthrow of the capitalist system,\nwe recognize that the time and manner\nof the transition to Socialism also de-\npends upon the stage of development\nreached by the proletariat. We there*\n; fore, consider it of the utmost import-\nIance for the Socialist Party to support\n!all active efforts of the working class to\nbetter its condition and to elect Social-\nIists to political offices, in order to facili-\n!tate the attainment of this end.\nAs such means we advocate:\n1. The public ownership of all means\n:of transportation and communications\n! and all other public utilities, as well as\nof all industries controlled by monopo-\n'
313e728691773362c0791bc1e8cefbf0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 Court lor divorce from Nancy Thompson,\n«nd the divorce being granted, John II.\nJohnson applied lor divorce Irom the o\naame woman. Thus the woman was ill- n\nvorced from two husbands in one day. c\nShe was married to Thompson up the «\nriver, but soon deserted him, and cimlng n\nhere married Johnson under the namo ol\nNancy Lodge. »\nThomas Mahon, well known to plnnlck- |c\ners, ol Mahon'a lirove, died yesterday at n\nhis residence in Ilrooke county, west f.\nVirginia. Ue was seventy-eight years ol\nage, was born In llaltlmore, and moved V\nhere with Ills lather at an early age, bell g Vl\nnumbered among tho oldest residents ol |,\nthis region. In early lile be followed the t,\nriver lor n living, afterwards going Into Cl\nbusiness as a merchant. He died possessed n\nol considerable property. I,\nMiss Mary Means died at the residence j(\nof her mother in this city last night, alter\na long Illness of typhoid fever. Hhewasa a\nmemner of one of the oldeet here ,,\nand was well known In society circlos c(\nliuth here and In Pittsburgh anil Wheel- i ,\nIng She was only about twenty years old |,\nand was a general favorite among her .\nin nil/ HuquaiiuauutJB. y\nMvelj ChMlng In flli«» irnr; Meadow*.\nNrw York, Narch 18..The New Jersey .\nsalt meadows are alive wilb men and boys a\nin pursuit of muskrata. Last fall an tin* b\ninually large number of mounds were f\nbuilt in theawamps by these animals, and\nthe appearance of the dominies led to *\nmany predictions of a cold winter, which H\nwere abundantly verified. In the recent ,\nfreshet the water suddenly roso in the **\nmud houses, and theoccupanta were com- »\nfuelled to tike to the tneadowa for tht-ir\nivea. They have fallen easv victims to\nthe hunters. Hundreds have beon killed\nin thn (litrhpR hv thn roadside between a\nNewark nn<i;Ktir.iilietli. The pklunbritiR 18 .\nto 20 cent* in the market, and Borne ol the '\nhunters make good w««ee In the nhaae.
15a0a3c19940ad6284ee556996f2d98b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.595890379249 40.063962 -80.720915 Louiinu.1, Kv., Auguat 5.A Lew\nrenceburg special to (lie Courhr Journal\nsays: On the 10th ol July l»t Arthur\nIngrsm, > poor old man about 63 years ot\nage, who leaves a wife and five or aix\nchildren, waa foully murdered by W, T.\nGrant, near bin home In (hla county,\nGrant, who la In Jail, rnskei the following\nconfession: That on the 19:h o( July he\nand one Trivia went to Vanbnren, Auder*\naon county; there met old man Ingram,\nand there all took a drlnlt. Tbey went\nI mm there to Ciltert'a etore, not very far\naway, Tlie'O Urant bought a q'lart. Grant,\n1'ravla and Ingram drank fieely ol It, and\nthe old tnan became drunk and bole\nMrntti. Grant and Trsvls took tbe old\nman'a sick, that tootslnud tome meal or\nfl mr he had bought, and eich bold\nul him to aaalat blm borne. When tbey\nhad gotten near Ingram's house they call\ned lor ennie one to come ami net him and\nhis eack. When hla daughter oauie out,\nGrant git over the fence and ailed the\nold man to get over, when he relneed to\ngo. Ingram reached over two or three\ntimei and took hold of Grant, using some\nharah wordi toward blm, when Grant\npicked up a rock and knocked hlo away\nfrom him. Ue then secured a fire-pound\nrock and struck the old man a severe\nhlow, knocking blm about fifteen fee'.\nIngram's daughter was standing there til\ntbe time, crying and screaming to let her\nfather alone. Tbe laat blow did the work,\nkilling him Instant ly, Grant thtn let him\nsgalnat a fee and left.\nri.oriKKn AU tiNir tub ruWKiM
024e8ad10e0b15e674dbf5d428586024 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.278082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 No. 13 . A three-story brick dwelling\nand lot, No. 814, on the easteily side ot\nKirkwood sircct. 98 feet 3 Inches north­\nerly from the northerly side of Eighth\nstreet, having a front ot 14 feet on Kirk­\nwood street, and extending that width\neasterly 68 feet 6(4 Inches with the use\nof a four-feet wide alley on the easterly\nside, thereof.\nNo. 14. A 3-story brick dwelling and lot.\nNo. 816, on the easterly aide of Kirkwood\nstreet 112 feet 3 Inches northerly from the\nnortherly side of Eighth street, having a\nfront of 11 feet on Kirkwood street and\nextending that width easterly 68 feet 5%\nInches, with the use of a four-feet wido\nalloy on the easterly side thereof.\nNo. 15. A three-story brick dwelling\nand lot. No. 826 . on the easterly sldo ot\nKirkwood wtreot. 11 feet 2 Inches south­\nerly from the southerly sldo of Taylor\nwtreet, having a front ot 14 feel on Kirk­\nwood street, and extending that width\neasterly 68 feet 5(4 Inches, with the use of\na four-toet wide alley on the easterly\nside thereof.\nNos, 16. 17 . 18 . 19, 26. 21. A thrce-slnry\nbrick dwelling and lot. No. 817, on the\nwesterly side of Kirkwood street, 112 \nnortherly from tho northerly\nEighth street, having a front of 14 foot\non Kirkwood street, and extending that\nwidth westerly «5 feet D',4 Indies, with (he\nuse of a four-foot wide alloy on the west­\nerly side thereof.\nFive two-Btory brick dwellings and lots,\nNos. 1121, 1123, 1125, 1127 and 1129, on the\nnorthwesterly side ot Railroad\nbeginning 150 feet\nstreet by\nstreet; thence westerly 125 feet; thence\nnortherly 57 feet 6 inches; thence east­\nerly 71 feel; thence northerly 14 feet 4(4\nInches: thence easterly 75 fool lo Railroad\navenue, and thence southwestci ly 71 feet\n10(4 Inches, more or less, by line at right\nangles to Twelfth street, with the use of\nalleys on the northerly and westerly sides\ni hereof. These houses each have a front\nof about 14 fcot 4(4 Inches, and will be\nsold separately.\nNo. 22 . A two-story brick dwelling and\nlot. No. 1124, on the southerly side of\nTwelfth stroet. 156 feet 4(4 Inches west­\nerly from westerly side of Claymont\n»inset, having a front of 14 foot 4(4 Inches\non Twelfth »tree!, and extending that\nwidth southerly'90 feet, with the use of\nalleys on tho southerly and westerly\nsides thereof.\nNo 23. A two-story brick dwelling and\n■,,'
24db7ca76e2b8d2873f65cde873c6cae NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.2589040778792 41.681744 -72.788147 The sixth annual police ball giv-\nen by the Bristol police department\nfor the benefit of the police fund\nwill be held tonight in the state\narmory and from all indications will\nbe the largest and most brilliant so-\ncial function of the year. Today the\ndecorators are transforming the bar-\nren drill hall into a bower of beauty\nwhich will, with the multi-c ol ore- d\nstreamers and twinkling lights.\nserve as a fitting background for the\ncostumes of the gentler sex. The\nticket sale has been far in excess of\nprevious years and, with the large\nnumber expected to be sold at the\ndQor, it is probable that the large\narmory will be well filled.\nThe dancing will be preceded by a\nconcert by the New Departure or-\nchestra from S : 1 5 to R:4" o'clock.\nImmediately following the concert, a\nfanfare of trumpets will herald the\nstarting of the grand march which\n be directed by John Hayes, chief\nof the Bristol fire department. Fol-\nlowing the grand march, dancing\nwill be enjoyed until 10:45 o'clock,\nwhen the first entertainment feature\nwill be introduced. This entertain-\nment number, together with a more\nelaborate one at Ihe regular inter-\nmission at 11:45 o'clock, will be fur-\nnished by the famous New York\nnight club attraction, the "Dancing\nDebutantes." The company, which\nwill put on a regular revue at the\nintermission, consists of seven at-\ntractive young singers and dancers\nwho are released to Bristol only\nthrough special arrangement. They\nwill put on their act with special\nlighting effects.\nMembers of the police department\nwill act as ushers for box holders\nand will act as general floor com-\nmittee. The boxes, for which most\nof the seats have been taken, w ill be\nSO in number. Two of these boxes\nhave been reserved by Chief Krnest\nT. licldcn. one for
1cd750d949d73c6d6d85f9f511f3d883 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.4315068176052 40.063962 -80.720915 Boast as much as you like about the\nprogress ol the girl, she is, alter all, rather\na helpless being still, and however sails\nfactory helplessness in woman uiay be id\npoetry or in theory, in actus! life it is lai\nfrom being the happiest lot in the world.\nSomething. more than two-thirds, it ii\nsometimes put as high aa Inur-lHibe, ol all\nthe adult womeu in New York are wage\nearners, but what does their meed ol dol\nlars amount to? A majority ol themap\norage less than (1 a day, and $10 or $15 <\nweeK marks tba limit of the ambition o\nthe ordinary salary-worker. Women ma)\nba self-supporting, but very few, compsr\natively speaking, have reached that puin\nwhere they look beyond subsistence to i\ncomfortable competency, aa ineu reckoi\nsuch matters, or to getting rich.\nItistrne enough In a way, tlmt tin\nrange ol women's is broadening\nUunineea circles, in the city at least\nrecognize very little distinction nowadayi\nbetween what is properly women's worl\nand men's work, except the nil importsnl\ndividing line of pay. tio into any largi\nmanufactory, whether of woarlng apparel\nhousehold furnishings, or articles con\nnected distinctly with men's lahor, am\nsomewhere about the building, workinj\nwith needle or brush, leading a machine\nkeeping hooks, or manipulating a type\nwriter, you will And a woman at work\nOn the other hand, start any new Indus\ntry, I care not how specially adapted tc\nwomen's niuible lingers or keen eyesigh\nor insight, and if there is "money in it'\nthe woman comes into immediate com\npetition with a man. The art of earuini\na living lor man or woman either is on\nthat involves a good deal ol thought ant\nstudy, more ol each with every jeartlia\ngoes by.
02735851f75e8bfca9d3eaa8a15f8fbe THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.7136985984273 47.478654 -94.890802 State of Minnesota. /\nCon ty of Beltrami. (\nIn Probate Court. Special Term, Sept. 9.1902.\nIn the matter of the Estate of ArvillaE.\nMilne. Deceased:\nOn reading and lillng the petition of Calvin\nC. Doty. Administrator of said estate setting\nforth the amount of personal estate that has\ncome into his hands, the disposition thereof,\nand how much remains undisposed of; the\namount of debts outstanding against said de-\nceased, as far as same can be ascertained:\nthe legacies unpaid, and a description of all\nthe real estate, exopting the homestead of\nwhich said deceased died seized, and the con-\ndition and value of the respective portions or\nlots thereof; the persons Interested in said\nestate, with their residences: and praying that\nlicense be to him granted to sell all the real\nestate, except the homestead, of the\nIntestate died seized. And It appearing by\nsaid petition that there Is not sufficient per-\nsonal estate In the hands of said administrator\nto pay said debts, the legacies or expenses of\nadministration, and that it is necessary for the\npayment of such debts, legacies or expences.\nto sell all of said real estate: viz: Lots 13. 14,\n15and10InBlock 7and Lot 0 in Block18of\nthe original townsite of Bemidji in said Bel\ntrami county. Minnesota, according to the\nrecorded plat thereof.\nIt is Therefore Ordered, That all persons\ninterested In said estate appear before this\nCourt on Monday the sixth day of October\n1902 at 10 o'clock a. m., at the Courthouse in\nthe Viflatre of Bemidji In said County, then and\nthere to show cause (if any there be) why\nlicence should not be granted to said Calvin
0ec5d9ed9bc0b05d520601fd95b273c4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.113387946519 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Auguste Froellehcr, of 299Bid\ner street. New York City, was a g;\nsufferer, but when a friend recotnnx\ned to him the greatest remedy of n\nem times, iL)r. Greene's Norvura bl\nand nerve remedy, he questioned\nelNcaoy. At last this Doubting Thoi\nwns persuaded to try this marvel1\nmedicine, and the following 1«!\nshows how he was convinced of\ngreat virtues, ana now he han bee\na ilrm believer in It. He uays: "fl\ning been Pick for over two years \\\nmiliaria nnd dyepepsia and not b<\nable to cat, the doctors advised m<\nmake a trip to Franc#*, which I did,\nturning without any better results.\ncaused several physicians of rem\nhere In America, as also other emli\nmember* of the medical faculty in\nrope to fall after persistently atten\nIng to cure. It wan pronounced a o\nplication of malaria, dyspepsia,\nkidney weakness.\n"I heard of Greene's Nerv\nblood and nerve remedy and after uf\nit for a time I began to ent well and\nsufferings disappeared.\n"That others who have suffered\nhave with terrible pains in the bi\nlimbs and head may be relieved fi\nsuch dreadful tortures, and restore*\nusefulness, this testimonial is givei\nlet it be made public that Dr. Oree;\nNervura blood and nerve remedy\ncompletely cured me."\nPerhaps It Is not strange that\nProellcher doubted, for the mnrvell\npower of Dr. Greene's Nervura,\ngreat blood and nerve remedy, is\nmost beyond belief. A trial will <\nvlnce the most skeptical that this is\ngrandest medicine of modern times,\ndiscoverer. Dr. Greene, of 35 V\nFourteenth street. New York Clt*"\none of the progressive medical prn\ntloners of whom this nineteenth <\ntury is justly proud. He allows all\nwish to consult him daily, either ]\nsonally or by letter, free of charge.
1b7d876abe5e03da3e4bae6138aca13d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.9303278372292 40.063962 -80.720915 much so as this hemisphere is the r«\nverse of our northern hemisphere. Her\nspring begins September 21. Tho col\ncomes from tho south, thn heat from th\nnorth, the trees shed their bark and no\ntheir leaves; cherry seeds grow outsit!\nthe cherry; the birds don't sing, th\nflowers don't smell, the bees don't sting\nand the swans aro black. The sui\nthrows its shadow to the south; th\nmoon wears a different face and tho con\nstollations in tho heavens aro upsid\ndown, the natives don't bury their dew\nunderground but stick them up in tree*\nThese aro all facts. Imported birds sin;\nand cultivated flowers have as mucl\nodor here as iu any country and are a\nbeautiful. The cities arc more substuu\ntiullv built than in nur country, us Btom\nis abundant and of a lint* <jnality fo\nbuilding purposes. The roads arc al\nbuilt by the Government uud are tbi\nbest without exception I have ever seen\nThey ure wider and smoother and white;\nthan our national road, and have no tol\ngates. There are many thousand niiluj\nof these roads in the colonies.\nAdelaide.near where I now am.is i\ncity of over one hundred thousand in\nhabitants and is without question tlx\nQueen City of Australia, anil very mucl\nresembles the city of no fur a\nshade trees ure concerned the might b<\ncalled the "Forest City." The city i\nsituated on a plain itcur the Gulf of St\nVincent and is beautifully laid out. i\nis divided into North ami South Ade\naide by the river Torrens (native nami\nYatalaJ a little larger than NVheelinj\ncreek, lier htroets are wide mid wei\npaved with Nicholson, stone and 14s\nphi»H. Her sewerage is perfect. Then\nis no doubt that Adelaide is us cleau, i\nnot the cleanest city in the world. Sin\n18 Burrouniii'u uy pur* minis, mm una\nlarge zoological ami botanical garden\nhas not u wooilcn structure in the eit;\nlimits, all beiug built of stone and brick\n"King William" is the principal bank\ning street, and the buildings are gran<\nand imposing in appearauce, inside am\nout, and are said to bo much better thai\nmany London banks. The'towu hall\npostollice, new Parliament building\nGovernment house, museum, university\nstock exchange, Adelaide club and nmuj\nother buildings are^pecimens of solidit]\nand architectural beauty that reflect*\ngreat credit on the business men of tlx\ncity, ller street car lines are perfect\nThe plaiu on which the city is built ex\ntends many miles in length and is sail\nto embrace some 950,000 acres and ii\nsurrounded by a chain of mountains.
12725cf7ad4d619c28ed30d114ca9729 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.6506848997972 39.745947 -75.546589 visiting her brother, tt. M Moore, at urban correspondents, they're congre-\nIwrview, near town—Joseph G. Brown gating by the hundreds tn flocks out-\nwas a Wilmington visitor ou Monday— 'side the city. Theyre mixing up with\n1 M-ss Grace Watkins, of Middletown, N. blackbirds and starlings, getting\nI Y., has returned home after an extended re°dy for the trip south.\nhot with Miss Maw A«prP -Missi Tbe fruit of the wild cherry tree Is\nI Fiances Watkins is viaii.i? in Middle turning now. too. and the dogwood\ntown, Del. — Mrs, Lee Sparks spout part bpmps will be ripe in a, week or two.\nI of this week in Philadelphia—Miss Jean- After a diet of worms and bugs all\nMette Watkins, of Philadelphia, i* spend-.summer a the city parks, the robins\ning her vacation at her home here— ace only too glad to get out into the\nMiss Julia Townsend, of Wilmington, Is suburbs whcr0 fresh fruit abounds,\nspending this week with her grand ! 8o, every year ns soon as the little\nfather, former United States Marshal blue eggs In the robins nests are\nGeorge L. Townsend—I, R. Carrow, hatched and the fledgeling* are strong\nGeorge Shaw and Lee Sparks, Jr. were enough to travel, the birds begin to\nin Philadelphia on Monday and attended Bather ifor their fall . conventions,\nthe ball game between the Phillies ana They re the midst of their sessions\nChicago—Mias Helen B. Watkins has re. now. Thats why you have missed\nturned trom a trip to the exposition at them from the parks.\nSan Francisco and Los Angeles—Miss j\nAlice McCoy, of Wilmington, is spend-,\ning her vacation with her mother, here—\nMr. and Mrs Edward Khien, of Phila-,\ndelphia, are visiting Mr. Rhiens father,\nWilliam Rhien, this week—Captoin\nOkely Vinyard, of Panama, is spending\nsome time with his wife here—Miss Cor­\nnelia Townsend, of New York eity, is\nvisiting her father here—Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Ward, of Norfolk, Va., are spend­\ning part of this week at the home of\nHarry Ward—W . Mailly Davis spent 1\nSunday at jiis home here—William S.\nTownsend, of Wilmington, visited hi»\nhome here over Sunday—George W.\n»Holdmyer has returned from a stay inj\nAtlantic City—Jose Coll, of Pliiladel-]\nphia. spent Sunday at his home here—j\nJ. C. Armstrong spent the first part of I\nthe week in Philadelphia—Mrs. Harry!\nLighteap has had as her guests recently)\nMiss Mae Fosse and Miss Helen Bradley,\nof Wilmington—Miss Mabelle Pennock,\nof Newark, is visiting Miss Minnie Arm­\nstrong this week—Miss Georgia Enosi\nspent Sunday with her parents here—j\nMiss Mabel Coppage, of W ilmington. is|\nvisiting her grandmother here—Mr. and)\nMrs Clark Coppage, of Philadelphia, arc
436d720a5e28f72727c690f03974b82a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.5904109271944 42.217817 -85.891125 elareth the end from the beginning.\nNearly :'00 years before his birth he\nwas named by God ns one who ou cer-\ntain altars would burn men's bones,\nand he did. Compare i Kings xlli., 2.\nand II Kings xxlil, Id. Ilezeklah ex-\ncelled all others In the matter of "trust-\ning In the Lord." but Joslah excelled in\nturning to the Lord" (II Kings xviii,\nr; xxili. H." ) . To do right in the sight of\nthe Lord without turning to the right\nhand or to the left ami to please Ilim\nIn all things is an attainment to which\nonly one perfectly reached, but by His\ngrace all believers might come much\nnearer to It if they desired it as much\nas Llislia desired that which he sought\nthrough Klljah the that they were\nparted by a whirlwind.\nJoslah began by getting himself right\nwith God, for in his sixteenth year he\nsought the God of David, his father,\nevidently with the whole heartedness of\nJer. xxix, IS. Paul's advice to Timothy\nwas to first take heed to himself (I\nTim. iv, 1(1),. a nd our Lord taught us\nthat If we would get the motes out of\nother people's eyes we must tirst get\nthe beam out of our own eye (Matt, vii,\n5). The tirst thing for each individual\nis a right relationship to God, and this\ncan be obtained only by receiving His\nSo:i. the Lord Jesus Christ, and In Ilim\nthe forgiveness of all our sins and a\nrighteousness which makes us accepted\nIn Him and gives us the standing of
1bd4bae6c3e77350a7a91c2181583c21 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.9602739408929 40.063962 -80.720915 There 'n ft seilaus cot>(lict as to when the\nt'arm woe rounded, the engineer says\nthat iho Del wis runs as a ion aa the Are\nwis discovered. The carpenter, Dolson,\niiye that it was thought that the Dimes\n:ouid be extinguished by the pump*, and\naot until it was found that this was im¬\npossible wis tho a'arip given. The en¬\ntire Vraief WMiu !| imps within three or\n[our miuutea after tho lirst alarm, en the\n[lames must have got considerable head¬\nway before the alarm was njng. To t|)!e\nlatll delay tue loan of life wan due. Thero\nla atill a wide dltTerenue of opinion as to\ntho number of lives lo9t. The Picayuni\nistimatea It at thirty; the Timet Vemocml\nit forty-two, and Captain Muse, the com¬\nmander of the White, at only fifteen. It\nwill never be known, an there aro no\nnooks of record; whsjaver o{ thl> ntjmhor\nif negro deck'paaaieng'i n. A number of\npersons on the White at tho time she was\n reached lirrs tc-day on the Par-\n(oud, among them Captain Muse, her\n:ommander, and John Stout, her pilot.\nJaptiin Muse was sick In this room, but\nmoke when (ie heard the olotqi hell. Ue\nran tu the ironi of the but, "Gut found his\nway cat off by tho ilimss. He caaght\nbold of the hog-chains and swung himself\nforward to the bank. Ue hesitated about\nlolng back to the boat to aave passengers,\nbut concluding that there was no phinpe\n)! doing aiwlit 1)11* Ills life, abaddbiiod\nho Idea and organis9d a relief party\nIrom the shore. Captain Mute tikes\ni very different view of the loss of life\nfrom those hitherto given,and. deulirea\n:hat there were only fifteen person; lost S)t\nnoQt Tho only itih'u pttisengets were\nHr. Staft'ord. wife and child, Mleo Nc-\nJaleb and Captain Wash Floyd. There\nivere besides these eight or ten desk pis-\nrangers drowned. Oaptain Muse thinks\nhere wore only fifteen cabin passengers,\nbut Cleik McCoy estimates their number\nnuuh larger,
89c24b1574b0393363dce03ac04b007e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.8178081874682 39.261561 -121.016059 We have received one or two copie* of a\npamphlet, which purports to be a response to\nJudge Douglas' essay ou popular sovereignly.\nOne of them comes uuder the frank of a distin-\nguished gentleman, to whom it* authorship has\nbeen attributed, but for whose obaracler aud\nabilities we have too high a respect to credit\nan imputation so disparaging, lu its style,\nforce, and temper, it falls very short of the\nrepulatiou of that geulleiuan. Under an atfcc-\nlatiou of respect aud candor, it sloape to low\nflings and miserable perversious. With the\nconceit of great precision and poiut, it demands\nof the leader that he wade to the bottom of the\ntenth page before he cau And the point of con-\ntroversy, and devotes three-fourths of the re-\nmaining six pages to show the inconsistency of\nJudge Douglas, with a protest agaiusl ibe argu-\nment urn ad honiinum, but with tbe bald \nof citation as authority! Professing to speak in\nbehalf of property rights, it aunounces a grave\nconstitutional opening for fraud, injustice aud\nspoliation, compared with tbe theory it combats,\ndecidedly as we oppose it, seems to us tbe per-\nfection of constitutional justice uud policy.—\nWhen we add, that it says what it attempts iu\nsentences so loose and ill balauced as to destroy\nthemselves, we think tbe reader will agree with\nus, tbat Judge Black did not compose them.\nWithout going farther than ten Hues to look\nfor au illustration, we may say tbat Judge B.\nis incapable of such sentences as tbe following:\n“The style of the article is in some respects highly\ncommendable. It is entirely free from the vulgar\nclap trap of the stump; has no vain adornment of\nclassical scholarship; it shows no sign of the elo-\nquent Senator; it is even without the logic of the\ngreat debater.”
06ee8226d83c0c34dfe34cb4ccda1a56 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.2972602422628 40.063962 -80.720915 31, beinir upward of thirty six hours, pol\nand during this time she was supplied avo\nwith men from tho British steam-tug this\nHercules, which followed her from Liv- the\nerpool; These thirty-six hours were al- mo\nloweiUo elapse without any attempt to cul\nstop nlr. Here was another stage of iste\n"gross negligence." Thus was there neg- all\nligence in allowing the building to pro- to\nceed, negligence iu allowing the escape Am\nfrom Liverpool, aud negligence in al- ma\nlowing the liual escape from the British froi\ncoast. Lord Russell, while trying to ten:\nvindicate his Government and repell- sla'\ningThe complains of the United States, ant\nmoro than once admitted that the os- deli\ncape of the Alabama was a "scandal of <\nand reproach," which, to my mind, is on\nvery like a confession. Language could this\nnot be stionger. Surely such an act sioi\ncan not be blameless. If damages are Nal\never awarded to a friendly Power for fou\ninjuries reoeived, it is difficult to see rigl\nwhere they could be more strenuously crei\nclaimed than in a case which the first ah\nMinister of the offending Power did not har\nhesitate to characterize so strongly. The tecl\nenlistmont of the crew was not less ob- Kd\nnoxious to censure than the building of woi\nthe ship and her escape. It was a part by\nol the transaction. The evidence is ex- in\npllcit. Not to occupy too much time, net;\nI refer only to the of Will, hit\nPaBsmore, who swears that he was en- lan\ngaged with the express understanding "\ntbllt the snip WllS *"lo ugui lur LUU\neminent of the Confederate States of the\nAmerica:" that he joined her at J-. sird'a the\nyard at Birkenhead, near Liverpool, re- are\nmaining there several days; that he inti\nfound about thirty old inan-of-war's ply\nmen on board, among whom it was mu\n"well known that she was going out as con\na privateer for the Confederate Govern- list\nment to tight under a commission from os,\nMr. Jefferson Davis," In a list of the\ncrow now before me, there is a large\nnumber said to be from the "Koyal Na- Bri\nval Reserve." I might add to this tea- dot\ntimouy. The more the case is examin- noi\ned, the more clearly do we discern the but\ncharacter of the tiansaction. The dedi- du<\ncation of the ship to the rebel service, om\nfrom the very laying of the keel and dee\nthe organization of her voyage with reg\nEngland as her naval base, from £Io\nwhich she drew munitions of war losi\nand men, made her departure as much Mr\na hostile expedition, as if she had the\nsailed forth from Her Majesty's dock- ger\nyard. At a moment of profound der\npeace between the United State3 and ing\nKngland there was n hostile expedition to s\nagainst the United States. Itwasinno "in\njust sense a commercial transaction, tril\nbut an act of war.
03c00c63a347815888c9d4aec02be490 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.43698626966 42.217817 -85.891125 congress, December 3, lSoO, President\nBuchanan expressed the opinion that\n"no power existed in the constitution\nto prevent secession, or force a seced-\ning state back into the union;" and on\nthe 20th day of that month South Car-\nolina issued an ordinance of secession.\nUnder this troubled condition of the\ncountry the legislature convened on\nthe 2d day of January, ISol. The\nmembers had been elected by the two\npolitical parties, but political differ-\nences seemed to be forgotten or laid\naside, and the all importa'ut questions\nwere, what course should the general\ngovernment pursue and what action\nshould the Michigan legislature take?\nStates were seceding, the property of\nthe government confiscated, and the\nadministration had. declared that there\nwas no remedy. Members differed in\ntheir opinions upon these questions.\nSome thought that the seceding-state-\nshould be permitted to go in peace\nand establish a separate government.\n perhaps more radical, claimed\nthat such a course would be ruiu to\nboth sections, and that the union\nmust be saved, peaceably if possible,\nbut at whatever the cost might be. It\nwas also evident that Canada was\nsympathizing with and encouraging\nthe seceding states; and in case of an\narmed conflict, it was claimed would\nbecome an ally of the South, and that\nDetroit and other cities along the\nborder were unprotected. A measure\nwas finally introduced to bond the\nstate for 52(K),((K fur a defense fund\nto be used in case of necessity.\nAmong the members of the hou.sc,\nwhose inlluence had much weight,\nwere James I Joy and Sullivan M.\nCutchen of Detroit, Judge William T.\nHowell of Xewago and Thomas D.\n(lilbert of Grand Kapids. And in the\nsenate Judge Soloman L. Withey. and\nJohn B. Owen. In opposing the meas-\nure, Mr. Joy said:
0603780ba3a3d4f1a93795e74b473e9c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.5669398590871 40.063962 -80.720915 Chicago, July 24..The grain market ha|\nbeen in a somewhat nervous but neverthe¬\nless in a steady condition, the fluctation\nin prices being very small; the beat prices\nprevailing early in the week and the\npoorest about the middle. Corn was ex¬\nceptionally weak to-day and oats for\nfuture delivery exceptionally strong. The\nfarmers seem determined to punish any\none who shall originate a corner, for im-\nmediately upon the appearance of a\npremium of one or two cents for present\ndelivery in corner oats they set about\ncrowding receipts into the bins in a very\ndlaiwuragin gway for'the woulti'be-inamiiu-\nlators. Premium fell off very decidedly\ntowards tho close of the week, on account\nof the heavy receipts of corn, averaging\nhalf a million bushels daily. The ship¬\nments have, however, exceeded the re¬\nceipts in every kind of grain, and the bins\nare half a milliou bushels nearer empty\nthan they were at this time last year.\nThe provision deal is cornered so strong¬\nly that pricps of hogs are running up at a\nfurious rate, and are higheruuw than they\nhave been lor several years. Under thcso\ncircumstances it would be reasonable to\nlook for tremendous receipts. On the con¬\ntrary, however, receipts have fallen otT so\nrapidly that every consignment is snapped\nup. immediately it reaches vards,\nqnd the question is being asked: "lfas not\nthp heavy ijrain upon the country on ac-\ncount of high prjced hogs had the effect\nof bringing an uudue proportion of the\nhog crop into market, and are not the por-\ncineoin uhortsupply?" Palpsfor,t||p week\nfor tho August option were as follow*:\nWheat, 88Ja90Jc; Corn, 35a3#Jc; Oats,\n22|a3c; Pork, $13 87Jal5 00; Lard,$0 77Aa\n0 97Jc. Closing cash prices.Wheat, 91 Jc:\nCorn, 25jc; Oats, 25c; Rye, GUjc; Barley,\nSOc; Pork, $14 00*14 25; Lard, $092$.\nClosing August prices.Wheat, 883c; Corn,\n3JJc; oats, 22jc; porjf, Sl<$05; lard, lM|2Jc.\nReceipts for the week: 470,000 bushels\nwheat. 3,050,000 bushels corn, 274.000\nbushels oats. Shipments: 777,000 bushels\nwheat, 3,170,000 bushels corn, 310,000 oats.\nReceipts for the same time last year: 570,-\n000 bushels wheat, 1,177,000 bushels corn,\n243,000 bushels oats. Shipments: 1,709,-\n000 bushels wheat, 1)02.000 Jfushpls corn,\n327,000 bushels oats. Ihecorn-fnovement\ncontinues to excite wonder both at the un¬\nparalleled demand from abroad and'at\nthe apparently unlimited means whigb\nour farmers have to supply The gram\nregions are all pending in favorable ac¬\ncounts of the probable yield, and only for\nthe uncertainties of the Minnesota crop,\nwhich is the only wheat region not yet\nOut of danger, the wheat yield of 1880\nmight be said to exceed that of 1370,
2ac411c0c12585fa7a1d079b085e1f8f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9493150367834 39.745947 -75.546589 Member» of tho Philadelphia delega­\ntion In Congress aro of the opinion\nthat tho many Interests which have\nneed of a deeper and more adequate\nwaterway between Philadelphia and\nChesapeake Bay, with its many tribu­\ntaries and shipping centers, will not\nbe compelled to wait very long for\ntho governmental control of the Dela­\nware and Chesapeake Canal. The Im­\nprovement of this canal by the Gov­\nernment has been tho subject of agita­\ntion for years, and another bill Is now\nbeing prepared authorizing such a step.\nCongressman William H. Heald In­\ntroduced a similar bill at the last ses­\nsion of Congress, and the outlook Is\nfavorable to the passage of the act\nat the present session of Congress. Mr.\nHeald's bill was referred to the com­\nmittee on railroads and canals.\nThe Delaware and Chesapeake Canal\nhas been twice favorably reported to\nCongress for Improvement Into a ship\ncanal of a sufficient depth to allow\ncoatwlse liners and the heavier barges\nfree passage. The Agnus Commission\nsome years ago recommended that it\nbe purchased by the Government for\n$2,514,289, and the Committee of Con­\ngress on Railways and Canals also re­\nported favorably on Its purchase. \nthese recommendations and the com­\nmercial necessity to hinge argument\nupon, one of tho Philadelphia delega­\ntion will present a bill authorizing both\nthep urchase and tho Improvement of\nthe canal during the present session.\nThis canal is probably the most Im­\nportant link In the Inland coastal pro­\nject of the Atlantic Deeper Waterways\nAssociation, and at tho two conven­\ntions of that body In Baltimore and\nNorfolk, Governmental action upon It\nwas urged. When tho question as to\nhow a bill of that nature would be\ntreated by Congress was discussed at\nthe Norfolk convention last month It\nwas practically decided that because\nof the retrenchment policy of the ad­\nministration it would fare badly. Since\nthe opening of Congress, however, con­\nditions have appeared to adjust them­\nselves to a different basis, and the\nKastcrn Congressmen have decided to\ntry to secure some of the rivers and\nharbors Improvements for the Bast.\nWork has been In progress on the\nBeaufort cut between Beaufort Inlet\nand Pamlico Sound, North Carolina,\nfor a year under a Government con­\ntract, and this will give the lumber re­\ngions In the Carolinas an outlet to\nNorfolk and the Chesapeake.
127877f7adc5942781cc85bc3e7e33d9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.6871584383223 41.004121 -76.453816 This truly alimhlo tonic lias been so thoroughly\ntested by all classes of tlio counnunlty that ll Is now\ndeemed lmllspeiislblo as a tonic medicine. It costs\nbut little, purines Iho blood nnd fives tone to tho\nhloinach, renovates the system and prolongs ure.\nEver) body bhould havo It.\nl'or tlio cuioof v. eaK htoinacuB, general oeuiuty.\nlndlgostlon, dlkeascs of tho btoinaeh.and tor all cases\nivnulrlnif a tonic.\nThis wlnu lucludes tho most agrees wo ami enicieut\nsalt of Iron wo ios&et.s citrate of laaguetlo oxide,\ncombined with tlio most cucrgctlo ot vegeUiblo tonics\ni ellow l'erut Ian bart.\nDo j ou want something to btrongthen jou:\nDo you want a gooJ nppetltu I\nDo you want to got rid of nervousness?\nDo you want energy 1\nDa you want to tlccp well T\nDo you want to.bulld up j our constitution ?\nDo you want to feel \nDo you v nut a brisk nnd vigorous feeling?\nIf you do, try Hunkers Hitter Wlno of Iron.\nI only ask a trial ot this valuable tonic.\nUowaro ot counterfeits, as KunLcl s Hitler Wlno of\nIron Is tho culr fcuro and tltectlvo remedy In tho\nknown world for tbo pirmaucut euro of dj.pepsla\nand debility, und us tlicro aro a number of Imitations\noffered to tlio public, I would caution tho community\nto purchase none but the genuine article, manufac-\ntured by E. 1'. Kunkcl, and having bis btatnp on tlio\ncork of every bottle. Tlie very fact that others aro\nattempting to Imitate this valuublo remedy proves\nIts worth and bpeaks v oluinca In Its favor, tint thu\ngenuine. E. F. Hunkers.\nHold only In tl bottles. Sold by druggists and deal\nera every wliero. E. F . Kunkel, Proprietor, V5 North\nNinth street, Philadelphia, I 'a .
123e085a1b13f8cf0c7a349d3b22b227 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.842465721715 40.063962 -80.720915 Shortly the long, lithe figure of il\nowner stalked out of the forest into it\nclearing, and as he drew nearer,\nbloody scalp was Reen dangling by it\nsingle gray look of hair from the mu:\nzle of his rtile. A rousing cheer we\ncorned his return through the sallypdi\nand tho tale he told was on this wisi\nEver suspicions of Indian subtlety\nand fertile in hla exnGdlunt* in mwit I\nhe went out believing that the otnlDot\nbird-oall issued from a wary bipt\nwithout feathers and was uttered\nbring some unBuspeotlng viotlm withi\nthe reach of bis deadly tomahawk.\nrepetition of it having enabled him\nfix more detinltely its direction an\ndistance, he slung his gun over h\nshoulder and climbed a (all pine whlc\ngave him a view of the ledge of rocli\nfrom whioh the Bound seemed to pr<\nceed. Shortly, iroin between tL\nbranohes of his lolty he osplt\nthe gray soalp*look of an old India\nwarrior ensconced behind a large roc\nover whioh he was cautiously peerln\nto watch the result of his atratagen\nInstantly covering the mark with h!\nunerring rifle, Wetzel drew trlgge\nwhen the head dropped upon the roc\nand then disappeared behind It. H\nhad obtained too sure an aim to die\ntrust the success of his bullet, and wai\nlng only a few minutes to ascertai\nwhether the enemy were Bingle or no\nbe descended, and taking a circuit e\nas to bring him above the rock, got a\nobservation Into a kind or cavern b<\nhind it, where lay the wild turkey wit\na perforated brain. Hastening dow\nhe seoured the rifle and other weapoc\nof his foe; found attaobed to his bel\nthe scalps of the two missing hunter\nto whioh he Immediately added thi\nOf their mnrdeiHir and\nfort.
09c8be4f1b34c843b852ca377973e630 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.83698626966 39.513775 -121.556359 Importers and Wholesale Dealers in Drugs and\nMedicines, Surgical Instruments. Glassware, Drug-\ngists Furnilnre, U'llckMlvor, Acids. Shaker Herbs,\nspices. Kssemiiil this Extracts tor Flavoring, Al-\ncohol, Mird Seed. Camphor. t'lis raid Paints. Damp\nIresh Hops, Seda Material Corks, brewers' Mate-\nrial, Plaster Paris, Itosendaie Cement, Alnloaiiuul\nSupporters, Shoulder Unices, Cast Iron Mortars\nPATENT M IllIF!N Is, a large stock of nearly\nevery kind in use, wilti a general assortment of all\ngoods kept in a large nnd well supplied Drugstore.\nWe ipivo made arrangements for receiving month-\nly shipments direct from the Atlantic citie-i Hum\nkeeping a full and complete assortment of all goods\nin our lino. We intend to deal m nothing but the\ntent quality of goods, so Dial physicians, surgeon,\nmid those dealing In our line mm rely upon getting\npure and unadulterated aitich-s from us V.e have\ndone the Drug b isieess Sacramento since IH-fit,\nand expect to continue it here during our na'.urni\nlives We expect to build up n large and i ermanent\nbusiness by keeping a large and wi ll assorted stock\nof the bert GOODS. and selling at small profits, so\nthat that those dealing in our tine to call upon ns,\nexamine the quidity mm prices of our goods before\npurchasing elsewhere, as we feel confident that we\ncan please In both PRICK AND QE VI.ITY .\nArtitirial teeth, gold IoU, mouth glasses, turn keys,\nhurt*, corrnndrum wiieels. for eps, excavators iisu-di -\nes. drills, with a complete assortment of denial stock\nfrom several of the most (uglily approved manufac-\nturers in liie world We luxv>* tbe agency lor teeth,\nand etui till any order, wi'h sets or odd ti-eih, at the\nMISER* Dill G ST< HIK Flit .1 * IRE El, SAC-\nU IMKM'O, by
c3ad3c5b74eff9700163d24efa726fa7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.8589040778793 41.681744 -72.788147 Acting upon complaints received\nfrom persons and firms in l'laiuvi'.le\nand elsewhere, the selectmen have\nmade a superficial examination of\nthe town land records and found\nthat they are not up to date, the in-\ndexing and recording being behind.\nA meeting of the selectmen has been\ncalled for Thursday evening, when\nthe subject will be discussed Willi a\nview to assisting the town clerk to\nbring her books up to date and to\nmap out a plan to bo followed ac-\ncording to the statutes to assist her\nIn laying out systematically her\nworking conditions, working hours,\nand other matter of Importance in\nconnection with her office.\nIt is thought that the selectmen\nmay find It necessary to follow\nChapter 40, Acts of 1921: Section\n20!) of the general statutes is amend-\ned to read as follows:\n"The selectmen shall, during the\nmonth of September in each year,\nappoint some suitable person to\ncarefully examine the Indexes of the\nland records of their respective\ntowns for the preceding year, and to\nnote and report in writing to the\ntown clerk all errors and omissions\nIn the same; and tho so ap\npointed shall examine the land rec-\nords and note all omissions by the\ntown clerk or his authorized assist\nant to attest to the records of con\nveyance of land with the genuine\nsignaturesAif the town clerk or his\nassistant. Selectmen shall, In the\nmonth of September in each year,\nascertain tho conditions of all rec-\nords of their respective towns and\ncauso any volume of such records to\nbe carefully repaired, arranged in\norder of pages, and rebound, when-\never such repairs and rcblnding are\nnecessary for the preservation of\nsuch records. In all towns in which\nthere is no general index of the land\nrecords the selectmen shall cause a\ngeneral Index to be made and ap.\npoint some competent person to\nmake the same under the 6tiper.\nvision of tho examiner of public rec-\nords, and the expense thereof shall\nbe paid by tho town. Such general\nindex shall be completed on or be-\nfore July 1, 1322. The selectmen of\nany town who shall fall to comply\nwith any provision of this section\nshall be fined not less than five nor\nmore than twenty-fiv- e
3b9127a8dbce377a1ceda277195a77fe NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.703551880945 41.681744 -72.788147 will permit all of the pupils of the\nschool to meet in general assembly\nthe same time, to promote mu-\ntual understanding and apprecia-\ntion, to build up a sound public\nopinion in the school, and to insure\nfine school spirit. Here in the au-\nditorium is where principal, teach-\ners, and natural leaders among the\npupils wield an influence of Incal-\nculable value and Importance which\ngoes far beyond the school and af-\nfects the life of the community. For\nyears the inadequate size of the\npresent auditorium has made it im-\npossible to assemble the entire\nschool, with a consequent loss to the\nstudent body. For years it has been\nnecessary to so curtail admtssions to\ngraduation exercises that friends\nand relatives of the graduating pu-\npils have been barred hundreds.\nThe school needs an auditorium\nthat will accommodate the entire\nstudent body at one time. If the\nschool Is to have a class room\nspace for two thousand pupils, the\nauditorium should also accommo-\ndate two thousand pupils.\n"Nor should such an auditorium\nserve school needs alone. It should\nbe so designed, equipped and man-\naged as to serve community needs\nand purposes as well. Concerts,\nconventions, lectures, dramas, should\nall be accommodated, and at such a\nrental as will make it possible for\nNew Britain to have the best which\nthe country has to offer. This would\nnot only meet a real community\nneed, but would bring to the city\nincreased patronage for hotels and\nmerchants, and make New Britain\ncity of even larger importance\nthan it now Is.
0482e1f22a46ffb55bcbc4fdaaf8b580 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.424863356355 41.004121 -76.453816 ing elder" was abolished on Mon-\nday by the adoption of a minority\nreport from the Revision Commit-\ntee of the Methodist General Con-\nference in session nt Baltimore,\nrecommending that the name be\nchanged to "district superintend-\nent," by a vote of 322 ayes to 210\nnoes. This radical change of terms\nis the outgrowth of a desire to de-\nnote the office more correctly. It\nhas been felt for a long while that\nsince the presiding elder is today in\nreality a superintendent that this\nterm should be given him since his\noffice is no longer merely sacrament-\nal, but administrative.\nA resolution iudorsiug the move-\nment started by the Young Men's\nChristian Association for the estab-\nlishment of a mothers' day" to be\nobserved on the second Sunday in\nMay yearly, was tabled.\nllertafter, the conference decid-\ned, Methodist Episcopal bishops\n be relieved of the duty of pass-\ning upon charges of heresy which\nmay be laid against professors in\ntheological seminaries. These com-\nplaints, if they come to the bishops,\nwill in the future be turned over to\nthe annual conference, of which the\naccused is a member if he be a min-\nister, and if a layman, to the pastor\nof the church to which he belongs.\nA report which received careful\nconsideration before it finally was\nadopted was one doing away with\nthe six months' probation system.\nUnder the new rule persons mav be\nreceived into the church as soon as\nthey are recommended by the offic-\nial board or by the class leaders'\nand stewards' meeting with the ap-\nproval of the pastor.\nIt was resolved that the changes\nin the discipline aud course of study\nshall go into effect June 1, 1903.
08cc837f9518ca7732b62cfc8d909f07 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.5876712011668 58.275556 -134.3925 enough for me to visit everything at\nKalighat, yet there were thousands of\npeople there every day and had been\nthousands of people there every day\nand every hour of the day for hundreds\nof years worshiping, and all of them as\nearnest as I ever was about anything.\nThe mint is worth visiting. A few\nblocks from it on the bank of the river\nis the burning ghat. There were five\nbodies burning when I was there. The\nHindoos cremate their dead; the Mo¬\nhammedans bury theirs. A number of\nnice little boys were digging half-\nburned bones out of the fire and offer¬\ning them for sale very cheap. I did uot\nlinger there. There is a very large\nnative quarter where the streets are\nnarrow and not very clean, where the\nboys and girls run naked and practi¬\ncally nobody speaks English.\nThe river is crossed by a pontoon\nbridge. Across the river is the main\nrailway station of Calcutta. Some dis¬\ntance it are the botanic gardens.\nThis is really a large park with all\nkinds of tropical plants and trees. They,\nare the finest gardeus in the world and\nsend plants to gardens and parks all\nover the world. There are many large\nconservatories with the rarest and most\nbeautiful flowers. There are orchids\nuntil you dream of them. There are\nmany beautiful drives and walks and\nthe avenue of palms is a wonder. But\nthe great thing is the boabab or banyon\ntree. This tree grows fast and sends\nout great branches, from which roots\nare shot out which dropdown and when\nthey touch the ground take root. Then\nthe hanging root becomes a tree and\ngrows. Other roots drop down, new\ntrees are formed, all being connected\nto parent trunk. This bauyan tree has\na circumference of over a ^thousand\nfeet, has hundreds of shoots, all beiug\nconnected. No trouble finding shade\nthere. Some of the roots drop from\nbranches more than twenty feet high.
060e326c2299d3bebaf914d071c1f65a THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1893.1849314751396 46.601557 -120.510842 Take notice, that the undersigned pjlueipnl\npetitioner for a forty foot county rend, begin-\nning at tbe enter of west line of scrtiim :i.\ntownship 12, north of range 111 east VV. M ., and\nending at the center of smith line section 1..\ntownahip;i2 north of range l.ieast W. H. will, on\nthe 14th day of March, IM. meet the viewer,\nand .iirvcinr nii)tolnte«i by the Imiird of County\ncommissioners uj.nu the following preinii-es . lo\nwhich you have some claim or title, to wit:\nLands abuttiiig on the following described Hue:\nCommencing at a point on the west line of sec-\ntion 3, township IS, n..nn runge l.i east W. M .\nwbeie a line running east ami west will pas.\nthrough the center of said section are now sur-\nveied, beginning at said point and running due\neast through the center of sections 3, 2 aud I.\ntwp 12. n r 19 c. W. M .; also continuing due east\nivaec 6, twpI.*, IIr 20 c W M, 1111 it Intersect,\nroad No —; nlso a branch mail -t .i feet iv width,\ncommencing at the center of see 1, twp r_\\ n r 19\ncW. M. nii.l running due south through the\nrenter of sec 12, twp 12, n r l.ic M. till itiv\nlersects road No—, leading to I'nrker Bottom.\nWe, the undersigned also pray that snch poi-\ntlons of the road known as the I'rlests Kaplds\nroad asHeinsections 10,11and13,twp12, nr19\ncWM,aud lvsection 4,twp12,vr2iieWM.be\nshiiiiilini.il and the road first above petitioned\nfor used in place thereof.\nWe furthermore pray thai such portion of road\nNo — wuth of the center of west line oi srettnu\nI,twp12.iir19cWM.amiin >M12,twp12,nr\n,»e W M, be ahaiiilnueil aud the branch road\nabove petitioned fct using iv Its place aud the\nviewer, will then and there proceed to lay out\n.aid road, and ishould you have filed with them\non or before said day. a written application for\ndamages, giving a deserintion of the premise,\nou which damages or compensation Is clalmedi,\nwill then aud there proceed to asses, env dam-\nages to which you may be entitled ou account\nof the laying out or altering of said county road\naud you are hereby iei|uestcil and required to\nproduie all evidence, which you may desire to\noffer in relation to surh damages, and do and\nperform «Hch other acts as may be ueeessary\nand lawful in tbe premises, or lie forever barred\nIn witness whereof, I have hereunto set my\nhand, thi. 20th day of February. UK,
0d9fb492bd7e3011d90917c70c5899c1 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.252732208814 38.894955 -77.036646 Samuel D. Watson formayor. Forcouncil,\nDaniel Pfiel of Colonial Beach, and John\nRome. Frank Renshaw and George Slant\nof Washington, D . C.\nThenoniinationofthesemenlstheoutcome\nof tiie fight lietween the summer residents\nof Colonial Beach and those who make the\nplace their home the year round. An effort\nlias been made by the Washington people to\nnominatea city man rormayor.and wit hthat\nend InviewtiieCoIonial Beach Citizens" Asso-\nciation sentaconimltteetothe Beach several\nweeks ago to treat with the winter residents.\nAt that meeting considerable ill feeling\nwas developed and it was evident that the\nwinter residents were disposed toantagonize\nthe city people, notwithstanding the fact\nthat they are dependent upon them for\ntheir livelihood. The committee made the\npoint tiiat a city man In the mayor's office\ncould better further the interests of the\nBeach and bring the attention of the public\nto the place as a cummer resort.\nTbej own improved property which is\ntaxed to the amount of $60,000 . against\n$16,000 held by the county people and \niew of this fact think they should have the\nmajority vote in municipal matters.\nThe country people arc jealous of their\ncity patrons and are trying to freeze them\nout. The fight represents the advanced\nideas, of the city against the slower and\nmore stolid way of the country peoplc\nThey consider the chief duty of the mayor\nis In hearing petty cases that come before\nhim. while the Washingtonians think that\nit should be the elder duly ot the mayor\nto further the interests of the Beach, keep\nit before the public as a summer resort and\nboom the town in every manner possible,\nleaving the minor duties to a major pro\ntem or justice of tlie'IIc.rcc .\nThe country people have nominated their\nticket and it remains to be seen if the\nsummer residents who own the majority of\nthe taxable property will put an opposi-\ntion ticket in the field.\nShould they do so they will undoubtedly\ncarry the day as they are largely In the\nmajority.
0d3b3402ba3d9c12149794f25891995a COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1865.6452054477422 41.262128 -95.861391 Fver since the form-. tionof the Natioa-\nal Gi)Vfjnm> nt in 17M', and in every st.ijrc\nof its prezre**, ev^n np to tho prcarrit\neventful hour, a con*taot controversy has\n!»'cn carried on a* to tbr nature and ex­\ntent of Slate Riijhls. At the cuviinenrt-\nment of this controversy, it serni« to have\nbeen maintained hy the old F«'der;»l party,\nas it bas been\nams and ctb\nthe United Siutes was, in its esstTitin! na­\nture, or niij.'ht to bo, to a larjre extent at\nl«*ast, a C<mtalid<Urd JtUpiiblie— making\nthe iiiiliTiJu.il Siat< s, in nnmc, iuiie^d,\ndi^tiret and separate tncnibera of tbe\nwhole: but as r-^'iirds r>ny independent\nShjte ri(ihl*~nl\\ subject tit last to tho ae-\ntnrtl onlimitfd aupremaey and control of\ntho one Grrtit Central Poire*' -\nt)n. the othir b.wd, a parly tquallj xenl»\nous Ki d powerful, sprang up.hiadtd \nJcff^r»on ar.d other*, manfully and stead­\nfastly maintaining, that tb« union of the\nStates did not of itself show [nor was it\n»o intended} that the General Coverament\nf^oald poea^sa one atom mor<* of power\nthan was allottrd to it by the Constitu­\ntion; not that tha States, in their individ­\nual existt nee, should possess a particle of\npower b'#s than.they hud before, except\n>o far as dearly yidded up in the Consti­\ntution. Both parties, no doubt, intended\nthe Government should, be perpetual;—\nnnd the great'st and only difficulty WHS,\ntbe true construction to bepia&'d on the\ninstrument which pave that government\nexistence. As to 'which party was or is\nright, or which wr*nfr in this preat con­\ntest, H pot the object of tbe prearnt arti­\ncle either to canvass or settle. The sira\npie purpose will be to give agenerni and
0cfaddfd59acd7bc58af28b609d93eff THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.6434425913276 40.063962 -80.720915 nates are that during the autumn monthB u\n3,000,000 will be brought hither. In the\njanwhile our own mines are giving us fl\nthp roip of not less than $40,000,000 r\nId a year, in addition to the share which at\nesinto the arts. For the present also ai\nne demand is springing up for silver\nliars to move the crops at the west, aud\na South must take more of them than J\nretoforp in return for its cotton. K\nAll these influences &r? felt in the con-\nence which underlies produotion and v\nide. Some of them involve future set- d)\nments and should prompt to caution.\nlit (or the moment tney an give tmpeiue\nindustry and to trafilo. The freights\nid earnings of the railroads are an index\nthe activity and strength of ail branches\nbusiness. Merchants report that the\nU trade is opening earlier than usual,\nid that many buyers discount their own\nills. This last featurp is encouraging,\nash is coming to be In larger measure the\nisis of trade. Whore this is the fact the\nwger of reaction is reduced to the mini-\nurn. The reports of laiinrea during the\nnat months confirm conviction that\nusinees is more sound and healthy than\nhaaheen before in many years. Taking\ns volume into account It may safely he\nLid that the country never before enjoyed\ngood a trade in all branches upon so\nch and varied production.\nThe abundance of money will give birth\nmany enterprises of dubious merit. It\nas already tempted many iutothe whirl¬\ned of speculation. Yet honest trade de-\nves advantages from it. Labor is fully\nccupied, and wages bear a better ratio to\nle cost of living than in recentyeare, and\netter than in any other laud that the sun\ntiines upon. The prosperity of every-in-\nustry, the reward of labor of every type,\nle growth of capital in every directiun,\nre on a scale never before paralleled on a\neace footing in any nation, and surely\never with so few elements threatening\n|ieedy danger and disaster.\nKoimrv the bo^y against disease. This\nreadily dono by purifying all the Fuidj\nf the system with Or. Tint's Pills. Then\n¦ere need be no fear of epidemics, Chilli,\nml Fever, Bilious attacks, Rheumatism,\nkin Diseases. orNervous Debility. Buoy-\nnt health and elasticity of spirits will be\n:ic result.
194448ceb479425f9ac7a0ba8ec21813 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1886.478082160071 39.743941 -84.63662 We are convinced that the average\nAmerican household should make far\nmore of the birthdays of its members\nthan it docs, and that if this were done,\nthe result would be a .large increase in\nthe attractiveness of our family life. In\nthe large majority of households these\noccasions pass by unnoticed, and a rare\nopportunity of relief from the monoton-\nous routine of .daily existence, of in-\ncreasing our love for each other, and\nfor the practice of those gentle courtesies\nupon which the joy of living so much\ndepends, is thoughtlessly sacrificed.\nWe are apt at times to have a feeling\nthat we are of little significance in the\nfamily life, and that we could not bo\nmuch missed if we were gone. It is true\nthat this is' generally a mistake. If we\ngo away to a distance upon a lengthy\nvisit the frequent letters soon undeceive\nus. Ur if a member of the family dies.\n vast store of latent affection is poured\nforth in vain regrets, and lavished in\nkind offices upon the lifeless remains.\nBut why should we not utilize these\ntreasures of affection to brighten each\nother's daily pathway at home while we\nlive? Why should not the tired husband\nbe made to forget his load of care in a\nfestal observance of his natal day, which\nought surely to be as joyous an occasion\nto his family as the birthday of Wash\nington to his country, and as worthy of\nbeing made a Holiday f ur the weary\nmother should not the meal this once\nbe prepared by other hands than her\nown and the bouquet be laid beside\nher plate, and made bright and beauti-\nful to her by tender offices of affection?\nOr should not each child, even down to\nthe smallest toddler, be made to feel\nthat the occasion of his cominsr into the\nfamily is a red-lett- er
3c7ae19615cc750ff749a3b56148b8ed THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.3712328450026 40.063962 -80.720915 "Properly speaking, we presume It\nmay be called a matter of taste. If so¬\nber reason, instead of love, were to con¬\ntrol a man's choice, we should think a\nbachelor would prefer a 'spinster,' for\ntwo reasons, viz: because, as she had\nnot yet been mentally moulded to suit\nanother man's habitudes of mind, he\nuught have a better chance of adapting\nher to his own peculiarities, and, be¬\ncause, as she haq no previous matrimo¬\nnial experience to fall back upon, she\ncould not be tempted to draw unpleas¬\nant comparisons in eulogy of 'when my\nfirst husband was alive,' for the edifica¬\ntion of her second. Of course, this rea¬\nsoning does not upply to the union of\nwidows and widowers. They stand on\neven ground, and both ought to know\nhow to take care of themselves in the\nconnubial condition. Wo have no re¬\ncollection of aspersing the widows.\nI hoy are frequently among the very\nbest of women, and many of them make\nmost eligible wives. They are some¬\ntimes, as -Lowell expresses it,\n"Earth's noblest thing.a woman perfected."\nSuffering has taught them patience and\nforbearauce. Sorrow has taught thein\nto appreciate true affection. Nothing\neau promise a man, perhaps, a fairer\n of wedded bliss, if he under¬\nstands thoroughly how to manage the\nhuman heart, than a union with a\nwidow whose first choice treated her\nwith sulien unkindness. The contrast\nwill expand the slightest good nature\nou the part of her "secoud" into an\namiability meriting all the homage of\nher nature. As for tue widows of bless¬\ned and never-to-be-forgotten-in-their-\ngoodness partners, how Is it to be ex¬\npected that they can ever feel contented\nwith new connections?\n"Tin distance lends enchantment to the view,'\nand when a reasonably agreeable hus-\nb»nd has bid good-bye to earth, those\nwho really loved him forget all his\nfaults and magnify vastly all his vir¬\ntues. The want of that 'distance' which\nproduces 'enchantment' just as natu¬\nrally magnifies all a present husband's\npeccadilloes into insuperable domestic\noffences and diminishes his cleverest\nqualities iuto almost-inappreciable so¬\ncial accidents.\nAnother question is as follows:\n"Do you not think the prevailing fash¬\nions, including scanty crown pieces,\ncoiled cascades and high hooped skirts\n(which reveal so much of the veal) per¬\nfectly subversive of true modesty?\nAnd is it not true that all such ex¬\ntremes In dress originate among a no¬\ntoriously disreputable class o/ Parisian\nwomen ?"
2726e370a70c4ab025e25d070771c6a1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.815068461441 39.745947 -75.546589 Also gll that certain tavern property and\nland adjoining, situate In Cent r «ville.\nChristiana hundred, county and atato\naforesaid. bounded and described as fol­\nlows. to wit:\nBeginning ut a stone on the northeast\nside of Kennet! rood, a corner new or\nlate of Amos Nichols' laud; theme by\nthe same north seventy-five degrees cost\nseventy-eight perches and one tenth to\na sir tie In ill" tins of Cromwell B. Mount'»\nland; thence by the sumo south live de­\ngrees east two perche» and eight-tenths\nto the middle of «aid road loading lo\nTwartdeU'» Mills; thence with the middle\nof said, road south forty-three and a\nhalf degrees west forty-nine perches and\n»lx-tenths to a atone In Ute line of the\nheirs of Rebecca Todds land; thence\nsouth elghty-ftvo degrees west on« perch\nand lo a alone and south\nIhlrty-slx and three-quarter degrees »eat\nnineteen perches amt five-tenths to a\natone In the Kennett Turnpike Road;\ntheme bv the same north twenty-eight\ndegree» »'i'll fourteen perches and e'ght-\ntenths and north twenty-six and a Itrlf\ndegrees west twenty perches and ,(*.\ntenths lo the place of beginning, contain,\nlog seven acres and nna hundred and alx\nperches of land, excepting ami reserving\nthereout always nevertheless those two\njots or parcels of 'and, being parts of\nthe aforesaid described premises, which\nwas heretofore »old amt conveved bv\nEzektol Baley. the then owner of the\nsame one of which contains three-miar-\n1er« of an acre, the other containing one-\nquarter of an acre, making together one\naero of land wfh the appurtenances to\nesch respectively belonging to George W\nLancaster,
0ddb458c682fae4a237ed282939bb41c UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1895.9273972285641 42.68333 -96.683647 without precedent, but I'll do what I\ncan for you. The first step will be to\nchange the nitroglycerin into dyna­\nmite. That, you know, is far less apt\nto explode by concussion. In fact, it\nis nothing more thon nitroglycerin\nheld in a solid form by an absorbent\nsubstance, I shall prescribe for you a\nlittle imusorial earth, to be taken\nthree times a day. That will gradually\ndraw out the nitroglycerin from yoor\ncirculation, ohange it into dynamite*\nand in the course of a few weeks you\nmay bo safe."\nThis assurance alleviated the fears\nof Mr. Cutter to some Extent, but he\nrepaired to the Red Dog druggist in\nan anxious frame of mind. The rum­\nbling of a passing dray filled him with\napprehension, and he made a long\ndetour to avoid passing a new build­\ning where the carpenters Were still\nbusy with their hammers. His alarm\nwas excited when the druggist began\nto pound up something in a mortar,\nand so bis critical oondition ex­\nplained to the pharmacist. Mr. Cut­\nter went home by a devious route in\norder that h? might not be exposed to\nany jar from the anvils of a black­\nsmith shop which he was accustomed\nto pass every day.\nOn ththe evening of the same day Dr.\nSilex attended a meeting of the Red\nDog Medioal society. It was a pri­\nvate gathering, as usual, and sounds\nof unwonted hilarity were heard be­\nfore the assemblage dispersed.\nNo one knew how the strange condi­\ntion of Mr. Cutter became known, but\nthe next day it was the talk of Red\nDog, He noticed that everybody\navoided him as though he were a\npestilenoe, and even the olerks in his\noffloe shuddered whenever they had\noccasion to be near him He cautioned\nthem against sodden dosing of the\ndoors of the huge safe that contained\nthe public moneys, and with his own\nhands he pinned upon the outer door\nof the office a placard reading: **Do\nnot slam."
1b2edb53604fc09b50532a3df766dd77 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.078082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 New York, Jan. 28..The Herald's\nRichmond corresponden tsays: One of\nthe Virginia delegation now awaiting\nadmission to Congress, telegraphed to\nthat city, from Washington, on last\nWednesday, that it is the intention of\nPresident' Johnson to supercede the\npresent Virginia State Government by\na provisional one. This has. received\ncredence in Richmond, and has there¬\nfore, ofcourse, created much commotion\nand consternation in financial as well\nas political circles there.\n4 Paris letter contains the following\nproclamation from Gen. Prim:\nSpaniards;.We have arrived at the\nterrible moment which revolutionizes\nand calls for the resources of the nation\nand the main duty of honorable men,\nI am at the head oia considerable mili¬\ntary force, and a great nu mber of armed\ncountrymen hasten on all sldes'to fight,\nunder my orders for the cause bf free¬\ndom and fatherland. M[y banner is the'\nlast manifesto the Progressista Cen¬\ntral Committee, and with ltin my hands\nI will fight with my wonted valor\nagainst the Government which dishon¬\nors us abroad and ruins us at home; lo\nthe point of making us a laughingstock\namong foreign nations and bringing ns\nto the verge of shame and bankruptcy. -\nSoldiers who have already fought un¬\nder my orders, you are aware that I\nhave never forsaken you, and that if\nyou stand by me in this enterprise, I\nshall know how to lead first; 'showing\nyouthe path to, victory and next remu¬\nnerating your endeavors. Fellow citi¬\nzens ana men of honor aid me to bring\nto a happy end a political revolution,\nwhich may do away with the necessity\nof that social revolution with which we\nare threatened. Spaniards! hurrah for\nliberty! for the constitution and for the\nProeressista Central Committee.\n(Signed)
342b15a9eee90fb410f89944295ab897 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.7745901323112 41.875555 -87.624421 It may teem that this tends to lessen our faith In the wide diffusion of any\nhigh form of llfo olsowhere, and to strengthen tho contention ot Alfred Rus-\nset Wallace that there is no other world than our adapted to the production\nof life. But this Is not tho correct conclusion. The very fact that we are\nablo, from comparing what Is going on In tho equatorial and the arctic re-\ngions of our planet, to say definitely that tho former aro highly adapted to\nlife, strengthens tho contention that under all circumstances whord the\ntemporaturo and other conditions aro similar to those which prevail In our\ntorrid tone, life will probably be developed on a largo scale.\nOf course tho cxlstenco of llfo does not Imply tho development ot a race\nendowed with reason. Wo cannot say definite on this point until the\nInvestigators of human evolution are able to toll us Just how it happened that\ntho human race appeared upon our earth when It did. It seems to require a\ncertain amount of scientific training to avoid forming on opinion when one\nhas no grounds ot knowlodgo. But It is what the trained Investigator ot na-\nture must always learn to do. S3 when he Is asked whother ho belloves In\nllfo on Mars, the best ho can ay, In tho writer's opinion, Is that, so far as we\ncan Infer from all tho facts and principles ot sclonce, tho conditions soem to\nbo unfavorable to any form of llfo unless of tho very lowost ordor, and that\nho has no opinion as to whether even this ordor ot llfo actually exists. From\nHarpor't Weekly.
04a00df383ce76637053801d765936af THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1900.2397259956874 46.601557 -120.510842 You are hereby summoned to appear within\nsixty days after the date of the tirst publication\nof this summons, to-wit: within sixty days af-\nter the33d of March. 1900, and defend the above\nentitled action in the aliove entitled court, and\nanswer thecomplaint of the plaintitl', and serve\na copy (IT your answer on the undersigned at-\ntorney for plaiuUn". at his officebelow stated;\nand incase of your failure so to do. judgment\nwill be rendered again-t you according to the\ndemand of the complaint, which has been filed\nwith the clerk of said court.\nTiie object of said action is to obtain a decree\nadjudicating ami declaring the mm of flB 08,\ntogether with interest thereon at the rate of 15\nper cent per annum from "9th day of January,\nl'. 'UO, together with one half of an attorney's\nfoe of $,V), and oue half of the costs anil \nbursements of this action, to be a lieu upon lot\nNo '.i . In block No. 111, iv the city of North\nYakima, Washington, according to the oiticlal\nplat of said city; and declaring and adjudicat-\nluu the sum of 113,011 , together with interest\n! thereon at the rate of 18 per cent per annum\nfrom^th ilavnf January, I'JOU, together with oue\n: half of an attorney's Ice of > »>, ami oue half\ni of the costs and disbursements in this action,\ntobe alien upon lot No. 10 Inblock No. HIin\n! the city of North Yakima, Washington, accord-\nIng to thi ..flicial plat of said city; that said\nIleus be foreclosed by the sale of said lota re-\nspectively as prescribed by law; anil the defend*\n| auts be forever barred of all their right, title\n, and interest in said lots; that the purchaser at\n'
2826ea730a831a3529192f46efc7e00c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.8483606241145 58.275556 -134.3925 Those people who bare n o confidence\nin the possibilities of agriculture in\nthe far North are invited to read the\nfollowing statement of a recent visitor\nto Dawson: "Three weeks ago 1 made\na visit to the farm of Chapman & 01-\nsou, seveu miles above the mouth of\nthe Pelly, aud on the Pelly river flats.\nThey have 240 acres under cultivation.\nThe chief crops this year were oats, po\ntatdes and hay. They threshed 1,200\nbushels of oaU, aud had another 500\nbushels unthroshed which they will\nkeep in that condition to feed to their\nstock this winter. The oats go forty\nbushels to the acre, which i« as high an\naverage ab auy of the Americau States,\nThe grain is fully matured, and would\nbe a credit to any country. In the Daw\nson markets the oats should be worth\nthe out rent prico of S80 to S100 a ton.\nThe outs were threshed with a modern\nthresher. It wa« at work while we were\non the farm: Horses were used to gene¬\nrate the power with the old circular\nmili, with the driver the center.\nFoui horses are used iu making power.\nThe farm is equipped with fine plows,\nseeders, mowers, binders, separators,\nrake* and all such labor-saving devices.\nThe natives of the country never saw\nsuch an outfit before, and they travel\nhundreds of miles to witness the opera¬\ntions. To stand on the place aud be\nhold the huge barn?, the stacks of hay,\nthe comfortable farm house, aud to see\nthe horses, cows and other livestock\naud poultry, the farmer from Missouri\nor Ontario no doubt would feel per\nfectly at home. Alfalfa, timothy and\nthe like also are grown with much sue\ncess. Many tons of potatoes, turnips,\ncarrots aud the like were matured, and\nwill be put on the market. The growers\non the Pelly and in the viciuity And\ntheir best customers in the roadhouses\naloog the overland road connecting\nDawson with the outside in winter.\nWith a roadhouse every 10 to 2.5 miles,\naud hundreds of people going over the\ntrail each winter, and the mail stages\npassing several times a week, there is\ngood demand for hay, grain and vege¬\ntables."
bf21f4aff5d49b15b91eb2365e86e8a0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.319178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 The case serves to recall the visit\na year ago of the great, Finnish\nmiddle distance runner, Paavo Nur-m - i ,\nwhose role as star of the Ameri-\ncan Indoor track season Hoff assum-\ned the past winter. Ntirmi failed to\nappear for the Kansas City event\nbut this soon was explained. Then\ncame questioning of his expense ac-\ncounts at Des Molncs but finally ho\nwas cleared.\nTAKK 1HOFF 1 li SPTS\nOfficial views from both the Uni-\nversity of Kansas and Drake uni-\nversity defend tho Norwegian. Dr.\nForrest. C. Allen, director of athletics\nat Kansas, said last night that ho\nwas sure that amateur athletic union\nrules had not been violated. Hoff\nreceived only the $8.50 a day al-\nlowed, by the national body, Dr. Al -\nlen said, and added that the \nsity paid the expenses of Mrs. Holt\nand of Mr. and Mrs. George Baan.\nBaan is Hoff's brother-in-la-\nIt develops that Haan, acting as\nmanager, refused to permit Hoff to\nvault until all motion picture men\nhad left the field at the Kansas meet\nand this led to the report that the\npole vaulter had signed contracts to\nappear on the screen in a story to\nbe taken from a book he is writing.\nDespite Raan's precautions advices\nfrom Des Moines are that the pic-\nture men claim to have hidden their\ncameras in one of the stands and to\nhave obtained the desired pictures.\nKdward C. Lytlon, business mana-\nger at Drake, also has come to Hoff's\ndefense, calling absurd intimations\nthat Hoff took more than his stipu-\nlated share from the meet at Des\nMoines.
0cbc8231811ea8a2816a25d606d7093a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.7164383244547 44.939157 -123.033121 Lumbermen do not appenr to bo\nhaving nn altogether pleasant tlmo\nthis year. A handsomo ndvnnco in\ntho prlceof lumber Inst nprlng no\ndoubt mado them feel good, but\nwhen It enmcto preceding with tho\nBenson's cut, tho largo Increuso In\nwogoB that had to bo paid wan a de-\ncided orfsot. Now .tho railways nro\nproposing nn Increase of 10 cents\nper hundred pounds In shipments to\ntho cast, and aB this represents about\n$3 a thousand feet, tho lumbermen\nnro protesting vigorously. Tho now\nrnto Is to go Into effect on Novem-\nber 1. But, tho current rato has\nboon In operation several years, nnd\nwns presumably satisfactory to the\nrnllronds or It would not have been\nadhorcd to so long. Tho proposed\nlncrcnso has somo nppoarnnco of be-\ning Inslrcd not so much becnuso of\nIncreased cost of carriago as by n do\nslro to got a Bharo of tho increaso in\nlumber prices and that Is hardly\nlogltlmato. Tho lumbormon would\nundoubtedly hnvo hnd to pay high\ner wages ovon though thoro hnd been\nno IncrcnBO In lumber price, nnd In\nthat ovont thoy could hardly hnve\nhoped for a rolatlvo lower freight\nrato, and nolthor would tho railways\nhavo been llkoly to contomplnto nn\nIncreaso, bocauso tho business woul 1\nnot that cobo have stood It. Tho\npresont proposed Increnso seems to\nbo Blmply tho old Btory of taxing\ntraffic nil It will stnnd. It is true\nthat nn Intcrstnto commerce com-\nmission has bcon nppolntcd to In-\nquire Into Bitch mnttors as theso for\ntho protection of tho public ngnlnst\ntho mercenary combinations of tho\nrnllronds, but thoro Is much red tape\nnnd thoro Is lnck of powor, and a\ngonornl Inability to deal with griev-\nances In tho prompt manner that\nthoy ought to bo doalt with, and n\nconsequent considerable loss to .tho\nagrloved boforo remedy bocomes ef-\nfective. This Is whnt is hurting the\nlumbormon, and somo of them nro\nlooking longingly to Canada where\nthoro Is a railway commission that\nhas powor to do things nnd does\nthem with encouraging promptitude\nTho lumber business of Oregon U\nn tromondously important one, nnd\nnny thing that sorlously affects It In\njuriously rotlocts on tho woll "being\nof tho wholo stnto. Last year tho\nOregon lumber output Is stntod to\nhnvo amounted to $30,000, which Is\ncertnlnly a very lnrge factor In tho\nbuslnoss affairs of a community of\nless thnn 500,000 souls, nnd especial-\nly as lumber monoy Is now capltnl\ndorlved from tho otherwise unpro-\nductive forests of tho stnto. Orogon\nObBorver,
512af6e7fd6075b90f4404a93117fce6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.7493150367834 41.681744 -72.788147 the attraction a\nanother name for a cause which has\ngone through a brain, while in the cop-\nper the attraction acts directly upon\nthe will and is called a cause. And\nanother difference is that in all cases\nwhere the acts are elicited by causes\nproperly so called, which is the case\nin all mechanical, chemical and elec-\ntrical phenomena, the effects can al-\nways bo predicted with mathematical\nprecision; whereas when the causes\nfirst pass through a brain, especially a\nhuman brain, with its myriad percep-\ntions, abstractions, prejudices and\noften hallucinations, one can never\nknow what the effect is going to be.\nSo true is this that it is only after\nmany years of experience .that any\nperson can know just about how his\nwill is likely to react any cir-\ncumstances at all. People who con-\nsider themselves above reproach in\nmatters of "mine and thine" are often\nastonished to discover their will\nyielding to a dishonorable or even\ndishonest motive.\nIt is this capricious power, the will,\nwhich we have now traced through fits\nmanifold manifestations in man and\nbrute, in plants, in crystals, in all the\nelemental forces, Including those\nwhich hold the planets in their course,\nin the greatest and in the smallest\nbodies it is this will that controls the\nelective affinities which determine tha\nproduction of colors. It is this self-\nsame capricious will that drives the\nbull wild when it sees red, and elicits\nthe most conflicting emotions in the\nbreasts of men under the influence\nof this color or of that one.
1be46503ea88dbcbeca1a57826d15823 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.0397259956874 40.063962 -80.720915 Special Correspondence of the In'.cUiqeiiccr.\nNew Yokk, Jan. 13..The past week\nin Wall street has been devoid of any\nspecial features. For the class o£ se¬\ncurities adapted for permanent invest¬\nments, such as railroad bonds and\nsteady dividend-paying stocks, there\nhas been p. really active demand from\nreceivers of January interest payments\nwith some advance in the prices of such\nissues; but, in the more transient oper\nationg in stocks, the movement has\ncontinued limited. The various and iu\nmany respects unusual influences at\npresent affecting tho market are con\nducivo to some degree of postponement\nof speculative transactions; but holders\nare not, on that account, the leas die\nposed to cling to their holdings, and\nthe situation is intrinsically strong\nenough to resist the constant though\ngenerally public attacks of the "boars."\n1 There are, nevertheless,- those who\nthink that a revival of buying within\ntho range of early probabilities. Tho\n in that direction, arising from\ntho still growing abundance of money\nand the low rates of interest, is gener-\n; ally conceded; but there ia some difler\neace of opinion as to how far the mat-\ntors dependent upon Congressional ac\ntioti may permit of such a movement.\nIt is perhaps safe to say that the calmer\nobservers begin to note a change of\nfeeling and estimate as to tho future\ncourse of business. They perceive that\ntiie extreme fright caused by tho silver\npanic and strengthen by preparations\ntor a sweeping change of national com-\nmercial policy.however well-founded\nit may have been.Lias yet run into an.\nexcess of collapse, in which countervail¬\ning considerations have not had their\ndue weight. There is undoubtedly real\nforce in this view, and a certain degree\nof reaction from this exaggeration of\nlear must be forcod upon tho public\nfeeling by tho more sober second-\nthought.
1509bd05a0222ea6d5a3068715f69b65 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.3767122970573 46.187885 -123.831256 Section 3 of the act entitled : "An act to\nprovide for the protection of the salmon\nfisheries of Alaska," approved March 2, 1889,\nprovides that :\n"Section 3. That section 1K56 of the Re-\nvised Statutes of tho United States is liereby\ndeclared to include and apply to all the do-\nminion of the United States In the waters\nof Behring Sea, and it shall be the duty of\nthe Presideut at a timely season in each\nyear to issue his proclamation, and cause\nthe same to be published for one month at\nleast in one newspaper (if any sucii there\nbe) published at each United States port of\nentry on the Pacific coast, warning all per- -\nsons agamsc entering sucn waters lor tuu\npurpose ot violating tne provisions of said\nsection, and he shall also cause one more\nvessels of the United States to diiitrentlv\ncruise said waters and arrest all persons and\nseize an vessels tounu to uc or to nave been\nengaged in any violation of the laws of the\nUnited States therein."\nNow, therefore, I, Bexjamix Hakkisox,\nPresident of the United States, pursuant to\nthe above recited statutes, herebv warn all\npersons against entering the waters of\nHearing sea wiimn tne dominion or the\nUnited States, for the purpose of violating\nthe provisions of aUl section 1950, Revised\nStatutes ; and I liereby proclaim that all\npersons found to be, or luno been engaged\nmany violation of the laws of the United\nStates, in said waters, will be arrested and\npunished as above provided, and that all\nvessels so employed, their tackle, apparel,\nfurniture and cargoes will be seized and\nforfeited.
195c657234b7a15b2e8e6488e37cebfd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.7082191463724 39.745947 -75.546589 Dear Sir; Your request for information concerning liquor\nlicensing in this city has been received. This city has been in the\nwet column since 189a. Dissatisfaction over the manner of grant­\ning licenses by the aldermen the preceding year resulted in a ma­\njority against the system in the fall election, so that from May,\n1892, to May, 1893, saloon doors were closed. That years experi­\nence satisfied the citizens that the cosmopolitan population would\nnot stand for no license, and they reversed the verdict at the suc­\nceeding election. The system is giving satisfaction. Our experi­\nence and observation of the working of prohibition in other com­\nmunities that a well-regulated plan of licensing the sale of liquor\nis not more conducive to temperance than prohibition. Notwith­\nstanding that Fall River has over 100 saloons, the number being\nlimited statute to one for each 1000 of population, there is not\na more law-abiding city in New England. Of course we have\ndrunkenness, but under the beneficent effect of a probationary sys­\ntem, by which first offenders are released without arraignment, and\nusually in time for them to get to their places of employment week­\ndays, cases of common intoxication arc infrequently presented to\nthe district judge. Our police commission, appointed by the gov­\nernor,—there being just two bodies so named in the Common­\nwealth—issues licenses, necessarily there is a scramble every year\nfor the privileges; but the policy in vogue is to disregard all con­\nsiderations but the reputation of saloon-keepers, with the result\nthat no man who respects the law ts denied a renewal of his license.\nFurther information is at your service if you should see fit to
0559963cc5ab6c296acf4b8ca02f1fad THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.7767122970574 37.083389 -88.600048 Yes IitJfcspontlblllty In tbe matters\nThe nan gravely ataredat Gordon\nDoit let It keep you awake to\nnlgbtuld Gordon In deep disgust as\nbewen outandmItwastoolateto\ncull on IJio state factory and tenement\nInspection body be went back to Hope\nHouse where be made an attempt to\ngive a humorous account of his after-\nnoons experience but dismally failed\nai he could see by the look on Miss\nAndrews face\nlIe went down to the city hall next\nday hnd found that the state factory\nInspectors met at regular sessions on\nthe lit of the month From all the\nknowledge be could gain he concluded\nthat the delays he would have to en\ndure before that body would consider\nhis complaint would be so annoying\nthat Tommy Randall would have his\ndoubt all built and Inhabited\nbefore the red tape bad all been un\nwound from the complaint filed with\nthe department\nHe came Lack to Hope House and\nhad a conference with Miss Andrews\nI am perfectly satisfied as to this\nadministration Gordon aid speaking\nwith repressed Indignation They are\nall a set of political thieves What do\nthey care for humanity So far as I\ncall learn there has never been a con\nviction during the whole of the present\nadministration for violating tenement\nhouse ordinances There have lean\nnumerous complaints filed at different\ntimes but they have all been treated\nwith the most Insolent contempt or po\nlitely entered In some department\nthere to lie untouched Rut there Is\none course open to us now and Im\ngoing to take It
19cd6acab885b4c57f1b5ea1a9ba4b98 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.3164383244546 40.063962 -80.720915 of government. Even this club in its con¬\nstitution, to which I subscribe as a' mem-\nber, says in the ninth section: "Tariff for\nrevenue only at the earliest practicable\nperiod consistent with all due regard for\nexisting interests and the financial needs\nof the Government; and immediately such\na revision of the preseut system as shall\nfairly and equitably distribute burdens."\nYou have no right to tax one man to help\nto make another richer; but is it nectssary\nfor us as Democrats to put "a tarill* for\nrevenue only" in our platform of to day,\nand to declare we will 'oring it about at\nonce? We do not know what Congress\nmay do iu the next two years. Congress\nmay so retorm, or Mvise, or remodel the\npresent pernicious hmff as to eliminate the\nWhole question. But will it do it? Go\nask them there what they are doing to-day.\nAre the Democrats iu Washington nil of\none mind on the question of tariff/ Here\nis my friend, Mr. Ask\nhim if every Democrat on the flwr of\nthe House ol Representatives is a man\nfor a tariff for revenue ouly. Ho will tell\nyon no. A Congressman from Virginia\nwants to protect some commodity /or tariff\nbecause his constituents demand it. But\n¦we may break down the rnonttrr that in now\nbuilding up the veaHh of the few at the ex-\nperne of the many, und that is by reforming\nthe present tarill, reforming it so as to take\noff the burden of the people, and thon you\nhave a living principle, a living issue to\nfight for, and not a thing of the dead past\nthat we have hauled up for years and paid\nno attention to when we got to Washington,\nI believe in living issues, I believe in the\nDemocracy. I do not want the dead issues\nof the dead past I do not want to tie\nmyself to a dead corpse that is lying yonder\nin the distance, that*we have trodden over\nand the sod is
09543317475e43a15a7f07611730f56f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.6178081874682 39.745947 -75.546589 quarters that a transatlantic ironmas­\nter had been preferred to a British\nmanufacturer, and that the Egyptian\ngovernment had gone out of its way tô\nIgnore this country. But the facts are\nexactly the reverse. The English agent\nfor the Egyptian government, who had\nthe ordering of the Atbnra bridge, gave\nthe first chance to British traders, and\nwould doubtless have given them th*\nsole chance but for the imperative im­\nportance of speedy delivery. Of the\nBritish ironmasters approached not one\ncould guarantee delivery in the time at\nwhich delivery was required.\n“One English_firm ran the Americans\nolose as to time, but, speed being of par­\namount importance and as ths Ameri­\ncan* would Insure it In the greatest\nmeasure, there was no choice but to go\nto them for the work. In to\ntho promptitude with which they have\nshipped the component parts ot the\nbridge may be placed the fact that the\nagents of the Egyptian government had\nto wait four months for, one small\nbrid-e of 31 tons ordered in England.\nProbably the recent engineering dis­\npute was responsible for this. It will\nbe found that the locomotives for the\nBoudajt railway, or, at all events, the\nfirst batch delivered, will come from\nAmerica. The reason In this case is\nprecisely the same. Thto desire is to get\ndelivery with ail possible dispatch, and\nns America is in a position to guarantee\ngreater speed than England the govern­\nment here has hod no choice but to go\nto the states for at least that portion of\nthe order which coukl not wait.”—Chi­\ncago Chronicle.
14bc5f6a44a086b15ec42bd43168d0f6 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1892.5942622634589 43.994599 -72.127742 Mr. Woodward is an enthusiast on the\nsubject of aerial navigation, and for ten\nyears has given the question the most\nexhaustive study. In the theory of the\nnavigation of the atmosphere he is per-\nhaps as well posted as any man living,\nbut in practice he is a novice, never hav-\ning made an ascension.\nOn account of the mountains being\nlower here than in the north, and also\nof there being nearly always a westerly\nbreeze in this part of the country, Mr.\nWoodward decided to honor San Diego\nwith his presence, and make it his point\nof departure, with what degree of suc-\ncess, however, remains to be seen.\nHe arrived in this city about two\nweeks ago, and while awaiting the ar-\nrival of his balloon has busied himself\nstudying the air currents and preparing\n peculiar apparatus, which he proposes\nto attach to his inflated globe.\nHe proposes by adding two huge white\nwings to the balloon to sail whither he\nwill, ascending and descending at pleas-\nure. The wings are about 8 by 6 feet,\nand are spread upon a bamboo pole\nabout twelve feet long, having two\nbranches from the main pole, one on\neither side, and four crosspieces. The\nwings were of strong though light weight\ncanvas, sewed to each piece of the frame.\nBy working the wings as one would a\npair of oars in rowing, the inventor\nclaims to be able to control his move-\nments. At any rate, he has such confi-\ndence in his ability to do so that he has\nnot only spent much money on the in-\nvention, but proposes to risk his life\non it.
0e3f52597538f1e020251db25e182491 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.1657533929476 37.561813 -75.84108 On tho 2:1(1 of March, 181, a gentle-\nman, accompanied by a buly and some\nwitnesses, eilled upon tne ltov. Dr.\nJoseph!. Ilylanee, of St. Mark'sChnrc.h.\nlie introduced himself as Mr. Washing-\nton Irving, and the. lady as Miss Susan\nKhea Bayard, and statedthat they wished\nto be married. The necessary blanks\nbeig filled and signed, Dr. Bvlanee per-\nformed the ceremony and tliought no\nmore about it. On Wednesday last a\ngentleman called upon him, and, saying\nthat he was Mr. Bayard, asked if his sis-\nter had boon married to Mr. Irving in\nMarch last. Dr. Rylance referred him to\nthe church books kept by the Sexton in the\nsafe. There the record of tho marriage\nwas found, and then Mr. Bayard told a\ncurious story. For some time prior to\nthe marriage Mr. Irving had been en-\ngaged to Miss Bayard, the consent to the\nengagement being somewhat unwillingly\nf iven by the parents of the young lady,\nt was not supposed that the young\ncouple were in a hurry to marry, iior \nat that time did Mr. Irving'scireumstan-ce - s\njustify any such step, as he was only\na clerk in an insurance company on a\nsmall Hilary. Nothing was said about\nthe marriage at the time it, took place to\nany of Miss Bayard's relations, nor was\nthe fact that the ceremony had been per-\nformed even suspected. After the mar\nriage Mrs. Irving returned to her moth-\ner's house and lived there as usual. A\nfew days ago Mr. Irving's salary was\nraised and he, thinking that he 'could\nsupport a wife, applied to the astonished\nrelations of the lady for his bride. As\nmight have been expected, the statement\nmade by both of them that they had been\nmarried was wa.imly disputed, and Mrs.\nIrving's brother at once took steps to as-\ncertain if the story w ere true. Convinced\nthat his sister was really Mrs. Irving, he\nat once gave publicity to the fact by ad-\nvertising the marriage and surrendered\nthe wife to her husband, with whom she\nnow is. A. Y. World.
1759d8a145810c7ec6f41700b508ab25 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1898.0561643518517 32.612638 -90.036751 If one is bound to ruin his children,\nthe choice should be to do it by kind-\nness, rather than by brutality; but\nthere is not the least need of hanging on\neither horn of this dilemma. Let every\nmortal child that is brought into this\nworld be taught to obey its parents; let\nIt be taught this while it is a little child,\nnot humored and petted to death then,\nand taught hundreds of tricks which it\nmust afterwards be beaten to be broken\nof. If you can teach your child obedi-\nence without whipping him, so much\nthe better; don't whip such a child it\nis cruelty; but if he won't fear nor\nobey without stripes, lay them on; but\ndon't be looking and speaking blows at\nhim for a week afterwards. While gen-\ntle, respectful and children are\nthe sweetest things on earth, there are\nfew things more disagreeable and re-\npulsive than bndly managed and unruly\nchildren. No one can endure them, and\ntheir parents are justly despised.\nOnce get that central idea of unquali-\nfied obedience well grounded in your\nfamily, and your government stands\nfirm. You need not be nil the time lay-\ning on commands. Do not fetter your\nchildren; within certain limits leave\nthem free; tench them thnt their rights\nshall be just as much respected as your\nown are; let them never have reason to\ndoubt that you love them dearly, and\nthat you punish them not for your own\npleasure, or because yon are angry and\ncan safely vent your passion upon them,\nbut for their good.\nChildren are cl ea r-s i ght e- d
0f053f77be999d7541798b4110811ca6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.664383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 There Is probably only one man\nnow living who is able to give au­\nthoritatively- the name of the Repub­\nlican who persuaded President Gar­\nfield, In March. 1881, to nominate\nJudge William H. Robertson collector\nof the port of New York—a nomina­\ntion that brought about the dramatic\nJoint resignation of Roscoe Conkllng\nand Thomas C. Platt from the United\nStates Senate, and. in the opinion of\nmany, the defeat of James G. Blaine\nas the Republican presidential nomi­\nnee in 1881 The one man is J. Stan­\nley Brown, who was private secretary\nto President Garfield, and who mar­\nried the President's only daughter. Mr.\nBrown, however, will never tell, un­\nless posthumously. He regards hijn-\nself as under obligations to reveal\nnone of the secret history of the Gar­\nfield administration.\n have been asked many times who\nIt was that recommended to Garfield\nthe appointment of Judge Roberston,\nand could only say that in Washing­\nton, at the time the appointment was\nmade, no one was found, excepting\nMr Brown, who could answer the\nquestion. Yet. It is p.obable that the\nlate John H. Starin, who was In Con­\ngress with Garfield and was a close\nfriend of the latter, knew; and I\nbase this statement on a conversa­\ntion I had with Mr. Starin several\nyears alter Garfield's death.\n"Mr Starin.” I said, "did you ever\nknow that, it was suggested to Resi­\ndent Garfield, after the resignations\nof Senators Conkllng and Platt and\nthe confirmation by the Senate of\nJudrg> Robertson as collector of the\nport of New York, that an ideal way
1910bc420dbbd8d7a98b5dde5644a0f1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.7226775640052 58.275556 -134.3925 A word to the good people of Douglas.\nWe have in our city an organization of\nyoung men who are banded together\nfor the sole purpose of protecting life\nand property. No matter what effort\nthey may put forth, their ouly reward\nwill be the knowledge that they have\nperformed their duty as men aud citi¬\nzens. Aye, and more than their duty, j\nWe refer to the Douglas Fire Depart¬\nment, the members of which organiza¬\ntion hold themselves in readiness to\ncome forth at auy hour of the day or\nnight to risk life and limb to protect\nthe homes and the business houses in\nthis town from fire. These youug men,\nwhose services in the past have won for\nthem the most grateful commendation,\nhave now a request to make of the\npeople of this town. Tt.ey do not ask\nfor pay for their services; they ask for\n really for themselves. They\nonly ask those who regard the\nwork in which they are engaged as\nworthy, to contribute to a fund to pur¬\nchase articles that will add to the\nefficiency of the department. Aud they\ndo not even ask that this be giveu as a\ndonation, but they offer in return au\nentertainment and ball that will in\nevery way be worth the cost of admis¬\nsion. They do not ask that any man\ngive more than he is able, but they do\nthink that each householder can well\nafford to give one dollar, the price of a\nticket. Douglas is not a town over¬\nburdened with taxes, and property\nowners and all others living in the town\noannot iuvest a dollar to any better\nadvantage. Will the good people of\nDnnrrlfts lead their aid to this enter-\nprise? We think they will. Natatorium,\nFriday night.
3ff673f322fc9ccb93abdb9620d10fcd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7356164066464 40.063962 -80.720915 I will certainly excuso him if ho in¬\nsists upon it, but not for the reason lie\ngives. There is not only no evldeuce\noflTered by Mr. Stanton, or to be fouud\nelsowhere, that tho "court were not sat¬\nisfied with it, and were not willing to\nbe responsible for it as an authority,"\nbut it is in entire harmony with the\nopinions and judgments of the court\nupon this question, from the beginning\nor the government. Some further evi-\ndeuco of this, in addition to what lias\nalready been furnished, I will give be¬\nfore I close. Why does he say, thoro-\nfore, without evidence, "that the court\nore dissatisfied with it.1* Is not this the\nreason that It is not reported, plain to\nevery lawyer? It was a suit com¬\nmenced to settle a contested boundary,\nbut was never tried becauso tho parties\nagreed, by concurrent legislation, upon\na boundary, and asked tho court not to\ndecido controverted which are\nreported, but to enter up judgment es¬\ntablishing the lines thus agreed upon,\nit was a judgment merely, not a\ndecision of points.and because such,\nnever reported. But the Supreme\nCourt, before outering up this judg¬\nment, required tho parties, In ac¬\ncordance with their previous opin¬\nions and decisions, to obtain the assent\nof Congress. I cited the law of Con¬\ngress authorizing the Attorney General\nto appear in tho case aud give that as¬\nsent. Ho did, and judgment was then\nentered by the Court. Ail this was re¬\nquired. And I do not know of any ono\nbut Mr. Stanton who is "dissatisfied."\nMr. Stanton further sa£:\n"But it is very certain that tho boun¬\ndary between Virginia and North\nCarolina, A irginla and Tennessee, and\n"VIrglniaand Kentucky woro all settled\n"by concurrent acts of legislation, on\n"the part of tho Stutcs Interested, and\n"that, they have never been ratified by\n"Congress."
3e459fe580f491a3f69282293ab72255 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.091780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 ginla, appellant; Mutual Asauranco Co\npany/ippoiiaiitl a. Supervisors of Bert\nley county, appellees;' Ferrell'«<«/,1 app\nBaKagTSaiS'\nMcCllhtlc, appellees ;Kelloy, appellee,\nArnold, et al, appellants; Arnold, et\nappellants, a. Welton, et aI, appcllM\nOcheltreo, et al, appellants, w. McCllnt\net at, appellees; the Commonwealth\nBrown, appellee, w, Fry et al, appellanl\nPntoheil, appellee, a, . Kelly, appeUai\nHill, appelliht, a.Wynn 4 Co., appolle\nlimb ® 'BAit.'Sifulre Clohan y\nengaged yesterday afternoon In tlie furtl\nexamination of tho. case mentioned\ntnese columns yesteruay morning, at\noral of ilie parties tniplicatod In tlio rc\nlilng of Boyoo have not btcn arrested;\nIs said they Imre taken rtfligu in a ca\nOy«r'In Ohio. opposite the clly, and ci\nnot, of codBC, he reached by our offlcer\nThe following wen held to bail by t\nJustice Id the sum ofthree hundred \nIan each, for their appearance at the m\nterm ofthe Circuit Court for. tbfa coon\nGcorgo Zink, Fat Murphy and Pat Eagi\n(not Hagai, tu we had it)\nThanaiues of those who hare flod a;\nThomas and James Swnney, James Bi\ntoo and Billy Pine. t'i / .ilM'J/.\nHowe 9p>n»..A antnber of perse\nfrom West Alexander wore in theci\nvoatanlair In nnivnlt rtf n kni«n ttilnf1 W\nj uitviuuj i *u jiuiautt ui uuuiov iuiwi( n\nder^in or near that place, TuuHlay^nlg\nand look out a valuable animal. Tho pi\nauera traced; thethlefand, peoperty as i\naa thlfl citv.' Here.thev were informed\none of'&i^didiicun thai he had hotibei\nman answering the description drirl\nrapidly' piro^^onyMhe^atre^^n\ned to, different, point!>alopg .the; rpnU\nwm'belWcd' he haii taken. It is hart\nnoaalblo that he wQi liicceed In nlaki\nhkeecape.
378f4fb4023ef5efc9f84e3535cba459 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4822404055353 39.290882 -76.610759 tertained any other view or opinion" in relation\nto his orders, and that the charge of duplicity,\nwhich was the point raised by the correspond-\nence, was so clearly disproved by the confiden-\ntial correspondence between Mr. Monroe and\nGeneral Jackson, that General Jackson was com-\npelled to retreat to the confidential letter to Mr.\nMonroe, and to allege not only that it was re-\nceived and read in the cabinet council, but that\nMr. Monroe did authorise Johnny Kay to make\nknown to him the wishes of the government that\nhe should invade Florida; and such was his ex-\ntreme solicitude to establish this fact, as the only\nmeans of breaking the force of the publication of\nthe confidential correspondence between himself\nand Mr. Monroe, that he afterwards brought\nJohnny Itay to Washington, and induced him,\nunder circumstances highly disreputable, to ad-\ndress a letter to Mr. Monroe, at a time when it\nwas supposed that Mr. Monroe was or\ndying, and could not answer it; which letter was\nintended to be used to impeach Mr. Monroe's\ntestimony, and establish the truth of Gen. Jack-\nson's assertion that he was carrying into effect\nthe secret tcia/ies of the executive. It however\nso happened, that Mr. Monroe, as the last act of\nhis life, placed it inthe power of Mr. Governuer,\nhis son-in-law, to disprove, in the most indisput-\nable manner, this statement likewise. And it\nis proper that I should here state that I have\nintroduced this correspondence between General\nJackson and IVIr. Calhoun, not to vindicate IVTr.\nCalhoun, as some may suppose, but 'it is to\nshow that the end and object of the establish-\nment of the Globe was to vindicate Gen. Jack-\nson against the consequences of the publication\nof that correspondence; that, with that view,\nKendall assailed Mr. Calhoun with the mostde-\nliberate and unblushing falsehoods, and got up a\nconspiracy against Mr. Calhoun',
1501cc003cee7c00a87464d489b853b0 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1909.346575310756 36.620892 -90.823455 lines 'Hadley Calls Democrats,\nEtc,' and replying will say the\nGovernor is in error. The records\nof the Btate board of equalization\ndiscloses that Maoon county had\nits hearing on March 23, 1909,\nand at the conclusion of this\nhearing and on the same day (he\ngovernor for some reason of his\nown offered the following resolu-\ntion, omitting preamble:\nThat the true value in money\nof each .class of property, as the\nsame is returned to this board\nfor equalization in eaoh county,\nbe ascertained by this board;\nthat this true value in money of\neaoh class of said property in\neaoh oounty be set aside in a tab\nulation to be prepared, and that\nwhere the value of any of the\nolasses of property in any of. the\ncounties, as returned to this\nboard, in less than its true ossh\nvalue, that suoh per centum of\nits true value be added \nby this board, as will make its\nassessed value, as equalized by\nthis board, equal to its true value\nin money, so that all classes of\nproperty in all of the counties\nwill be and is hereby equalized\nand assessed on the basis of its\ntrue value in money.'\n"This resolution offered by the\ngovernor was supported by him\nand was defeated by the votes of\nMajor, Roach and Gordon. Now\nthe governor's statement, 'the\nrecords of the state board of\nequalization show that it was I\n(Governor Hadley) who made\ntha motion to leave the assess\nment of real and personal pro-\nperty in that oounty (Maoon) the\nsame as it was returned by the\nassessor,' is not correct. The\ngovernor neither made nor voted\nfor suoh a motion, and the re- -\noord signed by him does not sup-\nport hit statement,' but contr a- di ot si - t .
11033bdc1f24ecc6039b01b3ade44e84 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1895.2041095573313 41.875555 -87.624421 this up long enough nnd you will bo\nu lino looking spoclmon.\nXoj tho weight of your body\nshould novor como on tho hands and\narms, but on your thighs, and thonco\nbo transferred to tho seat, with tho\nunconslous springy action of your\nlegs, which in a measure allows somo\nof your wolf-li - t to come on tho pedals.\nIn this position your hands aro free\nto guldo your wheel; your body Is\nerect; you do not then get Into tho\nhabit ot swaying from Bide to sldo to\nput moro weight first on ono sldo\nand thon on the other, and vonr\nYUalo rcM;:!ar Ujovetssjit Is rouJnr\nnnd nSriJial. Try riding without\nputting olliior liaiKl on tho handles\nnnd sitting orect. If you rldo well\nyou Cfln W"Hy keep your, bnjnnce,\nnnd In an InstdhtYon bo In Hid\ncorrect position. Onco In this position\nplace tho hands lightly on tho linn -d l- o\nbars nnd you will bo In a healthy,\nn propor situation to gain bonefit\nfrom your riding.\nIn riding ton miles, for example,\nI should never go tho wholo dlstnuco\nat ono pace Slow, steady riding\nhas Its merits, so has sprinting for\nshort distances. When a good clear\nroad looms up ahead have a brush for\ntwo or tliroo hundred yards with tho\nboy who Is wiih yoU. Thoso little\nraces aro good things, Thoy quicken\nyour movomonts, nnd thoy Mop you\nfrom forming bad habits or lolling\nyour body sasr Into, sot, Immovable\npositions. Tliey ius6 bring tho muscles\ninto n different kind of piny.\nIn fact, in blcyclo riding ns in\nabout ovorylhhigolso, you should
2518f43b2b6305392079b51db89de89b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.8095890093862 40.063962 -80.720915 three persons. Outside it glistens\nlike a mirror. Inside it is upholstered\nwith rich satin cloth, with a spring at\nthe back, making it almost as soft as\ndown. At the side of the seat there is a\nmirror set in the panel, and on the other\nside a "pocket" for carrying any small\npackages that it is not desirable to carry\nin the hand. There is also a small case\nfor cards set iu the door. The front is\noval tilled with class at the top; the\nboard below is cushioned and a little seat\nor shelf can be let down to accommodate\na child. There is also a bell handle\nin the front, and by a turn of it\ntho attention of the driver out-\nside is attracted. The vehicle is in all\nrespects complete, and a remarkably fine\nspecimen of that kind of work. Next to\nthe coupee is a "Landeauor carriage,\n the top parting in the center, and\nthe sides on springs like a buggy, so that\nit can be used either as a close or an open\ncarriage. It is cushioned also, and lined\nwith bluo broadcloth, and the no^y is set\non MC"spring*. Back o! the Lanaeau u\na carriage known as the "Berlin coach."\nIt is fully up in the way of cushions, and\nfurnished somowhat like the rest, and iu\nbody is set on "C" springs, but has one\ndistinguishing peculiarity. The sides are\nmade in panels which can be removed at\npleasure. If used in winter, these panels\nare kept in. if used in summer, they\nare taken out, leaving it an open carriage.\nCurtains always go with it also, for use in\nsummer in case a sudden rain ahould\ncome up. It is the most complete vehicle\nof the kind we have ever seen, and is a\nsuggestive commentary upon the
16ec21624b47809c1f047ff409478874 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1894.3383561326739 43.994599 -72.127742 Whereas, Eilniond P. George of West\nFairlee in said County lias tiled in the office\nthe Clerk of said Court, Wis petition lor\nforeclosure against Albert D. Giant. George\nGrant, Jessie 1). Grant and .Sidney 13.\nGrant of Chelsea in the State of Massachu-\nsetts, setting forth in substance that Melissa\nGrant and Albert 1). Grant then of W est\nKairlee aforesaid on the 141 h day of Febru\nary 1K72 were justly indebted to the West\nFairlee savings tiank ot v i st hairlee\naforesaid in the sum of two hundred dol- -\nirs specified in a promissory note describ\nas follows: Said note bearing date Feb\nruary 11th, 1S72, executed by the said Me-\nlissa L. Grant and Albert 1). Grant, and\npayable to the West Fairlee Savings Hank\nfor the sum ol two hundred del ars on de\n with interest annually; and that to\nsecure the payment of said note according\nits tenor the said Melissa L. Grunt, Al-\nbert 1). Grant and Josic 1). Grant on said\nUth day ot February 1ST2. in consideration\ntwo hundred dollars by their deed of that\ndate by them duly executed, acknowledged\nand recorded, did convey to the est j air-le-e\nSavings Hank land situated in the town\nWest Fairlee in said county of Orange,\ndescribed in said deed as follows, viz:\nAbout one acre of land in the villaire of\nWest Fairlee upon the northerly side of the\nhighway leading from the Village to Mid-\ndle linxik, bounded easterly by Aluion\nJohnson's land, westerly by Mary Ann\nross' lot, and northerly by laud of J. li.\nDearborn's and southerly by the aforesaid\nroad, upon which is a dwelling house and
9c505cd4d7a38d38149a4ada3eb92b2d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.8178081874682 31.960991 -90.983994 dency of this Republic may well con«\nstitute a title to the confidence of any\nconstituency; and it would afford me\nthe highest and mo3t lasting satisfac­\ntion to continue in the position in\nwhich that confidence has placed me.\nIn that position, perhaps, 1 might ren­\nder more efficient aid than in a private\nstation, in the enforcement of (hose\ngreat doctrines and principles which\nconstitute his political creed, and in\nthe establishment of which the happi­\nness and honor of the country are so\ndeeply involved. I am proud that 1\nhave zealously and constantly labored\nin so worthy a cause; and whether in\npublic or private life, J shall continue\nto advocate it with unabated ardor,un­\ntil by the blessing of Heaven that\ngreat cause shall be crowned with \ncess. While I readily admit that no\nman can present claims, to the favor of\nthe people, I cannot look back upon\na history made luminous by his illus'ri-\nous service, nor around me upon\ncountry filled with its enduring memo­\nrials, and for a moment doubt that the\nprejudices and antipathies of party\nwill be swept aw ay by a returning and\noverwhelming tide of public gratitude\nand admiration, and that as the People\nrallied about the patriot soldier in 1840,\nthey will agaih rally in resistless num­\nbers to the support of the patriot orator\nand statesman in 1844. That I may\nbe permitted to share with my friends\nin the labors of that now impending\ncontest is the devout prayer of mv\nheart. In the Providence of God 1
08a31e56d0eb4bf40367af664e59f5e2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.7554644492511 46.187885 -123.831256 never has yet a policy been devised\nby the art of man that mil insure,\nthrough all times and seasons, a con-\ntinuous flow of pnosperity. But the\nquestion is whether, given as a series\nof years, there has not been a larger\ndegree of prosperity to the people un-\nder the policy of protection than un-\nder the policy of free trade. The\nquestion is to be gauged and tested,\nnot by the experience of a single\nyear, but by the experience of a series\nof years. We have had a protective\ntariff now for more tnan two decades,\nand I ask you whether there has ever\nbeen another period in "which the\nUnited States has made such progress\nas during tho last twenty years? But\nit is true that now and then there\nwill come a little lull and a little re-\naction in business; there will come a\nlittle lull and a little reaction in\nthe laws of nature. You had a great\ndrought in Ohio this year, but yon do\nnot on that account vow that you will\nhave no more rain. On tho contrary,\nyou are more firmly persuaded that\nrain is the only element "that will re-\nstore fertility to your soil, verdure to\nyour fields, and richness to yeur\ncrops. So in this little slough, this\nlittle dullness in the business of tho\ncountry. The "one great element that\njpan bfrxelied.on .to restore prosperity\nis the protective tariff. The question,\nthen, is for Ohio to decide. On the\n14th day of this month you will have\nan opportunity to tell the people of\nthe United States whether you be-\nlieve in that doctrine. If you do you\nwill secure not only its continuance\nbut its permanent triumph. But if,\non the other hand, you should falter\nand fall back, it might produce disas-\nter elsewhere.
026eff61bf173e2c31a0415f58b67aa0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.4835616121259 40.063962 -80.720915 Applications for Pardon.Tlie South\nCarolina DelesmtIon.Florida to Put.\nin an Appearance. I>nir (ircen.\nNkwYork, June 24..Tin* HerithFs]\nWashington sj>eoi:il says: Among the,\nnew applications to the President for\npardon are the foil owing rebel otlicers:,\nBrigadier-generals J. M . Barton. J . M .\nFrazer, T. 15. Smith, W. D. Slidell, M.\nD. Corse, G. W . Gonlont Kppa Houghn,\nJ. H. Jones, <K S. Murmuduke, D. M.\nDubois, John R. Tucker, Commander\nof the rebel navy, and the following ci¬\nvilians have been added to the list of\napplications since yesterday: J. G .\nHunter and Kieharcf Howes*, of Ken-'\ntucky; Solomon Frank, A. Converse,\nAndrew Johns, Edward McCormiek\nand Blair Burwell, of Virginia; Eustisi\nLurgent, of Louisiana; H. F. Thomson,\nand David Black, of Arkansas; Win. M .,\nVorhees, R. G . Wain and G B. Parmer,1\nof Tennessee; Thomas W. Fleming and]\nF. Y. Clark, of Georgia; J. W. M. Har¬\nris, of Mississippi, and B. T. Pinekney\nand I). J . Chandler, of Maryland. No\nprisoners of war, the rank of Cap-\ntain are being released at present. The;\nnumerous applications for pardon from\nprisoners and civilians art* tiled away!\nfor future action, and none but excop-\ntional cases immediately granted.\nThe South Carolina clelegation is to;\nlmve another interview with the Presi¬\ndent to-morrow, when thev will urge\ntho views of secesh loyalists of tliatj\nState in regard to reconstruction. They\nare not likely to have much influence\nin shaping the course of things in that\nState, the rebel record being of so ultra\na character as to destroy any eiaim to\nconfidence in regard cither for their sin-\nceritv or honesty of purpose. Alter the\ndeparture of the South Carolina delega-\ntion the coast will be clear here for any\ncitizens of Florida, who have beenuii-:\nusually prominent in the late rebellion,\nto put in an appearance, and tender to;\ntho President their advice in regard to\ntho conduct of atl'airs'in the last of the!\nrebellious States to seek for restoration\ntinder the President's plan of recon-i\nstruct ion.
164a15197b244d7121cd58317f0cce88 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.6150684614408 40.063962 -80.720915 Mu Bookwai.tkh, of Ohio, has come\nhome from his tour around the world\nladed with rare aud curious articles from\ntie KoiyeouB Kiat. Mr. Book waiter is a\ncandidate for the United States Senate. It\naim be confessed that his museum of\noriental curios gives him great strength\n*iih tlie Democratic party. General\nItorbin Ward is also a Democratic candi¬\ndate lor the United States Senate. He has\nno museum as aforesaid. But the Mahora-\njih Dhaleep Singh, a wealthy Kast Indian\ndignitary, is about to oiler for sale a job\nlot ol such plunder as Mr. Bookwalter has\ns'.oredupand General Ward lacks. Here\nUthelieneral'a opportunity to meet Mr.\nB»kwalter on even terms. It may be\nsaid to be the opportunity of a life-time.\nto (onaor yu«n> It ha* been tnought that the \n£*!irprit{ wa> h ill litttdlum throURh Which U)\n. dTtr.lie the Wim vtrulul* Unlvercl jr. Kityetto\nwiaij buM«it leveral young men to bo educated\n*'. imt itytitm|r>u of learulug. and wo thought it\nth«n probable that w« would get Uie iidver-\n?"h* lot »ur State Ins'ltntlon Uiliytiur. Lut sadly\nMTt we teea wlKlakvu. 1 hla year wo hato not re-\nthe benent cf jt* patronage. How ii thia?\n'.» became we are uot Democratic enouah to be\naigteil with a recognition Iroot the man\n»«n c( that high toned LtJnlveirity? Or\nJ* 'i to puul«h tin /or leaving the party\nuwtukw uie School Fund and nut It contrary to\n»'' We do uot expert tn be the recipient of many\n. .Tor* from the Democratic party, but wo weio not\nior thin maniftNtauon of political vonom
ca40b25be4e7d3ff56d9a8ea2ead4ae3 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1922.319178050482 39.623709 -77.41082 The opening of the wagon business\nnecessitated the erection of a great\nmany inns or taverns along the roads\nand also in the towns and villages.\nMany of these old inns can still be;\nseen standing along our roads as well\nas in our towns and cities.\nThe owners of pack horses and\nmules bitterly opposed the use of wag-\nons as an invasion upon their rights i\nand prerogatives, as did the wagoners;\nthemselves some years later bitterly\noppose the introduction of railroads.\nThus step by step the march of j\nprogress moved on, and moves on still\nFirst the foot-traveller—then the pack 1\nhorse—then the wagon, thought to be\ncarrying a great load at the rate of\nfour or six miles an hour; now the\nsteam locomotive drawing more than\nten thousand horses can carry and at\nthe rate of forty miles an hour—yes\nat this very hour gas and electricity\nare seemingly putting the steam loco-\nmotive on the back list with the \ntruck, llmopsine and airship.\nA long days journey of our fore-\nfathers can now be made in an hour.\nThe rifle company formed in Fred- j\nerick upon hearing of the Battle of\nBunker Hill, under the leadership of\nbrave Captain Cressop and his gallant\nLieutenant Otho Holland Williams was\nnearly three weeks in marching to the\ncamp of Washington near Boston; now I\nit is possible for a resident of Freder-!\nick to breakfast at home, lunch in\nPhiladelphia, dine in New York andj\nsup and sleep in Boston all the same\nday. These are few of the many\ngreat changes that have' come into our\nglorious Monocacy Valley country as\nwell as in the country generally, since\nthe first settlers found their way into\nthe wilderness from Pennsylvania and\nthe Palatinate and settled between the\nMonocacy river and the Catoctin\nmountains which now is one of the\nbeauty spots of America—beautiful\nfruits and grains of a fertile soil and\nan invigorating climate.
0a5a38d45b553562ea11ad88a3e919b4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6753424340436 39.261561 -121.016059 \\\\ ondrrfui Ki]»nnaloii of our Navy.\nThe Bulletins Washington Correspon-\ndent, to his letter of August 1st, has the\nfollowing interesting naval statistics:\n1 be people of the United States have lit-\ntle idea how w onderful the American navy\nhas been expanded since (he rebellion\nbroke out. In 1861 our entire navy eon\nsisted of 88 vessel* only, of which about 80\nwere steamers. To day we have 290 ves-\nsels, all of which are propelled by steam,\nexcept a few sailing corvettes and and fri-\ngates which can at any time be cut down,\nconverted into iron-plated ram* or sloop*\nof-war, and propelled by steam. We had\n8 000 sailors and marines a year ago.\nThere are now over 23,000 seaman in the\nUnited States naval service; the marine\ncorps has been doubled, and, besides, a pro-\nportionate increase of officers on the regu-\nlar siaff. commanders, lieutenants and mi-\nnor officers have been easily obtained for\nnear 200 vessels purchased or chartered for\nwar purposes. These are facts which\nshould, and doubtless will make European\n■"'lions hesitate before they still further tax\nour resources. Among our fleets are two\niron chid frigates, 23 iron clad gunboats,\nand a good slock ol the highly effective na-\nval weapon, the ram. Of the latter the\nnumber can be increased and\nat any moment, us they may be needed.\nAllwe havetodo,isto(Ita beakouto\nany staunch sti inn craft, plate its most vul\nnet aide parts, and it in ready for service iu\nsinking and destroying wooden walls, or\nwhatever else it can get a drive at. In this\nway ilie magnificent ocean steamship Van-\nderbilt was filled up in a short time in this\npm i, and sent down to Hampton Hoada for\na tilt wish the Menimao;and the liver ram\nfleet of Col, Ellel was also turned out in the\nsame way. With all the boasted powers of\nthe Merriinsc, her commander did not dare\nto venture into llampiun Roads to try a\nbrush with the Vanderbilt, lilted up as a\nram in a few days* time, with tier machine-\nry protecied by cotton hales, and not ail\ninch of iron-cladding anywhere upon her\nhull, In case of a contest with a naval\npower, the lain, we believe, would be one\nof our most formidable weapons. Fifty of\nthem, stout and swift, cruising along our\nconst, and it would be hard wuik for an en-\nemy to land troops anywhere on our shore.\nIf the foe sent mailed convoys with hi*\ntransports, the rains would simply dodge\nthe ironclads and sink ihe transport*,\nif indeed they could not quickly destroy\nboth.
37d00b3f3e1c09c677db15ff02878b0b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.736338766191 41.681744 -72.788147 all this in what starts out to be a com-\nmon, ordinary drama but which before\nit gets well into the second act de-\nports from all previous attempts and\nbranches out on lines of its own.\nEllen Neal is a girl who has ambi-\ntions, what though she is of lowly\nbirth. After departing from the\nstraight and narrow path she seeks\nemployment as a maid in the wealthy\nFullerton home. There, while a dance\ni3 in progress, she meets her betrayer,\na society man. The son of the family\nfalls in love with her and in the next\nact the family lawyer is called upon\nfor a settlement. A complication fol-\nlows and the case is thrown in the\npolice court where .the big moment\nof the play happens. It would be fu-\ntile to attempt to tell the story in this\nshort space, daring to approach what\nrequires finished acting and proper\nsetting to produce.\nAnd "Common Clay" has the acting.\nIf the name of Thomas E. Shea alone\nwere mentioned no further proof of\nthis assertion would be needed. Mr.\nShea, long known to another genera-\ntion of needs no introduction.\nThat he departs from his regular\nwork in no way detracts from his abil-\nity. He is as good in the part of tho\namiable Judge Filson as he ever was\nin "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde", although\nthe characters can in no way be com-\npared. As a prosecutor who discovers\nin the woman he condemns his own\ndaughter, Mr. Shea is on his mettle.\nNor does he overdo the scene, which\ncould easily happen.\nCatherine Tower, as the pitiful El-\nlen Neal, has many opportunities at\nemotional acting and makes the best\nof them. Her lines, for the most part,\nfilled with "punch", are made to score.\nIn a word, Miss Tower is well suited\nfor her part in the play, one by no\nmeans easily filled. Playing opposite\nher is George Tilton, the wealthy son\nwho afterwards rights all the wrong.\nAs his father, W. A. Whitecar, puts\nplenty of action in the part. Raymond\nBramley, too, is good. Others in the\ncast are Charlotte Burkett, Edward\nLeahy, Pearl Ford, Frederick Going,\nJames J. Cassady, J. Irving Southard,\nV. S, Grandin, Charles Barnett and\nTessie Lawrence.
0ea73778b5701414a324f09dfd753180 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1891.7712328450025 42.68333 -96.683647 FKtqt'KVT communications are pass­\ning between Berlin and Vienna, aud the\nsubject is believed to be the operations\nof the Russians in the southwest.\nWhatever may be the Intentions of Rus­\nsia, everything Is being prepared as if\nfor war in that direction. The re­\nserves are out. ostensib.y for drill; 240,-\nooo are on the banks uf the Prntli, or\nwithin ten miles of that river, the Ru­\nbicon of a Ru8so-Turklsh war, aud the\nRussian forces are amply fitted with\npontoons and all the requisites for rapid\nadvance Into the heart of the Balkan\nstates. It is said Austria Is in some\ndoubt as to whether to regard a Russian\nadvance toward tbe Balkans as a cause\nfor war, and also as to whether in such\nan event she could expect, the co-opera­\ntion of and that this is one\nreason for the frequent interchange of\ndispatches between the two capitals.\nTHE house of lords In England is\nreally in danger of extinction. All that\nis necessary to raise the issue is a stupid\nact of hostility to public interests, and\ntbe aristocratic branch of parliament\nhas rarely failed to indulge in just such\nhostile stupidity whenever an emer­\ngency arises. The Aristocracy is l >t\nting out. It is merely a burden and an\nobstruction. It has attempteJ to\nthwart nearly every important, pro­\ngressive movement in British politics\nduring the last century. The lOMs\nhave not been attending to public\nbusiness. Out of a peerage of 700 mem­\nbers the attendance does not average\nmore than forty.\nOENERAI. Bot;I.AN"<>EK committed sui­\ncide «n the tomb of Madame iionne-
1f754b839816d2f533a926490b48d522 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2945205162355 40.063962 -80.720915 One prominent feature of thia Chapel is [ty\nthe congregational singing. They all ^\nall joined heartily in both the singing and a \\\nreaponeea yesterday, in ainging the Easter cei\nchautsund hymna in commemoration oi we\nthe Risen Lord, Hymn No. 110, (Ohriat- pni\nmas); No. D8. (Pleyel'a llymn); No. 105. bui\n(Webb); Trtsagion, and the beautiful pui\ncommunion hymn, "Bread of the World, fh\nThe tloral decorationa were very beauti- M\nful, contributions having been made by uo<\nMrs. Henry Kose, Miss Agues Hose, Mr. am\nand Mrs. G. Lamb, Miss E. J. Oecil, Miss 1\nLucy Kyle, Mrs. E . M . Clendenning and uvi\nMrB. S, P. liildreth. and were very taste- ad'\nfully and symmetrically arranged by the wo\nlast two named ladies. dol\nMr. Spalding announced to the congre- lik\ngation that a fitting and acceptable bel\nEaster offering had been made to the con- sui\ngregation by one of itd friends, to w;t: a pol\nlot of ground on the southeast corner o pre\nPeon and Ohioatreets, and that a meetin £\nwould be held at the chapel on Monday an\nevooing, by those interested in the work, am\nto elect three trustees, to bu confirmed by Tb\ntho Circuit Court, to hold the title to the dei\nproperty and to lake the iuitiatory steps du\ntoward building a church. the\nOver forty persona remained and par- Hh\ntook of the Holy Communion. 'J\nVAKTKK SUNDAY AT TUB CATHEDBAL.\nThe attendance at the Cathedral, at all wj,\nof the services, 0:30, 0, 10:30 a. m . and 3 rat\np. b ., was as large as has been noticed for 'or\nyeflr8, co!
35f18f9f2d6056792660effc2020d8b4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.7547944888381 58.275556 -134.3925 . \\ccordl:n to cshiogrsms from\nNome, the Casco was driven on the\n.¦oeky south shore of King Island\nvhlle beating out of tho Arctic In\nin effort to escape the ice. She\ntruck September 8. The master\nmd crew escaped to shore, taking\nill the ship's supplies with them,\ntlx members of the crew arrived In\nVome recently In a native skin boat.\nThe Casco sailed from San Fran-\nIs. early In the summer on a mys-\nerlous gold-seeking expedition:\n>ound for the Arctic shores of SI-\nteria. and commanded by Capt. C .\nI,. Ollvor. She was to have wintered\nn tho Arctic, but the heaviness of\nhe early Ice caused her to flee for\nllorlng sea. If haulod off tho rocks\nbefore the Ice hems In King island\nhe can probably bo sav<4).\nRobert Ixmls Stevenson chartered\nhe schooner from Dr. Merritt of\n- inn Francisco and used her In his\nSouth Sea voyage. Several years\ntfter ho returned the vessel to her\niwncr she was sold to a sealing con-\nem. Later she was suspected of\nimugglinr Chinese and opium into\nHawaii, having a spectacular career\nti those watera. Hcfore the war In\nKurope she was purchased by a\na nt leal school in Vancouver, II. C..\nor use as a training ship.\nIn the summer of 1917 Capt.\nHarry W. Crosby of Seattle pur-\nhased tho acliooner and brought\nior to Seattle, mooring her at the\nSalmon Hay plant of the Hallard\nMarine Railroad. Several months\nlater Capt. Crosby sold her to other\nSeattle Interests and the following\noar she was taken bark to San\nYanclsco. her old home port, where\nist spring she was acquired for the\nIberian expedition.
1d885dcb9bd23da64a1aff8cba814547 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.9821917491122 40.832421 -115.763123 This new process for tho reduction\nof ores being of especial interest to a\nmining country, wo publish the follow¬\ning from tho Virgiuia Enttrpriw\nA gentleman of this city, who had\nsome ore worked by tho Fryer process,\ninforms us that the prevailing notions\nregarding said process are incorrect.\nThe idea that has some way taken root\n£n the public mind that Mr. Fryer sub¬\njects the oro submitted to him for re¬\nduction to Bono kiud of a chemical\nbath which dissolves it, reducing it to\nun impalpable powder is entirely\nwithout foundation; os tho contrary\ntho oro is pluced iu u furnace of pecu¬\nliar construction ami roasted, when it is\namalgamated. The oxo is not crushcd\nbefore roasting, but is placed in the fur-\njinco in lumps just ns it is taken from\nthe ruine. The gentleman who gives\nus this informatios took to Grass Val¬\nley n lot of tailings which he wished to\nhave tested by tho process in question.\nMr. Fryer, the inventor of process,\nwas in the East, but his brother was at\nCrass Valjey and undertook to tnako\nthe test. He (the brother) said that ho\nwould not bo nolo to work tho tailings\nto his entire sutisfnc.ion, as their fur-\nunco was intended for roasting uncrush-\ned rock and not anything so tinely pul¬\nverized as tailings. Ho made no secret\nof ifc being a roasting procesH. He said\nthey roasted tho ore in their furnace\nand then amalgamated it. With some\nalteration of their furnace, bo said they\nAKotild bo ablo to work tailings -as well\nand as satisfactorily a* roek in tho\nlump. Tho tniliugs submitted to tho\nprocess yielded in a manner quite satis¬\nfactory to the gentleinau who carried\ntlvem to Grass Valley, but not to tho\nsatisfaction of Mr. Fryer, who said that\nwith n different kind of furnace bo could\ndo still better with tbem. The suppo¬\nsition is that something is put into tho\nfumnco with tho ore which destroys tho\niron aud sulphur it contains.
06dd5259614ae74f386836e377a2f802 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.746575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 Assistant State's Attorney R. L .\nGideon asked for substantial prison\nsentences, on tho ground that every\ncount against the pair had been\nproven. He called the court's atten-\ntion to tho finding of several articles\nin possession of Giardino and Gar-\ngano, which had been in cars stolen\noff the streets of New Britain and\nHartford, and recovered later with\nengine numbers filed off and new\nnumbers stamped in their places.\nGiardiano On Stand Two Honrs\nLate yesterday afternoon, Giardi-\nano took the witness stand. Ho spoke\nfairly good English and needed an\ninterpreter only when Judge' Booth\nwished to make clear to him the\nmeaning of the word "incriminate."\nHe said, in reply to Mr. Gideon,\nthat he was born In Italy 27 years\nago and had lived Scranton, Pa.,\nand other places before coming to\nNew Britain about four months ago.\nHe lived at 471 Myrtle street prior\nto moving to 66 Smith street, where\nhe lived "about 10 days before he\nwas arrested. He seemed desirous of\ndefending himself and was on the\nwitness stand almost two hours, re-\nciting the story of how he came into\npossession of automobiles which he\nhad sold. He did not know, the full\nnames of the men from whom he\nbought the cars and he explained\nthe finding of numerous articles\nwhich were Identified by their own-\ners by saying they were left in his\ntruck by picnickers whom he took\nto Momauguin on Sundays.\n"It must be that some gang is try-\ning to make trouble for me and
6b18c38a3ec9ecddbaa2414089a5ee20 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.8890410641807 41.681744 -72.788147 Lightfoot the Deer did very much\nthe sama thing, only he stole for\nward to where he could see that\nhunter and Just what he did and\nat the same tlmo keep out of Bus'\nter Bear's way. Even Yowler the\nBob Cat, keeping to the thickest\naid darkest thickets, crept alone as\nonly a cat can, watching every move\nthat hunter made. Sammy Jay fol\nlowed silently through the tops of\nthe trees and Blacky the Crow\nperched in the tops of high trees\nfrom which ho could see some\ndistance through the Green Forest.\nIn a way they were all hunting that\nhunter. They were keeping track of\nhim so that no one would unsus\npectlngly five him a chance to use\nthat terrible gun.\nThere were times when that hunt\ner had a feeling that he wat be\n watched. He didn't know why\nhe had that feeling, but he did have\nIt. Then he would stand still for the\nlongest time and listen with all his\nmight and look with all hie night\nBut with all his listening and all\nhis looking he heard and saw none\nOf the little people. Not even the\nlittle birds came near him. By the\ntime he. reached the edge of the\nGreen Forest he actually was feel- -\nIng lonesome. It was a relief to hear\nSammy Jay suddenly begin to\nscream at the top of his lungs\n"Thief! thief! thief! thief!" It was\nSammy's way of letting all the\nother people In the Green Forest\nknow that that hunter was leaving\nthe Green Forest and there no long\ner waa need to hunt. him.\n(Copyright, H2i. lry T. M . Burgess)
15ee150aa2999eebed784980a338f7f0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.3356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 A cup six inches across and perhap\nten inches deep, in the center of a hear;\niron block, receives the melted lead l\ni the weight of SO or 100 pounds. A man\ndril or rod of the same length presse\ndown through the center of the melte*\nlead, and when the ram works a follow\ner attached slowly sinks, exactly fillini\nthe cup. In the bottom ox this cup is i\nJie, simply a ring, with an edge on tb\ninside; through this ring the rod of lb\nrun enters, bat it does not fill all tb\n- pac*.the lead fills the balance of tb\nM»ace.acd it presses oat perfectl>\nformed lead pipe. Tbis is ingenioo*\nbut it is an invention 30 jean old. T\nmake lead pipe encased with tin is an\notber thing, and it is what these yourr\nmen here. In Sew York, hare done.\nA block of tin Is cast and turned in\nlathe. It is about 10 inches long, tapex\ned, with a hole in the center, and of ai\naverage diameter of, say, two inches\nthough such are made of various sizes\naccording to the size of pipe to be manu\nfmated, Tbis tapering shape is to giv\nuniform thickness to the tin I\nit were of equal diameter, the decrease*\npressure of the ram would give an Irreg\nalar thickness. To determine this poin\nrequired long, careful, and cosily expe\nrimenis. Now, this tapering block o\ntin, freezingoold, is feet In the cup, tb\nsmallest end down, and melted lead h\nlei in from an adjoining furnace, al\nround it. Immediately the hot leax\nmelu the tin block, bat only on th<\noutside, and here a perfect alloy ii\nformed. Down comes the heavy ram\nthe mandril, or rod, passes through tb«\nheavy block of tin. the follower slowlj\npresses down, and the new oompoaai\npipe is forced through the die below\nAs the ram works with steady pressor\nthe tin and lead are forced out togethei\nwithout the least chanee in the origina\nposition; the only change being In th\nshape. Of course, the thickness of tin\nlining will depend on the size of th<\ncone of tin. Now, although tan is mucl\nmore costly than lead, it is lighter, a\nwell as strooger; hence, a foot of tbl\npipe costs only about the same as a foe\nof lead pipe. Here we have a pip\nsuitable for carrying water, which L\nperfectly harmless, and it is cheap.
0a4084de1a6a35def9310e75ece1f6f4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.8260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 uries and amusements. It is fair to\npresume that every liquor dealer has\nat least fifty regular customers and Ups\nlive merchant can readily see that these\nfifty families are compelled to get\nalong with the most meagre expendi­\ntures. while the one family of the liquor\ndealer Is probably a profuse spender.\nIf the conditions wore reversed and the\nfifty families of the middle classes\nwere receiving and spending all the\nearning power of the workingmen of\nthis community with tho merchants in\nthis city, ns they usually do. Instead of\nthe one saloon keeper, Is It not clear\nto even the dullest merchant that he\nwould be supplying the needs and lux­\nuries of fifty families, whereas now he\nIs only supplying )>art of the needs of\nthe one prosperous liquor dealer, who\nmany times, as is well gnown, spends\nthe greater part of his money In the\nlarger cities for costly clothing, sup­\nplies. amusements ard pleasure excur­\nsions? If each saloon represent and\ndiminishes the purchasing i>ower of\nfifty families, then the DUi saloons In\nWilmington are diminishing the pur­\n power of 9,300 families.\nIn many cases tho families of the\nmiddle and poorer classes are denied\neven the necessities of life, because of\nthe spendthrift habits of the wage earn­\ner. who is constantly paying tribute to\nthe liquor traffic and usually nettles his\nscore with the tavern keeper first, as\nsoon as he receives his pay.\nBy voting AGAINST LICENSE, the\ngreat drain ot yie ^immunity may be\nstopped and the merchants of this city\nwould be voting to distribute among\n1 themselves easily five millions of dollars\nannually more than they now receive\nwhich is being filched from the podkets\nof the wage earners and diverted to the\npockets of the liquor dealers.\nMr. Merchant cant you be as wise to\nyour own interests as the liquor dealer\nis to his interest?\nThe liquor dealer is consistent, at\nleast. He gives aruF works and votes\nFOR THE LIQUOR DEALER every\ntime. He even has tho effrontery juet\nnow to ask you, Mr. Merchant, to for­\nget yourself and your interests to work\nand vote for him, too.\nWILL YOU BE FOOL ENOUGH
00891d818313c740e246f86ba269e082 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.6424657217149 39.24646 -82.47849 wholo world before us, professing\nto bo Christians and to know states-\nmanship, when war is over and\nblood has ceased to flow, wo do not\nknow enough to shako hands and\nmake peace? Havo we not at tho\nNorth already suffered enough in\nthis terriblo civil war ? How many\nhundreds and thousands of our\nfathers, Bons and brothers havo laid\ndown in premature graves ? Whero\nis the household which has no va\ncant chair? Whero is tho father\nwhoso son has . not fallen or beon\nwounded in this terriblo Btrifo ?\nHave wo not sufferod enough ? Is\nit not enough for me that I havo\nbeen called to look into tho grave\not my eldest son a saennco in this\nterriblo struggle? : Can I ask for\nmore? Because I havo sufferod\nshall I givo vent to no feelings but\nthoso of vengeance? Shall pity,\nshall Christianity, shall generosity,\nshall magnanimity longer dwell\nin tho human bosom? And havo\nnot the people of tho South suf-\nfered beyond all description?\nTheir sons, too, havo perished, but\nnot like ours, in a causo which has\ntriumphed; but in a causo which\nhas failed and forever overwhelmed\nwith ignominy and defeat. Their\ncountry has been ravaged by war.\nFire and arson have swept it every-\nwhere. If you follow in that broad\nblack track of forty milosin width,\nof Sherman's march through the\nSouth, do you not soo enough in all\ntho misery which has arisen there\nto satisfy even thoso who cry "Ven\ngeance Woe to the Conquered I"\n(Applause.) I know, eir, there\nhave boon times in tho midst of\nthis conflict, while tho war was\nraging, when I havo boon called to\nurgo my countrymen to tho tern\nbio struggle, when I, too, have giv-\nen utteranoo to feelings of vi ndi c- tivenes- s ,
48a71b2eb6a204dccc9b04e6ba38814a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.6890410641806 41.004121 -76.453816 or to bo made, containing the uuinesoi nil per"\nsous so leturncd as reNideut tuxables lu said\nward, borough, towns hip or pi eel net, nndlurutsh\nthe same, together with tho necevsrtry election\nblanks to thuulllcers of the election iu said u urd.\nborough, township or precinct, on orbeforo bIx\no'clock 111 the mornluit of tho second lueadny of\nOctober, nud no man Hhnll bo permitted to vote\nnt the election uu that tiny whoso name Is not on\nNiuu iisi, unless uo snail mauo proof 01 ins ngnj\nto vote, us hcrelnalter iciiulred.\nVcc. 4. On tho uny ut election nuy person\nwhoso name Is nut 011 tlio said list, and elulnilui\nthe right lo voto at said election, shall produce ut\njviui, unu (luamieii Miierui inu uistrici us 11 wit-\nness to tno liMkleiH-- of tlin thilntntit. Iti thn\ndistrict of which ho claims to ben voter for tho\nperiod ofnt lenst ten days next preceding ald\nelection, which wllnes-- shall take and subscrlre\nu written, or partly written nnd partly printed\nnlllJavit to thu statu 1 hv him. which nMlti.- i -\nvit shall dellno elearly whero tho rcsldcnca Is of\ninu iieinuu hu uui lining 10 uu u viner ; nnu inu per-\nson so clalmliiLf tho mint to voto shall also lulto\nuud subserlbou wiltien or partly written nud\npartly printed uflldavit, slating to tho bust of his\nknowledge nhd belief, where uud when ho was\nburn, inai. nu is a ciu.enoi ino uomnionucaim\nor Peiiusylvaul.i uud or the United Htates; that\nho has u--! UI til in the Commonwealth one year,\nor If formerly 11 ei l,an therein, and has moved\ntherelroui.thathe has rt Hided therein six mouths\nnext pteeedlng said election: that hu has nut\nmovtd Into thu district lor the purpose of voting\ninerein; uint ne nas p.iiu u buuu or eouuiy wx\nwlthlu two icar. whiuli wua nssesscd ut least ten\ndas beloie said e ice t Ion ; and, it n uaturullx--\nlctien, shall til so slulo whin, where uud by\nwhat court ho was uaturallztil, aud shall also\npro luce his eirlillcuto of naturalization lor
1e9ea67c1691ec3c1ecf16273a563818 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.7986301052765 39.745947 -75.546589 Beginning al IU» northeasterly inter­\nsection of Fourth and Market, streets;\nthence northerly along the easterly side\nof Market street, about fourteen feet and\nsix Inches to the middle of the partition\nwall which divides the house on\nlot from a house adjoining now the prop­\nerty of Rebecca Stevens, late of Jacob\nUelvlllc; thence through the middle of\n■said partition wall easterly parallel with\nFourth street about forty-five feet six\nInches to where this Intersects a line run­\nning through the gable end wall Of the\ntenement at the easterly end of this lot\nfronting on Fourth street; thence south­\nerly parallel with Market street through\nthe middle of the last mentioned wall\nabout fourteen feet six Inches to the\nnortherly side of Fourth street, and\nthence along the same westerly about\nforty-five leet six Inches to the place of\nbeginning, be the contents thereof what\nthey may. (Excepting, nevertheless; the\nuse oT the privy und an alley leading\nthereto from Fourth street, which Is re­\nserved to Rebecca Stephens and her heirs\nand assigns, owners and occupiers the\nadjoining messuage to hold the name In\ncommon forever. Subject to the payment\nby the said Rebecca Stephens, her heirs\nand assigns, two-thirds of all necessary\nexpenses which may be Incurred In keep­\ning the said alley and privy In repair.)\nIt being the same land and prero.ses\nwhich the said Lydia liockyer, by Inden­\nture under her hand and seal.bearing even\ndato herewith, but previously executed\ndid grant and confirm unto the said\nRoberta!! Robinson and his heirs and as­\nsign* forever as in and by said Indenture\nnow present appears.\nThis Indenture Is Intended to secure the\nabove mentioned sum of three thousand\neight hundred dollars, as a part of thte\nconsideration mone,y of sold premises.\nSeized and taken In execution as the\nproperty of Henry C. Robinson, John\nRobinson Moore and Alfred S. Robinson,\nexecutors of Robert R Robinson, surviv­\ning mortgagor of Robert R. Robinson\nand Sarah N. Robinson, mortgagors, and\nHenry C. Robinson, Lota R. Tatnall\nMaria Hooper. Robert E. Robinson and\nMaria J. Robinson, terre tenants, and to\nbo sold by
0df6f72f04156313211d1ba835c4134a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1886.6972602422627 40.832421 -115.763123 A Charleston, S. C ., dispatch of the\n9ud, eaye; . The last earthquake shock\nwe* elperi 'noed here about 11 :5U last\nnight, since which time thcro huvii been\nno vibration*. Tbe people are ju*t\nbeginning to pick up courage to couie\n. at. Efforts are being made to olear\npath* through the atreete for the pass¬\nage of vobiole* Mid pedestrians, and tbe\ncity one* more begins to show some\naigoa of life. For tiro lony days slid\nnights of horror women aud children\nhave been camping out in parks nnd\n. quarts. It is impossible to give auy\ncorrect estimnte of I he losa of life aud\nproperty. For two daya aud nights the\npeople have done nothing but huddle\nou tbe squares, aniall detached relief\npartita going ou duty dig out the\ndead from the dnbria or enocor the\nwoaudtd. The Qrst systeiuizeil effort\n40 get at the facts is now making. The\nHat of tbe dead recognized aud re¬\nported tli a morning, nt thia time (II a.\ntu,) fools np 111 aud the search ha* only\ncommenced. The list of the wounded\nwill go into the hundreds. About %\nof tbe house* and public building* in\ntiiia city are either damaged or wrecked\nKven historic St. Michael* nil I rit\nPhilip* are *0 badly wrecked that it i*\nfeared (bat they will have to !>.. takm\ndown. Ware* from 9:55 o'clock Tues¬\nday Bight have been eornlng.about every\nflv* or *|t boors. Tln r« ha* boen none\nfor twelve hour* and atroug hope* are\nentertained that tb-* horror i* over.
319be6d29d8d297ca713005587a3da9e THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1857.7739725710298 38.894955 -77.036646 patched, leavn^yOg a8d, the 88d, ana the 98d\nstill to folio if. By the mails j|i| Aomtw tyo\nvessels, the Perrl and the LimCefield, were re- H\nported as actually at' Calcutta with trqppe Iran ^B\nthe Transit; two ateamers with troops on board ^B\nwere met by the Pentiijck coming up the river t\nLord Elgin had brought about 700 with hlp^jLp ^H|\nthe Shannon, and a flying slip published by /qmo\nof the Calcutta journals on the 9th of August says\nthat "further vpry largo rclnforcemenls" were\nexpected by the 22d of that month, If this raters\nto the draughts from the Gape, it is possible ^^B.\nenough that Lord Canning ipay receive altogether ^^B\n0,000 or 7,000 excellent troops even hefore toe\narrival of any of those despatched f^om Bodand. t\nIf Havelock do so much with toe 04th and }\nthe 78tb, what may not be done with the half\ndoeeu fresh regiments thus coming in ?\nWe cannot, however, pretend to disguise the |\nseverity with which time must still press upon _J . ^^^^B\nour beleaguered garrisons. For weeks to oaine,\nat the very least, every European detachment in Bj^^H\ntbo northwestern provinces must represent one\nman against 'Ifty; and it is impossible to say,\nwith these sporadic eruptions of mutiny, what ^^B\nfresh dwriiands may dot be created upop thefreeb ^^B\nforces which arrive. A month hence we mny dnd\na new Delhi in' Bengal. It is clear that we want\ntroops to retain in the Lower provinces as well as ^^B\nito despatch to the Upper; and, till the great\nrninfAPonmonta npnii/o iKA JAA41»
5d73af84ab0854a7aa46cf058162e768 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.064383529934 37.451159 -86.90916 In a walnut coffin constructedJ under\nhis direction anti inspected after its\ncompletion John WEOt1j a Harrison\ncounty farmer viis buried Tuesday\nafternoon In the cemetery attached to\nSt Peters Catholic church near Buena\nVista Harrison county eighteen miles\nsouthwest of New Albany Mr Wilson\nhad been ill of consumption for many\nmonths and before his death made\npreparations for his funeral and distrib\nution of his property among his friends\nHo WRIt slatythree years old anti\nhad lived in Hnrrlnon county all his\nlife Never having married he hal\nlived alone for ninny years Always of\nan eecentric disposition he had made\nthe preliminary arrangements for his\nfuneral when avery young mum Forty\ntwo years ago be had a fine walnut tree\ngrowing on his farm felled and sawed\ninto one and ahalf Inches in\ntblcKnees This lumber was stored in\nthe barn at home and he frequently\ndeclared that he intended using it In\nthe coffin In which he was to be buried\nOn Sunday December ill he became\nsntlslleil that his term of life would soon\nclose anti he sent for Millard Thomp ¬\nson u carpenter living near anti In\nstructed him to build the coftln telling\nI him where the lumber conld be found\nnod giving explicit directions as to the\nmanner of construction The boards\nout of which the casket was made were\nplaned by hand and every pains taken\nin the work It was completed Thurs ¬\nday of last week carried into the house\nand carefully Inspected by the dying\nman who pronounced the work satin\ntory
09945c6f1852b91d0612081069add249 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1886.491780790208 43.82915 -115.834394 ■uanre of an ordar of the Probata Court of\nthe County of Bolae. Territory of Idaho, made on\nthe 26tb day of June. 1886, in the matter of the es­\ntate of R. G. Alien, deceased, the und eraifoed, the\nExecutor, will sail at publio auction, to tb a highest\nbidder, fo r caab, and enbjaot to court rotation by\nsaid Probate Court, on Wednesday, tu e 21»t day of\nJUly, 1886, at 12 o'clock X. at Quartaburg , in the\ncounty of Bolae. all the right, title, int erest and es­\ntate of the aald R. G. Allen at the time of his death,\nand all the right, title and interest that the said es­\ntate has, by operation of la.r o r otherwise, acquir­\ned other than or in additiou to that of the said R.\nG. Allen at the of bis death, in and to all those\nlots, pieces or parcels of land situate, lying and be­\ning in the said county of Boise, T eriitory of Ida­\nho, and described as follows, to wit: The stone\natore building and the wooden sto re building in\nQuartaburg, lately occupied by deoeated. The\n■House of Biases”—th e old shoemaker sh op—three\ncabins in San Bernardino gulch, and one oabin in\nGranite gulch, all in and n ear Quartaburg; also\none quarta mine known aa the “ Yellow Ja ket,”\none qnarta location known as the "'Shoo Ply,” one\nundivided one-half of a qnarta location i n El sh o rn\nDistrict, one undivided oue-balf of a qu arts loca­\ntion known as the ■■Justice," and one placer claim\non Wash ereek with the ditch and water righ t there­\nto belonging,
406c4b0e2301fc2c2032d0a0bb673e65 THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1867.6616438039066 36.294493 -82.473409 Wm. Garland, one tract of land In District\nNo, 10, containing 72 acres, valued at 300 00,\ntaxes 1 57, collector' fee 1 00, clerk's fee 160\nprinter's Cm 1 50.\nLevi Hodge, one tract of lar.d In Distiiet\nNo. 10 coutaining 133 acres, valued at 800 00,\ntaxe 6 45, poll 1, collector's fee 1 00, clerk's\nfee t 50, printer's fee 1 50.\nJame D. Rhea, on traet of land InJDIs-tric- t\nNo. 10, containing 2843 acres, valued at\n10,000 00, taxes 62 60, collector' fee 1 00,\nclerk's fee 1 60, printer' fee I 50.\nM. 0 . Led ford one tract of land In District\nNo. 11, containing 200 acres, valued at 150 00\ntaxes 79, collector's fee 1 00, clerk' fee 1 50,\nprinter's fee I 50.\nD. Xarkwood, one tract of land In Dis-\ntrict No, II, containing 125 acres, valned at\n300 00, taxes 1 57, collector' fee 1 00, clerk'\nfee I 60, printer's fee 1 50.\nWilliam Oiwald one tract of land In Dis-\ntrict No. It, eantainiog 40 acrea, valued at\n0 00, taxe I 02, colleeiot's fee 1 00, clert i\nlee 1 50, printer's fee I 60.\nDaaleJ IUeae on tract of land In District\nNo. 11, containing 1500 acres, valued at 40000\ntaxes 2 10 collector tea 1 00, clerk fee 1 50\nprinter' fee 1 60.\nJ. W, Sibley one tract of land In District\nNo. 11, containing .6 40, valued at 2U000,\ntaxe 1 00, collector' fee 1 00, clerk fee 1 50\nprinter' fea 1 60.\nWilliam Houstoa, heir of, on
02e850f31338397c0fb3e8360f110f3d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.7773223727484 40.063962 -80.720915 called at the Commodore'* house at\no'clock in the evening and at midnig\nand then sent to their papers a br\nparagraph, telling who had visit\nhim and what food he had ti\nen during the day. Sometime* c\nof the two doctor*, Linsly and Elli\nwould answer the questions, but oftei\nit wa* the servant-girl, who, exasperat\nat being rung up in the middle of t\nnight, would answer the necessary qui\ntions in a more concise than elegant mi\nner. On the 4th of Auguit the comn\ndorc was seized with a nudden and pai\nful attack of the diaea&s which, for\nlong time, had been kept under part\ncontrol. Hi* death was moraentar;\nexpected, and in the early eTening a gj\neral alarm was sent to all the morni\nnewspaper offices, aa the result of whi\n111 reporters were assembled in front\nthe house at 10 o'clock. But he wot\nnot die, and there was nothing for\nhorde to do but sit on the and w\nuntil after their respectire papers h\ngoue to-press at o a. m. before goi\nhome. In a few days, the Commode\nin the meantime hating becoi\nmore comfortable (having been\nmoved to a back room of his house, wh<\nhe could not hear the entertaining ti\nof the reporters on the subject of\nhealth), a number of the waiting foi\nwas removed and the five dailies assign\ntwo men each day to watch Vanderb\none man from the eity associated pr\nbeing also on duty. A room was hired\nthe university building,which is atpres<\noccupied by the reporters. All are\nhand at S in the evening, and togetl\nthey march over to the residence of\n"oldjman.,? as be ia termed. "Withinjl 5 m\nutea of the appointed hour, one of\ndoctors, or a male nurse, opens the d<\nand walks out on the stoop, much in\nway ot a cuckoo irom the door ot a clo\nwhen there ensues a dialogue after t\nstyle:
4ba5d656e4093fbe10a2d7dee62fd443 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.078082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 been a month in his seat, and wh\nseeond official act, read from the Clci\ndesk here yesterday, U a letter to my *\nleague in aid of lib unsaid l on liie C'<\nmlttee on Appropriations in iU effort\nruduee the exiienditures, and thereft\nsir,l examined iuto all the deuartmi\ncommitted to my charge, and I nay t\nevery one of theiu wax examined by ot\nmend tent of the Committee in the an\nway. And now, was it worth while\nus, with that knowledge, to try and ind\nthe representative of the iieople to\ndown tlie expenditure*? The work\nloiign here. Many of them were the\nsuit of laws enacted here, aud here i\nthe place to undo them. Many of Ui\nwere addressed to our discretion, aud li\nwas the place to consider aud to act\nthat discretion. of them re»\nfrom abuses of lung Ntandiug. There\nto-day five hundred officers of the ar\noir duty more tlian are accessary.suj\nnumeraries. Can any one tell me wi\nthe anuual draft on the Treasury for tli\nsalaries is? Take the pay of a inayoi\nmidway in rank at an average, and inn\nply that by five thousand, and you v\nfind that there is jwid anuually to th\nsu|>ernumarv offices $1,250,000 as sala\nNobody at the other end of the aveuui\nresponsible for that. We are rcsjHinsi\nfor it, and 1 submit whether we ought\nto hold up these expenditures More i\neyes,so that we n»y see where wee\nL*Ul MICI1I UUWII. 11IUW IUV IIUI IIWIIMI\ncoming to uh through the administrati\nof tlie past, but we arc res|K>nsible unl\nwe apply tin- pruning knife ami cut\ntllMC L'XJK'IulitUrfH.
100f56825b57f5d5425a712e6080d600 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1882.8972602422627 42.217817 -85.891125 Sir Peter Mitchell took the floor and\nlaunched into a eulogy of the deceased\ncow and tho propriety of making an ap-\npropriation for tho widow. He was\ngreeted with laughter and mock ap-\nplause, and then his auditors waited un-\neasily for him to finish. Ho did not\nfinish. He told tho story over again,\nwith embellishments and elaborations.\nHe contrasted the stinginess of the\nwealthy ruler with the quiet endurance\nof tho penniless widow. He began to\nread from the Bible tho commands to\nmercy, justice and charity, when tho\nhonorable members straggled out ono\nby one to dinner. Sir Peter bit a bis-\ncuit, drank a swallow of water and con-\ntinued, impressing upon the empty\nchairs about him the tender duties and\ngraces of humanity. Members strag-\ngled in again. He quotod the Song of\nthe Shirt. They appealed to him to\ndraw his remarks to a close. He retold\nthe story of tho cow. Meantimo Sir\nJohn Mackenzie was perspiring with\nwrath and anxiety in tho Premier's\napartment hard by. All his were\nbound up in the Appropriation Budget.\nWhat if it should not come to a vote !\nTho honorable member from Now\nBrunswick could not be stopped, fort\nthis was the ono bill in a Canadian par-\nliament on which a member could\nspeak as long as ho wished. Thero was\nno way of cutting short tho debate. No\nmotion was in order while he was\nspeaking except the motion to adjourn\nand that would bo adjournment si?ie\ndie. The government members were in\nconsternation as the orator delivered\na speech on tho blessings of vaccina-\ntion, gave statistcs on the cost of fences\nin the United Statos, passed an elabor-\nate encomium on the superiority, for\ndraft purposes, of Devon cattle, to\nwhich class tho deceased domestic\nfriend of the bereaved widow belonged,\nand then began to describe tho religious\nceremonies in which tho sacred cow of\nBurmah takes part, when tho bell rang\nfor vespers. A short time moro and\nthe session would expiro by law, and\nthe government had passed no appro-\npriation bill!
05628661a5edf8201e293734c6edb039 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7520547628108 40.063962 -80.720915 more recent report, referring to tho coal\n(a six Ibot vein.) which is richly bitu¬\nminous, as will Imj observed from tho\nuualysls he Airulshes, Dr. Higglns says,\n" tho coal is moderately hard, firm and\n'freo from dust, burns well in an\nopen. Hut grate, and from Its freedom\nfrom sulphur is well adapted to the\nmanufacture of iron, und to the reduc¬\ntion of Its ores." Tho following Is one\nof tlie analysis over made (the second I\nbelieve) of this coal. Specific gravity,\n1.282, carbon 7:1.20, volntilo matter 23.1f>,\nash .'1.05. Besides this vein which has\nbeen opened on the west side of the\nYoughiogheny river, I am confident\nfrom openings in oilier places uud from\nout-crops on different parts of the river\nand Its tributaries, that there exists un¬\nder it a two fpot voin, two four foot\nvoius, and a five foot vein, making an\naggregate thickness of nineteen feet of\ngood coal for fuel, steam, or manufac¬\nturing purposes. Such is tho testimony\nof one who ranks .among the first\nchemist* of tho country, and I ain ills-\n to fully credit hlsaffirmation.that\ninstead of exceeding,Ills representations\nfull short of the full merits of tills rich¬\nly favored region.\nThese "glades" are by no means con¬\nfined to Maryland, but spread over a\nlargo portion of our Preston county,\nand although they have been, until re¬\ncently, barricaded to tho enterprising\ncapitalists of freedom; by the barbarous\nlegislation of slavery, I will here pre¬\ndict that before the lupse of another de¬\ncade, the fostering und liberal policies\nnow predominant In tho two noble\nStates of West Virginia and Maryland,\nwill have wrought that development\nwhich is but tho sequence of inexhaust¬\nible mineral wealth, and universal free¬\ndom for.thaomployment of capital. I^et\nall those who aro.Interested in estab¬\nlishing an iron ore market nearer to our\nWest Virginia factories than Lake Su¬\nperior, look well Into the merits of this\nrcgiou so convenient and accessible to\nus. Without reverting in detail to\nhealthful and hilarious effect of my\ntrip, and trusting that ill this I shall\nnot nave proved a trespasser; I will ab¬\nruptly conclude With tlie subscription
0d74bb30af0cc56c6991b7ffa6173c84 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.1953551596337 44.939157 -123.033121 larity. Have you ever thought that it is\nprobable that the earth supplied ui with\nthe means to keep our bodily vigor, our\nhealth, if we only knew It? The animals\nknow by instinct what ia good for them\nand will search until they find in some\nplant what they need for correcting indi.\ncation or constipation, etc. Is it, there\n?ore, not possible that there are roots and\nherbs supplied by nature which wilt cure\nthe diseases that afflict human kind?\nThat ia why Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y\nhas such faith in his "Medical Discovery."\nYears ago, when he was In general and\nactive practice, he found that a combina-\ntion of certain herbs and roots made into\nan alterative extract without the use of\nalcohol, would always put the stomach into\na healthy conditltn nourish the tissues,\nfeed the blood and nerves and put healthy\ntone into the whole system.\nThere are some people who can lose fat\nto advantage, but the loss of flesh is one\nof the accepted evidences of health.\nAi flesh making processes begin in the\nstomach, no naturally when there Is loss of\nflesh we look first to the stomach for the\ncause. And the cause is generally found\nto be disease of the stomach and digestive\nand nutritive tracts, resulting in loss of nu-\ntrition and consequent physical weakness.\nDr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery\nrestores the lost flesh by curing diseases\nof the stomach and other organs of diges-\ntion and nutrition and enabling the perfect\ndigestion and assimilation 01 food from\nwhich flesh and strength are made.\nDr. Plerce'a Golden Medical Discovery\npurifies the blood and entirely eradicates\nthe poisons that breed and feed disease.\nIt thus cures scrofula, eczema, erysipelas,\nboils, pimples and other eruptions that\nmat and scar the skin. Pure blood is\nessential to good health. The weak, run-\ndown, debilitated condition which so many\npeople experience is commonly the effect\nof Impure blood. Dr. Pierce's Golden\nMedical Discovers not only cleansea the\nblood of Impurities, but it increases the\nactivity of the blood-m ak in-
0d0f039942ab833a5d55086dca9c99e2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.821038219743 39.745947 -75.546589 " The principles of good government\nrelate to > he great matter of human sal­\nvation. It 1» necessary, therefore, to\nhave two parties to watch each other.\nIf a Republican or u Democrat regrets\nthat the opposite party exists ho is very\nwrong. The Democrats should be glad\nfor the existence of a Hepublican party,\nfor if it had not been for the Republican\nparty It would be hard to tell whore tho\ncountry would have been. The Republi­\ncans do not claim to be better than Dem-\nocrata and it knows the Demo­\ncrats are no better than the Republi­\ncans. If any one expects that hard names\nwill add votes and victories to either side\nhe is mistaken. Many a msu would take\nhis chances on perdition rattier than be\ndriven to Heaven.\n" If the Democrats honestly think that\nstate banks wild cat money are best,\nthen we respect their opinion. If you\nbelieve It Is better to send out of the\ncountry for goods instead of making\nthem, and instead of nourishing a homo\nmarket, nourishing a foreign one, then\nrespect your opinion, however thin It\nmay be. If we believe it is best to have\na national currency good over the world,\nwe want our opinion respected, and not\nto be abused fur having un opinion.\n“It would nut take lung tn compare\ntho prosperity of this country under a\nlow tariff with its prosperity under a\nhigh tariff or see that the latter is tho\nliest and only one to live under. Tho\nlow prices of the necessaries of life is an\nevidence of the benefits of protection.\nBut competition will bring down prices.\nThe logic of the case is against the Demo­\ncrats.
6f1f6f633de55d585a8043160300ab8b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1865.146575310756 37.561813 -75.84108 riser find the dawn gradually enoroacb\ning on the prolonged darkness; here\nnd there in untimely lamb sendt forth\npiteous wail, and occasionally an hour\nof sunshine pcks warmly of advanc-\ning ipring but lowering clouds and\nfitful atorms quickly warn tho impatient\nbuda to bide their time and not trust\nthe apparently relenting heart of winter\nThese hints of the ooming season\nshould not bo loot. If a full plan of\noperations for the year be not perfected,\nlose no tiioo in its completion. A map\nof the farm will be of great assistance\nin this work. It need not bo an accu-\nrate survey of each lot, thoosrb this\nwould be more catisfaotory ; a plain\noutline of boundaries and measure\nBents taken with a marked polo, will\nbe sufficient. Great caution should be\nezeroisod muking radical changes,\nMany have bcon tempted by tho high\nprice of sheep to sell out an established\ndairy, or to seed down their green fields,\nand aro up to ihcir eyes in wool, if in\ndeod it has not been pulled over their\neyes. An article on this topio in the\npresent number contains timely hints\nEqually unwise id an immovable con\nsemtism, that can not bo attracted\nfrom following the "good old ways."\nMany will find sorghum culture worth\ntrial; an acre or more of roots for\nnext winter's feeding should not be\nforgotten ; perhaps less grain and more\nfruit will give better returns. The\nmost successful campaigns are always\nfirst developed on paper in good plan\nApplet. Sort over those commencing\nto decay, and feed, if no better use can\nbe made of them.
09d8569b500d60cc3ddf0cf7510dc861 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.4193988754807 40.063962 -80.720915 fool friends of "the scholar in politics"\n(of which class the ass in politicsand the\nslanjj-slinger are fair samples) who are\nmaking such an "atlo about nothing." i\nIf the ass in politics has no memory of :\nthe event, let us inform him that General *\nFlick met the "scholar in politics" at (\nPhillippi, in joint debate, in the cam-\npaign of 18H4I, and the result was so dis-\nastrous to the "scholar" that he J\nnever afterwards permitted the ponder- i\nous General to repeat the experiment.\nThe ass should also recall the fact that\nGeneral Goll' once met the late Henry 1\nM. Mathews, at Weston, during their\ncampaign for Governor in 1870, and the\nDemocratic committee kept Mr. Mathews\nout of the General's path during the re-\nmainder of that campaign. General Goff\n also allowed to cross swords with the\nHon. John Brannon, in 1880, and the\nmemory of that brief grapple with a\nmaster debater is sufficient even at this\nlate day to cause each particular hair on\nthe Hon. John's head to stand on end.\nThe able Congressman from the First\nDistrict has met every Democratic\nleader in the State when properly\ninvited to the intellectual combat, it\nis not likely ho would shrink from\nso easy a conquest as would be afforded\nhim were Mr. Wilson to ask him to do-\nbate tiie tarill question witn mm, tnougn\nat present there is no call upon his\ncourtesy. If the editor of the BegUtor\n(or the general manager, as the case may\nbe) is spoiling for a light of that kind,\nlet him challenge the editor of tho
47c6836911f35f1ca61f8f1ddb3b16cd PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1906.97397257103 31.762115 -95.630789 Special to the Herald\nWashington Dec 22 DurlngjBtfio\npast few days there has beea i\nmost continuous stream of expressmen\nand delivery boys calling at theiWhite\nHouse Every year at this season\nthousands of gifts from total strangers\nreach the executive mansion TtiSlrc\neclpt of these gifts cause no endfof\nembarrassment to the presldent jand-\nhe doubtless would be sincerely grati-\nfied it appreciative citizens chose stSno\nless substantial method of remeinjSgr\nlug him at Christmas time Wh eMpf\nconsiderable value the gifts arejlal\nways returned to the donors other\nwlse they are accepted politely wfth-\na note of acknowledgment Thongs\nalways a large collection of choice\nedibles received at Christmas tlnie\nmore than would he sufficient for the\nneeds of the White House occupants\nfor many weeks These are always\nturned over by the president tothose\nattaches of the executive mansion who\nhave families In the same way the\ncountless toys and trifles that are sent\nto Roosevelt children are distrib-\nuted among the childrens hospitals\nand orphans homes in Washington\nThe Roosevelts inherit from their\nDutch ancestors a veneration for the\nspirit and sentiment of Christmasand\nthe day is always given up entirely to\nfestivities Quentln and Archie the\ntwo younger children still hang up\ntheir stockings to be filled by Santa\nClans For the other members of the\nfamily the gifts are usually laid out\non the tables In the library where\nthey are distributed by the president\nhimself after breakfast Though the\npresidents eldest daughter now has a\nhome or her own she and Mr Long\nworth will spend Christmas day at the\nWhite House ami join in the general\nfestivities The Christmas dinner will\nbe served at 730 p m Beside tho\nmembers or the ramlly there will be a\nnumber or guests including Senator\nand Mrs 1odge Captain and Mrs\nCowles and several young Harvard\nmen the guests or Theodore Roose-\nvelt
89e9df3f0ba93c5bdcc82ac7d21c639d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0041095573313 39.261561 -121.016059 §|Mflda fjMflftai.\nThis Storm in Sin Francisco. —The wind\nof Thursday evening blew hard in San\nFrancisco, and the rain fell in torrents.\nThe Sacramento steamers were kept on the\nbay an hour behind their time, and the\nStockton boat had to tie up, and did not\nreach San Francisco until noon Friday. The\nNevada and the Crysopolis parted their bow\nhawsers while being made fast to their\nwharves. The shipping in the bay not\nmuch damaged, but property on land did\nnot fare so well. The Bulletin has the fol-\nlowing gccount of it:\nAt Douglass Place, which intersects Beale\nstreet near Harrison, a handsome row of\ntire frume cottages in course of erection,\nwere demolished by the joint aciion of the\nwind and water—the Inner washing away\nthe sandy foundations and underpinning\ninto an excavution that had approached too\n The cotinges were worth probably\nsome $800 each—total $4,000. In the\nneighborhood of North Beach some damage\nwas also done. The lots at the intersection\nof Chestnut and Mason streets are full six\nfeet under water, and a corner house upon\nLicks lot, belonging to a poor family, was\nblown down. It was a sad blow for them.\nThis hooding above Mason and Chestnut\nstreets is caused by the tilling in of those\nstreets by high embankments without the\nfirst approach to a sewer to drain the sunk-\nen lots. A great lake sets back from this\nneighborhood which must cause great in-\nconvenience. as it already has cost much\nsickness. A sewer should be constructed\nacross Mason street at once. The soutnern\nend of Third street was this morning quite\nsubmerged, but relief there is a thing uut\nso easily furnished.
8dade9e8478b95dbee54be8cb6daef82 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.215068461441 41.681744 -72.788147 Courago In tha face of adversity\nwon a battle recently In which It\nseemed for a time that the weaker\nof tho toes would surely auccumb.\nThe greater of the forces consisted\nof three dogs and the weaker of a\nblack cat. Said cat of no email\nproportions but wltffthe courage of\nan animal six times Its size, was\nsauntering along peacefully In tho\nback yard. Along came a terrier,\nbarking smartly at his feline enemy.\nTho cat, evidently eenslng that tho\ndog was all bark and no bite, stood\nIts ground and If a cat can look dis-\ngusted, gave that dog some mean\nlooks, and walked up and down past\nhim as if to tempt him to rush.\nBut the rush did not take place and\ntho dog gave up. The cat began\nits Interrupted journey once more\nbut thla time met a hunting dog\nwhich Immediately gave chase. Evi-\ndently tho dogs of the neighborhood\nhad planned for a cat chase for\nsoon there were three of the canines\nhunting the cat. There was a \nopening beneath a nearby fence,\njust large enough for a cat but too\nsmall for the dogs. Through this the\ncat dashed but did not keep going.\nJust sat on the other side watch-\ning tho dogs as they rushed nil\naround the yard and out another\nway. Soon they reached the spot\nwhere friend cat was sitting. She\nallowed them Just time enough to\nget within a few feet of her nnd\ndashed back through the opening In\ntha fence. The dogs were nonplussed\nagain and back they ran to the gate.\nA merry chase ensued but the cat\nkept her ground and finally stood\nand faced the dogs. This was too\nmuch for them and after making a\nlot of noise they finally gave up and\ncalled it a day.\nThe incident brought to the mind\nof the spectator the battles some-\ntimes fought by humans with the\nresult that the seemingly weakcj\nparty emerges triumphant, because,\nlike the dogs, the opponents do a\nthe weaker of the forces does some\nthinking and acts.
10340f33ff35f25977a86e420e9a2146 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.8671232559614 39.369864 -121.105448 Shut Your Mouth.—That sounds\nlike very rough advice, and folks who\nare afflicted with a propensity to talk\non all occasions may think it is meant,\nfor them. But these remarks have\nno reference to the cacoethet loquan-\ndi; they are intended as a useful\nhint to those who are troubled with\nthat “hell of all diseases,” the tooth-\nache. The immediate cause of this\npainful complaint, in most instances,\nis exposure of the nerve in decayed\nteeth to the cold air, owing to the\nhabit most persons havs of breathing\nthrough the open mouth. This prac-\ntice subjects the delicate nerve to\nsudden inflamation—and hence the\ntoothache, for if the swollen nerve\nwere not confined on all sides by the\ninterior walls, so to speak, of the tooth\nthere would be no pain. Now, if the\nmouth kept closed, and breathing\nperformed through the nostrils, the\natmosphere we inhale becomes warm\nby the time it reaches the teeth, and\nproduces no irritation, thus largely\ndecreasing the liability to toothache.\nParticularly on leaving heated rooms\nand going forth into the cool atmos-\nphere should the mouth be kept\nclosed, and also during the hours of\nsleep. We know by experience that\nkeeping the mouth shut will do more\nto prevent toothache than any thing\nelse except a dentists forceps. The\nwriter of this was formerly afflicted\nterribly on every recurrence of cold\nweather, until he chanced to read a\nhint such as is given above, and which\nhe at once took. Since then, for\nnearly three years, be has been per-\nfectly free from any serious attack\nof his old enemy, Try it, ye suffer-\ners.
0004fdc5217a1fde82dcc1524b70aec5 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1890.8315068176053 35.996653 -78.901805 truth. And then he knows how to talk.\nHe thinks and then he gives his think-let- s\nexpression. He is convincing, he is\nforcible and he is eloquent when he wants\nto be, and he is funny when he tries.\nThis is a combination that will win any\ndiscussion, but it will win more success\nfully in discussing prohibition. No sane\nman can stand up and argue in favor of\nthe manufacture of rum. The still is the\nbrooding place from which hell is peo-\npled. The mother's tears; the desola\ntion; the genius wrecked and dwarfed\nand blighted ; the broken hearts ; the\nruined homes; the sister's misery and\nthe fathers woe; all these things are the\nlegitimate children of the damned and\nfrightful monster rum, and oratory,\nbrains, eloquence and honesty and \ncerity can paint a picture with them\nwhich furnishes convincing proof that\nsomething should be done. And with\nthese brushes and these colors, Colonel\nSoutiigate presented an object lesson,\nthough with words, that carried with it\na direct appeal for serious consideration.\nBut The Globe does not believe that\nprohibition prohibits. State prohibition\nis words wasted on the statute books.\nNational prohibition will alone, sweep\nthe evil from the land, and to nominate\nsuch men as Templeton for congress\nand have him harrangue the people will\ndo no good. If states can vote for a con-\nstitutional amendment, let the United\nStates vote for it and carry it, and then\nthe law will be written and we will see\nprohibition. And until this is done, all\nthis skirmishing is time and wind wasted
0916d1972e1fd70c9b2fa56933047c32 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.6452054477422 39.261561 -121.016059 crick presents 1” ho exclaimed. 1 return the\nexclamation. A candidate for Governor of this\nState, speaking in bis own horns, can scarcely\nSod place for aught vise save a defense of bis\ncharacter from charges of the saddest import 1\ni may, and probably shall, have oecesion, be-\nfore this canvass is over, to show up Mr. La-\ntham, us a figure in a spectacular pioce, more\npainfully ridiculous lo the sight than any serio-\ncomedy ever enacted in pnblic. But, if Latham\nwas iri innocent igooranoe, or free from suspi-\ncion. at the time these charges were preferred\nby Tilford. why did he take the trouble to for-\ntify himself with statements of half a dozen\ngentlemen connected with the affair ? I will\nstate to you to-night the reason why Mr. Til-\nford gave to him the statement which he read\nlo the people of Nevada some week or ten days\nsince. After the Senatorial election was over,\nMr. Tilford supposed that Mr. Latham intended\nto retain his position as Collector of the port of\nSan Fraucisco. Mr. Tilford, with rod over\nLatham, made this proposition : If he (Latham)\nwould resign the position of Collector in Til-\nford's favor, Tilford would give Latbam a let-\nter exculpating him from Ibis charge. Mr. Til-\nford obtained tho resignation and the .recom-\nmendation from Mr. Latham. I suppose tt.c\nrecommendation is now ou fllo in the Treasury\nDepartment. Mr. Latbam. in bis late speech,\npublished a letter given to him, January, 1867,\nby Mr. Mabooy. In this letter, Mahoay rays\nthat he seut Latham to visit me, at my room, at\nmy request. Mr. Latham, in his speech at Ne-\nvada, stated that Captain Nye was the man de-\nputed hy me to send bin to me. While at Sac-\nramento I obtained a letter from Captain Nye,\ndenying the charge, and stating that Mabony\nwas the man who procured hi* solicitation in\nLathams behalf. Mabony was the man who\nsent for Latham to come to his room, so that he\n(Latham) conld see me. Now, Latbam comes\nout with a letter dated January 13tb, 1867, re-\nbutting his own statement at Nevada,
2409756c73ed6319a999ce88e7ed1069 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.568493118975 39.745947 -75.546589 uisr\nPhiladelphia and\neral oversight.\nmined rtaud he is known to have\n•turned in the matter nf having\ntract requirement« lived up to in tho\nwork of improvement lias in any way\nmilitated to bring about the change\nwas a question on which there was\nsome speculation last night among\nthose Interested in the work.\nMajor Roeeell, who is to go to Phila­\ndelphia. has the reputation of being\nefficient engineer. He was graduated\nfrom West Point la 1873, and whs for\nsome time in charge of work at Port­\nland. Me. Ho has hern at Mobllo for\nthe last six years.\n• oioncl Raymond began his work\nin the Philadelphia diattlet in 1890. He\nwas graduated from tho\n1865. He was tho first to explore thor­\noughly lor the government the Yukon\nliver. Alaska. For years he ha» bien\na member of various Important \nneering I .cards, and is one of the most\nwidely-known officers in the service.\nTho appointment to ihc dlstilct ot.\nMobile is, for an officer i\nCosbys rank, bne «bat is 4«lghly\npliraentory to his ability.\nCaptain Cosby entered West Pofnt\nin 1887. at 19 years of age, by appoint­\nment of President Cleveland, and war.\ngraduated fmir years iatw. The endete\nshowing greatest, scholarship« are ap­\npointed to the Engineer Core«\nCaptain Cosby was placed at WilletU\nPoint. N . Y .. with tho rank of second\nlieutenant, to assist Lieutenant Colonel\nW. R. King, upon whose recent death\nColonel Raymond .received promotion.\nFor three years Lieutenant Oosb>\nassisted in planning the harbor de­\nfenses of Now York city, and in July.\n1894. was appointed to assist Lieuten­\nant Coflonel Raymond, then mayor, in\ncharge of the engineering work in the\nDelaware river and harbor.
8c94824d8768dfdbffe37db6686cbb09 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.5986301052765 41.681744 -72.788147 Three other prisoners who made\nthe break for freedom were captur-\ned two hours later in the Lansing\nstockyards less than half a mile\nfrom the prison .They were: .lohn\nKdwards, alias L. 12 . Jenkins, 33; O.\nG. Shultz, 35, and Charles Cheat-\nham, 37. All the men were serving\nterms ranging from 15 years to life.\nThe break occurred at 4 p. m .\nwhen th men were brought out of\nthe prison coal mine. The first of\napproximately 400 convicts to reach\nthe surface, produced pistols that\npresumably had been .smuggled in to\nthem and captured four unarmed\nguards and four other prisoners\nwhom they used as a shield against\nbullets to gain a gate in the prison\nwall. The convicts forced the gate\nand emerged in the open to be met\nwith a fusillade of shots from a sen-\ntry on the outside guari line.\nIsing the guards and prisoners as\na shield they the sentry and\nafter gaining the shelter of a small\nravine a quarter of a mile from the\nprison, released Iheir prisoners. In\nthe meantime an alarm had been\nsounded at. the prison and Deputy\nWarden Hudspeth and Assistant Day\nCaptain Arthur Graham organized\nthe prison guards for pursuit.\nHudspeth. Graham and several\nLansing merchants armed with shot\nguns came upon the convict party\non the Leavenworth, Victory Junc-\ntion highway a half mile north of\nLansing, and shot it out.\nWebb was killed by Hudspeth.\nCollins wounded twice, and seeing\nthat capture was inevitable, turned\nhis gun upon himself and placed a\nbullet through his heart. Knight in\nattempting an attack upon Hud-\nspeth with a knife made from a pris-\non file received a fractured skull\nvhen the prison official struck him\nover the head with the butt of his\nempty weapon. Heslop was wounded\nin the exchange of shots. The other\nconvicts surrendered
09bca3284b0881e050d2b7e0a713dd6d THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.9795081650982 40.114955 -111.654923 The faces of all the girls were sober\nWe cant figure out that theres any\nchoice for us between breaking up our\nlento andi I being old maids said the\noldest Carroll girl It nay bo a dis-\ngrace to be an old maid People say\nIt Is but at least we are comfortable\nand happy Why what would become\nof father If we married\nI Instantly thought of a girl 1 knew\nIn Fall River She was a weaver too\nand earned 11 n week which made\nher nn object of desire to more than\none young mtn In the town But at\n25 she was still single In the course\nof a confidential talk I asked her why\nshe had never married and she told\nme with much laughter tho reason\nWhenIwasIS shesaid Iwas\nfoolish enough to fall III love with the\ntimekeeper In the clothroom at the\nIron works n Ills Ho was better look-\ning then than he Is now Well ho\n oho to marry him and I said I\nwould Then ho said we ought to go\nand get thin license What license\nI asked flaming mad You see we\ngirls had a dog we were awfully fond\nof and ono day the poundkeeper cane\naround anti said wed have to take out\na license or he would kill the dog So\nwe skimped and saved und went with\nout carfare until wo had enough to\nIpay for the dogs license\nWell somehow the word license\nseemed to me to be connected with a\ndog I didnt know that people had to\nhave licenses I told my young man\nthat If he couldnt marry me without a\nlicense as If he were paying for a dog-\nI wouldnt marry him lie argued and\nargued and we both got madder and\nmadder and finally we broke It oft\nMother was glad enough She always\nhates to have one of us marry Less\nmoney carried home you see
0b8e60a939a137186e4a3f5577a84ccc PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.9219177765094 40.441694 -79.990086 Now, that whole question is very easily dis-\nposed of by the statement of two propositions,\nlh which every mind on .this jury will agree\nwith me, I think. First, 'the defendant here,\nConghlin. is either guilty or innocent If inno-\ncent, be could not have had those knives, If\nthey were Cronin's; if guilty, he would not\nhave had them If they belonged to Br. Cronin.\nThose two plain propositions, in the mind ot\nany reasoning man, would be the end of that\nknife episode the last and grand climax that\nthe State gave to a case of suspicion against\nthese men. .That they are not Dr. Cronin's is\nconclusively shown by those two considera-\ntions: That they were found 20 days after the\nhomicide, in the possession' of Conghlin; that\nif Conghlin was Innocent he could have\nhad them if they were Cronin's: if he is guilty,\nhe would not have bad them. That Is all there\nis upon that episode, and that is all that can be\nmade of it by legitimate argument\nYet, they say a detective, a member of the\npolice force, a man who has sent the men that\nhad engaged the horse for carrying the man to\nhis death they would have this court and jury\nbelieve that a man thus circumstanced would\ncarry two little knives which would indicate\nhis guilt beyond all earthly question, carry\nthem after he was arrested, carry them after he\nwas suspected. I say that if guilty he would\nnot have bad them; if Innocent he could not\nhave had them. He did have them and there-\nfore, they are not Cronin's knives.
235521978be512ddda112dcd6709ea2e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.5150272907813 40.063962 -80.720915 be afraid to make experiments.\nTime to Cut Hay..Some kinds ol\ngrass need to be cut? early, becausc\nmatting sweeter uuu uvueruaj. uiuici,\norchard grass and timothy attain theii\ngrowth and maturity rapid and early\nand if not cnt soon lose their gooc\nquality. This is generally true of grasi\ngrowing on highly cultivated land, 01\nrich and warm uplands; but meadow\nhay should be left for several weekf\nlater, as it requires a longer growth; ai\nlong as it continues to grow it Improve!\nin quality, and retains its good coloi\nand aroma quite late in the autumn\nThe Ohio Farmer gives good advice ii\na nutshell concerning curing hay:\n"Don't dry your hay too much. Haj\nmay be dried till it Is as worthless ai\nstraw. As f. good coffee-maker woulc\nsay, 'Don't burn your coffee, but browi\nit;' so we say, 'Don't dry your hay, bu\noure it.' Our good old mothers, whi\nrelied on herb-tea instead of."pothe\ncary medicine,' gathered their herb\nwhen in blossom and cured them it\nthe shade. This la the philosophy o\nmaking good bay. Cut in the bloasou\nand cure in the shade. The sugar o\nthe plant when it is in bloom Is in th\nstalk, ready to form the seed. If th\nplant is cut earlier, the sugar is no\nthere; if later, the sugar has becom\nconverted to woody matter. Hay abouli\nbe well in the sun, but cured i!\nthe cock. Better to be a little greet\nthan too dry. If, on putting it into th\nbarn, there is danger of 'heating in th\nmow,1 put on some lime and salt. Cal\ntie will like it none the less."\nCattle Around Trees..Keep then\noff. It is a noticeable fact that a tree\nbe it ever so thrifty, or of any kind\nbut to which cattle gain access, and qd\nder which they habitually stand, wil\nvery soon cue. iae reason w iumi u\nroots of the tree need air and moistun\nbat the tramp of the cattle hardens th\nground and forms a crnst like brici\nthrough which neither the warmth c\nthe sun nor the rain have any invlgc\nrating Influence.\nTools..Improve odd spells an\nrainy weather in repairing your tool\nand farm-wagons. Examine and w\nthat all is right.every nut, screw, c\nbolt in its place and tight. Sharpe\nyour knives, and oil your macbiner]\nProtect your' hoes, shovels, rake\nplows, and cultivators from the weatfc\ner. It is easy after work is done to tak\na wisp of straw or grass and rnb tt\nmetal parts clean and dry. More mi\ncbinery is spoiled by rust, decay, an\nexposure to the weather than by actui\nwear and tear. If implements are le\nout in the rain, the water will fill ti\ncracks in the wood, enter into evei
1e89a1007d58e2b30093c8414ffcb550 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7657533929478 40.063962 -80.720915 Of tho naval offlcera in service at the\nclose of the war, 5,050 were bora in tho\nUnited States,748 wore foreigners, and\n889 did not furnish tfee place of their\nbirth'.' Of native .bora Americana,\nNow York State furnished tho largest\nnumber, 1263; but iMasstichiisettStf con¬\nsidering everything, makes'bettercom¬\nparative show than this, h&Contribu¬\ntion being 1226. Pennsylvania had 850;\nMaine 490, which quota is small taking\nInto consideration tho extent oi her\ncoast; Connecticut 2fa: '.New Hamp¬\nshire, with her limited seaboard, 175;\nRhodo Island 102, a 'larger proportion\nof men hi proportion to her territory\nthan any or the large seaboard States;\nand Vermont>81.\nOn tho. 1st of January last there were\n200general hospitals in .the country,\nwith thousands of^fcatfenta Under treat¬\nment. At tli& present, time there-are\nbut, 40, al>out 7,000.patients.\nAny person desiring to obtain the\ndead body of a deceased soldier, must\nbe prepared to moke an affidavit before\na justice of the peace or. a notary public\nto the efTect that he is duly authorized\nto receive said body, and at the same\ntin^e state tho company and regiment\nto .which he formerly belonged. All\napplications should be .made at the\noffice of James M. Moore, assistant\nquartermaster at Washington.\nAt the Brooklyn yard, tho work on\ntho monster ironclad Dundcrberg i»\nprogressing finely. Her musts are up,\nand she begins to asaumo tho dignity\nof a vessel of war. Tho work on her\nis being dono in: ri" very thorough and\nsubstantial manner, so tbut when fin¬\nished She will take rank with the beat\nironclads in the world:
1c83e509ac898d1547755d9eddb851c9 THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1911.0342465436327 35.721269 -77.915539 Congressman Pou is still in the\nrace for membership on the Ways\nand Means Committee, as will be\nseen by the following letter of Mr.\nThomas J. Pence, dated last night:\nRepresentative Pou gave to the\npress tonight a statement announc-\ning that he had not withdrawn as a\ncandidate for membership on the\nWays and Means Committee of the\nHouse. He does not say so, but his\nfriends assert that he will remain in\nthe contest to the finish.\nLast week it was reported around\nthe Capitol that Mr. Pou had decided\nto abandon the contest in the interest\nof harmony, and that he would give\nRepresentative Claude Kitchin, who is\nalso in the race, a clear field. This\nreport was published Friday last in\na number of papers in the South as\nwell as in the North and West.\nIn his statement tonight announcing\nthat he has not withdrawn from the\ncontest, Pou said: "I have .not\nauthorized any one to say that I have\nwithdrawn as a candidate for the\nWays and Means Committee of the\nnext Congress. It is very true that I\nhave been working as best I know-ho-\nto aid in preserving harmony and\nunity in any action which may be\ntaken preliminary to the organization\nof the new House.\n"I have said and repeat now that I\nam willing to make any personal sac-\nrifice if by doing so I can help pre-\nvent division and discord in the ranks\nof the party to which I belong, but it\ndoes not appear that my withdrawal\ncan have this effect.\n"I trust we will enter the caucus\nwith the purpose to prevent if possi\nble, those factional differences which\nso much injured the prospects of our\nopponents in the last campaign, and\nwhich have so much injured otir party\nin the past.\n.
fb512f5951f1c2a9a23b17a19e1f3078 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1923.0671232559614 39.745947 -75.546589 Section 103. When any position in the classified service is to be\nfilled, the appointing authority shall notify the Commission of that fact\nand the Commission shall certify to such authority tho names and ad­\ndresses of the three candidate* standing highest on the eligible list for the\nclass or grade to which such position belongs. The appointing authority\nshall apjMiint to such position one of the three persons whose names are\nI fil'd. When the eligible list contains less than three names, such\nnames »hall be certified from which the appointing authority ray appoint\none tor such position. When no eligible list for a position exista, or when\nthe eligible list has become exhausted and until a new list can bn created\nnames may he certified from the eligible list most nearly appropriate to\nthe position to he filled. A person certified from eligible list more\nthan three times to the same or similar position may be omitted from\nfuture certification, but certification for a temporary appointment shall\nnot be counted ns one of such certification*.\nLimitations on Appointments and Transfers.\nSection 104. Xo person shall be appointed or employed in the classi­\nfied service of the city under any title not appropriate to the duties to bo\nperform«! and no person shall be transferred to, or be assigned to perform\nany duties, of u position subject to competitive tests unless he shall have\nbeen appointed to the position from which the transfer is made as a result\nof open competitive test equivalent to that required for the position to bo\nfilled, or unless he shall have served with fidelity for at least two years\nimmediately preceding in a similar position under the city.\nPromotions.
05592a39fc70536294f678b34f545f3b THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1892.096994503896 37.92448 -95.399981 The firm of Cleveland & Mills seems\nto have been dissolved by the with-\ndrawal of the junior partner. This is\nunexpected and painful. For a long\ntime their relations were as intimate\nand pleasant as those of David and\nJonathan. They went forth together\nto war upon the Randallitcs, and they\nrouted them. Mr. Mills scoffed at the\nidea of any presidential candidate ex-\ncept the senior partner, and the latter\nmaintained that nexX to himself Mr.\nMills was tho leading apostle of dem-\nocratic free trade.\nMr. Mills was at homo last week\nlooking after his senatorial chances.\nAs is the custom of statesmen be was\ninterviewed, and in reply to the ques\ntion: "What is the prospect for reduc-\ning the tariff?" he said:\n"Everything depends on the present confess\nand course pursued by tho democratic na\ntional convention next summer. If congress\npresses earnestly on for tarifl reduction and the\ndemocratic house passes a thorough revenue\ntariff bill. Ignoring and opposing protection in\nevery feature, and if the national convention\nwill maka that tho Issue in the coming contest\nand give the pcoplo a sound western democrat\nas tho nominee for president we will win, carry\nthe reform, and remain in power for years. The\ncontest in the convention, from present indica\ntions, will be between Hill and a western com-\npetitor. Hill has declared In his recent speech\nat Albany for the protective tariff of 1BS3. Un-\nless we give up all that wo havo been contending\nfcfr we cannot accept his platform or bis can-\ndidacy and wo must look to the west for oui\nsUndard-bearer.- "
26ac5f1e5d73bd161f6363659670926b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.7904109271942 39.623709 -77.41082 “And the Lord appeared unto him iu\nthe plains of Mature, and he sat in the\ntent door in the heat of the day, and he\nlifted up his eyes and looked, and 10, three\nmen stood by him; and when he saw them\nhe ran to meet them from the tent door,\nand bowed himself toward the ground.”\nWe have here the thought of communion\nof which the Christian Church is so much\nin need in these days. It is not so much\nservice that is demanded now as fellow\nship with Him and waiting upon Him by\nmeans of which we may know His will. 1\nlike to picture this visit of angels. Abra-\nham At his tent door during the heat of\nthe day, when suddenly the angels np\npeared. There were three of them, the\nangel of the Covenant being their leader\nfstood on the very spot where it is said\naccording to tradition, the tent of Abra-\nham stood and the place seemed holy\nground. I doubt not the tent cvei\nmore beautiful to Abraham and Sarah, foi\nas a matter of fact homes arc transfigure !\nand lives made beautiful just in propor-\ntion that Christ, the Angel of the Cove\nnant, fills us, ami He still cones to us to-\nday, and in His coming He is the same\nyesterday, to-day and forever. He entered\nthe home of Zaechcus and gave him a new\nsong, and salvation came to his entire\nhousehold. He filled the heart of Peter cc\nthat when Paul was converted ho came\ndown just to visit, him that he night know\nconcerning his Master. Doubtless he saw\nthd couch where He rested, possibly the\nroom where He slept, and I have no ques-\ntion at all but, Peter and Paul journeyed\ntogether visiting the scenes that were\nmade sacred bv His gracious presence. He\nwalked with the two on their way to Em-\nmans and illumined the Scriptures a id\nalso made their hearts burn. We nay\nhave angels visits in these days in unex\nported ways.
071230778bd349ac64cedb794e66f433 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1875.9767122970572 39.743941 -84.63662 to come in fast, and as grandpa was a sur-\nveyor, he was always away from home a\ngreat deal, locating claims. Sometimes\nhe would be gone two or three days at a\ntime, leaving grandma alone with the\nchildren. The day before Christmas he\nwent "away with a man who had bought\na lot of hind ten miles off, expecting to\nbe home again before the evening of the\nnext day ; but night came, and he had\nnot returned. Yen may be sure it was\nnot a very " merry Christmas" to grand-\nma as she sat before the fire in the lonely\ncabin, anxiously listening to every sound,\nand hoping each moment to hear her\nhusband's footsteps. No visions of sugar-\nplums danced through the children's\nheads as they played about the floor, for\nSanta Claus didn't find his way into the\nbackwoods in those days. All at once\nthere was a strange pawing noise at the\ndoor, and grandma's heart began to beat\nfast, for bears were very plenty in the\ncountry then, and die thought she was\ngoing to be favored with a visit one\nof the family. But in a moment the\nlatch was raised, and as the door slowly\nopened the first thing she' saw was the\nend of a gun poking into the room, this\nwas followed by an Indian, then came\nanother and another, each armed with\ngun and tomahawk. These uninvited\nChristmas guests all squatted on the floor\nbefore the fire, and began to entertain\ntheir hostess by telling horrible stories\nof the massacre of Wyoming in which\nthey had taken part. They flourished\ntheir tomahawks, and described the way\nthe settlers were butchered and scalped,\nwhile poor grandma sat listening in\nterror, although she tried to appear\nbrave and unconcerned, for she had al-\nways heard that the savages were much\nmore likely to spare those who showed\nno signs of fear. The youngest child,\nwho was just beginning to toddle around,\nwas greatly attracted by the tomahawks,\nand in spite of all she could do would\nbreak away from his mother; and going\nup to the Indians reach out his hands for\nthe horrible weapons, which she everv\nmoment expected to see buried
03730a152ecd7a28702c210285835c97 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.6589040778792 39.745947 -75.546589 Boston, Aug. iP. —T here la a new Ehaw, Twenty-ninth volunteer infant-\nqueen of the American navy, the Uni- ry, died here yesterday. Capt. Cren-\nted Slates battleship Alabama, which shaw saw service In Cuba and the Phil-\nyesterday won the title in one of the ippines. and a wound received In the\nmoat magnificent speed trials yet held Battle of Putola caused his death Capt.\nIn the history of the navy. Her aver- Crenshaw, who arrived In Atlanta a\nage speed for four hours continuous week ago, made a statement to his\nsteaming was 17 knots, a figure not father, In which he charged outrageous\nquite as high as that made by the Iowa, treatment and neglect on board the\nbut notable from the fact that It gave transport Sherman from Manila for\nan Idea of the yet undeveloped power San Francisco. The statement was \nIn this latest product of American the effect that after the vessel left Ma-\nshlphuilders. The Alabama was built nilai and wa8 on the hlgh gea8 offlctrs\nby the Cramps at Philadelphia, and (n the state rooms next to Capt. Cren-\nwhile of the first class she is unlike ghaw's complained that he kept them\nany of the earlier creations bofh archl- aWake by the sufferings from his\ntecturally and as a fighting machine, wound. He was taken from the state\nBuilt under a contract that required at room and paraIyEed in the loft side\nleast an average speed of 16 knots per and unable to lift his head and almost\nhour, ahe has been turned out to dc 17 unconscious, Was placed in a berth\nknots or better under conditions that down ia the hold of the ship, near the\nwill not be termed extra.
161bca93b007a3b01423b930b2872cec NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.2178081874683 40.735657 -74.172367 Plans and specifications of the work may be\nexamined at the office of the architects, H. J.\n& J. V. King, No. 22 Clinton street.\nSaid proposals to be accompanied by the con-\nsent in writing of two sureties or a surety com-\npany authorized to do business in this State,\nwho shall at the time of putting in such pro-\nposals qualify as to their responsibility in the\namount of such proposal and bind themselves\nthat If the contract be awarded to the person\nor persons making the proposal they will, upon\nIts b *ing so awarded, become his or their sure-\nties for the faithful performance of said work,\nanti that if the person or persons omit or re-\nfuse to execute such contract they will pay the\nCity of Newark any difference between ths\nsums to which he or they would have been \ntitled upon the completion of the contract and\nthat which the City of Newark may be obliged\nto pay the person or persons by whom such con-\ntract may be executed.\nBidders m u»t specify in their proposals,\nshould the above work or works be awarded to\nthem, the time that they will require to com-\nplete the iame.\nAll bids must be made out on blanks fur-\nnished for the purpose, which can be had upon\napplication at the office of the City Clerfc.\nTho said Board of Police Commissioners re-\nserve for themselves the right to accept or re-\nject any or all proposals for the above work, or\nto waive any defects therein, as they may deem\nbest for the interest of the City of Newark.\nBy direction of the Board of Police Commis-\nsioners of the City of Newark, N. J.
22f7ea612bd41a68e43b9c49dc33c60b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.3438355847286 37.561813 -75.84108 The Republicans claim that the action\nof the Democrats in unseating the four\nRepublicans and seating four Democrats\nin their place?, was a gross breach of the\nplighted faith ot that party, iney say\nthe Legislature has come together with\nthe same personnel as when it adjourned\nat the close of the regular session, and\nhad made all the changes recommended\nin the award. Both bodies had then\nadopted a resolution that the House\nshould remain without change, except\nby resignation or death of a member,\nuntil a general election. The Republicans\ncontend that the only argument ot any\nweight offered by the Democratic ma-\njority that carried the measure was that\nthe members unseated had not been re-\nturned by the Returning Board, whose\nother acts the same majority has re-\npeatedly denounced as illegal. These\nRepublicans had been seated after con\ntest, and represented pansnes wmcn nad\nheretofore been strongly Republican.\nThe Republican, in its leader says:\nWhat the result will be is not difficult \npredict The outraged minority iu the House\nhave no remedy. In the Senate the relations\nare reversed, but no one believes the Repub-\nlicans will put themselves as much in the\nwrong as their opponents by retaliating on\nthe Democratic minority in thai body. But\nwhat opportunity of passing measures of re\nform can such a body as that which now\ncontrols the House afford. What guarantees\nhave the people that the adjustment they be\nlieved in will prouuee nartuuny in tnis dis-\ntracted State. It is plain that the Democrats\nin taking the responsibility of breaking faith\nwith Republicans have broken the compact\nconfirmed the truth of the argument they in\ntented no justice to their opponents, ren\ndered all but partisan legislation impossible,\ndestroyed the hope of better days aud less\nbetter" feeling, widened the breach between\nthe people of each side, turned the effort for\nreform into a struggle for office, and defeated\nevery effort for the benefit of the people the\ncompromise was intended to promote.
02831a1dc0b67611972132d4c4d11ac7 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.4068492833587 40.441694 -79.990086 Meanwhile, Mr. Burdick, and afterward\nMr. Gillan, whom Speaker Thompson had\ncalled to tho chair, pounded with the gavel\nuntil it seemed as though they must break\nthe desk to splinters, and alternately im-\nplored and threatened. The sergeant at\narms and bis assistants were commanded to\narrest all offenders: but these discreet off-\nicials seemed to be always looking tho other\nway when tho act was being done, and no\none was called before the bar of the House\nto receive tho dread reprimand of the Chair.\nThe monotonous roll calls on Senate bills\nwent on. Members voted, but wore not\nheard or perhaps wero heard when they did\nnot vote, then tried to voto and wero ob-\njected to, or someone objected to their votes\nbeing counted because thoy had not \nBad blood was engendered osporsons wero\ncast Upon the count. Tho bar of the House\nwas thronged with angry, shouting, gesticu-\nlating Representatives, and altogether tho\ncelebrated monkey and parrot, time was bad\nto a most "halcyon and vociferous" extent.\nJust as the Arse red rays of morning\nlighted the hall Mr. Baker arose and called\nup tno conierenoo report on tne Daiioc trni,\nand, for the first time in five long hours,\nthere was perfect silence. Mr.Ttlter, who\nbad dissented from tho report, said that he\ncould not vote for the bill. Tho duty of giv-\ning to the people an honest ballot reform\nDill had not been done. Tho twenty-sevent- n\nsection removed all privacy from about tho\nballot, tho public count had been stricken\nout and be must vote nay.
0e191dca87dff79c9adfdf12a04b542f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.1219177765095 39.513775 -121.556359 The ntnl'Tsiglied. de-iions of acqnalnthc* those\nwho may he iinl"rliinnte enough to tin similarly al\ndieted wln-re a permanent rein I ol their sufferings\nmay tie obi lined, feels it Ills duty to lints p'ltdiei*\nexpre-s his sincere gratitude In Hr, I. J i /.i 'pl ay,\nlor tin- permanent recovery ol los health Horne\ndown by Ibe di-tresslng symptoms incident to till)\nvicious practices ol imcontrollalde missiiui in youth,\ndepressed in body nod mind, onntile to perform even\nthe most trilling dmy imposed upon tin- daily a voca-\ntions of lilt., 1 -ought the advice of inaiiv physicians,\nwho at lir-1 regarded mv disease ol Irilliag Import-\nance. Inti alii.: tiller a few week- , a nd in several in-\nstances months, ot iheir treatment, I found to my tin\niitlernble horror, tli.il instead ofrt In f the sympToins\nliecntne more alarming in their torture, and being\ntin liy told me by one that the disease.being confined\nprinc.pl* to the medicine-w ould be of little\nconsequence. I despaired of n er regaining my health\nstrength and energy; and ns a Ins' re-ort, and w ith\nbut n faint hope, called upon Dr. C/apk ay.v . bo all* r\nexamining my ense. prescribed some tin ilirine winch\nalmost instantly relieved me of the dull pains an 1\ndir/ines. in my head, f nconraged Ivy tl,is re-nil, I\nresulv ed to piaee toy -elf iinnn dlately under hi- care,\nand, by a strict obedience to Ids d(recti' n - and ad-\nv ice. my bead bccniiie clear, my idea- cotlei t.al, tin*\nconstant pain in my lan k and •- nuns the w eakness\nof my limbs, (be nervous reaction .it my wholes*—\nlent on til" slighlesl alarm or evci'einent, the mi--\natilliropy and cv il forebodings, tin* self distrust and\nwant of cotilidelice in o In-rs, the jiicaj iibiiity to\nstudy and want "I ri solution, the frightful exciting,\nand at times pleasurable dr.
0afce46504f1d655bb8c8dd2a4de1b9c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.0863013381531 42.217817 -85.891125 In pursuance and by virtue of a decree in the\nCircuit Court for the county of Van Huren. in\nChancery, in the State or Michigan, made on\nthe 12th day of April. 1877, in a cause therein\npending wherein The Michigan Central Iron\nConn any is complainant and Mary A. Knapp\nand Jason A. Sheldon are defendants. Notice\nis hereby given that I shall sell at public auc-\ntion to the highest bidder at the front door of\nthe court bouse, in the village of Taw Faw, in\nsaid county and state, at 10 o'clock in the fore-\nnoon, on the eleventh day of February. 1878.\nAll that certain parcel of land situated in the\ncounty of Van Duren, State of Michigan, in\nsection number thirty one, town three south,\nof range thirteen west, and particularly \ncribed as follows, vit: Commencing at the\nsouth weet corner of said section, running\nthence north on the west line of said section,\nforty chains to the quarter post, thence eaet on\nthe quarfr line thirty nine chains and thirty\nfive links to a stake, thence south parallel to\nfirst described line sixteen chains and sixty five\nlinks to a stake in the center of the highway,\nwhich runs along the north side of the Michi-\ngan Central Railroad, thence along the center\nof said highway south, fifty five and one fourth\ndegrees west, forty chains and seventy linas to\nthe smth line of said section, thence west along\nsaid section line, s.x chains to the place of be-\nginning, containing one hundred and eighteen\nand seventy three hundredths acres of land\nmore or less.
048c0301af1f598e88fb0c0398a2740b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1878.7712328450025 37.451159 -86.90916 about as quiet and sociable as an oys\nter himself. He went by the name of\nliard, and when parties came into the\nshop, it was Bard, come up and take a\nnip, or 'Bard take a hand in this game.'\nHe wa a sort of pensioner on his ac\nquaintances, as far as drinks were con-\ncerned. Whenever the old woman met\nwith any incident or idea that tickled\nher fancy she would ask Bard to versi-\nfy it. Poo always complied, writing\nmany a witty couplet, and at times\npoems of considerable length. Much\nof his poetical work, quite as meritor\nious as some by which his name was\nimmortalized, was thus frittered into\nobscurity. It wits in this little shop\nthat Poos attention was called to an\nadvertisement iu a Philadelphia paper\nof a prize for a meritorious story, and\nit was here that he composed his \nous 'Gold Bug,' which took the prize.\n1 heard him read it before he sent it to\nPhiladelphia, and wheu it was an-\nnounced that his story was successful\nthe widow Meagher gave him the mon-\ney to go on aud obtain the prize."\n"lint how about his death 7\n"Poe had been shifting between Bal\ntimore, Philadelphia and New York\nfor several years. He had been away\nfrom Baltimore about three months and\nturned up one evening at the widow's.\nI was there when he came in. B.ird\nhad made a littlo raise North, nnd it\nwas drinks nil around, with repeat, un-\ntil the crowd were down jolly. It was\nthe night before an election, nnd the\nparty started up town. There were\nfour of us, ami we had not gone half\ndozen squares before we were nabbed\nby policemcu, who weie looking up\nvoters to 'coop.'
222bc17586c6f0c3551b49903b318540 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.960382482038 41.875555 -87.624421 could calmly retire under tho shelter-\ning wing of tho bankruptcy officials\nand no ono would benefit from my\ndishonesty. Everyone gives you cred-\nit, nnd tho system, instead of being\ncurtullcd, secniH to grow. I described\nn yeur or so ago tho history of a young\nman and woninn who wero married\nwith nothing more to bnck them than a\nRound belief In themselves nnd a few\nsilver things thnt hnd been presented\nto than on their wedding dny. I told\nhow they lived in grcnt luxury in Park\nLuuo for u couplo of yenra and gnvo\ntho most expeusivo nml exclusivo din-\nners, luncheons nnd supper, nnd how\nthey ilnnlly disappeared. Four simi-\nlar cases havo como under my obser-\nvation Nlncu thun, ouo of thorn partic-\nularly aggravating, so fnr as tho cred-\nitors nru concerned. A youth of 20 In\nan nrlstocrutlc cavalry regiment found\nIt Impossible to conceal from his fath-\ner tho fact ho had contracted\ndobts,to the extent of over 5,000. Tho\nfather promptly "lifted" tho boy out of\ntho service anil placed him In an In-\nsurance broker's olllco lu the city,\nwhero he wiih to receive tho munificent\nsalnry of .") a yeur. Tho tirst yenr'a\nexpenditures returned to tho futher by\nu set of compliant creditors amounted\nto over 8,000 . Tho boy hnd taken two\nshootings, hnd hired n yacht for Cowes\nweek, hnd given endless supper par-\nties nt tho best hotels, nil on credit,\nand smoked Innuniornblo cigars thnt\ncost something llko 2 shillings each;\nand all of this on tho strength of hav-\ning been In tho army! Tho boy, bo-l u- g\nJust under age, escaped the pun-\nishment generally meted out to such\noffenders, and his father commuted\nwith tho creditors, but I understand\nthat tho youth' continues to llvo like a\nprlnco on his 50 a year Income\nTown and Country.
440d8657cc8ed96c7f957576220dae35 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.305479420345 39.261561 -121.016059 “Again you heard that eloquence, with a\nhigher hope of a more splendid result, in 1770.\nThe leader in that great cause was our own\nJohn Adams, of Massachusetts. He was the or-\nator alone of the revolution iu which the nation\nwas bora. Others co-operatcd splendidly with\nhim—Samuel Adams, Samuel Chase, Thomas\nJefferson,Patrick Henry, Jap. Otis—in earlier\nstages. Each one of these went abroad and\nscattered broadcast the seed of life into the wait-\ning, virgin soil. Jefferson, the magic of style,\nthe power of touching the feelings with those\nfair ideas of freedom aud equality, dear to men,\nso irresistable at that time. Henry, the inde-\nscribable spell of speech, which fills the eyes,\nstays the blood, turns the cheeks pale, instilling\niuto the foul the sweet madness of battle. Sam-\nuel Chase,the tone of indignation, the proud de-\nfiance, and the extrordinary nrt of inspiring\ncourage and hope. John Adams alone \nto have met every demand of the time. As a\nquestion of right, as a question of prudence, as\na question of honor, as a question of feeling, ns\na question of conscience, he knew it nil through;\nand in that mighty debate which commenced as\nfar back as March or February, 1770, _lo its\nclose, ou the 2d of July, he presented it in nil\nits aspects, to every passion and affection—ap-\npealing to the sense of wrong, exasperation, at\nlength, almost beyond control by the shedding\nof blood—to grief, to indignation, to self-re-\nspect, to desire for happiness and safety, to the\nsense of moral obligation, to the fear of God—-\ncasting out all other lour— to all these ideas\nand all these passions he appealed for month af-\nter month, day after day, until the result was\nattained, the record of which lie has left in a let-\nter to his wife.
2b0bbccf22add3bf002747bc3d63fade SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1904.596994503896 43.624497 -72.518794 The gooseberry ylelds a large crop, it\nglven cnre, and lt should be niore ex\ntenslvely grown, ns there is n large de.\nmand and good prlces for gooseberries\never.v yeur. It should be grown ln tbe\nsuii (not ln shndy places), 011 rleh soil\nbei'ng mulcbed late lu the fnll. Oue\npoint is to cut out soiuo of the wood\nfrom the centre, to ndmit nir nnd\nsunllght, wblch wlll piirtlnlly servc\n11s '11 iirevoiitlve 6C mlHlow.\nThe best season for seltlng an\norchnrd is Just ns soon ns tbo wlntet\nbrenks nnd the grouud can be bandled\nBe careful not to freeze the roots\nGround can be bandled wetter ln wlu-\nter aud ln very parly sprlng than latet\nin the senson, for it will not pack ot\nbake tben, as it does later, but It Is\npreferable, especiaiiy ln elny solls, to\n the ground ln proper coudltlon\nnot too wct, ns there is dnnger of\nbnklng tbe ground nround the roots\nof the trees. We have set trees lu the\nfnll, wlnter, nnd ns late ln the sprlng\nas May, when large apple trees were in\nbloom and the early varietles of frult\nwere leaving out. It is best to set the\ntrees ns soon ns posslble nfter belng\ntaken from tbe nursery row.\nIf any of the roots are badly injured\nor brulscd It is best to cut them off\nnnd lot the tree send out healthy ones,\nthe roots should bo carefully exnmlued\natul If they show lumps ns the result of\nnpbls 01; other c'isenses, do not set tbe\ntrees. if you want a permanetit\norchnrd you should set healthy trees\nI cannot too strongly emphaslze tbe\nIdon tbat deep plautlng makes "root\nrot."
430114ce171aa04af18bdb3c601e9260 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4068492833587 44.939157 -123.033121 devotes considerable space to show why the\nrailroads have to carry their cases to the public, and\nto create public sympathy for themselves. It is a waste\nof time and space, as no excuse for so doing is necessary,\ni As a matter of fact, it is because the railroads have\npersistently refused to take their cases before the public\nthat there has been so much drastic legislation concerning\nthem. The old policy was the Vanderbilt idea of "the peo-\nple be damned" period. The railroads were above the law\nand did pretty much as they pleased, holding themselves\naccountable to no one and openly defying the government.\nThis has changed, and the change is a good one for both\nthe railroads and the public. That the public does not at\nonce rush to the defense of the railroads is the fault of\nthe roads. Being told that railroad matters were none\nof their business was not the way to awaken friendship\nor create a liking. When a dog bites you, you are some-\nwhat chary about trying to pet that dog again. For years\nthe railroad dog has bit the meddlesome citizen that at-\ntempted to get familiar with it. It either the\nlegislators it permitted the people to vote for, or failing\nin this, openly purchased such legislators as the people\nelected without its dictation. The railroad dog did not\ngrowl; it bit, and bit hard, for its teeth were sharp and\nstrong. It dictated legislation and it ignored such laws\nas were distasteful to it. It charged such rates as pleased\nit and watered its stock at will. But times have changed\nand the railroads no longer dictate. Their teeth have been\npulled, "and the common people,' finding the old dog no\nlonger dangerous and disgusted with themselves for hav-\ning ever feared it, now take pleasure in kicking it.\nWhen the novelty has worn off and the public has sort\nof evened up things and kicked all it wanted to, there will\nbe another change and the railroads will be given fair\nplay. They might as well make up their minds though,\nthat hereafter the earnings of all railroads will be only\na fair and just return on the money invested. The water\nw ill be squeezed out of their stocks and the actual physical\nvaluation of the road will be the only basis on which re-\nturns will be calculated.
1ac763358a94f5cf2abda90031fd9765 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.5520547628107 58.275556 -134.3925 It is difficult to understand the value\nof such an official. It is to be presum¬\ned that he will go around to the vari¬\nous schools and investigate, but what\nwill he or what can he investigate? If,\nas in the British Islands, examiners\nwere appointed who would be indepen¬\ndent of the teachers whose pupils are\nexamined, and if examinations were\nheld each year in every school one\ncould see an advantage coming from\nthe salary expended, but the mere\ncoming of a man or a woman to glance\nat the pupils aud make them a peda¬\ngogic speech or two can hardly aid the\nsproutingof the young idea very much.\nOwing to the size of the territory and\nthe great roundabout distances to be\ntraversed it would be impossible to !\nhold examinations of pupils at any\ntixed period of the year when time\nwould have been given them to prog¬\nress their class work. Certainly there\nwould hardly be any use iu examining\na child in the work of the year before.\nThe man appointed to be superin¬\ntendent may not be one whit better\nqualified than any of the principals of!\nthe schools themselves. The candi¬\ndates are, as a matter of fact, entirely\ndrawn from the school principals of\nAlaska. They are qualified, no doubt,\nas they have been appoiuted principals\nonly after having proveu their qualifl-\ncntions, but the very same may be said\nof every principal iu the territory. Be¬\nsides all this, the school boards arej\nusually, perhaps entirely, made up of\npeople who are intelligent enough to\nunderstand the progress made by pu¬\npils. Indeed, it can easily be under¬\nstood how such an offioial as this new :\nbuperiutenleut might cause a lot of\nthe irritation begotten of officiousness\nwithout in the least helping the cause\nof education.
df83570ae92323f9e8c9ce0cd38bce95 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.2581966896882 31.960991 -90.983994 To amend and reduce into one the\nnl acts in relation to the revenue of\nthis State,and for other purposes.\nSection 1. Be it enacted hy the Legis­\nlature of the State of Mississippi, That\nthe following taxes shall be assessed and\ncollected within this State, to wit:\nad valorem tax of three tenths of one per\ncent, on all lands in this State, not accep­\nted by the ordinance admitting this State\ninto the Union, or specially exempted bv\nprovisions of this act—on all money loan­\ned at interst by individuals or employed\nby them in the purchase of notes, bonds,\nchecks, hills of credit of any description\nwhatever, as security for money advan­\nced—on all goods,wares and merchandize\nsold by anv regular merchant—on all\nbank stock, subscribed for in any incorpo­\nrated'bank in this State, which shall not\nhave paid a bonus for its charter, or been\nexempted by the provisions thereof, (ex\ncept stock subscribed for and owned by\nthe State, or some incoporated literary or\ncharitable institution.) An ad valorem\ntax of two aud one-half per cent, on all\nmerchandize sold by an auctioneer\ntransient vendor of goods; ad valorem\ntax of one pel cent, on each pleasure\ncarriage, watch and clock, (except such\nas are kept for saie by merchants or ar­\ntisans.) A tax of ten dollars on each nine\nor ton pin alley, or any nlley of the same\nkind kept for public play; a tax of fifty\ndollars per annum on each theatre and\neach race track, and one dollar on each\nand every Bowie knife; a tax of one cent\non each head of cattle over the number of\ntwenty owned by any one individual; a\npoll tax of fifty cents on everv free white\nmale between the ages of twenty one and\nfifty years, a tax of one dollar and a haif\non each and every free colored male be­\ntween the age oftwentyonc and fifty years\nand of seventy-five cents on each and eve­\nry slave under sixty & over five years of\nage; and on each slave under the age o!\nfive years, twenty-five cents; an ad valo­\nrem tax of two percent, on all gold and\nsilver above the amount of fifty dollars,\nmanufactured otherwise than into coin,\n; except jewelry worn about the person,
271e1c9c4382d162f651cd9774815c97 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.746575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 llarkley took up the willow rtndllied out\nLnird hit safe to center, but UoHenbarg went\n>ut on strikes and Moflat died ut tirst.\nStrief opened iho next inning with a tw<\n3aser, but Lane.laid down tlie U:Ltafter a nca\nfoul tip oalch by llarkley. Salisbury died a\niret, ana iuanseit iciiuwea suit, Strict, How\n:ver, getting iu and scprinjj.\nWelsh hit sharp to third but was*throwi\nHit ut flrsL Miller struck the wind threi\nlimes and retired to the shade, vrliil'e Liiken\nlied at tirst. Taylor took the inufcli paddl\nind was retired by a beautiful foulcntclf\nllarkley. Peters hit eafe to center liut die*\nitwcond on Morgan's hit to Sullivan. Uattii\nbit tu Laird who threw hint out at lira!.\nljhees Donoed up u t|y to short, and Sulli\nfan popjKit up-ouo toHspcoud. Uarkley hi\nliurd tu center and. Laird followed with\nJai.svrcutter third, but Rosenberg sunt\nill rising hopes by Hying out to Lane.\nStrief then came in and clubbed'the sphen\nfor one base. Lane hit to Laird and died a\nfirst. Moflat made a beautiful catch of Strief\nliy and made a double play and put out Salis\nbury, which play \\eas:loudlv applauded b<\nenthusiasts from tbaigiiuid stand.\nThe home nine caule.in for the last whacl\nit the leather and went out in sacrificial or\nJcr, Motiat batting to Salisbury, Welsl\npunching the ball io.third and dying at, first\nand Miller ending thegame by stritciyg 'threi\ntimes at the wind, closing a vcry.iriterestini\nif not a victorious contest for the Standard\nThe Intei.|.i<jf.N(;ru lakes pleasure In com\nmending the uniformly good work cf tin\nHome nine, and encourages them to pi toll it\nto-day and du as good work and nu one wil\nUrowl. »
6ed8508d911752336403357fe46c063b THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.3438355847286 40.618676 -80.577293 That's the biggest mistake of all.\nTrue, grownups know best what war\nis. But there is hardly a child, how­\never young, whose body and mind are\nnot touched by a Nation at war.\nIf ever children needed mothering\nand fathering, they need it now. The\ndoctors say they need more of it in\nwartime than in peace. They need the\nkind of mothering and fathering that\nbuilds a child's security in a world\nthat, even for him, if full of change.\nYour Johnny and Jane know lots of\nthings are different at home today.\nThere will be more changes tomorrow.\nBoth for you and for them many of\nthese changes are hard to take. But\nwith you there, throwing your confi­\ndence and pluck and a fleet ion around\nJohnny and .lane, they'll be hurt.\nThese are the foods your children\ngrow 011, just as much as the bread\nthey eat. They need such food every\nday of their growing lives.\nA child's spirit can be undernourish\ned as well as his body. Your faith, and\nyour courage, and your love are Grade\nA foods for your child's spirit. There\nare not others as good.\nOf course it takes times .to give\nchildren that quality of care. Just as\nyou willingly give the time it takes\nto provide the carrots, milk, and other\nfoods you give your child, you'll be\nglad later for the extra time you spend\nnow in giving him affectionate guid­\nance. Behind many a youngster in\ntrouble is a parent overburdened with\nwork, who thought he or she was too\nbusy for children.
2eeb3d64daeea3b8bf718e8f84a0aa45 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1879.7739725710298 41.004121 -76.453816 purpose ot Amending the Constitution and\not Bald association oh follows i\nArticle IX ot constitution to bo amended a'tcr the\nwords ' loaned out tu read : The members shall\nue bouna to taxo up vne mans at me lowest prtm-turn- s\nnxed. beictnninir with tliat member who shall\nhold the largest number of shares unincumbered,\nbut no one shall be compelled to take in a single\nmonth more than one loan in tuts manner.\nArticle XX section ist of bylaws to be amended\nafter the word "reason' to read! The inembere\nwho still hold iroo share are bound to take up the\nsame, according to Article IX or the constitution, at\nthe lowest premium tlxed, then It shall be done in\nuie louowing inaoucr :\nThat member who hoir tho most rre shares.\nshall llrst take ud a sharo. then the holder of the\nnext number, one; and ho on until all the\nmembers who bold over Are shares shall hare re-\nceived one thereof. Then the succession betrlns\nwith the first, until all tbe tdiares of one and the\nsame holder are reduced to five at the M truest.\nThen, if necessary, the Bamo rule shall be ap- -\nmeu iu vue uuiutr iruni uvu uuwn w uirutj buares\nhen from two downwards until the dissolution of\nthe association.\nHicriONVnd. If two or more members hold an\nequal number of shares, in such cases tho succes\nsion snail oe ueieruiiuea oy 101 oeiwccn mem.\nSection 3d. Hucui voluntary loans shall be se-\ncured by the transfer of free shares to the assocla\ntlon, and If there are not sufllclent, by such securi\nty as me directors inav nua lo ne goou.\nliy order of tho President, Attest: J. B . It E ILLY,
4cd9ddef8803182032619dd30576f61b DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.9356164066464 58.275556 -134.3925 Banker Haydeo, a multi-millionaire\nof Boston, who holds vast mining in¬\nterests in all parts of the world, states\nthat more money than ever will be |pnt\ninto development work in Alaska this\ncoming summer and that the northern\ncountry will receive attention from\nmiinng investors. The certainty that\nafter the present war the demand for\nmetals will be heavy and will continue\nfor many years is so certain that bank-\ners and mining men are planning to\nmake heavy investments in mines.\nIt is reported from Nome that the\npolice overlooked a good bet when they\nfailed to raid a resort in the city the\nnight before the big crowd of passen¬\ngers got away for the south, on the\nVictoria. According to the story there\nwere more than one hundred men who\nhad spent the summer working for the\ndredae companies in the far North and\nwho were simply "lousy" with lucre,\nbecause they had no opportunity of\nspending it while working. The lid\nwas taken off for the uight aud gamee\nof all kinds practically wide open. \nthe men all had their tickets for the\nStates in their pockets, it is dollars to\ndoughnuts that any reasonable tine as¬\nsessed by the judge woald have been\npaid. Nome overlooked the chauce of\ngetting a new city jail.\nAltfir seveu mouths of strenuous\nwork in Bering sea and the Arctic\nocean, the United States coast guard\ncutter Bear arrived in Seattle the 23rd\nof last month and the next day con¬\ntinued her journey toward San Fran¬\ncisco, rounding out her twenty-seventh\nseason in Uncle Sam's service in\nNorthern waters. Capt. C . S. Cochran\nis master. The Bear went as far North\nas Point Barrow, carrying mails to the\nvarious towns and stations on the\nAlaskan coast. On this trip Bishop\nPeter Trimble Rowe was a passenger\non the coast guard cutter. He visited\nthe Episcopal mission stations along\nthe coast and attempted to reach the\nSiberian coast, but was blocked by\nheavy ice. A number of people, unable\nto pay their fares to Seattle ou the\nregular steamers, were brought south\nby the Bear.
080cdc360e9f8b6d812fe60c46fe83e7 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.9219177765094 40.419757 -77.187146 Mr. Editor Being a reader of your\nvaluable paper, and formerly a resident\nof Perry county, and having promised\nmany friends to write what I thought\nof my western home, by your kindness\nI will respond through your paper.\nAbout two years ago I took H. G's. ad-\nvise, (young man go west and double\nyour money), located in south central\nMissouri, 25 miles north east of Jeffer-\nson City, Calloway county. The sur-\nface of this county is broken, being\nabout the same as Perry county without\nthe mountain. The soil is a yellow clay,\nranging between Gunbo and Crawfish,\nabout it of the soil is timber land, i\nprairie climate, seems to be on the ex-\ntreme either dry or wet. The principle\nproducts are tobacco and corn, wheat\nraising has begun lately on timber lands\nwhere has been successfully raised.\nMarkets are low here, there being no\ngrain shipped hence no merchants. The\nmineral is a soft coal which is found\nimbeded in timber land it sells for eight\ncents per bushel. Politics are all one\nsided like a handle on Jug (Democratic).\nThis having been a slave state, about it\nare white, the remaining i negroes, of\nall shades and colors. Improved lands\nsell here from $1 to $15 per acre. Taxes\nare high, schools and churches con\nvenient. There are about 12 or 15\nPennsylvania families located here, the\ncry with all is, if I could only sell and\ngo west. Now if any think I am going\nto advise them to come west, they are\nfooled, for I believe in all seeing for\nthemselves, and you all know the rail\nroad runs both ways.
0e66aa0335097073e4765bab8148896a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.0808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 on the open market so huh lhat they inal facilities are noi there but the tons watchword, was the basic ap-\nhardly know what to do. Careful inves- depth of water, the natural advantages peal of the speakers to Uie large audl-\nligation showed before the war started are there, and only money Is needed lo once. In the furtherance of Wllmlng-\nthat It cost the Delaware farmer about provide the railroad and terminal fad- ton's sh pbu.ldlng prog am. eve-y cltl-\nforly dollars an acre to plant and har- lilies. The expenditure of a few millions 1 zen should lend every bit of a d In in­\nvest and deliver an acre of tomatoes, of dollars will provide them Here It | power. Until more houses are built\nthe Government report is that the aver- Is possible to make a closed harbor : lo accommodate the shipbuilders and\nage Delaware crop last year was a little right on the ocean where vessels may j their families, the people of Wllming-\nahove three tons per in other he unloaded In any weather. No long ; ton, as patriotic people, should open\nwords at the general contract price of trips up rivers, through long and tor-! up their homes to the sh i builders\ntomatoes last year the avera-re grower tuous channels delayed by tide» or lack The Chamber of Comme ce should call\n,-ot about cost for his product This of depth of water. All the vvuarfage j on the people. There Is many a horn ,\nvear the cost of the product may be needed ran be provided. Build the old t In AV'lminglon where , the spa -e room\nnearly double the co t of last year, and Breakwater to the shore and a pier four ; or rooms are only used when guest-\ntf this Is true and the average crop is miles Jon g will afford a place to build fare calling and staying over the nigh',\nno more, the farmer must have about all necessary wharfage. Build the Har-1 WHm ngton's sh pb: Iding p;og-am !«-
256e5f1b78ee0bb1f64f2e36943482d4 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1914.001369831304 39.623709 -77.41082 Morse. For a long while I thought she\nwas right. It was really pitiful to see\nLemuel. He didnt have no more lib-\nerty nor will of his own than a five-\nyear-old boy, and not so much. Mehit-\nable wouldnt let him do this and that,\nand If there was anythin he wanted to\ndo, she was set against It, and he'd al-\nways give right In. Manys the time\nLemuel has run over to my house, and\nhis wife come racin to the fence and\nscreamed after him to come home, and\nhed start up as scared as he could be.\nAnd manys the time Ive been In\nthere, and he started to go out, and\nshed tell him to set down, and hes\nset without a murmur.\nMehitable she bought all his clothes,\nan she favored long-tailed coats, and\nhe bein such a short man never\nlooked well In em, and she wouldnt\nlet him have store shirts and collars,\nbut made them herself, and she didnt\nhave very good patterns, she used her\n old ones, and he wasnt no\nsuch built man as Lemuel, and I know\nhe suffered everything, both In his\npride an, his feellne. Lemuel began\nto look real downtrod. He didnt seem\nlike half such a man as he did, and the\nqueerest thing about It was: Mehlt-\nable didnt 'pear to like the work of\nher own hands, so to speak.\nOne day she talked to me about It.\n“I dunno what tls,” said she, "but\nLemuel he dont seem to have no go\nahead and no ambition and no will of\nhis own. He tries to please me, but\nit dont seem as If he had grit enough\neven for that. Sometimes I think he\naint well, but I dunno what alls him.\nIve been real careful of him. Hes\nworn thick flannels, and hes had\nwholesome victuals; I aint never let\nhim have pie. \n“Lemuel was always dreadful fond\nof pie,” said I. I felt kind of sorry, for\n,1 remembered how fond poor Lemuel\n'bad always been of mothers plea, and
10750bbd2848f57b160c77f99ce335d5 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.4726027080162 40.441694 -79.990086 Dear Sie Referring to Tour request\nmade to me during the trial of the Starr\n'case, that I should, after consultation with\nMr. Wcyman, inform you what additional\nprecautions ought to be adopted by the Penn-\nsylvania Company to protect the public at\nthe Federal street crossing in Allegheny,\nand your assurance that you would use your\ninfluents to have the same adopted, allow\nme respectfully to submit that Federal street\nis the most crowded thoroughfare in Alle-\ngheny, and every reasonable precaution to\nprevent danger to life and limb should be\nused at that crossing. At present, however,\ntrainmen are not required to give any notice\nwhatever of the approach of trains gojng\nu est on your company's lines, but the put\nlie, are compelled to gain their knowledge of\nsuch approach from two gatemen, who, on\nAccount of their positions, because they\nthemselves have not had timely warning\nthereof may not know that a train is ap- -\nproacuing in time to warn me puoiic or ex-\nclude them from the track. It some-\ntimes happens that by reason of crowds\nof pedestrians, vehicles and street cars,\nupon or crossing over the tracks, the\nview of these watchmen is so obscured that\nthey may not see a train until the danger is\nimminent, and it is too late to avert an acci-\ndent; and these causes may be aggravated\nby darkness or other unfavorable conditions,\nand it is of the utmost importance that these\ntwo watchmen, to whom is committed the\nfearful responsibility ot guarding the lives\nof the tens of thousands who daily pass and\nrepass their gates, should be warfcd by\nevery contrivance for safety known in rail-\nroad management.
3fb1788c3cfc1c2211ba175aa41b8f4c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.4139343946063 44.939157 -123.033121 ed up the Santiam on Saturday, and\nplayed to smaller but not low ap-\npreciative audiences. The first stop,\nat Mill City, did not stop the cawmlHs,\nbut a gool crowd met the .candidates,\nthe candidates being all introduced,\nJimmlo Culver setting the soda water\nfor all hands, and Hat Patton gave a\nfree exhibition In the magic black art,\nto the delight of tho audience At\nGates T. B. Kay gave the Judicial tick-\net a great boost, and did not entirely\noverlook himself and tho re3t of tho\nboys on the ticket with him. Ho bat-to- d\nHuckensteln's wild pitching clear\nagainst tho the sldo of tho Cascade\nmountain. Grant Corby was the next\nspeaker, and Ccrby closed tho dobate.\nGraham mado a good speech, faying\nthat ho had worked in an Iron foundry\nat 10 years of age, had artorward\nlearned the carponter trade, and \nInterests wero with tho worklngmen\nand farmers. His earnest manner of\nexpressing himself Is very pleading to\nmost of his hearers, and he makes\nfriends for himself and the ticket.\nCulver made his maiden speech ill re-\ngard to tho Santiam bridge approach,\nand answered Corby attack on Scott\ncomplotoly. Jlmmie has surveyed land\nfor half tho farmers in the county,\nand his word has never been ques-\ntioned on a matter of fact relating to\nhis profession. Scott closed tho dis-\ncussion when tho bases wero filled\nwith men, and brought them In with\na satisfactory hit in tho unprotected\nflold of the enemy. As ho was finish-\ning his story tho train whistled, and\ntho candidates mado a wild 2:41 rush\nfor the train, which was their last\nchanco to get back Into the valley.\nScore 1 to 0 In favor of Murphy's gi-\nants.
30e134570842a1a579d40e4b5c0dbed6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.2534246258244 39.261561 -121.016059 Unless tbe seceding Slates can be induced\no act with moderation upon the question of\ndavery they may rouse a feeling of indig-\nnation and horror in Great Britain which\nwill overpower all consideration of material\ninterest. Of ibis many of their leading\nmen in tbe present movement do not seem\nto be aware. Some of them even talk\nopenly of reviving the African 6lave trade.\nAn attempt actually to do this would, it\nmay be supposed be at once put down by\nthe united force ot the Northern States, of\nGreat Britain and of civilized Europe. But,\non tbe other hand, it might be extremely\ndifficult to bring any of the slavcbolding\nStates to renounce, in principle, tbe right\nof trading in negroes, or induce them to\nenter into any treaty on the\nsubject. Any such engagement would be\nregarded by them as an admission that they\nwere in the wrong on the question on\nwhich their contest with the North has so\nInflamed their passions that they have lost\neight of all reason. How could they bind\nthemselves not to extend to larger numbers\nof Africans the blessings of the institution\nof American slavery, which they hold to be\nordained of God for tbe happiness and im-\nprovement of the negro race? It is to be\nipprebended that we shall have very con*\ninferable difficulty in placing our relations,\nSommeicial or political, on a satisfactory\nfooting with a people imbued with such\nsentiments, immense as is the importance\nto us of procuring a cheap and abundaut\nlupply of their staple commodity.
4a750be47068da29b15a208cc1bb140c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.2397259956874 58.275556 -134.3925 The Wrangell Sentinel says Mr. G\nA. Singer, superintendent of the Olym¬\npic mines, arrived up on the Jefferson,\nSaturday evening, after an absence\nbelow of several months. Mr. Singer\nbrought with him sufficient money to\nliquidate in part the obligations of the\ncompany at this place, and in a few\nweeks he hopes to have enough to pay\nin full all the debts of the corporation.\nBy the first of June it i9 their intention\nto have the mines at Woedsky in full\noperation, and push the work with a\nlarge force of men, and continue the\nsame. Under the new organization the\ncompany is receiving the fullest meas¬\nure of confidence and enconragrnent.\nMr Singer goes from hero to White-\nhorse, to start a development work for\nsome.parties, and expects to return to\nWrangell inside of thirty days. Of\ncourse we are all pleased to see him\nback in this country again, and are-\npleased to know that the Olympic will,\nsoon start up again.\nThe gold output for the winter of\n1001-5 on the Seward peninsula will be-\nmore than double that of any previous-\nyear, many conservative miners-\nstate that it will be three fold, says the-\nNome Gold Digger. The facts and fig¬\nures are very easy to ascertain of the-\noutput. to date, and with the winter's-\nwork now in progress and the recent\nfinds chronicled it may easily reach the-\nlatter estimate. In our own district in\npast years we figured simply on the out¬\nput of gold from Dexter, Dry aud por¬\ntions of Anvil creek and a few scatter¬\ning streams. Today-little is heard of\nthe old mines, although they are addiug\nthousands of dollars daily to the world's\nwealth. New finds have beeu made, of\nfabulous richness, and while the old\nnames will never be forgotten, the\ncreeks now in the public eye are Little,\nCenter, Wonder, Moonlight, Peluk aud\nthe old beach line, which is one long,\nglitteringstreak of gold from far west\nof Nome to beyond Cape Nome. The\nreports come from outlying districts\nof the peninsula that more winter work\nis being done than ever before. The\nbenches of Candle creek are lined with\nwinter dumps, and, farther to the west,\nthe Kuruk and lumachuck are scenes
272abb3ed0a96a45e04dc4cc46dcf6f1 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.252732208814 40.735657 -74.172367 Governor Harmon, of Ohio, had sought to win popularity in\nNew Jersey a compelling sentiment would exist today to make\nhis candidacy lead all others in this State. The Ohio Governor\nhas made no canvass, but modestly remains at home attending to\nhis State duties. Yesterday he headed the delegation of Governors\nthat appeared before the Fnited States Supreme Court to protest\nagainst the decision of a federal court which, in the opinion of\nthese Governors, trespassed dangerously upon the sovereign rights\nof the States. That wan a State and national duty altogether\napart from any campaign movement. As Governor of a State\nin the Middle West Harmon's personality since the present Congress\nconvened in special session last spring has not been brought as\nprominently before the country as that of Speaker Clark. The\nman who occupies the position of speaker of the House of Repre-\n focuses the national attention. There is only one figure\nat Washington more prominent, that of the President. And the\nHouse over which Speaker Clark presides has been given duties and\nresponsibilities more important than any House of Representatives\nsince the close of the great Civil War. Questions are presented to\nthis Congress as important as those out of which grew the Civil\nWar. A Speaker like Joseph E. Cannon, dominating the House\nand in absolute personal control of legislation, would treat those\nquestions from one single standpoint, namely, the special interests.\nAnd committees appointed by him and under his thumb would\nstrangle any measure that popular sentiment might force Congress\nto pass, if it should be reported. The record of the present House\nof Representatives under Speaker Clark is flawless. The conduct\nof the Speaker has won universal admiration. He is a people's\ntribune.
19c64c153fd8d54ce61e1e746de7f37d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.5724043399616 41.004121 -76.453816 competent engineers,\nThe Ilclknap ense hnngs fire on account\nof tho Indisposition of 0110 of tho managers\nnnu 01 uarpenter or tho defense. Tlio testi-\nmony of Evans, wnlch was deemed of so\nmuch consequence that tho trial was adioui li\ned to await his coiulng,did nnt really change\ntbe(bcarings of thocaso In any particular.\nIt only wont to confirm Marsh, nnd might\nliavo been dispensed witli without detriment\nto Justice. Tho evidence is all in and it was\nvoted to rcstmio tho consideration of the case\non Wednesday. Mr. Illnir lias already made\na portion of his opening argument, and it\ndoes not seem that it will occupy moro than\na very few days more, nlthough it if general\nly supposed that tho defendant's counsel will\nmake elaborate nnd protrncted pleas. What\nthose benntors who volcd against their juris-\ndiction going to do when n final vote is\nreached is .1 conundrum npt easy to solve.\nTho lolief is'unhisitntincly expressed in\nDemocratic circles that'tho evidence against\nKobeson, mountains high, warrants his im-\npeachment, and it wns supposed thnt imme-\ndiate steps in that direction would hnvo beeu\ntnken. Hut prompted by judicial fairness,\nthe testimony ns taken may he submitted to\ntho judiciary committee for tho opinion of\ntho eminent lawyers partly composing it ns\nto that ollicial's amenability to that method\nor punishment Tor violation of law. Two\nmembers of the Cabinet on trial nt the same\ntime would bo a refreshing spectacle to the\nmembers of the party of "moral ideas."\nThe matter of making silver a legal tender\nis being warmly discussed here nt the capi-\ntal anil the disposition to restore it to its old\nplaco is wide-sprea-
0484bf9038f2e12f2d9ca26829419f6f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1900.278082160071 41.004121 -76.453816 Impounded and advertised by the nigh rw\nsubln, for which services he shall reivirptta\namount set forth In his fee bill, psynbip tft\nowner of the animal, or animals so ltnpnun4,j\nor out of tho proceeds of tho sain tlieroof. J,\nfho owner appear before the expiration of fr,\ndays and pay all charges as herein contain\nthey may reniovo tho anlrrnl or animals, tiid'\ncharges shall be as they appear in the (v\nstables fee bill together with twenty.(7,\ncents for tho use nf the Borough. The'iiii\nConstable In his advertisement giving tencUji\nnotice to the Impounding of any anlmui ctr\nshall add tho tlmo and place of salo nf srn-- t\nanimals etc., Impounded, which may be on th\novenlng of said tenth day and not later t ria\ntho eleventh day, unless that should fun o,\nSunday, when the Bale shall take place on tn6\nfollowing Monday. The proceeds of RiMuat,\nshall be appropriated as follows: All the atn,\nmentioned charges shall first bo paid, tnnw\nwith tho fee of tho High Constable for selling,\nas per fee bill,' and the shall be p.nj\nInto the Borough Treasury for the use nf tli\nowner, If demanded within six months jrnr\nthe sale: tr not demanded witnin said time theg\nthe sum shall belong to the Borough absolute,\nly. Furthermore It Is hereby made the diitror\nHigh Constable, under penalty of one dniiur tor\nneglect of duty, if called upon to Impound my\nanimal etc., running at largo In the streets or\nalleys of said Borough contrary to the ord-\ninances thereof.\nSection 3. That It shall bo unlawful forbevs\nor other persons to congregate around or out -s i-\nof auy building whero a meeting, a the.\nutrlcul exhibition, or any other congregation u\nassembled and there make a nolsu or chu4\ndisturbance, or tor persons to so make a noise\nor cause disturbance within such huiidtnc\nwhen Buch meeting, theatrical exhibition ot\nother congregation Is In session, niid tli\nsame Is hereby declared to bo a nuisance; and\nany person convicted before the Chief Hun .-'v-\nof a violation of this Ordlnunco shall pay a nn\nof five dollars together with the costs.
05ea652d556cd175a32426fea97d5775 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.6150684614408 29.4246 -98.49514 Mans Held now asks for money tn com\nplete the work so well begun. It would\nseem then an easy mailer lo get tho\nnecessary appropriation by Congres ;\nhut when we consider that the selfish In-\nterests of some large railroad monopolies\narc opposed to deep water here; that\nothir pons are jealoun of the growing\nImportance or Aransas Past as it threat-\nens their coininen e; Hint these Intercuts\nendeavor to defeat u liberal appro\npriation if money and lobhj lug can do It,\nwc must realize that Col. .Manslleld needs\nthe indorsement and assistance of tho\npeople and ol every member of Congress\nIroin Texas. The Importance of the\nwork to the Slnte's prosperity and devel-\nopment for deep woter here means\nboth demands Ihat the united efforts ol\nIts people and Congressmen should bo\n Tho Caller has advocated tho\nImprovement ot Aronsns 1'nss from the\nbeginning, knowlsg that It could he\naccomplished for lens money and more\nspecilly than nt any other point on the\ngulf coast. Wo call now on Iho people\nof Texas and our able Congreasincn to\nexert themselves In Its behuirnt the next\nCongress. It Is understood thai Con-\ngressman ( rain will visit Corpus ChrUtl\nand Aransas l'ass soon to examine the\nwork, and Iho Caller trusts our peopla\nwill sec that he gets nil Hie liitonnntloii\nwnntul. Invite Congressmen .Miller,\nlayers and others, nnd Benulors Coko\nand JIaxcy to Jolnhliu here, say early In\nSeptember. Let n big excursion or the\npeople and Congressmen bo made to the\nl'ass that all may sen what has been\naccomplished. We must bo up and doing\nIf we wish success."
4d0d9b2baeab21559ba9835234cc0c0d THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.1571037935134 40.114955 -111.654923 Prices of metals arc higher at the\npresent time than they were In time In\ndustrial depression that followed the\npanic of 1893 In February 1894 the\naverage prico of copper was 90 cents\nlead was 331 zinc 385 per pound\nand sliver stood at 05 cents per ounce\nToday they arc 131A 375 480 and\n571 respectively\nThe Mary Ellen Mining company\nfiled articles of Incorporation wltt\nthe secretary of state of Utah last\nweek The company which Is an\nAmerican Fork concern is capitalized\nfor 100000 In shares valued at 1G\ncents and the Incorporators are H D\nBoleyCDHanksTMAllmanW\nS Nocdmah and W C Boley\nDuring 1907 the Daly West Mfnlng\ncompany of Park City treated or\nshipped 24850 dry tons of ore Ol\ncrude ore there wore 8521 tons\nwhich produced 213001 pounds of cop\n 2289598 pounds of lead 3U05U\nounces gold and 307531 ounces silver\namounting to 24295957 net The to-\ntal production amounted to 771079\nSalt Lakers arc opening up a prop ¬\nerty two miles west of Palisade Ne-\nvada that Is showing up splendidly\nFrom tho work In the shaft now\ndown fifty feet they extracted a Hfty\nton lot of oro carrying sliver and lead\nthat will average anywhere from 18\nto 100 per ton The entire face of\ntho tunnel Is in oro that will average\nIn tho vicinity of 40 per cent lead\nAfter a rather prolonged yet most\ninteresting and spirited session time\nMontana Mining association perfected-\nits organization and adjourned to\nmeet at Helena a year hence The\nchief business of the gathering was\ntho adoption of resolutions expressing\nfear that unless an Independent smel-\nter
067946f32f56f2a2440704ecee2c345d THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.9410958587011 40.419757 -77.187146 THIS ttlTN will bft printed every flay rtnriwr the\nyear to come. Ttn purpose and method will bethewime\nhh in the jawt ; To present nil the uewn iu a readable\nahai'e, and to till the truth thoiiKh the heavens fall.\nTHE BUN hat been, in, and will continue, to he in-\ndependent ot everybody and every thiiw pave the truth\nand itn own convietimiH of duty. That in the only no.\nicy an honed newspaper need have. That in the policy\nwhich nan won for this newn paper the confidence ana\nfriendship of a wider constituency than was ever\nby ny other American Journal.\nTHE HUN is the. newspaper for the ieople. It In not\nfor the rich man avufnpt the poor man, or for the poor\nman against the rich man, put it secka to do equal Jus-\ntice to all iuierests in commnuity. It is not the n\nof any person, clans, sect or party. There need be\nnn mystery about its loves and hates. It is for the hon-\nest man atraiuct the rogues every time. It is for the\nhonest Democrat as avainst the dishonest Republican,\nand for ihe houest Republican as aKainst the dishonest\nDemocrat. It doea not talte its cue from the utterances\nof any politician or political organization. It wives its\nsupport unreservedly when men or mensuren are in\nagreement with the Constitution and with the prinet-pip- s\nupon which this Republic was founded for the\npeople. Whenever the CotiHtitution and constitutional\nprinciple!, are violated as in the outrageous conspira-\ncy of lh7ti, by which a man not elected was placed in the\nPresident's oiUce, where he utill remnins ft speaks out\nfor the riwht. That is THE tiUK'S idea of indopen-deuce-
2d48ca3b208fd4ac4655fd16eb493eac DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.9986301052766 44.939157 -123.033121 army is up toward Perlepe fighting the\nBulgarians back from this town that\nwe are in and if the Serbians are mov-\ning hay and flour back to Monastir\nfrom their front it looks as if they were\ngetting ready to fall Dack to this point.\nThe creaking of these carts from\nPerlepe secretly gladdens more than one\nheart in Monastir. There are many Bul-\ngarians in this town. Until the previous\nBalkan war three years ago, Monastir\nand all the southern part of present\nSefbia was part of Bulgaria. The Bul-\ngarian and Serbian allies quarreled and\nthe Serbians took Monastir.\nMost of the people hero speak Bul-\ngarian, were educated in Bulgarian\nschools and the history they learned\nto consider most glorious is the history\nof Bulgaria. There are . perhaps 20\nSorbian families in Monastir. The popu-\nlation is 40,000 . The rich Serbians havo\n the poor ones are ready to go.\nLet them but hear that the Bulgarians\nare near and they will fear their neigh-\nbors before the Bulgarian soldiers come.\nThe Serbians do not permit the Bul-\ngarian here to have arms.\nThere is a price of $24 on the head of\nevery Bulgarian eomitadjl, dead or\nalive, caught in Monastir. Within the\nlast four weeks Dr. Luikhart, of Phila-\ndelphia, has conducted autopsies on 15\nmen killed win Monastir. Every dead\nman was supposed to have been a Bul-\ngarian comitadji.\nThe intrigues of the Bio Grande bord-\ner are as simple as two times two com-\npared with the complications of Bul-\ngarian and Serbian coniitadjism here.\nNo one trusts anyone in Monastir. The\nfew Serbian officials rule with an iron\nhand. Two weeks ago the Serbians\nordered that any person who refused to\nchango a
1750f627fbda843081f43c005f62c983 THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.8671232559614 39.768333 -86.15835 A Disgusted Doo. A curiou railroad ac-\ncident occurred at Clinton, Conn., a few days\nago. An express train was approaching, when\na cow, annoved by a small dog, dashed on to\nthe rails. When the train had passed, the cow\nlav with her head cut off ; ar.d the little dog,\nwith hi tail cut off, sat between the rail look-\ning at the retiring cars with a face Indicativ e\nof the most intense astonishment and disgust.\nThe Scientific American mentions a new\ndesisrn for small coins, which consists in mak-\ning them in the form of the numeral of the de-\nnomination they represent, as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. By\nthis device all confusion in the use of the coins,\neven in the darkest night, will beavolded; but\nit is a nuestion whether they not soon\npunch holes in the pockets.\nWE publish in another column the prospec-\ntus of the Indianapolis Daily and Weekly\nHerald. It will be remembered that the Sen\ntinel was sold out, a short time since, when it j\nwas announced bv the Journal that the Demo\ncracy of Indiana would hav e no central organ ;\nbut we are pleased to inform our readers that\nthe Sintinel comes out under a new name,\ndress, editor and proprietor. The simple an-\nnouncement that the Hon. Samuel L. Perkins\nwill wield the pen editorial, will be sufficient\nto materially increase the subscription list of\nthe Herald. We ask our Democratic friends;\nto sustain the proprietors in their new enter-\nprise, by subscribing lib rally, and we assure\nthem they will receive a live paper. Decatur\nLa'jle.
29647bf130f1ff50e292c77a76afb07d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1868.561475378213 41.004121 -76.453816 Congress from tho St. Louis district,\nover Mr. Kennett, who hail defeated\nColonel Kenton two years before. In\n18.)7 ho delivered an elaboralo speech in\ntlio Houso of Representatives In favor\nof colonizing tho black population of\nthu United States in Central America.\nMr. Klalr was also an editor and writer\nin tho Missouri Democrat at ono time.\nTho father of General Klalr was a firm\nand fast friend of Andrew Jackson; thu\nGeneral when a child was wont to play\non tho knees of Andrew Jackson In tho\nWhlto Houso His father was at that\ntime editor of tlio (7oic, in Welling-\nton. In 1800 Mr. Klalr contested tho\nseat In Qpngress of Mr. Knrrett, from\ntlio St. Louis District, and soon after\nwas returned to tho House, after which\nhu resigned his .scat. In ISOU General\nKlalr mado a speech In Krooklyn in fa-\nvor of Mr. Lincoln for tho Presidency,\nand also dollvcred a speech at tho Me-\ntropolitan Hotel, In this city, June,\n1801, In favor of strong war measures,\nhinting that General Scott was rather a\nslow campaigner. Mr, Klalr was very\nnssiduous in raising volunteers in St.\nLouis, and was tlio first volunteer oftliu\nStato of Missouri. Hu raised thu Vlrst\nlteglmont of Missouri Volunteers, and\nacted as its Colonel, albeit ho did not\nhold a commission as Colonel of tho\nregiment. A difficulty aroso between\nColonel Klalr and General Fremont,\nand Colonel Klalr was unjustly placed\nunder arrest by that officer, who was\ncommander of that department. This\narbitrary ineasuro of General Fremont's\naroused great excitement in St. Louis,\nwliero Genornl Klalr was universally\nknown and respected, tho journals of\nthat city taking part In tTfe nuarrol at\ntho time. President Lincoln ordered\nColonel Klalr to bo released from arrest\nin September, lOl, thureby causing a\ngreat feeling of relief to tho numerous\nfriends of Colonel Klalr In St. Louis.\nIIo was again arrested by General Fre\nmont, but finally released after
8adbf96c711aed800c9b4c49da954e15 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.1027396943175 41.681744 -72.788147 Now York, Feb. 7 UP) Speculators\nfor the advance continued in control\nof the price movement in today's\nstock market despite the uneasiness\ncaused by the strained Wheeling &\nLake Erie situation, and sporadic\nbear attacks against a few special-\nties. Chief speculative interest in the\nrailroad group shifted from the low\npriced carriers to the dividend pay-\ners while the industrial list was fea-\ntured by a sharp run up of 4 points\nin Hudson Motors.\nExcept for a few extra dividends\non oil shares and a readjustment of\nsteel prices here to conform to re-\ncent price cuts in the steel districts,\nthere was little in th eday's new to\ninfluence the price movement. Tho\nmonthly tonnage statement of the U.\nS. Steel Corporation due Thursday,\n expected to show a decreaso of\nabout 100,000 tons in unfilled orders.\nThe predicament of the "shorts"\nin Wheeling & Lake Erie common\nwas strikingly illusfrated by the\npremium of $5 a share a day, the\nhighest In the history of the ex-\nchange, which was charged for the\nloan of the stock and an extreme\ngain of 15 points in the stock, which\ntouched a new high record at 95, as\nagainst a low of 27 2 last year.\nDirectors of the road today authori-\nzed the conversion into common of\nthe prior lien and preferred stocks,\nthen adjourned until later In the dy\nwithout Indicating what arrange-\nments had been made to bring this\nabout, as there is no authorized com-\nmon stock outstanding for this pur-\npose.
0c27f71badbdfef039a98b2764c83c4e THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.4494535202894 37.305884 -89.518148 Sax Francisco, June 6. The passen\ngers by the steamer Peru, which ar-\nrived yesterday morning from China\nand Japan, report that the black\nplague is gaining alarming propor-\ntions in the orient. The disease is\nspreading in all quarters, and com-\nmunication with many places is en-\ntirely cut off. The Japanese officials\nare doing all in their power to kep\nthe disease out of that country, and so\nfar seem to have met with success.\nThey have adopted strong measures of\nquarantine, aud all incoming vessels\nare being thoroughly disinfected.\nThe Peru was held at Nagasaki sev-\neral days in quarantine. On the voy\nage from Hong Kong one of the Chi-- ;\nnese passengers was taken sick and\ndeveloped a strong symptom of chol-\nera. He lived bat a short time, \nbefore Nagasaki was readied, lie was\nuried atsea 2J0 miles from port.\nWhen the Peru sailed from Yoko-\nhama the plague had made its appear-\nance in Formosa. Up to May 10 there\nhad been 30 cases of the disease at\nAmpitig, and of these 20 had been fa-\ntal. The disease also broke out am ng\nthe Japanese .soldiers on the island,\nbut there had been few fatalities.\nThe disease generally seems, to con-\nfine itself to the natives, few foreign-\ners being attacked.\nWiien the Peru left Yokohama, it\nwas reported that the Occidental and\nOrieutal steamer Coptic, due here next\nweek, was being held at Nagasaki. It\nis said a Chinese who was lauded from\nher had developed all the symptoms of\nthe plague aud died the day after\nlauding.
078f4e814eaca584ca536b9dee3678da THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1882.878082160071 41.004121 -76.453816 Rev. E . H. Yocum of Willlamsport,\noutdated nnd tied tho nuptial knot. The\naltar of the church was beautifully and\ntastefully decorated with Mowers and\nevergreens, which added beauty to tho\nscene. After tho ceremony the bridal party,\nfollowed by the numerous guests, proceed\ned to tho house of the bride's parents,\nwhere, after the usual congratulations tho\nviands were placed upon tho hundred and\none tables arranged about tho various rooms\nfor the occasion, and tho bridal party nnd\ntill, consisting of about 27A persons did\nample justice to the delicacies, and not until\nlate in the night did the welkin cease ring.\nIng. Quito n good ninny were present from\nabroad amongst whom wero Ida Vander- -\nsllce, Philadelphia i Minnie Stone, North\numberland Leoru Brown, Willlamsport j\nMiss Mury Cleaver, Ashland Edith Barton,\nLime Rldgo ( Miss Stiickhouse, Shlck.\nshinny Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lucas, Wll\nllamsport ( Mr. and Mrs. S. Hogg, William\nsport ; Mr. and Mrs. Kllugor, Milton ; Mr.\nand Mrs. Brobst, Willlamsport i Levi Gann,\nJames Denworth, Esq., Willlamsport j Mrs.\nEzra locum, WllllHinsporU\n great many cicgunt presents wero re\neelved by the brldo of which tho following\nIs a partial list : Domestic Sewing Ma-\nchine, foot rest, sowing chulr, walnut sldo\nboard, silver tea set, plcltlo castors, butter\ndishes, egg caster, tablu castor, Individual\ncastors, table spoons, tea spoons, knives,\nforks, soup ladU, fruit stand, cako knife,\nbutter knives, caso desert spoons, toilet\ncases, sconce and card receiver, perfume\ncases, tin toilet set, chamber suit, china\nlollet set, statuary, oil painting, steel en\ngraving, Ininlly bibles, glovo and haudker.\nchief case, whisk nnd holder, glass ten set,\ncomplete, bronze statue, pair silver napkin\nrings, set crackle ware, parlor stove, chlim\ndinner set, large parlor lamp, pin cushions,\nglass cako dishes, sliver cako dish, silver\nJewel case, bridal cake, silver card re\ncelver, dozen china fruit plates, hand\npainted, set brass candle sticks, china fruit\ndishes, pair vases, placques, pair toilet per-\nfume buttles, pair glass sauce dishes, silver\ntoilet mirror, Ice tea set, dozen ground\nglass tumblers, tidies, Turkish doyles,\nTurkish nig, 4J dozen napkins, towels,\ncounterpane, linen table spreads, lint Irons,\nimsKet cut llowers,
4c1489c67fa214efb70f481765632758 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5931506532218 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent nnd thinking person must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well tested expe-\ni fence in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian whose preparatory study fits him for all the\nduties lie must fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor tiostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest In the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways Injurious. The unfortunate should he par.\nTtct hAtt in selecting hts physician, as it is a lament-\nable vet incontrovertible tact that many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nbv mn! treatment, from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a point generally conceded\nbv the best syphilographers, that the study and man-\nagement ofthese complaints should engrossthc whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir comonlv pursues one.system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used by thesypli-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume Herman, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Peter\nFunk “institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J . C. YOUNG\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysiciun in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 761 Clay street, opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom9a.m..todr.m.
076d6e6e3f2bcb341be0551e1859ad74 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1891.8123287354135 37.305884 -89.518148 separator goods, which sells for 2c to te per\n1U mors than gathered cream butter. Ha\npays 60e per 1 0 for August milk, ttc for July\nluc for cream that make 1 lb. of butter.\nIt coat Be per lb. to collect cream ; marketa\nbutter in New Tork, Baltimore and Atlanta;\nhas quite a local trade; selling now at 20e.\nla doing a satisfactory business both for\nhimself and patrons; is anxious to co-\noperate with other creameries: baa shipped\nIn several carload of Holsteln and Jersey\ncows, and la doing all ha can to advance the\ndairy interests.\nsorbu. Cirr. Vebxos CotrsTT Schell City\nButter and Cheese Co. Butter nd eheeaa\ncombined; cost, $5.94 for entire plant;\ncapacity. 12 .000 lbs. per day; started May I.\ntssa, ran s day and closed fo. of milk ;\nwere losing money en what they did get;\nL330 Iba most milk received any day; war\npaying 5e per 109 lb, for that Started\nagain ia Mar. 1". and ran till July, par as\n(0 to (te per 100 lb. At this tiros aereral ol\nthe best pstrone war bonding cow barn\nand getting cows, but, about tbe time they\nwera ready to sell, the factory closed. Las\nfall they again tried to start the taetory. not\nonly ran for two weeks; bar. some of tha\nelteeae yet Bad management from begin\nnlng to end. It would be a very bard ma '.\nter to get the factory started again. Owner\noffer to donate tba entire plant to an ex- -\nperienced man who will pledge IVulself to\nrun it for tlpei or mora year.
03c55804bb89d50a434626dc2e8cabcc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 seem an interminable maze of billow?\nscenic splendor. To the north across\nthe 8olwsy, those sweet old shires,\nwherein Burns lived, sang and die<'.,\nspread their snnny dales, even their\nsrery fields and homes, to vtow, senti-\nleled by hoary Oriflel, at 6olway side,\nind blend into pnrples and grays along\nhe range of misty bills behind*\nThere is another matchless panorama\nhat with the eye of fancy and the heart <\n)t memory can be seen and felt from 1\nTim old fikiddaw's heights. The eyes <\naist with tears as they trace the saflrony 1\n(olway and recall the straggles and end'\ness trsgedy of that mighty heart that\niroke in the bitter light, and is now at\n>eace beneath the mausoleum in old i\n)nmfries town; while every true man *\nbat lives pays tender tribute to the <j\naemory of Robert Burns. The melan* ^\nholy Gray, author of the "Elegy," on 11\n>ot and with the toy, the Claude- 1\n<orrAine glass in band, in the autumn a\nf 17G9, wandered past Skiddaw in his c\njar ol uiscovery, wnico nisi opens i mo '\nyes of Eoglana to tbe beauties of the »\nuibrian Lakes, and mado It possible "\n>r all tho bolt that followed to knov *\nieir inspiration. Here, at your feet in e\nId Keswick town, dwelt, sang and lies "\nnried in Oiosatbwaitechaich-yard sear\nte mnrmnrings of the river Greta he so »\nired, that high-souled poet of pensive C\nimembrance and meditative calm, 1,1\nobertSouthey. Here, too, tbe unhappy c]\nolerldge passed the most fruitful, >\nlough still the most miserable, years of '<\nis baleful slavery to a deadly drug, bi\nrside him, is tbls wraith procession of\nitellectnal genii of the Lake region, £\nipears that one who of ail English\nes ol letters existed in the dream-life\nadnees of opium, Thomas Ds Quincy.\nown therein one of Keswick's
12cbe38677be5752f644436c86996dc9 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1900.705479420345 33.031451 -111.387343 its stock and bouds and the stocks mid bonds\nof other corporations; to estuhlish and\ncarry on agencies, otlices. storage tanks and\nhouses, aud to sell article und products\nmanufactured by itself, or other persons or\ncorporations, in Arizona, California and\nother states und territories of the United\nStates and foreign countries; to construct,\nmaintain, own and operate its own line of\nrailroad from iu property to the nearest\nconnecting rail point for the purpose of\ntransporting freight and the products of\nsaid company to and from its property ; also\nto construct, own, maintain and operate its\nown telegraph and telephone lines, and\nsuch other means of rapid communication\nas may now or hereafter be in existence for\nthe purpose of facilitating or aiding in the\nconvenient transaction of the Company's\nbusiness, and to do and perform all things\nnecessary to transact tue tin airs anu nusi-ncs - ti\nof the corporation, within and without\nthe Territory of Arizona, and requisite and\nproper for purpose of carrying out all\nor unvof the object herein sijeciticd.\nARTICLE 3. i he amount of capital tock\nshall be the sum of three hundred thou-\nsand (300.000.UO) dollars, divided intotrtree\nliuudied thousand shares (oUi',l Hj of the\npar value of one dollar each, which\ncapital stock, when issued, must be fully\nicnd in nuh or nrtioertv im:tn issuance of\nthe same, and shall forever be\nfor any purpose whatever, and the same\nshall be issued at such times and upon such\nconditions as may ie prescribed by the\nboard of directors, and said directors are\nhereby authorized, to issue any or all of\nsaid stock, fully paid and nou assessable,\nupon the couditiou of the transfer to this\ncorporation of property, or rights in prop-\nerty, of any description, which suid corpora-\ntion is hereby authorized to acquire, own\nand deal in, and each certificate of stock\nshall state upon its face the number of\nshares represented thereby, and that the\nsume is forever
2d5a7d7ca449cd2bdcd0d8bde7e3e30a PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1913.987671201167 39.456253 -77.96396 It is reported that we are to hold our\nsession in the basement of >» church of\nthe W. Va. Conference. It is further\nreported that the present pastor had an\ninvitation recalled to a lecture to be\ngiven in said W. Va. Conference after\nthe said church learned that he is a\ncolored man. Owintr to these changep\nmuch discussion ha«< risen about the\nwisdom of holding the conference in\nthe laid Charleston. Two conditions\nface us, the delicacy on the part of\nSimpson church notifying us of the\nchanged conditions mariner them una.\nble to entertain us. and the impropriety\nof us seeking another place without be-j\nin* so notified. In view of the above\nreported conditions, the Baltimore\nPreachers' Meeting requested the writer\nto write the pastor at Charleston for in¬\nformation. The was sent the\nsam§ day reqne^tpd, December 2nd. to\nsaid pastor. Threw weeks have elapsed,\nand no answer from Charleston has\nbeen received yet. vSince writing for\n¦aid information. Asburv, Annapolis.\nlearning of our supposed dilemma hap\nalmost unanimously invited the confer¬\nence there. Two conditions fane us po-\ning to Charleston and b« "jimcrowed"\nin the basement of a white church.be\nhumiliated in the sieht, of other colored\ndenominations bv being thus "jim-\ncrowed." Shall we go where the pastor\nin these changed conditioner since its\nelection bv the D. S .'s, refuses to tell us\nwhat we may mept by way of entertain¬\nment? We ought to know what condi-\njtions we will meet if we go, or we\nought to know the conditions so that if\nwe go the responsibly will rest on us,
0bd2fb71f57a8fc3f0cabc40dabba17e THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1907.2561643518518 40.114955 -111.654923 Boris and Jorlan nodded There was\nno difficulty about that\nGood they said together as of old\nListen then Theresa went on\nYou know and I know that unless\nquick succor come the city Is doomed\nYou are men and soldiers and whether-\nye make an end amid tho din of battle-\nor escape for this time la a matter\nwherewith yo do not trouble your\nminds till tho time comes But for me\nbe It known to you that J am the wid¬\now of Henry the Lion of Kernsberg\nMy son Maurice Is the true heir to tho\nDukedom Yet being bound by an oath\nsworn to the man who made mo his\nwife I have never claimed the throno\nfor him But now Joan his sister\nknows and out of her great heart silo\nswears that she will give up tho\nDuchy to him If therefore city Is\ntaken the Muscovite will slay my Bon\nslay him by their hellish tortures as\nthey have sworn to do for tho despite\nho put upon Prince Ivan And his wife\ntho Princess Margaret will die of grief\nwhen they carry her to Moscow to\nmake a bride of a widow Joan will bo-\na prisoner Conrad either dead or a\npriest and Kernsberg the heritage of\nHenry the Lion n fief of the Czar\nThere Is no help In any Your Prince\nwould succor but It fakes time to raise\nthe country and long ere he can cross\ntho frontier tho Russian will have\nworked his will In Courtland Now I\nseo a waya womans way And It I\nfall In the doing of It wellI but go\nto meet him for the sake of whoso\nchildren I freely give my lire In this\nbear me witness
06d2c0f4c7cd0f8f1b3c2721c4094fcc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.664383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 Martin's Furry wore a regular Fourth ot\nJuly appearance last ovenlug in order to\nproperly celebrate the arrival ot natural\ngas, the great expense-saving fuel that is\nexpected to do bo much tor this thriving\nlittle city with its soveral large and impor¬\ntant industries. Had tho rain not inter¬\nfered the atTalr would have been a com¬\nplete ouccoss. As it was, tho event was a\nmemorable and gratifying one.\nThe Board of Trade was at the head of\nthe demonstration, aided by Mr, 0. ltus-\nhoII Wood, tho company's representative\nthere. The cltisnna desiring to aid in\nmaking the ovent a credit to the town\nopened their hoarts and pooketbooks to\nmake the "blowout a go" and succeeded\nadmirably. Many business houses and\nresidences woro gay with (lags and light*.\nThe Publication Committee got out \nvery neat programme which was gener¬\nously distributed for the general good.\nThe Citizen's Hand met atsevou o'clock\non Hanover street, and after parading tho\nprincipal streots with noarlv everybody\nadjourned to the stand pipe uown by the\nBuckeye glass works, where a stand had\nbeen erected, Thero was music and\ncheering and the uproar grew terrlflo as\nMiss Flora Williams began to shoot the\noandles at the tup of the plpo. Suddenly\nthe charming little vocalist niado a centre\nshot and the heavens were illumlnatod.\nTho speaking had scarcely commenced\nwhen a furious rain storm put an ond to\nthe programme and the people dispersed,\npleased enough to know that tho gas was\nreally In tho town. Homo excellent music\nhad to be omitted on this account, Tho\nprogramme as arranged was as follows!\nSpetoh
5a341377cc31800d9689157712f41e1a THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.209589009386 40.618676 -80.577293 The Little Steel Formula provides for an ad­\njustment of 15 per cent to permit workers to meet\nthe rise in living costs between January 1941 and\nMay 1942. With some special exceptions, it has\nbeen applied by the War Labor Board to mean\nthat wages are frozen at that point. The cost of\nliving lias risen, by the most conservative esti­\nmate, by another 7 per cent since May of 1942.\nIn industrial areas where the black market is\noperating rampantly, the cost of living is cer­\ntainly 15 per cent higher today than the May\nJ 942 freezing date. Yet the War Labor Board\npersists in applying a 15 per cent yardstick to\nwages, while 30 per cent would be nearer the\nfacts of the situation. OPA Administrator Brown\nalso warns us to expect not less than another 6\nper cent rise this year—a figure most observers\n>elieve to be ridiculously conservative.\nLabor accepted the establishment of the War\nLabor Board as a necessary part of its pledge to\navoid strikes and other conllicts that might inter­\nfere with war production. Labor originally ac­\ncepted the Board's Little Steel Yardstick foi\nwages because President Roosevelt demanded a\nprogram that the people expected Congress to\n program that included freezing of prices.\nWhat has happened is that the War Labor\nHoard has attempted to carry out in full its share\nof a many-sided program, while the other parts\nof the same program were not applied. Two other\nimportant parts of the program, price ceilings and\nfair taxation, have been sabotaged in Congress.\nThe War Labor Board has been a useful\nagency. It is the only Federal agency in which\nLabor receives its full and deserved share of par­\nticipation. It can play an increasingly important\npart in eliminating strife and improving morale,\nproviding tthat a basic change is made in the\nBoard's approach. (We mean here a change of\nattitude by the public and employer members, of\ncourse, since the Labor members have been de­\nmanding a new view for some time.)\nThe changes that labor insists upon are prim­\narily these two: (1) that the Board give up\nhandling every separate case individually, and\ndeal with wage scales on an industry basis wher­\never possible. This is the only way out of being\nswamper! by an expected 40,000 to 60,000 case's\nthis year. (2) the May 1942 wage freeze must be\ndropped, and wages related to the actual cost-of-\nliving-situation.
04f8a0d8e38e42f759c5f90978c652a5 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1896.599726744333 32.612638 -90.036751 table all complete. A smali, square bit\nof cork that once served to stop the\nmouth of a little glass jam jar and\nsticking ill four matches for feet and\ntwo more on the upper side for a back,\nwith a bit of cork at the top of these,\none has at once a delightful chair to go\nwith the tabic and stool. The next\npiece of manufacture might be a tee\ntotum, and here lioD's paints uegm 10\ncome into play.\nCut n match in half; sharpen one end\nlittle. Cut a thin slice crossways\nfrom a claret cork and stick the motch\nthrough the middle of it, pointed end\nfirst. Cut out a circle of cardboard\nfour times as large as the cork, and\ndraw two lines at right angles acrcss\nthe disk. That will leave it divided into\nfour quarters, and these quarters are\nto be painted blue, green, yellow and\nred. Bore a hole in tue center ot tne\ndisk and slip the blunt end of tha\nmatch through it until the cardboard\nrests upon the cork. Next cut another,\nbut rather thicker, slice the corkf\nbore a hole in the center and stick the\nblunt end of the match through, press\ning it down till it touches the card\nThis will leave about an inch of match\nto be taken between finger and thumb\nfor spinning this beautiful teetotum.\nCutting long slices through the mid\ndle of the cork leaves pieces which, with\nthe aid of Bob s paints, can be turned\ninto a beautiful set of dominoes, and by\ncutting out square pieces one can make\nbeautifol set of noiseless dice to be\nu&ed with the backgammon board.\nBut perhaps the nicest toy of all made\nin this shop, wnicn nas ior its sign:\nOld cork taken in exchange for new\nplaythings," is the set of parlor croquet.\nTo begin this heavy but fruitful labor\ntut out 18 small squares of cork. Bend\niDto a curved hoop a miniature of those\nused in lawn croquet nine hairpins,\nand these, with each end stuck into one\not the small squares of cork, will stand\nupright and serve as table wickets for\nthe game. Cut slices crossways from\nthe vinegar-bottl- e
0b9960d2df18fa22ebbed2ae50bc3183 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.4397259956875 40.832421 -115.763123 NOTICK IS IIKRKHY CIIVEN TO CII.\\ltl*E8\nKtormer unl unl vo\\%4i ro<owuviK of *JOU\nfret of tin* mini ii;; grr.ii . .», location ami claim\nKnown ami recorded by bo namo of .. HLl'K\nUK Lis" I coal oil October 29th. ISO'J, by William\nllrowu, (.baric* Hti riuer ami S. I*. Wellcr, oil\nIbo rldgo of what la known an Bob Hauler\nMountain, ami »omc UHJ leet north of the bob\nHunter mine, In ltallroa-J Mining District, Klko\nCounty, State of Nrvada, tbat tbeie la now duo\nfrom you for aatCMinent work done and per¬\nformed on the above named mine, by the un-\ndcralgued, a co.uwiicr, ii|> to the 31»t day of\nDecember, Wilis the HUtiiof $COlli I'ldtcd Statca\nCold eolu : Ibat being tlu* amount required to Ikj\nexpended during the yearn 1S74-6 and »», by tbo\nart of Co:iKn a» entitled "An Act to promote tbo\ndevelopment of tb»« mining resource* of tlie\nUnited SUtrn," approved Jlay lOtli. 18?'J, and\n acli* amendatory thereof ; the paid aiun so\nexpended being ?lu per year for each 100 fret\nof atid delinquent feet of th* III. UK UKI.L\nmlxillil* claim, and that audi of you a* thai I\nat tbo expiration of ninety days after the com-\n{.Ittion of the publication of tliltt notice, be de-\nimjucut In tbo payment of your respective |»or-\ntloiia thereof, and ahall fail or refuao to con*\ntribute and juiy to iuu y«utr pro|H>rtioii ot the\nexpenditure mo made, at th« rate of $ It) for each\nIWJ feet, which > on uiay. severally own in aald\nHI. UK liKL! mine and claim, the Interest, right\nor property in nald mining ground and claim\nowned by any and every such delinquent owner\nwill become the properly of tho umlcrtlgitcd\ncisowtier, who baa made the required expend!*\nturca thrreou required by the act of Congress\nbefore Luentloueil and recited. rayiucnt to bo\nmade to mc at illko, Nevada. .
232147c8eca31bf5c5845f3886bbc172 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.4753424340436 41.875555 -87.624421 Wo nro not obliged t.i luw thco\nthings If we do nit want tliein. The\n.re medies nro simple enough.\nAb to tho "lumpy Jnw," 'the 'tubercu-\nlosis and tho cancer, put a slop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Let nil the slaugh-\ntering of food animals U done by Ih\nStnto In tho light f day. without any\nif tills dark lantern business, on eqn.il\nterms for nil. There inv wry fow\npiivutp slaughter houses lu England.\nThe cities mil towns run their slaugh-\nter houses under inc. Hen I Inspection.\nRut In England the n'ui!o do not care\nt.i be p'.Uniod lu their meat\nAnd we need u t worry nlwut the ob-\njection that puMlcly owned slaughter\nli'iii'cs ure nn Invasion .f tho private\nrights nr hudiivu. When It comes, to\nlife uud death there are. private\nrights of I iislneiU No man has a right\nto saved profits that bo make by\nspreading disease. Wo havo gono too\nfur ou tho roud to public sanitation to\nturn back bcauso somo goutlemnu'c\nprofits nro threatened. Tho Stnto will\nnot allow you to go ground with small-\npox or to conceal scarlet fever In your\nhouse, nlthough each may bo strictly\nyour own affair, Compared with can-\ncer, smallpox and scarlet fover are\nnothing. If tho Stato can take radical\nmeasures to stamp out cholora It can\ntako radical measures to stamp out\ncancer, a million times worso than\ncholera. If it can prdvldo post houses\nfor public safoty It can provide slaugh-\nter bouses for public safety. Aud IU\nduty In tho ono caso is at least as clear\nas In tho other.
231fb1665e51cb9777fab0e5657260f2 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.2144808426938 41.004121 -76.453816 pay little or no attention to the de-\nmands of higher institutions, but\nrather let them adjust themselves\nto the needs of the comparatively\nfew pupils who come to them from\nsuch schools. It may be impossible\nat this time to. secure the kind of\nteachers necessary to do this quali-\nty of work, but this should be no\nobjection when planning for the\nfuture. We should set our goal,\noutline our course, and then pro-\nvide an opportunity for the prepa-\nration of teachers. Any good teach-\ner who has had a scientific training\nand who has a desire for useful ser-\nvice and a sympathy with the coun-\ntry people, can soon develop into a\nfine teacher and leader in this great\nrural school problem. Personally\nwe are looking forward to a time in\nthe near future when teachers will\n this line of work a specialty.\nRather than teach in the country\nmerely to get experience enough to\nenter the town, men will live in the\ncommunity, do a certain amount of\nreal farming, teach the township\nhigh school, and work out thU ru-\nral problem at first hand; then and\nnot until men can we nope lor a\nreal solution of this problem. What\na wonderful opportunity is here\npresented for the progressive young\nteacher with these qualifications !\nThe present course of study is\nprobably as good as could be had\nunder the circumstances, and in the\npast has enabled us to do some ex-\ncellent work, but in view of the\ngreat awakening and rapid advance-\nment in all things pertaining to ru-\nral improvements, we venture to\nmake a few suggestions in the hope\nof being helpful.
2eab4ed9a0847d9c559fb05b76de06f0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.9219177765094 41.681744 -72.788147 Mr. Uterhart took the boy in his\nmachine to the mother's country\nplace at Roslyn without sending the\nnews ahead, so the child's return was\na surprise. The boy, who will be five\nyears old on Christmas Day, is plump\nand sturdy and large for his age. He\nwas dressed in a sailor's costume. Mrs.\nDeSaulles had been so hardened by the\ntrial that she did not notice the\nstrangers present when she met her\nchild. The boy did not at first, but\nafter a few embraces he looked some-\nwhat surprised at the spectators and\nsaid: "What's the trouble, mother?"\nHe used the word "mother" when\nthe conversation was of a business na-\nture, but called i her by the nickname\nof "Bumby" when he was playing\nwith her or embracing her. Mrs. De\n told the child that they were\nnever to be separated again, and he\nsaid he was very glad. He added that\nhe would rather be with her than\nanything in the world. Mrs. De\nSaulles thought a second, and said\nthat she would rather be with him\nthan anything in "the universe."\n"What is the universe?" asked the\nboy. The explanation of this raised\nmany questions, which continued to\nmultiply for some time. The photog-\nraphers finally got Mrs. DeSaulles to\npose with her son. When this ordeal\nwas over John's aunt, Miss Amalia\nErrazurls, called him to have a cup\nof chocolate. A few minutes later he\nshouted from the dining room to his\nmother for another cup. As the first\ncup was a small one, he was allowed\nto have another.
22a8b5e1571e8129bd99009f66645329 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.3948087115461 29.949932 -90.070116 copy of ter I'uck. She ha~ a mate ir himnin her\n!:;er Wlll-o'-the-wlgp, or at least a comrade, but\nthe latter i- not quite so bewitching. B1t the\nglory of her rooms is a head of Medusa. I have\nawan)s th ught that to fulfill the true idea of tie\n(Id nmythbMedusa should be wonderfully beauti-\nful. but I never saw one so before. This is the\nhead of a lovely girl; her rich hair kept back by\na lillet from the ntoble forehead, seems at firot to\nrce•de in wavres; when you see that these waves\nternamnate in serpents, it strikes you w;th no feel-\niig ,f reg ulsicn. The face, whose eyes loii up .\nward, is full of glorious eadneis, to which the se'-\nprts add an idea of mystery and gloim, which\n ti.e beauty more fascinating and turilling;\nat- i the folded wirgs which come down over the\nL.eir (n ca, I side tf the face give ana r of m ijeity\nto the Lead wh;ch enhances the effect. It was\ntLrd for tre to look away from the statue ; if l' g\nc,.:: wcu:d have tci,i1C onee tostlne t.e o d\n:r.ditia.ns would have been fuit!led. In the\nrc :g Lburinrgroom was a full lengih a:: I several\nI .ts ('t the stately Zenobia, 'who you do:.bt;less\ns;w ii ('Liago a tew years ac,,.\nlisse lia, iCer a-ked us into her inner ra':'.\nwlere h.eLerse;lf work. Just hr-voud t:.o e-\ntrance stards the work on whlhi she s now\nccr.rd--lite Wak;ng Fa::n. It is the se i: . t ,\n'!.e lIvely S!eepirg Fan.n, uh:ch was exhib.:
3046dc4d7125313b1466cada5f306c59 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 described tract* of land situated In Ohio\ncounty, West Virginia, between five and aix\nmile*from thocityof Wheeling, on the Wheel-\nIn?, West Liberty A Bethany Turnpike am! on\nthe waters of the sooth fork of Hhori Creek and\nof Woods' Hun, that la to say:\nNo. I ComalaliiK.SI I Acre*,,? roodi,\n39 perches, known as the Uenjamin Kelly farm,\nbeing the same which was conveyed to said\nIsaac B. Kelly and others, by James Kelly\nand wife, by deed dated ticptember 33,\nISM. and of rccord in the office of the\nClerk of the County Court of Ohio county In\nDeed Book No. 41. psgo 501, and of which tract\nan undivided halt was conveyed to Isaac B.\nKelly by Daniel P. Jacob and wile by d«d dated\nOctober?, 1868,and of rccord In esld Clerk's\noffice In Deed Book No. 55, page 24.\nNO. 2. containing 02 Acres. 1 rood aud\n88 perches, being part of a tract of 303 acres. 2\nroods and 36 perches, known as the James Kelly\nfatm, which was conveyed to Isaac B. Kelly by\nIsaac Kelly and wife by deed dated September\n16,1864, and of record in tbesald Clerk's offico In\nDeed Book No. 48, page S16, tho tract to be sold\nbeing the part remaining to said Isaac B. Kelly\nafter his conveyance or 251 acres and 38 perches\nto Daniel P. Jacob by deed dated October 7,\n and of rocord In said Clerk's office In Deed\nBook No. &6. page 29.\nNo 3 Containing 74 Acres. 2 roods, 85\nperchesTbeine samo land wblcn was convoyed to\nsaid Isaac B. Kelly by Blljah Pogue and others\nby deed dated April 1,1857, and of rccord in said\nClerk's office In Deed Book No. 53, page 1W7.\nNo. 4 containing 15 acres 3 roods 10\nperches, being the same land conveyed to said\nIsaac B. Kelly by Geo. W . Hmith by deed dated\nNovember 17, 18W, and of record in aald\nClerk's office In Deed Book No. 48, page273.\nPor the metes and bounds of said several tracts\nreference la made to the deeds aforefald, and to\nthe said decree of sale la this cause.\nThis land is among the mosttaluable farming\nland In Ohio county. Bachtract is accesilble by\ngood roads, and is well watered and well fenced.\nOn tract No. 1 there is a good brick dwelling\nhouse. S tenant houses, a largo bam, all necessary\noutbuildings and a large orchard. On tract No.\n8 thero Is a good double log house, stable and\nother outbuildings.\nBald four tracts adjoin one another and forma\ncompact body or land, but they will be fold sop-1\narately, and tract No. 1 will be sold as a whoie\nor In two or more parcels as may suit tho con\nvenlence of purchasers and bo to the best
04ff3d4db2be30f908058c19a1e3be1f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.0726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 Woman has suffered, and still suffers, much at the\nhand of man, but the worst enemy ehe has on earth\nIs he who would enrich himself upon her faithful and\nIntelligent labor and then deny to her decent working\nconditions and a fair wage for work faithfully per­\nformed. Such a man strikes at her honesty, her re­\nspectability and her honor and also stands between\nher and her ability to take her proper place In the\nworld as a wife and a mother. He brings to her a\ncheerless present and a hopeless future, and the evil\nhe does lives after him In the newer generstlon, that\nIs Impoverished In hrnln. blood and brawn as a result\nof his commercial rapacity or Industrial heartlessness.\nIt will he the height of folly for any employer of\nwomen and girls to endeavor to convince the Legisla­\nture that those women and girls rather work,\nweek In and week out. twelve or fourteen hours s dsy\nthan ten hours. To advance such a proposition would\nhe to Insult the Intelligence and common sense of n\nSenator or a Representative. Remonstrances against\ntho enactment of such a beneficial law and purporting\nto express the untramracled and honeat opinion of\nwage-earning women and glrla will be taken nt their\ntrue value In the halls of legislation. They will be In\nletter and spirit, contrary to human-natnre and com­\nmon-sense. They will not ring true. The fear or co­\nercion that underlies them will obtrude Itself, no mat­\nter how skilfully such remonstrances may be drawn by\nthose who WOiïlû tre«-k in hide it. The sonortuaiity of a\nworking woman or girl asking the Legislature to re­\nfuse to shorten her day of labor and to give her her\nsveuingi lor social and other diversion* will bo so
1b5451c5236f83b900e2a796db0a237a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.1024589847702 40.063962 -80.720915 Aliia ny, N . Y ., February 5..The result\nof the Pennsylvania Convention is com¬\nmented on by Republicans here with some\ndegree of caution. Outspoken Grant men\napprove of it, and are in favor of tho New\nYork Convention following the example.\nThey say that the action ot the Harrisburg\nConvention shows that Pennsylvania is\nfor Grant, and that he will, if nominated,\ncarry that State with ease. More conserva¬\ntive Republicans are reluctant to criticise\nthe result of the Convention. Blaine men\npredict trouble in the New York Conven¬\ntion if the attempt is persisted in to in¬\nstruct the delegation for Grant A prom¬\ninent member of the Assembly said this\nafternoon that tho State Convention bas no;\nright to instruct a delegation made up by\ndistricts and that if the Pennsylvania dele¬\ngates were selected by districts, as reported\nby telegraph this morning, it was unwar¬\nrantable arrogance on the part of the Con¬\nvention to impose restrictions upon the\nfree action of the delegates at Chicago. A\nRepublican Senator said that if he had\nbeen a member tho Pennsylvania Con¬\nvention ho would have fought to the last\nagainst the attempt to force a vote on the\nquestion of instructing tho delegation.\n"If," said he, "delegates from my dis¬\ntrict to the Stato Convention shouldselect\nmo as their delegate to the National Con¬\nvention, I would like to see any Conven¬\ntion or any body of men undertake to tell\nme what to do." He declared his inten¬\ntion to go to Utica as a delegate, or to\nhave somo one there from his district who\nwould light the Pennsylvania precedent to\nthe bitter end. He said he might be for\nGrant, or lie might be for Blaine, but in\nanv case he did not intend to be clay in\ntho hands of any set of political potters.\nThe action of the Pennsylvania Conven¬\ntion has evidently. set the Republicans\nthinking. It has warned anti-Grant men\nthat thoy have business on hand, if they\nare to make an effectual stand against the\nevident purpose of the third-termers.\nIt is believed that the canvass in this\nState will at once become animated.
1022c808fc686cfff13892b615bf116c THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.6653005148248 37.451159 -86.90916 interest in his surroundings or is preM-\ned with a continual round of duty\nThere is something heroic In the coon\ntry boys struggle with the elements\nRain snow and sleet only brace his\ncourage The garnering of the crops\nthe housing and feeding of the domestic\nanimals the gathering and preparation\nof the winter fuel give a purpose and\nzest to his toil Then there are long\ntramps sometimes of miles to the dis ¬\ntrict school lessons learned before and\nafter long hours of labor Is it any\nwonder there are keen wits developing\nall outside of graded systems and in de ¬\nfiance of pedagogical order\nIt is the Intensity of purpose with\nwhich the mind acts under the influence\nof vigorous health and the conscience\nvalue of time that accounts for these re ¬\nsuits So from the farm is being sup ¬\nplied a stream of active worldworkers\nmen not afraid to do their duty and\n over with energy and ambition\nTouch the countrybred boynow the\nmerchant prince or the successful prof-\nessional manand how responsive\nhe becomes to every suggestion of moral\nlife The same cannot be said of boys\nreared amid other surroundings It is\nthe contact with nature that makes the\nindelible impression upon his life No\ngreater gain can come to the country at\nlarge than that which comes from the\npromotion of love and appreciation of\nural life Health happiness purity\nand peace are the natural inheritance of\nthose who dwell surrounded by freshI\nair beautiful scenes bright skies and\npure social influences\nIA Perfectly Painless Pill\nIs the one that will cleanse the system\net the liver to action remove the bile\nclear the complexion cure headache\nand leave a good taste in the mouth\nThe famous little pills for doing such\nwork pleasantly and effectually are-\neWitts Little Early Risers BobI\nMoore of Lafayette Ind says
efa3443cbff854b0c6918c3c1f9ff642 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.6863013381533 41.681744 -72.788147 old Colhy of 640 East street, this\ncity, are held in $500 bonds each by\nthe Middletown authorities for trial\ntomorrow morning on the charge of\nenticintr a minor female for immoral\npurposes. They were arrested about\n10:15 last night by Officer William\nPolltis and arraigned in Middletown\ncourt this morning. The continuance\nwas taken for the purpose of allow-\ning them to engage cousel, with the\nunderstanding that they were not to\nbe released in bonds without ap-\nproval of Die judge of the court.\nThis was taken as an indication of\nthe probability of an increase in the\namount of bonds in the event that\n$5000 was raised in ench case.\nThe arrests came about through\nan incident alleged to have occurred\nTuesday night when the girl accept-\ned the yoffiiK men's offer of a ride\nto her home. She had been to the\ntheater and had left her girl friend\nwhen an automobile which two\nyoung men, said to have been Ohl-\nson and Colby, were riding, drove up\nto the curb and after a conversation,\nthe girl entered the car. She told\nthe police she understood the young\nmen to say they were acquainted\nwith her brother or other relatives\nand she thought she would be safe\nwith them, especially as they as-\nsured her they would take her at\nonce to hor home.\nInstead of carrying out their pro-\nmise, however, they are said to\nhave driven In the direction of New\nHaven and according to her com-\nplaint, one of them committed a\ncriminal assault before she left the\ncar and ran away from them In\nNorth Guilford. She made her way\nhack to Middletown by walking and\nriding with friendly autoiftts, accord-\ning to her story, but she made a\nment. 'il note of the registration of\nthe car and this led to the arrests.
34639e2c18c3ea83f0ec2b71794ea621 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1914.6205479134958 39.456253 -77.96396 the cotton market would h^ material¬\nly helped to (lie advantage of every¬\nbody. There are millions of families\nwho have been intending to make oth¬\ner purchases, perchance of furniture\nor other household goods, or agri¬\ncultural implements, or o'her things\nfor farms. Millions have been plan¬\nning for little improvements to their\nhomes, or to the doing of other\nthings which create business activ¬\nity. For those who can afford to do\nthese things at present there is a re¬\nsponsibility wh"!?h rests upon them\nto do them and to do them at once.\nKvery individual can contribute to\nsome slight extent through the doing\nof things of this k'rd to keeping open\nthe channels of trade, increasing the\nactivities of the country and absorb¬\ning the production of the farms, which\notherwise would bring about conges¬\ntion by reascn of the inability to\nship freely to foreign countries.\nIt is incumbent upon every municip¬\nality in the country to carry forward\nas actively as possible every improve'\n. nent which it has under way or\nwhich it. expects to undertake in the\nnear future. Patriotism of the high¬\n kind can be displayed by the peo¬\nple of the whole country in ways\nsuch as is hojo indicated just as\nmuch as in the support of a country\nwhen it is at war with its enemies.\nIf our people become so absorbed in\nthinking about the situation in TCur-\nope as to put aside from day to day\nthe things that they have been intend¬\ning to do in a business way. the im¬\nprovements they have been expect¬\ning to make, the purchases that they\nfully intend to consummate, they will\nto that extent intensify the general\nsituation and lessen the business ac-\nMvities of the whole country.\nIt is the supreme duty of every\nman at the present time to put forth\nincreased energy for the expa^«sson of\nhis own business and for ass:s':"g in\ncarrying forward the broad work of\nMio business activities of the eoun'ry\n'hat the products of the farms .tray\nfind a profitable market and the out-\nout of factories be not curtailed. Our\n'.onntry is in magnificent shape to\nmeet this unprecedented condition,\nwithout excitement, without any fear\nas to the future, but with an abiding
0fff01fb2016895933b513471d5b22f0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.5931506532218 58.275556 -134.3925 was the same as now when those aui-\nmals lived and thrived there. I believe\nthat a false premiso was adopted wheu\nit was taken for granted that the mas-!\ntodon was a tropical animal simply be-!\ncause it was of as large proportions as\nthe elephant. It has loug been evident:\nto me the mastodons lived on mosses\nand grasses as do the moose of today.\nI have in my collection some of the\nhollow teeth of the mastodon still\npacked with moss in all respects as\nthat growing ou the surface of the\nground today. Invariably iu digging\nthe bones and tusks you will find large\nbunches of almost fresh moss in and\nbetweeu the boues, showing that at the\ntime of the catastrophe which buried\nthe boues forty feet under grouud, it\nburied sub-arctic moss, too, the two\nbeing contemporary Without a doubt.\nThere surely is nothing impossible in\nthis. Moose aud elk.and eveu domes¬\ntic auimals when turned out to graze.\nlive up there today: and why not \nhairy mastodon, then? It has been\nproven, 1 think, that once the elephant\nwas equipped for and thrived in a cold\nclimate. Iu mining in the North, be-'\nfore I undertook the collection of these\nremains, I never once ran across any¬\nthing betweeu the surface and bedrock\nwhich betokened a tropical or subtrop¬\nical origin. The trees found under\nground in great quantity are the same\nspruce, piue and birch which flourish\nup there today. There are none of the\nferns of the Southland, and none of\nthe quick growing woods either. The\ndisaster which overcame so many of\nthe native animals was a flood, when\nsuddenly the pent-up waters of great\nlakes broke a passage, cuttiug down\nthe great beds of the rivers aud leaving\nthe old bed fifty feet in the air. It did\nuot catch all the animals, but thecouu-\ntry became populated with ludians, and\nthe rest of the stupid animals were\nsoon hunted from the face of the earth\nas have been the buffalo in America.
0efb532d484157b4f0fa2cad67c03e44 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.4479451737698 37.451159 -86.90916 There were eight bidders for the conI\ntract Besides the parties who got the\ncontract the following parties bid on\nthe job Missouri Construction Co\nCape Girardean Mo C H Dlshmtn\nPensacola Fla Edington Griffltts\nCo Knoxville Tenn Ryan Bros In\ndianapolis Indj Kirkpatrick DrOll\nPenrod Ky C D Smith Co Mem\nphis Tenn Carter Construction Co\nIndianapolis Ind\nThe firm of Walton Wilson Rhodes\nCo will have associated with them\nMr J W Borches an expert In rail\nroad building Work will begin on the\nroad in about fifteen days The firm of\nmen who bave taken the contract In\nhand are amply provided for the work\nwhich is their specialty They have\n750 good teams and a number of steam\nshovels and various other parapherna ¬\nlia tor railroad building The ¬\nlug firm agrees to bave the work done\nIn 18 months but they will probably\nbeat that time It Is Intended to begin\nwork at both ends and in the middle\nStarting at Madlsonville the road\nwill pass near Antod in Hopkins coun\nty It will pass between Sacramento\nand Bremen la McLean county coming\nwithin about a mile of the latter place\nIt will cross the O N Railroad at\nHendricks and Green river at Small\nhone From Centertown it will come\npa lnHftrtf Mil JTto Hartford depot\nwill be located it Is said at the south\neast end of Liberty street and near\nwhat is known as the Masele residence\nIt will be a handsome edifice\nGoing east the road will cross the\nBeaver Dam road near Mr G W Bun ¬
301b7a8d549ba1dc4527b3eb284e9a64 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.9136985984271 40.827279 -83.281309 instance of its display of which not\nmuch 13 known. O'Connor was the\nla vyer of Mrs. Forrest in tlie celebrat\ned Forrest divorce trial (Edwin For-\nrest, the tragedian,) and it was in this\ncase tnat he won his greatest reputa\ntion. .During its progress and alter\nits close he was lauded far and near\nfor his championship of the rights of\na cruelly wronged and poor woman,\nand for his generosity in conducting\nher case gratutiously. The verdict\nwas in Mrs. Forrest's favor, but the\ngreat tragedian refused to pay the\nalimony awarded, kept the case in\nappeal till three years ago, when\nfinal judgment was given for the pay-\nment of the back alimony. It amount\ned to about fifty thousand dollars.\nand with it Mrs. Forrest hoped \npay her debts and the sum she had\nborrowed from her relations, who had\nalmost beggared themselves in assist\ning her. But Mr. O'Connor refused\nto let the money go into her hands at\nall, and of the fifty thousand he ac-\ntually keptor eight thousand dol\ntars for his own service in the case .\nHis victim was, of course overwhelm\ned ; but what coud 6he do? Sooii\nafter O'Connor had got the money,\nhe was present at a dinner given by\n(he bar of New York to William M,\nEvarts, and when Mr. Evarts compli\nmented him on his cr.ivalrous and\ngratuitous defense of the friendless\nwomans case, O Connor accepted the\ncompliment by rising and bowing\nplacing one hand on his breast, and\nholding the forty-eigh- t
7085afedab1b40515644cb4f95e10a2e THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.878082160071 43.994599 -72.127742 sure the further recovery of Europe.\nThey would also assure the ultimate\npayment of our loans, for the burdens\non Europe which these loans impose\nare trivial in comparison with wastes\nand destruction whicji would be\neliminated" by such a policy.\nSecretary Hoover says if there is\nany country which really is unable to\npay its just debts to the American\ngovernment or which, in the interest\nof economic stability should be given\nextra wide latitude in the manner cf\nrepaying its loans "then there murt\nbe a demonstration of the facts in\nrespect to each individual country\nwhich would be convincing to the\nAmerican taxpayer and to Congress."\nContinuing, Secretary Hoover makes\nthe following observation:\n"America has dealt with Europe\nduring the past few years in terms\n idealism. We have always given;\nwe have never received. No one can\ndeny that we are capable of great\nsacrifices and' of great generous char-\nity. We want to take part in mak-\ning a better world, but it must be\nclear that sacrifices and charity frqrri\nAmerica do not themselves bring\nabout a cure for those evils which\nnow gnaw at Europe's economic life.\nWhat the American people would do\nin the circumstances that the forces\nof real economic stability were put\nin motion, could easily be determined\nwhen the time comes. Our record to\ndate has been one of helpfulness."\nIn elaborating upon the them,\nSecretary Hoover makes the point\nthat $11,000 ,000,000 debt is not a very\nlarge debt as international debts go.\nHe says:
19578006c8376d925fd6151d19562e95 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1877.6205479134958 37.451159 -86.90916 seurs pronounced it the most wonderful\npiece of art that had ever been produced.\nHis brother artist was jealous of his\nfame and sought revenge. By bribing\nthe keeper ol the studio he gained access\nto the picture each night. At first he\nwas content to only deaden the brilliancy\nof the complexion and eyes, efface the\nbloom from check and lip and paint a\nshadow on cither check. Later, lib\nstrokes grew bolder and freer, and one\nmorning the artist awoke to find the en-\ntire outline of the portrait changed. He\ncould scarcely recognize in the emaciated\nform nnd haggard countenance the bright\nconception he had embodied. The pallid\nface and and expressionless eyes fie had\nattributed to a lack of genuineness in his\nmaterials; but when the outlines \nchanged he suspected the cause and in-\ndignantly dismissed the keeper. What\nthe revengeful artist marred by a few\nrapid stokes of his skillful brush was on-\nly restored by years of patient industry.\nReader, need we name the artists --\nHealth, who paints the ilowcrs and\n"grassy carpet" no less than the human\nform divine, Disease, the dreaded artist\nwho revels among the ruins both of na-\nture and humanity, and Carelessness,\nthe keeper to whom Health often intrusts\nhis portraits. And b not the beauty of\nwoman, the most admired of all . the\nworks which adorn the studio of Health,\nthat Disease oftencst seeks to mar? The\nslightest stroke of lib brush upon the\ndelicate organization leaves an imprint\nthat requires much skill and patience to\nefface.
1948079d479f2217f2422184695318cb THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.1543715530763 37.561813 -75.84108 the Trustees were compelled to pay the\npurchase money of the lands alluded to as\nobtained in the early history of the Insti-\ntution, and also to aid the Female Semi-\nnary by the purchase of its building and\ngrounds from Kev. Mr. Matthews, who\nhimself was struggling so nobly to sustain\nhis school. He well deserved the aid he\nreceived, and the purchase money of the\nHoop and Brown lands was a trifle com-\npared with their real value, but both ob-\njects took from the institution about $5,-00- 0,\nand put a stop to all those improve-\nments so necessary to its welfare.\nIt is worthy of remark, that neither dur-\ning the constrnction of the building or\nsince, has any Trustee ever asked or receiv-\ned any compensation for services of any\nkind, though peculiar labors and sacrifices\nwere constantly demanded from every\nacting member of the Board. The writer\nspeaks from his personal knowledge.\nFor the last five years the Academy has\nfurnished such accommodations to the\n Schools as cannot easily be replaoed.\nIts destruction will impose upon the com-\nmunity a heavy additional tax, but it should\nbe cheerfully borne. No doubt measures\nwill be at once taken by the Board of Edu-\ncation to procure a proper site and erect a\nsuitable building, and let us hope that they\nand the community may be guided by wise\ncounsels to a harmonious and happy result.\nThe destruction of buildings devoted to\ninstruction is so frequent as to demand the\ngrave attention of the public. The writer\nof this has been informed by a friend, that\nhe knows personally, of the burning of five\nschool houses within the limits of a single\ntownship in this county during the last fif-\nteen or twenty years. The Board of Edu-\ncation will of course make a careful inves-\ntigation into the causes which led to this\ncatastrophe, and though this will not re-\nstore the property, it may tend to satisfy\nthe publio mind, and perhaps be of use\nhereafter.
d469cc539333274d2787f91c81029574 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.6671232559615 31.960991 -90.983994 On the subject of distributing the pro­\nceeds of the sales of the public lands, in\nthe existing state rf the finances, it has\nbeen my duty to make known my settled\nconvictions on various occasions during the\npresent session of Congress. At the open­\ning of the extra session, upwards of twelve\nmonths ago, sharing fully in the general\nhope of returning prosperity and ^credit, I\nrecommended such a distribution ; but that\nrecommendation was even then expressly\ncoupled with the condition that the duties\non imports should not exceed the rate of\n20 per cent., provided by the compromise\nact of 1833. These hopes were not a lit­\ntle encouraged and those views strength­\nened by the report of Mr. Ewing, then\nSecretary of the Treasury, which was\nshortly thereafter laid before Congress, in\nwhich he recommended the imposition of\n per cent, ad valorem on all free arti\ncles, w ith specified exceptions, and stated,\nfifth is measure be adopted, there will be\nreceived into the Treasury from customs,\nin fbo last quarter ofthe year (1841)$5,-\n300,000; in all the year 1812 about $22,-\n500,000; and in the year 1843, after the\nfinal reduction under act of March 2, 1S33,\nabout $20,800,000;” and adds, “it is be­\nlieved that after the heavy expenditures\nrequired by the public service in the pres­\nent year shall be provided for, the reve­\nnue which wili accrue from that or a near­\nly proximate rate of duty, w ill be sufficient\nto defray the expenses of the Government,\nand leave a surplus to be applied to the\ngradual payment ofthe national debt, leav­\ning the proceeds of the public lands to be\ndisposed of as Congress shall sec fit.”
119116d46b80ce9d524c176371cca2e5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.8073770175572 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described real eylnte. via:\nAll that old <*oiner tavern stand and\nlot of land with the building* thereon\nerected, situate In Stanton. Mill Creek\nInndrcd, New Castle County, and Sint©\nof Delaware, which Is bounded and d©-\nHcribed as follows, to wit:\nHanning at an old corner stone of\nland, now or late of Willi«m Southgate;\nthem:« by said Southgate's land north\neighty degrees and thirty-five minutes\neast four hundred and nlnclv-sevcn\nto a stone on the westerly side of\nthence along the westerly side thereof\nMouth four degrees and fifty minutes emit\ntwo hundred and ninety-eight feet to a\ncorner of W. Hayes Dickey's lot; thence\nby said Dickeys lot In juirt and partly\nby other land now or late of Emily Price,\nthese next three courses to wit: South\nMxty-three degrees forty minutes\nwest two hundred and forty-nlfie feet to\na stake against the northwest corner of\na sped attached to a small barn or sta­\nble; south sixty-two degrees and eigh­\nteen minutes west one hundred and for­\nty-one feet to a corner; and smith nine­\nteen degrees and forty minutes east\nninety feet to n corner In a lino of Ben­\njamin W. Dickey's lot: .thenco thereby\nthe next two courses, to wit: South six­\nty-eight degrees west one hundred and\nbeventeen and two-tenths feet to a stake;\nand south twenty-two degrees «nd twt*n-\nly-ftve minutes east ninety-five and seven\ntenths feet to a corner stake in or near\nthe northerly side of the old Wilmington\n»II.<1 Cofl«ti*IMI Turnpike,\noi near the «aid northerly\nsouth sixty-five degrees ami fifteen min-\nweat one hundred ami Iwentv-tdne
342479f07af5fc67fe177d2fdf1b4922 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.78551909406 29.949932 -90.070116 A correspondent of the Philadelphia Press,\nclaiming to be a "Life-long Demoorat," and\nwhom we strongly supe4$ to be the protean\nShelly, or the itinerantC~ -•rnay, furnishes to\n•hat paper some very remarkable information\nfrom New Orleans. This imaginative gentle-\nman prefaces his remarks by stating that he\nhad been a Democrat up to the time of the\nNew York Convention, and then found him-\nself compelled to turn Badical, probably to\nmake a living by the praetlee of honorable and\nprofitable carpet-bggery. Immediately on\nbecoming a Radieal he discovered that the\nDemocracy of New Orle'ns are engaged in a\ndark conspiracy against the peace, dignity\nand permanency of the 'lmak-and-tanners in\nDryades street. Haing traveled this country\nall over, and tallied off the mysterious Ku-\nKlux on his newly-loyal Angers, he ascer-\ntained that there are precisely four \nthousand members in that organization. They\nare fully armed and equipped, well organized\nand drilled, and each man carries in his veet- I\npocket forty rounds of bell-cartridge, and in\nhis oosttails a package of Ku-Klux proc- I\nlmations, elegntly illustrated with pat-\neat metallic brial-meas, 8mith & Weson's\nrevolvers, and doubleedged back-action\ndaggers. In New Orleans there are seizteen\nthous•and men organised as militarybodies;\nbut bypooritie•lly calling themselves Broom\nRangue, Pendleton Guards, Innocents, etc.\nThe two crack regiments of infantry are the\nSeymour Knights-who must kindly have dis-\nmissed their horses to fesh fields and pas-\ntures new, and the Blair Guards-both com-\nmanded by that rebel and irrepressible\ntraitor, Gen. Harry T. Hays. These orack\nregiments display their treasonable intents 1\nand rebellios propensitie by uring marks 1\nend guide when wheeling round the eorners
0d9106ef4d3d0fcb786c322916e6f62c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9438355847285 39.745947 -75.546589 quently asserted that even a police­\nman could lead a Just life, and he had\nturned .many an unfortunate to tho\npath of rectitude after ho had landed\nhim In a cell.\nThera was always hope for the drunk­\nard. he argued, and besides trying to\nconvert his prisoners he took a keen\nInterest In their moral welfare, even\nafter their release.\nWhen Brown finally walked out of\nthe station no one knew where he wan\ngoing, but a week later there came\na request for a permit for an evange­\nlistic meeting half a block away.\nBrown was behind It. In a month\nhe moved to the little storeroom, and\nhe has held forth there ever elnca. The\nsmall change he managed to eke out of\nthe contributions n^ter helping every\ndeserving person ho could find was a\n pittance compared to his salary\non the force, but he managed to get\nalong and still lives at 132 McDougal\nstreet.\nThe Ordination Plans.\nTie will be ordained Wednesday\nevening In Grace Gospel Church In\nBalnhrldge street, near Saratoga ave­\nnue, and Rev. Charles Heald, the pas­\ntor. will officiate, assisted hy Rev. Mr.\nHnppel and Rev. Ur. Edward Niles.\nAnd among those who have promised\nto atend is tho Rev. Herbert I.owe,\nwho was a policeman for 23 years and\nalso attached to tho Ralph Avenue\nStation. Ho was a Presbyterian min­\nister before he Joined tho force, and\non one occasion he was up on charges\nof preschlng In a church when he\nshould have been oh post. Ho resign­\ned from the department four years ago\nand now has a church in Hempstead,\nL. I.
062dfb7fda963500746048be030caf8f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.3575342148656 42.217817 -85.891125 for breath. In a short time she had fully\nrecovered, and the Captain placed her on,\nher feet beside him, while ho supported her\nwith his right arm, his right foot being\nfirmly braced in the ring. Occnsionallj'\nthey had to move from side to side to bal-\nance their frail craft and to keep it from\nturning end for end. In this way an hour\npassed, and the sea gTew comparatively\nsmooth, so that they could move about to-\ngether upon their frail craft in safety. A\nfew moro hours, and tho sea had resumed\nits natural placidity. Tho day wore away,\nand night came on. They passed the night\nin sitting side by 6ide upon the planking,;\nwhich still held together remarkably well.\nMorning dawned at last. Ten o'clock\ncame, and, to tho joy of both, a sail \ndescried bearing directly toward them.\nThey were both beginning to suffer from\nhunger and thirst, Adelaide very severely.\nThe advancing sail proved to be a very\nsmall schooner sailing from San Augustine\nto Havana. As it drew near, a boat was\nsent out, and tho Captain and Adelaide\nwere taken on board, where they received\nevery courtesy from captain and crew. At\nHavana, a vessel was found about to sail\nfor Charleston, and, taking passage, they\nsoon arrived at the latter place, where tho\ngallant Captain had the satisfaction of de-\nlivering his chargo safely into tho hands of\nher parents; but as the price of his deliv-\nery he demanded his cargo, and his demand\nwas complied with, and he and Adelaide in\na few weeks were united in marriage.\nOnly one of the boats from the
198952b6fceb2921d1996579900e93ea EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.0808218860984 39.745947 -75.546589 New Castle, 8 15,11\n850,061pin,1206nil\nLewes,816am,4ihpm.\nHarrington, Delutar and way stations, 8 15\na m. Harrington and way stations. 2 60 p m.\nExpress for Dover, Harrington and Delnisr,\nII18am,437pin,1201night.\nExpress for Wyoming and Smyrna, 6 50 o\nExpress for Cape Charles. Old Point tom-\nfort and Norfolk, 11 18 a m, 12 01 night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad street for Wl,\nmlngton, express, 3 60. 7 20, 7 35,8 31.0 16 . 10 20.\n1033.111«ain,1210,S1225. 13U.2id, 346.863,\n40. 430,508,+518,630,658,617700.740.1118,\n11 pm,1203night.\nAccommodation, 6 20,7 35, 10 ns. 11 32 a m, 113,\n326.310,403,437,822.838.10 "3.1010,1138p.in.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington tor.\nPhiladelphia, express, 1 55, 2 55, 4 20, 8 50, 9 0.\n1151 am. 130.305,604.6Hi,564),606.708.7 6.\n9 12 p m. Accommodation, 7 00 8 05 a m, 1210,\n1 45.4 06,5 20.10 pm.\nChester, express, 1 56, 4 20. « so, 9 0o, 11 6'. a.m,\n137,304,568, 706, 0 12 p ru. Accommodation,\n7PI.805ain,12in.145,405,52d,725.1030p\nNew York, express. 1 55, 2 55,4 20,7 00, SIX),\nHI05,1151 am, 1210, 137.306,406,610. 558,\n"•,+621,708.1030p\nBoston, without change. 5 66 p m.\nWest Chester,via IgtmoKln, 8 65 a m, 5 20 p m\nNew Castle, 0 51 p m. 12 00 night.\nCape Charles, Old Point Comfort aud Nor­\nfolk, 12 01 night.\nMiddletown, Clayton, Dover. Wyoming, Feb\nton, Harrington, Bridgevllle, Meaford, Laurel\nand Deltnar, 12 01 night,\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 35, 8 01. 1018\nam,1806.1250,517. *8OB,748,820pm, 1240\nnlchi Baltimore only. 8 06 p\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad\nmlngton, express. 3 50, 7 20, « 10.11 18 a in, 1110,\nI30 5*18, 700, 740,835,1116, 1130pm. 1203\nnight.
16601351c47a8b30b9860b3b3263d290 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.105479420345 40.735657 -74.172367 THE CITY OF NEWARK WHERE PUBLIC\nEXHIBITIONS OF MOVING PICTURES ARB\nGIVEN AND SHOWN.\nBe it ordained by the Mayor and Common\nCouncil of the City of Newark;\nSection 1. That in all places within the City\nof Newark whereir exhibitions of moving pic-\ntures are given and shown and an admission\nfee charged therefor, the aiales and passage\nways In such place or places shall be kept free\nand clear of all obstructions, and no perBon or\npersons shall stand or remain in suoh aisles\nor passageways while such place or places are\nopen to he public. It shall be the duty of the\nproprietor or proprietors, lessee or lessees of\nevery such place to keep the aisles and pas-\nsageways therein free and clear from all ob-\nstructions and to prevent persons from stand-\ning and remaining therein while and so Ions\nas such place is open to the public. Each ani\nevery owner or owners, lessee or leasees of any\nsuch place who shall suffer or permit the aisles\nand passageways thereof to be obstructed while\nthe same is open to the public, or who shall\npermit or suffer persons to stand and remain\nin the aisles and passageways of any such\nplace while the same Is open to the public,\nshall forfeit and pay a of twenty-five\ndollars for each and every such offense. It\nshall be the duty of the police force to aid !n\nthe enforcement of the provisions of thlB esc-\ntion, and the officers of the police force shall\nhave power at any time, while any such place\nor places are open to the public, to prevent\npersons from standing or remaining In the\nuisles and passageways of such place or plaoes,\nand to remove persons therefrom and to es-\nquire all obstructions to be removed therefrom.\nSection 2. Every exit from such place shall\nhare over or alongside the same on the Inside\nthe word “Exit" in legible letters not less than\neight Inches high. Over each exit shall be\nplaced a lamp lighted by whale or other non-\nexulosive oil, with a red globe or shade, which\nshall he kept burning while such place is open\nto the public and no fixed red light shall be\npermitted within such place, except to Indicate\nan exit to be used in case of Are.\nSection 3. Any person or corporation who\nshall via. ate or neglect or refuse to comply\nwith any provision or requirement of this ordi-\nnance rbal! for every such offense forfeit ind\npay a penalty of twenty-five dollar*.\nSection 4. This ordinance shall take effect\nimmediately.
168b9b9cf31a6cc6bb019baf9a4db389 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1898.9602739408929 46.187885 -123.831256 down the Nehalem river, on th north\nIda thereof, via. Grand Rapids and Red\nBluff, to the northeast corner of lot No.\nf, seottofi t. To. 4 north, range 7 west of\nth Willamette meridian. Ordered that\nT. J . Brown, Chaxie II. Miller and An.\ndraw Youna; be appointed viewers, and A.\n8. Tee, surveyor, and that they meet at\nth Jewell poatofllco on Monday, the Itb\nday of January, MM, at 10 a, m.\nIn th matter of th petition of B. Gal-\nlagher and a others to lay out a count\nroad aa fallows, towlt: peglBplnf at a\natako In tho center Of th county road,\nrunning easterly 34 rods and 13 feet, from\na point ar th center of the west end of\nthe east approach to th draw spaa ot\n Lewis and Clark river draw bridge,\nsituated in section 7, township 7 north,\nrang t wcat ot the Willamette merldlajn;\nthence over the most practicable rout\nvia th north aid of the BatU Creek\nschool faouso. In section 10 of above tjarn\nahlp, to the 8. E. corner of tho 8. W.\nof section 22, township 7 north of rang\nt west of the Willamette meridian, al) In\nClatsop county, Oregon. Ordered that A.\nB. McMillan, H. F . Nurnberg and John\nFry be appointed viewers, and A. 8 . To\nsurveyor, and that they meet at the resi\ndence of W. J . Ingalls on Tuesday, De-\ncember uth. 1898 , at 11 o'clock m.. and\nduly qualify and tmr upon rli dirrharg\nof their dutlea In tbl behalf, according to\nlaw.
40cf9a34f62eee04d5893c46ba8f02ae NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.9986301052766 41.681744 -72.788147 Then a membership card is issued\nto the applicant with his name and\naddress on It. This card is blocked\noft for every week in the, year, the\ndates running from January 7, 14, 21,\netc., on through the year. Against\neach date the secretary of the club\nwrites in the amount received each\nweek. A duplicate memorandum card\nIs kept with the payments noted on it,\nand as soon as $5 is paid in the sec-\nretary makes requisition for the pur-\nchase of the first war stamp for the\nmember on the treasurer. The stamp\ncosts $4.13 so there fa 87 cents left\nover to credit on the payment of the\nnext stamp. A requisition blank is\nprovided so that the treasurer has it\nto show for each stamp issued. The\nsystem is so simple that It does not\nrequire any bookkeeping, and It ac\ncomplishes just the desired end, a\nsystematic savings On the weekly\n That . means that people will\nkeep on buying these stamps just as\nthey keep up Christmas clubs, Vaca-\ntion clubs and the Uke through the\nyear. ; The vice chairman assists in\ndirecting the clubs, so as to get as\nmany members In as possible. If\nthese clubs are organized in different\ndepartments of factories they would\nstir up some lively conlpetitlon among\nthe departments In purchasing, the\nmost stamps. At the end of the year,\nthe club securing the most stamps\ncould banquet at the expense of the\nother. Hoover would put his O.' K.\non that sort of a banquet.\nManager Herbert V. Camp, of the\npublicity .end of the campaign has\nsamples of 'the Prudential War Sav-\nings society cards In his office at\nRooms 305 and 306 in the New Brlt- -\nLain National Bank building, and will\nbe pleased to show them to anyone\ninterested in starting such a patriotic\nclub.'
1e08263b618ab3c721fe5e89a7562439 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.2671232559615 40.419757 -77.187146 the riven rock was a large cavity. The\nfact was told a number of neighbors and\nupon visiting the spot and removing the\nrocks sufficient was revealed to prompt\none of the parties to go into the cavity.\nAt once he reported the opening of a\nlarger once than bis unaided vision\ncould discern and brought to the sur-\nface several specimens of stalagmites\nand stalactites. These latter Induced\nthe entire party to explore the opening\nthoroughly. In a few moments Messrs,\nJoseph Weibley, Charles A. Smith, Jno.\nS. Humer, Wm. Wetzel and the writer\nentered the cavern equipped with lan-\nterns. The mouth or entrance of the\ncavern proved to be about five feet high\nand three feet wide, descending and ex-\npanding In a few yards to a long passage\nfrom seven to ten feet high by about Blx\nfeet wide, extending In an easterly di-\nrection downward at a fall of about an\ninch to the foot. At a distance of about\nfifty fiet from the mouth this passage\nopened Into a large circular room about\ntwelve feet in diameter, with the most\ncurious rock formations projecting from\nthe floor, whilst from the roof hung\nhundreds of stalagmites from which\ntrickeled crystal drops of water which\ndraining to the south side formed a pret-\nty streamlet of a foot or more wide and\n inches deep. From this room\nthree openings were discovered leading\nIn different directions. By common\nconsent the southern one of these pass-\nages was entered and followed fully a\nhundred feet when the party suddenly\nfound themselves In a large triangular\nroom, in the centre of which the little\nstream has found a minature lake, in\nwhich, to the surprise of all a large\nnumber of small fish were seen. By the\naid of Wetzel's bandanna three of the\nfishes were captured. They proved to\nbe eyeless and scaleless of from three to\nfour Inches long, of a whitish color with\nred fins and tail. From this room two\ngalleries led south and east, the stream-\nlet passing from the lake by the east\ngallery, from which came a perceptible\ndraft of air. Here the party discovered\nthey had already spent two hours In the\ncave and all were of the opinion that\nbut a small portion of It had been tra-\nversed. It was then decided to return\nto the surface and at one o'clock that\nnoon to meet again equipped with at\nleaBt a thousand feet of rope, lamps and\na lunch to finish the exploration even\nshould it require a day's journey under\nground. Carlisle Mirror.\nPapers which can not get up more prob-\nable lies than the above, ought to\nchange editors.
0bd6f068cfba050d0dafe8197de8a05c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.2698629819888 41.681744 -72.788147 O'Mara on Arch .street early this\nmorning in front of Turner hull, af-\nter the bartenders' ball. The pris-\noner, Michael Gorman, was hustled\naway by some of his gangsters while\nothers in the crowd assaulted Patrol-\nman O'Mara and Supernmneraiy Of-\nficer Charles McGrath. Four of the\ngang were arrested end were In court\ntoday. Gorman has eluded the po-\nlice for several hours, but they ex-\npect to arrest him. The police learned\nthat Gorman broke tho chuins that\nbound his hands together, but the\nwrist bands had not been removed\nwhen he was last, heard from.\nAndrew Liebler, Robert Boyle,\nThomas O'Dell and Patrick Polaney\nwere charged with breach of the\npeace in police court this morning1\nand pleaded not guilty. Prosecuting\nAttorney Georsre E. Klett gave notice\nthat he would probably add charges\nof assault on Patrolman O'Mara \ninterference and resistance.\nThe trouble took plact about 1\no'clock this mcrning. Patrolman\nO'Mara was in the vicinity and, in\npassing the crowd, overheard re-\nmarks made by Gorman. lie paid no\nattention to them until Gorman\nraised his voice to a loud pitch and\nemphasized his comments with pro-\nfanity. The patrolman placed Gor-\nman under arrest and slipped a pair\nof handcuffs on him. Gorman then\nstarted to fight and the rest of the\ngang went to his assistance. Super-\nnumerary Officer McGrath came to\nhis fellow officer's aid. There was\na rough and tumble fight and du ring-i -\nL.lebler, Patrolman O'Mara says,\nkicked him in the head. O'Mara In\nscratched. lie was struck severol\nlimes and delivered some blowy, but\ndid not use his club. McGrath re-\nceived a kick in the stomach.\nAttorney P. F. McDonough
a621ca47b448d9bb3843cf3722b2ed13 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.752732208814 41.681744 -72.788147 will contribute a report on the pro\ngress of the campaign. Mr. Darling\nwho has been drawing political car\ntoons for the past 27 years is an\nauthentic reporter of political events\nand he will bring forth his interpre\ntations of the present campaign as\nseen by a cartoonist.\nNo doubt the famous Judge's\nCave which is situated two and a\nhalf miles northwest of New Haven,\nis well known to nearly every per\nson whs has had tho opportunity to\ndo considerable motoring at differ-\nent times. Well then, the event that\nmade this cave famous will be por-\ntrayed in a sketch to be presented\ntonight at 7:30 o'clock over the\nsame stations. It has to do with the\nning of a death warrant for\nCharles the First by two men, Ed\nward Whalley William Goffe,\nwho found the situation a bit awk-\nward after the succession of Charles\nthe Second back in Colonial times.\nAll phases of broadcasting, to\ngether with some inkling what the\nfuture holds for television are to be\ndiscussed in a new series of broad-\ncasts to be known as "The Radio\ntricians." 8. L . Rothafel, otherwise\nknown as "Roxy" will discuss this\nsubject during the first program of\nthis series which will go on air at\n8:30 o'clock over WEAF and WTIC.\nThe program will not be devoid of\nmusical entertainment as an orches-\ntra and vocal soloists will supply a\ngoodly amount of interesting music.\nA sparkling program of popular\ndance selections will come through\nthese same stations at 10 o'clock,\nand among the novelties will be\nheard Wlrges' "Igloo Stomp,"
3b1250fd610908da6905f8f8e6ba82c5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.015068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 JPREAD TIIE TRUTH.\nBorne medical men Insist Mint it lit uudigtiill\nadvertise a remedy, however valuable it hi\nu Queer reasoning thin. It Is like saying tli\narticle which the world need* should he hid\ncorner.that benefits and blessings may bo t\nIdeiy diflhued.that the means of protecting ai\nstoring health should bo a close monopoly, ai\nit accessible to nil. The argument Is bad. It\njrse than that; it is inhuman. Suppose lit\nIter's Stomach ISittorti.an absolute specific\n's|«psla, billiousncss and ncrvuus debllltj\nid never been known lieyond the repertoire\nc faculty, what would Imvu been the corn\nlonce* Instead uf curing and Invigorutli\nllilons, the good efforts of the pruparatli\nDtild have been eon lined to a comparative ft*\nhere In tlio highest authority for baying tli\n[lit should not bo hid nmler u tli\nliatever is excellent should ho placed as a ci\na hill, where all men cau take cognizance\n]1 ih ii|Min UUH principle mm inc inner* na\n<<11 advertlwd mid continue to «»o advertised\ncry nowppap<T of any prominence In the ww\nn hemisphere, nnri that the Hpontaneou* ten\nmiialx In Its favor havu been translated Into\nrttten languages Thousands enjoy peril\nalth to-day who would he langnlsbliitf on he\nsickness If the newspapers lmd nut rprtail I\nuth irith rrpunt to thl» nnequntrd Inrlyom\ni(I corrtcllrt far and wide. Sup|H»o profit h\nen reaped from thin publicity. In thai any\nintent against It! Ifthejuhiic health h\nenprotected; If Uvea bavehcett raved; If\nehlo hnvo biun strengthened and Uio Hick\nored, great good ha* txtn aa*/tni>lbh«t; a:\nhosomuanastoKradire to exertions thns\nctod their fair reward ?
3933aed1557ac8ae73bb14f7c7c766a8 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.441256798978 43.798358 -73.087921 usnea lor the benent ol others, in their opera\ntion in such cases, thev restore the tone of the\nStomach, strengthen the digestive organs, and in-\nvigorate the general functions of the whole body\nand thus become to both sexes (for they are per-\nfectly adapted to each) an invaluable means oi\npreventing disease and restoring health.\nIn affections cf the head, whether accompanied\nwun pain and giddiness or marked by the gnev\nous calamity of impaired mental nerv; in pal-\npitations of the heart, flatulence, loss of appetite\nand strength, and the multiplied symptoms of\ndisordered digestion, THE LIFE MEDICIA'ES\nwill be found to possess the most salutary efficacy.\nConstitutions relaxed, weak or decayed in men.\nor women are under the immediate influence ol\nThe Life Medicines. Old coughs, asthmas and\nconsumptive habits are soon relieved and speedi\nly cured. Poverty of blood, and emaciated limbs\nwill ere long meet'the happiest change; the chill\nwatery fluids will become rich and balsamic and\nthe limbs be covered with flesh firm and healthy.\nJVervous disorders of every kind and from\nwhalever cause arising, fly before the effecls of\nTHE LIFE MED1CIJVES and all that train of\nsinkings anxieties and tremours which so dread-\nfully affect the weak, the sedentaiy and the deli-\n will in a short time be succeeded by cheer-\nfulness and fvery presage of health.\nFor weakness, deficiency of natural trcngth\nand relaxation of the a ess t Is by two frequent in-\ndulgence of the passions, this medicine is a safe,\ncertain and --invaluable remedy.\nThose who have long resided in hot climates\nand are languid and relaxed in their whole sys-\ntem may take THE LIFE MED1CIJYES with\nthe happiet effects; and persons removing to\nthe Southern States or West Indies can not store\na more important article of health and life.\nT e following cases are among the most recent\ncure3 effected and gratefully acknowledged by\nthe persons benefitted:\nCase of Jacob C. Hunt JV'ew Windsor Orange\nCo. JV. Y. A dreadful tumor destroyed nearly\nthe whole of his face nose and jaw. Experienc-\ned quick relief from the use of the Life Medi-\ncines and in less than three months was entirely\ncured. Case reported with a wood engravinz\nin a new pamphlet now in press.\nCase of Thos. Purcell, sen, 84 years of age\nwas afflicted 18 years with swellings in his legs\nwas entirely cured by taking 42 pills in 3 weeks.\nCase of Joan Daulton, Aberdeen Ohio rheu-\nmatism five years is entirely cured-h - as
02a7843438d59c0e2103ef042de59abb THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1898.0561643518517 41.258732 -95.937873 Mexico, and in all the South American\nrepublics; she is paralyzing, by a civil,!\nwsr, the arms of the soldiers of Lib-\nerty. She divides our nation. In order\nto weaken, subdue and rule it\n"Surely we have some brave n4\nreliable Roman Catholic officers and\nsoldiers In our armies, but they form\nan insignificant minority when com-\npared with the Roman Catholic trait-\nors against whom we have to guard\nourselves, day and night The fact\nis, that the immense majority of the\nRoman Catholic bishops, priests and\nlaymen, are rebels In heart, when they\ncannot be in fact; with very few ex\nceptions, they are publicly In favor of\nslavery. I understand, now, wny me\npatriot of France, who d'termined to\nsee the colors of liberty floating over\ntheir great and beautiful country, were\nforced to hang or shoot almost all the\npriests and the monks as the irrecon-\ncilable enemies of liberty. For it in\nfact, which Is now evident to me.\nthat, with very few exceptions, every\npriest and every true Roman Catholle\nIs a determined enemy or lmerty.\nTheir extermination in France was \nof those terrible necessities which no\nhuman wisdom could avoid; it looks\nto me now as an order from heaven to\nsave France. May God grant that the\nsame terrible necessity be never felt\nIn the United States! But there Is a\nthing which Is very certain; it is, that\nif the American people could learn\nwhat I know of the fierce hatred of\nthe generality of the priests of Rome\nagainst our institutions, our schools,\nour most sacred rights, and our so\ndearly bought liberties, they would\ndrive them away tomorrow from\namong us, or they would shoot them\nas traitors. But I keep those sad\nsecrets in my heart; you are the only\none to whom I reveal them, for I\nknow that you learned them before\nme. The history of these last thou-\nsand years tells us that wherever the\nChurch of Rome is not a dagger to\npierce the bosom of a free nation she\nis a stone to her neck, and a ball to\nher feet, to paralyze her and prevent\nher advance In the ways of civilization.\nscience, intelligence, bapiness and lib-\nerty."
0960369de809ab20288e2f697825306f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.305479420345 39.745947 -75.546589 pernnee Lecturer. Cancel» Engagements.\nSpecial Correspondence Kvkmino Journal,.\nNew Castle, April 23 —Work on the\nlibrary building bas commenced In\nearuest. All this week five skilled masons\nbave been at work cutting aud fitting In\ntbe unique pUoes of brown stone that are\nto form the handsome base of the build­\ning The brownstoue will be laid for a\ndistance of five feet above the ground,\nwhen pressed bricks aud colored mortar\nwill be used. 'The material that Is being\nused In the handsome structure is\nof the best quality aud prettier than\nany other building here.\nThe hammers and other tools which\nwere to have arrived here ou Monday\nmorning to ta used by the tramp oon\nvlots in the New Castle jail yard, had\nnot arrived In time to begin work at 8\no'clock this morning, and. In conse\nqueues, the convicts are still languish\n in ease lu their big cells In the\ncounty jatl. The tools, which are to be\nfurnished by Duncan Brothers of\nWilmington, will be sent here by them\nthis afternoon They are as follows:\nOne dozen 3 pounds napping hammers,\none dozen 4 pound napping hammers,two\n15 pound sledges, aud bandies.\nThe members of the local branch of tbe\nW C T. Ü, received a telegram from\nLanrel last evening stating\nIda C. Clothier and Mrs N.\nwho were to have lectured here to-day.\nwould be uuable to get. here owing to the\nIllness of the latter and the engagement\nwould therefore have to be canceled. All\nI" rangements had been made to have\nMis Green deliver her “chalk talk" m\npublic school building No. 1 this after­\nnoon, and Miss Clothier was to have\nltd tired lu the M E Church and organ\nIzedabranchoftheY.W.C.T.Ü,this\nevening,
0238fedcaf4f3d6de890e543f19ef4ff PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.7554644492511 31.960991 -90.983994 pie of Cuba or Canada or India may three or four hundred thousand bales of Wv\nhave a governor-general sprung upon ! °‘,r cotton. Already the English be-\nthem after they had, cn masse,petition- IF” to find that unless they giVe fcctt\ned for another. But i' a small junto j prices lor our staple, the Américain\nof horizontaiists can thwart the express- j WHI cut them out of the foreign market\ned will of 9-lOths of the American j provided our exports of cotton g^'\ndemocracy and not only drive them should increase for a few years to come\n■from their principles; but drive them ' as 1 Iicy have increased forafew\nalso to demolish the works of the old 1 pnst.\nrepublican fathers, there is an end to: H we exported one or\nthe people ruling on democratic princi- j millions worth of cotton fabricsii.stead\npic, and the sooner that every patriot, °f live, England would have to raise\n on his own hook if he has no | the price of the raw material, or she\nleader, resists such tyranny under the ! could not compete with us and payljj\nname of democracy the better. Bad j or -5 dollms per bale more than the\nas wl.igg» rv may bo, tyranny is wor<c. American manufacturer lias to pjy,\nThe essence of tyranny consists in At high prices the English duty and\nbending the will of (he many to the I extra .charges are not so much fd;,\nw ill of the few. It matters not wheth- j Does any one doubt our capacityim\ner tire will of the many he subdued to j few years to export an hundred millions\nthe will of the few by the bayonet, by ! of dollars worth of cotton goods! Is\nsuperstition cr by party machinery. 1821 Mr. Iiaync hooted and deridfd\nThe »ffect is the same and the Irantiy the idea that we could ever manafar-
3d268f2b483269b03dd4a2d4cb03ecf8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.6671232559615 39.745947 -75.546589 Mrs, John C. Stltes entertained at\n“Bridge” and with luncheon In honor\nof her guests, Mrs Spruance, of Wil­\nmington. and Mrs. Vanden, of Ridley\nPark, Pa. The guest* were; Mrs.\nW. B. Biggs, Mrs. O. L . Townsend,\nMrs. H. B. McDowell, Mrs. L. O.\nSterner, Mrs. J . L. Shepherd. Mrs. H.\nM. Schroeder. Mrs. Edith Cochran,\nMrs. Henry S. Brady, Mrs. Hugh C.\nBrowne. Miss Justine Peverley, Miss\nDora Price, Miss Agnes Cochran, Miss\nMay Holten, and Miss Laura Wllllts.\nThe Rev. Francia H. Moore writes\nIn a private letter to J. Fletcher Dea-\nkyne, that he and Mrs. Moore were\nto leave Bar Harbor, Maine, on Wed­\nnesday, going from there to Bass\nRocks, Gloucester, Maas., for a weeks\nstay. They leave there on Septem­\nber 7, going to New York on the Fall\nRiver Line, stopping a night In Phil­\nadelphia and reaching Middletown on\nFriday afternoon, September 8. The\npreparatory service before the com­\nmunion be held on that evening\nat 7.30 o'clock. During Dr. Moores\nabsence, the prayer meeting service\nhas been In charge of Mr. Deakyne.\nPersonal;—Miss Helen McDowell,\nMiss Mary Griffith, Miss Elizabeth\nGibbs, Kendall McDowell and Ralph\nShallcross recently formed a pleasant\nparty at Betterton, Maryland—Mr. and\nMrs. Frgnk L. Nowland, of Philadel­\nphia. visited their sister, Mrs. Walter\nS. Letherbury, this week. Their son,\nRobert Nowland, has recently been\nvisiting his cousin, Nowland Lether­\nbury—Mrs James Irwin and children,\nof Philadelphia, wer* guests of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Echen-\nboffer, this week—The first fall meet­\ning of the Womans Christian Temper­\nance Union will he held on Monday\nevening at the home of Mrs. J . F. Mc­\nWhorter—Misses Deaklyne are enter­\ntaining Miss Turner, of Baden, Md.,\nand Miss Kennedy, of Harrington—\nMrs. R. R. Cochran has returned from\na months visit with her daughter.\nMrs. J F . Plummer and family, of\nSalisbury, N. C.
5cc39cdc7bda1b8b670a618b9a4aa024 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1906.546575310756 39.623709 -77.41082 The vestry of Catoctin Parish order\nspread upon the minutes of the vestry the\nfollowing reference to the death of the\nRev. Ernest McGill.\nWhen at 3a. m. on July 7, 1906, our\nHeavenly Father called the Rev. Ernest\nMcGill from the ranks of the Church Mil-\nitant to the hosts of the Church Expec-\ntant, there passed from the field of earth-\nly activity one of the best men; and we,\nthe vestrymen of the church to which Mr.\nMcGill gave the last years of his life\nwork, plead the utter inability of words\nto express the emotions which pervade\neach breast, the thoughts which over-\nwhelm each mind and the sorrow which\nsaddens each heart as we realize the loss\nwe sustain by the death of our rector and\nfriend, a man so modest, so retiring, but\ntruly one where best known best loved.\nWell may every interest of our commun-\n mourn the death of this noble servant\nof God. The Rev. Ernest McGill was,\nindeed, one of the best and truest of men.\nDuring the ten years of his ministrations\nin our midst, his life was an open book\nand its every page bore testimony that he\nwalked with God. His ministrations as\npriest and rector were earnest and un-\nceasing, inspiring and uplifting, while his\nprivate life was so genial and sincere, so\nsweet and pure, so genuinely character-\nistic of the true Christian, that our be-\nreavement is not only for that of a faith-\nful priest, but also for that of a beloved\ncompanion and friend. To his family we\nextend our deepest sympathy and most\nsincere condolence, with the assurance\nthat their grief and their sorrow arc\nshared by us and we pray our Heavenly\nFather to be mindful of them in this their\ntime of sore distress.
2505ec158351ee03e7dc7f41a11a4299 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1912.7581966896882 36.620892 -90.823455 possession of th" same for more than ten- years\nnext hefore Hi.. Dliiig of ihls petlilon. That the\ndefenoants e!ulni siine title, estate or int' ret to\nsaid premises, the nit lure nnd chn raster of winch\nIs unknown to the plaintlfte and cannot le\nd hec ln. eieept that snld claim Is adverse\nand preliulh lii! to the plaintiffs. And tv which\nsaid action plaintliJs sevk to forever bar and\npreclude the said defendants and -- ach of th'- -\nfrom sitting np any Interest oreialtn in or to\nslid rettl estate adversely to plaintiffs, and which\nsaid action Is returnable to and trlfthle on the\nfirst dav of the next regular tenn nf thin court\nto be holden In the city of Doniphan, In the\ncountv of Kipley. in the state of Missouri, on\nthe llth day of 'November, ry. at which time\nand place said defendants are required and \nmanded to beard appear and to plead, answer\nnr demur to plaintiffs said petition, otherwise\nthe allegations contained In snid petition wilt be\ntaken and considered aa confessed and Judge-\nment rendered according to the prayer thereof,\nforever barring and precluding said defendants\nfrom hereinafter setting up any claims or title to\nsaid real property.\nTflK Uipltt rovNTV DEMOCRAT, published In\nDonlpljsn, Kipley county. MtMsonrl. having been\ndesignated by the plaintiffs and their attorney of\nrecord aa the newspaper most likely to give\nnotice to the said defendants of the pendency of\nthis action, It Is further ordered that a copy of\nthis order he pnhtlshed In said Ripi.kv-Goi'N-\nUfhockat once a wees for and during four\nweeks successively, ths last Inserting nf eald\norder In said newspaper to be st least thirty\ndays oerore tne ursi nay ot tne neat regular\nterm nC this court.\n(SKAL.I
efd475ddabcb661bbaad1bbf85fef9d4 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.015068461441 39.290882 -76.610759 perhaps compel them to press upon their custo-\nmers, and wring the last dollar Irom the commu-\nnity it had to yield up to them?and into the va-\ncuum, which the absorption of their own circu-\nlation would create; would flow the depreciated\nbil's of the neighboring States, and from the cir-\nculating meuium of your State. If after this\nsearching operation to enable them to meet their\nown liabilities in specie, your banks were able\nto maintain tiie position they had assumed, they\nwould, lor all practical benefits, remain 'closeu'\ninstitutions to the community?lor the first dol-\nlar they issueu, or the smallest deposite they re-\nceived, would immediately be drawn from them\nia specie, while specie was at a premium above\nthe ordinary medium, which must continue to\nbo the irredeemable paper of the neighboring\nStates. Your banks would thus be deprived of\n ability to aid the community, whose busi-\nness would be restricted, if not arrested and\nbroken up, and who would bring upon itself one\nintolerable evil without a compensating benefit.\nThere is no law lure invariable in its opera-\ntions, than when there are two currencies of dif-\nferent values in comi .unities allied by trade,\nthat the depreciated currency will work itself\ninto circulation and supercede the moru valua-\nble. Thus the Ohio community would be sub-\nject to all the evils of au irredeemable circula-\nting medium of foreign issue, while they had\nClosed their own banks, destroyed their own\ntrade, and entailed suffering and distress upon\nall classes, in the futile attempt to range her-\nself among the f eie paying communities.?\nThe .amr result would fo low, to both States,\nwere Ohio aud Kentucky to resume without the\nother Western States.
ae326c4166a5095fb5d24dfd44a03243 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.9136985984271 39.261561 -121.016059 To see these things as they were to ns we\nmust turn back in imagination to the gates of\nlife, and recall the freshness of our youth. La-\nter on in life, the most unlimited accumulation\nof precious stones loses its power of producing\naO effect, and no reverses of fortune are extra-\nordinary enough to startle us. The suddenly\nrevealad treasures, the gorgeous palaces with\ndoors of sandal-wood, fretted ceilings, and jew-\nelled couches, the high-bosomed virgins, the\nobedience of the genii, and the state of kings—-\nthese things come not near us. We have lost\nthe sublime egotism of our early years, and ac-\nknowledge that such splendid possessions are\ntoo good for us. Fate has already assigned ns\nour moderate share, and set with some sufficient\ndefiniteness the limits of our ambition and our\nhopes. Who are we between thirty and forty\nthat we should pull tip a flat stone with a ring\nin it, and find steps leading to a cavern stored\nwith the precious rarities of an Eastern fancy,\nor wake In the night, and tremble with sweet\namazement to behold fair paragon of China\nsleeping by our side? Enough for us if we sold\nout before the fall of consols, and if the singlu\npartner to whom we limit our admiration of\nfemale beauty, preserve a moderate share of\nthose fair proportions and serene disposition\nwith which she adorned the early days of court-\nship. liut there was a time with us when the\nArabian Nvjhlx were not so much a story as a\ndream, when, with the same dim mingling of\nidentities which we sometimes have in sleep, it\nis not Aladdin, lint ourself, and yet not ourself,\nbut Aladdiu, who gazes on the jewel-bearing\nfruit-trees, marries the Sultans daughter, and\ncontroils the resources of the lamp; we suffer\nand triumph with Sinbad, taste vicissitudes with\nCamaralzainan, enjoy the shrinking fondness of\nRiibulhe. travel upon the enchauted carpet, or\nmount the flying horse. * * * To rend of\nthese things was a sort of intellectual hasheesh\n—an intoxicating stimulant to that early imag-\nination which does not conciously subdue other\nthings into its own forms, but delights to lose\nitself In suggestions from without.
48b5d612563f48391af7317bc9c48d2b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.2281420448796 41.681744 -72.788147 "There are changes tn the home, of\ncourse, la a good many cities todsy\npeople are living their lives la apart-- !\nments. Moras of us remember when\nwe usedtoliveona(srmandwehad\na considerable variety of respnnsibti.\nIty. M'e had to cut the wood and do\nthe chores. When we want to be '\nwarm now we lure en the gas; when\nwe wsnt milk we ft pen the bark door\nsnd there it la on the steps. Even the\nbaking and the preparation of food Is\nlargely done outside of the home. We\nsend oud clothee to the laundry. A\ngreat many operations that used to\nbe done in the homo are done by out-\nside agencies. Perhaps ws sre not re-- 1\nsponsible; but because of these\nchanges there bave come certain\n subtle Influences have\ncome Into the home and mads It hard\nto maintain that delightful and fine\nChristian spirit In the home that our\nparents maintained. Tben there's a\nsort of propaganda going on at the\nexpense of theYomr. You who at-\ntend the theater know that the home\nsnd the marriage relationship is the\nbutt of all kinds of Jokes, Folks do\ntint take the marriage relationship\nseriously. Cheap magazines sre filled\nWith trssby Innuendoes against the\nhome. There Is the spirit of freedom\ntn which a man or a woman says. 'I\nem going te have my fling In life.\nPerhaps you hsve read the book, I do\nnot retell the nstne now, but the\nwomsn simply insisted on hsvlng her\nown way and going her own war-Ther - e
11146651d5254a237725929df8dba539 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.7136985984273 39.745947 -75.546589 Jonas Heck was arretted at Front and\nMarket etreete by Officer White, drunk.\nHe got $2 and cost«.\nOrle Fox wa% charged by hts mother,\nMrs. Lzzle Witer, with disorderly con\ndnet. She aald that for two years he had\nbeen drinking and when under the lnfli\nrace of llqnor was abusive He paid $3\na waek board, bnt Judge Ball «aid this\ndidnt make him a dictator of the family.\nHis mother didnt want to presa tba\ncharge and be was allowed to go on eon\ndttion that he behaved btinielf.\nSadie Tilgbman, s good looking colored\ngirl wa* arrested for dleorderly conduct\nat Sixth and Poplar street«, by Officer\nGilling. It was shown that aba did talk\nloud, aud was Quad $5 and coat«.\nJamea Colllus arrested by Officer\nGann for being drunk at Fr«nt and\nUnion, was fined $3 aud coats\nMartin Corliss, who stabbad Officer\nMurphy last Saturday night, was called,\nbnt Dr. Hngbee stated that the officer\nwas uaab e to be present and wonld not\nbe able far several dais The case wat\ncontinued uutil Monday.\nList night Officer Palmer was going\nalong Front street when he saw John\nMcLaughlin drunk and disorderly. II*\nordered him swav and John assaulted\nhim. Then i lit jer gave him a taste\nof the locust and this morning he\nshowed the effeot« of the treatment.\nMoLanghltu is considered by the police\nas a dangerous men and Palmer has a\ngaod record Judge Ball thought best\nto continue the case an til to-morrow\nto allow witnesses of the affray to\nappear. McLaughlin was remanded.\nLily Reed, colored, was charged with\nassanlt on Emma White, colored U was\na Leasehold row and LUy was discharged,\nJudge Bill cautioning both agalnat any\nfnrther warfare.\nHenry Morris, colored, was charged\nwith assanlt with Intent to commit mar\nder on Rlehard Polk Neither Polk nor\nRichard L Rider, the main witness, were\npresent, although tummocei, and at\ntachmenls were lcsupd for them\nFrank Grlsom, a 12 years-old boy. was\nconvicted of enteric? the house of Mrs\nPl«re« Devis, No. 2132 Market street, sod\nstealing a gold ring and pin Tha theft\noccurred last Monday afternoon and the\nring was fonud on the boys finger FraDk\nbas been iu trouble before, ODce in\nompany with other boys at Eighth aud\nMarket, and again when ha aud another\nboy took a bicycle to Chester and sold it.\nNeither case was pushed. This time\nFrank was sent to the reform school.
1bff5da5c878cb69832ba7b98e3d760c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.8013698313039 58.275556 -134.3925 Annie Kudlaluk, an Eskimo girl ed\nseated at Carlisle, has been the object\nof considerable interest and comment\nfor the reason that report had it that,\nupon her return to her people in the\nfar North, she went back to blubber\neating and forget the lessons of civili¬\nzation. Bishop Rowe, Who but receutly\nreturned from the Point Hope country,\ncow says that the reports are without\nfoundation, and the girl is really en¬\ngaged in efforts to improve the condi¬\ntion of her race-\nThe trading ecbooner "Bender liros^\nwhich sU 'aaded twenty miles from\nBering sea ou <tw» mud flats of the\nKu>koJcwiei liver thnee .years ago, has\nreached Puget round in safety. The\nvessel was salved by missionaries aud\nnatives by digging a trench three miles\nle»g through which they were able to\nget her into wat-er -of sufficient depth\nto float. Capt. John Knaflich took his\ncommand to iJuget sound without nav-\nigatiug instrucnents or proper stores\nand with the atd of a crew composed of\nv single fieamau and a party of four\n!>i«8i*etora, who were nicked uj3\nstranded on the river.\nStroller White, of the ^Whiteborsb\nStar, is trying to raise money enougt\nto visit the States, aud duus delinquent\nsubscribers in the uuqiue\nmanner.: "There have passed through\nWhitehorse within the past two werfks\nmany persons who., to the Stroller's\npersonal knowledge have passed out\nevery fail and back every spring for\nthe last eight or ten years. As many\not this class toil not neither do they\nspin when in the country, it is beyond\nthe ken of the Stroller to determine\nhow ihey are tfbie to do -so much trav¬\neling. Sozie cf them cauuot a(ford to\noven wear .underclothes, but that ia\nprobably why they go out in the win-\nter The -close of gambling at Dawsoc\nseven yea.* ago left exactly .197 boost¬\ners stranded there. Of that number\n182 auwered to the name of -'Kid.1 2noi\nhalf a duEeu of them bad raiment tc\nexceed ?>iJ30 in value .and that .wab\nmostly moth eaten and iaciriug in\ngables. And yet, when the time for the\nanimal exodus came ,round, they all\nhad the price*© take thee* xwt .It\n^oaid be -a betrayal of confidence tc\ntell hew th^y got it, but they had it\nFor the Jirst two years after the dis\ncoveiyof gold in the Klondike, only\nthree classes could afford tcipa to the\noutside.gaverunuant officials, those\nwho had struck 62 to the pan and meat\ndealers.
ea7fe608d96f8f2dd5c29a1d34d93bc8 HANNIBAL JOURNAL AND WESTERN UNION ChronAm 1851.9246575025368 39.70825 -91.358741 In withwrawing Mr. Crittenden, or rcqnest-in- g\nhis withwrawal, I was compelled to ex-\nplain, or be exposed to misconstruction myself\nand risk irreparable injury to him.\nThe facts existing at the time are briefly\nthese: That portion of the Whig party who\ndesire to restore Mr. Crittenden to the Senate,\nfrom whence he was withdrawn in 1848, to\nmake the Gubernatorial race against Mr. Pow-\nell, sorely as it now appears against his owq\npolitical interests, did not desire to involve him\nin a contest on the floor with any member of his\nown party. They were willing to discuss his\nclaims upon national, State, personal cr party\ngrounds, before the Whig party alone, in a free\nand equal party council. They did not know,\nby any count they were able to make, what\nwould be the result. They pledged themselves\nover and strain to abide that result, whatever it\nmight be, and to go in solid and unbroken phal-\nanx for the nominee by a majority in a \nof seventy of the party, the w hole seventy bind-\ning themselves to such submission.\nIn scanning the elements of opposition to Mr.\nCrittenden, and in tracing the sources of divi-\nsion among the Whigs, those which I huve enu-\nmerated are open and lie upon the surface.\nThero is another deeper and far more dangerous,\nwhich is working at the vitals, which, if not\nhealed or eradicated, will, in my judgment, dis-\norganise the party, and scatter its elements nev\ner again to bo united under a common head, with\ncommon objects, and upon its ancient principles\nof social organization, law, and policy at least!\nduring tins generation. This sore I endeavored\nto touch, when 1 spoke, as I shall do while I write,\nwith tenderness and caution, but with truth. I\n.l id it then, aa I do now, with a sincere desire to\nvindicate historic accuracy, and to prevent the\nmischief which must inevitably result to a com-\nmon cause, from the misunderstandings and\nheart-burnin- gs
1faa23560e23c9a0d70598092edf3faf NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.7767122970574 41.681744 -72.788147 To years old, a veteran of the Civil War, a sufferer for many\nyears with Stomach trouble as he thought of an incurable nature,\nadds his testimony to the hundreds of others of the wonderfully\ngood qualities of Goldine. Said Mr. Owen Farrell of 18 Greenwood\nstreet, New Britain, to the Goldine man the other day: "I came in\nto tell you how much good your medicine has dono me. For the\npast live years I suffered terribly with indigestion, headaches and\ndizzy spells. I really was afraid to eat anything for no matter\nwhat I ate I would suffer for it. I had catarrh, mucous would drop\nin my throat and I coughed constantly and spit up mucous until I\nwould gag. I would grow dizzy on the street, was short of breath\nand my heart would palpitate so I thought I would choke. For five\nyears I doctored and also tried every remedy that was recommend-\ned, to me but could not relief. Finally some friends who had\nused "Goldine" told me I should by all means try it. I thought\nit would be like all others I had tried and believe me I was a sur-\nprised man when I had taken only two bottles. I began to im-\nprove, my appetite is now good' and I sleep good. Today my folks\nhad corned beef and cabbage for dinner and for the first time in\nyears I just ate my fill of it and here I am feeling fine and not\na bit of distress from eating it. In fact, I believe I can eat anything\nnow and get awayv with it. I dont' have headaches, no more dizzy\nspells, catarrh is nearly all gone, and I feel as young as I did 20\nyears ago. It is wonderful what your medicine has done for a man\nof my years. You can publish my story and besides I will tell every\nbody I meet the same thing.
435dc9290d9480f7bf76ee857711a54d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.719178050482 58.275556 -134.3925 me Iirsi stream mill muy were\nplanted III was Lawnoii crock. wlu<rc\nhulf of the fry were liberated, and\nthen a two-mile walk was taken and\nthe rent of the fry liberated In Cowec\ncreek. Uwnuil creek Is the stream\nthat empties Into the channel Just be¬\nyond the Douglas cemetery and\nCow ce creek empties near the pole\nline a couple of miles farther up the\nchannel. All the fry were liberated\nabove the ditch und it Is thouKht\nthat the llsh will travel along the\nditch und In time be found In ull\nthe other streums on the Island.\nMr. Sprague, who rulsed the fry\nmid has charge of them on the trip,\nis mi enthusiastic fish culturlst and\nwus for many years lu the service of\nthe U. S. government as a llsh expert.\nHe has accomplished many wonder\nfill feats in propagating llsh. HIh\nwork In Alaska Is little less than\nwonderful and has been commented\non many times by the press of tills\nlocality. Through his efforts in con-\nJunction with the Alaaku Fish und\nGame Club many of flic streams of\nthis locality have been stockcd with\nthe Colorado Hrook trout, the gumest\n tliut swims, und In a few years\nlocal fishermen will reap a great\nbenefit from his efforts.\nHo known the nature of trout fry\nso thoroughly that the trip Sunday\nwhich covered several miles of terri¬\ntory over rough country, wus uccom-\npllshed without tho loss of hardly\nany of the fry and thoy reached their\ndestinations as lively as crickets and\nsought hiding places among tho rocks\na few minutes c.ftcr being liberated.\nThe dues to the Alaska Game and\nFish Club are one dollar per year,\nund the club Is doing great work for\nAlusku, fighting for territorial eon-\ntrot of the fisheries, experimenting\nwith the propagation of trout and\nsalmon, and it should be the duty of\nevery citizen to belong to tho club\nwhether ho Is u disciple of lsaak\nWalton or not. Now In particular\nthe people of Donglus Island who are\nInterested lu trout fishing, should\nshow their appreciation to the efforts\nof the Club by Joining It.\nThose wishing to Join should\ncither send their dues to Mr.\nSpraguc, acting secretary of the club,\nor give their names to J. F . Henson,\nof this city, who will send In their\nnames.
085bfb67b0889fdd44c65a9a179a2c73 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Field.It is not tixed by law. Vol\nmen and judges have decided that the la\ncan not controvcnc the Constitution, n<\ncan Congress make a law that binds tli\nStates. Congress can not do it, and hi\nnot done it. It passed a law in 17'J2 tin\nthe certificates should be sent in by tl\nlirst Wednesday in February, ami\nnot llip S<>rrnt«irv nf Slnto ulir.nl,1 uoi\nfor them, llo coulil send for tliei\nat any time before the two houses inc\nThat i« the law, if it was not repealed\nthin Electoral Commission.a law whir\ndeclare* that all certificate* and papei\npurporting to he certificate* which una\nhave been received .shall l»e opened,\nhave answered the objection that th\ncertificate ha* not been received, becaui\nit ought to have received. In poil\nof fact, it was received in your presenc\nIt was delivered by the member fro\nNew York (Hewitt) to the President\nthe Senate. Was it for him to reject it\nAre the representatives of the people\nsubmit to that '.' Are the Republicans\nsubmit to it? If you do, look out f<\n1881. Let this House put down its heel;\nonce and forever on the doctrine that tl\nPresident of the Sonata is anything mm\nthan the presiding oflicer, the guardin\nof these certificates until they are opene*\nand that it his di*ty to o|>on them at\nsubmit to the two Houses every questic\nthat shall arise.\nThe debate being closed and the que\ntion being on tlio resolution btiered 1\nMr. l'oppleton, Mr. Knott moved the fo
0406aa7e7b071948de485b043046f7dd THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.4698629819889 42.217817 -85.891125 warrant of authority to summon the Chief Jus\ntices of the Supreme Courts of the several\nStates to sit at Washington as a jury to try any\ncae. however grave and weighty may be its\nnature. The right to summon must carry with\nit the power to enforce obedience to the man-\ndate, and the committee can see no means by\nwhich the Judicial officers of a State can be\ncompelled to assume the functions of jurors in\nthe Supreme Court of the United States.\nThere are other objections to the practical\nworking of the bill under consideration, to\nwhich we do not think it necessary to refer.\nIt may be true that the SUte of Maryland\nhas been, in the late election fr President and\nice President, deprived of her just and full\nright in doclaring who were legally chosen, by\nlettRjn of frauds perpetrated by Returning\nIijsrdi ia some of the States. It may also be\ntrue that these fraudulent acts were counte-\nnanced or encouraged or participated in by\nsome who now enjoy high cilices as the fruit of\nsuch frauds. It is due to the present genera-\ntion of the people of this country and their\njiosterity, and to principles on which our\nGovernment is founded, that all evidence tend-\ning to establish the fact of such fraudulent\npractices should be calmly, carefully and vigor\nouhIv examined. Put your committeo are of\nopinion that the consequence of such examina\ntion, if it discloses guilt upon the part of any\nin high othcial position, thuuld not be an effort\nto set aside the judgment of a former Congress\nas to the election of a President aud Vice\nPresident, but should bo confined to the pun\nishment by legal and constitutional means of\nthe offenders, and to the preservation and per-\npetuation of the evidences of their guilt, no\nthat the American people may be protected\nfrom a recurrence of the crime.\nThree Republican members of the\ncommittee, Mr. Frye, Mr. Conger, and\nMr. JJapham, add the following:\nWe agree to he foregoing report, so far as it\nstates reasons for the resolution adopted by\nthe committee, but dissent from the conclud\ning portion, as not pertinent to the inquiry be\nfore ua, and as giving an implied sanction to\nthe propriety of the pending investigation,\nordered by the majority of the Ilouse of Rep\nresentatives, to which we were and are opposed.
1b9a9c6393f550e0ce2f6c26480f7c1d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.0863013381531 41.681744 -72.788147 As far as the law Is concerned the\ndecision Is a wise onr Many believe\nthat there are too many "privileged\ncommunications;" that there are too\nmany cases where one is not obliged\nto testify because of the relations\nexisting between two persons. Many\nbelieve that thc truth should be\nbrought to light under all circum.\nstances; that everyone should be com-\npelled to tell all that is known about\na crime or a criminal. Technicallv.\nthe decision follows this principle\nand It is probably the best principle\nin the greatest number of cases.\nBut the atttude of Judge Lindsey\nexplains the reason for his great power\nin the right direction among "kids."\nThey believed in him. Many have been\nbrought before him in Juvenile Court,\nand many are the lives he has been\nable to straighten out Just because\nthey have believed and trusted him.\nKvidently he would prefer o retain\nthat trust, even though he must suffer\npersonally because of it, than to have\nthe "kids" know that, in even one In-\nstance, he had betrayed one of them.\nThus a man who has come in con-\ntact with more young criminals if\na lad may be said to be a criminal\never than perhaps any other man\nIn this country, believes thoroughly\nIn the good that may come from ob-\ntaining the trust and conlldence of\nthe young. Men and women who do\nnot occupy an official position such\nas Judge Lindsey'n would do well to\nfollow his example. When once tho\nconfidence of the young lad or girl is\nobtained; when that confidence i.- - s\nnever abused, there is no end to the\ngood that one may do if ho inclined.\n"Vf.oeclnly is this true of parent
0564659ab00cfc3df48f1e3b1854e4bc SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.1301369545915 37.53119 -84.661888 at which It hot ever been our pleasure\nto be present wee the colden wedding\nof Col and Mrs W HulT Dudderar at\ntheir handsome home on the hilii\nnear Rowland Wednesday AD hun ¬\ndred Invitations had been lued fully\n75 of those fortunate enough tu receive\nthem responding and from 11 until 3\noclock the Dodderer home was a scene\nof joy and gladness The happy bride\nand groom of 50 years ago were In per\nfeet bealth and spirits tbe children\nand grandchildren delighted because\nof the long life of the good old couple\nand tbe friends glad to be In the happy\nhome all lent to make the day one long\nto be remembered Tho home was beau\ntlfully decorated with emllax aDd other J\nevergreens and an orchestra furnished\nthe sweetest of music at Intervals Th-\ninner matTwas not forgotten either for\nthe large dining table whereat so ma ¬\nny friends have gathered in tbe years\nthat Col and Mrs Dudderar bavo been\nhuobllrd wife was laden down with\ngood ttttufs An elegant dinner the\nmenu of which would take considerable\nspace In this paper was most exquis ¬\nitely served members of the family\nacting aa waiters and seeing to It that\nall were abundantly cared for An Idea\not this splendid repast may be bad whet\nIt Is told that there were over a dozsn\ndifferent kinds of cakeall as good as\nmortal man ever tasted Some 20 or so\nguests were served at a time and at each\ntableRev It B MabonyorDrL B\nCook asked tbe Divine blessing Whet\ntbe parting hour cano Rev Mabony\nfor Cal and Mrs Dudderar thanked\nthe guests for their presence loa beau\ntlful little talk which closed with an\nappropriate prayer Eacn guest brought\na present and one corner of tbe large\nparlor was filled when the last arrival\nbad added his donation Mrs Ellzi\nPollock who was a bridesmaid at tbe\nmarriage of Co Dudderar and wife\nwas present and enjoyed tbe occasion\ngreatly
466125b63551cb8997d7a307d2c04c27 THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.8534246258243 39.768333 -86.15835 A shocking tragedy occurred in the town of\nCaledonia, Racine county, on the night of tbe\n1st inst. A boy named John Stitoky, tbe only\nson of a respectable Bohemian, residing near the\nChicago and Milwaukie Kaiiroad track, in the\nnorthern part of Caledonia, Racine couuty, com-\nmitted one of the most atrocious and cold blood-\ned acts of combined parricide aud homicide that\nhas ever been recorded ia the annals of crime.\nThe circumstances are as follows-- .\nTbe father who was a farmer in excellent cir-\ncumstances, had been laboring in the woods dur-\ning the day, and bad come In at nightfall for his\nsupper. Tbe meal was prepared, and tbe mother\ncalled John, who is an only eon. about nineteen\nyears old, to come in to tea. The a gel couple\nsat down to their meal, thinking the boy would\npresently join them, when suddenly a shot was\ntired through tbe of the room, and\nthe father was struck by a ball in the left arm,\ncompletely shattering it at the elbow. The\nmother started up, and at the same iustant an- -\notner report resounded, and she was struck in\nthe abdomen by a bullet, which passed complete-\nly through ber body.\nIn another moment another discharge wm\nheard in the yard, and the father, who, with pa-\nrental instincts, divined the nature aud effect of\nthis third shot, summoned strength to get out of\ndoors , where be found bis son weltering in his\ntlood, and already gasping Lis last. He had\nmurdered both bis aged parents with the two bar-\nrels of one gun, and had shot himself with an-\nother weapon, ending his life almost instantly.\nWe say murdered, for it is not probable that\neither will recover, though both were liviug when\nour informent left. The mother has doubtle\nbreathed ber
4499673fc585d969f60acc9a0de5d150 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1906.9931506532216 43.624497 -72.518794 years old, and Georgo Davls 25 years\nold, were drowned ln the grlst nilll\npond In the Rocknway rlver recently\nafter a frantlc flght for llfo. Arko was\nskatlng on tho pond wlth n crowd of\nboys, when he suddenly fell through n\nhole ln tho lce. Near tho pond was\ntho home of Davls, and tho otber boys\nran to hls place for assistnnce. Both\nMr, nnd Mrs. Dnvis hurrled to the\npond, whero young Arke was struggllng\nIn the wnter and crylng to bo Baved.\nMrS. Davls brought a clothesllno\nwith her, whlch she plcked up In the\nrenr of her house, and before sho would\nallow her husband to go near the hole\nthrough whlch the boy had Vallen\nshe tled the rope around hls body nnd\nheld fust to the other end.\nIn n few seconds Davls waa nt tho\n of the holo and slowly slld Into\nthe cold water. He grabbed young\nArke, who by that tlme was exhausted.\nWhen Davls trled to llft the Hmp body\nto the surface he encountered a task\nthat was too much for hlm. Each tlme\nhe got the body to the surface it slld\nback lnto the water. Soon overcomo by\nthe cold, Davls was unnblo to mako fur-\nther eftorts for the boy, and bent whnt\nlittle strength he had left to gettlng\nhimself out. He couldn't do that.\n"Pull, for God's sake, pull," he crled\nto hls wife, who, wlth the help of sev-\neral of the boys, was tugglng on the\nropo fastened to hls wulst, Just ns\nthe man was about to crawl to safety\non the lce, the rope b'roke, und be went\nback lnto the water and under tho\nlce.
068503d866f70edcced2b215574fb170 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.2342465436327 40.063962 -80.720915 liosebiid and l'owder river*, and from 1"\nthe branches of tho Tongue river, and on\nhi* representing that *uch vollow metal\nwa*of great value they told him that they «\nknew whero thero wa* a mountain of it.\nHubgequont investigation however proved pi\nthat tho Indian mountain of gold H(j\nwa* nothing moro than a forma- nl\ntion of yellow mica *ueh as\nmay be found in minerul pluces E\nin the nbovo described country. I had tit\nscarcely given the story a thought after\nthis until about three year* ago, when 1\nihappened to bo In New York and it wa* w\nthere brought to my recollection by a tr\nprominent gentleiuun, who asked me w\nwhero Fatlior Desmet was to bo found, o«\nmid insi*ted that some one should be w\nsent at once to got from him tho aucrot of \nthe gold mountain, which would pay tho\nNational dobt<&c. After I had told him\nthat it wus an old and oxploded story his tv\nardor cooled and tho oxcitement about w\ntho mountain of gold subsided. It so j>\nhappened, however, thut tho lilack Hill T\ncountry was embraced in my mllltury 0,\ncommund, nnd two years ago it became tl\napparent to ine that a military post in tho t|\nJlluck Hill* of the Sliyonne .would soon (G\nbecome necessary for the proper pro tec- m\nlion of tho Rettlemcnt* in Nebraska from ni\nraids by tliu Sioux warrior* who always, n|\nbefore* they commenced depredating on (||\nthe frontier, secured a safe place for tnelr\nfamilies and villages in tho Ideality men*\ntinned. Believing that these Indians\nwould never make war on our settlements\nas long u* wo could threaten their
72214848d8a9dc88e1c92361c11ceca8 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.7062841213824 39.369864 -121.105448 In 'dViiitti'ng 'tea, the saucer is placed on\nthe top of the cup, instead of at the bottom.\n\\Miey kill themselves to be revenged of an\nenemy. Men wear gowns, petticoats, beads,\nembroidery and garters, and women wear\npantaloons, (not, however, ''the pAntaloohs.”)\nThey always mount ft horse on the wrong\nside, and Women ride as the men. Military\nofficers carry fans instead of pistols. The\nplume is on the back of the cap and hangs\ndown, instead of being on the front and\nstanding up. In battle they wait for a ship\nto sail In line With the cannon, on a fortifi-\ncation- , instead 'of moving the gun and di-\nteciibg itto the position of the ship. In the\ndress of men, the drawers are large and\nloose at the bottom, and have no strings,\nwhile the pants are tight as possible,andare\ntied around the ankles like drawers. In\nothVr Words-, itViilght be said, they weftr their\ntbowsers outside of thetr pantaloons.\nAmong us, young men and women choose\nfor themselves add dii their own courting,\nwhen they become grown (and sometimes\nhefpre)| in China this is all done for them by\ntheir while they are infants. With\nus, ladies have the preference; with them,\ngentlemen. We educate and honor our\nwives, sisters and daughters, and bring them\nforward in society; they degrade theirs, keep\nthem in ignorance and out of sight. Women\nhave their feet bound—their waists, never.\nThe circumference of their dress is greatest\nat the waist and least at the tinkles; They\nwear their breastpins on the forehead. Tin*\nyoung lady goes to the residence of her be-\ntrothed to be married, and she wails and\nweeps along the whole way to the wedding.\nThey always have feasting and music at\ntheir funerals. Green plums are preferred to\nripe ones. They abominate milk, hatter and\nthCese, but relish castor oil,stlai!*, arid many\nother articles that are to us horribly offen-\nsive. They shave off nearly the whole of\nthe eyebrows; leaving ft mere pencil of hair,\nwhile that On the Opposite side of the head\nis allowed to grow till it reaches the ground.\nAlthough men do not exactly acton the eggs,\nthey yet do tflosl Of the hatching, thus\nsuming the prerogative of the bens, add de-\npriving them Of that ffleftstlte and privilege.
1a42099208631c850e66a877dcc1d4bb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.050684899797 39.261561 -121.016059 Ily virtue of an execution to me delivered, is-\nsued out of the Court of \\V. 11 . Hamilton Esq., an\nacting Justice of the Ieaco in and for tho county\naforesaid, bearing date January 2d a. d . 1861 , to mi' .-\ni dy a judgment rendered liy said Court on the j*th\ndnv of IVremlier a.p . 1S60, in favor of WAj.lLK\nW'lTHKY and against BENJAMIN liuLJ.AND nr\nnrin. pal and JAS. HOLLAND and A. J . HOLLAND\na* sureties, for the sum of forty-six dollars, for cost*\nof suit. I have taken In execution anti will sell to\nthe highest bidder for w*h the following described\nproperty to wit : One set ot mining claims known as\nthe Manasco claims, situated on Mooney Flat, said\nclaims lw ing four id number, one hundred r.n.l twenty\nfeet front, four hundred feet deep, being block\nHaims. Also one set mining claims known as the\nGorman Hall claims, situated on Mooney Flat. Also\none House and Lit in the town of Mooney Flat, situ-\nated on tho west side of the street in the south par 1\nof the town, the same being now occupied by defend-\nants. Notice is hereby given that 1 will expose to\npublic sale all the above described property, to the\nhighest bidder for cash, in front Trail's and Oti>\nstore in Mooney Flat, on Friday tin* 25th day of Jan\nnary a. n. 1801 , between the hours of 10 o'clock a.\nm. and 2 oclock 1\\ M.\nSai I property taken ns tl.e joint property of the\nsaid Benjamin Holland, James Holland and A. J\nHolland, to satisfy the above demands and accruing\nCost*.
2aafec36794e4f89e7b534a96f619fee THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.9877048864096 41.004121 -76.453816 Ono of tho number present nt the\nmeeting was Mr. B . F . Ileadloy, who\nmoved to ssaw Jersey witn ins lamily\nIn tho Spring ofl871, prior to commenc-\ning work on tho State Road, after which\na meeting of Road Commissioners was\nhad per advisement of M. E. Jackson.\nEsq,, Attorney, nnd by virtno of the\npowers cotiferred by tho Acts or Assem\nbly declared tho scat or said Ileadloy\nvacant nnd nppointed E. L. Koons a\ncommissioner in his place. In Sentem\nbor or tho samo year n beginning was\nmauo and tno portion oi tlio road in\nColumbia county, was completed Juno\n30th, 1S72. In October following tho\nCommissioners began to open tlio road\non tho Luzorno county sldo and mado\ntlio same up to within nbout fifty rods\nor completion (November 19th) when\non account of tho severity of the\nweather further work was susponded.\nDuring a portion or this timo from\n 80th, 1S71.J . C. Smith was irreg\nularly in attendance, wiuioui in a man\nner assisting, employing no hands, at\ntempting to assumo control, oftimes in\nvariance which well considered plans\not too otner uommis.iionersj wiion tins\nwould not bo permitted ho mado It a\npoint to retard tho work as much as lie\ncould. Tho general tenor of fault And-in- g\nwith "Jerry" that, "his propositions\nto mako unnecessary expense to tho\ncounty1' was not listened to, conse-\nquently ho imagined tlio slights too\ngrievous to bo borne, sworo vengeance,\n"that ho would havo a now organiza\ntion of tho board, that ho would, nnd\nhavo Koons put out ; he's no Commis-\nsioner anyhow. I, Joroiniah O. Smith,\n(bringing his fist down on a stump)\nWill show them what I can do," and\nleft to carry out his threats in holding\ntho meeting above mentioned, tho pro-\nceedings or which, ho hastened to\nWlikes-Barr-
045a4291a160b845b5fa3a19a7d3ceac THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.97397257103 37.305884 -89.518148 Editors are said to be cynical. Is it\nany wonder? What other professions\nmeet with such constant and universal\ningratitude? Through the life of what\nother man does this black sin so per\nsistently drag its slimy form? No\nother avocation is so full of unselfish\nness, helps so many people, builds so\nmany fortunes, makes so many repu-\ntations. No other is gl ven to express\nions of kindness and sympathy and\nbenevolence. The editor has a word\nof encouragement for every work of\nenterprise and . philanthropy, and\nwords of approval far every deserving\npublic act, sends sunshine and happi-\nness into thousands of lives. That\nnewspaper is never printed which has\nnot something in it to help some one.\nScientists, scholars, divines, politi\ncians,, tradesmen, statesmen, the\nmillion, owe their fame and prosperity\nto the editor. Sor .does he help only\nthose whom the world calls great He\nis a friend to the friendless and a con\nstant benefactor to all classes. A jd\nhis kindness stops with the grave.\nHis is the hand sxhick pays the last\ntribute of affection, often to an enemy.\nAnd yet how rarely is he thanked.\nHow few manifest any appreciation of\nwhat he does lor --them? His baoevo- -\nlence is accepted as a matter of course.\nHow many repay .him with the basest\ningratitude? Is it any wonder that be\nis full of cynicism and even of bitter-\nness when he thus continually encoun-\nters the coldness, the meanness, the\nemptiness of human nature? Payette- -\nville Sentinel.
2518e8afbca0701d3e651770dd2832ef VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.5520547628107 43.798358 -73.087921 ing to follow their Lord. Since the pres\nent year commenced, I have baptized seven.\nTwo Shawnees, one Delaware and four\nMohegans. Two of the last mentioned\nmaking the remnant of a whole household,\nthe whole of which hopefully converted\nwithin a year. ""These numbers are compar-\natively small, yet considering the apparently\ninsurmountable obstacles to the progress of\ntruth, we rejoice that we are thus far re-\nmembered by the Head of the Church. We\nhope the hearts of many will be affected to\nprayer for those who once roamed, free from\nrestraint where cities and villages are now\nadorning the land. And are there not those\nwho will do something for the spread of the\ngospel among them? And some "who will\nrenounce their grasp upon the world so far\nas come out to do them good ? You will\nnot, my dear brother, forget the red man of\nthe forest? , Remember he is not yet gone.\nHis sun ence shone in the East; and also\nin its meridian brightness 07er the length\nand breadth of our happy country. A veil\nhas obscured it in the history of civilized\nman, yet who can doubt but that its influ-\nence was considered genial to the untutored\nmind. lis . beams still linger in the West.\nLinger did I 6ay ? Let me pause. It seems\nas though I could see them still spreading\nand brightening over a delightful country\nyet vast in extent, while the voice of mercy\nseems to whisper, "Let hin receive of the\ntread and waters of everlasting life."\nShawnee Cap. Miss., Jane 13.
1e94c81ab6084bc2dbd61811f63871b8 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1878.37397257103 41.004121 -76.453816 the proof that Mr. Hayes by offering official\nhonors and rewards to those who were enga-e - d\nIn making the canvass of the electoral\nvotes In Florida was an active participant\nin the frauds by which he was elevated to\nthe Presidency of the United States against\nthe consent of n great majority of the peo\nple. As partisans they dread the exposuro\nof tho character of the services for which\nJohn Sherman was made secretary of tho\ntreasury and Edward F. Noyes was sent as\nminister to France, with the work that was\nperformed and the rewards that were ob-\ntained by the minor conspirators In this\ngreat drama of political crime. Hut the Is -\nsue between the two political parties on this\nquestion has been made up by the action of\nthe house on Monday, In of a wrong-\ned and outraged people the democrats de-\nmand an investigation of the electoral\ncrimo and the exposure of all who were con-\ncerned in it that It may servo as a warring\nto political conspirators and knaves for all\ntime. The republicans In congress, on the\nother hand, throw every obstacle in tbo way\nof Investigation In fear of the partisan con-\nsequences, while making hypocritical pre\ntense of alarm concerning the business inter\nests ot the country. No country can pros -pe -\nnor deserves to prosper whose reprcsen-\ntatlves have not the courage to probe to the\nbottom a crime against the elective franchise\nwhich saps tho very foundation of the polit\nleal institutions upon which all its material\nprosperity must ;depend. The people wjll\ndecide between tho two parties on this Issue.\nPatriot.
17ec5d023d19da4a9b33d6391b8c9d8b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.0890410641807 39.745947 -75.546589 .«ewark Center and intermediate stations.\n740am,1230.633pm.\nBaltimore and Inter-mediate\nam,120B,247,446,60Bpm,1213night.\nBaltlmure and Bay Line, 5 17 p ro.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 -1|8 01. »li.\n1015, 11!» am, 12 00, 12 50.81 06, 2 08.4 24.5 17\n8(3,«68,74B.«*0pm.124Pnight.\nTrains for Delaware Division leave for;\nNew Cattle, 8 15,11 23» m, 2 50.3 40. 4 40.8 IS.\n850.»51pm.12OBnight.\nLewes,816am.487pm.\nHarrington, Dclmar and way stations, 8 15\na m. Harrington and way stations, 2 50 p m.\nExpress Cor Dover, Harrington and Delmsr.\nII It » m.437 pm, 1301 night.\nExpress for Wyoming and Smyrna, 8 Mu m\nExpress for Cape Charles, Old Point Com-\ntort and Norfolk. 11 18 a m. 12 01 night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad street for Wt\nminglon, express, 3 60. 7 30, 7 26. 8 31,9 10, 1020.\n!»33.1118ain.1210,41226, 130,208, 346.35S.\n40.4!»,508.+518.630.56B.617 700.740,111«,\n11» p m. 12 03 night.\nAccommodation, B 20,7 36, 10 os. ,1 32 a m.l 18,\n338.310.4»4,437.622.888.1003,1040,1138p.m.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington \nPhiladelphia, express. 1 55, 2 66. 4 20, 8 60, » C,\n1151 am, 130.805,6Id,610,666,fi06.708,7 6,\n9 12 p m. Accommodation, T 00 8 06 a m. 121C,\n45,405,620,1030pm.\nChester, express, 1 66. 4 20, 8 50, » 00,11 51 a.m,\n137.504.668. , 06. » 12p m. Accommodation,\n700,806am,1210,146,405.620,725.1080 p\nNewYork, express, 165. 265,420,700, 5Ml,\n101(6,1151 am. 12 10, 137, 3 05, 4 06, 6 10, 6 60.\n■ »•.+«21,7 06, 10 30 pm.\nBoston, without change, 6 66 p\nWest Ohester.vla Lamoktn, 8 0.'\nNew Castle, 9 61 p m, 13 UB night.\nCape Charles, Old Point\nfolk, 12 01 night.\nMiddletown, Clayton,\nton, Harrington, Brldg\nand Ilimnar, 12 01 night.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 35, 8 01, 10 18\nam,12Oil.1250.5IT. 803.74B,82u um. 1248\nulgbi Baltimore only. 8 OB P in, 12 13 night\nI/eave Philadelphia. Broad street, loi Wll-\nmington, express, 8 60, 7 20, » lu. 11 18 a m, 1110,\n■I30 538. 700,74C,835.1110,1130pm. 1203\nnight.
1d89fa891c5e51a0d733bf93de9a3162 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.1789617170107 40.063962 -80.720915 Coming..The Kev. Harry Mooi\nhouse, the celebrated English Evar\ngelist, has written to the Young Men\nChristian Association, that he will ai\nrive here on the 16th inst. and remai\none week. Mr. Moorhonse will preac\nin the churches of the various denom:\nnations during his stay in this city.\nRegents' Meeting..The Hoard c\nRegeulsofthe State Normal School »\nCruyandotte.had a meeting at the Capi\ntol, yesterday. The principal busines\ntransacted was the appointment of\ncommittee to exumiue those who ma;\napply for the Presidency of the Insti\ntution. The committee consists c\nProf. W. R. White, Rev. J. T. McClur\nand Major J. H. Bristor. It was dc\ntermined to employ a Principal at\nsalary of $1500 per year, and two assis\ntant teachers at salaries of $500 each\nThe examination is to be held in thi\ncity, commencing on 20lh inst. Th\nsubject of putting up another buildini\nwas also under consideration, and 1\nwas concluded to have an architer\nvisit Guyandotte for the purpose c\nviewing the site and prepariug the de\nsign. It is the intention of the Regent\nto have the institution opened tor th\nreception of students by the 1st of May\nSt. matthkw'a Church.- .In ou\nnotice of the concert which ca^ne off i:\nthis church a week or more since, w\ntook occasion to refer briefly to the'afi\npearanceof tbetouildiug, both as to it\nexterior and interior, and mentioned\nthat itiiad been erected according to th\nplans and under the supervision of Mi\nFairfax, architect. We hAve. sine\nlearned that Mr. Charles W. Lloyd, (\nDetroit, drew up the designs and spec\nfication* whiclrwet©f;adopted by tfa\nbuilding commute**; and that ttirwor\nhas t^eirdobe* under
27cf6459bfb669516b3f2b8dada5f1ab THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.3493150367833 39.261561 -121.016059 But If the Federate should now be able to\npursue the advantages which were inaug-\nurated at the deteal of Zollicotler, the\nSouthern spirit will be more severely tried.\nIf the large border States are definitively\ndetached from the seceders, their inferiority\niu the struggle will become more manifest\nthan it is already. They commenced the\nwar with a population of uine millions\nagainst twenty, but these nine millions may\nthus, by the abridgement of their resource's\nbe reduced to six. These six, it it is true,\nmay resist still ; in fact, no more uuuierical\nsuperiority o*'force could ever enable the\nNoitli to hold the South. But will the\nSoutherners preserve their constancy under\ndifficulties, and maintain the strife? That\nis the question now to be decided.\nIt cannot be denied that the Northerners\nhave shown great tenacity of purpose in\n their preparations and renew-\ning their efforts iu the face of discouragiug\nlaiiuics. We attach little weight to their\nmaritime expeditions. Except for the mere\ndiversion or distraction which they may\ncreate, lho operations on the coast of North\nCarolina will probably be of no avail. It\nis iu Keutucky and Tennessee that the im-\nportant blows have been dealt, and a new\ndirection given to the campaign, and here\ntbe Federal forces are lakiug the field on u\ngigantic scale. Besides the 40,000 under\nen. Grant, 80,000 are said to be in urms\nunder General Buell, and a third army is\nspoken of besides. The operations, too, of\nthese commanders appear to have been well\nconceived uud skillfully combined, and if\n(hey sliuuid succeed iu their udvauces it is\nclear that a uew aspect will be giveu to the\nwar.
2706d322ce943e651ea9ca65f5e5675a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.4193988754807 39.745947 -75.546589 or of you gentleman can deny It, that\nthis removal Is not based upon any\nIncompetenoy of Mr. Van Trump or\nany wrongful act of his It is simply\na personal feeling whlc- dictates your\naction. Mr. Ford Is a norUsait, he also\nis desirous of running this department,\nund Mr. Shaw, yielding to nis h pnolln\ninfluence, is giving him e* ery help, and\nI helleve that not only this action but\nothers wll he done, of great Injury to\ntoe interests of the community and\nto the efficiency of the department.\n"There Is a right wav und a wrong\nway to do a thing. Tit! right way In\nthis case, is to bring charges against\nMr. Van Tiump of either Incompetency\nrr malfeasant, e in ofllcs und It those\ncharges are sustained, to remove him\nfrom, office t.v.t If no charges arc\nbrought, then the comm jr.lty must be\nforced to the conclusion that you have\nno charges which you can bring. There\nfore like men In the blackness of mid­\nis night darkness you sandbag him from\nthe rear. Is the office necessary? Is\nthis man a competent officer? For\neighteen years through the changing\nadministrations of both parties he hu.t\nremained In service. No other of the\npractical working force has been there\nso long. No other man knows the\nneeds of the department in Its practi­\ncal so well. No other man\nhas pointed out so many defects and\nimperfections in the system and that\nIs, I believe, one of the reasons whv\nyou are removing him.\n"Wl*ti is the orlgmalor of the meter\nsystem? Ho Is, and through him. It\nhas attained Its present proportions.\nWho was the originator of the ser-\n\\ ice system. Who for Instance ad ■\nvised the previous board agaln.>t spend­\ning *10,000 on the pipe line over Wash­\nington street bridge, which\nwed a few years and then abandered ?\n"I am reliably informed that Mr\nvan Trump has been responsible for\nronectlng many abuses In the dvpari­\nment. He has advised against many\nmopoaed undertakings in the depart­\nment, which advice, expe .- vo has\nshown to have been Justified. Ho has\nalso advised many things which bis\nsuperior officers have not at 11 rat ap-\np. fved, one of these being in connection\nwith the requests which Mi. Ford made\nlor water service at hij morocco fac­\ntory and which was obtained by Mr\nFord through Mr. Van Trump:, Insist­\nance, Mr. Van Trump believing this\nwas one thing which should be done\nfor the good of the city. Blumenthal r\nwas another Instance, Mr. Van Trump\nbelieving that manufacturers should be\nafforded every facility.\n"Time and time again has Mr. Shaw\nspoken to me personally of the com-
e8d876e2df2a9d47a796db0881c42d68 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.050684899797 39.290882 -76.610759 election, the governor proceeds to notice the var-\nious subjects which should come before the legis-\nlature. He calls for the intervention of the\nlegislature to prevent the system of voiingout of\npublic lands which at present obtains, and sug-\ngestsas a means to that end the adoption of a\nregistry law. He says the condition of the hanks\ni n New Orleans is as satisfactory as are the af-\nfairs of such institutions in any other city|of the\nUnion; yet the experiment would be dangerous\nwere they to resume specie payments simultane-\nously with the Philadelphia banks; measures\nshould be taken compelling those banks togoin-\nto liquidation which arc deprived of active capi-\ntal ; but, as there exists a probability that a Na-\ntional bank will lie established, clemency should\nbe extended to them with regard to time.\nHe shows that the finances of the state are\nnot in a very flourishing condition, and sug\ngests that the legislature be economical in its\nappropriations; as such a course will render\nthe disagreeable alternative, on his part, unne-\n of so often using the veto power, which\nthe constitution has placed in his hands. The\ndifficulty ofobtaining from the Sheriff, for the\ntime being, the monies of the state at the pro-\nper period, requires to be remedied. He sug-\ngests that henceforth the term of sheriff's ap-\npointment be limited to one year, and that\nwithout a receipt in full from the State treas-\nurer, he shall be ineligible for re-appointment.\nHe also thinks that the law of assessment\nshould be amended with a view of increasing\nthe Revenue of the State. He points out the\nnecessity which exists for a protective duty in\nfavor of sugar of native growth?a measure\nwhich would not benefit Louisiana alone but\nevery State in the Union. He gives a state-\nment of the location and extent of the lands set\napart in the State for the support of colleges\nand public schools, and hoped that the present\nlegislature would render itself memorable by\nits judicious application of it, for the literary\nand scientific education of the rising genera-\ntion.
00b3682c46013a4ad7f4cfd164e95658 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.368493118975 43.798358 -73.087921 gave me more sound corn than I had on\nthree acres adjoining same quantity of\nland but taking the whole together, it\nwas still a losing business. Tthen re-\nsolved to take a different course, firstto\nplant on a different soil; second, to plant\nno more than I could make as rich as\nmy garden. My garden is of a gravel I)',\ndry soil, of course rich. In it I had eve-\nry year planted some corn; sometimes\nnear the first of April, and at other times\nquite late, but ever have failed to get good\ncom even in our poorest seasons. Ad-\njoining the garden, the nalural soil is the\nsame, and I came to the conclusion that\nI could take some of it and make it pro-\nduce as well as my garden. Therefore,\nlast season I planted about an acre with\nthe early Dutton, or Buel and the\nresult was one hundred and twelve bush-\nels of shelled corn to the acre. This is\na great yield for this country, and in fact\nis beyond any thing I have ever before\nseen. There was more sound corn than\nI had raised for a number" of years be-\nfore. The season was a favorable one,\nand aside from that, I attribute my suc-\ncess to three things, viz: manuring high,\nplanting thick, and a prolific kind of seed\ncorn. The tilling was nothing but ordin-\nary. In the fall of 1837, the ground\nwas into timothy and clover, with a light\nsward, having been stocked about two\nyears. I then ploughed it lute in the fall.\nIn the spring follovving-- I covered it over\nwith common coarse manure from the\nbarnyard, which was composed of a large\nquantity of straw. My stock is princi-pall- y
00972f8db85e80f457c59f5e10f93bc6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.769125651437 40.063962 -80.720915 The claim that negroes voted in vas\nnumbers with tho Democrats is to\nsilly for a momont's serious considers\ntion. It is the same old story that hai\nbeen iterated and reiterated. It wa\nabsolutely necessary that tho Georgn\nand Alabama Democracy should shov\nto theirnorthdrn co-conspirators agains\na froe and honest ballot thoy were hold\ning their own. It would have been die\naster to tho presidential ticket to havi\nexhibited any signs of wavering, an<\nby their usual methods they were abli\nto send the "cheering news" tha\n"Georgia has given 40,000 to 50,000 ma\njority for tho Democratic ticket."\nThe managers of the People's partj\nclaim that the election was little shorl\nof farcical, bub they intend to buckle o<\nthoir armor and go into the presidentia\ncontest and domand deputy marshal!\nat the polls to soe that there is no ioti\ninitiation, and that there is the frees\nexpression of franchise and a fai\ncount of the ballots. In this they havi\na Democratic precedent, strange to say\nThe slump orators of the free tradi\nparty are now howling thomtelvei\nhoarse ovor the "foaco" bill, vot in 188\nPresident Cleveland authorized the us\nof deputy marshals in and arouni\nNashville, Tennessee, a state of. thi\nsolid south, bocause the section was in\nclined to Republicanism. But we neoi\nnot go away from home for precedents\nThero were deputy marshals at thi\npolls in Wheeling the same year, am\novery last one of thom Democrats.\nIt does not take a very wise man t<\nsee through the Democratic party. Iti\nmethods and principles.if they har<\nany.are as thin as tho haze of {in au\ntumn sunset Honest eloctions and i\nfair count would forever break the bar\nriers that hedgo the solid south, am\nthat Is why the party will not permi\n4I\nHIV111.% .
0031d0009bbb568806ab3ad54bca78d9 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.4041095573314 46.187885 -123.831256 A beautiful and accomplished girl\nsought employment in n down town busi-\nness establishment ran by a father and\nwi. She managed to entangle both, and\ngot up an escapade with tho young man\nwhich coht him a very tidy little sum be-\nfore the cud was reached. He wrote her\ni"ffcetiouatc letters, made short excur-\nsions around and had a lovely time gen-\nerally, until one fine morning an elderly\nruffian stopped up, claiming lo bo her\nfather. Tim idiot was only too glad to\ndisgorge liberally on the spot. Then the\nex charmer threatened to sue for the re-\ncovery of her letters and the balance duo\non ber furniture: to avoid r. scandal ho\npaid up handsomely. Finally, fearing he\nwas to be bled to death by these vam-\npires, he appealed to the police. A singlo\nvisit, with a promise of arrest sufficed to\nsettle the whole business.\nA neat trick is for a pretty blackmailer\nto cuter a store where there are p. great\nmany clerks. Ones in the store, she plies\nall hor feminine art on tho chosen Mctim\n(ono who holds a pretty good position,\nand whoso circumstances sho has learned\nsomething about), nnd, engaging him in\nconversation, lets slipsomostray remark,\nwhich she emphasizes with her eyes. If\nlio smiles and retorts in the same vein, a\npoint has been gained. Afser the\nconquest is uot difticult. A visit or two,\na matinee, an opera night, and then some\nfine day my ludy sails into tho store liko\na Spanish pirate bent on plunder. A\nhurried talk; tho man looks glum, bat\nhands outthemonoi' theensnaror has de-\nmanded. After that she rends him regu-\nlarly, onlv at short and shorter intervals,\nuntil something "goes bust," 113 tho dy\ning is. liituer sue gets 111 jau or ji oig\nscandil breaks ont, or possibly hodeSos\nher: but as a rule ho hasn't the pluck to\ndo that, and iu many cases the pay pro-\ncess goes on for years.\nA well known editor of mu;h bril-\nliancy and sagacity on the metropolitan\npress was badly dono for some time ago\nby a pretty littlo widow. Sho first relied\nou him. and her woful talc, backed by\nher girlish face, enlisted his sympathies\nin her cause. Then came requests for\ntheater and concert tickets and other\ncourtesies, in compliance with which ho\ngenerally sent a gallantly worded note.\nOn tho strength of these letters, and a\nconfederate, it cost him 1,000 inside of\nthree months. He was too sensitivo to\npublic opinion to hand her over to tho\npolice, and had not a friend of his stepped\nin and grappled matters with an iron\nhand, ho probably would have been\nn victim
250118a809a04ed7c1291464c493ed0d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.5915300230217 40.063962 -80.720915 '/Yea, me and him are right Veil at\nquaiflted now; he knows more'n X d(\nand he's had more experience. Bill eaj\nhis father used to be a robber (Smith, b\njthe way, ia a deacon in the Prcibyteria\nchurch, and a very excellenUawycr), an\nthat he has ten million dollars in goli\nburied in bis cellar, along with a whol\nlot of human bones, j>oopJe he'a, Jellied\nAnd he a ays his father ia a conjuror, ahi\nthat he makes all the earthquakes tha\nhappen anywhere in the world. The oli\nmanll come home at night, alter tliere'\nbeen an earthquake, all covered wjtl\nawcot, and so tired he kin hardly stand\nBill savsit'* such hard work.\n"And Bill tole me that opoe, when\nman came around there trying to eel\nJijghtning rods, his, father got mad and e\nhim up, and.bib* QUt«\neverybody he comes a<*o*t. That's whn\nI.SULiplhan. Th^t'niil i know about ii\nJ -And.he t^ld me ^hatoneohe used tohav\nI J1 dpgrf one o|t|»eae little kind of dogs, abi\n(10 wm uving ju8 Kiie, |ina, juhi igr inn m\ntied tfo kite-string 011 to his dog's tall\nAnd then the win/1 itruck her and bin doi\nwent ^bpomin' down tli# ntreet, with hi\nhind legs in the air lor about a mile, whei\nthe kite of a sudden began to go up, am\nin about a minute the dog won lifteei\nmilcd high, and commanding a view o\nCalifornia and Egypt, and Oahkosh,\nthink Bill said. He came down anyhow\nI know, in .Brazil, and Bill said he hwuu\nhome all the way in the Atlantic occar\nand when*he lauded ,hia legH wai all nib\nbled off by sharks.
989ff22868d3b929ef2dcd4a81ae4635 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.009589009386 41.681744 -72.788147 and the other will almost automatic-\nally pick it up and combine. They\nhave no secret signs to presage the\nchanges, etc. In fact, they seldom\nlook at each other at all while play-\ning. When they get the score of a\nnew show their method of orches-\ntration is to go to a reljcarsal, see\nwhat the requirements of the players\non the stage are, fhen get to a couple\nof pianos and .ait for the flashes.\nLittle of their stuff, outside of the\ngaps in the orchestra score doliber- -'\natoly left for the pianos to fill, is\ndefinitely set. They continually im-\nprovise for new effects, working on\nthe basis that novelty of melody and\nrhythm is preferable to piano tricks\nand finger hysterics.\n"Naturally their work is built upon\nthe score originally written by the\ncomposer, but outside of that it is\nup to them. When Paul the\norchestra leader of "Lady, Be Good"\nhanded them their band parts they\nfound many ploces of manuscript\npaper blank, except for the number\nof bars which they had to play and\nthe words 'Use your own discretion'\nscribbled on them. They worked for\nabout two weeks to get the piano\narrangements fixed for "Oh, Kay".\nNumbers for their Victrola records\nrequire time to get set, but for the\npiano rolls, on which much of their\nday is still spent, they have only\ntime to run through perhaps twice\nbefore recording, owing to the fast\nand furious rate in which these have\nto be turned out. This, in brief,\nis how Arden and jOhman started by\nmaking piano rolls singly and have\nnow become sort of a dual integral\npart of the Aarons and Freedley\nmusical productions.\n"For a relaxation from jazz these\ntwo turn to tho classics, which, by
00b2f1d60412afd6420983cb96471a8a THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1909.6150684614408 43.994599 -72.127742 Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 10. That\nAnna Schumacher, 17 years old,\nwhose body was found crudely buried\nin Holy Sepulcher cemetery,, was\nchoked and beaten to death after be-\ning criminally assaulted, is the con-\nclusion based on the autopsy held by\nthe coroner, but many of the cir-\ncumstances of the crime, even to the\nexact place where it was committed,\ncan still be only guessed at.-\nA broken spade which is relied on\nto give some indication of the murder-\ner was found near the lonely spot\nwhere the victim's body was hidden.\nThe shovel was taken from a shed\nat St. Bernard's seminary, which Is\nnear the cemetery, and its use lends\nplausibility to the belief that the\nmurderer was not unfamiliar with the\nlocality. Having secured the spade,\nbe must have dragged the Into\nthe shrubbery, and with such care as\nwas possible in the darkness, dug a\nshallow trench, Into which he later\nplaced the corpse, covering It with\nearth and leaves. This work must\nhave consumed considerable time.\nThe autopsy emphasizes the brutal-\nity of the crime. The body was in a\npitiable condition head, face, chest,\narms and hands were covered with\nbruises and scratches; the bone that\nsupports the tongue, the hyoid, was\nfractured in the choking and the hair\nwas full of dirt and leaves, indicating\nthat the body was dragged some dis-\ntance, probably by the feet.\nIt would seem that the girl, who\nwas of vigorous physique, made a\ndesperate struggle to save her honor\nand her life. On account of the con-\ndition of the body it was buried to\nday.
041019e4c9e538325434db1da5deaac4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.1164383244545 40.063962 -80.720915 Thn South Grafton suspension bridge baa\nagain been condemned as unsafe.\nRandolph county, with a population of\nabout nine thousand, has but seven doctors.\nCoL C. 8 . Wood, of the Eutaw House, Bal¬\ntimore, who so ably managed the B. & 0. rail*\nroad rompauy's hotels at Oakland and Deer\nPark for the last two seasons, has taken them\nagain for the coming season.\nA number of the enterprising young men\nof Flemington, W. Va., have organized a\nbrass band, bought a complete aet of instru-\nnients and are now down to hard practice.\nThe town has the sympathy of everyone.\nThe Third Diatrict Greenbackers are mak¬\ning arrangements for a musing campaign,\nnnd it is said that Col. Jesse Harper, tien.\nWeaver and others, among whom will be Col.\nR. H . Freer and Wirt H. Neal, of Parkers-\nburg, will stump the district.\nThe citizens of South Grafton have been\nconsiderably excited recently concerning the\nnightly appearance of a mysterious being\nhaving the shape of a woman with a shawl\nworn over her head, and upon being ap¬\nproached it glides away and disappears.\nCol. C . H . Beall, the famous stock trader, of\nBrooke county, W. Va., recently sold to L A\nN. W. Bundy.of Barnesville, three thorough¬\nbred abort-bom cattle, two heifers irnd one\nbull calf,of the Princess bred from his\ncelebrated Tenth Ladies' Bale. This breed of\nCittle has a world wide reputation and has no\nsuperior in this country.\nThe Preston County Journal says that the\n"Cheat river is on a fearful higb, reaching\nseveral feet above high water marks of recent\nyears. The damage to property along the\nriver has been great, and irom the amount of\nsaw logs that passed uown yesterday, the loss\nto the lumbermen aoove must be very great,\nreaching several hundred dollars."\nWm. Burke, a colored man who lives in\nStrainville, near Lewisbnrg, was arrested by\nPergeant Branbon and committed to jail\nWednesday evening, cbargtd with having\ncommitted a murderous assault upon his sis¬\nter. He struck her a severe blow on the\nbead with an axe handle, cutting an ugly\ngash and laying bare the skull bone, and\nperhaps causiug a fracture.\nJames Fuller, of Frostburg. Aid., has an\nantiquated stirrup found some years ago on\nMeauow Mountain, uvnr Braddock's road, in\nAlleghany county. It is supposed to have\nbeen dropped by some ancient warrior. It\nis made or copper, weighs 314 pounds, and is,\nshaped liko the end of an Indian canoe,'\nturned up to a point, being hollow to receive\nthe foot There is a ring ou top to attach the\nstrap, and it is beautifully carved and en¬\ngraved.
02f6ee0e3000ff10664ddbb58b782eb0 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.9931506532216 37.92448 -95.399981 Stock operations are almost confined to a few\nfavorites especially Industrials, which are af-\nfected by rumors of changes in taxation. The\nwar of rates continue., and though Vanderbilt\nlines made encouraging reports and declared\nusual dividends, the feeling prevails that all\nImportant roads must share in the shrinkage of\nbusiness. Earnings in December thus far are\n4 per cent, less than last year, on the trunk\nlines, 13 per cent: an western wheat carrying\nroads, it.9 per cent: on other western roads,\nII per cent: on southern roaas, 8 3 per cent,\nand on Pacific roads. 10 2 per cent\nThe failure of the Crane Iron Co. at the end\nof last week, with some other smaller failures,\noutweighed the Influence of the resumption of\nwork by a few Iron works, and has Increased\ndepression at the east. Bessemer Iron Is\nshipped to Philadelphia from Pittsburgh,\nwhere it sells at 11(173. and gray force sells for\n19 3 at Mahoning Valley furnaces, but even in\nthat region the manufacturer keeps only 8,423\nof the Connellsville coke ovens at work, while\n9,03 are Idle. The reduction In prices in\n cottons last week and of leading\nwhite sheetings this week has been less effect-\nive in stimulating trade than was expected,\nand print cloths are selling at 3 cents.\nThe woolen trade has started three more\nmills, but six have stopped, one employing\n3,000 hands, and others are reported about to\nstop when stacks in hand are worked up The\nsales of wool at the three chief markets were\nonly 2,507 WW pounds for the week, against V\n537,400 last year, and throughout tbe west the\ntrade s completely paralyzed. The shoe man-\nufacturer does somewhat better, though ship-\nments from Boston show a decrease of 21 per\ncent for the week, and many factories are\nworking on orders now nearly exhausted, while\nfew new orders come In and sales from stocks\nare commonly rare, which Is mostunusua. when\nstocks in dealers' hands are small.\nForeign trade still shrinks, exports for three\nweeks having been 13 per cnt less than last\nyear and Imports at New York 2) per cent,\nless. The delayed treasury report In favor of\ncoining the silver bullion on hand substitution\nof other
4221a1e8a3881bb49893c14df716b55f WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1914.7493150367834 35.318728 -82.460953 Mr. Harris states that his enthusi-\nasm in having secured for the Western\nNorth Carolina Fair the very finest at-\ntractions available in this country is\nso great, that he fears a full expres-\nsion of his views would give rise to\nsuggestions as to his veracity or men\ntal condition, and, therefore,, reters\nto the following comments by the\nLynchburg News and Daily Advance.\n"Of course, the greatest additions to\nthis great local exhibition will come\nfrom the Roanoke Fair, taking three\nsolid trains to. bring them, one train\nof exhibition stock, another of race\nhorses, and still 'one more bringing\nGeorge Murphy's mammoth aggrega\ntion, the Great Argyle Shows, wit\nseventeen paid attractions and good\nness knows how many concessions\nMr. Murphy has not s disguised the\nfact, since he has been on the Vir\nginia fair circuit, he expected to\nhave his great display at the Lynch-\nburg Fair, and that he was bending\nall his energies to that , end, knowing\nthat the Hill City folks are liberal\npatrons of the "arts and sciences" as\nexemplified on the midway at the\nGreat Interstate Fair. Mr. Murphy's\nmidway will be laid out scientifically,\nand will extend from a point above\nthe end of the grand stand, nearest\nthe main entrance, all the way. down\nto the boundary fense, near the Nor\nfolk ad Western Railway, and will be.\nwithout doubt, the greatest : line of\nshows that has1 ever been assembled\nir Lynchburg in any . section, at any\ntime. The beauty of it all is that not\na single show is duplicated, and. bet\nter still, they are all clean and cannot\ngive! offense,; for this was one
982d8fecc724d8aae17de03e9f802ed8 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0726027080163 39.513775 -121.556359 IMPORTANT TO MINERS. TIMVRI.RRfi, RTO\nfit A ll IM I-isno mu I ady ol deeper i mportance either\na (ha medical or moral light of view, to which\nthe human family is more liable th in that arising\nfrom impure connections,\n\\« a medical man it is the lipyof every physician\nto look at disease as it effects health and life, and his\nsoli* old eel should lie to mitigate, as far ns lies in his\npower. Ihe bodily suffering, llimian nature at best la\nhut frail, all are liable to misfortune.\nof nllihe I'lsth.- .l affect man none are morsferrlhle\nthan those of a private nature.—Dreadful ns (1 is In\nthe person who conlrnrtlsit (rightful as are Its ravag-\nes upon hi'C'Uistilulloii, ending Irequ. ally In destnic-\ner. and alonlhsomegnive.il becomes ol still greater\nimportance when it is transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such lining theecsehnw necessary it be-\ncomes Hint every one having Ihe least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\nto it at once hy consulting some physician, whose\nrespectnlhllily and education enables him to warrant\na sale, speedy, nnd pernn nent cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity. HU Vltl'NlJ feels called upon to\nslate that, hy long study and extensive practice, he\nhas belome perfect master of all those diseases which\nconic under the denomination of nnd hav-\ning paid more attention to Hint one branch than any\nother physician in the I'niled States, he feels himself\nbelteripmlified 10 treat them.\nSyphilis In nil its forms, such as ulcers, swelling In\nthe groans, nicer In the throat.secondary syphilis, cu -\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, tenunry syphilis, sy-\nphilis in children, inercnreal syphilitic affections.gon-\norrhea . gleet, strictures, false pin-ages, 111(Initiation o'\nthe bladder and protrale glands,excoriations, tumors\npustules. Mr., ate ns familiar to him as the most com-\nmon things ol dally observation.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent cases inafew\ndays, anil finds no difficulty In curing (hew of king\ndural lon. without submitting the patient lo such treat-\nment as will draw upon him the alightest suspicion,\nor oblige him lo neglect his business, whether within\n(sirs or without. The diet need not he changed, ex-\ncept in cases of severe inflamation. There are in Mall,\nfornia patients (amounting lo ovet two thousand In\nthe past year! that could furnish proof of Ihis; but\nthese are matters I hotrequire I hi nicest eecresy which\nhe always preserves\nAll letters enclosing *lO, will he promptly attended\nto. Office hours from !• A.M lo H P M. Address J,\nC. YOUNii, M. (>. Express buildings, corner of\nMontgomery and Californian streets, over Well* .'arj\ngo & Co.s Express Department.
2fca7b78a251c5f0c3d5ba10960d0002 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.580601061273 39.290882 -76.610759 thesa, guiding the steps of his fecblo and venera-\nble old mother, Albcrti advanced to the throne;\na deep blush seemed fixed upon his manly fea-\ntures, and the hand which supported his mfiira\nparent, trembled more than tne one which he\ntenderly clasped in his; the empress herself hung\nthe order of the golden fleeee round his neck,\nand gave into his hands the sword which he had\nbefore forfeited; but, as she did so, her tears fell\nupon the golden scabbard, the young soldier in-\nstantly kissed them with quivering lips. And\nnow every eye was turned to the wife of Albcrti,\nwho, with her young child sleeping in her arms,\nand supported by the noble-minded general, who\nhad oht aincil licr t< usbands pardon, next approach-\ned. Blanch had not forgotten that she was still\nonly the wife of an ldrian miner, and no costly\nornament adorned her simple drsss?not a \nof colour had yet returned to her cheeks of mar-\nble paleness, and a shadowy langour still re-\nmained about her large hazel eyes; her delicate-\nly shaped lips had, however, regained thtir soft\ncrimson dye, and her dark-brown hair, parti)\nconcealed by a long veil, shone as brightly as the\nbeautiful and braided tresses around her. She\nwore a loose dress of white silk, only udomed\nwith one large fresh cluster of pink roses, (for\nsince she had left the mines, she was more fond\nthan ever of flowers,) Every rye was fixed oil\nher, and the empress turned coldly from the\nglittering forma before her to the simple, but ele-\ngant Blanch. Descending from the throne,\nMaria Theresa hastened to raise her before she\ncould kneel, and kissing her with the tender at\nfection of a dear and intimate friend, she led the\ntrembling Blanch to tho highest step of the
4fa33267d1283aba8bdf70cb6a4cf619 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.8890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 Albany, N. T . .IfS and 465 Broadway.\nBaltimore, Md.Baltimore and Charlei ats.\nBuffalo N. Y .Co*. Mala and Tftrace eta.\nBoilingtoo, Iowa-Cor. Main and Valley at*.\nCharleston, B. 0 .5 Bavne at\nChicago, ill .Cor. Washington and State ais.\nCincinnati,10..8. w . Cor. 9a and Walnut ats.\nColumbus. 0 .22 Bast Broad at.\nDavenpuit, lowa^-Cor. Br.dr and 8o:ondata.\nDayton, O . .5 Odd Pellowa' Temple.\nDetroit, Mi> h .159 Jefferson avenue.\nDebuque, Iowa-OiMaln street.\nBrie, r&..Keystone Bank Building.\nHvanaville.Ind.Marb'eBall Ma.nat«oL\nGalveston, Texas.Kuhn'a Building, Strand\nGrand Hapld", Mich..65 Catal street.\nHartfuid Conn. - ilO A avium street.\nIndianapolis, Ind..3 Wiley's Block.\nKansas City, Mo Mlsmnrl avo. and Vain sL\nLeavenworth, Ks..8 Balaton's Bld'g, 81 and\nLoulavUle, Ky.2C8 Mnln et. [Uelawai e ats.\nWemphie, Tenn .Cor. Madison audFjontsta.\n Wis .830 and 882 k an Water at.\nMobile, ala..Cor. tit Francis and B^yal sis.\nNaahvlllo.'i enn .23 PnbllcSJquAro.\nNewa k, N.J..729Broad st I\n'New Haven. Conn..180 State at, i\n'Hew Orleans, Ln..13 and 15 Camp st.\nNorfolk, Va.-18 ana 95 Brcadwatcr at.\nPhliAnelnhlft. Pa..Oh a.nnt and Ninanm hijl\nritiahnruli, ra..03, W and 67 fourth aro.\nFoi tU&d, Oregon.Oor. otark and First ata.\nProvidence, R f.- 9 Wojboaaet at\nQulncy, III .Cor Fifth and Main ata.\nKichmood, Va -1817 Mat Main at.\nRocheater.N Y. .15Erchango at\nBan Franclaeo, Cal.- StO California at\nBt Joaeph, Mo..Cor Fourth aud fell* ata\n8t Loo la, Mo..Cor. Second and Plna ata.\nBe ran too, F*. -Il9 Wy. mlng are.\nBjracuae, N. T . .4,18 aod 14 douth Sallna at.\nToledo, O .B Board of Trado
209c9961ee6a542428fe1b21a1c943b4 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1902.0452054477423 32.612638 -90.036751 Behold, also, as it is possible in no\nother month of the year, the wondrous\nanatomy of the trees in January, the\nleaves of the last year all gone and\nnot somuchnsabudofanewbotan-\nical wardrobe appearing, the trees\nstanding with arms stretched toward\nheaven, one of the greatest evidences\nof the wisdom and the power of the\nCreator. The leaves appear only once\nand then die, but these great arms are\nstretched up toward heaven in silent\nprayer for scores of years, now mailed\nwith ice, now robed in snow or bowing\nto the God of the tempests as He\npasses in the midnight hurricane. In\nJuly the trees stand glorifying the\nearth; in January they stand defying\nthe winter. Under the same tree the\nchild plays with his toy and, growing\nup to manhood, sits under it in senti\nmental or philosophical mood and, hav\ning passed on to old age, rests himself\nunder its shade. In these January days\nthe trees seem to say: "The leaves \nrustled their music in the last summer\nare dead and gone, but the leaves that\nwill adorn this uncovered brow and\nthese" bare arms shall have a3 much\nbeauty and glory as their predecessors.\nOnly wait. There are beautiful and\nlovely things to come in my tree life,\nas there are beautiful and lovely things\nto come in your life, O human specta\ntor." Oh, the tree! Only the Almignty\nand the Infinite could have made one.\nGothic architecture was suggested by\nit. But for the arch of its bough and\nthe pointing of its branches the St.\nChapelle of Paris and other specimens\nof Gothic arch would never have been\nlifted. No wonder the world has taken\nfrom it many styles of suggestiveness\nthe laurel for the victor, the willow\nfor the sorrowing, the aspen for the\ntrembling, the cypress for the burial!\nBut, unlike ourselves, they cannot\nchange their place and so stand watch\ning all that passes. Some of them are\nsolemn monuments
3710dc13ba34b7b9d65972a28f03002d THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1914.3904109271944 34.51147 -110.079609 What would certainly have\nproved a fatal accident occurred\nin Snowflake Monday afternoon,\nMay 18, a few minutes before\none oclock, when the thirteen\nmonths o1 d girl, Marylynn,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph\nL. Henderson, fell into a tub of\nwater that had been drawn from\na well preparatory to wash-day.\nIt is presumed that the little\ngirl had been playing around the\ntub and was trying to reach for\nlittle green twigs and parts of\nblossoms which had fallen into\nthe water from an over-spreading\napple tree, when she lost her\nbalance and fell into the water.\nIt is not known just how long\nthe little girl had been in the\nwater wr hen found, but was ap-\nproximately eight minutes.\nEdna May, the five old\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mc-\nCloskey, who live in the same lot\nwith the Hendersons, proved her-\nself a very young and thoughtful\nheroine, for she was the one\nthat first told her parents, who\nwere eating dinner at the time of\nthe accident, but not until she\nhad pulled the drowning child\nout of the water and laid her be-\nside the tub. Little Edna May\nafterwards told her parents that\nwhen she found the little girl,\nher feet were sticking up in the\nair and leaning against the side\nof the tub. When she first came\ninto the house and gave the\nalarm she said: “Mamma, Mary-\nlynn has drowned,” and then,\nchild-like, began to cry, after\nhaving relieved herself of telling\nof the accident.
15e177eb79e0ebef7e3c37b243413bb9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.7991802962456 39.745947 -75.546589 thought that Is permeating the Amer­\nican brain—the idea of imposing a\ncharge for the use of the Are de­\npartment upon the man who disre­\ngards a Are prevention order. The\ngrogress of this Idea inAmerloals en­\nlisting the co-operation that Is sought\nby thoso who have promoted Are de­\npartment inspections.\nThe argument for this law or ordi­\nnance Is unanswerable. No civilized\ncommunity should expect its Aremen\nto risk their lives In lighting Ares\nthat are easily preventable; enough\ndanger always will be encountered in\nextinguishing those which are not\neasy to avoid For many years we\nwill continue to have disastrous Ares\nand Ares of great magnitude in those\ncities in which wooden construction\nstill makes sweeping Are possible.\n“The aggregate Are loss cannot for\nsome time be taken as direct\nmeasure of success in Are prevention.\nIt Is the decreasing number of Are\nalarms that is to bo the signiAcant\nfactor, and nothing will reduce the\nnumber of Are alarms so radically as\nthe Axing of personal responsibility\nthorefor. The utmost achievements\nof Are-flghting science are crippled\nand balked by the habits of a ipeople\nencouraged in irresponsibility toward\nthe common safety.\n“The attention of suoh a peop\ncannot be attracted and a correctif\nof their mischievous habits achieved\nby any ordinary methods of polite ed­\nucation They must be made respon­\nsible -for their acts of trespass. A\nman who has a preventable Are picks\nthe pockets of nis neighbors, either\nthrough the medium of Are insurance\nor an unjustiAed use of the publto\nAre department which all nust sup­\nport.
8262c52ed7e0871c1dce57408d24aaff THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1860.132513629579 39.560444 -120.828218 pieces. We seem to forget tbe inglorious conclusion of\ntbe combined attack of the English and French ships\nsent from tbe Crimea a few years ago to capture the in-\nsignificant forts of Rnwian Petropolowski, and we utterly\nignore all possible thought of the extent, to say nothing\nof tbe innate power, of Englands possessions. Were all\ntbe gun-boats and merchant vessels of the French Em-\npire to be suddenly metamorphosed into ships of tbe\nline, armed and manned and added to the present fleet (\nwe donbt tbe ability of Napoleon to accomplish that\nwhich it is so confidently predicted he is to do with a\nNavy which is ip every way of acknowledged inferiority\nto tbe English ; and as to his 44 sweeping the commerce\nof England from the seas in six weeks,” it were as like-\nly that be could do it, as that old bigh-tory Halibnr-\nton, the recently knighted “Sam Slick” of Nova Scotia,\neven, if be thought so, should say it.\nThe English Nation has a thousand wrongs and \ncious crimes to answer for ; it has scourged the innocent,\nthe helpless and unoffending with remorseless cruelty ;\nforced upon the world, and established in it, evils that\nare festering in tbe vitals of society ; and its insuffera-\nble pride and arrogance have merited and received tbe\ncontempt and scorn of the world. We would gladly see\ntbe whole fabric of the English Government pulled\ndown, were a better one to be bnilt up in its place ; but\nin tbe present condition of Europe, we would regard the\nact which wonldreduce England to a state of subserviency\nto France as the most disastrous to the canse of human\nliberty of any event , except the loss of onr own freedom\nand nationality, which could affect mankind. England\nsubverted by France, wonld leave the Despotisms of\nEurope bnt one enemy in all tbe world to cope with,\nand God forbid that we should look forward with any\ndegree of pleasure to the arrival of the day on which\nsuch an event could be anticipated.
5316bf8364a3d3c4c7e1bd51990da2c4 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.401369831304 40.807539 -91.112923 he proved himself a weak brother. By (ships of Henry County met in Mount\nthis time the Committee was ready to j Pleasant 011 Saturday the 15th instant.—\nreport through the son, and one of the j Regular delegates appeared from nil the\nbitterest invcctives over written against < townships cxcept Tippecanoe, Wayne\nthe Whig party was then read—so said and Baltimore; and proceeded to organize\nthe son; also some most "scathing" res- j the Convention by appointing JOSEPH\nolutious were read and adopted, as also j FORBES president, and GEO. S . SHANKLI.V.\nsaid the son. The Captain again arose, j Secretary. The Convention then proceed-\nI .<aw the son then, who was very un-;edto ballot for candidates to represent\neasy—pregnant with a speech, he was J Henry County in the next Legislative\nimpatient for a delivery. Hope flushed ; Assembly of Iowa; and 011 first ballot,\nhis face, and his heart beat high when the following gentlemen having received\nthe person nexl him promised to have ; a majority of all the votes of the Conven-\nhirn called out as soon as the Captain j tion, were declared duly nominated: '\nwas done. The Captain closed—and lo! j Peyton Wilsou, Simeon Smead, Asbu-\nand behold! a novice iu the shape of ajry B. Porter.\nDoctor was called upon. The son could j The Convention, after passing a reso-\nconlain himself 110 longer. Disappointed,: lution that their proceedings be published\nhe retired in disgust; for well he knew |in the Hawk Eye, adjourned to meet at\nthat if the wind was not let ofl with a the polls on the first Monday of August\nbodkin, the Doctor would consume the next.\nrest of the day in giving it vent through
1f6b4afc2073415b819549af2dec4195 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.491780790208 31.960991 -90.983994 The Editor Concord Freeman dis­\ncourses in the following ungrateful\nmanner concerning asilvercoin recent\nly found on this island, whilom the\nplace of his abode and residence, where\nif lie did not “wax fat”1ndecd he cer­\ntainly kicked not in frequently:\nA silver dollar was recently found\non the beach, in Nantucket. The\nTelegraph says it was neither rich nor\ntare and only wonders how it came\nthere. We propose to treat this im­\nportant matter under three distinct\nheads. Primo--as to its richness, we\npresume it to be worth one hundred\ncents, or, seeiyg that it is on Nantuck­\net, we will say ÏU) cents; it being an\nascertained fact that a dollar on that\nisland will go further, and fare worse\nthan in any part in these States. Se­\ncundo—as to its rarity, if a silver dol­\nlar is not now a thing ou the sand\nheap, affairs must have confoundedly\nchanged in that quarter within a few\nweeks. When we left the island, dol­\nlars were matters of pure tradition\ntiling only connected with the past like\nthe Yzinchkfnvlbxqmptygnd Indians,\nwho formerly held imperial sway over\nthe sea-girt Sahara, but whose lovely\ndomain was usurped by the bloody\nMacys, the relentless Coffins the noisy\nHusseys, the roving Starbucks, the va­\nlorous Folgers, the land-loving Garden­\ners, and other followers of Thomas the\nConquerer. Tertio—as to how the\ndollar came there, we are opinion that\nit acted in accordance with that law\nwhich sends things to the place where\nthey are most wanted. A very sensi->\nble dollar it was for going to Nantuck­\net in these limes. It wont be crowded\nby any of its brethren, and will be\nfreely admitted in the best society.
aa7dc1da0517f641c96a567968c58f0f CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1920.5040983290326 41.875555 -87.624421 were passed last week when there was\nno quorum. It Is expected that a\nminority report will he offered on the\nsection which permits the reading of\ntho Illblo In the public schools. This\nsection, as approved by the majority\nof committee, follows:\n"Tho free exercise and enjoyment\nof religious profession and worship,\nwithout discrimination, shall forever\nbe guaranteed and no person shall bo\ndenied any civil or political right,\nprivilege or capacity on account of his\nreligious opinions, hut the liberty of\nconscience heiehy secured shall not be\nconstrued to dispense with oaths or\nnfllrumtlons, excuse acts of licentious-\nness or Justify practices Inconsistent\nwilh the peace or safety of the state.\nNo person shall lie lequlred to attend\nor support any ministry or place of\nworship against his nor shall\nnny preference he given to nny re-\nligious denomination or mode of wor-\nship. Tho reading in the public\nschools of selections from any version\nof tho Old and New Testnnients, with'\nout comment, shall never he held tc\nbo In conlllct with this constitution."\nChairman We Young of the Judlcl\nary committee Is expected to pre- e- n l\nhis final report to the convention tills\nweek. The committee Is prnctiuillj\nagreed on all sections, with the ixcep\ntlon of that which refers to the mini\nher of members on the supreme bench\nSovonil of tho members nro In fuoi\nof n provision for suven members\nwhllo the Cook county members ar\nsaid to faor n membership of nine.\nThis question Is expected to he sot\ntied soon.
11118a08e274bb5441f28a075d9956b4 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.4986338481583 29.4246 -98.49514 goods' than Kalllrs, among whom mis-\nsions' havo not yet been extended. The\nTransvaal state Is largely a misnomer.\nIn the Transvaal there Is no state In the\nsense of nn orgunlo whole obeying tho\norders of n central government. There\nIs the semblance of a state, but decen-\ntralization and Individualism are carried\nto such an extent that the orders of the\ncentral government nro set at naught\nwhenever tho local landrost nnd Its\nneighbors prefer to disobey them. This\nit is mat renuers it so very iiimcuic io\ndeal with the Transvaal, which Is but a\nloose confederation of a great number of\nfarmers scattered over an Immense ter-\nritory, eaoh of whom does llrst thnt\nwhich Is good to his own eyes, and obeys\nthe government or not as it pleases him.\n"Itlght to the or llechuanaland\nlies the most fertile territory In South\nAfrica, Matnbele Land. The tribe Is of\nZulu origin, and organized In strict mili-\ntary fashion. They profess to havo\nlighting men, who are continually\ngoing out on Impls In their neighbor a\nterritory, slaying merotlcssly every adult\nwhom they meet. Children they spare,\nthe hoys being trained ns warriors; and\nIt is a remarkable fact recalling re-\nminiscences of the Janissaries of the Ot-\ntoman Fniplre that these children so\nkidnapped, no matter what tribe they\nbelong to, acquire under the Matebelo\ntraining all tho military prowess of the\nMatebeles themselves. Upon this tribe,\nsooner or later, the Iloers will of neces-\nsity encroach, when there will probably\nbe some wild work, In which the natives\nwill make a better light than did the\npoor llechuanas.
1f1d3508857b24e66f34ed1d0936e69d SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.009589009386 37.53119 -84.661888 Our little town was aroused to Its ut\nnose Monday evcnibg when both ladles\nand goats began to swarm In from all\nparts of the globe for the purpose or\nntering our Normal College whicl\nopened on the 1st with the largest en\njllmont ever known before and In\nlt3id of other schools at a distanci\nprospering on our talents our teachcti\ncan enter their own county college\nsellnc assured they will get as good\nInstruction here as abroad There art\ntwo ladles ono from Oklahoma ihc oth-\ner from Barren county at the college\nand a number of others I have not a8\n< t learned from whence they camo\nCharley Douglas and wifeOf Dan\nvllle and Miss Lula Russell of Mil\nled cvlle were visiting their aunt\nMrs Robert McAninch during \nilldays Miss Jesslo Bryant was al\nbomo from her school last week She\nseemed to make sunshine wherever she\nwent and all were glad to see her but\nirrv to say she could not tarry long\nvlthus as her school will not bo out\nuntil February Mrs John Coulter and\nlIttlo son Byron are In Somerset this\nweek visiting her sister Mrs Lum AI-\nlen Bob Gfiter of Columbia bas\nmoved tothls place to take a position\nas clerk In his brothers drug store\nVo welcome Mr Geter as a citizen\nfcellnl that our gain Is Adair loss-\nFor the present he will take rooms at-\nbls sister Mrs J M Durhams but-\nwlll600n begin crcctlngacottage Miss\norenco McAninch bas been visiting\nber sisters In Lincoln and adjoining\ncounties during the holidays
1ed9dcfd5fe29e1b2ad9d45c8a664901 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.395890379249 39.513775 -121.556359 Priests horded the lore ofKgypt and\nChui Jea in the adyta ot temple* dedi-\ncated to the gods. The learned of an-\ntiquity weie objects of veneration and\noften of w or. -h ip . Put it' the scholar\not' tins.century w re ns ignorant us the\nseven wise men who came from the\npast,' or as illiteiute and half as ignor-\nant of absolute truths as Plate and\nAristotle, he would not he counted\namong the learned of the present pe-\nriod. The mind of Plato wasev. r lull\nof the wild st and most irrational vaga-\nries Ido not believe the world owes\nthe discovery of half a dozen facts,\neither alotract or material, to that\nPlato, whose Verbiage has tilled tin\nwhole world during so many centuries\nwith bis renown. Jlis two parent ides\nwere, our tine, the olh r iulse ; anid\ntheiofore, tvoiy thought generated\ntherefrom was monstrous —a cross of\nthe true and tl e false, of the infinite\nand the linite, of tne gross in..te-\nnd the nuintc.sence of nonentiy. Mis\nfirst and tru'' idea w..s, ihat tin re is\none Self.existent and eieituu (Jod,\nwithout form or substance, according\nto all human ideas. 11 is second false\nidea was, that matter Was antagonistic\nto (in i and good, and forever -t \nwith him. lie believed that mattei\nwas essentially evil, and the origin of\nall evd; but we have learned that\nmatter is »sS' ntially good, ai-d tne only\ntamable good ; that it is by nature in-\nch tructihle, according to all inodes <d\nthought. To believe ui its destructi n\nis pure faith, unsupported by a single\nward of revelation of the Supreme d••-\nsmns. It is -abject to intinil •, ab.- o -\nsute'y infinite changes—cuangns sufii-\nciently radical and elemental to des-\ntroy all forms with win h we are ac-\nquainted, whether anunaor mathema-\ntical. This absence ot all integral or\ntdernentary forms is chaos, the state\nfrom which the matter of our globe has\nbeen progressing towards infinity of\nunit form during hundreds of liiousuuds\n.df years. New forms or varieties ul\nanminls, of vegetables, and even ot\nchrystals, are being constanily gener-\nated in the great omniferons matrix <<l\nnature, pan jiassu, with t >e discover-\nies of science. Jhe science of the\nfinite will forever remain at an infinite\ndistance from the omniscience of the\nPreator ; and this endless accumula-\ntion of knowledge during the infinite\nngos that arc before the immortal soul\nof each one, and perhaps before the\ngate soul of the pernio of our\nrr
1e4e242c862d92827ab240568f242596 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1881.9575342148655 41.004121 -76.453816 Science is a big thing, but there may\nsometimes bu too much of it. Thn\nRtrflrotul Advertiser relates a casein\npoint. A certain scientist learned that a\nyoung man had engaged a buggy at the 1\nlivery stable and bribed the liveryman to\nallow him to experiment on the 'buggy.\nThe following was the result;\n'i'he young scientist put a small elec-\ntric lamp on the lower part of the dash-\nboard, out of sight of the driver, and ran\nsmall copper wires to the back of the\nseat. It is well known to the student of\nnature that when a brunette young man\nand ablondu girl, who act as tho positive\nand thu negative that is, ho is posi\nlive that he will put his arm around her,\nand she negatives tho arrangement along\nuUirst until, after dark, there is a cer-\ntain electric current established, small in\nitself, but of power it carefully\nhusbanded. Vou have all felt it. It is up\nlike your arm getting asleep or hitting\nyour funny bone on the arm of a rocking c\nchair. Well, this wire was placed so that\nthe arms of the young peojilo would\ntouch it. Just as they wero passing\nFitzgerald's, there b the toll gate, they\nbegan to snug up, and before they got\nto Linderniaii's the little lamp began to\nthrow out light. It went under the horse's\nfeet and lit up tho road for several\nrods, aud the young people were alinsst\nmuch astonished as the horse was.\nThey thought I here was somebody fol-\nlowing them with a lantern, and they\nstraightened up ami the light went out. I\nivery little while they would get to-\ngether and kiss eaeli other slyly, and im\nmediately the light would blaze up. The\ngirl was really frightened, and insisted
10efe29e24ad41f961deeb8ae8d9e7ae THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.7904109271942 40.063962 -80.720915 llaby turned red with wrath and sur\nIse at this sudden thrust. 'You lose\nit young scoundrel!' he cried. Wha\nthat to you, and what connection cai\nsre be between that portrait and\nin in your way of life?'\nThere's a close connection,' sail\n3nry, trembling with anger, in hi\nrn; 'and the proof is that, when tha\n!ture la turned to the light, I'll tel\nu my name; and till that picturo 1\nrned to the light, I'll uot tell you m;\nme; and If anybody hero knows m;\nme and tells It to you, may that per\nQ'a tongue be blistered at the rood'\nOb, how fearlnll' cried Grace, turn\n; very pale. 'But I'll put an end t\nall. I've got the key and I've hli\nrmiaulon, and I'll.oh, Mr. liaby\n»re's something more lu this than w>\niow.1 She darted to the picture an<\nlocked the padlock, aud with Jael':\nilbtunce. began to turn the picture\nen Mr. Raby rose and to bem\ni mind inwards, but he neither for\nde nor encouraged this impulsive ao\nGrace Carden'a.\nSow there was not a man, nor .a wo\nin In the room, wiiose curiosity hac\nt boon more or lesB excited abou\nis picture;, bo there was a genera\n)vement towards it, of all but Mr\niby, who stood quite still, turning hii\ne Inwards, and evidently much mov\nthough passive.\nThere happened to be a strong ligh\non the picture, and the lovely oiiv<\n;e, the vivid featurea, and glorioui\nickoyea and eyebrows, seemed t(\nsh out of tbe oanvass into life.\nSven the living faces, being blondes\niea uuiure it, lu ibe one partloulai\nor. They seemed fair glittering\n>ona, and this a glorious bud.\n3race's first feelings were those o\naplo surprise. and admiration. Bui\nshe gazed, Henry* first words re\nrned to her, and all manner of ideal\nnek her pell-mell. 'Oh, beautllnl\nautifal!' she orled. Then, turning U\nsnry,
09f5945dd6979b90893b8a2af80f9bd1 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.2068492833587 37.305884 -89.518148 To clean cloth dresses rip them, if\npossible. Men's cloth clothes can be\nmuch more easily cleaned without rip\nping than women's gowns. Whether\nthe garment is ripped or not, begin by\nshaking and brushing all the dust you\ncan from it. After this examine it for\ngrease spots. Bemove these with gaso-\nlene. If they are obstinate heat them\nand try washing out the grease with a\nsolution of soap bark and lukewarm\nwater. Use a stiff brush to scrub the\ngoods on both sides. When it is dry use\ngasolene again. In time the most ob--\nstnate grease stain will come out.\nWhen the grease stains are gone clean\nthe garment for dust. Go over every\nportion of it on the right side with a\nbrush dipped in a solution of soap bark.\nBinse off this soap with clear cold or\nlukewarm water, taking care if the gar-\nment is not ripped to absorb the rins-\ning water as fast as it is applied. By\nthis means the soap bark can be rinsed\nout. Let garments dry a little.\nthen iron them dry. Ammonia may be\nused diluted with water to help rinse\nout soap bark. It dries more iSpidly\nthan clear water. Silk garments that\nwill not wash are difficult to clean.\nA mixture of half alcohol and half wa\nter applied with a stiff brush or a firm\nwhite cotton cloth does better work\nthan anything else we know. Ribbons\nmay be very successfully cleaned in this\nway after first removing any grease\nstains with gasolene. After using al-\ncohol and water absorb all the mois\nture you can with a linen cloth, lay\nthem on a linen cloth and lay a linen\ncloth over them and a heavy cotton one\nover that, and press them nearly dry.\nNow press them perfectly smooth with\na thin cotton cloth over them, and let\nthem hang in a warm room on a line\nuntil they are perfectly dry. Linen\nabsorbs water more easily and is bet\nter than cotton to lay under and over\nsilk when it is pressed. N. Y. Tribune.
1257e5d9cc780b2c9d99e6057a0437fb THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1908.5751365803987 37.451159 -86.90916 New York July 24Old John Mor\ngan who balled originally from nbout\nFrankfort In the Blue Grass region\nIn Kentucky Is attracting atentlc\nby the genuine hosplpllty lie Ius\nbeen showing to those of the down\nandout class in his modest IIbtle\nhome in Christopher street among\nthe homes of the really poor on the\nlower West Side Morgan h of 1he\nfaintly of the Morgan one of who\nwas the famous John Morgan the\nraider of Civil War fame He has\nthe good blood and the great hlClrt\nof a game lpeople like them Qne\nhundred mn a day nre being fed\nfreo of eo r by Morgan 1iiin elf n\npoor working mat at his hom Nt\n10 ObrUtoplw sreet mid so quIet-\nly that mice even rerldtnlM of ille\nneighborhood have known what Is go-\ning on Every evening 7 oclocl <\nscores of hungry mow out of employ\nni ent appear In groups of eight o\nten and for a full hour they come and\ngo crowding trite small room In whIch\nhe serves then to their full capacity\nEvery man helps himself to soul\nand bread and coffee without stint\nant lie it at liberty to obtain his\nbrttakfatfc nod dinner there for a reas\nenable time until he gets work John\nMorgan has been carrying on the wOlk\non a small tonle for the late two or\nthree yeaiw but the demand on\nfilm have Increased so that his ac-\ncommodations are now taxed to that\nfull capacity He has no money H-\nIt aided In 1115 work by his daughter\nOalvlna who helps him to pay th\nrent while he collects food for his\nprotests a5 bet he can
20750da0bd3b10700893b990443cc43d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.0314207334043 42.217817 -85.891125 unpaid for. If Uncle John would only\nbuy out this interest for Jim Golden, it\nwould be of great advantage to both\nsides, and the plan was hardly arranged\nbefore it was executed. Ballou received\nseveral thouands of dollars in cash and\nnotes for tho balance secured by a mort-\ngage on the farm. The day of depar-\nture arrived, the travelers departed with\nthe blessings of the good old man rever-\nently invoked on their heads; and the\nshy, fond caress of the beautiful sister\nand fiancee sweetly lingering on their\nlips. So generous was the treatment of\nfarmer Golden that he had also pur-\nchased several fine horses for trading on\nthe route. Tho cash and convertible\nmeans placed in tho hands of Ballou\namounted to nearly $11,000 in the ag-\ngregate. Frequent home letters from\ntho absent adventurers delighted the\nhearts of tho Golden family. The let-\nters of the son written at tho different\nstopping places where they halted to\nsell goods, as Ballou repve?ented to his\nvictim, announced that 44 Steve" had\nsold so many goods and made so much\nmoney, rinally letters wero written\nhome by both announcing that they had\nsold all the goods and would soon re\n Young Golden announced that\nlie should leave for home at a given\ndate with his full share of the profits,\nwhich had been very large; Ballou's\nletter announced the same fact as to\nyoung Golden, and added that he him\nself should be detained for some weeks\nlater. As time progressed, the day of\nexpected arrival came, but their son\nfailed to appear. Day after day passed.\nUneasiness ripened into alarm, when at\nlast a letter from Ballou, dated October\n15, 1S70, announced the fact that young\nGolden had absconded with all the\nmoney, which had been temporarily\nintrusted to him a few days before his\nregular time of departure. This fearful\nnews struck the unhappy parents liko a\nthunderbolt. After a lew weeks, when\nthe edge of their suflering was a little\nblunted, Ballou arrived. His manner\nwas exquisitely tempered with a digni\nfied repression of his own sense of\nwrong, barely allowed to make itself\nfelt, and a delicate exhibition of sympa\nthy and tenderness for those whose sen\nsibilities had been so cruelly wrung.\nHe pressed his wooing of the amiable\nClara and married her. Within a few\ndays after tho nuptial ceremony tho\nsmiling miscreant delicately hinted to\nhis father-in-la-
457a4c6fd1a683e67f2eeb53950885c4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.23698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 The fact of the Senate accepting\nand passing the two House bills, one\nproviding for the administration of\nschool affairs and the other to raise\nthe funds to carry out the adminis­\ntration was a surprise to many per­\nsons. While It had been rumored\nabout the corridors all day that the\nSenate would concur should the\nHouse pass the two bills, there were\nmany who refused to believe it.\nMoat of the Republican Senators\nargued it was Incumbent upon this\nLegislature to pass some school bill.\nThey pointed out that the House had\ntwo bills before it sent there by the\nSenate and had refused to act on\neither, neither of them ever getting\nout of committee and therefor the\nonly way possible to get a school\nmeasure .through seemed to be \npass the House bills. One of the\nSenate bills was practically Identical\nwith the one prepared by the clllsens\ncommittee and defeated by the\nHouse several weeks ago, except for\nsome changes In the tax provisions.\nThe other Senate bill repealed the\npresent school laws, re-enacted the\nold school laws of previous to 1912\nand carried tq$ provisions Indentlcal\nwith the other Senate bill.\nTo justify their action In voting\nfor the House bills, soma of the Re­\npublican Senators explained that the\nbill was practically a copy of the tax\nprovisions in the Senate bill, and\nthat the alcohol bill did not differ\na great deal from the cttlxens' com­\nmittee bill, except that State board\nmembers will be appointed Instead\nof being elected and the abolishing\nof the eounty hoards.
876eabb3e6c49526be92c562510534da THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.5013660885954 40.807539 -91.112923 Thc author's nim Is to delineate faithfully,to\nstate facts derived from personal observation\nand jiractical research, and from a general ac­\nquaintance and identity with the interests of\nIowa, her resources and susceptibilities, and\nduring a constant residence of four years past,\nhe indulges the hope that this little work will\nfind favor with thc public, aa a convenient\ndocument of reference, worthy the patronage\nof the citizen at home, as well as the emigrant\nabroad. The principal towns and villages in\nthc Territory will be minutely described, their\ncommercial advantages and general resources\nset forth, average prices paid for labor, and thc\ninducements presented to all branches of me­\nchanical industry. Amongst thc principal to­\npics will be embraced the Military, Civil and\nJudicial organization of the Territory; Judi­\ncial, Civil, Military and Staff Officers ; Mem­\nbers of the Bar, &c.; Religion, Morals,Schools,\nState of Society aud Social Relations of the\n ; mode of" Claim Making" and Town\nship Regulations amongst thc settlers ; Sketch\nof LandSale ; Process of Mining and Smelting ;\ngeneral suggestions to Emigrants in their\nchoice of location; Purchasing, Improving,\nBuilding, and Synopsis of thc Geology of Iowa ;\ndescription and indication of Lead Mines, Co­\nral Beds, Marble, Granite and Limestone ; sin­\ngular formation of Petrified substances, and\ndiscoveries of antiquated origin, and specula­\ntions of scientific men thereon ; together with\na sketch of the present condition of the Sack\nand Fox tribes of Indians, their villages, cus­\ntoms, traditions and pursuits, with a brief bio­\ngraphical sketch of Keokuk and Black Ilawk.\nThe work to beissued from thc press about the\nmiddle of July, which will enable the author\nto give a correct estimate of the population of\nthe Territory, from the apportionment of the\nrepresentation authorized by act of the Legis­\nlative Assembly.
95cecb620fe3d1076f409277d0cca858 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.1849314751396 41.681744 -72.788147 Data was received from 4 29 cities.\nThe report says: "These facts, ob-\ntained from 75 per cent, of all the\ncities reporting, show that in these\ncities even excluding those housed in\nannexes where conditions may be\nnormal, there are more than 453,000\nchildren who are either on half-tim- e\nbecause of lack of building space or\nare housed In portables, rented build-\nings, attics, basements or corridors.\nIt would require an average of two\n30room buildings in each of these\ncities to properly house these groups\nof children alone."\nThe report sets forth statistically\nthe inadequacy of playground space.\n"It is clear that in many cities chil- -\n'dren are now housed In buildings in\nwhich there Is less space on the play-\nground than is supplied in the class-\nrooms In which they are taught,"\nsays Mr. Strayer in the introduction.\n"Three million six hirhdred thou-\nsand children are represented in this\nreport on playgrounds," it is stated,\n"and the study discloses that one-ha- \nof them 1,800.000 children have\neach a plaj'ground less than six by\nsix feet per pupil and many of them\nhave no playground at all.\n"These facts of limited playground\nspace," says the report, "present one\nof the serious problems confronting\nthose who are Interested in the wel-\nfare of American school children,\nWhatever tho cost, adequate play- -\nr ground 'space should be provided for\nthose school buildings already erected\nin congested districts. ruDiic senti-\nment must become so strong that it\nwill be considered a breach of trust\nfor school authorities to erect a\nschool buildins? on a site that will not\nafford adequate playground space for\na,Il the pupils housed in the building."\nOn the subject of fire hazards in\nschools, tho report states: "Only five\nper cent of the total number of build-\nings are, of the type of constuction\nusually called fireproof. Only a small\nnumber have fireprooflng elements to\nlessen the fire harard to the children.\nAt least twenty-fiv- e
4e23a5322c30dcdb2862ee45a6810146 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.1543715530763 58.275556 -134.3925 Messrs. I . D. Carpenter and J. D .\nMiller leave in the morning for a trip\nto the Tenakee Hot Springs. They ex¬\npect to remaiu about two weeks.\nKoominghouse No. 1 being completed\nand ready for occupancy, the men be¬\ngan moving into their rooms last Mon-\nday. Interior work on the second\nbuilding is being rapidly pushed in\norder to have it ready within the com-\niug month. These two buildings are\nup-to-date, modern structures iu every\nparticular and form an important ad¬\ndition to the equipment of Treadwell\nfor the comfort of its employes. They\nmeasure 103 feet by 30 feet and are\nbuilt in three stories each. The\nentrance is at the front by double\ndoors which open into a large steam\nheated hallway. On the first floor of\neach building is a washroom provided\nwith suitable conveniences. On this\nfloor are also sixteen bedrooms. A\nbroad stairway leads up to the second\naud third floors, each of which con-\ntain? nineteen bedrooms opening from\na steam heated corridor ten feet in\nwidth aud runuiug the length of the\nbuilding. The bedrooms are 8x10 or\n10x12 feet, single or double, with ac¬\ncomodations for one or two ac\ncordingly. Each room contains iron\nbedstead, table, chairs and shelves for\nclothing. The buildiug is plastered\nthroughout and well lighted with elec¬\ntric lights. The floors are oiled, and\nthe woodwork nicely painted <*ud fin¬\nished. The windows are carefully\nbuilt and are equipped with patent\nweights. Every precaution has been\ntaken in the construction of the build- 1\ningsto insure their preservation aud\npermanence. Large concrete pillars\nwere used to provide a solid, lasting\nfoundation. Each floor is supplied\nwith apparatus for fire protection iu\nthe shape of hose and bydrauts, egress\nfrom eaeh floor beiug made possible by\nmeans of escapes at the rear of the\nbuildings. A janitor will look alter\nth» cleanliness and order of the rooms\naud ball ways. Each rooming- house\nwill lodge eighty-two men. With a\nboarding place as admittedly excellent\nas the Treadwell boarding houses, a\nplace of recreation near at hand^and\nopen at all times, with cleanly, com-\nfort-able rooms such as are now pro¬\nvided and then added vital considera¬\ntion of regular, steady pay it would\nseem that Treadwell employes in these\ntimes of stringent conditions and\nfinancial panic, are not only well oil\nbut decidedly fortunate.
372821bac27feaa1bab4d4104e014686 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.4849726459724 58.275556 -134.3925 Xotice is hereby given,, that L. Kane, citi-'\nxen of tin' United States, over the age of\ntwenty-one years, and residing in the Dis-\ntriet of Alaska, and at Hoonah, Alaska, has;\nMiiricr untf pursuent to Sees. 12 and 13 of an\nAct of Congress of date March 3rd. 15*91, as\namended by Section 10 of an Act of Congress\nof date Slay 13th, 1898, entitled "An Act ex-\ntending the hoaiestead laws and providing\nfor the right of wa v for railroad*; iu the Dis-\ntrict of Alaska,. and for other purposes," up-\nnlied to purchase the lands embraced hi U.S .\n- Sou-Mineral Survey No. 669, situated an west\nshore of Excursion Inlet, two miles from its\nhead, in the District of Alaska and more par-\nticularfy described* as follows, to-wit:\nReginnuig at cor. No. 1 M. C. on mean high\nwater mark of west shore of Excursion In-\nlet. cor . not set; wit. cor . bears west 0.45 ehs.; |\nU.S.L.M.No. 669bearsN.40 deg.33min. W.\n ehs. dist.; thence west 17.35 chs. to Cor.\nNo. 2, an iron pipe set in ground marked S\n869 Cor. 2; thence north 17.60 chs. to Cor. No.\n3, an iron pipe act in ground marked S 669\nCor. 3; thence east 14.48 chs. to Cor. No. 4 M.\nC., cor. not set; wit. cor. bears west 1.00 chs.;\na rock set in crround marked S 6<>9 C. 4 W. C.;\nthence meandering mean high tide of Excur¬\nsion Inlet (1) S. 14 deg. 02 min. E . 0 .73 chs.; (2)\nS. 20 deg. 59 min. W. 1.31 chs.; (3) N. 73 deg. 29\nmin. W. 0.S7 chs.; ( V) S. 1 d«-g. 52 min. E. 4.28\nchs.; (5) S. 8 deg. 50 min. \\V. 4.56 chs.; (6) S. 29\ndeg. 35 min. E. 5.70 chs.; (7) S. 'iS deg- 43 min.\nE. 2.6"i chs., to cor. No. 1 M. C , the place of;\nbeginning. Area 24.75 acres. Var. at all cor¬\nners 31 deg. 13 m hi. East.
06791774e5207bfae45152e5bf17af4c THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1889.3931506532217 46.187885 -123.831256 publication. Mr. Reed, chief of-\nficer Gregory and the writer\nthen lowered their fishing lines and be-\nfore long Mr. Gregory was rewarded\nby catching a twenty pound halibut.\nA few minutes later Mr. Reed caught\nanother halibut which he thinks must\nhave weighed in tho neighborhood of\n75 lbs, it was a pretty heavy job to get\nsuch a large fish on the deck of the\nboat, so chief engineer Lord took a\ngaff hook and hooked him in the gills\nwhen the fish gave a jerk freeing him-\nself from the gaff," and his weight\nbreaking the line and thus was lost the\nfish, hooks, and a 10 lb. sinker. By\nthis time it began to" get a little\nchoppy around the rock, the boat em-\nployed in landing, supplies bobbing up\nand down with tie swell, making it\nsomewhat tedious to work.\nCapt Richardson took a quart bot-\ntle filled with oil and a weight at\ntached, dropped it overboard near the\nrock and a few minutes tho surface\nof the water was covered with oil.\nmaking it, wherever it touched as\nsmooth as a miirpond. so that the men\ncould work with greater safety. At\nnoon au quit worK for lunch and at\n1 o'clock work was resumed landing\nthe bricks which by the way arc to\nbuild a new oil house.\nAt 3 o'clock all being landed. Cant.\nRichardson gave the signal to start\nhome, the whistle on the rock saluted\nthe steamer with three toots and\ndipping the flag, which was an\nswered by tho Manzanita. At 5\no clock passed the whistling buoy,\nfrom there to Sand Island tho wav\nbeing perfectly clear, but from there\nalmost to Fort Stevens, Capt. Richard-\nson had trouble trying to keep clear\nor the labyrinth of hsh nets that were\nlaid 'out The party returned at 530\njust twelve hours of a pleasant trip,\nana the Astoria representative ex-\ntends his hearty thanks to Capt Rich-\nardson, chief officer Gregory,
3958d83fe2b1a4145970aee9821c5972 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.9467212798522 40.735657 -74.172367 the event of such arrangements being made\nthe material so transported mav be utilized\nby the city for filling where ft may desire\nto use the same, the contractor to furnish\nthe labor and track which may be needed\nfor the spreading of such material up to\nthe amount of 2,000 feet of track per year.\nThe attention of bidders Is also called to\nthe possibility of making arrangements fot\nthe transportation of a large portion of the\nmaterial to be collected under theso specifi-\ncation! by the use of barges on the Passaic\nriver, and the city hereby authorizes the\nuse of the city dock at the foot of New Jer-\nsey Railvoad avenue and the dock at the\nfoot of Herbert place. This latter location\nwill, however, need to be placed In service\nable condition at the expense of the con-\ntractor. should he desire to use the same\nfor this proposi&l.\nEach proposal must be Inclosed In a\nsealed envelope, properlv Indorsed with the\nname of the bidder and the nature of the\nwork, and directed to the Board of Street\nand water Commissioners of th*» City of\n and the bidders will state their\nprices in writing as well as In figures.\nCopies of thq contract specifications for\nthe work can be procured ot the office of\nthe Chief Engineer of the Board of Street\nand Water Commissioners at the Cltv Hall.\nSaid pronosals to be accompanied bv tht\nconsent in writing of a surety company,\nqualified to do business In New .Tersev. who\nShall, at the time of putting In such pro-\nposals. obligate Itself to the amount of$2B.-\nhOO that if the contract he awarded to the\nperson or persons making the proposal It\nwill upon its being so awarded become his\nor their sureties for the faithful performance\nof said work, and that If the person or per-\nsons omit or refuse to execute such contract\nthey will pay to the Cltv of Newark any\ndifference between the sums to which he or\nthev would have been entitled upon com-\npletion of the contract and that which tho\nCity of Newark mav be obliged to pay the\nperson or person* by whom such contract\nshell he executed.\nThe Board of Str^ft end Water Commit-\nfloners
1b777d904824234b0d4c9a8e99dc14c2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.3547944888383 46.187885 -123.831256 the depredations, the number of years\nthey had been allowed to go on un-\nchecked, tho number and character\nof the people implicated iu tho rob-\nbery, tho fact that tho exposure was\ndue to the efforts of an obscure news-\npaper and the necessarily rotten con-\ndition of a community in which such\na robbery was rendered possible, all\ntended to give the case an almost\nEuropean notoriety. The amount of\nthe swindle perpetrated by the bank\nmanager and his confederates was\n12,000,000 rouble or about $8,000 ,000 .\nWhen, after two years of legal shuf-\nfling and delay, tho conspiracy was\nat last exposed in open court, tho fig-\nures, large as they were, dropped into\ninsignificance when compared with\ntho social and political questions\nraised by this extraordinary trial.\nThe bank of Skopine was founded\nin 1863, at a time of considerable in-\ndustrial activity in BuBsia. It was a\ncommunal bank, hence not strictly a\ngovernment institution; but it was\n the direct supervision of the\ngovernment, being placed under the\ncontrol of the ministries of tho inte-\nrior and finance, and obliged to ren-\nder to tho latter department n period-\nical and detailed account of it\noperations and its position. Bykov\nwas appointed manager, notwith-\nstanding tho fact that he had been\nguilty of fraud whilo holding a pre-\nvious appointment. The people of\nSkopine made a feeble pretest against\nhis appointment, but with out effect.\nIn 1868, as the evidence showed, there\nwas a deficit of 5M,000 rubles. Being\nreluctant to publish this unpleasant\nfact to the world or impart it to the\nminister of finance Minager Bykov\ndid what, as his lawyer ingenuously\nput it, anybody in his pbco would\nhave done drew up a false balance\nsheet, and of so satisfactory a charac-\nter that it drew deposits from all\nparts of the country. From this\ndate the affairsof the bank went from\nbad to worse, and tho more
004f6940603d04d11ca04859eb81e6e0 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1905.2808218860985 39.756121 -99.323985 One of the fantastic tricks which\nlightning plays upon its unfortunate\nvictims is a kind of flashlight pho-\ntography. There are numerous In-\nstances of this which are more or less ,\n"authenticated," but they seem almost\ntoo wonderful to be believed. One\nof these is of a young man in New\nJersey who was struck by lightning '\nand was taken in an ambulance to the\nhospital at once. There seemed to be\nno wound except a small mark on the\nback, but while the doctors and\nnurses were examining him a picture\nbegan to develop on the skin. Soon\nbefore the wondering eyes of the\nwatchers appeared a perfect picture\nof the figure of Christ nailed to the\ncrocs. The explanation is that on the\nwall opposite the bed on which the\nyoung man lay was the picture which\nwas reproduced on his skin.\nAnother Instance of a man who\nwas struck by lightning, and on his\nchest were red marks resembling the\ntree with all its branches under which\nthe man was standing when he was\nkilled. From France comes the story\nof a peasant girl who was driving a\ncow from the pasture when she was\novertaken by a storm, and she and\nthe cow took refuge under the tree. A\nbolt killed the cow and stunned the '\ngirl. When she recovered conscious-\nness she found on her chest a picture\nof the cow she had been driving.\nThe chatelaine of the castle of i\nBenatonnalre was sitting in a chair\nIn her salon when the chateau was\nstruck by lightning. She was quite\nuninjured, but on the back of her\ndress was found a perfect copy of the\nchair on which she bad been sitting,\ndown to Its minutest ornament These
0241c20d2e5ca1e35962e44161af0640 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.2753424340435 40.063962 -80.720915 There was im eighteen hundred dollar llrol\ntbu Parker block, cornor of Hanover and 8econ\nstreets, yentorday morning. The building Is\ntwo-story brick owned by Oliver Parker. Ther\naro two ftoro rooms on tlanovvr ft reel occuplc\nby r. Dauglierty'a book and wall paper nor\nand I-ambrecht's Jewelry storo; tbo rear end c\nthe building and tbo Heeond story In ocouple\noy James Mndl-y'H boarding liowe. The tlr\nbroke otit In tlio kitchen about half nm foil\nand (be Hamcs boon spread to tbo dining roor\nami Dttugberty's store. The flio was discover*\nby notno emtdoyes in tbo Hnekeyu glass wortfi\nwho were returning home from work, and the\ngave tbo Alarm. J'bo b'eeund wr.rd lioso com\npuny and tbe hook and luddei company were o\ntbeg'onnd In remarkably quick tlnjo and dl\nexcellent work, getting the lire under control b\nthe time tbo first ward company \nu few juiuutes later. The Third wan\ncompany, usually out In short ordei\ndid not put In lis appearance. Tn\nHumes were confined to l-'lndley's kitchen am\ndining room ami Da'-gherty's store. M r. Daugh\nertytatbe heaviest loser. His lom, tirlnc^ntil\non wall paper, Is about §1,000. nndunjortuuatel\nfor blni hi# stock wwouly IniuroJ lor oneha)\nthe value, IIo Wu» liuureil wlthWtllliun M. Luj:\ntftu'n aRotiey. In the Davton. Tlio loss to tb\nbuilding Is about SOOO, fully covcre.t by Insui\nanco.also In Mr. Luptou'snuency.and Mr. Find\nJey'w Iohj Is about $100. Nearly all of tb{> ' too\nof Mr. Lumbrecht was safely moved to Tote\nWagner's store, across the street, butforluuatel\ntbo tiro dl«l not reach the jewelry store, and Mi\nt. inUirec'ht opened uh usual ytstcrday morning\nbo Ore In supposed to have originated Iro^i\nover pressure of natural gas In Flndley'a coo\nstove.
3c409c2c06b105168b18ce473bb3775d WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.8128414984315 40.827279 -83.281309 Eight years' experience has abundant\nly convinced mo that by dipping the whey\nirom a sweet, good curd, and graaually\nheating it to the boiling point, and skim-\nming off carefully all the albuminous and\ncurdy matter which arises, then setting\naside the whey to cool, and afterward de-\ncanting it so as to remove the sediment.\nit is the best known liquid in which to\nsoak rennets. By tieatins whey in this\nway, ana then using it wnen acid to ex-\ntract the essence from the rennets, 1 both\navoid the taint which the use of water\ntends to produce, and, as I can do this\nwith much less salt, I do not detract so\nmuch from the efficiency of tho rennet. I\nturtbermore believe this to be the testi\nmony of all the best cheesemakers in the\ncountry who have thoroughly tried both\nsystems. I would here state one other\npoint wnicn l consider important in\nthe discussion relerrcd to, and that is, we\nuse earthen jars instead of wooden ves\nsels lor tins purpose, in my opinion,\nmost rennets are salted too much in cur\ning. The best rennets I know of are\nblown up with air and salted only at the\nends. These, when properly dried, give\nmuch better satisfaction than those which\nare saturated with salt. Io not object\ntotheuse of asmuch salt asmaybe\nnecessary1, in both thecuring and prepara-\ntion of rennets, to preserve them from\nbecoming tainted, but what I do decided'\nly maintain and urge is, that by filling\nrennets with air and drying to cure them,\nand by soaking them in pure sour whey\nin preparing them, we may avoid the use\nof too much salt, and at the same time\npreserve them from decomposition much\nmore effectually than by the old method\nof using wooden barrels, water, and an\noverabundance
12fa4f936eb5c25d92dd506426e081ea DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.023287639523 58.275556 -134.3925 One month of winter gone; I can\nhardly believe it. While we don't have\nchurch on the Lord's day, nor the busy\nlifo of the different trades aud profes¬\nsions during the week days.nor the\ndifferent amusements in the evenings,\nas those who live in the city have, to\npass away the time.yet timo seems to\npass very rapidly here. It seems but a\nfew days since I tore off the leaf of my\ncalendar which read Nov,, yet one\nwhole month has passed and the old\ncalendar of 1900 is of no further use.\nChristmas, which meaus so much to\nboth children aud grown people, has\npassed. If it had not been for the In-,\ndians comiDg in several times a day, j\nfor at least six weeks before Christmas,\n us how many days to Christmas,\nwe might have forgotten that Christ¬\nmas came in this part of Alaska. As\nthere is no church to atteud here ou\nthat day, nor do they exchange pres-\nents, there is no Sunday school outer-\ntainment to take part in or go to, I\ncan't for the life of me understand why\nthey are so anxious to know when\nChristmas comes. I hope before an¬\nother Christmas to be where I can en¬\njoythedayas I once did. Yet1am\nvery thankful that my husband and I!\nwere perfectly well and able to do jus¬\ntice to a dinner of roast duck and ven-\nisou, buttered beets, carrots, mashed\npotatoes, cranberry sauce and "Injun"\napples (crab apples) made in jam. The\ncranberries aud apples both grew a
6891fabf70327843c36bd44a18f4a159 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1861.7520547628108 35.780398 -78.639099 are fiom their homes and the sweet influences which are there\nbrought to bear upon them to restrain them from sin. Many of these\nmen, however, are more serious and solemn, and inclined to. seek to\nknow their Saviour than at any other time. The thoughts of their\nhappy homes and dear friends far away, both in this State and in the\nfar sunny South, will often act as a check to any vicious course to\nwhich their inclinationsTmaylead them. What I propose,' sir, is that\nyou write one of your very powerful articles; surging ministers of the\ngospel and chaplains in the army to put forth their utmost strength\nfor the conversion of soldiers. What a grand moral spectacle would\nha presented to the world, of an army being concerted ? What gran-\ndeur would it not lend to our cause ? And what power, or powers\niof.the earth combined, could overcome an army of half a million (as\nour army will soon reach that number) of praying men ? how-muc- h\nmore courage will truly brave men go into danger, when they\nknow that the messenger of death is but God's angel to call them\nhome. And then, when this "grand army" disbands, and the various\nregiments return to their several States, how much will it tend to\nunite us more and more as a Confederacy in the bonds of unselfish\nlove, for the raising of a brave generation that will soon return from\nthe field of strife to the arena of the political world, to go there with\nhearts full of love to God, and with the highest and most religious\nsense of honor towards their fellow men. Sir, let me urge you to\nthis good work ; your paper is read by thousands, I expect, in thi\nvery brigade, and God Almighty will meet surely and highly reward\nyou. Oh, what a glorious field, white for the harvest ! Bo 'not neg-\nlect it. Your editorials have vast weight. You have spoken nobly\nand truly for your-icou-
10437bd224c0ef58e88638513e830b38 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1903.519178050482 41.004121 -76.453816 coming down from Berwick. When\nthey passed Espy switch the signal\nlights were thrown on, and properly\nexhibited at Park street. The up\ncar was somewhat delayed on ac-\ncount of a heavy storm, but reached\nPark street and ran upon the switch\nin obedience to the signal and wait-\ned five minutes. This was sufficient\ntime, conductor Nagle thought to\nallow the car to reach there if it\nwas in that block. He failed to\ntake into consideraation that the\npassengers were largely work hands\nfrom Berwick and that eighteen\nstops had to be made iu Espy, and\nconcluding that the signal light had\nbeen thrown on by mistake, be\ngave motorman Evans orders to pro-\nceed. When the car had reached a\npoint along the burm bank, just\nabove the residence of John Hoff-\nman, Evans saw the car coming only\na short distance His car had\nattained a pretty high speed, and\nrealizing that to stop would be im-\npossible he jumped as did several\nof the passangers, and the cars\ncrashed into each other. Fedder\nexerted his every energy to stop\nhis car, and was at his post with\nhis hand on the lever when the\ncrash came. He was thrown vio-\nlently backward striking the end of\nthe car. He was stunned and sus-\ntained several cutaneous wounds.but\nno bones were broken. Dr. Rede-ke- r\nwas summoned, and lie was re-\nmoved to his home at Rupert.\nBoth cars were damaged to such\nan extent that they bad to be sent\naway. The ends were crushed in\nand all the glass broken.\nBecause of their failure to wait,\nwhich was directly responsible for\nthe accident, both Evans and Nagle\nhave been laid off for an indefinite\nperiod.
121da760c605b964fa90c27ef0ae69c3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1917.2808218860985 42.217817 -85.891125 Washington, April 2. The condition\nIn which the railroads find themselves\nas a result of coa stunt Increases In\nwages, prices of material, taxes and\nother expenses, while their revenues\nare restricted by legislation, was strik-\ningly described by Julius Kruttschnltt.\nChairman of the Executive Committee\nof the Southern Pacific Company, In\nhis testimony during the past few days\nbefore the Joint Congressional Com\nmlttee on Interstate Commerce, which\nis making a study of the question of\nrailroad regulation. Mr. Kruttschnltt\nurged the committee to recommend a\nplan of regulation which, will center\nresponsibility for regulation and Its\nresults in the federal government, so\nthat conditions affecting both expenses\nand revenues may be made subject to\na uniform policy Instead of the waste\nful and often conflicting policies in\nvolved in the system of combined state\nand federal regulation.\nWhy Roads Need More Money.\nAir. Kruttschnitt'8 testimony also hail\na bearing on the reasons for the appli-\ncation of the roads to the Interstate\nCommerce Commission for a general\nadvance in, freight rates. He showed\nthat, while the price of transportation\nhas declined in recent years, the cost\nof producing transportation like the\ncost of almost everything else, has rap-\n advanced. This ho illustrated by\nshowing that If freight and passenger\nrates had increased during the past\ntwenty years in the same proportion as\naverage commodity prices the railroads\nof the United States would have re-\nceived $1,034,000,000 more for trans-\nportation in 1015 than they did receive.\nThis saving to the public was effect-\ned, in spite of an increase of 93 per\ncent In the cost of operation of trains,\nby a reduction in the average passen-\nger rate per mile from 2.01 cents in\n1893 to 1.08 cents In 1015, a decrease\nof 3 per cent, and by a reduction in the\naverage freight rate per ton mile from\n8.30 mills In 1805 to 7.3 mills In 1015, or\n13 per cent. During the same period\nthe cost of operation per train mile\nrose from 02 cents to $1.78, almost\ndoubling. At the same time the aver-\nage price of $0 commodities enumer-\nated in a bulletin of the Department of\nAgriculture Increased 115 per cent.\nTransportation is practically the only\ncommodity, in general use that has not\nincreased tremendously in price during\nthe past twenty years, freight and pas\nsenger charges being lower than they\nwere twenty years ago.
2d709a394ce29043995f1f2c644ffa28 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.4002731924206 43.798358 -73.087921 3. See at what an expense to our sex\nyou purchase, your gratification. Your\ncourse is strewd with the sighs and tears\nand groans of widowed, mothers, who re-\ngret that their daughters had not died in\ntheir infancy j with the sighs and tears\nand broken hearts and indescribable\nwretchedness of your victim, who, but for\nyou, might have been the pride of the fam-\nily, and lived and died virtuous and hap-\npy. Not unfrequemly is your track stain-\ned with blood, suicidal blood, which your\ndeluded victim has spilled, when driven to\ndesperation by your perfidy and her own\ncrimes. Count the sum. total of all the\nshame, and infamy, and ruin, and wo,\nwhich your licentious indulgences occa-\nsion to pur sex, and then osk yourselves\nare you willing to meet it all at the bar of\nGod I Tlii nay be sport to your sex, but\nit is death, xcorte than death to ours."\nWhat mark should be awarded by a\nvirtuous community, to human beings\ncalling tnemselves gentlemen, who will\npursue sports of (his kind, and at such\nexpense? We are glad to find that some\nlemales in our land, are awakening, and\nturning their attention to the proper course\nto bs pursued in this business ; and we\npromise them all the aid in our power, in\nturuing the jpst amoant of odium in this\nmatter, into its proper channel. The sis-\nters in Qberlin have taken a noble stand on\nthis subject. The two following articles\nare from the constitution of the Oberlin\nFemale Moral Reform Society," and we\ntrust, they, and all other virtuous females,\nwdl ever aa in strict conformity to the\nprinciples contained in them.
194a1dbd9da6547eee3a4428f5d712c5 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1887.478082160071 41.004121 -76.453816 "If it had not been for you, I should havo\nnow been lying crushed at tho foot of that\ndreadful cliff. I am so grateful."\nAt that moment Dorothy enmo back with a\nlittlo water in Ernest's black hat, for in ber\nhurry she had spilled most of it.\n"Hero, drink some ot this," she said.\nEva tried to do so, but a billycock hat is\nnot a very convenient drinking v e.ssel till you\nget used to it, nnd sbo upset moro than sbo\nswallowed. But what she got down did ber\ngood. Sho put down tbo hat, and they all\nthreo laughed a littlo; It was so funny drink-\ning out of an old hat\n"Wero you long down thero beforo wo\ncamo!" asked Dorothy.\n"No, not long; only about half a minute on\nthat dreadful bulge,"\n"What on earth did you go there for!" said\n putting his dripping hat on his head,\nfor tho sun was hot.\n"I wanted to seo tho bones. I am very act-\nive, and thought that I could get up quite\nBafely; but sand is so slippery. Oh, I forgot;\nlook here," and she pointed to a thin cord that\nwas tied to her wrist\n" What Is that!"\n"Why, it Is tied to such an odd lead box\nthat I found in tho sand. Mr. Jones said tho\nother day that bo thought it was a bit of an\noldcoffin; butItisnot,itIsnleadbox witha\nrusty iron handle. I could not move it much,\nbut I had this bit of cord with me I thought\nI might want it get'Jng down, you know so\nI tied ono end of it to tho handle."\n"Let us pull it up," said Emest, unfasten-\ning tho cord from Eva's wrist and beginning\nto tug.
0b2d256aa6d2c8b21215ec28ee14931e THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.116120186956 40.832421 -115.763123 Tho tenth witness was BcnnetH. Eng-\nelka, a St. Lonis distiller, who testified\nto his connection with tho rinj;, and\nstated how tho distillers were invariably\nwarned of tho comiug of reveuue agents\nfrom Washington; had been Bhown tele-\ngromn from Washington announcing\ntheir prospective departure for St.\nLouis. Defense objected to tho stating\nof contents of telegrams; the Court\nsustained the objection unless the Gov¬\nernment could put these telegrams, in\nevidence. Cross examined by Judge\nlvrumcl. Nothing of importance.\nII. C . Rogers, Deputy Commissioner\nof Iutcrnul Revenue, at Washington,\nwas the eleventh witness, lie testified\nthat he has held his present position\nfour years; iu August last Commissioner\nDouglas requested witness to corres¬\npond with Gcnoral Brooks iu rclatiou\nto whisky fraud* iu CliicRgo, St. Louis\n uther Western cities; not certain of\nexact date; requested Mr. Brooks to\ncome to Washington, which he did; it\nresulted in placing the preliminary ar¬\nrangement* in Brooks' hands; ouo day\nlotc in September, Iloag wanted a delay\non account of the near approach of the\nFall elections; in November n corres-\npondeuco was carried on between\nBrooks unci witness, looking toward an\nimmediate earryiug out of tliu orders;\nHong also came to Washington on De¬\ncember 7th; McDonald called at wit¬\nness' office on the same day; McDonald\nsaid he did not want any information,\nbut could give sonio to witness; Mc¬\nDonald Srtid the sending of revenue offi¬\ncers in that manner was not fnir; if the\nGovernment could not have officers to\nbe trusted it should remove them.
1b06ab3347ceedca0cf82c3daa862994 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.6315068176052 40.735657 -74.172367 Four 14) markets.\nBiuucts aiv not to state auj price lor ma\ntenuis and work tor whlcli there Is a fixet\na mount provided for in the specification*.\nr.acu proposal must be enclosed i.n a seale*\nenvelope, properly indorsed with the name o\nthe blduer and of me improvement, and di\nreeled to the Hoard of .Street and Wats\ncommissioner* of the city of Newark.\nBidders will utate their prices in writing a:\nwell hh In figures.\nBidders uiuai specify in their proposals that\nshould ilie above work be awarded to them\nthey will bind themselves to finish and coin\nplete ih6 same within six <t») consecutlV'\nworumg days.\nThe plans and sped fixations of the worl\ncan be examined at tlie ufflue of the Okie\nEngl near of tha Board of Street and Wata\nCommissioners at tlie City Hall. Sakl pro\nposais to h« accompanied by the consent. Ii\nwriting, of iwo sureties, or n surety compan;\nnunhlied to do business in New Jersey, wh<\nsnail at the time or putting iu such proposals\nqualify ms to their rceponslblllty In the amoun\nof such proposal, and bind themselves that, 1\ntha contract be awarded tc the person or per\nsons making the proposal, they will, upon it\nbeing so awarded, become Ills or their sureti#\nfor tlie faithful performance of said work\nand that if the person or persona omit o\nrefuse to execute such contract they will pa,\nto the city of Newark any difference wee\nthe sum* to which ne or they would hav\nbeen entitled upon completion of tha con\nnact ano that which the City of Newark ma\nbe obliged to pay the person or persons b;\nWhom such contract shall he executed.\nThe Board of Stree* and Water Coinmis\nsioueis of the city of Newark reserve t\nthemselves the right to accept or reject an\nor all proposals for the above work, us tha\nmay deem beet for die interest of tha city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified tha\nunder tlie piovlaious of the seveutli section o\nme lav. creating the Hoard of Street an\n"Water < omwiiHSlouers, upproved March 28. 189:\nmat the bond or bQnds to be given for th\nfaithful execution and performance of sa>\npublic work shall (list be approved as to suf\nficiency by the board, and at* to form by th\ncounsel of the board, and uo contract aha 11 b\nbinding on the city or become effective o\noperative until such build is so approved; an\nthe president of the board shall have power t\nexamine the proposed bondsmen under oath, I\nh* filial! so desire, or shall he so instructed b\nthe board, but the board will not be bound b\nany statement that may be made by sue\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full powe\nand absolute discretion in the whole mattei\nend tliis provision shall be referred to in an\nadvertisement inviting bids for any such pub\nHe work.
01dc45f1fdc45774f34f0b6c29203cac THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1890.091780790208 38.894955 -77.036646 is proposed to remove this monument to one\nof the squares on tho northwest suction.\nllctraclng ours tops wo And\nThe Printing and Kngraiing Bureau.\nThe great money mill of tho Government Is\nlocated at tho corner of Fourteenth and B\nstreets southwest, southeast from tho Monu-\nment and (southwest from tho Agricultural\nBureau. It Is reached by tho Belt Lino Curs\nond Is opened to visitors nvcry day.\nDavy Burns' Cottage.\nOno of tho curiosities of Washington Is old\nDavy Burns' t ottage, on Seventeenth street,\nmar tlio llvor. It may bo reached by tho\ndrive south ot tlio Ptoshlent's Homo or by\nthe Metropolitan or Avenue Huo of cars. Noxt\ndoor to It Is General Van Ness' onco statoly\nmansion, where ho brought his bride, Marcla\nBurns, ono of tho original holressos of Wash-\nington.\n(Jjrcouin Ait Gallery.\nTho Corcoran Art Gallery Is at the corner of\nPenusylt aula in cuiio and Seventeenth htteet\nopposite the War,Nay and State Department.\nIt Is open Thursdays aud Satur-\ndays free; on other days (except Sundays) a\nsmall admission fee Is charged. This g illery,\nultl ough not to be computed with tho great\nOld Woild galleries, 3 notortholess a very\ncicdltablo institution for so now a country\nus tho United btutes. It contains among other\noriginal objects Powers' gicat statue of tha\n"Greek Slat o"\nThe Louise Home.\nTho Loulso Homo is it bountiful building at\ntho corner of Massachusetts avenue nnd Fif-\nteenth ttrcet, near Scott Circle. It has ex-\ntensive grounds, beautifully erabolllshod, and\nIs a tinlquo establishment, It Is a memorial\nto tbo wife nnd daughter of Mr. W . W,\nCon oi un, and Is Intcidca as a home for\nladles offctducatlflii and birth and refinement,\nw ho hat o hi eu lodueed to poverty from af-\nfluence\nThe Columbian Vnirerm'ty.\nComing down Fifteenth Btreot from tho\nLoulsollomo, at tho corner of Flftoenth and\nH streets, tho visitor sees the ( olumbtan Uni-\nversity, which occupies tbo
11588c6e77be70bd75c27cef044de6a5 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.6452054477422 42.217817 -85.891125 Wages and Their Purchasing Power.\nThe wages paid for common labor\nrange from as low as 20 cents per day\nfor full grown men to 37, 50 and 70\ncents, the latter rate being paid only in\ncases oi temporary need at noints dis\ntant from the haunts of the laborers,\nfor the hovels they inhabit for a few\nhours during the nighttime cannot be\ncalled homes. The wages of native tai\nlors, printers, painters, clerics and such\nlike K'tter occupations rarely exceed $1\nper day, tho highest in any of the fore\ngoing occupations of which I have\nearned being $1.50 per day, and these\nwages are all paid in dollars worth at\nthe present time 44 cents.\nAt tho grocery stores in this city, al\nmost under the shadow of the national\nmint, Mexican dollars, tho only money\nof the laborer and farmer and toiler for\nwages in any capacity, must be ex\nchanged for the necessaries of at\nsuch prices as tho following: Sugar, 10\nto 14 cents per pound for tho cheap,\ndark, native production and 25 cents\nper pound for American or German sug\nar; potatoes, b cents per pound; butter,\n50 to 80 cents jer pound, the latter\nprice for American butter and tho for\nmer for tho native unsalted quality;\nsalt, 14 cents pr pound; beans, 6 to 20\ncents per pound; lard, 24 cents; green\ncoffee, 44 cents; tea, from $1.50 to\n$2.50 per pound; kerosene oil, 55 to 80\ncents per gallon; vinegar, $1.60 per\ngallon; baking jowder, $1.75 per\npound, and so on through the list.\nThese prices conclusively prove that the\nfree coinage Mexican dollar is but a 44\ncent representative even in the homo of\nits adoption and under the flag whose\nstamp it bears. The so called "wall of\nprotection" created by free coinage in\nMexico, so favorably alluded to by Mr.\nBryan and other advm-ate- s
11f77fb83aaf3fc043dd31e46a80383b DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.7164383244547 58.275556 -134.3925 Many folks here remember Charles\nGrewur, who for a number of years\nwas an employee of the stamp mills\n¦t Trcadwell and varloua other\nplares. Charlie lias been to rite war\nand returned North (ho first of tho\nmonth, since which time he haa been\nworking In the Alaska Juneau mill.\nHe left here a couple of years ago\nand was living in Hprngfteld. Mass..\nwhen he took a notion to onllst witli\nthe Canadian army at the recruiting\nstation' at Schenoctady. N . Y. He\nwas immediately aent to Eugland for\ntraining wilh the Third Canadian\nMachine Gun Ilattallon. He trained\nthere for a few months and then\nivaa sent to Northern Prance. Moat\no fthc time they were in the vicinity\nof Aras, and were also In the big\nlight at Cambml. His battalion had\nmany fatalities and Charlie went\nover the top a number of times but\nfortunately was not injured. The\ngreatest^ misfortune he had during\n time he waa there was being lost\nfor three days behind the lines.\nCharlie says the machine gunners\nvere the targets for many of the\nGerman bullets, as they were con¬\nsidered dangerous. During the last\ndays of the war he says that It was\nImpossible to keep up with tho fly¬\ning Germans, as they were falling\nhack so foat. As they fell back they\ndestroyed bridges, railroads and can-\nIn to make pursuit more difficult.\nIlls battalion waa acting as reserve\ntroops on the day of the armistice\nwas signed and the boys were clean¬\ning their guns In preparation to go¬\ning up to the first line when they\nwore told that the armistice would\nlie signed. This waa an hour before\nhostilities ceased and waa the first\nintimation that peace was near.\nHo left Kurope In March of this\nyear arid received his discharge' at\nToronto He visited In Springfield.\nMass., before roming back here.
1e706225f3780d6f1cc9da318c709916 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1899.1273972285642 41.004121 -76.453816 Blcylers are Interested in a bill Intro-\nduced by Representative Paschall, of\nWarren, and reported favorably by the\npublic roads committee, to legalize the\nconstruction and maintenance of side\npaths along the highways of all town-\nships, for the use of bicycles and pedes-\ntrians, the wheel people, however, to\nhave the right of way. Upon petition\nfrom at least 25 freeholder residents of\nthe county, who are bicycle riders, the\nquarter sessions court shall appoint\nthree resident wheelmen to serve as\nside path commissioners, without com-\npensation beyond necessary expenses.\nF.ach year the term of but one com-\nmissioner Is to expire, and the vacancy\nIs to be filled by the court upon peti-\ntion as before. The commissioners shall\nsuiervlse the construction and main-\ntenance of side paths. All residents\nowning bicycles are to be assessed by\n regular tax assessors, and the\ncounty commissioners Fhall levy a tax\nof $1 on each wheel, or as much thereof\nas may be recommended by the side\npath commissioners. The money thus\nraised shall constitute a side path fund.\nThe paths are to be constructed be-\ntween the roadway proper nnd the land\nabutting thereon, and not less than\nthree nor more than six feet wide.\nAs beer pays the notional govern-\nment $2 a barrel, half of It Spanish war\ntax. It Is authoritatively hinted that\nGovernor Stone would veto, even If\nconstitutional, a bill introduced In the\nhouse by Mr. Hestick, of Allegheny, to\nImpose a tax of half a cent a gallon on\nnil beer, ale nnd porter manufactured\nor brewed In the state during the three\nyears beginning June 1, lKttH. to be paid\nsemi-annuall-
7ce93dcf3077d1fe06e90fd5c9d98121 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.2753424340435 41.681744 -72.788147 which Is always working for tho best\ninterests of Plainville especially In Its\nwork towards securing enough mon-\ney for a library building In town,\ngave tho fund a. wonderful, Impetus\ntoday when officers of the club met\nat the Plftinvillo Trust Co., a nd turn-\ned over as a donation, 1,400 to the\nbank which is the trustee of the li-\nbrary building fund. This sum In-\ncludes tho $600 made by tho club In\nits Easter bazaar two weeks ago and\nother money secured by the club\nthrough other channels. The size of\nthe sum speaks for the untiring ef-\nforts of the members of the club to\nrealize the fact of the building .for\nwhich the, members started working\nseveral years ago. A. A. MacLeod,\nsecretary and treasurer of the Plain-\nville Trust Co., stated today that he\nwill make an acoounting of the fund\non Monday and he wished to clear\nup points on the fund over\nwhich there is a misunderstanding at\nthe present time.\nMr. MacLeod said that ono of the\nthings which seems to retard prog-\nress towards the library' building\nfund, is t he idea that all organiza-\ntions in town have that the only or-\nganization which has the right to do\nanything for the building fund, is\nthe Woman's club. This Is an erron-\neous Impression and the wrong atti-\ntude, he said. 'Eormerly, tho Wom-\nan's club was working on this line\nby itself, but some time ago the club,\nthinking that because of the munici-\npal nature of the project, other or-\nganizations would like to help out,\ndecided to turn the money they had\nalready collected towards the build-\ning, into a public trust fund and\nthis was done, making the Plain-\nville bank the trustee and all money\nis now in the hands of that institu-\ntion.
033f692b81ef43a46b3afc84c43d5616 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1898.3794520230847 46.187885 -123.831256 into the water the battleship looked like\na big red giant chained to the earth, but\nprepared at the word to spring forward\nand be completed, so that she might be\nable to take part in maintaining the honor\nof the United States against any foe. In\nheight she towered above everything In\nsight and the great length and breadth\nof beam bespeaks her tremendous power\nfor attack or defense. It will be several\nmonths, however, before she will be\nready to be turned over to the United\nStales government.\nIf the officials at Washington desired\nft and Issued an Imperative order to that\neffect, the ship could be made ready for\nwar duty In about six months, but this\nwould necessitate the putting on of a\ndouble set of workmen to labor day and\nnight. Under ordinary circumstances she\nwould be ready in about a year from now,\nfor It takes something like three years to\nplan and complete a vessel of type.\nBesides. It Is said, there may be some\ndifficulty In obtaining the great amount\nof armor that will be required owing to\nthe fuct that the goverment has not taken\nkindly to the high prices which have been\nIn vogue for some time. But by the time\nthe material Is needed It Is thought some\nnmleaMo arrangement will have, been\nmade whereby the heavy steel plates can\nbe obtained on satisfactory terms.\nThe Alabama will be one of the three\npowerful battleships for the construction\nof which provision was mnde by the act\nof June 10. ISM. By this act tho cost of\neach of three ships, exclusive of arma-\nment, was limited to J3.500 .000 . The Ala-\nbama, and her sister ships, the Illinois\nand Wisconsin, now In progress of con-\nstruction, are combinations of the best\nfeatures of the Iowa and Kearsnrge types\nmoditled by such advances and Improve-\nments as experience has suggested to be\nmost desirable.
0d5397d3cf22b58f5a8f32efc92688e5 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1882.7383561326737 39.756121 -99.323985 cations of malarial poisoning are loss of appe-\ntite, shortness of breath, paint about the\nheart, wasting of flesh and strength, despond-\nency, nervousness, chilly sensations, unac-\ncountable lassitude, dull pains in various\nparts of the body, headaches, dizziness, a\ncoated tongue and dry mouth, nirht sweats,\nmuscular debility, puffing under the eyes, an\nunusual color, ordor or sediment about the\nfluids passed from the system, etc Anyone\nof the above symptoms may be an Indication\nof malarial poison in the body which necessi-\ntates Immediate and careful attention.\nBut if malarial poison could not find a lodge-\nment in the human body, it would be just as\nharmless as the oxygen of the air. The great\ndifficulty is that, after being absorbed into\nthe system, it produces obstructions in the\nstomach and lungs, clogs the circulation of\nthe blood, affects the kidneys, liver and other\norgans, and brings on diseases of a most dan-\ngerous character. There is only one known\nway by which these diseases may be avoided\nor cured after they have once made their ap-\npearance, and that is by keeping the great\npurifying organs of the body la perfect health.\nThese organs are the kidneys and liver. No\none whose kidneys or liver are in a perfect\ncondition was ever afflicted by malarial \nson. And when these organs are disordered,\nthey not only permit, but invite, these dis-\neases to make their inroads into the body. It\nis now admitted by physicians, scientists and\ntue majority ot tne general public that one\nmedicine, and only one whose power has been\ntested and proven, has absolute control of.\nana keeps the kidneys and liver In constant\nhealth and hence prevents malarial sickness.\nThis remedy is Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver\nCure, the most popular medicine before the\nAmerican people, and sold by every druggist\nin tne lana. it luiiy counteracts tne evu\neffect of malarial poison in the system, and\nnot only banishes it, but restores the members\nwhich that poison has weakened. How well it\ndoes thisc n be learned from the followjns:\nKansas Citv, Ma, June 26, 18S2. Moving\nirom tne Mate or .New York to the Western\ncountry, 1 was attacked with malaria and eren\neral debility. I had lost all appetite and was\nnaraiy aDie to move aDout. 1 had tried\ngreat many remedies, but nothing bettered\nmy condition until 1 began using Warner's\nSafe Kidney nd Liver Cure, which seemed to\nhelp me right away, aud I feel as well as I ever\nhave in my life, it is a blessing to people in\nmis malarious country.
099201b22549dcc84f7e482af75bdb69 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.2698629819888 39.745947 -75.546589 House reassembled at 5.15 p. m .\nNotice: By Mr. Sackctt, to transfer\nHenry W. Stuart's farm to district 85,\nSussex; to compensate South Milford\npublic schools for the use of the building\nfor election purposes ; for the draining\nof certain lowlands in Cedar Creek hun­\ndred; by Mr. Hynson, in relation to\nschool taxes; by Mr. Masten, to reineor-\nporate the Beaver Dam Branch Ditch\nCompany; by Mr. Armstrong, to incor­\nporate the Delaware Laud and Improve­\nment Company : for improvement of pub­\nlic highways and bridges; for the preser­\nvation of the electric franchise ; to ex­\ntend the franchises of municipalities; to\nprotect fur bearing animals; to\nencourage the improvement of live stock ;\nto promote the dairy interests of New\nCastle county; to discourage offenses\nagainst private property: by Morgan,\nto transfer a farm to district 65, Sussex ;\nfor a public road in Nanticoke hundred;\nin relation to encampments of gypsies;\nby Mr. Wallace, to authorize the Lew\nCourt to accept part of a road in Balti­\nmore hundred ; by W. E. Davis, to di­\nvorce George aud Maty Smith ; to ascer­\ntain the sense of the qualified voters of\nthe several counties in regard to the sale\nof intoxicating liquors; by Mr. Clark, to\nprevent pool selling aud gambling; to\npromote purity of elections; to amend\nthe liquor law ; to regulate work on the\npublic roads of Kent county : relating to\nthe Kenton public school ; to incorporate\nthe Walker Branch Ditch Company ; by\nMr. Downham, to unite districts\n97 and 139, Sussex; to estab\nlish a board
1467c6a2180d99a7af77281048f9b695 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.7301369545917 39.623709 -77.41082 of faith to trust Him, diligence to discover\nHis will and readiness to obey. He will\nbring ns to the place and position most\nsuited for our eternal profit and glory. No\none else mav stop into our place, until we,\nthrough unbelief and disobedience, have\nforfeited the privilege of its occupancy.\nEvery life has its own unique endow-\nment. Success or failure depends upon the\nmanner in which we hold these posses-\nsions. If we hold them selfishly to profit\nourselves withal, they turn into corrup-\ntion. But it they he held in trust as a sa-\ncred stewardship, used for the furtherance\nof His purposes and the bringing of His\nkingdom, they will turn out eternal treas-\nures. Our temptation is to discredit our\npossessions and opportunities. Hut we may\nnot despise the day of small things.\nEsther had only personal beauty to cam-\nmem! her at first. This is not a gift de-\nspised by Satan in his attempt to ruin a\nsoul; then why should it he discredited is\na power for good? The hid had only live\nloaves and two fishes, hut, consecrated to\nHis service, they fed the multitude and\nmore. It all turns upon whether wc are\nusing our endowments in the interest of\nself and by the energy of self, or whether\nwe are living and working in co-operation\nwith Him anil for His glory. The form of\ns life will vary. God docs not duplicate\nami make all lives to to a like pat-\ntern. There was a vast difference between\nthe captive maid that served in Naamin's\nhome and the orphan captive who in mined\nthe Persian throne, lint it was the same\nGod who worked in each.\nThe orphan girl became the bounteous\nqueen. She enjoys the honors and emolu-\nment.* of royally. Banquets are held in her\nhonor and a retinue of servants minister\nto her continually. Can she support the\ndignity thus thrust upon her? Will adu-\nlation, Mattery and vanity enervate her\nsouls ability, or will she grow strong and\npotent for good am ol opportuniti"*? Only\ntrial can answer such queries, and that\ncomes soon enough. From the outer world\nshe hears the lamentation of her kindred\npeople. Mordcctii, her cousin, is in sad:\ncloth and mourning mid would not be\ncomforted. All tin* captives arc wailing\nwith fear. What eouM it mean? If -he\nhad only been party to the conference be-\ntween ber royal husband and the prime\nminister prim e she would have undcrsla id.\nL she could sec all the clerks writing Hie\nsentences of death winch were being hur-\nried throughout the empire site would have\nknown. She seems to he exempt. Does\nshe not dwell in the palace? But Hi"\nblackness overshadows her oven there.\nNo circumstance or condition can shut it\nout. The court of Persia permitted no one\nwearing sack cloth, that symbol of sorrow\nand mourning, tji enter the royal pre-\ncincts.
56843ff518ad8d803518edfe7ed98689 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.4589040778792 41.262128 -95.861391 tat ires to which the State may be entitled\nin Congress ; but no Senator or Reprt-\nsentatire, or p rson hoidioe any oftee of\ntrust or proit under the United Statqs,\nshall be appointed an elector.\n3. The elfjtor* «ba!l meet in their re-\nspeetire Stataa, and rote by ballot for\ntwo pcraons. of whom one at luaat shall\nnot be an ianabttaat of the same State\nwith theauielros. And they sbtdl aayplEo a\nlist of all the persons roteu for, aad of\nth<; uumber of rotes for each; which list\ntb'*y »bali sign and certify, aod transtait\nsettled to the seat of the Government of\nthtyL"nlt»'d States, directed to the Presi­\ndent of the Senate. Tb* Pn.aideat of\nthe Senate shall, in the presence of the\nSenate and house of Representative*,\nop m aii the certificates, and the rotfa\nshut! than b- counted. The persons bar­\ning the greatest nuaiber rows* |h<Ul be\ntb>- Prtsident, if soch number be a major­\nity uf the whole number of electors ap­\npointed ; and if there be more than one\nWLJ hare such a majority, and bare an\neq Jul number of rotes, thai the House of\nRtpresentatjres shall immediately choose\nbr ballot one of them for President; aod\nir no pt-T'on h<*r« a majority, then, from\nthe fire highest on the list, tn« said Hous '\nshrill in like msmner choose the Presi­\ndent, the vote* TCaa be t^keo by States;\naa i a majority of all the States shall be\nnecsitrv To a choice- £& erery case,\naf .ur the" choioe ot the Pjesidaat the per­\nson baTiog the greatest a*otuber of rotes\nof the electors shall "b-3 Vice President.\nBut if there should remain two or more\nwho bave equal votes, tbe Senate shall\nehoosit front them by ballot tbe Viee\nPresident.
384cc1fc04156cec7d9959aada8204ce THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.727397228564 37.561813 -75.84108 Dem. Well, a month ago I thonght be would\nbe elected too, but ill swear I dont thick so now.\nBut how do yon think the school question is going\nto set with the people?\nCol. Well, I dont know. I dont think that\nthere is much in the Geghan bill ont of the way.\nDem. No, I don't think there is either. There\nis nothing in the bill in sdditioa to what the Con-\nstitution allows any one; bat that la not the point.\nThe passing of the bill was a suspicions circum-\nstance, and shows that the Democratic party is ready\nto sell Itself ont to any sect, for votes, and we've got\nmake ourselves square before the people on this\nquestion. But .how are yon on the money ques\ntion T Are yon for more money T\nCoL O, yes, for more money.\nDem. Well, I'llbed difIam. Forwhile we\nhave an irredeemable currency, bnsinees will be In\na state of starnation, men will be ont of employ-\nment, and times never will get so that people can\nlive. Ton assure the people that we are going to\nresume specie payment at some set day, as the Re\npublicans have, and from that moment, business,\nwhich is now so dull, will liven op. Then we will\n hear the rambling noise of the mills and\nmanufactories, that are now standing idle. The\nmen who are now lounging around the streets of\nthe cities scd towns, who are all but starving, will\nbe called into respectable employment, and they\nand their families will be comfortably supported.\nWhy, Colonel, while the currency is in snch a\nfinctating state as It is now, there is nobody going\nto invest in a mill or manufactory of any kind, or\nbuy stock or labor to start one. For instance, we\nwill suppose a man takes $10,000 in greenbacks to\nboy a stock and start some kind of business. At\npresent the greenback is worth about 90 cents in\ngold on the dollar. He buys his stock, starts his\nbusiness. Two or three months afterwards, the\ngreenback currency, by an increase in volume\ndepreciates to sixty cents on the dollar. Now'\nevery dollar's worth of goods which really cost\nhim ninety cents, is only worth sixty cents.\nIt is jast the same with everything else. If a\nman did start some manufacturing establishment,\nand thus give employment to a great many almost\nsuffering men who sre now idle, the materials\nwhich he is obliged to purchase are liable to de\npreciate on his hands in value to one-ha- lf
e8c06222f0dcb6d524c0a0f442cf45b9 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.050684899797 40.618676 -80.577293 National Labor Relations Board to observe a\nfundamental principle which should make for\ngreater justice in the orders of the Hoard. That\nprinciple is that the Board does not have un­\nlimited discretion to deal with labor situations in\na way that promotes the interest of favored\ngroups. As Chief Justice Hughes, who wrote\nthe opinion of the Court, vigorously states:\nThe Act contemplates making of contract}\nwith labor organizations. That is the manifest\nobjective in providing for collective bargaining.\nUnder Section 7 (29 U. S . C . 157) the employes\nof the companies are entitled to self-organization,\nto join labor organizations and to bargain collec\ntively tlirough representatives of their own choos­\ning. The 80 per cent of the employes who were\nmembers of the Brotherhood and its locals, had\nthat right. They had the right to choose the Broth­\nerhood as their representative for collective bar­\ngaining and to have contracts made as the result\nof that bargaining. Nothing that the employers\nhad done deprived them of that right. Nor did the\ncontracts make the Brotherhood and its local ex­\nclusive representatives for collective bargaining.\nOn this point the contracts speak for themselves.\n"They simply constitute the Brotherhood the collec­\ntive bargaining agency for those employes who are\nits members. The Board by its order did not direct\n election to ascertain who should represent the\nemployes for collective bargaining. Section 9(c)\n(2!) U. S. C. 159(c)). Upon this record, there is\nnothing to show that the employes' selection as\nindicated by the Brotherhood contracts has been\nsuperseded by any other selection by a majority\nof employes of the companies so as to create an\nexclusive agency for bargaining under the statute,\nand in the absence of such an exclusive agency\nthe employes represented by the Brotherhood,\neven if they were a minority, clearly had the right\nto make their own choice. Moreover, the funda­\nmental purpose of the Act is to protect inter-staU\nand foreign commerce from interruptions and ob­\nstructions caused by industrial strife. This pur­\npose appears to be served by these contracts in an\nimportant, degree. Representing such a large per­\ncentage of the employes of the companies, and\nprecluding strikes and providing for the arbitra­\ntion of disputes, these agreements are highly pro­\ntective to interstate and foreign commerce. They\ncontain no terms which can be said to "affect com­\nmerce" in the sense of the Act so as to justify\ntheir abrogation by the Hoard. The disruption of\nthese contracts, even pending proceedings to as­\ncertain by an election the wishes of the majority\nof employes, would remove that salutary protec­\ntion during the intervening period.
5aaa5da117ed05a54a829bdbdcdbb875 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1920.7418032470653 38.951883 -92.333737 show how much of a carpenter be is.\nEvery garden supervised by the school aut-\nhorities should have a hotbed, and the\nbuilding of this should be one of the ear\nliest garden duties. U the bed u prop\nerly made in the fall, it will be in excel\nlent condition for the next spring work.\nIn making the hotbed afpit is dub from\n2to3feetdeepandfrom 5to 6feet\nwide, but other sizes may be used if nec-\nessary. Make the pit long enough, to fit\nthe sir; of the sash chosen.\nPlace a 2 inch plank 12 la 15 inches\nwide on edge on the north side of the bed.\nThen on the south side of the pit place\na plank about half the width of the one\nused on the north side. The sash, rest\ning these boards, will then slope to-- J\nward tne souin, ami you win get netier\nresults from the sunlight. The ends of\nthe bed are closed with boards cut to fit\nsnugly and soil is. banked up all around\nthe, framework to keep out the cold. The\npit should be dug and the framework ar-\nranged in llie fall.\nThe sashes may be hinged at the lop\nand held up b) strong slicks when the\npit is open, or they may be hinged on the\nside and thrown back when the pit is\nopened. Sometimes ihe sashes are made\nto slide in and out on strips of wood set\ninto the sitles of the hotbed. The opening\nof the sajies is ncecsary lo ventilate the\nbed properly and to allow you to work\nin Uie pit.
31b8299f9ab5b4050c94d8caaaffbc52 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1855.0534246258244 39.560444 -120.828218 survey has demonstrated that it may he\nbrought here from the Yaba river at an\nexpense of three hundred thousand dollars.\nExperience has shown that the stock will\npay 30 per cent per month, and the city\nmerchant knows that the streets of Ma-\nrysville, and Sacramento, would throng\nwith teams and pack trains, could this bo\ndone. I am no visionary writer. I\nwrite not for effect, but the voices of two\nthousand miners asking for water cannot\nbe disregarded. Let those who deem this\nstatement an exaggerated one, visit this\nsection of the country, and nowhere will\nthey find a miner who will not tell him,\nthat for eight months in the year he mu it\nlie idle for the precarious chances of four\nmonths work. The season when most can\nbe done, is wasted in idleness and often a\nfcw weeks of labor is all the miner has.—\nTo the capitalist, then, do they appeal,\nasking that those men who will invest\nthousands in fancy speculations will invest\n paltry sum to them in an enterprise,\nthe success of which, is guaranteed by\nthe treasures of the earth almost inex-\nhaustable. Lot them trust to the experi-\nence of the men whose labor has built\ntheir splendid stores, their palaces, their\npublic buildings, and by the sweat of\nwhose brow is gained those treasure*\nwhich move the steamers upon our rivers,\nand the ships which come to the Pacific.\nLet them look at a season of unexampled\npressure in the money market because it\nIms not rained, and then ask themselves if\nit is worthy of energetic business men, to\nsit calmly and wait for Providence to send\nwater when capital and man's ingenuity\ncan suffice. And good Citizen, if they\nwont help its, then wo will break the mer-\nchants by eating provisions without pay-\ning for them, and let the generation of\nmerchants who will como after them reap-\nthe profits which a few hundreds would\ninsure to these, should they but wait? from\ntheir Rip Van Wiukle sleep.
2271d825751972d1f35b3453d4e135e2 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.746575310756 41.004121 -76.453816 The tale went that of a summer\nniuht a husband and wife, return\ning home from the theater, entered\na Fifth avenue stage far downtown\nand for many blocks were the only\noccupants. A little above Four\nteenth street, however, the stage\ncame to nn abrupt stop, the door\nwas opened, and three young men\nentered. One of the three had evi\ndently been drinking heavily, for\nhis companions were obliged to\nhelp him to his seat. The door was\nclosed behind them, and the stage\ncontinued its journey northward.\nAbout ten blocks farther on one\ncf the vouncmen rose and. bidding\nhis friends good night, stopped the\nstace and alighted. A few minutes\nlater the second of the three said.\n"Well good night, Dick," pulle\nthe strap, stepped to the sidewalk\n walked off through one of the\nside streets. There remained in the\nstace only the husband aud wife\nand the young man who was obvi\nously under the influence of liquor\nand who satin a crouching attitude\nin a corner of the staue under the\ndim flickering lamp.\nAfter a time the husband noticed\nthat the young man's head seemed\nto be drooping as if in sleep, and\nfearing that he might be borne be\nvond his destination, he rose, tap\nped him on the shoulder and called\nattention to the number of the\nstreet they had just passed. There\nwas no response, and the husband\nrepeated Irs words, leaning over as\nhe did so. Then he suddenly\nstraightened up, turned to his wife\nand said quickly, "We will get\nout here."
cd62838b48e020f6f033518011768ccc THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.7109588723997 47.04502 -122.894872 to have a mint in their own imagination,\nwhere they can coin such snnll change as\nbest suits their purpose; nud manufacture\nsuch tales us they think may create it little\nwonder in the henrer and entitle them to\nthe praise of being their ?tst propagator.\nBy such folly and reprehensible indulgence,\nthey o?eu wound the character and feelings\nof those persons in whose welfare they are\nso busily engaged Render! what would\nyou say were you told that from the single\ncircumstance otu gentleman changing his\nplace in a private circle ot friends, in order\nto converse a few moments with a lady.\nwhom he saw, perhaps for the ?rst time, it\nshould be reported in four days that he was\npositively engaged to marry, that every\npreparation was making tor the ceremony,\nthat hundreds were already anticipating the\ntlt'llgllis ofthe marriage? But willsay\nthat this is incredible; no human being\ncould be so toolish, so base, as thus to tri?e\nwith the feelings and happiness of soother;\nno one Could be 1-0 inconsistent and so indif-\nferent to truth and his own reputation, as to\nutter such falsehood and improhahility. ——\nStop a moment. Iagree with you in part.\nPerhaps it'such an occurrence astho above\nshould happen, no individual or person\nshould be entitled to the uoxon ofbeing its\nsole author. If melt a thing should take\nplace, l tell you how it might be brought\nabout; and itis not possible but that asimi-\nlur process may have been carried on. Sup-\npose I should 100 a gentleman speak to _a\nndy—tltis is perfectly natural—and suppose\nI tell my friend that I saw Mr.A .,speok to\nMisc 1)., and suppose, with a sort of inuen-\ndo,
369bee655d0af57edc761c69b4cf236d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.395890379249 40.063962 -80.720915 When the Baltimore and Ohio Rail-\nroad had reached Cumberland, one\nhundred and seventy-eight miles from\nBaltimore, and that place bad beeu its\nwestern terminus lor years, the com-\npany was ua poor as the Central J^ail-\nroad Company Is to-day. When,; by\nextraordinary efforts, building a jfew\nmiles at a lime, the road reached the }\nOhio river at Wheeling, the value of the j\nhcock nau ran aown almost to zero.\nBut ouce there, the road built up the\ncompany, which was soon able to con-\nstruct another road! one hundred and\nfour miles-long, from Grufton to Park-\nersburg. The company's credit grew\nbetter daily. It began to double its\ntrack, to increase itg running: i\nstock, to extend Its Influence in\nevery. direction; and to-day its\n is above par. It runs a line of\nsteamers to Europe, it controls the Ma-\nrietia railroad, aud other railroads in\nOhto,and its revenue is Qte liirnw its\ngreat as the revenue of the State or\nVirginia. Baltimore would have been x\njustified, as tho results prove; In paving «\nthe whole,coat of the road out ^01 her\nown treasury, and giving It to the coin-\npany. Without itj that city was power-\nZeaj£LWIth it^She Iraraedinteltbefjame\nno contemptible rlvaT16f Jfe\\v York or\nPhiladelphia. And. so prosperous* a re\nthis company's affair, and such is its\ncredit, that if it desired to do so, it\ncould, at its own proper oost; construct\na railroad from Norfolk to the Ohio «\nriver without calling fbr any State,\nmunicipal, or individual aid. .It,is. a
29d923811dbfab3063c43733aea204c4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2808218860985 39.745947 -75.546589 "Rochester, Minn., Jan. 10, 1018.\n"Mr. P. S. duPont, Wilmington, Del.\n"Dear Pierre—Upon receipt of your\nletter of the 14th 1 telegraphed you,\n'Letter fourteenth received. If you are\nnot committed withdraw my offer. Will\nwrite, which is now cotlnrnied,\n"Inasmuch as Christmas and January\n1st are (inst I dont think two or three\nmore months will make any difference,\nand in my mind it would be such a good\nthing for tlie young men to have a stock\ninterest that l am sure we can arrange\nfor them to take it without it being\npurchased by the company through one\nof the New York banks, probably the\nHankers Trust Company, but I believe\nif this is left until I get home we can\nwork it out better.\n"I note by the Wilmington papers of\na few days ago that common stock was\nselling at- 155 to 10O. With the outlook\nand the orders ahead I cant understand\nwhy the prediction in my letter to you\nHuit stock would lie 180 even 200\nduring the first few months of 1015,\nis not being fulfilled.\n*l note that the total orders are soma-\nthing over $40,000,(8)0 with $10,000,000\nmore in prospect, not counting the two '\npartially payable - ,n lionds. These should\ncertainly make the dividend 60 par cent,\non 1015 and I'.HO and 1017 which should\nmake the stock easily worth 200. At\nany rate, 1 feel sure wo can work out)\nsome plan that will be beneficial to the\nimportant men in the company and,\ntherefore, beneficial to the company, just\nns soon ns I get hack home.\n“Speaking from memory, you or some-\none told me that Alfred considered the\ncommon stock worth 300; therefore the\nprice was not the reason for his chang-\ning Ids mind after 1 left Delaware.\n"Your letters are all fully appreciated,\nbut there is nothing going on at this\nend of the line give me the oppor-\ntunity of writing much in reply.\n"Your affectionate cousin
4609e1c6990b2f3a3ac45c8cc62c0c5b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.957650241601 42.217817 -85.891125 naturally the first name on the list of\nsubpoenas is "Andrew Carnegie."\nOnly one bunk has been hit hard\nenough to fail the Citizens' National,\nOberlin and Froldent Reckwlth. of\nthis bank, Indicted for misapplication\nof Its funds, has made a full statement\nthe pith of which Is that the induce-\nments offered him by the woman\nwere: That his bank was to be made\nthe trustee of Mrs. Chadwick's estate;\nthat the president and Cashier Spear\nwere each to rev ive a yearly salary of\n$UUX) for their services, and that an\nadditional bonus of iftO.UX) was to be\npaid to the bank when the loans' were\nrepaid. On this promise, without even\ntelegraphing Carnegie to ask him\nabout his signature to the notes, the\ntwo otlicers let Mrs. Chadwiek have\nthe money that broke the bank.\nIt Is the opinion or some of the lead-\ning attorneys of Cleveland that a\ncharge of forgery cannot made to\nhold in connection with thee notes.\nMrs. Chadwich has not soid or attempt-\ned to sell the notes for cash. She b".s\nobtained money from various sources\non the statement of Iri Reynolds that\nshe, to the best of his knowledge and\nbelief, held securities of a certain val-\nue, ami whether he proves correct or\notherwise in his estimate of the value\nof the notes there can be no doubt that\nReynolds believed what he sahl.\nThere has been, according to the at-\ntorneys, no evidence so far elicited\nbhowing that Mrs. Chadwiek obtained\nmoney on those notes in any other\nmanner than through the attestation of\nIII Reynolds that he had seen the notes\nand considered them good. If any man\nloaned money to Mrs. Chadwiek accord-\ning to the strength of his belief in the\nability of Mr. Reynolds to Judge accu-\nrately of the value of securities, that\nwas his own lookout.
354aa780b68344124be1131495aaaf61 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6871584383223 39.745947 -75.546589 no introduction as a pitcher for Hie\n• earns around only know Mm loo weil\nThen we, have George Smith to cover\nshortstop and It is evident that everv\none who ever took any Interest in\nbaseball at all knows what this lad\nevi do. Then comes Worth the Man\n0 War of flrst base; you all know\nwhat this means—can't be beaten.\nTJien Naylor, the New Castle boy who\nhas taken care of the Keystone bag\nsince the race began, and we wish to\nadd that he. sure was a lucky And.\nNow we have come to Ihe man that\ndeserves lots of the credit and It is\nLonney Greene, for besides being the\nmanager he has covered third base\nbolter than any other third baseman\nIn the league and that's not all, for he\n leading his team In hatting; what\nmore can you exprot? The outfield\nIs composed of some very fast ma­\nterial In Toomey, who sometimes takes\nthe mound when called on. The s.mia\nnay be said about McGraw, one of the\nDelaware College heroes, and by no\nmeans should Englcman and Weldin\nNe forgotten. With this bunch of the\nfastest material together, wl'h a\nrecord of IS game* won and 3 lost,\ncan ace no mason whv we should\nnear from Mr. Brady within a shJI\ntime, as the All-WlImlngton League\nIs about ended. So Parkside, If you\nthink you have a Just cause to dis­\npute our claim, we will expect lo\nhear some time in the near future as\nyou know the goal posts will be, going\nup tn Harlan Field before many days.
0ea91d39e681ef59f46e5a6386f53b6d THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.409589009386 46.187885 -123.831256 "We're all making our fortunes," said\nan upper Astoria fisherman to Tiie Asto- -\nbiax mau yesterday morning, as he\nleaned against the net rack of tho can\nnery, and looked down at the boat that\nhe had made so many stormy trips in.\n"I suppose," he went on, ''that every ono\njust at present thinks that he has a\ntough timo of it, but if you'll just listen\na minute, 1'H give you a bit of an item\nabout the 'big wages, the '123 n month\nclear,' that wo fishermen make."\n"Go ahead" was the answer, and as\nhis partner sent up the net for him to\nreel off to dry, he said: "There is no\nneed of talking about the bard part of\nthe lite. 1 never saw hard work yet that\nwas easv, and 1 guess we who go out in\nall weatLers to take our chances have\njust about the same amount of hard\nwork as others; no more; certainly \nless, iiut id like to nave some of those\nfellows who talk about big wages try it\nfor awhile. They're welcome to all tho\n'big wages' they can mako fishing in tho\nColumbia river. Now here it is the last\nof the month. I went out for this cannery\non the 29th of April. I've been fishing\njust n month, and I think, if anything,\n1 ve liau a little more than average luck.\nDuring tho month Pve caught 252 fish.\nFifteon cents on every one of them fish\ngoes to tho cannery; thal'a 37.80; that\nleaves 80 cents for the boat; now the 2j2\nfish bring .?7f.G0 to tho boat. Out of\nthat 73.G0 1 hava to givo mv boat puller\nfourteen cents a fish, or 33.28; so you\nsee that I have just $40 left for my\nmonth's work. Forty dollars for going\ndown near that bar and drifting for a\nmonth. How do you like it? Where's\nthe big wages?"'
094c3917ab99ed6406899a0a40b2c570 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.050684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 When the Ordnance reached the\nwater two snow white doves were re­\nleased from the pilot house by Ward-\nlow Hammond and the beautiful! binds\nmade a direct line .far the sea. This\nto builders of vessels indicates good\nluck for a craft, a« had the birds cir­\ncled and alighted on tho vessel misfor­\ntune is sure to follow.\nPrevious to the launch the party\ngathered in the offices of the company\nand Mr. 8avery, president of the con­\ncern, stated In a. few words the natura\nof the gathering and assured those\npresent that the vessel would fill all\nrequirements demanded of it\nCaptain T. L. Ames, who represent­\ned Brigadier-General W. M . Crosier,\nextended hla thanks to Mrs. Thayer\nand also to tho company on behalf of\nhla superior officer for the fine vessel\nthat had been turned out compli­\nment'd the Arm on Its work. Follow­\ning the launching an elaborate lunch­\neon was served in tho companys of­\nfices Tho launching was under the di­\nrect supervision of !.. T. Jefferies, gen­\neral manager of the Pusey & Jones\nCompany, while Chartes Heald. general\nyard foreman, had charge of the men\nemployed about the host.\nAmong the out of town guests were:\nOhauncey O. Whlton, of New Bedford.\nMass.; Mr. and Mrs. Hartman Baker,\nPhils.; Mr. and Mrs. George B. Mellor,\nMr. and Mrs. Edward 8avery, Mr. and\nMrs. Stephen Savory. West Chester,\nPa.; Mr. and Mrs. F. A . Town«, Stam­\nford. Oonn.; I* J. Nilson, Baltimore,\nMd.: F. G . Oulmames, New Tork: R. R.\nHaydock, Phlla,; Joseph Wharton,\nPhil*.: Goongo T. Parker. Mr. McLain,\nIrving L. Price, N. B. Church, George\nH.Watra,A.L.G.Doty,W.B.Den­\nning, H. L. DosAngcs,
3615bd0307ab282b95c7ed2ec54026eb THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1871.146575310756 37.561813 -75.84108 fire. 1 . Be it ordafued by the Conncfl of tbe In cor.\nporated Villag of HilUboro, Ohio, That if any par eon\nbeing the owner of any horse, mare or gelding, er of\nany mule, jack or Jenny, or or any bull, cow or calf,\nor of any sheep or goat, or of any animal of tbe bog\nkind, or of any geese, or having charge of the same aa\nagent, shall after tbe 6th day of March, 1871 , permit\nany such animal or animals to mn at large In any\ntreet, lane, alley or common, or public ground of sard\nvillage ; every soch owner oi agent shall oa conviction\nof the same before the Mayor, be assessed by him in a\nsum not lea than onedollar, nor more than ten dollar\nas a penalty therefor, and costs, for every such offence.\n8 10 2. Any such animal a aforesaid, so found run-\nning at large, shall be impounded by the- Marshal in a\npound to be prepared by him for that purpose, at the\nexpense of the Corporation ; and the said Marih.it\n thereupon give al least seven days' notice to the\nowner or agvnt if known to him, and if not, then by\nadvertising once in eouae newspaper printed iu said\nTillage, or by putting up a written notice on the donr\nof the Engine Mooae, that the said owritr or agent\nprove his right to said animal or animaJa before the\nMayor, on a day specified ia said notice, and on the\nday specified, or at any time before, snnh owner or\nagent may prove his right to such animal or animals\nand have the same returned to him by paying the coats\nand expenses, but if such proof be not made, the\nMayor shall enter an order on his docket, that such\nanimal or animals be sold, and therefore fosoe an order\nunder the seal of the Corporation that such animal er\nanimals be sold, and the Manual on receiving said\norder shall give tbe same notice as is required by Uw\nfor the sale of property by Constable, and shall sell\nsaid animal or animals at auction at the pound to the\nhigb-- s t
330676ea3e14ed8ea004e6a8ab296f38 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.04508193559 40.063962 -80.720915 JVom the Cincinnati Qmctte o/yMfijnffly.\nThe Senate yesterday, with only font\ndissenting votes, passed the bul sns<\npending the contraction or the durren\ny, and providing that the power of th<\nSecretary of the Treasury la not to b<\nresumed without the permission ol\nCongress. This settles the inrrenoj\nquestion for years to oome, and leave)\nthe oountry with abont 760 millions o\npaper money to work npon^T This, wi\nbelieve, will hava a benefltotal effec\nupon business, removing, ssjlt wUl,thi\nteeling of uncertainty which hai\ndisturbed confidence, and render\ned it impossible to make an;\nbusiness calculations reaching Inti\nthe future. The amonjit of our\nrency now outstanding Is mor\nthan double what It was at the perloi\nof greatest Inflation previous to th\nwar, oonntlng in the gold an<\nsilver, which, of course, ljrnot currenc;\nnow. It lsnotprobabltfthatanyineoi\nure providing for Inflating can pass th\nSenate. It is almost certain that 1\ncannot. This la well. jThere Is mone;\nenough, and there ootgd be no gnau\nevil than Inflation, jn Congress wil\nlet the eurreney alone, ana thas le\nbusiness alone, the -latter will soon b\nregulated. Thfjosrt-man power ove\nthe ottrrenoy hMRMenabollshed, and 1\nwill never bfgrenewed^rWeafeall uoi\nmake soUd-dfagNastpwaiaspecie pay\nmenta, thiooKh a revival of trade ani\nan increase in productive Industry.\nISIarleiMtWMWfaMllattt Wert\nA Milwanker paper £Ives aaummar\nof the salaries paid In the West to n\ndons professions, trades and oalling)\nThe actual aal&ies of olercymen avet\nage about 93,Mk editors, 11,200; lai\nclerks, <200; school teachers, mail\n91,200; female,
1279cf51771c5ea5a53bc385f9c59d5d THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1892.1543715530763 37.92448 -95.399981 dressed man wearing gold oyo glasses\nand carrying a satchel slung over his\nshoulder. Now it happened that the\ntrainmen had noticed the young man\nat the station at Syracuse before the\ntrain started and they had not seen\nhim since and the question what ho\nwas doing at Lyons at once suggested\nitself. An attempt to arrest him was\nmade, but ho pulled two revolvers,\nheld the crowd back and backed across\nthe yard until he reached a coal train,\nthe engine of which had steam up\nready to pull for the west He pulled\nthe pin holding tho tender to the first\ncar, climbed over the coal into the cab,\ndrove the engineer and fireman out\nwith his revolvers, pulled open the\nthrottle and started the engine.\nConductor Lass and one of the switch-\nmen procured shotguns, freed the en-\ngine of the express and ith the fire-\nman and engineer in pursuit of\nthe fugitive. The road is a four tracked\nroad and the engines though they were\ngoing west were not on the same track.\nThe express engine soon overtook\nthe robber's engine, but he suddenly\nreversed his engine and let his pursuers\npass him. pouring a perfect rain of bul-\nlets into the cab as his pursuers went\nby. Then the others stopped and the\npursued wont ahead. Another duel\nensued, the shotguns taking part this\ntime. No one was hurt oh either side.\nAbout seven miles further on tho\nrobber found his steam going out of\nthe engine, dropped off at a cross road\nand started across the country, going\nsouth. Here he f jrced a farmer to let\nhim have a horse and rode on two miles\nfurther south. Hero he procured a\nhorse and compelled the owner, a\nfarmer, to entrust him with it by firing\non him.
1b2d8e8ab3f0c34481aaaa98415a9fde PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1900.1630136669203 39.756121 -99.323985 thought led to another, and the ball\ncommenced rolling. The ministers\ngave it a push, and by this time many\nothers had j nned tho "awkward\nsquad" and were not content with be-\ning seen but wanted to be heard. The\nreason some kept their seats and did\nnot say anything was because they\ndidn't get a chance. Enthusiasm ran\nhigh. The reputation which the\ncounty seat has attained during the\npast year is astonishing. Get out\namong the thrifry, intelligent and\nconsciencious farmers of the sur-\nrounding country and ask them what\nthey think about it. Many will tell\nyou that Phillipsburg in her attitude\non this question this past year has\nbeen a disgrace to her citizens. When\nthe posts our city wont stand still\nlong enough for a man tie his\nteam tnd them cornstalks in that field\nare all goin' somewhere, and mother's\nsons take their first glass, which prob-\nably won't be their last, .it is high\ntime the moral, upright citizens, the\nprominent business men of the place\nshould call a halt. It was the uni\nverbal idea of the convention that\nsome of the institutions of our city\nhad better be going elsewhere and\na good many things be made to stand\nstill. The remarks by our county\nsuperintendent were not .only inter-\nesting but helpfui and encouraging\nThe committee on nomination com-\nposed of Mrs McFall, Mr. Ferguson\nand Mr. Hageman, submitted the fol-\nlowing which was approved:\nPresident G. M. Cole; Vic e-P r es id en - t,\nMrs. M. L . Heath; Secretary
41df945cd7122200bd5ced66109fb820 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.2917807902081 42.217817 -85.891125 times the fossil.; indicate genera no\nlonger extant on the continent where\nthe fosils lie. Thus our North Ameri-\ncan rocks ail'ord us cinnamon leaves in\nrich abundance, but there are no cin-\nnamons growing now on all this side\nof the world. Our nearest representa-\ntives are the laurels and the sassafras.\nWe have already in these chapters re-\nferred to the tulip tree, a glorious tree,\nbut the only lone species of the genus\nnow on earth. But in cretaceous times\ntulip trees flourished all over the north-\nern world, many species in this country\nand in Furope, ranging south as far as.\nItaly and north as far as ( Jreenland.\nIn fact, everything seems to Indicate\nthat for our northern world at least the\nforests of cretaceous times wire richer,\nmore varied, more extended and in ev-\nery way liner than those we know to-\nday. These trees were the immediate\nancestors those we know, the same,\nyet not quite the same. Conditions cn\nthe earth have changed since forests\nwere at their prime, the glory of the\nworld. Vegetation entered first upon\nlife's scene and culminated first, cul-\nminated In the deciduous forests that\ncast their leaves through countless\ngenerations along the shores of the\ncretaceous seas. With the close of the\ncretaceous a race of terrestrial animals\nfirst appears, competitors of the forest,\na new factor in environment, changing\nfrom that time on the entire trend of\nbiologic differentiation. These were\nthe mammals, the culmination of\nearth's fauna in the progress of the\nages, until at the last, In these most re-\ncent times, the destinies of the forest\nand of the animal world ns well rest In\nthe hands of a slncle creature, the high-\nest mammal, the god of this lower\nworld. Ills name Is man!\nCopyright, 1902. by Lewis D. Sampson.
175352a3105747d0d27fd6f6e4be9912 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.3674863071747 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Casey's successor as Collector of v\nCustoms at New Orleans will not be an n\npointed for several days. J\nThe Secretary ol War has sent to the b\nSenate, leporta from the commandants of h\ntbo Springfield armory and Rock Island A\narsenal, giving a comparative statement p\nshowing tho operations of the eight hour c\nlaw. With regard to the Rock Island tl\narsenal, tue commandant says ne uenevcu n\nit was expected that under the law, the S\nemployes would »work more willingly, tl\nmore intelligently, and with more strength c\nand dispatch than under tlie ten hour sys- i\ntern, and therefore more work would be tl\ndone per hour, uncompensate or partially c\ncompensate the government Tor the loss H\nof two hours work. This expectation has «\nnot been realized at tbat arsenal. It bus A\nbeen claimed that if the men worked only n\neight hours per day, that the additional c\nleisure time allowed then), would gener- p\nally be devoted to reading and study, si\nand otherwise to the benefit of c\nthe physical, moral aud condi- ti\nlions, thereby making them be more and F\nmore valuable workmen and citizens. t<\nThis expectation baa been partially reali- d\nzed in the case of the carpenters and me- »\nchanics, but has not been realized to any *1\nconsiderable extent in the case of the ci\nmasons anil stone cutters. Tho leisure <1\ntime has been generally an injury rather 01\nI linn a benefit in the case of the laborers. 8\nThose in the latter class have generally n\nno houses of their own, and their leisure tl\ntime in most cases was more productive u\nof bad habits than good. The command- G\nant at the Springfield armory says tbat a a\ncarelul calculation shows that an average G\nsaving of about $600 a year lor gas for e\nlighting purposes is eflecied by reducing tl\nthe hours from ten to eight, which saving tl\nis principally in the abort daysol the win- ii\nter months the total saving in coal and gas n\nis (2,000 per year, ol 500 woiMng days, 1\nin f»vnr nl' llm nlrrltt linnr avalom a limit A
1c7db3ffce298c3e227d5981ae0a1e65 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1878.9657533929478 37.561813 -75.84108 the strap and block, a coil of halyards,\nmil a marlinespike, about his neck. He\nAdl from the starboard shrouds, and rtbt\nknowing how to swim, and being very\nheavily dressed, with all those things\nabout his neck, he probably sank imme-\ndiately. We pulled astern, in the direc-\ntion in which he fell, and, though we\nknew there was no hope of saving him,\nyet no one wished fo speak of returning,\nand we rowed about for nearly an hour.\nwithout the hope of doing anvthim:. but\nunwilling to acknowledge to ourselves\nthat we must give him up. At lengtl:\nwe turned the Doat s head, and made\na towards the vessel. Death is at all times\nsolemn, but never so much so as at sea.\nA man dies on shore; his body remains\nwiiii nis menus, anil ine mourners go\nabout the streets;" but when a man falls\noverboard at sea, and is lost, there is\nsuddenness in the event, and a difficulty\nin realizing it, which, give to it an air of\nawful mystery. A man dies on shore\nyou follow his body to the grave, and a\nHone marks the spot. You are often\nprepared for the event. There is always\nsomething which helps you to realize it\nwhen it happens, and to recall it when\nit passed. A man is shot down by\nyour side in battle, and the mangled\nIxidy remains, an object and a real evi-\ndence ; but at sea, the man is near you\nat your side you hear his voice, and in\nan instant he is gone, and nothing but a\nvacancy shows his loss. Then, too, at\nsea to use a homely, but expressive\nphrase you miss a man so much. A\niozen men are shut up together in a lit-\ntle bark, upon the wide, wide sea, and\nfor months and months see no forms\nand hear no voices but their own, and\none is taken suddenly from among them,\nand they miss him at every turn. It is\nlike losing a limb. There are no new\nfaces or new scenes to fill up the gap\na There is always an empty berth in the\nforecastle, and one man wanting when\nthe small night watch is mustered. There\nis obc less to take the wheel, and to\nlay out with you upon the yard. You\nmiss his form, and the sound of his\nvoice, for habit has made them alniest\nnecessary to vou, and each of your\nsenses feels the loss. All these things\nmake such a death peculiarly solemn,\nnnd the effect of it remains upon the\ncrew for some time.
23653b85d341d6fd8bdbf8d95cfca2e0 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.3784152689234 40.735657 -74.172367 -Ntiw Jersey workingmen. A man who puts in eight hours\na dayfora wage of$3adayand can work alltheyear\nround is usually well satisfied. If he is a good workman and\ndoesnt shirk his work his employer is likewise satisfied. New\nJerseys Governor gets f 10,000 a year, or $30,000 for threp years'\nservice. His election is an implied contract. He takes an oath\nof office to faithfully perform his duties to his employer, the\npublic. He is provided with an elaborately fitted tip office, with\na private secretary, stenographer and messenger, and is fur\nwished with fine stationery, postage stamps and other office\nconveniences. He has no overseer or auditor, but is placed on\nhis honor. When he applies to the comptroller for his monthly\nsalary of $833.33 he gets it promptly and is asked no questions.\nAll that is asked of the Governor is that he shall give a fair\nclay's work, the same as the carpenter or clerk or salesman, for\nwhat the Htate generously regards as a fair days pay. Now.\nhow has Governor Woodrow Wilson lived up to his contract\nand to the motto of the wage earner? The answer is on official\nrecord, and it is a character to make it widely exploited in\nother States against his candidacy. If a carpenter or clerk or\nsalesman should be enabled to draw regular pay while habit-\nually absenting himself on fishing trips he would not be classed\nas worthy of any job. He would not be deemed desirable for\na more responsible appointment. And the record shows that\nthe Governor spent the greater part of the time of the legisla-\ntive session this year traveling in other States on his private\nbusiness. It shows that for a very large part of his time last\nyear he was absent from the State on personal campaign trips.\nIt shows that he did not scruple to pocket a large amount of\nunearned salary. The legislative session this year saw little\nof the Governor and had no cooperation from him, and the\nroutine business of the executive office was left to a private sec-\nretary. Is that the stuff American Presidents are made of? Js\nthe Governor who fails so utterly to fulfil the ideals of the\npeople of New Jersey the kind of man whom the Democrats of\nMew Jersey would present to the Baltimore convention as then-\ncandidate for President?
6ee486225beb0e52b6810942c687b970 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4506848997971 39.261561 -121.016059 Southern Paper* Then and Now.\nThere can he no more pregnant and in-\nstructive contrast than the tone of the\nSouthern newspapers a year ago and to-day.\n1 he wild yell of defiance, rage, contempt,\nand execration which burst from them then\nhas significantly changed.\n•The North has no officers fo command\nor drill the cowardly, motley crew of starr-\ning foreigners and operatives that it pro-\nposes to seud South to fill ditches and as\ntood for cannon, because it bas no room in\nIts penitentiaries and poor-bouscs to receive\nor sustain them.” “Our people can take it\n(Washington), they will lake it, and Scott,\nthe arcli-lrailor, and Lincoln, the beast,\ncombined, can not prevent it. The just in-\ndignation ot an outraged and deeply injured\npeople will tcacb Ibc Illinois Ape to repent\nhis course and retrace his journey across\nthe borders of the free negro Slates still\nmore rapidly than be came; and Scott, the\ntraitor, will be given opportunity at the\nsame time to try the difference between\n•Scotts Tactics and the Shanghai drill for\nquick movements.” “It is not to be endured\nthat this flight of Abolition burpies shall\ncome down from Ibe black North for tbeir\nroosts in the heart of the South, to defile\nand brutalize the land.” “They never did\ntight, and never will light, except for pay,\nfor pillage, and plunder. Once satisfy them\nthat no money is to be made, no pluuder to\nbe gotten by invading (he South, and no\npower on earth can lash and kick them\nsouth of Mason aud Dixons line.”\nAll these things the Richmond Examiner\nsaid. A year has passed, and it says: “The\ndestiny of the Confederacy is trembling on\nthe result of Yorktown. If successful, it\nwill give us six months tor carrying out the\nconscription act, arming and equipping a\nlarge army, and lauuchiog a fleet of Mer-\nrimacs; but if unsuccessful, Virginia is\nlost.”
0fce688c2a51ba95f48d6fc97272f15d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.7849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 "What difference docs that mnke if ii\nisn't so?" interrupted Jabez, fiercely.\nThe girl turned. Iu her eyes of in\nfantile blue there was a woman's long\niug. "But if it is ?" she whispered, and\non the narrow and shrunken chest ol\nage her fair young head rested.\nIt was two years later that one of th<\nstateliest mansions on the main avouut\nof Aberdeen bore all the outward signs\nof bereavement. Within, the liveriec\nservants attested their obligatory grie\nby long faces and shadowy stops In\nthe trout room lay the body of him\nwho had been their nominal master,\naurroundod by the elegauce which tic\nhad not desired, by the luxuries whicl\nhad been comfortless to him. In dealt\nold Jabez Knowlos' face had regainei\nthat serenity which had left it whet\nwifely force removed him from hit\nbooks, his pets, his easy chair, and hit\nfire. Since at last he is at peace, so lo\nhim lie; for ne boast of the world could\nnow induce him to relinquish the for\ngetfulness of the grave.\nIu the rear room the youug widov\nkept her seemly conclusion, yot no\nalone. No, the best people, amoni\nwhom in every good work she had beei\nforemost, were faithful in her hour o\nneed. The rector of the St. Simon'\nand even the bishop himself had beei\nassiduour in ghostly attendance, an<\neven now Mrs. Peter Bullion, the wif\nof the banker and senior warden, wa\nconsecrating a chair by her side. Int\nthe lugrubious conversation there cam\na rap liko rain upon dust. A servan\nentered and presented a card to hi\nmistross.
46b60f4d7b0cdfbbc268571c910e6e92 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1923.0726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 “ I have ab«olute confidence In the integrity and wis­\ndom of the majority of the American people, and if\nthe direct primary enabled the majority of a party to\n'i nominate their candidates, I would be an advocate of\nand loyally support that method of making nomina­\ntions. But in practice we find the majority of the\nparty is generally defeated, and that a minority makes\nthese nominations, if there were but two candidates\nfor any particular office, then one or the other of course\nwould receive that majority, but iu practice We find\nthere are generally many more than two candidates,\nand frequently the mail receiving the plurality, and\nthus the nomination, will not receive more than one-\nthird or one-fourth of the total vote. We find further\nthat the loyal party supporters, tho people who be­\nlieve In the principles adopted by that party at it« na­\ntional convention, and for which It has stood for years\npast, divide their among three or four candidates\nrepresenting the party principles while probably one\ncandidate, professing to be a Republican or a Democrat,\nbut whose principles differ from cither party, will re­\nceive the «olid support of a class which frequently Is\nsufficient to make the nomination over any of the true\nloyal men. Thu« the will of the majority is defeated\nand the minority representative becomes the candidate.\n"It thie were not a government by parties probably\nthis would not be so serious a matter, but I firmly be­\nlieve that in our government, if its success, certainly If\nIts efficient functioning, depend« upon parties, the di­\nrect primary, as I have described, destroys the power\nof parties to legislate, and permits a few by a combina­\ntion with the minority party to either defeat legislation\nentirely or to prevent the carrying out of the policies\nfor which that party stands pledged, and for which\nthe people at the provious election gave their vote.
0c73a90fa3fb07fb29011e1d09b78772 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1867.1438355847285 41.004121 -76.453816 "Just then I heard tho rumbling of a\nwagon toniing toward us. He heard it\ntoo, and for a minute stood and listened.\nThen with an oath, ho suddenly whirled\nmo around and struck mo three heavy\nblows full in the face with his huge list,\nknocking mo senseless to the ground.\nWnen I opened my eyes again a farmer,\na neighbor of ours, had my head on his\nknee and was wiping tlio blood from\nmy face ; tho rascal had given mo ono\nblow that had cut open my cheek, and\nleft a mark until this day. Tom Brln-\nton had run Uko a deer across the fields,\nthe farmer said. Anyhow, that was the\nlast seen of him in the place as long as\nI remained. Bess nnd I wero married\nand camo to America as happy and lov-\ning a couple as ever crossed tho waters.\nWhen I lauded in Now York my pocket\nwas picked of all my money tho few\npounds I had saved to buy mo a littlo\nland nnd I was friendless. It was an\nawful time that followed, sir."\nThe poor fellow seemed overcomo by\ntho memory. Tho perspiration beaded\nfrom his forehead, his eyes filled with\ntears and ho nervously fingered tho glass\nthat still contained a few drops of liquor.\nThen, with a determined eflort show-\n Itself in his compressed Hps, With a\ngulping noise In his throat nnd a dash\nof his arm acro-- s his faco ho struggled\nwith his feelings to continue tho story.\n"Alter this misfortune, I tried to ob-\ntain work. Now nnd then I got a job\nthat gave mo enough to buy us a little\nfood. But what could I, a farmer and a\nfarmer's son, do In a great city that\nneeded urticans, not farmers ? It was a\nhard and bitter struggle for life. I had\njust got a place as porter, at good wages\nwhen when my dear, darling Bessie\nwhen sho sho died."\nHis groans and tears and sighs mas-\ntered his firmness and ho bowed his\nhead upon the table. I could understand\nthe loneliness of his life, and that the\ndead wife was a being worshiped above\nall else in the world. It seemed so cru-\nel of mo to obtain from my guest so sor-\nrowful n story, to recall memories so\nfragrant with keen, undying grief, that\nI placed my'hand upon tho head of tho\nweeper, and tried by words of sympa-\nthy ami of cheer, to lead him away rrom\ntho sad story of his life and leave it un-\ntold. But after a littlo while ho raised\nhis head tho faco white and tho eyes\ntearful.
1ec565e828614300600251251e04156a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.4178081874684 58.275556 -134.3925 Wbilo most of the inhabitants of\nDouglas were in Juneau last Monday\nwatching the baseball boys give the\nJuneau club a very painful beating the\nstay at homes were getting numerous\nthrills. At about 3 o'clock in the after-\nnoou a tiro was discovered at the Kiloh\nbouse, opposite the ekating rink, and\nwas only extinguished after consider¬\nable water was thrown on the building\nby the fire companies. The contents of\nthe house were removed and the dam¬\nage was confined to the interior. It is\nclaimed that flying sparks lodging ou\nthe roof caused the coufisgration.\nThe fire was hardly out when Mary\nSmith, an Amazou of the Thlinget tribe\nwent on the war path with a fighting\njag. She tore down several doors,\nsmashed some windows and had several\nfist fights. unkuuwn peacemaker\ninterfered, got bit, kicked, scratched\nand lost his watch fob iu less than ten\nseconds. He quit and Mary amused\nseveral hundred spectators until the\nmarshal arrived. Mies Smith will reside\niu the sbookum house during the\nbeautiful mouth of Juue and also pay\n$10 iuto the city treasury, according to\nthe verdict rendered by the municipal\njudge Tuesday morning.\nAfter the excitement died down that\nhad arisen over the fire and the fight\non the beach, a Juueau man by the\nname of Bob Dupee, in a fit of jealous\nrage shot Clara Collins, a girl of the\nuuderworld,in the hip with a 45 calibre\nautomatic revolver. The wound iu-\nfiicted was dangerous, but will uot\nprove fatal. The shooter was captured\nby Marshal Frank Hach and taken to\nJuneau.
02926d0f242b45310249744d02556c80 THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1880.7062841213824 44.593941 -72.616505 much of himself who did not have a\npoor subject for his conversation?\nDid you ever know a fool who was\naware that he was a foolP\nDid you ever think that you might be\nthus oblivious as to yourself?\nDid you ever see another do the same\nthing three times without thinking that\nyou could do it much better?\nDid you ever know a swindled man\nwhose hurts were not partially healed\nby hearing of another man being\nswindled in like manner?\nDid you ever know a young lady\nwith a new and neatly fitting waist\nwho thought the weather was cold\nenough for a wrap'\nDid you ever see a man with large\nfeet who did not declare that his boots\nwere two sizes too big that ho likes\nthem easy, you knowP\n you ever think that men are\nthe biggest fools in creation, and that\nthe women enjoy the fun of letting\nthem remain unconscious of it?\nDid you ever see a young man who\ncarried a cane who would not repel the\ninsinuation of lameness?\nDid you ever see a drinker or a\nsmoker that couldn't leave off at any\ntime, if he wanted to?\nDid you ever think whiti horrid chil-\ndren good people have?\nDid you ever think what horrid chil-\ndren these good people's parents proba-\nbly had, the good people's storks to the\ncontrary notwithstanding?\nDid you ever lose your temper but\nyon felt lonesome without itP\nDid you ever feel like immolating\nthe shopkeeper whose free use of your\nname made that name seem hateful and\nodious to you?
279f58f7a00ccf6264fd884579d5ab4f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.195890379249 58.275556 -134.3925 Octopus After Alaska\nUnder the above caption we find the\nfollowing, purporting to be a Washing¬\nton telegraphic dispatch to the Asso-;\nciated press, going the rounds of the\nEastern papers:\nAdvocates of autonomy for Alaska\nintend to urge in support of their ap-\npeal to congress the reason that only\nby self-governmeut can that northern-1\nmost and fertile territory be saved\nfrom the clutches of a trust, one of\nwhose members.Simon Guggenheim. j\nhas been elected a United States sen¬\nator from the state of Colorado. Al-\nready the smelter trust, of which\nDaniel Murray, Isaac and Simon Gug-\ngenheim are the moving factors, is said\nto have placed its grasping hand on\nthe fruitful soil of Alaska in which lie\nburied millions in mineral. The trust\nis with menacing freedom of\ncompetition. It has a firm friend and\nsupporter iu the financial interests1\nthat center about J. Pierpont Morgan.:\nThe prize of which this gigantic\nmonopoly is seeking to obtain exclu¬\nsive possession is declared by geolog¬\nical experts to be the greatest undevel¬\noped copper field in the country and j\nan area rich in coal and other deposits.\nThat the largest smelter in North\nAmerica will some day be located iu\nthis region is the statement of those!\nfamiliar with conditions in Alaska.\nWhether its owners are to be absolute\ndespots iu the control of this valuable\ntract or are to be compelled to engage\nin business as the competitors of inde¬\npendent companies is a question about\nwhich the citizens of Alaska are deeply\nconcerned.
1287398661a33737b566ddcd0203d9fb PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.3849314751394 39.756121 -99.323985 and success and even the "smallest of\nthings are governed by law. Many\nforgetting this, expect success to drop\ninto their .lives without previous pre-\nparatory work. If man could attain to\nsuccess without any preceeding work\nthe world would be very different from\nwhat it is at the present time. He\nwould degenerate and gradually sink\nlower than the beasts. Tie greatest\nknown aid to civilization is success as\nit leads to the things that are neces\nsary tor the development of mind or\nbody. It not only builds up man ment\nally but also physicallv.\nWhen a young person arrives at that\nstage of life where he must go to worK,\nhe should select the vocation that he\nexpects to make his liie work. The\nchoosing of this requires more consid-\neration than anything else as it deter-\nmines whether he. is going to make\nthis life pay or not. The majority of\nthe people that fail today not\ngiven enough thought at the start.\nThey have taken the first thing that\ncame . their way without thinking\nwhether they had any love for it. It is\nthe worst mistake they could have\nmade, as a start in the wrong direction\nis much worse than none at all. Fame\nor money .are great inducements to\nthe young man or woman at the pres-a- nt\ntime but one who works for these\nand nothing else will neyer succeed.\nNearly all young people have the\nidea that they can do anything a little\nbit better than anybody else, and for\nthis reason they select something of\nwhich they know nothing at all except\nthat some man has made a fortune out\nof it. As soon as they meet with re-\nverses they drop it and try something\nelse. They go through life this way\ntrying everything but doing nothing.\nThey lack one of the necessary things\nfor success, viz : perseverence.
443e56a580a533d08b64111b009b95b7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.0397259956874 40.063962 -80.720915 jars acquitted themselves with new (\nlaurels. Especially is this truo of j\n"Ool." William Henry Hogemau, Siq.\nBeing somewhat interested in the case I\nmanaged to gel a file ol Couriert that <\ncontained a report of tho proceedings of ]\nthe court. 1 road them csrelully, and 1 \\\nam frank to confess that tho reporter for\nthe Owner Is n very (?) reliable (?) -writer.\nAccording to tho published report of the\ncase, Hogeman is the only lawyer that had '\nanything to do 'with it. Maior Fitzhupli- I\njuuge Brown anil olher able l»wvcr! on- <\ngaged In tho case ate only carnally men- i\nuoned. In comparison with Mr. flogc- |\nman they are a raero nothing. Why,\nEvwta himself couldn't hold & candle to\ntho young giant 'Squire. I do not mention\nthis disparage Mr. H., aa ho is a young 1\nman of lair l<wal acquirementa, and will\nvery likely make a good lawyer. It was\nthe strangeness of tho thing that caused mo\nto mention it Pardon mo for saying that\nit has been hinted to mo that the young\nglaut wrote out tho reports hlmsell. It\nthis is true, the strangeness connected\nwith tho reports becomes clear and reasonable.\nA second and similar contest between\nJudges Harrison and Lewis for the\nClarksburg circuit will be tried belore a\nspecial court consisting of 8. A . Miller,\nJames Morrow, Jr., and N. Goft, Br.,\nEsq . , on the 14th Inst Although this\ncase is a plain one, and on its taco shows\nHarrison to bo entitled to tho seat, it will\nbe decided In Lew la' favor. Itisnouso\nfor a
0fa8fc8e81e194ff438855867214f1a8 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.56420761865 40.827279 -83.281309 Duriko this Administration all the\nconquered States have been peacefully\nbrought back into Congress with full del-\negations of their own choosing; the great\ncotton crop of the South has regained its\nformer ascendency in the markets of the\nworld; the back of gold speculation has\nbeen effectually broken ; stability given\nto trade and commerce; railway con-\nstruction has gone on upon a prodigious\nscale ; the Pacific Railroad protected\nagainst tbe Indians, and a new line at\nthe North partially built ; measures com-\npleted for the construction of the Southern\nPacific Railroad ; a regular line of mail\n8teimers from San Francisco to Japan\nand China established and sustained, and\nalso one from New York to the Capital\nof Brazil ; and the national census shows\nthe wealth of the Republic, notwithstand-\ning the devastations of the civil war, to\nhave risen to an equality with that of the\nBritish Great progres has been\nmade toward a permanent peace with the\nIndians and their civilization and accept\nance of our institutions\nThese things we take to be evidence of\nsubstantial statesmanship ; and as re- -\neards the men who have led in public af-\nfairs, the ability of Secretary Boutwell\nfor the conduct of our finances, of Sec-\nretary Creswell for the management of\nour postal service, and of Morton, Wilson,\nbchenck, Dawes, Garfield, Schofaeld, and\nScott for the lead in legislation, is evi-\ndence by the results. Through all the\nexcitement of this Administration, Presi-\ndent Grant has been calm, unruffled, pa-\ntient, attentive to business, always ac-\ncessible to the public, a ready l:s et er and\na frhrewd and discriminating critic and\njudge. From first to last his guidance\nhas been visible, and if this is not states-\nmanship, let ns ask what then is? Phila--\nde'p.ia Aorth Amrrian.
0c7001f8d0a969527b58190dd6e0d9a0 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1912.219945323568 42.68333 -96.683647 same in this that, so far as their feel­\nings are concerned, the imitation is\nmore,ap£to be better than the original,\nIjecause It is newar and it lacks aone\nof the accredited marks or nicks at\ncrackels or stains, since genius has\nbeen outdone in imitation.\nHow this rule runs through the imi­\ntative and counterfeiting manhood and\nwomanhood which plagues society, in­\nfests literature and shadows all life\nwith its insistent presence! You may\nbe sure that the first thing an imitator,\nor the maker of a fake in art, does is\nto have the mark or the signature\nmechanically perfect. The modern\nWorcester and Chelsea, manufactured\nby carloads in Paris in imitation of the\nold, is sure to have the square mark of\nDr. Wail or the gold anchor upon it.\nThe easiest thing to imitate is not\nthe quality of the constitution\nof the body or the sort of glaze. The\nfalsifier always sees to it. that the ex­\nternal and mechanical likeness alone\nis perfect. This only he can make\nperfect. It is so with counterfeit Dau-\nbiguys and innesses, as it is with coun­\nterfeit human beings. Even the frame\nof the picture has been soaked in\nwarm water or cheap oil and sirup and\nvariously touched until it has "aged."\nSo only it acquires a maturity of lying\nwhich is like that of a man who is\nonly an echo of somebody else, if he\nwere the echo of the best; if one could\nbe the repetition of that which is spon­\ntaneous in the goodness or greatness\nof another—but "that is another story."\nThe Art of Living is something that\nforbids imitation, even though "imita­\ntion is the sincerest flattery."
5c76ba356bee6e1a93de0dba48284c91 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.828767091578 41.681744 -72.788147 Financial position Strong\nLocal concerns are in a strong\nfinancial position, and their share\nare worth purchasing, seems to be\nthe consensus in investment circles\nhere. No one, of course, can say\nthat bottom prices have been reach-\ned, that the hurry is over on the big\nboard and that the country will see\na gradual, more healthy, increase in\nprices generally. This is true of all\nstocks, wherever the organizations\nare situated. There has been in the\npast, a lack of interest in manufac-\nturing stocks on the local board be-\ncause of the promise of quick profits\non the big board. Appreciation in\nvalue was looked to, rather than the\nyield of the dividends which has\nbeen nil in some of the stocks late-\nly in demand. Kvery avail, hie cent\nof speculators, large and small, and\nthere are many of them in this city,\nlias been placed in the street hoping\nfor quick returns, removing t lie sup-\nport from the local market and re-\nsulting in lower prices for the stocks.\nQuiet Ittiying of Focal Stocks\nNow that it appears that the spec-\nulative feature has. disappeared from\nWall street for the time, being at\nleast and that buying will be on an\ninvestment basis with the yield ever\nin mind, conservative interests with\nmoney to invest who have preferred\nto keep out of the speculative mar-\nket are picking up local stocks\nquietly, putting their money to work\non an interest bearing basis, or bet-\n and relying upon the stability of\nlocal concerns for a continuance of\ndividend rates.\nIf the entire country is headed for\noblivion, that is if the. buying abil-\nity of Americans has been exhaust-\ned, there is not a cheerful outlook\nfor money, even in the bank. If\nthere is to be a financial revision on\nthe basis of present day prices, the\ninvestor has little to fear, as his\n50 cents, which was a dollar three\nmonths ago, will buy him just as\nmuch in necessity or luxury, as the\ndollar would have before the re-\nvision, though he may not be worth\nas much on paper. Underlying busi-\nness conditions are sound, is heard\nfrom many well informed quarters,\nand there is no reason to suspect\nthis to be untrue. None of them are\nwilling to predict there will be any\nsudden and violent upturn on the\nstock market to equalize the paper\nlosses of the last few weeks, it\nwould take a brave man indeed to\ndo that, but many of them appear\nto believe there is'to be a slow re-\nsumption of confidence and a prob-\nable gradual increase in prices\nafter the bottom has been struck.\nThere probably will not be the op-\nportunity to realize on speculation\nto the extent of realization during\nthe past several years, but all of\nthis argues for a return to nor-\nmalcy in investments and an oppor-\ntunity for the conservative buyer\nwho has feared an abnormal bull\nmarket.
0f880140b13655460d2a8b77f21b64de THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.2964480558085 40.063962 -80.720915 "These little feathers." says the clr- g\nculor ,4wero provided by nature as the\nnoptlal adornment of the white heron,\nor egret. 'Many kind-hearted women jy\nwho would not on any account do a 5\ncruel act are, by following this fashion,\ncausing, the contlnuanoe of a very great \\\ncruelty.. The aigrette In nearly all cases' 4\nIs maxle of the slender decomposed\nfealhers that grow at one time of the\nyear on the birds' backs and drop\ngracefully over their sides and talis. p ,\nThe less flne plumes with shorter and\nstlffer filaments are from the squacco\nha>v%n M-hlfh (a nnt nn otrrM Th<» br»St #1\ntime to attack them is when the young\nbirds are fully fledged, but not able\nto liy, for at that time the solitude of b\nthe parent bird is the greatest, and, for- q\n of their own danger, they are p\nmost readily made victime. When the v\nkilling Is finished and the few handfuls 0\nof coveted feathers have been plucked t,\nout. the slaughtered birds are left in a a\nwhite heap to fester in the sun and i\nwind, in sight of their orphaned young a\nthat cry for food and are not fed. There a\nis nothing in the whole world so pitl- 7;\nable as this.so pitiable and shameful. p\nthat for such a purpose human cunning\nshould take advantage of that feeling fl\nand instinct which we regard as so h\nnoble in our own species, and as some- ©\nthing sacred.the tender passion of the el\nparent for Its offspring:, which causes IS\nit to neglect Its own safety and to per- a\nIsh miserably, a sacrifice to its love.
248b4a71853480394af8d8aec8730109 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1915.7301369545917 42.217817 -85.891125 Thayer, and went with his parents to\nthe Thaer farm on the "Black River\nRoad" west of Paw Paw in I8O61 Here\nhe grew to manhood, and was married\nto Miss Louise Bilsborrow on Septem-\nber 12, 1894. To them was born a\ndaughter, Miss Martha, who is just\nblooming into young womanhood, and\nnow with her mother is left to mourn\nthe loss of a devoted husband and father.\nTwelve years ago the Thayer families\nmoved to the village of Paw Paw, to\nreside in the beautiful and palatial home\non north Kalamazoo street, familiaily\nknown as "Thayer's Likeside " Tne\nhome was burned early in the present\nsummer, but was immediately rebuilt\nunder the personal supervision of\ndrceased. It was made more beautiful\nand commodious than before, and me\nfamily had anticipated long y t ars of hap-\npiness iu the new home.\n"Ed" will greatly mi&sed in the\ncommunity. A sentiment expressed by\non of his close friends, "He was a man,\nevery inch of him", is a testimonial of\nthe esteem in which he was held by the\nentire community in hich he had lived\nHe was hospitable and kind hearten.\nEver ready and willing to lend a helping\nhand where ever it might be of some\nservice. Always cheerful and optimis\ntic, spreading good cheer and a feeling\nof contentedness to those about him.\nBe will be missed in social circles, in\nthe ciub, io fraternal circles, in the\nchurch and in fact in every activity\nthat makes the life of this community.\nDeceased leaves, besides a widow and\ndaughter, his aged parents, and our\nheart goes out to them in their hour of\nreat bereavement. He was their idol,\nand their one great comfort in their de-\nclining years.
79fdb53da4e21cc7fcf16689fdac0cbf COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.8835616121257 41.262128 -95.861391 - liiagraoefoi retrecto," «*d of glodbua\nreaulta wUib to foliaw a girea poiioy\nwithaa a oartata period. To tlwcn '*war's\ndread aianuaa" have ao torrur, Dn&g au\nitatrea% ao eare, ao tear aor aigh, ao\naoaraiag for a aatioa's woe.. Bat go to\ni toe gory battle-held, aad there, 'mid\n|aeao«e of devaatatioa, view the ooadi\nj uoa of the thouaaada of bra#e aad pat-\nriotie mea drirea to arm* by aocial aod\naectiooal dtaoord , eaa the faithful eaati-\nael a* through the dreary Bight be walk*\nhi* round, heedl^ta, appixeatly, of pelt­\ning atena or btUag cold—the vigtlaat\npicket guard upon hia daagaroua duty o»>\nthe extreme out-poata of tba army, while\nhia oomradea rest their weary limbs, it\nmay be, upon the sold, wet ground, un­\nsheltered aad half-etarrsd. Aak thoee\ngallant man, muauig withia theataeifi^,\nw tail you their thoaghu: UBOoaapiauj-\ntag of preaeat hardahipa, tbey will point\nyou to tbe &elda of Shiiob, of Donaiaon,\nFt. Heary, of Ball'* BlaJ^ of Chicka-\nhomiay, of Cedar Mosntaia, of Maaaa-\naa*, of AatieUkffi, of P«rryavilie aad Cor-\nriath. They will tell yoa of the dread­\nful carnage, the heap* of slaia—thoa-\nsaads aad tens of tbcueaada, of a\ncommon country and a common blood,\nfriend aad foe commingled, locked ia tbe\nembraeeof death—death by each other'*\nbaodes. They will apeak of tbe groans\naad agoay of the wouaded left to die or\nbe trampled aad crushed beaeath the\nhoof* of cavalry. Then they will tell\nyou, that on the morrow, or the next day,\npr th* aext, tbey are to miagie aad par\nticipaU iu other aeaaas like thoee, wbea\nthe adjaceat Ktetai will run red to the\nrevolting tea with the blood of them\nsaWee aad their eoaaradea, mingled with\ntbat of their oaoe brothers, aow deadly\nfaea. Then they will *p«ak of tbwr\nwive* and Uttleoaea, their *i*ten, daugh­\nters, brother* aad paure&U, sorrowing aad\naaxious at home, aad will apeak of their\nCoc.Timr—their bleeding aad eeemiagiy\ndoomed country —in terms of sadneee\n•uch aa thoe« employed by the RepuSix\ncan't corraspoodeat, ia the extract ba-\nlow. Tbta might poeaibly take th* «oa-\nceit aad raia glory oat of some ol oar\naoisy self-styled patriots, aad bring them\nto thair aeoeee; but tha most effectoa\nway to do it, woald be to make t&em\nahoulder a maaket ia tba freak raaks «f\nbattle:
40f27ad84ae20655b070f08a0c05380c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.03698626966 41.004121 -76.453816 Tho establishment of this coileoo was\nundoubtedly Intended ns a progressive\nmovement, and under tho impression\nthat it would contribute much to tho\neasy acquisition of a combined knowl\nedge ot agriculture, science and litera-\nture, and to promoto tho practical cdu.\nanon oi ino industrial classes in llio\neverul nuisulls of life. It has been\nfostered by the most liberal lecislatlon\nnnd is enelowcel with the stun of $381,-5 0-\nInvested In United Slates and Penn-\nsylvania bonds, yielding nn nggrcgnle\ninterest this year of $25,051 90, which\nhas been paid to tlio trustees of tho In\nstitution. Thus far tlio most satisfac\ntory results from tho worklnes of tho\ncollege havo not been realized. Rut it\nis now under the direction of n presi-\ndent nnd six learned professors. It re\nceives ior its pupiis oniy mnies over mo\nago of filtecn years, qualified for admis\nsion by n good common cdu ca\nnon. Tiicre nro in lint present loriy- -\nllvo students with a fair prospect of a\nonsiderablo increase in number. Tui\ntion, board nud tlio necessaries of life\nmo mere iiirnuiieu at n less rate man is\ngenerally demanded for boarding alone.\nthusaflbrding nn extraordinary oppor\ntunity to tho youth of the country to\nacotnronn accompnsned education wttn\ncomparatively small expenditures. Un\nder theso circumstances tho college de\nserves mo indulgent sympathy nnd sup\nport oi mo people.\nThree exnei inicnttd farms nro con\nucctcd with tho college, purchased ut\nnn aggregate cost of $ 13,880 50. Ono is\nlocated at tho colli l'c. one In Indiana\ncounty nnd ono in Chester county. Op\nerations nnvo been commenced upon\nthem under tho prescribed programmo\nof erics oi experiments wiin promises-\nof complete sui'cess ; tho results of\nwhich nro to bu reported annually to\nino legislature uy ino rroiessor oi
104c349895bb7a2eb30af47881626635 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.0698629819888 37.92448 -95.399981 tor both were naturally reticent, and\nespecially so with regard to the most\nsacred of till conditions. After the but-\ntle thut followed iu tlie wake of the\ninformation we hud gained and the gen-\neral's vindication, I wus suddenly Mun-\nitioned one morning to attend lilm. lie\nrode straight to the plantation, where\nlie found Marguret, and I am quite\nsure thut it wns on tills occasion thut u\ntreaty of pence wus formally drawn be-\ntween the two aud their future rela-\ntions ollieltilly bcttled. As to their\ncourtship, except that courtship which\nwas going on under my eyes while the\ngeneral held Marguret us a prisoner, 1\nknow nothing, but 1 can vouch for the\nfact of their wedding, for I witnessed\nit, and they were afterward a \ncouple, for 1 have often visited them.\nAs to my nffnlr with Georgia, nn ac-\ncount of what followed our few brief\nmeetings described iu tlie lust pages\nof tills story would involve another\nvolume of confessions not more orcdlt-abl- o\nto me than the foregoing. I made\na very unsatisfactory lover, forgetting,\nduring an exciting campaign, to com-\nmunicate with my inamorata for\nmonths at n time. Hut when tlie ab-\nsorbing events of that most eventful\nperiod in the nation's history wcro\nended, I took as much interest in love\nas I had taken in war. Hut I made\nslow progress as n husband. For years\nI could never lienr the rattle of a drum,\nnor the bullet of somo careless marks-ma- n\nsinging over my head, without
75949eb974e39df52103b093d1f19b8f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.146575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 Hartford, Feb. 23 . Motor vehicle\naccidents in Connecticut reached a\ntotal of 1,201 for the past month,\nbeing at the rate of about 390 a day,\naccording to statistics for January\ncompleted at the state motor vehicle\ndepartment. It was an increase of\n819 over January, 1923, Indicating\nthat accidents are occurring this year\natarateofabouttenadayinex-\ncess of the dally average for the\ncorresponding period of last winter.\nIt Is pointed out, however, that the\nnumber of motor 'vehicles, exclusive\nof motorcycles and jitneys, register-\ned and in use in the state during the\nfirst month of 1925 was 20,550 in ex-\ncess of the total for January, 1923,\nthe whole number of such registra-\ntions appearing on the books of the\ndepartment on the first day of the\npresent month being 127,988, as\nagainst 107,438 shown to have been\nregistered on that date of last year.\nAn idea of the rapidity with which\nthe ownership of automobiles is \ntending in Connecticut may be\ngained from the fact that more mo-\ntor vehicles were registered in this\nstate in the single month of Janu-\nary, 1925, than were registered in an\nentire year only five years ago. The\nfigures given in the second para-\ngraph apply only to passenger cars\nand commercial motor vehicles. Tak-\ning In all classes, the total of regis-\ntrations for the month amounts to\n132,517, whereas the total for the\nyear 1920 was 131,775. The depart-\nment registered more cars tor 1925\nIn one week than were registered in\na whole year 10 years ago.\nFifteen fatal motor vehicle acci\ndents occurred In January, 1925, an\nincrease of two over the fatal acci\ndent record for January, 1924. Va- -\nterbury is the only municipality\nwhich reported more than one, the\nnumber of fatal accidents occurring\nin that city during the first month\nbeing three. West Willington, W e th- crs fl el -
0b0c9b9ef7e42545d2224431e07ed328 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1893.6260273655505 39.756121 -99.323985 Whereas, The people are in a state\nof unrest; business interests and en\nterprises are prostrated and demora\nlized, and every industry more or less\naftected by the results of a false and\nfraudulent monetary system, which\nhas robbed the wealth producer of\nth& fruits of his toil in every age of\nthe world, and has overthrown evory\ngovernment having the semblance of\na republio, or kept them in a state of\nvassalage. Witness Mexico and the\nbouth and Central American repub\nlies, which have no stability and are\nsubject to the whims and caprices of\nany would bo leader, thereby making\nit possible to precipitate a revolution\nat any time Therefore be it\nResolved, That we arraign and de-\nnounce domestic traitors, who in col-\nlusion with foreign enemies conspired\nto bring this condition of affairs upon\nour once happy, prosperous and con-\ntented people. That we them\nto be enemies of a republican form of\ngovernment, and enemios of the best\ninterests of the human race.\nResolved, That we will hold to a\nstrict accountability tho extra session\nof congress for the manner in which\nit deals with the financial problem.\nResolved, That wo demand that the\ngovernment resume the function of\nsupplying and adjusting tho circula-\ntion to the needs of the business in-\nterests of the country, independent of\ncorporations and syndicates.\nResolved, That we demand that\nwhatever the government uses as\nmoney, let it be gold or silver or pa-\nper, shall be placed upon an equality,\nshall be a full legal tender for all\ndebts, both public and private. There\nshall be no exceptions in favor of any\nclass or classes.\nResolved, That a copy of these res-\nolutions be furnished the Phillips-ddr- o\nHerald aud that reform papers
19b9318c86ab2407f9860234e3a42b7d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1895.9657533929478 39.623709 -77.41082 1 Various causes have been given for\nthe rapid decline in the free silver sen-\ntiment, which lees than a year ago\nseemed destined to sweep everything be-\nfore it The masterly exposition of the\nfundamental principles of the currency\nquestion by Secretary of the Treasury\nCarlisle in a series of speeches has\ndoubtless done much to check the free\ncoinage idea. In the son them states an\nadvance of over 60 per oent iu the price\nof cotton destroyed the sole argument\nof cheap cotton on whiob the silverltee\nrelied for their support by farmers and\nplanters. Throughout the whole country\n(he educational work of sound currency\nelnbe and similar organizations, aided\nby the sound money press, has exposed\nthe fallacies and false statements\nthrough which the agents of the silver\nmine owners had secured a following\ntor the cheap dollar scheme.\n| These different agencies have all con-\ntributed the ront of the 16 to 1 sil-\nverites, but a more potent influence\nthan any or all of them was the recog-\nnition by the American people of the\nright of property and the hope of every\ncitizen to be some day a property own-\ner. In the progress of the currency dis-\ncussion it soon became evident that the\nfree coinage agitators were really at-\ntacking the right to hold property, and\nthat their arguments against the gold\nstandard and the “creditor class were\ndirected against the natural right of\nlenders to receive back from their debt-\nors as much property as was loaned.\nThe Populist papers and the speeches\nand pamphlets of the more rabid silver-\nites were filled with denunciations of\ncapital, rich men and bunkers so that\n.M ilo uukWvCii guiu aim sliver wa.\ngenerally dropped for the wider ques-\ntion of the poorer classes against the\nwealthy.
13ebea6595582d6d58259b65f840d091 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1899.2999999682902 39.623709 -77.41082 at present on foot promises more benefit to\nthe business men of Frederick than the ex-\ntension ef the telephone system to include a\nnumber of the Important towns in the county\nwith which there has been, up to the present\nno communication by telephone from the\ncounty seat. Boms months ago the secretary\nof the Business mens Aassoolatien pointed\nout in a letter to The Newt that Frederick\ncapital could hardly be invested in away to\nyield better returns, proportionately than in\nthe building of telephone lines to Brunswick\nThurmout, and other towns in this county\nand to connect with towns in Montgomery\ncounty. According to a statement of an\notHcer ot the new Frederick County Tele-\nphone and Telegraph Company, all this bids\nfair to be accomplished sooner than was\nexpected. Whether it would have been\naccomplished in the near friture by the old\ncompany is a question no concern and it\nis greatly to the credit ef the new company\ncomposed exclusively of home people and\noperating with home capita), that it is under-\ntaking the improvement and extension of\nour chief telephone system on a large scale.\nThe scheme of improvement and extension\nIncludes an additional line to better accom-\nmodate the business between Frederick and\nWalfcersville, a line from Jefferson, which is\nalready connected with Frederick, tc Bruns-\nwick byway of Putersville, and later another\nline taking jn Creagerstown, Lewistown\nand Tburmont. In addition to this the com\npanr has made an arrangement with a Mont-\ngomery county company which has connec-\ntions through that county and already has\npoles up for an extension to Urbans, this\ncounty, for a connection of the two lines at\nthat place so that subscribers here may have\ndirect communication with many towns in\nMontgomery County. — Newt.
0e2cc193a427203f00b759b103d269ac THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1897.842465721715 46.601557 -120.510842 Krank 11. Fowler, lilram c Well*. Sam chappel\nand W. A. Cox, partners under the firm name\nof Chaiiprll »v. Coa, Charles I'owell, Clara\nIlßti-man and Annie I. Merwm. Defendants.\nHy virtue of an execution Issued out of the\nSuperior Court of tlie state of Washington nnd\nfor the Coaaty of Yaklma, holding termn at\nNorth Yaklma In nald county, and to me di-\nrected nml delivered, upon a Judgment render-\ned In lialil court on the fifth day of ortiilmr, A.I).\nlviT. in favor nf the Anglo-American Land Mort-\ngage Agency Company, limited, plalntm. md\nagainst Frank 11. Kowfcr, defendant, for the sum\nof |4SI 40 with Interest at the rate of IS per cent,\nper annum from said ">th day of October, A I) ,\n1w.17, and the f\\irther sum of KM attorney's fees,\nand flu costs of unit. I have levied nnin the fol-\nlowing dpscrltM'd real estate, situate Vakiina\ncounty, Washington, to wit:\nThe cant half, re 1.,,), ol the southeast quarter,\n(se' 4 ). the southwest quarter, (sw I.^), or tho\nsoutheast quarter, (sc 1,), ami the southeast\n'jiiHit.r.(8e.,), of the southwest quarter. (sw'4),\nof section twenty-one, (Jl), In township thir-\nteen. (I.D, north of range nineteen, (ill), east.\nW. M. Including with said laud nil ditchesaud\nwater rights thereto pertaining nr In anywise\nbelonging; said premises lieing dcseiilied In\nmill judgment. (Win. h nald judgment in a\njudgment of the foreclosure of a certain mort-\ngage lv which sale In ordered of the above do-\n\\u25a0onbra premises.)\nNotice In hereby (riven that on Saturday, the\nthirteenth day of Noveml>er, IMC, at the hour\nof J o'clock p. m., of said day.at the couri houM\ndoor, In North Yakinia. In I county of Yakl-\nma. I will nell all the right, title and Intercut of\ntin.
3906ff5a54c02ba95db120b70e81c614 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.382191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 hy the deed of John Woods, trustee, ami Mar*\nthu Knni, Nurlnu date the 8th tiny of June, |8rt8,\nami recorded In the Clerk'* nffien of mill Ohio\ncrninty In I teed li<«>k No. ft:l, imge 4(57; excepting\nonly so much ofanhl c«aI a* wa* lonveVed hy mid\nOeorge Holier!* ami wife to Kniina If. Carter hy\ndeed dated the Irt day of January, 1870, the anlil\ndeed beta* a deed of exchange I*twren the aald\nliniuia II. Carter, of the one |>art ami the aald\nOeorge Holier!* of the other part, ami recorded In\nwilil Clerk'a office In Deed Monk No. hi, page 24.\nAImi, all Die mill, way*, en*enietit», right* anil\nprivilege* which hy the wiM la*t nictilioncil deed\nof exilianve were granted hy the aald Emma M.\nCarter tuthcanld Ueonw Itoliertaj thealmve \nthe Mime roal, mineral.*, way*, coaernenta. right*\nami prlvllcuca which were conveyed l»y (he aald\nItoliertaaml wife to the Crexfetit Iron Company\nby deed Ixfirlu« date the IJtliday of July. 1871,\nand recorded In aald Clerk'* office In Deed Hook\nNo '18, puge :w7. For a inure |nrtleular and minute\ndcaerlptlon of Iheniete* ami iMiund* of the premise*\nhereotlen^l t»»r wile, the course of en trie*, and the\ncharacter of other Improvement* connected with\nthe aamo, reference I* hereby made to a complete\nplat of the *idd premise* no* po*ted In tile Clerk'*\noffice of Ohio County (Vairt.\nTr.tmi or 8 ai.k ..One-fourth of the purchan\nmoney to ho paid In cash on the day of aale, and\nthe reMiliti* of *ahl pnrcluwe money to l»« paid In\nfour e*|iinl animal Installment*, with Interest
0caaa159eff9c0be22c1f553010f66c2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4795081650982 40.441694 -79.990086 THE POLICY OF TEARING DOWN.\nAs the Presidental campaign, by mutual\nconsent of the party leaders on both sides,\nis to turn once again, only more decidedly\nthan ever, .upon the vital issue of Protec-\ntion vs. Free Trade, it becomes well for\npeople to look at the practical and demon-\nstrated results of the one policy and the\nprobable results of the other.\nProtection, which the Chicago Conven-\ntion denounced, has been the policy under\nwhich the great industries of Pennsyl-\nvania, Ohio and West Virginia, notably,\nand of the New England States have been\nbuilt up. It is the policy under which\nmanufactures have sprung into being in\nthe South, bringing to extensive sections\na degree of industrial and mercantile ac-\ntivity which was not dreamed of in the\nperiod when agricultural resources alone\nwere depended on. Had markets\nbeen opened to foreign products produced\nby the cheaper labor of Europe, these\ngreat American industries, which give\nemployment directly and indirectly to\nmillions ot people, could not have leen\nestablished and maintained. A tariff for\nrevenue only one which considered\nmerely how much money was needed to\nrun the government, and which raised\nthat money without any attempt to pro-\ntect American industries from foreign\ncompetition would have left the Euro-\npean manufacturer with his cheaper lalior\nin possession of our markets. Such a tar-\niff now, embodying no idea of Protection\non the contrary expressly renouncing it,\nas the Chicago platform does would in-\nvite to our markets those who produce at\nthe lowest cost and who could sell at the\nlowest price. That is the philosophy of the\nFree Trade. The Democratic leaders can\nfashion
04270fa1de90a990fb94a843077c4703 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 Dennis Lowry wan his name, but every\none who know him called him Denny,\nHe was a Ull, rather good looking, yet\nsloucby-appearing young fellow oftwen-\nty-two or three, lie had always lived in\nthe sleepy little country village of New¬\nton and every one lor miles around knew\nhim. IIu wus called laiy and shiftless,\nand it was true that he had never excited\nhiuiaeK a great deal to prove the charge\nfalse, lie was inclined to lay his poor\ncircumstances to luck. Worse than\nbeing born poor, he had been unlucky.\nThis was what ho told himself, but peo¬\nple who knew him, averred that he had\nnuver made any vigorous attempt to\nchange his luck. Denny was a dreamer.\nIt was his delight to wanderaway through\nthe woods or fields, and all alone\namid the sweet-scented gruss and watch\nthe clouds as they sailed along above, or\nto follow the swift flight of thoswallows\nlis they circled and whirled at dluy\nheights, lie would lio thus for hours\nwith his mind filled with wild fancies of\nthe future, when Ills luck hsd changed.\nDenny had a poet's soul, but lacked a\npoet s power ot expression.\nDenny arid 1024 Porter grew up to-\njether. They were playmates while\nchildren, and their friendship seemed to\nprow stronger as they became older.\nUenny wan so kind ami gentle that bo\nleotued much like a girl bitnaelf, Insa\nwas a little, datk-oyod, red-lipped witch.\nEtiose very soul seemed always a bubble\nKith mirth. She was unlike Denny in\nMany respects, yot something seemed to\niilhd tbeui togetner,
06c4a10380553cd48348cdec73592a94 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.1575342148656 40.063962 -80.720915 Editors Intelligencer:\nrrhere was a Union meeting held in\nTriadelphia on Friday evening, 23d in¬\nstant, by citizens of all parties, in sup¬\nport of Andrew Johnson's Presidential\npolicy, and proved to bo a perfect suc¬\ncess. ,The attendance was large, the old\nhills were made to echo to the strains of\nimirtial music, and the feelings of the\npeople were enthusiastic and determin¬\ned in defence of their personal rights\nand liberties.\nAbout half past seven o'clock the\nmeeting was called to order by N H\nGarrison, Esq., who nominated Mr\nJohn Suppler, to bo President or the\nmeeting. Upon taking the chair Mr.\nSuppler stated tho object or the meet¬\ning, and remarked that it was well\nworthy the consideration of all present.\nWithout further remark lie proposed\nthat the meeting proceed to complete its\norganization, and proceed to tho busi¬\nness or the evening. following\nnamed gentleman was thereupon nom¬\ninated and elected Secretary, Lewis\nWheeler. Mr. Garrison was then called\nupon to nddress the meeting, nnd re¬\nsponded to the same with much credit\nto himself, as well as to the cause which\nhe espoused. On concluding bis re¬\nmarks, Mr. Handler was called upon\nwho answered with a short speech, full\nof energetic appeals to the citizens,\ncalling npon tllem to rally to the sup¬\nport or the President and tho Constitu¬\ntion, in opposition to the radicals who\nwore trampling upon them tbrougb an\nambitious lust of power. After Mr.\nHancher bad closed bis speech, the\nPresident, on motion or Mr. Garrison\nappointed Messrs. Hancher, Vanco and\nHeior, a committee to prepare resolu¬\ntions expressive or the sense or the\nmeeting. After a few moments the\ncoinmitteo through their chairman, Mr.\nHuncber, presented the following reso¬\nlution^
439e131f87c666c17b61dda569e25d11 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.478082160071 58.275556 -134.3925 Investigation has revealed tho fact\nthat tho body recent ly found floating\nin the river at Whitehorse was that of\nDominico Melis, an Italian, for some\ntime employed at the Pueblo mine.\nTho post mortem revealed that the\nskull bad been broken into many\npieces, ono side of tho jawbone and nine\nlibs broken, the doctors testifying that\nsuch was evidently accomplished, pos\nsibly by an ax, but more likely by a\nclub such as a baseball bat or a heavy\nbottle. There iaevidenco that tho head\nwas given many blows, any one of\nwhi- l>, hotli doctors asserted, would\nbavi* product d death.\nThe great calamity which recently\ndestroyed the business portion of Atlin\nwas caused by a tire which started in\nE. L . Pillmau's store from the boiling\nover of a kettle of tar which was on\nthe stove. The flames spread so rap¬\nidly that Mr. and Mrs. Pillmau barely\ncscaped with their lives, the foi mer\nL.tviug to jump through a window in\norder to get out. Before he cculd reach\nthe store entiance the whole of the iu\nterior was a teething, roaring furnace.\nAll that ho was able to *ave was a pair\nof lubber boots. Three blocks wore\nburned to the ground inside of two\nhours, the ioss beiDg about ;?100,000.\nAccording to Fred Tracey, general\nagent for the Alaska Steamship com¬\npany, who has just returned from Cook\n on the Dirigo, there will toon be\na new settlement on the inlet at Ship\ncreek, which is also known as Knik\nAnchorage, says tho Seward Gateway.\nTracey said that the activity on the\nmainland at the mouth of the croek is\ndue to the selection of that spot as\nfield headquarteis for the Alaska En¬\ngineering commission. Tho horses\nbrought up on tho Dirigo were uuload\ned there and also lumber for a two-\nstory headquarters building and bunk\nhouse for the men. "Knik people are\non the verge of stampeding over to the\nnew place," said Tracey, "and I would\nnot be surprised to fiud that before the\nsummer is over it will bo the center of\npopulation." Knik has always had the\ndrawback of being located so far up\nthe inlet that boats could not reach it\nat low tide and sea going vessels are\nforced to anchor at Ship creek, which\nis 12 miles below. The tide iu the iniet\nis so great that no attempt has been\nmade at permanent dock construction\nat either placo. The lauuehes tie up\nalongside a small wharf at Knik at high\ntide, but rest ou tho mud wheu the\nwater goes out. At preseut the Pacific\nAlaska Navigation compauy has the\nliertha auchored at Ship creek as a\nfloating wharf, and the Alaska com¬\npany's boats uuload ou lighters. Small\nboats transfer freight aud passengers\nto the shore.
2969a59b75cf395373a1a04b8fc09271 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.1849314751396 37.561813 -75.84108 On Friday Mr. Tom Wise sent for Mr.\nP. J. Hogan to connect the street gas\nwith the Music Hall building. It w ilfbe\nremembered that the Elm Street front of\nHorticultural Hall is about three feet\nabove the level of the part used for the\ncascade anil exhibit of plants. Into this\nraised portion Mr. Hogan went boldly\nwith a wrench and lantern, but he had\nscarcely disappeared from view' when a\nmost unearthly yell wis heard, and tho\npoor plumber without lantern, hat or\ntools, rushed out to where the astonished\nWise and his assistants stood. Hogan's\nhair stood up like bristles on the fretful\nporcupine, and his eyes rolled with such\nan expression of terror that the other\nmen shrank from him.\nMr. Wise, thinking the man frightened\nwithout cause, undertook to explore the\ncavern and beard the monster in his den,\nbut he was only absent a few seconds,\n made quicker time in reaching day-\nlight than Hogan. He staid long enough,\nhowever, to lind out that the reptile was\nan alligator, and at a rapid glance seemed\nto measure four feet in length. Here\nthen, was the alligator which was sup-\nposed to be lost, and Hogan had found\nhim. It had probably crawled into this\nretreat and had hibernated in the moist\nmarshy ground. The food which Mr.\nAlligator had indulged iu probably con-\nsisted of rats and small bugs and insects.\nAt any rate he is still alive and has in-\ncreased his length during his mysterious\nabsence about two feet. But there seems\nto be a dispiMition to let him severely\nalone, as the gas has not yet been con-\nnected. Wise and Hogan declare they\nare satisfied to let him slay. The inge-\nnuity of man will probably capture him\nat last, and with tho help of one huu-d re-
a3fc1f13b4ddb2680c2a1a92c723cfc2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.9795081650982 41.681744 -72.788147 cases begun under such procedure\nthe clerk may, on application and\nfor cause shown, issue writs of at-\ntachment on property as in causes\nbegun by writ and complaint.\n"Sec. 2 . In any cause so entered\nIn the 'Small Claims' docket by any\nplaintiff, any other party to the\ncause may require the same to be\ntransferred to the regular docket and\nproceed according to the usual rules\nof practice by filing in court, prior\nto the date on which he shall have\nbeen notified to appear, a claim for\nsuch transfer accompanied by his\naffidavit stating that he believes in\ngood faith that he has a defense to\nthe action and setting forth the\ngrounds of such defense and, in an\nappropriate case, that he desires a\ntrial b jury. He shall, at the same\ntime, pay into court the amount of\nthe usual Jury fee, if he shall intend\n claim a jury trial, and the amount\nof the usual entry fee. The cause\nmay thereupon be tried upon the\naforesaid statement on the docket,\nor upon written pleadings, if the\nsame be ordered by the court in its\ndiscretion, and such cause shall be\nplaced upon a privileged list for\nspeedy trial. In any cause so in-\nstituted and not transferred as afore-\nsaid, all parties shall be deemed to\nhave waived the right to trial by Jury\nand there shall be no right of appeal,\nwrit of error or other review of the\njudgment, but the judgment of the\ncourt shall be final and conclusive;\nprovided, in cases where the losing\nparty shall file affidavit with the\nclerk of the court that the judgment\nhas been obtained by fraud, an ap-\npeal, writ of error or other review\nshall be allowed as heretofore per-\nmitted under existing laws.\n"Sec. 3 .
24c904d17556c98ecd5d97899a5772b9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.2123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 K<ffsar*«SS\niterday morning at 10 o'clock.\nfa the ca»c of toe Wheeling Gas Con\nny m. the CUy of Wheeling, in chaj\npy, on motion of the plaintiff" it «u o\nred that Daniel C. List, the Receiver\nis Court, pay to the said Wheeling Gi\nimpany the iumof money paid Into h\nndk, pursuant to the order made in th\nuse on the 25th of November, 1871, wit\nb interest accrued thereon, leas the taxi\nid thereon and two per cent thereo\nmmission to said Beceiver.\nAdjourned to Court in course.\nCounty Court.Judge Cochran. Tt\nmnty Court met yesterday morning\ne usual hour and resumed the exam\nlion of the Fitzpatrick-Crawford ud(\nne," the particulars of which were give\nyesterday mornings brrcLUoxatcE\nftcr hearing theeviaenceof about thirl\nitnesses ana the arguments of six lav\nr», the jury retired to their chambi\nid soon after with a verdict\nvor of defendants.\nJohn A. Crawford, by his father, M.\nawford, then brought an sction again\n>hn Fitxpat rick, suing for damages doi\nm by being bitten by defendant's do\nbe case was put to trial before the fa\nwingjury: J. E. Hughes, J. D. Stanto\n'. McK. Day, E. B. Young, W. F. Pete\nn, W. A. Curtis, John J. Jacob. A. I\nritt, P. E . Pieruon, Wm. Marsh, Gc\nracey, Si. J . nunter. aiessrs.uoou ar\nrootU appeared for plaintiff, and llu\nird and Cracraft for defendant. Aboi\nlirtjr witnesses wore in attendance, ti\najority of whom reside in Greene com\n, Pa., who were summoned to prove t)\nlaracter and rcputatUn of the do\niveral witnesses were examined, and ti\niai will be resumed this morning. TI\nm attracts considerable attentiou, ai:\ne court room is generally crowded wil\nlectators.
1dd259cfb942c6c4f332c259c2858c65 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.3219177765093 37.92448 -95.399981 SiKoi'H, Popomoko City, Md. For\nsale by Campbelht Bturell.\nSupt. Webb of the Missouri Pacific\nwas herein his private car Tuesday,\nlooking uvui the ground and mak-\ning notes ol the necessities for a new\ndepot. The company lias already of-\nfered to put iu a new depot here to ac-\ncommodate its increasing business\naud it is to be hoped thnt .Mr. Webb\nwill besoailbcted by the sight of the\npresent Inadequate quarters t hut he\nwill open up lu good style.\nSeth I turtle 1 , who has held down\nthe Job of Farmer at the Hutchinson\nRelurm school, leturued home Mon-\nday, his place having been tilled by\nanother man. He was nppomte t by\nGovemor Leedy, the position being\ncreated by that administration, he\nreturns to his old haunts hale autl\nhearty and says he has nothing to\ncomplain ol, although another man\nwas appointed tu his Job,\nMr. Claiborne will break ground\ntills week for his sorghum mill,\nlhls means that every farmer with\nin the reach ol lola wiio wants to\nmake a sure addition to his Income\nand to the comfirt of his family shuiild\nplant a patch ot sorghum. Mr. Clai\nborne's now mill will bo the best that\nmoney can liny, and will turn o.it as\nhigh grade syrup as lt;is possible to\nuiake;from Kansas sorghum.\nDied, at the home other sister, Mre.\nJames Simpson in lola, at KMO p. m.\nluesdaj, April -- 5, I MM), Mis. James\nSuarr, in the 70th yer of her age.\nThe funeral services were conducted\nfrom the house, corner of Madison\navenue ami Walnut street, Thursdav\nafternoon at 3:30, Rev. H. M.M. Tudor\nolllciatiiig. Mis. Snarr has not ben\nwell for sonte time and her death wa\nnot unexpected. She bus made her\nhome In lola for a number of years\nand has a wide circle jf friends who\nwill be deeply grieved lo learu of her\ndeath.
048baf69f70f17c8acdfe74343055582 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.7136985984273 58.275556 -134.3925 And so Alaska holds out opportuni¬\nties for everyone. It is «i count ry not\nalone for the miner and prospector, but\nfor the merchant, farmer and railroad\nbuilder, and :i fairyland for the tourist-\non pleasure bent.\nOne of the great highways of Alaska\nis the Yukon river, more than 2,500\nmiles in length. In the summer months\nthe vessels of the British Yukon Navi¬\ngation Company ply between White\nhorse and Dawson, carrying thousands\nof tons of provisions and supplies to\nthe interior. From Dawson the steam¬\ner lines extend to Fairbanks and be¬\ntween Dawson and St. Michael the\nNorth American Transportation &\nTrading Company iias its fleet of river\npackets handling tho freight shipments\nfor tho mining districts.\nJune 1 always witnesses the depar-1\nture of the ocean steamships from So-\nattle for the Nome gold fields. During\nthe winter months the ice lloes from\nthe Arctic close in the port and navi-\ngatiou is at an end. The steamer lines,\nall pioneers in the Alaskan trade, are\nfactors in the progress of Alaska 3r:d\nthe best vessels in the ileet of the\nWhite Star Steamship Company, North¬\nwestern and Pacific Coast Steamship\nCompanies are placed in the \nSea trade during the months of June,\nJul}*, August, September and October\nof each year. The service to Valdez,\nSeward, Katalla and points on the West¬\nern coast is furnished by two big lines,\nthe Alaska Coast Company and the\nNorthwestern Steamship Company,\nsuccessors of the Alaska Commercial\nCompany During a period of twenty\nyears this company alone paid the Un¬\nited States government nearly $7,000,-\n000 for its rental of the Pribylof islands\nand a tax on all seal skins taken. This\nsum nearly amounts to the total pur-!\nchase price of £7,200,000 paid tor Alaska\nto Russia in 1S67. The betterment of\ntransportation facilities has been in\nkeeping with the general progress of\nthe country and at the present time the\nshipyards of Seattle are turning out\nbig steel vessels, some fpr the passen¬\nger trade, while others are great freight¬\ners built to carry supplies to the dis¬\ntrict and return ladeu with valuable\nshipmeuts of ore, salmon and other\nexports of the North.\nProminent men in every walk of life,\ngovernment officials and tourists from\nevery part of the globe, havo visited <\nAlaska and all return with many words\nof praise for the district. There is such
0503012b211af1817fd9a1599ab4f837 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.4685792033495 40.832421 -115.763123 Sweituater atntiou. The Appeal says:\nThe robin rs leveled shotguns at the\nI cad of Cambridge, the driver aud\nordered him to throw down the box.\nThe box containing nearly #l,l«)0 wa>\npitched down. Tbe passengers consist\n"K of E 11. Shew, XI Klussetidorf. Mr.\nSungcut, Mot. Casa and Mr. llowt,,\nwere ordered out, placed in the road and\ntnado to stand in a lino while they held\ntheir hands. One of the road agents\nthen went through tbe crowd while other\nheld a shotgun ,at their heads. Six\n» tches were taken and s-nall amonnU\nif money. Tbe stage and passengers\nwere allowed to procaod.\nOn Wednesday afternoon as I)r.\nOazlett wag coming from Como, be met\nwith a severo accident which came very\nnear proving fatal. lie had just passed\na bend in tbo road and *.» coming down\nhill, when be came upon a mule walking\nin the road ahead. lie did not\ncheek bis horses as he supposed the\nmule would tnru out, but when within\na It w yards of the animal he discovered\nthat it was sick aud lame and could not\n^et out of tbo way. Jnsl then a Chinese\nwood wagon came in behind bini\ndrawn by a six-hor>e team, which were\ncoming at full gallop. The leaders\ncame i-mashiiig into his carriage, turn\nlog it over on him aud kicking it to\npieces. He was thrown into a ditch\nuloi-g side of the road while (he wood\nteam passed on, tbe driver bating lost\nconl rol of the horses. About half an\nhour afterwarda I'ark Karnes came\nalong, aud finding the Doctor brought\nhtm to tbe city. He was senseless\nwhen picked up. aud badly bruised\nabout the legs and face. Internal in¬\njuries vero at first feared, but at last\naccounts be waa doing much betteer.
b5ffa63c73f7486056d22c90e14022e2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0452054477423 39.745947 -75.546589 Ind not hern -uplcclcd In experiment. Fifty-ninth Pioneers, be said from all\nThe building of the Kennelt pike has] reports they acquitted themselves\nbeen watched with Interest by high- most creditably Since May of Util!.\nengineers and has assisted in | the principal work of the adjutant\nsôlving manv road problems In Ibis I generals office has been collecting\nparticular class of construction. On j data concerning the soldiers, sailors\nsmne sections, the concrete roadway and marines from Delaware who\nwas constructed In two longitudinal served In the World War, and In as-\nslrlps, each twelve feet In width and] slating them and their dependents In\nparallel to the center tine. The results : settling claims against the United\nobtained would seem to Indicate that Slates In addition tn this, the Slate\nIn pavements of twenty-four feet or I medals hy the General As-\nover. belter surface results may be ! semhly to be presented to the Dela-\nobtained by carrying on the work In; ware ans. approximately 10,000, who\nthis way, rather than by constructing served In Hie late war were, by dlrer-\nthe pavement In one wide strip of; tlon of the Stale Medal Committee,\ntwenty-four feel In width, certainly at I prepared for distribution at the ad-\nIcast when hand-Anleb 1« used. The jutant generals office. In this work,\nreason for this is that more stability r,aPtaln Hcnrv G. Parker, the report\nesn be secured In the forms and rut-1 s«vs. was energetic and diligent,\nting template on the narrower suraee : The records of service of those who\nroads, and thus the finish can he held served In the late war are being re­\nin closer control.
0c24fe5ac689f7cff3bc918bc6ce75fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 tioner in this case, who was in 1878 one ba\nf the Judges of election for a certain preint\nin the city of Cincinnati, was indicted t),\ni the United States Circuit Court for the1\nouthern District of Ohio for violation of u«\nae duty imposed by the laws of the State jw\nn him as such Judge in the Congreesiou- u ,\n1 election held in October of that year.\nit the February terra, 1879, of said court\ne was tried and convicted upon the in- ^\nictment and sentenced to twelve months' t0\ntnprisonment aud to pay a One of $200 and\noats. He now petitions this court for a m\niischarge upon a writ of habeas corpus ^\nn the ground that the statutory pro- cr\nisions under which he wasindicted, were iA\ni)valid aud the United States Circuit j},\nJourt bad no jurisdiction in the premises. 4,\nt is here maintained by counsel in be- J\ntalf of the petitioner that the Circuit m\nJourt was wuhout jurisdiction for the\neason that although the violation of a 0I\nluty imposed by tiro State may be an w\nitFense cognizable under the authority of u,\nhe Slate it can never bo a crime cognizable w\nLuder authority of the United States as pi\nt ought to be under article 3,\nection 2 of the Conbtitution in order [q\no give the Federal court jurisdiction. \nIt is admitted that Congress may, under pt\nmicle 1, section 4, of the Constitution, m\nIter the regulation prescribed by a State\n^egislaturo relative to the manner of hold» th\nng elections for representatives, but since tb\nhe regulation has been altered it remains j,\nState law and does not become a Federal Ka\negulation. It mu«t be enforced by tho\nItate and not the Federal agencies. All\nhat Congress has done, however, in seeion\n6515 of the Revised Statutes is to add\npeualtyfor the violation of the States ..\nwn regulation, and this, counsel main- ar\ntin, is unconstitutional, because it ob*\niously exceeds the power vested by ju\nhe Constitution iu the Federal Gov- |0\nnent for punishment for the violation =\nt the law of Ohio cannot in the uature n\n! things be the means of enforcing obe* J\nlience to any federal statute. ItTa ar* aj\nued, furthermore, in section 5,511, Re*\nised Statutes, that it is unconstitutional "\nlecause it attempts to punish State offi*\nera for official acts and omissions. State\nifficere as such cannot, it is claimed, be re* ot\ntuired to perform federal duties or to be u\nmuiahed for their nonperformance in\nlehaif of the United States. It la .\ntruued j C\nFirst.That Congress has full and un- k\nlualitied power to regulate the manner of\niolding elections for members thereof.
035763f37e3ac5caef4ad0e5d2c3cf96 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.8702185476118 40.735657 -74.172367 mortgaged premises.\nBy virtue of the above stated writ of fieri\nfacias, to me directed, I shall expose for sale\nby public vendue, at the Court House, In\nNewark, on Tuesday, the tenth day of De-\ncember next, ut two o'clock p. m.. all that\ntract or parcel of land and premises situ-\nate. lying and being In the City of Newark,\nEssex County. New Jersey:\nBeginning in the westerly line of Boston\nstreet at the northeasterly corner of Cath-\narine A. Smith's line, which is known as\nlot number forty on a map of Gardner and\nExall property, and from thence running\nwesterly along the line of said Catharine\nA. Smith's line to a point midway between\nBoston and Richmond street; thence north-\nerly along midway line thirty feet; thence\neasterly parallel with the first described\nline ninety feet ten Inches, more or less, to\nthe line of Boston street aforesaid; thence\n the line of said street thirty feet to\nthe place of beginning.\nThis conveyance is made subject to a right\nof way and a perpetual right and privilege\nof light and air granted to Moritz Pollack,\nhis heirs and assigns, hy deed dated June 1,\n1903, and recorded in the office of the Regis-\nter of Essex County In book H-36 of deeds\nfor said county, on page 591. in and to an\nalley way about seven feet three inches in\nwidth in front and seven feet one inch in\nwidth in the rear on the northerly side of\nthe above described premises and running\nthe entire depth thereof, and is also made\nsubject to the right of the adjoining prop-\nerty on the south to stand on two inches of\nthe said lot above mentioned on the south\nof the same as long as the present adjoin-\ning building on the said south remains\nstanding
1fc5a386d75b278bd09a4579f7cfb5ee THE ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.7246575025367 35.084103 -106.650985 The undersigned, a minority of the\ncommittee on credentials, respectfully\nreport that they are compelled to dis\nsent from the report of the majority of\nsaid committee, with reference to the\ncredentials of the delegates from the\ncounties of Rio Arriba and Socorro, A.\nfor the following reasons:\nIn Rio Arribi county, tne under\nsigned find that a convention was duly\ncalled bv Luceano de llenera, one of\nthe members of the central executive ro\ncommittee of the Republican party for\nsaid county, by notices dated August\n19th, to be held August 25, 1882, at\nChamita, a point within one mile of a\ndepot and station on the Denver & Rio\nGrande railway, that said point is\nnearest the centre of population in\nsaid county, and the most remote parts of\nsaid county are connected with said\npoint by said railroad, or are in close\nproximity to said railroad, and by it\nthe people therefrom could easily reach\nsaid point or holding said convention;\nthat all other points in said county,\n a few very small settlements,\nare within one day's ride on horseback\nof said place of holding said conven\ntion; that Pedro Ignacio Jaramillo\nwrote a letter from El Rito, which was\nread at said convention, requesting jr.,\nthat it be adjourned to meet at El Rito\nwhere he resided, a distance or about\nforty miles from the place of holding\nsaid convention and on one side of the\ncentre of population of said county\nand inconvenient to any railroad; that\nthe two parties who were before the\ncommittee on behalf of said conven\ntion resided within four miles each of\nthe place of holding said convention, of\nand had not been away from their\nhomes during the time between the\ndate of the call and the time of hold-\ning the convention; that as they are\ninformed and believe the peaple of\nsaid county generally had fnll notice\nof said call, and that there was quite a\nlarge attendance at the same; that\nthere was no inconvenience or coni -Dlai- nt
132c1aa701aeaf2d3672d7f8e57ea136 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2068492833587 40.063962 -80.720915 Some satirical persons pretend to bo\nvery much afraid that tbe handsome\npersons und dresses of the uctresses who\nrepresented Madame Tallien aud other\nfashioimble ladies of the day, will roll\nthe tide of fashion more and more, in\nthe direction of the classic modes of\nthat period, when, it is well known, la¬\ndies, to bo classic and Athenian, went\nabout almost nude, and displayed an\nundue portion of the charms nature dis¬\npenses to the female sex. This is not\nneeded, for to turn from pnrtic«ilur«otr-\nces and/etas to the general fashion of\nthe present mouth, it is impossible to\nimagine greater latitude in the wuv of\ndress and display than is now the case.\nDresses are cut so low as to resemble\nmere bauds across tho body.the rest\nis made up of tulle and beads and pearls,\nand as the matter of sleeves, these have\ndisappeared altogether, the trimming\nonly remaining, fastened by a cameo,\nor a loop of ribbons or beads, This ex-\nnggeration (not in the very best of taste)\nlias led to the adoption of a light tulle\nscarf, either simple or spungled with\nsilver, tar crystal beads, which is tied\nrouud the throat and thrown off in the\n of the evening.\nTho hair is worn in all sorts of ways,\nbut chiefly iu quantities of small loose\ncurls, fulling over the front liair, and\nringlets at the back. When bands are\nworn, these are waved, and the hair\ndrawn away from the temples, while\nrows ot stiff curls, kept in place by\nlong pins, replace tho chignon at the\nbuck. Cornbs quite straight at the top,\nund with chains und bulls depending\nfrom them, are worn, both in gold- aud\nsilver,steel not being nearly so muelr|\nused. Flowers seem to be out of fash-\nion, but green leaves of all sorts, velvet\nornaments, and above all, chains "of\nsilver nnd gold of the style called a la\nDeuriton, ure nil the rage. These are\nplaced on the bend, fastened at the sides,\nand huug down on either side of the\nneck, till fastened to tbe top of the\ndress, after forming a necklet round the\nthroat. Tbe same mode is adopted with\ncrystal beads and ornaments which]\nstill continue in vogue. Coats, or rather\nbasquines, forming coats, are worn,\nboth high and low, and In the latter.\ncase are trimmed with lace, and often\nwith rows of green leaves and drops of\ncrystal.
32e0097200615476b37fc9dc4b86520a THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.392076471109 40.618676 -80.577293 The Amoskeag Company located their mills in\nManchester to utilize the water-power of Amos­\nkeag Falls in 1831. For decades these mills made\n• Manchester in America the counterpart of Man­\nchester of England. The company obtained ex­\nclusive control of the water-power of the Merrimac\nriver for its locality and controlled large land hold\nings which drew it into real estate promotion. The\ngrowth of Manchester to a town of 80,000 was di­\nrectly related to the operation of the mills. The\nmills themselves were not owned by local persons.\nControl over its stock was owned by merchants\nand financiers of Boston. The treasurer of the\nBoard of Directors, who was their active represen­\ntative, had his office in Boston. Responsibility\nfor production was delegated to an agent—a sala­\nried official who lived in Manchester and was di­\n responsible to the Director. The mill was\nhandicapped by remote control and absentee\nownership. The profits from production went to\nthe absentee owners whose concern for Manches­\nter was related only to their income. The directors\ndiverted to themselves the profits from wartime\nhigh prices and put through financial reorganiza­\ntions that drained away all revenues by increasing\nobligations to pay to security owners. Then faced\nwith competition from cotton production in the\nlow-wage mills of the South together with freight\nrates of raw materials and the depression begin­\nning in 192!), alter a manufacturing life of 107\nyears, the company applied for a liquidation-order\nwhich granted by the court and put into effect\nwithout inquiry or concern as to its effect on the\ntown of Manchester or on the more than 17,000\nworkers attached to its payroll.
347b4aa8def698b5d311da95d90a20e0 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.8265027006173 41.004121 -76.453816 The president causes it to be an\nnounced that lie will not take the\nstump for Taft, for the reason that\nit is not necessary. It would have\nbeen more truthful t say that\nTaft's cause would not be promot-\ned by it: for the general opinion we\nbelieve to be that it needs all the\nhelp it can get, and the president is\nvery much interested in getting it\nfor him. He is taking a very ac-\ntive part in supervising the Repub-\nlican campaign, and is now reputed\nto be intent upon promoting the f-\ninancial end of it. The presidential\ninfluence of his direction is very\ngreat, and we may rely upon its\nbeing used vigorously in this cam-\npaign, as it was in the last.\nThe current is setting so strongly\ntoward Bryan that all the people\nsee it and we may be sure that the\npresident does. He may be wise\nif he relinquishes purpose to\ntraverse the country in behalf of\nTaft through the persuasion that\nhas been brought to him that this\nwould do his candidate far more\nharm than good. He does all that\nhe can do for him in showing his\nfollowers that he earnestly desires\nhis election. There is no doubt\nthat they are all persuaded of this,\nand that all who can be influenced\nby his opinion will vote for Taft.\nAnd there are, without doubt, very\nmany. There are a vast number\nof people who believe that he is\na great and wise man, and that his\ncounsel is good to follow. There\nare people who do not know, doubt-\nless, as much as they think they\ndo, or they would not have so ex-\nalted an opinion of Roosevelt's po-\nlitical integrity and wisdom. He\nwould not be likely to increase his\npower over them personally going\nabout among them proclaiming his\nopinion.
10f14febacd11effe4ea8870b2c1ff1c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.9959016077212 40.063962 -80.720915 I.vdmnapoljn, Doe. 21)..l'or fourteen\nyears State Geologist Collett has beeu vx>\nIxirimoilUug upon a theory that tiio best of i\niron, when subjected to continuous strain,\nwould undergo changes in its strueturo\nWhich would, aftor n tlmo, render its uso\ndangerous, and that theso structural\nchanges were tho explanation o( many\notherwise inexplicable accidents, particu- c\nlarly to railway bridges. Ho has lately fl\nundertaken a systematic investigation, j\nwhich has resulted in n coniirniullon of ]\nhis theory. For experiment he took from\ntlio Wubash dam, at Delphi a number of\nbolts und spikes, which were, when tho\ndam wob constructed, of the best quality 11\nof malleable bar iron, as is shown by tho J\nbattering of the head wlicn they were i»ut i\ninto the structure.\nOf theso bolts and spikes he found that\n percent of tho.whole number were as.\nweak as cast iron, while 90 percent of\nthoso which were near the bottom of the\ndam were worthless; yet, of those which\nwera rotten, tho tins vlinro in«nrlinl In\nimmovable rocks were fibrous and strong.\nWhen broken they showed polished ends\nto the connecting fibre#, indicating that\nthe continued vibrations of many years tl\nhad polished ami rounded the points of \\\nfibrous structure.- A similar effect is found\nin "the partings" or "homjbacks" in coal 11\nmines, which become polished and striated\nby the continuous quiver and motion of nt\nthe crust of the earth. Dr. Col let t says 0j\nthat all car axles, after a reasonable run,\nbecome crystallized two-thirds of the as\nlength from'the hub and one-third from w\nthe outside extruuiitv, rendering them ai\nworthless. is
13c223ce54d110c7fd93f763ce198de6 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.2671232559615 39.745947 -75.546589 classes and quarterly collections^1,869 -\n11 ; total for missions from church and\nSunday cchool, $925.44 ; total amount\ncollected during the year for all pur­\nposes, $5,679.53. Of the $1 860.77 col­\nlected for use of church, $1,589.92 was\npaid for pastors salary, Presiding\nElders appropriation and sundry other\nexpenses, leaving a balance in the trea­\nsury of $279.85. The other collections\nwere paid over for the objects for which\nthey were contributed.\nThe report closes as follows :\n“ Finally, I call your attention to\nthe needs of our church building. We\nhave, as you very well know, no infaut\nschool room, as other churches in this\ncity, tilted up and set apart especially\nfor the little people. The present Sun­\nday school room istco small for our\npurposes, hence we have met in the\naudience room for more than a year.\nThe audience room and the entire\nchurch is in great need of repairs.\n“ T he general plan recommended by\nthe Conference to the Board\nof Trustees, which they propose to\nexecute as soon as possible, will give\nus an infaut school room, two large\nbible class rooms seating forty or fifty\nl»ersons each, a Sunday school library\nroom, and so enlarge the present Sun­\nday school room that ample accommo­\ntions will be given. The truslooe pro­\npose no change in the present audience\nroom, except a door in the amen corner\nnext to Third stieet, through which\nwemaycomein from orgo out on\nThird street. They, however, Intend\nto fresco, paint, carpet, and upholster\nthe audience room, and further, to put\nthe whole church in good repair. The\ntrustees .have adopted a plan for raising\nthe money, and I earnestly hope every\nmember and friend of this God honored\ntemple will come to their help and\n1st in this work nntil the Lords\nhouse shall present such an appearance\nand accommodations as shall honor\nHim from whom cometh every good\nand perfect gift.
09a00784bbfdf993d49342bc319b6d94 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.0671232559614 39.756121 -99.323985 voters who participated in tbe last\nelection since the enactment of that\npartisan, unjust and unfair ballot law.\nTo take measures and decide upon a\nline of policy to circumvent tbese\nplots and machinations of our republi-\ncan opponents, we have deemed a con-\nference representing the entire mem-\nbership of our party both prudent and\nnecessary. We must decide whether\nwe will go into a triangular contest,\nthus allowing the common enemy to\ndevide and conquer us in detail and\nrendering success impossible next\nyear or for yeara to come, or whether\nwe wiil plan to continue\nwith those who have been our allies\nduring the last two national contests,\nin working for the overthrow of the\nrepublican denomination and the res-\ntoration and preservation of those\nrights privileges of which that\nparty has plotted to deprive us.\nVarious plans have been suggested\nby which we can circumvent our ad-\nversaries and the delegate conference\nwhich we have agreed to caU will un-\ndoubtedly be able to decide whether\nany of them are advisable, and in that\nway we can make our influence most\neffective for the promotion of those\nprinciples of government to which we\nare devoted. It is earnestly requested\nand desired that in each county the\nconventions to select delegates to the\ncoming conference be as largely at-\ntended as possible and that the fullest\nand freest expression as to our future\ncourse be encouraged, to the end that\nthe conference may be able to crystal-iz- e\nthe thought aud wishes of our en-\ntire membership.
4f2c893aa0be349f397b7726389fd94f CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.6753424340436 41.875555 -87.624421 John P. Harding.\nN. M . Kaufman.\nWilliam Nlendorf.\nPhilip J. McKcnnn.\nJohn Downey.\nA. J . Bnnta.\nJacob C. Lo Bosky.\nAugust Lucdcrs.\nAlbert I.urlo.\nSimon W. Strauss.\nThomas Cnrcy.\nM. Joseph.\nCornelius S. Kelly.\nJ. M . Lnvcnthal.\nOliver T. McCormlck.\nIrwin Klein.\nJoseph Grcln.\nEric Hall.\nJohn McCarthy.\nWilliam T. Maypole.\nThomas Kasperskl.\nMichael P. Byrne.\nJohn A. McGarry.\nW. K. Cochran.\n. lames Condon.\nIsaac Kelm.\nJoseph Mclncrney.\nJoseph F. Ryan.\nPoter Schneffer.\nWilliam E. Schlake.\nWilliam H. Sexton.\nA. R . Tearncy.\nDaniel Ityun.\nAid. John Powers.\nAid. Vincent Swlcfkn.\nWilliam A. Tllden.\nJoseph Holpuch.\nMnurlco Rothschild.\nPeter M. Shaughnesscy.\nS. B . Stafford.\nErnst Hummel.\nHenry F. Donovan.\nJohn Corcoran.\nFred Rhode.\nEmit Sclpp.\nRlchnrd W. Wolfe.\nIrving L. Shutnan.\nPeter S. Theurer.\nA. D. Wetner.\nJames A. Quinn.\nAlbert Nowak.\nFrank C. O'Connell.\nEdward Prlndlvllle.\nBenjamin M. Mitchell.\nOtto Spankuck.\nMichael Rosenberg.\nL. J. Milord.\nDavid Pfaelzer.\nJohn E. Owens.\nFrank Paschen.\nDr. Adam Swajkart.\nFrank J. Skala.\nB. M . Winston.\nWilliam Russell.\nWilliam J. O'Brien.\nJoseph A. Weber.\nMichael J. Prelb.\nFrank Slum.\nWilliam Rohm.\nHenry E. Ericsson.\nMorris Vohon.\nGeorge A. Tripp.\n11. F . Hubbard.\nThomas Byrne.\nWilliam Lowey.\nGeorgo W. Jackson.\nW. Szymanskl.\nM. Bernhardt.\nDr. William D. Byrne.\nChristopher J. McGurn.\nHenry Welso.\nHenry Nowak.\nPhilip Klaftor.\nMichael J. Flynn.\nD. B. Kennedy.\nG. Edward Treblng.\nCharles Barnes.\nAlbert P. Bauer.\nGust P. Bartlnek.\nPeter Brady,,\nAnthony Scbroeder.\nMelville O. Holding.\nJohn W. Bockwith.\nWilliam Brown, Jr.\nMiles J, Do vine.\nHarry Goldstein.\nJohn F. LIUls.\nCalvin B. Beach.\nPhilip J, Slobold.\nGustavus J. Tatgo,\nFrank J. Adam.\nMichael Schoenwald.\nSimon O'Donnell.\nFrank J. Selff, Jr.\nAnton J. Hojka.\nThomas F. Little.\nFrancis A. Hurley,\nHenry F. Schuborth.\nMichael L. Igoe.\nEdward J. Kelly.\nEdward O. Brown.\nRoy Keehn.
034727a946667ef8c94197f3b8bb2d0b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.828767091578 46.187885 -123.831256 The committee who met them was\nSamuel Elmore, M. M. Kotchnm and\nWade Hampton Smith, and the former\nbrought them to the Occident, where\nbreakfast was served. A ride was then\ntaken about the city and all points of\ninterest were shown, including a fine\nview from tho summit of the hill. A\nnumber of prominent citizens gave\nconsiderable information, and the\nnext on the program was a ride over\nthe Baj' Bailway. Besides the board\nand the reception committee, there\nwere in the party, M. J . Kinney,\nColonel Jame3 Taj'lor, E. A. Taylor,\nSam Tee, C. E . Bunyon, Lieut\nEdward Burr, corps of engineers in\ncharge of work at the Cascades;\nLieut O'Brien, 5th Artiller', of Fort\nCanbj; G. B. Heardt, of the corp3 of\nengineers, in charge of the jetty; Mrs.\nE. A. Weed, Mrs. J. F . Ferchen and a\nrepresentative of The Astorian.\nTho ride over the railway was very\npleasant, and the gardens of Johnson,\nthe florist, were visited, which proved\nquito" interesting to the guests, who,\nthough having seen many elaborate\ngardens, were greatly surprised when\ninformed that all the growth had been\nonly since the last half of April, or\nwithin the last six months. Beturn-in- g\nto the city, lunch was partaken of,\nand at 230nearlall tho same party\nembarked on'the government steamer\nGeorge H. A. J. Megler hav-\ning been added and M. J. Kinney re-\nmaining behind. A ride of only thirty-fiv- e\nminutes, and the wharf at Fort\nStevens was reached.\nStepping ashore, the visitors had tho\npleasure 'of seeing the huge derricks\nlift the carloads of rock from the\nbarges to the cars, then taking a seat\non an open car, the swift little engine\nsteamed up the "wharf, past tho offices\nand shops, and out on the only rail-\nroad which runs over the Pacific ocean.\nA distaneeof 20,200 feet, or nearly four\nmiles was traversed, and the train was\nstopped to allow the visitors an op-\nportunity of seeing how the rock is\ndumped from the tilting cars into the\nrushing waters below. This was de-\ncidedly interesting, for some of the\npieces of rock weigh fivo or six tons,\nand as they strike tho water they\nthrow high up into the air water and\nspra, coming down on the workmen\nlike showers of rain, compelling them\nto wear rubber clothing.\nBeturning from the voyage over the\nocean on cars, the offices and shops\nare inspected, and compliments are\ngiven by tho board at seeing how wide\na range of work is done in small\nshops. Cars and pile driver were\nmade there and all tho repairing and\nmachine jobbing is done on the\npremises.
e5d64fa7249907cd66c44b69f3661f4d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.8589040778793 41.681744 -72.788147 at the pains to break up a piece of\nrough land, and sow It with wheat;\nwould you let it lie waAe be causa\nyou could not agree what sort of a\nfence to make? Would it not be\nbetter to put up a fence that did not\nplease every one'ai fancy, rather than\nkeep disputing about It, until the wild\nbeasts came in and devoured the\ncrop? Some gentlemen say. Don't\nbe In a hurry; take time to consider.\nI say,There is a time to sow and "a\ntime to reap. We sowed our aeed\nwhen we sent men to the federal con-\nvention, now is the time to reap thef\nfruit of our labor; and if we do not\ndo it now, I am afraid we shall never\nhave another opportunity"\nthere spoke the common aense of\n common man of the Common-\nwealth. The counsel of the farmer\nfrom the country, joined with the\nresolutions of the worklngmen from\nthe city, carried the convention ftnd\nthe constitution was ratified. In the\nlight of succeeding history, who shall\nsay, that it was not the voice of th\npeople, speaking with the , voice rf\ninfmlte authority?\nThe attitude of Samuel Adams,\nWilliam SliepanJ. Jonathan Smith\nand the workingnien of Boston tc\nwant government, is worthy of ovr\nconstant emulation. They had not\nhesitated to'take up arms against\ntyranny in the llevolution, but hav-\ning established a government of the\npeople they were equally determined\nto defend and support it. They haUd\nthc usurper, whether king, or parlia-\nment, or mob, but they bowed before\nthc duly constituted authority of .the\npeople,
d270c727c617cce4192abdf0bd4d5fed DELAWARE ADVERTISER AND FARMER'S JOURNAL ChronAm 1829.5767122970574 39.745947 -75.546589 There —*|*n extensive adhesions of the ces were two items, one of one million and\natomach and liver to the surrounding parts, the other of two millions of livres. The\nI he circumstances in thts case which led first million was advanced belore our deda-\nto my giving it publicity was iu exciting ration of independence—the Kings order\ncause, which, I have no doubt, was the tight was given in May 1776. Beaumarchais was\ndress worn by tho patient previous to, and the secret agent employed by the French\naftergthe commencement of her sickness government to furnish supplies to the Colon.\nThia IS rendered nearly certain by the fact ic,_he executed that agency, and although\nthat she had never bee» seriously indisposed part of the suppliea were taken from the\nuntil the period when my account of her Kings amenais, tlie French Government\ncaae commences; and that none of those ap. were obliged to deny all in the mat-\npenrancesweredetectcdio the lungs, which ter. and Beiumsrrliuia attnallv received\naccompany consumptive disease. It is fur- from the United States some millions of li-\nther in proof of tlie same fact, that notwith- vret for these suppliea at if he had paid for\nstanding the extensive ravages of disease, the whole with his own meuna. When Dr.\nthe constitutioni steadily resisted any parti-, Fr.it,fclins accounts came to be adjusted,\ncipaliuo with the local affection; that there the three millions referred to were charged\nwas no fever in the commencement, and ve- to him while he had received but two—ho !\nry little at any period; and that, none of thr wrote hia government that he suspected\nhectical kind; and that the body was not that Beaumarchais had received the million\nmore emaciated than it probably would be in question, and that sum\nfrom an eq tal abstinence from food iu a state suspended
46c37a09884858fe0133e007142c6e66 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1873.8479451737696 43.624497 -72.518794 Court of Chancery boKau and held at Wood-\nstock, within and for tlio County or Windsor\naforesaid, on the fourth TuoHdav of Jlay, A.\nD. 1873, Charles N. Wood, uf Bridgewater, iu\n8aid County. pretsented to the said Court, hia\nt'otition. Hetting lortn in uuijstanco, tliat\nMarvin rarmonter, of uaid Woodstock, on tho\n15th day of October, A. D . 1809, dulv oxecutod\nto ono Jnmcs II. Murdock, of said Woodstock,\na Mortgago Dccd of cortain land situatcd in\nsiid Woodstock, aud described as follows :\nUeinK on Lindon Street, on the oastorly side,\nat a point llvo rods, oigbt feot and thrce inclios\nironi tuo soutueriy corner 01 lanii Deionging to\nNathan Woodbury, being his houso lot ; theuee\ncasterly to tho land of Joseph lioati, and boiug\nfivo roda from the oastorly corner of tho Baid\nWoodburv'H houso lot : thoneo aoutherly on\neaid Bean's land flvo rods ; thoneo westorly to\ntho said Linden Street ; tbenco northerly fivc\nruds to tho placo of begiuniug. \nfor the payment of three promissory notos, all\ndated Oct. 15th, 18G9. by tho said Marvin\nPannentor, duly oxecuted unto said Jamos II.\nJluruocK, anu mauo payauio to lum or ins\norder as follows : ono noto for one hundred\ndollars, in ono year ; ono noto for one hun-\ndred dollars, in two yoars ; ono uote for fifty\ndollars, in tureo years, and au witn mtoreBt\nannuallr. tho last two notes which aro now\njustly duo and owing.\nAnd lurtuer sotting :ortu tnat said rarmon-\nter lias sold and conveycd all his interest,\nright and titlo in said premises to Houry (i.\nWhite, of said Woodstock, and that Charles W.\nSayward, and Charles Fishcr, and Morris C.\n1' airbanks, all or saiu woodstocu, ciaim somo\nright, tille or interost in eaid premises.\nAnd furthor setting forth that said James\nII. Murdock, has sold and transforred said\nnoto and mortgago to tho Fotitioncr, and that\nhe is tho logal and oquitahle owner of tho\nname.
3ec3897c70a3e9c5ee7e73bb9ae441f7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1136985984272 40.063962 -80.720915 should he sought out and delivered tin.\nBecause the situation was everything to\nhim hu lmd the vanity to believe it must\nbe something to somebody.etoe.\nI'nrluittt it Wnilld not L'lntllV innnv a\ngrlstiterirtanthauhe, trfcome bade from\nthi! grave anil sue how exceeding well the\nworld ciui get along without him\nHe knew instantly thut Ills doom was\nsealed; for Instinctively he Tell that hid\nnephew had murdered him Tor his money\n. tor murder it was, as much as il he had\nplunged a knife into hlrlioart; for With the\ndoor closed ho could not live a dozen\niioun in the vault: and with Uitoortainty\not death before him, In that cold slimy\npiece hf felt that he should go mad in less\nthan half that Uoie. Already his brain\nwas In a whirl; the scenes ol Ills life gild-\ned like a panorama before tho vision of\nills Intensified \nNow lie was a boy again, anil roamed\nthrough Knglish meadows happy and free\nwith other bovsi went nutting to the\nhuzlo barrow, nnil when the gloaming\ncniuo played liiJo-und-Mck among the\nhodgMthatglrt the narrow garden 'round\nhis Ooyhotxl's home.\nTlio scene changes, and ho Is a man.a\nlover.a husband. The liulo pnrlsh\nschoolmistress, Besay Leo, will bo bla Utile\nwife, llo loads her, bluaiilog, to the low\nGothic church, and they nro ono.they\ninaa the portals ot that little Ivy covered\nchurch uuitcd lor lire. Hut now hia /ace\ndarken): deep ttrlnklea corrugate bis\nbrow; green-eyed Joalousy whispers In hi*\ncar, and hu strike* her (luwn senaelc.w at\nIds feet, then llec* from homo and ibanie,\nand leave* her.tho ono whom more than\nHod ho had Hived.to lavish her guilty\nsmiles u|»n liar high born paramour.\nYears pa*. Time softens bis leellngi;\nshe may he poof and deserted,Ibrlio
4488238f5dc1225a1cfef978540b722c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.1816939574478 39.261561 -121.016059 SnfFer not when a Care le Guaranteed In\nall state* of Secret Dleeaeea.\nPelf abuse, Nervous Debility, Evphillis in all it* stage*.\nStricture*, Gleet*, Gravel, Piabetia, Disease* of the\nKidney* and Bladder, Mercurial Rheumatism, Scrofula,\nPain* in the bones and Ankles, Disease* of the Lungs,\nThroat, No*# and Eye*, Ulr**rs upon the Body or Limb*\nCancer*. Epileptic Fit*, St. Vitus Dance, and all Diseas-\nes arising from a derangement of the sexual organ*.\nSuch as Nervous Trembling, I/»ss of Memory. J/»«* of\nPower, Geaeral Weakness, Dimness of Vision, with pecu-\nliar spots appearing before the eyes. Los* of Sight, Wake-\nfulness, Dyspepsia, Liver Diteases. Eruptions upon the\nfare, Pain in the Back and Head. F*uiale Irregularities,\nand all improper discharges of both sexea. It matters\nnot from what cause the disease originated, however long\nstanding or obstinate the ease, Rzoovzrt is Cirtiik, and\nin a shorter time than a permanent cure can be effected\nby any other treatment, even after the disease has baffled\nthe skill eminent physicians and resisted all their\nmeans of cure. The medicines prescribed are pleasant,\nwithout odor, entirely vegetable, causing no sickness, and\nfree from mercury or balsam. During fifteen year* of\npractice in Europe, the Atlantic States and California. 1\nhave rescued from the jaw* of death many thousands,\nwho, in the last stages of the above mentioned diseases,\nbad been given up to die by their physicians, which war-\nrants me in promising to the afflicted, who may place\nthemselves under my care, a perfect and speedy cure,\nprivate diseases are the greatest enemies to health, as\nthey are the first cause of Consumption, Scrofula, and\nmany other diseases, and should be a terror to the hu-\nman family. A permanent curt* is scarcely ever effected,\na majority of the cane* falling into the hands of incompe-\ntent persons, who not only tail to cure the disease, but\nruin the constitution, filling the system with mercury,\nwhich, with the disease, hastens the sufferer into a rapid\nconsumption.
bf65d0996bb659ff8d47b934cb7c28db SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1850.6616438039066 35.780398 -78.639099 not incur a debt without taking steps to\npay it off again. Why, from 1792 to 1815,\na period, of not more than twenty-fiv- e\nyears, under your glorious constitution,\nwitli your hereditary House of Lords,\nwith the Commons representing the Lords\nand not the people (hear, hear, and ap-\nplause,) we have added to our national\ndebt more than obU million pounds ster-\nling (shame, shame.) In America, they\nhave few taxes compared with what we\nhave , they have not the interest ot that\nenormous debt to pay; and they have not\nan enormous standing army and a fleet to\nscour every sea, and to bully and insVilt\non every coast (applause.) They have\nin nrmv no oreater than we Dav for in\nCanada at this moment ; and therefore\nthev are free from the interest of that\ndebt, and free from the vast amount of\nseven or eight millions, which we pay lor\nour peace armaments. And bear in Blind\nthat, although in America mere is ev-\nidence to show that eight or ten millions\nper annum is apportioned for the purpose\nof instructing the people in morality and\nreligion, there is no evidence to snow that\nthe people oi tne unitea states oi a-\nmerica are not at least as moral and re\nligious, and much belter educated, than\nthe people of this country are (heaT, bear,\nand cheers.) And they have less pau-\nperism and less crime than we have; and\nthey have less of that which is a standing.\ndisgrace to the constitution ot tnglann\nthev have less of insurrection.\nNow, it was only as I was coming here\nthat this subject of insurrection crossed\nmv mind, or else I would have made a\nlist out of what this country has been do\ning in this way for at least fifty years.\nin America mere isnoining oi tnai mnu\nNo three men in America ever met togeth\ner to denounce the government and the\nconstitution, end to say that they are not
26bcf42a5abac934ea9b1d3402004a10 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.064383529934 39.261561 -121.016059 fornia, Comity of Nevada, Township of Rough ft\nReady, ss. In Justices Court, before W. H . Hamil-\nton. By virtue of an execution to me delivered, is-\nsued out of the Court of W. H . Hamilton Esq., an\nacting Justice of tlm peace in and for the county\naforesaid, bearing date January 2d A. r>. 1861, to sat-\nisfy a judgment rendered by said Court on the hlh\ndaV of December A.n. 1860. in favor of WALTER\nWKTHEY and against BENJAMIN HOLLAND as\nprincipal and JAS. IDMJ.AND and A. J . HOLLAND\nas sureties, for the sum of forty-six dollars, for costs\nof suit. I have taken in execution and will sell to\nthe highest bidder for cash the following described\nproperty to wit: One set el mining claims known as\nthe Manasco claims, situated on Mooney Flat, said\nclaims being four in one hundred and twenty\nfeet front, and four hundred feet deep, being block\nclaims. Also one set mining claims known as the\nGerman Hall claims, situated on .Mooney Flat. AIm\none House and lot in the town of Moouey Flat, situ-\nated on the west side of the street ill the south part\nof the town, tho same being now occupied by defend-\nants. Notice is hereby given that I will expose to\npublic sale all the above described property, to the\nhighest bidder for cash, in front Trails and Otis\nstore in Mooney Flat, on Friday tho 26th day of Jan-\nuary a. n . 1861, between tho hours of 10 oclock a.\nM. and 2 oclock I. M.\nSaid property taken as the joint property of the\nsaiil Benjamin Holland, James Holland and A J.\nHolland, to satisfy the above demands and accruing
162ee555248e0ae48de8295288e1eda1 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.2260273655504 40.832421 -115.763123 Moth 4«riieroUH And Just.\nThe Congressional Committee on\nF.ducutiou and Labor has reported a\nbill which provides that tho net pro¬\nceeds of sales of public binds shall be\nset apart aud forovor consecrated to\nthe purpose of free education for the\npeoplo. A provision of tho bill re¬\nquires that the Secretary of the Treas¬\nury, on or before tho Ulst of July of\neach your, shall apportion to the sev¬\neral States aud Territories upon the\nbasis of tlioir population between five\nand twonty-ono years of age, nuch net\nproceeds, providing that after five\nyears, one-half of such not proceeds\nand after ton years, the wholo of tbo\nsame shall form an educational fund,\nthe mouey to bo iiivestod in United\nHtuto bonds bearing not less than fonr\nper cent, interest, both principal and\nintorcst payable nlono iu coin.\nThe money derived from tho sale of\ntho public lands could not bo \nto a better purpose tliau that proposed\nin thin bill, And it is to be ttinceroly\nhoped that It mny benouio a law.\nTheso lan Is aro fast passing into tho\nbauds of privato corporations and In¬\ndividuals, without spelling to nny ap¬\npreciable extent tho National Treasury,\nand iu a few years mora this source of\nrevenue will have been exhausted, and\ntho ouly means by which tho liberal\nsystem of education now in voguo in\nAtucrioA con bo maintained, will t<o ex¬\nhausted. Tho importance of educa¬\ntion as a factor iu preserving free gov¬\nernment is too well understood to noed\nany couiineut, aud tho necessity of\nproviding a perpetual fund for that ex«\nelusive purposo, bo oro it shall become\ntoo late, cloarly demonstrates tho wis¬\ndom of this bill which should rcoeive\nthe mi justincd support of svory uau\nwho has at heart tho welfare and safety\nof tho Hepnblio,
21fde3b61a76d344bf28434bef08a0ca THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.9630136669202 40.063962 -80.720915 During the recent trial of Mrs. J. C. Good¬\nwin, at E&ston, Pa., for fraud, she gave the\nfollowing account of hertelf:\nMrs. Goodwin testifies that she Is the wife\nof John 0. Goodwin; was married in New\nOrleans; that she came from Oleveland to\nEaston; that she went to board at the Frank¬\nlin Hons*; that she arranged with Mr. Case\nto pay her board monthly; that she rang one\nnJgbt for ioe water, and the call was an¬\nswered by Mr. Case instead of the porter;\nMr. Case made an insulting proposal to tier\nand she ordered him ont of the room; that\non the following Monday she went to Mr.\nNorton's to sacure rooms.\nOn cross-examination, witness said she was\nborn in New Orleans; that her maiden name\nwas Eleunora .Russell; hermother's name was\nSarah Gray; that her husband was a book¬\nkeeper; that they lived there six months and\nthen went to Mobile, ufter that Cleveland;\nthat her husband accompanied her a short\ndistance on her way to Easton; that he\nhad been in Eastou before she came,\nand had written ssveral letters to her from\nEaston; that her husband staid in New\nOrleans, was sick with consumption, and\nshe went to Corry to commence busln» ss as u\ndrersmaker; that she never went by theenme\nofMattie Campbell; that she never wusln\nWaverly, New York; never was in Wheeling.\nWest Virginia; never wks in Springfield,\nMass.; that her child wes born in Mobile; not\nborn in prison at Cortland; tnat no person\nbad called on her since Bhe hm been In\nprison and recognized her ai Pauline Dnd-\nley; that she does know that there is a war¬\nrant from Wheeling, West Virginia, for her,\nbut that It is a mistake; that she never was in\nSpringfield, Men., as Pauline Dudley.;\nNotwithstanding her ability as a perjurer,\nshe wes convicted by the iury.
04ce04f9eb8b1bac713287821d7529b4 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1900.2616438039067 37.92448 -95.399981 b.indcd cup In iccugnitioii of the con-\nstant chi or from the host ashoie and\nthe throng of blue skills on the fore-\ncastle head. Then arose another shout,\nas ii vetciiin officer, in the uudiess uni-\nform of a geneiul, appealed upon that\nHiicied bound, and, bowing to the\ncrowd, was escorted by the captain to\nthe end overlooking the animated scene\nbelow; and then the signal was given,\ntin heavy lines were cast oil' and hauled\nhwlftlj In, the massive screw begun\nslowly to churn the waters nt the stern,\nfind gently, almost impeiceptlbly nt\nflrbt, the Queen slid noiselessly nloug\nthe edge of the dock, to the accompani-\nment of a little volley of flowers and\ngarlands tossed fioni eager bunds, nnd\nn cheer of godspeed from the swarm of\nupturned faces. And then there up-\nrose another shout, n shout of mingled\nmerriment, surpiisc nud applause;\nfor nil on u sudden thciedurtcd up the\nstulrwny from the crowded promenade\ndeck to the sacred peich above, defiant\nof I he lettered vvnrnlng: "Passengers\nare not allowed upon the a\ndainty vision in filmy white, and all In\nthe next moment there appeared nt the\ngeneral's side, smiling, bowing, blow-\ning kisses, waving ndieux, nil sparkle,\nanimation, radiance nud rejoicing, a be-\nwitching little figure, in tho airiest,\nloveliest of summer toilets. The lied\nCross nurses on the deck below looked\nat one nnotlicr nnd gasped. Two brave\nnrmy girls, wives of wounded oflleers in\nthe Philippines, who by special dispen-\nsation were milking the voyage on the\nQueen, glanced quickly at each other\nand said nothing audible. The gen-\neral, lifting his cap, but looking both\ndeprecation nnd embarrassment, fell\nbuck nnd gave his plnee nt tho white\nrnil to tho new arrival, nnd colored high\nwhen she suddenly turned nnd took his\narm. The captain, trying not to see her\nor to appear conscious of this infrac-\ntion of a stringent rulo nnd invasion of\nhis dignity, grew redder ns ho shouted\nrapid orders nnd swung his big, beauti-\nful ship well out Into the stream. The\nguns of the Hcnnlngtou boomed n deaf-\nening salute as
ffb8551128ea237b397b1dc07ce14dd1 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.7219177765094 31.960991 -90.983994 In assuming the control of the HeiuI.d, the\npresent proprietor set forth in a brief paragraph,\nthe motives and principles by which he would\nbe (Toverned, as the Editor of a public journal.\nCommencing at the dullest and most “nfaVora;\nbie season of the year, and some time before the\nclose of tho present volume, we deemed ad­\nvisable to defer issuing a prospectus until by\nthe publication of four or five numbers, our\nreaders might judge correctly of opr course and\nability, and approve or reject at pleasure.\nThe first volume of our paper is now nearly\ncompleted, and the success which bas attended\nit, warrants the assertion that the Herald is\npermanently established. In the second volume\n(soon to commence) it is our intention to carry\nout the principles avowed in our first number—\nto make the HKRALminteresting and useful as a\ncounty paper, by devoting a large portion of its\ncolumns to general news and agricultural mat­\nters. So far as politics are concerned, we shall,\nas before stated, advocate and support \ndoctrines and Whig principles to the best of our\nhumble ability, and until the ensuing November\nelection, we shallopenly war against the odious\ndoctrine of repudiation—believing the defence\nand protection of our State honor paramount to\nand all other considerations—ashamed as we\nof the degraded position which our State\nnow occupies—of the contempt and scorn hurl­\ned upon her by honest men of every political\ncreed; but sustained and cheered by the belief\nthat the moral honesty of our citizens is yet un­\ntainted and pure—that they have been misled\nand blinded by designing men, we shall spare no\neffort in our exertions to enlighten, instruct\nand warn them of the dangerous consequen­\nces of this dishonest doctrine—joining ourselves\nwith the patriot band now warring manfully a-\ngainst it, we will aid, so far as in us lies.in tear­\ning away the veil from this hideous Mokan-\nnah, who, in the sacred name of Democracy,\nhas reared the altar of Repudiation among us,\nand ealls upon us to worship at his unholy\nshrine.
0737e37e6485fc8842be892b8aa56b02 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.5040983290326 40.063962 -80.720915 tirnai>ntilir>n in Detroit would be more 1\nvigorous than one would be in Chicago.\n"Yes." he said to a reporter, "I will\ngo back to Detroit and stand my trial.\nThere in really nothing against me. I\nknow nothing of half the women they\ntalk of and whitfeYfitmy relations with\nthe other half may have been I can truly\nsay that they will not be recognized by\nthe law. Still, I have enemies there.\nOne man will probably shoot mo on\nsight. They can't protect me from him.\nJiut if r escape hi in I will stand my trial.\nShould 1 be acquitted, well and good.\nShould 1 be convicted they, can never\nmake me work in the penitentiary. I\nalways have a last resource and you may\nbe sure I will avail myself of it.\n"You will not commit suicide?"\n"Yes, sir, I will. I would rather die\na hundred times than be sent to prison\nfor no crime." The lirst known of <\nBrown's bigamous tendencies was in «\nlooo, nuen ne, aireuuy pussesBuu ui ui\nleast one loving wife, married Miss Ida\nKelly, n pretty young woman living on r,\nJefferson avenue, Detroit. This was in p\nthe of the year, and u few inonts lu- e\nter he deserted" her and went to Muske- h\ngon, Mich., where ho was married in V\nJanuary, 1880, to a lady of that town, n\nwhoso name cannot he ascertained. Miss c\nKelly followed him and caused his ar- \\\\\nrest, when he was sent from court at o\n. Saginaw to the Penitentiary at Jackson, n\nwhere ho served nine months, hi\nand during his term of im- c<\nprisonment made an unsuccessful at- si\ntempt to end his life by cutting his 8t\nthroat with a razor. Me inflicted a had >v\nwound. It was early in November, 1880,\nwhen he was released from the peniten- U\ntiary, and all trace of him was lost until\nJanuary 15, 1887, when lie made his ap- II\npearanee in Pontiac, Mich., and live S\ndays later married Miss Annie M. Hazle \\\nof that town. From thoje lie lied to X\nDetroit, closely followed by Miss Ilazle's n\nfriends, including a brother, who is the II\nman who threatened to shoot Drown on A\nsight, and the fear of whom made the o\nprisoner unwilling to go back to Mich- !\nigan. H
0512864ca34c980a4cc5b82cb57d5969 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.864383529934 58.275556 -134.3925 The Valdez Miner anye: Falcon Jos-\nlin is optimistic of the future of the\nmining industry in Alaska and believes\nit will take a thousand years to exhaust\nthe placers of the territory. While ap\npeering before the senate committee re¬\ncently he gave testimony as follows:\n"lu my judgment the placer mining in¬\ndustry of Alaska will last a thousand J\nyears, the area suitable for placers is so\nenormous. What we are working there\nnow is only the gravels that carry from\nthree to ten dollars per yard. You can¬\nnot work gravels that carry less uow,\nbut once we have transportation, aud j\nwork as they do in California, those\ncarrying seven cents a yard. We have\ngot so nearly uri unlimited area of it\nthat no man can forc-ee the end of that\ninduhtry in Alaska. There are thirty\nor forty dredges in the Seward renin-\nsula. There is one dredge at Fairbauks\nand another in the Citcie district.\nThere are eight or ten dredges in the\nKloudike. They operate one \nand fifty days per year. They usually\nwork until November, beginning some\ntime in May. They are working gravels\nat Dawson, which is an older camp\ncamp than Fairbanks, that carry fifty\nceuts per yard. And in some cases\nthey are working gravel by dredging as\nlow as foity ceuts per yard at a profit\nin the Dawsou country. When our\ntransportation gets better, we shall be\nable to work similar gravels in Alaska.\nOne great thing is that nearly the whole\narea of Alaska is gold bearing. There\nare placers and quartz. It has beeo\nsaid, I believe the statistics and ex¬\nplorations of the geological survey\nshow it, that you could go from Alaska\nat Kctcbikau, where there are impor¬\ntant mines, along this route by way of\nHaines, a distance of two thousand\nmiles in a straight line, and that in\nevery twenty-mile strip along that\nroute you could develop gold mines.\nIt is infinitely greater than any o'her\narea of gold country that has ever been\nfound in the world/'
07546dba27059e8e5dea3df5f9bbd0a4 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1892.1898906787594 39.623709 -77.41082 The following is the full text of r bill for\nthe regulation of liquor licenses in this coun-\nty, introduced in the House of Delegates by\nHon. Manasses G. Grove.\nNo. 311 A . No person, after the first day\nof May, in the year eighteen hundred and\nninety-two, shall sell, oiler for sale or keep\nfor sale in Frederick County, any intoxica-\nting liquors except as hereinafter provided,\nbut tins act shall not apply to sales made by\na person under a provision of law, or order\nor decree of a court ofcompetent jurisdiction\nrequiring him to si II personal properly, or to\nsales of cider hy the maker thereof, not to lie\ndrunk on the premises; and whenever the\nterm “Intoxicating Liquors” is used in this\nAct, it shall be deemed to include whiskey,\nbrandy, rum, gin, wine, ale. beer and ail oili-\ner fermented and distilled liquors which shall\ncontain more than two per cent., by weight,\nof alcohol, and every mixture which shall\ncontain less than two per cent, of alcohol if\nthe same shall he intoxicating.\n811 B. The clerk ofThe Circuit Court shall\nkeep a full record of nil applications for li-\ncense, of all for and remon-\nstrances against the granting of licenses\nwhich record he shall mouth y lay before the\nBoard of County Commissioners, who shall\nhy a yea and nay vote determine whether or\nnot such license shall be granted or retused,\nand such license shall be issued for no lunger\nperiod limn one year; and if issued for a\nshorter period, the licensee shall pay lor ev-\nery month for which his or iter license Is to\nrun one-twelfth the annual charge for sueli li-\ncense, aud all such licenses shall expire on\nHie first day of May succeeding their issue.\n811 C. Every person applying to sell in-\ntoxicating liqnois in said county, shall flic\na petition with the said Clerk of the Circuit\nCourt staling the name and residence of such\napplicant, the particular place for which\nsaid license is desired, designating by street\nand number, if practicable, (who i said place\nis in Frederick City) or by otherapt dtseiip-\nlion as definitely locates it either in Freder-\nick city or county. Second. That the\napplicant or applicants, nor any ot them,\nhave not had a license for the sale ot intoxi-\ncating liquors, issued hy ihe Stale, revoked,
11b2ee88917af9ffc591471ce2d4810a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.9166666350436 40.063962 -80.720915 The annual Peabody Institute for t\nteachers of Wheeling and vicini\nwhich lias been in session at the U.\nchurch for the past three days, clot\nlast evening with a lecture by Pi\nNathan C. Schaeffer, Principal of\nState Normal School at Kutztown, 1\non "Manual Training,". His audioi\nwas tho largest one seen at any of 1\nyesHions of tho Institute; every s\nwas occupied and quite a number w<\ncompelled to stand up. Prof. Schaeflc\ntalk was a very interesting one aud x\nclosely listened to. It was on a live si\nject, one the lack of which in 1\npublic schools is believed by many w\nhave made a careful study of the pul\nschool question to be a great drawback\nthe common education of the youth\nlue ianu. rroiessor ocuwuur was ui t\ntime of u commission appointed\nGovernor Beaver, to make a report\nthe question of numual training in 1\npublic schools, and is thorough!y post\non it. He spoke in a very entertaini\nmanner forsoinewhat over an hour,\ntold about Girnrd College and other li\ninstitutions in the country where be\nand girls have not only their min\nbut their hauds and eves taught as wj\nnnd paid a tribute to the philuuthropi\nand advanced minds that brought abc\nthe establishment of these institutioi\nlie urged that manual training bo ma\n>i part of public sehool educations evei\nwhere; pointed out some of the ma\nbenefits resulting from sucIl trainii\nL>otli to the one trained and the co;\ninunity ut largo; ho snowed now bu\ntraining and brain building were i\ntimately allied and made many otb\ngood points.
2bc01a854979070b9bb804ab4befabf4 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9795081650982 39.513775 -121.556359 for the permanent recovery of his health. Horne\ndow n by the distressing symptom* incident to the\nvicious practices of uncontrollable passion in youth,\ndepressed in body and mind, imahle to perform even\nthe most trilling duly imposed upon the daily avoca-\ntions of lilt*. I sought tin) advice of manv physicians,\nwboal (ir-l regarded mv disease til trifling Import-\nance. but ala*! niter a few weeks, mnl in several in-\nstances months, of their treatment, I found In my un-\nutterable horror, that instead of relief the symptoms\nbecame more alarming in their torture, and being\ndually told me by one that the disease. being confined\nprinciply to the brain, medicine* would I I little\ncoiisequenee, 1 despaired of ever regaining rny health\nstrength and energy; and as a last resort, and with\nItnt a taint hope, culled upon Hr. Or.apkay.who. alter\nexamining my case, prescribed some mt which\nalmost instantly relieved me of the dull pains and\ndizziness in my head. Encouraged by this result. I\nresolved to place myself immediately under his cure,\nmid. by a strict obedience to his direction* mid ad-\nvice. my head became clear, my Ideas collect «l. the\nslant jiain in my buck and groins, the weakness\ntd mv limbs, the nervous reaction of my whole sys*\nlemon Itie slightest alarm or excitement, the mis-\nanthropy anil evil foreboding*, the self distrust and\nwant of conlitleiice in o ilers, the incurability to\nstudy ami want of resolution, the frightful exciting,\nand nt times pleasurable dreams id night, followed\nby involuntary discharges, have all disappeared,and\nin fact, in two month* after having consulted the\n11. ctor, I felt as if inspired by a m-w life—that life\nwhich, but a short time ago, I contemplated to end\nby mv own hand.
14600844ae67c3b73f00bbcb6672c1d4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.905479420345 58.275556 -134.3925 The Porcupine Nugget says that on\n10th inst. Mr. Frank AltamoDt and\npartners came out from Quartz creek,\nPorcupine district, bringing with them\n84000 in gold dust and nuggets. The\ngold is clean and of an excellent qual¬\nity, being worth 819 per ounce. They\nreport the creek very long and wide\nand that the diggings are shallow, bed¬\nrock being reached at from three to\nfive feet, and that the gravel pays from\nthe top down. Upon their return after\npurchasing supplies at Porcupine, they\nsluiced in an improvised sluice for four\ndays and took out $4000. They would\nhave worked longer but the weather\nbecame so cold that the water and grav¬\nel froze up. They report that the\nstampeders that went back with them\nall located on Edward and Blue\nBerry Creek, and all of them took out\nquite a quantity of gold by panning.\nMr. Altamont and partner hurried out\nbefore the snow got so deep that they\ncould not travel. They report that sev¬\neral of the others would be out in a few\ndays. The new district is situated 1G0\nmiles from Haines, 30 miles northeast of\nthe Dalton trail, and is easily reached.\nMr. Altamont reports that there are a\nnumber of creeks near Quartz, none of\nwhich have been prospected owing\nto the early approach of winter. It will\nbe impossible to get into the new dig¬\ngings before March on account of the\nsnow. At that time, however, Mr. Alta¬\nmont and partner will return accom¬\npanied by several of the Porcupine
204c39e96fe3e11ab1152fa4e6e8cb9d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1901.7520547628108 58.275556 -134.3925 The Klondike Corporation has taken\na hand in the rate war on the upper\nYukon and the regular fare between\nDawson and White Horse is now quot¬\ned at $20 and $15.\nErastus Brainard has bought what is\nknown as Idaho bar at Rampart, and if\nthe tests now being made of the ground\nprove satisfactory, he will install a $250,\n000 hydraulic plant.\nH. S. Brimley, representing a Balti¬\nmore capitalist, has been in Skagway\nlooking over the field with a view of\nputting on a line of steamers between\nthat place and Seattle.\nSix hundred dollars to the shovel\nwas the record made one day on No. 3\nabove, on Gold Run in the Nome dis-\n| trict. Four men were shoveling in and\nthey cleaned up $2,400.\nThe mill-run of ten and\ntwelve tons of rock, at the Lucky\nChance is over and a most encourging\nresult obtained. Its a great thing for\nSitka, says the Alaskan.\nJust before his departure from Skag-\nway for his new field of labor at Ogden,\nUtah, Rev. J . J . Walter was presented\nwith a handsome gold watch by the\nmembers of his congregation.\nThere was a rumor afloat in Seattle\nSept. 23rd that the steamer Oregon had\nbeen wrecked on her way from Nome\nto Seattle, and friends of the passen¬\ngers were expressing much uneasiness.\nMrs. A. Osier, of 1513j^ Tacoma ave¬\nnue, Tacoma, Wash., is anxious to re¬\nceive news as to the whereabouts or\nproof of the death of her husband, Alex.\nOsier, who came to Southeastern Alas¬\nka 3 years ago.
0c061004fb0d6fdff658c6ff759c8ac3 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.3246575025369 39.560444 -120.828218 buildings situated on the Oregon Ranch, at\nthe junction of the Yuba Turnpike leading\nfrom Marysville to Downieville, and the\nBranch Turnpike from the Oregon House to\nSears Diggings via Lexington House.\nThis is the present terminus of the Stage\nRoute from Marysville to Sears Diggings,\nand the connecting point with Greathouse\n& Spellmans splendid Express and Passen-\nger Train for Columbus House, Lexington\nHouse, Gibsonville, Sears Diggings and\nOnion Valley, and also the point at which\nthe road from Nevada, French Corral and\nFrenchmans Bar intersects both Turnpikes,\nand where travelers must come to take the\nPassenger Train to Sears.\nIn addition to our other accommodations\nwe have one room suitable for public meet-\nings or ball room, and 12 private rooms\nelegantly furnished, well adapted for fami-\nlies or private boarders. We have also 15 tons\nof Ice, put up expressly for the use of those\nwho may favor us with their patronage. A\nlargo garden is attached to the \nwhich furnishes at all seasons of the year\nan abundant supply of vegetables.\nThe Oregon House is one of the most\npleasant and desirable summer resorts in\nNorthern California, and no money nor\npains shall be spared to render it the Ex-\ncelsior Hotel of this wonderful and im-\nproving State. The table and sl?eT*.?n<v\napartments will be under j*.rso nal SUpera-\nvision of tb£ vcr vigilant landladies; and\nthe proprietors, though not disposed to\ntrumpet their own fame abroad, believe\nthat they can please the most fastidious.\nTo those who have heretofore bostotved\ntheir patronage we tender our thanks, and\nto all who may hereafter favor us we pro-\nmise prompt attention and indefatigable\nexertions to make their sojourn agreeable.\nBoard only $l2 per week.\nThe proprietors intend also to keep a\nBoarding School during the summer mouths,\nand all scholars entrusted to their charge\nwill meet with the same kind attention as\ntheir own children. Board and tuition\nreasonable.
445baaa76175b5ff6bd407a8fd595272 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.5246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 AnotherJFire.Several Stables De»\ntroyed in East Wheeling.A Bn«]\nNight with the Fire Bngn.\nAn hour or two after tho occurrcnci\nabove narrated, another alarm of firo wai\nBounded, and the whole eastern ))ortlon o\ntho city was thoroughly nroused. The seem\nof this second firo was tlic intersection o\nthe alleys in the square bounded by Sixth\nSeventh, John and Xano streets. Tin\nDames were first discovered In a stable 01\nthe lo known as Uie "Rohan property,'\nfrom which they communicated to a sta\nble immediately west ol it, owned liy Join\nNol>le, and a small, one story, vacant tene\nmcnt house on the cast These building!\nwere on tho south side of tho ullej\nrminlng east and west North of tl)ii\nalley, on a lot owned by the Coci\nbrothers, stood tlic stable ofJoseph Watsoi\nand the outbuildings belonging to tin\nCoen property. These took fire and wen\nilmost entirely consumed. Mr. Wutsot\nsucceeded in setting a valuable draft horsi\nrroni bis stable at on early stage of tho fire\nMr. G . W . Pumphrey, whose stable is Ir\ntho vicinity, turned his horses into tin\nstreet, and had not secured them last even\nIng. The stables and tenement house on\nthe side of the alley mentioncc\nabove, were burned to the ground. Th(\nloss is a total one, we believe, there beinj\nno insurance on any of the property\nrh'at tho fire was tho work 01 an inccn\ndiary, admits ol scarcely a doubt. A sur\nvanfgirlina house in tlio vicinity of tin\nDro, says timt sho saw two men going uj\nUiu alley, a few minutes before the flatnc!\ntvere seen bunting from tbe stable, ani\njverhcard a conversation between then:\nto tbo effect that they intended to bun\nnil the buildings along that alloy.\nRopeated Attempts to Burn the City,\nYesterday and JLast Night.\nYesterday about half past eleven o'clock\nthe stable of Dr. E . A . Hildretli, just cnsl\niftho McLuro House, was discovered tc\nbe on Ore. This was one of the boldeal\noperations of Uio "Bugs" wo have heart:\ndI. Tlio building is so situated that it car\nl>e seen from Monroe and Fourth, is but t\nTew feet from tho hotel ..mentioned, and\n[>ut a short distance from the Fourtli\nStreet K E. Church, in which a large\ncongregation was worshipping at tlx\ntime. Tho discovery, fortunately; wai\nmade belore tho fire had fairly got undei\nheadway, and the flames were
209e14cef1810d6c1f5e86240f64fc01 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.801912536683 58.275556 -134.3925 j Cbc Stroller\nThere In something radically\nwrong with both social and vcouom-\nIr conditions and nobody known of\nt h In discrepancy bettor or more real-\niMt it-ally than does the Stroller. Il«\nknown It by actual and bitter exper¬\nience. He h«M seen the llroad White\nNorth carpeted with the snows of\ntwenty wintors, counting what he,\nha» Heen on the fringe of our neigh¬\nboring mount a 1 ii tup* this fall ax\nthe twentieth, and during all those\nwinters* uud Intervening moaqutto-\niiraed summers lie ban visited the\nOutside gune below, some people\nterm it but twice. He wan twelve\nyearn In the North before ever be¬\ning south of Castlneau Channel and\nby that time a great many things\nwhich bad happened on the Outside\nbefore he left It were forgotten.\nHut the fact that mime people\nmake trips to the outside .\nremain here. In fart, only a few\nmonths in the summer during which\nperiod they corral sufficient money\nto keep them III style and Afrlcanas\nIn some winter resort in California\nor Florida is what has convinced\nthe Stroller that there Is something\nwrong with social and economic\nconditions. These people go out\nwith the first roar of Old liory In\nthe late fall and remain away un¬\ntil the gentle purring o» the pussy\nwillows Is heard in the gay and glad-\nHomc springtime, when they return\nto us wearing belts In their coats,\ntheir features made over and money\nill every pocket. They linger with\nus for a season, work us for what\nlittle money we had saved wbl'i\nthey were away and in the fall they\ngo south again the same as the\nducks and geese.
327dc62f4400e8c549a8940cedb1c395 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.7336065257539 40.063962 -80.720915 Thy blooming head and gain the praise.\nAnd this reverbrated treasure\nHUall be tome a world of pleasure.\nCheerful I'll part with former merit\nThat it, my darling, may inherit.\nHaste then the hours that bid thee bloom,\nAnd fill the zephyrs with perfume.\nThus had the Koae tree scarcely spoken,\nKre the sweet cnp of bllis was broken,\nThe gardner came, and with one itroke\nHe lrom the root the offspring look,\nTore from the soli wherein It grew,\nAnd hid it from the parent's view.\nDeep was the wound nor alight the pain\nWhich made the Hose tree tnus complain;\nDear Utile darling art thou goneT\nThy charms scarce to thy mother known,\nWnat hast thou clone f dear offsirring iay f\nBo early to be snatched away ?\nWhat! gone forever, seen no more ?\nForever I the lota deplore.\nYe dew* desund, with tears supply\nMy nowforever tearful eye.\nOr rather come tome JSorlhem blast\nDutiAve my yielding roots in haste.\nWhirtwindt a rite 1 my branches tear.\nOr to some distant region bear\nJttsr lrom this spot a wretched mother,\nttlnce iruit anu joys are gone togeiher.\nAs thus the anguished treo cried.\nHer owner near her she espied,\nWho in these gentle terms reproved\nA plant though murmuring still beloved:\nCease, beauUon3 flower, these useless cries,\nAnd let this lesson make thee wise.\nArt thou not mine? did not my hand\nj ransplant thee lrom the Darren sand,\nWhenco once a mean unsightly plant,\nExposed to Injury and want?\nUnknown anu unadmired, 1 found\nAnd brought thee to this flrtie ground;\nWith curious art improved thy form\nSecured thee from the inclement storm,\nAnd through the seasons of the year\nMade thee my unabaiiug care.\nHast thou not blest thyliappy lot\nla sucii an owner,such a spot?\nBut now because thy shoot I've taken,\nThe best offriend* must beforsaken.\nNo, flower belov'u, in this affliction\nShalt prove to thee a benedlotlou.\nHad /not the young plant removed\nHo fondly by tby heart beloved,\nTby heart of me would scarce have tbougbt\nWitb gratitude no more bo fraught.\nYea, thine owi) beauty be attiake\nSurrendered/or tt\\y offspring sake.\nHot, thlufc unit mou bhattaiwavs be apart,\nJ-Yom the dear darling of thy heart,\nFor 'tis my purpose tuee 10 bear\nIn future time and plant thee there,
8d80019db717626eed473815de7f840a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 years, will return to old scenes and as¬\nsociations, and tracing (ho long train ot\nimpressive lessons, wiU pause to gaze\nupon thesigilificant 90nt rant ofthe No%v\nand Then. The great gulf, which rolled\nbetweeu the pa$t and .present, the s^uof\nblood which-scjntcelj* yet has ceased to\nflow, have not Effaced those ever present\nlandmarks which conduct the mindun?\nerringly* along "the vistu' of 'events, -to\nthe contemplation ofthe spectacle before\nus, Which reveals Virginia marred in\nhur once perfect majesty;. shorn of her\nmight, deprived of half her area, and\nprostrate at the feet of tho conqueror, a\nmute monument and. yet a touching\nappeal against th^fol^leH of ftpceSsjpn.\nPerhaps tliere may bo some who will\ndespair of the future, as they accept the\nimpossibility of re-animating the dead\npast. Others will contemplate events as\nbut steps in the orderofProvidence, and\nwill look ahead to realization-ofthat\nwealth and power by Virginia, to which\nher resources and the character of her\npeople entitle her. Itis td be hoped that\nnone will be weak enough to indulge\ntho delusion that Virginia can be resto¬\nred to the condition ofantebellum. Divi¬\nded, the territory which once knew her\nname must forever remain. The war\nhas not decided any fact more fixed and\npatent than the existence of West Virgi¬\nnia, which, already, proclaimed by the\nirrevocable law of Nature, was merely\nreaffirmed: by the war as the appro\nprtat© occasion of their vindication. It is\nneedless to discuss the method ofsepara¬\ntion, which was simply according; with\ntho principle of geographical position,\nwhich has prescribed a separate politi¬\ncal existence to'Tranco arid'Spftin T>y\nthe thin barrier of the Pyrennees, and\naccorded tho manifold political division\nof State with .the complexity of its\ngeography.
5525288d04f06f24a0c2ff6ccb393092 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5164383244546 39.261561 -121.016059 T.V AL.1 . BHAKCHB8 OP BOTH THE\n1 arts and sciences, as well as the Medical Prole*\n„inn uptciahly has ever been recognized by men •>»\njudicious reflection, as both progressive and instruc-\ntive for it is a perfectly well demonstrated tact that\nany individual, however astute he may be. attains\nto an infinitely greater degree of perfection by a\nthorough and persevering continuity tonne branch\nof art, science, medicine, or mechanics, than it he\nattempted to accomplish half a dozen—as in the lat-\nter case he would be likely, nine times out often, to\nobtain at most but a very superficial knowledge ol\neither. In the practice ol medicine or surgery, it uu-\nraveis. simplifies and makes char to the arduous\nstudent, the mysterious complications (complicated\non account of the uumerous causes which produce\nthem) which diseases of any kind take upon the hu-\nman system; operating, as they do frequently, both\non the meutal and physical organs. It seeks to le-\ncupemle and restore the functions to their natural\nand proper status, as well as to neutralize all antag-\nonistic influences to which the system is continually\nsubject. Certain it is. that while the busy affairs ot\nlite Seem to exhaust all our time and attention, the\niucipieucy and progress of disease, sometimes of dan-\ngerous and latal approach us utmost un-\nnoticed. plow in its progress but insidious in its\ncourse, a disease, or even the simple disturbance of a\nsingle function. Irequently becomes an affair of ini\nininent danger when least expected, lo this the at-\ntention of the physician ot Spaialitie* is always ear-\nliest given. With pr per perceptive power- , added\nto ample experience, lie is necessarily able to arrive\nwith unerring certainty to a correct conclusion ns to\nthe character ol the ailment and the proper appli-\nances tor its cure. This 1 have nevei found to tail.\nA rempdy properly administered, and nt the proper\ntime, is surt to accomplish the object of its mission,\nprovided it be directed by the hands of a skillful\nphysician, who knows his business. I need not re-\niterate the old adage, that Health is the endorse-\nment of Jiivinity.” sent to us for our own benefit,\nand that we should not lor a moment disregard the\nsecret admonitions that tell us to beware lest we lull\nimperceptibly into a layby noth from which it will be\nmuch more difficult to escape than if we had given\nproper attention to ourselves before venturing so tar.\nConsult your phvsici.m before it is lisi late; c >nlide\nin him, itud you will save yourself an infinity of suf-\nfering.
3c81345aa0d932131e35a0cc468b3e99 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.5109588724 41.681744 -72.788147 "The committee appointed by your\nhonorable body, Peg leave to report\nthat they have spent considerable\ntime in examining the situation of\nthe city's water supply, properties\nand system, have held several meet-\nings, held one hearing, and endeav-\nored to secure the information neces-\nsary to formulate a complete report\nfor presentation at this meeting. They\nregret' that they are unable to do so\nin full, as further investigation in\nregard to storage seems necessary to\nus, and some ofthc manufacturers,\nbefore we can sec our way clear to\nmake a recommendation for the coun-\ncil to act on. The committee recom-\nmends that the board of water com-\nmissioners submit to the common\ncouncil plans and estimates for an\nintake below the Whigville dam and\nconnections therewith, to run the\nwater into the main pipe line. They\nalso recommended that the water\ncommissioners submit to the com-\nmon council plans and estimates for\n continuation of the Wooster street\nmain to the Avest canal for the con-\nstruction of a water tower as rec-\nommended m their report to the\ncouncil April 24. Beyond the tower\nyour committee recommend the con-\ntinuance of the pipe line to Shuttle\nMeadow and the securing of the\nownership of the land on which the\ntower will stand and the line of the\nmain clear through from Wooster\nstreet to Shuttle Meadow. The com-\nmittee request necessary enlighten-\nment and comparison the water\nboard have the necessary surveys\nmade, preliminary plans made, pre-\nliminary plans drawn, and data fur-\nnished for the proposed dam (gate-\nhouses, etc.) at Burlington with some\nform of estimate of the costs of the\nnew roads required and further prop-\nerty acquisition should also be esti-\nmated. Also the committee' recom-\nmends the water board to furnish the\nrequisite data in the way of prelim-\ninary plans, estimates, etc.,
4264dc8cbed0cb0fe855f8ec3a75a529 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.3027396943176 42.217817 -85.891125 Mlchiiau, to lames A. Hhiudoll of Bloom-lu- g\ndale, MichlKau, aud waa duly recorded in the of-\nfice of the register of deeaa of Vau Buren county,\nMichigau, In liber 73 of mortgage , page 169, on th\n9th day of December, llsrj. Haid mortgage was after-\nwards, ou the 7th day of January, 1903, duly assign-\ned by the said James . Hhiudoll to F. P. Grimes.\nPaw Paw, Michigan; said assignment was duly re-\ncorded In the office of tbe register of deeds of Van\nBuren couuty, Michigan, In liber 74 of mortgages ou\npage 691, ou January 25, 19ii3, and on which mort-\ngage there is claimed to be due and nnpald, at the,\ndate of this notice, the sum of one huudred dollars\nprincipal and Interest amounting to (19 35, making1\ntotal amount due f 119.35. also au sttonu j fee of\nfifteen dollars, and suit or proce du,gs at law or\nin equity having been instituted to recover tha\namount now due and unpaid, or any part thereof;\nNow, therefore, notice U hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power of sale contained In said mort-\ngage, and In pursuance of the statute In such case,\nmade and provided, there will be sold at publlo\nauction to the highest bidder, at tbe frontdoor of\nthe court house lu the village of Paw Paw, Van\nBuren county, Michigan (that being the place for\nholdlug the circuit court for said county) on Sat-\nurday, April 29, 19nS, at oue o'clock p. in. of saul\nday, the premise described iu said mortgage, or so\nmuch aa may be necessary to satisfy tbe amount\nnow due and unpaid on said note aud mortgage\nwith interest and costs, said premises being de-\nscribed as follows, to -w-
3b7deb84cda7a0af76327cc51ed1f188 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.5493150367834 41.681744 -72.788147 whose aellons recently in a hotel\nsuite in Hartford brought down upon\nhim the criticism of Ihe entire state,\nit seems, was asked for his resig-\nnation, which he declined to submit,\nwhereupon bis position was declared\nvacant, but before the step was com-\npleted there was an exchange of let-\nters between the moyar and his sub-\nordinate which attracted wide at-\ntention. In New Britain, when the\nmayor makes up his mind that the\nroom taken up by a subordinate is\nmote lo be desired than the pres-\nence of the. official, he may or may\nnot give him a chance to resign. In\nthe event lhat he cares lo show the\nofficial the consideration ot asking\nfor his resignation and the latter\nchooses not to resign, he is promptly\nremoved, and if the mayor does not\nwish lo allow him to resign, he \njemoved more promptly. The city\ncharter gives the chief executive the\nauthority lo act in this manner, the\n"cause" being entirely within the\njudgement of the mayor.\nBut 'twas not ever thus in New\nBritain. Time was when the removal\nof a commissioner canted as much\nstir as has the recent affair in Hart-\nford, and George A. Quigley. who\nwas probably the "bossiest" mayor\nthe city has had in two decades, had\nplenty ot trouble .with his board of\npublic safety a short time after he\ntook office in 1914. It was he who\nsaw the advantage in having the\npower of removal vested in the may-\nor wilh no strings attached, and at\nthe earliest opportunity he saw to it\nthat the cily charter was amended\nlo that end. Since the mayor of New\nBritain has b'cen the sole judge of\n"cause."
85ea3d90f6adc8aed73dd117527967d3 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.4397259956875 38.951883 -92.333737 The first installment of the bonds\n3000000000 will be delitered to the\nReparations Commission on July 1 A\nsecond installment is due November 1\nof 9300iXX000 At the same ttme\nGermany is to deliter a third series to-\ntaling 20500000000 to be held with\nout coupons until the Reparations Com\nmission decides Germany is able to pay\ninterest and sinking fund from her stal ¬\ned annual payments of 500000000 and\na 26 percent tax on her exports\nThat represents a total of 33000000\n000 to be delivered Not all of these\nwill be isjd The ultimatum iO Ger\nmany protiJul for payment of this uin\nin bonds Ilu 750003000 representing\nISelgiums debt to the Allies From the\ntotal must be deducted the amount ter\nmany has already paid in reparations\nso 2000000000 The total to be\nissued will be roughly 31750000000\nThe bonds represent Cermanys total\nreparations debt and they or their value\nwill be apportioned by the commission\namong the Allied and associated coun\ntries to whom reparations are due\nThe solution contemplated is to per\nmit the recipients of the bonds to do\nmost of the marketing or to hold the\nbonds as thev clioose In this case pre\ncautions will be taken against possible\ndumping by some country witling to\naccept too low a price lor them\nIt is believed tlie first lot marketed\nwill total from 50000000 to 500000\n000 There is no autlioritative estimate\nso far though It is certain the marketing\nwill be as soon and as for as great an\namount as the commission thinks possi\nble
7fa25c6f04ab5533a10c1f466251b682 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.061475378213 40.807539 -91.112923 But as the location has been made at Iowa City,and the commi-ie,\nhave gone on, at considerable expense, to survey and lay off lots, ofuhii\n$28,000 worth has been sold, and one fourth of which has been reteiw\nby the acting commissioner and contracts for materials have been maJi; i.\nI do believe that it would be indicative of instability in our leoisla i\ndeliberations which we should endeavor to avoid, to attempt removal 1/ ;\nwere not for the manifest improper course taken by the commis»ij!\nwith regard to the extent of the State House. I do not presume to aP\nthat the commissioners acted intentionally wrong in the performaiict • 1\nthe duties incumbent on them as commissioners, but on the contnirv :\nhave reasons to believe that they are high-minded and honorable meni-\nI must say that it does appear that they are operated on by an influent "\n to the main interest of the Territory. The intention «/ /I\nLegislature, when that location was made was a temporary location an,jj\nccnseqiu:ntly it was expected that the buildings would be erected oiu nj J\nin accordance with that intention. The tuenly thousand dollars a\npriated by the general government for the e eclion of public buiidiL\nwas presumed to be the only fund that would be laid out upon that lo^\ntion. But what are they doing? 'J hey are about to commence the er«.\ntion of a building, the cost of which is estimated by some, at two b\ndred and fifty thousand dollar*. Now I will ask the good sense of this\nHouse, what use we have for a building of that cost, even if we\nable to build it ? The Illinois Legislature have done their legishn'\nbusiness in a house until the last session, which did not exceed in
01de51b645987a3dfc79664d7c357929 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1914.8452054477423 35.318728 -82.460953 ourogti wise, honest and true is Mr.\nWilson, and bravely and faithfully\nhave his Democratic followers held up-hi -s\nhands and given him support dur-\ning the trying times through which he\nhas had to pass since taking up the\nreins of the chief executive. We do\nnot believe there has been another\nPresident in the. history of this coun-\ntry whose duties have , been so varied\nand complex as have been those of\nMr. Wilson. He has had to pass on\na Wide range of governmental mat-\nters: international . affairs, diplomacy,\neconomics, finance, internal troubles,\nlabor problems all these and more\nhave required his attention to a re-\nmarkable degree. Yet his great mind\nhas never failed, his strong will has\nnever faltered, his honesty of purpose\nhas never been questioned, his sense\nof justice has never ceased to prevail.\nBut with all this the Republicans\nnd Progressives blunder along \nstupidity, seeking to convince the peo-\nple that the President and his admin-\nistration have failed in their efforts.\nThe fact of the matter is the poor fel-\nlows have no other course to pursue.\nIt is one of stupidity, it Is true, but it\nis the stupidity of necessity. They\ncannot afford to give to Mr. Wilson\nand his followers credit for their good,\nworks; neither can they afford. to re-\nmain silent. Hence a stupid state-\nment which is false on its face Is the\nonly card our Republican and Pro-\ngressive friends have to play.\nAnd this applies not only in nation-\nal politics, but in state and county\npolitics as well. The Democrats have\nadministered state and county gov-\nernment ably and honestly, while the\nrecord of the misrule of Republicans\nand Pops in North Carolina brings to\nmind a sad state of affairs in years\ngone by. Fayetteville Observer.
114a3d5a8b4dd98a46da3f16bd65e508 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.2773223727484 40.063962 -80.720915 "Daughter of the Great West, child\nour niece, Columbia.oil hail I Tin\nhost done well to come within the Ix\nders of our realm. Our clemency e\ntends to thee this day. We are con\nfrom the caves of the ocean. We u\nhero this day to reward you accordii\nto our bounty, because you have con\nto our court to celebrate your birthda\n"It is well! It is welll\n'Those who trust our bounty, thoug\nthey be children of the dust, ahull fa\nlike heirs of our own briney Kingdoi\n"Ho, boy! Hasten to receive from 01\nminister tno present# the King of tl:\nOcean, oven the mighty Neptune, hi\nbrought to luy at the feet of tliin fa\nlady. We will send her back\nher native land in the getting tmi\nsaying 'The half has never been told\nthe power, aud glory and bounty <\nOld King of the Brino."'\nHe then opened hit* bug and prescnte\nme with a photograph of himself and\ncurious silver Indian brooch from th\ncantuin, a shawl from Sumner, and\nsilic embroidered handkerchief from th\nmen, together with a little gift from\nBombay friend who had been in the si\ncret. I was astounded, lm(j expected t\nbe the donor rather than the recipient\nHowever, they were the ones to be stir\nprisod, as from the depths of the bug\ndraw out one by one the gifts for cud\nof them. The captain was completel;\ntaken back; he had entered so heartil;\ninto the preparations and didn't knov\nthat he was to be included in the sui\nprise. Not to be outdone, the mates go\nup impromptu fireworks in the shape o\nsignals of distress, the 011 lv availubl"\npyrotechnics, and thus we closed ainos\nmemorable day.February 15,1888.
04e1d1ec1f839a5fc83aaf8df968bd65 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.1410958587012 58.275556 -134.3925 "Suddenly one night the flames burst\nout through the hatches. It was a\nweird sight. In an iustant the ship was\nalmost in a blaze. Fire seemed to leap\nfrom every nook and crevice and to\nenwrap the vessel.\n"For an instant the crew were pauic\nstricken. A rush was made for the\nboats, but order was soon restored and\na systematic attempt to put out the fire\nwas then made. Water was poured\nover the rigging and the decks, hand\npumps, buckets and every available\nthing was put into service to help ex¬\ntinguish the blaze. From the captain\ndown to the cabin boy everyone work¬\ned as men can work only when their\nlives are at stake. All the rest of that\nnight we bailed and pumped water on\nand into the ship. Then we managed\nto batten down the hatches so as to\nsmother the flames.\n"From then on it was a constant\nnerve-racking fight. We could get the\n(lames under control and then they\n break out agaiu. This was kept\nup day after day till the crew was worn\nout and utterly exhausted.\n"The men stood the test well. There\nwas no shirking.\n"But it was like walking over a vol¬\ncano. Head winds drove us back from\nthe coast time after time and every day\nlessened our chance to reach shore\nsafely. Although under control to a\ncertain extent the fire was burning be¬\nlow decks and gradually eating through\nthe sides of the ship.\n"At last we sighted the coast of Japan\nand headed directly for the beach. We\ngot the ship into a sheltered cove in\nthe Kee channel and then scuttled her.\nThe scuttling was accomplished by\nmeans of large holes cut in her sides.\nThe water rapidly went in and in a few\nminutes she sank. We all took to the\nboats and reached the shore safely. It\nwas all we could do to pull to the\nbeach. All were worn out by the long\nbattle with the fire.
01ff95602d772c9d449adbb4506e797d THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.148907072202 38.894955 -77.036646 quented by officials and dignitaries of\nhigh and low degree.\nAmong these notables who fairly rev-\neled In the quaint hospitality of the "Old\nColony" was Edmund Yates, the distin-\nguished press writer and novelist, who\npronounced it tlie best regulated club,\njudged from tlie Bohemian standpoint, he\nhad ever known. In fact, Mr. Yates' visit\nto Washington.! entertaining and instruc-\ntive as it w,H3 , wouId have been practi-\ncally a failure'iTithout tlie "Old Colony"\nindulgences to le.tjen the loaf.\nGov. B outwent! of Massachusetts wna\nthen Secretary of the Treasury, and he waH\nspecially invited to the club to meet Ed-\nmund Yates. Although Mr. Boutwell was\npassionately fond of billiards, lie did nntr\ntake lo other games, and those who remcni;\nber him will recall that lie was somewhat\nof a lugubrious tohiperaiuent, not'unsoclal\nexactly, but and not\neasily approached. He fraternized, how-\never, with MJraVntcs, known as the prince\nof boliemiani,4and under tlie warmth of\nYates' English oddities and peculiarities\nreally unbended and "cottoned" to him, so\nthat, when they parted for the night, they\ngreeted eaclolh?"r very warmly.\nTlie next difvvronie. member .asked Mr.\nYates how he"3lke4 our Secretary of the\nTreasury, to which inquiry he responded,\nin the true English vernacular: '\n"A very nicish sort of man, you know, and\nI liked hini, although, he was a bit bilious,\nyou know. Sllll, you must all acknowl-\nedge that MrTjBoutwell Is not the kind of\nman, you know, that you'd call oil for a\ncomic song after dinner."\nThis description of Mr. Boutwell was\nadmitted on all sides to be as grapluc as'ifc\nwas correct and peculiar, at least from the\nEnglish standpoint.
595ad2d2aa98d56e4378e38891856513 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.5301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 Be kind to tho atroet car driver. Mot j$\nnany may know all that be endures.\nrYilhouttbo advantaged baying an eye {;'\nn each corner oi his head, he is required "\no Bee all that passes within two squares Wl\n>1 him, whether it be in iront, to the H/\night, to tho lelt, or in the rear, and he is\nzpected to keep quiet when a woman,or\nKrson who has not succeeded in getting ce\nho car stopped instantly, addresses with- ac\nring remarks to him. Always an object th\nif suspicion, in consequence o[ the jD\n. mount of monoyby which ho la constant- nt\ny surrounded, and criticised by an unjust de\nnd indiscriminating public as to his spir- pr\nt of accommodation, it ia no wonder ba\nhat be occasionally givea vent to hia w,\naelinga in extra whacks upon tough ev\nlide ol the least sprightly ol bis mules. ab\nJp in Cincinnati he ia treated with lesa bu\nonsideration than anywhere else in ]e(\nLmerica, and it is a wonder'that some- gc\nody there docs not start some sort ol a th\nociety lor hia protection, the mulea long m,\ngo having been provided tor in that re- iDi\npoet. The Cincinnati driver ia on duty 0n\nItteen hours a day, and though a conduc- qu\nor helpe him to manage the car, he is al- rei\n3 wed no time lor dinner. From hia ear- 34\nf and hastily swallowed breakfast to his\nito and perhaps meager supper, his atom- H:\nch cries to him in vain lor anything bet- tb\ner than a dry morael which he may have\nlipped into Lis pocket in the morning. It\nle is consequently unhealthy and
09086e3703eddfb14015bfb23348be3a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.493169367284 40.832421 -115.763123 The World utc "Sfpiliilioini are\nin pn>£r< ss for the practical consolida¬\ntion of the Baltimore and Ohio Tele-\ngraph (Jonipujr, l>. 11. Kites, I'resi-\nilriit. Bil l the IV « till Telegraph C'oui-\n|«uv, J. W. Mockay, President. Acon-\nfereuce wan held, at which lJutcs and\nltobert Garrett of the Il.iltimorc and\nOhio ami Vice-President Cumuiing* of\nthe Postal and other rcpres« ntutives of\nboth companies were present. The\n<luc»tion of a rfom- connection between\nthe two companies v.n s oonshlercd. No\ninformation in regard to the ill tails of\nth; consolidation conltl lie ol t. titled from\nthe officer* of eitln r company, but it in\nnot deuied that cinutiatjoUH itre in pro¬\ngress. It is understood that Hates is to\nbe plaeeil in charge of b >th systems.\nThe object of the proposed union is to\npresi nt one combined unil powerful\norganisation iu opposition to thu Wes¬\ntern Union. There wer« four opposition\nsystems. the Bankets un l Merchants,\nthe Postal, the Baltimore aU"l nlul\nthe National. The Baltimore an>l Oliio\nhas absorbed the National, mid the\nHankers and Merchants aiul the Postal\nrecently came to mi agreement which\namounts to n pru< ti<-<il consoliilation. It\nthe Baltimore unil < >hio joins the com¬\nbination, there will l<c olin big system.\nThis coiubineil system will cover nearly\nevery competitive point east of the Miss¬\nissippi river, north and south.\nIf the above statement lie true and a |\ncompany be thus formed competi lit ami\nwilling to compete with the jvowertul\nWestern Union, the advantage to the I\npeople < ! Mined in the matter of cheap\ntclcgraj hy will probably approach the\nbenefits to Imj ilc i iviil from a Govern¬\nment po-tul telegraph.\nThe objection to pliicin/ an additional\nengine of corruption iu the huud< of\nGovernment ol'Jriuls, was only overcome\nby the desire to secure relief from the\nextortions of the Wi tern 1'uion mou j>- j\nciv, mil il that object can l>e iittnine<l\nthrough private iut-.
1350ff16eb9a46f1b455597207e765d3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.061475378213 41.681744 -72.788147 responsibility, and when his case\nis disposed of in local court, he win\nbe turned over to the Bristol au\nthoritles to face a similar charge.\n' Harry'L. Walnwright of $ Charter\nOak avenue, Hartford, was driving\neast on West Main street about 8:16\nlast night when he saw a car com-\ning towards him on the left side of\nthe road. Bringing his car to a atop,\nWalnwright expected the approach-\ning car would also stop but It con\ntinued In its path until it struck his\ncar, whereupon the driver backed up\nturned out and continued on bis\nway, according to Walnwright, who\nreported the matter to the police.\nAn Investigation disclosed that the\ncar was registered In the name of\nKyjewskl. who was not at home.\nAbout two hour later, the Bris\ntol police sent word to Lieutenant\nBatnforth that they wanted Kyjew-\nskl, his car figured In an\naccident and continued on without\nstopping. Sergeant McAvay and Of- -\nfcer Klely went to Kyjewski'a home\nand while they were talking to Mrs.\nKyjewskl, her husband came in.' He\nsaid he did not stop after the acci-\ndent on West Main street because\nthere was no damage and he did\nnot consider the Incident merited a\ndelay on his trip to" Bristol. He was\ntaking a woman home from a party,\nhe said, and as he was driving\nthrough the Bell Town a car travel-\ning about 60 miles an hour came\nstraight towards him. He waa fortu\nnate to escape uninjured, he said,\nand decided then and there to take\nno further chances with automo\nbiles. The owner of the car which\nfigured in the Bristol collision told\nthe police that Kyjewskl was at fault\nand was not to be found after the\naccident
068d79a726ec1bbed68ba91c571c50ef THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.5986301052765 40.419757 -77.187146 seemed rather unaccountable to me, as\nsuch an agreeable encounter exhlllrated\nmy spirits in the highest degree. We all\nthen entered the house, where Charles\nreceived the congratulations of Helen's\nparents upon his safe return. Seated by\nthe side of the blushing maiden, he an-\nswered the many questions respecting\nhis health, the voyage, and so forth,\nwith a great deal more patience that I\ncould have done with such a beauty as\nHelen by me. I had never seen her look\nso lovely and so- happy as upon this oc-\ncasion. Her bosom heaved with emo-\ntions, her large dark eyes were fixed at\nIntervals, with the utmost tenderness,\nupon the countenance of her lover, and\nher rich brunette skin was tinged with\nthe deep flush of happiness. She was\nonly years older than me, but, I\nam sorry to say, she took no more notice\nofmethanifIwas not in the room,\nwhich conduct on her part made me feel\nvery Indignant, although I was too much\nofamantoshowit. ButIcould not\nhelp running my hand defiantly over\nthe down which, with the aid of a tele-\nscope, might have been detected upon my\nupper Hp. My indignation, however,\ndid not prevent me from noticing all\nthat passed between the two lovers\nwhich, by the way, was not much. I\ndid not see him look at her more than\nonce, and then It was with the mournful\nexpression of pity in his eye, which\nthe occasion did not seem to warrant.\nI could see nothing about Helen to\npity ; she appeared perfectly happy and\ncontented.
6efcd600238920b1abb740856736a315 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.2123287354134 41.681744 -72.788147 In explaining the workings of the\nclub she stated that tho first man\ntold her that she would receive a\nlit) piece set of dishes upon the\ncompletion of payments amounting\nto $34.50 . Those paying tho last\n10 payments would receive also a\nset of Rogers' silverware. She stat-\ned that she asked each week who\nwon and several names were given\nto her and finally the man said that\nMrs. Koran had won that week.\nWhen he had gone, she called up\nMrs. Foran who said that she hadn't\nwon anything. She also said that\nthe man promised her that he would\nfix It so that she would receive her\ndishes a little ahead of the others.\nMrs. Whiter Hiltpold of 77 East\nBroad street was next called. She\nsaid that Wolfe was the first man\nto come to. house. Heasked her\nif she had lived in riainville very\nlong hut she said she had not because\nshe had formerly lived in New\nBritain. He told her that he was\nforming clubs of 69 members who\nwould pay f0 cents a week and the\nplan was explained. He showed\nher a contract blank on which he\npointed out tho state seal. He told\nher that the concern couldn't fail\nbecause the state was backing it.\nShe said that he told her that Mrs.\nNerl got the first set and she took\nhis word for it. He promised to fix\nit so that she would receive her set\nof dishes after the second or third\npayment. She then stated that she\ngot tired of paying each week and\nshe told him. He then said that If\nshe wanted to pay up, she
02c46183b9d878d95d3ce5c03b6a0a4c THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1885.6890410641806 37.561813 -75.84108 Tho story of (Jeueral Orint's life\nsavors moro of romanc than reality; it\nis more like a fable of ancient days than\nthe history of an American citizen of\ntho nineteenth century. As light and\nshade produce the most attractive clVootl\nin a picture, so tho contrastj it. the\ncareer of the lamented fleneral, tho\nstrange vicissitudes of his eventful life,\nsurround him with an interest whieL\nattaches t few characters in hisi,ry.\nHis rise from t he obscure lieulenr.nt\nto tho commander of the veteran armies\nof the great republic, his transition from\na frontier post of the untrodden West\nto th" Executive Mansion of the nation;\nhis sitting at one time in a little shire in '\n(ialena. not even known to Ihe Con-\ngressman from his district : at another\ntime striding through the palaces ol' the\nOld World with the descendants of a\nline of kings and standing un-\ncovered iu his presence: his humble\nbirth in an Ohio town scarcely known\nto the geographer: his distressing illness\nand courageous deal h in t he bosom of\nthe nation he had saved these are the\nfeatures of his marvelous career which\nappeal to the imagination, excite men's\nwonder, and fascinate the minds of all\nwho make a study of his life.\nMany of the motives which actuated\nhim and the real sources of strength\nemployed in the putting forth of his\nsingular powers will never be fully un-\nderstood, for added to a habit of com-\nmuning much with himself was a mod-\nesty which a!was seemed to make him\nshrink from speaking of a matter so\npersonal to him as an analysis of his\nown mental powers, and those who\nknew him best sometimes understood\nhim the least. His most intimate assn-"i at e- s
1abefea2389c22c1baa324b7b281a4cb THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.2397259956874 46.187885 -123.831256 the fire from the upper story. Fully 1500,\nBnois were nrea ana every window we\nshot out and the walls perforated like\na selve. Stray bullets flew far and wide\nand terror and consternation prevailed\nthroughout the little town. Everybody\nwas uneasy and no one knew who was\nsafe with four score drunken and Infu.\nrlated Indians armed to the teeth and\nwith the smell of blood In their nostrils,\nEvery heart went out to Locke, his\nwife and little children who were\ncooped up In the house which was being\nriddled by Winchester balls. United\nStates Commissioner Kirkpatrlck, As\nsistant United States Attorney Lee and.\nJudge Durant the leading Jones man.\nwent to the militia camp at Davenport\nthree miles north of Antlers and had\nhad a long conversation with Captains\nDurant and Thompson and Judge\nDulkes, a Janes leader. The govern.\nment officials explained to them the\nposition the United States occupied, If\nLocke, attacked Durant who was\nUnited States deputy, Locke's entire\nparty would be held to answer in the\nUnited court for attacking him\nIf they attacked Locke, they would be\nheld because he! had served the United\nStates as posseman andr guard. They\nwanted to know If they had a process\nfor any man Locke had. After much\ndickering, they said they had a process\nfor Willis Jones, who had been indicted\nfor complicity in the killing of five\nJones men at Wllburton, last fall. They\nsaid they wanted others but had no pa\npers for them, and If he was delivered\nto them It would all be well. The party\nreturned to Antlers and a meeting was\nheld with Locke. Locke prepared\nwritten proposition to Captain Durant\nsetting forth that if the militia would\nhave warrants legally Issued by proper\nprocess he would assist In the arrest\nof such offenders. The party started\nfor the militia camp accompanied by\nJudge Durant. They had gone about\nthree hundred yards when they met an\nadvanced party of twenty who had\npicked up two of Locke's acouts and\ndisarmed them. This party was headed\nby Judge Dukes.
0ac7e7e66159db3eec03bcba691f3383 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1889.5082191463723 39.756121 -99.323985 Well, we floundered aroun fur quite\na spell, an then Willarn Ilenery he got\nout an went rite off an lef me to git\nout the bes way I cood. I hollered to\nhim to CTtni an help rue, but he jes went\nrite off, an I floundered aroun an got\ninto a hole wher it wus awful deep, an\ndown I went, mos to Chiny, I thort ;\nbut je3 afore I got quite thare I cam\ntni agm, an then I scrambled out on to\nthe bank in Squire Roper's pastnr.\nI wns a settin thare a restin a spell\nwhen I heerd a low rumblin, an looked\nup an seen the Squire's ole Samson a\ncumin fur rne full tilt. I dont no how-\never it happened, but sum how I got a\nholt of ole Samson's tail, an away we\nwent, lickety cut, hirn bellerir. every\njump an me a hollerin "Holp ! Holp !\nSumbtiddy stop us !" an like things.\nWell, we wus the hed ones of a hull\ndrove, an we run an run.\nI wus thet tired it did seam thet I\ncoodn't run, not another step, but ef I\never le'go thet tale. I knowed I'd git\na toss up. Oh, laudy, how skeered I\nwer ! We, that is ole Samson an rne,\nwe finly got a long ways ahed of all\nthe res, an thinkin to myself, I can't go\nnot another junip furder, an so I jes\nle'go, an insted of bein gored I jes ris\nrite up an flew an flew. Arfter a while\nI cum to a big mounting, an kep a\ntryin to fly over it. I coodn't, an lost\nmy grip sumhow an fell down, down !\noh, awful fur.
092408a068748cdb09c5cf281fce5589 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1879.9027396943177 37.451159 -86.90916 When completed their house will front\n100 feet on Alain street, having 2 wings\nwhich will make it one of the largest\nhotels in Southern Kentucky.\nOur tobacco men are already on the\nalert and have purchased some tobacco\nthough our farmers, generally, are in-\ndisposed to sell at the pricos ottered\nwhich ore ruling at about four and two\ncents. One crop of some t wenty thous-\nand pounds is being delivered, I under-\nstand, at the above figures.\nSpeaking of farmers, calls to miuduu\nincident that will lie of Interest to at\nleast ti few of your Ohio county readers.\nDame Humor has it that one of our\ntownsmen, whojby the bye, is one of the\nmost enterprising farmers in our coun-\nty, h:ts, of late, made some two or three\nvisits to your county, ostensibly for tho\npuriiose of purchasing a farm, but it is\nvaguely surmised that his real motive\nis to persuade the proprietor of that\nfarm that the climate of old Muhlen-lor- g\nis conducive to dealth and\nlonsr life than that of Ohio. A word to\nthe ladies is sutllcient. As a matter of\nnews that will iuteress at least a portion\nof your readers.\nI may bo permitted to refer to a rumor\nthat some two of the citizens of Our\ntown are, or will be in the near future,\ncandidates for the suffrages of the yeo-\nmanry of our State, anil their repre-\nsentatives. I know not that either of\nthe gentlemen refered to are candidates;\nbut of Mr. W. H. Yost, Jr., who is\nspoken of as an aspirant to the office of\nCommonwealth Attorney for this dis-\ntrict. Imay sayofhim thatheIsa\ngentleman who is in every sense quali-\nfied for the discharge of the duties of\nthat otilee, and if the people should call\nllim to it, they may rest assured that he\nwill make an abloand vigorous proseeu-to- r\nof crime and its abettors. Of Mr.\nN. G. Harris, who is spoken of as a can-\ndidate for Sergeant-At-Arm- s,
1373c43de3f3766ee0d619545805c8fa THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1899.6452054477422 46.601557 -120.510842 an editor should send an apprentice hoy\nto write up a society event and describe\nthe dresses of the ladiis present.\nOur troops have not yet met a defeat.\nThis shows that there is a hand at the\nhead, steady and conservative, maneu-\nvering the troops to the best advantage.\nLack of men ut times' Yes, we acknow-\nledge that; but 50,000 men can nol be\norganized and equipped in an hour or a\nday. As soon as the fighting com-\nnit-nced, all available troops were rushed\nto reinforce those already at the front.\nThe regular regiments were recruited to\ntheir maximum war footing. This neces-\nsitated a great deal of drilling, as fully\n10 per cent, of the regiments wen; new\nmen. When these urrived in the l'hil -\nIpplnee they OOllld not he nseil. except-\ning for garrison as they were not\nacclimated. Now that they arc accli-\nmated the reports we receive from the\nfront show their fighting qualities.\nThe administral nni was ulso con-\ndemned by some for not equiping the\nvolunteers in the Philippine! Willi tin-\nmodem initga/.ine gun instead ot the\n. Springfield. Our government—not ex-\npecting trouble in this quarter—issuetl\nthe modern guns to the volunteers who\nwere intended for the Cuban service,\nwhere there was the greatest necessity\nfor tbem. As soon as the trouble com-\nmenced, however, 10,000 Kraigs were\nshipped at once. When these arrived in\nthe Philippines it was thought best not\nto arm the entire companies with guns to\nwhich they were unaccustomed, so only\nabout twenty men of each compauy re-\nceived them. All of the new regiments\nwill be equipped with the magazine\nrifle.
236a198c3967e3f1be0ac72ffefbf262 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.7109588723997 40.063962 -80.720915 among thu Irozen waters of tbo Arctic\ncircle, aud after twenty-one years to\nhave been cast ashore something like\n8,000 miles from the place where It wait\nlaunched, in lull of a melancholy inter*\ncrit, though there la little probability\nthat the document, even If authentic,\nwlir add much to what we already\nknow ol the laat Uaya of Frauklln's\ngallant band. In all llkellbood thu\nrccord la merely a duplicate or lb** one\nwbloh MoUUntock diioovered on King\nWilliam's Island In 1830, Sir Leopold,\nIt will be remembered, found there the\nonly authentic account of Franklin's\nfate which, up to the preaeut time, hai\never reached ui. In n calm,'erect*\ned twenty.eight yoara before by Sir\nJohn ltoaa, ho fouud, Inoloaeu in\na tin case, a record of tiir John's laat\ncrulso up to the 26th of April,\n1818. Franklin bad died on the lith\nor June, 1647. The ships liiebus and\nTerror hud been frozen In for 10\nmonths, and tbo survivors of the crow,\n10!) in number, under oommand of Capt.\nOrozler, had abandoned them and set\nout over land for the Great Fish River\nof British North America. McCUntock\nbeard from the Esquimaux how the\nwhite men had one by one dropped\ndown und died on the way. He fouud\nthe skeletons two or three, with their\nabandoned sledges, boats, and guns; he\nsatisfied himself that the remainder had\nperished miserably among the frozen\nstrait*, aud their bonos bad been lost in\nthe waters when the short summer\nmaw set In; and though tbtro has since\nbeen a rumor that Crozler and some of\nhis men were alive several years later\namong the Esquimaux, and may even\nyet be wandering In those inaccessible\nregions where tho root or no other civ*\nlli/.ed man has ever trod, there can be\nlittle doubt that McOllntock'a conclu-\nslona were jastltled, and that no later\nrecord of the most memoiable of all\nArcllo voyagea will ever reueh us.\nThe document said to have been\nfound on the California coast appears\nto have been written, as that lound on\nKing William's Island was, on one of\nthe printed forms lurnished by the\nBritish Admiralty to all discovery j\nships, for tbe purpose of being lnclos-\ned in bottles and thrown overboard in\norder to ascertain the diftctlon ol ocean\ncurrents. Ho exact, indeed, Judging\nfrom the telegraphic report, is Its re*\nsemblance to tbe McCllutock relic, that\nwe should have little hesitation In pro-\nnouncmg it a lorgery imptred by that\ndocument, were it not probable that a\nforger would have Invented some
144b3be0180ce62598cf3f2191d42b6c CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1900.015068461441 41.875555 -87.624421 distinct," nnd, providing, however,\n"that nothing In this net shall be con\nstrued ns extinguishing snld compaules\nentering luto tho agreement or agree-\nments mentioned, or annulling or Im-\npairing nuy of their respective fran\nchises, licenses or privileges, but that\nthey shall severally bo regarded ns still\nsubsisting, so far as their continuance\nfor the purpose of upholding any right,\ntltlo or Interest, power, privilege or Im-\nmunity ever exercised or enjoyed by\nnny of them, mny bo necessary for tho\nprotection of their respectlvo creditors\nor mortgagees, or any of them" nnd\nSECTION 10, of tho ACT. which Is n\nviolation of tho letter of tho Constitu\ntion, lu that Is attempts to supcrsedo\ntho rights expressly vested In the City\nCouucll by the Constitution, In relntton\nto grant privileges In tho streets of tho\ncity, aud would destroy tho vested\nrights and property Interests of the\ncity nnd liabilities and obligations to\ntho city and Its citizens assumed by\ntho gns companies, under their ordi-\n nud franchise contracts, by pro\nviding tltat "tho purchnso and salo or\nlease, or consolidation and merger,\nshall not bo held or construed ns a vio\nlation of tho provision of nny ordlnaneo\nor bond given thereunder," theroby en\ndeavoring to protect the evaslvo and\ndishonest gas companies nt tho ex-\npense of tho legnl aud equitable rights\nof tho city and Its citizens.\nREAD AND PONDER. This snmo\nCONSOLIDATION ACT, In SECTION\n10, provides that "Ir nsu tho property\nsold, or leased, or acquired through\nconsolidation or merger, Is subject to\nmortgage OR OTHER LIEN, such\nmortgage or other Hen shall bo and re-\nmain a lien upon ALL PROPERTY\nso sold, purchased, leased or AC\nQUIRED, so that tho samo shall bo\nliable for and respond (to tho payment)\nof hiteli mortgage or other Hon exist-\ning at the time of such Mile or lease,"\nnud "Any corporation purchasing or\nlousing the real estuto and personal\nproperty of any other company or com-\npanies
425bc101da502e8e819250919b6ac16a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.001369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 horse-power motor, to make an Ideal Mr. Seward was accustomed to re­\ncar for flVe passengers. It is a big oeive informal calls from the diplo-\nroomy car In every sense of the word, matle representatives of other coun-\nhavlng 4 wheel-bare of 110 inches, tries early In the morning, frequently\nand wheels 32 by 3 1-2 inches. The at the dinner hour, and sometimes tale\nVpaT'/motbr 1B cast en bloc and has a bore at night. One evening in Ihe early\nY jf 3 7-8 inches and a stroke, 4 1-2 1 spring of 1867, Mr. Seward was en-\n' Inches. Electric lighting and starting ; terlalning some company who wore\napparatus is Included, and the equip- ! enjoying Ihe fragrant cigars which it\nment in every way suggests the car | was his custom to pass around among\not »2,000 rallier than one of $785, his guests. Almost unannounced, the\nthe price which Dodge Brothers have | minister from Russia appeami and\nmade. Real leather upholstery and | said in an way: "Mr. Seward,\nthe latest type of self lubricating j my government is ready to accept\nsprings makes the car one of the your terms. Russia will sell for $7. - I\neasiest riding machines that has ever I 200.000. If convenient to you, I will S\nbeen marketed. Among the unusual I call at (he State Department totnor- j\nfeatures on the ear is the speedo- | row and we can draft a treaty."\nmeter drive, which Is connected dl- Instantly Mr. Seward was upon his |\nrectly to the transmission, and is | feet, and once more shook hands with j\ntherefore practically (rouble proof. I the Russian minister cordially, as he I\nThe arrangement of Ihe transmis-1 said : "Why not tonight? Whats Ihe j\ntears is also a novel one, no j use of waiting until tomorrow?"\nexcept the third being in oper- ( One of those who were present sug- j\nwhen the car is driven on dl-1 Rested that it would be necessary to\nrent drive.
1c9016d449ba3527a34628d193dc6f8b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.6534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 ifter seeing rao leave it, and- had told\nin* of the writers that he hod- left a\n001 in my room. He had come up to\nhe room with the servant who had the\noom under his care, u native, of course,\nike himee!f, and had then; either by\nor?e or connjvance, made a thorough\nearch for the cigars. As It was not\nny policy to let the manager of the ho-\ne* know about the diamonds, I told Mm\nhat my pocket-book, containing about\nBO rupees, had been atolern On inquiry\nt was discovered that the servant in\nhargs of my room had- disappeared. No\nloubt remained In my nrind that my\nIrst suspicion was correct. I was much\nIUI wm, 1UI IL OTCiinnf « » «\nhat the cigarmaker would be ratistled\nrtuh hlii failure and five up the Idea of\npouring the Flore*. However, I warn to\nalb on> the next day in one of the Olan\nilr.e steamers, and the diamonds were\necure ire tlie hotel safe.\n"About hour before the saHIng of\nhe veseob I got the packet from the\nnanager, and placing* It in a secret\nocket inside my waistcoat, set off In a {\nharrle for the gftat where the ship was\nfin®. I was not to get on board, how-\nver, without another attempt being: i\nnade to deprive me of the diamonds. t\nVe were about halfway to the ghat\nk-hei> we were run into by a gharrie t\nolng at great speed. I was thrown- to t\nhe ground, and before I could regain e\niry feet two natives fef> ore top of me. c\nlo we lay for a moment on the ground, i\nfctt the two men going through my t\nockets. The whole tiring was done so ^\nirickly that I was quite helpless. The ,\nwo men were gone before I hadi a «\nhance of seizing either of them. For- j\nimately they had not got as rar an my ^\naside pockot, so the diamonds were still ,\nafe. i
343a131b16e8c4f76d5e8a4128b14b9f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.801912536683 39.623709 -77.41082 The question of macadam and other mod-\nern metal roads has recently become one of\nadded interest to Marylanders in view of the\nmovements now In progress in the various\ncounties to lake advantage of the opporlun\nity offered to secure such modern roads un\nder the new State aid road law. While there\nis generally believed by peisons ol experience\nto be great difficulty in obtaining an anywise\naccurate computation of the comparative\ncost of hauling over metal roads and over the\nold fashioned earth thorofares, Mr. Halbert\nP. Gillette, In the Good Roads Magazine,”\ngives some conclusions from a very carefully\ncompiled set of figures, which may he con-\nsidered with profit by those to whom the\nquestion of good roads is all-important.\n“It may be safely said,” writes Mr. Gillette\n“that the building of macadam roads in\nAmerica will enable a team of horses to haul\nthree net tons on the average of all roads as\ncompared with one ton which la now the\naverage on earth roads, and in the face of\nthe facts 1 have very little patience with who\nInsist that earth roads are good enough lor\nAmerican fanners. Experiments show that\non a good macadam road a tractive force of\n35 pounds will pull a ton as compared with\n75 pounds on a good, hard, gravel road, \n100 pounds on a good, hard, clay road. This\nshows conclusively that from two to three\ntimes as big a load can be hauled over maca-\ndam as over a firstclass earth road."\n“I have found from actual experience,”\ncontinues Mr. Gillette, “that the average\nload hauled over macadam has been 3 tons\nbesides the weight of the wagon, practically\nanother ton. Oyer gravel roads I find that\n1j tons is a fair load where there are any\nhills to ascend. Grades of from 3 to 6 per\ncent can be ascended on macadam where the\nload is 8 tons, although on the level I have\noften had teams pull 5 tons and occasionally\nup a hill with a 5 per cent grade.\n"Now. if a good macadam road enables 3\ntons to be hauled to market where one ton\nis the average load, we have by the follow-\ning very simple computation, a cost ol 8 to\n10 cents per ton mile over macadam; for a\nteam costing |3 a day travels ten to twelve\nmiles and return with 3 ton? of produce; or\nit hauls 30 to 36 ton miles for |3, which is 8\nto 10 cents per ton per mile, as compared\nwith 25 or 30 cents over common earth roads\nand 17 to 20 cents over the very best gravel\nroads.
6dc8b2cebf2d5b4ed1f263e89f47198c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.1547944888382 31.960991 -90.983994 the naval marine generally, precisely ofthe\ncharacter to be most appropriate and the\nmost useful in a war w ith our country. I\nam not prepared to say, nor do I deem it\nmaterial to decide, how far wre have a right\nto expect an explicit disclaimer ofthe char­\nacter and purposes of the warlike prepara­\ntions now making by Great Britain, under\nthe circumstances. They may be the dic­\ntate of various motives of policy, and the\nsuit of many causes; and, without attempting\nto assign to each its particular influence, 1\nam by no means prepared to admit that the\napprehension of difficulties with the United\nStates had no share in them; and it is very\nclear that if a rupture with the United States\nshould grow out of our present difficulties,\nthis country will be as fully and effectually\nprepa for it at all points, and fbr all pos­\nsible purposes, as if that,* and that alone,\nhad been the object of all her warlike pre­\nparations. She will be in a situation to act\nand strike as promptly and signally as she\ncould have been with her energies exclu­\nsively directed to that end; and I feel it\nduty to add, that not to expect, in case a\nrupture becomes unavoidable, that this Gov­\nernment, thus in complete armor, will\npromptly and vigorously exert her utmost\npower to inflict the utmost possible injury\nUpon OUT country atuL.nl] if ^ iutors«i«, vMtuki\nnot be doing justice to such a crisis,\nI think it ought to be expected, indeed from\nall I learn I cannot doubt, that, in case of\nhostilities, the aim of this Government will\nbe to strike its heaviest blow at the
1f6b01a81e83d7473475804c96472849 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1902.2123287354134 58.275556 -134.3925 tio corporation assessor snan oe suu-\n>ct to review by the city council, and\nppeals may be taken from their decis-\n>ns to the district court. Surely a\nise and just provision. And it is\nirther provided, that no bonded in-\nebtedness whatever shall be authoriz-\nd for any purpose. With such wise\nafeguards no man's property can be\nTongfully assessed. No man can be\nobbed. What would be the pipbable\nax on the average home if the full\nmount were levied? Taking all things\nito consideration we would say that a\nair valuation of the average residence\nroperty would be $500. If it is assess-\nd at 60 per cent of its valuation that\n'ould be $300, and a tax of one per cent\nn $300wouldbe$3ayear, or 25centsa\nlonth for municipal purposes. Think\n it, a man to partake of all the bene-\nts of a properly conducted city at an\nxpense of 25 cents per month and then\nick at that. Men whose wives and\nhildren are in daily peril from the foul\ndors that arise from poor drainage,\nlthy cesspools and the like, will stand\nack and howl about taxes when asked\nd pay the paltry sum of 25 cents a\nlonth, or even to double the whole\nalculation, and call it 50 cents, or\nouble it again and make it a dollar.\n,et your property bo valued at 82000\nnd your tax 81 a month, and we assert\nuthout fear of contradiction that that\nj the maximum amount possible,\nlany of us pay that amount each\nlonth to the Fire Department and\nhink nothing of it.
187be00287584ee7b94fb97ef435d645 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.2589040778792 37.561813 -75.84108 gating the mysteries hidden in a bee-\nhive, and still half of the secrets would\nbe undiscovered. The formation of\nthe cell has long been a celebrated pro\nblem for the mathematician, whilst the\nchanges which the honey undergoes\noffer at least an equal interest to the\nchemist. Every one knows what hon-\ney fresh from the comb is like. It is\nu islear yellow syrup, without a trace\nor solid sugar in it. Upon straining,\nhowever, it gradually assumes a crys-\ntalline appearance it candies, as the\nsaying is, and ultimately, becomes a\nsolid lump of sugar. It has not been\nsuspected that this change was duo to\na photographic action ; that the same\nagent which alters the molecular ar\nrangement of the iodine of silver on\nthe excited collodion plate, and deter\nmines the formation of camphor and\niodine crysta's In a bottle causes the\nnyrupy honey assume a crystalline\nform. This, however, Is the case. M.\nScheibler has enclosed honey in stop- -\njtered flasks, some of which he has\n. kept in perfect darkness, whilst others\nhave been exposed to the light. The\ninvariable results have been that the\nminned portion rapidly crystallizes,\nwimsi uiai Kept in the uarK has re-\nmained perfectly liquid. AVe now sec\nwhy bees are so Careful to work in per\nleci oaricnessy ami wny they are so\ncareful to otacure the glass windows\nwhich are sometimes placed in their\nhives. , The existence of their younar\ndepends on the liquidity of the saccha\nrine food presented to them ; and if\nlight were allowed access to this, the\nsyrup would gradually acquire a more\nor less solid consistency; it would seal\nUP the cells, and in all prolwbility\nprove fatal to the inmates of the hive.\nLtiuarterly Journal of Science.
28f49925e183bf7342799cc4572e647d COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.541095858701 41.262128 -95.861391 apon, the wboie of tbe iawa which werajcal *Bperior ? Tarted by thia, ao one «f\nrequired to be faithfully executed, were jour Suu», eatoept T«x m, aver waa a *o*-\nbeing reaisted, and failing of erecution, j ereignty . and erea Texas gave ap the\nin aearly, one-third of the .States, muat j character on coming iato tbe Union, by\nthey be "allowed to finally fail of exeeu- j wbiah act she acknowledged us Ooawti-\ntion. Ktac had it been* perfectly oiear j tation v*f tbe^ raited State*, mi tbt lawa\nthat, by the ase of the. m^aua aeoaaaary to j ^nd treatie* uf th.j United State*, made ia\ntheir execution, some aiagle law made in j puraaaaoe of ths t'onat»tutnJn to he for\nsuch extreme tenderouas of the citusnis' \\ her the supreme law of th< land. Hie\nLiberty, that practically it relieve# aiore j State* have their atatas in the Uaicm, aad\nof the guilty than of the innocent, ahoaid, j they bate no other iugai stains. If th^y\nto a very limited exteot, l>e filiated. To j break from thi*, they oat oalt do ao\nstate the question more directly, are all i law aad by revoiutiea. Th« Ua-\nthe laws bat one, to go unexecuted, aad j jots, an 1 not tfceaaalte* aeparau;, arocur-\nfir,ii mmppt iuself go to piece* le*t that |*d their independence aad Lberty, by ooo-\noae be violated? Erea in aueh a eaae} quaat or purrha*#; the Tgioo gate each\noald not the official oath be broken if of the whaleter indepeadeaoe and liberty\nthe Gorarnmeat should be overthrown, j it bad. The Union is old« tb*a any jf\nwhen it wa* belieted that disregarding i tbe States, aad in fact it orcated them as\ntbe single law would tead to preserve.— j State* originally. Some dopeadeat ooto-\nBat H wa* aot beiitved that um questioa! nies made the uoion, aad m turn the l'n-\nwas presented r it was aot beliiTed tbatjion threw off Sboir old dbp»r».ici»ce for\nany fikW «m violated. The pr^vuuon* of j them, and mtde them Statut such a*tfcrf\nthe Constitution, that the pri*iif ge of the j are. Not one of them crer had a State\nwrit of Habeas Corpas shall not be *oa- |ConstiuaUioa hefor# they eatered the L"a-\np«cded ualc*a «b«, in eases of rebellion lion.
a562a6351d8736ffe1ebfb40efde3058 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.6424657217149 43.798358 -73.087921 Whilst, then, we tvould encourage each\non? to labor irr his appointed sphere, ac-\ncording to his ability, or the mitigation\nor removal ofthe sufferings of mankind\nwe would do what we may with the fee-\nble powers which God has given us, to\na waxen our fellow men from their apathy,\nanl to lead them into an investigation of\nthe cause of these suffering; confident\nthat it will result in a conviction that it is\ndeeper far than most have divined. The\ncause of most ofthe evils which the phi-\nlanthropist sees and deplores, we a reaper\nsuaded lies deep in the foundations of soci\nety ; and no rational hope of permanent\nrenei can do entertained out in a tnorougn\nuprooting of that fafee social Sys'.em, which\nis their fruitful It is in vain for\nus to shut'ouf eyes against this tru'Ji un\nwelcome as it may be, it will, aooner or\nliter; if we are not perverse!? blind, force\nitself upon us ; and the sooner we look it\nmanfully in the fjce, the better for us and\nfoi the world. Our civilization is bank\nrupt it is an ctier failure it has tamp\nered long enough with the hopes of hu\nminity it 1ms not satisfied its wants, and\nit never can it does not allow man to ful\nfil his destiny on eartbit obliges him to\nsuporeis his highest aspirations, to do vo\nlencd to his holiest instincts it belittles\nhi o it makes him a dwarf, (True,there\nare different degrees of growth, as some\ndwarfs are larger or smaller--Du- f,
1b2e863e4e4074c583b0d4f4aacf9327 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.7684931189751 42.217817 -85.891125 Notice is hereby Riveu that by virtue or an\nExecution, aud levy thereunder made, issued\nout or the Circuit Court for the County of Van\nHuren, in favor of Warren IX Kinney, Frank-\nlin li. Adams and John Ibliug, against the\ngoode, chattels, land and tenements, of David\nW. Powell and W illiam Wilson upou a tran-\nscript or a judgment rendered berore C harles\nM. Muii 1,1, a Justice of the Peace of this\nCounty, and duly tiled and recorded in said\nCircuit Court, and also pursuant to a decree of\nthe Circuit Court for tho County of Van Uuren,\nin Chancery', mado upon original aud supple-\nmental Hills, iu aid or said execution, iu an\naction therein hal, wherein said Warren L.\nKinney, Franklin ii. Adams and John Ihling\nare complainants, said William Wilson,\nLevi W ilson and Hannah Wilson were defend\nants in original bill, and wherein by death of\nsaid Hannah Wilson said William Wilson, Levi\nWUson, and. by revivor, George Wilson, Wil-\nliam Wilson, Jr., Jane Anstis and Betsey Bur-\ngess are defendants, directing the enforcement\nof said execution against the lands below de-\nscribed, I shall expose to sale, to the highest\nbidder, at the rront door of the Court bouse, in\nthe village of Paw Paw. Michigan, at eleven\no'cock in the forenoon or tbe fifteenth day of\nNovember, 1870, and In tbe order in wbieh they\nare named, the following described parcels of\nland being in Van Huren eonnty, Michigan, vli;\nLot four (4) block two (I) village of Lawton,\nlot seven (7) block four (4) Dodge's addition to
1f83ed72995b8c00e271bb6e323e63fc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.0452054477423 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described real estate, viz:\nNo. 2 . All that certain lot of land and\nthree-story brick dwelling thereon, situ­\nate In the city of Wilmington, bounded\nand described as follows:\nBeginning on the westerly side of Ship-\nley street between Second and Third\nstreets, at the centre of the party wall\nbetween this and the dwelling of Henry\nGarrett, adjoining on the south; thence\nWesterly through the centre of said wait\nand parallel with Third street forty feet;\ntheme northerly parallel with Shipley\nstreet about three feel and six Incite«;\ntheme westerly parallel with Third\nstreet amt passing over the middle of the\nwell of water, «o as to divide the satna\nInto two equal parts, for the use of both\nproperl les. twenty-two feet;lhonce south-\noily parallel with Shipley street about\nthree feel six Inches to the direction \nthe line first described; thence westerly\nparallel with Third street tblrty-slx feet\nby to the easterly side of a five feet wide al­\nley leading Into Third street; thence\nnortherly by said alley side parallel with\nShipley street twenly-iwo feet and »tx\nInches; thence easterly parallel with\nThird street, and by other land of the\nsaid Henry Garrett ninety-eight feet to\nthe aforesaid westerly side of Shipley\nstreet, and thence thereby southerly\niweiily-two feet six Inches to the place of\nbeginning, be the contents more or less,\nthe said alley having been laid out for the\nbelter accommodation of the ground, now\nof the sold Garrett.\nNo. 3 . All that certain lot of land and\ntwo-story frame dwelling thereon, situate\nIn the said city of Wilmington, bounded\nand described as follows; Beginning nt\nthe westerly sld« of Walnut street, be-
75c6f6937513351a2f6fd99d06963988 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4385245585408 39.290882 -76.610759 lished in his magazine, after it had been rejected\nby several of the literary journals, made himself\nresponsible for its scurrilities. It is true, he man-\nifested a consciousness that he had done wrong,\nby givingan explanation of the manner in which\nhe had been tricked by Horwitz, and the excep-\ntionable parts re-inserted after lie had caused\nthem to be stricken out. The Lutherans were,\nnevertheless, displeased. But to make it out,\nthat I was the cause of their displeasure, will re-\nquire something of the logic of the wolf who ac-\ncused the lamb, drinking inthe stream below him,\nwith rendering the water turbid.\nThe Rev. doctor complains, too, that what he\ncalls my attack, but which I have' shown was a\nrejoinder, appeared on the evening of March\n10th, "being the afternoon of the very day on\nwhich the trialfor libelcommenced)" and I know\nthat lie has made the impression on some, that I\nattacked him about the subject matter of, or some-\ntliing connected with the trial. This is one of\nthe most disingenuous and exceptionable parts of\nhis note. I leave it to the reader to decide for him-\nself, what was his design in thus specifying \nday of the beginning of the trial, in glaring ital-\nics. If I had written on that subject against him,\nof course I must have been one of his enemies.?\nBut it is well known that I was his friend, and\nemployed my influence in preventing the institu-\ntion of the suit. It has been seen that it was the\ngeological discussion with Horwitz, into which\nhe had obtruded himself; and surely he could not\nexpect that I would wait until the trial was over,\nto defend myself. That would have been look-\ningfor something beyond the patience of Job. If\nhe thought he had enough of work on his hands\nat that time, he should have Kept back his attack\nuntil the suit was finished. He ought not, how-\never, to bring this forward as a grave charge,\nfor, unless I mistake his character, so good is his\nstomach for fighting, that he cannot have too\nmuch of it, and lie has not the least objection that\nhis antagonists come all together. Perhaps he\nlicgins to find that teo many hard knocks at once,\nimpair his appetite for the sport An excess of\neven the. most palatable food, will produce satie-\nty
0f626042280f332d36bc9f06a635d07a WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.2964480558085 40.827279 -83.281309 World would be glad to support a Liberal\nRepublican, provided that the Democrat-\nic Convention should adopt him; and\nother Democratic papers prod Senator\nSumner to hasten out of the Republican\nranks, without, however, betraying the\nleast disposition to leave their own. Are\nwe, then, upon the eve of the formation\nof a new partv? If we are, what are its\ndistinctive principles? Or have we come\naround again to the Monroe era of party\ndissolution and good feeling?\nIt seems to us to be the merest folly.\nand a perilous folly, to speak of the issues\nwhich divided the country lor a genera\ntion, and which led to the war, as in any\nfinal sense settled and closed. Politics\nare not a mere game, in which one side\nhaving lost and the other won, there is a\nsmiling of the board for a\nnew turn. The division between the Re-\npublican and Democratic parties was\nfounded upon differing views of the very\nnature ot the government ana or. miman\nrights. Those views were absolutely in-\ncompatible, and admitted of no pacific\nsettlement. But when the life and char-\nacter and conscience of one part of the\npopulation are hostile to those of another\npart when the spirit of society, the the\nories of industry and of original right\nin one section are hopelessly opposed to\nthose of another, and the result is a des\nolating and cruel war, in which one party\nunconditionally conquers the other what\nsupreme folly to imagine that a mere\nformal acquiescence in the defeat has\nhealed or settled the real difference !\nThe present condition of the Southern\nStates, the Ku-Kl u-
2d586497b2e98b8b595cfed809ebcd4a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8041095573312 40.063962 -80.720915 dollars If you will tell meliow you go\ndown ahead of my boat."\n"Dat's bully, Jlossn Captain," was thi\nnegro's ready reply, "you put dat Ave dol\nInm into dis gent'lman's baud and I'll tel\njrou how I got down."\nThe money was placed, therefore, li\nmy possession, and Pompey, striking an\nattitude, proceeded with l)is4xplanatlon\nevidently hugely delighted at his numer\nim< and attentive audience.\n"You mind, Bissau Captain, when\nlumped ashore?"\n"Yes,yes," said tho Captain.\n"Well, inoasa. 1 land in de water and di\nmad, and I links a good deal. I faild tc\nmare In de dark, and wld de bout and di\npaddles all hanging around dar. Well,\nmama, pilot ho ring de bell go starn wit\nDno wheel and go head wid the odei\nwheel, and 10 de boat nlio swing round\nlnd by and by, all in de dark, tbe starn ot\nie boat come round to dis chile as he wai\nlar in do water. So I jtst took hold of dc\nudder and I drawed myself up In\n. 0 de little boat atde atarn, and I lay dai\nill do folks go to bed lode boat, and den ]\nirawl out and I tell the cook I done gont\nlungry, and golly, mnssa, how I did scan\nlat cook 1 lie tought I was a gliost, sure\nWell, be gib mo someting to eat, and dec\n10 cut my liar all short, and den I telh\nlome ob de boys, and the berry nexi\nnoruing I goes to worlc on de boat and\njets my rations just like cberybody."\n"Do you mean to tell me," said the cap\ntain, "that you rode all tho way down thi\nriver in my own boat, and Just under mj\neyes and those of tlio mate whom you\ntried to kill?"\n"Yes, raassa, dal's so," said Pompcy\n'and when I got up here to de railroad 1\nHepped on do cars, and, massa, I got here\n[is In time to go to the Bureau Tore df\nliuat got In."
218de0bbb925c9ae4a9dd09a1733d00a THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1886.1219177765095 46.187885 -123.831256 then passed. IIire are to be seen\nmany boats laden with lumber, fire-\nwood, vegetables, fruit, flowers, etc.,\nwaiting to pay toll. A large daily\nrevenue is derived from this source\nby the government. The stalwart\nIndians swiftly pole the boat up the\nstream for about ten minutes more,\nand Santa Anita is reached. This is\nan old Indian village, which has un-\ndergone few or no changes for the\nlast 300 j'ears, if we except the pub-\nlic school for boys and girls and a\nsmall church. It is a favorite pleas-\nure resort for the inhabitants of Mex-\nico, especially during the summer\nmonths, and is rendered doubly at-\ntracts e by the numerous cAtnanipaa\nor lioatmg gara ins lounu in its vicin-\nity, on which are grown in remark-\nable abundance Vic; tables of all\nkinds and beautiful" flowers, which\nare sold for a mere trifle.\nThe water in the canal was the\ncolor of dishwater. At Santa Anita\n entered a narrow ditch just wide\nenough for our boat. The little boy\nwho pulled the boat with a long pole\nworked manfully. We passed by a\nnumber of women washing clothes on\nthe bank, and using a fiat stone for\na washboard. The gard ens -s ur pris e-\nand pleased us. Here was a small\nstrip of land of, say 20 feet wide by\n100 feet deep, surrounded by water,\nproducing the finest onions, another\ncabbages, another radishes, another\nflowers, and so on, for at least a mile\na succession of the best cultivated\ngardens I ever saw. The Mexican\nIndians are the best gardners in the\nworld, aside from the Germans.\nTheir methods are rude, but they\nknow how to cultivate their garden\npatches. Un our return we met boat\nloads of girls and boys singing and\nlauzhin" as thov slowlv elided alone.\nIt was not a Venetian scene, but it\nshowed that the browa -Bho uld ere -
14b81b5db53b7357b7122e1f722b177a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.9575342148655 44.939157 -123.033121 As the present contracts for the\nschool books used In Oregon will expire\nin jtfiy, state printer Arthur W. Law- -\nrence, suggested at the meeting of the\ncommercial club last evening, that ef-\nforts be made to bring about legislh- -\ntion by which, after 1!)1!), the school\nbooks used in the state should be print\ned at the state printing plant in Salem.\nAccording to Mr. Lawrence, the plant\nhere was large enough to print the\nbooks, and that Ty so doing, a saving\nof 50 per cent could be made to the\nstate. Another point of special inter-\nest to Salem, was that the printing of\ntext books would add largely to the\npayroll.. At present this amounts to\nabout $1,200 a month, but during the\nsessions of the legislature, it is from\n$:i,500 to $4,000 month.\nShould the books be printed in Salem,\ntile payroll would amount to $5,(100 dur-\ning the entire year. . In 1914, Oregon\npaid $160,000 for its school books, all\npublished in the east, and only 10 per\ncent of this was left in Oregon. Mr.\nLawrence suggested that with the print-\ning of the books, horo, only Oregon\nmaterial would be used, as has been the\ncustom in the state printing plant.\nCalifornia was cited as a state pub-\nlishing its own school books, saving the\nstate yearly $220,000.\nThe great saving to the pcoplo of the\nstate, according to Mr. Lawrence, would\nbe in the retail price of school books,\nas this would be reduced fully half.\nIf this proposition could bo passed at\nthe next legislature, it would give the\nplant here ample time to
ac99d62d27c3dfc900acae42be545f53 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5778688208359 39.513775 -121.556359 Rondo & CuLO. —This firm bare lately es-\ntablished themselves in one or more places\nin town, and appear to be doing a very brisk\nbusiness. Each evening are we enlived by\nthe cries of the Banker and the excited\ncrowd around the Banking tabic.\nIt seems impossible to build up a town in\nCalifornia, without having it pass through\nall the different gradesof society. Were it\nin the earlier times of the country, there\nmight be some reasonable excuse for tolera-\nting such swindling, gaming establishments.\nSociety wag then in a disorganized state,\ngold was more easily obtained than at pres-\nent, and excitement and amusement were\nsought for. Now, when we have society,\nand all the comforts and endearments of\nhome around us why should such things be\nencouraged and patronized in our midst.\nWhy should the gambling table be found in\nevery mining locality where the miner is\nenabled to make wages? Do not those who\n throng around Rondo & Culos ta-\nbles understand the principle of the game?\nDo they not know that the per centagc token\nby the banker, will soon eat up the princi-\nple of those who invest in the game ? Let\nthe crowd who surround one of these tables\ncommence with a specified amount of money,\nand see how long it will take the banker to\nappropriate the whole of it with his per\ncentage. They will then be able to see that\nthey arc playing a losing game.\nThe law, seeing the untold evils and the\namount of crime that sprung from the gam-\nbling dens in our State, has wisely provided\nagainst many of its more odious features.\nWhy the law permits Rondo & Culo to do\nbusiness, and exclude other branches of the\nsame business, we know not, unless for the\npurpose of creating a monopoly in favor of\nRondo & Culo. That the law cannot reach
579d78978df408b287d5b16ab50c244f THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1906.1630136669203 40.114955 -111.654923 Sec 4 That the Bureau of Chemistry of the Department of Agrlculttrt\nshall procure or cause to bo procured from retail dealers and analyze rt\ncause to bo analyzed or examined chemically microscopically or otherwise\nsamples of all manufactured prepared or compounded foods offered for iii\nIn original unbroken packages in time Dlstrlst of Columbia In any Territory\nor in any State other than that in which they shall have been respectively\nmanufactured or otherwise produced or from a foreign country or intendel\nfor export to a foreign country The Secretary of Agriculture shall mats\nnecessary rules and regulations for carrying out tho provisions ot this del\nand is hereby authorized to employ such chemists Inspectors clerks tW\nors and other employees as may be necessAry to carry out tho provisions\nof this Act and to make such publication of tho results of tho examination\nand analysis as ho may deem proper And any manufacturer producer of\ndealer who shall refuse to supply upon application and tender and full par\nment of tho selling price samples of such articles of food to any perioi\nduly authorized by tho Secretary of Agriculture to receive tho same sluB\nbe guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall bo fined not \none hundred dollars or Imprisoned not exceeding one hundred days or boil\nSec 5 That any person firm or corporation who shall violate sectlosJ\none and two of this Act shall bo guilty of a misdemeanor and upon contlo\ntlon shall be fined not exceeding two hundred dollars for tho first offensl\nand for each subsequent offense not exceeding three hundred dollars or M\nImprisoned not exceeding ono year or both in the discretion of the court\nSec C That any person firm or corporation who shall wilfully purpose\nor maliciously change or add to tho ingredients of any food make faltt\ncharges or Incorrect analysis with tho purpose of subjecting tho makers ot\nsuch foods to fine or imprisonment under this Act shall bo guilty of a mi-\nsdemeanor and upon conviction shall bo fined not exceeding ono thousand\ndollars nor less than three hundred dollars or Imprisoned for not less thou\nthirty days nor more than ono year or both\nSec 7 That It shall bo tho duty of every district attorney to whom til\nSecretary of Agriculture shall report any violation of this Act to cause pr-\noceedings to bo commenced nail prosecuted without delay for tho fines ani\npenalties in such caso provided-
ab5b8c00a0074fa732609c9b7bbc4ca9 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.2616438039067 40.618676 -80.577293 Paden City, W. Va.— The regular\nmeeting of Local Union No. 14G was\nheld March 23 with a good attendance.\nTwo mouldrunners were accepted and\nwill be initiated at our next regular\nmeeting. Applications have been ac­\ncepted from several girls which seems\nto indicate an upward trend in busi­\nness. A majority of the employes are\nreceiving their forty-four hours per\nweek, and we certainly hope this con­\ndition continues.\nThe iocal was saddened by the pass-\nng of Brother Everett Stull, a char­\nter member of Local Union 14fi. Broth­\ner Stull joined the local when the shop\nwas organized. Mrs. Alta Stull and\nfamily wish to express their grati­\ntude to the neighbors and members of\nthis organization for their sympathy\nand help during the illness and death\nof Brother Stull.\nInterest isn't exactly brimming at\nthe present. Too many "members are\nallowing the officers to shoulder all\n responsibility. The officials are\ndoing a splendid job and we believe\nthey deserve more support than they\nare getting. Matters can be thrashed\nout easily when the local turns out.\nWe feel at least 200 members should\nbe present at every meeting.\nWe wish to warn the members that\nthe time is drawing near when we\nmust select our delegates to the nati­\nonal convention to be held in Atlantic\nCity. It is best that every member at­\ntend the meetings to become acquaint­\ned with those who are eligible so a\nmember who is vitally interested in\nthe affairs of the Brotherhood will ba\nchosen. We all want a representative\nworthy of upholding our craft. You\nmay select such a person only at the\nmeetings. Those not having enough\ninterest to attend all the meetings\nsurely would not be worthy to repre­\nsent us in anything so important as\nour convention.
20e44cbd9b289bd2ee7f422264769ed0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.0178081874683 58.275556 -134.3925 H. E. McCarthy, en route to Seattle,;\nis latest arrival here from the new\nChicken quartz find, says a Dawson\ndispatch. He confirms the stories of\nfabulous riches found on American\nclaims, and predicts a great rush into\nthe country next summer, if not before.\nHe says that quartz streamers have j\nbeen found six feet below the surface\nthat would assay $30,000 to the ton. A\nminer could take out $1,000 a day with\nmortar and pestle.\nThe Forty-Mile country is busy.\nSeveral hundred miners are engaged on\nJack Wade, Walker's Ford, Franklin,\nChicken and their tributaries. On\nWade there are fifty miners at work\nfor the winter. About twenty boilers I\nare in use there. Chicken and its sev¬\neral tributaries have quite a number\nof people at work for the winter. On\nthe Forty-Mile proper many new cab¬\nins have been erected since last spring\nby men who are working along the old\nstream with rockers. They are mining\nby the primitive Forty-Mile method of\nsinking through the ice of the creek\nafter it is frozen solid, and taking the\nauriferous sands and gravels from the\nbed. They heat water in a tent on \nice, and keep a supply sufficient to\nrock out their dirt. Some of them\nhave made as high as $4,000 in a winter.\nMount McKinley, the highest moun¬\ntain on the North American continent,\nwas visited last season by Alfred H.\nBrooks and his party from the United\nStates geological survey, of which Mr.\nD. L . Reaburn was topographer. As\nfar as is known, this is the first time\nthe slopes of the peak have been reach¬\ned by white men, though in 1898 its al¬\ntitude and moisture were determined\nfrom a distance by Robert Muldrow,\nof the same survey. The mountain is\nlocated near the western margin of the\nAlaskan range, the general name given\nthe large mountain mass which sep¬\narates the Yukon and Koskokwim\nwaters from Cook inlet drainage. It is\na great dome-shaped mountain, form¬\ned of intrusive rock towering to an\nelevation of over 20,000 feet above sea\nlevel. Though its summit reaches so\nhigh an altitude, almost four miles\nabove tide, it probably is not as diffi¬\ncult of ascent as some other Alaskan\nmountains, for example, . Mount St.\nElias, because of its relatively high\nsnow line.
28910f8213ed44a247d642b9455e04cf PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.8342465436326 39.756121 -99.323985 realize that only one more thing re-\nmains and that is to get the voters to\nthe polls, and they are bending every\neffort to that end.. Mr. Craddock and\nthe state ticket will be elected from\ntop to bottom. The lower house of\nthe legislature will be carried by the\nfusionists. The Supreme Court will\nbe fusionists. Botkin will be elected.\nA majority of the congressman on the\nfusion ticket will be elected.\nThe two state committees feel that\nthey our! to make one more appeal\nand warning in tin last few days of\nthe campaign, an 1 to call upon the\nmembers of the respective part ies to\ncome out and take the victory which\nis so easily in their grasp, and which\nto win only needs their united votes.\nIt seems almost as if the rcpublscans\n willing to give us the election if\nwe only get out and take it. We feel\nthere is no need to warn our people\nagainst campaign roorbacks and lies\nstarted tu the eve of election, as they\nare famiiiar enough with "politics to\nunderstand how little there may be in\na tale started on the eve of election\nfor political purposes.\nThe election of Mr. Craddock and\nthe state ticket will not only be a\nvictory for the fusion forces, but will\nbe a victory for the whole people who\nare virtually interested and whose\npecketbooks will be directly affected\nby such a victory. The tax payer of\nKansas is up against the tax dodger of\nKansas, and your state committee\nhas faith that he will see his chance\nand vote to mriKe uie corporations\n'Do Right" oa November 4th
238d7d0089e4d6a70ad97b8487a8e65c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.561475378213 58.275556 -134.3925 Miss Thora Smith is the' geest of\nMrs. - Lyman Ferris -for a few days.\nOne of the most brilliant function\n.ever witnessed at the «Club was that\ngiveu last Thursday night, the eighth\nannual ball exf tbe Treadwell 'firemen.\nTbe large auditorium end billiard room\nwere converted into bowers of beauty\nby interested aud untiriug workmeu.\nGreens were used profusely, inter¬\nspersed with 'dusters of poinsettas. All\nlights were shaded with beautiful red\natrd green shades Alternating, giving\nthe hall a festive appearauce. Tbe\nstage represented a typical 'forest\nsceue, displaying mi artificial cataract\nrushing down the mountain side, form¬\ning a gurgJiug fountain at its base.\nThe approach to the Olub was just as\nattractive accordingly, with its rows of\nevergreens and alders extending to the\nboarding aud'it is estimated 700\npeople trod "Lovers' Lane,"" as it wa9\nnamed, and apropos, that uight. The\ntiremeu are famous for their spreads,\nand this -one surely eclipsed all others.\nStreamers of pink and white flowers\nwere suspended from the ceiling, pre\nsenting a most pleasing effect, while\neach table was adorned with a huge\nboquet ©f carnations. The happy\ncrowd did justice and quickly dis¬\npensed with the eatables, which con¬\nsisted of salads, cold chicken, sliced\nham, fancy cakes, assorted fruits, cof¬\nfee and ice cream, before returning -to\nthe hall to continue dancing. The or\nchestra was up to the staudard and\nplayed the most popular hits. The\ntiremen hold an enviable record for\nentertainiug, aud deserve a great deal\nof credit for this their latest achieve¬
2e955a9a1d6658a8e1dacccc3bbb1a62 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.4945205162355 37.561813 -75.84108 ny of thea vaunted "guideR of pub-\nlic intelligence and leaders nf popular\nthought," there is no degree of vul-\ngarity too extreme, either in txpres\nsion or suggestion, for their use, and\nthey carry malevolent traduction to\nits farthest limit.\nAnd it is by no means the provin-\ncial journalists who are chiefly or in\nthe largest degree guilty of this de-\nbasement of the editorial profession.\nThe pres3 of the great cities the me-\ntropolitan press is at "the head and\nfront of the offending,'' as has recent-\nly been fully and most disgrace\nfully manifest. We have seen such\npapers as the Xew York Tribune and\nTimes and the Cincinnati Commercial\nand Enquirer, hurling the most vin-\ndictive vituperation, couched in the\ncoarse and most insulting terms, and\ndisplayed in the most prominent posi-\ntion for the perusal of their readers,\nagainst their respective editors fuels\nasserted and representations made,\nwhich, if true, should consign these\nmen to the everlasting contempt and\nloathing of mankind. When papers\n this class, controlled by men who\npass for gentlemen, and who are cer-\ntainly men of culture and liberal at-\ntainments, do this thing, it is not as-\ntonishing that the country papers,\nwhich for the most part are merely\ntenders to, and take their cue chiefly\nfrom the city press, should be found\nwallowing in the same filthy and\nnauseating mire. Yet there is a wel\ncome assurance in the expression of\nthe little coterie of editors of Indiana\nthat this distemper has somewhere run\nits course, and we may at least hope\nthat the work of reform, albeit so\nhumbly begun, may grow vigorously\nuntil it has drawn into its embrace\nthe whole profession, and the princi-\nple is established that the journalist,\nin prder to be recognized, must be a\ngentleman, and that his claim to this\ndistinction, whatever his merit other-\nwise, will be made to rest mainly\nupon the degree of courtesy and re-\nspectful consideration he shows to-\nward his brethren in the profession.\nPrinting Gazette.
4c5350ff57fe67b6d155f00c69be35f8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0205479134956 39.745947 -75.546589 of the Budget Committee.\nnr the *12 0111.000 for the Presby­\nterian 1921 22 budget, the three wom­\nen's boards receive »2,738,(110 as tlietr\nportion. This was with »1.400000\nvlven to the Woman s Hoard of For­\neign Missions: »i.ltO.OOO to the Wom­\nan's Hoard of Home Missions, and\n»198 000 to the Woman's Department\nof the Presbyterian Board of Missions\nto Freedmen, Pittsburgh. Pa.\nThe remaining »9.262.000 of Ihe »12 -\nrtki.non budget was apportioned to the\nthirteen remaining board» and agen\nCleg Of tills sum. the Presbyterian\nBoard of Home Missions, including\nthe self-supporting synods, rereivad\n»3.381,000, which compares with »V\n612.000 for its preceding years budget\nThe Presbyterian General Board of\nEducation was allowed *l,7Wf.OOO. as\nagainst »2.878,000 last year The Pres,\nbvterlun Board of Publication and\nSabbath School W®rk PhHadelphla\nwas cut from *191.4 .>0 Its 19W»-.1\n to *31*1.000. The Board of\nChurch Erection was likewise reduced\nand allotted *250.000. ns against »1.-\n388.000. Its askings for 1920-21.\nFor aged and disabled Presbyterian\nministère and widows and orphans at­\ntended through the Presbyterian\nBoard or Belief and Sustentation P ,,i\nadelphia. there was allotted *f.*i.ono,\nas against »2,089.156. For work among\nthe negroes, done by the t resbyterlan\nBoard of Missions for Freedmen\nPittsburgh. Pa.. *171.000 was set aside\nagainst *281,577 for last year.\nThe Presbyterian Board of Temper\nance and Moral Welfare, Pittsburgh,\nwas allowed »50.01» for its several de­\npartments of work, as against *189.-\n415 last vear. The General Assembly s\nCommittee on Evangelism was de\ncréas»-d from »90,000 to *<u.000 . A small\ndecrease- was suffered by the Presby­\nterian Committee on Men * ''or*,\nwhose budget was rut from *>2,090 to\n*50.000.
382036a8b731e12ff57cc48e18c52bdc PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.30464477712 39.756121 -99.323985 do not take a small payment down\nand a mortgage for the rest.\nNotwithstanding the depression In\nthe business on account of the inabil-\nity of the Standard to take the full\nproduction, development is going on\nin every direction. Wells are being\ndrilled and capped. They are not\nbeing shot. This will be done when\nthe market opens up again. The courts\nhave recently decided an Important\ncase to oil men. A farmer here sold\nhis farm to another farmer. It had a\nlease on It The original owner tried\nto hold the royalties. The court held\nthat the lease was a part of the Yvf\nand Its ownership went with the land\nand that the purchaser was entitled\nto the royalties. Oil wells knock out\na farm for crop purposes. The two\ndon't go well together. of the\noil lan ls are converted into pastures.\nHumboldt has an Independent refin-\nery. It is the only one In the Kansas\nfield. It Is owned by C. D. Webster,\nof Philadelphia, and Is called the\nWebster refinery. It has a capacity\nof 250 barrels a day now. Within\nthirty days it will be Increased to 500\nbarrels and Mr. Webster promises to\nmake It a 1.000 barrel plant by No-\nvember. It was only started In Janu-\nary. Mr. Webster has eight oil wells\nof his own and he gets the rest of the\noil from local operators. He has es-\ntablished a tank car line, and ships\noil In all directions. He owns a couple\nof other refineries In the East. He\nhas been fighting the Standard for\ntwenty years, and is acquainted with\nIts methods.
0dc9d8aa4594245964cc6885f0b3ac97 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1921.132876680619 36.000618 -88.428106 "No, I mean that we'll come through\nand they'll come after us. My idea\nIs not to take any chances, but to sell\nthe property, or as good as sell it, be-\nfore we buy It. So I sent a govern-\nment report on it to this syndicate, as\nI heard they were looking out for coal\nlands in the West, and I just took the\nliberty of offering it to them for a\ncool quarter of a million, and gave\nthem until tonight to accept or refuse,\nby wire. I'm a little anxious for an\nanswer, although if they donH take it\nothers ,will. You see, the old fellow\nthat owns It simply hasn't any idea\nwhattt's worth. He has lived In the\nhills until he looks like one of 'em,\nand a satchelful of money in bills\nwill simply dazzle him. A check\nwouldn't serve the purpose; he'd be\nsuspicious of it, and he'd come down\nto investigate, and some one would be\nsure to crimp our deal."\n"And suppose I don't like the look\nof the mine when I see it!"\n"Then yon bring your money back\ndown with you and put it into farm\nlands, or anything else that takes\nyour fancy. After you look it over, if\nyou don't want to go in on it, Mr. Har-\nris, perhaps Riles and I" can. raise\nenough ourselves to swing the deal,\nbut you see we thought of you from\nthe first, and we will stay with our\noriginal plan until you have a chance\nto decide one way or another."\n"Well, that sounds fair," said Allan,\nand" his father nodded.
3908058586a6f3b6e9b5525d5f7f8171 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.3520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 o( opinion, the prisoner liimself thinking\nthat in any event it would not be worae\nthan penitentiary for life.\nAt eighteen minutes past nine o'clock,\nafter being out an hour and Uyty-aix\nminutes, the sheriff was called and the\njury came filing in. Their nsmes were\ncalled by the clerk and tho prisoner told\nto stand up; then came tho important\nquestion, "Gentlemen, havo you agreed\nupon a verdict?" As tho auswer c&mo,\n"We have," perfect silence reigned in the\nhouse, a silence that must havo been\nfearful to Taylor Strauder; and then the\nquestion upon which the life of Strauder\ndepended, "What say you, gentlemen, do\nyou find tho prisoner guilty or not guilty?"\nThe answer came, "Guilty," in tones that\nmust have made the stoutest heart quake.\n'What Taylor Strauder'a Jeelings were\nis only to him and his God, for he\nseems possessed ol the faculty of hiding\nhis feelings to a remarkablo degree, but\nn9 we ?.ere beilrte litm nou noticed bun\nclosely v/e could ace when the word\nguilty came that it shocked his whole\nsystem as one who grspfl ; battery nud a\nsomething seemed to raise in hid throat\nwhich nearly choked liim. It was over\nin a moment when the same look^a look\nnot of unconcern, bat ot hop?, seeintd to\ncome upon his face again.\nStrauder'ii counsel will, we presume,\nmukc n strenuous effort to.get u new trial,\nbut just how they will proceed will not\nbo known for h day or two. From one\nor tho jurymen we learned that at the\nfirst poll the vote was unanimous for\nmorder in the first degree, but two
4c195c7d3836a68d627cea9831afd6b6 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1908.7281420448796 37.451159 -86.90916 Probably never In the history of\noily mutual organization iwas a miore\ndcspcrute and datermined fight made\nthan is now being made to destroy\nthe American Sjclety of Equity and\nwith it the vurlous tobacco associa ¬\ntions Men and money are being\nu 5k41 without stint to acCcmpllrfh the\nend so much to be desired by thbsc\nwhose interest it Is to d ntnol the\nprices of tine products of the farm\nand it is a matter of great regret\nto know that some cf tlhe nitet ef ¬\nficient and willing tools are to be\nfound among the fanners Men wlhio\nhave had personal experience with\nthese who would press downward\nthe prices of the products of tho\nfarm are found to be willing for a\nfew paltry dollars to become Dbe\naids Kaid tools of Uhe great oppres ¬\nsors of their own brethren\nHowever It is n matter of cause\nlatlon that their numbers are few\nand that their own o nsclonces will\nsome dry accuse them and the dtol\n for which they sold their broth ¬\nren will turn to dross or as Ht meta\nto burin into their very souls\nThe Mvrk is going en notwlth\nstanding the great flgbt being made\nzgainst us JtJsto be expected\nthat same wtuld falter and ask to be\npermitted tio put on again the yoke\ncf bondage as did the children of\nIsrael tnd as hundreds and ttoious\nands of weak stoldlers have done 1n\ndines giie by and will do again BO\nbug as ihumcii nature is weak and\nthe tower of the tempter is strong\nTuhc American Society of Equity may\nteem to its enemies to be tailing\nbut they will one day awakon to the\nfact that revolutions seldom retro ¬\ntirade When brave men once jnake\nup their minds no longer t > wear\nthu yoke of any mister It is Beldam\nthat enough Bl iow the wlhito feather\nto endanger the work undertaken\nThe great body of American farmers\nLie not cowards nlor will they eves\nconsent to be vassals
0d7126b5f9f092062cc40d9b204e18a5 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.3547944888383 35.996653 -78.901805 "I propose," said Mr. McAllister, "that\nthe American herald's office should be\nestablished as one of the departments of\nthe federal government at Washington.\nThis is a very practical suggestion. The\ngovernment would be able to put a tax\non armorial bearings and in that way\nraise a large revenue, as the English\ngovernment does. It is one of the hap-\npiest ways of raising a tax I can think\nof. Members of fashionable society and\nall the other persons taxed would be\npleased by it, and no one, I think, can\nshow any good reason against it.\n"I know it is easy for you to assert\nthat Americans have no business with\ncoats of arms and such things because\nthey are relics of feudalism, but that is\nnonsense. They are not any moro harm-\nful relics of feudalism than many of our\nsocial customs. Fashion requires us to\nuso them, and fashion must be obeyed.\nIt is merely a matter of fashion. A man\nwith a coat of arms is not likely to be a\nmoro dangerous plutocrat than a rich\nman without one. Besides, armorial\nbearings are ornamental look well\non silver and china. That is one of the\nbest reasons lor having them.\n"I must say a few words as to who has\nthe right to use them. It is not neces-\nsary that a family should obtain them\nby grant from the English or some\nother European king. It is enough\nif they have been used since the begin-\nning of the country's history, or for\nthree generations. In England any re-\nspectable person not in retail trade can\nget a coat of arms by paying for it.\n"Unquestionably many younger eons\ncame over to this country who had a\nright to bear tho arms of their family.\nTheir descendants settled in different\nparts of the Union and are now in the\nfullest manner entitled to use arms. On\nthe other hand, many men of wealth and\nhigh social standing, but not of aristo-\ncratic origin, have adopted them since\nthe practice became fashionable, as they\nhave a perfect right to do. These fami-\nlies will transmit their arms to their de-\nscendants until they become as interest-\ning as those of aristocratic European\norigin.
3c30f3afe93b8633cb4fc67d5affd826 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.6013698313038 39.261561 -121.016059 ■KPOT1SM in TUB AIIAlt .\nThe burthen of most of the letters fiom\n•or troops in service at the seat of war\nis the bad effect of an indiscriminate issue\nof commissions to men who may be very\ngood partisans and who may flourish a yaid\nstick with peculiar grace, and know how to\nmarshal a street procession at night, or\npack a primary iu their ward or township\nat home, but who understand military sci-\nence about as much as a horse does the ru-\ndiments of music. One case recently pre-\nsented itself in a striking light. A young\nman from Brooklyn—a ci devant clerk from\na flourishing dry goods establishment in\nthe City of Churches—visited the quar-\nters of the 71st, immensely inflated with a\n1st Lieutenant's commission that day ob-\ntained through the red tape department.\nIn the course of conversation with some\nof bis acquaintances, be naively remarked\nthat if he did not know auylhing -about\nmilitary tactics, be knew 'as much as the\nciptaiu, who was as greeu as he was.”\nHeaven help the meu who may be led into\nbattle by such officers, who, though they\nmay have the requisite courage, \ncope with troops the majority of whom\nare conceded to be men of thorough raili-\ntary education. Another individual from\nBoatou was created captain, although be\ndid not know the manual of arms. There\nare many who have euii«ted as recruits,\nand are not yet three mouths in military ser-\nvice, that are said to have obtained com-\nmissions solely through political influence.\nThe recipients of such favors, of course,\nare not to blame. Who is? Others have\nbeen taken from certain regiments to be\nmade officers of iu other regiments—on\nthe principle, probably, that oue cannot\nbe a prophet in his own country. Anoth-\ner case of this kind, is that of a youngster\nof 20 years—an unsophisticated youth, who\ncould not carry a musket properly in the\nranks to save his life—who iu one day has\nvaulted from out of the awkward squad\nInto a lieuteuanants uniform, and left bis\ncompany with flying colors to go home and\njoin some new regimeut. Probably by this\ntime be is a major or colonel; and if bis\nfriends are in favor at Court, he may pos-\nsibly be a brigadier general before be flesh-\nes his maiden sword.
04cd122b7728a1a453084be3a8202945 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.1712328450026 40.063962 -80.720915 Kev. J . G . Armstrong, having returned\nfrom Shepherdstown, officiated aa usual\nat St. Matthews' Church yesterday.\nThe discourse at the English Evan¬\ngelical Lutheran Church yesterday morn¬\ning was by the pastor from the text in 1\nKings, vi:7. "And the house when it\nwas in building, was built of stone made\nready before it was brought thither: so\nthat there waa neither hammer, nor axe,\nnor any tool of iron, heard in the house\nwhile it was in building." The speaker\nsaid: Aa the wood and stone were pre¬\npared for the temple at a distance from\nthe place of building, so God ia fitting us\nhere below for our respective places in\nthe Heavenly Temple.\nThe evening sermon waa by Rev. Prof.\nC. Louis Loos, of Bethany College, and\nwas just such a sermon aa might-have\n expected from so clear a thinker and\nso logical a reasoner. The text was:\nMatthew viii: 2, 3: "And behold there\ncame a leper and worshipped him,\nsaying 'Lord* if thou wilt thou canst\nmake me clean.' And Jesua put forth\nhis hand, saying 'I will; be thou\nclean, and immediately hia leprosy was\ncleansed." Notwithstanding the very in¬\nclement evening a large audience was\npresent, filling every seat. At the close\nof the sermon Rsv. BarniU expressed the\npleasure of himself and people for the\nvisit of Prof. Loos, and paid a compli¬\nment to Rev. 0 . P . Miller, of the Disciples\nChurch, and his congregation, for the\nChristian courtesy and brotherly^kind¬\nness manifested in their closing their own\nhouse of worship in order to give all\nwho desired the privilege of hearing their\nfriend Prof. Loos.
199288566084fa2e28f76c4a32d38502 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.568493118975 37.53119 -84.661888 Tbo long expected and much heralded\npeace commlsulou arrived In Manila on\ntho 3d They wore most heartily and\ngoncrously received by both citizen\nanti solJlers Of course everybody\nknow tho object of their coming\nwhich Is to try to peaceably bring the\nwarring Tagalogs to terms and cstab\nItch 11 civil government In tho Philip\npines Six weeks ago tho Insurgent\nsympathizers of Manila and they Bro\nnumbered by tbo tens of thousands\nwore preparing for a general outbreak\nIn the city on the arrival of the com\nmh lon Every American soldier and\ncitizen In the city was to bo murdered\ntho principal thoroughfares and bW\nlncs district of the city to bo gutted\nUnderstand this was most timely nip ¬\nped In tho bud by the ni ttvo police and\nmilitary authorities of the city At the\n tlmo there was to havo been n\ngeneral uprising not only In Luzon but\nthroughout the Archlpellgo Uncle\nSams boys happened to get on to this\nand of course tbo jig was up Tho\nabovo plans of the Insurrcctos have\nfurnished most of the material for ono\nof tho most active campaigns ever\nwaged against losurrectory forces\nThe question often comes up Where\nIs Acclo Don Emetlo Agulnaldo\npresident of Republlca Fillpinas and\nleader of tho Revolutionary force V\nSome think him dead tome believe\nhim to bo hiding In tho mountains of\nNorthern Luzon and others that ho Is\nhiding in Cavlto province tho land of\nbis birth to the south of Manila Then\nthere are those who believe him to be\nat Hong Kong Singapore In China\nand others have him visiting tbo big\nshow at Paris
063ca3eacbc9a52537be3ed20d1ac179 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.1438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 rater. An immense amount of live stnc\nnrl lumber has been swept away. Th\nrater is higher than at any time sine\nS7o, and it is st:l! rising, it is great!\nHired that some of the briuges on the Nt\nional road will be washed away. At G'ai\nnville it has rained for fortv-eight hour\nill trains ln\\ve been abuiuloned, bridgi\nn>l houses have boon swept away an\nrettdamagehas1e n doneto tho farir\nituated in thu low lauds.\nRock 1st,and, February 21..The stori\nf sleet ami snow has not abated this aftc\noon. Little damage is as vet reportcc\n,11 the railroads except the Cnieagt\nlurlington & Quinev are reported in goo\nrder. l'rorn the meagre reports and oil\nial telegrams to telegraph otlkials, it\niiirncd that the sleet and u-indstonn whic\nms miiK'Hitu, extended nil ov<\nown, Missouri, western and southern 111\niois, southern Indiana, Ohio and Cnnnd\n'urther east than this the condition\nHairs is not known.\nHukfaio, N. Y ., February 21..The win\nhis morning lifted roofs und did eonside\nible dumage about the citv. The Ne\nt'ork Central depot suffered a large lo\nrom broken glass.\nCincinnati, February 21..To-night tl\nIvor is 68 feet 5 inches and falling. It h\nalien one inch since 0 o'clock, and is fa\nng about one-half inch nor hour. Tl\nweather is cold and cloudy, und a lig\nmow fell during the day.\nDulutii. Minn., February 21..A vc\nacvereand unusual storm for the season\nthe year prevailed here last night, ceasi\n[it daylight. The wind was accompaui\nby a driving snow, The sea on Lake 6
365d2dfd3907d8b02b577a0dd3e5256d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.532876680619 43.798358 -73.087921 caeniiy uuect meir euoris io me specinc\nobjects which are essential to he produc-\ntion of the great end.\nThere are not a few who seem to think\nit selfish to exhibit a great deal of inter\nest in any one branch of christian benev\nolence, or for the prosperity of any par\nticular church, when there is., so much to\nbe accomplished for the world at large;\nand in the expans.iveness of tneir benevo\nlenc.3, thv overlook the interests of home,\nand sometimes, it is to be feared, the spir-\nituality of their own heaTts.y.Yjft\nThey forget that the prosperityfof each\nchurch is essentia! to the compTete triumph\nof Christ's cause. Before the church\nuniversal can be holy and prosperous, all\nits branches must become so, for if everjr\nportion of the church, but one, were pros-\nperous, the depression of that One would\ndetract from the glory of the whole. A\nsound budding can not be reared of rot-\nten timbers. A kingdom can not be in a\nhealthy condition while an of its prov-\ninces aren a suffering or turbulent \nA stream can not be perfectly pure or\nclear while any of its tributaries are pol-\nluted or n"ddy. So in ordei to the puri-\nty and eflraency of the church universal,\nall the branches of which it is composed\nmust be pure and efficient\nThose specific duties, then, which are\nadapted to promote the prosperity and pu-\nrity of the individual churchf which he\nis a component member, are first in obli-\ngation upon every disciple of Christ. We\ndoubt the honesty and sincerity of that\nman's prayers and labors foHhe introduc-\ntion ofhe millennium who does not strive\nby his example and influence to give a\nmillennial character to tho church with\nwhich he is connected. He possesses not\na proper foreign missionary ipint who\ndoes not perform missionary work at home\nThe christian, therefore, who would con- -\nsistently and mosY effectively labor, for\nthe universal triumph of the gospel, must\nengage in those minor duties of Christian-\nity, which are necessary to fringing all\nwithin his own circle of influence to the\nobedience of the faith. Baptist Record.
07aac9f0fae4a8ac7273d1641459e545 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1890.1547944888382 38.894955 -77.036646 that has not been improved is assessed at\nthe s.amo value as when It was built."\nB. F. Guy said: "I have no fault to\nfind with my assessment. I live In tho\neastern part of tho city and I think my\nproDcrty Is fairly valued. I am In\nfavor, though, of a permanent Board of\nAssessors. I think this work ought to\nbe performed by men who havo somo\nknowledge of real estate and know what\nthey are about."\nFrancis Miller said: "I have read\nthe articles iu The CitiTic. and I be-\nlieve them to bo correct. Heretofore I\nhave not paid tho matter much atten-\ntion, because it is like oilier affairs that\nbelong to everybody and aro looked\nalter by none. I have no doubt that\nthe assessments arc vory unequal on\naccount of political and financial \nfluences. It Is understood nowadays,\nauyway, that laboring men, mechanics,\nmerchants and clerks pay the taxes."\nWilliam B. Moses said: "Thcro will\nnever bo anything like just or equita-\nble assessments as long as men aro ap-\npointed assessors by political Influence.\nWhat wo want aro business men for as-\nsessors, not mete clerks, who havo sim-\nply signed somebody else's namo all\ntheir lives Tho present system is nlso\nbad. Assessors should bo appointed to\nserve continually at a respectable salary\nand their term of office should last from\nthe time of their appointment until tho\ncommencement of the next assessment."\nR. Goldschinidt said: "Tho last as-\nsessors were very fuir. The F street\nproperty Is assessed at from $8 to $10;\nnone could bo bought for less than 15\nper foot. Most of "it ts worth '2o.
5df7399a7fb7f90e490d5d14fab4cc50 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.0860655421473 39.261561 -121.016059 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, County off He- '\nvada, ss. District Court of the 14th Judicial Dfstrici\nof said State.\nThe People of the State of California, to JAMES\nGRANT, Greeting:\nYou are hereby summoned to appear and answer to the\ncomplaint of C. A . PECK and W. C . COLEY , doing busi-\nness under name and style of Peck k Coley, filed against\nyou, within ten dav* from the service of this writ, if\nserved on you in this County, within twenty days if serv-\ned on you in this District, and out of this county, and\nwithin forty day* if served on you in the State and out of\nthis District, in an action commenced on the 7th day of\nJanuary A. D . 1860 in said court to obtain a decree of\nthis Court for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage, bear-\ning date 3d day of November A. D . 1866, executed by the\nsaid defendant to Alex. J . Johnson, and assigned to ono\nN. B. Isaman and by said Isamanassigned to these plain-\ntiffs, and for the sale of the premises therein, and in said*\ncomplaint particularly mentioned and described, and the\napplication of tbe moneys arising from such sale to the\npayment of the amount due oo a certain promissory note,\nset forth in said complaint made and delivered said\nAlex. J . Johnson, and assigned to one N. B. Isaman, and\nby said Isaman assigned to these plaintiffs, bearing oven\ndate with said Mortgage and thereby intended to bo se-\ncured, to wit : The sura of $250 with interest from the\n3d day of November A. D. 1856, at the rate of 3>£ per\ncent per month till paid ; and if any deficiency shall re-\nmain after applying all of said moneys properly so appli-\ncable thereto, then that plaintiffs may have execution\ntherefor against the said ]>efendant, also that said defend-\nant and all and everv person claiming by through or un-\nder him subsequently to the date of Plaintiff's mortgage\nand the commencement of this action, may be barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien and equity of redemp-\ntion in or to the said mortgaged premises, or any part\nthereof, and for such other or further relief, or both, in\nthe premises as may be just and equitable. And you aro\nhereby notified that if you fail to answer said complaint\nas herein directed, Plaintiff will take Judgment against\nyou therefor by default, together with all costs of suit,\nand also demand of the Court such other relief as is pray-\ned for in Plaintiffs said complaint.\n(/—*-* .' l In testimony whereof, I, John 8. Lambert Clerk\n<
2b43eed5b07bb0ebb1f32516eb3559ed OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.2260273655504 41.020015 -92.411296 "Now, gentlemen, I come to my share in\nthe matter. It was a bright spring day. 1\nwas returning to the city from a long walk,\nand was unusually happy. That day, for\nthe first time, 1 had ventured to give a\nyoung girl, whom I lovod, a trifling proof\nof my affection, oponly beforo her parents,\nft was her birthday, and I had presented\nher with a bunch of flowers and a copy of\nHeir.e'a 'Book of Songs.'\n'•I passed the church-yard,'and, joyous a\nframe of mind as I was in, I nevertheless\nfoltan irresistible re to enter. It seemed\nto be entirely deserted, and it was not until\nI had walked about lor some time that I\ndiscovered in a remote corner the figure of\na woman. Sbe was kneeling, with her head\nbent very low, Iapproached her and found\nthat she had fainted. I hastened to find\nsome water, but when I returned she had al­\nready regained consciousness. I will not\nundertake to repeat onr entireconversation ;\nsuffice it to say that I told her of my joy,\nand that she confided to me her sorrow.\nWithout mentioning names, she told me\nthat she had been attached to a young\nmerchant, and that she hoped some oty to\nbecome his wife. The year 1670 came, and\nwith it the dogma of the Pope's inffcHbility.\nTho young man rejected it. From tbat mo­\nment began an endlesschain persecutions.\nTowerful partisans of the papal party pltei\nthemselves to the ruining of his credit, and\nrendering all his enterprises abortive. In\nthe fruitless struggle his health failed, and\nafter a few months he laid himself oa a sick\nbed, from which be never roto.\n'• 'To-day,'said the Udy, 'I too, celebrate\na birthday—that of my betrothed. I could\nnot let it pass without laying a wreath on\nbis grave. Uy relations, the only friends\nI have, must know nothing of it—they\nwould cast me off if they knew of my love\nfor aa apostate. For that reason 1 came\nhere secretly ; I avoided the highroad, and I\nthink no one but you has seen me.'\n"I have not tho right," I said in conclu­\nsion, "to disclose more of the secrets of an­\nother than is absolutely necessary. This\nmeeting and conversation took place fully\nnine miles from tho chateau of Herr von\nG . The young lady of whom I have\nspoken was the one I see hero before me;\nthe day and hour, the 5th of April, 1871,\nafternoon, about four o'clock."\nThe lady remained calm and attentive\nduring my recital, but when I ended she\nburst into tears.\n"You are sure that you recognize the\nlady ?"asked the judge.\n"Yes. Yon can CjtivlucoTowraelf. The\nlady in the church-yard had a mole about\nas large as a pea directly under her right\near."
5455237e7c2efd84ab85526e73a02acd THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9713114437866 39.290882 -76.610759 DEATH FROM CRUEL TREATMENT.?Consider-\nable excitement was produced in this city dur-\ning yesterday and the previous day, growing out\nof a report tnat a colored girl, who had for some\ntime previously lived in the house of a free col-\nored man named Ignatius Adams, not far from\nthe Railroad depot, had come to her death by\ncruelty and inhuman treatment. In consequence\nof these rumors and the representations ol many\nrespectable citizens residing near the dwelling\nof Ignatius Adarus, it was deemed proper by T.\nWoodward, Esq.. the coroner, and two city mag-\nistrates, to hold an inquest. Accordingly, notice\nwas immediately given that the corpse, which\nhad already been placet]jin the coffin for burial on\nWednesday, must be examined and a thcro' inves-\ntigation take place before the coroner and a jnry\nduly summoned for thatpurpose. Gn the inquisi-\ntion which was held on Wednesday bight, seve-\nral respectable witnesses were examined, who\nall agreed iatestifying to repeated acts of inhu-\nman treatment and excessive severity practised\nfor more than a rear past upon the deceased by\nMary Ann Adams, the wife of Ignatius Adams.\n it appeared, on examination of the\npoor girl, that there were several marks of vio-\nlence upon her person. Three medical gentle-\nmen?Dr. G. W . May, Professor May, and Dr.\nT. D . Jones ?were also examined, of whom the\nIwo latter gave as their impression that the\ndeath of the unfortunate girl was produced by\nthe violence committed upon her person.\nTo give time for the medical gentlemen to\nmake a farther examination of the corpse,\nfor the jury to act deliberately in the matter, the\ninquest was adj urncd until yesterday morning,\nwhen Professor May being again examined be-\nfore the Coroner, expressed the opinion that he\nhad before given, that the girl's death was pro-\nduced by violence, remarking, however, that Dr.\nG. W . May and Br. Lindsly, who had assisted\nhim in the second examination of the deceased,\nentertained doubts, and differed with him on\nthat subject, although they were all of the opin-\nion that some of the wounds upon the body of\nthe deceased had been caused by flagellation,\nand were not ulcerated wounds, as had been at\nfirst stated.
098eb4dc3e26a6a5446a7fc9026cd1fc VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.2835616121258 43.798358 -73.087921 But the question recurs, where are those\nslaves 1 I have, for more than a month,\nhad a resolution lying in my drawer, call-\ning on the Secretary of War for informa-\ntion respecting them; but to this hour I\nhave had no opportunity of offering it in\nthe regular course of business, and. I felt\nno hopes of success by offering it in any\nother time. It may not have been observ-\ned by many members, that in the lastsess-io- n\nof the late Congress a petition was\npresented to ihis House from a Mr. Wat-\nson, in which he stales that in May, 1837,\nhe purchased these same negroes, captur-\ned by lhe Creek warriors, ot their agent,\nand paid for them 814,600, and he gives\npretty good evidence to sustain his state-\nment. This occured in May, 1838, while\nthe order of Gen. Jessup receiving them\nas public property was September pre-\nvious; and the confirmation of that order\nwas on the 7th October, prior to the time\nof Watson's apparent purchase. Gener-\nal Jessup's letter to Col. Warren, saying\nthat these warriors hadireceiced between\n$14,000 and 15,000. bears date on the\n17th of October, prior to Watson's suppos-\ned purchase. It will be borne in mind\nthat these are official documents, transmit-\nted at the time of their dates. There is\nalso a curious coincidence in regard to\nprice. General Jessup said in October\n1837, that these warriors had then, receiv-\ned 4'bet ween 14 and 15 thousand dollars- -\nAnd Watson says, and gives good evidence\nto prove that he paid to these same warri-\nors 14,600 in May following; Now, if\nthese Indians got twice paid for, those\nslaves, they were more fortunate in slave\nirnding than they ever were in any other\ntransaction with the white people".
1b91ce77ece55c333afcb8e0d45562dd THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.2445354875026 39.743941 -84.63662 the 11th of February a telegram was sent\nhim stating that the President retained fall\nfriendship for him, regretted the bitterness\nwith which he was assailed, and adhered to\nhis opinion that his connection with the\nEmma Mine was an unfortunate indiscretion.\nbat without any improper motive oa his\nDart, sad haUiad honed that his early with\ndrawal therefrom would have quieted the\nstrong pablio criticism, and also regretted\nthat such had not been the result; that his\ntelegram of the 8th threw upon the President\nthe responsibility of accepting or of declin-\ning to accept his tendered resignation ; and.\nin me laKer case, ui nppwvuig so msisi on\nhis retention in the face of a pnblic demand,\nmore or leas strong, under which the Presi-\ndent had remained quiet, in fall conviction\nthat his conduct had been ire of wrong\npurpose, and in the absence of any expressed\nwillingness to resign; that now, having\nvoluntarily expressed his readiness to re-\nlieve the President from any embaraasment\nwhich hia position might involve, with kind\nfeelings toward him, he felt that under the\nexistiug circumstances his resignation would\nrelieve him from embarrassment, and that it\neoold be made either by telegraph or by let-\nter, and to take effect when his successor\nshould enter upon the duties of his post.\nOn the 14th of February General Schenck\ntelegraphed thai he failed to reconcile the\ntelegram of the 9th, informing him that the\nPresident did not deem- it necessary to act\non his of the 8th with that received Saturday\neonunnnicaxing his of. hia offer, bat he\npromptly acceded to the suggestion, and\nwould send his resignation in writing by the\nnext mail. On the 21st of February General\nSchenck telegraphed that, having placed his\nresignation at the President's disposal, pend-\ning the inquiry ordered by the House of\nRepresentatives, he asked leave to repair\nto Washington to appear before the\ncommittee on the 23d of February, and he\nwas informed by telegraph that leave of ab-\nsence with permission to return to the United\nStates was given ; that the inquiry tf the\nHouse was to ascertain the action taken by\nthe Executive Department of the govern-\nment in relation to his connection with the\ncompany and the prosecution of the claim ;\nthat a reply had been sent, and that the\ncommittee would probably report soon. On\nthe 24th Gen. Schenck telegraphed that he\nwould go to the United States as permitted,\nprovided the inquiry into his case proceeded;\nthat in- - the meantime he awaited the onv\nmittee's report, and the President's action\non his'resignation sent on the 19th." On the\n29th of February, as Gen. Bcfaenck had ex-\npressed a desire to return, and to appear be-\nfore the committee, he was informed that\nthe committee had reported the information\nfurnished By the department, which was re-\ncommitted; that the House had adopted a\nresolution to inquire further into Minister\nSchenck's connection with the mine, and to\nsend for persons and papers. On the 1st\nof March he telegraphed that being informed\nof the House's resolution ordering iurther\ninvestigation,
147637d98db6b5df276a871f9501724d THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.7109588723997 29.4246 -98.49514 Imported to this country n year or so\nbefore the civil war, recalls to mind that\nthey wero domiciled for a short while In\nthis county after their arrival In Texas,\nWhenever ono of the singular looking\ncreatures appeared on our streets, thu\nellect was to stampede every hor.e\ntheir neighborhood. Tho aroma which\nsurrounded those ships of the desert\nseemed to be particularly ohjecllonnhle\nto our domestic animals, who Imme-\ndiately grow frnntlc whenever they\noame in contact with It. While hero\nthey wero in charge of n stately looking\nTurk, who eventually, we think;, served\nns a member of one of the compntiles or-\nganized In this county for tho Confed-\nerate service. Tho camels llnally passed\nInto the hntidsoflhu United Slates Gov-\nernment, nnd were to have been used In\ncarrying dispatches across tho Staked\nPlains. About tho time tho war broko\nnut a resident of ono Ot upper coun-\nties contracted with the government to\nherd thecnmcls nt.$7A per month. When\nthe State seceded the Confederate au-\nthorities took possession of the herd,\nand retained control until tho break-u-\nIn the menntluio the herder had drifted\noll'.butnt tho close oftho war found him-\nself In West Texas. He at oneo hunted\nup the camels, and when the United\nStates government regained control, ho\nnns found In chnrue. as Provided bv his\ncontract made more than four ycurs pre-\nviously. He presented his hill, amount-In- g\nto over Sl.OUO for services rendered,\nwhich tho government paid and relieved\nhim of his charge. Subsequently the\ncamels wero sold at miction, purchased\nby Colonel Coopwood, of San Antonio,\nwho established a camel ranch In the\nneighborhood of Austin. It Is, we think,\nstill In existence, and from this ranch\nmost of the menageries nre supplied\nwith this class of attraction.
38d4d714a9278d22192d85c2c7b1b6a0 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1909.387671201167 41.741039 -112.161619 The Board of Governors of the Bear\nRiver Valley Commercial Club met in\nGarland Saturday afternoon, May 8th.\nThe object of the meeting was to dis-\ncuss plana for making an exhibit at\nthe State Fair and other fairs next\nfall, but In some way the meeting\ndrifted from Its stated purpose Into a\ndiscussion of the question of having\nbetter roads In the valley.\nPresident J. P . Holmgren presided\nand K. H. Fridal was secretary. The\nminutes of a former meeting were\nread, approved and then the good\nroads business commenced. Henry\njseeger was the first speaker, nnd he\nwaa full of the subject, which he has\nstudied from all points of view. He\n'closed with a motion that the county\ncommissioners be asked to bond the\niinty for 2 per cent ofthetotal val-\nuation of taxable property and the\nmoney thus raised be used for the\nconstruction of better roads In the\ncounty. Mr. Moslub Evans moved to\namend by having the commissioners\nMl aside $25,000 for a new court\nhouse and whatever can then be spar-\ned be devoted to roads. After the ex-\npenditure of a great deal of hot air,\nthe amendment nnd motion carried,\nhul as the vote was not unanimous,\n'Mr. Moroni Mortonscn succeeded In\nhaving the vote reconsidered, and nn\namendment put through that the\nroads have the first consideration anil\nthen what could bo spared be used for\nu new court house. Then It was re-\nsolved that it wau the sense of the\nmeeting that ho Bum of $50,000, or\nso much as may be needed, be expend\ned for building good an permanent\nhighways.
546f7d035279760bc16e760f9d922c82 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4658469629123 39.745947 -75.546589 Warning; signs having so far failed\nto have the desired result, the au­\nthorities have deedded upon a sterner\nwourse in the effort to break up the\npractice of parking automobiles in\nlira rural sections for improper ipur-\nposes. The greatest annoyance, Judg­\ning from complaints that have reached\nthe Levy Court, seems lo be In Bran­\ndywine hundred, particularly on the\nWeldin road.\nTlr- matter was recently taken up\nwlUi Isaac C. Elliott, president of the\nLevy Court, who had the roads post­\n'd, giving warning against Ihe prac­\ntice complained of, and who employed\non officer to ipatrol Ihe roads. As If\nto defy the authorities, some of these\nsigns haw been torn down or mu­\ntilated and Ihe abominable practice\nhas apparently been unabated ; the\nonly effect, seemingly, being that the\n have managed, to lo op out\nof the way of the officer.\nConsequently, a second officer has\nhern appointed and ttie roads are lo\nbe patrolled every night next week, at\nleast as late as 10 o'clock. Already\nIhe work of taking the license num­\nbers of the offending cars has been\nstarted and the numbers are being\nlisted. It is proposed lirst to com­\nmunicate with the owners of the cars\nand give warning In that manner, and\non second offence to take such sum­\nmary action as is deem'd warranted.\nThe warning signs are also to be\nprotected, and any person found tear­\ning one down or mutilating it will be\nprosecuted. All such offenders are\nliable to lines. In addition to the\nnotoriety that Is sure to follow their\ncases getting Into court.
ed3460f6cc1911542cffda1954bf097e THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.7657533929478 39.560444 -120.828218 the hall an old negro servant made a gia'yi\nat my hat, but I held on, and in triumph\ncarried it into the parlor, where, in the\nmidst of introdufctiohs, flaring lamps and\nwaving and fluttering of silks and cash-\nmeres, bowing, scraping, fuss and feathers,\nto all of which I was more or less deaf\nand blind, down upon a piano stool in the\ncorner, I socks iny hat.\nThe two cousins close to me, introduced\nme; I bowed; one of the Misses Dcgraud\ncame forward; I was introduced; and as\nshe in the tip of fashion, made her per-\nfectly grand theatrical bow to me, I\ngrabbed her by the hand in the most\ndemocratic manner imaginable, and shook\nit most heartily. She not only blushed,\nbut by her eyes I saw that she was like-\nwise mad as a hornet. Her sister and\nshe had a word, and then her sister avoided\nme; Things grew no better fast, from\none bungle I got into another. In whist\nI was ignorrnt and awkward, in a hop\nwaltz with one of the cousins, I trod on\nher toes till she screamed, and in trying\nto mend the matter, I stepped the\nflounces of Miss Degrands dress and tore\noff live yards at least. In despair, I\nbacked down, saw a seat, back upon it,\nrny head dizzy, I rushed, and down I sat\nsquash upon my hat! In confusion I\narose, snatched up my pancake-looking\naffair, which I frenziedly held up to the\nvulgar gaze. There was a roar of laugh-\nter, in which I did not join I assure you;\nI gave a rush forward, hit the corner of a\ntable, tilled over the astral lamp—such a\ncrash!—l kept on, I made for the door,\nwhich, just then old Degraud was enter-\ning, avaunt courier of his old negro man,\nwho bore a large tray well tilled with wine\nin glasses. I struck the old gentleman\nso forcibly that he fell back upon Poinpey,\nglasses and wine, and on in my mad career\nI proceeded! Going out at the wrong\nend of the hall I found myself in a dark\ndining room, but jerking open the first\ndoor in advance, I went out into a hall,\nthence to an aute-room, groping in the\ndark, I struck my forehead against a half\nopen door, saw bushels of stars and—fell\nsenseless!
159169a8e322c57f1d76443b86b537e2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.1575342148656 39.745947 -75.546589 For extraordinary. Incredible, dia­\nbolical wickedness the name of Rosas\nlias become a proverb in tiouth Amer­\nica. It is barely 20 years since he died;\nyet w hen the people of the River Blatte\nspeak of him, we seem to be hearing\nof some half-mad Ethiopian suitnu\nhero of the “Arabian Nights;” a crea­\nture of other clay than ordinary men;\na being, half devilish, half divine,\nslavishly worshiped by nil, capricious,\nvindictive, ruthless, slaying in the dark\nby some mysterious power his enemies,\nbis refractory slaves, and even those\nwho dreaded and hated in silence; not\nto be caught unawares; proof against\nplots, free from ordinary human in­\nfirmities; knowing neither fatigue nor\nfear; violent, too, and fantastic, strik-\nIng nslonlshroent and a Kind of super­\nstitious dread by his mad freaks, his\ndangerous banter and his tits of\nage generosity or cruelty.\nSuch ia tho Rosas of tradi­\ntion; nor does the picture so drawn\nseem exaggerated in the light of au­\nthentic records. But Rosas\nthan this; he it was who gave the first\nreal, solid government to a young na­\ntion which numbers to-day 4,000,000\nsouls, and has the largest city of the\nsouthern hemisphere for Its capital.\nHe practically secured internal peace\n—with brief interruptions—to a coun­\ntry torn by incessant revolutions and\ncivil war. He was the creator of the\nArgentine confederation—by force,\nperhaps: but force was the order of Ihe\nday; and ho arose from among a crowd\nof enudillos, party chiefs, halt soldiers,\nhalf brigands, mostly as despotic in\nspirit, as regardless of law and re­\nstraint, as contemptuous of human life\nas Rosas himself. To him more than to\nanyone it is due that Argentine is one\ncountry instead of containing half a\ndozen rival and discordant republics.—\nCornbill Magazine.
5e27bb910701f8159364db13f414c37e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.9602739408929 39.261561 -121.016059 A dispatch from Cincinnati, of Novem-\nber 12th, gives the following particulars of\nthe massacre of Federal troops at Guayan-\ndotte, in Southwestern Virginia, and the\nsubsequent destruction of the town:\nThe defeat of the Union forces at Guay-\nandotte was accomplished by trickery on\nthe part of the inhabitants, it seems that a\nforce of rebel cavalry, variously estimated\nat 500 to 1,000, had concentrated in the\ncountry back of the town. These proposed,\nwith the assistance of the rebel inhabitants\nof Gayandotte, to annihilate the Union for-\nces in tbc town. This force consisted of\n250 Virginians belonging to a Virginia\nRegiment, and a few of Col. Zeig'.er's 5th\nVirginia Volunteers. It was arranged be-\ntween the rebel cavalry and rebel citizens\nto massacre our troops in|cold blood. Ac-\ncordingly the rebel citizens were very kind\nto our troops last Sunday evening, aud in-\n them to their bouses on various pre-\ntexts, and all who were off duty accepted\nthe invitation. While they were being en-\ntertained, at about half past eight oclock\nat night, the rebel cavalry dashed into the\ntown. Signals wpre displayed from every\nbouse where the Union troops were, and\ninto these the rebels rushed, murdering the\nunarmed soldiers in cold blood. The rebel\ncitizens—men, womeD and children—rushed\nto arms, and aided the cavalry iu the\nslaughter. The Union troops in camp pre-\npared us soon as possible for defense, but\nwere overpowered and had to break. Very\nfew meu were killed in the engagement\nwith the cavalry, nearly all being murdered\nin the bouses. When Col. Zeigler arrived,\nand on learning the particulars of the af-\nfair, he ordered the destruction of the town.\nThe buildings were immediately fired, and\nthe wljole town was reduced to ashes.
70b3d035a152ce5d39ef01955f8efcb1 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.5657533929477 32.408477 -91.186777 But on one point Benson was right;\nKittrell was not up to himself. As\nthe campaign opened, as the city was\nswept with the excitement of it. with\nmeetings at noonday and at night, of-\nfice-seekers flying about in automo-\nbiles, walls covered with pictures of\ncandidates, hand-bills scattered in the\nstreets to swirl in the wild March\nwinds, and men quarreling over\nwhether Clayton or F'sworth should\nbe mayor, Kittrell had to draw a po-\nlitical cartoon each day; and as he\nstruggled with his a irk. less and less\nthe old joy came to cheer and spur\nhim on. To read the ridicule, the\nabuse, which the Telegraph heaped\non Clayton, the distortion of facts con-\ncerning his candidature, the unfair\nreports of his meetings, sickened him,\nand more than all, he was tilled with\ndisgust as he to match in carica-\nture these lilels of the man he so\nloved and nuoored. It a~s bad enough\nto have to flatter Claytcu's opponent,.\nto picture him as a noble, disinuterest-\ned ch:.acter, ready to sacrifice him-\nself for the public wepl. Into his pic-\ntures of this man, attired in the long\nblack coat of conventional respectabil-\nity, with the smug lace of 4harisalsm.\nhe could get nothing but cant and hy-\npocrisy; but in his caricatures or\ne Clayton there was that which pained\nIhim worse-disloyalty, untruth, and\nnow and then, to the discenoing letw\ne whoknew the tragedy of hittreli s\nsoul, there was pity. And thus nis\nwork declined in value; lackltg all sin-\n.cetrty. all talth in itself or its purpose,\n, t became false, uncertain. full of jar-\na ringnotes. and, in short. never once
8d853e9115bae876998ebd08a06f6878 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5915300230217 39.513775 -121.556359 Mob Law rs. Law —(joYcrnments are in-\nstituted among men for mutual protection\nand benefit. Laws are tut the exponents\nof the contracts entered into by the parties\ninterested Under no system which the\nwisdom of man has yet devisvJ. have equali-\nty of rights and equal justice to all men\nbeen so fully and certainly guaranteed aw\nthey are by the republican government of\nthese United States. Here every citizen of\nago and sound mind, who lias not forfeited\nhis rights by the commission of crime, may\nhave a hand in saying what rules shall be\nprescribed to govern himself and his fellows\nThere can be no excuse then for those who\nassume the ground of opposition and rebel\nlion to the laws—to the authorities consti-\ntuted by themselves to dispense justice.\nResistance to and tyrannical laws,\nframed by the few, assuming to govern the\nmany, without allowing them a voice in such\nregulations, is now generally recognised\namong the free thinkers of the world as a\nholy on i necessary duty. It must be ob-\nserved, that there is a marked distinction\nbetween rcsisl ; ug laws made by ourselves\nand those which are set up for us by others\nindependent of our own action. Therefore\nunder a representative and rational system\nof government, such as has been established\nby the people of these United States, no valid\nexcuse can be ottered for violent resistance\nto the laws He who is guilty of this for-\nfeits all claims to the title of good citizen,\nconstitutes himself an outlaw, and has no\njust cause for complaining of the conse-\nquences.
254fb5510d03e76d9c1c76d95985bc95 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1902.9794520230848 58.275556 -134.3925 Alaska 2, beginning? at corner No. 1, iden¬\ntical with corner No. 2. "Bullion," corner _\nNo. 2 "Alaska," corner No. 1, "Bullion 2," from\nwhich corner. U. S. L. M., No. 9, hears S. 44 deg .\n12 rain. W ., 626.1 feet, thence N. 46 degrees. 10\nmin. E., var. 29 deg. 47 min. E.. 49.4 ft. lode line\nhears N. 34 deer. 01. min. W . 1500 ft (600 feet to\ncroppings). Stake on which notice is posted\n98.8 ft. to corner No. 2, identical with corner\nNo. 2, "Bullion 2." A hemlock post 4 feet long,\n4 inches square, set 18 inches in the ground,\nwith mound of stone, scribed U. S . S .575-2 -2,\nfrom which corner a hemlock tree 14 inches\nin diameter hears S. 29 dog- . 2 5 min, E.8.7 feet.\nA spruce tree 18 inches in diameter hears S.\n62 deg. 24 min. W ., 10.4 feet distant, each \ned and scribed U. S. S . 575-2-2 B. T . Thence N.\n54 deg. 01. min. W. var. 29 deg. 47 min. E. 1500.0\nft. corner No. 3. A hemlock post 4 feet long.\n4 inches square, set 18 inches in the ground,\nwith mound of stone, scribed U. S. S., 575-3,\nfrom which u hemlock tree 2 feet in diameter\nbears S. 38 deg. 30 min. W . 23.2 feet. A spruce\ntree 2 feet in diameter hears N. 60 deg. W.#\n15.5feet distant, each blazed and scribed U.S .\nS. 575-3, B. T. Thence S. 46 deg. 10 min. W.var.\n29 de^. 47 min. E. 49.4 ft. Lode line, 98,8 ft. cor¬\nner No. 4, identical with Corner No. 3 "Alas¬\nka" Lode, this survey. Thence S. 54 deg. 01.\nmin. E., Var. 29 deg. 47 min. E. 1500.0 ft, to cor¬\nner No. 1, the place of beginning. Allcomers\nare identical with the location corners.
402426adc057af9f4710629b7ee15f9f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.43698626966 44.939157 -123.033121 name. Deceased had also an almost\nunchangeable habit of making a cap-\nital "I" approximately thus, "I" or\n"I," the stem being made first and\nthe upper turn being completed by\nseparate stroke of the pen, and al-\nways touching or projecting beyond\nand to the right of the top of the\nstem. In several score of Instances,\noccurring in his genuine writings,\nthere appears only one where this\nmanner of making the letter has not\nbeen followed. In the proposed will\nand alleged letters to Clara Young,\nand proponent, and ln the memoran-\nda in the pocketbook the prevailing\ntype of capital "I" when viewed un-\nder a microscope appears approxi-\nmately thus "I" or "I", the glass re-\nvealing a distinct space between be-\ntween the stem and the upper turn\nof the letter. In his true writings he\nhad a characteristic and very un\n way of making a capital "N".\nthuB "N" the upper turn and down\nward stroke at the last never being\nomitted. In the supposed will and\ntn the letters and memoranda above\nalluded to the capital is made ap-\nproximately thus "N" showing a\nfairly well made standard capital\n"N" not seen In any of his other\nwritings and with the upper turn and\nshading at the end of the letter en-\ntirely omitted. Another common\ncharacteristic ln his writing was\nwhen writing words containing "th"\nhe would cross both the "t" and the\n"h", thus "th" or "th". In the alleged\nwill and other documents referred to\nthese letters are crossed approxi-\nmately thus, "th" or "th" or "th",the\n"t" Itself not being crossed. In the\ntetters before referred to the words\n"letter" and "better" are propertly\nspelled, and ln other genuine letters\nthey are
59fca9d76eeaed895cf48fb4c9074c05 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.6260273655505 39.261561 -121.016059 The New York correspondent of the Bul-\nletin, in bis letter of July 27th, notice* the\nreturn to that city of three regimeuts that\nwere engaged iu the battle of Bull's ltun:\nYesterday and to-day our thoroughfares\nwere crow,ltd to the point of sutlocaiion,\nalmost, with citizen* and soldier*, the occa-\nsion being the return Iroin the war* of three\not the splendid regiment* which, but three\nshort mouths ago, went out from our midst,\nwith full rank* and glowing hopes, to light\nthe battle* of their country. Since their de-\nparture they have seen much service, all\nthree of them having been iu the bloody\nbattle of Manassas, wheru each performed\nits allotted duly with a gallantry that will\nfor a long time keep its memory fresh in the\nannals of our military history. It is hardly\nworth the while in this place to attempt the\nrecital of the services of 8th. the ti9th,\naud the 71*1 regiments of New York, or to\nmore than refer to the names, respectively,\nof their gallant commanders— Ljone, Cor-\ncoran, aud Vosburgb The last named is\nalready in hi* grave, Corcoran is a prisoner\niu the hand* of the enemy, aud Lyon* has\nalone returned; avd to the set vices of the\ntroop* wbicn they led into the Held tin\nnewspaper* have air* ady done full justice.\nSuffice it to say, that the wild tumult of en\nthusiasin with which their decimated ranks\nwere greeted, each in its turn, as the regi-\nments inarched up Broadway, were almost\nenough to repay the bronzed warriors for\nall the toils they had undergone. These\nregiments are to be immediately mint-red\nout of service, but it is understood that a\nlarge portion of their members propose to\nre-eulii-t iu the partially organized regi*\nmen is in the city.
0cefcb441ae43bb77a7b7c0f2ea79071 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.924863356355 39.290882 -76.610759 who shall not have been surrendered tosaid corporation\nin the manner heiein provided, may be withdrawn from\nthe Institution or the person to whom he is bound, by\nins parent or guardian, upon payment to snal corpora\nlion of expenses iucuriyd by them, in the relief, sup-\nport, and instruction of such boys, and, Provided, fur-\nther, that nothing in this act contained, shall prevent\nthe said Board of Directors from dismissing any boy\nfrom the Institution, whenever they think thai the\nwelfare of the Institution will be promoted thereby.\nBur:. 7 .?And be it enacted, That the first meeting of\nthe Corporation, hereby created, may be called by any\nthree of the persons named in the preamble of this ncl\nat such lime and in such place, in the city of Baltimore,\nas they may think proper, by giving public thereof\nin two or more of the newspapers published in said city\nat least six days before the time of snid meeting; at which\nmeeting there shall be elected a Board of Directors, as\nis piovided in the third section of this act, who shall\nhold tin ir respective olfiecs until the first Monday ill\nMarch, in the year eighteen hundred and forty-two, and\nuntil others shall be elected to succeed them: except in\ncase of death or resignation, in Which case itshall be the\nduty of said Board of Directors to fillthe vacancy, na is\nprovided in the said thud section; and the Court* having\ncognizance in like oases, as between master and appren-\ntice. shall bear and determine in ail charges of ill-treat-\nment, made by the parent gunidians, or next of kin to\nsuch apprentices of said school
189a56b6f1178791281490fdccf4dedb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.4643835299341 41.681744 -72.788147 Damp printer, whose name once, was\nlegion and vyho circulated from city\nto city living on the doles handed\nout to him by more prosperous fel-\nlow craftsmen. He is almost extinct\nonly a few of him remain.\nLike the little old red shawl which\nmother used to wear, the tramp\nprinter was usually tattered and\ntorn. But in spite, of his rags, he\ncould and did smile. H" preferred\nto be recognized as a trav eling jour-\nneyman, but this euphonious de-\nscription was seldom used. He was a\ntramp printer and no one ever called\nhim anything else.\nHis home was wherever he hap-\npened to hang his hat. He frequent-ee- l\ncheap lodsing houses and his\nprincipal article of diet was beef\nstew or any other food which was\nserved in large quantities at low\nprices. It must lie confessed that \ngreater part of his cash was spent\nfor strong liquor which made him\nforget that he was a piece of clay\nin rc.gs and exalted him to the es-\ntate of a. knight in purple.\nFew days passed in newspaper ot- -\n!ices without visits from these rovers.\nThrv visited among the boys and\nsought alms to get them 10 tne m- .- i\ncity. In their quest for tunas tnej\nwere seldom disappointed. Occasion-- !\nallv one of them could be persuaded\nito'go to work, but the duration of\nhis spasmodic visits to tne type\nwas usually one or two days Then\nhe would collect whatever pay was\ndue. him and pass out of sight in\nth" dust of the horizon with a stom-\nach warmed with whiskey and a\nfew dimes jingling ill his pockets. In\nspile of his poverty ho was not dis-
202af3c43cf7fcd07aa100f548504b98 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.6342465436326 39.745947 -75.546589 Why should the President hesitate\nany longer to follow the example of\nPresident Cleveland? The evidence\nin the present Instance is, as you\ncorrectly observe, much stronger than\nthat which Impelled Mr. Cleveland\nto dismiss the British minister. This\nis true even if the letters now pub­\nlished in the World are alone con­\nsidered; but the offences are more\nnumerous and incomparably more\nserious if the whole situation is con­\nsidered. For the Lusitania massacre\noutweighs everything else.\nThe helpless victims of that awful\nslaughter cry aloud from their wat­\nery graves. Shall their cries be lon­\nger unheeded? More than three\nmonths have elapsedx_slnce those un­\nfortunate Americans, men, women\nand children, were murdered by the 419 Shipley.— Adv.\nGermans; more than three months\nsince the President threatened to\n action. Have those murders\nbeen forgotten so soon? The Ger­\nmans hope so. and it is evident that\nthey inlend to do nothing in response\nto the twice repeated demands of the\nPresident (or disavowal and repara­\ntion. But what will the President do?\nWill he do any thing? Is he waiting\nto hear from the people? The peo­\nple, though silent, demand action. '\nThere can be no mistake about 'this, \nLet The Sun then give utterance\nto that demand once more, and again\nand again until the President in his\nstudy must needs listen. Has he for­\ngotten the answer of the people to\nPresident Clevelands action? Let him\nhut act and the people will support\nhim. They are longing for leader- |\nship, and they always support a res­\nolute leader.
0e52a38c4ee29e6e555a3875b1e08b01 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.6999999682903 39.745947 -75.546589 Allies, will be returned to tlie United\nStales government. It pays Interest.\nIt pays tlie guveynmeut more Interest\nthan tlie government pays our Lib­\nerty bond subscribers. Clearly, money\nborrowed from our own people to be\nlebt to tlie Allies will not have to be\npaid for by our future generations.\nOn the contrary, that money bor­\nrowed from us today will be paid back\nto tlie generations after us. If we\nsubtract that IG.ouO,000,000 from Uie es­\ntimated $24.000,000,000 to be raised In\ntills country in a year, there is left $18-\n000,000,000 to be spent by us on the\nwar. The $8,000,000,000 of the proposed\ntaxation, therefore, will not bo one-\nthird of our actual spendings on the\nwar, but will be nearer one-half than\none-third; Instead of 33 per cent. It Will\nbe 44 per cent.\nAgain, If It is a sound theory \nthis war should be paid for largely\nby direct taxation)! that direct taxa\ntlon should be so widely and fairly\ndistributed that it wil not be a crush-\ni ing burden upon anybody. Consump­\ntion taxes of $1,000 ,000,000 a year\ncould be laid upon our whole popu­\nlation and Die average per capita\ncost would not bo $9 a year, or per­\nhaps a half of $9 a year. The man\nwhose consumption expenditures were\n$20,000 ayear, on as low abasis as a1\nper cent, consumption tax, would yield\n$200 into the treasury. A man whose\nconsumption expenditures were only\n$50Q a year would yield Into the treas­\nury $5 a year. And how favorably\nwould an average consumption tax of $3\na year or $10 a year, compare with the\nmany dollars of Increased cost of living\nthat every family In the United Slates
3c62f4ab2e033d6588af415c16963ec5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.919178050482 58.275556 -134.3925 "Dead by his own hand,1' wae the\n- erdict of the coroner's jury at White\niiorse in the case of Alfred Spreadbury,\nau Englishman, whose body was found\niu the woods about a mile north of\ntowu. A shotgun rested between hie\nleg?, his left hand grasped the barrel,\nin his right hand he held a stick about\ntwo feet long, and in his heart was a\ncharge of duck shot. He wae uot a\ndissipated man, says the Star.\nSuperintendent Beattie, who receutly\nreturned to Juneau from Metlakahtla,\nwhere the government has taken over\nthe control of the uatives and is build\nj ing a large school, say9 that the eight\nreindeer which were recently brought\nfrom Nome district are doing well. One\nof the animals received injuries from\n it died during the trip. The\nother seuen were placed in charge of\nherders and tuned loose, with the ex\nception of the lead deer, which wat-\npicketed. Six of them eluded the\nvigilauce of the herders and escaped.\nThey have been seeu several times, but\nhave not been recaptured as yet. How-\nlever, they will be all right, providing\nthe wolves do not kill them. Reindeer\nmoss which was brought in sacks to\nfeed them until they became ac¬\nclimated was spurned as food by the\ndeer and they aro thriving on the\nnative moa* and fodder which grows in\nabundance on the island. I hey have\ndemonstrated that they can thrive on\nthe feed growing on the island and a\ngood increase i9 looked for in the\nspring.
17a27414d7ef0c3658aeb50ef96b3d93 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.582191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 lion of tincture of iodine. On going to I\nlied one night 1m) took down the bottle la- 1\nbeled in paper for the article he wanted, c\nand cautiously made an application with J\na amel1* hair brush.' Be .was a little sur- y\nprised rail lh^ sensation wal sot what he li\nlind niilicipatwi hut thought no more c\nabout it, untl wont to bed. Intho morn- c\nlug he eiairiHoMns anliTe*, expecting to t\ntin J thrill ataiiiied of a color tltnllar to that 1\nproduced by jyecn walnut halls, luU to his a\nloiislcmation found them rmftaied *itk a\nbard mottled crust. StK thought o»'was t\nruiDed, and that the iodjho had actefl as a li\n|N>wi-rlul escharotlc, destroying thtfwholo d\nnilicle ot lils ankles. It alarmed hint *11 ii\nibo more tbit ho experienced sensa- b\nlion u( pain. HB lamentations wen equal t\nio those ol Jeremi&li, and atiractcd the at- *\ntrillion o! the porter, who then recoilec- . 1\ntnl that in washing Uiose two bottles a n\nlew dsyi before, tho labels bad come off c\n»nd that he bad pasted them on again. g\nHis suggestion tint ho bad. got them u\ntransposed infused new life into tho lot- f\n' ow stricken cletk, nntl'when ho found by C\ni'.ainiualion tbsf tho fOSter's suggestion p\nwas correct,'his con'st&hatlon was iud- ji\ndeuly metamorphosed Into indignation, c\nA little aloohol and a sponge casllyre- b\nmoved the hard shell Irom his anklfl, and s\nthere wis apparently a molaatoeia of it to c\nhis hearl, lor that organ was erer alter- a\nward crusted to the poor potior.
27a35196941743263c868c37bbb30e84 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.1188524273932 58.275556 -134.3925 to teat Iti strength with hit axe. In\none place where the Ire seemed to\nbe bending beneath the weight of\nthe partv he struck the Ice with his\naxe. and It slipped out of hli cold-\nstiffened fingers and went to the bot-\n'om of the sea. This left him In a\n.> recarloua position, without means\nfor chopping fuel and he was there¬\nafter forced to eat his meat raw.\nHe experience great difficulty In\ngetting around f'ape Lisburne. The\nIce at this point was broken and he\nwas compelled to ferry hla chilled\noarty across the chasm of water to\nanchor Ire alone the shore. He en¬\ncountered many bliixards. Ills (In¬\nters and toes were frozen and gave\nhla great agony and he lived for\nnine days on raw flsh. Hefore ar¬\n at St. MlrhaeJ he met Lieut,\ninrvls and l>r. Call, who gave him\nanother axe and supplies.\nFrom St. Michael, whirh was still\na Russian trading post at this time,\nhe continued his Journey across the\ncountry to Illamna lako and Katmai.\nirrivlng at the latter placo March\n12. At Katmai he expected to find\n. he station of the Alnska Commercial\nCo.. but It had been abandoned. He\ndiscovered among the old stuff at\nthe abandoned post an old dory. He\ntore up all his underclothing to make\nmaterial with which to calk the dory\nand after putting It In seaworthy\ncondition as was possible he launch¬\ned his frail craft In Shellkof straits\nand attempted to pull across the 35\nmiles of turbulent waters which sep¬\narated him from Kodlak and the
1df7834e424a71c532573fbd67f30eac EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.078082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 REAL ESTATE.\nBy virtue of nn order of the Chancellor,\nmade the 31st day of December. 1900, will\nbe exposed to sale at public vendue, on\nBATt'RDAT . FEBRUARY 2 , l»H, at 3\no'clock, p. m .. at the Court House, In\ntbs illy of Wilmington, the following\ndeanHhed real estate, late of Adam\nGrubb, deceased, to wit:\nNo. 1. A lot of land with the brick\ndwelling thereon, known as No. 2215\nMarket street, having a front on Market\nstreet of 28 feet 5*. Inches and a depth\nof about 87 feet 3 Inches.\nNo. 2 . Adjoining No. 1, above described,\nhaving a brick house ther««on erected,\nknown us No. 221* Market street, havl\nIt front on Market street of 15 feet\nInches and extending back that width 87\nfeet 3 Inches.\nNo. 3. lot on the south side of Tat­\nnall street, beginning 18 feet easterly from\nTwepty-seoond struct; thence along Tat­\nnall street 58 feet 7 Inches; thence south­\neast 187 feet: thence west parallel with\nTatnall street, 117 feet 4% Inches to a cor­\nner 5 feet 6«Si Inches east of Twenty-sec­\nond street: thence northwest crossing the\n«■ast side of Twenty-second street 122 feet;\nthence north (B feet 5 Inches to beginning.\nNo. 4. A lot of land, beginning on east\nside of Hutton street 179 feet 2H Inches\nnorth from north side of Race street;\nthence east parallel with Race street' S9\nfeet 111 S-16 Inches; thence north parallel\nwith Hutton street 73 feet 1H4 Inches;\nthence northwest parallel with Vandever\navenue 102 feet St« inches to Hutton\nstreet; thence south 123 feet 8 inches to\nbeginning.
29085bad52a683c2182869d0bad8ac9a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.6215846678303 39.745947 -75.546589 This week will practically see the end\nof the peach season tor 1908 In this part\nof Delaware, and those who have failed\nto get their supply for canning or pre­\nserving. will have to look elsewhere for\npeaches. The prices have ranged well\nup all tho week and the effects of the\ndrouth Is plainly seen In tho size of\nth* peeches, say* the Milford Chronicle.\nMonday the Mixon variety was In evi­\ndence and the quality was good, but the\nsise was below the average. Elbert&s\ncame In In small lots and sold web. One\nload brought »1.12, another brought In\nby the president of the Buasex County\nLevy Court »1.02, and several others\nbrought »1 per basket for th* ent re\nload. Five cars were shipped from Mil­\nford, and the steamboat* took away 4600\nbaskets between them: which I* equiva­\nlent to about nine carloads mote. ad­\ndition to the peaches more than a thou­\nsand baskets of apples and as many\nmore baskets of potatoes were shipped\nby the steamboats.\nTuesday the market was well supplied\nwith good fruit. and,aa the boats were not\nthere to compete for shipments, all went\nby railroad; fifteen ears were loaded\nand sent away. Elberlse rame In larger\nquantity and were n{^lne quality; prleea\nranging from 80 cants for fair fruit, to\n»1.25 (or fancy—only eleven baskets\nbrought that price; tho price for full\nloads of seventy »0 ninety baskets, did\nnot exceed »1.08 per basket, while the\naverage price was about 90 cents. Crew-\nfords another yellow variety, brought\nfrom 50 cents to 80 cents according to\nquality. Mixons brought from 40 to 77\ncents and they generally were fine stock.\nJoseph Gray Davis got 21 08 (or sixty-\nfour baskets of Elbeytas and Craw­\nford*.
1d9e0fe89fa3f246b60ed8367ce9b38e MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1885.2945205162355 39.78373 -100.445882 To the following named defendants\nand to all owners of. or claimants to,\nthe real estate thereon, or improve\nments when assessed separately, here\ninafter described, known or unknown,\nYou are hereby notified that suits\nhave been commenced in tbe Justice\nCourt ef Carson township, Ormsby\ncounty. Nevada, by the State of Nevada\nplaintiff against each of the defendants\nhereinafter named, and each of the fol-\nlowing described tracts or parcels of\nland, with fthe improvements thereon,\nand improvements when separately as-\nsessed, and all owners of, or claimants\nto the same, known or unknown, to re\ncover the tax and delinquency assessed\nto said defendant against property, for\nthe fiscal year commencing January\n1st, 1881 and ending December 31st, 18K4,\nand that a summons has been duly is\nsued in said case; And you are further\nnotified that unless you appear and\nanswer the complaint Sled in said cause\non or before the\nEighth day of Slay, A. D. 1885\nJudgment will betaken against youand\nthe real eRtate and improvements here-\nin described, for the amount of tax and\n specified, and costs of suit.\nE, I. Sweeney and lots numbered 4 and\n6, in block No. 9 , with dwelling in\nSears, Thompson & Sears division of\nCarson City, personal property asses-\nsed at $500, tax and delinquency $59 67.\nR. H. Fish and land bounded as follows:\nBeginning at a point on the north line\nof 5th Avenue, 200 feet east of south\neast corner of Rice & Peters' division\nof block No. 8 , aud running thence\neast along the north line of 5th Avenue\n100 feet; thence north 248 feet; thence\nwest 100 feet; tnence south 248 feet to\nplace of beginning, with dwelling,\npersonal property assessed at $100, tax\nand delinquency $19 14.\nA. Nichols & O. P. Crawford and lots\nNo. 4 and 5, in block 25, of Musser's\ndivision of Carson City, taxjand de-\nlinquency $3 63.\nStephen Jones and east half of lots No.\n2 and 3, in block No. 34 , with dwelling\nof Sears, Thompson & Searsdivision\nof Carson City, personal property as-\nsessed at $!00, tax and delinquency\n19 14.
104029b15650343fe0981c4c6789d7ee EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.6863013381533 39.745947 -75.546589 Thoreau and Robert Louis Stevenson\nhad weak lungs. Byron had a mis­\nshaped foot. Scott had to walk with a\ncane. A recent postmaster-general of\nEngland was blind. Several painters\nhave been deaf. Beethoven kept on\ncomposing music after he had lost his\nhearing and Handel played his “Sam­\nson” music when, like the hero of his\noratorio, he had lost his sight,\npicture of Milton, blind, and dictating\nhis lofty epics, is a familar one. Fanny\nCrosby, whose hymns are sung by\nthousands, is sightless. Talleyrand was\nlame. Richard HI., a maligned and\nmisrepresented monarch, a patron of\nthe arts and sciences, and encourager\nof learning, is remembered chiefly for\nhis crook back. Alexander Stevens,\nFrancis Packman, William H. Prescott\nand Mrs. Browning are familiar exam­\nples of those who did Important state\nor book in spite of weak bodies\nor failing sight. Richard Jefferls was\nweakened and hampered by inherited\ndisease, yet he did an Immense amount\not work. Demosthenes, greatest of ora­\ntors, was born with a «-eak voice and a\nstumbling, indistinct speech. Henry\nIrving, greatest of English actors, has\na* voice that is only to be understood\nafter a special course of study, and two\nintractable legs. Instances might be\nmultiplied if It were of any use, but it\nought not to be. The physically imper­\nfect deserve our help and sympathy.\nWe do not want to get rid of them, es­\npecially by violence. It is the morally\nimperfect that have become a nuisance,\nand the sooner we put them out of the\nway behind bars or in graves the bet­\nter for them and for all of us.
0264669f67e8e9fc52c048ebe35c03c9 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.7684931189751 44.939157 -123.033121 son, tho auto maniac, wns thrown\ndown by Dnmo Fortune, who Just\nstood by nnd grinned nf htm yester-\nday nfternoon when ho put up a $50\nbill against tho samo amount posted\nby two other auto drlvors Edmun-so- n\nand Hoyt with tho understand-\ning that ho was to mnko tho Plghtoeit\nmiles botween this city and Dallas\nin ono hour flnt and run Ills mi ehlno\nbackward tho ontlro distance.\nNovor beforo in tho history of Sa-\nlem sports hns thoro been Just this\nkind of a freak wngor posted. 'Lucky'\nJack, accompanied by Chns. Stage,\nloft tho corner of Court nnd Com\nmercial streets about 4 o'clock for\nDallas at a $50 winning pace, ac\ncording to tho torms of tho bet, tho\nbig machine throwing up clouds of\nmud nnd smoke to the amusement of\ntho largo crowd of spectators that\nhad gathered at tho starting point to\nbco tho "backward" raco time\ngot off. Ovor tho big steel bridge\nPotorson piloted his snorting car and\nout onto tho county road straight for\nDallas. After striking tho road, Pet-\nerson oponcd up his mnchlno a few\nraoro notches nnd sailed along at n\ndangorous rnto of speed with the\nheavy car swaying from sldo to side\nIn nn oxtromoly ticklish manner,\ncaused by tho unusual hind-for em o- st\ndriving. Had Potorson stayed in the\nroad and lot tho telophono poles\nnlono, and had his auto machinery\nromnlnod Intact, ho would havo mado\ntho run In less than nn hour, but ho\nlind not proceeded threo miles from\nthis city when tho clutch gave out\non tho mnchlno, nnd nftor smashing\nhis tall light and mud gunrd on n\ntologrnph polo and running Into the\ndltcli tho contestant, wns compelled\nto glvo up tho rnco nud tho $50 to\nEdmunson and Hoyt, much to his\nchagrin nnd disgust.
0dfc106133f703e00966cbb61f1dbf3a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.683561612126 39.261561 -121.016059 CtTATK OF CALIFORNIA, Comity\nO Nevada, ss . In the District Court of the Klk\nJudicial District of said Btate.\nThe People of the Slate of California to G. It. TAI-\nLOR. Greeting :\nYou are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the complaint of 8. II . D1KEMAN , bled against\nyou. within ten days from tlie service of this writ.\nIf served on you in this county, and witliiu twenty\ndays if served" on you in this Di- trict nnd out ot ta.<\ncounty, and within forty days if served on you in\nthis State and out of this lfistriet. in rii action com\nmenccd on the lhth day of April, a. D. 1861 , in\nsaid Court to obtain a decree of this Court lor the\nforeclosure of a certain mortgage, hearing date tie\n12th day of October a n. 1859. executed by the sail,\ndefendant to plaintiff, and for the sale of the premi-\nses therein, and in satd complaint particularly men-\ntioned and described and the application of the mon-\neys arising from such sale to the payment ot the\namount due on four certain promissory notes nt\nforth in said oompluint, made and delivered to sahl\nplaintiff by the defendant bearing even date with\nsaid mortgage thereby intend* d to be secured,\nto wit: The aum of $1,590 , with interest 1 hereto\ntroni the 12th day of October A. l>. 1859 . at tbe rats\nof two per cent, per month till paid : at d it any e.*5-\nciency shall remain after applying all ol said money s\nproperly so applicable thereto, then that Plaintilt\nmay hare execution therelor agaiust the said defend-\nant. also that said defendant and all and every per-\nson clanniug through or under defendant subsequent-\nly to the date of plaintiff's mortxaire rnd the coin\n-venoement of this action, may bo barred and foie*\ntoned of all right, claim, hen and equity of redemp\n. loo in and to the said mortgaged premises, or any\npart thereof, and tor such other and further relief,\nor both, in the premises us may be just at: 1 equita-\nble. And you are hereby notified that If you fail t"\nanswer said complaint as herein direct'd, planLit\nwill take judgment against yon therefor by defano.\ntogether with alt costs ol suit, aud counsel fee* in the\nsum of $150 aud also den ami ot the Court such eth-\ner relief as is prayed tor in ploiutiffs said complaint-\nIn testimony whereof, 1 , John S. launbert, ( fork
52e6f743dd2b932384a32845b73f0e7a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.401369831304 58.275556 -134.3925 The Alma, one of'tbe largest passen¬\nger vessels equipped with a gasoline\nengine that has been bnilt at a Seattle\nshipyard for pome time, will slide dowo\nl he ways at the Nilson & Kelez ship-\nyard at the foot of Atlantio street at 2\no'clock next Wednesday afternoon.\nThe launching was to have been held\ntoday, but was postponed. Mrs. Alma\nL. Seigley will be sponsor for the vessel.\nThe Alma has been built for the Ju¬\nneau Ferry & Navigation Co., at a cost\nof $35,000. She is 93 feet in length, with\na beam of 19 feet, and iu commission\nwill draw 7 feet of water. She is built\nespecially for passenger t-ervice between\nJuneau, Douglas and Tread well, and\nwill carry 155 passengers with ease.\nDesigned by Leslie Geary, naval\narchitect, with offices in the Grand\nTrunk dock, she is built more than or¬\ndinarily stanch for the rough weather\nshe will eucounter on her regular run\nout of Juneau. The vessel is said to be\nnearly twice as stroDg aud reinforced\nas is customary with vessels of her size,\nand ib equipped with a *250 horse power\nSpeedway engine.\nJ. P . Oorbus, president ot the Juneau\nFerry & Navigation Co., and Mrs. Cor-\nbus, arrived yesterday from their home\nat JLjOS Gatos, Cal., to be present at the\nlaunching. Capt. Waldo States, who\nwill command the Alma, accompanied\nby Mrs. States, also reached the city\nyesterday from Juneau. Capt. States\nwill take the Alma North, leaving Se¬\nattle about a week after the vessel is\nlaunched.
13e8fa4811ff824cac30f0048e0e6f22 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.5150272907813 37.451159 -86.90916 aware of any one here .asking for it,\nunless the petitions published in the\nHkkai.d for a few issues past can thus\nbe construed. That there are Demo\ncrats in the county who favor their re\nmoval we have not a doubt. Our\netforta have been to get the committee\nto obey the call of the District Commit-\ntee. Falling In this, we favored the\naction of the minority, and thought\nthat the District aud State Committees\ncould make a minority action valid.\nThis was doue, aud this was ail that\nwas asked for by those who signed the\npaper to the State Committee. What\nwas doue, was doue by true Democrats,\nwho saw that a failure of the action of\nOhlocouuty would cause a bolt, and that\na bolt under such circumstances would\ncreate a big rent in the party, 'and all\nthat was done was an honest to\navert a bolt aud preserve unity in the\nranks. We arc sorry that the bolt has\noccurred in spite of all that could be\ndone. It will be seen that we were\ncorrect in our prophesies, for Maj. Joe\nHaycraft nays lie boiled because the\nDemocratic Committee of Ohio county\nwould not act. If this Committee had\ngono on iu proper time ami discharged\ntheir duty there would bo no bolter or\nIndependent on the track to- da- y .\nHut the light is over, md we have not,\naud will not, ask for, urge or advocate\nthe removal of the committee. We\nsucceeded in our efl'ort, viz., having\nregular nominees for Circuit Judge and\nCommonwealth's Attorney, and our\nfight is over except to do all we fairly\naud honorably can to elect the Demo\ncratic nominees, from Hancock down\nWe criticized the failure of the Coni-milt- cc
29fbf7fc3b837379d7ba2cf556d37104 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.9410958587011 39.623709 -77.41082 How would you go about estimating the\nvalue of Catoctin properly? A business or\nproperly is worth the net income of said\nbusiness or property capitalized at 5 or 0 per\ncent or as much more as it will take to keep\nup renewals and sinking fund, to wipe out\ninvestment when same is exhausted.\nVVlial does Catoctin property consist of\nand its income, If judiciously man tged, and\nnecessary capitalization? Catoctin tract\ncontains about 10,-100 acres of land, about\nit,ooo acres of this Is worthless so far as the\nlimber on same is concerned, being run over\nevery few years by tliemountain fires killing\nthe new growth. But most of this laud is\nvirtually a level tract free of sUmea and spe-\ncially adapted to fruit. There is 1,500 acres\non the eastern slope set with 25 to 30 years\ngrowth of limber yvorth #ls to S2O per acre )\nthere is 4,500 acres worth from $6 to #10_\nthere is 1000 acres cast of the pike with 125\nacres of good farming laud worth #ls per\n Tile hematite ore bell contains about\n400 acres and its value can only lie obtained\nby the present workings and test pits that\nhave been sunk on the deposit to estimate\nthe amount, the cost of getting out,and wash-\ning of same, deducted trom I lie worth on the\nmarket or what can be realized by smelting\nsame on the property, the amou..t produced\npci day will give you the amount of its cap-\nitalized worth. The former method of min-\ning 'are was entirely by hand labor with sho\nvel, pick and drill in open pit at fool bills of\nthe mountain using steam pumps to keep the\nmines free of water and hauling the ore and\nclay out with mules. After eveiy heavy rain\nthe mines were flooded and It would take\nfrom two to six weeks work to clean the\nmines of water and mud before ore could be\nmined again. The cost then of mining so\nnearly equalled the worth of the product that\nit was only profitable during a good iron\nmarket.
547f399b785588493edfe389fb2106a5 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.03698626966 40.807539 -91.112923 death of said Swope, and also that the note\natovo referred to, signed by Nicholas Winter-\nstein, and Gideon 13. Alexander, by some\nMeans got into the hands of the said William\nBuchanan, who instituted a suit upon the\naamo, in the District Court, for said county,\nin the name of the said complainant, for the\nuse of said William Buchanan, without any\n•Militbority so to do, and having been notified\nby said complainant, of the true circum-\njs .flanccs and situation of said note, he- is cn-\nfavoring to enforce payment of the same,\ngreatly to the prejudice and injury of said\ncomplainant, and that the said note, was\nmade payable to the said Josiah Luckcy. or to\norder, and that the same is not endorsed by\nhim, and also representing that at the May\nterm, of said District Court, 1840 , \ntras rendered by default against said Wintcr-\natein and Alexander, for the full amount of\n•aid note with interest, &c, and whereas a\naummori8 has been issued in this case, against\nthe said defendant, returnable at the Octobcr\nterm of said Court, 1840, which was returned\nbv the Sheriff, nnn est inventus. Now unless\ntfic paid William Buchanan, shall personally\nlie, and appear before the District Court, for\n•aid county, setting as a Court of Chancery,\n-O H or before the first day of the next term,\nthereof, to be begun, and held at the Court\ntlouse, in Burlington, on the third Monday of\nFebruary, 1R41, and answer r,n his corporal\n«ath. She chargcs and allegations set forth in\n•aid bill of complaint, the same shall be ta­\nken as confessed, and a decree entered in the\npremised accordingly. Nov 23d, 1840 .
1ce9356d39816fea9d3196fdc4a8428e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.957650241601 39.745947 -75.546589 January 9, 190«. Robert W. Tardcll, fee\n>0. Notary Public. Term 4 years.\nJanuary 15. 19W>, Charles K. Lloyd, fee\n«6. Notary Public. Term 4 years.\nJanuary 18, 19o8. Eugene Davis, fee I«,\nNotary Public for National Bank ot\nSmyrna. Term 4 years\nJanuary 26. 190». William R. Chandler,\nfee «6, Notary Public for The First Na­\ntional Bank of Pagsboro. Term 4 years,\nJanuary 3“, Unix. Charles G Fisher, fee\n«•>. Justice of the Peace until end next\nsession of Senate.\nJanuary 30. 190S, Charles G. fsher. foe\n«6, Notary Public. Term 1 years.\nFebruary 18, 1908, Charles W. Gooding,\nfee M. Notary Public. Terra 4 years.\nFebruary 27. 1908. Joseph II Bartlett, fee\n«6. Notare Public. Term 4 years.\nMarch 24. 1908. Ezekiel Cooper, fee «6.\nNotary Public for the Farmers' Hank of\nthe state of Delaware, for tho branch nt\nWilmington. Term 4 years.\nMarch 30. 1908, Oscar O. Oouart. fee *6.\nNotary Public for The First \nBank of Wilmington. Term 4 years\nApril 2. 118(8. Frank H. Mason, fee «6,\nNotary Public. Term 4 years.\nApril 7, 1908, Frank A Johns, fee «6.\nJustice of the Peace until end next ses­\nsion of Seriate.\nApril 7. 1908. Frank A. Johns, tea «8.\nNotary Public. Term 4 years.\nApril 11. 1908. Theodore Jones, fen «6,\nJustice of the Peace until end of next\nsession of Senate.\nAprtl 11. 1908, Theodore Jones, fen «6,\nNotary Public. Term 4 years.\nApril 16, 1908. Charles 8 Hamblin, fee\n$C, Justice of the Peace until end next |\nsession of Senate.\nApril 15. 1908 diaries S Hamblin, fee\n$6, Notary Public. Term 4\nApril 18. 1908. Lambert J\nNotary Public. Term 4 years.\nApril 24. 1908. William P. White, fee «6.\nNotary Public. Term 4 years.\nApril 26. liais, Joshua C. Raughley\nJO, Justice of the Peace until end of\nsession of Senate.\nApril 25. 1908. Joshua C. Raughley, fee
36fc9c7fd30687261f64027665414065 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1918.2561643518518 39.623709 -77.41082 this night of anxious watching, dawn\ncame, and glad we were for it. For a\nwhile the firing seemed to cease, then\ngrew worse. We finally found out the\nreal state of affairs. The Southerners\nwere just coming. The few Northerners\nwho had not left were trying to hold the\ncity. One brigade who had fought four\ndays and nights without fqod or sleep,\nhad come back from the front the night\nbefore and asked the commander to let\nthem go to another place, and they muti-\nnied. They tried to commandeer the\ntrain, but as I said before, the engineer\neluded them. Atter this they let. loose\nin the dreadful work of destruction all\nover the city staying as long as they dar-\ned. From the back window that over-\nlooks the fields and mountains I watched\n battle. It was wonderful to see the\nsouthern troops advancing. At first\ntheir white flag appeared on a distant\nmountain, then it came nearer and near-\ner. You could see the men advancing at\nset intervals, and orderly. They seemed\nto come faster and faster, and finally\nthe northern troops flew, upon which the\nsouthern troops set after them. How 1\nwish I could give you a picture of those\ntropps entering the city. The northern\nman WCF e a ll 80 well provided with cloth-\ning and everything that makes for com-\nfort, and they are mostly big husky fel-\nlows. The southern men, on the other\nhand are little, brown men, skin and\nbone, full of fiery enthusiasm and vigor.\nThey have no set uniform, a 8 they are\nfrom various places, Kwantung, Kwang ß '\netc.
df1d54663eca8c899aaf6670a78d71da NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.664383529934 41.681744 -72.788147 courts for a new hearing. He will\nask that the county commissioners,\nthe Connecticut Humane society,\nand the Connecticut Child Welfare\nBureau appear in court and show\ncause why the children should not\nbe returned to their parents.\nUnder the jurisdiction of the\ncounty, commissioners, the Humane\nsociety and the Welfare bureau are\nholding five out of six children of\nthev Romaine family. Investigation\nby Probation Officer E. C . Connolly,\npolice, newspapermen, County Com-\nmissioner E. W . Schultz, and even a\nrepresentative of the Child Welfare\nbureau of the home at 15 Star street\nhave failed to find evidence to sub-\nstantiate charges made in court\nwhen the children were taken away.\nA striking instance of the alleged\nattitude of the welfare agencies oc-\ncurred yesterday when inspired by\nthe of a woman connec-\nted with the probation officer's of-\nfice In Waterbury that furniture in\nthe Romaine home was not up to\nthe standard she thought it should\nbe, Mr. and Mrs. Romaine last week\npurchased a ' six piece upholstered\nparlor suite, second hand, and at a\nbargain, informed of the purchase,\nsome one in the Child Welfare Bu-\nreau remarked, "That's the way with\nthose people, they spend their mon-\ney for parlor suites when they\nought to spend it for beds."\n"What can I do," asked Mr. Ro-\nmaine. "If I can't buy furniture they\nkick, and when I do they kick."\nThe verbal report to the county\ncommissioners by a girl who found\nthings immaculate when she called,\ncontained a statement that Mr. Ro-\nmaine is "Not working now."
39eed1cfef8dd6997dac92e0efdbbfa3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.7609289301254 39.745947 -75.546589 The 12 stamps will be issued in\nthree series of designs. In the first\nseries modern methods of transport­\ning mail will be illustrated,\nmail car of a railway train will be\nshown on one stamp, an ocean mail\nsteamship on another, a third will\nhave a motor wagon of the type used\nIn the postal service, and the fourth\nwill show a mall-earrylng aeroplane.\nPostal employes will be shown at\nwork In the second series. The fig­\nures will bo those of railway mall\nclerks, postolflce clerks, city letter\ncarriers and rural free delivery car­\nriers.\nAuxiliary Service-\nAn auxiliary postal service, not\nnecessarily under strict civil service\nrules hut under complete control of\nthe Government, will he established\nto take charge of the anticipated\nlarge volume, parcels post busi­\nness in large cities.\nThis is one of the problems with\nwhich tho postmasters of the five\nlargest cities of (he country—New\nYork, Chicago, Philadelphia, St Loyie\nand Boston—have been wrestling at\ntheir many conference with the Post-\noffice Department Officials.\nThe expectation of the postmasters\nis that retail merchants will largely\npatronize the parcels post for local\ndelivery because of the cheap post­\nage rate. For city delivery the rate\nwill be 5 c-ents for the first pound\nand 1 rent for each additional pound\nup to 11.pounds. That this low rate\nwill appeal very strongly to retail\nmerchants is definitely known.\nRange of Postage.\nMen's suits could be delivered via\nthe parcels post for a rate of ap­\nproximately 12 cents, while the rate
1baab39ed5bf0bf42535a2a71013b989 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.6534246258245 41.020015 -92.411296 Onr present Insurance Law, With\nbut slight changes and modtiteatioas\nwas drafted la lit office of this compa­\nny, and lt» offlcdN Hied every hoaoro-\nbli means to sacaro its passage. By\nthe operation r>f this law many com­\npanies located inftl*State, and many\nmore from othor states wore buried\nso deep that aothlag remalaed of tbom\nbat a slakeniag steacb la tbe ooitril*\nof all honest men. Thlt eompaay, as\niu name indicate!, waa organized ex­\npressly tor the purpose of lasarlag\nfarm property, noaatry ehorcbes aad\n•cbool-hoasca wtaUa the State, avoid­\ning all rftke, audias stores, ibopi, liv­\nery itablet, mills, mannfhetoriet, and\ndwellings In towaa or citisa when ex­\nposed by tbe above claat of riska. In\nyielding np tho entire fic^fl. of b'aalaen\nrisks, to other eompaalea, aod opera*\ntiag only amoag tho faraters, many\nradical ehaagea had to be made, to\nmeet the wanta of tha term log com­\nmunity. Amoag the moat promt-\naeat of theae ehaagea ia tbe inter-\neat of tha fbrmervwere firat to strike\nout of the policy nil the tunal condi­\ntions, restrictions and technicalities\nleaving the oontmet eo plain- and un­\nequivocal tbat aay school-boy could\neaalty understand it. Second, to ex-\ntead tbo booadarlea-of the insnraace\nto the llmlu of the pmalsea owood or\noccupied by the applicant, aad aot\nconfining personal property to tbe\nbuildinga, aa ia uniformly done by\nleading companies; and third by giv­\ning time for tbe payment of pre­\nmium to thoee who could not pay at\ntho time of makiag thalr application\nfor inaurance, tikjpg • note for the\nsame duo in a reasonable time. The\ninsurance in thla case being just aa per­\nfect as though the caab had been paid,\nup to the time tbo note becomes due.\nThia feature, enabled every farmer\nwho bad property to JUuare, to aecure\nthe protection desired whether bo had\nthe money or not, and numerous in-\natances are ahown by tbo records of\nthe company, tbat losses have occured\nand been paid, long before the note for\nthe premium became d ne. Many good\nlaaurnaca men, honeatly predicted that\na company could not long exist and\ncarry out theae radical tbeoriee, and\nitlaeraat dead-beats talked Jkemselvee\nhoarse to convince the people, that\neach ideaa ware simply redlcalous, and\na humbug. Bat, notwithstanding all\nthia, tho eompaay to-day staads ia the\nftoat raak of aimilar iastltatfoas.\nIt has issuedforty fkomanrf polict**,\nformiag the latgeet eomhlostfon of\nformers la oas eempaay or ccrpnation\nwlthlaths limits of a stagle state. Its\naasataoxcaad t30&0Q0. wMeh toaathar\nwith dally receiptsaad laorsasiag bos-\niaess Is ample to meM tha twoor three\nioaes occnrlag every day ia |he year.\nWe npaat, that we takaprldfe la call­\ning attaation to this Iowa lostltatloe,\naure atpocklly as it is located la oar\nattUt, aad overy farmer la the State\nshould aot ooly be prood of K, bnt\nsaeoro a policy in it.
370add585b7d46e7fe0feb25eae13a43 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.03698626966 58.275556 -134.3925 Beginning at Corner No. 1, identical with\nCorner No. 2 "Alaska;" Corner No. 2 'Bullion'\nand No. 1 "Alaska 2," from which corner U. S .\nL. M. No. 9 bears S. 44 deg. 12 min, W. 626,1 feet\nthence N. 46 deg. 10 min. E. var. 29 deg. 47 min.\nE. 49.4 ft. Lode line bears S. 62 deg. 09 min. E. j\n1500 feet, (140 feet croppings). Stake upon I\nwhich notice is posted, 98.8 ft Corner No. 2,\nidentical with Corner No. 2 "Alaska 2*' lode\ni of this survey. Thence S. 62 deg. 09 min. E.\nvar. 29 deg. 47 min. E . 175.0 ft. center of Ne¬\nvada creek, 15 feet wide, flows N. 80 deg, E.\n301.0 ft, center of open cut 4 feot wide bears\nS. 68 deg. 05 min. W. 710feet, N. 68 deg. 05 min.\nE. 5 feet. 1825.0 ft center of creek 5 feet wide,\nflows N. 17 deg. YV. 1500.0 ft. Corner No. 8, A\nhemlock post, 4 feet long, 4 inches square, sot\n inches in the ground, with mound of stone\nscribed U. S. S. 575-8, from which corner a\nhemlock tree 2 feet in diameter bears N. 35\ndeg. E. 8 .4 feot. A spruce tree 2 feet in diame¬\nter bears S. 17 deg.E . 8 feet, each blazed and\nscribed U. S .S . 575-3 B. T. Location corner\nbears S. 62 deg. 09 E. 190 feet, thonce S. 46 deg.\n10 min. YV, var 29 deg 47 min K. 49.4ft Lode line\n98.8 ft. Corner No. 4 . identical with Corner No\n3 "Bullion" Lode of this survey. Location\ncorner bears S. 62 deg. 09 min. E. 190 feet.\nThence N. 62 deg. 09min W. vnr. 29 deg. 47 min\nE. 55 .0 ft. center of creek 5 feet wide, flows N.\n17 deg. W. 1202.0 ft. center of open cut. 1377.0\nft. Nevada creek, 15 feet wide, flows N. 80 deg.\nE. 1500.0 ft. to corner No. 1, the place of begin¬\nning. All corners are identical with location\ncorners, excepting S and 4.
0e835e942b804899adbb8015d5504b79 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.6178081874682 42.217817 -85.891125 "Thenyou d(mrve never toget a\nwife if you canm.t sacrifice your busi-\nness for lu r. Why, lov making is the\nbest part of a woman's life!"\n"Enough! I had expected to find In\nyou, if not a linn believer in my theo-\nries, at least a strong sympathizer.\nThat setths it. I shall never marry."\nNow, here a very singular thing oc-\ncurred. Alice, of course, might have\nturned the conversation into other chan-\nnelsreminiscences of old times, expe-\nriences in the Interval which had\n(lapsed since last they met; a hundred\nand one other diverting subjects might\nhave been Introduced, and that would\nhave been the end of it, but instead she\nfell into a meditative mood, pondering\nupon the subject at hand, fascinated\nby Its very brilliant, though obviously\nabsurd, novelty. She could not \nIt from h'T mind, nor could she ever tell\nwhat had held her so potently in Its\nspell. It came to her gradually that\nsuch an erratic harangue from any one\nsave Percy Garden would have been\nsimply offensive. But he had been ever\nsuch a dear old friend and such a char-\nacter! Hew sad and lonely he must\nbe with business alone to occupy hiin!\nSee his fa.ee now set drawn and' wor-\nried! No one understood him! To the\nworld lie was an undesirable crank, an\niconoclast, a cynic, an offensive pessi-\nmist. She understood him well, for\nthere was rebellion in lu own heart\nagtiinst many of the foibles and foolish\nthings of life. And yet could he be\nreally serious in this last eccentricity?\n. She would probe him further.\nGardvn oliM-rvi-
1158da94bd2854319b13d33008bd20d0 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.064383529934 37.53119 -84.661888 constitutional method of changing the\nconstitution. Tlie constitution provides\nthat a majority of all entitled to vote for\nrepresentatives shall vote for calling the\nconvention and do so twice before the\nconvention is called. Tho Oll'utt bill\nevades this constitutional provision by\nmaking the number actually voting for\nrepresentatives and those whoso names\nthe oflicers of the election may think of\nand add thereto as the test. This may\nnot be a majority of tho9o entitled to\nvote for representatiu'S by many thous-\nands, and in fact if the Oll'utt bill were u\ntrue test of those entitled to a vote for\nrepresentatives, then Kentucky has lost\nmore than S0.000 voters, because there\nate more than that number entitled to\nvote for representatives that did not vote\nand were not reported by the ollicers of\nthe election precincts, and the constitu-\ntional testis a majority of those entitled\nto vote for representatives and not those\nnctunlly voting or reported by the olli-\ncers of election, as the Oll'utt bill propos\nes, and byjwhicli aconstitutional barrier,\nwisely incorporated in the constitution,\nto prevent and injudicious change\nof organic law, is sought to be overleap-\ned. We have already had three consti-\ntutions, 17H2, 1709 and IS'iO, which shows\nthat the people can and will change the\nconstitution when they want it changed,\nA majority of the people of the State of\nKentucky do not want a change and\ntherefore they do not voto for it. It is\nthe politicians who want the change for\nplace and power and to create more new\notlices. But some say 'tis necessary in\norder to get rid of the clauses on the sub-\nject of slavery. We have already gotten\nrid of those clauses and slavery also by\nthe Kith Amendment to the Constitution\nof the I'nited States, which constitution\nsays: J his Constitution and the laws\nof the United States made in pursuance\nthereof, and all treaties made, or which\nshall be made, under the authority of\nthe TniUid States, shall be the supremo\nlaw of the laud; and the judges in every\nState shall be bound thereby, anything\nin the constitution and laws of any State\nto the contrary notwithstanding."
02000832e5bbb67cbcfd9ce3e39f4b59 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.2753424340435 43.798358 -73.087921 are noi oounu 10 upnoid slavery in any\nrorm, as we nave not the evidence agreed\non by the constitution, ihat theie 13 a slave\nin the United States. All presumptions\nare to be made in favor of liberty, until\nthe record evidence by due process of law\nappears, by which the slave has been de-\nprived of liberty according to the consti-\ntution of the United States.\nWe are bound to do but one thing, which\nis to petition Congress, without ceasing,\nuntil Congress passes a declaratory act,\nin affirmance of the great principles of\nhuflian liberty established in the 5th arti-\ncle of the amendments to the constitution\nof the United States, by which every\nslave. unconstitutionally deprived of his\nliberty, may lift up his head and Tejoice\nfor the hour of his redemption.\nIf it be true Congress have, entire\npower over the question. of slavery, and a\nright to put an end to the unconstitution\nal slavery which now exists, is it not\nmatter of rejoicing that in all future ef-\nforts of our cause, they will be directed,\nnot against slavery in detail, in the Dis-\ntrict of Columbia, or the internal slave\ntrade between the states, but against it as\na whole, as an entirety. We can fence in\nthe whole field. How thankful should\nwe be, if the foregoing proposition be true,\nthat the responsibility of slavery rests on\nthe entire American people, and that its\noverthrow does not depend upon the con-\nversion of slaveholding states to our sen-\ntiments ; but Congress has ample and\ncomplete power over the question.\nFor all this, let us give thanks to the\nMost High.
210842e4e50a360cd07bb71910b16bd6 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.596994503896 40.832421 -115.763123 Tiic ITtraUl lias tho following special:\nA St. Louis spccial from Leavenworth,\nKansas, says o terrible civvy comes\n'from Siiluvy, Nebraska, a rccrniting\nstation on the U. 1*. II. 11., not far\nfrom Cheyenne, to the effect that au at¬\ntack was mmlo by the Sioux on Crook's\nCamp on Goose Creek, which proved to\nbo inoro of a slanglit«r than a fight.\nNearly 3U0 soldiers of Crook's command\nwith killed, and the cnliio command\ndriven across tho creek. r . mark for\ntlio unerring bullets of tho savago. The\nailviccs state that last Wednesday even¬\ning A. T . Tracy, Post-trader at Camp\nSkoriilun, arrived at Sidney with infor¬\nmation that Lamo Deer, n friendly\nChief, had conic into Camp Sheridan,\nthirty-six hours from tho battlo field, as\na courier, bringing tho terrible news,\nand stating that General Crook had\ntnoro men killed than Custer had with\nhim in the fatal light npou tbo Little\nBig Horn. The loss of tho Indians\nwas not stated, as it is hardly \nLame Deer, knew tho redskins drove,\nthe soldiers across tho creek, and being\nin possession of tho field, left them\nsuftlcicnl time to bury their dead.\nA special to tho Ileruld from Saratoga\nsays Tildeu arrived yesterday and rode\nout with Governor Hendricks and\nDorskimcr. Tihlcn and Hendricks are\non most cordial terms with each other,\nand express- the fullest faith in their\nsuccess in the canvass. Letters .of ac¬\nceptance uro looked for next week. 'Ike\nletters of i acceptance will take strong\ngrounds in favor of hard money, as\nwell as reform, and if Hendricks is not\nwilling to wheel into lino he will have\nto look out fur himself. It is believed\nHendricks has been induced to adopt,\nas fi:r as possibles Tilden's financial\ncourse, and that Congress, acting on\nTihleu's views, will adjourn without re¬\npealing the resumption act. Tho lct-\nIovk of acceptance will bo ready next\nweek. Tilden leaves to-day, but re¬\nturns soon, and Hendricks will remain\nuntil ho comes back.
0d80fd26c4ecd2ca299a3d322354bba6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.3082191463725 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho West Virginia Educatjonal Asso¬\nciation, which holds Its annual meeting\nhero Juno 29 and SO and July 1, Is com¬\nposed of the leading educators of the\nstate, such as University professors,\nprincipals and teachera of norma\nschools, same as high and graded\nachools, presidents and professors of the\ncolleges and seminaries of the state, and\nalso all other leading educators of tho\nstate. These are the people we are\ncalled on to entertain, and the teachers\nwill do It right royally. They will come\nfrom perhaps every county In the state,\nand they are a class of people that will\nknow Just how to advertise our city af¬\nter going away ftom It, and it would ho\nwell to have thom take away with them\na good Impression.\nA meeting of the C and D teachers ot\nthe Eighth ward school was held In tho\nofllco of the principal yesterday after¬\nnoon, was presided over by City\nSuperintendent Anderson. After a num¬\nber of questions wore discussed, the\nsubject of grammar was taken up, and\nthe rule. the verb must ugree.wlth Us\nsubject In number and person.was\nthoroughly discussed. Apparent con¬\ntradictions to the rule were cited, and\nshown that there was really no trouble\nin determining at any time th* correct\nusage. Mr. Anderson is an enthusiast\non tho subject of grammar, or at least\nthat of using good language, and he\ngenerally makes these lessons very in¬\nteresting. Too much pains cannot be ta¬\nken by the teachers to assist the pupil\nto form the habit of using good lan-\ngaugo. As a rule we are too careless In\nthis mattir. When the use of good lan¬\nguage is made one of the accomplish¬\nments of the perfect lady and the true\ngentleman there will be mere pains la-\nken to acquire the habit.
29767594f59cfd6650700b3e5620b112 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.6561643518519 39.743941 -84.63662 body looks at you. Not, as yon may\nvainly imagine, because you are the\nfirst young man who ever wore a stove-\npipe hat, but because it in apparent\neven to the old blind man who sits in\nthe back pew, without any cushions in,\naway back under tho gallery, where the\npoor have the gospel preached to them,\nthat it is the first time ever you wore a\nhat of that description. Your old father\nclaps one on the back of his head, and\nwalks off down the streets in a gale of\nwind, and never thinks of his hat. But\nyon, son, you put yours on at the most\ngraceful angle it can be posed, and you\ngo teetering along, both hands ready to\nfly at the hat at the slightest provoca-\ntion of the srhostliest Dhantom of a Dufl\nof wind. You don't look comfortable,\nson Your hat is always trying to come\noff; you bump it against everyUung you\npass: von rub it the wrong way when\nyou try to brush the dust off it. When\nyou carry it in your hand up the aisle.\n smiles, because you first hold\nit by the brim and let the crown tip\ngracefully over your arm and, by the\ntime you nave hit three or lour wor\nshipers in the head with it, you change\nand turn it under your arm and try to\ncarry it that way without touching it\nand, the first thing you do in that pose,\nyou put a women's eye out witli your\nelbow. Then when you sit down, you\nset it down on the floor, setting it on\nthe brim, a fatal mistake. And then\nbefore the sermon is half through, you\nput your feet on it three times. But\nnever mind; you hare to learn somo\ntime. Only don't imagine that people\nnever saw anything of the kind before,\nbecause they have. And finally, eon, if\nyou are only five feet three inches tall,\ndon't think that a hat three feet five\ninches high improves your appearance,\nor makes you look taller, because it\ndoesn't It may make you look as\nthough you clerked in a second-han- d\nclothing store, but it doesn't make you\nlook taller.
12dc2819af255e3ee564fe6245b2b624 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1895.869862981989 39.623709 -77.41082 President Clevelands obstinacy .back-\nbone, or whateyer you may choose to\ncall it, is neither affected by party vic-\ntories nor such crushing defeats as those\nadministered to his party last week. He\nknows nothing and will learn nothing\nof the doetrine of give and take which\nis so familiar to politicians of all parties.\nHe is perfectly willing that the demo-\ncratic party shall get together,provided\nhe can stand still and that the other\nfellows will swallow their opinions and\nmeekly take their places behind him.\nHe refuses positively to giye up the\nsmallest part of his opinions for the sake\nof party harmony, but insists that those\nmembers of his party who differ with\nhim shall giye up theirs and accept his.\nMen who place their admiration for Mr.\nCleveland above their party allegiance\ncall this bravery, but—mark the predic-\ntion—before the coming session of Con-\ngress is sixty days old it be publicly\ncalled political bullheadedness by more\nthan one democratic wheelhorse; and\nnobody need be surprised if it eventu-\nally brings about that much prophecied\npermanent split in the democratic party.\nNo political party in this country has\neyer succeeded when completely domi-\nnated by the ideas of one man, and it is\nnot probable that one ever will. No\none man knows it all. The principles\nof all political parties have been build\ned by concessions and compromises.rep-\nresenting in part the opinions of the\nentire membership of the party.\nThe populists regard with complacen-\ncy the increasing probability that Presi\ndent Cleveland will be renominated by\nthe democrats, on a single standard gold\nplatform; they say that the silver demo-\ncrats would then go over to them. The\nrepublicans are so confident of winning\nthat they are apparently indifferent to\neverything but their own struggle over\nthe naming of their candidate.
020715ce64b45ea6871813dcef81af4b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.4424657217148 46.187885 -123.831256 way to Maine, to settle in the home of his\nho v hood. lie had passed the previous ten\nyears in the western mining country, and had\namassed a fortune. If YOU have any of tho\nsymptom., k iven in the following testimonials\nyou should lose no time in seeking relief.\nFrom John L. Eoberts, Slatington, Pa,:\n"I have suliered with valnitaiion, irregular\npulse, fainting and mothering spells, pain in\nthoulden, tide, and am for over forty yeart.\nFor twelve years have been treated without\navail by prominent physicians in my neigh-\nborhood and ia New York. Growing con-\nstantly worse, smothering spells followed one\nanother, so my me was oitcn in Ganger ana\nI needed constant care. As my son had been\ncured by Dr. MUei New Heart Cure, he sent\nmo three bottles. The first dose me\nititant relief. Before using the lost bottle\nI was completely cured. Although seventy- -\nfive years old I feel twenty years younger.\nI claim my cure to be almost a miracle."\nHere is a letter from Mrs. John Kolges,\nf Cleveland, O.: "I had been troubled with\nmy heart and stomach for years, but for six-\nteen months had been confined to my bed.\nI had four of the best doctors in the city, but\nnone of them could benefittheweakncssof my\nheart. I also had dropsy and rheumatism.\nI never took medicine that relieved me at\nonce as Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure does. I\nam much stronger. My appetite is splendid.\nI gain strength, with every dose. I have\ngained more in six weeks from your treat-\nment than in sixteen months from all the\ndoctors."
2caee8e082eafff23bc63ca404bcdd3d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.9356164066464 43.798358 -73.087921 The assessors chosen in each town\nshall, on or immediately after "the first of\nApril, in each year; proceed to take the\nlist of all the persons whose polls are lia-\nble to taxation, and also a list of all the\npersonal property owned by, or in possess-\nion of each person liable "to be taxed, in\nthe town where such person is liable to\nbe taxed j and it shall be the duty of such\nperson, n demand of ciiher of the Jisters,\nor within ten days after such demand, to\nexhibit to the listers or some one of them,\nthe true amount of his personal properly\nliable to taxation, according to the best of\nhis knowIedgerand also the amount of so\nmuch of the debts due from him as he\nshall choose to disclose ; and if such pei\nson shall neglect - to do or the listers\nshall not be satisfied with the expose of\nsuch parson, so mad, they shall nssess\nhim in such sum as they, shall think just\nand reasonable; and the listers shall ap-\npraise such personal 'property at the titre\nof setting the same in the fist. It shall\nalso be the duty of the listers, at the time\nof taking said list, to inquire if any addi\ntional buildings have been erected since\nthe last assessment of real estate, and if\nso, said listers shall make such . additions\nto the assessments of the individuals who\nmay have erected such buildings, ag they\nshall deem to be just, and also where\nbuildings may have been destroyed by\nfire or other accident, said listers shall\nabate such sums from the assessment of\nthe persons owning such buildings, as\nthey shall detm to be just.
cea863f67ebfb5340d85b0ff2e3777ee NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1922.9547944888382 41.681744 -72.788147 of child welfare can look back on a\nperiod of unemployment wltftout feel-In - g\nthat in the last analysis its bur-\nden falls very 'heavily on the shoul-\nders of the children." says Oraee Ab-\nbott, Chief of the Children's Bureau,\nin her annual report to the Seoretary\nof lAbor made publlo today. The bu-\nreau studied the effects on children's\nwelfare of the unemployment period\nlast winter in ei middle western and a\nNew England city, and Miss Abbott\nstates her conclusion that the low-\nered standard of care for children\nduring such a period must result in\npermanent losses to the community.\nIn these cities many families having\ntwo or more children were spending\nless than 1 60 a month, Including store\ncredits. In one of the cities a \nestimate of the amounts of food,\nclothing, fuel, and sundries required\nfor families of different size and age\nhad been prepared by a large manu-\nfacturing firm, and for half the faml-lie- s\nIn which comparisons were made\nthe average monthly receipts from all\nsources during the unemployment per-\niod, including relief, were less than 50\nper cent of this estimate.\nAlthough work was very difficult to\nsecure, nearly a third of the mothers\nIncluded in the study had taken gain-\nful employment; the mothers of 102\nchildren under 0 years of age and of\n154 between the ages of 6 and IS were\nworking outside their homes. A num-\nber of children under 16 had left\nschool for employment after their\nown and many other fathers were out\nof work.
082af544febee6c6b8112b945e8e4f42 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1882.9684931189752 42.68333 -96.683647 ••So Christopher, \\ on have boo 'lit a\nborse," observed ?• ir. (»andy, n- he\nplcisantly sni veled l is son. "\\v hat\nbusiness are you going into?"\n"Business — or— o -— business; we'l,mv\ndear sir, the fact is, I have been tum­\nbling on something l i t can trot."\n••Yoii shouldn't have done it. C!:r<to.\nplier," s id I he old gent.email kindly:\n"you arc not young enough, yoerbou- s\nare-cl and you arc too fat. \\c.ii eiul\nnever be an emperor of the arena,\nChristopher. I)<» not tumble or en a,-w\niuanvgymnasjieson the suima' a r in."\n"l)f course, I only uhmm '.nut 1 m've\nb<H'n luc.;y enough to distover soiiu.*-\nthlng w i; ii spj'ed, aud have picktal it up\nfor a lucre Kong."\n"Ah—a colt?"\n"Well, no. not emphatically; btlt her\npedigree is a poem- dam Mmo. Spavtn.\nsire Signor Bolts: own si.- ier t<» B nes\nami Osteo'ogy. and half-sister lo li.iiiil\nStaggers and Soap Grease."\n"You will soon do it," mused the old\ngentleman, a* a s<>;'t light played \niiis eves; "von will soon !>»• ther. ,Chris­\ntopher. Ti;er>' a re a great nianv ohyou\ns-att-red through t,.e country; you\nbiossom nt every rural crossing, my\nbov. You will soon pose on a contriv­\nance like a hav rake wiih tlie toelh out:\n\\ou will round your siMiiiiders togMC\nan artistic outline toaspoit-nl s'drt with\nbaggv s'eeves and a bid i>- tt\\ back, nnd\nas \\oii sit mi your vehicle by a pump\nyou will look j!en«iveiy out^rom under\na cati-pcnk built like tne biil of a sugar\nscoop, and as you tiit your cigar ash Hi\nthe Vvei of your left eye, Rn.l keep si-\nIcnily fann tig the Inil of your animal\nwith a two-foot whip, you will io^e\nyourself iu tne enchantment of turf rev­\nerie. The bystanders imn never knoiv\nthnt yon cannot distinguish tiie |H.int«\nof amire fromti.o-e of a meiiniid,\nC iristopher. but as ioiig »s son are ob-\n•ivi.'Us io ti'is know .edge I see no a a-\nson why you si'.ouid not enjoy your\n-o o'JiUig rct'.Ciilotis." -»!<?r hi-
560c0900b8b7db47bde1c9198873d4e5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.5575342148657 40.063962 -80.720915 of which 750 were Prussian.\nLord Derby made a statement in thf\nHouse of Lords on the 9th in which\nalter detailing the difficulties he mei\nwith in forming a ministry, said, ic\nforeign affairs he held it to be the dutj\nof the country to maintain amicablc\nrelations with all foreign countries, tc\navoid entanglements with foreign die\nputes, to abstain from all vexatious anc\nirritating interference or advice witt\nrespect to the war in Central Europe\nThe Government would maintaii\na perfect neutrality, but would be pre\npared in conjunction with other pow\nere, whenever a favorable opportunity\npresented itself, to offer Its good officei\nfor the restoration-of peace.\nCommending the action of the IJnitec\nStates Government in relation, to thi\nFenians, he paid a tribute to the loyal\nty of the Canadian volunteers, adding\nas expressive of his desire that a con\nfederation of all the British Americai\ncolonies might soon be accomplished.\nThe Paris Presse says: The lollowinj\nare the basis of negotiations suggest**\nby France, and communicated to th<\n of the belligerents: Tb<\nGermanic confederation to be dis\nsolved and another confederation U\nbe established, of which neither Pras\nsia nor Austria should form a part. N<\nterritorial cession to be demanded o\nAustria; the abandonment by the latte\nof her rights to the duchies, and to re\nplace the war indemnity at first de\nmanded by Prussia.Prussia u\nincorporate uchleewig Holstein, Hess\nCassel, Hesse Darmstadt, and Bruna\nwick. The population of the Prussia]\nKingdom would thereby be increased t<\n25,000,000; the Rhine to constitute th\nwestern frontier of Prussia, aud th\nprovince between the Rhine and Mesn\nto serve as an indemnity to sovereign\ndispossessed by the war. Anexchang\nof territory to take place be\ntween Baden and Bavaria, whicl\nwould give the former nearly\nthe whole of the Rhenish Pala\ntinate, Saxony, Hanover, and th\nDuchies of Saxe; to conclude the mil]\ntary connections with Prussia; the in\nhabitants ol Landau to choose whethe\nthey shall belong to France or Badec\nand the population of the Valley of th\n.
647ff391fa52912b28434844fb4da245 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.9712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 Aiiiiivkd from Italy..Wo noticed scv\ncral men yesterday, engaged in unloadini\ntwo immense blocks ot marble in front o\nthe works of J. A . Carroll, on Jnlm street\nand stepping inside the establishment wi\nascertained that they were parts ol th\n"lloyse monument," to be put up in thi\ncemetery at Ivingwood, I'reston county\nCapu William Royse in whose mcuior\nthe monument is to be erected, was\nhighly esteemed farmer citizen ol tha\ncounty. He died in May, 1800 and in hi\nwill set apart three thousand dollars fo\nthe purpose above indicated, and fivi\nhundred dollars additional lor the founda\ntion. The contract for furnishing the for\nmcr was awarded to our townsman, Mr\nC. The design, alter receiving the ap\nproval of the surviving Iriends ofCapt. H\nwas sent to Italy by .Mr. Carroll, to hi\nwrought out in the best ol tha\ncountry. That has been done, nndnfterthi\ninscription hashccn cut, the completed me\nmoriul will be put in position as before men\ntinned. This is perhaps the finest work o\nthe kind in the State. The design is atonci\nchaste and beautiful. It will repay an)\none to visit the establishment of Mr\nCarroll, and view the exquisite represen\ntations of farm and orchard products ii\nhas relief on its base. The principa\nblock weighs nearly five tons; the shafl\nabout lour, while the other three sections\nrange from one and a half to three.\nMr. C . keeps constantly a full stock o\nmarble and Scotch granite monument!\nand tablets, besides the ordinary head\nstones. lie has built up a large business\nrequiring a considerable number of the best\nworkmen to till the orders received, and\nthe class of work he executes. We
143aebd7fd5ee8e9c58a628a87d679d1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.2890410641805 41.681744 -72.788147 tenance cost and a part, at least, of\nthe overhead. Why should tho tax-\npayer support a convenient meeting\nplace for groups anxious to make\nmoney for themselves or for their\nprivate charities? He most certainly\nshould not, in our opinion.\nPossibly there may come a time\nwhen some great city event, of inter-\nest or benefit to all irrespective of\ntheir social or business affiliations,\njustifies the loaning of the hall rent\nfree. If it is loaned to one organiza-\ntion, with one aim, composed of\ntaxpayers, but not many compara-\ntively speaking, then it should in all\njustice be loaned to another organi-\nzation, with another aim, and with\njust as many taxpayers. But if the\nbars are lo be let down for one they\nmust be for all, there no man can\njudge between the comparative\nworth of the many objectives that\nare being sought in tliij city. And as\nsoon as that is done the cliques not\ninterested in the particular aim that\nis being exploited at the moment are\ngoing to make it hot, unanimously\nand in unison, for the School Board,\npossibly entirely ignoring the fact\nthat one of their groups might have\nused it before. Believe us, we know.\nOrganizations should be charged\nenougrh for the hall to cover light,\nheat, janitor services, wear and tear,\nand a portion of the overhead. That\nis fair enough to all. Possibly an ex-\nception might be made of organiza-\ntions which arc planning some affair\nfor which admission is lacking but\nagain w hat is fair for one is fair
011d8e266c53efc27e68a6ad99beed6c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.17397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 Fined For Disturbing Peace.\nThe long arm of the lawr was put\ninto effect last Sunday night when\nJohn Wojtusik, a resident of the city\nof Bristol was garnered in by Con-\nstable Marino on a charge of breach\nof the peace and general disturbance.\nJohn had been out on a party of some\nkind where, a celebration was in order\nand had taken just a little bit too\nmuch of the merry mucilage which\nAvas the. cause of his debauch. When\nhe first gat into, town he started to\nmake trouble for the trolley men by\nboarding the car and wanting- to lick\nevery one that Avas in the car at the\ntime, he was preA'ented from doing\nthis however by being gently escorted\nfrom the )Caceful atmosphere of the\ntrolley. That Avas not enough for him\nbut when the next Bristol car came\nin he got on and proceeded to smoke\nhis pipe, a Adolation of statutes.\nThis was too much fo the trolley men\nso Constable Marino took ' him in\ncharge and he Avas in court yester-\nday and faced Judge Condell who\nordered him to pay a fine of $3 and\ncosts Avhich he promptly did.\nIn connection Avith the Patriotic\nFood Exhibit to be held in the Red\nCross roams, March 6th and 7th\nthere will be a competition in Victory\nBread making, on both days, open to\nall the women of PlainAdlle, who wish\nto complete. A prize of $2 in Thrift\nStamps is offered for each day. The\nbread Avill be judged by Mrs. J. M.\nDean, County demonstration agent.\nIn view of the drive for members to\nbe made by the Hartford county\nleague during the week beginning\nMarch 3. a booth will be open\nthroughout the exhibit where all who\nAvish to identify themselves with the\nleague may register and receive mem-\nbership cards.
1180ed053950264b7fc3108bf3a76179 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.2397259956874 40.441694 -79.990086 When we stop to consider that the recom-\nmendation of Colonel Merrill, that Congress\nappropriate $100,000 for the commencement of\ntwo more locks and dams In the Ohio river in\nthe interests of navigation will open up thou-\nsands of acres of the finest of manufacturing\nlands no farther distant from Pittsburg than\nare Homestead or Braddock. or that of S100,-0 0- 0\nfor tbo construction of tbe Herr's Island\ndam in the Allegheny river offering similar re-\nsults, why is it that tbe business people of our\ntwo cities and suburbs do not encourage tbe\nproject by giving it tbeir heartiest indorse-\nment and urging our Representatives not to\nstop with S100.00U for each of theso grand works,\nbut to see that at least 600.000 be appropriated\nto these improvements, which will worth\nmillions to tbe business interests of our cities\nas well as to tbo navigation which now is and\nthat may hereafter beestablished. Other com-\nmunities make vigorous efforts to acquire what\nwe view with utter indifference, or at least do\nnot apply our energies to secure.\nOne more lock and dam in the Ohio river\nwould place within our reach the whole of\nNeville Island, a tract of about 1,000 acres, or\nas great an area as nearly the whole of the land\napplied to manufacture In Pittsburgtproper,\nand indeed much moro desirable, being almost\nlevel, nearly all above tbe flood height of 1884,\nand having not a swamp on it. The first dam\nin the Allegheny will give navigable water to\nall mills and factories now existing on\nits banks
117d2b19513c197d465ca6bed92df1b8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.5657533929477 40.063962 -80.720915 The abundant shrubbery planted aroun<\nthe Court House is growing finely, and i\na few years the grounds will be a" plcasat\nresort to the inhabitants of the town. Th\nschoolhouse grounds are an ornament t\nany town, while the school taught by Mi\nE. D. Haines is as good as any in tlieStati\nWe were pleased to learn that for th\ncoming year his salary has been advance\nto $100 per month, which begins to approa\nimate the amount such a U-acher should r(\nceive, though we are free to say that it is\nburning shame that his whole corps of a;\nsistants are not better paid.\nWe enjoyed the hospitality of Osca\nWright and his amiable wife'during ou\nshort sojourn in the city, and all who kne\nthem know that we were well entertainer\nHis little home is surrounded with gres\nprofusion of flowers, while his green-house\nare full of the perfume of fragrant flowen\nMany other things of interest wc migi\nmention concerning the grand old towr\nsuch as D. L. Logan has.no more room t\nbuild and is talking of movin\noutside the corporate limits an\ntilling a ten-acre field with building\nThis I do not have from Mr. Logan hitr\nself, nor do I vouch for its truth. S. V\nMatthews still sells all the goods he cai\nwhich is his full share. C . H . Weaver ha\nthe most desirable dwelling in towi\nbut we forbear, and close with saying th:\nMoundsville is steadily but slowly inipro^\ning, and I am satisfied that your worth\ncorrespondent at that place baj reason t\nboast, as ho sometimes does, and I sul\nscribe myself as of yore. X.
0c9fb7e746cdee726606c34b5e30156c THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.7767122970574 39.743941 -84.63662 finest fishes in the world. Ho has all the\nhabits of the brook trout, lives in both\nKtrefliHs and . laKcs, develops vermilion\nspots on his sides, rises readily to a fly,. Is\nfar more vigorous and fully Oiie -t hir- d\nlarger than ordinary brook trout of the\nsame age. The possibilities of develop-\nment in the fish world nro great, and we\nare rapidly ascertaining what they are."\nAg the man of news watched the counte\nnance of Mr. Gl'eeft While ho wan giving\ntho above account, he could not bus feel\nthat he was in the presence of one of the fetf\ninvestigators who, from a ricn ana life\nlong experience, bring great benefit to the\nworld. Let the reader imagine a strong\nand Stalwart frame, surmounted by a head\nstrongly resembling that of and\ncovered with a white, silky beard and lux\nuriant gray hair. Seth Green, tho father\nof fish culture, is a picture of health, and\nthe r. porter could not help remarking so.\n"If you ha 1 seen me the last winter and\nvp ing, young man, you might have\nthought differently." said the veternn.\n"How is that? One would think, to look\nat you, that sickness was something of\nwhich you knew nothing."\n"And so It was until last winter. I went\ndown into Florida in the fall to see what\nkind of fish they had In that State and\n8' udy their habits, and was attacked with\nmalaria in its severest form, and when I\ncame home I realized for the first time iu\nmy life that I was sick. My symptoms\nwere terrible.
08bd8e11e82c078775d5edc456e19382 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1898.401369831304 32.612638 -90.036751 was .explained, but it seems not\nto the satisfaction of at least one\nof the members who accosted us\nin reference to it. We made\nevery explanation in our power\nbut he seeming implacable we\ntold him he could rescind the\ncontract if the Board desired to\ndo o. He said he favored such\naction. It seems that the Board\nis impressed with the idea that\nwe are adverse to it, and trying\nto shield Mr. Kemp. Nothing\nis further from our intention.\nWe have published enough for\nthe people of Madison county\nand the world to know that the\nBoard says Mr. Kemp is short\nin his settlements and that they\nhave instituted suit against him.\nIt would seem to reasonable\nminds that this was synopsis\nenough if not a "full synopsis"\nas the gentleman claimed we\nwere due the Board, whatever\nthat means. Now we will en-\ndeavor to give a 'synopsis,' not\na full one, however, of the whole\naffair: It being rumored last\nFall that Mr. Kemp was short\nin his settlements with the\ncounty, on his return from a\nvisit to Virginia he requested the\nBoard to investigate his ac-\ncounts and proffered to furnish\nan to make any neces-\nsary explanations or render any\nservice in his power, which was\ndeclined. This was the duty of\nthe Board simply upon suspicion\nbut it became imparatively so on\ndemand , and no one has a right\nto be aggrieved at the perform\nince of its duty to the people.\nThe Board employed an expert\naccountant, and they, he, and\ntheir legal council have for about\neight months been at work on\nthe matter and have not yet been\nable to specify in the suit brought\nthe amount due by Mr. Kemp,\nalthough he and his attorneys\nhave demanded an itemized ac-\ncount. Mr. Kemp's accounts\nhave been checked by the State's\nFinancial Agent Wirt Adams,\nwho brought the City Council to\ntaw, the Auditor, and by the\nl late James Priestley, and all Ray\nhe owes the county nothing.\nHe has informed the Board that\nif he owed anything he stood\nready to settle it. The law and\ncommon justice both conoede to\nall men th right to lnow their\nindebtedness and to be granted\nthe privilige to settle before suit\nis brought. We are no special\nfvianri of Mr. Kerrm's nor anv\nman's further than all gentle-me -
2dcc92a7d1930f3a0f10717082142e43 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.691780790208 39.745947 -75.546589 which is the Russian army of today, the campaign of 1918 Is fought. This is In all probability the fall of Riga >e shut, off from the Baltic and he*\nAnd this celebration comes at a time true whether German armies arc de- presages a German attack upon Petro- leet wotild almost inevitably fall a\nwhen the Allied nations have refused a clslvely defeated In the field or whether grad. The boast of being In occupation prey to the Germans. On the other hand\npeace which would merely leave Oer- Germany Is subjected to that final of their enemy's capital would go far Auslria would be shut off from the\nmany as she stood on August 1, 1914. year of economic pressure which will toward stilling the apprehensions Adriatic. Ftumo, to the south of Trieste,\nThe contrast between Sedan Day, 1914, make recovery for her a matter of de- In the minds of the German lias her railroad connection with Buda-\nand 1917 Is one of the most Illuminating cades which will build up all over the people by long continued reverses in pest, while her «omiffcrclnl interest*\nevidences of the present condition of world an area and an atmosphere of the west, and by the oppearance of are those of Hungary. The Austrian\nthe war. And yet it Would be a fatal hostility whi(*h will make It practlc- American troops In France. Should the fleet now blockaded in Pola, Is already\nblunder not to understand what the ally Impossible for German commerce advance upon Petrograd Indeed be or- doomed. Tq the Germans would accrue\nGerman government and the German and finance to restore their old posi- dered, the world will have a military the prestige of occupying their .enemy's\nmilitary leaders are now up to, Peaco tlon.
34c0b13a9bcc370751b878017b69d87d CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1919.505479420345 36.000618 -88.428106 ICopjrrlirht, 1919, Waatera Ndvspp.r Union)\nDelight gazed across the\nfields as she leaned against the\nBid fence that bordered the roadway.\nShe was reviewing a little sadly the\nivents of a fait changing year, wheu\nmisfortune had followed misfortune\nuntil she had been obliged to close\nher own home and dispense with the\nxnnpanionshlp of the old nurse who\nhad in her loneliness become her\nfriend. Then Delight, In quest of nec-\nessary employment, had answered a\nitrange advertisement.\nThere were so few things that her\nhome life had fitted her to do the un-\nusual advertisement seemed to have\nbeen especially written for herself.\nDuncan Reynolds of "The Towers\nrequired the services of a young wom-\nan who could give to his great abode\nthe home atmosphere.\n servants enough," he said, "and\nI good housekeeper, but the place is\nlike an Institution. I want" Delight\nfancied that the shrewd eyes softened\n"I want a woman's touch, the right\nilnd of flowers on the table, the sound\nf a piano at night maybe I'm glad\nfliat you have applied for the position."\nWith her arms folded now on the\nfence rail Delight marveled that she\nhad become an Inmate and a necessary\nInmate if the great mansion on which\nshe had looked with awe since the\nlays of her childhood.\nThe erratic old gentleman who was\nits occupant and owner had been re-\ngarded as a sort of ogre then.\nThe old nurse had told to Delight\nweird tales of the great house on the\nhill how, long ago,
14beb7547d94de90d484e87dcffd9091 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1887.3356164066463 39.745947 -75.546589 This is just tbe way he desorihes the\nsensation: I was sitting on a fence\nlooking into a garden of roses, a Span­\nish bewitching little brunette with deli­\ncately chiseled features aud great dark\nbrown eyes, approached me, ard with\nmusical words said, “Ah there!*' wheu\na magnetic ebook went right through\nme. Right behind her came a tall,\nmagnificent woman, with a face fault­\nless in its loveliness and fair as the eve­\nning air, olad in the beauty of a mil­\nlion stars, exquisitely arched eyebrows\nand soft brown eyes that sometimes\nseemed to change to the gray ot a trop­\nical da wu. She was accompanied by\nanother brunette with black eyes\ncrowning ahead, classical iu shape and\npose. Their manners weie wonder­\nfully sweet ftüd winniug. I tell you\nthey made a charming pair to draw to.\nI could keep on for smother hour re­\nlating my dream; but one more face I\nmust speak of. It was by a once\nwealthy merchant. Among all the\nhuman faces 1 ever saw, I remember\nnone leveller than hers My dear fel­\nlow, life is worth tbe living if only to\nalt on tbe fence and see such women\npass by. Storms inay beat and brains\nmay fail; disappointments, cares and\nsorrow may burden tbe heart almost to\nbreaking; bnt one ray of light from the\neye of tbe pinion of euoh an earth angel\nas the typioal woman In that garden is\nenough to banish udj gloom, however\ndeep; to lighten any load, however\nwearisome. Do you wonder why I In­\nhaled tther? I awoke in the morning\nwith my head twisted out of joint and\nmy heart and band in a sling. The\ntruth of the matter is, I was thinking\nabout Manager Bon tier's great intro\ndnotion of îosebnds attached to a beau­\ntiful souvenir, to be given to tbe ladles\nsometime daring the Wilbur Opera\nCompanys engagement In our city.
10b437a82162a18367511ebc0648ad16 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1891.691780790208 35.996653 -78.901805 turned from a trip c oag the coast, and\nbrought with it a party of father, son\nand daughter, who had an experience\nwhich rarely falLs to the lot of any one.\nThe party is William Buchanan, his\n4son Tom, and his daughter Nellie. Five\nweek3 ago they started on a cruise along\nthe coast in a small yacht, taking a\npleasure trip. They were provided with\nguns, ammunition and fishing tackle,\nand expected to have a fortnight's sport\nand then return east. Miss Nellie was\nas expert with the gun and rod as either\nher father or brother, and all three were\ngood sailors. About sixty miles south a\nsquall drove their yacht out to sea and\nwrecked the vessel on one of the small\nislands about twenty miles off the coast.\nMr. Buchanan was badly bruised by\nbeing dashed against the rocks, and Tom\nhad his right arm broken in a similar\nway. Miss Nellie was the only one of\nthe party who received no injury, and it\nis to this alone that any of them are\nalive. The guns, ammunition and fishing\ntackle were all saved, and Miss Nellie\ncared for her wounded relatives and\nthen started out to get them something\nto eat. The island is out of the way of\ntravel, and in consequence not a vessel\nwas seen for two weeks. During all this\ntime the young --lady hunted and fished,\nand was so successful that they did not\npass one day without food.\nTheisland is so flat and barren that\nunless a vessel gets close to it the people\non board cannot see it. They could not\nuse the little wood they found for signal\nfires, for they were afraid there would\nnot be enough to serve for cooking their\nfood. A storm had sent them on the\nisland, and a similar occurrence saved\nthem, for the fishing schooner had been\ndriven off the shore and out of her course,\nand when the captain saw the island he\nsent a boat ashore to see if he could get\nwater.
32fbf5a8a89c9a11abd870442fda6fda EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.8726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 K. C . rtose, who fell from the roof\nof the residence of Mrs. Anna Pen­\nnington on Clinton street, on which\nlie was placing a new roof, last\nThursday, and has been in the Dela­\nware Hospital since last Friday, will\narrive home this afternoon. Dr. W.\nW, Kills, who gave him attention im­\nmediately following the accident,\nsaid yeslerday that the X-ray ex­\namination aliayed his fears of a\nfractured vertebrae. He Is suffering\nfrom shock and bruises only.\nFarmers In this vicinity report tho\nlargest crop of the large-sized white\npotatoes ever grown. About 400 bas­\nkets to the acre of the tubers are\ngathered from the poorest of lands.\nThe David Jenes Dredging Com­\npany removed the last two barges\nfrom the Delaware City wharf yes­\nterday. The company has completed\n contract of dredging the channel\nbelow the Liston Light Range, and\nIts equipment has been rcturncfl to\nthe home port. Norfolk. Va.\nThe eight hour day system has\nbeen installed at the local locks of\nthe Chesapeake and\nCanal. William J. Weaver has been\nassigned here, as the third man In j\ncharge of them. For many years the\nmen have been operating »these\nlocks on a 12-honr day system. In\nformer years no boats were lock­\ned In either end of the canal be­\ntween 9 oclock and 4 oclock Sun­\ndays, During those periods the\ncompany only had one man on\nduty. Since the government\naumed control the locks age kept\nopen 24 hours each day.\nTho next shoot of the Delaware\nCity Gun Club will be held Satur­\nday afternoon, November 28. when
03418ae3a27f894d9377d277437b30f3 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.5986301052765 41.020015 -92.411296 acres—not many thousand vou know,\nsay—say—say, about 50,000 acres or\n8l)__jUgt a little for my poor people."\nThen there was a bnizl The »fficer of\nthe Northern Pacific was agiUted. lie\nwa6 a lord—a lord who spurted inter­\nest money, aud he wauled a little bit\nof land—50 .000 acres—for benevolent\npurposes! He would like U inspect\nit, of course, before purchasing. Bo\nthey equipped a caravan and lea him\npromptIv forth. It was the last of\nAugust * wlieu the princely retinue\nstarted from St. Paul to tie Northern\nPacific under command of Col. Loom Is,\nthe devier and commander of the ex­\ncursion. Can the gloriei of that cara­\nvan be told ? It was efuipped for a\nlord. There were half a dozen teams\nwith carriages for my l»rd, besides the\nomnibuses, ambulanci, &c. There\nwere twelve men to d» the manual la­\nbor, with a French cook and darkv\nwaiters in linen aprons and white silk\ngloves, and the royal tables were un­\nloaded from the baggage wagons at\nevery meal, and set out with fresh\nnapkins, sllTer plato and china—un ­\nhappily chinawarc without the Gor­\ndon arms. Ah 1 it W*s Ev­\nery luxury that the markets of Chica­\ngo, St. Paul and Minneapolis could\nproduce was there; and all tho game of\nthe boundless prairie, from woodcock\nto Buffalo. Champagne three times a\n<W- *v>r this creature was a lord you\nsee—a lora •«. unmindful ol expenso as\nHarold Skimpole. When **"> caravan\nhad sjctnea Oak lam, mllord.wanted\nto see Fergus Falls, and when it had\ndone Fergus Falls, he longed for\nMorehead, and when he had digested\nMorehead, he yearned to visit the\nglimpses of the moon beyond the Red\nStiver. So on, and so on the deluded\nLoomis prettied, ever rowelling the\nsable waters, ever cajoling and re­\nproaching the French cook, ever per­\nspiring between anticipation and ap­\nprehension, aud sending relays of mes­\nsages for more potted grouse, more\ncranl>erry jelly and more champagne.\nIn November they oamn back half tro-\nzeu. Milord had selected his 50,000\nacres iu Otter Tail and Beaver coun­\nties. The Northern Pacific Hailroad\nCompany footed the T>;lls—Jf15,000 tor\ntwo months. The ubsnred farco was\nat an ond. Milord Gordon did not\nbuj'thc land tor his jioor tenants,and\nnever again mentioned his benevolent\nsister to anybody.
8c2b1abdb06842808d1319c29a1aa808 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6479451737696 40.063962 -80.720915 Pkack, Qcikt axd Kookomy..Yes¬\nterday wm '» very1 quiet day in the\ncity, and peace and good order every¬\nwhere prevailed. Ko one could tail to\nnotice the abBenee of the great number\nof golfers which lately were every¬\nwhere present in the streets. Collisions\nand deaths, by accident or design, hud\nbecome so frequent as to beget serious\nalarm in the minds of all. who bad oo-\ncasion to be on the street; and all this\nwas the more aggravating from the\nfact that every sensible man realized\nthe fact that there was no existing tie-\ncessity for the strong military force\nquartered in this city; all knew that it\nwas a useless and'unnecessttry expense\nto the government, which should be\nditicontinued without delay. This has\nbeen partially remedied by the reduc¬\ntion of the provost guard, the l&Jd Npw\nYork, having been withdrawn and two\ncompanies of the 103d substituted. The\nchange bas-produced a feeling of relief,\nand we hope this step in the right di¬\nrection will be speedily and vigorous¬\nly followed up, not only hero but else¬\nwhere. Such n course will save million**\nof dollars to tho National Treasury.\nWith tho close of the war people have\nearnestly desired a reduction of\nexpenditures. This has probably been\ndone wherever the authorities knew it\ncould lie done with advantage, but\ntroops are scattered over such a. wide\nscopo of territory and stationed at so\nluuny different posts that it is almost\nimpossible for the Government to know\nat which points the number may be re¬\nduced or where entirely removed. We\npresume that Wheeling is but ono of\nhundreds of similar places where con¬\nsiderable military force is unnecessari¬\nly employed. It iB generally believed\nthat a still further reduction might be\nmade here with advantage, and ex¬\npenses further curtailed, by reducing\nthe number of buildings in tho occu¬\npancy of the government. The Athe-\nneum building is a very considerable\nitem in the expenditures of the govern¬\nment, at tliiH place,^and there are few, if\nany persons, who will not say that It\nshould be dispensed with. It is only\noccupied as a military prison, and as\nbarracks for the soldiers employed as\nguards. These prisoners are all sentenc¬\ned soldiers, some seventy or eighty in\nnumber. The great majority of them\ncould and probably should be pardon¬\ned immediately, in which event this\nheavy expense- for prison and guard\nwould necessarily cease.
0912424250985ccab7e2f793652a7276 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.0068492833586 40.063962 -80.720915 The total number of stars one can se\nwill depend very largely upon the cleaj\nness of the atmosphere and the kee'nnes\nof the eye. There are in the whole cc\nlestial sphere about 0,000 stars visible t\nan ordinary good eye. Of these, how\never, we dm never see moro than a frac\ntion at any one time, because a half c\nthe sphere is always below the 'horizon\nIf we could see a star as easily ii\nthe horizon as in the zenith,\nhalf of the wholo number, or 3,00(\nwould be visible on any clea\nnight. But stars near the horizon ar\nseen through so great a thickness o\natmoBphero as greatly to obscure thei\nlitfbt, and only the brightest ones\nthere be seen. Ab a result of this ol\nS en ration, it is not likelv that more thai\n2,000 stars can ever be taken in at a singl\nview by any ordiuary eye. About 2,00\nother stars are so near the South Pol\nthat they, never rise in ourlatitudei\nIlence, out of 0,000 supposed to be visi\nble, only 4,000 ever come within th\nrange of our vision, unless we make\njourney towards the equator.\nAs telescopic power is increased, vr\nstill lind stars of fainter and fainte\nliuht. Hut the number cannot on in\ncreasing forever in the same ratio a\nwith the brighter magnitudes, because i\nit did tho whole sky would be a blaze o\nstarlight.. If telescopes with powers fa\nexceeding our present onoa were made\nthey would no doubt show new slurs c\nthe twentieth and twenty-first, etc., mag\nnitudes. But it is highly probable th'a\nthe number of such successive order o\nstars would not iucreose in the same ra\ntio as is observed in the eighth, nintl\nand tenth magnitudes, for example.\nThe enormous labor of estimating tin\nuuiiiuci ui auwo ui oui.il tiuoata nui iniii\nprevent the accumulation of statistic\non thia question; but this much ia cer\ntain, that in special regions of.the sky\nwhich have been searchingly examinee\nby various telescopes of successively in\ncreasing apertures, the number of new\nstars found is by no means in proportion\nto tho increased instrumental power\nIf this is found to be true elaewhere, tlx\nconclusion may be that, after all, the\nstellar system can be experimental!)\nshown to be of tiuite extent, and to con\ntain only a tiuite number of stars.\nIn the whole sky an averuge eye will\nsee about 0,000 stats, as I have just said,\nWith a telescope this number is greatly\nincreased, and the most' powerful telescopes
116015a1f7828896fb5fb9d8dfd1bbd8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.9438355847285 41.681744 -72.788147 likes to think that any one else\nknows something that he doesn't\nNow this was just what Sammy\nJay wanted. He felt sure that soon-\ner or later some one would stumble\non it. and that if he kept his eyes\nand ears open he would find out\nwhere that new home was. Sammy\nis a very clever fellow; he is smart\nenough to make use of other people.\nNow Sammy gels up early in tho\nmorning. It happened one morning\nthat Just after daylight camo creep-\ning through the Green Forest Sam-\nmy, for no particular reason, flew\nover to a certain part of the Green\nForest that he wasn't in the habit\nof visiting. As always, he used his\neyes. Also he kept his tongue still.\nlie wanted to who might be\n.iere, and he didn't want to be no\nticcd himself. Presently he discov-\nered a grayish brown form moving\nsilently and steathlly and keeping\nin the shadows as much as possible.\nIt was Yowler the Bobcat Plainly\nYowler the Bobcat was In a bad\nhumor. His stubby tail was twitch-\ning. Kvery now and then he turned\nto look back, and every time he did\nthis ho would draw his lips back\nshowing all his teeth. It was a si-\nlent snarl. Once he turned and stcod\nwith his forefeet on an old log,\nlooking back along his own trail,\nand his stub of a tall twitched more\nthan ever. Then he showed his\nteeth again before going on his way.\n"Now vrhat can that mean 7" said
10854b78396b5ce9e5d76feb701658ee THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1879.3136985984272 41.004121 -76.453816 their own opinions, and souud ones, on the\nstate of the country and the various ques-\ntions of the day ; they weigh political par\nties and their respective merits and duties ;\ntbey hope to see good and true men in high\nofiice, aud selfish and mean ones removed\nand yet when they are urged to take an ac-\ntive part in these things, to put their pow\nera out at interest In the service of their\ncity, their State or their country, to accept\nresponsible positions for which they are\neminently fitted, they shrink back into re\ntirement and plead inability. Does this\nnot seem altogether loyal and true ? Does\nnot the whole future of our country depend\nlargely upon the character and ability of\nthose who are to lead its And\nif those who are its natural leaders sit down\nsupinely to watch the progress of events, in\nstead of bravely rising to guide and direct\nthem, can they avoid the responsibility of\nhaving left it to drift into the hands of in\ncompetence, recklessness and selfishness T\nLet all who are disposed thus to bury their\nopportunities and their energies In the re-\ntirement of private life, against the advice\nof good and wise men, reflect ou the conse-\nquences of such a step. Let them remera\nber that it is no mere honor, but a serious\ncall to duties and responsibilities from which\nthey have no right to shrink: an onnortuni\nty to pay a debt which grows naturally out\nof everv endowment of nature and everr ad\nvantage of circumstance,
1b5d71fe4b25327cbbfc45e1bedf44b8 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.7712328450025 41.020015 -92.411296 the old Democracy!" What these princi­\nples are the convention explains by de­\nmanding the "rights of the States," the\noverthrow of the Kellogg government in\nLouisiana, et c., lint, this was all unneces­\nsary. The "historic principles of the De­\nmocracy" are familiar to every schoolboy,\nand they are a bail lot altogether, There\nnever was a more graceless association.—\nWhat they have done that wasbad isknown\nof all men. What they have dono that\nwas good nobody can find out. It is sel­\ndom that a party out of power is ablo-to do\nenough to make it obnoxious to the coun\ntry, but the Democracy has beeu equal to\nthis feat. Without having a place iu the\nnation it has had its fingers deeper in every\nsteal than atiyboly else. Kicked out of\nnearly every respectable |and responsibl.\nposition in State and municipal "govern\n111011 is, it has nevertheless managed to be-\ncon- .e interested in every "j:.l>," and has sold\nout faster and oftenor than any party\nin Christendom. Its record is so entirely\nhad that, it is hard to discuss any of it\nclaims soberly; but it is passed beyond re\ncall that it will figure in history a-, the foe\nof the nation and I ;e regarded as that mean­\nest of all allies to the rebels, an apostate too\npenurious to give and too cowardly to fight\nlor itsprinciples. This is the main historic\nincident in the life of the Democratic party\nFor the rest its precedent and subsequent\nhistory are unimportant. It w;is distin­\nguished formerly for a weakness for wild­\ncat banking :uul a pas-ion for human sla­\nvery, and latterly for the magnitude of ii =\nstealings in Xety Vnrk and Brooklyn; but\nthese are only I|KiN 1.t in tlie tvui'KI ol\ndarkness that enshrouds the whole party,\nand need not be dwelt upon. That organ\nizition lias been for jears wholly and irre-\nclaimably bud,, without a feature tlial we\ncan now recall to commend it to the coun­
084a69cc1de54566a1ffdc9fc473e09e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1891.746575310756 42.217817 -85.891125 formed as to admit air and light to\nthe building, and also to give a diver-\nsity of outline.\nThe tower, it is said, will be easily\nMsible from Michigan City, La Porte,\nAurora, Elgin, Waukegan and points\nsixty miles distant. It will not be\nbuilt m?rely as a curiosity. While\nits design will be artistic, business-\nlike consideration will not bo lost\nsight of, for within it will be run no\nless than eighteen elevators, in addi-\ntion to four main stair eases, which will\nlead to 192 olllces, all in the tower\nproper and above the roof level of the\nbuilding. Discontinuing the termi-\nnal bays above the tenth story will\nprevent the throwing of shadows into\nthe lower offices and will develop the\nclement of progressive recessions from\nbase to pinnacle, which constitutes\nan Interesting feature of the design.\nThe terminals, as the plan shows,\nserve as buttresses for the long arms\nof the cross, is the typical char-\nacteristic of the plan.\nIt is intended that twenty-fou- r\nlodge rooms and public halls shall oc-\ncupy the third, fourth, fifth, sixth\nand tentli stories, the great drill hall\noccupying the whole of one en'd of the\ntenth story, and measuring nearly\n8,000 square feet in area.. The re-\nmainder of the building will be avail-\nable for , business purioscs. The en-\ntire number of rooms 'available for\nrental, exclusive of the 'halls and\nlodge rooms, will be 1,100, and their\naggregate area will be over 250,000\n. square feet, while including lodge\nrooms and public halls, the area in-\nclosed, exclusive of walls, partitions,\ncorridors, etc., will Vie .'150,000 square\nfeet. The design of the superstruct-\nure involves the use of riveted steel\npillars and steel girders, immovably\nknit together at all joints, vertical as\nwell as horizontal, by steel or iron\nrivets, and a system of diagonal wind-brac- e s
167a86b4f16ba3a7fad2c9c566bc1aed THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1893.568493118975 46.601557 -120.510842 way discoverers, conquerors and colonizers. J\nThey did not Inrk for room at home as\nmuch as for freedom, excitement and j\npleasure, like more civilized men who And j\ndiversion in the jungle. Unknown far-\naway seas, barren arctic islands—theae were\nthe lairs and hiding places of the van-\nquished, the outlawed, tho brave but des* j\nperate refugees when drhen from their\npeople by crime, misfortune or love of\nisolation. One such is the hero of Ixmgfel-\nlow'a verse, nnd if Itbe not t, ue that some\nbold Norse Rom so fleeing with Ml .lul.it\nmade a refuge on Newport, bluff- nnd cast\nhimself despairing upon his spear point\nwhen the grim maraud- r lifthim a discon-\nsolate castaway it ought to be true that\nsome romance based on thi. powerful pas-\nsion of love gave rise to tbe first appear-\nance of man iv the new world. The gar-\nden of Eden had its luve idyl. Why not the\nwestern Kden also?\nThe date tbe Newport tower is fixed\nby good authority at some period not later\nthan the twelfth century. In a note to lo*\npoem Longfellow quoted the arguments of\ns distinguished I'rench antiquarian in fa-\nvor of considering tbe tower to tie one of\npre-Columbian origin.\nGunnbiortf, a Norse sen rover, was driven\nwest from Iceland in SW and sighted a\nstrange coast. The discovery was recorded\nin Iceland, and 50 years later another wind\ntosiud mnriner was shipwrecked on a coast\nlyinjnvest from Iceland,and be named the\nnew country Iceland the Great. A century\nafter Gunnbiorn came Ked Eric, a young\nNorwegian wbo bad killed his man at\nborne and sailed as a fugitive to Iceland.\nAgain outraging the laws, be was set afloat\nIn a strong ship with some daring fellowsof\nI his own ilk, and they sailed away on the\npath described by Gunnbiorn to find a wiW\nj Lome beyond the icy main. At tbe end of\nthree years the rovers went back to Iceland
d3073a8a5c3dab06ac5ce8fb1e524870 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.0669398590871 31.960991 -90.983994 Snch are the forebodings of Professor McCay,\nbut in our opinion he has commenced with a\nlarge over-estimate of the present crop, and\nthat therefore his arguments are erroneous and\nhis fears groundless. By many persons the crop\nis estimated at from 1,500,000 to 1,600,000 bales\nonly, and every day this low estimate seems\nmore plausible; this season has been an extraor­\ndinary one, the small streams of the interior,\nnot usually navigable until March or April,\nhave been high all winter, affording to the\nplanters of the interior unusual facilities for an\nearly shipment of Colton. Prices have been\nhigh, tempting the planter to seek an early\nmarket. Yet notwithstanding these things, the\nreceipts at New Orleans, to the 13th instant,\namount to but 373,766 bales. Now as one half\nof the cotton of the Union is shipped from N.\nOrleans, and as it reasonable to suppose that\nnearly one-half of the last crop has already gone\nto market, we are inclined to believe that the\ncrop will fall 2 or 300,000 bales short of the\nestimate of Professor M., which estimate, by\nthe by, was made on the 6th of October last,\nsince which time causes highly prejudicial to\nthe Cotton crop have occurred. If, therefore, he\nbe right in his estimation of the demand for con­\nsumption, not only will the entire crop be used,\nbut also the entire surplus on hand at the com­\nmencement of the present cotton year. The\nwarehouses of Europe will then be cleared for\nthe first time in many years, and the crop of\n1844 will find a clear market and high prices.\nIf we are correct in our opinion. Cotton will,\nthroughout the season, continue to advance as\nit is now advancing.
187785ac89c00cc526e48412e4c02518 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.1575342148656 44.939157 -123.033121 added to the Bainbow division today\nAllen Young, Coquillo.\nGena Ashley, Coquille.\nJ. D. Cook, Burns.\nBaymond Hickcy, Burns.\nBurton Kambcrg, Union.\nDarrel Kielblock, Union.\nBobert Slater, Union.\nAlta Phillips, Union.\nGerald Spencer, Union.\nBeed Dallon, Union.\nBichard Davis, Union.\nCharlie Hibbert, Union.\nNolan Skiff, Union.\nArnold Kohler, Union.\nGlen Miller, Union.\nThurston Chadwick, Union.\nJessie Burns, Corvallis.\nJosie Coleman, Wels, Union.\nFreda Ann Thompson, Monroe.\nGreta Carter, Wells.\nHarry E. Judson Monroe.\nStella Dutton, Wells.\nTeresa Wilhclm, Monroe.\nDonald Neave, Monroe.\nAlvin Bond, Monroe.\nEdgar Morris, Monroe.\nAlice In galls, Corvallis.\nFTed Miller, Monroe.\nFabian Cottnair, Monroe.\nCarl Swager, Monroe.\nBarnard Bennett, Monioe.\nFranci3 Brimner, Monroe.\nOlive Emmingham, Monroe.\nGeorgia Miller, Monroe.\nGeorgo Utterback, Monroe.\nJames Thomas, Monroe.\nCharles Ralls, Monroe.\nJohn Schick, Corvallis.\nEnid Beal, Wells.\nWallace Marks, Wells.\nDelbert Carpenter, Monroe.\nChester Beader, Monroe.\nMartha Hereth, Corvallis.\nMyrtle Bilea, Agnes.\nGeorge Eoycs, Suinmerville.\nFred Behrens, Summerville.\nNellie' Behrens, Summerville.\nBuby Behrens, Summerville.\nErnest J'ugh, Summerville.\nMarian Pugh, \nZaehary Pugh, Summerville.\nLola Carftrel, Summerville.\nDorothy Whitcomb, Summerville.\nCarroll Woodell, Summerville.\nErma Woodell, Summerville.\nForrest Woodell, Summerville.\nVirgil Sanderson, Summerville.\nArchie Craig, Summerville.\nOscar Craig, Summerville.\nHazel Bichardson, La Grande.\nMildred Standlcy, La. Grande.\nElinor Campbell, Summerville.\nFritzlo Ott, Summerville.\nDoris Oswald, Summerville.\nBay Vermillion, Summerville.\nFay Hamilton, Summerville.\nEulah Ott, Summerville.\nLeila Ott, Summerville.\nAlice Ott, Suinmerville.\nRex Ott, Summerville.\nClarence Goodwin, Summerville.\nIna Goodwin, Summerville.\nNina Goodwin, Summerville.\nBernice Slack, Summerville.\nBuster Vervillion, Summerville.\nMaude Becker, Summerville.\nMelba McKenzie, Summerville.\nJames Jackson, Summerville.\nJames Archer, Summerville.\nThelma Stanley, Alicel.\nCecil Ycungstrom, Culver.\nCarrol Youngstrom, Culver.\nEverett Seeley, Coquille.\nClare Giinett, North Bend.\nBobert Goetz, North Bond.\nNeal Ii'gram, North Bend.\nOrval Thompson, Monkland.\nFaye Thompson, Monkland.\nWayne Perkins, Union.\nGeorge Brown, Union.\nLois Boyes, Union.\nTheron Egbert, Tho Dalles.\nThelma Winans, The Dalles.\nEsther Gibson, The Dalles.\nWilborun Raymond, Days Creek.\nNorm m Baymond, The Dalles.\nLee Connolly, Boseburg.\nClarence Mertsching, Princville.\nEdna Wolf, Prineviile.\nCatherine Drurj;, Prineviile.
90d3db045c61b15cc4cd5aa298aeb0ee PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.5833333017101 31.960991 -90.983994 H ESE Lozenges have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time »hey have\ngained fot themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,DUO\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmaj' well be called the only certain wo m de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worths that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense and even death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would Speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, tend\nSo pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they bave been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, attd the pllblic generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, or the safety With which\nthey mav be administered to persons <>f all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms;of\nthe impotency oj most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity aS a remedy.
1432f044dc7b04b22f93b1720be13910 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1907.932876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 when ho seemed to ho given complete\nly up to ndorntlon of the one woman he\nloved, he gave her a black eye, simply\nbecause she smiled when nnother man\nwas looking. Now, this Is not good so\ncial form. It Is us bad almost ns that\nobeervod by the women who loved her\nhusband so Intensely as ho wns that\nwhen ho bad his hair cut by tho bar-\nber she refused to nllow him to enter\nhis home, and has commenced suit\nngnlnst him for divorce. 8ho loved\nhim, alas, not wisely hut too well, nut\ntho worst exnmplo of nil Is tho case of\nnnother husband. Ho wns so devoted\ntn his wlfo that ho wns nlwnys nnxlous\nnhout tho condition of her health. If\nsho.looked n trllle pnlo In tho morning\nho .would go to his work with n heavy\nhenrt nnd bo unhappy nil day. IIo wns\nconstantly feeling her pulso nnd look-\ning nt her tongue. Such n solicitous\nhusband nobody did see. nnd tho\nneighbor's wives nil used to point him\nout to their husbands ns n husband to\npnttern nfter. Tho other dny ho enmo\nhomo imd thought that sho wns look-\ning rather noorly. 8ho protested thnt\nsho never had felt better In her life,\nUc denied this emphatically, went\ndown to tho drug store, bought some\npills which ho hollered would do her\ngood, nnd, returning, nttempted to forco\nher to take them. Rho resisted, nnd so\nfearful wns ho that she should bo sick\nand suffer pain that he lost his temper\nand threw her down a lllght of stairs.\nIt Is a wonder that sho escaped with\nonly slight Injuries. Now, when thoso\nwho love us nnd tiro anxious ulsuit us,\nand solicitous with regard to us, nnd\nadmire us, and would do anything for\nus, do these things to us, what nre wo\nto eS'et from thoso who do not care\nanything about us? Iteally, It Is hard\nto say.
1bfb8750453072d162156a7fbb770ad8 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.7082191463724 37.561813 -75.84108 maledictions which they cast upon onr noble schools,,\nwe are forcibly impressed with the necessity that these;\ngentlemen have some lessons in true American de-\nmocracy, and that tne American people will be found\ncompetent to give them.\nBut remembering the differences of oar antecedents,,\nlet us use philosophy and eschew anger. Let us, how-\never, take every means of making it known, beyond all\nchance of error or mistake, that the com mo u school\nsystem is a part of our Republican State; and that to\ncall it "godless" or "pagan," while it is not likely to\n"shiver" the schools, will go far to destroy our respecQ\nfor the discretion or good manners of those who say\nsuch thiugs. This fearful disposition of one portion of\nGod's creatures to bastardize all the rest, and claim to\nbe the only genuine offspring of the Deity, is too com-\nmon be elective. Tne public schools can not be put\ndown by an epithet. But the man who uses epithets\nmanifests his own sentiments, aod thus we know\nauthentically the sentimeuts of these men toward the\nschools, aod how little tbey care for tbe Democratic\nor the Repuolican party, except as a means to get at\nthe schools. They" hope some assistance, directly or\nindirectly, from the Democracy. They can have no\nhope of any such assistance from the Republican:.\nFrom the Democrats they have got the Gehan bill,\nfor which, it is supposed, they bargained, and sold tho\nsolid Catholic vote, and that they propose now to de-\nliver it. Tbey naturally hope for other traffic of the\nlike kind, especially u tney now mace prompt pay-\nment, according to contract. They know that a Dem-\nocratic platform is not a thing to be alarmed at.\nThese hard -m on-
ff0967ca77e7b65a11d0cda4eba87488 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.228767091578 41.681744 -72.788147 to say that worker is being voted in-\nto t,he club today. We collected\n$1300.66 which gave us third place\non the list of nine teams.\n"Our next work was the Christ-\nmas tea for the Children's Home\non December 17th. We were deter-\nmined to make this a success, so\ndivided the names of the entire\nmembership of the Woman's club\namong the members of the civic\ncommitee, thus giving each mem-\nber 27 names to call and remind\nthem of the Christmas tea and it3\npurpose. As this canto at a time\nwhen everyone was busy about theii\nown Christmas party, this telephon-\ning by members of the civic com-\nmittee was much appreciated.\n"The tea was open to members\nand friends but each was expected\nto bring a gift for the children. The\nweather was about the worst \nwinter could give us but the tele-\nphone reminders brought out a rec-\nord attendance. They came to find\na beautiful tree on the platform,\ntrimmed with tinsel, white lights\nand a white star at the top. Mrs.\nRalph Britton and members of her\nhospitality committee very efficient-\nly assisted with trimming tho tree.\nAlso Mr. Spring, of Spring and\nBuckley, gave the use of the very\neffective white lights and did the\nwiring himself. As tho gifts were\nbrought they were placed around\nthe foot of the tree and the plat-\nform was hardly large enough for\ntho great number of attractive\nChristmas packages.\n"About 50 of tho children from\ntho Home with Mrs. Klingberg and\nher son, Edwin, wero our guests. A\nprogram of songs and recitations by\nthe children was enjoyed by all.\n"A letter from Mr.
84a0d3d0d018a2bced29e5d6ed75fa64 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.0397259956874 39.369864 -121.105448 thorship: “Sam Slap,” a regular\n“dowa-easter,” Mr. J. Marriott; '“Mr.\nDaniels,” landlord of the house, and\nuncle to Samuel —Mr. A. Ivctchum;\n“Mr. Bichard Williams,” a rival of\nSamuels in the affections of a young\nlady—F. Farwell; “John,” a waiter\nMr. Or. Thomas. The character of “Sam\nSlap” was personated in regular 1 ankce\nstyle—it being not quite equal to \\ an-\nkee Addams iu that line, in one sense—-\nhut was more natural, according to my\nnotion of a Yankee. The sung of the\n“Yankee Quilting Party was thrown in\nwith good effect. Mr. Marriott did the\ncharacter “up brown,” which speaks\nwell for his abilities in that line -and.\n' .r ive satisfaction to the audience. Ihe\n:>meters of Mr. Daniels, Mr. Bichard\nWilliam-, and John, the waiter, were\nwell personated, and gave general \nfaction. The character ot “John, I\nmust say, was well performed, and much\nbetter becomes the abilities of the indi-\nvidual who personated it titan uid the\ncharacter of “Snoozel.”\nThe next iu order were several song 1?,\nby different members of tne Company.\nFirst, “Joe Bowers, by Mr. Manaott,\nwhich was well executed. Second—\nSweet Betsey, from Pike, by Leon-\nard and Marriott. Third—a volunteer\nsong by Mr. S . Levy, from a Crennan\nopera, which was well received by the\naudience. Fourth—“Willie Dear,” by\nMosc Leonard, which was sung in a very\nagitating manner, but the great trouble\nwas, he could not keep time with the\nmusic. Fifth—“Slid Bof Ocean, by\nMr. J. Marriott—which was creditably\nexecuted, considering that it is a song\nwhich should not be sung unless all\nparts are carried.
2d1ed438769fbbcc1f0970fa58e18d11 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1920.6243169082675 41.681744 -72.788147 Boston, Aug. 16. The Inquiry into\nCharles Ponzi's spectacular financial\nactivities was resumed by. state and\nfederal officials today with the assur-\nance that the discovery of further\ndamage to the financial fabric of Ntew\nEngland was unlikely.\nPonzi's counsel tried to obtain ball\nto release him from the East Cam-\nbridge Jail where he Is held on a\ncharge of using the mails to defraud.\nShould a bondsman be found, the state\nauthorities were ready to arrest Ponzi\non charges of larceny.\nA heavy guard remained around\nPonzi's home at Lexington and sever-\nal of them accompanied members of\nhis family whenever they left the\nhouse. Threats are said to have been\nmade against him by persons who\nwere attracted by his offer of 50 per\ncent, in 45 days.\nA search for possible hidden funds\nentrusted to the Old Colony Foreign\n Co. which was compelled\nto close last week was made today\nby officials engaged in tracing that\nconcern's operations on a basis of 100\nper cent, in six months. Charles M.\nBrightwell, Raymond Meyers and\nFred Meyers the three officers of the\ncompany who were locked up on\ncharges of larceny, are in jail in de-\nfault of $50,000 bonds each.\nThe attorney general's office figures\nPonzi's liabilities as indicated by un-\npaid notes of which records have been\nmade thus far as $2,100,000. In addi-\ntion the office has one thousand let-\nters, the contents of which have not\nbeen tabmlated, but which are esti-\nmated to show $500,000 additional in\nnotes. The largest single unpaid noto\nshown was for $10,000 but a former\nnoteholder tdld the attorney general\nthathe had Invested $30,000 with Pon-\nzi In one note which had later been\npaid,
d912bb0f62884fcc0540f7a87a048a15 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.788251334497 41.681744 -72.788147 J20.000 against David Dorfman, a\nPleasant street grocer, alleging de-\nfamation of character.\nThe suit is based on alleged state-\nments by Dorfman that he had paid\nGorbach $100 as a deposit on the\nD'Angelo tract of land and that\nGorbach has refused to execute a\ndeed for the transfer of the property\nor refund the payment\nThe land in question is one of two\nsites being considered by the school\ncommittee for a new building to\nserve the needs of the eastern sec-\ntion of the city.\nAttorney S. Gerard Casale, coun\nsel for the plaintiff sets forth in his\ncomplaint that "the plaintiffs repu-\ntation, both in the state of Connec-\nticut and elsewhere, has always been\nthat of a competent, energetic and\nhonorable man of business, one to\nfVhom the management of large en\nterprises requiring the experience of\ngood judgment and Integrity could\nsafely be trusted."\nHe further alleges that Dorfman\n and maliciously told third\npersons that Gorbach had mis rep-\nresented his Interest in the D'Angelo\ntract, and that he intended and was\nunderstood by third persons to\ncharge the plaintiff with appropriat-\ning the $100 to his own uses.\nThe concluding allegation is:\n"That the statements so made by\nthe defendant, David Dorfman, of\nand concerning this plaintiff were\nand are wholly false, malicious and\nslanderous, and made with the in-\ntention to injure the plaintiff and\nhis good name and credit in his\nsaid occupation and business, and\nto cause it to be believed by tne\nreason thereof that he was unworthy\nto be entrusted with money,, and\nunreliable In his conduct of busi-\nness.' That by means of said state-\nments the plaintiff has been Injured\nin his good name and credit as\nbusinessman and- real estate broker,\nand will work greatly to his injury\nin his development of real estate\nin the future."
ae62a4f525091010918a4890079ea7bc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6051912252074 39.513775 -121.556359 The Viuilanci: Commiite —By refer-\nence to a telegr spine despatch from the\nMarysville Express, to be found in another\ncolumn, it will he seen that Judge lerry\nbus been unconditionally released. They\ncould neither bend nor break him. It is\nalso announced that the Committee are\nabout to disband. We trust it may he so\nWe should be pleased to see the Committee\nreturn to their senses, and by disbanding\ntheir infamous organization, and returning\nto their duty ns citizens, restore peace to a\nState well nigh ou the borders of anarchy\nWo arc not among those who wish to insin-\nuate that the Committee have bccu induced\nto disband because they feared the next\nsteamer would bring intelligence from Wash-\nington which would place at tho disposal of\nthe Governor the U. S. forces now on the\n to he used against them We have\nno desire to seethe United States army and\nnavy employed against any portion of the\nAmerican people ; tut we prefer to sec even\nthat than to see such an organization as the\nVigilance Committee continue in session.\nGod grant that vise counsels may prevail,\nand that the Committee may disband with-\nout such proceedings. The fftet that the\nCommittee are divided among themselves,\nand calling for tho election of a new Execu-\ntive Committee, tenders it quite probable\nthat the Committee will full to pieces; or,\nshould they attempt to continue their trai-\ntorous organization will soon full un easy\nprey to the constituted authorities. Should\nthey not have the good tense to disband, we\ncan only pray to God that they may be\n(driven from the country they have dis-\ngraced.
39d50e20f02d110709d936f7cd23b138 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.8948087115461 41.681744 -72.788147 by nightsticks but comes first and\nthen follows the law.\n"In cities abroad actual conditions\nare faced and there are no laws on\nthe books than can not be enforced.\nDrink is sold in many cities abroad\non certain hours on Sunday but aft-\ner that time none is served and it is\nvery doubtful if any could be' ob-\ntained. If the German Reichstag\nwere to pass certain of the German\nJaws the whole army could not en-\nforce them. .The police of this coun-\ntry lack adequate powers such as the\nright to search a house without a\nwarrant. In Germany the chief or\nlieutenant can search if there is any\nevidence of crime. Abroad they are the\nservants and not the masters of the\npeople. In most every case abroad\nt;i? third degree is used to a more or j\nloss extent "and a man is obliged to\ntell the truth. Here it is illegal to\nmake a man confess and the system\nw ould not be tolerated in this country.\n'"Throughout a person\nmust register 24 hours after he has\narrived in a new town giving age,\nparents' names, place from whence\nhe 'came, etc. Ot one time I stayed\nin Berlin for several days, three years\nlater I returned and found my name\non the records, also the fact that I\nwas an American citizen. This re-\nport is filed and then sent back to\nthe place where a man first lived\nand in this way the police have a\ngrip on crime. This system has been\nin effect since 183 5 and there are at\nthe present time 12,000,000 names on\nfile in the city of Berlin. If a man\ncommits a crime and escapes, should\nhe return later, the police would get\nhim for the event is filed in red ink\nand no matter when he returns the\nrecord is there against him. It is an\nimpossible thing to get away fom this\nsystem even if the name be changed J\nfor the records from the former place\nof residence will show the truth.
02c5ea4c094a7d8d9d474deea02bb235 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.8397259956876 37.561813 -75.84108 Condition of the Crops —R epo rt s\nfrom the Department of Agri culture.\nrnitnre.\nThe Department of Agriculture has\nprepared a digest of the reports lipdn\nthe condition of the crops for October,\nfrom which tho following ia extracted:\n"The wheal crop for 1870, in a ma-\njority of the Staes, and espechWly in\nthose where this cereal is prominent, Is\nmaterially less in quantity than the\ncrop of 1869, which was a Very large\none, notwithstanding the assertions of\nsome croakers to the contrary. The\nreduction is due first, to the loss of\nplants by an unpropitious season for\ngermination and early growth of the\nwhiter variety, followed Jby an open\nand somewhat Variable winter and,\nsecond, to drought, which prevailed\nwith great severity in the Northern\nand Eastern This reduction,\nas averaged from our iocal returns,\nappears lo be about fourteen per cent.\nThe average quality of the crop is bet-\nter than that of 18G9. The PaciQc\ncoast reports are variable. Some coun-\nties ia California make the quality\nsuperior, while others report Injury\nfrom rust ahd inferiority from maturi-\nty of the grain blighted by drought.\nThe early snow, fall and spring grain\nof Oregon is good, while that of the\nlate snow was injured by - the exces-\nsive heat of the summer. Among the\nwinter varieties whlcih have succeeded\nbest, the Tappahannock is prominent-\nly harried. It is favorably mentioned\nthroughout the South and West, and\nhas done well among the mountain", of\nUtah. The corn crop of 18? 0, unlike\nthose of the two yeat--
575c4ac27a8483925988abbe2ed52736 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.395890379249 39.369864 -121.105448 Tbns weeks passed ; I wasted away, for I\nhad no appetite to eat. I became weak, and\ncould not work. De Witt saw all this, and\nbecattie to me kind and gentle, treating me\nmore kindly than was his wont, though our\nfriendship had been ever of the warmest\nkind, prior to this fatal occurrence. Finally,\none day, be proposed to me that I should\nvisit a bar a short distance below our loca-\ntion, and see if I could get a claim there.\nMy heart leapt for joy when I beard this\nproposition, though I did>lol dare to let him\nknow it. I had to play the hypocrite with\nhim, so as to mislead him. I told him I did\nnot want to go alone, that he should accom-\npany me, etc. It was finally arranged that\nI should go alone, and return in the evening\nof the same day. The next morning I\nstarted. As soon as I got out of bis sight,\nI started on a run, taking the direction of\nBidwells Bar ; I staid there that night. I\ndidnt sleep a wink, however, for I antici-\npated seeing De Witt every minute. The\nnext morning I started bright and early\ntowards Shasta, intending to go on to Ore-\ngon, and thus get entirely out of his way. I\n not, however, get rid of my own\nthoughts; my conscience smote me. At\nnearly every step I took, I imagined that\nsomething whispered in my ear, “You area\nmurderer.” I got out of town about ten\nmiles, and then made up ray mind to return\nto Bidwclls and consult a lawyer, relative\nto the course I had best take. I did so. He\ntold me to go direct to Marysville, and make\nknown to the authorities there the facts I\nhad developed to him. Acting under his\nadvice, I went to Marysville, and had just\nreached the United States Hotel, when I was\nmet by the sheriff, and summoned by him to\nappear before the Court then in session, as a\njuryman. I went to the Court House imme-\ndiately. where I saw this gentleman, (point-\ning to the writer.) and made known to him\nall the facts I have testified to.\nThis was his statement, made by him\nwithout an interruption, and written down\nby the Justice, at the time it was given.\nDuring its delivery, the prisoner sat looking\nthe witness in the face. Not a change came\nover the countenance of Shattuck, except an\noccasional look of surprise, which was easily\nrend to mean, “How is it possible for a man\nto concoct so great a lie ?”
9a2f662573b149095857f04f5a9ef751 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8401639028032 39.513775 -121.556359 (HiWi-r. the Ixxlilv suffering. Human tiKlitre at lie*l I*\nbut fr iil, nil nfe (table to inl.fonime.\n(if nil the ill* th.;t utfect mnn none nre mere terrible\nthan thonc of n private nature.—Dreadful as It i. in\nthe perron who contract* It. (rightful n* life it* rsvag-\ne. upon hla constitution, ending fhapienlly In destruc*\n■•Ion ami n lon h*oßle if rove, it Monies Of Mill greater\nImportance when it i. iran.mitleil to inmcent off-\nspring. Such bffing the cfse how necr*.nry it he-\nroine* thapevCfy one having the least r«usoti to fuar\n(mil they IniVe Contracted the disease. should attend\nhi it itt omu by consnliimf some physician, Whose\nfespectatblllty and edufalion enables him to wnfrnnt\nn -*fe. speedy, and pormeneiilvnre. In accordance\nt.dih thi. nece«*iiy. DR YOtNr. «n-I* called nr e. to\nMale that, liy limit atudy "ltd extensive practice, lie\nhit* Mome perfect master ot all those diseases Avthcii\ncome under the denomination of vein'Ceol. nivl> (V.\nhut paid more attention to that one'lirancb (ban nnv\ndlher in the Inited Slate*, he Pels billWi If\n•heifer qualified to treat them\nt>yptiili* in all it* form*. such n* hirers. sWcMirtS In\nthe groans, nicer in tin* throhl. secondary ayphjiis.'tu-\ntaneous eruption*. ulceraftffhs. irfinary .yphili*. *y.\nphili* in children. mercurcf.l'sypltlUdt' iitreftions. iron-\norrhen. gleet, strictures, false'pas-ages, inn.iiT.ttlhui of\n(lie bladder and protrale clrtid*, exctirlalioh*. tumor*,\npustules. J*tr.. are a* familiar to him in the most com-\nmon things of dally observation\nTbt Doctor effect* » cure fr. receift cases In a few\nday* Htidlhid. no ilKiicnlty ♦i cordite llio-e of long\nduration. Wifhodt shbrnittioft (he patient loym h treat-\nment a* fill draw upon hit* the alightesi suspicion\nor oblige him to Retried id. business whether w ithin\noors or without.. The diet need not he changed. ex-\ncept in caw* of severe Infiantiilion. There are in t'nll-\nfontia padent* inniountlhg to ovet two thousand in\ntlm past yenri that could fmni-fi ('roof of tins'; hut\nthew are mill ter* I hot reijhiro thi nicest eccre.y which\nhe nlwiiv* preserves
05c06dcc5202912bda78c7d8a354cde2 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.0589040778793 29.949932 -90.070116 discussion. Isabelle, ex-bootblack, took the floor\nar avor of te bill. The Beaste semed peoltive\nabout passing the measare, and would pass no\nappropriation bill unluesthat were made a portion\nof it, and the House by its penlbtenoe woold lose\nmuch valuable time, and perhaps so much as to\nnecessitate an extra session, which would\ncost the State $100,000, instead of the\npitiful $7000 or $8000, which the committees\nasked. Mr. Lowell, speaker of the Honos, thee\narose to register his opposition to the bill. He\ndidn't want the House to be bull.ragged-that\nwas the honorable gent's word-by the Senate, he\nwanted the House to do right regardless of the\nSenate. As to the committees for whom payment\nwas asked, one of them, at least, the committee\non elections, was one of the greatest frauds that\never disgraced a republic. The committee had a\nclerk, who to Mr. Lowell's own knowledge, \ngone out on the street and got men to come into\nthe committee room and sign a certificate of hav-\ning served as a witness, when be, the clerk, re-\ntained half the fees. A great part of the expenses\nof that committee were thus made up, and a large\nportion of the certificates of indebtedness iuaned\nby them do not represent a particle of service\ndone to the State. We have given this little ab-\nstract to show what some of our model legislators\nthink of others, and to ilsplay to the community\nthat they think no mere highly of each other than\nthey ought to think. The bill did not pass by avote\nof 55 to 7. What will come next it is impossible\nto say. The Senate will doubtless make another\neilfrt, for it is a question of money, and the love-\nly creatures will never leave t'le trail while such
1032004753c00a8f8744017add276e69 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.669862981989 39.745947 -75.546589 Except for the one .ap speed record are expected to reach the market this quince Je ly In popularity with the houses\nmade by Blériot and Curtl.a tu s week and week. the reason will not be on In earnest keeper, but Indications now are that the\nFaulliun's tune record In tne a r, Luti.am Vnt11 ttle Northern fruit makes Its ap- latter will he put up In larger quantities\nnow holds the world's record for distance pearance, as it la not until then that this season,\nand speed. L.ko Pau ban. he desce .oed\nonly when the gaso ii.e tank was empty.\nFlights were made of s.x ra.les In vu ht\nminutes. Think of It! From Dovtr to Chcs-\nwold n six m.nutes! From Do.er to Cam- ;\ndon Camp while one is putting on his col­\nlar! From Dover to W1 m ngton whl s-\none Is winding and sett ng h.s watch— .f\n. ts a Waterbury.\nWellbeataprettypasbythstime\nI next year, at that rate. Of course .cr >\nI John B shop of Cheswold wd. be fly.ns\nhere nstoad of motoring over unimp o.cd\nI roads. Jeff Cooper w. 1 be d-nn ng h.s\nSanta Claus costume ai.d be drop,.! g doll\nbaoies and cornucopias of ca dy as ho \nsails over Dover. Me.srs . Vosheu, Huwe 1 ■\nand Lewis wd) have the house.io ders set\na net between thlr roofs that they m ght\ndrop the weekly supply of (lour ar they\npass over. Wlllara Johns w Ii even ,e\ntossing milk bottles over .ha a.rshlu s\nI gunwa e. M .ford pjl.tlcians wd be rd if\ntheir compa nt that they have io spin-l\n' a whole day In “dull Dover e .tiy time\nthey come here to atiend a co Lrente\n1 and. Incidentally draw some State velvet\nCommodores A1 Alnscow and Al C n er\ncan sail out over the oyster navy and\nback again whl o coffee is being poured at\nhome.
14a03ef4370cc391e0a683def511a600 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.4315068176052 42.217817 -85.891125 One of these bills, which is now pend-\ning in the House, and will probably pass\nthat body, and become a law this session,\nis for the benefit of grasshopper suffer-\ners, and provides that it shall be lawful\nfor homestead settlers on the publio\nlands whose crops were destroyed or se-\nriously injured by grasshoppers in the\nyear 1876, who ieft their land in that\nyear, if no other settlement shall hav3\nbeen made thereon by, or right or inter-\nest therein accrued to, any other person,\nto return to said land at any time within\nthree months from and after the passage\nof this act ; and upon the return of such\nsettlers to such land such absence there-\nfrom shall in no wise affect the original\nsettlements or homestead rights, but\nsuch settlers shall be to resume\nand perfect their settlement as if no such\nabsence had occurred : Provided, That\nproof of such destruction or injury of\ncrops, absence, and return of such set-\ntlers, shall be made in such manner as\nthe Commissioner of tho General Land\nOffice may prescribe.\nAnother bill for the protection of\nhomestead settlers on railroad lands pro-\nvides that, on and after its passage, the\neven sections within the limits of any\nrailroad company, or any military-roa - d\ncompany, or to any State in aid of any\nrailroad or military road, shall be open\nto settlers under the homestead laws to\nthe extent of 160 acres to each settler,\nand any person who has, under existing\nlaws, taken a homestead on an even sec-\ntion within the limits of any railroad or\nmilitary-roa- d
056773a8f40c0d01076484064f93ffba THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.5767122970574 40.063962 -80.720915 Mri. Babecca Roby, m widow lady who\nhu iSiidH thl. vicinity for many\nrears, died on S.tnrd.y nijht and wu\nburied yesterday (Sunday) »<«««».\nDr. P . R Chapman, whom I spoke of\nin my last l«"er aa.llkely to b. the Con¬\ngressional nominee of lhe Oreenbiok\npaTty of tbia dUtrlct, poaititely reiused to\n«llow his name to go before the Cowm-\nSon, which wuheid in StenbentiUe lut\nBalurdsy, and 10 Inetrncted the delegates\nIrom thia county. He la, however, the\nnominee of that party for Coroaer of\nBelmont county, and will likely be en¬\ndorsed by the Democrat, for the place.\nThe Disciples hold their District Con-\nrenlion at thla place on the 8th of next\nmonth. It will doubtless be largely at-\ntended, a> ii the u»ual cuitom.\n* iiartT of young men from your city,\nwho are boilers in one of the mills, went\nthrough here laat week In a \nipring wagon, lully equipped wi h camp-\ning implements, on their way to Wills\nCreek' where they intend hanging up\n'"^'lively debate took place at Van Cu-\nren'e school house, near here, on Satur¬\nday night, the subject being "Should there\nhe a new party," a subject which seems\nto anitate every man, woman and child in\n{^neighborhood. I did notlearn wheth¬\ner they decided upon organising a new\n^GeonMBerry, a well known farmer aa\nwell aa borse trainer and driverUs "\nBne stable of horaes, which he baa a\nreputation ol keeping, among which there\ntre two Baahaw and one Hiatoga colts\nEat mum of your city sporte might be\ngDdrlJo°hWn°V. Fisher, a native of your\ncity now a prominent druggist and mer-\nchant here, baa qulU a coition of an¬\ntiquities which are very interesting in\ndeed Among tbem he haa a book in\nnerfect state of preservation, that waa
09a5a7d11ff32b320bbfb52ffa5c0e54 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.6205479134958 37.561813 -75.84108 In the course of Judge Pierrepont's\nargument yesterday afternoon he allu\nded, with most impressive effect, to a\ndream of Mr. Lincoln, which on seve\nral occasions had occurred to him be-\nfore great national calamities. This\ndream he had the night before his as- -\nsassination, and the next day he men\ntioned the fact to Gen. Grant, among\nothers, saying that he feared some\ngreat evil, and expressing a strong de-\nsire to hear from Sherman, who was\nthen in North Carolina, and whose\narmy was the only one not in telegraph\nic communication with vashington.\nJudge Pierrepont did not relate the\ndream itself, but Mr. Lincoln related\nit before his death, and like every\nthing in any way connected with that\nsad tragedy, it cannot fail to have a\nmost pathetic interest. He seemed\nto be at sea in a vessel that swept along\nby an irresistible current toward a\nmaelstrom, from which it seemed no\npower could save her. and\nfaster the whirling waters swept the\nfated ship toward the vortex, until,\nlooking down into the black abyss, amid\nthe deafening roar of the waves, and\nwith the sensation of sinking down,\ndown, down an unfathomable depth,\nthe terrified dreamer awoke. The same\nterrible dream Mr. Lincoln had four\ntimes; first before the first battle of\nBull Run, again before the second dis-\nastrous defeat at the same place, again\nbefore the battle of Murfreesboro, and\nfinally, as above mentioned, on the\nnight before his own assassination.\nMr. Lincoln had at last come to rec-\nognize the dream as a portent of some\ngrave disaster, and one can hardly\nconsider his so regarding it a mere su-\nperstition. Whether we attribute it\nto some supernatural agency or not, it\nis certainly one of the most interest-\ning pf psychological mysteries, and\nreminds us forcibly that "there are\nmore things in heaven"and earth than\nwe have dreamed of in our philoso-\nphy."
10454a918bc10d3a7d0a3b97d801de8c THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.6270491487048 37.561813 -75.84108 four millions of colored persons, who,\nwith their ancestors, had been held in\nthe most inhuman form of slavery for\nmore than two hundred years, were sud-\ndenly freed and elevated to equal citi-\nzenship with the master class, as a con-\nsequence of the insurrection of that class\nagainst the Union, and of its total and\nruinous defeat The general feeling of\nthat class can only be one of contempt-\nuous incredulity and distrust of the\nequality of those whom it had not con-\nsidered or treated as human beings ; and\nwhile many of them would not openly\nmanifest their discontent, it is inevitable\nthat there should be a large and reckless\nnumber who would not conceal their feel-\nings, nor hesitate at the most heinous of\ncrimes for its gratification.\nThis is precisely what has occurred.\nThe Southern situation has constantly\npresented two facts the most cruel and\nbloody outrage, terrorism, and massacre\nof the colored population, and a white\npublic opinion that practically approved,\nby declining protect or to act with\nany vigor or efficiency. This is not a\ntheoretical observation or abstract infer-\nence. In reply to Gen. Garfield's direct\nquestion, Mr. Lamar, of Mississippi, said\nthat the occurrence at Hamburg was not\nsporadic, although unnatural ; it was the\neffect of a morbific element that he\nthought would disappear under good\ngovernment The Richmond Whif says\nthat while it believes the great mass of\nthe people in the Southern States to be\npeacefully inclined, " the misfortune is\nthat public opinion is not outspoken\nenough to discourage these bad men from\nsuch acts against the weak," adding that\nthe negroes are sometimes exasperating.\nAnd CoL Higginson, calling attention to\nthe fact that even the colored magistrate\nat Hamburg, before whom the case was\nbrought and whom he knows as a brave\nand loyal man, was also forced to fly for\nhis life, speaks for thousands of intelli-\ngent and patriotic men in this part of\nthe country in a letter to the New York\nTimes:
1bf210b6f4068033ce07c0f1fb8107ea THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.1630136669203 37.561813 -75.84108 wisdom and cxjierience of ages taught\nour fathers to establish as securities for\ntho protection of the Innocent, tho pun-\nishment of tho guilty, nnd tho fijunl\nadministration of justice, are to be set\nasitle ; and for tho sake of a more vig-\norous interposition in behalf of Justice,\nwo are to tako tho risk of the many\nnets 'of Injustice that would, of necessi-\nty, follow from an almost countless\nnumixr of ngents, established In every\nparish or county, In nearly a third of\ntho States of the Union, over whose\ndecision there is to bo no supervision\nor control by tho Federal Courts. The\npower that would lie thus placed in the\nhands of tho President, is such as in\ntime of peace certainly ought never to\nbo entrusted to any one man. If it le\nasked whether the creation of such a\ntribunal within a State is warranted as\na measure of war, the question imme-\ndiately present itself, whether we nre\nstill engagetl in war. Let us not un-\nnecessarily disturb the commerce and\ncredit nnd industry of the country, by\ndeclaring to the American people and\nthe world that tho l.nited States are\nstill in a condition of civil war. At\npresent there is no part of our country\nin which the authority of the United\n is disputed. Offi nces tliat may\nbe committed by individuals, should\nnot work a forfeiture of the rights of\nthe same communities. The country\nhas entered, or is returning to a state\nof peace and industry, and the rebel-\nlion in fact is at nn end. The meac- -\nure, therefore, seems to be as incon-\nsistent with tho actual condition of the\ncountry, as it is at variance with the\nConstitution of the United States. If,\npassing from general considerations,\nwe examine tho bill in detail, It is\nopen to weighty objections. In time\nof war it Mas eminently proper that\nwe should provide 'for those? who were\npassing suddenly from a condition of\nbondago to a state of freedom. But\nthis bill proposes to make the Freed-\nmen's Bureau, established by the act\nof 1 St.fi, as one of many great and ex-\ntraordinary military measures to sup-\npress a formidable rebellion, a perma-\nnent branch of tho public administra-\ntion, with its power greatly enlnrorl.\nI have no reason to suppose, and I\ndo not understand it to be alleged, that\nthe act of March, 1SU5, has proved de-\nficient for the purpose for which it was\npassed, although nt that time nnd for\na considerable ieriod thereafter, the\nGovernment of the United States re\nmained unacknowledged in-
4cbfd8feda81bef68d59bc69171e6258 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.5164383244546 41.681744 -72.788147 an's intuition led to the d'scovery of\nthe slaying of John Maslriano, Jr.,\n,of Meriden, at Hamden last Decem-\nber, it developed in the superior\ncriminal court today in the trial of\nFred W. Edel, also of Meriden,\ncharged with the murde". Mrs. Mary\nA. Ailing of 3846 Whitney avenue,\nHamden, who found the body in the\nwoods, testified today that blood\nspots she casually noticed at the side\not the road and passed by indiffer-\nently, preyed on her mind to such\nan extent that she turned back and\nfollowed another trail jf blood, into\nthe woods Op to the body.\nMrs. Ailing stated thv.t in the\nafternoon of December 23 last about\n4 o'clock she left her home to go\nto a nearby pond to wat;h the skat-\ning and took a path through the\n at the rear of her home. As\nshe came out on to Shepard avenue\nshe noticed blood in the snow on the\nright of roadway, but passed on\nthinking little of it as 10 other spots\nwere apparent nearby, .r .fter going\nabout 25 feet, however, something\nled her to turn back and then on\nthe oposite side of the road from\nthe original spots, saw a trail of\nblood and followed it until it led to\nthe body about 75 feet within the\nwoods. Without touching it she hur-\nried home, telephoned police and\nled them to the body. Wl en State's\nAttorney B. D. Winner a.id Defender\nTeter Trench! had finish jI their ex-\namination of the witnesj, Judge E. C .\nDickenson took her' in hand and\nbrought out positive statements that\nplainly proved footprints
50554bcccfd361c9594d0aa05df72c66 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1864.0751365803987 37.561813 -75.84108 'Editor Highland News: After\nwaiting for some time for something to\neome to pass, t will attempt to give you\nthe history. In the first place, all tho\nrumors about changes in eompanie\nwere well founded. Co. D is now in\nFort Laramie. Co. Bjis here also, ex-e e- pt\nabout 20 men left at Platte Bridge\nand Deer Creek. Capt. Shoeraan (Co.\nII.) relieved tho dotachment of Co. D\nat Sweetwater Bridge. Co. F went to\nFort Halleck; companies E, G and A\nare here, and such al present ia the dis\ntribution of tho 11th Ohio Vol. Cavalry.\nIt would require a brilliant imagine-tio- n\nto describe the aotions, scouts, &c,\nin which theillh O. V. C . have boon en-\ngaged, especially for the last six months.\nBut then we are in almost porfoct saf-\netyand (hat is tho great \nThen wo aro in a healthy country: fCo.\nD has only six on sick report out of\nniooty six taon,) have plenty of every\nthing, and Dress Parades every evoning,\n"if tho inclemency of the weather is not\ntoo much so," We certainly should be\nthe most happy and contented soldiers\nin the U. S. sorvioe, especially since we\nhavo a Reading Room, (which it a good\ninstitution) and a Brass Band! Yos,\nstrango as it may be, we have a Brass\nRand, six hundred miles from civiliza-\ntion proper! Co. A organized tho band,\nprocured instruments, sent to Denver\nfor a teacher, and we now havo tho most\ninspiring strains of rauaio over heard in\nIdahoe, I reckon.\nA member of Co. 0. namod Burt.\ndied last Saturday, of Consumption.\nAll tbo troops at the Post turned out at\ntbe funeral.
05a471769e09550b72d9bdc6c1ecc94f THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.9549180011638 39.369864 -121.105448 Poetical Injustice —ln Hutchings Maga-\nzine, lor December, three wretched stanzas\nof studied rhyming appear, which Mr. Hutch-\nings acknowledges he stole from an album,\nentrusted to his temporary care by sonic\ngood-natured and confiding literary Tady,\nnamed “Alice.” These wretched stanzas hap-\npen to have the name of “Allen” placed be-i\nneath them; and thereupon, brother Ridge, of\nthe Marysville Democrat, goes off in a tan-\ngent and attributes their authorship to one\nof the persons connected with the Nevada\nTranscript. This is not. the first time that\nbrother Ridge lias entangled tis in an album\nembroglio; though Heaven knows, we have\nneither taste or talent for any such iniqui-\nties. We never had a poetical gift—never\ncould manage to make better rhyme than\nBenedick, who made “lady” jingle to “baby”\n—never wrote in an alburn—never knew\nanybody by the name of “Alice”—never\nheard of an “Allen” that could scribble any\nthing better than very plain and indifferent\nprose—and never will consent to have poeti-\ncal fun poked at ns by such funny rascals as\nHutchings and Ridge.—Nevada Transcript.\nNow. General, this kind of won't\ndo. You are guilty, and you know it. We\nunderstand your allusion about that other\n“album embroglio.” You were guilty in\nthat case also, and we exposed you. Yon\nfeci sore about it, but we cannot help that.\nYou aic a wolf in sheeps clothing—a poet\nin disguise, and we arc determined that yon\nshall bo known in your true character. You\ncant be allowed to go round the community\nlike a straight forward wrilerof good, honest\nprose, when just as good men as you are,\nhave to be held up before the world as\nscribblers of verse, and be branded with the\nname of poets. No, sir ; that kind" of thing\nhas got to be stopped.—Marysville Democrat.\nWc are with Ridge, in this controversy.\nThe Generals disclaimer is entirely too\nmodest. There is no doubt but he was the\nauthor of the lines referred to—and very\npretty lines they are, too. We could tell a\nta e about a certain, “Roaring, rearing Tam-\nmany Boy,” if we thought proper. But we\nwon't do R. Conviction on Ridge's indict-\nment is sufficient for the present.
e3921c1a66dae2380837ace3639dbe59 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.6397259956875 41.681744 -72.788147 reason for lowering gates, in most\ncases It is done with great care or\nthe gates are gone and must be re-\nbuilt; It is much like playing tag. We\nhave to watch our chance to crowd\nthe gates down between traffic of the\nstreet as they must bo lowered all\nthe way down and thut don't stop\nthem at times; wo have just got to\ndo that as you know; we try to favor\nstreet traffic all wo can, bearing in\nmind, "Safety First" all of ffie time.\nWore drivers to approach crossings\nwith their car under control there will\nbo little need for reports such as you\nrefer to In your item; then, they\nshould proceed only as tho way is\nseen and known to be clear; do not\ndepend on the one" in charge to see\nfor them, one's own eyes are best for\ntheir own as you must\nknow; again, the one in charge may\nbe ill or perhaps dead. Who knows?\nWhy take any chances? Life is too\nshort to take chances of this sort and\npay with our lives. It don't pay. Like\nothers, we are human, or try to be\nhuman; aro subject to blunders the\nsame as everyone is, we sometimes\nmake mistakes, it is not dono on pur-\npose, this we assure you; we do try\nhard to use. good judgement a the\ntime which is very necessary in our\nline to look out for those that only\ntouch tho high spots on the street\nwith their machines and there are\na number that drive in that manner,\neven at this late day.\nDuring the past ten years, I have\nnoticed drivers begin to try to stop\nas much as three or four huntfred\nfeet from the crossing
1d0b6779243e0d35f5077f51de9720e7 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.3438355847286 41.004121 -76.453816 Edwnrd, thercforo, could without In\nterruption, court ids pretty Quakeress,\nwell assured that his father would nev\ner think of opposing his ninrrlage. Tho\nsituation of tho loving couplo was, to\nall appearance, very prosperous; and\nhonest Toby did not put off tho day of\ntheir marrlago longer than to collect\ntho arrearages of hla rents : ho destined\ntho money for tho extraordinary ex\npenscs of tho ceremony. For this pur\nposo ho went to his country seat, soma\nmiles from Loudon, In order toregulato\nhis affairs. Ho had passed but ono doy\nfrom homo ; nnd ns ho was about to\nput up his horso for tho night, ho per\nceived nt somo distance ix horseman,\nwho had barred tho road. Ho stopped\nuncertain whether to go on or turn back,\n tho horsomnn advanced\ntowards him. Tho Quaker could not\noven think of escaping; ho thercforo\nput on tx good face, nnd brought Ms\nhorse to n walk. In approaching tho\nman who caused ids uneasiness, ho per\nceived that ho wns masked, n grlovous\naugury, which wns booh confirmed.\nTho unknown showed a pistol and ill'\nrccted thu muzzlo to tho traveller, do\nmondlng hla purso. Tho Quaker did\nnot want courage, but calm by charaO'\ntcr, lnoffen8lvo by religion, nnd ocn\nunablo, without arms, to resist an arm\ncd man, ho pulled from hla pockot very\ncoolly, n pureo containing twolvo guln\nens. Tho robber took it, counted tho\npieces, and left tho poor man whom ho\nhad stopped, to pass on, whilo ho put\nhla horso to tho trot. But tho robber,
21550cd1152a893954de63eef8516347 THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.9684931189752 37.083389 -88.600048 the Wolrrrhambton engineer\nsigner discovered the motive power\nof heat exhibited It In one of the\nsimplest cheapest and most useful to\ntlnei Imaginable and then deprived\nthe world of its benefits 110 had Pro-\nduced beforehand a round dozen of ex\ncellent Inventions which itlll tear his\nname Including the modern revolving\nchimney cowl and having male a\nlarge fortune he developed himself\nharnessing the ordinary beat of a toII\nand making a neW power of IL The\nIdea wu laughed at by all his friends\nbut after four years of study and ex\nptrlmentlcc he produced a stationary\nengine that gave double the power elt\nany itemdriven mechanism at about\na third the cult and alto a Small\nmodel bt locomotive Urge enough\ntodraw atruckwithananInILHi\nInvited a committee ot scientists and\nengineers Including Profs Huxley MallS\nForbes Brown and showed them\nhis two machines worked to perfect\nicon The affair made a treat stir and\nIt proved a treat power of un-\nlimited scope bad been discovered\nWeymouth was flooded with offers of\nhuge same for his Invention but tai\nno apparent reason except perhaps\nthe alleged madness of genius he all\nloluteir refused to either bring It out\nhimself or sell the secret lie an\ncounted himself satisfied with the tri-\numph of the Invention and before his\ndeath a year later he destroyed ill\nthe papers and plans explaining the\nsystem and removed the essential\nparts of the two engines Thoe en\nglaei are still possessed by bin heln\nbut nobody kai been able to mall\nanything of them SUIT stranger wu\nthe famous loss of the reelpe for the\nmanufacture of diamonds some fifteen\nyears ago Herbert Warner who\nalone discovered and held the secret\nof diamond making did not live to\nwreck the diamond Industry ai peo-\nple thought he would and the elrrnm\nstances of the lou were mysterious\nand tragic Interior diamonds
1b7fff01c8002159be253cdae6953de5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.1493150367833 40.063962 -80.720915 The Superintendent and local directors\nire in fault for not holding such boards,\naid the directors generally are in fault for 11\nlot eeeing that tho law in this respect ia u\n)b&yed. It is claimed that this provision c,\n>f the law is UBelees. If such be tho opin- a\non of tho authorities of the hospital tiiey ti\nihould have recoDimended to the Logiala- o\n, ura tha repeal of that section of the law. tl\nAll of our time has been ao cloanly oc- ri\njupted that we have not exatninod into ii\niho financial transactions of the hospital o\nind we have heard no complaint respect- b\nng them. For like reasons wo have not d\nixamined the boobs of account or the e\njittoo of the clerk. In investigating'other f;\nnatters, howover,- we have ascertained\n;oine facts which ought bo made known ft\n;o tho Legislature. Tho Treasurer gives s\nbond in the penalty of $30,000 with two r\nsureties, one of them the Superintendent, t!\nWith reBpoct to come of the funds at least n\nit would bo the duty of tho Superintend- a\njnt to detect and provo any defalcation of n\nwhich a Treasurer might be guilty. The n\nSuperintendent therefore should not be\nduo of tho sureties of tho Treasurer. It is ti\n3ven more remarkable that tho Treaa- t\niror'c bond ia lodged with tho Superin- e<\n:endent, so that this bond for tho indem- tl\nuity of tho State is placed for safe keoping t<\n, n the hands of one of the sureties who\nsigned it. Tho Board of Directors might bo b\n;xpected to pay Eome attontion to a mat- f<\n:er of this sort.
4fb8430180b4885249d6f9854cd2ac13 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.2534246258244 43.798358 -73.087921 mates, within which it is prohibited. In or-\nder to secure its power beyond the reach\nof the states, it claims its parentage from\nthe Constitution of the United States. It de\nmands of us total silence as to its proceed\nings, denies to our citizens the liberty of\nspeech ana me press, ana punisnes them\nby mobs and violence lor the exercise of\nthese rights. It has sent its agents into\nfree states for the purpose of influencing\ntheir Legislatures to pass laws for the se-\ncurity of its power within such states, and\nfor the enacting new offences and new\npunishments for their own citizens, so as\nto give additional security to its interest.\nIt demands to be heard in its own person\n:in the hall of our Legislature, and mingle\nin debate ihere. Sir, m every stage of\n4he.e oppressions and abuses, permit me\nto say, in tbe, language of the Declaration\nof Independence and no language could\nhe more appropriate we have petitioned\nfor redress in the most humble terms, and\nour repeated petitions have been answer d\n repeated injury. A power, whose\ncharacter is marked by every act which\nmay define a tyrant, is unfit to rule over a\nTree people. In our sufferings and our\nwrongs, we have besought our fellow-citizen- s\nto aid us in the preservation of our\nconstitutional rights, but,' influenced by\nthe love of frain or arbitrary power, they\nhave sometimes disregarded all the sa-\ncred rights of man, and answered in vio-\nlence, burnings, and murder. After all\nthese transactions, which are now of pub-\nlic notoriety and matter of record, shall\nwe of the free states tauntingly be asked,\nwhat we have to do with slavery? We\nshould rejoice, indeed, if the evils of sla-- ,\nTery were removed far from us, that it\ncould be said with truth, that we have\nnothing to do with slavery. Our citizens\nhave not entered, hs territories for the pur-\npose of obstructing its laws, nor do we\nwith to da so, nor would we justify any\n' individual in such an act ; yet we have\n";)Qtn branded and stigmatized by its friends
1a4d5c0fe8920f8be7e2fedc0004db90 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4385245585408 39.745947 -75.546589 Early yesterday all of the Philadel­\nphians were on the eourts playing\nI heir Aral and preliminary malehe».\nNothing exciting developed until Mrs.\nHarvey and Miss Sewell iook Die court.\nMr». Harvey won the flrsl set, 6-3 . but\neven so she had a hard time gelling\nstarted, and Miss Sewell's tenacious\nreturning kept the Eastern double»\nchampion hurrying all the time. Short­\nly after second set\ned that Mrs. Harvey\nwinner for she quickly ran the »core\nup lo 3-1 . Bui Miss Sewell had "Just\nbegun to tight" and soon had the\nscore at 5-3 In her favor. Mrs. Harvey\nmanaged to putt up even, then they\nsee-sawed games under a brotlng sun\nuntil tho score stood 11-all, Mrs. Har-\nvey seemed lo feel tho Intense heal\nmore than Miss Sewell, and tost the\nnext two games and the set at 11-13.\n a rest Mrs. Harvey was herself\nagain and had no trouble In running\nthe match out, winning the Anal set\nwith the toss of but one game.\nLatcp In Die afternoon Miss Walsh\nand Miss Ballln took down the pladlts\nof the large and thoroughly Interested\ngallery. It was the general belief\nthat Miss Walsh would give Mias Bal-\nlin a good battle, nevertheless. Miss\nBallln wss the favorite. When tho\nmatch was completed and, consequent­\nly, Miss Walsh had the larger end of\na 6-2. 2 -6 . 6-1 scon*. The gallery waa\nmuch surprised. The peculiar score\nIs accounted for by the fae>That Miss\nWalsh was In wonderful Term In the\nllrst and third sets, but in the second\nshe was constantly making errors,\npartly, of course, due to Miss Ballin'*\nwell-timed driving.\nThe point score of this match fol­\nlows :
3cc3a018c728e7c820be53084d14a34f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1917.146575310756 42.217817 -85.891125 Admirable and furslshted pluus for\nsecuring a peaceful iuteruational order\nhave Wen before the world for 300\nyears. M . Einerlc Cruee submitted his\nplau, which Included liberty of com-\nmerce throughout all the world, as\nearly as 1023. Following the peace of\nUtrecht, the Abbe do St. Pierre devel-\noped his plan, which Included media-\ntion, arbitration and an Interesting ad-\ndition to tho effect that any sovereign\nwho took up arms before the union of\nnations had declared war or who re-\nfused to execute a regulation of the\nunion or a Judgment of the senate was\nto be declared an enemy of Europcau\nsociety. The union was then to make\nwar upon him unUl he Bhould be dis-\narmed or until the regulation or Judg-\nment should be executed.\n twenty years earlier William\nPenn had produced his quaint and real-\nly extraordinary plan for the peace of\nEurope, in which he, too, proposed to\nproceed by military power against any\nsovereign who refused to submit his\nclaims to a proposed diet, or parlia-\nment, of Europe or who refused to\nabide by and to perform any judgment\nof such a body.\nAll these plans, like those of Rous-\nseau, Bent hum and Kant, which came\nlater, as well as William Ladd's elab-\norate and carefully considered essay\non a congress of nations, published in\n1S40, were brought luto tho world too\nsoon. They were Uio fine and noble\ndreams of seers which It is taking civ-\nilized men three centuries and more to\nbegin effeetively to realize. New York\nTimes.
1509333bf461010dc2ea5aba689a6678 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.5493150367834 42.217817 -85.891125 At every call to quarters all officers\nmust report themselves ready for duty.\nThe chaplain and paymaster, having\nmuch less to do with drills than the\nother officers, are usually the first to be\nback in the wardroom, where there is\nother work for them. The medical offi-\ncer has gono forward to the sick bay to\nlook after his patiuts.\nWhen tho midday breakfast comes,\nthere is the first breathing space for a\nlittlo leisure and relaxation. But the\ndrills for the day are not yet over, and\nat 1 o'clock the bustle is resumed\nthroughout the ship. A sudden call may\ncome for collision drill, or fire drill, or\nbattalion drill. If at sea, a floating tar-\nget may bo dropped overboard, and for\nan hour the ship be shaken from stem\nto stern by the discharge of guns. From\n3 to 5 o'clock in the afternoon there is\ngenerally a from work, and the\nwardroom begins to show signs of be-\ning a home. Some in it are reading or\nwriting, others are smoking or playing\ngames or loafing. Still others are in\ntheir rooms taking the seaman's after-\nnoon nap. But at 5 o'clock the drills\nand exercises come again.\nBy 6:30 o'clock there is a feeling that\nOne can sit down and dine without fear\nof interruption. The mess as a whole is\nnow gathered together, and the meal is\ngenerally a thoroughly enjoyable and\ndelightful affair. After it is over there\nare cigars, games, music, or tho right to\nwithdraw within oneself without ex-\nciting remark. By 10 o'clock most of\nthese sailors are in bed, but even now\nthe drills may not be over. At midnight\nthe bugles may sound, and in two min-\nutes all the ship's company be rapidly\nmaking ready for an enemy. New\nYork Post.
0ec9de2b6be25b5e455517da934dbd80 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1895.3164383244546 41.258732 -95.937873 and having the welfare of yourself a id\nfamily at heart, as well as that of the nation\nat large, we would most heartily Invito you\ntobecomeamemberofthe U.A.M., asItIs\nthe only Order In existence founded es\npeclally to promote the Interests, elevate\nthe character and secure the happiness of\nthe American mechanic and business man\nIt therefore appeals to the head and heart\nof him who wields the pen as well as to him\nwho swings the scythe or wields the sledge\nhammer of t he mechanic. I n lis councils, a\nfree discussion of principles relating to the\nfostering and care of the Interests of Indi\nvidual members Is permitted; but nutblng of\napolitical or sectarian character is ever al-\nlowed to be discussed. It has no afliliatlon\nwith such Institutions as Trades Unions,\nKnights or Labor. Sovereigns of Industry, or\nthe like, and desires not to control either\ncapital or labor, as It would be doing a gross\nInjustice to many of its who are\ntaken from both classes. The membership\nof the Order Is scattered from Maine to Cali-\nfornia, and from all polntsco nes ihe glorious\nnews that the Order Is gaining great strength\nIn all Jurisdictions.\nAn endowment branch s also connected\nwith the Order, both national and .state,\nwhich Insures those who seek Its benefits,\nenabling them to leave a sum, which is in all\ncases substantially and promptly paid, to\nthe dear ones, when death marks Its mem-\nbers for its own.\nIt seems very strange Indeed that the\nAmerican does not feel Inclined to become\no peculiarly national In his Ideas and as-\nsociations as do the F.nglish, French, Ger\nman. Irish, and other nationalities. JEach\nand all of the foregoing have their peculiar\nnational organizations, and take; pride In\nsame. But the American Joins order aftei\norder, composed of a mixture of nationali-\nties, and lets his own countrymen severely\nalone In the matter of secret and fraternal\nsocieties.
1cfce7a06a4b1fec6b10f76a19c63579 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.9109588723998 43.798358 -73.087921 EARlIlfilAKES I. SVKIA.\nUp to this moment I had refused to\ncredit the account, but one frightful glance\nconvinced me that it was not in the pow-\ner of language to overstate snch a ruin.\nSuffice it to say thatthis great to wn, which\nseemed to rye like a beehive four years\nago, and was still more so only eighteen\ndays ago, is now no more. Safet was, but\nis not. The Jewish portion containing a\npopulation of five or six thousand, was\nbuilt around and upon a very steep moun-\ntain ; so steep, indeed, is the hill, and so\ncompactly built was the town, that the\nroof of the lower house formed the street of\nthe one above, thus rising like a stairway\none over another. And thus, when the\ntremendous shock dashed every house to\nthe ground in a moment, the first fell up-\n the second, the second upon the third,\nthat on the next, and so on to the end.\nAnd this is the the true cause of the al-\nmost unprecedented destruction of life.\nSome of the lower houses are covered up\nto a great depth with the ruins of many\nothers which were above them. From\nthis cause also it occurred that a vast num-\nber, who were not instantaneously killed,\nperished before they could be dug out;\nand some were taken out five, six, and one\nI was told, seven days after the shock,\nstill alive. One solitary man, who had\nbeen a husband and a father told me that\nhe found his wife with one child under her\narm, and the babe with the breast still in\nits mouth. He supposed the babe had not\nbeen killed by the falling ruins, but had\ndied of hunger,
10c8d0e2a087006157022214eaf58ade THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1898.6479451737696 41.004121 -76.453816 It follows from this division of\npowers and duties that the questions\narising under the Federal jurisdic-\ntion are, with rare exception, essen-\ntially different from those arising\nunder the jurisdiction of the State.\nIn like sequence it comes to pass\nthat controverted public questions\narising under these respective juris-\ndictions give rise to two sets of po-\nlitical issues, not only totally dis-\ntinct in their origin and subject mat-\nter, but ultimately determinable in\nwidely different tribunals. These\ntwo sets of issues being distinct in\norigin, character, subject matter,\nand as to form of final settlement,\nreason suggests that each be tried\nseparately and on its own peculiar\nmerits. Ifthere be those who neg-\nlect this obvious truth and thought-\nlessly regard all popular elections\nas inquests on federal questions, let\nthem reflect that it is the power con-\nfided in trust to the State that as-\n security to the life and liberty\nof the citizen, that stands guard\nover his property, that makes his\nhut or his palace his castle, that\nmaintains schools for the education\nof his children,that maintains courts\nfor the enforcement of his rights\nand the redress of his wrongs, that\nmaintains highways for his use and\nconvenience,that regulates the elec-\ntive franchises by which he makes\nhis voice potent for good or ill to\nhimself and his kind, that attends\nhim in all the busy scenes and leis-\nure hours of his life, and, when at\nlast he bids farewell to this world,\nsupervises the distribution of his\nestate among the chosen subjects of\nhis bounty and affection. The mag-\nnitude of this power, the wide va-\nriety of subject matter on which it\noperates and the highly delicate\nduties attending its exercises render\nit only the more tempting to official\navarice.
024de1e3097dc05f791e100762d62591 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.201369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 to assume, accept without saying, your |\nprofessed belief In these essentials of the |\nChrist len religion; and If your belief Is\nreal, trustful, reliant, when tested by\nyour works, then relentless logic will\ndrive you either to change your religious\nbelief, or cease your tissault» upon ours;\nand If your belief Is not real, not proven\nby your works, might there not bo a sug­\ngestion of safety to you In tho caution to\n"dwellers In glass houses';*\nIt may bo said that I have given you\nsome of the points of doctrine upon which\nthe old churches and Christian Scientists\nagree, but that I have not tod you any­\nthing about the many points upon which\nth#y do not agree. The failure lo do this\nwas not an oversight. It Is a part ot tho\nethics of my profession, that a lawyer\nshall willingly, smilingly, even gleefully\nlose his own case rather than deliberately I\nslaughter hts own logic. 1 have made on\neffort for n few moments at least lo satis­\nfy you that upon tho essential» of the re­\nligion »•« do agree. It Is apparent to us |\nthat In the religion of Jesus we ,do agree,\nIt Is to us that If you have the]\nessentials of that religion, then we each\n»hall have the gospel supplies, and U Is\nJust as apparent to your logic as to mine\nthat If wo are In accord respecting the cs- '\nsentluls of the religion of Jesus, thon I\nthere Is not anything essential for ns lo\ndisagree about and there never Is an op- )\nI portuno time to discuss honessenlluls.\nAgain you might ask: "If we arc In liar-1\nmany respecting the essentia's of religion\nof Jesus, what Is the necessity for a non\nchurch, why do you, as nine-tenths of the j\nChristian Scientists have, go out of the\nold churches?" If we really believe alike\nrespecting these essentials there Islbi an­\nswer to the question; there would bo no\nreason, for a church would bo new,\n“transformed by the renewal ot your\nmind,” all one; for when all Iho people\nthink alike and think aright of the one\nonly living and true Ood there will be and\ncan be but one church. Iho heavens its\ndome, the kord God Almighty and the\nkamh its temple; tho redeemed nations\nI shall walk ln K. and the glory ot Ood\nj shall light it.
4421ebda818ef70cbff0c30e5c904f11 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.23698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 Wo submit that there is a great deul\nof force in tho above remarks from tho\nPress. The case stands as therein pre¬\nsented, viz: that the loyal people of tho\nState, those who organized it, who be¬\nlieved in it, who took ail the risks of\nso doing, who opposed tho usurpers at\nRichmond, who adhered under-all de¬\nfeats and discouragements to the State\nand the United States, are "the people\nwho should control tho policy of tho\nState." Either this is true, or tho con¬\nverse of tho proposition is true, viz:\nthat thoso who opposed tho State, who\nbelieved and denounced it as bogus,\nwho cast all their sympathies and in¬\nfluences to the rebellion that was war¬\nring upon both, and would, if possiblo,\nhavo crushed both, should control its\npolicy. Both cannot that poli¬\ncy. Therefore the issue now is simply\nthis: Who are tho natural and rightful\nguardians and custodians of West Vir¬\nginia's interests? Those who havo\nIVom first to last believed in her, stood\nby her, rescued her, made her a State,\nor thoso who have scouted her, opposed\nher, hindered and thwarted her by\nevery means in their power? The is¬\nsue lies just in this question. No ono\ncan mistake it. Friends and foes must\nalike admit that the contest is, who\nshall control and mould the policy of!\nthe State? The two mothers who came\nbefore King Solomon claiming the\nchild, the ono a genuine, natural, sym¬\npathetic claimant, the othor a mere\npretender, presented just such an issue,\ninvolving just such an award of indis¬\nputable justice. By all that was right*
0934dabddf706c508c9fabf32b708b0a THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.3219177765093 37.305884 -89.518148 Washington, April 23. Hon. Mat\nthew S. Quay was refused a seat in the\nUnited States senate on the appoint\nment of the governor of Pennsylvania,\nTuesday, by a vote of 33 to 32. The\nentire time of the senate was devoted\nto debate upon the question, many of\nthe greatest lawyers and orators in the\nbody delivering speeches.\nAs the day's session wore on and the\nhour for the Anal vote approached, the\ngalleries filled nntil they were\nthronged with multitudes, while other\nmultitudes were unable to gain admis-\nsion. On the floor of the senate was\nevery member of the body now in the\ncity, and scores of members of the\nhouse of representative..\nThe great throng listened with deep\nattention to the brilliant argument ol\nMr. Spooner in favor of the seating ol\nthe former Pennsylvania senator, and\nto the dramatic and fiery eloquence of\nMr. Daniel, of Virginia, who appealed\nto his colleagues to do what, ou his\n as senator he deemed right nnd\nvote to do justice to him who was\nknocking at the senate doors.\nAs the big clock opposite the presi\ndent pro tern, indicated four o'clock\nthere was a hush in the chamber. Mr.\nFrve, in the chair, announced that\nthe hour for the final vote had arrived,\nind that the question was the pending\nmotion of Mr. Chandler to strike out of\nthe resolution declaring Mr. Quay not\nto be entitled to a seat the word not.\nSenators throughout the chamber\neargerly followed the roll call, for all\nknew the vote would be close. The\nfirst sensation was caused by the\nfailure of Mr. Pettigrew to answer to\nhis name, although he was in his seat.\nWhen Mr. Vest's name was called he\nvoted "no" in a clear voice, thus dash\ning the last hope of the friends of\nMr. Quay, who had expected confident\nly that the distinguished Mfssoiirian\nwould vote for Jiis long-tim- e
de66ca0fa14df5b752ebcd4ce3121837 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.7739725710298 43.798358 -73.087921 worth as much as a good crop of grass on\nthe same ground ; the grain is cooked in\nmany ways and Iorms an excellent food\nfor man, and it forms a good food alone, or\nis a valuable ingredient fn mixed food for\nstock. The importance of this crop, and\nthe difficulties in raising it in cool seasons,\nshould stimulate every farmer to learn\nwhat kind is best, and induce those that\nhave good kinds to select seed judiciously,\nthat they may ia a measure overcome the\ntroubles that attend its cnltivation. And\nhere we should urge one very important\nconsideration upon the farmer, which, we\nbelieve, will pass unnoticed by many to\ntheir very serious disadvantage ; that is,\nthis season has been unusually propitious\nto the corn crop, and the firmer should\ncalculate to plant seed suited to the short,\ncool seasons for a number of years last\npast, rather than calculate on a succession\n such seasons as the present.\nThe earliest ears tbut ripen, if they are\nwell filled, of good form and large size,\nshould be selected for seed, and marked\nby tying some husks together, or in some\nother way, that they may be distinguished\nat harvest; or n the corn be well ripened\nit may be gathered at the time the selec-\ntion is made. If a very valuable variety\nof corn be cultivated that is rather late for\nthe climate and it be desirable to acclimate\nit, the very earliest ears must be selected\nwithout so much regard to their size and\nbeauty ; but if the corn be sufficiently\nearly, and it be necessary to improve in\nthe size of the ears and in productiveness,\nthen none should be selected but the large,\nhandsome ears that are well filled, and\nthat grow on stalks that have two good\nears or more, thebest of which only should\nbe taken.
091d70fe42a2de0f60e0f5c9b52ccab6 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.184426197885 38.894955 -77.036646 public from mailing in and grabbing Uie\nsalesmen and attendauls at the booths and\nholding their attention lo the nearly total\nexclusion of all other interests. This was\nso m:n ked and the "cycle show craze" was\nso pronounced thai lunumeiable attempts,\nand all more than successful, to hold local\nejcle.shows In many other cities were made.\nOmnha, Milwaukee, Albany, Philadelphia,\nBoston, Utica, Providence, in fact every\ncity or over 20,000 population, has had\nor "will have a ejele show. At all of these\nplaces an admission fee of filly cents, with\nno reduction for children, was charged\nand cheerfully paid. Nothing better could\nillustrate the popular cycling crnc than\nthis exhibition or n detiie to i ay to see-\nthe latest models and s( jleg in w heels, and\nincideutallvtoobtalna bultcnora souvenir\ngiven out at U'C sUmdn of various ex-\nhibitors. Mauy attribute Ihis craze tolely\nto the dcs.ie to obtain lomething for noth-\ning, as illutlratcd In the rush for souvenirs\nat the shows. Manager Buckley is satis-\nfied that it Is more olten a genuine doiic\ntoobtalnknowiedge and compare the makes\nof wheels, as well as to meet other wheelmen\nand enjoy a social time, than it is a\nsouvenir grab game thot fills the halls (if\nthese events to overflowing.\nHowever. Manager Buckley Is determined\nto make the first Washington cycle show\nmore than an exhibition of wheels and to\ngive more than value for value. He wilt\nnot only furnish the finest display of\nimproved wheels and accessories seen out-\nside one of the National Cycle shows, but\nhcj will give daily concerts to entertain\nthe visitors and also the most thrilling\n"liome-tralner-
f6408dd1031d37ab6797d910b09a5fe5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.078082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 It is said that one morning about\n1S62, his father thought that the\ntime had arrived when the' boy\nshould learn the boundaries of the\nHart holdings, which even now are\nwidespread. One spring .morning,\ntherefore, the father took nim afield\nand pointed out the boundaries, im-\npressing the lad with the necessity\nof learning the correct lines. May-\nbe it was the May morning that de-\ntracted tho youngster's gaze from\ntho mythical lines which his father\npointed out or it might have been\nthat young Samuel was not imdujy\nimpressed with the Importance of\nknowing the property lines, at any\nrate the story has it that ho did not\nretain many of his father's words.\nThe year passed and on a spring\nmorning a Iear later his father again\ntook him afield and asked him to\npoint out the boundaries which had\nbeen shown him the pear previous.\n"I can't remember them, father,"\nconfessed the boy.\nHis father then took him around\nthe same again and again\nand indicated the boundaries which\nseparated the Hart land from tho\nneighbors holdings. And again the\nboy's attention wandered from the\nbusiness at hand "as he possibly\nthought of the large trout he had\nseen the day before in the brook\nwhich bordered their estate. An-\nother year passed. On the third\nspring morning his father again\nasked young Samuel to point out tho\nboundaries which had twice been ex\nplained to him and again Samuel\npleaded ignorance of the subject.\nHis father thought then that two\nsuch excursions were sufficient.\nSilently he went to a nearby alder\nthicket and cut a sizeable switch\nwhich he peeled expertly. He then\nadvanced to the waiting boy.\n"My son," he said, "this wall here\nis the first boundary. Please re-\nmember it." With that he laid the\nboy over his knee and administered\na few ungentle whacks. They pro-\nceeded to the second boundary and\nthe father laid the youngster over\nhis knee again.
c290da67df538038e2dcb092fbe530cd THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1858.209589009386 37.561813 -75.84108 scon in the starry heavens, and for tin;\nsake of employing a few hours of leis\nure, in such a way as to. Le profitable to\nmyself, and perhaps instructing, in\nsome measure, ta others, that I propose\nto give you a lew chapters of thought.\nIf you think, Mr. Editor, they will bo\nof any service in tho way of helping\nthose who have not the timo to devote\nto such inquiries, to a better under-\nstanding of these things, and that they\nwill aid thoso who may read, to seo tho\nbeauty in, and adore the Being that\nspread out the heavens as a great ban-\nner of blue, and studded it with scin-\ntillating gems of light, you cau givo\nthem placo in your paper.\nWhen wc look out, upon a clear\n tho sky seems like an immenso\nconcave, resting upon tho visible hori-\nzon, and all over it, ns appears to tho\neye, equally distant, are the stars. Tha\nearth's diurnal or daily motion, from\nwest to east, gives the stars thejapparent\nmotion of running a raeo from, east to\nwest, and hiding themselves behind tho\nearth. It appears to the uneducated\nmind, that tho earth is in the center,\nand that all theso shining hosts revolve\naround it at an equal distance; but tho\ntruth U, that tho Sun is tho centci'\nround which wo revolve, with all tho\nglobes of this system, and of tha almost\ninfinite distance that intervenes be-\ntween us and the nearest of the fixed\nstars, tho uneducated have no idea, and\nthe most enlightened can farm r,o just\nconception.
05db0bd2408b9c5559785bc56e832483 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.3273972285642 39.623709 -77.41082 faculties the two have in common: Reason\n,onsoience. will, are specifications in point\nMan is endowed with them and the oonsti\ntulion and course of nature reveal tucir ex\nistence in the workings of God. By resem-\nblance of attribute and identity ot lite wc\nire proven Gods children. And will God\nkill His own children? kill us before we\nhave fully realized what tlie life He ha*\ngiven is? Wo long for happiness and vet\nive get comparatively little of it here. Wc\ndicrisli an ideal of perfection and yet we\nnever attain it on earth. We are but be-\nginning to understand wiiat a grand and\niioble tiling life may lie when we have tc\nie down and die. We are just on tlie point\nif reaching the rewards for which We haw\nwaited anti toiled when the end conics, uric\nif we arc ever to enjoy them it must be 111\nanother world. Now is God iiqall tins and\nall tlie while deceiving us? When we de\nfire the bread of everlasting life will lie\ngive us the stone of everlasting death? At\nter we have prayed to Him, trusted in\nHim, lifted up our hearts to Him. tried\nHis works to do, loved Him longed to\nbe with Him during our residence on cartli\nwill He welcome us when at last wc come\nto Him with annihilation? If so He is\nnot good. If so lie is not God. If R" there\nis no God. If so 011 the throne of Hie uni\nversa is seated not a loving father but a\njeering fiend taunting us for our helpless\nness and delighting in our misery. Right\ncousness. eternal righteousness is against\nany such supposition. It is not possible\nthat tlie devil is supreme. It is not possi\n|,|e that man is more kind, more humane\nand considerate and sympathetic than the\nGod who made him. It is not possible\nthat He who made conscience has no\nconscience. If anything stands the test ol\nreason this does—that He who implanted\nthe sense of justice within ns must Himself\nbe just. Amid all Hie darkness the sor\nvows, the riddles of existence, let us not de-\nspond or despair, let us look confidently\nfor the greatest gift, the gift God owes it\nto Himself to bestow—eternal life.\n“In all the maddening maze of tiling!\nAnd tossed by storm and flood,\nTo one fixed state my spirit clings—\nI know that God is good.
a2cde26047c666e1c9bf83b116bd4be2 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.1657533929476 39.261561 -121.016059 On all tho various forms of Chronic diseases, including\ndiseases of the Lungs, Liver, Stomach, Heart, Kidneys,\nand Spleen,—a cure guaranteed in Hheumntism, Neural-\ngia, Amaurosis, or nervous Blindness, Sick, or nervous\nHeadache, Apoplectic and Congestive fullness of Brain, Ep-\nileptic, Paryloctic ami Hysterical affection*.\nCancer Cured without the use of Knife,\nand attended with little or no pain also Tumors, Ulcers,\nFistulas, and all the various forms of diseases pertaining\nto the EYE and EAli. Diseases of the reproductive\nor genital organs will receive special atteution.\nDr. SNYDER 'S practice in Uhronic and Surgical\ndiseases have been extensive, having been many years\nconnected with an Infirmary in which patients were re\nceived from all parts of the Union, whose diseases were of\nthe most desperate character. Of these he failed to cure\nin a very few instances, in which there was auy reasona-\nble prospect of success lie has restored to health and use-\nfulness hundreds who had given up all hope of recovery,\nand who had suffered for years relief, under the\ntreatment of ninny of the most distinguished Doctors of\nthe age. I)r. S. will visit in the City or country, those\ncases which require personal examination and Surgical\nSkill—Invalids, living at a distance, who cannot make it\nconvenient to consult Dr. Snyder iu person, (although\nhe would prefer seeing the patient at least once,) by send-\ning a carefully written description of the origin and history\nof ids or her case, with its symptoms, audita treatment\nheretofore, with a correct statement of liia present condi-\ntion will enable tho doctor to judge pretty accurately of its\ncurability, and enable him to prescribe the proper reme-\ndies, and give the necessary iustructions requisite to effect\na cure. A volume of testimonials of such cases could be\ngiven, received from patients in nil jiarts of tho country,\nwhom he has cured, and who it was never his pleasure to\nsee. DR. SNYDER deals in no secret nostrums—his pre-\nscriptions are prepared in accordance with the latest im-\nprovements in Medical Science.
02df9753fc94e27faa3227acb3749808 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.760273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 "Have yon ever seen ice blaatad? \n"Many a time, and It is an interesting\nspectacle There are ' several methods\nemployed, because of the different kind*\nof work Bnppoae a rivet Is so frozen\nthat navigation is closed. It is necessary\nto open tbe enaunel. Tbe process Is very\nsimple. Holes are cat in the ice and\ncharges varying from half a pound to\nfive pounds In weight are passed\nthrough them and suspended by w're or\ncord at a distance of from eight Inches\nto five or six feet beneath tbe nether side\nof tbe ice. The deeper tbe charge is\nhang the wider Us sphere of iLttuenee,\nfor there is less force spent In throwing\nInto tbe air tbe Ice and water displaced A\ncharge suspended five feet under fresh\nwater Ice 36inches thick will break a circle\nof nearly two hundred feet in dreamier\nence. Balt water ios, which la pearly\nalways rotten, can bs broken In xlxty-\nfoot circles with from a half to three\n of a pound of tbe explosive. It\nis quick work, and a few men can ac\ncompilait a great deal in one day Float\nlag Ios li broken by throwing tbe charge\nto tbe middle of the cake.\n"When it comes to an ice gorge the\ncharge has to be increased, sometimes\ngoing up as high as twenty-five ponnds.\nThe weakest points in the gorge are\nselected for tbe placing of tbe charge\nTbs battery is nsnally employed to set\nthem off, It being safer than the fuse by\nreason of tbe uneven surface over which\ntne workmen have to baat their retreat\nafter placing tbe explosives in position\na slip, a fail, and a burning fuse might\nmean eternity to some poor devil. With\ntbe battery it is different The man who\ntarns on the carrant can wait nntil all Is\nclear. Bat tbe fose baa no conscientious\nscruples It would as lief blow up a man\nasacakeofice and tbe menhave a\nprofound regard for Its lack of humane\nfeeling.
b1c433a27202ace174d0925d8fa15c67 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.023287639523 39.290882 -76.610759 THE BARRY CASE. ?The decision of the\nCourt ofKrrors.in the well known Barry case,\nhas resulted like the D'Hauteville case in Phil-\nadelphia, by giving the child to the custody of\nthe mother. This we have already said would\nbe giving the natural and proper direction to\nthe whole sabject. all things considered; yet it\nought not to be deemed as establishing a pre-\ncedent which hereafter may be considered an\nestablished principle, for many circumstances\nmay occur which may render it highly inex-\npedient to give the child to the mother. Su h\ncases are to be decided by equity, by circum-\nstances, by sound discretion, in the absence\nof any positive law on the subject. Nor from\nthis termination of the case would wc desire\nto encourage -those separations between man\nand wife, growing out of what is called in fash-\nionable parlance "an uncongeoiality of temper. "\n,It occurs, however, to us that a similiar case\nwas similarly decided some years ago in this\nState, with very brief legal proceedings. A\nMajor W. on trie Hudson river, a man of for-\ntune, but with peculiar notions of matrimony\n very much in favorof bringing up a wife to\nthe hand, undertook to educate a country girl\nwho, in due time, he married. There was,\nnotwithstanding ail his caution, "an unconge-\nnialityof temper,' which rendered the parties\nunhappy, and separation, and finally a divorce\nwas the result; the lady continuing to reside in\nthe Highlands, while the Major and an infant"\ndaughter emigrated to the South, where he\nsoon again married.\nDying in a few years, h* directed by will\nthat his daughter should be conveyed to Ver-\nmont, to be educated by a certain clergyman\nHer step motber accordingly carried her to that\nState, in a secret manner, unknown to her mo-\nther, who, after many painful inquiries, finally\ndiscovered her abode. With the aid of some\nfriends, she devised a plan to possess herself\nof her child. A farmer in the neighborhood\nespoused her cause, and called in one day, as\nifoy accident, to see the clergyman, who had\na large family of his own In fondling with\nthe children, this girl, then about seven years\nold, came in for a snare of his attention, and he\nremarked,
84831b92d23e27fa189271f70273a053 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.4002731924206 41.681744 -72.788147 sully their fair hands and more of\nthat. But she preferred to strike\nfrom the shoulder and her aim was\nperfect. She told her audience that if\npolitics is rotten it was their fault.\nShe didn't give three long cheers\nfor Charming Womanhood, as so\nmany speakers who address audi-\nence of this type, prefer to do. Sen-\nator Alice went, to the core of things\nand, perhaps, aroused a few of her\nlisteners from their complacency.\nCome again. Senator, and next time\naddress your remarks to the men\nand tell them where they pet off.\nIf you promise you'll do it. the Ob-\nserver will use his influence with the\neditorial powers and see that your\ntalk gets first page position so that\nyour message may tie. driven home.\nThere' great deal of Al Smith\ntalk heard on the street, e Hoover,\nat present, isn't very strong. Con-\nnecticut republicanism is sitting on\nthe fence, where it is frequently\nfound, ready to hop onto the band\nwagon the minute any candidate at\nthe national election shows any un-\nusual strength. J. Henry Roraback\ncannot be dislodged from bis posi-\ntion. He professes to believe that\nPresident Coolidge can be prevailed\nupon to accept a renomination in\nspile of the president's assurance\nthat he does not choose to run and\nthat mention of his name in connec-\ntion with the candidacy is embarras-\nsing. Meanwhile the democrats\nthroughout the state are making the\nmost out of the situation and seem\nto he progressing in the campaign\nto line up support for Smith.
034edcf4d783aee38e5c78d7a02cd478 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.009589009386 58.275556 -134.3925 One of tho best evidences in the\nworld that the Skagway, Whitehorse\nand Dawson route to tho Tanana is the\nonly practicable way to tho great Am-\nerican gold camp is the fact that people\nare coming from Valdez to Skagway on\ntheir way to Fairbanks. A . R . Ileilig,\nclerk of tho United States district\ncourt, arrived iu this city on the last\nboat and took the train from here Sat-,\nurday morning, leaviug Whitehorse\nSunday afternoon by White Pass stage,\nMr. Heilig was iu a hurry to reach his\ndestiuatiou and was afraid to tackle\nthe Valdez trail. Notwithstanding that\nhe was at the coast terminus of that\nronte to start with, ho came to Skag¬\nway facing a disagreeable and nasty\noceau voyage of several days that ho\nmight make the remainder of the way\nin comfort rather than to attempt to\nwallow through tho unbrokeu snow\nbanks on the Valdez glacier or mush\nover the fastness of tho Cop¬\nper river valley..Skagway Alaskan.\nCol. W . T. Perkins, auditor and Nome\nmanager of the Northwestern Commer-\ncial Company, who was recently a can-\ndidate for the governorship of Alaska,\nto succeed John G. Brady, is being\nurged by his friends for appointment\nas United States marshal at Nome.\nThe office recently became vacant\nthrough the dismissal of Frank II.\nRichards, and has been temporarily\nfilled by Judge Mooro, as provided by\nlaw in such cases. It has been assum¬\ned that the president would not make\nthe appointment until spring, unless\nsome desirable candidate should ap¬\npear who was willing to make a trip to\nNome over the trail. George Shea, of\nNome, is also a candidate for the\nmarshalship, and has a strong follow¬\ning. Several other candidates have\nbeen quietly brought forward by sena¬\ntors and representatives from Western\n9tates, but the president is not con¬\nsidering any applicants at present.
36822907601a05c5a9da7817cd757f50 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.1520547628108 37.561813 -75.84108 the country will depend upon the num-\nber of cats. How can that be ? Because the\nnumber of bees is dependent upon the\nnumber of field mice, which eats the\nbees. Hence the more cats, the fewer\nmice, and the fewer mice, the more bees.\nIf the whole genus of bumble bees be\ncame extinct, or very rare, the heart a\nease and red clover would become rare or\nwould disappear. How is that? Because\nbees promote the growth of those flowers.\nThe visits of bees are necessary to the\niertuization or some kinds ot clover, and\nalmost indispensable to the fertilization\nof the heart's ease. In a word no bees.\nno seed ; no seed, no increase of the\nflowers. 1 he more visits from the bees.\nthe more seed from the flower ; the more\nseed the flower, the more flowers\nirom the seeds. Nearly all our orchida\nceous plants absolutely require the visits\not insects to remove their pollen masses,\nand thus to fertilize them. Twenty\nheads ot unprotected Dutch clover\nyielded 2,900 seeds. The same number\nprotected from bees, produced not one\nseed ; one hundred heads of unprotected\nclover yielded 27,000 and the same num-\nber piotected from bees, not a seed.\nSave Your Coal Ashes. Too often\nit has been said that there is no good\nin coal ashes, but chemical examination\ngives them tbe power of absorption\nalmost equal to charcoal ; and if, when\ntaken from the stove or grate, they are\nmingled with the .chamber ley of the\nhouse and with the soap wash from the\nkitcheu, they are found valuable as\nabsorbers of fertilizing ingredients.
7c0731bedd4bd32c7ad8c8376ce4f536 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.8178081874682 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, Monday, Oct. 23.\nA deputation of Congregationalists,\nconsisting of tho pastor and 16 members\nof tho now Church recently organized\nin this city, called upon President John¬\nson to-day. in pursuance of resolutions\nrecently adopted by that body, and ex-\n{tressed to him the respectful wish that\nte will appoint and set apart Thursday,\nthe 80th of November next, tho day us¬\nually observed annually by most of the\nStates in the Union, as a day of national\nthanksgiving and prayer to Almighty\nGod for His goodness unto us as a na¬\ntion, and especially for the suppression\nofthe recent Rebellion, for tho destruc¬\ntion of Slavery.tho cause or our civil\nwar.and for tho restoration or peace\nwithin all our borders, and to offer de¬\nvout supplications that He still would\nkeep us as He has done in all our\nnational history and trials under His\ndivine guardianship, and inspire all our\nrulers and people to deal justly, love\nmercy, aud humbly before Hiin;\nand tendering to President Johnson\ntheir prayers that he may in the dis¬\ncharge of the high and solemn duties\nwhich Providence has devolved upon\nhim, be sustained by the God or our\nfathers and bo guided by that wisdom\nwhich comes down from above.\nThe Rev. B . F . Morris, tho pastor, in\nhis address said: In common with all\nthe churches in this city and through¬\nout the land, it is the aim of the church\nsociety we represent, through the benign\ndoctrines influences or the christian re¬\nligion, to add much strength to the ad¬\nministration of the Government, and to\ndifTuso those christian and patriotic\nprinciples which constitute the true life\nand moral glory of nations.\nWo sincerely invoke, Mr. President,\nthe God of Washington and the.Gofl of\nAbraham Lincoln, whom the nation\nprofoundly believes were aided aud\nguided by God in their respective works,\n(be one to found, and the other to pre-
0367d3e20bc32b718635305dde7fb54f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 By rlrtne of a deed of tnwt made by ftamni\nlien and Mary J. Allen hi* wife, to me iu trurtw\nsecure the Crtscent Building A»ocUtion, data\nctober 29, U8S, recorded In the office of the cw\nf the County Court of Marshall County, W«t Yti\nInia. In Deed of Trust Book No. 5, pate 1ft, i mi\n01 at the front door of the Court Bouse of Mai\ntall county, on\nSATURDAY, THE 11th DAY OP JULY, 1885,\nMomeucing at 10 o'clock a. m., tlio following <j<\nSlbed property, that Is to say: A certain tract c\nmd situated In Union Dbtrfct, in Alarthall (vat\nr. State of Wert Virginia, bounded as follow*, u\nrit: Beginning at a stake In Richard Allen's llti\near Wallaoe's spring; thence with said line tout]\nJ$j° K. 4212-100 poles to n stake on a branchc\noggs' hun; thence down the mcan^on them\n»55l00polestoastakein theorklual lloe; Oiena\nV W. to a hickory in the original Uue and li\ndrhard Allen's line: thence with the ortolanl lin\n62*W.74po'eatoa red oak and becchinU\nriglnal line; thenco C&° W. 88 poles to a sum tre\narner to BenJ. AlcMechens; thence 4S9 w7£ polt\n> a red elm oorner to John Qulgley; thence .\\\\a\nJ, 60 poles a black walnut corner to John Quii\njy; thence N. 87® W. 68 poles to a white oak if\nmall drain: thence with the drain down to\nolnt corner to John Qulgley and lohn Brown to\neech on the point: thence up the run to a tup\nree on the bank of the run; thenco up tho tu\nrlth tho meanders thereof and bindlug tlioreon t\nstouo marked As tbenoeH.870 K. 22 pole* to\n[one marked B; thence to the beginning, suppose\n) contain 189 acres, be the same more or It*.\nThe title to the above land Is ti llered to be re:\njet, but I will convey only the title vested In d\nysald deod of trurt.\nTsams orSAL*rOne third, and as much norei\nse purchaser elects to pay iu ca h ou the dsy t\nUe, the balance in two equal tust&lmeuti at on\ntid two years, with Interest, for w hich tho ptii\nluiser nhall executc his notes with good n-cmlti\nearinf Interest fiom the d«y of tale, tbe leu\nUo to be retalnod as further security for the «T<\nrrod payments, or at the purchaser s optlou I\nlay secure tho notes for such payments by d<«\nImU.ontoproI««i;pHcMARi)iiuiw\nW. J . W . Cowden, Solicitor ju
0e6bb1a532178bc29005881fa0d21965 THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1918.2123287354134 35.721269 -77.915539 "Under these condition I told him to\nspit obt his scheme. It was so daring\nand simple that it took my breath\nawiy. This is what he proposed :\n"If the Boches should use that road\nagain, to send by the tap system the\ntarget and range. I had previously\ntold him abeut our captain talking out\nloud as if he were sending through\norders. Well, If this happened, I was\nto send the dope to Cassell and he\nwould transmit it to the battery com-\nmander as officially coming through\nthe observation post. Then the bat-\ntery would open up. Afterwards, dur-\ning the Investigation, Cassell would\nswear he received It direct. They\nwould have to relieve him, because it\nwas impossible from his post in the\nbattery dugout to know that the road\nwas being used at that time by the\nGermans. And also it was impossible\n him to give the target, range and\ndegrees. You know a battery chart is\nnot passed around among the men like\na newspaper from Blighty. From him\nthe Investigation would go to the ob-\nservation poet, and the observing off-\nicer could truthfully swear that I had\nnot sent the message by 'phone, and\nthat no orders to fire had been issued\nby him. TThe investigators would then\nbe up In the air, we would be snfe, the\nBoches would receive a good bashing,\nand we would get our own buck on Old\nPepper. It was too good to be true.\nI ghefully fell In with the scheme,\nand tttld Cassell I was his ment.\n"Then I waited with beating heart\nand watched the captain like, a hawk.\n"He was beginning to fidget again\nand was drumming on the sandbags\nwith his feet. At last, turning to me,\nlie sold:
09fd5ba5e1fab34b47c0b5379d0e4241 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.015068461441 39.745947 -75.546589 Accommodation,® 00, 6 55 ,8 06,10 45,1188 a m.\n1238.225.840.620,748.1080pm.\nNewYork.I55,265,420,830,056, 880, 900,\n1005.1046.1151»m.11219, 137,225,S06,*610.\n517.656.«31. ' 06,1080pm.\nBoston, without chante. 1016 a m, 8 66 p m.\nFlorida and the South, (via Atlantic Coast\nLine)1219am.1260pm.\nNew Orleans, Richmond and Danville Kx-\n1res«.3741pns.\nWest Chester, via Lamokln, 6 30,8 06 am.,\n225,840>. m\nNewark Centre and Intermediate stations,\n740am,683pm.\nRail!more and Washington, 485. 801, 911,\n1015. II00 am.1304.1250, II15,208.424.628,\nt603,668.741.880nm,1219night.\nBaltimore and Intermediate stations, 3 88,\n445,806pm,and1•49 night.\nBaltimore and Bay Line. 6 28 p m.\nTrains for Delaware Division leave for\nNew Castle. 8 18,1112 a m, 2 41,4 30,8 09, 6 90,\n951pm,1206night.\nLewes,818ain.427pm.\nExpress for Dover, Harrington and Delmar,\n8IS,1103am.427pm,1201night.\nHarrington and way stations only. 2 41 p m.\nExpress tor Wyoming. 6 60 p m.\nExpress tor < ape i Karies, Old Com­\nfort and Norfolk. 11 03 a m, 12 01 night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad etreet, for Wil­\nmington, express, 8 50. 7 20, 7 25. 8 81, 9 10,10 20,\n11 18 am. 121«,+12 85,180, 1 68, 8 46, 4 01, 4 41,\n508,580,556.617.866,740,11(8,1116,11IBpm.\nAccommodation, 6 20. 7 83.1088 a m,l 28 , 8 08.\n408,437.823.888,1003.1188pm.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington for:\nPhiladelphia, express. 1 55, 3 65, 4 20. 8 50,9 00.\n1006,1151am187,805,504,51«.566, 706, 735.\n912pm. Accommodation,7CO,806am,1210,\n145,4 05 ,6 20 ,10 30 pm.\nChester, express. 1 55 4 30,8 60.9 00,10 05,1161,\nam,137,604, 566, 700,013pm. Accommo­\ndation.700.806a m, 1210, 145,406, 620,725,\n1080pm.\n,Æe,y,Xork' express, 1«, 2 55, 4 20, 7 00. 8 60 .\n««l^loSpm0, 1ST- 3 05< 404< <6 10 **\nBoston, without change, 6 66 p m.\nNew Orleans. Richmond and Danville\npress, 37 41 p m.\nWest theater,\n580pm.
2ad297104e50bf541c98aeaa57cb8b6d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.4150684614408 40.063962 -80.720915 ton haa been telegraphed to in regard to 0\ntho matter, and haa sonified hia willing* Cf\nneflB to accept the appointment, end will\narrive in the city to-dav, The new Judge J'\nwas born in Klchtnond about forty yearn «><\nago, and is a iou of the late lion. John M.\nPatton, for many years Attorney (Jen* Hi\nera! of the old State, and one et\nof the revisers of the Code of 01\n1840. He waa educated iu the ei\nUniversity of Virginia and Military In- ca\natitute and is a gentleman of magnidoent bt\nattainments and erudition. Duriug the P'\n"late onnleasantness" he waa a soldier on\nthe Confederate side and held the rank of cs\nMajor. Since the war he haibeen engaged in\nin the practice of law in this State and is a\none of the moat successful lawyers in it. m\nHe is married to a daughter of ex-Senator \nAllen T. Gaporton, of this State. In eon* 01\nversatlon with the other members of the\nSupreme Court yesterday we were flBaiired re\nthat no appointment that could havo been ««\nmade could be more congenial to them. t'i\nCircuit Court, Part 2.Judge Melvin,\nThis court met at 0 o'clock yesterday\nand disposed of the following business: [.\nThe case of the State of West. Virginia at\nvs. Alex. Letnley, indicted for horso steal* f']\ning, was continued until this morning. J;1\nHiato vs. Chaa. Nledemeyer, indicted for\nstealing Mayor Sweeney's horse and J*\nbuggy. Jnrv: Simon Uhaso, H. C. Patter* 1)1\nson, Win. Kfilcgham, Theo. Klievis, John\nUrban, James Johnson, Chan. Dion, C. I,\nHagedorn, M. Heilslein, Isaac Liuton, y\nKuisell Bane, Albert Ziuk. Houston and\nHtifel fur defense, and Jordan for the Stato.\nThe jury at 8 o'clock returned into court J)\nwith a verdict of guilty, and fixed his ten-
1daf83dafebf03e67864ca811cd6131a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.5767122970574 41.004121 -76.453816 that lliu elephants 01 thuluresiol'CVylon\naud tho Ileus ofour bedrooms uru uliko\nsubjugated to thu service of mail by\ntho process of biarviug ami tethering ;\nonly, indeed, tho ttickiu required ditl'ers\ncuusiilerably iu strength and iorm, but\ntho principle is thu same.\nWhen thu ilea bccoiuu tractable ho Is\nfed by being placed on u bit of raw beef,\nat which hu sucks greedily. Quiero,\ncoula wo not utilize raw beef as u bait\nfor it "Ilea trap" to entry about with us\n011 continental tours, etc.; by\nthe fleas to Mr. Kltctiluglutm wo might\nhelp to pay our hotel bill. Tho regular\nfleas aru fed over night upon tho back\nof their master's hand; ho feeds us\nmany nn eight or itluo at n time. Thoy\nbury their probosces deep Into tlioskln,\n when sucking, turn their tails up\ninto tho air liku a duck turns his tall\nBkyward when hunting for worms in\nthe mud. They would, If allowed so to\ndo, feed for four hours; Mr. K . has ob-\nserved that they act llko ptunps, that\ntho blood will run out from them when\ntheir stomachs aro full. Ho therefore\nleaves them on his hand till ho knows\nby this sign that they aro as full nsthey\ncan hold, aud then ho takes them olf\nhis hand. But this must bo donu care\nfully, or thu proboscis, thrust into tho\ntkln, llko tho boring tuba of an artesian\nwell. Is liable to bo Injured. Sometimes\ntho lloas will feed freely .sometimes they\nwon't eat at all. Mr. K, thinks they\nhavo thelrtempors llko ourselves; somo-
0830a45d146434f18fc6566995dc8571 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.2123287354134 39.756121 -99.323985 from the five acres. Mowing it all three\ntimea and part of it four times. The\nreason for not mowing the whole piece\nthe four timea was that he saved a part\nof the third cutting for seed and probably\nwould have saved all the third crop for\nseed had not all previous efforts to succeed\nin getting it threshed failed. Mr. Mar-\nshall thinks there was a little more than\ntwo acres that he saved for seed and the\nyield waa sixteen bushela of nice seed\nwhich is worth ten dollars per bushel,\naud every bushel ia sold. Now to sum\nup a little we find a handsome profit off\nfrom those five acres. We have thirty-si- x\ntons of hay, that putting it on a basis\nof prairie hay and comparing their rela-\ntive values aa food for cattle, worth at\nleast ten dollars psr ton which would\nmake $3C0 for the hay crop, and the six-\nteen bushela cf seed at ten dollars per\nbushel is S160; total $520, or little\nover S100 p9r acre. Some of our neigh-\nbor farmers have refrained from sowing\nalfalfa on account of seed being so cost-\nly. Others because they thought dry\nweather would kill out tue plant. Some\nthink if a person were lucky enough to\nraise a crop they could never get the hay\ncurfed ready for stack or barn. Again,\nsome think the hay cannot be kept\nwithout a barn. Now to tell of these we\nthink we are able to cite cases to prove\nsuch ideas to be erroneous. We must\nhave more tame grass iu order that we\nmay save from one and one- ha - lf
a202e3eef05cf3d0c22de627b9efce65 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.2397259956874 43.798358 -73.087921 Within twelve months, there has been I\nan increase in numbers and in moral ef- - '\nfort. A Pledge, embracing all kinds of!\nintoxicating liquors, was ratified bv the\nSociety on the 4th of July last, and altb-o - '\nnot designed to affect the duties of any\nperson, but such as might be disposed to\nattach their names to it, yet it has obtained\nan extensive support the number that\nadhere to it, and that now reside within a\nreasonable distance to be subject to its dis-\ncipline being 182. while those that adhere\nonly to the Pledge embracing distilled\nsP,r,ts' (which has been in operation more\nlnan f,,r years) and that now reside\nvvithin a reasonable distance to be subject\nto its control, amount to 144. It is wor-\nthy of remark, that although the number\nof members in this Society, thnt has signed\nthe Total Pledge, considerably exceeds the\nnumber of those that have only signed the\nold Pledge, yet we have cause to be-\nlieve that a greater proportion ol the for-\nmer strictly adhere to the restrictions of\ntheir Pledge, than of the latter to theirs.\nIt may not be amiss to observe, that within\na few months, this Society has caused an\nexamination be made, relative to the\nefficiency of its constitution, with a view\n'to make improvements therein, if the\nexigencies oi the case should require it.\nThe result was the adoption of an entire\nnew Constitution, calculated not only to\ncarry out the design of the old one, but\nclothed with energies answerable to the\nonward march of the Temperance reform\nThe 2d article states the object to be the'\nentire overthrow of intemperance.\nThe 3d reads thus: This Society shall\nendeavor to obtain its object, by collecting\nand diffusing information upon the true\ncharacter of intemperance, and of the\nactual condition of its victims.the amount\nof misery introduced by it, and of the\nmany vices, which follow in its tram.\nAlso, py rciraining nom any otner man\nthe necessary medical, and chemical use\nof distilled spirituous liquors, and many\nof them by abstaining from any other than\nthe necessary medical, chemical and sa-\ncramental use, of every kind of intoxicat-\ning liquors, and bv endeavoring in all\nsuitable ways to dissuade other people\nfrom making a free use of the same.\nArticle 4th. The Officers of this Socie-\nty shall be a President, Vice President,\nSecretary, Treasurer, Librarian and seven\nor more Counselors; all of whom shall
58c23d46bc46cd690b85da818b04a112 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.5082191463723 44.939157 -123.033121 and right to stomach. Thev roughed It,\nRivers forcing. Ritchie 'stabbed left\nto face and tried right cross but it\nwas blocked. Rivers put hard left to\nhead on the break and then a hard\nrieht to head Bonding Ritchie hack.\nThey clinched in center and Ritchie\nducked left stab and ducked left to\njaw. Rivers put left to face. Ritchie,\ntrying to straighten him up, tried\nright to head. Rivers put left to face.\nThey were clinched at the bell. Even\nround, Rivers doing tho forcing.\nRound 5. Rivers is better than even\nmoney now. Rivers put left to faco.\nAfter a clinch Ritchie put left to stom-\nach. They sparred and Ritchie put\nright to heart. Ritchie put left to face,\nright to head. Rivers landed left to\nhead and the another right to face.\nRitchie tried right cross but Rivers\nducked it and the champion 's\nhead in a clinch. Rivers put hard left\nfo head. Ritchie kept poking left to\nhead. They clinched. Ritchie put left\nto face and blocked left to face. Rit-\nchie pot hard left and then a right to\nfnce. Ritchie put three hard rights to\nhead, forcing Rivers around the ring.\nHe ducked Rivers' lead anil cave him\na backhand in the mouth. Rivers put\nleft to head at bell. Ritchio's round.\nRound fl. They wrestled across the\nring. Ritchie put left to fnce. They\nexchanged left to tho face, and then\nleft honks. Rivers seemed wild. In a\nlong clinch nothing happened. Rivers\nwas short with a hook on he break.\nRitchie forced him. Thev clinched\nairain. Then Ritehio put left over the\near. Rivers landed left to stomach and\nriirht to head, then a left to the head.\nRitchie forced tho Mexican
058c237fccb64309476c2c56b09d983a THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.0726027080163 46.187885 -123.831256 Chicago, Jan. 23. A young man\nwhose real name is Otto Funk was\narrested last night for having in his\npossession a large number of books\nstolen from the public library. The\nbooks which were seized at his resi-\ndence, were found to be in large box-\nes, and these boxes were removed to\nthe new City- - Hall building\nwhen the discovery was made that\namong them were six or seven infer-\nnal machines containing dynamite,\nany one of which was sufficient to\nblow up such a building. Consterna-\ntion prevailed at police headquarters\nwhen the discovery was made, and a\nstartling number oi rumors were at\nonce put afloat. Funk when ques-\ntioned, said he was only experiment-\ning. The matter is still a mystery.\nThe box found among the stolen\nbooks was a foot long and six inches\ndeep. Inside of was a lot of saw-\ndust packed about a revolver. The\nsawdust was saturated with glycer-\nine. A little crank made of thick\nwiro was attached to the outside of\ntho box. Another box, about twice\ntho size of the first one described,\nwas filled with a dozen packages of\ndynamite Funk has been known as\nJ. O. Talbort and was a student at\ntho Chicago medical college, and con-\ntends that ho was experimenting for\nscientific purposes only. Tho detec-\ntives, however, are divided in their\nviews and contend that ho intended\nto commit suicide if arrested. Tho\nstatement was also made that he was\nan active socialist, but this was de-\nnied. The statement is made by the\npolice that if tho machine had ex-\nploded, its force would have certaiuly\ndestroyed tho City Hall building and\noccasioned frightful loss of life.
47f5c728fc5d3b09ee6dd0c1cc7f22ca VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.2999999682902 43.798358 -73.087921 Messrs. Reed, Wing & Cutler Gent.\nI feel it a duty I owe the public, and es-\npecially to hundreds of my fellow beings\nwho are now suffering under different dis-\neases of the lungs, to give you a statement\nof the -- good effects I have experienced\nfrom the use of the Vegetable Pumonary\nBalsam. Having from my youth up been\ntroubled with different complaints of the\nlungs, such as spitting of blood, a dry\ntroublesome cough, frequent hoarseness,\nwith severe, fits of coughing, and indeed\nall the symptoms of consumption, and from\ntime to time 1 have consulted several emi\nnent physicians, and have taken much\nmedicine, but I received little or no relief\nand at last they told me there was no help\nfor me; that my case was beyond the\nreach of their medicines. In the spring\nof I was advised by a friend to try\nthe Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. I ob-\ntained two bottles, and on trial I was sur-\nprised to find so sudden and effectual re-\nlief which it gave me, and after using it\nnbout five weeks all my complain's were\nentirely removed, and I was restored to\ngood health. Since that time I have kept\nit constantly by me, in case of the appear-\nance of any of the above complaints.\n1 have known a large number of cases\nwhere all other medicines have failed ol\naffording any relief, the Balsam was at\nlength resorted to, and speedily effected a\ncure. I would therefore recommend to\nevery person that has any of the above\ncomplaints, on their first appearance to\ntake the Vegetable. Pulmonary Balsam,\nwhich they will find a safe, convenient\nand positive cure.
215c86dc838b1d34afbef4e2a7f1af49 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.8589040778793 37.451159 -86.90916 oq until yesterday morning dill\nMarlon W Bell of Ohio county Ky\nlearn of the marriage of his duugh\nter Ruth Bell to Theodore Hill tin\nInformation being curried to him\ncomlel11lred\nlong search for his runaway daughter\nMr Bell arrived In Boouvllle lai\nnight the purpose of his visit to this\nplace being to learn the particular\nconnected with the granting of a mar\nxlagejienso teethe eloping couple De\ncause of the tender ago of the girl\nthey were unable to secure a license\nHowever they secured the llcensie\nhero since the girl did not lava to\nappear but eighteen years of age\nU was Mr Bells intention to prose-\ncute any person who might have\nmisrepresented tho girls age How\nover ho learned trout Deputy Clerl\nYoungblood that his daughter repre\nseated her ago as being cigliteui\nyears Under other clrcumstuncei\nwould the license have been granted\nIn n very Interesting manner Mi\nBell told how he had refused to al-\nlow Hill and his daughter to marry\nstating that the refusal was nmdq or\nthe grounds that tho girl was tot\nyoung He hud promised her suite\ntits hand of his daughter its soon as\nshe became eighteen years of age lit\nalso stated that his daughter hud\nbeen going to school und Unit hoi\nlover drove to the school house and\nbegged her to run away with him\nThe couple then went to Owensbon\nand secured un automobile and trltt\nHenderson and Evansvllle before they\ncould escape their pursuers Mr Bell\nstated that he was In Rockport early\nTuesday morning which was exactly\nthe same time that the runaway\nwero in Hoonvllle The fact that hU\ndaughter had married
215f4854613e2de39a504ae7be4ef485 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.0999999682901 37.561813 -75.84108 Appletons' Journal gives, in a weekly form, all\nthe features of the magazine, lta weekly issue\nbrings it a more frequent visitor to the family thau\nis the case with a monthly periodical, while, iu\ncourse of the year, a much greater aggregate and a\nlanier variety ot papers are tnrnisned than are giv-\nen in any of the regrlar monthlies. But, fur those\nwho prefer it, tbe Journal is pot np in Monthly\nParts, and in this form its scope and variety, as\ncompared with other msgazines, become conspicu-\nously apparent.\nApplxtons' Journal win continue to presect\nhealthful, sound, instructive, and entertaining liter-\nature. It will con line itself, as a rule, to ofM serial\nnnrcl at a lime; it will contain the best short stories\nattainable; it will give picturesque descriptions of\nplaces, and stirring narratives ot travel and adven-\nture; it will have eutertaiuing papers various\nsubjects that pertain to the pursuits and recreations\nof the people; i? will give portraits and sketches of\npersons distinguished ii'arioas walks of tile; will\npresent lively, social sketches, having iu special\nview those things the knowledge of which will con-\ntribute to the welfare and happiness of the house-\nhold; it will describe phaes of life in all quarters of\nthe globe; it will disc ess the important events of the\ntime, and the advances made in art, literature, and\nscience; it will endeavor to reject the ideas, move-\nments, and development of society; and, while hop-\ning to enlighten, will strenuously aim to entertain,\nwith large abundance of mat trial, all who resort to\nits pagts for intellectual pleasure. Illustration will\nbe used sufficiently to gtve variety and animation to\nits pages; bnt the aim will be to make it rather a\njournal of popular high-cla-
030ab689e1928e24f1f9fa56a036c951 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1867.6205479134958 39.24646 -82.47849 As to the other, the advance-\nment in the value of tho lands\nalone in tho vicinity of the stream,\nwould probably repay the expend-\niture necessary for the work.\nIn fact, it is so often the case that\nland owners and farmers profit so\nmuch more from railroads, canals\nand turnpikes, than any other of in-\nterest, that they ought to defray\ntho cost of such improvements, to\na great extent, to the exclusion of\nall others. F01 example, the farms\nin Green and Fayette counties,\nBonn., rendered productive and ac-\ncessible by slaokwatering tho Mon- -\nongahela river, are now cheap tt\n100 per acre; whereas, before that\nimprovement was completed, they\nwero hardly worthy owning south\nof the line of tho National Road.\nThere is much to said in favor\nof the proposed improvement.\nWether it can be effected under tho\nrather impracticable Constitution\nof Ohio, remains to be seen. Its\ninexpensiveness ought, however, to\nwarrant a trial. The press is most\nuseful in concentrating public opin\nion as to a given project, and in in\ndicating ways and means. But tho\npress cannot do all. Somebody\nmust put his hand in his pocket.\nluere are capitalists enough inter\nested in tho proposed navigation\nseheme, to give it the next twelve\nmonth. Let some public spirited\ncitizen bring about a consultation\namong these parties. The more\nthey examine tho subject, tho moro\ntho work will commend itself to\ntheir hands. Coal, iron and salt can\nbe found nearly all along Raccoon.\nThey will be wanted some day.
074c631ae31675d39d8eeda4ee4dc812 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.9301369545915 39.745947 -75.546589 publicans who had the, best Interest of development of those Innate God-given J. U.King, president of Colored Mln-\nfhe republic at heart? Would they powers he rises to the other man's isterial Union of Wilmington and pas-\npass laws doing away with the Food level; but equality of opportunity be- tor of Ezion Church; Charles H, Coul-\n\\dminlstralion that saved those of us fore the law; and Justice, whose bourn./member Slate Central Commll-\nwho were unfamiliar with the world foundation is the golden rule. These are lee; Edgar Starling, quartermaster gen- i\nfood supply, from over extravagance, the inalienable rights guaranteed every eral of Odd Fellows ; Convvell Banton, M .\nand the world Including ourselves from citizen of this, our great republic. If D ., member of Board of Education ; John\nsèrlous want? Would they decree that we be citizens, these are the rights o. Hopkins, member City Council;\nDr. Gardeld should step down and out which we shall humbly but persistently Ferdinand Trusty, President of Klon­\nend let the coal proposition take care contend until we, our children, or uun day Club and president of N. A . A . C. P ;\nof itself? At this stage of the pro- grandchildren shall finally become thé j, w. Bond, pastor of Mt. Joy M E\neeedlngs Interferance with either of I beneficiaries of a genuine democracy. Chyrch; J H Pell, pastor A. U. M . P ■\nthese two matters might not have any We bave not we arc not We will not church; H. Clay Stevens. M D ., past\nserious affect, and It might. However ask for any spec|ai favors; we only ask exalted ruler of*Elks; John L. Hubert,\nthe present Congress will put us on a
513922d939ad5cff31f33b34d8bfbbad THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.83698626966 39.768333 -86.15835 the ortücsry rotation of life. It tout be of a\nmaterial which will not spot or soil In a shower.\nIt tnait be of a design which either a tall or a\nshort man may wear without tuaklac him look\ntoo conspicuous. Tbe Knickerbocker suit, for\ninstat.ee, fulfils all these conditio nj admirably,\nand we believe has been adapted for ordinary\nwear in many country gentlemen's bouse. With\nsome alight alterations ia point of material, etc.,\nit rx Ight be esed rer j well in trousers through Lon-\ndon mud en J would soon learn towns, and these\nwho bad to walk in to appreciate the change.\nAbove all, our evening dress seeds radical re\nform. How it happens ibat black cloth has come\nto be associated with occasions of public and pri-\nvate festivity in common with occasions of pub-\nlic and private mourning is a riddle which we\n leave posterity to solve. But it is certain\nthat in tbe existing ittte of society, Eaglubceu\nwear the same dress at a party and at a fune ral\nWe might go further and remind our reader\nthat many a host who eoUrtaioi Lit friend at\ndinner has a butler behind hi chair who is\ndm led preciatly like himself. To add to this\nconfusion, tbe clergyman who rue to say grace\nmight, so far a bis appearance goes.be miatakeu\nfor cither. 1 his is not as it should be, and we\nwere glad to hear some time ago that the Prince\nof Wales contemplated the suggestion ot a com-\nplete change in evening dresses. It i only\nthrough the agency of such an example that we\ncould ever hope to escape from the conventional\nugllnea of a modern tailcoat, and looking at tbe\nsubject from a oomruoo-sense - ,
0dfee63ed5b43f9ab956980deb0dbd93 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.683561612126 42.217817 -85.891125 twenty years, and am now runninf on the Maine\nCentral lUilroad. life on au enpine, ae all engineer\nknow, la very trying to health and strength. The con-\ntinual Jar of theeuplueand atraia on our long trip\nall tend to weaken the kldneya and urinary organs.\nIn addition to this, ten years apo I met with a severe\naccident, and I was taken from under my engine with\nsevere internal Injuries, which gave me great pain. X\nwas laid up for six months, and suffered more than I\ncan describe and more than I wish to suffer again. X\nresumed work, but my kidneys began to disturb me,\nand my nervous systuin seemed to bo out of order. I\ncould not sleep, ss my water demanded such con\nstant attention that I was kept awake a great part of\nthe night ; to uriuate caused severe paias. I employed\nthe best skill in Portland and elsewhere, but\ncontinued to grow worse.\nI was persuaded to try Hunt's Remedy, as X found\nthat many of my frtonds In Portland had uaod it with\ngreat eueceas, yet I had no faith that it would reach\nmy case. However, I seut for a half dozen bottles at\none of the drug stores in Portland, and from the use\nof the first bottle found a great relief. My water waa\nmuch better, and the pain In the back and limba\ngreatly relieved. I continued Its use until I had used\ntea bottles In all, and it baa lteen to me a wonderful\nbtapfting. and I have deemed it a duty and privilegn to\nrecommend it to those troubled in a similar manner;\nand you may publish this for the benefit of our rail-\nroad men and the public in general, aa it has com\npletely cured me.
0352ab8e893c949982843ffce48a68cb PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1905.6863013381533 31.762115 -95.630789 Inning at Boyco Creek whero\nvision line of tho Joso Parada\nleague grant crossos said Boyco\nThenco o with said division\nJMCooksswcorneroftho\na bought of Pauline V McDon\nhenco n with said Cooks w\nry lino to O O Pickles s lino\nW with said Picklos 8 line to\ncorner Thenco n with his w\nary lino to his n w corner\ne with the n boundary lino of\nPickles land and tho n lino\nWells land to said Joo Wells\ncorner Thenco s following\noundarv lino to O O Slaughters\nrner Thenco o with the n lino\nSlaughters and B R Cooks\nA Cooks land to tho no corner\nS A Cooks land Thenco s\nA Cooks o boundary lino to\nvision lino of said Parada throo\ngrant Thenco o with said dl\nline to tho o lino of said Purada-\n north following tho e\nry lino of said Purada grant to\nlw corner of the Walter F Pool\nThenco o following the n lino\nPool survoy to tho n e corner\nn Owens land on said Pool sur\nhence south with said Owens o\nsaid Owons s o corner Thence\nthe o lino of the Ernest Mooro\nn tract and tho o lino of the\nn land to tbo s boundary lino\nPool survoy Thenco o follow-\ns boundary line of said Pool\nto tho middle of tbo Neches\nThence np tho middle of said\ntho n o corner of Anderson\nThenco w following tho n\nAnderson County to where said\nlino crosses tbo Buckingham\n4 Thonco down said branch to\nIt empties into Caddo Creek\ndown said Caddo Creek to tho\na o boundary lino Thenco a\nsaid fiengo o boundary lino
5d609fa85f358536b05e64ad7fb3dcb4 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.4616438039066 41.262128 -95.861391 On Friday evening last a negro liviag\nin St. Mary's committed a fiendish out­\nrage on the person of a iady—the wife A\na tcdaateer now serving ia tbe Federal\narmy-- aad to ooiiCt»ai hwcrime, attempt\nad to kiil her. ifre have not learned tb«\nfoil particular of this shocking afair,\nbut as near n* we caa learu the particu­\nlars are as follows:\nThe negro saw tte woman starting out\nof town to go to her residence, wbieb is\nsituated Mme dtst&aca down the canal\nfrom St. Mary 's, followed her, aud wuea\nhe supposed she bad got £ut enough to\nbe beyond uie bearing of the citueos of\nthe ueisthberhood, be sprtuig upon bar,\nchoking her senseless, and while sbe was\nis that condition, h suca <l«d in ac-\noempiiahtng bis deviiish and damnable\ndesigo. W'heu the poor womtin returned\nto coaseiousness the negro was standioir\nover ber. He asked her if sbe would tell\nwhat occurred, and oa her him\nthat aho wouid surely do so, be drew a\nLarge kaife, and saying thu.* , "dead people\ntell bo tales;'' stabbed ner. Sbe imaae-\ndiatelj grappled with btm% aad duriof\niba scutfie tbe kaifeieii to tbe ground,\nand betag oo tbe back of We caiiai, she\nkicked it into the water. Just at that\nmoment, some one un tbe sppo&ito side\nof the can a! heard the quisk;, and started\nto see what was tbe mattor, when tbe nu-\ngro struck for the wood*, tt was doubt­\nless tus intention to kill the ..woman and\nthrow ber body into the oanal, and thus\nbide all evidence of bis crime. The ne\ngro has since been caugbt, and is now in\nthe jail in our place, wherss be will have\ntw he boarded at tb« ecraatry's expense\nfur eeverai mouths before be can be tried.\nA great many seem to be surprised that\ntfco sitissos of St. Mary^s didn't bang\nhim on tbe spot.
8bf6950a34b900e9946ed28532d500bd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.009589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 T. and Margnrette F. Harter\nChance), aged 5 months.\nFuneral service« at the residence of\nthe grandfather, narry E. Chance, 124\nWest 29th street, on Wednesday morn­\ning, January 5, at 11 o'clock. lutcnncot\nprivate.\nGODWIN—In this city, on January S,\n1921. Irene S. Godwin, wife of Elwood\nGodwin and the daughter of Sarah and\nthe late William R. Scott, aged 34 years.\nRelatives and ?ricnds are invited to\nattend the funeral services, at her lata\nresidence, 307 West Thirty-first street,\non Thursday afternoon, at 2 oclock. In­\nterment at Riverview cemetery.\nMURPHY—In this city, on January X,\n1921, Sasah M., daughter of John and\nthe late Elizabeth Murphy.\nRelatives and friends are Inrited tc at­\ntend the funeral from the residence at\nher Aunt, Mrs. Rose Mitchell, 2206 La-\nmottc street, Friday morning, at 9\noclock. Requiem mass at St. Patrick1«\nChurch. Interment at Cathedral ce:no­\ntery.\nCURRY—In this dty. on January S, 1921,\nElizabeth Sullivan Curry, aged 74 years.\nFuneral serricea will be held at Chand­\nler's Funeral Parlors, 1011 Jefferson\nstreet, on Wednesday afternoon, January\n5, at 2.30 oclock. Interment at Wil­\nmington and Brandywine cemetery.\nSHARP—In this dty,\n1921, Della, wife of I\nSharp-\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral from the residence of\nher sister, Mrs. Nora Gilmore, 419 S.\nRodney street, on Wednesday morning,\nat 9 oclock. Requiem mass at SL\nElizabeths Church. Interment at Ca­\nthedral cemetery.\nPOOLE—In tills dty, on Jannary Î,\n1921, Annie C. Poole, wife of Thomas\nPoole, aged 62 years.\nRelatives and friends are invited to at-
0dd8162013253ad5b346ddb85923aa56 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.6397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 The following decribed real estate, viz:\nAll those the following described tracts or\nparcels of land situate in White Clay Creek\nand Pencader hundreds, bounded and de­\nscribed as follows, to wit :\nBeginning at a «tons In a line of lands\nwhich Joseph Griffith purchased of Isaac\nFrancis, ami at the south east corner of\nlands of the said I- rlffith, purchased of Benja­\nmin •- roves, tbtnre binding on said *.ritilths\nland south 85M degrees, west 79 7-10 perches\nlo.Ichn Richardsons line, thence still bind­\ning on se id line s >uth 5 cegrces and 15 min­\nutes, east 84 perches to the centre of the\nElkton and Christiana Turnpike Road,\nthence with the middle thereof north 73 de­\ngrees east »3 perches to a cornea, thence\nnorth 13 degrees 3 perches to a corner,\nthence s juth »3 degrees east 9 3- II iierches to\na corner of Mr-. Morton's lot, thence north\n11 degrees, west 12 pe dies to a gam tree,\nthence north 8546 decrees, west 6 4-.0 perches\nto a corner, thence rorth 11 decrees, west\n■>} 4-10 perches to the place of beginning, in\neluding a lot sold at sheriffs sale,\nproperty of S. Lewis, the other of said tracts\nbeing bounded as follows, to wit:\n at a stone In the Elkton and\nChristiana Turnpike Hoad corner for land\nJohn W. Dyatt, thence by his land north 3 de­\ngrees, west 88 perches to a stone, a corner of\nRobert Armstrongs land, thence by the same\nnorth 86 H degrees, east 80 perches to an apple\ntree, thence north 8644 degrees cast 113 5-10\nperches to a sassafras tree, a corner of Wil­\nliam Brooks land, thence by his land south»\ndegrees west .>346 perches to a stake, thence\nsouth6946 degrees west 70 4 1) perches, cross­\ning said turnpike road to a corner, thence,\nnorth 304*. tost 3 4-10 perches to a stone,thi noe\nnorth 75 degrees west t46 perches to a pin oak,\nthence not th 85^4 degrees! west 26 iierches to\na cherry tree, thence 12 degrees, west 13H\nperches to the middle of said turnpike road,\nthence along said road »onth 75 degrees west\n98 perches to the place of beginning. Contain­\ning in both tracts 74 acres. 3 rods and 27\npi relies of land, be the same more or less. 27 '\nSeized and taken in execution as the prop­\nerty of John Mills, deceased, and James A.\nO'Donnell, administrator of John Mills, de­\nceased, and George W. Groves, terre tenant,\nand to be sold by
e3f883d7c766aa99f1975ba446405589 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.9631147224752 41.681744 -72.788147 against New Bedford.\nThe decision tt the Merlden man\nto switch hla dob to the New Tori!\ncity is a culmination of a long argu-\nment started at the and of last sea-\nson with the owners of the rink\nwhere the team was playing Ita\nhome games. This and the displeas-\nure of many of the fans over the\ntransfer of "Kid" Williams to the\nNew Britain team, eaused Manager\nIves to take the only step possible.\nThe Albany team will play Ita\nhome games In the Menard Arena,\nan amusement structure capable of\nhousing 7.900 fans. The building la\nopposite Chadwlck Stadium, home\nof the Albany Eastern league base-\nball club and la half way between\nAlbany and Troy. It measures 125\nfeet long and 115 feet wide.\nThe team will play its home\ngame on Christmas Day. It will\nopen under '"ie name of the Albany\nclub against Waterbury. Two games\nwill be played that day, one in tho\nafternoon and another at night.\nHorns games. In Albany will be\nplayed on Sunday afternoons and\nMonday nights.\nAccording to President A. W .\nKeane of the league, it may be pos-\nsible that the Fall River club will\nbe transferred to Merlden within the\nnext month. Fall River needs to bo\nstrengthened and the game la not\ngoing so good in the Bay State city.\nUeridem Beats Bridgeport\nThe Maroons last night staged a\nfurious rally in the final period and\nscored six successive goals to beat\nBridgeport by the score of t to 6.\nThe game was the fastest aeen at\nthe Merlden link this aeason.
5efa2dd98c5557ee279d2c90ad54a929 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.209589009386 40.827279 -83.281309 ton has onencd a stock of groceries in\nthe building owned by Stanclift Broth- -\nera, and the Stanciut itrotucrs\nhave been reinforced by the addition\nL. A. Pease to the firm, and are now\ndoing a thriving cash business. John\nMollenkopf has bought out Ed. Stlner's\nGrocery, and still carries on the old\ntrade wtitb and groceries. Martin\nWoodsides from Benton, has purchased\nthe old stock of Boots Shoes of W. B\nMiller and has bow gone east to bring\non a new additional stock . Be intends\nopen, a fine stock in his line. Ed .\nStiner has rented the basement of Jos.\nMaskey's room in the brick blockand is\nfitting It up for a whisky saloon. The\nElliott Bros, have rented the fine ware\nhouse, built by the Associa\ntion" of this place, and having fitted\nnp a smig little office are now open for\nthe purchase of wheat, corn, and other\ngrains, and intend to keep a good stock\nof agricultural implements for sale.\nCantwell Miller has opened a shoe\nstore in the room formerly occupied by\nMr. Ledler, as a harness shop, and will\nbe happy to accomdate the public at\nhis new stand. Mr. Ledler has removed\nto W, F. Goodbread's new room, south\nof theR.R. where he will carry on the\nharness trade in full blast.\nThe above list of changes In mercan\ntile matters &c, we think we can safely\nchallenge any town of the size of Ne\nvada to beat in the same length 05\ntime, without fear of the challenge\ning accepted.
454c40a6226672d2753ad06e0f697457 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.8972602422627 58.275556 -134.3925 The disappearance of Wm. Christie\nand the crimes of which Edward\nKraase is accused still occupy a large\npart of publio attention. As far as\nChristie i9 concerned, absolutely noth-\ning has been learned. From the day\nbe left his work at Treadwell he has\ndropped out of sight as completely as\nIf the earth had opened up aud swal¬\nlowed him. Krause, who came to\nTreadwell and induced Christie to ac*\ncompany him, presumably to Juneau,\nhas been arrested at Seattle, turned\nloose and then re-arrested, and will\nprobably be brought back to Juneau\nthrough extradition papers to auswer\nto the charge of murder. Krause still\nsticks to the story that he acted for\nanother in taking Christie to Juneau;\nthat the other man was a stranger and\nthat on landing at Juneau, Christie\nand the stranger walked away aud that\nwas the last he saw of them. Besides\nlaying the disappearance and possible\nmurder of Christie upon the shoulder*\nof Krause, local papers have not nesi\ntated to add every imaginable form of\norime, including three or murders,\nrobbery aud auarchy. They have even\ngone so far as to declare that an anar-\nchistic society existed at Petersburg,\nthe bright little town at the head of\nWrangell Narrows, of which society\nKrause was the moviog spirit and bead.\nIn fact, these papers have shown an\naltogether vindictive spirit in the mat\nter, inspired, perhaps, in one case, by a\nrooted hatred for all peoples of\nGerman origin, and in both a play for\nsensational news. The introduction of\nso many suspicious, which in most\ncases are not at all well founded and\nin some instances positively foolish,\nand the positive mauner in which they\nhave been declared, has inflamed the\nminds of the people on both sides of\nthe channel until there is even talk of\nlynching when the prisoner is brought\nNorth. If Edward Krause is to be\nfound guilty, let him be punished, but\nit is surely not the province of a reput¬\nable newspaper to poison the minds of\nthe people of this community against\nbim that prejudice will usurp the place\nof justice.
10f5d952836427c4c5bd64cbdf45f3a0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.8835616121257 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho counsel for tho defense In opening\nsked that the defendant be dismissed\nn tho ground that thsro was no evidence\ngiiust him. This tho Oourt refused,\nno defense thon outlined to the jury in a\niw words what It proposed to show and\nlaced Hunt Mniingo on tho stand as the\nrot witness, flu testified that his father\nad had nothing lo do with tho burning i\n1 any wov: that it was all hia work fmm ll\niception to oonBumniation.\nOn a severe crow-examination some <\nery interesting pointa were brought oat (\nsgarding the manner in which he had t\nursed bia m*.lioe towards Mr. Orothora (\nnd at the sumo time pretended to be on t\niie beat of torms with that gentleman and i\nnxloua to romain in his employ. Bunion's \\\nold manner while on the stand giving t\ntie minnte details of the and the i\nray in which ho arranged tho details was 1\nsmething remarkable, Following him, I\n)aniel Masingo, tho old man, waa put on \\\n20 fitandj~hiB testimony waa a fiat con- c\nradiction of all tho damaging toatimony (\niat had been given by a score of reputa- <\nlo witnecBoa who had beon. put on tha 1\nLand by the Coramonyfealth. He waa <\nBry cool throughout it all and at the ]\n\\mo timo spoke and acted with tho air of J\nmartyr. 1\nE. B . Todd, of Perkina' Pittsburgh Do- i\nictive Agency, waa among those called to i\nao stand and related in a very interesting\nlanner how ho had gotten Bunton to i\nanfeea to tho burning. Bunton's version i\nt the manner in which ho had come to\niako this confession, tallied very closely ]\nith that given by Mr. Todd. The
8af9a974a3afd1ad7cbac0214879202d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.0368852142785 43.798358 -73.087921 "TriE American Aovocate of P EACE,\npublished in Hartford, Conn., by William\nWatson, for the American Peace Society,\nedited by Francis Fellows, ha3 been on our\ntable some days, waiting for notice. It is a\nwork of incalculable importance to Chris-\ntianity and Philanthropy, and deserves to be\nin high places throughout the land. So large\na space in our columns is already otherwise\ndevoted to this subject, we have only room\nhere for the following Prospectus :\nThis publication is issued in June, Sep-\ntember. December and March. It will con-\ntain at least 48 pages to each number. Price\nto subscribers One Dollar a year, payable on\nthe delivery of the first number. The work\nwill be furnished to Peace Societies at half\nthe subscription price. Any person forward-\n to the publisher five dollars or more,\n(free of postage,) will be furnished with it\non the same terms. Any clergyman in the\nUnited States who will preach during the\nyear on the subject of Peace, and send his\nname to the publisher (post paid) a copy\nof the work shall be forwarded to his order.\nThe work is devoted, 1st, and chiefly, to\nextended discussions of the most important\ntopics connected with the cause of Peace ;\n2d, to brief Critical Notices of current pub-\nlications as they come within the application\nof our principles, with the design of promo-\nting, in this respect, in a Christian country,\na pure and Christian Literature ; 3d, to in-\ntelligence concerning the progress of pacific\nprinciples, and the civil and political affairs\nof nations.
0c9dba69eda8709c40d9496dd6f58250 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.57397257103 46.187885 -123.831256 Princess Beatrice the queen her-\nself gave the bride away, although\nthe official programme assigned Ihia\nduly lo the prince of Wales. The\nreasons for this change iu tho pro-\ngramme turns out to bo that tho\npi ince of Wales all along refused to\ntako any part whatever in the cere-\nmonies and decliued even lo be pres-\nent at his sister's marriage. His\nrame was, however, placed on the\nprogramme withont his knowledge,\nand iu obedience to the imperative\ncommand of his royal mother, he\nsulkily contented to attend tho wed-\nding. Upon his arrival at Osborne\nluns?, Beatrice vainly begged the\nprince lo give away tho bride, and\nIho queen added her commands with\nas little effect The prince declared\nthe match was beneath the dignity of\nthe roval family, and the alliance\nworse even than that formed by the\n of Priuces3 Louise lo the\nmarquis of Lome. If Beatrice must\nbo given to an obscuro beggar it\nshould never be dono with his con-\nsent, and certainly not by his act\nAt this juncture tho duko of Jidin- -\nburg, probably with an eyo to his\nmother s hoarded millions, camo for-\nward and offered to officiate. He was\npromptly and effectually snubbed,\nhowever, by the queen, who donbtless\nseeing that tho substitution of the\nduke of Ediuburg for tho prince of\nWales in so important and conspicu\nons a capacity would create immedi-\nate suspicion that a serious eruption\nhad taken place in the family, decided\npersonam' to give the bride away.\nCouriers were accordingly instructed\nto circulate a story that the queen,\nanxious lo give crowning proof of her\naffections for her only remaining\ndaughter, would personally give her\naway.
21c89424b10407ad0867d0c8b74cef24 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.3975409519835 39.290882 -76.610759 His present facilities for manufacturing agricultural\nimplements, are not surpassed by any other establish\nment in tins country, he can therefore afford them on as\nreasonable terms as any other person for the same qual-\nity of work. Ifis present stock of implements are ex-\ntensive both in quality and variety, to which he would\ninvite the attention of those who wish to purchase.\nA liberal discount will be made to nilcash purchasers,\nand those who purchase to sell again.\nThe following names are sonic of his leading articles,\nvi/.: His PATENT CYLINDRICAL STRAW CUT-\nTER, wood and iron frames, but all withhis patent don\nble eccentric feeders, with or without extra knives; prices,\nvarying from £*>3 to SIOO, subject to cash discounting;\nlie challenges the world to produce a better machine for\ncutting long forage; MYEIiSWHEAT FAN and EL-\nLICOTT\\S PATENT HORIZONTAL WHEATFANS\nboth a very superior article. Fox &. liarland's PAT-\nENT THRESHING MACHINES, and Martineau 4 s\nPATENT HORSE POWERS, also a verj ar-\nticle. A great variety of PLOUGHS, wrought and\ncast Shares, of all sizes and prices, Gideon Dav is's im\nproved PLOUGHS, of Davis own make or patterns,\nwhich are sufficiently known to the public not to require\nrecommendation; 100 CULTIVATORS, uliro expanding\nCULTIVATORS,both iron and wood frames, and new\nplan; TOBACCO CULTIVATORS.\nF. H. Smith's PATENT Li ME SPREADERS, the\nutilityof which has been made known to the public; to-\ngether with a large assortment of FARMING IMPLE-\nMENTS. PLOI GH CASTINGS of every description\nand superior quality kept constantly on hand, at retail or\nby the ton; also. MACHINEand other CASTINGS fur-\nnished at short notice and on reasonable terms, this Iron\nFoundery being furnished with the best materials and\nexperienced workmen withample machinery running\nby et&un power for turning and fitting up machinery.\nAlso?constantly on bund, D. Lambeth's superior\nGARDEN SEEDS- In store, Potatoes and common\nSeed Oats, Timothy and Herd Seeds, all oft-upcrior qual-\nity. All orders willlie promptly attended to.
20965b4d3bf3393bcefa0db610a74e74 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.5887977825846 46.187885 -123.831256 concerning tno reported appear\nance oi an opium smuggling vessel\nni iaquina, tlie .Newport jeun aaya:\nIn the last issue of this journal ap-\npeared an item concerning a strange\ncraft, which had lately come into the\nbay, and winch was snpposeu by\nmany to bo a smuggler. This opiu\nion is still entertained by a consider\nable number, while others scout at\nthe idea. The owner of the craft, who\ngives his namo as Duncan O'Donald,\nreturned from up tho bay a few days\nago and called at the Hews office,\nand stoutly denies being connected\nin any way with smuggling. In an-\nswer to questions he gave the\nincidents of his trip as fol-\nlows: His boat, which a sloop 21\nfeet in length was purchased in the\nColumbia river, whero ho fitted her\nup and laid in a stock of provisions\nwith tho intention of going to Alaska.\nHo then had a partner, bnt owing to\ntheun usual roughweather waited\nfor five weeks and made several\nineffectual attempts before he could\nget over tho bar. In tho moantimo\nhis partner thinking it too risky, de-\nclined to go on so long a trip. After\nhis partner left O'Donald changed his\nopinion about going to Alaska and de-\ncided to sail for Gray's Harbor and\nprospect for coaL Aftor finally get-\nting clear of the Columbia river, he\nsailed north, but was unable to enter\nGray's harbor and again changed his\ncourse for Nehalem river, expecting\nto prospect lor coal on that stream.\nbut when the mouth of the river was\nreached he was also unable to enter\nthere, and so continued his course\nsouthward and finally brought up at\nthis place. Ho is still here aDd is\nquite anxious to sell his boat, which\nis indeed a fine staunch little craft\nand is offered for S200. He says he\nis a miner by profession and owns a\nclaim in Shasta county, Cal.,
518ed727d7aa29f3cfeedde35877dfeb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.042465721715 39.261561 -121.016059 The long agony of financial circles is\nover, and the report of the Secretary of the\nTreasury is at hand. It relieves the appre-\nhensions of our most cautious bankers, who\nfeared Mr. Chase would recommend an un-\nlimited issue of demand notes, the elfect of\nwhich would be as seen in the history of\nFrench assignats, Continental money and\nirredeemable bank money the world over,\nto produce ultimately public distress. The\nreport happily relieves all apprehensions on\nthat score, as Mr. Chase evidently objects\nto these demand notes as much as the bank-\ners themselves, though all the speculators\nin the country are in favor of them, as the\nthe obvious tendency would be to give us\nglorious good times for six months or a year\nending up with a terrible smash when the\nday of settlement The recommenda-\ntion that he really makes, for the Govern-\nment to furnish currency to the different\nbanking associations, rather puzzles finan-\nciers here, and was, no doubt, not intended\nto be very definite. It is evident that so far\nas Mr. Chase is concerned, the measures\nof the various bills which he will urge for\nthe adoption of Congress, in relation to this\nmatter, will be founded upon sound finan-\ncial principles, so that we shall leave as lit-\ntle as possible on the future. We shall\ndoubtless have all the advantages ot a great\nNational Dank without many of its disad-\nvantages. At least, the objection to the\nold United States Dank, that it was an en-\ngine of political influence, will not be ap-\nplicable to the new method of remodeling\nthe currency of the country.
1a5cb0231753e783fac3f422ddcd5137 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1919.7547944888381 36.000618 -88.428106 see the progress of the work pretty\nMrs. Wentworth stood in her front\nhall, with its background of dark\ngreen paper the dreadful kind that\nfills one with thoughts of\nand everything gloomy and makes the\nwhole world look dark and dreary.\n"Oh, Mr. Bunker I" she cried in a\npleading voice, yet with the cheerful\nspirit that was usual to her, and that\nmade her so attractive, "don't you see\nhow dull this hall is with this dreadful '\ngreen paper that makes the whole\nplace loelc dark. How can I fix any-\nthing pretty here? How much more\nartistic pearl gray would be I It would\nset off my things and be Just lovety."\n"Well, go ahead and have it done\nhe returned with a half grin, as he'\npassed eut of the door.\nThe hall was papered In artistic\ngray, but that was not the end. After\nthe papering was finished Mrs. Went-\nworth thought she like to have\nthe back porch fixed up ; it would make\nsuch a beautiful place to sit in the\nmorning, if only she could have Did\nshe dare ask for anything more? Yes,\nshe did ; and she got it, and many oth-\ner things, a little later.\n"Go ahead and have It done," Mr.\nBunker assented when she told him\nhow much prettier it would look to\nhave the porch finished in gray instead,\nof the dingy red brick. It was done in\ngray and the celling sheathed. She set\nout her Jardinieres of potted plants\nher little work table, with her knlttlnff\nbag and basket. She arranged small\ntables for afternoon tea, with tiny\ncups and cut flowers. Then she invit-\ned her neighbors.\n"Isn't it Just lovely 1" they cried.\n"Pearl gray ! How did you get it doneT\nI never should have dared to ask for\nanything so elaborate, or, Indeed, for\nanything," they confessed.,
45243128a72f856c03ce3bd7580c9ba3 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.4260273655505 41.262128 -95.861391 from which date*, until th'v ihall be rc^\n»f>ecti*ely p*jd and r=4e«aed, ihsy sfa»Jl\nbaar such rate of interest as shall b« ex-\npreoaed tn sucn note®, which raw of inter­\nest shall be sis p«r centum par annum\nProvided, That, after the maturity of anv\nof said notes, interest (hereon shall cease\nat the expiration of sisty days' aoUc-e of\nreadiness to redeem ana pay the sair.e,\nwhich may at Etny tiuje or times be given\nby the Secretary "of the Treasury in ons\nor more newspapers at the seat of Gov-\nMht&imt, TL<: redemptioe and pnymmit\nofs«id notes, herein prondiid, shall be\nmade to the lawful holder* thereof re-\nsp»*ctiveiy up>n pretseKtment at the Treas-\nurv, and shaii include uie principal of\neaich note and the interest which shali be\nda*; thereon. And for the payment and\nredemption of »uch notes at tho tune and\ntisn-ss therein tpeciUed, the faith of the\nCtited State*u hereby pledged.\nSbc. 3 . And be ii further enacted, That\nsuch treasury notes shall be prepared un­\nder the direction of the Secretary of the\nTreasury, ar d shall be signed in be&alf\nof the United Stats* by the Treasurer\nthereof, and ccuntertieped by the Regis\nter of the Treasury. Each of these offi­\ncers shall keep in s book, or books provid­\ned for that purpose, separate, full, and\naccurate aoooucts, showing the number,,\ndati-, amcunt, sod rat* of intursst af «ach •\ntreasury note signed and eOuntersigiu-d\nby them respectirely ; and, also, similar\naccounts showing all such notes which\nmay be paid, redeemed and ftanceled, as\nthe same nisy be return**}. aii which hu-\ncounts shail he carefuily preserred ia the\nTreasury D 'partmcct. And the Treat ar\nshail acount quarVa'ly for all sq(^\nsury nou-u as shall haTeiMec counuir-\nigned by the R. -g iater and delivered to\nthe Treasurer for issue.
2de50d0b8378671695c0b796e1160e54 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.042465721715 40.419757 -77.187146 less woman with drunken husbands are\nenough to make all women curse wine,\nand engage unitedly to oppose It every\nwhere as the worst enemy of their sex.\nWomen, there are some things you\ncan do, and this is one : You may make\ndrinking unpopular and disgraceful\namong the young. You can utterly dis\ncountenance all drinking in your own\nhouse, and can hold In suspicion every\nyoung man who touches the cup. You\nknow that no young man who drinks\ncan safely be trusted with the happiness\nof any woman, and he is unfit as a man\ncan be for her society. Have it under\nstood that every drinking young man Is\nsocially proscribed. Bring up your chil-\ndren to regard drinking not only dan\ngerous but disgraceful. Place tenptatlon\nin no man's way. If men will make\ntieasts of themselves, let them do it \nother society than yours. If your mer-\ncenary husbands treat their customers\nfrom private stores kept in their count\ning rooms shame them Into decency by\nyour regard for the honor of your home,\nRecognize the living, terrible fact that\nwine has always been, and is to this day,\nthe curse of you sex ; that it dries up\nyour prosperity 1 that it endangers your\nsafety ; that it can only bring you evil\nIf social customs propel you to present\nwine at your feasts, rebel against it, and\nmake a social custom in the interest of\nvirtue and purity. The matter is very\nmuch in your hands. The women of\nthe country, in what Is called polite, so\nciety, can do more to make the nation\ntemperate than all the legislatures and\ntumultuous reformers that are struggling\nand blundering in their efforts to this\nend.
042db0ecd1b032e7425a8aeb967594ef MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1887.8808218860984 39.78373 -100.445882 and temperate fruits. Orange and\nlemon trees of the most thrifty growth\nmay be seen in the gardens and or-\nchards. Grapes, apricots, figs, pears,\ncberrif s, almonds, peaches, and ail the\nother fruits to be found In the most fa-\nvored localities, reach here the greatest\nperfection. The very earliest fruits and\nvegetables appearing in Han Francisco\nand other markets is grown in this val-\nley. With respect to early production,\nCapay Valley ranks fully with, if not su-\nperior to, the selebrated v'aca and Pleas-\nant valleys. This fact alone confers a\nvery high premium upon the lands to be\noffered. Theorcbardist, vineyaraist and\ngardnerof Capay Vajlej can place ripe\nfruits and vegetables In the Ban Fran-\ncisco and Chicago markets at the hlgu\nrate usually obtainable for early fruit,\nand from four to six weeks in advances\nof nearly every other portion of the\n(state of California. Under completely\nanalogous conditions in Vitlley,\nlands h ave reached a valuation of JHfOau\nacre, and have proven highly profitable\ninvestments at that price. The lands\nto be ottered by the Capay Valley Land\nCompany are In all respects equal in\nfertility, and lie under equal ciimattc\nadvantages with the most favored or-\nchard and garden lands of the state.\nOne of te leading obiects ofthe pur-\nchase of this land by a syndicate of per-\nsons interested in the success of the\nrailroad to be constructed was to socare\nthe subdivision ofthe land into small\nholdings, and to promote the density\nof '; settlement. Keeping this object\nsteadily in view, some of the largest\nan most fert'le tracts will be subdi-\nvided into ten and twenty --acre lots, and\nindividuals will be strictly limited to\nthe ownership of a single lot. Town\nsites wilt be located as ne.r to the cen-\nter of the tracts vs naay be fjund con-vesic- al
2981882ea20e9f6e4d0a5035c4410ed1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.1493150367833 39.745947 -75.546589 With the beginning of Lent to-day-\nknown as Ash Wednesday—society bids\nau revoir to the world, the flesh, etc., for\n40 days, coming out of Its retreat and life\nof meditation and abstinence on April It—\nEaster Sunday.\nThe season is the most important and\nsolemn one In the entire church calendar\nof the Roman Catholic Protestant Epis­\ncopal, Reformed and Lutheran churches.\nThere are many members of other\nchurches who also observe the holy sea­\nson by moderation In the swift pace of\nmodern life and by more frequent indulg­\nence in religious meditation and observ­\nances of the means of grace.\nThe social season ends with Ash Wed­\nnesday, and from that time on all social\nfunctions, theaters, dances and even wed­\ndings are forbidden In the churches in\nwhich the season Is rigidly observed. The\nparticular observances of Lent take the\nform of fasting, abstinence and self-abne­\ngation by the laletl. while the churches\ncelebrate It with extra services, which In\nmany cases, take place several times a\nd-y . The Sundays of the season are con­\nsidered as being excluded from the regu­\nlar fast days.\nNoonday Services.\nThe special noonday Lenten services\nwhich have been customary at An­\ndrews Church under the auspices of the\nBrotherhood of St. Andrew, will be con­\ntinued as usual this year. In past years\nthese short meetings have been character­\nized by great interest and each day large\ncrowds attended the services, made up\nlarge of members of other churches than\nthe Protestant Episcopal.\nAn unusually strong list of speakers for\nthe services has been announced for this\nyear's series, consisting of well-known\nP'scopnl clergymen. There will be no\nmeetings on Saturdays and Sundays.\nMany of the other churches have ar­\nranged elaborate programs for appro­\npriate Lenten services. The music plays\nan Importants part in the observances,\nand many beautiful and solemn masses\nand services by the masters are only\nheard at these services, not being used at\nother times of the year.\nAs the season advances the character\nof the music becomes more solemn, as\nfitting the approach of the solemn hush\nof the Crucifixion. During Holy Week\nthere Is no organ music In the Roman\nCatholic churches, the masses and entire\nservice being sung In solemn, unaccom­\npanied chant. In the Tenebrae—the dark­\nness—the acme of awed musical Intona­\ntion Is reached, typifying the hours be-\nfor-Hhe crucifixion of Christ.
16adc1f54784ef8bba967197ff82165e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.568493118975 40.063962 -80.720915 rmuom.rauirA.July 20..Flour Arm j\nOhio, Indiana, HI,. Louis and eoulhoru\nIllinois $4 25a4 iiJi; winter patanta J4 801\nJ 00; Minnesota bakora $3 204'! 75; patents\n$1 85»5 10. Wheat quint; rejected Fnili\non track 75 i77c; No. 11 red July 83J»83l6i\nAugust Bill ,8!i)c; September Kii i84 j ; Octo¬\nber 84}<8fv. Uorn,spot firm; No. !1 mixed\non trnulc 47J;, No. a follow do 41),!; No. 2\nmixed on track4Sa48)n;Itituresquiet; No,\n2 mixed July 4U)a47Jci Augnst 47a('loj\nHeptombor 48»48Jc; October 48 J*49c. OatB,\nspot llrin; No. :i white !W)i40jo; No. 2\nwhite 41c; future! dull; No. 2 white July\n40Ji41e; August 8.'l)i30c; September !IIJ«\niltw; October 84 J .U5u. Provisions dull.\nI'ork, new mess, $11 70)12 00; do prliuo\n$11 OOall 60; do lumily $12 7.- >il:t 00.\nHams, smoked, per pound, i:iil4jo. Lard,\nretlued 7.00.17 28c; do Jteam 0 60c. llntter\nIn good demand; creamery extra 10<20o;\nweatern dairy extrns HalSc; do good to\nchoice 0«12e. liflja Arm Ircah 14»14Jc.\nUheese quiet and eaay; Ohio lUtt, choice,\n7)a7Jc| do (air to prime 0i7c.\nOiKctKKATi, 0. July 20..Flour In tight\niloinaml: laudly 13 40«ll fanc» (8 70a\nII00. W beat dull J No. 2 red 70} i70o; re-\ncuipta 20,000 buahela; shipment! 28,000\niinahila, Com alrong; No. 2 mixed 4tc.\nOita In lair demand! No, 2 mixed new\n211)0. ltye dull and lower; No. 2, M)n,\nI'ork, demand light it $10 12). Lard\nsteady at II 11)0. llulk meala quiet; shoul-\ndera lU2Ju; abort fib aldea 0 25». Ilamui\nquiet and steady; ibouldera 7 00c; abort\nr I) allien 7l2|o; abort clear aldea 71174c.\nWtilaky quiet at $1 07. Butter In moder¬\nate demand extra creamery 21a22n;\nprime to choice dairy 10al2o. Sugar\neealon hard rellnnd (i|*7jo; Now Or.\nleana 8«AJ i. Linseed 0I1 etrongor at 40a\n42c, Kgga In light demand. Oheeae\nqulel and llrui; prime to choice flat 848)0.\nToi.xuo, O.. July 20..Wheat weak and\nInweti caah7U|c; August 77o; September\n78|o; Octcher We, Uorn aloadyi cash\nAugiint42o;HrpUilnher42)i Oata nominal,\nUlnverai'od eaay | caali $0 24.\nHaltimoiir, Mb., July 20 .Wheat, welt-\nem lower ami active; No. 2 weatern winter\nrednmtKl 83|oj Annual 82)«83o;Bepteni-\nIter 83|«<U|<i. Corn, weatern eaaler and\ndull 1 WMWrn mlx«d spot tnd Auguit
01c04a4ccf0ed1ee4b196c84b95b670a PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.0397259956874 31.960991 -90.983994 we may, xve\nbusy hands must work, and diligently too,\nand all day long the boats are flying and\nearning cargoes to “rich argosies”\n“That overpeer the petty traffickers;”\nand all day long we hear the busy hum of\nthronging multitudés forever toiling at the\noar, and there is no cessation from labor, no\nhour when the hum hushes, none when the\nsharp cries of boatmen are not heard shril­\nling calling and responding to each other.\nNow a canoe passes xvith its single in­\nmate, jingling a pair of shears, that produce\na ring like that struck from a tuning fork,\nxvhich all who have heard remember, and\nknow that the fellow is a w andering barber.\nAgain a sampan is seen with a female guid­\ning it, and, with a gourd rattle, inviting all,\nfar and near, to purchase something that\nshe sells. And here is an old fellow of sixty,\nxvith long and thin and xvhite moustaches\nand a peaked beard, quite Vândykc-îike in\n and he steers about to peddle hit\noranges and plantains.\nThen with the fierce tide, xvhich whirls\nswiftly hither and thither, comes a large\nvessel crowded xvithin and without by star­\ning Chinese going to Macao; fine groups\nthey form on the decks; and these boats may\nbe known far off/even when hid in darkness,\nby the ceaseless motion of their immense\nsculls working with a see-saw, see-saw, see­\nsaw sound. From morn till night, in the\nface of cold wffnds, or under the all-seeing\neye of Asias burning sun, the wonderful\nwork gees on; it goes on, not sluggishly cr\nslowly, but as if hy one all-pervading, heart­\nfelt enthusiasm, the industry of myriads, the\ndaily toil of the denizens of a vast, strange\ncity on the W aters. And all this bu3tle and\nlife and enterprise, all these rare sights and\nsounds, that make up tho daily record of Chi­\nnese life, can be compared only to the un»\nfrequent festive clays of western nations.
1c7d542fd4ebdfde848ac5797207c871 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1876.8155737388686 43.624497 -72.518794 then thc owuer and posscssor of said note\nand a rcsideut of said Hartland. That\nl'helps Hunt of Hartland was duly ap- -\npolnted admlnistrator ot uis J.siaie, auu\nacccDtcd said trust. That JoLn B. Fletch\ner of Westford, Mass. , took posscsslon of\nsaid note and other papers of said deceas- -\ned, and procurcd himselt to ue appointcu\nAdm'r. on said dcccascd's Estato by the\nProbato Court for Middlesex County,\nMass. That said Hunt deraanded of said\nFletcher your orators note and other pa-\npers belougiug to said deceased and he\nrefused to dellver tne samc to saiu ntmt\nas Adm'r. and threatens to collect thc\nsamc of your orator. That said Chandlcr\nwas a young man without family, owing\nno debts, and that his othcr proporty\naside from said note is more than suiilclent\nto pay tlie expenses occasloucd by his\ndeath and burial. That his Fatlier New- to - u\nChandlcr who rcsides in California is\nhis ouly lcfjal helr, nud that said Willic A.\nleft no Will. That said Ncwtou is iarge-l - y\nindcbtcd to your orator exceedlug two\nthousand dollars, aud your orator lias\nbecn unablc to collect thc samc, and that\nsaid Newton is In insolyent or in doubtlul\nclrcumstances. That your orator has\ncommeuced a suit aualust said Newton\naud trustced said Hunt as such Adm'r, but\nfears that shall not be cnabled to col\nlect his said debt against said Newton,\n:md that by means or said Admiuistration\nin Massachusetts said Newton may tret\npossessiou ot the funds belonHingto the\nEstate of said Willic, cspeciaiiy it itshouid\ninpcar that his residcnce at the tinie ot\nhis death was in thc State of Massachu-\nsetts. And your orator does uot want to\nbe corapclled to pay said note which is\nreally the property ot said .Newton as tlie\nhelr to said Willic, and insists that his\nsaid debt against said Newton siiould be\noil'sct in payment of his said note, aud has\napplieu to naiil Auinrs. auu reimestcQ to\nhave it thus oil'sct and applied.\nBut that the said Newtou Chandler,\nPhclps Hunt aud John B. Fletcher con- -\ntriving to wrong and injure your orator,\nin tho premises, refusc to comply wlth\nsuch requcst, aud pretcud that said New\nton is not ludcuteu to your orator, wnere-a- s\nyour orator charges the contrary.\nAll wlilch is contrary to eqtiity aud\ngood conscience.\nIu consideration wiiercot your orator\nprays for rellcf and for a writ of subpoena\naiHi that tlie said unanuicr, iiuuc ana\nFletcher may true, direct, and pcrfcct an- -\nswcr make to all und siuguiar tlic mattcrs\naforesaid, aud that your orators said note\nmay by thc ordcr aid Dccrcc of your Hon-or b- c
35337a6fa9cb0035509be92ab18133bb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.2254098044425 39.745947 -75.546589 tracks of the New York Central Railroad and told\nof the educational campaign that is being con­\nducted by it and other railroad companies to put\nan end to such trespassing or to reduce it to a\nminimum. Now the Pennsylvania Railroad Com­\npany, which was one of the pioneers in the cam­\npaign, issues figures to show that its educational\nwork has been effective and that the mortality\narising from trespass on its lines has decreased.\nThe companys records show that since January 1,\n1900, 8,523 trespassers have been killed and 8,285\ninjured. It was not until 1907, however, that the\nrailroad company began its educational campaign.\nIn that year 916 trespassers were killed. That\nslaughter, for which the company was in no sense\nresponsible, shocked the railroad officials. They\ndecided to see what they could do toward putting\nun end to A campaign of education was used.\nPublic officials in all sections were asked to assist\nin the work. In many instances there was hearty\nand effective response. Since then there has been\na steady falling off in mortality on the Pennsyl­\nvanias lines. In 1908 the number of trespassers\nkilled was 743, a reduction of 173, or more than\n18 per cent. In 1909 the death roll was reduced\nto 633, or about 15 per cent. In 1910 the number\nof killed was reduced to 585 and in 1911 to 627, a\ndecrease of 42 per cent, since 1907.\nLow-water mark in mortality among trespassers\non the Pennsylvanias lines was in 1900, when 518\nwere killed. High water mark was in 1907, when\n916 were killed. The showing for 1911 was 527, or\nwithin nine of the low-water mark, notwithstand­\ning increased population and trackage.
245a5cea1396bdbfc447d3b3117d478d SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.43698626966 37.53119 -84.661888 lor him!' why, tho girl had sense und\nknew tho dillerenco n twecn a feller ns\nstraight as a sapling, with n color liko\nnew mahoL'anv.ntHrsuch a melancholy\niookinc specimen us that. Besides, f\nlied a mor'gage on the old homestead,\nnod Ann Maria's father owed mo\nmoney; but I did right by them. I\ntold her ef she married mo I'd deod\ntho whole thing back to her, nnd I\ndid. Well, we was married, nnd we\nmade ni purty a couplo ns you ever\nsaw in your life. Ann Maria had n\nsettiti'but of china nnd linen, and I\nprovided the house, nnd folks saidl\nhad the best wife n uiau ever had in\ntho world, nnd I'd got every thing just\nns I wanted it, and s'posed it would\nalways be so. but from tho day wo\nwere married wife failed iu health\nnnd spirits, nnd in six months I buried\nher. Folks said it was consumption,\nbut it didn't run in the family. I wns\nblind and full of pride then but I'vo\nthought since," here the old man low-\nered his voice, "that raebba nil tho\ntime she loved that white faced chap\nns I despised; n woman's heart, I've\nfound out, is n queer thing, nnd Lovo\ngoes where it is sent, but if sho did\nnnd married me from n mistaken sense\nof duty, why nil I've got to say is I've\nnever felt it ns much as I did when I\nsaw her lying while aud peaceful iu\nher chintz gown, with the violet on it,\nnnd"sorao thing round her neck that I\nnever Bee before a little cheap locket\nwith somo hair in that wasn't mine-
00abf56497a34926485c0156ead23830 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1895.4534246258245 41.875555 -87.624421 with the United States Government\nto take nnd provide for Government\nprisoners at a stipulated price per\nhead, It Is not genorully known to\nwhat nn extent tho Government has\ntaken advantage of this agreement.\nHardly a week goes by without ifs\nbatch of United States prisoners ar-\nriving, sentenced all tho way from\none year to life. Out of the 1,000\nprisoners 'now serving at the pen, as\nit is usually called by those who have\ndealings with It" olther as convicts,\nkeepers or otherwise, about 200 aro\nUnited States prisoners, Perhaps it\nshould be taken as a compliment to\nthe general management of the\nprison that the majority of the pris-\noners sent there are the most des-\nperate, heartless, cruel nnd cunning\nof those sentenced by United States\n many of them coming from\nTexas and the West. The percentage\nof escapes during the past ten years\nhas been so small, in comparison\nwith the escapes from other like\nprisons, that the United State au-\nthorities have come to have almost\nImplicit confidence In Its security.\nWhen there Is a particularly daring\nand desperate criminal to be sent\naway the Kings County penitentiary\nIs among tho first prisons mentioned.\nOne of the most interesting prison\ners now at the pon is Kid Wilson,\nwho is serving a sentence of twenty\nfour years for robbing a mall train In\nArkansas. Wilson is a bright look\nIng lad of 18 years, and If you were\nto moot him on the streot he would\nbe the last person you would suspect\nof being a desperado.
0fc852ad116528b0e187c626dad56220 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.03698626966 40.827279 -83.281309 throughout the previous struggle be-\ntween Spain and the former colonies\niu behalf of the latter; but the con-\ntest at no time3 assumed thej condi-\ntions whic'i amount to a war in the\nsense of international law, or which\nwould show the existence of a de\n'facto political organization of the\ninsurgents sufficient to justify a rec-\nognition of belligerency."\nAnd he adds : "Our course should\nalways be in conformity with strict\njustice and law, international ana\nlocal," which none ot those criti-\ncising bhn can denv. The Presi\ndent believes, as his whole message\nproves, in the Golden Rule for na-\ntions a well as individual. What\never our sympathies may be,he holds\nthat we should act tcward others\nexactly as we would have others act\ntoward us during our recent struggle\nfor national existence,or as we would\nhave them act hereafter if unhappily\nanother dark cloud Of civil war\nshould ever overshadow our land.\nBut, while thus performing ' the un-\npleasant task," he submits whole\nmatter. to Congress, which, repre-\nsenting the people, and fresh from\ntheir midst, is certainly a proper\narbiter on a question that might\neventuate in war with a foreign\npower and its possible allies.and the\nincreased debt and taxes, diminished\ncommerce, and renewed bloodshed\nthat might result, if recognition was\nnot justified b3' the international law,\nwhose infraction by others in our\nown case we have so publicly and\nemphatically condemned at the bar\nof the civilized world. It is a re-\nmarkable coincidence that, while the\nPresident was writing this message,\nCespedes, the President of what I\nhope is yet to be Free Cuba, on the\n30th of November,wrote in his proc-\nlamation sis follows:\n"Perhaps it is just that the Admin-\nistration of the -- Washington Gov-\nernment should delay recognizing us\nuntil Congress shall have met."\nThis brief and dispassionate retro-\nspect might be extended ; but enough\nhas been written to prove that the\nadministration fully deserves the\npopular confidence it has won.
369c2a471b4f9d76c0a5b3dfd4e2ceb6 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.8041095573312 44.939157 -123.033121 A dozen years or so ago David Starr Jordan wrote a\nmonograph, "The Blood of the Nations," "A Study of the\nDecay of the Nations Through the Survival of the Unfit."\nThe author takes the position that in every war it is the\nstrongest and most virile who enter the armies, and if\nthe war is long and severe, the fit are followed by those\nless fit, and these as necessity demands, by the still more\nunfit, until those left at home in case of a war to a finish\nare the physically deficient and incapable. It is from these\nsires, from whom the stronger have been eliminated, the\nrace must be continued. That the race must deteriorate\nunder such a system is undeniable. It would seem from\nthis that it is not high living and idleness that causes the\nrace to deteriorate, but the destruction of the strong and\n by their selection to fight their countries' battles.\nThe evidence of this condition is before us, where the\nwarring nations are calling first to their colors the very\nbest of each nation's young blood, followed by the second\ngrade, and these by the third, and so on until those abso-\nlutely unable to fight will be left" if the war is continued\nlong enough. The dispatches Tuesday gave the total kill-\ned during the war as about 100,000 and the wounded as\nthree times that, and this does not include the deaths from\n.sickness which will make a larger and still larger pro-\nportion of the total death list as exposure and hard living\nget in their work. The very flower of every one of the\nwarring nations is being sacrificed and the physical stand-\ning of the nation in the future is bound to be lowered\nthereby.
49b118d2b697e77edf8578b456d7a638 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.4959016077212 39.756121 -99.323985 Geese are very hardy birds, and it\nIs easy to keep them over summer.\nThey should have access to plenty of\ngreen forage, plenty of water to drink.\nThe adult birds need no shelter, and\ncan live on grass alone, but they rel-\nish a little grain and should be fed\na small quantity at least once a day.\nAt night is a good time, after the\nchickens and turkeys have sought\ntheir perches. In late summer or\nearly fall if the drouth dries up the\ngrass geese need a little more grain.\nOne must gauge the feed by the quant-\nity and succulency of the forage.\nWhole corn will do very well for the\ngrain; that Is all we use.\nAn adult goose seldom dies of any\nsickness. True, the very old birds\ndrop off, but the per cent of loss Is re-\nmarkably small with any reasonable\ncare. The flock must be fed grain\nBnd vegetables, clover or fodder dur-\ning the winter and early spring, be-\nfore there Is green forage. The breed-\ning birds should be mated, one male\nto from one to three females. We\nput the different matlngs in separate\nlots, but they will do very well In\nflocks of ten to fifteen birds. It is\nnatural for geese to choose but one\nmate, hence we must not attempt to\nmake one male take too many females\nor we will not get the best results.\nGeese (our experience has been alto-\ngether with the pure bred Toulouse)\ncommence to early In March in\nour climate, time depending on\nweather conditions. A little straw\nthrown around In odd corners will\nfurnish nesting for the geese. The\nfemale makes no attempt to hide her\nnest or slink away to it; she sits on\nit in full view, but she covers up the\neggs. Robbing her nest has no effect\non her, she will not change; she lays\nabout every 36 hours. The eggs\nshould be gathered sbon after laying,\nearly In the season, or they will get\nchilled. Set them on end In a box of\nsawdust or excelsior In the cellar, or\nsome cool place (not too cold), and\nkeep till ready to set. Some turn the\neggs dally, but we do not If they are\nto be kept only a reasonable time. We\nset them under chicken hens and rear\nthe goslings with same hens. They\nhatch In 28 to 30 days; it eggs are\nkept warm enough 28 days Is suff-\nicient The little goslings should not\nbe fed till they are 48 to 72 hours old;\nit Is no harm to let them nip a little\ngrass or green vegotable tops earllor,\nas this will not hurt them. For the\nfirst week or two feed three or four\ntimes a day on a little corn bread\nsoaked and crumbled, or a little chick\nfood made Into a mash same as for\nyoung chicks. At first they are very\ndainty and eat very little, but In\ntwo or three weeks they are quite\nravenous.
14d565bd16bcc40916bdc8519a07e33a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.8945205162354 42.217817 -85.891125 Then comes another ruso of tho hunt-\ner, by tho skillful cxerciso of which ho\nmay bo able to inveigle two or three\nmoro cf tho turkeys to their death. In\ntho wing of each turkey is a hollow\nbono that can readily bo transformed\ninto n whistle, tho notoxrf which, when\nproperly blown, very closely resembles\ntho call of a turkey. Not far away and\nwell concealed lies tho "daylight mur-\nderer's accomplice. " As fooh after their\nflight from tho perch as tho turkeys dis-\ncover that all has becomo quiet and tho\ngobblers havo mustered up a littlo cour-\nage, they begin calling for tho purpose\nof collecting tho remnant of tho flock\npreparatory to a pcrmanout departuro\nfrom tho sccno of tho massacro. Tho\nsecond hunter softly answers with his\nwhistle, and tho chances aro that\nho will by often responding to tho in-\nquiring cry luro tho turkey within\nrango of his gun. A sharp report, re-\npeated over and again by tho echoing\nhillsides, a flutter of wings in a death\nstrugglo on tho ground, and tho forest\nis again wrapped in silence.\nAfter an hour of waiting tho hunter\nFonnds his call, then listens for a faint\nresponse If nono is hoard, ho ventures\nngain. A third effort is likely to elicit\nnn answer unless tho turkeys have be-\ncomo so terrified by tho last shot that\nby common impulse they havo fled pre-\ncipitately nlono or in very small groups.\nIf they havo hidden themselves in\nclumps of bushes or tho tops of fallen\ntrees to which tho withered foliage is\nFtill clinging, tho punter may get an-\nother shot.
217f6d1fee3e2d53e34189a08d5f5ae2 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1910.83698626966 37.451159 -86.90916 It is dltllcult to explain bow com\npleto lu normal times In thu dullnes\nof tbo small villages In the protecto-\nrate of Sierra Leone on tbo coast of\nwestern Africa says a writer in the\nNineteenth Century and After At\nhour before sunrise shadowy figure\nmove noiselessly through the narrow\nalleys which separate the mud walled\nhouses and In Mingle tilQ pass out ot\nsight toward the farm lands A little\nlater children and a few women leave\nthe houses to obtain water for cook\nlug They also go in single file and la\na short while will return iu the same\nmanner carrying >vuter la calabashes\nexcept perchance one or two may be\naffluent enough to possess a tin la\nWhich kerosene oil has been Imported\nDuring the great heat of the day peo\nplo return and sit silent and motion-\n In the thatched roof verandas\nToward evening there Is moro move\nment Food time generally brightens\npeople even when It only means rice\nand peppers Soon after sunsitall\nsign of life ceases There iu no light in\nthe houses because oil is expensive\nand u dying lire Is enough when there\nis nothing to see except those you have\nseen all day there are no ounds save\na babys cry at Intervals or perhaps\nthe weird call of some night bird be ¬\ncause people cannot talk much when\nno one has anything fresh to say\nNext day will bo the same and so wilt\nbo every day In the year except at\nfestival times such as when the girls\nor boys return dancing nnil gayly\ndecked from the Porrob flush There\nis no church uo postman no passing\nIIhorso or carriage and no newspapers
02d694c5e89d4aab660169ad545fe608 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6123287354135 39.261561 -121.016059 CtONSTABLKS SALE.- M«t* «f e ,„\n/ fornia, County of Nevada, Township of Blwn\nfield, by virtue of an execution to me delivered i»*\nsued from the court of 1). P. Walter Esq., an «/\nJustice of the Peace in and for the county aiuresaiif\nbearing date July 7th. A. I*. 186*2, to satisfy » j,,^^\nment re rolered by said Walter on the Pth day jav , if\nJuly, A. D . 1862. in favor of Marius Breninnd« h !|\nagainst Ji Proquiller firr the mm of 8241,06 del,>\ndamage, interest and cost of suit 1 have tnken in (.x-\necution and will sell at public auction to the highest\nbidder frrr cash all the light title and interest of j)\nProquiller the above named defendant 1o the foil,,*,\ning described property which was heretofore attar!,,\ned, in to a certain lot. situated in l ake Pit,"\nCounty, township and State above named, bounded\nas follows: Fronting on the road and running hark\ntwo hundred feet, more or less; on tlie east by pro.\ninonds Hotel: on the West by Bordice hr ham." Also,\na mining claim located in Malakolf Canyon, contain'\ning five hundred feet, more or less, known ns the\nclaims of Theopolia Ijtyh & t o. Sale to take pi-, , .,\non said lot, on Wednesday the 20th day of August'\nA. H. 1862 . between the hours of 10 oclock .v. a\nand 4 oclock r. u. Taken as property of Ji Proquli-\nler to satisfy the above demands and interest at uur\nand a half per cent, per month, t.'iven under\nhand this 18th day of July. A . I). 1 b62.
205c56b8b1cb6ede6e8545a9a9ecaa7e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.8232876395232 39.261561 -121.016059 Also disease*of the Stomach, incn a* Gsstritia or lnfift-\nmatlnn of the Stomach, Enter!tea or Inflamation of the\nbowela, Dyspepeia in all it* forma, which destroy the appe-\ntite and digestion, flatulence, Dysentery and Diarrhoea.\nAlso diseases of the Kidneys, and other Urinary Organs,\n•uch as Diabetes, or an excessive flow of urine, Albumina-\nria, commonly known as Bright* disease. In this com\nplaint, the physician and patient do not ottentime* suspect\nthe presence of the disease until too late. The most com-\nmon ►ymptoms are general indinjwwition. with dropsical\nswellings, calculi in the Kidneys, Urethra or Bladder, En-\nursls or inability to retain the urine, cystitis or inflama-\ntion of the bladder, and all other disorders of the urinary\norgans. Also, diseases of the Womb and its appendages,\n■uch as ir egularities of the MENSES, when excessive, de-\nfective, suppressed or irregular, Prolapsus or falling of\nthe womb, sterility, ovarean dropsy, and other diseases of\nthe parts. In the treatment of any of the above diseases,\nthe Doctor has mnny new remedies, and guarantees a per-\nfect cum in all ca*es. or the money will lie returned. All\nconsultations (by letter or otherwise) tree.\nAddress Dr. I .. J. C/apkav. San Francisco.\nTO THE LADIES OF CALIFORNIA.—DR. L. J. CZAR-\nRAY. late the Hungarian Revolutionary War, Chief\nPhysician to the 20th Regiment of Honveds, Chief Surgeon\nto the Military Hospital of Iesth, Hungary, and late Lec-\nturer on diseases of urinary organs, and diseases of women\nand children, invites the attention of the sick and afflicted\nfemales, laboring under any of the various forms of disea-\nses of the Brain- , Lungs Heart, Stomach, Liver, Womb,\nBlood, Kidneys, and all diseases peculiar totheirsex. The\nI toctor is effecting more cures than any other physician in\nthe State of California. I<ct no fal»e delicacy prevent you.\nbut apply immediately, and save yourselves from painful\nsufferings and premature death. All married ladies whose\ndelicate health, or other circumstances, do not allow' to\nhave an increase in therr families, should call at lb. L. J.\nCrapkay's Medical Institute, Sacramento st., below Mont-\ngomery, opposite I. M. S . CosOffice, and they will receive\nevery possible relief and help. The I motor's offices are so\narranged that he can be consulted without the fear of mo-\nlestation. All consultation, by letter or otherwise, free.\nAddress I>r. L. J. Czapkay, Medical Institute, Sacramento\nstreet, below Montgomery; opposite Iaciflc Mail Steam-\nship Companys Office, San Francisco.\nIicntnrkiible Instance of Medical Relief.\nBelow we publish the certiflcatos of two of the suf-
04508f3ff0c4e063eb55c17ee3fe731a SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1883.6068492833588 37.53119 -84.661888 gather around his table. Colin lies on his\nrug, nose on paws, blinkingly awaiting the\ntime when he may come In for a part of the\nbreakfast. Thia he soon claims, for the\nmusical rattle of knives and forks proves\ntoo much for his dog nature and he walka\nrestlessly from one to another, receiving a\npleasant contribution from each, to stay his\ntorments ot appetite. Colin has a soft,gen-ti- e\neye, but the coachman tells me he has\nbeen a great fighter in his day and an inva-\nriable companion of the Irish bays, until\nthey ran over him one day and the car\nriage wheel followed before ho could recor\ner; since whicli he is shy of it and general.\nly stays at home, reposing like an old war-\nrior on his Youthful laurels. A sheep dog,\nthoroughly trained and of rare intelligence,\nhe has also been. But he is verging on\nthe "sere and yeSlow leaf," and dozes away\nwhat is left of life in dignified retirement,\nleaving the active duties to younger curs.\nBreakfast over, tho open doors all over\nthe house inspection, we spent an\nhour looking at the statuary, pictures nnd\nfurniture, all costly and in exquisite taste\nof selection and arrangement. One statue\nalone was worth the journey that of a\nblind (fill reading the raised letters of the\nbsok lying on her lap. The artist has\ncaught the expression of face exactly and\nconveys it in a way one would have\nthought impossible in marble, however at-\ntainable In painting. The turret view is\ncharming, to a degree. Peebles has a com\nplete amphitheatre of hills around it, al-\nmost rising to the dignity of mountains,\nyet with enough of intervening low land and\nmedows, befoie the foot is reached, to give\nperfect variety. The crystal river,abound.\ning in trout and unpoisonedby paper mills,\nta the Eskis, flows in pretty curves thro'\nthe clean, stone village and out through\none of the glens, us It entered the amphi-\ntheatre by another, giving that water life\nto the picture without which the loveliest\nlandscape ia incomplete. The hills are,\nsome of them, covered with dark green firs\nto the summit, while others are
46e9fbdc61a27c52c2555b2dc9cd3e2d SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.023287639523 37.53119 -84.661888 Meedamct Edmlslon and Bastln con ¬\nclears seriously III Mr Ceo Patton\nle confined to room from the effects ofti\na painful fall George Conder Is as\ndeigns In tbe posloHIca during her 111\noral Mesdames J D Pettus John\nRiddle and Chris Uutchlnson are sick\nPerry Klnr and wife have moved Into\ntbo new hotel formerly the Beazley\nHouse nil friend hope bo will have\na successful patronage\nJack Wells entertained a fow eve ¬\nning elate at bid country hums with a\ngame of krokoaolo Miss Nettle Col\nHer Suo Both and Goo Andrew James\naro up from Stanford with re I 1 veil\nMr A Addamt and family of Loba\nnun WSandSJBuroh ofStan\nford attended the handsome dining\nlIven by hire Jane Buchanan Mr\nManuel has moved his barber shop to\nStanford Street near tbe Wallln sa\nloon lie has rented of Mr Cul\ntoo and moved GIa family thorn Wal-\nter Dover and family have gone to\nhousekeeping the cottage of Curtis\nCover on Lancaster sirecX Sam King\noar tolepone boy has been visiting In\nSomerset Miss Catherine Bronaugb\nhas returned from a delightful visit to\nCampbellsville Mr Mortimer Adams\nIs up from a long spoil ofslckoes Mau\nrice tjpoonamoro was over from Uub\nbio to son a mighty pretty girl Jas\nAnderson was elected superintendent\nand Kllburn Stuart treasurer of the\nBaptist Sunday school Sunday W B\nHaosford Is 111 at the Cover House\nHarold Hulchlns of Boyle was a guest\nof his eraodfttiber Geo W Evans\nMessrs Hughes and Doty of Lancaa\nter were here Sunday to see two of our\npretty girls David Stoveosoo and sis\nter Miss Pattie accompanied by their\nlittle nephew were hero during tho\nholidays with friends
11cf6c139a135bddfe5490aaa363b717 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1897.387671201167 41.875555 -87.624421 missioners wero compelled to recognize\ntho evil, but for a yenr these nmnzlng\nfrauds held high carnival lu New En-\ngland. Finally one of them was Inves-\ntigated by n savings bank commission-\ner under authority of a legislature. It\nwas found thnt little of the money had\nbeen Invested, but wns accumulated to\npay the Interest of 2 or 11 per cent, n\nmonth, which tho dupes who received\nIt for the most part invested ln new\nseries. Tho officers of these swindles\nvoted themselves large salaries, the\nchaplain of ono of them, who had of-\nfered prayer ln two or threo of tho\ngeneral meetings, being pnld $2,000. An-\nother example: A woman named Howe\nset up In Iloston as a borrower of\nmoney to help women. She worked up\nn largo clientage. Sho Invested some\nof her money, but nt length tho time\nenmo when she could not pay her 2 per\ncent, a month dividend, and collapse\nnnd gteat loss to many women who\nhad deposited a few hundreds follow-\ned. Iu 1SSU nnd 18S7 every Eastern\ntown was canvassed by tho agents of\nloan associations which promised to\npay 12 cent, on money to be loaned\nlu Kansas nnd other new States ou\nmortgages. Early In tho boom those\nwho loaned received n quarterly In-\nstallment of a per cent. Interest. This\nwns noised about and money poured\nInto thesu Investment companies by\nhundreds of thousands. Conservative\npeople lu thnt region gnvo warning, but\nIt was of no avail. Tho quarterly pay-\nments of Interest, obtained by taking\nIt out of tho first money loaned, wero\nunanswerable, nnd tho loaning went\non for a year. At length tt beenmo nec-\nessary to pny tho luterest from tho\nmoney collected of tho borrowers. That\nbeing Impossible, Interest wns default-\ned, and sluce thnt time the larger part\nof the money Invested lu theso farm\nand city mortgages has been lost. Many\nsuch Instances could bo uoted to show\nthat this promise to pny 20 per cent.\nInterest ou money Is n very old swludlo\nIn a new disguise, Experience Is tho\nsafest teacher, nnd experience teaches\nthat sooner or Inter theso people who\nnro trusting their money to persons\nwho promlso 20 per cent, or any other\nper cent, without giving security will\nbo defrauded.
10892909bc2b2ca85fdb4883f75afe82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.856164351852 40.063962 -80.720915 In view of the fact that the Wei\nVirginia debt is the only remaining m\nsettled ante-war d<\\bt, and also of th\nrecent compromise botween Vireini\nand her creditors, it is presumed tin\nthe present undortakim: will be as su\ncessful and receivo the same hearty an\ncordial oo.operation that was given\nthe Ulcott committee when they undo\ntook the Virginia debt.\nCharles Francis Adams, of Boston\nWilliam Pinkney Whyte, of Jialtimor\nand Holmes Conrad, of Winchesto\nVa.. have boeai invited to act, and hut\nconsented to servo, as an advisoi\nboard in tlio adjustment 01 tiio <iei>\nThe mattor hna become very compi\ncated, and will require carolul invest\ngation to ascertain the amount creditoi\nought, under the circumstances, fc\nwilling to acccpt in settlement of tl'\ncertificates issued by Virginia to j-epr\nsent the one-third oi tho eotniii Adel\nwhich kIio set aside to await scttffnei\nwith West Virginia.\nThe history of the debt is an\nlong when told in detail. It began i\nlS00t and up to 1S61 Virginia hud e:\nponded upwards of $45,000.000 to coi\nHtruct roads, bridges and other interni\nimprovements. In IS01 tl»e state ha\noutstanding 000,000 of bonds, an\nnearly half of this money was borrowc\nto develop what is now West Virginia\nUpon the principle of law that when\nstato is divided its dent9 shall be appoi\ntioned to their relative property, popt\nlation and territory, the one-third\nthe old debt thus fixed on West Vi\nginia would amount to about $10,501)\n000, with interest since 1801, but tli\nordinance which divided the state pr<\nvided that the now state should tak\nupon itself the first proportion of th\npublic debt, to be ascertained by char;\ning to it all state expenditures withi\nits limits, and the just proportion of th\nordinary expenses of the state goveri\nment since, and part of the debt wa\ncontracted.
1614fe29aa7e1e5e7ba602c94593d7a1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.346575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 Going up to his homo to call on him\na fow daya ago, at about 'J o'clock in tho\nafternoon, I waa quito dismayed to find\ntho nuto-room full of pooplo waiting\nthoir turu, and waa almost ready to turn\nback and wait for a moro favorable op¬\nportunity, when tlio doctor camo out\nand assured mo that ho would dis*\npatch tlio crowd speedily, and moan-\nwhile invited me to take a aoat and ex-\norciso a httlo patienco. I wad ourpriaod\nto eoo how fast they meltod away, and\ninasmuch as they vroro tho tail end of\nthe procession and only ono or two\nrnoro camo ho was soon at liborty to ait\ndown and talk with mo in his reception\nroom. I be^'an by telling him that I\nfolt toraptod to asauraotho rolo of Jothro\nin tho wilderness and givo him aomo of\ntho fatherly advice that the wlso priest\nof Midian gave to Moses, which was to\ndivido ut> somo of this popular pressuro\nnnd at loast a pnrt of it on to\nothor shoulders. IIo emilod at mv ob¬\nservation, and roinnrkod that ho\nwas not so much of a victim to\nthis sort of pressure us I might aup-\nposo, nnd paid that I had hnpponod\ntlioro jint at the particular timo net\napart lor theso audiences, and that if I\nhad coino in tho forenoon or later in\nthe evening I would havo scon practic-\nally nothing of it. IIo then wont on to\noxplalu how ho divided up his timo and\nliia «vork nnd thocharnctor of assistance\nthat he had, and how tlio prosauro on\nany one part of the machinery of his\npurish waa relieved. I will not so into\ndetails of our conversation inasmuch as\n1 wish to rosorvo all tho apace at my\ncommand for aomoaccount of ray nubse-\nquont visit with tho Doctor to tlio\n"Pariah llouio" whoroso much that ho\nwas explaining to mo theoretically was\nshown to rno practically as an object\nlesson.
3f58bfb0ab281e64c794a912a0f88ace PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1903.7876712011669 39.756121 -99.323985 Many teachers do not understand\nwhat is required by tbe truant report.\nThis report should Include all habit-\nual truants or those who are a menace\nto tbe school. Teachers should use\ntheir efforts to get all pupils of truant\nage in school before reporting them\nand when reporting should make such\nsuggestions as tbey deem advisable.\nThe county superintendent being\nresponsible for the enforcement of\nthe truancy law, all truant officers\nwill act only under bis Instructions.\nAny citizen of tbe county who knows\nof children who are not In school and\nbelieve there Is no good reason why\nthey should not be, should report\nthat fact to tbe county superintend-\nent, giving the names of the children.\nTbe programs of the Northwest\nTeachers' Association at Norton will\nbe mailed within a week or so. Every\nteacher in this county Is asked to at-\ntend. Tbe (stance is not far and all\ncan conveniently arrange to go to\nNorton. It the whole body of teach\ners could b present, what an uplift\nit would be to the educational work\nof the county I The value of such a\nmeeting can only be felt by the teach\ner whoattends with tbe Idea of gett\ning all she can from the association,\ncarrying the Inspiration back tober\ngohool.maklng ber work more efficient\ntnri herself of more value to the com-\nmunity In which she labors. Thus\nwul me standard of education be\nraised, j People will learn to appre-\nciate more than now tbe worthy ef-\nforts of those to wuom they intrust\nthe training and development of their\nchildren. Teachers wages will be ad\nvanced and the wurtby, progressive\nwhocon'clentlousiv reels the respo-\nnsible t of her position, need not nee It\nnoma other more remunerative
22c4db8ddba54c5532c98d264ee4a92e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4287670915778 39.745947 -75.546589 truth when 1 say that this question\nnever would have been brought up,\nit would no*, now be, threatening the\noverthrow ot the Democratic Party,\nit would not now be disturbing the\ncountry, but for the speech made by\nthe distinguished senior Senator from\nNew York (Mr. Root) on January 21,\n1913. It strikes me that the Demo­\ncratic Party lias fallen upon evil\nlines, its poverty of leadership has\nbecome pathetic when it has to rely\nupon the distinguished senior Sena­\ntor from New York (Mr. Root), that\nastute, resourceful, untiring lawyer\nwhoso professional career is distin­\nguished by his successful defense of\npredatory interests and the malefac­\ntors of great wealth, this erudite,\nradical exponent of the Hamiltonian\ntheory of government. For this man\nto become the defender of the Demo­\ncratic faith, the leader and chief\ncounsel of the Democratic adminis­\ntration, and the keeper of the con­\nscience ot the Democratic organiza­\ntion In the matter ot the tolls con­\ntroversy. I Mr. President, it\nis unfortunate, indeed, for the Demo­\ncracy that this man, remarkable, dis­\ntinguished, and groat in certain lines\nus he is, should become the leader\nand he followed by the adherents of\ntile party ot Jefferson and of Jackson\n—that party which has held sacred\nthe rights of the people, which stands\nfor Die preservation of the Constitu­\ntion, the dignity of labor, the equality\nof Anglo-Saxon manhood, and the\nsanctity of the platform promise,\nlaird, God of hosts, be with us yet,\nLest we forget, lest we forget.\n"Think of Bryan and Root pulling\ntogether shoulder to shoulder for the\nmoral, menial, and material uplift of\nthe American people and the preser­\nvation of our national honor!\n"Does any Senator imagine that the\nrepudiation of platform promises will\nbe overlooked and forgotten by the\nneonle because the distinguished\nSenator from New York tells us it\nis the right thing for us to do? Will * mortal\nhis eloquence and logic be soothing | Kempls:
9bd76b4816f1df6020c71bf4b9244eb4 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.9136985984271 40.618676 -80.577293 free equal opportunities to all for fuller and more\nsatisfactory living. That nation which steadily\nand effectively deals with the causes of injustice\nand which effectively undertakes to use its ma­\nterial resources to give its citizens employment\nwith compensation that assures distribution of\ngoods and services produced in an abundance\nnecessary for a comfortable standard of living,\nwill give democracy within its borders the best\nguarantee of security. But in addition those who\ncherish democracy must be on guard against those\nin our midst committed to the revolution of de­\nstruction and subject to orders of foreign dicta­\ntors. Those in this country who believe in com­\nmunism or the totalitarian state are comparatively\nfew in numbers and can do comparatively little\ndamage if they are known for what they are and\nare denied the right to participate in our f'vee, dem­\nocratic organizations. Members of \nand authoritarian groups have renounced the\nethical standards which underlie democratic so­\nciety and are undependable in word and deed.\nThey work with democratic groups only to gain\ntheir own ends—the first of which is the over­\nthrow of democracy. As a fundamental measure\nfor the preservation of democracy, our unions\nmust protect their membership from communists\nand deny any communist election or appointment\nto any representative position or capacity. When\ncommunists are known for what they are, they are\nto a definite degree made ineffective, and the union\nis free for its constructive work. Communists and\nadvocates of all forms of totalitarianisms would\ndestroy those spiritual forces and ethical stand­\nards that give our civilization value. We cannot\ncompromise with or tolerate these subversive pur­\nposes. We must understand and know in order to\nseparate ourselves from them for the protection\nof our free institutions.
1a3fabb7e35f6e4ee04a86ffba70ed17 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.6506848997972 43.82915 -115.834394 The farmers took with the idea, and\non tlie recommendation of the scien­\ntists went into a more systematic cut\ntivation of the soil by better tillage,\ndrainage and rotation of crops. The\nexpectations of tlie farmers were sat­\nisfied for a time, as this system utilized\na large quantity of plant food that was\nlying latent in the boü, but after a few\nyears they were again abruptly aroused\nfrom this mythical dream by the fact\nthat their land was again becoming ex­\nhausted, showing that this better ays\ntern of tillage did not prevent the de­\npletion of the soil, but only made avail­\nable the remainder, of the plant food\nthat was lying dormant in the soil.\nThe same kind of thing is now on\nsomething of a boom in this country.\nMost of tho agricultural papers arc\nrecommending ilrainage, more thor­\nough culture and rotation of crops as\na means of keeping up the soil. The\ndrainage and thorough tillage may be\nclassed as a permanent good, but the\nrotation of crops cannot be so classed.\nIt is simply taking from tlie soil with\none crop the plant food not needed by\nanother, and eventually all these ele­\nments will have been exhausted, and\nthen the soil will bo poor, indeed. The\nrotation creates no new supply of\nnoeded elements, an d hen ce unle ss\nsomething be added to make up the\nloss caused by tlie crop s removed there\ncan be otherwise nothing to re­\nmove sooner or later. A supply can­\nnot come without a source.\nThis failure to keep up the lands in\nEurope on the new plan put the chem­\nists to work, and they learned that the\nsoil must contain certain elements of\nplant food to be productive, and since\nlong cropping had exhausted them\nthey must bo supplied, not hy mechan­\nical means, but by direct application.\nThis theory is still recognized to be\nquite correct, with the fu rther theory\nthat the soil, however fertile, contains\ninexhaustible supplies of these essen\ntial constituents. With these facts\nstaring tho farmer in tho face ho had\neither to let his land become barren\nand sterile, or get a supply of these in­\ngredients, in some shape or other, to\ntake the place of the waste going on.\nA new departure was then adopted\nin the shape of mixed farming—that\nis, keeping a certain number of stock,\nprincipally dairy stock, to utilize all\nthe rougher produce of the farm and\nhave it converted into manure and put\nback into the land. This was to bo tlie\ngreat cure-all for the prev ailing evil,\nand, indeed, is now considered by a\nlarge school of o u r own farmers as be­\ning all that is requisite not only to\nkeep up, b ut also to restore tho fertility\nof the hardly used soil. This is a myth,\nand one science finds it very bard to\ne ra d icate.
1b99459e722b2b527839914606a100ae THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.842465721715 37.005796 -89.177245 An InKrratlna; Leaf frM Ita ltt7.\nThis county waa settled at a very early\ndate by the Frenoha.nd Spaniards. The\ncounty seat of the county, New Madrid,\nwas laid out by a Col. Morsran. of New\nJersey, under thol paWetaasje'of jfcti\nopaniau iving. xi waa tne lnieniloa to\nmake Now Madrid the capital of the\nthen expensive colonial empire of Spain\nin North America. Its situation,, forty- -\nfWo miles below tho mouth of the Ohio\nriver, on tho Mississippi, seemed pecu-\nliarly adapted to mako the embryo city\nthe centre of this empire. From the re\ncords of that time 1 find that tho limits\nof this new city of Madrid were to ex-\ntend four miles south and two miles west\nfrom the river so at to cross, m it fa said,\na beautiful, living, deep lako of purest\nspring water one hundred yards wide\nand several miles lu length, emptying\n by a constant and rapid narrow\nstream through the ccntro of the embryo\ncity. The banks of this lukc. culled St\nAunls, nreBald to huvo been hlgb, beau-\ntiful and pleasant, tho water deep, clear\nand sweei and well stored with fish ; tho\nbottom n clear sand freo from woods,\nshrubs or other vegetables. On each Bide\nof this delightful lake streets were to bo\nlaid out one hundred feet wide, aud a\nroad to bo continued around It of tho\nsame breadth ;aud tho streets weredlrcct-c- d\nto bo preserved forever for the Health\nand pleasure of thecltlzous. A street ono\nhundred and twenty feet wide, on the\nbank of tho Mississippi, was laid out.aud\ntrees were directed to be preserved for\nthe same purpose. Twelve acres in tho\ncentral part of the city were to be pre-\nserved lu liko manner, to bo ornamented,\nregulated and improved by the nagls-trac- y
022ca01c7bdf5ec19649c1e90229ec58 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.4002731924206 42.217817 -85.891125 horses from their subterranean impris\nonment, that they were not harmed.\nIt has been said that ho was a man of\nquite irregular habits ; but my inform\nant says that from the time that Mr.\nPayne arrived at Tunis until 1817, when\nMr. Reed was appointed to the consul-\nate at Tripoli alter which they did not\nmeet they were on the most intimate\nterms, meeting almost every day and on\nall sorts of occasions, and that he never\nsaw anything to cause him to believe\nthat this charge was true. Mr. Reed\nadmits that Mr. Payne never had any\namount of money at Lis command long\natatime r buthe saysthatitwasbe-\ncause of his extreme generosity, and\nnot from extravagance and . prodigality.\nHo always spoke of the United States\nwith great affection, and said\nthat he always felt proud whiio abroad\nthat he could call himself an American\ncitizen. He also referred very oftt n to\nhis separation from relatives, and siid\nthat he was a man without a home ; but\nthat the fact was rather the result of\ncircumstances than a matter of choice.\nTho following is the history of "Home,\nSweet Home," as Mr. Roed says tho au-\nthor related it to him, in Tunis. Mr.\nPayne had written several pieces for tho\nstage that had met with considerable fa-\nvor, and had been sent for to go to Paris\nto look after the introduction of one of\nthem in one of the theaters of that city.\nIt was the afternoon before Christmas,\nand, although in winter, tho day was\nbright and pleasant.'
268bd851d6bce4f244438d04ba9cb34b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.2964480558085 39.745947 -75.546589 pressure forces the knifelike edges\nthrough four and five feet of coal that\nsometimes block the doorways to the\nbunkers. In less than thirty seconds\na wall has been made that is ready to\ntake the place of any part of the aids\nof the ship that has been torn away.\nSo far as experiments can show a\nliner can have three forward com­\npartments flooded and still keep\nafloat. Rut when she has been struck\na blow amidship—that Is, In her\nheart—she Is In a bad way. One com­\npartment there flooded is serious, two\nis certain death.\nIn the case of the Titanic it I* be­\nlieved by seaman that ignorant of\nwhat she had struck or the damage\nshe had sustained she had backed\naway from the berg, which as long as\nshe kept her head burled In It, acted\nas a plug to her wounds, but when she\npulled off the sen rushed into the\ngreat gaping and the theory\nIs that the pressure was so great the\ncompartments gave way.\nThese same experts believe that\nsome of the ships near the Titanic\nwhen she struck have a far more\ncomplete story of the wreck than has\nyet been told. They base this upon\ntheir belief that the wireless worked\nright through from the time she\nstruck until she sank.\nThey do not believe that the flood­\ning of the engine (1res shut off the\nwireless power. For Just such emer­\ngency there was a special equipment,\nthe Titanic. For fear that the two\ndynamos aboard the ship might be­\ncome disabled, and to insure that the\nwireless shall work perfectly at all\ntimes there is an auxiliary engine to\ngenerate power for the Marconi plant.\nAlso, as an additional safeguard,\nthere are two complete sets of storage\nbatteries or accumulators iastalled in\nth« wireless house, capable of work­\ning the wireless for twenty hours\ncontinuously.
09f117bdfbae4166f2ae630d25943494 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.8205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 San Francisco, Oct. 20..The Pacific\ntill Company's steamer City of Now\nfork went ashore this evening in a fog,\ntnd will probably bo a total loss. She\niai!od for China and Japan at 3:30 p. in.\ntnd went down tho bay undor full head\n>f steam. Tho fog was very heavy, and\nrom tho lower wharf the heads could\n>e seen. About* 4:30 p. in., the big\nicean steamer was lost sight of and a\nialf hour later tlio booming of cannon\nould be heard and signal rockots could\n>o soon as they burst above the fog.\nThe signal station at Point Lobos at\njnco bont a message into town, and soon\nivory tug in tho bay was racing for\n?omt Bonita. Arriving there it -was\notiud that the steamer was hard and\nuat on the rocks, having gone on them\nlndcr a head of steam. As Boon as\nho ship struck thero was aeceneof\nrild coufucion. A couple of hundred\n3hinoso in tho steerage set up a howl\nhat could be hoard half across the\niolduu Gat-' . Captain Johnson was\nvondorfully cool, however, and ho and\nlis officers soon restored ordor.\nWhen tho signal lights began to flash\nbo observer at Toint Lobos came to the\n:onclusion that it was tho steamer\nMonowal that had gone on to the rocks,\ntnd that nows was circulated all over\nhe city. Those who were oxpecting\n'olativcs on that steamer from Sydney,\n\\uckland, Samoa and Hawaii at once\nlocked to tho olQcers of tho Oriontal\nuid Occidental line. All that thoy-could\n>o told was that a steamer had been on\n?oint Bonita, but whether it was the\nilonownl or some other craft no one\niou!d tell.
f259990e3dca965a67ee393f4c2b2f62 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.683561612126 35.780398 -78.639099 In Wilson, Edgecombe county,' Jf; C, on Saturday.\nthe 6th of August, after a protracted illness, Mrs.\nAmanda Mr Daniel, in the 25th vear of her a?c.\nwife of W. 1J. Daniel. She leaves four small chil\ndren, tho youngest about one nonth old. Mrs.\nDaniel was a devoted wife and an affectionate mo-\nther, and leaves a large number of friends and rela-\ntions to niourn her unt?niely deajth.\nIn Alannmee county; on the 12th ult., Bro. Wm.\nM. Jarshall, an exemplary rii'embor of Haw River\nDivision, No. 320, S. of T., of consumption, after a\nlingering illness of several months. His brethren,\nin formal resolutions, bear test'raony to his worth\nas a member of the Order tind tts a citizen, and ex\npressive of their deep sorrow it his loss. The ob\nservances usual to tho fraterMty were directed to\nbe made in of the demise of Brother M.\nDied in Louisburg, on Wednesday, 17th, Aug., of\ntyphoid fever, Miss Elizabeth ltouutreo, daughter\nof Mrs. E. Kountree, near Wilson. Edsrecombe co.\nThe deceased was about 16 years of age, with per-\nsonal charms and mental endowments, which chal-\nlenged universal admiration. Could all that would\nseem to us to make life desirable, have stayed the\nhand of dttiythtduhad this charming aud in-\nteresting young lady lived long to bless the circlo\nof her friends, and especially to minister to the hap-\npiness of a fond mother, of doating brothers and\nsisters. But she i? gone ; and her unexpected\ndeath impresses again the solemn admonition of\nthe Scriptures; "Whatsoever thy hand hndeth to\ndo, do it with thy might ; for there is no work, nor\ndevice, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the gravo\nwhither thou goest.
40788ab11ac45f14d0aa288f1eecc27d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1903.9794520230848 39.756121 -99.323985 In visiting many herds and flocks 1\nhave been most strongly Impressed\nwith the fact that there Is no unl\nformlty of type In them. Each man\nhas all sorts of types and kinds In his\nherd or flock,' says Professor Q. K\nDay, of Guelph. The result Is thai\nthey breed ttp a flock or herd that will\nnever be of any use in the country\nEach young breeder, and old one, too\nfor that matter: must find out what\ns the right typej then set this up as\nan ideal and work to it. You cannot\nreach your ideal at once. It maj\ntake ten, fifteen, twenty or even forty\nyears to do so, and perhaps you may\nnever reach It, but keep it ever before\nyou, never lose sight of It for an In\nstant, nor let anything else drive it\naway. You will find that the man\nwh6 makes a success of breeding Is\nhe who sticks to his Ideal with, as\nIt were, a bull dog tenacity, and\nthough he may not become famous,\nhe will at least make a name for\nhimself In sphere of life. I would\nemphasize the Importance of getting\nthe right type fixed in one's mind as\nan Ideal. There Is a type of hog that\ngives the best bacon, and If the pro\nduction of bacon hogs is the Ideal a\nman has set up for himself, then be\nshould get as near to the Ideal type as\npossible. Some breeds of hogs come\nmuch nearer that type. than others,\nIn judging of the length of a hog It\nIs not enough that he should be long\nfrom the nose to the tall, but it is of\nspecial Importance that he should be\nlong between shoulder and ham. I\nhave heard some people say that it\ncosts more to produce the bacon type\nof hog than the fat kind. I want to\ngive you this for your encouragement\nit has never been proved that it\ndoes cost more. Our experiments show\nvery conclusively that it does not nec\nessarily cost more to produce a pound\nof gain In a good bacon hog than in\na fat hog, and that a good bacon hog\n1b an economical producer.
169194b4f2e5364c10123c361a8db1a9 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1898.7493150367834 33.031451 -111.387343 "The enemy tells us that there is no\nhope for silver only in the republican\nparty. My friends, if 1 believe that I\nnever would have left that party, if\nthe republicans settle the question it\nwill be on the basis of the gold standard.\nDo you believe the men who proclaimed\nthemselves the followers of McKinley\nare the friends of silver? (Cries of\n'No! No'!) When the convention at\nSt. Louis declared for the gold standard\nMcKinley accepted the nomination,\nand made more than 100 speeches from\nhis cottage home, and in every speech\nhe derided and denounced silver. He\nselected for the secretary of the treas-\nury Lyman J. Gaga, a man who was\navowedly a gold standard man. Do\nyou believe the president, if a bimet-\nallism would put such a man in his\ncabinet? The people of Colorado are\n idiots, even if some public people\nsay so, and it is hardly fair to tell\nthat in the face of this that McKinley\nis a silver man. Every movement that\nthe administration has made has been\nto fasten the yoke of the gold standard\nupon the people, and every vote given\nfor a McKinley man indorses this\ncourse. The word has gone out to the\neast that Colorado has Been the mis\ntake it made in 1896, and that the re-\npublicans will again get into line with\nthe old party. I don't intend to get)\ninto line. I will stand for silver. I\nwill not join hands with the gold\nstandard in the east and then come\nhome here and profess friendship for\nthe Bilver cause. I feel moved to speak\nwith some earnestness on this occasion.\n"If Colorado should elect which,\nthank
623d82131c723b94ccc368a2262bc0bc THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.2123287354134 39.369864 -121.105448 “1 was interested in reading in one\nof the numbers of the Press about the\ndesperate attempts of the men of San\nJuan to skate upon the old reservoir;\nbut no mention was made of any trials\nby the fair sex. With us the women\nskate as much or more than the men;\nand every pleasant afternoon when the\nice is good, there can be seen on Jamai-\ncr or Fresh pond a sight which I fancy\nwould set the California miners perfect-\nly crazy: from two to five hundred per-\nsons darting about in every direction on\nthe ice, and the shores lined with spec-\ntators in carriages and jn foot. The\ncostumes of the ladies add much to the\npicturcsqneness of the scene. They\nwear what are termed the Balmoral pet-\nticoats, or skirts, made of woolen with\nstripes of bright scarlet, or or drab,\nalternating with gray. Of course,such\nskirts were made to be shown; and their\ndresses, which they wear short lest they\nshould get entangled in the skates, are\ncarefully looped up in front or all around,\ndisplaying their pretty little feet and\ngiving glimpses of charming ankles—-\nif one will permit his eyes to wander in\nthat direction. Moreover, the dear\ncreatures like to have their brothers,\ncousins or beaux put on the skates for\nthem —which of course the young men\nare delighted to do—and in their first\nessays need a protecting hand or arm to\nsustain them, and assist them when they\nfall—for they will fall sometimes,which\naffords excellent opportunities for dis-\nplays of gallantry. Of course, with\nsuch incitements, skating has become\nhighly popular. The young b*£<- de-\nclare it is charming, \nmen swear it i- •
0d4ba977a2aaed264d1acee297024bbe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.1027396943175 40.063962 -80.720915 BERLIN, Feb. 6 . .The freedom Which\nthe Relclutng and the Prussian Diet con-\nceded thli week to the Agrarians, who\nformulated numcroua wishes and com¬\nplaint*, la significant. The minister of\nagriculture. Baron votv Hainmcrstcln-\nLoxtcn, promite* the government would\ngrant (is many of their demands as pos»\nslble. At the moment the was making\nthli declaration, measures were prepar¬\ning to atop the Import* of American\nfru!?, and the decree In that connection\nhad Already been Issued.\nThe entire Liberal precs openly disap¬\nproves of the policy, and asserts it was a\ngovernment trick to obtain the vote of\nthe Agrarians for Emperor William's\nnaval bill. The leading oommcrcl.il Jour¬\nnals point to tho Ill-will and Indignation\nsuch measure* are bound to produce In\nAmerica, and to the futility of prohibit¬\ning the imporfttlon of nn article Germany\ndoes not produce with auillclency. The\nnewspapers claim the only result will be\nthat fruit will be Imported from the\ncouth of Eunrpe at a higher coK than is\nnew being paid for American fruit.\nDr. Frledrich von Kuegcr, of the ngrJ-\ncuitural high school, upon whoge import\nthe authorities here are understood to\nhave acted, lino been making an \nsive series of experiments and examina¬\ntions of American plants and fruits sup¬\nposed to be Infected by the San Jose bug.\nAfter many failures, he finally discover¬\ned the bug in three spcclmenta of\npeaches and peara.\nDr. Helnrlch Dorhue, president of the\nEntomological Society, of Settln. writes\nthat the San Jose bug has long been\nknown in Germany au the Blut-Lous,\nand has devastated orchards in various\nparts of the country, especially in the\nneighborhood of Frankfort and Btettln,\nHe adds: "The present scare ii as un¬\njustified as the late Colorado bug scare."\nThe United States embassy is contin¬\nuing its remonnrancea as a protest\nagainst the unfounded rumors alleging\nthat It was weakening. Sovcral of the\nnewspapers express the opinion that the\ndecree will not be permanent and that it\nwas only intended aa a temporary ac< of\nretaliation for American treatment of\nGerman sugar. Inquiry made at the for¬\neign ofllcs and at the Prussian agricul¬\ntural department, however, shows the\nsteps taken to be only forerunners of\nothers of more importance; the govern¬\nment having concluded that something\nmust be done to gratify the Acrrarian de¬\nmand for retaliation on the United\nStates.
22d71f880576e4b3befa01d90540b54a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.6407103508905 40.063962 -80.720915 ranlonedl ya sudden cold, and had raised uf\n3cus streaked with blood. Bhe soon found pe\nlef ana sent for more. She took about Qn\n1 ounces of It, and got well. J. B. Clarke, co\nq., editor of the Manchester Dally Mirror, a*\nide a trial or the same preparation In the\n» or a severe cold and was cured immedl- tej\nily. He was so highly pleased with the re- jq,\nIts, and so confident of success attending lt« na\nair placed before the public, that he ge\ny pursuaded me to give it a name, and th\nid it abroad to benefit the buffering. In 0f\n>vember, 1855, 1 first advertised it under be\nb name of White Pine Compound. In two jcx\nars from that time there had been whole- pc\n In Manchester alone one hundred dol- pn\ns worth, where it took the lead or all the lu\nagh remedies In the market, and it still <;c\ntintains that position. There is good reai\nfor this; it is very soothing and healing\nits nature; is warming to the stomach and\nsasant withal to'the taste, and Is exceed- Ix\njly cheap. ne\nAs a remedy for kidney complaints the gn\nbite Pine Compound stands unrivaled, it th\nib not originated lor that purpose, but a an\nnonln using it for a cough was not only as:\nred of the cough, out was also cured ol a m.\nIney difficulty of ten years standing. Since ea\nit accidental discovery many thousands ah\nvn nuxl (t for thfi Kfltnn mmnlnint. and fr*\nve been completely cured."
1d07bb0fd8370f955bc94dfcfd122ec0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.924863356355 40.063962 -80.720915 tity of other valuable timber and naval\nmaterial of every kind. Our navy is\nnow far more powerful for our warlike\npurposes than it has ever before been in\ntime of peace. It does not compare,\neither in the number or character of its it\nvessels, with the expensive establishments nj\nof those European nations whose mutual st\nrelations keep them always in armed st\n|array; VhbfrB contiguous coasts and deep oc\nharbors at home, and scattered colonies o'i\nall over the world, seem to require that dt\nthey should constantly rival each other, m\nat whatever expense, iu the size and g«\nIpower ol their naval vessels ana arma- si\nmenu. But lor the defense of a peaceful to\npeople, without Colonies, with a danger- tli\noub coast and shallow harbors, separated \nby n vast ocean from warlike naval pow- T,\nera our fnavy in not without strength bi\nand when ita iron-clad.fleet shall be com- th\npletod or repaired, a work requiring now\nbut a little time and expense, and its\nforce supplemented by the comparatively di\ncheap addition recommended, it will be f0\nfound sufficient to resist any force which tc\ncould bebrougbt across the ocean to attack #c\nup, and po'wferful also for oflenslvo opera- ti\ntions upon the ocas and among the\nislands, which lie contiguous to our own\nshores. In view of the fact that the^ ap- 0j\npropriations for two of the princi- w\npal working bureas of the De- ^\npartment now average but little over .l\n|5,000'0d0'annually, and considering tho or\ncost of merely maintaining a Navy
1dfc3f570c724e0f391a03f9765aefcb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.4685792033495 39.261561 -121.016059 There is no malady of deeper importance, either in a\nmedical or moral point of view, to which the human fain\nily is more liable, than that arising from impure connec-\ntions. As a medical man it is the duty of every physician\nto look at disease as it affects health and life, and his sole\nobject should la* to mitigate, ns far as lies in his power,\ntheir bodily suffering. Human nature is at best but frail;\nall are liable to misfortune.\nOf all ills that afflict man, none are more terrible limn\nthose of a private nature. Dreadful as it is in the person\nwho contracts it, frightful ns are its ravages upon his\nconstitution, ending frequently in destruction and a loath-\nsome grave, it becomes of still greater importance when\nit is transmitted to innocent offspring. Such being the\ncase, how important it becomes that every one having\nthe least reason to fear they have contracted the disease,\nshould attend to it at once by consul ing some physician\nwhose respectability and education enables him to war-\nrant a safe, speedy find permanent cure.\nIn accordance w ith this necessity, Dr. Stackpole feels\ncalled upon to state that by long study and extensive\n he has become perfect master of all those diseases\nwhich coma under the denomination of venereal, and hav-\ning paid more attention to that branch than any other\nphysician in the United States, he feels himself better\nqualified to treat them.\nSvphilis in all its forma, such as Ulcers, swelling of the\ngroins, ulcers in the throat, scceudary syphilis, syphilis\nin children, mercurial syphilistic effections, gonorrhoea,\ngleet, strictures, false passages, inflamation of the bladder\nand prostrate glands,excoriations, tumors, pustules, etc.\nsre as familiar to him aw the most common tilings or\ndaily observations. The doctor effects a cure in recent\neases in a few days, and finds no difficulty in curing those\noflong duration without submiting the patient to such\ntreatment ns will draw upon him the slightest suspicion,\nor oblige him to neglect his business, whether in doors or\nwithout. The diet need not be changed except in cases\nof seven* in finmatlon. There are in California, patients\n(amounting to over 10,000 in the pa-t year,) that could\nfurnish proof of this ; but these are matters that require\nthe nicest secrecy, which he always preserves.\nAll letters enclosing $10 will tie promptly attended to.\nOflioehoursfrom 9 A. M. to 9 1*. M.
24acf546c46600f6b16c795596f94c6f THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1866.5520547628107 41.004121 -76.453816 nn immense debt already burdening the\nenergies of tlio industrial and laboring\nclasses, a due regard for their interests,\nso inseparably connected with the wel-\nfare of the country, should prompt its to\nrigid enconomy and retrenchment, and\nInfluence us to abstain from all legisla-\ntion that would unnecessarily Increase\nthe public Indebtedness. Tested by this\nrulo of sound political wisdom, I ean\nsco no reason for tho establishment of\nthe military jurisdiction conferred upon\nthe officials of the Bureau by tho four-\nteenth section of the bill. By tlio laws\nof tho United States and of the different\nStates competent courts, Federal nnd\nState, havo been established, and are\nnow In full practical operation. By\nmeans of these civil tribunals nmplb\nredress isaflbrded for till private wrongs,\nwhether to tlio person or the property\nof the citizen, without denial or unne-\ncessary delay. They ato open to nil\nwithout regard to color or race. I feel\nwell assured that it will be better to\ntrust the rights, privileges, and immuni-\nties of tho citizens to tribunals thus es-\ntablished and presided over by compe-\ntent nnd impartial judges, bound by\nfixed rules of nnd evidence, and\nwhen tho right of trial by Jury is guar-\nanteed and secured, than lo the caprice\nor Judgment of an officer of the Bureau,\nwho it is possible may be entirely ig\nnorant of the principles that underlie\ntlio just administration of the law\nThere Is danger, too, that conflict of Ju\nrisdiction will frequently arise between\nthe civil courts and tlicso military trl-\nbtinals, each having concurrent Juris-\ndiction over tho person and cause of\naction ; tho ono Jurisdiction adminis\ntered and controlled by civil law, tho\nother by military. How is tho conflict\nto bo settled, and who Is to determino\nbetween the two tribunals, when it\narises? In my opinion it is wise to\nguard against such conflict by leaving\nto tho courts nnd juries tho protection\nof all civil rights and the redress of all\ncivil grievances. The fact cannot bo de\nnied that since the actual cessation of\nhostilities many acts of violence, such,\nperhaps, as had never been witnessed in\ntheir previous history, havo occurred in\nthe States involved in the recent Rebel!\nion. I believe, however, that public\nsentiment will sustain me in the asser
403b3a8da73c77f38fc4e52dbde0cd88 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.4260273655505 44.939157 -123.033121 courts that every intendment will be\nused to uphold a statute when It Is\nattacked for alleged conflict with the\nfundamental law. The sum and sub-\nstance of the revision Is that where-\nas before in general terms the peo-\nple interposed the constitution and\ncriminal laws of the state as a quali-\nfication of and limitation upon the\notherwise "exclusive power" of mun-\nicipalities to enact and amend their\ncharters, now in the revision, they\nhave gone Into details and have not\nonly repeated their former Injunction\nbut have also particularly specified\nthis Identical criminal law as one of\nthose to which municipalities must\nbe subject. It means that the whole\npeople have not yet abandoned their\nsupreme authority over all the state\nand do not Intend to allow their gov-\nernment of the state to disintegrate\nentirely the village system. In\nhis masterly opinion inStraw v. Har-\nris, 54 Or. 424, Justice King made a\nstrong case against this tendency\nand his reasoning applies here with\ngreat cogency. In construing a law,\ncourts will consider the mischief de-\nsigned to be remedied. Toomey v.\nDunphy, 86 Ca. 639; Soby v. People,\n134 111. 66; Swan v. Mulherln, 67 111.\nApp. 77 . In the light of that rule\nthis view of the constitution Is sup-\nported by a sound financial reason\nindependent of all preaching morals.\nIt Is a well known fact. Within com-\nmon observation, that somewhere in\nthe analysis of almost every criminal\nprosecution," liquor appears as a fac-\ntor. The county as a whole pays the\nexpenses of such litigation on both\nsides from its inception before the\ncommitting magistrate to the final\nJudgment
08252fbc9e9953c8915c475340d09353 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.0040983290326 40.063962 -80.720915 "Having learned on Monday evenlnf\nbat Dr. Jamison hud entered Boei\nDUatry, I have slnco been iontlnuouslj\nngaged in on endeavor to avert tin\nonsequenres of hie extraordinary act\n>n. Sir HerculGs Robinson has by pro\nlamatlon publicly repudiated Dr. Jaml\non's act and has enjoined the nritlid\nUbjects to obey the law* and remaii\nulut. l)r. Jamison and his olflcen\nave also been ordered to retire itnmo\nlately. It is hoped that a collision wil\no averted; but Dr. Jamison cut tlx\nrlres as he advanced.\n"The Kritlsh agent at Johannesburg.'\nlr. Chamberlain's statement continue*\nIs going forward to meet Dr. Jamlsoi\nnd to order him In tho queen's name, ti\nptlre forthwith. I have callod upoi\nhe chartered company to repudiate Dr\nomlson'a croceedinga. of which tin\nompany says it is entirely Ignorant.\n"Mr. Cecil Rhodes (premier of Cnp<\n'olony) has staled that Dr. Jamiooi\ncted without hla authority. As sooi\ns h«* heard that he contemplated enter\nlg the Transvaal he endeavored to stoi\nlm but found that the wires were cut.'\nIt is reported that Dr. Jamison wrot«\nd Commandant Marlce. who cautlonei\nlm to retire, as follows:\n" I have Informed you lhat I intend t<\nroceed with my original plana, whlcl\nre not hostile against the people th<\nransvaal. Hut. wo nre here in reply ti\nhe invitation of the nrlncloal resident)\nr (ho Kant! to assist them In their de\nlands for Justice and to ordinary right:\nf every cltlxen of a civilised mate."\nIt appears from this letter that Dr\nainlson was not induced to take tin\nxtraordlnary step of Invading a friend\n/ country in time of peace by the fea\nor the life of the women or children o\nnative uprising: but in order to hup\nort a political movement which in it\nlie natucb of o constitutional airitatioi\njr a redress of xricvancos.\n\\V. I'. Fraser, « member of the execu\nIve council «»f the national union, tlv\nnly member In London. discussing tlv\nitTiatinu in I he Transvual, said: "Tin\nlost distinguished and influential mln\niK men In the HandH are Americans\nnd they all feW that Africa In the!:\nlome and are with the ICngllsh In feel\nup the necessity for bolter irovommun\nnd a freer code of mining lawn.\nA special dispatch recolvcd here thl\nfternoon from Merlin nays It 1m ntntcc\nt thn German capital that Krnpero\nVtUlum hu promised bin moral sup\nort to the lioers and has Indicated tha\nn may tako other meanttrcu If Orca\niritaln persist* in her present course.
aac8862c903135e79aa35ed510841ca3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.387671201167 39.261561 -121.016059 plaint of lh Ransom to obtain a decree of this Court\nfor the foreclosure of a cetain mortgage, hearing dale\nJune 1st, 1868. executed by you to 1). hansom, ami\nfor the sale of the premises therein, and in said com\nplaint, particularly mentioned and described, and the\napplication of the monies arising from such sale to\nthe payment of the amount due on a certain promis-\nsory note set forth in the sHid complaint, made and\ndelivered by the defendant Robert McCloud to the\nplaintiff D. H.unsom , bearing even dnte with the emd\nmortgage, that there is due u|s>nsald note more than\nthe sum of two hundred dollars and interest thereon\nat the rate of three per cent per mouth from the 1st\nof June, 1858 . And if any deficiency shall remain\nafter applying all the monies nrising from the sale of\nsaid premises to the paymeut of said amount, inter*\n and costs thereon that the plaintilT may haveei-\necution therefor against the said defendants and all\nand every person claiming through or under the de-\nfendants subsequently to the date of plaintiffs mort-\ngage may be barred and foreclosed of all right claim\ninequity of redemption in ami to the said premise,\nor any part thereot, and such other and further relief\nor both in the premises as may lie just and equitable.\nAnd you are hereby notified ttiat if you rail to appear\nand answer, judgment will be taken against you for\nthe sum of two hundred dollars and interest thereon\nat the rate of three |ier cent, per month from the\nfirst day of June, a. d. 1868 , together with all the\ncosts of suit, and also demand of the court such other\nrelief as prayed for in said complaint. Given uuder\nmy baud this eighth day of May A. D. 1862.
1339dd1bd959f3718ce0fcaad43fe3f4 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1919.582191749112 42.217817 -85.891125 and interest and the further sum of\nfifteen dollars the statutory attorney\nfee provided for in said mortgage\nwhkh is the whole amount claimed to\nbe due and unpaid on said mortgage\nand no proceedings at law or Id\nequity having been brought to recover\nthe amount due whereby the power of\nsale contained in said mortgage has\nbecome operative,\nNow therefore notice is hereby\ngiven that by virtue of the power of\nsale and in pursuance of the statute\nIn such, case made and provided, said\nmortgage will be foreclosed by a sale\nof the mortgaged premises at public\nauction to the highest bidder at the\nnorth front door of the Court. House\nin the village of Paw Paw, county of\nVan Buren, Michigan (that "being the\nplace holding the Circuit Court for\nthe County of Van Buren) on the 9th,\nday of August, A. D. 1919 at ten\no'clock in the forenoon of that day,\nwhich said premises are described io\nsaid mortgage as follows, to- w- it:\nCommencing on the east and west\nquarter line of section 21 town V\nsouth range 14 west 17.90 chains\nwest of the quarter post between sec-\ntions 21 and 22, thence north 26.44\nchains, thence west 23.10 chains to\nthe north and south quarter line,\nthence south on same 8.80 chains to\nthe margin of lake thence south east-\nerly on same to the east and west\nquarter line; thence cast about 14.15\nchains to the place of beginning, ex-\ncept ten acres off the south side.\nPaw Paw township
2047eef6eb90fc3ec337452ab2bfee6c NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.9139343946063 40.735657 -74.172367 The brief argues that the enforced\npublication of a newspaper companys\ncirculation and the publishers credi-\ntors would unduly burden the power\nof the weak newspaper to compete,\nwith the stronger, and in many cases\ndrive the weak newspaper to the wall\nHe further argues that at the time\nthe first amendment was adopted the\nimpersonal dissemination of ideas was\ngenerally recognized in discussion.\nThe letters of "Junius” are cited, as\nalso the fact that the constitution it-\nself would never have been adopted\nhad It not been for the federalist pa-\npers, published anonymously by Ham-\nilton, Madison and Jay.\nAny attempt to compel a newspaper\nto disclose either its owners or Its\ncreditors or to comepl it to mark as\nan advertisement matter which it has\npublihed for a consideration, restricts\nthe freedom of discussion and Is con-\ntrary to the custom of impersonal\n which prevailed generally In\nEngland and America when the Con-\nstitution was framed.\nThe brief further argues that the\nappropriation of the newspaper col-\numns to enforce the policy of pub-\nlicity, without compensation, violates\nthe fifth amendment, in taking prop-\nerty without due process of law.\nMr. Beck argues that the law has\nthe merit of sincerity in that it\nmakes no hypocritical pretense to be-\ning a means to carry out any consti-\ntutional power. He quotes the de-\nbates of Congress as showing that the\nauthors of the bill. Senators Bourne\nand Read, and Representatives Henry,\nBarnhardt and others, all admitted\nthat the purpose of the act was to\ncompel a public disclosure of the oft n*\nership of newspapers and of the influ-\nences which dictated their policies.\nThe Supreme Court has specially\nset Monday npxt for the argument ol\nthis test case.
1ff2fc0f6ea3c02c8d1f4731e5cfb6c4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0860655421473 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. PoMBitov presented a rcsolutloi\nIroin the Kansas Legislature urging actio:\nlor cheaper transit Irom the agrlciiltum\nStates to the seaboard.\nMr. IUmsbv introduced a bill in rola\ntlon to the settlers in the late Sioux In\ndian reservation, Minnesota.\nMr. Scott reported from tho Financi\nCommittee bill declaring tho meaning o\ntlio internal revenue act of July 14,1870\nIt declares that tho meaning of the nc\nwas to exempt Irom the 2} per cent tax al\ndividends of earning nnd undivldet\nprofits ol all banks, insurance or othe\ncorporations mentioned in tho act made\nor which accrued a surplus fund durinj\nAugust, September, October, Novembe\nandDecembcr, 1870. In all cases whcri\nbulu corporations unu already paiu, 0]\nwould thereafter pay upon their earnings\nincomes, or undivided profits for any pre\nvious month in that year, a tax eqnal t<\nat least 2) per cent per annum. The sub\nstitute also directs the Commissioner o\nInternal Hcvcnue to refund the tax pail\nupon all earnings for the said flv(\nmonths, to nil corporations that hnv<\npaid u tax of 2J per cent upon all dlvl\n(lends of 1870 and 1871. The bill passed\nMr.TnuMMiix, of the Judiciary Com\nmittec, reported adversely on the bill tc\nauthorize the President to accept thj\nresignation of the Judge of any Court ft\nthe United States.\nThe amnesty bill was taken up, ant\nMr. CriANDLKR addressed the Senate si\nlength. lie declared himself against uni\nvcrsal amnesty, it was a boon, and thej\nwho proposed to grant it, had certainly e\nright to impose combinations, and h<\nthought it a very mild and reasonabh\ncondition to require the rebels to ceasi\ntheir infernal outrages upon loyal men\nbefore giving them amnesty. He was\nopposed too, to forcing amnesty upor\nthem, if they would not condescend tc\nask it, they ought not to get it. Tlie flrsl\ncondition of forgtvcncas was repentance\nGod might forgive an unrenent rebel, bul\nhe (CiiANDUtR) never wcft.a - .
2c4f24c7cac4db0e6951e245cb4899d7 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1913.8123287354135 36.000618 -88.428106 further experiment; placing a drop of the fluid\nswarming with larvae on the back of his hand he\nallowed It partially to dry up. The burning and\nthe reddening of the skin began over again, and a\nlittle later when he removed what was left of the\nfluid Hrery few of the larvae were to be found. The\ngreat majority of them had disappeared. These\nlittle trifles gave Doctor Looss "furiously to\nthink," as the 'French say, and he then repaired\nto the hospital, where he found a boy whose leg\nwas about to be removed. He dropped a little of\nthe fluid full of ancylostoma larvae on the leg, and\nafter the leg was cut off the area in question was\nremoved and cut into sections. When these sec-\ntions were examined through the microscope the\nlittle ancylostoma larvae were seen forcing their\nway down into the body through the skin, espe-\ncially traveling by the hair follicles, and, to a\nlesser extent, through the sweat glands into the\ndeeper layers of the skin. It was, of course, im\npossible to pursue work with the human\nancylostoma, and Doctor Looss had to carry on\nhis work with another species. The larvae of A.\ncaninum were traced into the blood vessels and\nlymphatics pf the dog. Swept along in the blood\nstream, they easily reach the lungs. Once arrived\nin the lunge the larvae have no difficulty in trav-\nersing the soft pulmonary tissue and making their\nway in the cavity of the respiratory organs.\nThence they travel along the bronchial tubes, and\nso to the windpipe and into the larynx and up al-\nmost Into the mouth, and here they turn back into .\nthe oesophagus and so down Into the stomach and\nintestine. The whole of this remarkable Journey\ntakes from seven to ten day. They then shed the\nskin of their second moult, and later, when they\nreach the alimentary canal, they undergo a ttird\nand fourth ecdysls or moult. In eight days they\nbecome capable of reproduction, and In a very few\nmore days the eggs are then passing away from\nthe body of the host The whole cycle of their\ny
0dfc04563de39c07c55f76a66fc23471 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.4822404055353 37.561813 -75.84108 na was crossed at Havre de Grace.\nIn February Pinkertotl was employed bv\nthe officers of the Philadelphia, Wilming-\nton and Baltimore road, to investigate and\nascertain the facts in regard to these mat-\nters, with a view of protecting their road.\nFor this purpose be removed to Baltimore,\ntakintr with him such of his detective force\nas he thought best suited to his purpose.\nWhile thus engaged an officer of tlie,\nroad learned that a young gentleman of\nhigh social position in Rallinio'e. the son\na very prominent citizen who had held\nhigh official position under the State and\nNational Governments, had declared that\nhe was one of a bant! who Had sworn toj\ntake the Hie or uncoui mi m\nWashington. The officer communicated\nfact to Pinkerton, and he immediately\nasked and obtained to investi\ngate this conspiracy. It was now to be\nplot and counterplot.\nA warm admirer of the President elect.\nwhom he had known in Illinois, Pinlterton\ndetermined that, if coolness, courage and\nskill could save the life of Mr. Lincoln and\nprevent the revolution which would follow\nhis violent death, he would accomplish it.\nHis plan was, with his detectives to enter!\nHnUitnore as residents ol ijuarieston ami\nNew Orleans, and by assuming to be se-\ncessionists of the most extreme violence,\nto secure entrance into their secret societies\nand military organizations, and thus pos-\nsess themselves of their secret plans. In\nlooking over his corps he found two men\nadmirably adapted to the object he had in\nview, both young, and both able to assume\nand successfully carry out the character of\na
a652804c02ef792e6c0c5ad7b56c7a63 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.595890379249 41.681744 -72.788147 A resistlessly moving mass of ice\nhalf a mile deep is responsible for\nthe topography of New Britain and\nvicinity today, . geogologista have\nlearned by examing the various\nfeatures of the landscape. Most of\nthe hills, lakes, ponds, and even\nsoil In this section of Connecticut\nwere left here some 20,000 years\nago when the great glacier finally\nspent its force and had to retreat\nbefore the return of a warmer cli-\nmate. At its fullest extent the Ice\nstretched over the whole state as\nfar as Long Island, burying hills\nand valleys alike beneath its huge\nand relentless mass.\nIn order that the glacial remains\nmay be better understood, it may\nbe well to describe how a glacier\nworks. This has been learned from\nstudy of glaciers which at\npresent In Greenland, the Alps, and\nother places, as well as from the\nevidence left behind by that which\nburled Connecticut. A glacier is a\ngreat mass of snow and ice parti-\ncles ground and pressed together\nand moving irresistibly outward or\ndownward from certain centers.\nThat which passed over New Brit\nain had its origin in eastern Canada\nand spread southward, sweeping\naway everything in its path. It\ngouged out great amounts of soil,\nground off the edges and tops of\nhills, and carried with it the rocks\nand dirt thus picked up, leaving\nthem far from their points of ori-\ngin. The whole surface of the earth\nwas changed when the glacier re\ntreated, and geologists have been\nable to discover Just what altera-\ntions were made.
100534c92d08abba29700f3328385fde THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1896.3128414984315 35.721269 -77.915539 cept to pass the Appropriation bills,\nthey insist upon being consulted up-\non all the measures to be taken up\nduring the remainder of the session\nand will not grant unanimous consent\nto take up anything that has not\nbeen previously agreed upon.\nThe movement started by Senator\nHawley, of Conn., to take the print-\ning of the postage stamps away from\nthe Bureau of Printing and Engrav-\ning at Washington, and give it to the\nlowest private bidder is making rapid\nprogress and if the friends of real\neconomy in public expenditures do\nnot watch their P's and Q's the sche-\nmers will get it through. It is diffi-\ncult to understand how any man can\nhave the cheek to stand up and ad-\nvocate this step backAvard in the face\n the advantages the government\nhas gained by taking charge of this\nwork. The stamps are better print-\ned, there are more safeguards around\ntheir distribution, and considerably\nmore than $50,000 a year is saved.\nThe Republican majority of the\nHouse Committee on Ways and\nMeans has decided not to report any\nReciprocity bill during thisCongress,\ngiving as the reason the uncertainly\nof what action the Senate would\ntake upon such a bill and the pres-\nence of the Democratic President.\nThe real reason is that the Republi-\ncans do not care to define the exact\npartv policy on this subject as a bill\nwould have to do, believing that it\nwill make more votes by leaving the\nquestion open so that any sort of\npromise that may be demanded may\nbe made.
45fe726ff518f6ee157697287191d49f THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1867.5246575025367 39.24646 -82.47849 unqualiuodly in lavor ot equal\nrights for all, not only without re\ngard to nationality and color, but\nwithout rogard to sex. Women\nwere more virtuous than men; their\nperceptions were quicker and keen\ner, and when they gained political\npower they would rectify many\nabases which had thus far remain-\ned untouched. If he had not be-\nlieved that his own wife had sense\nenough to vote, he nevei would\nhave married her, laughter and\napplause, and if any of his hear,\ners had wives who were unequal to\nthe discharge of the right of suff-\nrage, he would advise them to go\nhomo and get divorced at once.\nRenewed laughter. The speaker\ndenounced those women who did\nnot want to vote because it was\nnot fashionable, and said that he\nhad a prediction to make: Female\nsuffrage will be general in less than\nthirty years, (A voice "That's too\nfar off!") and he thought it likely\nthat in Kansas the next Legisla-\nture might set matter straight.\n(Applause.) He repeated that he\nintended to keep m advance of the\npeople on this subject, and that he\nwas now ready to take another\njump forward, if necessary. In his\nview radicalism upon this and all\nother questions was righteousness,\nwhile conservatism was hypocrisy\nand cowardice. The conservative\nwas a mere lickspittle and hanger\non; he was not only willing to be\ntrampled in the dust, but was wil-\nling to remain there.\nAs regarded the political situa-\ntion he would only say that the\nSoutherners now had the mildest\nterms offered them they would ever\nget. If they chose to accept them,\nwell and good; they might have all\nthe advantage of such action; if\nthey refused them, another turn\nwould be given to the screw and\nthey would be compelled to yield\nwhether they wished to or not.\nCongress had thus far been with\nthe people, and it would not now\ndesert them under the lead of J oh n- so- n
711a8e11a06088a750207e749b439d9c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.0890410641807 39.261561 -121.016059 28th day of January, a. I). 1881 a final Judgment\nami Decree was rendered in the District Court of the\nFourteenth Judicial District of the 8tate of Califor-\nnia, in ansi for the county of Nevada, against >.' £& -\n1KL.CORBKTT and WIFK, et als., and in favor of D..\nk U. l .ACUMAX, for the sum of Dive Hundred and\nfifty-two dollars, principal debt, with interest on the\nprincipal at the rate of ten per cent, per annum trom\nthe-21st day of January 18(31 until paid, together\nwith all costs of suit. And whereas, on the said\n38th day of January A. I>. 1881, it w»» orders* and\ndecreed by the said Court, that the Mortgage eat\nforth in plaintiff's complaint be forecloses], anil the\nproperty therein described, to wit: “That certain\nRanch, piece or )>arcoi of geeund, lying and being in\nNevada county State of aud known as\nl.ind,s Rauch, situated iu Willow Valley, about two\nmiles north-east of Nevada City, on the Washington\nroad, bounded aud containing as follows, to wit:—\nCommencing at a stake nitr a cabin, at or near the\nSnow Mountain Ditch, aud running north 48* 30'\nwest, two thousand six Ipindred aud forty fi'et, cross-\ning said ditch to a pine stump- thence north 60° 30'\neast two thousand sis huiplrui and forty leet, cross-\ning a road to Neiada City aud Snow Mountain Ditch\nto a stake on the hill side ; thence along the hill side\nsouth 84° 30' east two thousaud six hundred aud\nforty fift to a stake ; thence south 60° 30' west two\nthousand six hundred and forty feet, crossing old\nNevada road. Snow Mountain ditch ami Slate Creek\nto the place of beginning, c ntaining one hundred\nand sixty acres,"
209667dc71187db11af05e15e4279a47 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1875.57397257103 39.743941 -84.63662 having been seen at a place about six\nmiles distant ; he at once proceeded\nto the spot and commenced beating the\njungle in the usual manner. The tiger\nbroke from the jungle at a place near\nwhere he was posted, and immediately\nMr. Dobbie fired, severely wounding the\nbeast, which slunk off into a thicket\nclose by. On hearing the report of the\nrifle the beaters stopped beating. Mr.\nDobbie called his peon, Syed Mustoffa,\nto collect the beaters and bring them all\nround to him, which occupied about\nhalf an hour ; lie then remarked to the\npeon, I have hit tho tiger very hard,\nand he has gone into that thicket,,'\npointing to one a short distance off. He\nthen, with the peon, proceeded toward\nthe thicket, picking up the track of the\ntiger by the marks of blood on the\nground. Cutting their through the\njungle they soon came near the place\nwhere the creature was lying mortally\nwounded ; the peon saw him, and point\ning to the spot, said : He is still alive.\nMr. Dobbie replied, ' I cannot see Mm.'\nThe peon again pointing to the place\nwhere the wounded beast lay, said,\nTake care, sir, he is looking at us ;' and\nimmediately afterward called out, ' He\nis crouching for a spring, so look out 1'\nMr. Dobbie replied ' I can't see him but\nm all ready, and the next moment tne\ntiger charged. Mr. Dobbie fired both\nbarrels of his rifle (snapshots) and broke\nthe forearm of the tiger, but did not\nstop him ; the beast was very bad from\nhis wounds, and possibly could barely\nsee. for he passed between Mr. uobuio\nand the peon, almost touching both of\nthem.
6e6d097cc02ba32fa42dc6f3e4781c40 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8346994219287 41.681744 -72.788147 Sooner or later the child must face\nthe fact of death.\nUsually before his sixth birthday\ndeath touches his life at some point.\nAn aged relative who often used to\nbring him bags of barley sugar\ncandy never comes to see him any\nmore. He wonders why. Or per-\nhaps his own dear puppy is run\ndown by an automobile, and lies\nstiff and strange by the road until\nput into a hole in the ground and\ncovered with earth a saddening and\nthought provoking episode. And one\nday surely the child will ask: "Will I\nbe dead, too, sometime?"\nWe cannot afford to evade dis-\ncussion of any of these issues. They\nare part oT the life our children\nmust learn to live. It is our task as\nparents to Interpret these difficult\nthings truthfully, and yet in such a\nway that the shock of the harsh\nfacts will not be too difficult Tor the\nchild to assimilate.\nIf the child asks why- grandad\nnever comes to see hira any more he\nshould learn the truth. If he is told\nsome fiction it will only delay for a\nlittle time his knowledge of the fact.\nWhen truth does dawn on him\nhe will know not only that his par-\nents have lied, which is always bad,\nbut also that death is so horrible\nthat it can hardly be mentioned.\nHis imagination will be haunted far\nmore hy the mystery and terror of\ndeath than If he had originally been\ntold the simple fact. On the other\nhand he should be spared all sights\nand sounds of grief, for these have\nno place in his life.\nWhen he asks what happens after\nyou die he should be told whatever\nwe ourselves believe.\nIf he asks whether he, too, will\ndie some day. he should be told yes,\nsurely, that every living thing must\nde. sometime. At. the same time he\nshould be reassured that he won't\ndie for a long, long time, so he\nneedn't worry about it. Having been\ntold the truth his attention should\nbe diverted toward his own busy,\nsunshiny world.\nA child who is happy In his affec-\ntions and active in his play will\nreadily take the attitude we suggest.\nBy implanting serene acceptance of\nan unalterable circumstance we have\nprotected the child from morbid\nfears and terrified wonderlngs.
2318d2cb6b1edc99c46e614c2e6132e9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.8346994219287 40.063962 -80.720915 Ml io the derricks, und I being a\nmj uJ spare buy, I used to liave tbo\n"abiog oi theui to but them to righto.\nT»place itself, on asleep mountain side,\nlB migUty precipitous, and when there\nms blast it used to ho uiy job to sue\n»the stones lay around. '1 bat,I supJ«,\nimight me bow to climb and get a\nlieiojliog- Trees was nothing to me;\n,;tn I was fourteen I could go up most\nuythiog, just like a stairs. Alter a while\nciint to be a rough kind oi a mason,and\n. hinds was rather obliged in the section\nj country 1 was born in, which was\nSite, w he kinds ol Jacks. of all trades\niiJ misters of none, I got lo doing bils of\nrsjlicsrpentcring. I always was good\ni getting up scaffolding, and generally\n«.:smin used to rely on uie for that kind\n(Imirk. You Sir, men don'tcare\nhi* they trust their lltfaa on a lot ol\nElding lOOIeetup.i# Uiu air? There\nny Ik some tools umong'ep, but tboy\nout!/ Ute a good lifok' at' where they\nant work btforo trusting themselves.\nWell. 1 worked at house building until I\n»u nineteen, then.why I can'ttell you,\nasless it was to spite a gill that I was\nml on, who lookup with another man\n- 1 went to sea, ami what with a voyage\ntjl'liins uud hack, if 1 didn't come back\nt<ooJ ssilor, at least I got a good knowWire\nofknotting and splicing, and hang-\n. _r .ui by your eye-lids. W ben I came\ninkididastroke of work inone of the\n^vernment shops as a rigger, and that,\nI :upi>oie,helped to made ine cool-headed\nid steady in the nerves. I ain't exactly\n/operate,and don't belong to any society.\nWtien a job's all over, I don't mind
2189ffa878b511bdab474fa845d353c1 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.5013660885954 41.875555 -87.624421 mid kicp this country worthy of the\nmen who gave their lives to save It\nonly on condition thnt the average man\namong us does his duty bravely, loyal-\nly mid with common sense In what-\never position life allots him." There Is\na lesson for us uveinge men In tho\nPresident's words which many of us\nneed to take to heart and ponder care-\nfully. For, In the failure of us aver-\nage men to see our duty and do It\nbravely, . loyally mid with common\nsouse Is the source mid the strength\nof the social mid political evils from\nwhich we average men suffer most.\nFor example, why Is the government\nof our cities so wasteful, Ineillclent\nmid corrupt? Why Is It that we aver-\nage men do not got what wo pay for\nthere? If not wholly, be-\ncause so many of us 11 vera go men, who\nwould not think of swindling or steal-\ning from our neighbors Individually,\nare Indifferent, are tolerant, nro oven\namused, often applaud, and sometimes\nshnro In the plunder, when wo and our\nneighbors are swindled and stolen from\ncollectively. When ono of us Individual-\nly buys a carpet he Insists on getting\nthe carpet he buys. Hut when some\nhundreds of us collectively buy n\nbridge or a street pavement, few of\nlis take tlie slightest Interest In see-\ning to It that each of us gets what wo\nnil buy. Yet, when all of us nro\nrobbed In that wny each Is robbed.\nAnd so It goes all around. However\npersonally honest wo a vera go men may\nbe, wo often luck that collts-tlv-
1fbe99f0c808b59c262618366d8dd403 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.1270491487048 41.004121 -76.453816 Pretty Is Just tho word which do- -\nscribed her. Sho was not strictly beau\ntiful, but her manner was extremely at-\ntractive, and sho had, moreover, an\nidea of tho respect duo to a man of my\ncharacter nnd position in life, which 1\nhavo found that young girls, ns it rule,\nseldom have. I soon learned thaUhcr\nmother, a widow lady, was from New\nYork, and that they wero both well\nacquainted with the family of my bus\niness partner. Wo therefore rapidly\nbecaino us familiar ns old acquaint\nances; and presently, whilo Dick, with\nids accustomed impudence, was giving\nthe old lady a history of tho catacombs\nof which I urn certain that he knew\nabsolutely nothing tho daughter drew\nclose to mo and whispered :\n"Would you dare get me u little piece\nof bone out of ono of tho niches ? They\naro all saints' bones, you know, but the\nguide won't let me havo nny, and, bo- -\nsides, I can't reach them, though I do\nso long for a pteoa of saint !"\nI need not say that I somo saint\naribIthinkitwas and my new ac-\nquaintance was delighted with it. Tito\ngirlish pleasure with which she hid tho\nbone in tho folds of her dress, nnd in\nsisted that she "was ever so much oblig-\ned to tne," together with the childish\neagerness with which sho had whisper-\ned her request, completely channel\nme. In fact I fell in lovo with heron\ntho spot, nnd determined that I would\nmarry her if sho would give her consent.\nWhen wo parted at tho entrance of tho\ncatneombs I was warmly invited by\nboth ladies to call upon them, nnd to\nbring my friend with mo.\nTo visit Miss Scott in company with\nDick was precisely what I did not wish\nto do. But hero, again, I could not\nhelp myself. Though Dick professed\nto ho n warm admirer of tho widow, it\nalways happened that, soon after our\narrival at tho Scotts' apartment, he\nwould rnanago to be in closo conversa-\ntion witli Susie, while I fell n prey to\ntho mother, whoso conversational pow-\ners were of tho most oppressive charac-\nter.
9b1204229dbaf870f6ceb0072c48e11a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1852.7144808426938 47.04502 -122.894872 lier period in the history of this nation it\nmight not havo been nble to stamp with its\ninrprv<<—to nppropriate to its grtmtll—to\nt<~ittril.tte to its nutr'irrtcrtt——to inmrpanttc\ninto its system and incite part of itself th\nmultirmh-s who are seeking a home and\naslylunr on its nhorcs; but. ithas nnw nttnin~\n" I to such it vigor and maturity that what-\never comm within its suction is btraightwny\nbrought under its tnnst'urnring in?uence.\nltcw foreigners who are her! ?ve or eight\nyears but almost unconciuusly have imbibed\nmuch at the manner, tone, nativity, intelli\ngene). and lore of well regulated lilerty\nwhich clrarartrriz: Americans, or Yankees,\n.H thny are called nhroad. And if one of\nthese make a visit to his native land, his old\ncmnrvmions mark the dccitlrd charm which\nhas takcn lilac), and often impntc it, not to\nits true cansc. but nth-elation or \\nnity.\nlt is true, itllvrtifnl?'n we nru not ourselvna\nalteg ther unali'eeted by the various peoples\naim com: irtand dwell amongt us. If we\ninfhtetrc: them in n dagree, it is not. to he\nuxpcctttl they will have no trace of them-\ntelvet :vn our national character. They (10,]\nand itis well they do. This is a cmnpoundr\nnntian. Ita- pedigroc is Various and cnmpli-j\neatvd. it traces its ancestry in runny landa,\nin direct line Anglo-Saxon it has lateral ro-\nlatiunsliip with every me: in Europe; now,\nuvt-n ('hln-i srsms lii/itunwilling to cam! its\nGunilla-tion, and, I! it it haul nut cuuz-ins\nrmugh nll'ml'ly, our lrn-idn-ut is smiling\n(. mnmodnrc lurryn wooing! to Japan ! We\n:m: :l cror: of all lutiuvls. and from among\n1H lmvu nrincn nml will yet in [gt-utter per-\nfection arise the mnat complete spacimqns of\nhuman nature.
9b9abfa6a16245fd957696d1e730d35d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.009589009386 43.798358 -73.087921 duced, which they denominate the stony ;\neart. Any resolution, any cessation of\neffort, any diversion of the attention to an- -\nother subject, will remove this oppression\nand leave the mind unfeeling, quiet and\ncomnosed. Thousands r.tmrH thi nMn\neffect as of divine production, and the\nresult of a superhuman agency, andfound\nupon ii a hope of eternal life. This effect\nproduced in innumerable instances\nwhere convicted sinners, perhaps at the\naltar, are asked if they do not perceive\nsome unusual feeling in their mind\nTheir attention is immediately diverted\nfrom their mental struggles, to ascertain\nwhether or not they have acquired any\ndifferent feeling, and of course the mind\nbecomes quiet This being perceived, it\ntaken for the token of God's favor, is\nregarded as the removal of the stony heart,\nand hope rises in the soul, producing joy.\nThis joy is supposed to be the new heart,\nand is regarded as another token the\nfavor of God, and the soul glows with\nrapture unutterable in the anticipation of\nheaven. And this selfishness is mistaken\nby thousands for religion?\nThe like effect is produced on those\nwho aw told they are Christians, and that\nthey may safely hope. Instead of yield-\ning themselves to God, and testing them-\nselves by his word, they confide in the\nopinions of others, lose their convictions,\nand hope springs up in the heart, produc- -\ning pleasure in view oi tneir escape ; tnis\npleasure is believed to be the new heart,\nand the deluded immortal becomes fast\nbound in the chains of selfishness. 6.\nThere isanotheV class who desire this per\nceptible change, but whose knowledge of\nmetaphysical principles secures them from\nthese delusions, and who, because they\ncannot thus delude themselves, re v on the\njustice of God lor mercy ; and another who\nignorantly reject the doctrine of regenera-\ntion.
35745d8c644989d106c4b9963d23dc5f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.9712328450025 44.939157 -123.033121 dition of the bonds wns stated in every\nannual report and that the report might\nuc seen at tne ottice of the city record\ner at any time. He said further that\nto employ experts to check over the\nbonds would cost nt least 1,5(10 and\nthat since the matter hud been covered\nevery year that it appeared to be need-\nless expense, in his opinion. The mayor\nsaid he would ratther the matter came\nto a vote in order that the councilmen\nmight pass upon it and that if they\ndesired a chocking over the accounts\nthat this would be done. The resolution\nwas put to a vote and lost.\n"I got just what I expected," said\nCouneilmim Von Kschen, "I wanted it\nspread upon the minutes, however, just\nto show that I asked that the status of\nthe bond question be exported and the\ncouncilmen did not want it."\nThe police alarm system will consist\nof two (10 candle power electric lights\nin red globes, one to be placed the\nintersection of Court and Commercil\nstreets and the other on Stato and Lib-\nerty. Whenever a call is sent into the\nstation for an officer the desk sargennt\nwill switch on one or both of the lights\nfrom his desk and the officers will call\nin at the station to answer the alarm.\nIt is estimated that the cost of installa-\ntion will be uboitt $130.\nIt was voted to mako a new garbage\ndump near the penitentiary as the pea\nofficials desire to huvo tho old channel\nof the creek filled up. The uew channel\nwhich was dug some timo ago vacated\ntho old one for some distance and the\nstato board of control takes this means\nto again level the ground. Muyor White\nexplained that the mutter of keeping\nup tho road to the city dumping ground\nwas expensivo during the winter months\nand as thero was a good road to the pen\nthnt tho city would profit by the\nchange while the pen grounds would bo\nimproved.
58e28a9aa2456cf6525719a8ab3e3afe PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1848.7062841213824 31.960991 -90.983994 “Not she with treacherous lips her Saviouretung;\nNot she denied him, with unholy tongue;\nShe, when Apostles shrunk, could dangers hrave,\nLast at the cross, and earliest at the gratte.”\nDo not understand me ladies, to say\nthat we can do nothing without your aid.\nWe can do m'tch, but we can do more with\nit. You. can aid us by your smiles and\nyour approbation. I appeal to you there­\nfore, to prove yourselves worthy the high\neulogiums which oràtors and poets have be­\nstowed upon you. Be in patriotism like\nthe Spartan mother, when she presented a\nshield to her son saying “in honor bring\nthis back, or let your dead body be brought\nback upon it,” or like the American mo­\nther, who, in handing her son a musket,\nexclaimed, “go my son, and prove yourself\nworthy of those who gave you birth!”\nSons of Temperance! It may be deem­\ned a work of superrefogation in mo to say\nanything to you on this occasion. Yrou are\noccupying high and responsible stations.\nIn respect, you are the light of the\nworld, a city on a hill. It is for you to let\nyour light shine before men, that they may\nsee your good works. We are not a reli­\ngious sect, consequently we have no per­\nsecution. But why talk of persecution!\nWe fear it not, for in our glorious cause\n“one man can chase a thousand, and two\nput ten thousand to flight.\nBrethren, there is something in our or­\nder, and in our number, which should\nmake us feel proud. When the mercena­\nry troops of Britain were quartered upon\nour forefathers, to crush their liberties and\neat out their substance, a noble band of\nbrothers, called “Sons of Liberty,” fired\nwith Republican zeal, held their nightly\nsecret meetings to devise means to rid\ntheir country of her oppressive invaders.\nIn like manner let us, as “Sons of Tempe,\nrance,” a name powerful in itself, devise\nsome effectual means of driving from our\nbeloved land an enemy equally as indomi­\ntable and still more treacherous. Let the
1d9846995da811d4a56a1837894f4d49 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.0616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 In talcing a general glance at (he trans¬\nactions of the year we find that the first\naeven months were quito unfavorable aa\ncompared with the same period of 1870,\nand the only roada which, aa a claas,\nallowed an increase in earnings were\nthoae running west and southwest from\nSt. Louis, with some of their connectiona.\nA* to the other railroads.embracing the\nwestern grain-carrying roada in one\ngroun; the east and west trunk lines in\nanother, and the Union and Central Paci¬\nfic in a third.it woa only upon the Un¬\nion Pacific that there was any increase in\nearninga, and oil the real the decrease\nwas considerable. Although it ia proba¬\nble that the Central pacific main line had\nthen made no losa on earning*, the de¬\ncrease of that company being attributa¬\n to ita branches, whereon a large de¬\ncline has taken place daring the vear,\nowing to the exceptional drouth and fail¬\nure of crops in some parts ol California.\nWhat then were the principle circum¬\nstance# affecting railroad earnings in the\nyear 18777 Without particular regard\nto the order of naming them, the follow¬\ning were salient points of the year:\nFirst.The exceedingly low rates on the\ntrunk lines during the greater part of the\nyear, and a moderate decreaae in the vol¬\nume of busineaa on thoso linea. Second\n. The diminished crops of 1876 in the\nWest and Northwest, leaving a small vol¬\nume of frieght for the railroads in the\nfirst half of 1877, which had to be car¬\nried at the low rates previously ruling,\nin consenence of the "
09e2f59c279a72527d228b71fef03586 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1889.368493118975 42.217817 -85.891125 made by James W. Baxter and Angeline Baxter, hi\nwife, to Alexander B. Copley, dated October Wh, A.\nI. iKHl, and recorded iu the office of the register of\nthe reenter of deeds for Van Bureu comity ami state\nof Michigan, on the loth day of October, A. 1). lsl,\niu HIkt "Jl of mortgages on pae 5h, ami on which\nmortgage there is claimed to le due at the date of this\nnotice the sum of three hundred and niueteeu and\n3M)0 dollars. f:U'.'iul interest, and an attorney's fee\nof fifteen dollars, provided for in said mortgage, and\npursuaut to the statute in such case made and pro-\nvided, and no suit or proceedings at law having )een\nInstituted to recover the money s cured by aaid mort-\ngage, or any part thereof :\nNow, by virtue of the ower of sale con-\ntained iu said mortgage, and the statute in such case\nmade and provided, uotice la hereby given that on\nHaturday, the 27th day of July, A. V. 1X, at two\no'clock iu the afternoon, I shall sell at public auction,\nto the highest bidder, at the front door of the court\nhouse, In the village of Taw Paw, Van Buren county,\nstate of Michigan, that teing the place of holding the\ncircuit court for Van Buren county, the premises\ndescribed iu aaid mortgage, or so much thereof as\nmay le necessary to pay the amount due on said\nmortgage, with Interest and all legal costs, together\nwith an attorney's fee of fifteen dollars, as covenant-\ned for therein, the premises being descrilx'd in said\nmortgage as follows, to-w-
16f4d683bbfd6738e688ca5d0078dc31 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.719945323568 42.217817 -85.891125 The Python, a great serpent, is known\nas the Indian Boa thirty feet in length.\nIt acts the tiger's part, lying in wait in\na hot, steamy swamp, or beneath tho\nunderwood of a dark, marshy forest.\nThere it lurks, half Heating in tho water,\nhalf stretched on the land, or partly\ntwined around some rugged tree, and\npartly extended like awithered branch,\nthe color of tho creature serving to de-\nceive the eye of tho beholder. Patiently\nit waits, until a deer, a buffalo, or human\nbeing passes that May, or comes to a\nstream to drink ; then, as rapid as an\narrow, it throws its body into folds or\nknots around that of its victim, and\nbears it to the ground. Ho great is its\nstiength, that tue bones of an ox snap\nin an instant. Having crushed its prey\nin its folds, until a shapeless mass re-\nmains, it then slowly untwines its length,\nraises its head alott, the tongue rapidly\nmoving to and fro, and prepares to swal-\n its prey. This work pneeeds slowly,\nand with many efforts ; its vast jaws\nspread out, and, as the crushed mass\nproceeds into the inside, the body of the\nboa expands to lour tims its usual size.\nThe cieature now sinks into a state of\nstupor, and in this helples condition\nit is easily killed. The negroes, who\nhave a great love for its Uesh, now at-\ntack it, and cairy it home, cut it up in\nslices and feed on it for days.\nThe boa is a native of the hotter por-\ntion of South America, where it is the\nterror of man and beat. The swiftm ss\nof the deer is no protection ; the monkey\nis not safe among the branches of the\ntree; nor the largo fidi in the stream.\nIt can climb, swim, dart along the\nground, and thus show itself to be su\nperior to all other living things. Let\nus be thankful that the bo.i is unknown\nin our land. Our Yvung Folks' lllus.\nPaper,
2f66d5933ca2c7d734d53d3e91972705 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.4986338481583 40.063962 -80.720915 Miss Louise Kotzebne, of Malt\n)bio, 1st prem. in the 3d class of Ar\nnetic, 1st in the 1st class of Mod\nGeography, 2d in the 3d class of Sac\niistorv* 1st in the 3d class of Christ\ndoctrine, 2d in the 5th class of Penm\nhip, and 1st in Stocking Darning.\nMiss Mary Hnas, of BriJgeport,0\nst prem in the Dir. of the 3d clas*\n-etter Writing, 21 in Grammar\n)rthography, 2d in Heading, 2d la\nid class of Arithmetic and 1st in\n>th class of Penmanship.\nMiss Kate Kelley, from the Sv\nSprings, lat prem. in the Div. of tb\n:lass of Orthography and .Letter W\nng, 2d in the 4th class of Chris;\nDoctrine, and 2d in Stockinc; Darn\nMiss Annie Brannon, of Weston,\nVa., 1st premium in the Div. of the\n:laas of Letter Writing, 2d in the\n:lass of Modern Geography, and lei\nbe 4th clta« of Penmanship.\nMiss Mary Devecmon, of Cam\nand, Md., 1st prem. the Div. of\ntd class of Orthography, 2d in the\nilass of Arithmetic, and 2d in the\nlass of Penmanship.\nMies Mary Kean, of Camberla\nild., 2d prem. in the Div. of the 3d cl\nf Grammar and Orthography, 2d\nleading, 1st in the Div. of the 2d cl\nf Christian Doctrine, 1st in the\nloss of Sacred History, 1st in Stock\n>arning,'and2J in Domestic Econoi\nMiss Annie Moore, of Buoh R\n>hio, 2d prem. in the Div. of the\nlass of Grammar and Ortbograp\niccessit in Arithmetic, 2d in the\ninaa ui reuiuausui^, ULIU isi IU mt\nlass of Sacred History.\nMiss Lacy Porter, of Frostbnrg, &1\nit prem. in the 2nd class of Modi\neography : Accessit in U. S . Histo\nnd 2nd prem. in Domestio Econoc\nMiss Elisabeth Mackio, ofPittsba\n'a., 1st prem. in the Division of the;\nlass of Letter Writing ; Improvemi\n1 the 4th class, of Penmanship;\nreminm in Slocking Darning; 1st\nm broidery.
923eeaa304c2c4a71805fe24e24fb658 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.228767091578 58.275556 -134.3925 Thin spring I* opening up with u\nwry good outlook as a trolling sen\n»on nnd local t roller* arc confident\nthat (air price* and a good demand\nwill be felt for king aalmon all over\nSoutheastern Alaaka. More buyers\nhave signified their Intentlona of\nbeing on the flahlng grounds than\nfor many yeani paat. and the trolllm;\nfleet will be a largo one If preaeni\nIndications count for anything.\nThe middle of thla week the gu\nboat Frisco wan In port and took\nout a number of hand trolling out\nflit who will havo their headquar\nlers near Craig, where there will be\ni buying station. The Croaa Sound,\n("apt. Walter Nicml. of thla city. Is!\nleaving today with several men wh>>\nare enroule to Cape Ommany. where'\nthey will make their headquarters\nIt is said that a number or \nwill be at those grounds this season\nItobert K. t'oughlln. l*>uis Wolf\nand Charles Johnson, trollers who\nhave been spending the wlntor at\nTenakee. are In the city, having ar\nrived on the former's boat this week\nand were scheduled to leave today\nfor Seymour canal to start the sea\nson's work. Hob will troll with his\npower boat and the other two men\nwill do hand trolllug.\nA steady demand for the mild-\ncured salmon and a market for all\nthe flsh that can be secured for\nshipment In Ice to the states Is re¬\nflected in the optimism felt In Ash¬\ning Irelus over the future of the\ntrolling businexs. It Is felt that the\nmarket for king salmon will go a\nlong way towards compensating the\ndistrict for the loss occasioned by\ncurtailment of operations of the
1fc02ba4169b878e8e7d6fa11eab515d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.2890410641805 40.063962 -80.720915 Nkw York, April 15. -Money caiy at I&12K per-\njont. 1'ilmu mercantile paper 4u5 percent. Sterl-\nuu Bxdliaugu uuchangid.\nliovKUNMKNT Hon Da -Dull ami btoady.\nHtatk BoNiw-Vury dull but llrm.\nHailroad UoNDN-Morv quiet; aalea,ft,596,000.\nHTQCKt-Tha pub leAtlou Uta morning o( tho\niould-Fowderly corro'poudence. with the implied\n;breata and lettera In cam hit demunda were uot\nn eeded to, bad a depreulng elled; U|>0U pdooka,\nno', much ou account. (any ellef that more aerloua\nLMiuolia wore to oorno than have already boot ex-\nHerlouced. na the auntlmeui which controlled the\nictloni of op.rutorn ou the bullMde waa that It\ntvai J<iHt a* woll U» ;snait further develop-\nincut* lie fore taking an active Intorott in the mar¬\nket. l'ornapt tbo undertone of thu market wa« aa\nitrouK m on other occaaloux. It prevented any vlg-\niroua raid by bean, at leaat, there waa a alow\ntud gradual yield lug InquotatloiMalinoU frjm the\nnulling to tliucloae, roauitlug luau average de¬\nfine of about 1 percent\n)u thladeclliiaUould'a stocks wore oonspleuoua.\nWestern Union aclllng from (jdjf to 01)4, cloning %\npercent higher; I'nlon i'uclflc tidown \\y* aud MU-\ntourl i'aciUo IX. CVul ntoeka were alio pretacd for\n.a cm, Lackawanna allowing a low of 1 percent, New\nlenoycentral], DelawareA IIudaon \\%. aud Head¬\ning 1. l'acltlc Mail, Njrthern I'aclile preferred aud\nLalioHlioru are alio 1 percent lower, Northweatern\nind Ht. l'aul U.amlOniaba IS lower The street was\nwell aupp led with report* from Chicago and elte-\nwhere In the Northwo.it, showing that the railroad*\nleading to that city were in danger of iuttering\nFrom u strike similar to that In Uie Houthweat. Mil¬\nwaukee, Lake shore A Western preferred U up l'jier-\nX'llt.
49158db9e0091d916543fdb93ae43d6e RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1914.1191780504819 36.620892 -90.823455 Wherever possible road should be)\nlocated on straight line between tor\njnUial points. In hltljr or mountalnou\ncountry, however, the attempt tot\nkeep roads straight between Urmlnah\noften lead to the serious error o:\nheavy grades. SlrUgMnrs and gad\nmust therefore be bandied together.\nThe best location Is one which L\nstraight In general direction, te frei\nfrom steep grades, Is located on solli\nground and serves the lnrgest possible\nnumber of atopic. Roads should bu\nlocated for the benefit of the publio\naa well as th private land owner.\nThe elimination of one or two steep\nhills on a Hue of road will frequently\nenable homes to draw three or tour\ntimes as much as tbey could draw on\nthe old road. It takes approximately\nfour tlnwa as much power to draw\nloads up 10 per cent grades (10 teet\nvertlral in 100 feet horizontal) aa oa\n \ncent grade a horse can usually drew\n(for a short time) a much as be can\ndraw on a levnl. A 4 per cent grsdJ\n1 therefore considered th irsxlmu.n\non roads subject to heavy hauling.\nMany ateep grades may be avoided by\nlocating tbo road arouud instead of\nover the hill the handle of the b'tckut\nIt no longer when held In a horizontal\nposition than in a vertical By gotig\naround we avoid two deep hills.\nIf th road must pus up a itp hilt\nor mountain side, the steepness of the\ngrade may be decreased by increasing\nthe length of tbe road, in other words,\neliminate steep gredes by locating the\nroad on curved or zigzag lines, and\nsot In a straight line from th bottom\nto the top of the hill. Thes curve\nshould be carefully plotted and th\ntralght tretches located with an
1fe3142495e9161a1dca2f9528cdca21 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.6287670915779 42.217817 -85.891125 lie will afterwards keenly regret this\ncourse. The anxiety of the speculator\nwill consume him, and even should he\nsucceed in gaining an advance, the cost\nof interest will doubtless eat it up. If\na farmer has money in hand and grain\nin his barn, he is independent of con-\ntingencies, and can do as he pleases;\nbut for all others, we think that the\nsooner they go to market the better.\nStarting a Balkv Horse, and a Load,\ntoo. It is not well for novices, or in\nfact for any body, to attempt to doctor\nstubborn cases without tho advice of\nsome competent person, or at least until\nall the circumstances have been duly\nconsidered. For instance, some people\nthink they know how to manage refrac-\ntory horses. Perhaps they do, but the\nquadruped sometimes gets the of\nit, as will be seen from the following,\nwhich we clip from an exchange: A\nfarmer in the neighborhood of Boston\nundertook to start a balky horse, the\nother day, by pulling a small quantity\nof hay from the load to which the ani-\nmal was attached, placing it under him,\nand setting fire to it. The remedy took\nhold well, and the horse started forward\njust enough to clear the flames, which\nsoon communicated with the hay, and\nthe entire load, with the wagon, was\ndestroyed, the farmer having as much\nas he could do to clear the horse from\ntho wagon in season to save his life.\nThe farmer still retains the horse and\nthe satisfaction of having moved him,\nthough he is doubtful as to the expe-\ndiency of repeating the experiment\nvery often.
5e35b95c769667f3fe69d6cffb876fc2 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1860.908469913732 35.780398 -78.639099 of party spirit, prejudice and animosity should\nbe utterly discarded and renounced. Mutual\nconcession and forbearance, with a calm and\nearnest effort to procure unanimity, if possible,\nis the spirit that should rule in this\nday of most momentous consequences.\nIf a division of the offices between the two\nparties would effect this result, the dominant\nparty should have the magnanimity to con-\ncede it, or do anything else that would break\ndown party walls, and bring the entire legis-\nlative body together united in a common and\nharmonious whole, to devise the best plans to\nbe adopted by the State in this critical emer-\ngency of public affairs. And the minority\nshould accept any such advances in good\nfaith, and unite with the majority as much as\nthey honestly and concientiously can, in\nwhatever plans they may present as to \nbest course to be pursued. But party ties,\nwe fear, are stronger than Southern patriot\nism, and will, therefore, prevent any una-\nnimity of action among democrats and whigs\nin the Legislature. We shall see, however,\nand we hope for the best\nBills have been passed in both Houses, re-\nmoving the legal restrictions against the\nBanks for suspending specie payments; and\nthe Banks of the State have suspended ac-\ncordingly. This step was imperatively de-\nmanded to protect our Banks against the con-\nstant demands made at their counters for\nlarge amounts of specie, by the brokers, and\nothers, from other States. And it was also\nnecessary from the fact that the Virginia and\nSouth Carolina Banks had already suspended.\nSo that, as the Petersburg Express very\ntruthfully remarks, in addition to the dread\nful political crisis that
18aa488faa3bf22dbc8e44151d8e91ad DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.04508193559 58.275556 -134.3925 have eugge»ted. Under a teraitorieJi\nform of government, this qncreabef\nrevenue would presumably be offset te\nthe extent of $250,000 of appropria¬\ntions whlcfc the uational Congress now\ngives, furthermore by at teast £150,00f-\nof the amount which the federal go?\neruraeut now pays for maintenance ofT\npeuitentiary and jails; and perhaps\neven overbalance by the withdrawal (£.\nother appropriations, already men¬\ntioned, amoufing to 3224,000. Accord\nling to this estimate of lances, there¬\nfore, the possible gain under territorial\ngoveruuieut would be $450,000 a year\naud the possible loss $624,000. Whether\nthe form of government be changed or\nuot the $.75,000 or £100,000 of additiiuaii\nfish taxes ought to be collected.\nIn the foretroiog remarks '.relative tt\ntaxes and appropriations, all of that\nwhich may be regarded as unfavorable\nto a local government and independent\ntreasury u based on the assumption\nthat Alaska, under local govern-\nuie.it would be treated by the United\nStates just as the other tei^itories have\nbeen treated. That if?, it has >beeu as¬\nsumed that if a local government i.\nauthorized it will be with the lde.i that\nAlaska is able to take care of itself auti\ndoes not need any more financial sup¬\nport from the national governmeut\nthan the other regularly organized ter¬\nritories have received . which is -com¬\nparatively little. JLu any event, IL\napprehend that the people of Alaska\ndo not wish to have the forte of local\nterritorial government without the\nsubstance; that a local legislature witfc\npowers ie>s ample than those of other\nterritorial legislatures, or a local gov¬\nernment the expenses of which should\nbe paid in part by federal appropria¬\ntions, are not desired.\nEveu if the matter of geueral feasi¬\nbility be not questioned, the subject of
29ad71e9fb70d45d1baaf6787c0ba034 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.023287639523 39.745947 -75.546589 HARTLEY—At Fort McHenry. Md .\nJanuary 0. 1919. Sergt. Robert Barnett\nHartley, son of the late Jamea J. and\nSarah Barnett Hartley, aged 24 yeara\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at-\ntnd the funeral from the residence of bli\ngrandmother. Mrs. Ellxa Barnett. No. 2604\nXV. Eighteenth street, on Saturday. Janu\nary 11, at 2 o'clock. Services at Imman­\nuel P. E, Church. Interment at Mt. Salem\ncemetery.\nRICHARDSON—Suddenly, on January 8\n1919. William C. Richardson, aged 4S\nyears.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral services, at his late resi­\ndence. Holly Oak. Del., on Sunday after-\nnoou, January 12. at 1.30 oclock. Inter­\nment at Rivervlew cemetery.\nPARKER—In this city, on January 8, 1919\nRaphael Parker, aged 47 yeara.\nRelative*, friend« and member« of Sf.\nLuke aud tbe Household of Ruth, are in\nvlted to attend the funeral services, from\nher late residence. No. 428 McCaulley street\non Friday afternoon, January 10. Service;\nat Ezlon Church, at 2 o'clock. Interment a(\nMt. Olive cemetery.\nKELI.AM—Near Beaver Valley,\non January 8. 1919, Rebeeca E..\nJohn H. Kellam. In her 73rd year.\nRelatives and friends of the.family an\nInvited to attend the funeral services, fron\nher late residence, on Sunday afternoon\nJanuarv 12. 191». at 1.30 o'clock. Inter\nment at Lower Brandywine Preebyferlat\ncemetery.\nSHOCKLEY—At Norristown. Pa., on Janu\nary 7. 1919. Annie E . daughter of Mra\nClara L. Shockley, formerly of this city\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at\ntend the funeral services, at her late rest\n No. 210 Chain street. Norristown\nPa., on Friday afternoon, at 2 o'clock. In­\nterment private at Riverside cemetery.\nMORROW—In this city, on January 7\n1919. Frances Springer.\nBrvnberg Morrow.\nFuneral services at the residence of he)\nhusband, 1323 West Eighth street, on Frl-\ndav afternoon. January 10. at 3 oclock.\nKYLE—On January 7. 1919, John Frank,\nhusband of Julia Mark Kyle.\nRelatives, friends and membera of L. O\nO M No. 184 . are Invited to attend th«\nfuneral from the residence of his father-\nin-law. Peter Mark, No. 512 Lombard\nstreet, on Friday morning, at 9 o'clock\nRequiem mass at Sf. Marys Church, In\n■ferment at Cathedral cemetery.\nRANSOM—In this city, on January 7, 1919\nPauline A., daughter of William J. and\nBertha Ransom, in her 4th year.\nFuneral services at her parents residence.\nNo 707 Bennett street, on Friday morning,\nJanuary 10. at 10.30 o'clock. Interment at\nRivervlew cemetery.\nHALFEN—In this city, on January 8 1919.\nPeter Halfen. Sr, aged 65 vgars.\nRelatives, friends and membera of Work­\nmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund, are\nInvited to attend the funeral services, at\nhis late residence. No. 105 East Twenty-\nfourth street, on Saturday afternoon, Janu\nary 11. at 2.30 o clock. Interment at Stl-\nverbrook cemetery.\nMOÜSLEY—On January 6. 1919. Florence\nA. Welch, wife of Frank B. Mousley, In\nher 41st year\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend tin funeral services, at her late resi­\ndence. Rockland, Del., on Friday afternoon,\nJanuary 10. at 2 oclock. Interment at Mt.\nLebanon cemetery.
103e84ce5543edc994c1fb05419cbefa IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.8013698313039 43.82915 -115.834394 Flret decide what styleyon will have-bust,\nthree-quarter figure, or full length. The first\ntwo ere the prevailing modes, the last Im­\nplying a more elaborate toilet. Bow tecuf*\nyour sitting. It ta always better to do » ,\nthus obviating the annoyance of waiting.\nBefore leaving the studio, unless the appoint­\nment is made by letter, consult the photog­\nrapher as to your dress, etc. Let him know\nwhat it ta to be. You may ha undecided\nwhich of several to use. It then may be a\nchoice in color or in cut, etc. He mil tell\nyou at once which ta beet. He may request\nyou to try more than one, end in the abeemoe\nof such invitation you will be expected to\npay extra for the experiment.\nWhile you are talking with him about\ndrees he ta studying your face, expression\nand form If he also be an arttat,\nand experienced, be may see at a glance that\nyour customary way of dressing the hair it\nnot becoming, for, strange as it may seem,\ncomparatively few women have the knack of\narranging their hair in the mode ftonvurvi**!\nby their face. While he knows that the por­\ntrait must not be ruined by the hair being\ndone up in an imfàmiiar way, he may yet\ngive you a few invaluable suggestions. For\ninstance, be may request you to be more\ncareful in dressing the left side than the\nright, thus signifying that the left side of the\nface is better. Few have both sides alike.\nThere is often almost as much difference as\nbetween two persona. The nose is much or a\nlittle to one side; one eye is smaller, because\none lid droops more: there is a depression
17333014043b440dc6e80e7a85c9dcb4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.9246575025368 40.063962 -80.720915 monfhH of urgent demand for mo:\nthe volume of the bank notes has\nmained stationary. The pressure\nthis retail demand for currency must\nsatisfied at whatever costivto other\nterests, and the consequence is that\nsupply of "lawful money," gold\nlegal tenders, out of which the bank\nreserves are compounded, Is mercih\nly drawn upon. This reduction of\nreserves compels the banks to red\ntheir loans and discounts, and in t\nway the credits which are transac\nthrough the use of checks and with\nmoney are smaller and inevitably c\ntracted. It is exactly at this pc\nthat the crushing stringency of\nmonths has risen, >and it is the 1\nthat this position Is created and\nforced by Inflexible law that clouds\nprospect of the money market, with\nuncertainty more or less paralyzlni\nt-'nder a situation like this there is\nway escape from a state of chrt\nexposure to panic except.^hrough a s\nt« m of bank note Issues which will m\nIt to the interest of the banks to\nout their notes under the pressure\nthe retail demand for money. Un\nsuch conditions the retail wants co\nbe satisfied without trenching upon\n"lawful money" reserves; the reser\nof the metropolitan banks would\nprotected against disturbing oscl\ntlons; the New York banks would at\ntimes be able to care for the Inter*\nof their local customers, and the mo\nmarket would be suved from the v\nartificial fluctuations In the si\n"f credit and in the rate of Intel\nwhich have become a fixed bane to\n'innnclnl markets. It Is possible tl\nwhile Congress Is about to deal v\n"we of the more theoretic aspects\n°ur money system. It will neglect\n"
07d58b328cafe961715919586cb1a0d0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.8753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 be a mile or two wide and extends some\nsixty miles down the coast and is so dense\nthat steamers and other Teasels are afraid\nto enter it for fear of getting stack. This\nkelp is the article from which iodine is\nmade. The bed to which I refer can\neasily be seen from the ocean shore. I\nleft the steamer for "terra tirma" and took\na carriage for the Arlington hotel, which is\nthe most capacious and one of the finest\nappointed, .hotels in Southern California.\nIt occupies a equare containing live acres\nuf grouud elegantly laid out in handsome\nlawns and llower gardens with a "Deer\nPark attachment." lis parlore and halls\nare spacious I-Breadingroom is especially\nlarge and comfortable, containing the\nlatest New York and San Francisco dailies,\nbesides a library of books and several cases\nof fiuo minerological specimens, gathered\nwith care and neatly labellod. The house\nstands on an elevated piece of ground and\ncommands a splendid view of the ocean\nand mountains and tho city of Santa Bar¬\nbara. veranda some twenty feet wide\nextends around the front and one eide of\nthe building, a portion of which is carpeted.\nThis is without doubt the fiuesl place that\ncould be found for invalids and people\nwith means who have no employment\nThe chambermaids at this hotel are all\nChinamen. Every evening they briag\naround a waiter Ju l of lemonade for the\nguests of the house. This is a treat\nHi re I bad the pleasure of meeting my\nold friend Mr. Henry Tallant, who taught\nthe clues, of which I was a member in St.\nMatthew's Sunday school thirty-five years\nago. lie was looking about as he did\ntwentv years, perhaps a little grayer. I also\nmet his wif-j who looks as well or perhaps\nbetter than when they left Wneeling. The\nSanta Birbara folks appear to be making\nuse of Mr. Tallant as his name figures in\nthe proceedings of the City Council. The\nlittle Episcopal Church here also is largely\nunder hfs judicious care. Long may he\nlive to take care of it.
e877560dff37b7cd22185e8ad9a78c05 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.9958903792492 39.560444 -120.828218 4. Malarious Infection—ln the form of\n“Chills and Fever,” Marsh Fever, Panama\nFever, Ague, Intermittent, Ac. Ac., gene-\nrated by the earth and air of a new country,\nand producing, in the sequel, a host of con-\nstitutional disorders.\n5. Rheumatic Affections —Face Ache,\nTic Doloreux, Rheumatism. Neutralgia,\nSwelled Joints, Stiffness of the Joints,\nArthritic Inflammations, etc., the result of\nhard work, exposure or free living.\n6. Delirium Tremens —The result of ex-\ncessive drinking with mental excitement.\nThese and such other diseases as arise\nfrom external, non-natural causes, and are\nnot inherited or constitutional, may be\nreadijy and speedily cured, if taken in good\ntime, and treated by natural method.\nPersons laboring under Secret Maladies\nor weakness, constitute at least one-fourth\nthe population of civilized countries. Scien-\ntific and medical research has consequently\nbeen largely devoted to their cure, and the\nmost illustrious of living names in medi-\ncine, are of those European practitioners\n have discovered sure and safe methods.\nThe saving of human life and health which\nhas resulted from the researches of John\nHunter and his successors, and the medical\ndiscoveries of Ricord and a few others, in\nour own times, has produced » sensible in-\ncrease in population, and has extended the\naverage term of humap existence.\nDr. W . wishes to have it understood that\nhe relies for his success upon a competent\nknowledge of the more recent and valuable\ndiscoveries of science. In a country so un-\nsettled, and withapopulation so fluctuating\nas that of California, it is not necessary for\nhim to apologise for having taken this pub-\nlic method of making known his principles.\nThe proof of their correctness is in their\nconstant success.\nRemember that Dr. Ws office is on the\ncorner of Sansome and Commercial streets,\n(Long Wharf,) up stairs, entrance on San-\nsome, opposite St. Nicholas, Nlantie and\nCrescent City hotel.
47fec3675c2c14810270d0d559d90610 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.1243169082675 40.618676 -80.577293 Even in our impoverished condition,\nand with all of our unemployment, the\nAmerican market has for years been\nthe greatest market in the world. This\ngreat market attracts all other na\ntions, who desire to dump their prod­\nucts on our shores, like a magnet.\nFor years every nation in the world\nhas been striving to improve the well-\nbeing of its people. The facts which\nI am going to present to you are not\nmy own. They were published by the\nLeague of Nations. I call it a world\neconomic ladder, based on the com\nparison of real wages paid in the va­\nrious important countries of the world.\nIn this economic ladder, th League of\nNations places the United States at\nthe very top, on the ceiling as it were\nHowever, this figure of ICO which the\nLeague of Nations has given the\nUnited States means something more\nthan wages paid. It is also a compos­\nite picture of the standard of living\nof our country—the number of auto­\nmobiles per capita, the number of\ntelephones, number of radios, the\nnumber of electric refrigerators, and\nall the other physical things used for\nthe comfort of the American people.\nAs you go down the rungs of this\nladder to the other countries repre­\nsented, you are also stepping down to\na lower strata of happiness of the\npeoples of the world, their comforts,\nhabits of life, wages paid, etc.\nCanada is on the next rung of the\nladder with a figure of 81.57, which\nof course means that for every dollar\nwe pay in wages in America for em­\nployment in diversified industries, Ca­\nnada would pay approximately 81V* fZc.\nWe go down another rung on the\nladder and we come to England, and\nthe figure of 52.63; but right here I\nwish to impress upon this Committee\nthat the figure of 52.63 is based on an\nEnglish pound, with an exchange value\nof $4.86 in American money at the\ntime this chart was made. Today the\nEnglish pound has come down to\n$3.96—a twenty percent depreciation.\nI shall later on refer to Article IS
325e0f0116ca5801fd12790b8cb1d38b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.4945205162355 40.063962 -80.720915 We are told that Ohio farmera have come\nnto the county and bought oheap lands,\ntud also that Marshall countv farmers, on\niia aide of the river, have settled their\none on the cheap lands of Wetzel. Wet*\n(el showed remsrkable progress from 1870\no 1880. In the first named year she bad\n>nly 8,505 inhabitants, whereas in 1880\nibe had 111,800-a gain of 00 por cent., or\n20 per cent, above tho uvcrageo! Ibe State,\nshe is undergoing tbe same change that\nHardball cauuly unuerwent at au earner\nlay, and will eoob be one of the most do*\niirablo eouutiea along the Ohio river.\nSheep huubaudry is inakiog a decided ad*\nvance ib her territory. Schools have alco\nlobe an important work. The younger\nportiob o( the adult populatiob have eb*\njoyed school advantages euch bo were\nnot accessible in the county prior\n the war. New Martinsville has\njust put up a $7,000 school house,\ncapable of acoomodatiug 400 to 500\nchi'dren, r.cd Iibb an efficient corps of\nteachers. Sho has alco built and is gel*\nting roady to build a number of haudsome\nchurche*. 1 he people take the newspa*\npera and watch the market reports and\nthe general nowsof the day with an in*\nter*»t uuknown (en years ago. The bew\nrailroad is looked forward to aa another\ntrand inifttiobary of progress in Wefael.\nrho project is overwhelmingly popular\nilong the river portion of the county.so\nmuch so that if a vote could be taken on\nthe question of laying a tax to purchase\nthe right of way through tho county it\nwould carry by a large majority. The\ncensus of 1800 will show at least 20,000\npeople in Welzel, and, bolter still, a
1c721e8e8bca01a7fa669a9f30bb9627 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1900.932876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 Washington, Dec. 5. The session of\nthe Iioufo Tuesday w.ns brief. The\nreal work v ill begin Wednesday when\ntho house will consider the army reor-\nganization bill, which Mr. Hull, chair-\nman of the committee on military af-\nfairs reported Tuesday. He explained\nthe urgent necessity for immediate ac-\ntion upon this measure as under tho\npresent law the army must be reduced\nto 27,000 on July 1 next and asked\nunanimous consent for the considera-\ntion of the bill Wednesday, but Mr.\nSulzer (N. Y.) objected, so Mr. Hull in-\ntroduced a resolution for a special or-\nder for the consideration of the bill\nwith provision for a vote at the end of\nsix hours' general debate.\nThe objection to the swearing in of\nMr. Conner of Iowa, the successor of\nSenator Dolliver, which was raised by\nMr. Pailey of Texas, Monday, was re\nmoved by the presentation of a new\nset of credentials from Gov. Shaw and\nMr. Conner took the oath. Three bills\nwere passed under the call of commit-\ntees, most Important being one tc\nprovide for the detail of not to exceed\n100 retired army ofllcers and 300 non-\ncommissioned officers as military In-\nstructors in the public schools of such\ncities as adopt a system of military\nInstruction. The others were "to pre-\nvent the failure of military Justice"\nand to legalize an issue of $250,000 of\nbonds by Pima county, Arizona.\nThe resignation of Mr. DeVrles, of\nCalifornia, who is now a member of\nthe board of general appraisers was\nlaid before the house as was the resig-\nnation of Mr. Pabcock of Wisconsin,\nas a member of the committee on in-\nsular nffairs. The speaker announced\ntho appointment of Mr. Hamilton of\nMichigan as a member of the commit-\ntee on insular affairs; Mr. Overstreet\nof Indiana, as chairman (f the com-\nmittee on expenditures In the depart-\nment of Justice and Mr. Davis, of Flor-\nida and Mr. McDcrmott of New Jersey,\nas members of tho committee on mer-\nchant marine and fisheries.\nThe house adjourned at 1:35 p. m.
33b95a35442877e66110c3acca6b5c5a OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.4068492833587 41.020015 -92.411296 Government Inis imned thcin rather\nbetter, cz a rule, iliau tlicy have tlieir\nown troops, and e/ they decline to\nconic out aud flte In- the regular tac­\ntics, the conundrum is a hard one.\nEz it seems to be certain that who­\never goes out agin em gets killed, I\nwood sejest that the shortest way uv\nendin the war wood be to compel the\nIndian and army contractors to 11 te\nem. But I presume they wood object.\nThey doubtless find it more profitable\nto furnish tho soldiers and the Indinns.\nEz a Kentucky Democrat, who hcz\nnever been reconstructed, and never\nwill be I wood be pleased to hev th£\ntyrant Grant and the Cabinet which\nassists him in his tyranny go ou this\nduty, but I don't sposethey will do it.\nI hev, however, a sejestion for iu-\ntrappin (he wily savages, which, with\nmy voosual generosity, I give the pub­\nlic gratis. 1 ask no reward, but el' the\nGovernment hcz a senso of gratitood\nthe Government knows my address,\nwich iz Confederit X Roads. Ef a re­\nward is given me I wood say, let il bo\nin greenbacks. Medals aro all well\nentifl' for fucher gencrashuns, but med­\nals will not buy Tikker for this genera-\nshun;and this!BtheoneIhevan cs-\npeshal interest in. Bascom don't re­\ncognize medals.\nMy idee is bost illustrated by the\nnarration uv a incident which occurred\nat the Cross Roods only last week, and\nwich sejestid it.\nThe old citizens uv the Cross lionds,\n a sportive mood, a few weeks ago,\nmade it tolerably warm for l'ollock\nand a dozen or so niggers. They bns-\ntid in Pollock's house, and bustid the\nhead uv every nigger they happened\nto meet in the streets. Ono' uv cm, I\nbleev, died from the injoories. Joe\nBigler and Pollock determined to see\nef ther wuz cny law in Keutucky to\nprotect em, and to that end they made\na complaint afore the grand joory,who,\nez a matter uv joke, indicted all the\nparticipants, wich inclooded Captain\nMcl'clter, Elder Pcnnibueker. Dcekin\nPogram. Issaker Gavitt and niysell. —\nUv course the joor> lied no idea that\nwe shood be arrested, but they wuz\nmistaken. The judge and the sheriff\nhed been over to the Corners, only a\nweek afore, and hed hod a dispoot with\nBascom about a bar bill, and they took\nthis opportoonity to gratify theirspito.\nThey came over with a strong possee\nto take the entire lot uv us, aud, cxpec-\ntin resistance, came armed.\nWe got notice uv their intenshuu and\ndetermined that, no matter wat the re­\nsult, wc wood not submit to go outra­\ngeous an infringement uv our rites ez\nKcntuckians. AVe went to tlie church\n— wc took in withus our shot-guns and\nrevolvers—wc barricaded thedoors and\nwinders, ond calmly awaited the coin-\nin of the minyuns iiv the law.\nThey came—flveuv em. Scein our\ntw>ai«hon. the aheriflT with a white cloth\nou tho ramrod uv his shot-gun ap­\nproached and demanded that we sur­\nrender.
448f964a9f8dadbe03a8426f9f2c6dc1 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1903.001369831304 39.78373 -100.445882 This waa agreed to and the Profes-\nsor took In his partner, as they had\nalways worked together and develop-\ned Che great copper belC west of town,\nso Charley was taken in. Upon reach-\ning town, the jumpers hunted up Che\nnew made partners, and while the\nmatter was being adjusted, the Judge\ncame along. He took one look at Che\nrock exhibited and wanted to get in.\nHe got, and from that day on was\npart of the company. Thus the "Real\nThing" mining company was launched.'\nThe winter being open, the com-\npany worked to a man. They flooded\nthe Mint with assays, t the expense\nof the Judge, who by this time was\nmade General Superintendent. Buggy\nhire stacked up wherever trust could\nbe had, and the extraction of ore was\ngoing merrily on. Shortly after the\naffairs were moving satisfactorily, ac\ncording to assay, a man was put to\nwork, and he and the Professor made\nthe manual investigations of the be\nlongings. A few days after the man\nwas placed on duty, he and the Pro\nfessor rushing wildly into town\nwith the news to the rest of the com-\npany that they had uncovered a great\ncave, full of wonders and dark cor\nners. There was no telling the depth\nas the man had refused to let the Pro\nfessor investigate, as he was afraid\nleast the cave contained more hob-\ngoblins than ore, ani as the peda-go- g\nattempted investigation, he was\npulled rudely from the cave by the\nboots, and informed that no tenderfoot\nminers were going to meet death in'\nunexplored caves and "lave the blame\nto the loikes of Pat."\nWork was neglected the next day in\ntown and the great cave was to be\nexplored. When the ground was\nreached there was a thrill for the ex-\nperience that was to come.\n'Did anyone bring a candle," was\nasked. Did anybody well, there were\ntwo railroad lanterns dug up from a\nsack and the others furnished about\nten pounds of candles. The Professor\nwas allowed the first look. The cave\nwas opened to admit him and in a\nmoment he wis inside. He came back-
cdcde4c30f51819b52986186431dda65 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.8178081874682 41.681744 -72.788147 "Our officers and directors for the\npast year who have all had a share\nIn derecting the various auxiliary\ncommittees are as follows: President,\nMrs. George W. Traut; vice presi-\ndents, Mrs. W . C. Hungerford, Mrs.\nG. T . Kimball, Mrs. A. C . McKlnnle;\nhonorary vice president, Mrs. Har-\nriet Merwin; treasurer, Mrs. George\nRapelye; secretary, Mrs. W. E . Att-\nwood. Directors, Mrs. V. B. Cham-\nberlain, Mrs. G. P. Hart, Mrs. W. H.\nRattenbury, Mrs. E . H. Cooper, Mrs.\nW. L . Hatch, Mrs. A. H. Harrop,\nMrs. H. L . Mills, Mrs. F . A. Searle,\nMrs. B. F. Gaffney, Mrs. W. S . Row-\nland, Mrs. J. S. North, Mrs. P. F.\nMcDonough. Mrs. A. S. Grant Mrs.\nM. DD. Saxe, Mrs. H. L . Judd, Mrs.\nP. C . Berlin; Mrs. Henry\nTrumbull, Plainville; Mrs. Robert\nGraham, Kensington.\n"The auxiliary commottee of\nwhich Mrs. W . C. Hungerford was\nchairman, arranged for visits at the\nhospital twice a month by two mem-\nbers of the board who read reports\nof their visits and conditions as\nfound by them at the hospital at the\ntime of making their visit These re-\nports are never falling in stating\nhow how entirely satisfactory all de-\npartments visited are found to be.\n"Mrs. George Kimball, as chair\nman of nurses' entertainment com-\nmittee, arranges for funds with\nwhich to defray any expenses in\ncurred by the nurses for their vari-\nous social activities during the win\nter, such as Hallowe'en and Christ-\nmas parties, informal dances, etc..\nall of which they plan and carry out\nthemselves.
1cb9299b9e376b2c31f8c681810b7248 THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1894.009589009386 40.8 -96.667821 ror, iana and capital monopolists\ncept d. it may require a fiftv dollar\nper capita volume; it may require lesB,\nor more. No more will be so borrowed\nthan can be alvantageously used to\nkeep all most effectively at work The\nmoney so dreadfully needed is now In\nthe banks because the people who would\nuse it cannot pay the usury or Interest\ncharges. If the government should\ntake back from the Shylock class what\nit ought never to have granted them,\nthe privilege of issuing and loaning\nmo iey, and phould monopolize this gov\nernmentai function itself, the rate per\ncent charged would regulate the vol\nume of currency. Under, say, a six Det\ncent charge, a certain amount of money\nwouia oe ca;ied for, under four percent\na much larger and at the bare cost\ncharges (less than two per cent) the\nuaturai volume, the full amount that\neould be securely issued and beneficially\nusect, would be demanded. All this re\nquires but the simple machinery of\npostal savings and exchange baais,\nbanks where all nuney not needed to\nrchange servios would be deposited.\nThe fiaanoial system of the present\nand past is tiia usury system. No;more\nurmey In circulation than the people\ncan by sliving themselves or others af- -\nrd to burrow. All producers must pav\ntribute to fie louder or users of money,\nmustconsmt to have a part of their\nearnings, represented by tke market\nprice of hdp products', "diverted from ,\ntheir hands, and so, not being able to\ncommand equ4 value for what they pro- di c-
0b8407497e64208c47bdefa4208a48b8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.5712328450024 40.063962 -80.720915 It is a mistake to suppose that cholera is\npctive only In the suumier months in this\ncirmate. fleretofote'its visits nave oeen t»\nwarm weather, but in other countries it\nhas not disappeared witb the oncoming of\nVfjntef. There is littlQ .doubt that heat is\na predisposing cause to*Some extent, but\nnot in so great a measure as seems to be gen¬\nerally supposed; "Tlitf'Mideast)! seems as\nlikely to break out at one season as an¬\nother. It/ i4 usually pracedod, as was the\ncase in Wheeling in J832 and in 1873, by\na case ol cholera1 appeal foUowed by a\nfew others, and in '. short lime the eui»,\ndemic sets in jgvenlyifctAfe other tunes the\nextreme violence snowiTtself suddeuly af¬\nter the prevalent of a few cases fprerfew\ndays. . Taa memo£abtaout^rwk$ot;chplera\nat KbmcUeeoCcutred,'in e*<pjr j>arfraf the\nIJritislfcani^ aid m almost wtdry Hmraeln\ntho within aJew- hours, and iu two\ndays wa4 'at its climax. It then declined\nas suddenly as it had originated, aud with\nas little conceivable cause.\nWhether the disease is contagious or not\niadifiPOted. The disease germ probably\nenters the blood through the respiratory or\nintestinal surfaces. Yofc aHfjndanta and\nphysicians in hospitals Yiiirp tfholej-a\npatientstre treated very seldow contract\nthe disease. It is prpbaWe th#t ifc^s spread\nby human iutero.'U.rse^etlt id jflcjanulable\nthat it, originates where it fs topoAMe to\ntrace any communication with no }nfec:ed\nperson, ad on isolated islands and on Ships\niorg at sea. And frequently the area\nafflicted is limited with notable precision,\none side tof a street being visited by the epi¬\ndemic while another eacapes, patients tn\none ward of a hospital attracting the\ndisease while those in toother idoTiof.\nand tbe soldiers fin one section' of\na
e729a526ac2a5e26b44e1113b9f4d2ac EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.8095890093862 39.745947 -75.546589 gent upon a Franco-Amerloan mill- don9 rather more than fslrly well\ntary alliance, 'fio France got neither ,v|th regard to registration. On the\nterritory nor alliances. During all ,,nal day, last Saturday, 8,BOO quall-\nthe time that has foloned the sign- ded bringing the total number of\nIng of the Versailles Treaty, Mr. y„,imed up te SB.900. The appeals\nLloyd George has stood between t0 register have evidently had effect.\nFrance and the collection of repsr-| It ls estimated that the total\natlons from Germany, ills reason number of eliglbles to register in\nfor doing this was frankly explain- th(x olty llt „bout 44,000 . and the\ned. England's factories were closed , number falling to register Is about\nand millions of her workers Idle g,ooo. This comprises both sexes,\nfor lack of markets. Germany held ao that to compare the slackness\nout the hope of furnishing a mar- with days before equal suffrage the\nkel, If afforded an opportunity to number of registered and unregls-\nreorganlze her domestic situation, tered should be divided by At\nFor this a moratorium was said to any ratt» the political leaders seem\nbe necessary; hence Mr. Lloyd i0 be satisfied with the result of\nGeorge objected to the French tb9 fln„i day\npolicy of coercing Germany. In the We think It would be well to con-\nmeantime Germany has applied to , „ider the advisability of having one\ndomestic Improvement* hundreds of j registration on a day other than\nmillions of dollars that could have I gaturd*y. Why are alV,the days put\nbeen paid to France for reparations. on Saturday, a time when many per-\nThe Gorman merchant marine Is j sons for one beason or another find\nnow expanding more rapidly than lt inconvenient to go to the polls?\nany other In the world. Germany a Election days «re not on Saturday,\ndevastated area In East Prussia. and there is no sound reason whv\noverrun by the Russians early It» the eVery ono of the tIm9g for peg„.\nwar. Is now better built up than be- traton should he Saturdays.\n*ore
2504c6b398f0e3279fb007db5c174be0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.9849726459724 39.745947 -75.546589 vice. Unquestionably the system will be faulty at the\noutset. There will e delay and breakage and other\nthings to try the public patlonee, hut every man and\nwoman in the Stale should stand by the Federal Gov­\nernment, realizing that. In Us work of emancipating\nthe people from the exactions of the express compan­\nies. the government Is subjecting the entire postal ser­\nvice to strain and readjustment confusion that time and\nexperience alone can cure. Those Interested In the\nexpress companies would like to see the parcels post\nmachinery of the Government break down,\nwould ilk? to hear it denounced by the public. No such\nsatisfaction should he given to them. No matter whaU\nmay happen in the Aral few weeks, stand by the Gov­\nernment and the postmasters and carriers. Remem­\nber, the American Government Is fully capable\nof performing what it has sot out to do, and that,\nwhile there may b0 errors at the outset, they will be\ncured as experience is gained and equipment, built up.\nThe express companies, in thé hope of holding much\nof tho business it otherwise would lose through the\noperations of the parcels poet, already have announced\nImpending rate reductions that almost cut their old\nrates in behalf. That Is another great benefit the peo­\nple will receive through the wise action of the Taft ad­\nministration in putting the parcels post Into effect.\nWith a cheap parcel« post and a cheap express ser­\nvice, the public will enjoy a double benefit, nB due to\nthe determination of President Taft to relieve the pub­\nlic from the voracity of the express companies.
10c07f878e8f3135d64d1abbc8a809b7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.6232876395231 39.745947 -75.546589 In 1895 the world was startled Ly the\nreports of atrocities inflicted on the\nArmenians by the Turks and Kurds\nThe uations, through their ambassa­\ndors, protested and threatened the Sul­\ntan, hut that individual does nothing\nThousands of Armenians were killed,\nwidows and children taken to slavery\nworse than death, multitudes stretch­\ning ou; ..ton- hands to England and\nAmerica fer resistance and everywhere\nthe cry; "Let the Turk be driven out.”\nAnd yet European selfishness and cow­\nardice and the national jealousies of the\nPowers restrain their hands from ar­\nresting this slaughter and ruin by un­\nseating the unspeakable Turk until lit­\ntle Greece alone, opposed by the great\nPowers, took up the cudgel against that\nmonster of iniquity. But what will tha\nend he. we ask again?\nGod has decreed the utter overthrow\nof Turkey that wonderful prophesy\nof Daniel, 11, 45:\n“Ho shall plant the tabernacle of hi»\npa lata between the seas in the glorious\nholy mountains. Yet he shall come to\nhis end and none shall help him."\nNow notice how readily this could he\ndone. Palestine, which contains tin\nglorious holy mountain” on which Je\nrusalem stands, and is "between the\neas" (the Dead sea and the Mediterran­\nean). is a Turkish province, and if Con­\nstantinople Is taken and the Turk Is\nobliged to leave Europe hastily, he\ncould easily pitch the "tabernacle\n(moving dwelling) ot his palace” or\ntemporary headquarters there, which is\nthe most notable point in his Asiatic\ndominion. It Is written also: "He shall\ncome to his end and none shall help\nhim.” Daniel, 11, 45. How appropriate\nthese words. Ixvok at the facts: In the
216d5ef68cbb4a338d84c980ddbeb9b2 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1881.305479420345 43.82915 -115.834394 notice: “ I tell you the children have\nthe same rights that we have, and we\nought to treat them as though they\nwere human beings, aud they should\nbe reared by love, by kindness, by ten­\nderness, and not by brutality. That is\nmy idea of children. When y our little\nchild tells yon a lie. dont rush a t him\nas though the world were ab out to go\ninto bankruptcy . Be honest with him.\nA tyrant father will have liars for\nehildren; do you know that? A lie is\nborn of tyranny upon the one hand\nand weakness upon the other, and\nwhen you rush at a poor little hoy,\nwith a club in your hand, of course be\nlies. Do you know 1 have seen some\npeople who acted as though they\nthought when the S aviour said, suffer\nlittle children to come unto me, for\nsuch is the kingdom of heaven, that\nHe had a rawhide under His mantle,\nand made that remark to get the \ndren within striking distance. I dont\nbelieve in the go vernment of the lash.\nIf any one of you ever expe ct to whip\nyour children ag ain after you hear me\nI want you to have a photograph taken\nof yo urself when you are in the act,\nwith your face red with vulgar anger,\nand then the face uf the little child,\nwith eyes swimming in t e ars aud the\nlittle chin dimpled with fear, like a\npiece of water struck by a sudden\ncold wind. Hdve the pictu re taken.\nIf that little child should die, I cannot\nfind a sweeter way to spend an autumn\nafternoon than to go out to tke ceme­\ntery, when the maples are clad iu\nbright colors, aud little scarlet runners\nare coming, like poems of regret, from\nthe sad heart of the earth—than to go\nout to the cemetery and sit down upon\nthe grave and look at this photograph,\nand think of the flesh, now dust, that\nyou beat. ”
36fa47a3150dbc91f988fa6937df4444 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.2909835749342 40.832421 -115.763123 liorriblo inurdor and sdictdo otour\nred nt Amoricnu Jb'ork oil Sunday, about\nnoon. It nppcarri Hint Mm. Pollock,\nwho was (lie mother of three children,.\nU tho wifo of D. S. Pollock, n minor,\nengaged nt work iu Bingham Canyons\nthat during her tvro yearu' residenco in\nAmerican Turk, she hna maintained au\nintimacy with Ueorgo Bnell, also n.\nminer, who went to American Fork om\nSunday mornings' train from Bait Lako;.\n(hat tho women, was stopping' nU tho\nhouse of Mrs. Vision, a neighbor,\nwhen Siiell arrived. WJiou ho left tho\nearn he proceeded nt ouco to Mrs. Wen-\nton's liouso ivud.mado inquiry' for Mm.\nl'olloek. On meeting hor ho. asked\nhor to go with him to hor own house,\nbut she at Dritt refused, Family, liow-\nover, nftcr furtlivr conversation , sho\nstarted otT with hirii, and after going ft\nshort distance with him words , nroso\nbetween them, when nho started tmok to\nMrs. Weston's liou^n. fjnell \ndrew n pistol and fired 'throe fihojti at\nhor, tho first taking effect iu tha^arm\nnnd tho othor two iu tho, bfiok., Ho\nthou placed the pistol to hi* heart, anil\ntired, inflicting a wound of which ho\nexpired in about ten minutes, -^Mrs.\nl'ollock lived until ton o'clock Sunday\nevening when sho also died. Mho stat¬\ned that Bnell wanted hereto proeuro »\ndivorce from her husband and marry\nhim, and that whoif slio refused, lit* in¬\nsulted her; she started to ltiavo him mid\nho fired..Spll Lake Tribunt,\nThis SiUtr StttU o f April reporla:' Tho\nKaglo mill lu Lvwla District Is a com¬\nplete micocM. It U now running Meadi-\nly and ttuning out eonviderable bnllion.\nA shipment of (our bruit, valuod fit $!,.\n500, wn» mado by tho company yester¬\nday. Mr, MoMasters, the Superintend¬\nent, nppoar* to nndorntand hid trusine**\nthoroughly, and In runing tho mill and\nmitio in a thorough ana bunineis-liko\nmanner.
0ae55d6e5b5aa2b6ec1c85410d5ed49b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.0561643518517 40.063962 -80.720915 A short time ago Prof. Ramsey nr\nwbuueed that In collaboration with .Mot\nri.i W, Trnvers he had procured froi\nDr. Ilatnptson "."0 cubic centimeters <\nliquid air. which was allowed to evaj\norate until but 10 cubic con time tern wei\nleft. From this residue all j^us was col\nk-cted. and ,the oxygen and nitrogen I\nit wire removed by chemical mean;\nThe remaining gas was oxamlned cart\nfully with a spectroscope, and whll\ntin-4 spectrum of argon was feebly ar\nparent there was also discovered Hi\nspectrum line of gas which had neve\nbefore lieen observed. Prof. Uamse\nnamed the gas krypton', or hidden. Th.\nM»s may he said to emanate direetl\nfrom arson. This very promising dh\ncovery led these seekers after know\n0(1k«* to make oven liner distinctions\ntheir methods of research. They cot\neluded > divide their to tli\nv/rf last point. The result wan tvv\nnew gafos. neon and moiargon. Late.\n0:1 (mother elemental gas.xenon.wa\neliminated. The difference In the line\nof the sp'vtrum of all these gases coul\n1"* easily discerned. Xonon was the lat\nof its particular series to be dlncovcrei\nfor while It Is easily separated it pot\nhchkos a mueh lighter boiling point an\nr'mnlns behind when the others hav\nevaporated. The quantity obtained w:i\n\\ very rnlnuto, but it. Ik practically fre\nI from krypton, argon or motargon.\n1 V ^ne "f thi; gages most recently die\nk 1L covered Is monium, which Sir Wl\na ft llam Crooke* recently announced. I\n#. |J looking at the spectra of rare eartli\nTJ.lt lie saw some lines which he did nr\nI If/"- recognize, On developing his discov\npy cry he presently became convlnccU tha
2df134087c5627cc547665e61f410aac THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.595890379249 37.561813 -75.84108 in this County, with a membership of\nabout sixteen hundred. We have a\nCounty Council, which meets at Leon on\nthe first Monday of every month, and\ntransacts such business as comes before\nit. We have organized, and in full work-\ning order, the Decatur County Fire In-\nsurance Company. Policies to the amount\nof $65,000 have been issued to the Pat-\nrons of the County."\nTwo Michigan Granges adopted a reso-\nlution that their attempt to establish\nbusiness relations favorable to the pecuni-\nary interests of the Patrons be and is\nhereby regarded as an important secret\nof the Order, and that any members of\nthe Order who shall wilfully reveal, or in\nany way make known, to any person not\na Patron, the name or place of business\n any firm or manufacturer or individ-\nual with whom the said committee have\nrelations, be and are hereby regarded as\nhaving violated their obligations, and as\nsubject to expulsion.\nShall We Say " Granger ?" Some-\nbody says: "No ; you might as well say\nof Masons, they are Lodgers;" but it is\nnot correct. The word Grange means a\nfarm with its buildings; therefore the\nword Granger signifies farmer a uitaph\nbetter word to our mind than Patron,\nwhich we dislike. A patron is one who\npatronizes, protects and assists, or gives\ncountenance or gifts to a person or cause.\nThe fanners are engaged in a cause, and\nthose who assist or patronize them are\nthe Patrons of Husbandry. Yes, let us\nuse the good, emphatic, and significant\nappellation, Granger.
0e64dc71f6f100318742d32254061b9d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.5794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 Artiatic drewing ii nowhere belter un¬\nderstood than in the London o/ khUj.\nBy Americane lie term i. received, 1\nthink, in lit general mm; bat il ha. >\nepecial significance in England, referring\nto the atyle of coetnmee introduced four or\nfire Jtln ago in the Wurld of artiau, and\nHence infiuencini e»en lie grandeet\ndimee of faabioo. In what it mi; be\n. eked, doee "artwlic" dreee coneiet? Any¬\nthing which ie graceful, picturesque,\nclassical and quaint, regardleee of the\naccepted ¦underdo of fajhlon. Xt mat-\ntert not whet century eerree ae e model,\nwhat nation proridee color, texture or\ndeeign. Art ud originality form the\nkeynote., and cling eeide confention-\nallty, the artistic" dreeemaker consults\nthe form, complexion and jeve of her\ncustomer firing Greek tunica of Elixa.\nbeth.n ruffs to tall or willowy figoree.\nand claeeical drapery, cioee outline. and\neerere linee to atoot form*.\n are aeteral domineering house-\nk? / *oere it ta considered unpardona*\n°i; f<". 1 "Oman to attend any apeciai\naffair in other than an "atliaUc" coalume\nlili? .k Jr Mine degree harmonize\nwith the medicral, Oriental, or Oaten\nAnne furnishing and ¦'effectfj'and at one\nbouse a recent "Contereexione" gate the\ntmpreeaion to our aninliated eyeeof a\nfancy-dreea baiL A pretty yonng woman\n¦n pale green caehoere, with lafl yellow\nSowera, and hating a scarf drapery from\nher ebouldere, preceded ue up the stairs;\n»od the hoeteee wore a irenuine Maria\nStuart coelame,pearle, toff and ail, with\nthe Miliary nineteenth century adjunct,\nof high embroidered mitta. There wu a\nyoung woman in del utin, eith a cloth-\nof-gold petticoat and filleted hair, who\nwore a pair of alippere in which Queen\nAnoe U laid to hate danced at Bath, and\nthe dainty little lady stepped about in\nsT "Ji difficol'7>
0933b110d006412ed5705bff7883942e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.5177595312184 58.275556 -134.3925 Stattie. For the first time in the\nhistory of world's fairs the Alaska-\nYukon-Pacific exposition, which will be\nheld here from June 1 to October 15,\n1909, will have a large exhibit of\nmotor boats. Henry E. Dosch, direc¬\ntor of exhibits and privileges, has now\ncompleted plans for the display.\nManufacturers are taking ap the\nmatter and their letters iudicate that\nthey will put forth their best efforts\nto hare big exhibits. They realize that\nSeattlo is a good market for motor\nboats, aud that more than likely they\nwill be ablo to dispose of all of the\nboats on exhibition and more too by\nthe time the fair closes.\nThe exposition being situated as it\nis, with Lek^ Washington bordering on\none side of ihe grounds and Lake\nUnion on the other, affords an unex¬\ncelled opportunity for the demonstra¬\ntion of boats. Lake Washing¬\nton which is the largest fresh water\nbody in the Pacific Northwest, having\nan area of thirty-eight square milep, is\nplied by scores of power boats at the\npresent time, Seattle has a motor boat\nclub with a strong membership and its\npleasure cruises aud races are held on\nLake Washington.\nIs is asserted that there is no other\ncity in this country endowed with\nbettor facilities for motor boating than\nSeattle. Besides Lake Washington\nand Lake Union there are the broad\nwaters of »'uget Sound which afford\nthe enthusiast great opportunity.\nThere is both salt and fresh water, and\nthe scenery on all of the waters about\nSeattle is unsurpassed. The climate is\nsuch that motor boating can be enjoy¬\ned all the year around.\nA pavilion for the motor boat dis-\nplay will be built on piles over Lake
8038f07493380b44b106de3b178ed2db OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9275955967921 39.513775 -121.556359 A r VUl)—Pnwaptert hy an honetg de-ire of my\nyil heart, 1 wish to lay l.etnre ll.e |inhlie a case\nw hieli deserve* a high cnmmeii'lation. not only a* an\nnet el Hcietililir skill. I.rn that < ' hn nanily also. A hunt\ntwo year* ago, I suddenly, and from ein*e« unknown\nto me, seized w ith a lit of epilepsy, which, owing In\nmi jni.i.iiiiv to meet Mn* expenses don*dipn nt upon a\nthorough medical treHtrneiil.and the discouragement\nI met with on allemplinif M. soon hecame such (a* I\nwas then led to hellevo) a* to defy the -kill of a phy-\nsician. 1 was frequently wiiile in pursuit of my call\nlog, liirow n down lo Mir ground will,mil the sdghlert\nwarning, and alMioiigti Insensihle lo the ngonn * . I\nyet despised the miseries of my life,and soon learned\nto look upon those who wool,l render me assistants*\n shelter me from danger as enemies w ho sought la\nprolong the miseries ol my existence. W hile in lids\nstale, and having previnns to my idlliction tasted llw\nswi'dls of iile, 1 once more was indaied to attempt\nseeking aid ol a physi(*lim, nnd. hy reeoniinendaUoa,\ncalled upon Dr. 1, . J . K/.tipUm. 1 told him my clr\ncalnst'inees and my hiahilily to reward him for hit;\nsi rvices. regardless ol which, however, he at on©*\nunderlook my case, and with the blessing of (lod i\nwas once nn>re restored to perfect health. Unahlo\nto reward him for the boon which I enjoy at present,\nand yet conscious of my indebtedness. I consider it\nline in 11,\\ sell Illll to all the alilicted to make the ease\npublic, in order Unit those in te ed of medical advice\n111:11 find a physician in whom every confidence cut\nhe placed
0cf8df22da1225c43e9b95e2aed5bf8a PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.7849314751395 40.441694 -79.990086 governing said bank. And so your orator avers\nthat the said bank, thus having a cashier subject-\ning himself to the temptation against which the\nlaw attempts to guard him by a highly penal pro-\nvision. Is not a fit and suitable bank to act as cus-\ntodian of the trust funds of said city.\nF"lfteentn lhat the said cash belonging to\nsaid sinking fund held by eald banks\nhas been and Is received, held and used\nby them severally as anv deposits are\nheld and used by such Institutions In the\nusual conduct of banking business. It Is deposited\nIn said banks in the name of the city, together\nwith all other runds or said city, and In the pose6-slo- u\nor said banks. Is In no way or manner set\napart, distinguished or other than any\nother deposits In said bank, and not separated\nfrom other property of said city, but Is held sub-\nject at any time to the check or the authorized\nofficials or said city, and Is used by slid banks as\nother deposits In the discounting or commercial\npaper for and otherwise making loans to carry on\nthe business and sustain tbe speculations .of their\ncustomers upon Just such security as the officers\nof said banks may see fit to require from such cus-\ntomers, and from such use of said rund. said\nbanks derive large orofits and gains, but neither\nthe city or Pittsburg, nor the bondholders wno are\nthe equitable owners or said ruuds, receive or\nget me Deneni oi any interest or accumulation\nIrom said runds.\nF'iriecnth and one-ha- lf
49d7ca2a643faafd19031a62a39d2b68 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.3575342148656 31.960991 -90.983994 T AX COLLECTORS SALE.\nÏ WILL offer for sale, to the highest bid­\nder for cash, before the court house door\nin the town of Port Gibson,Claiborne coun­\nty, on Monday the 29th day of May next,\n[1843.] between the hours of 11 oclock a\nm and 3 oclock p m, the following tracts,\npieces or parcels of land, in said county,\nto wit: Lots 3and4,section 43, township\n10, range 3, East, containing 408 acres ;\nLot 2, section 45, township 13, range 3,\nEast, containing 36 acres fractional sec­\ntion 13, township 13, range 4, East, con\ntaining 47 aciÉ^f JLota 2 and 3, section 12,\ntownship lfojpaogc 4, East, containing\n135 acres; Vlj^lrolf 6f lot 2, section 32,\ntownship 14\nacres; Lots 5 ffikLß,section 33, township\n14, range 4, East, containing 198 acres;\nLots 1, 3,4 and 5, section 30, township\n14, range 4, East, containing 341 acres;\nWest half of lots 3 and 4, section 37, town­\nship 14, range 4, East, containing 298\nacres; Part of Section 38, township 14,\nrange 4, East, containing 70 acres;South\nhalf of section 42, township 14, range 4,\nEast, containing 392 acres; West half of\nNorth West quarter of section 42, town­\nship 14, range4, East,containing 98 acres;\nNorth West quarter of section 43, town­\nship 14, range 4, East, containing 1GG\nacres; Fractional secnon 25, township 13,\nrange 3, East", containing 325 acres; as­\nsessed as the property of Charles A. La­\ncoste, Thomas Bernard and Lemuel Pit­\ncher, and will be sold, or as much thereof\nas may be necessary to pay $29 43 cts.,\nthe State and county Tax due thereon for
0659aaf7603bd3653bdbae6ffc47e092 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.5204917716555 40.063962 -80.720915 Senator White beat a sharp penetra¬\nting click with his gavel until the con¬\nvention consented to subside a trifle nnd\nthen he announced that Governor Alt-\ngeld, of Illinois, was called for. Gover¬\nnor Altgelil 1ms many warm friends In\nIllinois and many enemies equally warm\nand they sprung to their feet to voice\ntheir sentiments. The Illinois delegates\nover In the section to the chairman's\nright led an enthusiastic cheer which\nwas taken up by other delegations and\nchorused by tho galleries. Curiosity\nwas rife to see tho man whom the dele¬\ngates hail heard so much about and few\nbad ever seen, so many mounted their\nchairs and faced toward Illinois. The\nDemocratic governor made his way Into\nthe alsl-i and nlood there, a pale faced\nman with a black beard closely cut and\nclose cropped black hair, and eves\nthat snapped and gleamed like spark-\nwhile he stood with uplifted arm appeal¬\ning for attention. Few could see hlin\nand there was much crowding and con¬\nfusion until he mounted his chair under\nthe Illinois standard and then the cheer\nwas redoubled, ills opponents, also\nwhen they spied him from the galleries'\nwere Inflated to wrath and they shower¬\ned upon him a sputter of hisses\nThroughout this scene the delegations\nfrom New York, Massachusetts and\nother eastern states sat In frozen silence\nThere eame an end to the uproar at l ist'\nand Altgcld made his voice heard shout-\nIng: "On behalf of the state of Illinois\nsuggest that this convention give to\nlion. David It. lllll, of New York, an op¬\nportunity to address II."\nThis stroke brought down another\nMhowor of demands for "Hill, lllll, lllll
307427e3e76e5868f5ba34230725cca5 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.4150684614408 40.735657 -74.172367 Third tract—Beginning at northeast corner\nof Dodd and Vail streets; thence along Vail\n; street south thirty-eight degrees two minutes\noast one hundred and twenty-five feet; thence\nnorth fifty-one degrees fifty-eight minutes cast\none hundred and forty-eight and seventy-three-\nhundredths feet to right of way of Erie Rail-\nroad Company; thence north fifteen degrees\nwest one hundred and thirty-five and eightj-\ntwo-hundredths feet to Dodd street; thence\nalong same In southwesterly direction two\nhundred and one and eighty-eight-hundredths\nfeet to beginning.\nFourth tract—Beginning In northerly line of\nVail street one hundred and fifty feet east-\nerly from Dodd street; thence north fifty-one\ndegrees fifty-eight minutes cast one hundred\nand thirty-eight and ten-hundredths feet to\nErie Railroad; thence south fifteen degrees\noast thirty-three and seveniy-slx-hundredths\nfeet to easterly line of whole tract: thence\nalong same south forty-six degrees fifteen min-\nutes west one hundred and twenty-five and\nfifteen-hundredths feet to Vail street; thence\nwesterly along same forty-three and fifty-six-\nhundredths feet to beginning.\nFifth tract—Beginning at northeast corner\nof Dodd street and Laurel place; thence north-\nerly along Dodd street two hundred feet to\nWillow street; thence along same thirty-\neight degrees two minutes cast two hundred\nand twenty-three and fifty-nine-hundredths feet\nto easterly line of tract; thence along same\nsouth forty-sixth degrees fifteen minutes west\ntwo hundred and one feet to Laurel place;\nthence westerly along northerly line of same\ntwo hundred and forty-throe and slxty-one -\nhundredths feet to beginning.\nSixth tract—Beginning at point In north-\nerly line of Vreeland avenue seventy-five feet\neasterly from Dodd street; thence north fifty-\none degrees fifty-eight minutes east one hun-\ndred feet; thence south thirty-seven degrees\nthree minutes east fifty-one feet; thence south-\nerly parallel with first course one hundred feet\nto northerly lino of Vreeland avenue; thence\nalong same north thirty-seven degrees west\nfifty-one feet to beginning.\nSeventh tract—Beginning at point in north-\nerly line of V'reeland avenue one hundred and\nforty-five feet easterly from Dodd street;\nthence north fifty-one degrees fifty-eight min-\nutes oast one hundred feet; thence south thir-\nty-seven degrees three minutes east fifty feet;\nthence southerly parallel with first course, one\nhundred feet to northerly line of Vreeland\navenue; thence westerly along name fifty feet\nto beginning.\nNewark, N. J.. May 1, 1911 .
47922bcec1a1bff61fe9fdada16599cc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2972602422628 40.063962 -80.720915 of Frenchmen in the United States\nis said to exceed a million, and in one\ncounty of Michigan alone there arc\nover 5,000 French voters. They think\nthey ought to have representatives ol\ntheir own in office. The Germans anc\nIrish have no difficulty in securing it\npolitical affairs a weight proportionec\nto their numbers, and the French, it it\nnrged, ought to do the same thing.\n. I t was hardly possible to believ*\nthat the colony ot Maine Yankees whi\nlately went to Palestine to aid in es\ntablishing the "government of Christ,1\nwere reduced to such a state that the;\nfound it impossible to get a living ii\nthe land flowing with milk and honej\nSuch a thing would certainly have beei\nan anomaly, incapable of explanatioi\nupon any theory yet discovered. It i\naltogether more agreeable to credit th<\nlatest report that the Yankee\nare doing well.that they are planting\nbuilding and enjoying themselves, am\nnow propose to show the Turks "hoi\nto keep a hotel." If they effect this lae\nnohluvumpnl thnv will not hjl VO If VP.\nIn ml traveled* altogether in vain.\n. Jubilate! The New York Woil\nannounces another grand Democrat!\nvictory. The vast metropolis know\nas Circtevilie, Ohio, held an electic\nfor town officers a tew davs ago. Tt\nconquering palm was at nrst awardc\nto the Republican party, but the Wor,\ndiscovers that the honor belongs to tt\nDemocrats (the majority being 173,) ar\nwith a reviving gasp, says: "Since tl\nConnecticut election such mistak\nought to be less common than th<\nwere before it." So, that has been tl\ntrouble all along; "mistakes" ha'\nbeen made counting up the majoriti\non the wrong aide. It is never too la\n» to learn.
0c230ff6902450d17b5ad4ad6b875944 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.0589040778793 39.745947 -75.546589 A Washington dispatch ; :«yu:\nSenator Kenney Is kicking up a furs\nabout tbe visit of Colonel William .).\nBryan to Delaware next Friday. Mr.\nKenney, it is said, informed the colonel\nthat he ought not to ccmc to Delaware\nwithout an invitation from some of the\nregular party organizations, but in\nreality objects to Former Congressman\nHandy and John O. Gray, the Bryan\nleaders of the city, getting the credit\nof the colonels visit to Delaware.\nSenator Kenney is making a big fight\nto succeed himself, and his friends say\nho thinks the colonel's visit la to boom\nsome otherperson. so it is not llkclytbe\nsenator will figure at all In the Bryan\nmeeting in this city. It is also said\nthat Mr. Kenney would Hue to have had\nBryan speak at Dover, but Smyrna\nwas selected for the other speerh. The\nDelaware railroad has to give\none-fare rates to Smyrna on Friday.\nIn the following letter Mr. Kenney\ndefines his position with reference to\nthe sealing of Mr. Quay in the United\nStates Senate: "I have not a word to\nsay in reply to what is said or printed\nastowhatIwilldoorwillnotdo. I\nshall vote in strict accordance with my\nunderstandlngof the Const itution as ap­\nplicable to such cares. I hope there are\nnot any who think I would vote for or\nagainst Mr. Quay on any other grounds.\nI hold it to be strictly a Judicial act\nof the Senate, and members, I am sure,\nwill vote as they interpret the Consti­\ntution of the United States, and not be­\ncause they like or dislike Mr. Quay.\nThe local politicians say If Mr. Ken­\nney was not going to vote for Quay it\nwould be easy for him to say so.
4b610c8886a59ebcc49a9afecead73f2 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1906.7931506532218 46.601557 -120.510842 "TT.* (-iiuidu't believe It.\n"'.Veil, you see, there won't any one\n1 ere want to get killed, and they will\nthink they got enough trouble of their\nMra to keep them home. "\n"We can gi.uptown and see if we\ncan't find a man who thinks of more\nthan his own skin. " said Pan.\n"Oh. yes: we can try:" agreed Purks\niipathetl'.illy, but his tone implied an\nunshaken conviction that the search\nwould prove a fruitless one.\n"Can't you think of any one who\nwon:! like t i matte the trip?" Purks\nwas thoughtful. He thanked bis lucky\nstars thnt the It. nnd W. paid half his\nsalary. At last he mid-\n"No. I can't. Mr. Oakley."\nThere was v sound like tho crunching\nof cinders underfoot ou the other side\nof the freight cur uear where they\nwere standing, but Purks nor\nOakley heard it. The operator's Jawi\nworked steadily in quiet animal enjoy-\nment of their task. He wns still can-\nvassing the junction's adult male pop-\nulation for the individual to whom life\nhad become sufficiently burdensome\nfor Oakley's purpose. Pan was gazing\ndown the track at the red blur in the\neky. Back of that ruddy glow, ln the\npath of the tlatneis. lay Antioch. The\nwind was lv the north. He was think-\ning, as he had many times In tbe last\nbour, of Constance and the Emorys.\nIn the face of the danger that threat-\nened he even ha.d n friendly feeling for\nthe rest of Antioch. It had been decent\nand kindly in Its fashion until Rydei\nset to work to ruin him.\nHe knew be might ride luto Antioch\non his engine none the worse for the
099e47fd98eeaa1d003edcd7eb19ceb7 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1880.0423496951528 42.217817 -85.891125 person presses tho too down so as to\narch the instep. Then she is told to\nhold on to a bar and to throw each leg\nas high as possible without bending the\nknee.. This exercise , loosens tho joints\nand lenders them fmpple. After daily\nwcrk of this kind during some months,\nand sometimes years, tho girl is taught\nsteps and learns to walk upon her toes.\nThis, which, when well done, always\nelicits applause, is by no means so diffi\ncult as it appears. In reality, tho dancer\nwalks on her big toes, and the others do\nnot touch the ground. Tho big toe is\nbent slightly toward the others, so that\nthe pressure is as much on the sido a3\non the end. But it is far more difficult\nto use the arms gracefully than the legs\non the stage. In order to find this out,\nperson has only to tako a stick and\nwave it after tho manner of a stage\nfairy. There must be no angles, and\ntho curves and movements must be\nmade very slowly in order to bo effect-\nive. Miss Kate Vaughan is tho most\ngraceful dancer on tho English 'stage.\nThis is because she knows how to\nhinder her body from following tho\nmovement of her ' arms or her legs.\nWiiatever steps she may be taking with\nher feet, or whatever curves she may\nmake with her arms, her body is in re\npose, as though, her limbs were uncon-\nnected with it. To realizo the effect of\ngraceful movement, let any one observe\ntho movements of a bad dancer on the\nstage. Instoad of only dancing from\nher waist, her body, is twisted this way\nand that with every step sho takes, nnd\nthus she produces tho impression of a\nyouiig heifer ihdnlging in'gambols. - -
13f87f5bbb45715c945dc9b91a2e37ba EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.943989039415 39.745947 -75.546589 He shut h!s Jaw and stuck out for\nawhile, but eventually followed mo\nflownrtalra. Then he trlod to grab his\nhat and overcoat and make a sneak\nforU,but1hadaneyeouhimami\nprevented It. I finally got him down to\nthe dining room and tho table, but ho\nrefused to cat. That made no differ\nonce lu the programme, however. I\nliegau to talk to him like—a motltor In\nlaw, I am an elderly woman of pro­\nnounced opinions. I proceeded to reel\noff some of tboae opinions for his beu\nofit. Ho hadnt got more than a quar\nter of a dose before he rose up to go\nsaying something about suicide, but I\nsquat led him down and kept him then\nuntil I had said all I wanted to.\nMr. Bowser wasn't exactly qulesocn!\nander my fire. He uttered exclama­\ntions about cats and bats and mothers\nla-law, and fourteen different times\nhe said he would leave the house\nIf I didnt, but we were both there\nwhe n I got through talking—that Is.\nwhen I got through talking for Just\nthen. 1 went upstairs to see my daugh­\nter and had scarcely got there when\nI beard him rattling and banging at\nthe furnace in the cellar. I descended\npart way und stopped him by threats\nof the crowbar. Then' ho took « no­\ntion pe fix a door in the kitchen, and I\nbad to make some blood curdling\nthreats before he would cease ham­\nmering and sawing. Then he came up\nInto the sitting room and got out an\nold harp and began strumming on it\nand singing. I didnt have to waste\nwords on him on this occasion. As\nsoon a» he baw me coming be cuddled\ndown, and I left him playing solitaire\nwith a pack of carda as I went up\nagain.
ab55a5cf5a2a74cfefc20785a827e84e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.7027396943176 43.798358 -73.087921 and certainty of what I have now told you.\nAt the late session of the Onion River As\nsociation your ".union" could be kept only\nby compromising' principle, sacrificing and\nsuppressing truth, and committing high trea-\nson against humanity and holiness. You\nwent away backward and abandoned the\nhigh ground which some of you had taken\nat Waterbury eleven months before. You\neft the "great work" and went down into\nthe plains of Ono and struck hands w ith To- -\nbiah and Sanballot.. The foulest sins find\nhiding placesiamong you. Those of you\nwho see and know it hold your peace for\nthe sake of "onion.'! Those of you whose\neyes have received so much light as to dis\ncover the shame of the nakedness of your\nown body, manifest too much inclination to\nturn away from additional lijjht, for the sake\nof t! le company of who walk in total\ndarkness. You are all of you, as a church\neverywhere, in league with the kingdom of\nviolence, which is at war wiih the kingdom\nof peace and righteousness. You are divid\ned and subdivided on the subject of common\nhumanity and commmon honesty. You\nare divided in regard to the rights 'of one\nhalf of your own number. You are divided,\nutterly divided, in regard to the great law cf\nlove and forgiveness, which lies at the foun-\ndation of the Christian religion. The Tele-\ngraph has labored with Christian fidelity o\nbring you all on to the ground of truth.\nBrethren : Can any of you give any other\nreason for considering it your enemy, o ily\nthat it has told you 'the truth ? The truth\nis the thing on which you are divided and\ndistracted. It is the rock on which all sec-
144c6b92bbc751e4d779166b4a6e851d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.4221311159179 41.875555 -87.624421 Cathay. Tho rhnngo 1h not so much\nin men as in mtnd, In methods moro I\nthan in products, Tiio soaps manu-\nfactured in tho tiny factory nearly\nfour scoro years ago wero as good in\ncleansing power, as puro In their con-\nstituent parts, as any Kirk product of\nthis year of graco. But how tar tho\ncry botwocn tho methods of that early\nday and tho vast machinery which\nhastens and controls with automatic\nprecision tho Kirk products now! It\nis safo to say thnt not a slnglo man,\nwoman or child In America ablo to\nread either English or any of the mod\nern tongues, out nas eccome ac-\nquainted with tho fact that Kirk's\nso'aps aro good soaps. Familiar with\ntho name, they have tried the prod-\nuct, and, It all right, they con-\ntinued to buy ever after.\nProducts Known Everywhere.\nIt 1b not chanco which has wrought\nthis tremendous Industrial success.\nIt Is no lucky stroke which has\nbrought the name and famo of the\nAmerican Family Soap or Jap Rose\nto tho attention of the civilized\nworld. Thoro Is the merltorlus prod\nuct, which is tho basis of growth, as\nIn every industrial success through-\nout all tlmo, and thero is tho per-\nsonality, tho real acttvo prosonco of\ntho man bohlnd. This suggestive\nphrnso, which sticks in tho mind with\na persistency suggestive of Its funda-\nmental truth, answers tho eternal\nquostlon, "Why this success?" by pic-\nturing tho driving forco, impelling\ntho hundreds and thousands of loyal\nemployes to their best efforts all tho\ntlmo.
1532693950cdb91e0b1782a7302ff3a8 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.4643835299341 31.960991 -90.983994 The sport was about drawing to a close. The\nlast pack had been -exploded, when Boss brought\nh imself to a hault,and announced his intantionto\ndie in his tracks. The crowd, as usual, pressed\nround him; those most conspicuous as his friends\nplacing themselves at his side, declaring their\nwillingness to sacrifice themselves in his defence,\nwhen, suddenly there was a tremendous explo­\nsion in their midst! For an instant a livid flame\nilluminated the scene, which the next moment\nwas shropded in darkness. There was a mo­\nments panic—a moments deathlike silence, fol­\nlowed bv a loud cry of wonder from the flying\nmob. Then there was some coughing and ban!\nbreathing to be heard, and many extravagant ex­\npressions of surprise. Some had been knocked\ndown and blinded—these were gathering them­\nselves up and making off as fast as possible. —\nSome three or four of the “ring-leadera” had\nbeen more or less burned, and were loud in de«\nmanding—“Who was that?\nconfusion that ensued, poor Boss, who lay upon\nthe ground near where he had been standing,\nwas distinctly heard, shouting “murder! murder!”\nwith the earnestness of dying mam His clothes\nhad been nearly all blown off him, and the few\nshreds of bis coat which still hung to his shoül-\nders, were on fire. They were soon extinguish­\ned, however, by such as were not busied in bru­\nshing the crisped hair from about their own fe­\nces, or feeling for their eye-brows and winkers\nin the dark; and those who had so recently been\ncruelly engaged in making him the subject of\ntheir mirth, now did every thing in their power\nto promote his comfort.\nThe mystery was soon explained.. Bo3s had,\nduring the day, purchased a quantity of gunpow­\nder, which he had deposited in his coat pocket.\nThis having been ignited by the squibs, had oc­\ncasioned the extraordinary blow up. Luckily,\nno serious damage had been done—but Boss was\nquite-sure that his time had come.\n“You see now, gentlemen,” said he in. a gasp-\ning tone, “what yous done with yar dratted sky-\nrackets, Ypus fixed me off and made a vvidder\nof my wife and children. Is a dead man! You\nsee what you alls done, and I spose yous sat­\nisfied.”
3881edffc230180444eb4babf2e3ef23 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.4397259956875 37.561813 -75.84108 Watering Fianvers in Pots Many\nwho have the care of windew plants\nseem to think that the operation of\nwatering is one of the simplest items in-\ncident to their care, and will hardly\nthank us for advice on this point, and\nyet we may safely hazard the assertion\nthat more plants are injured and more\nfail to reach their greatest perfection\nfrom an improper mode of watering than\nfrom all other cases combined.\nTo water the various varieties that\ntheir different wants shall be supplied\nand co more, is an art acquired by but\nfew, pnd the credit which some receive\nfor fine collections is often due to the\nproper observance of this one item.\nIt should be kept in mind that the\nduty of the water is to dissolve and con-\nvey to the roots of the plants the food\nwhich they need; some plants must \na season of comparative rest, and if such\nare watered liberally during this time\nthey will keep on growing, and the nec-\nessary rest is not obtained. When any\nof my lady friends tell me that they suc-\nceed very well with certain classes of\nplants, such as the fuchsia, calla,\nlobelias, and ivies, and fail with others,\nI at once set them down as being profuse\nwaterers. who, by too much water,\ninjure or destroy such plants as will not\nbear it. On the other hand, there are\nthose who fail with this class of plants\nand succeed well with others, because\ntheir mode of watering does not supply\nenough for the want of one class, but is\nabout the proper amount for another.\nMany plants are permanently injured\nby water remaining in the saucer:\nothers often suffer from a bad selection\nof the soil. '
08476d40017bc7d10be26572abbf38fb RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1901.4671232559615 36.694288 -105.393021 Electric lights are coming into more\ngeneral use all the time In the City of\nMexico as the various companies add\nto the capacities of their plants. Three\ncompanies are now furnishing electric\nlight and power. An American com-\npany is preparing to erect a modern\nfas plant. Several gasoline lamp com-\npanies are operating in the republic\nthrovgh local agents. Candles, how-\never, remain in very general use among\nall classes. Petroleum costs from 60 to\n70 cents a gallon, while tallow candles\nof local manufacture can be purchased\nas low as one cent each, this price nat-\nurally for a small taper. Mexican\nworkmen can get along with less light,\napparently, than any other class. In\npome of the old fashioned offices ujj im-\nportant commercial houses no other\nlight than tallow dips ever known.\nA bookkeeper may be seen making his\nentries in a great ledger with the light\nof a single candle, and the wealthy\nproprietor may be found bending over\nhis big mahogany desk flanked by two\ntall and stately candelabra. A Mexi-\ncan printer can work with a candle\nstuck carelessly Into one of his boxes,\nund two tailors in the small shops can\nbe seen sharing the rays of a single\ndip. The opportunities for the sale of\nbetter lighting apparatus in Mexico\nwill be great when it can be provided\ncheaply and of simple construction.\nThe great difficulty experienced with\nmost of the gasoline lights that are\non the market here Is that they require\ncareful attention, and in the hands of\nIgnorant Mexican servants they soon\nget out of order. Pennsylvania GrIL
0d01f6daa5d8810efd7e85135d8920f4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.2561643518518 39.745947 -75.546589 was to make such arrangements as\nwould avoid the repetition In the fu­\nture of the Boxer troubles of last sum­\nmer. The ambassador declined, in the\nabsence of official advices, to indicate\nwhat probably would be the future\ncourse of hla government.\nRussia, In a measure at least, con­\ntrols the situation in Manchuria, as\nshe has possession of the country, and\nthe great muss of her soldiers now In\nAsia are within that territory. China\nhaving refused the terms specified by\nRussia, the Russians assert she may\ntake her own good time and retire from\nthe country whenever she Is Inclined\nto do so. She has proclaimed to the\nworld that her intentions regarding\nManchuria are entirely honorable, that\nthe proposed agreement was "purely\ntemporary and not Intended to impair\nI he sovereignty of China or to Injure\nthe Interests of the other powers.”\nSuch being the case, 11 was suggested\nby a diplomat that the powers must\nhave confidence In the honesty of the\nRussians. The also is made\nthat perhaps the Russians may attempt\nto obtain a further modification of the\nproposed agreement with China, or\nmay seek to obtain from the powers\nopposed to it in its present form the\npoints of objection held by them W'th\na view to the preparation of a future\ndocument that will overcome many of\nthese objections, and assume without\nany equivocation whatsoever the ab­\nsolute Integrity of the Chinese empire\nand render it free from any entangle­\nments that may menace It ns the re­\nsult of such argeoments. The United\nStates was firm In the opinion that 11\nwas Inexpedient for the Chinese gov­\nernment to enter Into a treaty with any\nof the powers Interested In the prevent\nstatus of the Chinese situation pendln;;\nthe general settlement of the matters\nat issue, and this position, backed by\nthe views <;f other governments. It Is\nfelt here, has been an important fac­\ntor with the Imperial government In\ndetermining Its attitude upon the Rus­\nsian government.
77dae10833c4f31228a1dd17fb4bdf0d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1920.288251334497 39.623709 -77.41082 Followed Strange Course.\n“For a man who is supposed to have\nmade a good deal ot money and to have\nput his a (fairs in such shape that he can\nafford to give up business'and gratify an\nambition for the Governorship, Emory L.\nCoblentz.of Frederick, followed a strange\ncourse as a member of the House of Del-\negates,” says a correspondent in the\nSunday Sun. He further says the wets\nwere supposed to be abroad in the land\nwith political murder in their hearts for\none who failed to stand with them. They\nhad all candidates for important offices\nscared last fall and have most of those\nwho will run this full as badly scared.\nYet, Mr Coblentz consistently voted dry\nalthough he must have known that he\nwas regarded as a candidate Govern-\nor in 1923, and his record in the House\nwas being observed more closely than\nthat of any other man. The race tracks\nhave la on powerful for several years\npant, aid have been increasing in power-\nYet he was the real manager of ih fi ht\nin the House for a referendum on racing\nSince line immemorial the oyster and\nseafuoi question in general has been the\nbugahi o of candidates for Governor.\nThey have been terrified over the possi-\nbility of the oystermens vote swingi g\nsolidly against them if they did not watch\nout. Yet, Mr. Coblentz earnestly favor-\ned the Conservation Commissions bills,\nand wanted to fight them on the floor,\neven'after a crowd appeared from Som-\nerset county and threatened dire ven-\ngeance upon all democrats,
2186c9f7264eea0c5fb2ce8a9cf45b3d THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.5794520230847 32.612638 -90.036751 in the First Psalm. They are they who\nwalk not in the counsel of the ungodly,\nnor stand in the way of sinners, nor sit\nin the seat of the scornful. Their de-\nlight is in the law of the Lord and in\nHis law do they meditate day and night.\nThey are like a tree planted by the rivers\nof water, that bringeth forth his fruit\nin his season; his leaf does not wither,\nand whatsoever he doeth prospereth.\nAbel dwelt in that land, and when the\njealous hand of his brother struck him\ndown, he quickly passed over to the joys\nand peace of the land where tears are un-\nknown and sorrow and pain have given\nplace to joy of heart and peace of life.\nEnoch walked with God in the Land of\nUprightness, and one 'day when enjoy-\ning the companionship of the dear Lord\nhe wandered over the line, and never\ncame back. Noah lived in 'the Land of\nUprightness, but at that time he was\nabout its only inhabitant. The god-\nless inhabitants of the world were as\nunconscious of the existence of the\nLand of Uprightness as the blind fish\nof Mammoth Cave are Ignorant of the\nblessed sunshine and the glad bird bath-\ning in its light. But \nthat Noah had a pretty lonesome time\nof it as related to human associations, he\nfound in the end that it paid to dwell\nthere. Abraham was content to abide\nin the Land of Uprightness, where\nGod's will controlled and His Spirit\nled, but Lot, who knew the Land\nof Uprightness, and ought to have\nremained a resident thereof, lift-\ned up his eyes, and, beholding the\nglitter and show and surface pleasures\nof the Land of the Natural Self, he wan-\ndered off to its distractions, and God's\nangels had hard work rescuing him\nlater from the destruction which over-\ntook a portion of that godless land. And\nwe have not space to teU of all the\nothers who dwelt in the Land of Up-\nrightness, as enumerated in the Scrip-\ntures. Nor have we time toTeview the\ngrand army which has passed through\nthis land into the better land since\nChrist first drew His disciples about\nHim and commissioned them to go into\nall the world and tell of this Land of\nUprightness, and draw thereto all who\nwould listen to the glad message and\nturn from the Land of the Natural Self,\nwhose borders are adjacent to the outer\ndarkness of eternal death, and to the\nedge of the bottomless pit.
22d05981d270641c9f619836271e23f7 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1904.9904371268467 46.601557 -120.510842 Wednesday afternoon a traveling man\nfor a casket company, a Mr. Parkburst,\nby nature and by the influence of his\noccupation one of the jolliest knights of\nthe grip on the road, blew into town. E .\nL. Ne--. ; as happened to tell Mm about\nthe turkeys, and he immediately put up\na job on the unsuspecting rent estate\nman. As a consequents a messenger boy\nsoon took a note bearing Mr. Doust's\nalleged signature, to the Shaw residence.\nBaking that the bearer be given Doust's\nturkey, It was immediately handed ov-\ner, nnd ns soon as it reached the plot-\nters was taken to a Yakima evenue res-\ntaurant and was prepared for the feast\nthat had been planned for Thursday ev-\nening. Then a number of congenial\nspirits were invited in. and among them\n Mr. Doust, who accepted the invi-\ntation to a feed in good faith and inno-\ncence. The others in the party were\nTom Fisher, Jack Shaw, Z. Y . Coleman.\nXV. TT. Patterson. E. L . Sessions. Judge\nTaggard and the casket salesman, Mr.\nl'arkhurst. Mr. Doust was invited to\ncarve the turkey, and graciously con-\ndescended to perform that duty. As\nsoon as he has started to separate the\nremains, the boys, after jollying him for\nawhile with mysterious hints, finally\ncame out flat-footed and told him he was\ncarving his own turkey. His protest and\ndenial met with the written order upon\nwhich the turkey was delivered; his feel-\nings may be better imagined than de-\nscribed, but it is safe to say he will\nimprove the first opportunity that pre-\nsents itself for getting even.
0c60129487b96e35449d674f6480c157 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.4835616121259 39.745947 -75.546589 President Baird, of the Board of Pub­\nlic Education, announces the appoint­\nment of the following committees:\nVisiting—School No. 1. D. H. Coyle,\nand S. F. Bette; NO. 2, John R. Hart­\nman and Thomas Huey; No. 3, Daniel\nRoss and John R. Hartman; No. 4,\nJames D. Carter and John Palmer, Jr.;\nNo. 5, Charles M. Uitch and 1). H.\nCoyle; No. 6, John C. Kersey and Rob­\nert Adair; No. 7, George P. Alfrey and\nJohn C. Kersey; No. 8, S. F . Betts and\nJ. W. Crumbaugh; No. 9, L. B . Mor­\nrow and John R. Hartman; No. 10,\nWilliam Turner; No. 11. W . H. Frick\nend J. W . Crumbaugh; No. 12, Robert\nAdair and S. II . Baynard; No. 13, S. A.\nMcDaniel and John Pyle; No. 14, John\nC. Kersey; No..15, George Rorainell and\nW. H. Frick; No. 16, S. H. Baynard and\nL. B . No. 17. John Palmer,\nJr., and L. B . Morrow; No. 18, James\nII. Green and S. A. McDaniel; No. 19.\nA. G . McCausland and J. D . Carter; No.\n20, John Pyle and George P. Alfrey;\nNo. 21, J. W . Crumbaugh and James H.\nGreen: No. 22, John Pyle and E. G .\nShortlidge; No. 23, John Palmer, Jr.,\nand S. H . Baynard; No. 24, William\nTurner and Daniel Ross; No. 25,\nThomas Huey and D. H . Coyle; No. 26,\nJames D. Carter and C. M. Lciteh: No.\n27, S. H. Baynard and George Rcm-\nmell; High School, E. G . Shortlidge, A.\nG. McCausland and William Turner.\nOn New Building«—S. .H . Baynard, E.\nG. Shortlidge. William Turner, D. H .\nCoyle, L. B . Morrow, Thomas Huey and\nGeorge P. Alfrey.\nOn Teachers—John Pyle, S. F. Betts,\nD. H. Coyle, L. B. Morrow and A. G.\nMcCausland.
2fa0d03c5a07d4624765e020e1f5218c THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.974043684224 39.290882 -76.610759 over 400 miles twenty cents; and to state what\nother tarifl', fixing the rates in federal money,\nand having in view the greatest reduction con-\nsistent with the nvcessary means of the Depart-\nI ment, if any in his judgment, would be more\njust than the above. And that he also state\nwhat alterations, if any, may be made in the\npresent rates of postage on newspapers, pamph-\nlets, and periodicals, so as to promote the circu-\nlation of information without detriment to the\nrevenues of the Department."\nIt is supposed that this resolution, in connec-\ntion with the prevailing interest then felt in the\nsuccess of the experiment making in England\nby what is called the penny system, induced the\nlate Postmaster General to commission George\nPlitt, Esq. one ol the special agents of the De-\npartment to visit Europe for the purpose of col-\nlecting such information concerning the new sys-\ntem in England, and the mail establishments in\nother European countries, as might conduce to\nthe improvement of our own system.\nMr. Plitt left the United States on this spe-\ncial service in June, 1839, and returned in Au-\ngust last. The results of his inquiries are con-\n in the report prepared by him, which is\nherewith submitted. Itcontains extensive de-\ntails tending to show the condition and manage-\nment of the mail establishment in several of\nthe most important countries in Europe, and\nmany intc esting facts and valuable suggestions\n' for the improvement of the system in the Uni-\nted States. Many of the reforms and improve-\nments recommended are deserving of conside-\nration. It will be seen that he recommends an\nentire change in our tariff of postage, and to\nhave all mail matter taxed by weight; letters\nnot weighing over half an ounce to be rated at\nfive cents for any distance less lhan sfo miles,\nand ten cents over that distance; and the same\nrates for every additional joz. when prepaid,\nand double those rates wlien not prepaid. As\nsuch a change would give great relief, not only\nto the commercial interest, hut to the whole\ncommunity, it is to be regretted that neither\nthe present condition nor future prospects of\nthe establishment seem to justify so great a\nreduction in the postage tax.\nIt is apparent that no essential change in the\nrates of postage should be made without great\nconsideration.
034dac466f541798ec6f8bf8c71d02c5 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.148907072202 44.939157 -123.033121 Judges Btrongly denounce. If there\nmust be decision by a close majority,\nthen let the people step In and let It\nbe their majority that decides. Accord-\ning to one of the highest Judges then\nand now on the supreme court of the\nnation, we had lived for a hundred\nyears under a constitution which per-\nmitted a national Income tax, until\nsuddenly by one vote the supreme\ncourt reversed its previous decisions\nfor a century, and said that for a cen-\ntury we had been living under a wrong\nInterpretation of the constitution (that\nIs, under a wrong constitution), and\ntherefore In effect established a new\nconstitution which we are now labor\niously trying to amend so as to get it\nback to be the constitution that for\na hundred years everybody, including\nthe supreme court, thought It to be.\nWhen I was we passed a\nnational workmen's emancipation act.\nunder It a railway man named How-\nard, I think, was killed In Tennessee,\nand his widow sued for damages. Con\ngress had done all It could to provide\nthe right, but the court stepped In and\ndecreed that congress had fallod. Three\nof the judges took the extreme posi-\ntion that there was no way in which\ncongress could act to secure the help-\nless widow and children against suf-\nfering, and that the man's blood and\nthe blood of nil similar men when\nspilled should forever cry aloud In vain\nfor justice. This seems a strong state-\nment, but it Is far less strong than\nthe actual facts; and I have difficulty\nin making the statement with any de-\ngree of moderation. The nine Justices\nof the supreme court on this question\nsplit Into five fragments.
013c7c5167dfe5a7318cbc7dadf4fcfa NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.2671232559615 41.681744 -72.788147 Know each other as Intimately as they\ndo now. The Parents and Teachers'\nassociation is very essential today, h\nsaid. In former years suchan asso-\nciation was not needed. Decause the\nYankee schoolmaster who taught then,\nmade it a point to visit the respective\nparents of his pupils, frequently living\nin tho different homes of the parents.\nToday, because of the largo number of\npupils and the change of conditions\nthe association is must beneficial for\nthe welfare, of the children. At this\nt ime when such meetings are held, the\nparents and teachers discuss the\ntraits of the child and suggestions are\nmade by each which are for its good.\nMayor Quigley closed his remarks by\nwishing a successful year to the as-\nsociation and that it gave him a great\ndeal of pleasure in addressing it.\nSupt. S . II. Holmes Speaks.\nSuperintendane Stanley H. Holmes\nof the public schools introduced\nby Toastmaster Pratt as the man\nwho made New Britain prominent be-\ncause of the educational advance-\nment made in this city. In opening\nhis address, Mr. Holmes said that he\ncould not have done all that Mr.\nPratt in introducing him had said,\nunless this city "had a school board\nwhich is a school board," as it "has\ntoday. He told how during his thir-\nty years of experience in schools in\nsevefal states, including Maine and\nMassachusetts, he never knew of any\ncity where there was such a fine\nschool spirit, where the people sup-\nported and took such an interest in\nthe schools, where there was such a\nfine equipment and schools, and where\nthere was such a capable School\nboard as New Britain is fortunate in\nhaving. He "said that he was throw-\ning no bouquets at the school board\nnor had he an eye for the-
04f143184e8db1935c8f6d13dfd0e0be THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1904.0532786569015 37.451159 -86.90916 conventional made a favorable impres\nslon the key of his thought being the\nnecessity of peace between the great\nEnglishspeaking races General Mlles\nwas received with applause long contln\nned aa his commanding voice and vlg\norous personality drove home his sen-\ntences The gem of his speech was\nthat armies should not be organized and\narmed for the purpose of minting down\nweak people and that arbitration had\nIts noblest service in protecting the fee-\nble against the powerful The situation\nwas nnlqne the foremost soldier of\nAmerica speaking for liberty and justice\ninstead of conquest and pleading for\npeace against all warlike methods J\nM Dickinson spoke for the South most\neloquently He was counsel for the\nAmerican boundary commissioners in\nthe Alaskan dispute Dr Silverman\nspoke for the Jews and warned the\naudience against any ruler who pro\nclaims peace and permits thousands of\nbis people to be butchered Andrew\nCarnegie undersized closeclipped fire\n his eye and a laugh on his face even\nwhen most in earnest warmed the an\ndience into a real Scotch conflagration\nof enthusiasm It was good to be there\nand made one feel for a moment as if\nthe world was progressing\nWhile the Democratic Committee and\nthe International Congress were in\nsession within a block of the White\nHouse the Senate was stirred to its\ndepths a mile off on Capitol Hill by a\nresolution offered by Senator Bacon of\nGeorgia advising the President to ne-\ngotiate a treaty with the Republic of\nColombia looking to full and complete\ncompensation by the United States for\nthe loss of her sovereignty and property\nrights In the Panama Senator Lodge\nof Massachusetts denounced the reso\nlution and all reference to the matter as\nbeing pernicious but debate was per¬\nmitted Something like consternation\nwas caused among Republicans by a\nremark of Senator Hale that hewaa in\nfavor of compensating Colombia
793f3f2570df24ac7b4dec7f6900bcf7 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.3630136669203 39.560444 -120.828218 May 11th, 1854; before Geo. A. Booth,\nEsifc—Two young gentlemen, Messrs.\nDuffy and Latham, were up for examina-\ntion on charge of stealing a trunk of\nclothing worth 8100 from John Bryan.—\nWitness identified a pair of pantaloons\nfound on the person of Duffy, who stated\nthat he purchased them from Latham on\ntime. Mr. Latham had disposed of them\nbecause they were a trifle too long for\nhim. Duffy having been discharged from\nwant of evidence, appeared as witness for\nthe prosecution, and stated that he, in\ncompany with the prisoner, came indirect-\nly from Liverpool, England; that they had\nbeen about in spots in this State for some-\ntime; that he himself had alternately fol-\nlowed the occupation of blacksmithing,\nteaming, dish-washing and bar-keeping,\nand was at present engaged in the last\nmentioned profession a house which\nhe felt a delicacy in naming; that the\nprisoner followed the occupation of a\ncobbler, and that he, the witness, had pur-\nchased the pantaloons in good faith, with\nthe stipulation that they should be paid\nfor next Lords day, when it was expected\nthat his employers would “tip the mo-\npuses.” How prisoner came by the panta-\nloons couldnt pretend to say.\nA motion to discharge was overruled,\nand the prisoner, Latham, was held over to\nstand bis trial to-morrow before a jury.\nMay 12; The People vs. Thomas\nLatham.—A jury was empanneled in the\ncase of defendant, held over yesterday for\ntrial. The guilt of the prisoner being\nclearly established, he was sentenced to\nreceive 25 lushes on the bare back. F . J.\nMcCann prosecuting attorney; A. Smith\nfor defendant.
313e16224ed862945cb0720aee24affa THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.6205479134958 35.072562 -98.243663 fee. That day for dinner I had a\noold lunoh, at night I had noth-\ning. I had a good hard bed in\nthO alley that night with one\nquilt, half to lay on and half to\ncover up with. Tho horsoa had\nplenty of water and good post\nhay while I enjoyed the Bleep.\nFor breakfaat I had nothing\nwhile tho horses had post hay.\nWe were soon pleased and at\nsun up we were bound for home.\nDuring the night a olizzard had\ncome up and' it was so nioe to\nrido 27 miles before supper,\nbreakfast and dinner, shivering\nall night and all day until 3\no'clock. When I got homo there\nwas no ono thero but tho old fire\nplace had a rice firo in it. I\nwarmed, a little, then I began to\nfool like eating a bile. Weli, as\nluck would have it, thero was a\nsmall saucer of beans but that\nWas ull I oould find. I could havo\neaten a man off his horse.\nI plowed 40 acres of sod whioh\nwas very tough. We had no\nfeed, we had no double trees. I\nout down little trees and hewod\nout my doubta trees and single\ntrees. Everybody used hay \ning wire those days for every-\nthing, so I had to bo in stylo and\nused wire for clips and olovioet).\nIt was real handy to havo to wire\nthe tugs to the single trees twice\nn day. saying nothing of the wire\nbreaking and having to replace it,\nTho plow was taken to the shop\ntwice to be sharpened. I: should\nhavo been taken at least twelve\nlimes, but we were like all the\nrest, we were bothered with" the\nshorts and I had to stiok that old\nplow share in the cook stove and\nheat it the best I oould and pound\nit out tho best a kid oould. I got\nthere just the same with that\nlittle old olaw hammer I found in '\nthe road until I broke my broth\ner's little anvil all to pieces.\nWhen I quit there was not much\nof two plow shares left and\nnothing left of the hammer but\nthe olaws, the eye and part of\nthe handle. Nothing left of tho\nanvil but the spikeB that held it\nontbe block so I had to quit\nWell, after all this, my pother\ngave the otaira away fpr $150 and\nsome town, property and got mar\nTied. I left like
2228a51009ab48bfe0f79163015785c0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.892076471109 40.063962 -80.720915 didn't hear a band play, or a drum*beat. I\nor «ee a procession of any kind. Crowds r\niid not even assemble aboutnewscentern. '\nrhe office; of the 8t. Charles Hotel wan <\nthe only place, ao famrhtf knew, in the F\nsity where there wa* the least feign of «ny *\nunuaual in teres t in the important political\nissues pending. In the evening thU\nleemed to be a common resort tor loafer a f\nind local politician*, and once in a while\nhe crowd filled the room, which ia not no c\narge aa the office at the Grand Hotel in i\nJincinaati. Atnuch times, however, he ,\njeard no angry wordaapoken by any one, r\nind did not near a pintol or gun report a\nluring hu five daya' atay in the city. He c\nfrequently aaw Qen. Sheridan, who r\nras dresaed in citizens' clothen, and\naccompanied by hi* brother and one other\nnember of hits ataff, alto in citizen's dreaa.\n General had no apprehension of any\nmibreak or trouble of any kind, but he 1\nvaa prepared for whatever might hap- F\n>en. Gen. Hunter Brooke is Id imme- r\nliate command of the troops in New Or- a\neana. in a conversation Mr. Cobuxn had\nrith Mm, he said the very worst system J\n»f intimidation had been practiced by\nhe White Liners during the entire sum- 0\nner campaign. Nor was it confined to ?\nhe negroes alone. Republicans of every, h\nolor were included, and Ihey had been\nompelled to aubmit to the very worn *\normi of barbarous treatment, in- hii 5=\npinion there was no auch thing" as free- r\nlom of apeech or liberty of action for Re- a\nmbhcan*, white or black,'In the rural e\nLintricui of Louisiana. He had been in F\nhe State ail Hammer, and he knew where- 1\nif he apoke. The treatment of then* *\nen, in hi* opinion, was simply outrage-
1ad6421081f8d9b393d1ebeb3f7195ec THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1900.8342465436326 46.601557 -120.510842 My Dear Mr. Plumb: 1 enclose a few\nletters in regard to ray geography. I find\nthat they have used it for a test for cam-\npaign literature instead of using it in tbe\nschools. Ido uot mind honest criticism,\nbut when the critics declare that I have\nmispelled " Yafa," and ridicule English\nthat is taken word for word from stan-\ndard authority, then it is about time to\nget mud. I stole from ray friend Herbert\nBashford a description of the black bear,\nand ihev have ridiculed the description\nunmercifully. I shall have to get after\nBashford lor writing sucb poor English.\nI it iv sending up by the next boat an edi-\ntion with all the legitimate errors cor-\nrected. The fact that the P. -I . criticised\nBy statement that Mt. McKiniey is the\nhighest mountain in North America does\nnot change the truth my statement at\nall. No geography is perfect. I have\ndiscovered more errors in the Rand &\nMcNally, the Natural Ueography and\nFry's Geography than there are in mine.\nI am getting out a hroadsi.ie defense of\nmy geography, and also a comparison\nwith tbe others that were offered in com-\npetition. I will send you a copy. Of\ncourse it is not uiv nature to fight. I\nwould rather go fishing. I owe it, how-\never, to mv friends and myself that I\nshall not let the papers overwhelm me\nwith shame and confusion and bring\nsucb stigma to you of the state board of\neducation who voted for my geography.\nMy geography is a coming book, a book\ntbat willlive. I will more than carry\nout my promises to the state board of\neducation as to my annual revision. A\nbook is a growth. Cordially yours.
234b833fc6ab212cbebc3fd9647af3e4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.3246575025369 40.063962 -80.720915 Icense. The meeting was brought nbou!\nigorous canvassing on tlio part of the nji\nants uml their friends. Tho Branch\niftllcd to order at S o'clock, Mayor Kgortc\nhe chair, und the following members p\n!iit; Messrs. lloring, Hull, Schultze, Zo<\ner, Miller, llutterllcld, McAdams, Hals\ntfyles. On motion of Mr. McAdtuus\nending of the minutes was dispensed wit\nThe ciiair stated that he presumed\n. v er e aware of the object of the meeting,\nlie was ready for a motion.\nMr. During moved to rccontider the\njy which licence was refused Ilenry I.(\n»rt» which was done and the action of\nk-cond Branch concurred in, in grantln\nIcome. This was a proper action, as Mr\nins always had the reputation of keeping\nurderly place.\nMr. Mc Adams made the same motioi\n:he ctmo at Frank J. Lutz, of whom tho »\n:an be said us of Lehnert, aud ho was pr\n!ii licenMO as per the.Second Branch actio\nMr. Miller made the samo motion in\n:ase of II. 0 . Bauer of Sixteenth street.\nuoring saui in tins lie could not cot\n«ntiousiy vote to grant license, as ho <liil\njonslder thw applicant a proper port-on to\ni saloon. For years past, living opposite\nplace, ho knew the place U bo disorderly,\nliail often spoken about It In Council an\niid not desire to detain the iJmncli by rei.\ningwhatho had before mild,\nMr. McAdltmssald ho thought tho pl\nwas a good one, and besides us the upplic\nmd his wife were old people and utiabb\nlo anything else, bo thought they alio\nhave the license.\nMr. llutterlleld said the old man had\nfoot in the grave, and ho should have lict\nin order to earn a living.\nMr. Hall said that bo was satisfied thai\ntho cases of Lehnert and Lutz an Injus\nliud been done, but he had also made\npiiries about llauer and was satUtled t\nlie was a man that should not have licens\nSome further remuks were made by Me;\nuuruiK mm OL'iiuu/.c, milt UJU HCt'iiau mil\n;ranted by n vote of 5 to -J, Messrs. JJor\n[lull. Halsted anil Schultzo voting ugainsl\nAdjourned.
188a443e28ca93b14f5c2cfae165fa8e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.9109588723998 40.063962 -80.720915 A. stationary market and few impor\nntileld developments during the weei\nst dosed left but Utile for oil men t\nscum in their particular line, says "L\nVT." in his weekly oil review. Th\nnditions so far as applied to the pro\nicing fields are peculiar, perhaps\nrallel has never "been witnessed in th\nBtory of the business. The scarcity u\nw territory is greater now than evei\nid the year bids fair to close wlthou\nivlng discovered any new fields o\ntols. It was argued that once the mar\nft, advanced above the dollar marl\nrerators would find the localities li\nhich new pools were waiting to b\ninctured. After several months of\nliar and better prices the new pool\n« not any nearer than when the mar\nt was hanging around 65 cents. Tha\niw territory has nbt been discoverer\nid no well under process of develop\nent is not chargable to apathy on th\ntrt of the operator. Me has been tire\n55 in his efforts 'but the only knowledg\nhas acquired lias been to determln\nhere they are located. Thousands o\nres have been condemned in this way\nid if the experienced operator Is aske.\ntiere in- nis opinion me next jiuji »>n\nfound, his will be. "I don'\nlow." and then he will tell you hov\nany dry holes he has drilled this year\nWest Virginia has been the most fav\ned by operators, but with the excep\nm of one or two small pooln, ther\nive been no new discoveries. Th\neater part of the work has been devel\nins: the outer edges of pools discovere.\nie and two years ago. In many loeall\n»» that class of work Is rapidly comlni\nan end. In Wood county, this Is moa\nytlceable In the Berea grit torrltorj\nPleasants there has in the past mont\nen a falling off of work in the shallov\nj)d territory. In the Keener sand ter\ntory jn Monroe county, In what ha\n(en designated the Jackson Ridge de\nlopment, there is^Si marked Increas\nnew work. To the Investors this ter\ntory will prove profitable out tnere\n»t any danger of a sudden rise !n pro\ntction from- that source. In the sam\n, tio that the wells multiply In numbe\ne aggregate production of the field \\vl\ncrease. Large wells will noc likely b\npart of the history of that pool wher\nhas 'been drilled over.\nNortheast of the Elk Fork pool, th\nftdlng attraction of last year, there 1
11af1dc1a8fff6847d98cbc4f8234760 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.4890410641806 42.217817 -85.891125 In the Church of St. Joseph, rueb-la- ,\nMexico, will be held in November\nof this year a grand rattle of souls.\nThe rattle Is held as a means of ra!a\nlug money for the church. The raffle\nhas been advertised In some American\npapers and one of the circulars print-\ned In Spanish and describing the plan\nIn detail was sent to the Tribune by\nthe authorities in l'uebla.\n"On behalf of all the souls that may\nbo entered for this raffle," says the cir-\ncular, "a solemn nine days' memorial\nservice will be held. The scheme of\nprizes Is as follows:\n"There will bo one extraordinary\nprize consisting of the thirty masses\nof Saint (Iregory, which will be ap-\nplied in favor of the soul that draws\nthis first prize; said masses to begin\non the day following the raffle; one\nprincipal prize, consisting of a solemn\nmass, preceded by the celebration of\nthe office of the dead; and seven small-\ner prizes, consisting of a like num-\nber of prizes to be applied In favor of\nthe souls that shall draw these seven\nprizes. During the nine days' solemn\nservices the holy schools of gentlemen\nand ladles, together with female\nslaves of the Immaculate Heart of\nMary, will partake of the sacrament.\nDuring the first three days the bene-\nfits of this communion service will bo\napplied to the relief of the souls of\ntheir relatives; during the second\nthree days to the well being of the\nsouls that are entered for this rattle;\nduring the seventh day for the souls\nof the worthy priests departed: during\nthe eight day for the souls that are in\ngreatest need; and during the ninth\nand last day for the souls that shall\ndraw prizes In this raffle.\n"Inasmuch as the before mentioned\nassociation forms a group of no less\nthan 000 pious souls It can easily be\nseen what a great treasure of spirit-\nual options there will be, who will\n.dedicate all these spiritual riches to\nthe good of all the blessed souls in\ngeneral ami In particular that of the\nsouls that take part In this raffle and\ndraw prizes in the same.\n"In due season public announce-\nment will be made as to the date on\nwhich will begin the nine days' ser-\nvice In November of this year by\nmeans of notices displayed on the door\nof the church."
22aa387398a3703be45bd8f8b1d971b8 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1883.395890379249 41.004121 -76.453816 querulous and unreasoning niiiko totally\nerroneous assertions as to the superiority\nof the old over the now.\n' 1 lie truth is that at no period of the\nworld's history liavu all sorts of drv irooda\nbeen so superb ns to quality or so moder\nate as to price as iney are In this, our day\nand generation. A moments thought will\nconvince all reasoning people that In con-\nsequence of the increased production of\nraw material nnd tiie improved system of\nmanufacture the result must bo a better\nclass of goods and lower prices than could\nhave been offered with tho limited supplies\naim inelllclent methods of a quarter or a\nhalf century ago.\nWith a resident buyer in Paris and others\nin all the great marts of trade throughout\ntho civilized world. What wonder Hint Air\nWanamaker can offer for salu at incredibly\n prices the choicest products of tho\nlooms of Lyons. Uerlin. Hoir.ist. Ar.mr .linc.\nter and Kottingham ; chosen ns experts In\nmo class ot goods they aro commissioned\nto purchase, every ugent sent abroad by\nMr. Wanamaker knows just what style\naim price of goods aro most desirable, and\nis fully posted ns to where these can be oil.\ntalned in the best qualities and at the most\nadvantageous ;rates for the house they rep-\nresent and tho customers thereof.\nWith this understanding of hh unor\nquided facilities for procuring and keeping\nup a full stock of flue Imported nnd domes,\ntic goods, our leaders will turn with fresh\ninterest to .Mr. Wnnamakcr'is advertise-\nment in lids issue and see the values\noffered In lino French dress goods, silks,\nhosiery, lace curtains and furnituro cover-\nings gentlemen's underwear, dress trim -m lng- s ,
074f715d0df44ac93a75baa3d80de417 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.719178050482 42.217817 -85.891125 A portion of the crew of a ship which\nwas anchored off the cdast of India\nonce went ashore for the purpose of\ncutting some wood, and ono of the\nsailors, having through some cause be-\ncome separated from his companions,\nwas considerably frightened by the ap-\npearance of a huge lioness which ho\nsaw approaching him. Much to his\nsurprise, however, she did not, on com-\ning up, appear to have any evil designs\non him, but instead crouched at his\nfeet and looked steadfastly first at his\nfaco and then at a tree somo little dis-\ntance away. For a time the man cculd\nnot understand this conduct; but pres-\nently, on tho lioness rising and walking\ntoward tho tree, looking back at him as\nshe went, ho found out what it meant.\nUp in tbo branches of a was a largo\nbaboon with two little lion cubs in its\narms, and it was because of this that\ntho lioness was in such trouble. Iho\ndifficulty now presented itself of bow\nto save the cubs, for the sailor was\nafraid to climb the tree. So, having\nhis axe with him, he 10 solved to cut\ndown the tree, and this be did, tho\nlioness watching him most, anxiously\nduring tbo whole time. When the tr.ee\nfell and the three animals with it, tbo\nlioness, it is said, dashed witli fury\nupon tlffc baboon and destroyed it;\nthen, having gently caressed her cubs\nfor some time, she returned to tbo\nsailor, showed her gratitude by fawn-\ning upon him and rubbing her bead\nfondly against him, and at length car-\nried away her offspring, ono by one.\nHarper's Yoii7ij People.
be5c0241b94d5bf0fff19563451d1466 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.9547944888382 41.681744 -72.788147 As the days go by Lily realizes\nthat she is too much In love with\nhim to marry Staley Drummond,\nwho has learned of her friendship\nwith Pat and Is suspicious of It.\nBut Mrs. Lexington announces the\nengagement and the plans for the\nwedding go forward.\nJust about the time Lily has re-\nsigned herself to life with Staley\nPat comes to work at the house as\nMrs. Lexington's chauffeur! He has\ntaken the job, he admits to Lily, just\nbecause he wouldn't resist the temp-\ntation to be near her for even a few\nweeks before her marriage. From\nthat moment they are together con-\nstantly, and Carrie, one of the\nhousemaids who is in love with Pat\nherself, goes to Mrs. Lexington with\nthe story of their attachment and\n leaves, ordered out of the house\nby Lily. Pat tells Lily the best thing\nhe can do is leave, too, and let her\nmarry Staley, because she never\nwould make a poor man's wife. He\ntakes Lily to his own home, intro-\nduces her to his father and mother\nwho both work in their little grocery\nnext door, and to his sister, Flor-\nence, a snappy young flapper who\nis overwhelmed by Lily's clothes and\ndiamonds and furs. Tlie next morn-\ning Mrs. Lexington tells Pat he is to\nwait on table thatj night, and when\nhe refuses to do it, discharges him.\nLily hears the argument, dresses\nherself in the best clothes she has,\nand goes out to his room above the\ngarage, to nee him.\nNOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
1c3f350236a0604f53274db1e56d1cf4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 Murder in violation of the laws ami\ncuwtoms of war,\naprcijlcntion l*f..In thin Unit fho wild\nBenry Wlrtr., an officer in tho military\nservice of the so-called Confederate\nStatos of America, lit Andersonvillo, in\ntho State of Georgia, on or about the\n8tli day of July, A. J). 18<H, then and\nthere oclng commandant of a prison\nthere located by tho authority of said\nso-called Confederate States for thoj\nconfinement of prisoners of war taken\nand hold ah such from thy armies of the\nUnited States, while actinc ns .said com-,\nmnndant fblonioufcfy, wflftilly and'of\nliiH liuUioo ufyrefhought did make an\nassault, and bo tiio Haid Wirtz, with a\ncertain piHtol called a revolver, then\nand thero ioadwl ami oluirged with gun¬\npowder and bullets, which Maid pistol\ntho naid ITonry Wirt/, in hi# liauu I lien\nand there had and held to, ngninst and\niiiwu a Holdier thonging to tho army\nof tho l/'nited States in bin, tho naid\nWlrU'a custody an a prisoner of war,\nthen and there did shoot and discharge\niutljcflng mortal wound from whicli he\nM/irriJlra/ion 2</. In tliin that tho Haid\nHenry Worts, an ofllcor in tho military\nservice of tiio so-called. Confederate\nStates of America, at Audoroonvllle, in\nthe StatO of Georgia, on or atxmt the\n20th day September, A. D . 1801, then\nand there being commandant of a pris¬\non, there located iiy the authorUy of\n»aid so-called Confed erato States, for\ntho confinement of prisoners of yrar ta¬\nken and held as such from tiio armies\nof the United State* of- America, while\nacting an nosu oommandant, felonious¬\nly, wilfully, and vf.liJs nuijico afore¬\nthought, did HpHt upon, Htaiiip, kick,\nbrnlse, and otherwise Injure With the\nheel of bin boot, a Hold lor bolnngitig to\nthe army of the United States,in Tils,\nthe said Henry Wert* custody as a\nprisoner of war, who*e uuuio* Im un¬\nknown. of which naid ^tamping, ki«:k\nIng and bruising, maliciously (lone and\ninflicted by the wild worts, the naid\nsoldier soon thereafter died.\ntipecijiciiNuuM, In thin that the Mid\nITonry Wert/., living an otllcer in the\nmilitary nervine 6f tluj to-called Con¬\nfederate States of America, at Andjj^-\nsonvllle, in tho State of Georgia, 61A\nabout the lath day of Juno, A, I>. 18&J,\nthou aud there, beiugln command of a\npriHcrn, there locat&T by authority of\nthe Haid so-called Confederate States,\nfor the conlineiuentof prisoners of war,\ntakou and hold sh swob from-tlm armies\nof tho United State*.,while acting iih\nHaid commandant1, did make an assault\nand ho, the Haid Wirtz, with a revolver
36f058dc92bdd81899a85349babe6fb7 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.541095858701 40.735657 -74.172367 award the contract In accordance with Chap-\nter 217 of the State laws of 1896.\nBidders are not to state any price for ma-\nterials and work for which there is a fixed\namount provided for In the specifications.\nEach proposal must bc Inclosed in a sealed\nenvelope, properly indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the improvemem. and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners of the City of Newark.\nBidders will state their irices In writing as\nwell as In figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposals that,\nshould the above work be awarded to them,\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following number\nof consecutive working days:\nBloomfield Avenue Repaying—Fifty (60) days.\nMalvern Street Paving—Seventy (70) days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work can\n examined at the office of the Chief Engi-\nneer of the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners at the City Hall. Said proposals to\nbe accompanied by the consent In writing of\ntwo sureties, or a surety company qualified to\ndo business In New Jersey, who shall, at the\ntime of putting In such proposals, qualify as\nto their responsibility In the amount of such\nproposal, and bind themselves that, if the\ncontract be awarded to the person or persons\nmaking the proposal, they will, upon Its being\nso awarded, become his or their sureties for\nthe faithful performauce of said work; and\nthat if the person or persons omit or refuse to\nexecute such contract they will pay to the city\nof Newark any difference between the 4um» to\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract
05a7f1003656aef9b7c1de8bafe1aca7 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.1926229191965 40.441694 -79.990086 Philadelphia Record.\nMedical science has of late been calling at-\ntention to the evils which arise from the im-\npregnation of the air in large cities with\nsmoke. In Chicago especially many plans\nhave been suggested for getting rid of what\nIs at once a discomfort and a danger. But,\naccording to a writer In Longman's Magazine,\ndust plays an important part in tbe pro-\nduction of clouds, fogs, rtln and snow, ana\nwithout it nature wouldbo unable to present\nsome of her commonest phenomena. A few\nyears ago John Atken, of Falkirk, Scotland,\nmade the discovery that without dust there\ncould be neither fog nor rntn, but only a\ncontinuous dew which wonld moisten cloth-\ning, cause walls to drip, keep the earth con-\nstantly damp, and render umbrellas useless.\nThe vapor particles are attracted Dy the\ndust in the air, and fog or rain particles are\nformed. When tho particles of dust aro\nnumerous and the vapor particles few, then\nwe havo fog; but when the dust particles are\nfew in proportion to the amount of con-\n varJor, each particle soon becomes\noverweighted and falls In mist or rain. If\nthe air be exnansted oy means or a pumn\nfrom a glass vessel, nnd air dp admitted to it\nthrough a tube packed with a filter of\ncotton, the cotton will arrest the dust, ana\nthe air in the vessel will be pure.\nA similar vessel containing air not tbns\ntreated will not present to the eye an ap-\npearance differing from that of the other,\nbut If each shall be connected by a tube\nwith a boiler containing steam, the steam\nwhen it enters the vesssel filled with unal-\ntered air will form a dense white cloud,\nwhile the vessel with the filtered air wil\nnot present any snoh appearance, the ab-\nsence of dust having prevented the watPr\nvapor from condensing Into fog. When the\nsteam is admitted into the vessel with the\nunaltered air several times in succession no\nfog will be formed, but rain will fall, owing\nto tho fewness of the particles of dust still\nsuspended. The theory, as hro-i r-he -
4cc3f13c7a57f1f78ea33359fb435c8d THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.2068492833587 43.994599 -72.127742 beckoned to the chief and he respond\ned but his evil spirits still dominat-\ned the air over the thatched houses\nof the little village and as soon as\nthe echoes of the shot died away,\nactivities began. Every man, woman\nand child wrapped in the individual\nblanket left the village and remained\naway until the removal of the body.\nImmediately scores of tiny fires are\nkfpt burning to kep a smoke screen\nabove the houses that Tigert ail's evil\nspirits may not return to molest his\nwife and family. While the smoke\ntwined and twisted upward, an aged\nIndian squaw gathered together\nevery possession of the dead chief,\nfor every trace cf him was removed\nfrom the camp. Within four days\nthe smoke screen will be discontin-\nued for it is believed that Jack\nTigertail will then be with the other\nbraves at the court of Ojus. Mean-\nwhile ' the family mourning has\nbegun. His wife and five children\nhave taken up new quarters and she\nhas partitioned off a small space on\nthe elevated floor, three six feet,\nand placed about it a net screen.\nShe will live in this space for four\ndava, while the children get along as\nbest they may in the rest of the\ntnt. She has taken off her beads,\nplaced there at her marriage, and\ntaken down her hair, which has\npreviously been done high on her\nhead. She will resume her usual\nactivities at, the end of four days but\nshe --will remain a widow at least\nthree years and durinjr that time she\nwill on no occasion do up her hair.\nThe other women went into mourn-\ning by undoing their hair but they\nwill retnin their benK If the\nIndians hd buried Tigertail, his\ncnoe weuld have been cut in half,\nh'S bodv and possesions placed in\none half and the other half attached\nto the first, it would have been\ncarried many miles into the wilder-\nness, possibly to the Big Cypress and\nallowed to remain their unmolested.\nAfter the great spirit claims a Semi-\nnole, he is of no interest whatever to\nth nttii-
18e0c4d1011aa3643ac98896e379162b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.0972602422628 40.063962 -80.720915 No. 16, to repeal the act providiiij\n>r the forfeiture of property in thi\ntate belonging to the enemies there\nf, Mr. Sterenson (President) vo\nng in the negative; S. tio. 17\n[Jiicerning divorces, Mr. Haymom\noting in the negative. [Thi\nill changes the existing law as follows\nlIIo wing a divorce I'ordesertion oraban\nonuient during three years; allow\n:ig a wife a divorce where before mar\niage, and without her knowledge, tin\nusband has been a notoriously liceu\nous person; und preventing the i>oor\nrom prohibiting the party divorce*\nrom tnatxying again;] S. No. 18, t<\nrovide for the employment ami pay o\nounsel to delend the suit of Virgin!;\ngainst West Virginia, in relation t<\netfersnn ami Ki>rkt>lpvcnnnti(Mt unnrn\nriating §10,000 for tbut purpose,and th\nosts; S. No. 23, to incorporate th\nrorth Branch Lumber and Boom Coin\nany.Mr. Haymond voting in th\negative; and S. No. 2<i, amending sec\nou 8, chapter 7, of the acta of 18&5.\nS. 13 . No. 31, to prevent the collectioi\nf interest and costs in certain cases\nas read the second time and referre<\n> the judiciary committee, bil\nrovides, among other things, that per\nons who went into the rebellion, ant\n»lt no agent authorized to collect thei\nLaims, shall not collect interest accru\nag during the time of their absence.]\nS. 15. No. 32, to reduce the number o\nDwnsliips in Taylor county from nim\n3 live, was read the 2d time and lai<\nn the table, Mr. Burdett being absent\nS. B . No. 34, for the relief of Jamc\ndbert, late Sheritl of Monongali;\nounly, and his sureties, was read th\nil time and relerred to the Committe\nn Finance and Claims.\nS. B. No. 35, to form a new townshi]\nut of parts of Union and Lincoli\njwnshps in Pocahontas county, wo\n?ad the 2d time and laid on the table\nIr. Young being absent.\nB. No. 36, to provide a turnpike ii\n'ocahontas and Webster counties, was\nead the 2d time, and lnid on the table\nIr. Young being absent.\nS. B. No. 3S, to repeal sections 1, 2, 3\n,5 and 6 of chapter 47, of the Code o\n'irginia, second edition, was read th\nil time, and ordered engrossed.\nAdjourned.
23280bc465305b75cd154b9db7d78db7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.3794520230847 58.275556 -134.3925 is a large one and should further de¬\nvelopment and prospecting show good\npay there is room for 5,000 people there-\nJust now, however, there is uothing\ncertain about it. While good pay has\nbeen struck on some of the creeks the\nextent of the pay has not been deter\nmined, &ud until this is don* the Tolo\nvana is uo place for a stampede. There\nare at present about 250 prospectors on\nthe ground, aud by the time the sum-\nsummer is over the new camp will have\nproved either a big strike or just an\nordinary proposition. It seems to be\nthe general impression, however, that\nTolovana ia destined to be a big camp.""\nThe federal law under which thoi\ntowns of Alaska are allowed to incor¬\nporate is very vague when it comes to\nthe question of the collection of taxes.\nThis is perhaps responsible for the\nmixed condition of affairs at Valdez, as\nshown by the following article taken\nfrom John Frame's Commoner: "The\ncity ordinance governing the sale of\nproperty for taxes is defective ^to say\nthe least. To illustrate: The on\nLot 4, Block A, including penalty and\ninterest, was $28.18. It was bid on by\nO. A . Borgen at the tax sale last week\nfor $100, there being several others who\ndesired to secure the tax title. The\nordinance provides that the party mak\niug the highest bid shall receive the\ncertificate of sale. But the ordinance\ngoes on to say that all excess over and\nabove the amount assessed against tha\nproperty shall be returned to the\nowner of the property. Then under\nanother section of the ordinance it is\nprovided that the property may be re¬\ndeemed by the ownera or others having\nthat right, by paying the amount of the\ntaxes, penalty, etc. Thus it will be\nseen that Olsen, under the ordinance,\nis entitled to all of the amount for the\nproperty over and above the tax and\npenalty, which is about £70.00, and can\nthen turn arouud aud redeem the prop¬\nerty by paying about $30.00 . There i«\nno provision made that if be chooses to\nredeem the excess paid by the bidder\nshall be returned to him."
99776d4a5f8ba8abc0ff41ceb56b8669 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.5383561326737 41.681744 -72.788147 Bobrowski was driving east on\nEast Main street when his car col-\nlided with a car driven by Joseph\nKern of 1104 Stanley street, which\nwas going west. Officer McCue was\nstanding at rne corner of Hartford\navenue and East Main street and\nheard the crash. When he arrived\nat the scene, he found Bobrowski\nreclining ov.;r the driver's wheel and\nhis car in a crosswise position head\ning north. He asked Bobrowski if\nhe had been drinking and Bobrow-\nski said he had two glasses of wine.\nAsked to wolk a few paces, Bobrow-\nski staggered, the officers said.\nIn his own defense, Bobrowski said\nh.ls daughter was injured yesterday\nmorning by being struck by an auto-\nmobile, and his wife is an invalid,\nlie had been to the hospital to visit\nhis daughter and when the accident\noccurred he was going to Hurlburt\nstreet to do a job for a\nman named Frank. There was a\ncar parked on the south side of East\nMain street, near Landers factory,\nand Bobrowski was driving past it.\nwith the left side of hie car a few\ninches on'o the trolley track area.\nHe said Kern should have been on\nthe north side, going west, but he\nwas too near the center of the street\nand the collision resulted.\nHe had two glasses of wine at\nsupper, but he was not drunk. He\nalways drinks wine with his meals,\nhe said. Asked why he does not re-\nport to the probation officer as he\nagreed to do the last time he was\nin court, he said he works about the\nhouse in the evening on account of\nthe inabili;y cf his wife to attend to\nher household duties and frequent-\nly he v;orl;s overtime in the factory,\nso he dee."
0109a8ddd021f912a30a13c559daeeb8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 It waa known bofore the call con¬\ncluded that Foraker had gained prob¬\nably less than thirty overthuilrst ballot.\nWhile the additions were being made\nAdams county asked to chango her vote\nand cost hor whole number (7) for For¬\naker. The chair ruled that 110 changes\ncould be made until the addition had\nbeon made and then changes would be\nallowed. This was the point at which\nthe friends ot Forakor had set to do the\nwork. The delegates wero on their feet\nand tbo opposition to Foraker joined in\nthe din and endeavored to stem the title,\nThe changes were finally begun, and 'j\nAdams, ltoss, Lucsb and others cauie to\nForakor solid. Tho machinery of the\nconvontion was so arranged that tuo\nSecretary only recognized thu counties\nthat wished to chango to Foraker.\nEverything was going In n swimming\n for Foraker when Columbiana\ncounty secured recognition and cast 111-\nteen votes for Kennedy. This brought\na new element of confusion into tho con-\nventlon, and it was a contest as to\nwhich Could raako tho most noiso. Tho\nChair refused to proooed with business\nuntil order had been restored. This be- (\nIng partly secured,the changes continued\nIn tuo direction of Foraker. Hamilton,\nCuyahoga, Lucas, Montgomery,Aslitsbu-\nla and other large counties changed their\nvotea to Foraker solid. Tho delegations\nwhich desired to chango ruihed In the\ndirection ol tho stage, and as nothing\ncould be heard several delegations\nvotos were handed up on paper. Alter\nIt became apparent that Foraker had a\nmaioriw of the votes at the convention\nthe frleudi of several of tho other candl-\ndates tried to make motions to maketho\nnomination by acclamation and unani¬\nmous.
37ebfd6764469e7b032c31eec8b7153f THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1905.760273940893 40.114955 -111.654923 crete offers a solution and many COD\ncrete ties are In use throughout the\nNorthwest but they do not give the\nsame resiliency as wood and goon\ndevices for holding the rails firmly are\nlacking A concrete tlo designed b >\nII E Perclval of Houston Texas\nIs a solid tie no steel being exposed\nanywhere und it has n special varl\nable cross section in orde-r to keep\nIt from becoming center bound and\nthus liable to unequal settlement The\nInventor states that tho shape mus\nbo such as to distribute tho ecentrk\npressure which ho claims to have\ndone In this tie by cutting away the\ncenter for 4I feet making It Vshaped\nTho ends are made oval to give ar\nmunch wider bearing for the dlslnnr\nof feet at each end The dimensions\nof the tie are S feet length 9 inch\nface and 9 Inches In depth Ho also\nclaims that tho form of tho tie makes\nIt a selftamper and thus easy tr\nmaintain Under each rail Is n\n2x9x14 Inch wood cushion which ha\nbeen previously treated by wood pre\nserver and It Is mado In such shapp\nas to readily give to the pressure a\na train passes over The rails are fast\noned to the tie by a screw pin ten\nInches long and Th Inch In diameter\nThis spike passes through time woodc\ncushion and screws down Into a sock\not In the tie filled with a composition\nof galvanized steel and babbitt metal\nTho ties are reinforced with corru\ngated iron bars
114cb7ffeb098dc77203fb2060ac42ce THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.491780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 Harvard started in with a fa3t atroko\nforty to tho minuto, hoping to break\nYalo's hoart in tho Hmt mile. Ynlo ro-\n. ponded gamely with thirty-eight\nstrokes and kopt right abreast of Har¬\nvard. For a furlong, perhaps, tho boata\nraced nip and tuck, then tho longer,\nstronger atroko of the sons of old Kli\nbegan to toll and Yalo drew away. At\ntbo half inilo alio was already fivo sco-\noods ahead, a full boat's length, and bor\nlead steadily grew. At tho inilo Har¬\nvard's stroke had dropped to thirty-six,\nv.-bilo Y'alo kept on at tho rato of thirty-\neiirht, with which eho started. Her\nlead grew steadily; alio passed the mile\na ud a half nineteen seconds ahead of\nHarvard. Both crows here begau to rc-\ndoco their stroke, Yalo dropping to\nthirty-six and Harvard to thirty-tour.;\nl»ut wbilo Yale's strokes were deep and\n Harvard's work was ragged.\nAftor tho first half inilo Harvard's\nmen woro novor in good stroke. Had\nthey, been perfect oar.nnen , however,\nthey would still havo lost tho raco by\ntheir steering. From tho inilo flag on\nthe Harvard boat zigzagged across tho\nstream in tho most extraordinary man-\nnor and finally struck tbo two urid one-\nhalf milo tlag stafF. Tho crow rallied\nbravely from this shock, but after that\nthey were never in tho raco for a mo¬\nment. They put on a spasmodic spurt,\nbut their stroke soon dropped back\nfrom thirty-six to thirty-two,'and they\nwere hopelessly beaten. Y'uio crossed\nthe lino in 23:47, almost a rainnte in ad¬\nvance, Harvard's time being 24:40. Tbo\nofficial time by miles: Milo, Yale 5:50;\nHarvard 6:07. Two miles, Yalo 11:47;\nllarvard 12:20. Three miles, Yalo\n17:47; Harvard 1S:35. Four miles,\nYalo 23:47; Harvard 24:10.
16f2947d21200f691c2cbcbe36038414 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.8534246258243 40.419757 -77.187146 tbe restaurant keepers in town have been run-\nning after blm. Tbe Republican party hat\nfrequently furnished evidence that It It the\nmost compact and best disciplined organization\nthe country has bad of late years. It rarely\nmakes a mistake, from a party standpoint.\nWhen Judgo Davit wat elected President of\nthe Senate tbe Democrat! did not feel to bad\nand thought tho Republican! had fooled them-\nselves tbat when they most wanted bis voto\nthey would not get It. But tbe record of the\nsession proves that the Republican! knew just\nwhat they were about. On every political\nquestion after his election Senator Davit either\nvoted with them or refrained from voting at\nall which amounted to tba same thing, aud\nhis boasted Independence It no more.\nTbe session of the Woman's National Tem-\nperance Union Just concluded here, was an in-\nteresting one and fruitful of pleasant incidents.\nTbo most prominent and widest known figure\nlu it was Miss Susan B. Anthony, who Is y\nscarcely a year older In appearance than she\nwas twenty years ago. Her hair is slightly\ntinged with grey but lime teems to work\nchanget very slowly upon her calm, Intelligent\nface. She appeared on tbe platform \nla black and wearing the gold spectacles which\nhave become to familiar lu caricature. Next\nto Mist Anthony Mist Frances E. Willard, the\nPresident of the Union, it perhaps the best\nknown over the country. She is alto next In\npoint of ability, and probably first In womanly\nqualities. Mist Clara Barton, who will be re-\nmembered for her services In the Army at\nnurse and doctor, aud Mrs. Woodbridge of\nOhio, the Secretary, were among the other\nprominent ladles In attendance. Tbe most\nthrilling scene of the session was when Miss\nWillard took the hand of her mother, who had\nbeen brought there unknown to her, and In\ntrembling accents introduced her to the audi -e nc- o\nat "the dear heart that never failed me."\nShe paid an eloquent tribute to tho aged moth-\ner who stood beside her. The scene In tbe\nchurch was remarkable j not an eje was dry\nand many ladles actually cried aloud. Tbe\nold lady thanked tbe Convention aud then\nkissed her daughter, whereupon there was a\nfresh outburst of emotion.\nSpeaking of kissing, one would hardly ex-\npect to hear mnch of that tort of thing lu a\nConvention of rather s tron g-m inde-
136e723c00e534bebe511722e3d80bc1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.4150684614408 40.063962 -80.720915 The trouble, in briof, la that this year\nthe racu was not a atraight-away, and\nthat the four hundred and fifty\ncontestant) literally by dozens\nand acorea doliboralely cut tlio\ncourio inatoad of going round the full\nturn at Kvauaton. It in claimed thnt\nwily thirty-one of tho first hundred to\nnniah, among whom was tho winnor,\nHomer Falrtnon, wero noted aa bavine\npassed the limit mark at Kvauaton, and\nthat do note was evor madoof tho other\nsixty-nine men at that point.\nW, F. Morgan, of tho firm of Morgan\nit Wright, in greatly Interested on the\noutcome of tbo inveatik-atiou, for it was\nat his suggestion that it has been atnrt-\nod. "When I saw some of tho figures\nthat were recorded aa the timo in which\ntho raco was woo," said Mr Morgan to¬\nday, "I know something was wrong.\n l?an, one of our employes, to\nwhom the second time prize waa award¬\ned, i§ credited with bolter timo than\neither Baiubridire or DeCardy, two\nscratch men, whom I know can ride\nHan to death in tiro miles, and especi¬\nally when they pace one anthor aa they\ndid yesterday. When I saw Kau to-day\nhe admitted atouco that ho never redo\novor iho course, lie aaid he was talcou\ntick half way out and was lying on the\ngrain a good part of tho time, and then\nwhen he rode in he never clairaod to\nhave ridden thu coursa There are\nothor men who claim to have had bol¬\nter nine than either Haiiibridire or l>e-\nCanly, who. I am willing to bet, would\nnot be able to ride Ave miles with these\nmen before they would bo lying aloug-\naide ot the road."
0f283c3323ff7a5d8550995c4cbac8f4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.5849314751395 41.681744 -72.788147 That was a nice point raised by\nthe board of public works when it\ntook up the matter of objecting to\nthe passing of a heavy truck lalen\nwith stone through the streets, par-\nticularly over the permanent pave-\nment which suffered as a result. The\nmatter has been amicably adjusted\nwithout resorting to any legal pro-\nceedings and the truck will cease its\ntrips through the city but the grea\nquestion as to its rights remains un-\nsettled. The fact that the truck will\nnot be run over New Britain's streets\n1s all that Engineer Hall desired\ndone, but whether the city had the\nlegal right to stop it is what interests\nthe public. It was Chairman Hum-\nphrey who raised the point at the\nmeeting of the board of public\nworks and the engineer was directed\nto take the matter up with the cor-\nporation counsel. The question of\nthe damage done to pavement by\nheavy trucks has always occasioned\nmuch discussion . in city governments\nand it has also been considered in\nreference to dirt roads to the extent\nthat there has been more or less de-\nmand for wide tires on trucks so\nthat the wheels might not cut into\nthe highway. All know what a dis-\npute there has been over automobile\ntraffic and the damage it does ma-\ncadam. It will be recalled that when\nthe city macadamized North Stanley\nstreet it was considered a good piece\nof work and yet in a short time the\nbed stone near the corner of Allen\nstreet and along by the cemetery be-\ncame visible from the wear and tear\nof automobiles and the road was\npractically ruined. Of course motor-\nists pay a license and are as much\nentitled to the privileges of the streets\nas any one else and the main ques-\ntion has been to obtain a pavemant\nthat will stand up under this traffic.\nOnly the real permanent pavement,\nhowever, will do it and now comes a\ntruck weighing over sixteen tons\nwhich damages even that. It can\neasily be seen that the point raised\nby the board of public work is Im-\nportant; if it can be sustained by\nlaw a most important right can be\nenforced by a city and it may mean\nthat trucks above a certain weight may\nbe prohibited the use of paved streets\nwithout a license or without some\nspecial right from the city. In the\ncase in question the truck will not\nbe run through the city again and\nso far aa the dispute is concerned\nthe matter has been settled. The\ncity has therefore won a victory such\nas it is.
508033a029dc1088a1f6f550d99e9dbd THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.7308742853168 39.261561 -121.016059 whose names are Taylor, Bonham, Moore and\nRogers, united their fortunes and set out togeth-\ner upon a prospecting tour through the moun-\ntains of Nevada. At a point about three miles\nsouth of Snow Tent, in the northern section of\nthe county, our adventurers discovered indica-\ntions which induced them to commence serious\noperations. Staking otr a small claim near the\nhead of what is now styled Logans Caflon,\nand forms the north-eastern boundary of Relief\nHill, they applied themselves with untiring\nenergy and patience. For two long weary\nmonths they toiled bravely on without reap-\ning any reward. The prospect was gloomy.—\n1 Finances were getting very low. A few days\nmore, and there was nary red in bank. The\nlast scad bad gone for a dozen murphies and a\npiece of Spanish beef, and now, these too, had\n•vamosed the ranch.” The boys were in a di-\nlemma. Tltcy were forced to suspend internal\nimprovements” or to seek a change of venue.—\nReduced to positive destitution, and heartily\ns.ek of “hope deferred,” they were upon tue\neve of adopting the alternative when one of the\nhungry struck the shining lede, and\nmanifested his delight by shouting the word—\nRelief. Hence, the name of the hill.\nOne of the party was forthwith dispatched to\nthe nearest settlement for provisions, and once\nugaiu there was sunshine in the camp. Resum-\ning their labors with a heightened zest and re-\nawakened hope, it may readdy be supposed that\nihe shovel and the p.ck moved stead.ly and fast,\nand in less than ten days after the discovery,\nthere were several thousand dollars in the bank.\nThis circumstance very naturally created a\nconsiderable excitement in the neighborhood,\nand but a short time elapsed before the entire\nravine was taken up and work commenced.—\nBut just at this point—“pop went the weasel”—\nthe water failed. The scarcity of tills indispensa-\nble element, alone, has kept Relief Hill so long\nin the shade. Fortunately however, for the de-\nvelopment of her vast mineral resources, two or\nthree ditches are now coming i.i, and by the\nfirst of December proximo, it is co.ilid mtly ex-\npected that there will be a supply sufficient to\nwork every foot of ground upon the hill. As a.
1738edac905742a9519a74464d5a56a6 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1888.8319671814916 42.217817 -85.891125 feature of the procession furnished by\nthe city M as a band, witfi the single ex\nception of a company of old soldiers\nwho had associated themselves together\nfor the purpose of marching in the col\nlimn each of them wearing an appro\npriate badge. Had it not been for the\ndelegation from Paw Paw, which eon\nsistcd of the llambeau and young ladies\nrepublican clubs, the members of which\nwere continually applauded as they\nmarched along the streets, and for\nother delegations from surrounding\ntowns the parade would have been a\nfizzle. As it was, the procession was\nnot more than a quarter as large as tm\none in this town on V eunestlay last\nA city like Kalamazoo ought to bo\nashamed of its lack of enterprise on\nany such public occasion.\nlhe street demonstration in the even\ning consisted exclusively of an exhibi\ntion drill by the two Paw Paw clubs\nand a parade of the band\nThere were no fireworks, no torch light\nprocession, no demonstration whatever\nother than the above and even that was\ncut short by the interference of a mob\nof young hoodlums who filled the streets\nyelling and hooting, blowing horns am\nthrowing stones and other missiles at\nthose engaged in the drill, and not :\nsingle policeman interfered to protect\nthe visitors to the city or to preserve\norder. We are pleased to be able to\nstate that at least one of the mob was\nknocked down by a Paw Paw boy and\nthat others will be handsomer than\nthey now are when they shall have\ngrown a new crop oi nair 10 replace\nthat burned oft their heads as the re\nsuit of a llambeau charge made by our\nboys upon the howling hoodlums\nWhen the Paw Paw ladies left their\nhotel to attend the evening meeting at\nthe Academy of Music they were im\nmediately surrounded b- -
0269391b2c23acea4d2cf68cb0bd7605 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.4303278372292 31.960991 -90.983994 THEsL Lozenges have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\noi twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over .70,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of-sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nm*y well bc called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and tho greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn thern, and are doctored for\n• various complaints without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and cat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey may be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering an4 death occasioned by worms;of\nthe impolency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
03b81b6c25affbac0fdfcd38ecbcd52e IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1883.760273940893 43.82915 -115.834394 Tliia is an appeal from an ord er of\nflic Hoard of Commissioners of Boise\ncounty disallowing a portion of the\na pp ell a nts claim lor fees for services\nalleged to have been rendered by him\nfor said county, as district attorney.\nThe record, and the evidence given\non the trial of the appeal in this court,\ntaken toghther, show that at the last\ngeneral election, the appell ant was\nelected district attorney for Boise\ncounty; that he duly qualified as such\nofficer, and on the fiist Monday of Jan\nnary last entered upon the duties of\nsaid oflicc; that at the March term,\n1883, of the district court held in and\nfor Boise county lie officiated as dis ­\ntri ct attor ney, and among other official\nacts, ho appeared for the county in a\ncivil action wherein one J . B. Emery\nwas plaintiff, and the count} was de ­\nfendant; that he prepared a brief in\nanother certain civil action relating to\ntaxes between one T. S. H arri s, plain­\ntiff, and the ta x collector of said comi­\nty, defendant, and atte nd ed the trial\nthereof ready to app ea r if it should\ndevelop into a caso in which t he coun­\nty was interested; and that he prepar­\ned and caused to lie filed in the P ro­\n court, a com plaint for a misde­\nmeanor against ono J. Kellar, which,\nbefore trial he dismissed. For the\n(irst service above mentioned he ch arg ­\ned the county in his bill, the sum of\none hundred doll a rs; for the second,\nseventy-five dollars, and for the last,\ntwenty-liv e dollars, and a t the la st\nApril session of the Board of Com­\nmissioners, each and every one of the\nsaid three items were by said Board\ndisallowed; from which order of dis­\nallowance this appeal was taken.\nThe main question involved in this\nappeal, as tar as the two first items\nar e concerned, is, whether the dist rict\natto: ney is entitled by law to charge\nand receive tho reasonable value of\nservic es rendered by him in the iegu-\nlar discha rg e of his ofiiciul duties, for\nthe county, In ca ses where no specific\nfees are provided by the statute.\nThe law creating the office of dis­\ntrict atto rney , after defining his duties,\nprescribes and fixes his salary and\ntees th at lie shall receive fo r compensa\nlion, b ut there is no specific provision\nin that statute fixing any liability for\nany fees for services such as were\nrendered by the appellant, in the civil\nea se s mentioned. The rule of law in
762043cbf5e1846a644dff5a8c217805 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.0123287354136 35.780398 -78.639099 rights have been outraged, to enter up the\nverdict due to such conduct ; and our only\nprovince 13 to lay the facts before them to\ngiro them a proper understanding of the case.\nAnd first, we shall take a brief view of the\nscene in the House, on an application for the\nuse of the Hall in which to hold a night ses-\nsion of the Temperance Convention then in\nsession in this City. The request was made\nin a respectful manner, as coming from res-\npectable citizens of the State ; but how was\nreceived ? Insult and contumely were\nheaped upon them. Every objectionable term\nthat had been uttered by Temperance Lec-\nturers was at once remembered, and these\nwero recited as reasons why the Hall should\nnot be granted. Others hid their opposition\nbehind tho pretension that it would be needed\ncourage to avow th&r opposition toftheause\nand to show that this formed their chief ob-\njection to granting the of the Hall to tho\nfriends of Temperance. Gravo Legislators\nusing all tha disgusting pratings of the igno-\nrant and debased, working themselves into a\nfury, for the purpose of pandering to the\nprejudices of the dissolute rabble! The scene\nwas disgraceful to the State, and the propo-\nser of tho Resolution was forced to withdraw\nit, to save the character of the House.\nA day or tvro afterwards, tho scene was\nchanged to the Senate chamber, where it was\nexpected at least calm deliberation would\nprevail. The occasion was the presentation\nof a Memoi ial signed by some 10,000 voters\nand from 4 to 5,000 ladies and youths, ask-\ning some amendments in the liquor laws of\ntho State. But how was it received ? Ex-\ncitement became rampant the signers were\ndenounced as " fanatics" and it was predic-\nted that " the Son3 cf Temperance, if their\npetitions were listened to, would soon become\ngreater nuisances than the grog-shop- s
413b1b894da013a8b2084952641a6563 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.878082160071 39.261561 -121.016059 I am Gafar; I have stolen your noble mare,\nand will give you notice in time.” This warn-\ning was in accordance with the customs of thu\ndesert, for to rob a hostile tribe is considered\nan honorable exploit, and the man wbo accom-\nplishes it is desirous of all the glory that may\nflow from the deed. Poor Jabal, when he beard\ntho words, rushed out of the tent and gave the\nalarm, then mountiug his brothers mare, ac-\ncompanied by somo of the tribe, he pursued\nthe robber four hours. The brothers mare\nwas of the same stock as Jabal's, but was not\nequal to her; nevertheless, he outstripped those\nof all the other pursuers, and was even on the\npoint of overtaking the robber, when Jabul\nshouted to him, “Pinch her right ear give\nher a touch of the heel.” Gafar did so, and\naway went the mare like lightning, speedily\nrendering further pursuit hopeless The pinch\nin the ear and the touch with the heel were the\nsecret signs by which Jabal had been used to\nurge bis mare to her utmost speed. Jabal's\neompanions were amazed and indignant at hie\nstrange conduct. “O thou father of a jackass,”\nthey cried, “thou hast enabled the thief to rob\nthee of thy jewel.” But he silenced their up-\nbraidings by saying, “I would rather lose her\nthan sully her reputation. Would you have me\nsuffer it to bo said among the tribes that anoth-\ner mare had proved fleeter than mine? I have\nat least, this comfort left me, that I oausay she\nnever met with her match.”
1184eacc0239c84c2c635d79645c22e8 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.561475378213 39.756121 -99.323985 The Democratic party, it said, could not\nevaue us responsiDiiity ior the late at-\ntempt in Congress to legislate in the in\nterest ot Iree trade, which pohev it also\ndeclared in its Chicago platform,\nbut in vague and evasive terms. The\nRepublican party had also favored any\npolicy whicn tended to increase Ameri-\ncan commerce, and had opened many\nmarkets for American products in the\nWestern hemisphere. The wise and dig\nnified administration of President Ar-\nthur was commended. Full faith and\nconfidence in the character, capacity and\npatriotism or James U. laine was ex-\npressed with a warm appreciation\nof his eminent public services and pride\nin his abilities which places him in the\nfront ranks of American statesmen.\nGeneral Logan was eulogized as a repre\nsentative of the volunteer soldier whose\n record is as distinguished and pure\nas his military services were brave and\neffective and his nomination was hearti\nly ratified. Resolutions were adopted\nunanimously amid great cheering.\nThe Chairman introduced Wm. M\nEvarts. As Mr. Evarts came to the front\nof the stage, the house rose to him and\ncheered lustily. When quiet was ob\ntained, Mr. Evarts began his speech by\nreferring to the novel arrangement of\nthe names on the Democratic ticket, and\ncaused a laugh. The speaker said he\nwould not make merely a salutatory\naddress. The exigencies of the times\nmade more discussion necessary. The\nsrreat auestion is. which partv shall\ngovern. There are some who hate and\nmalign our candidates. There are some\nwho abhor the Democratic party, but\nwho want Grover Cleveland for Presi-\ndent. Laughter.
7a7d01ec71d4e6f819680f9696e4c3b5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4863013381532 41.681744 -72.788147 thought, are those of the captured\nman who is being held for a part in\nthe robbery which netted the ban-\ndits more than $4,000.\nA minute search of the woods has\nbeen carried on by a corps of citi-\nzens since the capture of the men\nfor a part of the loot which it is\nbelieved has been buried there. The\nheavy rain of the past few days has\nmade the work difficult because\ntraces of diggings are washed away.\nBecause of the admission made by\nAlbert Meyer, another of the men\nw ho is being held as one of the ban-\ndit gang, that he had buried his\nshare in the woods, the police and\ncitizens will keep up the search\nuntil every inch of the ground has\nbeen gone over.\nWhen arrested, De Marco was\ncarrying a black traveling bag in\nwhich there were some and\n$1,516.75. He wore no tie and the\none which was picked up in the\nwoods yesterday, a blue and white\nstriped affair, is thought to be his.\nThe ..police say that the shirt\nwhich De Marco was wearing and\nothers in the bag, bore the same\ninitials as the one found in the\nwoods and it Is thought that he\nchanged his clothes in a hurry, and\nleft, the shirt and the tie there.\nThe fourth man who is being\nsought as a member of the gang,\nwas reported to have been seen Sat-\nurday in the northern part of the\nstate. He Is said to have stopped\nat a restaurant and ordered some-\nthing to eat. He flashed a large roll\nof bills when paying for his dinner.\nHis description fits the suspect\nexactly and the state police are\nsearching for him. It is thought that
409fb3edc95397ede57d3c2c7f4ec51b OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.1136985984272 39.513775 -121.556359 ! oclock, P M ., all ol the rigid. title and inton-at of Hie\ni above named defendant in and to the one undivided\n1 one-half of all that certain piece or parcel of land\nI iviiiK and belli" situate, in the Town of Omville,\n! it,tie County, California, and described as follows\nito win Comm -Jug on the south cQruer nt lot No.\nfive, (6t In block No. nine, (fft mil running thence\nalong Myers street eighty tNit lent. I hence alright\nangles in >i northerly direction forty-six fib) lest,\nthence nt right angles In *u easterly direction ei ffity\n(S i) i,rl to Myers alley, thence along said alley iorly-\nsix 1 40) feet, to the place of beginning, togede-r wtdi\nall the tenements, heredllame Is and tip;,.in .■nances\nthereunto belonging, or in anywise upp ervuiuing.—\nAlso, all his rigid, title and interest In ir.nl to the one\nundivided oneHalf of lot No. two (2) 'n block No.\nnine (' . ») as laid down on the Town pbu of the Town\nuf (rovlllo. fronting sixty six (W( lee , on Hint street,\nand running bark one hundred and thirtytwo (132;\nfeet, also 111 and to llio < ne undiv ,ded one-half of u\nportion of lot No. three (3/ in block No. nine,,' . ) )\ncommencing on the south cor.iecof lot No. two [2J\nus aforesaid, and running lit mice m a southerly *ll •\nnrlion sixty six I lid] feet, thence in u westerly dr\nrection one hundred Hid S ,veu [.HIT] 'eel, thence ill a\nnortherly direction IHlyfour [s4] (eet, thence i:» u\nwesterly direction twe jiyHro (25) feet to Miners\nalley, thence along sir d alley twelve ] Pi] feel to the\nwest corner f lot No,, two, 2 tlnmco in an easterly\ndirection one hum' red and thirty-two Fid feet to the\nplace of beginning together with all the tenements,\nhereditaments r.od appurtenances thereunto belong-\ning or in tinyw tse appertaining.\nThe above yffe pi take place at the Court House\ndoor ill II .(* Town of Orovillo, Comity and State\naforeiaii,
067e25b0b1f11665899b66e74ce2d7ce THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.541095858701 40.618676 -80.577293 John Marshall had been an employe of the Royal China Company of Sebring, Ohio, for many years. The group\ninsurance proposal for employes of this plant became effective as of June 1st, 1941. On the day thereafter Mr.\nMarshall was stricken ill and immediately rushed to the Cleveland Clinic Hospital, where he died on June 10th 1941.\nAfter the necessary forms had been completed, the Union Labor Life Insurance Company forwarded its check for\n$500.00 to Mrs. Minnie Marshall of 156 East Maryland Avenue, Sebring, Ohio, who was the wife and beneficiary\nunder the policy. The National Brotherhood of Operative Potters is happy that in some small way it contributed\nin building up an estate for Mrs. Marshall which will help to defray some of the expenses caused through the un­\nfortunate death of her beloved husband. The National Brotherhood is also appreciative of the fine service ren­\ndered by the Union Labor Life Insurance Company in tha prompt payment of this claim. The Union Labor Life,\nLabor's own company, has built up a reputation of being cognizant of the problems and complications sur­\nrounding the employment of wage earners, and again they indicated by their action why Labor is so proud of its\ninstitution, and why in turn the institution should command the respect and support of all.\nIn addition to the death claim check, Mrs. Marshall also received a check for benefits under the Hospitalization\nand Disability Coverage from the Hoosier Casualty Co., which company furnishes the disability protection offered\nby the N. B . O . P. Group Insurance Plan. This is by no means the first disability check issued. Each day many of\nour members are now receiving hospital benefits and weekly payments for loss of time due to disability. The Hoos­\nier Casualty Company is to be complimented on the excellent service which they are rendering our insured mem­\nbers. On some few cases there may have been a little delay occasioned by the fact that Francis P. White, who is\nin charge of the insurance program ftr both companies, was himself disabled for some time, due to injuries sus­\ntained in an automobile accident.
0b1f57c10218e489ae4b6fbff069737a IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.2835616121258 43.82915 -115.834394 If we look at a ladys sealskin jacket, we\nat once observe its rich brown color, and\nthe velvety softness and denseness of the\nfine hairs composing it.\nIf this be compared with the coarse, hard\nor dry salted skin as imported, or, still bet­\nter, with the coat of the living fu r seals,\none is struck with the vast difference be­\ntween them, and wonders how the coarse,\noily looking, close pressed hair of the live\nanimal can ever be transformed into th\nrich and costly garment above spoken of.\nPassing our fingers among the hairs of\nthe cat or dog, we may notice fine short\nhairs at the roots of the longer, coar\ngeneral covering of the anim al. This is so\ncalled under fur. But in thegreater num\nber of animals the short hairs are sofew\nand often so fine to be, comparatively\nIspeaking, lost sight of among what to our\neyes constitute the coat.\nThe remarkable feature then in the fur\nseals is its abundancy and density. The\noperation which the skin undergoes to\nbring out, so to say, the fur, may be briefly\ndescribed astollows:\nThe skin, after being washed free of\ngrease, etc., is laid flat on the stretch, flesh\nside up. A flat knife is then passed across\nthe flesh substance, thining it to a very\nconsiderable extent. In doing this the\nblade severs the roots of the long strong\nhairs, which penetrate the skin deeper than\ndoes the soft, delicate ones under the fur\nThe rough hairs are then got rid of while\nthe fur retains its hold,\nA variety of subsidiary m anipulations in\nwhich the pelt is softened and preserved\nare next gone through. —Exchange.
06f5edb2d5e04369a7948860fb0407fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.2205479134957 40.063962 -80.720915 Ich moved most erratically. ISupa\n1 Brooklyn Transit. Immeillatel:\ner the opening the leading Industrial:\nre pressed for sale; sympathetically\nh the sudden Reclines In Sugar ant\nx>klyn Transit. An Idea of the vlo\nce of the movement In the special\ns is conveyed by the fact that Suga\npped fourteen points from the high\nIn the morning and Brooklyn Tran\nVrt. Subsequently they recovered\nnts from the lowest, leaving Sugar\ncent off on the day and Brooklyi\nincit 1% up. Accompanying the de\nle In Sugar there was dissemlnate<\n<lenlal by an anonymous official o\ncompany that any deal with com\n:itive Tlrms was In existence. Th\n*ly decline in Brooklyn Transit ap\nired to be realizing on the an\nmcement of the company's absorp\nn> of Brooklyn elevated. The rail;\nmed to be buying on advance infor\ntion that the Brighton Beach rail\ny nail ueen oougni in tne interest o\nTransit company. The prospec\nit the Third Avenue line might hav\ngive up its Amsterdam avenue prlvl\nea resulted in a break of 12% li\nird avenue, which dipped to 200. Th\nieral market showed moderate sympa\nitic movements with the leaders am\n,'eloped weukness when call mono;\nes reached 6 percent and then ralllei\nen money worked easier to 3 pe\n The bulk of the business wa\nnsacted around 5 per cent for cal\nney and time money was up a hal\n4 per cent for four to 6lx months oi\nIroad collateral with industrial col\neral accepted at higher rates. Be\nes the financing of industrial combi\n:ions, there are several reasons fo\npresent stiff money rates. One i\npayment every ten days, maklnj\npayments in all, of n million dol\ns to the government In settlement o\nitral Pacific obligations. Anothe\nson is the preparation for April div\nnd and interest disbursement and i\nrd is a tendency to discount an inter\nmovement of money which it wai\nculated would last about threi\neks. London was a seller to-day o\nderate amounts of the Union Pacl\nNew York Central and St. Paul\nIch stocks, however, showed fraction\nadvances. America^ and Continent\nrobacco, after wild lluctuations, clos\nwith some Improvement. The Pad\nexcept Northern Pacific preferred\nre up fractionally, while Central Pa\nc and Southern Pacific gained over:\nnt each. The grangers moved bu\nrhtly either way and the marke\nsea wim an unsettled icno.\nhe bond1 market lacked a decislv\ne and pave alternate appearances o\nakness and strength with the up\nrd 'tendency In vojjue at the end\nIted States 5s advanced M and
00ebfbaf3ae0fb025f8f11f80b015b36 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.8890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 Tiio Baltimore ami Ohio Uailroad God\npany recently adopted a novel but a\neffectual method of stopping a apeculatic\niu wheat, which, having carried pric<\nabove the shipping point, had tilled tli\nBaltimore elevators and blocked therai\nroad tracka with loaded cars. The compan\nadvanced its rates lor storage iu its elevi\ntors to 2$ cents per bushel, and gave ri\nceivers notice that a heavy charge ($5) pi\nduy would bo made for delay in uuloa<\niug its cars. This was too largo a tax ft\ntho speculators to ataud, aud they wei\ncompelled to meet tho views of shipper\nso that now the blockaded tracks ai\ncleared, the cars havo returned to tb\nWest to tying forward moro grain, ac\nthe quantity of wheat in th.e elevators lit\nboon reduced from over 2,100,000 bual\nels Novembor 7 to 1,824,000 bual\n November 14. Tho rates f(\nstorage are reduced to % of a cent p<\nbushel. At New York, however, th\nstock of whoat continues to accuuiulat<\nhaving been 8,00(1,404 bushola in stoi\nNovember 15, against 7,455,016 bushel\nNovember 8. Tho quantity in storo i\nthat port at corresponding dates of pri\nceding years was: November 10, 1871\n4,478,245 bushels; November 17, 187!\n1,755,500 buahels; Novembor 18, }87l\n2,38$,702 bushsls. The quantity of a\ngraict in store at Now York list Saturda\nWas 12,010,000 buBhels, against 11^36^90\nbuahels November 10, 1878, 7,156,59\nbnshels Novembor 17, 1877, and 8,179,89\nbushels Novembor 18, 1870. But in add)\ntion to the stock in store now, there is\nvery large quantity afloat in tho barboi\nfew of the rocently arrived canal-boat cai\ngoes going into store, ai the boats remaii\nin Ntw York for tke whiter.
03d61d5350f2b8da4903931876c9c43b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1884.3674863071747 37.561813 -75.84108 natures required a stimulus to eierlion that\nstern neoossily alone could supply.\nnut tnis man scorned tne idea of being a\ndrone in the world's great hive, to eat in idle-\nness and dependence bread acquired by the\ntoil of others. His inherent manliness and\npride forbade him to view the world's ereat\nbattlefield from a place of safety and inaction\nin the rear and ever prompted him to strive\ntin generous enthusiasm to be a hero in the\nstrile. Never very strong and robust, and\npreferring intellectual pursuits to the hard\nabor required upon a tarm, be commenced the\nstudy of law with Judges Matthews and Mug-\ngins, of this place, in the year 1878. ileing a\nlose and dingenl student, possessed of sound\njudgment and the faculty of concentrating all\nui. m .nmi lorces anu oringing mem to bear\nupon the task he had undertaken, he very of\nsoon a thorough knowledge of the\nelementary principles of the law and upon ap\nplication to the Supreme Court of Uhio be was\nadmitted to the liar in 18HI.\nHe at once entered into the practice of his\nrofession, remaining in the office of the firm\nwhere be had formerly been a student. This\nconnection lasted untii Judge Huggius retired\nfrom the firm to take his seat upon the bench. of\nAfter the retirement of Judi;e Uuizins. Mr.\n.e a v e rton formed a partnership with Judne\nMatthews which was continued until a few\nweeks previous to his death.\nr ir more Iran a year before his nartnerahin\nwith Jud;e Matthews was dissolved he had\nbeen atllicted with pulmonary troubles and\nheart disease and his health gradually deelin- - of\ni, yet nis strong anil earnest nature relused\nto yield to the obvious and pressing necessity\nr repuse and freedom frc--
11cebb7e6e152cb5db75d97f4375d14e THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.2671232559615 35.996653 -78.901805 havo arrangements of their own under\nthe local governments assured to them,\nand next, that among the remainder\nthere are many thousands who by tak-\ning allotments have become citizens and\nhave passed under the jurisdiction of the\nstates and territories where they reside.\nHowever, there is an existing system\nof Indian courts organized under the\nregulations of the interior department,\nwhile tho act of I880 gave to the United\nStates and territorial courts jurisdiction\nof crimes committed by Indians upon\ntheir reservations. Recently the regula-\ntions for the Indian courts proper have\nbeen enlarged, bo as to make them more\nefficient. Among the changes in the new\nregulations is the division of the reser-\nvations into districts, with a judge in\neach, while there is a court in banc for\nthe reservation, having a clerk to keep\nits records. A may be div-\nided into three or more such districts,\nfollowing, as far as practicable, county\nlines, provided that the Indian popula-\ntions, including mixed bloods and whites,\nwho are members of the tribes, shall be\nnearly equal in the districts. If there\nare no comity lines, natural boundaries\nare used, so that the Indians can easily\nascertain what districts they belong to.\nAll the judges are Indians and must\nbe men of intelligence, integrity, good\nmoral character and monogamists, pref-\nerence being given to those who "read\nand write English readily, wear citizens'\ndress and engage in civilized pursuits."\nThey are appointed by the commissioner\nof Indian affairs for the term of one year,\nsubject of course to earlier removal on\nproof of misconduct. Each judge must\nreside in the district and hold court at\nleast one day in each week.
3b28ecdd5383112fe849762870d82223 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.5109588724 39.745947 -75.546589 Graduated from the Wilmington Con­\nference Academy two weeks ago. Wal­\nter Winner, aged 19 year», aon of Dr.\nJ. M . Winner, a dentist of No. 605 King\nMreet, was drowned In the Brandywine\nat the foot of Rising Bun hilt late yes­\nterday afternoon. He, with David M.\nWeaver was swimming In the stream\nami started for the other side of the\nriver. He grasped the limb of a tree\nwhich protruded nut over the water but\nhis hand slipped off and before he\ncould again reach it he was carried\ndown the stream. Winner was not pro«\nHelen< as a swimmer and after strug-\nllng fur awhile ho sank, not to come\nto the surface again.\nGeorge Shackelton and Chester Hol­\nden, who went to the young man's as­\n were also nearly drowned.\nSchackelton became exhausted from\nhla exertions in diving for Winner and\nhe was assisted ashore by Weaver.\nAnother Nearly Drowned.\nHolden, who Is an employe of the\ndulont Powder Company, started out\nto assist In tho search for the body,\nwhen ho was suddenly attacked with\ncramps and hud It not been for several\nmen in a small bout who quickly went\nto his rescue, ho would have perished.\nWinner was graduated from the\nDover Conference Academy In June and\ncame homo for his vacation a few days\nago In the fall he had Intended to\nenter the dental school at tho Uni­\nversity of PAhnsylvanla.\nChief of Police Black aided In the\nsearch for the body which was recov­\nered last evening by the grappling\nparty.
04af6ec65edcb5fde65ebfb410f0a81b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.2178081874683 39.745947 -75.546589 l^1 JuriRfB of the Court of General HesMon*\nof the Fearel *nd Jail Delivery of the Slaie\nof Delaware In and for New Caetle county.\nWe, the undertsijciied, and .renpeclab o citi­\nzens and substantial freeholders of the First\nward of tbe uicy :of iVMlmlnston, do heteby\ncertify that Thomas Mulrooney, the tenant\naud «K'cupant of the store situated at No. .V3\nTat nail etre**t, in the First ward, city, county\nand *tate aforesaid and described In his ap-\n1>I 1 ation. and whol* an applicant for license\nM Mm day, 11ki *u> ol Mft). a . D*SM*» beln*\nthe next term of '»»aid court, for the sale of\nintoxicatiuK liquor* in quantities not «less\nthan nne-half Kadon therein, not to be drunk\non the prtmlsos. he being a licensed retailer\nof good*, w ares merchandise; the agifre-\n. ate com value of his stock constantly k* pt\non hand for hhI«£1h not lea* than five hundred\nd »liars: being a nan of full age, sobriety and\nbrood mors1 character; that such sale ofln-\ntoxicalIn* liquors at said place is necessary\nto accommodai« the public; that he is the\ntenant of said house, and the (true rental\nvalue is two hundred and fifty dollars, ana\nthe following respectable citizens of said\nward, at least twelve of whom are substan­\ntial freeholders of *ald ward, recommend the\nsaid Application, viz:\nE. J. >lcMaimn\nCharles Corrigan\nLudw g Hendricks\nJacob Sebelber\nJoseph Kell- y\nJames H. Harkins\nGeorge Melnlckcn\nJohn Fdllben\n1*trick Dougherty\na.ues Me enna\nGeorg* Frick\nJa lies H. Lange\nHugh Collins
949a3df688ab67b7884a5417bb3acd49 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.2390710066281 31.960991 -90.983994 IS Published in the City of New York, every\nSaturday morning, in quarto form, on a very\nlarge sheet, and afforded to subscribers in the\ncountry at Two Douons. Six copies will be\nforwarded a year for Ten Dollars; Ten copies for\nFifteen Dollars; and any larger number in the\nlatter proportion. Payment in advance invaria­\nbly required, and the paper stopped whenever\nthe term of such payment expires.\nThe Tribune—whether in its Daily or Week­\nly edition, will be what its name imports an\nunflinching supporter of the Peoples Rights and\nInterests, in stern hostility to the error* of su­\nperficial theorists of unjust or imperfect leg18'®,'\ntion, and the schemes and sophistries of self-\nseeking demagogues. It will strenuously advo­\ncate the Protection of American Industry a-\ngainst the grasping, and to us heightening poli­\ncy of European government, and the unequal\ncompetition which they force upon us, it will\nadvocate the restoration of a sound and uniform\nNational Currency; and urge a discreet but de­\n prosecution of Internal Improvement.\nThe Retrenchment, wherever practicable, of\nof Government Expenditures and of Executive\nPatronage, will be zealously urged. In short-\nthis paper will faithfully maintain and earnest,\nly advocate the Principles and Measures which\nthe People approved in devolving on Whig\nStatesmen the conduct of their Government.\nBut a small portion of its columns will be de­\nvoted to purely political discussions. The pro­\nceedings of Congress will be carefully recorded,\nthe Foreign and Domestic Intelligence early\nand lucidly presented; and whatever shall ap­\npear calculated to promote Morality, maintain\nSocial Order, extend the blessings of Education,\nor in any way subserve the great cause of Hu-\nProgress to ultimate Virtue, Liberty and\nHappiness, will find a place in our columns.\nN. B .— Where ten persons club together, and\nremit $15 at one time, in funds not over fou*\npet cent discount in New York, the paper will\ncost but $1 50 per year.\nSubscriptions are solicited by\nCREKJ-V &, McELRATH, No. 30, Ann st
fa8214fc980f0f91a054bac10ea2543b PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.200819640508 31.960991 -90.983994 IS Published in the City of New York, every\nSaturday morning, in quarto form, on a very\nlarge sheet, and afforded to subscribers in the\ncountry at Two Dollars Six copies will be\nforwarded a year for Ten Dollars; Ten copies for\nFifteen Dollars; and any larger number in the\nlatter proportion. Payment in advance invaria­\nbly required, and the paper stopped whenever\nthe term of such payment expires.\nTheTaiBUNE—whether in its Daily or Week­\nly edition, will be what its name imports—an\nunflinching supporter of the Peoples Rights and\nInterests, in stern hostility to the errors of su­\nperficial theorists of unjust or imperfect legisla­\ntion, and the schemes and sophistries of self-\nseeking demagogues. It will strenuously advo­\ncate the Protection of American Industry a-\ngainst the grasping, and to us heightening poli­\ncy of European government, and the unequal\ncompetition which they force upon us, it will\nadvocate the restoration of a sound and uniform\nNational Currency; and urge discreet but de­\ntermined prosecution of Internal Improvement.\nThe Retrenchment, wherever practicable, of\nof Government Expenditures and of Executive\nPatronage, will be zealously urged. In short-\nthis paper will faithfully maintain and earnest,\nly advocate the Principles and Measures which\nthe People approved in devolving on Whig\nStatesmen the conduct of their Government.\nBut a small portion of its columns will be de­\nvoted to purely political discussions. The pro­\nceedings of Congress will be carefully recorded,\nthe Foreign and Domestic Intelligence early\nand lucidly presented; and whatever shall ap­\npear calculated to promote Morality, maintain\nSocial Order, extend the blessings of Education,\nin any way subserve the great cause of Hu-\nProgress to ultimate Virtue, Liberty ««4\nHappiness, will find a place in our column«.\nN. B —Where ten pereone club together, and\n'remit $15- at one time, in funds not over four\nper cent discount in New York, the paper will\ncost bat SI 50 per yaar.\n•
158837950c54bacd810aa942351fd181 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.8342465436326 42.217817 -85.891125 bly its great manufacturing and mercantile\ninterests, whose hundreds of thousands of\nemployes are all consumers and not produc-\ners. What would be tho case if our factories\nwere closed and the vast horde of laborers\n. uiployed by the same were to become pro-\nducers instead of consumers? The tablt\nwould be turned, and as farmers we would\nhave to depend upon an export demand for\nnt least ono half of all we raise, and the result\nwould inevitably be extremely low prices, and\nI venture to say that the loss on our products\nwould more than balanca tho extra cost we\nLave to pay for what we consume, which\npays a duty, and it does not end here. With\nthe close of our factories competition would\ncikw?, aud foreign countrias would bo ablo to\ndictate prices to us, which they would not\nhesitate to make as high as possible. So\nthat in the end a judicious tariff enables us\nto get more for what we have to sell, and to\nt.ny cheaper than we could do without it.\n!t seems to me that no one who will give\nthe careful consideration will advo-\ncate the doctrine of free trade. The govern-\nment must have about 3i0,00.000 annually\nfor its current expenses, and this, as I said\nbefore, must be raised either by direct taxa-\ntion or by a tariff. If raised by direct tax,\nwho think you, would pay it? I answer,\nthose of moderate means, such as tho farmer\nmechanic, merchant, etc.? and when you re-\nfect that this would be a tax of T for every\ni.ian, woman, and child in tho United States,\nyou necessarily sec that direct taxation would\nbo a grievous burden, and that the bond-\nholders and money loaners would escape\ntheir just proportion, which would still fur-\nther iucrearte the burden, while by a judic-on - s\ntariff, the bondholder, the millionaire,\nftnd rich corporations must pay their part,\nand last but not least, the large class called\nHociety young men (the dude of modern so-\nciety), children of rich parents, who think\nthemselves too good to wear anything of\ndomestic manufacture, and must have foreign\ngoods, foreign cigars, foreign liquors, etc.,\ncontribute no small proportion of this\n!g:i.' AXM 1,000 .
09a13acf62933de4ada7591811672912 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1878.6397259956875 37.561813 -75.84108 paaiSa pcq aq qoiq.w iuipusutuj jajjn\n'a;io eqi u' HAtop EBCutsnq pcq nazrjta\nsecond was introduced as a person who\nhad called at the hotel to see the Amer\nican on private business. He was a re-\nspectable looking individual of about\nfifty years of age, dressed in pepi er and\nalt, and, stepping aside, presented to\nthe tourist his card, which bore the in-\nscription, "Mr. John Lund, Chief of\nPolice, Leamington."\nHe was very polite; was very sorry he\nhad a very disagreeable d uty to perform;\nand he drew out a formidable-lookin- g\ndocument, with a prodigious formula\nof English expression, and several\nstaring seals, which cited the offence\nour traveler had committed upon one\nof her Majesty's servants, and sum-\nmoned the offender to appear 011 the\nfollowing Wednesday (it was then Sat-\nurday) at "the aforesaid'' Leamington.\n was coming up to London my\nself," said the official, apologetically\n"and thought I would serve this, to\nmake it as comfortable as possible."\nIt was useless for the American to\nstate that the matter had all been set-\ntled by the railway manager; of this the\npolite chief of police knew nothing.\nThe first arrest was probably at the In-\nstance of the officials of the railway\ncompany in London; but this was by\nthe police authorities at Leamington,\nof which he was chief. The official\nwould cot be satisfied except by a visit\nof the 'American and responsible friend\nagain to the manager's office at the\nLondon station, where it was arranged\nthat the traveler would appear and an\nswer on the following week, if the affair\nwas not settled before; and the polite\nchief of the Leamington polico took his\ndeparture.
23003139071f027dac31b6e16030c4dc THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.0123287354136 39.369864 -121.105448 Uncle Charleys well again\nFrom that infernal gouty pain ;\nHes gone below to seek an office,\nIn which pursuit hes quite a novice.\nCharley deserves to be door-keeper,\nHis gravity and weight would prove\nThe house depended on a sleeper\nNo storm of eloquence could move.\nWooster and Coley, Wclton and Swain,\nJohn Guthrie, the Winhams, I may name\nAs being like the famed Micawber,\n(Of time and circumstance a robber,\nWho drank from Hopes ideal cup,)\nWaiting for something to “turn up\nIn Fortunes toss may “heads” appear\nBfore a week has scored the year!\nTufts, as a builder, has “the call,”\nSome of his jobs are rather “tall;”\nIn Greens new brick lie placed those windows\nWhich beat your common work to “flinders.”\nEdwards, the chief of our police.\nSuppresses mobs, and keeps the peace ;\nAvoid him ! ye law-breaking knaves,\nWho drift about on hell-surged waves!\nA faithful watchman his beat\nIs Wilcox, who parades the street\nTo guard our slumbers, and expose\nThe stealthy crimes of midnight foes ;\nLot no man grumble when the day\nComes round for him to get his pay.\nTwo more names I have to rhyme on,\nIll do the best with them I can;\nThe first is my good friend Pat. Synon,\nThe other, Nicholas Isaman ;\nPat. got married some time since,\nAnd lives as happy as a prince ;\nNicholas, cant you find a wife ?\nTwonld change the manner of your life,\nBlending with future scenes the real,\nNow too much spiced with the ideal.\nFrank Moyer, I have thought of you,\nAnd Elder, and some other few,\nWho might apply the marrying hint.\nAnd find theres joy and comfort int.\nHeaton, Bickford and Littlefield,\nSteve South wick, Hays and Soule,\nEach in his place the pen can wield\nOr saw, or edged-tool ;
30fa011b2645b40c7586055fcad9dbc4 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1875.919178050482 37.561813 -75.84108 regiments of infantry 818 officers, 11 ,000\nmen ; available recruits, hospital stewards,\nordnance sergeants, etc., 2,321.\nDuring the past winter the troops in the\nDepartments of Missouri and Texas were\nengaged in an arduous and severe winter\ncampaign against the Kiowa, Cheyenne,\naud Comanche Indians, on the border of\nthe Staked Plains, who have for years been\nengaged in depredations on the Texas and\nKansas frontiers, resulting in their disarma-\nment and subjection to authority. If mili-\ntary commanders can have control over the\nsupplies needed by these Indians, as they\nnow have over their persons, I am con-\nvinced, by a recent visit, that a condition of\npeace can be maintained.\nThe Sioux Indians have recently made in-\ncursions in Northern Nebraska, mostly to\nstealing cattle and horses from farms along\nthe Pacific Railioad and north of it. Gen-\neral Crooke is of the opinion that the whole\n acting defensively, can not prevent\nthese incursions, and suggests that troops ot\nstationed in the midst of the Indians, so as\nto watch and prevent them leaving on pre-\ntense of hunting. This is impracticable, un-\nless the army can have the supervision of\nthe necessary supplies of these tribes within\nthe reservation, which is now not the case.\nThe reports of the several commissioners\nwhich have, nnder military escort, recently\nbeen engaged in exploring the country and\nin negotiating with these Indians will throw\nmuch light on this subject. Generally speak\ning, the damage to life and property by the\nIndians is believed to be less during the\npast year than in any former year, and the\nprospect is that as the country settles up it\nwill be less eacn year, nntil all tne Indians\nare established on small reservations. But\nuntil they acquire habits of industry, in\nfarming or in stock-raisin-
1208e24f6d4c25f482c3af3acb4d65b4 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.209589009386 40.832421 -115.763123 Tax Wor,iTt Washington spccial Buys\nit is aguin asserted in BepubHcim cir¬\ncles that Chamberlain is to rcsigu tho\nGovernorship and be provided for\nDlsewhoro. If this is truo it will solvo\ntho South Caroliua difficulty.\nThe Senate privileges aud elections\n:oinmittce, by a party vote, authorised\ntho Chuirmau to report that Mr. Kel¬\nlogg has prir,ta/>icie right to aduiissiou\nas Seuaior from Louisiana. Tho Dcm-\njorals will present dissenting reports.\nTuksdat morniug,' Mitchell Merri-\nmau, of Bock Creek, Indiana, a former\ninnate of tho Insuuo Asylum shot ono\nion, aged 18, fatally wouudiug him,\ntud another sou agod 10, probably fu-\nally, then killod himself.\nTnK Inltr-Oetan'i Washington spec-\nul suys: For tho first timo iu sixteen\n'ears, tho Democrats, on Wednesday,\ntad n majority in tho Souate, aud had\nhey been disposed thoy could have\n the committors, elected\ntfficers from their own party, and\nivorturned things generally.\nIk the Republican caucae, Wodhes-\nlay, ex-8ccretary of War J. D . Cauier-\n>n wub noniuntod ou tho first ballot for\nUnited States Senator. The voto stood,\nCameron 128, Morton McMichael 1.\nI'ho noniuiatiou was tlieu mado unani-\nnously. A resolution endorsing I'resi-\nleut Hayes' policy, was passed.\nA couuittkk of (2t>o. -is and proini-\nlent mining men aud npe.'ntors, os-\n>lorcd the nowly opened l'ifyOfoot level\n>f tbo Consolidated Yi.^inia mi no. and\n. heir report is awaited with tho g-er.test\ninterest ou California street, and is ex¬\npected to set at rest various contradic¬\ntory stories set aJsat concerning tho\nprospects of the inino.\nVicic-I'rmidk.ht Wiikklkb, Secretary\nMcCrary nnd Assistant Secretary Co-\nlaut. hava, after examination, 'discover-\n)tl a patent method of
0552cfb87fe2d41c9fd79e904801a345 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.8616438039066 39.745947 -75.546589 The sudden full in the price of steel rails,\nwhich has been maintained at $'29 for a\nlong time, hut Is now $22 at the mills, has\nbrought the quiek enlargement of demand\nwhich might have been anticipated, and iu\nturn the demand for ore, coke and pig iron\nimproves. There is also a better demand\nfor some manufactured product« at the\nwest, tbougb no improvement as yet ap­\npears in prices, und with a few large cou-\ntracts taken ut the cust prices are never­\ntheless at the lowest point.\nThe first week of November has passed,\nand thousands of business men breathe\nmore freely because the apprehended fail-\ntires iu dry goods have been much less nu­\nmerous and less important than was feared.\nNo doubt it is true that many concerns\nhave been curried over by extension, but\neven a moderate revival of trade will en­\nable most of them to weather the storm.\nA gradual improvement is seen in the mar­\nket for cotton goods, with slightly better\nprices in priut cloths anil some other grade».\nThe sales of wool for the week been\nH>H,'ioo pounds at the three principal mar­\nkets, against 8,215,900 Iasi year. Whiletho\nproduction of men's woolens from June 1\nto Nov. 1 was only 10,1?.' .,716 yards, against\n17,085,019 for Ills same period last year,\nthere is good reason m i vpeel a larger de­\nmand hereafter. Thus orders for spring\nwoolens have clearly increased, and with\nmills which have some orders booked al­\nready, hut uut enough, the change is al­\nready important.\nThe volume of domestic trade, though\nsmaller than a year ago, shows considera­\nbly less decrease than appeared in Septem­\nber or October, the exchanges at clearing\nhouses outside New York being only 17.4\nper cent smallerthnnforthecorresponding\nweek lust year. Railroad earnings ulso ex­\nhibit some relative improvement, as the\ndecrease for tlie latest week reported!» only\n• - .4 per cent, although analysis of the re­\nturns shows that the decrease iu freight\nmovement, separately considered, was de­\ncidedly larger. Money Is abundant and\ncheap, for although the commercial de­\nmand has quite perceptibly expnmletl, the\nsupply accumulated at the chief financial\nI centers is extraordinarily large.
6568ce4ef3ae8ca12b342eaff452756e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.6123287354135 41.681744 -72.788147 The P. & F. Corbin team landed\non the offerings of Ferguson for 13\nhits and seven runs to beat the\nFafnir team 7 to 1 on Diamond No.\n2, thereby going back Into first\nplace in a deadlock with the Stan-\nley Works for the league lead.\nThe Corbin team with every\nman on the squad getting at least\none hit, failed to score as many\nruns as there might have been be-\ncause of tho excellent fielding of\nthe Fafnir crew, but they hit in\nthe pinches and put across enough\ncounters to give them a good lead.\nThe Bearing Makers threatened\nin several innings' but sensational\nfielding which Includes four double,\nplays, killed all of their chances of\nUicaivillg mtl BI!UlUUr Willi U1C eX- -\nception of a rally in the seventh\n when they managed' to push\nill one run on Klalka's double into\nthe tennis courts, O'Brien's infield\nout and Lipetz' drive into right.\nThe Corbin team scored three In\nthe second on four singles, a sac-\nrifice and a walk. They added one\nIn the third on an error and a\nsingle. Two more came in in the\nfourth on two singles a walk and\nan error. Their last run came in in\nthe sixth on Matteo's fielder's\nchoice and Wright's slash to right.\n"Goody" Preisser was the sensa-\ntion, not only of the game last night,\nbut of the entire league season\nthrough his fielding in center.\n"Goody" has one of those arms that\nused to be able to propel a ball\nat least 25 feet but this has gone.\nDespite this, he completed
3ec4358484299e91d9f58e58da0894cc THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.395890379249 41.004121 -76.453816 The coroner's jury returned a ver-\ndict exonerating the lVnna Rail-\nroad Company ironi any blame for\nthe dksas.rous wreck at South\nHarrisburg, in which twenty-tw- o\nlives were lost and more than one\nhundred were injured.\nFollowing is the jury's verdict: ,\n"We find as a fact that the rail-\nroad company and its employes\nwere not guilty of any negligence\nby reason of which the accident oc-\ncurred; that, trom the testimony,\nthe rules of the company with re-\ngard to the flagging of trains and\nthe stoppage of trains were strictly\nobserved, and the company and its\nemployes are to be commended for\ntheir actions after the accident in\ntaking c?are of the wounded and\ndistressed; that the cause of the\naccident was the result of applying\nthe air brakes to the freight train\nin order to stop it so that it would\nnot collide with the shifting engine\nand train which were on the east\nbound treight tracks on which\nengine No. 2,188, together with its\ntrain and crew, was going east-\nward on the morning of the acci-\ndent; the shifting crew, with its\ntrain, was properly on this track,\nand the crew of this train were per-\nforming the duties, and, so- iar as\nthe jury can learn, were guilty of\nno negligence on their part; the\ntrain was standing on the same\ntrack on which the train drawn by\nengine No. 2 ,1 83 was going east-\nward; that, by reason of \ntke air on the freight train, two\ncars of said freight train, Nos. 35\nand 36 from the engine No. 2,188,\nthe car No. 36 being loaded with\ntwenty thousand pounds of Rock\nChief blasting powder, commonly\nknown as Judson powder, which\naccording to the testimony before\nus, is a low grade explosive, con-\nsigned to H. S. Keibaugh & Co.,\nat Columbia, Pa., and car No. 35\nbeing loaded with steel billets, were\nthrown from the freight track over\non to the west bound passenger\ntrack of the said company.\nJust at this time, the passenger\ntrain, whose wreck caused the death\nof the aforesaid people, known as\nsecond No. 19, and also as the\nCleveland and Cincinnati Express,\nwas going westward, and ran into\nthe two derailed freight cars, and\nthe fire from the engine of the pas-\nsenger train, so far as the jury can\nascertain, set fire to the powder and\ncaused a terrible explosion, which,\ntogether with fire which came from\nsome other unknown source, burn-\ned all passenger coaches, including\nthe Pullman cars.\nUnder the evidence submitted to\nus it would have been impossible\nfor any human agency to have stopp-\ned the passenger train on its west-\nward way from running into the\nfreight cars, because it was due just\npX. that time, and every effort was\nmade to flag all trains in both di-\nrections from the wreck as soon as\nany of the employes knew anything\nwas wrong.
1755a6e6eefba52933846401dc392a36 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1898.878082160071 39.756121 -99.323985 possible, however, to produco tho powders fast\nenough to meet tho emergency, and In some\noases oxporlonce In their uso was noeessary for\nadapting them to all tho requirements of tho\nservice. It should bo stated, however, that\nsmokeloss powder only was manufactured\nfor Hold and slsgo artllery. Tho fact that tho\nfield and siege artllery wero to bo employed\nwas not determined until about tho tlmo that\nwar was declared, nnd there were no funds\navailable for procuring ammunition for those\nguns beforo that time. Tho preparation of\nsmokeloss powder ammunition for thesa guns\ncommenced nt once, but It was necessary to\nissue Immediately the ammunition on hand for\ntho batteries that wore sont to tho front and as\nthis was oil charcoal powder ammunition It ac-\ncounts for tho fact that only black, or char-\ncoal, powdor ammunition was generally uscd-l -\nactual service against the enemy.\nGen. Flagler also says:\nThe war has furnished no opportunity for de-\ntermining by experience the effect of our\nmodern seacoast armament against modern\nbattleships. Tho roports of tho experience\ngained, however, tend to can firm the opinion\nthat tho nro from ships cannot silence tho Uro\nor Berlously cripple tho armament of our\nmodern batteries, but tho ships could not with-\nstand tho fire of our modern batteries, and\nthat, therefore, the ships cannot attack the\nbatterlos successfully. Whether the ships can\nrun by the batteries without too great risk has\nnot been shown. This will depend on the skill\nnnd rapidity with which the guns aro served,\nprovided the ships are not stopped at the\nmines.
013f50d3acfeaf7f453e032a29e8625d OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.1079234656447 41.020015 -92.411296 ST.LOUIS, Feb. 7.—O.E. Babcook\nappeared in the U. S . Circuit Court\nthis morning to answer to an indict­\nment charging him with complicity\niu the Whisky frauds. He was attend­\ned by Jndge John K. Porter, °f New\nYork;_ Emory A. Storrs, of Chicago;\nex-United States Attorney General\nWilliams, Judge John M.andAVob-\nflter H. Krum, of St. Louis as [coun­\nsel. His father-in-law, U. S. Mar­\nshal Campbell, for the Northern Dis?\ntrict of Ills., and his brother, C. W.\nBabcock, of Kansas, nat in the Court\nroom near him. District Attorney\nD. S . Dyer and special counsel James\nO. Broadhead, and Major L. Eaton\nappeared for the Government. It was\nGeneral Babcock's first appearance in\nthe Court since his indictment, and\nthe formality of pleading "not guil­\nty" was gone through with. The\njurors remaining on the old panel,\n those especially summoned for\nthis casp were called over, but only\nhalf of them responded, they having!\nbeeu selected from outside "St. Louis '\nand many of them not having time to\narrive. Mr. Storrs, counsel for the\ndefendent, stated that they very\nmuch needed another day for cousuf-\ntation and were also awaiting the\narrival of important documentary\nevidence. The. counsel for the Gov­\nernment made no objection to the de­\nlay and after a brief consideration\nJudge Dillon announced that the case\nwould go over until to-morrow\nmorning, but that at 2 o'clock r. M.\nthe jurors would be called again, that\nit might be seen who were preseni.\nBesides counsel, jurors, witnesses\nand members of the press, very few\nwere admitted, even to the second\nfloor of the Government buildiug. A\ncrowd of several hundred, however\ncollected on the outside.
07a9c9c7369e561e6a3e1e1a90704e1c PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.6424657217149 40.441694 -79.990086 weeks, and at thd same time displayed a de-\ncided weakness in tone, which resulted in ma-\nteria! losses all over the list, scarcely any ot the\nactive stocks being less than 1 per cent lower\nthan last evening. Tbe influences which had\na bearing upon tbe market tbis morning were\nall of an unfavorable nature, such as the recent\nheavy failures, further cutting of rates in the\nWest and Northwest, tbe utterances of Chair-\nman Walker and Judge Cooley, the former ex-\npressing the situation as deplorable in the\nNorthwest, and general fear of tight money.\nThe traders made the most of the oppor-\ntunity, and with tbe first sales inaugurated a\nvigorous attack upon the list, the Grangers and\nCoal stocks being the principal sufferers, and\nthe opening prices lrorato percent lower\nthan last night's figures. The market, under\nthe pressure to sell, which included, without a\ndoubt considerable long stock, yielded rapidly\nin the early trading, and Jersey Central and\nCleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and St. Louis\nled the decline, whicb. however, died away\ntoward tbe end of tbe first hour, when dullness\nfollowed and slight recoveries were made.\nAfter noon pressure was resumed with\nforce, and all the Grangers, Missouri Pacific,\nUnion Pacific. Cotton Oil and Sugar became\nprominent for tbe weakness displayed, but\nlater they were all surpassed by the Chicago\nand Eau Illinois preferred and Chesapeake and\nOhio first preferred, which lost about 3 per\ncent each. Lake Erie and Western preferred.\nLackawanna and Sugar Trust, and afterward\nSt. Paul and Missouri Pacific led the decline,\nwhich reached Its limits in the last hour only\nwhen money had been run up to 6 per cent.\nThore was a sharp reaction in the rates for\nmoney, however, and they ran off to 2 per cent\nat the close. Which induced some buying prin-\ncipally for tbe short account.\nThe outstanding short Interest was largely in-\ncreased to day, though there was heavy liqui-\ndation of long accounts. The trading, however,\ndid not lose its professional character. The\nclose was fairly active and weak generally at\nthe lowest prices of the day. The earnings of\nthe Northwestern for last month served to re-\nstrict the decline in that stock but bad no ap-\npreciable effect upon the remainder of the list.\nTbeentire'listU lower
150785ac460e22993dd3dc080501781d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.9547944888382 39.745947 -75.546589 Gentlemen: The Finance Committee\nwould respectfully report that tho city\nsolicitor, at the direction of your com­\nmittee, has exerted himseif to procure\nfrom C. H . White & Co., of New York,\nan amicable settlement for the issue\nof 934,GP.O of city bonds awardol to\nthem under their bid of August 21 last.\nThis was attended by much delay re­\nsulting from an examination of the\nfacts and the law relating to tho case,\nall which was diligently pursued by the\ncity solicitor. That the city solicitor\nhaving reported to your committee\nwithin the past few days his inability\nto reach hdjustment of the matter, your\ncommittee are of the opinion that n>\nfurther negotiations are advisable «nd\nwould recommend that the whole mat­\nter he ended by canceling the Issue of\nbonds amounting to $24.000. which has\nbeen awarded to said C. H. »' bile .4\n said bonds being now on deposit\nat the Union National Bank In this city\nand that said bonds be withdrawn from\nthe hank by the city treasurer and de­\nlivered by him to the commissioners of\nthe sinking fund, for cancellation.\nYour committee, would further re­\nport that the $24,000 of city hoods,\nwhich fell duo on September 1 last.were\npaid out of the current funds of the\ncity, and It Is dhe opinion of your com­\nmittee that the financial interests of\nthe city will be best subserved by not\nrefunding the same, it being the belief\nof your committee, that the revenues\nand income of the city for the current\nfiscal year will be sufficient to warrant\nyour body In adopting this course. In\nthis way, $24,000 of the city debts will\nbe paid, and what promised to be a\nprolonged and expensive litigation will\nbe avoided.
05c2c40cbd75a7e6e0a018c30d0eb422 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.5027396943176 40.441694 -79.990086 The Flea of Allegheny Connty.\nHe proposed to name one, and in urging\nbim lor the nomination for .Secretary of lu\nternal Affairs, he felt that the convention\nwould not only please tbe soldier element,\nbut would also do something that would\nbring out a full Democratic vote in Alle\ngheny county. He thereupon moved that\nWilliam 1. Barclay, ol Pittsburg, pension\nagent appointed by President Cleveland, be\nnominated for Secretary of Internal Affairs.\nSenator Humes, of Crawford county.\nmoved that the rules be suspended in order\nto make the nomination by acclamation.\nThis was done and Mr. Barclay was nom-\ninated to the position by a rousing vote.\nCommittees were appointed to invite and\nescort Messrs. Pattison, Black, Wallace and\nWright to the convention ball. They\nstarted away to the hotels, and in their \nsence Judge Connolly, of Scranton, in a neat\nspeech presented the Chairman Harrity the\ngavel and block which be had used,\nand the handsomely carved chair upon which\nhe sat. Tbe gavel and block were made\nfrom the first apple tree planted by white\nBettlers in the Wyoming Valley, and the\nchair was manufactured from wood from the\nfirst coal breaker in the Lackawana Valley.\nA Boosing Reception for Pattison.\nThe band played a couple of selections\nand then Governor Fattison arrived. He\nmet with a tremendous reception. When\norder was restored he delivered the follow-\ning address of acceptance:\nGentlemen of tbe Convention, TeUow Demo-\ncrats and Citizens'\nIn response to the invitation communicated\nby your committee, I have come among you to\nthank you for the honor conterred In\nselecting me
3047ef2cf29a43aa64d56e856bad4fec THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.078082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 "The meeting then lieing declared ope\nfor testimony, the lJcv. Arthur Mitche\n"aid tlmt he wan glad to l»c able to atten\nthe prayer-meeting once more, liavin\nbeen kept away for a week by reason «\nsickness. lie paid a visit on the pn\nccding day to a woman who had fo\nmany year.' been a puttering saint r\n!od. Although a paralytic, ami s|>eeol\nless, and sul*isting entirely upon liqui\nnourishment, her nick chamber was a\nabode of peace Hi* had known he\nseven years, but bad not visited her for\neonsidorahle time. Yesterday he visile\nIter again, and there heard a most woi\ndertuI story from tier. She declared thn\n«omc time ago a voice seemed to say t\nher, "Kneel and pray." She had nc\nknelt for seven years, but felteonstrainc\nto obey the injunction. With grer\ntrouble she did kneel, and an instant late\nshe. saw a bright light. "A t he same tim\nshe felt a curious cracking in her j.iv\nwlilch extended down iier arm and tudt\nanil at the same moment she was cured c\nher seven years' illness. She got up an\nwalked into the text room, frighteuin,\nher attendant almost to death, and a fei\nminutes she crossed the road to in\nform her nephew of the wonderful inira\ncle which had been wrought. He (Mr\nMitchell) had not the slightest doubts a\nto the facts in the case, and consuleret\nthis :js a genuine instance of answer t«\nprayer, signified in what men call a su\npernatural manner. The woman ha«\nsince visited him at his hotif>e on Michi\ngan avenue, and if any person felt anx\nions to obtain further particulars as ti\nthis wonderful response to prayer, hi\nwould Ik; happy to furnish full details.1\nThis incident is but the rejietition of ai\nincident related at an Ocean drove Camp\nmeeting a couple of years ago, and, foi\nthat matter,of varioua other incident!\nthat have been published in the papers.\nRoy. Mr. JTammond, the celebrated re\nvivalist, told, some years ago, how hi\nhimself had brought about, by prayer\nthe paralysis of the tongue of a scotfcr\nThe Chicago case is only one of man;\nthat abound in books that treat on sue!\nsubjects. People have, under a suddei\ninspiration of some sort, such as fear, tri\n(implied over j»I» v. - n*.« ailment* I list h:u\nbeset thorn for yearn. Such c-is<m an* no\nnew by any means.
49a20c23c33d4b9c78e65ab38cefe937 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.009589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 Wlille the existence of an agreement that M. Plchon referred when he spoke\nbetween the two nations most keenly of the French claim as based upon 'bis-\ninterested In the ottoman Empire Is torlc conventions."\nBins acknowledged there is nothing But France has a modern daim upon\nthat clearly defines the character of the Turkey. IVrhaps (fully half of Who\ninterests which France and Great Brit- g eat national debt of the Ottoman Em-\naln will seek. There Is apparently a pire bcfore the begnnlng of the war, a\ncareful avoid mce of such words as col- debt estimated at ft,000,00,^00 represent-\nonlzatlon, spheres of Influence or even ed money advanced by French flnan-\nproleelor.ite except as It is used re- eiers. Excepting the pilgrimage road to\n■jmnl ng a demand for protection made Medina, the Hcdjaz line, all the. rall-\nby the Armenians themselves The sug- of Syria had been financed by the\ngestion Is made that since the French French. France fum'shed the capital\n,'a\\* denned their rights as along the to est hllsh most of the successful In-\n. Ii'dllerranean coast, the British con- dustrles, notably the Lebanon silk fac-\ntrol was to be operative to the east- tories, and the products of these indus-\nward. In other words, Great Britain tries were gent to France,\nwas to have the chief responsibility In It Is tN-se very evident and Important\nme dlspo ition of much of the southern considerations that make the future of\nportion of the Ottoman Empire, of the Sy ia a matter of such deep concern to\nregion east of Aleppo, of Mesopotamia Fi ance They represent to her the lead-\nnnq or Arab.a with the exception of the Ing factors In the Nenr East question\ntungdom of Hcdjuz,
43f0d23b8cb64af183dce62b1b00fd73 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.0808218860984 41.020015 -92.411296 Gentlemen—I have the honor to ae •\nknowledge the receipt of your letter\nof December 14th, 1872, In which yon,\nin discharge or your duty as a com­\nmittee appointed by the citizens of\nthis city, in mass convention assem­\nbled, propound and solicit specific an­\nswer to a number of interrogations.\nIn compliance with your requcrt,\naud in order to give you full and com­\nplete information, I have made dili­\ngent search among the books and\nrecords of this institution, but regret\nthat they are too incomplete aud un­\nsatisfactory, particularly in thc finan­\ncial department, to give positive\nreplies to several of your enquiries.\nQuestions ijy Committee :—What\nhas been the annual increaseof prison­\ners since its establishment?\nAns. The best information - I am\naMe.to show that for the past\nfifteen years, the annual increase has\naveraged a fractioi) over fourteen (14),\nbut for thc past two years there has\nbeeu considerable ol a decrease.\nQpes. What number of convicts\ncan you now accommodate ?\nAns. There are 318 cells completed\nand furnished; with little trouble and\ncost, 60 more cells can be added in a\npart of tho cell house already bolit,\nwhich part is occupied by the Deputy\nWarden ; the number ol convicts that\ncau there be accommodated without en-\nlargiug, is over four (400) hundred.\nQites.— What is the number of State\nconvicts now confined in the prison ?\nAns.— Two hundred (244) forty-four.\nQueb. — How many tiers of cells are\nthere now, and how many cells in each\ntier?
0e1ea694b37b6b0b35ab7e08b11114c7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.6890410641806 39.745947 -75.546589 Prom the Washington Post,\nWo sincerely hope that there is noth­\ning in tho newspaper rumor I« the ef­\nfect that the accomplished gentleman\nnow representing China at tins capital\nis about to be transferred to Jxmdon\nMr. Wu has made a most agreeable\nImpression not only in Washington, but\nthroughout tho country. He has done\nmore to give u» tut intelligent and just\nunderstanding of the Chinese Empire,\nits people. Its Institutions, end its\nideas, than till the envoys that ever pre­\nceded him iput together. Not infre­\nquently ho lhas wounded the\npropre of some supersensitive and nar­\nrow-minded people, but to all persons\nof broad and 'liberal ideas; to all\nsearchers after truth; to all mtn will­\ning to admit the possibility of virtue In\nothers ho lias a constant sourer\nof information and delight. He s[leaks\nand writes our language far more for­\ncibly and felicitously than the average\nAmerican does. Ho apprehends the na­\nture of our 'political and social struc­\ntures quite as dearly as any statesman\ni the land. Some have taken offense\nwhat they are pleased to describe as\nhis effrontery, but the truth is that, he\nhas offended only against our ridicu­\nlous conceit, and even then only by il­\nlustrating in his own acts and utter­\nances the superior modesty, toleration,\nand temperance of the Chinese attitude.\nThat rwe and the Chinese should have\nmisunderstood each other is not sur­\nprising in the least. We\npraised them by the standard of the\nemigrating coolies—Hie produce of the\nshims of Chine«« seaport towns—wht'je
06ebdceaf9159b6a305ab66a6c98d8f5 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.1164383244545 29.949932 -90.070116 During the present, as well as the last season,\nhowever, they were somewhat afected by the\ndry rot, but this may have been in consequence of\nthe wet seasons, which were unfavorable for in-\ntagers, and moreover, in both oases, the vines\nwere not sufficiently exposed to the air, which\nought to be done it every vineyard. Also the\nroots may have been too fiat and shallow, as J1\nboth instances the vines were raised from cut-\ntinag, which should be avoided in Southern States,\nas It has been proved that in all vineyards planted\nwith cuttings dry and wet rot and mildew have\nprevailed a great deal more than in those planted\nwith roots. It is an ungrateful job to plant cut-\ntings here. I have planted soon for three con-\nsecutive years, and each time, on account of dry\nweather, have lost two.thirds of them. We have,\ntherefcre, to practieoo the layering of plants,\nso that we may more speedily and more surely\nrsle• plants with roots.\nThe bewt and surest way, however, to raise o-\nclimated and richly bearing vines would be to im-\nprove our own mndigenous Texas wild grapes, for\neven the European vines of the highest fame, as\nCharselse, Muscat, Traminer, Malvasla, Beslang,\netc., were not always what they are at preseat,\nand only by oonst3nt improvement have they been\nbrought to the present climax of per'eotion. We\nhave the principal native species, (of which each\none has several varieties.) viz: the Mastanrg, the\nPesetok sad tbhe Winter grape.\nThe Mustsng bears a cteer of middline sie,\nwith large berries, well shoaldered, of thick skin\nand dark bluish color, covered with blue bloom\nand of sharp acid taste, and ripens at the end of\nJuly. Many prepare from this species wine for\ndomestic use, but it is mostly quite inferior in\nquality.
7f5c574318d5a566088a1ea5a135370d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.4342465436328 43.798358 -73.087921 Messrs. Reed, Wing & Culler (aent.\n1 feel it a duty ovve the public, and es-\npecially to hundreds of rhy" fellow beings\nwho are now suffering under different dis-\neases of the lungs, to give you a statemeni\nof the good effects I have experienced\nfrom the use of the Vegetable Pumonary\nBalsam. Having from my youth up been\ntroubled with different complaints of the\nlungs, such as spitting of blood, a dry\ntroublesome cough, frequent hoarseness,\nwith severe fits of coughinsr, and indeed\nall the symptoms of consumption, and from\ntime to time I have consulted several emi-\nnent physicians, and have taken much\nmedicine, but I received little or no relief\nand at last they told me there was no help\nfor me; that my case was beyond the\nreach of their medicines. In the spring\nof L was advised by a friend to try\nihe Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. I ob-\ntained two bottles, and on trial I 'was sur-\nprised to find so sudden and effectual re-\nlief which it gave me, and after using it\nabout five Weeks al! my complain's were\nentirely removed,.nnd I was restored to\njrood health. Since that lime I have kept\niv constantly' by" me, in case of the appear\nance of any --of ihe above complaints.\n1 have known a large number of cases\nwhere all other medicines have failed ol\naffording any relief, the Balsam was at\nlength resorted to, and speedily effected a\ncure, I would therefore recommerd to\nevery person that has any of the above\ncomplaints, on their first appearance to\nlake the Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam,\nwhich thev will find a safe, convenient\nand positive cure.
10f651a2b0a6acc35372b4d2073f54a5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 Tobacco Company, at tho corner of\nWater and Fortieth streets, Soath bide.\nBy the merest chance tbo only fatality\nis tbo death of Sir. 8. S . Blocb's tine\ndriving Kontucky thoroughbred, "Bob."\nThe folnt track of tho Ptfn-llsndln\nand Ohio lilver roads runs along Water\nstreet In front of tho tobacco works,\nand a switch runs from it into tbo open\ncourt between tho factory proper and\ntbo new brick warehouse adjoining on\ntho north. This switch is supposed to\nbe kept locked, gnd tho only porson\nwho has a key is tho ewltcb hand of the\nPan-Hsndlo yard engine crow. Only\nabout six minutes before tho accident n\npanaonijor train had panned uv and the\nswitch waa tot all right at that time.\nAt 1 o'clock, bowover, when an Ohio\nItfver freicht train wg* coming down\ntho road from city the wyltch had\nbeou turned, by whom it it not known,\nand the train instoad of going on down\ntho main lino turned aharply to the left\nand crashed through tho big oak door on\na routo of destruction. Thoongineor ntid\nfireman of tho train, not knowing what\nwould bo struck behind that closod\ndoor, jumped from tho cngino after tho\nformer hud rovorscd and put on tho air.\nOnly about forty foot beyond tho big\ndoor, which was broken into a thousand\nand ono eplintora, 6tood a Pan-Handle\nfreight car ready to be loaded with\nMail Pouch tobacco. Tho engino\ncrashed into tho car with groat vlolonco,\nand car, engine and train continued\ndown tho switch into tho eastorn end of\ntho warehouse building, only to bo\nbrought up short by tho heavy bumpor\nattheond of tho switch, which,
1bf4c18e6217a457cbafe18841ecb3de THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.4041095573314 40.832421 -115.763123 Tbs He to G»x«tte m;« ll.-t.ry II ff-\nman. a young man about 20 Trail i ( age,\nmade cd CBgaccessfnl alt. iui t t" Uk«\nbis own Mr, in a boose uI t!l fame, ou\nDouglass avenue, kept tj a vomm\nnain-d Mmpby, by taling a d< se of\nc. ~ e o&ote. I: seems the young f> l!«.w h»s\nbiro drawing bard o{ late, and he. with\nthe inwUe of the boat* Lai quit* a\nspree last night. Tbia woruiog be made\nnp bia mind to jmap into tba .lata as-\nmtaial; by the aid of poison. Dr.\nDawson was summoned. and, It pump¬\ning the Tioog win oct, tare J bia life.\nTba boy ii highly conn<ct*d.\nLiTe> ua*s from Muscatine. Iowa,\nwith regard to tba McMenome fratri¬\ncide, ia that tba daughter d- clares \nshot h.r father in a*lf-defcnse. lb*\nJournal baa a foil confe-sion from the\ntwo girla, showing that tha murder w.s\ncommitted by the brotiu r iu order that\nthe children ni;bt hare their own way\nat bcmr. and tbat it was arrange! tbat\ntha yonuyeat sister should do tba abooU\nioR. wiih tha idea that the plea of s-lf-\ndefenaa and bar extreme youth would\neave btr from paniahmeut, and thus ber\niiater and brother eacape punishment.\nThe Salt Lake Tribune says: At\nlaaat half the p-acb freej were killed\nlaat Winter Hud tba other ha'f look ex¬\nceeding fick. Tba crop will be the\nsmallest raiaed in tha Territory in roai y\nyears the plum Ire's were also damage J,\nbat not to so great an extent. Apt Ira\npromise to be better than ever.
149e280894c3ba359d509cd7ae17ffe2 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.4397259956875 44.939157 -123.033121 Section I It is hereby made unlawful for\nany person or persons to keep a dog or dogs,\nwithin the limits oi the city of Salem, of the\nage of more than four months unless the\nowner or keeper of such dojr, or dogs, shall\nprocure from the city maishal a license for\neach dog as in this ordinance provided.\nSection 2. The owner or person havingin\ncharge any dog kept or owned wilhin the city\nof Salem, shall on or before the first day of\nJune in each year, pay to the city marshal the\nsum of$1 50in gold or silver coin of the\nUnited States of America for eaeh and every\nmale dog, and each spayed female dog, and\nthe sum of $3 for each and every slut or fe-\nmale dog (not spayed) so kept or owned by\nhim, which shall entitle h'm to a receipt from\nsuch city marshal, disignating the owner's\nname and the number of the license, which\nnumber shall correspond with the number on\nthe tag which said owner or keeper shall place\non each dog at his own expense.\nSection 3, It shall be the duty of the city\nmarshal of the city of Salem, or any one ap-\npointed by said city marshal, and he is hereby\nauthorized to seize, impound and sell or kill\n bury any ana all uogs, sluts or spayea\nsluts found by him within the limits of the\ncity of Salem, Oregon, the owner or owners of\nwhich have failed to procure and pay for a\nlicense as provided in section 2 of this ordin-\nance. Upon the taking up and impounding\nany such animal the city marshal shall post a\nnotice on the city bulletin board and shall\nsend a similar notice to the owner of such dog,\nslut or spayed slut, if the name oi such owner\nand his address is known. Such notice shall\nstate that unless the owner of such animal, or\nother persons having an interest therein, shall\nclaim posession of the same and pay all fees\nand charges of impounding, keeping and\nposting the same, together with the sum due\nto the city for license thereon as here inbefore\nprovided, within five days from the date of\nSUCH nuilCC, llic Cliy muiauai will iJiutcuu iu\nsell the said animal at a time and place\ntheretn named, not less than five nor more\nthan ten clays from the date thereof, to the\nhighest bidder for cash. Such sales shall be\npublic, and shall be held at the city pound\nand no bid shall in any case be received for\nany animal for a sum less than the fees of
01073377ccdf463cb2978777fd92ad59 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.6516393126392 44.939157 -123.033121 and sale, shall deliver to the sheriff\nor any constable of the county in\nwhich such chattel is then situated,\na certified copy of the notice of lien\nduly certified to by the county elerk\nwhere the same was filed,, with the\nrequest endorsed thereon, signed by\nclaimant, or his attorney, for tiie fore-\nclosure of said lien. Thereupon said\nsheriff or constable shall take the\nproperty described in said notice of\nlien into his possession, and for such\npurpose shall have power lo forcibly, if\nnecessary, enter any building, gurugo,\nor other enclosure where the same may\nbe stored or held, in tho munner provid-\ned by law under a writ of replevin, and\nshall' at the time of such taking, deliver\nto the person having possession of such\nchattel, H copy of said lien uotico; cer-\ntified to by the lien claimant or his at-\ntorney, together with an itemized bill\nof particulars of tlio said lien claim-\nant demand, also certified to by such\nlien complaint or his attorneys; the per-\nson or persons, claiming to own or to\nhave an interest iu suul property, may\nat any time within fourteen days after\nsuch service herein provided for, deliver\nto the sheriff or constable, written\nami verified denial of any allegation:\ncontained in said lien notice or bill of\nparticulars, and if such denial or an al-\nlegation ot payment on the part of any\nsuch person, or persons, be so made and\nserved upon the officer then in posses-\nsion of said chattel, be so "made and\nserved upon the officer then in posses\nsion of suul chattel, such officer snail\nthou and in such case retaiu the posses-\nsion of said personal property, subject\nonly to the order or orders of the cir-\ncuit court having jurisdiction of the\nparties, or the subject matter, in a suit\nto be prosecuted by such lien claimant,\nwhich suit shall be begun and prosecut-\ned within an .additional period of 10\ndays from the time of service upon such\nofficer of uch denial or nllegntiou of\npayment. In such case, if the lien\nclaimant shall fail to commence and\nprosecute such suit within such, period\nof 10 days, the sheriff or eoustnble\nshall rWeaso the said personal property\nfrom such levy and deliver the same\nto the person or persons having or\nclaiming an interest therein. If such\nsiit be commenced within said period of\n10 days, the sheriff or constable shall
44678753c4cf13aa69ce73a5d9ff8cb3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.3575342148656 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr, Lewis said in part:\nThere is such a thing as righteous\nindignation and its fires\ning sometimes. If a curse cl our State\nis open, brazen bribery, then this is\na timely text. The articles of Mr.\nKennan in the Outlook not long ago\nought to shame us for Indifference,\nand if what he said were true, and I\nhave every reason to believe they are\ntrue, then the public only does its duty\nin arousing itself for the cause of\nrighteousness and civic purity in mu­\nnicipal government Politics are (he\ncurse of our city and State, and it would\nalmost seem as though Idleness and\npolitics were twln-liom, for when a\nman is “out of a Jdb" he turns to poli­\ntics for a living. This, on the face of\nit is all wrong. Men enter Into the\nhighest office« of the city with no other\nmotive than to get what they dan out\nof them. Politicians let out contracts\nnot to the lowest bidder or a tender,\nbut to the highest In the collection of\nour city garbage, and that, too, when\nthe lowest bidder is as efficient as the\nhighest. The condition of our streets\nare either like the desert of Sahara\nor like a volcano ridge with manholes\nin it. A well-known politician in this\ntown, a personal friend of mine, told\nm? the other day that the "cobbler\nshould to his last," meaning\ntherelby that ministers of the gospel\nshould not look upon public affairs\nnor discuss them. But.it is a sacred\nduty that in protest to such a religion\nmen who never attend our primaries\nshould acquaint themselves with some\nof the profound problems of municipal\ngovernment rather than separate them\nfrom their true solution by the prin­\nciples of the New Testament\nBribery in Delaware has been going\non for years. Bu now the facts are\ntoo plain. No one challenges their\nreality or their import The only way\nto prevent such things in our midst\nis by concentrated effort on the part\nof citizens who live in Wilmington\nnominate ajid elect to places of civic\ntrust men of honesty and integrity,\nwho are not in submission to the dic­\ntates of any political "boss" or ma­\nchine. The Decalogue should have as\nmuch place in municipal politics as in\ncivil life. Edmund Burke's aphorism\nis very true: “A nation needs to be\npurified as well as fortified. If men\nare willing to give their life to serve\ntheir country In time of war. why\nshould they not be willing to do so\nIn tlpies of peace? The greatest dan­\ngers to any land are not so muo.i\nfrom without as from within: not\nfrom the invasion of a foreign enemy,\nbut from designing demagogues and\neorrupt politicians from within. "
d66f2c9351235971ac599e96608f7786 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.3849314751394 31.960991 -90.983994 Indian Corn for Soiling and Fodder.— W«\ndoubt whether the value of Indian corn is more\nthan half known yet among the generality of\nfarmers; and if the unparalleled drought through­\nout the country last summer should have a ten­\ndency to teach it to them, the terrible lesson may\nbe looked upon as a mercy, rather than a\nscourge, from a beneficent Providence. During\nthe past eight months, thousands of animals have\nperished or been sacrificed for want of grass of\nfodder to sustain them, all of them, all of which\nmight have been saved and kept in good condi­\ntion, had each farmer sown a few acres of corn\nfor soiling and fodder. We saw, last summer,\na sandy soil, a crop of corn growing, which\nturned out six tons of excellent dry fodder per\nacre. It was so.wn on the first day of July, in\ndrills three feet apart. The land was ploughed\ndeep and highly manured. This crop was the\nmeans of saving a superior herd of cows from\nstarvation. Henceforth, however promising the\ngrass and hay crop may be, let no fanner depend\nentirely upon it, but him sow a few acres of\ncorn for summer soiling, or to be cured for win­\nters use. He will then be tolerably indepen­\ndent of a capricious season. If the land be rich\nand properly prepared for corn, it will be sure to\ncome up and grow, however dry it may be, pro­\nvided the seed be prepared by steeping it in\nguano or saltpeter water, or some other*5cheap\nsolution. When corn is tolerably advanced in\nits growth, it completely shades the ground, and\nthe drought will have little effect upon it. A\nlarge crop may usually be grown in drills than\nwhen sown broadcast; and if these drills be two\nor two and a half feet apart, we believe it will be\nfound better than nearer, especially in a very dry\nseason, as the cultivator can be often run be­\ntween the rowe, stirring the ground effectually,\nand neutralizing, in a measure, the effects of\ndry weather. We recommend sowing at least\none acre of corn for fodder for every five head\nof cattle kept on the farm. If there be\nplus of hay it is very easily disposed of. —Am,
0b4e69deacceb1e209ba518adaf43028 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.8397259956876 44.939157 -123.033121 ture, but fow renlize its valuo when\nfnl;en into the human systom for\ntho same cleansing purpose.\nChnrcoal is a remedy that the\nmoro you take of it tho belter; It is\nnot a drug nt all, but simply absorbs\ntho gases and impurities always pres-\nent in tho stomach nnd Intostines\nnnd cnrrlos them out of tho systom.\nCharcial sweetens tho breath nftor\nsmoking, drinking or after eating\nonions and other odorous vegetables.\nCharcoal effectually clears and Im-\nproves tho complexion, it whitens\ntho teeth and furthor nets as a nat-\nural and eminently safe cathartic.\nIt nbsoibs tho lnjurlor gases\nwhich collect in tho stomach and\nbowels; It disinfects tho mouth and\nthroat from tho poison of cntarrh.\nAll druggists soil chnrcoal In one\nform or another, but probnbly the\nbest charcoal and tho most for the\nmoney Is In Stunrt's Chnrconl Loz-\nenges; they aro composed of \nfinest powdered .Willow charcoal,\nand othor harmless antlsoptica in\ntablet form or rather In tho form\nof large, pleasant tasting lozenges,\ntlio chnrcoal being mixed with honey.\nThe dally ubo of theso lozonges\nwill seen toll In n much Improved\ncondition of tho goncrnl health, bet-\nter comploxlon, sweeter breath and\npurer blood, and tho beauty of It Is,\nthat no poBslblo harm can result\nfrom their continued use, but, on\ntho contrary, great benoflt.\nA Duffnlo physician, In speaking\nof tho bonoflts of chnrcoal, says: "I\nadvise Stuart's Charcoal Lozongos to\nnil patients suffering from gas In\nstomach and bowels, and to clear tho\ncomplexion nnd pimlfy tho breath,\nmouth nnd throat; I also bellovo tho\nHvor is greatly benefitted by the dally\nuse of thorn; they cost but twenty-liv- e\ncents a box at drug stores, and\nnlthough in somo senso n patont\npreparation, yet I bellovo
0beb9a7887019035d44f2280f0c3617e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.4193988754807 40.063962 -80.720915 000 buahcla; exports 23,lO> bu>h»U; ungraded G7a6!<\nNo. n, 02c: steamor GSJ^c; No. *2 .May 63^c; Juud63j\n63£{c, cloijcg atG3^c; July W^aWJfcc, closing t\nGlKc; August CCaCo^c, clowau »t GGj^o; fc'eptombi\n07>iC. Oats a shade lower, rocclpts lW.OOd bushel\nexports VO.OOO bushels, western mixed CS^atCc: whit\nwestern mixed 89>iHllo. Hopnquiet, steady and ui\nchanged. Codec, epotfalr;KiouoinlL»aUyuuehauge:\noptions dull and lower, partly owing to the di\nellne ot llano, salts to-day wero for Jong a<\ncounty, buying by ghorts. Ladeuburg, Ilolma\n& Co. were large Bwleid: Graver bought eomeJulj\nWolflalioboURht; sales 60 bags Rio 7 July*\n8.20*S.25c; August at 8.30a8 -I0o; September at 8.4C\n8.50c:uctober at 8.6Cc; November at 8 60a8.fi5<\nDecember at 8.55i8.6i Sugar dull and weake:\nCuba centrifugal 5 5-l£c: retlulux fair to goo\nat *'15-16a6 1-lCc; retiued steady; eut-Joaf an1\nctu«n»d 7>Sa7Jfc: granulated G i-lCc. ;Mo1h<uc\nquiet; 50 test 17c. Klce tirrn and In inoierai\noemand. Tallow (lull aud lower at 6%\nG 9-lfic. Turnentino weaker at 3lJ^c. Eggi\nwestern fiewi demaud fair ana nurkt\ndrm at 15at5)a". Pork nuiot and firn\nBeif quiet steady. htrd du 1; western steame\nBpot §.25a8.32c; Juno 8.23*825c: July S.ilc; Ac\ngu« s.&ic; September 8G7aS.G{c. Butter quit\nand steady. Cheese quiet aud unchanged.\nBhiladeuuu, May 31..Flour qulot and uc\nchanged. When dull but steady; No. 2 red Ma\nSI 02%al 03«4' Juno 81 G3al 03K; July 91 Oa^ol ft\nAugust 81 (U%'.l «033t i.'oru, options u-uitcted\neiriyj^irceand wanttdisallmUod G3c; tall yello*\n04c: steamer quoted at G«G3c: No 3 61u62c; sal\nmlxed.JuuefilkaG2>4c; July G2ftG2%c: rfUKUst62a64:\nOits quiet aud steady; no. 8 white 40j<c; No 2 whit\n4lc. flutter quiet lijKa llrm and in good demand\nextras 16V27u. Cheesequiet; full cieim lO^all^c\nfiir^to good8Ka9Xc.\nb&ltivokei May 31..Elonr steady. Wheat, west\nera higher and dull; No. u winter red srot 31 0\ntld;tresli Juuo 81 01'/* as ad: July 8103}j;4l 03&\nAugust81 0£j£al03. com.western hl^fter aud dull\nmixcJ sr.ot GiUaG'in: Mav filn Md* i«nn mhs.ctis-\nJuly 6134"iG2^. OitU ve y dull: wcs ora whiti\n33j'l0c: mixed 36a3Sc: Pennsylvania 3*«41c. Uy<\nfiuilit at C8h70c. i'roviilODS quiet B:d stead v\n£<st8 firmer at 14al4%c. Whisyy nominally stead;\nat SI 14.
11f1d9503a8fe0a7d42b9f06ff5de566 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.560273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 jy because Blame always compelled elation, inquiring whether It wnuld be\nattention when he spoke, but tmmedi- possible for such a course to be given\netely after he had thus generalized, at the next session,\nhe began to tell s historical anecdote, i Shameful to admit, we Delawareans\nHe said that In Massachusetts there |are not familiar with our own hls-\nhad been a hotly contested guberna- itory. Few States are so rich in his-\n(orlal election some thirty years ear- torical association in the founding of\nDer. In (hat election the passions, the the Republic. Sad, too, that these\npride, and the prejudices of men were events have not been recorded so as\nenlisted as never before in the State to give them just prominence. The\nof Massachusetts. Having said as much i Chair of History, held by Dr. Vaughn,\nas this Blaine stopped for a moment, ils the result of i State appropriation\nevidently anxious to see whether his j with the history of our State and\naudience was listening as closely as > government as prominent requlre-\n| he desired to what he said. He was i ments of study, in this day of a\nnot disappointed. Every was fix- igrowing thinking citizenship. the\ncd upon him Then he went on to say j State has builded well In making\nthat the party which was in power such nrovision\nIn Massachusetts held all the election\ncards or counter in Its possession.\nThere was a total vote of about 100,-\n(00. The party m power which had\n♦he counters or cards representing\nI he power of possession was beaten\nby a majority if one vote and im­\nmediately acknowledged defeat. The\nresult was that Edward Everett, the\ngreat orator, president of Harvard\nCollege and afterward candidate for\nVice-President, walked out of and\nMarcus Morton walked Into the office\nof the governor Could there he a more\ncomplete or perfect illustration of the\nrecognition of the majority rule then\nthose few words Everett walked out\nand Marcus Morton walked Ir. Then\nBlaine said that for the Anglo-Saxon\nface a majority nf one is as good as\na majority of a hundred thousand, and\nId that fact is to be found, he said,\nthe reason for confidence In the per­\nmanence of our republie.\n"The speech made a very great im-
06ab2f388e342f21b35873b7dd0c0ecf THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1884.8866119902348 42.217817 -85.891125 Dick blushed guiltily. Ho wondered\nwho had told his wifo about that wine\nsupper. To bo sure, it was a foolish\nbet mado on tho fall elections, and ho\nhad lost it; but what could ono expect?\nA man must bo a man, or loso standing\nwith his fellows ono or tho other. And\nreally it was, after all, none of Maria's\nbusiness. Ho carnod the money, she\ndidnot,andhohadarighttousoitas\nho pleased. All sho had to do was to\nsit thero in the comfortable homo ho\nprovided for her, and bo supported.\nHo was certain now that ho didn't like\nit about tho servant, and ho rose from\ntho table feeling that ho had a grievance.\nWhat on earth did Maria nocd with a\nhired girl? Sho had told him often\nenough that Benny and Billy were just\nas good as they be, and that the\nbaby wasn't tho least bit of troublo in\ntho" world. All she had to do was to\nseo to them, and do, tho little house-\nwork necessary for them all. Mr. Van\nDorn would havo been mightily offend-\ned if anybody had intimated to him\nthat his wife was a drudge. Another\nweek went by. Somehow there seemed\nto havo come a great change in Maria.\nHo was puzzled to account for it, when-\never ho had timo to think about it. Tho\nservant was still in the house, and a\nnurso girl had been engaged to care for\nthe baby. Maria was certainly develop-\ning a peculiar method of retrenchment.\nAt this rato ho would bo obliged to\ngivo up his elegant new fall overcoat,\nfor his salary was not largo enough to\ncover so many expenses.
00530a4d5126be678600c2f1f5248cd3 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1876.5669398590871 37.451159 -86.90916 The copiousness of tho English\ntongue, as well as tho difficulty of ac-\nquiring the ability of using its immense\nvocabulary correctly, is well exhibited\nin tho following array of synonomous\nwords ; which if not new, is yet a cap-\nital illustration of tho nice distinctions\nwhich characterize so many of our vo-\ncable?. It is no wonder that we slip\noccasionally, even the wariest of us\nA little girl was looking at the pic\nture of a number of ships, when she\ncxclaimcd,"Sec, what a flock of ships."\nWc corrected her by saying that a\nflock of ships is called a fleet, and a\nilect of sheep is called a flock.\nAnd here wc may add, for the ben\nefit of the foreigner who is mastcrin"\nthe intricacies of our language in re\nspect to nouns of multitudes, that a\nflock of girls is called a bevy that a\nIicvy of wolves is called a pack, and a\npack of thieves is railed a gang, and a\ngang of angels is called a host, nnd a\nhost of porpoises is called a shoal, and\na shoal of buffaloes is called a herd, and\na herd of children is called a troop, and\na troop of partridges is called a covey,\nand a covey of beauties is called a\n;alaxy, and a galaxy of ruffians is\ncalled a horde, and a horde of rubbish\nis called a heap' and a heap of oxen Is\ncalled a drove, and a drove of black:\nguards is called a mob, nnd a mob of\nwhales is called a school, and a school\nof worshippers 3 called a congregation,\nand a congregation of engineers is called\na corps, and a corps of robbers is called\na band, and a band of losusts is called
02128edb12e14181b368dbb164c0e132 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.6571037935134 39.745947 -75.546589 The Sliding Seale To Free Trude\nThe following figures exhibit how grad­\nually but surely has the tendency been to\nFree Trade, and if the same scale of an­\nnual reduction occurs for the next decade\nit will develop in complete Free Trade.\nThe graduation is worthy tho attention\nof any American citizen having the wel­\nfare of our industrial interests at heart.\nWe admitted free goods to tho value of\n$17,033,130 In 1874; 1868. $15,147,018;\n1860, $31,692,683; 1870, $20,214,106; 1871,\n$40,619,064; 1873, $47,683,747; 1873, $178,\n399,796; 1874, *167,694,834; 1876, *146,\n466,463; 1876, $140,561,381; 1877. $140,\n810.14«; 1878, $141,339,059; 1879, $143,\n650,159; 1880. $208,049,180; 1881,\n667,413; 1882, $210,731 ,981; 1883. $306,\n913,289; 1884, $211,380 ,366; 1885, $192,\n913,234 , 1886, $211,630,759.\nIt seems that In loss than twenty years\nwo have enlarged our non-dutiablo goods\nfrom $17,033,130 to the largo amount of\n$211,530,769, and the most startling tig\n for the Free Trader to study will tie\nthose that we have only increased the\nvalue of the dutiable goods from $361,\n125,658 in 1867 to $413,778,065 in 1880,\nThe Free Trader has gained on his initial\ncrusade against Protection at least twelve\ntimes the amount since 1867, while the\nProtectionist has moved but a step—not\nmore than twenty per cent. —in the same\nperiod from 1866 to 1886, and yet they\ncry out Protection is growing alarmingly\nburthensome. If these figures are not con­\nclusive, lot us supplement them bysayirg\nthat the amount collected from customs, in\n1867, was $168,503,750, and In 1880 $189,\n410, 448 , and that the average advalo\nrein rates of ordinary duly on dutiable\ngoods has not varied six per cent, during\nthat period, from 1867 to 1886. It was\n46.67 in 1867. ,a ud 45.55 iu 1886. It was as\nfolio\n43,4■
03e19d2a253c698e5e9260812ecbd7e7 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.0013660885954 35.996653 -78.901805 souls in the road &long which we are\nwalking heavenward. Sunshine rays\nproduce shadows, and the fact that oui\nsouls go into eclipse now and then\nproves that there is sunshine just behind\nus. But what do you do when rou get\nthe blues? Do you cry or scold or mope;\nIs it hard to live in the same house with\nyou while the shadow falls athwart\nyour way? Do the children get out of\nthe road when they see you coming? 1\nhave found one excellent cure for the\nblues which I mean to tell right here.\nGo straight to work and do something\nfor some one more miserable than 3'our\nself. Whatever your trouble may be.\nthere is always soine one to Le found\nwho has a harder lot to bear. The othei\nday a young wife was deserted by hei\nhusband and taken to the hospital to face\na terrible illness, without a friend tc\nstand by her tier hour of need, and\nwith not a cent to defray expenses or un-\nlock the door of the future. Suppose you\ngo hunt her up and offer a helping hand.\nSuch betrayal and desertion discount\nyour puffs of vapor. A mother watche.J\nthe coffin lid close the other day forevci\nand forever, so far as mortal time\ncounts, between her yearning eyes and\nthe face of her only boy. What is youi\ntransient deiressiou con;xared to the\nheart anguish of such a grief as hers'\nDon't you think it would help cure yoii\nof the blues if you sat down and wrote\nthat mother a letter, or dropped in foi\nan hour or two to keep her company? It\nseems such a selfish thing to bo so exclu-\nsive in bearing trouble. A load shared\nis a load lightened, and the deepest\ngloom takes on a bright tint now i nd\nthen if overshone with the sunshine\nof love. Chicago Herald.
036012ea52f6d72995c4b88a8b639b81 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.4342465436328 42.217817 -85.891125 The Peninsular House at Lake Cora is\nnow open for the reception of guests. All\nwho may patronize that beautiful resort will\nbe sure to be served in a manner that will\nprove highly satisfactory to them. No\npleasanter place can be found in south-\nwestern Michigan.\nOur friend, A. T. Foote, left at our office\nlast Monday a box of the finest strawberries\nwe have yet seen. They were of the Sharp-les- s\nvariety and were as large as fair sized\npeaches. Their quality was fully in keeping\nwith their size. Mr. Foote has marketed as\nfine berries this season as can be found\nanywhere. He raises several different varie-\nties, all large, fine and well flavored.\nWe were highly pleased (?) to observe in\nlast week's Advance an editorial article clip-\nped from the Courier and credited to the\nNortherner, and we were tickled almost to\ndeath to see in the same paper a Northerner\neditorial clipped and credited to tho Courier.\nWe presume the Courier man was also very\nhighly gratified. The Advance seems to\nthink that exchange is no robbery.\nProf. Dawes from Puget Sound, expect3\nto go to New York this summer to wake up\nthe sporting men. He will stop in Michigan\nand walk with Mary, and says he will wheel\na wheelbarrow with a 100 pound weight in\nit and keep up with her. Mary says she is\nm her 50th year and has got to be grandma,\nbut he will have to wheel his Irish gig faster\nthan she ever saw one go or she will keep\nout of his way.\nA few evenings 6ince, while riding along\none of our country roads with his best girl, a\nyoung Paw Paw gentleman lost his hat and\ndid not discover hi? loss until he had driven\na half mile or more. He then turned and\ndrove leisurely back and the lost was found\njammed into the mud and in a sadly de\nmoralized condition. He asked us not to\ngive him away and we won't; but we hate\nbeen wondering what so occupied his atten\ntion that he could drive a half mile in the\nrain,
12c4031a2583a28edfcaa2d1a99fb5a5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.184426197885 40.063962 -80.720915 ucccfliaiT. the following real estate, to-wit: All the\neaute, right, title and laterest of Jamoa C. McCord in\naforoald, In, to and of, a certain piece or paroel of 8t\nland ljlng in Ohio oounty, West Virginia, on the re\nOhio river, abont tiye miles uerth of too city of oi\nWheeling, and bounded and described aa follows: ot\nOn the north by tho landa of Jamea Lyle, John B\nLyloand Key. McLure. on the east bj the lands of hi\nMra. J. B Wilson, on the south bj the lands of the el\nBeilly heirs and Jacob Zlllea, on the wctt by the pi\nOhio river, it haying been Uin home farm of\nThomas McCord, deceased, In his lifetime,\nand supposed to contain about one hundred acrca\nmore or leaa; aUo all tho eatatf, right, tltlo and In* .\nfi»r.*t of James B. MeCord/ln. tn tA th« lanA .\nasabraoed a< d Included la a certain inland in the\nOhio river, about ono mile abovo said (arm, and -»\nknown aa Pike island, which estate. right. title\nand interest bo, Jamea C. McCord, own* as heir\nof Thomas McCord. deceased. Also to subjeot to _\ntm-lien of Bald attachment and to payment of H\nBald 1302 and interest aa far aa necevary an? In* ftv\ndebtfdness of tbo defendant. Tbomaa B MoOord, H\nto the aald Jamea 0. McOord. and any affec»aof 11\nthe laid JamtB 0 McCord In tho poaaraalon of aald\nThomaa B. McCord. And It appearing from an\naffidavit filed In thla oaoae, at these rules, that the 1\ndefendant. James 0. McCord, la not a resident of wt\nthoHtate of Wnt Virginia, and he not baring\nDoen served with proccaa In this suit on the mo-
0c8cb1cf1a10704d65a91e6a2eb6114b THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1893.7219177765094 40.8 -96.667821 Hogs a, ali ages, even from the day\nthey are Uttered until they are ready\nfor the pork barrel, are more nearly\na cash commodity than any other\nstock produced on the farm. There\nare always buyers for swine; soma\nneighbor wants a sow with her litter,\nanother wants a lot of weanlings,\nanother a bunch of shoats and again\nanother the older stock hogs, while\nthe shipper is always ready for tha\nfatted hog. There is a market for\nswine of all ages and conditions at\nall seasons f the year. A good crop\nof corn, provided in advance, ready\nfor the swino and, to guard against\nany liability of crop diater, is neces-\nsary for the successful prosecution of\nthe swine industry. I'nder these\nconditions the business of raising\nhogs can safely commenced with\nan assurance of profit\nIt is always beat to hare in view\nbut one condition of market animal.\nWhile it may in a general way be\ndesirable to finish up the hog on the\nfarm, there are many risks taken\nwith the carrying of a litter of pigs\nup to the time when they will sell in\nthe fat hog market In view of these\nliabilities many of the most success\nful hog raisers divide their chances\nof profit and dispose of sows and lit\nters and pigs in all conditions of\ngrowth up to the matured animal,\ncarrying only a portion of the hog\nstock through to the shipper.\nTheir motto is always hare some\nthing to sell in the line of swine\nwhen good prices can be secured. As\na money-mak-
00763920e4181042acad56085a691c12 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.4890410641806 44.939157 -123.033121 manago n cherry fair with Tolk county cherries) it should be remembered Hint\nthe people of Pallus have dono their share to make past events of this kind a\nsuccess in Salem. Sovernl hundred of them took their band ulong and journeyed\nto Salem in tho middle of May and awakened the echoes at their Moose carni-\nval. Pallas hns always performed her part, ami more, in dealing with the\nCapital City, and people here felt that it would have appeared with much bet-\nter grace on the part of Salem people, if the eelebrntion in that city had been\nomitted. But the hoggish spirit for which a certain clans in the city is noted,\ncouldn't stand the thought of some of tho dollars going elsewhere, so tho big,\novergrown country town, will do its heat to attract the crowds from the towns\nin the contiguous territory whose merchants patronize what few wholesale\nfirms the city possesses, but who are doing their best to have a celebration on\ntheir own account. Dallas people should remember this event in the \nIt is regrettable) that the Fourth of July, the nation's holiday, comes to\nall parts of tho country at the same time. If our ancestors had wisely provided\nfor about a dozen Fourths along in a row, it would have saved much bickering\nover this very thing that the Observer complains of. It is also regretted that\nour celebration will, in a small way, tend to nttract some that otherwise would\nhave attended the celebration at Pallas. That is, it is regretted on Pallas' ac-\ncount, and that only, for Salem wants them ,but it docs, not want to put any-\nthing in the way of the celebration at Pallas. Salem has stood aside for five\nyears, and has not held any celebration of that date in that time. It has made\nits Cherry Fair its big event, and has heretofore ignored the Fourth. This\nyenr the Cherry Fair was, forced on us by tho earlier ripening of the cherries.\nNaturally, the events coining together, made, the celebration of tho Fourth a\ncomponent part of the other celebration.
b9c10fc6a33ce7f8252d112b0eea81fc THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1858.8863013381533 32.36431 -88.703656 the illustrious and lamented dead. On\nthe 16th of July last, he whom we were\nproudly wont to call our Qtitman was call-\ned to grapple with his hist enemy on\nearth, and in the mighty struggle fell a\nvictim to that universal conqueror who\ndrives his triumphal car over every land,\nenter every city, town, hamlet, neighbor-\nhood and family circle, and when he en-\nters fails not to do marked execution.\nYee, our QriTMAK, the idol of tho South-\nern people, is dead. No more, aa in days\ngone by, shall we be irmitted to point to\nhim in pride of heart, while he stands the\nbrave and intrepid general upon the battle\nfield, leading hi men to certain victory,\nnor yet as the statesman pleading his coun-\ntry's cause in the council of his nation.\nAlready this broad land wept from\ncentre to circumference already have the\nsad funeral processions moved and al-\nready have the virtues and services of this\ndistinguished man been celebrated from\nthe pulpit and the rostrum, through the\npress of the nation, and in every freeman's\nlieart. It i befitting, then, in us, now as-\nsembled in tho very town whose name\nproclaims the high estimate in which the\ncharacter of (jviTMAN has lieen held by\nthis people, for many years jiast, to con-\ngregate and give some public expression\nof our grief and our sorrow at the loss of\nthis favorite of our land.\nWe perceive, from the earliest record of\ntime, that the practice has been common\nin all ages, and in all nations, to honor\nthose who had distinguished themselves\nas public benefactors, and who were es
02af7fc97f41fbbb378749a3b310f21c THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1895.4726027080162 37.305884 -89.518148 tary conditions also help. The time\ndraws near when, with good crops, ex-\nports will bring gold hither, and\nthough foreign operations in stocks\nand bonds have been insignificant this\nweek, the effect of previous transac-\ntions has not been exhausted. Much\ndiminished receipts of money from the\ninterior indicate better employment\nin business, especially at the west, and\nthe volume of commercial loans stead\nily rises, and is now fair for this sea\nson even in a good year.\nThe government crop reports wera\nso much less dismal than was ex-\npected that they really extinguished\nfor a time a host of calamitous ru-\nmors. The decidedly cheering out\nlook for spring wheat, which our own\nand other private advices confirm, goes\nfar to balance reports of loss in win-\nter wheat regions and even this, in\n light of thedemonstated deficiency\nof the ofticia) returns of acreage were\nfound far more encouraging than pre\nvious accounts.\nWestern receipts for two weeks ol\nJune were 3,llti,6S0 bushels of wheat.\nagainst 3,001 .202 last year, while At-\nlantic exports flour included, were\nonly 2,304 ,847 bushels, against 4,0:;0,- -\n227 last year.\nThe official statement of 14.8 per\ncent, decrease in acreage was quickly\nfound, in view of the revised govern\nment estimates for last year, to mean\nthat more than 20,000 ,000 acres now\ngrowing cotton, which much exceeds\nthe best unofficial estimates, and from\nan area no greater over 9,000 .000 bales\nwere produced in lS'Jl, so that the re\nport gave no aid to prophets of evil.\nThat some reduction would be well for\nthe south is clear, but the heavy pres-? -
15e9fb498f3c22b0642ef5268e0e6f59 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1880.4221311159179 39.743941 -84.63662 Piqna, Ohio, the past week, was the scene\na terrifio gasoline explosion, resulting in a\nhorrible death to four persons and the complete\ndemolition of the property In which the ac-\ncident occurred. Mrs. Fannie Jones, a widow,\nwho uses a gas stove for cooking purposes, had\npurchased a barrel of gasoline, which was\nplaced in the cellar. On the morning follow-\ning the purchase an odor of the fluid was de-\ntected issuing from the cellar, and Fred. W.\nAmendt, a young grocery man, was called upon\nto Investigate. He and two boys named Pur\ndue entered the cellar and struck a match, when\ntwo explosions followed in rapid auooessioa,\nfirst the gas and then the barrel of oil. The\nsouthwest wall and portions of the north and\neast walls were thrown outward, and brisk and\nshingles were projected into the air fifty, feet.\nThe elder Purdue was thrown into a corner\nwhere he was consumed the burning build\ning. Amendt and the younger boy, with their\nclothing saturated with the oil and in flames,\nescaped to. the street, the boy falling in the\nmiddle of , the street where h burned to a\ncrisp. With, assistance Amendt got the ' fire\nwhich was ' consuming him extinguished, but\nnot until ' it was too late, and he died shortly\nafter. : Miss Newman, a sister of Mrs. Jones,\nwho was standing at. the entrance door , of the\ncellar, waa so badly burned that she cannot\nrecover. Mrs. Jones jumped from a second-stor- y\nwjndow in her night dress and eseaped\nwith serious injuries. The mother of the Pur\ndue boys, it is thought, cannot recover the\nshock which the horribledeath of her boys has\nproduced upon her, The young wife of Fred\nAmendt is also prostrated. The explosion was\nfelt throughout the town and was heard for a\ndistance of six miles.
48918f5d939b193a42db6331d3cbfead EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5040983290326 39.745947 -75.546589 Prisoners at the New Castlo County\nWorkhbuse will be feted on Monday\nIn a most fitting manner. The pro­\ngram as arranged by the honor com­\nmittee of the prisoners with the ap­\nproval of M. S. Plummer, chief war­\nden. calls for a flag raising, band con­\ncert, baseball games and refreshments.\nThe first part of the day's program\nwill be the raising of a silk flag 20\nby 12 feet, donated by the Oppenheim\nCompany, for whom clothing is manu­\nfactured at the workhouse. As Old\nGlory Is Hung to the breese the band\nwill strike up patriotic selections.\nThe flag will be unfurled at 1\no'oloek from a pole 80 feet high, that\nhas been donated by\nSenator Darlington FI\nCorner. This staff was erected In the\nexercise today by workmen of\nthe Wilmington and (Philadelphia\nTraction Company.\nFollowing the flag\nmere ball team and the\nored teams of the prisoners will line\nup for a doublcghouder. The ptaylire\nwill march onto the field, while a\nhand of sixteen pieces, furnished by\nthe Wilmington Ixxlge of Elks ptayB\nThe prisoners will be allowed to\nwitness the games-\nFollowing the games the player« of\nthe three teams as wen aa the musi­\ncians will be treated to toe cream and\ncake and the prisoner« will be given\ntheir fill of good things. The Ice\ncream will be furnished by Cornelius\nMundy, and the furniture firms rtf\nMundy and Company\nKane have supplied 60\naddition the prisoner* th/msolv*» have\nwas received 100 cakes from their families\nand friends.
7b995e4754a4d45e26f8d62bcca2d849 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.57397257103 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent Hnd thinking jicrson must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their efficacy established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian. whose preparatory study fits him tor all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cine-alls, purporting to be the\nbeat in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should be PAR-\nT1CVI.AR in selecting his physician, ns it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible tact ttiat many syphilitic\npatients are made miserable with ruined constitutions\nf.y mat treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a joint generally conceded\nby the best syphilographers, that the study and man-\nagement oftliese complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, baling neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, cmnonly one system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used bytbesypli-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are withoutanv claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nend, by means of their lying advertisements and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Peter\nFunk “inutitutions.” and unmercifully fleece (hem\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance iu the country are more apt to he duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Itr. J. C . YOUNG\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, 751 Clay street, opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom 9a. M..to 8 p. m.
43e906c2cccb3ea364f675641156ee2d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.2698629819888 41.681744 -72.788147 The New Britain manufacturing\nconcerns have arranged for some fine\nexhibits of the automobile supplies\nmanufactured in this city. The show\nwill give the people here a chance to\nsee what New Britain is doing for the\nautomobile world. The factories will\nhave their displays in the parlor on\nthe first floor of the building. Mayor\nG. A. Quigley will open the show.\nThe entertainment will be furnished\ntonight by the Philharmonic band and\nDave Young, a Scotch entertainer1.\nDirector Edward J. Lynch has ar-\nranged, a fine program of music for\ntonight. Some of the latest selections\nof the day are on the program. Dave\nYoun? is second to Harry Lauder as\nan entertainer. He has traveled for\na number of years with Harry Lauder.\nDuring the early of the war he\nenlisted with a Canadian regiment and\nwas in many of the most important\nengagements in the war. He was\ntwice wounded in action. During tfie\nlast months of the war, after recover-\ning from his wounds, he traveled this\ncountry in the interests of the Harry\nLauder fund for wounded soldiers.\nNw Britain people have a treat In\nstore for them in Dave Young.\nThe show is run under the auspices\nof Company M, Connecticut State\nGuard, and the Veteran Corps of Com-\npanies E and I. The proceeds of the\nshow will be used to tender a recep-\ntion to the returning heroes of Com-\npanies E and I. They have worked\nhard to make the show a success and\nthere is every indication that their
029c03ea1835276ec0dd30421fa221cd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.9301369545915 40.063962 -80.720915 We uilght bo content, uhd, by reason of\ntho abundance of our resources, for a time\nablo to stand the drain cf heavy Imports\nof manufactures, but in timo of war come\nblockades ucd all tho obstacles to interna¬\ntional commerce Incident to strife. At\nouch a timo tiro foreign source of supply\nfalb and the pcoplo tullcr, an thn people\nin tho lately robellious Htatesof tho Union\nwill testify. Tho southern people were\nforced lo go into manufacturing as beat\nthey could after they bail gone Into war,\nnnd noither their own enterprise In manu¬\nfacturing nor Ihelr darlug'in the blockade\nonabled them to msku tbolo exchanges\nwhich were necessary to their well-being.\nHut it Is not posslblo to draw the llpo\nbetween the manufactured cominoilltlea\nrequired by the Government an-l those\nneeded by the people) for tho Govern-\nmeat and tho peoplo are ono and the\n so tbat that which olfcote unfavor-\nbly either li hurtful to both. Kvsiy un-\nsatisflod preening need of tho Bouthora\npeople in the war time was u source of\nweakness In Ihelr Government, on overy\nwoll filled Rtanary and overy piece ol\narms, though Individual prcpurly, was no\nmuch strength added to the Government.\nWhoever is ready lo admit that It in not\nwlio for tho Government, nor In keeping\nwith lta dignity and pilde, to bo dependent\nupon foreign worMiopn for Its imple¬\nments of war, caunot well innlat tbat his\ncountrymen elir.ll be dependent upon\nforeign producers for any of lbs\nImplements of porn tbat can he\nmade lu till* country, /ml who¬\never admits tbia niach niu not\nwlllilery that Congrcw, which reprn.\ntentaalllho people, clowi Hell vlun It\nencourages any American indsntry, end\n111 when It dltcouregus any Aniotican in¬\ndustry,
61495f57b9fb5fa8e8b87c0992ce3ef1 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.9356164066464 35.780398 -78.639099 lieve a Son of Temperance on any other. it\nsubject, yet when you tell them that there\nis nothing wrong in the Order of the Sons to\nof Temperance, they look at you with sus-\npicion. Now if none but drunkards would\nact in this manner we would not be so\nmuch surprised, but when good, intelligent\nand even religious men act so strangely,\nour surprise is great indeed.\nHdwever those who are not " with us are\nagainst us," let us neither act, nor speak\nunkindly to them they are fellow -- travellers\nto the same judgement bar, and will\nultimately be our associates arid compan-\nions in Heaven, or finally driven away in\nGod's righteous displeasure down to the\npit of eternal despair. Let us endeavor to\nconvince them by a kind, courteous and\nconsistent course toward them, that we are\nresolved by the grace of God, to go for\nward the discharge of our duty, let the\nconsequences (as to us) be what they may\nWe have enlisted for the war, and we ex\npect to fight it out, and if we should not\nprove victorious in our day, we trust our\nsuccessors will continue the conflict, while\nthere is an enemy in the field. What\nthough we have to encounter great oppo-\nsition, and with many reverses yet trust-\ning in an omnipotent arm, we expect ulti-\nmately to succeed. The fact. that we have\nto encounter much and great opposition is\nevidence that our cause is a good one. We\nneed not be surprised that the arch enemy\nof mankind, and wicked men oppose us\nit would be strange 11 it was otherwise\nthey have alwaysopposed God, his Church,\nand his people, and as our eause is oppo-\nsed to the wicked conduct of men, we are\nnot surprised at their opposition.-
19befeeac31ad4deaf476faee647aba6 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.7712328450025 41.020015 -92.411296 Iowa Weather Service.\nSeptember, lf>78. was clear, calm,\nwarm and dry. except in Northeast,\nwhere the rainfall generally exceed­\ned live inchcs. Nearly all rainstorms\nwere all thunderstorms, over live of\nwhich occurred within tho triangle,\ntounded by lines drawn from Tabor\nto Algona and to Dubuque. The\nstorms of the 19th, 24th, and 29th\nwere hailstorms in various places.\nAt the Central Station the temper-\nture of the air was <53.3 degrees,\nwhich is 2 degrees above normal.\nThe rainfall was 3 25 which is 1.43\ninches less than normal Calms and\nsoutheasterly winds greatly prevail­\ned. Only 2 days were cloudy, 15\nwere fair, and 13 were clear days.\nIn the State, the entire west and\nthe Southeast had less than three\ninches of rainfall. Over five inches\nfell in the northeast from Dubuque\nover Maquoketa and Waverlv to\nCharles City; also from Blairstown\nto Tho highest rainfall re­\nported are: liopkinton (Delaware\nCo.) 10.83 inches; Waverlv, 7.37 inch­\nes ; Decorah 7.30 inchcs. The lowest\nrainfalls reported are : Audubon Co.,\n0.70; Cass Co., 0.91 inchcs.\nTho principal storms occurred on\nthe 8th, 19th, 24th and 29th, all heavy\nthunderstorms, the th ee last also ac­\ncompanied with hail. Over two\ninches ot rain fell during those storms,\nas follows : On the 8th, fom lilai>-#-\ntown over Albion to Waverlv, and\nfrom Charles City to Cresco, also at\nFairfield; on the 19th, from Afton\nover Oskaloosa, Iowa City, Anamosi^\nto Dubuque; on the 24tli, from For\nest City to Winuishiek couuty, and\non the 29th from liopkinton to Du­\nbuque. The storm of the. 24th waa\nespecially severe at Clermont.\nCold weather followed the storms\nof the close of the firstand second de­\ncades, but the slight frost did hardly\nany damage.
423327be46766c13e5513ef229bedaf6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.3410958587012 58.275556 -134.3925 Dr. H. C . DeVighne and wife were\npassengers on the City of Seattle for\nthe States. Mrs. DeVighne will visit\nher former home in California, and the\ndoctor will go ou to Washington to\nmake his report to the department.\nFor the past six months the doctor has\nbeen engaged in making an inspection\nof the Indians in Southeastern Alaska\nand in ministering to their physical\nneeds. He has taken a great interest\nin the subject, both from the stand¬\npoint of a physician and a citizen, and\nwe are of the opinion that the report\nthat he will file will be reliable iu every\nway. The doctor will be absent from\nDouglas about six week?, when he will\nreturn and resume his practice here.\nL. G . Thomas, of the Alaska Furni¬\nture and Undertaking Co., is just fin¬\nishing three articles of furniture for\nthe A.- Y .- P . exposition. They are a\nlibrary table, a settee and an arm chair.\nThey are made of spruce. \ntide-land spruce. The lumber was\nsawed at the James mill in Douglas\nalong with millions of feet more of the\nsame kind. However, one glance at the\nfurniture will be enough to excite the\ninterest of any wood worker. The one\nthing about Alaska spruce is the lovely\ngrain. Mr. Thomas has finished this\nfurniture with a care to show off td the\nbest possible advantage this feature.\nThere has beeu much speculation as to\nthe cause of the grain in Alaska woods,\nbut probably the best theory is that en¬\ntertained by Mr. Thomas. He thinks\nthat the trees in Alaska, like the\ngrasses, having only a short season to\ngrow, make a wonderful growth during\nthose few months. This emphasizes\nor brings out the grain in a way that a\nlonger, slower J^owth will not. Be that\nas it may there is no wood that shows\nup like the Alaska spruce, and when\nthe furniture made by Mr. Thomas is\nexhibited at Seattle it will excite atten-
2d27b7626dba559d6e46b292e056e6e4 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1907.5931506532218 31.762115 -95.630789 Monday In November A D 1907 the\nsame being the 25th day of November\nA D 1907 then and there to answer\na petition filed in said court on the\nCthdayofJune A D 1907 Inasuit\nnumbered on the docket of said court\nNo 7599 wherein Miss Luiie M-\nGooch Is plaintiff and Geo B Camp-\nbell is defendant and said petition\nalleging that plaintiff and those under\nwhom she claims had and held peace-\nable and adverse possession of part\nof lot 13 of Larkln Campbells addi-\ntion to tiie city of Palestine Texas\nbeing the first tract of land described\nin deed of Mrs B J Blackshear to N-\nIt Boyall dated September 11 1S91\nrecorded in Vol 35 pages 122 and 423-\nof Anderson County Deed Records\ncultivating using and the\nsame and paying all taxes due there-\non and claiming the same under a\ndeed and deeds duly registered for\nmore than five years prior to the 1st\nday of June 1907 that plaintiff and\nthose under whom she claims had and\nheld peaceable and adverse possession\nof the said lot of land cultivating\nusing and enjoying tho same for more\nthan ten years prior to the 1st day of\nJune 1907 That on the 1st day of\nJune 1907 plaintiff was In the lawful\npossession as the owner in fee simple\nof the said land when the defendant\nunlawfully entered upon her land and\nejected plaintiff therefrom and with-\nhold from her the possession thereof\nPlaintiff alleges that the claim of the\ndefendant is based upon the convey-\nance
20412774e25e4328fc33b840c33c3a46 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8292349410544 39.290882 -76.610759 "After a few minutes conversation upon in-\ndifferent matters, the subject was opened by\nMr. Stevenson and not by me. Mr. Stevenson\nsaid that he had told Glentworth that he had\nthat day had an interview with Messrs. Butler\nand Hoyt, and had told them that Glentworth\nwas very much embarrassed in his pecuniary\naffairs, and was apprehensive that he might bo\ngreatiy oppressed and distressed, if he should\nmake the disclosures: that he had a wife and\nthree children who might be made to suffer;\nand that Mr. Butler had remarked to that, that\nno man who would disclose to the world the\nenormous frauds which it was alleged had been\npractised, and would thereby contribute to res-\ntore the purity of elections, would be permit-\nted to suffer in this cammunily; that honest\nmen of all parties would protect and support a\nman under such circumstances, and for Ids part,\nhe would share his last farthing with him be-\nfore he should suffer. When Mr. Stevenson\nclosed, Mr Butler repeated .the purport of the\nin'erview of the morning, more fullybut sub-\nstantially, as it had been stated by Mr. Steve i-\nson, and'both he and Mr. Hoyt in the most ex-\nplicit terms, repudiated all idea of offering any\nreward in any form, for the disclosures."\nMr. Stevenson.it seems from this, with Mr\nButler's testimony, had promised Mr. Glent-\nworth a reward. The manner in which he\nurged upon Mr. Butler, Mr. Glentworth's con-\ndition proves this. The consulate at Havre\nhad even been named. Messrs, Butler and\nHovt very discreetly could close no bargain,?
1fe3f5a89689de49a41630836016f265 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.6315068176052 40.063962 -80.720915 Ia71c; No. 8 bOc bid: steamer 6tfn hid; No. 2,\n)a71 o: No. 2whlte73Xc; yellow 72>fc: Au»\nu»tO!)^a72J4c, closing at72U'a72J4c: October\nitt«70*c, citing at 7flc. oato advanced la\n3; receipts 174.UOO bushels; western mixed\nU46o, wblte4faWJ<o. Hay. ateady with a\nilr demand. Hops, qalet and ateady. Coff'e\nulet. Sugar quiet and steady. Molaiset\nemly with a fair demand. Kice demand\n\\ r ana market tlrm. Petroleum dull and\n>wer; United 70Jio: crude 0tfa7Xc: refined\nHe. Tallow Arm at 6Xa7Ko. Turpentine\nuil and weak at 45Xa48c. R»in steady,\ntap quiet and unchanged at JPal2c Pork\nuil and unsettled; new innae $18 00a 18 SO.\nleef dull and weak. Cut meats strong, but\nulet; Iouk ciear 10 70;abort clear $10 00,\njird demand adllve and piio«s advanced!\nrime steam $11 66all 70. Butter dull and\nnchanged. Cbeeae firm at 7al0Xc.\nPuiLADKtFBit. August 18.Klbur stronger\nrith more activity Ohio extra 94 60: ch« ice\n5 io, M InnemU extra, clear and gOMi, 16 2^\nhoU-e tB fiO; straight IB CO. Ohio extra family\n37 K: choice $6 60; toncy $6 76a6 86; 8t\nouts good to choice IH 60a6 76: ohm patent\n $7 10.*7 11^; Obio grades 18 00; Minneso*\ni patentx<8 2A; choice $7 75. Kye Hourlugood\netnand; fresh ground $6 00. vVbeat excited\nnd higher: f»o. 2 re.I elevator $1 88H: No.\nred August $1 88il 31H; September $1 MH\n1 30. October$1 40tfil 41X. Novemter SI 43\n1 43M. Corn exclte t and higher; Mil mixed\na72o -steamer track and grain depot 7la72c;\nfo 3, 70a71c; rojected 7>'n; sail mixed Atiguai\n9a71o: September 7t>tfa70Ho: October 7iHa\niHc.i November 74)4a75c Oats excited and\niglvr; No 2 white, new aud old, 4Ra.'<0o; No,\ndo 47a48c; rejected 45Xc; mixed 46c: Prj*\nisinne, demand fair and market firm; metl\neef IIS 00; prime mm pork $18 60al8 7ft{\nams, smo'- ed $1800a 8 60. Lard, city kettle\n120°a14 0), d'tAt am $11 87K Butter, de*\nltnd active and strong: creamery extra 27a\nBo; do good to choice 24aWo; New York and\nIradford Co, Pa, 24a26c: do first *la?8t:\nairy extra 20a22c: good to choice 17aX'c.\niggs, western fre. - h scarce at 10c. Che-M\nrtn; full creamery OkalOo; fair to good 8#\nOtfc. Petroleum dull at 7Kc. Whisky\ntrotig at $1 17.
119ca63202cc8ae5b96d27ec5a443988 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.5931506532218 40.063962 -80.720915 A Oaixast Tooth..On Sunday even\ning last a gay young gent ol out city tool\nhis girl oat baggy riding. Of cours\nmany young men took their girls oc\nbuggy riding on that evening, but we r<\nfer particularly to young Mr. Bnedikei\nof the First Ward. Mr. Ssediker doesri\noften squander a V in such foolishnesi\nbut on that particular occasion he becam\nsomewhat exhilarated by drinkiog to\nmuch o( Jim Marry's loda water, and h\ngot rcckleaa like. So be invited b!\n"young woman" to take a buggy ridi\nand (he said "yea," as why shouldn't she\nBo Snediker went off and told the liver\nman that he wanted the "all firedest\nnicest rig that be had in the eho;\nand "ilixn He expense." So th\nlivery man gave bim a splendid turn\nout. Snediker got his girl in and fel\nhappy, oh to happy. Why he didn'\nknow, nor care, whether it was Fourth c\nJuly or Christmas, or both. It was\nlovely evening lor a ride, but Snedike\ndidn't know it It was so pleasant sittin\nbeside a nice young lady.cloae up to he\nyou know, and to bars her talk so swee\nto him that Snediker did not think c\nanything. lie forgot everything and onl\nfelt a delight in his forgetfulness. Be\nthere a change oe'r the spirit of hi\ndreams and Snediker found himself, hi\ngirl and the boggy all lying iff a hemp a\na stone pile under the fence, just this aid\nof Billy Stamm's. Bntrilker don't knot\nhow it happened. He never will knoi\nHe only knows there wu a whiz, a crait\na scrcam and they landed on the ston\npile. IBut Bnediker is a young manofim\nwords, and in this instance he proved tob\na man of none, for he just sat on the ston\npile long enough to see the horse makin\nlor Wheeling, and then young Snedike\nmade after him. Be didn't tell the youn\nlady to wait till he came back. He di\nnot even excuse himself or bid her goo\nbye. He just up and legged it after thi\nhorse, and he did leg it On, on, on,paj\nthe toll gate, past Fulton, over the hi\nand down into the city he chased thi\nhorse, and never spoke a word until com\nlng down Seventh street he anxiously it\nquired of a passer by, "11 he had seen thi\nborsc." He Anally caught him in the sti\nble. And all that tune tnai mco youn\nlady was sitting on a pile of Hones lou\nmiles away. Ob, Bnedlker, Snediker, hoi\ncould you so forget yourself.
1f53a0f26bcddf55f74c298cf6368652 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.4123287354134 39.24646 -82.47849 name of Union, practically dissolv-\ning what it pretended to preserve.\nWe see eleven States that have\nlaid down their arms, are obedient\nto the Constitution and the laws,\nand are anxious to resume the ex-\nercise ot their constitutional rights,\nforcibly deprived of them, heavily\ntaxed without representation ami\nruled by laws in the making of\nwhich they have not the slightest\nvoice And this is done by a par-\nty that calls itself Union and Re-\npublican. Pray, gentlemen, if this\nbe Union what is dissolution? if\nthis be Republicanism what is des\npotism? Did any one ever hear\nEnglish rule over Ireland, Austri-\nan rule over Hungary, or Russian\nrule overPoland called republican?\nI fancy not and yet wherein do\nthey differ in principle from that\nrule which our Abolition\nCongress exercises and is striving\nto consolidate over the .southern\nStates? And who does not see that\nif the precedent bo set and an\nproved, of Congress excluding a--\nState, or States lrom representa-\ntion, never will be wanting a\npretext for a like exclusion of any\nState obnoxious to a majority of\nthe Congress, or whoso representa-\ntion would oppose a bar to the\nschemes of that majority or to the\nperpetuation of its power? If the\nrepresentation of a State is to de-\npend upon tho will 6f Congress,\ninstead of the provisions of the\nConstitution, of what use is the\nConstitution, or what vitality has\nour form of Government? What\nwould have been said had the Con\ngress, when the Hartford Conven-\ntion was in session, and when Mas-\nsachusetts forbade her militia to\npass her own borders to defend the\ncountry, excluded the New Eng-\nland States from representation?\nWhat would the Sumners, and\nWades, and Stevenses of that day\nhave said to that? And yet there\nwas just as much right to do so\nthen, as there is to exclude the\nSouthern States npw that is to\nsay, there was and is no right of\nexclusion in either case. Let no
8bd74280c66f1bbe039130204ef7b3a6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9575342148655 40.063962 -80.720915 JJL ... HPRSflS | obligatory\nupon* the Supervisors, Inspectors, or\nany one else, and that it was tho duty\n;of these ofilcials to disregard it. They\n. will .hold that an unconstitutional Act Of\n»tbe Legislature, which in a mere nullity\nfrom its origin, cannot furnish any pro¬\ntection tp. t|ie .officers of«election for\n. foiling to*perform their duty according\nto'the Constitution and tlio law?" Or,\nthat the 12th Sec. of Art. 3d of our Con¬\nstitution, viz: "tho Legislature vuiy\nprovide for a Registry of votes. They\nshall prescribe the maniier of conducting\naiidinaking returns of clcction, and de-\ntermini n&coiitested elections and shaft\npara suclriaw's us shall be nccessary and\n; proper, to prevent intimidation, disorder\np'r violence at the polls, and corruption\n'aridfraud ut t'oti^'H^did not authorize\nthe legislature to pass the 24th Sec. of\ntb6 law,"passed in.* 166a, entitled "An\nAct to regulate Flections by. thp people."\nMid- Also the Test Oath law passed\n'February 25th, 1885? Or. that the; mode\nof ascertaining citizenship prescribed\nin that' oath is not embraced in the\npower conferred on the Legislature\nby the words, '.'shall prescribe the man¬\nner of conducting electionfi" or by the\n "to prevent fraud \\n voting *" or\nthat when we left "the manner of con¬\nducting elections" jlo the * Legislature\nwithout any. qualifying or restricting\nwords, either-in the contest or the in¬\nstrument any where,'we did not mean\nthat our Legislature should' have the\npower to authorize the judges of elec¬\ntions, whom the Legislature was to pro-\nvide'for appointing, Ac., .to ascertain\nand determine the qualifications of per¬\nsons Offering to vote, either by swear¬\ning and interrogating- them orally or\nprescribing beforehand a form of affi-\n:aavlt{ -^tfitmicing all the pre-requisito\nqualifications bf a right to vote,' or any\none of them.the'tnost occult and uncer¬\ntain as citizenship then was.in a form to\nbe subscribed <and-sw6rn to and deposited\n'in the'-Hetor(lbv'8 office of -the county and\npreservft^as evidence against the person\nmalting it; or asJudge Loomis has\n8aid,Tthatthe examination on oath or¬\nally is constituttbntU and that it is the\nit, but that the Inquiring.'61 the affida¬\nvit was "palpably unconstitutional and\nvoid ?" These distinctions, we confess,\nare tdo'fine'fdr onr-coarse - mlhds, and\n;wo leave tliem to the metaphysical\nscissors of D. l^amb, Fsq.» and the Hon.\nJudge Loomis-^-\nM
149d979483499e1686e8a1949c3521ed SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1847.2479451737697 43.624497 -72.518794 thcrans, who hold ccrtain daya as Ash Wcdnl\nday and good l riday, to bc moro sacred than e\ntho ordinary Babbnth. J liat, tliercloro tho co\ncould not susiain Iho dclence on iho ground tl\ntho contract was immoral in itself.\nTho court also intimatcd, that even ifit be 11\nen as grantcd ihat thcro was m tho stato of\nHampshiro, a statcd law oftho naturo claimedl\nthe defenhant, it waa matlcr of doubt, whetll\naflcr nll, llio courts oftlns slalo ought to givo\nfect lo il in llm rnelhod cluimcd; whclher the\nfusing to inlcrfcro wilh contracts, which aro i\ngal as tlioy nrc madc so by statuto, is not.as in\nmalter ofpolicy, saying that wo will not lielj\nman, if ho has violatcd our own laws.\nThc rourt uloo held, that they wcrc not prcpaj\niu su, iuui u yaiiy ui.iy nnvujrs jirueeeu iu uii\njirmance oi a coniraci iuegai uy siatute; but\n this respect, Sundny contracls may bo diJ\nguished from olher contracts inintcd wilh illegal\nIhat alhllcgul contract when purged ofll\nillegality, bccomo vnlid ; but that a contractl\nmoral iu itscir, and void lor Ihat, cannot bl\npurged; tliat it ia shown by the authorities, llS\naunday contract may bo purged ol Us MlegJ\nby a subsequent ralification; that they stand tl\nliko promises made by un infant, whicli inal\nmay not be ratihed, or liko contracts, mtliin\nstatuto of fiauda, for thc sale of lands, wheru\nprico has been paid and pcrforinapcc has bccn\niused; ihat, in caso of a Sunday contract, thc I\nty mav demnnd the property, and thc rcfusl\ndelivor it is to bo Ircalcd ns an uHirmanceJ\nihat thia may be dono by eithor party; thai\nwaa tho only salulary ductrinc, uhich coull\nnpplied to cascs of this charactcr, and that lll\nloro the judgrncnt oi uio couri ueiow mni\nallirmod.
1a54882edc7136dd2f75e9447f1df529 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.560273940893 35.996653 -78.901805 I am bound by a deathbed oath.\nLet me explain: WThen I married my\nlate husband, he, like you, was in the\narmy. A young man and a young, un-\nsophisticated girl, we fell in love at a\ncountry ball and wedded without a\nthought of consequences. He was hand-\nsome, popular and practically penniless,\nand it was not long before I discovered\nalso that he was deeply in debt\nHis father, who idolized him, freed\nhim from his embarrassment, for the\nsecond time, I heard, but with his last\neffort the old man's powers of assist-\nance came to an end, and in a year there\nwere embarrassments again.\nI will not detail the history of my\npoor husband's difficulties the history\nof a young follow placed in an expen-\nsive regiment tempted to extrava-\ngance by the example of bosom friends,\nwhose position made their companion-\nship a curse. I will only say that in his\nlast years, disgraced and broken heart-\ned, it was to his mistaken choice of a\nprofession that he always attributed his\nruin, and before he died he called me\nto him and bound me by formal vow. It\nwas that when his child was marriagea-\nble she should never be given to a mili-\ntary man. I shall always keep that\nsacred pledge I gave in the chamber of\ndeath I feel that nothing can absolve\nme from it and it is my painful duty\nto beg yon not to approach my little\nNellie again. Sympathize with me in\nmy distress, Captain Fairbrain, and be\nlieve me sorrowfully yours,
3453147f8c6b9006c1206310690e5a77 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.9221311159179 37.561813 -75.84108 A Market House is another improve-\nment strongly advocated by many citi\nzens, and which we think would be a great\npublic convenience. It is now sometimes\nvery difficult for our citizens to obtain sup-\nplies of country produce, such as butter,\neggs, poultry, fruits and vegetables. With\na Market House, and regular market days,\nthe country people would be stimulated to:\nbring in their produce regularly, and in\nabundance, because they would be certain\nof selling .it for cash, instead of "trade," as\nthey now do, at the stores. It would also\nbe better for the town people, as they\nwould buy directly from the producer, and\nthnB save the grocer's profit, besides get-\nting articles fresher and of better quality.\nA petition to the Town Council, signed by\nmajority of the citizens,: for a Market\nHouse, would no doubt be re\nsponded to by that body. '\nMore Manufacturing establishments, all\nadmit, are needed, to give employment to\nmechanics, and thus increase the popula-\ntion and business of the town. Probably\nno better point can be found in the State\nfor a large Agricultural Implement manu-\nfactory, a Cotton factory, Sash, Door, and\nBlind faotory; and other similar establish\nments. The capital to go into such enter-\nprises is here ia abundance, if our wealthy\nmen could, only be made to see that their\ntrue interests, and. those of the town, lie\nin that direction. We hope they are now\nconvinced that such is the fact, and that it\nwill not be long before some of these en\nterprises will be commenced and carried\ninto successful operation. Then, with\nour new turnpikes, to bring ns the trade\nand products of the-
1cb2641a33479499c4bb4beb39fd41e2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.0835616121258 41.681744 -72.788147 of Our Lady of Mercy.\nThe men's supper which was given\nat the Congregational church last\nnight was a success and the men\nturned out strong to greet Editor\nRodemeyer and Thomas Kelly who\nwere the speakers for the evening.\nThe women of the church were in\ncharge of the. supper and the tables\nwere set for 98 and as luck would\nhave it there were just that many\npresent. The supper was greatly en-\njoyed by the men and praise was\ngiven the women in regard to the\nexcellent way in which the menu had\nbeen prepared. The supper was in-\nterspersed with the singing of popu-\nlar and patriotic songs under the\nleadership of Frank Usher, who act-\ned as master of ceremonies for the\nevening. The men were highly \nwith the speakers and found them to\nbe all that they had anticipated.\nThe genial and welcome humor of\nJohn Rodemeyer kept the audience\nin a continuous round of laughter\nfrom the beginning to the end of his\naddress. Mr. Kelly gave a vivid and\ninteresting description of the Eng-\nlish internment camps in which the\nGerman prisoners "are kept after cap-\nture by the Allies. His work in the\nY. M. C . A. war service brought him\namong these people in addition tp\nthe work done by him in the camps\nwhere the Allied and American\ntroops were stationed. It happened\nthat he was in London at the time of\nseveral German air raids and he told\nof some harrowing experiences ho\nhad gone through. The address was\ngreatly enjoyed.
1721e59ed297ffc08a24f45669ad36c6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.7794520230848 58.275556 -134.3925 The Taj stands on a large platform\n315 feet square. The Taj itself is 186\nfeet squaro. It is 187 feet high, the met-\nal pinnacle on the dome running up an-\nother thirty feet. On each is a redstone\nbuilding exactly alike in appearance.\nOne is a mosque, the other is a dam-\nmy pu.t there to balance things. The\nTaj has a great central dome, four high\ncorner minarets, with many small cupo¬\nlas. It is covered inside and oat with\nflowers of nil colors and other decora¬\ntions all being done by inlaying prec- j\nious stones, jade, jasper, coral, gold,\netc., etc. The light is' let in through\nbeautifully cai7ed lattice screens of\nmarble. Above are the false tombs,\nwith the names of Shah Jahan, his wife\n their titles. On the tomb of his\nwife are the 93 names of God. In the\nvault below are the real tombs contain\ning their bodies. I cauuot describe the\nTaj. Mahal. For ins-tauce:\n"All the angles and more important\ndetails are heightened by being inlaid\nwith precious stoues. They are com-\nbined in wreaths, scrolls and frets as\nexquisite in design as beautiful in col-\nor. They form the most beautiful and\nprecious style of ornament ever adapt¬\ned in architecture, etc., etc., etc."\nNot a word of this is mine. It is\nnearly quoted from an enthusiastic de¬\nscription of the Scotch Presbyterians,\ngiven me by Mike Donnegar one day\nwhen we were walking from the ferry\nlanding to my office, bot it would do\nfor the Taj.
5d15b834ad4e1d066d460b78b6544711 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.2890410641805 41.262128 -95.861391 We exposeu jusiertiny eeruia ;*b«wrli-\ntie* of the tax 1mU wbicb (tie Caauaittea\nof Ways and MMIUS bavo raported to tbe\nIlou«« at Washington. We had not in­\nvestigated, and felt in no baste to investi­\ngate, tbo provisions of the bill especially\naffecting ourselves, because it struck ua\nth a in repeat to so universal an intsre»t\nas newspapers tbe ooiamuttseuad obaervsd\ncommon fairness andjuatice aivl deoency\nia aasesviug tbe taxes. Some of our co-\ntemnorarios, however, biive uyt been so\neoriadrng as ourselves, but have analysed\nthe bill as relating to tbrmselves, one of\nwh ose analysis is as foilssrs :\n" If it were not for tbo impatatioa of\nsp«*king from motives of personal inter­\nest we should o' jeet to some of tho vari­\nous modes of taxing newspapers propo»ed\nby tbe bill, it is right tbat tbe proprie­\ntors of public journals should bear their\npart in the general contribution to the\nseeds of tbe treasury, butit may i>e doubt­\ned whether it is good policy to make news­\npapers dear, the effect of which is to take\nthem out of tbe bands of tbe poorer class.\nBy the iffeet of tbe bill the publisher of\na newspaper is on Hit incomt and\nin other way* like everybody else. Then\ncomee tbe taxes which 'bear p<ir titularIy\non bis vocation. He is taxed on the paper\nhe employs three mills a pound, which\nthey say is ab^ut fifteen cents aream. H"\nis next taxed three per cent, on Uu value\nof all the newspaper* he prints. In th"\nthird piace be is taxed fire per cent, on\nall the money he receivet tor H.ivtttiti-\nmen(». In tht- fourth place he is charged\na daiv of t hree conI# on all vxettaau sent\nor received by teisgrupb. In tbe fifth\nplace be is required to pay a tax of three\np*r ct-ut. on tbe value of the printer's\nink usod by him. Here are five distinct\nways in which the pubii«ber of a news­\npaper, after paving bis proportion oi the\ngeneral taxes like otb -r persons, is taxed\noo his special branch of business. We\nare not »ure tbat these are all, for tnc tax\nbili is surprisingly mutifarioas, and we\nbavo not bad time to examine it as closely\nas it requires. We doubt whether any\nother branch of business is made to con­\ntribute in so maay different ways and so\nlargely."
1fc5bdc3f818e36f29ea4b22b700604a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.3356164066463 39.743941 -84.63662 partments oi the city government oi tne city\nof New Orleans recognized his authority.\nThe Supreme Conrt nominated by him and\nconfirmed oy his senate was nomine; aany\nsessions, and had heard about two hundred\ncases, ine time lor the collection oi taxes\nhad not arrived, bnt a considerable aum of\nmoney In the form of taxes had been volun-\ntarily paid Into his Treasury, out of which\nbe was deirayina the ordinary expenses oi\nthe State government. The Nicholls Legis\nlature had a quorum in the Senate, upon\neither the Nicholls or Packard theory of\nlaw, and a quorum in the House on the Nich\nolls, ont not on tne racxara ineory. ine\nPackard Legislature had a quorum in the\nHouse on its own theory of law, bnt aa\nalready stated, not in the 8enale, and was\nthus disabled from any legislation that\nwould be valid even in the of its\nown party. The Commission fonnd it\nto be very difficult to ascertain tne\nprecise extent to whioh the respective\ngovernments were acknowledged in the\nvarious parishes outside of New Orleans,\nbut it is safe to say that the changes which\nhad taken place in the parishes alter the\norganization of the two governments on the\n9th of January, 1877, were in favor of the\nNicholls government. The claim to the\nlegality of the Supreme Court, composed of\nuniei justice Manning ana associates, wno\nwere nominated bv Governor Niohollsand\nconfirmed by his Senate, rests upon the same\nbasis as the title of liovernor fOcbolls and his\nSenate. The claim to legality of the Supreme\nconrt, composed ci unit! justice J.uaeiiog\nand h's associates, res s either upon their\nlight to hold over in case the Nicholls court\nis illegal, or upon tne legality n the Jiei-\nd
279052597767d7de59c728347745478f SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1911.669862981989 43.624497 -72.518794 Dlrcctor Roberta of tho TJnltcd\nBtates mlnt says In a clrcular xegard\ning tho purcbaso of mutilatcd colns'\nthat sacb.coins of any dcnomination\nwill bq rccelvcd at any one of tho\nrqlnts or assay ofllces of tbo Unltod\nBtatcs dnd tbe valuo of tbo fliic gold\ncontalned. will "be pald to tho dep.ositor\nat the rate of $20.07 "plus per ounce\nfino or $18.G0 plus per ounco standard\n(.000). Mutllatod silver colns of' tbo\nUnltcd Statcs will bc, nurcbascd at\ntbo intnts in Pblladolpbla, San Fran-\nclsco and Denver at tho prlco flxed\nfrom tlmo1 to tlmo by the dlrcctor' of\ntbo mint for silver contalned in gold\ndcposlts. Silver colns vrhlch can bo\nclcarly and rcadlly idcntlflod as to de\nnomlnatloii and gcnulacnoss hnd wblch\nnro .not approclably rcduced in' welght\noxcept by natural abraslon will bo ro- -\n or excbangcd attbo trcasury\nor at any subtroasnry, but aubsldlary\nsilver must be prcsoutcd ln tbo' sum of\n$20 or multlplca thprcof. Mutllated\nminor colns (tbo flve cen nlckel nnd\none cent bronzo plecos) will bo purchns\ncd nt tbe mlnt in Fblladelpbla ln lots of\nnot lcss tban one pound of cach klnd,\nnnd mutllated brofizo ono ccnt picccs\nwill bo purcbascd' at tbo mlnts ln\nSan Francleco and Denver ln lots of\nnot lcss tban ono pound nt.a prico\nfljceil from timo to tlmo by' the dlrector.\ntbo mlnt. Minor colns which can\nbo clcarly nnd readily idontlfledna\ngcnulno colns of tbo Unltod Statcs and\nwbich nro not appjr'eciably rcduced in\nwelght, exccpt by natural abraslon,\nwjll bo rcdccmcd or exchanged at tho\ntreaBury or nt "any subtreasury when\npresented In tbo sum, of $20 or mul- ti pl-
7a4cbb2bd8de45443db4a2098d1ec7f1 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.2616438039067 43.798358 -73.087921 Mr Bolts of Va. then moved that the\nrules be suspended in order to enable him\nto introduce a resolution as follows :\nWhereas the Hon. Joshua R. Giddings,\nthe member from the sixteenth Congress-\nional district of the State of Ohio, has this\nday presented to this House a series of\nresolutions touching the most important\ninterest connected with a large portion of\nthe Union, now a subject of negotiation\nbetween the United States and Great Brit\nain of the most delicate nature, the result\nof which may eventually involve those na\ntions and perhaps the whole civilized\nworld in war; and whereas the duty of\nevery good citizen, and paiticularly the\nduty of every selected agent and represen-\ntative of the people, should discountenance\nall efforts to create excitement, dissatisfac-\ntion, and division the people ofthe\nUnited States at such a time and under\nsuch circumstances, which is the only ef-\nfect to be accomplished by the introduc-\ntion of sentiments before the legislative\nbody of the country, hostile tothegrounds\nassumed by the high functionary having\ncharge of this important and delicate trust ;\nand whereas mutiny and murder are there-\nin justified and approved in terms shock-i - n\nto all sense of law, order, and human-U- y\n; therefore\nResolved, I hat this House hold trie\nconduct of the said member as altogether\nunwarrantable, and deserving the severe\ncondemnation of the people of this country,\nand of this body in particular.\nMr Botts's state, Virginia, had already\nbeen called for resolutions, hence he could\nonly offer one, at this time, by a two thirds\nvore.
17540e67fe26b8173c2011b7d64ffb88 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.146575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 (a (ha present hour, no stain of njnit\nobligation vlolaivU has yet tarnished\nthe American n«me.'\nThis must and will be as true In the\nfuture a* It ha« b*tn In the pact. There\nwill be prt>pb«t» of evil and fals«\nteachers. Pome part of Iho column may\nwaver and wander away from the\nstandard, but there will ever: rally\naround It a mighty majority to preserve\nIt _italnleaa and In honor.\nAt no point la hla admlnlatratlon does\nWashington appear In.grander propor¬\ntion! than when he enunciate* hla Ideas\nIn regard to the foreign policy of the\ngovernment: "Observe good jalth and\nJustice toward all natlona: cultivate\npence and harmony with all: rellirlon\nami morality,enjoin thl» conduct. Can\nIt bo that good policy doc» not equally\nenjoin It? it will be worthy of a free\nand enlightened and at no pe-\nrlod a great nation to give to mankind\nthe magnanimous and too novel ex.\nample of a people nlwaya guided by an\nexalted justice and benevolence."\nTo-day, nearly a century from Wash¬\nington o death, we turn reverentially to\natudy the leading principles of that\ncomprehensive chart for the guidance\nof tho people. It was his unflinching,\nimmovable devotion to these perccp-\nHons of duty which more than anything\nelse made him what he wan and con¬\ntributed to directly to make us what we\nare. ^Following the precepts of Wash¬\nington we cannot err. The wise lessons\nin government which ho left ua it will\nbe profitable to heed. He seems to have\ngrasped all possible conditions and\npointed the way safely to meet them.\nHo has established danger signals all\nalong the pathway of the nation's\nmarch.
1ac6a0cf52828ddaf04f4f7187184cb3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.993169367284 39.745947 -75.546589 people offer the mont pretentious feat­\nure of the bill at the Garrick Theatre j\nthis week. The scene Is "Paradise\nAlley" on the East side and the char­\nacters are residents of that partlcu- j\nlar neighborhood. The aong numbers\n" My Pretty l.lltle Jumping Jack,"\n! "Jungle I.and" and "The Political Boss” j\n; are very well rendered and It Is one of\nthe best dancing companies that has\nappeared at the house this winter. Tom\nI Whlffln, Will Mealy and Company In\n"The Hall Room Boys" have a com- j\n1 edy creation that maintains the repu-,\nj tat ion of those famous caricatures of\nMr. McGill, the cartoonist who made\n! them famous. The Helm Children In\nj a singing and dancing sketch that |\nj fairly over with comedy have\nI what Is really one of the hits of the j\nI bill, and it is particularly creditable Ini\nI view of the fact that they are bpth !\nI children In years. The lad Is espe-I\ndally clever In his comedy work. The\nI Varsity Quartet In singing and com-j\nI edy; Kratore, a musician with a <7\nrepertoire, amj Whltely and Bell, a\nsinging, dancing and talking duo. are\nall entertaining and offer good num­\nbers, The Mix Bonnesettls, French\ngymnasts have a performance that does\nthem much credit, their tumbling and\nmld-alr work winning hearty applause.\nThe picture machine as usual offers\nsome Interesting views and adds much\nto the comedy vein of the bill. Both\nperformances yesterdaj were greeted\nby crowded houses.
19b00b1d0a909ce43b8a7e3f96ebce35 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.878082160071 39.513775 -121.556359 Theundersigned,desirous< lac", min'ingnif***! who\nmay be unfortunate i nongli to be similarly affected,\nwhere a permanr ntrehul of their sufferings may he\nobtained, leels it his lin yto thus publicly expre *\nhis most sincere gratitude to Dr. I. J . i znpkuy, for\nHie iiermanent recovery of his health, 110. ne flow n\nby tiie distressing nvn ptorns incident to the vicious\npractice ol uiiconiroiluhle passion in youlh;de|.re- e l\nin boiiy and mind: micHe to perfoifil even the most\ntrilling duly imposed upon the daily avocations of\nlife, I souchl ti.e advi nof many pi ysicians, who at\nfiisi regarded my disease a ; ol tritTiitpf importance—-\nbut nia-! aiti r a lew weeks, ami in several instanci s\nmomhs. of their treutineiit. I fonn I > my unuttera-\nble Horror, Hint in- end of re). f , the symptom* \ncame more nh.rmini/ in Ilnur torture, and. beinglo.d\nby one that my di.-ruae. be ink principally counned lo\n:he I.rain, me .iicim would be ofiilt e cu-eqie lice I\nde.paire l ol • vi ' regaining my heallh. strength and\nini rgv; and a* a la-l S r sort. and with hut a taint\nhope called upon Dr • /apkay. who, afler examining\nmy i-n -e pK-scribxd some me.liiMie whi h almost in-\n-Inillv relieved me of lire dull pain an 1 dizziness I r\nmy head. I 'licouraged Dy this result, I resoved lu\n(dace inysidt immi dialelv under li s care, an 1 by a\ns:ii ■: adherence to liisrtirecllonsnnd advice, icy hen 1\nbecame clam, my ideas collected, the constant pmu\nin n v hack nr. 1 groins, the weakness of rny linili ,\nIhenervous rtac mnof my »ho'ebody onth■
357e37cd24fefe4b1925ec93cd5594d4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.613387946519 40.063962 -80.720915 JulU Atkinson and others.J\nThe undersigned special commissioner hereby\ngives notice that, in pursuance of the authority\nconferral upon him by a dccree of aid court made\nin the above entitled caule.on the2Gthdayof June,\nJ 676, he will, on\nWEDNESDAY, tbeJOih day of August, A. D. ItiTC.\ncommencing at 10 o'clock a. it., proceed to sell oo\nthe premises, it public auction, 10 the highest bid*\niler, the real estate of which William Atkinson,\ndeceased, (lied wized and ooasessed. contalninc one\nhundred and ninety-three acres and thirty-dx\npoles, more or lna, and situated on the waters of\nShort Creek, in Ohio county, In the State af West\nVirginia, and bounded aa follows: Beginning at a\nstone, corner to John Wilson's heirs, tnence South\n70° 59 East 113 poles arid 18 links to s stone, thence\nNorth 22* West 39 poles and 20 links a stone,\nthence North 45* East 48 poles and 5 links to a\ntrfpple locust, (hence North 46° West 12C poles and\n12 links to a stone, thence North 253 East 43 poles\nand 6 links to a stone, thence North 12%9 East 2G\npoles 13 links to a atone, thence North lfji° West\n17 poles and 9 links to a stone, thence North 1154s\nEast 106 poles and 11 links to a stone, thence South\n64° 40* West 58poles20llnka to a sugar tree in the\naide of a small run, corner to John Wilson; thence\nSouth 25}West 184 poles 8 links to a stone, corner\nto aid Wilson; thence South 11° West 142 poles 17\nlinks to the beginning; according to a certain deed\ndated the 10th dsy « June. 1846, made by John\nSnod grass and wife conveying said real estate to\nsaid nfitasfwl
30258c6ce5d3016c50c068e4f5cb9459 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.993169367284 42.217817 -85.891125 MORTGAGE SALE.\nDefault having been made m the conditions\nof a certain mortgage, whereby tbe power there-\nin contained to sell has become operative, exe-\ncuted by Albert C. Gay, of the state of New\nYork, to Thomas J. Reed, of Albion, in said\nstate, bearing date tbe eleventh day of March,\na. d . one thousand eight hundred an 1 forty\nfour, and recorded in the office of tbe Register\nof Deeds for tbe county of Van Buren and state\nof Michigan, in liber R of mortgages, on page\nforty four ; which said mortgage was duly as-\nsigned on the fifth day of November, eighteen\nhundred and seventy four, by the said Thomas\nJ. Retd to Nelbon 1 ale, of Albion, Now York,\nwhich said assignment was recorded in tbe Van\nBuren county Register's offico, December twenty\nseventh, eighteen hundred and seventy four.in\nliber 9 of mortgages, on page two hundred and\nsixty seven, upon which mortgage there is\nclaimed to be due at the of this no'ice tbe\nsum of ono hundred and seven dollars and forty\nseven cents, and no suit or proceedings at law\nhaving been instituted to recover any part\nthereof. Notice is therefore hereby given that\non the third day of March, a. d . one tboueand\neight hundred and seventy seven, at the hour\nof ten o'clock in tbe forenoon, I shall sell at\npublic auction, to the highest bidder, at tbe\nfront door of tbe Van buren county court\nhouBe. in tbe village of Paw Paw, the premiaea\ndescribed in said mortgage, or so much thereof\nas shall be necessary to satisfy the same, with\nthe costs allowed by law t that is to say, the\nfollowing piece or parcel of land situated in Van\nRuren county, Michigan, viz : The north east\nquarter of the south east quarter of section\nnumber thirty five, in township number two\nsouth of range sixteen west, and containing\nforty acres of land, more or less.\nDated December 6. 1876.
29f7e469fd9712091b8abbaf5df8f8c4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.3849314751394 39.745947 -75.546589 mington Trapshooting Club on Satur­\nday. After the moat thrilling race\nyet staged at the Hellevue traps, Isaac\nTurner walked off with the money.\nHarry S. Crawford, of Dover; Isaac\nTurner and Stanley Tuchton all' tied\non 10 straight in the gold event, no\na shoot-olT was neceasary. Another\n10 birds was shot, and both men went\nstraight. The same thing happened\nIn the third 10 and also in the fourth.\nAt the forty-fourth target they were\nat.All lied. Turner knocked down his\nforty-fifth, while Crawford drew a\nslraght away and missed. With five\nmore targets to shoot it was stilt\nanybodys race, hut Turner went out\nwith 49x50, while Crawford, though\nhe mjpsed no more, amassed a total\nof 48 Tuehton finished out hia string\nn of 25 without missing another one,\nmaking the total for the three men 120\nout of 125 shot at.\nAll contestants shot at an additional\nI 4ft handicaps 1G to 22 yards,\nii and some fine totals were hUR£ up.\nh Turner was high man, shooting from\nii 2ft yards, getting 48. William Coyne\n0 and Harry Crawford, from 18 yards,\n1 gathered 47 each, as did Thorpe Mar­\nti tin from 2ft yards. Dave Lindsay was\nit third, with 4ti, Coyne, Crawford and\nLindsay nil received sterling silver\n•i spoons l'or their good work. Lindsay\nshot from thp 19-yard mark. Turner\nK. was high gun on the 100 largets, also\nl .getting 97 for his total 4ft of which\nwere front the 20-yard mark. Craw­\nford crowded him hard, being hut one\nI target behind, with 96. Havo Lindsay\nII broke 92; Thorpe Martin and Kugcno\n" duPont. 91 each, and E. R. Calvin 89.\n11 OaK n and Kugcno duPont engaged\n0 m a friendly mp.tehwt 50 targets which\nwent to the former, who scored 49 to\n0 1rs opponent s 44.
020cc253b1740b3e15398fcf94ad5a26 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.1164383244545 39.756121 -99.323985 Fearful Slaughter on a Vermont Railroad.\nFour Cars Dumped illy Feet Down on hs\nto the Icy Hed of a ltlver The Cars Take\nFire and About Forty Unfortunate Pas\nsengers JLose Their Lives.\nConcoisd, N. H. , February 5. The express\ntrain that left Boston at 7 o'clock last night,\nmet with a 'terrible accident near Wood\nstock, on the Central V'ermout railroad, at\nabout 2:JO o clock this morning. lhe train\nstarted from this city on time, but was de-\ntained at White Rivti Junction, so it was\nabout an hour and a half late when it left\nthere. It consisted of a locomotive, a bag-\ngage car, a postal car, two passenger coaches\nand two sleeping cars, and was moving at\nthe usual rate of speed. When about 200\nyards sou h of the end of the dock bridge,\nnear old Windsor station, a broken rail was\nstruck. The locomotive, baggage car and\npostal car broke away from the rest of the\ntrain and passed over the bridge in Batty.\nThe rest of the was thrown\nfrom the rails, and continued on the road of\nbed untu it came near the end of the bridge,\nbut there it ran over the abutment and all\nof the cars fell into the White river, some\nfi'ty feet below. It was frightful, and when\nthe oars went down there was a terrible\ncrash. As soon as possible the detached\npart of the train stopped and run baok to\nthe scene of the disaster. The screams of\nthe injured were heartrendering. Assistance\nalso came from the people living in tha vi-\ncinity and everything was done to resone\nand relieve the injured. Soon after help ar-\nrived it was discovered that a lire had start-\ned in tne first passenger coach and soon the\nentire train was ablaze, thus adding a new\nhorror to the already frightful catastrophe.\nThose present wtre powerless to stop the\nnanies, and devoted themselves to attempt\ning to rescue those imprisoned in the wreck.\nlhe rescuers met another and unexpected\nobstacle in the heat, which became so in-\ntense
1bb71da786ac4f342f4933d11c7ab427 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.2609289301254 29.949932 -90.070116 voters aresgistsed etoour days. There is\nno reason why we should not regker at last\n5000 in five days. There are still 10,000 non-\nregistered white voters in the city. It is to\nbe hoped that they will come forward now 4\nand avail themselves of this last opportunity\nto aid inthe det o the vagrant and mendi-\nant carpet-baggers who are trying to deasoil\nthem of their liberty and their rights. We\nmust, at least, save the city government from\nthe "trooly oil" plunderers. We have the\npower. We are at least two to one, even if\nevery negro voter should be deluded by the\nvagrant carpet-baggers into voting for those\nwho are their worst enemies. We should\navail ourselves of our numbers, and insist on\nour right, at least, to govern ourselves as to\nour local affairs. Those who are unwilling to\nsee the city Bakerized make haste to\nregister, and be sure to vote at the election.\nThere are no oetacles in the way now. The\nregistration is conducted by officers instructed\nto obey the law and warned against violating\nit. Every qualified voter can register.\nThe reign of adleal swindlers is over for\nthe present. The radical committees no\nlonger have the power to disfranchise white\npeople, and to augment their own vote by a\nprocess of continued reduplication. Sheridan\nit king no more. As far as the infamous\nlegislation of Congress leaves us any rights\nwe are able to exercise them. If we do not\nearry the election in this perish and put to\nlight the hugry beade of vulture. about to\ni omesam the eOrsm of a daemt eity aMd\nState, we shall have only ournelves to blame.\nRegister register! ! register! !! that is the\nword for the times.
08bc08db88aca61b1e956cbd0502a2e1 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1894.6479451737696 46.187885 -123.831256 New York, August 24. Bradstreet's\nwill tomorrow say:\nThe sirlous Industrial disturbances\nIn New England, the drought In the\ncentral and western states, curtailing\nnearly all the staple crops, and a dl\nposition In all lines to continue to buy\nfor near by wants only, fail to greatly\ninfluence the general trade throughout\nthe country, the trend of which Is tow\nard Improvement. Northwestern states\neast of the Missouri and the A'tlnntlo\nand western states respectively, show\ning gains In the volume of traffic and\nthe spread of that better feeling and\nconfidence In the largest volumo of\nbusiness in the fall, upon which the\nImprovement depends.\nruiiiinem among the evidences of\nthe expansion In the general trade Is\nthis week's bank clearings, 020,000,000,\na gain over last week about four per\nten.c . ii is aiso wortn nonng. 3 a glgn\nof tho business movement, thut. every\noays clearing total Tor the week Is\nlarger than a week ago, except one.\nine greatest increase In volume of bus-\niness this week is at St. Louis, Minne-\napolis and San Francisco. At the larger\neastern cities there Is evidence of In\ncreased confidence that autumn will\nbring largely augmented 3 ;man J In eta\npies, but Baltimore is the nly city In\nuie group announcing a decided Inr\nprovemenU The sales of wool at Ilos.\nton have fallen off Bharply, and wool\nImporters and dealers who have a great\ndeal of raw product in store in bond\nfind transactions checked because of\ndoubt whether it will be admitted free\nor
1e300de568b4c855056e562103838b3c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.3547944888383 42.217817 -85.891125 MOKTGAilE SALE.\nDefau;t having beeu made in tbo conditions\nof a certain mortgage, whereby tbo power there-\nin contained to sell bis become operative, exe-\ncuted by WUiiam II Clay aud Mary J Clay, ma\nwife, of Lawrence, Van buren county, Michi-\ngan, to F C Bartholomew, of the state or Con-\nnecticut, bearing date the seventh day of Feb-\nruary, A D ciguteeu hundred and seventy sis,\naud recorded m tbe oliico of tbo Register of\nDeeds for tbe countv of Van Buren, in said\nstate of Michigan on the tenth day of February\nA D 1376, in liber 15 or mortgages on pago 40,\nupon which mortgage there is claimed to Le\nuue at tbe date of tuis uotico the sum of two\nhundred and forty eight dollars and thirty one\ncents, and no suit or proceedings at law having\nbeen instituted to recover auy part tberco:.\nNotice is therefore hereby given that on Satur-\nday the eighteenth day of il ay next, at eleven\no'clock in the lerenoou, I shall sell at public\nauction to tbe higbe&t bidder, sale to tako place\nat tbo front door cf tbe Van Burcn county Cir-\ncuit Court House, in the village of Paw Paw.\ntbe premises described in said mortgage or so\nmuch thereof as shall be neceseaiy to satisfy\ntbe amount due on such mortgage with ton per\ncent interest and legal costs, together with an\nattorney fee of titty dollars, covenanted for\ntherein, tbat is say, the following pieco or\nparcel of land situated in Van Buren county in\nthe state of Michigan, viz : Commencing at the\nnoitb east corner of the burying ground on\nsection mno9J township three 3 south of\nrange fifteen 1 15 J west, running thence east\nalong the top of the bluff bank about nine UJ\nrods to a point where said bluff bank turns\nfrom an easterly to a south easterly course,\nfrom thence iu a northerly course down taid\nbank to a butternut tree standing in the bank\nof bayo. thence northerly along said bank to\ntho south bank of tbe Paw Paw river, thence\nulong the south margin of said river to the low-\ner bayo, so Called, thence along said bayo to\nwhere tbe same would intersect with the west\nfine of tho burying ground lot, thence south to\nthe top of the bluff bank, thence along tbe said\nbank to tbe place of beginning. Ard also, all\ntbe following piece or parcel of land lying in\ntne county of Van Burcn aud state of Michi-\ngan, commencing twenty five 25J feet north\nfrom the eouth east corner of lot number five\nr5J of block number ono fl I n Phelps' addi-\ntion to the village of Lawrence, running thonce\nwest ten 10J rods thonconorth thirty two 32J\nfeet, thence east ten f 10 J rods, tnencs Bouth\nthirty two 32 feet to the place of beginning.\nDated Paw Paw. Mich., Feb. 20, 1878.
5360eaba13acc4fda9c3ddb2bb26e113 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.264383529934 39.261561 -121.016059 Th# owner of a tract of land on which there\nis a lofty mountain, ought not beheld liable for\nthe injury done by a volcanic eruption of con-\nsuming lava produced by sulphurous compounds\nof natures depositing. In general terms, the\nowner of property ought not to be held respon-\nsible for the toss resulting entirely from a dan-\nger created by nature and concealed by nature un-\ntil the act of naturo at the same instant occa-\nsions the loss and discloses the cause. Where\nthe nuisance or dangerous thing is of natural\nand not artificial production, cither knowledge\nof, or a dear opportunity of knowing, the dan-\ngerous condition or noxious tendencies of the\nthing must be clenrly carried home to a defend-\nant. before responsibility can attach. There\nmust be a lack of prudence and care, and there\ncannot bo neglect of duty without a knowledge\nof the circumstances imposing the duty. The\ndecayed, mouldering condition of the tree was\nthe ciroumstauce making the property danger-\nous, and giving the tree the character of a nni-\nsance. A knowledge of this condition, or an\nopportunity of knowing it, would have thrown\nupon the defendant in the case at bar, the duty\nof removing tho tree. From the Tacts of this\ncase it appears, that defendant did net know\nand before the fall, could not by the usual means\nhave known, the unsoundness of the tree. The\ndeeay had been gradual, natural and wholly\nconcealed beneath a green, healthy and vigor-\nous exterior. Inspection in this case only serv-\n to misdireot the mind from the truth, and\nseems to have as completely deceived the plain-\ntiff, who sought to dwell beneath its cooling\nshades, as it did defendant. That plaintiff, aT-\nter residing for more than one year immediately\nunder its boughs without danger or injury,\nshould have conceived some apprehension, and\nimparted to defendant his fears of injury, I do\nnot conceive sufficient to more than put defend-\nant upon inquiry. The communication appears\nto have had that effeot, but the outward appear-\nances of the tree were such as to allay all ap-\nprehension of a fall, in the mind of a reasonable\nand prudent man. Upon this ground alone, de-\nfendant wonld be entitled to judgment\nBut another fact of this case is to be consid-\nered. Tho plaintiff had the actual nse of the\nland on which the tree grew—virtual permission\nand an undeniable legal right to cut the tree\ndown, and in addition to this, the safe removal\nwas guaranteed by another to plaintiff, on the\npayment of $10, but on considerations of econ-\nomy merely, plaintiff delayed the cutting, until\nthe accident and loss followed. It is a well »\ntablished legal doctrine, that where a plaintiff\nsues to recover damages for negligence alleged\nagainst another, the plaintiff must be free from\nnegligence himself, and some authorities go to\nthe extent that the plaintiff must be wholly\nwithout fault. Rathburn vs. Payne, 19. Wend\n?,r3S9^# Mkwe11 T ' Wilgon - 5 - Carr A Payne'\n375—Williams vs. Holland, 6. Carr & Payne 23
0f936e5ba95721d17be8758f67f825fd THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1877.7767122970574 39.743941 -84.63662 A FEW WORDS OF WISDOM\n"FOB ALL who are seek in? new lionifs In the\nWest. Jf you are iroing to change yonr location,\nby all means yon ibonld keep on about the "same\niatittde" as where yon formerly lived, for In\nthis way you will escape the severe climatic\nchange In the weather Incident to the extreme\nNorth or .South, hating none of these thlngcto\ncontend with, yourself and family are healtny and\nyou become a producer at ouce, consequently soon\nindependent; on the other hit ml should you listen\nto the many glowing accounts of the sunny South,\nor the MILD climate of the North, and thus be in\nduced to try your fortunes there, yon will And the\nreality is not ail your fancy painted it. If you go\nSouth it usually takes alHr.it two years to pet ac-\nclimated to the climate, during which time, not\nbeing to work, yourself and family ae eon\nsomen, besides being constantly exposed to the\nmalarial fevers which abound there, and the ex\nperience of many Is that they retnrn discouraged\nleaving not a few loved ones beneath the sod in\nthe snnny South. Therefore, In going West keep\non about the same latitude which will Insure\nHEALTH AND HAPPINESS. There are most\nexcellent lands In Northern Missouri ou the line\nof the Hannibal fc St. Jo. It. It., and in Kansas,\nNebraska and Colorado, JUST AS CHEAP AND\nGOOD AS THE SUN EVER SHONE UPON.\nwhy not accept a certainty rather than run the\nrisk of losing all? Through day and sleeping cars\nare run from Toledo, Ohio, via the Watuwh liq\nuid Qulncy to St. Jo. , Atclilsou and Kansas City,\nand from Chicago vJa Chicago, Burt in? ton and\nUuincy B. B, whereby all are furnished first-cla-\naccommodations.
13a6624d24479ecc0496a206b3b9338e THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1909.1547944888382 43.994599 -72.127742 regent. After the ushers, who were\nin Colonial costumes, had presented\nthe guests, the regent welcomed au\nin a charming manner, with a few\npatriotic and most appropriate\nwords and a verv eniovable program\nman nnenprl with the singing OI\nAmerica by all, and the invocation,\nby the Rev. Mr. Shank. Solos were\nsung by Mrs. Herbert Johnson of\nBradford with violin obligates by\nMiss Lucia Darling, and by Mrs.\nHarry Hibbard and Mrs. Richaid\nDarling, and readings by Miss Alice\nBeckwith and Dr. Russell. Every\nnumber was excellent and was re-\nceived with the heartiest applause.\nAnother verse of America was\nsung, after which a delicious colla-\ntion was served. Then a real social\nhour followed. Many of the guests\nwore colonial or historic costumes\nwhich added greatly to the interest\nand charm of the event. Elmore's\norchestra was in attendance and the\nVirginia reel started the \nwhich was enjoyed until midnight.\nAmong the out of town guests\nwere Mr. and Mrs. Chas. H. Dom-\ning of Montpelier, Mr. and Airs. Da-\nvid Conant, Mr. and Mrs. A. E .\nHale, Mrs. Edward Clark. Mr, and\nMrs. Belcher, Mr. and Mrs. Hooker,\nMrs. Annie Spalding, Miss Edith\nChamberlin, Major Herbert John-\nson and wife, all of Bradford, Mrs.\nElla Burbeck of Manchester, N. II .,\nMrs. Cowles of Albany, Mr. and\nMrs. Jerome Hale, Miss Ad ine Hale,\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Cochran, Dr.\nRicker and wife, Miss Carrie Rick-e- r\nof Wells River, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nM. Libbey of South Ryegate, Mrs.\nLaura Chamberlin Johnson, wife of\nDr. Irving Johnson of Boston.\nMr John Weed attended the fun-\neral of his aunt, Mrs Sarah Buchan-\nan, last Monday. Mrs Buchanan\nwas the last of a family of eight\nchildren of Charles Weed of Tops-ha-
083c24d3fee7474f8ce89700fc6807f6 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1892.9521857607265 42.217817 -85.891125 dependent, for the most part, upon such\nmeasures as may be offered by the large\nnumber of gentlemen who constitute\nthe two bodies, all of whom have\nmore than less bills which they or their\nconstituents desires to press forward,\naud that added to all this, there is no\ncompetent agency employed to put these\nbills and measures into legal form, it is\ntruly wonderful that we attain to even\nthe success that the past has shown.\nJf tho time shall come when it is\nmade the duty of our Supreme Court\nas well as of our Circuit Judges, tho\nAttorney General, ami our state officials\nto direct the attention of the Governor,\nin proper reports made to him, to such\nlaws as may need amendment or enact\nmenl, to be presented by him to the\nlegislature when assembled, with such\nrecommendations as ho may think\nadvantageous, and when competent\npersons shall be employed put into\nproper and leal form sut h laws as the\nlegislature may deem it wise to pass,\nor when some satisfactory plan looking\nto this end shall be adopted, we shall\nhave no further occasion to belittle our\nselves and our legislature by dubbing\nthem by such uncomplimentary names;\nbut on the contrary shall find that even\nwith the talent which can be expected\nto olfer itself to the stato for tho price\npaid, we shall secure tho enactment of\nsubstantially all legislation that is best\nfor us in good and legal form.\nThe amount of money which has been\nlost and spent in consequence of tho\nloose, irregular and illegal manner in\nwhich our laws have been thrown to\ngether and which has necessitated their\noverthrow by our courts, would have\npaid for a great many years tho services\nof men learned and competeut to have\nframed and worded such laws in such
103920a325fba4f9a21fe237ad887f54 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.7739725710298 41.004121 -76.453816 sought to dive after It tho tree In-\nstantly disappeared.\nThe negro priests declared It grew\nnear the Island of Java, where Its\nleaves and branches rose above the\nwater, and formed the habitation of\na monstrous bird or griffin. This grlf-fi- u\nwas accustomed to sully forth\nnightly and tear to pieces with its\nboak such insignificant game as ele-\nphants, rhinoceroses, and tigers, and\ncarry off the flesh to its nest to feed\non at leisure. Moreover, ships were\nattracted by the waves which sur-\nrounded the tree and were unable to\nsail out of the fatal zone, so that the\nhapless sailors fell an easy prey to\nthe voracious bird. Needless to say\nthat the inhabitants of the Indian\nArchleplago In their travels about\nthe ocean were careful to give the\nspot the widest possible berth.\nNowadays the of the trunk\nthat Is, the heart of the leaves Is\neaten like that of the American cab-\nbage palm, and often preserved in\nvinegar; but It is less delicate and\nslightly bitter. The trunk Itself, af-\nter being split and cleared of its soft\nand fibrous internal parts, serves to\nmake water troughs as well as pali-\nsades for surrounding houses and\ngardens. The foliage Is employed to\nthatch the roofs of houses and sheds,\nand even for walls. With a hundred\nleaves a commodious dwelling may\nbe constructed, Including the parti-\ntions of the apartments, the doors\nand windows. The down attached to\nthe young leaves serves for filling\nmattresses and pillows. The ribs of\nthe loaves and fibers of the petiole\nare used for making gaskets and\nbrooms, while the young foliage\nfurnishes an excellentt material for\nhats.
6146bfe42cb12e5d9795d8ad1d621dbc THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6598360339506 39.290882 -76.610759 FELLOW-CITIZENS: At a nieetingof the friends\n?f HARRISON and TYLER, held at the pub-\nlic house of F. Dern, on the evening of the 6th\nuist. the undersigned were appointed a Commit-\ntee to make arrangements for the great HARRI-\nSON and TYLER CONVENTION, which is\nto be held in the CITY OF LANCASTER,\nOn Friday, the ISfA ofSeptember, next.\nIn accordance with the duty thus imposed on\nthem, the Committee would respectfully suggest\nto their friends in the different townships and\ndistricts, that the meetings which arc to be held\non the 22d instant, for the election of delegates\nto the County Convention, will present a very\nfavorable opportunity for making arrangements\nto have themselves represented in the Convention\nof the ISth of September.\nIt is recommended that a Committee be ap-\npointed at your meeting, whose duty it shall be\nto call upon all the legal voters of the district,\nwhose sentiments coincide with our own, and\nascertain, as near as possible, how many of them\nwillbe willingto attend as delegates; to urge\nupon all the importance of so doing; to procure\na neat BANNER, with the name of the district and\nan appropriate motto inscribed thereon; to select\na competent and energetic man officiate as\nMARSHAL to the delegation; and TO see that it\nis assembled at some convenient place on the\nmorning of the ISth, in order that it may reach\nthis city by 10 o'clock, oa earlier, if practicable.\nThe Committee deem it unnecessary to say\nmuch to you- upon the importance of having the\n"OLD GI ARD" well represented in the proposed\nConvention. The steady devotion to the cause\nof FREEDOM AND EUUALSTV which Lancaster\ncounty has at all times manifested?the firm and\nunbroken front which she has uniformly present-\ned to the assaults of the enemy?are the surest\nguarantees that she will not be backward illthe\npreparatory arrangements for the great struggle\nin behalf of Constitutional Liberty, which is to\ntake place in October next. Wc feel confident\ntliat the farmer vrillcheerfully leave his plough\n?the mechanic his workshop?the laborer his\ndaily task?in erder to aid in swelling the tor-\nrent of real Democracy, which willpour in upon\nour city on that day from the neighboring coun-\nties of the Commonwealth. The hear ,of tlie\npatriot willrejpice to be brought into close com-\nmunion with the thousands of honest freemen who\n.will then assemble to register their eternal hos-\ntility to the destructive and demoralizing doc-
0cfe4133af46deaff02db172518bcb8c MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1888.2390710066281 39.78373 -100.445882 call it a grass, but rather a weed.\nIt has many of the characteristics\nof a weed. It grows rank and\nquick, will do without irrigation,\nseeds down rapidly and is peren-\nnial. It will grow on the worst\nland you can find in this State. I\nhave seen it scattered on land that\nseemed to be nothing but grit. It\nwas worse Uian sandr land ; regular\ngrit, and seemingly useless, but es-\npercet would grow finely on it. I\nhave Been it planted on hard, red\nsoil that would resist a pick, and\nyet the espercet would grow from\neighteen inches to two feet high on\nit without water. Still, a little ir-\nrigation is a great improvement.\n"With one irrigation in the Spring it\nwill grow to a man's chin, and so\nrank and thick that men want extra\nprice to mow it. I have seen seven\ntons to the acre in Germany,\nand a German acre is smaller than\nan American acre. For espercet\ntake any of the big sandy deserts,\nao called, of the State, and you can\ntorn them into big eBpercet fields.\nA few Summer showers will make\nthe plant s)W higQ and rank 14\nfattens stock raDidly and makes\ncowa give milk splendidly. A mil-\nlion tons of espercet could be raised\nin Nevada in places which are now\nconsidered worthless for anything.\nIt will not seed the first year, but\nafter that it is a heavy seeder. The\nseeds grow in pods and yield tre-\nmendously. I 6hall send to Ger-\nmany for largo quantities of the\nseed this Summer. The Fall is, I\nthink the best time to sow it. Scat-\nter it among the sagebrush in the\nFall without even harrowing, and it\nwill soon spread. Cattlemen ought\nto pay more attention , to this\nplant."
43f61dfd62a5475b840616e9efc3a2d3 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1873.1575342148656 40.827279 -83.281309 ing summary of a recent lecture at Cooper\nInstitute, by Professor C. A. Young, on\n'Uur .Present Knowledge ot the sun :"\nThe professor said : Not only is the\nsun the centre of our system, but it is\nmore than this it is the source of all en-\nergy in and upon the earth; of animals\nand vegetables, of wind and rain, and\neven of steam power, which, derived in-\ndirectly from coal the "bottled sun-\nshine" of Stephenson is in the last re-\nsource derived from the sun. Nervous\nand muscular power, the movements of\nour limbs, our voices, and even mental\naction itself has its source in the great\ncentral fire. It is true that each star sends\na little heat to the earth, and there is some\ndegree of it from one or two other origins,\nbut that little can scarcely be appreciat-\ned. Of late years science has been much\nengaged investigating the sun, and\nfirst of all it is necessary to cfbtain its\ndistance as postulates for finding its size.\nIt is not difficult to discover its relative\ndistance in the system by making use of\ntne tnird law oi iveppier, but so hard is\nit to obtain its distance from the earth in\nmiles that was not till the last century\nthat this was done. Antique methods\ncannot be relied on, and the one new in\nuse is that derived from watching the\ntransit of Yenus and getting its parallax.\nYet this is not without its difficulties,\nowing to the refraction of light In ob-\ntaining the exact position of Venus\nagainst the sun, the Germans use the\nhellometer, which gives very accurate\nresults. The French and Americans relv\nupon photography, and this is probably\nthe most accurate method. To observe\nthe transit which will take place next\nyear Russia will have twenty-fiv- e
070202a8f0d08681a51801a7108bdc3e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.0726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 those balances, while Genernl Grant'i\nccretaries in-18(18 made their. c»tlmat«\nitbuut any view of such balances in tlu\nreasury, those balances being substan\nilly expended. As to the Wnr Depart\nnt iIih itititimt/si for tin* vi'Jir pnilini\nme'aOth, 1809, were $50,000,000, nnd\nthat weh added the okl war drbupaid\nwould tiring il to $80,000,000. Tin\nin}' L'xpviuua for the year ending Jum\n)th, 1870. tlio Unit year of Oenera\nrant'*, were $44,000,00(1. The reductloi\ntin* ariny expenditures from the las\nair of Johnson's to tho first yt'jtr o\ncui'ral Oram's Administration was $12\n«8,02:J, and the otimatcd ruduction for\nle next year was $8,119,110, and in\nuxted tlie reduction would Mill go on.\ns to tile Post Office Department, his col\nague knew that nearly $13,000,000 o\nic estimated oxccss was a clerical error\nhe whole amount asked for the Pos\n(lice Department, instead of being $30,\n14,704 asappearcdin the bookofestimate\nan $37,432,031). Tills error was discov\n111 at ttyti Department on the 7th of Do\nmiliar, nnd hw colleague had lieen noti\nfd of |L- Referring In this connection\ne proposed the abolition of tho franking\nrivilege. He expressed his desired to se<\nabolished, because II was ah imped!\nlent and a nuisance; but he wished u\n«italmlishcd fur everybody, everywhere\nnd aliovc all be wanted to see everj\newspancr pay its postage for their use ol\nle franking privilege.\nAs to the Navy Department, and Ills\naileague's sneer at attempted economy In\nMil, ho could show that Instead of coal\nir the navy costing $150,000 a year, the\nitinmte for coal for two years, IHrts and\njkJU, amounted to $1,880,000.\nAs to tho .Treasury Department, he
0582ec0ba42c2d28a8ac885d70e543b5 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.5712328450024 39.261561 -121.016059 ra ddle clus< orjhe pi ople, and to do uway at\nonce with our aristocracy oil the one hand or a\nrabble on the other. The publ c lands had\nbeen lavished on States and corporations. He\nthought it was now high time to place them\nwithin the rench of all tuc people. At the pres-\nent rate of dispensing them it would require\nmore than six hundred years to till up and oc-\ncupy our public domain. If it be said that this\nmeasure, by offering a boon to emigration,\nwould tend to depopulate the Southern States,\nit was only on the supposition that the laborer\ncould better his condition by a change of loca-\ntion; and who would object to a policy which\npromised this beneficial result to toe individual\nman ! Wherever found, the laborer would still\nbe a loyal eitixen of the same Republic.\nMr. Johnson then proceeded to criticise cer-\ntaiu portions of the speech delivered by Mr.\nClay of Alabama, on the Kansas question, in\nwhich that Senator had treated or properly and\nits protection as the main object of Govern-\nment, and had regretted the growing tendency\ntowards an undue development of the demo-\ncratic element in the institutions of the United\nStates. If property was a main object of Gov-\nernment, Mr. Johnson held that it would be in\naccordance with that Senators view to offer to\nevery head of a family, who would upon\nit. a portion of the public laud.\nAfter speaking in defence of Democracy as\nthe highest form of society and government,\nMr. J . proceeded to review certain statements\nmade by Mr. Hammond, of South Carolina, du-\nring the Kansas debate. He dissented from so\nmuch of that Senators language as scented to\nimply that uien who labored with their hands\nand for a stipulated price were therefore slaves.\nSocrates and Archimedes and Haul each wrought\nwith their hands. Were they to he called\n■•slaves!” Such statements and such doctrines\nwere not only false in themselves, but were cal-\nculated to do infinite mipehief in the South,\nwhere the number of slaveholders was small In\ncomparison witli the free white and non-slave-\nbolding population. Though it was true that\nI he number of slaveholder* did not represent\nall who were directly interested in the main-\ntenance of slavery, it was also true that sttsh\ninvidious comments on manual labor tended to\nengender opposition to slavery itself. If ex-\ntreme men in the North and extreme men in the\nSouth would alike discontinue the use of irri-\ntating and insulting language, he thought the\npeace and hurmony of the country would soon\nbe restored, while the people would be left free\nto see that the interest of the whole community\nwas promoted by slave labor. He did not\ndoubt that the North would in the end perceive\nthis great truth.
24daf0e2cd11902d6c086e5aa5488d8a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1860.146174831765 37.561813 -75.84108 It ia a fact that, at eorao period, cT.ry mem-\nber of the human family is subject to disease\nor disturbance of the bodily function!; but,\nwith the aid of a good tonic and the exercise\nof plain common sense, they may be able so to\nrcgulute the system as to secure permanent\nhealth. In order to accomplish tliia desired\nobject, tho true course to pursue is certainly\nthat Trhich v. 'i l l produce a natural etato of\nthings at the lc:i;,t hazard of vital strength nnd\nlite. For this purpose, Dr. llostcttcr has in-\ntroduce! to this country a preparation bearing\nhis name, which is not a new medicine, but one\nthat has been tried for years, giving satisfac-\ntion to all who have used it. The Kitten\noperate powerfully upon tho stomach, bowels,\nand liver, restoring them to a healthy and\nvigorous action, ami thus, by tho simple pro-\ncess of strengthening nature, enablo tho sys-\ntem to triumph over disease.\nFor the cure of Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Nau-\nsea, Flatulency, Loss of Appetite, or nny Bilious\nComplaints, arising from a morbid inaction\nof tho Stomach or Kowels, praducing Cramps,\nDysentery, Colic, Cholera Muibus, c, these\nKilters no equal.\nDiarrhoea, dysentery or flux, so generally con-\ntracted by new seniors, nnd caused principally\nby the change of water and diet, will be speedily\nregulated by a brief use of this preparation.\nDyspepsia, a disease which is probably more\nprevalent, in all iis various forms, than any\nother, and the causo of which niny always\nbe attributed to derangements of the digestive\norgans, can be cured without fail by using\nIlOSTIiTTEirS STOMACH KIT'llCR.S, as pet\ndirections on tho bottle. Fortius disease every\nphysician will recommend Bitters of some kind;\nthen why not use an articlo knnwiuto bu infal-\nlible ? AU nat ions have their Kilters, as a pre-\nventive of disease and streugthener of the sys-\ntem in general; and among thctn all there Is\njot to bo found a more healthy people than\ntho Germans, from whom this preparation ema-\nnated, based upon scientific experiments which\nhave tended to prove the value of this great\npreparation iu the scalft of medical science.\nFt:vi:a asu Aour. This trying and provok-\ning disease, which fixes its relentless grasp on\nthe body of man, reducing him to a more sha-\ndow in a short time, and rendering him
0e896a898c1c6a7e40b8c45850d0cf6b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.5259562525298 39.745947 -75.546589 Newark Center ami intermediate stations,\n740am,1254,638nin.\nHaltiiuore ami intermediate stations, 10 15\nam, 12(4t,347,445,61«pin, 1203night.\nBaltimore and Bay Line, 5 23p in.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 45,8 01,911,\n1015, 11(Hi am, 12tXk «I 15,3Ô8,435,623,1-0CO,\n018, 7 40,8 20 pin, 13 4P night.\nTrains for Delaware Division leave for:\nNewCastle,815,1123ani,250,350.44«», C 15,\n053,96«pni,1306night.\nLewes,815am,43»pm.\nFor Helmboth, H.15 a m.\nHarrington. Delimit* and way ntat ions, 8 15\na m. Harrington and way stations, 3 60 p in.\nExpress for Dover, Harrington and Delmar,\n1113ani,437nm, 1301 night.\nExpress for Wyoming mid Smyrna, C 53 p in.\nExpress for Capo Charles, Old Point Com­\nfort and Norfolk, 11 18 a m. 13 01 night.\nIsave Philadelphia, Broad street for Wil­\nmington, express, 3 50,7 20, 7 »*, *wtt, u iu. m»u,\n1033, II IHaj«, «13ÎI6. 130i02,301,34d,353,4Ol,\n441,5(18,1517,630,55U,Ü17,057,740,UItt,11:«J\np tu. 12 03 night.\nAc(*ummodat ion, 6 35,7 4\\ If) 38,11 55 a m, 1 33,\n33H.310,4OP,44(i,033,s:js, 1«(«,|t)40,1138pm.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington for:\nPhiladelphia, express, 1 ftft, 2 ft.\\ 4 20, 8 5*», P 00,\n1151ain, 1:«»,805,6(4.510,5ft«,«0«,706,735,\nP12pm. Aeiommodation,700,805 aut,1310,\nI45.405,530.IU301»m.\nChester, express, 1 6f>, 4 20, 8 60,0 00,11 51 m,\n5 04, 5 5«, 7 06, 0 12 p in. Accommodation, 7 00,\n806ain,121",145,406,520,735,10HOpm.\nNew York, express, 165, 3 55,4 30,7 00, 8 50,\nII51ftm, 1310,l»>,805,.406,610,65«,\n+Ü21,706,1030pm.\nBoston, without cliangc, 5 56 p in.\n\\Ve»t Chester.via l^imokin, 8 05 a m, 5 30 p m.\nNeiv Castle, P 60 p in. 12 06 night.\n( 'ape Charles, Old Point Comfort and Nor­\nfolk, 12 01 nljït.\nMiddletown, Clayton, Dover, Wyoming, Fel­\nton, Harrington, Bridgevllld, Seuford, Laurel\nmid Deimar, 12 01 night.\nBaltimore and Washington. 4 46, 8 01, 10 15\nam,1206.523, *>03,744»,830 pm,1249 night,\nlialtlmore only, 6 06 p m, 13 13 night\nLeave Philadelphia, lirxiaxi street, for Wil­\nmington.express,350,730, PlO. IlIHam,441,\nß08, « 37,740,835, II 16. 1180p m, 1303 night.\nAccommodation, 8 85, !0 38 a m, 13 35,\n838,1003and1138pm.\nFor further infonmv4 ion. passenger« are re­\nferred to the ticket office at the station.\n♦Congressional Limited Express trains, com­\nposed • utirely of Pullnum Vestibule\nand Dining Cars.\nBIJ mi ted Express train«, composed of Pull-\n111:111 V» -» Ihulc t *;,? D,r Cars, Yestibule Iusseii-\nfer Coaches and Dining Cars.\nHAS. E. PUUH,
1d1eea4bd184d92aab05b33c2e693692 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.8456283836774 40.063962 -80.720915 >Y VIRTUE OF A DEED OP TRTJ\n> dated the fourteenth dayof Jane, 1\necnted by Robert Ibbltson and -wife\n?self as Trustee, and of record in theClei\nice of Ohio county, volume 52, page <5\nII sell at the Court nouee In tbe clt:\nbeeline, on Saturday; tbe fifth day or\nnber.lSa, tbe lollowing deecrlbed proj\nmentioned In said Deed of Trust to wit\nA piece or parcel of ground situated on\nnkof Wheeling Creek, in, tbe city\nheeling, bo andea as follows, beginning\naoint one hundred and ninety teet eas\ne east line of £off street, on tbe line 4\neet called Crescent street, l*id oat fi\n»IT street, eastward ly to tbe Cntscenti\nill.ontbtt bank of Wheeling creek, >\nvkceat street being a continuation\nebuer btreet, though running nearer\nreet and at a different from Web\nreet thence northwardly along tbe\nle Of an alley twenty feet wide to W fa\ng creek, tbeuce eastward ly up said a\ncty feet, thence southwardly oy a\nLrailel with said alley to. said .Crest\nfeet, thence wesiwordiy along the ni\nie of crescent street sixty feet to the p\nttares mna improvements thereon or\nirtatnlng thereto. being. the same prop*\nnveyed by <iiii A HirdlMIl lO lbUlUO\nmmer aud by the latter to Robert in\ni erms of Bile, one fourtn cash, and the\nalnderln tqoai payments of idx, tin\nid eighteen months, with Interest/!\nty.oi sale.secnred by Dee^ of Xrost on\nitbe%e to the above property Is bell*\nbe good. Helling as Trustee I will <\nmveysnch title as Is vested in me by\nooW-'urieSr1' g-H. FITZHPOH.Trni\nQDEES Of THE SOUTH
386f4b07b8df3731da6085e61830cf15 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.6534246258245 42.217817 -85.891125 w ringing his hands and talking of his wife\nand children, the reooUeotion of whom\nin that awful hour terribly affected me.\nHis wife he said was young and inex-- l\nperienced, and hie children were but in- -\nmnts. What Would become of them\nwere he to be cut off, and they even igno-\nrant of hie fate 1 Iforgan was told thai\nlus remonstrances were idle; that he\nmust die, and that, too, before the morn-- '\ning light. He continued t plead most\npiteously tor his lite on benail 01 his\nfamily, My oonuadea had in the mean-\ntime returned, saving they had procured\na lxiat. On consultation weoonoudod to\ngive him half an hour to prepare for is\ninevitable fate. For thii we n tired from\nthe magaaixM and left him. How Moi\ngun passed the time I cannot tell, but\nall was quiet as the tomb within. At the\nexpiration of the time we entered the\nmagaaine, laid hold of Morgan, bound\nbis nandi behind him, placed s gag in\nhis mouth, and led him forth. A short\nlime brought us to the boat, and we en-\ntered it, Morgan being placed in the\nIxav with myself alongside of him. My\ncomrades took t he oars, and the boat w as\nrapidly forced out into the river. The\nnight was pitch dark W0 could scarcely\nsee a rod before us and therefore was\nthe time admirably adapted to our hell-\n purpose, llavmg reached proper die\nt mo from the shore, ouroeraraen ooaeed\ntlc ir labors. The weighte were secured\ntogether by s strong oord, and another\nCord of equal strength, and of several\nyards in length, proceeded from that.\nThis cord I took in my own hand and\nfastened it around the body oi Morgan,\njust above his hips, using all my said to\nmake it fasti so that it would be sura lo\nhold. Then in a whisper bade tin' un-\nhappy man to stand up, and after a mo-\nments hesitation ha complied with my\norder. He stood close to the head of\ntlve lxiat, and there was just length\nenough of rape from his person to the\nweignta to prevent any strain while ho\nwas standing. I then requested one of\nmy associates to assist in lifting the\nweights from the bottom to the side of\nthe float, while tho other steadied In r\nfrom the stern. This was done, and, as\nMorgan was standing with his back to-\nward mo, I approached him and gave\nhim a strong push with both my hands,\nwhich were placed on the middle of Iuh\nluick. He fell forward, carrying the\nweights with him and the waters dosed\nover the moss. We remaine.i quid ior\ntwo or three miuutes, when my compau\nions, without raying a word, resumed\ntheir places, and rowed the boat to the\nplace from which they had taken it."
0c2c00ef86f1d4f2448a40ea51820f85 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.409589009386 46.187885 -123.831256 As a part of the census of the people\nto bo taken during the month of June\nBpecial provision has been made by\ncongress for ascertaining the names\nof surviving soldiers, sailors, and\nmarines who were mustered into the\nservice of the United States during\nthe war of the rebellion, aud of the\nwidows of soldiers, sailors, and marines\nwho havo died. In connection with\nthis special census of veterans the\norganization or vessel in which they\nserved, tho term of service in each\ncase, and present residence will bo\ntaken by the census enumerators. In\nthe case of widows, information re-\ngarding the service of their deceased\nhusbands is also required.\nTho importance of accurate state-\nments concerning tho military record\nof each participant m tho late war\nshould not bo underestimated. It\nshould bo tho duty moreover of every\nveteran soldier or sailor to see that the\nenumerator placed in possession of\nthe necsssary information concerning\nhis own service. If he cannot bo at\nhome when the enumerator calls he\nshould leave a proper memorandum\nin tha hands of his wife or other mem\nber of his household, so that the work\nof tho census may not be delayed, and\nalso that there may be no doubt as to\nthe accuracy of tho statement concern\ning his service which may be given to\nthe census enumerator. That there\nmay be no question as to the points to\nbe covered by this memorandum,\nit may be well to state that\nthe special inquiries to bo mado\nconcerning veterans of the civil war\ninclude the name, the company, and\nthe regiment or vessel in which they\nserved, their late rank, the dates of\nenlistment and discharge, the length\nof service in years, months, and days,\nand their present post - of fi -ce
04dcc5d13d31cfc877841170437a6faa NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.7773223727484 41.681744 -72.788147 In reply the Government of the\nUnited States must express its sur-\nprise that there appears to be an en-\ndeavor of the allied powers to de-\ntermine the rule of action governing\nwhat they regard as a "novel situa-\ntion"' in respect to the use of sub-\nmarines in time of war, and to en-\nforce a compliance of that rule, at\nleast in part, by warning neutral\npowers of the great danger to their\nsubmarines in waters that may be\nvisited by belligerent submarines. In\nthe opinion of the Government of the\nUnited States, the allied powers have\nnot set forth any circumstance, nor\nis the Government of the United\nStates at present aware of any cir-\ncumstances concerning the use of\nwar or merchant submarines which\nwould render the existing rules of\ninternational law inapplicable to\nthem. In view of this and of the\nrotice and warning of the allied\npowers announced in their memoran-\nda under acknowledgmet, it is incum-be- t\nupon the Government of the\nUnited States to notify the Govern-\nments of France, Great Britain, Rus-\nsia, and Japan that, so far as the\ntreatment of either war or merchant\nsubmarines in American waters is\nconcerned, the Government of the\nUnited States reserves its liberty of\naction in all respects and will treat\nsuch vessels as, in its opinion, be-\ncomes the action of a power which\nmay be said to have taken the first\nsteps toward establishing the prin-\nciples of neutrality, and which for\nover a century has maintained those\nprinciples In the traditional spirit and\nwith the high sense of impartiality in\nwhich they were conceived.\nIn order, however, that there should\nbe no misunderstanding as to the at
12a8b7c24770690bd7ad2ab86da2ae12 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.064383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 t? Some one has solved the difficulty, ai\nyou can see by looking in tho show win\ndows of some of our dry goods stores\nCalico is printed in imitation of the mucl\nprized quilts, and even Mrs. Cady Stantor\ncan sleep under one, without thinking o\nthe lives wasted in miking them.\ni ne gas pipe mat me company startc<\nto luy up the Gravel Hill cut in laid t<\njust beyond Indian run, where the ex\ntreinecold weather caught it The goi\nposts up that far nro not in use, however\nand the cut is not lighted at all. It. C. F\nWkddiko Joys..The nuptials of Mr\nJohn Koch and Mist* Mary Weimor\nduughtcrof Mr. Frederick Weiiner, of Ful\nton, were solemnized at ti o'clock last eve\nning, at the residence of the bride's pa\nrents, by Rev. Werder. The attendant!\nwere Mr. harles Welmer and Miss Lou\nisa Weiraer, Mr. Henry Seibert and Misi\nKatie Brockhardt, Mr. Henry Bayhaanc\nMiss Zoecklcr. The commodioui\nresidence of Mr. Weimor was thronged\nwith tho friends of the happy couple, up\nwards of two hundred guests being in at\ntendance. T . T. Cockayne's excellent or\ncheptra furnished the music. There were\nnumerous handsome and costly present!\nfor tho bride. The reception accorded the\nhappy pair was ono of tho most brilliant\nknown to Fulton society. May they "live\nlone und been happy.'\nMr. W . G . Wilkinson, the well known\nclerk at tho Exchange Bank, recently\nmysteriously dinannnnrfHl frnm hia -tiRnnl\nhaunts for a fow (fays, and when he again\nput in an nppearance, Mrs. Wilkinson ac\ncompanicd hiin. Miss Anhio C. Wakerly\nformerly of Wheeling, Is the bride. Th<\nknot was tied at Wboater/ Maas, on Tiies\nday, the 21»t inst. The numerous friendt\nof the happy pair unite in wishing them\na happy and prosperous pilgrimage\nthrough life.\nThe weather has been moat favorable\nfor trade, and our wholesale men are
1281127dc2c447a4efa7aeedfad9ae70 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.0863013381531 44.939157 -123.033121 fife: and tho cajo was oponed as5\nsoon as tho tlmo lock went off and\nthte gard worked tho combination of\ntho Iron doors befront tho. cajo,\nAnd thoro was tho Kernel weaplng\nUko a little chid, nnd ho sod to mo\nsod ho, Old Man, this Is awful, aw\nful, for tho poepul as ono man want\nmo to run for gowornor, and I dont\nwa,nt to, I must stlfol my ambition\nand continue as tho grate eddltor of\nthe stato, and as master of my\ngranjo. Dut I sed Kernel I newer\nherd of this grato demand. No, he\nsed you diddent, but I know It is in\ntho harts of tho poopul, all of tho\npeepul, for I am a mind reeder, a\nthcosoflst, a toloppfast nnd a maste\nof a granjo of granjers, and thore\nfour monny things hidden from you\nis piano to me, and I know tho pee\npulas1manwantmotorunfor\ngovornor Honco theso walls,\nhonco these hero teors. Jest then a\nfollor cum running In with sever or\n8 gards trying to hold him, a gran- -\nJor looking feller, and ho cryed out\nat tho top of his voico that he was\na member of tho granjo up on the\nhodwattors of tho Pudding rlvor and\nthat they had tooken a straw vote\nfor govenor tho nlto bofour and\nthat ho, tho aforesed Kernel, had\ngot 1 vote My God, sed tho Kernel\nI have prayed that tills cup might\n1)0 passed up, that this howl might\nbe shattored In my hands, that 1\nmight not havo to make this torri- -\nbcl, this awful sacrifice, but it is no\nUfile, tho will of tho peepul must be\nobeyed, henco I discharge you gards\nand I will, with teors and weapi.ng,\nin sack cloth and ashes, announce\nthat I am in tho hands of my friends J\nnnd tho granjes.
112bc3d488e2065b1e454f481e3b3aef THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.8041095573312 40.063962 -80.720915 The quiet aud orderly seesion last nigl\nIbe Council Committee engaged in it\njstigating tlie chaises* of Porter Suiit\njainst Mayor Grubb wad in striking coi\nast to the shameful spectacle witnesae\niring the progresti of the proceedinj\nle night before. A larger crowd wi\nresent than ever before, people bsing a\nacted by the reports of the sensation\njiaodia of the previous evening, and tl\n>ors being thrown wide open to all con\na. There were fully a thousand peop\nthe hall aud galleries. The session hi\n3t efpjcially notable except for the fat\ni«t tne prosecution concluded its ev\nL'nce and the diffuse begun.\nThree of the witnesses whom the pros\nltion hud fmjueutly expressed their d\nru to produce appeared last evenin\naving been induced to do so by the fa\ntat 1'orter Smith in his testimony \neld them up iu a lulse light before tl\nublic. Their testimony was so favorab\n»the defeuse that the listener could n\nelp feeling ain»zed that tne prosecutic\nud summoned them. Their evident\nus not merely creditable, it was high\n)uipliiuentury to the Mayor.\nThough not expecting to have an o\nortunity to open the defense last nigt\nlayor lirubb a counsel did so, putui\n>ur witnesses on the stand, aud provii\nmphatically that all the stories of tl\nrosecution to tho effect that there w\njundalion for the charge of druukenne\nt the ifiengerfest. were lalse. When C<\ntruett said that im thought at least sol\nf the charges had been proven, be e\nressed a belief wnicli is probably n\nhared by any sane mau who has hea\nlie testimony outside of the Colone\niient ana his co-couuaei.
40b96955dbabdb0ba6b71fe9144cc3d9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.0972602422628 58.275556 -134.3925 On board the Yukon . Katmai baa\nbeen seen at last. Ever since the ter¬\nrific eruption the peak and the moun¬\ntain range for a hundred miles have\nbeen enveloped in au impenetrable\nbank of fog or cloud. But when the\neteamerj Yukon sailed down Shelikotf\nstrait duriug the beautifully clear day\nof Jauuary &, tbe entire range showed\nup white as the driven snow, outlined\nagainst a sky of deepest blue, while\ngreat clouds of amoke rolled slowly up\ninto the sky and trailed off to leeward.\nThe sight was most l>eautiful and in-\nteresting, and we stood out in the\nbiting wind for hoars and watched it.\nEvery camera on the ship, and there\nwere several, was trained on the scene\nfrom time to time, but, as we were\nsome fifty miles off, the pictures will\nnot give much of au idea of the gran¬\ndeur of the sight.\nDuring the afternoon the wind swung\ninto the northwest and a thin yellow\nhaze began to come our way. When\nit reached us everyone said, "Whew."\nThe air was laden with a strong smell\nol solphoric gases that were almost\nnauseating. At the cannery at UyakT\nKodiak island, the -watchman told us\nthat the bad smell had begun that day,\nbut when, on the 13th, we again \nat the same cannery, he told us that\nthe smell had appeared almost every\nday during the time we were gone. It\nwas again quite noticeable to us, but\nnot so strong as on the 6th.\nCaptain Jensen, of the steamer Yu\nbon, after takiug careful bearings on\nthe peaks, pronounced them Katmai\nbeyoud all dispute, thus corroborating\nthe statement oJ Captain McMullen of\ntbe Dora. It was established that there\nare three peaks, quite close together,\nall active, as claimed by Charles Roud-\nryT the trader at Cold bay, on the main¬\nland near Katmai. The two peaks that\nhave been active with Katmai seem to\nbe located to the southward and west\nward of Katmai, and with it they form\nalmost an isosceles triangle.\nThe present activity of the volcauoa\nis in no way like the tremendous erup¬\ntion of last June, when the light of the\nsun was obscured over an area of h\nhundred thousand square miles. In\ntbe preseot activity the clouds of\nsmoke were dissipated before they had\nassumed a size as great as that of the\nmountain from which they issued. To\nus who were enveloped in the j<reat\nvolcanic cloud of June 6, the later\nsight, while not ho awe-inspiring, was\nfar more beautiful and comfortable\nthan the former.
ad8b7a582d06df9bdfed72646f8eefde VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.6808218860983 43.798358 -73.087921 tureS numberless names ot persons, plac- -\nes, things, etc.; there are also references\nto numberless habits, usages, customs, em-\nployments, incidents, and matters of his-\ntory, which were familiar to those for\nwhom the Scriptures were written, but\nare wholly unknown to many readers of\nthe present day. There are also numer-\nous passages, which, owing to defects in\nthe present English translation, are either\nobscure, or perverted, or unintelligible.\nAnd in addition to these, there are some\nplaces which owe their obscurities to the\nidioms and oiher pfulinriliea of the ori-\nginal writings. All these, for the benefit\nof the common reader, require explana-\ntions ; because the information requisite\nto understand them is not attainable from\nthe tex', nor probably from any other\nsource within his reach. explain\nthese otherwise unintelligible matters\nshould be the precise object of an annota- -\ntor. And just so far as he succeeds in\nthe accomplishment of this end, in that\nsame proportion his book will be useful to\nhis readers, t rom what we have seen ot\nthe work under consideration, it is our\nopinion, that the author has set out on the\nright principle, and has adhered to his\nnlan with becom inn constancy and success\nUnder these circumstances we believe the\nbook calculated to be extensively useful,\nand as such, we cordially recommend it to\nthe attention of all schools, Bible classes,\nfamilies, and individuals that desire to\nhave always at hand a brief and compe-\ntent solution to all unavoidable difficulties\nwhich may arise in studying the word of
0f93f03264aafcb3ff836a9813f294c6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.4041095573314 40.063962 -80.720915 The late disaster has brought to the U\nsurface hero, in New England, a res pec la- a\nble showing of that virtuo, which Paul n\nsays, is greater than either faith or hope, ti\nIt is wonderlul to see the amount that is rt\nbeing done for the alleviation of Buffering, b\nAid in money, clothing, and food Is com- si\nlng in every few hours from all parts ol b\nNew England. Within two hours after a\nthe water had aubslded the Mayer of New si\nHaven telegraphed the authorities at ti\nNorthampton to draw on him to the II\namount of (1,000, and if more money q\nshould be needed to let It be known, a\nResolutions were adopted by tho Oonncc- si\ntlout Legislature Tuesday, and Bent to tho I\nLegislature of Btato, tenderingcondo- o\nlence to tho peoplo who suilered by the n\nflood. Besides this a practlcil manllesta- !i\nlion ofwmpathv was made by the appro- fi\nprfatlon ol $10,000 Irom the Btato Tress- r\nary, made subject to tho draft of the Qov- p\nornor, for the reliol of tho needy. Up to ti\nWednesday $12,000 had been received p\nfrom New York, The Chairman of the o\nKellel Committco estimates that at least t\n$100,000 fill bo needed to mako tho r\nhomeless comlortable, and from present\nindications that aqiount will be contrlbu- t\nted beloro this letter reaches you. These i\nNew Eogland lolks do not stand much on\nceremony ija matters of this kind. II\nmoney Is needed, they roll op their sleeves\nand so right to work to get it
39a044f52b501431c7ffd185a3ace9cb CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1874.4671232559615 39.623709 -77.41082 day of January, 1873, the Complainant as\nacting Executor of the last will of John\nHarhaugh, of C., sold to Israel Williard\npart of a tract of land situate in Hanvers\nDistrict, in Frederick Ccunly, State of\nMaryland, called "Ludwiek's Content,”\ncontaining two hundred and font acres of\nland, more or less, for the sum of thirty-\nsix dollars and thirty cents, per acre, mak-\ning an aggregate of Seven thousand five\nhundred and four dollars and twenty cents,\nupon the following terms; one third cash,\nthe balance in two annual payments with\ninterest from the day of sale; that said sale\nwas reported to and finally ratified by the\nOrphans Court for Frederick County; that\nalter the ratification of sale Israel Williard\ntook possession of said properly, paid the\ncash payment, and the second payment\nwith the interest thereon, hut failed to pay\nt.ie last payment with the interest thereon;\nthat the last payment amounting' to tlio\nsum of two thousand four hundred and\nsixty eight dollars and forty cents with in-\nterest thereon Iroui the thirty first day of\nJanuary, Eighteen hundred and Seventy-\ntwo, fell due on the thirty first day of Jan-\nuary, Eighteen hundred and Seventy-four,\nrad is still due, owing, and unpaid, and is\na lien for unpaid purchase money on said\nland. The Bill further that Israel\nWilliard, lately died, that his widow La-\nvinia Williard has been appointed by the\nOrphans Court for Frederick County, Ad-\nministratrix of ids personal estate, and\nthat said lands descended to his nine cliil\ndren mentioned in said Bill subject to the\nvendors lieu of Complainant, that Samuel\nWilliard and Sahillu Williard his wife, Jo-\nsiah Williard and Sarah J. Williard, hia\nwife, George W. Williard and Malinda E.\nWilliard, his wife, and John F. Williard,\nparties mentioned in said Bill do not re-\nside in the Slate of Maryland, and are non\nresidents of the Slate of Maryland, as\nstated in said Bill of Compuimint.\nIt is thereupon the 33d day of April, in\nthe year Eighteen hundred and seventy-\nfour, ordered that the Complainant cause\na copy of this order to he inserted in some\nnewspaper, published in Frederick County,\nonce a week for four successive weeks\nprior to the first day of June, 1874, giving\nnotice to the said absent defendants of the\nobject and substance of this Bill, and warn\nthem to appear iu this Court in person or\nby solicitor on or before the tenth day of\nSeptember, in the year Eighteen hundred\nami Seventy-four to answer the premises,\nand show cause if any they have why a de-\ncree ought not to pass ns prayed.
4623596b16417204ba413f2209af74a0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.160273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 The creditors of daniel m\nStockton, deceased, will take notice tha\nIn puisuance of a decree or wild Court, enter\nedon the 16th day of Octol»er, 1865. thereoi\nIn said cause. I will r>rooee<l on tlie 4Tir iia-<\nof Makch, 1887, m my office In the city o\nWheeling, to take and state an acrount of thi\npersonal estate of the said Daniel >1. Stock\nton. deceased, which came into tbe hands o\nMary Bell Pollard Hate Mary Bell Stockton,\nI lis widow and late his Administratis, o\nwhich has come into the bands of any otlie\nperson or persons, for her use; or which ha\ncome into the hands of any subsequent Ad\ninlnlstmtor of said Daniel M. Stockton; that\nwill charge her with ail fliseetts which havi\ncome into her hands, or into the hands o\nany other person or persons for her use; tlia\nI will charge it* like manner toany subte\nquent Administrator of said estate; that\nwill credit her or any Administrator, sue\nceedlng her, (the said Administratis,* witl\nall proper payments and disbursement*\nher or any such Administrator, made in du*\ncourse administration,and I will allow he\nor any such administrator lor all proper cost\nand expenses; I will also state an account o\nthe location, quantity and value of the rea\nestate of the said 1 >ani«.-i M. Stockton, deceas\ned, whereof he died seized, and of tin\namount of the encumbrances thereon: ant\nthe order and priorities thereof. I will a's<\nascertain and report what may be due thi\nf-everal creditors or tin*said Stockton at th<\ntime of his death, either in his indlvidua\ncharacter, or as a partner of the Ilrms o\nStockton, Russell & Co., or of Win. II . Rus\nsell «fc Co. I will also ascertalu and repor\nwhat, if anything, is owing from the salt\nWm. H . Kuaiell to tbe estate of the said de\nceased on a proper settlement of the sale\nfirms of Wm. H . Rusell dfc Co. and Stockton\nRussell & Co., on said notice in the bill anc\nproceedings mentioned; and also what isdut\nafld owing from the said Wm. I>. McAfee tc\nthe same estate on account of the agreement\nand notice in said bill and proceedings mentioned,
2ff75a549b3db9c0ba825173676b6103 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.683561612126 39.745947 -75.546589 drawing the money from the Wllm'ngt«n\nSavings Fund, John L. B . Kerns to-day\nIs ' penniless. His underground cache\nproved a poor bunk for every cent of lb«\nlEIo I* missing from Its hiding place.\nKerns Is 64 years old end grief stricken,\nwith his future blighted by the myst a\nvanishing of his savings of years. He\nlives willh the Arthurs family at No 43«\nSouth Huald street, In South Wilmington.\nIt was not because he >had a distrust of\nhanks that Kerns withdrew his hoard oil\n11610 from the savings fund, «t he in­\ntended to provide a home for hU future\nyears with It.\nWas Going to Buy Farm.\nThe money had been drawn out of the\nsavings fund by Kerns to buy a farm for\nthe Arthurs and he was to make his home\nwith them during the remainder of his\ndays, A search being made of tihe title of\nthe farm at the Court House, delayed the\nconsumutton of the sale, and for safe\nkeeping Kerns hurled the money In ea\nearthen pot in the cellar of the Arthurs\nhome a fool deep In ehe ground. The cash\nwas all in bills of tliw denomination and\ncrisp, new money.\nWhen he went to look over his savings\nyesterday he startled to And every\ngreenlMek gone. Almost swooning, he\ngrasped the stairway for support, and\ncried out us If he had been wounded.\nStricken With Grief Over Loss,\nAll Inst night Kerne cried and every\nfoot-step he heard he Imagined tt Vas\nsomebody returning with his savings. The\nstory Is a sad one, Indeed, and the old\nman has lost all hopea In Hfe and Is won­\ndering whnt will become of him.\nKorns at one time was a restaurant\nkeeper In this city and he made his\nmoney In that business. For years he h«s\nmade his home with the Arthurs and\nwould have spent the remainder of h s\ndays wllh them. Ho was going to buy a\nfarm on which they could all live and In .\nthe end1 the farm would probably revert\nto the Arthurs. This dream Is gone uniras\nthe pohee can come up with the person\nwho took the money and tints they are try­\ning to do with their best effort.\nKerne has told the polloc of one man\nwho knew where tho money was hidden. *\nThe police desire to question the man\nabout his knowledge of It; but he could\nnot bo found yesterday afternoon or to­\nday and his return 4s being awaited by\nthem.
136543af7acd0719b19e19a4b8e9cd8d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.8589040778793 40.441694 -79.990086 property fronting and abutting upon the said\nstreet have petitioned tbe Councils of said city\nto enact an ordinance for the grading and pav-\ning of the same; therefore.\nSection 1 Be it ordained and enacted by tbe\ncity ot Pittsburg, in Select and Common Coun-\ncils assembled, and it is hereby ordained and\nenacted by tbe authority of the same. That the\nChief of the Department of Public Works be\nand is hereby authorized and directed to adver-\ntise in accordance with the acts of Assembly of\ntbe Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the\nordinances of the said city of Pittsburg relat-\ning thereto and regulating tbe same lor pro-\nposals for the grading and paving of Com-\nrie alley, from Pearl street to Cullen street,\nthe contract therefor to be let in the manner\ndirected by the said Acts of Assembly and Or-\ndinances. Tbe cost and expense of the same to\n assessed and collected in accordance with\nthe provisions of an Act of Assembly of tbe\nCommonwealth of Pennsylvania entitled "An\nAct relating to Streets and Sewers in cities\nof the Second Class," approved the 16th day of\nMay, A. D. 18S9.\nSection 2 That any ordinance or part of or-\ndinance conflicting with the provisions of this\nordinance be and tbe same is hereby repealed\nso far as the same affects this ordinance.\nOrdained and enacted into a law in Conncils\nthis 27th dav of October, A. D. 1890.\nH. P . FORD. President of Select Council.\nAttest: GEO. BOOTH. Clerk of Select\nCouncil. GEO. L . HOLLIDAY, President of\nCommon Council. Attest: E. J . MARTIN,\nCleric of Common Council.\nMayor's office. October 30. 1890. Approved:\nH. I. GOURLEY, Mayor. Attest : ROBERT\nOSTERMAIER, Mayor's Clerk.\nRecorded in Ordinance Book. vol. 7,page 534,\n1st day of November, A. D. 1890.
1471b3e86fbb506ccfab3152ba1acacf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.2972602422628 40.063962 -80.720915 COAL FOR "WAR VESSEL?.\nThe Pittsburgh coal fleet, which be¬\ngan passing Wheeling yesterday, is\nbound for New Orleans, where\nmost of the 4,000,000 bushels of black\ndiamonds will be held in reserve for tb*\nnaval vessels expected *o operate\nagainst Spain.' From the Crescent city\nthousands of bushels of coal will be\ntransferred to the bunkers of Uncia\nSam's vessels. The huge coal scuttles\nat New Orleans have been put in oper¬\nation to transfer the coal from th*\nboats to cars, which will be rushed tf\nfast freight to the gulf ports 10 fee\ntransferred to the vessels.\nTho boats which form .the«big ooa!\nfleet are as follows: T. N . Bbnton No. I\n7 barges, 2 flats; John Moren. 3 boats,\n1 barge, 1 flat; Clipper, 5 boats: Little\nDick, 6 barges; John W. Alles. 5 boats:\nRescue, 3 boats. 1 flat; Relief. S bargee:\n. Mariner, 6 boats. 1 barge, 1 flat; Pacific.'\n110 barges, 2 flats; Dick Fulton. 2 boa:v\n5 barges. 2 flats: Tflhnot, »' barges:\nBelle McGowan, 7 barges. flat: Enter-\nPrise, 7 barges,. . '3 flats; Ed Roberts, 10\nbarges, 2 flats; .Tames Moren, 12 barges.\n4 flats; Samuel Clarke.' 30 j)argos.4 flats:\nW. G . Horner, 5 barges, 1'ilat; RavmoaJ\nHorner. 2 boats. 5 barges; Advance. 5\nbarges, 2 flats: .T . C . Rlsher, 5 barge.*,!\nflat: Tom Dod?worth, 12 barges; Dave\nWood, 3 bonis, 2 flats; Robert Jenkins. I\nboats. 2 flats: Jim -Wood, S barge?. 1\nflat: Faille, 1 boat. 6 barges. 1 flat:Ut-\ntle Fred, 1 boat, S barges, l'flat: George\nShlras, 5 boat?. 1 flat; Charles Clarke.«\nbarges. 2 flats;1 Volunteer,. S barges. 3\nflat; Cyclone, fi barges; Tornado, I\nbarges. 1 flat.\nThe fleet passed Wheeling in the fo!-\nlowing order yesterday: ^Samuel Girt\nDick Fulton, Tom 'Dodswbrth, 6 a. n»!\nJohn Moren, 7 a; m.; Raymond Honi«".\n10 a. in.; Rescue', Enterprise, John\nA lies, Faille, 11 a. ni. Gborge Shiran\nClipper, noon: Pacific No. 2 . Mariner,\nJim Brown, Robert 'Jenkins, l' p. ni.j\nLittle Fred, Volunteer, '4 p. m .; Jcsi\nCook, o p. m,
41f8ef909261f4726c76c31855c5d5fa NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.4890410641806 41.681744 -72.788147 A cryptic chalk mark on the sole\nof the shoe Indicated what the cus-\ntomer wanted done and when the\nwork was completed the shoes were\nplaced on a shelf and if the cobbler\ndidn't remember which shoes were\nyours, you were allowed to point\nthem out. This method has been\nreplaced by tickets which tear in\nhalf, one half remaining with the\nshoes and indicating the repairs to\nbe made and the other half given\nto the customer. The Oriental slo-\ngan "No checkee no washee," has\nthus been extended to Include "no\nshoesees" as well.\nIn place of the cobbler who did\nthe entire job, the shoe repair shop\nof today, has, as a rule, at least two\nmen and perhaps an apprentice each\none doing only part of the work and\nutilizing the most modern machinery\nin the process. This has also given\nrise to a custom of waiting until the\nrepairs made, a device that\nworks good for the man in a hurry\nhut ill for the customer who leaves\nhis shoes in a parcel. Every time\nthe shoemaker picks up the shoes to\nstart the job, someone comes in for\na rush job and the shoes are laid\ndown and the newcomer given atten-\ntion. For this reason jobs frequent-\nly are not done within the time\npromised despite the aid of machines\nand additional help.\nThe cobbler's shop of former days,\nlike the corner grocery and the bar-\nbershop, were gathering places\nwhere neighborhood gossip would be\nexchanged. In the modern shop this\nis impossible because of the noise\nof machinery. Children were fre-\nquent guests in tho olden times and\nwould often spend half an hour or\nmore watching the cobbler. Today\nthey are sent on their way quickly\nbecause of the. proprietor's fear that\nthey may be injured by the machin-\nery.
039a025578dbc3785bd75485fea23f67 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.5246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 upon Uio premises to thn hlghwt bidder, the\njOtBor partclsof land numbered respectively 1 to24\nncluklve. the location and dimensions whoreoi ore\nnoro particularly fhown by the plat thereof filed\nu the Clerk's oillce ol said Court. Bald lots or\nwcelMif land arc part of tho subdivisions K and\ni shown on the plat of tne subdivisions of ttu>\nShepherd estate recorded In Deed Book numbered\n>5, pago 578, iu tho Clerk's oillce of the County\nTourt rf said fouuty, whfch subdivisions K and u\nvero conveycd to Abuer Key by Daulel C. LUt and\nDaniel Lainb as special commissioners, by deed\nlated tho I'Jth day of May, 18.0, and recoraed (a\n. he last meuticmc d Clerk's ollico In Deed Book If\nlumbered 67 pago 217. B4\nThe property will bo sold either in Lots as laid I\nrat ou the first mentioned plat, In pircels <>f mid K\nouj, or as a wnolo, as may seem mo<t Judicious. I\nTho undersigned U authoriziKi by said decree to K\nell said land, or any parcel thereof, at private Ka\nale, subject to confirmation by a*1d Circuit Court, I\nind respect'ufly solicits bids tnerefor in writing to § 3\n»c filed with him beforo sale.\nTKRMS Of aALE-Each purchaser to pav la §\nlaud one third of the Purchase money due by nlm. fj\nind as much more as lio may choose to pay, and I\nho residue, if any, In two equal instalments bew* §3\nng intercut from the day of wile and payable re- l|S\npectlvelyln ou*and two years thereafter; uot« 13\nvlth good security to be given for the deferred ln« ImS\nt&lmeuu aud tho legal title to be retained as fur. |\nher security until payment lu full.
284c96a3cff83d5ea2226e2dd9022192 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1886.187671201167 46.187885 -123.831256 The following are extracts from the\nrules and instructions by which judg-\nes and clerks of elections are to be\ngoverened, taken from the precinct\nregister books. In case of the sick-\nness or absence from the precinct or\npolling place of any qualified elector,\nduring the time the said judges are\nsitting to register voters, such elector\nmay apply to the chairman of the\nsaid board of judges and on making\nsatisfactory proof that the said appli-\ncant was sick or necessarily absent\nfrom the said precinct during the\ntime the said board was sitting to reg-\nister voters, the chairman of said\njudges may register the name of the\napplicant on the register in his pos-\nsession, and issue to him the certifi-\ncate provided for; and said chairman\nshall immediately notify the \nclerk of the said registration, giving\nhim a copy of the same, and the clerk\nshall enter the same in the county\nregister. It said applicant shall be\ndisqualified, the application shall be\nrejected and Ha name entered on the\nlist of rejected applicants.\nThe registration of voters com-\nmences on the first Monday in April\nand continues for three days.\nIn all incorporated cities and towns\nin this state, no person shall approach\nor stand within one hundred feet of\nthe polls, when opened for receiving\nvotes, except the elector; desiring to\nvote, and but one elector shall be per-\nmitted to approach the polls within\none hundred feet, at the same time.\nThe said judges may allow one from\neach party to stand at the polls for\nthe pnrpose of challenging votes.
2c71b6bf12dca29acc02e05670405817 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.6890410641806 40.832421 -115.763123 Tlin Kticeml of Url^htini Youn^.\nThe jonrnalH of Suit Lake City give\nfull particulars of the funeral and\nccrcmonics attending tlie burinl of the\nbody of lSrightim Young, which took\nplace ia thilt city ou Sunday, from\nwfiich wo collate us follows: "Since\nthe arrival of tho Pioneers no such\nthrong ever congregated in tho city.\nTlio principal streets word literally\nlined all day long, uud i«i tlio vicinity\nof Tciaple lilock, tlio crowd of people\nwns something tremendous. To swell\ntlio vuat concourse, nnd make the\nanimate density nioro dense, excursion\ntrains from ovory direction soon begna\nto arrive, when tho scene, despite the\nfact of the day' being Sunday and the\nftiuoral air pervading the city, 'was ouo\nof bustling activity. Crowds pas bed In\nand out reviewing tho roinains until .\n11 o'clock, when preparations for the\nfuneral ceremonies commenced. Tho\nbody was placed in a plain red¬\nwood cotlin of ample proportions, the\nmonotonous outlines of which wero but .\nslightly relieved by the silver handles,\nund a fow ornaments on the lid, to-\ngctlier with "several wreathes of im-\nmovtillcs; this was elevated upon a\ntable four feet liiglil, and placed im¬\nmediately before tlio stand, where it\nwas it. full view of the vast assembly.\nTho interior of tho Tabornaclo pre¬\nsented u magnificent appearance, being\nheavily aul tastefully festooued with\n and ornamentcQ throughout\nwith rosettes, boquets and baskets of\nartistically executed artificial flowers;\nwhile 011 the pillars of tho building and\ntho various compartments of tho stand\nthe sonibro huo of tho inouruiiig drap¬\ning was conspicuous. At nbout 12\no'clock, with fully 12.030 peoplo in the\nbuilding and probably half ns many\nmore surrounding it, Elder Geo. Q .\nCannon aroso auil announced that the\nexercises would comnienco by singing\ntho hymn on pago 193 of the hymn\nbook. Tlio choir, under tho direction\nof Prof. Gcorgo Careless,, numbered\nprobably 125 persons, nnd all tho pieces\nwero sweetly and olUcieutly rendered.\nAfter tho sinking. Elder F. D . lUchards\narose nnd offered a fervent, eloquent anil\nappropriate prayer of soma minutes dn-\n> ration, which was followed by sfngiutf.\n! of tho hymn ou pago 357. Pint. D. II,\nWells, thon nroso nnd slid: I nriso\nI with an aching heart to pay a tfibuto\nof respect to our departed friend, and\nI might suy that tho silent tear gives\nrelief. Wo have lost a friend, of God,\nthe Church nnd humanity. I fool at\ntlii.i tiino only to suy. Good bye, Broth¬\ner l>ri|jhnm, until tho morning of tho\nresurrection. May God blets ns nil,\nand may tho spirit of Christ porvailo\nevery hea/t. Amen.\nAt tho conclusion of rather lengthy\ndiscourses by Elders Woodruff, Snow,\n>
306acaa40778d0e8766f7cb672f9c98d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.8972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 Alter the houso adjourned yeaterday too\nrvenlng, it was thought there would be t0\nlomc spilling ol blood among those who th\naad mado such lolly threats. Met could JT\n>e seen crouched In knots on every street\nsorner, waiting for something to turn up, res\niut nothing turnti. At nlgbt, however, lay\nBro. Davenport got titam too high, and sut\nlelt it to be.his duty to challenge Bro. the\nDampbell to fight a duel, and thus settle\ntheir dispute alter the code prescribed In .\nShe ConMtutim ofchivalry. He therefore '\nittempted to And a man who would act I01\nis his Irlend and boar the challenge to Mr. not\nDampbell. Major Sweeney was in the pet\nJity, and knowing him tobejrftty George full\nwent lor him. The Major ianghed at him, jjrj\nind advised to go to bed. This .\nkind of treatment forced George to !r\nbrand the Major as a eovard. H"\nrhe Major, of course, did not care for «\ninch a charge as that and went oS to the the\nsther side of the audience room of the not\nState Bouse. But as George was thirst- ma\nIng lor blood, warm asd frtah, he could nol\nnot let the matter drop and went for the ~T\nMajor again, and tried to iorce him to\n:arry his dispatch to Mr. Campbell. The\nMajor again refused, asd one word itK\nbrought on another until George gave the foil\n"He" and the Major replied by (lapping am\nhim over, asd applied a "spat" or two ol pra\nKU'ieamtr. me puuco caecaeu nuiicn ii.\nat thla Juncture, and after the usual flna
20ccfc195938e4345ad1e5d871006418 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.8073770175572 40.063962 -80.720915 jfHrtu An account of all mono: H and ef-\nfects belonging to the estate of Mary smith,\nwhich came into the hands of Joseph W.\nMorgan, and William B. Morgan, or either\nof them, as administrators of Joslah Morgan\ndeceased. And what amount of money and\nelTecls remained in the hands of Josiah Mor-\ngan at the Unite of his death, belonging to\nsaid Mary Smith's cBtate, and the amount\nof his indebtedness it any, at the time of his\ndeath, to said Mary Smith's estate. Also\nwhether sufficient estate, and If. so what es-\ntate of Josiah Morgan legally applicable to\nsuch payment came into the hands of Joseph\nW. Morgan and William B^ Morgan admin-\nistrators of Joslah Morgan, to pay to the es-\ntate ol Mary Smith the indebtedness of\nJosiah Morgan to such estate at the time of\nBald Morgans death, and what real property\nthe said Joslah Morgan died seized of, if any,\nand what disposition has been made of the\nSecond. An account of any bonds, notes,\nsecurities or other evidences belong-\ning to the estate of Mary Smith nnd remain-\ning uncollected. And to ascertain and re-\nport if the same or any part, and which of\nihem, could have been collected, during the\nLime the said Joslah Morgan acted as Ex-\necutor of said Mary Smith's estate, and\nwhether the same or any part therdot can\nnow be collected, or could nave been since\nthe appointment of an administrator de\nboni* non of Mary Smith's estate. And to\niscertuln and report what amount of money\n3as been lost to the estate of the said Mary\nSmith, if any, by the neglect of the said JKx-\nscutor Josiah Morgan, in falling to collect\nho debts due said estate.\nThird: To ascertain and report what lega-\ntes under the said will of Mary Smith, have\n>een paid to the legatees, to whom, the\nimount and the date, and also what legacies\npet remain to be paid'and their amount.\nh.lao I shall enquire Into and make report of\nmy and all other matters I may deem per-\nInent.
28662a73d2715104ad7726e2f84916f6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.050684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 has taught us that money spent In\ntemporary repairs on our public roads\nis not well spent, and while It is of\nthe greatest importance to safe-guard\nour revenue, and to place no burden\nupon future generations that does not\ncarry with It a corresponding benelit,\nI am lnclin%d to believe that such pep\nmanent Improvement In our public\nroads would Immediately Increase the\nvalue of our farms to an amount al­\nmost equal to the cost of such Improve­\nment; and If that bo true neither the\npresent nor future generations should\ncomplain if the increased burden. Prop­\ner legislation along this line is both\na direct and a general benefit to almost\nall our citizens and Is particularly\nhelpful to the farmers.\nAnother suggested Improvement that\nIs Interesting to all of us In general,\nand to many farmers In particular\nis the establishment of a proper sys­\ntem of drainage for the low lands and\nswamps in the lower part of our Stats\nThe proper draining of the new roads\nwould of itself accomplish this In\npart, and it may questionable\nwhether at this time we could afford\nanything more, but let us hope that\nthe time Is not far distant when we\nmay either feel able to do something\nIn this direction ourselves, or Induce\nthe national government to so Im­\nprove our rivers and creeks that little\nwould be needed to bo done by ns to\nsolve this important question .\nThe State ought to bo liberal In its\nappropriations for theset hin g a which\nmean so much to its citizens, but the\nimportant question Is, how liberal can\nIt be, considering Its present and pros­\npective financial condition? We cor\ntainly cannot hope to do as much as\nwould like immediately, and «hero-\nfore wo should do those things first\nwhich would mean the greatest benefit\nto the greatest number.\nThe matter ct State Revenue has always\nbeen, and ever will be a serious problem.\nThe revenue received through the General\nincorporation Act lias done much for the\ntrust few years to make this problem less\nserious. Wo can nol/aflord, however, to\nbecome extravagant because of the revc-
1107ea7ce39a54779e35186e33e476ed THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.678082160071 37.561813 -75.84108 F5 pnrsnanc of an order of tbe Probata Court' of\nM. Highland County, onto, I will offer tor sale, at\npublic action, on FRIDAY, th 6th day of Septem-\nber, 1667, at 1 o'clock P. M.f npon tbo premises near\nPrice to wd. the following described Real Estate, siln- -\nstein Salm Township, Highland County, Ob ior\nBeginning at a stale, tn tne center ol tn uonnty\nRoad, lead Id tr from Pricetown to Bollowtown. souttr- -\neast corner to T. A. Ferris' belrs, and 8. W . corner to\njufiD b. rerrts: tnence with j. u. jrerns and Jonn\nHastltifrs' tines N. 86 K. 23 poles to a stone; thence\nwith said Hastings' line N. 87s K. 30 poles to the cen-\nter of a branch, corner to said Hastings and Mark\nWalUngford and Carey Ferris; thence vrith snid Ferris'\nline S. 7 E. 40 poles to a stone corner to said Ferris,\nand In Ho Gtorg Stevens; thsnce with said\ntUeens' line and V. B . Ouster's lines 8. 843 W.64\npoles to a stake in tbe center of tbe Coonty Road\naforesaid; thence with tbe center of said road and lice\nof T. B . Caster, S. 6 S. 101 poles, 16 links to a stake,\ncorner to said Caster and in lino of M. J . Pnlliam;\nthence with the line of said Pnlliam aad Jesse Ferris'\nheirs, S. 84 W. 91 poles to a stone, corner to James\nSmith, and in line of said Farris heirs; thence with\nsaid James Smith's line N. 7 W. 93 poles to the center\nof Whiteosk Creek; thenc with the center of said\ncreek in tbe meanderings thereof N. 3H E. 40 poles,\nN.26 W.9poles, 11 links. N. 25 E.37polestothe\ncorner of T. A. Ferris heirs, and in line of V. B .\nCuster; thence wltn the liiie of said Ferris' heir S.\n75
8b266a9e06cd5aee3ce72326ab4925d2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.1762294765736 39.745947 -75.546589 “I think the chemists have\nstruck upon the right trsck with\nHypo-Cod and it is by «II odd« the\n(best tonie 1 ever saw," declared\nj Mr. Chaa. Crolina, a prominent re­\ntirai gentleman of Detroit, Mich\n"1 was in a general run down\ncondition myself. Nerves were\njumpy and weak anil made it bard\nfor me to rest well nights. 1 fell\ntired and dopey during the day\nand seldom ever had any appetite\nI called in a specialist but re­\nceived no benefit soon seeing a\nstatement of a man I knew prais­\ning Hypo-Cod, I bought a bottle\nand I'in feeling fine now. I sleep\ngood nights,\nbefore first battle wss gone. Feel\nvigorous and energetic now and\neating like a boy. My mother,\naged 79. suffered with very bad\nnervous spelts. Couldn't sleep\nand was like myself—run down\nand always feeling tired, but since\nshe has taken this dandy tonic\nshe says she feels fine and looks it,\n tt helps the old folks slr.ftit\nset v«a can publish my sUIenant sad\nlet's hope It makes all the old folks\nyounger sad free o( sickness this\nwinter." continued Mr. Crollas. ad\nWarren Ave. Detroit. Mich.\nElderly people Deed a eery powerful\ntoste out It must not upset a weak\nstomach or have any reaction. That\nIs why Earle's HypoC'od It such a\ntriumph In modern medicine. It does\nIts work so much quicker sad effect-\nIvely. You will be delighted. Send\ndo- a to the store tor a couple bottles\nOn# of the biggest and beat known\nmen la Phsrmaceutbal circles assert,\ned racially that Earle's Hypo-Cod\nthe most powerful, effective, and pal<1\nable reconstructive, alterative, digest­\nive. nutritive tonic msda. The ex-\npense of the process sod concentra­\ntion of medicinal elements In II made\nIt far superior lo anything In ths old\ndavs. (His name on request). Read\nwhat another user says about It below\n•nd on the lefL
1efbdbd55ce5591f1d5c4aa6c6a71422 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1883.0753424340437 40.832421 -115.763123 Mr. E. P. Hudulx, of Elk*, has in¬\ntroduced in the Assembly tha following\nJnat and equitable bill:\nSection 1. That whenever any ani¬\nmal or animals ahall ha killed or In¬\njured by the ears, locomotives, or other\ncarriages need on any railroad In tbia\nState, tha owner or ownera tuanaf mj\ncommence an aetion before any Court o'\ncompetent jurisdiction of tbs township\n. r county in which tneh injury oe-\neurred, and if such action ahall ba\ncommeneed before a Justice of tba\nPeace, such Justice shall* make the\naummona issusd therein returnsble in\nten days from tha service thereof. The\nsummons may be aervad by delivering\na copy thereof to any agent of aueh\neotnpanv in said township or oounty,\nand any telegraph operator or atation\nagent in the employ such company\nahall be deemed an agtnt for the p«r-\nposes of this Act.\nSection 2. The individual, individu¬\nals or corporation owning or operating\nsuch railroad shall be liable in any ac¬\ntion commenced as herein provided for\ntha full value of the animator animals\nkilled, or for any such injury inflicted,\nunlesf the defendant in such action\nshall establish, by a preponderance of\nevidence, that such killing or injury\nw»s the result of unavoidable accident;\nbut it shall not be deemed an unavoid¬\nable accidcnt when the individual, in¬\ndividuals or compaoy operating such\nrailroad shall fail to bavo the same\nfenced at the point or points where\nsuch killing or injury occurred.\nSection 3. All Acts and parte of Acta\nin conflict with the provisions of this\nAct, are hereby repealed.
36ac9aabb4b31ece615e655322c60e0b THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.2917807902081 37.561813 -75.84108 Kit Burns, the Rat Catcher.\nIt is said of the late Kit.Burns. of Jfew\nlork, that, as a professional rat catcher,\nhe was the first in America. It is far-\nther alleged by those who profess une\nquivocal know ledge of the matter that\nthe deceased Kit had amassed much\nmoney in the pursuit of his unique voca\ntion, tie once made $ooo out oi one sin-\ngle job in the rat catching line. One of\nthe firet restaurants on Broadway had\nbeen so badly infested by rats that the\nquantity of provisions consumed or de-\nstroyed night and day was incredibly\nlarge. The finest mousers were pro-\ncured, but they made no inroad upon\nthe army of rodents. In fact, cat after\ncat became demoralized, while the rats\nerew bolder, and frequently put them to\nflight. Alone in the restaurant one\nnight, Kit surveyed tbe situation, and de-\nclared it to be a desperate one. The fol-\nlowing night he sat hia huge cage close\nto an advantageous aperture. A small,\ndim lamp ou the shelf above him was the\n light in the place. He lay above\nthe great cage, with the string of the\nmain trap in his hand. His obiect was\nto catch the "king" rat, and.then the\nwork was easy. They all follow the\nking. Rat after rat came to the cage,\nnibbled the bait, and ran back to the\nhole. There seemed to have been a per-\nfect understanding about the matter\nbefore his majesty ventured forth. When\nhe did, Kit knew him, for the king rat is\nan enormous shaggy specimen, with\ngreat bristles growing out of his body\nand down snapped the trap. Now the\nrest were guideiess, and wholly at the\nmercy of the rat catcher. Kit then fast\nened the king so as to secure his pres-\nence in the cage, and when the trap was\nagain raised scores upon scores of rats\nfilled the cage. It could hold no more,\nbut when the subjects found themselves\ncaptured they fell upon the king and\nnearly tore him to pieces. After that\nKit easily secured tbe rest of the var\nmints and was paid toQO.
168111cbba527ff29f93ae5a9c5a5a6e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1883.9904109271943 46.187885 -123.831256 started in there a year or so ago with\na logging camp, and now there aro\nseveral families living in that neigh\nborhood. The laud is susceptible of\nbeing converted into farms. A good\nwagon road the entire distance is the\noutlet to Woodward's Landing, and\nfrom there to South Bend, Oystor--\nville and other points on tho bay."\n'About what is the number of acres\nin the valley that could bo put under\ncultivation during the coming season\nand also the number of acres you\nwould have should the land be\ncleared of standing timber?"\n"Annroximatelv, 1 should sav that\nwe have not over 2,000 acres that\ncould be utilized to good advantage.\nIt tho land was all cleared there\nwould be fully 12,000 acres that could\nbe put under cultivation."\n"Is the land hard to clear.\n"No; it is comparatively easy. The\nfigures I have given you comprise the\nland, strictly speaking, "within the\nvalley, and is covered with a growth\nof vine maple, alder, which is conced-\ned to be easier to clear than any other\nland we have. The land bordering\nthe valley will also be made use of\nsome day in an agricultural sense,\nbut at present it is valuable\nfor the lieavy timber, consisting of\nfir, spruce, hemlock and cedar. The\nlogging business, however, like every-\nthing else here, is in its infancy, but\nfor all that, the five camps on the\nriver put upwards of ten million feet\nin the water this season."\n"According to your estimation, how\nlong would it require a new settler to\nclear up a home and raise enough\nproduce for his own use?"\n"About one year on the average\nclaims, five or six acres can be made\nready for cultivation, and with that\namount of land cleared one can make\na good living. You see, so many per-\nsons have come here and settled who\nhad barely enough money to pay for\nfiling on "their land; some work will\nbe done, of course, to be able to hold\nit, and they are compelled to seek\nemployment either in the logging\ncamps or in a sawmill during tho\nsummer season, and with the money\nthey have earned they make improve-\nments on their claims in the winter\nmonths, and finally, in a year or two,\nthey resort to the farm altogether.\nThe wages paid for all kinds of labor\nare very high, especially in the log-\nging camps.
0f9324f1c771c6ef69461aceb78b79d2 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1901.505479420345 46.601557 -120.510842 "Prahl came to the camp the next\nmorning, and finding the sheep mixed,\ngeit crazy mad, abusing Will at a hor-\nrible rate, saying Will had killeel bis\nherder and that he—Prahl—would kill\nWill; that he would tie him anel burn\nhim to a stake, at the same time draw-\ning his revolver. Will told him that the\nherder would show up all right at the\ncorral. Prahl drew his 'six-shooter'\nagain and wanted Will to tight him.\nWill told him he would fight no man\nwith a revolver, and for that matter he\nhad nothing to fight with as he carried\nneither a gun or revolver.\n"Prahl told McGrath if he came back\nto his camp he would kill him. Will\ntold him that he could kill him then, lot-\nhe was coming to his own camp in the\nmorning. Will got a man to herd his\nsheep while he came to Glenwood to the\njustice of the peace have Prahl placed\nunder bonds. Finding that the range lay\nin Yakima county he could do nothing.\n"Willwas obliged to be back with the\nsheep at night, so he borrowed a gun and\nrevolver and started for his camp. Find-\ning he could not reach camp that even-\ning, he stopped at another man's camp\nfor supper. Then he started again, get-\nting about a mile from his camp when\nthe sheep wouldn't go any farther. The\nnext morning he drove his sheep toward\nhis camp so he could get breakfast. On\narriving at his camp he found Prahl\nthere with his tent stretched. Prahl\ncame out and set the dogs on Will's\nsheep. Will told Prahl to stop and call\nthe dogs back. Prahl got mad and\ndrew his revolver. Willthen aimed his\ngun. Prahl jumped back and called for\nhis herder to hand him the rifle. The\nherder did so, Prahl banding the revol-\nver to the herder.
2de87fa8fe3d725eb07684ab90373a88 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1903.8835616121257 41.004121 -76.453816 . 1. ("lowell, Henvlek.\nli. K. Frit, Jackson.\nIt. (J. Urifiily, MikIIsoii.\nl'hilip (iaiigluin. Coiiynham.\nII. A. (ihhliiiK. "loom.\nKdwanl M. Holmes, Itlnoni.\nHenry Jones, Herwlek.\nJiiiiich Kerrigan, Cmiyii)rhntn.\nHenry I). Keller, Fishing. Creek.\nKmiuitiel l.tiziirus, llloomsburg.\n(JiKrre L. M limey, Cntawlwsa Tw ji.\nTheodore Merlele, lIlooiiiHburg.\nDuniel O'iNell, Hloom.\nJ. H . ratterson, lilnom.\nJ(iiitli K, Koberta, ( atawlssa lloro.\nM. F . 1). Seanlln. Hhxun.\nSylvester Slttler, Centre.\nl'. K. Stiatih, Coiiynghani.\nJames Trump, Orange Twp.\nJohn Vance, Mt. Pleasant.\n(JeorgeJ). Yost, Hcnton lloro.\nTK A VKHSK Jl'KOH First VPek.\nV.. V. Alexander, 1 ten ton lloro.\nMiles 11. IteU, Jiloom.\nCharles Hurt, Ilriar Creek.\nLewis Itelshllne, Fishing Creek.\nAsa Delly, Hemlock.\n(1. li: Dennis. Centre.\nJohn Donahue, Centralia lloro.\nA, C . DeShepnard, Hloom,\n11. D. Edgar, ltlooni.\nSecly F.ilwanis, Hcnton Twj.\nF.lliis Kmest, Cleveland,\nCharles F.yer, Orange.\nV. S . Fisher, Main.\nJacob Fought, Pine.\n(leorge Feiisternmcher, Herwlek.\nHihisIih' Flster, Orange lloro.\nAlbert tiilisons, Herwlek.\nS. J . Hnrrison, Fishing Creek.\nJohn Hampton, Catawis.ui Twp.\nS. M . Hetw, Hloom.\nEli Kriim, Montour.\nIt. O. F. Kshinka, Hrlar Creek,\nCharles Lee, Scott.\nThomaa J. McUuiic, Conynghnm.\nJohn 11 Mcllenry, Stillwater.\nFrank Marteena, lierwlek.\nV. D. Mover, Hloom.\nC. V. M slier, Centre.\nTheodore Mcinlcnhull, Pine.\nJohn K. Monlitn, Mt. Pleasant.\nEiiuiiitK'l Mauser, Mttiii.\n Mensch. Montour.\nC. H. Meyers, Hetiton Twp.\nJ. D. Potter, Pine.\nV. F . Rhodes, Conynghnm.\nFrederick Kit e, lbmiing Creek.\nJacob Hitler, Pine.\nA. J . Koiilns, Centre.\nFrens Hingrose, K.)ott.\n11. F . Hiee, Scott.\nOeorge Kuckle, Centre.\nClinton Sterling, Hloom.\nV. Af Snyder, Scott.\nJ. A. Tnhhs. Hetiton Horo.\nIt. I). SVenner. Fishing Creek.\nHiram V. Villianis, Herwick.\n(ieo V. Yctter, Cutawlssa lloro,\nIra Zelsloft, Matliaon.\nTKAVKitsE j ciio its Second Veek.\nW. A. Hutt, Heiiton Horo.\nC. D. Howers, Catawis.su lloro.\nJ. S . Hltie, Hloom.\nJoseph Crawford, Orange.\nDbvld Cotfman, Hloom.\nIt. C . Deittriek, Herwlek.\nWilliam Dildine, Mutlison.\nEugene Doty, Herwick.\nJ. Harrv Dean, Herwlek.\nHenry H. Delghniillcr, Hemlock.\nPeter' O. Edtlinger, Main.\nP I). Ervin.Cataw lssa Horo.\nAllison Essiek, Madison.\n1. H. (ieiger, Hloom.\nSamuel S. Horlneher, Heaver.\nFred llartmati, Hloom.\nDillmnn Hesa, Hriur Creek.\nA. It. Henrie, Miillln.\nWilliam Johnston, Millville.\nJ. 11 . Kelm, Scott.\nHarry E. Kearn, Sugnrlowf.\nMarvin Kline, (ireenwood.\nClarence Lenhurt, IWrwick.\nThomas It. Moore, Hloom.\nFranklin Meyers, Sugarloaf.\nP. W . Miller, Cutawlssa Horo.\nJ. W . Perry, Sugarloaf.\nHarton T. Pursel, Hloom.\nT. C . Smith, Jackson.\nHultis Sterling, Mnillson,\n(iilhert Shtimtin, Main.\nV. . Schllcher, Heaver.\n1. W . Smith, Mifflin.\nL. 0 . Shultz, Pine.\nHarry Tow intend, Hloom.\nJamea William), Centre.
488f8e4e5f52e8ad09f01dd2aa9f4edf THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.6150684614408 39.369864 -121.105448 being confined to a certain altitude and a\ncertain line, it exists at every altitude, on\nthe main ridges as well as on spurs of them,\nand even on isolated peaks. Its color is ow-\ning to the presence of sulphuret of iron in\nsolution, without which the gravel would\nnot be any different from that lying above,\nexcept that the boulders and largest stones\nwould be found in it as they are always found\nat the bottom of every gravel deposit.—\nWherever sulphurous acid or sulphuret of\niron is found, there the so-called blue lead\nwill be discovered, just as certainly as red\nearth and gravel will be found where the\noxide of iron is present as a coloring agent.\nIt is found at a great elevation in Sierra\ncounty, and at a low one in Nevada and Yuba.\nIt has been at San Juan andatpoints\nthirty or forty miles above it, leads -of -ether\ncolors intervening. Raving such a variety\n•of location the fe-ltie lead also exhibits a\nvarying inclination of its strata, though\ngenerally the inclination, like that of all the\ngravel beds, is towards the great valleys, as\nthough occasioned by the gradual subsidence\nof a vast body of water. Tree trunks are\nfound in it to be sure, as they are in other\nleads, where they were probably borne by\nidentical causes. Some of them we have\nseen are completely coated with sulphuret\nof iron, the material of the wood in some\ninstances being gone and this mineral occu-\npying its place, presenting the exact appear-\nance as to shape and grain of the old log.\nThe alleged uniform character of the gold\ntaken from the blue lead is another error.
1d3711fb4edd19a495736d09f9e4f30a THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.8838797497976 40.114955 -111.654923 Hundreds of years ago when people wore nc\nshoes they never complained of rheumatism they\nnever had Ingrowing toenails neither did they\ncultivate corns and seldom could they boast of an\nattack of gout They called It evil spirit then\nBut the advance of civilization had its drawbacks\nrime feet were clothed but at the same time tho\nwearing of the shoes brought on disease of these\nsupports and some authorities doubt whether\ncivilizations feet are any bettor off today than\nthey were a thousand yours ago when they were\nfilled with slivers brambles and the like but\nwere not nearly ns wide a topic for discussion as\nthey are today for thou people didnt mind time\nlittle Inconveniences Today great progress hav-\nIng been made In that line smaller ailments of\nthe feet are a source of complaint\nThe most civilized portions of the world havo\ndeveloped a tenderness of feet which ions be-\ncome a tradition in tho circles which have made\nthe greatest progress People who wear pointed\nshoes are compelled to suffer the same agonies\nthat would come If timer toes were bound together\nwith adhesive tape and they were compelled to\nwalk about thus conditioned Others who wear\nshoes too small have swelling of tho feet when\nthey take off their shoes Shoes too large produce\ncorns just as do small shoes\nYoung ladies and some older ones who follow\nthe fashions with good Intent equip themselves\nwith Frenchheeled shoes which raise tho heels\ninto time nit from three to six Inches This of\ncourse gives them a beautiful Instep they claim\nand It also keeps them walking on their toes It\ntwists the spine and exerts pressure upon time\nhalo of time bran which brings on fearful head-\naches if till practice Is kept up for mommy
4e766ea04d72045b66a252a8879fb68b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2452054477424 39.745947 -75.546589 space. In eight small single rooms,\nwhere only one girl should he accom­\nmodated, there are two girls each.\nThe girls continue to be sent in\nfrom the courts, and despite the\novercrowded conditions, the mana­\ngers of the school feel that they can­\nnot and must not be turned away.\nThe normal capacity of the building\nis limited to 30 girls and there arc\nat present 57 in the building, 16 of\nwhom have been sent from Kent and\nSussex counties, four girls having\nbeen received from Seaford, alone.\nSince February 1, one girl has been\nsent In from Laurel, one from Sea-\nford. one from Smyrna and one from\nDover. More than half the normal\ncapacity of the school is occupied by\ngirls from Kent and Sussex counties\n—yet no money Is received for their\nmaintenance from those counties—\nnot even money for the expense \nbringing them to the school.\nThe annual State appropriation is\nat present $3000. From the New­\ncastle Lévy Court is received the\nsum of 40 cents daily for each girl,\nfor the girls in New Castle County.\nTwenty-seven acres of land have been\npurchased with a legacy from the\nGeorge Lobdell estate, so that the\nland will cost the public nothing.\nThe appropriation of $70,000 has been\nasked for the purpose of erecting two\nbuildings—one for the younger girls\nfrom 12 to 15 years, and one for the\nolder girls from 15 to 18 years. This\nseparation Is a system which is re­\ncognize in penal institutions for men\nand boys, where the adult delinquents\nare separated from those of youthful\nage—and the system has been found\nentirely satisfactory—and is consid­\nered one of the most essential needs\nin the management of the Delaware\nIndustrial School.
31b8c2726047cae05776bdcc8046d363 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.4534246258245 40.827279 -83.281309 The solution ot the problem is not yet\narrived at. isut all Captain Warren s re\nsuits point to the same conclusion that\nthe voice of tradition is right; that the\nold spots which so many ages has rever-\nenced as the actual sites of the holy places,\nare genuine ; and that, with them as our\nguides, we may reconstruct the topography\nof the city with tolerable if not exact\nfidelity.- No excavations have ever been\nconducted which can approach these in\ninterest It is a pity that the want of\nfunds;' and the ill health of the party in\nJerusalem, nave caused them to be dis\ncontinued. At the same time, it must be\nallowed that to go on with them, costly as\nthey have been, only to discover more\npassages, more aquaducts, more subterra\n chambers deeply interesting as it\nwould be would not be carrying out the\nprogramme of the Palestine Exploration\nFund; which includes, besides tne solu\ntion of the topographical problem, the\nsurvey and examination of the whole\ncountry. 'We rvjoice to learn that this is\nnow to be undertaken in earnest, and that\na party will ba shortly dispatched to do\nfor the scattered ruins of Palestine what\nCaptain Warren has done for Jerusalem.\nAnd let us, in calling attention to the\nlabors of this officer, call attention also to\nthe pluck and patience which were re-\nquired to carry them out, the tact which\nenabled him to manage the fanatical popu-\nlation, and the modesty which distinguishes\nnot only his own account of the work,\nbut also the conclusions which he draws.\nOnce a Week.
839b16478e18e06bdee45b036189fbb7 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1860.2964480558085 35.780398 -78.639099 folldrvvcd near to the shore for several miles,\nftfene which was presented was one of ex-\nceeding beauty. Here would be fields of\ngrain and countless groves of orange and\npalm, while over beyond would peep out the\nlong rows of negro huts and the white villas\nthe planters. The grass and verdure grows\nquite close down to the water s edge, and the\nwhole plain beyond looked very fresh and\ngreen, forming quite a contrast to the bleak,\ncold hills which we had left behind. The\nupward curling of the smoke from distant\nhabitations, the tinkling of bells mingled with\nthe lowing of cattle, and the still air of re-\npose which seemed to hang over the island,\nmade us think of a far distant home, and we\nfain would have remained longer gazing at the\npeaceful picture, but the tireless arm of the\nengine was rushing our keel through the wa-\nter, and with the setting sun went down the\nlast glimpse of what seemed almost fairy land.\n sunset, the moon rose up in all her\nbeauty, and a flood of silver light came down\nover the sea. It was one of those soft, hazy\nevenings peculiar to this latitude, and the sCa\nwas almost perfectly still so still that we\nalmost regretted to see it whirled and tossed\ninto foam by the rushing of our gallant prow.\nfaint breeze, scarcely sufficient to waft the\nperfume from the neighboring islands, came\nsoftly over the water ; and the air was so soft\nand mellow that we almost forgot that we\nwere floating upon anything but an ethereal\nelement forgot but that it was always thus\nforgot that even here the wild tornado\nrushes with all its terrors, and that round\nabout these enchanted isles the earthquake\nand pestilence are lurking in ambush. But\ndo think the enjoyment of one such evening\nthat was, is worth all the trouble and pri\nvations of a voyage. At any rate, I shall not\nsoon forget my first night on the Caribbean\nsea.
069d052439ea9949f6094738b2a93db2 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.0945205162354 40.419757 -77.187146 Attempted Robbery A few nights' since\nMrs. Llghtner, wife of Jacob Llght-ne- r\nof Landisburg awoke her husband\nsaying "there is some one In the room."\nHer husband got up and lighted a lamp\nbut as several matches went out before\none burned rightly it was probably a\nminute before he obtained light. Upon\nsearching the room no person was\nfound, but a door leading on to the\nporch was open a little way, and this\ndoor they knew to be closed and fasten-\ned when they retired for the night. Mr.\nL's vest where he usually carried a fine\nwatch had been taken out from under his\npillow and It was this vest touching his\nwife's face that awakened her. That\nnight however she had taken the watch\nfrom the pocket and put it in\nanother place, thus saving this valuable\npiece of property. A suspicious circum-\nstance in connection with this attempt-\ned robbery is the fact that Mrs. L . had\nbeen asked during the day by one of the\npeddlers who were concerned In the\nwatch swindle we recorded last week, if\nshe had that watch which had been\npresented to her by her father, and\nwhen he was told she had, he requested\nto look at it, but was told that her hus-\nband had the watch at the School he\nwas teaching. These parties were seen\nin town early In the evening, but were\nnot seen afterwards. Whoever attempt-\ned the robbery must have been secreted\nin the house before it was locked for the\nnight.
22ccd72f8a7b0e97f6a1bf93b167b189 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.3273972285642 39.261561 -121.016059 The demand for the surrender of Fort Sum-\nter was made on the 11th and refused, not only\nby Major Anderson but by his command. On\nFriday morning, at 3 o'clock, the rebels sent\nword that the fire would be opened in one hour.\nAt 4 oclock the fire opened in every direction,\nincluding hidden batteries. Andersons men\ntook breakfast on salt pork and biscuit. His\ncommand was divided into three watches and\nthen went to work and opened fire on Moultrie,\nCummings Point and Morris Island. Ander-\nson refused to let me work on the parapets on\naccount of the tremendous fire. Andersons\nfire on Moultrie had terrible effect. Andersons\nbarracks caught fire and were extinguished by\nthe efforts of Hart, of New York, and I.yman,\nof the Baltimore volunteers. On Saturday the\nofficers quarters caught fire from shell at the\nmain gates and were burned. The magazine\nwas surrounded by Ninety barrels of pow-\nder were taken out and thrown into the sea.\nWhen the magazine was encircled by fire, aU\ntheir materials were cut off, and they had eaten\ntheir last biscuit two hours before. We had to\nlay on the ground with wet handkerchiefs on\nour faces to prevent smothering. A favorable\nsteady wind was all that saved our lives. The\ncartridge boxes gave out and five men were en-\ngaged in the manufacture of them out of shirts,\nblankets and sheets. It will take half a million\nof dollars to repair Fort Sumters interior. Most\nof the shots were aimed at the United States\nflag. Wigfall demanded a surrender without\nauthority. Anderson pulled down the flag, and\nafterwards, finding he had been sold, raised the\nflag again. Hart, of N. Y ., nailed the colors,\namid the deadly fire of the enemy and the\ncheers of the U. S . troops.
1e24c14653007dcfc950f528605a4b2f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.250684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 Scaled propoaaia will be retired aitiui\ndrtaaed to the "Secretary ol th«* Hoard vf UincVA'\nt Weston, W. Va., up lo April J, lSTV.iUw'ckU\nand will b« opened publicly at 10 o'clock l i\non tha day (ollowiug, by the Board,\nFor too titone Work.\nFor the Brick Wot*,\nFor the Carpenter Work.\nFor the Pliuieriiif Work,\nFor the Hooting Work,\nAnd lor the Painting and (ilatins Work,\nnecwsury (or the construction ol the next mtfeitf\nthe U<«pluil, which is to corrt-speud lot italic i*\ntjon already built.except some minor ihiuin-«il\nwill be of cut stone; the building Uelog a u3ltlat\nlong, 40 k*t wide, and three ami ! ur itvriu IA.\nThe walla will be about two lent thick, about wmU\nof which will be of atone. and backed wlib bnckw\nfoot In thickneaa.\nBids will be received aeparately (or the itonttork\ncomplete In walls; the brick wi.rk cuo^kuUik\nwalla: the carpenter work complete; tlie i-lutmij\ncomplete; the roofing, (pouting and iillry vvrkoK*\nplate; and (or the painting and plating coui'ktt, lU\noonliactor, in each case, furnishing evcrytubg mc»\naary to complete bla contract.\nThe material used must be of the Imt quality,ul\nla to be subject to the inapeitiou of the buUdiog»*<\nperintendunt before bttng put in the building.\nThe contractor (or the stone work it to romMM\nbla work on or belore the 2uth day o( April.U7j,u*\ncomplete the aama on or before the lit <Uy ol Imw>\nber, 1870. The contractor for the brick wort Uisb»\nready to commence laying brick In the villi ouotb*\ntore ine join aay w juno, ia,i, lua Cga^tei um\nMine againat the lit day of December, Is'.) . At\ncontractor for the cart^nier work U to keep well\nwith the atone and brick work,and
449ee5b2c22338e9fa353e3f54b67143 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.2178081874683 43.798358 -73.087921 from the foundation to the plates 48 4-- 12\nfeet in height, with a wing 24 feet by 34,\none story. The whole was built of cob-\nble stone, (not of the first quality,) the\noutside was laid in courses of cobble stone\nfour inches in thickness, and larger stone\non the inside. It is a steam flouring mill,\nand has been in operation three months.\nIt stands perfectly well it is situated in\nthe village of Palmyra, on Canal-stree- t .\nAs it regards their durability, lam per-\nfectly convinced that if they are laid with\ngood materials, and in a workmanlike\nmanner, they will stand, and their solidity\nwill increase as their age increases. The\nquality and quantity of sand with the\nlime is very essential. The coarser and\npurer the sand, the stronger will the ce-\nment and the firmer the wall. As for the\nproper quantity of sand with the lime, it\ndepends on its coarseness and purity.\nThe proportion which I generally use, is\nfrom five to eight bushels of sand to one\nof lime in the stone. As for elegance &\ntaste, everv one who has seen a cobble\nstone building, built as it should be, will\nacknowledge that it surpasses quarry\nstone' or brick buildings. As for the ex-\npense of building, it is cheaper than al-\nmost any other kind of building.\nIf the above, after such corrections as\nyou may deem expedient, will be of any\nuse to your readers, let it have a place in\nyour paper; if not, throw it under the ta-\nble; suit yourself and you will suit your\nob't serv't
11588bb2f480572d3a0b6b13195c5a6c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.9275955967921 40.063962 -80.720915 A "leathery" lookingarticle in thesho\nwindow of a Market street drug sUre t\ntraded the attention oi n reporter veste\nday, and asking! he .druRjIst what i{ wa\nlie said: "Have you not seen that befori\nThat is Prof. Dwight's l:i teat experlmen\nM» culls it 'Cellulin.'^ it is not Ieathe\nalthough It- resembles it veryjnuch. T1\narticle in <juealjpn is what is known\ncotton mills as a 'roving aim.' Jt is mat\nfrom the new material, which in tejftui\nvery much resembles leather, and nobod\nbut. an expert conM/ieteet the difference,\nPro/, pwight was seen later in the d«\nabout the jnven^Of), and said: '"Son:\nyears ago the article eu)|e») 'jealheroii\nwas made at the Fulton {iujier mills, #e;\ntljjy (:ity. It was not a success, and sine\nthattji/ip I have occasionally experiinen\ned in the sajijo direction. Lately I di;\ncoverod that by treating :j pertain speeu\nof paper wltii u1icmica)s..Qyol)jlJnJ) rcseii\ntiling leather might be prod»}cei|f j'foei\ncuting my experiments, I luive turned oi\nthe iirticle you, saw in the'roving-can\nThis *ubs|ani:e 1, have called 'cellulin.'\nresembles pltta-purcha, is gene\nally Impervious 'to ffpf/tOFphoric an\nacquious action; toijgu, Sj>riugi\nuC.xible, and generally adapted t\nninnv nwirPUlPlltS of cusloiu. It can h\nusmI'm R- chair bottom_to a bettor ndvai\ntago-than any Material now in use.\nmean of course an)' #}Pfl|» nmterial. J\nwill also be used as a eubsfit^to in potfr)\nmills for roving cans. 'Jtapopijieftts i\nthis direction show that it is worth tiv'eRt\npereejifc more than tin, as it is more dun\nhie, cheaper, lighter and lias other advar\ntages.; It will al«j, I thiuk, eoiue int\ngeneral favor as it Hoor-Aflvpring, bein\nlighter, handsomer and better adapted t\nflooring requirements than eitlje\nlinoleum or oil cloth. One of tit\nlargest crimping houses in the countr;\nhas been experimenting jyith it with rc\nference to its use as a counter fax shoe\nand it reports that it is better than e(t)|e\nleather ay leather-board -which is no<\nused. If tiio experiments are sutisfactor\nand terms can be arr/WJgcd, this lirm ca\nuse a ton a day. Of cour^i! the article.;\nstill very new and 1 cannot as vet gjye an\nidea ut» U) its possibilities, ^o eonipan\nhas been organized and no 6teps taken t\nprosecute its production."
106e0ef68b40e1626aa9746293bef95c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8671232559614 40.063962 -80.720915 flufeland, a Qerman physician wl\nwrote on health at the end of the la\ncentury, said that the whole body oug\nto be bathed in cold water every da\nand this has been very commonly i\npeated by writers on health np to tJ\npresent time. And yet there are vei\nfew, even among those who console\ntioualy intend to take suitable care\ntheir physical condition, who comp\nwith this injunction. Are they wl\nneglect it altogether in error? It ce\ntainly wonld be a great inoonvenien\nto most of them to comply with it; b\nstill; if the measure be requisite for 8\ncuring the full health of the body, tl\ninconvenience should be no bar to i\nemployment. That bathing should 1\nused far more than it is by most pe\npie there is no doubt; but the questic\nis, to what extent is it required, and\nwhat ways should it be used ? We wl\nanswer this briefly as well as we can.\nThere are objects in bathing. Oi\nis to cleanse the skin. This organ (ft\nit must be remember that it is an acti^\norgan, and not a mere covering) is coi\ntinually discharging a large quantil\nr of reftise matter from the system, in tl\nform of both insensible and sensib\nperspiration. "For this purpose the:\nare innumerable tubes closely set t\ngether. It is important that the outle\nor those tubes, the pores ot the ski\nshould be kept well open. They a;\nliable to be obstructed, both by the a\n; cumulation of some of the mutter whit\npasses out of them, and by the lod;\nment Of matter brought to the skin i\nthe air, and in various other way\nThese accumulations are removed\nthree ways.by becoming attached\nthe clothing in its friction from the mi\n(. tions of the body, by the application\nwater, and by the washing out of tl\np tubes of the skin by the free flow\nperspiration occasioned'by brisk exe\nclBe.
1b1a1dd2c17d4cb586c80f258fa98895 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.8890410641807 43.82915 -115.834394 bud and blossom in the shadows of\nobscurity when the world ie fairly\ntolling end howling for it to come\nout from ita hiding place and make\nitself seen and fell for good. It ia\nthis hiding away of such talent and\nclear, keen, far-seeing vision that\nkeepe the world from moving for­\nward at fast at it should. Another\nreason given by this obscure genius\nfor stopping bis paper is that “it it\nnot as good as the Statesman,” and\nhe takes that paper. This informa­\ntion ie superfluous, as we are well\naware of that fact. The W orld es­\nteems the Boise Statesman as the\nvery best paper west of the Rockies,\nconsidering the population of tho\nState and the size of the town in\nwhich it is published. However, this\nreminder will be the means of accom­\nplishing much good. The W or is\nnow fully determined to go to the\nhead of the Idaho journalistic class.\nThe Statesman will have to take\nsecond place. Wo have determined\nto do this so as to avoid any painful\nreminder henceforth that the W o rl d\nis not the greatest journal In the\nState. It has been said that in the\nfield of politics the worst men are the\nGet-There Elis, nnd the best men get\nleft. We believe it, and as a posi­\ntive proof of the truth of that state­\nment it is only necessary to say that\ntho subject of this glittering effusion\n“ once upon a time” ran, or rather\nwalked, for a small office for which\nno one else would accept a nomina­\ntion. He ran, or walked, against\nhimself and when lie “ surveyed”\nthe vote found that he was defeated\nby a big round majority.
0a6db44c3760d236b603ebebd26dfd13 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.023287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 Some years ago an aunt, residing in\nanother city, was invited to visit the t\nfamily and did so, and during her stay\none of the members died. Later she\nnniil nnnther visit, nnd strain there wax\na death. The circumstance wan noted '\nas rather singular; but a year later she U\ncame lor the third time, and either while C\nsho was staying, or immediately after «\nher departure, there was a third death, t\nSo strange acolncidence was naturally fi\ndistressing to all concerncd, as the aunt u\nreferred to is a lady of fjreat amiability b\nof character and held in the highost s\nesteem and regard by her relatives tl\nU pon a fourth visit death again attended a\nher, and when she returned to her home «\nshe announced that bad determined &\nnever to come back to Baltimore again b\nShe kept her resolution for some time, E\nbut her brother, the father of young a\nVVyatt, In the oarly part of December, ri\nwrote, urging her to spend the Christ- B\nwas holidays with the family, Ho ti\nspoke lightly of tbe superstitious asso- bi\nciations attending her former visits, and V\nremarked humorously that it was now\nimpossible for any one to die, as they w\nwore all in tbe best of health and spirits, tr\nand could defy tbe ghastly intruder on si\nformer occasions of her appearance. As hi\nBlie had often shared their grief in a|\nbereavement, it was now proper that a<\nshe should enjov with them the pleas- A\nures they had planned for the Christmas\nholidays.
22af0c52aa775956b9e79d8f183f0d5a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.4452054477422 42.217817 -85.891125 for the sessions. The forenoon session\nwas taken up with routine business, in-\ncluding election of ofiicers, the old\nollicers being re elected. The picnic\ndinner was most enjoyable. The after-\nnoon session opened with music and\nprayer, after which tho association was\ncordially welcomed to Decatur, and a re-\nsponse was made by A. W. Haydon of\nHamilton. A poem by E. Barnum, one\nof the earliest pioneers of this county,\nwas finely read by Miss Anna Shaad.\nThe poem was first read by its author at\nthe second meeting of tho association .'J 2\nyears ago. The principal address of the\nafternoon was given by Bev. L. II. Man-\nning of Decatur, a talented young man\nwho interested the pioneers in spite of\nthe fact that he is of a newer generation.\nMrs. G. B. McOmber of Decatur a\nfine recitation. Short five minute ad-\ndresses were given by Hon. C . D. Law-to- n\nof Lawton, Dr. A. S. Haskin of Law-\nrence, D. Woodman and Mr. and Mrs. J.\nJ. Woodman of Paw Paw, and Elias\nMorris of Decatur, who was the second\nwhito child born in Van Buren county,\nhis brother, who died in infancy, having\nbeen tho first. His father was Dolphin\nMorris, the first white settler in Decatur\ntownship. Tho program was interspersed\nwith music by a Decatur quartette. A\nresolution was adopted favoring the loca-\ntion of the new state normal school in\nDecatur. The location of tho next meet-\ning was left with tho executive com-\nmittee, no town extending an invitation\nexcept Decatur. Th True. Northerner\nwould be pleased to see the pioneers\ncoiiio to Paw Paw next year.
158395c4863df65f8d67bad42de2d6d0 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1901.1657533929476 41.875555 -87.624421 Mr. John Martin, 1100 Indiana ave-\nnue, City:\nDear Sir I am In receipt of your let-\nter asking for a declaration from me\nof my views on certain questions\nwhich you submit, which, because of\nmy candidacy for the position of Al\nderuiaii for the new Sixth Ward, you\ndeem of public concern.\nRecognizing, ns I do, that the ques-\ntions asked by you must be answered\nby me, by my vote in tlie Council dur-\ning my term of olllce, If I am fortunate\nenough to be elected, mid that the pub-\nlic therefore has the light, beforo giv-\ning me support, to know what my an-\nswers will be, I take pleasure lu sub\nmitting the following reply:\n1. Upon the question of the exten-\nsion of the franchises of the traction\n I think that these exten-\nsions should be grunted upon terms\nthat should be equitable both to the\ntraction companies and In the city of\nChicago, in other words, It Is my Judg-\nment that legislation upon this subject\nshould be along lines which, while rec-\nognizing the property lights of those\nwho have their moneys invested In\nthese great public utilities, shall Im-\npose upon the traction companies the\npayment to the city compensation for\nthe privileges granted.\nIt Is my belief that lu granting new\nfranchises the same considerations\nshould be kept lu view, ami (hat exten-\nsion of street railways should be allow-\ned only in those neighborhoods where\nthey are demanded by a majority of\nthe property owners.\n2. Ilelievlng, as 1 do, that no light-m ind e- d
5cfe592354e54e370e3118c050359b9e THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.2671232559615 39.560444 -120.828218 Monster Ships in Olden Days.\nAn article in the Edinburg Journal, by\nProf. Tenant, states the dimensions of\nsome of the large ships built by the an-\ncients; whence it appeared, that a ship\nconstructed by Ptoloimeus Phibpater.\nwas 429 feet long, 56 feet broad, and 72\nfeet high from the keel to the prow, and\nwas manned by four thousand rowers,\nfour hundred servants, and two thousand\neight hundred and twenty marines. Hiero.\nKing of Syracuse, caused to be built by\nArchias, the Corinthian shipwright, under\nthe supervision of Archimedes, a vessel\nwhich appeared to have been armed for\nwar, and sumptuously tilled for a pleasure\nyacht, and yet was ultimately used to carry\ncorn; the dimensions were not recorded,\nbut there were twenty banks of oars,\nand three masts, the timber for the main\nmast, after being in vain in Italy ;\nwas brought from England and the cargo\nwas sixty thousand measures of corn besides\nvast quantities of provisions, etc. , for the\ncrew the dimensions must have exceeded\nthose of any ship* of the present day: in-\ndeed, tiicro, finding that none of the sur-\nrounding harbors sufficed to receive his\nleviathan, loaded it with corn, and present-\ned the vessel with its cargo, to Ptolemy\nking of Egypt, and on arriving at Alexan-\ndria, it was hauled ashore, and nothing\nmore was recorded respecting it. Taking\nthese dimensions as the basis for calcula-\nting the tonnage, by the old lay or build-\ners measurement, the first named ship\nwould measure 6445 tons, and Noahs Ark\nwould have registered 10,905. So it\nseems that, after all we are only going\nback to the vast proportions of the an-\ncients.
b7cfe915fa3943711f78d450cf3b4e00 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.080601061273 35.780398 -78.639099 instance, consumed moflfood in "a cold\nwinter than in one of ioclerate tempera-\nture; and he reasoned that if they ate more\nindicated better health and a faster\ngrowth of flesh and wool; and of course a\ngreater profit. Following out this opinion\nkept a flock of sheep in an open field,\nexposed to bleak winds and pelting storms.\nthis field he had placed a number of\nsmall stacks of hay, to one after another\nwhich they had free accesss, and upon\nwhich they made rapid inroads. Their\nonly shelter was afforded by the leeward\nside of these hay stacks and by the stone\nwalls that surrounded the field, together\nwith a grove upon the northern side that\nserved to break off the wind from that di-\nrection, but from entering which were\nprevented by the intervening fence. He\nwas quite sure they ate better when thus\nexposed than if housed or allowed a warm\nshelter around and under the barn. His\nother stock were treated in a similar man-\nner. Instead of warm sheds or stables,\nthey fed and slept in a cold open yard.\nHe said it kept them ia better 'vjaeart,"\nand gave them a sharper appetite. As to\nthe latter, he was doubtless correct.\nBut he, like thousands of others, had\ndrawn his conclusions from a false theory,\nwhich a few careful experiments would\nhave corrected. He should have consid-\nered that the profitableness of keeping an-\nimals depends not upon the absolute amount\nfood they consume, but upon the great-\ner or less product of flesh, wool, &c.,
0b13a2c9550e5ccc2c04dfd53912fb8c PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.1898906787594 40.441694 -79.990086 claring that all laws, and parts of laws are\ninoperative which exempt from the payment\nof duties articles of oommeroe which\nare not on the free list entered\nin the Custom Houses of the United\nStates for transportation through the\nUnited States to or from any British pos-\nsession. Senator Morgan savs he will use\nthe same arguments in behalf of the bill\nthat President Cleveland used in a message\nhe sent to Congress in the first session of the\nFiftieth Congress. This message recom-\nmended certain retaliatory legislation touch-\ning intercourse with Canada, and was called\n"forth as a result of the rejection by the Sen-\nate of a treaty negotiated for the settlement\nand adjustment of the differences existing\nbetween the United States and Great Britain\nconcerning the rights and privileges of\nAmerican fishermen in the ports and waters\nof British North America. The \nthen recommended Immediate legislative\naction, conferring' on the Executive the\npower to suspend by proclamation the op-\neration of all laws and regulations permit-\nting the. transit of 'goods, wares and mer-\nchandise In bond, across or over the terri-\ntory of the United States, to and from Can-\nada, and this is the object of Sir. Morgan's\nbill, which would deprive the Canadian\nPacific Ballroad of its valuable concession\nof the right to transport goods in bond\nthrough the United States to and\nfrom Europe and other foreign ports.\nAmong the bills Introduced and referred\nwas one with the following curious title,\npersented by Mr. Cullom (by request) "To\ntest and try the science nf spelling and to\nprovide for establishing 100 schools for the\npurpose; and to establish a spelling school\nin tne World's Columbian Exposition to be\nheld in Chicago in 1893."
0db2cba7ef782fcc3907b870fc3a9f02 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.3410958587012 41.004121 -76.453816 fic cost $1.00 per ton from Shlcksliluny\n10 iieacii iiavcn, u instance 01 soveu\nmiles; It now costs $2.00 . Hemember,\ngentlemen of tho Commltteo, that this\nrailroad under tho law passed last win-\nter can only chargo in all twonty cents\nper ton for distances under ten miles,\nunless tho rntoi under tho 18th section\nof tlio Act or 18 ID exceed that sum, so\nmat tney cnargo ten nines tno amount\npermitted under tho Act of 1870, and\nnearly us many times more than tbev\nare allowed under tho Act of 1810. l'n\nu word, thev now ohnrtm ns much fur\nsoveu miles, as they formerly did ror\nsuvuiuy. 10 uiustran nirtner. Thu\ndistanco rrom Hloomsburg to Hupert is\niwo nines i nun yet mis company\ncharges 40 contH per tou transporting\nnun tout instance; uouuio wnat tno\niaw 01 ism permits, ami so \nthat tho Iron men or Hloomsburg find\nIt cheaper to boat tlielr Iron In summer,\nand haul It by teams In winter.\nAgain, thu Iron men of Hloomsburg\ngut tlielr Ilmestonoovcr this road inthtie\nown caw, from Llmo Hldge, ti distanco of\nsix miles, for which they uro charged\n25 cents per ton, when under tho Act of\n1870, the limit Is 20 cents. It Is uo\nnrgument to ullego that tho curs may\novorrun lu weight, becauso both thu\ncompany ami iron men assutuo tho ca\npacity of each car to bo 11 vo tons, and\nhavo always settled on that basis. H\ntheso Instances tin not constitute a plain,\nclear, palpablo violation of tho law,\nthen I can concelvo or no combination\not circumstances that will.\nAnd now, gentlemen ortbocommlttee,\nhaving gone over tlio general question\nof thu light of lho.su railroads to chargo
32a65aa0003b886aa84e9485465d4c8f CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.6479451737696 41.875555 -87.624421 way or another.\nTho lufectcd ones aro tagged by tho\nlnsiectors nnd corralled, nnd It Is these\nthat nro slaughtered. During slaugh-\ntering hours four Inspectors nro on\nduty, and every part of each carcass la\nexamined. Dr, Charles Worcester, gov-\nernment Inspector, Dr. J. C. Loltb, Stnto\nInspector, und Dr. W . J. Wlesen and\nDr. W . C. Mason, city Inspectors, tho\nlatter two working under orders from\nChief Food Inspector "Fish" Murray,\nare tho men detailed to look after tho\nInterests of tho consuming .public.\nThe Inspectors work on tho theory\ntlmt "lumpy Juw" Is not uecessarlly In-\njurious to tho beef, provided the in\nfection Is local. Carcasses found in-\nfected with tuberculosis or general\n"lumpy Jaw" aro condemned. Bruises\nami sores nro not considered sulllclent\n for condemnation.\nThis week's slaughter with tho nc- -\ntual, evident lumpy Jaw section cut out\nwill be on salo lu tho coolers of tho\nplant this morning, tbe beef being sold\non bids. Because dealers know tho\ncharacter of tbo meut they refuso to\npay as high prices as tbo packers ask\nfor tbelr beef, although tbo best car\ncasses of "lumpy Jaw" bring from 0\nto 8 cents a pound. Sound beef may be\nbought wholesale for 7 cents a pound.\nTho present city Inspectors have boon\non duty since last March, wbeu "Fish"\nMurray, who then was a meat Inspect-\nor, was called off tbe work by tbe Com\nmissioner of Health', under Instructions\nfrom tbe Mayor, because he was "too\naggressive In condemning 'lumpy Jaw'\ncattle."
5b7065d0b8540af6dc6b24c399fbab9c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.3082191463725 39.745947 -75.546589 Do your eyes, give you trouble? Do\nyou already wear eyeglasses or spec­\ntacles? Thousands of people wear these\n" windows" who might easily dispense\nwith them. You may lie one of these,\nanil it is yonr duty to save your eyes\nbefore it is too late. The eyes are ne­\nglected more than any other organ of\nthe entire body. After you finiah your\ndays work you sit down and rest your\nmunde», but how about your eyes? Do\nyou rest them? You know you do not.\nYou rend or do something else that\nkeeps your eyes busy; you work your\neyes until you go to bed. That is why\nso many have strained eyes and finally\nother eye troubles that threaten par­\ntial or total blindness. Eyeglasses are\nmerely crutches; they never cure. This\nfree prescription, has benefited the\neyes of so many, may work equal won­\nders for you. Use it a short time.\nMould you like your eye trouble* to\ndisappear as if by magic? Try this\nprescription. Go to the nearest wide­\nawake drug store and get a bottle of\nOptona tu blets ; fill a two-ounce bottle\nwith warm water, drop in one tablet and\nallow it to thoroughly dissolve. With\nthis liquid bathe the eyes two to four\ntimes daily. Just note how quickly\nyour eyes clear up and how soon the in­\nflammation will disappear. Dont be\nafraid to use it; it is absolutely harm­\nless. Many who arc now blind might\nhave saved their eyes hu<> they started\ntc caic for them in time. This it a\nsimple treatment, but marvelously ef­\nfective in multitudes of cases. Now
1d679b5b0402ab9897bbfce5edeeb005 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.8972602422627 40.735657 -74.172367 R. It . crossing, and between Fourth avenue\nto the rear line of lots fronting on Emmet\nstreet; thence westerly and parallel with\nEmmet street to a point about 100 feet east of\nthe easterly line of Avenue B; thence north-\nerly anti parallel with Avenue B across Em-\nmet street to n point about 100 feet north of\nthe northerly line of Emmet street, whieh Is\nthe reai line of property fronting on Kmmet\nstreet; thence westerly along salt! rear line of\nproperty to a point about 100 fort east of the\neasterly line of Mulberry street; thenee north-\nerly and parallel with Mulberry street, serosa\nAstor street to the southerly line of Murray\nstreet; thence easterly along the southerly Hue\nof Murray street to a point about 100 feet ea-i\nof the easterly line of Goble street; thenco\nnortherly nnd parallel with Goble street, serosa\nMurray. Harper and Parkhurat streets to a\npoint about 100 north of the riortherly line\nof Parkhurat street: thenee easterly along the\nrear line of property fronting on Parkhurat\nstreet for a distance of about ..fty feet: thence\nnortherly and parallel with Goble street, across\nThomas street to the point or place of begin-\nning; on both sides of Chancellor avenue, from\nthe terminus of the present sewer, about 160\nfeet west ov Redden street for a distance of\nabout 420 feet westerly; on both sides of Ogden\nstreet, between Bridge street and Orange\nstreet, from the terminus of the present sewer,\nabout 300 feet south of ('lay street, to the D..\nL. and W. Railroad croMlng. and between\nFourth avenue nnd Hark street.\nThe owner* of lard and real estate assessed\nIn said Certificates of Assessment sre hereby\nrequired to pay the amount so assessed upon\nthem, and each of them respectively, to me at\nmv office, City Hall, on or before December\n27, 1911 .
06b5653e5cf6e21732b3b6d7a6e0c275 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.2424657217148 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, March 29..The presiden¬\ntial possibilities in the case of General\nJohn A. Logan was one of the subjects of\nconversation between a correspondent and\na prominent Democratic member of the\nlast Maryland Congressional delegation on\na Baltimore «Jc Potomac train to day. The\nSentlcman referrod to is one whose voice\nas at timrs been quite a power iu National\nDemocracy, antl his idea of the opportuni¬\nties now available for either side is there¬\nfore interesting. "Logan has been a can¬\ndidate for a long time, anil Lincoln is one\nby virtue of his name and his present sur¬\nroundings. Thero is plenty of room\nfor the belief that Logan and. Lincoln\nare being antagonized, but it is not\nsafe to say they are antagonizing each\nother. Logan was very much chagrined\nthat he was uot selected to till the breach\ncaused by the failure of the third term\nscheme of the Grant men at Chicago, but\nhe made the most of it, and secured a rep¬\nresentative in the Gardeld administration\nin the person of Bob Lincoln. Then lie\nspoke early enough to have Lincoln re¬\ntained in Arthur's Cabinet. So youeee\nLincoln is emphatically Logan's own man,\nand it is foolish to say that they are now\npersonally at odds on a matter so very far\nfrom settlement as is the presidential nom¬\n 1 am rather inclined to think\nthat each knows the hand of the other;\nthat Lincoln will not interfere with Logan\nif I/)gan can win, and that Logan will do\nhis best to have Lincoln win if he himself\ncannot do so. Now, the question is, can\nLogai^ win ? It must not he forgotten by\nthe Republicans that there is a man named\nBlaine who is far from dead yet, or who, if\nhe iB dead as far as his own nomination is\nconcerned, has life enough left to prevent\nthe nomination of a stalwarL It is quite\nprobable also that the Btalwarts are strong\nenough to prevent the nomination of an\nextreme "half-breed," and so, it seems to\nan outsider like mytelf, that the Republi¬\ncans will have to look for a man who\neither has little learning either way or\nwho cau please both factions. That is\nwhere such a man as Lincoln may come\nforward. He has been identitied with a\nstalwart administration and with a\n"straightout," he comes from an advan¬\ntageous locality, and he has the prestige\nof a name that would bring him many\nvotes. I would not be greatly surprised If\nhe should receive the next Republican\nnomination; and if he does not, I think he\nis young enough to at least be heard from\nin the same connection later on."
2b8e683d2df7fd3d145383396e185111 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1910.0178081874683 43.994599 -72.127742 The execution of a death sentence\nis thereby usually postponed from one\nto two years, and an appeal to the\nlegislature for commutation Is practi-\ncally always made. The attorneys\nand friends of the convicted man are\nnot considered to have exhausted his\ndefense until such an appeal is made\nand strenuously pressed. The result\nIs that the case of every person con-\nvicted of murder In the first degree\nmust be threshed over in the legisla-\nture, and the evidence and proceed-\nings are supposed to be reviewed and\nreconsidered by a large body, neither\ntrained nor intended for such work.\nIf the purpose of such review is to\nsee whether any mistake or error has\nbeen made In the trial, that Is purely\na Judicial question and should apper\ntain finally the supreme court. If\nit be a question of mercy. It Is a\nprinciple common to all American con-\nstitutions that such a question U ex-\necutive and should appertain to the\ngovernor or a pardoning board.\nThere are special and Justifiable\nreasons why the power to remit or\nmitigate punishment In case of trea-\nson or impeachment might be taken\nfrom the governor, as such cases of-\nten Involve executive officers or else\naffect the general public safety; but\nneither of those considerations apply\nto the case of murder. The consid-\neration of individual murder cases by\nthe legislature Is an assumption of\neither Judicial or executive powers, or\nboth, and contrary to the spirit of\nSection C of Chapter 2 of the Con-\nstitution, which provides that "the\nlegislative, executive
03d0fc0112ca7ab833abff721796329a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.9273972285641 40.063962 -80.720915 "Alia Oatbolio community aeema to\noare about la eaae and bsppldeas, Tbe\nProfeatontoentree bis beatitude In ao-\ntlvlty and riches. One leave* every-\ntblng for Qod to do, while the other aota\naalr he expected God to do nothing. A\nProtectant country la generally made\nup of locomotive*, ¦pinning Jennie*,\nfanaticisms, skeptics, Incorporated\nbanks. Joint stock und life Imnranoe\ncompanies, careworn men snd preach¬\ning women. Tbe produotlons of a Cath-1\nolio country am music, dauolng, sculp¬\nture, painting, poetry, band-organs aud\noontentuient. The former la all acflv-\nIty, like a mass meeting of fleaB.tbe\nlatter all hilarity, like a tnaas meeting\nofjokers. The Protectant tolls as If he\nexpected to live forever.tbe Catbollo\nas If he expected to drop otf in the\nmorning, In every oountry this singu-\nlar diiTurence between (be two sects Is\nas evident In the dlflorenco In their\nforma of worship. In tbe North of\nIreland, as In Canada, Swltterland\naud Italy, the Protestant la Invariably\nthe busy, Irritable, dlasailstled mau,\nwhile the Catholic ISithe happy, con-\ntented One la diasallafled with\neverything.the other belleveatUatUod\nis everything perfect, aud aeema to\nhkve no Inclination .to disturb His ar¬\nrangements. The first thing a Pro\ntesiant thinks when be enters a beau¬\ntiful valley, is what a duoed nice place\nIt would be to tun a cheap railroad\nthrough. The ilrst thought that would\neuter u Catholic's cranium would be its\nadaptation to tbe wabtMol a Utile love\naffair. Put a l'rotestant couuuuulty In\ntbe canton of Luzerue, aud In two\nyears the lake would be so studded\nwith woolen and ooLton factories that\nyou could not see a simple ripple of Its\nbeauty. The llute would be au perceed-\ned by thesteain whistle and "Ave Ma¬\nrias'' the by G.d.a aud tho Revised\nStatutes. Prom all this It must beevl-\ndent to tbe reader that there are more\nspinning jennies, fanaticism, trade und\nactivity iu tbe north of Irelaud (ban lu\nthe soutband west which Is true. One\nis an agricultural district, and tbe\nother Is glveu to breeding sheep aud\nmaklug linen goods.
633e75ec688b01dfd2d48c042f769b25 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.1109588723998 43.798358 -73.087921 6. Left our sympathizing friends, Capt.\nand Mrs. Hannay, with much regret, and\nstarted for home, having been provided\nwith an elephant through the kindness of\nCapt. H. Reached Keremia, a small\nvillage on the Dangori river, where I\nfound two or three persons who could\nread Asamese. Read and explained the\ncatechism and history. of the creation, and\ngave away three tracts.\n7. Passed several villages, the princi-\npal of which was Tipuk, quite a large\nplace, and containing many priests and\nlearned men. Gave awrjy about twenty\ntracts during the day. Reached Hap Jan\na little before night, where 1 had an op-\nportunity to spend an hour in conversa-\ntion with the natives, who seemed very\nfriendly and disposed to listen.\n8. Passed a large number of small\nvillages, and gave away from twelve to\n tracts. Came to Tingrai, where\nthere is a small but flourishing tea garden.\nRead and explained the catechism to the\nworkmen employed in cultivating the tea,\nand gave a few tracts.\n9. Came through a dense and unin-\nterrupted forest from Tingrai to Jaipur,\nwhere I arrived a little after noon. Thro'\nthe blessing ot God 1 have enjoyed unu-\nsual good health, during this trip, ani\nfeel much recruited. Have given awav\nin all, about eighty tracts in Asamese,\nand ten or a dozen in Shyan.\n28. Have completed the revision of\nthe first chapter of Genesis in Shyan.\nFind the revision a work of much more\nlabor than the fint copy. Have given\naway fourteen books and tracts in Asam-\nese during the week.\nArrival of missionaries Visit to the\ncoal mines Resources and prospects\nof Asam.
0a053ae11bb21256215cd91159da4081 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.5246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 SATURDAY, THE 11th DAY OF JULY. 1885,\niommenclng at 10 o'clock a. v., tho following\nicribed property, that la to far: A ccrtaln tract\nand situated la Union i>l» trfct, la Manhall cot\n;y, Htale of West Virginia, bounded u follows\nfit: Beginning at a make in Richard Allan's Ifi\niearWall*ce's spring; theuco vrlthauld Hue sou\n«K°X 4212-100 pole* to & itako on a branch\n3oggB' Run; thence down the meanders then\n» 8M00 poles to astakelntheoriginid line; thtr\n1.1® W. to a hickory in the oriKlunl Hue and\nEUchard Allen's line; thence with the original 1!\n».62°W.74polestoft red oak and leechint\njrlglnal line; thence 03° W. 88 poleeto a inptru\njorner to BeuJ. McMechen a: thcnee 45° W7»m'\no a red elm corner to John Qulgley; thence 2*.\nN. DO poles to a black walnut corner to John Qu\ney; tnence N. f-7 W. 68 jv>le« to a white oak at\nsnail drain: thence with the drain down to\nM>int,ooraor to John Quigiej John Brown tc\n>Cech on tho point: thence up the rtin to a ini\nrce on the bank of the rtin%, thencn up the n\nvilli tho meanders thereof aud binding therera\nistono'marked A: thence N.S7° K. 22 poles to\nitouemarkrd B; thence to the beginning, tuppoi\no contain 189 acres, be the aame more or las.\nTho title to the above land is believed to ben\nect, but I will convey only the title voted hi\n>y fcaid deed of trait.\nTwins of SAtx-One-third, and an mcrh more\nhe purehaaer electa to pay in ca h on tho da;\nale, the balance in two equal Instalment* at a\n;»id two yean, with intercat, for which the yt\nbaser shall execute his notes with good wcurit\ncaring interest Lorn the day of »ale, the kt\nitle to be rotalned as further security for the 3\nerred payments, or at tho purebwior'i option\nnay secure the notes forauoh payments by da\nif trust on the property.
0e4a68f620456db88620a0b12b4b8ef4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.6479451737696 39.745947 -75.546589 •10.35 a. W.; *12.21, *2.29, *3.29, »6.22, »7.48, *1\np. m. Sundays, *3.13, *9.40, *11.25\n•3.29, «5.22, »7.43, »11 p. m .\nPHILADELPHIA, week day». »3.13, 5 .58\n6.40, *7.15, 7.35. *8.25, 9.0C, »0 40, M0.25, 11.10 a\nm.; •12.21, 1.20, •2.29, *3.29. 3 .50, *5.22, 6.30\n•7.43, 9.15, *11 p. ra . Sundays, »3.18, 7.35\n8.50. *9.40, *11.25, 11.25 a. m.; *3.29, 3.50, »5.28\n6.30, *7.43. 9.15, *11 p. m.\nCHESTER, week days, *3.13, 5.65,\n•7.15, 7.35, »8.25. 9.00, *9.40 . *10.25, U.10 a. m .\n1.30 . *2.29, 3.50, *5.22, 6.30, *7.43, 9.15, *11 p. ra\nSundays, *3.13, 7.35, 8.50, *9.40, »11.25, 11.25 a\nm.: *8.29, 3.50, *5.22 . 6 .30 . »7.43, 9.15, »11 p. ra\nATLANTIC CITY, week days. »7.15 a\nm., *8.25 a. in.. »12.21, *2.29, *3.29. *5.22 p. m\nSundays, a. m. ; *3.29 p. ra .\nCAPE MAY, week days,\n•2.29 p. m. Sundays. 7.3o\nBALTIMORE AND\nweek days, *4.13, 7.10, *8.49, *11 a. m . ; »12.5«\n•2.07, 3.04, *4.03, »4.57, *6.16, »8.17, *8.53 p. m\nSundays. *4.13 . 7 .10 . »8.49 a. m.; *12.6«, »2.07\n8.04, *4.57, *8.17, *8.53 p. m .\nBALTIMORE AND WAY BTATIONS\n7.10 a. m. ; 3.04 p. m. dally.\nNEWARK, week days, *4.13, 7.10, »8.49\n•11.00 a. m .: *12.56, 3.04. »4.03, *4.57, »S.16\n7.35. *8.17, 10.46 p. m. Sundays, *4.13, 7.10\n•8.49 a. ra .: »12.56, 3.04. »4.57, 7.35, »8.17 p. m\nPITTSBURG, week days, *«.16 p. m\nSundays, »4.57 p.\nCHICAGO, dally, »4.57 p. m.\nI CHICAGO via CINCINNATI and IN\nDIANAPOL1S, *8.49 a. ra . dally.\nCINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS, *12.56 p
0da996c39cb92d9df3ee36ac900763cc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.8534246258243 39.745947 -75.546589 The physicians at the hospital told me that\nmy case was a serious one nnd I was com­\npletely discouraged. I remained at the\nnospital seven weeks and took the medicines\nwhich the doctor* gave me. I felt better at\nthe hospital and thought that I was recover­\ning, ana went home to continue their treat­\nment, which 1 did for two months, nnd also\nhad an electric battery under their advice.\nThe improvement, however, did not continue\nand I began to give up hope. August 1st,\n1893, I could not get out of my chair without\nassistance, and if 1 got down upon the floor, I\ncould not get up alone. About thia time I\netiaaoed to rend an account of the wonder­\nful curative powers of Dr. Williams Pink\nPill* for Pale People in cases similar my\nown. I did not have any faith in the Pills\nbut thought a trial could do\nbought some without telling anyone what I\nwas going to do. After I nad been taking\nthem some time I found that, for the first time\nin months I was able to walk down to the\npost office, and my neighbors began to dis­\ncuss the marked improvement in my health.\nAs I continued the medicine I continued to\nimprove, and aoon recommenced work in\nthe mill, at first very lightly, and increasing\nas I was able and as I gained in health and\nspirits, and now for the past three months I\nhave been working tea hoar* per day almost\nas steadily as I ever did. I feel well, eat\nwell and sleep well as I ever did and 1 have
1160215e10a12d9327a7e669af7512d7 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.03698626966 40.735657 -74.172367 Please take notice that on the thirtieth day\nof September, one thousand nine* hundred and\nseven, Georgia E. Clark purchased for the sum\nof one hundred and seventy-six dollars and\ntwenty cents at a sale held In pursuance of\nChapter CXI1. of the Laws of eighteen eighty-\nsix and the several supplements thereof and\namendments thereto, lands known as lot num-\nber three on block number two thousand seven\nhundred and forty-four, as laid down on the\nblock map* of the City of Newark, and by\nmemo assignments the undersigned, Charles\nD. Butler, became and la the owner of tho\ncertificate of sale Issued in pursuance of said\nsale of said lot, which said lot la described by\nmetes and bounds as follows:\nBeginning In the easterly line of Elizabeth\navenue, at a point fifty feet northerly from the\nnortheasterly corner of said avenue and Loctlst\nstreet; thenca running eusterly In a line at\nright angles to said or:c hundred feet;\nthence running nortjiuly in a line parallel to\nsaid avenue twenty-five reet; thence tunning\nwesterly lit n line parallel with the first course\none hundred feet to the f*aid easterly lino of\nElizabeth avenue, and thence running southerly\nalong said avenue twenty-five feet tp the' place\nof beginning.\nAnd that by virtue of an order made on the\nsixteenth day of December, one thousand nine\nhundred and nine, by the Circuit Court of the\nCounty of Essex, you are required to redeem\nsaid lands from said sale on or before tho\neighteenth day of. June, one tnousund nine hun-\ndred and ten. or show cause'on sold day before\nsaid court, at the Court'Hottfe*. In the said City\nof Newark, at ten oclock ou said day, or as\nsoon thereafter as counsel cat; bo heard, why a\ndeed for said '.and? should not he delivered to\nthe said Charles D. Butler, hla lie Ira and\nanalgin*.
1bece5d662e4b3c3ff80349c3529c931 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.596994503896 39.745947 -75.546589 It was not till the last year of the last cen­\ntury that the first mammoth was disen­\ntombed from the tundra, to tho complete\ndemolition of giants and antiquaries, and the\nprofound.delight of scientific inquirers. In\n17911, at the very moment when a rash young\nman of the name of Bonaparte wjas upsetting\nthe Directory and making himself inconti­\nnently into a first consul, the people of Sibe­\nria were quietly rejoicing in the rare and un­\nexpected luxury of a warm summer. In the\ncourse of this unexpected climatic debauch a\nTungusiau fisherman In the Lena district\nwent out one day hunting for mammoth\ntusks, nud was surprised to find instead a\nwhole mammoth sticking out visibly from a\nbank of liait thawed mud. Siberians stand\nrather in awe of mammoths; they\ngarded as in some sort antediluvian, and\ntherefore uncanny monster.-;, and the fisher­\nman accordingly said nothing of his find to\nany man anywhere, but locked up the secret\nprofoundly in his own bosom.\nNext year, however, he went again stealth­\nily to visit tho suspicious creature, and tho\nyear after that he visited it a third time, and\nso on, until tho mammoth was at last\nfairly out, and fell on live sandbank\nby tho shore of the Arctic ocean. Thou the\nfisherman, seeing the monster was really\ndead, summoned up courage boldly to cutout\ntho tusks, which he straightway sold, on\nbusiness bent, for fifty roubles to a Russian\nmerchant. As to the body itself, ho thought\nno more in any way about that, for tho skin\nand flesh being somewhat high, not to say\nunpleasant, were not in a condition to form\nremarkable commodities. However, he\nticed that his monster was covered with long\nhair and thick wool, and that in general\nshape it roughly resembled his own unsophis­\nticated idea of an elephant. Two years later\na wandering man of science passed that way\non bis road to China with Count Golovkin.\nHearing that a mammoth hod been\nearthed, or, rather, noticed, near the mouth\nof the Lena, lie turned astde from his main\npath to pay bis respects in due form to tho\nprehistoric monster. He found it, indeed,\nstill recognizable, but quantum mutatus ab\nlllo, a bare and mutilated elephantine corpse,\nwith scarce a fragment of flesh clinging to\ntho bones of the huge skeleton. The fisher­\nmen around had cut off the muscles from the
2e9fc704e07342a8fefd1be17f370b58 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.4385245585408 39.369864 -121.105448 this character, is a serio-comic essay on\nthe technicalities of boxing, in which, with\nall deference be it said, there is one glaring\nfault. If the beautiful ladies of Marysville\n—and, Heaven knows, some of them are very\nbeautiful, as our bachelor friend, Mr. Avery,\nwill soon find out to his cost —if the beauti-\nful ladies of Marysville have a penchant for\nthe pugilistic vocabulary, it is scarcely fail:\nto make such a matter patent. Just read\nwhat “the satirical rogue” says :\n“A knowledge of these technical terms is\nrequired for a full Understanding of the Kee-\nnan and Sayers battle, and, of course, every-\nbody has more or less posted himselfor her-\nself as to the definition of them. It is no\ngreat wonder, then, if we hear from rosy\nlips, wreathed with a halt deprecating smile,\nsomething about Keenans left shooting\nout and getting on Toms conk, while\nKeenan received a right hander upon\nhis nut, at which he shook and grinned;\nor a laughing observation, that, on a cer -\ntain round, Tom's bn'ug showed Keenan's\nsign-manual; and again that Tomspeeper\ndisplayed marks of pepper; on the other\nhand, that Tom countered Keenan heavily\non the right cheek, drawing the claret,\nwhereupon Keenan napped him on the right\ncheck and closed his dexter goggle, and di-\nrectly after got him on the smeller. Yon\nmay laugh, but we fell you that there are\nlively females of the genus Lady Gay Span-\nker, who can reel you off this kind of talk\nas glibly as you please, and they do it in ft\nstyle, ton, that is perfectly captivating.—\nThey seem fo know intuitively, so quick is\nwoman's wit, what is meant by a straight\none on the sniffer, or lodging a left on the\nnozzle, or letting go his right on the kisser\nand drawing the carmine , or a blow alight-\ning on Keenans oration trap, and bringing\nthe ruby; or Keenans retaliating sharply\non the bridge of Tom's snout, or Tom's get-\nting a hot un on Keenans whistler, which\nshook bis ivories:' or the Benicia Boys lan-\nding a lick on Tom's gob, which brought\nthe juice, and Toms responding with a blow\non Keenans snuffer-trap with a like result,\nkc., &c. , kc.
15ca84b6d7ef8516ffcfb47074f0e021 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.546575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 N*w York, July 18..A Hartford apo-\ndtl to the Tiinanyi: The tot lorn\nbill which is to he introduced nt tho\nopening session of Congress in Decem¬\nber involving the most gigantic scheme\nfor railroad consolidation ever candidly\ndiscussed In this country, la now being\nput into type in this city and a Chicago\nfirm is engaged in publishing tho mapa\nillustrating the conaolidation of railway\nUnci and the tracts of country which are\nto supply the proposed system with busi¬\nness, The fundamental idea la to multe\nBob ton the metropolis of the continent.\nWhile the Inter State Commission and\nthe busiueis men of New England are\ndiscussing the problems to be solved on\naccount of the low freight rales enforced\non ihe Canadian Pacific road, the con¬\nsolidation is consummating plans for the\nabsorption of the Cauadlan rival with\nthe American system and the establish¬\nment of the greatest railroad power in the\nworld. The Yiilard system is only\none not embraced in the conception.\nThe Union and Northern l'aclllc roods\nand the Canadian Pacific are the oni a\nto be consolidated. The-systoin extend¬\ning from Santa Fe through the south¬\nwestern States, thence by way of the\nPennsylvania coal reglonsand across tho\niludBon river at Poughkeopsie, taking\nin the Hartford & Connecticut western\nline with tho new road from Tarlll'viilo\nto Springfield, Is also involved In tho\nunparalleled scheme for consolidation,\nFrom Boston the originator ol the plait\nproposes to run a steamship lino to Eu¬\nrope, furnishing the amplest accommo¬\ndations for freight and passenger tralllc\nfrom tho Pacific alopo to the largest\nporta on the European continent.\nThe details ol the bill cannot be as¬\ncertained at present, but its projectors\nstate that members ol the Senate uru fa¬\nmiliar with the scheme and are enthusi¬\nastic lor Its prosecution. Tho capitalisa¬\ntion to be asked lor will not be less than\n$700,000,000.
07fb3922834e861e7018a14dac159c82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.2800546131855 40.063962 -80.720915 QIMMDNQ' LIVER DISEAHE and Indlgea*\naimmuno tlon prerall to a greater extant\n.han protablv any other -malady, and r»lief teal-\nray a anxioualy sought alter. If the Liver la R*gula-\ned in lt» action health la almoat Invariably secured.\nIt dlratlon or want of action in the Liver causee\nHeadache, Constipation, Jaundice, rain in theShould-\ntra, Cough*, Plumes*, SonrSiora»cb, bad ia«te In the\nmonth, bilious attacks, palplta1 fna of the heart, de¬\npression of iplrlta or the blu#a, and a hundred\n>tber symptoms. Sumojta' Ijvkb Eksulator la the\n(jeet tf med y that hat ever been dUcoverrd for t heae all-\nmenu It acta mildly, effectually. and being a simple\nvegetable com pound, ran do no Injury In any quanti¬\nties that It may be taken. It la hartnltaa in ertrj\n"ray; It baa uaed for forty rears, ani hundrvda\nfrom all parts of the country will vouch for Ita vir-\ntura. Tie Won. Alexander II. Stephens, of Georgia;\nI IVPRBIikop Pierce, of Georgia: John Oil!\nl»lwtn shorter, of Alabama: Qen. John B. Gor¬\ndon, R. L . Mott, of (olamhus, Ua., are among the\nhundreds to wbotn «. can refer. Extract of a Tetter\nfrom Hon. Alexander II. Stephens, dated March 8,\nU7£ "I occasionally use when my condition require*\nIt, Dr.Simmona' liver Kegula or, with god «flfct.\nIt la mild, and aulta me better than more active medl-\nREGULATOR. £?$£.«\nblood and h*al*h. It la the thorough dl.eatlon of the\nfood taken let It be much or little. Therefore, do not\nstimulate np the stomach to crave feod, bat rather\nassist digestion after eating by taklrg
fb906929a363d29cf7610dc5fa75b67f VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.7958903792492 43.798358 -73.087921 Tupbridge VeJIs, which was a few years\nago. in the occupation of the late Gen.\nUeatson, contains about 300 acres of land.\nwhich 1 12 are arable, and is described\nabounding with clay, and retentive of\nkuriace moisture, but wnen arieu oy tne\nsummer neat, i' oecomes as nara as a\nbrick,' and impervious to the plough, un\nless with a. great power of animal exer-\ntion, particularly os the general mode is\nplough isep. The established rotation\nthat part of Kent, and the neighboring\nportion of Sussex, is fallow, wheat and\nots, with occasionally clovei nnd rye-\ngrass; and the husbandry appears to have\nremained unaltered for many ages, with\nthe single exception of substituting lime\nfor manure instead of marl. Upon th:s\nsvstcm the farm was managed during the\nGeneral's absence, while governor of the\nIsland of St. Helena; and, finding on his\nreturn, in the year 1813, "that he had no\ncause to boast his profir, he resolved to\ntiaee the whole progress of the operati ns,\nfrom the commencement of the fallow to\nthe close of the roiation," the result of\nwhich was, that " having made a scries\nof experiments, to which he devoted his\nattention during 5 years, he determined\nupon the total nbolition of failows."\nIn order to effect this, he adopted seve-\nral new implements, chiefly of his own\ninvention, for a description of which we\nmust refer to his "new system of cultiva-\ntion," as we have only seen the scarifier\nin use. This is of a light construction,\nand Certainly performs well; though up-\non land such as that described by the\nGeneral, it is worked by a pair of horses,\nand scmetiir.e3 more, instead of one.\nHe conceived that the grand source of\nall the heavy expanses of the old method\nmight be traced to the fallow itself, and 10\nthe mode of preparing it,
0d6b716b85f1125433394a402aa9fbf3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.5013660885954 40.063962 -80.720915 all Important question uv payln Hit\nbonds with greenbacks?"\n'Certainly. I regret, however, that ]\nam onable to give yoo ez full and ex\nplicit an aneer to this query ez to tbi\nothers. The fact is, my dear sir, I he\\\nnever paid any attenshun watever tc\nthe subjeck uv finance, and am no\ncompetent to give a opinynn there\nupon. I pledge myself, however, t<\nstudy the intrikit queutiou diligently\nso that in case I am nominated anc\nelected, I kin recommend a policy tha\nwill be entirety satisfactory to the peo\npie. I sbel hev to assertane the dilfer\neut kinds uv bonds how held agin th<\ngovernment, the dates uv their lshoos\nand the stipolashens ez to payln u v em\nFrom my present stan-point, and witt\nmy limited knowledge uv the subjeck\nI am inclined to hold the opinynn thai\nthis question, tho onct uv importance\nis now aotully a deadishoo.\nWe convent some' time jipon othei\ntopics, and I mast say that I wui\ncharmed with the strateforerd honesty\nuv his replies. He asshoord me that hi\nwuz a Democrat and alluz hed bin. Hi\nhad been estranged from the party or\nsome questions wich hed bit\nhannilv settled, and nnon lookin the\nsubjeck all over, he ooodent find one\nsingle difference atween em. All tbi\nquestions wicb divided em wnz deac\nJahoos, and he cood now shake handi\ncorjelly with em. He wnz not a parti\nzan, in proof uv wicb he cited me to hi!\nroolins on the impeechment trial.\nWhile he bed allnz ben a Democra\nand cherished the principles nv th«\nparty as the:especial apple nv his eye\nhe hed not, it la troo, allnz acted witl\nit. His first vote was agin Jackson\nhis Becond and third for Harrison. Hi\norganized the .Liberty party movement\nand voted in 1848 agin Cass. He ala\nwnz elected to the Senit by the Fr«\nSollers, and opposed Douglass' Kansai\nNebraska skeem, and in 1855 wnz elect\ned Governor of Ohio by the party wicl\nbez allnz been opposed to the Demo\ncrats. He coniessed that he originates\nGreenbax, wnz a Naahnel bank an<\ntariff man. and hed opposed the fngl\ntive slave law and secession, bnt whs\nav these t They were mere pints w\npolicy in their day, and are now, to*Ba;\nthe least, dxad ishoos ! Waft we wan
205e610a1cbf3bb235a94f14733e7107 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1886.6315068176052 42.217817 -85.891125 The defense act up by the prisoners' counsel\nis regarded generally as a very weak one,\nthough probably the best that could be offered\nunder tho circumstances. A large number of\nwitnesses have been examined, nearly all of\nwhom were regular readers of the ArMter\nZtitung, and either avowed socialists or social-\nistic sympathizer. Most cf tne witnesses thus\nfar examined by the defense have been called\nfor the apparent purpose of attempting to prove\na negative, under the rigorous prompting or\nthe counsel for the prisoners they have been\nmale to testify to what they did not see, what\nthey did not hear, what they wera not in-f-\nmod of, and what they wero not in a position\nto know anything definitely about. We have\nhad a series of witnesses to prove that they did\nnot eee pistols in the hands of the socialists\n were aesembled iu front of the speak-\ners' stand. An effort to prove a nega-\ntive must inevitably result in failure,\nludeed, under any strict rules of evi-\ndence such testimony would not be per-\nmitted. Hut apparently both the court and the\ncounsel for the prosecution are disposed to allow\nthe widest latitude to the defense, for the rea-\nson that it is clearly as much for tho interest of\nthe people as for that of the prisoners that the\nwhole truth shall be brought out during the ex-\namination of witnesses. Hut for the purpose of\nestablishing any moral probability as to the\nguilt or innocence of the accused, all this testi-\nmony as to what was not seen or heard is worth-\nless. Up to this time the chain of proof sub-\nmitted by the prosecution has not been broken\nat a single ioint.
2afc980161fd98fd58cf9eeb3a7d29c1 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1915.3493150367833 41.875555 -87.624421 1887, delights In telling the story of\nhow he and his wife mode the first\ncatcher's breast protector ever worn\nby any backstopper In the country.\nAnd he says that Gray, the patentee of\ntho protector now In use, got his first\nIdea from the homemade affair of C.\nBennett's inventive genius and Mrs.\nBennett's skill with the needle.\nIt was a constant source of worry to\nthe then very young and very pretty\nMrs. B. to watch her husband being\nmade a target for the speed merchants\nof 30 years ago. And she fully real-\nised the pressing necessity of some\nkind of armor to prevent the hot shot\nsent through by these speedy slabmen\nfrom caving in a rib or two that be-\nlonged to her handsome better half.\nSo she and her hubby proceeded to\ncontrive some means of saving the\naforementioned ribs. After much deep\nthinking and considerable they\ngradually shaped out something that\nhad a faint resemblance to the pro\ntector worn today.\nA crude, but very substantial shield\nwas made by sewing strips of cork of\na good thickness In between heavy\nbed ticking material. So after much\nhard work they had It ready for trial.\nCharlie didn't have nerve enough to\nwear it outside his shirt for fear of\nthe fans roasting him for being chick-\nen hearted, so ho woro It under his\nshirt. In a private trial It worked fine.\nAfter Bennett got used to his new\nappliance he wore It In a regular con-\ntest, and with the eyes of thousands\nof the spectators gazing upon him he\nwould let n fast one hit hlin square on\nthe chest. The ball would rebound\nback almost to the pitcher, much to\nthe amazement of the fans and players\nwho weren't on to tho hidden cause.
07845185f966d048b3c8346355089a3f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.6232876395231 40.063962 -80.720915 caught as ever. The Chief of Police I\nand Otlicer Short aro still busy on the i\ncase, but they make no sign of what 1\nthey are really doing nor how they are J\ndoing it. Dora Florence is still locked r\nUp 1Q 1(10 BttCK ID J 111 uown euurs in lue \\\nCity Building, and the police are making c\nregular calls and applying the pump at q\nregular intervals, Tbey say she still p\ntells all they ask her to, and is B\ndocile and does not complain of r\nher confinement. Miss Chisnell ^\nwho was at first very positive that Dora (\nhad tho diamonds Beema to have changed a\nher mind, and is now just as positive 5\nthat Blanche Ferrell, the other inmate <!\nlocked up Wednesday night, knows all\nabout them. Yesterday she called at i\nthe building and accused Blanche of the v\n and told her that she was positive J\nthat she had taken them. Blanche did /,\nnet rullla at the accusation, and told fc\nMies Chisnel that she did not blame her s\nfor but one thing, and that was that she I\ndid not Inck up everyone in the house, e\nChisnei's reason for accusing Blanche\nof the theft is that Blanche's stair door £\nopens into the hallway to her room, a\nThis is quite a change of base, Miss r\nChisnel having at first refused to allow 1\nBlanche to be arrested. t\nYesterday afternoon Oflicer Short call- g\ned at the building and took Blanche t\nfrom the chief's private office and lock- a\nedherupinacell. Thegirl tookthe \\\nchance as gracefully as could be expect- t\ned, although at midnight she asserted [\nthat Bho had killed seventy-eight bed i\nbug*, which had crawled over her person c\n.!
10fade11bf442aa715c7f61ac3dbf711 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.424863356355 40.063962 -80.720915 Recall, if you can, these scenes, tho\njarful times, and theu you can appi\niate what is passing in the minds of tl\nnrviving comrades, mothers, wido^\nnd children of these men whom wo lo\n3 honor as we see the bright flowers\nring budding ami blooming. Tin\nre then thinking of the grassy moun<\n1 theso cemeteries and of those wl\nleen their last sleep in the cities of tl\nead. Aud when tlio day comes a ho\naim falls upon the laud. All busine\nsuspended. Tho Grand Aruiv gnthi\ni their |>ost headquarters. They g\nUl, wiu uiu hi»k uuu us 11 nnvt-o in bi\nreezo draped in mourning they on»\n»ore march beneath it with solemn st<\ni tho muffled dram. Not to battle. Ni\no! Thov are marching to these sacrc\nsots. The mothers, the fathers, tl\nidows, tho orphans, patriot\ntizen is in line. Beautiful childrc\nith garlands and flowers to decora\nle last resting place of tho veterans <\nJ31-5, and when the cemetery is reachc\near tho words of patriotism spokei\nle soul thrilling and inspiring son]\nint are sung, bod is worshiped an\nis divine blessing is asked and receive.\n11 feel that in honoring our dead the\n3 honor to themselves and are bett<\nir having dono so. Eten* soul is liftc\n»a higher plane of thought, all feel be\nr, purer and holior for having done »\no patriotic American citizen should fa\nmake duo observance of this day.\nBehold the picture of the whole lao\nom ocean to ocean thus engaged in a\ntiowledging tho debt of gratitude the\n(veto these sleeping patriots; see tli\nsing generation drinking in lessons <\nitriotism, listening to the praises f<
24a28308faf3958f445dc7a95598b553 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.2068492833587 39.743941 -84.63662 ohase bonds for cancellation.\nA Washington correspondent of the Cincin\nnati Commercial says: "The indications are\nthat the National Banks which hastily with-\ndrew their circulation because a funding bill\nwith a disagreeable features was about to pass,\nhave got themselves into trouble. The most\nof them are now trvine to cet back their circu\nlation, but the law is plainly against them, and\nhaving gone out of business, they will have to\nstay out at least tnat is the view of all promi-\nnent Treasury officials except Comptroller\nKnox, who gives the law a singular interpreta-\ntion.' The question has gone to Secretary\nWindom for final action, and it is believed he\nwill decide against the banks, as it is difficult to\nsee now ne can ao otnerwise.\nThe Congressional Committee of "the Na\ntional Greenback party has issued an address\nto the people of the United States; . The ad-\ndress opens with the assertion that "National\nBanks, through years of unwise and unjust\nlegislation in their interest, now assume to\n the Government and defy its sovereign\nngnt to issue ana regulate tne volume ol cur-\nrency;, oharges the National Banks with having\nrebelled against the Government, causing bor\nrowers or money to pay at the rate of 500 per\ncent, annual interest for its use." Railroad and\n" telegraph compw are cairgeoTwIth cbnduct- -\nuj butur uusjuwb ii tujwuuu ui private ngnta\nana runaamentai laws oi tne eminent aomaln.\nThe address concludes by maintaining the\nwrongs complained of cannot be corrected\nthrough either of the old parties because both\nare allied with such abuses, and therefore\nearnestly advises the formation of clubs in\nevery city, village ana township in the United\nStates with a view to thorough organization\nand final triumph of the National party.\nThe New Cabinet. Senator Windom, of\nMinnesota,' Secretary of the Treasury, was\nadmitted to the bar at Mt Vernon, Ohio, in\n1850, and in later years was Prosecuting\nAttorney in Knox County. Subsequently he\nremoved to Minnesota, and in 1858 he was\nelected to the Thirty-sixt- h
127ce28365356bf2bf5796342c1bef79 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.9602739408929 40.063962 -80.720915 HOW YOU CAN 11EA\nIn every eounty in the United States of ordinary popti\nretired tnrough thuliuiidlliifrof thi* nrtlule. By cstab!\nllbrla to enrich thrmsolvea will at tho aatne time yield\nountica tbua worked probably ua much or more for thU\nr company would pay lor its exclusive «se, and at the\ntenia ua to the valuoof thu Preservative for uie in a ell\n'heelty'sanpplieamust all come from the country. 'I\nlilp hU goods to market, no matter at what prico, in on\nir inatance, mutt reach the market wPhiu a few daya a\nr fifty cent*. There ia no option in tho matter. It Is\n1/lnv to preserve eggs; but they are cxpenilvr, usually\nir from iresh and palatable. Willi this p ocesa any furii\ndc«lrublc, and When the market ia right they can 1mj t\nImt, and nothing eUe. Now, If onu man In a county i>om\nj secure every eggluld in the county, for he could alwn\nrhohad to ship immediately, as hucould hold them iu<\nnd tho difference In price of egga between apring and w\nutidred pcrcent ut lo the man who could hold eg*\nWith audi un article aa tlila preservative, we oak you c\nbility to muiilpuliitu and work it aa to yield him a splei\nntmcuiiB to chooKofrom to make it yield tho beat resu\n>r the preservation, in a wholesale way, of tho uroduoU\nne in mnj mux/]/ will wt 11 largely. There la not a fan\nire for the article If he knew thut lie could lurnaroiin\nlie amount; Mid thia is exactly what hu could do. Tht\nroflt and still eu-tblo the purchaser to use it almost at a\nlint why go on? Your own business sagacity will Rtigi\nwllxe a hundiotno Income from O/one, vromnl you hu\nThere/ore, to make money, mid make It lioiustly, legit\n> do, and to do at once, ia to handle Owne. An agency\nloner In hand, itccuuao wo advertise teat packages at\n'ould be interfered with, for no person can buy u teat p\nig lest packages Is lo enable agents and packers to m ik\nhit done, the only orders we will fill are those which\nholesalo quantities.
2d08fe1fccbc0e221783a1bd0668806e WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1873.1191780504819 40.827279 -83.281309 sion ; to provide for the publication\nof the debate and proceedings of the\nConvention, in durable form, and\nfor the securing of a copyright there\noi lor.ine oiaie ami to lis ami pre\nscribe tne lime and form anil uian\nner 01 siiomuung any proposed re\nvision, alterations or amendments of\nth Constitution to the electors of\nineritatc; aiso tne notice to bo giv\nen of such submission.\nSec. o . The election at which said\nsubmission shall be made shall be\nheld and conducted at the places and\nby the ofbees and 111 the manner pro\nvided by law for the election of mem\nbers cf the House of Representatives\nso far as practicable, and the votes\ncast for and against such proposed\nrevision, alterations or amendments\nand thoso for against cac 1 ol\nthe same separately submitted, shall\nbe entered on the tallyshect, counted\ncertified, transmitted and canvassed\nand the result thereof declared in tiie\nmanner prescribed in the "act rela\ntive to submitting the question, 'shall\nthere be a convention to revise, al\nter or amend the Constitution' to the\nelectors of Ohio," passed March 30,\n1871, so far as applicable. Au I all\nthe provisions ofthe law of the State\nrelative to elections shall apply to\nsaid election as far as applicable. If\nsuch submission be made upon a day\noilier than the Second Tuesday o\nOctober or the first Monday of April\nthe judges and clerks, of election\nand other officers performing auties\npertaining thereto, shall bo entitled\nto the compensation fixed by la w for\nsimilar services
0d8875672dda6289072fcc130a7d5a33 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.1931506532217 39.745947 -75.546589 The following remarkable event in a Indy's\nlife will Interest (lie reader: “Fora long Unie I\nhad a terrible pain at my heart, which flut­\ntered almost liiccssuntly. Iliad no appcl11o\namt could not sleep. I would bo compelled\nto sit up In bed amt belch gas from my stom­\nach mull I thought every inlnutu would bo\nmy last. There was a reeling of oppression\nabout my heart, and I was afraid to draw a\nfoil breath. 1 couldn't sweep a room with­\nout sitting down and resting; but, thank\nGod, by the help of New Heart Cure nil that\ntspastnndl foci like another woman. Be­\nfore using the Now Heart Cure I had taken\ndifferent so-called remedies and been treated\nby doctors without any benefit until I was\nboth discouraged and disgusted. Mv husband\nIsiught me Isittlo of Dr. Miles' New Heart.\nCure, and am happy to say I never reg\nIt, as 1 now nave a splendid appetite and\nsleep well. I weighed 129 pounds when I lie-\nÎ1111 taking the remedy, and now I weigh Ckl1..\nts effect In my case has been truly marvel­\nous. It far surpasses any other medicine 1\nhave over taken or any benefit I ever re­\nceived from physicians." —Mrs. Burry Starr,\nPoltsvllle, Pa., October 12. 1692,\nDr. Miles' New Heart Cure Is sold on a posi­\ntive guarantee by nil druggists, or by thn Dr.\nMiles Medical Co., Elkhart, Did., on re ceipt of\nprice, it per bottle, six Ixit tics is. express pre­\npaid. This great discovery by an eminent\nspecialist In heart disease, contains neither\nopiates nor dangerous drugs.\nSold by Druggists every when.
86c7eccb2370bc09133aa82490bcc64e PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.1816939574478 31.960991 -90.983994 IS Published in the City of New York, every\nSaturday morning, in quarto form, on a very\nlarge sheet, and afforded to subscribers in the\ncountry at Two Dollar s Six copies will be\nforwarded a year for Ten Dollars; Ten copies for\nFifteen Dollars; and apy larger number in the\nlatter proportion. Payment in advance invaria­\nbly required, and the paper stopped whenever\nthe term of such payment expires.\nThe Tribu ne— whether in its Daily or Week\nly edition, will be what its name imports—an\nunflinching supporter of the Peoples Rights and\nInterests, in stern hostility to the errors of su­\nperficial theorists of unjust or imperfect legisla­\ntion, and the schemes and sophistries of self-\nseeking demagogues. It will strenuously advo­\ncate the Protection of American Industry a-\ngainst the grasping, and to us heightening poli­\ncy of European government, and the unequal\ncompetition which they force upon us, it will\nadvocate the restoration of a sound and uniform\nNational Currency; and urge a discreet but de­\n prosecution of Internal Improvement.\nThe Retrenchment, wherever practicable, of\nof Government Expenditures and of Executive\nPatronage, will be zealously urged. In short-\nthis paper will faithfully maintain and earnest,\nly advocate the Principles and Measures which\nthe People approved in devolving on Whig\nStatesmen the conduct of their Government.\nBut a small portion of its columns will be de­\nvoted to purely political discussions. The pro­\nceedings of Congress will be carefully recorded,\nthe Foreign and Domestic Intelligence early\nand lucidly presented; and whatever shall ap­\npear calculated to promote Morality, maintain\nSocial Order, extend the blessings of Education,\nor in any way subserve the great cause of Hu­\nman Progress to ultimate Virtue, Liberty and\nHappiness, will find a place in our columns.\nN. B .— Where ten persons club together, and\nremit $15 at one time, in funds not over four\nper cent disconnt in New York, the paper will\ncost but $1 50 per year.\nSubscriptions are solicited by\nGPRPI-Y A McELRATH, No. 30, Ann *t
3474dc40cdcc9cc71bf93ec0fd95bf48 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.443989039415 40.063962 -80.720915 well aa Weight, and who pursues t!\nfollowing daily liablt-- Myoccupath\n1« bookkeeping," bat I have some ot\ndoor business during the day. I a\ntriotly temperate, drink little or not\ning at meals, and eat lightly. I o\nmeat only at dinner, and then in smc\namount. I breakfast at balfrpast aeve\ndine at two, and take a very lig\nlunch »t eight in the evening, retlrli\nat about ten o'clock. I rise at lrom fi'\nto six A.M ., being very regular as\naleep. liouerally, X take u walk of\nmile or two in the morning befo\nbreakfast, eating a cracker or sou\nlight thing previously, and alwa;\ntaking a sponge bath on rising. I roo\nout or towu, having a walk to and fro\nbusiness of about one mile each wa\nand a walk out of town of about on\nhnlfmiln tn the honvc. Dinner ia taki\nin town, and a walk of three*quarte\nof a mile In taken each way. My pre\nent weight la one hundred and twent\ntwo pounds, and I have never excee\ned one hundred and twenty-s\npounds. I desire to reach about oi\nhundred and thirty, but I do not see\nto gain much toward my point. I ha\nno trouble to complain of, In the wi\nof sickness or disease, unless receut\na touch of dyspepsia, which I seem\nhave relieved myBelf of by aubmittii\nto a smaller amount of food, and gi\ntag up a bread and milk breakfast.\nthe latter diet, I attributed an noplee\nant, dull, and 'headachy" sensatli\n reaching the office. I room aloe\nand am particular as to the ventilath\nof my apartment. Be pleased to gi\ninformation as to diet and quantity\nloodrequsite in such a case us mine,\nhave particularized enough to,'allow\nA* It la our impression that you tal\ntoo little food and are, In all reaped\ntoo abstemious. Abstemiousness is t\nexcellent thing in persons inclined\nobesity und plethora, or whoso assiin\nlative powers are so potential tb\nnearly all they eat and drink\npromptly converted into flesh ui\nblood. Hucb persons may judicious\ndiminish the amount of nutritious nl\nmeut their appetite craves, and mi\nbeneficially abataiu from the ubq of £\nliquors except water. But the san\nrule will not apply to persons of yoi\nbuild, nature and temperament. Y<\nneed more of the vitalizing materi\nthan you indulge yourself in at pre\nent. Your system requires u 1110\ngenerous diet. Yon are simply killii\nyourself by inches under a mistake\nidea that you are pursuing the road\nhealth. In the first place you net\nmore animal food. Acquire a taste f\nit, and eat of it heartily at least once\nday. It would not be wise to make\nsuddeu change, but accustom yourse\nto it by degrees. Make up your rale\nthat you will grow stronger and stout*\nand enjoy; ex eel lent health, as soon\nyou are able to relish tt solid meal\nbread aud butter, with a mutton chc\nor two, or a piece of tender and n\noverdone beelsteak, with or wllhoi\npotatoes, weak coflee or tea,
2a6b4aeca27969105d56844bc8e651ca NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.2863013381532 40.735657 -74.172367 fronting on the westerly side of North Eighth\nstreet; thence southerly along the same to a\npoint 100 feet north of the northerly line of\nDelemn avenue; thence easterly and parallel\nwith Delev an avenue to the Morris Canal\nthence southerly along the same to a point 100\nfeet north of the northerly line of Chester nv. -\nnue; thenc® westerly and parallel with Chester\navenue to a point 100 feet west of the westerly\nline of North Sixth street ; thence southerlv and\nparallel with North Sixth street to a point 100\nfeet north of tne northerly line of Berkelev\navenue; thence westerly and parallel with\nBerkeley avenue to a point 100 feet west of the\nwesterly line of North Seventh street; ♦hen.-e\nsoutherly and parallel with North Seventh\nstreet to a point 100 feet north of the northerly\nline of avenue; thence westerly an 1\nparallel with Second avenue to a point 100 fe*>t\nwest of the westerly line of Roseville avenue,\nthence southerly along the rear line of lots\nfronting on the westerly line of Roseville av<-\nnue to a point 100 feet north of the northerly\nline of Park avenue In Block No. 1337 and plsc'»\nof beginning, and have filed their reports of ssld\nassessments for benefits in the office of ths\nClerk of the Circuit Court of the County of Ks\nsex, and that the judge of said court has fixed\nSaturday, the sixteenth day of April. 1310 , at ten\no clock in the forenoon, in the Circuit Court\nroom at the Court House in the City of New\nark, a* the time and place of healing any ob-\njections that may be made to the said assess-\nments.
25ef188b20a2d99bd64087e720050f0b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.2554644492511 46.187885 -123.831256 Senator Dolph, in his speech of\ntwo weeks ago on tha tariff ques-\ntion, quoted the following interest-\ning passage from a speech of Mr.\nFox, the great English statesman,\nat the time of tho Oregon contro-\nversy nearly 43 years ago. Mr. Fox\nsaid: "Quarrel about this! "Why,\nwe might just as well be invited\nby feel and Polk to fight aoout\nmountains in tho moon. But lot\nmen have something to do with it;\nlet those who have found no prefer\nable home co there, and see what\nelTect they can produce upon the\nbest portions of tho soil; as their\nnumbers increase and their exer-\ntions tell, it will become more valu-\nable. And when men have occu-\npied it, when industry has driven\nus car of peaceful conquest around\nthe borders of that vast land, when\ntowns have arisen and cities ap-\npeared with their thronging num-\nbers; when tho Rocky Mountains\nare tunneled, and rail and canal\nhavo united the Atlantic and Pa-\ncific; when tho waters of the Co-\nlumbia swarm with steam-boat- s\nwhy, then will be the time to talk\nof the Oregon territory. Then,\nwithout a rceiment or line -of-ba- t -\ntle ship, without bombarding any\ntown whatever, free trade will con-\nquer tho Oregon territory for us\nand will conquer the United States\nfor us also, as far as it is desirable\neither for us or for them that there\nshould bo conquest whatever\nin the case. Free trade will es-\ntablish there all the insignia of\nconquest. When their products\ncomo here and those of our indus-\ntry return, there will bo scarcely a\nlaborer upon the pi no forest that\nhe is clearing but will wear upon\nhis back, to his very shirt, the liv-\nery of Manchester. Tho knife with\nwhich he carves his game will have\nthe mark of Sheffield upon its\nblade as a testimony of our su\npremacy. Every handkerchief\nwaved upon tho banks of the Mis-\nsouri will be the waving of an En-\nglish banner from Spitaltields.\nThroughout tho country there will\nbe marks of our skill and greatness,\nand tribute paid for us received\nnot by warriors or governors,\nnot coming directly into the\nnational treasury, but flowing into\nthe pockets of tho industrious\nand toiling poor, refreshing trade,\naud enriching those who pursue it,\ngiving them an imperial heritage\nbeyond the wide Atlantic. Why,\nthe' will be conquered, for they\nwill work for us: and what can tho\nconquered do more for their masters\ni hey will grow corn for us, they\nwill grind it, and send us tho flour:\nthey will fatten pies for us upon\nthe peaches of their large wooded\ngrounds; they will send us what\never they can produce that we\nwant, and without asking us to\nput our hand in our pocket in\norder, by taxation, to pay ngovern-
02ca11e4e3167b7dccec714d3832d54f THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1902.1986301052766 43.994599 -72.127742 like as if ,some great manufactory\nwas spuing up there. I says to\nJohn, why what is all this commo-\ntion about and he says, don't you\nknow, Susan Jane? Why, its the\nmines. There were teams and teams\nloading up with all kinds of stuff,\ngreat big ropes, machinery and coal\nthat looked like as if all the life\nwas out of it. My John says it is\nwhat they call coke. It don't smoke.\nAin't that nice? (I always told John\nhow nasty it was to smoke) Well,\nthat was the first of my surprises.\nEverywhere I went that blessed day\nit was all hurry and hustle. The\nmen folks all on the road teaming,\nthe women folks just as busy mak-\ning new clothes, and, to tell the\ntruth. I can see they are doing bet-\nter than they have done for years.\nNo empty houses now, new pieces of\nfurniture and money to pay for\nmore, and Mr. Editor, it is all be-\ncause that there Mr. Westinghouse\ncame up here in Vermont and brought\nhis money (and as true as I live he\nmust worth ten or twelve thous-\nand dollars, sure) to do so much for\nour old Green Mountain state. And\nthey told me the towns for miles\nround got some benefit from this\ngood man, even you Bradford peo-\nple, say n thing about West Fair-\nlee, Post Mills, Fairlee. yes, and\neven Thetford, too. But, my word,\nI put my foot down for once and as\nsure as my John is alive he will be\na sorry man if he don't do all he can\nto help keep these good times going\nandhereishowhe hasgottodoit.\nI have heard it whispered that a\nman, who stands on record as op-\nposed to outside capital coming into\nthe state to help develop our indus\ntries, is talking of running for state\nsenator and as sure as that happens\nJohn and I, who are two as good re\npublicans as you will find, in this\nstate, will go to that caucus and\nboth vote against him. God bless\nMr. Westinghouse for what he has\ndone for the wives and mothers and\nhungry children, too, of this part of\nthe old Green Mountain state.
3a0d3e1222ce62565616387f2376bbf1 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.9112021541691 42.217817 -85.891125 There is this difference, too, between\nthe Conservative party of England and\nthe Democratic party of the United\n. States. The former, after riding to\nplace on the ruins of a Liberal Cab-\ninet, have immediately stolen and prop-\nagated the measures which their oppo-\nnents would have been certain to ad-\nvance, and have thu3 been able at inter-\nvals to Leep long administration leases\nunder a conservative name because they\nare doing radical work. But the Demo-\ncratic party has never had the brains\neven to steal better principles than its\nown; and it proved in 1S60 and for\ntwenty years before that it had not\nthe courage to adopt better ones when\nit could have got them honestly. The\n2arty in England which tried to main-\ntain political distinctions on account of\ndifferences in and which upheld\nthe divinty of the King, made a strug-\ngle for liiV more pertinacious than that\nof the Democratic party; both were\nkilled for exactly the same reason\ntheir countries had outgrown them.\nNeither revolutions nor nations move\nbackward. The Tarty of the Future in\nthe United States will be that which\nwill lead the country on farther in the\nrealization of free government than the\nKepublican party 'has done. Perfect\nhuman government is, of course, ideal ;\nbut the irreversible trndency is to get\nnearer to it. This tendency has thus\nfar been the animation of the Kepubli-\ncan party ; and while its spirit remains\nunchanged, ;t, and no other, is the\nParty of the uture. There need be\nno limit to a party's life. It lives in\ndeeds, not years. Chicago Post.
12368889500e9a2140f01b2aa3dca90c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.4561643518518 39.745947 -75.546589 ,.1rs. Madeline duPont Bancroft. Jr.,\nand in which Max Hiebler, Jr., also is\nnamed as a defendant, will be vigor­\nously resisted, it was said today. Tho\ncase could come before tho judges in\nSuperior Court at tho September term\nif both sides are ready then, and under\nI ho Delaware law it could be heard\neither publicly or privately in cham­\nbers in the discretion of tho court.\nThem are some unusual features of\nthe case, one being the naming of two\ndefendants on tho record. Tho writ\nsummoning Max Hiebler, Jr., as a de­\nfendant was read by Deputy Sheriff\nBartlett to the two months old sou of\nMrs. Madeline duPont Bancroft. Jr„\nat the same time she was summoned\nat her homo in this city. This la\n to be the first time in Delaware\nand one of tho very few times in the\ncountry that a suit has been entered\nagainst, the mother and baby both as\ndefendants under such circumstances.\nMr. Bancroft, Jr., is twenty-alx\nyears old and his wife Is twenty-\nthree. He Is now at Minerva. N. Y .,\nand she is at Atlantic City where she\nwent shortly after the writ was serv­\ned. The couple were married In Wash­\nington In December, 1907, the wed­\nding surprising their friends. They\nhave a son born in Munich, where Mr.\nand Mrs. Bancroft want after their\nmarriage so he could finish his studies\nat Heidelberg University. The baby\nnamed as "Max Halbier, Jr.,*' in the\nsuit, was born two months ago in this\ncity.
4dd7b5444c674a6c210256468f8e71b9 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.1051912252074 41.875555 -87.624421 Prof. B. B. Boltwood of the Rloane\nLaboratory. New Hares, concludes, as\nthe result of recent experiments made\nby htm, that there Is good cause for D-\nelisting that uranium minerals contain\nn element emitting alpha rays, and re-\nsembling thorium In Its chemical prop\nerties, but which Is different from the\nother radioactive elements that hare\nbeen Identified. This element appears\nto bare about the same degree of ac\ntivity as the radium with which It Is\nassociated In minerals, and Professor\nBoltwood thinks that It Is, without\ndoubt, a product of uranium, and prob-\nably "the Immediate parent of radium."\nDoctor Beaton, the medical health of-\nficer of the County of Surrey, has mndo\na special report on the prevalence of\ntyphoid In that district of England.\nIlls are Interesting, lie\nsays that It Is doubtful whether even 10\nper cent of the cases can be attributed\nto the drinking of polluted or Infected\nwater. Ho believes that polluted and\nInfected foods are a much more fre-\nquent source of typhoid Illness than Is\ngenerally supposed. He refers to cases\nwhich It Is Impossible to connect with\npreceding cases, and suggests the pos-\nsibility of origin from other bacilli\nthan those which are rcgnrded as In-\nvariable specific causes of typhoid. Re-\ncent Investigations In Germany show\nthat patients may harbor typhold -bn cll-I - I\nmonths after recovery from Illness,\nand that persons In good health may be\nthe hosts of the organism.\nAll the engineering Journels, Euro- pe n- n\nas well ns American, found an In-
3916851426ddd8be483e69e606ff6433 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.9027396943177 40.063962 -80.720915 "A republic has at least this advan¬\ntage, that it survives scandalous expo¬\nsures which would utterly ruin a mon¬\narchy. Tho corruption which was\nnotoriously known to exist in America\nin curtain departments of the state\nduring the prodigally conducted sub¬\njugation ol the South by the North,\nwould have brought any aristocratic\nform of government to the \\'ery verge\nof destruction. Memory aud contempo¬\nraneous observation alike will provide\nour readers with instnuces which we\nneed not more plaiuly adduce of\nthrones,both old aud new.beinggravely\nshaken by the self-inflicted loss of\nmajesty which ought to hedge them.\nBut a republic seems none the worse\nfor the ill-manners or venal reputation\nof its lowest or highest servants. Every\nshred of character may, in public es¬\nteem, bo torn from the back of secre¬\ntary, gonerat, judge, but the ofllce\nseem* to be in no degree imperilled.\nTho 'Immortal Institutions* appear ca¬\npable of tiding over every scandal. The\nstory of tho Diamond Necklace has al¬\nways been considered to have played\nno small part in the hastening and ag¬\ngravating the fall of the French mou-\narcliy, though the story, as we ull\nknow, was an utterly fals'e oue. We do\nnot suppose that the story.just fresh\nfrom America.about Mrs. Lincoln's\nshawls, will stall damage tho United\nStates Republic, and yet there can be\nno doubt whatever that it is a trueone.\nIndeed, Mrs. Lincoln has been good\nenough to tell it for herself. It is as\nthough Marie Antoinette, iustead of\ncontradicting and confuting everything\nalleged by the Countess de la Motte,\nhad confessed to the whole truth of\nthat imposter'sextraordiuary charges."
01aa3fee155573f7c79bcb97784d871f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbo Water Hoard wishes to muko this act of\nthoHoxrdof Public Works tho occasion of re¬\nquesting your body to puss an order that in tho\nfuture when the Hoard of Public Works changes\nu street grarle without authority, that all the ex¬\npenses arhliiK from (bo i-liaugo snail be paid out\nof tbo Contingent fund o> that Hoard If grados\ninual be changed aud public money expended to\nImprove certain (duces of property abutting on\nstreets on which the work Is duue, it la unjust to\ncompel the expenditure of a portion of the\nmoney set aside for the running of the Water\nWorks (In addition to the moults of tho Board of\nPubMo Work*) (or that purposo.\nWhile always willing to aid each aud every\ndepartment of tbeclty government to tbo best\nof its ubllily, the Water Board does most ear¬\nnestly proton ai-alnst tho a>suinptlon of power\non tho part of the Board of Public Works stid\nwould respectfully suggest to your body that a\nrevision and amendment of somo of tbe rules\ngoverning tho Board of Public Works might\nbuvou salutarv It worked well with a\nformer board, and If tho amendment to rule 4.\npassed by a former council, wa» strictly enforced\non or observed b) the present Board of Public\nWorks, tho work above mentioned and several\nother", which have Iu en done in the last year\nor two for the be ellt of private property would\nhave been referred to Council for apmoval.\nRespectfully, T|tK City Watku Boajid.\nThe communication was read in tbe\nSecond Brunch of Council lout night,\nfind referred to the Bourd of Public\nWorksbynvoteof13to10.\nTito Fornktir Meeting To-Morrow Night.\nTlio Foraker meeting at Bellaire to*\nmorrow uight, will be one of the features\nof the Ohio campaign, and will draw an\nininieQgo crowd from all parts of Bel-\nmout conuty. There are ninny people\nin this city who feel an interest in the\nOhio campaign, who will attend the\nmeeting. It is suggested that everyone\ngoing fioiu here meet at the Lincoln\nciub at ueven o'clock, and go from there\nto the wharf, and board the steamer\ner lk-llairo which will make a special\ntrip.
3c8d726ace69c75d144ebeb031c5f8dc DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.1027396943175 44.939157 -123.033121 Aldirman Johnson introduced a reso-\nlution that the matter of salaries of\nunofficial officers of the city be placed\nin the hands of the committee on ac-\ncounts aud current expenses, said com\nmittee to revise such salaries and make\nout au equitable scale, of wages to be\nreceived by the employes ot eaca do\npartment. Motion carried unanimously\nSimeral then moved that tue council\nreconsider its action at tho lust session\nwhen it raised the salaries ot the em\nployes of the street department and lelt\nthe salaries of the members of the other\ndepartments unchanged, and place tue\nwages of the street employes back on\nthe old schedule. Alderman Elliott, of\nthe street committee, arose and suid\nhe strongly disapproved of the action\nHe said two of tue employes of the de-\npartment had already quit because the\ncouncil had delayed so long iu raising\ntheir. wages to where they were at pre\nsent, and asserted that if the council\nwent ahead and the wages again\nhalf the force would quit and the street\ndepartment would be demoralized. Al\nderman McClellan said that this thing\nof each department getting up at every\nmeeting and attempting to have the\nwages of its own particular department\nraised without regard to the wages of\nother departments was becoming a joko\naud he would like to see it stopped, lie\nquestioned whether Bimeral was pros\nent at the last meeting when previous\naction on the street department had\nbeen taken. Simeral asserted he was\npresent. Johnson moved that resolution\nto raise said wages uo noi uuopieu.\nChairman Unruh stated tho resolution\nhad been already adopted at the lust\nmeeting and asked Johnson just what\nhe meant. Mayor Kcyes then started to\nmako a hasty explanation to Johnson,\nand Aldermuu Wilson, with a nuscnev\nions irriu. moved tiiat all consideration\nof the ordinance be indefinitely post-\nponed and the wages put back to their\nold schedule. The motion carried 8 to\n2.
1b1ec23e28daf4811bff66a222c22b91 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.5356164066463 46.187885 -123.831256 teen miles from here. John llogers,\nwho keeps a general store, was a staid\nmarried man with two children, a de-\nvoted wife and a bappy home, when,\nabont three weeks ago, Miss Emma\nSnell, a cousin of Mrs. Uogers, a\npretty school teacher from the rural\ndistricts of Delaware county, came\non to spend her summer vacaliou with\nthem. Eogera lost bis bead aud heart\nto the fair guest. The intimacy of\nthe two in a short time became very\nmarked. Mrs. Rogers, unable to en-\ndure tbo situation longer, yesterday\nordered Miss Snell to pack her bag-\ngage aud leave. Eogera overheard\nthe conversation, entered and struck\nbis wife to the floor, and then in com-\npany with bis guest left tbo hpuse,\ngoing to bis store, balf a mile dis-\ntant. pair did not return until\nevening, when tbey found tbo bouse\ndeserted. Rogers, fearing the worst,\nbegan lo search, and found bis wife\nlying face downward in the water\ntrougb back of the barn. In the\nbarn were found the bodies of the\ncbildreu, lying side by side, aud each\nwitb a gaping wound in the head. A\nbloody as lay beside them, telling the\nhorrible tragedy. Mrs. Rogers bad\nevidonUy brooded over her troubles\nall day and finally, just before the\nlime for Rogers lo return home, bad\ntaken the children lo the barn and\nmurdered them, and then deliber-\nately lay down in the water trougb\nand ended her sorrows. Rogers in-\nformed the neighbors ol the occur-\nrence and left ostensibly for Boone-vill- e\nto find the coroner, bnt up to a
0018e40e98ee234f1a540631158d9b62 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1889.4315068176052 46.187885 -123.831256 The dueling ground lay n good\nday's journey from Nashville, and\nearly upon the appointed day Dick-\ninson set forth accompanied by a\nchosen party or sporting friends, and\nwas followed a few hours later by\nJackson and his second.\nAll during the long day's travel\nthe General was constantly regaled\n(?) at the different inns and taverns\nupon the road with evidenaes of\nDickinson's confidence in tho result\not the dnel as strings hanging fiom\ntree boughs with papers attached\nstating that they had been cut by\nDickinson's bullet at eight paces.\nJust before reaching the ground he\nfired four balls, each at the word of\ncommand, into a silver dollar at the\nsame distance, and tossed it to the\nlandlord, as he road away, with the\nrequest that it be given to \nJackson when he arrived. Th? let\nter's revenge for these cruel taunts\nand contemptuous nonchalance was\neven more fierce than poets dare to\nfancy, as the sequel will show.\nTho conditions of the dnel were\nthat the combatants should face eaoh\nother at eight paces, thereby making\nthe largest possiblo target of their\nbodies; the pistols to be held down-\nward until tho word was given to fire,\nwhen each man was to shoot at will.\nTho chances of success thus lay en-\ntirely with the party who combined\nin the greatest degree quickness and\naccuracy. Dickinson wn3 not only a\nmarvelous' shot in a state noted for\nits good marksmen, but he required\nno aim, firing at sight, and it was in\nview of this that Jackson suddenly\nhorrified his second with tho
232c6425e8902ab690f2ef9b72cf7a31 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1886.7109588723997 43.994599 -72.127742 starting tho asparagus will have attained ton\nor twelvo inches in height, and it must now\nbo thinned out. so that the plants stand nino\ninches apart in tho rows. By fall they will\nlie A'ora two to three feet in height, and, if\ntho directions for culture have been faith\nfully followed, strong and vigorous. When\nthe stems dio down (but not before) cut them\noff close to the ground, and cover the lines\nfor five or six inches on each side with two or\nthree inches of rough manure. The following\nporing renew cultivation, and keep down the\nweeds the bocoiuI year exactly as was done\nduring the first, and so on to the spring of the\nfourth year, when a crop will be produced\nthat will well reward all the labor that has\nbeen cxiiended. Sometimes, if tho land is par\nticularly suitable, a marketable crop may be\n tho third year, but as a rule it will bo\nbetter to wait until tho fourth year before\ncutting much, as this would weaken the\nplants. To compensate for tho loss of a year's\ntime in thus growing asparagus from seed,\ncabbage, lettuce, onions, beets, spinach or\nsimilar crops that will bo marketable before\nthe asparagus has grown high enough to in\nterfere with them, may be planted between\nthe rows of asparagus the first year of its\ngrowth with but little injury to it. I hod an\nold friend near Macon, (Ja., who grew an\nacre of asparagus after this plan. It was sold\nin the New York market, and brought him\nan average of 61,000 a year for six years after\nit came into bearing. He died some ten years\nago, and I presume the plantation was neg\nlected, or it might have been in full bearing\nyet.
2f8b82e9a6b191aacdef493c390bbd1b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.4479451737698 40.063962 -80.720915 ncrvoi:»uo*, by tiposmg the n*kt<i Uce\n'l lilte »*!nv i fruit »>r niked land, to th<\nunhvorabl .* a. wn of the air and sun\nand not only exhausts the body of it\n^nourishment by depriving it of its electr*\noil seccreted by the rouia of healthy hair\nbut r>/Ui the brain of Us mental f»Jd, ant\nt prevent* its giving birth to new ideas. It\n;hU way hair acts as a galvanic battery\nSuch Li tue magnetic power of this rega\n[ robe of nature that non shaving speaker\nhave double endurance, double voice toi\ndistinctness and volubility, double com\npoiure, because free from irritation, double\ncenry. double advantage in appearand\nand ta bringing hearers in sympathy witi\nthemselves over those who shave, i/ecau*\nthe former have more nature and doubi<\nthe vitality when otherwise equal witi\nthe latter. Non-shaving teachers foverr\nschools with more eaae and teach m«»\neffectually by the magnetism hail\ngives them, thereby diffusing sunshine\nTike a charm, through the minds of theii\nIiujiiii. shaving is one rcisoo why |kir«\naru *) many married miseries in undou\nof the world of fashion. U cause lea\nens afllnity and sympathy bctwcun tb<\nnexes; for magnetism i.-» weakened by de\npriving the system of its natural stimuli\nor electric oil secreted by the roots of un\nmutilated hair. Ladies are great lover\nof hair, for they not only admire theii\nown lull flowing heads of hair, with\naddition*, but they like to see it on others\nand long Mowing bearus, too; for they ire\n<|u<:ntly excl lira when they ace them\nI'Whai magnificent looking gentlemen!\n! Wltyf Because hair indicates manhood\nand u'iv«--» energy of character. Now\nhair-cutting would effectually preven\nbaldness; lor ladies are seldom bald, arc\nwhen they are, it is hereditary. Bhavlnjj\nand hair-cutting damage the personal an\nj>earaneo of any man as much as it wouli\ninjure the looks and Hale of a horse t<\nidiave oil' hi* mane and tail. The Yanke*\nor any other man, whoahall invent an ar\nrtngement that would change this mos\nubminl fruition of shaving and hair cut\nting into the cultivation or imnrd and hair\nwould not only ho a public benefuctd|§>ii\nhi* name would be invested with irnrnor\ntal clory by bit race.
184c10229abd1b3cfb234fc17e57bf4e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.392076471109 40.063962 -80.720915 Referring to the Tennessee and engines, h,\ntho committee not only exonerates the w\nSecretary from all suspicion ol any bad w\nfaith or imprudent contracts, but shows a\nlaudable effort on his part to utilize tho M\npublic property, by taking the available tu\nship rendered useless through defectivo ji\nmachinery, and convertiug her with the w\nleast possible expense, into a first class ot\nand efficient vessel of war. The contract di\nfirice to be paid Roach, is considerably\ness than was computed by the acting te\nChief Engineer ot the Wavy. The\nmachinery is to be a compound engine, cr\nnow almost exclusively used in England,\nand which, it is thought, will soon be in pl\nthis country and elsewhere, to the BUp- J),\npression ol all others. Relative to the bs\npuyment of $03,000 on a claim of Secor, m\nthe Committee say the claim was just und ti(\nthat the testimony clearly shows that it hi\nhad nover been paid, disallowed, or even 6t,\nconsidered, until allowed and paid by\nRobeson, and that the delay was occa- aI\n by the sudden death of persons\nwho would have passed on them. The Tc\nonly real question is, whether the claim cc\nwas barred by the act of Congress\nof 1307, allowing other claims ol j\nSecor, and this is the question on which gj\nlawyers may differ, aud decision may th\nhonestly bo made either way; and the k\nCommittee believe the Secretary's inter- w\nprctration of tha-words of the act in the\nfull discharge ol ail claims against the\nUnited States on account of the vessel tli\nupon which tho Board made the allow- te\nance, as meaning tbo discharge or the cc\nclaims under tho act on which tho Board to\nmade the allowance, as per their report, g|\nis a correct one. jsvery consideration 01 a\njustice ami equity demanded tlio payment\nof this bill, and it was tho duty ol the (j,\nSecretary to search lor such interpretation a\nof the law, within a lair import of its re\nterms, as would save tho Government from f\ntho humiliation of having perpetrated p\ngross injustice. p ,
104286dc9680059f965e5192e963afae THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.0041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 Drs. France nnd Ottman, of New York, the\neminent Specialists, on account of their large\npractice in Ohio, have established the Fraricn\nfcledlcal Institute, where nl\\ diseases will be sue\ncessfully treated on the 'raiost Scicntific Prin\nciplcs. The Institute l»as for its 1-acuity c\ncorps of rccopnizcd specialists, cacli eminent\nin his profession. Their loner experience in the\nlargest hospitals in the world enables them to\nsuccessfully treat all forms of Chronic. Nervous en J\nPrivate Diseases, also J.)iscascs of the Kyc and Ear.\nIMPORTANT TO LADIES.Dits. France and\nOttman, after years of experience, have dis¬\ncovered the greatest cure known for all dis¬\neases peculiar to the sex. Female diseases pos¬\nitively cured by the new remedy, Olivo Blossom.\nThe cure is. efiectcd by home treatment. En¬\ntirely harmless aild easily applied. Consultation\n Correspondence Frco and StrlctlyConfidentlal.\nThey have attained the most wonderful suc¬\ncess in the treatment of Catarrh, Stomach, Kid¬\nney; Bladder, Nervous, Chronic and Special Diseases\nof men and .women. Drs, France and Ott¬\nman, after years of experience, have perfected\nthe most "infallible method of curing' Vital\nDrain in Urine, Nocturnal Losses, Impaired\nMemory, "Weak Back, Melancholy, Want of En¬\nergy, Premature Decline of the Manly Powers.\nthose terrible disorders arising from ruinous\npracticcs .of youth, blighting the most radiant\nliopes, rendering marriage unhappy, annually\nsweeping to an untimely grave, thousands of\nexalted talent and brilliant intellect. A Perfecl\nRestoration Guaranteed. Bring- sample of urine\nfor chcmical and microscopical examination.\n/2uF*Cascs and correspondence confidential.\nTreatment sent C; O.D . tonnypartof the U. S.\nXyi3t of 130 questions free. Address, with\npostage.
56ab9349d8a0aa030a511c081a502f7a THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.4945205162355 41.741039 -112.161619 daughter of Evo, and having fulled to at-\ntract any very big fish nnd having ar-\nrived' at the period of a maiden's Hfo\nwhen sho begins to realize thnt It Is time\nto cast an anchor to tho windward, sho\nturned to Homer, Not that sho was old\nor devoid of charms, but sho hud set her\nstandard rather high und tho knight of\nhor ill earns had not appeared. Resides\nsho was a young woman of discrimina-\ntion and sho saw below tho common-\nplace exterior of this slmplo hearted\nman, tho truo gold or his unselfish char-\nacter. Sho appreciated this und sho\nshrewdly realized that with him sho\nwould bo absolutely queen.\nHut, ah, yo daughters of Evo, when-\never did reason govern your lieaits and\nyour desires? Whenever did not \nwhen does not nnd will not tho gay\ncavalier flro your hearts nnd Imagina-\ntions nnd mako tho plain sturdy plow-bo- y\nseem commonplnco und Impossible?\nAnd who shalt say thnt tho fnlr Agnes\ndid not nceopt Homer with a mentnl\nreservation? And who shnll say that\ntho vision of tho gny cavnller did not\nstill nbldo In hor Imagination?\nBo all that as It may tho fact remains\nthat 0110 glorious ovening sho plighted\nher troth to Homor with n dainty gasp\nof biirronder which bo filled him with\nJoy and rovorenco that It must nbldo\nwith him forovor. It wns many weeks\nboforo ho could thoroughly bollovo that\nthis Hplondld creature, this wonderful\nbeing had selected him of nil tho world\nfor a mute unci ho bowed lu roverence\nand thanksgiving
4aec9fce7fd5011c60a4098987fd07ca EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.474043684224 39.745947 -75.546589 1 An Interesting musical program wa.i\nI provided by the church choir and by a\ni double quartet during the service. Prior\nto the sermon, John Lolland, of\ncommittee In charge of the service, real\nthe names of the members of the lodge\nwho have did since Its organisation on\nApril 3, 1393. Twenty-six members\nhave died since the lodges organiza­\ntion. The surprising mortality among\nrailway men was in shocking evidence\nwhen It was announced that 20 of the\n26 deaths had been duo to accident!\non the railroads.\nThe dead with the cause and date\nof death are as follows:\nJ. M . Herfllcker, killed, April 15. 1394,\nGeorge Creswell, killed April 10, 1896.\nCharles A. Hlggans. killed, September\n1. 1397: George Irwin, killed, April 2.4,\n1393: William Woodward, killed, Octo­\nber 27. 1398; George B. Wetzel, killed,\nj November 12, 1898; L. H. Pierson, kill-\nled, anuary 12. 1900: Charles Springer,\n, killed. October 18. 1900: N. S. Brown,\nkilled, November 11, 1902; F. J. Lurs-\nkey, killed, December 19, 1902: W. H.\n natural, January 17. 1903; Roh\nert A. Porter, killed, March 29. 1903;\nBenjamin F. Oarman, killed, April 2,\n1903; William H. Neal, Sr., killed. May\n5. 1903; WHjlam H. Maloney, natural,\nJonuary 26, 1905; George W. Santmyer,\nkilled, uly 6. 190R; Harry N. Smack,\nkilled, July 30. 1905; Walter Quarles,\nnatural, February 28. 1906; A. Silver-\nthorn, killed. March 15. 1908: Harry S\nDriscoll, killed, June 21, 1906; John C.\nGordy, killed, September 19. 1906;\nFrancis Reynolds, killed, October 27.\n1906; John E. Lammey, natural, March\n2. 1907; George D. McLean, natural,\nMarch 17, 1907; Jacob H. Mock, natu-\nral, January 25. 1908; George C. Lee-\ndom, killed. May 4, 1908.\nThe Rev. Mr. Alison preached en\n"An Honest Man." saying In part:\n"All men pay tribute to honesty. In hit\nT »say on Man, Alexander Pope declared\nthat An honest mans tho noblest walk\no? God.* In like manner Robert Burns, <ho\nScottish plain people's poet, Joins the uni­\nversal homage declaring that:\nA Prince can mak' a belted Knight,\nA Marquis, Duke and a that;,
1b90c315e73edae8786c33cf5819050a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.5986301052765 40.832421 -115.763123 What is callcd Buckley Mountain is an\nelevated table-land ahuut three miles cast\nof the market -town of Mold. Its inhab¬\nitants were formerly a savage, quarrelsome\nrace, divided like the Scottish Highland¬\ners into "clans." There were the Wil-\nlianises, the Joneses, the Hughoses, the\nGriffiths, the Morgans, and the Shepherds,\nand bitter family feudsoften raged between\nthem. Coat-mining and coarse stone pot¬\ntery manufacture employed most of the\nadult males; and it was no unfrcqucut oc¬\ncurrence to see the military ordered from\nChester to suppress their intcrnccine con¬\nflicts. The soil is mostly freehold, and\nthe coal-mines are worked on the princi-\nplo of nhnros.each miuc hciug divided\ninto thirty-two shares, and each sharu be¬\ning designated "a half an ounce."\nAt one time eight relatives of the name\nof Hughes were associated with an equal\nnumber of the name of Hoherts in work¬\ning what was termed the Great Ash Mine,\nso nnmed from the fact that the shaft had\nbeen put down close to an immense ash-\ntree. The coal lay deeper here than in\nmost other sections ot the mountain,\nbut it was a thicker seam, and ol superior\nquality, and the Hughcses and the Grif¬\nfiths were hence esteemed particularly\nfortunate all over the mountain. There\nwas a good deal of rivalry and frequent\nquarrels among tlieni ; but it was mostly\ngood-natured rivalry on by boast¬\ning, feats of strength, ami physical prow¬\ness. But when it became widely kuown\nthat Kvan Hughes, a handsome, stalwart\nyoung man of twenty, and Samuel Grif¬\nfiths, nn equally lithe nnd promising young\nHercules, were bitter rivals for the heart\nof Miss Anne Shepherd, everybody in\nBuckley knew there was strife a-brevving.\nAnne was the daughter of a stone-pot¬\ntery manufacturer, who, without educa¬\ntion, had risen from the ranks, and accu¬\nmulated a handsome fortune. Wealth\ndiil not make him arrogant. Ho was still\n"hail fellow, well met!" with every hard,\ntoiling miner on the mountain; and ho\ndid not hesitate to state, when in his cups\nin the Bed Lion parlor of a night, that\nSam Grilliths and Evan Hughes were the\ntwo brightest young men on the inouii-\ntain, and that ho would be satisfied with\neither of them for a son-in-law.\nSam and Kvan had wrestled, and run,\nand jumped, and pitchcd the stone, with\nvarying success, and eager animosity.\nNothing but Anne's threat that she would\ndiscard the first one who made n black¬\nguard of himself kept llicm from open\nand deadly hostilities. Both knew she\nwas a girl of pluck, and would keep her\nword, and hence their fierce spirits were\nkept in the outward bond of peace.\nMeantime, the Great Ash Colliery was\nturning out well ; the seam was
452d358ee6254d95694081fd492234fc DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.3986301052764 44.939157 -123.033121 Notlco Is horoby glvon that tho\nreport of tho vlowors appointed by\ntho common council of tho city of\nSalem. Oregon, for tho purposo of\nmaking nn assessment of damages\nnnd benefits for tho opening und\nwidening of Chomokotn street on ac-\ncount of condemning tho land of Mrs.\nN. Clark as sot forth In ordlnnnco\nNo. 622, has boon filed In tho offlco\nof tho city recorder nnd la now open\nto public Inspection In anld offlco.\nTho district assessed by tho vlowors\nas bolng tho district bonotltcd nnd\nto pay for tho damages auntalnod to\nMrs. N. Clnrk on nccount of tho wid-\nening of said Btroot Is Includod be\ntween tho oast lino of Thlrtoouthj\nstreet nnd tho wost lino of Twenty- -\nfirst Btroot and oxtondlng and\nwest not to oxcood a dlstanco'of 236\nfcot on eltuer aldo of said Chomokotn\nstreet. For oxnetness, however, rof- -\noronco may bo had to tho roport of\ntho vlowors on fllo in tho offlco of\ntho city recorder which shows tho\ndamages and oxpenses ub a result of\ntho widening of said Chomokotn\natroot and tho property llnblo to bo\nassessed for tho paymont of said\ndamages and oxpenses.\nAH porsous Interested in said ro-\nport aro horoby notified to present In\nwriting tholr objections, to sqld ro-\nport, If any thoy havo, to tho com-\nmon council and said objections to-\ngether with said roport shall be\nhoard and dotormlned by tho council\nat or about 8 o'clock p. ra. on tho\n24th (lay of May. 190D.
1a2f4c3ae46b566c673d595ae572f67f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.1027396943175 40.063962 -80.720915 business, but one or two probably un¬\nwilling to disgorge, were sent to prison\non account of their refusal to testify.\nOne of the largest stockholders in this\nenterprise was the Hon. Geo. A . Tren-\nholm, late Secretary of the Treasury of\nthe so-called Confederate States, thus\ncarrying on the double business of\nguarding the Confederate money and\nfilling hTs own pockets atthesametlme.\nIn the course of his examination on\nthe 16th ult., Mr. Trenholin stated that\njust before the evacuation of Richmond\nthe rebel amount of specie in the cop-\nfederate vaults was $350,000 to $400,000,\nof which sum about $300,000 was in the\ntreasury at Richmond. This $300,000\nwas curried off and distributed part¬\nly among the soldiers of Johnston's\narmy, and partly among the military\nescort of Jeff. Davi&at the timeof-their\ndisbandment. Trenholm stated\nthat, in his opinion, Mr. Davis and the\nother civil officers refused to re¬\nceive any part of it. The examina¬\ntion of Air. Trenholm, as ex-secretary\nand ex-blockade runner, was quite\nlong, but showed much- frankness on\nhis part in revealing allhe knew.\nThe World's special says the House\nCommittee on Banking and Currency,\nhad under consideration yesterday\nan application of a Bank for an amend¬\nment to the National Banking law, so\nas to allow more State banks, to come\nin under the provisions of the law. The\nCommittee decided adversely, thus es¬\ntablishing a' precedent for all such fu¬\nture applicatrons. The committee are\nagainst inflating the -currency by in¬\ncreasing the National banking capital.\nThe committee have done nothing on\nthe proposition to remove the bureau to\nNew York.
385f9d3c6564ed4054a27f1c751c9482 THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1866.491780790208 36.294493 -82.473409 Brown, of Washington county, who\nwas in tho town last week.thaton Sat-\nurday the 2d .inst.; a man arrld in\nFoyrttevillo in the itage.and informed\nthe Sheriff, and two other person, that\nthere were four men, who would bo in\ntown shortly, from Msssotirl, who had\nkillod an old mart, robbed a store aud\na grocery, and that he had raised a\ncompany and pusued them, but fail-\ning to overtake them, he had taken\nthe stage and came on ahead. Pretty\nsoon tho four men rodo Into town, got\noff their horses, hitched them, and\none went into the store of Mr. Stone,\nand tho throe others went into a gro\ncery to take a drink, before they had\ntime to tako a drink, the Sheriff, clerk\nof the Court, Mr. ileed, Mr. Win\nPosvnn8ter, and Colonel Gunter, went\ninto the grocery to arrest them Mr.\nWing said them, ger.tlemen, you\nmay consider yourselves prisoners\nWith that one of tho men called outto\nthe others to ' shuck themselves, " and\nwith that each of thorn drew two re-\nvolvers and commenced firinj. Mr\nWing, the Postmaster, was shot dead,\nand the man who came in pursuit was\nshot under the chin in the throat and\nhe died in a few minutes, and Colonel\nGunter was shot in theurm, shatter\ning the bone. The three mrrn retreat\ned out of tho door still firing as they\nwentout, and by this time the citizens\nhad collected, and on attempt was\nmado to arrest the desperadoes, but\nas they wore armed, and most of tho\ncitizens were not, they all made their\nesjape. Aposseoofmon immediately\nstarted in pursuit of them. They\nfountl one of the men sitting, leaning\nagainst a tree, having been shot\nthrough the . abdomen,
15b95c89d7fbcc6c88e8cb747858ab8c THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1900.409589009386 37.451159 -86.90916 The Democrats of Kentucky are a\nlawabiding anti a peaceloving people\nThey would welcome not repel f roui\ntheir association those Kelltucklnll > who\nluc liberty and justice antI who hate\ncrime Under Republican rule the civil\narm of the State Government was struck\ndo uiutuit1 a military usurpation was set\nUI1I11 its place Under Republican rule\nuinrder was made a weapon of party\nwarfare ami Republican officials ob\nstrncted and defied the courts in their\noffort to discover and punish its authors\nIn view of these things we invite every\nKentuckian who remains a true Ken-\ntuckian and without regard to former\npolitical afliliations to join with us in\nstamping out their possible recurrence\nand to share with us the glory of reo\ndeemping the honor of the State and re ¬\nviving the memory of the patriots and\nsages who III its better days made \nprosperous illustrious and happy\nilIIKUNATOltlAI CONVKNTIOX\nIt is further ordered that on Satur\nday July 14 at 2 lp m Standard time\nthere shall be held at each voting pro\ncinct in the various counties and legis\nlatlve districts of theStnteof Kentucky\nor the usual voting places a precinct\nconvention for the pnrposn of appoint\nlag delegates to a county or legislative\ndistrict convention on Monday July 10\nat 2 p m at which county and legisln\ntlve district conventions shall in turn\napi oint delegates to a State Convention\nto be lucid in Lexington Ky on Thnrs\nlilt July 19 WOO for till purpose of\nnominating a candidate for Governor\nto bo voted for at the November eleciou\n1900 Provided that in the counties of\nCampbell Kenton Fayette runt Jeffer ¬\nson legislative district convention only\nshall be held In lieu of precinct\nconventions
2e46c7d1bdacc37bd4a51b5881024a6b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.3265027006173 40.063962 -80.720915 Wht Poikt, April 28..In the Whit-\ntaker inquiry to-day Profesaor Kendrick\nban testimony to the studious habits and\niptness ol Whittaker.\nThe fireman in the boiler house testified\nthat Simpson on the morning of the out¬\nrage (aid, tfaia will create a great racket\nthroughout the country and in Congress.\nKecorder Bears placed himself on the wlt-\nness stand and dictated a question to the\njtenographer which he himself proceeded\nto answer. He ia the Aseistant Professor of\nPhilosophy. He testified that Whittaker\nwas one of the most attentive and Indus¬\ntrious students in his class. He was not\ndeficient to want of application or study,\nbut wltneee thought that he wss deficient\nin mental ability to grasp some of the\nmore abstruse portions of the subject\nHis social ostracism, of which the Re¬\ncorder said he knew nothing personally,\ndeprived him of the interchange of ideas\nand hints with his fellow pupils which wsa\nenjoyed by the white cadets. This wss in\nsome degree made up to him by his (the\nRecorder's) assiduity in explaining knotty\npoints, as he had stood as much ss half an\nhour with him at the blackboard. Whit-\ntaker's average standing from the third of\nJanuary up to last Saturday was 215-100.\nThe Recorder considered Whittaker's\npresent position doubtful, the chances\nin favor of his picking up in the general\nreview and getting through. He had\nstudied well, and showed a fair grasp of\nthe subjects. In reply to Mr. Townsend,\nthe Recorder said 210100 was a trifle over\n00 per cent, or two-thirds of the maximum.\nThe trifle was figured out and found to\namount to six per cent, making Whitta¬\nker's standing seventy-two, or nearly\nthree-fourths of the maximum.\n"Do you consider 72 per cent bad stand¬\ning?" ssked Mr. Townsend.\nThe Recorder did not particularly.\nThe Recorder also said that at the close\nef the week ending April 3d (two days be¬\nfore the outrage and one day before Whit-\ntaker receivea thenote of warning). Wbit-\ntaker had made in natural philosophy 11),\noutof a possible 16,when, as Mr. Townsend\nstates, 10 would do.\nMajor General Schofleld testified that at\nthe semi-annual examination in 1879\nWhlttaker was reported deficient and the\nBoard recemmended that he be discharg¬\ned. Witness held a conversation with\nWhittaker, and the latter promising to\nstudy hard and make up the deficiency if\nbe was given another ohance, and after\nconsideration of all the circumstances,\nwitness recommended to the Secretary of\nWarthat Whittaker,with twoother cadets,\nHammond and Buruam, be given another\nchance or be turned back.
20c73aaed173f992aeaf9d7c064b3370 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.5383561326737 39.513775 -121.556359 Through some ac ideut the halliards\nof the liberty pole on Portsmouth\nSou ire h*d got uurove, and were it\nnot lor the i'ui ing of a sailor named\nJohn Green, l»te of the ship Star ot\nHope, tlo* Amcnrican 11 nr woule not\nhave flouted there on the glorious\nFourth* He dimed the tapering mast,\nand repaired ail damage, thus meriting\ntlie warim st thanks < f our citizens\nFor this d - ring so; vice, he was reward-\nwith purse undo up on the spot, con-\ntaining s2l. During the day u t-üb-\nscripti hi w is set on lout, and $23 was\n-o on colloced ami appropriated to the\npu diase ot a now fl a,--Wide I Vest.\nA White Black-Bird —Among\n'he fl >cks of IdaeK-hirds (hit every\nmo iling make iheir rendezvous upon\nthe 1 vee, gith'-reiing up the waste\ninaiii and sending I" rlii tneir nates of\n ibtful melodv. has recently b on ob\nserved a heiut lul snow whtie bird of\nihe same specie*, who mingles in the\ncompany ol its ebony companions ap-\n- 1 ar ntly unc m-chuis of any distinction\nof color. The fat •f* s » do-e a rela-\n(ion- hip ox -ti g m nature between the\nwhite and h'aek is a strong point,*\nwtiien Abol ticni-ts will do well to n ito.\nTti" bird- n akes i s home in the trees\nof W beds girden, and when assem-\nbled with his emup nioiH in council,\npre-en's a co tra-t ol color that at\nonce -intil s bun out ns a ram avis,\nwho seems an mba-sidor of Nature,\nwh so uore pres uge in the company\nin w hi* I he is foil'd, would -cem to\nquestion *h*! in allihility of the old\nadage, that birds of a leather flock to-\ngotli r.’— Shiclpn Affiux.
32fa64469f2144139e63e4c5e100bd7e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbe Times regards the postponemec\n)f the debate on the Alabama claim\nwith satisfaction. Their introductio\nit the present moment would serve n\nfood purpose. The general sense c\niVearinesa with respect to the subject oi\nDoth sides necessitates an interval c\n:onslderable period before It is re\ninmed. Debate conld be only useful I\nParliament disapproved of the condac\n>f the ministry or wished to Instruct i\nn regard to future negotiations, bu\nhere is no dissatisfaction. The onl;\nsharcre asralnst Lords Stanlev and Clar\nmelon is that they were too yielding\n>ut the Commons were not likely ti\nidvise the withdrawal ol the negotla\nions made, nor were tbey prepared ti\nay down a plan lor future negotiations\nind anticipations of such results fron\nbe discussion were most imprudent\nVnother reason for declining discus\nlion is a due regard for national dtgnl\ny, which forbids our approaching lb\nAmerican Government on these ques\nions. Public opinion Is unanimouBoi\nbis point. The late treaty was virtuall;\nAmerican, for it was made, altered am\nealtered by Seward and Johnson. I\nvas rejected through party antlpathie\nis much as from discontent with Its pro\nrlsions. It was probably \nind whatever its provisions might hav<\nieen, in all likelihood it would hav\nnet the same fate.' England is read:\no listen to any proposals which Amer\noa may make, but to display i\nlesire to receive them favorably wouli\nend to Increase, uot lessen, the de\nHands, When Mr, Motley consider)\nhe fepling of America is such that\nreaty consistent with the honor o\nSngland will satisfy Americans, b\nnay address the Government for tb\nenewal ol negotiations. Only suoh\nreaty will have aobanceof acceptance\nNothing more li desired than to live ii\nleace and good will with kindred na\nions, but now a less disposition exist\no sacritice the Interests and dignity o\nhe country to any unjust pretensions\n'he public will not approve any eager\nless to negotiate which seems to lorbodi\nweakness. When negotiation comei\nbe prevalence of more moderate viewi\na America is gratifying. It is to b<\nloped that the question of tbeQueen'i\nleutrality proclamation, which hai\nropped out ol sight, will be taoltlj\nbandoned. This favorable change 1:\nwing to the discovery that Englam\nrill not concede beyond certain points\nnd this resolution is not likely to bi\nbaken,
ad4c7e65c4f60140b803ec08379c5788 THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1859.2999999682902 32.36431 -88.703656 young plants not having sufficient nutri-\nment for immediate and vigorous growth,\nare .mothered by crab grass or weeds natu-\nral to the soil. If the time of sowing be se-\nlected, which w ill enable the young plants\nto strike their tap roots in the soil, before\nthe weeds liegin to grow, afterwards they\ndefy all opitosition. The best season for\nsowing clover is the time of sowing tur-\nnips or very early wheat. When once\nfairly established, the value of red clover\nC4in hardly be cxagcrated. Ashes, leached\nor unlcached, are the liest manure for it\nwhere lime is too expensive. Gypsum\ngreatly stimulates its growth, uamg only\none bushel to the acre. It is now settled\nthat success in the growth of clover is not\nquestion of climate, but rather of soil.\nThe splendid clover fields near New Or-\nleans are proof of this. The lands of\nSouthwestern G"orgia, probably could not\nbe surpassed in their yield of clover. I\nhave seen it near Savannah in Bald-\nwin county as tine as I have ever seen in\nNew or old England. Everything de-\npends on the preparation of thesoil, time\nof sowing, and subsequent treatment.\nAt the North, the danger is th.t it will\nbe frozen out at the South, that it will\nle burned out. The one danger is no\ngreater than the other. Proper precautions\nwill guard against them both.\nRed clover has an especial value to us\nat the South, where bacon is so much\nused in feeding our negroes. We have a\ngeneral idea that clover is a great reliance\nin Kentucky in raising those large droves\nof hogs which are annually brought into\nthis State. But the full value of rTiis plant\nfor this purpose is not appreciated. It\nmay not lie amiss to quote two agricultu-\nral authorities of undoubted veracity.\nshowing the number of which may be\nraised niion an acre of clover. Dr. Deane,\nthe father of improved farming in New\nEngland, says :
0d5e455ca870978510cccecc920168d6 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.8811475093605 40.735657 -74.172367 all the business men and manufacturers of a city should\ndevote a fraction of leisure time to organized work for the\npromotion of public improvement what a vast amount of\ngood would be accomplished. But. as a rule, they pay little or\nno attention to matters outside of their private affairs. Only a\nsmall percentage of the members of a board of trade can be\ninduced to attend meetings or take a personal interest in im-\nportant questions. In New York this general apathy is re-\nsponsible for the condition which now confronts the commercial\nmetropolis. The improvement of the port and enlargement of\nits facilities should appeal eveu to the selfishness of business\nmen. but they have remained supine, content to see commerce\nleave the port. An effort is now being made to arouse business\niuen out of their stupor and get them to join Merchants\nAssociation, composed of a few men who have some vision be-\nvond the end of a yard stick. That the business community of\nNewark needs an awakening, too, is evident enough. The ques-\ntion of meadow aud dock improvement, which has dragged\nsloiig for four years iu the hauds of an indifferent board, is\nvital to Newark's business men and manufacturers, and yet it\nhas been left to incompetent official judgment and to persistent\nneglect until the public has begun To believe that meadow and\ndock improvement is all a bluff, not intended to be carried out.\nIt is as important to Newark to develop *its water-front advan\ntages ns it is for New York city, while Newark has, also, all \\\nthe splendid opportunities for industrial growth in the four\nthousand acres of meadows that can so easily be transformed\ninto manufacturing sites.
16d923977eea84d787837b12e977738e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1886.1767122970573 46.187885 -123.831256 the husbands what they should do to\nmake the home happy. As I talked I\nnoticed that some of them squirmed a\ngood deal in their pews, but on the\nwhole.they took it pretty well.\n"There a few things, oh! wife, that\nI would say to yon. First, I charge\nyon appreciate that your husband is in\na very Solferiuo or Sedau from morn-\ning until night Then if he comes\nhome preoccupied, forgive him. Sup-\npose, during the day, he has a pro-\ntested note or sorre one has called\nhim a liar, you might as well tell the\nstorm of the Atlantic to keep off the\nshore as to try to make him pleased\nwith his day's work. After 45, men\ntoil, not for themselves, but for their\nfamilies. The high pressure of life is\nnot in the different of busi-\nness, but in the home pressure. Don't\nnag your husbands. The most dis-\ngusting thing on earth is a woman\nslattern, or one who keeps her hair\ndone up in curl papers until she goes\nout or some one calls, Make your-\nselves attractive. Keep the home se-\ncrets. Tell them to no one. Veil the\nimperfections. When a woman can\nsay, O, Lord, I have kept the secret,\norders will be given that that woman\nshall be led to the best room in the\nheavenly palace, and given the softest\ncushions, and tho angel ushers will\ntake good care of her."\n"Thank God for flats. They are\nthe homes of many noble people. I\ncharge you to read the newspapers\nand keep posted on the affairs of the\nday. Beware of the life of the die-a wa-
13044668e018a081bb1d44f335704034 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.1109588723998 44.939157 -123.033121 guay & that nobody cud tell him any\ndifferent, & he sed tlmt the Andes\nMountains was bounded on one side b\nthe Pacific Oshun & on the other side\nby Tennesee. Doant fergit, tho, sed Pa,\nthat in his erlier days lie made mistuiks\ntlint ho hasent made since he grew up.\nThe man is, a rich man now, sed Pa.\nI doant like to meet rich men, sed\nMa. Tli y are all the time telling\nabout how tliey niude tliare mutiny, the\n'same as a jasper out in the woods wud\nbe telling pecpul how much cordwond\nhe piled up. If a man interrups wen\nsumbody else is talking who cares I\nimunv yellow bills he has in sum safety\ndeposit vault !\nMa was rite at that. The frend that\nenim to the house with Pa dident seem\nto think of anything much excep his\nmutiny. He toald us how he started by\nsaving the dollar that he ewer\ntmade & how in the course of time tlmt\ndollar grew into a grute big roll. You\nwill newer know, he Bed to Pa, the\nreal thrill of joy that cams to a nuia\nthat has his f irst dollar in the bank.\n1. in you teei tnnt tnrin you will nev-ve- r\nknow you are alive.\nThen I guess I will always be ded,\nsed Pa, beekans the first dollar that I\newer made t jumped out of my hands\nlike a kangaroo & if it kep oa going the\nway I started it I guess it is going yet.\n1 hnvent got anything nggenst a safety\ndeposit vault, Pa sed, bekaus I newer\nhnd any declings with one, nul I know\n.tlint a safety deposit box is about the\nonly square thing In a lot of hanks, but\nuny time you find me taking a bunch\n'of yellow hills out of circ u-l at io-
16e3866bcf30d0e177aba64c8d492e7f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.4726027080162 39.745947 -75.546589 Colored, charged with assault and bat­\ntery, was discharged for want of testi\nmony. Joseph Hickey, an old offender,\ndrunk, $3 or twenty days; John Hardy,\ndruuk, $1 and oosts; Essie Johnson, for\nasking Officer Francis to arrest her\ncompanion, who was acting disorderly at\nEighth and Market streets, and then\nassaulting the officer for so doing, was\nfined $3 and costs; John O'Brien, drunk,\n$1 or ten day»; Ida Becker, colored, dis­\norderly conduct, $1 and costs.\nA funny case was that of Henrietta B\nEvans. Bhe occupies rooms In the honse\nof Jacob Aastin beyond Third street\nbridge. On Saturday night Henrietta\nand her husband were having a good\ntime in their room. They made so much\nnoise that Jacob and his wife, who slept\nbeneath them could not go to sleep So\nJacob hallooed up to them to stop their\nnotas, and that not having the desired\neffect he went to the door of their room\nand warned them to stop or he would\ncall in an officer. He then returned to\nhis room, but Henrietta was so enraged-\nby his interference that she pursued him\nto his quarters, jumped on him and tors\n shirt into shreds, whacking Jacob's\nwife at the same time Jacob escaped,\nin a state of nudity, for Officer Welsh,\nwho took Henrietta into custody. When\nAustin was giving his evidence, in order\nto make it mote emphatic he threw off\nhie coat to show his torn shirt. Hen­\nrietta was fined (1 and costs.\nThe case against John 8ord-n, colored,\ncharged with assault and battery was\ncontinued uutll to morrow, George W.\nBates, drunk, f 1 and costs James Grant,»\ncolored shoe-black who takes ap his\nposition at Eighth and Market streets,\nwas charged with insulting street car\npassengers Ex'policeman William B.\nWeldin teetified that Grant used abusive\nlanguage repeatedly to passengers. The\ndefendant said that Weldin had a spite\nagainst him. Grant was fined $3 and\ncosts. Neil Puttmau.drnnk, $8 or twenty\ndays. The ease against W illlam Crowley,\ncharged with larceny, was continued\nuntil ta aserrow. Michael McDonald was\ncharged with the larceny of a valise\nfrom Joseph Thorp, with whom he had\nbeen drinking. Thorp denied that Mc­\nDonald took the valise with the inten­\ntion ot stealing it. When the bag was\nopened it eonta'ned among other |th!ngs\nsome religious msgizines.
19472ad09a9dc7c42abecb3d83f277c6 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1884.7745901323112 41.004121 -76.453816 Animals, like men, when tho oppor-\ntunity for oxeicising preferences is pre-\nsented, aro apt to consider that tho\nbest only is good enough for them ;\nand if moro hay is given than they re-\nquire will pick out tho tcndciest and\nsweetest portions and leavo tho remain-\nder, which not ouly wastes valuable\nfeed, but encourages tho habit of dain-\ntiness in the animals which is conduc-\nive to anything but thrift. Animals\nthat pick over their food, smelling and\npoking every blade ami stem m appar\nent hesitation as to whether to eat or '\nnot, do not compare in thriftiness with\nluo good, square oaters, whose appe-\ntites givo them a good relish for a rea-\nsonable quantity of any proper food.\nThci general practice is to 'feed enough'\n is correct enough when just\nenough is given, and very incorrect\nwhen great quantities aro given to bo\ntrampled under foot or otherwise wast-\ned. Hut, with hay in bulk, it is not\neasy to guage tho quantity pivon, nnd\novon if this were possible, it would vnry\nmaterially with the quality of tho pro\nduct, although where good grain ra-\ntions aro given, variations in tho qual-\nity of hay aro not so important. Wo\nremember onco weighing some hay\nthat had been passed through a cutting\nmachine, and that a grent big pilo of\nit uncut, measured only a few bushel\nbasketfuls after tho machino had dono\nwith it, woighing seven and a half\npounds to tho baskot, or just half tho\nweight of coarse wheat bran weighed\nat tho same time.
06abd2cee9c70d1005362dcc8be352ab NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0751365803987 41.681744 -72.788147 has a very dull time of it. and be-\ngins to regret her hasty marriage.\nHowever, she still is In- love with\nPat and wildly jealous of his former\nsweetheart. Elisabeth Ertz. One day\nshe meets her chum, Sue Cain, dow n\ntown, and Sue invites her 1o a card\nparty. Lijy needs some new clothes\nfor it, and has no money lo Duy\nthem, and when Fue tells her that\nStaley is still in love with her, it\noccurs to her to telephone him. Ha-\nley pays for the clothes with his\nown. check, which is later seen by\nFlorence France, Pa.t's f.ister,' who\nis bookkeeper in the shop where\nLily. buys'. them. Lily keeps on see-\ning Stu.ley, will urges her to leave\nPat. and one day bumps into Roy\nJetterson, whose wife. Padye is a\ngreat friend of Elizabeth Ertz,\nSadj ehearB about Lily's carrying-on - ,\ntoo, but none these people tells\nPat anything. He finds out about\nthe affair between his wife and Sta-\nley when he .discovers a jeweled\nwatch that he sent her for a Christ-\nmas present. Fat and Lily, quarrel,\nand she goes home. After a month\nspent In her father's house, which\nis not so luxurious as it was, owing\nto Mr. Lexington's business re-\nverses, Lily pays a. visit to Pat and\nfinds Elizabeth in his apartment,\nhelping him to clean it. She goes\nhome, and consents to see Staley's\nlawyer about a divorce. Then Staley\nbacks a company that buys Fat out\nfor next to nothing, and. filled\nwith sytnpahty for him. she goes\nto see him again. She finds him at\nthe Jettersons', and w ith him is\nElizabeth. The sight of her enrages\nLily, and she begins to shake her\nand scold her and threaten her If\nshe doesn't leave Fat alone,
0f056a83cdf37f8f246e9756079de972 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.3082191463725 40.063962 -80.720915 On Wednesday of last week Sidni\nQuimby, son of A. J . Quimby, m\nBanks In Black Bock. Banks Insist!\non young Quimby taking dinner wil\nhim. HeBhOwed bis wedding suit at\ntold his guest of his approaching m«\nriage with Miss Greeley. He announci\nthat he would appear in Cbappaqua\ngood time for the event. He bad hea\nnothing about the Rev. Frank M. Gle\ndenning and imagined himself to-be tl\nprospective bridegroom.\nNo one in Obappaqua who kno\nBands has the least doubt that be w\nkeep his word. The village his on\nabout five hundred inhabitanta and it\nlooking forward to the most exciting e\nisode since those days in 1861 when\nmob was gathered to sack and bu\nHorace Greeley's residence and Mi\nGreeley bought 100 pounds of powder,\nLate last night Mr. Quimby \n"There's no knowing what time Ban\nwill come or where he will come fro\ntie is liable to step oil any train tt\nstops here, and is just as liable to we\nin from. Sing Sing or Buffalo for tt\nmatter. He is a perfect man physical\nand absolutely tlrelete, and be tbin\nnothing of a fifty or sixty mile wa\nHe will surely come here, and will jt\nas euiely be very difficult to manage,\nho does not know what fear is, and\nfull ol dcry fanaticism.\n"But when be lands I and a nnmt\nof others here will tackle blm. X be\nseen the Justice of the Peace, and it w\nbe all right. The Justice will send h\nnptothecountyhouae. Ouwhatcharp\n0, well, I don't know as there will\nany charge. We would arrest blm\nbeing craiy."
1ea12b56d1c8fcd2bc94991c56edbea1 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1894.546575310756 39.623709 -77.41082 A Page From Her History.\nThe important experiences of others aro\nInteresting. The following Is no exception:\n•I had hfeen troubled with heart disease 25\nyears, modi of that t imo very seriously. For\nfive years I was treated liyone physician con-\ntinuously. I was in business, hut obliged to\nretire on account of my health. A phy-\nsician told ray friends Hint I could not live a\nmouth. My reel and limhs were badly swol-\nlen, and I was indeed in a,serious condition\nwhen a gentleman directed my attention to\nDr. Miles New Heart Coro, and said that his\nsister, who hud been afflicted with heart dis-\nease, had been cured by the remedy, and was\nagain a strong, healthy woman. 1 purchased\na bottle of the Heart Cure, and In less than\nan hour after taking the first dose I \nfeel a decided Improvement In the circulation\nof my blood. When I had taken three doses I\ncould move my ankles, something I had not\ndone for months.and my limbs had been swol-\nlen so long that t hey seemed almost putriiied.\nBefore 1 had taken one bottle of the New\nHeart Cure the swelling had all gone down,\nand I was so much better that I did my own\nwork, On my recommendation six ottiers are\ntaking this valuable remedy.”—Mrs. Morgan,\n669 W. Harrison St., Chicago, 111.\nDr. Miles New Heart Cure, a discovery of an\neminent specialist in heart disease, Issold by\nall druggists on a positive guarantee,or sent\nby the f)r. Miles Medical Co.,Elkhart, I nil., on\nreceipt of price, ?1 per bottle, six bottles for\n$5, express prepaid.. It is positively free from\nall opiates or dangerous drugs.
206e26238703b9390a8c21b3738fdef1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.8835616121257 58.275556 -134.3925 Dr. G. P . Ramsey, the Nome dredging\noperator, recently came down from the\nNorth. Dr. Ramsey is manager of the\nNome Moutana Mining Company,:\nwhich operates two dredges in the\nNome district. Although it was a very\ndry season aud a bad one for most of\nthe operators, he says that his company\nhad a very prosperous year, although\nouly one of the dredges was able to\noperate. Their dredge, a new oue, on\nCasa de Paga river, was unable to do\nany work on account of the lack of\nwafer, but their dredge on Solomou\nriver had an unusually rich season.\nIn speaking of the recent storm at\nNome, Dr. Ramsey said: '"Nome needs\nall the relief that she can get, more\nmoney is needed right now." At the\ntime of the storm the city treasury was\njust about empty.\nA number of patrons the Washing¬\nton saloon eujoyed the unique spectacle\nyesterday of seeing an almost full-\ngrown moose step up to the bar of the\nestablishment and literally demand bis\nmorning drink. A drink was placed\nupon the bar for a patron and the\nmoose made for it in a greedy manner,\nbut after getting one smell of the\nliquor be declined to driuk it, and\ndirected his attention toward the dish\nof crackers. In consequence of the in¬\ncident, Bill McPhee claims to be the\nonly host in the world who had ever\nbad the pleasure of serving a real live\nmoose at his bar up to that time. Later\nin the morning the moose visited a few\nmore of the drinking emporiums and\nenjoyed the attention that was given\nhim. He also visited Dan Rose's cigar\nstore, and found the box of apples\ngreatly to his liking.
204d79f5bbd761cda5dd6e29e28c93e3 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.5575342148657 44.939157 -123.033121 markets the country over are in a wait-\ning attitude. The California asxociatioo\nafter naming its opening price, with\ndrew from the market ami is still out.\nPackers in the northwest are doing but\nlittle in the way of making contracts\nwith growers. The limited business un-\nder way is at the obi basis, but grow-\ners are" not pressing sales.\nThe feature of the eastern trade has\nbeen a moderate amount of export bus-\niness in prunes( which lends to en-\ncouragement that more trade of tho\nsame sort will be forthcoming. Com-\nmenting on the situation, . New Vork\ntrade advices say:\n"Tre opening prices of prunes and\napricots have absorbed all the interest\nthat has been shown in the market for\nthe present, and the trade is uow wait-\ning for something else to turn u. \nfooil control legislation at Washington\nis still Bi ting as a dead weight on bus-\niness, and until some definite policy has\nbeen decided upon it is not likely that\nanything of a serious nature will be\nattempted in the way of general busi-\nness. Outsiders are asking highr prices\nfor prunes than those named by the as-\nsociation, but there seems fo be no evi-\ndence as yet of any urgent desire on\nthe part of buyers to make additional\net.ntrncts, although it is strongly in-\nsisted that nnder no circumstances are\nprunes likely to go below a fie basis.\nIfowever, with snch a large crop on\nhand, it will be necessary for some de\nmand to come from somewhere to help\nabsorb the supply; so that the export\nsituation will be an important factor\nthroughout the season."
024f1b652e963224b825d01a32949b58 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.392076471109 37.305884 -89.518148 When fully completed, this tower\nwill be one of the highest structures in\nWashington, higher than the dome of\nthe Capitol by several feet. It will be\ntopped, of course, by the Washington\nmonumeut, and, standing in compara-\ntively low ground, it will not show off\nto the advantage which would belong\nto it if it were on a greater elevation.\nThere is yet to be 67 feet of masonry\nset on the tower itself before the base\nof its peaked roof is reached, and this\nwill all be marked by unusual features,\nthe plain surface being broken first by\nthe clock faces and thecapping arches,\nthen by a cornice of ornamental stone,\nfollowed as the stone goes upward by\nan open story with three high- arc he - d\nwindows on each side. Above these\nwindows comes the story of the\ntower, containing five small -a rch e- d\nwindows on each face, with peaked\nturrets at each corner of the structure.\nThe roof of the tower springs from\nthe cornice immediately above this\nrow of small windows, and from that\npoidt it rises at a sharp angle 45 feet\nto a peak 308 feet above grade, making\nit 20 feet and 7 inches higher than the\ncapitol dome from its own base line.\nThe dome springs 287 feet 5 inches\nclear from the base of the east front,\nbut as it stands on a hill that is con-\nsiderably more than 20 feet higher\nthan the level of Pennsylvania avenue\nat Eleventh street, the cap of the statute\nof Freedom will overtop the metal\npeak that is to surmount the sloping\nroof of the Post Office tower.
26f7bee522b4dee0892113467c363e73 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.1816939574478 41.681744 -72.788147 there is nothing but laughter. Cast\nas the jealous wife of Nettleton, Dora\nBooth gets a good chance to come in\non the comedy. She too measures up\nto the bill. Then there is Philip Shef-\nfield who plays thepart. of the lawyer,\nthe chap who does the "fixing." and\ndoes it to the queen's taste or rather\nto her distaste. Mr. Sheflield goes\nthrough all the vernacular of the le-\ngal profession with the ease and grace\nof one long addicted to the vicious\nhabit, or practice, of drawing up tedi-\nous and ambiguous contracts.\nMiss Julie Heine, as the sweetheart\nof the unfortunate T. Boggs Johns,\nthere is something wonderful about\nthat name, has a part that does not\ngive her any chance. for emotional\nacting ,but withal she has a very pret-\nty part to play and has no difficulty in\nstamping it with her usual sweetness\nand character. She is the Queen who\nfinally beat "A Pair of Sixes."\nMiss Eveta Francis helps the play\noff to a good start by her work as the\nstenographer of the two dissatisfied\nbusiness men but, like Joseph Henley,\nworks only in the first act. The office\nboy, Francis Murphy, also ends his\nservices in that period the play.\nGirard Patterson this week .gets a\nchance at a real part, 'though only\nfor a brief period, as Toney Toler,\nthe tempestuous and ambitious sales-\nman for the firm. J. Irving White's\ncharacter creation is also short lived.\nA brief outline of the play woulo\nrun somewhat as follows, not beins\ncomplete by any means. George B.\nNettleton and T. Boggs Johns, part-\nners in a pill manufacturing business,\nare constantly at loggerheads, each\nlonging to be rid of the other, but\nneither willing to sell out. They sum-\nmon their lawyer but decline his var-\nious propositions for dissolution until,\nin despair, he suggests a contract with\nnumerous conditions by which a. hand\nof poker is to be played, with the pen-\nalty that the loser shall quit, the bus-\niness for a year and in the interval\nserve as a servant in the household\nof the winner. The lawyer is interest,\ned personally because he hopes to see\nT. Boggs Johns lose, and with his lips\nsealed by the contract, he will be hu-\nmiliated before the girl with whom he\nis in love, and in whom the lawyer is\nalso interested. The breaking of the\ncontract means a forfeiture of $,".,000\n.
0b8a555e1f6536843229b679291067d9 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1896.099726744333 39.756121 -99.323985 His aimy will bo preceded by great\nclouds of cavalry, pushed forward both\nto rcconnoiter and to hold back the\nadvanced bodies of tho enemy. In ad-\ndition to this, his screen of cavalry will\nserve to conceal the movements of his\nmain body from the enemy. Skirmishes\nbetween the advanced cavalry of the\ntwo armies will be of frequent occur-\nrence. At last one of the commanders,\nnot wishing to advance further without\naccurate information and prevented\nfrom obtaining this by the enemy's cav-\nalry screen, wi) jiake arrangements for\nbreaking through this screen. Concen-\ntrating his own cavalry, he will launch\nit at somo weak point in the enemy's\nmounted advance guard.\nIf tho attack Is kept secret It proba-\nbly will succeed with ease; if tho ene-\nmy Is warned in he, too, will con-\ncentrate and a great cavalry battle will\nresult. Tho victor in the engagement\nwill succeed in obtaining nil the in-\nformation he desires, while the defeated\ncavalry will fall back on their main\nbody of infantry. Thus will end tho\nfirst phase of a modern war.\nEvery gun of his artillery will be\nbrought to bear upon the guns of tho\ndefense, and until the concentrated ar\ntillery fire succeeds in silencing and\ncrushing the defender's artillery tho at-\ntacker will move forward with his\nInfantry, for a rifled gun will now carry\nover five miles; its fire becomes decisive\nat 3,500 yards, and murderous at 2,000\nyards, so that an infantry attack would\nbe doomed to disaster at the outset un\nless the artillery of the defense wore\nfirst silenced.
0bc4187fb8a2bee3960becd9492fb8c3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.209589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 “Resolved, Believing as wedo-lhat the\nconduct of the principal of No. 16 school,\nMiss Edwiua B. Kruse, is detrimental to\nthe advancement of our children, that\nwe unite all our efforts to cause the re\nmoval of said teacher from the principal-\nship of said school, and be it farther\n; “Resolved, That as the members of\n, said board did sustain said principal in\nher action, and in the face oi à petition\nvoicing the sentiment of three fourths\nthe colored citizens of Wilmington.\n“Resolved. That should any member of\nsaid board—consisting ,of the following\nnamed gentlemen, viz ; Charles Baird,\npresident; Jessie K. Baylis, John Pyle,\nMeyers Hayes, Peyton O. West, William\nTurner, John Û. Danby, S. Rodmond\nSmith, Samuel H. Baynard, Samuel F.\nBetts, Abner P. Bailev, James H. Morgan,\nM. I)., I). R. Smith,' E. O . Shortlidge,\nThomas ODonnell, Samuel W. Trump,\nPatrick Magarity, Samuel Harris, Joseph\nPyle—ever come before the public for\npolitical preferment that wo. the colored\ncitizens of Wilmington, will not only\ndeny them support, but do all in our\npower to defeat them in any and all their\npolitical aspirations, believing that it\nwill be detrimental to the progress of our\nrace in Wilmington, should any of said\nmen be selected to fill any public office\n“Resolved, That had the negro the\nright of franchise at school elections the\npresent trouble might never have\noccurred and, having occurred, could\nhave baen amicably adjusted ; that we do\nall in our power to secure for ourselves\nand our posterity the rights, privileges\nand immunities belonging to us as\ncitizens of the United Slates.\n“Resolved, That we demand at the\nhands or instaura of the Board of Edu­\ncation the removal of James H. Morgan,\nM. D ., and Abner P. Bailey as committee\non said school, as they have become an\nincumbrance and offensive to the mass of\ncolored people in general, and\n“Resolved. That it is the sense of this\nmeeting that Miss F. E. Lewis should be\nreinstated to the position that she was\nsuspended from.
07ecefb0e90c3c2eb1545d42f9f6f25f IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.7964480558085 43.82915 -115.834394 “Tcç or twelve years ago I wit-\naosced the most dramatic situation\nof my life in a Philadelphia court­\nroom,” said Henry J. Erskine, of the\nQuaker City. “It occurred during\nthe trial of an important suit involv­\ning certain franchise rights of -the\nPennsylvania railroad in Philadel­\nphia. Benjamin Brewster, after­\nward attorney general of the United\nStates, was then the chief counsel of\nthe Pennsylvania company. Brev­\neter, yon know, was a frightfully\nugly man on account of a terrible\ndisfiguration of his face from burns,\nbut intellectually he was a giant and\nin deportment a Chesterfield.\n“8o great was the admiration for\nthe man's powerful mental parts that\none soon forgot his ugliness. He\nwas extremely sensitive of his facial\nmisfortune, but never referred to it\nhimself, nor did any of his thousands\nof friends ever ask him the cause.\n“The trial to which I refer was a\nbitterly contested affair, and Brew­\nster at every point got so much the\n of the opposing counsel that by\nthe time argument commence«! his\nleading adversary was in a white\nheal In denouncing the railroad\ncompany this lawyer, with his voice\ntremulous with anger, eeilaimed:\nThis grasping corporation S a s dark,\ndevious and scarified in its methods\naa is the face of its chief attorney\nand henchman, Benjamin Brewster!*\n“This violent outburst of rage and\ncruel invective was followed by a\nbreathless stillness in the crowded\ncourtroom that was painful. Hun­\ndreds of prying eyes were riveted on\nthe poor, scarred face of Brewster,\nexpecting to see him spring from\nhis chair and catch his heartless ad­\nversary by the throat. Never be­\nfore had any one referred to Mr.\nBrewster's misfortune in such a way.\nor even in any terms, in his pres­\nence. Instead of springing at the\nman and killing him like a dog, as\nthe audience thought was his de­\nsert, Mr. Brewster slowly arose and\nspoke something like this to the\ncourt;
415d91a66de1fc53d46d05500fc02568 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.4589040778792 58.275556 -134.3925 The reception accorded President\nRoosevelt by the committee of Al¬\naskans, and by the hundreds of Al¬\naskans wbt> crowded the Grand Opera\nHouse on the night of his visit, we\ndoubt not was one which the president\nwill cherish as being among the most\npleasant of his entire tour says the\nNorthwestern Miner. A gold pan was\npresented to him by the Arctic Brother¬\nhood, A. G . Daly, a prominent Nome\nlawyer, making the presentation in the\nfollowing appropriate words: "Mr.\nPresident," he said, "today the presi¬\ndent of the United States is for the\nfirst time the honored guest of Alaska,\nand to mark this important event in\nher history the Arctic Brotherhood\npresents to you tonight a gold pan,\nwith an iuvitatiou to visit the camps of\nAlaska. The gift which the \nhood asks you to accept tonight, a\nprospector's pau, is the emblem of the\norder. It is also emblematic of Alaska,\nIt is the implemeut of the pioneer, and\nbehind it come great stamp mills,\ncities, families and civilization. The\nnuggets in the pan represent the min¬\neral wealth of Alaska, the wealth that\nhas been uncovered by that pan and\nher citizens." The gold pau is about\nfive inches in diameter and is of pure\nAlaakan gold, twenty karats fine. At,\nthe top are the Stars and Stripes and\nthe Union Jack, done in enamel, with\nthe letters A. B . in raised characters of\ngold. The body of the pan bears the;\ninscription "Presented to Theodore\nRoosevelt, President of the United\nStates, May, 23,1903, with an invitation I\nto visit the camps of Alaska."
21b751bf77140cdef4e3441aeb7f3581 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1942.2698629819888 40.618676 -80.577293 The pottery industry, employes and employers, with few\nexceptions have over a period of more than forty years bar­\ngained collectively. The industry, as a whole, has been in the\nforefront of those which have settled the grievances, wages\nand working conditions of the workers at the conference\ntable, rather than through industrial strife.\nLast December, after a week of intense debate between\nrepresentatives of the employers and the workers, your of­\nficers succeeded in prevailing upon the employers to grant an\nincrease of ten per cent in wages, together with other bene­\nfits, effective February 1, 1942. This increase in wages, as\nyour officers foresaw, just about equalled the increased cost\nof living. It did not offset, nor was it expected to, the loss of\nfamily income due to the great number of our younger men\nwho joined the armed of their country. Neither did it\noffset the increase in taxes which we have all gladly paid.\nThis increase in wages, even the job opportunities of our\nworkers are now jeopardized. Not directly by the short-sight­\nedness of the employers, as has so often been the case, but by\npossible threatened official action on the part of a group of\nWashington bureaucrats, few, if any, of whom have any prac­\ntical knowledge of industry either as producers or in the man­\nagement and operation of a production plant. The employers\nin the pottery industry to meet the increased costs of opera­\ntion, such as wages, materials, freight and traveling expenses\ninstituted an increase in wholesale selling price of the products\nof our labor. Lo and behold the Office of Price Administration\nissued an order that such an increase should.not be made\neffective.
33fed72add2c21d9f693ed69a82c49c1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.3401639028032 37.561813 -75.84108 made known by feeling him. Not being\nable to find out from any one the time of\nlow water, and having twenty miles to\nride before reaching the " Narrows," I\nmade a daylight start, calculating that I\nshould arrive there about noon, and\ntrusting to Providence that it would be\nlow water some time between then\nand dusk. I jogged along at the amb-\nling pace that journeys are made in\nAustralia, and arrived, exactly as 1 had\nintended, at noon.\nMy first look was at the channel, when\nwas disgusted to find that low water\nmust have been about eleven, and that\nthe tide was rapidly flowing. The next\nlow water would not be until several\nhours after dark, and I hardly knew what\nto do, tor 1 had brought no blankets, in-\n to sleep at the station, and I was\nalso unarmed, and the blacks were nu-\nmerous and hostile ; so I did what I have\nalways found to be the best thing when\nin any difficulty in the bush, dismounted,\nunsaddled and hobbled my horse, lit a fire\nandput apotofteaon, and satdownon\nlog and smoked a pipe whilst I thought\nout the situation.\nWait until night to cross I couldn't, for\nwould be madnessattemptiDgit in the\ndark ; ride back again I wouldn't for my\ntime was precious, and 1 hardly knew\nwhat to do, when I became conscious of\nwhat 1 had been too pre occupied to no-\ntice before, the buzz of thousands of\nmusquitoes, and these amiable insects in\nclouds all round, evidently enjoying\nthemselves most amazingly on my bare\narms and neck.
21a2f51b14e5699c7be8ed22962a1055 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.3374316623658 40.063962 -80.720915 Raolud, That no form of taxation 1\nis Just or wise which pnts a need- *\nlets bur Jen upon the people. We do- 1<\nmand a genuino reform ot the tarifl, so\nthftt all nntie* ahull h« mmmrwl wXUfc 11\nin addition to the revenue, yield to the c\nTreasury in value according to the In- Q\ncrease of the price of domestic products, e\nand in consequence is a tax for the P\nbenefit of the lavored interest. Now, I "\nwill- tell you one ol the reasons why 1 «\nwent into this movement. It was that 1 F\nmight assist in emancipating the politics y.\nand business ol this country from the de- '\nnomination ol rings ; [Cheers.] I mean "\nthe political rings in Washington; 1 P\nmean the rings which are steal- *j\nleg our. public lands; [loud cheers;] I <j\nand I mean the pig iron rings which are d\nrobbing tho country; [cheers. ] and yet n\nwhich pretend to relieve the burdens of o\nthe people bv Uking the taxes ofi tea and P\ncoffee, in order that it may keep them on P\nsalt and corn. [Loud cheers.] P\nMr. Atkinson.As a member of that 5\ncommittee permit me tolntorm you that f\nthe delay under which you are, perhaps, ;J\nrightly becoming impatient is not caused .\nby any delay in the tariff question, ."\n[cheers,] aB that plank to be reported haa "\nbeen decided In the Commltteo by very H\nnearly a unanimous vote. I am not chair- 5\nman of that Conimlttee and I can not
04c1057a69d708be4928fb71940586fa THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.7438355847285 37.92448 -95.399981 that it would be impossiblo with tho\nfunds at the disposal of the Regents,\nthe suggestion was made that tho ad-\nditional lecturers asked for might bo\nsecured if the students would pay a\nlecture fee of $25. The Alumni com-\nmittee promptly approved the sug-\ngestion and gavo it as their opinion\nthat the students would bo very will-\ning to pay the fee In order to securo\nthe additional instruction. It was\nargued that there was not another In-\nstitution in the United States which\ngave a law course absolutely free;\nthat the law was a technical, not a\ngeneral Btudy, and the State was un-\nder no obligation to provide free in-\nstruction in it; and that the fee pro-\nposed was in the nature of a "labora-\n charge inasmuch as it was in-\ntended to provide extra facilities\nwhich without it could not be had.\nIt was from this point of view that\nthe Regents acted. The sole purpose\nwas to provide funds to Improve the\nschool and not, as the Democrat un-\nworthily suggests, "to provide fat\nfees for a few special favorites."\nWhen the School opened this fall and\nobjection was made to paying the fee,\nthe question waa submitted to the at-\ntorney general, and acting upon his\nopinion the Regents promptly recind-e- d\nthe order. Tho result will simply\nbe that the school must be deprived\nof two or more courses of lectures\nwhich would have been given Hy some\nofthe most distinguished jurists of tho\nState if the fee had been paid.
7f3f3414504292a41ce85dce284a7d0b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.3356164066463 43.798358 -73.087921 would be preferable.\nTo prepare the ground for a vineyard,\nthe best way is to turn under the. whole\nof the surface soil from 15 to 18 inches in\ndepth, early in the spring, soon afier the\nfrosi was out of the ground, by plowing\ntwice in the same furrow. This will place\nthe richest part of ihvi soil, in a position\nwhere it will give the greatest supply of\nnourishment to the vines. Few vineyards\nin this country have been planted in this\nway ; but the cost is so small and the ad-\nvantages so great, that it should be done\nwherever there are no rocks or large\nstones to prevent it. Instead of adopting\nthis method of preparing the ground, ma-\nny persons have been content with dig-\nging pretty large holes where they intend-\n to plant the vine?, and placing in the\nbottom of these, six or eight inches of good\nsoil, previous to putting in the plants. A\nstill greater number ot those who have at-\ntempted to lay out vineyards, have not tak-\nen the trouble to resort to either plan, but\nhave planted the vines with the same care-\nlessness that they would a common annu-\nal, ins'ead of giving them the attention and\ncare each plant should receive especially\nwhen it is expected to produce a fine crop\not fruit every season after it has commenc-\ned bearing, for a hundred vears.\nRespectfully, R. T . Uxderhill.\nP. S. The Isaballa grape ripens its\nfruit two or three weeks earlier than the\nCatawba, anl is therefore more sure to\nproduce a peifecily ripe crop m a short
505a9481180a8d35e8f0c23a297d1ced THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.1904109271943 40.807539 -91.112923 Also—That the fractional parts of township\n69, N. range 4 west, and 69 N. range 5 west,\nho constituted one organized townsaip, to bo\nknown by the name of the AUGUSTA\n1OW XSlilP, and that the first meeting of\nthe electors of said township be held at tho\n" Iowa Inn" in the town of Augusta.\nAlso—I hat township 70, N. range 4 west,\nbe constituted one organized township to be\nknown by the name of the DANVILLE\nlOUiN.lllP, and that the first meeting of\nthe doctors of said township be held tit tbo\nHouse of Hiram Messenger.\nAlso • I hat township 70, N. range 3 west,\nbe constituted one organized township to be\nknownT by the name of FLINT RIVER\n1OV\\ NSHIP, and that the first meeting of\nthe electors of said township be held at tbtf\nHouse of Jonathan Morgan, Esq.\nAlso—That 71, N. range 2 west,\nand Fractional township 71, rango 1 west, bJ\nconstituted one organized township to bo\nknown by the namo of TA.MEY TOWN ­\nSHIP, and that tho first meeting of the ejec­\ntors of said township be held at the Houae of\nMatthew W. Latty, Esq\nAlso—1 hat township 74, N. range 3 west,\nbe constituted one organized township to bo\nknown by the name of FRANKLIN TOWN\nSHIP, and that the first meeting of the elec­\ntors of said township be held at the Iluuao of\nJohn Lorlon, Esq., in Franklin.\nAlso—That township 71, N. range 4 west,\nand 72, N. range 4 west, be constituted 0110'\norganized township to be known by the name\nof PLEASANT GROVE TOWNSHIP, and\nthat the first meeting of tho electors of said\ntownship bo held at the House of John Hew.\nland, Esq.
147a0b7b69277eb6804daa3e6f404ff2 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1889.719178050482 39.756121 -99.323985 This article of agreement made and\nentered into at Norton on September\n16th, 1889, between S. D. Decker, of\nOberlin, Kansas, and Louis K. Pratt,\nof Norton Kansas, witnesseth :\nThe parties hereto agree to submit\nfor decission, to the Republican State\nCentral Committee of Kansas, the\nquestion as to which shall stand as\nthe nominee of the Repablican party\nfor the office of District Judge of the\n17th Judicial District of Kansas, by\nvirtue of the action of a judicial Con-\nvention, held at Atwood, Kan., on the\n20th day of August, 1889. The de-\ncision of said committee is to be final\nand the one against whom such decis-\nion is rendered k to withdraw from\nthe race for said office, and publicly\nannounce the fact in the newspapers\n the District, and the one in whose t\nfavor the decision may be held stand\nas the only Republican candidate for\nJudge in said District.\nAs to the manner of arriving at\nsuch decision, it is further agreed that\nthe same is to be made by not less\nthan a majority of the members of\nsaid committee (no proxys being al-\nlowed to act in the premises, and the\nmember of the committee for the 17th\nJudicial District being also barred).\nThe said committee to assemble upon\nthe published call of the chair-\nman, Henrv Booth, at such time not\nlater than Oct. 8th, 1889; and at such\nplace within the District as said chair-\nman may designate, and then and\nthere proceed to investigate and de-\ncide the matters in controversy herein.
1990f5cedd5592722de55a6125c849f3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.815068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 prearrange, a kaun aonaonf tho uses and\nproperties of things all their aro the\nqualities on which 1 vain my Kgyptian\nfriend*, and inch qualities aro what\nliouid hu evolved by any education\nworth the naino. The greatest odoca*\ntional intluanee, howuvur, it example.\nThii it obyioui when we fee how rapidly\ntho curies of our civilization spread\namong thoao unhappily aubjacted to it.\nTne contact of Europeans with lowur\nranei l« almost always a detriment, and\nit is thiaoveroit redaction on ourselves\nthat such should bo tho c««o. It is a\nubjo t which hat tfivon much room for\nthoiuht in my own dealing* with the\nKgyptian peasant to cottaider how thia\ndolotori .ua oil -ct is P rod ucud and how\nIt la to ho avoided. l'»rit, it n dun to\ncarelessness in leaving tarnptations\nupon to uativui which may bo uo temp*\ntutiotis to our«olves. To bo carolers\nabout sixpences is in domoraii/.in-j to\n n« a man wiio toaxod aoVerouMis\nabout the street woul I bo (o us. Il a\nman or a government dolrnulH it is but\nnatural to Kin suUeror to try to rorom*\npens* himself bv any tnoans available,\nnnd tlitu an interminable system of re*\nprisnln is iqt up. Such is tlio chronic\nstate of thneiiiiat pretext atuoeg tho\nmora civilissflil races. llio h;y;»ti.mi\nuro notorious for ttiolr avarion nml urn\ninitially c rod i tod with lioinir invotorato\ninoney-mbbon, yet n6aoou.tr do (hoy\nllnd tImt tlii* systotu of ropriHHh is\nnbfinilohotl a >J mrict jufttics maintain\nlinn tliuy nt onco roipiml to It, and\nw (inn coufMuiioo Iim on cm liHoti trained\nit in nliu l ai coinni'Ui to fln<l a mm\nillipttto nt) account ngninst liin own in*\niwrsst in for liliuiolf, nnil icarcoly ovor\nI-* any ntlompt luudo nt laNn itnloineQtfl\nor imposition*. Nui'li In llio li«*altliv r»»«\nipnnw to straightforward iloaliiii; with\nthorti.
136441c57331e7c2844e86f57231efe1 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.2308742853168 46.187885 -123.831256 "You want to know something of ray\nlife," began tho convict, taking without\ncomment the visitor's tobacco aud repeat-\ning his question, "something of my men-\ntal life, as 'you put it; something of the\nthoughts and feeling of a life convict, I\nsupjesr. You're n newspaper man, you\nsay. You would put me on the rack like\nl'rotEf theu3 of old, and paint a pen pic-\nture of my ngony that the public shall\nseo and glott over while it admires your\nskill," he went on, with a curious expres-\nsion that had in it no despair, but a cer-\ntain grim apathy, as if the features set\nthemselves mechanically to an emotion\nthe soul no lonoer evolved. .\n"Well," after a moment's pause, while\nthe visitor stared in astonishment at the\nprisoner's language and fluency, "I am\nwilling, but I warn yon that I shall not\nwrithe the process; yon will find\nno quivering in these bared nerves, no\nshrinking in these exnosed and handled\nsensibilities. Emotionally, sir, I am as\ndead as I shall be when, sooner or later, I\nshall leave these narrow quarters for an-\nother cell not so very much narrower and\ndarker than is this one. whoso earthlv\ndoor shuts no closer and no more inevita-\nbly than that iron one there.\nIt was a little past midsummer in the\nyear when I was brought here, and we\ncame a day's journey from the county\nseat of the scene of my crime. I nrn in,\na3 you know, for homicide. Kvery inci-\ndent of that day, my last in the world, is\nindelibly printed upon my memory. We\nstarted very early. The dew was heavy\nupon tho grass as we drove from the jail\nand over tne lulls to take tne train, l
0d51d56c52444d9a9f2d7a342bf88604 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 Section 3 provides that "any office\nmanager or agent who shall make an\nfalse statement or oath respecting it\nmatters and things therein required\nbe stated and sworn to. shall be deen\n?d guilty of a felony and punished t\nImprisonment in the penitentiary f(\nnot less than one nor more than thr<\npears." This is a harsh and unjustl/\nxble provision, and does not correspon\nwith the penalties imposed upon otl\nera guilty of like offenses. In oth<\ncases, the offense Is only a mlsdemeai\nir. while In this bill the same offense\nmade a felony, punishable by confln<\nment In the penitentiary. But 1\nharshness does not stop with this,\nmakes the simple fact of making\nfalse statement or oJth a felony, r<\n[tardless of the fact as to whether 6uc\nstatement or oath was made Icnowinf\nly or willfully. If such untrue stat<\nmerit or oath Is made merely.by ml.\ntake or Inadvertence, It makes It\ncrime and visits this severe pen3lt\nwhich Is contrary to a well settle\nprinciple of criminal lav. Our statu!\n order to make a false statemei\nperjury, expressly requires that sue\nstatement shall be made-'wlllfully ar\nknowlnslJ*." To provide that an ui\ntrue statement, not made willfully, bi\nthrough more Inadvertence, error <\nmistake, should subject the party\nImprisonment In the penitentiary an\nthe disgrace width follows, can hard!\nIlnd tolerance arnonir civilized peop!\nSurely this requirement was not Interlc\ned by the author of the bill before me.\nConflicts with National Laws,\nThe license fees exacted by this bi\napply alone to the agents of for^lg\nexpress companies, and the payment\nthe same Is a condition precedent to t*\ntransaction of business by such con\npanles within the state. This provlslc,\nf the bill Is plainly unconstitutiona\nund has been so expressly decided t\nthe supreme court of the United Stait\nIti llw case al Cruncher vs. The Con\nmonwealth of Kentucky, In 141 Unite\nStates supreme court reports, page 4\nThe court In that case holds that sue\nexaction Is an Interference with Inte:\nstate commerce, and Is accordingly u:\nConstitutional and void.
03ea29ad64cb56928d294c0256f01107 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.250684899797 44.939157 -123.033121 the world and especially the United States he will have\nto be the real thing or step down ?.nd make way for some-\none who will. If the German situation is solved peace-\nfully, which we all hope, it would be a fine time while the\narmy is together to make a permanent end to the Mexican\nbanditry. It would be at great cost if we should inter-\nvene, but it looks as though this will finally have to be\ndone before Mexico can enter on that era of peace and\nprosperity which will in a short time make her one of the\nmost prosperous and richest of nations. We will have it\nto do sometime and we should attend to it when we are\nfully prepared. We have gotten along peacefully with\ni.ur neighbor, Canada for more than a years and\ncould do the same with Mexico if the would act as a civil-\nized nation should, and show respect for thersrights of\nother nations and other people. The Latin races are\ni.aturally suspicious, and at least pretend to fear the\nUnited States has designs on their territory. Her course\nwith Cuba should remove this fear. Her conduct in with-\ndrawing her troops from Mexico should convince the\nMexicans we had nothing but her good and our own peace\nits an object. However good intentions go but a little\nways with a country governed by gangs of bandits, prey-\ning on their own people and.murdering and plundering\nall foreigners. The job of cleaning up Mexico and setting\nher up in business for herself is before us sooner or later,\nand the sooner, the quicker it will be over.
6facf2c2cd36a3b4a179228d00a4be38 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.0698629819888 39.369864 -121.105448 From the foot of the “incline” you traverse a\nlong way back where the miners are now at work,\nand where the spectacle is about the same as that\npartially described in the “Masonic.” As most\nof your readers are familiar with extensive mi-\nning enterprises, they would not be pleased with\ndetailed particulars. Some brilliant genius,\nskillful with pen and pencil, should prepare an\nillustrated article for Harpers Magazine, des-\ncriptive of the wonderful private enterprises\nwhich, familiar to ourselves, would be strange to\nevery body out of California. This suggestion is\nspecially meant forBrooks, discoverable in and\nabout the Appeal establishment.\nThat receptacle of stolen jokes, Harpers “Draw-\ner,” where antique sayings find rejuvenation,\ncould also find better material in the everyday\nlife of the mines. Let me relate one which, if\nthe “Drawer” encounters, it will undoubtedly\nsteal and locate somewhere in Georgia, though\nit is original not far from here-:\nAn old gentleman of'irasc<ibletemper and with\nwhom nobody durst venture to joke, owned a\nwater-ditch which it was his occupation to keep\nin repair. So intent was his mind on the care of\nthe property, that when asleep in his cabin near\nby, if the water <rose or fell an inch at a certain\nripple, the change of waked him, and the\nold fellow was off directly to the place of derange-\nment. One night a mischievous fellow who\nknew his peculiarity, found the old man asleep,\nwith candle and matches ready oh the table. The\nscamp shaved the candle wick close off, . even\nwith the tallow, and in the place where the wick\nought to have been, stuck a piece of a sail needle,\nand then slipping out to the ditch, took a clap-\nboard and began a tremendous troubling of the\nwaters. Up rose Antiquity, and down into his\nbreeches, which, they said, were self-buttoning.\nSeizing the candle, he applied an ignited match,\nbut no light! Another and another, while the\ncommotion in the ditch increased, indicating that\ndie floods had come, and that things were going\nto eternal smash. Match after match was lit\nwith the same success, until the box iyas nearly\nall consumed, when seizing the wick to twist it\ninto inflammibility, a nearly red-hot needle\nburned his fingers almost to the bone !\nThey say that the old man swore, and ripped\nround the cabin at an awful rate, threatening\ndeath to the practical joker. Five years after he\nflew into a furious stare of mind at a remote al-\nlusion to the ditch difficulty.
2d8dec5bb6abc0108d3017a69ccb23fd PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1916.1926229191965 39.456253 -77.96396 Commenting on this decrease in the\nrato from tuberculosis, the Bureau\nif the Census says "As a result of a\nmore general undostanding of the\nlaws of health, the importance of\nfrtsh air. etc., due in part, no doubt,\nto the efforts of the various societies\n*or the prevention of tuberculosis\nthere has been a most marked and\ngratifying decrease during recent\nyears in tut mortality from this\ncourage of civiliaztion. In only a\nlecade.from 1904 to 1014.the death\n.ate from tuberculosis in all Its forms\nfell from 200.7 to 146.8 per 100,000.\nthe decline being continuous, from\n\\ear to year. Tills is a drop of more\nthan 25 per cent."\nAs an indication of the growlh of\nHit campaign against tuberculosis\nThe National Association for the\nStudy and Prevention of Tuberculosis\nshows that in 1905, when the cam¬\npaign was definitely started, \nwere in the United States only thir¬\nty-nine ani-tuberculosifl associations.\n115 sanatoria and hospitals, twenty\nspecial clinics no open air schools.\n\\nd not more than 5.000 people ac¬\ntively interested in the prevention of\nthis disease. At the close of the\nyear 1915 there were over 1,"00 anti¬\ntuberculosis associations, OOP sana¬\ntoria and hospitals, 450 dispensaries,\n800 open air schools, and o/er 100,-\n00 people actively interested in the\nprevention of tuberculosis. Besides\nthis, the fundamental truths that tu¬\nberculosis is a communicable, pre¬\nventable and curable disease have\nbeen carried into almost every vil¬\nlage and hamlet and to millions of\nmen, women and children in a great\nvariety of ways.\nThe National Association for the\nStudy and Prevention of Tuberculosis.\n105 East 22nd Street, New York City,\nwill gladly send literature on tuber¬\nculosis to those who wish it.
049044f1951be278a36eee96bc469f81 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1887.6260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 Dr. David E. Cole, 77 years of age,\nwas ootnm ttted as a vagrant at tbe\nJefferson Market Oonrt In Hew York\nyesterday. Dr. dole claimed that he is\nno vagrant. He aaid be owned two\nfarms containing 263 acres in Pennsyl­\nvania, and reeelved a royalty of a\npatent tomato vinegar which be in­\nvented. His borne was at 227 North\nTwentieth street, Philadelphia, and he\nhad a married daughter living at tbe\noomer of Twentieth and Race,that olty.\nHe waa travelling aroand the country\npeddling beosuse be could not stay at\nhome ainoe his wife died.\nThe State Bailroad and Warehouse\nCommission Is In Session at Foorla,\n111., Investigating tbe Ohateworth rail­\nroad disaster. Superintendent Arm­\nstrong testified that the brakes were set\non the train, and thvt this was a lew\nseconds before he saw the fire. The oars\nwere good order when they started.\nHe did not believe in tbe incendiary\ntheory, bat thought that a double-\nheader was safer than running a train\nIn sections. He will be recalled tor\nfurther examination.\nUnited States Vice Consul Mitchell\nreturned to Eagle Pass yesterday from\nSanta Bosa, Mexico, where he weDt to\ninvestigate the recent murder at that\nplace or James B. Dnvai, an Amerioan\ncitizen. He brings the Intelligence that\nthe murderera, six in number, have al-\nready been convioted and sentenced to\nten years' imprisonment,\nTbe second trial of Dr. Weir at East\nTawas, Miohlgan, resalted on Monday\nin a verdict of not guilty. Dr. Weir,\nof An Sable and Oscoda, waa smcuBed\nof killing Mabel Clark, a patient, at a\nprivate hospital he conducted. Tbe\ncharges were sensational and oreated a\ngreat deal of excitement in the two\ncities.
104ecdca6e4efddf972db7f62ceb8186 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.1410958587012 39.745947 -75.546589 Reported unfavorably and laid over—\n111 »use bill giving Incorporated cities and\ntowns one-half of the liquor license reve­\nnue collected therein by the State.\nIntroduced and referred—By Mr. Clem­\nents, an ael to authorize the town of\nLewes to borrow money for school-pur­\nposes; by Mr. Maull, an act to repeal, the\nlaw authorizing the town commissioners\nof Lèves to Issue certain bonds; by Mr.\nGroves, an art authorizing the Mayor\nand Council of Wilmington to pay. to\nGeorge Drake *3,000, and to Frank C.\nStidham, *4,600. to reimburse them for\nmonoy expended for licenses as auetdon-\neors; by Mr. Knox, an act fixing the sal­\nary of the sheriff of New Castle county\nat 17,500, and allowing him *3.000 for dpeu-\ntlea; by Mr. 'Wright, an act to authorize\nthe town of Seabird to put lu au electric\nlight plant; by Mr. Maull, an act to\namend the of the Sussex Trust,\nTitle and Safe' Deposit Company; Axing\nat *26,ooo the official bond of the secretary\nof State; by Mr. Ellison, an act providing\nthat trolley cars shall be equipped whh\nfenders; by Mr. Maull. requiring the aeo>\nretary of Stale to make quarterly settle­\nments with the State treasurer: by Mr.\nPennewill. an net to Incorporate the\ntown of Greenwood; by Mr. Knox, an aet\nIn relation to the election of a chief en­\ngineer and two assistants for the Pire\nDepartment of Wilmington (by request,\nMr. Knox stating that he knew nothing\nabout the merits or demerits of the bill):\nby Mr. Groves, aens to authorize the gov­\nernor to appoint a notary public for the\noffice of the grand recorder of the A. O .\nIT. W ., and another for the law office of\nHarr) Whiteman; by Mr. Hart, an art\nappointing commissioners to Investigate
08a1638698b2352cbf83493036a80e43 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1894.3767122970573 37.92448 -95.399981 I wish to add ono, perhaps two\nto tho general fund. And to be\ngin with, I wish to state that I am\nnow and always have been in favor of\ngiving tho ladies equal political rights\nwith the men. I never could see the\nsense or justice in depriving one half\nof eur population admittedly the\nbest half at that, of any political\nrights which the men possess. The\nmore intelligence and virtue we put\ninto anything the better it is, and if\nthere is anything on top of God's\ngreen earth that needs it, it is our\nAmerican politics; who is more capa\nble of casting a pure, honest, intelli-\ngent ballot that will promoto the\nweal of tho whole country, than\nwoman. From time immemorial a\nfoolish, insane, and a very ungallant\nprejudice on the part of the men,\nbased upon their self asserted claim\nof intellectual superiority, has kept\nthe ladies from their rights. From\ntime immemorial with hypocritical\ncant man has proclaimed himself\nwoman's friend and protector, but\nwhat has ho done for bor but enslave\nher? Every vantage ground she\nholds to day, has by sheer force of\ncharacter and power of intellect,\nwrung from him in tho faco of the\nmost bitter opposition and protest.\nFirst, he declared she had no intel\nlect, or, at best a very weak ono, that\nwas incapable of receiving an educa\ntion, but sho soon drove him from this\nposition, then he fortified himself\nwith the theory that sho did not need\nan education. That a thorough men\ntal training was not necessary lor her\nto master the little perplexities and\nperform tho duties incident to her\nnarrow, contracted, limited kitchen\nlife; that it was not necessary for her\nto understand chemistry in order for\nher to properly mix and bake a loaf\nof bread, or grammer in order to spank\ntho children, or philosophy to bear\nuncomplainingly the abuse and in-\ndifference of a heartless husband, and\nour schools and colleges were a sealed\nbook to her, and it was considered al-\nmost a sin to educate a girl. But sho\nhas given the lie to man's false claims\nand assertions, and driven him from\nposition after position and covered\nhim with shame and confusion.
047e069896d7820bc91b384207c2ece4 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1878.3904109271944 39.743941 -84.63662 The Judiciary Committee was discharged\ntrom inrtner consideration ot tne redis-\nricting bill, which was, after prolonged de--\nbate and filibustering, referred to the Com-\nmittee on Privileges and Elections. A res-\nolution, that this General Assembly adjourn\non Wednesday, May 15, to convene on Tues-\nday, January 7, 1879, was adopted by 30 to\n2. Tue Senate concurred in the report of\nthe conference committee on Clonvh's bill,\ndefining the powers of the Board of Public\nWorks. The new Southern Railroad bill\nwas received from the House, the rule sus-\npended, read twice, and referred to a select\ncommittee of Hamilton County Senators.\nHouse Mr. Bohl, from the select committee\nof three, reported back H J. B. No. 7, by\nMr. Bohl, to indorse President Hyes in his\nconstitutional and pacific policy toward the\nSouthern states, and recommended its post-\nponement to the second Tuesday in Febru-\nary, 1879. Agreed to. Mr. White and Mr.\nWilliams presented majority and minority\nreports on the reso ution for investigating\nthe penitentiary. Ordered printed in the\nappendix to the journal. The Conference\nCommittee's report on the bill to reorganize\nthe Asylum for Imbeciles was adopted.\nThe Republican members sent up a protest\n certain arbitrary rulings of the\nSpeaker against the minority of the Honse.\nThe protest was entered on the journal.\nThe House concurred in the Senate amend-\nments to Mr. O'Connor's bill, reorganizing\nthe Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphans' Home.\nMr. Hendrick's House hill fixing the com-\npensation of the Board of Equalization in\ncertain cities of the second class (Dayton\nbeing the principal one,) was passed.\nMr. Meuser submitted a report that the pub-\nlic interests demand that this General As-\nsembly adjourn at a later day than Monday,\nMay 13. Adopted yeas, 62; nays, 30. The\nnew Southern Bailroad bill was adopted.\nThe Honse concurred in the 1ist three Sen-\nate amendments to the Appropriation Bill.\nThe House concurred in the report of the\nconference committee on Mr. Clough's bill,\nprescribing the powers and duties of the\nBoard of Public Works, so the bill is a law.\nMay 14. Senate Bills were passed:\nHouse bill requiring the Superintendent of\nInsurance to make annual examinations of\nlife insurance companies, and to charge the\nbasis of valuations of policies at four per\ncent.; Honse bill to prohibit insurance\ncompanies from adopting names previously\ntaken by other companies; Honse bill re-\nquiring foreign insurance
11f5ecd3ccbfcd9870f0d906cc74ae45 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1888.392076471109 42.68333 -96.683647 I This mine, while one of tko lsrgeel, j\nwas also one of the moot dangerous in\nthe valley. In order to keep the work­\nings supplied with pure air, in quan­\ntity sufficient to rendor harmless the ,\nexplosive gases released by opening\nthe coal-seams, an immense fan had\nbeen constructed which, during every\nminute that it was in action, drew forth\nfrom the mine over 200,0.)0 cubic feet\nof impure air. Even with this great\nair-cutrent, there were still very dan­\ngerous parts of the mine, requiring the\nutmost vigilance from the miners. To\nhear of aome miner or laborer tiring the\ngas in his chamber and being burned\nthereby, was a matter of almost weekly\noccurrence. In pits of thia character,\nwhere there is a plentiful sir-current,\nit ia often a custom writh miners to\n"l ire" the gag in their working-places\nbefore a quantity sufficient to render\nits combustion dangerous accumulates.\nWhen this is done, the gas will take\nfire with noise not unlike that made\nin lighting a common gas-jet. There\nis such an excess of air that the ex­\nplosion of tho gas is very weak and\nharmless. The flame, often three or\nfour feet deep, will travel along the\nuneven roof, showing beautiful colors\nvarying from a deep, dark blue to s\nbrilliant crimson; and in it shine stars\nof dazzling white light, showing that\nfine particles of coal-dust suspended in\nthe air are burning in the great heat of\nthe gas. Sometimes this flame will\ntravel close up against the roof, slowly\nto and fro, several times, until all tlie\ngas has been lmrned away.\nWhen the flame dies ont, the burnt\ngiises itlia "b'ack" or "after-damp,")\nbeing heavier than the air, fall to the\nfloor. 8o the cool-miner is ever ex-\njiosed to two great dangers; the ftrst,\n* that of being burned; the second, that\nof being suffocated after he has escaoed\ntho lire. —Roy Alc'ntnislt, in St. Ntch-\notm.
124cc50f52e75302f224433aee3fff10 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.3547944888383 39.756121 -99.323985 to Peking, one got a very close insight\ninto the comparative discipline, the?\nequipment, the endurance v ana tne\nfighting or soldier spirit in them, as -\nwell as into the working 01 meir\ntransport, commissariat, army medi\ncal corps, etc, writes George Lynch,\nin the Independent.\nThe standard of comfort 01 xne\nUnited States soldier is far and away\nhigher than that of any soldier in\nthe world. The United States com-\nmissaries in Peking were a perfect\ngodsend for procuring luxuries whicn\ncould not be obtained in any others.\nIn discipline I mean the obvious\ndiscipline, the surface discipline if you\nwish, the discipline that was apparent\nto the eye of the spectator the Amer-\nican soldiers were wofully lacking, and\nwould compete with the French for\nthe last place among the allied forces,\nbut when real fighting is be done\nthey generally manage to get there,\nfight well and shoot straight.\nIn sharply marked contrast to ev-\nery other arm of the service, the Jap-\nanese cavalry were an absurd carica-\nture. This is not altogether surpris-\ning when we bear in mind how unusued\nto horses is the average Japanese. He\nhas not the instinct for caring for\nhorses which is ingrained in those who\nare accustomed to them from child-\nhood. In every other branch of their\nservice it appeared to me that they\nequaled, if they did not surpass, the\nbest of the allied troops in China.\nTheir extreme mobility in the field\nwas a revelation, all their movements\nseemed to be done on the double, and\nthere was a verve, go and activity about\nthem that was simply delightful to\nwatch. The old fighting or soldier-spiri- t
6b6121ea9176b6c3a6f4addf10f14f51 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.6890410641806 39.560444 -120.828218 The Spirit of the Times has some cor-\nrespondents, so it has; humorous fellows;\nwho write for the fun of it, and to excite\nfun in others. And they succeed, too,\nand with the aid of the tallest of editors,\nthe real Porter, make the Spirit the great-\nest paper published. One of them tells\nthe adventures of abashful lover as follows:\nHis name was Damphule, we used to\ncall him Jackass for short. Rea Von help\nme if he should see this story; I hope he\ndoes not get the Spirit.\nAmong many of his misfortunes, for he\nwas cross-eyed, red-haired, and knock-\nkneed, he numbered that inconvenient one\nof bashfulncss; nevertheless, he was fond\nof the ladies, although when in their pre-\nsence he never opened his mouth if he\ncould help it, and when he did speak, he\n both hands to help him; in fact he\nwas a man of “great actions.”\nJack, one warm day, fell in love; he had\njust graduated at college, and began to\nthink he must seek the ladies society; he\nwas getting to be a man, and it Was manly\nto have a penchant. So Jack fell in love\nwith the sweetest, liveliest, and hoidenish\ngirl in the square; but how to tell his\nlove; there was the rub? He had heard a\ngood deal of the “language of the eyes,”\nand he accordingly tried that, but when\nhe looked particularly hard at the window\nwhere Miss Emily was in the habit of sit-\nting, some person on the other side of the\nstreet would invaiiably bow to him,\nthinking he was endeavoring to catch\ntheir eyes. He has despised expressive\neyes ever since.
0d66479a874b4ae3f4a77b7c8b77f2aa THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.4057376732949 40.832421 -115.763123 Jlonj)i.i;Mh at WCiHK,. l'hilliji Hitch,'\nKHuh fttnrk; Charley liiiyeb' nml James,\n¦llnyon, Ihroo pink-eyed, Hlrawberry |\nhlomlo lioodhiuiH, who nro proutl to\nMnim thoniotro|i»Hi </<'Auicricn an their\nhome, being Im/iiJtjfrMMft nud nAnl/lo t6i\npurclmno n puckol-lftiWe, erftwtod Into\nn largo covored wagon tieloifjiiig to\nMnlth) Mulcnhy, nnd nit liro to koiiio\nhay innidn nml t6nnled Vfioir hIiIiih in ,\nVutnforl by tho bli»*e. l\\mrlng (hut Iho\ntown, ii h well us thuir iinprovlHud quar-\nU'M in Iho w*£or», inipht bcc6nni tooi\ntroj.icnl for their comfort, Iho sweet-\nKconlod Irio |o<>k refnj«o tn thu lool do- J\nparliiivnl of ft fttofght tV/iin iihoifl to\nHtnrt cnnl. Th« wind nt tho Ifmo whk j\nblowing n jjnli;, nnd thu "fthirin of tiro!\nliist.mllv brought everybody to Hie\nHired, ami llu> entire llro department\nwAA discovered nothing fuviomdy toward\n hcoiio of the ml,unity; ft fftinjuiuituy\nlooking "llubeock" hounding »long lit\nlln ImcN. Tho |ironi|itiludo of tho llro\ndeportment cannot ho loo highly ox-\ntoiled, but tfomo private citi/eiiH w ho\nhappened to bo closo by when thw\nihtiueit (nok'o o'ul, Huevo'cdod In miMulng\nthem beforo (ticy Kurt (WirtWuiiilonlcd\n\\*ith Iho mlj*e«nt b«>ihlii>}Trt, nnd Iho\nllopM tineut gol upon thu yrouMd. 'llio\nthree liiimlsoinu liollyliockn will bo ei*Mt\nft»r Iheir pu r Is by Judge Tnylorbn Mon-\n>h«y, nnd mi Cno court "kuowH llcriioif,"\nIhoy Will UoublleHH bo ptrmilled '\nlu Wimlo their RurpluH nweet-\nnoHH wliore moth nnd runl don'l hronk\nthrough ntul ctenl, nnd whore tho grnun\nhoodluni fjroWrt fnl ii|u>n iln vni>orH.\nTiiM train cunt yt'Hlcrdfty hml two rnrn\n<>f horMOB nml blooilctl I)«>v»un1iir<*\n(Or 1>m». Mur)iljjr, nt \\V«ills.\nWamtki*. .
03893296f22516c001fd8ecb04415e99 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.1657533929476 40.063962 -80.720915 met Temple in the village of White\nl'lains. S . Y ., the latter part oi Septem¬\nber. ls',13. where he was engaged in\npaintiu.- the scenery ior the new Opera\nHouse at that place, erected by -Mr. .s.\n1-1 iI.mil. lie boarded with a man by\nthe name oi Frank Morrcll while there.\n"About the time lie had completed\nbis contract. .Mr. Vincent and 1 entered\ninto au arrangement to produce a set o.\nscenes representing the important\nphases in the life of Christ, wlncli wo\nproposed to exhibit throughout tho\ncouutrv. At tho time Teiuplo had no\nmoney", and wo agreed to put up the\nmonev necessary to produce the work,\nand put it on exhibition. Lndertno\nterms ot our agreement he commenced\nthe work, and completed asceue depict-\nJntr tho crucifixion of Christ. It was a\nmarvelous pieco work, but was only\na part of the work ho agreed to proauco;\nat relying on his promise to conipleto\nthe otlior scenes, we consented to come\non to this place from >*ew \\ork. \\\\e\narrived hero the'JOthof December, paid\nall of Temple's expenses, also those ot\nhis halt-brotner, W illiam Chevalier.\n"\\fter our arrival here it was almost\nimposdiblo for us to got him to do any-\ntiling he agrood to do, and linally, alter\ntwo weeks' delay, wo exhibited tho cru¬\ncifixion, but onlv to a small house.\n"From the hour of his arrival hero he\nspent most oi his time in the compauv\not the woman, Celina ColFey, whom lie\nrobbed and deserted in \\» heeling. I lis\nactions created a wide-spread scandal\nhere, which 1 have learned, since his\ndeparture, had the effect oi keeping tho\npeople away.
225570c33bac3969602902f82f5d804a THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.856164351852 40.618676 -80.577293 The statistics submitted by the Council show\nthat fifty-five national and international unions\nhave secured the five-day week for some or all of\ntheir members. A few of the larger numbers are\nInternational Brotherhood of Bookbinders, 17,893\nmembers; Boot and Shoe Workers Union, 80,850\nmembers; International Union of the United\nBrewery, Flour, Cereal, and Soft Drink Workers\nof America, 42,000 members; Bricklayers, Ma­\nsons and Plasterers International Union of Amer­\nica, 65,000 members; The United Brick and Clay\nWorkers of America, 10,000 members; United\nBrotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of Amer­\nica, 270,000 members; National Federation of\nPostoflice Clerks, 45,000 members; International\nBrotherhood of Electrical Workers of America,\n162,000 members; International Union of Oper\nating Engineers, 62,960 members; Internationa!\nI'hoto-Engiavers Union of North America, 9,500\nmembers; international Brotherhood of Firemen\nand Oilers, 16,380 members; United 'Garment\nWorkers of America, 40,000 members; United\n Cap and Millinery Workers International\nUnion, 35,000 members; National Association of\nLetter Carriers, 56,700 members; Lithographers\nInternational Protective and Beneficial Associa­\ntion, 11,000 members; International Association\nof Machinists, 92,000 members; Meat Cutters and\nButcher Workmen of North America, 13,000\nmembers; Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators\nand Paperhangers of America, 107,137 members;\nOperative Plasterers' International Association of\nthe United States and Canada, 19,000 members;\nUnited Association of Plumbers and Steamfitters\nof the United States and Canada, 40.000 members;\nInternational Printing Pressmen's and Assistants\nUnion of North America, 40,000 members; Inter­\nnational Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite, and Paper-\nmill Workers of the United States and Canada,\n30,000 members; Railway Mail Association, 22,\n000 members; American Federation of Teachers,\n80,000 members; Tobacco Workers International\nUnion, 16,115 members; International Typograph\nical Union, 59,000 members; Upholsterers Inter­\nnational Union of North America, 10,000 mem­\nbers.
8b0878a5c26340370dc633e4ea90d8ad CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1920.8483606241145 41.875555 -87.624421 "What will I do when we go to the\nWhite House? Well, I will describe it\nbest, perhaps, this way: Do you re-\nmember on one of the campaign trips\nand at a big meeting, the speaker in-\ntroduced Senator Harding and me as\n'just folks?' Well, that is exactly what\nwe shall be in Washington just folks.\nThat isn't any pose; I mean it.\n"The gates barring the approaches\nto the White House will be swung\nwide open when we go to Washington.\nI want to see as many people as I can,\nand I want them to see me.\n"I look forward with' all enthusiasm\nto the duties of the wife of the next\nPresident, and I shall try to discharge\nthem in the best way.\n"One of the most thrilling \ntions I have is to make short trips on\nthe presidential yacht, the Mayflower.\nI shall never forget the day we sailed\non the Mayflower down to Mount Ver-\nnon with the king and queen of the\nBelgians. I experienced all the thrills\nof a debutante at her first party."\nBut Mrs. Harding, or "the duchess,"\nas Senator Harding affectionately\ncalls her, made it very plain to her\nInterviewer that while she keenly an-\nticipates the brilliance of social Wash-\nington, her first thought always will\nbe to make herself as helpful as she\ncan to her husband In the grave re-\nsponsibilities he assumes on March 4.\nAll other considerations are secondary\nto this with her, and judging from her\nsuccess as a campaigner, side by side\nwith Senator Harding,
345ba73df4aa3978b628a82fdf636917 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.5232240120927 39.745947 -75.546589 of Rufus Wheeler Peckham, a famous . gee what Swamp-Root, the great Kid-\nNew York lawyer of his time, and I ney, Liver and Bladder Remedy will\nfather of the late Rufus William j df> (0r them Everv reader of this\nPeckham. appointed associate justice j paper, who has not already tried it.\nof the United States Supreme Court may address Dr. Kilmer & Co. Bing-\nby President Cleveland in 1895. must hamton. N. V .. and receive sample\nhave had called to mind the tragic bottle free by mail. YTou can pur-\nend of that great lawyer and his wife, chase the regular flfty-eent and one-\nRufus Wheeler Peckham was for dollar size bottles at all drug stores,\nmany years the law partner of San­\nford E. Church, who afterwards be­\ncame chief justice of the highest (\ncourt of New Y'ork State, and at one |\ntime seemed to be certain of receiv­\ning the Democratic nomination for\nPresident in 1868, Only a swift \nbination made in favor of Horatio\nSeymour robbed Judge Church of\nthat distinction\n"I never knew a man who was so\nperfectly poised and balanced in in­\ntellect and in temperament as was\nRufus Wheeler Peckham,” Judge\nChurch once said "He confided to me\nthat his philosophv of life was that a\nman should so live as to be able to\naccept with equanimity whatever\ndestiny had in store for him 'If\nmen would only remember that where\nthere is no fear there ls.no real dan­\nger, they would be spared many a\nworry,' he said. And when I asked\nhim if he ever felt fear of any kind,\nhis reply was that while be was nat­\nurally timid physically, yet he had\nat last conquered the weakness, add­\ning that he felt certain that he could\nface the gravest peril and the cer­\ntainty of immediate, possibly painful,\ndeath, with perfect composure, know-\ning no fear.”
6bf306ebb7e332529dd7ec8db2b5d5f1 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.5136985984273 35.780398 -78.639099 In one county, one of the laborers visited\nabout 3,200 families, nearly 500 of whom\nwere without the Bible, over 700 without all\nother religious books, more than GOO neglect-\ning church, and nearly 1000 families stated\nthat they never had a religious visit and\nprayer at their firesides until by this Colpor-\nteur. There was but one Sab. School in the\nwhole county, except the town, when he be-\ngan, and now there are 24 Sab. Schools with\nabout 1400 scholars most of which he aided\nforming and supplied with books by sale\nor grant. Scores have been reformed from\nvice, and converted bv ."Doddrice's Rise and\nProgress," "Baxter's Call" "Anxious Inqui-\nrer" and other books. In another county\ntho Colporteur visited 2,500 families, found\n650 of them without the Bible, 700 destitute\nof all other religious books, and from their\ninability to buy he to families and Sab.\nSchools $650 29cts worth of books. More\nthan 30 Sab. Schools are now in that\ncounty, through which means grown persons\nhave learned to spell and read, been conver-\nted, and are now Sabbath School teachers.\n. At different stages of the meetings the ex-\nercises wc?e varied with singing and prayer,\nand instructions as to the history, principles\nand workings of the Society, and more than\nan hour was spent on Monday in answering\nmore than 50 questions, calculated to bring\nout the whole of Colporteur work in an im-\npressive manner, as to duties in visiting fam-\nilies, the best manner of treating errorists, the\nignorant and prejudiced, the distribution of\nbooks, reporting punctually the 1st of each\nmonth and quarter the duties of which show\nclearly that we can have no men for Colpor-\nteurs but pious, prudent, persevering,
02d6ee54deb74607bd2a4e128f77c657 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.4726027080162 40.063962 -80.720915 OrtlieCJovrrnmnnt In Itrpnl to thOJoro\non Santiago.Ocenpatinn at that CUf\nbni an Incident In the Urnfral Schema,\nWASHINGTON, June 21. -Now that\ntho army is about to set foot on Cuban\nsoil, the purpose of this move on Santla-'\ngo was pointed out to-day by an army\nofficial fully acquainted with the general\nplan of action. He said Santiago do\nCuba was not to bo made a military\nbase of operations, as it was not adapted\nfor such use.\nBeing far removed from the rich and\npopulous portion of the Island, without\nrailroads or ordinary highways fop\ntransporting munitions of war west¬\nward, th& town would be practically use¬\nless as a base of military supplies. TV>r\nthat reason, ho enld, there had* never\nbeen an Idea of occupying: this place as\nthe first base, and then gradually ex¬\ntending military operations westwards\nOn the contrary, this occupation ot San¬\ntiago was but an incident of the general\nplan of occupying several points and in\ndue time there would be landings at the\nwest end of Cuba Just as there had been\nat the east end. When that occurred\neach point of landing would 6erve for\nthe time being as a base fur the sur¬\nrounding country. Santiago could no\nmore be used as a base for reaching\nHavana than could Havana for reaching\nSantiago. The occupation of \nhe pointed out, would accomplish sev¬\neral incidental but very desirable ends.\nFirst oC these was the capture of Ad¬\nmiral Cervera's fleet, which would al¬\nways remain a menace and an unoertaln\nfactor until entirely disposed of.\nAnother pc.at which had come up was\nthe relief of Hobson and his brave band\nof associates. "While this might seem a\nminor master yet the government al¬\nways had been most solicitous in reliev¬\ning and protecting Its citlzen6, and Just\nnow there was added reason why the\nstrongest efforts of the government\nshould-be put forth for the rescue of this\nheroic band. Great Britain had sent an\nexpedition Into the heart of Africa to\nrescue one of its imprisoned heroes.\nGeneral Gordon, at Khartoum. The\nUnited States should do as much and\nthe.raising of the American flagon Cu¬\nban soil, whether at the east or the west\nend, would have a powerful moral in¬\nfluence, alike stimulating to our own\npeople and our fighting forces, and dis¬\nheartening to Spain. The humiliation of\nSpain was in having our men and our\nflag planted on her soil, whether the\nparticular point was to be used as a\nbase of operations or not. It would also\nconvey information to the world at large\nthat the United States was entrenched\non the island of Cuba as well as the\nPhilippines.
17034c7be886a711da40a98874448648 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1910.015068461441 41.004121 -76.453816 scribed as follows: Situate on the north-\nerly side of 3rd avenue, bounded on the\neast by lot No. 897, on the west by lot\nNo. S99, on the south by 3rd avenue, on\nthe north by an alley, being known and\ndesignated as No. 1233 3rd avenue in the\nBorough of West Berwick.\n34. Fedorco, John, hotel. West Ber-\nwick, Pa., bounded and described as fol-\nlows: Beginning at the corner of War-\nren street and Freas avenue, thence\neastwardly 92 feet, 8 inches to comer of\nlot No. 101 S of Berwick Land and Im-\nprovement Co.'s addition, thence along\nlot No. 101S southwardly 160 feet to a 15\nfoot alley, thence northwardly along\nsaid alley 02 feet. S inches to Warren\nstreet, thence by Warren street loo feet\nto 1' rens avenue, the place of beginning.\n35. F airman, J. II hotel, Berwick,\nPa bounded and described as follows:\nSituate on the northerly side of Canal\nstreet above the D. L . & W. station,\nbounded north by land ot Mart, and De -pu-\neast by land of S. A. Becker estate\nand J. E , Smith, south by Canal street\nand west bv lands of Ida Fritz.\n36. Friedman, Barney A., hotel, Ber-\nwick, Pa., bounded and described as fol-\nlows: Situate on southeast corner of\nVine and 9th streets in borough of Ber-\nwick aforesaid being 50 feet front on\nVine street and 150 feet on 9th street.\n37. Fftterman, Isaac, hotel. Convng- -\nhatn Twp. Pa., bounded and described as\nfollows: Situate in the village of Aristes\nbounded north by 7th street, east by\npublic road known as Centre street, south\nby property of Joseph Zimmerman anil\nwest by an alley,
fc6ae194a5f72a45033b8fec46f24b85 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.3109588723999 41.681744 -72.788147 death for the shooting of Patrolman\nSkelly, had come from Detective\nSergeant McCue, his interviewer left\nwith that Impression.\nFollowing his refutation In a\nmorning paper, Mr. Lane was called\ntoday on the telephone by the Her\nald representative to whom he had\ntold the two stories and asked what\nhe meant by the other story. He de-\nnied questioning anyone's veracity\nbut said he had not read the other\nstory. When an offer was made to\nread It to him, he said he waa too\nbusy to listen. When called upon at\nhis office at 10 o'clock Mr. Lane took\nhis hat and coat and left the bos- -\npitnl, failing to make any statement.\nA phone call at his home at noon\nelicited the information that Mr.\nLone had gone to Hartford.\nWhen visited in office, Dr. T.\nEhen Recks, superintendent of the\nhospital, said he was Interested in\nthe casB on,y lnsofar as it Involved\nthe hospital records, copies of which\nwere amontr the naoers disturbed In\nMr. Lane's office.\nPr. Berks Intimated that it was\nnot good policy for a person to tell\na story to one paper and then turn\naround and deny it in another. He\nsniil it was entirely incredible to be-\nlieve that a reporter would know\nnbout the hlne and yellow lights, the\nnew window screens, the filing of\ncopies of the autopsy In the Lane\nhome, etc., unless so informed. He\nsaid I! was very unlikely that a re-\nporter's mind could conjure up a\nstory of that type nnd that the story\nmust have been told by Mr. Lane or\nsomebody in his house.
1933b0ebf82bac461f55915e7116c548 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1899.842465721715 33.031451 -111.387343 The enterprise, pursuit, business and\noccupation in wlich this Company proposes\nto engage, is to acquire by purchuse, and in\nany other lawful manner, real estate, lands\nand all kinds of property, real, personal or\nmixed ; to lay out, construct and acquire by\npurchase or in any other lawful manner,\nand accept, hold, possess, enjoy, operate and\nuse franchises from any State or Territory\nof the United States, or in any county or\nmunicipal or private corporations, wagon\nroads, canals, mills, factories, houses capita\nstock and bonds of corporations, chattels\ngoods, wares nnd merchandise, choses in\naction, to transact any and all kinds of busi-\nness which may be transacted by a natural\nperson; to hold, use and enjoy the same and\nto alienate, sell,. lease, demise and dispose\nsame or any part thereof, as well as of \nother property this corporation possesses, be\nseized of or be entitled to; to borrow money\nand contract to repay the same at such time\nor timss as its Board of Directors doem pro-\nper and see fit; and to hypothecate, mort-\ngage or plcdse, all or any part of tbe prop-\nerty which this corporation may hereafter\nacquire; to secure the payment of such\nmoney with interest, or to secure the pay-\nment of any debt of this corporation, with\nsuch interest thereon as it may be legally\nobligated to pay and to conduct a general\nmerchandise and trading business; to buy\nand sell gold, silver, copper, lead aud other\nmines to form subsidiary companies to\nwork them, and to erect quartz mills, smelt-\ning furnaces or other reduction works for\nthe treatment of ali kinds of mineral ores.
1eb14031ed7117e7b58b570fb227aba4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.97397257103 58.275556 -134.3925 If congress appreciates the import¬\nance of Alaska's present needs there\nwill ^e no haggling over the estimates\nof the interior department nor skimp\ning of the necessary appropriations.\nThe great territory is at the threshold\nof its greatest opportunity. The first\nyear of government railway construc¬\ntion ha-) stimulated the iutereet of the\nwhole country and started a host of\nargonauts Alaskaward. Prospectors\nhave penetrated the wilds and discov¬\nered uew mining wealth for develop-\nrnent. Agricultural lauds have been\ntakeu up, the navy as well as the com¬\nmercial interests are waiting for Alaska\ncoal supplies. Every community and\nmaterial interest of the territory is\nawaiting the new life, and the whole\nmachinery of development waits only\non the action of congress. Secretary\nLane, of the interior department, and\nthe Alaska commission, estimate the\nconstruction and maintenance needs of\nthe government railway the ooming\nseason at $8,217,000. This will complete\nconnection with the Matanuska coal\nfield, will extend the presont Alaska\nNorthern railway forty-five miles on\nthe Seward line and will add ninety*\none and one-half miles to the main line\nconstruction to the north, as far as the\ncrossing of the Talkeetna river. There\nis also provision for grading the right-\nof-way out of Fairbanks to the sooth\nand estimates for necessary dredging\nand headquarters expense. Emergent\nneeds are also indicated for the coast\nand geodetic survey, aids to navigation\nand roads aud bridges. General con¬\ncurrence of official opinion in the esti¬\nmates gives assurance that they are as\nlow as the needs of the situation will\npermit. There should be little or no\nobjection on the part of congress to the\ncontinuance of the program of develop¬\nment so auspiciously begun this season,\n.
04dd8c7da3ceb07ec559537102a528e4 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.4999999682902 41.020015 -92.411296 ter .follows a demand that this issue\nshall "be convertabta Into specie et\nthe will of the holder/' Thie to followed\nimmediately by a demand that "the\nvolume of currency shall at all times\nbe adequate to the general business\nand commerce of tbe country, and be\nequitably distributed among tho sev­\neral States." Now, when any green­\nback is exchangeable, dollar for dol\nlar, in gold, bow are they going to\nmake tbe volume of currency any\nmore adequate to the wants of busi­\nness than tbe amount of specie will\nallow 7 It to not what tbe necessity\nof tbe country demands, but what tbe\nooin Iu our vaulu permits, that must\ngovern the quantity of currency In\nexistence. Do the wise men who\nfhuncd this plank know what tbe\namount of specie In the is,\nand what it has been ? It is presum­\ned they do not, or tliey never w«.uld\nhave given utterance to such a su\npremly ridicuously idea. And the\ncurrency thus placed upon a specie\nbasis is to be "equitably distributed\namong the several States." We shall\nnot attempt to analyse this brilliant\naud in evey way fitting termination to\nsnch a gorgeous array of wisdom. It\nIs too much for us. One thing is ap\nparent: the Independent statesmen of\nIowa have talents which have been too\nlong held in reserve, aud the benefits\nof which have been too long denied\n1 heir countrymen. We are glad they\nhave at last opened their mouths and\nmade this obscure financial question\nplain. The oountry has suffered\nfrom the silence of such Solons, aud\nwill feel easier
1327cae6e850d9656df0a229fb84c395 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.8068492833586 41.020015 -92.411296 eeem Uke storms borrowed from\npegas of roomnce. They tsll rr> dsnfls\nand actions which, unless neomw,\nwould, as the years pass on, (ade from\n<MFt "thoughts. Tfasy epeafc of tbdso\nwbo, promlsMiatin tbeAeM\nmost among military leaders," ha^e\nsooa woa diatlaclion ia the\nof the country's statesmen and\nscenes of peaee* Those tbe antien\nbeeen glad to honor.\nWben"th*-noise ofibbcaptaine aid\nthe sbontinc,'* bad eeaaed ; when the\nmore q«Mditln«( civil life were fn\n-n eed of seen who eouM ebatt^l"#ib\n•redit its pablie aftsirs, tbe peojde\ncalled oa those who bad gaiaed a na^e\nin army life. Washington, who attaib-\ned a fame in the Revolution ao Ms fast\ngeneral, gave the talents of his states­\nmanship to (ho interests of good gokr-\nernment ond seonred increased ne-\nnown. Upon the of Us admin­\nistration and tbe legiatetion of tbe pe­\nriod are tbe marks of Uo almost p«>\nfeet cbaraoter aad the reeatts of.Ms\ngreat wisdpaa. Jaokson pteoad iadf-\nfaceably upon bis ag*the indaenoe pf\nbis unbending will. Harrison add\nTavlor, true, (tied, and snseessfnindl-\ndinw, brought to tbeir Ugb positiin\naU those ouallties wUcb attract the\nmasses aadefhstea friendships.\nAll ot those men won Came on the\nAatd. Alt at tbem had shown, aoo^g\nmarttai eoeans, thoee traits wM#h\ndrew to tbem 4be affection* of the\npie, aad on Me registers of tbe d\nment tbeir nausea!are found out\nrolls of tbe army of the United «t*t<\nNone of tbem were feiltree, lor tl\n•ouid booMased fsv*ll ef them ab!\nity, patrietism, hope for the nntti\nwrifare, and integrity widient bl\nor Wot
11599248c39d9a0f9549bc02dbf9b07b THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1892.801912536683 40.8 -96.667821 The statute referred to read as followss:\nTho auditor, state treasurer and at-\ntorney general, shall form a board, and\nas such are hereby authorized and em-\npowered to make all settlements for\nmoneys due the state from any county\ntreasurer or his bondsmen against\nwhom judgment has been rendered in\nany court of this state, in such manner\nas in their judgment shall be to the\nbest interests of the state. Compiled\nstatutes of 1891, Sec. 4,284.\nIt should be observed that this statute\nonly grants power to this board so far\nas the manner of settlement is concern-\ned. It grants no authority to compro-\nmise, or remit any amount due. The\nlegislature has no power to authorize\nany board ts do such a thing as will be\nseen from the following \nThe legislrture shall have no power\nto release or discharge any county, city\ntownship, town or district whatever, or\nthe inhabitants thereof, or any corpo-\nration, or the property therein, from\ntheir or its proportionate share of\ntaxes to be levied for state purpose, or\ndue any municipal corporation, nor\nshall commutation for such taxes\nBE AUTHORIZED IN ANY FORM. (Art.\nIX, Sec. 4, Const of Nebr.)\nWhatever settlement this board is\nempowered to make must of course be\nin accord with all other statutes.\nNow let us go a little further and see\nWHAT THE STATUTES REQUIRE.\nAttorney General Hastings seems\nsadly in need of instructions: Section\n4071 Revised statutes of 1891 says that\nthe bondsmen of a county treasurer are\nresponsible for "all taxes" that may be\ncollected by him.
32020959c6feac62315585ff96a29d60 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1860.8319671814916 35.780398 -78.639099 out England during the past six or eight\nyears, causing a large mortality among chil-\ndren. What is it ?\nWe find the following description in on of\nthe City Registrar's Reports :\nJJtptheria is a disease of childhood, the\ngreater portion of its victims, like those of\nscarlatina, beiug between two and twelve\nyears of age. It commences with the usual\nsymptoms of a cold, and with considerable\nfever. Simultaneously with these symptoms.\nand some times precedinjr them, there is a\ndeposit in spots, of a whitish or greyish\nwhite membrane upon the tonsils and back\npart of the mouth. This membrane increases\nwith great rapidity, the fever becomes of a ty\nphoid character, there is great constitutional\ndepression, the breath becomes excessively\nioetia, ana, in some cases, the glands about\nthe neck become enlarged. When death\ntakes place, it is caused in some cases by the\nextension of the false membrane to the air\npassages, producing the effects of croup; in\nother cases, it is caused by exhaustion and\nfever from the poison of the disease. In some\nepidemics, a majority of the fatal cases will\ndie, apparently from croup; in other' epidem-\nics, the larger portion will die from the con-\nstitutional symptoms. In the severe epidemic\nin the city of Albany, in 1858, a few cases oc-\ncurred in the spring and summer; but the\ngreatest severity of the disease was in Octo\nber and November."\nPerhaps this gives a sufficient idea the\nsubject for the general reader, though yery\nimperfect as a medical description.\nThe causes of diptheria, like those of scar- lati- a ,\nare very little known, and perhaps for\nthis very reason there is a very great di er -s it- y\nof opinion among physicians in relation\nto it, and any number of discordant and con-\nflicting theories have been advanced. An ac\ncount of these, though it might be amusing,\nwould only serve to confuse the reader.\nxnetrutnis, mat diptheria is now anew\ndisease to physicians and to the people of the\npresent generation, in this country. It did\nprevail extensively here, many years since,\nand an excellent account of it was written by\na pnysician in mew xork.\nIt is entirely a distinct disease from scar\nlatina or croup, though it has some relations\nto these diseases which might at times, cause\ndoubt in the minds of superficial observers.\nThe indications seem to be, at present.\nthat we shall see much more of it in this\ncountry, and it is imporiant that physicians\nshould make themselves familiar with it.\nThe Rhode Island Medical Society has al-\nready awarded a prize for a dissertation upon\nthe subject, which will soon be published,\nand we are happy to know that some, at\nleast, of the physicians in this city have been\ninterested in the disease during the last two\nyears, and are acquainted with all the partic\nulars of its history, symptoms and treatment
0b47546afc9220428c7eb4cfc7b68683 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.9109588723998 40.441694 -79.990086 OPINIONS ON LABOE'S MISSION.\nMr. Armstrong's early life and service in\nthe army were eloquently described, and his\nwork after the war, in building up trade\nunions, was then gone into at some length.\nMr. Humphries then said:\nTbe great economic function of union was not\nmerely to resist the encroachments from with-\nout; but to protect labor from undue aggres-\nsions from within. He would have organization\ngive the workman a just sense of his power, in-\nstill Into his mind the principle of manhood and\nindependence, and learn him to feel as a citizen,\nand not cringing as tbe slave.\nHe would have It teach him the value of\nthrift and prudence, by compelling him. if need\nbe, to save, and teach him the worth of sobriety\nby showing him the value of his weekly earn-\n He loved peace and good fellowship, and\ntbus was opposed to conflicts between employer\nand employed, when possible to avoid them; yet\nat times there seemed to be no escape, and in\nsuch cases he affirmed that the pecuniary\nlosses sustained by tbe workmen were the pre-\nventative of a still greater, as it kept them from\nsinking irom aeptns to lower aeptns, and tbere\nto remain; that there were times when strikes\nbecame, as it were, capital sunk to produce re-\nmunerative wages, just as capital is oftentimes\nsunk to produce remunerative profits; and while\nhe deplored these struggles, he cherished the\nbelief that tbey might be the means. In part at\nleast, or eventually leaaingmen to tne adoption\nof a system of industrial partnership.\nIf he warred against one evil more than\nanother it was against tbe
90c4de09e06246d3499bba8ecbe41193 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.3767122970573 39.745947 -75.546589 liflatlvea, friends members of Diamond\nCouncil. Jr. O. U. A. M.; L.mape Tribe,\nI. t). U . M.; Loyal Order of Moose, Sons\nof Veterans and employes of the P„ It. \\m\nW. it. K. Co., are invite.I to attend the\nfuneral services at his late residence, 410\nNV 28rd street, on Saturday afternoon.!\nMay 21, at 2.30 o'clock. Interment at Sill*\nverb rook cemetey\nDOWNING—In fills city, on May 1H,\n1921, Mary E. Downing, aged 80 years.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at-k\ntfnd the funeral services at the residence\nof her nephew, Joseph II. Masten.\nNineteenth street, on Friday afternoon.\nMay 20. at 3.80 oclock (city time). In-1\ntorment at Uivendew cemetery.\nPETERS—In this city, on May 17, 1921,\nEmma S., wife of the late Dation Pe­\nters, aged 71 years.\nRelatives, friends, members of P. O\nof A., are invited to attend the fnuerai\ns^nRes at her late 523 North\nUnion, street, on Friday afternoon, May\n20. at 2 o'clock (city time). Interment at\nSiîverbrook cemetery.\nPIT/PATRICK- In this city, on May 17.\n1921. Mrs. Mary E. Fitzpatrick (ne«\nDrukker).\nRelatives, friends, Keystone Circle. No.\n2(i L. F. of A., and Lnmokln Council, No,\n144, I>egree of Pocahontas, of Chester. Pa.,\nt»re invited to attend the funeral from\nlier late residence, 114 North duPont\nstreet, on Saturday morning. May 21. at\n9 oclock. Requiem mass at the Cathe­\ndral. Interment at Cathedral cemetery.\nGRANT—In this city, on May 18. 1921 ,\nMartha K. Grant.\nRelatives and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funeral services at the Wilming­\nton and Brandywine Chaptel, on Friday\nafternoon, at 2 o'clock (local time)\ntorment at Wilmington and Brandywine\ncemetery.\nBARDEN—In this city, on May 17, 1921*\nJoseph A. Barden.\nRelatives, friends, Brownson Library\nAssociation; Eleventh Ward Democratic\nflub;
1df1d1ba865dc86803bb9bcce0b30968 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.3849314751394 39.261561 -121.016059 Whekeas, The Legislature of the State of\nCalifornia, at its tenth session, on the 3d of\nFebruary, 1859, passed a series of concurrent\nresolutions, prefaced by a preamble, which pre-\namble and resolutions are in the words follow-\ning: [Here followed the preamble and resolu-\ntions censuring Broderick.]\nAnd whereas, Said preamble is untrue, inas-\nmuch as the resolutions of instruction referred\nto therein were not received by the Hon. David\nC. Broderick until after his vote had been cast\nin the Senate of the United States against the\nLecompton Constitution,\nAnd whereas, The people ofthis State and of\nthe United States have, by a very large majori-\nty, indorsed the course of the Hon. D . C . Brod-\nerick against the Kansas policy of the latePres-\nident of the United States, James Buchanan ;\nAnd whereas, Said preamble and resolutions\nwere inconsiderate, and only intended to \nthe feelings of Californias honest, able and\nfaithful representative in the Senate of the\nUnited States jtherefore,\nBe it Resolved, by the Senate, the Assembly\nconcurring, That the preamble and resolutions\nhereinbefore recited, passed Feb. 3d, 1859, so\nfar as the same relate to the Hon. David C.\nBroderick, are hereby declared to be unjust to\nhis character while living, and derogatory to\nthe honorable and patriotic fame which a true\nand faithful record of his acts will always ac-\ncord to his memory.\nResolved, That said preamble and resolu-\ntions, passed Feb. 3d, 18o9, were not true in\nfact, and are not sanctioned by the people of\nthe State of California, but on the contrary the\npeople ofthe State cherish, with profound re-\nspect, the memory and character ofthe late\nlion. David C. Broderick, adorned as his char-\nacter eminently was, by integrity, firmness and\npatriotism.
1c46066ec334745a38408bac84f1adf5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.5942622634589 40.063962 -80.720915 White Pine Compoun\nTS NOW OFFERED TO THE AFFLICT\nJ_ throughont the country- after hav\nbeen proved by the teet of eleven years.\nLb© New England Stales, where i&a me\nhave become as well known as the tree &\nwhich, in part. It derives its virtues.\nTIM White Pine Compound Cnre*\nSore Throat, Colds, Coughs, DipUioia, Br\nchilis. Spit ting of Blood, and Fulmooary\nlecuocsgenemily. It is a remarkable\nmedy for Kidney Complaint- , Ll»t*-te&,\nflcaliy of Voiding Urine, Bleeding from\nKidneys and Bladder, Gravel, and ot\ncomplaints.\nThe White Pine Compoui\n*It was early in Use spring of *S2 that 1\noomponnd iraBOfteliAkd. Ame^berof\nfamily was i IHicied witb an irrltatioj ef\nthroat a'tended with a disagreeable coug\nbad for come months previoo* thought t\na preparation htvmg for its baris toe lnt\nbark of wh:tepine might be »o ccunpoan\nas to be very useful -n uiseases of the Lhr\nand lungs. To test the value of It In tbe c\nall odeJ to. I compounded a srnsll quad\no; tbe medicine tbat I bad been piannl\nand gave it in teaspuonful doses. Tne r<s\nwas exceedingly gratifying. Within 1\ndays tbe Irritation of tbe thioat was rem\ned. tbe oongb subsided cd speedy c\nwas effected. Boon after this, I ae:. t some\na lady in Londonderry. M -, wbo h*d b\nsuffering for some weeks from a bad cou\noccasioned i y a suduen cold, and baa ral\nmucus streaked with blood, febe soon kx\nrelief an. sent for more. Sbe book at\nleu ouncesof It, and got well. J. E. Clai\nE*q-, ed lor of tse Manchester 1 ally Mir\nmade a trial of tbe same prepaiation In\ncase of a severe cold and wa? cured mmi\nately. He was6o hlgb'y pleased »llh tne\nsuits, and so confident of suocett attendlni\nsales, if placed before tbe pubbc, tbat\nfinally pursaaded me to give t a name, (\ntend It abroad to oenefit tbe ufienng.\n. November, 1*55, I first advertised it un\ntbe name of w bite Pme Compound. In 1\nyears from that lime there had been wb<\nsaled in M*ncbester alone one hundred c\nlars worth, where It took tbe lead of all\ncough remedies In the market, and it !\nmaintains that position. There Is good i\nson lor this; it is very soothing and b»al\nIn its nainre; is warming to the eiomacn i\npleasant withal to the la&e, and is exoe\ningiy cheap.
2adccdbc865bb6017c152a5cb2fb612f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.0205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 Lono Bkanch, January 7..TheTrat\nAtlantic Hteamer Amtrique, bound froi\nHavre for New York, came ashore a\nSeabright. about four miles north of hen\nat 3 o'clock this morning. There were\ncabin, 51 second and fourth-class piBsen\ngers and 1C2 officers and crew on board\nall of whom, with the exception of threi\nof the crew were saved. Boon ufter th\nship struck the Captain ordered a sraal\nboat with a crew composed of otlicer Brtl\nlanin and eleven men to convey informi\ntion ashore and obtaiu assistance; tin\nsteamship was then only seventy yard\nfrom the beach. The boat struck th\nbeach, hut the under tow and floating ic<\ntogether, there being much of thi\nlatter, upset her, and three of th\ncrew weie lost. The crews from the lift\nsaving stations were on hand and auc\nceeded soon afterward in throwing a lim\nto the ship, and by the aid of the crew o\nthe A inerique the life car was soon drawi\non board. The paasengew were at lirs\nafraid to the car, but Cornell Jewet\nand his wife, who were passengers 01\nboard, entered and were safely drawi\nashore, after which all of the passenger\nand most of the crew were landed, five o\nsix in the car at a time. The Captaii\nstill remains aboard looking after th'\nvessel. All of the mails and s|>ecie wer\nsafely landed The vessel lies well upoi\nthe beach, and it is thought she will Is\nhigh and dry at low tide.\nMr. and Mrs. Cornell Jewelt and\nSpanish lady, the only cabin passenger\nare at the hotel at Seabright, while sec\nond and fourth class passengers and\nlarge part of the crew are about the bote\nhere. The ship was in charge of the pilo\nthat was taken on board yesterday. Th«\nweather was very thick. The conduct o\nthe crews of the life saving stations wa\nof the most etlieient nature. They wen\npromptly on hand, and by their exer\ntions Miived every one who was on boan\nafter they arrived. Had not the boa
0c0acb9269c914b7b8fde1f1a3c069f6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.3702185476118 39.745947 -75.546589 These books are the very biggest values ever offered by any\nhouse. They are nicely bound in cloth and for the most part are\nprinted on good quality paper.\nDumas, 3 volumes, regular $1.25 . .... .... .. .... .... ... ... ...\nGeorge Eliot, 6 volumes, regular $3.00 .. .... ... ... .... ... .\nV. Hugo, 8 volumes, regular $3.00 . ... .... ... ... ... .. ... ... .\nHawthorne, 9 volumes, regular $3.25 . .... .... .. .... . ...\nDuma», 6 volumes, regular $1.75..............................\nIndian Tales, Kiplings, 2 volumes, regular $1.75\nAmazing Marriage. Merrcdith. 2 volumes, 50c..,\nShakespeare, 9 volumes, regular $3.25. ... ... .... ... ... ...\nEnglish Masterpieces, 11 volumes, regular $2.00 .\nHistory of France, 4 volumes, regular $3.00 . . . .\nHistory of England, Macauley, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 . .. .$1.00\nUnited History, 2 volumes, regular $4.50. .. .... ... .... ... .... .. .$3°°\nScott, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 .. .. ... ... ... .... ... ... .. ... ..\nHawthorne, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 ... .. .... .... ... .\nRose Carey, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 ... .. .... .... ....\nCooper Sea Tales. 5 volumes, regular $1.50. .,,\nSouthworth, 5 volumes, regular $1.50. ... ... ... .... ...\nLyall, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 ... ... ... .... .... .. .... .... .. .\nDuchess, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 . .... .... .... .. .... ....\nMarlett, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 .. .,\nDickens, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 .. .\nCarey, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 ... .... .. ..\nCorelli, 3 volumes, regular $1.50 . .... .. ....\nB. Clay, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 ... .... ....\nCooper, 5 volumes, regular $1.50 ... .... ....
372bd0c2faeb14cf8c870067d1e98f63 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.3027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 Attemptkd Escapade at tjib Pen:\nthxtuky..Tuesday evening a number o\nthe convicts in the Penitentiary made m\n^attempt lo escape from durance vile\nAbout forty or filly ol them were concern\ned in the plot, litVinj? Uecotie dissatisfied\nit is suggested, with the furv fUrnlsbcd it\n(he institution, or for soin o oilier <k|uallj\ncogent reason, TbcporticularaofUictrans\naction were sulisUuitially these: As tin\nprisoners on timt evening were liein;\nmarclieU Iroui. slipper to their cells, thej\nseized tho guirai In tljo Judl, took froh\nthem a key, tbrccd them into a cell/strip\nped them of their clothing, and liavinf\ndoOiil their stripes and donned citterns\nnit ire, guvo tlio signal,,fin; Hie llml re\nlief. When the relief came into the lull\nthey were treated as their predecessors liiu\nbeen. The conspirators then began ar\nonslaught on such of their comrades m\nthey susjx.'cted of having money or valua\nhies about thorn, as "well as those win\nwould not engage in the conspiracy will\nthem. It was now CJ o'clock, the hour al\nthe convicts usually locked up for tin\nnight. A signal was given for the outsid<\nguards to vacate their boxes. Had tlii;\nbeen, obc>;od, it was evidently, the inten\ntion of the conspirators' toWlrout of tll<\nhall, scale the stockade and thus make\ntheir escape. But the non-api>earnncc a\nthe gate of tho guards in the hall win\nhad been relieved, aroused suspicion at\nonce that all was not right inside. Tlw\ncommissary proceeded to the office not\nfinding no one there, went out into tin\nhall, when he was assailed with rcqulsi\ntions for clothing, tobacco, «fcc.\nNot returning to report the state o!\nthings inside, the dayguards, and a crowd\nof citizcnB lrom town who had heard oJ\nthe difllculty and renaired to the prison\nmade a rush for the hall door, when tin\nsituation of affairs was at once perceived\nThe guards and convicts had changed\nplaces. The conspirators were fired upon\nonly one of them, however, was hurt.\nTho name of tho wounded man is Charles\nMoore, who is serving out a term for
08d6d05e19583f776174576c9b2f05d1 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1883.7082191463724 40.832421 -115.763123 Postofflces are o( the first, second\nthird uud fourth class. Postufficia of\nthe first, second and third cists are\ncalled Presidential ulBrei because the\npostmaster is appointed by the Preai-\ndent of the (Jolted States, while post¬\nmaster s of fourth clasa offices are ap¬\npointed l»y the Postmaster Gei.erJ.\nWheuttiu revenues of au office are\nsufficieu. to warrant a salary of $3,000\nuud upwards, the office is ranked as\nfirst class; froui $2,0l>0 to $3,000, sec¬\nond class: from $l,00'J to $2,000, third\nclaf*;and when the salary of the posi-\nmutitir ib l- a* than $1,000 the office is\nranked as a fourth class office. The\nsal <ries of postmasters of fourth clasa\noffices are regulated by commissions on\nstamps cancelled at tb» office, and not\non stamps sold aa was formerly the\nrule. The latter rule wqb annulled for\nthe ronsoti that n species of fraud was\n by postmasters, their commis¬\nsion bting CO per cent on the face\nvalue of stamps sold, they could sell\none dollar's worth of stamps for 75\ncents aud still make 35 per cent without\nouy investment of capital, as the stamps\nwere not paid for uutil sold.\nBy a recent Act of Coouress which\ntakes (fleet October 1st, 1883, the coin-\niui»sioiiH allowed to postmaster! of\nfouith clasi offices on stamps cancelled\nare as follows: Ou the flrjt $>0 or\nless per quitter, 100 prr c»ut; the uext\n$100 cr lets, CO per ci nl; ou the next\n$200 or Ush, 10 per c> nt; ou ull the bal-\nanco less thnu $250, 40 per cent, but\nwhen the revouues of the office, exclu¬\nsive of commissions on Money Order\ntjuainetii, equals, or eiceeds $250 per\nquarter it then ranks as a Presidential\noffico and the calnry is regulated ac¬\ncordingly.
3b46592ff7b99279518c7e027905f295 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 who buy the vciy best cattio they can\n;t. Uarlts & Bro. Bold u car of extra\nittle to one of our city butchers for 8Jc,\nbleb we believe to lie the highest prico\nached to-day. Tho market was n litlle\nrisker than lust week, but prices wcro\nit much cbunged, although good cuttle,\neigblng nbuut 1,200 pounds, brought u\ntie more money Hum Inst week, whilo\nimnion und tail ends were slow nutf dull,\nlling at about last week's prices. Dulls s\nId to day readily at prices from 4c to\nc, with considerable innuiry for thorn,\nid supply short of the (fcnmud. Slock\nitllo selling to-day dull at prices iromifc 1\n5}c, and Ihe number in tho market t\nnail, tin it is very hard to buy stock cat- i\nin Chicago", at the present time, to ship, ,\n to tho fact that farmers and country\nlyers are there, and are paying better i\nIces tlian our shippers can atiora to pay i\nr this market. t\nShkki\\.- The number ol sheep on sale £\nis morning was small and the market\nas,a fair one, somo better than last week. 1\nHofis..'Tho number of hogs sold this 1\norningwas exceedingly small. Sellers t\nport market dull and uraggy, butchers t\ndining to pay tho prices drovers ask, ,\ncrefore sales were few and hard to make.\nCows..Some 13 to 15 head of fresh '\nilcli cows wero sold this morning at\nices rangiUg from #45 to $70, a larger t\njniber than has been sold on this market\nr some time. They were mostly sold to\nlibera wlm will ri'sell nmln nt llin Plttj».\nirgh cow market 1
264d92c6d509a33e3f1057f03a65a301 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1877.1219177765095 37.451159 -86.90916 a million of souls with the most carefal, com-\nplete, and trustworthy acconnta of current\nevents, and will employ for this purpose a nu\nmerous and carefully selected stsff of reporters\nand correspondents: Its reports from Wash-\nington, especially, wilt be full, accurate, and\nfecrlcss; and it will doubtless continue to de-\nserve and enjoy tho hatred of those who thrive1\nb plundering the Treasury or by usurping\nwhat the law docs not give them, rhile it will\nendeavor tu merit the coLfidenee ol tho pablie\nby defending th j rightj of tbe people against\nthe enchroarbments of unjustified power.\nThe price ol tho daily Sex will be Ji cents 6\nmonth or f4 SO a year, post paid. Or with the\nSunday edition $7.70 aye Jr.\nTheScxDAT edition atono. tight\nyear, pott paid;\nTbe Wbkclt Srs eight page of Si broad\n will bo furnished during 1S77 at the\nrat of SI. a yeat ost paid.\nThe benlSt of this large reduction from the\nprevious rate for the Wiiklt can be tajoyta\nby individual subscribers without the necessity,\nof making up eluls. At tho same line, if aa\nof our friends choose to. aid la exieadiaf ur\ncirculation. We shall begratcfalta thtai.and\nevery such person who tends us tea or )\ntubf cribera front en place will be entitled r.v\none copy of tbe paper for himself wilhas:\ncharge. At one dollar year, postage, paid.\ntho excesses ef paper and printing aro lately\nrepaid: and, considering tho siio of the aaesc\nand the uuatity of Its contents, we aroei.nli\ndent the poupU will eeaaldrrTai Wickclt Sv.r\nthe cheapest newspaper published In I lie worU\nrja we trait al.o ons rtbe very belt,\nlAdtfree..
0636f688612a8ed8a484435d4b8c8979 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.5778688208359 37.561813 -75.84108 platforms and the candidates. Nor\ndoes it matter that it may be denied\nthat the Democratic platform explic-\nitly opens the question of reconstruc\ntion. Its declaration ie, that "the\nreconstruction acts (so called) of Con\ngress are usurpations, and unconsti\ntutional, revolutionary, and void.\nAny man or officer who refuses to\nacknowledge them is justified by the\nDemocratic platform. Coiniug into\npower, the party must treat those\nacts as void or belie its declarations.\nIf it acisas it professes to believe, it\nwill sot the acts aside. If it chooses\nto belie its words, it will let them\nstand. tSat m what manner is it\nlikely to respect or enforce acts which\nit denounces as void c It the recon\nstruction adts are to be overthrown,\nlet the Democratic party come into\npower. If they are to remain, which\nwill most honorably maintain them\nthe party which believes in the prin\nciple they embody, or that which de\nrides the principle and declares them\nusurpations, revolutionary and void?\nThe attentive and reflective reader\nwill also remark that, according to\nthe Democratic platform, the present\nsituation of the it not alto\ngether what might be wished, is whol\nly due to the Republican party. That\nmen like Wade Hampton, and N. B\nForrest, and General Hoke, and a\nhundred other rebel officers, who\nsat in the Convention, have directly\nor indirectly done anything to dis\nturb the national tranquility or in\ncrease the public debt, is not remotely\nsuggested. But words were feeble\nin the mouths ot the Committee on\nResolutions lo describe the enorrflons\noffences of a party which had led the\ncountry in its noble and triumphant\nresistance to the rebellion, whether\nin the field or in Coppfrhead coun\ncils; wiiicti nas removeu me unspeak-\nable stain from the national character,\nand which, without a stroke of ven\ngeance, has restored the Union upon\nthe enduring principles of liberty and\nustice. it has not made Wade\nHampton and his companions the\narbiters of the fate of their loyal\nneighbors; and the Democratic parly,\nwhich, four years ago, clamored for\nsurrender to Wade Hampton, and\nForrest, and Hoke, now denounces the\nparty that prevented the surrender,\nand that honors all loval men in the\nland.
2d3b0d609257973e9d2fca4e3de6e227 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.8945205162354 41.681744 -72.788147 can be stated that instead of irrepa-\nrably damaging the canal the great\nslide will in the end make the canal a\nsafer watercourse, and when it is re-\nmoved the danger of a recurrence will\nto a great extent have been eliminated.\n"What has happened," said General\nHodges, "was clearly foreseen as far\nback as October of last year that is,\nwe saw that the mass was slowly mov-\ning into the prism. It was of course\nimpossible to foresee that it would be\nso suddenly dislodged and plunge in its\nentirety into the cut, blocking it to\ntraffic and causing the great tieup.\n"When it was discovered that the\nrock and earth involved in the slide\nwere moving the most powerful of\ndredges were put to work removing the\nrock and other material as fast as it\ncame into the threatened part of the\ncut. All went well, and the dredges\nwere able to keep the channel com-\nparatively free until in the early part\nof September the mass of sliding \nterial suddenly began to move so fast\nthat the block followed. Unfortunately\nit came with a rush, and the dredges\nwere entirely unable to cope with the\nsituation. The result Is what the world\nhas since learned, and the problem\nnow is to get it out. You may rest as-\nsured the problem will be successfully\nworked out and the canal, when it is\nagain clear, will be a better canal than\nit ever was before.\n"About 10,000,000 cubic yards of mat-\nter were involved in the slide. The fact\nthat it was in motion was, as I have\nstated, known to the canal engineers\nsince October of last year. For months,\nuntil the sudden rush of September, the\nmovement was very slow. That it was\nmoving could be detected by the drop-\nping particles. The east side of the\nslide is north of what is known as Gold\nhill and north of Contractors' hill on\nthe west, a part of the western area\nbeing the site of the old village of Cu-lebr- a,
b57b809201e270f73bf671d736f65874 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.0479451737697 43.798358 -73.087921 part of the idea which it attempted to grasp.\nis not improbable that the largest meas\nhave yet acquired or can represent lo\nour mind of the immensity of the univere\nare inferior to a full and comprehensive\nidea cf the vast globe ol the sun in all its be\nconnexions and dimensions; and, there\nfore, not only must the powers of the\nhuman 'mind be invigorated and expanded,\nbut also the limits of our intellectual an J\nCorporeal vision must be indefinitely ex\ntended, before we can grasp the objects of\noverpowering grandeur which exis s with\nthe range ot creation, ana laKe an en\nlightened and comprehensive view of the\ngreat Creator's empire. And as such en\ndowments can not be attained in the pres\nent state, this very circumstance a\npresumptive argument mat mm 13 aesunea\nan immortal existence, where his facul f\nties will be enlarged and the boundaries\nof his vision extended, so as to enable him\ntake a large and comprehensive view\nof the wonders of the universe, and the\nrange of the Divine government. In the\nmean time, however, it may be useful to\nallow our thoughts to expatiate on such\nobjects, and to endeavor to firm as com\nprehensive an idea as possible of such a\n(Stupendous luminary cs the sun, in order\nto assist us m forming conceptions still\nmore grand and magnificent; lor the sun\nwhich enlightens our day is but one out\nof countless millions of similar globes\ndispersed throughout creation, some of\nwhich rray far excel it in magnitude and\nglory.
046fa540eec159841028a35c0d688f93 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1910.4424657217148 43.624497 -72.518794 accldent which happcns tery rarely\nand whlcb not evcn the most oxpcrl\ncnccd cuglueer cnn successfully guard\nngalnst But ns he struck the op of\ntho hlll nnd bcgan to desccnd on tbo\nslde toward Benson bo fclt aOerk\nwhlcb nearly tbrcw blm off bls scat.\nLooklng back. ho saw tbat tbc worst\nhad happcncd. A coupltng bad snap\npcd ln tbe mlddle of the traln.\nFor the present thcrc was but ono\nthlng to do. aud that was to go down\ngrado as fast as bo could. Looklng\nback; ho could sce that tho rear brake\nman, who was tbo only man on tbo\ncnrs whlcb bad becn lcft bchlnd, bad\nmado ono lneffectual attempt to sct tbo\nbrakes and then bad Jumpcd to safcty.\nJlmmlo knew tbat If tbe fourtcen cars\nrunnlng wlld bchlnd caught up wltb\ntbo forwnrd half of tho thcro\nwould be a wreck wblcb would causo\niamngo to tho cxtcnt of thousnnds of\nilollaro aud blackllst, If not klll, tbe cn\nglnecr rcsponslble.\nFnster and faster tho telegraph polcs\non the slde of the track flcw past blm,\nJlmmle's mlnd was worklng fastcr\nthan It hnd ever dono ln bls llfe. His\nordcrs dlrectcd hlm to wnlt on tho sld\nlng at Benson statlon for tbe west\nbound passenger traln to pass, and ho\nknew tbat at any cost bo must savc tbo\npasscngcr. Awny otr on tho farthcr\nsldo of Benson bo could alrcady sce\ntbo falnt llne of smoko comlng up from\nIt, nnd bo knew that It would arrlvc\nat Benson ln just about tcu mtnutcs,\nHo flgurcd that his own traln was go\nlng about n mllo a mlnuto nud would\nroach Benson In scven mlnutcs. lf ao
3dd5bdfe9a488e90a5afee10eab01d92 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.3986301052764 37.53119 -84.661888 In due time I will announce myself a\ncandidate for the oQlce of jailer of Lin ¬\ncoln county subject to tbe action of\nthe democratic party and in view of\nthe fact that Mr Barrio has announc ¬\ned that he will be a candidate I feel\nthat I owe U to myself to make this\nstatement now It Is true as stated in\nMr Barrios card that It Is customary\nto give a good officer an endorsement\nbut Mr Herrln Is not In condition to\nclaim tbo benefit of this worthy cue ¬\ntom It will be remembered that I\nwas about to make a contest with Mr\nHerrln for the nomination shortly after\nthe primary election which ho claims\nnominated him I firmly believed at\nthat lime that I was the nominee of the\ndemocratic party the once of jailer\nand have bad no cause since to change\nmy opinion I realized that a contest\nwould be hurtful to party harmony and\nabandoned the Idea under tbe follow\nlog circumstances Mr Herrln propos ¬\ned to me that If I would not make the\ncontest and would support him that be\nwould not run for the ofllco next time\nbut would support me Instead I ac-\ncepted his proposition abandoned tbe\nIdea of a contest and did all I could for\nMr Herrln In the November election\nbetweenI\nout In the above statement For these\nreasons I dont think that Mr Herrln\nla In condition to claim an endorsement\nat this time and after giving the mat\ntor due consideration himself I believe\nthat ho will come to the same conclu ¬\naloe
064d5921f16c5a69d0509c0f9ea601f8 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1890.160273940893 43.994599 -72.127742 Differing conditions of soil and climate\nare in part responsible for the many and\ndiverse opinions or agriculturists at to\nthe best season for sowing grass seed,\nCharles L. Flint, recognized authority,\nin his work on "Grasses and Forage\nPlants" sums up the question substan-\ntially as follows:\nMore than sixty years ago careful ex-\nperiments were made in the hope of ob-\ntaining such information as would settle\nthe question as to the time of sowing\ngrass seed, and the practice of seeding\ndown in the fall was then commenced by\na few individuals. At or before that\ntime the practice of sowing in the spring\nwas universal, and the same custom has\nvery generally prevailed till within a\nvery few years. Both the practice and\nthe opinion of the best practical farm-\ners in the northern and eastern states\nhave changed to a considerable extent,\nand it idnow commonly thought best to\nsow grass seed in the fall, early in Sep-\ntember if possible, though there are, and\n will be, some cases where tha\npractice of sowing in the spring with\ngrain is convenient and judicious.\nIt will be found that no season is with-\nout its exposure to loss; for If we sow ia\nautumn and have an open and sever\nwinter, with frequent changes from\ncomparatively warm and thawing weath-\ner to excessive cold, the young grass\nwill be likely to suffer, while if we sow\nin spring with some kind of grain, at\noats, barley or rye, and have drought in\nspring and summer, as we generally do,\nthe grass may be injured and may be en-\ntirely killed. No invariable rule for all\nsoils and seasons can be given, but the\nweight of authority seems to fix upon\nearly autumn as the best season to sow\ngrass seed, sowing it alone without a\ngrain crop; and the losses from proper\nseeding down at that season are proba\nbly considerably less in an average of\nyears than those which arise from\nspring sowmg with grain.
1f7fb3f45e0dc96b18a8032a50ff9709 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.5219177765093 32.612638 -90.036751 ing faithfully and legally in the court\nof the Babylonian king. Following God\nand walking as a child of light did not\nlead him to develop such a religious\nbias as to put him out of touch with\nthe world about him. Rather did it\nmake him a djeep student of the polit-\nical situation which surrounded him.\nAnd his masterful grasp of the affairs\nof vtate in time gave him the oppor-\ntunity to preach the true God and true\nreligion not only to the king, but the\nnation as well. One man following God\nwas able to put the impress of his\npersonality upon the kingdom and rise\nfrom slave boy in the heathen court to\nbe prime minister over all that vast\nrealm. Daniel is a most striking type\nof exalted citizenship. His life is a\npractical illustration of our text in\nits reasonable application to the every-\nday affairs of the community, the state\nand the nation. I cannot imagine a\nmore difficult place for a young \nto have been placed in than that into\nwhich Daniel found himself drawn\nwhen carried away into captivity. I\ncannot imagine circumstances which\nwould have afforded better excuse for\nrefusal to recognize the claims of the\nnation upon him. It would have been\nmost natural and human for Daniel to\nhave reasoned himself into the belief\nthat disloyalty to the heathen king\nwould be loyalty to his God and his own\nunfortunate nation. But there were\nthree elements in Daniel's character\nwhich enabled him to adjust himself\nmost equably and righteously with\nthe conditions surrounding him. As a\nfollower of God he recognized God's\nabsolute sovereignty in both temporal\nas well as spiritual affairs; he kept his\neye steadfastly fixed upon God, and he\nconcentrated his purposes in God. And\nas a direct result of this threefold re-\nlationship to God, his walk among men\nwas marked by a practical contact with\nthem, and consistent and persistent ef-\nfort in the duties and responsibilities\nwhich lay before, him.
03a90fad0461a1a6a8eb3f0234288fee THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.1712328450026 40.832421 -115.763123 T N TIIK niHTUUTT COU11T OP TlllC\n1 NiuUi Judicial PUtrict, of the Slate of Ne¬\nvada. in and (or the County of Elko.~ Arurlia T.\nJewett, plaintiff, against John H. Jcwctt, de¬\nfendant. Action brought in Iho District Court\nof the M- th Judicial District of Ibe Btat© of\nNevada, in and for tho County of Elko,\nand the Co iu plaint AIM in tins office of\nthe Clerk of udd District Court-\nTHE STATE OF NEVADA SUN 1)3 GREETING\nto JOHN 11. JEWLTT, defendant. You are\nhereby required lo anpear in an action brought\nagainst 3 on bj the above named plaiullff in the\ndistrict Court of tho Ninth Judicial District of\nthe Btateof Nerada, In and for the County of\nElko, and to answer tbo complaint filed therein\nwithin ten daya (exclusive of tho day of aervlro)\nafter tbo scnlco OB you of this Hummona.If\nserved within this County; or. If served out\nof Uiia but in thla District, within 20\ntlaya; otherwise, within 40 days.or Judgment\nby default will be takeu against you. according\nto .b© prayer of aalif coiuplaluL Tbo aald ac¬\ntion la brought to obtain a judgment of thla\nCourt, deem ing that tbo bond* of matrimony\nezla'lng betwten plaintiff and defendant be\ndlsaoived, on the grouuds of habitual, gross\ndrunkenness, and for **xtrvm« cruelty; and tbat\ntho plaintiff have Iho cuatody of the minor\nchildren, iiu utloncd in the complaint. aud for\nauch other aud further relief aa to tho Court\nmar aeeui Juat and equitable in tho premise a. as\nwill more fully appear by rvferenco to the com-\nplaint on file in my office, a certified copy of\nwhich areoinpanlea thla writ. And you are\nhereby notlfird tbat If you fall to appear and in*\nawer Mid eomnlaint as abovo required, tho\naald trial n tiff will arnriy to the Court for tho re-\nlief therein demanded.
0c860754a84e9cdeb62a78cca41e985a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.4795081650982 40.063962 -80.720915 George C. Sturglss was made permanent s2|\nchairman and Ira E. Robinson, of Tay-aj\nlor. permanent secretary.\nMr. Sturglss* strong and forcible^*\nspeech on taking the chair was one of 'i\nthe chief events of the day and his aadi- ^\nence gave him a regular ovation. HotU< a\nWilliam M. O . Dawson, chairman of ^\nthe resolution committee, read the ptat-/jn\nform, every clause of which was apTagj\nolauded. It endorsed the St Louis plat-: Vti\nforqi, highly complimented Congreaa-^\nman Dayton and Senator Elkins ani-3\nconcluded with the .sentence, "The troti*^\nble Is not with the currency but with the ^\nThe only contest of the day followed ln^3\nthe election of elector. William G. "WU- fjS\nson, of Randolph, and William A. Chap^/33\nline, of Jefferson, both the honor';\nof voting for McKinley in the elcctonl-jc\ncollege. They were both put In noml-ijg\nnation and on the first ballot polled 1U&1\nvotes each, on the next ballot Mr. ChM)Vj|j|\nline won by three votes.\nThen came the crowning event ot thtf\nday, when William M. O . Dawwpraa\nmounted the platform nnd In a happjga\nspeech placed Dayton before 'the eon-^H\nventlnn. At this point the crowd let' ltv.ift\nft-ellngs out with cheer after cheer.\nDawson concluded by moving the nomU^j\nnation be made by acclamation and the*\nconvention gave back the answer, ||H\nwith one voice.\nWhile a committee waited upon' MtvgH\nDayton to brlns him ti» th<> convention®\nthe enthusiasm was kept up at a trt-j/S\ninendous rate, seconding speeches by ^i\nHon. John
aa7fb58b889f2f21acf295537d655526 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5724043399616 39.513775 -121.556359 SHERIFFS SALE.—I!y Vlrlueof a decretal order\nissued mil oi the District Court, Ninth Judicial\nDistrict, in mid for Unite County and State of Cali-\nfornia, nmdt the I til It day of June. A . D. 185ft, la me\ndirected and delivered, commanding me to make the\nsum of four hundred mid ninety seven fifty one linn\ndredths dollars judgment, and interest on said amount\nof judgment nt the rate of ten per cent, per annum,\ntill paid, ana Die sum of nibely-eight sixty one Inin\ndredths dollars costs and accruing costs of said order\nout of tlie property hereinafter described, to satisfy\nthe aforesaid judgment, wherein M. Walsh is plain-\ntiff, and A. Pk inkle defendant, to wit: Commencing\nmi the Plain In the village ol Hidwell, County and\nState aforesaid, at the North east corner of Lamp &\n11 Saloon, nnd running in an easterly direction-\nto the co'lier of the said plu/it, sixty feet more or less, :\nthence in n southerly direction to the corner on the\nstreet of Messrs Hoffman, on which iliejrreservoir is\nsituated, thence in a westerly direction to the line of\nLamp A Mldas Ibikery.add thence in a southerly di-\nrection to the end ol the space dug out and formerly\nused a ten pin Alley including the space Ding be-\ntween Lamp .V Hida's Lot and the Reservoir of\nMessrs Hoffman 5; Co., together with the Hilliard Pa-\nloon. situated on said premises, which I w ill sell at\nPublic Pale at Ilia 4 ourl House dis.r in itidwell, coun-\nty and Plate aforesaid, on the 4lh day of August, A\nD. 1850 , ul 2 oclock P M.. to the highest bidder for\ncash.
17999f724dd740926587764e29c57d7b NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.4112021541691 40.735657 -74.172367 SHERIFFS SALE—In Chancery of New\nJersey—Between The Reliable Building and\nLoan Association of the City of Newark,\ncomplainant, and The Ridgewood Land Com-\npany. defendants. FI. fa., for sftle of mort-\ngaged premises.\nBy virtue of the above stated'writ of fieri\nfacias, to me directed, I shall expose for sale\nby public vendue, at the Court House, in\nNewark, on Tuesday, the eighteenth day of\nJune next, at two oclock p. m.. all that\ntract or parcel of land and premises eltuatr,\nlying and being In the Town of Irvington,\nEssex County. New Jersey.\nBeginning at a point In the northerly line\nof Lenox avenue distant southerly seven\nhundred and thirteen feet and thirty-eight\nhundredths of a foot from the intersection\nof the same with the southerly line of Or-\nange avenue as the same are laid down on\nmap hereinafter mentioned and which \nis the southwesterly corner of lot No. 847 on\nsaid map; thence northwesterly at right\nangles with Lenox avenue one hundred feet\nto the centre of the brook: thence along the\nsame southeasterly sixty feet, more or less,\nto the northerly line of lot No. 345 on said\nmap; thence southeasterly and parallel with\nthe first course eighty feet, more or less, to\nthe northerly line of Lenox avenue afore-\nsaid; and thence along the same northeast-\nerly fifty foet to the point and place of be-\nginning. Being lot No. 34fl on map of the\nHedden tract situated In Irvington. N. J. ,\nsurveyed 1007 by H. W. Creed. Being part\nof the same premises conveyed to said\nRidgewood Land Company by deed recorded\nIn book Y 42 of deeds for said Essex\nCounty, pages 179, etc.\nNewark, N. J. . May 13. 1912 .
21c83349d2c6d6ed52324a2814234a95 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1888.2964480558085 42.217817 -85.891125 Many of the homos of private citi-\nzens in Petersburg, and the rule is\noven more extensive in Moscow and\nother cities, aro quite as lino and\ngorgeous as the palaces. The devel-\nopment of trade and iudnstry has nat-\nurally enrichod thw mercantile and\nmanufacturing classes, while the eman-\ncipation of the serfs impoverished\nmost of tho nobles, who were agri-\nculturists and depended upon the\nearnings of their slaves for support L\nIho conditions aro about tho same us\nthey wore in our Southern States at\nthe close of the war. Tho rich and\naristocratic planters were financially\nruined, with lots of land and taxes and\nextravagant kabits and tastea. Very\nsoon, as will be seen all over the South,\na new race of citizens came in, with\nfresh blood and capital, and made\nmoney. The old nobles of Bussia are\nmost of them poor and espe-\ncially proud. Their estates are paying\nscarcely enough to meet their taxes\nand aro heavily mortgaged to tho Jows.\nIf tho Hebrew race did not have so\nfirm a financial hold upon tho noblesso\nof Bussia there would be more religious\ntoleration in the empire.\nIn tho meantime, a new race of mer-\nchants, bankers, and manufacturers\nhas arisen money princes, who are be-\nginning to be felt in tho body politic.\nThey buy the palaces of ruined princes\nand dukes and nobles, spend their\nmonoy lavishly in decorations and up-\nholstery, have thoir walls covered with\ngigantic mirrors and tiue paintings, fill\ntheir cellars with rare wines, and en-\ntertain royally. Their banquets and\nballs are occasions for the display of\nextravagance, each attempting to ex-\nceed tho other in wasteful ostentation.\nThcro in no people on earth so fond\nof display as the Bussians.
0e534b5c5df2bdb9e329cad8303a3493 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1944.0915300230217 40.618676 -80.577293 The right lo adequate medical care and the right to security against\nfinancial losses dee to old age. unemployment. and disability constitute the (!th\nand 7th points ol Roosevelt's second bill of rights. These points are covered\nby Ihe Wagner-Miirray-Dingell ISill lor belter social security. This bill would\nraise tlx rate ol benefits for unemployment ami old age payments. It would\ninclude in Ihe benefits of the social security system people now excluded such\nas farm workers, domestic servants, employees of non-profit institutions like\ncolleges ami hospiiuls, and the self-employed. Also it would provide cash bene­\nfits for people who are sick or disabled, and medical a,ml hospital care too. Hut\nil lias nol iieen possible thus far to gel Congress to take action.\nFinally the president asked for tiie right to a good education for all. I'n\nfortunately some localities are so poor they can afford to spend on educa­\ntion scarcely one ienth as much per cliihl-as do wealthier places. Furthermore,\nthe poorer localities* are likely to be just tho>c where tiie average number of\nchildren In proportion to the rest of the population is the greatest. Then there\nis an additional lack of fair ami equal opportunities for education for Negroes\nin those slates where separate schools for whiles and Negroes exist. Senators\nThomas of Flali. and Hill of Alabama have introduced a bill to provide federal\naid lo education while leaving control of schools coiupleteh in the hands of\nthe states as now is tlu* case. The bill contains the wise provision that states\nwhere the average income is below that of the national average should get a\nlarger proportion of what they spend for education! provided they do not re­\nduce their present expenditures.
352e93f721ebab19c78177d8c0ecd8f5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.6188524273932 41.681744 -72.788147 Westerly, R. I.. Aug. 14 OP) The\n15 foot sail boat which capsized off\nFisher's Island Sunday night and\nfrom which four young men were\nlost, was picked up today by the\nlighthouse keeper at Race Rock, at\nthe west end of the island.\nThose who were drowned were\nTrowbridge Cottrell, 19, of this place,\nJohn Mcllvain, 19, of Philadelphia,\nJoseph Scales. 21, of Louisville. Ky.;\nand Lloyd Gus Bankson 20, of Phila-\ndelphia. The member of the party\nwho was saved by George Adams, a\nfisherman, of Noank, Conn., after ly-\ning all night on the upturned craft,\nwas J. Barry Colahan, Jr., of Chest-\nnut Hill, Penn., who is so far recov-\nered from exposure as to be ready\nto leave Westerly hospital today.\nThe sail boat, floating keel up-\nward, was found four miles due\nsouth of Watch Hill light and the\ncoast guard station. In the opinion\nof coast guardsmeVi it had drifted\nseaward in the strong tide and wind\nSunday and then been carried\nback to a place about six miles from\nwhere the boat capsized.\nIt was thought probable that the\nbodies of the young men may be\ndrifting about in about the same way\nand that if recovered at all, they\nwill be carried up on Fisher's Island.\nThe boat was found in an area from\nwhich cries were heard by a woman\nat Lord's Point Sunday night. The\nwoman called Captain Peckham of\nFisher's Island station and told him\nof the cries and he called out his\ncrew in search for a boat in distress.\nToday, the Fisher's Island crew\nunder Captain Peckham and the\nWatch Hill crew under Captain\nBroadmeadow, were out searching\nfor the bodies and scores of small\nboats were also going over the area.\nMajor General Preston Brown of\nthis military area ordered that Fort\nWright establish a patrol along the\nshore at the fort and directed that\nan army plane sweep the waters,\nwhich was done all forenoon.
10cb5d717becde68eab638e9f7b901e5 THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.5246575025367 35.072562 -98.243663 always gcntlo nnd nover abused them,\nand hooii thoy grow to lovo mo nnd\nwould do anything I told thorn to.\n"Ono day I took them to bo shod.\nAn ox, you know, lias a spilt hoof,\nllko n cow, and so each foot must\nhavo two shoes. That makes eight\noboes to an ox, doesn't It? I must\ntoll you how they shoo oxen, as It\nIs vory different from shoeing n horse,\nTho ox Is first led Into a framo about\nthreo foot wide, which Is built of\nstrong tlmbor, with a floor In It. Two\nheavy poles push up on each side of\nthu ox's shouldors, holding him linn;\nthon two more just back of his horns,\nto which ropes nro attached, and\nthoso hold his head and shouldors per-\nfectly still. Two broad leather bando,\nfastened loosely to poles as high ns\ntho ox's back, aro noxt passed under\nhis body, and hook on other side\nto anothor polo. Thoso polos aro\nturned nround, shortening tho bands\nuntil tho ox Is raised off his foot. Tho\nfeet aro then roped back, hoof up-\nwards to othor poles, and tied tightly\nbo thoy cannot move. Tho blacksmith\nIs then nblo to nail tho shoos on\nquickly, without being bothered by tho\nanimal's struggles.\n"Buck and Bride could go so much\nbettor after they had been shod, as\nthoy did not slip In going over tho\nrough roads. Ico and melting snow\nmade It vory slippery, and ono had to\ndrive with great caro.\n"Ono day, along in April, fathor\nwau chopping with a vory sharp ax,\nand It sllppod nnd cut a gash in his\nlog. Tho blood spurted high and wo\nboth know that ho had cut an urtory.\nTogether we munaged to bind It up\nabove tho wound and stop tho blood\nflowing, but fathor was dreadfully\nweak.
0ff7b61a04d0ac344e7071a606e3641e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4287670915778 41.681744 -72.788147 Phil was Just exclaiming at the\nsplendor of his mother's jewels as\nshe opened the door and she heard\nMrs. Tracy say "I do not think\nthat I ever wore them all together\nbefore In all my life."\nLater she confided to Lyra:\n"Nearly every one of these pieces\nof jewelry means a separate tragedy\nto me, for always when my husband\nhad done something particularly\natrocious when his liaison with"\nsome other woman had become\nmore than usually acute or he was\nafraid it had or would shortly come\nto my ears, he brought home to me\na piece of jewelry.\n"I got so that I could tell by their\nprobable value how much he con-\nsidered he had injured me."\nWithout her volition Lyra's eyes\nstrayed to a magnificent tiara \ncrowned Anne's lovely dark hair.\n"I see you are looking at my\ntiara," she remarked. "I have never\nworn It before In my life. Two days\nafter Phillip presented It to me he\nwas named corespondent In the\ndivorce of Eileen Lawler, the ac-\ntress. Surely you remember it. It\nfilled the papers. That time he\nwanted me to divorce him, but we\nhad only been married six months\nand 1 would not, for, strange aa It\nmay seem, I still loved him.\n"I am wearing these diamonds,\nhowever, so that all the young\nwomen who will be at this dinner\ntonight may see what will some\ntime coma to the wife of Phillip\nWynne Tracy IV."\n"Have you picked out the girl you\nwant to tempt, Anne?" Lyra asked\nsarcastically.
0fa1be87a18e710b3eed67dc5b92f669 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.0150272907813 40.063962 -80.720915 The Supromn Court of Connecticut 8ui*\ntnlim 111* Ulght to Hold Over,\nUa)itfow>, Cos*., Jul). 6..Tho Su¬\npremo Court unanimously sustained\ntho demurrer of Gov. liulkloy, the hold-\novor governor, in quo warranto suit ot\nMorris, tho late Democratic candidate.\nThe court Bays that the declaration of\ntho result is nn indispensable adjunct\nto tho choice of governor, as it furnishes\ntho authentic evidence of ail election.\n[Judge Morris has not been declared\nolected by tho House.] Tho court says\ntho right to choose any state ollicpr, un¬\nless tho result of tho choice can bo pub¬\nlished in Homo way so as to bo obliga¬\ntory on tho wholo state, would lie\nno bettor than a mockory: It\nwould bo to glvo tho form of a choice\nwithout the Tho declaration is\nthe only ovidoncoby which tho person\nolected can know that ho is entitled to\ntho olllco or thu previous incumbent\nknow that his term has expired. Tho\ncourts can take judicial notice of tho\nfact of an election, but nover of tho re¬\nsult of an election, or of who is elected\nuntil somu declaration is made. It Is\nfound that there lUuL'.beon no declara¬\ntion by the generai assembly that the\nrolator had boon olectod govornor, and\nit is not claimed that there lias been\nequivalent act by any othor authority.\nIt follows that the relator cannot now\nbo said to havo been elected to the olllco\nof governor, and that tho respondent\nremains tho do jure as well as tho do\nfacto governor of tho state.
56a92de44d0a0cc0b31f7b99c1b59a69 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.8041095573312 41.681744 -72.788147 away villi the. corner saloon, but in\nits stead it has put the hole In the\nwall. I'll wager that your priests\nlUTe4 as elsewhere, have given just\n,ik many pledges since the enact-\nment of the ISlh amendment as be-\nfore. I know 1 have, and to women\nI have given a great many more\npledges than before prohibition."\nDishonesty in high places in the\ngovernment is evidenced en all sides,\nday after day, Father John declared.\nGigantic trusts and combines are\norganized so strongly that they have\nno trouble putting small competitors\nout of business by underselling them\nso completely that they are unable\nlo continue at the old stands where\ntheir fathers before them made an\nhonest living for years. Then, with\nthe field clear, the trusts raise their\nprices and force poor people pay\nor do without the necessities of life,\nbut worst, still, the adulteration of\nfoods was so brazen and effective\nthat if became necessary to pass\npure food laws, ami the same prac-\ntices with drugs brought about the\nenactment of similar legislation.\nFather John delivered a scathing\narraignment of dishonest officials,\nwho, he said, think nothing of bar-\ntering their positions for "yellow\ngold and white silver" until political\noffice and grafting have become\nsynonymous. Likewise, he declared,\nthe impure lives of the\n"400" in society are bared repeatedly\nin the courts of the country and re-\nveal something of (he tilth that is\nindulged in behind the curtains of\nthe homes of the rich. Magazine\nand similar publication patronage by\nyoung people wo would merit "a\ncrack in the ear" at the hands of
1b1c22b5f028becfe11b77b6b95b7df8 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.4753424340436 41.741039 -112.161619 A weak stomach needs n dlgestivo\ntoulo aud that thero is no better touio\nfor this purposo thnn Dr. Williams' Pmk\nPills is shown by tho statement of Mr.\nA. O. Merrill, n mining mail, of Oneals,\n,Cnllf., n veteran or Battalion O, Third\nU. S . Regular Infantry.\n" I had novor boon well since I left\ntho army," ho says, "nlwayshaving had\ntroublo with my stomach, which wns\nweak. I was nrn down nnd debilitated.\nCould keop nothing on my stomach,\nand nt timos had sick hcaducho so bad\nthat I did not euro whether I lived or\ndied. My stomach refuted to retain\noven liquid food mid I almost despaired\nof getting well ns I hnd tried so many\nkinds of medlclno without relief. Then\nI was bitten by a rattloMinko that\nlaid mo up from work 'entirely for a\nyear, six months of which I spent in bed.\n" Ono day n friend rocommoiided Dr.\nWilliams' Pink Pills to mo nnd I began\ntaking thorn, .Thoy cured niu when nil\nother mediciuo hnd failed, I liavo\nrocommondod tho pills to n groat many,\nfor during my recovery every one nsked\nnio what was helping mo to mid 1 told\nthem Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I can-n -\nsponlc too highly of them."\nIf you wnut good health yon must have\ngood blood. Dr. Williams1 Pipk PillB\nactually make now blood nnd restoro\nshuttered notves. Thoy,. n ro fold by\nnil druggists or sont, pphtpald, on re-\nceipt of prico, COc, por box, sl boxes for\n$3.60 by tho Dr. Williams Mediciuo\nCo., Schouoctady, N.Y.
05c9d165eaa37d05ad3bc8721d972c21 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.9221311159179 58.275556 -134.3925 On Wednesday morning the cook.\nt. M . lirown, while preparing the\n>lrdi. was amazed to And a small\n(old nugget in the craw of one of\nhe birds. When he had assured\nhimself that the nugget was real\n[old he carefully inspected the re¬\ntraining contents of the eraw and\nound two more of about the same\ndie. Me Informed the roat of the\noldlers of his extraordinary And.\nmil by so doing created a desire on\nhe part of every member to go\nHinting. The nuggets were brought\no town by Private Evans and shown\n0 several expert mineralogists,\nimong whom were D. D. Stewart,\nnine inspector for Alaka, and T. 0 .\nila< Donald. of the Tread well Com-\n>any. The gold was pronounced a\n;ood quality of the placer kind. It\nta* flat mid dull In color and the\notnl of the three nuggets was\nilaced at approximately $4.00 .\nSomewhere on Marathon mountain\nir along Resurrection creek or one\nif the mnny creeks tributary to It\nlie ptarmigan that produced the\nInd picked up the nuggets with\nithcr gravel nnd pebbles. C .old\nnlors of the flour varletv have been\nound on Resurrect Ion and other\n(reams in the vicinity, but nothing\nIke the nuggets discovered in the\nlead bird have ever been discovered.\nI', snow In the gulches and on\nklarathon mountain at the present\nIme make it Impossible for the lucky\nlunters to go prospecting, hut It is\n1 cinch thnt If they are still In Sew-\nird next summer they will spend all\n>f their time in tho vicinity of\nvhere they shot the birds looking\nor the place where the ptarmigan\n>lrked up three valuable digestive\n>i Ms.
29ee28fb35031ad983003f2bd17f922c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.554794488838 41.681744 -72.788147 The cow, dead or alive, still ad-\nvances in value. Local milk dealers\nhave advanced the price of the ani-\nmals' product one cent per quart.\nBeef is going up, despite its much ad-\nvertised plenty. The dealers are not\nto bid me, so they say. High prices of\nice, and feed is responsible for the\ngreater cost of milk high price of la-\nbor is responsible for the greater cost\nof feed and the high price of living\nis responsible for the greater cost of\nlabor. It is an endless circle that may\nbreak somewhere, someday, but it\nshows no signs of doing so now.\nEvery time the cost of a necessity is\nboosted to cover the price demanded\nby labor, labor wants more to buy the\nnecessity and labor is in a position\nto set more. It should get. it, pro-\nviding its are not exorbi-\ntant. Man has to live, and has need\nof man's assistance to do so.\nThe question is, when will we be\nable to obtain our supplies at a nom-\ninal price? The answer is, when la-\nbor is willing to turn out these sup-\nplies at a reasonable return to itself.\nWhen will that be? When labor is\nable to get its own needs, furnished\nby another class of labor, at a nomi-\nnal price. And the original question\nIs again in order. The influenza epi-\ndemic, the war, and numerous fatali-\nties with no connection to either are\nfactors in the increased cost of pro-\nduction. The number of workers has\nbeen diminished to a great extent. In\naddition, the demands of everyone are\ngreater wc wish more than ever be-\nfore, we regard luxuries of a few- yea r- s
05e79533bde2792b8b8b6cfb7084e4c1 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.1767122970573 43.798358 -73.087921 taken into consideration, their conduct was\ntruly wonderful ; yet because the slavery\nloving portion were not allowed to have\nall in their own way, the venal editors of\nnewspapers were crying out aloud, as if\nall was going to destruction ; and charg-\ning the Baptist missionaries as the auth:\nors of the evil ! one writer gravely ask-\ning if the. present conduct of one of them\n(who had advised some people to leave\nthe property if they could nut agree with\ntheir master) was not a sufficient .proof\nthat they (the Baptist missionaries) were\nindeed the instigators to the rebellion in\n1831 2! ! Thus the papers still 'rave\nand rage ; but none of us think it neces\nsary to notice them much, as we know\nthey are not to be reformed, and are too\nlow sunk in character to be believed to\nour injury. Indeed, we have so much to\ndo with our flocks and schools, that we\nare without tiaia to misspend upon such\nattacks as daily, almost, pour forth in the\nnewspapers against us. have the an-\nswer of a good "conscience, and go for-\nward fearlessly in the path of duty. God\nhas been nigh to us to maintain our cause;\nand if we are kept humble and faithful,\nwe have nothing to fear from those who\nhave set themselves up against us. The\nGovernor is going on well, and several in\nauthority; but a majority in the House of\nAssembly, and a number of maddened\nspirits out of it, who wish to uphold a\nsystem of slavery in a free country, are\nthose that cause all the agitation and tur-\nmoil. The Assembly are acting in a\nway likely to change our form of govern\nment in this island, as they have stretched\nthe patience of the British Parliament to\ntne utmost pith it is likely to bear.\nun my return I found my different\ncnurches iri a belter state .than I could\nhave expected, through the blessing of\nGod upon the faithful labors of lhetwo\nnative assistants I left in charge of them\nduring my absence. Since, Wv have\ngone on
139292883e91d06c5f0f97b9a3f19e7c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.6945205162353 39.745947 -75.546589 The September term of tho United\nStates District Court, Judge Leonard R\nWales, presiding, opened at, 10 oclock\nthis morning. Among those present\nwere: Counselor* Henry O, Culirad,\nHugh C. Browne, Henry C. Turner, Wil­\nlard Santsbury, Jr., Harry Emmons,\nWalter Hayes, City Solicitor George A.\nElliott, District Attorney L C. Vaude\ngrift, aud State Detectives Witsll and\nMcVey. The list of grand jurors wsa\ncalled and the following excused : D.\nJ Layton, Georgetown; Harry A. Miller,\nWilmington; Dr. William P. Orr.Lewes\nand Uahobolh.\nThe following grand jury was called\naud sworn in; John W. Jolis, St.\nGeorges, foreman; Thomas Holt, Wil­\nmington; James Stelling. Duck Creek;\nJohn G. Cooper, North Murderkill;\nAnthony R-ybold, Wilmington; Robert\nII. Taylor, Wilmington ; Derrick B. Mortis,\nMlllsboro; Harry A Brown, Wilmington;\nJames E Blggs,New-Castle;Wllllam Jolly,\nNow Ehe W. Tunnell, Lewes and\nRehobotii; John Ponder, Broadklln;\nHorace H Mustard, Duck Creek; A M,\nDanner, Bast Diver; John T. Jacobs, N.\nW, Fork and Alfred L. Burton, Lewes\nand Reboboth.\nAfter the jury had been charged by\nJudge Wales, and bad retired, YVIutield\n8 Quigley reported. His excuse for be­\ning late watt accept« d and he was sworn\naud took ht# place ou the jury. Ehe W.\nTunnell being excused from acting.\nAt 11 3) the jury came In, and handed\nup Indictments bb follows; William\nMatter, violation of section 1, act of\nMarob.26 . 1888. United States statutes,\nIn knowingly depositing or causing to be\ndeposited far mulling and delivery non­\nmailable matter,\nWilliam DeCourf.ey, violating section\n8893, U 8 P. S., in «mbezzling aud\ndestroying a postal card not directed to\nhim
5ae67c726116ef8c43aec40f37b38af2 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.5356164066463 39.560444 -120.828218 the Sink is ten miles wide, and the river\nextends twenty-five miles nearer California\nthan in 1&19, owing to the high stage of\nwater, caused by the melting of snow on\nthe mountains. The emigration this\nthis year is rather large, and much stock\nmay be expected in the course of a month-\nAlong the whole route feed for animals is\nextremely bad, except on the Truckee,\nand for two hundred miles up the Hum-\nboldt from the sink, scarcely any is to be\ngot. Several droves of horses are now\ncoming in—the pioneer train of 25 horses,\nwith wagons, are now probably at\nWebers ranch recruiting. Mr. C. left a\ndrove of 100 horses at the sink, and\nFrinks drove of 50, at the lower crossing\nof the Truckee, bound in; also the brothers\nGilbert 20 more fine horses. The\nhealth of the emigrants is very good; and\nthe Indians are said to be friendly—Wah-\nsus and Plotes. Both theee tribes are\nvery large; the Wah-sus extending from\nthe north side of Pyramid Lake to the\nhead-waters of Feather river, and- the\nPiotes from the west side of the lake to\nwithin twenty miles of the Truckee.—\nAbout four miles from Truckee and forty-\nseven from the sink of Humboldt the\nmountains resemble islands of coral, and\nMr. C . entertains the opinion that at one\ntime the Humboldt was a much larger\nstream than at present, overflowing the\nwhole desert and part of the country ad-\njacent, as he distinctly traced for miles\nstrata of alluvium cropping out of the hills,\nabout a hundred feet above the Humboldt\nlake.
0eaf550df0d8f7a5c01341400b0f2150 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.4631147224752 40.832421 -115.763123 bo a solemn obligation of the Legis¬\nlative ami Kxecutivo I'epaitnieiits of\nthe 'OoveriimeVil to put "into iiiimcdifttc\nuse arSil *fXer*,isn all the constitutional\npowers for tcliioving any just causes of\ndiscontent on the part o( any chilis and\nfor Hncnring to every American citizen\ncomplete liberty mm I'piality In the\nexercise of civ if ami political lights.\nTo this villi we imperatively demand a\nConurcHs and a Chief /",\\ecutive, whoso\neouiAge ami fidelity t^ fhoso duties\nshall not falter until those results are\nplaced beyond dispute or ft 'i(tl.\nFourth. - ' |Vi tire lir.st act o( Congress,\nsigned by President Grant, the National\nGovernment sought to remove any\ndoubts of its duties to discharge all just\nobligations to public vreditors, ami\nsolemnly pledged its (nth to make a pro¬\nvision; at the curliest possible moment\n(or tin! redemption of United Statin\nnotes coin. Commercial prosperity,\npublic nlorals and national credit dc-\nili.lllil that this promise be fulfilled by\na continuous and steady progress to\nspecie pf.l -n'Vntrt,\nI'idli. .-.Under the Constitution (lie\n('resident and liei'ds of l'cp*ilinciils«re\npermitted to malic I'Vliiliiillions (or ei'r-\ntain ofllces. The Semite ia to advise\nand to consent to these appointments,\nami tin1 Mouse of Mcpicsciitutiv/'H is to\nprosecute faithless ollicers. Tile best\ninterests of the iiiiblie service demand\nthai tie lie illstiiicllolttt be resjiecleil;\nthat Smut ts and ltepreneiitstivi'H, win\niila** bo jrdgen litld accuser*; idiofihl not\ndictate appointments to ofliecrs. The\nrule for appointments should have ref¬\nerence to the honesty, fidelity and ca¬\npacity of the appointees, giving to tlio\npatly iu power those places where liar*\nninny and vigor of iidiniuistralioli (re-\nquires its policy to bo rp|irrj.'Milct?, ili'il\npermitting all others to be titled by per-
8f8e4b27570c5f70f0714b774bc4f1bf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.3811475093605 39.745947 -75.546589 master, has organized a Ship of Sea\nScouts. They have been named in\nhonor of George Pierce, chairman of\nthe troop committee, veteran naval\nman and a veteran of the civil war.\nA full attendance of members is re­\nquested for next Tuesday evening,\nWhen llnal rehearsal and drill for Hie\nMemorial Day exercises will be h»ld\nA. J. Naylor, an engineer for the du-\nPont Company, Wilmington, function­\ning under the Delaware School Auxil­\niary Association, In rharge of lhe P.\nS. duPonl fund for the erection of new\nsohool buildings, was In town yces-\nterday, looking over the school sit­\nuation. A new high school building\nIs needed, aeeordnig to school nffi-\neials, and It Is thought the visit of\nMr. Taylor will bring results. The\ngrealest experienced so far\nIs Hie selection of a suitable site.-\nThose that will meet the require­\nments are held so high In price lliaj\nthe authorities can not buy.\nThe Sunday school classes of Mrs.\nMary Denny and Mrs. Mary Sheridan\nwill hold a measuring social In the\nSunday school room of Nazareth\nChurch tonight. Admission Is by In­\nvitation. The girls, \\vlio attend will\nhave to pay one cent for every Inch\nthey measure around the waist, while\nllie boys will have a greater expense.\nIt costing them 5 cents a font for\ntheir height up to live feet and two\ncents an Inch, for every Inrh they\nmeasure over live feet. The Inter-\nChurch World Movement fund no\ndoubt will be greatly aided by the so­\ncial.
22f89af761544aed3bee66e67bad3389 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.0315068176053 40.827279 -83.281309 Progress of the Wa r\nThe bombardment of the onter\nline of Forts compassing the fortifi\ncations of Paris has been commcne\ned by the Germans. This marks an- -\nher stage in the "progress of the\ngreat Continental war, and indicates,\nlet us hope; the approach to its end.\nThis exterior series of Forts were\nerected to protect the city itself from\nthe shells of the enemy. They have\nthus far prevented the German bat-\nteries from being placed in positions\nwhere Paris would be brought with\nin range of th best siege guns. The\nreduction of these oucer Forts w ould\nseem all that would be necessary to\nto bring about the surrender of th."\ninvested city. The demolition of\nthose on the south side, which have\nbeen attacked, or on any side, would\nenable the Germans to advance their\nlines in sufficiently far to bring Paris\nunder their guns. This would amount\nto about the same as carrying the\nplace by assault. We cannot believe\nit possible that the inhabitants of\nParis will permit the city's destruc-\ntion. But whether the Forts which\nthe Germans have so vigorously at\ntacked are carried or not, the bom\n of them and consequent\ndestruction of life, will add greatly\nto the suffering and distress of the\nbesieged and hasten the work which\nfamine, disease and destitution are\nslowly but surely carrying forward\nto one inevitable end. The efforts\nof the French to raise the siege of\nParis by attacks noon the rear of\nthe besieging forces have been aban\ndoned. Tbcir only hone now lies\nin sorties from within. How slen\nder this hope is, we may learn 'from\nthe want of success which has at- -'\ntended all former efforts to break\nthrough the German lines.\nWith the surrender of the French\nCapital the war will probably end.\nAs Paris is France, the utter futility\nof continuing the struggle will be\nmade manifest to the French people.\nAt last a Frenchman is found who\nhas the courage to tell his country\nmen unwelcome truths. Father Hy- -\nacinthe has lifted up his voice in\nLondon and proclaimed that it is the\nduty of France to make peace. He\ntrtll them that territory may be lost\nwithout honor being lost, and more\nthan hints that they must submit to\nthe inevitable and give up Alsace and\nLorraine.
d1f451e552fcd41698b8c4439287741d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.2260273655504 43.798358 -73.087921 consumptive habits, are soon relieved and speedi\nly cureu. roverty ot Diood, and emaciated limbs\nwill ere long meet the happiest change; the chill\nwaiery nuias win Decome rich and balsamic and\nthe hmljs be covered with ilesh firm and healthy.\nvVervous disorders of every kind and from\nwhatever cause arising, fly before the effects of\nTHE LIFE MEDICINES and all that train of\nsinkings anxieties and tremours which so dread-\nfully affect the weak, the sedentary and the deli-\ncate will in a short time be succeeded by cheer-\nfulness and every presage of health.\nFor weakness, deficiency of natural strength\nand relaxation of the vessels by too frequent in-\ndulgence of the passions, this medicine is a safe,\ncertain and invaluable remedy.\nThose who have long resided in hot climates\nand are languid and relaxed in their whole sys-\ntem may take THE LIFE MEDICINES with\nthe happiest effects; and persons removing to\nthe Southern States or West Indies can not store\na more important article of health and life.\nThe following cases are among the most recent\ncures effected and gratefully acknowledged by\nthe persons benefitted:- -\nCase of Jacob C. Hunt JVew Windsor' Orange\nCo. JV. Y. A dreadful tumor destroyed nearly\nthe whole of face nose and jaw. Experienc-\ned quick relief from the use of the Life Medi-\ncines and in less than three months was entirely\ncured. Case reported with a wood engraving\nin a new pamphlet now in press.\nCase of Thos. Put cell, sen, 84 years of age\nwas afflicted 18 years with swellings in his legs\nwas entirely cured by taking 42 pills in 3 weeks.\nCase of Joan Daulton, Aberdeen Ohio rheu-\nmatism five years is entirely cured ha3 used\nthe Life Medieiues for w orms in children found\nthem a sovereign remedy.\nCase of Lewi9 Austin periodical sick head-\nachealways relieved by a small dose now en-\ntirely free from it.\nCase of Adon Adams cured of a most inveter-\nate and obstinate dyspepsia and general debility.\nCase of Adah Arnes Windsor Ohio rheuma-\ntism gravel liver affections and general nervous\ndebility had been confined seven Years was\nraised from her bed by Liking" one box of pills &.\na bottle of bitters a most extraordinary cuie\nshe is now a very healthy and robust woman\nattested by her husband Shubel Adams.\nCase of Mrs. Badger, wife of Joseph Badger-nearl- y\nsimilar to above result the same.\nCase .of Susan Goodarant, a jroung unmarried\nwomansubject to th
0036c82d417049bff7826825cb9f27f1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.5833333017101 41.681744 -72.788147 occupied by Harry Engel and his\nwife, Mary, and their two daughters,\naged 10 and 11 years, was raided at\n3:15 o'clock this morning by Ser-\ngeant J.C. Stadler and Officer Wil-\nliam Politis after they had watched\nthe actions of Mrs. Engel and Albert\nMeisner through a window from a\npoint of vantage. Engel, who gave\nhis age as 34 years, and his wife,\nwho 6aid she was 31', w ere sentenced\nto jail for 10 days by Judge H. P.\nRoche in police court today the\nformer on the charge of keeping a\ndisorderly house and the latter on\nthe charge of improper conduct,\nwhile Meisner, who gave his age as\n42, and his address 154 Curtis street,\nwas fined $20 and costs and given a\nsuspended jail of 10 days\non charges of improper conduct and\ndrunkenness. The Engels must also\npay the cost of the court in their\ncases or work them out in jail.\nAccording to Sergeant Stadler and\nOfficer Politis, they saw Meisner and\nMrs. Engel sitting at a table in the\nkitchen of the tenement, which con-\nsist of four rooms on the first floor.\nA pane of glass was out of the win-\ndow through which the police were\nspying and they heard the conver-\nsation. A quantity of home brew was\nconsumed before Meisner paid:\n"Let's go to bed," and Mrs. Engel re.\nplied: "All right, honey." They were\nin bed about ten minutes when\nMeisner called for a cigarette, and\nMrs. Engel went into another room\nwhere her husband
0ee175bf7e6d2bd6d33ec223c52fc78d PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.3547944888383 40.441694 -79.990086 Miss Jane M. Bancroft addressed the Woman's\nHome Missionary Society yesterday afternoon\nat Christ M. E. Church, on the Deaconess'\nHome. In her talk she treated of the practical\nnecessities for and advantages to be obtained\nfrom such a Home and its inmates. How tbe\n"deaconesses" would, in their capacity as\nnurses and missionaries bridge the chasm now\nexisting between cburch and people on account\nOf tbe pastor's utter inability to cope with as\nmuch work as tbe proper care of a congrega-\ntion demands. Between bis sermons and the\npreparations for them, prayer meeting and\nother similar dntics, it is Impossible\nfor a pastor to visit among the peo-\nple and . know them as a missionary\nwould, and for that reason each church should\nhave one Or more "deaconesses" to assist him\ntbat special line. Miss Bancroft spoke of\nthe various 'Homes" that have been fcih.\nlished in other cities and of their flourishing\ncondition, the one Iu Philadelphia, which owes\nits existence to Mrs. Bishop Himpsori having\nflourished from Its birth, and the one in Wash-\nington, D. C. which is a memorial to Mrs.\nHayes and will be dedicated the ,15th of this\nmonth, has received as donations mdro furni-\nture and carpets than caq possibly, be used.\nOther "Homes" bavo the same success report\nfinancially, and also report wonderful results\nfrom the labor of tbe deaconesses."\nAt tbe conclusion of Miss Bancroft's talk she\nrequested Rev. Mr. Fqlton, the pastor of the\nchurch, to give bis views on the Subiect th\ngentleman uld so by heartily indorsing the\nmovement, and remarked that although at first ,\nwas opposed to having the new enterprise\nunder the auspices of the Woman's Home\nMissionary Society, yetit was a rule in bis Hie\nthat if he, failed to get bis own, way in anything\nwould help someone else get theirs,\nconsequently as the tendency seemed\nbe in tbat direction ho wonld do all in his\npower to aid it Rev. Mr. Fulton said tbat be\nhad been a John the Baptist in tbe cause, that\nbefore any action was taken upon tbe matter\nthe General Assembly, lie had In tbe city of\nSt Louis employed a lady whom he formally in-\ntroduced to the congregation as a "Deaconess"\nassist him in tbe care of bis congregation.\nAu informal reception closed the meeting\nwithout any definite actlou having been taken.\nThero is considerable money in tbe treasury\nauaitlng a selection of a site and active incis-\nures in the construction of a "Home," jiid\nseveral ladles have already signified their will-\ningness and readiness to become "Deaconesses."
0a42999e9cbab8addf9f08f1f9f616c6 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.719945323568 41.020015 -92.411296 "Mr. Hayes, in April, 1870, owned\nthree horses, to wit: one old horse\nleft by Mr. Bircliard, about 27 years\nold, not worth much of anything;\none work horse, purchased by himself\nwhich is considered unsafe for a bug­\ngy, and balky; and tho pony he\nbought with tho plueton. I think\nthe three horses are not worth more\nthan (250 (their assessed value). I\ndon't know of Gov. Hayes owning\nanyother horse since lie came to Fre­\nmont to reside."\nThe next affidavit is from the mem­\nbers of a piano firm, stating that the\nGovernor owned no piano, but rent­\ned one from them. The two remain­\ning affidavits relate to geueral person-\nill property, especially credits. One\nis subscribed to by A. II. Miller, one\nof the executors of the Bircliard es­\ntate, and the cashier of the Frst Na­\ntional Batik of Fremont, which posi­\ntion has held ever since the bank\nwas organized. The other is by the\npresident of the institution, who was\nvice president from the time of the\norganization until he was promoted\nto the presidency. Mr. Bircliard was\npresident from ita organization until\nhisdeath. These gentlemen know all\nabout the Bin-hard estate mid the fi­\nnances of Gov. Hayes. They go into\ndetails very fullv, showing beyoud\nthe shadow of adoubt that Governor\nHayes kept back nothing.\nThus is met, with all fullness and\ncommendable promptness, the silly\nattempt to oil-set the Ananias record\nof Governor Tilden with t he charge\nthat Governor Hayea' is equally bad.\nWill tho democratic newspapers\nwhich started the cock-and-bull story\nabout the liayes taxes, publish the\nrefutation ? We shall see. Thev are\ninasorry ti.x. Todo sowillbe to\nstultify themselves, yet not to do so\nwould be a confession of intentional\nunfairness. —I'hicai/o
ebe8514c6d5c7acd82f1cf3f5c8ed2b9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.5986301052765 41.681744 -72.788147 Paul of Rockvllle.\nA. H. Abbe, W. L. Hatch and\nH. D. Humphrey, the committee of\nthe Businessmen's association look-\ning for reduced suburban trolley\nrates, called on Manager F. L . Ter-\nry this morning and conferred with\nhim. He doubted if the patronage ot\nthe Berlin line warranted reducing\nthe fare there to five cents, but ad-\nvised the signing of a petition. A\nsuggestion was also made that the\ntrolley company extend its line to\nEast Berlin, it already havng the\nnecessary charter for this. The em-\nployes of the bridge shop and of\nPeck, Stow & Wileox spend much\nmoney which would come to New\nBritain merchants if this were done.\nIn the local markets tomatoes\nhave gone up 2 cents a quart and\nare now selling at 18 Newj\npotatoes are way up; usually they\nsell for about $1.15 a bushel at this\ntime of year but now they are $1.50 .\nCucumbers are to be found at the\nstores for a cent apiece. String beans\nare selling at three cents a quart.\nWhen Dick Hartnett, driver of\nEngine Co. No. 1, started out this\nnoon to answer the fire alarm, he\ndid not know that it was his own\nbarn on Washington street that was\nin flames, and when he reached\nthere he was obliged to remain on\nthe seat of the supply wagon while\nthe firemen were at work on the\nburning building. There was noth-\ning in the barn except a carriage\ntop, and that, as well as the top of\ntho barn, was ruined, the damage\nbeing $75.
0f1035ac5444ba63be19d5ad1cdeac57 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.0040983290326 41.875555 -87.624421 not what loneliness haunts tho hearts\nof them who llvo In gilded show cham-\nbers, and hnvo no homes. (Distance\nlends to riches an enchantment they\ndo not possess. The man who hns\nmillions is Just ns unhappy that ho\nhas uot mora ns you are. Content-\nment in wealth Is it\nthnt no man over yet caught up with.\nMany n fool hns put his whole ener-\ngies Into the chnso after it, following\nIt unceasingly through bogs of selfish-\nness mid mires of meannesses, only to\nfind nt Inst when no lies down to dlo\nthat ho long ago had loft behind him\nall that Is worth whllo In this world\nor to bo hoped for In the next. It Is\nonly to tho man who is poor that\nwealth glows like a steady star In tho\nnight. The law of recompense always\nIs In forco. It Is only when darkness\nshrouds our world that wo can see tho\nlight of a million others. Scientists\ntell us that if wo could approach a\nstar Its glow and glamor would van-\n and the star Itself dissipate into\ndust. What wo lovo Is ours. Wo can\nown the wholo world if wo will. But\nwo can really possess nothing that\nwo apply to our own selfish purposes.\nDid you not learn In babyhood that\ntho bubble Is brilliant only until you\ngrasp it? Tho gems In tho lino lady's\nhair nnd nt her throat glitter not for\nher eyes but for the eyes of others.\nSho owns only somo stones, nover tho\nlight tbnt sparkles In them. That\npriceless trensuro is only for then\nwho lovo It, and It Is scattered broad-\ncast at their feet In tho countless myri-\nads of morning dowdrops In tho sum-\nmer grass. This is a world of beauty\nuot to thoso who havo money to pluck\nIts roses, but to those who havo souls\nto scent tho swoot odors. With lovo\nof tlio beautiful In man and In un-\ntil re no ono can bo poor; without it no\nono can bo rich. Happiness lies deeper\nthan tho pocket. Tlio millionaire can\nmnko his thousand-ncr- o
1ff72b3eb81fde62c838f21ce9f4e78c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.6397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 employed two Iloston lawyers (it Rive\ntheir name*) to bring suit against the 1U\npublican and Woman*' Journal. So tha\nu looks as if the exposure is near at hand\nI want to s%y one word more, however\nGin you not let the report get out aftc\nthe II. matter becomes public witliout be\ning exactly responsible lor it 1 That yoi\nhave kept up friendship with Mrs. W . ii\nthe hope of Intluencing her not to publiel\nthe story, you haviug learned its trull:\nand that is substantially the tact as I hav\nunderstood it, and that you gave up goini\nto Europe with me so as to be at horn\nand comlort it when the troth came out, a\nyou expected it to do during tbo sumtnei\nThis will give the appearance of sell\n to your alllliation with her, am\nwill explain your not coming abroad will\nme, a lact which has a very unwilellk\nlook. 1 know that you will olhei\nwise be regarded as holding Mrs. Wood\nhull's views, and that we shall bo regard\ned as living in eomo discord, and prob\nably by many people us practicing he\nprinciples. It would be a great relief t\nme to have your relations to Mrs. Wooc\nhull explained in this way, so credi'\nable to your heart. There is not hb\nthn untruth in that. that thr>rf> htm hrn\nin my pretend approval of Mn\nWoodhull's course. And yet the pcopl\nthink ine an honest man. I havu lie\nenough about thut to ruin the charade\nol an average man, and have probabl\ndainnt'd myself by it.
250edaee10d65ec3726fde331a7b3f4e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.6260273655505 41.681744 -72.788147 felt in an unexpected quarter in\nNew York, objection being made to\nthe noise of the thunder storms in\none of the plays now being produced\nin a theater in that city. In most\ntheaters thunder is caused by the\nshaking of a large piece of sheet iron,\nbut in this particular theater the rill-\ning and sharp detonations is produced\nby machinery. The neighbors, how-\never, claim it is caused by the explo-\nsions of cannon and the dropping of\nenormous metal balls on sheet iron.\nSince the warm weather set in the\nstage doors are left open and the\nnoise is said to be terrimc.\nThe wave of reform has set in in\nso many ways that it may bo expect-\ned in almost any quarter, but when\nthe sensitive being objects to a stage\nthunder storm it comes near \nthe limit. A sweet potato has done\nduty in a cage for the family canary;\nwe have all heard the man with a\nwhistle imitate the hlrds in the trees,\nthe raging ocean has been pro-\nduced by cloth shaken by the indus-\ntrious and intelligent stage hands,\nand the only kick has been when the\nwork was perfectly done, but there\ncomes a stage thunder storm so real-\nistic that it is said that some timid\nladles thinking it was the genuine\nthing raised their umbrellas while\npassing the theater in question the\nother evening and the neighbors ob-\nject. Nothing will probably satisfy\nthem except the actual clash of the\nclouds, the electric flash and the\nrain running down the aisles. There\nmust be no more faking. There must\nbe a real canary, the ocean must run\n!
2bf214ec8c19dcd0c2cf0b2c4ea4c957 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.6890410641806 41.681744 -72.788147 Now Buster was so Interested In\nhis day dreams that he quite forgot\nhe was standing In plain sight star.\nIng up In that tree. Back came\nChatterer and the first thing he\nsaw was Buster staring up in that\ntree. Chatterer forgot he had a\nmushroom in his mouth. Ho opened\nit to scold Buster and call him bad\nnames, and, of course, down fell the\nmushroom. Then how his tongue\nflew! He blamed Buster because he\nhad dropped the mushroom.\nBuster tald nothing, but shuffled\nover to the mushroom Chatterer had\ndropped, picked It up, ale It, , and\nshuffled away quite as much as If\nno person as Chatterer the Bed\nSquirrel existed. Chatterer scolded\nuntil Buster was out ot sight. Then\nhe stopped scolding as abruptly as\nhe had begun. A thought had\npopped Into his head. What If Bus.\nter Bear had seen all those mush-\nrooms he had stored up in that\ntree Chatterer sighed. It was a\ndeep heavy sigh.\n"I must move them," said he. "It'e\na big job, but I must move every\none of those mushrooms, I never\nwould have another easy moment\nknowing that Buster Bear knowa\nwhere they are. It Is a great pity\nthat I can't put them away In my\nstorehouse, but they would rot there.\nI've tried it before and I know."\nDqwn scampered Chatterer and\naway he ran to make sure that Bus\nter Bear had really gone away. It\ndidn't take him long to find that\nBuster really had. Then Chatterer\nraced about through the tree tops\njumping from tree to tree, until\nfinally he found one that suited him.\nHe could get to it from the trees\nwhere, the mushrooms were without\never going down on the ground. He\nwasted no time. He moved all those\nmushrooms. He didn't leave one In\nthat tree where Buster Bear had\nfound them.
4aa30cb13ea6c5b553a4746a5d12109f FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1918.5438355847286 35.318728 -82.460953 For three weeks the church bells\nof many cities and towns of North\nCarolina have been calling the peo-\nple to prayer at seven o'clock in the\nevening, in response to a proclama-\ntion issued by Governor Bickett sug-\ngesting that this be done for two\nminutes every evening for the dura-\ntion of the war. During the time\nthe bells are . sounding the call the\npeople are asked to lift their hearts\nto Almighty God in prayer for our\nsoldiers and sailors and for the suc-\ncess of the cause for which they are\noffering their lives on land and sea\nin the world struggle for democracy.\nNo citizen of the State should show\nhimself indifferent to the call, for\nthere is virtue and power in prayer.\nAlready is the hand of Jehovah\nplainly visible on the field of con-\nquest and when the people of all\nChristian nations unite in earnest\nprayer for the success of the allied\narms, acknowledging their utter\nhelplessness to overcome the forces\nof without the aid of the divine\nhand, deliverance will surely come\nand that before a great while.\nThat God works in mysterious\nways his wonders to perform, is as\ntrue today as when He handed down\nthe proverb to the inspired writer\ncenturies ago. And the individual\nor nation that forgets the source\nfrom which every good and precious\ngift must come will be called to ac-\ncount just as surely as God rules the\nuniverse. All down through the\nages the god of -- battle has been di-\nrected by the same hand that led the\nchildren of Israel out of Egyptian\nbondage and gave them safe deliver-\nance from the enemy by whom they\nwere sorely pressed. And, behold, a\ngreater than Pharaoh is now seeking\nto enslave mankind. But the same\nguiding hand is able and willing to\ndeliver His people when they realize\ntheir helplessness. Let one and all\nheed the call to prayer each day, not\nfor two minutes only, but until their\nhearts are satisfied.
4fd6e0daf6665cfd44db2bb7dfd62caf DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.6890410641806 58.275556 -134.3925 In case it is necessary to get extra-\nditiou papers for W. R. Rogers, the\nAlaska miner held in Chicago charged\nwith the murder of a fellow miner iu\nAlaska, J. 1«\\ Warren, the United States\nextradition ageut locatcd at present in\nthis city, will have to leave for the East\nMonday to get the papers from the\ngovernor of Illinois and to return with\nthe prisouer to Alaska. In case the\nUnited States court iu Illiuois grants\nan order of removal, the United States\nmarshal for th« Illinois district will bo\ninstructed to take the prisouer North\nand Warren's connection with the case\nwill be ended, according to information\ngiven by the extradition officer last\nnight, says the Seattle P. -l . According\nto a dispatch from Chicago yesterday,\nday, Rogers was arraigued before Louis\nP. Mason, the Uuited commis¬\nsioner in Chicago, and entered a plea\nof self defense. The dispatch says\nfurther that there will be a hearing on\nSeptember 4. The charge against\nRogers is that he murdered N.W .Wixon\nat Christmas creek, in the Porcupiue\nJistrict, Alaska, on May 23, 1913. He\nwas arrested in Libertyville, a town\nibout 35 miles from Chicago. In\nauswer to the charges Hied against him\nhe stated that Wixou had assaulted\nhim aud that he shot in self defense,\nafterwards being exonerated by a cor¬\noner's jury on that ground, lie said\nthat be was willing to return to Alaska\nfor trial. Wixon's body, it was said,\nwas found iu the snow, high in the\nhills, where he aud Rogers had beeu\nprospecting. He had been bit on the\nhead with a hammer and then shot\nwith a rifle.
095f6d25326407e19d322cfe8149c6f0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.3630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 ij County Election Notice.\nELECTION JOKE 10, 1882.\nAt h Mooting of tho Doard of Cotmnlwlonon o:\nOhio County. IwldonMouiUy the 0th day of M*v,\n18»i, the following Action was bttd, una ordui\nadopted *nd uwle, vlii\nTub Hoard of OonimMonen 0/ tho County o:\nOhio deeming it (Icolrublo ttmt the County of Ohl<\niihouid appropriate, by lubscriptlon to tb<jc*|«lU\nitock of t/it* heeling. I*rkei»buijr A rhurJextoi\n% lljillwny Company, acorponttiou under tu« iaw» oi\nWctt Virginia, the iutn of Twenty Tliouwud tMllan\nk /fjo oW.Of). lo *ld1» tho conttrucllon of mild coin\n% uHiiy't ntllnmd, to bo ennMructed in and near w»lc!\nJ county, tlto Hoard of Unruml#lom r of Ohio Count)\n^ iloili wow direct nnd order that a voto be taken It\n«m county upon llie mio.tloii o( »»ub*rlnllon III\ntho wld County of Ohio to tho capital mock of \nWhcoUns, lUikombUM Si Charleston lUltwayCotn\npuny, of tho mm of Tweuty Itmuuiid toltar\n(|'J),000.00). Said nt*crlptlon to bo paid In th«\nrnuitou bonds of huiil county, bcurttiK tnior**t a\ntho rato of tajrccntum per annum and redeem\nable within twcnty-llvo, yearn, an too Hoard inaj\nill& vote film!} bo taken upon IbonuMflon *foro\npaid at thouMiul votliiK place* lit «j»ld county, at\n«<lHH:lal election which l» hereby ordered to bo tftket\nI and held for the pur|x*o on\nJ Skiiiurilnv. tho loth lhir ol" June. 1S82\nM, Ktlwnrtln, Jobti Konney and K. Fry, nro hcrob;\nnp|ioliitcd ComiiiMonere of wild election ut thn vol\nlug place In hulil county, at tlio Vigilant Knglut\nHouse, ln\\Va*liliiRtoa district.\nl Urtli, F. Kolnicrand k. Ilanna. nro hereby «jj\nH|k>luted ComiuMoncis oi hhld election nt tlio votliij\n1»Inco luMtlil county, at Fulton, In oaaliltigtou Ult\ntrfct.
04afa9a5f04be2f379b1327c879d5096 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.217213083131 40.063962 -80.720915 mil i navesaui enough.nil at least that\nspace anil time permit at present.as to\nwhy wc should expend our capital in\nimiliWng one or more railroads hence to\nthe northwest. Now (nr a few considcra-\nlions as to why it would bo unwiso for the\njHH»ple of Wheeling to invest their money\nin the construction of the proposed bridge,\nIt is lair to assume that but two objects\nare had in view in the proposed bridge\nenterprise. One ot these is to create tin\n| investment that will yield a reasonably\nlair profit, at least, to its stockholders,\nwhile the other announced purpose is to\nencourage and invite railroads to come to\nami through the city, by providing them\nwith an ample, convenient, and expeditions\nmeans of transit over the river.\nThis latter object I have, I think, already\nshown to bo inexpedient at the present\ntime, especially as regards the two north-\nwestern now requiring our direct\ncontributions of money to make their\nconstruction even probable, bridge.or no\nridge. As an investment, I think it can\ni* icnuuy Buuwu, the bridge will not pay.\nAs it is proposed to construct the work\nthrough a corporation scparato from any\nrailroad company, it iiboth natural and\nproper to compare the enterprise, and its\nanticipated results, with the bridge at\nSteubeuvlllc which was built by a similar\nagency.a separate company. That\nbridge we arc told cost originally $750,WO,\nand it is estimated that\n» similar one at this point would cost\nsomething more.say $800,000. As to this\nwe will doubtless be better inlortned in\nthe course of a few days, tvIiqu the report\nand estimate of the engineers who have\nrecently made a survey of the proposed\nfeite shall be made public. But for tho\npresent suppose tho cost to be $800,000,\nand then let us make tho most liberal
995dc32c7f3b6bfe1daec04acfed508b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.4150684614408 41.681744 -72.788147 The rule states plainly "cleaning\nthe ball when in play entails a pen-\nalty of disqualification in stroke\ncompetition and loss of the hole In\nmatch play, except under special\nrules by local committees in charge."\nThis covers play on the green. If\nyou're playing the game according\nto the book, you can't clean the\nmud from a ball even on the green.\nvjdost tournament committees an-\nnounce that the ball may be cleaned\nwhen reaching the green but if the\nspecial ruling is not announced, the\nball can be cleaned only on each tee.\nIn other words, you can remove\nnothing from the ball from the time\nyou hit your tee shot until the all\ndrops into the bottom of the cup.\nIf aaball split or In any ether\nmanner becomes unfit for be.\ntween tee and green. It may be re-\nplaced with your opponent or part-\nner's permission. Mud adhering to\na ball shall not be considered cause\nfor making it unfit In play.\nAnother practice frowned upon\nby most good golfers its the habit of\nusing one ball off the tee xnd\nthrough the fairway and another on\nthe green. You've seen them come\nup to the green, whip out a new ball\nfrom their pocket pick up the all\none and drop the new ball onto 'he\ngreen and usually nearer the ho'e.\nJust remember that It is againt\nall rules of golf to ever touch he\nball with anything but the club from\nthe time you tee it up until yea\ntake it out of the cup, Plsy ac-\ncording to the rules!
04410304fd86ed1ca54bc7db7d3a8a1d THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.9139343946063 40.832421 -115.763123 of business debt, old Morpheus sloaly\nurouud hiui crept; uud, si eping he\ndreiitm d that Ik Whs dead, frof: trouble\nand toil his spirit had tied, and tbat not\neven a cow -be11 tolled for th peaceful\nrest of his coir-hide soul. As he waudercd\nabout muoiig the shades that smoke and\nscorch in the lower hades, he suddenly\nobserved nn iron door, tbat croaking\nhung ou biu;:es ajar; but the entrance\nw r.s closed with all iron bar, uud Satan\nhimsrlf stood peeping out, uud watching\nfor travelers thereabout, and thus to the\nl>as>iug printer spoke: "Come in, my\ndear, it will tost you nothing, uud never\nfear; this is tlic place where I cook the\nones who never pay their subset iptiou\nstilus; for, though iu life th y may escape\nthey'll tiud wh.n th ir dead it is too\nlute. I will show you the place I\ntuelt them iu red-hot chains and scraps\nof tin. uud ul io where 1 eotub their beads\nwith broken glass and uielted lead; und\nif of refreshments they only thiuk,\nthere's boiling w ater for theiu to drink;\nthere's the red-hot grindstone to grind\ndown their nose, and the red-hot rings to\nwear on their toes; uud i ' the}' mention\nthey don't like fire, I sew up their\nmouths with red-hot wire; and then, deur\nsir, yon should see them tiqnirm, while I\nroll them over to cook to u turn."\nV iili these last words, the printer\nawoke, aud thought it u'l a practical\njoke; but still ut times so real did it\nseem, that he cuunot lielieve it was all a\ndream; und ofteu he thinks with a\nchuckle nud grill, of the fute of those\nwho savu their tiu uud never pay the\nprinter.
75c357c5a4691225d089d51d21bfd626 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1920.0751365803987 37.451159 -86.90916 The other morning trouble began to\nbrew before sunrise. The fitful night\nwind steadied with the light as though\nIt had lust awakened to the fact that 4\nIt had a good day's work ahead of It.\nFor a time It hovered, as though to\nsurvey the world. It poked Into odd\ncorners, combed the long grass, took\nstock of all the fag ends the summer\nleaves behind, like a householder In-\nspecting his premises after his tenant\nhave departed to town for the winter.\nIt Is really surprising, the amount of\nmuss It found. The most careless\nhousewife hardly dares to let her ashes\nand potato peelings accumulate beyond\na certain point,,' but summer gets clut-\ntered up with all manner of unconsid-\nered trifles. Even such tiny things as\nthe husks of seeds, the wings of gnats,\nthe cast-of- f down of the little birds, ac-\ncumulate Into surprising amounts.\nSmaller, but still more untidy, are the\nmolds and genus, elements of decay\nwhich have their place In scheme\nof things, but must not be allowed to\nusurp that of their betters.\nAll these things the wind found. It\nsighed and set to work sweeping the\nearth with angry, vigorous blasts. And\nthe dust rose up and filled it with\nstifling clouds. Like the Augean sta-\nbles, here was a task nothing less than\na river could wash clean. It reached\nout for a lowering cloud which hung\nfar In the western sky and dumped Its\ncontents until every crack In our part\nof the earth's floor was running over.\nIt scoured and rubbed and scrubbed\nand rinsed until It squeezed that cloud\ncompletely dry and flung It hack to the\nhighest rack of heaven until It should\nbe fit to use again. And then It went\non polishing up the world until It was\nfairly dry again. And while it worked\nIts voice took on a satisfied contented\nsound. For this particular corner of\nthe universe was us fresh and clean us\nIt had been In early spring.
2be8c87d0ff757e9f2c3dc93e2286e91 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.8292349410544 40.735657 -74.172367 tance of eleven feet nnd ninety-one one-\nhundredths of a foot (11.01 ft.) to a point\nOi compound curve; thence (2) curving to-\nward tiie loft with a radius of thirty-seven\nfeat and thirty-five hundredths of a foot\n(37.85 it.) a distance of thirty-four feet and\ntlurty-throo hundredth* of a foot (84.88 ft .)\nto a point of compound cun »; thence (3)\ncurving toward the left with a radius of one\nhundred and two Test nnd thirty-live hun-\ndredth* of a foot (102.35 ft.) u dlotanc® of\neleven feet and ninety-one hundredths of a\nfoot (11.91 ft .) to a point of tangent; thence\ni.4i south flfty-four degree* thirty-four min-\nute* ten seconds (54 degrees 34 minutes 10\nseconds) west six* feel and thirty-eight hun-\ndredths of a foot (0.88 ft.) to si point In the\nsoutherly side line of South Orange avenue.\n(c) Is u connection between the southerly\ntruck in South Orange avenue a* relocated\nand property of Public Service Hallway\nCompany on the southerly s.de of South Or-\nange avenue, the centre line of which begins\nat a point in (he centre line of the \nsoutherly track in South Orange avenue dis-\ntant one hundred and ftfty-lrve feet (155\nft.) eustwardly from the intersection of cen-\ntre lino of South Nineteenth street and the\ncehtre lino of the proposed new location of\n(be southerly track n South Orange avenue, I\nand extending thence a* follows. (1) west-\nward! v curving to®aid the left with u ihu ua\nof one hundud and two test and thirty-five\nhundredth* of a foot (102.35 ft .) a dints nee\nof eleven feet*and rttnety-one one-hundredths\nof a loo: (11.91 tt.) to u point of compound\ncurve; thence \\2» curving toward the left\nwith a radiu* of thirtyeiuen feet and thirty\nfive hundredth* of a foot (37.36 ft.) a dis-\ntance of nineteen feet snd one one-hundredth\nof a foot (10.01 ft .) to a point of comp <and\ncurve; thence (8) Still curving toward the\nleft with a rad.u* of one hundred and two\nfeet and thlny-Ave hundredths of a foot\nU02.85 ft .) a distance of eleven feet and\nninety-on® one-hundredth* of a foot (11.91\nft.) u) a point of tangent, thence (4) south\nseverity eight degree* four
0c86f87838bd3feaca82c48d76ef8112 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.195890379249 39.745947 -75.546589 the United States.\n"Mr. Allee had been reminded that he\nwas guilty of an lll-bre^ Injustice to\na worthy man and by Innuendo casting\nunjust reflection on the race and re­\nligion of the people of whom this man\nis the representative.\n"The Hon. Mr. Allee forgets the re­\nflection and the Implied slur. He Ig­\nnores lhat he Is dealing with Innundo\nand he hides himself behind a weird\nInterpretation of his own of the con­\nstitution. He actually tells the people\nof Delaware that he could hide behind\nthis bulwork, but he will not do so;\nwhile all the time he Is trying to shield\nhls lack of understanding by talking\nabout somebody seeking publicity.\n"It Is a bit of comedy which would\nbe a scream if you were not compelled\nto remember lhat this man has as much\npower In making the laws of the\nSlate of Delaware as have all of Wil­\n seven representatives In the\nLegislature. He has ns much to say in\na political way as all of Wilmington's\n115,000 people. Heres where comedy is\ntragedy. This one man can say no\nto anything and everything lhat Wil­\nmingtons one hundred and fifteen thou­\nsand people can do. Think of that! This\nman. mind you, who when reminded of\nhis moral responsibility Interprets the\nconstitution to shield his ignorance.\n1 "The General Jewish Committee was\nnot finding fault with Senator Allee be­\ncause he voted against the minimum\nwage bill. The merits of the bill had\nnothing to do with what he said. Jews\nwere in favor, opposed or Indifferent to\nthat bill like other people. There Is no\ncapital and labor issue here. The Gen­\neral Jewish Committee asked an apol­\nogy for an uncalled for slur offered to\nDr. RablnowlU and through him to the\npeople lhat be represents.\n"Yes, Senator, the Jewish people are
0a144a77eea864651a75fbaa6cb2207c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.4945205162355 39.745947 -75.546589 The parade started from tlhe Wash­\nington engine house about 8.30 o'clock\nand marched over '(he following route;\nFormed on Third street, left resting\non French, up French to Fifth, to Wal­\nnut, to Ninth, to Poplar, to Fourth, 'to\nFrench, to Front, to Market, to Elev­\nenth, to Jefferson, 'to Ninth, to West, to\nSixth, to Washington, to Fourth, to\nMonroe, to Maryland avenue, to Lin­\nden. to Jackson, to Second, to the Woc-\ncacoe engine house.\nThe march of the fire laddies was\nthrough a continuation of fljeworks\nand red fire. Arriving at the house the\nchemical, driven by Frank Hyatt, of\nthe Washington company, was run in\namid the cheers of the assembled fire\nladdies. After the housing the invited\nguests sat down to supper on the third\nfloor of the engine house. The mem\nhers of City Council and other city of\ndelate were present.\nAfter supper President Maguire in\ntrod need Mr. Abel, of I»ng Branch. N\nJ., an old volunteer and a\nmember of the old W eccacoe H ose Com­\npany. of Philadelphia, who made an\naddress. He gave a brief history of all\nthe companies bearing 'the name of\nWeceacoe since the inception of the\nmother company In 1800 to the nresent\nday. There are now but two Inexistence,\nthe one of this city and the Weceacoe\nof Bordentown, N. J. Although an ex-\nchief of a paid system, the speaker de­\nclared that he had no* sympathy for\nthem. He said the paid system was in­\naugurated for economy, and then show­\ned by figures that 1t is a pretty expep-\nsive economy in all the cities which\nhave tried It. That this remark fell on\nwelcome ears was demonstrated by .'he\ncheers which greeted him at the close\nof his speech. At the conclusion of his\nremarks he was presented with the\nfrontispiece of the Weceacoe company,\nof this city. He is seeking to gel a m.v\nmento fn»in all the companies of that
24ca302b207a303b89edda5996b39cdd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.2041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 Telegram company says:\n"The Russians are now entrenching\nIn the disputed territory. A company\nof the Hong Kong regiment, with fixed\nbayonets, is in front, while two com­\npanies of the Madras Pioneers, under\nthe command of Maj. Johnson, are held\nin reserve. Both the Russians and the\nBritish are awaiting Instructions from\ntheir governments.”\nThe Russians at Tien Tsln took pos­\nsession of the railroad siding, and\narmed sentries are now guarding it.\nGen. Barrow, second in command of\nthe British forces, hesitates to act ap­\nparently in the absence of Gen. Gazc-\nlee, feeling sure that bloodshed would\nensue. He had a long consultation\nyesterday with Sir Ernest S.itow, the\nBritish minister.\nIt was reported at the United States\nlegation yesterday, says a Pekin dis­\npatch, by the Rev. W. 8. Ament, of the\nloeal Mart of the American Board of\nForeign Missions, that the Gormans\nhad visited the prosperous market\ntown of Nau Ming. 60 miles from Pe­\nkin. and completely looted it, ami that\nthey had also ransacked and desecrated\na native Christian chapel and \nwomen of their trinkets, even taking\nrings out of their ears and generally\nill treating the natives.\nThe attitude of M. De Glrrs t Russian\nminister! regarding further p inis.i-\nments Is delaying the demand of the\nministers of the powers upon the Chi­\nnese, and the matter has bean referred\nto the home governments. Mr. Rcck-\nhiil. the American special commission­\ner. say* t® i personally he is tu favor\nof drawing a clean sherd over addition­\nal executions, but that certain high of­\nficials throughout the provinces arc\nguilty of moat barbaroiui-wiii.r,* and\nthat it is generally reccgaired that\ntb^se must he punished, if only as a\nwarning to others. Ituevery care where\nionfemy vr rcsslhie, Mr. Rockhill has\nadvocated if, hut he has felt that In n\nfew cases leniency we-! nut of the ques­\ntion. He says M. Do Otera had virtual­\nly agreed to certain additional punish­\nments, but that the citante if his atti­\ntude is presumably attributable in Hus-\nriaa annoyance nt the interference of\nthe other powere in the Manchura af­\nfair.
0e1d0d41978f047c3d872fee1d7f8260 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.9904109271943 40.735657 -74.172367 mas Sunday by two-score men with the purpose of intimidat-\ning him into giving a pledge that he would vote for a sena-\ntorial candidate whom his judgment and conscience did not approve\nwas little short of a public outrage. Among these intruders were\nmany who had voted against him at the polls, and who, therefore,\ndid uot have a shadow of right to attempt to influence his judg-\nment. The men who visited Mr. Backus represented nobody but\nthemselves. Their authority to dictate was self-given. The intru-\nsion was the result of a private agreement among themselves and\nwas an act of insolence. Occurring on a Sunday, and on a Christmas\nSunday, the act was worse than mere insolence. There were sena-\ntorial election campaigns ih the past, but none of them witnessed\nthe spirit and the methods that are employed in the present one\nby the of a candidate described by his principal sponsor\nas one who as United Htates senator would be a disgrace to the\nHtate. Intimidation, coercion, misrepresentation and downright in-\ndecency have thus far characterized the campaign for this candidate.\nLegislators-elect have been hounded by newspapers and in their\nhomes, and no unscrupulous means have been left untried to\ndragoon them into pledging themselves against their convictions\nand to prejudice the public mind. If such methods always pre-\nvailed in politics they would always be practised and we would\nwitness their recurrence in every election campaign. But experience\nhas shown that as a rule they have the contrary effect. There is\na sense of justice, decency and fair-play in an American community\nthat is proof against the arts and influences of men who practise\nthese methods, even though they should be sanctioned and abetted\nby a governor or governor-elect.
6fa1bc378450120a3a166e9faf8536f9 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.8890410641807 39.261561 -121.016059 The October number of De Bows Review,\nfor 1859, contained an article, whiab. in-\nsetting out the merits and> methods of the\n•Port Royal Eetorprise” stated many facts\nconcerning the harbor and vicinity of Beau-\nfort tlrnt will be read with tenfold- more\ninterest now than when it wus first publish-\ned. It was the production of a South Caro-\nlina. We quote:\nOn Port Royal is an area of sea islands beau-\ntiful and healthy as can be desired, 800 miles\nnearer the mouth of the Mississippi than New\nYork, and reached from Europe at all seasons\nof the year by a most desirable route. When\nthe whole North is one sheet of ice and snow,\nevery step of the South becomes more temper-\nate and open, while the internal commerce,\n on diverse productions, will give em-\nployment to a dense population. The bay of\nPort Koval i» nearly if not quite equal to that\nof New York; and there are at least five sites-\navailable for cities on its shores, while by water\nchannels it connects with the everglades of\nFlorida and the rice fields of the Waccamaw,\nand all the intermediate shores as far back as\nthe falls of the rivers.\nAs if prenerved by Providence for name\ngreat purpose, this noble bay has been lost\nsight of almost entirely, and is note open to\nthose who will go in and possess it for com-\nmercial purposes. It is the natural outlet of\na large extent of country already intersected\nwith railroads, and it wants but population to\ndevelope its superior advantages.
0e760aa04305d9e5c79a8316d15a9c07 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.3575342148656 44.939157 -123.033121 XotVo of Intention to Improve n\nPortion of Winter Street,\nNotlco In horoby glvon that the\nCommon Council of tho City of Sa- -\nlom, Oregon, dooms It expedient to\nitntirovo. nnd nrnnnunn in tmnrnvn. nt\ntho cxpbnco of abutting and adjacent\npropony, winter stroot,. in tho City\nof Salem, Oregon, from tho south\nlino of State street to a point within\n114 foot of tho north rnll nf thn rnll.\nroad track of tho Southorn Pacific\n. yo., wnoro it crosses said Wlntor\nstroot nt tho Intersection of Winter\nand Trndo streots. Tho roadway of\nsaid portion of said street shall bo\nUnproved tho full width from curb to\ncurb by grading tho samo and plac-\ning thoreon n crushed rock Improve-\nment tho full width from curb to\ncurb, Including tho full Intersection\n TtVirrv atrnnt wlmii If lni., .. .iu\n"Winter stroot on tho west side of said\nwinior stroot. Tito intersection of\nWlntor nnd Trado streots from tho\nnorth lino of Trade stroot to a point\n1 H foot or tho north rail of tho rail-\nroad trnclt of thn Ronthnrn Pnxlfln\nCo., shall bo Improved for a width of\nzu ft root on both sides of, tho center\nlino of said Winter stroot qxceptlng\n. .u .u .tuui, uuvruvur, u Hinp t IOCI in\nwidth oxtondlng full width of tho pro\nposoa improvement to bo occupied\nby tho street railway track of tho\nPortland Railway. Light & Power\nCo., and Improved by said company.\nCurb Unco shall bo established nnd\nsaid stroot shall bo Improved In ev-\nery respect In accordanco with the\nplans and . specifications
31e877022f6d7ea6948b43ca4269cbad THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.3647540667375 40.063962 -80.720915 It is well known that the ordinary coa\noil is one of the surest means of killinj\nifraaahopper*. and during the payment o\nthe bounty in this county it was usee\nquite extensively to kill the insects befon\nmarketing them. And coal oil is th<\nchief of Mr. Riemann's plan for killing\nthe grasshoppers, lie says that tin\nsmallest particle that'will adhere to one'i\nlinger, if touched upon the body of an in\nsect will cause almost instant death. Hi\ntakes a piece of cotton cloth a yard wide\nand about twenty feet Jong. One side h<\nfastens to a rope, tie ends of which ex\ntend over the cloth a foot or two. To tin\nbottom of the cloth he fastens, say oiw\nfoot apart, lead sinkers, to keen the clotl\nfirmly stretched. The cloth' is the:\nxoaked in coal oil until thoroughly\nsaturated, and with a man at each eni\nthis is slowly dragged over th<\nground occupied by the insects. Every\nKroHnhopper touched by the oil isinstant\nly killed. Tho cloth is soaked, from tim<\nt<> time, as-one^ judgment dictates. Mr\nUiemann says the first soaking consume*\na good deal of the oil, but afterward)\nmuch less is required, and he estimate*\nthat one and a half or two gallons is al\nthat is necessary to kill the grasshopper!\n»n eighty acers. The process is to be ap\nplied u noon after hatching as possible\nwhen the grain is small. Where il\ntouches the grass or weeds more or lesi\noil adheres and this kills such Insects ai\nootnc in contact with'it. Mr. Riemanri\ntried the method last spring, and it work\nfd to his complete satisfaction, destroy-\nmg the grasshoppers upon his premises,\nand what injuries were sustained by hie\ncrops were traceable to insects that came\nUpon hita from other localities.
229376c975a9a1964826e132d87ba6f8 THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1905.4945205162355 39.739154 -104.984703 some ted clothing and fix up the big\nold-fashioned leather covered sofa for\nmy guest. I forgot to say that I kept\nmy safe in the library and that on\nthis particular night there was quite\nasumofmoneyinit,asIhadonthat\nday received the rents from a number\nof stores, offices and dwelling bouses\nwhich I owned in the village.\nIt being past banking hours when\nthe lest payments were made, I pu t\nthe money in my safe and decided to\ndrive into the city early the next\nmorning and deposit She whole\namount in the bank. In passing from\nthe room I slopped in front of the\nsafe turning mv back to it, 1 called\nMr. Col Iyers attention to some triv-\nial matter and with my left hand\nlocked it securely by giving the knob\na quick turn, I was not sure that I\nhad previously locked it. I then re-\ntired, not to my own room however,\nbut to that of my];faithful servant,\nJohn Henry, where we together held\na lengthy conference lasting about\nthree quarters of an hour and in\nwhich I learned that Mr. Collyer,\nthough a stranger to me was no\nstranger to John Henry who had\nseen him a number of times within\nthat mouth in company with another\nman near my I ouse, “but he didnt\nwear the heavy black mustache which\nhe now wears,” said John Henry.\nThis statement alarmed me quite con-\nsiderably and I asked John Henry if\nhe was certain that the man in my li-\nbrary the same man he had seen\nwith another man some weeks ago,\n“I am as certain Commodpre, as that I\nam speaking to you at this mament,”\nwas his calm reply. “I neyer forget a\nface. There is something about this\nman's face that will not letjone forget\nit. Theie is something wrong about\nhim, sir. I think you have made a\nmistake in letting him sleep in your\nlibrary, and if he does not rob the\nhouse tonight it will be because you\nfrustrate his plans."\nIt then flashed upon me that possi-\nbly I had done the wrong thing in ac\nceptingthis man as my guest without\neven identitying the signature ot my\nfriend,Captain Addison. There were\na half dozen or more letters of his in\nmy safe but they could not be gotten\nat now without arousing suspicion.\nJohn Henrys words worried me\ngreatly and decided me to use a little\nstrategy to stop this “gentleman' if\nhe was not what he claimed to be and\nthe more I thought over the matter\nthe more strongly was the conviction\nforced upon me that be was n gentle-\nman crook. I told John Henry that\nI now believed he was a took and\nknowing his fertility of resource I\nasked him whit course be advised.\nQuick as flash he answered, “my ad-\nvice, Commodore, is that we each arm\nourselves take a coil of stout rope and\nlay in wait for this man's confederate\nwho will certainly show up under the\nlibrary window about midnight.
5551ecd22881970c5d497f6a77e8a64d THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1860.9494535202894 37.561813 -75.84108 their option, might, by an application\nto Congress, havo obtained a Conven-\ntion for the same object. This is the\nvery course which I earnestly recom-\nmend, in order to obtain an explana-\ntory amendment of the Constitution on\nthe suhjectof Slavery. This might orig-\ninate with Congress or the Stato Legis-\nlatures, as may bo deemed most advisa-\nble to attain tho object. The explan-\natory amendment might be confin-\ned to the final settlement of tho true\nconstruction of tho Constitution on\nthree special points: First, an express\nrecognition of the right of property in\nslaves in the States where it now ex-\nists, or may hereafter exist. Second,\nthe duty of protecting this right in nil\ntho common Territories throughout\ntheir Territorial existence, and until\nthey shall be aJtnitted as States into\nthe Union, with or without Slavery, ns\ntheir Constitutions may prescribe.\n a like recognition of tho right\nof tho master to lave his slave, who\nhas escaped from ono Stato to another,\nrestored and delivered up to him, and\nof tho validity of the Fugitive Slave\nLaw enacted for tlis purpose; together\nwith a declaration that all Stato laws im-\npairing or decreasing this right, are vi-\nolations of the Constitution, and conse-\nquently null and Toid. It may be ob-\njected that this corstruetion of tho Con-\nstitution bas nlrc.iiiy been settled by the\nSupreme Court of the United States, and\nwhat more ought to be required? Tho\nanswer is, that a very I irgc proportion of\ntho people of thcUrited States still doubt\nthe correctness of this decision, and\nnever will cease frem agitation nnd ad-\nmit its binding foice until clearly es-\ntablished by the ptoplo of the several\nStates, in their sovreign character.\nSuch an explanatory
801d99fa85895ed23dca8978629c8015 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.37397257103 39.261561 -121.016059 n., 1862. at 10 o'clock, a. M.. to answer to (he com-\nplaint of H. Ransom to obtain a decree of this Court\nfor the foreclosure of a retain mortgage, bearing date\nJune 1st. 1858 . executed liy you to It. Ransom, ami\nfor the sale of the premises therein, and in said com-\nplaint. particularly mentioned and described »nd the\napplication of the monies arising from such sale to\nthe payment of the amount due on a certain protni*-\nsory note set forth in the said complaint, made and\ndelivered by the defendant Robert McCloud to th-\nplaintiff D. Ransom, bearing even date with the said\nmortgage, that there is due upon said note more than\nthe sum of two hundred dollars aud interest thereon\nat the rate of three per eeut per month from the 1st\nof .hitie. 1858 . And if any deficiency shall remain\nafter applying all tlie monies arising from the sale of\nsaid premises to the of said amount, inter-\nest and costs thereon that the plaintiff may have ex-\necution therefor against the said defendants and all\nand every person claiming through or under the de-\nfendant* subsequently to the dnte of plaintiff*- mort-\ngage may he barred and foreclosed of all right claim\nin equity ot redemption in and to the said premises\nor any part thereof, and sueli other and further relief\nor both in tlie premises as may be just and equitable.\nAnd you are hereby notified that if you tail to ap|j«i\nand answer, judgment will he taken against you for\nthe stun of two hundred dollar* and interest thereon,\nat the rate of three per cent, per month from flu*\nfirst day of June. a. D. 1858 , together with all the\ncosts of suit, and also demand of the court such other\nrelief aa prayed for in said complaint. Given under\nmv hand this eighth day of May a. n. 1852.
5e12dcff1a58246bac1912c66a094a2d THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.582191749112 37.561813 -75.84108 S'lhlkrs of the Army of the Went:\nI am moro thnn satisfied with you.\nYou havo annihilated twtf armies, com-\nmanded by educated and experienced\nsoldiers, entrenched in mountain fast-\nness fortified nt their leisure. You\nhavo tnken five guns, twelve colors, fif-\nteen hundred stand of arms, one thou-\nsand prisoners, including more than for-\nty officers one of the two comanders of\nthe rebels is a prisoner, the other lost\nhis life on the field of battle. You\nhave killed moro than two hundred\nand forty of the enemy, who havo lost\nall their baggage and camp equipage.\nAll this has been accomplished with\nthe loss of twenty bravo men killed and\nsixty wounded on your part.\nYou have proved that Union men,\nfighting for the preservation of our\n nro more than a match\nfor our misguided and erring brethren;\nmoro than this you have shown mercy\nto tho vanquished. You have made\nlong and arduous marches, often with\ninsufficient food, frequently exposed to\nthe inclemency of tho weather. I have\nnot hesitated to demand this of you,\nfeeling that I could rely on your endur-\nance, patriotism and courage.\nIn the future, I may have still great-\ner demands to make upon you, still\ngreater sacrifices for you to offer; it\nshall bo my caro to provide for you to\ntho extent of my ability; but I know\nnow, that by your valor and endurance,\nyou will accomplish all that is asked.\nSoldiers! I have confidence in you,\nand I trust you havo learned to confide\nin ino.
3b109ab8323d39279c352fd272fc2ad4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0013660885954 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho said "Tho Supervisors of the Cout\nty of Ohio" do hereby covenant an\nagree to and with tho said ' The Haiti\nmore and Ohio Railroad Company," thu\nthey will release to tho said company am\nt«» the company known ;as "The Wheel\ning, Pittsburgh and Balthnoro Bailroa\nCompany" all taxes, levies uud sums «\nmoney heretofore assessed and charge\nagainst said companies, or cither of then\nand claimed to bo due from then\nor either of them, lor county, towushi\nand school district purposes tinder tli\nlaws of tho Stato of West Virginia; an\ntho said Supervisors of the county\nOhio do accordingly by these present\nrelease, quit claim, and discharge to th\nsaid companies and to each of them, a\nsuch taxes, levies and sums of mone\nheretofore assessed uud charged agaim\nsaid companies, of cither of them, an\nclaimed to have accrued and to be duo t\nsaid county of Ohio from said companic\nor cither of them, for such county, towi\nship, or school district puri>oses us albn\nsaid, together with all suits, action\ncauses of suit or action, and all rcmedic\nwhatsoever for the recovery of tho samt\nand all or any of them; hereby hol.lin\nand declaring said companies and each i\nthem, to be free, acquitted and discharge\nfrom all such taxes, levies and sums\nmoney claimed have accrued and to l\ndue from said companies or cither\nthem, to said county, or to said Stipe\nvisors thereof, or to any township <\nschool district in thesame, for such coui\nty, township and school district purpose\nas fully and to all intents and purposes\nif tho same had never been assessed, <\ncharged against said companies or eitht\nof them, by or on behalf of said county,«\nany township or school district (hereof.\nAnd the said "The Supervisors of tl\nCounty of Ohio" do further covenant ar\nagree that they will not at any time her\nalter assess or charge agaiuat the said con\nponies, or oither of them, or against tl\nproperty of said companies, or either\nthem, or cause to be assessed or charge\nagainst them or either of them, or no\nproperty, any taxes, levies or sum\nmouey whatever for such county, tow;\nshin or school district purposes us afor\nsaid, and that they will not collect m\ncause to be collected from said companic\nor either of them, any such county, tow;\nship or school district taxes, levies or sun\nof money whatever as may be at any tin\nhereafter assessed or charged against sa\ncompanies, or either of them, the proper\nof either of them, contrary to tho tenor ar\netrect, true intent and tncaniug of this\npresents.
0f4c8ee713e2d3e4b0939ab3088e8778 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.264383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 The B. 1'. W. has replied in a manner\ncharacteristic of their usual methods. First\nthey muddy tlie iasue as much as possible,\nbringing outside issues and persons in.\nThey do not deny that the wharf is mined\nat the place referred to, but in one place\nblame it on the contractor and in the next\nacknowledge that it was done by the Board.\nThen they vent a well known spleen against\nMr. Kimberly, intimating a prostitution of\nhia otlice as chairman ot the Wharf Com¬\nmittee, because he was employed to do\nsome hauling. Mr. Kimberly has assisted\nin our hauling for years, and only did hia\nduty as a committee chairman in investi¬\ngating a complaint made to him. A very\nlame defense in the slurs imtimating\nthat my complaint* were made because\nof an order of the Board requiring the\ntilling of a "set fall" (really a depression\nin the sidewalk of flftv yearn standing) at\nthe old in North Wheeling. No\nMuch order or occurrence was ever withiu\nmy knowledge. Every member of the B.\nP. W . knows 1 have taken no interest and\nhave never acted in auy question connect¬\ned with the electric light pOlea. I did per¬\nsonally object to allowiug the dictum of\nthe B. P. W . to so construct a pavement at\nour lower works, that we could not haul\nout of the yard, but I was glad to have the\npavement, and since 1 secured my own\nmethod in the construction of the drive\nover, did not feel olleuded.\nReferring to what the B. P. W . charac¬\nterize as a statement "too small and de¬\ntestable" for approval, 1 have the state¬\nment of reliable persons that a member of\nthe B. P. W. did say, that unlets i\nwould "let up" on the B. P. W. about the\nholes and stone piles, we would be com¬\npelled to pay wharfage.
264dcd5bd7c6085e5ae9290fceef0806 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1904.1543715530763 32.612638 -90.036751 was again a city of mourning Friday.\nBusiness was practically suspended and\na large proportion of the population\npaid homage to the memory of their\ndistinguished fellow citizen, Senator\nMarcus A. Hanna. Just four weeks ago\nSenator Hanna left; his home city for\nthe national capital happy in the\nthought of his triumphant re -e le ct - i on\nto the highest legislative body in the\nland. His one ambition then as he\nhimself stated was to give to his coun\ntry a 'season of uninterrupted service.\nThe last rites over the body were\nheld in the afternoon at St. Paul's\nEpiscopals church. During the solemn\nservice, Cleveland was a silent city.\nNearly all business was suspended.\nStreet railway and steam road traffic\non every line in the city was \nfor five minutes from 1:00 to 1:05\no'clock. People generally in all parts\nof the city bowed their heads in rev-\nerence for a brief space of time at that\nhour. Thousands who were unable to\nview the remains of the dead senator\nas they lay in state in the Chamber of\nCommerce auditorium flocked to the\nchurch doors to witness the conveying\nof the black casket, bearing the re-\nmains of the senator into the church.\nThere they stood with bared heads\nand moistened eyes as the cortege\nmoved into the edifice where the last\nearthly tribute was paid the dead.\nAdmittance to the services at the\nchurch was by card and limited to 800;\nthe seating capacity of the auditorium.\nThe body, accompanied by the family\npall-beare- rs
3d72ecfeed61b9f1d11ed7f20870f1db OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.8123287354135 39.513775 -121.556359 IM pi illtiNT TO MINERS*. TH A V V'I.EIIH. KTC.\nraj'y II I KK is no malady ot deeper liut'orpince either\n0 ip a medical or moral light of view, to which\nthe human family i, more liable titan that arising\nfrom impure connections.\ny, a medical man it is the duty of every physicr.n\nto look at disease as it effects health and life, and hm\nsole object should be Hi mitigate, as far as lie* in hi,\npower, the tardily suffering. Human nature at best Is\nInti frail, all are liable to misfortune.\nnf all i he ill, that affect man none are mere terrible\nthan those of a private nature.—Dreadful a, it is in\nthe ner«on who contracts it frightful a, are its ravag.\nes npon hic institution. ending lrei|uenlly in deslrnc\nlon mtl a loathsome grave, it becomes of still greater\n fiance when it i, transmitted to innreent off*\nspring. Hitch being the et so how necessary It he-\ncomes lii. i every one Having lhe leasl reason to (ear\nlint tin i have contracted tile disease, should attend\nto it at onm hy consulting some physician, whoso\ntospenrtildlily and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedv, and permenent cure. In accordance\nw ith lids necessity. III! VittNl. foot, called niton to\nstale that, hy long study and extensive practice, ho\nhas helome perfect muster of all those discus* , which\ncome under the denomination of venereal, ami ha vs\ning paid more a I tent if n lit that one branch than any\nother physician in the I nited Stales, lie fools himself\nbelterijiiulifted to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its form*, such a- ulcers, swelling In\nthe groans, nicer In the throat.secondary syphilis, cu
1823747bc9f42f82965d066e38ceb4ca PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.9356164066464 40.441694 -79.990086 The usual way of settling election con-\ntests in legislative bodies, where the con-\ntrol of the body may turn on the decision,\nhas little respect for impartiality. There\nis not much pretense of obeying anything\nexcept the dictates of party exigencies.\nIn Xew York the usual attempt was made\nby the party leaders to grab everything in\nsight; but fortunately the New York law\npermitted the matter to be taken into the\ncourts. The result in the two most noto-\nrious cases shows that Democratic judges\ncan decide election cases fairly and hon-\nestly, even against their own party.\nIn the Dutchess county dispute the\ncase came directly before Judge Barnard,\na Democratic judge. Here the canvassers\nwho counted out the Republican role had\nthe most color for their proceedings, as\nthey excluded some presumably illegally\nmarked ballots. But Judge Barnard ruled\nthat the must be counted, and made\na peremptory order to correct the returns\naccordingly. In Syracuse the action of\nthe Democratic judge was less prominent\nbut no less significant At that point the\njudge who has ruled against the Demo-\ncratic attempt to throw out a Republican\nrepresentative on clerical errors by the\ninspectors was a Republican. Governor\nHill brought in Judge O'Brien, of the Su-\npreme Court, to hold a special term at\nSyracuse in the evident hope that he\nwould overrule Kennedy. But Judge\nO'Brien went to SsTacuse, looked into\nmatters and returned to New York with a\nsilence and practical declination to do\nanything at all) which speaks volumes.\nTo most party papers the leading aspect\nof these judicial actions is the defeat'they\nadminister to the Hill scheme of captur-\ning the Legislature. But to us its most\nimportant phase is the demonstration of
01de27ce3d20fa100de61f7da125ecbd SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.5630136669204 35.780398 -78.639099 llooke, along with John Rey, a Irench phy-\nsician, belong the houor of first directing at-\ntention to the .chemistry of the atmosphere,\nin Tvhich the sagacity of Hooko recognizes\nthe modern oxygen and identifies the same\ngas in saltpetre. The next names of celebri-\nty which wo find in pursuing our sketch, is\nthat of John Mayow. To him belongs the\nmerit of extending the views of Hooke in\nrelation to combustion. He it was who first\ndiscovered and prepared Nitrogen from the\nair, although ho was not awaro that this gas\nwas a new element. We have now arrived\nat the middle of the seventeenth century, and\nfrom this dato up to' the year 1757, we find\nno new discoveries worthy of note. Let it\nnot be, however, supposed for a. that\nduring this time the science of chemistry\nwas in a dormant condition, for it was du-\nring this interval that ono of the most vital\nproductions of chemistry was given to the\nworld ; namely, a table of the equivalent\nnumbers of the elementary substances. This\ngreat work was performed by Berzelius.\nPrevious to Berzelius, we.find also tho names\nof Sthal, Hales, Geoffroy, Gellert, Limbourg,\nand Bergman; all these philosophers; ""did a\ngreat deal for chemical science, but'' it was\nonly to the examination of the composition\nand properties of -- bodies already discovered,\nthat they devoted their attention. In 1757.\nhowever, a new impetus was giren to chemi\ncal scienco, by the discovery of Carbonie\n. 'Aeid Gas. for as it was then; called, fixed\nTCTIja.y Drr lilaoksr A'pCWOTroT 15
0830eb94b2fcc7a559f3285d35062153 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1879.2753424340435 41.004121 -76.453816 Just pntcntcd nnd nro now Introducing to the\npublic n Handsomely finished Family Scale,\nnn article that hna nlways been needed In every\nhousehold, nnd in a rnmtnuntcnt'ion addressed\nto the publishers of this pnper tho proprietors\nask us to refer them to somo reliable party, to\nIntroduco it lor them to tho people of this\nCounty, It is seldom that n now nrtlclo steps\nso suddenly into universal favor. Housekeep\ners nro loud in its prniso, It is nlwnys ready,\nthere aro no weights to get lost or to be liunteei\nup, is reliable, nnd will not get out of order.\nThe description of them is n hnndsomo baso\nsurrounded by n column in which works a splrs\nal spring so scientifically ndjusted as to weigh\nanything up to twelvo pounds with perfect nc,\ncuracy, on tho top of tho column is tho plat,\nform on which the articles to be weighed aro\nplaced, nnd they hnvo an ndjuslnblo indicator\nso that you can Inko the tnro of any vessel \nmny use in weighing, gising you the exact net\nweight. Housekeepers at once seo their value\nin weighing fruits, sugnrs and other Ingredients\nused iu preserving, cooking, etc., or iu testing\ntho svcights of purchases from others.\nThe Scnles nro mndo of Hms, nro highly\npolished nnd nro finished In n skillful manner-\nThey nro scry nttrnctivo nnd tnko tho cje ol\nevery ono who sees them.\nIt seems lo in Ihnt nearly every fnmily in\nthia county will want i,ne, nnd is certainly n\nraro opportunity for some ftnnrt and energetic\npnrty to pick up quite a nice little income dur\ning tho next lew months. The Company has\nagents in other counties svho nro easily making\nIrom S2 00 to SO 00 per day selling 'hem, nnd\nlie would recommend parties in need of cm\nployment to drop the OHIO SCALE WORKSi\n2o, 12o nnd 127 Central Avenue, Cincinnati, O.\na Postal Card, and all information etc, svill bo\nchcerlully given them by mentioning our\npaper.
0b462658a5075524441bceb1864b58cf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8592895858633 39.745947 -75.546589 A. I will be glad to do so. It is a pleasure to demon,\nstrate these 27 reasons ot Royal superiority. Work\nends and pleasure begins when I place the machine\non your desk. When these improvements are Fully\nexplained it makes it impossible^for a purchaser to\nbuv any other make of typewriter and as a result of\nthis the Royal is fast becoming the dominant writing\nmachine. As water always seeks its level, so the su­\nperiority of the Royal is reflected in largely increased\nsales, over a quarter of a million sold already. This\ndemonstration will give me an oportunity to show\nyou a number of other Roval improvements of u me­\nchanical nature that would appear technical in a dis­\ncussion like this, but which aid in the easy operation\nof the machine and insujc it a long life. There is a\nroller on the rigid dog w hich gives a quicker escape­\nment than the usual flat dog, and it lessens the noise\nand is frictionlcss. making for longer life. And the\nUniversal bar is pulled instead of being pushed in\ncausing the carriage to move step by step, and finding\nits original position by gravity instead of requiring a\nspring, thus taking the spring weight off the keys,\nlightens the effort in The power required\nto move the ribbon back and forth ts furnished by\nthe main spring which pulls the carriage taking that\neffort also off the key load, further light ng effort\nrequired in operating. The carriage is cushioned so\nthat the noisy metallic sound is eliminated w hen shift­\ning for capital letters. The key levers are much\nshorter than usual, and sturdier, giving extra\nstrength. The scale at line of writing makes it easy\nto insert a letter for correction in exact place even\nafter the paper has been removed from the machine\nand replaced. The paper guide folds hack out of the\nway when not in use so as not to interfere with\nwide work. The shift lock, back space, tabulator and\nmargin keys are most conveniently located. The\nstencil lever throws ribbon out for cutting stencils\nand replaces it in a fraction of a second. The car- \nriage release levers arc most convenient and the feed\nroll release lever locks so that both hands may be used\nin setting sheet. The Royal has stood the acid test of\nexperiment and is fast becoming known as the King\nof Typewriter World," as real merit is rarely unrecog­\nnized for any great length of time. To know the\nRoyal is to buy it.
08600fd825c877b9cf92170cf056cb91 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1892.5560108973386 37.92448 -95.399981 In arranging scales of wages to govern Iron\nnnd steel workers, there are Innumerable things\nwhich must receive attention if justice must\nprevail. The Intricacies referred to uresuch\nas to render liable erroneous views to Ihj drawn\nby those not familiar with the trade from their\ndiscussion in the public press. There can be no\nlegitimate reason why tho Carnegio company\nbhould deny, to their Homestead workmen a\nconference where the things of which they com-\nplain could be analyzed and. If found inljust,\ninado right. The m2a make do farther proposi-\ntion than this for the simple reason ihat none\nfairer is possible If argument and honest\nreasoning were substituted for tho reserve and\ncoldness of manner as seen in the company's\nattitudo there can be reason to expect an end\nof this state of affairs. Does It not seem straago\nthat the Carnegio company looks with distrust\nupon organization of its Homestead em-\nployes, while al several of its largo mills they\nhave for several years encourged the organiza-\ntion of the men, and at this moment are getting\nalong satisfactorily together\nSurely It will cot be charged that the men of\nHomestead are less intelligent, or less entitled\nto those rights which are the principles of or-\nganized labor,. and which aro inseparable from\ntheir citizenship. There arc none who regret\nthe lamentablo occurrences of the paat few\ndays more ihan those w horn tho Carnegie com\npany charges wlthhning been instrumental in\nbringing them nbout We ure willing to allow\nthe public to judge after the evidence Is all in\nwhether these charges are trut We foel that\nthe erroneous statements ghenout relative to\nour conduct w ill be removed by impartial in-\nvestigation in due tlma. Until then we prefer\nto forget our recent sad experience.
2a0f79118f64c4f9559a2f68dee05b4e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.5383561326737 41.681744 -72.788147 New York, July 16. The threat-\nened suit under the Sherman law, the\nreport of the interstate commerce\ncommission and the bill passed by the\nMassachusetts legislature permitting\nthe sale of its Boston and Maine stock\nwith the provision that each stock\ncertificate bear a stipulation that the\npurchaser agree to sell it to the state\nof Massachusetts at any time, are the\nchief questions up for. consideration\ntoday at the meeting of the board of\ndirectors of the New York, New\nHaven and Hartford Railroad. Upon\nthe action of the board rests. In all\nprobability, the attitude of the de-\npartment of justice with reference to\nthe filing of a dissolution suit, the\npapers for which have been held in\nabeyance for several weeks by an\nagreement providing for a partial dis-\nintegration, of the New Haven sys-\ntem including the sale of the Boston\nand Maine stock contfol. On June 25\nthe board of directors adopted, resolu-\ntions and issued a statement to the\nstockholders in which .it was declared\nthat it would be better to let the\nSherman prosecution proceed\nrather than submit to the terms of\nthe Massachusetts law, which it was\ndeclared would make the Boston and\nMaine stock unsalable, on a fair basis.\nAttorney General McReynolds took\nthe ground that objection to the\nMassachusetts law was not sufficient\nbasis for the refusal of the New\nHaven to carry out its agreement for\na partial dissolution and intimated\nthat he would file suit under the\nSherman law if the directors persist-\ned in the stand they had taken. He\ngave the board until today, it is stat-\ned, to file with the department; ,'ott\njustice a report showing that all step\nhad been taken to carry out the terms\nof the agreement, including provisions\nfor the naming of trustees for the\nsale of the Boston and Maine stock.\nA statement bearing on the matters\ncontained' in the report of the in-\nterstate commerce commission also\nis expected today over the signature\nof James H..Hustis, president of the\nNew Haven, 'who will probably pre-\nside at the meeting in the absence of\nChairman Howard Elliott, now on\nvacation.
013f764ff421d1376c2f6e9a7e38cee2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 From the New York &atunlay Review.\nThe true explanation of the prevail¬\ning extravagance in costume is that\nwomen dress for 0110 another.\nIn other words, thev dress for eyes\nwhich can appreciate the material and\nestimate the cost of every separate ar-,\ntide they have on.\nIt is quite true that many men care\nas much for, and are as competent to\ngive an opinion 011 the appearance of!\ntheir wives, or sisters, or friends, as-\nany number of female acquaintances;.\nbut the grounds unon which the two\nclasses ot critics will base their several\njudgments will always be distinct, and'\nthe conclusions themselves liotunfre-i\nquently quite opposite.\nAsk a man and a woman to tell you;\nwho is the l*»st dressed girl at a ball,\nand you will hardly ever find them\nagreeing in their answer. Go a step;\nfurther, and compare the costumes\nwhich have been selected, and you will\ndiscover almost to a certainty that the!\nwoman has singled out the most expen¬\nsive dress in the room, whereas the\nman has simply asked himself which\n the most, becoming. The one has\nsuffered herself to be so impressed bv\nViUeTiessTof the embroidery, the costli¬\nness of the trimmings, that in the end\nshe has found it simply impossible to\nleave these things out of the calcula-\ntion. The other, happy in his igno¬\nrance, has looked only at the general,\neffect; and has probably given the prof-.\nerenco to a young lady whose gown has\n110 other merits than those of being\nscrupulously neat, becomingly cut, and\nperfectly well made.\nChoWD 1 NO a Baciiki.oh.."What did\nyou come hereafter?" inquired Miss\nSuMtin Diaper of a bachelor friend, who'\nmade her a call when the rest of the\nfamily had gone out.\n"I came to borrow some matches,*1 he\nmeekly replied.\n"Matches! That's a likely story..\nWhy don't you make amatcfi ? I know\nwhat you came for," exclaimed the de¬\nlighted miss, as she crowded the old\nbachelor into a corner; "you came to\nkiss mo- and hug me almost to death,\nbut you shan't without you are the}\nstrongest, and the Lord knows you;\nare."
18e9e19d8ae2ea61f026f134347650db CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1906.2972602422628 39.623709 -77.41082 poorer, while prepared paints are get-\nting plentlcr, better and less expensive.\nIt Is n short-sighted plan to lot the val-\nuable lumber of our houses go to pieces\nfor the wont of paint.\nFor the man that needs paint there\nare two forms from which to choose;\none Is the old form, still favored by cer-\ntain unprogresslve painters who have\nnot yet caught up with the times—lend\nand oil; the other Is the rendy-for-uso\npaint found In every up-to-date store.\nThe first must be mixed with oil,\ndriers, turpentine and colors before It\nIs ready for use; the ether need only\nhe stirred up in the can and It Is\nready to go on. To buy load and oil,\ncolors, etc., and mix them Into a paint\nby hand Is, In this twentieth century,\nabout the same ns refusing to ride In a\ntrolley car because ones grandfather\nhad to walk or ride on horseback\nwhen he wanted to go anywhere.\nPrepared paints have been on the mar-\nket less than fifty years, but they have\nproved on the whole so Inexpensive, so\nconvenient and so good that the con-\nsumption to day Is over six-\nty million gallons a year and still grow-\ning. Unless they had been In the main\nsatisfactory, It stands to reason there\nwould have been no such steady\ngrowth In their use.\nMixed paints are necessarily cheaper\nthan paint of the hand-mixed kind, be-\ncause they ore made In a large way by\nmachinery from materials bought In\nlarge quantities by ttio manufacturer.\nThey are necessarily better than paints\nmixed by hand, because they are more\nfinely ground ' and more thoroughly\nmixed and because there Is less chance\nof the raw materials in them being\nadulterated. No painter, however care-\nful he may he, can ever Iks sure that\nthe materials he buys are not adulter-\nates!, but the large paint manufacturer\ndoes know In every case, because\neverything he buys goes through ttic\nchemists hands before he accepts It.\nOf course there are poor paints on\nthe market (which are generally cheap\npaints). So there Is poor Hour, poor\ncloth, poor soap; but because of that\ndo we go hack to the hand-mill, the\nhand-loom and the soap-kettle of the\nbackwoods? No, we use our common\nsense In choosing goods.
4fae02bed31dcf7c40e7bd3663fd87b2 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.5904109271944 43.994599 -72.127742 in those days sold Dots celebrated\nMandrake Bitters, good for men and\nbeast, with directions to take dcee\nimmediately after rising, before and\nafter each meal and just before go-\ning to bed, and it would do you no\nharm if you took an occasional swal-\nlow between meals. There was a re-\nport in those good old days of long\nago that a certain man who, reaching\nthe extreme age of 99 years and 11\nmonths, passed on leaving behind 999\nempty Mandrake bitter bottles and\nwe boys thought at that time, if he\nhad bought only one more bottle he\nwould have reached the century mark,\nbut Alas! it now looks as if those\ngood old days are gone forever, and\nin the place of the Town Agent we\nnotice the White Ribboned Ladies\ngathering dandelion and\nother herbs and from the report we\nlearn that they are adepts in making\ndecoctions which will make old age\nappear young, but this is only hear\nsay, but it it should be true, the tact\nwould only go to prove that the\nthirst of the former generations re-\nmains. Mr Clark's call was brief,\nbut that long dlelayed visit which\nhas brought back to the minds of the\nfew recollections of the Newbury of\n60 years ago was most welcome and\nas he bade his old friends adieu it\nwas with the promise that there\nwould not be such a long interval\nbetween this and his next visit.\nTuesday there came into town an-\nother Newbury boy, whose boyhood\ndays were spent here in the Seventies,\nRev. Gardiner S Butler of Demorest,\nGa. Mr Butler's home
16a15740cdc854da6f0f847329635c6c THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1899.532876680619 32.612638 -90.036751 Tuesday afternoon last, as we were\nbusy at our editorial table, a stranger\nentered and began firing at us with\ntwo guns. We were too surprised to\ndo any dodging, and our nearest pis-\ntol was ten feet away. It was all over\nin 15 seconds, however, and the shooter\nhad fired 12 bullets without even graz-\ning our hide. There were two bullet\nholes in the back of our chair, threa\nthrough the stovepipe behind us, and a\nwall received the other bullets. Wei\nrose up after awhile and took the man\nby the neck and slammed him around\nuntil he begged for mercy. He gave his\nname as Elklris, and said he was on\nhis way from Salt Lake to Prescott.\nWhen he arrived here it struck Jiim to\n an experiment. He had a curiosity\nto know whether an editor would fight,\nand what an editor would say in his\ndying moments. As a matter of fact\nho had nothing against us, and when\nthe affair was over he subscribed for\nthe Kicker and paid two years in ad-\nvance. That was tlie first time we had\nsat down without a gun within reach\nfor five years, and nobody need plan\non the idea that we will do it again.\nHad we been "heeled" Mr. Elkins\nwould now be sleeping with his fore-\nfathers. Nevertheless, he got enough\nat our hands to satisfy him that the\neditoriul fraternity of Arizona is not\nto be walked on, and tljat any experi\nments with the craft may result in\nspringing the bear-tra-
2fdacdad2cc60b935d3330cc75508e13 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1881.5520547628107 39.623709 -77.41082 the dormitories being so arranged asl\nto exclude rain and snow, only the\nair having full access at all times, all\nstimulants, including tea, cofiee alco-\nhol and tobacco, not being allowed\n•o n the premises because nervous de-\npression follows nervous exaltation,\n¦besides, they interfere with digestion\nand it destroys profound sleep. W e\nshould cultivate the farm' grow crops\nand raise farmers at the same time.\nThe milk, butter and cbeese from our\n¦dairy should go to market and estab-\nlish its reputation A. No. 1. Our fruits\nof all kinds and vegetables should fol-\nlow as soon as we could get them\nstarted In addition we shorn! grow\n•enough of the cereals and grasses to\nfeed our stock, preferring rather to\nbuy feed than fertilizers, though we\nshould use them freely when citcum-\nfitances required it and it was profita-\nble to do so. At the end of our \nyear, with our routine and discipline\nthoroughly established, our first class\nwould become sophomores and twen-\nty-five freshmen would be admitted,\nand so on for the third and fourth\nyear, when our numbers would be full.\nAt the end of our fourth year we\nshould graduate our first class of\ntwenty-five thoroughly accomplished\nfarmers, perfect in physique, longing\nto grapple with the problems of life,\nperfect in the art of faming, familiar\nwith all that had been written on the\nsubject, able themselves to write on\nany topic and give results of aciual\npractice, thoroughly accomplished in\nall the sciences relating to agriculture\nveil versed in English literature,\nskilled in mathematics, upright in\nmorals, economical and temperate in\ntheir habits. Such men would be or-\nnaments to society, would be able by\ntheir skill and labor, in this country\nof cheap lands, soon to purchase a\nfarm and establish themselves,
11dd1c0f18af7fee705261073b774f93 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.1301369545915 40.063962 -80.720915 vide. He said Judge Davenport, of Iowa,\nr would manage matters for lum. Witness\n1 telegraphed Senator Allison and the folf\nlowing afternoon received a replv and\nshowed it to them. It ran that it was\ni safe to consult Howe and if that cannot\nt be done to come on to Washington. Obe\njected to witness going to Howe, but he\ndid so and told Howe what he had heard\nnunc nam iuc uuiuuiuico were mere 10\n1 expose all frauds and that the beat thine\n1 witness could do would be to expose all\n1 he knew. Witness wm going to Texas\nand suggested to Senator Wadleigh that\nhe might hear from Littlefield in Washi\nington. Wadleigh said he was sorry thst\nf Littlefield could not be brought Cefore\nthe New Orleans Committee, and that ho\n1 would sooner see Tilden inaugurated\nthan Hayes elected by fraud. Witness\ntravelled with Collins" to San Antonia,\nand called at his room; he he had\ntalked with Littlefield and Spearing.\nWitness advised him to have nothing to\nI do with them, as it was a dead beat plan\n1 to make money; he replied that it had\n1 gone to far for that. Judge Murray of\n1 St. Louis had been telegraphed to, and\nthey must have money to go to St. Louis.\nHe then went upstairs and returned with\nSpearing and Littlefield, and they went\naway together in a car, but Collins came\nback after a few dayB.\nSpearing used to keep a liverv stable\nin Davenport, Iowa, where witness knew\nhim twenty vears ago. Littlefield stated\nto witness that Gov. Wells had given a\ncheck to each clerk of the Returning\nBoard for $2,500 outside of their salary,\nand had only offered him a petty collect*\norship, and that he felt insulted, and this\nwas a good chance to get oven, and he\ncould make a good speculation out of it\nbesides.
729ac732704a624e04e9f14ba57a2f1a THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.0860655421473 40.618676 -80.577293 After the nullification of the conspiracy laws\nagainst unions, employers still reluctant to negoti-\nite contracts with workers, thereby limiting their\ncontrol, found in anti-trust legislation and in\nequity law ways to make the union and union ac­\ntivity punishable by the government. The Sher­\nman Anti-Trust law had been on the statute books\nor years practically as a dead law, unenforceable\nuntil organized employers decided to use it to deny\ntheir employes the right to organize. After the\nBuck Stove and Range Company case denying La­\nbor the right to free speech, and Loewe vs. United\nHatters, the Federation organized its political\ntrength to get remedial legislation. Sections 6\nind 20 were written into the Clayton Anti-Trust\naw for the avowed purpose of freeing unions from\ninti-trust action and protecting them against\nibuses of the injunctive process. Later the use\nof injunctions industrial disputes was more\ncarefully regulated by the Norris-LaC.uardia act,\nand wage-earners' right te> union membership for\nthe purpose of collective bargaining was definitely\nestablished by Sectiem 7 (a) of the National Re­\ncovery Act and the National Labor Relations Act.\nAgainst all this progress comes the well-nigh\nincredible proposal to wipe out all Labor's gains in\nestablishing legal status for the union and those\nactivities by which Labor exercises its right to\nlife, liberty and pursuit of happiness and to set up\ndiscretionary regulation of unions by the Depart­\nment of Justice with threats of civil and criminal\naction under anti-trust law. The Department of\nJustice proposed to invade the field of private in­\ndustry as well as that of law makers, determining\nefficient methods of production and extending leg­\nislation to provide them with the tools to build up\ndictatorship over Labor..
11d7cb26992413141b2649de30edc865 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1907.2726027080162 37.451159 -86.90916 When Mr Teague found out I was\ngoing he said I should never take my\nbaby back with me Then he or some\none else started the report that I\nhad sold my children whom I had\nfought so hard for all the days before\nI was to start away the next morning\nhe followed and made all manner of\nthreats against me and being afraid\nof him and thinking my life in dan ¬\nger and knowing that he would try\nto take my baby by force I conceal ¬\ned a pistol and took my two little\ngirls and my two brothers went with\nme to the depot to bid me goodbye\nRichard and Robert Crenshaw As I\nwas standing in the waitingroom\nholding my baby by the hand he\nTeague came up and attempted to\nsnatch her from me I held on to her\nprecious form and oh how\ndear she was to me at that moment\nI never loved my baby quite so much\nas then I begged him to let go and\nwhen my two brothers saw us strug ¬\ngling they came to my rescue Just\nas they took hold of him in that aw ¬\nful moment I shot him I seemed to\nhave lost all reason and being sick\nand nervous I shqt him one time\nMy little daughters are and always\nhave been my most precious treas ¬\nures and God in heaven knows my\npoor brothers are Innocent and had\nno part in the trouble They are Im ¬\nplicated Just because they had their\nhands on him trying to reason with\nhim to get him to give up my baby\nbut I was so crazed at the time that\nI was not responsible for what I
0fefe461898ef86ac0fa1d2ba84c4f15 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.368493118975 40.063962 -80.720915 that's grand, any way." J*'\nIf, as Shakespeare savs, "all's well that rj\nends, well," then nil was well with Dr. nm\nRidgawav's fraternal address, for in his wit\nulosmg ^utterances on he subject of union me\nhe carried the conference by storm, lie est\nwag aware, he snid, t'ijat jt \\yas Ypfy bard\nto knock apples fron. a tree while thcv\nwere green, and when they had been ?ul\nknocked oil' they always proved to be very "I\naovir. When ripe, however, they would full }\naf themselves, and then were delicious to\nLhe taste. J5y and by the apple of organic jy\nunion would be ripe. Then everybody\nivmild u'nnt it. Jinil cliililron nrv fiM- i»\n[Loud applause.] The Doctor also re ferred\nto the difficulty p$perjencet| in bRijdiug\nthe i>reat bridge which span* the river b<£\ntweeu Cincinnati ami Covington. The aQ\n was cold and the irons would not ^\nmeet. A messenger was dispatched to the rt\\\nplace where the irons had been made. In *J\niiis absence a spell of warm weather so dig- '"I\ntended these irons that the workmen were l\nable to brjnjj t}}e;p together, JnstaRtly «\ni dispatch was sent to headquarters, *\n'They have met," the reply being Hashed h\nback, "Clamp thetji." JJy and hy, g\nsaid the doctor, under the warm rays of C)\nihe sun of ri jjhteousijees t||«ir two separated +*\nHetuodisms would meet, and ho felt sure &\nthat when they did all would bo in favor ©\nof clamping them- This and the compare IJ)\nson he drew in another nart of hia address\nbetween the Methodist itinerancy and Kxe- "g\nkid's vision of the wheels were the Doc- 0\ntor's two happiest hits.
5c6b1fb14a50299fd3bbe44f3119bbd6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.1493150367833 39.261561 -121.016059 I nm not vain enough to presume that my\nopinions will have any effect In nettling this\nvexed Kansas question. Still 1 am unwilling\nto have them misrepresented. 1 will state w hat\nI have said on this subject. When I arrived in\nWashington on the 25th Nov. last,directly from\nKansas, I fouud a division in the Democratic\nparty hors on that part of the President's Mes-\nsage relative to Kansas matters. I stated then,\nthat although there was no violation of princi-\nple iu not referring ths whole Constitution to\nthe people for a direct vete, it would have been\nwisar to have submitted it, aethers was an on-\nderstandiug amongst the people that sueh would\nbe the case, and all partiss would have been\nsatisfied. That the South nt best ceuld only\n a mere empty and temporary triumph,\nthe question having already been settled against\nthem by eraigratien, the only way in which\nthat settlement could permanently be effected.\nIn n few days after my arrival it was an-\nnounced that acting Governor Stanton had\ncouvened the Territorial Lcgislatnre in extra\nsession—a course he bad uudoubted authority\nto pursue, however much the policv may bit\ndoubted. The representatives of the pevple,\nelected by 13,000 voters, 9,000 of whom voted\nfor Mr. Isrrott for Congress, uh being opposed\nto any Constitution from the Lecompton Con-\nvention, passed a bill providing for the submis-\nsion of the Constitution to the people ftr a neg-\native vote, thus affording them the only oppor-\ntunity they eould have of expressing their ob-\njection to that instrument, or of being admitted
343738d86ad7f0d4d84ca5a4620cd8a3 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.6178081874682 31.960991 -90.983994 On or about the 13th day of Dec. 1841, I\ntaken with a violent pain in the side near the\nLiver, which continued for about five days,and\nwas followed by the breaking of an ulcer, or\nsomething inwardly, which relieved the pain a\nlittle, but caused inc to throw up agreart quan­\ntity of offensive matter and also much blood. —\nBeing greatly alarmed at this, I applied to a\nphysician, but Ifo said he thought he could do\nbut little forme except give me some Mercury\nPills, which I refused to take, feeling satisfied ;\nthat they could do me no good; many other rem­\nedies were then procured by my wife and friends,\nand none did me any good, and the discharge\nof blood and corruption still continued every :\nfew days, and at last became so offensive Ï\ncould scarcely breathe. 1 was also seized with\na violent cough, which at timos caused me to-\n much more blood than I had done before,\nand my disease continued in this wny, still\ngrowing worso until February, when all hope of\nmy recovery was given up, and my friends all\nthought I would die with a galloping\nTioN. At this moment, when my life was ap-\n^parently drawing near to u close, I heard of Da.\nWistars Balsam of Wild Cherry, and got a\nbottle, which relieved mo immediately, and by\nthe use of only three bottles of this medicine,\nall my paitrswere removed, my cough and spit­\nting of blood and corruption entirely stopped,\nand in a few weeks my health was so far res­\ntored as to enable ine to work at niv trade,\n(whieh is a Carpenter) and up to this time 1 have\nenjoyed good health.\nWitness. — I am acquainted with Mr. Thos\nCozens, and having seen him during his illness.\nI think tho above statement entitled to full
49fc2bfd67fee9dbf7980bfd761112cd MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1906.0342465436327 39.78373 -100.445882 lat he went upon the premises, mark-\ned and pointed out the boundaries to\nthe plaintiff, put him in possession and\naccepted a cow in payment. There-\nafter plaintiff hauled and sold sand\nfrom the pit exclusively and nis right\nto the same were expressly acknow-\nledged upon different occasions by\nClow, who directed to plaintiff, per-\nsons applying for sand. No evidence\nwas offered by the defendants.\nThe court was in doubt as to whether\nthe proofs showed asaleof the land out\nat the request of the plaintiff foum\nthat "he purchaseu tne sand situate I\nupon and in the sand hill described :n\nplaintiff's complaint and the exclusive\nrignt to take sand therefrom", tnit\nClow received and retained possession\nof the cow and that prior to and long\nafter his death plaintiff was in posses-\nsion of the property and taking sand.\nFrom a judgment in of de-\nfendants for their costs and an order\noverruling a motion for a new trial,\nthis appeal is taken.\nThe burden being upon the plaimiff\nto establish clearly an executed saie\nand there being a doubt as to whether\nClew intended to sell the land in fee,\nor only, the sand, leaving the land for\nhim or his estate when stripped of it.\nthe court properly refused to enforce\na conveyance of ihe freehold to plaint-\niff., but it having been plninly indi-\ncated by thf evidence and the court\nhaving found that there was an exe-\ncuted sale of the sand by Clow to\nthe plaintiff, the latter was entitled to\nrelief to fnat extent. In principle tne I\nnlaimiff has an interest in ie land!\nlike the right to remove stone or cut\ntimber rr n:a1r.t"!n a roadwav or othrr\nensomcnt, or Pko a lore or trT""
105c8827ff86c7f97c5f3f65a725cf61 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.616120186956 29.949932 -90.070116 8. At the elose of said lease, the said road. de-\nSpots, stations, rolling stock, etc., from Berwlek'\nay to the Texa line-,shall be valued by experts,\none to be appointed by each of the partes ereto,\nor and in the event of disagreement, th two to se-\nlect an empire, whose decisico shall be fal. The\nSvalue thereof tbhusAscertaned shall be subecribed\nmsstockln the present company, it being well on-\na derstood that all costs of maintesanee, u wellas\nSexpense of operating the road, shadllbe at the ex-\nclusive charge of the lessee.\n9. The contract with Charles Morgan for run-\nsno a line of steamersto Texa, extending to 1871\nto be carried out by the lessee in every rspect.\nS10. The present road to Berwick's Bay. ocud.\nleg depots, machbiae shops,rolling stooak, bridges,\netc., to be torned over tothe lessee after loves-\ntory and appratement, sad the said property, or\npropert oe like and value end like coo-\nditionad good order, to be retorned to the oom-\npany at the expiration of said lease.\n11.The leaee, to ilsure the faithful perform-\nance of this contract, to foranbshsecurity to the\nsatisfctllon of tie board of directors.\n12. The said lesses shall contribute and pay\nachyear the sum of 500S0.payablo quarterly, to\nkeep up and maintIl theorganalation of the raili-\nioad company draigthe exstencea of this lease.\n13. The said leseea obhigate themselves to do\nnoset whbichbmay operate a forfeiture of the char.\nter. ad shall hold the said N. O..U. and O. W. R.\nR. Co. harmless agaiset any and all acts of theire.\nBealedproposals will be re-eired at the onfl:e\nof the company in New Orfesan, No. 69 Canal\nstreet, until the first dayof 8eptember next, at 12\n'co-ock u , the comp•y reserving the right of re-\njecting any or all bide.\nFor particularinformatioo apply to
147839e919e90962e88250f2f3801857 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.3657533929477 40.063962 -80.720915 10 be remembered. The 6plendid Bin\n:* ing of Mme. Hitter Gootrve wj-b a cot\nJ* panion piece to that of Fischer, and\ncomparison with these two artists tl\nother soloists sank into complete Infi\nnificance. The choruses *ere poor\n|r rendered and the orchestra waa raggt\nB. and uneven all the time.\nr. | ^Ungrateful New York allows Thcodo\nk Thomas to depart juet when a hall\n3. opened uf which he should have bee\nB the director, a position to which his ioi\na! and faithful services in the cause\nc music, justly entitled him.\nt. The name of P. 9. Gilmore was st\nficient to crowd tho Lenox Lyceum c\n"e last tiundny evening, and the applaui\njj which greeted him was of a most nffe\nB. tionate nature. Maud Powell and Car\nB. panini were the two prominent solois\n1, of tho and displayed their g\nnius and perfect training in their ueu\nn artistic style. Gilmore is without doul\n>a the most popular conductor in Americ\nra and the difference last summer in tl\na audiences at Manhattan Beach and\nit Brighton was due the to difference in ti\nJ personal popularity of Leidl and Gi\n0 more. Not that the impression shou!\nit be conveyed that Leidl is unpopule\nj, but (iiimore's name was a househoi\nj. word long before Leidl dreamed\nt. crossing the Atlantic. In the capacil\n3 rtf orrunolno nrnurnmiiKW tn nloaiiM ti\ne multitude, Gilmore Btanda without\nt. rival, and a brilliant season may be ai\n0 ticipated when he open* at the Madiso\nv Square Garden on May 30tb.\n>f "Mrs. Wilkinson's Widows" ca\nd scarcely accommodate all their admire\na and the demand for seats has been t\n>
9a23d99654148b16455236f977bef18a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0259562525298 41.681744 -72.788147 contest for second ' place between\nStanley Rule and P. & . F. Corbin\ngirls and a battle for third place be.\ntween Stanley Works and New Brit\nain Machine men will feature to.\nnight's games in the Y. M. C . A. In-\ndustrial Basketball league.\nBetting is heavy tin the results of\ntonight's games and the players hava\ncaught the spirit. The teams, know,\ning that they will have to win to-\nnight in order that they might be in\nthe thick of the fight down the homo\nstretch, will put everything they hav\ninto the game.\nStarting lineups will represent tho\nfull strength of each factory. This\nyear the concerns which have been\nin the habit of being in the rear,\nhave made a special effort to send\nstrengthened teams on the floor. For\ninstance, Stanley Works realised\nit had a wonderful opportunity to\nwin the pennant so it railed every\nbasketball player of ability In tho\nfactory to Join the squad.\nLast year, an announcement that\nthe New Britain Machine, Stanley\nWorks and Landers were to play\nwould give the fans the signal to get\ninto their easy chairs at home, turn\non the radio and settle down for a.\nnice quiet evening. How times hava\nchanged! Last year the P. tc F.\nCorbin team in the girls' league waa\nin last place and when this team waa\ncarded to play the fans came early\nor went home late according to\nwhether the team played in the first\nor second game. This year, Ciarenco\nCoons made the rounds of the\nconcern and appeared with player\nwho were truly "diamonds In tho\nrough."
3b4b6ac482da5ec0daf7be5d66b826fa THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.7904109271942 42.217817 -85.891125 Co yrik'lit, l'.riS, ly American Tress Asm iatiuii. J\nThis also is written by the Holy\nSpirit, as David said in some of his last\nwords as the sweet psalmist of Israel,\n"The Spirit of the Lord spake by me,\nand His word was In my tongue" (II\nSam. xxlli, 1, 2). See also Acts 1, 10;\niv, 25. If we would honor Cod and be\nMessed by Him wo must not only be-\nlieve that nil Scripture was written by\nthe Holy Spirit, but that It was all\nwritten for our profit (II Tim. ill . Id,\n17; Horn, xv, 4). The occasion of this\npsalm Is given to us in what we might\ncall in our Hibles the preface to the\npsalm, but which in tho Hebrew\npsalter is part of the psalm itself and\nnumbered as verses 1 and 2, making\nthe whole psalm consist of twenty-on- e\ninstead of nineteen verses. The same\nDavid whom 11 od appointed a king and\na prophet proved himself to be a very\ngreat sinner. He did not in this sur-\nprise Cod. Cod knew him thorough-\nly before He called him; but inasmuch\nas the only human material God can\nget to work with is sinful, lie takes\nwhat He pleases and magnifies His\ngrace in stn h as wo are, shewing forth\nin greater or less degree our utter sin-\nfulness and 1 1 is amazing grace and\nlove. The Holy Spirit shows forth all\nthat is in man without respect of per-\nsons. Nothing is covered or made light\nof; but man, being fully exposed, is\nshown how he may be cleansed from\nall his sin by God's own provision.\nGod is all mercy and loving kindness\nand long suffering, but He is Just ami\ncannot tolerate siu, even though He\nbear long with the sinner (Ex. xxxlv,\nC, 7). He has provided, at infinite cost,\neternal redemption, including the for-\ngiveness of all sins, for every truly\npenitent sinnvr, but there must be on\nthe part of the sinner honest confession\nand forsaking of all sin. We are all by\nnature sinners. This is set forth gen-\nerally in verse
af5db7fde28c9c8f9feeaba02d02839c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.3794520230847 39.261561 -121.016059 tickets, were allowed a larger representation\nthan the real strength of the party entitled\nthem. The committee this year have decided\nthat the several counties shall be entitled to\none delegate for every two hundred votes giv-\nen for the candidate having the highest vote,\nwho was nominated exclusively by the Demo-\ncratic party. By this action of the committee,\nNtvnda county will lose two delegates in the\nConvention, as the vote of Mr. Findlty would\nhave entitled us to nineteen delegates; but as\nhe was nominated by the Settlers in ether\neonnties, he was not regarded as exclusively a\nDemocratic oandidaie. Judge Field, whose\nname was on no ticket but the Democratic, re-\nceived in this oounty 3,169 votes, which is the\nbasis on whiob the representation is fixed, and\nwhich entitles us to seventeen.delegates—one\ndelegate being allowed for the county, and one\nfor the fraction. Mr. Findley did not gain any\nvotes in this oounty in consequence of bis name\nbeing on the Settler ticket; be the\nvotes, however, of many personal friends of\nthe other two parties, and it would be im-\nproper to count them as Democrats. In the\ncleolion of delegates, the question of Lecomp-\nton and anti-Lecompton will doubtless be the\nmain issue in the primary meetings, and in\nmany counties the contest between the two\nwings will be fierce. We do not, bowevor, an-\nticipate any division ef the party, and feel quite\nconfident that all will go well if moderate coun-\nsels prevail in the Convention. The “reading\nout” process, if ever seriously entertained, has\nbeen abandoued by all, except a small clique\nof Federal officials, who have their head-quar-\nters at San Francisco, and who occasionally\npromulgate ediots of uxoommunication through\ntheir organ in that place. Distasteful resolu-\ntions must be kept out of the Convention. The\nmasses of the Demooraoy can be induced to\nsupport objectionable men whon fairly nomina-\nted, but they cannot be dragooned into sus\ntainiog principles which they do net approve.
12165e06a83394a8bfebc3e4c370446e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 At the iegular yearly meeting of tbe\nFourth street M. E . 8u»iday school, held\nMonday evening, the following cfficeri were\nelected: Superintendent, Guy R. C . Allen,\nEtq ; Assistant Superintendent, Chas. E .\nMorraoc; 8ecretiry, R. J . Bullsrd, Jr., Ai-\nsistant becre'ary, Georite Wincher; Treas¬\nurer. a A. Wayman; librarian, Jn-». Bailie;\nOrganist, Mrs. W . 8. Hutchini; Superintend¬\nent Infant Department, Mra. John Wairner:\nassistant, Mies Nannie Britt.\nAt the Pittsburgh Coal Works south of\ntown, there are half a dcaen or more Bwi's\nand they all sleep in a box filled with straw\nin o-e room. They make no pretense of\nhaving bed clothe*, but huddle together like\nuncivil'*^ beingj who can have nothing\nbetter. Now. one of them, Albert 8boop.\ninger hss the typhoid fever, it is quite\nprobable that the whole pone of them will\nbe down with tbe disease from the way they\nhave been 11 ving..Btllaire Independent.\nThe Bellalre Tribune says: "A more dif-\ngusting thing never appeared In print than\nthe fulsome account of the slugging match\nbetween tbe bruisera who were brought to\nWheeling and displayed their ind«o«ncies\nlast night, for the edification and enjoyment\nof the gamblers and fancy men of ttot very\nnice oily. That two thousaud people oonid\nbe brought together to witneis such a per¬\nformance and to p»y homage to a man who\nla a disgrace to hia raoe, Is not cr dltable to\nthe intftlllg nee or moral character of our\nslater city" Several prominent Bellalre\nmen of gjod standing paid $1 each for seats\nintheh11.
120753ed481cb7921bbed9b050c3241c SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1908.200819640508 43.624497 -72.518794 STATE OF VERMONT,- -) Whereas, A ina S.\nWindsor Countv. s . I Plrltptt Yif favpn.\ndish, Vt., has duly filed her petition to the County\nCourt, setting forth her legal marriage to Charles\nPickett of the State of Massachusetts j that she\nhath resided for ten years past in the County of\nvvinusor, uiai sno nain Kept ine marriage cove-\nnant, but that the said Charles hath violated the\nsame, for that he hath treated the libellant with\nintolerable sevef ity, and hath wantonly neglected\nand refused to Drovlde suitable maintpnrinrp. nnrt\nhath wilfully deserted the libellant for three con\nsecutive yoars ; wnereiore tne petltioner prays lor\na bill of divorce from the said Charles Pickett.\nAnd whereas it appears that said Charles Pickett\nis without this state, so that the summons of said\n may not be served upon him :\nIt is Thereupon Ordered that the said Charles\nPickett be notlfied and required to appear In and\nbefore said Court and make answer, if any he have,\nand abide the order and judgment of saia Court in\nthe premises, at the term thereof next to txi held\nat Woodstock, in andfor the County of Windsor in\nthe State of Vermont, on the first Tuesday of\nJune A. D. 1908, upon the first day of said term, by\npublishinp; the substance of said petition, together\nwith this order, for three successive weeks, in the\nSpirit of the Age, a newspaper publishcd at Wood-\nstock, in said County, the last publication to be at\nleast six weeks prior to said term of Court, which\nshall be deemea sufficient notice to said Charles\nPickett.
0278de07292dc72a98ae99bb9d48d741 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1905.132876680619 41.875555 -87.624421 Will the day ever come when men\nshall clamor for their rights and gtt\nthem as women have clamored for\ntheirs and are now enjoying them In\nabuudaiice? Chivalry Is one thing,\nbut Imposition is another. A whip-\nping post has been advocated for tho\nman who abuses his wife, but what\nredress Is there for tho man who Is\ntortured lu a hundred contemptible\nways by the woman who promised to\nlove and obey him? It seems to bo\nassumed that women belong to u high\ner order of beings and do not need\nthe saino measure of punishment for\ntheir misdeeds. There Is always tho\ntendency In court to let a woman off\nlightly because she Is a woman. Al -\nthough our laws arc made by men,\nthey aro framed In a way to protect\nand even favor women, lu family dis-\ncoid sympathy Is sure to bo given to\nthe woman, It Is possible to do so.\nA man may need It u hundred times\nover, but tho woman 1 the one llkel\nto get It. Will tho time over come\nwhen a huhmiil shall have alimony\nfiom tho woman who was his wife\nand refuses to live with him? Why\nshould not the woman with a large\nfortune bo compelled to enable her di-\nvorced husband to live In the same\nease and luxury bo did after he mar\nried her and shared her purse? It Is\nu hard thing for n man to 'jo turned\nnut Into the cold world and made to\nearn hi living after ho has enjoyed\ntho lu.wirlc of life. And why should\nn woman lu a breach of promise cine\nbe able to recover damages In court\nwhllo a man in liko circumstances\nslinks away, hides his diminished\nhead mid has no consolation what-\never? This process has gono on
228e324f85dc95cc44f5fa9059367f0d THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1879.7904109271942 39.743941 -84.63662 more than ten years of peace that the\nlast of the subjugated Southern States\nemerged from beneath the authority\nthe Washington bayonet a bayonet\nthat had turned oat ana installed Gov\nernors and Legislatures at the imperial\npleasure, the histono will of the sword,\nPower in the South gone, the leaders\nof the Republican party; the few\npossession of the political spoils the\nmasses have nothing to do in the mat-\nter have seen the necessity of desper-\nate measures to retain power in the\nNorth. The people of the Northern\nStates are really not aware of the na\nture and extent of the plans for power\nwhich the few men in control of the\nmachine at Washington have made and\nto which they cling with the energy\ndespair. Since the South can no longer\n snbjngated the North must be over\ncome by processes from Washingto- n-\nthat is, the North must be subjugated.\nThe Federal Election laws, known\nthe Deputy Marshal laws, authorize the\nFederal Government to move into cities\nof 20,000 inhabitants and over, and take\ncharge of elections. In cities of\nmany as 20,000 people an unlimited\nnumber of United States Deputy Mar\nshals may be appointed, all Republicans,\neach to receive $5 a day for as many\nten days, all clothed with power of ar\nrest without warrant, all given authority\nto suppress all State authority, each\none a political tyrant, paid from the\nFederal treasury, and rendering\nservice save to the Republican party.\nWhat does this power mean r\nThis is not a power to be exercised\nin the South, though it is doubtful
0b4c6f4d355b0d83dbc1bea79328a247 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.9986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 End or the Sensational Polsont\nCase.I .lftj Imprisonment^ I'ona\nImposed.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., §&.\nPnthor tn Ihp cnprnl HlirDrUl Of th1\nwho have followed the Botjtln tr\nand to the entire dismay of tlii-defci\nant and her attorney. Mr*.|Cordc\nBotkin was to-night found fktillty\nmurder in the first degree, for fca'usl\nthe death of Mrs. John P. Dinning\nsending a l>ox of poisoned &*ndy\nher temporary home In Dovei^Del. 1\ncondemned murderess will be Spared\nignominious death on the galldws, ho\never, the Jury that found h#r fullty 1\nposing also the penalty of Uf$ Impr\nonment. The verdict was unexpect\nAn acquittal was confidently await\nby the defense, while the proiecuti\nfeared a disagreement. Rumors h\nbeen In circulation to the effect t*\nseveral of the Jurors strongly, favor\ntho defenHe. and that their ^opinio\nwere too firmly grounded to M fapal\nof a change. Although the -Jury\nout only four hours, more thntf one\nwhich was devoted to dlnnerjft ,is c»\nrently reported to-night tbalRthe v<\ndiet was the result of a cofcpvuml\nThe sex of a prisoner ip' a cc\nslusion satisfactory to the juMta.\nConsidering the unoxpectefflat-Rfl\nthe verdict. Mrs. Botklft-kei&; hers\nwell In hand when her. fate* :was a\nnounecd. Not until the jaratMn a\nmnst of tho spectators lAiiiwft t\ncourt room did she give avsHMhce\nvoUapae. Then she sank bifok hu\nfainting, but speedily revived wh\ngiven u glass of water. Judkc Co\nannounced that Henictice., . _jreUld\npronounced on Saturday/"Tftttiliary\nHe then remund( 1 the prisoner to (\njuntody of the sheriff, to be IroprlHor\nin the branch county jail uiltU call\nto receive her sentence, wbe&Ahe v\n}e trnnsfered to the stute penitential\nThe court room was cleared whi\nlust after Mrs. Rotkin had MHounc\nin the deputy sheriff In a (dear vol\nthat she was ready to go w!|&. him\nprison, occurred the only :SfP»i\\tlor\nincident of the evening. 3fche ce\nlemned woman attempted to rise, wh\nicr highly strung nerves seeitikd to\nlax, and suddenly she fell back Jr\nthe arms of Mrs. Roberts. mlt- w\nthought she had fainted*, but 111 a m\nnent a glass of water revive^ller,
36b6cdfd685eea5039262128652bb58f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.678082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 Oolowbs, September 3. - In Athena mi\ncounty, where the Democracy hoped to cr<\ngain by forming a combination with a few m(\noared Republicans there haa been a moat cei\nnoticeable change during the put few foi\nweeka, and many who joined the ao-called Coi\nIndependent movement have already Qr\nbecome dlagutted and returned to the Re- wc\npublican party, and at the same time given thi\nInformation as to the plana to be adopted at\nby the Democratic Committee In order to Th\ndefeat certain ones on the Republican wil\nticket. The fullexpeaure of the ichemehaa te°\ndeveloped the fact that money haa been\nused in tormina the combination, and aid* fail\ning In bringing about the result. Names oyi\ncould be given, but at present are with- be\nheld for obvious reasons, but the plotters Yo\nare closely shadowed, and every move pot\nknown. My informant states that in the Thi\nentire county there are not fifty Repub- too\nUcani who will be led to vote tbo Demo- era\ncratlc ticket, even if it goes under the era\nname of Independent. But he does be- Thi\nlieve that a large number of Democrats stil\nwill either scratch Ewlng, or at pea\nhome on election day. At Nelsonviilo the bov\nminers are all work, and better satisfied moi\nthan for years gone by, the difference in tha\nthe value of their money more than makes cou\nup the difference, and they have seat\nno love for "fiat money," and the tint\ntime has gone by when the miners can be said\naroused by demagogues to act: wholly mot\nagainst their own interests, and any effort will\nin this direction will not avail the Demo- for\ncrats at the present time. It is the belief re«\nthat the miners around Nelsonvllle, inci\nStraltsville, Haydenvillo and Shawnee the\nwill cast the largest Republican vote that nest\nthe party has ever received in those locaii- bett\nties. The new furnaces which have re- hav\ncentiy been started on the new road from citii\nN'elsonviile to Monday Greek are in full\niperation, and give employment to a large 1\nlumber of men, a large majority of which C\nwill vote the Republican ticket for the witl\nIrsttimo. The coal and iron business of ^\nJie Hocking Valley Railroad has vastly\nncreased, and around the mines there are um<\n10 idle hands, unless it be from choice. pan
06dd28e95dd9df602fa4b5dc3f1f064f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.9109588723998 58.275556 -134.3925 Uccause of tho large amounts to\nbe collected, the Uureau of Internal\nRevenue will bo compelled to check\nthe Income-tax returns filed by tax¬\npayers more closely than heretofore.\nTho retnll merchant who is ablo to\nplace before the Internul-revcnue In¬\nspector book records showing exactly\nhow he arrived at his statcmont of\nnet income will greatly facilitate\nthe government's tus'.. of collecting\nthe war revenues and save himself\nannoyance and expense.\n"No special system of accounts Is\nprescribed by the Internal Revenue\nllureun. but tho books should show\nin detail inventories, purchases,\nsales, capital Investments, depreda¬\ntion and similar Items rcquirod In\nmaking up the tho Income-tax re¬\nturn. Kvery merchant should study\nthe Income-tax law and regulations\nand see to It that his accounts are\nkept In such a manner thnt will\nenable him to determine his net in¬\ncome for taxation purposes.\nKeopinp Systematic Accounts\nAhI<Io fruni the necessity of kcep-\nliiK systematic accounts in order to\ncomply with tho government's re¬\nquirements. ovory progressive mer¬\nchant should adopt nil approved ac¬\ncounting system f or the Rood of his\nown business. In no other way can\nho further IiIh financial Interests\nmore effectively. It has been proven\ntime and time again that accurate\naccounts are absolutely essential to\nsuccess In business. Tho inerchunt\nwho Iuih a good nccountltiK system\nIs able to eliminate wnsto and\nunnecessary expense and can so con¬\ntrol his purchases and his cr^lits\nas to greatly lessen tho chnnce of\nfailure. Tho inventory, which can\nnot be tuken without some form of\naccounts, Is the compass of a busi¬
2f2ee69d17a271da133e400d1e648b4f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.1767122970573 37.561813 -75.84108 "Enlightened statesmen, in the ea\nger pursuit of remedies for political\nabuses and for the arbitrary control of\nmajorities, have devised a plan for se\ncuring the representation of minori-\nties by cumulative voting. In muni\ncipal organizations first, and since\nthen in the more extended spheres of\npopular representation, the pian has\nbeen adopted with satisfactory results.\nIn Denmark and England, in numer\nous cities and townships in Pennsyl\nvania, and in the State of Illinois at\nlarge, it has been successfully carried\ninto practice. In the latter, three\nrepresentatives, or members of the\nmore numerous branch of the Le\nlature, are elected in each Senatorial\ndistrict, and each qualified voter may\ncast three votes for one person, or\ndistribute them as he may think fit\nAt the late election the object in view,\nproportional representation was se\ncured; and the composition of the\nHouse of Representatives is said to r.J\nfleet, in eract proportions, the nu\n strength of parties of the\nbtate. By this plan, with the great\nest preponderance a majority is likely\nto possess, a minority is sure in a\nrepresentation to detect, resist, and\nexpose abuses. I differ with my learn\ned predecessor in regard to the pow\ner of the legislature to adopt this\nplan; and believing that it will prove\ncheck to the tendency of majorities\nrepresentative bodies to disregard\nthe rights of minorities, and to forget\nthe consciousness of their strength,\nthat the interests of their constitu-\nents are par amount to their own, I\nreepectfully recommend that it be\nadopted in the City of New York, for\ncases in which more than one person\nfor the same body is to be voted for."\nIn the next place,! present the opin\nion of Gov. Hendricks, of Indiana,\nDemocrat of jeweled intellect and a\nstatesman of the highest repute. In\nMb late message to the Indiana Leg-\nislature he remarks:
4f27f3ccfa403a2286bf07be4f2fc939 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1872.0887977825846 42.217817 -85.891125 Tho poor little bantling first saw the\nlight in Missouri, and at its birth\nkicked and squalled lustily. But its in-\njudicious parents exposed it too soon.\nMamma Schurz carried it around the\ncountry, holding it up for exhibition,\ndandling it and talking nonsense to it\nafter the fashion of fond mothers, reck\nless of the ellect of the uncongenial\natmosphere on its constitution. Then\nBlair took it into his rough nursing,\nshaking the remaining life out of his\nlittle body. When the Blairs take a\npolitical infant into their charge the\nundertaker and sexton may as well be\nnotified at once. Thero is no hope.\nThe Democracy at first showed some\nsigns of favoring passivism, but a change\nhas como over them, and there is a vig-\norous repudiation of the scheme. To\ngive the masses of that party their due,\nwe do not believe met with any favor\nat their hands. The country press de-\nnounced it with great unanimity. It\nmet with little favor in Ohio from any\nportion of tho Democracy. In Ken-\ntucky the Bourbons rejected it, and the\nprogressives hung back with suspicion.\nBut among tho leaders of the party\nin the North, outside of those States,\nthere were indications of willingness to\ntry the experiment.\nWe doubt if there was an honest pur-\npose of adopting the policy even among\nthese, and that view we have repeatedly\ninsisted on. The design was to induce\na serious defection from tho Kepublican\nranks, and when tho breach between\nthe Kepublican factions had become so\nwide as to prevent a union, then the\nDemocratic party would have thrown\noff the " passive" mask and shown\nitself as active, unscrupulous and greedy\nfor office as ever. The scheme fail
b7def78e041fc272f83ae73261f2f143 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.532876680619 39.261561 -121.016059 Tl>o undersigned, desirous of acquainting those who may\nbe unfortunate enough to be similarly afflicted, where a\npermanent relief of their sufferings may be obtained, feels\nit his duty to thus publicly express his most sincere grati-\ntude to Dr. L . J. CziPKAT for the permanent recovery of\nhis health. Borne down bv the distressing symptoms in\ncident to the vicious practice of uncontrolable passion in\nyouth: depressed in body and mind; unable to perform\neven the most trifling duty imposed upon the daily avoca-\ntions of life, I sought the advice of many physicians, who\nat first regarded my disease as of trifling importance—but\nalas ! after a few weeks, and in several instances months,\nof their treatment, I found to my unutterable horror, that\ninstead of relief, my symptoms became more alarming in\ntheir torture; and, being told by one that my disease, be-\ning principally confined to the brain, medicines would be\nof little consequence, I despaired of e*er regaining my\nhealth, strength, and energy; as a last resort, and\nwith but faint hope, called upon Dr. Czapkay, who, after\nexamining my case, prescribed some medicine which al-\nmost instantly relieved me of the dull pain and dizziness in\nmy head. Encouraged by this result, I resolved to place\nmyself immediately under his care, and by a strict obedi-\nence to all his directions and advice, ray head became clear,\niny ideas collected, the constant pain in my back and\ngroins, the weakness in my limbs, the nervous reaction of\nmy whole body on the slightest alarm or excitement, the\nmisanthropy and evil forbodings. the self distrust and want\nol confidence in others, the inability to study and want of\nresolution, the frightful, exciting and at times pleasurable\ndreams at night, followed by involuntary discharges, have\nall disappeared: and in fact, in two months after having\nconsulted the Doctor, I felt as if inspired by a new life—-\nthat life which, but a short time ago, 1 contemplated to\neud by my own hand.
330a6a5c9a97124b80a0a88449f8a8ba THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.3931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 Mivr You, May 21.A dispatch Iron\n>odon says that the revised version o\na New Testament was received tlier\nIth an almost unbroken chorus of disaf\noval. The public are astounded at lb\nimberaod character of the changes L\ne authorised text. Ibe Bishop of Uioii\nater, iu presenting the work to the Ooi\ni cation, announced that in tbe tiospel\nle changes average nine to each fiv\ntrees, and in the Epistles three cbangi\neach veri>e. Elaborate criticisms appes\ni most of the dally papers, ali,couilemni\ntry and convicting the revisors of disri\nuding their pledges to induce the (ewe;\niterations pcsuble.\nMeantime 2 (100.000 eopits of the Test!\nlent have been BO It I. The Oambridg\nnd Oxford Universities, who own tti\napyright, are crno puling with each otbi\n1 a undignified manner; but bot\nre uuable to supply the orders receive\n(tar April. The Testament is pul\nahed ia various et>le«, at prices rangic\nrom one shilling to two pounds.\nIt is understood that an net oi Pa«li\nleal Hi^iuiiod tu enforce 'hs useoi lb\new torsion by the lvglish church, bi\nhe Govern in*, tit have i o intention of pn\noeingsuen auac% \\sihreajec totl\ntmaricau bible Society'b u*o of the reviet\neiaion, it ia eaid tbu tUo hcciety canai\nDU«h tUtjLo*' wition, uudtr their cl;a\nBr, v*ithoutinvMlvij «thewctlvtsio coul\nMHla.VMUiit. If they wero \\o pub.ieh\nBviscd edition many persona wuuld ev\nhtm for the novuiy <f funds givi\nhern for the priming and distribution\nhe b\\ JruiHs version, and they c»nr\ndd nrotiucg to the Bible us Low pu\nIshed by thcui.
1aa5cb0e90e9a1e96ed6e7d6f603e312 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1917.2616438039067 36.620892 -90.823455 Why Reads Nsed Mere Money.\nMr Kruttscbnltt's testimony also bad\na bearing on tbs reasons for the appli-\ncation of the mads to the Interstate\nCommerce Commission for a general\nsdvsnce In freight rates. He showed\nthat while the price of transportation\nbos declined In recent years, the cost\nof producing trsnsiortatlon, like the\ncost of almost everything elxe; bss rap-\nidly advanced. This be Illustrated by\nshowing that If freight and passenger\nrates bad Increased during tbs past\ntwenty years in the same proportion ss\naverage commodity prices the railroads\nof the United States would have re-\nceived II, 864,000,000 more for trans\nportntlon hi 1015 than they did receive\nThis saving to the. public ws effect\nOd, In spite of an Increase of 83 per\ncent In the cost of operation tralus.\nby a reduction In the average paasen.\nger rate per aula from 4.04 can is In\n1809 to 1.08 cents m 1915, a decrease\nof 8 per cent, snd by a reduction In the\naverage freight rate per ton mile from\n8.3B mills In 1805 to 7.3 mills In 1015. or\n13 per cent ' During the same period\nthe coat of operation per train mile\nrose from 02 cents to $1 .78, almost\ndoubling. At the same time the aver\nage price of 346 commodities eaumor\nsted In a bulletin of ,the Department of\nAgriculture Increased 116 per cent.\nTransportation la practically the only\ncommodity In general nse that baa not\nincreased tremendously la price during\nthe psst twenty years, freight and pas-\nsenger charges being lower tbso they\nwere twenty years ago.
0aaac1c9e61942b195a02682935d25cc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1920.9193988754807 41.681744 -72.788147 Cuts in wages amounting in prac-\ntically every instance to 25 per cent\nof the present salary will shortly be-\ncome effective in several of the lead-in- s\ngroceries and meat markets\nthroughout the city and may be fol-\nlowed by similar action in the cases\nof smaller dealers if plans now be-\ning made by the managers of those\nestablishments mature. The cuts will\nbe uniform, it is expected, making\nIt of Jjut slight benefit for employes\nto give up their present positions for\nsimilar places in other grocery stores\noror markets. It is probable that the\nChamber of Commerce will be asked\nto serve as a medium through which\nthe managers and proprietors of\nstores may come together to discuss\nthe new wage scale.\nOne of the city's leading grocers\nexplained this morning that the at-\ntitude of store labor throughout the\nwar and period immediately follow-\ning the war has such that store-\nkeepers have been subjected to "hold-\nups," figuratively speaking. Men re-\nceiving the highest wages have proven\nincompetent. In addition, clerks re-\nfuse to adapt themselves to the needs\nof the establishment and continually\nobserve a strict line of demarkation\nbetween the duties of a clerk, sales-\nman and butcher, making it extreme-\nly difficult for the manager.\nIt is the belief of a number of\nmerchants that better results can be\naccomplished by cutting the salaries\nof present employes and retaining\ntheir services than by discharging\nthose now employed and hiring new\nand cheaper help. Those taking new\npositions will invariably be required\nto work for less than their old sal-\naries and wilt be handicapped also\nby the fact that for a time they must\nbe regarded as "green" help. For\nthe merchant, the hiring iof inex-\nperienced workers will tend to de-\nstroy the smooth-runnin- g
06afc0dd61a377d6117828c63eb36fd5 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.5575342148657 39.756121 -99.323985 are never in a hurry about anything.\nThe representatives must look after\ntheir reelections every two years, while\nthe senators do not bother about their\ncontinuance in public life because they\nare elected for six years and are not\nrequired to do any biennial hustling,\nIn the intermediate years they sol\nemnly and carefully look after their\npolitical interests, but they are never\nin a hurry. Nor do they hurry to move\naway from the national capital. It\nhappens that some of them are so well\nfixed here that they prefer to linger.\nSenator McMillan, of Michigan, owns\none of the finest residences on one of\nour popular avenues. He is as much at\nhome here as he is in Detroit. By the\nway, he told the writer one day not\nlong ago that when he was married\nhe bought a little house on the install\nxnent plan. When it was paid for his\ninstallments of children caused him to\nrequire more room, so he bought an\n house on the installment\nplan. As he grew in wealth", he Bought\nall of the houses in that row; and,\nupon becoming a millionaire, he bought\nthe entire block of ground upon which\nhe made this beginning and erected\nthereou the palace which is his home.\nThe senators from one state in our\nunion never buy homes in this) city. It\nwill be many a long day before the\nstatesmen of Minnesota forget the fate\nof Senator William Windom on the\nhouse question. When he was a candi\ndate for reelection in 1S80, one of his\npolitical opponents caused thousands\nof copies of photographs of his splen\ndid Washington residence to be sent\nto the people of Minnesota. The peo-\nple were informed that Senator Win-\ndom had built that palace in the na\ntional capital because he intended to\nlive there for the remainder of his life;\nand that no citizen of Minnesota ever\nowned or lived in so fine a mansion\nWindom was defeated.
086c43a1611cd13449d7875eb39a5582 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.864383529934 41.004121 -76.453816 The Petrified Body or a Giant\nTen Feet and a Hale High Ex\nhumed. Tho Syriicuso Courier says :\nOn Saturday morning labt, two men by\ntlio nameof Gideon Emmons and Henry\nNichols, wero engaged in digging a\nwell on tho farm of Mr. Newel, about a\nmile and a half from Carnlff,when they\nsuddenly camo upon what appeared to\nbo a man's foot of colossal dimensions ;\nat first they wero somewhat startled, as\na matter of courso ; and proceeding to\ndig around it thoy discovered tho legs\nnnd body of what thoy supposed to ban\npetrified roan of monstrous size. Tho\nbody lay about two nnd n hilf feet be-\nlow tho surface of tho earth, on its back,\nwith its right arm and hand crossed up-\non Its breast. Its legs werecrosscd,ono\nlying upon nnd across tlio Tho\nnews of tho discovery of tho supposed\nhuman being spread like wiidliro\nthrough tho valley, and nil day Satur-\nday and Sunday hundreds of people vis\nited tho locality. Dr. J. F . Boynton.of\nthis city a geologist of celebrity, paid n\nvisit to tho Iocall ty,yestofday afternoon ,\nand mado n most thorough examina-\ntion, nnd pronounces it to boa statue of\na Caucasian, Tlio features nro finely\ncut and arc in perfect harmony. Tho\nstone is tlio gypsum of Onondaga coun\nty. It is thodoctor's opinion that tho\nstntuo was carved by tho Jesuits or tho\nearly Inhabitants of tlio country, and\nwas placod in tho slough In which it\nwas found for tho purpose of concealing\nIt. Tho dimensions mid proportion of\ntlio statue aro colossal and majestic. Its\nlength Is ten feet threo inches. Wo
1f4f67db8eb5c5c50e7b464bc775500d THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.009589009386 38.951883 -92.333737 Columbia instead of being designated\nthe Athens of Missouri might be call-\ned with equal propricy the Gty of\nColumns It is the mast columnar city\nin the state It has two croups of col\numns half a mile apart on the same\nstreet in plain view of each other both\nof them impressive and notable At the\nsouth end of Eighth street stand the six\nlowering massne pillars or columns\nmarking the she of the old university\nbuilding noble ruins reminding you of\nthe ruins of ancient temples in Greece\nAt the north end of Eighth street are\nfour pillars equal in size and height to\nthe six at the south end These mark\nthe site of the old county court house\ndestroyed by fire a long time aco These\ntwo remarkable or groups of column\ngive the town a truly classical aspect\nAfter I had spent some days at the\nsouth end of Eighth street and had im\nbibed the university atmosphere and had\nbegun to feel the depression of my little\nLatin and less Croek I turned to the\nother set of pillars those at the riorth\nend with the view of visiting the new\ncounty court house in which place one\ntnay always inquire successfully for rural\ninformation Then again I wanted to\nsee North Gentry successor to the late\nColonel Switzler as local historian and\nwhose office is in the Guitar buiding\nOpposite this buiding I encountered a\nsight that stopped me with astonishment\nJust as I was conning over in my mind\nsome Lain case endings and long forgot- -
27f9c5725f013defb5b8595ad62248cc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.0890410641807 41.681744 -72.788147 Mr. T3aruch's evidence was intensely\nInteresting. We do not recall such\na simple proposition. in the gentle art\nof making a fortune with a few days.\nNaturally an artist in the emotions\nof the street, he kept his eyes right\non the news columns of thfe daily\nnewspapers, morning and afternoon,\nto keep informed as to the likely at-\ntitude of the central powers in parti-\ncular and the Allied powers in general.\nHe came to the conclusion that, while\npeace might not be in sight, the\nslightest reference to peace emanat-\ning from any of the belligerent coun-\ntries would impart to the street a\nstate of nerves. He began to sell\nshort, that is he began to exercise a\njudgment which told him of falling\nprices. He says he needed no "leak"\nfrom Washington to guide his \ntions. All he required was "the eye."\nHe was right in his calculations and,\nIn consequence, cleaned up nearly a\nhalf million without affecting in any\nmanner the organization, control or\nprosperity of the concerns in whose\nstocks he dabbled extensively and in\nwhose welfare he does not appear to\nbe concerned. This simple experience\nreminds us of the man from the south\nwho, after a few days watching the\nmarket, came to the conclusion that\nwhat some chap made some other\nchap lost. We forebear to discuss\nthe difference between this transac-\ntion and a like transaction aided by\nthe roulette wheel, but, of course,\nthere must be one for the law forbids\nthe one and sanctions the other..\nAs for the " consideration of the\n"leak" Itself, as forced by the testi-\nmony given the investigating
127b8706c06cced5e4104110e4cbfe34 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.457650241601 41.004121 -76.453816 her daughter's daiiger, increased 'the fury of1\nher assault with tho mallet, and although tho\nbear got ho girl iu his embrace; it (dropped\nher beforo doing material injury to nard off\nthe attacks oft the mother.\nThe UeW of the pen was how slipper with\nbloodithativvas flowing from the wounds of\ntho bear j for ithe girl had struck With 'the'\nedge of tho ax and buried it somewhere In\nthe aniinkl every, time.\nWhen the bear turned on the mother she'\nshouted to her daughter to run to the house\nand get, he rifle. While sho was gone her\nmother' succeeded iu keeping the bear from\ngetting too close to ber.but when the daugh-\nter returned with tho rifle she was about ex-\nhausted, and was fighting from a corner into\nwhich the bear was pressing her closely.hav-iu- g\ndisarmed her. put the barrel of\ntho gnu through a chink, in the logs and fir-\ned. Tho!ball entered behind tho bear's foro\nshoulder, and ha fell to the floor and died\nin a short time.\nIt was a long timo before Mrs. Butler\ncould summon strength enough to climb out\nof tho enclosure and aa soon as the excite-\nment tha$ had sustained tho daughter was\nover the latter fell fainting to tho ground,\nand it was two hours boforo sho could, got\nabout agaiu. iHer clothing was nearly all\ntorn from her by tho claws of tho bear; but;\nneither of 'the women sustained any serious\ninjury. Monday Jeunio walked out to whero\nher father 'waa at work and told him of their\nadventure, when ho returned homo with her\nand skinned nnd dressed tho bear. It weigh-c- b\nover three hundred pounds.
71172ff11b7b097e22bb84cab8fe80ab THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.821038219743 38.729625 -120.798546 Oh ! Stephen Lenard, Stephen Lenard !\ndo you know that to morrows sun will\nrise upon aching hearts and hitter tears?\nHave you thought of the happy home and\nkind loving faces, from which you are\nluring that gentle one! Cannot those\ndaik eyes of yours peer into the mirror of\nfuturity and look upon a lonely wife, pi-\nning in some gloomy harrack-chamber,\nhearing nothing hut tit* coarse jests and\nribald talk of the soldiery ? Look again.\nIs that slight (rame lilted to hear the wea-\nrying night marches and the horrors of a\nbattle plain ? Aye, the arm you are wa-\nving is strong and muscular, Stephen, and\nyou think not of the time when it shall he\nweak and powerless as an infant's, when\nthe lips upon w hich you are gazing shall\ncall ujion you in vain, when the head you\narc holding so near your own «shall rest in-\ndeed on your bosom, and the hands you\narc clasping he thrown wildly round you,\nhut the embrace shall not he returned.\n Ellen stands at the door. As she\npa-sed it. I he old clock on the stairs struck\ntwelve; the echo has died away, hut its\npendulum i> swining backward and for-\nward with its dull, monotonous tick, tiek,\nseeming every mommi to grow louder and\nmore solemn. Ellen shudders ; she is\nthinking how, since her hand lias been\nlarge enough, her mother has never suffer-\ned any other to wind that clock, and how\noften she has gazed on its curious old face\nwith wonder. Who will wind it to-night?\n“Ohi mother, mother !” lint the door is\nopen, and Stephen is there. Thy little\nthink how often in the dead of night, in\ntrial, sorrow, and even privation, w ill that\ncry go up from her heart, though it pass-\netti not In r lips. “Oh, mother, mother!”\nand the clock ticks on—on, through the\nsolemn hours of the night; on, through\nthe dull sorrow ful days that succeed ; on,\nin mournful monotony through hours and\ndays and years; on, and on, and on !
23b91dc5c0e666d18b9eb0c666f8b2bb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.9658469629123 41.681744 -72.788147 The moment the motion is made, if\nit be made, to increase their, salaries,\nan amendment should be offered ap-\npointing a commission to investigate\nand report upon the best .manner of\nabandoning the county form of gov\nernment. We suggest a state commis-\nsion of investigation because the dis-\ntribution ot the duties of the commis-\nsions should proceed in an orderly\nmanner. There is nothing complicat\ned about the job. The duties can be\neasily disposed of, but the general as-\nsembly should not be formally asked\nto abolish the county form, of govern-\nment until all the facts are before it.\nThere would be involved, for example,\nthe transfer to a state excise commis-\nsion the power of issuing liquor li-\ncenses, the transfer to the state of the\ncare the county jails, county courts\nand county homes. These are serious\nand major duties of the county gov-\nernment which could be better done\nby. the state than by the county. In\naddition to the Improvement that\nwould follow in the administration of\nthe county, then merged into the\nstate, there would be removed from\nthe political life of the state an ar-\nchaic instrument of government in\nitself objectionable as such, and a\npurely partisan machine which is\npractically superior to all authority\nand removable by none.\nIt is purely incidental to the situa-\ntion that the present commissioners\nare all members of the republican\nparty. The situation would be im-\nproved in no degree whatever by\nmaking them democrats. The fault\nis in the system and not in the\ncommissioners.
036b661d9071be6776a0e6078fddeaa1 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1908.099726744333 39.623709 -77.41082 The Monocacy Valley railroad was built\nto build up an industry, lying on the bor-\nder of Thurmont. Why that industry suf-\nfered through failure wus no fault of the\nM. V . railroad, but on the other hand if\nthe M. V . railroad had not been built\nthere would be no work at Catoctin today.\nThurmont has received thousands of dol-\nlars due directly froip, and to its exist-\nence, and if the people do not appreciate\nits existence, the W. M . railroad does and\nlyijl protect its'trade.\nWhen the M- V. railroad was built the\nW. M, railroad hud <l° cars over 40,000\ncapacity, most of them 30,000 and 30,000 ,\ntherefore its track waslald with some 40,\n50 and 50 pound rail;; the 40-pound have\nall been replaced with 60-pound and most\nof the 50-pouM, the capacity of the cars\nhas more than doubled and it is necessary\nto keep pace with the times, as renewals\nof rails is a small item of cost in compar-\nison a good roadbed.\nThe haul of the Monocacy Valley has\nbeen in carloads of dead weight freight,\nand it was necessary to have a substan-\ntial roadßed, and the Nf. V. has its tracks\nthoroughly ballasted all the way through.\nIn regard to the W., F. &G., the writ-\ner knows the M. V. has not laid one straw\nin its way; 1 have have talked with its\nsuperintendent, and he seems as anxious\nas any one else to have the W., F. &G.\ncome through Thurmont, and I understand\nwhat they ask is cost, if they desire their\nroad; surely the trade they have main-\ntained is worth something.\nThe first line surveyed via Eicholtzmill\njs about one nqile shorter than via Catoc-\ntin and easy grading; that line passes\nwithin one and one-half miles of Creag-\nerstown at its nearest point, and will be\nabout midway between the mountains and\nthe Monocacy river, and get the whole\nfarming trade west of the river.\nIf the writer knew the ultimate inten-
1332bf5971cdf41ab0983a67b1db9e29 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.4506848997971 37.53119 -84.661888 DUNN At 430 Thureday mornin\ntho sweet spirit of Mrs Jeanie Saulle\nDunn returned to Him who gave It and\nnow the homo of Judge M C Saufley\nis darkened with deepest grief Mrs\nDunn who was born at McMlnnvllle\nTonu March 1511563was the oldest\nchild of Judge and Mrs Siulloy and\nhers being the first death In the fami ¬\nly makes it the harder to bear For a\nnumber of years she had been In very\npoor health but the Illness Attending\nher death begun Tuesday afternoon\nwhen she spoke of not feeling well and\nwent to her room Wednesday she was\nthought to be no worse but about 10\noclock that night she begun to rapidly\nsink and was never conscious after ¬\nward Although she bad a complica ¬\ntion of troubles her doctors pronounced\nheart disease as the immediate cause of\nher Almost an Invalid for\nyears and her body racking with pain\nMrs Dunn was always cheerful and her\nchristian fortitude was beautiful to be ¬\nhold She was passionately fond of\nmusic and even her frail condition and\nalmost total lose of voIce by weakness\ndid not keep her from playing the piano\nfrequently She was a splendid musi ¬\ncian and for several years successfully\ntaught that art Mrs Dunn joined the\nPresbyterian church whoa a more girl\nand bad since been a faithful follower\nof the meek and lowly Nazarinu A\nlittle daughter Sarah just 13 years old\nis loft to fool tho want of a mothers\ntender guidance and she and others of\nthe family circle have unbounded sym ¬\npathy In their great bereavement At\n10 oclock this morning after short\nservices at tho grave In Buffalo Springs\nCemetery by Rev S M Rankin
0df05fde01d74a878d06dd165274ed14 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.5040983290326 46.187885 -123.831256 About 1600 a stranger named\nTebaldo established himself as a\nmerchant in Venice, fie became\nenamored of the daughter of an\nancient house, and asking her\nhand was rejected, the young lady\nalready being affianced. Enraged,\nhe set himself to plan revenge,\nand, being a skillful mechanician,\nhe invented a formidable weapon.\nThis was a large key, the handle\nof which could be turned easily.\nLsemg turned it discovered a\nspring, which, when pressed, sent\nout irom the other end of tho key\na needle of such fineness that it\nentered the flesh and buried itself\nthere, leaving no external trace\nWith this weapon Tebaldo waited\nat the church door till the maiden\nhe loved passed in to her marriage.\nThen, unperceived, he sent the\nslender needle into the breast of\nthe bridegroom, who, seized with a\nsharp pain from an unknown cause,\nfainted, was carried and\nsoon died, his strange illness baf-\nfling the skill of the physicians.\nAgain Tebaldo demanded the\nmaiden's hand, and 'was again re\nfused. In a few days both her\nparents died in a like mysterious\nmanner. Suspicion was excited,\nand on examination of the bodies\nthe small steel instrument was\nfound in the flesh. There was uni-\nversal terror; no one felt that his\nown life was secure. The young\nlady wentinto a convent during\nher mourning, and after a few\nmonths, Tebaldo begged to see and\nspeak with her, hoping now to\nbend her to his will. She ,with an\ninstinctive horror of this man, who\nhad from the first been displeasing\nto her, returned a decided nega-\ntive, whereupon Tebaldo contrived\nto wound her through the grate.\nOn returning to her room she felt\na pain in her breast and discovered\na single-dro-
261a2b0ef4130a02c672a32e2c42f3c2 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1917.1684931189752 41.875555 -87.624421 Irst, and alternates:\n1. Taos. S . Hayes; F. B. Can.\n41. W. O. Swing; A. P . Danfortk.\n74. H H, Jonea; E. B. Whit.\n71. R. L. Piper; J. J . KHckenger.\n70. W. W. Carroll; W. W . Donley.\n81. C. C Parker; A. J. Frailer.\nit. Q. r . Conley; J. R. Zoll.\n87. Jas. W. Flnley; J. C. Paul.\n98. J. M . Kelley; C. A. Watters.\n97. C. P . Bemts; E. S. NlchoU.\n101. F . 8 . Thomas; Jerry MoCarby.\n'08. K. A. Bledsoe; A. J . Douglas.\n112. J. I . Davis; C. T . Harris.\nHI. F. D. Sughrua; W. Ertckson.\n(18. F . L. Howard; A. M . Barnes.\n127. T . F . Phleger; J. H. Voss.\n106. W. P . Sheehan; H. Devlin.\n!2J. C. H. Dal ton; H. B. Holt\n195. O. O. McCarty; P. O. Rourkn.\n191. Jno. Fowler; M. Ingham.\n108. C. C. Craig; R. Trogden.\n127. L. M . Hough; B. F . Bradley.\nW7. B. B. French; O. W . Melbourne.\nI8. W. A. 8harpe; C. H. 8tanley.\n188. J. L. Lamport; J. C . McQuan.\nW8. W. J . Smith; P. H. O'Connor.\n109. D. W. Marshall; T. Nltson.\n159. M , F. Cooper; A. S . Kuykendall.\ni01. D. a . Craig; J. A. Bonham.\n'09. E. Fread; W. M . Stevenson.\nUS. D. Naney; C. E . Blackburn.\n148. H. Hill; F. C. Zlel.\n549. A. W. Stewman; W. E. Whaler.\n77. F. P. MUle; E. E. Flanagan,\n100. B. F . Congdon; J. E . Shorten.
1240458d4bb5f6df99cafd3434209277 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.771857891874 39.745947 -75.546589 cago Times, whicn is now fast regaining\nits former greatness, will give two col­\numns to an accident on the cable railroad\nin this city, by which one life was lost,\nand a quarter of a column to a railway\naccident in Franco by which forty lives\nare sacrificed. The stanch Republican\nInter Ocean will use a column in telling\nwhy a Chicago Democrat has concluded\nto vote the Republican ticket, or in ex­\nplaining why a Republican has gone over\nto the enemy, but it lias little space to\nspare for an account of the latest revolu­\ntion in Hayti. A cyclone in China in\nwhich two thousand people perish is not\nworth as much to The Chicago Tribune\nns a runaway accident on State street in\nwhich a little girl is rescued from death\nby a bravo policeman.\nYou cannot understand why this should\nbo so? Think a moment. Suppose you\nare walking down street in your town or\n A crowd gathers. Whats tip? A\nman has fallen from a building and is\nbadly hurt. Nobody knows how badly.\nYou get a glimpse of his bruised body\nas they curry him away to hospital. You\nask several questions, but nobody seems\nto know anything about it. Next morning\nyou pick up your paper. What is tho\nfirst tiling you look for? The report\nof that accident, and if it is not\nported fully, you say the paper is no\ngood. The mau was only a laborer, and\nwas not badly hurt after all, but your\nrlosity has been roused by contact, and\nyou eagerly devour all tho details. In\nthe next eolumn Is printed a short ac­\ncount of the foundering of a Dutch\nmerchant vessel off the coast of Africa.\nA hundred lives aud a million of treasure\nhave been lost. Concerning this you read\nonly tho headline« aud arc satisfied. If it\nhad been a sailboat with four or five
b0c70c475c95475f1cbe6c0a5e2e7836 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.5904109271944 41.681744 -72.788147 Brutal Murder, He Says\n"The South Braintree crime was\nparticularly brutal. The murder of\nthe paymaster (Parmenter) and the\nguard (Berardelll) was not neces-\nsary to the robbery. The murders\nwere accomplished first, the robbery\nafterward. The first shot laid Berar-\ndelll low In the roadway and after\nParmenter was shot, he dropped the\nmoney box in the road and ran\nacross the street. The money could\nthen have been taken but the mur-\nderers pursued Parmenter across the\nroad and shot him again, and then\nreturned and fired three more shots\ninto Berardelll, four In all, leaving\nhis lifeless form in the roadway.\n"The plan was evidently to kill the\nwitnesses and terrorize the bystand-\ners. The murderers escaped in an\nautomobile driven by one of their\nconfederates, the automobiles being\nafterward located in the woods at\nBridgewater, 18 miles distant\n"Vanzetti when arrested on May\n5th, had In his hip pocket a fully\nloaded revolver. Sacco had a loaded\npistol tucked Into the front of \ntrousers and 30 loose cartridges\nwhich fitted this pistol. Upon being\nquestioned by the police both men\ntold what they afterward admitted\nwas a tissue of lies,\n"Sacco claimed to have been\nworking at Kelly at April 15. the\ndate of the South Braintree crime.\nUpon investigation It was proven\nthat he was not at work on that day.\nHe then claimed to have been at (fie\nItalian consulate in Boston on that\ndate but the only confirmation of\nthis claim is the memory of a for-\nmer employee of the consulate who\nmade a diposition in Italy that Sac-\nco, among 40 others, was in the of-\nfice that day. This employee had no\nmemorandum to assist his memory.\n" As the result of the study of the\nrecord and by personal investigation,\nof the case, including my interviews\nwith a large number of witnesses,\nI believe with the jury that Sacco\nand Vanzetti were guilty and that\nthe trial was fair.\n"This crime was committed seven
114345bfdf0605c010337976e9f29660 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.4643835299341 42.217817 -85.891125 Amending law so as to authorize\nnualltied voters of school districts to\nmake approp iatlon for transporting)\nchildren to and from school; amending\nschool law relative to vacancies in dis-\ntrict school offices; amending school\nlaw as to duties of district officers; to\nfacilitate the inspection of records and\nfiles of offices of school districts;\namending act of 1M1 providing for\nelection of county school commission-\ner and appointment of county examin-\ners; for securing information tegard-in- g\nall public or school libraries in tills\nstate; revising laws for the govern-\nment and control of the state public\nschool; amending various sections of\ngeneral law for incorporation of sc' ool\ndistricts; amending law for inco; pota-\ntion of associations for establishing\nscholarships in Michigan university\nfor the 'benefit of graduates of high\nschools of the state; amending general\nschool law; providing for the payment\nof tuition in and transportation to an-\nother district of children who have\ncompleted the eighth grade in any\n district: authorizing the tegents\nof the university to grant teacher's\ncertificates, etc.: reincorporating the\nboard of education of the city of Hast-\nings; amending act Incorporating pub-\nlic schools of Bttnyon township, Bay\ncounty; amending act Incorporating\nthe board of education of the city of\nSaginaw; providing for board of libra-\nry commissioners to manage public dis-\ntrict library and library property and\nart gallery of the city of (irand Bap-id- s ;\nincorporating public schools of\nCharlton township. Otsego county;\nproviding for compulsory education of\nchildren in Osceola township. Hough-\nton county; providing a uniform sys-\ntem of examination of teachers for\nPresquo Island county; amending act\nincorporating public schools of Ossin-ek- e\ntownship, Alpena county: giving\nadditional powers to school board of\nfractional District No. 1 of Cottiell-vlll- e\ntownship, St. Clair county: requir-\ning the state board of education to pre-\nscribe courses of study, issue certifi-\ncates etc.. in connection with the sev-\neral state normal schools.
130bf0bbef56fadb06b881f4d55c9a67 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1889.7958903792492 43.82915 -115.834394 The prolongation of hum an life, the\nrentoration of decayed function« to their\nnormal activity by eectricby, even when\nsuggested oh a remote po««ibi!ityt r. use\nand chain the attention. When thia sug*\ngeHtion in made by aman whose record of\nachievem« nts has given him a reputation\non two continent«, and whose statem ent*\nare always receivtd with respectif not\nwith deference, incredulity forget« to\n«mile, and we listen with the feeling that\nthe path of discovery always runs through\napparent imp issibilitlea. No snap judg\nmeritavails in this modern age T>say of\nanything th it it c»nt bedone is to exhibit\nignorance of what has be* n done. The age\nof miracles is n »tin the past, but in the\nIresent and future. We wa'k in the com­\npany of marvels ev ry day, * hsch the\nscience of electricity has recently achieved.\nOr Darrin at any rate given us some­\nth!ng serious to think ab mt, aud encour\naged the hope of new victories over the\nilis to whi<h flesh is heir by his system of\nelectro-nismi* tic treatm ent, as the follow­\ning references show:\nGeo. H . Papenberg, Tualition, Or.—Deaf­\nness ten >ears so he could scarcely hear a\nsound; cured in twenty minutes\nMrs. John McGinnis, Vancouver, W . T.\n— Parai}zed artn cured sixteen years ago\nby Dr. D arrin while in San Francisco.\nEx Mayor C. H Hills son, of Albina,\nOr. —Cured of am offensive discharge of\nboth ears since five m onths old.\nJohn B. Dougherty, Roche Harbor, W .\nT. —H ydrocele entirlv cured and removed\nby one operation of five m inutes.\nMrs S A. Woodeus gul, 94 Columbia\nstreet, P o rtlaud—Ne»vous debility and\nmalarial fever and discharging ear; re­\nstored.
170f677da8aaf7fbf189a80799185741 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9821917491122 39.513775 -121.556359 dicial District of the State of California, in and (or\nthe County of Yuba,entered on the filth iUv ol Do\ncamber, A . I) 1H57, in a certain action therein pend-\niug wherein I lias Curst ninl James K (ialluway,\ncomprising the firm of Caret tc Calloway were\nplaintiffs, and li. K. Spillman, K II Could, mi l\nJames b, burr were defendants, a certified copy of\nwhich has been delivered to me, it was among oilier\nthings ordered, adjudged and decreed, by the said\nCourt that the plaintiffs have and recover of the de-\nfendant, li . K . Spillman, the sum of (J4m«2 4S-IOU , to\ndiuw Interest at the rate of two and one-half percent,\nper month until paid, besides the eostsof .his ucdon,\ntaxed at $73 IS-1(KI, and that all that certain piee 01\nparcel of land lying and being situate in the count ies\nof Yuba and Untie. Stae of Cnßiornia on both sides\nof the main road lending from the cl'y of Marysville\nin said Yuba county, to the town of Rabbit Creek, in\nBierra county, and upon thu dividing line of the\ncounties ol Yuba and Untie, at a place known mid\neal ed Straw Is rry Valley,”-which contains one hun-\ndred and sixiy acres of land, on w hich, near Its cen-\ntre in V üba County. Blands the house known as the\n•Columbus House,” and which is kept as a house of\npublic entertainment, together with all and singular\nthe tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances\nthereunto belonging or in anywise npperaining, and\nnil the right tide and which ll.u said defend-\nant, H. It. Bpiilmun. possessed in and to the same on\nthe seventeenth day of July, A. I), eighteen hundred\nand Hfty-six, or which he Ims acquired or possessed\nat any lime since, he sold by Win. 11 . Thornburgh.\nSheriff of Yuba-cminlv, and for such purpose lie be\nand is hereby appointed a Master and •'oninitssloiier\nin Chancery, at auction, to the Ingbe-t bidder, for\ncash, in like manner and upon like notice and adver-\ntisement as sales of real property under execution\nare required by law to be made. In both Vutia and\nButte counties ; and that the parties to (tils action,\nand all.persons claiming under them, or any or either\nol them, after the filing ol the notice of the pendency\nof this action in the office ol the Recorder of Viihaund\nButte Counties, bo fort ver barred and foreclosed, of\nall rigid, title, and equity of redemption in the said\npemises above described so sold, and every part\nthereof, filler six monlhslrom the time of such sale.\nAnd it is further adjudged, decreed and ordered,\nthat lifter the expiration ol -ix months from the time\nof such sale of the property so sold, whereof no re-\ndemption shall have been muds, ( iirs .mil to law,\nthe said Master and Commissioner in Chancery exe-\ncute to the parly or parties entitled thereto, a Doc/ of\nConveyance of the premises so sold and unredeemed,\nand that upon tho production of such Ds«/. sui h\nparty or parties be let into possession of the premia, s\nthereby conveyed.
0a9d64fe60c5cbbba9191259f223273f THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1885.1712328450026 37.451159 -86.90916 After repeatetl acts of violence, such\nas whipping defenceless women, burn-\ning cabins and terrorizing the whole\ncountry, their misdeeds culminated last\nfall iu 1 lie whipping of a Mr. Greer,\nConstable of Shrewsbury, and his sou,,\na young man of 21 or 22 years of age.\nIt seems that young Greer, who is a\nlittle wild, was lu the habit of abusing\nhis mother ami father, aud on several\noccasions Mr. Greer hail been heard to\nexpress the wish that the Kluklux\nwould give his sou a good chastisement\nto see if it would have a tendency to'\nmake him do better. Sure enough, oue\nstarless night the house was surround-\ned, the doors forced open, ami young\nGreer was soon in the hands of the\nRegulators writhing under the stinging\ncuts from hickory switches iu the hands\nof his captors. The old man could not\nstand to see his boy whipped so un-\nmercifully, aud to save him,\nwhen the coward... scoundrels caught\nhim anil, divesting him of his clothing,\nproceeded to lay on the hickories with\na will. From one of the most reliable\nmen in that country I received the\ndetails of this outrage, and he stood on\nhis own porch and listened to he blows\nas they rapidly fell ou the backs of the\ndefenceless victims, although he could\nnot see the participants iu the disgrace-\nful proceedings. After whipping them\nsome lo minutes, the scoundrels rodeott\nuuder a flourish of pistols and dire\nthreats against any oue who would try\nto find out the parties who were im-\nplicated iu that night's lawlessness. .\nAbout four weeks ago young Greer\nmet a man by tlte name of John Wilson\nwhom he suspected ot being one of the\ngang who hud whipped himself and\nfather; stepping up to Wilson ho accus-\ned him of the crime and demanded to
dbb2a369b2a5974587a68f0653eb32e6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.0945205162354 41.681744 -72.788147 man Edward P. prior were qualified\nto act on the petition to oust Fire\nCommissioner James It. Boswell\nwere raised today, the question aris- -\ning from the fact that both men are\nofficers of the fire department Sir.\nPrior is chief of the local company\nand Sir. Downham is also an official.\nIt is the usual practice In civic\nor legal matters for men interested\nin or connected with either party to\na dispute to refrain from sitting In\njudgment upon such questions. At\nthe numerous hearings on zoning\nchanges in New Britain, for instance,\nmembers of the board of adjustment\nwho have property in the neighbor-\nhood under discussion declare them.\nselves disqualified and do not rote.\nToday the fueling was apparent In\nseveral quarters here that the same\npractice should be observed in the\nsettling of the dispute within the\n department. Selectman Down-\nham himself stated this morning that\nhe was not certain whether or not he\nhad any right to pass on the mat-\nter and that he would be willing to\nretire if any question were raised.\nFirst Felectman James Simpson,\nthe only member of the board who Is\nnot connected with the fire company,\nsaid today that he intended to take\nthe matter up with the town attor-\nney. Judge B. F. Gaffney of New\nBritain, and obtain a ruling from\nhim. If the other two are ruled out.\nSelectman Simpson will be the sole\njudge of the merits of the request.\nThe selectmen will meet Wednes-\nday night, when a committee of six\nfiremen will appear before them to\npresent their side of the argument\nresulting from their petition to have\nSir. Boswell removed. The fire com-\nmission
1e0a399750fc5c6b9e4d3d3f15af0e6a THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.6095890093861 37.92448 -95.399981 his location In preaching the Gospel\nof Jesus Christ to the poor people of\nScotland. Frederick T. Fi'elinghiiysen.\nof New Jersey, once secretary of state,\nan old fashioned E angelical Christian,\nnn elder in the Ileformed church. John\nUrlght, n deluded Quaker. Henry Wil-\nson, the ice president of the United\nStates, il.ting a deluded Methodist or\nCongrcgationalist. Earl of Klntore\ndying a deluded Presbyterian.\nThe cannibals in South ten, tho\nliushmcn of Ticrra del Fuego, the wild\nmen of Australia, putting down ,lie\nknives of their cruelty nud clothing\nthemselies lu decent apparel all un-\nder the power of this delusion. Judsoii\nu ml Doty and Abeel and Campbell nnd\nAVUIInms and the 3,000 missionaries\nof the cross turning their backs on\nhome and civilization nnd comfort and\ngoing out amid squalor of heathen-\nism to e It. to save it, to help It,\ntoiling until they dropped into their\ngraves, dying with no earthly comfort\nabout them, and going into graves\nwithiioappioprlnte epitaph, when they\nmight lime lived in this country and\nlitcd foithemselies nnd Hied luxuri-\nously and been nt Inst put into brilliant\nsepulchers. Whnt a delusion!\nYes, this delusion of the Christian re-\nligion shows itself lu the fact that It\ngoes to those who are in trouble. Now,\nIt is bad enough to client ti man when\nhe Is well nntl when he is prosperous,\nbut tliis religion comes to a innn when\nho Is sick and says: "You will do well\nagain after awhile. You are going into\nit laud whero there are no coughs, and\nno pleurisies, and no consumptions, und\nno languishing. Tnke eourngo and bear\nup."
145801e2f3e196d459e90f16bb52e6fb THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.9712328450025 38.894955 -77.036646 Coroner Eidman of Now York had an\ninquest yesterday in the case of Nclllo\nHouthwick, a young woman who was\nfound dead with a bullet in her breast,\nIn the yard of a house In West Twenty-fir-\nstreet, where eho lived with Robert\nMontgomery, an actor. Tho jury ren-\ndered a verdict of suicide, and Mont-\ngomery, who had been under arrest sinco\nt tie young w Oman's body w .is found, w as\ndischarged. To tho coroner and jurors\nho said that although no marriage cere-\nmony had taken place, ho looked upon\nNellie ns his w tfe and had introduced\nher as such to his friends. Tho suicido\nIs supposed to havo been brought alwut\nby a quarrel between Montgomery and\nNellie, resulting from her rofusal to tell\nhim she had done with a diamond\nring ho bad giion her some time ago. It\nhas since boon lenrned that she paw ned\nit to buy him a Christmas present.\nAn uptown train on tho bixth Ave-\nnue Elevated Railroad in Now York,\ncrowded witli passcngois, was thrown\nfrom tho track near tho franklin Street\nStation, in West Broadway yesterday\nafternoon. The cars bumped along ovor\ntho tics and w oiild bate fallen into the\nstreet but for tho fact that at tho point\nwhere tho accident occuned a now truck\nIs being put in over to the middle of the\nhticct, and timbers to sustain tho addi-\ntional track had been thrown across\nbetween the tracks on tho sides of tlio\nstreet. Tho derailed tinln was, there-\nfore, sustained bytheso timbers.
25450e70d42c7734a5e3aeb7108f9dd5 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.1383561326738 31.960991 -90.983994 the Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve imrnths, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for tb«\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds' and thou­\nsands of the mo« blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and foreve| blast­\ning tho fondest hopes of tb. parent. So great\nhas the» efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well bc called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and "adults. Many disease,\narise from worms, &nd occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and even death, without \never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, when\none of two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them. They are a certain reihedy, and\npleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them ie readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Y/hereverthey have been\nused they have received the most fiattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safely with which\nthey may be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of\nthfe impolency of most of the preparations Wbieh\nheretofore have heen presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
e7718795c99470af79b53051c2161c97 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.4972602422629 41.262128 -95.861391 hold my life, my liberty, aud personal\npreperty subject to tbe arbitrary whim of\nGen. Burnside, or aay other general, this\nConvention should aever adjourn antil it\nhas accbieved the liberty of the people.\nHe said it ia view •_/ Order No. 3e.—\n[Chwrs.j He ccmld die but once. I\ntrample under foot the order of any\nmilitary officer defining treaaoal They\nmay imprison me, pat me to Lard labor,\ntake mv life ; but, come, what will, I de­\nspise (5rd'-r No. 38. And if you, my fei-\niow-oituena, are sach abject siavea to\nyour lives, liberties, and property, at the\ndictation of any man, Coioael or Cor­\nporal, yoa deserve to be slavee, and pos­\nterity will despise you. He maintained\nthat his client, Mr. Yallandigbam, who\nhad dared to expres his opinions apou\n momentous questions of the war, had\nthat right.nnder the Constitution to de­\nliver litem, and he exhort'd thr- C inven­\ntion to postpone every other question in\nfavor of the great question of our own\nliberties. He would ex^ ;rt Mr. Lincoln\non the question of p^ace or war wheu he\nhad the right to express bi» opinion in\npabiio, aad be intended to express his\nopinion at the haxard of uut iiia. This\nquestion should fill their hearts every\nhour and d*v, and be tbt-ir exclude bus­\niness antil the second Tuesday iu Octo­\nber. Mr. Pogh then commented with\nmuch severity upon the acts of military\nofficers intruding upon the h^tues of pri­\nvate citiiens, in the presence of their\nwives and children, and bringing their\nvictims before a mock tribunal ealled a
323e839014d4d9176f6c8c76898130e3 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9986338481583 39.513775 -121.556359 BN the iimtler of be declaration of certain streets in\nthe Carlton tract to be highways, and to alter the\nroad to McConnells Kerry, It is hereby ordered that\nthe present road running from the termination of\nBird, Robinson and Montgomery streets in the town\nof t troville to Butcher Ranch in said county, be, and\nthe same is hereby declared vacated as a public high-\nway. And it Is further ordered that the said bird.\nMontgomery and Robinson streets of said town of\nOroville be extended as public highways across the\ni tract of laud known as the Carlton Tract, and ad\njoining said town of • troville. Said continuations of\nBird. Robins'll and Montgomery street to be sixty\nsix feet in width, and extending In directions parallel\nwith each other, according to the plan or servey of\nsaid Carlton Tract, made by M. H . Parley. And it is\nfurther ordered that the street marked Fourth Ave-\nnue. according to the plan servey of the said\nCarlton Tract be. and the same is hereby declared to\nhe n public highway—the said Avenue to be sixty six\np.,>t in width, and extending across said tract of land.\nAnd it is further ordered that so mud. ol Hie First,\nSecond. Third. Fifth Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Av-\nenues, as lie between Robinson and Montgomery\nstreets, according to the plan or survey of said M. IL\nParley of said Carlton Tract new on tile In Urn office\nof the County Recorder pf said county, be, and the\nsame tire hereby declared to be public highways, all\nof -aid highways to be sixty feet in w idth. And it\nis further ordered that the rood now laid out from the\ntermination of the niu Robinson street, across\nHie Butcher Hunch, to its inaction with the old road\nbe, and the same is hereby declared a public high-\nway, said highway tube sixty -ix leel in width.\nABestthe foregoing a true copy.
2644cc8792287992bd65859372d58c9a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.892076471109 40.063962 -80.720915 alius. It ia a question solely of\nwhat the country owes to Itself. Can\nit afford to say we have no further use for\nthe experience gained at the head of the\narmy and at the head of the government.\nWhy, for example, should not the soldier\nof Appomattox be borne while he lives on\nthe retired hat of the army. Why, indeed\nshould we not creato for him the rank he\nhas eo conspicuously earned, and make\nhim, while he lives, Captain General of\nthe armies of the United States. Abort\nall, why should not the country say to\nhim and to every retiring I'reeident,\nHenceforth we wish your advice and\nyour knowledge of our affairs in our high¬\nest council, the Senate of the United\nStates. You have the wisdom that\ncomes {with experience, the moderation\nthat comes with the exercise of powers.\nHenceforth your future is provided for\nlet all your thoughts and all your care be\nfor your country, to the end."\nTo some such the purpose 'of the\neountry;iB surely turning, and neither\nparty nor precedent should be suffered to\nstand in its way.\nWell, gentlemen, you have honored too\nmuch of my voice already, and yon have\nlately discovered that, iu spite of his life-\nlong efforts to conceal it, your guest is an\nadmirable sneaker. Fill your glasses.\nThere are Democrats and Republicans\nhere, Northerners and Southerners, men\nwho wore the blue, and men who wore\nthe.croy,} conservatives and stalwarts,\nthird termers and anti-third termers\nand possibly we have even some timid\nsoul in dread of the Empire, but in ad¬\nmiration for the heroes and in gratitude\nfor victory and peace wo are all Grant\nmen to-night. I give you a toast that\nhas been honored by every camp-lire in\ntho continent, a prayer that has been\nbreaUied in every patriotic household:\nHealth to our Hrst soldier and our first\ncitizen, General Grant.\nThe General was cheered for ifeveral\nseconds as he rose. He responded Welly\naa followsi
052cb6dff24bc74759e56572a05d31b4 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.54508193559 37.305884 -89.518148 Success in raising squabs for market\ndepends, first, upon a suitable cote.\nThis should be large, airy and provided\nwith plenty of nests. Second, upon\nproper care, including the keeping of\nthe place clean, providing suitable food\nwheat, peas, very little cracked corn\nand salt, and giving the birds a chance\nto fly, either in a large wire inclcsure\nor, better still, at large. And third,\nupon the stock. There is no better\nfoundation for this than the common\npigeon, those with white plumage le -in - g\npreferable because white squabs\nFeli for rather better prices than col-\nored. Such birds, crossed with runts\nor dragoons, the runts being preferable\nou account of size, will give the best\npossible stock for squob raising. Doubt-\nless it can be made to pay whpn a good\nmarket for the squabs can be found.\nFrom one pair of old about six\nor seven pairs of young can be raised\nin a season. If there are but six pairs,\nthat will give a pretty good product,\nand as these birds often bring excel-\nlent prices, as much as three dollar3\nis possible to be received as the income\nfrom a single pair of old birds. But\nto receive such a sum it is needful to\npet a good price for the squabs. Com-\nmon pigeons can be purchased almost\neverywhere at 23 to 50 cents a pair,\nhunts are occasionally advertised, but\nwould be quite exjieiisive to purchase.\nA good pair of runts would be worth\nprobably $10. The squab raiser, how-\never, should buy only runt cocks, and\nthese need not be the best ones, so that\nhe probably could get them at two dol-\nlars to three dollars each. II. S. Iiab\ncock, in Farm and Home.
3abfa7191da7fdd64faf3bd6bbe6f290 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.0669398590871 40.735657 -74.172367 First tract—Beginning In the easterly side\nof Summer avenue at a point therein distant\nfifty feet north from Arlington avenue: thence\nnortherly along Summer avenue one hundred\nand eleven feet three Inches; thence south\nsixty-six degrees thirty-one minutes east ore\nhundred and fifteen feet and five inches to u\npoint distant on© hundred and fifteen feet\non a lino drawn at right angles to Hummer\navenue; thenoe south parallel with Summer\navenu© on© hundred and twenty-on© feet four\nand one-half Inches more or less to the north-\nerly line of lot recently sold to Mickens;\nthence westerly along the same at right niftes\nto Hummer avenue one hundred and fifteen\nfeet to tli© place of beginning.\nBeing tho same premises conveyed to the\nsaid Joseph W. Mandevllle by Mary W. Tyn-\ndale. formerly Mary L. West, othert.\nby deed dated November 29th, 1885 , and\nrecorded In the Register's office of Essex\nCounty. November 10th, 1809, In book Y 32\nof deeds for said county on pages 81 to 83.\nSecond tract—Beginning In the easterly\nside of Hummer avenue at a point therein\ndistant three hundred seventy-six feet and\nforty one-hundredths of a foot south from\nChester avenue: thence along Summer avenue\nsouth twenty-eight degrees seven minutes west\nforty feet and thirteen one-hundredths of a\nfoot; thence south slxty-slx degrees forty-one\n^minutes east seventy-four feet and twenty-one\n•one-hundredths of a foot to the westerly line\n3uf Woodside avenue or Summer place; thence\n{north twenty-four degrees five minutes east\nJforty feet: thence north slxty-slx degrees\nforty-one minutes west seventy-on© feet and\nthirty-eight one-hundredths of a foot to the\n.place of beginning.
02bdae5369ae31643fc992dba80159dd THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.9575342148655 41.004121 -76.453816 Juno. Claron Hill was n beau-ti- l\nuj crown of growing wildflowers\nwhich sent up their sweet fragrance,\nHl.o incense, to the clear, cloudless\n!':. Of all lovely days in June, that\nday must have been the best. It was\ncommencement at college, nnd Ellen\nher Ellen was to graduate with\nhighest honors. How selfish she had\nbeen to think herself neglected even\nfor a moment when Ellen had been\nworking so laboriously these last four\nyp.irs to win these honors thnt she\nIter mother might feel the great pride\nof owning such a brilliant daughter.\nIn the large crowded hall she felt\nthat every mother's eye enviously be-\nheld her when she clasped her daugh-\nter to her breast after the exercises.\nEnraptured, her cheeks flushed with\na bloom like youth and her eyes\nsparkled with Joyful tears.\n"Why, mother, how pretty you\n the daughter exclaimed, draw-\ning her arm through hers and leading\nher Into the festive college grounds.\nHut It was In the evening that the\nmother realized her dearest hope. To-\ngether she and her daughter walked\nto Claron Hill, and when they reached\nthe summit the world was wrapped\nIn the sunset's afterglow. Still, while\nIt lasted, the mother lifted her face to\nher daughter's and the thin lips quiv-\nered and her eyes were wet.\n"Why, mother mother, darling!"\ntho daughter whispered, and gazing\nupon the sweet face she noted for the\nfirst time Its numerous lines of care\nand worry, the sad mien on every\nfeature. A great pang seized her. She\ndrew the slight form closer to her,\nraining kisses upon the gray head un-\ntil the mother looked up in surprise.\nK was the daughter who spoke ngaln.\n"Darling,
37fe2856516355679a732b7fd6d3af11 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.43698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 V nited States and American Companies\n¦ re quoted at tll(Xa,llZ, share* in the\nNational, of like amount, with only\nten dollars paid In thereon, are being\ndisposed of at the rate of eighty-two\ndollar* and a half. Ttaia la certainly a\nremarkably good showing for h com-\npany that baa been in existence but a\nrew months, and has had to compete\n¦with old and wealthy corporations.\nThk Wuthbl.Yesterday was un¬\nquestionably one of the warmest days\nwe have yet experienced. It was some¬\nwhat amusing to see fat, corpulent old\ngentlemen bunting the shade and there\nsoiling white handkerchiefs by reason\nof their excessive obesity. We felt like\nexclaiming with the poet Cowper:\n¦yhforalodge In some rest wilderness.\nSeme boaodjew bonligully of shade..\nThe eveninga are now the only pleas¬\nant part of the hot days; Sinoe hot\nWMtbir has oome upon as inaeed and\nIn truth, our streets alter supper pre¬\nsent a very lively appearance. The\n^ young ladies are out en and al¬\nthough it is hard to get a Rood view of\ntheir Cues by reason of the bats now\n¦worn so extensively, yet we opine thev\nare enjoying the season very pleasant-1\nly and are making many conquests.\nSootstso Wo* m Liabls to Iiroicr-\nMXXT..The Supreme Court of Pennsyl¬\nvania at iu late session in Harrisburtr\ngave an interesting decision in a <s£\nbefore it from Lehigh county. It an-\npeare that a woman, Ellen Mohn,: had\nteen indicted in Lehigh county as a\ncommon scold, Ac., and was acuuitted\nunder a ruling by Judge llaynard.\nThe defendant waa indicted on two\noounta, aa follows: The first charged\nher with being a common scold and\ndisturber of the peace ol the neigbbor-\nfe"1* T*L.*Eood eb"B«l ber with\nbeing an evil disposed person, and oon-\ntriving and intending the morals of\nyouths to corrupt and debauch. The\n**.*! «»» quashed the indictment\nand held that the offense was not pon-\nifcll*,l1!« bylbe laws or this Comuion-
16fb674a4d281d917ade079763c9dd01 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.9303278372292 29.949932 -90.070116 and prepared to rest and enjoy a few hourm\nmental recreation. But tempted by the broad,\nsoft lounge drawn up before the glowing fire that\nhad burned down into that state when there are\nlittle flickers of flame Illummsting the bright\nglowing coals that peep through the white ashes\nin a thcousand fantastio forms, enabling you to\ntrace all sorts of scenes and pictures in them, I\nsank upon it and began making castles in the fire.\na pastime 1olten indulge in-and books, pea aad\nSaper wooed in vain.\nIt must have been near one o'clock when I was\nroused by plainly bearing steps overhead in the\nguestchamber, as though some one was slowly\npacing over the floor. Startled at the sound, I\nrose up and listened, wondering if it were possible\nthat some friend had come through the day and\nhad retired before my return home. I could not\nthink it probable. Yet I plainly heard the regular\nstep ofsome one slowly walking to and over-\nhead in that room. Getting up and going over to\nthe cabinet, I opened it and foond the key of the\nchamber quietly resting there, and as I had locked\nit myself, I felt confident that it had not been left\nopen through mistake. Throwing open the door,\nI took a lamp from a table near by, and passing\nthrough the hall and up the staires atethe grand\ncorridor and on to the door of the guest chamber,\nI stopped a moment to listen. Not a sound; the\nwhole house seemed buried in sleep, or as though\nDeath held his court there, all was so still. I\nunlocked the door, and opening it, entered.\nNeither fire nor light betokened the presence of a\nguest. On closely scanning the room, I found the\nwindows closed. Those on the balcony were well\nfastened, and the certains drawn. Locking the\ndoor again, I returned to my room beneath anad\nestened. Again I heard the regular step tithe\nroom above.
1003b1b587e0b5c50da543022836f254 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.2123287354134 39.745947 -75.546589 At yesterday afternoons session of\nthe Levy Court, the committee to exam­\nine th« error lists of William C, Rigger,\ncollector of county taxes for Peuosdt r\nhundred tor 1890, reported having eom-\npleted the work and found errors\nountlngjto $37,663, also errors m dog\nassessment amouutlog to $74. The poll\ntux of William F. Smalley White CUy\n('reek, vas Increased from $200 to $400.\nWilliam T Simmons (colored) sssesa-\nmeut was Increased $350, for two acres\nof land in Pencader hundred.\nJohn B. Mahoney's assessment In Pen­\ncader hundred was raised to $1,000.\ntwenty acres of laud having recently\nbeen added to bis farm. The twenty\nacres of lard as assessed to James C.\nClatk, same hundred, were then stricken\nfrom the assessment list. A tenant\nhouse and 100 acres of land were trans­\nferred from Arthur Chlllas *o Adam E.\nWiegand. The assessment of Edward J.\nCranston, Mil! Creek, was reduced #300.\nThe following assessed persons of Mill\nCreek hundred having died daring the\nlast three months, they were stricken\nfrom the lists; Milton Steele, Joseph\n Benjamin Shake:pearc, Jef-\nerson Kelley, Edmund Païen. Benja­\nmin Cranston, Jacob Chandler, Lewis\nBennett and Reuben Bali. James H.\nPolks name was transferred from Mill\nCreek to South Christiana hundred, and\nhis poll assessment raised from #300 to\n#400. Property of Solomon Hersev in\nMill Creek hundred was assessed at $822\nAt this morning's session, committees\nconsisting of Messrs Hutchison, Klllgore,\nJolis, CMIlia and Eliason audited tho ac­\ncounts of Joseph Roberts and Sene'* F.\nShallcross, ex-commissioners from Appo-\nqulnlmlnk and St. Georges hundreds,\nWashington Jones appeared before the\ncourt and appealed for a reduction in his\nassessment On motion of Mr, Hickman,\nMr. Jones poll tax was reduced from\n$3,000 to $1.600 and bin factory assess­\nment. reduced from $20,500 to #21 000.\nMary Williams, colored, stated 'that\nfor two years she had paid tax on the\nhouse No 918 Walnut strest, which she\ndid not own. On motion of Mr Hickman\nthe house was assessed to the estate of\nJoseph Barns and Mary Williams's claim\nwas referred to the Committee on Over­\npaid Taxes
159ba14950538b5d75bd79c769d58b91 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.554794488838 37.451159 -86.90916 between Little Rock and Fort Smith\nIt la the countyseat of Johnson county\nand has a population of about 1200\nThe country around Is hilly but yields\nfair crops of cotton corn and potatoes\nwhile Its fruit is of as good a quality as\nis found in the Arkansas fruit belt Ex ¬\ntensive coal mines are found here too\nand zinc further north To the south\nthe Magazine mountains are to be seen\nwhile spurs of the Ozarks lie to the\nnorth six or eight miles away These\ni4aiufltaln f nraish cool retreats to\nwhich numbers of poopla from here and\nelsewhere resort during the hot seasons\nAcross the river in Logan county is\nlocated Snblaco Abbey It being open\nto public visitation one day last week\nseveral of us made the trip over and\nwent through it When finished it will\nhave cost f 1000000 and is now only\nabout half completed But even now\nit is a monster structure It is situated\non an eminence away out in the forests\nin about as lonely a place as could have\nbeen selected It is made of stone quar ¬\nvied near Is four stories high and ia\nfurnished with the most modern fix ¬\nthree From the cupola is to bo com\nmanded a most magnificent view of the\nrugged hills and blooming valleys of\nthe industrious German farmers in the\nmidst of whom the abbey is situated\nThere are Mars and monks there pre-\nparing for the priesthood and a regular\nCatholic college is for the\npurpose of training tho youths of this\ncountry in the ways of Romanism The\nstructure reminds me more of what I\nhave read of King Solomons templo\nthan anything else\nOne peculiarity of this State is the\nvast number of its citizens that\nwere born in other States During\nall the time of Arkansas Statehood\nwhich began in 1830 ahe has not had\nbut one nativeborn Governor and it is\na singular fact that a few weeks ago in\na company of six Us from different\ncounties who took the examination for\nState licenses there were only two\nnative Aakansawyerethe other States\nbeing represented were Georgia Ala ¬\nbama Tennessee and Kentucky\nThA people here generally are keeping\nup with the feud developments of\nBreathlttconntyKentuoky pretty close\njy I have frequent occasion to de ¬\nfend Kentucky from the reproach of\nthat countys offensive deeds A fair\nminded man will readily recognize the\nfact however that the whole cow ¬\nmonwealth should not be stigmatized\nfor the outlawry and bloodshed corn\nmuted at the instigation of perhaps\nlees than a dozen men in a single ooun ¬\nty Let us hope that the prompt and\nvigorous efforts of the courts support ¬\ned by the powerful arm of public senti ¬\nment and publlo sentiment Iis always\non the right side in Kentucky may\ndrive lawlessness anti tbeinfamotm spirit\nof assassination from her borders even\nas the sunbeams of morning chase from\nearth the shadowy specters of nights\nrayless gloom
35fd99f66c31f480069d4e51538104f3 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1906.3164383244546 39.623709 -77.41082 Ifeveryone who ever saw Tub Clarion\nlonged for its weekly advent as do those of\nthe household of your scribe, you could with\nboldness enter upon the great Journalistic\nCiicuiation Tournament, with the most ac-\ncomplished Ananiases of the fraternity. You\nwould want to charter the Anlietam Paper\nMills and George Gould would have to pul\non a “Clarion Express” double header, ami\nsubsidized to warrant a private track, with\na subway—Deerfield to Einmitsburg and bal-\nloon connection—Owings Mills to tidewater,\nthe latter because of the exclusive Baltimore\n“ bell” recently delimited by Act of the leg-\nislature, within the sacred precincts of which\nshall i.ary a railroad be imildcd.\nCatoctiu Furnaces sold, presumably to an\nentirely capable party; the diallers of three\nrailroads amended—Emmilshurg, M. V and\nW., F. & G.— the Corporation election held;\nIhe town virtu illy out of debt; the summer\nboarder season at hand; you lie looking\nforward to something a little beyond the or\ndinary: not! Stick a pin into one of the of\nfleers of the Business Mens Association; il.\nthe B. M . A., is there yet and should il\n“come to,” il ni'gbt find work ready to its\nbaud and awaiting an energetic shove.\nShould it enter into the heads of a certain\nthree f. fs of Thurmont to visit Charlie\nRainsburgs ponds this summer (“f f” is\nphonetic for frog finders) sec to it that the\nwagon will carry four and 'hut Joe is pro-\nvided with the b. b. ofh. r. Now this may\nseem to he very mysterious and possess hid-\nden possibilities of uuarcbbm or other dire\nand dark secrets—not at all; it is but the bug\ngestion that a certain very enjoy able frig-\nging expedition lie duplicated in season.\nAs 1 Mary Jane” so el< ipieully says: Ta In.
0e8b7462f2ab56a3e5ee64897d0738f3 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.7657533929478 39.623709 -77.41082 emergency. Walter, you rt member,\nsaved him ouce when he was nearly\ndrowned, and since thru I believe he has\nbeen ready to sacrifice his life for my\nbrother at any moment.”\n"Will is the man that Ihad in my\nmind. Clan you scud ono of tho boys to\nhis house for him?”\n"Wait here till I return, nnd I will\nfix it.” W ith these words Alice quitted\nthe room. 1-eft to herself, Virginia was\nat oneo thoughtful. Bhe could not be-\nlieve that all tbo agitation which she\nhad witnessed in her friend was solely\ndue to tho coincidence of a nightman).\nYet how cunld Alice have really known\nanything of tbo crime, since she had not\nbeen out of her own room, unless indeed\nshe bad been present the night before?\nAlice returned and, as sbe said:\n“Ibnve sent Flank, one of tbo stable\nboys, for Will. Now, shall 1 tell you\nwhat I did last night?”\nVirginia signified her assent, nnd her\ncompanion proceeded.\n“Harry Lucas had promised to take\nme to drive iu the evening, but during\nthe afternoon bo called and told mo that\nit would be impossible to do so, as ho\nbad received a note which would make\nit necessary for him to leovo town. I did\nnot doubt his statement, and after a lit-\ntle conversation he left the house. After\nhis departure I found on tho floor a\nuoto which ho must have dropped iu\ntaking his handkerchief from his jioeket.\nOf course 1 had no right to read it, and I\ndid not think of doing so until Irecog-\nnized that the address was iu your\nwriting."
1ae6e64fe68711fe760f8abd8e79642c PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.201369831304 40.441694 -79.990086 terested, and as a necessary consequence to tbe\nloss of tbe city and Injury of every taxpayer.\nThe bill is filed against 'those officers and\nagents who have been derelict in their dntles\nand others who seem to be necessary parties\nand who have been willing to perform their du-\nties. Tbe Councils might have been made par-\nties but are not necessarily so under the facts\nalleged in the bill. We are unable to see any\ngood reason for making tbo bondholders par-\nties. It does not necessarily follow that a bill\nis roultifanous because all tbo parties may not\nnot be interested in all tbe questions raised or\nall tbe relief prayed for.\nIn this case the money belonging to the sink-- ,\ning fund, or tint by law should be nsed there-\nfor, and its management is the subject matter\nof the complaint. In one way or another all\n parties defendant are connected therewith,\nthough it seems to us very improbable that a\nfinal decree will be entered against tbe mem-\nbers ot the Finance Committee whose terms as\nsuch before the filling of tbe bill. Yet we deem\nit better to have their answers. All the de-\nmurrers are overruled.\nAnd now, March 14, 1891 . after argument, the\ndemurrers of tbe respective defendants are\noverruled and said defendants are ordered to\nanswer within 20 days otherwise judgment.\naue uanKf, ueposiiones oi tue luna, uowevcr,\nare not required to answer further than as to\ntbe amount and dates ot deposit of city funds\nwith them respectively. Per curiam.\nController Morrow, when asked yesterday\nwhat action would be taken by the defend-\nants, replied that the city would file its an-\nswer within the prescribed time. Others in-\nterested in the case coald not be found yester-\nday.
002433f93e34f48b367f188426addc77 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1905.4150684614408 36.694288 -105.393021 And while the progress of this\ncountry, while the development of\nthe agricultural west of this country,\ndid mean the impairment of the ag-\nricultural value east of the Mississippi\nriver, that ran up Into hundreds of\nmillions of dollars, It meant Incident-\nally the building up of great manu-\nfacturing industries that added to the\nvalue of this land by thousands of\nmillions of dollars. And. gentlemen,\nthose things were not foreseen in the\n'70's. The statesmen and the public\nmen of this country did not see what\npart the agricultural development of\nthe west was go'ng to play in the in-\ndustrial development 6f the east. And\nyou may read the decisions of the\ninterstate commerce commission from\nthe first to the last, and what Is one\nof the greatest characteristics of those\ndecisions? The continued inability to\nsee the question in this large way.\nThe Interstate commerce commis-\nsion never can see anything more\nthan that the farm land of some farm-\ner is decreasing in value, or that some\nman who has a flour mill with a pro-\nduction of fifty barrels a day Is be-\ning crowded out. It never can see\nthat the destruction or impairment of\nfarm values In this place means \nbuilding up of farm values In that\nplace, and that that shifting of values\nis a necessary incident to the indus-\ntrial and manufacturing development of\nthis country. And if we shall give\nto the interstate commerce commis-\nsion power to regulate rates, we shall\nno longer have our rates regulated\non the statesmanlike basis on which\nthey have been regulated in the past\nby the railway men, who really have\nbeen great statesmen, who really have\nbeen great builders of empires, who\nhave had an imagination that rivals\nthe Imagination of the greatest poet\nand of the greatest inventor, and who\nhave operated with a courage and dar-\ning that rivals the courage and dar-\ning of the greatest military general.\nBut we shall have our rates regulated\nby a body of civil servants, bureau-\ncrats, whose besetting sin the world\nover Is that they never can grasp a\nsituation In a large way and with the\ngrasp of the statesman; thit they\nnever can see the fact that they are\nconfronted with a small evil; that\nthat evil is relatively small, and that\nit cannot be corrected except by the\ncreation of evils and abuses which\nare infinitely greater than the one\nthat is to be corrected."
0da788a50a7eb8ea0725a0dc4cadaf65 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.278082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 Judges of the Court of General Sessions\nof the Peace and Jail Delivery\nState of Delaware., In and Tor New Cas­\ntle county. We. the undersigned, free­\nholders and respectable citizens of school\ndistricts Nos. 89, 39V4. «1 and 41Vts. consoli­\ndated and Incorporated tinder the name\nand style of the Newark Public Schools,\nin Wnlte tlny Greek hundred, do hereby\ncertify that Harry M. Campbell, the ten­\nant tnd occupant of the store situated in\nsaid sehool districts\nthe town of Newark. county\nstate aforesaid and described In his\napplication and who is an applicant for\nlet-use on Monday, the 10th day of May.\nA. D., 1S97, being the next term of said\ncourt, for the sale of intoxicating liquors\nIn quantities not less than one-half gallon\ntherein, not to be drunk on the premises\nhe a licensed retailer of goods,\nwares and merchandise, the aggregate\neost value of his stock constantly kept on\nhand for sale is not less than five hundred\ndollars He Is a man of full age. sobriety\nand good moral character, that such sale\nof Intoxicating liquors at said place is\nnecessaiy to accommodate the public:\nhat he is the tenant of said store, and\nthe true rental value Is Î3Û0. and the fol­\nlowing respectable citizens of said school\ndistricts, at least six of whom are sub-\nHantial freeholders of »aid school dis-\ntrict. recommend the said application,\nviz:\nJames Crocs.\nA. B . lierdman,\nG. Fader,\nT. I. Lilly,\nr. j. Ewing,\nR. Warpoie.\nJanet Roberts,\nJohn McCains,\nJos. W . McCormisk.W. McAnally,\nWilliam T. Htad.cy, A lex. Perry.\nJohn Gregg,
1747041c523121b849dd40dfb5b50b92 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1871.8808218860984 39.24646 -82.47849 on which became due on theltrst dav of Inly,\n171, wa not pal I on said dav; and thereupon\nafterward, lo wit, on the tenth day of August,\n1871. ilue de'iiand for the payment of thepnn.\ncij al and intere.t o due on laid bird', w\nmade in writing upon aaid Vinton Furnace\nnd Cord Company, by the holdera of 178 of\nsiud bonda, ainou'iHing in the aggreirate to\nj'j,imji, M.nnea interest, and the said Vinion\nFurnace and Conl company made default and\nItfuxed and neglected to pay the aaid principal\nor interest for more than thirty duya after\nasid deninnd, and yet make default and\nand neglect to pay the same or nny part\nthereof: and whereas, the liohl.rs of sanl\nbninls lo the amount of amy thouaand dol\nhira and upwards, did, in writing, on the\ntwelfth day of September, 1871, and\nrequire the said Samuel J. MucMullan, Trus-\ntee aforesaid, to proceed upon the said In-\ndenture, and aell. the said premises so con\nveyed in truat, and distribute the proceeds of\ninch sale according to the terms nf said In-\ndenture unless the principal money due to\nthem respectively on said lamds ao holden,\nand all unnaid interest thereon, should be\nlolly paid to them respectively bv said Com\npanv, on or belore tne expiration nl Hurt;\ndaya from the date of aaid demand, and said\nprincipal and interest yet rem i ntng unpaid\nsa aforesaid. Now, therefore, I, fnmiiel J.\nMac.Mullan, Trustee aaafniesaid, in coniorm-tt -\nwith the provisions of aaid Indenture, or\ndeed of trust, will, on\nThursdavJan.18,1872\nBelweeo tho hours or eleven o'clock In the\nforenoon and two o'clock in the afternoon of\nthat day, at tho
0650eb3cbc57dc9ab749d6a67f49645b THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1881.278082160071 40.419757 -77.187146 The sudden death of an eccentric,\nmiddle aged man in Lower Merrlon tp.,\nMontgomery county, on the 7th Inst.,\nenvelopes in mystery the whereabouts\nof a fortune of $7,000 or $8,000. Some-\ntime ago Mr. Fogarty, the tenant of Mr.\nJoshua Ashbrldge's farm, near Bryn\nMawr, employed a stranger who came to\nhis place as a farm hand. The newcom-\ner was very reticent about his antece-\ndents, but it was learned that his name\nwas Ilyan, that he had friends living\nin Philadelphia, and in Iowa, and that\nhe led a roving life, going rom place to\nplace over the whole country, picking\nup work wherever he could.\nLast Thursday Mr. Ilyan was sudden-\nly taken ill, and after lingering until\nSunday died. Ills burial took place\nTuesday from the house of Mr. Fog-\narty. an hour before his death\nthe deceased asked that a scrivener be\nsent for to draw up a will. The request\nwas complied with and the legal docu-\nment was duly prepared and executed,\nin which he bequeathed to his Iowa\nand Philadelphia friends various sums\nof money aggregating $7,000 or $8,000 .\nEvery one in the room was amazed at\nthe wealth of the supposed indigent\nIlyan, and he was asked where the\nmoney was. " Knickerbocker," gasped\nhe, suddenly sinking back on his pillow,\nand before he could utter another word\nthe spark of life had fled. The where-\nabouts of the money is a deep mystery,\nbut communioation will be held with\nthe legatees named in the will, and\nother efforts will be made to discover\nwhere the money is deposited or in-\nvested.
01f995afd85b84d530a905f9824319ef THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.1027396943175 38.894955 -77.036646 The Antagonism of Certain Clergy-\nmen Cause It to Be Defined.\n(From the New York Tribune.)\nThe discussion which clergymen of various\nevangelical denominations have been car-\nrying on in the hope of helping to intro-\nduce the era of "the ideal newspaper" has\naot been without interest, and we hope\nit may prove to have been not without\nprofit. But there is one obstacle in their\nway to which, perliaps, they have not\npaid sufficient attention, namelj, that they\nare not at all agreed among themselves\nas to what constitutes an 1 deal newspaper.\nThat this is the case nay fairly be in-\nferred from what they have said on the\nsubject.and is otherwise demonstrable. Dif-\nfering widely even in their definitions of\nthe ideal church, how can they unite In\ndefining the ideal newspaper? Many ot\nthem have high personal respect for ono\nanother, as doubtless they have also for\nmost of the newspaper men whom they\nknow; but the simple fact th.it eachriings\ntenaciously to his own ecclesiastical forms\nand precludes the possibility of\nhis regarding another's as ideal.\nMore than that, the clergy are generally\nwont to use, much freedom of speech in\ncommenting upon the ways and opinions of\ntheir brethren. We have no doubt that if\nthey should ever get ho far as to establish\na newspaper for the purpose of carrying out\ncertain ideas which they suppose they hold\nIsiconinion, and should appoint one of their\nnumber it editor, he would resolutely ex-\nclude from its columns under a strong sense\nor responsibility many articles contributed\nby members of the ministerial syndicate,\nwho would speedily conclude that they had\nmade a ser'ous mistake In choosing him for\nto important and delicate an oftice. Indeed,\nwe si ould pretty confidently expect that\nthe first point as to which all the others\nwould find them selves in perfect agreement\nwould be that their appointee, being very\nfar fiom an ideal editor, could not possibly\npi o.l uce an Ideal newspaper, and conse-\nquently that It was their painful duty to\ndepose him.
1ac4255a7c78f23f1dce2384128163c9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1882.43698626966 41.004121 -76.453816 never been seen since, began to bo\nmuch agitated, especially as every ono\nwas talking of n horrible murder in\ntho Bellair coach.\nAt last sho went to Bellair. and\nwhen sho learned how tho victim had\nsaid this and that, she thought littlo\nabout it, for sho knew poor Tom had\npower to speak. Ono evening.\nhowever, she saw a drunken man roll-\ning home. Like other fools of his\nclass, he scattered all he had about\nhim, and Mrs. Conway s eyes fell upon\nsmall letter caso which she knew\nbelonged to Ellwood. Sho picked it\nup, followed tho drunkard, saw whero\nlived, and then applied to tho Mag-\nistrate. Tho drunkad was arrested.\nHo proved to bo none other than the\ncoachman, John Rush, who could not,\nHowever, account tairry tor the case.\nDrunk as ho was, ho was too sensible\nbetray himself. He was, however,\nheld to bail, which, as ho could not\ngive, ho was, course, locked up.\nine next day ne was brought betore\ntho Magistrate and examined. Mrs.\nConway sworo that tho letter caso\nbelouged to her missing brother. Tho\ncoacuman sworo that ho bought it,\nwith somo other trifles, of a peddler\nwhom ho met iu tho street, and as\nthere wai no evidenco to refute this\nstatement he was at onco discharged.\nRush now saw that he vas likely to\nbecomo nn object of suspicion, and\nprepared to flee.\nMeanwhile the detective police.\nhaving at last a cluo which even a\nblind mnn could not help but follow,\nset to work again m earnest. Thov\nsaw Mrs. Conway and suggested to\nher that it was her brother Ellwood\nwho had been murdered, and that per\nhaps tho coachman knew moro of tho\nnff air than he choso to allow. This\nsnsnioion shn of nnmnn nt. nnr,n ,1o,.W\nc(i t0 bo groundless, as her brother,\nbeing deaf and dumb, could not havo
155720b099020d8e5c41940d8ef124d0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.0671232559614 58.275556 -134.3925 It should be a proud moment for the\ntrue American when he realizes that the\ncivilized world depends upon this country\nfor deliverance from threatened enslave¬\nment. We are looked to now for the ships,\nthe men, the food and aeroplanes to de¬\nfeat autocracy and America will not fail.\nIt is a new role we assume, but one we can\n. . airy without fear of failure.\nProud should be the man who has a\npart in it and damned to everlasting dis¬\ngrace that man who does not do his whole\nduty to help our government win the war.\nBe vigilant, be true and steadfast to the\nideals of our Presidents. Disclose traitors\nand expose slackers, save for and support\nfinancial demands of your country and\nwithal] let America come tirst as it will if\nyou sacrifice %vour personal comforts and\nluxuries. Observe the mandates of \nwho are directing. meatless and wheatless\ndays arc vital, do not waste food, help the\nRed Cross.help the United States until\nit hurts your pocket book and remember\nthat others are helping in a way that hurts\nthe heart. remember that those who go\n"over there" are making greater sacrifices\nthan those who must stay at home, 110 mat¬\nter how worthily these may serve the cause.\nKeep in in your heart the memory of mur¬\ndered babes and women on tho sea and\nland, desolated Belgium and France, the\nwanton destruction of peaceful lands, the\nsoiled bodies of the innocent .keep before\nyou the law of an enemy of "Might Is\nRight," a law whose preceptors would en¬\nforce upon the world.and remember that\nour brothers and sons, our neighbors and\nfriends and our fellow-men are shedding\ntheir blood that these things may never\nhappen again.
12bad35b21afa4e3fb4bacf7c10903dd OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.8123287354135 41.020015 -92.411296 Des Moines Canal Locks-\nAt the Mississippi River Improve­\nment Convention held in St. Paul last\nweek, Mr. Russell, of St. Louis, offer\ned a preamble aud resolutions de­\nnouncing the closing of tho steam­\nboat lock on the canal around the\nrapids of the ^Mississippi river at Ke­\nokuk, whereby the canal was shut to\nnavigation twelve days in September\nand eighteen days in October; that\nsaid canal bad cost the Government\n$5,000 ,000; that the job had been bun­\ngled or botched by incompetent en­\ngineers, and calling ou Congress to\ninvestigate, etc.\nAfter reading tho document Mr.\nItusscll proceeded to denounce the\nmaimer iu which the work had been\ndone on the caual, and clmrgcd that\nnegligence, incapacity, and corrup\ntion was at the bottom of that trouble\nwith the canal. The government had\nbeen twelve years building the canal,\nanil had given the people nothing\nnow. The canal cost about $5,000,000\nand now could not be used. The en­\ngineering department received a mild\nbut evidently deserved criticism.\nGen. .Meigs, Assistant Engineer of\nDepartment of Rock Island, replied\nto the criticisms of Mr. Russell, and\nexplained how tho locks in the canal\nfailed to work. Ho thought that,\ntaking into consideration the stupen­\ndous and unparalleled undertaking\nof building that canal, that some al­\nlowance should be made for mistakes.\nHe gave a full of how\nthe failure of tho canal to work oc­\ncurred. The contract for laying and\nbolting the rocks down under the\ngates, and the work, as subsequent\nexamination showed, was not proper­\nly done. When a contract is let it is\nnot always possible to watch the con­\ntractor, so that ho cannot slight or\nneglect his work. These bolts that\nheld the rocks became loose, aud that\ncaused the displacement of the stone,\nSubsequently other stones were found\nto be loose for the same reason, and\nthis caused the second closing up of\nthe canal. He did not regard these\nmisfortunes to be such as to rcllcct\nunfavorably upon the engineering\ndepartment. It was evident that\nsuch mistakes could not always be\navoided. He then made some re­\nmarks in regard to the great size of\nthe gates, when he was interrupted\nby Mr. Russell, who asked him if the\ngates at the Dcs Moines Canal were\nany larger than those at Louisville\nare, and was answered in tho affirm­\native. Mr. Russell indicated that ho\nwas not quite satisfied on that pointr\nbut as he did not have the cvidenco\nat hand to show the statement incor­\nrect, he said nothing further. Gen.\nMeigs also stated that Mr. Russell\nwas iu error when ho stated the cost\nof the canal to bo $5,000 ,000 . Its cost\nwas $1,155,000.
32bfb4a1a19a25868585395f6314e1ce NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.7609289301254 40.735657 -74.172367 posals to be accompanied by the consent, in\nwriting, of two sureties, or a surety com\npafiy qualified to do business in New Jersey,\nwho shall, at the time of putting in such\nproposals, qualify os to their responsibility\nIn the amount of such proposal, and bind\nthemselves that, if the contract he awarded\nto the person or persons making the pro-\nposal. they will, upon Its being so awarded,\nbecome his or their sureties for the faithful j\nperformance of said work, and that if the i\nperson or persons omit or refuse to execute !\nsuch contract they will pay to^ the City of ;\nNewark any difference between the sums to j\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon* completion of the contract and that\nwhich the City of Newark may bo obliged\nto pay the person or persona by whom such\ncontract ahaII he executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Cotnmls\nsioners of the City of Newark reserve to\nthemselves the right to accept or reject anv\nor all proposals for the above work, as they\nmay deem best for the of the City.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified\nthat under the provisions of the seventh sec-\ntion of the law creating th© Board of Street\nand Water Commissioners, approved March\n28th. 1891. that the bond or bonds to be\ngiven for the faithful execution and perform\nanc© of said public work shall first be ap-\nproved as to sufficiency by the board and a*\nto form by the counsel of the board, and no\ncontract shall be binding on the city or\nbecome effective or operative until such bond\nIs so approved, and the President of the\nboarU shall have power to examine the pro-\nposed bnudsmsn under oath if ft© shall so\ndesire, or shall b© ao Instructed by the board,\nbut the board will not be bound by any\nstatement that may be made by such pro-\nposed bondsmen, but shall hu .'© full power\nand absolute discretion In the whole matter,\nand this provision shall be referred to in\nany advertisement Inviting bids for any such\npublic work.\nBy direction of the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners of th© City of Newark.
3cdc90abaccf43eeffddfacca8cab159 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.2999999682902 31.960991 -90.983994 I confess I feel deeply penetrated by\nthese unexpected and unsolicited demon-\nstrations of kindness on the part of those\nwho have known me long and intimately,\nand I can but express my profound grati­\ntude for their friendly sentiments, and\nearnest solicitude manifested by them for\nmy promotion to that responsible office. —\nHaving no ambitious views to gratify, I\nhave been reluctant to thrust myself be­\nfore the public as a candidate for popular\nfavor—my habits and past life would ad­\nmonish me, that in times ofhigh party ex­\ncitement, I would be unsuited to act the\ncharacter of the brawling politician or un­\nscrupulous partisan. This could not be\nexpected of me. Of myself, or my quali­\nfications it does not behoove me to speak.\nI must refer to those to whom I am best\nknown for information, but should it be the\npleasure of my friends, who have brought\nme before the public, without solicitation\nof mine, to use my name for the office of\nTreasurer, I place myself in their hands,\ntrusting that whatever of fair fame I may\n they will guard and protect it\nwith the same vigilance they would their\nown ; tis the heritage I prize most in life.\nMy name can be presented in any way\nwhich win not conflict with the advance­\nment of the Whig principles I have ever\ncherished and maintained---- principles\nwhich were deliberately adopted by me as\nthose best calculated to promote and per­\npetuate the greatest degree oi prosperity\nand happiness to the greatest number, and\nthe maintenance of which 1 deem of more\nvital importance than my own personal\npromotion. Wrong tho I may be in my\nestimate of the correctness of these prin­\nciples, 1 have nevertheless, used every ef­\nfort to arrive at truth. Having an abiding\nconfidence in them, I avow my convictions\nwith a candor, equalled only by the sin­\ncerity with which they are felt, and de­\nfeat or success will fail alike to enduce\nme to change or abandon them. I speak\nof these principles not as constituting\nqualifications for office, but because the\npeople have a right to know the political\ncreed 1 profess.
4e06a5ce3f4079729fef2713b33c3628 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1922.9520547628108 41.681744 -72.788147 distribution might be postponed.\nOn the other hand, it would not\nbe desirable to compel corpora-\ntions indiscriminately to divide all\ntheir earnings promptly. Every\ngrowing business is constantly re-\nquiring mere capital, and it is the\ncommon practice, not only of cor\npotations but of individuals and\npartnerships, to allow a portion\nof their earnings to remain in the\nbusiness each year for its develop-\nment. The history of nearly every\nimportant business will snow that\nit .was built up in great degree by\nso doing, and It would be a serious\nhandicap upon the corporate form\nof organization if it was not given\nthe privilege of building up by\nthis method. Moreover, it always\nhas been, regarded as sound, con -\nservative and praiseworthy policy\nfor a corporation to build up a\nsurplus amount representing sur-\n assei.er and above the\namount required to cover its obli-\ngations and outstanding capital\nstock. The position ot the cor-\nporation as an industrial institu-\ntion, as an. employer of labor, as a\nborrower of money, as a supporter\nof trade, as a factor in many ways\nin the regular life of the commun-\nity, is strengthened by the policy.\nIt appears that Congress took\nthese facts into consideration and\ndid not iatend to interfere with\nthe normal and proper manage-\nment of business. In order, how-\never, to provide against accumula-\ntions of "surplus" for which there\nis not legitimate use, and which\nthere is good reason to believe are\nheld for the purpose of escaping\nor postponing the application o?\nthe individual surtaxes of the Rev-\nenue Act of 1921, section 220, pro-\nvides as follows:
47086eb430d8f8ef65b7a98b582b11ad THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.4863013381532 42.217817 -85.891125 lint perhaps the most remarkable in-\nstance of what may be called the te-\nnacity of life in ships is that of a small\ncutter somewhere between twenty-fiv- e\nand thirty tons burden, and called the\nArab of Poole. This tough little vessel\nbuilt assuredly of true English oak\nwas launched at Poole in the year 1886.\nNot very long ago, certainly, consider-\ning that among the violent deaths of\n1871 alone there are to be numbered\nthose of mole than eighty Vessels of up-\nward of forty years of age. Rut if the\nlittle Arab's career has not been very\nlong it has at all events been a very re-\nmarkable one. For some six or seven\nyears she appears to have plied her\ntrade successfully as a coaster, but at\nthe end of that period misfortune came\nupon her, and she foundered in the very\nharbor had given her birth. And\nthere She lay at the bottom of tile sea\nfor twenty years, and the tishes swam in\nand out of her empty cabin, and spawn-\ned in the sacred recesses of the captain's\nbunk. One would have thought that\ntwenty years nt the bottom of the see\nwould have been enough to write finis\nto the history of any ship, and so it\nseems, thought the English Board of\nTrade, who ultimately decided on cancel-\ning the lost Arab's registry. Rut twenty\nyears of slumber passed away like those\nof the sleeping beauty of the fairy tale,\nand then she came to life again.\nBought by an enterprising builder alter\nher twenty years' immersion, she WSS\nraised, dried, put generally to rights,\nand sold again as good SI new, for a\nyacht. To an imaginative owner she\nmust be a yacht worth having.
df182ca38d86b5310f8d155ca64585a8 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.828767091578 31.960991 -90.983994 During the late trial nt Baltimore of\nMcCurry for the murder of Paul Roux, an\nattempt-was made to exclude from the jury\nan Odd Follow, on 'die assumption that ho\nwas, by his commotion with the Order, dis*\nqualified from serving thereon—the murder-\ned man having been also a member, while\nthe prisoner had no connection with it. The\ncharge was based, by the counsel for the de­\nfence, upon the fact that the Grand Lodgo\nof Maryland had offered a reward of $200\nfor the apprehension ofthe murderer. Tri­\ners were accordingly appointed, and seve­\nral witnesses cited to appear for examina­\ntion,—among them P. G . Sire Wildey. Tho\nresult was, of course, the establishment of\nthe competency of the challenged juror to a\nseat in the jury box, and he was therefore\nadmitted without hesitation or opposition.\nThis is the first instance, we believe,\nwhere the competency of an Odd Fellow to\nsit as a juror has been called in question,\nunder any circumstance; but we are not at\nall surprised that it has been done. There\nwas something in the case which now in­\nduced it, that seemed if not to call for, at\nleast to justify it. No Odd Fellow need be\ntold how utterly unfounded was the objec­\ntion, but there are others who may be par­\ndoned for entertaining different views. Hero\nwas a murdered man—a stranger, far away\nft oin his home, “alike unknow ing and un­\n with no ties of kindred to claim\nmore than a common sympathy; and naught\nsave his tragic end to make even the fact of\nhis death known beyond the inmates of tho\nhouse where he lay. A paper of a certain\ncharacter (termed a “visiting cerd,”) is\nfound among his effects, and forthwith a se­\ncret and powerful society is seen hastening\nto pay the last sad offices to his remains,\nand depositing with ceremonials and honor\nthe slain body in the last resting place of\nthe worthy and the good. Not, however,\ncontent with this exhibition of friendly fee­\nling, this same society, through one of its\nhighest organized bodies, steps forth, and\nwith offers of pecuniary reward stimulates\nthe officers ofjustice to greater exertions for\nthe discovery of him whose hands had been\nthus raised against one of its members.\nThe public prints spread these things over\nthe whole length and breadth of the land.\nIs there not something in all this to strike\nthe attention of the observing and perplex\nthe unitiated? and when at length the mur­\nderer, or supposed murderer, is arrested and\nplaced on his trial, it is very strange that\nthe man who is entrusted with his defence,\nshould, when an individual belonging to the\nsociety which had so strongly manifested\nits interest, appears to pass upon the fate of\nthe accused, seek to know what is the cause\nof the deep interest in the welfare of its\nmembers?
0032d601e7e85567fb77e9db4f4aaa7b DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1884.5587431377758 39.745947 -75.546589 All thea8h<?s and dirt gathered on Market\nstreet and ill that portion of the olty east « f\nof Market streot must be taken and deposit­\ned ouChristlana ave.,or any other part if the\noity east oLMarket that the street Commis­\nsioner may direct. All the ashes and dirt\ngathered West of Market must be taken and\ndeposited on Union street, or any other place\nwithin the city limits that the Street Com­\nmissioner may direct. It the contractor fails\nto colleot the ashes within the specified time\nhe must present a written excuse totheSireet\nCommissioner; and, If the excuse is not satis-\nfactor\ncoed\nrubbish at the contractors expense.\nThe oontract cr contracts for said work\nshall oontaln a special provision and stipula­\ntion that all questions and matters in dis­\npute, both of law and fact, arising under said\ncontracts respectively, shall be determined\nby the Mayor, and that his decision upon\nany question whatever, relating to said con­\ntracts, or either of them, or to the i»erform-\nof the same, shall be final anl conclu­\nsive upon the parties concerned. For the pur­\npose of removing the ashes, dirt, rubbish and\nother refuse matter as aforesaid, the city \nbeen divided into four districts, vis :\nAll south of the northerly side or Sixth\nstreet and east of the westerly side of Market\nstreet being the First District; all north of\nthe northerly side of Sixth street and east of\nthe westerly side of Market street being the\nSecond District; all south of the northerly\nside of Sixth street and west of the westerly\nside of Market s*reet being the Third Dis­\ntrict; all north or the northerly side of Sixth\nstreet and west ol the westerly side of Mar­\nket street being the Fourth District. Pro­\nposals may be made for the eastern side of\nMarket street,\nond Districts,\nMarket street, comprising the Third and\nFourth Districts.\nA bond with security in the sum of five\nhundred dollars must accompany each pro-\nprosal for the good faith ofthe bidder ; and\nthe person or persons to whom the contract\nor contracts may be awarded, shall give a\nbond with security In the\nsand dollars as a guarantee for the faithful\nperformance of the contract. The O ty Coun­\ncil reserve the right to re >eot any bid that\nthey do not thiuk It will be to the interest of
08e357320b9f0d32dd0dbcd02bd9be90 THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.856164351852 39.768333 -86.15835 ftHR Company holds by lease, and In fee, abkl\ntwenty tbsand Jres of the most select coat\nlands Jn WesUfn Indiana, bordering both sides of th\nWabash river. Mapa cf these Lands may be ucb at the\noffice of the Company, in Covington, Ind., at the office of\nWm. Dai a. No. 2& Park Place, N. T.City, at the office of\nHon. J . R . Coffrotb, Huntington, Indiana, and at the\nAfficofKouh A McDonald. lasManapoIIs.\nA refereoce to the report of the Mao. David Dale\nOwen, late State Geologist, will show that these lands\nare aituate In the midst of the finest eoal fields of the\nState, abounding alao in aalt, iron and other valuable\nmineral substances.\nNear the mouth of Coal Creek, where tbe Company has\nlarge quantities of lands salt water has been discovered\nequal in quality to the Kanawha. This Water was pro-\ncured some 35 years sgo by boring, soon after, the On-\nondaga salt finding its way down the Wabash and Erie\nCanal, Mr. Thomas, the proprietor, finding himself an- ab- l e\nto compete with It, abandoned the manufacture. Ia\nhis he encountered that which recently dis-\nclosed facts prove te have been coal oil.\nThese lands ail li in close proximity to th Wabash\nand Erie Canal, some of them upon Its banks.\nMr. John McManomy, the business agent of the com-\npany, Las retumed from a tour of observation of the oil\nregions of Pennsylvania, convinced that the lands leased\nby the company, In Fountain and Parke counties, has,\nso far as the general formation of the country and the\naurface Indication, preaent themaelv.a, a stoog analogy\nla tbe oil and mineral substances as found on French\nCreek, Pennsylvania, where the greatest quantity and\nth moat valuable oil is found. Mr. McManomy has pur-\nchased for the company the mot approved machinery,\nwith aril the fixtures necessary for operation, and Is pre-\nparing with experienced workmen the speedy develop-\nment of the hidden treasure of the lands of tbe company.\nAll tbe indices of coal oil, found ta localities where It\nhas been procured, are strongly marked In various lo-\ncalities of the laods of the Company, affording every\nrational prespect wf success. Th company thinks It
4b9a3e0d0f95cd466f8ae258ce8a3331 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.43698626966 37.561813 -75.84108 the State to the office of "Commissioner of\nRegistration," turning out Union men\nwho had refused to issue certificates to\nthose who were disqualified by reason of\ntheir participation in the rebellion. These\nnewly appointed Registrars issued certifi\ncates to all who wished them, thus eufran\nchising 90,000 rebels.\nThis, together with the spilt in the Con\nvention at Nashville last May, in which\nthe Rev. Mr. Pearne figured so conspicu\nously and disgracefully, took the power\nout of the hands of the Union party and\nplaced it in the hands of the Conservatives,\nIt is not probable that these 90,000 vot\ners, even though they are not in posses\nsion of their certificates by any known le\ngal process, can now be disfranchised, and\nno the State is hopelessly ia the hands of\nthe Conservative party.\nShould the Congressional plan of \nstruction be tried, it would only keep loyal\nmen in power while it lasted. All the pol\niticians of the State, or most of them, are\nin favor of this reconstruction, because by\nit, and by it only, they can retain their\nplaces. Many men whose loyalty can not\nbe questioned, are opposed to Congressional\nreconstruction. They say they would\nrather "bear the ills they have than fly to\nothers that they know not of."\nThere are too many laws in the land.\nLet some that we already have be enforc-\ned, rather than make others which will be\nperhaps no better.\nThe papers of the South, or at least a\ngreat many of them, are now using their\ninfluence in covering up past doings and\nsectional feelings. The Knoxville Whig\nof a recent date had a very sound article\nupon "Northern Men."
70a1b111d93bcbc3b1e0174fcf698d1b OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9166666350436 39.513775 -121.556359 3 N Hie mutter of t « declarntion of certain streets m\n2 Hie t arltoii tract to lm highways, and to alter the\nroad to McConnells Ferry. It i » hetvhy ordered that\nthe present road running from Iho termination of\nItird, Itoliinson and Montgomery slresttvin the town\nof t iroville to Hatcher llaiich in said connty, he, and\nthe same is hereto declared vacated as a public high-\nwuy And it is further ordered that the said Itird,\nMontgomery and Uohllison streets of said town of\nI Iroville. he extended as public Highways across the\ntract of land known us Hie Carlton Tract, and ad-\njoiniiil; «aid town of * iroville. Said coniian.i / ;oiis of\nItird. Robins - n and MonUroraery street. In ho sixty\nsix feel in width, mid extending in dirtctions parallel\nwith each oilier, ascording to tile plan or server ol\nsaid Carlton Tract, made hy M. 11. Fnrhe*. \\nd ibis\nfurther ordered that the street marked Fourth Ave-\nnue. to the plan and serreyi of the sui t\nCarlton Tract lie. audlhe same >s hifchy declared to\nhen public highway —the said \\venue Rvhe sixty six\nfeel in width, and esrtejnttng uemns-said ;nirt of land.\nAnd il is further ordered Unit so nined. of the First,\nSecond. Third. Fifth Sixth. Seventh and Kighth Av-\nenues, as he hetweeu llohia-on and Montgoinery\nstreets, according lo llm plan or survey of said M 11.\nFarley of said Carlton Traci saw on Bin in the office\nOf the comity K-corder of *aid county, lie. and the\nsame are hereby declared lo he public highways, all'\nof said highways to he six*7 fesi in width. And t\nis further ordered that the road now laid out from the\ntermination of tho said Uohinson street, across\nthe Hatcher Ranch, to its jitfictioti with the old'coin'\nhe, and the same is hereby iluchc-ed a public high-\nway, said highway to he sixty six feet in width.\nAUesllho foregoing a flow copy.
24ecdb3bf1fd4f873e50d8b9886a3ff9 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1876.4904371268467 41.020015 -92.411296 "And now a closing work—the re­\nsult of my personal observation in\nthe south. We of the north delude\nourselves in expecting that the masses\nof the south, so far behind us in\nmany of the attributes of enlightened\nImprovement and civilization, are, in\nthe brief period of ten or fifteen\nyears, to be transformed into our\nmodel northern communities. Tliat\ncan only come through a long course\nof patient waiting, to which no one\ncan now set certain bounds. There\nwill be a good deal of unavoidable\nfriction, which will call for forbear­\nance, and which will have to be re­\nlieved by the temperate, fostering\ncare of the government. One of the\nmost potent if not indispensable\nagencies in this direction will be the\ndevising of some system to aid in the\neducation of the masses. The fact\nthat there are whole counties in\nLouisiana in which there is not\na solitary school-house is full of sug­\ngestion. We compelled these people to\nremain in the and now duty\nand interest demand that we leave no\njust means untried to inakc them\ngood, loyal citizens. How to dimin­\nish the friction,how to stimulate the el­\nevation of this portion our country,\nare problems addressing themselves\nto our best and wisest statesmanship.\nThe foundation for these efforts must\nbe laid in satisfying the southern peo­\nple that they are to have equal, exact\njustice accorded to them. Give them\nto the fullest extent every blessing\nwhich the government confers upon\nthe most favored—give them no just\ncause for complaint, and then hold\nthem, by every necessary means, to an\nexact, rigid observance of all their\nduties an.l obligations under the con­\nstitution and its amendments to se­\ncure to all within their borders man­\nhood and citizcuship,with every right\nthereto belonging. This I believe to\nbe the doctrine of the Republican\nparty. I know it is of the thousands\nof veteran Republicans in the banner\nSt. Lawrence district, as it is of\nyours, very truly,
385dd78afd890c45f45a41663053c10c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.8863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 bit contingency of human action. Jle\nignored tl»' fact 'and we do not apeak it\nprofanely) that (Jod Almighty has not\nbeen ahle do ho, nave and except in\nthat niblime moral axiom of liia Christ,\n(bat "a* yc would that men should do\nunto you, dw ye even ho unto them."\nHo failed to recognise that the nkil I\nir.l ingenuity of law breaker* is alwoyn\nil lean fully etpial to that of law maker*,\nmil that there never has been and never\nfin be a code «»f lawn that can not Ikj\nviolated in itomo roHpeot with impunity.\nIn doing "d the gentleman from Marion\ncounty utterly ignored the existence and\nthe value of a great unwritten mora)\ncode, under the shadow of whoso protect*\nio^i' the honor and purity of human\nio«titutioiH may alone be maintained. \nthe face nt lie advancing tendency of\nciriluilion and of Christianity to hold\nmenre.<|)oiHihlo for, and punishable for\nmoralohlii|uity, hu advocates in his place\n« tli.' representative of the |H>ople, ax\none of the gardians of the interests of the\npeople, as one of the conservators of public\nvirtue that there i.s no crime ngaiiiHt\nilii- people, no breach of oflicial morality\nworthy of more than a mild censure, un*\nIe«, /prioolli, il is also :i violation of\nwritten .statutory law An u legislator\nthe gcnlloiiiiin known that his po^ition is\nfalse in theory ami false in fact, lie\nkn<»*s that statutory law in inperfeet ami\ncm never be any thing else, else why the\neternal motion to amen 1 ami re-enact.\nKoluceil to hi-* standard there woill be\nnoliopo, no possibility of eitlior securing\nor maihhiningofficial integrity.
0345635d67f504a5d0d5222a08d5fad9 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.683561612126 40.618676 -80.577293 At the great industrial exhibits at the fairs\nyou will see vividly presented the achievements\nwhich are responsible for our American standard\nof living, the highest by far in the entire world.\nOut of the work of millions of hands and brains,\nworking in a free society, has come this epochal\nprogress. Pottery, power, radio, railroad, auto­\nmobile, clothing—every exhibit is a monument to\nthe American system—private enterprise.\nIt is fitting that the two fairs should be in op­\neration at this time. For, to an extent never before\nknown in our history, this American system of\nours has been under attack. The greatest achieve­\nments of private industry have been minimized.\nThe very foundation stones of democracy have\nbeen undermined. Individualism has been held up\nto scorn and ridicule. Business has been \nBack of this campaign against the American sys­\ntem is a determined attempt to put in its place a\nsystem based upon some foreign "ism."\nWell, one can hardly believe the American\npeople will fall for this. A century and a half ago\nwe were among the least of the powers—today we\nare the greatest power on earth. That unprec­\nedented progress has come from private enter­\nprise—from the work of free men, engaged in free\nundertakings with strong unions to advance wages\nand conditions. It is all shown magnificently at\nthe fairs. And it is shown, too, all around you,\nwherever you live—in the stores, the industries,\nthe service companies in your town or city. All\nof America is a great and continuous fair, exhib\niting proudly the fruits of the American system.
148ca3c60ce87973f35f93d7759d12d5 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.8890410641807 46.187885 -123.831256 of the United Slates, he says: "The\ntroops from the Boston, were doing mil\nltary duty for the provisional gorern- -\nment. The American flag was floating\nover the government building.. Within\nIt the provisional government conduct\ned business under the American pro-\ntectorate to be continued according to\nthe avowed purpose of the American\nminister during the negotiations with\nthe United States for annexation. My\nInstructions directed me to make in\nquiries, which In the Interest of candor\nand truth, could not be done when the\nminds of thousands of Hawaiian citi-\nzens were full of uncertainty as to\nwhat the presence of the American\niruopB, 111a Araunean nag, anu tne\nAmerican protectorate implied. It\nseemed necessary that all these Influ\nences should oe withdrawn before in\nqmrtes coma tie prosecuted In a man\nner befitting the dignity and power of\ntne United States, inspired with such\na feeling, and confident that no disorder\nwould ensue, I directed the removal of\nthe flag of the United States from the\ngovernment buildings and the return\nof the American troops to the vessel.\nCommissioner Blount says the causes\n the dethronement of the queen and\nthe establishment of the provisional\ngovernment were both remote and prox\nimate. He then reviews the history of\nthe Islands, beginning with the const!\ntutlon of 1852, and the changes made in\nthe system of government down to the\nrevolution In 1887, which resulted in the\nconstitution of that year, and which' to\na great extent is given by Blount as\nthe cause of the revolution of 1893. The\nvoting out of the Wilcox cabinet pro-\nduced discontent amongst reformers\nverging very closely towards a crisis.\nand had more to do with the revolution\nthan the queen's proclamation. The\ndiscontent with the constitution of 1S87,\nand the eagerness to escape from It,\ncontrolled the elections against the par\nty which established it. Divisions on\nthe mode of changes In the constitution\nprevented relief. Such was the situa\ntion at the prorogation of the legisla-\nture of 1892. Blount says the cabinet\ncould not be removed for two years.\nand it being against the new constitu\ntion, there was no possibility of it being\nproclaimed. His description of the rev\nolution is as follows:
82f1d7ea9111d5cfedb27db2f6e614f1 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.2835616121258 35.780398 -78.639099 Oh ! women of America, will you not\narouse to a sense of your duty and act well\nvour wart on the great arena of life ? On- -\nportunities lor usefulness are daily otFeriin.\nNor need you covet high stations for the\ntheatre of action. She, who in thc hum-\nble cottage, brings up children in wisdom's\nways, administers to the sick and afllicted\nand dispenses the bread of life to perishing\nsouls, discharges her duty as faithfully as\nshe could, did she live in the costly man-\nsion. It is true that woman's deeds are\nless conspicuous, but are they not as neces-\nsary and even more beneficial to society\nthan those of the other sex ? See in that\nhumble cottage, the patient mother meek-\nly performing her varied and laborious oc-\ncupations. AH know her delight to\nlinger around her quiet home and dwell on\nher irresistible charms. What renders her\nthus attractive ? The pure, thc gentle, the\npious soul within beautifies her countenance\nana gives her a holy lnhuence. Again we\nsee woman in the gilded palace, possessing\ntho same qualities and transacting the samo\ndeeds, yet she is no more lovely, for thc\ntrue woman is the same whether she dwells\nin thc low valley of poverty or on thehi.h\nmountain of wealth and influence. Itis\nthe duty of every woman to cultivate, to\nthe utmost extent, her intellectual faculties.\nWhat unparalleled advantages would result\nto society were she to do this. How much\nlight and knowledge she would then in-\nfuse. How insignificant thc trivial accom-\nplishments, superficial knowledge and ab-\nsurd opinions she now
35937ac771afc41f05b8ef730d39c29e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.7904109271942 41.681744 -72.788147 Organized At Peace Strength.\nAll of these new commands would\nbe organized at peace strength. Ade-\nquate supplies of small arms and field\nguns and howitzers and of reserve\nammunition for the enlarged estab-\nlishment would be sought.\nThe plan is erected on the thedry\nthat the nation must depend upon a\ncitizen army, largely of a volunteer\ncharacter, in time of war. There are\nhundreds of thousands of young men,\nit is said, who have both the time and\nInclination to devote at least two\nmonths a year to rigid and intensive\nmilitary training, and the continental\narmy would be composed of these,\nleaving to the National Guard those\ncitizens whose responsibilities pre-\nvent their devoting more than one\nnight a week or so to military train-\ning. With six months actual field train-\ning, army officers are confident that\nthe continental army would be as\nthoroughly organized as is possible\nwith any system short of compulsory\nservice and a regular establishment\nof half million men.\nOfficers from tne new army would\nbe obtained from civil life almost en-\ntirely, as the "West Point Military\nAcademy would be overtaxed even to\nsupply officers for the Increased reg-\nular army. Even at present, not more\nthan half of the officers of the army\nare West Point graduates, and an ex-\ntension of the work at West Point\nwould be required to care for the\nnew regiments to be created.\nOfficers for Continental Army.\nFor the continental army, the plan\ncontemplates drawing from the Na-\ntional Guard and from educational\ninstitutions where military training is\ncompulsory at least 1,000 officers a\nyear for each of the first two years.\nEventually, it is hoped that all mili-\ntary schools in the country can be\nstandardized as to their courses in\nengineering and other military sci-\nences. These courses would "become\na specialty, it is believed if a given\nnumber of ranking gradautes each\nyear were assured of commissions in\nthe continental army.
49259372273e808bb68c0463192e5b79 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1919.2205479134957 41.875555 -87.624421 There is something rcmnrkablo.\nTho horrors of war havo been upon\nevery tongue; tho influenza, except\nto thoso fumlllcB thnt wero stricken,\nban been almost us much a subject\nof Jest as of fenr.\nTho war has been blatant, spectacu-\nlar; advertised on ovory hand as a\nhorror. Tho plaguo has been silent,\nunseen; news of It hns been suppress-\ned. When wo rend tho dally casual-\nty lists from France, wo havo cursed;\nwo hnvo said: "who Is responsible?\nWho turned looso this horror upon\ntho world? Let him bo hanged as\nhigh as Hnmnn nnd his body burned\nmid the ashes sunk deep In tho sea."\nRut as regards tho black plaguo of\nInfluenza there havo been no casualty\nlists. The deaths havo been reported\nsingly, hero nnd there, day by day.\nWhen tho dread hnnd of contagion\nhns takon away a life, only tho Im-\nmediate family as a rule, has known.\nKven tho neighbors In flat above or\nbelow may not havo heard tho news.\nWho, upon rending of the death of a\nfriend, has said, as ho said upon rend-\ning the casualty lists: "Who Is re-\nsponsible? Who turned looso this\nhorror upon the world? Let him be\nhanged ns high as Hainan and his\nbody nnd tho nsheb thereof\nsunk deep In tho sea."\n"Yet, as some one Is responsible for\ntho war, so is somo ono responsible\nfor the plaguo thnt took almost as\nninny lives. As regards tho nntlcms\nof Europe, they could scarcely havo\nboon Isolated from tho plaguo of\nsword and shell, nor could thoy havo\nboon Isolated from the plaguo of fever.\nHut with America, In both cases, it\nwas different. As America remained\nfor long years Immune at peace whllo\nKuropo fought, so America remained\nfor long years immune, safe for tho\ntlmo being from the pestilence that\nwas Ailing grave for grnvo In Kuropo\nIn competition with tho death of tho\nbattle Hold. As tho Immunity of tho\nsea kept America out of tho fighting,\nso It kept America freo of tho epi-\ndemic until it had devastated Europe.\nWhllo tho pestlloneo of blood let-\nting could not end without American\nIntervention, there was no need that\nAmerica should contribute her dead\nthousands to tho pluguo of disease\nIn tlmo of peace thootashrdotaoahrr\ncould hardly havo kept tho Influenza\nInfection from crossing to our shores.\nThen shipping came and went from\novory port and tho deeki sore load-o - d\nwith humanity, going and coming\n(Continued on page I )
1a3c643c32552d14ab850f5b8f437659 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.9109588723998 42.217817 -85.891125 And such a dinner! Why, If Miss\nPolly had been In training for it all her\nlife sho could not have done better.\nAud there was a baby at the table, a\nthin faced baby in the arms oi a thin\nfaced mother, and when It cast one\nlook over the table It absolutely laugh-\ned, a funny little quavering laugh, as\nthough it were not used to it. Then, In\na moment, everybody was laughing,\nand there never was such a merry\ncrowd. Why, even poor old Mrs. Day\nwas laughing like a schoolgirl and de-\nclaring that sho liked any part of the\nturkey, so there was enough of It.\nAs for Miss Polly well, there was\nabsolutely no accounting for her. There\nshe was, carving away as though her\nlife depended on it, and here\nand there around tho table and re-\nplenishing everybody's plate before It\nwas half empty. Her face was fairly\nglowing with happiness.\nAnd then all at once tho little old\ngentleman In the shabby clothes stood\nup and leaned his trembling hands on\nthe tabk He wanted to express his\nown happiness and that of all the\nguests, he said, at the privilege of join-\ning in this blessed Thanksgiving feast.\nSome of them had been living hard\nlives, very hard lives. Some of them\nbad feared, had even thought, that\nthey were friendless and alone in the\nworld. He thanked heaven for their\nhostess, who had made her home that\nday a home for so many others, and he\nthanked heaven for the lovely young\ngirl who carried sunshine wherever\nshe went.
1f7bbb24eb45c4395c486e5a436c6dab DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.474043684224 44.939157 -123.033121 tion with tbe parable of the Wedding\nGarment. Tbat parable pictures tbe\nclosing time of this Age, when under\nDlvlno blessing God's most saintly peo-\nple will be given greater light on His\nWord and be enabled thereby to more\nfully appreciate the lengths, breadths,\nheights and depths of His Love and\nIts wonderful providences.\nThese cousecrnted ones are repre-\nsented as being gathered Into a great\nbanquet ball, riidluutly beautiful. In\nIt tbey tarry, waiting to be ushered\nluto the bancjuet proper, in un adjoin-\ning apartment. Tbe light of these\napartments Is In the parable vividly\ncontrasted with the darkness that pre-\nvails outside, which darkness repre\nsents the condition of tbe world und nil\nof God's people who have not yet come\nInto the light of "present troth."\nThe parable Is given specially to\nshow tbe necessity the "wedding\ngarment" tbnt none may enter Into\ntbe marriage feast axcept be acknowl-\nedges and uses the "wedding gar-\nment" On such festlvul occasions In\nancient times It wns customary that\nall guests should be furnished by the\nhost with gnrments of white which\nwould cover their own giirmetits. unit\nfor the time being, as bis guests, this\nplnced them all on the same footing,\nwhatever their ordinary station In lire.\nThus we have pictured the Jiistlllcution\nwhich all God's people receive as a\ngift through the merit of their He\ndecmer. Being Justified by faith the\nconsecrnted have not only peace with\nGod. but tbey have access to this tig\nnrntlve "marriage Biipper."\nThe parable Is laid in the end of this\nAge and points out that ut this time\nan Inspection of the Church tuny be\nexpected.
0f02da84ae9a122175bda21f79973c61 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.1164383244545 42.217817 -85.891125 bly tho largest establishment of the\nkind in Boston is tho ono at No. 290\nCommercial street, which employs\nabout sixty hands, and keeps somo\n$20,000 or $30,000 worth of unmanu-\nfactured stock on hand all tho time.\nOno reason for keeping so much raw\nmaterial in stock is the fact that there\nare no dealers in the articlo of bristles\nin the city. New York is tho great\ncenter of the trade for this country. It\ndoes all tho importing, and the larger\npart of tho work of preparing the\nAmerican product for market. Tho\nbest bristles are imported, and come\nmainly from Bussia and Germany, a\nfew fine ones coming , from France.\nThe Bussian and German bristles are\ncoarser, longer, heavier and straighter\nthan tho American article. They will\nrange in length from three to six and\neven seven inches, and are worth at\nNew York from 50 cents to $4 per\npound, the short and dark colored, or\ngray, being the lowest in price, and tho\nlong and white the highest.\nAmerican bristles como mostly from\nthe Western States, although are\nobtained from the largo abattoirs in all\nparts of tho country. There aro large\nconcerns in New York City that buy up\ntho bristles from tho slaughter houses,\npayiug some years 3 to 4 cents per hog\nfor the season, and in others as high as\n8 to 10 cents. Tho present price is\nfrom 5 to G cents per hog. These\nbristles aro boiled, washed, dried\nstraightened, laid one way. assorted\ninto different lengths and colors, and\ntied up in bundles alout four inches in\ndiameter for market. Only a small\npart of tho raw material can bo utilized\nfor bristles. These hairs come from\ntho back of tho head and along the\nspine. The "fur" which grows on tho\nMiles of the animal is too short and\ncurly, and it is so!d to mattress facto-\nries to be made into the nice "Sonth\nAmerican horse hair" mattresses which\naro adveitisod to bo sold cheap. This\n"wool," a it is called, is wortli only 1\nto 5 ccnla per pound, after it is hag-\ngled. Tho bristles, which vary in\nlength from 2
0b05df084156fae5e4e1b3376ca03e38 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1899.3575342148656 46.601557 -120.510842 itn fruits and its lilessinuH. Valleys\nricher than the Nile; a climate salubrious\nas an Kden, compared to the bllaaard*\nridden enot; on the rlgbl and left monn '\ntains of ore, precious as lha' of Ormiiß\nand of lud.atid I'Nrth't natural hiklhways\n\\u25a0tivtching from ttie Colombia liamn to I\nthe Pacific ocean for railroad builders to\nlay their tracks of steel—all invite capital\nand itttriirt Immitfration. Man is sup-\nplementing the hoiintilul «ork nf nature,\nand the jewel city of Vskima is springing\nforward by leapa and bonnda. Bpokane'a\nnterpriaing men have mnde her a yreat\ninland city, though pnanraalng not a tithe\nof the OOntribUtory advantaaee of this\ncity. The future manufacturing indus-\ntries, under the stimulm of Oceanic trade\nand commerce, will multiply a thoneand\nfold in n decade the motor power will\nhe the mountain atreama that Bow hut\nto bleaa the land in countleta ways. Nn-\n» here in the s'litc in t Inn- such i Men" of\nwiter power hu easy of in i eaa and utili/.;i-\ntion hh in Vbk.mit. Here Corbin, who Ul\nhoildinii h m iiijiho'h mi,: ir beet refinery\nin another part ol the utale tnual con.c,\nac he prorniaea he will, to erect another\none near the li'inc ol mppliea, foe Yak-\nIma'a noil la fitted, aa no other is, for mikiar\ndect production Mere muet aprtng up a I\n!innt woolen mill; for th<> Northern I'rt :\nciflc rail«Hv, by mi unparalleled reduction ;\nof tarill' rates —from $"> to $1 a ton on\nwool shipments— has decreed that North\nYakima must he the, wool center.
0afab6b34dd24e23e795cd702393d22f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.6150684614408 39.513775 -121.556359 Thoughts on Type. --The printing pre**\nwe arc told, is the grandest invention since\nthe death of Tubal Cain. lt is a printing\npress, said a boy standing by the ink trough\nwith a qeucless turban of brown paper on his\nhead. A printing press? What do you\nprint ? 1 asked. Print ? said the boy,\nstaring at mo doubtfully. Why, we print\nthoughts. Print thoughts? I slowly re-\npeated after him; nr 1 we stood looking ft\na tn 'incut at each other in mutual admira\nC n—he in the absence of an idea, and I in\npursuit of oto. But, ttiy boy, I nsknl.\nhonest soberness, what arc thoughts, and\nhow can you got hold of them to print them ?*\nThoughts are what comoout of the peoples\nminds, ho replied. Get hold of them in-\ndeed ! Why, minds arn't nothing you can\nget hold of, nor thoughts either. All the\nminds that ever thought, and all the\nthoughts that minds over made wouldnt\nmake a ball ns big ns your fist. Minds, they\nsay, are first like air. you can't see them;\nthey don't make any noise, nor have any,\ncol r, they don't weigh anything. Bill Deep-\ncut the sexton, says that a man weighs just\nas much when his mind is gone out of him as\nhe did before. No, sir, all the minds that\never lived wouldn't weigh an ounce troy,\nThen how do you print thoughts ? I asked.\nThoughts make tracks. he continued, ar-\n in his left hand a score or two of\nmetal slips, and with these hero letters we\ncan take the exact impression of every\nthought that ever went out of the heart of\nman, and we can print it, too. Talk about\nthe mind's living forever! exclaimed the\nbay, pointing patronizingly at the ground,\nas if mind were lying there, incapable of\ni nmortality until the printer reached it a\nhelping hand. Why the world is biimful ot\nlive, bright, industrious thoughts, which\nwould have been dead, if it hadnt been for\nboys like me, who have run the ink-rollers.\nliiiinort.a;itv indeed! Why peoples minds,\nlie can tin'.md, with h : s imagination climbing\ni; to the | n i indy sublime, | eople's minds\nwtiiC in't he immortal, if it twasnl for the\nprinter, at any rate, in this ; lanctary bury-\ni ground. Wo are the chaps what manu-\n-I'iclure immortality tor dead men Give ns\none go. J healthy mind to think lor ns, and\nwe will furnish a d ;zea worlds as big as this\nwith thoughts to order. Give ns such a man\nand we will insure his life, we will keep him\nabve forcv«T among the living. He cant\ndie no w ty you can fix it, when once we have\ntouche i him with these bits of inky pewter\nHo shan't die nor sleep Wo will keep his\nmind at wank on till* the mind that shall\ncome to live hero as long as the world\nstands. Quarterly llrvi<v\\
04ffb1eec1848d3dcf937364519e5466 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1900.6287670915779 41.875555 -87.624421 Old world privileges and restriction\nreign supreme In Spain, whero thcro is\na law that no subject shall touch tho\nperson of tho king or queen. Tho pres-\nent king of Spain nearly suffered a se-\nvere fall from this rule, In his child-\nhood. An aunt of his made him a pres-\nent of a swing. When ho used It for\ntho 'first time the motion frightened\nhim, jind ho began to cry. Whereupon\na lackey lifted him quickly out of It\nand so, no doubt, preserved him from\nfalling. The breach of etiquette, how-\never, was flagrant nnd dreadful. The\nqueen wns obliged to punish It by dis-\nmissing the man from his post. At the\nsnmo time sho showed her real feelings\non the subject by appointing him Im-\nmediately to another and better plnce\n tho royal household.\nIn another enso a queen of Spain\nnearly lost her life In a dreadful way\nowing to this peculiar rule. She had\nbeen thrown when out riding, and, her\nfoot catching In the stirrup, she wns\ndragged. Her escort would not risk\nInterference, nnd sho would have been\ndashed to pieces but for tho heroic In-\nterposition of a young man who stop-\nped tho horso and released her from\nher dangerous position. As soon as\nthey saw sho was safe her escort turn-\ned to arrest tho traitor who dared to\ntouch tho queen's foot, but he was not\nto bo seen. Knowing well tho penalty\nho had Incurred, bo mndo off at once,\nfled for his Ilfo nnd did not stop until\nhe had crossed tho frontier. Now\nYork Mall and Express.
1d0e452a884f425ba5e98dd9d9d54747 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.493169367284 39.745947 -75.546589 The delegatee elected by the various I President and Vloe President of the\nRepublican oluba throughout the State , United States nominated by the Rtpub\nto ferm a leagae under the authority of lloan National Convention at Obloago.\nthe National League of Republican We reoogniso in General Berjamln\nOluba of the United States met yester-1 Harrison tbe distinguished lawyer, ex­\nday afternoon at I o'clook In the hall at1 perlenoed atatesmau and the gallant\nthe Young Men's Rîpubllosn Oink1 soldier of tbe Union. We honor him\nHouse, No. 810 Klug attest, and were j for his great publlo service, the purity\noalled ta order by Edmand Mltohell,1 and integrity of bla oberst ter, and hla\nJr., who read the oall Issued ander the life of devotion to tbe groat principles\nauthority of iho National League, after of the Republican party, which has\nwhich for officers of the j honored him and honored itself by ee\ntemporary organization were made. The looting him as Its oasdidate Tor the high\nRev. Jonathan 8. Willis of Milford, and responsible offije of President of\nWashington Heatings, Walter H. Hayes, the Unlttd Staue. In the Hon. Levi\nUaq., and John G. Baker were noml- P . Morton la presented a gentleman\nnaied Hastings and Baker deo.lnel thoroughly familiar with tbe business\nto ue candidates. B »lloting was then Intereste of theoonntry, of long and\nbegan, eaoh olnb casting one vota, re- varied experience In publlo affairs,both\nsalting in the selection of Mr. Willis as at home aud abroad; of broad and Intel*\ntemporary ohelmaan. He was esooited Ugent views as a atatesmau, whose ripe\nto the phalr by Etlwoid 0. Jaokson and wladoa, high personal character, and\nH. H. Ward, Esq.
0083f5f3b72654cce9eceff7dfc0066b PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.9575342148655 40.441694 -79.990086 to conquer my spiritual foes, if I want to get\ntbe victory over sin, death and hell, I come\nto the front of the.boat, and 1 kneel down,\nand I say: "Oh, Lord Jesus Christ, Thon\nwho dost hush the tempest, hnsh all my\ngrief, hush all my temptation, hush all my\ntin!" A man, a man; a God, a God.\nI learn once more from this subject that\nChrist can hush a tempest\nIt did seem as if everything must go to\nruin. The disciples had given up the idea\nof managing the ship; (he crew weVe en-\ntirely demoralized; yet Christ rises and He\nputs His foot on the storm, and it crouches\nat His feet Oh, yes ! Christ can hush the\ntempest You have had trouble. Perhaps\nit was the little child taken away from you\nthe sweetest of the household, "the\none who asked the most curious questions,\nand stood around you with tbe greatest\nfondness, and the spade cut down through\nyour bleeding heart rerhapa it was an\nonly son, and yonr beart has ever since\nbeen like a desolated castle, the owls of the\nnight hooting among the fallen arches and\nthe crumbling stairways. Perhaps it was\nan aged mother. You always went to her\nwith your troubles. She was in your home\nto welcome your children into life, and\nwhen they died she was there to pity you;\nthat old hand will do you no more kindness;\nthat white lock of hair you put away in the\ncasket or in the locket didn't look as it\nusually did when she brushed it away from\nher wrinkled brow in the borne circle or in\nthe country church.
342b823d65dbf4f87f7a72b703bc18ca NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.5751365803987 41.681744 -72.788147 sistant postmaster for a number of\nyears. He was appointed by the late\nE. F . Tomlinson to succeed M. O.\nRyder who was forced out of office\nduring a political squabble. His trans-\nfer to the rural carrier's place was\naccomplished at his own request, the\npostal authorities permitting the\nchange without compelling him to\ntake the usual eft mination.,\nThe salary of the assistant post- -\nmaster and that of the rural carrier\nis now practically the same, although\nthe country mail man nets less be\ncause of the fact that he has to fur\nnish his own team or auto. Mr\nMorse was anxious to get an out X le\nplace and he was willing to make the\nsacrifice to get the appointment.\nProhibitionists to Campaign.\nWhile definite move towards or-\nganizing to make a fight at the Oc\ntober election to put Plainville in the\nclass with dry towns has as yet been\nmade, men prominent in the ranks\nof the temperance advocates claim\nthat thev are frolng- to conduct a\nvigorous campaign and are hopeful\nof victory. Their plans are yet in\nembryonic sate but when they de-\nvelop the leaders declare there will\nbe something for the friends of Bar-\nleycorn to worry over.\nFor the past few years the tem-\nperance people have been exerting\nthemselves in an effort to secure a\nvictors'" for no license and it have\nbeen so near to success on a" few oc-\ncasions that the liquor dealers had\nto work overtime to retain the bal-\nance of power.
22f3871fe7371fd0faceb03d11fe7068 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.7136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 Jtaotrtd, That tho further continuance\nof one partv in power in the Nation, and\nespecially in the commonwealth, tending\nto corruption and affording-opportunity\nand temptation to iiial-adiiiinistration and\npeculation, multiplication of salaried om-\nces, many of them unknown totheConstltu-\ntion, thus removing the responsibility for\nmis-government from tho otllcers elected\ndirectly by tho votes of the people, giving,\nin fact, the administration or tire common¬\nwealth into the hands of otllcerH uncon¬\nstitutionally appointed hy the executive,\nho as to interpose a harrier l>etwcen it\nand the people for, just accountability of\nexecutive ofliccrs, fatextravagance and ac¬\ncumulation of unproductive property in\nthe hands of the State, the purchase and\ncare of which has*been paid for by a bond-\ned dobt of many millions purposely placod\nin foreign countries so that it might Ikj held\n an investment freu from tho taxation\nwhich lias so burdened tho j>eople with\ndebt. Slate and municipal, to he paid for\nhy the constant increase of taxation and\nexactions upon the people in a time when\nall enterprises are hindorcdTwhen indus¬\ntries in business yield no adequato return\nand labor gets no just equivalent for its\ntoil, make it a permanent necessity that\nthe administration of State and municipal\naffairs shall be thoroughly and efficiently\nreformed. Wo therefore reproduce the\nplatform for tho State government as set\nforth by the Democratic party in its Con¬\nvention iu 1875, a mora extended reference\nto which is fonnd In on address of our can¬\ndidate for Governor to the citizens who\nasked him to be a candidate, and in whiuh\nho plodgcs himself to undertake to reform\nall such abuses.
086afad8893fb840f54fd0be9cb8f398 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.6753424340436 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho great year of yellow /over epidemic\nill New Orleans was In 1833. TJie popula-\ntion of tlml dt.v, at that tlmo was nbout\n80,000. The total number, of deaths that\nyear from yellow fever was 0,020. On the\n22(1 "f August the number from that dis¬\nease was 2.34. The present population of\nNow Orleans is about 220,000. Wore the\nepidemic as fatal as a quarter of a century\nSKJ'10 .Wotifd aggregate nearly\n2.,000 nod the daily mortality 730.\nSew Orient. Dli|ottli »Cincinnati Cjimiitrchl.\nMuch indignation is expressed in com¬\nmercial circles/t the lieartleMindiflbrenco\nof Mobile anil Ualveston, both of which\ncities have done incalculabledamage to Now\nOrleans commerce by absurd exaggera¬\ntions of quarantine, and who up to this\ntime have not contributed a cent towards\nalleviating suffering. The Mobile llail-\nroad projiosc to sue Mobile for the full\n resulting from her ridiculous om-\nbiirgo on through tniius, ostiuiatlnir the\nloss at at SIO.OOO a week since Aug 1.\nMomphia DUpatcti toUiiihrllloConrfcr-lounnl.\n"Found dead in n house" has becotno a\ncommon n'jiort from the visiting nurses.\nA sad case of this character is tliat of Dr.\nK. i». Watson. Ho had worked like a\nTrojan since the fever broke out as phvsic-\nian ami nurse, finally lie was missed, no\none knowing what had become of him.\nYesterday a visitor went to his temporary\nquarters (Ids family having boon sent out\nof the city). He found the door locked,\nkicked it open, nad found the dead body\n. wit*' all symptoms of having died with yel¬\nlow (over. He could not tell how long ho\nhad been tleaj. I)r, Watson wos one of\ntho most active pliysiciaus in the epidemic\nOl 18/.'I.
0cd5b782b35ec98df2a631d234075d07 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1889.1767122970573 46.187885 -123.831256 more worthy of respect and love, or a\nland so magnificentin extent, so pleas-\nant to look npon, so full of suggestion to\nenterprise and labor. God has placed\nupon our head a dicdem and at our feet\npower and wealth beyond definition or\ncalculation; but we must not forget that\nwe take these gifts npon the condition\nthat justice and mercy 'shall hold the\nreins of power and the upward avenues\nof hope be fr;e to all people.\nI do not mistrust the future. Dangers\nhave been in frequent ambnsh along our\npath, but we have uncovered and van-\nquished them all. Passion has swept\nsome of our communities, but only to\ngive us a new demonstration that the\ngreat body of our people are stable, pat-\nriotic and law abiding. No political par-\nty can long pursue advantage at the \npense of pu'ol;c honor or by rude and in-\ndecent methods without protest and fatal\ndissatisfaction in its own body.\nThe peaceful agencies of commerce are\nmore fully revealing the necessary unity\nof all our communities and the increase\nof our peoplo is promoting mutual re-\nspect. We shall find unalloyed pleasure\nin the revelation which our next census\nwill make of the swift development of\ntho great resources of some of our states.\nEach state will bring its generous con-\ntribution to the great nggregate of the\nnation's increase, and when tho harvests\nfrom the fields, the cattle from tho hills\nand tho ores of the earth shall have been\nweighed, counted and valued, we wili\nturn from them all to crown with the\nhighest honor tho state that has most\npromoted education, virtue, justice and\npatriotism among its people.
3d72a8e710fe9f30e8c9669767782b0d OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.7684931189751 39.513775 -121.556359 Where lit- ran be consulted p-ivntelv and with thi*\n'linn"' confidence by the afflicted at all hour* dully,\nfront * A. M ,. until * P. >l. (Cures always guaranteed\nor no p it required.\nIMl*< >I»T \\NT TO MINERS. TRAVKLKUS. KTC.\nfit M ERE I* no malady of deeper Importance either\nt! In a medicftl or mural light of triew. to which\n(he hutriftn family i* more liable than lhnt arising\nfrom impure connection*.\nA« n medical mnn ill« 'he Inly of every physician\nto look if dl*en*e as it effect* heftllh and life, and his\n*ole object should tie to mitigate, n* far h* lie* In hi*\npower, the bodilv suffering. Mnmsii nature nt best is\nhut frnll. nil ire liable to misfortune.\nOf nil the 111* lh.;t nlfecl man none are mere terrible\nthan those of a private nature. —Premlful u* it I* In\nthe perron who contract*!! frightful a* it* ravin;,\ne* upon hi*cm*'ttutlou. ending treqnently In destruc*\nlon and « loftlh«ome tirnve. Il become* of still greater\nlmt>orlanre when it I* transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. !*uch being the errehow necessary II be*\ncome* that every one bavins lhe least reason to fe*r\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoll tit once by con*ulllng seine physician, wlioso\nr.'spectalbllin and education enable* him to warrant\nn wife, speedy, and perinenent cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity. HI! YOUNG feel* called upon to\nslate that. t>v lon* stud' and extensive practice, ho\ntins belome perfect master of all those diseases which\ncome under the denomination of venereal, and hav-\ning paid more nltentlo i tolled one branch than any\noilier physician in the United Slates, he feels himself\nbelter (jnalifti-d to treat them.\nSyphilis la all it* form*, such r* nicer*, swtdllnir IB\ntheirroans. nicer In the throat.secondary syphilis, c.il
5953d25c3a721503bec6e7a3421043bc THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.8479451737696 39.369864 -121.105448 The idea of applying blasting to\nmining in deep banks is not original\nwith the Independent's correspondent,\nnor is his the only experiment. The\nblasting process has been tried in this\nvicinity for a number of weeks past,\nand the general results have been\ncarefully noted from time to time in\nthe “Press.” Its value as an aid to\nthe miner in procuring a supply of\ndirt for washing has been fully proven\nand accurately stated. Instead of\npiping, or picking, at a hard bank of\nearth for perhaps more than half the\ntime, he can now keep his boxes run-\nning full of dirt constantly , at a great\nsaving of time and money and labor.\nThe great desideratum with miners\nhas long been to obtain an uninter-\nrupted supply of dirt at as small a cost\nfor labor as possible; the application\nof blasting appears so far to meet this\nwant. It is being extensively tested\nin these diggings, and so far has not\nfailed in a single instance to realize\nthe hopes of the experimenters. Sev-\neral companies have already adopted\nit as a regular and indispensable part\nof their mining operations, and in our\nopinion use is destined to be com-\nmon throughout the State. There\nare no arguments needed to convince\nanybody of the fact that the explosion\nof confined powder will displace\nmases of earth; we only want to ex-\nperiment and ascertain the best modes\nof applying this fact to the purposes\nof the gold miner. The press through\nout the entire mining region ought to\ncall special attention to the subject.\nIt merely needs to bo generally men*\ntioned to be generally tested. The\nuniversal introduction of blasting as\na means of procuring dirt, will work\na great gain not only to the miners\nthemselves but to the State. It will\nmake profitable a large quantity of\nground which is not now worked for\nthe reason that its excessive hardness\nprevents a sufficient supply being ob-\ntained by ordinary methods except at\na greater cost than the total yield.\nBut the miners ought to use elec*-\ntricity to fire their blasts, as well in\nrock tunnels as in banks, instead of\nfuse. It would be much cheaper in\nthe long run, and would prevent that\ndreadful loss of life and limb which\nsaddens the mining record of every\nlocality.
af337ae5c22cd666758a44f022cac9cc NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.746575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 The Boston woman appeared at\ntho most recent hearing which was\nheld in the probata court last Mon-\nday. Sho explained that the woman\nwho claims to be a sister to Mr.\nDonovan, the father to the testator,\nwas unable to appear at the hear-\ning and she requested that time be\ngiven for her to place proof of her\nrelationship before the court. Judge\nWelch gave her until October 25 to\nprove the claim.\nIn the event that It Is proved that\nthe woman is a sister of the late\nMr. Donovan, her claim to the es-\ntate will supersede all the other\nclaims of first and second cousins.\nAfter the death of Miss Donovan\nand the notice of the first hearing\nof claims on the estate, relatives\n all parts of Connecticut and\nalso from Massachusetts, put In on\nappearance for a share in the es\ntate. At subsequent hearings, judge\nWelch eliminated many of these un-\ntil the number is about half of what\nit was at the first hearing.\nBecause she had no near relatives.\nMiss Donovan's estate would have to\nbo divided between her closest ol\nkin upon proof of relationship. These\nwere so numerous that It was im-\npossible for the court to decide\nwhich claims were bona fide and\nwhich were not.\nThe latest surprise to be sprung\nin the case Is liable to set all the\npresent claims at naught and should\ntha relationship of the Boston wo-\nman be proved, It Is said that she\nwil' Inherit the entire estate.
7aecb5f7bd66c6d7ed4feb51aca93a0d THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.9164383244547 43.994599 -72.127742 came off a house they tore down some-\nwhere around here. Had to chop tha\ndoor down, almost to get the knocker,\nbut. then, the door was bust in, any-\nway. Nowadays they makes the\nknockers so they screw on easy, but\nthis one has rivets that goes right\nthrough. If It hadn't 'a' been made so\nqueer I might 'a' sold it before. But\nno one wanted to go to all that fuss to\nfasten it on."\nMyra waited until she reached home\nto admire the knocker at leisure. It\nwas large, and displayed a griffin's\nhead of a stamp that Myra had never\nseen on any modern replicas. But she\nhesitated about putting It on her front\ndoor. Once it was attached, reasoned\nMyra, it would have to remain in\nplace. If she left and sold her house,\n tenants would not appreciate\nthe old knocker; they would not pay\nher what It was worth. Besides, she\nwanted the knocker herself.\nThen one day after a rather gloomy\nday at school and a gloomier visit from\nMiss Snooks, Myra gave Instructions to\na nearby carpenter to go to work and\nfasten the old knocker on her front\ndoor. The next day when she re-\nturned from school he was waiting to\nfinish the Job. Before her supper the\nknocker was in place. When It was\nknocked it sent out a booming sound\nthat fairly shook the little house.\n"I'm going to stay here the rest of\nmy life," she told a younger teacher\nwho called on her that evening. Tve\nhad the knocker attached, so there is\ndo selling out now. Til b a second\nMiss Snooks "
0a1f19a93870eca40735074490f33ac1 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.8808218860984 44.939157 -123.033121 Section 1. That Section 23 of the above\nentitled act, being Section 23 of the present\nCharter of the City of Salem, Oregon, be\namended ao as to read as follows:\nSection 23. Ths Common Council shall not\nin any manner create any debt or liability,\nexcept as in this Charter provided. At tho\nend of each year an estimate shall be made of\nthe actual revenuea to be derivd from all\nsources, and from the total of that estimate\nthe total of fixed charges shall he deducted,\nand the disbursements of the City Council\nshall be restricted to the balance. No debts\nshall be contracted in excess of the estimated\nrevenue, except aa otherwise provded herein,\nand also except in the case of an emergency\nor unforeseen calamity, when the Common\nCouncil may borrow by giving a note or notes,\n the Issuance of bonds, or otherwise, a sum\nnot to exceed $20,000.00 to meet such emerg-\nency or calamity. The Council may call a\nspecial election to determine whether the\ncity shall incur an Indebtedness, or may sub-m -\nsuch proposition at any general or special\nelection of the city. The ordinance calling\nsuch special election shall be passed not less\nthan thirty (30) davs prior to such election,\nand shall set out the term of the proposed\nindebtedness, and the general purposes for\nwhich such indebtedness will be incurred,\nend upon a majority of the qualified voters of\nsaid city who vote at such election, voting\nin favor of authorizing the proposed indebted-\nness, the Council may then contract the same,\nand may by ordinance provide for the issu\nance and sale of bonds to fund such indebted-\nness.
43112a8db0ba106039f9d5dcb968a664 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9136985984271 40.063962 -80.720915 The New York J*oat ridicules the an¬\nnouncement that "bridal chambers,"\nand other ^extravagances, such as fres_\ncoed ceilings, sumptuous tapestries,etc.,\nare about to be introduced into some of\nthe Northern cars. It says: "Bridal\nchambers are disgusting enough in\nhotels and Bteamboats, where they have\nlong since been condemned by public\nopinion, even the least refined; but\n'bridal chambers' in a railroad car\nwould be too shocking to be tolerated\nat all. The first load of decent passen¬\ngers wonld cast their tawdry finery out\nof the windows. The ambition of rail¬\nroad managers should be turned, not\nto an increase of frippery in the orna¬\nmentation of cars, but of safety in their\nconduct. If money is to bo spent, lot it\nbe spent, not in fantastic decorations,\nbut in substantial improvements. Does\nit not seem a mockery, whon wo have\nover a hundred frightful slaughters\nby rail each year, to be told that the\ncars are to be froscoed and gilded and\ncarpeted ? Or are the managers mad,\ncaring nothing for life or limb, and\nonly eager to mane a display? Or, do\nthey make so much money, spite of\nthe large sums ever and anon paid for\n'damages,' that they canafiford to throw\nit away in this silly ostentation, in\nwhich ill-breeding unites to produce at\nbest only a shabby gentility."\nThe old maxim about loving the\ntreason but despising the traitor, is re¬\nceiving a new illustration in the manner\nin which the Southern press speaks of\nBuchanan and his book. For instance,\nthe following,from the Richmond Times:\nJames Buchanan, that extraordinary\nillustration of the trite remark that not\nonly great men have their weaknesses\nbut little ones too.that model ofdeport¬\nment, who conld never be trusted by\nhis most intimate friends one single\nhour.and the brightest features of\nwhoso administration were bis accom¬\nplished Vic© President and his magnifi¬\ncent niece, the most elegant woman who\nover presided at the White House.has\nwritten a book. After any number of\nyears in the United States Senate, after\nnaving served as Minister at St. James\nand President at our capital, after dab¬\nbling for an untold period in themuddy\nwaters ofPennsylvania politics,stricken\nby some strunge visitation of God, some\njudicial blindnes, he has published a\n"book.
18ff5d3940d4ed3676fa921fefd7b1e4 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1897.1356164066465 37.92448 -95.399981 Editor Register : In fulfilment\nof promise I write to tell something\nabout this country.\nWe are having lots of rain just now\nbut are busy getting ready to plant.\nMo3t of the corn is planted in the last\nof this and the first of next month.\nCotton is planted after corn. In fact\nthey plant cotton from the middle of\nMarch until the middle of June. Af -\nter cotton comes sweet potatoes, and\nsuch sweet potatoes a3 they grow here\nthe finest and best we ever saw. They\ndo not raise plants a3 they do up theie\nbut just plant some potatoes early,\nthen when you are ready for the main\ncrop just cut the vinos of the early\nono3 in pieces about six inches long\naud stick each piece in the ground\nwherever you a hill aud the\nthing is done. They save the crop the\nsame as Irish potatoes iu Kansas,\njust bury them out doors aud they\nwill keep until spring.\nI think this is going to make the\nfinest fruit and truck aud small farm-\ning country I ever saw. I have a\nfriend here that sold strawberries in\nDecember aud January at fifty cents\nper quart. The cold spell in January\nkilled all tho berries and bloom, but\nnow the vines are full of bloom again,\nand the owner says he will have a big\ncrop in March or April.\nThe Houston and Galveston mar-\nkets use all the fruit sent to them so\nfar and would consume as much more\nat good prices, but they are not very\nplenty when they sell at the above\nprice.
10c20f8b21b4b965fc7429d1efd2c9f8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.0833333017101 40.063962 -80.720915 Apart from the general crowd stood the\nfisherman whom tho miser had last ap*\npealed to, surrounded by a few kindred\nspirits, who were discussing with him the\nchance of the young man's return.\n"It is madness to attempt it." said the\nfisherman; ^but when I found he would\ngo, I insisted that he should raako his con*\n(1 itions with the old man before he ven*\ntared; for, you see, if his daughter was\nonce restored to the usurer'aarms, mighty\nlittle gratitude wquld he lmvo for her pre*\nserver, and Harry would stand as bad a\nchance as ever. Between us, I think she\nthought as much of the young man as he\ndivlof her, and if her father sent her awav,\nas I more than suspoct, to drive Martiu\nfrom her thoughts, her present dauger\nseems something like the retribution of a\nhigher power oh a punishment for his con-\nduct. But, hark! was not that a halloa?"\n eye was turned seaward in which\ndirection tho fisherman had indicated he\nheard the hail; but nothing could be seen\nexcept the white foam of the breakers in\nthe foreground, and tho lowering clouds\nbehind, forming a chaotic mass of .dark*\nness, Nor was there any sound save that\nof the roaring tempest borne to the ear.\n"Hark.l" at length said another one,\n"there it is again!"\nEvery one"listened, anil now a halloa\nwas heard faiiitly through the thick gloom\nseaward. One of tho fishermen shouted,\nand a reply was quickly caught in the lull\nof tho tempest. A few minutes of breath*\nless suspense followed, during which\nevery eve was strained to the utmost.\n"lhere it is.there it is!" at leugth cried\nbne. "fc»ee.just rising on yonder wave."'\n"I see it!" shouted auother.\n"Here they come, huzza! a miracle! a\nmiracle! Ah, howgallontly she breasts the\nsurf!" were the exclamations that followod\nfrom the crowd.
091458cd1a589551ee7347d150e5c6f1 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.4890410641806 35.780398 -78.639099 1. Resolved, That in view of the pernicious fruits\nof the traffic as affecting the social, civil, moral and\npolitical interests of the country, upheld as it ia\nby the laws of North Carolina, we, a portion of the\nc tizens of the State, declare our settled determina-\ntion to use all proper means to secure the enactment\nof a law which shall repeal the license law and put\nan end to the traffic in ardent spirits as a beverage.\n2. Resolved, That we cheerfully submit to taxa-\ntion for purposes of Improvement and Education\nand for alt public works tending to elevate the con-\ndition of our fellow man; but do most earnestly\nprotest against paying taxes for the prosecution of\ncriminals and the support of paupers, produced by\nthe traffic in ardent spirits.\n3. Resolved, That facts prove that by far the larg-\nest portion of the taxes is paid by tho industrious\nand sober part of the people and that the dealers\nin liquor, by reason of the smallness of their num-\nber, condition, Ac., bear a very disproportionate\nshare of such taxes.\n4. Resolved, That it is clearly wrong that one part\nof a community should be licensed to carry on a\ntraffic, the inevitable consequences of which is bur-\ndensome taxation to another part and resulting in\nevil and only evil to the whole community.\n5. Resolved, That in so far as the traffic in anient\nspiriU affects the social, civil and pecuniary inte-\nrests of the country, it is a political question, as\nmuch as any other within the range of our police\nand revenue laws, or as that of cleaning out a river\nfor navigation, or c instructing a public road ; and\nis a clearly entitled to be so recognized and dealt\nwith. That in so far as said traffic affects the health,\nhappiness and morals of the people, it is as much a
1d0d0d707667f250873def7196c236c0 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.0726027080163 41.020015 -92.411296 landed interests to dispose of, those\nwho cannot get debts qne them, and\npossibly those who find the dtsburae-\nDursoment of offerings, a difficult and\nmany times, ungratetal tank..\nAfter the return flrotn the Republi­\ncan Vallov of oorSupt. of Instruction,\nHon. J . M. McKenzie, I had a long\ntalk with him. I think there can be\nlittle danger of exaggerating the desti­\ntution. Hundreds of families have\ngone thero, having llttlo money left\nwhen arriving, relying upon the corn\ncrop to help them through the winter.\nThis failed, utterly. It h not as in an\nold country where an amount ot pro­\nvision Is in store—everything wont, or\nnearly so; if a few had wheat, the rest\nhave no money with which to boy. It\nis different flrom sn old country, too,\nIn that there la tti) work to be done by\nWhich money Can be earned. There\nla so little timber that the wood hired\ncnt, gives employment toalmost \nEven here, where men have come\nfrom the Wast to spend the winter,\nrelying upon getting through with\nteam work, there are nearly six men\nto every job. I can call to mind at\nthis moaent not less than four of\nthese Inen In onr little town, ready to\ndo any jobs of troitc with their teams,\nand dependent npon their labor for a\nliving. One of these, an old citizen of\nNebraska, is said to have been worth,\nwhen he oune west, $5,000 or 16,000.\nOf these four men, one has a family\nof four children, another six, and an­\nother eight. Some of them have claims\nto a homestead, but this is ot no pres­\nent practical value to them. Some­\ntimes they have little moro than a\nday's work in the whole week—they\nhave nothing upon which to fsll back.\nThese cases give us hints of what it\nmust be in whole communities where\nno work is to be had.
297c412246f0f84ae620486ae5aa6bed NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.1219177765095 41.681744 -72.788147 "Then there is the floor problem\nIt is a popular belief that a slnjrl\nlarge square rug, or one that suits the\nshape of a room, Is the correct floor\ncovering for a small room. This Is\nnot always the case. A carpet which\ncovers the entire floor will not alter\nthe size of the room to the eye, but\na large rug with a decided border or\none about which there is a spaco of\nbare floor will contract the walls of\nthat room, seemingly, just as though\nthey were brought up to touch the\nedges of the rug Itself. A better\nway is to use two or three small rugs,\nplacing them, of course, so that they\nwill not be at bewildering and dizzy\nangles. This arrangement has the\nopposite effect and the floor, to the\n gains In spaciousness. A moment\nago I mentioned a carpet. Please\ndon't think for a moment that I\nadvise it. Rugs are the only floor\ncovering permissible in these days of\nsanitation, to my mind. And there\nare rugs and rugs the smaller the\nroom, the smaller the design in a floor\ncovering should be, even to the ex-\ntent of being nonexistent. Plain rugs\nare always in good taste.\n"Vistas are important in a small\napartment. The rooms should be re-\nlated in color and furnishings, and\nscant portieres, if any, used, so that\nthe rooms will open generously one\ninto the other and so eliminate that\nboxed up feeling.\n"But there, suppose I run over to,\nyour apartment tomorrow afternoon\nand really help you in the enlarging\nI'd enjoy cheating that mercenary\nlandlord."
1bd6860536bf438e84092a7f6db67d54 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.250684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 ceipt of the above, went to his partner's j\nresidence, and, being unable to obtain i\nadmission to the house, visited the )\npolice station at Twenty-third and >\n. Brown Btreets, and after informing the <\nofficers of the dispatch he had received, l\nrequested assistance. The police, on i\nvisiting the premises, got over the t\nfence into the yard and found the <\nkitchen window shutter bowed and un- t\nfastened. The window was opened and <\nthe officer entered, and, on stepping to t\nthe lloor, discovered the bodies of Mrs. (\nBlackstone and her children lying t\nupon iho lloor, their heads una parts of 3\ntheir clothing covered with blood. The t\nlloor was also covered, and the llow of \\\nblood was stopped from running into t\n yard by a roll of muslin, which had f\nbeen placed in front ol' the door, as if <\npurposely intended to keep all evi- t\ndeuces of the crime within the room, s\nTho kilchen is a very small one, and, r\nfrom appearances, Mrs. Blackstone (\nwas about kindling a lire in the range f\nwhen she was deprived of life, her c\nhands being stained with coal dust, c\nThe coal had been freshly put on. She i\nlay at full length, on her back, in the 1\nmiddle of the lloor, the head to the south. 1\nKeating against her knee lay her son, 1\nwith liis face to the lloor, while the\ndaughter lay with her head upon his\nBhoulder, both in their night clothes,\nand all having evidently been killed a
10d4f06c3d2ee0f05eb68195cfcb5ec7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.4698629819889 39.745947 -75.546589 »eir. t; Goes not mean, in fact 1 think t|vate and develop faculties ami talents this or that, but how sastly more our be on hand. You all know what a nice\nIt does not usually mean, to nave a gay aiong unPS different from those used In enjoyment when we call someone else trip It Is from Wilmington to Phlladel-\ntlme, nor a frivolous time. Here Is Inc our jal|y occupations. John C. John- In to there the pleasure with u*. True phla, along the historic Delaware,\nvery point where so many make the con, the great lawyer, was a great col- enjoym'-nt cannot be selfish, it does not Lndeatorert If you Intend closing\nmistake. They have the pre-concelved ieC(or 0f aiq amk j,e „tu^ied It. studied thrive alone. The Joy of work of one 1 your meetings on Sunday evenings lin­\n'd8* that they enjoy themselves u f,anj so y,at (,0 became the con- kind or another is \\astly enhanced ■ til September pl--a»e close the last Sun-\nwben they are on pleasure bent and noisseur. It Is difficult to tell whether when we work for someone else ami day In June and bring all your mem-\nR“fnu lhey are dom« those things g Weir Mitchell Is more widely known with all our power strive to do some-î bers to the Patriotic Service at Wash-\nwhich have as their one objective aim-1 a„ t|,e p.eat neurolo«ist or as the fine thing which will give its blessing to Ington Heights on June 30. This will\nply to amuse. Such persons think they novelist. When he was not busy with others. The best way to have a good be a big rally If each and every society\nmust be constantly entertained. But tlj!(
52cebb8b49f748ba48afe2c33557450e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.9521857607265 43.798358 -73.087921 produced in a family by the influence of\nthe morning and evening petition ; but\nthis effect is not what ought to be in the\nmind of the speaker. To be acceptable\nto God, prayer must be really what it pre-\ntends to be, hone6t, heartfelt supplication\nfor the blessings which the heart desires.\nThe heart, therefore, must be on God, and\nnot on the hearers around.\nThe duty of family prayer, thus per- -\nlormea, win nave a vast innuence upon\nthe character and happiness of the house\nhold. 1 . It will have an immense influ\nence in softening and soothing all the ir\nritating passions so likely to creep into a\nfamily. If a father calls together his\nchildren and domestics, and reads and ex\nplains a portion of the Bible, and offers a\nsimple and heartfelt prayer in their pres-\nence, one that they can understand and \npreciate and join in, what an influence it\nmust have upon them during the day.\nThe father will be morejeind and patient,\nthe mother more considerate for those em-\nployed by her, the children more peaceful\nand accommodating; and all this will\ntake place as a natural effect of the exer\ncise, independent of any direct agency the\nprayer may have in bringing the influ\nences of the spirit upon their minds. If\na man does not thus recognise the hand\nof God in the government of his house\nhold, the members of his family have no\nthing to remind them of their accounta-\nbility to any higher power. From Mon-\nday morning to Saturday night, there is\nnothing to bring before them their rela-\ntions to God, and their need of salvation.\nThey are thus trained up for the world,\nand worldly influences will of course have\ncontrol.
00cdc6e88c8d4479182892110edd850b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1889.3794520230847 46.187885 -123.831256 the improvement of Benton street, in\nsaid city, as laid out and recorded by\nJohn McClure, from the south side of\nJefferson street to the northern ter-\nminus of said Benton street, in the man-\nner provided by Ordinance No. 1079,\nand which ordinance was approved on\nthe 13th day of April, 1889, on each of\nthe following described lots and por-\ntion of lots and blocks fronting on\nany portion of said portion, of said\nstreet, is now payable at tiie office of\nthe city treasurer In U.K. gold coin, and\nunless paid within five days after the\nfinal publication of this notice, to wit:\non or before Tuesday, May 28th, 1889,\nthe Common Council will "order war-\nrants issued for the collection thereof.\nThe assessment is as follows :\nE. C . Crow, lot 5, 7, SCO yards fill-\ning; cost of grading, 67GJ0; cost of\nplanking, $154.20: total cost, $250.70.\nC.Baltes,lot4,blkll0, 250 yards fill-\ning; cost of grading, $62.50; cost of\nplanking, $15420; total cost, $219.70.\nH.B. Parker, lot 4, blk 10, 293 yards\nfilling; Icost of grading, $7323; cost of\nplanking, $15420; totalcost, 227.43 .\nUnited States, lot 4, blk23, 319 yards\nfilling; cost of grading, $79.75; cost of\nplanking, S15420 ; total cost, $233.93.\nUnited States, lot 5, blk 23, 324 yards\nfilling; cost of grading, $81; cost of\nplanking, $15420; total cost, $23320.\nClatsop county, lot 4, blk 28C07 yards\nfilling; cost of grading, $76.75; cost of\nplanking, 15420; total cost,230 .93.\nClatsop county, lot 0, blk 23, 185 yards\nfilling; cost of grading, S4G25; cost of\nplanking. S15420rtotal cost, S200 .45.\n"W . II. Gray-
b111bd8ec152a60f2193fd9edc21ffb8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.7849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 Under the terms of the amend­\nment drawn by the federation»\ncouncil, "the United States Supreme\nCourt will have the power to review\nan act of Congress and to declare\nsuch an act unconstitutional, but(1n\nthe event that Congress a second\ntime enacts the legislation in ques­\ntion it will be beyond the power of\nthe court and will stand as the filial\nand unassailable law of the land.":\nThis dangerous amendment, if^lt\nshould become effective, would de­\nstroy the stability of the country.\nIt proposes a revolutionary way of\nchanging the Constitution—by act\nof Congress Instead of by the peo­\nples expressing their will through\nthe Legislatures of the various\nStates. Under the Gompers' plan the\nConstitution of the United States\nwould become the target In Con­\ngress of professional propagandists\nand lobbyists. The safeguards writ­\nten Into this great instrument tl>\nthe founders of the republic would\n demolished and the Constitution\nwould become a nullity. The CoA-\nstltution, in fact, would be, at any\nparticular time, just what a major­\nity of the members of Congress hap\npened to think it should be, ot\nshould be politically coerced by spe­\ncial Interests Into making it.\nThe founders of the republic\nrealized the necessity for the erec­\ntion of a bulwark to protect the\npeople against congressional Inva­\nsion ot their rights and liberties\nThe Supreme Court of the United\nStates is that bulwark. If a major­\nity of Congress, at any time, from\nany Influence or under any motive,\nshould attempt to Invade the con-|\nstitutional rights of the American\npeople, the Supreme Court standi\non guard to protect the peoples\nrights. If It were not for the Su­\npreme Court, Congress could be con­\nstantly setting aside constitutional\nsafeguards and bulwarks of the pe*\npie.
095007c33ffd971649437c07f16bd308 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.3767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 worse. Scales would form over the sores and then dry out until they would\ncrack and pop open, showing a watery matter. My skin was all liko a dry\nwrappor. It felt as though it had driea on me. Tno scalcs wcro so bad that\nthey would collect in the bed and have to bo shaken out It was about this timo\nthat I commenced using 8. B. 8. I was so bad that I was ashamed to take my bat\noil before a neighbor. I had used Ave bottles of another medlclno without noticing\nany effect; but when I commenced to take B. B . B . the sores came out thlokcr\nthan before, and they burned like flro; they were immense blotches of fire that\nwould burn so I could not sleep. The way they burned and itched can not be\ntold, and I hope no one elso may ever know from experience. The only relief I\ncould get was from washing the sores with somo B. B . B .\nI stuck tbo medlciao and was on the fourth bottlo before I could see that I\nwas really better, although I knew that it was better to get such rottenness out of\nmy blood thon to have it stay there. I did soy onco that I wished I hod novcr\ncommenced taking B. B . B . but my wife encouraged mo, and to-day I thank her\nfor the advice, for I am in good health now, and I don't believe I over would have\nbeen with my blood in such a condition as it was.\nMy scalp now Is clean and clear of all scalcs and tetter, and on my body there\nare only small spots to show where the sores wero, and these spots are free from\nscales. I do not doubt but that tho cure will be perfeot.\nI am now on the sixth bottle and will tako more until ovcry Bpot is gone, i\nfirmly bellevo that Burdock Blood Bitlera will euro tho Wont disorders of tho blood,\nlor such certainly wos mine.
2e40de323bc1c054132871effe2a719a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.8972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 physicians in whom myself and friends jJJ\nuccd implicit confidence.'in this condition {n\nwas taken to Brattleboro, Vermont, for j-J°\no purpose of beiug placed in the insane f.lls\nylum. I remuiued there until last A prili au<\niing attended all the while bv my faithful\nife who never left me and believed tlia1 ^lo\nme disease and not insanity was my\ne cause of all my trouble. I regained\nnaciotisncsa in March1 last and insisted JJj[\nion being Uiken home. Tho physicians niu\nvised that 1 remain, but I insisted upon t,ul\niving.and we began the journey,traveling {/J\n)wlv. I was met at the dock by a friend stei\nloin I recognized and then 1 became\nain unconscious and remained so for over ,Ug\nweek.. When 1 oxiee more recognized am\ny friend and know my surroundings 1 P/1!\ntormined to try, as a lust resort, a treat- J\nent of which I had hoard much but ci,sl\nicw nothing. Neither myself nor friends his\nd much faith that it or anything could \nilp me, but we resolved to try. Wo ac- L .i .\nruingty dismissed the physicians, gave No'\nall other .remedies, and,! rejoice to sny\nat with the blessing of Him who guided ^\n,"'l am to-day a well man";'having riot 55c\nen so vigorous for -nv.iny 'years, and 1\nre it all to the woudirftil, :- . Imoat miracu- ^\nus, power of Warner's Sate Kidney Cure, see\ne> remedy which I used. R?"\nYou can well imagine how grateful 1 j°,;\nuslfeel under tho circumstances, and, Si7\n:c a new convert, I earnestly dtnire that J1'\nI who are Buti'uriiigshonld kuowand.avail $i'0\nemselvcB of this means ot recover}'." Had she\nnot been for the rotnedy above "nftmcd\nshould doubtless now be within the walla\nan asylum or in my grave. The great tiij\nauble with m v case was that no one seemed *|a\nknow what 1 was alllieted with, and I am y(J,\nisitivc that thousands of people iu Mm\nuierica to-day are in the Fame or a timilar JJ edition,
8091c435da59ea9db41a49b72e809f0f THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.6680327552622 38.729625 -120.798546 As we anticipated and predicted, Mr.\nConness bad complete and absolute con-\ntrol over bis Convention which met in\nthis city on Wednesday. It was disa-\ngreeable to witness the subserviency and\nobsequiousness of, not only his old adhe-\nrents, bat bis new followers also. His\nvast superiority over them was at once\napparent The slightest indication of his\nwishes was sufficient. He commanded,\nthey obeyed, with a servility truly disgust-\ning. The temporary chairman, with an\nill-concealed sigh and bitter irony, said he\nliked the complexion of the Convention.\nSo did we. How must Conness have felt?\nHis old enemies at his feet, piteously\nbegging him to recognize their claims, and\nfitwningly, cringingly soliciting his sup-\nport With a smile of exultation or a\nsneering remark, he granted their request\nor coldly turned from A recent\nconvert, for whom Conness entertains\nprofound contempt, thinking to gain Con-\nness' approbation, made a motion which\nhe thought would meet the views of bis\nnew master. Foolish roan ! He had scarce-\nly made the motion when Conness pro-\nnounced it absurd, and the imprudent\ndelegate, trembling in his knees and look-\ning appealingly at Conness, precipitately\nwithdrew the motion. He wilted instantly.\nAll acknowledged Conness the master,\nspirit of the Convention—nearly all im-\nplicitly obeyed him. He made every\nnomination, and dictated the course to be\npursued. In some instances he ruthlessly\nsacrificed his old friends, merely to show\nthe tremendous power be wielded and\nbow dangerous itvias to cross his path.\nIt was a lesson lie wished to impress on\nbis new followers, and they will profit\nby it.— »—■
1ce24e6c28a72459d3d0d91870759c06 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1886.015068461441 42.68333 -96.683647 tho war-path, and may in time be-. '\ncomo useful members in society. The\nfirst step should be to make tlfein citizens.\nThere are many million acres of land set1\napart to the Indians for which they can\nnever have use. The proper course to,\npursue, be says, is to break up their tribal;\nrelation, put them under the protection of >\nthe law, and make them amenable to its,\npenalties, allot to each of them a sufficient!\nquantity of land to enable them by industri­\nous habits to maintain themselves ns indi-'\nvidua! members of societv, and dis|M>se of\nthe remainder of the land to actual settlers,^\nand appropriate the proceeds of the salesi\nfor their education and support.\nMr. Towushend's plan is essentially dif­\nferent from that of Semrtor Vnu \\Vvck.\nHis bill to organize the Territory of Okla­\nhoma provides for the consolidation of the\nIndian Territory under a territorial govern-,\nment, the establishing of a court, aud the,\nallotment of lands iu severalty among the'\nIndians. It authorizes the appointment of.\na Governor and Secretary DV the Presi­\ndent, the Governor to ex-offlcio Super­\nintendent dt Indian Affairs in the Territory.|\nA Legislature, to consist of a Senate of.\neleven members aud a House of Representa­\ntives of twenty-nine members, is to be\nchosen at the first election to lie held,\nin the Territory by all male personam\nI""" " ynara nt ag*. Inwfnltjr AmMM;\nin the Territory. At subsequent elections,\nthe right of suffrage is vested in all anoh\nmale persons who have resided in (he ter-«\nritory for six months. A court is estab-'\nlished, to be presided over by one judge..\nAn attorney and marshal are authorized to)\nl>e appointed by the President. The jaris-i\ndiction, criminal and civil, will be of a]\ncharacter similar to that of the Western'\nDistrict of Arkansas. ^1 are competent aa.\njurors who are bona fide male residents of\nthe Territory and over 21 years of age, and\nwho uuderstand the English language well\nenough to comprehend the proceeding*..\nAll laws of the United States applicable\nand not in conflict with Indian treaties\nare to be in force in the Territory.''\nA delegate to Congress is authorized\nas in
0f37c96bd8365f82311adf390d66c73b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.815068461441 41.681744 -72.788147 It Is not generally understood that,\nwhile Yale is managed as a business\ninstitution by trained administrators\nYale is not a business institution. She\nhas education to sell but sells it at a\nnominal price, nowhere near enough\nin total to meet fixed charges. Par-\nents who send their sons to big pre-\nparatory' schools are often amazed\nat the nominal fee charged at Yale,\na trifle over $150. The business an-\nswer to this proposition is to raise\nthe tuition fee as practically all other\nforms of Investment do under like con-\nditions. But education is not a com-\nmodity. Should Yale rate her tuition\nfee in accordance with her expenses,\nshe would at once cease to be the na-\ntional, democratic institution she is.\nHer halls would be crowded with\nthose who have the money but not\nwith those who have the brains. The\ncountry no interest in, and cer-\ntainly the state would not exempt from\ntaxation, a university devoted to the\ntraining of rich men's sons.\nYale must continue to be the\ncharge of her graduates and friends.\nNothing must be permitted to inter-\nfere with or impair the great serv-\nice she is giving the country, though\nas the report of the treasurer shows\nshe is doing all in her power to re-\nduce expenses without impairing her\ndomestic efficiency. And ow more\nthan ever is Yale deserving of her\ngraduates and friends. She has become\na powerful factor in the prosecution\nof the war and will be found magnifi\ncently represented wherever there is\nwork to be done in connection with\nit. Yale may be embarrased but she\nwill not be Injured by the- abn orm -\nlimes that have overtaken her along\nwith the rest of us.
03f0ee6cdb0c295709e5fe032996ae2d WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.0095628099068 40.827279 -83.281309 outrages that may have been perpe-\ntrated in your State by the Mssocia\ntion of Ku Klux I have listened\nwith horror to some of the testimony\nwhich has been brought before you\nThe outrages proved have been\nshocking to humanity; they admit\nneither of justification nor excuse;\nthey violate every obligation which\nlaw and nature impose upou men.\nThese men appear to have been alike\ninsensible to the obligations ot hu\nmaiiity and religeon. The day will\ncome, however if it has not already\narrived when they will deeply la-\nment it. Even if justice should not\novertake them there is another tribu-\nnal from which there is no escape.\nIt is their own conscience; that tit\nhunnl. which sits in the breast of every\nliving man ; that still, small that\ninniia jtiirough the heart, and a3 it\npeaks gives happiness or torture.\nthe voice of conscience --the voice ol\nGod. And if it has not already sno\nken to them in tones which have\nwaked 'them up to the enormity ot\ntheir conduct, I trust, in the mercy\nof Heaven, that voice will speaic be\nfore they 6hall be called to the dread\ntribunal to account for the transac\ntions of this world."\nSuch words a3 these, coming from\na gentleman so eminent as Mr. John\nson, and who at the time he uttered\nthem was standing in the relation of\ncounsel for the Ku Klux. ought to put.\nto utasti tne JNortuern sympathizers\nand Baltimore indignants. who from\nday to day insist that these masked\nraiders have committed no crime.
408432249381902db704ddcf0c57d431 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.201369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 College, 1 would like to ask through\nIhe columns of your paper. It It would\nnot be a better Investment on the part\nof the State to bond itself for $125.000\nIn order that the white girls of the\nstate may have the sam» chance for\nan education that their brothers—as\nwell as the colored girls of Delaware\n— now have, than to issue bonds to the\namodnt of $730,000 for a “state long\nroad when It may have the duPont\nboulevard as a gift. 1 believe I am\nright In saying that one of the chief\nobjections that has been raised to the\nduPont boulevard is that the slate\nwould have to boar the expense of Sts\nupkeep after it has been completed.\nThe stale would surely have to keep in\nrepair "state long road" for which\nsome members of the Senat, advocate\nthe issuance of bonds to the amount\nI of $750,000, and therefore, It seems to\nj me that It would be displaying far\nmore wisdom to accept the duPont\nboulevard (in some amended form If\nnecessary) and spend $126,000 for the\nérection and equipment of an Affiliated\nCollege for Women, thus bringing Del-\ni aware up to a level of progressive-\nj ness nearly equalling that which has\nlong existed In other slates of the\nUnion. Besides the difference in the\namounts of the two bond issues now\nbeing considered would cgver the cost\nof maintaining both the Affiliated Col­\nlege and the duPont boulevard for\nsome time to come.\nTherefore I would urge that our\nworthy Senators lay aside personal
139b2ad6161e518fb324d968e3839d1a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.0835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 ind I don't want you to say a word about bill\nit." After the mill shut down Mr. Fergu- 5>ta\n<on and myself were left in the office alone. Coi\nlf« went oiif. 1 remained until half nast the\nseven. At that time he returned; said he gali\nwas going to lire the mill; 1 did notsav am\nunytlunc, us I thought 1 had said all that 1 of\ncould, lie went out into the tnill; was gone 3\nabout five minutes. When ho come back Re«\nbe said be had tired the mill. 1 went to poi\nmy boarding house and immediately re- of\ntired to bed; was not asleep when I was ing\ncalled; don't know just why I did not tell\nthe authorities; 1 had nothing to do with the\ntl.e firing of the mill; did not see him after for\nI left the mill on the evening of the llth con\nuntil (lav; lie 8uidt "now mind and be per\ntrue or thyy will send us both up." I re- pas\nplied that it was not inv doing; at every 3\nconversation since ho has requested me to bill\nkeep my mouth shut; said lie had used act:\noily waste from the cngino room; I had Ed\nlittle to do with buying the mill; Ferguson Oh\nlid the talking and yaid the money: when reg\nCornell purehascd his interest, I knew of sail\nthe terms only as Ferguson told me; he (\npaid the money himself: 1 signed the deed, oft\nbut did not read it or hear it. wa\nAdjourned until 7 r. m . on<\nAt tuo evening session Mr. V'atlcins was (\ncross-examined. He was evidently in awe al*\nof Mr. Ferguson, lint a most rigid cross-ex- da;\nanimation from Mr. Ford failed in any i\nmanner to shake hisdirect testimony. That abi\nthe
180769ac868a31a1d2cabee1fa34e978 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1878.2835616121258 40.832421 -115.763123 Fatal Shootinc at Currkt.\nTho particulars of the killing of Om\nBotto by Jokxc Bigelow, in Eureka,\nSaturday night, aro thus given by tbe\nSentinel of yesterday:\n. .At half past 10 o'clock last night\nand about fifteen miuutes after the\nperformance «ai over at Bigelow *\nHall. A number of pistol shota were\nheard in that vicinity. and a man\ncame rashiug np town with the infor¬\nmation that Jeeso Bigelow had fchot\nGus. Botto. A number of peoplu ran\nto t'-e hall, and found Botto lying on\nthe floor, nearly uncouscious und evi¬\ndently in n dying condition. Ho was\nimmediately removed to bis residence,\non 15 ne 1 street, and Doctors Owen and\nBishop summoned to hi# aid. On\ntheir arrival an examination was made,\nand it was fouud that ho had boon shot\nfive times. One ball had entered on\nthe left of navel; another penetrat¬\ned just below the heart; ouo above and\none below the right nipple; and the\nfifth ball entered tlio left log midway\nbetween the knee and bip, breaking\ntbe bone, lie was partially conscious\nwhen taken to biti home, and A. M .\nllillhcube, lisq.. was tent for to take\nliis dying deposition. lie attempted\nto speak, but was too far gone to moko\nhimself intelligible."\nAccording to Bigelow 's statement,\nBotto, in the early part of tlio evening\nhad abased him for failing to retain\nseats for tlio latter at the show, und\nfearing an assault from Butto, Bigelow\narmed hiiuscif with a "Whistler, and\nabout fifteen minutes ofter the enter¬\ntainment was over, and whilo Bigelow\nwas in the hall, Botto entered nt the\nfront door, walked down toward him,\nnear the stage, and said; "I want you\nto give uie two dollars."
37ee3fbc2d1033da4276307e0e5576a7 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.6734972361364 40.807539 -91.112923 $5 00.' painting the entire building inside andoutsida\n22 00 i°r which a special appropriation of $3,-1^2 was\n7 50 voted by Congress. The Representatives of tho\n5 50 People have been gulled—yessir, actually gull-\n1 07 i *d, with the idea that large annual uppropria-\n54 00'tions have been necessary for 'repairs of the\n18 75 President's House,' that it might not 'fall ta\n12 50 pieces and go to ruin;' and when thoso uppro-\n36 00 priations have been made for 'repairs of tho Prc-\n27 00 sident's House,' they have invariably been ex-\n6 25 pended in the manner I have indicated.\n0 00: Cut sir, the phraseology of the act of Congress\n10 50, passed 3d March, lb37, hs before mentioned,\nijo embraces the word 'alterations' as well as the\n103 00 word 'repairs' What do you understand by\n31 50' the term 1alterations?' lean tell you what that\n12 87 j word signifies at the palacc. If the broad walls\n7 87 °f t'»e East room have been hung 'paper\n{ of the lemon color, with a rich cloth border,' and\n1 if the lemon color should be proscribed by the\n120 00; palace dandies as unfashionable, the word 'dl-\n16 00 teratiuns' would in this supposed case apply\n4 00 with remarkable clearness, and would enable\n11 25 tiiC master of the House to substitute 'a rich,\n4 GO chaste and beautiful' silver paper, wilh gol-\n108 00; dcn borders, for the unfashionable 'lemon col-\n24 75 orf with a rich cloth border. ' It sometimeshap-\n4 00; pens that the 'alterations' suggested toth-3 Pre-\n' sident are so various in their character that ho\n30 00 jg unable to decide on their rsspective merits.\n2343jji jn difficulties of this sort he has been known to\n7 50 1 ca]l jn the aid of a professional artist, by whose\n2 25 plans and drawings the mind of the President\nmay be aided in arriving at safe conclusions.\nHence, amcngst the official vouchers before mo\n1 was not surprised to find the following:
0edc8b7b12d84fbbb8cd48a4e85797d0 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1919.7931506532218 36.000618 -88.428106 noiselessly and from the vantage\npoint thus obtained I was enabled to\nsurvey a large portio.'i of the room.\nI clambered over the rail, assured\nby the first glance that the room was\nempty, and succeeded in lifting the\nheavy sash a few inches without any\ndisturbing noise. Then it stuck, and\neven as I ventured to exert my\nstrength to greater extend to force it\nupward, the single door directly oppo-\nsite, evidently leading into the hail,\nwas flung violently open and I sank\nback out of view, yet instantly aware\nthat the first party to enier was Joe\nKirby. He strode forward to the table,\nstriking the wooden top angrily with\nhis fist and knocking something crash-\ning to the floor.\n"You know where she Is, don't you ?"\nre asked, in the same threatening\ntone he had used without.\n. "Of course I do ; didn't I help put\nher there?" It Carver who re-\nplied, standing in the open doorway.\n"Then bring the hussy in here.\nI will make the wench talk If I\nhave to choke It out of ber; she'll\nlearn what it means to be i nigger."\nI had but a moment ic which to\nobserve the man, for almost immed-\niately Carver flung the door of the\nroom open and Kirby swunp Impa-\ntiently aboct to farw the entrance. Ex-\ncept for a possibility of thus attract-\ning the attention of the newcomer I\nwas In no special danger of being de-\ntected by those within. Carver thrust\nher forward but remained' himself\nblocking the doorway. I use the word\nthrust, for I noted the grip of his hand\non her arm, yet in truth she instantly\nstepped forward herself, her bearing\nin no way devoid of pride and dignity,\nher head held erect, her eyes fearless-\nly Eeeklnc the face of Kirby. Their
02725c672d93717c8713c57b08426407 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1886.7904109271942 39.756121 -99.323985 You have a mild illustration in the\nWoodford evictions of what will happen.\nThe marquis of Ciauriearde a typical\nabsentee and Airs. Lewis own proper-\nties that adjoin in the County Galway.\nLnlilie tue eurrouuuiDg landlorua, these\ntwo owners refused to accept the com\npromise of the tenants, and police, mili\ntary, and a body of emergency men from\nDublin arrived upon the scene.\nThe YV'oodrord races took place the\nday before the expected arrival of the\ncrowbar expedition, and that a fitting re\nception 6hould await tue strangers a\nbellman was sent unou the course, who\nproclaimed to all whom it might con\ncern that the sheiiif and his bailiffs\nwould arrive the following day to evict\nthe tenants at Looscauu, and that it\nwould be well if as many as possible\nwould remain in town over night. The\nhint was tatcj readily, and wi'h a result\nwhich was seen in the comjjlete destruc-\ntion of all the bridges that spanned the\nriver which divides the Looscauu district\nfrom Woodford. This was the first de- la - v\nin the eviction work.\n first house which the sheriff and\nhis army approached was that of an old\nbedriddeu cottier, but on smashing in\nthe door the bailiffs, aided by the emer-\ngency men, found that a solid piece of\nmasonry had been built up inside which\neffectually barred an entrance. While\ncontemplating this unexpected obstruc-\ntion and concocting plans for its demoli-\ntion, the party were suddenly immersed\nin a shower of boiling water and lime\nwater and an equally destructive shower\nof brickbats, stones, and missiles that\nhad been carefully accumulated by a\nbody of men who had concealed . them-\nselves within. The bailiils then battered\ndown the gable end of the cabin, and the\npoor old occupier, groaning in a death\nagony, was conveyed amid the execra-\ntions of the crowd, on r stretcher to the\nroadside. The defenders, however, suc\nceeded in making their escape.\nAt one cabin, after an exceptionally\nheavy volume came pouring from the\nroof, the head of two exceedingly pretty\ngirls were seen to suddenly rise above\nthe thatch for the purpose of observing\nthe effect of the hist
31352f168e08335c50b0db0f496db0b1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.5383561326737 58.275556 -134.3925 Statistics of the population of Alas\nka, according to the census of 1910, are\npresented iu detail in a bulletiu soon\nto be issued at Washington, D. C., by\nthe bureau of the ceusus, department\nof commerce. It was prepared under\nthe direction of William O. Hunt, chief\nstatistician for population. Statistics\nare presented for the territory, as a\nwhole, relatiug to number of inhabit¬\nants, iucrease of population, color or\nrace, nativity, pareutage, sex, age, mari¬\ntal couditiou, state of birth of the na¬\ntive population, couutry of birth and\nyear of immigration of the foreign-born\npopulation, males of voting and militia\nages, citizenship, school attendance,\nilliteracy, inability to speak English,\nand uumber of dwellings and families.\nStatistics relating to sex and age for\nIndians of fullblood and of mixed\nblood, by stocks and tribes, also are\ngiven. All topics covered by the thir¬\nteenth census are iucluded except oc¬\ncupations and ownership of homes.\nThe Pioneers' llome at Sitka will be\nready fcr occupants July 25, according\nto the plans of the trustees, who met\nand organized in that city, July 4. The\ntrustees, who of Governor J. P .\nA. Strong, W. P . Mills and Kev. Sergius\nGeorge Kostrometinotf, selected rep\nresentative A. G . Shoup to aot as the\nfirst superintendent of the Home, with¬\nout compensation. The furniture for\nthe home has been ordered, and it is\nproposed to havo it installed and ready j\nfor occupancy July 25. Several appli¬\ncations for accommodations have al¬\nready been received. The funds for the\nuse of the home are limited to 110,000\nand it is the purpose of the trustees\naud superiuteudeut to make that go as\nfar as possible. For that reason it has\nbeen decided to ask the people of Al¬\naska to douate books for the library,\nand the newspapers will be requested\nto send copies of all their issues to it.\nDonations of other necessities would\nalso be welcomed. The purpose of the\ntrustees is to carry out the intention\nof the legislature *nd not conduct the\nhome as a charitable institution, but to\nmake those availing themselves of it\nfeel that they are simply receiving a\nreward for the services they have done\nthe territory In pioneering.
f144c4d69c27f6772f0283bc6ed94ca2 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1847.1164383244545 31.960991 -90.983994 tence, our friend, arid has ever extended to ua\nlier warmest sympathy—those Irishmen, who, in\nevery war in which we have been cmguged, on\nevery battle field, from Quebec to Monterey, have\nstood by ns, shoulder to shoulder, and shared in\nall tiie perils and fortunes of the conflict. The\nimploring appeal comes to us from the Irish na­\ntion, which is so identified w ith our own as to be\nalmost part and parcel of ours, bone of our bone\nand flesh of our flesh. Nor is it any ordinary\nhuman misery, or a few isolated cases of death\nby starvation, that we are called upon to consider.\nFamine is stalking abroad throughout Ireland,\nwhole towns,. ounties—countless human be­\nings, of every age and of both sexes—at this\nvery moment are starving, or in danger ot star­\nving to death for bread! Of all the forms of dis­\nsolution of human life, the pangs and agony of\nthat which proceeds from famine are the most\ndreadful. If one dies fighting gloriously for his\ncountry, he is cheered, in his expiring moments,\nby the patriotic nature of his sacrifice. He\n tliat his surviving relations and friends,\nwhile lamenting his loss, will he gratified and\nhonored by his devotion to his country. Poets,\npainters, sculptors, historians—will record his\ndeeds of valor and perpetuate his renown,\nhe dies by the sudden explosion of the boilers of\na steamboat, or by a storm at sea, death is quiet\nand easy, and soon performs its mission. A few\npiercing shrieks are uttered, he sinks beneath\nthe surface, and all is still and silent. But a\ndeath by starvation comes slow, lingering and\nexcruciating. From day to day the wretched\nvictim feels his flesh dwindling, his speech sink­\ning, his friends falling around him, and he finally\nexpires in horrible agony. Behold the wretch­\ned Irish mother—with haggard looks and stream­\ning eyes—fier famished children clinging to her\ntattered garments, and gazing piteously in lier\nlace begging for food! And see the distressed\nhusband and father, with pallid cheeks, standing\nby, horror and despair depicted in his oounte-\nnatice—tortured with the reflection that he can\nafford no succor or relief to t lie dearest objects ot\nhis heart, about to he snatched forever from him
1988480ff4ec952fc7e6cf39c1e6409c THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.0972602422628 43.994599 -72.127742 Possibly many of you suppose that\nthe umbrella is a modern invention, but\nit is not. Both as an emblem of rank\nand as a protection from sun and rain it\nis of very ancient origin. Though the\nmaterials used iu the manufacture have\nbeen constantly changing, the general\nconstruction of the frame has been\nchanged but little in thousands of years.\nEgyptian and Ninevite sculptures of\nthe earliest dates have many representa-\ntions of the umbrella, but it is invari-\nably in connection with royalty. It was\nalways held over the head of a monarch\nwhen he rode in his chariot and at hia\ngreat open air feasts. In some of the\nHindoo sculptures Vishnu is represented\ncarrying on umbrella when going on a\nvisit to the infernal regions.\nWe find frequent references to the\numbrella in the Greek poets, for its use\nwas quite fashionable among women of\nhigh rank in Greece. the middle ages\nit was an emblem of rank in the church.\nUmbrellas were carried over cardinals\nand bishops in solemn processions, and\nall of the large cathedrals owned one or\nmore umbrellas that were kept for use\non such occasions.\nThe Chinese adopted the umbrella at\na very early period in their history, and\nfor many centuries were the only people\nthat did not confine its use to the king\nand princes of the blood. However, they\npermitted only men of wealth and high\nposition to carry them. The common\npeople protected themselves from the\nelements by making their hats broad\nand umbrella shaped.\nFrom the time that they established\ntheir empire the Japanese have made\nmuch use of the umbrella. It is also\nused throughout India, but it is a mark\nof rank in Burma and Siam. One of\nthe titles of the king of Burma is Lord\nof the Twenty-fou- r
3b7c6511ba7c156add19fbaa39f16054 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4999999682902 39.745947 -75.546589 on a basis other than the calendar year,\ncun be authorised only in eases wherein\ncorporations, not less than thirty days\nprior to March 1. give notice in writing\nto the collector of the district in which\nare located their principal places of\nbusiness, designating in such notice the\nI last day of some month as the close!\nof their fiscal year. In this ease the\ncorporations will make their returns tori\nT“ : the year so established, and will tile\nI their returns on or before the last day\nof the (10-day period next following the\ndate designated as the close of the fis­\ncal year.\nThe Fiscal Year.\n"For the purpose of the Income tax I\nlaw a fiscal year, when designated. |\nmust be so designated that the re­\nturn made on this basis will not com­\nprehend a period greater than twelve\nconsecutive months. If the required\nnotice Is delayed until cannot be\ngiven at least thirty days prior to\nMarch 1. or If the date designated as |\nthe close of the fiscal year compre­\nhends a period greater than twelve\nmonths from the close of Hie period P“\nfor which the last period return was p\nmade, the returns must be made as\nof the calendar year, and must bo\nfiled on or before March 1, until such\ntime as a fiscal year for this purpose t\ncan be legally established.\n“If a corporation, which shall have !\nfiled, on or before March 1, Us return\nfor the preceding period ended De­\ncember 31. desires to establish, as a\nbasis for making future returns, a\nfiscal year ended at some date prior I\nto the next December 31, it may do (\nso by filing, at least thirty days prior\nto the date when its returns, on ;t.\nfiscal year basis, will bo due, a no-
1c67e361404be2fe6060c83555e27652 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.8123287354135 42.217817 -85.891125 farming. The tiller of the so:l is not\nleft to the mercy of fortuitous rains.\nHis capital and labor are not risked\nupon an adventure. He can plan with\nall tho certainty and confidence of a\nmechanic. He is a chemist whose labora-\ntory is a certain area of land ; every-\nthing but the water is at hand the\nbright sun, the potash, und other min-\neral ingredients (not washed out of tho\nsoil by centuries of rain). His climate\nsecures him always from an excess of\nmoisture, and what nature fails to yield,\ngreater or less, according to the season,\n. the farmer supplies from his irrigating\ncanal, and with it he introduces, with-\nout other labor, the most valuable fertil-\nizing ingredients, with which the water,\nin its course through the mountains,\nhas become charged."\nWater is thus both for tho farmer and\nthe herder and the ranchman, who is\nboth farmer and herder the sine qua\nnon, tho prime necessity; and just here\ndid one see how well Uncle Pete had\nchosen his situation. Ho had nine\nmiles of water frontage on the St.\nCharles creek, and the same on the\nMuddy. Just where the comes\nout of tho Wet mountain range, and\nwhere no one could take water above\nhim, he had tapped it for his broad\nirrigating ditch, which, after a tortuous\ncourse through the estate, empties\nagain into the stream from which it\ncame, not a drop of its precious con-\ntents being thus wasted. Along the\nupper side of the fields lying on this\ngentle slope before described run\nsmaller ditches. Then during the sea-\nson does the skillful Mexican laborer\ndig little channels leading down through\nthese fields, and, making little dams for\nthe purpose, turn tho water into them.\nTho result is simple : Uncle Pete has\nraised 10,000 bushels of wheat, 6,000 of\noats and 2,000 of corn, and had a mar-\nket for the whole on the spot, it being\none of the charms of Colorado farming\nthat the "honest miner" is both hungry\nand liberal, and that the farm produce\nhas ready buyers. Suppose, however,\nthat for our present purpose we call\nfarming a side issue, and come to tho\ncattle which this ranch would support\nall the year round. It is said that when\nKentucky cattle men, fresh from tho\nM Blue-gras- s
7fee91563def5e514e2ee60195582874 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4041095573314 39.745947 -75.546589 Special to The Evening Journal.\nSEAFORD. May 38.— Matthew F\nMarine, aged 8» years, died yester­\nday at his home on North street,\nafter an Illness of several weeks, as\nthe result of a stroke of paralysis\nMr. Marine was a native of Upper\nDorchester county, Md., but came to\nDelaware when 40 years of age and\nhas resided here ever since, engaging\nIn farming, which occupation he fol­\nlowed until retiring and moving to\nSeaford. He was a staunch Repub­\nlican. He was also a Civil War vet­\neran. Resides his wife, he leaves six\nchildren—William T. O . Marine and\nGeorge F. Marine, Blades; Jesse E\nMarine and Spencer Marine. Sea­\nford: Augustus R. Marine. Bethel:\nMrs. George Carmoan, Broad Creek.\nMrs. Howard Morgan and Mrs.\nMonroe H. Adams entertained a\nnumber of their friends Tuesday aft­\nernoon, at the home of Mra Adams,\non Cannon street, at "500." in honor\nof Miss Elizabeth Ross, whose mar­\nriage to Dr. Charles H. Clalbourne.\n Ten Hills. Baltimore, will take\nplace In St. Luke's Church. Seaford,\nnext Saturday evening. Those pres­\nent were Mrs. E. Arnold Greena-\nbaum. Mrs. W . Ford Breeding, Mrs.\nWilliam Johnson, Mrs. E. C . Ross.\nMra Ethel Ross Graham. Mrs. C . C .\nThompson, Mrs. Fred Marvil, Mra\nHoward Morgan, Mra G. M . Huston. I\nMrs. Monroe H. Adams. Miss Lillian\nAnthony, Miss Laura Callaway, Miss\nMadeline Ixird, the Misses Elizabeth\nand Clara Ross.\nMiss Hazel Hitchens, daughter of\nMr. and Mra Clay Hitchens, of near j\nEpworth Church. Sussex county, and\nGeorge D. Friedel, son of Mr. and\nMrs. James Friedel, of Wesley, near [\nSeaford, were married last Saturday.\nDorsey Donoho, son of Mr. and\nMra Alexander Donoho, of this\ntown, captain of this year's baseball\nteam of the University of Delaware,\nwho will graduate next month, has\nbeen offered a contract to play ball\nthis summer with a Southern League\nclub, and also at Cape May, N. J .
0a2f41a298dc538540137aa55dea87dc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.8095890093862 39.745947 -75.546589 Baltimore and Washington, week days\n•4.18, 6.55. *8.04, *11.01 a. m.; *12 50. *2.09,\n*3 40. *4.57, *6.20 (Royal Limited). »8.04 .\n•10.1« p. m Sundays. »4.18. *8 04. 9.06 a. m .\n•12.66. »2.09, *4.57,\nб.65. «8 04. »10.16 p.\nBaltimore and way stations, 6S6 a m.;\n3.19 p. m . . dally except Sunday: 9 06 a. m.;\n6.55 p. m. . Sunday only.\nNewark, week days, »4.18, 6,55. »1.04,\n•1101 a m.: *12.36, 3.19, *1 57. 6.10. »10.16\np. m . Sundays, »4.18, *8,04, 9,05 a. m .; *151\n•4.37, 6.35. 8.42, •10,16 p. rri.\nBittsburg. week days, »8.04 a. m.; »4.57\n'10.16 p. m. Sundays, *8 04 a. m .; *4.57.\n*10.16 p. m.\nChicago, dally. *8.04 a. ra. ; *4.57 p. m\nCincinnati and St. Louis, »4.18 m.\n•12.56 and *10.16 p. m . . dally.\nSlngcrly accommodation, week days\n■55 a. m,; 3.19. 6.10 p. m Sundays. 9.05 a\nm.: 6.55. 8.42p. m.\nLar.donherg accommodation, week days.\n« 30 n. m. Sundavs, 6.56 p. m.\nLEAVE MARKET ST. STATION FOR\nBaltimore, week days, 2 .45 p m.\n1-sndenberg—week days. 8 40 a. m .; 2.45\n5.30t>. m. Sundavs. 9.40 a. m.: 655 p. m\nT FAYE PHILADELPHIA, for Wl)\nmlngton, week days. *3.35. 6 50. »7.30. »10 36\n•11 00 e. m.: *12.20. •! 37 2,15. *3.07. *4,20. 4.30\n•5-30. »R4S (Royal Lmlted). 5.55 6 35 *7 30\n"9 40. »1135 p m. Sund.iv». »3 S3. •7 30. 8 06\nand »10 a. m.; *1220, «1,37. 145. *4.20. 4«\n(Royal Limited), 5.6«. *7,30, 7.40 . *9.40, 10 30
1a688df8837fd87995dd2c5845931fed THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1883.7575342148655 39.743941 -84.63662 ears to each staik over an acre. If wo\ngrow a stalk to each square foot, that\nis one foot apart each way, we should\ncertainly have nothing but stalks and\nnot one ear. It is the same with every\ncrop. We grow the finest strawberries\nfor our own table in hills three feet\napart each way; but for market we put\nthem in matted rows three teet apart.\nThe hills will produce berries of which\nten hav) filled a quart measure and\nwhich, saving abundant food and sun\nlight, are finely colored and of high\nflavor. It is the same with potatoes, tur-\nnips, beets, and all other crops. It. is\nthe same with wheat. A good stool of\nwheat produces one good head four\ninches long and having about forty\ngrains. That is all that ten sqnare\ninches of the best soil can produce, and\nthis amounts to about forty bushels per\nacre. But the average head of wheat is\nabout two inches long and has about\nfifteen grains; and as ton square inches\nof poor soil cannot support one wheat\nplant, the average yield varies from\nfifteen bushels downwait2\nNow, if on such land as this each\nplant had four times as much room, it\nwould be more than four times as pro-\nlific. On good land a wheat plant\nhaving a square foot of soil has pro-\nduced thirty heads averaging five\n in length, and containing in all\nmore than 900 grains. This is equal to\nsixty bushels per acre, which is a com-\nmon crop in England, where wheat is\ngrown with a peck of seed to the acre,\nand is hoed and thinned out and weed-\ned by hand. And an equally good crop\nhas been grown in this country. We\nremember sowing a field of wheat over\nwhich a large flock of pigeons belong-\ning to a neighbor trespassed from the\ntime of sowing until the last one had\nbeen shot. The field came up very\nthinly. But it soon filtered so much as\nto cover the ground, and the soil, hav-\ning been limed and well manured, pro-\nduced unexpectedly a very large crop.\nAnd but one bushel per acre had been\nsown in all. Parts of the field produced\nears seven inches long, and several ears\nnine inches long were picked from part\nof the field. The whole of the wheat\nwas sold for seed, having attracted the\nnotice of the neighbors, and very much\nregret was felt for the sacrifice of the\npigeons, which had done us a most val-\nuable service. The moral of the whole\nstory is that we undoubtedly use too\nmuch seed; too much for the land to\nsupport, and too much to find room in\nthe crowded space for a chance to\nspread and do its best. N. Y. Times.
21dc4d690757c09476141a6aa83705e9 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.3538251049888 40.827279 -83.281309 surety for any such officer, agent or\ncontracror, or be interested directly\nor indirectly in any contract cover-\ning said railway. They shall be re-\nsponsible only for their own aet3.\noec. 12 . The provisions or tun\nact are hereby so extended as to au\nthorize cities, incorporated villages\nand townships to vote for the con\nstruction of a railroad, and to bor\nrow a fund therefor, to the extent,\nin the manner, and subject to tae\nconditions and provisions ef this act\nin relation to counties : and it sha'l\nbe the duty of the trustees of any\ntownship or incorporated village.\nand the Mayor of any incorporated\nvillage, to call a meeting of the elec\ntors of such townsdip, village or\ncity, as provided in section two of\nthis act for counties, lne Donas\ncontemplated in this act, if issued\nby a city or incorporated village.\nshall be executed by the mayor \nclerk or recorder thereof, as the ease\nmay be ; and if issued by a township\nthey shall be executed Dy the trnst\nees and clerk therof : and if any city,\nincorporated village, of township\nissuing sueh bonds, shall have a seal\nthe same shall be impressed upon\neach of said bonds as provided for\ncounties in sec. three of this act\nThe bonds, after execution, shall be\nplaced in the hands of the State\nTreasury, as in case of county bonds,\nand subject to the same provisions,\nexcept as hereinafter stated, where-\nupon the trustees of such township,\nor the mayor or clerk ot such city or\nvillage: with the advice and concur\nrence of the council of such city or\nvillage, shall proceed to contract for\nthe read in question with the same\npowers and governed by the same\nprovisions as in the case of eounty\ncommissioners under this act. The\nState
20334eeefe04f0de93c1082f044fd414 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.23698626966 39.756121 -99.323985 The story begins with the picture oi\na girl singing in a garden among the\nflowers, and there she learns from the\nyoung lawyer who is settling up hei\nfather's estate that her possessions ar\nbo limited that her days of careles\nyouth are over. The lawyer, who has\nbeen the girl's lover for years, aski\nber again to marry him, and let hire\ncare for her, but she turns away, onlj\ntoo glad of the necessity for work\nIt has been her dream to go abroad, tt\nstudy music and become a great singer\nThe lawyer tells her that she canno-wi-\nperfect success; that her knowledg\nand experience of the world is not suffi-\ncient; that she must feel the joys an\nsorrows of others before she can giv(\nthem expression in her art. Incredu-\nlous, the carries out her plan\nDuring her studies in Paris the lawyei\nwrites to her regularly, once a year, ani\nresolutely keeps his determination t\nwin her in the end. But suddenly he b\nwarned that his sight is about to fail\nOnce. more he goes to see her, to hav\none last look at his idol, and comei\naway leaving her in ignorance of hit\nImpending blindness. For two yean\n&he sings in Continental cities, and tho\nher voice is praised, she awakens no en\nthusiasm, and her success is not wha'\nEhe had hoped. She returns to Amer-\nica, hears for the first time of her life-\nlong friend and lover's misfortune, and\nawakens to the fact that he is dearei\nto her than anything else in the world\nBut when she goes to him, he gentrj\n,,
2774ba8bc387b31b581615e376d43d95 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1917.264383529934 39.456253 -77.96396 levy of TWENTY CENTS according\nto the ordinance of the Couuoji ()f the\n¦( Ity of Martinsburg. passed on th.c\nRth day of March, lit 17, to pay the\ninterest and provide a sinking fund\nfor the discharge of the bonds now\nbeing voted for"; and directly un¬\nderneath in two separate lines shall\nbe printed the words "For the Levy"\nand "Against, the Levy." Persons vot-\ning for tho levy shall leave upon\ntheir ballots the words "For the\nLevy" and persons voting against\nsuch levy shall leave upon their bal¬\nlots the words "Against the Levy."\nThe result of the said election shall\nbe certified in the same manner as\nthe result of the general municipal\nelection* is now certified.\nSec. Vll. The Treasurer shall re¬\ncord the said bonds in the bond led¬\nger in his office in their numbers,\ndates( amounts, time when due, the\nname and address of the purchaser\nand holder so far as known, and file\ntherein the bonds and coupons taken\nup and cancelled from time to time.\nSec. Vlll. This ordinance shall be\nin force and effect from and after \npassage and shall have been ratified\nat the election provided for herein\nas to the authorization of tho is¬\nsuance of said "General Improvement,\nand Paving Bonds" by three-fifths or\nall the ballots cast for and attains?\nthe same at said election and by a\nmajority of the votes cast for and\nagainst the authorization of the max¬\nimum special bond levy of TWENTY\nCENTS herein provided for.\nNOW. THEREFORE, TO WHOM\nALL THIQSE PRESENTS ©HA Li.\n< 'O.M E. OR BETING: .\nKnow, ye, that in pursuance of and\nin accordance with the duty imposed\nupon me by the ordinance aforesaid,\nand under the statutes in such case\nmade and provided, J, p. W . Loiter.\nMayor of the City of Martinsburg, do\nhereby proclaim that on Tuesday, the\n^.h day of May, 11)17, between the\nhours of aunriso and sunset, a spec¬\nial election will be held at the reg¬\nularly established voting precin.- 's !-.\nthe first, second, third, fourth and\nfifth wards of raid c Ity, by the qual¬\nified voters thereof, to decide whoth\nor they will ratify or reject the said\nordinance.
4fec8f824ef996e626b9a3bb5481657d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.719178050482 39.745947 -75.546589 The Ischçol God» is constitutional ! of the hearing given the people for the\nThe unanimous opinion of the Judges purpose of arguing pro and eon the\nhanded last Wednesday to the Governor constitutionality of the school law as\nsustains the new school laws, and they enacted. The Judges sitting as a body\nstand as a basis of public school eduea- to hear the people would have been\nlion for Delaware. This 18 good news justified In ordering the removal of the\nfor the nhildren who will benefit by badges from every individual In the\nbetter schools, and gloom for a small court room, and punishing failure to so\nset of people who hoped through Ihe | remove these emblems as an art of con-\ngeneral agitation to escape the pay- tempt of court. In lower Delaware it\nment of a few dollars school | is not likely that any lawless results\nnot. all the people objecting lo the would follow such displays of insub­\nchange In the laws governing public , ordination to law, as prevailed''at the\nsehool education were of Ibis latter 1 hearing in Dover, on the part of those\nclass, but there is a very considerable | who hy free rides, free dinners and\npercentage of such, and Ihey would j badges, gathered several hundreds of\nescape any payment of money for the | people at the Stale Capital, and by\npublie purposes, If II were possible ; voeiferous talking, without knowledge\nLet the schools proceed, and forget (he of Ihe subject Ihey proposed lo op-\npast animosities, that the education of1 pose, attempted (o Influence the de-\nthe children along belter lines may be- , elslon nf Ihe Judges, In a city with a
c3e6748389c6e737bcdffd765483763e THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.2041095573313 40.618676 -80.577293 dispute to mean controversy in which the disput­\nants have the relation of employer and employes,\nand which directly concern wages, hours, or work­\ning conditions of the employes of the particular\nemployer directly involved in the controversy. The\nmajority of the employer's employes must be in­\nvolved. Specifically excluded from the definition\nire disputes between organizations, or groups of\nemployes as to which should be the collective bar-\nraining agency. Workers or their unions are for­\nbidden any process of lawful unions—. . buying,\nselling, transporting, receiving, delivering, manu­\nfacturing, harvesting, processing, handling, or\nmarketing of any agricultural or other products."\nPicketing is unlawful except in a labor dispute,\nis defined in the initiative petition. Boycotting of\nm employer not directly involved is prohibited.\nFurthermore, unions are prohibited from col-\necting dues in excess the ordinary and legiti­\nmate requirements of the organization. Unions\nmust keep accurate records itemizing receipts and\nexpenditures and the purpose of such expendi­\ntures. Any member may, at reasonable times, de­\nmand an accounting and inspect the books and rec-\n>rds. No person or organization shall directly or\nindirectly interfere with any person seeking em­\nployment or any employer desiring to employ such\nperson. This law is to be enforced by the State\nCircuit Courts with power to issue restraining\norders, temporary and permanent injunctions.\nBy this legislation Oregon turned back the\npages of labor legislation to the period of yellow-\ndog contracts preceding the Norris-LaGuardia\nAct, ignoring the National Labor Relations Act,\nand all recent decisions of the Supreme Court de­\nfining the rights of workers to union membership\nto promote their economic welfare.
1cc113f3e10832b0efc15f8c358d48a4 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1894.9164383244547 41.875555 -87.624421 und work for a considerable time at\ntho bottom of the sea. It sui rounds\ntho whole under part of Its body,\nnheto Its breathing organs arc, with\nu bubb 0 of ulr, and, Incased In this\ncrystalline boll, it keeps tho water\nout arid Is ablo to breathe freely. Ex-\nposed to tho attacks of many ene-\nmies above water, It seeks to escape,\nfrom them by making a hiding placo\ntor Itself at tho bottom of tho pond.\nThis It docs by drawing together the\ntops of somo ot the weeds growing\nthero with n few threads which it\nspins, so us to make a llttlo bower.\nIt thou ascends to tho surface and\nbrings down a bubble ot air with It,\npart of which it squeezes out and\nleaves In tho Insldo of tho bower,\nwhoso steins, meeting over It, pre-\nvent It from gottlng of Its place\nand rising to tbo top as air hubbies\nulwuysdowhcn disturbed or released.\nThe spider then, with Its part of tho\nbubble which It has kept to Itself,\nascends to the surfuco 11 second tlmo\nund fetches down another bubble ot\nair, part of which It secures In tho\nsame fashion, und with thu remain-\ning part ascends to the top to bring\ndown some moro ulr. Itrcpcuts this\ncurious proceeding until within the\nbower It has succeeded In forming a\nbubble of ulr us big as a plum, con-\ncealed and kept In lis placo by the\nsilken meshes of tho weeds, llko the\nnetwork ot a small balloon. Thus\ntho spider In tho same way that a\nmason carries stones and 11 mo to hla\nbuilding, carries down bells of air\nfrom tho surfaco to build for Itsolf a\ncrystal palace, who-- o
00afccd08b15d43af8c475d3430ccdbc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1898.1712328450026 46.187885 -123.831256 ,. Iluatlrr ft Alkrn'a Aat.\n,, l luailrr ft Alkon's Aat,\n.lluatlor ft Aikon'a Aat.\n.lluatlor ft Alkrn'a Aat.\n.Huitlrr ft Alkrn'a Aal,\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkon's Ast.\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkrn'a Aat.\n.lluatlor ft Alkm'a Ast.\n.Mu.tl.r A Alkon's Aat.\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkon's Aat.,\n.Iluatlrr A Alkrn'a Ast,,\nlluatlor ft Alkrn'a Aat.,\n.Iluatlrr ft Aikon'a Aat,,\n.Huatler ft Alkon's Ast. ,\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkon's Aat,,\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkrn'a Aat.,\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkon's Aat.,\n.Iluatlrr ft Alkon's Aal. ,\nlluatlor ft Aikon'a Ast,,\nIluatlrr A Alkrn'a Aat,,\nll'iatlir ft Aikon'a Ast. ,\n.Iluatlrr ft Aiken's Aat..\nIluatlrr ft Alkrn'a Aat.,\n.Muatlrr A Aikon'a Aat.,\nlluatl, r ft Alkrn'a Aat.,\n.Iluatlrr A Aikon'a Aat.,\nIluathr ft Aikon'a Aat.,\nIluatlrr ft Alkrn'a Ast..\nIluatlrr A Alkrn'a Aat.,\nMuatlrr ft Alkon's Aat..\nIluatlrr ft Alkrn'a Aat. \nIluatlrr ft Alkon's Ast. ,\nMuatlrr ft Alkon's Aat. ,\nlluailrr ft Alkrn'a Ast. ,\nHijHtli.r ft Alkon's Aat..\nlluatlor ft Aikon'a Ast..\niluatlrr ft Alkon's Aat..\nMustlrr ft Alkrn'a Aat..\nMuatlrr ft Alkrn's Ast..\nMustlrr A Alkon's Aat. ,\nMuatlrr ft Aiken's Aat..\nMuatlrr ft Aiken's Aat..\nMuatlrr A Alkrn'a Ast..\nMuitlrr ft Aikon'a Aat..\nMustlrr ft Alkrn'a Ast..\nMuatlrr ft Alkon's Ast..\nMiiathr ft Alkrn'a Aat..\nIluath r A Aikon'a Aat. ,\nMuitli r ft Alkrn's Ast..\nIluatlrr ft Alkon's Ast..\nMuatlrr ft Alkrn's Ast..\nMuatlrr A Alkrn's Aal..\nMuatlrr Alkrn's Aat..\nMustlrr A Alkrn'a Aat..\nMuatlrr A Alkrn'a Aat..\nMuatltr A Alkrn'a Aat..\nMuatlrr A Alkon a Ast..\nMuatlrr A Alkon's Ast..\nIluatlrr A Alkrn's Aat..\nIluatlrr A Alkon's Ast..\nMuatlrr A Alkon's Aat..\nMuatlrr A Aiken's Aat..
5cc01ed875bfc227b1cf379706399e44 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.0561643518517 58.275556 -134.3925 Eastern peoples, and especially of\ntbO0e In India, to accumulate their\nsavings In precious metals Is well\nknown. The vast population of that\ncountry, though Individually poor as\nmeasured by European Ideas, Is\nthrifty and Ita cumulative capacity\nfor saving great.\n"While their Inclination to Invest\ntheir savings In silver has always\nbeen marked, the Increased prosper¬\nity of tho country and the change\nIn the relative value of gold and sil¬\nver, I. e. the rise In the price of sli¬\nver and the fall in the price of gold,\nhave as their natural consequence\nan Increased demand for the yellow\nmetal for which these Kastern peo¬\nples are evidently prepared to pay\nmore than the Western world Is\nwilling to give in order to secure It\n monetary purposes. The cheap¬\nness of gold has also very naturally\nstimulated its demand for industrial\npurposes In the West. Hence the\nmaterial curtailment of tho supply\nof gold for monetary purposes.\n"It is not by mere accident that\ntho great economic progress of the\nworld during the last quarter of a\ncentury prior lo the outbreak of the\nwar has coincided with the steady\nand material Increase of gold pro¬\nduction. One may fairly conclude\nthat this increased gold production\nwas largely responsible for bringing\nabout tho very general adoption of\nthe gold standard, and It la unneces¬\nsary lo emphasize the inestimable\nvalue which the wide adoption of\nthat standard, with Its stabilizing\neffect upon the exchanges, has had\nupon the economic progress of the\nworld."
097720c1d0309d5b1710d193227bcc30 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.2945205162355 39.745947 -75.546589 rules governing the Démocratie party for\noily elections, yon will be called upon to\nnominate and elect from those present a\npresident, secretary and treasurer, and\neach other business relative to the\ncoming campaign as yonr wisdom may\nsuggest; and before the secretary and\ntreasurer read tbair final reports, 1 will\nerava your Indulgence for a few momenta.\n"1 simply wish to counsel yon to set\nharmoniously together In all things and\nwith only one single purpose in view:\nThe success of tbe Democratic party In\nthe coming campaign Whilst (belast\ncity election was well fought and fairly\nwon, only for the treachery of those who\nhave set themselves up as our horses In\nblgh places, I assure you, my friends,\nthat Mayor Shortlldge was more sur­\nprised, If It were possible for tbs'. to be,\nat bis election as mayor than the Demo\noratio Executive Committee which run\nthe osmpalgu were at our defeat; but I\nsay 1st by-gone« be by-gones, aud let ns\ncome together aud pull together, no\nmatter who gets the nomination for the\nvarious offices be voted for, and we\nwill show ths people of tbe whole state\nthat Wilmington Is Democratic, with an\nhonest diction aud a nutted Democracy.\n“Commeuce here to night, and let us\nstamp out all factionalism and all\nmanner of ting rule 'Democrats never\nwere (neither will they ever hr) tbe\nslaves of any boss rule aud be success­\nful ' Let ns hare to-night, my fellow\nDsmoorata, extend the hand of honest\nDemocratic fellowship to each other, and\npledge onrsaltss faithfully to work for\nthe election of the whole city ticket.\n8ee that yon select a good and faithful\nexecutive from each ward, who knows\nwhat to do and la also willing to do it for\ntbe aneceaa of the party. ”\nRobert G Harmon was also called on\nto speak and said; Gentlemen and\nfellow Democrats, 1 hid not tbe least idea\nwhen I came here to-night that I would\nh* called on to speak Tbe views of any\nDemocrat at this particular time are of\nImportance especially when they express\nnls views of the outlook. I am impelled
0760e82ae8cdde8e76828116efbf582e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.3164383244546 39.745947 -75.546589 ,The measure of the man Joffre Is | the trenches, blocked every stieees-\nbest taken in the fact that he failed sive attempt, to retake the road to\nfrequently before he won completely. Faria and finally transformed the Ger-\nIlls Initial offensive in Lorraine broke man blow Into an Inert German occu-\ndown under German heavy artillery. ; patton of French territory. Behind\nFor the same reason his attacks in [trench lines two armies fared each\nthe Ardennes and at Charleroi failed, other while time waB Allowed to the\nMobile heavy artillery on the German English to raise an armv to trans-\nside triumphed over gallant Infantry, form themselves into a military na\nunsupported save by field artillery, | tion and to begin the campaign which\nand In the third week of August, i we now see going forward.\nJoffre contemplated a which There was lacking to Joffre fhe\nmight well have broken the spirit of i numbers and the resources to make\na smaller man. All French armies had ; Immediately complete his great vie-\nbeen defeated: all French armies tory of the Marne, but what Is hap-\nwore in retreat, and a great and vie- penlng 'oday in France—the ebbtide\ntorious German machine was moving of German occupation is an inevit-\nforward as it bad moved 44 years be- able, .if delayed, consequence of his\nfore. Defeats that seemed to forecast ' great victory. The blow that was to\na new, colossal Sedan were already a I crush France forever was parried at\nmatter of history, and the collapse of',the Marne. The gigantic thrust that\nthe French military establishment was | wtas to win world power was blocked\nalready accepts* in Germany.
4280ceb56ee6a045b37c5a0e5064b2f4 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1907.1821917491122 43.994599 -72.127742 Give Them a Beautiful Setting.\nIt is also important to adorn for\nChrist our mental equipment. We\nshould sing our thoughts with the\nmost melodious sounds. We should\npaint them in the most beautiful blend-\ning of colors. We should symbolize\nthem In the most poetic similes. We\nshould chisel them in the most exqui-\nsite statues. We should preach them\niu the most teuder pleadings. In other\nwords, as the lapidary takes his pre-\ncious stones Just quarried from the\nmines and cuts them and polishes them\nand harmoniously arranges them in\nthe most beautiful settings, we should\ncut aud polish aud blend our thoughts\nas precious Jewels for the service of\nJesus Christ We should develop our\nthoughts aesthetically in order that they\nmay better spiritually serve our . Di -\nvine Master aud King. We should en-\ngrave our mental doors with cherubim\nand palm trees aud flower blossoms.\nDo you suppose that Robert Burns\nwould have his influence upon Scottish\nlife uuless he been able to sing his\nsougs of love and patriotism with a\nsweeter or a more clarion note than\never bard had sung before or since his\ntime? Do you believe Cardinal New-\nman's "Kindly Light" would today be\nleading the Christian world through en-\ncircling gloom unless the words of that\nhymn were as soft and limpid as any\never written by a master of English?\nDo you believe the gospel messages of\na Munkacsy, a Millet, a Raphael or a\nDa Vinci would be teaching the love\nof Jesus Christ as they are doing un-\nless each one of their messages had\nbeen painted by the hand of a master?\nDo you believe that Bunyan's allegory\nwould be read by the hundreds of thou-\nsands and the millions unless, like\nChrist's parables, It was the wonder\nof all literary critics? Do you believe\nthnt a rhilip Phillips and a P. P . Bliss\nand a Thomas Hastings and an Ira D.\nSnnkey would have charmed the thou-a nd- s
c62c043e75ac342e52ae1cb99aae4fbb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.856557345426 41.681744 -72.788147 When he got through she was on\nher way to jail where she was held\nin lieu of $10,000 bail on a charge\nof perjury and conspiracy.\n"It is the most outrageous case\nof attempted fraud I have ever\nseen," Supreme Court Justice Gibbs\nsaid in commiting Mrs. Friedman to\njail. She had testfiied that Hyman\nhad not spoken a word since the ac-\ncident, which occurred Oct. 13, 1923,\nwhen her son was seven months old.\nThe suit had been brought against\nR. H. Macy and company on the\nground that one of their delivery\ntrucks had run upon the sidewalk,\nupsetting the carriage in which\nyoung Hyman was lying. The com-\npany settled with Mrs. Friedman for\nher injuries for $2,500 but refused\nto pay $25,000 for the alleged In-\njuries to the baby. Finally they of-\nfered $12,500 when she held out\nfor $25,000, forced her to take the\ncase to court\nNeighbors of the Friedmans were\nin court ready to testify that Hyman\nhad never spoken to their knowl-\nedge Seven reputable physicians\nhad examined the boy in a vain ef-\nfort to make him talk. The judge\nhimself talked to Hyman for 45\nminutes In his chambers but could\ndraw no syllable from him. But\nwhen the court attendant put his\nquestion, Hyman answered.\nThe judge released the two Fried-\nman attorneys from the case saying\nhe was convinced they knew noth-\ning of the alleged fraud. He sent\nHyman home In charge of his fath-\ner, suggesting to the district attor-\nney that'he look Into the possibil-\nity of taking action against the eld-\ner Friendman also. The father had\nnot yet testified In the case.
134a19098275d3d6058180649fe25773 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.5575342148657 39.745947 -75.546589 Cape May. will make its initial Either ßressler or Crowell will pitch\nappearance in hydroplane racing on |0morrow. being opposed by either\nSaturday, when it will be in competi- Mitchell or Hagerman. As two games\ntion against the Fame, owned by Fred\nNathan, of the Island Heights Yacht\nClub, and other craft belonging to |\nmembers of the South Jersey Yacht I\nRacing Association, under the aus- I\npices of the Atlantic City Yacht Club. !\nDuring the early part of the week j\nGeneral duPont issued a challenge to\nFred Nathan for a race over the At- j\nlantic City Yacht Club course. Mr. j\nNathan immediately consulted Adolph |\nE. Apel, the builder of the Fame and j\nthe Tech Jr.. 11 as to his chances of j\nwinning. Due to the large time al- j\nlowance which he will receive, he has\nanswered the defi. The two hydro­\nplanes were built at the Apel yards\n the past several months and\nare of the same construction. The only\ndifference in the boats is the power\nplants. The Fame has made an ave­\nrage speed of close to thirty-five knots\nan hour while the Tech Jr., 11 in sev-\neral trials off Pennsgrove. N . J ., over\nthe government surveyed course and j\non Long Island Sound, reached an ave- j\nrage speed of a trifle over sixty miles\nan hour. Besides the two above men- j\ntioned boats it is expected that the j\nSandburr HI. owned by Commodore *\nA. K. White of the Atlantic City |\nYacht Club, the Chelsea Special. A. j\nF. B . II and several other prominent i\nseashort craft will compete.\nCommodore A. K . White of the At- j\nlantic City Yacht Club announces that i\nthere will be fully 18 boats to com- ;\npete in the first interclub race for the
620ea535e2f454b45db3f1cca44c7a45 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.8265027006173 39.745947 -75.546589 Exactly the same situation existed\nIn regard to most other goods and\nmaterials. Thousands of manufactur­\ners never knew from day to day\nwhether or not tomorrow the\nhave enough raw material\ntheir plants going,\nthem had their warehouses packed to\noverflowing with a balance of goods\nthey could not deliver and so could\nnot collect the money on which they\nneeded to run their business. Such\nmen, too, inevitably sooner or later\nreach a state of nerves-where they\nwill pay anylhlng to get such raw-\nmaterial as was availble.\nThousands of carloads of ordinary\nfreigtit were sent at express rates,\nwhich further cut down the freight\ntraffic that came tWougti and further\nincreased local shortage.\nThere are many oilier induslrial\nnerve centers, and professional strike\nleaders are learning more and more\nhow to pick them out with unerring\naccuracy. Here's one of the simplest\ncases right at home and right now.\nPainters are rated only as semi­\nskilled labor, and they work more in­\ndoors and more regularly than most\n budding trad s. it is fund ay\nmenial doctrine in the building labor\nfield—accepted by the .ii»n themselves\nas axiomatic—that all the other more\nskilled and lessT sheltered workers\nshould get more than Hie painters\nIf the comparatively small number of\nsemi-skilled painters win their strike\nfor Jin a day. that very fact will\nmean that, tens of thousands of other\nmore skilled workers will be put in\na position where, according to all\nfundamental labor Ideas of Justice,\nthey can demand at least *12 a day.\nOf course, that is exactly the real\nInside r i^n bark of that strike.\nThe public, is used to big, conspic­\nuous strikes, like the clothing or the\ncoal or the steel strikes, where hun­\ndreds of thousands of men openly\nquit, their work and Ihe Issue and\nconsequences are conspicuous. Public\nopinion is able lo understand and\nJudge and deal with such a strike.\nBut in a strikp where seldom more\nthan a few thousand men are on\n«isiLn «t m time, and they are, scat-
24708049c0bec3d8597d68ed6f1c1774 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.532876680619 40.735657 -74.172367 This announcement indicates that\nthe commission concludes that It has\nJurisdictfcn over commutation rates.\nThe fact that subsequently. It is to de-\ntermine the reasonableness of these\nrates indicates that It will exercise\nauthority to reduce them If in the\nJudgment of the commission they are\ndeemed too high.\nChairman Knapp, who has on more\nthan one occasion given rise to the be-\nlief that he was not in favor of delv-\ning into the rates of a railroad which\nwere les sthan a single tariff, voted\nagainst taking the matter up. Com-\nmissioners Cockrell and, Harlan sided\nw-lth. him, while, contrary to expecta-\ntions, Commissioner Prouty, one of the\nmost learned of the commissioners,\nvoted in favor of giving the people of\nNew Jersey a fair show to present all\ntheir arguments as to which rates\nshould not be allowed to go into effect.\nCommissioner Clements, who, by his\nquestioning during the hearing inti-\nmated that he wanted the people \nhave their full rights in the matter,\nvoted with Commissioner Prouty, and\nformed the minority dissenting from\nthe refusal of Knapp, Cockrell and\nHarlan to allow a suspension.\nPersonally, I am inclined to regard\nthe decision as decidedly favorable,"\ncontinued Mr. Sommer, “even though\nit does not cover all we had hoped for.\nDetermines Regulation Power.\n“It does meet and determine the main\nissue, 'which involved the Jurisdiction\nof and the right of the Interstate Com-\nmerce Commission to inquire into and\nfix and determine commutation rates,\nas well as straight tariff rates.\n“That right was disputed by the rail-\nroad interests. Now, however, the de-\ncision will be accepted as final in view\nof the -recent decision of the United\nStates Supreme Court affirming the\nright of the commission to regulate all\nfreight and passenger rates.\n“Our expert statistician will complete\nhis examinations with all possible haste\nand we will at once submit his findings\nto the Federal Commission.-
73b8b05e6ffec2c2029a45377dec84fa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.3136985984272 39.745947 -75.546589 Auto-Polo Is p'ayet' bv two str pped\nchassis, with two men at each ma­\nchine; Rsltz King and Biondy Ster­\nling at the wheels and Clyde Fervlfer\nand Bud Jackson as the mallet men.\nThe machines are surmounted with\nsteel hoops to protect the men and\nthe mechanism In case of upset. The\nmallets used are short bandied, heavy\nInstruments, and the ball, which la\nnearly os light as the regulation foot\nhall Is made of leather. The game Is\nplayed in periods of five minutes each\nwith on Intermission between the\nperiods to right the machines If nec­\nessary At the beginning the con­\ntestants take their positions with\ntheir autos at each fnd of the arena\nand the ball Is placed In the center.\nAt a given word or signal the reck\nless ehaufieurs turn on all power\nand the machines bounce forward\nbelching fire and smoke like a bat­\ntery of galling guns, literally shoot­\ning tho cor towards the ball with the\nmallet men standing on the guard\nrail, supporting themselves with one\nhand and the mallet In the other. Both\ncars eager to first reach the ball they\nlook for a moment as If they ^ver«\nbound to collide, head on. which they\nfrequently do unless the skilled driv­\n gauge the distance so nicely that\nthe cars pass each other by a hair-1\nbreadth escape, so that the expert !\nmallet men may strike the ball with\nunerring aim. driving It In one di­\nrection or the other. Then the fun\nand excitement commences.\nWhirling their machines In all1\nsorts of intrirate curves and with re­\nmarkable speed, they rush down\nupon the ball In an attempt to force\nIt to the goal. Oftentimes In an ef­\nfort ta make a quick turn the automo­\nbiles go tumbling over carrying the\ndriver and mallet men under or hurl­\ning them to the extreme distance.\nFrequently turning on two wheels at\ntop speed and with a dash that I\nwould make a Vanderbilt cup race\nlook like a standstill the game Is a\nthriller. Collisions, upsets, ground\nand lofty tumbling have no terrors\nfor the men who participate.\nRaltz King, the Inventor of this\nsensational sport, and undoubtedly\nthe most daring chauffeur that ever\nput his hand to the wheel, accom­\npanied by his colleagues, will give an\nexhibition of daredevil driving and\nreckless maneuvers such as have\nnever before been attempted by hu­\nman beings at the Buffalo Bill and\nPawnee Bill shows at Lancaster ave­\nnue grounds on May 15.
0b0af1bc4e7ccc840119209d295f8ae6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.2589040778792 58.275556 -134.3925 sprung up that the government will\nnoon recognize that the second larg¬\nest river valley must have a rail-\nload. if / the tremendous resources\nitf the country are to be developed.\n"The largest placer strike was\nmade last year, and it is very shal¬\nlow and quite rich. A strike car¬\nrying pay was made during the win¬\nter on Crooked creek, three mile*\nbelow Stevens camp. A strike In\nthe fall was rtiade on (jcorge river,\nnnd much coarse gold was found,\nthe largest nugget weighing six¬\nteen ounces. Tills is the largest\nnugget ever found In this or any ad¬\njoining camp. Before the finding\ni»f this nugget. New York creek bad\nproduced the largest chunks of gold.\n"During the winter a strike was\nmade on the llolltna river, which\npromises lo make a good machine\nproposition. Two outside companies\n good pay on Hear creek, hut\nnwlng to claim Jumpers interfering,\nthe same may be Idle for some time.\n"Al Walsh has taken ail option\nhi the Parks-Fuller cinnabar prop¬\nerty, lying on the north bunk of the\nKuskokwlin, fifteen miles above\nGeorgetown. There Is probably no\nlarger body of rich mercury-bearing\nore in the world than Is found in\nthese two properties. A feature of\nthe ore is that nothing of the kind\ntins ever before been found. Much\nnf the ore carries native quick and\niloes not resemble anything before\nknown. Tho men who made the\ngeological survey decluro It to be\nthe biggest thing they over saw. It\nIs believed that a mill will be erect¬\ned on the properties tills season.\n"A railroad Is what we need to\nmake this district* the wonder of the\nworld. Hurry It along."
33d6f30b3f7e3e269508633b0a2965f8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.1215846678303 58.275556 -134.3925 Last Friday just before noon, Rade\nM. Murisieh either tell or attempted to\njump from a oar of the powder train,\nand was caught beueath the wheels,\nlie was taken to the hospital and given\nevery attention possible, but his in¬\njuries were too terrible for him to sur¬\nvive. He died a few hours later.\nFuneral services were held at the Ser-\nviau church iu Douglas, Sunday after¬\nnoon at 2 o'clock, under the auspices\nof the Servian Slavonic Harmony\nSociety, Rev. Father Stepauovich offi¬\nciating. Deceased was a native of\nAustria, aged 27 years. The intermeut\nwas at the Douglas cemetery.\nFriday morning four Belgiau con¬\ntractors on the IGOO-foot level of the\nTreadwell miue, were injured by a\npowder explosiou. It was caused by\ndrilling into a "missed hole,"or, in\nother words, a hole in which a charge\nhad failed explode. At the hospital\nit was found that one of them, Julius\nCoteuy, was the most seriously injured\naud will probably lose his eyesight, j\nHe was taken to the States on the\nCuracoa, where he may have services\nof a specialist. The others will bo out\nof the hospital in a few days.\nA third accident at about 5 o'clock\nFriday evening resulted in the death\nof Constantine J. Demeroutis, on the\n1300 level of the Mexican mine. The\nman was loading a hole when the\ncharge exploded, killing him instantly.\nFuueral services were held at the Ser¬\nvian church in Douglas on Sunday,\nFebruary 11, at 10 o'clock a. m ., Rev.\nFather Stepauovich officiating, luter-\nment at the Douglas cemetery. De¬\nceased was a native of Greece, 29\nyears of age, aud leaves a wife and two\nchildreu to mourn bis loss.
c2b74f80445cd08d279e0b4e346c331a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.0860655421473 41.681744 -72.788147 families throughout the city who send.\ntheir children to school realize what\nthis means. In addition to the added\nexpense in taxation to the taxpayers,\nIt has the following objections:\n1 It reduces the actual study or\nsession period exactly 85 minutes.\ndon't think that the city of New Brit\nain can afford to have the pupils in\nthe high school lose 35 minutes each\nday the pupils don't get any too\nmuch education as it Is today.\n2 The children taking their lunch\nat the school will not get the proper\nfood. We all know that children aa\na whole like sweet things and it will\nmean that they will indulge in more\npies, cakes and tee cream than they\nwill in substantial foods such as they\nwould get at home.\n Under this luncheon plan the\nchildren will be forced to buy a warm\nluncheon at the school at an addi-\ntional expense to the parents of from\n15 cents to 30 cents a day (it is very\ndoubtful if suitable food could be\nprovided for 15 cents, therefore, for\nthe child to have proper nourishment\nwe will figure on 30 cents a day\nnow then, the school term I believe is\n40 weeks so that this charge of 30\ncents a day would mean an added ex\npense to the parent of $60.00 a year\nfor each pupil (which expense I don t\nbelieve any of us want to bear) or\nelse eat a cold luncheon brought from\nhome which is very bad for the di-\ngestive organs and a troublesome task\nfor the mothers.
b4277fc9263d00c30d599d58314e6b67 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.9986301052766 41.681744 -72.788147 For a time Stumpy, the crippled\nyoung Muskrat lived in constant fear\nof the return of Little Joe Otter or\nBilly Mink. Only when he was curl-\ned up with his father and mother in\nthe snug but crowded bedroom in\nthe bank of the Smiling Pool did he\nfeel quite free from fear. You see\ntwo things had happened to make\nhim fearful; he had seen his sister\ncaught by Little Joe Otter and he\nhad been chased right to the door\nof that very bedroom by Billy Mink.\nThe Smiling Pool which, with its\nroof of ice. had seemed such a safe\nand wonderful place, the finest place\nin all the Great World, no longer\nseemed this at all. With that roof\nice over it he felt trapped. He said\nas much to Jerry Muskrat.\n"That Is because you have had two\n down here," said Jerry. "It\nmight have been just the same had\nthere been no roof. Your sister\nmight have been just as foolish and\nprobably would have been. Billy\nMink might have seen you and chas-\ned you straight home just the same.\nYou have learned something of two\npossible enemies to watch out for\nand with your experience you will\nbe better prepared for them another\ntime. You don't know what a bad\nwinter storm is yet. When you do\nyou will be thankful for the roof on\nthe Smiling Pool. "\nStumpy doubted this but wisely\ndidn't say so. Afterward he was glad\nof this for it was only two days lat-\ner that he swam to the open water in\nthe Laughing Brook just above the\nSmiling Pool and as he put his head\nout of water it seemed
00f123aa10135619cfe8a62f9a60ab84 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.1109588723998 43.82915 -115.834394 silver, he gets but 83 cents. With\nfree coinag e at the ratio of sixteen\nparts of silver to one of gold, making\nsilver worth 81.29, England could\nnot buy it for less than that—in fact\nw ould have to pay more than the\ncoin value in order to g et it. Before\nthe demon etization of silv er the\nmarket value was greater than the\ncoin or mint value. This great ad­\nvantage that England now holds over\nthe American farmer would be tak en\naway. The silver question it the\ngreatest before the world to-day. All\no thers, com pared with it, aiuk into\nu t te r insignificance, b ut those who\nhave brought upon the world such\nbaneful results continue to try to\nmislead the people as to the true\ncause of tbeir distress, and thus far\nhave succeeded admirably, b ut the\npeople are beginning to open wide\ntheir eyes, an d a day of recko ning\nwill surely come. This thing cannot\nnow be carried much further without\nbringing revolution, and come it will,\nif this monstrous wrong is not soon\nrighted; then woe be unto the money\ngrabber. He and his wealth wilt be\nas po werl ess as were the sharks at\nthe time of the Fren ch revolution.\n people are all powerful and when\nthey do arise as one man as a result\nof lo ng -p racticed wrongs and oppre s­\nsion, the oppo site extreme must be\nlooked for. Such is the philosophy\nof the history of ages. Like causes\nwill produce like results, an d history\nwill repeat itself; no doubt about\nthat. The sharks and shylocks of\nthis g en eration seem to think th at the\ntruism that “ history will repeat it­\nself•” is in this age of the world a\nmean ingless expression, b ut events\nare now almost ripe for a rep etition\nof just what has been brought about\nin ages p sst . The money sharks\nhave been and are s till th oroughly\norg aniz ed , and the people must formu­\nlate some plan of operations that will\nhe more effective than t h at adopted\nby the Bi-m etallic Leag ue. The $1\ncontribution is all right, but a plan\nfor making sm aller collections ought\nto be inaugurated also, and this will\nbring in greater amounts than that\nalready p ut forward . This cause will\nnever down, but money must be\nraised to fight the enemy. The sil­\nver advocates are carrying on an ed­\nucational campaign , which req uires\nfinances.
71d62ab0c7dcd645cc1a0d64cfd28dfa THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.6506848997972 39.560444 -120.828218 Forest City, Aug. 20. 1854 . aug 26-3 t\nYE THAT SUFFER--HEAD/ HEAD!\nDr. Pareiras Great Itali n Be needy!\nL'CR the certain and speedy cure of dis-\nJ eases of a private nature, no matter\nhow long standing, without any injurious\neffects to the system, or any change of diet.\nIt has ne\\er laded—it cannot fad to cure.\nThis invaluable specilic, tirst introduced\ninto I isa some Jijty yiura since, soon be-\ncame so well known as a “certain cure/\nthat in every town and c.ty. not only on\nthe Continent, but in Great Britain, the de-\nmand for it was so great, its merits so as-\ntounding, that in less than one year from\nits introduction it had supplanted all other\nremedies. The Medical Faculty of the\nprincipal cities of Euroi»e were compelled\nto acknowledge its wonderful mastery over\ndisease. Proprietors of other medicine*,\njealous of its sway, vainly (ndeavored to\nstay .t> onward progress. Like grass before\n mower, their ellorts foil to the ground:\nand 1 ke tire on the prairies, sweeping all\nbefore it. its onward march became trium-\nphant. It stood forlh upon its own merits;\na discerning public saw tried and w ere con-\nvinc< dof its magical virtues. The massive\nfortune acquired by Dr. Pareira from the\nsale of it during the six years he prepared\nit, alone bore witness to its miraculous me-\nrits, At the decease of the Doctor, the\nrecipe was bequeathed to his son, who has\nlately introduced the remedy into the Uni-\nted States. The number of cures it has al-\nready made are astonishing. Thousands\naud tens of thousands can bear testimony\nto its efficacy.\nAll who use it, it will cure, with a safety,\nspeed and certainty no other med.cine has\never possessed. Resort to no quack nos-\ntrums. Use a remedy that has been tried\nfor the past fifty years, aud was never\nknown to fail.
2629e1512c91a3abdc845be98011a66a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.1273972285642 39.745947 -75.546589 If (hat letter were not from a man who has made a\nbig success In fruit growing and who also is prominent\nin the Peninsula Horticultural Society, (he National\nGrange and the State Grange, we should not give it\nsuch prominence. However, when a man who ranks\nas a pioneer In the mutter of sending well-packed\nfruit to market points out such defects in a grading bill\nas are discussed above, it is certainly time for Dela­\nware apple growers to pass upon the bill, and for our\nSenators and Representatives to defer action until\nthey have passed upon tt. No mailer how laudable the\nmotive may be underlying such an apple grading bill.\nIts pr»»vlsions should he passed upon hy practical men\nand> not by theorists. The people of our State cer­\ntainly do not want a hill passed that would destroy\nthe value the State's Summer apples, which are\nsmall and must lie marketed green to sell advan­\ntageously for culinary purposes. Nor do they want a\nbill passed providing a scale of grading measurements\nDial falls lo rc»ognize the fact Dial some varieties of\nFall and Winter apples are long, while others arc\nshort and squat. Under such conditions the transverse\ndiameter test would throw Into the lower grades many\nof the best long apples produced In this Slate. The\nbill also Is d«'feetive in that It fails to provide for In­\nspectors at the shipping points in this State or at the\nj receiving points outside tho Stale. The committee\nhaving charge of the bill should call in the Sopers, (he\nDerby*, the Bancrofts, Die Masseys, and other up-to-\ndate apple growers and gel their views relative to\namondnienla Dial will put U tu practical shape.
18e2773f5a50e04a90e045dbdeea72c3 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1909.1904109271943 40.114955 -111.654923 Governor Spry on Tuesday March\n9 transmitted to both houses of the\nUtah legislature n special message\nMJrtalnlng to liquor legislation In\nwhich ho recommended that a law In\ntudlng both local option mill strict\nlegislation as these relate to tho\nliquor traffic should bo enacted and\nthat Ho provisions ho drawn carefully\nwithin tho constitution 110 there will\nbo no failure The governor declares\nthat whorovor tho Hale of alcoholic\nliquors la permitted It should ho un-\niler regulations no plain and effective\nbat tho traffic will ho kept within\nlegitimate hounds and be under the\nperfect control of thoso officers\ncharged with tho enforcement of law\nand when tho peoplo of any locality\nwish to exclude such traffic fr6ni\ntheir neighborhood thoy should ho\ngiven the opportunity to do so\nThe governor signet threo senate\nhills during tho day\nA uuinbe1 of bills were approved\nby tho house mostly amendments to\nexisting laws whllo two new Mils\nwero Introduced by consent ono to\nprovide for tho Initiative and rofer-\nonduiu on legislation and tho other\nbeing n measure intended to provide\npunishment for Inmates of tho state\nudutrlal school who uscapo there\nfrom or aid other inmates io escape\nTho senates substitute measure for\ntho Cal 1IQII prohibition bill has been\noccupying the attention of the senate\nto exclusion of other qiicstlont\nSenator Carl A Badger has dellvoret\nthe most sensational speech In which\nho charged the antisaloon league aw\nothers with crooked politics\n1ho number of bills Introduced In\ntho senate at the session passed he\n200 mark on Tuesday senate bill No\n200 being an act creating a commis-\nsion to revise the revenue laws of the\nstate ot Utah and to suggest changes\nProviding for tho appointment of lhe\ncommission its salary the employ\ntncnt of necessary help and appro\nprlatlon for its salary and expanses\nByavoteof25to15thehouseof\nrepresentatives on Monday March 8\nwent on record as being antagonistic\nto tho playing of ootball Tho bill\nwhich caused an animated discussion\nwas introduced by Hepresentatlv\nHanson and prohibits the playing of\nfootball upon the grounds of any pub\nHe Institution and will prohibit the\norganization or training ot football\nteams at any school In any depart-\nment of tho public school system\nMr Hanson In support of tho hili\ndeclared that there were fifteen per\nlIOns killed and 338 Injured In the\ngame of football during tho pant yon\nHo also declared during tho footbn\nBenson the students fell down on\ntheir examlnntlons that It the qtiea-\ntton were submitted to the people of\nthe state that threefourths of the\nvoters would record their vote\nagainst It
0cd250be665b739e0a960c13e6f52eec EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.1383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 $2.800 shall be paid in before the com\npäny is organized instead of $500, as pro­\nvided in the original bill. The amount\nnamed is a remarkably small amount to\norganize a company of the magnitude\ncontemplated. To section 8, which gives\nthe company power to change its name,\nrestricted by the provision. Provided\nsuch change shall not affect any debts or\nliabilities contracted previous to such\nchange under any other name,”\n“Will the bill pass the House?” is a\nquestion asked about the lobbies to­\nnight. The changes mads have not\nbeen adopted by the committee and will\ncome up for consideration to-day In the\nmeeting at 9 oclock this morning. One\nthing is certain and that is that those\nmembers who were outspoken at first in\nopposition to the bill are by noiS\n by lire amendments offered. As\nan evidence of the earnestness of the in\ncorporators to get their bill a subscrip\ntion list of possible stockholders In the\ncompany were exhibited to some of the\nmembers last evening. The paper bore on\nits face purported subscriptions amount\ning to $2,900,000. Among t he subscribers\nare J. Edward Addicks, $001,000; Henry\nC. Gibson. $150,000, and John Wans\nmaker, $50 000. Just why in the face of\nthis large list of subscribers that the\ncompany wants to start business upon\na small paid-up stock of $2,500 needs ex­\nplanation. There will be a determined\neffort on the part of some of the Repub­\nlican leaders to defeat the bill, and a\ncaucus is not impossible. It is said that\nboth Mr. Higgins and Bradford will take\na hand acaiust it.
087dd452f4d4479af67e3333e14da4e2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.519178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 The only man she is sentimental-\nly interested in is John Nye, whose\nreal estate office is across the, hall\nfrom Mr. Peevey's office. She barely\nknows him, however.\nOn a hot Monday in August Millie\ndrops into Sally's office with the\nnews that she's had to quit another\njob because another employer tried\nto make love to her. This is always\nSally's story, but Sally knows that\nthe real reason for Jlillie's quitting\nis because her employer did NOT\nmake love to her. Beau's best girl,\nMabel Wilmot, has told her that\nMillie "just won't work around an\noffice where there's nobody attrac-- 1\ntive enough to give her a thrill."\nMillie gets a glimpse of young Mr.\nNye and decides to run over and\nask him if needs a good steno-\ngrapher, by any chance. Sally is\ndreadfully afraid that she will. She\nhates the thought of the siren, Mil-\nlie, working for John Nye all day,\nsix days a week.\n.But later that afternoon Nye tells\nher that his secretary has been mar-\nried, and asks her if she know of a\ngirl who would do for him. Sally\nunwillingly tells him about Millie\nand promises to send her down next\nmorning. Millie is out when she gets\nhome for supper. Beau's ill, and\nMrs. Jerome is In bed, worn out\nwith the heat. Ted Sloan helps Sally\nget some food ready for them, and\ncasually asks her to marry him.\nWhen Mrs. Jerome hears about it\nshe cries, and Sally promises never\nto marry Ted.
6ace54641633ef2bca35ac079ba0069d OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8265027006173 39.513775 -121.556359 '»\\V this day it appearing to my sati'iaction ns\nJudge of tint County Court, in ami for Blltm\nCoiui'v, that the Hoard if Supervisors in aau lor said\nCouniv. did , on Hie *_*4ih dav nf September. A . It. one\nIbous.md eight liundnal ami fifty.six. denpire Droville\nIn lie the (mint* «er;t of Unite County from nnd after\nHie said Iweiily-loarHi day of September / l>. 1* ah,\nin pursuance ot an act euiiiied An Act to change and\nIK Ihel'imniv "eat of Untie tjoimty, npproveil A.areb\ntitlh. IS.V ; and it further appearim/ to mv satislnction\nHmt Hie present buddings ii whlah Hie “aul Conn Ins\nbeen held, and in which the Uncords have been kept\nin die Ihwm hi' Uidwell, are unsafe as a place ol de*\npost lory for said Records. aml Hi al I tie same liable\nlode truclhm by Hre. by reason of their helm* con\nstructed entire of wood. And it furllier appearing\nthat there Is no building In the town ot Uidwell. suil-\naide (tic hold in g the terms ef Hi is Court, and to sal. |y\nkeep il* p.ecords from lire or other calauiil y. and ii\napix'iirint, Hmt the town ofllrtville is a lit place to\nhold Hie lerins ol H i- Court, and that a safe and coin\ntil*.ili■ins brick building in suid town lota been leu-\ndereii the county as county buildings.\nIt iv therelore ordered, adjudged mid decreed I hut\nthe Clerk el the Cm ntr Court.in and for Unite\nCounty, forthwith remove his office and the Uncord'\nHu re if. to I iroville. ill the building selecied by the\n'aid 'loan! of Supervisors as t'ouuiy Uuildim.*'.
096f945f4ca5cb5377aad20908200b84 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.856164351852 40.441694 -79.990086 When Mr. Jcfierson heardof his loss, he said\nwith characteristic magnanimity: "Had ho\ncarried off tho slaves to give them freedom,\nhe wonld havo done right."\nIn March. 1781, Mr. Jefferson wasappointed\non a committee to draught apian lor the\ngovernment of that immense region called\nthe Northwestern Territory. Tho draught is\nstill preserved in his handwriting in Wash-\nington. Trneto bis unwavering principle\nor devotion to the rights of humanity, he\ninclosed in the ordinance the provision,\n"That after the year 1S00 or the Christian\nera there shall neither be slavery no Invo-\nluntary servitude in any of the said States,\notherwise than in punishment of crimes\nwhereof the party shall have been duly con-\nvicted to have been personally guilty."\nThis clanso was stricken out on motion of\nMr. Spaight, of North Carolina, seconded by\nMr. Reed, or South Carolina. These extracts\nfrom the public life of Thomas Jefferson go,\nto show that the charge of inconsistency\ncannot be proved against him. Let us now\nturn to his life.\nIn 1772, Mr. Jefferson was married to Mrs.\nMartha Skelton. She brought to him as her\ndowry 40.000 acres of land and 135 slaves.\nOver these slaves Mr. Jefferson had no con-\ntrol. He conld not, under the law, give\nthem their liberty. And though belabored\nwith all his energies for the abolition of\nslaverv, declaring it to be "a curse to the\nmaster, a curse to the slave and an offense\nin the sight of God," he was powerless to do\nthat wliich every act of his life warrants us\nin believing he wonld gladly do, viz: liber-\nate his slaves. It is our firm conviction that\nhad Jefferson lived in the days of Lincoln\nhe would have stood side by side with the\ngreat emancipator, pleading for the right3\nof man, and no pen wonld have been more\npowerful and eloquent in its pleadings of\nthe cause of the slave than wonld that of the\nimmortal author of that immortal docu-\nment, "Tho Declaration of Independence."\nEast Bradt, Pa.
1fd0793c52315f09a212d7bebd0ae1cd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.8479451737696 40.063962 -80.720915 There waa held at the McLure House\nlast night, one ol tbe gayeet social events\nenjoyed in the city lor sometime. It woe\nin the nature ol a fall drew hop which\nwas arranged lor and conducted to a buc-\noeaslnland memorable lssne by two or\nthree oi the low atlll unmarried members\nol the "Gorman" ol 1883-85. They dem¬\nonstrated last night that they had not loat\ntheir tact lor getting up an elegant ami\npleasant affair. All the details were care-\n¦uUy arranged with that good judgment\nwhich alwaya oharaoterlssd the germane\ngiven by that Unions organization.\nThe large dining-room was, as usual,\nused lor dancing. Kramer's lull orohestra\nfurnished music that was irresistible; it\nwas all late raualo that he brought from\n"The White," where ho delighted thous¬\nands with it during the summer season.\nToo crowd was not eo large but Hint\nall had plenty of room and thic\nof Itself was one of the most pleasaut\nthings about the affair. The parlors and\nbroad corridors wore Ireely used for cosy\nlittle lUlrtti anil promenading. The\ndressing of the ladles was unusually hand-\nsqmo ami attractive, The oompany,\nthe lights, the mujlo and the bright laoes\nand animated forius made a picture tbat\ncharmed all. At midnight a\nsplendid supper gotten up by\nDixon, the hotel caterer, was nicely\nserved, Among those preaent were\nMlsa Jeesie Young of Pittsburgh,Mlsu Bally\nOrcll, Mr. and Mrs. U . Walker Peterson,\nMr. and Mrs. F . J . Norton, Misses l.ucle\nand Minnie I/irlng, Miss Ourlla of New\nYork, Miss Louisa Cummins, Miss Vir¬\nginia Pendleton, Dr. and Mra. A . F . Has¬\nted, Mr. aud Mrs. Charles L. Hobbs, Misa\nBirdie Harrison of Piedmont, Miss Kate\nKlnoald of I.incaster, Ohio, Misa Mary\nBankard, Misa Bailie Bweiney, Misa\nMamlo I.slgbton, Mlsa ttolle Me-\nGabe, Mlsa Maud tybolf, Mr, Will\nDelaplaluo, Mr, Bam Patterson, Mr. Bam\n11. Harrison, Mr. T. P. Howell, Or. K. 0.\nMyers, Mr. Hnlllhen Quarrler. Mr. W . B .\nMcMucbon, Mr. B . K . MoMeohen, Mr.\nGeorge Ualrd, lr., Mr. Sieve Uloa, Mr. Ott\nOarqthers, Mlsa Hadle Hilrd, Mr. Will\nDlovener, Mrs. Al< Glass, Mr. Austin\nUssiib, Mr- Alex. Langhlln, Mr. W . W .\nWbltraeyer, Mr, Harry Franiheim,\nMr. George Vatdy and others.
a55e0053828c6636b70356fed3bdce67 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5082191463723 39.261561 -121.016059 Celebration of the Fourth.— The cel-\nebration of the 86th anniversary of our Nation-\nal Independence, though not on so large a\nscale as that of last year, passed off in fine\nstyle, and ill a manner reflecting credit upon\nthe Committee of Arrangements and doing jus-\ntice to the patriotism of our town and county.\nThe town was crowded with people from morn-\ning till night, with men, women and children,\nwho had come from all parts of the county to\ntake part in the festivities and testify their ap-\npreciation of American Independence and their\ndevotion to our republican institutions. The\nJay was ushered in by the firing of a salute of\nthirty four guns and the ringing of bells. The\nsalute was fired at the upper end of UntilJer\n•trect, by Messrs. Varney & Davis. A proces-\nsion was formed about half past ten, under the\ndirection of Chas. Matsh, Marshal of the day,\nassisted by Messrs. Williamson ami Green as\naids. The Nevada Cadets, headed by fife and\ndrum, took the lead in the procession, followed\nby the Orator of the Day, Reader of the Dec-\nlaration, and Chaplain in a carriage, the Neva-\nda Brass Band, three fire companies, and\nthe Order of Good Templars. The Cadets\nmade a soldiery appearance, and in their vari-\nous evolutions and movements, evinced a cred-\nitable proficiency in the company drill. The\ncarriages and machines of the several fire com-\npanies were appropriately and tastefully decor-\nHted, and eaclt drawn by four horses. The\nPennsylvania company had out both their en-\ngine and hose carriage, and regardless of mort-\ngages and the prospect of bankruptcy, out-\nshone everything else in the procession. Six\nlittle girls rode on their beautifully decorated\nengine, and constituted an interesting feature\nin the display. A girl and two boys were sea-\nted on the Hook & Ladder Cos, truck, and\nfour young firemen rode the horses attached to\nthe Nevada Hose Cos, carriage. After march-\ning through the principal streets of the town,\nthe procession disbanded, the fire companies\nhoused their machines, and the crowd proceed\ned to the Pavilion. The exercises here consis-\nted of music by the Band; prayer by the Chap-\nlain, Rev. Wm. Grove Deal; reading of the\nDeclaration by Thos. P. Hawley; the Oration\nby Addison C. Niles, and closing with a bene-\ndiction. The oration occupied only twenty-
3d1830a1e018163cc848acc5d47fe372 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.683561612126 40.735657 -74.172367 street to South Twelfth street; west of the\ncentre lino of South Twelfth street, from\nSixteenth avenue to Fourteenth avenue; south\nof the centre lino of Fourteenth avenue, from\nSouth Twelfth street to Ashland street; west\nof the centre line of Ashland street, from\nFourteenth avenue to South Orange avenue,\nshall constitute the Sixth Election District of\nJ the Thirteenth Ward.\n! All that part of the Thirteenth Ward lying\nnorth of the centre line of Springfield avenue,\nfrom South Tenth street to South Twelfth\nstreet, east of the centre line of South Twelfth\nstreet, from Springfield avenue to Eighteenth\navenue; north of the centre line of Eighteenth\navenue, fiom South Twelfth street to South\nThirteenth street; east of the centre line of\nSouth Thirteenth street, from Eighteenth ave-\nnue to Sixteenth avenue; south of the centra\nline of Sixteenth avenue, from South Thir-,\nt (tenth street to South Tenth street; west of\nthe centre line of South Tenth street, from\nSixteenth avonue to Springfield avenue, shall\nconstitute the Seventh Election District of\nthe Thirteenth Ward.\nAll that part of tho Thirteenth Ward lying\neast of the centre line of Sandford avenue*\nfrom the line of the town of Irvington to\nSouth Orange avenue; south of the centre line\nof South Oange avenue, from Sandford ave-\nnue to Sunset avenue; west of the centre line\nof avenue, from South Orange avenue\nto Valley street; west of the centre line of\nValley street, from Sunset avenue to the line\nof tho town of Irvington; north of the line\nof the town of Irvington, from Valley atreet\nto Sandford avenue, shall constitute the'Eighth\nElection District of the Thirteenth Ward.\nAM that part of the Thirteenth Ward lying\nj north of the centre line of South Orange ave-\n! nue, from Columbia avenue to the line of the\ncity ot East Orange; east and south of the\nline of the city of East Orange, from South\nOrange avenue to the former city line, said\nline being one hundred feet west from tho\nwesterly- line of South Twentieth street; west\nof the former city line, from the line of the\ncity of East Orange to South Orange avenue;\nBouth of the centre lino of South Orange ave-\nnue, from the former city line to the line of\nthe town of Irvington; north of the line of\nthe town of Irvington, from South Orange\navenue to a line in continuation of the centre\nlin*? g>f Columbia avenue; east of the line m\ncontinuation of the centre line of Columbia\navenue and the centre line of Columbia ave-\nnue, from the line of the town of Irvington\nto South Orange avenue, shall constitute the\nI Ninth Election District of the Thirteenth\nWard.
25c4b5d94529e594bac4c4c86697dd69 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.0589040778793 39.623709 -77.41082 ' minister of the gospel of the Presbyterian\n| church. That he resided with his said wife,\nSusie £. Guyton, in Indianapolis, Indiana,\nfrom the marriage up until about 1876, then\nin the State of Maryland up until about the\nyear 1884 and from that time to 1892 at Cam-\nbridge City, Indiana. That though the con-\nduct of the plaintiff towards his wife, said\nSusie E. Guyton, has always been kind, af-\nfectionate anil above reproach, said Susie E.\nGuyton has, without any just cause or reason\nabandoned and deserted him and has declar-\ned her Intention to live with him no longer\nand that such abandonment has continued\nuninterruptedly for a period of more than\nthree years, in fact about ten years, and is\ndeliberate and final aud the separation of the\npai ties beyond any reasonable \nof reconciliation.\nThat the plaintiff has resided in Frcdcriek\ncounty, State of Maryland for more than two\nyears, next proceeding this application for\ndivorce and that the said defendant resides\nin Cambridge City, Indiana. That the plain-\ntiff and the said defendant, Susie E Guyton,\nhave had by said marriage, three children\nliving, viz.: Stanley W. Guyton, who is over\ntwentyonc years of age, Mamie Guyton (now\nMrs. Mamie Brown) aged about twenty years\nand Bucla S. Guyton, aged sixteen years who\nresides with her brother Stanley In Cam-\nbridge City, Indiana.\nThe bill then prays for the following relief;\nthat the plaintiff, Charles T. Guvton, may\nbe divorced a vinculo matrimonii , from the\nsaid Susie E. Guyton, for general relief, and\nfor an order of publication against the non-\nresident defendant, Susie E Guyton.
1556e9154d549d4b88e8a2d5c8f5a4d1 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.7794520230848 40.441694 -79.990086 Why, oh why, do our city fashionable\nwomen go to pieces so early'in lire, while\nour men, even if they do get fat and bald,\nstill look neat and dapper, and have a style\nabout them until overtaken by theseventies?\nTake a New York debutante of the McAl-\nlister set, dainty and delicate as a miniature\non ivory, with teeth like pearls, skin like\nthe petal of a rose, 'eves full of warmth and\nfeeling, figure ravisbingly beautiful and\nher whole being breathing intelligence,\nsympathy and spirituality. Yet at 25 with\na married life of two or three years, they\nbegin to fade; at 30 the bloom is gone; at 35\nthey are passe; at 40 they are old women.\nBut not so the man about town. At 40 he\nis still erect as a fashion plate; at CO his hair\nand teeth begin to go, but not so his spright-\n his interest in things, his elbow\ntouch witb the spirit of the times. In a\nword, as he grows old in the flesh, he seems\nto brighten intellectually, and that, mind\nvon, is the secret of his perennial bloom.\nHis breezy, cheery way deceives you. He\nacts like a man ot 30, and as his rotundity in-\ncreases, he wraps his toga tightly around\nhim and straightens up like a boy of 18.\nHe is as constant to his bath tub as he is to\nhis sweetheart, and speaks as affectionately\nto his tailor and barber as if they were his\nown brothers. He is careful what he eats,\nand when he eats it, drinks sparingly, sleeps\nnine hours dailv, and isas neat with his\nhands as a girl. He is regularly manicured,\npedicured, and massaged. All this costs\nhim a heap of trouble, out egad I he gets his\nreward.
1062034f0461855097d73be9d5aa884d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.4205479134957 40.063962 -80.720915 JnliiutoHiii ltd Location, lit Iui|iortniic«,\nIn ImhMtrlen,lt* Illnloryln llrlef,\nJohnstown, until ovcrtakon by the\ndisaster of yesterday, was one of the\nmost flourishing and prosperous manu¬\nfacturing towns In tho State. It had\nover a population of S,000 In 1880, and\nhas grown rapidly since, Probably the\nnumber of Inhabitant* at tho present\ndate It was tttlco at large. It has not\nIraen Incorporated as a city, llut Is still\ngoverned under a borough charter. In¬\ncluding Ita populous suburbs, which are\nreally a part of tho town, several of them\nbeing separated from it only by Imagin¬\nary lines, Johnstown has neatly. If not\nquite, M.OOO inhabitants.\nIts alto Is picturesque and boautllnl-\nIn tact tho natural scenery of the entire\ncounty la lierhaiis unsurpassed In the\nHtato. The Valley, at Johns¬\ntown, Is but a few hundred lectin width,\nthe mountains extendlngcloso up to the\nriver. Tho neighboring boroughs, Cone-\nmaugh, Mill vale, Oambrln, Prospect,\nEast Ooneniaugli, Franklin, Ooonoradalo\nand Woodale, are all greying places.\nJohnstown proper Is situated at the con¬\nfluence of tlio Connuiattgh river and\nStony creek, a portion qt tho c|ty lying\non the vest sltlo ol the latter stream.\nIts location Is tho site of Klckens-\npawllng's Indian town, where the whites\nIx-gan to settlo nearly 100 years ago.\nTho town Is well pnvedj Itss electric\nlights, street cart and a lino lyitom ol\nwater workt. It contains many hand-\nsomo business blocka and stylish resi¬\ndences. It Is particularly, noted lor the\nnumber and oxcellenco ol lUchurohos,\nneatly a doien different denominations
df9f3cb0288514706089c79d11a14e17 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.3849314751394 41.681744 -72.788147 A meeting of the general commit-\ntee, consisting of the chairman and\na delegate from each of the 60\nsporting clubs of the state, has al-\nready been held and several im-\nportant decisions reached. It was\ndefinitely determined to divide the\nfield trials into two parts in order\nthat more dogs may be accommodat-\ned. Last year SO applications were\nreceived from owners of high bred\nhunting dogs, but it was possible\nfor only 40 to run. A coon dog\ntrial, a new event, will be held this\nyear and if possible there will be a\nbench show for hunting dogs.\nThe ky and bait casting events\nthis year will also be divided Into\ntwo parts, this being done also to\naccommodate more entries, and\ntrap shooting will appear on the\n as a double event.\nOne of the biggest surprises of\nlast year was the interest displayed\nin the archery contest. The com-\nmittee expected few or no entries\nto this ancient sport, but the event\nproved to be one of the most in-\nteresting on the entire program.\nChairman O'Connell stated today\nthat he had already received a\nnumber of inquiries as to whether\nsuch an event would be held this\nyear, which indicates that a large\nnumber of entries will be made\nbefore the entry list is closed.\nAnother event decided upon Is a\nhorse shoe pitching contest. Many\nexponents of this game expressed\ndisappointment last year because\nthe sport was not listed on the\nprogram and at that time it Was\ndecided to Include it on this year's\nschedule.
a66641a479696f611ece2dbbd9e069fd THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.2068492833587 39.261561 -121.016059 It will be seen that, differing somewhat from\nJefferson, the President tells us, that, without\nregard to time or mode, from the mandates and\nmanacles of the Lccompton Constitution, the\nwhite majority and black slave may achieve de-\nlivery.together. Sir, under the perfidious sanc-\ntions of such a Constitution, freedom and slav-\nery, person and property would be alike exposed\nto the demon of nullification they would breed\nagainst themselves. Out upon such a Govern-\nment ! It traces its attained lineage to the pol-\nluted loins of a minority Convention. It is a\nbastard pretender, contesting and claiming the\ntitle and the throne, the crown and the scepter,\nof tiie legitimate sovereign—the people, if no\nCullodeu awaits it at the Federal Capitol, the\nspecial message may be a fatal forerunner to\nthe field of Kansas. This, sir, is the Govern-\nment under which gentlemen so impatient\nto hurry Kansas into this Union. Why ? Be-\ncause the President, in the exercise of his discre-\ntion, has seen lit to nmko it an Administration\nmeasure. If the gentleman from Trinity (Mr.\nBurch) will take for his standard the high hand-\ned defiance with which Jefferson seeded at Ex-\necutive dictation, he may see less to alarm him\nin the attitude of Mr. Broderick ; he would be\nless impatient to drivohim from a fundamental\nprinciple to prevaricating expediency—from the\nside of the distinguished author of the Kansas\nNebraska Act, to the support of a measure which\nhas for its object the nullification of that Act in\nKansas. Perish tho thought that we should at-\ntempt to drive a proud hearted and honorable\nman from his principles and his present compa-\nny ; that we should, by this paltry resolution,\nattempt to
08c4de6e4fc685df68a3088c36f71d2f OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.5027396943176 41.020015 -92.411296 ropolitan force in the eugine house,\naud, thinking it would be oasy to\ncapture it, he mustered his deputies\nat his own headquarters, a little more\nthan a block away, and made a dash\nfor it. He was quickly seen, however,\nand the occupants of the engine-house\nOfficers Wallace and Gleyre, and\nTurnkey Chapman—barred tho door\nand hastened up stairs and the two\ntirst-named appeared at the windows\narmed with Springlield rifles. Walsh\nand his men rushed on, armed with\nclubs and revolvers, and found Offi­\ncer Stock near the door of the engine-\nhouse, whom they assaulted with\nclubs, knockeil down, aud three pis­\ntol shots are said to have been tired\nat him, one of which wounded him\niu the head. Wallace and Gleyre\nthen called upon tho crowd to dis­\nperse, when more shots were tired \nMarkham. Wallace and Gleyre then\nshot into the crowd, and Deputy Mar­\nshals Neville and Conners fell dead,\naud James Doyle was wounded. The\nMarshals then retired, taking with\nthem their dead and wouuded. May­\nor Bowman in the meantime appear­\ned on the ground, and, he says, nar­\nrowly escaped, as one of the men in\nthe engine-house, ho claims, took de­\nliberate aim at him. but by, a quick\njump sideways, he avoided being hit,\nthe ball entering the ground only a\nfew feetfrom where he stood. While\nthe fight was progressing the alarm-\nbell on the engine-house was rung,\naud the Metropolitans hastened to\nheadquarters from all directions, but\nthe Marshal had retired and nothing\nfurther was done. Mayor Bowman\nimmediately telegraphed to Belle­\nville, the county-seat, for Sheriff\nWeber and County-Coronor Conly,\nwho
2cfa32af95d328a175b484e298a6fc0d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.1986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 who are not manufacturers, while the\ntradohere is controlled by the Western\nIron Association, composed mainly of\nmanufacturers. They nay that iron\nha* not undergone any change here\nwithin thu pant two mouths, and is\nas low an U ever was in tho annuls of the\ntrade. It is believed that whatever u>l\nvanee is made in Philadelphia will lie\nentirely local, just uh the advance in the\npit? iron market a week or two since, and\nwhich was tho result of a bi$ contract by\nthu l'lnciiix Iron Company, which at once\nimule demand for all the pig iron available\nin that section. There has not been a\n»<mi>riil nilviiMiui in I!n» nil? iron iii:irkt<(.\nA leading iron urn mi facta rur said this to it\nreporter: "Tho market Uero Is firm; more\n that, trade in brink, and there seem*\ntu boa great desire on the part of buyers to\nplace orders at the priced now rilling, hut\nthere its no live per cent udvance; we\nwould only ho too glad to learn thai the\nreport is true. However, there is a alight\nadvance of two and a half cents per hiind\nrod, which would only amount to fifty\ncunts per ton.a mere bagatelle. Pig iron\nhits advanced in the Kast from $2 to$2 oO.\nand is now quoted at $lilto $17 per ton.\nYou can scarcely call this an advance,\nhowever, as the tirst cost of the metal at\ntho furnaces is fully that. U is merely a\nrecovery of the market from where it hus\nbeen forced to. It is an indication,\nthough, of what may be looked
08adc321226da2dfd59bf080578b7ab2 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1907.7767122970574 42.217817 -85.891125 isuppose, that never to this day have I\nseen anything remarkable In the fact\nthat it took me ten years to make up\nmy mind to propose to Sally. It did\nnot take me ten years to know thivt\nshe was pretty, and good, and charm-\ning; but it did take me ten years to\nbe sure that I wanted to marry her\nthat, I admit. But what is there\namusing In that? Heavens! has not a\nman a right to pause and consider so\nImportant a matter as getting mar-\nried? And what right have people to\nlink one's name with another's prema-\nturely? Isn't it dreadful?\nWell, as I was saying. I had made\nup my mind, and I went to see Sally.\nI was full of the subject. Never had\nI felt so much a man before. I was,\ndon't you know, lifted up. I ner-\nvous, of course. All men are at such\ntimes, I suppose, and I don't know\nhow I managed to get into the house.\nI think I did remember to ring. Oh,\nI'm sure I rang! Of course I did!\nBut what I mean is, that I was in such\na state, don't you know, that I was\nquite unstrung.\nWell, Sally came down, as pretty\nand darling as ever, and with a rose\nIn her hair. She wore her gray crepe\nde chine you know, the one she had\nfor Mrs. Gale's reception, with the\nVenetian lace. I had never seen her\nlook better never! And that very\nfact disconcerted me. Still, when I\nmake up my mind to anything, you\nknow, nothing daunts me nothing!\nIt is not my way to let anything inter-\nfere. So, after the usual salutations,\nI said to her:
56febd337fd9ae4ec0003c4e7addeb5a COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.6342465436326 41.262128 -95.861391 ple. They have not only advanced in j ent unnatural war, now ragiug in our\nindustry and agriculture, but they have ' midat, may ever lead to such blotwij deeds\nmade great progress in mental, moral ami • of atrocity, as were perpetrated in that\nreligious culture, sehoel houses and j horrible war, the very ttieught oi which\nchurchea may he seen in every city, town i makes the blood chill is our veins, ud\nand pariah, this giv^a unmistakable «vi-, we shudder with horror at it, though it\ndence of civiluation and progress. From ' has been seventy years ago.\ntbeae facta we can judge whether etnana-j l bave always favored and advocated\npation baa proved a bleating or a etirtc peaceable and gradual emancipation, be-\nto the colored people of thoee islands— ( c*u*« I believe it to be tha best for all\nIt is true their progress hae not been as j iatereated. I am, by no m*aos\nrapid as that of more enlightened nations,; lQ fmTor 0f holding my fellow mon m\nwe cannot rcaaonaoly expcct a people, bondage. I would be glad to see every\nwho hare beed held in bondage a!i their J inch of American soil consecrated to free-\nlive#, with all the disadvantages ol ig- j dom, and avery man tbat treads it white\nnorance ana poverty agau.tft theia, to . or black, a free man ; but I am opposed\nleap with one bound to a position that! t0 seeing aiavery go down in a delude of\nwill enable them to oompet* equa.iy and . blood, if it can be possibly avoided be-\nsucoeesfully with more «aiight«aed and c&uie I believe it would entail mora\nwealthy nations, it requires time for a! miaerv and suffering on tha colored race\nnation to develop luelf. Y> hen we read S than ,f jt
0f03c84fec922dd5ec658ec0397c75c0 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.0890410641807 40.441694 -79.990086 of the double crime and trace the possession\nof these to the acensed. On the assumption\nof Trestrail's guilt it was possible, of course,\nthat the murderer had hidden or buried the\nproceeds of the robbery somewhere in the\nneighborhood, unless he had been acting in\ncollusion with some confederate who had\ncarried off the spoil to some place of safety.\nThe medical testimony had proved con-\nclusively that Mr. Bradburn had been mur-\ndered some time between 10 and 12 o'clock\nat night. Put in at the furthest limit, that\nthe murder was committed, the contents of\nthe safe packed up, the murderer had\nwashed his hands in Trestrail's bedroom\nand had broken away the lock within and\nbattered the door on the ontside by 1 o'clock.\nJohn Gubbins did not arrive untill 7. That\nleft the culprit nearly six hours in which to\ndispose of his booty.\nThere was many a dell and cave, grown\nover with a thick growth of underwood,\nwithin a three miles radius of Cross Hall,\nknown only to poachers and the like, that\nwould have to be discovered before the po-\nlice came on further traces of that night's\nwork. Such was their theory. Some of\nthese hiding places might never be discov-\nered, unless the police could win the confi-\ndence of some poacher who would consent\nto show them his haunts. But this was an\nimpracticable notion. The feud between\nthe officers of the and the humbler dis-\nciples of Nimrod in the county of Cheshire\nwas too deep to admit of reconciliation on\nterms that would have the effect of placing\nevery poacher in time to come at the mercy\not his natural enemies.\nWhen all seaich proved unavailing.the\npolice fell back on the theory that Trestrail\nmight have had accomplices, and they ap-\nplied themselves to unearthing his past, in\nthe hope that this might lead to the discov-\nery of someone who was confederate with\nhim in guilt But as Sergeant Williams\nput it pathetically to Doggett, "When you\ndon't know where a man comes from, or now\nhe got here, whether he came on wings or\nwhether he walked, what are you to do?"\nThat Prank Trestrail had called at Cross\nHall in the summer and asked for work,\nthat it so happened Mr. Bradburn was hors\nde combat and wanted the services of a man\nwho could be trusted, and had engaged\nTrestrail, and that Trestrail understood his\nbusiness thoroughly, and was asked to stay\non after harvest, and did so stay, was all\nthat rewarded Sergeant Williams' inquiries.\nAnd so the weeks wore on and Christmas\ncame and went and the date fixed' for the\nwinter Assizes at Chester drew on.\nTrestrail lay in gaol at Chester, growing\nmore and more apathetic as the day when he\nmust be tried for his life approached. The\nchaplain, who was a kind-he arte -
c9378176a989ee6cb9d7234f2596d143 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.5493150367834 43.798358 -73.087921 pike, where it was built on the side of the\nsteep hilh Trees and earth, Tiowever, are\nso plentiful, and so much at hand, that the\ncost of repairing will be small. Repairs\nand improvements; were going or in differ-\nent places. If these be kept up a proper\nlength of time that is, until the road is\nwell settled and properly shaped this will\nbe the easiest pass of the Mountain, south\nof the Onion River, in the Slate, so far as\nmy observation extends. After passing the\nheight of land, and descending the hill a\nshort distance, what should be presented to\nview, some rods before us my wife and\nbabe were with me but a spruce, some eight\nor ten inches through or more, lying directly\nacross the road, with its limbs on. What\ncould be done ? A previous appointment\ncalled me to at Rochester at &. It was\na long distance back for an axe. While\ndevising "ways and means" for getting past\nthe obstacle, we came up to it, and there\ndiscovered the old path, leading into the\nthicket, on the Ieft. It was now to be seen\nthat the- - tree had been fallen by created\nbandstand not by the band of nature. The\nobject manifestly was to turn the travel off\nfrom the new road for the present. The\nreason, or reasons, there were no means of\nascertaining, precisely. The rains might\nhave made some partof the new road im-\npassable or the managers of the matter\nmight bare taken it upon themselves Jo say,\nyou must wait until the new read is better\nsettled it costs us top much to keep it in\nrepair, in its newness, if we allow you\nconstaaily to-c u- t
31a9e1010b142a43fbf49718bf0f9a6c THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.015068461441 37.451159 -86.90916 The turkey eat was not complete\nthough without n liberal supply of\npawn boas and head cheese and with\nIt went the sweetest of rye bread and\nbutter Penn haas Is a strictly Penn ¬\nsylvania Dutch creation-\nIt Is made from the rich Juices left\nafter boiling the Ingredients for head-\ncheese these being thickened to a stiff\npaste with buckwheat flour This paste\nIs pressed In forms until cold and is\nserved In slices It la a dull blue in\ncolor very rich and very good\nAfter the feast the turkey rot was\nrounded out by a night of Jollity super\ninduced by the fiddle and maintained\nby It in its music for the old fashioned\ncotillon figures nnd reels which were\ndanced until the gray of morning\n most of those old time woods\nmen have j assed away and on those\nwho are still dwellers In the mountains\nthe game laws have forced ft situation\nthat leaves them with their ancient oc ¬\ncupation gone and the hunt being no\nlonger a source of maintenance its tra ¬\nditions have departed with it The\nnewer generation of these people Is of\nother tastes and associations so while\nthe wild turkey is yet In proximity In\nthat Blue mountain region to supply\nthe material for tho festive turkey eat\nthe traditions and associations that\nmade it possible are no more and it is\ngone like the apple cut tho quilting\nbee the pig killing frolic and others of\nthe old time rural pastimes that are\nnow but a memory
04f4f76af9b8536bdc03cc106a8e8c75 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1886.2178081874683 40.832421 -115.763123 Major-General John Pope, United\nState* Army, who entered the service\naa a cadet in the Military Aca lemy at\nWest l'oiut, July 1, 1833, from Ken-\nlucky. wna on Tuesday officially retired\nfrom active service iu the United States\nArmy, ou account of age, and in- accor¬\ndance with Cong regressions! eosttntali\nGeneral Pope contemplates living Iu\nCibciunuti and making that citybisfu-\nurn hoiue. His pay as retired Major-\nGeneral amounts to the sum of to.tCa\nper annum, or $1G8,75 per month, dur¬\ning his natural life.\nSome of the principal frauds devel¬\noped under Commissioner Spark's ad¬\nministration have been the stealing of\ntimber from public lands. In the case\nof th; Sierra Nexaila Lumber Couipa-\nuy, of California, the special agent\nfound that the Co ipany hod construc¬\nted extensive aul several rail¬\nways tilteen or twenty utiles iu lingth\nfor the sole purpose of facilitating its\ntrespass upon the public lands, uud 05,-\nOOO.UUO feet were identified us having\nbeen cut by the Company. Depreda\ntions upon the public timber iu Utah\nuud IdaUo Territories have beeu equal¬\nly exteusive tud fligrunt. In Wash¬\nington Terrstory and northeast Califor¬\nnia lumberman have hired hundreds of\nsailors oud other transient and irres¬\nponsible men to muke lriululent entries\non lands containing the finest and most\nvaluable timber iu these sections. Tho\nvigorous course of the Commissioner to¬\nwards the companies is having its effect-\nSeveral d legations from the West have\nbeeu iu WashiugUtu for the last few\nweeks trying to postpone action in their\ncases, or having the suits uguilist thein\ndismissed.
2a1aeadff3b4c109fcd0672e2912caa5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.392076471109 40.063962 -80.720915 District.Gen. I . 11. Duval.\nFrx/tn the Elizabeth Gazette.\niwcffipB. III., May 5tb, 1S68.\njEGazette:.You will doubtless fc\nsurprised to receive a commanicatlo\nfrom the "Sucker State," and from\nstranger, bnt having seen a copy c\nyour paper a day or two since, contaU\ning an article by "Quad," urging upo\nthe Clarksburg Convention the duty c\nnominating Hon. C. D . Hubbard as th\nCongressional candidate for the Fire\nDistrict; and inferring from tbe fire\nsentence in the letter referred to tha\nyour columns are open to all who d<\nsire to express their political views o\n. farther the interests of their friends c\nfavorites, X, as a West Virginia soldiei\nwish to appeal to niy comrades in arm\nand to all who are In favor of reward\ning a brave soldier and one of Virgl\nilia's noblest son's, to use their influenc\nand cast their votes for Qen. I. »E\nDuyal, as Major of the 1st Infac\ntry, Colonel of the 9th Infantry, an\ncommander of a Brigade, won tb\nhearts and confidence of all who hai\nthe honor to serve under or come i\ncontact with bim, by bis gentlemanl;\ndeportment and uniform kindness to\nwards each and every one.\nAll honor, Bay we, to the choice o\n"Quad," Hon.C. D . Hubbard, "for hi\nell'orts for the old flag in the dark day\nof the Republic," which mighty effort\nwere put forth while in safety am\ncomfort in his seat at Washington, oj\nduring the adjournment of Congress\nwith friends and 'midst the pleasure\nof home; but ten thousand times mor\nhonor to the brave man who endure\nthe many hardships of the march, tb\nmiseries .of camp, and the storm an\nthunder of artillery and musketry, t\nmaintain the honor of oar gloriou\nbanner in the dark days of the Keput\nlie.
011243fe20eca112946f932ca1543d48 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.4999999682902 40.832421 -115.763123 The House his passed a resolution\nauthorizing the Secretary of the Treas¬\nury to receive trade dollars until July\n1, 1834, snd give in exchange therefor\nstandard silver dollars. This should\nhave baen dona long ago, as ranch loss\nhas been occasioned by tha trade ilolUr\nbeing at a discount. The only sba..ow\nof excuse for discounting it is that it is\nnot a legal teuder, and the Government\ncan well afford to wake the exchange,\nas it contains 7% graius more Oliver\nthan the standard dollar. We should\nlike very much for soma flnoucier to ex¬\nplain why 412/J grains of silver should\nbo worth 10 cents more than 4-0 graius.\nAn Embarrassing Coal Hon.\nThe steamer Etcoinbia, says tbo\nRecord-Union, which foundered off\nthe Heads of San Francisco rtceully,\nhas sold as she lies for $1,400 to\none mau, while another has bought he*\ncargo for $300. - The question as to\nwhat shall be don* with her is how¬\never still unsettled. The mail who has\nbought her thinks he could perlnps\nraise her i( the cargo was ont, so he is\nwaiting to aee what tbe purchaser of tlie\ncargo mesus to do. Tbe purchaser of\nthe cargo, on his pari, will not decide\nupon any plan until be knows what tbe\nowner of tbe Trs<el will do. Iu abort\nthin situation remiuds on- of (hut which\nhas become immortalizsd by tha verse ;\n"Lord I'hslhtro, with hie eword i!ri«n,\nWsa welling for Mr Itlclnnl Mir cuao,\nSir Richard, looking io be it >m,\nWat waiting for t*>e Ksrl vl C ti allium "
02cca46fd9cb3aea33a3a6bff2e4b018 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1890.6561643518519 39.756121 -99.323985 It is foolish to expect a husband, who\nhas entire access to his wife's society,\nto make the same sacrifices to be with\nher for an evening that the lover makes,\nwho is only admitted to the loved one's\npresence for an hour. It is no indica-\ntion of any lessening of love if he some-\ntimes goes out and leaves her at home.\nA jewel may be very precious to us,\neven if we do not always wish to wear\nit in sight and gaze upon its brilliancy.\nSome women seem to marry with the\nidea that "wife" means "interferer."\nThey set themselves to work at once to\nrevolutionize the man's whole life, and\ndemand attentions which, if they ex-\nercised a little gentle patience, would\nbe gladly given. I have seeu wives\nwho laid plans for every hour of\ntheir husband's leisure time. Now, no\nman likes this. It is natural for them\nto be the planners and directors, and\nthe wife who in all waj's strives to ca-\nter to her husband's tastes and comforts\nwill find him planning for her happi-\nness ere long. Nothing touches a man\nof any feeling quicker than to see that\nhis wife yields her wishes to his, and\ngives up with ready sweetness in small\nmatters. Pay attention to any wish of\nhis, no matter how trivial and foolish\nit may seem to you, and respond to his\nrequests cheerfully, not sullenly, and\nin a little while you shall find him the\nmost reasonable and thoughtful of men.\nOf course I am not writing of brutes or\nbullies, but of men with hearts and\nheads.
0a97b27a524de7677c064454c137c6cc THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1891.8890410641807 37.305884 -89.518148 minute she said that I knew what was\ncoming, and thought I should die.\n'What wedding?" asked mamma.\n'Why, when Aunt Grace and U'ncle\nJack get married. I s'pose that will be\nthe next thing we will have to see to.\nI didn't know they 'tended to be mar-\nried 'til I heard Minnie tell Kittie last\nnight Annt Grace, what makes you\nand Uncle Jack look so funny? Oh\ndear! I hope you ain't got mad at each\nother again and changed your mind\n'bout having the weddtag. I shall be\nso 'spointcd if we don't have it\nKitty says people jump over the broom-\nstick when they get married, and I\nwant to see Aunt Grace jump. I never\nsaw a fat woman jump, bnt I know I\nshould just 'joy it she look aw-\nful queer. Uncle Jack?"\nMamma told Toot to stop two or\nthree times but she didn't pay any at-\ntention to bar but went right on. Papa\nlaughed so he couldn't say anything.\nEveryone laughed but Annt Grace and\nUncle Jack, and mamma and me. I\nnever saw mamma so angry before.\nShe gut up from the table and took\nToot in her arms to carry her out of\nthe room. Toot screamed and kicked\nand one of her feet hit Uncle Thomas\non the head and knocked his glasses\noff. They struck a goblet as they fell\nand broke. He tried to catch them\nand tipped over a dish of gravy on the\ntablecloth, and a lot of it ran down in\nAnnt Martha's lap on Jjer new silk\ndrsas
10dabef9d8b428a87602bd3bb284aa82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.9082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 SV>S :o dialer, 3f?iic.\nCoffer, option# opened steady at'ur\nchanged price* to as advance of 5 point\nruled firm and exceptionally active o\nfirmer European and Braslllan cable\nIncreasing Investment buying, small!\nreceipts at Rio and Santos, and larj\nwarebous» deliveries In this country\nclosed steady at net unchanged to ]\npaints advance. Liquidation of Decerr\ntier contracts were* feature; sales M.CH\nbam Including: December at t.t604&\nJanuary 5.66c; March 6.76®5.SOc; Ma\n6.MCV July 105c; August 8.06c: Beptem\nber (.10a Spot coffee. Bio market st»d\nbut quiet; No. 7 Invoice (He; No. 7 jot\nbin*. <Hc. Mild ateady; Cordova 8016<\nSugar.Raw strong; fair rellning <c\ncentrifugal, 90 test, 4Mc; molasses augi\nS*c; refined Arm; mould A 6Mc; etaml\nard A 5H: confectioners' A 5Hc: cut lo<\n5Kc; crushed 6«4c; powdered 6%c; grai\nulatea &s»c; cuoes ntc.\nBALTIMORE.Flour doll ul or\n receipts 18.237 barrel*; expert\n1M barrels. Wheat dull and easy; spo\nmonth an4 December 71*®72c; recelpl\n161,936 bushels; exports 12.000 busbeli\nsouthern -wheat by cample 63®72%i\nCorn easier; spot, month and Deoembe\n>8He38Kc; steamer mixed W®3S%c; n\nceipts 244,022 bushels; exports 128,1!\nbushels; southern white corn SHPSSc; d\nyellow 3Jfc©S8c. Oats Arm; No. J whit\n82%<J33c: receipts 31,620 bushels. By\ndull and easy; No. I western UUc; r<\ncelpta 0,12$ bushels. Butter firm and at\nchsnged. Egg* weak and unchangei\nCheese steady and unchanged.\nCINCINNATI.Flour steady. TOiet\nquiet; No. 2 red nominal at 69c.' Cor\nsteady; No. 2 mixed SSftc. Oats firm\nNo. 3 mixed 28ftc. Bye strong-; No.\n57c. Lard easy at It 85. Bulkmeat\neasy at »4 80. Bacon steady at (6 oi\n"Whisky firm at II 28, Butter quie\nSugar Arm. Eggs firm at 18a Cheea\nfirm.
5d18e3ef13e5cd104a31ce38e7a038cd NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.741095858701 41.681744 -72.788147 Detective Sergeant A. J. Richardson\nand Sergeant William C. Hart, who\nwere the principal factors in securing\nthe confession of guilt from Clemens\nKalkowski and Frank Fetzmann who,\nit is alleged, allowed the body to lie\nin the cellar of the saloon of the\nformer and one of whom later re-\nmoved tho body to an alleyway in\nback of the saloon where it was found\nwith life extinct the next morning,\nwere busy today in preparing the case\nof the state in the readiness for the\nhearing of the two principals in police\ncourt Friday morning. The two police\ndetectives have been working actively\nthe last few days to bring Kalkowski\nand Fetzmann to account. Suspicion\nfrom the first was directed towards\nthe saloon of Kalkowski, the body\nhaving been in such proximity that it\nwas obviously there or thereabouts\nthat Winkle received the injuries\nwhich caused his death. Whether they\nwere inflicted through human agency\nor only through a fault of his own re\nmains to be seen. Despite the fact that\nKalkowski broke down and confessed\nafter he had been closeted with the\nlocal detectives there Is a wide opinion\nparticularly among the relatives of the\ndead man. that there is more to the\nstory than has been told, that possibly\nKalkowski pushed Winkle, or even\nstruck him or that someone else is re\nsponsible for his death and that Kal\nkowski has not told all he knows.\n Detective Richardson and De\ntective Hart are satisfied that the con\nfession clears up the mystery as far\nas the local police are concerned and\nbelieve that the solution offered is the\nproper one and that Kalkowski Is not\nshielding anyone or an so -ca ll - ed\n"gang" from any complicity in the\naffair. Many say that whatever may\nbe said of Louis Winkle there is to be\nlittle consideration to be given to the\nwild disclosures that he was in direct\ntouch with rum runners, and that his\ndeath could not have come about\nthrough a fear that he would "squeal."\nWhile he was known as a drinking\nman, this Is about the extent of any\nconnection he would have with booze,\naccording to several persons well ac\nquainted with the dead man.\nIn discussing the theory that Winkle\nwas hit on the head and robbed cf\nseveral hundred dollars, one of the\ncity's influential men said today, that\nhe knew Winkle for three years, since\nhe was connected with the real estate\nbusiness, and at no time in that period\ndid he ever know him to possess such\na sizable amount. To this man. Winkle\nis said to have often said that when\na big deal was nearly consummated\nsome other real estate man would\n'butt in" and take the sale away, and\nafter collecting the big commission he\nwould hand Winkle a meagre amount\nas a balm for his feelings.
09a5812d9bdc9ffb797a0c32ddffe6bc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.5109588724 40.063962 -80.720915 )t celebrate, the recognition of tli\nhroughout the Northwest was inoi\nill and enthusiastic than on any pri\noccasion for many yearn.\nj most tinted celebration was\nburg, Illinois, where HenatorTrun\nras the orator. After speaking i\ni«al strain of nil orators on this occr\nlie instanced the wrongs and insnll\nAmerican people had oorno durin\nhellion from the monarchical |m>\\\\\nt Europe, and said when the r<\nn was ended the voice of a ningl\nor carried terror and dismay int\nand palaces. The Joint Ilig\nulssion owned tho wrong of deorc\n; ou our ruuinierua, nuu Rgrneu i\n»r It, and ho rejoiced that tho Amor\npeople had had tin* patience t\nsuch a consummation. Ho rejoice\nvc did not go to war with n natio\nsame race, language and religioi\n» doing ho much lor civili/.atiou an\ntianity. He alluded to the departe\ns of Homo and Franco, caUHed h\nimhition and tlcrcc oppression, an\npaid a glorious tribute to tho laws c\nnitcd Htates, tiiat accorded justic\nrotectlon to all alike. lie exprcsse\nill decidedly in favor ol the olovatio\nmen, and hoped that tho day wc\natant when woman would receiv\nmo pay lor their services as tho mei\n or women, ho continued, to pai\nto in the government of tho countr\never tliey ask for it cannot he deniei\nnation would ho all tho better an\nfor their participation. IIo the\nof the rights vouchsafed to minor\nmd the functions of different depar\ni of tho government, executive, leg!\nand judicial, giving a review of tt\nn of government, lie expressed h\nin tho i>ower of tho government\n' ess rebellion under tho Constitutio:\nivlng unlimited power In mir\nent, lie, however, condemned tl\niso ol 1110 war power in nines\nInn time of pence n man thou!\nodliva jury,butInn time ofwi\nrmod rebel should bo shot, T1\nlor nnld that attempts lmd been mac\notlio the Executive willi too lnu<\nr, anil that centralization was tl\ndanger of republics. Local goror\ns are the mfeguardn of liberty, whl\nFederal Government Is only uecdi\nDloot its citizens. Liberal and kind\nn on tlio part of tlio General Gover\nwas needed to Ileal tlio wounds\nioutli. Tlio fathers of tlio count!\ndeparted from the principles of tl\njratlon ofIndependence by toleratli\nry, and from that cause sprung tl\ndesolation and rapine. Tlio countr\nmtlmied. Is now free from tlio ata\nvnpir
141b0107c230c06d7b93832a61b2c204 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.7630136669204 29.4246 -98.49514 decorated, the bolster of the wagon gave way\nand the effects of much care and trouble were\ninstantly destroyed. In the second wagon\nthat came to grief was Hhodiua & Temptky's\nAlpine tcene, in which were sat the Tyr oleic\nsextette. The wagon was run for the third\nprize and was effectively enough to have\ngiven a close competition, but in passing\nScholz's hall the wheel broke off the\nand fell to pieces, thus ending their chaaces\nfor the prize. The boys were sadlr disap-\npointed, because they nave worked long and\nwell to make a good show and .certainly de-\nserved a better fate. It Is a pity that the\nVolksfest committee did not offer a prize for a\ncomic wagon, because the Sam Antonio\nLight minstrels would have certainly taken\nthe prize as they did the cake. Never mind,\n deserved it; that Is some consolation, and\nthey pleased the many friends of the Light.\nAfter the award had been made there was\na temporary lull In the proceedings, for the\ngentlemen who had taken part In the Voiles-fe-\nlike other men, needed refreshment and\nthis was duly obtained, and for a time the\ngarden had a deserted appearance, but grad-\nually the crowd reassembled to hear the\noration of Hon. Columbus Upson. There\nwas some deliyin carrying out this part of\nthe programme, as the tun'a rays obliquely\nttiuck the oratoral rostrum and made It un-\ntenable for a lengthy speech. Other arrange-\nments had therefore to be made, and\neventually the dance platform was used, Mr.\nUpson, who was supported by the President,\nVice President Mauermann and several prom-\ninent citizens, came forward and read the fol-\nlowing address;
af30600b23a907d0d3b8f8f895f4dc62 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6232876395231 39.261561 -121.016059 T|K A I, I, BRANCHES OF MOTH THE\nJL arts and sciences, as well as the Medical Proles\nsion, tpeciality has ever been recognised by men ot\njudicious reflection, as both progressive and instruc-\ntive for it is a perfectly well demonstrated lact that\nany individual, however astute he nitty be, attains\nto an infinitely greater degree of perfection by a\nthorough and persevering continuity to one branch\nof art. science, medicine, or mechanics, than it he\nattempted to accomplish half a dozen—as in the lat-\nter case lie would be likely, nine times out often, to\nobtain at most but a very superficial knowledge ol\neither. In the practice ot medicine or surgery, it un-\nravels, simplifies, aud makes clear to the arduous\nstudent, the mysterious complications (complicated\non accouut of the numerous causes which produce\nthem) which diseases of any kind take upon the hu-\nman system; operating, as they do frequently, both\non the"mental ami physical organs. It seeks to ie-\ncuperate and restore the functions to their natural\nand proper status, as well as to neutralize all antag-\nonistic influences to which the system is continually\nsubject. Certain it is. that wliiie the busy allairs »!\nlife seem to exhaust all our time and attention, the\ninuipiency and progress ot disease, sometime* ot dan-\ngerous fatal character, approach us almost un-\nnoticed. Slow in i1s progress but insidious in its\ncourse, a disease, or even the simpledisturbance ot a\nsingle function, frequently becomes an alfair of im\nmiuent danger when least expected. To this the at-\ntention of the physician of Spmiolities is always ear-\nliest given. With pn per |>erceptivo powers, added\nto ample experience, lie is necessarily able to arrive\nwitli unerring certainty to a correct conclusion as to\nthe ebaractsr of the ailment and the proper appli-\nances for its cure. This I have never found to tail.\nA remedy properly administered, and at the proper\ntime, is sun to accomplish the object of its mission,\nprovided it be directed by the bunds ot a skillful\npiivsiciau, who knows his business. I need not re-\niterate the old adage, that “Health in the endorse-\nment of Divinity.” sent to us for our own benefit,\nand that we should not lor a moment disregard the\nsecret admonitions that tell us to bew are lest we tall\nimperceptibly into a laybynnth from which it will be\n■iiucli more difficult to escape than if we had given\nproper attention to ourselves before venturing so far.\nConsult your physician before it is tis> lute; confide\nin him, and you will save yourself an infinity of suf-\nfering.
0ed3b900c6be03ba1296702e18d26efc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.395890379249 46.187885 -123.831256 Section 3 of the act entitled : "An act to\nprovide for the protection of the salmon\nlisherie3 of Alaska," approved March 2, 18S9,\nprovides that :\n"Section 3. That section 193G of the Re-\nvised Statutes of the United States Is hereby\ndeclared to include and apply to all the do-\nminion of the United States In the waters\nof BehringSea, aud it shall be the duty of\nthe President at a timely season in each\nyear to Issue his proclamation, and cause\nWhe same to be published for one month at\nleast in one newspaper (if any such there\nbe) published at eacli United States port of\nentry on the Pacilic coast, warning all per-\nsons against entering Mich waters for the\npurpose of violating the provisions of said\nsection, and he shall also cause one or \nvessels of the United States to diligently\ncruise said waters and arrest all persons and\nseize all vessels found to be or to havo been\nengaged In any violation of the laws or tho\nUnited States therein."\nNow, therefore, I, Benjamin Haiucison,\nPresident of the United States, pursuant to\nthe above recited statutes, hereby warn all\npersons against entering the waters of\nRetiring Sea within the dominion of the\nUnited States, for tho purpose of violating\nthe provisions of paid section 135C, Revised\nStatutes ; and I hereby proclaim that all\npersons found to be. or nave been engaged\nin any violation of the laws of the United\nStates, In said waters, will be arrested and\npunished as above provided, and that all\nvessels so employed, their tackle, apparel,\nfurniture and cargoes will be seized and\nforfeited.
1e5b9e6275ae35d94edb689536257c82 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.2534246258244 40.063962 -80.720915 ho good old-fashioned ones in the woods\nnd at farm houses, and tho "got up" par- al\nies in our larger places, which bring the ,t\nempting dish within tho reach ol the ol\nluithudes. For our own part, we like\nest to go right into the "sugar bush," >f\n. here wo can shake hands wtth Dnmo f\nfaturo In her rustic garb, us well as par- u\n»ko ol her sweets in a naturul, homespun >>\noit of a way. But while tho new sugar c<\nwpII wnrth imtinir thorn nrn rirriim- .1\ntanccs which will make it hardly pay to\no to eat, certainly Tor people who UkcT\nbelr caso better thai; alitUu tccmblo,- he-.\n14e* thoso who,h»jo;Bo opi>orlunlt| to jj\nonYcuiently do so. Therefore YllTsgc S\nugar parties have come in vogue, and do £\nuite well as substitutes Tor the genuine T\nbing, especially as the is genuine al\new maple hero as well as in the woods. 11\niome ol our church societies have inau- v\ntirated these parties, arranging them w\nery much as they do their oyster sup- t\nera, strawberry and ice cream and other "\nstlvals, thus having a pleasant, social "\nImo, and saving a handsome profit for ft\nUelr respective societies. Thoilruptobe. 111\noiled down, or the new sugar lobe toelt- Cl\nd is readily obtained fresh iromflie man- "\nfacturer, while the ladies, of course, h\nlanage the affair handsomely, and to s<\nlit "satisfaction of all conccrned This T\near the important question was: What, al\nhall we do for snow ? For thougji we' 81\n»lk of eating tram sugar, it must bo '\nraxed, we think, to bo perfect; and, if w\nnow is unattainable, ice, though moro hi\nrouble to manage, answers a good purose.
1374831e43bf93d334e84c1269b1474f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.3082191463725 40.063962 -80.720915 ffxelal Comr}>ondtnrt of the Intel!tjrncer.\nMountain LakuPakk, Mb., April 21.\n. Intensive proparntiona nro boing\ninadu to mako tlio coining eoa?oti at tho\npari; tlio most micci'saful In Its hiiitory.\nTho park tins always enjoyed a liberal\npatronage from West Virginia. In fact,\nNVhoelln^ hna furnlehod aotno of its\nmost outliusiaatic workers. In the be*\nginning of tiling Rov. l)r. Maadon was\ntlio proaident, J. C. Aldcraon, secretary,\nA. I* I.iat, treasurer, and Dr. T . 11.\nI<ognu 0110 of the directors. Wheeling\nfurnishod four of the fluvon otlicers.\nFrom Hint day to this Mr. Lint has boon\nro-olected treasurer. Later on Mr.\nStono, one of Wliooling's moat success-\nful buainoss men, bocatne interested\nand erected nine counties.\nMr. C . W . Cornier becaiuo n mombor\nof tlio board of directors sovnral years\na^'o and bus boon continuod in oillco\novor since. Ho is one of tlio inoat active\nmember of tlio board, lion. Goorgo C.\nSturgis, of Morgnntown, in also on tlio\nboard of directors. Twonty-eight cot-\ntngos nro owned by West Virginians,\nten of them by eitizons of Wheoliup.\nDnrlug tlio past scasona a number of\ncottages lrnvo been occupied by West\nVirginians, and moro than n scoro will\nbo this Buuimor. It is also fuct that\nMountain Lako Park is within the\nbounds of tlio West Virginia confer-\nonco of tho Mothodist church. Thoso\nfacts doubtless account for tho groat\ninterest. Woat Virginia liao in tho most\nclmriniag and queonly health and Bum¬\nmer resort of our nation.\nTin tabernaclo ia bolng onlargod\nthirty feet to accommodato tho great\nnmnbora who nro arranging to attend\ntho coming camp mooting and con¬\nventions to bo hold at tho park this\nsummer. Among tho important im¬\nprovements ia the electric light. Tho\npark will bo lighted from Juno 1 by\nelectricity.^ Tho poles are now boing\nput up. Now streets hnvo been oponed\nup, rustic bridges and arbors built, and\nother noticeablo improvement* made.\nAbout twonty-flvo now housos will bo\norectod by tho opening of tho season.\nThe Columbia hotel is having nn addi¬\ntion 30x10 foot, two stories added to it.\nTho Alleghony llouso lias been rented\nby Mrs. Ebert, of Ivingwood, W. Va.\niNIra. IIowo of Morgantowu, Mrs. G .\nW. Brown, of Grafton, Mrs. llello C.\nllarmison, of Romnov, will conduct\nthree of tho boardiughnlls nud Mrs.\nSawyor.'of Wheeling, will run tho As¬\nsembly llouso uud cottaeoa. Woat Vir¬\nginians will feel perfectly at homo in\nthe park this summer.
67f66ae369ff87c790a5977d8f34d9f1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8702185476118 39.513775 -121.556359 CONSTABLE S SALE\nVIKTI Ko' Hie lollown.g executions issued\nR out of John JonesCourt, . lu«Hee ot the Peace\nin and lor Unite County i anion la tome dinned,\ncommandin'., ' me to n ek. .he follow mg sums, to w it:\none execution in favor of Coldsinilh, mid against Jus.\nIlrudley. for the sum ol titty live dollars debt, and\nsix dollars and Puly cents . osls of court; one i xeeo-\nlion in favor of tdias MeCnlluiii and ngnilist Jus\nItradley, for Hie sum ■ f loriy i light dollars debt and\nsix dollars and lor y d nls costs of court; one execu-\ntion in favor of \\\\ 111ii. in Modal and against Ji.s.\nItradley for the sum ol tillv one dollars and seventy\nlive cents debt aml six dollars and forty cents costs\nof court: one execution n favor of Duul Ciithcrv\nand against Jus, Bradley for Hie sum of eight) in dol-\nlars debt and six dollars and foi ty cents costs of court;\none execution in favor ol John Irimi and against\nJas. Itradley tor the sum of ei Hit dollars and fit 15 cents\ndebt and six dollars and forty cents costs of court;\none in luvor of John Kiiey and against .!;.s.\nitradley lor the sum of forty nine dollars debt and\nsix dollars and forty n uts costs ol court; one execu-\ntion in favor of ITios. .tones for the rum of lorty six\ndollars and fifty live cents debt and six dollars and\nforty cents costs of court.\nt bn* execution in favor of liau'l Peterson for the\nsum of forty two dollars and fourteen emits debt and\nsix dollars ond forty cents costs ot court, together\nwith the costs accruing on said w nls. I have levn-d\nniion and w ill expose to public sale to the highest\nbidder lor cash on Thursday the 2d day of December\nA. I). IH.Tti, at 1/ o'clock M | the following described\nproperty, to w o: l.ots No. 1, 2, and 4 iu block No. 21;\nlots No. I and 2tu block No. 20 . and lots No. 2,1! and\n(i in block No 2d, as laid down and described In the\nmap of Hie town of (irovdle, Unite county, together\nwith all the improvements and appurtenance* ibere-\nuiilo belonging. Sale to lake place at the Court House\niu the (own of uroville, county and stale aforesaid.
01fa9f4e507e1aab6c341da4b25cd08f PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.0315068176053 40.441694 -79.990086 and there are a grace and a swlns about their\nmovements that was unknown to the mincing\ngait of the girl of a generation ago. The\nchange" is owing to physical culture and out-\ndoor exercise. Our girls are taller, healthier\nand more graceful than the girls of 25 years ago\nwere. Tbe change, from the same cause, is so\nmarked in England that girls there are uni-\nversally taller than their mothers. Life out-\ndoors, a physicalculture that limbers up every\nmuscle in the body and keeps it full of electric\nlife, will go far toward making an old woman\nover new. And a woman is never too old to\nbegin such training.\nTHETHanrard examinations for women were\nopened ten years ago. The flrst year 25 stu-\ndents presented themselves. They passed the\n required of the freshmen class\nfor admission to tbe university. By degrees\naccommodations were found at Cambridge for\nwomen students, and professors were found\nwho gave them instruction. Tbese belonged to\ntbe Harvard faculty. The prof essors have en-\ntered into their work in a noble, truly liberal\nspirit This year there are 139 women students.\nThe instruction given to male stndents at Har-\nvard is simply duplicated to the female pupils.\nIt is the same course of study, to all intents\nand purposes, except at tbe end of it the women\nstndents receive no diploma. To tbem is given\nonly a certificate informing whom it may con-\ncern that the bearer has pursued in Harvard\nUniversity a course of study equivalent to ti.at\nfor which the degree Of Bachelor of Arts Is\ngiven.
26784abc39fa907d89b5562ced46b95c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.5942622634589 58.275556 -134.3925 To be treed by a big black bear; to\nhave the animal then follow him out\n011 a big limb of the tree in which he\nhad taken refuge snapping and snarl¬\ning viciously in an endeavor to reach\nits enemy, was the experience of C. L .\nJohnson a few days ago in the Carbon\nmountain country says the Katalla\nHerald. Johnson has been in the em¬\nploy of Surveyor C. S . Jlubboll and\none day last week Mr. Hubbell, George\nNylon, John Strebolt and Johnson\nwere making their way to their camp\nat the foot of a steep hill, on the sum¬\nmit of which, close to the trail, stands\na big tree with big out stretching\nbranc hes. In climbing down the hill\nit wus tno custom of the men to seize\nhold of a projecting branch thus start\nthemselves gently down steep in¬\ncline. Tho other day Johnson and\nStrebolt were making for the camp,\nStrebolt in the lead and he had swung\nhimself down on the limb. Johnson\nfollowed. The latter had just seized\nthe limb to follow his companion\nwhen, on hearing a uoise close behind\nhim he looked back and a few feet\naway, coming straight at him, mouth\nopen and eyes gleaming like balls of\nlire, was a big black bear. Johnson,\nwho is something of an athlete, made\na spring and pulled himself up on a\nfriendly limb, just in time to escape a\nvicious swipe from the bear's paws,\nthe blow falling fihort, striking the\nheel of his boot. Then he began to\nclimb, the bear following. Johnson\nAnally olimbed far out on a big limb;\nthe boar followed, but uot liking the\nposition, it desoended to the ground
5a51d6fcbc14f7f1912d455ef782305e CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1913.7136985984273 39.623709 -77.41082 me that he hud seen the woman, not\nalone lu the dreams that had visited\nhim In his sleep, but in those that\nhad come to him lu the daytime, and\nthat at these periods she looked fully\ncapable of gratifying her desire.\nStrange that a man who had faced\ndeatli in a thousand different ways,\nand who otherwise did not know the\nmeaning of fear, should be so singu-\nlarly impressed by Hie impassioned ut\nterance of a thoroughly unscrupulous\nwoman. However, 1 knew this to be\nHie case. Bill had repeatedly told me\nthat though he felt that lie would die\nwith liis bouts ou, he was equally cer-\ntain that ut that period his ears would\ncome off. But six years had passed\nnow since he left the woman, and 1\n that she and her Inhuman wish\nhad passed from his mind forever,\nIt was in tile memorable summer of\n'76, soon after tbe Custer massacre. 1\nhad joined Cook's command and had\ngone up to the Yellowstone. Terry had\na command in the field, also Gibbon.\nThe Indians had split up and scat-\ntered, and there seemed to be little\nchance of a fight.\nWhile encamped on the Yellowstone,\nCrook was anxious to get important\ndispatches to Gibbon, who was about\n150 miles away. 1 volunteered to bo\nthe bearer, but was forced to abandon\nthe undertaking to my pard Bill. He\ncame to me and said that he had a\npresentiment, and that he absolutely\nmust carry the dispatches. Seeing that\nhe was thoroughly In earnest, 1 gave\nway to him.
331d4466d487f8216f362cfba8fc0c59 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.360273940893 39.261561 -121.016059 Our Legislature by common consent has care-\nfully abstained from all interference iu the con-\ncerns and bnsinsss of mining. A wise nen in-\ntervention, has left it te the miner to enact his\nown laws,' or rather has left the mining com-\nmonwealth to develop a system of customs and\nlaws best adapted to its necessities. It was\nnevsr supposed however that this would entire-\nly avoid litigation. Se far from it, the unwrit-\nten statute* ef the mining community have\nbeen carried up t* be expounded by the eourts\nand too often to be expounded by the light ef\nold principles, illogical and incorrect when ap-\nplied to tbo peculiar condition of the country.\nThe field of jurisprudence opened up by the oc-\ncupation of geld mining in California is a terra\nincognita to tbo legal literature of modern States.\nIn the tenure by which the possession of the\nminer is heM, it has no analogy to the muni-\nments of title recorded in the books. In their\nrelations as laud holders the mining community\nhave found themselves thrown together, with\nnew and peculiar duties arising out of the pe-\nculiar nse to bo made of the sell. With such dif-\nficulties largo aud important interests are com-\nmitted to the courts, to the courts aiont to\ndetsrmine. With no general laws upon the sub-\nject to guide or control them, we have to rely\nwholly upon the knowledge, experience and\nwisdom of the judiciary for tne legislation by\nwhich we are governed. When we reflect that\noften a mining claim of a hundred feet square,\nis of as much value as a square mile of land in\ntbo agricultural region, some conception may\nbo formed ef the magnitude of the private in-\nterests which find their way to tbo calender of\nthe courts. Of no less consequence are those\ndisputed rights te water privileges which have\noccupied so large a share of their attention. It\nmay be said that although we bar* had repeat-\ned decisions of cases with regard to these rights\nstill but little progress has been made towards\nestablishing a safe rule of action, and to furnish\na reliable precedent for tbs future. These con-\nsiderations it seems to us should have in-\nfluenced the selection ef at least one member of\nthe eourt, from its first organization down\nfrom amongst the lawyers practising iu the mi-\nning couuties. The experience in this new de-\npartment of the law which is gained by a daily\nintercourse with the people engaged in thie bu-
3267cf66cf3cd4d49d16be09928b5660 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.1493150367833 37.53119 -84.661888 Kooxvllle assisted by Elder Moore\nand a largo concourse of sorrowing rel\natlvc and friends followed the remains\nto the cemetery Tne deceased was a\ndaughter of the late Judge SawI Lusk\nand Is survived by a brother Aleck\nLusk and two sisters Mesdamis H O\nJennings and J M Fruzeo\nMiss Olivia Swecnoy Is visiting Miss\nCharlotte Bliss of Louiavlllo Mln\nAlice Walker la visiting in Richmond\nMUs Salllo Lou Mycra Is visiting her\nsister In Lexington Miss Emily Chen\nault has returned to Richmond The\nMisses Ray of tbls vicinity bavo uc\ncompanled their brother to Illinois\nLeslie Anderson of Central Unlveral\nty has been on a visit home Miss\nCarrie Curroy Is visiting her sister\nMrs F D Gaines at Danville Mrs\nJ M Frazee who has with her\nsister Mrs Q C Jennings left Moo\nday for Maysvllle Mrs Martha\nThompson Is visiting Mrs R L Jon\nnlbgs of Paint Lick\nMlssTheoHemphlllls In Danville\nMrs R E Galnea and hula daugh-\nter of Duncan I T have been guests\nofMrsHMBallouMrsW0\nBradley Is on the sick list Miss Eva\nGrant has returned to Danville Miss\nFannie Doty Is visiting Mr and Mrs\nLowls Doty of Lincoln Mrs John\nFrancis of Danvllla Is the guest of\nMrsJADoty MrsDMLackey\nIs reported among the slak Misses\nRay have gone on a visit to Illinois\nMiss Hare of Nlcholasvllle Is visiting\nMrs W McClelland Johnston Mr\nJohn M Orana and Mlsa Eliza Ander\nson of Waco Texas will spend several\ndays with Mrs H C Jennings and\nother relatives
2d9fb32364080a06d376f1600fe04774 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1911.4315068176052 46.601557 -120.510842 The first North Dakota Boys' and\nGirls' Institute, in session December 10\nto 24, 1910, proved to be a great life\nevent to the thirty girls and sixty-five\nhoys who had ilie privilege and honor of\nbeing its members 19 well as charter\nmembers of what will surely he a great\nslate organization. It would be indeed\ndifficult to conceive of an equal number\nof youth getting more of practical in-\nstruction, lively enjoyment, and icrl sat-\nisfaction in an equal time. The morning\nand early afternoon hours were given\nover to lessons and demonstrations con-\nducted by different members of the col-\nlege faculty. If Instruction of this kind,\ngiven as this was. could be put into our\npublic schools, the problem of attendance\nin the upper grades and high school\nwould he solved, and tlie great exodus of\nbright country boys to city and town\nwould soon be a mutter of history. 1\nDuring the latter part of the after-\nnoons and evenings everybody had \nTbe main College gymnasium was open\nto the boys where every one played in\none or more games of indoor baseball.\nAt the same time the woman's gym-\nnasium in Ceres Hall was occupied by\nthe visiting girls where various games\nwere enjoyed. The Young Men's and\nYoung Women's Christian Association\nrooms of the city were also thrown open\nto members of the Institute and very\nmucb appreciated. This, with an orches-\ntra rehearsal, a stereoptioon entertain-\nment, a visit to the Grand Theatre and\na trolley ride about: the city made up\ntlie principal entertainment features. But\nin reality it was nil entertainment; the\nnovelty ol" the grent buildings with their\nstrange fixtures, the laboratories with\nqueer apparatus, the green houses, the\naquarium, home of frogs, fishes and\nmakes, the museum, the wood and iron\nsimps, the barns with their wealth of\n-leek, pure bred animal*, the deer park—\nall contributed to a week crowded full of\nkeenest enjoyment ami useful instruc-\ntion.
27d1005bb562d4e197fe0d729d8aaf3f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.1191780504819 39.623709 -77.41082 prise you soy afternoon.\nThe Siamese, as a race, are lazy, but It ia\nespecially so with the men; after a man buys\none or two wives he feels he has done enough\nA good wife coHtrnbout 160 finals or leas.\nTbe man ridea In the boat and tl • woman\nrows, generally he has a cigarette Id hia\nmonth. She rooks, washes—but there Is\nvery little ot the latter done sa their clothing\nia acanty, and no stockings to wash as neither\nIbe husband nor wife wear either shoes or\nstockings. These, of course, constitute the\ncommon class; tho better class does wear\nboth shoes and stockings and cover their\ncharms to some extent. Tbe Chinese are\nbetter workers; the men usually marry Siam-\nese women; the combination ia belter and the\nwomen prefer a Chinese husband to a native\nas he work and aheia both willingand\naide to do her share. Tbe small children\nwear llitleorno clothing but they are usually\nclean aa the klongs and river give ample\nroom for bathing and at all times you can see\nthorn swimming and washing either them-\nselves or their clothes.\nThe ahopa are almost always kept by Chi-\nnese with tbe exception of a few Indians; of\ncourse there arc aomo native ahopa where\nyou can find betel and the sweets they are so\nfond of fried cakes cooked in coconnul oil\narc also much sought after.\nThe market ia moat interesting to walk\nthrough; it consists of very narrow streets\nand many ot them filled with stalls where\nyou may buy any kind of tropical fruit you\nhave ever heard of as well as many with\nunpronounceable names, also toys, silks; mu-\nsical instruments,Btruddaa.
071c64c29b186bdaa8ed97235f397ac4 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.1794520230847 43.82915 -115.834394 The testimony of the customs officer» at\nHavre and of the dame du comptoir at\nRouen was first taken, aud then a mass of\npolice testimony to prove th at Desruelles\nwas unques tionably Quentineau. This\nwas chiefly from the provinces, Quentineau\nhaving apparently operated very little io\nthe capital. At the outset the defense ex­\nperienced an unexpected difficulty. There\nwere some hundreds of witnesses willing\nto swear that they knew Desruelles per­\nfectly well, but not nearly so many who\nwere satisfied that the prisoner was th At\nperson. His hardships, his voyages, his\npoverty had told upon Desruelles. He was\ndeeply sunburned, his hai r was grizzled,\nLis Land was hard, his mann er nervous\nand excited—as little like as possihloto the\nplacid shopkeeper of the Rue de Seine.\nUnquestionably the accused resembled\nDesruelles remarkably, aud knew as much\n ut that persons antecedents as if he\nwere really himself, but th en — In short,\nDesruelles neighbors ware exceedingly\nconscientious, and the police exceedingly\npositive, and the unfortunate shopkeeper\nwas convicted of being not himself at all,\nbut P ierre Quentineau, counterfeiter.\nThe rebu tti ng testimony adduced by the\nadvocate general not only convinced the\nju ry but overwhelmed Desruelles. It was\na lett er which one of his neighbors, a\nwoman, testified she had received from\nDesruelles wife, from New York, that she\nand her Scipion were happily accommo­\ndated with a shop and a thriving custom\nin Broadway in t ha t great city! Des-\nruelles admitted that the handwriting was\nhis wifes, b ut the stat ement impossible,\nfor the reason that he was in the Palais de\nJustice, and consequently could not be in\nNew York.
0c7acb12ab6be5cd50fded97bebf2030 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.2917807902081 40.063962 -80.720915 General Grant and wife are at Wash\ningtrn, Fa., sojourning a fe«r days will\nthe Smiths, 'fhose visits of the grea\ni'Siitff to that classic Jittle town havi\ngiven it a national reputation, lit* wa>\nthere in September J8G9, before tha\never memorable Illack Friday when goh\nshot up to G5, and when Corbin, hit\nbrother-iu-Uw, sent a letter by Jim Fisk',\nmessenger to ask the President to forbii:\nthe Secretary of the Treasury to set\ngold. At least hucIi was the Hupposet\npurport of the letter, but no body\nhns ever known what Corbin actually\ndid write on that memorable occasion\nFisk, when he was aftewards examine*\nbefore the Congressional Committee o»\nlinking and Currency, us to the purpor\nof that letter, remarked to Gen. Garfield\nthe Chairman, in answer to his inquin\nus to what wrote to Grant, "Ah\nsir! it was In that particular tlrat Gouli\nand me mado d.d fools of ourselvet\nwe never knew what was in that letter.'\nIt was expected for a time that Corbii\nwas trying to get the Prenident in tin\npool to bull gold, along with hiiUBell\nFisk and Gould, nnd scandal went so fa\nat one time as to say that it was Mr*\nGrant who was to receive a share of tin\nprofits. Of course there was nothing it\nit. Neither the President norhis familj\nhud anything to do with the scheme\nCorbin had, of course, and it is not im\nl>o«sihle that at first he did gently feel lh<\n{'residential pulse to sec it he could per\nsmule llis Excellency that it was l>ettei\nfor the country to let gold go up prettj\nhigh.
03ad77d584bea7aba29852228305ba87 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.6543715530763 58.275556 -134.3925 letter to Sarah and told her the\ntruth told her ray actual condl-\nllona. that I could not supply the\n«alt If ahc could supply all the other\nIngredients for a mulligan. I told\nher to ship me a few hundred pounds\n.f raisins even If aha can't aend me\nAny more money. I figure that I can\nafford to pay from one-third to\nlliree-flftha of my profits in fines\nand still make enough to get back\nlo Iowa this fall. Have written\nSarah to please extend the time to\nthe first of January, aa I may be re¬\nquired to spend .10 possibly fin\nilayr in Jail provided I am pinched.\nAnd now you understand what I\nmeant In the beginning of this let¬\nter when I said It was just one thing\nafter another. First I became a vic¬\ntim of the gambling habit, then the\nbooze got half nelson on me; also,\nilanrelialls appealed to me and later\naid (ieneral Debility homesteaded mv\nsystem and the result was that I\nJust gradually slid down the scale\nuntil well. I Just told you I walk¬\ned from Whlteliorse to Skagway.\nPersonally I am not worried about\nthe future, so you will understand\nto what depths I hav<> sank. When\na man In my predicament has not\nambition enough to worry, the buck\nIs usually passed to the coroner.\nWhile I have never regret ted leav¬\ning that Iowa farm, the mistake I\nmade was In not having Sarah uae\nsome of the money she sent me In\nbuying a ticket to Yukon for her-\niclf. Ilad she corralcd mo heforo I\nadopted the roadhouae life, my fu¬\nture would have borne a more ro-\nict'.e tint than it does.\nI reckon that Is about all.\nltcluctantly yours,
0e86b0adcb6e82e50b2771147ea91095 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.596994503896 40.735657 -74.172367 ed. become his or tbelr sureties for the\n| faithful performance of said work, and thut.\n! if the person or person* omit or refuse to\nexecute such contract, they will pay to the\nCltv of Newark any difference between the\nJ sum* to which he or they would have boon\nentitled upon completion of the contract and\ni that which the City of Newark may be\n| obliged to nay the person or person*) by\nwhom such contract shall be executed\nI The Board of Street and Water Commis- ;\nI sioners of the City of Newark reserve to\nj themselves the right to accept or reject any\n! or all proposals for the above work as they\nmay deem best for the interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified 1\nI that under the provisions of the seventh\nsection of the law creating the Board of j\nI Street and Water Commissioners, approved\nMarch 1801 . that the bond or bonds to\nbe given for the faithful execution and per I\nformance of said public work shall first\nbe approved as to sufficiency by th* board,\nand as to form by the counsel of the board.\nI and no contract shall be binding on ths city\nor become effective or operative until suob\nbond is so approved; and the nresident of\nthe board shatl have power to examine the\nproposed bondsmen under oath, if he shall\nso desire, or shall be so instructed by the\nboard but the board will not be bound by\nany statement that may be made by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full\npower and absolute discretion in the whole\nmatter, and this provision shall b* referred\nto in an) advertisement Inviting bids for any\nsuch public work.\n1 Bv direction of the Board of Street and |\ni Water LOrarolssUmer* of the City of Newark,\nI
1d83d38fe8d77d83cb6317fafebcc7a0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.5767122970574 37.561813 -75.84108 theraT The absurdity as well as falsity of\nthis story is apparent, when it is considered\nthat Mr. Tilton now alleges that he carried\nthis guilty secret of his wife's infidelity for\nsix months locked up in his own breast, and\nthat then he divulged it to me only that there\nmight be a reconciliation with me. Mr. Til -\nton has since in every form of language and\nto a multitude of witnesses, orally, in written\nstatements, and in printed documents, de-\nclared his faith in his wife's purity. After\nthe reconciliation of Mr. Tilton with me,\nconsiderations of propriety and honor de-\nmanded that the family trouble should be\nKept in that seclusion which domestic all airs\nhave a right to claim as a sanctuary, and to\nthat seclusion it was determined it should be\nconfined. Every line and word of my private\nand confidential letters which have been pub-\nlished is in harmony with the statements\nwhich I now make. Mv published corres\npondence this subject comprises but two\nelements, viz. : the expression ot my griet,\nand that of my desire to shield the honor of\na pure and innocent woman.\nI do not propose to analyze and contest at\nthis time the extraordinary statement of Mr.\nTilton, but there are two allegations which I\ncan not permit to pass without special notice.\nThey refer to the only two incidents which\nMr. Tilton pretends to have witnessed per-\nsonally: the one an alleged scene in my\nhouse while looking over engravings, and the\nother a chamber scene in his own house. His\nstatements concerning these are absolutely\nfalse. Nothing of the kind ever occurred,\nnor any semblance of any such thing. They\nare now brought to my notice for the first\ntime. To every statement which connects\nme dishonorably with Mrs. E. R. Tilton, or\nwhich in any wise would impugn the honor\nand purity of this beloved Christian woman,\nI give the most implicit, comprehensive, and\nsolemn denial.
01844963cc8474cd61a264fc7ee6f76a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1884.0314207334043 40.063962 -80.720915 ruary 8.85a9.0Cc, closed at 8.87ka8 90c; Matcli 8 97k\naO.lfic, closed at 9.C3a0 02Xc; May U.'JOaO.b^,\nclosed at 9.22%a9.25c; Bulk meats in fair demand;\nshoulders C.85c; ehort rib 7.75c; short clear 7.00c.\nButter and eggs quiet and unchanged. Whisky\nsteedy and unchanged. Call.Wheat, sales 2,178.*\n000 bushels; January declined Kc; February ad*\nvanced J^c; May di cllnod Kc. Com, sales 100,000\nbushels: Jaunary advanced %c; May declined kc.\nOata, sales 480,009 bushels. I'ork, sslesy.COj pounds;\nFebiuary advanced 2Xc; May decllucd 7%c,v- Lard,\nlales4.053pounds; deciiued^Ko.\nNkw York, January 11..Flour dull: receipts\n8,000 barrels; exports 6,000 barrels. Wheat, spot lots\nU&iQ lower and dull; options advanced /i^Hc at\nthe opening, afterwardB weaker and declined 1%i2c\nin 8ymp»thy with the west; closing heavy; receipts\n7.CCO bushels; exports 123,000 bushels; No. 2 spring\n8106: No. 3 spring 81 02>4ul 03%: No 2 red 81 09$\nal 13J4; ungraded white 81 Olal 05%; mixed winter\n8105: No. 2 red January, sales 1 (is.000 bushels at\n31 06^*1 08% closing at 81 00%; February, sales\n35),JjOO bushels at 81 0&%al 10% closing al\n81 09; March, sales 1.47C.0W busnelB at 81 ll%a\nal 13, clcsln« at 81 AP 11. Silefi 544,000 bushels\nat si 13al 14%, clo lug nt 81 13^; May. sales 2,056,.\n000 bushclBatSl IBal Ityi, closing at 5115^: Juuc,\nsajes 32,000 bushels at 81 15}{Rl 1 <%. clcflng at\n8115W. Corn, spot lots lal^c lower; options opened\nfirm, later declined %nlc, closing steady with a\nslight recovery; receipts 16,000 bushels: exports 84,000\nbUHhc's; urgraded mixed 51a6Cc: No. 3 62aG3c;\nNo. 2 ,6Cc; No 2 Januury 60,^004%c, dosing at C'^c:\nFebruary C45<ftC6%c, closing at 65^c; May Gf&a6"Hc,\nclosing at 66%c. Oats Ka>^ lower; receipts 1.9C0\nbushels: exports 015 buauels: western mixed 39J^a\n41c; white weileru 41a ite Hay quiet and Aim lor\nprime: others heavy.- Co Tee. spot fair: Rio quiet\nand steady: options opened slightly lower, after*\nwards recovered *nd closed firm. 8ugar steady; frir\nto good reQnlng S-^aSKc; refined Urmer; oil A 7a\n7%- . ; mould A 750734c: coniectloners A 7 9- 62 .\nMolaocs quiet and stndy;Ncw Orleans 80a56«. Rice\nfirmer; Rangoon 4%i4%c; I'atna 4%*5}{c. Tallovf\nsteady and fairly active. Rosin firm. Tyrppntiuo\ndull and weak at 35Xa3f.c. Esgp.in moderate-de*\nmaud: western fresh 32^30. Pork dull ar.d nomlUkl."\nIltfe} niilntfinil Hrm fni t-~»
42f171869cea421aa1cd158483f67b48 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.1493150367833 41.875555 -87.624421 that they should allow their supply\nof food to puss into tho hands of ono\nspoculntlvo interest, says Charles Ed\nward Russell in a powerful article\nwritten by him In tho Appeal to Rea\nsou. You can understand how n care\nless community might tolcrnto a mo\nnopoly of somo things, how it might\nenduro to havo its transportation, for\nInstance, or its electric light, control-\nled by ono ownership, for men can\nllvo without sleeping cars or aro\nlamps; but that it should tolerato n\nmonopoly of tho primal necessity of\nfood Is beyond comprehension and\nwithout precedent. Even linked snv\nages luivo uniformly been too wlso\nfor that, nnd tho only nation that lias\nover submitted to such n monstrous\ncondition Is our own.\nFrom n thousnud illustrations of tho\nInjuries wo nil suffer from tills Idiotic\narrangement let us one.\nThoro is no way of communicating\ndJseaso to tho human body surer than\nthrough Infected meat tissue. Somo\nof the worst nnd most destructive ba\ncllll that prey upon mankind nro com'\nmon among tho animals ho onto for\nfood. Cows havo tuberculosis and\nspread vast quantities of it through\ntho human population. It is so com\nmon nmoug cows that tho wlso nnd\ntho forewarned will uso uono but ster-\nilized milk. What is 'hog cholera"\namong swluo Is merely typhoid fover\nIn men. Trlchlnca In hogs poisons\nhuman beings. , Both those diseases\naro common among swlno.\nWorso than nil these, and mora\ndeadly, Is another fact that is seldom\ncommented upon becnuso It Is too ap-\npalling to dwell much upon. What Is\ncalled "lumpy Jaw" in cattlo Is simply\ncancer. Tho germs of cancer aro\ncommunicable.
813b195348ecae9a470d4061fc95c3f8 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.1547944888382 32.408477 -91.186777 the Parish of Malison aforesaid, in\nthe above entitled cause, I will pro-\nceed to sell, at public auction, at the\ndoor of the Court House in the town\nof Tallulah, in Madison Parish, Lou-\nislana, on the second\nSaturedy the 1ath da .t March\nA. D ., 1921, between the hour pre-\nIcribed by law, ap the riht, title •a•\ninterest of W. H. Gillon in and to'\nfollowing described property, to-wit:\n1 grey horse mule, Mike; I grey\nhorse mule, Tom; 1 bay mare m le,\nJane; 1 bay mare mule, Rody; 1 bay\nmare muae Mattie; 1 bay hors mule,\nMidnight; 1 bay horse mule, Bea, 1\nsorrel mare mule, Mary; I brown\nhorse mule, Jenny; 1 brown mare\n.ale, Kate; 1 brown mare mule, Corn;\nI brown mare mule, Kate; 1 blu,\n. nule, Blue; 1 brown mare mule. Kate\nI dun n-are mule, Hattie; 1 bay ma\nmule, Eunice; I brown horse mua\nBen; 1 brown horse mule, Bob;\nbrown horse Shanmrock; 1 brow\nmare mule, Billie; I brown mere r-,'\nMat; I brown hore mule, Jno. Pab-\ntist; 1 brown mare mule, Annie; 1\nbay mare mule, Rena; 1 brown mare\nmaule, Beck; 1 bay horse mule, Ben;\n1 sorrel horse mule, Pedo; 1 brown\nmare mule, Mary; 1 brown mare\nmule, Mag- 1 brown horse mule, Bob;\n1 brown horse mule, Jack; 1 bay\nhorse mule, Tow; 1 bay horse mule,\nGeorge; 1 black mare mule, Rena\n1 sand Lorse mule, Red; 1 browr\nhorse male, Breeches; 1 sorrel man\nmule, Lik; 1 sorrel mare mule, Car\nie; 1 sorrel mare mule, Venus; 1\nbrown horse mule, Duffy; 1 browr\nhorse mual. Adam: 4 brown mart\nmule, Ronie; 1 black horse mule,\nTow; 1 grey mare mule, Mattie; 1\nback mare mule, Queen; 1 brown\nhorse male, Rube; 1 black mare mule,\nMand; 1" black mare mdl, Ella; 1\nblack hore mule, Day; 1 black horse\nnule, fcEks, located on Mound plan\n'ation, Madison pe*s,
1a285bf5591598520a574fae78a089cd IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.0534246258244 43.82915 -115.834394 The dairy industry is ot sueh a nature\nt h a t few peopl e can rcalze its magnitude\nuntil their attention is especially called\nto it, says the Breeder's Gazette. Let cl\nco m p are w heat -g ro wing with butter-\nmaking. In enumerating the provision!\nof a fam ily a barrel of flour per annum\ntor each individual is a fair allowance.\nAbo ut five b us n eis of wheat aro required\ntor a barrel of flour, worth a little over\n$4at present prices, or say$5forabarrel\nof floor. The butter allowance (or s\nfamily ia ab o u t one pound per individual\nm em ber lo r each week, or Bay fifty\npounds per year. At 20 cents perpound\nthis ÎB$L0, or at 25 cents, atxiut the av­\nerag e p ri ce for good butt er, it is $12.50,\nTaking th e smaller of these two \nwe have the cost of the butter commuted\nby our people as fully twice the cost of\nwheat. But in addition to butter there\nis the cheese, and especially the milk,\nthe value of the latter amounting to an\nenormous sum in the aggregate. With­\nout the figures it is doubtlul if it would\nbe conceded th a t dai ry products cost the\npeople of our country two or three timee\nas much as the wheat they consume.\nIt is probable that no improvement!\nin the manufacture of fl mr will materi­\nally increase its use. Enormous as is\nthe consumption of dairy products, the\nlimit is by no means yet reached. The\ngeneral adoption of the creamery eyatTM\nthrough the West is substituting a goou\nproduct for a poor one, aud an ever-wid­\nen i ng circle of consum ers are learn.ng\nthe taste of good but: er.
4d80062a4b75ee9b54171746c297d76e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.200819640508 39.261561 -121.016059 STATE OF CALIFORNIA, County of He-\nvada. ss. District Court of the 14th Judicial Dietii#\nof said State.\nThe People of the State of California, to JAMES If.\nGRANT, Greeting:\nYou are hereby summened to appear and answer to tke\ncomplaint of C. A . PECK and W. C. COLEY, doing busi-\nness under name and etyle of Peck It Coley, filed against\nyou, within ten days from ths service of this writ, if\nserved on you in this County, within twenty days if serv-\ned on you in this District, and out of this county, and\nwithin forty days if served on you in the State and out of\nthis District, in an action commenced on the 7th day of\nJanuary A. D . 1660 in said Court to obtain a decree ef\nthis Court for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage, bear\ning date 3d day of November A. D . 1856 , executed by the\nsaid defendant to Alex. J . Johnson, and assigned to one\nN. B. Daman and by said Daman assigned to these plain-\ntiffs, and for the sale of tbo premises therein, and in said\ncomplaint particularly mentioned and described, and the\napplication of the moneys arising from such sale to the\npayment of the amount due on a certain promissory note,\nset in said complaint made and delivered te said\nAlex. J . Johnson, and assigned to one N. B. Daman, and\nby said Daman assigned to these plaintiffs, bearing evea\ndate with said Mortgage and thereby intended to be se-\ncured, to wit : The sum of $250 with interest from tW\n3d day of November A. D . 1856, at the rate ot*% per\ncent per month till paid ; and ifany deficiency shall re-\nmain after applying ail of said moneys properly se appli-\ncable thereto, then that plaintiffs may have executioa\ntherefor against the said Defendant, also that said defend\nant and all and every person claiming by through or un-\nder him subsequently to the date of Plaintiffs mortgage\nand the commencement of this action, may be barred and\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien aod equity of redemp-\ntion in or to the said mortgaged premises, or any part\nthereof, and for such other or further relief, er both, ia\nthe premises as may be just and equitable. And you are\nhereby notified that if you fail to answer said complaint\nas herein directed. Plaintiff will take Judgment against\nyou therefor by default, together with all costs of suit,\nand also demand of the Court such other relief as is pray-\ned lor in Plaintiff's said complaint.
1069161359925321e9410ae3af939e74 THE ALBUQUERQUE MORNING JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.856164351852 35.084103 -106.650985 blaze and shimmer and burn in\nthe steady blaze of light and heat which\npours upon them from a cloudless sky\nThe valley's deep declension grows\nupon the senses and becomes more\nmarked as the eye is held steadily upon\nit, and it is emphasized by the swift\ndeclivity of the increasing mountains\nDrear and'desolate it stretches its full\nlength along in a frame of painted\nmountains, which denne, in strong and\nmighty lines, its aspects of terror.\nThough leaving the summit at 3 P.\nM, and riding steadily down descending\ntrails night settled upon us before we\nescaped from the canon and reached\nthe borders of the valley. By the\nbrilliant moonlight we were enabled\nto trace the trail along the rocky\nwashes as we rxle on into the night\nAt last, worn and weary with hoars of\nriding, we reached the centre of the\nvalley, known as "Big Hole," the\npoint of greatest depression.\nThough time and exploration have\ndrawn from out the ancient story most\nof its fearful threads, this is still\nDeath's Valley and is still and will re-\nmain a region of dread. Indians fam\niliar with its f.tce from infancy know\nits treachery and cannot be prevailed\non to go into it boyond their time-wor - n\ntrails. To the lost emigrant it was\n"the valley of the shadow of death ."\nThe daring prospector enters it with\nfear. He knows its terrors, and the\nbleaching bones of many a skeleton\nwarn him to beware Once lost with\nin its embrace, and a man's doom ij\nwritten. Without water to cool his\nfevered frame, the sweltering air\ndnve3 him to agony and bewilderment\nConfused, he wanders without aim\nReason, unseared by fantasy, gives im\nagination reign to play' tricks with his\nJudgment.
0a0e1bcd396a379c7ac72da8fd103006 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.815068461441 40.441694 -79.990086 repairing a displacement obstruction, dam-\nming up then the knife, tbe probe,\nthe cold blue steel is the doctor. A careful\nband, a steady eye, a sharp blade is the medi-\ncine. Is it hard to take? Well, tbat depends.\nReally, though, the preparations for the dose\nare worse than the administering. If at borne,\nthere's the carpet to be covered,the pile of lint,\nthe bandages, tbe cold oilcloth for the cool\nsheet If In the hospital, tbe operating table\nwith all that goes with it These stare you in\nthe face, test your 'nerves, shock your weak\nened system you live a day in an hour, a week\nin a day, a year In a week, waiting for the awful\ntime. And then the medicine tbe keen blade,\nthe smooth probe is given. Did tbey "put you\nto sleep?" No. Woll. how the knlte did burn,\ndidn't it! Carefully, carefully! Sting, sting,\nsting burn, burn, burn! Tbere you are,\nmy lad; steady, now. There! Ob, what re\nlief I How tho pain and tbe pressure fly away.\nGod bless the knife, tbe tonder. steady band,\ntho kind, sharp eye, tbe cheerful wordsl Over\nso soon, too. Why did we count the seconds,\nthe minutes, tbe hours awaiting your coming,\nanyway? Silly, weren't we? A sting and a oy\nin th6 same breath, wasn't it? God bless the\nknife agalnl It can cut and kill; it can Cut and\ngive life, hope, health. Don't look at it with\nfear and trembling. It is sharp, but it bears\nupon its keen edge a magic message of mercy;\nit burns, but it banishes pain; it stings, but It\nsoothes. May heaven keep you from it, just\nthe same. But if the blade must cut into your\ntissues, or the saw eat through your marrow,\nbe patient brave, cheerful. Nerve, my boy, is\nbetter than any an res the tic Don't let the lint\nscare you, the blade shock you, or tbe gruff-voice- d\nbut tender-fingere- d
0de99bee7e9cf2fd80912001e37b5741 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.5778688208359 58.275556 -134.3925 Not Ire In hereby nlvcn <hal the\nAlaska Endicott Mining anil Milling\nCompany, a corporation, claimant\nhas flleil Its application In the I'nlted\nState- Land Office nt Juneau, Alaaka,\ntor patent to the following lode mln\nliiK elalmii and inlllalteH. to-wli:\nAlaaka Bndlcott, Alaaka Kndlcoll No.\nI. Alaska Endlrott No 2. Alaska Kn-\ndlcolt No. 3, Alaaka Kndleott No. I,\nBonanza No. 3 . Bonanza No. 4. Can\nnon Falls. Cannon i-'alls No. I . Can¬\nnon Kalis No. 2 mid New Discovery\nIxxte Claims, and Alaska Kndleott.\nAlaaka Kndleott No. 1 and Alaska\nKndleott No. 2 Millalte*. Mineral\nSurvey No. 1099 A. & B whleh said\nclaims are altualed approximate!)\ntwo mi lea southerly from the head «>[\nWilliam llenry Bay, Lynn Canal. In\nhe Juneau Recording District. Ter¬\nritory of Alaska. In i.atitudo .">8* 43'\nN. Longitude 136* 13' W.. magnetic\nvariation 32* 40' K Thai said l<«le\nclalmu form a contiguous group. and\na description of the exterior boun¬\ndaries thereof Is us follow*:\nBeginning at Cor. No. 1 of the\nAlaaka Endlrott l/>dc, whence I'SLM\nmarked IICJC bears N. 48* 13' Hp"\n 4906.50 feet; ilienre S. 5<>-62 '\\V.\n541.23 feel to the Intersection of\nIne 4-1 uf the Bonanza No. 3 lode;\nthenee along line 4-1 of Bonanzu No.\n:: Lode a 75* :>6' K. 727.56 'ret. In\nCor. No 1 of Bonanza No. 3 Lode,\nwhence I'SLM marked HCJC hears\nN. 41* 41" 16" K. 5069.60 feet;\nIlienre 8. 14* 04' W. 600 feel along\nline 1-2 of Bonanza N«j 3 Lode to\nCor. No. 2 of Bonanza No. 3 Lode,\ncommon to Cor. No. 1 of Alaak Kn\ndlrott No Z I .ode, whence I'SI.M\nmarket HCJC bears N. 3S' 5H'\nK. 56'iS.2i> feci; thence along line\nl-l of Alaska Kndleott N. 2 laalo S.\n14 04! \\\\*. 105. 5o feet to the Inter-\nMellon Of line 4-1 of Alaska Kndl¬\neott No. 1 [.ode; thonce nlong said\nline 4-1 of Alaska Kndleott No. 1\nI-ode S. 75* 16' E. 846"!. feet to\nCor. No. I of Alas!:n Endicott No. 1\n. ode. whence I'SLM marked IICJi\nbt-ar* N. ;|n 12' 20- K 5410.SO feet\nthence S. 14* 04' \\V. 600 feet to Cor\nN'o. 2 of Alaska Kndleott No. 1 Lode.
17e4579c8c28b386b8d7c9089ec2e3c4 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.878082160071 58.275556 -134.3925 Last Sauriuy » veuing about 500 res\nideuts of Douglas and friends froai .'\nTread well gathered at Xatatorium ball\nto celebrate the completion of the new\ncity wharf in Douglas. While the-\nwharf was built by the city, under the\ndirection of the mayor and council, the\ncelebration was given by the business\nmen of the town, who also contributed\nthe money for the expenses. A thou¬\nsand dodgers acattered around the\nIsland announced the event and hinted\ntnat among the attractions there would\nbe music by tho band and beer by the\nbarrel and also a few sandwiches. The\neffect was electrical and at an early\nhour the big hall was crowded with rep¬\nresentative citizeus from all parts of\nthe islaud. Wheu Mavor O'Connor ar-\nrived he pushing a grocery cart\nloaded with sandwiches. These sand¬\nwiches, by the way, were made by the\nladies, who, although sadly disappoint¬\ned because they were not to take part\nin the celebration, still were enthusi\nastic euough to work for the cause.\nThe project of building a city wharf\nhas met with the most decided popular\napproval of anything that has been\ndone in Douglas siuce the town was in¬\ncorporated. There are many reasous\nfor this feeling, but perhaps the strong¬\nest is f«iund iu the fact that a part of\nthe equipment of the new wharf is to\nbe a large engine and pump to pump\nthe water from the bay through iron\npipes for fire protection. This pump\ning plant has arrived and is now being\ninstalled.
373df58fb1d5481293db17d6684e0ee6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.6397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 Gov. Austin O. King then said: "Mi\nresident.We would also call yoi\ntention to the fact that the offices\nie disposal of the Federal Governmei\nre now in the hands of the enemies <\nie conservative Union men of tl\nAte. I might refer to particuli\nunes, but we would now simply as\n>u to look into the matter with sac\ntention to it as it deserves, and wil\niference to a change therein. - We fe<\nlat the Federal offices in our State ban\nsen, accidentally or citherwise, so fillc\ni to put greatpower into the hands c\nlose who are the greatest obstacles 1\nte restoration of order and liberty i\nie States. He would not ask action 1\nlis njattor, but that it is necessary 1\nive a change in this for the good\nie people, and to enable thein, in a\nirdance with their desire, to sustai\nie Administration. The greatest "ol\nacles to their doing sot being the*\nderal officers, whoare even now usir\n1 their influence against the restore\nan of harmony in tne States.\n"I presume not to know howyc\nel in this matter, but the New Ham]\n delegation have spoken at lengl\npon it. and I would not have referrc\nit only that in Missouri we are mo:\nsculiarly situated than are the peop\nany other State of the Union. Ot\njople feel oppressed, borne down t\nie bayonet. We are threatened by\nid unless some steps are taken by yc\nrelieve us front the Military Go\nnor of that Department, our peop\ninst continue powerless. But if son\nsmonstrations were made, some sho\nprotection by the.General Gover:\ntent, some assurance that it will pr\nct them in all their rights, they won\n> fearlessly to the polls and cast the\n3tea for the Union: We do not m\nlat any man shall vote who cann\n. ke the oath of loyalty. On the co:\nary. we have always inculcated\nad insisted that they must take tl\nstoath or not present themselves\n3te at all. But I say that such is tl\nate of feeling among the peoplo, th\nless they can have some assuran\nr protection being given them by tl\nfederal Government, there are tho\ntnds who will not go to the poll\ntough they could conscientious!\n3 so.
1e05045e32ca58294222224b3c36b8ae THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.2937158153713 46.187885 -123.831256 Several English detectives have arrived\nin Paris for the purpose of tracing dyna-\nmiters. In spito of Colonel Magendie's\nreport it is declared that the dynamite\nused hi tho Victoria station was made at\np factory between Amieu and Boulogne.\nA rumor is afloat that an attempt will\nshortly be made to blow up one of the\npublic buildings in London. The activi-\nty of the dynamiters continues unabated.\nThey meet twice a week for the purpose\nof making plans and preparations for\nfuture oulr.,jes. It is believed the Eng-\nlish and French police are fully acquaint\ned with their movements, and'that every\noffort will be made to counteract the\nplot. It is also believed that one of the\nmost trusted dynamite leaders keeps the\npolice fully informed of all their plans.\nConcerning the drop in Oregon Im-\nprovement stock, Tuesday's 2'rioune says\nit is understood tho company is in finan-\ncial difficulties; that it owes its laborers\nrecently engaged in construction about\n$375,000 , and requires at least $G00,000 to\ncomplete an.: equip its projected road,\nand that it now has a floating indebted-\nness of nearly 1,500,000; but its chief\nembarrassment is said to be due to the\ndispute between it and the Northern Pa-\ncific Hailroad company about the title to\nS0,00 acreb of coal lands on river,\naoout tuiriy muea irom Seattle. When\nVillard was president of the Northern\nPaoifio, an arrangement was made by\nwhich these lands were transferred to the\nOregon Improvement company, and in\nreoent reports the lands are montioned\numong its assets. It is said now that the\nactual transfer was never made, and that\ntho Northern Pacific directors have re-\nfused positively to surrender the prop-\nerty, in compliance with a recent demand\nby tho Improvomont company.\nIn the senate on the 14th, Senator\nSlater introduoad a bill declaring for-\nfeited unearned land grants to tho North-\nern Pacifio Bailroad company for con-\nstruction of a railroad and telegraph line\nfrom Lake Superior to Portland, Oregon.\nThe bill provides that whsre\nhave settled upon lands within the limit\nof the land grant hereby forfeited, they\nshall have the right to enter the same to\nthe extent of 160 acres, in tho general\nland office and obtain patents therefor.\nWhen pereons have crops upon railroad\nlands under leases from the Northern Pa-\ncific oompany, time is allowed by the bill\nwithin which they may be remoTed,and\nfor all lands sold by the company from\nearned portions of tho grant, after the\npassage of tho bill, they are required to\naccopt not more thae $1.25 per aore.\nSlater gave notice that y
1bca6a379b753a0f25bad6d94833fff5 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1898.8397259956876 46.601557 -120.510842 Though the outlook of the young\nbeet-sugar industry in the United\nStates is not so promising as it was a\nyear ago, it is much too early to lie-\ncome discouraged. While it may be\nadvisable for those planning to stait\nnew plants to make haste slowly, yet\nthe good work already begun should\ncontinue. Especially should the work\nof locating the areas in the United\nStates suitable for the culture of the\nsugar-beet be continued, as this can be\ndono without risk or lobb of money, tho\nsugar beets being capable of utilization\nas feod. In leading the reports of our\nexperiment stations in various states,\nboth as to yield of sugar-beets and also\nas to their Baccharine qualities, one\ncannot but admire the wonderful prog-\nress made in this new industry within\na few years, and to congratulate our\npeople engaged in it upon success.\nSugar is made, not in the sugar fac-\ntories, hut out in the fields. Therefore\nit is impossible to pay too muuh atten-\ntion to the cultivation of beets con-\ntaining the bigheflt proportions of\nsugar, and, at the same time, with the\nlargest tonnage tier acre. In order to\nproduce such, tho selection of suitable\nsoil, the climate, tbe rainfall, and\nlength of Reason, tho fertilizing, plant-\ning, cultivating and harvesting—all\nthese aro very important factors. Bnt\nthe most important of all is to start\nout with tlio best need obtainable; for\ngood seed, after all, is tho foundation\nof successful Biigar industry. If I may\nexpress an opinion, based on my per-\nsonal observation, it is that some of our\nbeet growers should insist more than\nthey have upon getting none but the\nhest of seed, no matter what the price\nmay be.
6d9436ab6ee6b196bf92cdf6e9e3a0ae THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.6598360339506 39.261561 -121.016059 Hon. J«i»L. Forsyth, of Alaba&a, w»s one of\nthe sptahBr* at the recent Douglas demonstration\nin Philadelphia. He said the Southern ctmserva.\ntire Dhoglas men would never comprofclse with\nthe friends of Breckinridge ; if they listened to any\ncompromises it would be from the friends of Bell\nand Everett, who like themselves, were waging war\nagainst disunion. Towards the close of his speech\nhe made the following decided hit;\nA word in regard to our standard-bearer. At laat\nthrough much trial and tribulation, the peoples man\nhas been nominated by the National Democratic\nConvention of the United States. It has been a\nhard fight against the office holders and the disun-\nionists, against the President and Vice President,\nelected four years ago by Democratic votes. Before\nthey doffed the livery oftheir party, they have turned\nrenegades to our great and glorious principles and\nparty organization. But the Democratic party has\ngained a triumph which makes me prouder of it\nthan I have ever been in my life. The worst is\nover. It will be easier to elect him than it was to\nnominate him. The politicians have gone down be-\nfore the in the Convention as they will be-\nfore the people in the country.\nMr. Breckinridge took occasion to say in his\nspeech of acceptance, that he was not a Disunionist.\nPerhaps he is not. If he is not, he is like Little\nBilly m the story. A father died and left his two\nsons a patrimony in sheep, to be divided between\nthem. He directed that the elder brother should\ndivide the sheep into two lots, and that the younger\nbrother should have the choice. Among them was a\nlamb called Little Billy, to which theyounger broth-\ner was much attached. The elder brother, with the\ninstinct of his age, thought lie could make a good\nbargain out of the affection of his brother for Little\nBilly. He took all the lank and mean sheep and\nput them and Little Billy in one lot, and all the\ngood sheep he put in the other. But the younger\nbrother showeu that he had some of his cider broth-\ners quality. He said, “Little Billy, wo have long\nbeen friends; I have loved you ; you have been my\ncompanion in pleasure and grief. But, Little Billy\nfou
237e7a632b30b7812ee9cb3bf5405027 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.1821917491122 41.681744 -72.788147 The persistency of the committee\nfrom the Business and Improvement\nassociation to which this matter was\nassigned for Investigation in getting\nafter the lighting company officials\nhas finally brought a promise of Im\nproved service that appears to ne gen\nuine. In the letters read at the dl\nrectors' meeting last evemug the com\npany expressed its intention of mak\ning certain connections with the New\nHaven and Waterbury systems which\nwill keep a uniform . current in the\nwires through which the lights are\nsupplied and will keep the highways\nwell Illuminated. An improvement of\nthis character will be greatly appre-\nciated. It is nothing more than , the\ntown Is entitled to under its contract\nand had It not been for the repeated\npromises of the company to do better\nthe would have found its way\nmonths ago to the Connecticut public\nutilities commission.'\nThe directors also considered last\nevening the matter of the town's co-\noperating with the state highway com\nmlssioner and the Connecticut com\npany in the extension of the perman-\nent, pavement through Whiting street\nIt is proposed to lay a strip of amie-sit- e\nfrom center to a point on Whit-in- c-\nstreet where the trolley tracks\nturn from the highway to the Connec\nticut company's property. The expense\nis to be borne entirely by the state and\nthe trolley people. The highway com-\nmission wanted the town to contribute\ntowards the. cost of the improvement\nto make it possible to have the pave\nment extended from curb to curb. In\nstead of having but a comparatively\nnarrow strip.
05c46c89d4b25b898035ad41f3ad93b1 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1902.1547944888382 37.451159 -86.90916 The promoters of tine enterprise are\ncapitalists many of whose names are\npowers in the financial annul business\nworM of New York Chicago and San\nIFrancisco Tine volume of the stock is\nfixed nt flIKIII a share\nThe objects of the nsw company were\nmade pnbllo by the directors after tine\ntilling of the articles Since the acquisi ¬\nthan of tine islands by the United States\nnearly all tine trade has been diverted\nto German and English markets Com\nparatively little of tint produce of tints\nIslands mats found Itn way to this country\nthrough San Francisco the natural\ngateway dividing this country and the\nPhilippines III order to divert this trot\ntic unto the logical channels this com\npany three years ago sent Prof Perry\nHayes of the State University to \nIsland with II view of studying the pos ¬\nsibilities of accomplishing that anti nth ¬\ner stasis His report was most favorable\nannul on its receipt immediate stilts were\ntaken towards incoriioratiou\nThe company intends to purchase a\nsteamer within tine next few days and\nformally begin business Laborers will\nbe sent to the island and company build\nIImpi will 1m erected on the Island of\nMindanao on which land has linen ac\nquired Tine precise locations of this\npost has been kept a secret but an noon\nnn a basis of operations lures been estab\nUntied trashing posts1 will be inaugurate\nin various part of the island An soon\nas this preliminary work lias lleen ac\ncomplished tins company will relncor\nporate under another name with a cap\nIal fir 2inthiOi
08b28c9f547133250300f8194a954e57 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.0726027080163 41.681744 -72.788147 only is he well read in the march of\nevents from the beginning of history,\nbut ho is a writer of no mean ability,\nso the class and school feel assured\nthat the history part of the Class\nNight program will be well taken care\nof. Miss Ruth Norton was chosen\nwriter of the class will by an over-\nwhelming majority, which speaks for\nher ability as well as her popularity.\nThere was no choice for prophetess.\nHarry Ginsburg was elected prophet\nlast week. Next Monday the class will\nnominate one of the faculty for the\ndedication of the 1916 class book and\nthe subject of the annual entertain-\nment for the defrayal of class book\npublishing expenses will be discussed.\nThe business meeting of the De-\nbating club which was to have been'\nheld yesterday was postponed because\nof failure to obtain a quorum.\nThe special classes for the prepara-\ntion for college examinations in June\nhave commenced. These, classes are\nheld in the afternoon and are of\ngreat value to the students who intend\nto take the examinations.\nIt appears that almost all who went\non the basket ball trip to So. Man-\nchester last Friday evening had an\nenjoyable time and formed many ac-\nquaintances, for Roger Holmes, Har-\nold Bassett, Harry Ginsburg, Roy\nBuell, Edward Martin, Leland Hoar\nand John Begley and a few others\nwill return to attend the junior prom\nof the So. Manchester High school\nduring the next month.\nPresident Lipman was absent from\nthe meeting of the Current Events\nclub yesterday nevertheless the meet-\ning was held and the following pro-\ngram was carried out: "Significance\nof Railroad Rate Division,"
149ab97ac1662aff39a52228add4149a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.974043684224 40.063962 -80.720915 men at or near the nlace where anv ceo-\ncrnl or special election in held in any\nStale, either on the day of inch election\nor for ten-days prior or subsequent\nthereto, unless it Iks necessary to repel\narmed enemies of the United States, and\nany jterson violating any of the provisions\nof this section shall be fined not more\nthan $5,000 and Buffer imprisonment at\nhard labor not lean than live yearn or he\ndeprived from hold any office of honor,\nprofit or trust under the United States.\nMr. Piatt ottered a resolution for the\nappointment of a Select Committee to\ninvestigate the charge made yesterday by\nHewitt, that his letters had been tamper*\ned with in the New York Post office. In\nconnection with it. Piatt sent to the\nclerk's desk and had read n telegranv\nfrom Post-master James pronouncing the\naccusation utterly and abiolutely false.\nAfter discussion of the resolution to\ninvestigate Hewitt's charges against the\nNew "York Post office, the House refuued\nto lay the whole subject on the table \nproposed by Buckner, and finaHy oum«>«\ntion of Mr. Springer, the Committee now\nin New York, ol which Cox is Chairman,\nwa9 instructed to investigate the matter.\nMr. Hewitt narrated the circumstances\nunder which-he made the charge, he laid\nabout a month ago he received a letter,\nthe writer stating that ho was an em*\nployee in the New York Post-office, and\nthat he felt bound to communicate tho\nfact that Slade's little kettle was at work\non his letters. The only attention which\nhe had felt called upon to pay to this\nanonymous letter waa to observe cloacly\nthe letters which he received. He had\nfound that a considerable number\nof them presented tho appearance\nof having been ojrcned, the flaps of the\nenvelopes presenting a puckered or cor*\nrugated appearance. He had called the\nattention of the gentleman in bis office to\nthe fact, and they had been able to pick\nout two classes of letters, those which had\nbeen apparently opened, and tho*e that\nhad not been. When ho camo to
6a4318ca363f2fdc42563e78f097e5ad VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.664383529934 43.798358 -73.087921 Indeed, there is but too much ground to\napprehend that even if this bill were per-\nmitted to btcome a law, alienating as it\ndoes the proceed? of the land sales, an ac-\ntual defict in the Treasuary would occur,\nwhich would more than probably involve\nthe necessity of a resort to direct taxation.\nLet it bo "also remarked, that $5,500,- -\n000 of the public debt becomes redeem-\nable in about two years and a half, which,\nat any sacrifice, must be met, while the\nTreasury is always liable to demands for\nthe jfiyment of outstanding Treasury\nnotes. Such is the gloomy picture which\nour financial department bow presentsrand\nwhich calls for the exercise of a rigid\neconomy in the public expenditures, and\nthe rendering available all the means with-\nin the control of Government. I most\nrespectfully submit whether this is a lime\nto give away the proceeds of the land\nsales, when the public lands constitute a\nfund which, of all other3, may be made\nmost useful in sustaining the public credit.\nCan the Government be generous and\nmunificent to others when every dollar it\ncan command is necessary to supply its\nown wants? And if Congress would not\nhesitate to suffer the provisions of the act\nof 4th September last to remain unrepeal-\ned in case the country was involved in war,\nis not the necessity for such a course now\njust as imperative as it would be then ?\n3. A third objection remains to be urg-\nedwhich would be sufficient, in itself, to\ninduce me to return the bill to the House\nwith my objections.
4376cb2f9f74ff12beadd57005239a45 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.595890379249 39.623709 -77.41082 find again and again, if we should follow\nthe inclination of onr hearts and minds\nthat we should stay at home. Hut Hiose\nare new experiences comparatively. Once\nwo could give up any pleasure for an hour\nwith God, and when to have been in His\npresence and feel that lie was hearing ns;\nto enjoy the touch of kindred spirits; to\nhave enjoyed the song and the prayer and\nthe service, out of God s heart, would have\nbeen better to us than riches and more\nprecious than fine gold. Hut that is gone.\nWe find ourselves sometimes coming be-\ncause wc think we ought; doing this or\nthat service because it is customary; enter-\ning into this form or that because it is a\nhabit to do so, and in the saner moments\n onr conscience we come sometimes to\ngay: “Why is this so?" Has God changed?\nHas the power of the old gospel to alle-\nviate human life of its brudens and suffer-\nings gone? Is there less of power and effi-\ncacy in the saving grace of Jesus Christ\nnow than once? After nil, is (xod s service\nreallv and truly at bottom nothing but a\ndrudgery? Or, hag something taken place\nwith ns? Have wc loft behind something\nwc once had and have we passed beyond\nthat moment of exultant spirit when in the\npresence of Jesus our heart bounded with\nthe jov of a new faith and the experience\nof salvation? Well, wc are perfectly sure\nGod has not changed. Wc are perfectly,\nsure Jesus is “the same, yesterday, to-ilny\nand forever. ”
593efd1e0c350d0f1c894c2a9806bbe8 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.4561643518518 37.561813 -75.84108 To amend an act entitled "an net to\nprovido for the Recording of Land\nPatents," passed March 14, 13;!0.\nSection 1. Be it enacted by the\nGeneral Assembly of the Stato of Ohio,\nThat the act entitled "an act to provide\nfor the recording of land patents," pass-e- n\nMarch 14th, 183ti, lo so amonded as\nto read as follows:\nSection 2. All patents for lands ly-in- g\nwithin the State oT Ohio granted to\nany person or persons by the President\nof tho United States, and nil copies of\nsuch patents duly certified by tho com-\nmissioner of tho general lsnd office of\nthe United States, and all exemplifica-\ntions of the record upon the general\nland officer aforesaid of any patent\nrecorded there, may bo recorded in the\n of tho recorder of the county in\nwhich such lands, or any part thereof,\nare situate, and the recorder shall bo al-\nlowed the same fees for recording such\npatents as are or may be allowed for the\nrecording of deeds and other instru-\nments of writing.\nSection 3. Copies of such record\nheretofore or hereafter made, duly certi-\nfied by the recorder under his official\nseal, shall be received in all courts and\nplaces within this State as prima facie\nevidence of tho existence of such pat-\nents, and as conclusive evidence of the\nexistence of such record.\nSection 4. That the original act en-\ntitled "an act to provide for the record-\ning of land patents," passed March 14,\n1S3H, be, and the same is hereby re-\npealed.
2c4203eef8da35bff08da9d20dde5234 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.678082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 taken similar action. Trade unions are ers as they go across the se-a to fight,\nstanding back of their men and using\npressura when necessary to gain for\nthem the means to live their lives and\ndo their work as Americans should.\n'Who stands back of tho clergymen of\nAmerica in these days of pressure?\nWhat great organization or compelling\nauthority, what generous heart or spir­\nit of fair play is winning for your min­\nister, or pasthr. or priest, or rabbi the\nsalary Increase that will give him\nstrength, courage, efficiency and suc­\ncess in his vital and exalted work for\nthe welfare of the nation, and the\nKingdom of God?\nYour pastor is not a cheap man nor\nan unskilled laborer. He has brought\nlong, careful training to his task. He\nwas chosen with scrutinizing -as\nto his qualifications, and be is being\nmeasured today by high and exacting\nrequirements In the performance of\nhis work. Carry that measurement to\nIts just conclusion. What salary would\nyou expect to pay to the trained man\nin business of whom such Important\nwork and expert ability were required?\nSet down on paper some of the quali­\nties and duties you demand of your\npastor and then Judge their value.\nHe must be-a man among men, a man\nof force, tact, and agreeable personal­\nity, « good mixer, a man of knowledge,\nwisdom and authority, whose, presence\ncornrrtands respeafl, and whose word\ncarries conviction. He must, he able\nto influence men and women, win their\nconfidence, kindle their enthusiasm, di­\nrect their energies and organize their\nworking powers. He must be full of
1192dcfd13e2fb44431aa1eb127d0814 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.0204917716555 41.681744 -72.788147 "As you please," said Moran, and\nright there the matter rested.\nNow, understand me, I didn't enter-\ntain 'any foolish notions of besting\nMoran in the fight. I expected to take\na beating, but for the honor of the old\nmarine corps I would have accepted it\nwillingly rather than let my shipmates\nof the corps know that I had been\nbluffed or had quit under fire.\nAnd so, when I went ashore with the\nswimming party next day, I was re-\nlieved to know that Moran was not of\nour number. I didn't want to swim\nvery bad, but I disliked to remain\naboard lest Moran get an idea that I\nwas afraid to go ashore. As we shoved\noff from the ship in the first cutter I\nglanced up at the bridge and saw Mo-\nran on watch there. He waved his\nhand at me and smiled. I smiled back\nat Why not? No malice har-\nbored in either of our hearts.\nThe waters of Samana bay were\nshark infested, but there was a good\nbathing beach at Macoris, and soon\nafter our arrival we plunged in to en-\njoy the sport. I got away out from\nthe others and was enjoying a peace-\nful swim in plain view of the ship.\nAfter awhile I noticed the Mayflower's\nsecond cutter shove off. I paid little\nheed to this and kept on swimming\nfarther and farther from the shore.\nFinally a full half mile from the beach\none of my legs became cramped, and I\nstopped swimming and turned over on\nby back. Marines are taught by their\nofficers not to get panicky in a time of\nstress or danger, and my training and\ndiscipline served me in good stead Just\nthen. I floated on quietly, now and\nthen giving voice to a shout for assist
06bdc48e20401be0cb2efa5ea041be70 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.1547944888382 39.745947 -75.546589 f.om the witness was that he had charge\nof the stocks and other eecnrlties placed\nwith the Bank of America. Ex-Judge\nEieock, who with Henry C. Terry, Esq ,\nis counsel 'or Mr. Dungan. entered a\nstrong objection to Mr. Pfeiffer's testi­\nmony, holding that the declarations and\nconfessions of a person joiutly indicted,\nwere not evidence agalust the other de­\nfendants. The examination of witnesses\nfor the defence began this morning\nThe road commissioners have placed\noyster shells ou some of the mauy bad\nplaces on the causeway just above towu.\nMrs E. H . Naylors cIsbs of tue M. E,\nSunday school gave a “fish party” at her\nhome, last evening, to raise fände to as­\nsist it in its missionary collection on\nMonday evening.\nWorkmen iD the Riverside rolling \nwhere the sheet Iren from the McDevltt\nmetal recovery factory is being tested,\npronounce it the best iron they ever\nworked, it being more pliable aud better\nin many ways that the ordinary.\nAn election for three members of the\nBoard of Education for .a term of three\nvears. will be held on Saturday, March 7,\nat the mayor's office. The retiring mem\nbers of the board are George W. Eckles\nWilllamU. Worthington and George M.\nRiley. The two former members will\n• How their names to be used for re elec\ntion, but Mr. Riley lias withdrawn from\nthe contest in favor of John F. Camp­\nbell, a new aspirant. Mr. Riley\nhas been in the board foi many yeais,\nMr WortbiDgton has served 1 hree terms\nand Mr Eckles two.
2fd3c23edc312c2921af3ba40a43c2e2 HANNIBAL JOURNAL AND WESTERN UNION ChronAm 1851.8671232559614 39.70825 -91.358741 tne Union. VYe have eeen schemes agitated at\nthe North, tending to Inflame the jealousy of\nthe South; whilst at the South we hava witnessed\na deliberate, oonoerted effort by certain politi-\ncians, to dissolve the Union. Many eminent\nstatesmen of both the great political parties of\nthe oountry, with a view to ouiet this agitation\nand restore peaoe and conoord, have secured the\nadoption ot a series of measures, known as the\ncompromise measures. In my judgment, these\nmeasures were diotated by profound wisdom and\npatriotism. Being in truth what they purport to\nbe. founded upon a fair asd ronsouable compro\nmise of conflicting opinions, thev are not onlv\nentitled to be respected as such, but as we value\nthe country and the integrity of the Union, it ii\nthe duty or every patriot to insist upon a full\nand faitliful adherence to them. I trust that in\n our approaching political contests, a rigid ad'\nherence to, and a faithful execution of these\nmeasures, will be deemed a cardinal principle\nwith both the great political parUes. But whilst\nthese measures wul, in a great degree, quiet\npresent agitation, it is the railroads to which we\nmust look at last as affording a guaranty of par\namount tranquillity. It is by railroads, that we\nare to bold the Union together in ponds of. ira\ntarnal affuotioa and reciprocal interests. The\ntime is not far distant when you wiii be able to\ntravel from St. Joseph, on the Indian frontier,\nto Boston, the heart of New England, or from\nNew Orleans, on the (iuir, to New y orlt on the\nAtlantic, in the space of three days. Nor, I\nhope, 4m the day very far remote when the costly\nfabrics of the East Indies aud the Guld of Cali- -
1862f1c4951a15a432d2ad1e99889997 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.0698629819888 42.217817 -85.891125 about 19 years of ng?, and on nearly every\noccasion sho was accompanied by an elder-\nly lady. She evinced tbo deepest interest\nin tho proceedings, nnd it finally becamo\nevident that she was more than usually in-\nterested in ono of the prisoners. As tho\ndays passed by it was ascertained that her\nadmiration extended to August Spies. At\ntho conclusion of the trial the visited tho\nCounty Jail to proffer her sympathy to tho\nprisoners, and on this occasion she intro-\nduced herself to Spies, and from that day\nbecamo completely infatuated with him.\nThe feeling which she entertained for the\nanarchist leader was evidently recipro-\ncated, and her visits to the jail to\nnee. her lover becamo so frequent that sho\nfinally camo to be known to tho jail\noflicials as "Spies' girl. She would\nstand at the iron grating of the "cage" and\ntalk to her lover until the jad hour for\nlocking up the prisoners arrived. Her\nidentity finally known, and she\nproved to bo 'Miss Nina Van Zaudt, only\ndaughter of J. an Zandt, a chemist em\nployed in June s soap lactory ai 2o. joz\nNorth Water street. She would bring nil\nsorts of dainty edibles for his use, and also\narticles of feminine manufacture for tho\nadornment of his cell. It was evidently a\ncase of "mash, and a severe caso at that.\nBut Miss Van Zandt seemed to glory in it,\nuna was annareutlv nroud of her powers of\nconquest. But nobody appeared to be pre-\npared for the news, which was made public\nthrough the local press a few days ago,\nthat August Spies and Miss Van Zandt\nwere to be married in a Khort time.\nlho future Airs. Spies was born in\nPhiladelphia, Jun. 5, 1M7. Her father is\nsaid to belong to ono of the Knickerbocker\nfamilies who moved from New York\nState to Central Pennsylvania about fifty\nvears ago. Her mother comes from a\nScotch-Fnglis- h
1d7ae42c669eea4fc41b360229d62038 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.8292349410544 58.275556 -134.3925 Nex. foesday is ejection day in Alas-\nka. \\\\ hen the people of ihe States are\nelecting a President of the United\nStates, Conjsjrfc.-smeu, Govercois and\nmembers of State legislatures, the peo¬\nple oi Alaska will be selecting the men\nwho are to com; o e t' 2 first Ala?\\»a\nlegisiatuie. While theie is so u.uch of\nturmoil aud strife in the States, it Js\nbut natural that Alaskans should be\nmore or less excited, and that they\nshould indulge in some good, hard\nscrapping. However, so far the cam¬\npaign has been conducted in hu orderly\naud decent manner, with very little of\nwhat ib rightly called "dirty politics/*!\nThe only excepMous we ha7e noticed\nhave beeu similar to the venomous rot\neminatiug from a Juneau campaign\nsheet, which is edited by one who is\nmore to be pitied blamed. that is\nif the general idea be true that he is not\nquite all there. In this campaign ther9\nhas beeu no excuse for tbeae things\nthat we have mentioned, because with\nbut very few exceptions the candidates\nwho have been named are good, honest\nand honorable citizens, who will do\ntheir duty if elected. The people of\nAlaska are gathered from every corner\nof the globe, and landing here most of\nthem dependent upon their first efforts\nforth, bread and butter that was nec¬\nessary on the morrow, they have em¬\nbarked in whatever business thatsemed\nmost promising for the time, some even\nbecoming lawyers. As such they have\nbeen employed by corporations, who\nneed lawyers, generally, more than\nother people, but we see no reason why\nthat should be used as a term of oppro¬\nbrium.
fb2c8681792729a481a94df32c903106 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.305479420345 39.560444 -120.828218 The Mammoth CaVk.— That the Mam-\nmoth Cave is an antiquity of the world\nbefore the flood—a city of giants which\nan earthquake swallowed, and which a\nchance roof of rocks has protected from\nbeing effaced by the deluge, and by the\nwear of the elements for subsequent ages,\nis one of the fancies which its strange\nphenomena force upon the mind. All is\nso architectual. It is not a vast under-\ngound cavity, raw and dirty, but a suc-\ncesstonofhalls,domes and corridors, streets,\navenues and arches—all underground, but\nall telling of the design and proportion of\na majestic primeval metropolis. It is not\na cave, but a city in ruins—a city from\nwhich sun, moon, aud stars have been\ntaken away—whose day of judgment has\ncome and passed, and over which a new\nworld has been created and grown old.\nBy what admirable laws of unknown ar-\nchitecture those mammoth roofs and\nceilings arc upheld, is every travelers won- ,\ndering In some shape or other,\nI heard each of my companions express\nthis. No modern builder could throw up\nsuch high vaulted arches, aud so unac-\ncountably sustain them. And all else is\nin keeping. The cornices and columns,\naisles aud galleries, are gigantically pro-\nportionate, and as mysteriously upheld.—\nStreets after streets—miles after .miles\nseem to have been left only half in ruins;\nand here and there is an effect as if the\nbasements aud lower stores were incum-\nbered with fragments and rubbish,\nleaving you to walk on a level with\nthe capitals and floors once high above\nthe pavement. It might be described as a\nmammoth Herculaneum, first sepulchred\nwith over-topping mountains, but swept\nand choked afterwards by the waters' of\nthe deluge, that found their wav to its dark\nstreets in their subsiding. What scenery\nand machinery this will he for the poets\nof the West, by and by. Their Parnassus\nis “a house *ready furnished.”—A, P.\nWillis.
1943b84b237869b5451c59c947c0c0c0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.1082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 Drees and family lived in the rear of\n2300 Mullany street. He was a hard\nworking man and had accumulated $8,000.\nHe ill-treated his wife continually, and on\none occasion she left him. She was a good\nwoipan and gave her husband no cause for\nhis insane jealousy. Last night the couple\nretired about 10 o clock, with two girls in\none bed, two boys in another and a baby\nof two years in tho same bed witii\nthemselves. Louis, the eleven-year-old son,\nwas the only witness of the tragedy. A\nnoise nroused him and he saw his father\ncutting his mother with a razor. He then\nsaw his father spring' in the air and fall\ndown. Then he got up, took the baby,\nMina, lying in bed with its mother's corpse,\nher night clothes soaked with her mother's\nblood, into his bed. He chauged the\nbaby's clothes and both went to sleep.\nThis morning, when the children awoke,\nthe floor and oed were covered with blood.\nLouis tried to find the to his father's\nroom, but the locked door could not be\nopened, and it was not until \\) o'clock when\nOtto Furuhorp, a boy of 10, came up and\ncalled Louis to go to school with liiili, that\nthe condition of affairs was discovered.\nOtto's mother, who lived in the lower part\nof the house, opened the door when the\nghastly sight was presented. The heads of\nboth corpses were nearly severed.\nReorKUuiznlion or the M. & . . Knllmttd'\nCiiillicothe, 0., February 8..A meet¬\ning of the bond and stockholders of the\nMarietta &. Cincinnati Railway wub hold\nhere to-day to perfect re-organization. The\nbusiness was transacted without incident\nworthy of note. Tho following boarfl of\ndirectors were chosen: Robert Garrett, T.\nEdward Hambleton, Samuel Spencer, J.\nCarroll Walsh, all of Baltimore; George\nHoadley, J. D. Lehmer, J. L. Keck, of\nCincinnati; W. T . McClintock, of Chilli-\ncothe, aud Orlando Smith, ot Columbus,\nOhio. The name of the road was changed\nto the Cincinnati, Washington & Balti¬\nmore.
1898aa953354f6a70b079d8e87b74bb4 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1880.5314207334043 40.419757 -77.187146 Indians In Perry. About eighty of the\none hundred and fifty Indian youths of\nthe Carlisle school encamped at. noon\nlast Thursday on the hill adjoining the\nWarm Springs Hotel, in tills county.\nEighteen or twenty, nine by nine tents\naccommodate tho party. Capt. Pratt and\nhis son with Mr. Strait, the carpenter of\nthe school, and Mr. Conly, one of the\nsuperintendents of the boys, being the\nonly whites present. The boys with\nyoung Mason Pratt marched over on\nfoot, leaving Carlisle at 7 A. M., and\nkept together to the top of Sterretts'\nGap. After that the smarter walkers\nwent ahead, young Pratt and a large\nnumber reaching the Warm Springs at\nnoon, the last squad being two hours\nlater, while the ambulance wagon with\nthe tents, etc., picked up Borne of the\nyounger stragglers, but one youth of ten\nor eleven years was with the first squad.\nThe girls and the rest of the will\ncome some weeks later. Sixteen tribes\nare represented in the school, but the\nSioux are in the majority. Some speak\nEnglish, having learned at the Agency\nschools before coming East. When not\nunderstanding each other's languages\nthey speak among themselves by the\nsign language common to all Indians.\nMany are members of churches, and all\ndress in civilized fashion, and behave\nthemselves well. Provisions come from\nCarlisle each day. At meal times one\nof the boys sounds the reveille and all\ncome forth from the tents armed with\ncup and platter and march to the cook's\ntent to receive their regular share. The\nregular cook remains with the school at\nCarlisle, but Daniel Tucker, one of the\nIndian youths, takes his place at the\ncauldrons, and with Messrs. Strait and\nConly attend to the hungry appetites.\nFishing is the chief amusement of the\nboys, and visitors kindly presenting\nthem with hooks, lines, poles, etc.,
1824c44261a355eb268180e520ce3630 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1878.201369831304 41.004121 -76.453816 Par money is what tho law declares to be a\nlegal tender for all debts, public and private,\nA dollar is what the law declares to be the unit\nof our decimal system of monoy or of Feder-\nal money. It is composed of 100 cents, 10\ndimes or 1000 mills ; tho valuo of which is\narbitrarily established by law, by means of a\nunit of value, composed of some commercial\nqpmniodity, the demand for which constantly\nexceeds tho supply, and the supply or increase\nis more steady and regular than any other\ncommodity. As these two conditions aid in\nrendering a unit of value steady and just.\nThere is no such thing as an absolute, steady\nor unchangablc value or price in any commer-\ncial commodity whatever ; but grains of sil\nver come nearer to it than anything else- - Two\nthings make grains of silver a better unit of\nvalue than any other commodity. First bo- -\ncause silver has a vein, while grains of gold\nhas only a place amon? other metals or min-\nerals. Second, becauso of its lower specific\ngravity grains of gold, tho same amount\nof commercial or legal value requires a larger\nbulk of silver than of gold ; consequently\ngrains of silver can be cut or stamped, coined\ninto pieces of smaller value than grains of\ngold, and as the mass of persons havo only a\nsmall amount of money at any one time, sil\nver is a more popular metal than gold. Tho\nsupply of silver it more regular than the sup\nply of. gold, the latter being found only in\nplaces and the demand for both being con\nstantly in excess of tho supply makes the\ncommercial valuo of grains of silver, wherever\nboth metalt are used at money, more regular\nor steady than grains of gold. Job in chap-\nter 28, verse 1 says : "Surely, there is a vein\nfor the silver and a place for the gold, where\nthey find it. Tendering any commodity in\npayment of debts by a fixed or nominal val-\nuo, instead of by weight or measure is a relio\nof barbarism and a trick of usurpers and ty\nrants and knaves of the 'dark ages.'
69b5d9d3cfbdecd5f152514c2707f9dd PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.1931506532217 31.960991 -90.983994 Honorable Sentiments. —The London f Precedence.— A Kentuckian claiming\nTimes , speaking of the difficulties between Precedence of a Coun%-We were yesterday\nGreat Britain and the United States, says: | showed a letter from a young gentleman—\n“We are two people, but we are of one fami- a native of Kentucky, who is now in Romo\nly. We have fought, but we have been —the Eternal City—to his friends in this\nreconciled. Let us hope that neither the ; State. He gives a graphic description of\nmemory of ancient feuds, nor the jealousy of his journey from Paris thither, and recites\npresent pow'er, survive the recorded amity one amusing incident of travel, which is\nwhich ended a sanguinary struggle. That worth transcribing- He states that in the\ntwenty-five years of peace and commerce boat in w'hich he travelled on the Rhone,\nhave humanized our mutual feelings—have from Lyons to Avignon, he was halffamish-\ntamed down our asperities and subdued our ed with cold, and nearly whole starved \njealousies—might be deduced from the pre- hunger. He tried a bribe to the cook, and\nsent intercourse between the citizens and entreaty wih the captain—but neither avail-\nsubjects of both countries; it might be in- cu him in obtaining a dinner. After pacing\nferred from their private language and their the deck for some time, mentally calling\npublic documents, from their conversation, anathemas on the heads of all Frenchmen\nand from all that is respetable among their I in general, and the surly boat-captain in\nnewspapors. And melancholy indeed will i particular, whose passenger he was, he\nbe the lesson taught by history ifittnrn out hurried down to the cabin, for the purpose\nthat the hot resentment of remembered de-J of getting a segar and puffng it instead of\nfeats, and the mad thirst for vindictive tri- blowing up the captain —There, to his as-\nurnphs, are strong enough to overwhelm the | tonishment, and not without exciting his\npacific counsels of the wise and good.”
100515292edd4769dc19006d709bd8c2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.746575310756 40.441694 -79.990086 These things led to the beller that the\ncount was inaccurate: aud the police au-\nthorities, by order of the Mayor, had the\npopulation of the city recounted. Tho re-\nsult showed a population nearly 200,000\ngreater than that shown by the "ederal enu-\nmeration, and the Mayor accordingly asked\nthe Census bureau for a recount. This was\nnot granted. The request was then made to\nthe secretary of the Interior; and tho books\ncontaining the names.as taken by the police\nauthorities, were sent to Washington, where\nMr. Kenny, their custodian, offered to the\nSecretary of the Interior to take them for\nhis inspection to any place the Secretary\nmight designate, and to keep them there for\ncomparison with the Federal schedules as\nlong as might be necessary, the books still\nremalnine in Mr. Kenny s custody. The\nSecretary refused to receive them unless\nthey were absolutely surrendered to the\nexclusive enstodi of the Federal authori-\nties, w Inch Mr. Kenny was not authorized\nto do. The 2ew York authorities, consider-\ning it Impracticable to procure of the\nentire lederal enumeration, which would\ninvoUciast expense, determined to take\none of the wards of the city and make the\nnecessary comparison, and a copy of the\nFederal enumeration in the Second ward\nwas demanded, this being one of the small-\nest wards in the city, and one in which the\ncomparison could be most easily made. A\ncopy of the Federal list for the Second w ard\nwas furnished. It contained 826 names, and\neight or these were round upon inquiry to\nilontr to the First ward. The police enu\nmeration for tho Second ward contained\n1,340 name a differenc of 41, or more than\n4,1 pei cent above the Federal enumeration.\nDEFICIENT ALL OVEK THE COUNTRY.\nIndeed, there is strong reason to doubt the\ncompleteness of the enumeration, not only\nin J.ew Yoik City, but througl.o it the entire\ncountry. Numerous correctiots aud addi-\ntions have been made; and, in cases where a\nrecount was ordered, the enumeration was\nfound to be greatly defective. Thus Mult-\nnomah county, Ore, had a recount, the
13a83c5be1cb0646790a4b32f6187248 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.0887977825846 39.745947 -75.546589 thoroughly sound in practice\nand grandly progressive in idea.\nThe truth of trade evolution is\nsought. When found it is the\nvitality of energy.\nThe new ideas in retailing\nthat must govern such a con­\ncern as ours, attach January to\nthe Christmas and New Year\nholidays. Our trade New Year\nbegins with February.\nLong since the fallacy disap\npeared here that stock-taking\nand annual settlement in our af\nfairs had any interest to Our\nPublic.They are mere incidents\nof detail, like tying a bundle\nor drawing a check upon a\nbank. Our buying and selling\ndepends not on incidents,\neither trivial or important,\nThey are controlled by the\ntimes and occasions when the\ngoods can be gathered bestand\ncheapest; when Our Public\nwant goods or can iake them\nmost advantageously.\nTherefore the Spring sales\n Dress Goods and Dress Silks\nbegin in December. Just now\nthese stuffs—mostly mere slaves\nof despotic Fashion—are in\nharmony with the progressing\nyear. The weaver and the\nprinter speak the language of\nNature, in bud, leaf and flower.\nLong before robin and crocus\nreveal the presence of Spring,\nthe south-born Cottons and\ncosmopolite Wools and silks\nspeak the herald message—\n“Spring is coming !\nAnd the stream of style goes\non deepening and broadening,\nas the weeks pass until it\npours its fullness into the great\nocean of Summer Dress.\nThere, now, drop the stilts.\nWell, in simple words, Febru­\nary will see the continued as­\nsembling, in ordinary fashion\n— so that you, Our Public,\nmay see and enjoy them com­\npletely—the richest stock of\nDress Goods in the wide, wide\nworld. Positive
172009055fa155ad992952f47893f7eb THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1907.2616438039067 41.741039 -112.161619 "Good!" thoy said together as of old.\n"LlBten, then," Theresa went on.\n"You know, nnd I know, that unless\nquick succor come, tho city Is doomed.\nYou are men and soldiers, and whether\nyo make an end amid the din of battle,\nor escape for this tlmo, Is a matter\nwherewith yo do not trouble your\nminds till the tlmo comes. But for me,\nbo It known to you that I am tho wid-\now of Henry tho Lion of Kernsberg.\nMy son Maurice Is tho true heir to the\nDukedom. Yet, being bound by an oath\nsworn to tho man who mado mo his\nwife, I havo never claimed the throno\nfor him. But now Joan his sister\nknows, and out of her great heart she\nswears that sho will give up the\nDuchy to him. If, therefore, tho city Is\ntaken, the Muscovite slay my son,\nslay him by their hellish tortures, as\nthoy havo sworn to do for tho despite\nho put upon Prince Ivan. And his wife,\ntho Princess Margaret, will die of grief\nwhen thoy carry her to Moscow to\nmako a bride of a widow. Joan will bo\na prisoner, Conrad cither dead or a\npriest, and Kernsberg, the heritage of\nHenry the Lion, n fief of tho Czar.\nThere Is no help In any. Your Prince\nwould succor, but It Takes tlmo to raise\ntho country, and long ere he can cross\nthe frontier tho Russian will havo\nworked his will In Courtland. Now I\nsee a way a woman's way. And If I\nfall In tho doing of It, well I but go\nto meet him for tho sako of whoso\nchildren I freely give my life. In this\nbear me witness."
0e300280167094112892960b4b534991 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.7219177765094 40.735657 -74.172367 city park or parking atrip within the city of\nNawarlc. or cause or authorise or procure any\nperson to cut, break, climb or injure any suoh\ntree or plant or any portion of such tree or\nplant; or to injure, misuse or remove, or cause,\nauthorize or procure arty person to injure,\nmisuse or remove any device set for the pro-\ntection of any tree or plant In any public\nhighway or city park of said city. Any per\nson, firm or corporation desiring for any law\nfill purpose to cut, prune or trim any tree In\nany public highway of said city of Newark\nmay apply to tho Hhade Tree Commission; and\nif in the judgment of said commission the\ndesired cutting, pruning or trimming shall ap-\npear necessary, and the proposed method and\nworkmanship thereof such a* said commission\napproves, the Shade Tree Commission may\nthereupon issue a written permit for such\nwork. Any work done under such written pet\ninlt must he performed in strict accoidance\n tho terms thereof.\nAny person, firm or corporation which shall\nviolate or authorize or procure « violation of\nany provision of this section »*r of any per\nmission given as aforesaid shall, upon convic-\ntion thereof, forfeit and pay a penalty of five\ndollars <$.*■•) for each and every such offense\n2. Jt shall be unlawful for any person, firm\nor corporation to kill or remove, or cans* '\nauthorize or procure the death *>t removal of\nany tree planted or growing in any public\nhighway, or any tree or plant [Hinted or\ngtowing in any city park within the said city\nof Newark. Any person, firm or corporation\ndesiring for any lawful purpose- to take down\nor remove any tree tn any public highway of\nsaid cite of Newark may apply to the Shade\nTree Commission: and If in the Judgment of\nthe said commission the desired taking down\nor removal shall appear necessary, the Hhade\nTree Commission may thereupon Issue a writ-\nten permit therefor.
0f7902104fac24ceb9fed5fcaa51fafe THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.842465721715 39.768333 -86.15835 wenty tnouajxi acrea or ine most aeiect coai\nlands io Western lailana, borJerlng beüi sides of lha\nWabash river. Maps of thee lands may be aeen at the\noffcee of the Company, In Covington, Ind., at the office of\nWw. Dale, Ko.2d Park Place, N. T.City, at the oClce ef\nBon. J . R . Coffroth, Huntington, Indiana, and at the\noffice of Roach A McDonald, Indianapolis.\nA reference to the report of the Don. David Dale\nOwen, late State Geologist, will show that these lands\nare situate In the midst of the finest coal Held ef the\nState, abounding also In salt, iron and other valuable\nmineral aubatancea.\nNeartbe mouth of Coal Creek, where t be Company ha\nlarge quantities of lands alt water ba bn discovered\nequal in quality te the Kanawha. This water waa wro -c ur- ed\nicae 25 years ago by boring, suon aftrr, tba On\nondaga salt flitirg Its way down the Wabash aad Erie\nCanal, Mr. Thomas, the proprietor, Coding himself un.\nable to compete with it, abandoned the manufacture. Is\nhis boring ha encountered that which recently \ncld fails prove te have been coal oil.\nTLo lands all lie ia cloe .proximity to the Waba.b\nand Erie Canal, some of them apoo Us basks.\nMr. John McManomy, the buinea agent of the ecm -p an- y,\nhas retained from a tour of observation ef the oil\nregloa of Pennsylvania, convinced that the Land a leaaed\nby the company," ia fountain and Parke counties, has,\nto far as tb geueral formation of the country and the\nsurface Indications present themselves, a stoag analogy\nla the oil and mineral substances aa feuad oe French\nCresk, Penoiylvanla, where the greatest quantity aad\nthe moot valuable oil la foend. Mr. McManomy has pur-\nchased for the company the most approved machinery,\nwith rtlth fixture necessary for operation, aad la pre-\nparing with experienced workmen the speedy develop-we- nt\nof the hidden treasure of the laDd of the company.\nAll the Indices of coal oil, found la localities where it\nhas been procured, are rcngy marked in varloti lo\nealltlee of the lands of the Company, affording every\nrational provpect of rocce. The company thicks it
5b0632bceda5531c0a55f9486f1ec5e6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.582191749112 39.261561 -121.016059 Tbe Great Fire In latndan, of Jam ltd.\n[From the lzradon Timm of June 26lh.J\nIt was not iu the dead of nigbt, bat on a\nrammer afternoon, that tbo fire brigade iu\nWatling street was summoned to Cotton*\nwharf, close to London bridge, on the south\nside of tbe Thames. The engines, directed\nby the chief of tbe brigade in person, were\nquickly on the spot, when it was (bond that\na fire had broken out iu tbe first story of a\nwarehouse. The boildiBg was perfectly\nuew, and constructed ou approved princi-\nples of architecture ; strong party walls,\nprovided with irou doors, divided the fabric,\nund the warehouses in the vicinity were re-\nputed to be (ire-proof also. The place bad\nnot been abandoned for the nigbt; tbe\nworkmen were siill oo the spot, and one of\nthem actually discovered Iu a small piece\nor smoking hemp, the germ of that confla-\ngration which before night was represented\nby three acres of flame. Unhappily, the\nsmoke at that early period protected tbe\nfire. So dense were its volumes as to forbid\nall approach, and tbe flame was left to do\nits work. Still there was a vast arrsy of\n in the street as well as on the\nstream ; there was a trained brigade of fire-\nmen, conducted by a courageous and ex-\nperienced leader ; there was a strong body\nof police to aid in keeping order, aud thero\nwere lire-proof walls to contend against\nfire. Hut, of all these appliances, not one\navailed to control the flames. They burst\nforth from the first warehouse aud seized\nanother. Iron and brick, though they did\nnot actually blaze, yet burnt through and\nthrough till they became red-hot masses.\nMr. Braidwood, tbe chief of tbe brigade, at\nonce discerned tbo true state of the case,\nand predicted from bis survey the magni-\ntude of the conflagration. It was tho last,\nopinion he was fated to utter. A fow min-\nutes later, as be was placing his men at\ntheir posts, and encouraging them hy his\ndirections and example, be met bis death.\nA tremendous explosion of saltpetre in a\nvault shook down tbe entire frontage of a\nwarehouse, Rnd he was buried under the\nruins. Iiis fall dismayed his men, already\ndistressed by the severity of their duties,\nand yet they rushed like brave followers to\nhis rescue—but in vain. A second explo-
038a5962cba90c2ab703782c0453d2de CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1898.691780790208 41.875555 -87.624421 l'tir the llrst'tline lu twenty yeuis llu\ncriminal court docket l practically\nclear, and before the beginning of an-\nother tumuli Hie Stale' Attorney will\nbe able to give persons under Indict-\nment a trial within thirty days from\nthe time of the return of u true bill.\nThis was the toudllloii of affairs over\nin the cilmlual court building Tuesday\nwhen the criminal courts opened for\nanother year'M grind. All this has been\naccomplished since the present Stale's\nAttorney was Inducted lu office twenty-on - e\nmouths ago. At that time there\nwere l.lK't cases hanging lire, the In-\nheritance from the preceding Slate's\nAttorney. One month before State's\nAttorney Kern went out of office the\ndockets of the criminal court showed\n:i,SS.i Indictments on the calendar un-\ntiled. During the last mouth of of-\nfice, It was charged at the time, there\nwere U.700 casus nolle pressed nud\n from the dockets. At tbe time\nState' Attorney l.ongeiiecker went\nout of office he left to bis successor\nlu the neighborhood or :t,(KKi untiled\ncases. As n result of this condition or\naffairs the criminal courts of Cook\nCouuty have 'been dogged, and men\nunder Indictments have been compell-\ned to He In Jail for weeks, nud In some\nInstances month, before their cist's\nwere reached.\nHy systematic woik State' Attorney\nDcuccu has brought about 11 reform In\ntho office, and as a result, beginning\nwith October, u man under Indictment\nwill be given a trial within thirty\nday from the return of 11 true bill If\nhe desires It. Tills will mean no delay\nIn dealing out justice. If a man 1 In-\nnocent the ban will not be held over\nhim fur months, as of old, while If\nguilty he will bo hurried to bis punish-mem - ,
1db3381f6401f50e10daa2d30996bcf5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.1986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 The Senate was then called to order, I\nand the Chair announced as a member to t\n1111 the vacancy on the Joint Select Com- 1\nmittee to Investigate tbe management of b\naffairs in tbe District of Colombia, Mr. i\nStewart, of Nevada, to be Chairman ot tbe\nCommittee in place of Mr. Boutwell, ex- r\ncased on account of ill health. (\nThe Senate then, on motion ot Mr. e\nBuckingham, at ten minutes past one, ad- it\njourned till Tuesday next. c\nAs soon as tbe Senate adjourned a rush 1\nwss made by a large number ol women r\nand somo men to the vacant seat ol Sena- o\ntor Sumner to gain possession of the s\nBowers which had been placed upon bis\ndesk, and similar attempts were made to 1\ncarry otl the floral decorations that had r\nbeen removed from the catallaque and \ncoffin. The crowd managed to seize a\nmany flowers before the officers of the (\nSenate could interfere, p\nThe coffin having been carried out to &\nthe entrance ot the Senate Wing ol I\nthe capital it was deposited in a hearse C\ndrawn by.four white horaet, and attended 1\nby mounted policemen, was followed to I\nthe Baltimore and Potomac depot by a c\nprocession ol tue members of the Civil c\nRights League, a colored organization ol e\nthis city, numbering about one hnndred v\nand fifty men, headea by Fred Douglass li\nand ex-Governor Pincbback. r\nNeit to thisorganUatlon followed the n\ncarriages in charge'ot the 8ergeant-at- n\nAmis, containing the committee of the it\nSenate and House appointed to accompa- a\nny the remains to Boston on a special a\ntrain, which will Btart lrom Washington p\nat 3 o'clock this alternooa. u
1dadd2f90a194eb15c1f212f9ad5b9bd THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.7904109271942 40.832421 -115.763123 tbro a4«lv>l tillvmg to |iltc* bla there,\n. bicb b* di I, »L»d H«4dlr«t»a* a* bed\nhife to go down aa4 get imu eig*r«.\nHe rt|>litd It km loo Ut*. Iloddi*-\na loo* lusist'd, btid Biliiiig turned to\n!**.* tb* bona*. Hit IdieetoDe'a t i»f ol\nwa* discharged. 1 urning katk iiiltibg\ninqi r»-d ft* nun of tk* aLot. and\nHuddieston* said tb* putol «nt of!\naccidentally. Nothing (nitb«i k«p\npened ioring lb* tii^kl. In tk* morn-\nlug. tk* |miIj> tiiiiliiiiif] tk* j'mrnt) to\nHop*. i'«-aii>g along th* road, Had\ndle*ton*'e pistol again dltcktrKol. 'Ik*\nball whistled kj Dll ling's krad. Turn\ning bis k< fed fend diaaiiig hla rev ol*tr,\nBilling itoiiikid Ik at accidrbUll; <11»-\ncbarged pistols vara gttin.g monoton¬\nous, and k« would call and return tke\ncompliment. At tk* n*xt town IJiltlng\ndeposited kia WObey *ltk a Irieod, leer-\nto* ka would b- kilK<l II b* letaia'd it.\nTba pally finally fucked II op«-, turned\nover tk* |irUuD>ii to Ike autkonties,\nisd received tk« t offered lor tke\neaptiir* o I all tke rohkers. Tke captors\nappeared at Ik* trial at Waakingiou on\nKaturday, wken Hil Irig dirulped Ik*\nwetter lo Kapt. Iluckenao of tke Iron\nMountain road. Huddle-atone, Moore\naad Doll.kld wer* examined separately.\nEaffc wad* affilavit Ikat they knew\nnothing of Ike wkereakouta ol any\nn»ori«y. Hukaer|uently they were ap-\npr oar bed hy liuekanen, «bu elated Ik*\nmoney could k* aecured. Tke train\nlokktra, Kl' j ke|.a and Ililari), k.ibg\nibt*r*iewed, Itflifi d to Iko lacta given\nabov*. and (itclared tkejr 'would not\nb CV* divulged III* affiir 1 1 tka parlies\ntbeins* Ires kad not given It away.\nH'lddlaaloiie, Hl< pkena ai.d Lielany,\netulroblnd wilk Ike evidence, rnnda a\nclear breast of Ike «kol* iking. They\npromised to rnske re-til ution, und w< rn\npermitted to go for tke money, kaving\naecreted it along l-ka road. Tk* amount\nw»s several lliouaund dollars liaa tt>an\ntb* reward duo Iberu from tke railroad\ncompany by tk* capture ol Ik* train\nrobber*.
2bbf0ba7cb08709fdd2c4ff2c795a214 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.8183059793057 37.561813 -75.84108 The leading feature of the Democratic\nplan was to subvert the German vote and\ntake it away from Barnes. This was only\npartially successful. It was successful\nenough to show its ingenuity, but it failed of\nits full expected effect.\nIiOoking at the returns, we find that the\nthree counties of Hamilton, embracing Cin-\ncinnati, Cuyahoga embraciug Cleveland, and\nFranklin embracing Columbus, gave just\n5,500 of a Democratic gain, or barely enough\nto neutralize Haves' maioritv.\nThe Democrats confidently expected a\ngain of at least 10,000 in the three cities\nmentioned. They went into the contest with\ntheir calculation in error to the extent of\nover 4,000 votes. By the operation of a sen-\ntiment which affected the country the re-\nverse of the city Barnes gained in the rural\ndistricts, and with Hayek's majority \nbalanced by the Democratic gains in the\ncity every Republican gain in the country\nwas virtually so much of a majority.\nThe Democrats also counted too largely\nupon the support of the Germans in Hamil-\nton County, where their majority of less\nthan 800 is a gain of only 2,000 or 2,500 less\nthan they expected.\nAt the last moment, the Cincinnati Ger-\nman Bepublicans fell into line and voted\nthe Barnes ticket quite generally.\nThe disappointment ef the Democrats at\nthe result in Cincinnati is consequently\npoignant, nor are they greatly consoled by\nthe result in Cleveland aud Cnyaboga\nCounty, which went only 2,600 in their\nfavor against an expected 4,000. These two\ncounties were the key to the situation.\nThe disappointment of the Democrats\nover the failures here mentioned was, in-\ndeed,
22c917dcc9a3c1fac1c3160bdb5202db PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1905.1082191463724 39.756121 -99.323985 which are dally served In the great\nSanitarium dining room, at which sit\ndown hundreds of intelligent men and\nwomen from all parts of the United\nStates and everi from foreign coun-\ntries. Milk, eggs and other dairy prod-\nucts are also freely used. Great care\nIs taken to provide the very best and\nchoicest of everything edible, of which\nthe physicians approve.\nDuring the year which has just\nclosed a vast amount of these things\nwere required to provide for the army\nof patients who visited the sanitarium,\nfor several thousand sufferers housed\nthere during the twelve months of\n1904. As to the expense for the past\nyear It was considerable, amounting to\na total of $327,189.99 . divided as fol-\nlows: Nut foods, 50 tons, $26,768.80;\ncereal foods, 101 .994 pounds, $9,521.19;\nbread, 65,026 pounds, $2,657.43; canned\ngoods, 3 .699 cases, $10,506.63; fruit\nJuices, etc., made on the place, 11,430\n $2,030.90; fresh fruit, 6,783\nbushels, $10,203 .46; vegetables, 5,137\nbushels, $3,695.20; sundry grocery\nItems, 41,558 pounds. $3,396.38; eggs.\n25,301 dozen, $6,789.65; butter, made\non the place, 29,961 pounds. .$3,951.69;\ncream, 68,678 quarts, $10,323 .70; milk,\n67,366' quarts, $1,692.45; coal, 6,714\ntons, $20,000 .00; labor, $213,653 .59;\ntotal, $327,189.99.\nThe amount of charity dispensed\nduring the past ten years at this\nsanitarium amounted to $585,610.\nTo care for the patients an average of\n725 men and women were employed\nduring each year, and an average of\n550 patients are under treatment at\nthis sanitarium every day In the year.\nWe have given our readers only a\nbrief glance at the workings of this\nunique establishment Another article\nwould be required to give something\nof the details of the dally routine of a\nguest at the Sanitarium, and of the\nmethods which have given to this In-\nstitution Its world-w id- e
0c9879e8e687198cb052d41a8e8c28ad NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.1657533929476 40.735657 -74.172367 IN CHANCERY OF1 NEW JERSEY—To Fredar-\nicka Wilhelm. Gustav F. Wilhelm and Fran-\ncislta R. Wilhelm:\nBy virtue of an order of the Court of Chan-\ncery of New Jersey made on the day of the\ndate hereof In a cause wherein Salaam^Temple,\nof the Ancient Arabic Order of •“the Nobles of\nthe Mystic Shrine are complainants, and you\nand others are defendants, you are required to\nappear plead, answer or demur to the bill of\nsaid complainant on or before the twenty-\nseventh day of April next, or the said bill will\nbe taken as confessed against yoQ.\nThe said bill is filed to foreclose a mortgage\ngiven by Ida May Mausert and George E.\nMausert. her husband, to the complainant,\ndated the first da" of August, nineteen hundred\nI and on iande in the City of Newark.\nCounty of Essex, and you. Frederleka Wilhelm,\nare made a warty defendant because ypu claim\nto he the lawful widow of Frank Wilhelm,\nformerly the owner of the premises described in\nsaid bill of complaint and covered by said mort-\ngage. and by reason thereof claim or may claim\nsome right of dower, in said premises; and you.\nGustav F. Wilhelm and Francloka K. Wilhelm,\nare severally made parties defendant because\nvou are or claim to he the lawful children of\nFrank Wilhelm, deceased, one of the former\nowners of the premises described In said bill\nof complaint, and covered by said mortgage,\nand by reason thereof claim or may claim\nsome property, right or Interest in the jpld\npremises.\nI Dated February 24. 1910 .
55eab246a11858343629f9954cfe1589 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.6589040778792 58.275556 -134.3925 It is about time that somo action was\ntaken in regard to the mail service that\nhas beeu accorded to the residents of\nNome during the past summer. When\nMail Inspector Clum was in Nome some\ntime ago he stated that the postal de¬\nportment would feel aggrieved to learn\nthat that the people of this section were\ndissatisfied with the mail facilities.\nOue roally dislikes to hurt the sensi¬\ntive feelings of the heads of this im¬\nportant department of the government\nbut there is 110 argument necessary to\nmake the people of this section believe\nthat they are given a mail service that\nis a reproach to the administration and\nwould be considered inefficient by the\nsavages of New Guinea. Seward penin¬\nsula has a population of about ten\nthousand white men, women and chil¬\ndren. They produce annually and send\nto the United States about five millions\nof dollars in gold, aud furs, ivory and\nother commodities to a similar amount.\nTheir productive capacity is greater\nthan that of the people of any other\ncommunity liviug under the American\nflag; and yet the government sees fit\nto allow them but one mail every three\nor four weeks during their busiest \nson. Instead of sending mail on every\nvessel leaving Seattle the postal\nauthorities economize to the extent of\na few dollars per year by sending the\nmail on the vessels of the company\nwhich will accept the prices which they\nseo fit to pay. This they have fixed at\nfour cents the pound, but in order to\nkeep up the departmental reputation\nfor inconsistency a rate of odc dollar\nand thirty-three ceDts per pound is\npaid to the vessels carrying mail to the\nOrient, ur course, tne poor Denigurea,\nand unsoapod heathens who inhabit\nthe great east are much more in need\nof mail than are the white people of\nAlaska, and besides they enrich the\nUnited States to a much greator ox-\ntent, with their wonderfully prolific\nproduction of bolos, spears and other\nweapons that are used for the purpose\nof killing off good United States sol¬\ndiers; so let them have the best mail\nservice possible. We are only a lot of\npoor white trash who are enriching the\npeople of America by sending them\nseveral million dollars worth of mar-\nfctable commodities every year, so we\nwill manage to get along without any\nmail service worth mentioning..Nome\nGold Digger.
0be631d9fc564b2804e80b5c2d7665b6 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.4616438039066 39.745947 -75.546589 éwhere b« had fallen until a When the managers of the Citizens\n. «consulted »hoot the dispo Kink erected their handsome building\nrf bis worldly ailairs. Here he at Ponrtb and Washington streets they\nd his will anil sigueil a check foresaw the nsed of a place where\n,!»bii »»fs upon her arrival, bath oou id be enjoyed, and where those\nnil that be did not pant bar em- who wished ronld learn to swim, and\nwîirn sbe ratne. Though bis they determined to add a natatorlum\nmpariltied;be slgbed ths docu- where these privileges oonld be enjoyed\nwithout apparent difficulty, by all at a trilling cost. Btnoe thesea-\n[Ijis was over Mr. Marshall said' son In the skating department has\n, jrtitlMnen, yon mby proceed to closed workmen have been employed\ntmtouiy room,” giving expli- day and night in hurrying to oompltv\ntc:ions Is » they should go about i|nn the uatatnri urn, and the tank\nelagged (be physician, who had and dressing rooms are now about oom\nlints meantime, to save his plete.1. Krerything is In readiness to\nÜ! the arrival o his wife, bat he turn the water ou, and the place will\n, I,» Isiurs before she came, be opeu for male bathers on Saturday,\nfbm a minister arrived, the dy- The walls of the took are of stone and\nirroined in with him in prayer, very strong, being laid in cement, and\ntest lbs preacher sang the fami- m uch of the work » as done by eleoUio\nCO ' Juntas I Am, Without light so *s to be ready for an early open-\nira," In which the jiijarea man ing. There is no (lonbt that\nmed «lib iervor. fir. Marshall everything Is\nd in great pain until Thursday\n»uen be ill'll- His remains\nmtalmeil and brought to Ralti-\nItoupanieil by his1 wife. —Balti-
03e23a3fc5bfc39b2ba40540f0d2928b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.3265027006173 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho witness replied because ho was as-\nsured that the Department was prepared\nto mako the remission and thus arrest fur-\nther proceedings, and bccanse he thought\nto secure tho remission of the forfeiture\nof tho vessel, General Banfield having re-\nsigned the office of Solicitor. The Gener-\nal was at that time in Philadelphia en-\ngaged in railroad business as an attorney,\nlie stated to General Bristow the object\nof his errand, and offered to give him part\nof the compensation. General Bristow\ndeclined to take a fee, but said\nho would assist in presenting the\nmatter fairly to tho Secretary of tho\nIreasury. Secretary Bristow introduced\ntiim to the Secretary, and Mr. Banfield,\nthe solicitor, was informed that it was\nllie policy then not to grant any remis-\nlion of forfeitures pending the negotia-\ntions. Bristow'rt conduct in the promises\nwas merely an act of kindness, he having\ndeclined all or compensation, and\nwas merely serving his Keutuckv neigh-\nbors. Gen. Bristow had no professional\n:onncction wim tne case, una was very\ncurefill lo have thin fact clearly and ex-\nplicitly understood, lie emphatically\ndeclined to have anything to do with\na fee. Secretary Bristow called tho at-\ntention of the witness to that part\nof the House resolution directing\nthe investigation, in which it is said that\n'ono of the attorneys for the owners of\nthe Mary Merrill applied to B. Il.ttris-\ntow, Secretary of the Treasury, for a re-\nmission of the forfeiture, to which the\nitaid Bristow replied that he would do\nnothing himself, but his private Secreta-\nry could fix it up, and said attorney met\nli'is private Secretary and had the for-\nfeiture remitted." Witness replied that\nthe mention of tho attorney in the extract\nread certainly did not apply to him. Jle\nwas not the man.\nAdjourned.
2c5c717eef797e420a7d1cde1f23247d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.1493150367833 58.275556 -134.3925 From Unga comes a story of outrage\nand murder committed Christmas eve,\nwith a young native woman as the vic¬\ntim. The crime was committed at\nPirate Cove, a fishing village seventeen\nmiles from Unga. Meager details so\nfar leceived l egardiDg the affair are to\nthe eli'ect that Nellie Kalugan, a young\nnative woman was killed, and an at¬\ntempt made to bum the body. The\ncharred remains and evidence showiug\nihe detail* of the crime were found the\nnext morning by the natives. The\nidentity of the murderer has not yet\nbeen learned, and as there is at present\nno marshal in the precinct, no steps\nhave been takeD toward apprehending\nthe guilty one. The murdered womau\nwas a one-armed native, about 28 years\nold. She was well known around Unga.\nTwenty fishermen are employed during\nthe winter at Pirate Cove, and it is be¬\nlieved that one or more of them were\n of the crime.\nThe annual report of the Dawson fire\ndepartment has just been completed\nby Chief J. A. Lester. The loss of prop¬\nerty by fire during the year 1908 was\nthe lowest in the history of Dawson; it\naggregated but $037.50, and reflects\ngreat credit on the efficiency of the de¬\npartment. A total of forty-four alarms\nwere answered, and twenty-three hours\nspent in working at fires, showing that\nthe splendid record was not altogether\nmade without real work. The heaviest\nloss of property since incorporation of\nthe town in 1902 was in 1904, when the\ngrand aggregate was $182,000. The fire\ndepartment force now comprises eight\nmen, inclusive of the chief, and has in\nservice one team of horses which draws\na combination chemical engine and\nhose rig. All water service is from\nhigh-pressure fire hydrants, and fire\nengines are discarded. Expenses for\nthe year were $40,8:14.72, of which, $22,-
22ce2f08a6687e213d5a5819e90fdfbc THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1906.2945205162355 46.601557 -120.510842 cost. Two of them were suspected char-\nacters. That is to say, every one in '\nthe reportorial party was of the belief\nthat they would, if they found the prop-\ner chance, get the news as early as pis i\nsible, wire it in to their offices, then, sat-\nisfied that they had secured a "scoo;)"\non the balance of us, would proceed to I\nWaukegan and leave the others to lake\ncare of themselves. This was mere sus-\npicion, however, nnd would not justify ;\nua in leaving them at the mercy of tin-\nZionists. For, the followers of "Elijah 11\nwere desperate that night.\nThrough one of the boys who came j\nto camp without his partner, we learn-\ned that he had gained entrance to the j\nmeeting and would "divvy" up the wind i\nnews when he succeeded in getting mil\nsafely, which was about as difficult i I\ntask as getting in. The guards knew of\nths preaence of an unusual number of ]\nreporters in the city were also aware j\nof the fact that it would be fully v cf- |\nfective to capture a man on the way i\nout of the meeting as it would while |\nhe was entering. Anything, to keep the !\naffair out of print, was their motto.\nWe divided into two squads. I wss i\nappointed leader of one to attick -iie\njail, owing to a previous experience that\nI had had in that place. The others l\nagreed to lie in wait for the successful\nspy, and in case of his arrest, grapple\nwith the guards and release him.\nWith my little squad of five men, we\nproceeded up the south boundary line of I\nthe city, keeping outside the limits, in- j\ntil we reached the street upon which\nthe administration building waa looted\nThis waa known aa Mizpah avenue. Up- j\non gaining the street, we turno;l into '\nthe city and stole along carefully, in |\nthe shadow of the buildings, through \\\nwhich entrance would have to be liiinlc
8aeaddde2bf4403044291c0bdbfaf30d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.1215846678303 41.681744 -72.788147 An informal discussion of the\nvarious plans for the elimination of\nthe grade crossing on East street\nwas conducted after the. hearing,\nand a large number of townspeople\ntook advantage of the chance to\nlook over the map of the latest\nscheme proposed by Engineer Jo-\nseph N. McKernan. Some approved\nthe new plan and some believed\nthat Mr. McKernan's first one was\nbetter. A few believed that the best\nsolution would be to merely Install\na flash signal and post a 24 hour\ngateman at the crossing, leaving the\nstreets as at present.\nChairman John E. Lamb of the\ncommission said this morning that\nhe wanted to correct the impression\nthat his group would attempt to\nspeak for the townspeople. The dis-\ncussion last night was merely to en-\nable the citizens to become familiar\nwith latest plan in order that\nthey themselves might speak intelli-\ngently regarding It at the hearing in\nHartford next Monday.\nWould Develop Mountain View\nPlans to open up Mountain View\nfor faster development by the elim-\nination of the one foot strip of land\nreserved by Wood. Harmon & Co.\naround its property in that section\nwere discussed by the commission.\nTo forestall rivals with neighboring\ndevelopments, this company re-\ntained a ring of land one foot wide\nabout Its own property, and the\ntown therefore cannot accept any\nof the streets within this barrier.\nThe matter has been taken up\nwith the company several times, and\nSecretary Frank T. Wheeler of the\ncommission was instructed last night\nto - open negotiations again. The\ncompany will be spurred to action\nby the inclusion of this ring of land
41d463f4a66f5e3a1e45b9302732bd1c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 lieves that he is still in the body whicl\nhe had when he was in the world. J\nhuman spirit also enjoys every externa\nand internal sense which he possesse<\nin the world. He sees as before; hi\nhears and speaks as before; he smelli\nand tastes as before; and when he ii\ntouched jhe feeja-as before. He als<\nloogs; 44sifes, wishes, thinks, reileots\nis atfected, loves and wills aj\nbefore. And he who is delighted\nwith sttidl&v reads and writes as before\nIn a word, when man passed from om\nlife into the other, or from on* worlc\ninto the other, it fs just as if he passec\nfrom ouQ place to another; and carrier\nwith film-"all things which he possessec\nin himself as a man, so that it canno\nbe said that after death.which it\nonly the death of the terrestrial body.\nhas lost anything that belonged to him\nself. He carries with him his natura\nmemory also, for he retains all thing!\nwhatsoever which he has heard, seen\nread, learned, and thought in the world\nfrom earliest infancy even to the end o\nlife. Bat because, the natural objecti\nwhich are \\h the memory can not-be re\nproduced in the spiritual world, thej\nare quiescent, just as tiiey are with i\nman ih this world when lie does no\nthink of them; but still they areTepro\nduced when the Lord pleases. The sen\nsnal man cannot possibly believe tha\nsuch is the state of man after death\nbecause he does not comprehend it; foi\nthe sensual man cannon think other\nwise than naturally, even about
2f23871546ddf85f737498434fe47679 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.250684899797 39.623709 -77.41082 that the assignment was illegal, because\nit was not made according to the form\nrequired by law.\nThe jury in Eclair awarded Henry S.\nJean $3500 damages for injury by cars\nof the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad\nat Pennsylvania Avenue Station.\nThe dwelling and barn on the farm\nof Mrs. Sarah E. Hastings were burned\nin Somerset county. Iho furniture and\nother effects of the fatuity were destroy\ned. Loss, $1000: partly insured.\nThe Democratic Ledger, of Havre de\nGrace, renews the agitation for a hand\nsome Masonic Temple for that town or\nthe plan adopted by the business nice\nof Salisbury. In Salisbury a company\nwas formed, a proper site was secured\nam! an effort is being made to provide\nquarters in the building for the postof\nbee. with the Government as a tenant\nJames Paul, aged nearly 80 years\nwho fought with Gen. Winfield Scott\nin the Mexican War and later a<\na pioneer in 1840 to California to seel-\nhis fortune in the gold fields of that\ncountry, died at his home in Garrett\ncounty of paralysis. He enlisted in the\narmy which invaded Mexico when he\nwas 27, years of age and served through\nout the campaign, entering Mexico\nCity with the triumphant army. Aftei\nhis discharge from the service he join-\ned a party of gold seekers and went to\nCalifornia, where he remained for 1;\nyears, enduring hardships and priva-\ntions that marked the lives of all the\npioneers in that country. In 1866 Mr\nPaul returned to his home in Garrett\ncounty and settled d nvn. By his death\nhut one survivor of the Mexican inva-\nsion remains in Garrett county, he he\nnig George \\\\ . Gould, of near I buyer-\nidle. Mr. Gould was in General Scott's\narmy also and was at the fall of t ha-\npul epee.
2a5dc23549710fbeb2570637af6e5e77 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6945205162353 40.063962 -80.720915 The physical powers of musquitoes\nare unusually vigorous this season,\nconsidering tlio fact that they aro. up so\nmuch nights. With the single excep¬\ntion of retiring late, their other habits,\nwe believe, are regular. They have a\npeculiar system of. gymnastics that\ngives a Bturdy development to their\nmuscles, and using their voices a good\ndeal in festive chorus has the effect to\nstrengthen their lungs and ward off any\ntendency to pulmonary coinjplaiut.T-\nThey sat up witli us last night 111 strong\nforce, and attacked us ill single compa¬\nnies and in battalions. While our at¬\ntention was diverted by a brisk skir¬\nmishing party on our right, the enemy\nhad massed on our left,, and made so\nsuddon and well directed an attack, that\nwo wore driven half out of bed. Taking\nadvantage of lull in hostilities, dur¬\ning which tho enemy seemed to be hold¬\ning a consultation of war, we crawled\nstealthily out of bed, leaving tlio mus¬\nquitoes beneath the bar, and took to tho\nsofa. Tlioy missed us very soon, and\nsent out a scout, who was not long as¬\ncertaining our whereabouts and report¬\ning, when tho whole forco charged ppou\nus with a violence that was increasod\nby rago at our momentary escape. So\ntho contest raged all night, fighting\nfrom the bed to.tho sofa* ana from the\nsofa to tho bed. Our loss was a pint of\nblood and a total loss of sleep. Loss of\ntlio enemy not known. They were sev¬\neral hours in burying their ^ead/how¬\never. "Wo coulu not pass sucli'auother\nnight though 'twere to buy. a world of\nhappy days."
0c1f9fc3ba049d699fe650a361eea25f THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1896.599726744333 37.92448 -95.399981 Editor Register: As citizens and\ntax payers of the city of Iola we de-\nsire to file our protest against some of\nthe acts of the city administration.\nWe are told by the city officers that\nthe treasury is so nearly bankrupt\nthat no assistance can be given\ntoward protecting our property from\nfire. Yet every few veeks the city\nenacts new and expensive ordinances\naud employs attorne3's all at its own\nexpense for the sole purpose of aiding\none gas company to Id jure another.\nIu addition to this the city is assum-\ning a responsibility that iu all proba-\nbility will result in its being compell-\ned to pay the injured company\nseveral thousands of dollars. And\nthis responsibility is incurred not at\nthe demand of the people. Not in an\nattempt to vindicate any of the rights\nof the city or to prevent it or any of\nits citizeus from being wronged, but\nsolely it the behest for the benefit\nof a private corporation. Is that\nright? Should the city government\nconstitute itself the champion and\nattorney of one company as against\nanother made up of just as good\ncitizens and having at least equal\nrights? And if it does dothis, should\nit not at leat require the company\nwhich it assists to pay 'the actual\nexpenses incurred? And should not\nthis company be required also to put\nup a bond to indemnify the city\nagainst any judgment that might be\nrendered against it on account of\ninjury done to the other company.\nThe city has been already put to a\ngreat expense bj the action of the\ncity government iu enacting illegal\nordinances passed solely for the bene-\nfit of one gas company (which ordi-\nnances have placed no restrictions\nwhatever as to prices for private use)\nand in defending the suits that no-\nbody except this company had any\npos Bible interest in.
10595d57474e1db5225a6ca4962279dc PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.457650241601 40.441694 -79.990086 A meeting of the shareholders of the\nGerman East Africa Company was held yes-\nterday. For the first time since the com-\npany was chartered a dividend of 5 per cent\nwas declared on the preference shares.\nPolice officials of New York have noti-\nfied banks nnd brokers not to negotiate a\nnumber of 5 per cent bonds and six 20,000\nJ rune puis wmen nave Dcen stolen. The\njobbery occurted on June 9 at nnmburg.\nJames M. Reid was arrested at St Louis.\nlie bought from J. A. Melville and A Green-\nwood, of Fllmore, Utah, 30 ponios, giving\ntherefor a deed to 160 acres ot Scott countv,\nKan., land. Investigation proved tho land\nbelonged to F. Y. Lewis.\nThe National Association of Dancing\nMasters is in session at Cleveland. Tne fol-\nlowing officers weio elected: President, E .\nW. Masters, of Boston; Vice President, W.\nL. Bass, of Utlca, N. Y.; B. F.\nThuma, of Pittsburg; Treasurer, J . W. B an- ger - t ,\nof Baltimore; Trustee for thiee years,\nA. C Wirth, or Milwaukee.\nThe will of Commodore Hunter, the sec-\nond oldest commodore of the United States\nnavy, who died in Now Orleans Sundav, be-\nqueathed about $10,000 in sums of $1,000 each\nto gcveal of his iriends, and to a nephew he\nleaves $10,000 In Confederate currency. This\nwas the price paid him for his live years'\nservices in the Confederate navy.\nFor somo time a man passing himself ott\nas a United States detective has been mak-\ning a nuisance of himseir in Corsiean, Tex.,\nby following women around. The polico\nfinally arrested him, and, finding no bona\nfide papers on him, held him on a charge of\ncarrying concealed weapons. He answers\nclosely to the description of the man who\nrecently committed the terrible Denison\nmurders.
dd2cfa1a0ba32f79b732cde0c64ccc95 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0397259956874 39.290882 -76.610759 Persons ignorant of the inture ofdisease, tie not\naware that many stages ihark its progress from tire com-\nmencement to its full developement, originating m a\nmost simple form, and through neglect or in Judicious\ntreatment, assume a more aggravated state ?> disease,\nami occasion abscess, ulceration, pseudo syphilid, can-\ncer, premature old age; often ending in a protracted in-\ncurable state of miserable existence.\nThis institution is under the management and super-\nintendence of Professor Cooke, MD. B. U., L. L. n. ol\nthe city of Albany. N. V ., who, after the experience oi\nthirty years in extensive Hospitals, in various climates\nami the British Navy, together with the minutest atten-\ntion to the subject in private practice, has discovered a\nmode of treatment for Venereal complaints, by which\nhe is enabled to effect a perfect cute, in all stages, and\ntotally eradicate from the system toe most obstinate ca-\nses in a manner which will not subject tin* patient \nany continemeat, or hindrance from daily pursuits. And\nall without the use of Me curv, that baneiul poison,\nwhich is sending to the grave its thousands annually ~\nthe best effects of which is but to induee a relapse of\ndisease, and rinallv, while it* victim is influenced with\ntiie joyfulprospect ®f health, suddenly prostrates his\nenergies and sends hina to a premature grave.\nDistinguished as the Chancellor of an University,aad\nacknowledged by great professional skill and practical\nexperience to be without a rival in his peculiar province,\nnil contidentiai consultations and the advice ol Profes-\nsor Cooke, formerly from London, with a superior col-\nk-gmte;education in Europe, offei advantages seldom\nderived within ths sphere of medical and intellectual\ntalent, invalids suffering cither with disease or Uno'\nthe inefficiency of unquahfled practitioners at physic\nand surgery, whose years deny equal opportunities and\nexperience, are reminded that the Lock Hospital is an\ninstitution worthy their patronage and entitled to their\nconfidence.
0e62965b065c0660cebd18e3104e4941 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.7109588723997 40.063962 -80.720915 The QouqcII Committee on Health\nmet last evening and bald a brief waloa\nthat, while it vu not u lively m some\nof the meeting* held by tbi* oommittee,\nWM nevertheless quite interesting.\nThere were pretest Meters. Ferrell,\nKunibie, Hadlich, Arkle and Pollock.\nIn the ibeence ol Dr. Campbell, Mr.\nFerrell waa called upon to act aa chair¬\nman. Keeper Berlg, oi the oreuiatory.\nreported that during the month of\nAugust the following amount of stuff\nbad been consumed in the furnaces:\nGarbage, from the drat district, 81 loads;\n. s c out.08loadajtbTriCTOloada; fourth.\n61 load*: fifth, 82? loads; Second ward\nmarket, 9 loads; Outre maaket.9 load*;\nbom other sources, 1 load; total, 320\nload*. Betide* tbi* garbage there were\nconsumed 333 barrels and bona, 2\nhorses, 9 dogs, 1 sheep, 1 goat and 1,389\nbarrels of night soil,\nThis report having been received and\nfiled, the billa that were awaiting the\noommittee'* consideration were taken\nup and the fun commenced. The firat\ntwo were for inspection service; \nWelty bad one in for seven day* work\nin August at (2 per day, and Harry\nObcw had one for eleven day's work,\nthe two amounting to $30. Tbey were\nendorsed by Health Officer Garrison aa\nbeing correct. There was quite a dis¬\ncussion over these bills, some. of the\nmembers being under the impression\nthat Dr. Garrison bad been ordered to\ndiscontinue work of ttits kind, for the\nreason that the committee'* funds were\ngetting low. No record of any such or¬\nder having been paased could lie found,\nhowever, and the bills were finally or¬\ndered paid, the voleq being accompanied\nwith sighs and grunts of disapproval.\nThe next bill wasoije from Dr, Garrison\nof $0 for postage. The question waa\nasked as to how much he had been al¬\nlowed for postage heretofore, but it\nbeing learned that this was bis first bill\nof this kiud, it was graciously allowed.\nA bill of Louis Serlg's ol WO 50 lor labor\nat the crematory during August, was\napproved.
865e1f5caf0be88b4a0b48f5ac0488cf NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.8753424340437 41.681744 -72.788147 ed the five as a strong contender\nfor tho league title. The team has\nbeen going through weekly practice\nsessions and all the players have the\nfiner points of the game down to\nperfection. Although the team is\nnew to the Dusty league, the play-\ners have long been in the basketball\nlimelight in this city.\nThe R. & E. team will take the\nfloor with almost the same make-u- p\nas it had last year when it threat-\nened the leaders and lost out just\nby a change in luck. The Wash-\nington street crew wants to win the\nfirst game tonight and for that rea-\nson, a quintet of players near the\ntop of form will take the floor. It\nlooks like a real battle.\nThe second game of the evening\nwill show a Stanley Works team\nthat is entii ly rejuvenated as was\nproved in the first game of the year\nlast week, battling the team that Is\nfavored by the majority of the fans\n win the championship this year,\nthe Stanley Rule & Level outfit. The\nStanley Works will give any team\nin the league a tough battle this\nyear. The five is a totally different\none from last year and shows a\ngreat deal of power.\nJimmy Murphy has gathered to-\ngether a team for the Rulers that\neven before the season is hailed as\nthe champion outfit ot the league.\nThe Rulers battled in the first di-\nvision last year, but could not just\nreach the top. Tonight, the team\nwill appear on the floor, a different\ncombination than last season, but\nwith the winning punch present.\nBecause of the rivalry between the\ntwo plants, both of whom arc parts\nof the Stanley Works, this should\nbe a ,real battle.\nDick Dillon will referee tonight.\nLast week, Dick had his first game\nand he probably wasn't as strict as\nhe usually is. Tonight, he will have\nto be on his toes, because two hard\ngames are to be played.
056219a60b5203ea99db9600aa56cfed EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.5273972285643 39.745947 -75.546589 New Your July 13 - Sisters of Mercy\nGenevieve, Josephine and Frances and\nFather A M Fever, u missionary, ar\nrived here from Colon ou the Colombian\nlino eUMii^hip AHinucu The sisters pro­\nceeded ln St. Walburga* convent at Eliza­\nbeth, N. J.. which they left eight years\nago to go to Ecuador and found mission\nschools luuier tho management of Bishop\nSehuumker, who has established missions\nat Jlpijapa, Bahia, Dccaraguez, Koca-\nführte ami Calceta.\nIn the late revolution in Ecuador the\nbishop, Ids priests and the nuns engaged\nin nilssiouary work sulTerixl very great in­\ndignities. Bisters Genevieve, Josephine\nand Frances and Sister Gertrude, a native\nof Eeuadig, who afterward remained at\nBöhla, I «truly escaped from the country\nwith their lives, and (hey greatly fear that\nBishop Schnnmker has boon assassinated.\nSister Genevieve, who is fill years old,\nwas the superior of (lie at Calceta,\nwhich was founded three years ago. Two\nmonths ago the revolution extended to\nCaleela, and frequent skirmishes occurred\nliiere. Bishop Sehuumker, with six priests,\nwas on his way to Quid), and stopped at\nthe eonveul on June 20 to eall on the sis­\nters and take dinner.\nThe revohitlonlsts, who bitterly hated\nthe bishop, determined to capture him,\nand invaded the town with 400 men un­\nder command of a brother of Alford, the\nleader of the revolution. They surrounded\ntho convent and demanded admission,\nwhich was refused. On the next day, June\n31, a second demand was made for the\nbishop's surrender, and threats were made\nto burn the convent if the demand was\nnut complied with. Bishop Sehuumker, in\norder to protect the lives of the nuns, gave\nhimself up to the soldiers and with three\nof his priests was led away.
085dad8773ebb0f2efdbcadc21b5269d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.382191749112 40.063962 -80.720915 This may be considered the heavy\nnight of the'Festival week, not that any\nthing has not gone satisfactorily; but\nthat the music ol the past, and the music\nof the future is in such juxtaposition, as\nto involuntarily demand comparison.\nThe programme throughout is Beethoven\nand Wagner, both before us in, so to\nspeak, their climax. The Ninth Sym¬\nphony and the Gotterdammerung, are\neach considered the most colossal work\nof the respective authors, and though\ntotally different have a slight vein of sim¬\nilarity in treatment. But it is not possible\nto institute a disquisition of the why or\nwherefore here, I shall merely report facts\nas they are. The programme to night\nwas a "Weistersinger Chorus" by Wag¬\nner, sung by the chorus, which was really\nmagnificent; all the parts were sung no¬\nbly, and by far the best hitherto. The\n. lovely overture to "Coriolanus." by Beet¬\nhoven, with the enchanting melody inter¬\nwoven between the upheaval of tones,\nfollowed, and was a fitting prelude to the\n"Gotterdammerung" by Wagner, in which\nthe immense demand made upon the or¬\nchestral resources to produoe the surpris¬\ning effects, perhaps for the first\ntime on many of the audience, who before\ncould not comprehend Wagner. Mad.\nPappenheim electrified the people with\nher broad conception of the role under¬\ntaken, and established herself as an un¬\ndoubted favorite and artist in this\nclass of declamation. This selection was\nreall v immense. The Ninth Symphony, by\nBeethoven followed, and to attempt a\ndescription of thin in detail would not be\npossible short of half a dozen columns.\nIn brief, the orchestra was faultless: the\nquartette, Mad. Pappenheim, Miss Carv,\nMr. Adams and Mr. Remmertz, fully\nsustained their reputation in the different\nroles undertaken, and the chorus, which\nso far had accomplished Herculean\ntasks, surpsssed itself. If any of our\nhome singers ever want a chorus to try\ntheir metal, the last 60 bars of the vocal\npart of the ninth symphony will deter¬\nmine who have soprano, alto, tenor and\nbass voices, and settle an amount of ego\nno other test will. That the festival\nchorus had a full complement of such\nvoioes, the immense success of the ninth\nsymphony makes apparent. To morrow\nwill oe the last day of the festival.
e95279f6068731d3da631f3fb710c953 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.7739725710298 35.780398 -78.639099 If, by the force of strong liquor, a man's\ncares may bo mechanically banished and\nhis conscience lulled asleep awhile; they\nwill soon break loose upon him with greater\nfury. He, who artificially raises his spiriU\nby drinking, will find them sink in propor-\ntion. Then they must be raised again : and\nso on, till he has no spirits to raise. For\nunderstanding, and fortune, and virtue, and\nhealth, all fall before this fell destroyer.\nNor is the pretence of being odious or\nprecise among neighbors, for living temper-\nately, any better than the others. Alas, we\nare not hereafter to stand or fall by the opin-\nions of our neighbors. Besides we may be\nsure of the favorable opinion of tho sober\npart of our acquaintance, by keeping on the\nright side ; the approbation of of whom\nis preferable to that of a thousand drunkards.\nOf nil the kinds of intemperance, modern\ntimes have produced tho most fatal, which\nlike a plague lays waslo both town and coun-\ntry, sweeping the lower part of the people,\nnor these only, by thousands to the grave.\nThe unhappy invention intended, and which\nby its mischievous effects seem to claim Sa-\ntan himself for its author, is the drinking of\nfermented liquors. This is no place for set-\nting forth the destructive effects of this most\nshocking species of debauchery. This it is\nhoped wilhsoon be the subject of legislative\ninquiry; and that the accounts tragical\nenough to melt a heart of rock, which will be\nlaid before that august body, will be the\ncause of producing an effectual remedy for\nthis ruinous national evil.
7a4eea6a2633450e88898573263ba2a8 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.1082191463724 43.798358 -73.087921 Whatever else it requires to become the\n"most enlightened republican and the most\nenlightened christian, exemption from the\nnecessity of toiling with the hands .from\nmorning till night, is indispensable. Jt\nneedj no menial culture to learn la "'wear\nthe yoke of absolute monarchy, and ns ac-\nquaintance with letters, to be a worship-\nper of an idol god. But to discharge the\nhigh and ?overeignlike functions of a re-\npublican citizen.and to worship with prop-\ner enlargement and elevation of 'mind,\nHiifl, who should be' worshipped tn\ntruth,'' as well as ,M in spirit;" requires nn\namount of reading and study for which he\nhas not the leisure, who devotes all or most\nof tho hours of the day to manual labor.\nIf it were not both republican and christian\ninstitutions, that our transmitted to\nnsfif, instead of "being free institutions\nand the religion of the Bible, our legacy\nwere but a bundle of Pagan rites and sub- -\nmission to a desnot we , should need little\nlearning; and I rule thought to perform our\npolitical and religious services. But ours\npre higher blessings and corresponding re\nsponsibilities ; and if we shrink from there\nsponsibilities, Ietus frankly acknowledge\nOurselves unworthy of the blessings. If\ntve complain of, and hesitate at, the cost of\nbeing a republican and christian neonle.\nlet us promptly !ay our necks beneath the\nfoot ofadespot.'and exchange our religion\nof truth for one of superstition and false-\nhood. We1 have the be3t form of civil\ngovernment : but on intelligent people\nonly can sustain it. ; Our religion is from\nHeaven: but-
23ef1c1edf05ca2c8b71bed21cb3c079 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1908.0860655421473 41.741039 -112.161619 John Sharp Williams has been\nchosen snnutor from Mississippi, to\nsucceed D. N. Money, whoso torm ex-\npires March A, 1011 .\nThe navy department has decided to\nsend tho gunboat Paducah, now at Now\nOrleans, to Hnytlcn waters during tho\nrevolutionary troubles.\nTho scnato committee on military\naffairs has agreed upon a favorablo\nropurt on Senator Warren's bill In.\ncreasing tho pay of tho army.\nAt tho minimi meeting of tho Aetna\nIndemnity company at Hartford, Conn.,\nlast week, tho Hclnzo interests wero\nvoted out of tho directorship.\nA motion offered In tho Kansas housq\nof representatives declaring William\nII. Taft tho choice of Kansas for presi-\ndent was unanimously carried.\nFour firemen wore killed nnd fifteen\nInjured, Including Chief Gcorgo Hor- t o-\nby tho falling ot tho wall ot n\nburning building In Baltlmoro.\nRov. John F. Kacstorlng, aged 78,\n retired Luthoran clergyman, was\nmurdered in Cheltenham, a suburb of\nSt. Louis, robbery being tho motlvo.\nCommissioner Balllngcr of tho gen-\neral land ofllco hutt asked congress\nfor n special appropriation of $50,000\nfor surveying homestead entries with-\nin forest reservations.\nFrank J. Constantino, who killed\nMrs. Loulso Gentry in Chicago nnd at-\ntempted suicldo later by throwing him-\nself from a gallery of tho prison, Is\ndead from his injuries.\nFormer United States Senator Geo.\nPcabody Wctmoro was olectod to tho\nUnited States sonato on tho first ballot\ncast In both branches of tho general\nassembly of Rhodo Island.\nLcsllo M. Shaw has roslgncd tho\npresidency of tho Carneglo Trust com-\npany, which ho assumed early last\nMarch on his retirement from tho\ntreasury portfolio at Washington.\nPresldont W. L . Bochemohlo of tho\nsusponded Bank of Elllnwood of Ellin- woo-
2d9e5f094fecf84e809722c4da54ba0f NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.6980874000708 40.735657 -74.172367 nue. Ridge street. Parker street. Highland\navenue. Lake street, front a point about 100\nfeet north of the northerly line of Grafton\navenue to a point about 100 feet south of\nthe southerly line of Grafton avenue; on the\neast side of Do Graw avenue from a point\nloo feet north of the northerly line of Graf-\nton avenue to a point about 100 feet south\nof the southerly line of Grafton avenue; on\nboth aides of Orntoir street and Riverside\navenue from a point about 650 feet north of\nthe northerly line of Grafton avenue to a\npoint about G50 feet south of the southerly\nline of Grafton avenue: on both sides of\nGrove terrace from Irvington boundary line\nto West End avenue, on both sides of West\nEnd avenue and Carolina avenue from about\n200 feel north of the northerly line of Grove\nterrace to TJndaley avenne. including Nos.\n149-151 West* End avenue, on both sides of\nMelrose avenue and Vermont avenue, from\nGrovo terrace southerly nbout 300 feet, on\nboth side* of Isabella avenue and Columbia\navenue from a point about 300 feet north of\nthe northerly line of terrace to the\nboundary line between Newark and Irving-\nton: on both sides of Runyon street, between\nMilford avenue and Hunterdon street; on\nboth sides of Bovlan street, from about 169\nfeet south of the southerly line of South\nOrange avenue to the present terminus about\n279 feet south of the southerly lino of\nAbinger place: on both sides of Clifton ave-\nnue. from Bloomfield avenue to Hallantine\nparkway, on both sides of Aldington avenue\nand Second avenue from a point about 100\nfeet east of the easterly line of Clifton ave-\nnue to a point about 100 feet west of the\nwesterly line of Clifton avenue, and have\nfiled their reports of said assessments for\nbenefits in the office of the clerk of the Cir-\ncuit Court of the County of Essex, and that\nthe Judge of said court has fixed Tuesday,\nthe seventeenth day of September. 1912. at\n10 oclock In the forenoon. In the Circuit\nCourt room st the Court House in the city\nof Newark, as the time and place of hearing\nany objections that may be made to the\nsaid assessments.\nDated September 11. 1012 .
7264cd64d7b6ce769cf89df03ae6ba60 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.28551909406 41.681744 -72.788147 victories over the Detroit Tigers.\nAlthough the Erowns were more\nthan a disappointment to the fans\nlast season, at no time figuring in\nthe fiffht, they are off to a good\nstart in the present campaign with\nthe distinction of being the lirst\nclub to capture a series and record\na strinp of three triumphs. To a\ncertain extent they .have reestablish-\ned confidence, that they will partici-\npate actively in the ensuing cham-\npionship. Manager Ilowley's band\nof youngsters which have replaced\nthe "old order" tripped the Tigers\nin their own lair yesterday by 4 to\n3, coming from behind in the ninth\nto tie the count and then put over\nthe deciding run in the eleventh.\nOf eleven home runs batted out\nin the major leagues yesterday, six\nwere at Philadelphia whero the\nYankees defeated Athletics 8 to\n7. Columbia Lou Gehrig, of the\nhome run firm of Ruth and Gehrig\nrecorded homer No. 1 of the cham-\npionship. Combs, Meusel and Coch-\nrane also connected for the full dis-\ntance while Joo Ilauser went 'era\none better by banging two homers.\nRomme.l was the victim of Geh-\nrig's lengthy swat, the ball crashing\nthrough a second story window of a\nhouse across from the ball park\nJtommel was followed on the mound\nby Jing Johnson and Ossie Orwoll\nwho made his debut in the big\nleagues. iloore, Shealy and Hoyt\nworked in the box for the yanks.\nDespite a pair of home runs\nthumped out by Phil Todd, the Red\nSox bowed before the Senators. 6 to\n4, Washington bunching hits in the\nfourth and fifth innings to score five\ntiroes,
cbcc2b0709e98afecf72a7f966c16529 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.932876680619 35.780398 -78.639099 lhe Fall Term will onen on the 1st Mondav In\nJuly, and close on the 4th Friday in November.\nlioani per month, in town, including room, wash-\ning and fttfcl $1. Near town $6.\nTuition per Session tu the JJale Dtpnrlmemt t\nPreparatory Course $lf; Regular English Course\nyear $12 50; 2nd jrar $14, 3rd or Senoif\nyear $15. Regular Euglub with Classics, 1st, 2d\nand 3d years $15 ; 4 th or Senior year $20. Linear\nDrawing, Penmanship and Vocal Music arc gener-\nal exercises, for which no charge i made.\nTuition per Session in the Female Department:\nPreparatory Curse $19; Reg. Eng. Course tf 3\nyears $12 50. The Reg. Eng. Course, with tb\naddition of Ancient and Modern language, contem-\nplates a period of 4 years.\nExtra Charges. Tuition on Fiano $17; e f\nInstrumei.t $3 ; tuition on Guitar ue of In-\nstrument $2. Sol. Feggio lessons $7 $0. Freneh\nand Latin, each, $5. Penciling and Drawing i .\nCrayon (Monochromatic or Polychromatic) Paintin g\nwater colors, each, $7 50. Painting in Pastil\n$10 ; in Oil $20. Ornanieutal Needle Wuk $5.\nThis newly organized Institution jens under\nthe most favorable auspices. The Trustees bavins\nfor some time desired the establishment in tbi\nplace of a Literary Institution of tho first order,\nfeel confident of success, having with much effort\nfortunately secured cs its Principal the above well\nknown, talented and successful Instructors.\nFraskM!to5. Its location is a pleasant, enter-- J\nprising village, 30 miles north of Raleigh, imme\ndiately on tho Raleigh and Gatton Rail Road, and\neasily accessible from all seetioss. In put of\nmorals, with its entire exemption from usual vil\nlage dissipations, is justly regarded as offering
54f1c17d526a7859161f6fc69508733b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.8863013381533 39.745947 -75.546589 nald In cash for whatever the defend- cut in PFssi'aP1* r,«ht of sa1d Peti* hers of th* class Mrs. J . D. Thomp- mendous and steady stream of enemy\n.»nt* received In dividends, whether Uon;.we Bl8.° BV8r.that lhp vo,° oa8t »on, Jr„ 5lrs. C. B . Lynch, Mrs. F. L. relnforeement* arriving at various\nthose dividends were in the form of on *bn, 8,ocV not held b> defendant* Berry, Mrs. H. B. Thompson, Mrs. A . points back of the. Teutonic lines.\n«ash, stock or bonds. This position Is,-08 <h8ir near relatives or by the era- j. Harper and Mrs. John F. Neary German big field guns are being\nIn my opinion, untenable. Tf the com- P*®J'es who belt stock under the New members are welcome. Besides brought into action. Due to this new\npany is entitled to the benefit of the bonus plan, was not a free and dis- three classes In surgical dressings at strategy the enemy under General | _"\nentire transaction, then what it Is en- expression of opinion by the teaching center there are several Krobatln, of the Austrian armies, suc-\nttiled to receive Is what the defendants stockholders as to what was for the other classes In the city. Any one ceeded In achieving some progress to-\nhave held or now hold under the co»i- be8t Interests of the company, but vvishing to Join the evening class In ' daF |n the critical corner of the Plave I\n*tructlve trust which ha* arisen In "'*» a vole dominated and controlled pom* nursing and Orst aid and the river line near Quero.\nfavor of the company. 1 am unable to by the defendants in said bill for afternoon class In dietetics can do so The Italian lines were strained back\ndistinguish between the rights of the heir own Interest as against the In- py Pnrojnng at the teaching center slightly here by the overwhelming\ncompany to the stock of the E. I . du- erests of the company through a ser- No. 0I3 Drtaware avenue.
11dd07c3c00489bed0cd1176894f07cf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.4506848997971 39.745947 -75.546589 burg that pleutre again was called\nup by my recollection, and from that\nlime on till Ihe end of the Civil War\nI found myself after every one of the\nsuccessive achievements of General\nGrant recalling him as he looked In\nthose first days of the war at Galena.”\n"It was in 1897 that the late Gen­\neral A. L . Chetlaln, of Chicago, made\nthis statement to me. Even as he\nspoke I could see, as 1 thought, a\nsort of dreamy. Introspective look In\nhis eyes, exactly as though he was\nagain calling up the figure of the ob­\nscure leather merchant's clerk in Ga­\nlena at. the lime the war broke out.\n"General Chetlaln was elected cap­\ntain of the Galena company, which\nwas first to respond in that section of\nIllinois lo President Lincoln's call\nfor 75,000 volunteers. With the com­\npany, Captain Grant, rather ex-Cap-\ntaln Grant—for he had resigned from\nthe United States army some years\ncai ller—was much occupied.\n"We should have elected Captain\nGrant onr own captain," continued\nGeneral Chetlaln, "if had been\nwilling to accept our offer. He told\nme privately that he thought he was\nqua If lied for a higher office than that\nof captain. He said to me, however,\nthat he would undertake to drill our\ncompany and would give several\nhours to the work of drillmaster. 1\nremember very well when he ap­\npeared in one of the fields of the\nsuburbs of Galena marching there\nwith our company to give It the first\ninstruction in company drill. My at­\ntention was fixed upon a peculiar\novercoat which Captain Grant wore.\nIt was early in April and the weather\nas I remember, was unusually cool\nfor that season of the year. My men\ndid not wear overcoats. 1 suppose\nthey thought that the drill would be\nsufficient to keep them warm.\n"But this short, ratehr thick-set\nman, well-bearded, stood out in front\nof the company with a curious long-\ntailed army overcoat protecting him\nfrom the chill winds. I remember\nperfectly well observing that the\nwind blew the tails of his coat around\nliis legs.
15966aad51023863a653193b5b519d95 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.1767122970573 40.832421 -115.763123 Din Lewis has written a ureal many\ngood tilings about health and how to se¬\ncure it. The following contains a few of\nhis blunt hints, that will he valuable to\nmany mothers who have never given the\nsubject any thought:\nThe habv's night-gown should he white\nllannel. The red lbinnel many mothers\nfancy may poison its skin. The\nold time red dyes were well enough, hut\nthe present reds «rc all poisonou j, mid\nshould not he worn next theskin l>y either\nold or young. They are particularly mis¬\nchievous to the delicate skin of our little\npeople. All of the modertt.dyes are pui-\nsonous. If there are any exceptions, I\nhave not been able to learn the fact, al¬\nthough I have taken pains to question\nthose who are engaged in the dyeing busi¬\nness. The little ones should have white\nllannel next their skins day and night. It\nis iiiu nniv proper materials to place next\ntlicir skint, am), truth, to place next\nliu; skins of any liuinan 1 icing day or\nnight, no matter in what climate or at\nwhat season of the year.\nPerhaps I ought to mlil that the su¬\nperiority ol'llanncl is greater during the\nsummer months than during th<' winter.\nIn the hottest weather a single (hickim*\nof ilsiiinel for a night-gown will give tho\nbaby abundant protection, whereas, if it\nwears cotton next the skin, it is soon wet\nwith perspiration, ami then there must lie\ntwo or three more thicknesses over it to\nf'.rnish tho protection against a lirce/.c,\nwhich single thickness of tlannel next\nthe skin could afford. Our little people\nshould have their night dresses made with\ndrawers closed at the bottom. With this\ndress, and lying upon a fresh straw pil¬\nlow, with the same for the little head, and\nsleeping in a well ventilated room, the\nsmall shaver will have a chance, even in\nthe hottest season, not only to sleep
782c8039244c97c6eee799f8529d5406 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.7904109271942 31.960991 -90.983994 On or about the 13th day of Dec. 1841, I was\ntaken with a violent pain in thenide near the\nLiver, which continued for about five days,and\nwaa followed by the breaking of an ulcer, or\nsomething inwardly, which relieved the p&in a\nlittle, but caused mo to throw up a great quan­\ntity of offensive matter and also much blood.—\nBeing greatly alarmed at this, I applied to a\nphysician, but he said he thought he could do\nbut little for me except give me some Mercury\nPills, which I refused to take, feeling satisfied\nthat they eould do me no good; many other rem­\nedies were then procured by my wife and friends,\nand none did me any good, and the discharge\nof blood and corruption still continued every\nfew days, and at last became so offensive I\ncould scarcely breathe. I was also with\na violent cough, which at times caused me to\nraise much more blood than l had done before,\nand my disease continued in this way, atill\ngrowing worse until February, when all hope of\nmy recovery was given up, and my friends all\nthought I kiakM Aia ur!»h ■ galloping CONSUMP­\nTION. At this moment, when my life was ap-\nlarently drawing near to a close, I beard of Dr.\nWistara Balsam of Wild Cherry, and got a\nbottle, which relieved me immediately, and by\nthe use of only three bottles of this medicine,\nall my paius were removed, my cough and spit­\nting of blood and corruption entirely stopped,\nand in a few weeks my health was so far res­\ntored as to enable me to work at my trade,\n(which is a Carpenter) and up to this time I have\nenjoyed good health.
7f9efb757c228580f9b5154b4d2d1129 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1860.3346994219287 35.780398 -78.639099 regard to the wines producing dmerent ef-\nfects as represented in the Bible. This led\nme to investigate the whole subject anew, aa\nthoroughly as time and means have allowed.\nPart of the result of that investigation ap-\npears in the former Tracts, and more will\nappear in this (anderhaps another) which\nthink wili at least indicate that I have not\ncome to the present noint. in a hurried or\neven careless manner. The sources from\nwhich the views in this Tract have been de-\nrived, will, I hope, satisfy the reader that\nmy authorities are at least reliable, and may\nbe received as good.\nlhat the use of the purest termentea\nwines have been anything else than salotary,\nso iar as the condition ot society is concern-\ned in the countries manufacturing them, is a\nfact which will be clearly shown in these\nsheets. To begin, then, this investigation,\nour attention is directed to the condition,\n1. Of the Jewish people.\nThe Jews while thev used only the unfer- -\nmented juice of the grape, such as I have\nshown in Tract No. 2, continued to be a so--\nber, temperate and pTosperous nation, inis\nstate of things prev&TlSd almost invariably\nfrom time of Moses to the latter part of\nthe reign of David and the former part of Sol-\nomon's reign. Soon after this, we find marks\nof divergence from this course to an increas\ned use of intoxicating wine, as is shown in\nthe histories of those times as in the 1st and\n2d Kings, and Chronicles, Esther, and Pro\nverbs. AVhen we come down to the times ot\nIsaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel, Hosea and others,\nthe scene widens, and we see Israel trodden\ndown and peeled, because of their drunken-\nness and other crimes growing out of their\ndissipated habits resultant from the free use\nof fermented wine.\nThis state of things was in the davs of\nIsaiah, of a most alarming character. He\nviewed the condition of the Jewish church\nand people, as being exceedingly disastrous,\nand this was brought about by their indul-\ngence in the use of fermented wine. Proph- -\nets, Priests and the People, all were alike in\nvoiveu m mis criminal conduct So ram-\npant had Israel become, in the use of fer-\nmented wine that the Prophet Micah assures\nus that they delighted tn hour Anv nna\nprophesy of 44 wine and strong drink," and\ndeclared that suehftft,
0c07150be4dda0ed52bb6d43116acc22 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.0726027080163 37.561813 -75.84108 Albert Tole. This witness testified\nthat he was standing at the front win-\ndow in his own house, nearly oppo-\nsite Davidson's, in Buford, on the\nmorning of Dec. 14th, when he saw\nBenj. Vance come down the street go-\ning west, with a cane in his hand\nlie approached within about a roil of\nDavidson's door, where Mr. Merce\nFry was standing, shaking his cane\ntowards Fry as if he w;ts anirry and,\nmotioning as if he wanted Fry to get\nout of the way.. He then walked up\ntowards Davidson's door, where David-\nson was standing in the open door-\nway, and struck at Davidson with his\ncane. Davidson dodged the blow and\njumped back into the house; Vance\nmade a second effort to strike David\nson, when Davidson shut the door.\nVance then went a few steps towards\nLewis Vance's drug store, adjoining\nDavidson's house on the west, arid\nstood there some 3 or 5 minutes talk-\ning with some men. then turned and\nstarted back in the direction of his\nhome, Frye walking with him,\nand Mr. Daniel White a short distance\nbehind, going in the same direction.\nThis was on the soulh side of the\nstreet, witness's house being on the\nnorth side, nearly opposite Davidson s,\nbut a short distance further east. They\ncame up to the corner of Mr. Collins'\nsaddler's shop, the next building east\nof Davidson's, when they were called\nto by White, and stopped for a mo-\nment, until White came up to them.\nAs they were all three standing nearly\ntogether, Davidson's kitchen tloor was\nopened wide and witness saw Davidson\ncome into the door with a gun in his\nhand, the muzzle pointing downward.\nAs he did so, Vance appeared to dis-\ncover Davidson, and Davidson raised\nhis gun to an aim, pointing in the di-\nrection of Vance. Vance stepped a\nlittle to one side, picked up a stone\nor some other missile, stepped back to\nthe corner of the saddler's shop and\nthrew at Davidson. The stone struck\ncherry tree in the lot between Vance\nand Davidson.
12320e87063bbd968706e741649da347 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.554794488838 40.735657 -74.172367 Thirteen (18) markers;\nDELANCEY STREET SEWER:\nNine hundred and ten (910) feet of eight\n(8) inch vitrified sule glazed pipe sewer (deep\nand wide sockets, three (3) foot lengths);\nTwelve hundred (1,200) feet of six (6) Inch\nhouse conectlons;\nFive (6) manholes with iron ^ heads and\nbuckets complete;\nSixty-six (66) markers.\nBidders are not to state any price for ma-\nterials and work for which there Is a fixad\namount provided for In the specifications.\nEach proposal must be enclosed in a sealed\nenvelope, properly Indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Hoard or Street and Water Com-\nmissioners of the city of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices in writing os\nwell as In figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposals that,\nshould the above work be awarded to them,\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following number of\nconsecutive working days:\nQuitman alley sewer, six (6) days;\n# Hecker street sewer, twelve (12) days;\nSouth street sewer, ten (10) days;\nDelancey street sewer, thirty t30) days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work\n be examined at the office of the Chief\nEngineer of the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners at the City Hall, Said pro-\nposals to be accompanied by the consent. In\nwriting, of two sureties, or u surety company\nqualified to do business In Nev\\ Jersey, who\nshall, at the time of putting In such proposals,\nqualify as to their responsibility In the amount\nof such proposal, and bind themselves thut. If\nthe contract be awarded to the person or per-\nsons making the proposal, they will, upon its\nbeing so awarded, become his or their sureties\nfor the faithful performance of said woik;\nand that If the person or peruona omit or\nrefuse to execute such contract they will pay\nto the city of Newark any difference betw.ei\nthe sums to which he or they would have\nbeen entitled upon completion of the con-\ntract and that which the city of Newark may\nbe obliged to pay the person or persons by\nwhom such contract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commis-\nsioners of the city of Newark reserve to\nthemselves the right* to accept or reject any\nor all proposnls for the above work,
1bc5a71e41708fa53df9064f08e65efc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0122950503442 40.063962 -80.720915 United Slutetof America, District of !/ntulana:\nPersonally appeared before mo, ut my w\nofllcc, iallie city of New Orleans, on (lie pi\n4th day ol January, 1873, P. Schumacher, aj\nHenry H. Stevens, Henry It. Kearson and bi\nJ. I'. Wilson, who, being duly sworn, say a\nthat they are citizens of the United States, d»\nand that they have received reliable in- ti<\nformation which they verily believe, and ci:\ntherefore charge the following persons, co\nto-wit: Ilenry C. Wannouth, 1'. E. 8. as\nPlnchback, Hugh .1. Campbell, A. B. re\nHarris, A. E. Barber, Mortimer Carr, E. Ci\n\\V. Dewees, Charles W. Kinggold, Peter\nHarper, W. B. Barret, L. W. Saver, John pi\nGartskauf, .1. B. Stamps, James T.\nnouston, 11. C!. Stanton, Dennis ca\nBrown, J. N. Bowati, Paulln Franklin, D. pf\nC. Cockell, li. Blunt, Emerson Beutlcy, a\nHarry Mahoney, Walter It. Whiyland, ta\nJ. Massicot, A. fc>. Badger, t'apt. T. 7. ta\nKnigan ami C'apt. B. Edgeworlli.that B:\nthey have, in the cily of New Orleans, on 8<\ntlio first, second and third days ol Jan- a\nuary, 1872, made an uniawlul combina- II\nlion and conspiracy, in the Slate of Lou- vs\nisiana, of a secret character, lor the pur- th\npose ol obstructing and hindering the sa\nexecution of the laws thereof, and also s\nthose of the United States, the purpose of\nsaid conspiracy being to deprive tlie\nKepresentatlves ol the General Assembly 'o\nof the State ol Louisiana both in the indi- S<\nvidual and representative character of re\ntheir rights, privileges and immunities its a"\nsuch under the laws and Constitution wi\nbotli of the Stale ol Louisiana ami of the Pi\nUnited States; that the constituted au- T1\ntboritics of said Slale are unable in part, tn\n»
7c36cd38e0393359868aa5f12caef5d2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.1794520230847 41.681744 -72.788147 Jeer Hart and Paonessa\nThe arrival of the nol\nhall and the stopping of the picture\nsurrea up outer feelings among the\nmen and women who had' purchased\ntickets to see the performance and\nbefore some of them left the hall,\nthey let it be known in no uncertain\nterms that they had little admiration\nfor Chief Hart or Mayor A. M . Pao\nnessa, both of whom were the ob-\njects of hoots and jeers.\nChief Hart said this mnrnlnir tw\nhe prevented the picture from being\n.jiuwu oecause tne promoters had\nreceived no permit. He added, how-\never, that even if they had applied\nfor a permit, it would not have been\ngranted. Motion pictures, plays or\nanything of a like nature that are\nagainst any race, creed or sect will\nnot be allowed In thin city, the chief\nsaid, and especially 'anything the\nform- of Ku Klux Klan propaganda.\nThe results of such performances\nhave a bad effect on the city and\nsimply stir up prejudice and 111 feel-\ning, according to the chief.\nNo Hearing Asked, Hart Says\nAttorney Arthur W. Upson, who\nwas called by the promoters of the\nmeeting to advise them as to the\nproper proceduce to take, conferred\nwith Chief Hart and he is reported\nto have told the neonle en.thnrii in\nthe hall that Chief Hart refused to\ngive him a hearing on the matter.\nThe chief said this morning that At-\ntorney Upson at no time had asked\nfor a hearing. Regarding the state-\nment made by Upson the chief had\nadmitted failing to commit the\nprosecuting attorney, Chief Hart\nsaid: "I didn't admit It. I told him\nI had consulted no one as there was\nno need of it."
5406785d20360f681ec0403098b54151 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.3931506532217 37.561813 -75.84108 We lmve neglected to notico heretofore\nsome of the advantages to tho traveling\npubllo, which will result from the extvn.\nslon of the M. A C. railroad, over tho now\nrouto, recently finished from I.ovc1and to\nCincinnati. One of tho most Important Is\ntho far greater convenience of the new Bo -po- t ,\nwhich Is but ft few aqnarrs from the\nbusiness centre of tho city, thus saving\ntravelers considoroblo tlmo, expense and\nfatigue, In getting from the curs to tho Ho-\ntels and business houses. Travelers who\nwish to go further West, find the cars of\ntho Indianapolis A Cincinnati road In the\nsamo Depot, or If they prefer tho Hamilton\nA Dayton ronto, or tho Ohio A Mississippi,\nthey can lo transferred to either road with\nthe greatest facility. Whichever road they\ntoko they aro at no expense, troublo or loss\nof timo In transferring bapgage, which was\na great source of annoyance under tho old\n of entering tho city at tho\nLittlo Miami depot, on tho w( side. Tht\nincreased facilities to shtppors of freight are\nrIbo worthy of notico.\nSince tho new rtrrnngement by which the\nM. A C. It. R. has secured theso close con\nnectloiiH with tho West and Northwest,\ntravelers can procure throuih tickr.i at the\nHillsboro Depot for all the principal points\nIn Indiana, Illinois, "Iowa, Kansas, Mis-\nsouri, Ac, ot as low rates as they can bo\npurchasedln Cincinnati.'\nThe enrtern connection of the road with\ntho llaltimoro A Ohio at Parkersburg, Is\nnow made vim enure regularity, ana\ntravolers to any of tho F.nstcrn cities can\nfind no plcasantcr, safer or shorter routo\nthan through the lieantifiil and picturesque\nRcenory of Virginia and Maryland, which\nlies along tho B. A O. It. R. We refer our\nreaders to tho advertisement of this road In\nanother column, In which Its advantages\nand connections are mora fully set forth.
1663076af983c3340812001ff1c8952f THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1910.6671232559615 40.114955 -111.654923 that WP of this sonerntlnn hold thn\nland In part for thu nnxt generation and\nriot prehrtlvuly for our own Hellish onjoy\nment Just nn tho farmer IIs n Rood cltl\ngen If ho Ileaves his farm Improved andl not\nUnpaired for his children andl a bad cltl\ntell If ho skins tho land In his own pelflsli\nInterest FO thn Nation behaves well If It\ntreats thn natural resources ns nsnpts\nwill < h It must turn over to the noM KUII\nration Incrnaped nnd not Impaired In\nvalue andl behaves badly If It leaves tho\nland poorer to thoso who como after us\nIn the second plire the natural re\nlonrerB Inuit be developed promptly\ncompletely and In orderly fashion It Is\nnot conservation to leave the natural re\nsources undeveloped Development Is an\niMdlsppnsablo part of the conservation\nplan The forests the mines tho water\npowers nnd tho land Itself must nit bo\nput uso Those who assert that con\nicrvatlon proposes to tie them up deprlv-\nnfr this generation of their benefits In\n9rdcr to hand them on untouched to time\nnext mlBs the whole point of tile ron\nlervntlon Iden Conservation doen not\naiean dcprlvlnB tho men of today of their\nnatural rights In the natural resources of\ntho land All It means Is that we of this\nfeneratlon shall so Ifle our rlfihls as tint\nto deprive those who Come after us of\ntheir natural rights In their turn\nIn the third place KO far as possible\nIhcse resources must be kept for tho\nwhole people and not handedl over for\ntxploltntlon to sIngle Individual Wo do\nsot Intend to dlsrouniRp Individual enter\narise by unwisely diminishing time reward\ntor that enterprise On the contrary wo\nlellcve that the men of exceptional nblll\nties should Imvn exceptional I rewards up-\no tx point wliorntlio reward becomes dis-\nproportionate
18bd8822764befb9ce329aa8e0dd4e7c THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1896.7499999683769 46.601557 -120.510842 A certain number of countries adhere\nto the silver standard. Among these are\nRussia, Argentine, Mexico, India and\nChina. In these countries there has been\nno change in values since 1873, when sil-\nver began to decline, An ounce of silver\nwill buy therein tbe same quantity of\nwheat or cotton or other products or la-\nbor ss it bought twenty-five years ago,\nthough the gold value of the silver ounce\nhas declined from $1.29 to 67 cents. But\nproducers in the silver standard countries\n\\u25a0ell their products in England and have\nto accept half the money lor them wbich\nthey did get twenty-five years ago, and\nthe United states, which ha* to meet\nthem in the English market, ha* to ac-\ncept tbe same reduction. Thus the ef-\nfects of the depreciation ofsilver as com-\npared with gold have already been rea-\nlized by America- producers, and there\nhno further loss to come. Americans\nhave not only to compete with countries\nin which cheap lalior has always been\nthe rule, but also with countries in wbich\n monetary silver standard has steadily\nbeen declining in gold value.\nTbe republicans argne that we should\nwait for the assent of Great Britain,\nFrance and Germany before we under-\ntake to restore silver tn its proper place.\nBut these three nations have in absolute\nownership one-half of the gold now pos-\nsessed by the world, and of the otber half\nthey have loaned the bulk to nations\nweaker financially, returnable in gold or\nits equivalent. Why should we expect\nthem to assist us in depreciating the val-\nue of a commodity of which they hold s\nsubstantial monopoly ? The lower silver\nfails relatively with gold the larger their\nprofit* and the more the debtor nations\nwillhave to pay for the use of money,\nthere might be some sense in inviting co-\noperation from Russia or Austria or Italy,\nwhich have enormons quantities of un-\ncovered paper afloat wbich tbey have not\ngold enough to redeem; but it ia not to\nthem that Ibe republicans propose to ap-\npeal. Russia has 1450,000,000 of uncov-\nered paper, Italy
041effd3734bf771047c97f75bb0578d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1894.3575342148656 41.004121 -76.453816 the Lreneral push and scramble for\nmoney making that particularly char-\nacterizes corporate wealth. And jet\nthe writer has often wondered at it\nWondered that some determined\neffort has not been made to have as\nfaithful representation in our halls of\nlegislation as our protected manu-\nfacturing industries have right alpng\nand very carefully guarded. We have\noften wondered that, for the sake of\nhome and fireside (long since mort-\ngaged beyond redemption in many\ncases) something has not been done\nby the farmers except to toil and\nsweat and be forever hoodwinked by\nmiddle men and deceitful politicians,\nIf the farmer presumes to go to town\nanil sell ins own products he is very\napt to be obliged to pay toll at some\ngate in trie hands of a corporation\nmat is granted the exclusive pnvt\nlege to take a little care of the hiiih\nway and tax everybody toll that travels\nit. lie next hnds that Inch protect\nion in the interest of a few smart men\nowning a market house in stares\nhim in the fate, requiring him to take\nout u high license or quit selling, ex\ncept to them, and at their rates. In\nstead ot permitting middle men to\ndictate to the farmer, w e should like\nto see lum able himself to reap what\nprofit can be properly gained on his\nproducts, and when a huckster, for\ninstance, says I will pay but 12 cts,\na dozen for egs next week, and 20\ncts. for vour butter, I hope the Lord\nwill in someway yet enable the farmer\nto tell that huckster he need not call\nfor his products at any such rates, as\nthey will never enable him to pay\ncurrent taxes, much less raise a moit\ngage one half the value of the farm\nand which is quite likelv to foreclose\nupon him at any time. We know the\nfarmer is not entirely free from blame\nfor hu present utter helplessness.\nHe should realize that he is in the\ncare of those who live by their wits,\nas they call it.
47d898f1492a12185d1dd8a6477816fd NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.099726744333 41.681744 -72.788147 ular force, and It is significant that\nthe detail on which hs worked just\nbefore becoming a regular officer\nwas the same as that to which ho\nwas assigned Just prior to his appli-\ncation for retirement. In the "old\ndays," however, th supernumerary\npoliceman at the theater was on du-\nty in the evening only, whereas the\npresent practice Is to police the thea-\nters afternoons and evenings.\nTo Officer Johnson is given much\nof the credit for starting the Chil-\ndren's Home, of which Rev, Dr. J . E.\nKlingberg is founder and superin-\ntendent, for it was "Charley" who\ncalled Dr. Kltngberg's attention to\nneedy cases among children of a poor\nfamily, and in providing shelter for\nthem, the clergyman actually began\nbis great work lor homeless chil-\ndren. None among the large crowd\nin attendance at the laying of the\ncornerstone of the present orphan-\nage building on Rackliffe Heights a\n years ago was prouder and hap-\npier than Officer Johnson.\nOfficer Michael Meehan was trans,\nferred to the Veterans' Reserve forcn\na few weeks ago, being tho first of-\nficer to apply. In the event that the\nboard of police commissioners ap-\npoints successors to Officer Meehan\nand Officer Johnson at the meeting\ntomorrow night, (he selection will be\nmade from Supernumerary Officers\nCyrus Schoonmaker, William Sulli-\nvan, Walter Wagner and John Riley.\nOfficer James Rappanottl, who has\nbeen in the department long enough\nto be eligible and is also within the\nage limit, is disqualified at this time\nbecause of illness.\nPolicemen on the veterans' reserve\nforce draw half pay, which in Officer\nJohnson's case Is $21 a week i while\nthey remain on the force, with the\nprovision that they may be returned\nto active duty at full pay if they be-\ncome able to .fill places on the regu-\nlar force.
0ce8e934f53ef725b1727ce4b050f37e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.9330600776664 40.063962 -80.720915 \\ Bcliel in u Futnrc KtUlenri\n. \\ece»«iurj to Malvutiou.\nAt Plymouth Church on Sunday Mr\nikecher discoursed on the "Immortalit;\n<>f tho Soul." Wo clip the followini\nrketch of bu remark* from the World\nMr. Beecher - . aid that the contrast bo\niween the Old and the New Testament\nwin nowhere no extraordinary a* in th«\ndoctrine cf a future. As a working forci\nimmortality unknown in the teach\niog< of the Oid Testament, while in th<\nNew it *n the ctief working force. I\na;u» not to l>e said that there were no in\ntimations in tha Old Testament of future\nreward and punishment, but it might U\n-aid that whatever of trust existed, ex\ni#teJ in a very limited degree, and waj\nnever Incorporated into the form o:\ndiviiie instruction nor made the bash\n. .f motive, and the saints of thai\nday were not consoled apparent!)\ni»y ho]>e of immortality. Men wert\ndeterred from evil not by the fear of j>en\nally hereafter, and were inspired to faith\ncourage and hope by no brilliant pictun\nof a future world. When wc take tin\nwritings of C'hriitian men nn this anlv\nject, we utippoMd tlifit they hail ihe gol\nilen seed ol the sanctuary in their hand?\nandcouid tell U4 everything, but l'au\ndid not know so much a-* thin, and he telb\nu$ that he did not, and John .<ar«, "We\nare the sons of (!«*!," but what being now\nof God mean?, that doth not appear, am:\nhe i«vb that he doe< not know, and *1\nthew pictures, addressed to the imagina*\ntion of men, would not beai the touch ol\nreason or of fact, and Paul says thai\nwhen wo come into the other life wt\nshall put away all the concept!ow of God\nwhich we have formed on earth. In
234117fc72f36c7ab608d199fd1d3439 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.43698626966 40.735657 -74.172367 Be it ordained by the Mayor and Common\nCouncil of the City of Newark;\nSection 1. That any person or persona. Arm or\ncorporation who shall propose to engage in the\nCity of Newark In the business of making or\ngiving advancements or loans of money or\nother things of value and of taking or receiving\nas collateral security therefor pledges of per-\nsonal property, chattel mortgages or assign-\nments of salary or wages or power of attorney\nauthorizing the execution of such assignment\nof salary or wages, may file with the City Clerk\nof the city an application in writing to the\nCommon Council for a license to do such busi-\nness in the City of Newark. Such application\nshall set forth the name or names of the person\nor persons, firm or corporation applying for such\nlicense, the place where the business is “to be\nconducted, and if the business Is to be con-\nducted under a Arm or business name or desig-\nnation such name or designation shall also be\nset forth In full In said application.\nEvery such application shall be accompanied\nby a certified upon a Newark Bank or\nTrust Company, to the order of the City Clerk\nof the City of Newark, for flve hundred dollars,\nI the amount of the license fee as hereinafter\nAxed. If the license Is refused, tho check shall\nbe forthwith returned to the applicant or appli-\ncants. The Common Council shall duly consider\nsuch application and grant or refuse the license\nby resolution.\nSection 2. Upon such license being granted\nthe City Clerk shall Issue to the applicant or ap-\nplicants therefor a license under the seal of the\ncity, which license shall specify the name ot\nnames of the person, persons. Arm or corpora-\ntion to whom the earners issued, and the Arm.\nor business name or designation, if any, the\nplace where the business is to be carried on,\nand the time when the license expires, and\nshall be signed by the Mayor and countersigned\nby the City Clerk. The City Clerk shall keep •\nrecord of all licenses Issued under the provision!\nof this ordinance. All licenses Issued tinder this\nordinance shall be for one year from tho date ol\nissue and no more.
3baf4d3ad7084eba3337bec2a87f5b54 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.580601061273 39.745947 -75.546589 The Philadelphia police were given a\nlessen on how to capture pickpockets yes.\nterday. Two Wilmington women showed\nthem the trick. They were Mrs. Jane\nBrown, wife of James Brown, of N«.\nfi»7 West Fourth street, and Mrs. Ann«\nKapp, her (laughter, who lives at No. 738\nWest Fourth street.\nThe women had gone to Philadelphia la\nhave Mrs, Happ's eyes tested by an oculist\nwho has been attending her, and while\nstanding looking In a store window at\nNinth and Market streets, Mrs. Brown\nwas relieved of her purse containing $9.\nQuick as a flash alio grabbed a young\nman, who had been standing near her\nand held on to him until the police ar-\nrived to lake him Into custody. All this\ntime the prisoner maintained his Inno­\ncence and wanted to bo searched.\nAt a hearing before Magistrate Scott la\nPhiladelphia yesterday afternoon the pris­\noner gave his name as Louis Bressler, but\nthe magistrate, looking at a police record\nand two photograph*, him If h« wa#\nnot known by the name of Leo Bush and\nIt« admitted he was. He was held In (600\nball for court.\nThe detectives stated later that the cep«\nture was a good one and that they had\nbeen working for some time to land the\nprisoner and his pal.\nMrs. Brown's Statement.\nA reporter for THE EVENING JOUR­\nNAL called at Mrs. Brown's home to-day\nand her story of the theft follows:\n" Wo were standing looking In a store\nwindow when a young man cams up and\nstood close to us. He then walked be­\ntween us and the window and I thought\nat the time that hls actions were strenget\nHe walked right around me and when\nhe started away, I looked down and found\nmy handbag open and purse gone.\n"The'young man had walked up to an.\nother man close by when 1 grabbed him.\nMy daughter saw him drop a handker-\n) chief which was In the handbag with
392c30d941a6ba199fbb51ba215e0d7c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.648907072202 58.275556 -134.3925 KKSTdUATION TO ENTKV OK\nLANDS IN NATIONAL FOREST\nNotion Is hereby given tbHt ttic lauds\ndescribed below embraoiiig 223.31 acres,\nwithin tlit- Tongas* National Forest,\nAlaska, will be subject to settlement\nand entry under the provision- of the\nhomestead law* of the United State*\nand the act of Juno 11, 1900 (31 Stat.,\n23:1), at tbe United States land otHco nt\nJuneau, Alaska, on September 30, 101G.\nAny settler who win actually und In\ngood faith claiming any of »aid land*\nfor ntf rirulturikl purposes prior to Jan¬\nuary 1, 190G, and bat not abandoned\naaiue, bas n preference riubt to make h\nhome-toad entry for tbe lands actually\noccupied. Said land .« were tinted upoll\ntbe applications Of tbo person* men\ntloned below, who bare a preference\nright subject to tbe prior tight of any\nsuch settler, prori led ?ettleror\napplicant is qualified to make home¬\nstead entry und tbe preference right i«\nexercised prior to September 30, 191G,\non which date the lauds will be subject\nto settlement and entry by any quail\ntied person. A tract of 20.12 acre*, on\nAdmiralty Island at tbe mouth of\nWheeler Creek, described ax follows:\nBeginning at Cftrtier No. 1, identical\nwith Forest Service Monument, con*\nsitting of a post set on the t>each above\nhigh tide al the edge of tbe salt gra*«,\nmarked F. S. M . II ./ 1, whence a spruce\n15 Inches in diameter bears S 10 deg.\nF.285oh* , tbe rock point nt the ea»t\nend of tbe core bears North. Point\nMarsden bears S71d**g. \\V; extending\nthence by meander along beach N 19\n.tw, 30 nto> E 1252 chs., N 71 d«r. B\n1.33 oh-
49c360ff3d851b2d8e269061846beed9 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2753424340435 44.939157 -123.033121 79:1,2118 pounds of sugar, or 186 pounds for each person.\nThis cost us about $1,750,000,000. This is about $800,000,- 0 0- 0\nmore than it would have cost us had it not been for\nthe war. The United States uses yearly about 350,000,000\nbushels of potatoes, the average price of which is about\nCO cents a bushel. Just now they are selling at four times\nthat, and for the year have averaged far above half\nthat increased' price, so we have paid for our spuds some\n$:)00,000,000 more than we would have done had there\nbeen no war. Our bill for meats, far the heaviest of any\none article of food on American tables, has much more\nthan doubled and the increase in its total is not less than\na billion dollars, and is probably far more than that. This\nmakes our increased expense for living, on those four\narticles alone, flour, sugar, potatoes and meats $2,500 ,000 ,- 00 0- .\nAdd to these the increased cost on the innumerable\nother articles of food, and to these still, the increased cost\nof our clothing, shoes and luxuries, and $5,000,000,000\n be a moderate estimate of what the United States\nis paying as. its share of the war burden. The amount\nproposed to be raised for the first year of the war with\nGermany into which we have just entered is just equal to\nthe expense that has been forced upon us by war condi-\ntions. As a matter of economy, so far as the cost of the\nwar in money is concerned, we cannot make a better in-\nvestment. If our entering the war will shorten its dura-\ntion, or put an end to it within the next year, we will have\nput our money to good use. For on top of what it has\ncost us we should not overlook the fact that so long as\nPrussian militarism is allowed to exist these same condi-\ntions are liable to be thrust on us as well as the -bala nc-\nof the world at any time and without provocation. We\nare investing our money to obtain a guaranty of peace for\nall time, and if this object can be obtained no price we\nmay have to pay will be too great.
6bd4bf6e79c49090968f16081aa27c5e THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.7062841213824 38.729625 -120.798546 There is a large class of persons among\nus, and strange, indeed, which includes a\nconsiderable portion of what are called\nreligious people, who believe that politics\nis a mere trade, and to be successful at it,\nit is necessary to be insincere and dishon-\nest. This is a great mistake, at all events,\nns regards Democratic politicians. The\nold adage that “honesty is tile best policy,\nis always true, and more true in regard to\npolitics than anything else. A man may\noverreach and outwit others in ordinary\ntransactions of life—sometimes without\ndetection and exposure for many years,\nbut a politician, whom every one is watch-\ning, and where it is the interest of every-\nbody to understand him, has but a “ poor\ntime" of it if he attempts to cheat the\npeople. It is true ho may make himself\nuseful, perhaps neeessary, to advance the\ninterests of a clhpic or faction, and the\n haring possession of the party or-\nganism, it may be some time, perhaps,\nbefore the strong hand of the people seizes\nthe unlucky wight and deals out the ap-\npropriate punishment\nHut it comes, sure as fate, and general-\nly much sooner than detection of trickery\nin the ordinary affairs of life. Just now,\nthis class of “ smart politicians” arc plen-\nty ns blackberries.and it is really amusing\nto witness their self-delusion in regard to\nthe supposed stupidity of every body but\nthemselves. They have any number of\nbright ideas, of course, but the brightest\nof nil bright things is to he “ in favor of\nBreckinridge" but support Douglas!\nWith pompous solemnity, they declare\nthat their views accord with those of Mr.\nBreckinridge, and they are not. nor ever\nwere favorable to those held by Mr. Doug-\nlas, but they feel it their duty, under all\nthe circumstances, to support the latter\ngentleman.
330036609c202ff2dcda6acaeccb9dbb THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1872.8319671814916 37.561813 -75.84108 The elections yesterday have resulted in\na sweeping Kcpublioan victory; a victory\nthai: snttlRs the Presidential contest and\nproves beyond doubt that the attempt to\nhand over the Federal Government to\nnew party composed of Democrats and dis\nsatisfied Republicans has proved a complete\nfailure. Despite the drawback of a ques-\ntionable State ticket, and the avowed oppo\nsition of many of the supporters of Presi\ndent Grant; in the teeth of the desperate\nefforts of the Liberals; and a canvass of\nthe State as thorough as political exper-\nience, tact and energy could make it, Penn\nsylvania has elected Hartranf t Governor by\na majority probably exceeding twenty\nthousand.. In contradiction of the confi-\ndent predictions of Mr. Greeley himself,\nmade after a tour through the State, Ohio\nhas apparently remained faithful to the\n cause, although losing consider-\nable of her accustomed majority. Even\nIndiana, with the great strength of Senator"\nHendricks' name to help the Liberal side,\nhas refused to repudiate the party of Abra\nham Lincoln the party that carried the na\ntion successfully through the war of the re\nbellion and has probably ranged itself\nagain under the Bepublican banner by a\nsmall majority. Thus the Central States,\nso for as they have spoken, and the Western\nStates add their voices to the New England\nStates in repudiating the demand of the\nLiberals for a change in the national ad\nministration, and the great Cincinnati Con-\nvention, that seemed at one tLne to promise\ngo much, has proved powerful only in rousing\nthe Republicans to extraordinary exertions\nand giving them a serious and perhaps a\nwholesome fright.
363546e8b8a373202f119ef3716648b2 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.9166666350436 39.369864 -121.105448 The Sultan s Wives.—From the “Rem-\ninicences of an Officer of the Zouaves,”\nrecently translated from the French, wederive\na sketchy description of the Sultanas,\nreturning from their devotion to the palace on\nthe Bosphorus: “ A band of black eunuchs,\non foot and horseback, came on in advance\nof the procession, to clear the way; which\nthey did with very little ceremony, except\nwhen they came to the French officers, to\nwhom they,on the contrary,exhibited themost\nrespectiful politeness. The Sultanas, to the\nnumber of about thirty, were seated in guilt\ncarriages, open in every side, and of a shape\nnot unlike those which were in use in France,\ntowards the latter part of the sixteenth cen-\ntury. The Sultans eldest son, a pretty and\ngraceful boy of about eight years old, was in\none of the carriages, seated on the lap of a\nlady of still youthful appearance. The\nSultanas had only the lower part of the face\nconcealed, and that by a gauze veil so trans-\nparently thin, that it was easy to distinguish\n it the form of the mouth; which, by\nway, is their least handsome feature. Their\ncomplexion was of a colorless white: their\neyes were brown almond-shaped, shaded by\nlong lashes, and surmounted by arching\neyebrows of the blackest jet; their hair\nappeared to be very thick and lustrous.\nBeautiful young girls, all of them, —gay,\nlaughing, and coquetish,— tbc.r features\nwere yet wanting in that air of distinction,\nwhich is usually inseparable from woman ot\nthe better class ofi-ociety in Western Europe.\nIt was almost impossible to distinguish the\noutlines of their shapes, through their heavy\nand cumbrous garments, which concealed it\nbetter than do even the ridiculous-skirts,\nwhether crinolines, or chicken-coops, with\nwhich our own fair countrywomen make it\na point of honor to take up all the sidewalks\nof our city. The women of the East are\nrather simple in their dress, pleasing in their\nappearance, and have, all, fine heads; but\ntheir movements are slow, as though their\nbodies were somewhat cramped in the indo-\nlent life which they lead in the harem.
21e460833983c1f124fddb3f9d9aaff0 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.0205479134956 39.369864 -121.105448 Editor Press: Probably many ofthose\nwho have returned to Nevada county\nfrom this at present almost Arctic re •\ngion, would like to know what a Decem-\nber prospect on Fraser is. I will tell\nthem: I loft Bridge River, some 140\nmiles above this, on the 4th inst. Little\nsnow had fallen then except on the high\npeaks, but the cold was intense; a pail\nof water would freeze solid in five hours,\nduring the day time. I crossed Fraser\nriver on the ice a short distance below\nthe mouth of Bridge river, and could\nhave done so at several places lower\ndown. In rapid places the ice extends\nfrom 40 to 60 feet from each bank, and\nI have no doubt by this time it extends\nacross. Of course all mining operations\nabove have ceased-—rockers, sluices and\nground are almost as solid as the rocky\ncliffs. The river, after its sudden freak\nof raising six feet on the level, in one\nnight, and sweeping nearly all the tools\nand rockers off, receded very fast, and\nis now thought to be at a pretty low\nstage. Many “spots” were found before\nthis cold weather set in that would pay\n best kind of wages, but for all in-\ntents and purposes at present, it might\nas well be in “Grinncll Land.” Of\ncourse it is a mere conjecture how long\nthis weather will last. About all the\nminers above who had not a sufficient\nsupply of provisions to last them at least\nthree months, have left, or are leaving\nfor below as fast as possible. At the\npresent time there is not more than 100\nmen on Fraser and its tributaries above\nthe Forks. I should think that when\nI came down there were about 350 or\n400 from the Forks down to this place.\nThe way they are coming in here at\npresent will not take long to thin them\nout considerably. Most of them leave\nfor the Sound, to winter, but many of\nthem will probably get lower down, as\nthey never discovered this kind of cli-\nmate in any portion of California. I\nshall winter here, and go up for a short\ntime in the spring. The weather here\nis very moderate in comparison to that\nabove, although at present it is belowr\nthe freezing point. During the last\nthirty-six hours about two feet of snow\nhas fallen.
539b99a0b6d630ce7f0dfeac711e9bd3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9057376732949 39.261561 -121.016059 were quite as good as any in the house, and\nwere in no way inferior to the best seats in\ntlie parquette, either for seeing or comfort.\nBut no—these would not suit them; they\nmust force their way into the parquette\namong the whites. You will recollect that\nI gave you a description of the egg scene\nin one of my letters—a presumptuous ne-\ngro pelted with rotten eggs; but although\nthe opposition to their Bitting in the par-\nquette was loud and determined, and adver-\ntised from time to time, on Saturday, the\njld instant, they came and forced their way\ninto the parquette, broke past the door-\nkeeper and knocked him down. They bran-\ndished pistols and clubs, dared the white\ns— of b— a to attempt to put them out,\nstruck the acting manager, knocked sev-\neral white men down with clubs, and cut\none man (Mr. Bailey) badly in two places\non the One white man was hit with\na slnng-sbot, another was stabbed in the\narm, and a scene of great terror for a few\nminutes ensued; camphenc lamps were up-\nset and the burning wicks thrown out, and\ntlie theater was several times on Ore. All\nthis was the result of a well-concoctcd and\npremeditated arrangement among the ne-\ngroes. Nearly, if not quite, every one of\nthem was well provided with clubs, pistols\nand knives, while the whites were unarmed\nand in no way prepared for the attack.\nAlter the wretches forced their entrance,\nthey bullied and exulted that they had\nmastered the whites, and dared the white\ns— of b—s to attempt to pass them out.\nThe dumber in and about the (heater lias\nbeen variously estimated at from 50 to 200;\nwhile the whites in the parquette, at the\ntime of the attack, were not more than ten\nor fifteen, and some of them were ladies.
08dde5a5c27649e446c2cd5cbb49741e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.7630136669204 40.063962 -80.720915 Au Lx-Cnuncllmiiu or FMIiidelptiin D(*\nr(KrcNil« Oiu Produce illus\nI'liiLADKLi'iiiif, October 0 .Fifty or six¬\nty curious people gathered last evening in\nthe ball of tlie Aw>embly Building, Tenth\naud Chestnut, to bear ex-Councilman Job\nLogan explode the "G feat Ross Bubble."\nAfter some preliminary practicing on the\npiauo by a youug lady in a bright red\nbatque, who apparently labored under the\ndelusion that "Maiden's Prayer" had never\nbefore been heard by any of the audience,\nMr. Logan appeared in evening costume\nand announced himself aa a man who nev¬\ner asked any fivors of anybody, but al-\nwave was ready to grant them to every¬\nbody. Therefore, he would not he disap¬\npointed if his lecture did not produce the\ndesired effect upon the minds of bis bear-\nerf, because for nine years he had been\n at and called a crank. He did\nnot care about such trifling matters, for he\nhad sworn to unravel 'be Charlie Ross\nmystery and he would do eo, crank or no\ncrank, il it took him his lifetime.\nMr. Logan then proceeded to unfold the\nrt salts of his researches in a rambling dis¬\ncourse, which lasted over two hours and in\nwhich he repeatedly charged that Charlie\nRosa had beei stolen by his father,\nChristian K. Ross. At the close of his\naddrtsti Mr. Logan asked his audience and\nthe influential meu of Philadelphia to back\nhim up with their iuflueuce, so that he\ncould obtain a requisition from Governor\nPattison to bring Charlie Ross and hia\npresent captor from bt, Louis, where they\nore now living, to this city. This he de¬\nclares he could do within ninety days.
3a0247c15d5b9d08264e811d30ed922c CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.2090163618195 39.623709 -77.41082 this tight? Will such conduct inspire con-\nfidence in outside capital to invest hen? Of\ncourse not, Some places donate lauds, fran\ncliises and money to induce capital to invest\nto improve Unit towns and cities.\nNow another matter uol to beovcrlooked,\nmuch of the stock of the Water Company\nhas changed hands, only HO shares out of\n1000 shares is held iu Frederick. A premium\nhas been paid for tins stock ot from $5 to $lO\nper share. Home estates winch held the\nstock have tecu closed and the appraisers\nappointed by Hie Orphans Court placed a\nvaluation off15 per share and upward Do\nthe parties who are advocating this bill think\nit right and honest to say you must lake our\noffer of $lO per share or we will expend sl2\n000 to pul iu other works, or if wc can uol\nbuy you out SIO,OOO wc will moitgugo the\ntown for $12,000 and make the taxpayers\ndaddy the bill? No honorable business man\nwill say Ibis is just and equitable.\nNow much Diisuuderslandiug appears to\nexist about the surplus of Hie company. Let\nme say it consists of 50 shares of stock bought\nat S2O per share and several hundred dollars\nheld by Hie treasurer to meet any unexpect-\ned loss or break or large expense incurred\nso as to thereby not impair the revenue of\nthe company. Any business man will say\nthis is proper and right. The total amount\npaid its officers for salaries has been $)0 per\nyear for 14 years and $75 for the last two\nyears. Can the Corporation of Thurmont\nmanage the affairs of the Water Company\nany cheaper or belter? Will tuxes be reduced\nor water rentals become any lower under\ntheir management?
3485e4112d11da8aa904cf2380f9fb68 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.1164383244545 41.020015 -92.411296 to provide ihat such an arrangement\nfor settlement, in order to bo valid,\nehall receive the signatures of two-\nthirds of the number of creditors,\nrepresenting one-half tho debts.\nMr. Thurman moved to fill the blank\ni to the time when the provision of\nthe thirty-ninth section, as amended\nby the committee, shall take effect, by\ninserting the first day of December,\n1873, so that that section shall apply to\nall cases of compulsory or involuntary\nbankruptcy commenced since that\ndate. Agreed to\nMr. Sumner offered an amendment\nto the twenty first section of the orig­\ninal act as follows: "But a creditor\nproving his debt or claim, shall not be\nheld to have waived his right of actiou\nor suit' against the bankrupt, when a\ndischarge has been refused or procoed\ntugs been determined without a dis­\ncharge." Agreed to.\nThe bill having been considered by\nthe Senate as in committee of the\nwhole, was reported to the Senate and\nthe amendments concurred in.\nMr. Johnson offered an amendment\nproviding for the publication of noti­\nces of sues nnder tbe act, ia some\nnewspaper, to be designated by the\nJudge. Agreed to.\nMr Stevenson declared himself op­\nposed to any bankrupt bill, and he\nwould therefore vote the House\nbill repealing tbe lew, He believed\npublic sentiment was favorable to the\nrepeal of the bankrupt law, and the\nSenate eould look to the House for e\nmeoifeetation of that public opinion in\nthe bill the Honee had peeeed.\nMr. Alcorn moved to reeoesider tbe\nvote by which the committee's amend-\nOMBte were agreed to. Rejected—\nyeaa, 19, neys 40. The bill wae then\npessed—yeee 48, naye 11.\nThe tollowiag ia the aegatlve vote:\nConover, Cratgln, Hitchcock, Logan,\nMcCrary, Mitchell, Ogleeby, Patter­\nson, Stevenson and Waaleigh.\nThe bill now goes beek to the House\nfor tbe concurrence ot that body.\nOn motion of Mr. Sherman, the\nSenate proceeded to the consideration\nof the Dill reported from the finance\ncommittee, to amead the act to pro­\nvide for the redemptloo of the three\nper cent temporary loan certificates\naad for the incroeee of national bank\nnotee. The bill to authorize tbe Comp­\ntroller of the curreucy to withdraw\nnational beak currency from Statee\nhaviag aa excess of circulation, and\nleaning it to thoee having less then\ntheir proportion: provided the whole\namount of circulation eo withdrawn\nehall aot exeeed twenty-five millions.\nPeadlag the ooneideretion of tbe bill,\nthe Seaate weut Into executive session\naad soon after adjourned.
0d02c778e7c1912b805378f8f5cdce05 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.0315068176053 42.217817 -85.891125 augmented by this action, and the sales of\nits unoccupied farming lands exceed in\nquantity those of any former year. This\noffice, during the eighten months of its\nexistence, has greatly broadened and\ndeepened the public appreciation of the re-\nsources of Michigan. It has defused through\nother communities and countries a more\naccurate knowledge of the greatness of the\nState than ever before existed, thus holding\nout attractions of the most substantial\ncharacter to the best chus of seekers after\nnew homes. No less important has been its\nwork in impressing upon, the people of\nMichigan the realities of the development in\nwinch they have shared and whose benefits\nthey are enjoying. The keeping within the\nState by this nivalis of ni.iivy citizens who\nwere inclined to look elsewhere for places of\npermanent settlement has been of tho\nespecially valuable results of the Commis-\nsioner's labors. The plan of this office con-\ntemplates making it a central bureau of in-\nformation concerning Michigan ami its great\ninterests, whose publications shall keep fully\nabreast with the growth of. the common-\nwealth, and those constantly augmenting\nstores of information shall be accessible at\nall times, not merely to the new comer, but\nto citizens of every class, Propeily ad-\nministered, it cannot fail to yield results of\ngreat value to the State. Its total expense\nto the present time, including salaries,\nprinting, cost of paper, postage, advertising,\nand all other items, is about Cl.ViO.\nIt gives me pleasure to attest my apprecia-\ntion of the skill, intelligence and lidelity\nwith which Col. Fred Morley. the Commis-\nsioner appointed by me, has' discharged his\nduties.
232c54565cbad1d0ca40c56a45c7ca61 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.5630136669204 40.063962 -80.720915 Later advices from the West say thi\nthe troops' train, on the Missouri Pacif\nroad, was not stopped anywhere on tl\nline and that the train is on time and wi\narrive this evening.\nThe Executive Committee of strikei\nhave rescinded an order to prevent pax\nengers irom leaving but at. Louis and\nis likely that some trains will leave ih:\nevening. A parly of strikers visited th\n7th street freight house of the railroa\nand demanded the men to quit worl\nThey refused and were given until 4 p. 3\nto decide, and the party went to the m:\nchine shops, on Grand avenue, and mad\nthe name demand on the men at worl\nThey also declined to stop work, sayin\nthat their demand on the compan\nfor the restoration of old wages ha\nbeen promptly acceded to. They ha\nentered into an arrangement in goc\nfaith, and were bound to abide by it, an\nwere determined to stand by the Comps\nny. The strikers then retired, th\nmen at the shops continued to work,\nshort time ago, about 300 strikers can;\nacross the bridge on two Oat cars, an\nhave gone out to the machine shop\nAnother party ot strikers visited tl\nPenn street depot of the St. L ., I. M. &\nRailroad this afternoon and notified tl\nemployes ibere that they must quit wor\nThere was a meeting of a considerab\nnumber of prominent men held at tl\nMajor's ollice in response to an invitatic\nby the Mayor to conter regarding the si\nuation. The result of the meeting wi\nthe appointment of a committee con\nposed of A. J . Smith, Gen. Marmaduki\nGen. Noble, Gen. Caven and Col. Garret\nwho were instructed to devise ineasun\nfor raising a volunteer force of citizens\nfrom 1,000 to 2,000 strong, as theoccasic\nmay seem to require. The Mayor an\ncitizens in conference with him deem\nbest to be prepared for any emergenc;\nthough nothing has occurred aa yet\ncall out the military.
19d78812144b75c69bb6ce02469eda06 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.2999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 Waynesburg, the county seat <\nGreene county, Pennsylvania, contalr\na population of about 2,000. and Greer\ncounty,- a population of 30,000. It cor\ntains 351,236 acres of farm land an\nproduced, according to the census <\n18W: Form produrtr, 91,593,410; l!\\\nstock and poultry.$2,076,580. This c.our\ntry Is underlaid with what Is known n\nthe Pittsburgh nln?-foot vein ,of coa\nevery foot of It, and Is the basin of th!\ngreat formation, and ns yet has bee\nuntouched by the operator, as thei\nhas been up to this time no way c\ntransportation *o get It to marke\nSince the agitation of railways an\npossible transportation has bee\nbrought before the public, almost 100,0<\nacres of this coal has beer, purchase\nby capitalists and there Is over $2,000\n000 of money now idle In the Wayne*\nburt; bank*, money by til\nfarmers for coa! land. This vein (\ncoal extends into Marshall count:\nWest Virginia, to within eight miles c\nthe Ohio river, ana is rapmiy selling: rc\ncash, and as soon as the Unlontowi\nWaynesburg & West Virginia rallroa\nis completed operations will comment\nall along the line. The roatl connec!\nat Wheeling, Benwood. Bellaire, Brldgt\nport and Martin's Ferry. This clustt\nof towns is similar to Pittsburgh. AUt\ngheny, McKeesport, Sharpsburg an\nother towns, and forms a communit\nof over 100,000 population.\nThe population of Marlon and He\nnojigalla counties. West yirginlj, an\nFayette and Greene counties. Pennsy:\nvanla, is about 260,000. The agricultui\nal wealth of Fayette county, In fari\nlands, in 1890. was $19,795,250; Green\ncounty, $15,652,309. The value of fari\nproducts per year In Payette county,\n$1,655,840; Greens county. $1,593,410; llv
5f1d5668332ad43b0d228dcf404862f3 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.3493150367833 43.798358 -73.087921 ceed, as there can be but little doubt they\nwill, the improvement must, to a great ex-\ntent, supersede the apparatus now in use,\nnot only in this, but in all countries. Mr.\nGoodyear appears to have completely suc-\nceeded in preparing a fabric of rntire\nflexibility, whether "applied to muslin or\ncanvas; impervious to air or water, and\nneither stiffened by cold or fused by heat.\nShould it be successfully applied as a sub-\nstitute for leather and to canvas for ships,\nit is destined to produce important effects'\nm traae ana commerce. iv. Y. Spec.\nLate and important from Peru.\nLetters from Callao to Feb. 1st, brought\noy tne supercargo of the brig Ocean,\nwhich arrived at Mazatlan rMYin ontk\nMarch, bring intelligence that a battle had\nbeen fought near Lima, between the Chi-\nlian and Peruvian armies, each 6000\nstrong, resulting in the loss of 1500 killed\nand wounded on each side, and the defeat\nof the Peruvians under Santi Cruz. The\nCastles of Callao still held out for Santa\nCruz. The Peruvians had issued letters\nof marque, but all the cruisers they had\nsent out," had been taken by the Chilians.\nDeath from inhaling Steam. A\nyoung man, named Thomas Wilhington,\nresiding in the city of New York, on\nTuesday evening last to light\nup a gas pie in a public house in that\ncity, but finding some obstruction therein,\napplied his mouth to the tube.nnd inhaled\na considerable portion of the gas, which\ncaused his death yesterday morning.\nA little girl, about nine years of ae\ndaughter of Reuben Lee, was burned to\ndeath a few days since at Gill, Mass.\nCommon Schools in Pennsylvania.\nThe Key Stone state is coming up to the\nwork in rarnea. Of L033 ditnt In\nto which the state Wis divided nnrWil.n\nact of June. I33G. (exclusive of i!w nU\nand county of Philadelphia,) 840 have\nwunin tiif? past year assessed a school tax,\nand received their portion of the public\nmoney. The number of schools in tliese\n840 districts is 5,269, male teachers 4,-7 5- 8 ,\nfemale teachers 1,074, male scholars\n127,677, female scholars 106,042. Total\nscholars, 233,719. Average number of\nmonths taught per annum, 5 ; average\nsalaries of male teachers, 818,95; do fe-\nmale, 911,30. The number of German\nscholars in 628 districts is 3,061. Color-\ned, 571. Stale appropriation for schools\nin 1839, 8303,919. Tax assessed to the\nsame purpose bv the 840 aece'ntinor\ntricts, 8385,783. Total 8600,732.\nNoruis Locomotive Manufactory\nat Philadelphia. We learn from the\nijnilade!phia North American that severity-e-\night
02f2452f52a6065dead9a5f0c6f8ab9d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.6068492833588 39.261561 -121.016059 much interest the account of the seige of\nSebastopol arc aware that it was largely\nowing to the French Zouaves tbat the Mai-\nakoff was taken. The French bad snceeed-\ned in sapping to within thirty-two paces of\nthe Malakolf, where the Zouaves lay cor,\ncealed, and the ingenious device adapted\nto capture that fortress is thus described\nby Capt. Geo. B . McClellan, of the U. 8.\nArmy, who was sent out by the Govern*\nraont to observe tbe different modes of Eu-\nropean warfare:\nIn their admirable arrangements for tbe\nattack of the Malakoff, tbe French counted\non two things for success : first, they bad\nascertained that tbe Russians wore iu tbo\nhabit of relieving the guard of tbe Mala-\nkoffat noon, and that a great part of the\nold guard marched out before tbe new one\narrived, in order to avoid the loss which\nwould arise from crowding the work with\nmen ; in the second place, it was deter-\nmined to keep up a most violent vertical\nfire until the very moment of the assault,\nthus driving the Russiaus the bomb\nproofs, and enabling tbe storming party to\nenter the work with but little opposition.\nThe hour of noon was therefore selected\ntor the assault, and tbe strong columns in-\ntended for tbe work wire at an early hour\nassembled in tbe advance trenches, all in\nadmirable order, aud furnished with pre-\ncise instructions.\nTbe mortars maintained an unremitting\nfire until the moment appointed. The very\ninstant the last volley was discharged the\nstorming party of Zouaves rushed over the\nthirty paces before them, and were in tbe\nwork before the astonished Russians knew 1\nwhat had hnppcued. It is stated that this\nparty lost but eleveu men in entering the\nwork. Other troops advanced rapidly to\nthe support of the storming party, a bridge\nwas formed by rolling up five ladders with\nplanks lashed to them, a communication\nwas at once commenced between the ad-\nvanced trench and the bridge, brigade after\nbrigade passed over, the redoubt ,was at\nonce occupied by tbe Btorming party, and\nUnis the Malukotf. and with it Sebastopol,\nwas won. The lew Russians remaining In
5d69a29374cc85b65c03bd758ba04029 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.4205479134957 40.063962 -80.720915 man's oTOHieiglifiors retail about him he\ntrue, it seems strange that even the most\ninfatuated of his black constituents should\nnet come soon to know the man. 1 have\nlistened to nothing from the Hps of HebI\nels or Democrats, and get iuv estimate\nonly from true, earnest Republicans who\nhaVe hud to work beside Uiuiiuui In que\ncalamity and another, in legislation ami in\nelectioneering, and have come to know\nhim bv degrees. These all give him the\npraise of being a tireless, constant laborer,\never ready to answer any call, able to\nspeak in stentorian tones by the hour and\nby the day, equally / capable on the stump\nand'in the nulpiti' and an' adept in all the\nsocial expedients Known.the local j»oli-\ntieian. Hut they''all Attribute to him a\nreadiness to replenish his pockets by anv\n a willingness to contlscatc smafl\nperquisites as well as large ones, an inu-\nbility to distinguish between Ills personal\ntreasury and that of the party which can-\nnot liuiLrgna any politician eventually to\ngritff. "Why, Air," said one gentleman to\nme, "when two lady school-teachers came\nto Darlington, and the hotel refused to\ntake them in, this inan took them down\nto the house of one of the best citizens,\n'pud got, him to keep them oyer night, a\nman * itli the ml Southern notion of Hob-\npitaTTtv; and tlxeiV the Uoprcscntative in\nCongress collected To cents apiece from\nthem for their lodging, and put it\nin his own pocket. They went to the same\nhouse for shelter again in a few weeks\nalter, and ojlercd their host in the\nmorning the same sum they had paid
38eaf37a9cd05ab9d4ffbab1bba273b8 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.993169367284 39.756121 -99.323985 Despite all that cynics and Jokers\nsay about new resolutions and the use'\nlessness of looking ahead, there is a\nglory about these opening days of the\nyear which comes not again until\ntwelve months have flown. It Is com'\nparable only to the splendor of a sum'\nmer sunrise, to the peace and Joy\nupon the face of , a pure young bride\nas she goes to the marriage altar, to\nthe thrilling moment when a stately\nship glides for the first time into the\nwaters. All the charm and potency\nthat go with beginnings belong to the\ninitial days of January.\nA man may, perhaps, be pardoned\nfor being unwilling to look forward,\nbut he misses it if he is too busy or\ntoo indifferent to look forward, to\nstand for a moment 'this morning at\n chamber window and looking out\nupon the world to send his gaze for-\nward into the coming year. What will\nit hold for you? What do they all\namount to anyway these swiftly pass-\ning years? What do you see ahead\nworth looking at? A moment's pause\nlike this wonderfully clarifies the vi-\nsion and seta a good many things In\ntheir proper light. Some men looking\nforward see only the lions in the way\nthe note to be met next April, the\nunpleasant change In business or in\nresidence next July, the burden that\nmust be shouldered in Novemjer. It\nIs manly to look at them squarely, to\nprepare In season to meet them, if\nyou are morally sure to encounter\nthem. But to worry o,rer contingen-\ncies or mere possibilities is not legiti-\nmate.
3b1686c7508cdd480e57451a6f9028f3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.0397259956874 41.681744 -72.788147 goons to the castle, which contains\npriceless historical treasures accumu-\nlated by the Sangushko family in the\ncourse of the centuries.\n"One of these dragoons caught a\nsoldier from a neighboring village\ncutting down a tree in the forest sur\nrounding the castle and tackled him.\nThe thief was slightly wounded, but\nnot severely enough to prevent his\nrunning to the neighboring village,\nwhere his regiment was stationed,\nshrieking that the guard at the casthi\nwas trying to murder him. The sol-\ndier's comrades at once seized their\nrifles and surrounded the castle of.\nPrince Sangushko. They began to\nfire, and the dragoons on guard re-\nturned their fire. All the time the\nofficers and the members of the regi-\nmental committee were appealing to\nthe insurgent soldiers to obey orders\nand to cease firing.\n"Suddenly they gave way, only stip-\nulating that a deputation from the\nregimental committee should search\nthe castle, as they were convinced\nthat the old princo had stored ma-\nchine sruns for use in the cause of\nthe counter Of course,\nthere were no machine guns, and all\nthat was found was a few sporting j\nguns and revolvers.\n"Just as suddenly as the crowd of\nsoldiers, standing in the courtyard of\nthe castle, had yielred to the appeal j\nof their officers, came a new uproar, j\nand, in an instant, they had over- - j\npowered the guard, and rushed into :\nthe castle. Neither threats nor appeals ;\nhad the slightest effect on them. They\ndestroyed, in a fit of maniacal fury,\neverything that they could lay hands\non. Pictures, furniture, statues, dra-\nperies were destroyed blindly, ruthl-\nessly. The venerable Polish magnate\nand his two nieces, the young and\nbeautiful Countesses Rzyszczcwski,\nfled to one of the attics, hoping that,\nif their home was to be ruined, at\nleast their lives might be saved. From\nearly in the morning, when the ma-\nrauders began their attack, until five\no'clock in the afternoon, the sacking\nof the castle went on. Then the sol-\ndiers retired to the court yard.\n"'What about the prince?'
78edf98eb5d9cafd297695e7b7d53f86 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.8095890093862 39.369864 -121.105448 Since our iast issue, there have\nbeen four arrivals from the\nSouthern Overland Mails at San\nFrancisco, the mail steamer John L.\nStevens, which was beat by the Mem-\nphis stage, and the Central Overland\nMail at Placerville, the last bringing\nno States news. At any other time\nthan the present, when the public\nmind is so exhausted by cable and oth-\ner celebrations, such a fact as these\nrapidly succeeding overland mails\nwonld hare excited the wildest joyin\nCalifornia. But we have been school-\ned by a succession of wonderful events\ninto great equanimity. The arrival\nof a Balloon overland from N. York\nwould hardly astonish us now:—noth-\ning can ever do that again short of\nuniversal honesty among politicians.\nIt is useless to give our readers a\n even of eastern intelligence,\nfor every paper in the state has been\nflooded with it this week past, and\nthere is hardly a subscriber to the\nPress who does not take the volumi-\nnous Union or the still more volumin"\nous steamer papers of the Atlantic\ncities. Some honest miner, sitting\nin his lone cabin and looking over our\nlittle bebdamedal, may anathematize\nus for the omission of what he has\nnot elsewhere seen, but a hundred\nmore will thank us. When it is pos-\nsible to give eastern news within a day\nor two ot its arrival, we shall always\npublish it in brief—to do so at any\nother time would look as if we were\nhard pressed for matter to fill the pa-\nper. So much by way of apology.
605d68e9dbaef85ff8ae0a3ace24f392 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.7794520230848 39.261561 -121.016059 Case of a Lost Child.—We have just seen a\nprivate letter from Iwipsec, Ohio, which gives an\naccount of a little childs wandering off into the\nwoods and becoming lost The child was six years\nof age. Its mother, Mrs. King, living at a little\ntown called Cuba, started to visit a neighbor named\nCrook. The child went a part of the way, but,\nmeeting Mr. Crooks children, who were carrying\nwater to their father in a field near by, turned to go\nwith them. Some of the children commenced quar-\nreling with it, and one of them picked up a stick to\nstrike it, but was prevented by the eldest. The\nchild then turned back for home. It had to go\nthrough a little strip of woods, and in traversing it,\ntook a wrong path. Search was begun in a few\nhours, but no trace being found, the whole neigh-\nborhood became alarmed and started forth into the\nwoods. The search was continued for seven days,\nand on the seventh a childs tracks were found in\nsome low ground, still moist after a rain. Runners\nwere sent to Findley, Lima, and all through 1 utnam\n to raise additional force for a more thor-\nough search. On the tenth day at one oclock, the\nlittle wanderer was found. It washing across a\nlog, quite dead. It had evidently starved. It had\nbeen, too, in the same place for "several days; had\nbeaten a path between two logs, and at the end of it\nhad made a little bed of leaves and moss. It had\nalso constructed a playhouse of sticks and poles\nwhich it had dragged together. The two nights pre-\nceding the discovery, rain had fallen, and the little\ncreature had taken off its clothes and hung them up\non the bushes to dry. Its clothing consisted of a\nsun bonnet, a calico dress, a quilted skirt and chem-\nise, all of which were carefully hung up in a conve-\nnient place. The little body was entirely naked.\nFraming a litter, the melancholy company bore it\nhomeward. When the mother saw the sad sight,\nshe rushed forward, fell frantically upon the dead\nchild and swooned. For a long time she lay insen-\nsible, and her grief, upon recovery, was so great\nthat it was thought she would die. —Marysville\nDemocrat.
0be7314c86609e8e2d8f154881074eef DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.9246575025368 39.745947 -75.546589 “It is because I atu his wile, and I\nlove him/'answered Viva, earnestly.\n“He was learning to oare for me before\nyou came; he would have been ti\nyou not charmed him with the arts cf\nwhich you are mistress Ethel Tr^van\nion, be merciful. If you love him----- ”\n** No, no,” cried Ethel, passionately,\nlaying her jeweled bands on the others\nshoulders and Woking down infn he»-\npleading eyes; Meten,Viva Eldridge. I\nam a wicked, heartless woman, hut 1\nam human; you have conquered me\nwith your uoble womanliness and en­\nduring patience. I will go away from\nhere ont of your husbands life forever,\nand may you win the heart that you\ndesire, the love I would have robbed\nyon of for the sake of revenir«,\nthat was all. I have deceived him.\nMy love for hlui was but a fancy—such\nwomen I never truly îove—but I\nwanted to pay back old scores and\nbring him to my feet, you uuderetaud ?\nLamtomarryamanoffortune, iam\nhappy only where I can reign in society,\nand make the men admire and the\nwomen envy. You cannot understand\nsuch nature«*, but J.Viva EidrMge, 1 am\nnot worthy even your com paniousu Ip ”\nShe turned abruptly and weut back\nto the hotel. They never met again\nHer power over Neil Eldridges heart\nwas lost at lair, aud Vivas reign be-\nÎ;an, a reign that ended only with life,\nor, standing there in the shade of the\nbowlder, Neil had heard all, and lei:\nthrough all the paiu and bltteruag*\nEthel Trevanions confession bad caus d\nhim, the sweet and just appreciation 01\nthe woman who was to him in after\nyears his hearts idol. Truly,a womans\npower is in her love.
03a581acce6ffac56c3b9e4b3d028e71 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.6589040778792 46.187885 -123.831256 L. D. CofTman, lot 7, Xr.0 feet, block\n."5 , ,"0 feet; cost of sidewalk S25; cost of\nplanking $31; number yards cut 310;\ncost of cut $77.30; total cost S133.30.\nMrs. E!i7i Sheppard. lotO. block,"!,\n130 feet: cost of sidewalk $73; cost of\nplanking SIC; number yards cut 1827;\nco.st of cultin" $4311.73 : total cost $624.75\nF. C. Norris. Iotl,S73 feet, block IV.\n73 feet; cost of sidewalk S37.30; cost of\nplanking $4(1.50; number yards cutGOti;\ncost of cutting $174 ; total cost 238.\nll.Urown, lot 12. block 10, 30 feet;\ncost of sidewalk 673; co.st of planking\nS03; number yards cut liurj; cost of cut-\nting S483.23; total cost $1151.23.\nF. N. Ulanchct, lot , block 20, 130 feet ;\ncost of sidewalk $73; cost of Ianking\n$03; number yards cut 1423; cost of \nting S33G.23; toiftl COSt $324.23.\nJ.F. Ferchen, lot 7, N 30 feet, block\n20, DO feet: cost of sidewalk $23; cost of\nplanking $31; number yards cut GOO; cost\nof cutting $132.23; lotal cost $208.25 .\nW. E. Dement, lot 7, S 100 feet, block\n20, 100 feet; cost of sidewalk $50; cost\nof planking $02 ; number yards cut 1324 ;\ncost of cutting $331 ; total cost $443.\nC. II. Page, lot 1. block 18, 130 feet:\ncost of sidewalk $73; cost of planking\n$y:; number yards cut 141; number\nyards fill til; cost of cutting and filling\n$33.23; total cost $203.23.\nILUiown, lot 12, block 18. 130 feet;\ncost of sidewalk $75; cost of planking\n$'J3; number yards cut 112; number\n3ards fill til; cost of cutting and filling\n$28; total cost SIOO.
52ca57b8cd445df1a659b6774b80ac2d THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.5587431377758 40.807539 -91.112923 against the said defendant, in the District\nCourt for Louisa county aforesaid, pravinjj for\nrelief generally in the premises set forth in\nsaid bill, and for injunction and subpmna to»\nanswer, and for an order of publication ngainal\nthe said defendant, which said several matter*\nhave, by the said Court, been allowed and or­\ndered ; and iu which said bill it is charged,\namong other things, that a certain note o(\nhand, signed by the said plaintiff and one Hen­\nry F, Al'Giiire, for the sum of three hundred\ndollars, and given to the said defendant, wa»\nobtained by the said defendant fraudulently,\nby false representations, without any conside­\nration, and in therefore void in law, in thn\nhands of thesaid defendant who now holds the\nsuinejand praying for aninjunction to restrain\nthe defendant from proceeding at law to\ncollect said note,and that the same may be de­\ncreed to be given up to be cancelled ; «nd\nwhereas a subpwna against the said defendant\nlias been duly issued and returned nun ml, and\nan order of publication is required:\nTherefore, the said William S. Campell, de­\nfendant as aforesaid, is hereby notified and re­\nquired to a.ipear and answer said bill of com­\nplaint, on or before the second Monday of Oc-\ntobc - next,' or the said bill will be taken as con­\nfessed hy him, and a decree will pass against\nhim accordingly, provided a copy of this order\nbe published in the Hawkeye and Patriot,print­\ned in liurlington, oncc a week for six. succes­\nsive week;", before the sitting of siid court.\nBy order of
040509fda3bdad407c2d6e3986e57808 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.8183059793057 40.735657 -74.172367 cluding crosswalks, disturbed in the con-\nstruction of said connecting tracks shall be\nrestored to condition satisfactory to the\nGeneral Superintendent of M'orks of the\nBoard of Street and Water Commissioners.\nSection 4. The raj is composing such con-\nnections are to bo laid on each side of and\nequally distant from the centre lines above\ndescribed, and are to be of a guage of four\nfeet eight and one-half inches i4 ft. 8% In.) .\nSection 5. Tho company shall maintain\nand keep in repair the pavement and cross-\nwalks between Its tracks and eighteen inches\n(18 inches) outside thereof.\nSection 6. Nothing in this ordinance shall\nbe construed as a waiver by tho city of any\nright that it may have under any existing\nordinance or ordinances respecting street\nrailway* the use of the public streets of\nthe City of Newark by street railways.\nSection 7. The coat, of advertising In con-\nnection with this ordinance shall be paid by\nthe said Public Service Railway Company.\nSection 8. The provisions of this ordinance,\nif accepted by said Public Service Railway\nCompany, shall be so accepted by the filing\nwith the clerk of tho Board of Street and\nWater Commiaaloner* of the City of Newark\nof a formal acceptance thereof, in writing,\nexecuted by the duly authorized officers of\nsaid Public Service Railway Company, with-\nin twenty (SO) days after notice of tho ap-\nproval of this ordinance, whereupon the\nsame shall take effect immediately, other-\nwise this ordinance and the consent and per-\nmission given thereby shall be void and of\nno effect.
1928d65fb8e818b359f73e1a04cb6231 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.382191749112 39.261561 -121.016059 Advcntum of n New York Boy.\nSome seven month!) ago a little hoy not\nquite eleven years old became enchanted\nwith the military pomp which at that lime\npervaded the city and country. He sought\nlor an available opportunity to leave homo\nfor the “Seat of War.” Accordingly he left\nwith one ol the New \\ork regiments, and\nwith them went to Poolcsville. While\nthere, the Massachusetts First regiment of\nVolunteers arrived and encamped. Our\nyouthful patriot was among theAroft to wel-\ncome them. He performed the part of a\nvery benefactor in his attentions to the\nMassachusetts officers, and he. of course,\nbecame a universal pet, both among the\nofficers and men. One of the Captains, in\nparticular, was very kind to the boy, whom\nlie found to be britnfull of intelligence and\nspirit. The attachment was increased,\nhowever, when the boy telat. d the sud tale\nof his coudilion, viz: that his father bad\nbeen killed in the action at Hull Run, and\nthat his mother had since died. The kind\nhearted Captain, at the request of the boy,\npromised to adopt him, and soon thereafter\nproceeded with him to Washington, where\nthe necessary forms were gone through, the\ndocuments drawn, and the hoy regularly\nadopted according law. Meantime the\nlather ami mother ol the boy, who were\nliving in New York, were uearlv heart-\nbroken ov<?r the loss of their beloved son.\nThe father made search in every conceiva-\nble place where a boy might be likely to go\n—had applied lo coroners, police justice,\npolice telegraphs and other uvailabie points\nusually in possession of news of lost per-\nsons, and traveled far and near, but no tid-\nings of the missing putriot. At length the\nlost one was over matched by his own ao-\ncomplishmenls. Afraid that he might be\ntorn from the father of his adop-\ntion, he cunningly wrote to some friends in\nNew York to know if the -old folks” had\nsaid anything about hie being away As\nbe required an answer, he sent his address\nand his glad father was the courier of the\nreply. The scene which took place when\nthe exultant parent and the astonished tru-\nant boy met need not be described. Tbo\nkind captain was as glad to relinquish hU\nclaims to the boy as be was to know that\nthe boys rather had not been killed at the\nbattle of Hull Hun. The boy is now at\nhome, and says that ho is well satisfied with\nhis experience.
1bafa0826d4ccfe831427ecc90363dce EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.3027396943176 39.745947 -75.546589 Hague, Henrietta F.\n♦Haislctt, William E.\n♦Hall, L. R .\n♦Halle, Louis\n♦Hamilton, Irene\n• Hamilton, Jos. S.\n♦Hamilton, Mrs. J . S .\n♦Hamilton. S . E.\nIlauby, C. Lillian\nHance, A . J.\n♦Hancock, J. R .\nHanly, John J.\nHanley, Wm. J .\nHanson, J. W ., Jr.\nHardesty, E. C .\nHarkins, Bernard F.\nHartigan, Alfred B.\nHarris, Roland\n♦Harting. Allen W., Jr.\n•Hartman. Mrs. Roy\n♦Hasson, Harry F.\nHathaway, Wm. K .\n♦Hawke, Elmer P.\nHawkins, Bell A.\nHayes, Helen M.\nHayes, Howard\nHayes, Horton H.\nHayes, Maude\n•Hayman, Nora C.\nHazard, W. H.\n♦Hazel, John F.\n♦Hazzard, W. R.\nHemphill, William J.\n♦Henderson, Anna £.\n♦Henderson, Estelle G.\n♦Hendrickson, Thos. R.\nHenkel, William A.\n Anne E.\n♦Henry, John J.\n♦Hensel, F. J .\n♦Hertel, Mary M\nHertel, Nell V.\nUesseltinr, J.\nHession, Helen G.\n•Hibbs, Wm. M .\nHicken, Chas. C .\n♦Hickman, Emmett S.\n•Hicks, Emily W.\nHiggins, C. W .\n•Hill, B. T.\n•Hill, Edith\n♦Hilles & Jones Co.\n♦Hirzel, C . Pauline\nHoffecker, Wm. 0 .\nHohn, Ruth M.\nHolland, W. B.\nHolland, Wm. E .\n♦Hoopes, Clement R., a nd\n♦Hoopes, George V. M .\n♦Hoopes, Helen Massey\n•Hoopes, Helen M,\nHoopes. Macmillam\n♦Hopkins, J. W .\n♦Hopkins, Robert L.\n•Horisk, John A.\nHorn, George R.\n♦Horty, Alice M.\n•Hough, Jeanette C.\nHouston, B F\nHubbard, C. L .\nHubert, Jean D, •\nHughea, A. V.\nHughes, Chas\nHughes. Mary E.
13c5a768f857d77fdd251bb16b36e4d1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.0452054477423 40.063962 -80.720915 The bankt sained during the pout\nweelt 13,509,800 In cash, »2,030,COO of\nwhich was In specie. Clold l» now com¬\ning In this direction from Canada, the\npast ten days receipts having approxi¬\nmated <030,000. Tho Increase In depos¬\nits was t6.020.400, while loans arc only,\n51,213,700 heavier. Tlio excess reserve\nIn consequence expanded *3,701,200 and\nstands at *26,068,775. This Is only halt\nas large as reported one year ago, liut\nIn view of the fact that, remittances\nare now becoming larger, an Increase\nmuy bo expected from week to Week. In\nthe changes mado during tho week the\noperations seem to have been confined\nto the larger bank#. The deposits of\ntho Hanover, tho National park, and\nthe National City banka, aro $7,000,000\nlarger than tho previous week, whether\nthis In due to special operations cannot\nb« definitely stated, but It "shows that\nthe remaining banks have leas' money\nIn hand than at the close of January 8.\nThe factors that led to tho gain In\ncash, however, aro rather well \nnnd they may be expected to affect oth¬\ner Institutions-having largo country\nconnections from this time on.\nAs was pointed out last week, the\nenormous Interior movement nt this\nseason forces down money rates and\ncompels capital to seek better rates\nabroad.In other words It leads to gold\nexports. But the anomaly Is now pre¬\nsented of our Idle money being Invested\nIn foreign exchange on this sfdo of thft\nwater. Europe Is now using nt least\nICO,000,000 American money In the\nform of deferred credits and unless\nrates abroad go to a very low level,\nthere is no prospect of this sum being\nImmediately reduced. Bo sensitive,\nhowever, la tho situation, since tho Unl-\nted States became the dominant power\nIn the International market, that tho\ncredit can be expanded or reduced nt\nwill. Clearings Indicate that a much\nlarger volume of money than usual will\nbe needed this year to properly care\nfor the business toeing done.\nBONDS AND STOCK QUOTATIONS.\nU. S. new 4h reg.*128Vi\ndo coupon
2a74bec745fa0303f4a973cf5e90a37e THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.0945205162354 35.072562 -98.243663 Rack of the "llowers that bloom In\ntl e spring" Is the great American\nseed Industry, which supplies the mil-\nlions of vegetable and flower seeds\nto tho country. At this time of the\nyear they are busy sending out the\norders that have already begun to\ncome In for nest season's planting.\nSo far as hlstoiy records, the first\nsale of seeds In this country was\nmade at Newport, It. I .. In 1763 by\nNathaniel Bird, a book dealer, who\nImported a small quantity of onion\nseed from London. In New York city\nhemp and flax seed were advertised\nfor sale as early as 1765, and garden\nseeds in 177C. However, Boston wns\nthe chief seed mart of the United\nStates during the early days, nnd\nthere were In business at the Huh\nfrom half a dozen to a dozen dealers\nwho handled seeds exclusively or In\nconjunction with other commodities.\nPrior to 1800 practically all tho seeds\nsold In the United States were im-\nported from Irfindon.\nWith the dawn of the now conturv.\nhowever, the seed Industry liegan to\nassume proportions that Justified Hit\nraising of the seeds nearer \nFrom thnt time forward the city of\nPhiladelphia began to gain rornmiittnn\nas the center of the American seed\nIndustry nnd one of the pioneers In\nthe trado was Bernard McMnhnn,\n"seed man and author," who became\nwell known not only in Philadelphia,\nbut throughout the country. During\nthe next quarter of a century rather\npretentious seed establishments came\nInto existence In Raltlmoru, Charles-\nton, S. C, and other cities, and a fen-- I\nturo of the trade at that time was a\nconsiderable demand for Shakers'\nseeds. These seeds wero not only\nsold at the regular sued houses, hut\nwero also peddled about the country\nin Shakers' wagons.\nHow the seed industry hns expand-\ned slnco tho practice of selling seeds\nby mall enmu Into vogtio mny bo ap-\npreciated when It Is explained that 30\nyears ago tho seed firm that received\n100 letters por day was esteemed to\nbe In tho flood tide of buccosb, whero-a- s\nat tho present time thero are In\nthis country sovernl Bood concerns\neach of which receive moro than\nC.000 orders por day during tho busy\nseason. Speaking broadly, tho seed\nIkllfllHlrlrt Art
187c32b9d2f60de60eceb84b76b792d2 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.1849314751396 40.735657 -74.172367 The determination of the value of the\nland owned and jised by the railroads\nand canals presents many difficult and\ncomplicated problems. When originally\nacquired by the corporations they were\noften compelled to pay prices having\nlittle reference to the value of adjoining\nproperty. -V railway company may ex-\nercise the right of eminent domain to\nsecure the land it needs for its right-of-\nway and other purposes, but in such\ncases it has no voice in the determina-\ntion of the compensation to the owner.\nThe ordinary conditions of bargain and\nsale are absent. Even when bought at\nprivate sale the railroad is practically\nhelpless. It cannot shift its located\nline to exercise choice or invite compe-\ntition. The owner, knowing this, usu-\nally demands a price many times what\nhe would ask under the usual condi-\ntions of bargain and sale between free\nand willing negotiators. As a conse-\nquence the prices the. railroad is com-\npelled to pay are often excessive. The\ncost of land purchased under con-\nditions may be its proper value for the\npurposes of determining the balance\n.sheet assets of the railroad property,\nbut it might be wholly wrong and un-\njust to base tax assessments upon such\na valuation. Again, the conditions of\nuse after the railroad is constructed\nmay increase or decrease the value, not\nonly of the railroad land, but of that in\nIts vicinity. Rabroad lands are usually\npermanently held, and as there are no\nsales of them the usual criterion of I\nmarket value is not applicable. Adven-\ntitious conditions may make sale prices\nIn the vicinity unreliable as evidence of\nthe value of the railroad property. The\nownership and control of a large tract\nof land for a certain purpose may limit\nor onlhrge the uses that can be made of\nadjoining land, and thus decrease or\nenhance the value it would otherwise\npossess, consequently the value of ad-\njoining land may or may not properly\nbe accepted as a basis of value for rail-\nroad land.
3f7391a40e07355036dad53871db6e9f THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1904.321038219743 46.601557 -120.510842 said defendant!, ihe unknown heirs of\nsaid William H Inverarity, deceased, and all\nother persona or parties itnknown claiming any\nright, title, estate, lien or Interest ill anil to said\nproperty, bave or claim to have in sail land\nand premises, this plaintiff alleges that tbe\nsame are junior. Inferior aud subordinate to\nthe lion of this plaintiffIn virtue of said certifi-\ncate of tlellM'-iiencv and the taxes paid by\nplaintiff hereinafter act fortli\nThat subsequent to the purchasing of said\ncert Ideate of delinquency, plaintiff paid taxes\ni assessed aoainst said p operty as follows:\nTaxes for the year IMS, amounting to $0.27,\npaid May 21, 1908;\nTaxes for the year taw, amounting to $0.30,\npaid May 22, 1»03;\nTaxes lor tho year 11K12, amounting to *0.;!7,\npaid May 21, 1908;\nTaxes lor tlie year 1808, amounting to JO.:V>,\npaid April!.. mm; the total inn..on - of taxes a»-\nsessod aud paid since the date of said certifi-\ncate of dellnqency being the sum of tl t>; all of\nsaid amounts beating interest at tho rate ot 15\npercent, per •minim, and are all the taxes as-\nsesed and due against the said land, either\nprior or subsequent to the date of said certtfl-\n.c ate; and lha* this plaintitt has paid all taxes\nassessed against said land, either prior or sub-\nsequent to tbe date of certificate; ami that\nthe aggregate amount so (.aid by this plaintitt\nis tlie sum ol f:) 32, wblch sum, with interest as\naforesaid, are a Hen In favor of this plaintiff\nupou said land, paramount ami superior to,\nand have precedence ol all other lions, inter-\nests and estates whatever.\nAnd you, and eeeb of you, aro further noti-\nfied that said plaintifl' will apply to the Superi-\nor Court of the Stated Washington in and for\nsaid county, for a judgment foreclosing his\nsaid lieu against the property hereinbefore\nmentioned, and you, and each of yon. are here-\nby summoned to appear within sixty hays\nafter the service ol this notice and lummons\nupon you, exclusive of the .lav of service. to-\nwit, within sixty days after the 20th day of\nApril, A. D. 1804 , Wblch is the date of the first\npublication of this notice and summons, and\ntbe date of service ol this notice snd lummona\nupon you. and each aud all of you. l.v pabllcs-\nHon, and defend this action or pay the amount\ndn. -; and in ease of your failure v. t . . do, Judg-\nment will be rendered foreclosing s«i.i n \\u0084.r - -\ntitieaic of delluqaeocy. tsxea, penalty, interest\nand costs, against the lan.is and premtaei Here-\ninbefore mentioned, e< rling to the prayer of\nthe application for .Judgment and
1a45a18acb5866c064b57a2e03a01264 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.2808218860985 39.745947 -75.546589 Middletown Forest. 354.25; Milford,\n$8.89; Newark. *49, $4.50; Ocean View,\n315; Pitts Creek. $52.36; Port Deposit,\n! $33; Port Penn. 37: Princes Anne. 341 .25;\nI Rehoboth, Md. , $6; Rock, 316, »1; St.\ni George's , $8.50; Smyrna, 317.50; West\nI Nottingham. 177 .76; White Clay Creek,\n! $20; Wicomico, 358.50.\n1 From Wilmington—First Church, 388;\nI Central. 3192.50; Eastlake, 320 .50; Han­\nover. 3222; Olivet, 315; Rodney, 3281;\nWest. $377.22; Zion, $4750.\nJ She especially commended the Happy\nWorkers of West Church,»under Miss\n' Grace Baird, who gave $125.\nj At noon a memorial service was held\nj for Mrs. Charles N. Torpe, late presi­\ndent. Mrs. William H. Logan gave a\nI memorial address, a quartette sang,\nj and Mrs. Faraday, of Rodney Church,\nI led In prayer.\ni Lunch was to delesrates at the\nI church by the Wilmington auxiliaries\n; and aft-rward they were taken around\n! the city In automobiles,\nj The afternoon session will begin at 2\no'clock, with a son service led by Mrs.\nR. C . Levis, Elkton, MU., and prayer\nby Mrs. Alexander Alison, Jr. There\nwill be a question box opened by Miss\nCornelia Bowman, of Wilmington, and\n[ an address of greeting from the synodi-\ni cal president. Mrs. J Frank Ball,\nj Tho address of the afternoon will be\n! by Miss Mary Riggs Noble, M. D ., of\n1 Lodlatia. India.\nj letters were read this morning from\nj Miss Mary Johnson of India, and Miss\nAlice M. Butts, of Korea, the latter\nI written on ton feet of rice paper. Miss\nJohnson salds to-day for America.
1775bbcc05a979e4ffffe5709a51f663 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.1712328450026 42.217817 -85.891125 two cattle guards and then went plump\nover a body that lay on tho track. I\npicked myself up and found I was covered\nwith blood. I tell you it scut a cold\nchill up my back. 1'hcn I turned my\nlantern on tho IkxIv, and you may be-\nlieve it took a great load off mo to find it\nwas only a cow. I resinned my ruu\nalong tho track, and in a minuto or two\nI heard a noiso as if some ono was fol-\nlowing mo. I looked back and could\nsco nothing. I started on and tho noiso\nbegan again, sounding just liko several\npersons running along after mo on tho\nties. I began to get discouraged, and\ntaking off two of tho torpedoes I had\nfastened to my lantern, I twisted them\non to tho rails, thinking that if anything\nhappened to mo or my lantern tho ex-\nplosions would warn tho engineer of tho\ncoming train before ho into tho cow\nor into our train, which had locn stop-\nped to fix something alont tho engine\nthat had been broken when wo hit tho\ncow. Tho torpedoes laid, I started ou\nonco more. Again I heard the steps,\nthis timo ahead of mo on tho track. I\nfollowed on and soon tho train I was flag-\nging came around a curve, lfy tho glare\nfrom the headlight I could see that tho\nputter on tho ties that 1 had heard was\ncaused by several cows and they wero\nright ahead of mo on tho track. I mado\na rush for them, swinging my lantern\nand shouting, and drove them into tho\nditch. I kept swinging tho lantern till\nthe train steppd, and got into tho en-\ngine and told what was up. I hate now\nto think of cows on tho track. How is\nit cows and drunken men always put for\ntlio railroad track when they get looso?"\nNew Haven Register.
73e072a2f77d87c5dc34f3bddd4d9b77 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.8183059793057 43.798358 -73.087921 gress for the purpose of showing that the\nsurplus money was net given to the States\nthat the general government or its\nagents have, by law, the control of, with\npower to call for it, whenever they deem\nproper by legislative appropriations to\nci eate a deficiency in the treasury. Be-\nsides, it is notorious every where, that had\nthe bill passed the two houses of Con-\ngress, making the transfer of the money a\ngift to the States, it would never have re-\nceived the sanction of the President.\nWe ask then, in view of the above, is it\nprudent to apply the deposite of this State\nto objects of internal improvement, or to\nany other object whatever, that will swal-\nlow up the money principal and interest ?\nIf so, we have only to say that the people\nwill be compelled, called upon, to raise\nthe whole amount by an oppressive di-\nrect tax on themselves and property or\nan enormous debt will be left for their\nchildren in future generations to cancel.\nMuch better would it have been for the\nState in such case, that the had never re-\nceived her share of the surplus. It would\nprove a 2urse instead of a blessing. But\nwe are told that the Spates will probably\nnever be called on to repay the deposites.\nThe answer to this is, we are legally\nbound. The Secretary of the Treasury,\nwhen authorised, has a right to demand\npayment ; and when deminded we are\ncompelled to cancel the bond. Every\nprinciple of law or morals, if the State re-\ngards common honesty, would place us\nunder the strongest obligation, in such\nCase, to repay this money-Havin- g
19e100d44c1473475b31f17481dc1486 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1891.064383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr Gray resented tbe attempt of the\nSenator from Ohio to read a lecture to\nhim as to how be should conduct debate.\nThe Senators age and long experience iu\npublic service gave him a great many\nprivileges which he (Mr. Gray) would be\nthe last to ignore ; but still they ga?o\nhim no right to interrupt him (Mr. Gray)\nand to administer a renroof as to the\nmanner in which he addressed himself to\nthe question [snpnressed applause] He\nhad been trying to show that the discus­\nsion on the Elections bill bad been con­\nducted within the lines of propriety and\nof the usages of the Senate, and he\nwould proceed in that line It might not\nbe a pleasing thing for the Senator from\nOhio to hear that even his own party did\nnot stand behind him In pressing this\nmeasure, which Democratic Senators\nconsidered odious and inconsistent with\nthe traditions of American liberty Tbe\ngreat city of Philadelphia, with its ai le\nand well-established press, had sp- _\nwith no uncertain tone» as to the no! cy\nof the bill. That great city, which wa- .\noften called the stronghold of the Re­\npublican party in the country (at least c:\n as the great cities were concerned),\nwith its constant, unvarying and enor\nmous Republican majorities, repudiated\nthe bill. Out of its ten daily nawspapers\nonly one supported it. The papers against\n1“ W8r« Ill« Icqulrer, always unfaltering\nin its devotions to the fortunes of\nthe Republican party, ably conducted and\nwidely circulated : tbe Evening Telegraph,\nanother paper of large circulation always\nsupporting the Republican party; tha\nEvening Bulletin, another paper of the\nRepublican faith of long standing, con­\nducted with ability and fairness in the\ntreatment of public questions; the Even­\ning Call, likewise a Republican paper;\nthe Philadelphia Record, a Democratic\npaper, with as large a circulation as anv\niu the city except the Ledger ; the Ledger"\nowned and edited bv that eminent phil\nanthroplst, George \\V. Childs, a man\nhonorably known all over the country,\nand the T.mes, an independent paper\nIt was not mere Idle words, the reading\nof that catalogue, those finger points of\npublic opinion. It meant someloiug. It\nmpfttit there wrs^ after all, deep seated\nin the American heart that tave of Amer\nlean traditions and free local self-govern\nmeut which had madb the United States\nthe republic of republics on thia conti­\nnent.
51a0495e67c6e0a5f9bcee03933463e5 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.6068492833588 39.369864 -121.105448 Singular Dream.—The San Mateo Gazette\nsays: On Saturday morning last, Jefferson\nHiggins, whose death is announced in another\ncolumn, on getting up told his companions\nthat he dreamed they bad attempted to\nremove certain logs, describing them, and\nthat in the attempt, he had been crushed\naud killed. These logs were two which the\nmen had lying near together, and one above\nthe other, on the side of the mountain, in the\nRedwoods, and they bad all the arrangements\nmade for their removal, on this fatal morning.\nNothing daunted by the singular dream, they\nwent at it, but examined the position of the\nlogs, and concluded that neither of them\ncould roll so as to do any injury. About\nnine oclock, having the dogs securely\nfastened to the upper log, and the team\nhitched on, Higgins mounted the lower log,\nand his companion the cattle. The\nmoment the log started, both commenced to\nroll, when poor Higgins attempted to spring\nfrom thg lower one, over the upper one, but\nhis own footing being so uncertain, he fell\nbetween them, and was instantly so crushed\nthat he died about two oclock the same day.\nThis is a casualty which has cast a gloom\nover all the loggers in our Redwoods, and is\none of the most remarkable verifications of\na dream, which ever came under our obser-\nvation. Mr. Higgins was a man about thirty*\none years of age, formerly from near Au*\ngusta, Maine; a sober, industrious and careful\nman, one who has been more free from ac-\ncidents than almost any other teamster in\nthe woods He was very highly respected by\nall who knew him, and his loss is deeply felt\nby the entire community.
0cbb79a1aeb09cf024f24af118cd776c COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.8863013381533 41.262128 -95.861391 General WiikioAH»u vat oomtaa<Kk*-ta-\nchief of the army of tb« United StsU«a,\nand also I I'overnor of Natchitoches. His\nwhole force was in active service, thor­\noughly disciplined aad drilled. Obeying\ntue dictates of honor as a aeidAer, t£ oot\nprompted by the impulses oI a patriot,\nhe was bound by every consideration of\nduty to arrest tfce progress of the scheme.\nOf all other*, therefore, be was tbe taosi\nto Jt feared, aod the moat to be avoided\nby Burr. Yet while his plans wwre bui\npartially revealed to bis ackaowiedged\nconfederates, while he diligently endeav­\nored to elude tb- ittispieiof) of his enemi**.\nBurr Aufftrr w> opportuiiity to eecstpe\nwithout fully tafursuos Wukioaoa of bi»\ndesigns, and seeking his advice on all\nquestion* of doubtful expediency. To\nregard tbe General, therefore, In any\nother light than aa accomplice of \nalter the perusal of the cypher letter,,\nwould render tho act of perusing it the\nsheerest imaginable tolly.\nBarr was the victim of misplaced con-\nad coce. Wilkinson, through coasidera-\nuoa af a persouai character, revealed tbe\nplan and fastened the treason upon Burr.\nOn the 21st of October he communicated\ntbe substance of the cypher letter to Mr.\nJefferson, then Preaideot of the United\nState*, who on the 27th uf November, is­\nsued a proclamation warning and enjoin\ning those who bad been iod to partici­\npate in the unlawful enterprise, to with­\ndraw wiibooi delay; aad requiring all\nofficers, civil and military, of the United\nstates, or any of ihe States %ud Territo­\nries, to be vigilant, each within his re­\nspective department, >b searching oot and\nbringing to punisnmeat all per?ot«\nengagud: or ooncuroed ia tbe aadertak-
3ea5dc0e46cf3098a966ba58fe1529d8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.9931506532216 39.745947 -75.546589 Beginning at « hlako In the middle of *\nlane twenty fort wide I'ailing from the Con­\ncord Turnpike to land Into of Benjamin KI- .\nllotl, raid «take being distant Iwonty-fourl\nf«>«itsoulhiautwnrdly from the Baltimore #ud|\n1tnludolphlu Railroad Company 'e right oL\nway and measured at right angle« thereto;!\nthence south forty-six degree and forty-\neight minutes cast by the centre line of th*i\nsaid lane two hundred and two feet and sixty-\nHvo hundredths of a foot to a stake; thence\nnortheasterly along other land of tho said\nparty of tho first part and at right angle*\nto the lino uf Twenty-fifth street (extended)\nn* laid down on tho map of the city of Wil­\nmington, aforesaid two hundred and\nsix feet and four tenths of a foot to a stako;\nthonco northwesterly, parallel with the line\nof tho said Twenty fifth street (extended)\nono hundred nnd forty-eight feet and thir­\nteen hundredths of u foot to a stake; dis­\ntant twenty four feet southeastwardly from\nthe Baltimore und Philadelphia Railroad Com­\npany'« righ*. of way aforesaid and .neanirod\nut right angles thereto, und thunee south­\nwesterly, parullul with tho southeasterly limit\nline of tho right of way aforesaid, three \ndred and one feet and seven-tenth* of a foot\nto (he place of beginning. Goutaiulog one\naero, more or leas.\nTogether with the free and uninterrupted\nuse, liberty, right and privilege of and pas­\nsage in nnd along a certain strip of land,\ntwenty foer feet iu breadth and six hundred\nand thirty «even foot, more or les«, in length,\nextending from tho middle of the lane above\n•ntloned to the middle of the Concord\nTurnpike a'oresald, and bounded on the\nnorthwest by tho right of way of the Balti­\nmore and Philadelphia Railroad Company\naforesaid, on tho southeast in part by land uf\nMargaret II. Kent and iu part by the land\nherein conveyed to tho said party of the\n«croud pari in common with other« entitled\nthereto forever and together with the full\nuse, right and privilege of the above men­\ntioned twenty feet wide lane and of another\nlann loading therefrom and thereout in a\nnortherly direction and beginning at the dU-\ntanoe of five hundred and slxty two feet and\neighty six hundredths of a foot more or let.«,\nfrom the r:ght uf way of the Baltimore and\nPhiladelphia Railroad Company, aforoOftld»\nmeasured southeasterly along vhn middle lino
4ce83e74c397e6ce257de4d57afe580e THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.648907072202 39.290882 -76.610759 A VALUABLE FA 11.VI AT AUCTION.\nTHE SUBSCHIHEHS will sell by Auction, nt\ntlie Exchange, m the eilv of Baltimore, at one P\n>l. Oil MONDAY, the 14th day of September next, a\nmost bcnlltifnHy situated and highly imprnved FARM,\nlying witllinfour miles of tin.- city of Baltimore.\nThis property lies directly upon the Baltimore and\nIlavre-de-Grace Turnpike, a road Rlways perfectly good\nin the worst wentlicr.\nIt has been covered with lime, ashes and other ma\nnitres,and is in a bcaiitiftil state ofcultivation. Thcgreat\ner part well set in clover or timothy. It contains 344\nacres of land, a lull portion of which is in fine wood.?\nThe Southern line of the Farm Isiunds upon the water.-\nof Back river, where there is line fishing and sliootin\nn their seasons.\nThe barns, stabling and shedding arc quite large an J\n good condition, and there is a plain small DWEL\nLING near the road. There are one or two beautiful\nsites for dwellings upon the place. There is av ,yfine\ndairy within fifty yards of the dwelling, yttt a nunle\nspring of water (lowing into it. An extensive and ex\ncedent orchard, a flue ice house, and altogether the pro\nperty is one of the most desirable in the neighborhood of\nBaltimore. It is sufficiently near to be used for a milk\nand vegetable farm for market.\nWe willalso sell with or without the farm, 20 bead of\nCattle, part fu bred, part nearly fail bred Durhams, a\nlarge number of Hogs, some of them genuine Berk-\nshire; farm horses and oarriages, horses, ploughs, carts,\nwagons, horse rakes, eider press, and every thing ne-\ncessary to carry on so excellent and extensive an estab-\nlishment.
1d01073d2e1b7a9143bf8406ab8c98ac WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.6068492833588 40.827279 -83.281309 The Democratic party have been practi\ncally out of official power for ten yeais in\nall parts of the country, except in New\nYork city. They have not had exclusive\ncontrol of the State Government over a\nyear. But in New York city their rule\nhas been absolute and exclusive. They\nhave had possession of every branch of the\nCity Government, lineal and lateral. They\nhave had control of all the public institu-\ntions, and of the election of all courts.\nJudges, and other authorities who might\nat any time exercise any supervisory or\nother control, m tact, the City Govern-\nment has been an absolute Democratic dy\nnasty, into which no .Republican could\npossibly hope to be admitted. During\nthat time the city and county of New\nYork have raised bv loans and taxes pos\nsibly $500,000,000 , and have expended the\nmoney. Tne tact tnat thousands ot men,\nhaving no known occupation save that of\npolitical jackals, nave ;in tnat time risen\nfrom poverty to wealth : that double that\nnumber have lived and are now living in\ntne most extravagant style, without any\nknown business or office, and that still\nothers have amassed fortunes which would\nappear princely alongside of the oldest\nhouses in Europe, tells its own It\nis also known that an immense army of\npolitical agents is kept lor no public du-\nties, and are paid liberally. Taking the\nexposures ot the New York limes as a\nspecimen of the way in which the money\nhas been distributed, it is safe to say that\nin the last ten years the City Government\not JNew York has divided among its ad\nherents K3SU,U0U,UU0 without tfie least con\nsideration or service to the public.\nThis is the Democratic rule in the only\nplace in the United States where that party\nhas had absolute control during the last\nten years. Tammany Hall is the grand\ndirecting power ot this municipal govern\nment, far surpassing, in its annual receipts\nand . expenditures, some of the largest\nStates in the Union. Tammany Hall aims\nto govern the nation as it governs New\nYork city, and the American people can\nwell imagine the result of transferring to\nTweed, Sweeney, and Hall the control of\nthe national expenditures, and, practically.\nof the legislation of Congress. In the\nnext Presidential election the contest will\nbe between the Republican party and\nTammany Hall, and to add the national ad\nministration to that of New York city\nwill be the grand effort of the Democratic\nparty.
3111bece97829f0c9034cfd7d539f2f8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.8726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 will, nndor no circumstances, repeat the\nhilly II11*00 of 1872. and tho Democratic\nparty will not again, won, if over, placo\nitsolt in tho awkward position of follow*\ning strange leaders in a crusade for reform,\nwhen it in perfectly apparent that tho pro*\n|K>sed reform is to consist simply in\nputting a lot of hungry gentlemen "into\nplaces where thoy may servo their coun*\ntry best by serving themselves tirst.\nThis means, as wo understand it, that\ntho Kepublicon parly is strong enough to,\ndo pretty much as It pleasrn nest year In\ntho way ot selecting a candidate, and that\nreally it is not important to tako into much\naccount the possibility of any defectiou by\nreason of an ohit'ctionnhlu iniminnilnn\nThin Idea tallica well with a remark of Mr.\nA. A . l .ewi*,of Uwis county, this State,\ntw reported in yeatorday's Iteg'ulcr, who\nsaid to an interviewer of that paper that\n'the Kepnblicaus aru jubilant; they think\nthey have tin, and they are going to do au\nindUcreot thing; they will probably nominal\no Grant, and thatjwill]ond them."\nMr. Lewis would seem to havo had in\nhia eye the school oi political logicians\ninside of the Republican j»arty to which\nthe editor ot the hiu'cjtriuknt belongs, and\nwho think that because tho democratic\nparty have compelled a majority ot the\npeople of this country to tako refuge in*\nside the Kepnhlican organization in\norder to avoid a threatened dauber to the\n(iovernment, that, therefore, the party\ncan presume on tho permanency of their\napprehensions and run tho risk of arousing\ntheir fears in sotim other direction.\nThe editor of the h«lq>anlait 'does not
97df1e6ef27bd5bf7d890913ee3b6dd9 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.7090163618195 39.513775 -121.556359 We publish to-day, tlic address adopted\nl y the Democratic State (''invention, Jbe\nresolutions will appear to-morrow. Both\nthe Ad Ircss and the resolutions were adop-\nted vsi l l l great unanimity, and will be read\nwith interest by every Democrat, They set\nforth in | lain an I until st tkable language,\nthe portion of the Dom-. cra>-y ( ,f California,\nUnlike the Know-Nothing State «'invention,\nthe Democracy were not afraid to declue\nthemselves in favor ot the immediate con-\nstruction of an Atlantic and Iacific Rail-\nroad. Tin; Fillmore party in California\nd ire not j ledge themselves in favor of this\nmeasure. Their N it: mal touscniii n, from\nwhich a majoiity of the St ites witlidrcw,\ndid not do it They dare not take action as\na party upon this measure, because they are\noppose 1 to it, and it is It tt for their Spc ik-\nc i s and sturnj ers to humbug the people into\nthe belief that their party favors this great\nnational work if they can. If, as many of\ntheir S| rakers asset;, are really in f.vi r of\nthe measure, why do rod say so as a\nparty? Why do their convenlh ns maintain\na studied silence upon the question as a\nparty, and permit their orators to declare\nin favor of it, if they do not intend to de-\nceive the peoj !c, and make the question\nmerely one upon which to ride into [ ower,\nan 1 then say that its construction was not\nmade an issue in the Canvass ? Should tiny\nsucceed in the present contest, they would,\nindeed, he enabled to say that the people\nhad declared against an Atlantic and acific\nRailroad, because the Democracy, who had\ndeclared in favor of a Railroad, would have\nbemi beaten by a party who had said noth-\ning about it. this is the p< sition of the\nFillmore party upon this quest!' n. m only\nin their national convention, but also in\ntheir State Conventions tbr- u »hout tli Un-\nion, and should they triumjdi now. they can\nmake it the hobby of innumerable un-\np Signs. And this, we verily believe to he\ntheir object, in thus maintaining their si-\nlence, as a party upon this important and\nn itional question.
7f2ca3984d80cc4a34eade36324aac86 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.382191749112 39.745947 -75.546589 crepe facing under the brim. This\ndainty sport costume Is made very\nsmart by the orange scarf which adds\nsuch a definite dash of color.\n"Its all In the way you wear It,”\nhas reference to scarfs as well as to\nall other accessories of dress. There\nIs art In the adjustment of a acart\nand opportunity for coquetry and the\nwoman who has an Instinct for such\nthings needs nobody to tell her about\nIt. Some women can put on a hat In\na provocative way and can make a\nfan express all sorts of emotion—they\nneed no lessons In the manner of ad­\njusting scarfs. Take the apple green\nscarf for Instance—Just a simple ar­\nrangement with one end tossed back\nover a shoulder. But note the charm­\ning opportunity for the display of a\npretty or stunning rings In the\nway that scarf-end Is held carelessly\nagainst one shoulder! A scarf Is al­\nways graceful with one end falling\nstraight, outlining shoulder -and arm,\nwhile the other end Is caught up with\none hand. This effect is shown In\nother picture. Then there Is the slim\ngirl who crosses the ends of her scarf\nIn front, carries them around to the\nback and stands casually holding the\nscarf-ends with hands behind her.\nThis is such a pretty pose and noting\nIt, one wonder^ whether It Is always\nquite unconscious. The one\nscarf does not look well Is hanging\naround the neck with the ends falling\nstraight down and of even length.\nThere, Is no Interest to a scarf adjust­\ned this way, unless It Is used to give\ncolor In an open coat-front.
086b0f1a941a1a48dc6a4fe18bc05750 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.842465721715 58.275556 -134.3925 Both 10 and 8-hour shifts were tried,\nand the best progress made with the\nformer; consequently, all shafts, as\nwell as other underground work, are\ndone by 10-hour shifts. The center-cut\nsystem of drilling is employed. The\ncut is first drilled, blasted and mucked\nout, then the other holes are drilled\nand blasted and the dirt removed in\nthe usual manner; save that the end-\nholes are reserved, and fired with the\ncut-holes of the following round.\nAlthough the shafts vary from 700 to\n000 feet below sea-level, and one of\nthem is under the channel, very little\nwater is encountered in sinking. Most\nof the water in the mines comes from\nthe surface, and is caught up and\npumped out, usually from the first lev-\nel. The water' underground does not\naverage over 50 gallons per minute, and\nthis is handled either by the skips or\nby 5 Cameron sinking-pumps.\nCross-head and buckets are used for\nsinking. The bucket is flat-bottomed,\nwith the sides projecting 2 inches, thus\ngiving it a more secure base and per- :\nmitting it to remain upright on an un- '\neven surface while being filled.\nThe question of light at the bottom :\nof a shaft has always been a vexatious\none, owiDg to the water and blasting;\nbut this question has beeu solved by\nusing a group of three 36 c. p . electric'\nlamps in the place of torches or can¬\ndles. The wire is brought down the\nshaft to some convenient point, where\na small reel is placed with which the\nlamps can be lowered or raised at will.\nIt has been found that the best wire to\nuse is the ordinary lamp-cord, wrapped\nwith heavy canvas and given a good\ncoat of P. &, B. paint. i
199c05c3d733fa3651de1ae053494dbd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.8315068176053 40.063962 -80.720915 Albany, N. T . .4*8 and 465 Broadway.\nBaltimore, Md .Baltimore inn Charle* its.\nBuffalo n. Y .Cor. Main and Terrace sts.\nBa.llng'on, Io*a-Cor. Main and Valley sts.\nCharleston, b . G .5 tlavne bt\nOblcajco, 111 .Cor Washington and Htate sts.\nCincinnati, 0..8 . * .Cor. 8a and Walnut Bts\nColumbus, O -22 Bast Broad st.\nDaveop.rt, Iowa.Cor Br d» end 8e:ondBts.\nDayton, u..5«Kid Hows' Te^p e.\nDi-tiol.M h .16UJeffersonaveauo.\nDebuque, Iowa-9IMal street.\nBrie, fa..Kejttone Bank Baildlng.\nJwansvllle, Ind .Marb o Ball Ma n street\nGalveston, Texas.S. .hu'n emitting, Strand,\ntiranii Rapid-, Mica. - 66 Cat ai atreot.\nflartfiid Cacn. - 1 1 0 Asv nmstreet.\nI .dlanapolia, ind..3 *U-y*a Ulask\nKansas city, Mo Mls-unrl ave. aud Vain at.\nLlavenworth, Bjj..8 Ralston'a tld'g. 31 and\nLoulavhJe,Ky .2C8 Main st. [uo awa e sts.\nMen. phi#, Tenn .Cor. Mad b*b and Front et«\nMilwaukee. Wis and832 art Water at.\nMobile, ola..Cor bt Francis aud R,yal an.\nNashville, 'leuc .23 Pnbik square.\nNewa k, N. J .729 iroad st\nNew Baven. CLnn..180 nute st\nNew Orlt-ans, L 18 and 15 Ca*np St.\nNorfolk. Va.- V8ano 95 Bd adwater st\nPhiladelphia, Pa..Ch s nm and taneom eta.\nPittsburgh, Pa..63,65 and 671 ourth tve.\nPo tland, Or* goo. :or. tark and Fiiat sts.\nProvidence, R I.- 9 Weyboaaet at.\nQulncy, 111 .Cor Fifth and Main ats,\nhiChmoud. Va .1817 naatMatn st.\nRochester, N Y -15 Exchange et.\nban Francisco, CaL-JJIO California st.\nbt Joseph, Mo..cor Fouith aud irellx sta.\nBt L»nfe, Mo..Cor. becona and Pine sta.\nBcranton, Pa.- 119 Wy mlng ave.\nbyracuse. N . Y . .1,18 and 14 bom h Sallna at.\nToledo, O .6 Board of Trade Building.\nTroy, N. Y ..276 «iver at\nL'tlc*, N. Y . .lbO Gen-ase st
105e8cada0525147a7cba8ab20813468 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.8319671814916 39.745947 -75.546589 Meanwhile it might have been ob­\nserved that the town got along in con­\nsiderable comfort and prosperity without\nthem. It had the electric light and the\ntelephone; two weekly newspapers, each\nlargely devoted to amazingly plain spoken\nvituperation of the other; a couple of\nbanks smoothing off the rough edge of\nrivalry in their common cause of keeping\ndiscount rates up to fifteen per cent.;\nhalf a dozen saloons exuberantly flour­\nishing; and, fittingly, as pitted against\nthem, as many church organizations, all\nfervent in every good work save the one\nof paying their pastors promptly. There\nwas the usual glorious Colorado climate,\nof which the peoplo were as proud as if\na monopoly of it had been granted them;\nand there prevailed the usual superb con­\nfidence in the future, when the embryo\ncity, only halting for capital to de­\nvelop its remarkable resources, should\nrival Denver in size and importance. In\nanticipation of these metropolitan pros­\npects there had even sprung up of late\nyears a spasmodic discussion at election\ntimes as to the propriety of barring cows\nfrom the public streets and closing the\nsaloons on Sundays; but these extreme\nmeasures were generally regarded as a\ntoo servile imitation of the effete east,\nand had so far been uncompromisingly\nfrowned down by the independent voter.\nThey were wise in their generation,\nthe pioneers who chose the site of the\nplace, which, dependent upon the mines\nas it was, was yet a little removed from\nthem all, in the narrow valley wailed in\nby mesas, just without the one natural\noutlet to that section of the mountains,\nPinon caul to.
11961f5a307cc2f5595f07459d1acb3c THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1873.023287639523 39.24646 -82.47849 ance, founded on proof, that no harm can arise\nlioni its use in any ipinutity.\nThat which protects from or prevents litis ills -od-\nmust bo of immense service in tho com-\nmunities whero it prevails. Prevention is bettor\ntitan cure, fur the jiatlcnt escapes the risk which\nlie must run in violent nttneks of this baleful dis-\ntemper. This "Cuhk" expels the niinsnintlo\npoison of Fkver and Aut.K from the system,\nand prevents tho development nf the illscne, if\ntaken on tlio flrst approach of its premonitory\nsymptom. It Is not only tlio best remedy ever\nyet discovered for this class of coiuplnints, but\nalio tho clicnpost. Tho largo quantity wo sup-\nply for a dollar brings it within tho reneh of\neverybody; and in billons districts, where\n1'F .VKit and Aoi'R prevails, everybody should\nhavo it, and uso it freely, both for cure nnd pro-\ntection. It is hoped this price will place it within,\nthe reach of all the poor as well ns tho rich,\nA great superiority or this remedy over snjp\nother ever discovered for the speedy and certain\ncure of Intcnniltcnts is, that it contains no Qui.\nnino or mineral; consequently it produces no.\n(ininisni nr other injurious effects whntover upon,\ntho constitution, Thoso cured it nro left\nhoalthy as if tliey had never had tho disease,\nFovor and Aguo is not alone I ho consequence\nof tho miasmatic poison. A grent variety of diss\norders nriso from its Irritation, among which,\narc Nouralgla, Rheumatism, Gout, Headache,\nBlindness, Toothache, Earache, Catarrh, Atth\nma, Palpitation, Painful Affection of the Spleen,\nHysterics, Pain in the Itowols, Colic, Paralysis,\nand derangement of the Stomach, all of which,\nwhen originating in this cause, put on the In-\ntermittent typo, or become periodical. This\n"Cure" expels tho poison from the blood, nnd\nconsequently euros them all alike. II Is an in-\nvaluable protection to Immigrants and persons\ntravelling or temporarily residing in the mala-\nrious districts, If taken occasionally or daily\nwhile exposed to tho infection, that will bo ex.\ncrctcd from tlio system, and cannot accumulate\nin snnli'lent quantity to ripen into disease.\nHence it is even inoro valuable for protection\nthan cure : and low will ever suffer from Inter,\nmittents if they nvnll themselves of tbe protcc.\ntion this remedy affords.\nfor Here Vnmplaintt, arising from torpid,\nI ty of the Liver, it is an excellent remedy, stim-\nulating the Liver into healthy activity, and pro-\nducing many truly romarkablo cures, where\nother medicines fail.
1201e4dd31730fb76aa094ddad9f0e19 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1916.8237704601802 39.456253 -77.96396 or promoted under a Republican re-\neimn, Now there are less than one\nir.:' fired, with anything like a decent\nsalary for the efficient services they*\n])- rform. Every colored clerk in the\noffice of the Auditor for the Postoffice\nDepartment has been reduced except\ntwo. Negro clerks in the Postoffice\nDepartment under Postmaster Burle¬\nson, of Texas, have had "hard sled¬\nding," scores of them have been re¬\nduced in rank and practically forced\nto accept lower pay as skilled and un«:\nskilled laborers; some have been dis-;\nmissed outright; all have vanished\nsave one, and, in line with Democratic\nprecedent, he has been "segregated"J\nbeyond visibility! t\nIn the Postoffice Department the ^\ncolored employees have been assigned!\nto obscure quarters, hidden away as;\nit were in some remote section of the'\n or building, and when the de-3\npartment had many visitors, the chiefs)\nand lesser satellites would see to itj\nthat the colored contingent was kept j\nclose to work, and on one occasion\nmany of the employees of the Post-\noffice Department.national meeting\nof postmasters in Washington City,\n1015.were actually locked in, mani¬\nfestly for the purpose of impressing\ncertain visitors that they were in an\noffice free from negroes. These col¬\nored clerks and employees have been\ngiven to understand that there are too\nmany of them there, von though their\nformer numbers have been radically\nreduced, and that they had better be\nglad to remain on the payroll in any\nposition and at any salary under a\nDemocratic Administration. They are\ndiscriminated against in everything as\nrelates to class of work* conveniences
34002739d0a868a699ac294fa9a0feed THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.541095858701 40.063962 -80.720915 WInu lo Do lii l'ium ofNtiiiMrolte.\nDr. James, of the New York Board o\nlealth, has issued the following circular\nSunstroke is caused hy excessive heat\nitid especially if the weather is "muggy.'\nt is moroapt to cfccur on the second, thin\n>r fourth day of a heated term than on tin\nIrst. Loss of sleep, worry, excitement\niloue sleeping rooms, debility, abuse o\ntiniulants, predispose to it. It is mor<\n,pt to attack tliose working in the sun\niiul especially between tho hours o\nleven o'clock in the morning and fou:\n'clock in the afternoon. On hot dayi\nrear thin clothing, liavo as cool sloepinj\n001118 as possible. Avoid loss of sleei\nnd all unnecessary fatigue. If workiuj\nndoors and where there is artifical heat\nlundries, etc., see that the room is\n ventilated. If working in the sur\nrear a light hat (not black, as it absorb:\nleat), straw, etc., and put inside of it on\nlie head a wet cloth or a large green leaf:\nrequentlv lift the hat from the head am:\nee that the cloth is wet Do not check\nerspiration, but drink what water you\need to keep it up, as perspiration pre\nenta the body from being over heated\nhive, whenever possible, an additional\nliade, as a thin umbrella, when walking\ncanvas or board cover when workiug in\nbe sun. When much fatigued do not gc\no work, but be excused from work, espe\nialiy after 11 o'clock in the morning on\nery hot days, if the work is in the sun,\nf a feeling of fatigue, dizziness, headaclu\nr exhaustion occurs,
0a3113e7285bf9286b47691f78d22c44 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.0863013381531 39.745947 -75.546589 Arrests for January—For the month\nof January Chief of Police Swiggel re­\nported 204 arrests, as follows: Assault\nand battery, 16: cruelty to animals, 1 ;\ncorner lounging. 3; carrying concealed\nweapons, 1;drunk. 40: drunk and disor­\nderly, 13; disorderly conduct. 38; disor­\nderly house, 6; gambling, 19; highway\nrobbery, 4; keeping house of ill fame. 5;\nlarceny, 22 ; obtaining money under false\npretenses, 1; patients. 6; peddling with­\nout a license, 4: receiving stolen gioods,\n2; selling liquor without a license, 4; sus\npicious characters, 2; selling liquor on\nSunday, 2; trespass. 2; vagrancy, 2; vio­\nlations of city ordinance. 3; violation of\nmarket ordinance, 1; witnesses held, 7.\nBuilding lines marked—Frederic H.\nRobinson, chief engineer of the City\nveying Department, reports that «luring\nJanuary, 1889, lines were marked for\nbuildings as follows: Andrew B. White,\ntwo dwellings. Twelfth street, north side,\nbetween Heald and Claymonl .streets.\n W. Booker, eight «dwellings, Pop­\nlar street, west side, between Thirteenth\nand Fourteenth streets. John H. For­\nres*. two dwellings, Railroad avenue and\nFourteenth street, southwest corner.\nSamuel F. Blackiston, stable. Bassett\nstreet, west side. Eugene D Messick,\nstable, between Eighth and Ninth, and\nAdams and Jackson streets. Daniel\nDohl, three dwellings. Third street, north\nside, between Lombard and Pine streets.\nPatrick Bolen, two dwellings. Linden\nstreet, south side, between Franklin and\nBroome streets. William T. Hickman,\nstore. King street, east side, between\nFourth and Fifth. Samuel Culbert,\ndwelling, Lombard street, west side, be­\ntween McCaulley and Twelfth streets.\nJohn T. Dickey, Patrick Neary and\nNathan Lleberman, one store and dwell­\ning and nine dwellings, Franklin and\nConrad streets,northeast comer. Charles\nO. and Frederick C. Mammele, store.\nPoplar street, east aide, between Fifth\nand Sixth streets. Total for the month,\n32 buildings; total for January. 1888, 6\nbuildings.
2f2b58d27a667e29165edcde72aaf663 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1907.891780790208 42.217817 -85.891125 Prof. Roth attacks the present\nsystem of disposing of our state\nlands as expensive and wasteful.\nTho state has realized practically\n$1,000,000 from the sale of its\nlands since the passage of the\nact of 1001, approximately $1.25\nan acre. It has licensed 300,000\nacres to actual settlers and of\nthat acreage deeded 150,000 acres\nto those who completed their\nhomestead contracts. Any\nlands delinquent for five years'\ntaxes or more are subject to\ndeeding to the state by tho aud-\nitor general. After being deeded\nto the state tho peoplo are prac-\ntically under no expense for their\ndisposal. The statements made\nby Prof. Roth along this lino aro\nmisleading. Only while they\nare in the hands of tho auditor\ngeneral is tho state put to much\nexpense for advertising, etc.\nReforestry natural pine\nlands, such as have borne a good\ncrop of pine, also of cut-ove- r\nhard wood lands may be possi-\nble if given ample fire protection.\nIn reforesting this class of lands,\nhowever, we should not set aside\nfor an indefinite period any lands\nwhich will be suitable either for\nagriculturo or grazing. Our\nnorthern counties will never be\nsettled if we give the acreage\nasked for by our reforestry en\nthusiasts. We must not be mis\nled by the expense of our pres-\nent system, which, wiien rightly\nunderstood, will show a hand\nsome profit to the state. Refor\nestry of the right class of lauds\nwo heartily endorse, but let us\nconfine ourselves to an acreage\nunsuitable for agriculture and\ngrazing and eliminate tho refor\nestry of tho jack-pin- e
120bbff9524dcb3ec6b69371b8940ef2 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.1767122970573 41.020015 -92.411296 The defeat of the latter gentleman\ngrew out of personal pique against\nhim, entertained by some Republicans\nand they worked against, him with all\ntheir might. We are very sorry lor\nhis defeat, but no other gentleman can\ntake defeat more serenely than McNeU\nand we feel sure that he is the less\nhurt party as between him and the\nRepublicans who fought him.\nThe old council was against us and\nnow by the election of four Demo­\ncratic trustees the council stands two\nRepublicans and six Democrats.—\nWhile we iiad a largo majority in the\n4th Ward, we lost our trustee (here by\na complete stampede of Republicans\nto the Democrats. The 2d and 3d\nWards had both of them fair working\nRepublican majorities but both these\nwere lost by three votes. This is be­\ncause Republicans failed to stand by\ntheir candidates. We would not deal\n any unkind words on this account\nbut simply say we deplore such action :\nwe do not deplore it altogether becausc\nof present, defeat, but wo fear that in\nthe 4tli AVardat least, it has bred a very\nunhealthy defection that will not easi­\nly be healed. It is hard at any time to\nkeep the vote at a city election true to\nparly lines; this oue seems to have\nbeen remarkably free and easy in this\nregard so far as Republicans were\nconcerned. These little failures do a\nparty good sometimes, and to see the\nelectiou of three trustees against us\nwhen we should have had all of them,\nshows that Republicans were luke­\nwarm. Further, the fact that not half\nthe actual vote of the city was polled,\nindicates how wanting in interest our\nvoters were, and when a light vote is\nthrown, Republicans are always the\nsufferers.
42070420dbc49194179da13caf73f609 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.6424657217149 58.275556 -134.3925 After the applications have heon\nproperly prepared and executed they\nmay bo either presented to tho\nTrustee at bis ofTIco or mailed to him\nat Hox 1091, Juneau. Alaska. A\npost-ofTlce money order or check on\na Juneau bank In an amount suf\nfldent to cover the assessment\nshould accompany the application.\nThe deeds which will bt Riven by\nthe Trustee to the lot claimants\nmust be acknowledKod before an of-\nfleer BUthortMd to take acknowledg¬\nments of deeds, tho cost of which\nIs to be borne by the grantee. The\ncharge for taking tho acknowlodg-\nmcut will bo fifty cents for cach j\ndeed and this amount should bo sent\nto tho Trustee at the same time that\nthe assessment Is paid\nAll applications (lied prior to Aug¬\nust 1118, will be considered as1\nfiled simultaneously for the purpose\nof muking lot nwards and In all\neases, In which no conflicting claims\nto the same lot appear, deed or deeds\nwill Issue to the claimant whoso ap¬\nplication has been filed if he is\notherwise entitled to tho same, hut\nin all ases whore two or more appll-\nrations aro filed for the same lot\nprior to August 21, 1918, the Trus¬\ntee will set a date for n hearing ut\nwhich all claimants may uppear and\noffer evidence of their rcspoetlvc'\nclaims to priority and the Trustee\nwill thereafter Issue his floods In ac-\nL'ordanco with tho flnal dofermlna-\nlion of said CM.. All applications\nBled subsequent to August 21, 1918.\nwill be considered In tho ordor of\ntheir filing.
a93e7e04cd2bdda98b241cd43c830317 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.0479451737697 41.681744 -72.788147 Inc., held last evening it was voted\nto increase the capital stock of the\norganization from $120,000 to 1400,- 00- 0,\nto be divided into twelve thous-\nand shares of no par value, to be\nknown as A common stock; eight\nthousand shares of the par value\nof $25 each, to be known as B.\ncommon stock; and eight thousand\nshares of the par value of 325 each.\nto be known as preferred stock; and\nthat the preferred and B common\nstock shall have the same status,\nrights and privileges as the original\nissue of stocks. The provisions con-\ntained in the certificate of incorpora-\ntion having to do with the payment\nof dividends on the A common\nstock were amended so as to pro-\nvide for dividends at the rate of 30c\na share on said class of stock be-\nfore equal participation with the B\ncommon stock on extra dividends\nand that the present issue of A com-\nmon stock of the par value of $5 a\nshare be retired and that the regis-\ntered owners of shares of said class\nof stock, upon surrender to the cor-\nporation of their certificate \nsenting same, shall be entitled to a\nnew certificate of A common no par\nvalue stock for twice the number of\nshares which they held of the old\n$5 par value stock.\nIt was also voted at the meeting\nthat the stockholders of record at\n10 o'clock on the morning of Janu-\nary 17, 1 929 be given the right to\nsubscribe for any additional amount\nof the capital stock of the corpora-\ntion according to the ratio of their\nhidings on said date of the various\nclasses of stock, the subscription\nprice to lie 325 a share for the. pre-\nferred stock, $25 a share for the B\ncommon stock, and $5 a share for\nthe A common stock. The right of\nsuch stockholders to subscribe for\nsaid additional stock shall expire at\n10 o'clock on the morning of Feb-\nruary 18. after which it will be sold\nto the public. Subscriptions are now\nbeing received from the public on\na "if all 'when issued" basis.\nThe concern was incorporated a\nlittle over a year ago and has met\nwith remarkable success. The prin-\ncipal business Is dealing in second\ninortgag-e-
04cfce194aed2833a1edbfb468c7e472 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.9273972285641 40.441694 -79.990086 Mr. Donahoe then tool! np the case of\nO'Sullivan, and occupied nearly all of the\nremainder of the forenoon in a discussion\nof the alibi evidence from various points of\nview, drawing the conclusion that it was in-c -\ntestably proved O'Sullivan could have\nhad nothing to do with the murder. Jnst\nbefore the noon recess the speaker recurred\nto the case of Kunze, pointing as evidence\nof innocence the fact that though he antici-\npated arrest, he did not rnn away and de-\nclaring that it was not shown thatHunze\nknew either of the;defendants except Congh-\nlin and O'Sullivan. prior to the murder.\nOh the reassembling of the court Mr.\nDonahoe resumed his address. He read\nfrom legal works a definition of the term\nreasonable doubt, and a number of decisions\ntouching circumstantial evidence. Taking\nup the question oi O'Sullivan's contract\n Cronin, the speaker read decisions\ntouching criminal intention. This was to\nshow that this circumstance could not be\nturned against O'Sullivan, because it had\nnot been proved that O'Sullivan's intention\nwas to use this contract to bring about\nCromn's death. O'Sullivan, said Mr. Don-\nahoe, had no motive to commit this crime;\nhe was not at odds with Cronin; Cronin\nnever did anything to harm him; the ab-\nsence of a motive must be taken into the ac-\ncount when making np the judgment The\ncontract was made" openly, and O'Sullivan\nfreely confessed it and told all about it to\nwhoever asked, even alter the murder.\nTwo or three times daring tbe course of his\nspeech, Mr. Donahoe took occasion to refer\nto Mr. Hynex, of the prosecution, in de-\nnunciatory or sarcastic terms. At the close\nof his address the court adjourned.
7ff2e82393c7943269e0ded5dbd2aa5c CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1922.7027396943176 39.623709 -77.41082 Adams, Louis R.\nAnders, Walter\nAlbaugh, Maurice J.\nAlbaugh, Miss Helen\nBaker, Harry W.\nBauersfield, Emil G.\nBlack, Luther Earl\nBossard, Stanley Revelle\nBrenneman, Charles A.\nBrown, Daniel E.\nBrown, John T.\nBlack, Willis G.\nBollinger, John L.\nBulman, Wm. F .\nBoiler, Raymond\nBoiler, Otto\nBlickenstaff, Wilbur\nCarbaugh, Ernest H.\nCarbaugh, John J.\nClabaugh, Ernest\nCline, Benjamin E.\nCreegar, Edwin C.\nCreager, Raymond E.\nColliflower, Walter\nColliflower, Ernest\nDamuth, Lester E.\nDevilbiss, Herbert W.\nDiehl, Glenn\nDubel, Wm. McKinley\nDubel, Roy E.\nEaton, Ralph\nEichelberger, John D.\nEichelberger, Martin S.\nEigenbrode, Russell G.\nEyler, Arthur A.\nEyler, Lt. Edgar J.\nEyler, Frank M.\nFleagle, Paul Foster\nFlorence, Quinn J.\nFogle, Earl T.\nFogle, James Russell\nFraley, Harry\nFreeze, Edgar M.\nFiror, Lt. J . Wm.\nFreshour, Guy T.\nFraley, W. T .\nGall, David D.\nGrable, Harry Oscar\nGrimes, Frank\nGrimes, Elmer F.\nGall, Lt. Lloyd\nGall, John\nGemand, Albert S.\nGrabill, Wilbur\nGreen, Clifford\nHessong, Ralph G.\nHoffman, Lester\nHoffman, Clarence W.\nHammett, Charles E.\nHeimer, Roger C.\nKelbaugh, Earl T.\nKelbaugh, Ira C.\nKelbaugh, Roy O.\nKelly, Luther Lee\nKunkel, Francis\nKelbaugh, Lee\nLanders, Col, George F.\nLanders, Col. Howard Lee\nLate, Howard F.\nLewis, Guy\nMackley, Lloyd Calvin\nMatthews, Russell J.\nMessner, John William\nMoudy, Dallas L.\nMathias, Capt. Charles McC.\nMiller, Earl\nMiller, Keefer\nMomingstar, Earl\nMarshall, Thomas\nMcAfee, Oak C.\nMcAfee, Osba Grover\nMcGill, Joseph\nOToole, Lewis\nPowell, Mahlon S.\nPryor, Jesse M.\nPryor, Victor\nPyle, Ralph E.\nRecher, Charles Clayton\nReed, James H.\nReed, John Jacob\nReed, Samuel Howard\nRidge, Charles E.\nRogers, Charles A.\nRogers, Philip W.\nRoot, George William\nRouzer, Daniel Robert\nRouzer, Horton\nRosenberry, Lloyd\nRobinson, Mark\nSchindeldecker,
425909c71ab8b8a53d33d6e91c0ce24c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.9630136669202 39.745947 -75.546589 Americanization an After War Program.\nDavid Snellenburg spoke briefly, say­\ning that Americanization appealed to\nAmericans as one of the great after\nthe war programs. He said that nothing i ^\nwould be of greater help than such a\nprogram. In giving the nation what It\nshould have, and that the solution of\nevery problem now before the country\nwas to be found In Americanization\nDr. Samuel Chiles Mitchell, president\nof Delaware College, also endorsed the\nproeram, saying Dial he knew the\nyoung people of both the men's and\nwomen's colleges could be enlisted very\nlargely to help in the Amertcwizatlon\nwork. He praised the speeches of the\nevening as being pointed and practica'.\nHenry Hldgely, of Dover, said that It\nought to be emphasized first, that the\nAmerican Idea Is protection of life,\n.Iberty and property of all, even against\nthe majority, even against ourselves,\nand second, that the should\nrealize that In this counl-y he Is going\nto have some life, liberty and prop­\nerty to be protected. He said that the\nrural part of Delaware had Its part to\nperform in the proposed program. Par­\nticularly he suggested that foreigners\ncoming to the State should be more\ncarefully directed. Those who had led\na peasant, farming life In Europe would\nprobably be better directed to the coun­\ntry, Instead of the city, where they\nwere often a misfit. The foreigner,\nconcluded the attorney, should not only\nmake a living but a life in this country.\nFederal Judge Victor B Woolley told\nof twenty years experience in Inducting\nthousands of aliens Into American citi­\nzenship. He said he knew several\nthings not to do with the foreigners,\nnot to patronize them, not to coddle\nthem, not to give them the idea that\nthey are special wards of the govern-
0aaa53b0cfec0bdecd4c41921063685c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.1630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 colored men, citliens of Florida, had been\nkidnapped and transported acrosa the\nGulf of Mexico to Cuba and there sold\ninto slavery. The writer »J« 'ha\nmembers of femiltea.ofaomeen.ilwri\ncitizen*, had "fived intelligence\nfrom Cuba from their relative. that they\nwere held in bondage there\ntcr wan communicated to the Chief Exec\nutile of the United State. foreuoh action\nik might be deemed bent to vindicate\nAmerican dlgnltj.ln view\nso grossly In violation of the civili¬\nzation of the time.. The content.\nof tho letter occasioned surprise, to\nIhe President, and with a view\nof ascertaining the truth of the story, he\nconcluded to dispatch a confidential agent\nto Cuba for that purpose. Such an agent\nwas found in the person of Judge Leon¬\nard. a Republican member from Louis¬\niana in the Houso of Representatives, a\ngentleman discreet and courteous and fa-\nmiliar with the Spanish language. It\nwas thought advisable W pur.ue llii.di-\nrect course instead of making subject\nthe basis of a diplomatic correspondence.\nJudge Leonard a few days ago obtain-\ned an Indefinite leave of ab«nce from tbe\nHouse and left New York for Havana\non the .teamer Columbus on Wednesday,\nearning with liim letters from the Presi¬\ndent to IheCnpL General, and also one\nfrom Senor Mantilla, theSpaniall Minis¬\nter, addressed to the same officer, to whom\nJudge Leonard will make known he\nobjects of his mission. It i".'doubled\nthat the Captain General will afford him\nevery facility for the accomplishment of\nhis mission, besides eitel,ding his own\ninvestigations in the same direction.\nAnother object of the mission is to aecer-\ntain the true condition of the insurgents,\nolBcial accounts and from nianrrecUonary\nsource, being contradictory. While one\nside represent. the decline of the insur¬\nrection the other assert, the contrary,\nand agents have been here in behalf. ol\ntho insurgent Cubans with a view to the\nrecognition of their independence by the\nDoited Slates.
a3dcbc16cb46ed30ab72a41a5bbac3a1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.5520547628107 37.561813 -75.84108 evidence oTsnch corporation or company\nSection 3 That when the foregoing\nprovisions have been complied with, the\npersons named as corporators in said\ncertificate, are hereby authorized to\ncarry into effect tho objects named in\nsaid certificate, in accordance with the\nprovisions of this act; and they and\ntheir associates, successors and assigns,\nby the name and stylo provided in said\ncertifiento, shall thereafter bo deemed a\nbody corporate, with succession, with\npower to sue and bo sued, plead and be\nimpleaded, defend and be defended,\ncontract and bo contracted with; to\nmako and use a common seal, and the\nrnme to alter or break at plenure; and\nto do all needful acts to carry into effect\nthe objects for which it is created.\nSection 4. Any company or asso-\nciation, organized for the purposes afore-\nsaid, shall have power to build, purchase,\nand hold such number of steamboats or\nother vessels, and such other personal\nproperty, as may be deemed necessary\nfor commencing and conducting; the\nbusiness of the association; and shall\nhave power to sell the same, or any part\nthereof, in such manner, and for such\npurpose, as may be prescribed by the\nrules and regulations of the company,\nand not inconsistent with tho laws of\nthis State. And said company shall\nhavo rower to carry any articles of\n or produce upon any of the\nnavigable streams in tho State of Ohio,\nand on any of the lakes and navigable\nrivers bordering thereon; and shall be\ngoverned by the Fame laws, not incon-\nsistent with this act, which govern indi-\nviduals in such employments.\nSection 5. Tho annual meeting of\ntho stockholders of such company, after\nthe first election of directors, shall be\nheld at such time as the directors may\nprescribe, at which meeting the direc-\ntors of tho company shall bo elected,\nand such other lawful business dono ns\ntho stockholders rcny deem necessary\nand proper; and should they fail to elect\ndirectors at tho annual meeting, they\nshall hold a special meeting at some\nsubsequent time for that purpose, by\ngiving thirty days notice thereof in\nsome newspaper in general circulation\nin the county whero tho principal office\nof such company is situated. The di-\nrectors shall hold their office until their\nsuccessors aro chosen and qualified, and\nshall have power to fill all vacancies in\ntheir body; but no person shall be a\ndirector after ceasing to be a stockhol-\nder. Immediately after the elcc'ion of\ndirectors, they shall elect one of their\nnumber president of the corporation,\nand may appoint such other officers\nand agents as they may deem proper\nto transact their business, and
0ed373d707bfc4ba9c7f22b5661b249b OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.3109588723999 41.020015 -92.411296 As tho Cincinnati Gazette says,\nthere have been a great many vol­\numes written on political economy\nwithin the last few years, especially\non the financial question, which are\nnot worth much to-day. In spite of\nall predictions and all theories, gold\nfell in New York Saturday to 100 xi,\nand has remained there, going down\nto 100l6, and now National banks\neverywhere are announcing that they\nwill redeem their noteB in gold on\npresentation. Specie payments have\nnot been resumed formally, but prac­\ntically everybody that wants specie\ncan now secure it, and substantially\nG50 millions of paper money is equal\nto gold. Eminent financiers have\ntold us that specie payments could\nnot be maintained without a heavy\ncontraction of the currency, but with\n650 millions of that currency out­\nstanding, gold has fallen of its \nweight, to a level with paper virtual­\nly. There is inflation, too, the coin\nin the country having been added to\nthe volume of the currency, and the\nmints are increasing this, in ([old and\nsilver, at the rati of four millions a\nmonth. The credit of the nation, too,\nis again as good as new, and 50 mil­\nlion 4,12 per cent bonds sold for gold\nat 103. Another curious and gratify­\ning thing is that with practical re­\nsumption values are improving.—\nWall street prices are in the upward\nscale and the bears are failing. This\nIs the opposite of what was anticipat­\ned. The Greenbackers are as badly\nfooled as the learned writers on po­\nlitical ecouomy, and greenback plat­\nforms can now be bought very cheap,\nwhile works on finance will be again\nlargely discarded.
815a1eaf3c8e498f655b3b2f4929ccde DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.8073770175572 58.275556 -134.3925 l'age 199. year 1787. - - Ground no\nthaw all summer. Owing to grouse\neggs freezing on aide next ground,\nonly top of eggs hatch; grouse all\ndoformcd and fly crooked, making\n'em hard to get. No water in river,\nno flsh. Young squaws leary about\ntaking bucks to support. Social life\nmuch disorganized and general bad\nsmell. Suf-fi-elent unto tho day Is\nthe evil thereof. Wough.\nOne year Inter. Another lean\nyear. Children all die of mange ex¬\ncept one hoy named Kowakadada,\nwho la eight years old.\nThe last Item from .the birch bark\nhook was given by the Stroller for\nthe purpose of establishing the\nstatement and verifying the word of\nhit old friend with whon he con¬\nducted the Interview given in the\n'.receding portion of Ihia article,\nind which thowi him to be, as he\nstate*, hi* Mint year.\nThe Stroller very niurh fear* that\nthe .early closing of navigation on\nthe Yukon river may prove a great\ndisappointment to one of hia frlcnda,\nthe Sourest of All Doughs, at Daw¬\nson, and to whom the Stroller had\nlust sent by registered mail a can\nof green paint for use on the grave\nof Mmpln' Grouse, as the latter fears\nthe steamer on which the consign¬\nment Is being carried down the river\nIs stranded on a bar. Nearly 10\nears ago the Stroller obligated him-\nelf to upply the Sourest of Doughs\nwith n < an o* green paint each fall\nand spring In order that he might\nkeep Inv'olMc a promise he made\no the de eased when sho died many\nyears ago to keep her grave green\nat all times when it Is not covered\nwith snow.
1489b680e2a7b0e0adb0b3da935caa4b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1901.7356164066464 41.004121 -76.453816 Whatever mav be the nraises and\nthe virtue of the American, and thank\nGod they are many, an excessive de-\nvotion to reverence and what St.\nPaul describes as a "zeal for religion"\ncannot, as. yet, be claimed as one of\nhis glories. And if the nation has been\ncalled upon to suffer, as it has just\nnow, mat mis golden fruit may come,\nwell may we thank God for the lesson,\nand at the same time, add penitential\ntears tO Our SOrrOW that the sarnhrp\nshould at all be needed. A deep,\nreligious instinct, which was so con-\nspicuously chuacteristic of hi m ure\nmourn, surely that is what we need.\nAna Dy no more impressive way could,\nthis be taucht us than hv the\nevidences of real love and trust in\nGod which he displayed in death.\nThe nation, my brethren, will gather\nits lessons to heart as once more it\nsteadfastly sets its face hopefully to\nthe future and its work. But it will\nhave forgotten the noblest, it it allows\n10 pass away, only alter a spasmodic\nand short lived effort, this, the deep-es- t\n most significant, the value of\ntrue religion in every heart. We leave\nto others to proclaim his statesman-\nship, his patriotism, his success in pol- -\nuics, Dut tms we may not, we wish\nnot to forcet his services to his\ncountry as a son of God. Come\nwhat will of the bursts of anarchy, or\nschism, or treason, or lawlessness, or\ndisorder, or it religion in any form, and\nwith whatever battalions of organized\nstrength they may force against our\nnie. Lome it mey will with insidious\ntreachery, sneaking into our council\nchambers, our homes, our churches,\nour friendships, in what disguise they\nmay, or with what attractions, and\never will creation (it only its heart be\nkept alive and true in that unsullied\nand pure religion which has been sent\nto us from heaven), ever will the earn-\nest expectation of creation resent the\nintrusion of these horrid thinos an1\nwith eager yearning wait for the man- -\nneataiion ot tne sons ot God. Truth\nand truth alone will prevail. It is\nforever and forever true in the lives of\nnations, as of men, righteousness
110bdc9b61064475058ed58e21403a67 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.703551880945 40.832421 -115.763123 "Nothing can be more distasteful to nie\nIn a political campaign than to find ques¬\ntions relating to my race and faith put\nto the front of the contest for party and\npersonal purposes. While it is ju»t\nand proper for all men of foreigu birth\nto sympathize with their countrymen ut\nhome, and to aid them in securing free¬\ndom and happiness, nothing in my opin¬\nion cau be more unwise than to mix our\nieelings and internals in our nutive land\n«rith the internal politics of this country\nof which we have become citizens,\nfiooner or later tho cause so near to our\nhearts will suffer from the dangerous\nconnection. It is gratifying for me to\nknow and feel that the party to which I\nbelong is not responsible tor giving the\ncitizens of Irish birth and blood tho\nspecial prominence assigned them in\nthis campaign. As a man who has never\nbeen ashamed of his race or blood, and\n-whose heart has ever empathized with\nliia suffering countrymen, I see nothiug\nto be proud of, but mflch that is danger-'\nour to the cause of Ireland in that pro¬\nminence. The country has been told by\nmany of its leuding journals and politi¬\ncians that the time has arrived when\nevery citizen of Irish birth ought leave\nthe Democratic party and go over to the\nRepublican. IJaui well aware that long\nyears of oppression, the base and wilful\nmisrepresentations of Great Britain and\nits press have done much in placing the\nIrish people in a false light liefore u\nlarge part of tho American public; but,\nnotwithstanding all this, all must admit\nthat no people on earth have greater\nnatural sagacity or stronger love for truth\nand principle than the Irish. V. hy, then,\nshould they leave their old, well-tried\nfriends and go over to their enemies ?\nWhat has thu Democrutic party done to\nforfeit Irish confidence? What lius the\nRepublican party done to merit it?\n[Cries of "Nothing," and cheers for\nCleveland.] Tho latter has bieu iu\npower for more tlmu twenty years, and\nduring that time tho great body of the\nmen of Irish blood on this continent\nhuve stood where their fathers did, stead¬\nfast iu their devotion, enthusiastic in\ntheir support, uuwuverirg iu their iidel-\nity to Democratic principle*. Whether\non the battlefield yielding up (heir life's\nb'ood in defense of the Union, or iu the\nstruggles of ordinary life by sweat and\ntoil, adding to the wealth and growth of\nthe Republic, they have never deserted\nt e grand old party that was ever true to\ntoui."
001f7c1ca1e5d268d423a13dcb4bfbe6 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1886.1520547628108 42.217817 -85.891125 presses its condemnation of the refusal of the\nAttorney General, under whatever iuiluptiee, to\nsend to the Senate copies of poers called for\nby its resolution of tho rth of January,\nand set forth in the reports of the\nCommittee on the Judiciary, as In violation of\nhis ollicial duty and subversive of the funda-\nmental principles of the Government and\nof a good administration thereof. Jiemlval. That\nit is, under these circumstances, the duty of the\nSenate to ref uso its advice and consent to pro-Io e- d\nremovals of officers, the documents and\npapers in referenoo to the supponed ollicial or\npersonal misconduct of whom aro withheld by\nthe Executive or any head of a department,\nwhen deemed necessary by the Senate\nand called for in considering the matter. He- -\nor. That the provision of section 17S4 I\nthe l&evisea htatutes declaring that ,ersons\nhonorably discharged from the military or naval\nservice by reason of disability resulting from\nwounds or sickness incurred in the line of duty,\nBhHll be preferred for anointments to civil\nothces, provided that they are found to possess\nthe business capacity necessary for the proper i\ndischarge of the dutir 1 of such office,' ought to\nle faithfully and fully put In execution, and j\nthat to remove or to prtose to remove any such\nsoldier whoso faithfulness, oompetency, and\ncharacter lire alove reproach, and to give place\nto another who has not rendered such service, is\na violation of the spirit of tho law and of the\npractical gratitude the people and Government\nof the Unjted States owju to the d fenders of\neonbtttotioual liberty ana the integrity of tho\nGovernment."
1772b4ddae1ed6c08e2569c5c0eed899 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1901.4643835299341 37.451159 -86.90916 ents would grant no hearing during\nJuly and August It is a tit sequel tot\nBoss Platt being allowed to put a polit\nteal figure head in charge of the enor\nuioua business Interests of the Patent\noffice That order If not set aside ho-\nhigher authority will delay the business\nof every inventor whose ease requires a\nhearing for more than two months and\npile up a class of business already in ar\nrears which will be a future incentive\nto Improper anti unjust decisions These\nmen will continue to draw their salaries\nduring July and August and the Gov\nernment will continue to make n profit\non the Patent office The injustice\nof such conditions is apparent to all and\nthe rumpus it will raise will be heard\nin Congress next winter\nAfter thinking the matter over the\nCubans have accepted the Platt amend\nment just as it passed Congress and\ntheir action has been officially commu\nnicated to the War Department\nThe Impression prevails among tIn\nlabor leaders who already at work\npreparing to bring pressure upon Con\ngress at its coming session toreenuct the\nChinese exclusion law which expires\nnext May that the administration is\nsecretly if not openly against reenact\nment although they do not cure to\ntalk about it for publication at this\nstage of the fight They hint however\nthat if the administration opposes reen\nactment there will be sonic lively times\nin Congress which will have an effect\non next years Congressional campaign\nAlthough Judge Springer attorney\nfor the Kiowa Comanche anti Apache\nIndians who are protesting against the\ncarrying out of the treaty providing for\nthe opening of their lands in Oklahoma\nto public settlement has not received\nmuch encouragement from the author\nes he Is still pushing the matter A\ndelegation of Indians arrived in Wash\nington today to personally present to\nMr McKinley the protest of what they\nclaim to bo a majority of the tribes\nand a suit against the Secretary of the\nInterior will be heard next week in the
2fe3b0931bce5894a41b7fb4cf89034a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.7794520230848 40.832421 -115.763123 Seventeen ear loads of fat beef cattle\nfor the San Francisco market passed\nthis evening. They were shipped from\nHalleck Staliou by Dan Mnrphy.\nSix drunken Indians passed through\nMound valley Monday, creating consid¬\nerable excitement and fright ainmig the\nsettlers. Tliey wero strangers in the\nvalley and it is not known where they\nprocured their liquor.\nSome musically Inclined individual,\nwho livos aud has hi* being in tho vi¬\ncinity of this office favored us to-day\nwith a sontn, or son of something else,\non a French horn or bugle, or souio ouch\near-tearing instrument. Tho fact of his\nplaying a solo somewhat distracted\nfroin the effect of tho tnu'ic, which\nwould have been appreciably improved\nhy an accompaniment of about thtrly\nc«ts in a love making mood.\nThe preliminary examination of Wi|.\nHam Qarrard for tho killing of Simeon\nBarclay at laat Fri lay, was\ncommenced in that place Monday aud\nolosod this tnorning. Tho caso was\nsubmitted upon tho testimony of tho\nprosocutlou and Mr. Oarrard was hold\nto answer before tho next Ursnd Jury,\nwith ball set at $10,000, which was\npromptly fnrnlshod by Oeorgo liussell\nand Dr. Henderson of thii place.\nThe Sixth Annual Rtato Fair of Ne-\nvada opened at Reno yesterday, and\nthere I* every reason to believe it will\nhe tho beat ever given by the State Ag¬\nricultural Society. A large number of\nhorie* aro at tho track, including lied\nCross, Maggie 0., Goldnote, Frank,\nTommy Gales, John Stewart, St. Hole.\nna, Belle II., Hoso, Lily Breed, William\nTell, Surprise, l'atchen Girl, I'rootor\nand SirWhix. Among tho trottora aro:\nComer, Madge, Dnko, Illusion, Long,\nfellow, J. D . Fryo, Dlcelwx, Hetsy Mo«\nGinn, Red Oak and many others,
06512d783ff676ab005fd1be878333e0 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1891.6452054477422 35.996653 -78.901805 There .was little laughter, les3 loud\nargument and no angry disputing. Ev-\nery now and then, like bees leaving a\nhive, a figure was seen to separate from\nthe rest and move o;7 toward the polling\nroom, and anon another returned. One\nsaw among them here and there the\nmodern Japanese, with his imitation of\nforeign garments, in appearance seldom\nelegant, often awkward, and generally\nout of harmony with the surroundings.\nBut chiefly there came the old fash-\nioned rustic, in hi.i best silk robes, with\nsquare shaven crown and short queue\ncaught up and tied perhaps wearing\nthe hakama, or divided skirt, of the old\nsamurai. A gentleman in every act, he\nbows as he enters to the oificial at the\ndoor, carefully writes his ballot and\naffixes his .ceal. then with great delibera-\ntion folds it and places it in the oblong\nofficial envelope. For some of the voters\nit is necessary to seek the assistance a\nspecial clerk in writing their ballots. It\nis not that the' cannot write; for every-\nbody knows the plebeian ka:ia or sylla-\nbic writing. They prefer to see then\nballots inscribed with the more elegant\nChinese characters: and then, too, the\nkana is sometimes ambiguous (for some\nwords have a dozen different meanings),\nand there is a natural perturbation and\na desire to have their meaning clearly\nand correctly conveyed. When the\nwriting is finished the long sleeved votei\nwalks over to the tachiainin, or inspec-\ntors. Here further effusions of polite-\nness take place, while the voter gives\nhis name, number and address, and is\nchecked off on the register. Then, with\nanother gesture of courtesy, he turns to\nthe ballot box, and with a bow, perhaps\nin duplicate, to the kind old mayor, who\nsits behind the box, he carefully deposits\nhis ballot and quietly retires by another\ndoor. J . II. Wigmorc in Scribner's.
21fd11b6a8ce591ef8d8632ed1f4e9aa THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1878.7383561326737 41.004121 -76.453816 That every person excepting Justices ot the Peace\nand Aldermen, Notaries Publlo and Persons In the\nmllltta service of tho state, who shall hold or shall\nwithin two months havo hold any rwe or appoint\nment of pront or trust under the Urd states, or of\nthis State, and city or corporated district, whether\ncommissioned officer or otherwise, a subordinate\nortlcer or agent who Is or shall bo employed under\ntho Legislature, Executive or Judiciary Department\nthis State, or of any city or of any incorporated\ndhtrlct, and also, that every member ot Congress\nand ot the State Legislature, and of the select or\ncommon couucll of any city, or commissioners of any\nIncorporated district, Is by law Incapable of holding\nor exercising at tho same time the office or appoint\nment of Judge, inspector or Clerk of any election o\nthis Common wraith, and that no Inspector, Judge or\nother officer ot such election shall eligible to bo\nthen voted for.\nTho Inspectors and Judge ot tho elections shall\nmeet at the respective places appointed for holding\ntie election In tho district to which they respectively\nbelong, before seven o'clock In the morning, and\neach of said lnspoctors shall appoint one clerk, who\nshall be a qualified voter of such district.\nThe qualified voters of tho several districts In\nthis county at all general, township bor\nough and special elections, aro nercby hereafter\nauthorised and required to vote by tickets priced or\nwritten, or partly printed and partly written, sever- -\nally classlHed as follows : One ticket shall embrace\nthe names of all Judges of Courts voted tor, and\nlabelled, outside, "Judiciary;" one ticket shall em.\nbrace the names of all the State officers voted for\nand to bo labelled "State;" une ticket shall embrace\ntho namos of all county officers voted for, Including\nthe office of Senator,
05291b272029d325d1e3c93eb2e0d361 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.0260273655506 40.063962 -80.720915 Alfred Lambert, compositor, seriously\nImrtin head and back, not fatal; W. A .\nMcCurdy, bricklayer, badly injured, but\nivill not die; Jumes Watt, carpenter, in-\njuries not fatal; Michael Kyan, brick¬\nlayer, badly bruised back and legn, will\nrecovdr; John Donully, bricklayer,blind-\nled by sand and badly bruised, will not\nlie; lien ry Faultnor, badly i uj ured about\ntho head, hurt internally, recovery\nioubtful; Thomas McKeu, bricklayer,\nwill recover, legs brokeu: Oscar E. Smith,\nstenographer, slightly; Elmer McKeon,\nclerk, not serious; Martin ilallcrun, en¬\ngineer, badly bruised but not fatal;\nUeorge Mason, seriously injured about\nlieud and body, bis life is despaired of;\nWilliam Springor. engineer, badly but\nnot fatally injured; William Barker, in¬\njured internally, death expected:\nJohn Goehriug, lawyer, severely Injured\nnbout tho bead, will recover;\nMorris Wine, brlcklayor, blown from\ntop of building, not fatal; Oweu Don¬\nnelly, bricklayer, hurt about head and\nback, quito serious; Geo. Threshler,bar¬\nber, severe scalp wound and concussion\naf the bruin, serious; W. W . McKown.\nboth legs broken, will recover; Samuel\nBrown,bricklayer, serious;GuorgoScott,\nprinter, severely hurt, but not fatally; G.\nLang, printer, back injured, not serious.\n E. Melvin, printer, urin dislocated and\nhead cut; Uus Messmor. printer,\nihouldor blsdo and leg broken; liov.\nFather Canovin, badly bruised but not\nBerious; Hartley Colley, fireman, bruised\nand cut, not fatal; Samuel Strineer, boy\nvory bauly hurt, may die; WfilioMc-\nGlone, boy badly injured, probably fatal¬\nly ; Huv. Father Canoviu, who wus help¬\ning to rescue the victims, narrowly es¬\ncaped being killed. About four o'clock\nJoseph Goehring, un errand boy employ¬\ned by Weldon « Company was discover¬\ned among the debris, lie was heard to\ncall for a drink of water, and Fathor\nCanevin. and B. Devileu got a tin of\nwater. They wore about to let it down\nto young Gephring. through a small guiu\nhose, when u partit ion wall in the rear of\nWeldon & Go,'a store fell covering up\nFather Canovin and throe others. Wnon\nFather Canevin heard the wall cracking\nhe supposed ho would be killed, and\npushing Devlin aside, ho threw his arms\naround a pillar, so as to prevent tho air\nfrom boinKCUtofftrom young Goehring.\nFortunately ho wns not much hurt, and\nwhon rescued, was able to go homo un¬\nassisted.
4a930b436fe2f13d7baaa6f5962bc222 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1861.7356164066464 43.624497 -72.518794 bia HE.MEDIAIj INSTITUfE FOU SPECIAI, DISEAS\nKS, No. 28 Union stroct l'roviucncc. a .. i .\n"Thi Spmalty cmbraces au uiseaata oi h rrwnt\nnaturo. both of JIKN ond WUMKiM, uy a rogmariy eu- -\nueated phyaiclan of twcntv ycara' practico, giving them\nbia whuttt oltntion. HT Conaultntioiia hy lctter or other -wia - e\naro .fn'rlly confidtntial, nnd mcdlcinca will be cnt\nby Expreas, iteure'rom ofotrvation, to all parts of the\nUniied Stntcs. Alo accomnioJ.ttlons fur pationta from\nabroad wlshlng lor a Bccuro and iuiot Umiikat with\ngcod care, until restorcd to hcalln\nCAUTION. It has bccn cstiiuatcd, that ovcr Two\nIfundrtd Thoumnd Dollots are paid to swlndling quacks\nannually, Iu New England alono, without nny Itntfit to\nthoao who pay it. .Most of thia aum comcs out of a claas\nofperaona who aro tho loistabloto lojo it, but onco\nnaid thrv amntver cil itbnck. an I they aro coiupellcd to\nanlTer the wrong In tdlenco, not daring to expov) \nchcat for fcar of tiposin; tkenuttvtt. All thia eoiuca\nrom trttsting, without tnomry, lo menwiio nroaiiKO\nof honor, cbaracter, and skill, and whoa only\nreeominend.itioti is ihclr own falso und cxtrar.ig.mt\narrlinni, in prnlse of thtmsrlvi. If, tlicrcforc, you would\navtidlnnz hunlnigrd, tako no mun'i word, no mattrr\nuhat Ai prtttnaiom nre, but .MAKE INQUIUY: it wlll\ncost yuu nothing, nnd may savo you iuiuy rcgrctsj for,\nas advortlalng physlclana, in nlno casea out of tcn aro\niojtiT, thore ia no a.ifcty in trusling any nf thrm, unlcss\nyou know tcho nnd what thuy arc.\nDr. M. will eond frkg. by sncloaing one etamp aa\nabove, a Pamphlct on UISEASI-- OF WO.MEN, and on\nPnWe Diteaits ccncrnlly, civli'g full informntlon,\nth mont undouUtd xrftrtneti and tatimoniaU, without\nwbich no advertiiiing physician or mcdlcinc of thia kind.\nia deaerringof ANY CONFIDENCE AVIIATEVEIt.\nOrdera by rot.il promplly atteuded to. U'rito yonr\ntddre:i fUixly, and dircot tr. DH. MlTriSON, as\nikoro.
0992add3b36e19c3e762862b87b22f15 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.7964480558085 40.063962 -80.720915 Blossom Prairjk, Tkx , October 16\nMrs. Munnell yesterday suicided by\nstrychnine. No cause is known but ill-\nhealth and despondency.\nSchl'lk-nbi'kg, Tax., October 16..A far¬\nmer named F. Jasper, living three miles\nout in the country, yesterday committed\nsuicide by banging. He was found hang¬\ning to the limb of a post oak tree, two\nhundred yards from his residence. The\nbody was taken down and buried by the\nwife of the deceased\nBkooksto.v, Tax., October 16..William\nRoan, colored, stabbed and killed a white\nman named 0. W. Lam yesterday. Roan\nwas arrested and jailed.\nBnnlnraa Hen (aught In the Trap.\nBoston, October 16..Since the damag¬\ning denouements of the past few days it\nhas been learned that a large number of\nwell known business men, attracted by\nthe immense interest paid on capital by\nthe "Ladies' Deposit," run by Mrs. Howe,\nand now suspended, raised every dollar\nwithin their power, even mortgaging\nstocks of goods, household furniture and\npersonal property, and with the aid \ntheir lady frieuds and relatives placed all\nin Mrs. Howe's hands. Some of Boston'*\nfirst families, allured by her tempting\noffers of interest, are mixed up in the con¬\ncern. for weal or woe, in sums varying\nfrom $2,000 to $10,000 each. It is esti¬\nmated that the amount of money obtained\nfrom depositors by Mrs. Howe during the\npast three years is fullv $1,000,000. Mrs.\nHowe is a short, fat, ugly looking woman,\ncoarse in speech, but is "loud" in tbe mat¬\nter of drew. Her "cashier," Susan Cran-\ndull, is described as being about thirty\nye;rBofage. thin, spare and exceedingly\n^nely, but "sharp" as steel. 8he was\nf«rJierly employed by Mrs. Howe as a ser¬\nvant in her household.\nBoston. October 17..Tbe police have\narrested Julia A. Gould, charged jointly\nwith Mra. Howe in a conspiracy to obtain\nmoney by falee pretenses through the\nLadies' Deposit Company,from depositors,\nand both women are detained at tbe City\nHall. Miss Crand'ill, the cashier, is also\nin custody.
1c6d741053c213cf3243b305df7aaec7 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9275955967921 38.729625 -120.798546 It mar seem stringe to ronr readers Ihst\nthe Centrili line, which but ■ few weeks ago\nwas selected with such unanimity, should be so\nsoon abandoned, and the rival mule so eagerly\nsought. For this change, independently of the\nreasons shore giren, there are others which it\nis proper the people of California should be ad*\nriseti of. The gentlemen who have charge of\nthe Pacific Telegraph hare long been in com-\nmunication with the Messrs. Ilee, who control\nthe line from PUcerville toCarsou Valiev, with\nwhich they will have to connect, on the Central\nroute. an<T, I am aorrr to any, that they hare\nbeen unable to come to any terms at all satis-\nfactors. Frinì what I can glean here, the\nMessrs. Bee set s very high estimate upon the\nvalue and importance of their line. Thev made\ndemanda which are regarded aa exborhitant.”\nThis information will surprise the Di-\nrectors of the Company, who were cer-\ntainly ignorant that any propositions had\nbeen made hy “ the gentlemen who have\ncharge of the Pacific Telegraph" lor a\nconnection with the “ line from Placerville\nto Carson Valley." The Messrs. TCtThave\nno authority whatever to net for the Pia-\ncertille Co. F . A . Bee, Ksq., is President\nof the Company, hut Albert Hoc is not\neven a Director, scarcely a stockholder.\nIf propositions foraconncction were made\nto them they kept the matter profoundly\n from the Directors. F . A. Bee is\nthe mere agent of the Company—Albert\nhas nothing to do with it—and the agent\ncan transact no business whatever with-\nout first getting the authority and con-\nsent of the Directors. liehoi no control\norer the line. He wóuM have been re-\nmoved from his present position at the\nlast meeting of the stockholders, had it\nnot been for what we musi now regard as\ngenerous but unappreciated sympathy.\nThat he has abused that sympathy and\ngreatly, perhaps fatally, injured the Com-\npany, the above almost warrants us in\nsaying. A Sandwich Islander has as\nmuch authority to act for the Company\nas Albert Bee has. The Company is not\nresponsible for his acts, nor do they re-\ncognize his acts. The President had not\nthe power to appoint him an agent—the\nDirectors refused to. We can scarcely\nbelieve that without authority, he would\nhave the presumption to claim to be an\nagent of the Company. We arc emphatic\nin our statements,—wc feel justified in\nusing unmistakable language, because we\nderive our information from perfectly re-\nliable and responsible gentlemen, from\nDirectors of the Company, who are mor-\ntified and annoyed at the presumption\nand mismanagement of the Messrs. Bee.\nThey have acted strangely and injudi-\nciously and unauthoritatively. They had\nno right to make demands on the Pacific\nTelegraph Company without first consult-\ning
22f3d275993977f3ffdb8138cb558eb8 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.392076471109 39.745947 -75.546589 North Ittoo on the Brandywine, Misty\nMorning at Cape May; Oove Below\nPenusgrove, 'Things to Adora;” J. B.\nBell, Evening; W. B. Butler, Mastiff:\nMrs. 8. M. Ooxe, B. & O. Railroad\nBridge Across Brandy wloe;Miss Liasta\nT. Fipps. Spectre Cascade, Gl\nOnoko; Miss Alios Flemming, tha\nRatal Home; F. W. Grotz, Sbellpot\nOr*ek; Brest Grnnflld, Gape May\nBeach, Ope May Beach by Moonlight;\nJohn T. Hysire, Month of Perkooming;\nMrs. Gerunds H Harlow, Windswept,\nGaps May; Miss Ella Hood, Terraoa\nFails, Glen Onoko; Houston Harlan,\nStudy of Charooal; Miss Marne E Ham*\nmitt, Game, Game, Hunting Prairie\nHens; Miss Bertie Harr s, No Admit­\ntance; Miss Lillian Jackson, Sweet\nVloet«, Going Abont; Miss Mazle L.\nKiny, Chi stunts, Au!a Lang Syne, Klee\nof the Siren; Miss Helen L. Lawrenoe,\nToe Flower Girl; Mias Uella O. Miller,\nHallowene, Bewails Point, Cape May;\nMUs L. F Moore, Violin, Apples; Miss\nMary Morrow, Sliver Spray Falls;\nJohn McKalg, Headgates on Brandy­\nwine; A. B . Marks, Coast of Maine,\nJertey Ooa»t; Albert S. Mmhausen,\nToole of My Profeesion; P. A. Mo-\nMaunr, Moonlight ou the Delaware;\nWilliam T. Nickerson, Niagara Falla;\nMlis Porter, Sindy in J. B .\nPierce, Fells Dam on Rsd Olay Creek;\nMrs. W. H. Rogers, Why the Hene\nDon't Lav; Miss Bertha L. RHey, Milk\nMaid ot Zayder Zie; George B. Rlugle-\nifl ton, Hois I Fai-, Apples, So Oold; P. O .\nSirane. Broadheads Greek, Pa ; Mtse\nJulia Belnioken, Roses; Miss L'zale\nWelle, Brandywine.\nAmong these are several works pos­\nsessing considerable merit, and all\nshow the advance that an Is making in\nthis olty under the aneplcee and effi­\ncient tnltlun of Mr. Hammltt. Q ilte a\nnumber of these pictures were painted\nby eleotrlo light, and while some are\nfrom sketohee made by Mr. Hammltt,\nothers are captes of paintings, engrav­\nings or ohromoe.\nAfter the pictures had been fully in­\nspected the guests retired to tbo large\nhall where a grand musical and literary\nentertainment w»e given, consisting of\nmuslo by Uitotaia's orchestra, recita­\ntions by Miss Virgle Jones, piano solos\nby Miss Carrie P. Forbes, voosl solos\nby Miss Tlllte Lambaaer and singing\nby a quart, te oompoaed of Miss Kata\nHiss* li*. Miss Mary TbieimiiD, Messrs.\nW. R. Walters and D. N Cloward.\nAt the conclusion of these exercises
316a48f1e9a76990aa6811f2af943184 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.0890410641807 41.681744 -72.788147 in France which have been vastly\ndevasted and there has been no con-\nstruction work done in these regions\nas yet. Other towns, which did not\nsuffer to any great extent have been\nrebuilt and are busy. The women in\nthat country are very thrifty and\nhard working, and can be seen in\nthe fields dolnj? a man's work any\ntime of the day. France is typically\na small nation of property owners.\nEach peasant, no matter how poor,\ngenerally oyns a small tract of land\nwhich they till. There are places\nthat are horribly handicapped. Fac-\ntories had been destroyed and ma-\nchinery within smashed. Mr. Chandler\nspoke well of a representative from\nIllinois by the name of Britton. This\nman hs said, fought against a bill\nthat had been brought forward in\ncongress to the effect that France\n send men over to the army of\noccupation in Germany. France is in\nno condition to aid in this end. With\nmore than one and a quarter million\nof men killed and three to four mil-\nlion crippled, they should be elim-\ninated from this work.\nItaly is suffering greatly from lack\nof coal There is little money in the\nnation, and it will take a long time\nto resume its normal stage.\nBelgium, hit harder than any of\nthe nations, is coming back to its\nnormal stage nevertheless, but there\nis suffering in some cities.\nBelgium people are hard working\nand will not rest until the country\nis on its feet again.\nMr. Chandler spoke briefly on his\nvisit as a delegate from the National\nChamber of Commerce in this coun-\ntry, to the national conference held\nat Paris.
1065cbd373e65a4329b37149e8f77224 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.1904109271943 29.949932 -90.070116 n was yesterday rendered by Judge Dorell:\n" It is ordered and decreed that the demurrer be\nsustained and the bill dismissed with costs."\nThe second of the great wine cases which was\ncommenced on Tuesday, weeasyesterday continued.\nOn Tuesday, Messrs. Marshall, Courie and Green.\nwood, English experts were examined for the\ngovernment, as was also Mr. P . Winfree of the\nCustom House and Mr. Duasat, inspector. Yes-\nterday, the claimants, Oscar Bercier & Co., had\nMessrs. Carriere.Banchard, Caveree and Coete*o\nrie, all well known importers of this city. on the\nstand. But little of the wine was brought tnto\ncourt and the quibbles which badel been raised at\nthe hust trial, regarding the capability of the wit.\nnesses to judge, were dispensed with, the atten-\ntion of the court being principally directed to the\nI. gal points involved and points of evidence.\nThe amount involved is 500 cases. The attorneys\nfor the government are 1)iatriet Attorney Morgan,\nE. C. Pillings Randell'Hunt; for the claim-\nants, Whitaker & Whitaker, and for the collector\nand surveyor of the port,,Mr. Judd. The case will\ncon:e up sgain today, when the argument will\nprobably be made.\nAn appeal has been taken from Judge Dorell's\ndecision in the first of the great wine casee.\nFornvn DISTrICT CocUr. - Mrs. Lily M. J . Ben.\njsmin and her hu.baud Jas. K. Benjamin, yester-\nday brought a suit of f.O000 damages agalnst the\nNew Orleans City Railroad Company, oo;the\ne-:onnd that on the lI;rh .January last, while Mrs.\nBerjamin was getting out of a Canal street car, at\nthe corner of Dauphis street, the driver started\ntoe car before she got well off the step, thereby\ncansing her, by the fall, a serious illness, and\ndamaging herself and husband in loss of tins\nsld health, and in money spent for physloian's\nservices and medicinea, and in mental pain. to the\namouet of $dt00. Lacey Butlouerfor plaintllts;\ndefendants to answer.
4eae593c19fefe677b911ea57a2d4082 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.7493150367834 37.561813 -75.84108 mate of an inebriate asylum for some time.\nBut, although he was " wanted bv the\nofficers, and his capture would at any\ntime have been considered a smart covj,\nhe managed to keep out of their hands\nuntil about a fortnight since, when he\nwas arrested while leaving the house of a\nrofcssional burglar in Thirteenth street,\nin this city. He was at once taken to\nBoston, where he confessed himself the\nchief agent in the robbery, and informed\nthe authorities that the man sutlering\nsentence in the State Prison was entirely\ninnocent. He was placed under $100,-0 0- 0\nbail to answer the charges against\nhim. When arrested he informed the\nBoston detectives that he was much as\ntonished, as he had not learned of their\npresence in New York.\nHere, we have the case of a pro-\nfessional criminal who seemed to have\nbut little fear of the officers of the law,\nand who was generally much better in-\nformed concerning the movements of the\ndetectives, his natural enemies, than they\nwere of his. He. of course, knew them\nall my sight, since few, if any, officers of\nthat class make any pretentions to con-\ncealing their profession, but advertise it\nas much and as loudly as they can. He\nwas ouite safe in both France and Eng\nland for some time alter it was Known\nthat he was the Boylston bank robber ;\nbut, what is still more wonderful, he re-\nmained at liberty, and very much at ease,\nin this country from February to Septem-\nber, while detectives were " looking for\nhim."
7849d7e8ba16a8aed9bc95ef31e2a55b SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1848.6653005148248 43.624497 -72.518794 ivoik of iiiustcring out and iinying off Ihe\nnintli rcgiincut of infanlry waa complcied\nnt Fort Adaina on Saturdny nighl. Thc\nclmngcs in Ihe rcgiinent sinco iis first or- -\ngnnization in tho springof 1047 rendered\ntne lauor ol prcpnring llie rolls for n fiii.il\nslatoinont vcry grcnt. Allhough numbcr-in- g\nonly 500 iipuii ils nrrivnf at Newport,\nllie numher on the rolls of tho regimcut\nwasaunut i iuu. Urcat cnrc was obsorvcd\nin nnrkiug up tho rucurd of those ho\nhnve bceu killcd or uniinileil, or hnve\ndicd or bccn iliscliurgcd on nccount of\nsickncss, iu ordcr to eiisiirc tlio cxtra pny\nor thc donntioii of Iniid scrip. Col. Dix,\nthe pnyinnster, va3 employed on thc rolla\nnnd nccoimis nlinnst nll ninht nud dnv\nduiiii" last wcek. Ou Saturdny evcning,\nnt thc United blntcB llntel, Ncwporl,\n was a rcuuiun ol ihe ofuccrs, nnd\nGcn Chiltls, the miistering nud dischnr- -\n!ing oflicer, look fricndly lenvc of ihcni.\nHeleft for New York iu the cvening bont.\nMay of tho ofliccrs cauie on to Boslon\nyesterday inorning iu the Fnll River trnin,\nnnd thc bnliinco will lcavc Newnort lo\nday by the I'rovidcncc linc In elevcn\nwccks nfter cniliniltiiig nt Newport in\n1847, and sailiue 3000 iniles nnd mnrch- -\ning250 by forceil inaiches, the uiiilli rcg-\niinent took part in llie linitle ofCoutreras,\nand was grcntly distinoiiislicd in thnt nud\nthe othcr great baiilcs whiuh lcd to llie\npcace, Mr John II. Wnrlnnd, who hcld n\nuominnl appointincut in ihe qunrter-mns-ler- ' s\ndepaitmcnt, but wilh the pnrposc of\nheiug tlio historiogrnpher oftho rcgiinent,\nproposca to publisli an account of itsopc r- al io n- s
f14dfc802fa4d469acb3b5b63ecb6dce THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.2917807902081 40.618676 -80.577293 'PHE seizure of German, Italian and Danish ships\nbrought prompt protests from Germany and\nItaly. Our own Government announced that the\nseizures were "strictly legal," and the Axis wasn't\neven asked to agree with our position. It seems\nvery likely that our Government will assume\nformal title over these ships as the next step, and\nthe Axis won't like that, either. As a matter of\nfact the time has passed when the Government\nof the United States gives a whoop about what\nthese European war lords think, or like.\nNaturally, actions speak louder than words\nand a good many Administration and Congression­\nal leaders in Washington admit the truth of the\ndaily charge that the United States "is in the\nwar," "on the way." We may convoy loaded ships\nto England, and other friendly countries in spite\nof Germany's threats to destroy American ships\ncarrying aid to the British. Greece and other\nnations are also being furnished liberal aid \nWashington, and if Germany and Italy sink our\nships, the little neutrality that still exists in the\nUnited States will "go out the window."\nIt has been perfectly plain for several weeks\nthat the Axis have been given plenty of excuses\nto extend their war to include the United States,\nand that our Government hasn't backed down an\ninch on anything. Our Nation has taken over-\nships, and given the Hitlerites to understand that\nthey can't bluff us. So, what's the answer? Some\npeople in Washington say that is the right way\nto keep out of this war. When you ask them why,\nthey will remind you that Hitler instructed his\nbutchers in the very beginning of the attacks on\nCzechoslovakia and Poland that the United States\nmust not be given cause to go to actual war with\nGermany. The reason he gave was that the United\nStates was the cause of German defeat in the first\nWorld War.
03439a788bd970176f3182390e287085 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1893.23698626966 35.996653 -78.901805 sion in Paris you must fee the man who\nbrinprs you a las3 of absinthe or lemon-\nade. In the sultry days of last August,\nsays a writer in the Home Journal, I\nwas a frequent applicant for seltzer\nlemonade at ''The Bodega," on the cor-\nner of Rue de Rivoli and Rue Castigli-on - e,\nunder the Hotel Continental, and I\nobtained some information from one of\nthe waiters. Their wag'es are very\nimall and the living1 expenses of a sin-\ngle man are from four francs to seven\nfrancs a day. They depend entirely on\nfees. The Bodega waiters in Paris\ndon't care about their own countrymen\nfor customers; they like Americans bet-\nter than any other nationality. Where\na Frenchman will give a sou, or an Eng-\nlishman two sous, an American will\nfreely hand out half a franc or a franc,\nif he is treating party of three or four.\nAt many places of public entertain-\nment in Paris, at the Cafe de la Pais\nand at a place of different character,\nthe Moulin Rouge, for example, they\nhave a system which makes it impossi-\nble for waiters to overcharge or cheat\nyou as do waiters in many restaurants\nin Regent street and the Strand. In\nthese Paris drinking places, upon the\nporcelain saucer which holds your\nglass, is printed (burnt in colors) the\nprice of your order. This method\nmakes you independent of the waiters\ntricks. You know exactly how much\nto pay him. In pleasant weather you\ndo not enter a Paris cafe for liquid re-\nfreshment, day or night; all Paris is\nout of doors. Thousands of people sit\nin front of the cafes and sip their lager\nor coffee, small iron tables and chairs\nbeing supplied for that purpose.
0f61188e95f9337a38e14635a7cefeb8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.6150684614408 39.261561 -121.016059 The Mrctl.ig Lail Saturday Night.\nThere wan u large attendance at the po-\nlitical meeting held in this place on Saturday\nevening. As appointments for meeting?\nhad been made by the State Commit tees for\nConness and Edgertoo, and for Ashley and\nlhelps, to speak on the same evening, it\nwas arranged, afier the speakers arrived in\ntown, that they should discuss the political\nissues from the same stand. The meeting\nwas called to order by E. G. Waite, of the\nJournal, and Judge Beldeu stated the ar-\nrangements, as follows: Ashley to lead off,\nto he followed by Conness; the latter to be\nfollowed by Phelps, and Edgerlon to close\n—each speaker to occupy the stand for one\nhour. We beard only the latter portion of\nAshleys speech, which was devoted almost\nexclusively to the bulkhead. During his\ntalk the crowd remained the vicinity ol\nthe stand, but his remarks and manner of\nspeaking were not of a character to engage\nthe very close attention of his hearers.\nDuring the hour allotted to Conness, the\nauditors gathered closely around the stand,\nand listeued attentively. lie siap-d his\nviews clearly and concisely, upon national\naffairs, but the time allotted to him was\nmostly devoted to the affairs of this Stale,\naud iu answering some of Ashleys asser-\ntions relative to the bulkhead, etc. Conness\nis a line speaker, and his vigorous, unaffect-\ned style, is calculated to secure the alien\nlive hearing of a mixed audience. lie ex\nhibited an intimate acquaintance with all\nmatters pertaining to our State government,\naud must have conviuced every uupreju\ndiced hearer of his eminent fitness and qual-\nifications lor I be position of Chief Magis-\ntrate of the State.
13fed83202e2c4e40830daa370fa4483 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1898.9410958587011 37.305884 -89.518148 IXUI11C ,tijllllttl ,u uuiuii. 11lit J.v.11\n436 on invalid marriaire because of the in\ncapacity of one of the parties differs\nsomewhat in different states. In Geor-\ngia, for instance, suit may be brought\nfor divorce on that ground, and no pro-\nceeding to declare the marriage a nul-\nlity is recognized. But the common\nremedy is by an action to declare the\nmarriage a nullity. Whether such\nmarriage is absolutely void, or merely\nvoidable is an interesting question.\nThere is much authority for holding\nthat it is absolutely void, and may be\nattacked collaterally in any court\nwherein the validity of the marriage\ncomes in question, as in suit fordower,\nfor distribution or for a widow's sup-\nport after the death of her husband.\nBut these authorities also declare that\nfor the sake of good order of so-\nciety, as well as the quiet and relief\nof the party, the nullity of the mar-\nriage should be declared by the de-\ncision of somecourtof competent juris-\ndiction, and there are some authorities\nwhich deny that the validity of the\nmarriage on such a ground can be in-\nquired into collaterally. The ratifica-\ntion of a marriage by a lunatic after he\nhas regained his reason is generally\nheld sufficient to make t valid. The\ngeneral tendency of the courts on all\nthese questions is to protect the rights\nof children or of other innocent per-\nsons which have been acquired under\nF.uch a marriage. And there are also\nsome statutes which provide for the\nlegitimacy of the children of such a\nmarriage notwithstanding its annul-\nment. Case and Comment.
c2de8be9104621b76f7e68f113062d03 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.091780790208 43.798358 -73.087921 Dreaming, aim some pain in me cuesi. some\ntimes it is preceded by an oppression at the chest\ndry tickling cough and sight shooting pains.\nThis disease is aways more or ess dangerous\nThe great danger is that these symptoms may ter\nmmate m consumption, and immediate remedies\ncan alone save this end. But Dr. I ay lor s Hdl\nsam of Liverwort is a sure remedy, and to show\nits unpara 7eed success, ceitihes of cuies from\n421 citizens, and many physicians, will be pub\nished in a few days.\nJVERVQUS DISEASES Sc WEAKNESS\nDr. Tayfor's Basam of Liverwort, made at 375\nxSowery, is assured y an exceWenr remedy for\nthese diseases. My wife has been more or less\nill for ten years. She was extremely uorvous,\nand at times so weak that she could not attend to\nher domestic duties By the ue of this medi\ncine, her strength is wholly lestored, and she is\nas as I can wish her to be. My address\nis at Dr. Taylor's office.\nCJURE OF CONSUMPTION. Mrs. Mar\nin, a worthy member ol mv congregation, was\ntaken ill some time since with a cold, pain in -th - e\nbreast and some difficulty of breathing, and I n\nfew days thereafter she had a violent cough and\nviolent pain in the sides, which no medicine\nwould relieve. She continued in this way for a\nong time under the medical care of Dr. Rea, but\nfinal'y became consumptive, and was evidently\nnear the end of her earthly sufferings, when her\nbrother persuaded her to try Dr. Taylor's Balsam\nof Liverwort When she commenced this medi\ncine it did not seem to agree with her for a few\ndays, but by lessening the do?e, she found it an-\nswered admirably: it relieved her cough and her\ndifficulty of breathing instantcr: and we had the\npeasureoi witnessing her rapid recovery to health.
403d03b41d40c39360cae4877004d504 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1873.8863013381533 37.561813 -75.84108 travagance and folly will entice them\nthe cotton and sugar crops. The poor\nnegro is blamed even now for being\nidle or unwilling to work, when the\nSouthern crops show that he never\ndid so much work. Just before the\nwar the cotton crops reached their\nheight, at about 4,000,000 of bales,\nthough that was reached only three\ntimes, in what is called the most pros-\nperous period of the South. After\nthe war the crops were for a time\ncomparatively small; but in this year\n(1873) the crop is 4,000,000 bales!\nSix years ago it was two millions of\nbales. Again, Louisiana had fallen\nvery much in the crops of sugar; but\nnow, the accounts from there say the\nsugar crop is large, and the planters\nfrom their holes. But to the present\npoint The export of our produce is\nincreasing at a most rapid rate, and\nit must go on while we have a pound\nor a bushel of anything to send. I\nlooked the exports of New York\nlast week, and found that 200,000\nbushels of wheat 50,000 bushels of\ncorn, and 20,000 barrels of petroleum\nhad left New York in one day! and,\nhappily, tho ships from Europe were\ncoming in empty. The empty head\ned political economists of the free\ntrade school say you cannot export\nwhon you do not import. I rather\ntliiak a man that is starving will give\nIns money and diamonds (if he has\nany) to buy bread, whether you im-\nport anything or not The nonsense\nof that argument was exploded by\nthe civil war. John C. Calhoun,\nHamilton (S. C), and others of that\nschool had penetrated the South with\nthis miserable stuff, until the South\nexploded, and its ruins are the test\nof that political dogma. Our follies\nhave filled the purse of Europe; but\nfor one year we shall stop that folly.\nWe shall feed Europe, and in that\nfeeding find the remedy for our finan\ncial follies.
0f6610c5e0c0495beef5046d1175d279 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1885.4287670915778 39.756121 -99.323985 but too true, the circumstaaces of the\ncae being as follows: After the heavy\nrain which fell last Saturday afternoon,\ncontinuing until about 7 o'clock, Mr.\nH. H. Powers, who lives a few miles\nsoutheast, left town for home accom-\npanied by his wife and a neighbor, Mrs.\nFlynn. On re:uhing Dry Creek, just\nsouth of Miles Hudson's residence , they\nfound that the wrater was very high,\nbeing over the banks of the creek, which\nis generally dry or almost so at that\ncrossing. Two teams that had reached\nthe creek just before them had turned\nback and would not venture to cross,\nand it is a surprise to everyone thar. a\nman of Mr. Powers age could so far for-\nget caution as to attempt the crossing.\nHe did however, and when near the\nmiddle of the stream his horses lost\ntheir footing and the box of the wagon\nwas overturned throwing them all into\nthe water, the current of which must\nhaye been very swift at that point. Mr.\nPowers succeeded in reaching the shore\nbut was given no opportunity of saving\n of the women as they were almost\nimmediately swept away. The team\nsucceeded in reaching the shore . From\na personal observation of the surround-\nings we should judge that the water\nmust have attained a depth of seven or\neight feet in the middle of the stream\nwhen at its highest, and those living\nnear by are of the opinion that it was\nabout at its highest when this attempt\nwas made to cross. The body of Mrs.\nFlynn was found the next morning\nabout fifty rods below the crossing; but\nthough a thorough search was made all\nd ty Sunday and Monday, the body of\nMrs. Powers was not found until Tues-\nday morning, when it wasdiscovered by\naccident by Tom Thompson on the\nplace of F. liergier, ou the river, five\nmiles from the place of starting, where\nit was lodged in a wire fence. Mrs.\nFlynn was a woman of , ": "! years of age,\nand leaves no immediate family except\na husband. She was a sister of Mrs.\nGoodman and Mrs, Corbett who live\na few miles from town . Mrs.
08fdc9150d2bb8f05dd38a817caed0f7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.7876712011669 40.063962 -80.720915 Iii commenting on tlie inestimable value\nof sunlight to children, Dr. Winslow says:\n"It is systematically ignored at a period of\nlife when it is of the highest importance it\nshould be brought to bear upon the puri¬\nfication of the blood, and consequent heal-\nthy development of organic structures.\nChildren, even at an early age, should not\nbe excluded, particularly during the warm\nperiods of the year, from the genial and\ncharming influences of the sun. Great\nbenutit^'Die.iurther says, "would accrue\nfrom giving children solar air baths.that\nis, permitting them to lie naked upon the\nbed or lloor, free from the incumbrance of\nclothes, so that their bodies may be\nthoroughly brought under the influence\nof good air and bright sunlight. The chil¬\ndren of HaVages, as well as negroes, who\nare often allowed to run about in the open\nair, freely exposed to the influence of the\nlight,liave finely developed muscular struc¬\ntures, and generally enjoy robust health."\nThe famous Klorence Nightingale ranks\nlight as seoond only in importance to the\ntick to fresh air, and further testimony as\nto the therapeutic value of sunlight is\nIxirne by the "Dictionary of Med-\nica" of Murat and De Lens, which says:\n"We cannot doubt that the influence of\nlight is one of the conditions most indis-\npensible to health,andit may consequently\n!>e usefully employed by the therapeutist1'\nAmong the attractive features of that\njxccllcnt edifice, the New York Hospital,\ns its ttJnriuin, situated on the top of a por-\nion of the structure, and inclosed in glass,\niervingalso the purpose of a conservatory.\nHere, in sunny days, are congregated\nmany, patients, and they certainly navethe\niDpoarance of being very comfortable.\nHie great hospital of St John at Brussels\nlias on thereof an elegant garden tasteful-\nv laid off and plantea with shrubs, small\nfrees, and a grass lawn, interspersed with\n'ragrant flowers. In this quiet rural re-\nreat patients, particularly convalescents,\nire permitted at certain hours of the day\nto promenade, indulging in the luxury of\nmod air and bright sunlight There are\nfew of our hospitals that might not profit-\nibly imitate these examples, and not only\nconstruct rooms inclosed with glass, but\nbetter still rooms without glass,\nkvhero direct solarization can be em¬\nployed with the most gratifying and salu¬\ntary results.
0dfdc6a8f31eeaa367234ed64ade8b99 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1902.1027396943175 42.217817 -85.891125 With Soap Caudlea and lluttlea of\nRainwater II Fooled the I'ublto\nand Laid the Foundation of\nSubstantial Fortune.\n"Talk about your self made men,"\nsaid an old timer among a party of\nhorsemen gathered In one of the speed-\nway Inns, "I don't think any of 'em\ncan equal tho early experiences of Tim\nHartman, who died In St Louis many\nyears ago, leaving nearly a million dol-\nlars to be fought over by his heirs. He\nmade his first good sized pile on pat-\nent medicines, then he picked up a\ngreat deal more on real estate, and at\nlast he rounded out with speculation In\nMontana copper, but he was known as\nDoc' Hartman to the time of his death\nby his few Intimate friends.\n"Rut the story that I'm going to tell,\nand the one which he often told him-\nself, concerns his very earliest experi-\nences In the accumulation of money.\nTim Hartman started life with $1. He\nkicked around as a barefooted boy\nand a pretty mean one, too In a little\ntown lu Connecticut until be was IS\nyears old, and at that time he had be-\ncome so fresh and so full of wind and\ngeneral cussedness that his father one\nday him he was no good, never\nhad been and never would amount to\na picayune. The old gentleman. Just\nto carry out the bluff, told Tim that he\nhad a good mind to cut him off with a\ndollar and make him earn his own liv-\ning. Tim straightened up ami called\nthe bluff. He told the old man that he\nwould take the dollar and get out then\natid there and hustle for himself. The\nold man banded him a crisp $1 bill and\ntold him that he'd be glad to seo him\nmake a fortune with It.\n"The first thing that cuss did was to\ngo about In a few back yards that he\nknew of and gather together a lot of\nempty bottles which were of no use to\nanybody. Then, for 10 cents, he bought\na large cake of a kind of white soap\nthat was then, and still Is, on the mar-\nket. He melted this soap and, nfter\nborrowing an ancient pair of candle\nmolds from an old granny In the neigh-\nborhood, made two beautiful looking\ncandles of soap. He next filled his bot-\ntles full of choice rainwater. Then he\nmade for himself one of those little\nthree legged tables like the chuck-a -
0e1176ea3638b4efc21ebdaccd829b4c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.9493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 bci'lnnltiKiit 10 o'clock a. iu.» nil tho rlnht, tit\nand Interest of tho Mid George W. TIvuihiiii ttti\nMary A.Tiemtttm, Ida wile,or either of then\nI0K111 or equitable, in the following describe\nreal estate, tluit Im to hay; Four acres an\ntwenty porelic* (formerly a part of thy farm\none time owued by Adatu I'ltcliucr and nfte\nwardthy Hauiuel J, Hojd) luUlilo county, 0\nUioNnUouaI Ko>\\d, about two and a half mlh\nmi ofthiM-ltyol WJm'cIIok: iwitluultiKat nuttk\n011 tho vimt hide of the said rond.aud the houtl\nWest corner of atraclofland on tlio20lh day*\nJuly, 1842, convoyby Adam Kltehner and wll\nto Jacob M. Warden; thence north 20.45 wei\n30.17 poles; thenco north 00.18 cant 41» poles\nthence south J1 out l.ViOpolea to tho lino of th\nland conveyed uh aforc»ald to Mini Warden\nthence Nauth t>i.A:Mvcfit -lo*, pole* with tin; (in\nof tho land convened f.s aiortMild to Mild Wat\ndun to tlio hcKlnulut;, together with rich\nof way alotia a lane twelve leet wldo runnlni\nwitli and adjoining tho northwest linoola pin\neel of land, incur tne laud conveyed by Kald ueei\nof trust) on tho 20th day of July.l».VJ, convoyci\nby Adam Kltehner and wlfo to KdwardM. Not\nton, aih(i tho ifutit to tho ute of tho law anriui\nin another and contiguous jmrt of said farm\nwith the further rl«ht to lay water |»i|>en Iron\n*uUl spring to any of the li.nd conveyed by salt\ndeed of trust. Hut allsubjcetto thoconcurren\nand joint interest ol crtaiu other persons, sia^cl\nHud in Mild deed rout tald FltOhHor and wlfo t<\nMid lid ward M. Norton; the said property abovi\nconveyed befnu tho tamo which was eouvcyei\nto tho said John ilenty Tleiuann by George W\nJtobfnson nud wifo by deed dated January '£!\n1MV, nud of rteord lu the laud records of OhU\ncounty, in Deed llo-d: No. to, jihku H!i.\n,
3e1d3753a287e633859d498d1c14c25d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.6024589847702 41.681744 -72.788147 Bristol. A.ug. 8 What waa term\ned by the police as the largest raid\nin the history of the city, was con\nducted late Tuesday afternoon, when\nSergeant Henry Jegllnskl and Offi-\ncer William Thompson swooped\ndown on a two story barn in the\nrear of Peter's Court in the center\nof the city and confiscated 135 cases\ncontaining S.240 bo'tles of alleged\nbeer, 12 quarts of Canadian malt.\n12 pounds of hops, one 20 gallon\ncrock, eleven 15 gallon crocks and\none ten gallon crock, a large box of\ncaps, a capping machine, can open\ner, and a ten gallon galvanized ket-\ntle were also seized. Three city\ntrucks were pressed into service to\nbring the beer and equipment to\npolice headquarters.\nThomas Crady of South street and\nWilliam Plante of 37 street,\nwho were In the barn at the time,\nwere arrested and brought to head-\nquarters, where they were later re- l- a\nsed under bonds of $200 each.\nHarry Peter, whom the police assert\nIs the proprietor of the establish-\nment, was arrested a short time\nlater In his rfcolroom on lower Main\nstreet A bond of $1,000 was fur-\nnished for his release.\nA analysis of the alleged beer\nwill be made today by a Hartford\nchemist. Because of the fact that\nthis Information was net available\ntoday, the eases of the three met)\nwere continued until Monday morn-\ning. August 11th. All are charged\nwith violation of the rehMtts\nlaw, Crady and Plante being t insist\nby the poHee as emplsyss of\nlodge 8. Russell Mlak has\ntalaed to
29a69fcae30d11bb03599cdbe9a18d98 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.332876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 Jacrsox, Mien., May 1..On Thursday \\\\\nevening last John If; Galley, of Kemper r,\ncounty, was assassinated by an unknown u\nparty. The aft'air ha? created intense |}\nexcitement, and evpry means ^ias bejn tj\nresorted lo to ifiit iver |Iie pirptffatorn .\nof the deed. On Saturday two negroes |<\nmade atlidavit that Benjamin Kust, a r\nwhite man, did the deed, and that Judge C\nChisolm, who ran for Congress on the b\nRepublican ticket in the Third district at l<\nthe la*t election, his son and Gilmer, H|\n. Kosenbaum and Hopper, prominent white u\nRepublicans, knew or and'in^tica'ted the a\ncriuie. Chisolm ami con wetearrested J\nand imprisoned at De Kalb. Mrs. Chin- n\nolrn .and daughter insRted on sharing n\ntheir confinement. On Sunday Chisolm «\nsent for Gilmer, for whom a warrant had |,\nbeen issued. Gilmer came, and on hi* ri\n was arrested. Just an he arrived jj\natthejailhewassetonbvamoband r,\nkilled. The jailor, after a short struggle, [,\nww then overpowered by the mob, who 'f\nattacked Chisolm, mortally wounding t|\nhim and killing his own son. Mi-s\nChisolm, in defending her father, was t<\nshot. Dr. Rosser and Mra, Chisolm were a\nseverely wounded. Young Gnllev, a son t!\nof Gulley, who assassinated Miss Chiso- j|\nIm, was also severely wounded. Rosen- «\nbourn aud Hopper were carried to the .\nwoods by the mob to extort from them the\nwhereabouts of Ruth, the alleged asaas- i\\\nsin of Gulley. When last heard from, [,\nsome weeks ago, Ruth was in Arkansas, it\nIt is supposed that Kosenbauni and Hop- a\nper were hanged. A horrible state of u\naffairs exists throughout that section. I\nThe people are wild with excitement and t|\nother hangings will probably follow,
37099b322f10cf183d4f154e58ae1947 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.6671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 The shaker then considered the ques- gi\nlions of jKilitlcal economy and finance in- n<\nvolved lu the proposition in the light of tu\ncxperlonce, as accepted principally by s\\\nthe world. To show how the'projwwed iU\nnew departure is at variauce with all 01\nIhese, and what the effect would bo on the T\nbusiness of the country, ho said: "The tv\nDemocratic financial plank gets forth this of\nreason for paying the bonded debt in new th\nissues ol irredeemable and, as 1 have He\n»kown, worthless notes, viz.: thatthepnb- th\nlie creditor is entitled to lie paid in the <it\nname currency he loaned the government, ti<\nnnd that when he loaned greenbacks he Ik\nshould lie paid greenbacks, until the con- cn\n!««»» nllnlnntlon iiVraiifloil mill flinn twi Ill\nu|h;i iiiuviniav juuimvr, nuu nuvu uu »«\nloaned gold lio should bo paid In gold, fill\n(leneral Kwing, who heartily endorses re\nHiIh pro|KJBitlon, seeks to < create the lm* an\n[ireasion on the public mint! Mint theOov- dn\neminent only realized forty nor cent of the fl,(\ngold value for its bonds. Therefore the de\npresent holders, regardless ol what they 111\n[>aid, flhould bo to yield them buck or\njpon receiving forty perccnt ot what br\n;hey cull for. This, Atedill flhowed, wo» a ini\nnisrepresentatlon ol the facts. During hn\n18(11 the currency was at par, and the tint w!\nJ 15l),lHH),(XXI of greenbacks loaned under ah\ntho act of February 25,18(13, realized the til\nGovernment almost |>nr. The flmi issue sti\n)f bonds.the 0s of '81.realized nearly ca\ngold value to the Government. The lie\nunoilut sold was $2851,000,000, and the loi\niverago realized during the four years ot flt\n*»r was seventy-two per cent. It Is true 1«\nlint at one period only lorty per cent was bh\noiillzed, but that was during tho darkest toi\nKsriod of the war, in 1804, when the Do- eo\nnocr'acy, in National Convention, declared fai\nlie wnr a failure, and by their acts tried Cc\nfjjnnko it so. It is no longer possible to Ai\nleal witli the original purchasers of the w<\nMinds. and as most of tho present holders tei\nlave paid between ninety cents and pur mi\nor them, t desire General Kwing or some in\nmo clso to rise and explain wlmt thoy ric\nnenn by the expression pnylng tlic
25078d35e9f00bfa9126a6e7a920c95d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7575342148655 40.063962 -80.720915 | Tub Presbyterians aro tiius for ahead\nof"othor denominations 1n Bonding\nmissionaries i i&d teachers. Into the\nSouth. No leas than eighteen lofft Cin¬\ncinnati oh oiVo d.n^^t week for Mom-\npbf*an£ '^tyubunr,-,JVhbnco yrlU\nbo" dratHfchtoa niopj? theMissfoslppi.\nTho ^finorlcun Baptist Publication so¬\nciety has issued un appeal to the'. Bap¬\ntist churcdies.to .raise'this year a special\nfund of $50,000, Tor the purposo ot ro-\n>organising \\ Spnday school1 missions\namong the whites <jf tho South, and\nbeginjiiug.tbom for tho blacks. It is\nproposed to give a small Sunday school\nlibrary, some testaments, eta, to every\nmissionary and toachor- of the Baptist\nhome mission society/ and to every\nother Baptist ldbqirqriii the South, who,\nby means ofsucli'ji.doiihtion, can form\na now Baptist .Sunday school of. either\nwhites or blocks, A special fund of\n950,000, it calculated, would sustain\nsevoral Sunday school colporteurs in\neach southern1 state, and supply 2,000\nschools with libraries.\nTho Presbyterians of the Southwest,\ndissenting from tho action of their\nchurch in support of the Union causo\nhave published ti "declaration and tes¬\ntimony," setting forth what they pon-\nsidortho erroneous 'rind heretical doc¬\ntrines and pructlce&iof tho minority of\ntho church. Rev. Br. James II. Brooks\nof St. Louis and Rev.'Dr. S . It . Wilson of\nIi6uisville are leaders in this demon¬\nstration. t' ^lioy 'protest against the as¬\nsumption ot the rlgjit of their church\nto decide questions,.of state policy;\nagainst the action o& the subject of sla-\nVOi^,'Which they still hold to bo a scrip¬\ntural institution;; Against tho theory\nthatrtGodto will isf to bo .learned from\npaflicatat' providences ;an'd'-' in* fine\n.*---V
9d439af7e137683c5aa74680b60b5085 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0260273655506 41.681744 -72.788147 New Haven, Jan,\nwill be Interested In the shape of the\ncorona or fringe of light which sur-\nrounds the sun at the time of the\ntotal eclipse on January 24 accord'\nIng to Prof. Ernest W, Brown of\nthe department of mathematics and\nastronomy at Yale. The seeming re-\nlation of sun spots to the variation In\nshape of the corcnawas discussed\nby the professor.\n"The shape has seemed to depend\non the number of spots on the sun\nIn past eclipses," Frof. Brown said.\n"At periods when spots are numor-ou- b\nthe corona Is nearly circular and\nextends outwards from the surface\nequally In all directions. If it Is a\ntime of1 few spots there may be long\nstreamers shooting out from three\nor four places, which make It look\nlike the picture of a bursting bomb.\nThis Is time of few spots."\nProf. Brown suggests to lay ob-\nservers that they look carefully at\nthe corona during the eclipse, try to\ndraw its shape and get others to do\nso and compare the results, which\nhe predicts will be astonishing. In\nthis connection he relates an In-\nstance when the three great astron-\nomers, Newcomb, Langley and Den-\nning sat watching an eclipse and\ntried to reproduce what they saw.\n"ThelT drawings had only a rough\nresemblance," says 'the professor,\n"and a good lawyer might easily\nhave convinced a jury that the\nweather was cloudy at the time."\nPhotographs, however, give faith-\nful pictures, the professor said the\ndifferences being small and depend\ning on the length of exposure.\nTimes of few and many sun spots\nsucceed one another at intervals of\nabout 11 years, Profes. Brown said.
11d068d2e90fe9e7a9da3a3c0b81f980 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.97397257103 43.798358 -73.087921 In regard to the farmer part of ihe fore-\ngoing i. e. tho Bible Societies, and Pro-\nfessor. Ha scaK's connection wi.ih.ibem, he\nmay have it which way he chooses\nwhether to continue in fellowship with\nthose whom he considers to be cor rupters\nof the Scriptures, or come out from among\nthem. Have it a3 he will, the matter\nstands thus: If, on the one hand, he con\ntinues to fellowship corruption in one\nplace, it can never be a good and valid\nreason for fellowshipping a still greater\ncoriuption in another place. If he con\ntinues to fellowship what be himself calls\na corruption ot the; American Bible So-\nciety, how can this justify his continuing\nin fellowship with theft and robbery ?\nOn the other hand, if he disfellowships\nthe corruptions of the American Bible\nSociety, he is called on much more by\nconsistency, and Christianity,\nto separate himself from the theft, robbery,\nadultery, and murder of American Slave-\nry, as it exists in the Eaptist church.\nFor him lo say, at this stage of things,\nthat he has never advocated a separation\nfrom the American Society, is to show\nhimself in a worse attitude on that point\nthan I could have placed him in, without\nthis information which he gives against\nhimself especially as he right away goes\nto work and denounces lustily the doings\nof that institution as corrupt. He never\nadvocated separation from the American\nSociety, "on account of the wickedness\nor impurity of its members" ! O, no !\nHe only charges them with requiring\nBaptists to " corrupt", their translations,\n' in one particular" ! J That's all I So\nI &oppose he would not have a separation\nfrom slavery 4 on account of the wicked-
21430641bb3b3751e49bbff11b5e7120 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1908.3237704601802 31.762115 -95.630789 The split log drag has finally comr\ninto its own in Anderson county\nAfter months of agitation by the Her\naid and others that the drag be giver\na trial on our roads and streets it has\nbeen tried and it is now declared t-\nbe the greatest road machine evei\ntried onour roads Of course it is\nThe best road builders all over the\ncountry have been telling us that fo\nthe past two or three years Finall >\nSuperintendent of Public Roads Bill >\nPierce made up his mind to give the\ndrag a trial and see for himself what\ncould be done with it in this county\nHe says he had little faith in the sim\npie looking little old machine but\nwas determined to give it a fair\nsquare trial and the result was \nsurprising that he is now so thorough\na convert to the ability of the drag to\nmake good roads when properly used\nthat he says emphatically that it is\nthe best road machine in existence\nMr Pierce has been using it on the\nMagnolia road some three or foui\nmiles from the city and he has obtain-\ned splendid results He is the author\nfyiforr esCtnTCn1rtuat the drag\nwillmake good roads if properly used\nand he is good authority And now\nthat he has made a success of its use\nthe fanners of the county should\nmake up their minds to organize split\nlog drag clubs and following each\nrain drag their part of the road If\nsix or eight farmers living on any\nroad in the county will get together\nand drag their road following
11c70b0bb852ef1d84a81f27194bd0b1 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.3904109271944 32.408477 -91.186777 house thence down to road 1.75 chains in\ntoanother iron, thence S. 61 .45 W. t.\n2.25 chains to an iron, thence N. 80\nW. 1.00 to an iron, thence S. 61 .45\nW. about 66 chains to an iron stake\nin a slough'near the edge of the woods T\nwhence a hadkberry X 80 inches in\ndiameter bears N. 27 W. O . 18 -Cy- r\nres X 1.0 E 0.O. 6, thence\nbetween and 4 through the woods S.\nSdegrees 45W. about 69 chains to\nboundary of setion 27 and 28 thene\nwith sections 27 and 28 N. 7 degrees;\nwest about 30 chains but marked on'\naccount of lake to the I section corper 1\nin the lake, thence south 84 degrees\nW. 83.80 to a gum treecorner, whence b\nanironwoodXN61.025,thence N. V\n6 W. between 4 5 and marked the ol\nline 31 chains to an ironstake, whence yi\na honey locus XS. 456W. 0 13 back- w\nberry XN. 68 E. 018, red elm X S.;\n21; E. 0 25, thence between 4 and 6 2•\n84 degrees E. 860 chains to an iron a\nstake in the slough, whence a honey lii\nlocus X bear 72 E. 0. 24, thence tl\nup the sloughinnd ditch northerly I,\nabout 7 chains to opposite another ti\nditch with the center of that ditch for: aI\nboundary to No. 5 N. 6I E. about 566 t\nchains to an iron stake on the ditch at i\na piantation road, thence up said road a\nfor a boundary N. 380 W. 1.20 to an\niron stake on the levee 40.48 chains to I\nangle and thence down the levee to
1b0b0eeb47d70f9aadab305dff336182 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.89999996829 58.275556 -134.3925 Prize Fighting'in Alaska.!\nA reporter for the News was a mem-\n)er of tho vast throng that gathered at\nhe Douglas Natatorium last Sat-\nlrday evening to witness a 10-round\naoxing contest between Nick Barley\nind Slim Williams. Tho crowd was so\narge that it almost taxed the seating\ncapacity of the hall. We wonder why\nt is that people would so much\n. ather attend a prize fight than a\njhurch service, but they would.\nThe audience was for the most part\nmmposed of men, but there wero a few\nvoman, among whom we noticed a lady\nvhose ancestors were Africans, whose\ni9Sociato was a squaw Indian.\nThe male part of the assembly in-!\nfiuded representatives of almost every\n. ac e and clime. There were a variety\n>f occupations from the\nnine superintendent and foreman to\nDie, the whistler. The old man who\njuides the destinies of the Record-\n\\Iiner came in and as a matter of\naabit acquired by long years of attend¬\nance at church, quickly removed bis\naat, but after a glance at the covered\nleads of tho crowd he quickly put it\n>11 again and sauntered up to a seat\nust as if nothing had happened. The\nDispatch man, who has had more\nexperience in tho fistic arena, was the\nnaster of the situation and exhibited\nao signs of excitement.\n9:30 wa9 the time set for tbeperform-\nince to begin, but at that hour nothing\njad been done to mar the deep quiet\n>f the occasion except the arrival of\n;he Douglas Harmony Band, in full\niniform.
2858384f433eebd316e8026dd5c38ea4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.5438355847286 41.681744 -72.788147 passing as a mere ghost of the old'\nLondon social season which former-\nly for three months after Master\ntransformed Belgravia and Mayfair\ninto a spectacle by day and night.\nIn other years, before the war\nwrought its changes, the early weeks\nof summer saw the great London\nhouses thrown open for entertaining\non a scale which no other European\ncapital knew. Their blazing windows\nat night told of receptions and dances\non a grand scale. Court was held at\nBuckingham palace with an array of\nuniforms and jewels an unsurpassable\nshow. By day the entire west end\nwas packed with cars and carriages\ntaking the women of society about\nfor their calls and shopping.\nThere have been foui blank years\nfrom 1915 to 1918, and now most of\nthe of the ducal and\nold landed families who were the pil-\nlars of t he declining regime are closed,\nor their lives are ordered to a quiet\nand subdued tone. Not a few, bear\nthe sign "For Sale," or "To Let,"\ntestifying to the devastation of old\nfortunes through war taxation or the\nretirement of families in mourning.\nNearly all of the social fixtures are\nmissing this year. No courts are be-\ning held at the palace for that pre-\nsentation to royalty of debutantes and\nothers which gave them the formal\nseal of rank among the socially elect.\nOne big garden party is to take the\nplace of these. The shepherding of\nthe exclusive world into the royal en-\nclosure at the Ascot races has been\nalmost the only semi-omcial- ly
049af52579ee09b96a4cb8e09e299782 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.519178050482 39.745947 -75.546589 Though Mr. Keely baa promised\nthat his new motor power ahali be fin­\nished by Angast or September« there is\nas much skepticism in regard to its\naaooeaa as there was ten years ago. He\nhad hoped to give an exhibition of hts\nbig engine on Monday last, bat when\nthe day arrived, as usual, the parta\nwere not all flniahed and a patient pub­\nlic was doomed onoe more to disap­\npointment In faot, he expects to have\nthe whole business off his hands by the\nend of the present year. He says it\nwill require some time before scientists\ncan oomprehend the nature and power\nof the new forces he baa discovered,\nand that they will have to undo much\nthat they have learned. He expeots to\nmake his easy of comprehension\nby a series of charts he has published,\nexplanatory of his etherio vapor, and\nthese will constitute an atlas to go with\nthe engine. He is now writing a book\ngiving the theoretical expose of the new\npower, which will be published in two\nvolumes of a thousand pages each. If\nthere is nothing else that will discour­\nage scientists the idea of having to\nwade through two such formidable vol-\nnines will do the business, and Mr.\nKeely will in all probability have to\nconiine himself to making promises as\nhe has for a number of years past. At\nany rate the people will wait to see his\nengine start off and keep a-going before\nthey will spend much time in reading\nhis big volumes of theory.
9bd4b519abb8ff477530d1b443930909 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.395890379249 41.681744 -72.788147 were again under consideration by\nthe claims committee of the com-\nmon council laat night, but no ac-\ntion was taken. Corporation Coun-\nsel J. H. Kirkham advised the com.\nmititee as he has done before, that\nin his opinion no court would hold\nthe city liable In the cases in ques-\ntion, but he felt it advisable to\nmake settlements with the claim-\nants from the standpoint of avoid-\ning possible litigation and also be-\ncause of the possible presence of a\nmoral obligation on the part of the\ncity to help relieve the property\nowners who suffered losses through\nno fault of their own.\nAttorney William F. Curtin, who\nis a member of the committee as a\nthird ward councilman, was called\non by the corporation counsel to\nexpress his views and he replied\nthat he could see no legal liability\non the of the city for the rea-\nson that there was no duty on the\npart of the city to keep the entrance\nto the storm water sewer clear of\ndebris, the culvert which became\nblocked being on private property.\nFurthermore, he said, some of th!\nitems in the claims were unreason-\nable and .should be ignored.\nCorporstion Counsel Kirkham aald\nthe law did not oblige municipali-\nties to keep water courses free from\nobstructions or be liable for failure\nto do so, except as relates to th\nportions of streams passing through\nthe highways. In other words, he\nsaid, streams on private property\nmight become obstructed and cause\nproperty dsmage but the city would\nnot be liable. The claims in ques\ntion have a nuisance value similar\nto that of claims against public\nservice corporations and Judge\nKirkham favored settling them on\nthat theory.
26269544e224ec2355de464c0e57736a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.2068492833587 37.561813 -75.84108 The election of Jonathan. J . Wright,\na colored man, to the position of Asso\nciate Justiee upon the bench of the Su\npreme Court of South Carolina, which\noccurred on the 3d inst., is an event of\nno ordinary importance. The position\nis that formerly held by S. L . Hoge,\nwhose election to Congress left it va-\ncant. This Court consists of three\nJudges Chief Justice Moses (father of\nthe Speaker of the House of Represent\natives), a native of the State, Associ-\nate Justiee Willard, from New York,\nand Associate Justice Wright (colored),\nfrom Philadelphia.\nJudge Jonathan J. Wright is said to\nhave been born in Pennsylvania, and is\nabout forty years of age. He was grad-\nuated at the Lancasterian University\nof New York; studied law for nearly\ntwo years at Montrose, Susquehanna\ncnunty, Pa , and a year at Wilkesbarre,\nin the same State; he was, just before\nthe war, admitted to the practice of law\nat Montrose, the first man of his\nrace admitted to the bar of Pennsylva-\nnia. In 1865 be came to South Caro-\nlina as an attache to the Freeiiman's\nBureau, under Gen. Howard, and was\nemployed as an adviser in law to the\nfreedmen about Beaufort. He was a\nmember of the Constitutional Conven-\ntion of 18G8, and under the new Con\nstitution was elected to the General As-\nsembly as a Senator from Beaufort\ncounty, in which capacity he has serv-\ned up to the present time. He has al\nways been known as a man of temper\nate views and pleasant countenance,\nand is very often heard upon the Sen-\nate floor. He enjoys the reputation of\nbeing the best educated negro in the\nSouth, standing, in this respect, infi\nnitely ahead of his opponent Wil\nliam J. Whipper, of Michigan, also\ncolored who is sadly deficient.\nJudge Wright is apparently w hat is\nknown as a black quadroon one who I\nis three-fourth-
19695f18eafd8db95b67712e6baa6c99 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1907.9684931189752 42.217817 -85.891125 The soil in most parts of Cuba is very\nfertile and under proper cultivation will\nbring forth jrand results, but it must\nhave this cultivation. We of the North\ndo not realize the sweetening and loosen-\ning jnocess our sod und. rgoes by freez\nIng, while there the soil h;is been beaten\ndown by rains for oentiries and has b\ncome sour and dead, ht t turn this soil\nuptothesunfora earor two and al-\nlow the sun to do what the frost does\nfor us before planting your crop and the\ngrowth is marvelous, causing one, in the\nslang phrase, to sit up and take notice.\nWhat is true of Cuba is true of the Isle\nof Pines, an island GO miles to the eouth,\nas the soil of both islands w practically\nthe Bame On a 40 cre tract one will\nhave a clay gravel boil red as a brick, a\nwhite sandy loam and a dark sandy \nThe gravel and light loam is preferred\nby many for citrus fruits and the dark\nloam for tobacco, wgetables, pine apples,\netc. Mv preference for land has been\nithe Isle of Pines from the fact that 95\nper cent of the land is owned by Amer-\nicans, making it one large American\ncolony. The land on this ibland is cov-\nered with long leaf penes and palms and\n""lip to three years ago had not been\ntouched with the exception of the two\ntowns of Santa Fe and NuavaGerona.\nThe latter is the capitol and was the\niheadquarters for a great many years for\n;the political prisoners banished by Spain\nto this island Tnis is a town of about\n1,000 inhabitants. The buildings are\ntypically Spanish, one story, brick plas-\ntered and painted, and for the greater\npart, tile roofed. Here, as well as at\n. Santa Fe, are located tine mineral springs\nof magnesia water.
1eca458d4ca67210d4f879829d52a8f4 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.0972602422628 40.735657 -74.172367 Madison; Elizabeth Daniels, aged 12,\n159 Dodd street. East Orange; Cather-\nine Dillon, aged 12. 4 Schulk street;\nFlorence Dickert. aged 12, 136 Penning-\nton street; Starbert Decker, aged 10,\n55 Chestnut street, West Orange; Ma-\nmie Driscoll, aged 12, 850 South Four-\nteenth street; Alice Downey, agel 12,\n332 New street; Martha Duncan, aged\n14. 19 Walnut terrace, Bloomfield; Ban-\ncroft Dlven. aged 12, 12 Stratford place;\nFlorence Dunham, aged 12, 503 South\nTenth street: Nelson Drungon, aged\n11, 20 Newark street: John Dougherty,\naged 11. 182 Morris avenue; Susie\nDougherty, aged 9, 405 North Fourth\nstreet, Harrisofi; Dorothy Denyar, aged\n12, 106 North Maple avenue. East Or-\nange; Lillian Demgurd, aged 10. 28\nWilliam street, Belleville; Russell Dur.\nham, aged 9, 124 Second street; Walter\nDunn, aged 11. 84 Commerce stre-t,\nRahway; Charles De Piano, aged 11,\n59 High street; Kathryn Doty, aged 11.\n Washington avenue, Elizabeth: Ger-\ntrude Dippel, aged 14, 432 South Sev-\nenty street; William Daeey, aged 13, 87\nJoseph street: Emily F. E. Denly.\naged 13, 327 Lafayette street: Mollle\nDi Ouglielmo, aged 10, 463 Bergen\nstreet; Hugh Dougherty, aged 11, 408\nNew street; Veronica Devaney, aged\n10, 13 Langton street. Orange; Dorothy\nDe Oormley, aged 0. 22 Franklin pluee,\nArlington; Eugene Doremus. aged 12,\n26 Halleek street; William Distee, aged\n8, 391 Fairmount avenue; George Mor-\nris Delaney, uged 5, 454 Springfield ave-\nnue, Summit; Emma Doebler, aged 9,\n326 Fifteenth avenue; Lea Du JMessis,\nage.d 12, 71 Astor street: Bertram\nDanzlger, aged 12, 55 Livingston street,\nElizabeth; William Doebler. aged 11.\n336 Fifteenth avenue; Emily Daniels,\naged 11, 159 Dodd street. East Orange;\nElizabeth Daniels, aged 12, 159 Dodd\nstreet. East Orange: Howard DodEon,\naged 9, 843 South Fifteenth street; Ed-\nward Earnshaw, Jr.,
8b90ef7453da19da4677960b4bdbe31a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0863013381531 39.261561 -121.016059 Tbe New York correspondent of the Bul-\nletin, writing about tbe time of tbe Mason\nnud Slidell excitement, says:\nAccording to tbe especial telegrams from\nWashington, the newest phase of the Eng-\nlish difficulty is a demand on the part of\nGreat Britain for the speedy re-adjustment\nof the Northern boundary question, which\nshe maintains has not been settled in accor-\ndance with her ideas of what would be right\nand proper in tbe premises. She wants a\nstraight froutier line from Canada East to\nthe Atlantic. This would bring her boun-\ndaries down to about latitude 45 degrees,\ngiving her the bigger half of Maine, to-\ngether with that small corner of New Hamp-\nshire which is wedged in between Maine\nand Canada. Tbe reason for this preposter-\nous demand is said to be, that tbe claimant\nwants the territory to construct through it\na great military road from the Canadas to\nHalifax. But why to Halifax, when, with\nthe control of the territory which it is said\nshe wants, and which she will undoubtedly\nget for the asking, she could carry her\ngrand Trunk Railroad in a line as straight\n the bee flies from Quebec to the mouth\nof the St. Croix, in Passamaquoddy Bay '!\nIt is passing strange that our good Mother\nhas not made known to us, before this cri-\nsis, thi9 want of hers.\nAnd then wc are told, through the same\nreliable information, that England is going\nto re-open the Oregon boundary question\nand the San Juan affair, and what not. So\nthat, even should the Mason and Slidell\nquestion be settled amicably—and, by the\nway, I hear that the question has been set-\ntled peacefully, and that the rebel Commis-\nsioners aro to be given up—should this\nquestion, I say, be settled to the satisfaction\nof England, there are likely to be other\nmatters out of which that Government can\nmake caiuut belli should she be determined\nto pick a quarrel with us. And so, asks the\nEvening Post and some other journals, wlmt\nis the use in giving up Mason and Slidell ?\nEngland cares nothing about those miser-\nable rebels, and should we put them into\nher hand to-morrow, she, beiug bent on war\nwould immediately push forward some other\nclaim on which to provoke it.
6426244f0132fb12ea4ccf290b5fbec2 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.7082191463724 40.827279 -83.281309 thought the rule a wrong one, but\nnot a single Democratic Senator\nagreed with me, and but few Repub-\nlicans. General Morgan ia now\nrather late in coming to the rescue.\nIt passed the House of Representa\ntives several times. They did not\nbear from him tbers. Why did he\nnot there bring out the opposition\nof Gen. Strong to the war of 1813.\nand tbe apocryphal blue lights of\nConnecticut the only Democratic\nNew England State ?\nBut it is not trne that Massachu\nsetts is unlike any other state in at-\ntending to her local interests. Ohio\nprotects her local interests with as\nmuch industry and ability as any\nother state, and perhaps I may say\nis not less influential in the Govern\nment of the Nation than any other\n It is nottrue that the lariffor\nRevenue laws in any respect favor\nthe interest of New England to the\ndetriment of other states, or that\nher voice is more potent than other\nsections. This is the stile residnm\nof old politics, when there were no\npowers but bouth Carolina and\nMassachusetts. He forgets that it\nis near rorty yesrs since Webster\nand Hayne debated all this. No\nlonger need the mighty West, with\nits increasing power, whine about\nthe influence ot other sections. She\nhas but to streth forth her hand to\ntake, to dictate, and to govern.\nGen. Morgan and I are both Wes-\ntern men, and ought not to grumble\nwhen we bare the power in our own\nhands. The empire of this nation\nrests now Arm in the Mississippi\nValley.
107d3b80f22e5eba21ef272d6ec1e2d0 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.3356164066463 39.756121 -99.323985 company of this lesson there were\nPeter, James, John, Thomas, Na-\nthaniel and two others whose names\nare not given. On Peter's proposal\nthey all entered a boat to spend the\nnight fishing.\nJesus Appears to Them. Morning\ncame without a fish having been\ncaught. Jesus stood on the shore. In\nthe dim daybreak light none recog-\nnized Him. Then He hailed them, and\ninquired of their success. Then He\nsuggested they cast their nets on the\nother side the boat. It is said that\nmen standing on the bank or cliff can\ntell the presence of a shoal of fish\nby the color of the water, while fish-\nermen close to the shoal will often not\nnotice them. This makes the sug\ngestion of Jesus a very natural one\nand explains why the disciples did not\nrecognize Him sooner. They did as\nHe suggested and their net was filled\nThen John, looking again, recognized\nthat it Jesus, and told Peter so.\nThe impetuous Peter immediately\nswam ashore, the others coming in\nthe boat and taking care of the fish\nthey had"gathered into the net. Jesus\nand the disciples breakfasted togethei\nthere on the shore.\nRestoration of Peter. It has beer\nnoted by one of the writers that Petei\nhad denied his Lord beside a fire ol\ncoals. It is now beside a fire of coala\nthat he is fully restored as a fishei\nof men. Immediately after breakfasl\nJesus turns to Peter with the ques-\ntion: "Lovest thou Me more than\nthese ?" It will be seen that this whole\nincident is a counterpart to another\nincident which occurred just before\nthe crucifixion. Peter had boasted:\n"If all shall be offended in Thee, I will\nnever be offended." Jesus recalls this\nboast in the words "more than these."\nPeter did not directly answer the\nquestion; he simply said: "Thou\nknowest that I love Thee."
3ac5973d9d1b1be7756ebb4fdcc4f9a8 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.6863013381533 41.875555 -87.624421 nblo of any people with foreheads Is\nthat they should allow their supply\nof food to pass Into the bauds of one\nspeculative interest, says Charles Ed\nward Russell In a powerful article\nwritten by him In tho Appeal to Rea-\nson. You can understand how n care-\nless community might tolernto a mo-\nnopoly of some things, how It might\nenduro to hnvo Its transportation, for\nInstance, or Its electric light, control-\nled by ono ownership, for uieu can\nlive without sleeping cars or arc\nlamps; .but that It should tolerate n\nmonoiK)ly of tho primal necessity of\nfood Is beyond comprehension and\nwithout precedent Even naked sav-\nages have uniformly been too wise\nfor that, and the only nation that has\never submitted to such a monstrous\ncondition Is our own.\nFrom n thousand Illustrations of the\nInjuries we all suffer from this \narrangement let us clto one.\nThere is no way of communicating\ndisease to tho humnn body surer than\nthrough Infected meat tissue. Some\nof tho worst and most destructive ba-\ncilli thnt prey upon mankind are com-\nmon among tho animals ho cats for\nfood. Cows liavo tuberculosis and\nspread vast quantities of It through\nthe human population. It is so com-\nmon among cows that the wise and\nthe forewarned will use none but ster-\nilized milk. What Is "hog cholora"\namong swine la merely typhoid fever\nIn men. Trlchluea In hogs poisons\nhuman beings. Both theso diseases\nare common among swine.\nWorse than alt these, and more\ndeadly, Is nuothcr fact that Is seldom\ncommented upon because it Is too ap-\npalling to dwell much upon. What Is\ncalled "lumpy Jaw" in cattle Is simply\ncancer. The germs of cancer are\ncommunicable.
12b84a1b52209e8c57262454674ad098 THE LADYSMITH NEWS ChronAm 1905.2671232559615 45.463023 -91.104036 Among the important bills passed by\nthe upper house were the Budnall bill,\nproviding for the organization of cor-\nporations to create and maintain\nparks in cities and to receive gifts for\nthem, with the right to exercise the\npower of eminent domain; the Frear\nmeasure, providing that all the pro-\nvisions of the statutes relating to the\nexercise of the power of eminent do-\nmain by railroad companies shall ap-\nply to street and electric railroad cor-\nporations, but that such companies\nshall not have the power to vacate\nparks, streets and boulevards unless\nvacated by franchise of the common\ncouncil; Senator Wylies measure, au-\nthorizing the governor to appoint a\ncommission of three members to serve\nwithout compensation or expense\nmoney, to detemine the advisability of\ntstablishing a state park at Devils\nLake;, another by the senator from\nColumbia, authorizing towns to levy\n special tax for the care of ceme-\nteries, but limiting the amount of\nmoney to be raised for any one year to\nthe sum of $500; the Martin bill, au-\nthorizing the board of control to pa-\nrole prisoners in the penal institutions\nof the state, but forbidding the parole\nof any prisoner who has served a pre-\nvious sentence, and requiring that one-\nhalf of the term for which he was\ncommitted to have been served; the\nStout measure, authorizing free pub-\nlic lectures on educational subjects;\nanother by the same senator, author-\nizing the state superintendent to pre-\nscribe a course of study for the'com-\nmercial schools of the state.\nThe senate also concurred in the\nHamm measure, providing for the rig-\nid inspection of places where persons\ndie ot tuberculosis in Milwaukee, and\nfor physicians immediately to report\nall cases to the board of health.
5a67dc44e24b0fb8336b6c3b34d28829 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.6342465436326 41.020015 -92.411296 had never strayed from the path of ; not in so doing expressly give as«cnr\nvirtue, which preservative he owed,; to her doctrincs. especially with regard\nAS he toll mo in a narrative of his life, j to the marriage relation, upon which\nto a very solemn scene with his father\non the eve of leaviug home, pointed\nout to him tho nature ofawomau's\ntemptations and the suares of evil to\nbe avoided from uuUwiul practices.\nHo declared that lu; had always been\nkept spotless by the memory of that\nscene. I waa glad to believe it trne,\nand felt bow bard it was that beshould\nbe made to suffer by evil and slander­\nous foes. I could not explain soma\ntestimony Which had been laid before\nme, bot I saw there was undoubtedly\nsome miauaderatabdjnp, and if I knew\nthe whole, 1 should find Theodore,\nthough with obvious faults, at heart\nsound hud good. These views I of­\nten to intimate frionds,\nin spite of their maiiife«t incre­\ndulity, and what in the light\nof factr, I must call th. :n well deserved rid­\nicule. Moulton lost no occasion o presen­\nting to me the kindest view ol Til o char­\nacter and conduct, on tlis other band he\n<om|l.itiel that Mrs. TiJt.n(didn't trust\nher hujiiaud or him, and ilid a.- 4-ist him lu\nnis effort to assist Theodore 1 knew that\n'listreaaed Moultoo, an l lie felt bitterly hurt\nby the treatment of ber litiaband. I waa\nuri<ed to use my influenc* with her to In-\n-pire confidence iu M .ul'or-, and to lead her\nto take a better view of Theodore. Accor­\ndingly at the instance of Jlr, Moul en\nihies letters ware w i ten on the same day,\nPeb ,17. 1871, on one common pur|>ose to\nbe shown to Mrs. Tiltou, aad to reconcile\ntier to her husband. And tuy letter to bor\nof that date
377ad199733a17a2451812f357dcd393 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.828767091578 41.875555 -87.624421 'Mr. and Mrs. Hodge were at a din-\nner party. Olga Jensen, the maid,\nwent out for a few minutes and whan\nshe returned discovered the burglars.\nThe robbers ran when she entered.\nThis occurred within n very few\nblocks of the station, and the Chicago\navenue station itself would be bodily\ncarried off If the electric cars and .elec-\ntric lights did not make such a glare.\nA young man named Charles E. Fos-\nter and a lame friend were brutally\nslugged and .almost killed at the cor\nner of Clark and Center street while\ntwo plain clothe men from North\nHoisted street station were lapping up\nbooze In the saloon of one of their\nrelatives only a few feet away.\nOf course no arrest wero made, but\nIt Is currently reported around the\nNorth Halsted street that the\nslugging was done by other policemen\nwho belong to the Pin Brigade.\nBo this 08 It may, the lieutenant nt\nthe North Halsted street station,\nwhen called up by phone about the\nmatter said that "no arrests had been\nmade because the mother of one of\nthe victim had failed to come In\nwith some more facts about It."\nThe people of the district have given\nup putting any dependence on the po-\nlice at all and an Investigation of the\nrecords, of some of them divulges facts\nthat would convulse the community If\nspace permitted their publication.\nThugs, outside of the police, stalk\nabout the district doing as they please.\nSo do thieves, '\nIn the Chicago avenue district it Is\nrelated that a recent coroner's jury\ncalled to Inqulro Into the death of nn
22a444bb1f24ce74241eba742ff9ea69 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.9193988754807 44.939157 -123.033121 that have been proceeding for a life-\ntime have not been altogether offi-\ncial. Consumers numbering millions\nhave taken the trouble to Inform\nthemselves and they have learned\nsome things thoroughly. They know\nthat taxes can be decreased as easily\nas they can be Increased, and they\nknow that If an Increase can be made\nin behalf of a self seeker overnight,\na decrease need not necessarily be a\nsolemn and laborious proceeding cov-\nering months and years.\nIf tho people bad been as atten-\ntive to their own affairs as they\nshould have been, tlinse processes\nwould have been reversed. Taxes that\nreach the food, clothing, household\ngoods and Implements of all Ameri-\ncans have been Imposed without, in-\nquiry or discussion In a Bingle day.\nJokers yielding millions to ciaft and\ngraft have been put into the law In\nan hour. These wrongs are known\nand they be corrected by the\nstroke of a pen. Measures for the\nrelief of the people have dragged\nalong for a generation.\nPrompt action Is necessary to keep\nfaith with the millions, to remove\nuncertainty and to forestall further\nagitation, but It Is supported by an-\nother Important reason. It Is neces-\nsary In order to destroy the super\nstition brl by the beneficiaries of\nprivilege that this tariff idol Is too\nholy to be touched by those whose\nsubstance its worshippers devour.\nThe assumption that Governor Wil\nson will move quickly after his In\nauguration as President seems to be\nJustified no less by his character and\nprinciples than by his utterances.\nHe, too, has Investigated the tariff all\nhis life and he knows as well today\nas he probably can a year or two from\ntoday what Is needed to correct the\nworst or Its Injustices and oppres\nsions.
1055cc7abc26d17f693d33b4118640d4 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1888.8948087115461 43.994599 -72.127742 The soil Is a compound substance of\nmineral, vegetable and animal particles\nthat form the upper stratum of the earth's\nsurface. In selecting the site for a farm\nthere are many things to be considered in\naddition to tbe character of tbe soil.\nAmong these is the Important one of loca\ntion with regard to market facilities,\nhealth, good neighborhood and prospec\ntive rise in value, sous admit $i many\nclassifications, arising from their different\nconitltuents. Rocks are the original basis\nof soils, having by the long continued\nageucy of .the forces of nature, by air,\nmoisture, frost ana neat, been re\nsolved Into minute particles, taking\non the form of earth. Soils are called\nstony, gravelly, clayey, peaty, eto.,\naccording as the substances named con-\nstitute a leading feature in the compound,\nA loam is a soil chiefly composed of sill\nclous clay and other mineral sub\nstances along with a large percentage of\ndecayed vegetable and animal matter, to\nwhich it principally owes its fertility.\nThe pulverulent brown substance formed\nby the action of air on solid animal or\nvegetable matter, is called humus, and is\na valuable constituent of soils. It renders\nstiff soils friable, absorbs and retains\nmoisture, and In a large degree supplies\nthe mineral elements of decayed matter\nin soluble forms tor plant growth.\nThe capacity of a sandy loam for retain\ning moisture depends on the amount of\ndecayed vegetable matter which it con\ntains and without which it will be infer\ntile. Sandy and clay soils requires differ\nent treatment. Each will be benefited by\nan admixture with the other, but the\nunion of pure sand and clay alone will be\nsterile unless supplied with decomposed\nvegetable matter.
1927ba78d38002f0f7598f4f4e4c9354 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.215068461441 40.441694 -79.990086 A French View of tho Alligator A Fox\nRides Hogback Tho Phantom Mountain\nLiving Under tho Snow George "Was-\nhington's Soap Bobble Helped Oat by\nSong Piety and Punishment.\nThe Revue des Sciences tfaturelles informs\nus that the United States are gradually wit-\nnessing the gradual extermination of the vari-\nous types of their aboriginal fanna; the buffalo\ngone, tbe alligator is now threatened with ex-\ntinction. In fact, every part of the animal is\nutilized. Its hide attains a high price; its\nteeth sell at from 15 to 30 cents the liter: in\nfact, its flesh, twee deprived of its fat, is\ngreedily devoured by swine, hogs and even\nfowls. Fibrous, but white and tender, it Is\nlikewise eaten by the Indians and negroes when\nthey have nothing else to consume; and, but\nfor its musky flavor, it would certainly be\npreferable to the lean Florida cows. The peo-\nple of South America esteem very highly, also,\ntbe tail of the alligator, in same decree as\nthe ichneumon, that delicate lizard whose fleh\ncombines with tbe flavor of the" chicken tbe\ntenderness of tho frog or green turtle.\nTbe cattle breeders of Florida, however, re-\ngret tho loss of their crocodiles, who are accus-\ntomed to wallow in tbe eartb, thus creating de-\npressions, which filled with water during the\nrainy season constitute in summer valuable\nreservoirs for theirstock. To the negroes the\ncapture of an alligator is a windfall, which tbe\ndealers In terrapins, their employers, abandon\nto them. These turtles, in fact, disappear in\norder to pass tho winter in the holes occupied\nbv the alligators. Tbe negro huntsmen em-\nployed by the terrapin brokers pass the winter\nexploring tbe environs of Savannah marking\nout the spots where the alligators have bur-\nrowed, when spring" returns they go with\ntheir tools and unearth at the same time both\nalligator and terrapiu, torpid still from the\ncold, the negroes appropriating tbe former by\nway of perquisites.
1520f646b718353d2583c048c04b821b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.8315068176053 37.451159 -86.90916 publican in nay fight which may lie\nwaged against him In which the II ¬\nquor question Is the Issue\nMyI residence In Frankfort for nine\nyears has made mn acquainted with\nthe records on temperance legisla ¬\nlion made by many public men In\nthe legislature and othT position\nIf the liquor people start a fight iii\nany of them because if tlmir ftiud\nfor temperance legislation tley mum\ncount on ms as a frknlI to Ibelast\nandIwillnotbesoMvuiynsIn\nget under cover to nvoU the liitl\nIt Is being freely char ed that 11 ov\nlUCkham first tried to dofiv the\nCounty Unit 11111 then riimIlimc he\ncould not turned In it Imuvi r r n1\nsaddled on It nn nmcndncnt 111111\nfictory to time liquor lntvntf in tlv\ncities while at the same time lu was\nendeavoring to please the temperance\nVfiple In till country Any statement\nof this miturccomlni from any source\nwhatsoever Is most positively false\nIVrsons who are makltig these state\nmtnts know nothing about tho facts\nIn the case If any one knows more\nabout the history of the County Inlt\nKill In the last Legislature than I do\nI do not know his name Front stRutI\nto finish Got Ileckham followed eveiy\nsuggestion made to him by those man\naging the tight for the bill without\nweakening once to the demands made\nby the people Examine time\nCommittee on Hellglon and Morals In\nIthe House mind you will find It com\npored of honorable gentlemen wilt\nwould not stoop to the delay tactics\npracticed by some hostile committees\nIn the past but gave It speedy pas ¬\nsage to the House where It could be\nvoted upon on Its merits If Got\nHeckham and his friends had want ¬\ned to defeat the County Unit Hill it\ncoild easily have been done by time\nappointment of a hostile committee\nAfter a hard fight In the Senate\nthe original Carmack 11111 was de ¬\nfeated and a substitute therefore pass\ned which was acceptable to the li ¬\nquor people and for which the liquor\nSenators voted It was also favored\nby several temperance Senators who\nwe believe were deceived as to Its\nItrue nature antI who thought It a\nfairly good measure Many temperance\npeople out In the State wrote to me\nadvising that this substitute be ac ¬\ncepted as on its face It seemed to\nthem a fairly good huh This substi ¬\ntute was a dangerous timing Those\nwho know something of the princi ¬\nmiles and history of our local option\nlaws could see at once Its grave do\nfells The enactment of that measure\nInto law would have been a heavy\nblow to time temperance cause In Ken ¬\ntucky
1257aacd21c65db79e9e2bb8d21847f8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6041095573314 40.063962 -80.720915 St.Louis Aug. 8 ..Nothing of the pro¬\nceedings of the Convention of the In¬\ndian Commissioners, held yesterday,\nhas been made public. It was agreed\nthat Gen. Sherman and Col. Tappan,\nCommissionersof Indianaflairs, should\ncommunicate with the officers and\nagents under their control, directing\nthem to send runners to the Indiaus in\nthe vicinity of their respective posts\nand agencies, requesting the Northern\ntribes to meet the commissioners at Fort\nLaramie at the full moon in September\nand all tribes South of Platte river to\nassemble ut Fort Larned, on the Ar¬\nkansas river, at the full moon in Octo¬\nber. The amuesLy goods now in transit\nfor the Cheyeuues, Arrapaboes and\nCatnunches were ordered to be sent\nto the agents of those tribes to await the\ninstructions ol the Commissioners of\nIudian Affairs. Col. Tappan and Gen.\nSauboru were made purchasing com¬\nmissioners of supplies. The board\nadjourned to meet in Leavenworth,\nthen proceed to Omaha, whence thev\nwill ascend the Missouri river to the\nhighest accessible point, to confer with\nall the Indians they can meet, and ex¬\namine lauda for Northern reservation.\nGeneral Sherman telegraphed to Gen¬\nerals Hancock and Augur in accordance\n the above, and Col. Tappan sent\nsame instructions to Superintendents\nMurphy and Dinuian, of the Northern\nAgeucy. General Sherman also In¬\nstructed Generals Sheiman and Augur\nto confine their military operations to\nthe protection of the routes of travel\nand tho settlements; and to General\nHanoock he says; "Do not iuvade the\ncou nt ry south of the Arkansas river ex\ncept in the pursuit of parties guilty of\nhostile acts. I want the deliberations\nof this Commission to be as little dis¬\nturbed by the acts of our troops as pos¬\nsible, so that this etlbrt to settle the In¬\ndian difficulty quietly and peaceably,\nmay have a fair chance of success."\nDispatches say that Captain Wick's\nengineers were attacked by a large\nbody of Indians at Fort Hays statiou,\nand had to call on the fort for assist¬\nance. The Indians had got between the\nengineers and the fort and heavy light¬\ning was anticipated.\nQuite a number of Indians, with\npainted white men as interpreters,\npassed Rock Springs, ten miles east of\nFort Harker, last evening. They made\nparticular inquiries regarding the rail¬\nroad and wagon trains, as to whether\nthey were guarded, «fec.,
10342b708e7ffd49a9dc987f33c79600 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1897.001369831304 37.92448 -95.399981 first creamery was established, and now there\nare fifteen at work all the time with more in\nprospect. The head of the largest company,\nthe Belle Springs Creamery company. Is J. K.\nForney, a farmer. He came to the county in\n1879 and for ten years made a success on a farm\nin the south part of the county. Then he came\nto this city to look after the central factory of\nthe creamery association and is here yet, But\nhe still takes an iu '.crest in his farm and says\nthat the man who will look after the little\nthings in his business cannot help but succeed.\nMr. Forney oversees nine creameries, five of\nwhich are in this county. In addition, there\nare ten that have either the ownership of in\nvestors or are mutual concerns that are the\nbusiness of the farmers of the communities in\nwhich they are situated. Says Mr. Forney:\nThese creameries pay to farmers of the county\nabout $.160,000 The average farmer\ngets $11 or S12 a mouth for the milk he brings to\nus. We paid over $160,000 this year and the\nothers of the county will pay fully as much\nmore. There are some of our patrons who are\nin the business for all that there is iu It who\nreceive checks tne fifteenth of every month\nfor ST5 to Sl"0, and they arc paying off the\nmortgages on their farms and buying more\nland. Some, however, receive as low as S5 a\nmonth, and are not sure that the business pays.\nTo Dickinson county farmers the payment each\nyear is now S2f0,000, and it is steadily growing."\nThe patrons of the creameries number 1,700 in\nthe county. The population of the county is\n20.000 and of this the towns have about 7,000,\nleavint; about 2,000 heads of families to reside iu\nthe county. So of these 1,700 are going to the\ncreamery each day and the result is far reach-\ning.
0b6944b2f70cd87a9e933dc7708c0a3e IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1886.3575342148656 43.82915 -115.834394 to come to a land where governmental op-\npression is unknown, they swear allegi­\nance to this government, and are given toe\nroll privileges and advantages that native,\nfree-born American citizens enjoy, make\nhomes, and are given liberties that have\nbeen de nted them across the ocean, where\noppression rules with an iron hand. They\nare treated as a stranger in the home of a\nhospitable and kind-hearted entertainer.\nThey share equally with those who invite\nthem to come. What do ihey do ? Like\nthe frozea adder, that, after being warmed\nby the man whose sympathies were awa.\nkened and who felt pity for its condition\n—p aid its benefactor with a deadly pois­\nonous sting for his kindness. These soul­\nless Social ista destroy propertv of Amer­\nican citizens add promiscuous, whole­\nsale murder to their other crimes—kill\nwithout just cause the citizens of the gov­\nernment that bids them come and enjoy\nthe freedom and partake of »hegood things\nof this free country. They are invited to\ncome to our hospitable land, away from\nstarvation and oppression. They come,\nand then try to oppress us, and succeed to\nquite an extent. America is altogether too\nfree for the ungrateful offscourings of Ihe\ncountries across the ocean. There are\nmany good people in those old countries\nprobably as good as can be found in\nAmerica. Every true American eives this\nclass a hearty welcome. They make good,\nindustrious, law-abiding citizens. But we\ndont want this socialistic element. The\ncountries from Which they come are clad\nto get rid of them.
4ff03003a70b14155dc45e7753f932dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 The largest is10Inch bore and 4y* feet stroke,\nwith largo new doctor and pumps complete.\nThe other Engine is one or .fDenmeadV'\nbuild, mauufactured in Baltimore, with solid\niron bed plate, governor and heavy fly wheel.\nThis is a first class Engine, simple in opera¬\ntion, and from 23 to 3u horee power. There\ni* a line or three-Inch shafUuH, with pinion\nwheels, cog-wheels, &c., geared to this Euglne,\nand a lar*e sized power pump, which can be\npurchased along with it or separately.\nThere are three Boilers. 22 teet long and 42\nInches in diameter, with two 14-inch flues.\nThese Boilers have only been hi actual use\ntwo or three years.\nAlso, throe Boiler Iron Tanks, 12 feet high\nand 5yl feet In diameter, for rendering Lard;\nalso one small Tank, with raise bottoms,\ncocks, tfce., complete. These Tanks are made\nfrom Wilson's pattern, And parties purcha¬\nsing can be supplied with desired length\nof 1, 1U or 2-lncu steam connection pipes,also\ncast iron, wrought iron and copper tubing\nof various sizes. Two Corn Crib*, capable of\nstoring 15,000 bushels or corn, one largo pair\nor Fairbanks' Stock Scales, also all the paving\nbrick in tho stock yards, as they toy, estima¬\nted at from 50,000 to 00,000; these brick are\nhard and in good order.\nThe Hog Pens are capable or sheltering and\nreeding 4,000 head or hogs, and will bo offered\nn divisions as they stand, and also the luin- .\nl>er contained in them at so much per 1,000\nfeet, it !>eing optional to accept either bid.\nThere is a large quantity or valuable oak\nand pine Joists In these pens.\nSeveral lame wooden tanks, suitable for\nOil Tunics, will be sold; also Band lion and\nmany other articles too numerous to mention\nconnected with tho Pork Packing and Dis¬\ntilling business.
d88f1c3b63d36be1040f4459524cb5a3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.9357923181037 41.681744 -72.788147 I'se of Imagination\nGood Safety Measure\nFew utterances by police court\njudges In this vicinity in some time\nhave had the favorable reaction\nthat is attending the recent declar-\nation by Judge M. D. Saxe of the\nlocal court that motorists, if they\nwould avoid accidents at intersect\ning streets, must use their imagina-\ntion. Having driven automobiles\nfor a. number of years, Judge Sax--\nrealizes and appreciates the tend-\nency of the average driver to de-\npend upon the "other fellow" to\napproach intersections with care\nand caution, and since becoming\njudge of the court, he has added\nito ni" store ot Information about\nL,,e causes ana results or acciaents,\nthrough the numerous cases thtt\nhave come to his attention In the\npolice court and civil \nWhile no reasonable person would\nexpect motorists to keep before\nthem at all times a mental picture\nof wrecked cars and maimed pas-\nsengers, it would be well if all who\nare trusted with the operation of\ncars gave a thought to the possibili-\nties at the corner ahead. It re-\nquires only slight effort to remove\nthe right foot from the accelerator\nand place it near the foot brake, at\nthe same, time sounding the horn\nand keeping a sharp lookout to the\nright. If there Is nothing In sight\nbut the clear roadway, there has\nbeen no loss except a few seconds\nbut if other cars make their ap-\npearance, no sens'ble driver or pas-\nsenger will dispute the soundness of\nthe judgment shown in slowing\ndown.
444a6134eb6678411683626b599b6da1 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1909.2726027080162 41.741039 -112.161619 now bo late that glass covering may\nbe dispensed with and a cloth cover\nused. We make our frame strips,\none by two Inches, to exactly flt the\ntop of the box, and stretch a couple\nof strings, or wire, across the frame,\nto support the cloth. On this frame we\ntack unbleached muslin and paint It\nwith linseed oil, tn which a little resin\nhas been dissolved by boiling.\nThe temperature In the air chamber\nbelow the planta should be about 80,\nbut a little variation from this will\ndo no harm. Raising the box slightly\nat the back will give slant to abed the\nrain and to better catch the sun's rays\nWater and air are indispensable and\nmust be left to the judgment of the\noperator. We cover the box at night\nand on severe days with an old carpet\nor horse blanket. In tins box It will\nbe necessary to have a door at one\nside, large enough to admit a lamp.\nIf well grown by the middle,\nof May the plants will be large and\nstocky, we have them In bloom.\nWe usually pinch the top of tomatoes,\nas this will cause them to throw out\nlaterals and make better plants. As\nsoon as the ground la warm and all\ndanger of frost Is passed, the planta\nshould be transplanted to the garden.\nHaving the ground prepared, take a\ntrowel or shingle and slip under each\ncan, carefully placing them on a car\nHer and remove to the garden. Dig\na hole of a depth to correspond with\nthe can, hold the hand under it to\nretain the boII, draw the earth around\nit, cut the string, and lift the can off,\nand you will not disturb a root or\ncheck the growth. If It Is desired\nwhere only a small number of plants\nare wanted, the seed box may be con\nverted Into a plant box, and thus ob-\nviate the necessity of a second box.\nAll that is necessary Is to lower the\nstrips, to give room for the growth\not the plants. In a box of two feet\nsquare you can place 64 cans of three\ninches diameter each.
3a8d38ddcc46bd111129cca5e836661c THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.546575310756 39.24646 -82.47849 the artisan otriew iork grow poor\nthat the manufacturers aifd specu-\nlators of New England Pennsylva-\nnia should grow rich ? Is this your\nidea of a Republic ? It is not mine.\nI have spoken of the mischievous\nchange in the theory and practice\nof our Government here in the\nStates which have been victorious\nin the late civil yar. See how it\nworks nnloiig that portion of the\npeoplo On whom fell the weight of\ndefeat' ttis more than a year\nsince the war ended more than a\nyear since all resistance to the Fed-\neral arms ceased more than a\nyear since the defeated people re-\ncognized and accepted tho conclu-\nsions to which they had been forced\nthat no State could of right, or\ndid in fact, cease to in the Uni-\non. Yet these eleven States, which\nare now in the Union, were always\nin.tho Union, could not take them-\nselves out of the Union, have been\nfor more than twelve months deni-\ned by this oligarchy all the Consti-\ntutional rights of States to be heard\nby. their Representatives in the\ngreat council of the Rerpublic. All\nobligation to the Union they are\nheld liable to perform. They must\nobey the Federal Constitution and\nlaws, and pay tho Federal taxes,\nyet the rights of Representation in\nthe Federal Council, which the\nConstitution secures to all, are de-\nnied to them. They are treated,\nnot as States of the Union, but as\na foreign conquered people, whose\nlives, liberties, laws and property\nare held at the will of the' conquer-er -
3bdcaad253c1dd2cf7cf2d21d0aee5f9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.3027396943176 58.275556 -134.3925 Kern Creek Fairbanks extension-\nStarting from Kein Creek in a gasoline,\nlaunch, the Commission examined the\nnorth shore of Turnagain Arm to a\npoint where the proposed extension oC\ntho Alaska Northern leaves this art^\nand turna to the uorthward. 7,'hi^\nshore is bold, and the load would t>3\nheld at tho foot of the hills on a prac.\ntically level grade with a series of cuts\nand tills. Several small valleys are\ncrossed. Tho right of way has bee.t^\ncleared for a considerable distance^\nbeyoud Kern Creek, and possibly 8^9\nmuch as 2 miles of grading has b'eeo,\nalmost completed; these miles,\never, not being in a continuous stret^\nbut extending along the arm as far a^a.\nRainbow creek. Construction through,-,\nout t hi* stretch of about thiity uiile^\nwould present no difficulty except tU$\npreponderance of heavy rock excava¬\ntion in the work of grading. C jnii'^e^.-\nable protection iu the way of\nshedswoulda\\snb>- i« <.iiij. I . ^\non I hi - Miction would be facilitated,^\nthe location is parallel to and\nclosely a water transportation 'OU'^\nopen to the sea for half the year,\nU has been suggested that Turcagaj^\nArm might bo crossed by a\nbetween Sniper and Bird points', \\y.tt^ \nview !u locating a line across the Kep^^\nmountains by Moose pass, Johnsoj:\ncreek, or Quartz creek. At tho poin'^\n8Ug^e->ted for this bridge Turnagajn\narm is ab nit 2 miles wide and th£\nwater is shoal. "This arm, however, ha§\nan enormous tid*», and for half the year\nis Ulled with ice Hoc?, which it is Re¬\nlieved make thh suggest?*} crossing\nimpracticable. If any of these alternate\nroutes over tho Kenai mountains were\nselected Suniise creek would have to\nbe reached by a circuit around the cas\\\nend of the arm. The routes may pre\nsent advantage as to southbound grades\nover tho present location of the Alaska\nNorthern, but the mileago would be\ngreater, and the principal difficulty tie\nto grades in the existing line it ie\nbelieved can bo removed at much les6\nexpense by the relocation suggested.\nAnother suggestion has been made\nto carry the road over tho Kenai uioun-\ntaius to Port Welles in Portage bay, on\ntho west side of Prinoo William sound.\nThis is a shorter roate to tide water\nbut the difficulties of construction'\nthrough the pass occupied by Portage\nglacier probably remove it from con¬\nsideration, and information at hanij\nindicates that Port Wells is an inferior
1cfc2ce904bbd995502fd84d9015c758 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.9139343946063 44.939157 -123.033121 materials nro highly effective.\nA striped velvoteon in grny nnd black\nshapes a gown in a plnin skirt and\njackot modol. Tho jacket is mado in\nblouse fashion, with long, doublo skirts\nand full puffed slcoves. Tho stock is\nof plain gray, brnidod with black, and\nthe collar and cuffs of black volvet.\nA second costumo showing a sort of\nviolet and black zibolino is mado mag-\nnificent with bands of violent mirror\nvolvot. Tho tight fitting coat of this,\nwhich has a good deal of tho look of\ntho '70s skirt to tho kneos. A stiff nnd\ncapo shaped trimming of volvot bands\nornnmonts tho shoulders of tho body\npart, which closes with n square bucklo\ntrimming mndo of tho velvet.\nMany coarso laces which nro effect-\nive in pattern but cheap prico, form\nslcovo fulls and jabots for theso smart\nfroeks. Ami, of courso, whenovor n\nrich button or handsomo belt bucklo\ncan be nfforded it is brought Into serv-\nice. A simplo button which gives good\nresults is in shnpo of n Wooden mold\ncovered with velvot. These, in laree\nsires, nro soon on a number of tho\novening coats of directoiro character,\nand often tho coats themselves aro\nmado of n coarso hairy cloth which is\nloft unlined. This cloth is not dear\nie n yard and up but tho rose tints\nnnd dim blues and greens of tho dyes\nnro very oharmlng.\nFurry details for such gowns afford\nmuch licenso for fancy nnd knnok of\nfinders, for a number of tho fur sots\naro milliner mane or fashioned nt\nhome.
9fcb30876504d084a4eff35a84c78b49 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.132876680619 40.807539 -91.112923 - jVTOTICE is hereby given that the Boa^d of\n| J_ i County Commissioners of I^je County\nat their regular term in January, 1£41, con­\nstituted and established the following Organ­\nized townships in said County, to wit: Frac­\ntional Township f>3 North, Range 3 West;—\nFractional township 69 north, Ilange 3 west,\nand all that portion of Fractional Township\n69 north, Range 4 west, cast of the north anU\nsouth line dividing sections 33 and 34, to ba\none organized township, to be Known by th«\nname of Green^Bay Township, the place of\nthe first meeting to be nt the house of Wesley\nHughes;—al'o , that portion of fractional town­\nship GO North, Range 4 West, lying west of\nthe North and South line dividing sections\n33 and 34, Fr. township tS9 North, Range 5\nWest, to be an Organized Township, lo ba\nknown by the name of Denmark Township,\nthe place of the first meeting to be at tho\nhouse of L. L. Thurston ;—also. Township Gii\nNorth, Range 4 West, and Fr. Townshipsixty\nseven North, Range 4 West, to be an Organ­\nized Township, to be known by the name of\nWashington Township, the place of the first\nmeeting lo be at the School house on tho six­\nteenth section;—aho Township GS North,\nRange five West, to be nn Organized Town­\nship, to be known by the name of the West\nPoint Township, the tfrst meeting to be at tho\ntown of West Point;—also Township 68\nNorth Range 6 West, Township 63 North\n G West to be an Organized Township,\nto be known by the name of Franklin Town­\nship, the place of the first meeting to be at tho\ntown of Franklin;—also Townships 63 and\n69, North of Range 7 West, to be an Organiz­\ned Township, to be known by the nameof Har­\nrison Township, the place of the first meeting\nto be at the house of Jesse Johnson;—also Fr.\nTownship 67 North Rnngc 7 West, the West\nhalf of Township G7 North Range 6 west, Fr.\nTownship fiG North Range 7 west, to be an Or­\nganized Township, to be known by tho nanio\nof Van 3urcn Township, the place of the first\nineHing to bo »l the house of Abraham Her.klo;\n—also Township t>7 North Range •> West, tho\nEast half of Township G7 North Lunge 6 west,\nlobe an Organized Township, to lie known by\nthe name ol JeiTVrson Township, tho place of\nthe first meeting to be at tfie house of Cyrus\nPeck,—also Fr. Township 66 North Range 1,\n5and G west, to be an Organized Township, to\nhe known by tho name of Ambrosia Township,\nthe place of the first meeting to be held at Am­\nbrosia;—also Fr .Township 65 North Range of\n4, 5 and 6 west, Fr. G4, North Range 5 west,\nto be an Organized Township, to be known by\nthe nameof Jackson Township, the placeof lh»\nfirst meeting to be at the town of Ke-o-kuk,\nsituated in said county lo be an Organized\nTownship. By order of the Board.\n4t—36
07139bb5289d7a24b60a9f42aed5ed9d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.2205479134957 40.063962 -80.720915 The City Election In ML Lonln\nSt. Locd, March SI..Political excite\nment has run high here to-daj, and th\ncontest in the coming city election prom\nises to be unusual]j lively. Henry Over\nstolz, the present Major,'wax called upo:\nSunday last bjr eteral thouaand citiien\nto run as an independent candidate fo\nMajor, lie accepted the invitation am\nannounced himself aa a candidate. Tc\ndaj the regular Democratic Contentioi\nwas held to nominate a citj ticket and i\nnominated Overstolz for Major bj alary\nmajority, whereupon the delegates fron\nthe Sixth Ward withdrew. The actioi\nof the Convention has met with a prett;\ndetermined opposition bj a number o\ninfluential Democrat*, anil a large meet\ning waa held at the Court House to-nigh\nto consider the situation. Several speeche\nwere made in denunciation of the actioi\nof the Convention, and a committee o\nprominent citizens, to be increased t<\none hundred, was appointed to consul\nupon the subject, and if thej deeu\nit desirable, they arc authorized' to cal\nanother Convention and put anothei\nticket in the held. This Committee ii\n empowered to act in concert will\nanj other partj or organization, with a\nview to combining all opposition to Mr\nOverstolz. A Kepublican Conventior\nwas al*o held to-day, and the candidac;\nof Mr. Oreratolz was endorsed by a stronj\nmajority. This Convention was callet\nby the Republican Central Committee\nbut another Convention, called by wha\nis known as the Republican Central Club\nwill he held to*uiorrow, and it wil\nprobably repudiate < »ver*tolz and nom\nirate a straight Kepublican ticket\nThis organization is opposed to the Cen\ntral Committee on Reformatory Grounds,\nit being utterlv opposed to the'asseiumen\nuf candidates for election purposes, am\ncontending for a different ward represen\ntation from the Central Committee. It ii\nbeing engineered by several old Republi\npan. - «, who are demanding reform*, and i\nis not unlikely that they will not consul\nwith the repndiating Democrat* ani\nigree upon tome plan to combinc tin\nenure opposition to Overstolz. liotl\nDemocrat* and Republicans allege tha\nUverstolz uied his intluence to pack th(\nconventions held to-day, and much indig\nnation is expressed thereat.
1bc7abb320a3e20d67823c8f3a2ac058 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.7493150367834 39.745947 -75.546589 new fashlmts seem more elegant and\nrefined. The color range, subdued\nand quiet as it Is, admirably suits the\nfeelings and minds of our women.\nThese are not sober or melancholy or\nsorrowful, bat deep and rich and\nstrong, with just enough brilliancy In\ntrimming to demonstrate that while\nwe are looking on the serious, side of\nthe country'« affair», none of tho\nblessing enjoyed have been overlooked.\nA costuma that is practical, yet not­\nably elegant, Is developed In taupe\nbroadcloth, with collar and trimming\nof self-color Velvet. The waist Is\nmounted on a slecvelos underbody\nand the vest of white crepe Georgette\nIs square nt the neck where there la. a\nhemstitched hem.\nA girlish frock of dark brown vel\nvet is one of the real gems of a col­\nlection of frocks recently sent over\nfrom Paris. It is so simply designed\nthat the home dressmaker will ack­\nnowledge herself master of Its details\nas soon as she sees it. It is trimmed\nfront back with suspender straps,\nthe straps at the front extending be­\nlow the waistline and turned back to\nform hanging pockets. Soutache braid\nornaments the pockets and large col­\nlar. The straps conceal the closing of\nthe waist, which Is effected at the\nleft side. At tho back the straight\nbelt is slipped under the straps. The\nfonr-plece skirt Is gathered and at­\ntached to the waist in slightly raised\neffect. Brown woolen crepe Is used to\nfashion the frock. Tho colors for win­\nter feature several new medium\nshades of brown that are very attrac­\ntive. Kolinsky is one of tho fanciful\nnames one Is apt to remember since\neveryone Is familiar with tho fur and\nrecognizes the relation the color bears\nto the smart pelt. Seal brown, darker\nthan the seal brown of old Is a strictly\nAmerican color, sharing favor with\nJava, another exceedingly pretty dark\nbrown. Tn tho greeds and blue, the\njade tones are the most discussed be­\ncause they are the newest.
1acdc4882cd46cf72712a5b5b48fa13f PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1900.6999999682903 39.756121 -99.323985 In this day of scientific poultry\nbreeding we read and hear a great deal\nin regard to the best food for the hens\nto cause them to fill the egg basket.\nThe various agricultural experiment\nstations have taken Up the subject, and\nat .considerable expense of both time\nand money have issued from time to\ntime elaborate tables which they see\ntit to call a balanced ration," which\nto the average farmer is no better than\nso much Greek, and is beneficial only to\nthose who have every convenience at\nhand to follow out instructions as\nthere made and provided. In their rea\nsoning they take as a basis the consti\ntution of the egg, hence foods that are\nrich in certain elements must from ne\ncessity when fed the hens, cause them\nto produce the egg. This is all very\nbeautiful in theory, but when you get\ndown to business and facts, "where are\nyou at?" My experience has been al-\nmost universally that while the theory\nseems reasonable, the results obtained\ndo not justify it. It was for a long time\n is still considered by many that\nthere was nothing in the way of a\nregular diet for laying hens like\nI have found this a fallacy, and have al-\nways had far better results, especially\nduring the winter season, from a gen-\nerous diet of corn, which as the weath-\ner becomes settled and warm was\ngradually reduced, and oats largely\nsubstituted; but corn never discon-\ntinued. One factor that (to use slang)\ncuts a considerable figure in the oat\ndiet is a very great difference between\ntheir relative price, which must be\ntaken into account, and may throw the\nbalance to the debit side of the ledger,\ninstead of the credit without a corre-\nsponding, benefit. To obtain the best\nresults the oats should be fed in the\nsheaf, the hens compelled to scratch\nout what they obtain, and nevex placed\nbefore them all ready threshed, and\nthey allowed to fill up on the grain\nwithoiit any effort. I always make it\na rule all through the year, summer\nand winter, to feed largely of this\ngrain, and with-mos - t
a5c5dd289563529293e23eb928e678d9 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.6407103508905 40.618676 -80.577293 I view of the past history of the Ku Klux Klan\nand the German-American Bund, their joint\nmeeting at Camp Nordland, New Jersey, on Sun­\nday, seemed a mingling of kindred souls. It also\nseemed appropriate that the Bund's brass band\nshould do its best to drown out "The Star-Spangled\nJanner" when some local residents who did not\nshare the Klan-Bund conception of "Americanism"\ngathered outside the fence and started to sing.\ne Klan's incitements to racial and religious\nhatreds furnish a helpful background for the\nBund's campaign for Ilitlerism. The effect of these\nactivities, singly or in combination, to the degree\nthat they succeed, is to weaken our democracy and\nimpede preparation for the national defense. The\nnational anthem does not belong in that setting.\nThe Americanism which both the Klan and\nthe Bund despise gives them the right to hold\nmeetings, to make speeches and to publish their\nopinions in print. It does not give them the right\nto stir up riots or otherwise break the This\ncountry is now engaged in readying itself to de­\nfend its territories and its interests against an\nenemy who may never attack us if we arc fully\nprepared but whose identity is known. Any or­\nganization which openly supports that possible\nenemy, as the Bund does directly and as Klan\nmembers did indirectly by their presence at Nord\nland on Sunday, ought to be kept under close and\nconstant surveillance. We hope that the Federal\nand local police are keeping close tab on the Klan\nas well as the Bund, and that they will be pre\npared to act if either group steps outside the law.\nIf Hitler were to attack this country, not on<\nof those who cheered the dictator's name on Sun­\nday could safely be allowed to go about his busi­\nness free and unwatched. It is just as important\nto know their identities, their activities and the\nsources of their funds, now, as it is to build air­\nplanes and reinforce the Army and Navy.
1e9ffef184f1e8687f8b9c2f5374a591 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.8342465436326 37.92448 -95.399981 But the consciousness of her posi-\ntion as a household servant anil of his\nposition ns lender hi the pulpit of the\nmost influential church in Crawford\nwas sharply p.iinful. The gulf be-\ntween them was not very deep per-\nsonally. She was fully ns well edu-\ncated along lines of general culture.\nShe was almost his equal in matters\nof knowledge and perception. It was\ntho social distinction that separated\nthem. And, as tho days went by anil\nshu felt muro and more the mental\nstimulus of his presence and the at-\ntractiveness of liis manner towards\nher, she shrunk from the thought of\ntho suffering In the future which sho\nwas making for herself in even allow-\ning his life to become a part of hers.\nAll this was in her as she went\naver to sec Mrs. Vane that afternoon.\nThe new plan proposed by Mrs. Ward\nand the gift of the money to make it\npractical appealed to her ambition,\nand she resolutely set herself to sat-\nisfy herself with the working out of\nler ambitions for social service, say-\ning to herself, not bitterly, but sadly:\n"Barbara Clark, there is no place for\nlove in the life you have chosen. Am-\nbition is all you have any ripht to."\nAh, Ilarbaral Is that as far as you\nhave gone in the school of life? There\nis nothing that can take lovo's place.\nFor there is nothing greater in the\nkingdom of God. Ambition may keep\nyou busy. It can never fill the place\nin your heart that God made to be\nfilled.
1bc833a92ba235f3f7c9fd7ff3cd9994 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.146575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 Permit me through your paper to cal\nattention to 8enate Bill No. 35, wbicl\npassed that branch of the Legislature yea\nterday, aiming to e&tabliah a State Boari\nof Health and Vital 8tatistica, and regu\ntating the practice of medicine and bui\ngery in West Virginia.\nSection twelve roada as follow, and\nhave italicized the parte to which I deain\nto call particular attention:\nBsc. 12 . Any person practicing mediclm\nIn any ol ita departments shall possess thi\n^ualificatioue required by thia act, via: I\n» graduate iu medicine, be shall present\ndiploma to the State Board of Health foi\nverification as to ita genuineneaa. If thi\niiploma is found to be genuine and isauec\nby a rrputabU medical college, and recoynuu\nu such cm iiislitutm by the Mate Board ut\n and if the peison named therein\n>e the person claiming and presenting the\nlame, the State Board of Health shall\nsaue ita certificate to that effect, signed\nill the members thereof; and such diploma\nind certificate shall be conclusive! a to the\night of the lawful holders of the same tc\n)ractice medicine in the State of Wesl\nVirginia. If not a graduate of such\nneuical college aa above designated,\nivery person practicing medicine in\nbis State shall present himself before\nhe State Board of Health and aubmit\nliniHBlt to inch examination at uie taia board\nhall require; and it tlie examination bti\natiefoctory to the said board, it shall issue\nt* certificate in accoidance with the (acta,\nmd the lawful holder of such certificate\nhall be entitled to all the rights and
276df4667dc298a2bdcacec79bf4a158 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.6397259956875 41.681744 -72.788147 "But her crew are perfectly disci-\nplined and trained. They have not\nlost a moment Still, the turn has\ntaken her nearly a minute, and we are\nbut three miles away. She has risen\n200 feet during the turn and can now\nrise at 600 feet a minute, while our ut-\nmost power Is 800 feet a minute. Our\nspeed is twice hers so long as we do\nnot rise, but only equal to hers when\nwe are rising fast\n"We keep straight on. still at 6.600\nfeet ,Two minutes pass. Only two\nmiles are now between us, but she Is\nnow on our level.\n"It must be a chase to the highest\naltitudes. The sky is cold and clear;\nwithout one grateful cloud in which\nshe can wrap herself impenetrable and\nhide from her mosquito torment\n"Minute after minute passes. We\nrise, pursuing her. Each minute she\ngains 300 feet of altitude on us, and\nwe gain no single inch In but\nno matter. Stream after stream of\nballast falls from her side, and see\nhow they are throwing their petrol\ntins, garments, anything to enable her\nto rise still higher.\n"Their only hope Is to keep up at J\nup, trusting our fuel may give out .\nthe engine cease to take us upwar .\nVain hope. Our engine Is working i i\nwell as ever, and we have fuel for set)\neral hours yet\n"It Is only a question of enduranct\nnow. At such a level no airship yei\nbuilt can have any reserve of fuel left\nUltimately, her engine must stop, ani\nshe will drift a helpless mass befori\nthe wind. She may begin to fall\nThe British expert then concludes:\n"In a fight between flying machinei\nvictory will go to that which can fly\nand rise fastest maneuver easiest and\nshoot the stralghtest Numbers and\ntactics will have their effects. Just ei\nin fight on sea or on land."
758f74f605bfc55c4865adde50130f95 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1942.1931506532217 40.618676 -80.577293 They should realize that the right to strike is just as fundamental as the\nright, to own and manage private property, the right of free speech or of a free\npress. Each of these rights is guaranteed by our Constitution. The very moment\noue of them is nullified, the others are expoj*eil to equal Jeopardy."\nLabor voluntarily gave up the right to strike for the duration of the war\njust as the newspapers submitted to censorship, but labor will no more submit\nto compulsory abolition of the right to strike than the newspapers would agree\nto abolition of the principle of the free press. One of the great freedoms which\nlabor is fighting to protect, in this war is the right to strike. Take these\nfreedoms away, and what are we fighting for? Our freedom is our flag.\nAmerican labor will not. let anyone, friend or foe, trample upon it.\nLet me sound another note of warning to those who blindly attack labor.\nDespite the rising cost of living, despite the heavier responsibilities placed oil\nworkers whose sons and brothers and loved ones have joined the colors and\nregardless of existing economic injustices, there has been a wide hue and cry\nfor fr«>e/.ing wages. Those have campaigned most vociferously for such\naction are the very ones who are most concerned for protecting profits. Yet it\nshould be obvious to any understanding person that if the Government ever\ndecides that the war requires the freezing of wages, it will be compelled in all\nfairness to limit or wipe out profits from war contracts at the same time.\nIn my judgment there is no reason or necessary for any such dire develop­\nments in America if we all concentrate on the main job of winning this war in\nthe shortest possible time. There is no sense in wasting our energies by\nsquabbling over internal differences in this hour of world crisis.\nThe oppressed and underprivileged, the world over, have looked to America\nin the past as the land of promise. Today promises are not enough. Today\nAmerica must become the land of performance. We must accomplish miracles\nof production not only to save the last remaining citadels of democracy in other\nparts of the globe, but to save ourselves. Labor is on the job. We ask industry\nand the Government to put aside all other considerations for the duration of\nthe emergency and get right down to work with us without further delay.
2dd57bcc6e75b3d026e80f7f4783ff2d CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1922.4589040778792 41.875555 -87.624421 Just leave your keys with me. We\nnever have any trouble about how\nlong cars are parked."\nIn fifty minutes twenty overtime\nthe experimenter returned.\n"Have any trouble about the park-\ning time?" he asked the starter.\n"Should say not," came the answer.\n"Remember this place."\nThe next stop was made on the east\nside of state street about midway be-\ntween Madison and Washington.\n"How about parking here, it's near-\nly 4 o'clock," he asked the starter, ex\ntending a tentative quarter.\n"All right," returned that worthy.\npocketing the tip, " we can usually\nget by, but there's a hard boiled cop\non this trick now. I used to be able\nto fix it for a cigar or a quarter. Now\nI need a couple of dollars. When I\nquit this job I'm goin' to get that cop.\nslip him some marked money or some\nthing. makin' it hard for me.\nIf you're going to be around for a\nlong time, why don't you pull around\non Washington street. Nobody will\nbother you there at all, but they try to\nclear State street after 4 p. m."\nAnother ride down Washington\nstreet discovered the same big cars\nparked in the same places they had\noccupied most of the afternoon. In\nsome chauffeurs slept peacefully, en-\njoying "equal parking rights."\nThe parking law reads: "No vehicle\nmayparkbetween6a.m.and7p.m.\nfor a longer period than thirty min-\nutes within the zone bounded by the\nnorth line of Lake street, south line\nof Harrison street, east line of Wa-\nbash avenue, and west line of Market\nstreet. No vehicle may park at all\nin the above district where street cars\nare operating between 7 a. m . and 10\na.m.andbetween4p.m.and7p.m.\nexcept long enough to load and un-\nload."
0d15d3e191237fa60debcc4523f383a3 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1890.3630136669203 38.894955 -77.036646 licfcrco J. A. Davonport has been ap-\npealed to for the purpose t f deciding\nhow much money Is required to support\na young How ork lady In a comforta-\nble and filling manner. She has funds\nIn tho Farmers' Loan and Trust Com-\npany and tho oillccrs of that Institution\naro authorized to pay her enough for\nher support. They nud tho young lady\ndo not agrco in the amount, and legal\nproceedings wefo commenced lo deter-\nmine how much Is required.\nTho decision will bo waited for with\nInterest, not only by many young ladles\nhut by several men who nro contemplat-\ning matrimony. Tills is a practical ago,\nnnd many think that sentiment does not\nhnve as much lo do with love, courtship\nand marriage as they ouce did. Somo\nmen ate so penurious that they stop to\n"count the cost" of supporting n wlio as\nthey do of building a house. They have\nbut a limited Income nnd thoy aro\nobliged to practice economy or fall be-\nhind in their accounts.\nRcfcrco Davenport is not obliged to\n experts lo give testimony In\nrelation to how much money is required\nfor the comfortable and adequate sup-\nport of a young lady. Tho correspon-\ndents of various New York papers ato\nfurnishing him with information by tho\nbushel. They nil unite in showing that\nyoung ladies of fashion aro pretty costly;\nIn fact, very dear creatures In every\nsense of the word. Few of them flguro\nout very Inrge amounts for food, ordi-\nnary clothing and washing. The lar-\ngest sums are for Incidentals.\nOne young lady spends over $2,000 a\nyear in lessons in music, art, Delsarto,\nvoice building and physical training,\nShe Is a graduate of a fashionablo\nscmlnaiy, but she was not finished off\nthere exactly to her liking. A young\nlady, born and bred on Murray Hill,\nfinds $0,000 to be tho sum required to\nmeet her expenses, which do not in-\nclude tho cost of her living, as she re-\nsides at homo with her parents. She\nhas a carriage and riding horse at her\ndisposal, and a hair dresser Is employed\nby tho family.
41f28c5b1a1d3bf62deb9533e3f4968a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.6972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 ol the best, il not the very best, ever\ngrown. The season thus lar has been [fi\neverything that could bo desired, apd the\nweather Just at this particular tlmo soems Hi\nalmost made to order, so peculiarly favor- to\nable is it. The grapes are largo and plump co\nand are rapidly ripening. A. few more du\ndays and tho sugar making process will Q(\nbe completo. It will be a great year lor ed\ngood wine. The present vintage should no\nbe noted for its superior quality. And jo;\nthis remark brings us to notlco an cdito- an\nrial in yesterday's Cincinnati Untitle. gp,\nThat paper complains of the btd odor bk\ninto which native wines havo fallen, and 0|\nare falling, owing to the lact tbat many (cr\nparties resort to the use ol sugar and he\nwater iu wlno making. This process ia thi\ncalled "extending tho juice," is in- P"\ntended to supply alcoholic Btimulant and [IU:\nstrength to the wine and thus not only in\nmake it more popular with certain classes\nbut also greatly increaso the profits of tho ^\nwine maker. And yet it is a very dele- jog\nicriuus process anu ono luai aamagca iuu wi1\nwine in the estimation of tlioso who real- 1\nly kuow what good, puro native wine\nshould tnato like. As the (lasitte very wj,\ncorrectly says, grape julco with any addi- vie\ntion of sugar in any stage of tho process\nof wine making i9 uot wiso. The addi- c'^\ntion destroys ill tho fine qualities, apoils ID(\nall Its adaptation to the digestive process, Is i\nand makes it heavy and stupefying. It is "ol\nbetter to have no wine at all than that\nin which any portion ol sugar haa been dea\nused. Therefore, says the Uaicllt,
120682b621c5658cda45bf04dc63e95a THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.1547944888382 43.994599 -72.127742 The New Suspension Structure Which Will\nUnite New York and lirookiyn.\nWork on the biggest suspension bridge\nin (lie world is already brp.un, and in a\nshort time men will bo laboring far be-\nlow the surface of the waters of the\nEast river, burrowing their way down\nto the solid rock beneath the river's\nbottom. They will work iu air com-\npressed half a pound beyond the normal\npressure for every foot they get down\nbelow the surface o? the water until at\nlength they wS.1 breathe an atmosphere\nwith a pressure of 3G pounds more to\nthe square inch than the atmosphere at\nthe earth's surface. This must be done\nin order to lay the foundations for the\npiers of the Williamsburg bridge.\nOver in Williamsburg, where North\nSecond street comes down to the river,\nmen are hurrying to completion the\ntwo great caissons on which the Brook-\nlyn towers of the new bridge will rest.\nThey will be the highest towers\nin the world, rising 335 feet above the\nriver's surface. The masonry part, rest-\ning far below on the solid rock and the\nconcrete filled caissons, will rear itself\n20 feet above the water, and from the\nmasonry will spring up the gigantio\nsteel towers. The Brooklyn bridge is far\nand away the largest suspension bridge\nin the world, and the fame of the struc-\nture has penetrated even to regions in\nAsia, where they regard America as "an\nisland near Marocco, between Egypt\nand Tangier," but the Williamsburg\nbridge will bo larger. The towers of the\nnew bridge will be 60 feet higher than\nthose of the Brooklyn bridge.\nThe entire length of the structure\nwill be 7,200 feet, or over 1,000 feet\nmore than that of the Brooklyn bridge.\nEven the central span will be longer in\nthe new bridge by five feet. The width\nof the Brooklyn bridge is 85 feet. That\nof the Williamsburg bridge will bo 118
432d0b99adfc3c71645ee634905a04f4 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.9986338481583 40.807539 -91.112923 would be heanlIhirthest- And so we all grealer return than the blue mineral. A^ °f moral right and love oi'law and order It will doubtless e-eite much surprise j "A bill supplementary to an act regu-\nagreed upon Old lip and we got nun company concerned in the Mine La will prevail. I rejoice to see the peo- and indignation in the public mind abroad, dating practice in the District Courts of\nprettj well mounted, and he souuded his jyiotte Mines, have erected a furnace® p!e i'1 crowds returning to the lolds of as it has already in this vicinity, when it is the Territory of Iowa, and No. 5. C . F .\nhorn, and its eciioes went up and down something after the fashion of the cupulo the constitution. I would address their known that the United States Soldiers, |"A bill providing for the service writs\nrivers, and across valle\\ s, and over moun- furnaces, to which they apply a blast by reason and give them encouragement—I stationed at this military post, were per- j by cony in certain cases, reported, that\ntains, till folks all about creation got well steam. In this furnace, which is so small would treat them as the lather treated the mined to vote by the federal locofocos. jthey agreed to the amendments made by\nacquainted with the sound, and on a given tlmt four persons can keep her supplied,' prodigal son spoken of in scripture. —If Had it not been for this extraordinary ,the House to No. 6, and disagreed fat\nday, they assembled at all their stations, have in 45 days, Sundays included whenI savv one returning I would go out, and high handed measure, the whigs j those made to No. 5 .
3a47ad824226c4f7d72086447a5fd888 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1918.0671232559614 36.000618 -88.428106 door asking for food. She gave him\nsome and he went away. He may have\ntaken the sweaters."\n"I shall scurry around and see if\nI cannot trace down the thieving fel\nlow," spoke Aldon.\nHe made some Inquiries of the two\nvillage watchmen and visited some\nwoods near the town that constituted\nthe favorite camping place of itinerant\nvisitors to the village, but gained no\ntrace of thief or sweaters.\nThe circumstance offered an excuse\nfor a call at the Gregory home that\nevening. Alden consoled the old lady\nas best he might.\n"To think that some poor fellow in\nthe trenches will miss the nice warm\nsweater I knitted for him," mourned\ngrandma, fairly at the point of tears,\nand Alden was so tender and thought-\n in his efforts to make the despoiled\none forget her loss, that Alma felt her\nheart warm towards him.\nGrandma Gregory went on knitting\nsweaters, but she continued to deplore\nthe abstraction of her first efforts. One\nday Alden was driving In his automo-\nbile along a lonely country road about\ntwenty miles from Hampden, when he\nslowed up and fixed his attention upon\ntwo brawny fellows lying on the\nground before a blazing fire of chips\nand logs, smoking complacently.\nNearby a small spring stream had\nevidently contributed to recent laun-\ndry work, for hung over a branch of a\ntree to dry were various articles of\napparel. What particularly held the\nattention of Alden were two sweaters.\nIn an Instant he recognized them as the\nstolen ones.
71411713efd193732ffceb85cde2ff5e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6123287354135 39.745947 -75.546589 to Warrior, Ala.— Mr. and Mrs. Harry n,,rk »pent 'he week end with Mr. and\nHeal and familv were recent guesta of Air»- (.eorge \\v. Clark In Philadelphie\nMr. and Mrs Jacob Kipp of Newark— Mr «nd Mrs. Frank Burton, of Balti-\nMra. John Schunder, who has been visit- more, Md., were visitors here on Sat­\ning friends in Philadelphia, has return- nrday Edward Burria of Bear was a\ned home—John J. Saxton wn* a visitor visitor here on Saturday Mrs. Theo-\nin Wilmington on Tuesday—Mr*. L A . dore 'Vise, •lohn Wl»e and Timothy Oal-\nSadler of West Philadelphia has been lahan were Wilmington visitors on Rat-\nvisiting her sister, Mrs. Charles Wr. Jef- (nrday—Miss Greta Holliday, Mr. and\nferson -Miss Evelina Culliaon has been I Mr*. Harry C. Clark, Mi»» Marguerite\nvisiting relatives in Camden, X. J—Ed- Mulligan. Miss Emma Mulligan. Miaa\nward l„ Clark and daughter. Mi»» Caro- I B"th Clark, Miss Ethel Hagan, Ml»»\nline Clark have been vi-iting in Wash ! Marguerite Hagan, Miss May Patterson,\ningtou, I). C . —M iss May Patterson, who Mr. nn(1 Mr». H. Reybold, Mias\nhas been visiting in Chisilhurst and At- Rebecca Cook, Mis» Katherine Cook and\nlantic City, N. J ., has returned home—1 Mi»» Mary Cook were vjaitora at Aug-\nJack Swan was a recent visitor in Wil- ; wstine Beach on Thursday—Mr. and\nmington—Mr. and Mrs. Walter Craig, of Mrs. Thomaa Ward, of Philadelphia\nWilmington, were recent guest* of Mr. 1 were guests of friends here on Sunday\nand Mrs. Jefferson ( lark—Lambert Bre- — Miss Dagma Thompson and Miss Eu\nr.ine, George H. Michaels, George Gar- Ig'-nin Thompson were visitors in Wil-\ndine and Musician Lee were visitors at mington on Saturday—Frank Davidson\nTolchester Beach on Wednesday—Mrs. ; spent the week-end here with his fam-\nJesse Francis, of Baltimore, Md., who ily—W. B . Spicer was n recent visitor\nhas been visiting her mother. Mrs. R . in Philadelphia—John Farmer was a via-\n,1. Mills, returned home on Wednesday. ! itor in Wilmington on Saturday—L\nMiss Margaret Mills returned to Haiti-I By«« Carty of Wilmington spent the\nmore with her—Mr. and Mrs. George W. week end here with relatives.
1c84baa1b8f26416953244a08e526b42 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.1953551596337 40.735657 -74.172367 Bidders are not to state any price for ma-\nterials and work for which there Is a fixed\namount provided for in the specifications\nEach proposal must be enclosed ln a sealed\nsnvelope, properly Indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners of the City of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices in writing\nis well as ln figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposals that,\nihould the above work be awarded to them,\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following number of\n:onsecutlve working days:\nAcademy street, twenty-four (24) days.\nAdams street, thirty-five (88) days.\nBowery street, sixty (00) days.\nBryant street, twenty (20) days.\nGrant avenue, fifteen (18) days.\nHighland avenue, thirty (80) days.\nLawton street, fifteen (15) days.\nMcWhorter street, sixty (60) days.\nSouth Twelfth street, fifty (80) days.\nTyler street, fifty (80) days.\nWest Kinney street, twenty-five (25) days.\nThe plans and specifications of the work can\n<e examined at the office of the Chief Engineer\npf Board of Street and Water Commis-\nlioners at the City Hall. Bald proposals to\nje accompanied by the consent in writing of\n:wo sureties, or a surety company qualified to\nio business ln New Jersey, who shall at the\nlime of putting in such proposals, qualify as\n:o their responsibility In the amount of such\nproposal, and bind themselves that If the con-\ntact be awarded to the person or persons\nmaking the proposal they will, upon its being\nso awarded, become his or their sureties for\nhe faithful performance of said work, and that,\nf the person or persons omit or refuse to exe-\njute such contract, they will pay to the City\n>f Newark any difference bstween the sums to\narhich he or they would have been entitled\njpon completion of the contract, and that\nwhich the City of Newark may be obliged to\npay the person or persons by whom such\n;ontract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners of the City of Newark reserve to them-\nselves the right to accept or reject any or\nill proposals for the above work,
09169ca153b8c99ba9eb51f905f90638 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.3630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 If boycott notices are sent to vou burn\nthem. 1 have in my possession over\nfour hundred boycott notices which were\nsent to assemblies with a request that they\nbe acted on. I .et me mention some ol\nthem: A member is editing a paper.\nHe fears a rival, and proceeds to\nget into an altercation with him,\nboycott him, and thon aabs the order\nto carry It out. A certain paper is iniiu-\nentlal in one or tho other political parties.\nMembers of the opposing party conceive\nthe Idea ol getting rid of the paper and\nthey invoke the aid of the knights of La¬\nbor, first taking the precaution to have\nthe paper in question sav bo Jiething un¬\ncomplimentary of the Knights of I^ahor.\nIn fact, our order has been used as a tail\nfor a hundred different kites, and in future\nit must soar aloft, free from all of them.\n1 hate word boycott. I was boycotted\nten years ago, and could not get work at\nmy trade for months. It la a bad practice;\nit lias been handed to us by the capital¬\nists. 1 havo no use for it only when\neverything else fails. Appeals for aid,\ncirculars, petitions, advertisements ol\nevery kind, are scattered everywhere\nthrough the order. 1 copy a letter which\ncomes to me on the subject: "A large part\nof our timo lias been spent in reading boy¬\ncott not'ees and appeals for aid, keeping\nus until 12 o'clock. We wero led to be¬\nlieve the Knights of Labor to fee an educa¬\ntional institution, but this kind of educa¬\ntion is not productive of good. We have\nne time for instruction. What do you\nadvise us to do?" I advised thein to\neither burn or table theBB matters, and\nnow ask of the Secretary of each assembly\nto do the same.
0eb32ba686b0ed019b66b4bcba284f90 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1892.8811475093605 41.004121 -76.453816 Wo wonder how many loys and girls\nknow the facts which we shall tell them\nabout this holiday. How many, for in-\nstance, can tell in what year the day was\nfirst observed? To recall tho circum-\nstances of the first day of Thanksgiving\nmay servo to remind ns of how much\nmore we havo to bo thankful for than\nhad those early pilgrims. History Vill-\nus that of tho 103 emigrants that landed\non the bleak and rocky coast of Cape\nCoil bay in tho winter of 1820 almost\nhaJf died boforo tho following wintei\nfairly set in. Today in our comfortable\ncountry and city homes we ennnot oven\nimagine the sufferings of the rurvivors,\nIxith from destitution and tho inclement\nweather, which they were not prepared\neither as to clothes or habitations to\nbrave. Tho most of tho bravo \nwere not inured to hardships. Among\nthem wero gentlo nnd delicately nur\ntured men and women.\nThey staked and laid out two rows ol\nhuts for thetineteen families thnt com-\nprised tho colony, but within tho first\nyear they had to make seven times more\ngraves f.r tho dead than houses for the\nliving. Notwithstanding all their trials\nand hardships these bravo founders of a\ngreat and glorious race hnd so much for\nwhich to bo thankful that they had to\nappoint "an especial day on which to give\nespecial thanks for nil their mercies."\nSo they agreed among themselves\nthat, since their prudence nnd fore-\nthought hud been so wonderfully blessed\nof God, they would send out four men\nhunting that they might rejoice together\nin n special manner after the fruit of\ntheir laljors h:nl been gathered.
f37d9b2e3496e99cd72158cc326f5baa THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.0669398590871 40.618676 -80.577293 VlflTH virtually all potteries reaping the benefits\nfrom the "Buy American" movement in\nimproved business, it is not hard to sing the\npraises of the drive, but it is an easy matter, now\nthat a substantial wedge has been driven, to turn\nlackadaisical and fail to push our advantages.\nPerhaps never before did so many Christmas\nspecialities boast of their American origin as this\nyear. Metropolitan stores set up featured dis­\nplays of American-made goods of all kinds.\nAdmitting that the current wars have played\ntheir part in gaining the aid of American mer­\nchants to boost the products of their own land, it\nwill be seen that the battle is not permanently\nwon; there still remains plenty of work to do.\nWith the advantage on our side, let us put\nforth every effort to make Americans conscious of\nthe quality and desirability of the merchandise\nmanufactured within our boundaries.\n X . A. Eble, managing director of the Made\nIn America Club, Inc., has informed President\nJames M. Duffy of the National Brotherhood of\nOperative Potters, who is a vice president of the\nclub, that Made In America Day will be observed\nat the New York World's Fair May 14 during the\nannual convention of the organization.\nDepartment stores will be requested to feature\nnothing but American-made merchandise through­\nout the week while all restaurants will be asked\nto prepare All American menus. Of special in­\nterest to us will be the suggestion by the Club that\nsuch menus could hardly be classed All American\nunless served on American-Made ware.\nWhile the Made In America Club is planning\nto push forward with every opportunity, it is ex­\ntremely important that every member of the\nBrotherhood back up these efforts, Never forget\nto, Be American—Think American—Talk Ameri­\ncan and Buy American.
0276b85065966f05899bf33239c1382a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.7109588723997 40.063962 -80.720915 In this office, as we write, thero are but\ntwo left of all who a mouth ago were em¬\nployed in the editorial, counting, and com¬\nposing rooms, and pur pressman is down\nwith the fover. Strangers to the office; as\nto the business, arc attending to our nf-\nfaire,-.whilCitho only editor left on doty\nalternates, 'through 10 hours a day, be-\ntweeu his desk and a case. This Is our\npersonal measure of the dreadful epidem¬\nic, and surely It is a sad one. Our experi¬\nence is one. we will never forget, and it is a\ncommon one. The fifth epidemic we hnve\npassed through, this surpasses them all in\nthe horrors it has uncovered. Parents\nhave deserted children, and children par-\nrents, husbands their wives, but not one\nwife a husband. Men have dropped dead\non the streets, while others died neg¬\nlected. only to be discovered by the deatn-\nspreading gases from their todies. Minis¬\nters of tlio Gospel, carrying messages of\npeace, hurrying from house to house,have\nhad their weary feet arrested and their\nwork stoid by the pestilence that walks in\nthe noonday as at night The priest, ad¬\nministering the extreme unction, and the\nbride of Christ, wiping the death-damp\nfrom tho forehead of those whose friends\nand kinfolks arc far away, are almost para¬\nlyzed in the sacred act, and die even before\nwe know they are sick. The business of\ntho hour is. the succor of the sick, the\nburial of tho dead, and the care of the\nneedy living? The last words of those who\nare well are at night farcwolls to the dead,\nand the first in the morning: "Who lives\nand who has died?"
92800ca132b7d54b8d69d75f2d503a61 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.9027396943177 41.681744 -72.788147 Hamlin's statement follows:\n"Upon further investigation of the\npresent memorial arch and court of\nhonor at Walnut Hill park. I find\nthat the person who worked Out the\noriginal idea and designed the struc-\nture is Max J. Unkelbach, a local\narchitect and civil engineer.\n"Acting on the suggestion of sev-\neral persons, I Interviewed him with\nreference to the practicability and\nfeasibility of duplicating the present\nlayout in granite, and also as to\nwhat the probable cost miht be.\n"At the time the West Main street\nsidewalk along Walnut Hill park\nwas lowered ti the street level. I\nunderstand the soil w8s very diffi-\ncult to excavate and In fact is ss\nhard if not harder than any soil to\nbe found in the city.\nJ'Mr. Unkelbach states that the\nprotect is entirely practical and\nfeasible, and estimates the cost of\n arch with the twelve accom-\npanying pillars, together with the\n1"0 smaller pillars in the Court or\nhonor at not to exceed $SO.0O0, as\nan outside figure.\n"If the majority of the citizens of\nNew Erltain. as is my belief, would\nprefer to have the Memorial Arch\nand Court of Honor made a per-\nmanent and fitting memorial, is It\nnot worth while to pause a moment\nand reconsider the action" already\ntaken by the committee and com-\nmon council? This in view of the\nfact that the appropriation already\nvoted is practically twice the cost\nof perpetuating the Court of Honor.\n"It has also been suggested that\nthe roadway to the park could be\nbuilt to the west of the Court of\nHonor, leaving the present approach\nfor pedestrians only and in this way\nproviding safety and privacy in the\nCourt of Honor.
7117df9601254aeb79f14343b5d4f0f6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.532876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 CHANOK INTHB STATE SKAT, OF VIRGINIA\nThe device of tho State seal of Virgin¬\nia lias been materially altered by the\nnew State government. It is tlie'same\ndevice, with the insertion'oft he words,\n. JTflberty and Union,'? surmounting the\nGoddess of liberty standing ui>on the\nprostrate form of tyranny..\nRETURN OF TUB RICH3IOND DKLF.GATION\nFROM A VISIT TO THH PRESIDENT.\nThe committee of citizens of Rich¬\nmond/who left this city something like\na week since to proceed to Washington\nfor the purpose ofconferring with Pres¬\nident Johnson in reference to the abro¬\ngation of the thirteenth exception to the\namnesty proclifcnation, involving the\ntwenty thousand dollar issu$, returned\nto the city this evening from the nation¬\nal capitol. It is understood that they\nreturn with a peries of gigantic ilea** in\ntheir several ears, and it is more than\nintimated that tho President them\na round aud.drastic talking to, and that\nthey parted from him disgusted with\ntho teuueity with which heelings to his\npolicy lis shadowed forth in his several\nproclamations. The ret urn of the com¬\nmittee and tho announcement of the re¬\nsult of their interview with the Presi¬\ndent are the talk of the capital to-night,\nfrom tho Kxeoutive Mansion down..\nThere is a -wide expression of satisfac¬\ntion on the part of large numbers that?\ntl\\e President stands so Jacksoniau and\nfirm in developing his policy, while tho\noriginal inhabitants hero gravely dis¬\nsent from tliis same idea. It is now\ncontidently affirmed and believed that\ntlie President will not modify his posi¬\ntion in relation to this subjcct, though\nit is said that he agreed to give tho pa¬\npers of tho committee further attention.\nMOVEMENTS AND DESIRES OF HENRY A.
04e8b8a7998c7dcf5dd31e7a573595f6 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.332876680619 44.939157 -123.033121 Our high school is being unjustly\ncriticised by somo of tho honornblo cit-\nizens of tho city. They say, "That wo\naro too aggressive," "that it is not our\nplaco to fight for our own rights,"\n"that wo should lenvo political func-\ntions of tho school nlone," "thnt wo\nshould leave tho more important ques-\ntions to our elders," etc. Wo sny, wo\ndo not wish tu seem nut of our placo In\ntho matter, but would llko to ask tho\ncitizens, what had tho citizens of this\ncity accomplished In tho wny of schools\nprovlous to tho tlmo tho schools took It\nup? Salem, tho second city in size,\nnnd tho capital of tho stato, has blun-\ndered nlong for tho Inst ten years with\nout proper public school advantages,\nwith every llttlo berg in tho country\nsupporting high schools, laughing\nnt it. Hllverton, McMlnnvillo, Jeffer-\nson mid other places havo until recently\nbeen ahead of Halcm In that respect.\nWo nsk, "Aro wo pupils to hnvo no\nright to work for our oltyT It certain-\nly ennnot bo denied thnt tho students\nof the school aro most directly interest-\ned in tho welfnro of it, that their in\ntorcst comes first nnd that, that of the\nvoter Is secondary. Tho school Is our\ndirect boncfit, nnd tho citizen rccoivos\nhis benefit from our being benefitted.\nThis bolng true, how In tho nnmo of\njustice can tho voter Insist on oxclud\nlog us from political mnttcrs connected\nwith our school T That connection not\nonly uffords us n chunco to obtain mora\nto our advantage, but materially aids\niu developing us, nnd makes us all tho\nmoro enjoy nnd npprcclato tho
449300134de5d633c2c2bb30bedfb986 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.0041095573313 58.275556 -134.3925 "As regards his statemeut that the\nmost urgent need of Alaska politically\nis that of home government, I have to\nstate that it is the concensus of opin¬\nion of conservative basiuess men of\nAlaska almost without exception, those\nmen who are doiug the most for the\ndevelopment of the country and mak¬\ning its resources add permanently to\nthe world's wealth, that time is inop¬\nportune for this form of government.\nThey regard the present system as the\nbest possible to meet the present con¬\nditions. ft is inexpensive, certain and\ncapable of expansion as the ueeds of\nthe country justify, but the tremen¬\ndous area embraced within Alaska, its\nsmall population, its scattered settle¬\nments, the uncertainty of the perma-\nneucy of the placer camps, would reu-\nder anything approaching a county j\norganization inordinately expensive\nand put a burden upou the people who;\nmust remain there beyond their present\ncapacity to bear. Nowhere in the j\nUnited is life and property more\nsecure than iu Alaska. Nowhere that\norder prevails as it does in that\ncountry, and these things are due pri\nmarily to the respect which our people\nhave for the federal judiciary. A large\nportion of the agitation for territorial\ngovernment comes from the saloon\nelement iu Alaska, which is desirous of\ndecreasing the burdens now imposed\nupon that business end at the same\ntime obtain a greater liberty than they\nnow have in the conduct of their bnsi-1\nness. Another large portion comes\nfrom the deinogogie statement that our\npeople are deprived of some of the i\nessential rights of citizenship, with\nwbroh I take a decided issue.\n"The people have all the rights and\nprivileges enjoyed by American citi-\nzeus, except the right to vote for comity\nofficers and to make some minor regu¬\nlations and laws respecting internal\naffairs. These are not essential at\npresent for the wellfareand well-being\nof the population,
f882b5afd7bbbd07f04d4a3aa6666e9a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0808218860984 41.681744 -72.788147 rich deposits of the rar. earth c:i!!ed\nmanganese ore. Although tins region\nIs supposed to have 200,000,000 tons\nawaiting the pick, Brazil is sail to\nhave a mountain of it, bat this par\nticular Brazilian deposit is so fur\ninland that Its exploitation is Im-\npracticable at present.\n"Before scientists discovered that\nmanganese would facilitate the pro-\ncess of making steel and before they\nfound that a certain per cent made\nsteel wonderfully hard, the Tchiaturi\nMountain district was inhabited by a\nfew scattered herders. In prosperous\ntimes 4,000 miners now work the\nhills. A herder of sheep knows little\nabout mining so at first Italian min-\ners were imported to work the stata.\nBut the mining is easy and compara-\ntively safe so the Georgians Boon\ncaught on and now the great major-\n of workmen are natives.\nBrought Theater and Hot Baths.\n"Before the World War much was\nnone to maintain good living condi-\ntions for the miners. Hftmes were\nbuilt for them together with an In-\nstitutions for hot baths, so dear to\nthe'Oeorglan heart. Electricity came\ninto tho mountains for the mines and\nthe villages. Manganese even brought\na theater to Tchiaturi.\n"When the branch railroad reach-\ned the deposits there was great re-\njoicing because previously all ore\nhad to bo taken over perilous moun-\ntain paths 5 miles to the main line.\nSeldom more than a ton could be\ncurried by bullock cart at one lime.\n'1 he old Russian government bull',\nthe branch lino but freight charges\nwere so high, it is said, that they\npaid the railroad's cost in two years.
1484d0d3a57c076578bc0e60c2a2025c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.3246575025369 42.217817 -85.891125 simply that you are breathing impure air\nwhich is clogging and poisoning the circulation,\nand unless some one is wiae enough to let in a\ncurrent of frsih air, you spend an hour of tor-\nture and then pass gladly out with an exhilara-\nting sense of relief; and your attendance upon\nthe house of God, which thould bave been a\nconsecrated season of worship and communion,\nloaves but the impression of a troubled dream.\nWhy is that with all our modern knowledge and\nmodern appliances for ventilation, pure air is\nso often denied us ? now is that sluggish con-\ngregations sit so quietly, Sabbath after Sabbath,\nin an atmosphere of somnolence ? Uow con-\ntinually you hear the little backing cough by\nwhich weak lungs feebly protest against the\nvitiated air! Do not they know what is tho\nmatter ? Why does not tbe minister admonish\ntbe instead of bemoaning h;s own lack\nof earnestness and the apathy of Lis people?\nAs indigestion and a torpid liver, more than\nmoral obliquity, may sometimes cause all sorts\nof ebullitions of llltetapcr, so may not the lack\nof pure air in our churches sometimes accoun,\nfor the lethargy of pastor and people ? John\nthe Baptist himself, or St. Paul, could not awa-\nken fervor wbero there was not enough oxygon\nin the air to feed the flame. Ae, then, you\nwould feed the starving and warm tbe shiver-\ning before preaching to them tbe Gospel of\nPeace, see to it also that enough pure air is\nfurbished to fill the hungry lungs and send the\nlife blood coursing with vigor through the veins\nbefore you can expect to awakei interest and\ninspire zeal even in the truiths which pertain\nto the salvation of tbe eoul and tbe life eternal
35a65a397b396a8d106b250dd283b57e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.223287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 There is an old proverb which says, "Expert\ncnco is the safest guide." To this guide the slcli\nand ailing naturally turn when casting about foi\n«hA mm mi nf Mlfnf Thav Innnlra what a medl\nqIqq has douo for others, before they adopt 11\nthemsolvea. Of all the reined lop and preventlvei\nin use, lIoBtottor'a Stomach Blttera meets the\ntest moat triumphantly, and banco ita Immense\npopularity and nit sales. The snlfcrer ftom In\ndlgestlorf Is sure to find tome one among hli\nMends who has been cured of that ailment bj\nthe famous vegetable stomachic. The victim ol\nfever and ague, liver coulplalnt, constipation\nnervous proslratiou, or general debility, has onlj\nto make inquiry in the neighborhood when h«\nresides in order to discover what this standard\nrestorative has effected in case| similar to hli\nown. In the published testimony to its merit!\n will find a volume of proofs of its sanltuj\nproperties, which it is impossible for his com\nmon sense to resist He tries it, and the effect it\nproduces on his system adds another to the host\nof witnesses in its favor. Thus, its reputation\nfounded on bets, not assertions, continual!;\ngrowa and spreads. Charlatans and impostors\nsome of them mere local tricksters, and otheri\nwho take a somewhat wider range, attempt U\nthroat into the hands and down the throats o\ninvalids, their hsphaxard concoctions, aa substl\ntutes for the tonic whleh for so many yeare hai\nbeen a medicinal etaple throughout the Unite<\nStates, Spanish America, Canada, and the Wes\nIndies, but only succeed toa very limited extent\nIn this reasoning age, the people, having aaoei\ntalned what is really deserving or their oonfl\ndonee, decline "running after strange gods,'"\nmaoleod
2e3049532ad988a3f33f9372a3529acc OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.9082191463724 41.020015 -92.411296 Probably ono of the most interest­\ning will contests on record is that of\nBernard Slavcn, which we have fre­\nquently had occasion to mention in\nthese columns. Slaven's first will was\nbroken in court, and the property\ngiven to some distant heirs. Since\nthen olher heirs turned up, and while\npresenting their claims in court, to\nre open the case, other and nearer rel­\natives -itep in and establish better\nclaims. Then, to cap the climav. Sla­\nven's wife turns up and puts in her\nclaim, and at the same time suit is be-\ning prosecuted to maintain the claims\nof one of the legatees of tho will.—\nThe following is the histnrv of this\ninteresting case :\nAn August, 1874, an old gentleman\nfrom Ireland, named Bernard Slaven,\ndieu in this city. Before he died he\nmade a will, devising his property,\nabout .$12,000, consisting of govern­\nment bonds, to a daughter of John\nFarrell, Esq., where he had boarded\n considerable time, and for tho bene­\nfit of institutions of the Catholic\nchurch, to which bo belonged. He\nwas often heard to say that he had no\nrelative?, and it was published exten­\nsively bv the press of the country that\nan old man had died in Keokuk\nworth considerable property and\nwithout heir, About tho time the\nwill came to bo probated, parties born\nin Texas, consisting of Elizabeth,\nKato and Mary Ann, daughters of\none I'M ward Slaven, of Galveston,\ncame forward, and through their at­\ntorneys, Messrs. (rillmore Hr Ander­\nson, of this city, contested the probate\nof Slaven s will on tho alleged ground\nof insanity and undue inlluence.\nlion. D. F. Miller, lion. John II.\nCraig and Hon. Geo. W. McCrarv\ndefended tho will for tho legatees,\nbut tho circuit court ruled against the\nwill and denied its probate, the su­\npreme court to which the case was\ncarried affirming tho decision of the\nlower court.
5fbde2cf6145aad830305f28e59f81e7 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.5383561326737 39.369864 -121.105448 appears to be very dry, and it is thought that\na ditch cannot be brought in under two years.\nThis is the substance of the rumors in cir-\nculation, for so far there is utter lackof pos-\nitive, reliable information from first sources,\nat least in this vicinity. Meanwhile people\nare excitedly talking and moving. The stage\nto Humbug from San Juan has been filled\nwith Washoe adventurers nearly every trip of\nlate, and on one occasion an extra vehicle\nwas pot on to accommodate the rush. The\nroute generally travelled is that by Gallo-\nways and Downieville.\nSince writing the above we have received\nthe Nevada Journal, which has had access\nto direct information and speaks as follows:\n“Thus far there appear to be no more indications of\nextensive quartz or other diggings at the locality than\nare discoverable in any of our quartz districts \nhome. The rock is decomposed at the surfaceand is\ndoubtless exceedingly rich. lint it is to bo borne in\nmind that the lead lies along the declivity of a high\nridge, is distant front water not less than seven miles\nand wood about the same distance. A report that\nquite extensive placer diggings existed below the lead,\nis contradicted by those who have examined the coun-\ntry latest. They tell us the decomposed rock, by the\naction of the elements and the force of gravitation has\nIteen deposited in placesa few indies in thickness and\nwould pay largely if water in any reasonable quantity\ncould bo procured. But that there are any extensive\ndeposits that would last any respectable number of mi-\nners even a few months, is said to be ont of the ques-\ntion. The country gives no indication of any large\nwash deposits of any kind.”
09de8ff9801dc86d147c3d2f65f9076d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.6890410641806 39.623709 -77.41082 year—<you know the mens college Is\nlight near our seminary and so they\nCall on us every evening*—the presi-\ndent made a new rule.\n'fie declared that wemust dismiss\nour guests at 0;30, and we decided we\nwould not do it After a great de&l\nof plotting and planning, we bit\nupon a delightful plan, and it was a\ngreat success. The boys seemed a\nMg basket and two .ropes and a pul-\nley for us, and this we hid during\nthe day and at night fastened two\nfereot hooka-on the sQI of our-etudy\nwindow. The hoys sent up then\ncards in the basket, and then after\ninspecting them with a lantern to\nmake sure they were not burglars\nwe hauled them up.\n" But one night the grave and dig-\nnified president caught us and\nplanned a little surprise for us. He\nfound one of the boys' cards in our\nrooms and placed it in the basket It\nworked beautifully, and we hauled\nhim half way up any ope\nthought of using the lantern,\n" Then Miss Ilyaway held it out\nthe window and took a peep at him*\nOne glanoe at the spectacles and bold\nhead was enough. It was lucky for\nthat president that we did not let\nhim fall to the ground in our horror\nand amazement but wo held on to the\nropes until wo decided what to da\n We couldnt let him down again,\nhe would only come up and catch us,\nand we couldn't drop him, bad as he\nwas, and we certainly didn't intend\nto help him carry out his plan by\nhauling him up, so wo compromised\nby securing the ropes ana letting\nhim hang there in midair.\n“Bebegged and implored to be let\ndown, offered us any bribe we could\nWish for and wasted more eloquence\non us in that first hour than he did\nduring his yearly lectures. But we\nhad no Visitors that night Be\namused us, and we wanted revenge,\neo we lefthim.
d9dfcd3d54f86c8a762e03543ecadb8e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.1438355847285 43.798358 -73.087921 public officers, and all who may be desirous of\npreserving copies ot their letters, documents, &c ,\nwith an immense saving of time, and the satis-\nfaction of having an exact copy of what they have\nwritten, this will be found invaluable.\nFrancis' Manifold Writer has now been in suc-\ncessful operation two years, during which time\nthe proprietor has had tho pleasure of receiving\nthe unfeigned approbation of all whose observa-\ntion it has come under. At the late Fair of the\nAmerican Institute, the merits of the article were\nexamined into by three of the most able chemist\nin thr country, who pronounced it to be a veiy\ningenious ana useiui connivance, and not liable\nto change color by exposure to air, moisture, or\nchemical agents. Consequently a redal was\nawarded by the Institute.\nThe .proprietor has lately made great improve\nments in this article. The paper is the best\nquality tnanufacturedln the United States, being\nmade lor the Manifold Writer expretsly to his or-\nder. The ruling of them, which has for some\ntime been thought impossible, has at length been\noiougiu ro periecuon, tor wbrcli a copynght has\nbeen secur ed. The copying books are bound in a\nvariety of forms and sizes, varying in price from\n50 cents upwards,\nStationers and countrv merchants in\nwill find it to their advantage to procure the arti\ncle, as they meet with a ready sale. A liberal\ndeduction made to those who buy by wholesale.\nnewspapers or magazines throughout the coun-\ntry, copying the above entire, without alteration\nor abridgement, (including this notice,) and giving\nii inrcivc uiue insertions, snail receive a copy\nsubject to their order, by sending a paper con tam\ning me advertisement to tne orace of the sub-\nscriber, LEWIS FRANCIS, 83 William st.,
35833e99d64c149221b1db8a6f22f0d1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.409589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 totally defeated. The commanding\nofficers and the greater part of the\nDelaware regiment being made pris­\noners by the enemy, only two com­\npanies remained tinder the command\nof Captain Kirkwood: This gallant\nremnant of the Delaware line was at­\ntached as light infantry to Lees cele.\nbrated legion and distinguished Itself\nwith glory !n the Southern campaign.\nAt Cowpens, where the enemy under\nthe notorious Colonel Tarleton were\neut to pieces, Captain Kirkwood was\nin the thickest of the fray and the\nbravest of the brave.\nWhen a charge was ordered. Cap­\ntain Kirkwood advancing ten paces in\nfront, bade his men follow him\nagainst, the enemy. His example of\nbravery in this battle inspired the\nwhole legion with courage\nAfter the Revolutionary War had\nended, left his native State and\nsettled in Ohio, near the Virginia line,\non lands he had purchased. Soon his\ncountrys dangers summoned this vet­\neran soldier to the field, and he obey­\ned her call. The Indians were threat­\nening the entire West. An army was\nplace In the field under General St.\nClair, to repel them, and Kirkwood i\nresumed his sword again. On Novem­\nber 4, 1792, he fell In battle and was\nmurdered by the Indians, fighting\nwith his accustomed heroism at the\nhead of his detachment. So perished\nby the hands of the merciless savage\nthe most valiant hero of Delaware,\nwho had faced death and danger tn\nevery form in battles for his countrys\nliberty. His example will live to stir\nposterity to patriotism and valor.
222c6f8ada7829f8cbc63619ee9cefef THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.616120186956 40.063962 -80.720915 f.'orU la » Fever of Excitement-Nix Bunt\nLoad, or JIen Board » Nlilp la t|iP Har¬\nbor, Overpower I he .Crew nud Cam\nOff A rinn.\nCork, A ugust 12..This city was thrown\ninto a high (ever of excitement thia morn¬\ning by . fresh scare connected with the\nFenian movement, which seems to have\nbeen gaining ground lately in various\nparts of the country, especially in the\ncounties of Wexford and Limerick. The\nfacta which have come to the knowledge\nof the authorities appear to be substan¬\ntially an follows:\nThe Norwegian ship Jnno has for some\ndays boen lying at the docks in Cork har¬\nbor oudorgoing repairs preparatory to a\nvoyage west. She was this morning\nat daybreak boarded by six boat loads ol\nmen supposed to be Fenians who over¬\ncame the men in charge of the vessel and\nstole three cases of arms and decamped,\nhaving previously cut the telegraph wires.\nThe robbery was made known to the au¬\nthorities as soon as possible and the con¬\nstabulary started in pursuit in boats; but\nthus far no trace of the thieves has been\nfound. The Juno was loaded with a gen¬\neral cargo for New the riflee form¬\ning a part of it.\nThe presumption is that the robbers se¬\ncreted themselves and their booty on some\nof the numerous small bays, with which\nthe shore is fllled on the other side of the\ncity. Some persons are of the opinion\nthat the robbers are members of the or¬\nganization connected with the Boyd out¬\nrage recently committed in New Ross,\nWexford county, and that the rifles are\nintended for use in that county. Others\naffirm that they are emissaries of the Cen¬\ntral organization in Dublin, which has\nJ«en sending out large quantities of En¬\nfield rifles to different parts of the countrv\nwithin the last few months. The men in\nboats were disguised so as to be unrecog¬\nnizable, and did their work without un¬\nnecessary talk, The Viceroy, who has\nbeen telegraphed to, has ordered every\nelfort to be made for their capture.\nLondon, August 12..The Corn Ex¬\nchange is considerably excited. The dis¬\nturbance is caused by the anticipated\narrivals of heavy shipments of American\ngrain at Tort Bevel. Ten cargoes are also\ncoming from Denmark. The Russian\ndealers acknowledged their inability to\ncompete, under present circumstances\nwith American shippers.
0e32c0ab3a36d7b0787ef2689c2339a7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.3356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 A Ladj <ntict>1 by me Head Brlweeo an\nKlevatoranil (lie rram«w«rk.\nSan Fbasicisco, Cal., May 2..A horrible\naccident occurred in the elevator "halt of\nthe Nevada Block on Sunday, resulting in\nthe instant death ot a lady and the seriona\ninjury of the elevator boy. While midway\nthe elevator caught and refused to go\neither up or down. The boy opened the\nsky-light and got on the top of the elevator\nand intending to get the lady out managed\nto get her up, and also proceeded to open\nthe doors leading out to the second door.\nAh «he atack her head out the elevator\ngave a violent jerk upward, and beforushe\ncould extricate herself or even utter a cry\nher head and .neck were caught between\nthe frame work of the shaft and elevator.\nThe boy crabbed the rope, but the cage as¬\ncended several teet before it waa stopped,\ncarrying the upper part of the woman a\ntadv with it, squeezing it into a space\nsix inches wido. Hearing the craBli\nand noise, some occupauU of tbe\n rushed oat and saw blood\ndripping from the mangled corpse through\nthe wire framework of the elevator shaft to\nthe eerand floor, where itcoiectedina\nlarge pool. The body was found with the\nlower portion lying on the top of the ele¬\nvator while the shouldets. head and neck\ncould not be seen. Tho body remained\nfor nearly an hour In the position where\nthe elevator had left it wtien it stopped,\nhe head being caught between the front of\nthe "p of the cage and the casing ot the\nshaft At last two workmen arrived, and\nnetting on top of the cage pried up the\nSpring ol the safety-latch, and the cage ell\n?n the floor below. An examination\nshowed that the neck of the unfortunate\nwoman waa broken. H*r face was horribly\ndisfigured, the nasal bone waB tornoffand\nthe eves torn out of their sockets. So little\nremains of the features that it was ""I**"'\nble to recognise her, and the body .l_\nyet been identified. The elevator is Hick\nelev's patent, lifting and descending by a\nwire
27e5df6969d604b0cc7a990514711c3b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.9494535202894 40.063962 -80.720915 rel>eli," and offering to "thrash any- 1(\nbody who interfered with them.\n1'erceiving Mr. "Zack" Chandler in\n(be pulpit, "telling stories" and chewing |,\ntobacco, and exercising the functions of u\na chairman, wo apked the bystanders £\nwhether they rcftlly meant, to "say that §\n"Zack" was a reformer, and learned that F\nbe wasn't much of a reformer,;bnt4wna a S\n<ood fellow, had plenty, of money, and j\nknew how to "run the machine;" and T\nthen thejr laughed, and punched us in the c\nritu. as if we. too. must eniov, the ioke.\nTurning to*jtfr. Wheeler, the-nominee\nfor the Vice Presidency, we jinked him\nwhen tiie exposition of' Kepublicnn doc- V\ntrine was to begin, and lie said ho would t,\nbegin it now himself, and "flack" there- w\nupon rapped for silence; and we heard, £\nto our amazement, that the campaign was S\nnot about c1 vil reform, or cur- II\nrency.or pacificatidnat all.thiit it was w\na continuation of.the civil war, and that Q\nwo had all to vote ns if we were actually g\non tho battle-field. Seeing ^(r. Blaine, M\nwho appeared loooking vigorous and ac- ^\ntire, we asked him what the campaign $\nw&j about, and he said entirely about a\n"outrajei" on negroes, on which Huhjeet 0\nho had roams of evidence, Inquiring of £\nMr. Boutweli if thi* was true, he said E<\nvery.gloomily that it wad not half true E\nenough. Here tho editor of the Now\nYork Ximu came up, and declared tint m\nthe whole tiling really turned on Tilden'.s ft\nincome and the condition of the once ^\n«uiiliijg village of .Brady's ..Bend, and he- 1:1\ncoma very violent anil abusive,* Mr. jj\nBlaine then added that, now that he $\nthought of it, he must say that the
341e49bbc696b17f9720e7d1b164356c WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.042465721715 35.318728 -82.460953 fered an opportunity and it was in\n1891 when Locke Craig began the\npractice of law in1 Ashevile in very\nearnest. From the first the peopel\nturned to him. Here was the oppor-\ntunity of judging the value of charac-\nter plus preparation and the result\nwas success and it is ever so.\nThe opportunity and the man came\ntogether and the man conquered the\nopportunity. Locke Craig became a\npotential factor in the material and\npolitical life of the growing Western\nCarolina city. Asheville was then In\nthe ninth congressional district and in\n1892 Locke Craig was the Democratic\nelector from the district and manfully\ndid he throw "himself into the battle\nlines. Four years later he was named\nas elector at large In this campaign\nthe first real opportunity of his life\ncame to the yQung orator. He was 36\nyears old. He was earnest and virile.\nHe was filled with courage and firmly\nconvinced. His campaign for Wil-\nliam Jennings Bryan during that year\nestablished his reputation as the "Ora\n of the Blue Ridge" and from the\nmountains to the Sea he carried the\nbanner of Democracy. The Republi\ncans . were in control in JtmncomDe\ncounty but when the Democrats nom-\ninated Craig as their candidate for\nlegislative honors 'he was elected with\na majority of 100 and this In the face\nof a normal republican majority of\n600. It was the test of the popularity\nof the man in his home county.\nThe General Assembly of 1899 is re\ncognized as one" of the remarkable\ngatherings in the history of the State.\nMen of marked ability were gathered\ntogether from every section of the\nState. The stronger men, the men of\nbig mind and stalwart brain and\namong them Locke Craig took his\nplace with the foremost He made\ngood in goodly company. He dem-\nonstrated his ability in leadership.\nThe campaign of.1900 came on and\nwith the splendid leader, Charles\nBranfly Aycock the campaign was\nopened at Laurinburg, Those two\nmaster men were together on the open-\ning day.
4c7dae2ade7bd6e8f4a0bba18f84c63b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.8315068176053 42.217817 -85.891125 youth made the spring, missed the cov-\neted brunch by the sixteenth of un inch,\nami oame down with a dreadful thud on\nthe back of Mr. O'Clarence, flattening\nthat gentleman to the earth, driving his\nnose into the Rod, ami muking every\nbone in his body snap like so inuiiy pop-\nping corns, if 'or un instant the misera-\nble man believed that a long SOfieS of\nfatetl disasters had finally culminated in\na stroke of extra strong lightning the\nnex t the heel of Muster Wickford's shoe\nploughing SCrOSS his neck awakened\nbim ttt u vugue sense of the trouble,\nand Springing to his feet, und half cruzed\nwith pain and rage, he ran to the out\nhouse for his axe. and securing it, re-\nturned to murder the youth, but was too\nlate. The little rSSOal being too scared\nto cry, or even realise his wounds, had\nimmediately scaled the on reach-\ning his feet, and taken refuge under his\nparents' roof. When Wickford camo\nhome in the evening, Mr. O'Clarence\nstarted over to see him, und was met by\nhim at the division gate, when that gen-\ntleman very pertinently inquired "what\nin thunder he meant by prowling around\nunder trees, scaring little boys that were\nin their own fathers' trees, getting pio\napples for their mothers 1 Mr. Wick-\nford topped off his demand by announc-\ning that he desired to live in peace with\neveryone, but if people were bound and\ndetermined to be always kicking up a\nbobbery of some kind, and crippling\nthe youth of the land, he should call in\nthe law and let its majesty crush the\nculprits. Stunned and bewildered by\nthis reception, Mr. O'Clarence retreated\nto his house, where ho grappled with an\nimaginary assailant, and gave him a\nferocious beating. I)anht,rif Xvavs.
2e34351c83a74a9b6114d275185fbd55 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.8753424340437 41.681744 -72.788147 Republican club, and "candidate for\nmayor" on both tickets in the last\ncity election, conducted one evening\nat G. O. P. headquarters. The origi-\nnal date for election of officers of\nthe club had been changed without,\npublication of the fact, and when\nAllee arrived to attend on the nisht\nfirst set, he found no others present\nfor that purpose. As a member of\nthe club, he exercised what he\nclaimed to be his right to call a\nmeeting. He rapped for order, made\nan enthusiastic speech in favor of\nhimself as chairman of the meeting,\nthen proceeded to elect himself to\nall offices and committees, and\nwound up by declaring annual elec-\ntions to be superfluous and he nam-\ned himself to these offices perman-\nently. After each suggestion, motion\nor nomination, made by, to and for\nAllee, he asked if there were any ob-\njections. No one else taking a part\nin the meeting, he naturally heard\nno objection, and as chairman in-\nstructed himself, as secretary to\nmake record the fact.\nIn a recent election, there was a\ncandidate for office who had little\nor no experience as a public speak-\ner. He realized this shortcoming and\ndreaded the. thoughts of appearing\nIn halls or on street corners to dis-\ncuss public business as he gazed into\na sea of strange faces. In the early\ndays of the campaign, he made no\nspeeches. Then, as if he had sudden-\nly come to a realization that he must\nspeak, the columns of newspapers\nbegan to carry daily reports of his\ndissertations on political issues and\non the fitness of the opposing party\nto rnu the government. This contin-\nued for several days until it was\nnoted that all of the talks were be-\ning made to "party workers" at a\npolitical headquarter. Some inquiry\nfollowed, resulting in the discovery\nthat the speeches were being made\nas soon as written to whoever hap-\npened to drop into headquarters and\nwere, then given to the newspapers\nto be digested by thousands of read-\ners.
429de3761975081d03c1c3b9b7604d0c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.9383561326738 39.745947 -75.546589 Some day the story of the transpor­\ntation of the British expeditionary\nforces to France may be written. For\nobvious reasons It is suppressed now.\nThe English newspapers dare only\nhint at the magnitude of the under­\ntaking. During the Boer war 250,000\nmen with artillery, horses,\nment and stores were carried 7,000\nmiles to South Africa, and the\nachievement was without a precedent.\nBut. the seas were clear of hostile\nships. England had the means to\nmove the troops, and It was only a\nquestion of how quickly the work\ncould be done. No other maritime\nnation would have been able to solve\nthe problem so smoothly and in lime\nso brief. Granting that England had\nthe tonnage, high praise was her due\nfor the celerity with which the trans­\nportation was effected.\nin sending army corps to the aid\nof Englands ally In the great war on\nthe Continent distance to be steamed\nby the transports was a \nfactor. The big factor was assemb­\nling the men at the point of embar­\nkation and getting them across the\nChannel without accident in time\nmeasured by days. Mr. H. A . Walk­\ner. general manager of the London\nand South-western Railway, thinks\nthat his line has made a record in\nhandling troops destined for the\nfront. The Government gave him\nsixty hours to make preparations to\ndespatch 350 trains of about thirty\ncoaches each. He was ready in 48\nhours. He does not go into details,\nbut the presumption is that the 10,500\ncoaches called for carried the first\nexpedition to the point of embarka­\ntion. It probably consisted of two\narmy corps and an extra division. In\nthe first three weeks of war seventy-\nthreo trains were unloaded everv\nfourteen hours, arriving from all\nparts of the country about twelve\nminutes apart.\nShip after ship look\nturn at the wharf, filled\ndiers, horses, guns and equipment
29d96caf4f1741328fca8dd26d7e1d88 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.9112021541691 40.063962 -80.720915 The Orvis improvement, as attached to\nan ordinary steam boiler furnace, may be\nbriefly described as follows: Pure Bteam\nis taken from the dome oi the boiler, and\nconducted through a small pipe down and\nacross the front of the furnace, over the\nlire doors, connecting with three vertical\npipes of same sue leading down to three\ndue ateam jets, used to draw the air up\nthrough large pipes into an air chamber in\nthe brass globes, which creates a vacuum,\nand forces the commingled air and steam\nthrough other pipes into the furnace, in a\nline converging toward the center of the\nfurnace, over the surface of the fuel. A\nvalve is used to regulate the pressure, or\ncut the steam off, at will.\nAa to,practice, the Orvis Smoke Con¬\nsumer, by creatinga vacuum in the closed\nglobe, through the introduction of steam,\ninduces a strong current of air through the\ntwo-inch pipes beiow tbo heats\nthe air and vaporises or commingles with\nit in the oriiice ol the globe leading into\nthe furnace, and entering the lurnace sep¬\narates the mass of black smoke and di¬\nvests it of its carbonic apid gases (gas\nworks accomplish the same result by\npassing smoke through water), and then\ncompletes the combustion of the oleflant\ngases and volatilebydrocarbons by a suf¬\nficient amount of oxygon contained in tlip\nvolume of air foroed iu by the vacuum.\nTbo necessary amount of heat (830 deg.\nFab.) is already in the furnace.\nMayor Sweeney with the spirit or nu\nenterprising public citizen has taken great\ninterest in demonstrating to his satisfac-\ntion that the device will do what is claimed\nfor it. Wo understand that he will take\nthe agency of the invention for this city,\nand endeavor to have the public derive all\nthe benefit from It there Is to he had.\njThis is commendable.
1627995d3bc59b0adf0d700888216ac6 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1899.9164383244547 32.612638 -90.036751 part and lie unto their own con-\nsciences. The poor widow's mite is\nstill a bigger thing than a rich roan's\nlarge donation,\n1 wonder what kind of a world we\nwould have if everybody was good?\nI don't mean religious, but kind and\njust and honest. Our courts and pris-\nons would be abolished. Just think\nof it! Hut it cannot be. Original sin\nand total depravity and moral turpi-\ntude are still in the way. The mys-\ntery of evil still hangs over us. John\nStuart Mill and Herbert Spencer and\nother great thinkers say that the ('re-\nnter made the very best World and tho\nbest- inhabitants that He could out of\nthe material that He had, but that it\nis improving as the centuries roll on.\nAnd John Fiske says that evil is nec-\nessary to teach us what good is. That\nif there was no crime or pain or grief\nwe would have no joy or happiness\nand would not know what it was.\nPlatp said 2,000 years ago that we had\nto limit God'l omnipotence or His\ngoodness, one or other, and many\nlearned and sincere men. like Calvin\nand Kd wards, huve tried to reconcile\npredestination with free agency, but\nit is all incomprehensible to me, and\nI have to fall back and intrench my-\nself on those injunctions which say:\n"Deal justly love mercy and obey the\nLord thy Hod," and the later one\nwhich snys: "Thou shalt love the\nthy (iod with all thy heart and thy\nneighbor as thyself," and then accept\nDavid's faith, which saith: "Though\nHe slay me, yet. will I trust in Him."\nI'm not going to strain my mind over\nperplexing problems that have never\nbeen solved. Mr. Fiske is a beautiful\nwriter, but if evil was created as a\ncontrast so that we might know what\ngood is, then how caji we enjoy\nHeaven, where there is no evil, no\ncrime or grief or affliction? Ono\nthing I do know, that this is a beauti-\nful world, and this life is a happy\none to those who choose to make it\no. President Dabney, of the Univer-\nsity of Tennessee, snid in a recent\nspeech nt Huntsfcille:
05928b0258e52bf6abc69e589d0c1f1e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.3986301052764 40.063962 -80.720915 The forcing of race issues is always un-\nfortuuate, but it is not a new thing in\nthose States where slavery was "the an-,\ncient heritage," Slavery is gone forever,\nbut traces of it remain in the ignorance ol\nthe colored race and the prejudice of the\nwhite. In this very Siato of Virginia\nthere was a "malign influence" which drew\nthe color line sharply, and on one side of it\nwere freemen, on the other chattels. This\ninflaence saw the slave made a freeman\nand a voter, before the law the equal of the\nwhite man. The thing was done and could\nnot be undone. It was written in the Con¬\nstitution, a tlxed fact. Instead of "accept¬\ning the results of the war in good faith,"\nthe old slave-holding class, by individual\nendeavor and through the machinery of\nthe Democratic party, sought to deprive\nthe colored mau of bis rights under the\nlaw, and, it must be confetsed, met with\ngreat success. This is recent and familiar\nhistory, and there is no need to go over it.\nIn Virginia, as in other Southern States,\nthe old masters could have controlled the\nfreed men if they had chosen to be friendly\nto them. They preferred coercion, and if\nthe negro does not always who are\nhis friends he instinctively knows who are\nhis enemies. lie knows when he is kicked\nand who kicks him; who gives him schools\nand who withholds them; who gives him\nthe ballot and who takes it from him. This\nis why he is agaiust the Damocratic party\nin Virginia, and is glad to be "banded"\nwith other forces which are hostile to it.\nThe Democratic party in Virginia can\nnot bo unprejudiced and willing to recog¬\nnize the black voter as the equal of the\nwhite before the law, or its leading news¬\npaper would not "go on" as the l)i*patch\ndoes. It is horrified at the thought that\ntwo of the nine trustees of tho Richmond\npublic schools shall be colored men.\nhardly an unfair division as against the\nwhites in a city having so large a colored\npopulation. And the VUpaich usas this\nargument: "Five of them constitute a\nquorum. Of these Ave, threo constitute a\nmajority. So that as there are two negroes\non the Board, those two negroes and one\nwhite man could of course outvote the\nother two white meu." If four white men\nabsent themselves, when there is so much\nat stako, that would not bo the fault of the\n"two negroes and one white man."
9fa2d8e9f92d6a96117526847dde6719 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4342465436328 39.745947 -75.546589 A surprise dinner was given re­\ncently to Mrs. Samuel Austin, in\nhonor of ther fifty-seventh birthday\nanniversary on the Clark Farm at\nDelaware City. Mra Boyce, who is\na well-known phrenologist, told the\nfortunes of many of the guests.\nGames were also enjoyed-\nThose present were: Mr. and Mrs.\nSamuel Austin and family, Mr. and\nMra Louis Stroud and sons, Rey­\nnolds and Clifton; Mr. and Mra Jo­\nseph Heller and daughter, Elizabeth;\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Austin and sons,\nMedford and Clyde; Mr. and Mrs.\nShrader and family, Mr. and Mrs.\nMorman Bendler, Watson Austin,\nHoward Austin, Mrs. Van Hekcl and\ngrandchildren, Grace Preston and\nCarell; Mr. and Mrs. Y . C . McCoy,\nMr. ^nd Mrs. B. R . Watson, Mr. and\nMrs. C. A . Watson, and Mrs.\nSamuel Green and son. Mr. and Mrs.\nSamuel Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Ben­\ndler, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Austin,\nMr. and Mrs. Harvey Austin, Mr.\nand Mrs. Clyde Austin, Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Walker, Mrs. George Walker,\nMr. and Mrs. Wilbert Boyce and\nfamily, Forman Boyce and family.\nMrs. William King, Mrs. Victor Call\nland son, Oscar; Mrs. Edward God­\nwin, Mr. and Mrs. George Guild, Mr.\nand Mrs. Oscar Welch and son, Har­\nold; Mrs, Mary Ford and son, Joe;\nMr. and Mrs. Raymond Ford, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ralph Godwin, Mrs. J . K.\nOrell, Mrs. Raymond Donovan and\ndaughter, Doris; Miss Elsie Watson,\nMiss Mary Godwin, Miss Elrna Guild,\nHelen Godwin, Esther Guild, Mr. and\nMrs. Earl Godwin and daughter,\nDorothy; Mr. Stewart and Horace\nGuild.
5186a683140c20ab5ab36bcba56d4276 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.2972602422628 43.798358 -73.087921 S'ate in the Union, without the allegation\nof the commission of any crime, and sole-\nly on account of his colort is a gross vio-\nlation of the federal constitution, as Well\nas the principles of rational liberty.\nResolved. That whenever the governor\nof this State shall be applied to in behalf\nof any citizen imprisoned as sftresaidaod\nit shall appear to him, by a representation\nunder oath, made by any c red irable per\nson, -- tnat such person so imprisoned, is\nheld in prison on account of his color on-\nly, it shall be the duty of the governor;\nforthwith lo take all suitable and proper\nmeasures to cause such citizen to be dis-\ncharged from his imprisonment, and the\nlegality of such imprisonment to be tried\nand determined by the courts of the Unit- -\ned States; and the governor msy 'draw\nhis warrant on the treasury of the Stateto\ndefray any reasonable and necessary ex-\npenses thereby incurred,\nj Resolved, That the governor request-\ned to transmit a copy of these, resolves to\nthe governors of the several States to be\ncommunicated to the legislatures thereof;\nR;solved, That while we deprecate all\ninterference with the social institutions and\nrights of other State?, and while we hold\nourselves bound by the strongest .possible\nobligations to comply with everv requisi\ntion of the Constitution of the United Sia'es,\nand especially with that of section 2d, ar\ntide 4th, we do hold the right of every cit\nizen, colored or not colored, to lhe protec-\ntion cf that Constitution iu his person and\nhis property to he equally good.\nResolved, That we do most solemnly,\nin behalf of the people of this State, protest\nagainst the existence of any laws in any\nof the States, or territories, of this Union,\nwhich subject our free colored citizens to\nthe liability to be arrested and imprisoned,\nand to be sold into slavery for the payment\nof the costs of such arrest and imprison-\nment
099e2951c1c6f21cb460730735b95a14 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1893.5301369545916 39.756121 -99.323985 reproducing in ink tho effect of tho\noriginal. Many wero tho schemes\ntried, but whllo some beautiful effects\nwere produced, yet nono were prac-\ntical ror rapid printing till the half-\ntone was perfected.\nIf tho reader will take a magnify-\ning glass and examine a half-ton- e\ncut carefully, he will see a network\nof dots and lines running diagonally\nfrom one corner of the picture to the\nother dots In the white and lines In\nthe dark portion. This effect Is pro-\nduced by means of a tint, or screen,\nruled with a diamond on plate glass.\nTho cuf made by the diamond is\nfilled with an opaque pigment, mak-\ning alternate black and white spots\ncrossing at right angles.\nlhls screen Is placed between a\nsensitive plate and the subject to be\nreproduced. A powerful electric lamp\nfurnishes the light, which the opaque\nlines interrupt, but which trans-\nparent lines allow to act on tho sen-\nsitive film. Tho original effect Is\nthus reproduced.\nIt would be Impossible to explain,\nin other than technical language, the\nvarious processes of developing and\nfinishing, but when finished we have\na negative compound of dense black,\nand clear, transparent dots and lines.\nFrom this negative a print is made\non copper or zinc plate, the plate\nhaving first been prepared with a\nsensitive coat, which on exposure to\nthe sun or electric liarht becomes in\nsoluble and acid proof.\nThe light acts through the trans-\nparent portion of the negative, mak-\ning the corresponding part of the\nmetal plate insoluble and acid proof,\nthe remainder being etched when\nplaced in acid. The plate Is allowed;\nto remain in acid until the required\ndepth Is obtained, when It is mounted;\non a block and is ready for the'\nprinter.
2cab2d0e2e049694272a64094b5e2b87 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.0561643518517 40.063962 -80.720915 Or OjnllHHi iH nllvl IIl t" HIKi wen "1\nmay assign u reason which to him rnaj\nscan proju'r, yet inch one be quite dilfc\nrent fVom the nthem, and return tlie Ibu\n1 sent to them by the Auditor, without of\nferinjc one tract of land for wile. TliL\ncould have no other effect than to,port\nHOItC UlC Hftie 01 SUCU IttUUS, US U10 Huenir\nLave no Tight to adjust any matter tha\nmay be presumed to them toueliing delta\nqueut land*. f (\nll might be proper in connection will\nth iti subject to state, us matter oflight am\njustice to litany persons, that section 105\nclwpter 11IJ, Acts of 1$J3, ought to be re\nenacted, or borne similar provision, uutho\nrising the udjusliuent of delinquent taxes\nin certain eases. This should bu done a\nan early date, and published In the news\n throughout the Suite, that all wor\nthy cases may bo presented for adjust\nincut before the present law works u for\nfeature of lands. Many pontons arc anx\nious to pay idI thu buck taxes on whai\nland they <qwu, but are wholly unable U\npay the amount of taxes charged on a larg<\nsurvey, of which thu Us may bo a smal\njuirt, yot all thu balance of such large sur\nvey may be charged in the name orisubse\nouent owner or owners, and the taxes pah\nthereon, and tlio assessors may hare omit\nted to drop that part of such tract lroin tin\nbook in the name oif, the former owner\nthereby showing a largo amount of taxo\nchanged against such land, when,'in fact\nonly n yery small part of,the taxes rcuiali\nune^lieeUitl. . ;VIn this and slmllur casc»\nparLies have no remedy.
1aff7394991d98fda1e465ddd71c61ab THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.3657533929477 46.187885 -123.831256 The democratic leaders In congress\nand tho administration are trying to\ncome to an understanding as to the\npolicy of the next congress by which\nthey can avoid the danger of a split In\nthe party on the money question and\nsecure united action on several Import\nant questions which will present them-\nselves. It is the present understanding\nthat a compromise proposition to dis\npose of the silver question by acconv\npanylng the repeal of the Sherman law\nwith a repeal of the 10 per cent, on\nstate bank currency which will receive\nthe sanction of the administration, and\nthe men who are fighting against any\ncontraction of the currency will be\nsatisfied to let go of silver It, they can\nget state currency.\nIt is designed, also, to levy an Income\ntax and It is believed that Cleveland\nwill favor this. Briefly, there are four\nthings which It is the desire the\nparties leaders that the coming con\ngress should dispose of as speedily as\npossible, and it Is believed that Cleve-\nland will dwell upon all of them in\nhis first message. They are the repeal\nof the federal election laws, the levy\nof an Income tax, repeal of the Sher\nman law and tax of state bank curren\ncy and a complete revision of the ta\nIff by making a very decided reduction\nIn duties all long the line.\nWashington, May 13, Assistant Sec\nretary Curtis of the treasury depart'\nment, who has charge of the World's\nFair matters, said today that until the\ndecision of the World's Fair directors\nto open on Sunday came to him1 in an\nofficial manner, he must decline to ex-\npress any opinion as to what action,\nIf any, the treusury officials might feel\ncalled upon to take In regard to the\nundelivered balance of the souvenir
20eac10f874643aa66b13034132b7070 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.703551880945 40.063962 -80.720915 Miss Mitciiblc^tI feel quite inco\nK'tent to discharge the duty that n\nlevolves upon me.that of makinji\nitjitablo response to the touching, cord\nHid sympathetic words which you hi\nuldrcssed to jis. v> u uiauK vuu ami\n;oo(J citizens of Clayton for yhift y\nuivo spoken( that you have opel\n^onr hearts so fully to us. Your h\n[)itablu welcome makes lis feel at hoi\nmil in behalf of this larye represen\nion of our regiment, possibly the larg\n[lint has fisseinfllcd since the close of l\nwar, gathered not only from these ad\njent counties. bjjt from distant hou\nbeyond the alississippi anil tl)e i\\lissoi\nwe give you to-day in return our m\nliearty thanks for your great kindness\nThe autumn time in the lit time\nDur gathering, for our springtime is go\nft wuk ju tlie springtime iof our \nthat \\yo beard our country's call. V\n5f vigor nnd youtji and patriotism,\nresponded to it. The exhaustion\nmarch lind camp and buttle, and\nuivil strife of these years that h:\npassed since the close of the war lu\nleft their mark upon us; and, as\ngather from year to year, we notice\nsigns of advancing age, and the roster\naur /lend is lengthened. We are g\nto-day to bo tflgetjier{ yet our giacmes\nsobered. As 1 look into Jhese famil\nfaces, 1 note a deep sense of sidis/acln\nbut 1 have not failed to observe t\nthere are tears in many eyes. We\nnot woye4 to tears by any sense of\ngret that we gaye so'^o «eryice to\nL-ountry and to its Jlag, but only by\nsense that we are not all here to-day i\nthat a)I w'l)0 ure here
1be01145dff9a50bf5a476f93452e3ae DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.4616438039066 58.275556 -134.3925 That they built the first 20 miles of j\nthe Copper River & Northwestern. (As\na historian Mr. Dickei-on is not ac¬\ncurate. The late M. J. Heuey, whose\nmemory every one reveres, was the suc¬\ncessful contractor for the construction\nof the White Pass route, just as the j\nlate E. C . Hawkins was chief engineer\nof that road. Later Mr. Hauey organ¬\nized the project of building up the\nCopper river from Cordova and called\nhis project the Copper Kiver railroad,\nlie and his associates only completed a\ntrifle over two miles. At this time the\nAlaska syndicate was studying the\nroute from Valdez, just as it later\nplanned the route from Katalla, but\nMr. lleuey and hiH associates were\neventually bought out and the name of\nthe road was eventually changed to the\nCopper River & Northwestern railway, j\nMr. Heney becoming the contractor\nand successfully completing the line,\nthere being no connection between the\nWhite Pass route and the Copper River\n& Northwestern.)\nThat they recently had under |\nway the question of financing another\nrailway to enter the Matanuska coal\nfields. (This is certainly a startler aud\nno one can explain what Dickeson\nmeans by this statement, it is beyond\nthe imagination of ail.;\nThat his company would certainly\ndevelop Alaska and as au illustration,\nthat it had already spent recently in\nvarious investments in the way of\nbuilding hotels aud opening up copper\nmines, large sums of money which in¬\nvolved spending more. (These sums\nwere spent in Canada.)\nThat personally he thinks all the\ntransportation at the preseut time in\nAlaska should be consolidated and uu\nder one control and management in the\nhistory of the public. "1 am endeavor-\niug to no small extent to bring that\nabout. We have extended our service\n1,000 miles this year. I have only been |\nlu Alaska two years and have been !I\nmaking progress since I have been j\nhere and have caused to be put on the\nocean three freight boats between Seat-
420b560b1ebf07b60303318ce1253cf2 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.9438355847285 41.020015 -92.411296 after date and bearing interest\nat the rate of 3 and 65-100 per\ncent. All national banks mentioned\nin section thirty-one of the national\ncurrency act are authorized to hold\nhalf of their reserve In these certifi\ncatesand the other half in United\nStates notes or gold. All the other\nnational banks may hold any part of\ntheir reserve in these certificates, Unit­\ned States notes or gold,and any deposit\navailable for the redemption of circu­\nlating notes may be counted aB part of\nthc_reserve of an association, organiz\ned in any city named in the currency\nact, to which such deposit may be due\nprovided no interest is paid or receiv­\ned thorefor, and all United States\nnotes so received shall be canceled.\nThe Secretary of the Treasury is di­\nrected at any time after October, 1874,\nto issue five-twenty six per cent gold\n to the amount of $200,000,000 ;\ntho proceeds of which, when sold at\npar for gold, he shall on and after\nJanuary 1st, 1875, redeem in coin such\nUnited States notes not bearing inter­\nest, as may be presented in sums of\nnot less than $100, at the Treasury in\nWashington, or at the Sub-Treasnry\nin New York, and all notes so redeem­\ned may be issued at discretion by the\nSecretary of the Troasury, in payment\nfor any dues of the United States, ex­\ncept United States bonds and the in­\nterest on the public debt. Finally tho\nbill proposes the repeal of all limita­\ntions on National Bank Currency, ex­\ncept the restriction that the amount iu\noironlitinn iasnnil «n *nv National\nRank, shall no exceed ninety\nof the bonds deposited as security of\nthe amount of its paid in capital\nstock.
12c343f5c8ac259f3d6f1d21d366618d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.705479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 tion and effect on the firet Tuesday aft\ncne tiret Monday in November, 1884, ax\n80 to continue until changed by law.\nOn the second Tuesday in October, 188\nThe people said by an overwhelm!]\nnajonty we will change the time of hoi\ning our general election* from this tl\nsecond Tuesday of October tothefii\nTuesday next after the first Monday\nNovember, 1884. This was a change I\nlaw from the highest power. Itneedi\n<io legislation to put it in force, it bad ft\nforce and power and vigor inherent to\nto become operative and took full for\nfrom the ratification of the amendmei\nThe seventh section of the fourth s\ntide of the Constitution was <\ntoe 14th day of October, 1881, wholly o\niterated frnm the Constitution, and r\nSection 7 of Article 4 could after the 14\nday of October, 1884, be found in tl\nConstitution; but we find in the Constit\ntion a section of Article 4, in which\n«ys: "The general election of State ai\nCounty officers and members of the Leg"\nlature shall be held on the first Tuesdi\nnext after the first Monday in Novemb\nuntil changed by law."\nThe election of any State, county\ndistrict cfltor on the second Tuesday\nOctober, 1884, must of necessity be voi\nas the time of holding a general elect!*\nof such officers was by law changed\nmother dav, and all such officers elact\non that other day are the only offi«\nlawfully elected and entitled to hold offi<\nAs the amendment, both by the constit\ntion and the law authorizing it, went in\neffect immediately on its ratification, ai\nthe amendment being ratified fixed t\nday on which all State and county office\nwere to be elected in the year 1884, ai\nso to continue until changed by law,\nI election of such officers could not be la\n(01 II msue
0ddab0386c29a303bad46700ddfaa970 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1884.7499999683769 37.561813 -75.84108 (iood Hope it eeaned rainiiiK and bin inn\ndelays the trip proved a very pleasant one, and\nwaa KTfatly enjoyed by every member of the\nClub. The run to Washington wan made in\nKood aeanon, but upon arriving within a half\nmile of the ntation the train came tu a halt on\naccount of a lengthy freight train occupying\nthe main track. For over an hour the excur-\nsion party waited anxiously for a forward\nmovement, but as tho freight still continued\nto remain atationary with no prospects of\ntaking aiding the entire party left the train\nand proceeded to town. Of course this proved\nanything but pleasant, as the mini was shoe\ntop deep, and during the trip the ollicialsof\nthe road came in for a goodly amount of bitter\ninvective. Had not the committee paid over\nthe amount due Company for transput la-\ntum, it in ipiite hkelv trouble Would have been\nthe result in attempting to collect it. About\n!'l:30 the Club returned to the .1. pot, oanh d\ntho train and the conductor onhi i d the engi-\nneer forward, belitving the switch was turned\nno an to allow the train to leave the siding for\nthe main line. Such was uot the case, how-\never, and oil went the engine, which caused\nd. iay of three hours and a half. The part v\nfinally arrived home ifct four o clock on Sunday\nmorning, it waa a very ipiiet. onlt riy partv,\nand but one pi rson wan injured, and the per-\nson who did the cowardly work was under the\ninfluence of lhpmr, and u Iiemocrat. The\nClub is now fully equipped with uniforms, and\npresent a splendid appearance.
2c618ea20688f9c7a56b6d52216502e3 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.8013698313039 40.735657 -74.172367 letials and work for which there 1b a fixed\namount provided for In the specifications.\nEach proposal must he enclose.: in a sealed\nenvelope, properly Indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners of the City of Newark.\nBidders Will state their prices in writing as\nwell as In figures.\nBidders must specify In their proposals that,\nshould the above work be awarded to them,\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following number of\nconsecutive working days:\nGrafton Avenue Grading—Fifty (BO) days;\nClinton Place Flagging -Twenty (20) days.\nThe plans and sped..cations of the work can\nbe examined at the otflce of the Chief Engineer\nof the Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners at the City Hall. Said to bo ac-\ncompanied by the consent In writing of two\nsureties, or a surety company qualified to do\nbusiness In New Jersey, who shall, at the time\nof putting In such proposals, qualify aa to\ntheir responsibility In the amount of such pro-\nposal. and bind themselves that, If the contract\nbe awar ed to the person or persons making\nthe proposal they will, upon its being so\nawarded, become his or their sureties for the\nfaithful performance of said work; and that If\nthe person or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsuch contract they will pay to the City of\nNewark any difference between the sums to\nwhich he or they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract end that\nwhich the City of Newark msy be obliged to\npay the person or parsons by whom such ooo-
1ae3d65f1e70ea21c52bc50a5991ed83 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1882.6424657217149 37.561813 -75.84108 Tho writer called on Mercer, at his cell\nin tho county jail, by the courtesy of Sher-\niff Long, Monday uftomoon, aud briefly\ninterviewed the accused. Ho was suffering\nwith lung trouble, which was aggravated\nby the closo confinement of tho cell, ren\ndering bis condition somewhat feeble, and\nho occupied his couch duriug the interview,\nas he has most of the time of his conline- -\nniont. At first Mercer was uncommuniea\nlive and broke down in an effort to say\nsomething in allusion to his family aud\naged mother, but finally regaining control\nof his feelings, denied, iu toto, tho crimes\ncharged against him and manifested confi-\ndence in his vindication at the approaching\ntrial, lie says he had been making his\narrangements for several weeks prior to\n1iis departure for Indiana, and that the\nfact of his going was no secret and was\n known iu that community for\nsome days before he left; that upon arriv-\ning in Indiana, where ho was interested in\nsome timber land and a saw mill that de-\nmanded his attention, he went about his\nbusiness with no attempt to conceal his\nidentity: that he was in communication\nwith his friends during his stav iu Indiana,\nand had communication with other persons\nin that community, including ono of the\nparlies upon whose affidavit the warrant\nfor his arrest was issued. He expressed\ngratitude for gentlemanly treatment on the\npart of Defective Hazcn, aud says that tho\narrest simply hublened his return to High-\nland county, as he was at that lime arrang-\ning to visit Lexington.\nLater Yesterday, after the above was\nplaced in Ijpe, and as we were preparing\nfor press, Mcrtcr was taken before the\nProbate Court and admitted to bail in the
7461736d1f31f553aaa366b94d3b2cc3 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.6452054477422 40.618676 -80.577293 Railroad Services Must Be Improved\nOver a million railroad men have\nlost their jobs since 1920, Consumer\nUnion points out in a series of articles\nby two railroad authorities on what\nails the railroad industry. Passenger\n^raffic has declined, and since 1933\nAmerican roads have been losing as\nmuch as 200 million dollars a year on\npassenger service.\nYet Americans travel at least four\ntimes as much as they did at the\nheight of railroad passenger pros­\nperity. They are using automobiles\nand busses, while passenger coaches\nroll along five-sixths empty.\nWhy has railroad travel fallen off?\nHigh rates, obsolete equipment and\npoor service drive away the customers.\nThe roads may reply that they are\nalready losing money on their pass­\nenger service and can't offord to low­\ner rates or improve the service. But,\nthe writers argue, it's possible to im­\nprove the service, increase the rev­\nenue and bring this important indus­\ntry back to the position of public ser­\nvice it should occupy. Experiments\nalready tried by .several roads indicate\nthat straight lc a mile fares, instead\nof the present 2'„2C basic fare (with\nexorbitant additional charges for Pull­\nman travel) may passenger\ntraffic. Modern, air conditioned, high\nspeed trains, now highly advertised\nbut hard to find, will attract enough\nadditional passengers to pay for them­\nselves several times over. Single unit\nmotor rail cars with Diesel electric\nmotors can provide comfortable, air\nconditioned, fast travel even on short\nlocal runs, at 23c a mile operating\ncosts instead of the 42c a mile used\nup by old style equipment.\nThe railroads talk about new pass­\nenger equipment but install very little\nof it. CU's articles demonstrate that\nonly one out of every 22 trains run­\nning is a modern train. Only 5% of\nlocomotives have been built since\n192!). 59% date frotn before the war.\nTo complete effectively with auto\ntravel, railroads should make it\npossible for the passenger to take a\ntrain, instead of "catching" it as he\nnow does. Railroads can, if they will\npick up the passenger at his home,\nrelieve him of all the fussy details of\nsecuring tickets and checking baggage,\ndeliver him and his baggage to his\nstreet and number destination, after\ncomfortable, speedy, tipless ride.\nThat is not fantastic wishful thinking,\nbut the sober report of a Federal in­\nvestigation.
1264fdf988e27281fcc80e73bb700072 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.9383561326738 41.004121 -76.453816 "My new suit hadn't come home\nyet," said Luclnda, "and here it was\nKrlday afternoon and I was going\naway Saturday and I wanted it.\n"It was originally promised me for\nThursday, but It didn't come, and so\nnaturally I was disturbed over It,\nand on Friday morning I telephoned\nabout it. They told me thnt It would\ncertainly bo delivered that Krlday,\nyou understand, afternoon.\n"Hut Krlday afternoon went by and\nFriday evening, and the suit hadn't\ncon e, and then really I began to got\nanxious: and on Saturday morning I\ntelephoned again about It. And that\nsure did surprise them. Why, they\nsaid, they had delivered my suit yes-\nterday, und wait a minute they snid,\nthey would call up their delivery de-\npartment, which they did, and In a\nminute they told me that their deliv-\nery department said they certainly\nhad delivered my suit to me yester-\nday. Krldny afternoon.\n"So then I said wait a minute and\nI called tip our hallboy and him\nIf there was anything downstairs for\nme and he said no, and when I got\nthe store again, to tell them that the\nsuit has certainly not been received,\nthe Ftore people were still more sur-\nprised and very seriously Interested.\nHere was a question Involving a suit\nof pome value that was now missing\nand Involving also the business meth-\nods of their delivery department. They\nsaid that that suit wns delivered at\nmy house between 6 and 7 o'clock the\nprevious evening, and that the mana-\nger of their delivery department was\ncoming right up to see me, bringing\nwith him the wagon boy who had\nbrought the box Into the house.\n"Ily this time It had come to be\nnbout 0 o'clock It was now Saturday\nmorning, you remember and ordi-\nnarily our n'ght elevator boy would\nhave been gore, but fortunately he\nhad been detained, nnd now we got\nInto communication with him and ex-\nplained the situation to him and got\nhlai to wait.
97089559be055cc52a8794c7bfb659d7 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1851.3904109271944 35.780398 -78.639099 It ia justly remarked by the Kentucky Era\nthat in spite of nil that may be said against the\nSons of Temperance, they have done an im\nmeasurable amount of good, and are still do-\ning so. The principles of the Order have\npread almost over the whole country, hun\ndreds, nay thousands, have been induced to\nthrow off evil habits, coldness and indifference.\nand go promptly forward to the discharge of\nmanifest duty. There was roused from the\ndepths of their own musings, master spirits,\nwho were before unconscious, many of them, of\ntheir own misery, and ell of them of the full\nextent of their power to do good, hot who,\nunder the genial influence and promptings of\nthose1 principles, went forth, giving practical\nevidence of experience, the enthusiasm of phil-\nanthropy and genius, and producing the most\ngratifying consequences to themselves snd the\ncommunity around.\nThe sacred pledge to " neither make, buy,\nsell, or use ss a beverage, any spirituous or\nmalt liquors, wine, beer, cider," is something\nmore than the mere renunciation, of habit\nThe support and defence of that pledge is a\ncontroversy wherein despair should find no\npWe the mere annunciation of it presents a\npractical, not theoretical operation of Temper,\nanee, Benevolence and Brotherly Love.\nau oenc&tn res power, whilst they reel a com\nmon interest tlutt each is a shield to the other,\nand all to the world an example, yet know that\nindividual self is not lost in the general mass,\nand though the union is for the good of all col\nlectively, advantages are nevertheless conferred\non every one as distinct and separate individu-\nals. So it is with duties and responsibilities.\nwhilst they are general and applicable to all,\nyet each have their respective special duties.\nIt is those same principles exemplified and\nearned out m externa, that keeps s nation bound\ntogether as one family existing as a united\nwhole, with general rights, yet each composing\nthat nation hath their separate rights, duties\nand privileges.
19f682a24a10489e7424d8fc2bce1ce6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.5794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 lie strife being lor the second, third and\nourth money.\nSummary.2:10J class; purso, (3,000;\nil.OOOtotho lint, $600 to the second, $300 1\no the third, and $300 to the lourth horse,\niaahvllle Girl 0.2, 1,1: Magnolia 1,1,7,\n1,5; Lady Turpin 5,8,2,3,2; Lady Hays\n!, 8, 4,3,3; Major Root 2, 0,5, G, 4; Tear- <\niway 0,10,8,7,7; George Judd 10,7, 8, J\n1,0; Merobrloo Kate 8,8,0,0,8; Frank F. i\ni, distanced; Reservo 3,5,9, drawn; Phil- 1\ndelphiaBoy 1, 1, distanced. Time by ]\nparters, flrst heat 37, 1:12,1:481, 2:27!; J\necond heat 85), 1:105, 1:40}, 2:20*; third 1\nleat 37,1:12,1:50,2:37i; fourth heat 37i, ]\n:10,187J, 2:281; filth heat 87,1:13^,1.50*, I\n2IH. At the end of the lourth heat of i\nbis raco Nashville Girl sold in pools ol i\n1100 to |25 agasnst the field. 1\nThe next race was the 2:20 class, with |\neven entries and six starters, Joker being i\nIrawn. Membrino Gilt was the lavorite\nt large odds belore the race, and at the\nlose ol the third heat sold to $70\ngainst the field. The raco was won in i\nhe first, second and fourth heats by Fred,\nlooper, Gilt taking the second, and Thoe.\ni. Yonng the third money.\nTho flrst raco was exciting. The horses\n:ot away alter considerable scoring,\nIooper going to the Iront, Gilt close up,\nv!th Royal John third, Young lourth,\ntelley filth and Grace sixth. This order I\nvaa maintained to the homestretch, where >\nilcmbrino forced Hooper oil his leet, i\n>using under tha wire flrst by a head, i\nlobn third, Kelley, Young and Grace as\nlamed. The heal was gtren to Hooper '\nlecause ol Mcmbrino's running, The i\nmdlence was evidently against the favor- <\nte, and greeted the decision with cheers, i\nn the second heat John took tho lead,\nlooper and Gift close to him, with the |\nitbers trailing. On the homestretch John i\nell back to the third place, where an ex-\n:iting race took place between the favor- |\nte ani Hooper, the latter winning by a
06f4342b7ead7bbfe4cd311a801e177d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.493169367284 41.681744 -72.788147 luminious arc is an entirely new de-\nvelopment of far greater efficiency\nand the design is such that the light-\ning is entirely without shadows and\nfree from fog. As to the cost, Wash-\nington, D. C, is lighting Pennsylvania\navenue with 1,086 of the same krhd of\nlamps at a cost of $97 each, New Ha-\nven is paying $100 and Broadway,\nNew York, uses the same light at a\ncost of $90. New Britain is to pay $75\nfor 85 of these lights.\nIt is necessary to make a start, said\nMr. Andrews, and there are prospects\nof doing this within six weeks.\nAlderman Jester said he would like\nto see the lights extended, but felt\nthat the experiment should be tried.\nCouncilman Landers spok in a similar\nven. However, saving would be\neffected and the mcmey could be used\nto good advantage in caring for the\nfamilies of the soldiers. In another\nyear the council will be glad to ex-\ntend the lighting plan, which Mr.\nLanders said cannot be rightly termed\na white way, but rather it means that\nthe center of the city will be well\nlighted. He denied that the Chamber\nof Commerce had had anything to do\nwith the lighting business but Mr.\nCurtis reminded him that the Cham-\nber gets out a little publication which\ncontained an article upon the matter.\nMr. Landers felt that it is perfectly\nproper for the taxpayers to shoulder\nthe burden of expense as the lighting\nis for the benefit of all and moreover\nhe did not think the city was "stuck"
09f9f5bf8e27d4966de400fcd8c07f1c THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1906.7383561326737 40.114955 -111.654923 This Is an age of great fees In law\nIn surgery in science and oven In\ndiplomacy Theso fees are not always\npaid by corporations or Indian tribes\nsays the Baltimore Sun A few years\nago it was widely published at the\ntime a gentleman who was among\ntho leaders of tho New York bar re-\nceIved a fee of 100000 for a legal\nopinion which ho was able to give al ¬\nmost offhand A question involving-\nthe status of a great enterprise was\nsubmitted to him In the form of a\nmemorandum Ho wrote his opinion-\nIn one word and It was sustained in\ntho courts This seems to bo an ab ¬\nsurdly large sum to pay for one word-\nof legal advIce In another aspect\nhowever It was not excessive for It\nenabled this company to establish It ¬\nself In an Impregnable position In tho\nlegal point of view and to continue Its\noperations with the assurance that \ncould not bo attacked successfully At\nthe close of the war between China\nand Japan eleven years ago the Chi\nneso government needed the services\nof an able and experienced diplomatist-\nto cope with the capable and upto\ndate Japanese diplomats It therefore\nengaged Mr John W Foster a former\nsecretary of state of tho United States-\nto assist In the preparation of the\ntreaty of peace It Is understood that\nthe fee which Mr Foster received\nfrom China was 150000 a largo sum\nto bo sure but not out of proportion-\nto the services ho rendered China\nwas at tho mercy of Japan which was\nable to enforce Its demands both as\nregards territory and Indemnity By\npersuading the Japanese to modify\ntheir demands Mr Foster was In a po-\nsition to save China territory and\ntreasure It was a business matter\nthroughout and the Chinese govern-\nment seems to have been thoroughly\nsatisfied with the work of its Ameri-
90151882f1825c9915a5423ad6aa83a4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.023287639523 41.681744 -72.788147 Jesse F. Atwater, traffic manager\nof tho American Hardware Corp. of\nNew Britain, addressed a large\ngathering of members of the Plain-\nville Chamber of Commerce at a\nregular meeting last evening on the\nfight being waged by the New Eng-\nland Traffic leaguo against proposed\nincreases In freight rates between\nNew lingland and the middle west,\nMr. Atwater's talk dealt with busi-\nness conditions in New Englana and\nthe middle, west and he claimed that\nif the increases go into effect, the\npeople of this section will suffer.\nHa stated that the boost in rates\nwould tend to give the manufactur-\ners In the middle west an unfair ad-\nvantage over those of New Kngland\nbecause one, of the great markets of\nthe New England manufacturers is,\nthe middle west and in proportion,\nthe market In New England for\nthose out there. Is much tmaller.\nBesides Mr. Atwater stated,\nthe prices ot all goods coming into\nNew England from the middle west\nwill be higher in price. He also\ntold of the eforts of the New Eng-\nland Traffic league to combat the at-\ntempts of the railroads ami slated\nthat the fight will be carried to\nWashington before the interstate\nrommeree comnilssloq. He told how\nthe merchants In New Britain had\nsubscribed to a fund to carry on the\n"icht and urged the businessmen of\nPlainville to back the movement. His\ntalk was one of the most interesting\nriven at any meeting of the. plain-\nville chamber and the arguments to\nbe used were presented in a lucidly.\nMr. Atwater is recognized as one\nof the best informed experts on\ntraffic Ip the New England state!,\nand the position he holds In New\nBritain is one of the most important\nin manufacturing circles.
2fd3185454048d0492b9d8948596640d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.2863013381532 39.745947 -75.546589 Section I.—The construction of all euch\nsidewalk and curb shall he subject to the\nsupervision and approval of the street\ncommissioner.\nWhenever a sidewalk Is to be laid, re­\npaired, renewed or altered, a permit\ntherefor shall be Issued by Ihe street\ncommissioner without charge, upon appli­\ncation of the owner or owners of prop­\nerty abutting the sidewalk to be lata, re­\npaired. renewed or altered, and no side­\nwalk shall be laid, repaired, renewed or\naltered without a permit has been Issued\nas aforesaid.\nSection 4.— Upon completion of the con­\nstruction of all such sidewalk and curb,\nan Inspection shall be made by the street\ncommissioner, and If found In accordance\nwith the provisions of this resolution, he\nshall Issue a certificate to that effect to\nthe applicant, but If found otherwise, sec­\ntion B this resolution shall govern.\n\\ Section 5 —Any person or persons, agent\neompany, corporation or concern violating\nany of the provisions of this resolution\nshall he subject to a penalty equivalent to\non* dollar for each square yard of side­\nwalk and fifty cents for esch lineal foot\nof curb, laid tn violation of this resolu­\ntion. The same to be recovered and col­\nlected at Ihe suit of a member or offi­\ncers of the Street and Sewer Department\nupon conviction before the municipal court\nof the said city of Wilmington.\nSection 6. —This resolution Is passed sub­\nject to all the requirements of the city\nchsrter relating to the setting of curb\nand laying of sidewalks.\nSection 7 —All ordinances or resolutions\nor parts of the same inconsistent here­\nwith be and the same are hereby super­\nseded.
197792b92237a7069e4c197005e68b66 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.616120186956 39.745947 -75.546589 Brandywine Summit. Pa., Ang. 13. —\nThe enthusiasm at the Brandywine\nSummit campmeeting Is increasing and\nIs evidently reaching flood tide. The\ntenters are taking a greater Interest\nin the meeting« than for years past.\nThe meetings yesterday wer« all well\nattended and many "aniens” and “hal­\nlelujahs" rang out from the assembled\npeople when the speaker expressed a\nsentiment that appealed to them.\nThere was a large attendance yes­\nterday on the part of the folk of the\nsurrounding country. A number drove\nfrom many miles to attend the services.\nThe woods were thronged with wagons\nespecially at the closing service of the\nday. when Mrs. Grace Wiser Davis\npreached. There were several automo­\nbiles on the ground also.\nIn the morning Just previous to the\npreaching service. Dr. Adams, the\npreacher In charge, laid down the law\nregarding bartering on Sunday. In\npast years dilatory people who have\n to lay In a supply of food for\nSunday prevailed upon the store keep­\ner to open hts doors to them. Dr.\nAdams In plain, straightforward words,\nsaid that such a practice Is detrimen­\ntal to the camp prosperity and declared\nthat the people should procure all ne­\ncessary groceries on Saturday.\nVisitors to the grounds are comment­\ning upon the various Improvements\naround the camp. Those who have\nbeen coming here for years say that the\ngrounds were never In better shape.\nMany of the campers have taken par­\nticular care to Improve the condition\nand appearances of their tents. There\nla no camp In the State that has more\nattractive tents than this one.\nThe preacher yesterday morning was\nthe Hcv. George R. Tompkins, a well-\nknown an^, favorite Summit worker.\nMr. Tompkins Is a thorough student of\nthe Bible and explained several knotty\nScriptural problems. His text
a248bcb0f82f912f48a1f91b4d84dff0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.771857891874 41.681744 -72.788147 Cuddy De Marco, the clever little\nPittsburgher who has been knocking\nat the door of fame In the light\nweight division for a couple of years\nwill have the biggest chance of his\ncareer when ba faces Tommy\nO'Brien of Milwaukee In the main\nbout of 12 rounds, on George Mul-\nligan's opening Indoor boxing card\nof the season Friday nlgh In the\nh'ield street armory. And this big\nchance comes about by an act of the\nNew York state boxing commission\nin naming O'Brien as one of the\njthreo leading contenders for Benny\nLeonard's lightweight title.\nNow It happens that O'Brien and\nDeMarco met a few weeks ago In\nthe Queensboro stadium In New\nYork. After piling up a big lead\nin points in the first five rounds, De\nMarco ran Into O'Brien's terrific right\nin the sixth round, was floored for\nthe count of nine, steadily gave \npoints where he had been gaining\nthem before and eventually lost the\ndecision. De Marco claimed it was\nall a mistake; that he hadn't watch\ned O'Brien closely enough and that\nif he was given another chance at\nthe walloping Irishman he would\nprove to the fistic world that his\nprevious setback was all a mistake.\nMulligan1 has given him this\nchance by bringing the two boys to-\ngether in a Waterbury ring, some-\nthing which several New York pro-\nmoters had been desirous of doing.\nDe Marco is hard at work "for the\nthe fight. He arrived in Waterbury\nTuesday, went right to work and In-\ntends to keep going right up to the\nday of the fight. His chance Is at\nhand and he means to make the\nmost of It. But ha will not have\nanything on O'Brien In this regard.\nEver since he knocked out Bill
2b930fa5d4336ca367b1fb5b4857e178 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.187671201167 37.451159 -86.90916 Next night they crept away acres\ntho south fork of tho Republican and\ntho morning of the fourth day fount\nthem on the pralrio at the bead 01\nGooso creek The Indians seemed tc\nhave been left behind and the boy\nand man decided now to travel also by\nday This piece of recklessness near\nly cost them their lives for about tS\noclock In tho morning they saw In\ndlans coming toward them and the\ndropped Into tho grass Fortunately\ntho Indians had not discovered them\nbut it was necessary to hIde quickly\nIn looking for a place to conceal them\nsolves on the open plains they dlscov\nered some weeds growing around a\nbuffalo carcass Crawling to theh\nprospective shelter they found tha\nthe buffalo had been killed about 0\nyear before and that the skeleton war\nIntact with little bits of hldo banging\nto the ribs In places In a moment\nthey had crawled tho skeletal\nwith its almost unbearable stench\nTho tenseness of their situation cou\npled with tho dangers at hand began\nto affect Trudeaus mind and bo al\nmost broko down completely H <\nwanted to shout shoot hIs revolve\nand leap out from their hiding place\nbut Stllwejl persuaded him to remali\nquiet until dark when a refreshlnj\ndrink of water revived him and they\ntraveled on through the night The\nnext day was foggy and they traveled\nby daylight without trouble About\n11 oclock when almost utterly ex-\nhausted they saw coming out of the\nhazo of tho Denver wagon road tw <\nsoldiers bearing dispatches Tho cou\nrlers were on the way to Colonel Car\npouters command lying at Lake Sla-\nt r about fifty miles from whereOeii-\noral Forsyth was besieged Spurring\ntheir horses they mado all haste fc\nColonel Carpenters camp and his\ntQ <cewaa quickly marched td General\ndjtorjryths relief
673c14c26baf4083b83693db4524bed3 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.646174831765 41.681744 -72.788147 New York. Aug. 24. JP) Raw silk,\nshimmering product of the Far East,\nwill soon be traded as a commodity\nin Hanover Square, off Wall street,\nwhere tor years cotton, coffee, sugar\nand rubber have held sway.\nSeptember 11 will mark the open-\ning of the National Raw Silk Ex-\nchange, the first open mart for raw\nsilk futures in this country. The\nexchange will be located in the old\nGrace National bank building at 60\nWater street, just around the cor-\nner from the cotton and coffee and\nsugar exchanges. The somewhat or-\nnate main banking level has been\ntransformed into a modern trading\nfloor, with its "ring," "board," ros-\ntrum and telephone booths.\nIt is expected that a billion dollar\nannual business will be done in the\nsilk exchange, which will give Amer-\nican manufacturers their lirst\nopportunity to enjoy the protection\nof "hedging" operations through\nScaling in raw silk futures.\nMembership in ihe silk exchange,\nhas been limited to 250 in addition\nto the small list of charter members.\nAlready exchange scats, quoted in\nMay, a month after incorporation,\nat $2,500, have climbed to Jw.tMiO in\nmarket value, with every seat taken.\nPaolino Gerli a member of E.\nGcrli & Co., is the first elected pres-\nident of the exchange, and. at 37, has\nthe distinction of being one of the\nyoungest men ever elected head of\nan exchange in New York city. Mr.\nOorli has been handling silk since\nhe. came to this country as a boy\nof 14 from Milan, Italy. He spent\nllirce years in Japan, obtaining an\nintimate knowledge of the culture,\nreeling and exporti
080c97c18f7b3f2581d78299455c4666 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.5794520230847 37.005796 -89.177245 Itocic Island, July 29. A terrlblo riot\ntook place on tho steamer Dubuque, this\nmorning, wbon between this city and\nHampton, which resulted In tho Killing\nof five negroes and ouo white mau. Two\nor throe others were badly Injured.\nIt appears, from tho statement of the\ncrew, that the troublostartedlu thlway:\nAfter leaving Davenport, the clerk went\non deck to assort tho deck fruui the cabin\npassengers out of 150 ratstneu who came\non board tho boat at Davenport, Ta'nd\nstationed two of tho negro deck hands at\nthu gangway, with positive orders to\nallow no duo to pass without his order,\nIt appears that oue of tho raftsmen at\ntempted to,go past tho guard, wheu tho\nnegroes remonstrated, and tried to forcu\nhim back uutil he had his ticket stamp-\ned. This exasperated hltn, and \nouo of the negroes, who, in turn, pun-\nished bins severely. At this his com-\nrades, to the number of 125, came to tho\nreacuo, boat tho negroes to death, and\nthrew their bodies Into t le river.\nAftor this a general row ensued, result\ning in tbo killing of threo other negro\ndecK nauus auu ouo or tho rartsmeu, and\nwounding three or four others.\nTho boat lauded at Hampton, and tho\nraftsmen drove all tho crew of the boat\nashoro. polling ttbom with roeka.\nCaptain Rhodes, ,f tho Dubuquo, tele-\ngraphed to tbo sheriff, who at once loft\non a speolal tralu with a largo posse and\nfollowed the boat to Clinton, whon ho\ntook possession, and returned with the\nboat atid rioters to tJiJn city.\nOn tho arrival of the boat thoro were\nno1
19b099eb9b3fca6baa994303f16f6b2d SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1905.746575310756 43.624497 -72.518794 sllces nbout a thlrd of nn lnch thlck,\nparc thcra nnd lny ln a deep dlsh wlth\na little snlt sprlukled between the\nsllces; pour over them wnter enough\nto cover thtim, turn a plnto ovei tho\ntop, put n welght on the plnte and\nIet them stnnd nbout two hours. Thls\nis to drnw the bltter wnter from them.\nWhen rendy to cook, make a batter\nwlth a teacupful of mllk, two eggs nnd\nflour to make n thln batter. Beat the\nwhltes nnd yolks scpnrntely nnd ndd\nthe whltes lnst. Take the sllces of\nplant from the salt water, dry eaeh one\nwlth n cloth, dlp them ln the batter nnd\nfry In very hot fat.\nMlnt Sauco Mlnt sau'ce Is usually n\ndelusion nnd a snare, belng mcrcly)\nvery suarp vincgar and n fow frag- -\nnicnts of tasteless mlnt leaves. Rcal\nmlnt sauce ls nnother thing, Here Is\n recipe vouched for by nn experlenced\nedok: Let the wnter from the cold\nwnter tnp run over n bunch of mlnt\nuutll it is perfcctly clean of dust, strlp\nthe leaves from the stalks, tcar them ln\nsmnll pleces, nnd put ln n bowl. Pour\nbolllng water over tho mlnt, and cover\nthe bowl closoly. A little sugar niav\nbe added wlth the hot water, ns lt\nhclps to uring out the flnvor of the\nleaves. Make a roux of a tablesnoon-fu- l\nor moro of the gravy from the pah\nIn whlch the lamb was roasted, wlth a\nlittle flour. Add tho wnter in whlc'b\ntho mlnt hns sonked, nnd thln wlth\nmore of the grnvy nnd n little wnter.\nThe sniico is not to bo n ernvv. Sea.\nson wlth salt and panrlka. Unless a\nstrong flnvor of mlnt ia ilked, strnln\nIhe leaves trom tiio sauce before serv\ning.
04ff14b6da3114d21a5199cd220fd827 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1219177765095 39.745947 -75.546589 Messrs. Davis and Sinister, managers Dr. Thomas 0. Cooper, a member of\nof the P A Q Shop, clothes for men, at the school board, then opened the op\nNo. 509 Market street, announced this position to the measure. He declared\nmorning that they have completed ail that the first thought of the board lh\narrangements for their opening tomor- for the'cliildren, and to show that Wll -\nrow. In making the announcement of mingtomschoois are Just as efficient a*\nthe completion for the opening the the schools of any other cities of «\nmanagement stated that, a new depar- similar size, he called attention to the\nture in the way of “downward re- fact that the graduates uf the Wll -\nvision" vvonjd be put In effect. This rnlngton schools are accepted by on'r\nannouncement will be good news, not in the United Stales that ac-\nonly for the host of customers, who cepts a high school diploma. He also\nhave made the P A Q Shop their head- pointed out that this satisfactory rc-\nquarters in the past for the purchase gujj was obtained upon a great deal less\nof men's clothes, but to the many clti- money than ttiat expended by othe"\nzens of Wilmington and surrounding schools. He explained the work that\nterritory who have recently taken up jjas been accomplished by the preseni\ntheir residence In these parts and who Board of Education and pointed oiU\nhave not yet made the acquaintance of that if it was permitted to raise more\ntho PAO Shop add the quality of rnonev for school purposes, as the nev-\ngoods sold there, where “fair dealings" boardif created would-be, that it could
0022ee5ab49db2dbdfa27a484d00e43a THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.228767091578 37.451159 -86.90916 ganother\nbeing made to improve our streets and\nput them in good repair We nee <\nthe work and at whatever reasonable\ncost it would be exceedingly cheap and\nadvantageous just at present\nIt has been suggested that our board I\npf town trustees meet and order a vote\nto be taken upon the proposition to Isaac\nbonds to the extent of eight or ten thous-\nand dollars levying a small poll and atd\nvalorem tax upon the residents of Hart\nford to meet same This plan seetni s\nreasonable to say tho least It would\nlikely meet with opposition however\nfrom those persons who feel that they\nare already taxed enough The bond\ncould be redeemed in the course of a\nfew years and then we would have\nsome good streets to show for the\ncanceled paper It could be done with\nout placing a burden upon anybody and\nit would be of more or less benefit to\neverybody paying the tax Good\nstreets would increase the value of\nproperty here at least twentyfive per\ncent Property on macadamized street\ncatches the eye of the purchaser more\nreadily than on other streets and brings\nmuch better prices Good rock streets\nwould be of great value to the mer ¬\nchants and every business house in\nHartford More people would come here-\nto trade and more citizens would come\nto locate here More goods would be\nsold and business done Even the\nputting down of these streets would\ndrop a large sum of money hero from\nthe work hands and employes for\ngeneral distribution-\nIt seems that the f3000 a year license\nmoney which we get from the saloons\ndoes not suffice for any extended public\nimprovements We have gotten four or\nfive thousand dollars from this source\nduring tho past two years and yet have\nvery little to show for it The residue\nof this license money however could\nbe used to good advantage to supple ¬\nment the street tax There is much\nroom for reflection along these lines\nFor instance if macadamized streets\nwould add onefourth to the value of\ntown propertyand nobody can deny\nthat they would add something would it\nbe any loss to the owner of the property\nto give onefourth or onefifth of its\nvalue for the construction of the roads T\nThe streets might gradually be extended\nout a mile or two from town thus\ngreatly enhancing the value of suburban\nproperty We cannot hope for extended\nturnpikes at once nor for all we need\njust now bnt we can begin the work of\nimproving our streeta If the work is\nkept up there would be a vast change\neven within the next few years We\ncertainly need this work and there\nshould be some move made at an early\ndate to give Hartford and vicinity some\ngood streets
2d19a32b60d602ac38a91e4b585746b7 THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.5136985984273 35.072562 -98.243663 It 1b a mutter of faot that this\ncountry is developing at a rate\nthat it requires good, honest and\nreliable men to transact tho largo\nbusiness that is increasing In this\nlino every day, In tho first place\nit requires a man of good char\nacter to make a success in this\nline of business and in tho second\npluce he must have some know-\nledge of the valuation of proper-\nties and also be acquainted with\nthe property he has for sale. In\nthese respects A. E. Baldwin and\nH. C. Gibbs are thoroughly quali-\nfied. They have been in this\noommunity for several years, aro\nwell acquainted with both tho\ncountry and its people, and have\n:il way s borno splendid reputations\nwith all classes for deal-\ning and good business qualifica-\ntions. They do a general busi-\nness in real estate, loans, insur-\nance and handlo rontals and\nleasaa, and havo listed on their\nbooks many fine pieces of oity\nand farm property for sale or ex-\nchange, They are always busy\nsecuring a list of the best bar-\ngains obtainable, and by ro do-\ning are in a position to offer the\npublic many select deals in real\nestate. A. E. Baldwin was born\nin Iowa and for six years was\ncity ticket agent of the C. & N. W.\nRy at Sioux City. He oame here\nin 1000 as agent for the Rook Is\nland which position he resigned\nin IU.,1 to accept that of book\nkeeper in the 1st National Bank-wher-
200d4c03eeb3e70e1cf86d357c8fd397 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.4808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 If our cotempomry bad been pleased,\nis connection witb ibis courteous para¬\ngraph, to specify wherein ours was\n(-"silly and ill-judged,** or wherein we\nknew nothing of tbe matters spoken of,\nwe should have taken great pleasure in\ni making proper acknowledgments of ocr\nfriend'* superior wisdom and discre-\ntion. As it regards Mr. Brown, sboold\n( ih*t gentleman became -a can didate for\nCongress we conjecture it will be bis\npoliey to poll tbe ^eonsri-rative" string;\nj yet il does not follow that if a Union\nconvention is held, Mr. Brotra m»y n«\nchoose to come with others before that\nconvention. We believe be claims to\nbe "Union*7 and bas a chronic desire to\nbe a candidate. We regard it as im¬\nprobable that such a convention would\nnominate him, but possible that in that\nevent, bis friends would be able to per-\n*oade blm lo be a candidate on bis own\naooount or on tbe other side. Tbe Is-\n:EtUiJ£ycE& cannot justly consid¬\nered an admirer of Mr. Brown's politi¬\ncal character. We imagine Mr. Brown\nhimself hardly clashes us under that\nbead. If tbe VSedetie means to impote\nto us a desire to advance Mr. Brown's\npolitical interests on account of a dis¬\ntant family connection between that\ngentleman and one of tbe editors of\nthis paper 'and we are si a loss to con¬\nceive what else it means; we most say\ntbe imputation is unjust, and one that\njournal should be ashamed of.\nHakpeb's Weekly, of last week, bas\na picture of thrilling power entitled\n"Contrast of Suffering.Andersonville\nand Fortress Monroe." One represents\na scene in the noted prison pen witb\nstarved, ragged and emaciated Union\nprisoners in tbe foreground, sitting and\nlying half naked in tbe filth and mud\nof ibear prison.two rebel officers\nstanding at tbe entrance looking at the\nscene with fiendish satisfaction, while\none poor fellow who happened to wan¬\nder outside of the 44 dead line *'
0e2fdc3fabbf17b8b0fba3480f7d0028 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.209589009386 58.275556 -134.3925 Congress ha? undertaken a thorough\ninvestigation of the seal herd on the\nPribilof islands, the subject of peren*\nnial dispute over which the United\nStates has spent, directly and indi¬\nrectly, pretty near as much mouey as\nit has ever reoeived from the lease of\nthe islands or from the sale of the seal¬\nskins, says the Seattle P.-I. In the at\ntempt to protect the monopoly of the\nlesees of the islands the government of\nthis country has at different times be¬\ncome involved in disputes with other\nnations, has been foroed to recede from\nuntenable positions once taken and\nhas been compelled to pay heavy dam¬\nages to sealers of other nations. As a\nmatter of fact, notwithstanding the\nmany volumes which have been "ritteu\non the subject, it is still an open ques¬\ntion whether would not be far better\nto permit the last of the t>eal which re\nsort to the Pribilof islands to be killed.\nThe fur seal are the most voracious\nand destructive of all animals. It is\nthe claim of men who have followed\nsealing for years that the fur seal each\nkills his weight iu food fish every\nday. They follow the salmon run to\nthe coast each yenr, aud probably kill\nmany times the number of salmon that\nare taken aud used for food. The dim¬\ninution of the size of the seal herd is\nbelieved to be the principal reason why\nthe salmon run remains as great as it\nis, despite the enormous numbers\nwhich are taken for food each year.\nThe complete destruction of the seal\nherd would mean the extermination of\nthe most voracious and destructive
1c127c77a496e1eca9947a596fb8df6b NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.346575310756 40.735657 -74.172367 Sealed proposals will be received at this of-\nfice from 3:15 to 3:30 p. m. on Thursday, May\n12, 1910, and opened at the last named hour, at\na public meeting of the Board tq be held at said\ntime and place for:\n100,000 lbs. of % Inch A. A. lead pipe.\n20.000 lbs. of 1 Inch A. A. lead pipe.\n100,000 lbs. of pig lead.\nEach bidder will state in writing and in fig-\nures a per centum amount in excess o.f the pig\nlead quotation stated In the daily market quota-\ntion for the City of New York, and published in\n"T he American Metal Market and Dally Iron\nand Steel Report" for the day following the re-\nceipt of order Issued by the Department of\nWater from time to time for the material\nneeded during the year 1910, for ho will\nfurnish and deliver at the storeroom of tho\nWater Department, Newark. N. J., % Inch and\n1 Inch A. A. lead pipe, and a per centum\namount in excess of pig lead quotation for\nwhich he will furnish and deliver at said •tore-\nroom, pig lead.\nProposals must be accompanied by the consent\nin writing of two sureties (residents of Essex\nCounty, N. J.) , or surety company authorized\nto do business in New Jersey, who qualify as to\ntheir responsibility In the amount of the pro-\nposal and agree to become sureties for the faith-\nful performance of the contract. If awarded.\nThe amount of the bond or security required\nIn the contract for Its performance in all re-\nspects will be the amount of the bid on the basis\nof a quotation of flvei (5) cents per pound.
0da649750bc692ae0807e6bd83369019 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.4863013381532 41.020015 -92.411296 POTTSVII.LE, Pa., June 21. —The\nweather this morning at daybreak\nwas dull and heavy. A drizzling rain\nbegan to fall without however dimin­\nishing the crowd already fn waiting\noutside the jail. The general suspen­\nsion of business throughout the\nsurrounding country in deference to\nthe extraordinary event of the day\nand funeral quiet attending the pre­\nparations for the executions served to\nmake more impressive the tragic oc­\ncurrences which marks this most\neventful day in the criminal calendar\nof tho State. The previous night\npassed without unusual incident, but\nsoon after dawn the town became a\nrendezvous for groups of pedestrians\nfrom all parts of the neighboring\ncountry. These are nearly all the\npoorer class, some having traversed\nmany miles from their homes to be\npresent. The jail located on the sum­\nmit of one of the many hills sur-\nrouuding this place is the centre of\nattraction, and the coucourse on the\nway thither is hourly increased in\nnumbers. In consequence of some\ndelay persons entitled to admission to\nthe jail at 8 o'clock were compelled to\nremain iu wailing outside for more\nthan a half hour. In the meanwhile\nthe immediate relatives of the con­\ndemned took their last farewell. The\nscene was a tryiug one. The brother\nand two sisters of Roarity were ad­\nmitted at C o'clock, and soon after the\n falhcr of Mundy, who had\nwalked to the prison all the way from\nGilbertson adistance of thirteen miles.\nSeveral of the relatives of others not\nhaving applied at the appointed time\nwere not admitted. The last of the\ndoomed men has been assigned a\nclergymen who will attend his charge\nin his dying moment. The reverend\ngentlemen were in attendance at the\ncells of the men at dawn this morn­\ning,'and afterward assisted in mass\nin a private apartment. The clergy­\nmen are the Rev. Daniel McDermott,\nF. N. J. Gately, II. J. Dep-\nwan, James McGovern, Martin\nWalsh, aud Phillip Beresford.—\nBut three of the doomed men were\npresented at one time. Religious\nservices being reported at 8 o'clock.\nAll access to the men by others\nthan the Sheriff and his assistants\nand spiritual advisers has been scru­\npulously avoided. They are report­\ned to have passed the night well and\nat the usual time breakfast was serv­\ned for each, though this was barely\ntouched by any of them. Carrol,\nMunly and Roarity expressscd their\neagerness to die and are apparently\ncalm and resigned. The last named,\nthis morning, received a letter from\nhis family wishing him to turn his\nthoughts heavenward and while ad­\nmonishing him of his parents' belief\nin his innocence advising him to con­\nfess the truth before God and the\nworld.
0696aa8a5076a533fef24aa80a1e8ac3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.8452054477423 40.063962 -80.720915 by the detective. The next arrest\nwas one iiart l'lerce, an accomplished\nengraver or Number 3D Nassau street,\non October 30th, with whom were seized\nall tbe dies aud machinery used in\ncounterfeiting, among which was a\npress for transfering, coating 91,000.\nCol. llobert Clark, who during the\nwar commanded the 14th New York\nvolunteers, was next scoured and bis\nrooms at 1117 East 17th street searched,\nand In almost every bureau drawer,\nstand drawers, boxes, trunks and vail*\nses evidences of guilt were found. One\nvalise contained tbe plate of the (30\npound atamp dies for tnarkiug one pen*\nny stamps. Hundreds of sheots con'\ntwining 210 ponnd stamps togmher\nwith about fltteen thousand dollars\nworth or clean genulue stamps.\nIt was next ascertalued that the mill\nwhere these stamps were ground out\nwas situated about fifteen miles from\nthis city, at Prince's Bay, Staten Island.\n(Seven men were sent to tho sp.it, and\nafter a tramp of a half mile through\nthe woods, discovered tbe building, lu\nwhich arrested John Rlpou, h\nsteel nod copper-plate prluter, a native\nof Kngland, ana his partuer, Wm. 8 .\nKempton, a native of Maine. Kipou's\nwife and three chlldreu and a colored\ngirl, were on tbe premises. In one room\nwas found a large amount of paper,\nsuch as Is used by the Government lu\nthe manufacture of revenue stamps; a\nlarge supply of Inks, oils, and jugs\ntilled wltn gum; also, a die for making\nthree cent silver pieces; steel dies for\nstamping coins, lu another room was\na perforating press for punching the\nholes between the stamps on the\nprinted sheets. In the garden, about\n18 inches below the surface, was found\non information given by Rlpon, a box\nwhich contained the plate ou which had\nbeen tranferred the onu cent revenue\n(stumps two hundred and ten times, the\nbed piece and transferring die, a large\nnumber of stamps, thousands of printed\nsheets ready for use and other articles,\nThe prisoners and materials were\nbrooght to the city. It was notv
01a78fb294402a50c9b214c95b7e8087 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.1767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 curiosity In our zoological garden:\nin the tamarau, a dwarf buffalo, fount\nIn the forests of Mlndoro, of the Phil\nIpplne group. It Is a stunted form of th<\nOld World buffalo, not of the Amerlcat\nbison. It unmpHmos nrmrs hleh lin lr\nthe mountains, it tunnels pathway.1\nthrough the thick bamboo undergrowtl\ncovering1 the mountain Bides abov<\n6,000 feet. Hunters must go upon handi\nand knees to follow these trails. Th>\naborigines never hunt this little beast\nbeing deathlf* afraid of It.\nThe midget Philippine squirrel Is an\nother odd creature. It Is about the slzi\nof a mouse, has legs longer in propor\ntlon than those of the ordinary squirrel\nlarger eyes and short, rounded ears\nA large, brawn rat, pray underneatl\nand with squlrrel-llke head and. eyes\nbut black, cord-Ilke tall, Is of stll\ngreater Interest from an evolutlonar;\npoint view. It Is discovered to b\nthe last link long needed to complet\nthe chain of relationship between th\ntrue rats nnd wnter rats. A wild pig\ndignified by the name of "Sua Celeben\nsis Phlllpplnensls," Is found throughou\nthe whole Philippine group. It Is ex\nceedlngly exclusive during the daj\nwhen it hides In the forest, but sallle\ngayly forth during the night Into th\nnative maize and rise fields, where 1\ndoes much damage. The natives cal\nthis badly behaved pig "babut."\nThe Philippines will also contribute\ngiant fruit-eating bat. All Amerlcai\nbats, of course, Bubslst entirely upoi\nInsects and are provided with shari\nteeth with which to nip them. The fruit\nentlng bat of these Islands is large\nthan a rat, has a long head and blun\nteeth. It makes nightly inroads upoi\nthe banana plantations and other frul\npreserves.
20a96c410c1d4f1651f779bcb910120e THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1894.760273940893 41.004121 -76.453816 The Baptist meetings last week\nwere well attended and successful.\nVery nearly 200 Baptists from out of\ntown were in attendance. The series\nof meetings was said by the delegates\nto be one of the best held in recent\nyears. The officers were Prof. W . E .\nMartin of Lewisburg, Moderator;\nRev. J. T. Judd of Lewisburg, Clerk ;\nand S. H. Burrows of Picture Rocks,\nTreasurer. Sermons were preached by\nRev. W . H . Ellis of Jersey Shore, and\nRev. F . S. Dobbins of Philadelphia.\nAddresses were made by representa-\ntives of national and State Societies.\nA very interesting meeting was held\nThursday evening in the interests of\nYoung Peoples Societies and work.\nTwo new churches were received and\nfive new pastors were welcomed. The\nnumber of baptisms reported for last\nyear was ; total merabersship,\n4,796 5 total money raised $47,290.00 .\nlhe Association will meet next\nyear in Jersey Shore, and Rev. G. E .\nWeeks, of Bloomsburg, was appointed\nto preach the doctiinal sermon.\nlhe delegates were favored with\ndelightful solos by Mrs. Rev. A. H .\nSmith, of Berwick, and Miss Ida Falls\nof Williamsport. The singing of the\nY. M. U A. male choir on Thursday\nevening was very much enjoyed.\nthe drill of the Berwick Baptist\nBoys' Brigade, on Market Square,\nwas very good and was witnessed by\nmany. The significance of this work\nwas probably understood by only a\nfew who saw the drill. It is not a\ncompany simply for military practice,\nbut all of those boys are pledged\nagainst strong drink, tobacco, and\nimpure language, and must attend\nSunday School.
2512247ef6826dee7cad698a2d09316e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.4589040778792 42.217817 -85.891125 The New York Central and Hudson\nIliver Railroad Company has issued\norders that hereafter no employe of that\ncompany shall llirt with unprotected\nfemales along the lino of the road.\nHeretofore every damsel from Gotham\nto Albany had her particular mash on tho\nroad; there was ono railroader upon\nwhom she smiled to tho exclusion of tho\nothers, and now alnnit 208 little romances\nare pulverized under tho iron wheel\nof tho monopoly. The men, of course,\ndo not mind the matter much, but tho\npoor little girls who havo been permit-\nting tho tendrils of their ail'ectiou to\ntwine around the hearts of tho errant\nrailroad men aro awfully indignant. Tor\na timo they could not understand the\nsudden coolness of their adorers, who\ncensed all along tho line to back\nwhen tho girls laughed at them, but now\nthat the order has become public they\nare up in arms. A numerously circu-\nlated petition, signed by every unmar-\nried female along the Hudson Iliver,\nbetween tho ages of eight and eighty,\nhas been addressed to the company, ask-\ning that tho odious restriction betaken\noft' tho men, and threatening in tho event\nof refusal to boycott this line. Tho\nsentiment is a unanimous one. There\nis some feeling in the female heart which\nthe railroader particularly stirs. It is a\nsentiment rather than a hopo. They all\nadmit that tho boys never marry they\ndo not wish them to marry: they only\ndemand that, in the beautiful language\nof tho song, they shall smile as they\nwere wont to smile.
113c7875afbe679007b72eb7e64e04eb THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1895.546575310756 41.004121 -76.453816 whether they are applicable to Blooms-\nburg or not. On this point lawyers\ndisagree. Some contend that Blooms-\nburg is an incorporated town, and an\nincorporated town is a borough, hence\nBloomsburg is a borough. Others in-\nsist that being incoiporated as a town,\nno law is applicable unless the word\ntown appears in it. Between the two,\nlaymen cannot tell what the law means.\nAnother complaint is as to the\nmanner of electing the town council.\nEvery year a full board is elected.\nSometimes members are\nand sometimes not ; so that it may\nhappen, and has happened, that an\nentirely new set of men has been\nchosen, none of whom know anything\nof what has been done by the previous\ncouncil except what appears on the\nminute book. is urged that if the\ncouncil were elected for three years,\nand only two elected eac h year, that\nthere would be constantly a majority\nof the members who are familiar with\nthe business of the town, and that\nthereby much more good could be ac-\ncomplished. Another objection is\nmade to the cumulative system of\nvoting, which enables any man who\nhas an axe to grind, to get himself\nelected to council by a small pro-\nportion of the voters.\nThere will be no session of the\nlegislature until 1897, and nothing\ncan be done until that time. If any\nchange is desired, the necessary action\nshould be begun in time, so that the\nmatter maybe freely discussed, and\nthat it may be presented to the next\nlegislature without delay.
0ff7d567b3d04e172082becf24ba5c3a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1884.0833333017101 39.743941 -84.63662 Camden Entertainment.\nOn last Thursday evening, 24th inst.,\nat Bennett's Opera House, Camden, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. H. Payne, Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Fowler and Walter King gave a\ngrand party in honor of the Eaton Social\nClub. With the thermometer standing\nat 10 degrees below zero the Club left\nEaton, forgetting the cold night, all with\nanxious nnd longing hearts turned to the\npleasant time soon to be enjoyed. Time\npassed rapidly as we drove along laugh-\ning and talking, having a good time gen\nerally. Before we were aware of the\nfact the street lamps ot the pleasant lit\ntle city of (Jamden were gleaming upon\nus. We were soon at tne nan, ready\nfor the evening's entertainment. Uron\nentering, the view that came to cror eyes\nwould be difficult to describe. Instead\nof entering a Hall, as we had supposed,\none would think we were in a grand\ndrawing room, with the floors covered\nwith linen, the seats decorated in pink\ndrapery, and room brilliantly illumi-\nnated. We were soon conducted to pri-\nvate rooms, which were fitted up in the\nmost tastely manner. After a pleasant\nlittle chat with our hosts and hostesses,\nat promptly 9 o'clock the Orchestra be-\ngan playing the Grand March. Such\nmusic we had seldom heard Deiore.\nWhat beautiful music ! Where is the\norchestra from? was whispered by every\none. We soon found out that it came\nfrom the Pa. is of America. We are sure\nthat we caMruly say that never before,\nat any partjf'had we heard such beauti-\nful selections of dance music as this or-\nchestra rendered. The Grand March\nwas lead by our popular young friend\nWalter King, followed by Mr. Payne and\nwife and by Mr. Fowler and wife, then\nthe Club. The programme of the eve-\nning hung on the north wall, elegantly\nframed, headed by the words "Wel-\ncome," "Compliments of Mr. and Mrs.\nH. H. Payne, Mr. and Mrs. James Fow-\nler and Walter King."
84059d130da2405c14fef17c1599b1e3 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.7254098044425 38.729625 -120.798546 A Youno Maid's SoiALoqtfT.—-Deer-mo I\nwhy don't some handsome bean -propose\nat once to wed ? For this IVo waited\nnight and day, through weary years long\nfled. The crows feet angle ronnd my\neyes, the hue todes from my cheek; Im\nleaving youths enchanted bowers—why\ndon't the young men spesk-t There was\ns time when I could draw a gating circle\nround, when life waa bat a dream of lore\nand suiters did abound'; but, woe -M me I\nthat day is gone, I'll never see it more ;\nthe die is cast, the jig is up—l'm almost\ntwenty-four. In vain I spread my crino-\nline to show my foot so neat, tost toot\nwhich once could draw the epee of all\nwho passed the street ; -is vein I paint\nmy palid cheek, and wreath my free in\nsmiles, its all for naught, for well I see\nthe youngsters those wiles. Youtbl\n■Il tìiy beauties once I had, bat that brief\ndream has fled ; on pleasures wings |\nonce careered, but they are long since\nshed; I now must look attUnge that arc,\n'tis useless to ignore that when my birth-\nday comes erouod, \\will be number twen-\nty-four. When to my virtuous couch I\nlie, how lonesome do I rest! Mo cheek\nthere is to press to mine, no head upon\nmy breestl My arms encircle naught\nbut air, on naaght my lips are led I Great\nHeavens 1 'twill surely drive me mad—-\nwhy don't the young then wed ? ▲ lucky\nthought I for now I think that this is leap\nyear sure, Ill make the leap and lake the\nchance—it can but kill or cure. Full\nlong enough alone, unloved, lifee weary\nvale I've sped, 'tis leap year now—l am\nresolved, before it's out, to wed.
2c889c6ff39e525dd519d46a1ba00f23 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1872.7554644492511 39.24646 -82.47849 county politics was as rotten\nand corrupt as it could be. The\nMcArthur ring rules every\nthing, runs everything, gets ev-\nerything. They ought to have\nbeen crushed long ago. The\npeople must rule, not a ring\nrule the people. Long feasting\non the county treasury has giv-\nen them the idea that it is their\nown private property to be\nused at their convenience. It\nlas made them care nothing\nfor anything but the offices.\nSee the disgraceful fight for\nihe nominations. It was the dir\ntiest campaign I ever knew.\nSlander, bribery and threats\nwere the weapons, and the\nones who could descend to the\nmeanest things and throw the\nmost dirt carried oil the nom\ninations. No w this is not De\nmocracy. On the contrary it\nis just what Democracy is not,\nand when such doings crop\nout under that name, we should\ndo what the Democracy of\nNe w York did with Tammany\ncrush it out, purify party.\nMr. Editor; these are not my\nsentiments alone. We talk\nthese things over among our-\nselves at such times as we have\nto spare from our work and the\ndoggings we get irom the Mc-\nArthur ring, ana understand\neach other pretty well. That\nis the true Democratic policy\nfor Ihe election riext'.Tuesdfly,\nand by it we expect to purify\nthe party in the county, break\nthe McArthur ring influence,\nshake off the barnacles, and.\ndefeat Greeley at the State\nelection so effectually that his\nmanagers will take him down,\nand give us the privilege of\nvoting for O'Conor or some oth-\ner Democrat There are more\nof us pledged to this course\nthan our smart ones think for,\nand I write this letter to\ninvite every Democrat who be\nlieves ,in the "Democracy of\nJefferson and JacksoTj to join\nwith us, so that oaf united ac-\ntion at the polls may be felt,\nand our party may yet b res--
529789b5a3c84e144c74fe3e119f69cb THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.3292349410544 41.004121 -76.453816 A. II . Pifier, Herwiek.\nAlfiud JCcigler, Hlooinsburg.\nK. II . Donnldson. Sugarlouf.\nLloyd Davis, Heaver.\nClmiles Crawford. Scott.\nTheodore Dent, Hemlock.\nHiram Watson. Conytighnm.\nS. D. Levan, Roaringcrcck.\nBradley Ruckle, Mt. Pleasant.\nW. A. Davis, Fishingcreek.\nCharles Rhodes, Conynj(ham.\nGordon George, Conyngham.\nFrank B. Rupert, Bloomsburg.\nA. L . kinnrd, Cntawissa Borough.\nSylvester Gross, Bloomsburg.\nW. B. Williams. Berwick.\nJ. E . Roberts. Catawissa Borough.\nC. W. Shannon, Bentjn township.\nJohn Lewis, Bloomsburg.\nPktit Jukors First Week.\nDaniel Huttensline, Mifflin.\nCharles Hon, Cleveland.\nJohn W. K nouse, Jackson.\nTheodore Mericle," Bloomsburg'.\nW. B. Goodhart, Mifflin.\nWilson G. Kramer, Bloomsburg.\nW. J. Hess, Fishingcrek.\nJohn Breisch, Main.\nWilson Knrshncr. Briarcreck.\nClarence Lenhart, Berwick.\nCharles Muse, Conyngham.\nW. C. Brittain. Berwick.\nJ. H. Howlett, Sugarloaf.\nWilliam. Snyder, Scott.\nJohn Shaffer, Locust.\nA. A. Evelund, Fishingcreek.\nLawson II. Lee, Locust.\nF. S. Henrie, Orange.\nWm. Flanagan, Conyngham.\nWilliam Moyer, Conyngham.\nJoseph Bailey, Centralia.\nSimeon Raun, Catawissa Borough.\nJames Doupjidrty, Conyngham.\nA. J. Suit, Berwick.\nW. f. Eastman, Bloomsburg.\nJohn Freas, Montour.\nB. F . Hower, Bloomsburg.\nS. F . Ridal. Briarcreek.\nGeorge B. Keller, Mifflin.\nCharles Hartman, Bloomsburg.\nEarl Bowman, Main.\nThomas Dickson. Berwick.\nJohn Nungesser, Centre,\nO. B. Millard, Centralia.\nMartin Tarkey, - Centralia.\nGerald Gross, Bloomsburg.\nH. W. Hower, Bloomsburg.\nII. S. Barton, Bloomsburg.\nCharles W. Hassert, Bloomsburg.\nSimeon Poust, \nWilliam Gouman. Centralia.\nCharles Shaffer. Scott.\nByron S. Keller, Benton Borough.\nVerncil Chvisman. West Berwick.\nD. N. Robbins, Greenwood.\nA. J. Beagle, Bloomsburg.\nL. T . Rider. Hemlock.\nAllen Arnold, Fishingcreek.\nC. M . Creveling. Scott.\nWilliam Vansickle, Sugarloaf.\nE. E . Stratib, Conyngham.\nLloyd B. Knorr, Briarcreek.\nFrank I. Creasy, West Berwick.\nRay Lawton, Millville.\nT. B. Gordner, Berwick.\nW. E . Geisinger. Bloomsburg.\nEdward Bardo, Jackson.\nJ. G. Kishel. Madison.\nVV. H. Robert, Catawissa township.\nHarry Mellick, Mt. Pleasant.\nTraverse Jurors Second Week.\nBruce Shultz, Berwick.\nMike Barrett, Jr.. Conyngham.\nlere. H. Fahringer. Bloomsburg.\nT. E . Ash. Stillwater.\nAdam Smith, Berwick.\nThomas Y. Hess. Jackson.\nIram Lyons, Madison.\nEli Derr Hemlock.\nA. W. Hess, Mifflin.\nM. A. Phillips, Benton Borough.\nClark Miller, Bloomsburg.\nA. F . Deaner, Main.\nH. C. Laubach, West Berwick.\nCharles Cooper,', Bloomsburg.\nRobert Hampton, Conyngham.\nCharles M. Harder, Catawissa Boro.\nIsaac Lyons, Millville.\nAmasa Lowen, Benton township.\nBarton T. Pursel, Bloomsburg.\nA. S. Truckenmiller, Catawissa Boro.\nBradley Leacock, West Berwick.\nFred K. Chrisman, Berwick.\nGeorge Michaels, Conyngham.\nH. H. Sands. Bloomsburg.\nH. D. Boston, Sugarloaf.\nJames E. Beach. Beaver.\nA. H, Varner, Berwick.\nN. J. Mansfield. Berwick.\nHarry Yaples. Scott.\nJohn R. Deimer, Catawissa Borough.\nSamuel Steelfox, Conyngham.\nAustin Correll, Hemlock.\nA C. Adams. Briarcreek.\nAdam Knouse, Sugarloaf.\nEmanuel Appleman, Oraugeville.\nJohn S. Keller, Sugarloaf.
0e97ca843f6bac132276756d4b4afc0a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.4835616121259 42.217817 -85.891125 alive and well. I have discovered his\nwhereabouts. And facts that have\ncome to light show clearly that the\nprisoner is the victim of a conspiracy."\nIn proof of this statement the detec-\ntive produced a false beard and wig\nwhich Bentley had worn while staying\nat the inn. He stated that he had\nfound them In the garret over the room\noccupied by Bentley. They had been\nthrust through a small ventilating aper-\nture In the ceiling, and with the beard\nand wig was found a dead cat which\nhad belonged to the Innkeeper and\nfrom which the blood found In the\nroom had been obtained.\nHere the detective paused In his state-\nment, then added:\n"I have caused a warrant to be is-\nsued for the arrest of the conspirator,\nwho is now present in this room."\nThis announcement produced a won-\nderful sensation in the courtroom, and\nsome one tried to rush through the\ncrowd the door. He was not suc-\ncessful, however, for he had not taken\na half dozen steps when the consta-\nble's hand fell heavily on his shoulder,\nand that official said:\n"You are my prisoner, Victor Laney!"\nVictor Laney and Boyd Springer were\ncousins. On account of his dissipated\nhabits Victor's guardian, a wealthy\nbachelor uncle, had disinherited him,\nmaking his will in favor of his nephew\nfrom the west, who through his own\nexertions had elevated himself from a\npoor boy to a man of education with a\nuseful profession.\nLaney could not get over his disap-\npointment and plotted revenge. Learn-\ning that Springer was coining to Burr-\nvllle at a certain time, he laid his plans\ncarefully to bring the young lawyer in-\nto disgrace and disfavor with the old\nuncle, who was sure to hear of the\ncharges against his favorite.\nA young woman whom Victor Laney\nhad deceived had tracked him from\nBaltimore.
1b8ea13a4db3fe01a2a2fffd94ce0a79 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1885.250684899797 39.743941 -84.63662 breakfast, until the bilions attack passes,\na little stale bread, say one slice, and a\npiece half as large as your hand 'of\nboiled lean beef ' or mutton. If the\nweather is Warm, take instead a little\ncracked wheat or oatmeal porridge,\nFor dinner take about the same thing.\ntio without supper. Hixercise freely in\nthe open air, producing perspiration,\nonce or twice a day. In a few days\nyour biliousness is all gone. This re\nsult will come, even though the bilious-\nness is one of the spring sort, and one\nwith which you have, from year to year,\nbeen much afflicted. Herb drinks,\nbitter drink, lager beer, ale, whisky,\nand a dozen other spring medicines are\nsimply barbarous.\n1 had a mend, a lawyer, who once or\ntwice a month had an attack of \nheadache, and .sometimes was obliged\nto ask the postponement of an impor\ntant suit. At length, tired and dis\ngusted he came to me and asked if\nnothing could be done, for really it was\ngetting to lie tne torment ot ms inc.\ntold mm now to eat and unnK and ex\nercise, and promised him u he would\nfollow my prescription he should never\nhave another bilious sick headache. My\nprophecy proved true as to two or three\nyears, but atter a time ne got back into\nthe ale, strong conee, sausage, buck\nwheat cakes, hot rolls, melted butter,\nand other abominations, and of course\nhis old headaches. But he knew the\nremedy, and when it became too hard\nto bear he tell DacK upon the prescrip\ntion, uuu uas never iaueu to out\nrelief.
0266a2bcf0669ea6b8b4a7f151a379a4 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.6953551596337 39.756121 -99.323985 Caldwell Journal: It is not generally\nknown, but is a fact, that the Shorthorn\nherd of Capt. G. W. Peters, of Falls\ntownship, numbering about 140 head of\nthoroughbred cows and a lot of young\nstock, is the largest in the county and\nsecond or third in the State, and contains\nas many fine specimens of that famous\nbeef breed as any in the State. This\nherd, however, i3 not the Captain's pride,\nbut the Angus herd, headed by an ani-\nmal of superior individual merit, is his\nspecial pride; and it is in every way wor-\nthy of it, if appearances go for anything.\nAlma News: Mr. A. T . Crim, a cattle\nman in Western Kansas, cured what he\nbelieves to be Texas fever in cattle by\ngiving those that are were sick one-ha- lf\nounce of the tincture of belladonna and\none quart sorghum molasses thinned\nwith fresh milk. The cattle should be\nwatched closely, and at the first symp-\ntoms a dose given, when from two to\nthree doses will be sufficient. He has\nthus far saved seven head. Linseed oil\nor anything else that will act as a physic\nwould do as well as the molasses and\nmilk, which he gave for that purpose.\nEmporia Republican : Texas or Spanish\nfever has broken out among the cattle in\nthe south part of Pike township, this\ncounty. The cattle amongst which the\ndisease has appeared consists of 100 head\nof youn2 stock, bought in TrumbuJ\ncounty; Ohio, and brought to this place,\narriving on the 11th of this month. They\nwereEhippedontheN.Y.fP.&O.R.E.\nand were unloaded twice tor feed and\nwater, once at Cincinnati, O., and again\nat Chamois, Mo. The chances are that\nthe disease wa3 contracted-
03ce2785804075f634f4cc41c7e2a2d8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.6898906787594 42.217817 -85.891125 agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad\ncompany, who piloted the train over\nthe lines of his company, and spent\nabout two hours questioning him about\nrailroads: He had a map of the Un-\nited States before him, and once he\nbranched off to the war of the re\nbellion, asking the names of the states\nthat seceded from the Union. LI asked\nparticularly about the battles in which\nGrant participated, and all of . them\nwere indicated on the map for his\nbenefit. He dwelt long on this subject.\nInterested Im tho AUTtvr President.\nThe story of the assassination of Lin-\ncoln also Interested him greatly. He\ninquired what became of liooth, and\nwhere Lincoln Is burled, and then que-\nried: "Do not the American people re-\ngard Lincoln as a very good \nThe deep Interest he shows in railroad\nmatters convinces those who paid at-\ntention to the subject that his principal\nobject in vteltlng this country is to\nstudy American railway construction\nand management with a view to the\nadoption of some of the features in a\nproposed general extension of the Ch-\nines railway system. In fact the vice-\nroy intimated that he is negotiating for\nthe nervices of an American engineer,\nwho. If he accepts the offer made him,\nwill go to China in the near future and\ntake charge of the railway extension\nscheme now being outlined. Li says\nthere are only about 200 miles of single\ntrack railroad in China at present.\nOnly three trains are run each day,\nand there is no traffic at night.\ncontintjt: settkino information.
2bdba777c5cfaee7d343355cddb9634c THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1877.7164383244547 44.593941 -72.616505 Prof. Owen, Prof. Mivort and others,\nattended the recent private reception in\nLondon of the young Berlin gorilla,\nnamed Pongo. Mr. Frank Buckland\ntried to teach him to write, but, al-\nthough he did make some marks on tho\npaper, he preferred to carry the pencil\nto his mouth, and swallowed about an\ninch of the best Cumberland lead.\nPongo's favorite position is to sit on the\nfloor and hug a stick or an umbrella,\nand he is pleased to b trusted with on\numbrella, although he does not always\ndeserve the confidence, because he has\na tendency to open it in a new and ex-\npeditious way, and no umbrella framn\ncan resist his very great muscular\nstrength of arm and jow. He drank\nhalf a glass of beer in the presence of\n audience, and also ate some roast\nbeef and potatoes; but ordinarily he\nlives chiefly on vegetables, and makes\nenormous meals of them. In the morn-\ning they give him milk and fruits, cher-\nries, currants, raspberries, etc. At mid-\nday he has a basin of boiled rice, and\nanything else that he can get. In the\ncourse of the afternoon he has more\nfruit, and perhaps some eau sueree of\nwine and water. In the evening more\nmilk is brought, and this, with bread\nand butter and eggs, completes his sup-\nper. He goes to bed at eight o'clock,\nand sleeps as late as eight the next\nmorning. But he has learned to smoke\nat least when the cigarette has an am-\nber mouthpiece, for he does not like the\ntaste of tobacco.
13097e05bf46644e30646a0da995758d MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1884.474043684224 39.78373 -100.445882 Was next introduced and spoke as\nfollows: It is with a little diffi-\ndence that I appear before you. I\nat first declinedto speak at this\nmeeting, occupying as I do a posi-\ntion as a United States Judge, and\nfeel that I should appear before\nyou more as a Judge than a par-\ntisan, applause But I was re-\nminded of the fact that were I not\na Republican I would not be occu-\npying the place I do. I want every\nman to understand that nothing of\na partisan nature will ever appear\nin my Court. You may say that I\nwas an Arthur man. He has cov-\nered himself with honor and integ-\nrity. He paid me the compliment\nof appointing me, but, I will say\nhere, that I stand here t o-n ig-\nnot as one who loves Arthur less,\nbut Blaine more, applause He\nhas stood for twenty years in that\nfierce light that beats upon a throne,\nbut it has beaten all that while\n a stainless shield. He has\nbeen charged with everything and\nnone of the charges proven. He\nhas been the foremost statesman of\nthe United States for twenty years,\ncheers No man so thoroughly\nunderstands the wants of our coun-\ntry as our nominee, appjause It\ntook England one hundred and\nfifty years to forget the War of the\nRoses, and now we have passed\nthrough the greatest war that ever\nshook the continent and in twenty\nyears we have risen above it.\ncheers J And Blaine was the man\nabove all others whose ideas reached\nout in sympathy with the furtherest\nboundaries of the Union. It is\na pleasure and pride for me to\nname John Logan the Black Eagle\nof Illinois, cheers I served by\nhis side for three years, and I know\nhiia as a soldier and leader. He\nleft Congress to fight for his coun-\ntry and now he like a true soldier\nand a brave man, feels no bitter-\nness for the past.
2e753a114d02b74c845ae86aeff8a3a9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1908.5368852142785 58.275556 -134.3925 clothing store to purchase a hat tie.\nWhen told they sold two for a quarter,\nhe counted ont a dime and three pen¬\nnies and took one string, leaving the\nstore thinking that he had made him¬\nself a good fellow by giving the mer¬\nchant half a cent the beat of it.\nLikewise thero was the nice, mode9t\nuewly married couple who walked\naround town two or three days with\nhalf Nelsous on each other.\nIn the mighty throng which has pass]\ned through within the recent past weref\na few men in the guise of working meal\nwho were recognized as being other\nthan they appeared. They will work\njust sufficiently long to get the "lay" of\nthe land and then we may expect to\nhear of some tricks being turned.\nMike Stone, the greatest egg inspec¬\ntor of tho day and age, was also here,\nMike can gaze on a sealed freight car\ncontaining eggs and tell exactly how\nmany of its contents will cook better\nscrambled than poaohed. Mike can\nscent a stale egg four miles.\nTwo young ladies . not as young as\nthey were ten years ago . were here\nthis week on the way in to be married,\ntheir affianced each having struck 22\n to the pan. To them tho time\ndragged slowly and the boats were a\nlong time in giving the signal to haul\nin the gangplank. Whltehorse Star.\nNewspaper Hydrophpbia\nPhiladelphia newspapers recently\ntreated their readers to a harrowing\nnarrative concerning a boy who was\nsupposed to have been bitteu by a dog,\nand in the intervals of convulsions\nwas "snapping at his attendants and\nbarking like a dog," in the throes of\nhydrophobia. A number of years ago\na young woman in Camden was said to\nbe suffering from this dreaded disease,\nand Prof. Joseph Pancoast was request¬\ned to see her. When he was told that\n6ho was "snapping and barking like a\ndog," he immediately replied "Then\nshe has not hydrophobia," and his\nnegative diagnosis turned out to be\ntrue, she was only suffering with fear\nand hybteria. The fact that no one\never saw a hydrophobia patient "ariafl*\nping and barking" does not deter the\naverage newspaper reporter from in-\nindulging himself with his little flight\nof imagination, in order to make the\naccount more graphic. In the case of\ntho boy, Dr. Wadsworth, the coroner's\nphysician, found no evidenoe of rabies,\nbut discovered that death had in real¬\nity been caused by typhoid fever. The
1c5713cd7b20e2a9568fcf9f536f3497 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.3109588723999 39.745947 -75.546589 hardships, and all arc In desperate I by Its original order, and for the | Hop Company owned a right of way hews, Claude Brookshire. Herman\nneed of clothes and food. Signs have purpose of satisfying the teachers of ; across his field, which had been pur- I Armstrong. Raymond Cornish El-\nbeen placed In front of all school* | the propriety of tho Issuance of such chased from the former owner of | wood Dairies and Charles Harris,\nand other receiving stations In this, an order will ask what disposition ihe farm. He Intimated, however. I The bugler. Thomas Phillips, was\nCity, by the Near East Committee ! has beenmade of funds collected at that It would bo necessary for tho H;g0 a member of his regiment.\nA. C. Cramp, who was a former ( various times for certain »peclflc Traction Company to secure a right Councilman John Hopkins \ncaptain In the United States Marine purposes, such a* the Red Cross, and ^ of way for the present line from ad !the line of march to tho cemetery\nCorps during the World War. told In | other charitable organizations, the Joining farm owners before th* line followed by a squad of city police,1\nan Interesting manner of the mill-1 purchase of graphonolas, certain Im- would he of any use. These owners. | color bearer, band, caisson, walking the Board of\ntary work that Is being done ln I provementsto school properties, etc., j According to Mr. Little will not grant beside which was the pallbearer* member*\nschool* and college* throughout the I for which no distribution of such •«*■ Cght unless accorded damages, and flrlng squad, followed by mem- time\nHe explained that his ad- j funds has been made so far as the by the Traction Company
148b130261791e8746a1b24d45882eae THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.7821917491121 40.063962 -80.720915 iur-horee wa^on had Bleigh bells on the\norees. There were many mottoes carried\ni the procession, among them "Free trade\nid ruin; tariff and protection; a touch ot\ninafore."\nThree roaring cheer* and one ch*er mora for Ch«r-1\nIwy Foautr lu tbe Calico store."\nWe vote as wo shoL "hardly ever;"\nwe vote a clean ticket.\nOn Gravel lilll, the old strong-hold of\nreenbackism, there were few, very few,\nnrk houses. Across one street, between\nvo Greenback houses, was a streamer,\nIhe prodigal's return, that called forth\n)unds of appreciative applause. The\nand had "tester" iu large red, white\nad blue letters, and the Goddess of Lib-\nrty, life size, above it.\nA8 the procession was parading the up-1\nBr part of town, speaking was begun on\nstand by\nn. B . DOVEN'ER, MQ., OP WHEELING.\nte advised solders to be careful about\noting for Ewing and Rice, because of old\nimradeship; Ewing gone back on his\nrinciples, and wlien such men as Cracraft\nlpport him there must be ''something\n)tten in Denmark." Ewiflg and Kice\nlade him think of the old farmer who\njft his sheep to be divided by his two\nins, share and share alike. The sharp\nin placed* his brother's pet ram on one\niae logeiner witn un me scaooy ana\nrorthless sheep, and the gwod sheep on\nle other side. His brother surveyed the\nwo flocks, and said to the pet mm, "Billy,\nre have been old friends, but I'm afraid\nre'U have to part; you're in too scabby a\nock!" The boom the Democrats talk\nbout is like the old deacon's church at\noppa that was looking up.it was on its\nack and could not look any other way.\nCUANNING RICHARDS, OF CINCINNATI,\next spoke. His speech was a ringing\nne. He thought the cause of so many\natheringat this meeting was that the
124d4f856a617694da1518c1d7212e0d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.4315068176052 40.063962 -80.720915 As I got into the deeper shadow of the\ntrees on the island I felt the shudder-\ning feeling I had experienced in the\nmorning. I almost persuaded myself\nto turn back, and to ask Dalrymple for\nshelter for the night; bnt, although the\nmuttering thunder was by this time\nfilling the air, and heavy drops of rain\nwere beginning to fall, something I\ncan't tell what, kept me on my course.\nAs I passed the head of the iBland,\nthe darkness was intense, but there was\nlight enough for me to see that I had\nreached the proper course, and I lay\ndown to my work vigorously. At that\nmoment, from under the very shadow,\nas it were, of the lock gates, a punt si- ;\nlently emerged. Again X felt that :\nnameless, objectless shudder. It was,\nas far as I could see, a common tlsher- l\nman's punt, and there was one man \nit. I wondered for a moment how he 1\ncame to be there, the lock-gates being, I\nas I could see, even in that dim light, <\nshut, But I paid but little attention <\nto him, and went on my own way. Pres-\nenlly I found the punt close to me,going, <\nas it seemed to me, exactly my pace,\nand the man in it, J could not help\nthinking, watching me. This feeling\nmade me uneasy, and I quickened my\npace. The punt shot after me, and\nwas presently along side. 1 eased, and\npaddled quietly. The puut dropped i\nback, and wna again alongside my\nskiff. And now I noticed that it passed\nover the water noiselessly, that the\ninau'H punt-pole made no. sound as it\nwas dropped into the water, no sound\nas ho recovered it and dragged it\nthrough the water i'or a fresh purchase.\nIts occupant now kept his head
29bb29453871753dca8ca952339d698a CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1903.2753424340435 41.875555 -87.624421 nwny, awaiting tho arrival of my suc-\ncessor, nnd nt my request I wns left In\nthe school room alone nloiio with my\ngrief. Through the open wltidow I heard\ntire shouts of the children. An hour went\nby, nnd then in tho li nil I heard the\nvoire of Jessie, nnd the word she tit\ntered sont an electric thrill through my\nnerves, nnd brought mc to my feet, for\nthey were, "Come this wny, Uncle Dick.\n1 reckon she's in the school room."\nThe next moment he stood beforo me,\nthe dnrk mnn, scanning mo curiously, but\nstill without anything like rudeness in\nHis gnzc. A bright, beautiful smllo broke\nover his strongly marked fenturcs, nnd I\nfelt ns If n gleam of sunlight hnd shone\nfor nn liistnut over my pnthwny. Taking\nmy hnnd In his, he bid Slosslc lenve us, us\nhe wished to sec mc alone. She stnrtcd\nto obey, but ere she reached the door,\nshe turned back and asked him to stoop\ndown, whispered lu his car, loudly enough\ntor to hear, "I want you to llko her."\n"Of course I shall," he replied, and\nngnln thnt smllo broko over his face.\nI did not expect him to recognise me,\nfor with the exception of tho night at\nthe theater ho had never fairly seen my\nfeatures. When I spoke, however, and\nhe heard 'tho sound of my voice, ho\nstnrtcd nnd looked mo moro fully In the\nface; but whatever his thoughts might\nhave been, he seemed to be satisfied that\nhe was mlstnken, nnd seating himself nt\nmy aido, he commenced conversing with\nmc as familiarly as If he had known mo\nall my life. Gradually our conversation\nturned upon books, and ere I was nwaro\nof it I passed through what I now know\nto hnvo been n pretty thorough examina-\ntion of all the branches which Mrs. Lan-\nsing had wished mo to teach.\n"You piny, I bcllere. I would like to\nhenr you," ho snld at last, laying his\nhand on, my shoulder, ns If he would lead\nme to the parlor.
2d9824ec42d4185340c1c8edef164590 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1914.1712328450026 37.451159 -86.90916 The following charges were tiled\n1. Secretary of State Dryan for\nmonths has been in possession of a\nconsular statement recounting the\nattack on two American girls, Llllle\nand Edna Gourd, near Tamplco.\n2r Innumerable complaints have\nbeen filed against Consul Thomas\nEdwards, at Juarez, charging him\nwith Inefficiency, and the State De\npartment hns created the Impression\nthat Gctorgo Carothers has taken\nchargo lit order that Edwards might\nnot have to bo removed.\n3. Mexican soldiers who havo\nkilled and wounded Americans nre\nbeing fed at Ft. Dllcs, nnd no effort\nhas. been made to demand punish\nment for the killings.\n4. American Consuls in Mexico\nhave been given to understand thnt\nreports of atrocities committed on\nAmericans are "considered to be un-\nwelcome'' in Washington.\nThe following nffldnvit by Mat-\nthew Gourd, formerly of Tamplco,\nhas beeni filed with a United States\nSenator.f vlt is signed by Clarence A\nMiller, United States Consul at Tam\nplco, and reads .in part:\n"On the night of July 2tf my\n Edna Gourd, my daughter and\nmyself retired about 10 o'clock. At\n12 o'clock wo were awakened by\nthree Mexicans, who kuocked on the\n.door and asked me to sell them\nsome cigarettes. I did this, as it has\nbeen customary for me to sell little\narticles which I have In my com\nmissary to those who need them.\n"Supposing that I kuew the Mexi\ncans, 1 got the cigarettes and hand\ned them over. One of them gave mo\n50 cents. I turned to get the change\nfor them, nnd while my back was\nturned they sprang upon me, roped\nme and dragged me from the house\n"When I hnd been taken bomo\ndistance away, they demanded mon-\ney. I rofused their request, nnd they\ntook mo back to within 20 feet of\nthe house, tied my hands behind me.\nthrew the rope end over the limb of\na tree and drow it until my toes\nbarely touched the ground.\n"l)y this "time my daughter and\nnleco had dressed aud bad come to\nmy assistance.
c592d7e1ad1722f1e434aa88715dc446 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1858.554794488838 37.561813 -75.84108 is truly bewildering to look out on a\nclear sky, and see the thousands of\nshiniikg worlds all whirling and revolv-\ning in what seems to be a vast and illim-\nitable blue, and though they eecm to bo\nscattered about in confused discoid, they\npreserve the same relative distances\nfrom each other. Although the natural\neye cannot detect any variations in the\npositions of these orbs, yet, when ob-\nserved by means of accurate instru-\nments, they are found to chaugo their\nrelative position. This change is not\nthe same in ull the stars. They are not,\nprobably, all affected by the same phys-\nical causes, at least in the same degree.\nIt is ascertained that some move over\na space equal to the diameter of tho\nmoon in 3."0 years, while others requiro\nJin) years, to move over the same inter-\nval. It may appear a small matter, in\no()0 years, to move over a space equal to- th- e\napparent diameter of the moon, \nye if we remember the distance of the\nstars and measure, it will be found that\nthe real distance moved is equal to\nJ37,")00,0001000 of miles, thus giving\nan hourly motion of 12,112 miles.\nWhen it is remembered that tho earth's\norbit would be an imperceptible point at\nthese distances, and that when theso\nstars shall have moved over a npaco bo\nlarge, no change will he apparent, wo\nmay have some idea what Ihe real dis-\ntance moved will be when it appears to\nbe equal to tho disk of the moon. Al-\nthough these motions are but just per-\nceptible after the lapse of a cuntury,\nthey cannot be less than at She rate of\nmany thousand miles per hour. What\noverwhelming subjects are here present-\ned for our contemplation. Platiets re-\nvolving around suns, suns and planets\nrevolving around other suns, systems\nsweeping around other systems, and all\nthese systems around sumo great center;\nperhaps tho throno of their Great Orig-\ninator.
9c74f9759999bf2eab48e84af6e3d06d THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.2863013381532 40.807539 -91.112923 office ol' the clerk of the District Court lor\nsaid counlv, his certain Bill of Complaint?\nrepresenting in substance, that Sumuut M..\nLambard on the bth day of May, ItilO, waa\nindebted to the suid complainant in a ccrtaii^\nsum then due and owing, &.c , tor tiie rdfc\ncovery ol" which the juid coinplutnant insti­\ntuted an action ol' Assumpsit in Paid District\nCourt, and at the same time sued out of\nsaid court, a writ of attachment against tho\nlands, tenements, gnodj and cli.itteiH, &c., of\n•aid Samuel M. Lambard, which said at­\ntachment wus personally served on Kiid Lain'\nbard and levied on the IItil day of Ma:/«\n184(1, on lots iNo. 69.), and 696. in tho ciiy\nof tf'jrlinglon iu said county, and on the fol­\nlowing described pit.ee or parcel of land,\nsituate m said county, to wit : Lot No. 2, in\n•Section I\\o. 5, of Township 69, N. Rungs\nNu. H west, beginning at a point 16 rod«, 6\nleet fiom N. W . corner of the land convey­\ned by Tucker and wife, to Richard\nF. Barrett, which said beginning point, is S.\ndegrees, IU minutes east of Barrett's comer,\nthenee N. 7 degrees, 10 minutes, cast ill) rod*,\nthence west 32 rods, tlicnce north paraliij\nwith first mentioned line, 20 rods, thene^\neanl to the place ot btginuinir, and coiitnirt-\nitig lour acres. Aud also, that ut the Oclo.\nb«r term of said court, le40, said compi.iiu.\nant recovered judgment against said Lam­\nbard in said action lor $393,20, together with\ncosts oi suit, &.c., and that ut tho time of\nthe rendition of suid judgment nor since, had\nsaid Lambard any property or ctlVcts in t'h«\njurisdiction of said^ court, that could by\nreadied by execution. And al&o, that thusat^\nlots, 695 and 696, attached nu aforesaid, at\nthe property of said Lambard, have not been\nsold under execution aforesaid, judgment ia\neonscqucncc of the said Lambard not having\nany litic nor interest in the same that could\nbe sold, the title to the name, still being \\n-\nthe uovcrninent of the Tinted titate#. And
122bb6c6854848b7261d5c050309aa6a THE COLORED CITIZEN ChronAm 1894.7493150367834 46.592712 -112.036109 Mr. Alonis Leatherberry and Miss\nAnnie Heyward were married last\nThursday night at the A. M. L c)urch\nof this city by Rev. J. P . Watson.\nThe church was beautifully decorated\nand the profusion of rare and costly\nlowers was a sight seidom enjoyed In\nthis clime. At the appointed time\nthe bride and groom arrived in an\nelegant carriage and were mt. by\nfour ushers in full evening dress, who\nescorted them on a carpeted pathway\nprofusely strewn with fragrant Bow-\nere, amid the strains of the weddlag\nmarch, to the altar, over which was\na beautiful arch of rare lowers, to\nwhich was suspended a large bell,\nconsisting of choice and fragrant\nroses. There, in the presence of an\naudience that illed every available\nfoot of space, the manly groom and\ncomely bride were made one. At the\nhome of the bride a reception was\nafterwards held. where a large num-\nber of were entertained in a\nmost royal manner at a feast unsur-\npassed. After the receipt and inspec.\ntion of presents, numerous, costly and\nvaried, those present enjoyed the\ndance till the small hours, when, with\nbest wishes, all departed, having\nspent an evening long to be remem-\nbered. The bride has resided a num-\nber of years in this city, and is well\nand favorably known. The groom is\nalso a great favorite, and for some\ntime has occupied the responsible\nposition of head man of the dining\ndepartment of the Hotel Helena. The\nfriends of Mr. and Mrs. Leatherberry\nvied with each other in their efforts\nto mate everything pass of agree-\nably. Mr. M. O . J. Arnett deserves\nspecial mention as the chief decor-\nator of the church, the taste and\nbeauty of which called forth so much\nadmiration. The Crrsna extends\nhearty greetings and a happy future\nto the newly wedded couple.
a5a032b0d78be976b51eb321cb28a6f8 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.89999996829 39.560444 -120.828218 “You know that your father was one of\nmy earliest and warmest friends, until his\ndeath added one more to the catalogue of\nmy lifes sorrows. I am a childless old\nman. But once it was quite as likely\nthat I should leave a fatherless son behind\nme, as that I should live soulless, to feel\nan interest in the son of my best friend.—\nWere your father alive, and I resting in\nhis grave—as 1 could almost find it in my\nheart to prefer—he would feel nearly a\nfathers interest in my son.\n“Think well 8., before you listen to\nyour mothers wish, and leave Californa\nto resume your residence in the State of\nyour birth. In going to that new country,\nyou were actuated probably by such mo-\ntive as decided your father, and many oth-\ner young men about that time, to emi-\ngrate to this, then, “new country,” God,\nwho preserved this broad and rich conti-\nnent so long from the possession of the\nwhite races, evidently designed it for the\nhome of the free. And it seems natural\nand right enough that the descendants of\nthose who crossed the Atlantic to make\nfree homes in the wilderness, should in\ntheir turn seek to win new territories to\nthe same high civilization for which they\nlaid the foundations. This may be Gods\n But there are few men who look\nvery far beyond personal considerations,in\ndeciding upon where they shall live and\nstruggle. Sometimes I fancy that we\nexalt the motives, even of the Pilgrim\nFathers, (though it may be treason to say\nso,) in the attempt to make them equal in\ngrandeur the results of their emigration.\n“However this may be, I would, as to\nmy own son, if he were living, earnestly\nadvise you to think well before you relin-\nquish your citizenship in the new State of\nCalifornia. To an old man like me, who\nhas been present, so to speak, at the birth\nofthis State, and who can form a guess\nat what is to be that States future, it is\nplain that to any young man who unites\nability with energy and high purposes, a\nnobler field was never offered, than the\nGolden State now presents.\n“8., I do not advise you what to do\nthere; whether to accumulate a massive\nfortune, aspire to political place and influ-\nence, devote yourself to the practice of\nyour profession, or to turn your attention\nto some line of life more avowedly philan-\nthropic than any of these things. This,\nwith the earnestness with which, were he\nalive, I would speak to my own son, I\nsay to you. Do choose your own course,\nand work !
55625ed36c3180692a6b378d15f77779 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.4303278372292 41.681744 -72.788147 Ssydowski denied that he sold a\nbottle of liquor to Peter Janlk of\nBristol, on May tl, when Janlk and\ntwo other baker who are employed\nIn the neighborhood brought the\nbottle to the police station and turn-\ned It over to Sergeant T. J . Peeney.\nHla atory was that Janlk owed htm\nI4.M and he asked htm to pay It\nwhen the bakers dropped in for an\nearly morning drink. Janlk, he said\ntossed II on ths table to be applied\non the debt and one of his compan\nions took the bottle of liquor. Janlk\nand the other bakers told a differ-\nent story, one of them saying he had\naeen many men in and about the\ntenement while he -- boarded there.\nMrs. Ssydowski testified that Jan\nlk and hla companions wera under\nths Influence of liquor when they\n and ahe accused Janik of en-\ntering the room where ahe waa\nsleeping and kissing her. He often\nasked her to desert her husband and\ngo away with him, telling her that\nher husband had asthma and she\nwould enjoy life more thoroughly\naway from him. ahe testified.\nDetectllve Sergesnt G. C. El linger\nand Sergeant P. A. McAvay told of\ngoing to the tenement with a search\nwarrant on May 11 and finding a\nbottle of alleged alcohol accreted in\nthe ceiling. A small board was re-\nmoved, exposing the bottle, the ser-\ngeant said. Mrs. Ssydowski testified\nthat she had concealed the bottle\nbecause her husband would have\nconsumed the contents had he\nknown ahe had It. She doea not ob\nject to having him drink but ahe\ndlallkes to see him. take too much\nat one time.
20fc9100974a54093482a71fadeb1e58 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1888.875683028486 39.756121 -99.323985 explosive looks like moist corn meal. It can\nbe made as easily a3 corn meal and can be\ncooked, and in much the same way.\nLast week Mr. Ericsson maio a quantity\nof it in a stove in Curran's drug store, and\nthen experimented with it before some per-\nsona whom he ia trying to interest in its\nmanufacture. A mass of rock at Shuttle\nMeadow mountain was selected as the scene\ncf the experiments. The first trials were to\nprove that the mixture could not be explo-\nded in the open air. A small fire was started\nand two pounds of extralite were put in it.\nThe stuff would neitner explode nor burn.\nIt was then thoroughly mixed with kerosene\noil. when about half of it burned, but did\nnot explode. A 6ma!l dynamite cartridge\nwas inserted in a ri 11 of the stuff. The cart-\nridge exploded with a fuse, but extralite\ndid not explode. When some of the sub-\nstance was placed on a flat stone and struck\nwith a hammer the only resalt was to reduce\nit to a finer powder.\nA hole two feet deep was drilled in the\nhardest rock to be found in a neighboring\nquarry. Three rolls of the explosive, each\ncontaining three ounces, were tamped down\nin the whole and connected with a fuse. The\nexplosion shook the ground and tha air was\nfilled with flying boulder?. The result\nachieved would have required two pounds of\ngunpowder or one pound of dyuamite, while\nonly nine ounces of extralite were used.\nThe manufacture of the explosive will be\ncemmencad in New Britian at once. The\netieet commissioners of Hartford have de-\ncided to use it ia the city's quarries. The\nFrench government is s id to have paid\n1.000 .0JO for tha right to U3 3 it.
4ff405197c84668b2a622e2fa400b75d THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.215068461441 32.408477 -91.186777 Every once in a while we fnd a\nfarmers' cooperative creamery that\npays for each can of cream as it is\nbrought in and on the ground that it is\nnecessary on account of competition.\nA farmer who requires cash for his\ncream at a co-operative creamery does\nnot understand the principle of co-op\neration and is unfortunate in his de\nmands, says a writer in Farm. Stock\nand Home. When butter was made\non the farms and sold at the local\nstore no cash was received for it. The\nstorekeeper offered in trade what he\nestimated that he could get out of it\nwith a fair margin for risk. It was\nalways in trade, however, and for\ngoods upon which a considerable mar-\ngin of profit was figured. The store-\nkeeper had to do this, as there was a\nrisk in the business. He did not al-\nways know what the butter would\nbring when shipped out.\nIn co-operation the farmers \ntheir cream to the creamery where it\nis churned into butter and then sold\nat the market price. When the pro-\nceeds of the sale are remitted to the\ncreamery, the cost of manufacture,\nshipping and commission is deducted\nand the balance is divided among the\npatrons in proportion to the amount\nof butterfat delivered by each patron.\nIn this way there is no risk fo- anyone\nand the farmer gets just ' hat his but-\nterfat is worth on the market the day\nit is sold, less the cost of manufacture.\nThis is all any just man should ask\nand it is only through co-operation\nthat the farmer can get the full value\nof his produce above the cost of man-\nufacture. The farmer who comes In\nand demands cash for his cream is\nasking for something a cooperative\ncreamery has not got if it lives up to\nits constitution. The cream must be\nchurned and the butter sold and re-
32f09c657e6661efe178f0709db1b451 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.7964480558085 40.063962 -80.720915 Every pew in the middle aisle was menei\ncrowded, while the pews on either side partu\nwere moderately well filled. Th? rev- Fates\nerend gentleman ascended to the pulpit Miss.\nat a.Quarter to 8 o'clock, and entered 6, D\ninto hu discourse in a. manner that as- most\nsnrcd the large and intelligent audience beaut\nthat thejr were about to receive a rare The e\nliterary treat. In introducing his sub- took\nject he spoke of the early life of Gregory in th\nVII, his piety and devotion as a youth, and t\nHe was born in the early part of the event\neleventh century, of humblo parents, beret!\nhis father being a carpenter. Gregory Th\nwas a man of great learning and ability, long\nand was the tutor of Henry VII of Ger- ceren\nmany, "with whom in after life, while with\nPontiff, he had a long struggle in endeav- brida\noring to free the church from the cor- the h\nrupt government of the Emperor, who ants,\nhad by his despotism and power aisle,\nthe church and filled the highest positions Wile\nIn its sanctuary with wretches subservi- acted\nent to his will. Dr. Braunn showed here Bassi\nthat by the usurpation and infringement dera\nupon the rights of the church on the part brill!\nof Henry VIIol Germany, in appointing bride\nand filling vacancies in the clergy with folio*\nunfit and unworthy men, the ill-conduct McL\nof those men was wrongly ascribed to the lie I\nCatholic Church. These miscreants were Miss\nappointed and held in positipn by Henry, Miss\nwho failed to secure the recognition-of Miss\nthe Pope of Rome. In speaking ot the and\nexcommunication and deposition of Hen- pecu\nry by Gregory the speaker showed how it perft\nbecame necessary to mo act, claiming that brid<\nthe liberty and prosperity of the people pear\ndepended upon it. Henry's acts of tyr- lovel\nanny and injustice became ho bold and un- eleg*\nparalleled that the rights of the people conv\nwere no longer respected, and they were prou\nforced iuto the most abject slavery,.
9c780ea3cf928c62a8b14566739db041 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.705479420345 39.745947 -75.546589 united States and the old Turkish H. W. Chairs, W.\nempire. They are a sort of extra Charles Dean, C. S . Eaton, Harry\nterritorial privilege enjoyed by for- Lackland, Julian Everett, Arthur\nelgners such as is the case In China. Eppenheimer, James D. Murry, Mr.\nhe Treaty of Sevres, between the an<l Mrs. E. V . Frankhouser, Wll-\nAllled powers and the present help- Ham F. Mink, Mr. and Mrs.\nless government of the Sultan at Ferrler. Otto Miller, Mr. and\nConstantinople, provided for the C. A . Green, J. Llnwood\nmaintenance for these capitulatory Thomas E. Grier, Mr. and\nrights In Turkey. This pact, how- Harry Murdlck, A. V . Gemmlll. Wal-\nover, has never been ratified by ter Gray, Harold Mlnnlck, Harvey\nmany of the principals concerned. Gray. John ,MllIer, Dr. Arthur R\nWhile the United States was not Hall, L. V . R . Philips, David A.'\nsignatory to the treaty of Sevres, bo- Hay. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Roden-\ncause It was never at war with Tur- heiser, Arthur P. Hudson, Welter\nkey. this country Is Just as desirous Rodenhelser, Frank HMlegers, Miss\nthat the capitulatory or extra ter- Rosie Rodenhelser, Frank Hickman,\nrltorlal rights be maintained In Tur- Samuel Robinson, R. O . Schaffer,\nkey aa In any other foreign country William R. Jacobs. WHIlard Schaffer,\nand what action this government will Mr. and Mrs. James P. Jones, Karl\ntake If the victorious Turks Insist Seidel, George Jones, L. J. Keyser.\nupon denouncing these privileges, Jr.. F . C . Schrodet», C. Leroy Kirby,\nmay soon have to be considered, Leroy Smith, M. B . King. William\nprobably In conjunction with the H. Taylor. Andrew Ulrich, Joseph\nAllied powers.
0b90b0656ea5696d6a47b6d5a5550fb4 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.8620218263004 35.996653 -78.901805 friends of the most "unlikely birds"\nand for the most inexplicable reasons.\nNo doubt some temporary alliances are\nformed for the attainment of a particu-\nlar object, not always of a creditable\nkind. Attachments betweeu members\nof the same race are of course common,\nbut attract the less notice on account of\ntheir obvious reasonableness. Dogs,\nhowever, are greatlj addicted to queer\ncompany, and constantly go out of their\nway in quest, of it. The numerous\nfriendships formed between dogs and\ngeese, and even poultry in general are\nquite remarkable. It is not generally\nrecognized that the goose is a bird of ex-\ntraordinary sagacity it has even been\ndescribed as of great intellectual capac-\nityand this mutual regard of fur and\nfeather may proceed on an understand-\ning t hat o verri des he distinctions of race.\nThe species of goose known as the\n"gray lag" is especially remarkable for\nits strong and frequent attachments to\nlie dog. One that was rescued by a\nmastiff from the insidious attack of a\nfox show ed a consciousness of its obliga-\ntions and a desire to return them that\nwere touching in their obvious feeling.\nT ho goose entirely abandoned the soci-i - e t\ny of its kind, roosted in the dog's ken-\nnel and followed it in its daily wander-\nings over a large farm and through the\nneighboring village. The dog happen-\ning to fall ill the goose would not leave\nhim night or day, and would to all ap-\npearance have been starved had not a\npan of corn been placed for it every day\nnar the kennel.
47e64ad9031087d4e43146bd9926e8d8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.6534246258245 39.261561 -121.016059 You are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the Complaint of S H. IHKK11AN . filed against\nyou. within ten day* from the service ol this writ,\nif served on you in this county, run -1 within twenty\ndays if served on you in this llistrict and out of thi a\ncounty. and within forty days if served on you in\nthis Mate and out of this ] istriot. in an action com-\nmenced on the 18tli day of April, a. D . 18C1 , in\nsaid Court to obtain a decree ot this Court lor the\nforedosuK of a certain mortgage. Hearing datethts\n12th day of October a d. 1859 . executed by tbe said\ndefendant to plaintiff, and for the sale ol tbe premi-\nses therein, and in satd complaint particularly men-\ntioned and described arid the application ot tlie mon-\neys arising tioni such sale to tbe pa) Went ol tba\namount due on four certain promissory notes set\nforth iu said complaint, made and delivered to said\nplaintiff by the deft-ndant bearing even date with\nsaid mortgage and thereby intended to be secured,\nto wit: The sum of $1,500, with interest \nfrom the 12th dav of October a. r>. 1859 . at tl e rata\n<-ftwo |ercent. |er monthtilljaid;aidithpv defi-\nciency ahull remain niter applying all ol said moneys\nproperly so applicable thereto, then that t laintitf\nmay have execution t berelor against the said detend-\nant. also that said defendant and all and every per\nsoo claiming through or under defendant subsequent-\nly to the date of plaintiffs mortcaire and tbe cem-\n-e n ce me nt of this action, may bo bar mi and fore-\nused ol all right, claim, hen and equity ot rrbemp\n.. on in and to the said mortgaged premises. oran»\npart tUeieof. and for such other at d further relief,\nor both. in the premises as may be just and equita-\nble, And you are hereby notified that if you tail to\nanswer said complaint hs herein directed. | lrintiff\nwill take judgment against you then-tor by default,\ntogether with all costs ol suit, and catiasel tees n the\nsunt of $160 and also de-i and of ilia Court such oth-\ner relief as is prayed for iu plaintyj's said complaint.\nIn testimony whereof. I. John S. lanibert, Clerk
11d3f956adf0409c0f71a7cbbf85d771 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.6890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 question. Thin would in no wise hinder\nus frum jwtieutly bearing with those of <Utf.\nerent opinion among us so fur iu thpy tlo u >t\nfeel themselves constrained to condemn our\ndoctfiiip. and |uu*r discussing with them the\npoints of difference in brotherly lovo.\nWhat In my estimation urge* uh to a (lent*\nion is the action of the Missouri My iuvd in the\npresent cutltrovow- W»P trmts (lie dltrer\nenup if nut in need of itself yet in vivw of thu\nurcusjitiona which among other members ol\nour Hyuud ulwi llml themselves constrained\nto raise against hern* a point of separation\nbetween uhurchus and therfore feels lierscll\ncalled upon to discontinue ehurclffollowshl|i\nwith tor opponents. This is im|>ortant fui\nus iu a twofold luniact. In the {\\rit place wc\nmust decide whether W° must refuse or we!\ncome Into our midst as brethren such pastor?\nand winKrcgationsiw can no longer remain in\nthat Hynod and apply for admission nmonfi\nus. |h tho second ntuoew? must deoldo ir\nwhat relation wo #,Aml to that hody after sin\n|ias instructed her delegates to tho Hynodlcu\nI'onference nottosUand confer with tliusi\n have wised ugnlnitt her the jtccusatior\nof('alvanlalng tenilenclcfl.\nAm regards the first part, the Missour\nSynod, as is well known, took occasion t<\nlay down a confession with reference to tin\nburning question, W«u*e In.her own mlds\nopposition VfOW MftlnM the doctrine of pre\ndUtinotlon, as aet forth in her publications\nfhja cunfcksiun la of such import as to mak<\nit impossible for some members of the Hynoc\nconscientiously to accept it. On tho om\nhand, these havo already withdrawn fron\nthe Synod because of her departure from til\ni old Lutheran doctrine, and on the alitor hunt\nthey will In all nrflM|Mlty l>® y«t constrain\nII Qi\\ tH lnl<e thin slop, Thuso, however, occupj\nthe Mine doctrinal position which they occu\npled for years, and simply refuse to sub\nserine in n uueinue in eouirauieunn win\ntheir old faith. Ilithorto we hwvo uhurUhiv\nfraternal communion >vlth them. Inasmucl\nas they Cfln no longer renuiln in the Missoui\nHyimil, miiU" "f them come to us. It seem\nit to me (hntwo cannot avoid doolarlngwhetho\nwc nlro must refuse to fellowship them in th\n^ future, on account uf.thelrrefusal tuabandoi\n,
006d606544baa4bc4d5778a39bc1316e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1901.7383561326737 42.217817 -85.891125 A year had passed since that same\nparty, with the exception of Mrs. Har-\nrington, was assembled there a year\nthat had meant much to Lisle and In\nfact to them all. Craig was Just tho\nsame old Craig, not a whit altered ex-\ncept by the disappearance of the beard,\nwhich he had not again permitted to\ngrow, and the fact that he wore his\nhair shorter than formerly. In other\nrespects he was the same. He had re-\nsumed his western manner and habits\nwith his western dress, and, if tho\ntruth be told. Lisle liked him better so.\nThere was something incongruous and\nunfamiliar about him while he was In\nthe east, and, after the trip abroad,\nduring which he accompanied Lisle\nnnd her mother, they all elected to re-\nturn to Nevada, at least for the sum-\nmer, and Erna her father were in-\nvited to Join the party.\nRegarding the reunion of mother and\ndaughter at that time one year ago,\nwhen, with Craig, Lisle had left tho\npresence of her lawyer to call upon her\nmother, very little need be said. To\nlook upon 'them now, side by side, ono\nseemed to be the counterpart of tho\nother, with the difference wrought by\nyears alone, for, although Lisle had re-\nsembled her father, she certainly was\n"the Image of her mother."\nThe two ranches were combined into\none, and both were under the manage-\nment of Craig Thompson, who had\nlived the free western life so long that\nhe preferred It to any other and who\nalso clung to his western namo with\nthe same tenacity with which ho ad-\nhered to habits which had become sec-\nond nature to him.
07b6c4f14e16fde017d889745c551c20 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1893.3767122970573 39.756121 -99.323985 lyn, may compsl him to lcavo tho\nCity of Churches unless tho lond of\ndebt is lifted. In a recent sermon\ntho famous divine said:\n"Wo havo been at our wits' ends\nhow to save our church, and that\nthrough no fault of ours. Tho story\nin a nutshell is that years ago wo\nbuilt a largo church. Tho next year\nwe enlarged it at almost the expense,\nof tho new church. Just as we were\ngetting it paid for the lightning put\nan end to it. Then wo built this\nchurch, which is practically the,\nfourth church, counting the enlarge-- ;\nment referred to as a new building.:\nWo have raised during my pastorate!\n$1,040 ,000 for religious purposes..\nBut no church on earth could enduro\nwithout serious embarrassment what\nwe have been called on to go through,'\nand we must havo help or stop. Our\ncongregation is to do its ut-\nmost, and day and night our people\nwill exert themselves."\nIn an interview Dr. Talmage inti-\nmated plainly that the continuance\nof his labors at the tabernacle would\nbe dependent upon the power of tho\ntrustees and congregation to extricate\nthe church from the swamp of debt\nin which it is engulfed. Dr. Talmage\n'also admitted that recently ho had\n(received calls from other churches of\n'an exceedingly tempting nature.\nThe tabernacle is a magnificent\n'structuro of llomanesque architect-\nure. It is built of red Corsehill\nstone, and the main tower or spire,\nwhen it is completed, will rise to a\nheight of 100 feet. The interior is\n'a vast amphitheater. Back of the\nrostrum rises tho huge organ, with\nits richly colored pipes. Tho windows\nare beautiful, and the glass used is a\ncombination of frosted crystal and\nvarious shades of yellow.
105bc612a9cfd45859413f85bea798d7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 rhe White Pine Compoun\n"| t wag'early I\nhroaFaTbendSl wluTa^lsagreeable couth\nisd for home months previous thought tl\ni preparation having for Its basis the In*\nKtrk of white pine might be so compound\nis lobe very uwefyj In diseases of the thn\nind lungK. To tat the value of it In thee\ndindcri to. I mm nountied a small au&nt\n)f the medicine that I bad been ppuinl;\nind gave It In teaspoonful dosea. The res\nrats exceedingly gratifying. Within t\nlays the Irrigation of the throat wm rami\nxl, tiio cough subsided and a speedy a\nras effected. Boon after this, I sent boom\ni lady In Londonderry, N. H ., who had be\n.offering for some weeks from a bad couj\nxxauooniMtby a sudden oold, and had rail\nnucus streaked with bl od. She soon foa\n«llef and seat for mora. She took abi\nen ounces of It, and got welL J. B . Clar\n2sq., editor of the Mancheater Dally Min\nnade a trial of the same preparation In\nsue of a severe cold and wv imm«\nrtely. He was so highly pleased with the\njutti, and so confident In success attending\nales, if plseed before the public, that\nlnally persuaded me to pvo it a name, a\ntend it abroad to benefit the suffering.\nNovember, 1855, I first advertised It urn\nhe name at While Pine Compound. In I\nrears from that time there had- been whe\nialed in Manchester alone one hundred d\nars worth, where It took the lead of all\n;ough"remedies In the'market.and Its\nnalntalns that position. There is good r\nion for this; tt la very soothing and heal!\nn Its natnrec Is warming Tbthe stomach s\npleasant withal to the taste, and la exoe\nngly cheap.\n" As a remedy for kidney complalnui\nSVhlte Pine Compound stands un rivaled,\nran not originated for that purpose; be\nperson in using It for a cough waa not oj\nrurad of the eoogh. bat was also cored a\nKidney difficulty oi ten yean standing. 81i\nhat accidental discovery many thouaai\nlave used it for the same complaint, a\nlave been oompleiely cured."
ef6fba34bb83e4e195a11d030edb0689 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.4753424340436 39.745947 -75.546589 Chester, Pa- ; Geo. J . Palmer. West\nChester, Pa. ; Isaac Watkln, Johnsons\nGorner. Pa. ; J. G. Schrader. Goncord-\n^lle. Pa. ; T. W . Richards. Concordvllle.\nPa. : C C. Green. (Gloud A- Green), Con-\ncordvllle. Ta.; Mrs M T World. Ken-\nre'ft Square, Pa. ; M. IT. Kastburn. Kon-\nnrtt Square. Pa; E. J . Kerns. Kennett\nSquare, Pa. ; Mr«. L. L . Kern«. Kennett\nSquare*. Pa. ; ja«, a. Garvin. Oxford.\nTa: Geo. E. Hoffman. (Oxford Hbtel).\nOxford. Pa. ; Mr«. Jas. A. Garvin. Ox­\nford. Pa. ; H. H . Pratt. West Chester.\nPa *. P. H. Corrhran. West Chester. Pa. ;\nMolton H. Davis. West Chester, Pa. ;\nAugust O. England, West «^bester, Pa. :\nJohn J Chamber«. West Grove, Pa. ;\nH. L . Kelley. Kimbleville. Pa.; P. H .\nL*lnhe!ser. Clavmont. (Worths); T«.\nTitus. Glen Riddle, Pa. ; IT. flchmalts,\nKennett Square; P. O . Orhert. Schmaltz.\nKennett Square. Pa ; W. B. Lar­\nkin Kennett Square, Pa.; W. K . Price,\nOxford. Pa. ; F. G. Wilson. Oxford. Pa. ;\nR A. Craig. Kennett Square; J p.\nErkies. Yorklvn. Del.; F. Milhous. Ken-\nnett Square. Pa. ; Harry W. Smith. (W.\nR. Smith A- Sons). Oxford. Pa. ; TV N.\nYorgus. (Mackey A Yergus). Oxford.\nPa. ; Tho«. Hakest raw. Kennett Square.\nFa. ; S. Everett Betts. West Chester.\nPa.; H. E. Biehn. West Cheater, Pa.;\nM A Biehn. West Chester. Ta; J. B .\nMoRfeller. West Chester. Pa. ; C. E .\nRuehwalter. West Chester, Pa. ; R. E\nWelch. West Chester. Ta. ; Crawford\nWelch, (Son of K. E. W. ». West Ches­\nter. Pa ; W. A. Williamson. Chester.
019dca0ca50788752f6bde3dda456659 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.1246575025368 37.451159 -86.90916 suppose It Includes much of the nboo\ndescribed process which Is a current\ntheory Ills safe to say that about\nnine tenths of tthe whiskey sold over\nbars Is reel I tied goods\nWhiskey at Its best and as It Is now\nconsumed Is the greatest curse that\natlllcts the country hut Its evils are\nrendered doubly more acute deadly\nand prolific by the wholesale adulter\nation now practiced Since our Gov\neminent has gone limbo partnership\nas It were with the liquor men and\nsays to them you pay us so much\nmoney and you may continue to man\nufacture and tratllc in this article\nthis same Government should also\nsee to It that every drop of whiskey\nthat Is made or sold Is absolutely\npure and free from any poisonous in-\ngredients It Is bad enough to reflect\nthat our Government placidly license\nthe liquor tratllc but It Is worse to\nthink that It also licenses manu\nfncture of stuff that not only intoxl\nsates but kills and that speedily\nThe Government above any other In-\nstitution should protect the lives of\nIts people The moonshiner If caught\nat his business IIs quickly Jerked up\nby Government officials and the most\nsevere penalty Is Inflicted upon him\nand yet the stuff he makes Is harm-\nless as compared with some of the\nliquor which these very same Govern-\nment otllclals not only tolerate but\ngive license for the manufacture of\nThe question of the adulteration of\nwhiskey Is one of the most hideous\nand vital that confronts the Amen\ncan people today We do not en\ndorse the manufacture or sale of whis\nkey In any sense butsincethe Govern-\nment has become a party to this pro\ncedure we think it ought to at least\ncompel Its agents to tralllc In only such\nliquor from which the rank poison\nhave been entirely eliminated
bb53b4eb05458d0f855e2f809778d216 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.5724043399616 41.681744 -72.788147 Warning Prevents Stampede\nChief William C. Hart of the po-\nlice department and Mrs. Hart were\nseated in the back row on the west\nside of the theater when the cry\nwent up. At once, the chief guided\nMrs. Hnrt to an exit and told her\nto remain thero unless it became\nnecessary to leave. Then he. walked\nslowly down the aisle, calmly assur-\ning the audience that there was no\nfire and no cause for alarm, advis-\ning them to remain seated, or. If\nthey wished to leave, to do so In\nan orderly manner. His timely ac-\ntion had the effect of stemming the\nstampede until Manager Carlyle C.\nBarrett, who had made his way to\nthe front with difficulty on account\nof the confusion in the aisles,\nmounted the stage and told the au-\ndience that a slight amount of\nsmoke had been drawn through the\nfans from the incinerator, and tier\nwas no danger whatever.\nJohn S. Contaras ,one of the own-\ners of the theater, also addressed\nthe audience, assuring them of\ntheir safety, but the natural un-\n that was caused by the\nthought of the possibilities of a\npanic asserted itself in the hasty\neparture of many adults and a\nnumber of children. At the same\ntime, Companies 1 and 2 of the fire\ndepartment responded to a "till"\nalarm, and a crowd of several hun\ndred gathered outside the theater\nto watch the excitement. The cause\nof the call was soon discovered and\nthe firemen were sent back to their\nquarters within a few minutes.\nFire Deputy Chief Eugene F.\nBarnes of the lire department, who\nwas off duty but responded to the\nalarm, conferred with Mr. Contaras\nand Sergeant Thomas J. Feeney of\nthe police department, advising the\nlatter to have attention paid to the\nuse of incinerators about the mer-\ncantile district at night. He pointed\nout that an ordinance prohibits tho\nburning of refuse after 5 p. m ., and\nhe remarked that the violation can\ncause danger in uddition to discom-\nfort, as demonstrated in the near\npanic. After examining the inciner-\nator, which is used to dispose of\nrubbish accumulated in stores and
0684ccf93aafb85f456ad0225b6ab7c5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.2534246258244 58.275556 -134.3925 Now ho lays a deep plot to entice Lady Inez\ninto the woods and try the effect of the\ncharm. Meantime a hand of Gypsies appear\nled by Muzetto, and the old fortune-teller\nFedulma. Sir Rolnnd seeks their aid and\nthey hide in order to seize Lady Inez, while\nSir lloland wends his way to the Castle in the\nhopes of meeting her. Lady Inez, with her\nmaid Susanna, comes to the wood by another\npath. Lady Inez is seized by the Gypsies\nund taken away to their camp, leaving Su-|\nsauna to watch for Don Carlos. Enter\nJuanito, the little Queen of the Gypsies,\nlooking for the return of the maidens who\nhuve been to Cadiz to dance and sing. Sir\nRoland returns and finds Junita, tries to de¬\ntain her, but Susanna conies to lier aid. Sir\nRoland finds the charm has worked, and that\nhe is in love with Juanita. Gluck-auf\n to give her the talisman, that she\nmay respond. Return of the Gj'psy maidens\nand final departure for their camp with\nJuanita. Pedro and Donuld meet in the\nwoods fearing a tight between their masters,\nand anxious to give them the clover so\nefficacious in their dispute. They are un¬\nable to prevent the meeting but stop the\nduel. This scene closes with the arrival of\nthe Spanish Lords led by Sebastian.\nScene 2.The Gypsies' camp at sunset.\nFedalma getting supper. Gluck-auf and\nGretchen uppear, anxious to give Fedalma\nthe charm. Enter Gypsy maidens. Song\nand Dunce. While supper is served, Lady\nInez and Susanna wander away, followed by\nPedro who hus come to the camp by his\nmuster's orders. The camp is surrounded\nby the Spanish Lords, and Lady Inez is re¬\nstored to her lover. Sir Roland seeks Su¬\nsanna's aid in wooing Juanita. The act\ncloses with his success.
15c607d6ab89a3c48ae100842c2d2fae THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.305479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 My application was based upon tl\nrecommendation of the advisory board a\npointed by the President, "To examit\ninto the facts and to report what action\ntheir opinion justice required should\ntaken by tbo President." That boa\nfound and. reported, after a long ai\npatient examination and consideration\nall the facts in the crse, that my "condti\nin all the events of August, 1So2, inquir\ninto by the court martial by whii\nI was tried was, in the lig\nof full evidenco-^-that which w\nthen laid before tho court an\nalso that which was unattainable at tl\ntime of my trial, not subject to critieisi\nmuch les3 deserving of censuro and co\ndeuination, and that it was obedient, su\nordinate, faithful and judicious; that\nsaved the Union army from disaster on t\n129th of August." And the advisor}' boa\nrecommended: "That in their opini<\njustice required at his (the President\nnondu such action as may be necessary\nannul and set aside the findings and s"e\ntence of the court martial in the case\nMaj. Gen. Fit* John Porter, aud\nresoro him to the position of \nthat sentence deprived him; such restoi\ntion to take effect from the date of d\nmissal from tho service." Relying, all\nupon tho clear, emphatic language of t\nsaid board, "that all essential /act* in eve\ninstanco stand out in clear and abnoli\ncontrast to those supposed facts upi\nwhich be (I) was adjudged guilty, andtl\nit is not possiblo that anv court-mart\nshould have condemned. such coudi\nif it had been correctly understoo(\nand bclioyiug that I am eutitl\nto tho complete and just vindicati\nrecommcndeu by. tho Board, and that t\nsentence of tho court-martial, subseque;\nljr proven, by overwhelming and irref\nglblo testimony, to have been palpal\nerroneous in its basis of assumed /actsa\nutterly destructive of tho happiness a\nwelfare of an ofllcer, who has never fail\nin the strictest and most bonorabfo fldel\nto his Government, should not bo a b\nrier to tho relief to which I consider inyi\nentitled, I again renew to you, as Cb\nMagistrate, my appeal for justice.\nConscious of my absolute and entire in\n) pence, 1 have not ceased, from tho hour\n*
3a2e562ad9da73e44b540867c4a8c30f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.5630136669204 41.681744 -72.788147 letters to newspapers has been regal-\ning New York editors with observa-\ntions pn changes that recent years\nhave wrought with Broadway and life\nalong that thoroughfare.\nRegard, he says, how the movie\nshows have shoved articulate actor\ninto the side streets. See what has\nbecome of the famous old restaurants.\nThey have gone and uninteresting\nshoe shops and drug stores have ta-\nken their places. The table d note\nresorts where dinner and laughter and\nJiquor kept patrons happily ensconced\naround the tables until bedtime are\nnow closing at 10 o'clock, and eve i\nsarlier. The good old crowds have\nvanished, he writes. Diners seem to\nregard eating as a duty. And it used\nto be an experience, not without aa\noccasional thrill.\nOne hotel has done away with it\njolly hunting room where the boys\nused to get together, and the space\nhas been rented to bourgeoise mer\nchants. And those virile chop house\nwhere banqueters robed themselves\nin huge white and fraternised\nover Juicy beef steaks are now admit\nting women to their tables. The mid-\nnight shows have closed, and the elec\ntric signs lure one only to a white\ngoods' sale, cosmetics, a movie show\nor chewing gum.\nAnd the clubs oh, how they have\nchanged! The cafe is deserted, the\nwages have forgotten hw to jest and\nwake merry. The stewards say they\nhave as many diners as before, but\nonly because men want company at\ndinner. Even the new night time\ntraffic regulations in the theater dis-\ntrict have kept the crowds away.\nMeanwhile the men who conduct bus-\niness in this great hotel, shopping and\ntheatrical district have banded togeth\ner "to help bring about a fair and\nproper municipal regulation of the\ndistrict which will not toe detrimental\nto business interests, the life and hap-\npiness of the New Yorker and the visi-\ntor, and to perpetuate the name and\nfame of the world's greatest money\nspending center."
7178ef648557fca2becf375ae14aa4a8 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.7712328450025 39.369864 -121.105448 the succeeding silence more impress-\nivelyfelt. What matter if the mos-\nquitos, in unseen myriads, fell upon\nus like an Egyptian plague and forced\nus to involuntary vigils ? Who wish-\ned to sleep at such a time, in such a\nplace! A few lay stretched upon\nthe deck, rolled up in thick smother-\ning blankets; but something worse\nthan the stings of conscience made\ntheir thoughts waking ones. At last,\nmorn dawned upon us—and such a\nmorn ! The very reverse of the pro-\ncess by which the preceding day had\ndeepened into night; for night seem-\ned to grow amorous of the beauty she\nhad killed, and the magic of her dewy\ntears worked a miracle in the east.\nDay faintly opened his eyes upon the\nsable mourner, commencing, the\nsame wan smile which had played over\nhis dying moments, to live again;\nand growing stronger and stronger,\nand brighter and brighter, and rising\nstill further into the embrace of night,\nuntil she fled like a blushing bride\nbefore his lusty approaches. Then\nthe Memnon strain burst from every\nfeathered chorister; the trees rustled\ntheir viny trailing robes and clapped\ntheir leafy hands, the Sacramento\nrippled musically past our advancing\nvessel, and all was joy, and hope, and\ninspiration. Just before us, after some\nhours, a few dozen naked masts rose\namongst the trees, and white tents\nbegan to gleam as though an army\nwere there, and the hum of human\nlife to sound, and—we were fast an-\nchored to an oak in front of Sacra-\nmento !
05d0d2cb01adfe7a076d30c852f8fcce THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.3493150367833 40.063962 -80.720915 Ruptured Persons.\nIt should be patent to every thinking person, am\nspecially those atlllctei onea who have tried tlieva\nioua cheap, or gooda at coat establishments, that it I\na essentially neceasary to bare an appliance luitcd ti\nheir particular form of Ilernlaand accurately adjust\nd by one skilled la hla profession, as it la that a frac\nured Umb requires a apodal kiud of splint applied a\nhe handa of an experienced 'surgeon. For these rea\nons we would advise you not to be tnlaled by dealer\nBering cheap and imperfect instruments at greatly\neduced rates, or at coat. Owing to their inability t\n1r* satisfaction they are willing to part with them a\nny price. But no matter how cheap It Is offered you\nt is comparatively worthies* in your individual case\nnd Just so money thrown away. A learnet\nirofeasor of medldnoand aurgery, whilst lecturing 01\nirrnla before a Medic*! college In Philadelphia, a ahor\nI me ago, suggested the very great Importance of thi\n'hyslclau accompanying the pstieut and superintend\nSthe adjustment of the appliance, and advised\nsre this was not poasible, that they should be care\nul to recommend their patient to a peraon skilled ii\nhe application of such instrument*. During thi\nnurse of the lecture he exhibited various trusses, am\npoke of thdr merits, and of one particularly that hi\nuid applied frequently with very satisfactory results\nThe exclusive agency for tblatruas has been given t\ndr. John McUuirk, the well known adjuster ant\nItaierinTrusau, etc.. of No. 88 Fifth avenue, whi\nrill b4 pleased to explain Its advantages to all whi\nuay call on him.
0804a7c418a491d2f15e58b6b581929c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.9219177765094 39.745947 -75.546589 RED, GREEN AND YELLOW.\nIt is doubtful whether red, green\nand yellow expressed to the Greek mind\nsimilar ideas to those that are now\nconnected with the words. In modern\nGerman, rath* or red, is a generic\nterm that can stand for a variety ot\ntints, and as for grun, it can signify\nrawness and freshness. The Greeks\nutilized color terms with more econ­\nomy. Some believed there were four\nprincipal colore, namely: White, black,\nred and yellow. Put it is doubtful in\n»'hat »ay green, which nature spreads\nso lavishly, was regarded. Chlore*\nseemed to be a word that could be\nmade generally applicable so long as it\n»as not used to suggest a field. In the\nsingle case where it appears in Heater\nin connection with ground. It is sup­\nposed to mean a sort of yellow, tor it\nwas likewise applied by him honey,\nand to men's face« when they were\novercome with fear. The "green and\nyellow melancholy” of Viola in\n“Twelfth Night,” would suit the word.\nThe Greeks, moreover, applied it to\nsteel, sand, white wine, etc. Less vague­\nness was attached to the word in the\ntime of Aristolle, for the philsopher\nconfines it to the delicate or imma­\nture green which is found in plants in\nSpring and to the faded green» of Au­\ntumn. Some translators of his works\nrender it by the compound “greenish-\nyellcw.” At a later period chloros sig­\nnified a complete green, and became a\ndesignation of plants and herbs. The\ndifferences in signification are hardly\nto be explained, unless on the suppo­\nsition that the eyes of the Greeks in the\ncourse of time had undergone Ooms\nchange, and colors were in consequence\n1ère hazy. —Fall Mall Gazette.
0b06043190172d38dd1ba17533962985 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.892076471109 46.187885 -123.831256 New York, November 21. The hours\nbetween 2 and 5 this afternoon must\ngo down to posterity as memorable In\nthe annals of football. Two of the gret\nrival factions In American college life,\nYale and Frlnceton, had each selected\neleven men to do royal battle on the\ngridiron. Each did glorious work and\nwon great honors, but the sous of old\nNassau defeated their antagonists by\na score of 24 to 6, amid wild cheering.\nThe best of all football grounds, Man-\nhattan field, was taxed to its utmost\ncapacity by eager thousands who were\nw illing to sit In the diirzling rain and\npenetrating atmosphere for three' full\nhours to witness the greatest sporting\nevent of the year. The gates were open-\ned at about noon and from that time\ntill long after the game had started\ncrowds poured into the enclosure from\nthe elevated railroad trains and horse\ncars. The fair sex turned out In large\nnumbers; society belles dressed In pret-\nty sweater costumes sat beelde their\nbrothers, fathers or beaux, never ut-\n a word of complaint during the\nlong weary drlxsle and adding much to\nthe beauty and enthusiasm of the scene.\nAt the apptarance of the contestants\nupon the gridiron the rival factions en-\ngaged In singing songs in honor of the\nplayers and shouting various college\nyells. Captain Murphy chose the east\ngoal, giving the Tigers the kick- of - f.\nFrom that moment the two teams, as\nthey lined up for the scrimmage, fol-\nlowing the ball in Its progress up and\ndown the field, became the focal point\ntowards which 35,000 pairs of eyes were\ndirected. For the first time since '93\nand for the fourth time since. '8 3, a rep-\nresentative team from the Tigers' col-\nlege defeated the sons of Ell today.\nThe score was 24 to 6, and when It has\nbeen added that Yale's six point were\nscored on a fiuke, the tory has been\ntold, for never from the beginning of\nthe game until its end were the men\nfrom New Haven aMo to cope wlt!\ntheir sturdy antagonists.
1d1bea08a8b669820b45cfdfff09619c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.9547944888382 42.217817 -85.891125 the sufferers by this lawless violence.\nThereupon, on the loth of October,\n1S71, a proclamation was issued, in terms\nof the law, calling upon the members\nof the combination to disperse within\nfive days, and to deliver to the Marshal\nor military officers of the United States\nall arms, ammunitions, uniforms, dis-\nguises, and other means and implements\nused by them for carrying out their un-\nlawful purposes. This warning not hav-\ning been heeded, on the 17th of Octo-\nber another proclamation was issued,\nsuspending tho privilege of the writ of\nhabeas corpus, in nine counties in that\nState. Direction was given that within\nthe counties so designated persons sup-\nposed, upon credible information, to\nbe members of such unlawful combina-\ntions, should bo arrested by the military\nforces of tho United States, and deliv-\nered to tho Marshal, to be with\naccording to law. In two of tho said\ncounties (York and Spartansburg) many\narrests have been made. At last ac-\ncount the number of persons thus ar-\nrested was 108. Several hundred whoso\ncriminality was ascertained to be of an\ninferior degree, were released for the\npresent. These have generally made\nconfessions of their guilt. Great cau-\ntion has been excrcisod in making test\narrests. Notwithstanding the large num-\nber, it is believed that no innocent per-\nson is now in custody. Tho prisoners\nwill be held for regular trial in the judi-\ncial tribunals of the United States. As\nsoon as it appeared that the authorities\nof the United States were about to tako\nvigorous measures to enforce the law,\nmany persons absconded, and there is\ngood ground for supposing that all of\nsuch persons have been violating tho\nlaw.
0fe93c1437c8b0da4ac1f443a6a01637 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.648907072202 40.063962 -80.720915 They are in the South poorly fed and\nworse clothed; there is nothing to incite\nthem to better their condition; there is\nnothing in their surroundings ol an ele¬\nvating or refining character, and then un¬\nder Democratic rule, or rather misrule,\nthey, insteBdof coming up sb they Bhould,\nrather deteriorate and decline.\nGreenback rudiments were then sev¬\nerally taken up and explained, after which\nthe speaker demonstrated in a specious\nmanner that labor paid the taxes, and\nthereby sustained the country. They, as a\nparty, proposed to atop all the crying evils,\nto ameliorate the condition of the laborers,\nto take the surplus money and discharge\nthe burden of debt of the countrv, hesides\nother less important reformations. He\nthen turned his attention to the Presi¬\ndential candidates, but he only got as far\nae Mr. English, for-whom beseems to\nhave an aversion. "This mau,"\nbe said, "for fourteen yearewas President\nof the First National Bank of Indianapolis,\nand in that time absorbed over one hun¬\ndred and fifty properties of poor men who\nwere, through the grasping avarice of one\nman, deprived of all their comforts, all\ntheir enjoyments, homes which they had\nput in yeare of painful toil to accumulate,\nfor which they bad denied themselves\ncomforts and often necessitiee, and in the\nend only to be swallowed at a gulp by\nthis usurer; and how in God's name any\nlaboring man can support him or give him\nsupport is beyond my ken. Howauyman\ncan vote |or Hancock or the Democratic\nticket with that accursed tail to It is more\nthan I can define. The election of such s\nman means the land, bank and law rob\nberies of England re-enacted in this\nUDion."
0adef0f122de224edd274212ebbbf76f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.9713114437866 40.063962 -80.720915 Tux Washington correspondent of the\nOacinnali Commercial thinks that the Leg¬\nislature of West Virginia, in open aesaion\nassembled, is full aa apt to find good ma¬\nteria] for the U. S . Senatorship outside of\nas inside of a party caucus. We concur\nin this Idea, and amend it by an expres¬\nsion of belief that they will be decidedly\nmore apt in that way to choose a Senator\nWho will give popular satisfaction. It\n¦only requires about thirty-three votes to\nnominate a Senator in the caucna,\nwhereas it requires about forty-five to\nnominate bim in open session. Sup*\nposing that the caucua ia not full,\nthen less than 33 votes may secure a\nmy nomination; so that It msy bsppen\nthat the choice of only one-third of the\n. wkole Legislature may Become the\nsuccessful candidate. Inaamuch as our\nDemocratic brethren have no fesrs of the\nelection of any body save a member of the\npsrty in goot' standing, would it not be\nwise on their part at the coming election to\ndispense with the caucus, and thus secure\nalienator who will give the greatest satis¬\nfaction to both sides. They will admit\nthat the oppoaition members, represent¬\ning almost half the voters of the\nState, are entitled to a choice among the\nDemocratic candidates, and any Demo¬\ncratic candidate who ,can command their\nvotes, united with the requisite number of\nDeaaocratic'.votes, ought to be acceptable\nto a majority of the people of the State.\nTbe ¦alloaal Educational Bill.\nWe are of tbe opinion that the Tiewa\nexpressed by Senator Davis, of this 8tate,\nand others, on tbe Educational bill that\npassed the Senate lrit Friday, are tboae\nwhich ahould have prevailed. The lull\n. mount received from the Bale ol pnblio\nlands and from patent fees, about $1,500,-\n000 annually, was Done too mucb under\n. ths circumstance], considering the de-\nIdmble amount of illiteracy in the 8onth,\nespecially among the colored population.\nThe neceaitiee for their educational im¬\nprovement can never be more pre-sing\nthan at this time, and it la not likely that\nthe States or the people will ever be\n. o poorly able to provide for their educa¬\ntion as thoy aro at this time. This being\nthe esse, and in view of the conjUnt\nmeosce ol ignorance to good government,\nit Is all important that common school ed¬\nucation ahould spread ai rapidly as poni-\nble.
0cdadf3b7323372d38655558baea8c4c IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.6315068176052 43.82915 -115.834394 “ They have adirect figurative signifi­\ncance and give scope to an Inventive\nfancy. Fo r example, the expression\n•You make me tired indicates to a\nshade the feeling of lassitude inflicted\nby a bore. Again, the phrase What\nare you giving us? is merely a figura­\ntive way of expressing incredulity.\nMany sanguin ary conflicts have doubt­\nless been averted by Its use, as the rug­\nged, synonymous phrnse, You aro\nlying sir, sir! has been known to give\noffense to cortain eccentric persons.\nMany slang phrases aro the embodi­\nment of a polite spirit. When you are\nou t with the boys and exhibit in\nmeteoric flashes the slu mbering hilarity\nin your nature, to be told that you aro\ninto xicated strikes a sensitive chord in\nyour breast; but to be accosted with\nWhat an eleg load you have got'\nbrings a smile of assent and satisfaction\nto your countenance every time. Gentle­\nmen never ffc-knowledgn to being drunk.\nIt is a still or a *jag' they have on.\nThe word drunk applies only to tramps.\nThey aro synonymous terms. Every\nacute i ntellect will recognize this sub­\ntle shado of meaning. G entlemen of\npugilistic procliviti es are very careful\nin their lang uage. They app reciate the\nmollifying effects of slang idioms and\nare pa rticul ar to employ them in speak­\ning of tliolr enco unters. Who ever\nhoard a champion of the ring say that\nhe gavo his antagonist a black eye or a\nbloody nose? He prefers, in a spirit of\nchivalry , more el eg ant terms, and will\nsay that he closed a peeper' or tapped\nthe claret.
8ed2ecf5d62b80b7b2fc419b7cba7618 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.7164383244547 43.798358 -73.087921 lambs has effectually freed my flock\n(about one hundred in number) from ticks,\nbut one having been found on my sheep\nat the last two shearings and it gives\nthe yearling clip an even smooth surf ice,\nfree from the coarse hairs and unequal\nlocks which are usually found on the first\ncoat of the lamb. The difference in the\nweight of a yearling fleece fr?m one shorn\nwhen a lamb, or one not shorn, if any, is\nbut veiy trifling, and in my opinion not to\nbe considered a moment when compared\nwith the advantages to be derived from\nthe practice. If sheared at all, lambs\nshould be sheared early, and then the\nwool is so grown, that no danger need be\napprehended from the effort of the cold\nweather. I have sometimes as an experi-\nment, sheared one side a Iamb, and left\nthe other untouched, but at the next shear-\ning no one would have supposed such an\noperation had been performed, unless a\ncloser examination th in usual of the wool\nwas made. I have therefore been accus-\ntomed to regard the wool so cut from the\nlamb, as nearly clear gain, and where\nthere was a number of them, it would be\nno despisable item in the profits of keep-\ning sheep. In the following article which\nI ropy from an English publication, it\nappears different opinions of the practice\nare entertained there, fron those I have\nexpressed; and if any of your readers\nhave made themselves experimentally ac-\nquainted with the practice and will give\nthe results for publication, they might,\nwhile gratifying a brother farmer, be con-\nferring a benefit on the public at Iar?e.
4747f484d04b4321e309056989ef1447 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.5383561326737 42.217817 -85.891125 and ran out upon tho piazza, crying and\nscreaming, lie followed, drove her back,\nagain made her kneel, and again whipped\nher with his horrid instrument of torture.\nAnd in concluding, to add to his already\ninhuman co iduct, directed her to bathn\nherself with sail and water, (which would\nhave produced tho mo. -. - t excruciating ag-\nony,) and say nothing about the affair.\nShe then proceeded to the residence of\nEnos I. Baker, but a few yards off, (for\nwhose family her sister works,) showed\nMrs. Baker the marks of her whipping,\nwhich laid iu thick, black welts over her\narms aud back, as thick as one's thumb,\nwith the blood here and there oozing\nthrough the lacerated fckin, and related to\nthem substantially as above. They di-\nrected her to tho residence of 'Squire\nBaldwin, whither she immediately re-\npaired, in spite of the protestations of her\n who supcrstitiously believed that\ndark evils would come upon them for\ndaring to opposo a priest. She asked\n'Squire Baldwin if there was any law to\nprotect a woman from a priest in this\ncountry. Ho assured her there was.\nShe then made oath of tho facts and pro-\ncured a Stats's warrant for the priest's\narrest. The 'Squire remarked to us that\nhe was very particular iu questioning her\nas to all tho facts of the case, as lie con-\nsidered it an extraordinary one, and wish-\ned to have no doubt about it. Sba nlso\nremarked to him that this was not the\nfirst or the only whipping that he had\nbeen guilty of; that ho had flogged a\nwoman in the neighborhood with a wire\nwhip, similar to that which he used on\nher. Wo think it was for marrying a\nman named Coppock, or Proctor, a Prot\nestant
67286cdbcc38158e382703708d93a6fa NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.2315068176054 41.681744 -72.788147 operation tho dead policeman, Medi-\ncal' Examiner Waterman Lyon and\nDr. Carl Hart who performed the\nautopsy, Henry Heller of Glonstreet\nand Adoplh La Chance, who saw the\nmurderer .leave the stoor after the\nshooting,, Bamuel Davidson, one of\ntho owners of the burglarised es-\ntablishment, Bernard Carlson, who\nsaw, the murderer In the Beaton &\nGadwell alley,' James Whlto who saw\nhim in Corbln, place, and- Miss Kdltli\nLarsen, former clerk at the Davidson,\na .cvomnai store who is reported o\nhave seen the murderer romovinr\nscrews from the lock on one of the\nfront doors ot the store on the after,\nnoon previous to the murder.\nThe qulzilng of the third pane!\nof 30 veniremen caller last night\nfrom various towns was started this\nmorning shortly after resum-e- d.\nA total of 26 men answered the\nroll call, four of the 30 being ex-\ncused for illness and other Causes.\nC. Edward Buckland, Sr., of Hart,\nford, ,was the first called and he\nstated.'that ho was opposed to the\ndeath penalty. Timothji Kennedy; a\nfarmer of Windsor, was found to\nhave a fixed opinion and he was ex\ncused. Christopher AlcNary of South\nWindsor was excused because he\nhas business dealings with State's\nAttorney Hugh M. Alcorn and Ed\nwin U Richard, a.Jarmer from East\nHartford, lias formed a fixed opin\nion from what he has read.\nJohn R. Lambert, a Glastonbury\nfarmer, i9 years of age, stated that\nhe would rather have the accused\ntake the stand, but he Would try tor\ndo his best.,
74e4b234557a1c8eab08421db64ca3ab DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6424657217149 44.939157 -123.033121 "the total City levy. Said tax levy shall be special and in\n"addition to the ten (lOj mill tax limitation contained in\n"Section 6, Subdivision 3 of this Charter and the money\n"from said special levy shall be kept in a separate fund\n"and be used for constructing public sewers and drains\n"and maintaining public sewers and drains which are now\n"or may hereafter be constructed and for no other purpose\n"except repayment of public sewer or drainage assessments\n"heretofore paid under assessment ordinances of the City\n"as hereafter provided. The Common Council shall not\n"construct any public sewers or drains unless the money to\n"pay for the same is either on hand or a tax levy has been\n"made to provide the same or any shortago of money ne-\ncessary to meet construction expenses as they mature.\n"Before undertaking any public sewer or drainage co-\nnstruction project the Common Council shall declare, by\n"resolution, its intention to construct the particular sewer\n"or drainage system or district therein shall direct the\n"City Engineer to file a report with the City Recorder\n"showing the plans, profiles, specifications Riid estimates\n"for said system or district and such plans shall show the\n"boundaries of the area proposed to be served by such sys -"t e-\nor district in sufficient detail for prospective bidders\n"and for accurate information to the public. The City\n"Recorder shall present said report to the Common Council\n"at its first regular meeting thereafter for its considera-"tio- n.\nAt any time within six (6) months after said report\n"is presented whenever the same shall be made to meet\n"the approval of the Common Council, it shall be adopted\n"by a resolution in which the sewers or drains to be co-\nnstructed shall be particularly described. Thereafter the\n"'Common Council may proceed to construct such public\n"sewers or drains either by contract under competitive bids\n"or with City employees through the engineering depart- "nic-\nof the City under the direct control of the Common\n--
399aede9e73c690d86d89473dc6f9997 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1860.9467212798522 35.780398 -78.639099 The pilgrims fled to the American wilds\nthat they might enjoy the blessings of the\nBible truths and Bible teachings unmolested\nand unoppressed by the laws of the tyrants.\nIt was devoutly recognized as a book especial-\nly needful for a people struggling for freedom\nby the fathers of our Republic In the dar-\nkest and stormiest hours of the Revolution,\nwhen money co;dd hardly be found to pay\nthe starving, naked and bleeding soldiers of\nliberty, Congress, in 1777, appointed a com-\nmittee to confer with a printer, with a view\nof striking off thirty thousand Bibles at the\nexpense of the Congress ; but it being diffi-\ncult to obtain paper and type, the Committee\nof Commerce were ordered to import twenty\nthousand from HolUnd, Scotland and else\nwhere. They gave as the reason lhatkits use\nis so universal and its importance so great\nIn 1780, Congress appointed a Committee\nto to printing an edition of the Bible\nin Philadelphia, and voted that they highly\napproved the pious and laudable undertaking\nas subservient to the interests of religion,\nand recommended this edition of the Bible\nto the people of the United Slates. In\neight successive years Congress voted and\nkept sixleen national feasts and thanksgiv-\nings. On tbe committees wbieh reported\nthese bills, wcie such men as Gen. Living-\nston of New York R. H. Lee, of Virginia,\nRoger Sherman of Connecticut, EliasBoudinot\nand James Madison. Some of these signed the\nDeclaration of Independence,and most of them\nweie engaged in procuring the Constitution\nand knew its true spirit.\nThus was the Bible honored by these apostles\nof freedom. "When their children who enjoy\nthe fruits of their labors shall cease to cherish\nit as the pallai ium of civil and religious liberty,\nthat moment will the nation begin its down-\nward inarch to ruin
1b21cb89084845f6fef64aca6fba4653 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.6945205162353 41.681744 -72.788147 It is safe to assume that this gold\nwill not be accessible when the Allies,\ndictate peace. One of the first things\nGermany will be called upon to do will\nlie to repay the forced levies made\nupon Belgium and towns in northern\nFrance and to redeem the "notes" and\nspurious currency which the Germans\nhave issued wherever they have planted\nthemselves. Compensation for, dam-\nage done also will have to be made as\nfar as possible in god, and the rest in\ncommuted payments, extended over a\nperiod of years.\nOf course it will be necessary to in-\nsist on Germany giving securities for\nthe payment of her obligations. One\nof these will be the mercantile tieet\nnow lying within Hamburg and other\nports, including the colossal ships\nwhich have been constructed since the\nwar began vessels of from 35,000 to\n tons, with which Germany\nhopes to recapture her foreign trade.\nThere are, it is understood, at least\nhalf a dozen of these building or built,\nand they will help in restoring Belgium\nto her old commercial position, and\nalso will materially assist France,\nwhich will have an enormous bill\nagainst Germany.\nBut they will by no nvaans cover the\nsum total of Germany's destruction\nand depredations, and it may be neces-\nsary to take a lien over her railways\nfor a term of years, also part of tha\noutput of the mines and forests, the\nresources of which largely have en-\nabled the country to carry on the war\nindependent of materials from abroad.\nThis is not vengeance; it is simple jus-\ntice. Germany has been robbing the\nmines of Belgium and France for the\nlast four years, and most probably will
3236d4dd567cf7c6ebc0535fccda07da DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.0178081874683 44.939157 -123.033121 amount of capital your company will\nrequire to raise during the calendar\nyear 1918 and also separately for the\nfirst six months of that calendar year.\n(1) To meet all maturing bonds and note\nissued which have not already been pro-\nvided for or which are not to be paid\nout of the cash resources of your com-\npany, showing dates of such securities;\n(i!) To pay r'S improvement, betterment\nand construction work already contract-\ned for and partially finished. (This\nstatement should show what proportion\nif any of such work can be stopped now\nwithout detriment;; (3) An approxim-\nate estimate of the capital which may\nbe imperatively important to provide\nfor other construction work, improve-\nments and betterments, including addi-\ntional terminals and new equipment,\n(showing equipment separately); (4)\nAn approximate estimate of the capital\nwhich in the judgment of your com-\npany, it is desirable to provide for the\nabove purposes, but which the de-\nmand is not absolutely necessary for\nthe protection of the property or for the\nmaintenance of its earnings.\n"Second, a statement as to the char-\nacter of stocks, bonds or notes with\nwhich your company expects to be able\nto raise the capital so required."\nInformation as to the number of\nfreight, coal and oil carrying cars in\noperation, owned and iu repair shops\non December 31 also was asked. Fur-\nther unscrambling of freight congestion\nwas in prospect as a result of the order\nincreasing car demurrage rates.\nWith this process will go, too, some\nincreases in living costs, McAdoo indi-\ncated. Extra labor will be required to\nget prompt unloading. His new schedule\neffective January 21, will allow cars to\nremain sidetracked two days free, but\nthereafter rates will go fifty to one\nhundred percent above the present.\nMcAdoo held that requirements of\nthe war and health and comfort of the
22b5a5c9ea4931b2d707cda6cf067436 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1903.382191749112 46.601557 -120.510842 There ia such a wide diversity uf opin-\nion as to the proper time to cut alfalfa,\nthat the following extracts from Bulletin\nNo. 13, written by \\V. P. Heaiklen and\npublished by the agricultural station at\nFort C'ollina, Colo., ahould be read with\ninterest by all growers of the standard\nstock food of the Yakima valley:\n"T here is a very generally accepted\nnotion tlmt there is a considerable differ-\nence in the value of the respective cut-\ntings of alfalfa for feeding purposes, the\nthird receiving the preference lor milch\ncows, especially if it wan made \\u25a0« ithout\nthe plants baring been touched by frost,\nthe first and third for sheep feeding,and\nso on. That there should be a diversity\nof opinion in qaite natural, ami a gener-\nally prevailing notion among intelligent\npersons, whose financial interests are\ntouched by their daily practice, is \nbaaed upon something more definite than\ntheir notions. Hut the judgment of in-\ndividuals is. almost an varying in regard\nto this us one can well imagine its. being\non any pouible subject, and the testi-\nmony of the people when taken indirida-\nally leaves one in a quandary as to\nwhether they are not nearly all ei)iia!ly\ngood. The more explicit qtlMtion as to\nthe best time or stage of development of\nthe plant to cut it fnr liny is the one\nwhich is most often raised, without spec-\nial reference to the first >econd or third\ncutting, tt ia this question that I shall\ntry to answer, KHDewhat fnilv for the\nfirst, and more briefly fwr the second.\n"There are two means of investigating\nthis subject. Tbvlntia by the itudy\nof the chemical composition oi the\nplant, the \\u25a0MOnd by feeding experi-\nment*.
bae63303b074ce20cc00a2809d25de31 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.5986301052765 40.618676 -80.577293 plain some of the less intricate curatives to\nthe general public—curatives which anyone can\nsafely use in case of emergency. Arlie L. Moon,\nM. D ., tells in a recent article in Life & Health, the\nproper treatment for burns: "In the early treat­\nment of mild burns a soothing burn ointment may\nbe quickly applied on gauze dressing and placed\nover the affected part and held in place with a\nbandage. One of the newer remedies which is be­\ning applied to burns, with apparently very excel­\nlent results, is cod liver oil. The vitamins pres\nent in this preparation seem to have some effect\non the skin, which hastens the healing process.\n"If a burn is at all extensive or severe it is\nbest not to apply an ointment or any greasy mate\nrial, as the physician may wish to make of a\n5 per cent tannic acid spray to the affected area,\nwhich forms a tough, dark coating over the skin\nand protects it from the air and hastens the heal­\ning process. This preparation is not effective\nwhen an ointment lias been applied, and the\ngreasy material must first be removed, which is\na difficult, painful process. However, baking-\nsoda may be moistened with water, which has pre­\nferably been boiled, as this renders the water ster­\nile and helps to prevent infection. The watei\nshould be warm, and the moistened baking soda\nshould be placed on gauze dressings and applied\nto the affected area. This will give considerable\nrelief. If the burned area covers a considerable\nportion of the body, the person may be placed in\na tub of warm water, which will give great relief\nas an emergency measure."
74934fa7b69bcea27a1d9834ebbc5e26 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1865.83698626966 41.262128 -95.861391 lay npiatform retting on two eroat'be\ntbe officer tbro»t bi* sword urvdev one sitiq^\nand t<K* colored soldier inserted a bayo-\nnet glider tbe other. Tbe roar of mis\ntbat i wic'-iliateiy ro'e told tbat both b«.|-\nonet and sword bad reached their m&gkj\nthe- platform was raited, and Df Uud4\naroas aud returned to his status of a cap*' <\ntive prisoner. lie was immediately hsu't\nto the fort^ and the thumb-screw* applied <\nto him, and uoder the pressure of pais b# f\nacksowledged thnt Kelly, with wboaa uf •;\nhad foric&a an acquamtaocr withia a ire­\nlays, had agretd t.j b- ip him to etoa^.|\non the promise of receiving Mudd's go.J\nwatch. Kelly was iberiupon marched i4\nthe fort, a drum bead douit utarttai heia,\nand be was senuueed to stx years' ic&.\nprmonmeot and bard labor id Tana*\ngas. The vesael then sailed wiihodl\nAfudd or K-Uy, aad tbe papers were for­\nwarded to VV*#biBfijti for cuntrmatioa **\nThe introduetioo of the thut&h-aarw tof»\ntare is one of Ua§ many berbarities of £bs\ndatk sges, rerired by Aholiiioaism. IS\nhas rot been u»ed io any civilised COBB-\ntrv since th*f-Spar,i*h lt.qutsitioa, or ths\ndays of the persecution af the bcoHt«A\nCovenanters. Tbi- tbumb- screw u a asa.\nebine which gradually eruahtt tbe thtuahv\nand ha* always been rfjearded s« the most\nhideous and horrible instrument of tor­\nture ever invented. Altar being execraty\nted and bsniahed from the moat faoaiicaj(|x[\nsnd cruel natioas of tfce old world, it i{| i\nrevived in the United States by the agefitf\nsf the "(iod aod huaMuniiy party" to tor\nture priaunert. it there no limit th*\nhidt^us atrociiita of Aboliuosisa^
6002812ad0581eef9b03f6857b6a2c61 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.8374316623658 43.798358 -73.087921 stantly twist him completely round two or\nthree times, which will confuse him very\nmuch, and completely throw him off his\nguard. The moment you have finished\ntwisting him round, place his head in the\nuun.uuu yuu wisn mm 10 proceed, apply\nwniP two or three times severely\nThe horse perhaps, will not be quite s'atis- -\nfied with the first defeat, but may be dis\nposed to try again for the mastery. Should\nthis be the Case, you have only to twist\nhim, &c. as before, and you will find in\nthe second struggle, he is much more\neasily subdued than on the former occa-\nsion in fact, you will perceive him quail\nunder the operation. It rarely happens\nthat a rearing horse, after having been\ntreated in the way described, will resort to\nhis trick a third time. But in going into\nother hand?, and having another rider, he\nwill be very likely to have recourse to\nrearing. The Sportsman.\nPit of human bones singular\ndiscovery has been made in Canada, about\n1 1 miles from Dundas. The earth was\nseen to be sunk about 15 inches, which\ncaused search to be made: when a large\nnumber of pits, ten or twelve in number,\nwere found, containing human bones, and\nvarious Indian implements, evidently\nshowing that -- not far from two thousand\nIndians had been huddled into these re-\nceptacles, and buried without the least\norder or system, and in great haste.\nLarge trees were growing over some of\nthese sepulchres; the kettles, pots, hatch-\nets, brass spoons, earthern cups, wampum,\n&c, were rotted and decayed, evidently\nshowing that they had been a long time\nburied. One hundred and twenty-fiv- e\nskeletons were found in one of the pits,\nand the developer says' that some of the\nskeletons must have belonged to men as\nmuch as eight feet in height. There is\nprobably some Indian tradition which\nwould throw light and interest on this\neurious hill of human bones.
230bfa1bd245db19e170bed767577b03 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.8534246258243 43.798358 -73.087921 Let us there, while we sdspend all av-\nocations unsuitable to ihe occasion recount\nthe unmeasured kindness of our Heaven-\nly Father; thank Him for tlu1 health so\npenerally prevalent; that no devastating\nsickness has visited us ; that amid the\nmultipled acts of His kindness he has sig-\nnally blessed us with a orovernment of or-\nder and of laws, depending upon the mor-\nal sense and power of the people for its\nsupport and continuance, and securing to\nus the quiet enjoyment of civil rights and\nreligious fieecbm. And while we thus\nrender thanks, let us not foroet. that to\nthe smiles of His countenance we are in-\ndebted for all our social, civil and reli-\ngious privileges ; that it was His guar-\ndian care that upheld us in the infancy of\nour national existence, that hath protected\nus fiom those storms and tempests which\nhave convulsed and overthrown other na-\ntions, and that His ovei ruling providence\nalone h.is preserved us, thus from se\nrious divisions and internal commotions.\nIt behoves us to thank God for the\nmeans afforded, through our svstem of ed-\nucation, for transmitting to those who suc-\nceed us the true princ iples of good gov-\nernment. Let us pray for those having\ncharge of our schools and seminaries of\nlearning, that they may rightfully appre-\nciate the responsibility of their stations,\nand so teach, that each succeeding gen-\neration shall be a generation of better men\nand better citizens ; ever remembering,\nthat to them, in a great measure, is com-\nmitted the future destiny of our Republic.\nLet us pray for our beloved country\nfor those who rule over it for all our\nfree itstitutions. That the foul stain of\nslavery may be speedily washed away.\nThat Gob would vouchsafe to extend his\npaternal care, and restrain all the disorder-\nly tumults of .vicked men, and say to the\nnae oi numan passion, "thus Mr snalt\nthou iro and no firtther."
104b29d08ce1adcba186ee15b83af349 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.9630136669202 31.960991 -90.983994 til the walls were destroyed. Tiie streets of\nMonterey were not only raked and enfiladed by\nartillery planted in redoubts and fortified houses,\nbut bariicades of masonry were also erected\nacross the streets leading to Hre Plaza, by which\nthe advance of the assailants nûgîit h» stopped,\nwhile at every moment, vollie*-* nf musketry could\nhe poured from the top« of thp hou«es on Imth\nsides by men concealed behind parapets.\nThe mode adopted of penetrating through the\nhouses on both sides of the streets, by making\nholes in tiie interior partiMm walls and thus gai­\nning possession of the adjoining houses succes­\nsively, rendered the street defences of the Mexi-\nenns wholly useless. In addition to the advan­\ntages secured by thus advancing under cover,\nfie American rifle, in he hands of such men as\n Texan rangers qnd the Western volunteers,\nwas a more efficient weapon in such a contest\nas this than any which the assailants of Saragos­\nsa possessed. The rifle used as it can be used\nby Americans only, is in fact a weapon which\nmust give superiority tu our arms against any\nfoe, in any kind of battle in which it can be effi­\nciently employed. It is usual to read, in the ac­\ncounts of battles, of troops being under fire for\nhours with an aggregate loss in the end so small\nas to?$; almost incredible. Now it is not pos­\nsible for columns «>f men to he exposed to the\nfire of American riflemen, even for a short time,\nw ithout great loss—because every riflemen is a\nmarksman, and no marksman shoots without\nsingling his man.— Balt. American.
03a21eacc99746f20bea336c3bfa152b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.6068492833588 42.217817 -85.891125 (A) Ita Purpose. We find iu this discourse\na rule of life. Tho Sermon on tho Mount is\nnot a codo, to ha analyzed and exhibited as a\ndry lifrt of enactments; it is legislation ready\nto bo incarnated in a living man. It is a thing\nto bo acted and breathed as well as read and\nquoted. Jesus of Nazareth lived his wonder-l- u l\ndiscourse. Nobody else ever did. Put ho\nput it forth to bo lived by everybody under\ntho New Testament dispensation. We finL\nhere likewise a standard of spiritual and ej?\nperimental attainment To bo reached? No,\nafter steadiest and most prayerful study we\naro forced to the conclusion that tho standard\nis exhibited in order to let us know we cannot\nreach it; that is, to show us what it is that\nGod demands of all his creatures which fall-\nen men and women cannot poesibly ihieot\nHence, it would seem as if its purpose nust\nhave been to convince every human being of\nsin hopelessly: "Now wo know that what\nthings soever tho law saith, it saith to them\nwho are under tho law: that every mouth\nr.iay bo stopped, and all tho world may be-\ncome guilty le fore God" (liobiiifcon. )\n"; Lomparcd wU tie Lax?. Tho most care-\nless reader hae probably been struck with tho\ncontrast between the delivery of the sermou\nand tho delivery of the on Sinai. Wc\nthink of that as a "fiery law," whoso promul-\ngation is surrounded by tho imagery of thun-\nders and lightnings and the voice of tho trum-\npet sounding long and wax'ng louder and\nlouder. We think of this as flowing forth in\ndivinest music, and all the calm and loveli-\nness of the clear and quiet dawn. That came\ndreadfully to the fetartled conscience from an\nunseen presence, shrouded by wreathing\nclouds and destroying firo and eddving\nsmoke; this was uttered by a sweet human\nvoice t!iat moved the heart most gently in\nwords of peace. (Farrar.) Jesus had two\nobjects in this "Sermon on tho Mount;" first,\nto correct the misrepresentations of his ene-\nmies, who thought him an opposer of the\nMosaic law, and, secondly, to correct the\nworldly notions which the people held with\nregard to the nature of the Messiah's kingdom.\nThe ono muM learn that tho kingdom of God\nwas a spiritual kingdom, not a kingdom of\nearthly pomp and splendor; tho other must\nlearn that the righteousness which the law re-\nquired was not tho outward service of rite\nand forms, but the inward service of the\nheart Tho proclamation of himself as atoJ-in- g\nSavior finds almost no place in the Ser-\nmon on tho Mount, and appears only at a\nlater period of Jesus' ministry, when the peo-\nple were better prepared to receive it
1548129998639dd1f4bca7dc17888cfe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.596994503896 40.063962 -80.720915 "Tho Indebtedness now stands $41000;\nbonds payable at the rate of 52,000 a\nyear; 515.000 second mortgage, 57.500 of\nwhich Is now due, and 52.000 In small\ndebts. We have no outstanding notes\nand no bills due us. The Inducement\nMr. Speldel offered me wfcvfi he cam-\nto me with his mill for sale, was that\nhe would take JHO.OOO himself, but his\nassociates wouJd not take any stock.\nAfter the thing progressed, he decid¬\ned lie would only take 520.000, which he\ndivided equally between Wheat. Simp¬\nson, Stlfel and himself. Mr. Hackett\nand myself subscribed st like amount,\nmaking the cash paid In. 5G0.000 .\n"Mr. Dunbar says the Wheeling\nstockholders would have put In more\nmoney had we done so. Here M«r. Dun¬\nbar has been misinformed. They posi¬\ntively and repeatedly refused, and I\ncould nut afford to see the dealers \nsupplied us with materials Jose tl*"ir\nmoney, knowing very well that the\nproperty was plenty good enough to\npay off all the mortgages.\n"We spent 534.000 In repairs and Im¬\nprovements. and $21,500 in paying off\nbonds and tax. of which $37,000\ncame from Mr. Hackett and myself.\nThe property Is easily worth 5140,000\nin any kind of prosperous times, leav¬\ning $$2,000 more than the liabilities.\nNow about the meeting that Dunbar\nsays I refused to attend. The meeting\nwas changed once or twice by the\nWheeling stockholders, finally by Mr.\nHackett In a letter written by Mr.\nSpauldlng, dated Thursday and eaJling\nthe meeting Tuesday, at Wheeling.\nThe letter was written III Pittsburgh\nand addressed to SpeWel. Mr. Spauld¬\nlng notified me personally of the\ncl>ange. That Is the reason I was not\nat the meeting. I did not know of it."
77e2c5586312f99918578539b32c8cd2 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.0123287354136 38.951883 -92.333737 loading The instant there is no further\nneed for a piece of equipment it is taken\ndown to the runs to await its turn to\nbe loaded The first thing down is the\ncook top There is no further use for it\nafter the early sapper However it is the\nlast loaded because it must be the first\ntent off the train After the main at\ntraction in the big top is well under\nway and the crowd has deserted the rte\nnagerie top and tents covering side\nrtiow attractions they are dismantled\nThe process of loading a circus train\nis vycII worm watching Inclines or\nruns are placed at the end of a string\nof flat cars The pull up teams haul\nthem along to their places Iron ways\nre placed between the cars to a\ncontinuous path A large circus train\nusually travels in four or more sections\nAccording to the Columbian who told\nthese facts he has seen Ringling Broth\ners circus give a complete evening per ¬\nformance and have the train ready to\niill out at 1210 oclock Such speed it\naccomplished onlr with an organization\ntrained and disciplined like an armv\nWhen the Barnum show first went to\nGermany the Germans marveled at the\nsstem of loading used and army officers\nwere detailed with the show during its\nentire stay to learn it thotoughly Thej\napplied the methods they learned in\nthis way to military transportation es-\npecially in the case of artillery and their\nspeed in the great war with this branch\nwas largely due to the lessons learned\nfrom the American circus
5af6947783d5b456dea3c23e02cfe06c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.8315068176053 43.798358 -73.087921 Who that has stood by the side of some\nquiet and lovely stream, accompanied per-\nhaps by hundreds of spectators, gazing\nwith intense interest upon the minister of\nGod as he descends into the water, con-\nducting some recently converted sinner,\nperhaps a youthful form, upon whose\nbrow reposes the serenity of a newly\nawakened bliss, and who is thus willing\nfollow ihe footsteps of the flock' who\nthat has witnessed such a scene has not\nfelt that baptism is a holy thing V It is\nthe day of rest, the morning of the Sab-\nbath. All around is hushed. A breath-\nless attention pervades that vast assem-\nblage. The temple in which they wor-\nship is that of Nature, the canopy of\nwhich is formed by the blue sky reposing\nfar above their heads. The echoes of\ntheir hymn of hath died among\nthe hills, the presence of God has been\ninvoked, and it is felt to be there, above\nthem, around them, and within them.\nThe minister and candidate have gained\nthe middle of the stream, and after a pause,\nthe solemn words of inspiration are pro-\nnounced " I baptize thee in the name of\nthe Father, of the Son, and of the Holy\nuhost, the wa'.ers are parted by the body\nof the candidate, which sinks into the liquid\ngrave, is lost for a moment to the sight,\nand then again emerges into thcjflight of\nday. A crowd of thoughts and feelings,\nlong buried in the &oul, rushes upon the\nminds of the spectators, and the tears glis-\nten in many eyes. The baptized is filled\nwith a holy joy, and he perhaps joins in\nthe SOnc of thanlrRo-Itrlnf-
5dee43de8ee7fde1cd833297abdf0848 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.2205479134957 40.063962 -80.720915 to the reorganization was that all the I\nurge runway luieruaia tmuum unvu 1.4U01\nnterestj. The oil directors wer to go i\n>ut voluntarily. Witness suggested that I\nI thero should bo soy trouble In getting\nbe old bourd to give way, that he should <\nrocuro the repeal ol the classification t\nill, and not an order for a new election, (\nI10 members of tho Legislature being 1\nriendly to any plan lor the benefit of <\nIrio. It was agreed that Duncan should 1\n0 to Europe In furtherance of this 1\nIan, and it McHenry and Bischoff- t\nrheim refused their cooperation the 1\nrrangement was still to bo carried out. (\nWitness first communicated with Lane on «\nlis subject, alter Lane had expressed his t\nlllingncss to resign, and to aid in pro- \ntiring other resignations. Lano subsc- I\nucntly said that a conspiracy had been\nirmed, and that most ol the directors had t\neen bought up, aud they were only wait- 1\nig for lunds irom Englond. I think, t\nild tho witness, he tojd mo $30,000. s\n' as the prlco ol tbo dlllorent directors, r\nod I believo he mentioned George C. t\n[all and Justin D. White as among them,\nimons was to receive $50,000, and White 0\n25,000. liamsdell, he said, was the I\njgest man lie had to bargain with. Sis- i\ninn name was also mentioned^ Gould I\nlen described the sccnes on that day i\nad night of the revolution in the Erie t\nlompany. The witness knew nothing i\neraonally, ol money having been paid to s\n10 directors lor resigning, but
1abddf51d93abfbae49384993c959690 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.3986301052764 58.275556 -134.3925 The new Tolovana placer camp is to\nhave wireless connection within a very\nshort time, as Falcon Joslin has sent\nhis plant to that place. The plant has\nbeen iu Alaska for a number of years,\nhaving first been installed when the\nIditarod was struck. Failing to pay\nthere it was started for Chisann, but\nbefore being started up the Tanana\nriver news was received of a discout ag¬\ning nature and the project was dropped.\nSome weeks ago a report was sent out\nfrom the Chisaua district, iu which it\nwas stated that Dry creek had been\nfound to coutain a rich pay streak. The\nnews was 6ent to all parts of the terri\ntory and uow the report has come to\nCordova that the gulch was nalted and\nthat no pay streak exists. The resi¬\ndents of the interior placer camp\n the sending out of false news,\nclaiming that they have a good camp\nand »hat lying and salting will not aid\nthe men who are really working to open\nthe claims and are willing to expend\ntime and mouey ou them.\nBusiness men of Ketchikan, Alaska,\nhave recently applied to the bead of¬\nfices of the Grand Trunk Railway com¬\npany for terminal rates at Ketchikan.\nIf this concession is made it practically\nmeans the Grand Trunk system will\ncarry halibut from Ketchikan to any\npoint on the continent for the same\nrate charged from Prince Rupert. It\nthe Grand Truuk system will grant\nKetchikan terminal rates aud oonsider\nation is shown the fishermen in the way\nof prices on ice and supplies, it is pos\neible a part of the halibut fleet will\nmake Ketchikau the home port.. Pacific\nFisherman.
0ef59bb4421d61f00309e868ebc60c3c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8342465436326 40.063962 -80.720915 tue of a'deedof trust executed to the]J\nmoderst/ned trosteo, by John W. Mitchell,\nII. Grace Mitchell, hla wife, and Geo. T . Tim\nTrotee of the aald H. Grtce Mitchell, bear\noate thu 14th day of August, 1800, and or\nord in the office of the Recorder or Ohio Co\nty, iu the State of Weal Virginia, in Deed »\nNo M, folio* 861 and 983, to secure tho perra\nof three several prommUaory notes drawn by\nsaid John W. Mitchell, for tho aura or aix th\nsand dollar*, principal.debt; which said sen\npromissory notes are each dated at Wheel!\nAugn-1 JUth, (669, and aro all payable two\nmouths after date, to the order or the said Jc\nW. Mitchell, and are by him endorsed negotia\nand payable at the Peoples' Bank of Wheel!\nvalue received, with Intercut from date at the r\nof »ix per centum per annum; also, to sec\nthe payment or any other note or notes wh\nmay be thereafter given by of renewal of,\nIn part satisfaction of or in lieu of any of\nabove named promiscory notes, 1 will, ou\nTuesday, the 15th Day of Xovember, 187C\nproceed to sell, at public auction, to tho high\namlitxst bidder. -at the fruut door or the Co\nHouse of ssid County, beginning at 10 o'clo\na. it. , the following described property, that li\nsay, the tract or parcel of land lying and be\nIn Ohio County, West Virginia, bounded and\nscrlbod as follows, via: Beginning at a stake\nthe bank of lbs Ohio Itivcr. corner to 'land*\nlotted to Anna Martha A'oods, and with her li\nli. ttltf dog. o . 66 00*100 polei*; s. 19# dog.\n49 90-100 pole*; s. 70 deg. e . 07 61*100 poles to\noriginal line of the Keagor tract, now a line\nHooert Marshall. and with said line a. 80 dog.\n8i 6*100 p iles to a stake; tbcuce n. 70 deg.\n69 10-100polo* to a stake; n. Si# dog. e. 19 9
0e170e2268f2ace6ff01412bc30867f3 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1898.015068461441 41.004121 -76.453816 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1898,\nat 2 o'clock In the afternoon, all that certain\nmessuage, tenement and tract of land situate In\nthe Township of Catawissa, Columbia County,\nar.d State of Pennsylvania, bounded and des-\ncribed as follows, to-wlt:\nBeginning at a mark on the fence, tbence\nsouth sixteen and one-half degrees west, nine-\nteen and one-half perches along paper millto a\nchestnut; thence south twenty-live degrees\nwest, eight perches to a stake; thenoe south\nnineteen degrees west, six aud one-tenth\nperches to a stake; thence south forty-three\ndegrees west, nine aud one-half perches to a\ncorner cf foundry lot land of Ueorge Ilughes;\nthence along said lotsouth seven and one-half\ndegrees west, seventeen perches to a pine!\nthence south tlfty-flve and one-half degrees\nwest, twelve and two-tenths perches to a post\nInline of land of Jonathan Partner; thence\nalong said land of Jonathan Fortner south Ave\ndegrees west, thirty-three perches to a stono\nheap; thence along land of Moses Hower and\nothers south thirty-nine and one-half degrees\ncast, forty-three perches to a maple tree; thence\nalong land of MUCB and Daniel Uelwtg north\nsixty degrees east, one and nineteen\nperches to a post; thence along land of some\nnorth nineteen deg; ecs west, ninety perches to\ncorner on public road; thence along said road\nnorth eighty-one degrees east, thirteen perches;\nthence by same and a private road north eighty-\nthree degrees east, sixty-four perches to post In\nmiddle of a run; thenco down the middle of\nsaid run lu Its various courses and windings\nalong land of Solomon Helwlg thirty-eight\nperches to an aspen asli; thence along land Of\nHenry HoUlngsUead north tbtrty-ave degrees\nwest, twenty-Ore perches to a stake; thence\nalong the line of Philadelphia and Heading\nHallroad south sixty-four and one-halt degrees\nwest, twenty-three perches to a state; thence\nflfty-slx degrees west, twelve perches to a\nstake; thence south forty-eight degrees west,\ntwelve perches to a stake; thenco south forty-\nflve and one-halt degrees west, thlrty-slx\nperches to a stake; thencesouthjflfty-three and\nthree-quarter degrees west, fourteen perches\nto a stake; thence south sixty degrees west\nten perches to a stake; thence south sixty-five\nand one-half degrees west, thirteen and nine-\ntenth perches to a mark on the fence, place of\nbeginning, containing
23f3b5578cbdcaa04afe4824793e5266 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.8671232559614 40.832421 -115.763123 Tho Tinet-Rericie, of last Friday,\ncharges mo with having left Tuscarora\niu a surreptitious manner, for the pur-\nposo of avoiding payment of debts con¬\ntracted during my brief stay in that\nplace, and with having taken away with\niuo garments belonging to parties from\nwhom I had them to rrpair. It also\npublishes what purports to bo ft com¬\nmunication from a citizen of thla place,\nel-urging that on my late departure from\nl.lko my debts lu re were left unsettled.\nThat I left somo saall unpaid bills iu\nTuscarora is true, fur (ho reason that I\nbad not tho means to settlo them. 1\ndid work enough, l.ct most of it was for\nminers at the Uranl Prize, aud as that\ncompany failed to pay them they failed\nto pay me, saying " everybody must\nbear their shuro of Ibo general loss."\nThat myself aud *ife, with what few\nthings wo had, left in a common freight\nwagon is also true, hut that w as only\nbicausn wo had not tho means scctiro\na more cinfortablo conveyance, and not\nfor tho purpose of avoiding my creditors.\nThere was no niteiupt at sccrosy in our\nmovements, nor was there any occasion\nfor it. What few gnrmcnts reinafned\nif my possession i.t (he (imo of my\nib parturo were b it at tho drug atoro for\ntbo parties to whom they belonged, nud\nwcro not carrid away, as represented.\nTbo statement (hat our child's death\nwas tho result us much of neglect as\ndisease, is as falso n» it is cruel; nor\nhave wo over felt tho least unfriend¬\nliness toward the country we linve made\nour home, ns (bo article iu question\nwould mako it appear; and, finally, tbo\nfact that I have aglin engaged in my\nbusiness in Elko, is n sufficient refuta¬\ntion of tho chargo that I attempted to\ndefraud my cmlitoii hero. My uiovo\nto Tuscarora was a disastrous on o, but\nas the amounts I owe ore small 1 hopo\nsoon to bo ablo to liquidate tbo lust ono\nof Ibom.
10179a33ebfa0bf57546896abca2aabf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.2315068176054 39.745947 -75.546589 EASTON. Md . . March 26.— T he Dela­\nware Conference of the M. E. Church,\nooli-Tt d, met in Asbury Church here\nyesterday In charge cf Bishop W. X .\nNlnde, cf Detroit, Mbit. J . H . Scott,\nof Newark, N. J., in secretary; J. H .\nRichard eon, of Philadelphia, etatlsti-\ncal secretary, and C. A. Tlnaeley, of\nFairmount, Md., treaaurer. This con­\nference embracer all the oolored\nchurches in Delaware, New .Jersey,\nEastern Pennsylvania and the Eastern\nShore of Maryland ami Virginia, that\nare under white bisher t. It his over\n20,000 members and $;ti*2.000 inverted In\nchurc h property. The seoalcn will con­\ntinue until Monday.\nThe presiding elders report will not\nbe as lull as last year owing to the\nstringency of the times, but a good\nshowing is expected on ail lines. Great\nInterest is manifest!.I In il>> appoint­\nments, Many changes are to be made,\nand. saya a presiding elder, "Disap­\npointments are on hand."\nThe official visitor« are Dr. Manon,\ncf the Freedmans Aid Society: Dr. A.\nJ. Palmer, of the Missionary Society;\nDr. M . 8. Hand, of the Church Exten­\nsion Society, und Dr. Wagner, of Mor­\ngan Rev. Dr. Mann, of the\nMethodist Episcopal book concern; Dr.\nPalmer, of the Missionary Society ;Pro­\nfessor Garland Penn, of the Epworth\nU'ugiu*, iiipd Dr. Brooks, ttf the New\nYin k Oonijft rente, addressed the con­\nference yastmlay morning. D. A. Riil-\nout, W. C. Jackson and J. H. Nutter\nwere appointed assistant secretHricn;\n(. 8. 8prIggr, J. W. Bond und W. F.\nCotton, assistants to the statistical sec­\nretary: J. R . Brown, C. W . Pullett, H.\nS. Johitscu, T. B. Snowden, assistants\nto the treasurer.\nThe chairmen of the standing com­\nmitters are: Missions, G. H. Washing­\nton; Sunday schools. ,1. H . Blake; tem-\npwamee, J. W . W. Oox; educational, W.\nC. Juron: Bllhlft and tract, M. H . Hor­\nsey; state uf the church, W. J. Moore;\nprrlodiciiils, E. H . Webb; Sabbath, G.\nH. Washington; mmvolrs, W. C . Dick-\niimon'; (durch cxLnalcn, J. H . Win­\nters; Freedman« Aid, J. E. Webb; reso­\nlution«. W. C. Dickerson; ministerlall\nqua.ilflcut.lons, M. P . Horsey; conter-\nt.ncti relations, J. H. Pearce.\nA statistical seaslcn was hold yester­\nday afternoon, when flnan.ial reports\nwere received. There reports Indicate\nthat hard times have afTacul'the sal-
14817b08aef9227550b9298d35770a8b PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.5696720995245 40.441694 -79.990086 $2 C02 50. Sheep and lambs Beceipts, 3,558\nhead. Market firm. Sheep, $3 005 K) $ 100\nSs: lambs, $5 757 00; dressed mutton\nsteady: dressed iambs weak at 9llc. Hogs\nBeceipts, 4 ,960 head, including three lor\nsales. Market firm, $5 506 35 fl 100 Bs.\nKansas City Cattle Beceipts, 5,000; ship-\nments, 3,000. Steers were active and strong\nto 10c higher at $3 255 CO; cows, 1015c\nhigher at $1 355 00; feeders quiet; Texas\nsteers, 10c higher at $2 253 05. Hogs Be-\nceipts, 8,200; shipments, none: tho market\nwas active and 510o higher; all grades, $5 40\n5 95; bulk, $5 705 90. Sheep Receipts.\n9,000; shipments, 200; the good sheop were\nwanted and strong; others neglected and\nweak; muttons, $1 50.\nSt. Loul Cattle Beceipts 7,000 head; ship-\nments, 7,000 market 10c higher on good\ngrades, teady on others, some Kansas fed\nTexas, $( 40: Indians, $3 80: fair to good\nTexas, 2 403 50; canners, $1 252 30. Hogs\nBeceipts, 2 ,300 head; shipments, 200 head:\nmarket 10c highenhcavy fair tocholco.$5 80\n6 05: mixed medium to good, $5 50Q6 00; fair\nto best, $5 705 90. Sheep lieceipttv 1,600\nhead: shipments, 2,000 head; market strong;\nfair to gocd native muttons, $4 C05 25.\nCincinnati Hogs strong; common and\nlight. $5 0OQ5 90; packing and butchers',\n$5 606 00: receipts, 1 .740 head: shipments,\nL180 bead. Cattle firm at $2 00Q4 60; re-\nceipts, 100 head: shipments, 240 lieau. Sheep\nsteadyat $3 005 00; receipts, 6,400 head; ship-\nments, 2,200 head. Lambs strong: common\nto choice spring, $3 506 75 per 100 pounds.\nBnff.ilo
113d3fc0810c6d2981f0fd6d9f78eb55 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.9356164066464 39.745947 -75.546589 There were eight bidders, and moat\nof the bids were well within the limit\nof cost allowed by congress for the\nships. The notable feature was the at­\ntempt on the part of the younger ac.l\nsmaller concerns to break the line of\nthe old organizations which have con­\nstructed nil of the heavy vessels of the\nnew navy up to this time. While It Is\nnot passible at this moment to fore­\ncast results accurately, there are In­\ndications that In at least one Instance,\nand perhaps two Instances, these at­\ntempts will he attended with some de­\ngree of success, for it looks as though\nsome of the work will be bestowed\nupon the Fore River company, which\nappears for the first time as a bidder\nfor constructing armored ships.\nThe Pacific coast, too, presents a\nlikely candidate In the Morans bid.\nBecause of changes made in the speci­\nfications by the bidders, the general\ntendency of which is to reduce con­\nsiderably the equipment of the ships,\nit is not possible yet to tell which of\nthe bids are actually the lowest.\nThe bids for armored cruisers are;\nUnion works. San Francisco: One\nsheathed coppered, $3,800 ,000; oue\nwithout sheathing, $3.760,000; another\nunder the same conditions, $3,750,000 ,\nmaking two in nil.\nWilliam Cramp Æ Sons, Philadel­\nphia: One sheathed, but uncoppered,\n$3,890,000; one unsheathed, $3,780 ,000.\nNewport News Shipbuilding and\nDrydock company: One sheathed and\ncoppered. $3,886 ,000; one without\nehnathlnc. $3,775,000, this for two ships.\nMoran Brothers & Co., of Seattle,\nWash.: One sheathed and coppered,\n$4,132 .000, or two at $4.008.000 each;\none without sheathing, $3,963.000, or\ntwo at $3,844,000 each.\nFore River Shipbuilding and Loco­\nmotive works. Quincy, Mass.: One\nsheathed and coppered, $3,976.000 , or\ntwo at $3,950,000 each; without sheath­\ning, one for $3,800,000, or two at $3,776 , -\n000 each. The same bid also is made\nfor two more ships at the same price\nand under the same conditions, under\nthe act of 1900. Moran Brothers &\nCo. made similar propositions.\nJohn H. Dialogue & Son, Camden, N.\nJ.: One unsheathed. $3.825,000; another\nunder the act of 1900 at the same price.\nRisdon Iron and lavcomotlve works,\nSan Francisco: One without sheath­\ning. $4.076,000.\nBids for battleships;\nCramp & Sons: One sheathed and\ncoppered, $3,600 ,000.\nNewport News
1bbeff8dd086f3d044719f9746b4cdaf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.1653005148248 40.063962 -80.720915 The history of* Religion has been j\ncsnstant fear; tho history of Science hai\nbeen a constant hope and trust. We cat\nnot go back to the time when religioui\nmen were not apprehensive lest any new\nlight of knowledge might in some way hi\nharmful to Religion. Every step of tin\nonward inarch of Science, na Dr. Drnpei\nhi* ithown in his volumo on "Tho Con\nflict Net ween Scionco nnd Religion," an<\nt« President White has shown, perhnp\nbetter still, in articles in the Februnr;\n»nd March numbers of the Seiencc Monthly;\nhai been made in tho tcoth of oppositioi\nfrom religious men. Physical Geography\nAstronomy, Chemistry and Physics, Ana\ntomy, and Medicine, Geology, Meteor\nology, Cartography, industrial and Agri\ncultural Science, Political K«onomy an\nSjcial Science, and scientific educr\nlion, havo all had to light the!\nwapr against powerful^ and persistent n\nligious opposition. What was tho \nof thin opposition ? It wan not that ther\nIs anything in Scionco that is nece.<saril\nanti-religious. It wai simply the fait!\nie«nc»s of religious men. J list that. Th\nmen who opposed science and every ii\ncoming of new Tcnowlodgo lacked tin\ntruo and largo faith which tho scientifi\nmen havo as a rule all tho whilo had, thr\nhigh and holy faith which sees truth an\ngoodness to ho inseparable, and whic\nbelierea that ilo who planned all thing\nlui forbidden any earnest search afte\nknowledge to lead to lasting evH. Th\nreligious teachers who havo lw»oa.(oreve\nbarging tho teachers of Scionco wit\nikepticlsm have thomaelvca been tli\n'keptici, in that they havo not beliove*\n11 tho scientist* as a class havo believe)\nthat thero is "a Power in the univcrf\nurong enotigb, largo enough, good onougl\nto make thorough search for truth sal\nIn every lino of investigation."
109ba784132ac09afdea991dcf485cdb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.6863013381533 39.745947 -75.546589 By an acknowledgement of this fact I can by no\nmeans, however, acknowledge an error concerning my\nposition on Koelble. I was not present, to be sure, when\nKoelble landed, but neither were you. While I have a\ngreat respect for reporters and number some of my best\nfriends among them, I nevertheless believe that even\nreporters make mistakes, as we all do. and that reports\nwhich were correct may at times change their form when\nthey go to the press, I well remember an article In the\nSaturday Evening Post a few years ago, which described\nin detail how easily a reporter may make a mistake.\nThe history of New York newspapers has been one that\nwill bear out this assertion. The reports of special cor­\nrespondents. no less ihsn those of men who reported\nmeetings which were held In the Interest of America,\nhave oftentimes been incorrect. For me Koelhles denial\nof the attitude he is supposed to have taken Is sufficient.\nYour editorial on the subject opens a large field. By\ndefending Koelble I never intended defending the atti­\ntude was supposed to have taken. Our position on\nthe Lusitania and Arabic has been that of many promi­\nnent Americans, and appeared in the Sunday Star.\nAs for German-Amerlcans. you as well ns all others\nIn our community may rest assured that we are Ameri­\ncans first and that we know but one flag, the Stars and\nStripes. Our whole history proves this. Defending Ger­\nmany in her battle for existence does not imply that wo\n, *>e disloyal to our own country. No more so than your\nopen championship of the cause of the Allies. I have\ntaken an active part in what you choose to term the Ger­\nman propaganda, but it has been merely a propaganda\nof defense, as all of the German-Amerlcan work was.\nThere have been no threats, such as appeared in Italian\npapers shortly after the war broke out between Italy\nand Austria. In fact, we have restricted ourselves to\nwaging a legitimate contest In our news-journals, ask­\ning for no sympathy, but fair play only. If we can be\nconvinced of our error we will gladly retract.
460507996763ab5e75148231c9e52f44 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.201369831304 37.561813 -75.84108 would properly demand the restoration\nof tnilv civil, covernmeiit. and not to\ngive it to the lately rebellious States\nwould be an admission. of the failure\nof the party which had carried through\nthe war to urove themselves eaual to\nthe cxigenay. Now that the work of\ndestruction was over, and tho rebuild- -\nIng had begun, military government\nalone would not pacify the South. At\nthe end of a long period of such gov- -\nernment, we would be no nearer, and\nprobably not so near the. end as now,\nand we should have the same work to\ndo. Ilenco there is a real necessity for\nthe adoption of a policy which should\nrestore the civil (Jovernment Just as\nsoon as tho rebellion should be\nthoroughly ended, and those condi-\ntions accepted by the South, which\nwere, to be regarded as absolutely nec-\nessary to the peace of the country.\nThe proper 'system of pacification\nshould be one which tended every-\nwhere to stimulate the loyalty of the\nSouth, rather than to impose upon\nthem laws and conditions, by direct\nexternal force. Thus in the case of the\nrreedmen's Bureau ho was not against\nthe idea of tho Bureau in toto, for he\nhad used it and was still using it. It\nmight continue for a period of more\nthan a year, yet he had contemplated\nthat either by a proclamation of his\nown, or by some action of Congress,\ntho condition of the technical\nend of rebellion, would probably be\ndeclared at some period not very re-\nmote, and as he understood the present\nlaw, the Bureau might continue a year\nfrom that time. Meanwhile, he could\nsay to tho South, it depends upon your-\nselves to say whether the Bureau .shall\nbe discontinued at nn earlier day, for\nI Will put an endtoitjust assoon as\nyou make it unnecessary for the pro-\ntection of the frecdmen. Thus, the\nhope of getting rid of the Institution\nstimulates them to do right, whilst\nthey are not discouraged by tho idea\nthat there is no hope of an end to what\nthey regard as a sort of military gov-\nernment. If, on the other hand, the\nbureau were made permanent by legis-\nlation, all the objections he had urged\nin his message applied In full force to\nit, and instead of encouraging the\nSouth to loyalty It would tend to make\ntheir hatred of the Government in-\nveterate. The same principle of stim-\nulating loyalty was shown in the man-\nner he had held martial law over them.\nWhenever they should show that mar-\ntial law was not heeded, It should be\nremoved. Tneir own conduct would\nthus determine the matter, and the de-\nsire and interest of all the bes t-p eopl- e\nbo increased to obey the laws, because,\nby Bo doing, they would hasten the\nwithdrawal and interference of the\nmilitary arm in their affairs.
13e47e6e0a5d518035772b37cf7f98ef EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2589040778792 39.745947 -75.546589 With the arrival of additional your very kind offer, nnd assure you\nequipment for the National Guard that I shall be very glad to cull on\ntroops and the payment of the men you for your assistance in assembling\nfor the home guard duty thus far per- this Information,\nformed, tho fact that the men are in\nFederal service has been impressed\nmore than ever upon the citizens.\nCaptain Guthrie, of Fort DuPont, dis­\ntributed the wages for the men for\ntho two weeks they have been sub­\nject to the War Department.\nThe new equipment consists mainly\nof ponchos and tents. The ponchos\narc for the rookies who may Join the\nbattalion and the tents will he used\nwhere field duty requires them. Sol­\ndiers now guarding the Baltimore and\nOhio railroad brKlge across the Bran­\n creek and the Van Buren\nstreet structure across the same\nstream have tents for their accommo\ndation. It is expected that now tents\nhave arrived additional men may he\nsent to guard railroad bridges in the\nthinly settled sections of (ho Stale.\nThe guardsmen are not waiting for\nspecific orders to gel into proper war\ncondition and loedt out for property of\nthe Stale, but are being put through a\n"course of sprouts” to harden them,\nand export to be ready for any call\nthat may come at any time. Every\nday, undvr the direction of Corporal\nSteck, the rookies are taken over\nWashington street bridge lo the Bran­\ndywine Paik and' given a thorough\ntraining in marching and the differ­\nent troop movements. There are a\ncouple of squads and make a fine up-
0a0f9aa0f9b4b6d5237e7657d33e81d9 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.3657533929477 41.004121 -76.453816 fmil ntlie.AJn. llutnmAin tho .list\ndny bfAugust lSfll this gentlcmnn wos\narrested by thrca Boldiers at blares!'\ndenco In tlio lower end of Luzcrno\nCounty nnd brought ncross tho county\nUtto, about' ten o'cldck'nt hlght, to tho\ncamp near Denton. Tho day .following\nho was taken by U. Col. Stownrt before\nGen. Cadwalladcr who, perceiving no\nreason f6Tlfoldltig1irm,11lschnrged lilin\nupon par6!o to iippenr when called for,-\nrind lib returned home. IIo wns not\nwanted or called for Until the night be\nfore the October election, when six\ndrunken soldiers nrrcsted blmhgainnt\nhis residence and hurried him across tho\ncounty lino to the canip near Colomnn's.\nThis was la'to In tho nlsrht and tho nr- -\n'thst was mado In arudo'and threaten-- '\nInglnnnncr to tho great disturbance nnd\nalarm of n family. A man named\nStcolo was compelled to drlvo Mr, Ku\nkri's team to tho camp. Mr.;il. Was\nkept nt tho camp two daVs and nights,\nsleeping on tho ground, and was" then\nsent to Harrlsburg by way of Blooms\nburg, under guard. Thus nu additional\nvoter was silenced nt the October elec\ntion. Tho 11 electors of this county,\nfirst nrrcsted, wero incantimo securely\nheld In custody nt Fort Mllllln (savo\nono who died nprisoncr,) nnd n number\nof other citizens (some, of whoso cases'\nyill bo mentioned hereafter) wero also\narrested on tho day of election, or Just\nbefore, and withheld from tho polls,\nTho Managers of the Invasion wero in\nfull prosecution of their enterprise, nnd\nRadicalism "laughed broad" In nil our\nboarders at tho happy progress of\nevents.
4161afaca9934d1a1b1f66e81f3c8e08 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1906.9301369545915 40.114955 -111.654923 A gigantic mining stock swindle\nfrom which Dr J Grant Lyman of\nNew York Is declared to have real\nized 300000 within thirty days was\nuncovered at Goldfield by time arrest-\nof K H Iatlmer his secretary and a\nstatement made by Sheriff Bradley\nthat he has wired Instructions to the\nchief of police at Pasadena Cal to\napprehend Lyman\nClaude Shea a young man from\nnear Reno Nevada was taken to Og-\nden last week suffering from frozen\nfeet He was taken to the hospital-\nfor medical treatment In the hope of\nsaving his feet though the physicians\nwho are caring for hint fear the in\njuries are too serious to be able to\nsave them entirely\nTho Harmony Lutheran church or\ntho Laramlo plain Just organized\nlaving determined to a log\nmooting place on the agreed site\ncalled for volunteers to chop and\nhaul time logs from tho forest In tho\nmountain The response was so\nhearty that tho congregation voted\nunanimously to begin the erection of j\nthe building without further delay\nAugust Trabing ono of the pioneer\nmerchants of Wyoming once mem-\nber of the territorial legislature of\nWyoming member of the board of\ncounty commissioners and mayor of\nLaramie died on the 20th at his home\neast of Laramie of pneumonia\nAbout 150 citizens of Ontario Ore\nheld up a westbound freight train ni\n12 oclock at night and ordered the\nengineer and conductor to switch\nfrom time train four cars of coal The\norder was obeyed and the coal famine\nIn Ontario for a time is settled
2db1a7546b3a5fa71d4768c42a84ae61 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.974043684224 44.939157 -123.033121 The word patriotism, or its Spanish equivalent, appar-\nently does not exist in Mexico. Not long ago General\nMurgia was sent to relieve General Trevino who was hard\npressed by Villa who had him penned up in Chihuahua.\nInstead of going to Trevino's aid, Murgia moved by\nselfishness and a desire to take Trevino's place as com-\nmander of the de facto troops in Chihuahua, stopped\nwith his reinforcements for a whole week only 25 miles\naway from where Trevino was for once putting up a real\nfight, Murgia held back his troops until Trevino was\nwhipped and forced to abandon the town to Villa who\nproceeded to loot it. Just the other day Colonel Coma-dura- n\nwas sent to relieve General Gonzales at Juarez.\nInstead of obeying orders and turning over the command\nto him, Gonzales turned soldiers loose on Comaduran's\nlittle company of 170 men and they were forced to sur-\nrender. Their leader fled across the border to El Paso\nand subsequent events show he did a wise thing. Gon-\nzales made demand on General Bell that the colonel be\nturned over to him. This Bell refused to do saying the\nmatter was a political or civil one and out of his jurisdic-\ntion. General Gonzales then sent word that hereafter\nhe would encourage and aid deserters from the American\narmy in every way. He also asserted that he wanted\nComaduran, so he' could hang him for stealing public\nfunds as he would not waste ammunition on him. All of\nwhich shows the Mexican idea of government and of\npatriotism. The whole and single aim of all Mexican\nleaders seems to be self aggrandizement.
180784d7182bb517ddac9b9aa9c4a6e1 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.732876680619 40.832421 -115.763123 Lojio Bbakcm, Sept. 19. 11 JO r. u .\nTbe President ilird at 10:30 *. u .\nAfter the bulletin waa iuutd at 5:30\ntbU evening, the President continued\nin the aame condition aa during tbe\nafternoon, tbe pulae varying from 103\nto 106, with rather increaaed force and\nrigor. After taking nouriahuient he fell\niuto a quiet aleep for about thirty five\nmiuutes before hia death, and while\naaKep hia pulae rose to 120, and waa\nsomewhat more feeble. At 10:10 be\nawoke, complaining of aevera paid over\ntbe region of the heart, nnd almost in-\natantly became unooutcioua and ceaaing\nto breathe at 10:30. Tbe doctor Baked\ntbe i'reaident if be was feeling uncom¬\nfortable in any way, and tbe I'reaident\nanswered, "Not at all," and shortly\nfell asleep. Dr. lllisa returned to hia\nroom across tbe hall from that occupied\nby the President, and Messts. Swain\nnnd Rockwell remained with tbe Prefci\ndent. About 10:15 o'clock tbe Presi¬\ndent awakened aud remarked to Colonel\n that ho whs suffering great pain,\naud placed bis band over bis heart.\nDr. Ulim waa railed, and when lie en¬\ntered the room be found tbe President\nsubstantially witbont pulse, and tbe\nactiou of tbe heart was almost indis¬\ntinguishable. lie said nt once that tbe\nPresident was dying, and directed Mrs.\nGarfield to l>e called.\nThe President remained in a dying\ncouilition uutil 10:35, when be wus pro¬\nnounced dead. 11c died of some tronble\nof I bo heart supposed to be neuralgia,\nbut that of course is uncertain Qen.\nArthur, aud Secretaries 1. Initio and\nLincoln were notified immediately.\nMcVeagb has just sent tbe following\ntoVico President Arthur: "It becomes\nour painful dutv to inform you of the\ndeath of President Garfield, and to ad¬\nvise you of taking tbe oath of office as\nPresident of tho United States without\ndelay, if it coucnrs with your judgment.\nWe will oe glad if you will come heie\non tho earliest train ta-inorrow morn-\niug."
c952368cf55e0b47b3a851da0becd330 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.5219177765093 43.798358 -73.087921 country and man makes the town,' is true\nin more senses than one. If there was\nnot a constant influx of population from\nthe country into our large cities and vil-\nlages they would soon cease to exist\nowing to natural causes, the population\nof no large city is able to keep its num-\nbers good, without large and constant in-\nfusions of new and vigorous materials\nfrom abroad. Statistical tables, and the\nrecord of births and deaths, with few ex-\nceptions, demonstrate this fact. From the\ncountry, then, must be drawn the supply\nthat fills up the chasm in the natural in.\ncrease of population, as well as gives that\nrapid multiplication in the numbers of our\ncities, numbers that swell the class of eat-\ners, while they diminish in the same ra-\ntio the active producers. Many of these\nwho throng our cities and are\nengaged in manufactories and mechanics,\nbut their industry, though laudable, does\nnot create provisions: the shuttle and the\nadze do not make, they can only purchase\nbeet steaK or saddles ol mutton. In this\noiuie ui iiiiuga u is evicent, mat prices\nmust remain comparatively high ; a heavy\ncrop of small grains may have the effect\nof partially reducing the Drices of wheat\nand flour, and in a still less degree that of\nmeat ; out so long as the proportion of\neaters so rapidly increases on thosfl who\nfurnish the materials for eating, so long\nas the country is depopulated to build up\nour cities and villages just so lono-wil-l\nprices remain high, and till a change\ntakes place in the habits and feeling of\ntrie great mass of the people, the farmer\nmay De sure ol ample remuneration foi\nhis expenditures.
4b1179fcd7697e53faf8957af2bcc9ae DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.760273940893 44.939157 -123.033121 something to do with this increased\nproduction F., S. & II. honestly hopes\nit has. It sincerely believes that it. is\na quarter of wheat lit a dollar a bushel\nthan a bushel ot wheat at a ilollnr a\nhmdicl, and all joking aside, the in-\ncreased production in the northwest due\nto better farming methods comes about\nso slowly that it can have practically\nno influence on the prices In t.ie\nworld's markets. Tuts subscriber is\nsuffering fiom wlmt is known as- an\ningrowing grouch. He is a flat failure\nand he wants everybody to know it. lie\nproclaims his failure by charging ev\nerybody save himself witn contributing\nto that end. There are a number ol\nhim five or six at bast in the north-\nwest; they talk cantankerously about\nthe politicians, yet they do not do \nthing to try to lift and better politics,\nbetter for a man to sell a bushel and\nsubscriber inviting K., H. k II. to send\nhim a free will offering of fifty cents\nyear, and at the same time charging\nhis financial stringency to the fact\nthat the democrats are in power and to\nthe assumption that increased produc-\ntion of crops is responsible for his poor\nlinanclal return. What is he raising '\nIs the price of wheat low I Has butter\nfat dee reused in value) Is corn cheap f\nAre folks giving away tneir hay Una\nanything that the farmer has tn sell\nseriously fallen off l;i price I Yet, these\nT'jey scoff at farm papers, but thev\ndo not listen to tne solid advice of the\nfarmers wao write for these papers.\nThey stir up
2253c45baeccb7b66c4a8fe476fb8a45 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.5630136669204 37.561813 -75.84108 Gen. Sickles and the Freedmen.\nGen. Sickles, addressed a deputation of\nfreedmen, on the Fourth, by congratulating\nthem on the happy change that had been\nmade in their condition during the past\nfew years and by advising them to go to\nwork and cultivate the land, buying real\nestate for themselves when able; lie added;\nYou have to prove as you are trying to\nprove, tnat your race is capable of progress,\nand then you will share, as you will have\nthe right to share, in all that belongs to\ncivilization. And those1 who look with\ndistrust and fear upon your advancement,\nlet me say to them that education to you,\nas to them and to all, is more thun power"\nit is security, it is wealth, it is refinement,\nit is virtue, it is peace. It is useless to tell\nme that Jamaica and Hayti and iSt. Do\nmingo and Martinique prove anything else\nthan tnat tne French, tbe Spaniards and\nthe fail in their colonial adminis\ntration. The United States, Spanish Ameri\nca, Algeria, and the Indies are amplified il\nlustrations of the same historical example.\nAs well might it be said the pale race oi\nMexico and Paraguay and New Grenada\nare unfit for civilization, because their sys-\ntems are in constant ferment and turmoil.\nYou will succeed because yon are Ameri-\ncans. Political events are near at hand\nin which for the first time you will exer-\ncise the high privilege of American citi-\nzens. You must try to discriminate well\nand choose wisely between the good and\nbad examples you see. Remember that in\npolitics as in all things, an even temper\nand a respectful demeanor toward our ad\nversaries detract nothing from the ardor\nof our convictions, nor from the tenacity\nwith which we press our purposes ; equa-\nnimity and courtesy always contribute to\nthe success of our undertakings. Do you\nremember Abraham Lincoln? Cries\n"Yes," "Yes," "Yes."
286d888ed38dc3c04fbd595450e6de3c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.1821917491122 43.798358 -73.087921 me, that his fears are altogether gtoundleai.\nThere certainly has been nothing in any cl\nthe operations of the N. E . S. S. Union to\nawaken them. Perhaps their origin mav\nbe traced to a clause in the first Article of\nits constitution, which is as follows, via :\n" This Society shall be known by the name\nof the New Enchsd Sabbath School Uk-to- c ,\nauxiliary to the American Sunday\nSchool Union," At the time this constitu-\ntion was adopted, this subject was fully dis-\ncussed and the conclusion was, that such\nrelation to the A. S. S. Union would prob-\nably be productive of some adrantage, or tt\nleast would produce no harm. One reason\nwhy that clause was added was, that tt\nwould cost us nothing to sustain the relation,\nexcept to send a copy of our annual report.\nA was, that as we should wish to\nkeep in our Depository a supply of their\npublications, we wish to be able to obtain\nthem on more reasonable terms than we\ncould if not an auxiliary. A third reason,\nwas the fact that the A. S. 3. Union con-\nsists of Baptists a3 welLas other denomina-\ntions, and on that account as well as other;,\nit would be desirable to have the two Un-\nions on such friendly terms as auxiliary-shi- p\npresupposes, and as might be expected\nwhere the same denomination are active in\nboth. Had our denomination withdrawn\nfrom 44 the old body" as the correspondent\nof the Monthly Paper calls it, as they have\nfrom the American Bible Society, (so fax\nas the work of foreign distribution is concern-\ned,) the case would hare been very differ-en- t.\nIf under these circumstances, we had
0292e1107c2df26faebcc034f5048c39 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.3538251049888 40.441694 -79.990086 cost more than $15 000, but they have been\nworth more than $15,000 a year to mankind\nat large ever since. Thoy wore a permanent\ninvestment. It is true that thoy have met\nin some measure tho fate whloh Jntnes\nLick feared might overtake his marble pyra-\nmid; thoy havo been bruised and battered.\nThey havo to bo pieced out by the Imagin-\nation. But they were beautiful. They were\nworks of art. And art is worth while al\nways. I supposo that there were a good\nmany poor people at Halicarnassus In tho\nyear when Mausolus shut his eyes upon the\nlight of tho Greek sky. Artemesia might\nhave invested her money in model tene-\nments or model coffee houses; she might\nhave divided It up amongst her less favored\nneighbors. I will not blame her, however,\nfor putting It into stone rather than Into\nbread. It has done more good.\n Tombstones Should Be Beautiful.\nThere is no valid objection to costly\ntombstones, if only they minister to our\nsenso of beauty, and help us through our\neyes. Man is not all mouth. There is a fig-\nure of an angel in the Allegheny Cemetery\nwhich is worth seeing. Some of the monu-\nments in Westminster Abbey could not well\nbo spared. I am quite sure, however, that\nmy dopartcd friend, who had never been of\nany particular service to the community\nwhile ho lived, will have an ugly stone over\nhis grave which will not be of tho slightest\nservice to anybody now that ho is dead. I\nam sure that he l.ad cxecrablo taste, and I\ngreatly fear that his descendents resemble\nhim in this l cspect. So that it is next to cer-\ntain that this $15,000 monument, which will\ngo np one of these days In one of ourepmo-terie- s,
c807b0bfa151ff202bfb05b6d112f5bf PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.023287639523 31.960991 -90.983994 the Southern and Western States, upward*\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine In over .50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering ihe cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called fhe only certain wo:m de-\nstroying medicine, in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery «ver made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and eveu dçalh, without their\n being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complain'ts without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly eure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most Battering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami-\nJies, and the public generally. Much more might\nhe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey mav be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexea; of ihe vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of\nthe'im potency of most of the preparations wbieh\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
0dfa086fdec911219293ff63c13ea951 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.2589040778792 40.063962 -80.720915 was sick for two years with liver an\nkidney disease, so that I could not sloe\nat night or at any other time. I coi\nsuited n great many doctors and the\nall said the disease was so thorough!\nseated that thoy could not cure me, bi\ncould only give temporary relief. Haviti\nhoard Warner's Sato Cure reepmmon\noil, 1 resolved to give it a trial, and di\nbo. Tho rosult was, that 1 improve\nrapidly, and was soon coniplololy curoi\nI have novcr had any return of m\ntrouble and know that this great reuii\ndy actually saved my life."\nMrs. II. G. X'. Carnos, who is ono <\ntho best known Indies in liutler, Pa\nsays: "I livod at Turkey City, Clario\ncounty, Pn., eomo eight yonra ago, nnd\nwas under tho doctor's caro lor thn\nyears, a constant sufferer from foma\nweakness in tho tpost aggravated forr\nI could not ovon take euro of mv infan\nMedicine mo no good and my nigl\nsweats would make mo so cold and sti\nand my Biill'oring was no groat thut\ntimes I felt tlmt death would bo\nroliof. Warner's Safe Ctiro was recot\ninondod to mo by the druggist in Voter\nburg. Without any conlidonco 1 cor\nmonced using it and was astonished i\ntho marvelous change it made, ovon b\nfore I had llnlshod ono kottlo. I ni\nnow fooling woll and strong and nlilo\nattend to all my domestic duties."\nTheso ladios speak from oxporlom\nand their testimony is beyond questio\nIt clearly provos that as a moai\nof relieving those distressing con\nplaints train which so many woiik\nsutler, nothing can compare with l)\nfiroat Safe Cure abovo described.\nius novor onco failod to help all wl\nseek ils aid and iu restoring hoait\nstrength and bright looks to tlio:\nwhoso systems are weakened and rt\ndown, it is, and always has boon, u\nsurpassod.
0cbeb39024c1df7ed72c62f33898c8dc DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.1762294765736 39.745947 -75.546589 At one part of this bnildlng there Is a\nmaun factory for mattresses and bed­\nding, us by making Iho goods them­\nselves the firm are enabled to furnish\ntho very bast quality at bottom prices.\nPassing from (be third story of this\nannex to the third tl>or of the Tstnall\nstreet building, the visitor finds himself\nina\nforce of workmon\nmanufacturing a.i kind» of furniture.\nImmense piles of hair and large bun­\ndles of spring« are on every side, whloh\ntho skillful hands of tbe workmen\nforming into fine upholstered werk on\nchair#, sofas, etc.\nThe basemonts under all theee build-1\nlugs are used for chipping and storage!\nrocma, a?d a number of men are kept |\nbusy Ailing orders aud packing goods.\nThe estabisbmeat ia the largest of the\n lu this State, and the salesrooms,\nIn tbe new building, are net exoelled\nfor s!zs, light and general beauty by\nany lu this country. The new building\nla lighted by electricity, aud oouee-\nquontly purchasers can m*ke selections\nas well to the evening as by day.\nAs Messrs. Megary manufacture\nmany of their goods, and buy their oi r*\npeta and euch other goods as they sre\nobliged t » purchase in suoh large quan­\ntities, direct from tbs manufacturers,!\nthey are euabled to supply their on*, to-,\nmtr« at lower rates than the same qua?*\ntty of go ids can ba bought in Philadel­\nphia. Not only this, but for the pur­\npose of aooommodatlng their patrons,\naad assisting them In furnlablcg and\nmaking their homas comfortable aud\nattractive, they will sHlgoooson easy
0354c8254783212308a9f3fb9056c357 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1898.5767122970574 41.875555 -87.624421 Cora Haven's bashfuluess cost the lives\nof her mother nnd lover at Columbia, Mo.\nThe story Is an odd one. Tho girl Is 18\nyears old and her father Is a prosperous\nfarmer of Boone County. She was en-\ngaged to C. II, Full, u young farmer, and\nadmitted that alio loved hliu and yet she\nwas so extremely bashful that when he\nwas In her presence she coukl not speak.\nShe seemed stricken dumb. Her lover\nund her parents noticed her bashfuluess\nand her mother would often reason with\nher, but she declared she could not help it.\nAs the day for tho wedding, July 5, draw\nnear her bashfuluess turned to dread. Hbo\ntold her mother that she could not becoroo\na wife, thnt she could not marry Fait.\nIn vain did her mother remonstrate with\nher. As day drew nearer she grew\nso shy that she would run at her lover's\napproach, but they believed that she\nwould overcome this, that it was natural\nfor a young girl to be bashful. On the\nday of the wedding Fait came for his\nbride. Some of the guests were also pres-\nent, when the girl declared that she would\nnot be married. Cajoleries and threats,\nprayers and entreaties were alike unavail-\ning and Fait, seeing the uselessncss of bis\ncase, quietly left and went home. Ho\nwrote a number of letters and then swal-\nlowed morphine and when found was\ndead. The suicide preyed upon the mind\nof tho girl's mother. Bho brooded over\nit day after day. The other morning she\nleft tho house nnd going to a shallow\npond deliberately lay 'down and slowly\ndrowned herself.
1244892e4caa2ffa91de5c92ac80fade THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.856164351852 40.832421 -115.763123 From tbo Hreorrf of Nov. 1st:\nAn individual, who feared neither\nHeft Tusker or the devil, went to Hen's\nplace aud stole a horse aud saddle right\nfrom under the old man'rf nose. Hen\nM very murh opposod to horse stealing,\nprovided tbe liorseS stolen Hto his own,\naud accordingly Cent fu hot pitrsnit ut¬\nter tbe rascal, swearing veftgehuce\nagainst all pilrloiiiers of horseflesh.\nW 9 ar« pleased 16" inform c'ifr readers\nlliat tbe long expected roasters for thu\nRaymond it Ely Company huve been\nshipped from Son FrancisCo and will\nsoon be hero. O . W . Kilburn.a gentlo-\ntleiunii ssnt by tbe company to superin¬\ntend tho erection o t tbe roasters, has\narrived in town. They will be pnt up\nat llullionville and will pfo\\*6 to all that\ntbe black ore Is Worth working.\nLast rfonday tho Newark mind was\nagain started up. this time under tho\nauspices Ryau k Co., who hnv6\nleased it for a t erttf of months /or tbe\npffrpose of obtaining screfrftlftgs for\nleaching. Tho American Flog riiifio\nhas beeu leased for twO years by respon¬\nsible parties who will soon start to work\non it. The American Flag has a largo\ndeposit of smelting ore. Homo miners\n(Wo Working on tho Amador Tunnel\nproperty. They recently extracted 30\ntons of screenings, which wero lertebed,\nyielding $ 13 per ton, leaving £8 per ton\niu the failings *hat Wore run off.\nOn Sunday last an ludlan entered\ntbo drug store nud asked Dr. Alexander\nfor a bottlo to "cathein milk for pap-\npoose," and liftd f6 repent hi* ({Mention\nsoveral times beforo tbo doctor compre¬\nhended that tiro wanted an infant's\nnursing boWe. The d06tor in.fnired\nwhat h« wanted with It, and the Indian\ntold him "sccjuhw no goftem milk; pap\npoose Want mtick-a -rtrick."
2c7bfd9ae96c9a47ea762816b5ca3b5e THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1911.850684899797 35.721269 -77.915539 The physician said that while he\nhad given the woman severe treat-\nment to counteract the effect of the\npoison, there still was a possibility\nof death because of the absorption\nof poison before the treatment was\napplied and because of her weaken-\ned condition due to previous illness.\nWhen eggs were served to the wo-\nman by the police, nurses who were\nwatching her pending her recovry.\nfrom .an illness, she objected to the\nblack pepper with which they were\nto be seasoned..\n"In the pantry there is some white\npepper in a paper bag," she told the\nnurse. "I'd prefer some of that if I\nmight have it.".\nThe nurse, by the odor of the light\ncolored substance in the bag, deter-\nmined it was pepper and allowed\nMrs. Vermilya some of it. af-\nter she became ill.\nThe "pepper" was taken to a drug-\ngist, who after an examination told\nthe police he thought the condiment\nwas mixed with an j arsenical rat poi-\nson. The remainder of the compound\nwas sent to a city chemist.\nThe incident has pointed to a new\npossibility of the method by which\nMrs. Vermilya's roomers and rela-\ntives in past years met death. If\nthe pepper and poison compound\nhad been a part of her larder in\npast years, that fact, said the police\nwhile pointing out more clearly a\nbasis for their contention that Mrs.\nVermilya has more than a passing\nknowledge of the cause of death of\nher associates, made it more diff-\nicult than ever to connect her with\na death orther than that of Boisson-nette- ,
3a9f4eb52e7f792eecddf247cf86d6d3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.83698626966 40.063962 -80.720915 DcrutTiiBKT or tuk Intihiou, )\nWasiuxoton, I). 0, July 1*1,1870. (\nDkak Sib : In accordance with your\nrequeatl forward herewith a roll ol Uie\nofficer* and employee* of UiU department.\nIn doing ao I beg to repeat wbat I aald to\nyouraelr and Mr. Piatt, via t That In my\neffort* to brlifg about an Improvement of\nthe civil aervlce in tbla department, I hold\nIt to be abaolutely osstmlUI that It should\nlie understood by the clerk* and employee*\nthat they hold their place* subject to re;\nmoval for lack of cAlclcncy or Integrity,\nand that no subscriptions to political fund*\nor ihow of political teal will securo their\nretention if capacity or induitry bo lack-\n^Ir, I'latt assured tuo, and I understood\nyou to agree with It Int. tlmt the Hit wai\nonly desired in order give your commit-\ntec tbe opportunity to Invite suck aa fell\nentirely free to do ao to contribute to *up- |\nport tbe work your committee is under- ,\ntaking, and not to Ithposo any tax upon ,\nany one. Knowing aa I do that many ol ,\nour clerks have all they can do to make a\nbaro existence out of tbeir salaries, 1\nshould be entirely unwilling to have the\napplication put ution any other basis,\neven If I did not think, aa I do, that anv\ncompulsory asacssinent would be a pollu-\ncai imniorallly and produce infinitely\nmore mischief limn benefit. We can do\nmore real service to the republican party\nby raising tbe standard of qualification\namong civil employees and putting each\nclerk upon his merit alone for appoint-\nment or promotion, man oy mc
2b1544dee92b52bee932a4f3b646a8b9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.209589009386 39.745947 -75.546589 MAJ/TIN—In Ibis city, on March l«lh, 1910,\nJames Martin. In his 05th year.\nRelatives and friends of the family are\nInvited to attend the funeral services at\nlate residence, No. 80« West Eighth\nstrecL on Monday afternoon. March 2lst,\nat 2 oclock. Interment at Lower Brun-\nrtvwln* Cemetery\nOCONNOR—in this city, on March 1«.\n1910. William T. OConnor.\nRelatives, friends and members of St.\nElizabeths Holv Name Society, Brother­\nhood of Painters' and Taperhangerrv\nUnion of America, No. 449. Camp\nModern Woodmen of America and tpe\nEleventh Ward Democratic Club are re­\nspectfully invited to attend the funeral\nfrom his late residence. No. 903 Brown\nstreet, on Monday morning at 9 oclock.\nRequiem mass at St. Elizabeth s Church.\nInterment at Cathedral Cemetery.\nEmployes of Harlan and Hollingsworth\nCorporation.\nLODGE—In this city, on March 17. 1910.\nSarah M. aged 68 years.\nRelatives and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funera' services at the residence\nof her «on. E. R . Lodge. No. 509 West\nEighteenth street, on Monday afternoon\nat 2 30 oclock. Intormennt private.\nTAYLOR—In this city, on March 16, 1910.\nIsaac N. Taylor, aged 61 years.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral sendees at his late resi­\ndence. No. 2ii8 East Fourteenth street, on\nSaturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Inter­\nment at Lombardy Cemetery.\nBOYD—At Philadelphia, Pa., o n March\n15th, 1910. Emily G, Carlisle, wife of\nHorace C. Boyd. In Her 27th year.\nRelatives and friends of the family are\ninvited to attend the funeral services at\nthe residence of her brother, Thomas\\G.\nCarlisle No. 115 Rodman street, on Sat­\nurday afternoon. March 19th, at 2 o'clock.\nInterment at Sllverbrook Cemetery.
11affa5707b25b5513e065c2cd4961d5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 f-yujri U*e Cleveland leader oj Tu&ulay.\nWe loll the pedestrian ut forty-live\nminutes puKt seven ou Satuiday eve¬\nning, retched upon a Kola iu Hie Fre-\nmout House ut Conneaiit, ilia bruin\ndizfcy with fatigue, and bis feet par-\nboiled und swollen, with nine uuac-\noomplished miles before hlfn und bis\nheroic; trial of the hundred miles u\nfailure. To ibo walker aud bis friends\ntne liour wmh a dark one., but fatigue\nsoon triumphed, aud Weston, his leet\nbathed und dressed, and bin meak dis¬\npatched, was noon in the oblivion of\nsleep, not, however, until he had re¬\nceived aud greeted the greater part or\nthe population of Conneaut.\nHo slept bis usuul aeven bouis~ho\nnever sleeps more tbuu this.and On\nSunday morning arose fresh and blithe\nan a lurk. How he bad shaken off the\neffects ol all that be bad endured the\n. lay before, was, aud is still a wonder.\nHut Weston is throughout a marvel, a\nmystery. Iheordiuary physical laws\nwhich govern men, are at a Idas wheii\napplied him. Ho eats daily enough\nfood to sustain three ordinary men.\nHe rarely; iu the warmest weather, or\nwhen walking fastest, perspires a drop.\nIf he growB nervous he must either\nshed tears or bleed' at the nose. After\nthe most severe exertion, he it* uever\nout of brontb. Fedestrlaus usually lag\ntoward the end of a day's walk. Wes¬\nton is capable of six miles per hour till\nhe drops.if, indeed, that should ever\nhappen. A paradox throughout, wil¬\nful, timid, waywurd, manly, devoted\nto principle, it i* not strange that a\nman who sets ut defiance the ordinary\nweHkueasi'8 of the flesh ahould perform\nextraordinary feats. The walker »peut\nthe uioriiiug ut Vbureh and the aiter-\nnoon iu urrungiiig his trunks, talking\nto people who came to see him, kissing\nthe babies of ambitious mothers, and\ndiscussing theology, politics, and a\ndozen other subjects with those who\nsought his room, rattling on from\nthence to thence, disagreeing with, but\namusing most of bis visitors, always\nhis owi\\ peculiar, vivacious self, simply\nWeston.
3f1865a4f45656dd130ac9369abd3b7d THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.5356164066463 37.451159 -86.90916 original theory of goodotlcal refills\ntlon ho succeeded In finding vast coal\nfields for tho railroad company\nglShooting on Train\nLast Thursday while Marshal Sam\nKeown of Fordsvillo was returning\nfrom Owensboro nan I 0 train ho\nwas attacked by Messrs Lincoln and\nButton Smith brothers hailing from\ntho former named place It seems that\nMarshal Keown had levied on a cow\nbelonging to tho mother of the Smith\nbrothers and this aroused the anger of\nthe boys Tho Smith men got on at\nJDcanefleld They were considerably\nunder the Influence of liquor and Imme\ndlately attacked Keown with oats and\nknives Dutton Smith had Koown\ndown while his brother Lincoln was\nusing his best efforts to cut the Mar\nshals throat Koown had no weapon\nexcept a small derringer pistol and at\nthis juncture ho brought his gun \nplay Defending himself against the\nknife thrusts of Lincoln Smith tho\nMarshal shot the latter In the side the\nbullet passing clear through him\nIn the meantime Mr B D Ringo\nwho happened to be on the train and\nConductor Riley did their best to quiet\nthe disturbance As soon oa Smith was\nshot the scrap came to an end and the\nbelligerents soon got off at Fordsville\nSmith continued to bleed Internally and\ndied the next day from the effects of his\nwound Marshal Keown was out about\nthe shoulders and neck pretty badly\nIbut his wounds did not prove serious o\nThe attack was unprovoked and no\nbody blames Marshal Keown for using\nhis pistol to defend himself The Mar\nshill is a brother to our Sheriff C P\nKeown and is known as a courageous\nand efficient colter-
24b5468fe9bdeb0feefd8344b43a81f4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.7684931189751 40.063962 -80.720915 >»ya: Preaident lionialw lunvinod the\nMexican Congreaa on the lith inat. Hia\nneaugu waa cunaidered a very able effort.\nIt began ill the following language: Mince\nlie adjournment ol Uie laat session ol Unit- :\nireaa peace lnia reigned, and progress has\n»tn the watchword ul the day. With re- j\nipect to our inter-national relations there\nixiat two causes of grave fhomcnt to our\niovernnient. Tho one is the state of in-\\\necurity|}dong our northern border'conse-\nluent upon the ravages of the Indiana from\nbe neighboring republic ami the frequent\nncursions of cattle thieves. The other lathe\n[uestion of boumlary line between the\nepubllcs of Uuatenialu and Mexico. . .\n'he complaints anil demands of our\nnlnister at Washington in regard to\nho former have generally received re-;\ndies and everything tends to tho belief\nhat but for the deplorable misfortune\nrhlch befallen the people of the United\ntales in tho assiuwinatum of their beloved <\n'resident, tho Government of that country\nrould have paid mora attention to our ru-\n*ated representations, and remedied tliu\nVila of which we are, with so much justice,:\nompiaining. Our relations witli (laute-1\nIIUIU (111 Hit: MIUUI, Illl Ull lUIIUW'l/p UO IIIJI\nlave the favorable outlook of our border\nrouble* on the north. Our Government I\nim hIiowii a ready diaiwaltlou to settle the ;\nexed question of tioumlury between tho '\nwo countries. Wo Itavo Iwon met by pro- j\nraatlnation ami a general Imllirerence on >\nlie |wrt of (Juatainala to Uiia most aerlous\nf queatloua. Tho vugucncss and tinner- i\nliinty surrounding tlie settlement of tliiii\nntematloual boumlary lino can only In\nreductive of grave inquiry anil possibly !\norious results.\nThe President cloned hie message tui fol-
1ca41a080938721608b6e0dca1b5161c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1912.3702185476118 58.275556 -134.3925 Dora, bringing twenty-five survivors\nof the wrecked codfishing schooner\nJoseph Russ, including Mrs. Charles\nFoss, wife of the master of the lost\nschooner, arrived late today from Chi-\nrikof island, where the Russ went\nashore at 1 o'clock on the morning of\nApril 21. The Russ struck at high tide\nduring a terrific gale. Immense waves\nswept the decks and the crew and the\nlone woman lashed themselves to the\nrigging, where they remained six hours\nwhen the tide went out, leaving the\nship high and dry on the rocks. First\nMate John Jorgenson, the only one to\nlose his life, was swept off the deck\nsoon after the schooner struck and\nwas dashed to death against the rock9.\nWhen the tide went out and those\naboard found it safe to desceud from\ntheir places of refuge in the rigging,\nbaggage, provisions and articles\nthat would enable them to live on the\nuninhabited island until rescuers came\nwere taken off the boat. As soou as\nall had been made snug on shore, Sec-\noud Mate A. E . Reeves set out in com¬\nmand of two small dories to row to\nChignik, a hundred miles distant, for\naid. Fortune smiled on the sturdy\noarsmen, and they pulled into Chignik\nthree hours before the steamer Dora,\non her monthly voyage from Unalaska\nto Seward, entered the harbor. The\nDora put about at onoe and steamed to\nChirikof, _ reaching there on May 4,\nthirteen days after the wreck. All\nday and all night the sailors worked\ntransferring the survivors from the\nbarren island and unloading the bag¬\ngage that had been saved. The body\nof First Mate Jorgenson was taken\naboard the Dora and was buried at sea.
09cb82f3dca7236a22a9964e84f4d0fe EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.9794520230848 39.745947 -75.546589 Jnd then In a twinkling I heard on the roof\nthe prancing and pawing of each little hoof.\nAs I drew In my head, and was turning around,\nDown the chimney St. Nicholas came with ahonnd.\nHe was dressed all In fur from his head to his foot.\nAnd his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot;\na bundle of toys he had Hung on bis hack,\nAnd he lookd like a peddler Just opening his park.\nHis eyes, how they twinkled! his dimples, how merry!\nHis cheeks wer« like roses, his nose like a cherry;\nHis droll little mouth was drawn up like a how.\nAnd the beard on hi* ehln was as white as the snow;\nThe stump of a pipe he held tight In his teeth.\nAnd the smoke. It encircled his head like a wreath.\n had a broad face and a little round belly\nThat shook when he langhed, like a howl full of jelly.\nHe wa* chubby and plump—a right jolly old elf—\nAnd I laughd when I saw him, in spite of myself.\nA wink of hts eye and a twist of his bead\nNoon gave me to know I had nothing to dread.\nHe spake not a word, bnt went straight to his work,\nAnd tilled all the stoeklngs, then turned with n Jerk,\nAnd, laying his Hnger aside of bis nose.\nAnd giving a nod, np fhe rhlmney he rose.\nHe sprang to his sleigh, to his team give a whistle,\naway they all flew like the down of a thistle:\nBnf I heard him exrlalm, ere he drove out of sight,\n“Happy I hrlMmas to all, and to all a good-night!"
5181d8d944c3a447e4ab5357ac635d25 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1920.9057376732949 41.681744 -72.788147 Grocery stores opened by factories\nduring the period or high prices are\nbeginning to close their doors, hav-\ning served their immediate purpose,\nthat of helping to lighten tle burdens\nof the buying public. At the time\nthcs stores first began to appear, the\nHerald editorially took exception to\nthem on the ground that the legiti-\nmate retailer was forced to meet extra\ncompetition from sources that could\nand did undersell hin.. it was contend-\ned that the factories, with their vast\ncapital, could eventually force the re-\ntailer to go out of business. Fortunate-\nly, it did not work out that way and\nwhile the retailer Telt the competition\nkeenly at the beginning, he has been\nable to survive and still make a good\nmargin of profit,\nThe principle behind the opening of\n stores was the same through-\nout the country. In the first place,\nstores, it was believed, would have, a\ntendency to reduce the labor turn\nover, the workers remaining at iheir\njobs and realizing that they had an\nadvantage over tha workers in fac-\ntories which did not maintain grocery\ndepartments. A added reason was that\nstores could sell for a small profit, a\ndirect gain for employes and one\nwhich would help to keep them in a\npeaceful state of mind. That stores\ndid succeed in reducing labor turn-\nover is attested by managers from\nmany parts of the country but, like all\nhuman plans, they probably fell\nshort of expectations.\nOne of the greatest drawbacks of\nfactory groceries was lack of delivery\nfacilities. The average man dislikes\nto carry home potatoes,
83988c87d6338234e2e51429abe5f7e8 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.4890410641806 43.798358 -73.087921 Were a true pa?ent u ifortuaately to have\na child of decidedly vicious organization,\nwould he, for the purpose of being rid of\nsuch a trouble, thrust him forth into the"\nstreet to.be derided and hooted by other boys,\nor would he wish to foist him upon hit'\nneighbors ? Would he not rather, boih in\nlove for his boy and his country, endeavor"\nto the utmost to reform his character and el-\nevate his senliments ? Very much like this\nis the picture of society. The criminals are\nour malorgaaized brethren. And let it bs\ncontinually remembered that it is on account\nof these, on account of a comparatively few,\nun formate near relations, that we commit\nsuch a. series of 'unprincipled, costly, and\ndestructive action. Oa what poor preten-\nces may vast superstructure of actuality\nbe erected. Would it not be a preferable\nplan fur every town to set its own criminals\nto work in the field, or the shop, before the\nhave grown ir t j desperate charactes, in-\nstead of passing them through stau; tridls\nand state prisons ? If it is yet premature to\nexpect evety separate family to ensure the\nmoral conduct of its own members, it would\nbe some little amendment of our present\nsystem to let each group of families take up-\non itself its owii responsibilities. If each\ntownship in Massachusetts having, by the\nabsence cf state interference, to other re-\nsource than its own moral influence against\nany immoral influence there might be, we\nshould I believe have in respect to all iLe\ngrosser crimes a power
61e5dcfaf6182e7210ab4545ec0572c2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 It is reasonable to suppose that Con-\ngress iatended to do what is the neees-\nsary consequence of its acts. When\napplication was made to admit the State\nWest Virginia into the Union the Con-\nstitution adopted by the people of the\nSuite was examined by Congress that it\nmight see whether it was "republican\niu form" or not. Congress would not\nadmit the State upon the Constitution\nas lirst olTcred to it, but proposed that\nif the people of the State would amend\nthe Constitution by inserting a provis-\nion for the gradual abolition of slavery\nthat it would consent to admit tho State.\nThe neople accepted the proposed\namendment, Congress proposed no\nmodification of any feature in the Con¬\nstitution, but admitted the State with\nits proposed Constitution as thus\namended, declaring it "republican in\nform." Congress having undertaken\nto reform the Constitution it is reason¬\nable to suppose that it did not stop as\nlong as it contained an objectionable\nprinciple or claimed a power for the\nlegislature of the proposed State which\nit did not intend to give to it.\nThe 10 of the IV Art. of the Con¬\nstitution of the State of West Virginia\ndeclares that: "additional territory may\nbe admitted into and become part of this\nState, with the consent of the legislature\nCongress, then, has consented that\n"additional territory may be admitted\ninto this State, with the consent of the\nlegislature." The General Assembly of\nVirginia has consented that the people\nof Berkeley and Jefferson couuties\nshould say whether or not their counties\nshould become part of West Virginia.\nThe Governor of Virginia has certified\nthat the people of Berkeley and Jetfer¬\nson voted in favor of their counties be¬\ning united to the State of West Virginia,\nand the legislature of West Virginia\nhas given its unanimous consent that\nthe said counties "may be admitted\ninto and become part of this State" by\npassing acts declaring that said coun¬\nties are "admitted into and made parts\nof this State." Does not this action of\nthe legislature, being within the authori¬\nty conferred by Congress, settle conclu¬\nsively the status of these counties?\nWill Mr. Dawes deny it? Can it be\ndenied ? *
5892f4d8b4fea461043be95abb822652 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1906.9109588723998 40.114955 -111.654923 only to gut to Ilourgctto nod then Its\ntithe ousy dim said confidently\nA carriage was secured the morn-\ning was lovelyI and the French fron-\ntier was soon passed for we lad very\nlittle luggage und nothing on which-\nto pay duty A tow miles further at\na lonely kind of an Inn tho coachman\nInsisted on our descending from the\ncarriage anti paying his fee Having\nno choice we consented anti then en-\ntered Into the lonely little Inn In\nsearch of breakfast After eating with\ngood appetites some wellcooked foods\nwo discovered that the carriage hud\nbeen replaced by u couple of rough\nponloH with oven rougher attendants\nof tho boy tribe The road beyond\nwas considered tot steep for vehicles\nso wo mounted In silence\nPlease our bags pleaded I foul\nlug disturbed by our landlords smiling\ndetention of our light luggage\nHo they must be sent on by\nthe inuUi train exclaimed Lady Jane\nTile straps of her ponys saddle\nbroke befora wo had gone a tulle and\nhad to bo mended with a fragment of\nstring and a good deal of language\nwhich wo fortunately could out com-\nprehend was leveled at tho four\nlogged members of tho party Then\nour little cavalcado proceeded onward\nand upward passing by many wayside\nmosses and encountering tvild looking\nharmless peasants with trains ot\nmules and thou again we noticed\nmore or tno tough crosses\nWhat In the world makes the pee\nplo put up HO unary wooden crosses 1\nasked Lady Jane at last looking rath-\ner nervous You must know that al-\nthough slut was our own aunt wo Ron\nerally culled her Lady Jane She was\nvery kind but rather odd\nThe boy managed to bake us under-\nstand
0569975a13d2587194a1a59997b5e482 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.8342465436326 40.832421 -115.763123 big mind to tluish you right here now;"\nIsaid, "DeitU,Ididu>tcouu n ret>\nhave any trouble;" "Yen, you j.il, jun\nil.dh.of ub.;I canleur u du/cn\nlike you to pieces with luy hands tie I\nbehind my buck; you are no part oi a\ninu11. youare a cowur<llya.n of ab.;\nIdareyoutoCallumas.ofab.\nhe wentou; I said, "No, I don't call\npeople Milch name*;'' he got on liiw\nhorse and said, "I will give you three\nday* to leave in, or I will tlx you: "that\nwas the first time I ever saw Joe Dean "\nJenkins further testified that he wanted\nt;i start with hi* shurp eastward, but af¬\nter some dayii search tailed to find uiit\nhorses, that Demi again came to his\ncaiop mid asked, "Are you going to\nstop here;" that he answered, "No, I\nwould have gone away yesterday had I\nfound (ny horses;" that Dean said, "1\nwould like to have you say you were go¬\ning to slop here;" tlist on Sept. Uili\nDean again to his camp anil said,\n"Damn you 1 want you to get out of\nhere before night or els? I'll kill you on\nthe spot; uiind you, tut* i* the last time\n1 will toil you;" that Dtrll refused to\nhire him hoises, saying, "Damn you I\nwill make you pack that stuil across the\nvalley oil your back;" that lie tfien\nhunted his horses but still tailed to find\nthem, and fearing trouble with Dean, re¬\nmained in the hills supperless all night;\nresumed search next morning, but' with¬\nout success, and about noon w< nt to\ncamp to get something to rat; while\nthere saw Dean approaching with a\nipade in hi* hand; Di an said: "Didn't\nt tell you to leave here?" I said, "1\n:oti't find my horse, but I will pack the\nIhings across the valley on my back,"\nknd I commenced packing up; I picked\nip a piece of willow to put under the\nleltle, and he advanced toward m# a* if
1679790ea841fc85719deea61c89dfac THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1897.387671201167 37.305884 -89.518148 producer and the consumer in tbe way of\ncommissions have become of more and more\nimportance to the producer. The reduction\nof such charges to a minimum has become an\nabsolute necessity. i"he reduction has come\nabout naturally throueh active competition\nby dealers in a bait' dozen cities which are\nreaching out lor the grain business oi tne\nwest. The imblic warehouses have been a\nmoat important factor in furnishing to the\nfarmers ot Illinois a broad ana active mar-\nket. This has been done without interfer-\ning with the business of the country grain\nmerchants. A system has been developed\nwhich ha poved entirely satisfactory to\nthe country at large, but apparently is not\nsatisfactory to a little coterie of dealers on\nthe Chicago Board of Trade. This coterie\nhas attacked the nroDrietors of Dublic ele\nvators on every possible ground and has de\nnied mem tne rigni in coniuiuu wuu umer\nrrain merchants to buy and sell grain. The\nnnblic warehousemen for vears have dealt\nin grain and the competition stimulated by\ntheir position in the trade has been most\nbeneficial to the interests of the farmer.\nWhile the custom of warehousemen deal-\ning in grain has been established by cus-\ntom the Illinois statutes are silent as to their\nr',ehtt and powers. The bill now in the leg-\nislature clearly deflnes their rights and\nmeets objection which could be raised\nto their actine in the capacity of grain mer\nchants and warehousemen at the same time.\nThe proposed legislation is in the interests\nof the producers of grain throughout tho\nstate and should be enacted. The opposi-\ntion comes from the Chicago Board of Trade\npeople who have been persistently fighting\nthe elevator interests for years. They have\nraised the cry of monopoly and arc attempt-\ning to discredit the warehouse bills. They\nhave made the most reckless assertions as\nto the prospective results under the pro-\nposed law, while the fact is that the law does\nnot contemplate any new order of things,\nbut 9imply a continuation of the system\nwhich is familiar to the state at large. Ihe\nDeople leading the attack on the bill are\nsingularly inconsistent. Their objection to\na warehouseman dealing in grain is that he\nis placed in a position to discriminate be-\ntween himself and other owners of grain\nstored in his warehouse to the prejudice\nof the other owners. This objection is fulls\nmet by the section which provides for mi\npervision of the warehouse business by the\nstate. The Chicago Board of Trade less\nthan two years no made a demand on tbe\nwarehousemen for just such mnerviirion as\nis now contemplated, but which could not\nbe granted without a change in tbe state\nlaws.
10dd6346f89ba6899296f21869eeff89 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.7219177765094 40.063962 -80.720915 The regular monthly meeting of the Board\nof Education was held last evening. The\nBoard was called to order by ^President\nCollier, Measrs. Caldwell, Dobb'ns. Ebellng,\nEsohfitrnttJ, Isett, Maxwell, McCullff Miller\nJ. A ., Naylor.Bchockey, Wilton A^Wllaon\nW. A . and Work, being preaeot. The\nmUutea were read and approved.\nThe Committee on Accounta presented\nbills ammountiug to $29015 whtch wereor-\nThe Committee on Finance presented a\nlengthy sUtement received from James ».\nTaney, School Collector, showing the amount\nof money received and disbursed by him\naince his last aettiemsnt. Tbls statement was\naccompanied by a detailed list of delinquents,\ndouble and erroneo if assessment, etc. The\ncommittee preseut ad the following which was\n^fojolvtd, That tho accompanying atate-\nineut of Jatues. B. Taaey, School Collector,\nwhich shows a balance in favor of the Board\nof $3,984 2L on the School Fund; $14 to) op\nthe Building Fund and of $334 51 on the Li¬\nbrary Fund received and spread upon the\nminutes of the Board, and that J. B. Tain*)\nbe authorized to pay said balance, and turn\nover, all uncollected t »x I Ills to F. Unrub,\nthe rxeaent School Collector.\nThe Committee on Public Library asked\nthat $198 70 be appropriated for the purchase\nof newapapere, periodicals and magaz nrs for\nthe enauing year. The amount was appro-\npriated. Toe amount represents the aggre¬\ngate of the publishers' prices.\n8upt. John M. Birch reported as follows:\nTo the Board of Education\nUkktlimkn The schools of the district\nwith the exception of Washington and\nRitchie opened on Monday, September ^\nOn account of the repairs to theWashington\nbuilding not being completed, the achool did\nuot open until Thursday. September 0. and\nthe prevalence of diphtheria delayed the\nopening of Ritchie until Monday, September\n10. By reports received from the different\nprincipals the enrollment In the several\n¦rhnnln la found to be as follows:
55de7317177dde2eb5405b4e37a5027a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.7794520230848 39.745947 -75.546589 Hartman, Eugene .............\nHouseholder, Wm.............\nHetzler, Chas, 8..................\nHadley, Noble F................\nHook. Geo. W. .... .. .... .... .. .. ..\nHaney, John M...................\nHannagan, John ...............\nHaughey, David B..............\nHaber. Sam ......................\nHolley, Wm. N .... ... .... ... .... ..\nHiggins, E. P. Co................\nHarkins, Ignatius J...........\nHacket, Harvey C..............\nHarrington. Robert H. ...\nHuck, J. W .... ... ... ... .... ... ... .\nHughes. Geo. C. .. .... ... .... ...\nHill, William ....................\nHolley, Ralph N..............\nHolley, Ralph N.................\nHolley, Ralph N.................\nHorlsk, Jos. A ... .... .. .... .... .\nHolt, W. A.. ... .. .. ... .. ..... ... ....\nHarwiti, Jacob .................\nHayes, Alice W.................\nHaney, John J....................\nHorner ft Keitte...............\nHanna, Edw. L. ... ... .... .... .. .\nHammond, John ..............\n Alfred D.............\nHaye», Geo. W. .. .... ... .... ...\nHarwitz, Lewis ...............\nHoopes, Granville .........\nHarkins, Daniel J...........\nHandelman, B............... .\nHllyard, W. J .. .... ... .... .... .\nHorner, Jesse H.............\nHanley, John J................\nHamilton, M . M. .... .... ... ...\nHeld ft Oo........................\nHey, Henry ....................\nHitchens, Jos. W.. .. ... ... ...\nHalfen, Barbara .............\nHubert, John H...............\nHeld my er. Jos. K ... .... .. ..\nHeldmyer, John. Jr.......\nHarrington, Mary A.......\nHirshout, L ... .... .. .... .... .... .\nHanby, Jos. L. & Bro....\nHerbener, Edw..................\nHelnold, Cora ................\nHollingsworth, E. J .... ...\nHague, Wm. A... .... .. .... .. .\nHess, Joseph ..................\nHeldmyer, Geo. W.... ... ..\nHaney, Dennis F...........\nHopkins ft Bantum....\nHirzel, H . Herbert........
031f9fc40af705a07bbbd82a63872227 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.03698626966 46.601557 -120.510842 Taxes for the year 1896, amounting to $2.00,\npaid on the 21th .lay of October. 1901: taxes for\nthe year 18!i7, amounting to $1.67. paid on the\n21th day of October. 1901: taxes for the year\nls'.is, amounting to $1.1 s, paid on the 24th day of\nOctober, 1901; taxes for the year IM, amount-\ning to $1 74, paid on the 24th day of October,\n1901; taxes for the year 1900, amounting to\n$1.17. paid on the 24th day of October, 1901; to-\ntal taxes paid on art-mint of said cerifleate of\ndelinquency numbered 1642. $8.16; all of said\nsums so paid bearing interest at the rate of fif-\nteen per cent per annum from date of payment,\naud said certificate of delinquency bearing a\nlike rate of interest from date of Issue, respect.\nively. And yon are further notified that I will\napply the Superior conrt of Ihe state of Wash-\nington In and for said county, for a judgment\nforeclosing my lien against tbe property here-\ninbefore mentioned, aud you are hereby sum-\nmoned to appear within sixty days after the\ndate of the first publication of this summons,\nto-wlt: Within sity days after the 24th day of\nDecember, 1901, exclusive ol said first day of\npublication, and defend tbls action or pay' the\namount due, and iv ease of your failure so tn\ndo. judgment will be rendered foreclosing said\nHen for certificate of delinquency, taxes, penal-\nty. interest and costs, against tbe lands and\npremises hereinbefore mentioned, according to\nthe demand of the complaint herein which has\nbeen filed with tbe Clerk of the above entitled\nCourt Anypleading or process many be served\nupon the undersigned attorney for planum at\nthe address hereafter mentioned.
94841647abad23e9dba0717982d2f872 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.9356164066464 31.960991 -90.983994 1. Our Colfege consists of six schools, a.s an­\nnounced in the publication of the Trustees a-\nbove. 2. These schools are divided into two\nclasses each, called the Senior and Junior, or\nfirst and second classes; and these may be sub­\ndivided into as niany sections as may suit the\nconvenience of each Professor, and mostly tend\nto .the advancement of 4be students. Every\nstudent will have an opportunity of attending\nupon the instructions of each Professor until\nprepared to graduate, which he .may dp, when­\never he can stapd a respectable exa.muai.on in\nthe eptire collegiate course of study adopted by us.\nAnd whether it shall take one year or seven to\nprepare a student to sustain this examination,\nwith credit to himself and us, until he can do it,\nhe will not be perraittedto graduate in the Cen­\n College. According to this plan also, a\nstudent who is ,deficent in apy study, will be\nbrought up in the shortest possible time, hy re-\nular and daily recitations; and the Faculty\narranged the hours for the recitations and\nlectures accordingly.\nIn submitting for the inspection of the pub­\nlic, this, our course of study, which we believe\nequal iu extent to any in the United States,\nand some of the general regulations of the Trus­\ntees respecting the reception of students and\ntheir government, we dp most solemnly and sin­\ncerely pledge ourselves to our patrons and the\npublic, thqt we will pot grant the honors of 4he\nCollege to apy that are not well educated, hut\n►that they may accomplish their educations as\nsoon as is consistent and possible, they shall re­\nceive every encouragement and facility from us.
25a0f116e2fd812629e1d2ffd7a5be0f NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.2144808426938 40.735657 -74.172367 GUARDIANS SALE OF LAND—\nBy virtue of a decree of the Court of Chan-\ncery of the State of New Jersey In the matter\nof Mary Wolf, a lunatic, bearing date the\nsixteenth day of February, nineteen hundred\nand twelve, on petition for the sale of lands,\nL Peter Wolf, guardian of the said Mary\nWolf, a lunatic, shall expose for sale at pub-\nlic vendue to the highest bidder on Thursday,\nthe ninth day of April, nineteen hundred and\ntwelve, at two oclock In the afternoon of\nthat day upon tho premises, numbers twenty-\nnine and thirty-one Horatio street, in tho\nCity of Newark, Essex county. New Jersey,\nall that tract or parcel of land or premises\nsituate lying and being in the said City of\nNewark, County of Essex and State of New\nJersey, and described as follows:\nLocation, Beginning on the south-\nerly side of Horatio street, at a point therein\ndtBtant on a course of north slxty-flve degrees\nlive minutes east three hundred and thirty-nine\nthirty-six one-hundredths feet from the corner\nformed by the Intersection of the southerly lino\nof Horatio street with the easterly line of\nHawkins street, thence running south twenty-\nfour degrees flfty-flve minutes east and along\nthe easterly line of lot number four on block\n238r* on map hereinafter mentioned slxty-flve\nfeet; thence north slxty-flve degrees five min-\nutes east and parallel with Horatio street fifty\nfeet; thence north twenty-four degrees flfty-\nflve mlnutea west slxty-flve feet to the south-\nerly line of Horatio street, and thence along\nthe side southerly line of Horatio street south\nslxty-flve degrees five minutes west fifty feet\nto the point and place of beginning.\nDated Newark, N.
5f3ced188249159a8b505e23768914f3 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1913.0260273655506 36.000618 -88.428106 (also called "flicker," "highhole," etc)\nis an Industrious tree protector, and\nthe most efficient of all feathered antr.\neaters. It is also feeds freely upon bee-\ntles, grasshoppers, crickets, caterpil-\nlars, and other harmful Insects, as well\nas on weed seds. Yet It is rapidly\ngrowing rare because It Is much\nhunted for food. It Bhould b pro-\ntected everywhere and at all times.\nIn view of the decrease already ac-\ncomplished In the general volume of\nbird life In America, in view of the\nenormous losses annually Inflicted up-\non the people of this country by the\nravages of insects, and in view of the\ndestruction of wild life which is now\nfuriously proceeding throughout Amer-\nica, the McLean bill, which is now be-\nfore congress, to provide for the fed-\neral protection of all migratory birds,\nbecomes the most important wild life\nmeaeure that ever came before that\nbody. In view of the annual \nloss that will continue as long as a\nfederal migratory bird bill fails to\npass, It Is Impossible for anyone to put\nforth one good reason unless it be on\npurely technical grounds against that\nmeasure. The Weeks bill, before the\nlower house of congress, is precisely\nlike the McLean bill, and it matters\nnot which one passes first.\nLTnless the people of this countrj\nwish to shut their eyes to their own\ninterests, and pay out millions of dol-\nlars annually in the form of increased\ncost of living due to the losses caused\nby Insect pests which would be\ndestroyed by the birds, they should\ndemand that a federal migratory bird\nbill be at once enacted into a law. It\nis Senate Bill No. 6497, and on the\nsenate calendar it Is No. 606 . We can-\nnot afford to wait until 1914 or 1915,\nand congress has full power to act\nthis winter.
01fe52dec539c7e64a8dd921ccb72131 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.1986301052766 37.451159 -86.90916 The Oweneboro Mttmvjcr says\nThe members of the American Society\nof Equity in the counties composing the\nGreen river district have gained notable\nvictories during the past few mouths\nThe DavIes county union was the first\nunion in tho country to adopt the pool-\nIng plan It has been a snccesc not\nwithstanding the fact that several obj-\nectionable features exist in it The\nsuccess of the Davies county farmers\ngave encouragement to other tobacco\ngrowers In tWo district and they too\nadopted the pooling plan In every\ncounty the question is asked by the\nfarmers Why this extra expense of\nhaving a Louisville company handle\nour tobacco Why cant we handle the\npooled tobacco and save the expense\nAt the last meeting of the Green\nRiver Tobaoco Growers Association\nthe warehouse committee made a report\nrecommending that a warehouse be con\n in Owensboro and that Owens\nboro be made headquarters of this dis ¬\ntrict This question will be voted on at\nthe next meeting of the association\nThe plan is to organize a warehouse\ncompany and sell stock to the farmers\nand others who wish to invest in the en\nterprise The number of shares to be\nsold to one person is limited\nThere is some opposition to this move-\nment Of course the greater portion\nof the opposition is coming from the\nagents of the Louisville concern which\nhandled till tobacco last year This\nconcern is in tbe business for the pur ¬\npose of handling tobacco antI selling it\non the Louisville market It was not\nan act of kindness to handle the Day\nless county tobacco This company\nshould be thankful to the finance com ¬\nmittee for the privilege of handling the
01cd6c7bf4a47018609eb3312481ccc0 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2589040778792 44.939157 -123.033121 better appearance during the summer than if allowed to\ngrow up to weeds. There are many school children who\nwould gladly cultivate these vacant lots, and if they are\nunable to procure the seed, the commercial club or the city\ncouncil can do no more commendable act than to provide\naich seed as they need. No one can foresee when the war\nonce started will end, or how great the demand will be.\nFurther than all if the war should end wTe want to be in\ncondition to divide with the German people and send to\nthe hunghy women and babies of that country the food of\nwhich for a year or two they have been so insufficiently\ntupplied. America is not warring on the German people,\nnor is it willing to see their families go hungry. We want\nto be in a position so that if the war should end this year,\nwe can at once rush supplies to relieve the distress in the\nTeuton countries. Germany no doubt feels sore at the\nintimation that this country would lend or give the French\n a billion dollars. They should understand it will\njust as quickly give as large an amount, or larger to pre-\nvent further suffering in their own country. They have\naccused us of profiting by the war, and naturally it has\ngiven us a larger market and better prices, and while a\nfew munition makers have undoubtedly gathered much\nmoney from their business, and many other pursuits\nhave been made more profitable, the great masses of the\nAmerican people have lost heavily by the war; for they,\ntoo, have had to pay practically double prices for their\nfeed and clothing. This war forced upon us by conditions\nin Europe growing out of the war there is not of our\nseeking. It will cost us many times all the profits made\nfrom war conditions, and we are undertaking it with no\nexpectation of any reward in any wav, except that greatly\ndesired prize a world at peace. The citizens of Salem\nand of every town and village in the state, and for that\nmatter in the United States should be ashamed to have a
173e9798a03bee3f227ec94c324820a3 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.4986338481583 46.187885 -123.831256 Chicago, June SO. The committee ap- -\niKilnted by the Democratic bimetallic\ncommittee to confer with the executive\ncommittee of the national Democratic\ncommittee will meet the gentlemen\ncomprising this organization at the\nPalmer House tomorrow. The mem-\nbers of the executive committee, with\nwhom the silver men conferred today,\nassured them that no step had been\ntaken looking to the selection of tem-\nporary officers. This had the effect of\ncausing the members of the bimetallic\norganization to feel that possibly their\napprehensions were unfounded and to\nconclude that probably there will be no\neffort at snap judgment. They will,\nhowever, make their call and present a\nstatement of the action of the bimetal-\nlic committee and ask that the com-\nmittee be allowed to suggest a tempo-\nrary presiding officer.\nIf this request is not granted they\nwill report to their full committee and\nthe full committee will proceed to se\nlect a man for the place prepare\nfor his election at the outset of the\nconvention In the face of a contrary\nnomination by the national committee.\nThe silver men are very determined\nupon the point of not being thwarted\nIn this matter and are giving their at-\ntention to it. They will tell the nation-\nal committee very' plainly that the only\nw ay to avoid a clash In the convention\nand for the national committee to avoid\nbeing repudiated Is for them to accede\nto the wishes of the silver men in this\nmatter. They assert that it will have\nto be made apparent from the begin-\nning that It is to be a silver convention,\nand that this can be demonstrated In\nno way so clearly ns In the selection of\nthe temporary presiding officer.\nThe silver men have given very little\nattention to the question as to who\nshall be selected to preside, but spec-\nulation turns more freely to Senator\nHarris, of Tennessee.
1c3d2bc753f92a793f5fd7572a77ef12 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.828767091578 39.756121 -99.323985 This libelous fling is from the Kan-\nsas City Star: A Beloit man who ad-\nvertised for a wife has not only\nheard from numerous single women\nbut from several married men who\noffer to give him, his heirs and as-\nsigns, a quitclaim deed to all their\nright, title and interest in such cal-\nico as they already possess.\nA half section of land will be pur-\nchased for the state soldiers' home\nat Dodge City. The additional land\nis needed for pasture purposes. Some\n40 cows are kept at the home and\nthere is not room to pasture them at\nthe present time. There are now 45G\ninmates of the home and the number\nis increasing steadily. Within the\nnext raonth a new hospital building\nwill be completed and the old one will\nbe turned into barracks. .\nC. D. Walker, the Atchison attor-\n has purchased 300 angora goats\nat $4 a head. Walker owns 500 acres\nof timber land near Atchison and\nwill use the goats to clear the land.\nKalph and Sheffield Ingall.s . sons\nof the late .John J. IngalU, are ar-\nranging to buy the routes of Atch-\nison milk men and control the milk\nbusiness of the town.\nAt Topeka Barbara Tauer got $15,-00- 0\njudgment against the estate of\nthe late Airs. Adam Sells. Aliss Tauer\nwas Airs. Sells companion for years,\nand 'sued for the above amount for\noccupying such position.\nThe twine plant at the state prison\nwill not be started up as long as the\nweather is pleasant enough for the\nconvicts to do outdoor work.\nFive good horses were stolen from\na pasture on the farm of -- Mr. Bink,\nnear Wallula. It is supposed that the\nhorses were taken by
b8303cfbf65e8f581352270ad822b111 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.582191749112 41.681744 -72.788147 London, Aug. 1 . Developments in\nthe peace negotiations between Premier\nLloyd George and leaders of the Irish\nrepublicans are imminent, it was re\nported here today, but government\nleaders refused to lift the veil of se\ncrecy. There were certain deductions\nmade from the arrival, in Dublin yes\nterday morning of Art O'Brien, presi\ndent of the Gaelic league in London,\nbut they could not be verined.\nOne rumor was to the effect that Mr.\nO'Brien was the courier who would take\nthe Sinn Fein reply to Mr. LlOyd\nGeorge, while another story declared\nthat Eamon De Valera would, himself,\nreturn to London during the coming\nweek and that Sir James Craig, the\npremier of Ulster, was also coming to\nthis city. It also Was reported that\nmembers of the Irish republican par-\n which has been expected to\nmeet during the coming week, have\nmade preparations to receive a sudden\ncall to Dublin and the British govern-\nment was declared to be ready to re-\nlease imprisoned members of the re-\npublican parliament immediately after\nbeing apprised of the date upon which\nthe parliament would meet.\nit was admitted m Sinn Fein quar-\nters that there was a considerable dif-\nference of opinion among members of\ntne republican parliament respecting\nthe concessions to be demanded from\nEngland, some members were declar-\ned to be adhering resolutely to the de-\nmand for full national independence\nand for" this reason predictions were\nmade that the meeting of the parlia-\nment, when held would probably de-\nvelop Some stiff opposition to tne lead-\ners, who were represented as being
1051bc0e9749fb4a77d463d296e5a33b THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.30464477712 29.4246 -98.49514 It Is a lamentablo fact that somo of tho alder physicians (without any special knowledgo on\nthis point) have n pre Judloa against tho stoppago of purulent discbarges from tho ear, but thl\nIs based upon tho crronoous teachings of old French writers. Du Vernoy and Itsrd. D. D. St.\nJohn llooca, M. I)., IX. I)., Professor of Diseases of Ero and Ear In tbo University ot New\nYork City: Burgeon of Manhattan Eyoand Ear Hospital; Consulting Surgeon of Drooklyn Eye\nand Ear Hospital, etc, nnd who is consUorod the very best authority on tho sbbjoct, taya In bis\nlast work! "There Is no pathological experienco on record which can sustain tho assertion\nthat It Is dangerous to stop a discharge from tbo car." Let anyono acquainted with anatomy,\nconsider this fact tbat thero Is, perhaps, no part of tho human body has moro Important\nanatomical rotations. Thocuvlly of tho tympanaura Is covered over bra thin bony plate,\nwhich Is In direct communication with tho cerebral meninges; tho floor Is closo to the great\nJuilar, Its Internal wall Is tho labyrinth wall, covered only by vory thin membrane, and open-\ning Into tho branches of tho acoustic nerve, whllo on tho ouUIdo wo havo a thin membrane\nabout as thick as paper. It Is easy to soo that a continuous destruction of those parts by sup-\npuration, unless cured, In this part would sooncror later, (which It always does), load to serious\ntroubles In Iho brola, and sometimes la tho Itingsor heart. I Und a largo percentage ot the\ncases having a "running car" have ulso a cough, nnd when tho car is cured tho cough Is also\ncured, lestcad ot being worse
31ea0a6e8aacba3605d4b29271de1c14 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0260273655506 40.063962 -80.720915 Rut tho coiii plaint is that tiie present\narrangement "takes out of the haud of\n"the parent the sacred right of saylh^\n"what books shall and shall not be\n"placed in the hands of his child,'1 and\nfrom tho teachor tho prerogative of ap¬\nproving or condemning tho books he\nuses. As to this "sacred right" of pa¬\nrents, It is one thoy tako very little ac¬\ncount of. They almost universally air,\nlow tho teacher to select for them. In\nsoino countries In tiuropo, the education\nof the youth is considered so necessary\nto the welfaro of tho State that boys of\na certain ago aro taken away from their\nparents altogether and pluced in tho\npublic schools. Here education is with¬\nout compulsion. Tho schools are pro¬\nvided by tho Stato. parent knows\nin advance what books are' used.\nknows, of course, that they aro not ob¬\nscene, immoral, or damaging. igunny\nway to tho child; and cau enjoyihoir\nadvantages ir ho chooses. ^ however,\nho has conscientious scruples about the\nparticular arrangement of ;tho lessons,\nthe questions, definition or examples,\ntho whole world is free before him, to\nmake other provision for his ehild^ The\ndifficulty is in truth with tho teacher\n(if any whore). Tho parent will as soon\ntrust the Judgment of tlia State Super¬\nintendent as tho teacher. Out theteach^\ncr has been educated to a particular\nbook and finds it a little inconvenient\nto use any other, nnd thus ho is led to\ndiscover that the Stato Superintendent\nis "the autocrat supremo of tho whplo\n"freo school machinery."
900173ce50d93a3d1d148e4f63bdf25d PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.2773223727484 31.960991 -90.983994 By the decisions of this Court, heretofore\nmade, me parties have a day in Court, at tùe\nTerm next after the perfection of the bond, to\nappear and contest it, if they have objections to\nit. (Wanzerc*. Baker. 4 Howard, 363.) But if\nthat time passes without any action on the sub­\nject, the judgment on the bond, which was pre­\nviously inchoate becomes absolute, and no fur­\nther day is given. It is then no longer a mere\nbond, but a judgment on which execution may\nissue. If at a subsequent Term, the Court un­\ndertakes to quash the bond, it attempts some­\nthing more—toset aside or quash a judgment\nafter the Term at which such judgment is ren­\ndered; the power of the Court over it is at an\nend; the same tribunal cannot reverse it or set it\naside. (1 Robinsons practice, 638.) Ajudgment\nwithout notice is void. A judgment cannot \nreversed in an Appellate Court upon a Writ of\nError without notice. An appeal taken at the\ntime of judgment in open Court operates as no­\ntice. A judgment cannot be amended without\nnotice. The order, therefore, in this case to\nquash the judgment or the bonds made without\nnotice, at a Term subsequent to the return\nTerm, is void for want of jurisdiction in the\nCourt. Its power over it has ceased as entirely\nas its power to set aside the original judgment.\nThe order is void, not merely voidable, and does\nnot affect the rights of the parties. If this view\nbe correct, it follows that the judgment upon\nthe forfeited bond is still in force, and that the\nissuing of the subsequent executions upon the\noriginal judgments against Harrod was errone­\nous; and the judgment of the Court in quashing\nthem, right and proper.\nThe judgment must therefore be affirmed.
653cf7c00a08b63c56231600682b5137 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.5794520230847 35.318728 -82.460953 "In revising the tariff upon the\npresent high protective basis, logically\nand necessarily heavy reductions have\nbeen made all along the line.\n"Every man, whatever his occupa\nt:on be, will be the beneficiary in some\ndirection to a greater or less degree\nof this general system of reduction\nIn this respect the farmer has been\nshown special consideration. Practi\ncally everything he buys has been put\nupon the free list or the duties on it\ngreatly reduced. For his special ben\nefit cotton bagging and ties have been\nput upon the free list. For his special\nbenefit the materials out of which\nsacks for grain, wool, fertilizer, etc..\nare made, have .. been put. upon the\nfree list. For his special benefit, wire\nfor fencing and bailing purposes, and\nsimilar articles for farm consumption,\nhave been put upon the free list. For\nhis special benefit plows, shovels, hoes,\nrakes and agricultural implements of\ntflrery ilnd and descriution have been\nput upon the free list He will he in\na very large degree the beneficiary of\nputting building materials of vari\nous kinds, materials used in the con\nstruction of roads, text books for\nschools, etc., on the free list. He will\nbe. largely the beneficiary of putting\nboots :and shoes, low grade blankets\nharness, and saddlery, wagons,\ncarts, sewing machines, and other like\nproducts of household and farm utility\nand consumption of the free list\n"In common with the rest of the\npeople he will share in the general\nbenefits from the reduction of the\nduty on sugar and its ultimate aboli\ntion. And, finally, he will share with\nall: the people the benefits of the heavy\nreductions which this 'bill makes on\nwearing apparel of every description;\non crockery, hardware, household and\nkitchen furnishings and utensils,\n"No ciass of our people have reaped\nas little benefit from the Republican\ntariff question and suffered as heavily\nfrom itslawlessness as the farmer, isc\nclass of our people understand the\npractical operation of our tariff bet-\nter than the farmer. He knows that\nunder the Republican system he has\nhad to buy In a highly protected mar-\nket, and sell most of his products on\na basis of free competition with the\nworld. The studied efforts to mislead\nhim with respect to the effect of this\nbill upon him will not succeed. He\nwill study it and study it closely, as\nis now his custom with respect to do\nall questions affecting his interests\nand the common welfare. There Is in\nmy mind no doubt that his verdict\nwlll'be on--
196594720300d7e69349a4b7b776d81e DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1885.4397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 work and play, to get and keep a voice consequence, many of the gentlemen,\nthat shall speak at all times the who had gone to their homes after the\nthoughts of a kind heart. But this is adjonrninent of Congress, have return-\nthe time when a sharp voice Is most ed to Washington, and they can be\napt to be got. You often hear boys and found daily at the White Houae and in\ng rls.say words at play with a quick, In the offices of members of theCablnet.\nsharp tone, as if it were the snap of the The Southern representatives, as a\nwhip. When one of them gets vexed, rule, are prone to demand rather than\nyou will hear a voice that sounds as if request executive favors. Cleveland Is\nit were made up of a snarl, a whine, unaccustomed to this sort of a thing and\n a bark. It is often in youth that he is not slow to resent what seems to\none gets a voice or tone that is sharp, be the slightest flavor of impertinence\nand sticks to him through life, snd or ill-timed importunity on the part of\nstirs up ill will and glief, and falls like his visitors. In almost every instance\na drop of gall on the sweet joys of where a flat rebuff has been given a\nhome. We should say to all boys aud caller by Mr. Cleveland it has been\ngirls: “Use your beet voioe at home. Intended as a rebuke to the arrogance\nWatch it day bv day, as a pearl ofgreat or self-assertion of some ill bred caller\n>rioe, for It will be worth more to you or loud-mouthed spokesman of a delega-\nn days to oome than the beat pearl hid tlon. The Southern statesmen
21a011c35689aab06bc2a9a0138df8f6 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.1575342148656 35.318728 -82.460953 part of the session the committees,\nwhere the real work is done, re in.\nsession only a short while and many\nof them never have any long sessions\nwhile others have lengthy sessions\nday after day in order to dispose of the\nlarge number of bills Deiore tnem.\nThe work of some of the committees\nis so heavy that they have to have a\nclerk to transact the business. Tak\ning ti upon an average the sessions of\nthe term, including the worK or tne\ncommittees, will amount to about four\nhours Der day. making the expenses\npractically $300 for each hour's, work.\nA bill certainly has easy sliding even\nwith the suspension of the rules, if\nit consumes not more than a half hour\nin its route through the mill, estimat-\ning all the time taken In pass-In- cr\nIt throueh - both bodies when it\nstrikes no snags and does not have to go\nthrough the hands of a committee, bo\nyou see the most trining Dili, even ii\nIntroduced through fun by a would-b - e\nfamous author, consumes about -- $150\nsay at least $100 worth of the General\nAssembly's time. A bill has passed\nthrough both branches of the present\nGeneral Assembly, changing the name\nof Wiccacon Creek to Wiccacon River.\nThose behind the movement prooamy\nfigure on getting a Federal appropria-\ntion for some improvement on the\nstream by changing the, name from a\ncreek to a river, but beyond that what\ncan it avail, for a person, who has liv- -\ned by the little stream all his life and\nhas been calling it Wiccacon Creek
0b6564a11dd0f788182d09d713fd148b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.0835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 b'A'i fitL?A y, FKBKUAUY ID, 1887,\nminuicucitiK ft10 o'clocM A. M . certain reul wtatc\nKB Hubert Si* fttevwt died ho toil, being tUt\ni. ihiwUiK iU*orlbed properly al united 111 the city\nIirtlRtjVlug. lu iliu county ol Unlo, and Hinto ol\n«cit VlneiuM. U>*t i" Ui m»: A portion of Loi No.\nnitir CJi III Miuuro wi. ton IIU), wfiicli lot UaliUHtod\niin ilic f>oiitli c*»t curuur ol aUrkot mid Kiuventli\naiuiiit *i»i **"' portion Im bounded ni loilots:\niu* uilniK u" U,u wua fc,llB 01 M"rll«t kirout nt the\ni»uii)wwk corner ou iMarket itrootol Ui« |»orUoa\nni muI Jot conveyed to eluiou llorkholinor by\ni htiliy » Martin. b> deed dated October 17. I87t,\nlid recoiled In tbo clerk'* oillio ol the County\nCotUtuf Mill uaiu i.uuiivj in ucvu uvuk ut m umjo\nu, w,nl i..st nuuied corner being tho ceutru oxtho\nJlv'lflOH MK.l UV.HVUli ihuhotuo mid Biore Ju lMO\noccupied by Auttiouy (Jolluur, and tho liuiuo next\niuuiu tueu occupied oy wild It. Al. Hiuvruit; thenco\nruuuiuK 1" « n ta»lerly dlioctloft through tlio oentro\nviMil wail will* Uio linool ilorkhulm.r flfor /cot\niii.i tinco lucheit to a coiner to llorkhelmor, samo\nbeluK Uiu uortheast coruur ol i>ro|>urty hereby\nconveyed; tli.uco runuiug lu * southerly direction\nwith aorktiuluiur'n nut suveuteen iihh und *,x\niueuw tj llorfcheimcr'u extrouio houiliwest cornur,\nitljHt Li u» N»y> his coruer, wnlch Is a southwuot\ncuruor of the probity conveyed to lilin Uy raid\nCfinniy Martlu aud 1a furtucr south than any\nother torner ou tho weal sldo thereol); thenco iuu'\nniiiK lu * wcsurJy direction ihrougu the ceutioo(\nthe uivuiou wHil between thonouso oocunled b>\nMidaievvartand tlie oue next south thereof to tho\niui nUlu of Market Btieot, a ulsUuco ol fifty feet\n(uJ throeluchea anil from thonco sovout.cn feet\ntit lilt-lies to tho place of beginning, being the\nmmc iuu.vtij conveyed to wild a. llurxuolmcf, by\nJereiuiah Hurry ami wife by d'.cd dated ilarou li,\nlteO, and recorded In tl.o oitlco of tho Clerk ol the\nCouni; Court ol Mild Uhlo couuty lu deed book Gv,\nM*«W,an' by Kill a. llorkhelmor aud a. n0rk'\nLtimer, ha lie, couvojed to mid K. M . titowart\nby dteiidated June M, tttoO, aud iccordod lu said\n^'/iho,*tue follow nj{ described lot of ground lying\noa the /National Koud In tho town oi Fulton, in\nuhio eountv, aud on ihe eiut tide of a street
19b79cd7b521bdb4479be9fb29c59df4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.0232240120927 40.063962 -80.720915 He is an old man with two elephants ti\non his hands. The one is tho Ileraul and v\nthe great house at Port Washington, ten u\nmiles out ut town. Tho first he would y\nhave sold some timo aeO If ho could have ti\ngot his price. UiB^aon is not a journalist, t!\nmill never will be 'one, and tho paper is jj\nconducted by a manager, Mr. l'utnara, o\nwho keeps it abreast with aM public mat- fi\ntern. Different parties have talked about h\nImying tho llertM; but who has $1,000,- o\nDUO to invest in such an enterprise 1 The h\nFort Washington property contains four 8\nacres; aud is immensely valuable; hut it ai\nwould look badly, and, in loci, iuvolvo\nloss of position, to sell it, ^hile to live\nthere is equally undesirable, llcnce it Is\ngood lor such a man to have an establish- A\nmeat in town. Young liennett, were he \nnot encumbered with wealth, would lie- n\ncome distinguished as a navigat ir. His fc\nturn for yatchiug and other naval matters V\nis no afl'cclalion. lie has always had a pre- p\ndllection for ships and navigation general- tl\nly; but whilo he enjoys preeminence as v\nCommodore ol the yatchiug fleet, his easy it\nposition will prevent that ufleel which it\nwould leail to maratime distinction. Hen- h\nncit Is much broken with age, but has w\nhold out woudurlully, considering the I\nhard work he has undergone. In this l>\nleature he has only been equaled bv dree- ttf\nley, ami it may be remarked that Greeley tl\nwas the only editor whom he respected, n\nIt is true that lie ridiculed him, but this u\nwas only an clement In ri'dtt'orinl conflict. In\nHow much lie rcspcctoH Greeley may be 1\njudged from tho fact thatlio onco propos- lii\ned to him a co-partnership..
35cf3fc3dfd5fafd2886dae1baadbc83 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.4057376732949 40.063962 -80.720915 trorn 400 to GOO feet, landing on the pave\nment of South street. The persons knowi\nto be wounded are Capt. Charles 11\nMitchell. Sandy llook pilot, both leg\ntractureu; John Bishop, mate of shT|\nSeminole, and resident of Boston, com\npound lracturo of left arm; Oliver Ander\nson, Bernard Carrie, James Parsons, resi\ndent of Brooklyn, and W. J . Keeser. Th<\nboat was blown to splinters above th<\nwater, and the hull sunk at once. Thi\nlargest piece of the boat yet found Is thi\npilot's wheel, which is uninjured save bj\na few scratches.\nThe constitutionality of the now Jurj\nlaw is to be tested to-morrow.\nThe receiver ol the Ocean National\nBank is paying additional twenty pel\ncent dlvlvends'this morning.\nW. Thomas, Paul E. Lowe, son of ex\nGovernor Lowe, of Maryland, Wm. De\nvine, Alfred Evans, Wm. Gould, and E\nTreadwell, were brought up at Jeffersor\nMarket Police Court lor concerned\nIn the shooting atlray on Mercer street\non Saturday night. Treadwcll, Qoulc\n1 and V.trona innro\n>.«V. MIHUO nutu uuvunig«ui XUOUtUUC\nwere committed. Lowe, who did all tlic\nshooting, was committed without boil\nGardner, the most seriously wounded o:\nthe victims, is not likely to recover.\nA mass meeting of the workingmet\nwas held in the City Hall Park this after\n| noon In favor of the eight hour move\nmont. About 1,500 persons wore present\nAddresses was delivered by J, Connolly,\n[ Marshall, McDermott, Hawkins and J no\nGunis and appropriate resolutions adopt'\ned. Workingmen have been sent to Bos.\nton, Philadelphia and Chicago to induct\nco-operation. A Committee of tho cighl\nhour league, who have in charge tho fur\nniture trade wero in session to day. The\nUpholsters report 250 new members hav\ning joined their organization since the\n1 strike begun.\n; Mr. Kuha has returned from a tout\n'
0ea7d7718ec3d45de75bcc5cf052ed20 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1881.132876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 An English correspondent in Asia, re-\nferring to the lighting qualities of the\nAfghan soldiery, says : 'Au Afghan never\nthinks of asking for quarter, but lights\nwith tho ferocity of a tiger, aud clings to\nlifo until his eyes glazo and his hands\nrefuse to pull a pistol trigger or use a\nknife in a dying effort to maim or kill\nhis enemy. The stern realities of war\nwero more pronounced on the battle-\nfields in Afghanistan than pcrhap they\nhave ever lccn in India, if wo except the\nretributive days of the mutiny. To spare\nu wounded man for a minute was prob-\nably to cause the death of the next sol-\ndier who unsuspiciously walked past\nhim. One thing our men certainly\nlearned in Afghanistan, and that was to\nkeep their wits about them when purs\nan enemy or passing over a hard-wo- n\nfield. There might be danger lurking in\neach soemingly inanimate form studding\ntho ground, and unless care and caution\nwere exercised the wounded Afghan\nwould steep his soul in bliss by killing a\nKalfir just when lifo was at its last ebb.\n stubborn love of fighting in ex-\ntremis is promoted doubtless by fanat-\nicism, and wo saw so much of it that our\nmen at close quarters always drove their\nbayonets well homo, bo that there should\nIk no mistake as to the dcadliness of the\nwouaiL Tho physical courage which\ndistinguished tho untrained mobs who\nfought so resolutely against tis was\nworthy of all admiration; Uio tenacity\nwith which men, badly armed and lack-\ning skilled leaders, clung to their posi-\ntions was remarkable, to say nothing of\nthe sullen doggedness they often showed\nwhen retiring. But, when tho tide of\ntho fight set in fully against them, and\nthey saw further resistance would in-\nvolve them more deeply, there was bo\neudden a change always apparent that\nono could scarcely believe the fugitive?\nhurryiug over tho hills were the same\nmen who had resisted so desperately but\na few minutes before. They acted wise-\nly; thev knew their powers in scaling\nstoop hills, or in making their cscapo by\nfleetness of foot, and tho host generally\ndissolved with a rapidity which no ono\nbut an eyewitness can pppreciato.
26f5adba35e75525460a5d87ef39a4e1 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1919.2178081874683 42.217817 -85.891125 years alter the date thereof, with in-\nterest at the rate of six and one-ha- lf\nper cent rer annum, payable annually\non the iourth day of October ot earn\nyear thereafter, until the principal\nsum was paid. Which mortgage was\nrecorded in the office of the Register\nof Deeds of Van Buren County, Mich-\nigan, on October 7th, 1913, in Liber\n98 of Mortgages on page 539.\nSaid mortgage was on June 14th,\n1915, duly transferred and assigned\nby the said Clyde W. Kool and Grace\nKool, husband and wife, the mort\ngagees, subject to a claim thereon of\n$2,000 held by the Benton Harbor\nState Bank, to Charles L. Miller of\nLake township, Berrien County, Mich-\nigan which assignment was duly re\ncorded in the office of the said Regis-\nter of Deeds for Van Buren County,\nMichigan, on June 17th, 1915, in Liber\n94 of Mortgages on page 581.\nOn August 20th, 1915, the $2,000\nclaim of the Benton Harbor State\nBank against said mortgage having\nbeen paid in full, the Clyde W.\nKool and Grace Kool, husband and\nwife, together with the said Benton\nlarbor State Bank, duly transferred\nand assigned the said mortgage to\nthe said Charles L. Miller, which\nassignment was duly recorded in the\noffice of the said Register of Deeds\nfor Van Buren County, Michigan, on\nJanuary 11th, 1916, in Liber 102 of\nMortgages on Page 335.\nOn January 8th, 1916, the said\nCharles L. Miller, assigned as afore-\nsaid, duly transferred and assigned\nsaid mortgage to Frank Bihlmire of\niarada, Berrien County Michigan\nwhich assignment was duly recorded\nin the office of the said Register of\nDeeds for Van Buren County, Mich\nigan on January 11th, 1916, in Liber\n106 of Assignments, on page 487.\nSaid mortgage is now past due, and\nno part of the principal sum of thirty\nfive hundred dollars secured by said\nmortgage has been paid, and no inter-\nest has been paid thereon since Oct- -\ntober 4th, 1917.\nThere is now due upon said mort\ngage the sum of thirty-fiv- e
2abe1238378de76861f0a8eeb564ea8e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.932876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 The question of impcaching the Pres¬\nident Is, of course, second only In the\nminds ol every one here to that of lead¬\ning the Government out or the finan¬\ncial wilderness, and naturally there ia\nmuch more fouling about Impeachment\nthan about Ways and Means. Many\nof the ItepubllRausure opposed to it; so\nthat it has ceased to he strictly a party\nmeasure.though I don't know any\nDemocrat in Isvor of It. Home ^pub¬\nlicans onposo it because they believe\nIt would product* a great deal of ex¬\ncitement throughout the country and\ndisturb business mid monetary affairs\nat a time when It 1m Important they\nshould not tie disturbed, atul hav¬\ning A. .1.'a claws cut clone mid his\nteeth pulled, they think it would be bet¬\nter to let have the length of his teih-\ner for the rest of his brie! Presidential\nexistence. Others ilka Blughsm and\nWilson, or lows, (author of the mi¬\nnority report) declare the evidence\ndoes not show that the President has\ncommitted any impeachable nifeuco.\nThese gentlemen, however, regarding\nthe President us somewhat naughty,\npropose a vote of censure.iih If Con¬\ngress and I he country have not been cen¬\nsuring him ever since "Inspiring bold\nJohn Barloycorn" backed hint lu tak¬\ning that oath or office lo which\nhe so frequently re re r red in connection\nwith the "Constitution." The country\nwould be us imiah benefitted and a\ngreat deal more amused If they would\nget a little toy, cannon such its the\nboys use for making Christinas cracks,\nand plant It on
020677c73986bab5d84b8224702351a1 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1883.2397259956874 39.756121 -99.323985 Ed. Herald: I have seen reports\nin the "Independent" that petitions\nare being signed all over the county\nprotesting against the Commissioners\nissuing the proposed bonds. Probably\nthe people in other parts of the county\nare like they are in this township. A\ngreat many signed the petition on the\nspur of the moment, but after thinking\nthe matter over, they are sorry they\nsigned it, and are decidedly in favor of\npaying 5 or 6 per cent, on bonds and\nhave county orders worth 100 cents on\nthe dollar, instead of paying 7 per cent,\non county orders and have them worth\nonly 75 or 80 cents, and also run the\nrisk of being sued on the orders and\nhave the costs to pay too. The people\nare afraid of costs in this township, as\nwill be seen our never having a law\nsuit in the township since its organiza-\ntion ; and we also are in favor of the low-\nest possible rate of interest, if it does\ntake bonds to get it. We are in favor\nof funding the honest debt of the county,\nand trust the commissioners will see\nthat no illegal orders are funded. I\nnotice by the papers that several other\ncounties had bills passed similar to ours.\nWhy do we not hear such a rucus in\nother counties? Would the debt be any\nlarger in bonds than it is in county\norders? Scrip scalpers would not\nmake so much and I guess that is what\nhurts the "Independent" galloots.\nProbably the editors of the "Inde-\npendent" are just blowing their bazoo\nto get a little two cent office next elec-\ntion.
06ef3b42643b3f7b70130b57174e4f55 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.4671232559615 42.217817 -85.891125 been obviously transmitted from father\nto son throughout the whole history of\nthe House of Hohenzollern; and they\naccount for the extraordinary propensity\nof the family itself, for the steadily pro-\ngressive increment of its European in-\nfluence, and for the territorial expan-\nsion of its realm, which has, within the\nlast two centuries, grown from a barren\nMargravato into a gigantic empire.\nMoreover, no country in the world owes\nso much to the individual qualities, capa-\nbilities, and achievements of warriors\nand statesmen actually! born in the\npurple. All the Hohenzollens havo been\neither scientific soldiers or eminent\neconomists ; several of them havo been\nboth. Their annals do not record the\nname of a single crowned spendthrift.\nThe wholo life of the Emoeror and\nhis much loved wife is extremely sim-\nple. Tho palace in which the imperial\ncouple live when in Berlin is a small,\nplain house, of stuccoed brick, which\ncuts a much less imposing figure than\nthe residences of many merchants in\nthe United States. It stands at the\ncorner of Unter den Linden, within\nsight of the arsenal, the university and\nthe epera; and was built for Prince\nWilliam at the period his marriage,\nin 1829, when his income was not so\nlarge as now. In this unpretentious\nhouse William and his wife have lived\never sinco when at Berlin; and all hints\nthat his subjects would bo willing to\npresent him with a more imperial-loo-\ning residence have fallen upon a dead\ncar. Until tho regicidal attempts of\nHoedel and Nobehng, the Emperor\ncould often bo seen at odd moments\nduring the day, standing at one of the\nwindows of his study, on tho ground\nfloor, which overlooks the street. The\npassing of a regiment down tho Lime\nwalk was sure to fetch him to tho win\ndow, and ho would acknowledge the sa-\nlute of tho officers with a friendly wave\nof the hand. Sometimes he would\nlook into the street merely to amuse\nhimself by tho ordinary sights of a\ncrowded thoroughfare. And more than\nonce the odd sight has been witnessed\nof a beggar applying to his Majesty for\na silver groschen, and being enjoined by\ntho imperial forefinger to "Move on." In\nthe afternoon ho used often to receive\npetitions in person from the bauds of\npoor people who had ' been admitted to\nthe coach-yar- d.
070be1563a0c8ab7ba1e32d824ea9404 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.4397259956875 43.82915 -115.834394 In the Dis trict Court of tbe Second Ju\ndieiiil District, of tbe Territory of Iluho,\nin and for the county of Boise.\nWeltlia Wbetherliult, plaintiff, vs. Elias\nWhctherhiilt, defendant.\nTo Elias Wbetherliult, defendant above\nnamed : Iu the inline ot the people of the\nUnited Slates of the Territo ry of Idaho,\nyou are hereby notified Hint there is now\non file in the office of tbe Clerk of (lie Dis­\ntrict Court of the Second Judicial District\nof said Territo ry, iu Idaho City, county of\nBoise, tbe complaint of Weltba Whetber-\nliult, praying for a judgment and decree\nof said court ag ainst you, dissolving the\nbonds of matrimony existing between you\nand plaintiff, on tbe grounds of your will­\nful desertion of plaintiff' for more than one\nyear, aud for your willful neglect for more\nthan two years last passed to provide \nplaintiff the common necessaries of life;\nalso p raying for the custody ot the three\nminor children. Fo r further particulars\nsee certified copy of complaint served\nherewith. And that unless you appear\nand answer to said complaint within ten\ndays after the service hereof, if served\nwithin Boise county, and within twenty\ndays if served out of said county but with-\nin said Judici al District, and within forty-\ndays if served out of said District (exclu­\nsive of the day of service), judgmen t will\nhe taken agai nst you by default, and plain­\ntiff'w ill apply to the court for the relief\ndemanded in the complaint.\nIn testimony whereof, I, A. L. Richard­\nson, Clerk of said District Court, have\n(g^Syjhereunto set my hand and affixed\nig««>tlie seal of said Court, at Idaho\nCity, this 31st day of May, A. D. 1887.
12c373c410f5e6574d5857c29a011bc0 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1895.6397259956875 39.623709 -77.41082 It is safe to wager 10 to I that the gold coin\nowner feels 10 times as much consolation when\ntelling In bullion his gold thousand dollars ns\ndocs any ono of the other soiling his thousand\ndollars of silver reduced to bullion. And tho\npoor man's last money Is that which loses\nleast In value When by flro or otherwise It\nloses tho stamp of the government.\nAnd if at that lire some flat money advocate\nlost a few thousand paper promises to pay dol-\nlars ho also willrise up and dispute the pop-\nular fallacy that “money Is a mere fiction of\nthe law" and vehemently denounce tho vagary\nthat "a commodity value In money is unnec-\nessary and useless.”\nGold and silver were money before any law\nmade them so—before any government coined\n or any mint stamped them. And then\neach was valued by the demand for each, and\nnow also the r. latum of the supply of gold to\ntho demand for gold regulates Its value. And\ntho relation of tho supply of silver to tho de-\nmand for silver regulates Its value.\nBut you further say that the government,\nnot taking silver for coinage at 10 to 1, has de-\nstroyed tho demand for silver.\nIn n government like ours, which ns nn en-\ntity Is simply “allof us,” there can be no de-\nmand created either for silver or anything else\nexcept tho integral parts of tho conqioslto\nevolve that demand. Only tho people of tho\nUnited States by their generally expressed de-\nsire for a thing can create a demand for It.\nYoura faithfully,
3a593335e8913ec2fd668fed9174f612 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.8452054477423 39.745947 -75.546589 If the 'champions of cloture in tlie\nSenate really mean business, that hon­\norable body is in for a lively struggle at\nthe .vary opening of the session login­\nning next month. A filibuster is sure\nto follow a Inot ion do adopt the cloture\nrule, ami thus tile Senate may find it­\nself involved in an interminably long\ndiscussion of its own procedure.\nbusfer lo vindicate the time-honored I «ceding session,\nright iif filibustering and attempts hyj\nformer filibusters to circumvent the \\<r\nrules that they formerly evoked wit\nsuch skill—Halt will he u situation well\nealeulated to put everything over until\nFebruary at the earliest.\nThe suggestion has- been made by\nsome one unacquainted with Senate\nprocedure that, since the Senate can­\nnot proceed until rules have been adopt­\ned. it filibuster can tie throttled imme-\ndinlelv after the session begins. But this\nis not the ease. The is a eon-\ntinning body, imd if.» rules are standing\nrules, operative without the necessity of\nreadupting them at the beginning of a\nCongress. Ihe Senate is always organ­\nized. and Hie moment its sessions begin\nit operates under the, rules, some of\nwliich were adopted- more than a cen­\ntury ago. The House adopts rules at\nthe beginning of each Congress, because\nit is an entirely new l«>dy. Tlie terms\nof nil members begin and end on March\n•I of every odd-numbered year; but only\none-third of the senators retire every\ntwo years, the-others eolistitnting a con­\ntinuing body. Tho Senate is almost in­\nvariably 'ailed into extra session on Hie\nday after a new presidential term lias\niiegun. This is the beginning of a new\nCongress period also, but the Senate\ndues not adopt new rules or readopt old\nones, it proceeds to business under the\nrules already existing.
0265bcb803789cfd44a09f03a609788b SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.4030054328578 37.53119 -84.661888 petitioners\nBailey jude of the Lincoln county court\nagreed with them that the proposed Grad-\ned Common School district shall be as\nfollow and which is the same in fact as\nthat described in the petition on ele here ¬\nin save as to ode line which is made near ¬\ner to the site of the schoolhouse towit\nBeginning at and including the rail\ndence and farm of J C Neal thence run ¬\nning from the East line of same to mile\npost 124 on the Cincinnati Southern Rail ¬\nway near the crossing of the Uuslonvtlle\nDanvllle turnpike of said said railway\nthence running to Petersburg schoolhouse\nexcluding it thence with Baker and Jen\nnings line to east side of said railway at\nBakers East corner thence with the Fast\nline of said railway right of way South to\nthe crossing of the driveway leading to\nRuss Jones now McOnrraaeksJ house\nincluding it thence residence of John\nMurphy including him thence\nSouth Fork Green River Turnpike to\nNorth end of trestle on said railway in\nfront of Hall Andersons excluding him\nthence a straight line to Bennett Cloyds\nresidence including that farm thence to\nresidence of George Carpenter occupied\nby WilH Routen including that farm\nthence to the old Geo Carpenter residence\nexcluding it thence to Wm Badgetts res ¬\nidence excluding him thence crossing\nHustonville ColTeya Mill Turnpike with\nNorth line of Evan Lyons farm thence\nfrom extremity of said North line a\nstraight line to point on Hustonville and\nCarcnlers Creek turnpike 254 miles from\nChristian College building In Hustonville\nKy thence to the farm of James Gastin\neau including it thence to the crossing-\nof the IJustonville and DradfoTdsville pike\non the Casey county line thence to the\nfarm of C K McClure inclining it\nthence to the farm of N 1 Cone includ-\nIng
0c8e1ee94cfd7fe3d22af0fbebb05357 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.0479451737697 44.939157 -123.033121 builds his vast structure on these same\nspeculations. I have his "Descent" in\nmy library. Hava read it carefully\ntiirougK, some parts two and three\ntimes, ami must say it appears to bo\na well written scientific romance. Evo-\nlution is not ycf ready for burial, uot- -\nwiyistandiug Mi. Darwin's admissions.\nllie refffnts of u. A. (J. nave spoken\npublicly to tho people through the press\nTheir justification for the act of ad\nvancing President Kerr's Balary I fear\nwill not prove satisfactory to the- tax\npayers. A public servant may be effi-\ncient yet tliat may be no good reason\nlor increasing his pay. It might not at\nho time be good business policy. Again\nDr. Kerr could do little at the head of\nthe school without helpers, and teachers.\nWhy nor bring, them into considera\ntion toot Why bestow it all on Prof.\nlKerrf That iucrease o $lm is itself\nmuch moro than the income of many\nsmall taxpayers 6t whom this writer\nis one. Vet w.e are helping to pay it.\nif Mr. Kerr not ask for this increase\nand if he at this time would stand well\nwith the people of the state he will\nicfuse it or return it back into the\ntreasury. We shall see if he does so. I\nam surprised that Mrs. Waldo, Mr.\nSpeuce and some others would lend their\ninfluence to this affair. And the gover-\nnor, too, I am sure" the readers of the\nCapital Journal woujd like to hear from\nthese, or others is "fro the real necessity,\nespecially at this time, for adding this\nexpense to the already burdened taxpay-\ners. Personal favoritism or desiro to do\na nice thing for a friend will not do.\nEspecially with other people 's money.\nI suppose the columns of the Journal\nwill be open for the purpose suggested.\nMr. Maurer of Pratum goes his daily\nrounds in all weathers dolivering milk to\nthe Garden road cheeso factory, lie\nhas been 011 the route two years or mure\nand is so sure to come at a certain time\nthat one could almost dispense, with a\nclock.
001d9fe3d96245ce28ebb26fd4dbfc8d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0178081874683 39.745947 -75.546589 was entirely loo early to Ox a dead­\nline for new business, a» the Legisla­\nture had no exact knowledge as to\nwhat business is to he presented.\nSenator Hobertson contended that\nsuch a resolution was unconstitutional\nand that a member If he so desired\ncould bring In new business on the\nsixtieth day of the session. The reso­\nlution went over until Monday with­\nout any action being taken.\nThe usual resolution» to provide the\nsenators with necessary supplies were\nadopted by the Senate.\nHill to Raise Salaries,\nAlthough the standing committees\nof the House have not been named\nand therefor there are no committees\nto which bills could he referred, Rep­\nresentative F. H . Davis, Republican, in\nIhe House yesterday afternoon Intro­\nduced two bills to Increase the salary\nof the Governor front *4,(KX) to *7.rs8i\nand that of Secretary of Stale\nfrom 11.000 In SC.,000, and Insisted that\nthey be given (test and second rending.\nThis was done and the bills arc left\nwith Ihe clerk until committees are\nnamed. The bill to Increase the Gov­\nernor's salary is House hill No. 1.\nFormer Speaker Alexander P. Cor-\nblt, to assist Speaker Paskcy In be­\ncoming familiar with the procedure\nOf Ihe House, presided over the ses­\nsion yesterday afternoon. When Mr.\nDi^vls Introduced Ihe two bills Acting\nSpeaker Corbll called his attention lo\nthe fact that no committee had been\nnamed Aiul Mr. Davlvs insisted that\nthe Hous.. was sufficiently organized\nlo receive business and that Wie bills\nbe given first and second reading. It\nhas been the custom for many years\nto give (he presiding officers one week\nIf they dedslre It, to get up the stand­\ning committees.
114d74444ce4afa1c2c02f7f133c7149 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.250684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 contract you can do it. but I never will."\nWhen asked why, no replied: "It ia\nwritten in analine ink, which fades, and\nlong before the expiration of thin contract\nthis document will ho entirely faded and\npractically worthless." Tho roault was the\nreturn of the contract, with a request that\nhereafter all important docamenta, the\npreservation of which is desirable, ohonld\nbe written in ink that wonld not fade.\nDuring Gen. Grant's term as President\none of his cabinet ollliws discovered that\ntho records of an important branch of one\nof the departments had been for two years\nwritten in purple ink. IIo at ouco issued\nan order forbidding its nso in tho depart*\nment, purchased a new sot ol books into\nwhich two years' records were copied and\nthus what in o few years would\nhave been lost. It is one of tho problems\nof chemistry to find something which will\nmake pormanent tho beautiful analine\ncolors, but thus fAr all etfbrts have failed.\nIt is growing moro and more tho custom\nto have deeds, contracts and valuable doc*\numenta printed onatyne-writerinanaline\nink. This is a great mistake, because in a\nitm years mey aro sure 10 08 obliterated.\nThe Lounger suggests, thcrofore, that\nmerchants have all important papers\nwhich it is deferable to koop for a number\nof years writton in ink which, instead of\nfading with age, will grow darker aud\nmore permanent. There are a number of\nAmericans and foreign inks which are un-1\nexceptionable in tbiu particular.\nDeath of a Celebrated Hymn Writer.\nif, 1'.
413fdd2b3c86add0bba336504cf0b4d7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.3784152689234 58.275556 -134.3925 "I believe the outlook for the rsorth\nto be very promising, iudeed, and Se¬\nattle's growth has only commenced,\nand if this Northern trade is fostered\nand properly cared for it will mean for\nSeattle in the future a hundred-fold\nwhat it has in the past.".X. W . Miner.\nNome has had a "Midwiuter Carni¬\nval," and it is the biggest thing she has\never had. It was given for the benefit\nof the Holy Cross hospital, and nearly\n61,600 has been turned over to that\nmost worthy institution, which amount\nwipes out every debt against the hos¬\npital and gives them a working capital\nof several hundred dollars. For two\nnights and a day there was nothing\nheard on the streets but "carnival".it\nwas carnival everywhere. The crowd\nattended.the whole town went.and\nthey came from the creeks, and even\nCouncil and Solomon furnished their\nquota. The Gate hotel was\nfilled to its utmost capacity and every\navailable nook and corner occupied.\nThe "wild man," the "fat woman," the\n"merman," the "fortuneteller,"and the;\n"dancing Eskimos," all had their sepa¬\nrate rooms, and outside the "speilers"\ntold the crowd of the wonders to be\nseen on the inside. The "Nome Jockey\nClub" held its second meeting, and\nmany a mile did the little horses ruu\nduring the carnival. It was not neces\nsary to induce people to lay their bets;\nthey wanted to spend their money, and\nthey did. During the vaudeville enter¬\ntainment held in the big hall on the first\nevening ample time was given between\nnumbers for the audience to visit the\nside shows and the long programme\nwas a good one. Saturday afternoon\nfond mothers took their babies to the\ncarnival and nearly forty little ones\ntook part in the "baby show."
148a0d8fbaa004f1268b0cfc39175fe4 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1899.0753424340437 41.875555 -87.624421 To the IMltor of Tho i:agle: One rf\nthe principal reasons why I was for\nSherman for Speaker was because of\nthe hypocrisy of the people opposed to\nIII in. I was a member of tho Fortieth\nGeneral Assembly nud I know how\nmuch money was spent to pass the Gas\nFrontage bill nud the Warehouse bill.\nI know that It took much less money\nto pass thu Allen bill. The Allen bill\non Its face was a fair and a necessary\nmeasure. The Gas Frontage bill, on\nIt face, and In every other particular,\nwas n fraud ou tho public nud n men-\nace to the people. It created n per-\npetual monopoly and deprived the peo-\nple of Chicago of their Inherent rights.\nWhen the attorney of the Trust who\nwas on the ground spoke to me about\nIt, gave my objections freely. I\nknow that many other members had\nobjection. I know how they were\nsilenced. They wro silenced with\nmoney, us every one knows, and the\nprice pnld depended upon a mini'\nkicking ability. Tho Warehouse bill\nwa also bad on Its face. It was n\nblow to the grain dealer and the farm-\ner. The Warehouse bill bribed Its way\nthrough the Legislature. Yet the great\ndally paper of Chicago have never\nsaid a word about thiJ Gas Frontage\nlaw or tho Warehouse litw. WHY?\nWHY? WHY? Wo members havo our\nown opinions ns to tho WHY, especial-\nly where tho dallies are trying to Id!!\neveryone connected with "tho compar-\natively Innocent Allen law. That Is\nwhy we were for Sherman for Speaker.\nThe majority of tho members hate hy-\npocrisy and love consistency.
039457f1cb32505dd3494188ed2d3760 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.368493118975 37.561813 -75.84108 .There was nothing very remarkable\nin the appearance or dress of our con-\njuror. An elderly man, short and sparely\nmade, dressed m dingy white cotton,\nwith ver' tight rleeves to li is robe and\nvery tight legs to his drawers, he might\nhave been a respectable servant out'of\nplace, but actually was a small land\nowner who had taken to conjuring for\nbis amusement. When lie entered the\nroom he spread a while cloth upon the\nfloor and sat down upon it with ids back\nto the wall, the door of the room being\nen his right hand. His spectators were\ndisposed of in the following fashion:\nMr. Smyth Bat on a chair nearly in the\nmiddle of the room, I was sitting on a\nsofa near the door, the Parsee merchant\nstood in the about arm's length\nfro.ii me. The servants stood about in\ngroujs, the largest group being between\nthe uoorandtlie conjuror. As soon as\nhe had settled himself he turned to the\nParsee and asked for the loan of a rupee.\nTlie peddler at first demurred a little,\nbut on being guaranteed against loss, he\nproduced the coin. He was going to put\nit into the conjuror's hand, but thn\nlatter refused and told the Parsee to\nhand it to Jlr. Smyth's bearer.\nThe bearer took it, and at the request\nof the conjuror, looked at it and de\nclared it to be really a ruiee. The con\njuror then told hi m to bond it to his\nmaster. Jlr. Smyth took it, and then\nfollowed this dialogue :\nConjuror Are you 6ure that is a\nrupee.
c9d1b3112adbb113abf1c540e664dee4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.8452054477423 47.04502 -122.894872 The improvement! in the machinery at\nthe Eriesnon ship which experience has sugv\ngoeted, were, at last accounts, neatly com-\npleted, and it was expected she would be\nreally to malre her ?rst Voyage to Europe\nbefore the opening of winter. The BIICCII>\nofthc principle of propulsion by the exparr\nsion of heated air, is triumphantly estub\nlished, and time will perfect its application.\nOrders without number have poured in upon\nthe manufacturers for engines of this char-\nacter. One of the largest steamboat owners\non the Mississippi has made nrran cments\nto apply them to his boats. SeveralV of the\nleading Atlantic journals are about to use\nthem, while the great saving of fuel has in-\ndtteed mill owners to send in large orders\nfor them. We perceive that even Chilt-\nhns taken the necessary steps to introduce\nthe motor upon her waters, by granting\na leading capitalist the exclusive privilege,\nofapplying It to boat! running upon her\nrivers. The small space required for fuel\nwillrender the Ericseon engine indiapensa~\nbiofor vessel» running bet Ween very distant\npoints, as between this port and China— -\nEngland and Australia. Owing to the im-\nmense amount of coal requisite for the toy-\nage between these two last countries. the\nAustralian line of steamers by way of the\nCape of Good Hope has proved a perfect\ntailure. Not one of six steamers running\nupon that route has yet been able to make\neven decent time, and the Colonials are loud\nin their complaints. The ago of steam is\nfast panning away. The ingenuity of men\nis wonderfully active in seeking a substitute\nless dangerous and less expensive. Du,\nTremblens in France has discovered
142890421c6a1506acf3fd55a45297af DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.5082191463723 58.275556 -134.3925 Public Lands Unoccupied Now\nWe i|o not have ih<> bountiful pub¬\nlic domain of the nUlIrM ami aeven-\ntlea. In a literal aenae, for the uae\nof It on a generoua wale for aoldler\nfarm home* aa In the aixtie«, "the\npublic domain ia gone." The of¬\nficial figure* at the end of the flacal\nyear. June 3«. 1017. ahow thin: We\nhave unappropriated land in the con¬\ntinental United Stati* to the amount\nof J30.S57.755 MM. It ia aafe to\nway that not one-half of thla land\nwill ever prove to be cultivable In\nany aenae. So we have no land in\nany way comparable to that In the\npublic domain when Appomuttox\ncame and men turned westward with\narmy rifle and "roll blanket" to Im\nKin life anew. While we do nut have\nthat matchleaa public domain of\nwe do have mllllona of acrca of \ndeveloped land* that can be made\nuvailahle for our hotne-rotnlnic aol-\ndlera. We have arid landa In the\nWent; cut-over landa in the North-\nweat. I .ake Statea and South; and\nalao awamp landa In the Middle\nWeat and South which can be made\navailable through the proper devel¬\nopment. Much of thla land can be\ntnado suitable for farm homca if\nproperly handled. Rut it will re\n<f|ilre that each type of land be\ndealt with In Ita own particular\nfaahlon. The arid land will require\nwater, the cut-over land will require\nclearing, and the awamp land muat\nbe drained. Without any of thene\nalda they remain largely "No man'a\nland." The aolutlon of theae prob-\nlema la no new thing. In the ad\nmlrable achievement of the Reclam-\natlon Service In reclamation and\ndrainage we havo abundant proof\nof what can he done.
0e898440eb6fa8ef985b55ed72336a56 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.5724043399616 39.623709 -77.41082 Cod the tilings that are Cods!” Ret that\ncry haunt you until it compel# yon to pay\nyour debt. i ..ve the courage to look on\nthe one hand at what you are giving to tho\nworld represented by Caesar, and on the\nother at what you are actually giving to\nCod. Is Cod missing His rights? Is your\nduly to Him threatened by the powei\nand pomp of this massive earth? Ah: then\nlie all tho more careful that your debt to\nheaven is paid. Hy the blood ol the Cruci-\nfied. give back to ilod what really belongs\nto Him! Your soul, your heart, your con-\nvictions, vour spiritual reality, your eternal\nbeing—all these to Cod, lor they are His.\nRelieve Him when He tells you that all\nelse that we see and handle is but a shadow\nthat passeth away. Aye, trust Him when\nlie pledges yon His help whenever you\nsincerely want to follow Him, and prom-\nises never leave you to struggle on by\nyourslf. Through Him who condescended\nto make His home in our hearts, who by\nHis spirit "helpetli our infirmities,” It- , * ns\nmake such offering to Cod as yet wo can.\n(five (!od, through Jesus Christ, your\nSaviour, first of all yourself. He will ac-\ncept nothing in the stead of ym-. Do not\nclutch the portion of goods thrt fa 1loth to\nyou and try to have them ail to yourself\nin some far country, where you shall never\nhear the Fathers voice or see His face;\nbut whatever you do have from Him,\nwhether more or less, try to enjoy it as\nchild in your Fathers house, under tho\nconstant benediction of His smile. In the\nface of this tremendous pressure of earth,\nwhich bears down so l.earily upon every\nsoul, resolve manfully that you will not\nyield; that the great and first command-\nment of Christ, "Thou shall love the Lord\nthy Cod.
63edefd9a46842ef6f1a777dd63d6c7a PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.1625682743877 31.960991 -90.983994 work, in the possession of the publisher.\nTo persons who desire to obtain cheaply,\nsound mercantile knowledge; and who are they\nthat could not bebenefitted by such knowledge?\nwe know of no other means where so much can\nbe procured at the same expense. You might be\ndeterred from even opeuing, with such a title,\nfrom the supposed dryness and exclusiveness of\nthe subjects. But an agreeable surprise awaits\nthose who take the best means of testing its\nmerits, that is reading a volume, and few will\nread one who will not secure to themselves the\npleasure and the profit of the residue. To these\nwho are called upon the very high duty of legi­\nslation on the mercantile policy of the U. States,\nHunts Magazine may be pronounced unhesita­\ntingly indispensable.— Nat. Intel.\nThe character of the Merchants Magazine is\ntoo well known to require puffing; but to those\nunacquainted with its contents, if they aro,\nwe would say it. is a magazine filled with mat­\nter, compiled with great care and labor, and gi­\nving to the merchant such information as can­\nnot be found in any other work of a similar na­\nture in Europe and America.— N. O . Com. Bui.\nThe Merchants Magazine continues to sus­\ntain its excellent reputation, and to increase\nconstantly in public favor. No periodical in the\ncountry is conpucted with more industry, intel­\nligence and judiciousness of adaytion to the in­\nterest of the class for whose particular benefit\nit is published. It took the right ground at first\nand has maintained it manfully. No where else\ncun be in so compendious a form, and such ex­\ncellence of arrangement, so large an amount of\nmercantile matter, and so uniformly valuable.\nMr. Hunt more than redeems his pledges to the\npublic in every issue of his excellent periodical.\n—N.Y.Cour. &Enq.
348ffc50dfcbe3109f154a89d7bdab17 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.1407103508905 40.735657 -74.172367 Beginning in the westerly line of Elizabeth\navenue at a point about ninety-two feet soutn\nof the southerly line of Pomona aveneue,\nthence westerly and parallel with Pomona\navenue to the easterly line of Bergen street,\nthence northerly along said easterly line of\nBergen street to a point about .100 feet north\nof tho northerly line of Weequahic avenue,\nthence westerly and parallel with Weequahic\navenuo to a point about fifty feet east of the\neasterly line of Hedden street; thence south-\nerly and parallel with Hedden street to the\nsoutherly line of Weequahic avenue, thence\neasterly along said southerly line of Weequa-\nhic avenue to a point about ninuty-one feet east\nof the easterly line of Heddetf sireet, thence\nsoutherly and parallel with Hedden street to\nthe northerly line of Pomona avenue, thence\nwesterly along said northerly line of Pomona\navenue to the easterly line of Hedden street,\nthence southerly along said easterly line of\nHedden street to a point about one hundred\nfeet south of the southerly line of Pomona\navenue, thence westerly and parallel with the\nsoutherly line of Pomona to n point\nabout one hundred feet east of the easterly\nI mo of Clinton place,, thence northerly and\nparallel with Clinton place to the southerly\nline of Weeqqflipc avenue, thence westerly\nalong said southerly line of Weequahic ave-\nnue to the westerly line of Clinton place,\nthence northerly along said westerly line of\nClinton place to a point about one hundred\nfeet south of the southerly line of Lyons ave-\nnue. thence westerly an<T parallel with Lyons\navenue to a point about one thousand feet\nwest of the westerly line of Clinton place,\nhence southerly and about parallel with\nClinton place to the boundary line between\nB* .s«x County and Union County, thence\neasterly along sa.d boundary line to a point\nabout 100 feet east of the easterly lino of\nElizabeth aVenue, thence northerly and paral-\nlel with the different courses of Elizabeth ave-\nnue to a point about one hundred feet south\nuf the southerly line of Pomona avenue If\nextended east of Elizabeth avenue, thence\nwesterly and across Elizabeth avenue to the\npoint or place of beginning; oh both sides of
1465d87396a2efaa4dc4290164b10a6f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.1794520230847 42.217817 -85.891125 THE INSANE -- ASYLUM INVESTIGATION.\nThe following resolution, offered by\nSenator Billings, called out a very\nsharp discussion in tho Senate last\nWednesday :\nJtfKohi'tl (tho Houao concurrine). That tho\njoint committee of tho two houses empowered\nto investigate tno action of particH having in\nchargo tho Asylum for tho Insane, locatod at\nKalamazoo, bo renuostod to hold thoir invosti- -\ngation with open tloora.\nSenators Billings, Farr and Moore\nspoke in favor of tho adoption of the res-\nolution, whilo Huston, Bell, Childs and\nothers vigorously opposed tho same.\nTho Legislative committees were sent\nto Kalamazoo without instructions as to\nwhether they wero to sit with open or\nclosed doors. Tho Senators opposed\nto tho resolution contended that for tho\ninvestigating committees to sit with open\ndoors would thwart tho very purpose\nfor which they were appointed. Again,\nafter having taken much testimony in\n to open tho doors to tho public\nand press at this stage of tho investi\ngation would defeat the whole matter.\nIt is not likely that the asylum officials\naro as black as they have been painted,\nbut that wrongs havo been perpetrated\nin tho institution thoro is good reason\nto believe. Tho peoplo of this Stto\nhave a vital interest in the great humani-\ntarian institution at Kalamazoo, and,\nwhilo they do not want to break down\ninnocent and able men, thej do want to\nsee a fair, impartial and searching in-\nvestigation: and if any or all of the\nasylum officials aro guilty of misconduct\nthey hope to seo them punished to tho\nfullest extent of the law. On the other\nhand, if everything at tho asylum is a3\nit should be, it is high timo that the\ndamaging reports therefrom should bo\nheavily "sat down" upon.
34c84fe42eb308fd22d366419e8e658c THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1906.4287670915778 46.601557 -120.510842 OFSCMPTIO. » Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined inside\nwith a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small punctures\nwithout allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers slating\nthat their tires have only been pumped uponceor twice in a whole season. They weigh no more than\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of thin, specially\nprepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding Back" sensation commonly feltwhen riding on asphalt\nor soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being\nsqueezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these\ntires is fS 50 per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory piice to the rider\nof only $«.8o per pair. Allorders shipped same day letter is received. WeshipC.O .D. on approval.\nYou do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented.\nWe will allow a cash discount 5 per cent (thereby making the price SA.IiH p. -r pair) ifyou send\nFl s.l. CASH WITH DKDKK and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one nickel\nplated brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these metal\ni puncture closers to be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tires to be returned\nI at ill It expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination.\nWe are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster\n! Banker. Kxpress or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a pair of\nthese nres. you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look\nfiner than any lire you have e*»er used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased\n! that when you want a bicycle you will give us you- order. We want you to send us a small trial\nj order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer.
2b2e9a76d31d9661042dff64f19dcb4a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.1109588723998 39.513775 -121.556359 JBJ>Y VlK'tdli OK \\ DF.HRKTAK ORDER issued\nout of the District CourhNiiith Judicial District,\nin and for the county of Hutfe and Stale of Culllor-\nnia, M mo directed and delivered, commanding me\nto make the sum oftwenty-w* hundred dollars prin-\ncipal of debt, and the sum of five hundred and seven\ndollars, interest thereon then accrued, and interest\non the above mentioned sums from date of judgment\nuntil paid, sit the rale of one per cent pur month, and\nlie- further sum of twenty-four eighty one-hnndtedilis\ndollars, costs of suit, it being an amount due on a\ncertain mortgage given to Jeremiah llulliiey,|ogt*ilier\nwith all th j costs accruing on said order, wln-rin Knn-\ndal Hobart, ndininistrut or of the estate of Jeremiah\n11 aVlnry, drernwd. la th** plfiiniiH mid 0. M l-.v. -m* is\nthe defendant. I will sell if ppblic solo, to Hie highest\nbidder for cash, on Hie thirty-first day of Juiniarv. A .\nI). lrti»7, at Hie tun**of two <>-took, P. M ,Hie follow-\ning described mortgaged properly, to The tin -\ndi\\i ll d one hall of the rancho situated on the east\nbank of Feather river, in II ill I« county. California,\nknown as the Jackson Ram-ko,” containing four\nhundred and eighty acres, and bounded as follows\nto wit: lleginnliig on the east lunik ol main Feather\nliver, at the north-west corner of I he lands or rancho\nowned and occupied by A. Kirby.c Co, ami miming\nHienee along tlie north line ol said rancho one and-\na hull miles east, thence north one half mile, thence\nwest parallel with Kirby Si Co.s north line to Feather\nriver, tneiice down the bunk of said river, billowing\nits meanderings to the place of beginning. Said It a110t,,,\not,,, (Jackson's Rancho) is hounded on Hie south by\nKirby &; Cos rancho or lands, on the west by main\nFeather ri\\er. on the north by In part and next io the\nriver. Hie rancho or lands formerly owned by Tubbs,\nand in part by a portion of the lands and enclosures\nknown as
60bf033e090cb520344249722501db0a THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.875683028486 39.290882 -76.610759 the cast iron protectors which had been fixed to\nthe copper bottoms of ships, so as to prevent their\ncorrosion by salt water, in pursuance of a sug-\ngestion by Sir Humphrey Davy, and observed,\nthat in tliis case the action of the salt water on\nthe iron was greatly aided by the galvanic ac-\ntion caused by the contract of the two metals.\nThe iron lost hal f its weight in two or three years,\nalthough retaining its original form; and in one\nlarge piece, which he produced, the weight was\nreduced almost to the levity of a piece of cork;\nand this piece would make a mark on paper like\na lump of black lead. The cause of the action\nin all these cases was, the minute quantity of\ncarbonic acid gas held in solution by the water,\nit being taken up with the atmospheric air, which\nwas always found to contain about 1 per cent,\n tliis gas. This acid was the cause of rust,\nwhich he proved by exhibiting two botttles, one\ncontaining iron in ordinary water, the other, iron\nin water deprived of its carbonic acids. In\nthis bottle the iron was perfectly bright; not-\nwithstanding it had been two years immersed;\nwhile in the'other bottle the metal was covered\nwith rust. These facts gave a clue to the cause\nof the curious phenomenon first mentioned. It\nwas well known to chemists that several me-\ntals, when reduced to a minute state of division,\ncaught fire spontaneously by tlie absorption of\noxygen. Cast iron, which had been long expos-\ned to the action of salt water, was in this state:\nit was, in fact, almost all carbon, and the little\nmetal that remained, being diffused throughout\nthe mass, was, necessarily, very minutelv divi-\nded ; on exposure to the air, an absorption of oxy-\ngen took place, and great heat was evolved.
233e09282b73c0138f5fdd48679e5e7c THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.4357923181037 39.743941 -84.63662 Behold that pale, emaciated figure, with\ndowncast eye, like some criminal about to\nmeet her fate Bee that nervous, distrustful\nlook, as she walks along with a slow and\nunsteady step. The pink has left her cheeks\nand the cherry ner lips. The once spark\nling, dancing eyes are now dull and expres-\nsionless. The once warm, dimpled hands\nsre now thin and cold. Her beauty has\nfled. What has wrought this wondrous\nchange? What is that wlich is lurking\nbeneath the surface of that once lovely\nform ? Does she realise her terrible condi-\ntion ? Is she aware of the woeful appear-\nance she makes ? Woman, from her very\nnature, is subject to a catalogue of diseases\nfrom which man is entirely exempt. Many\nof these maladies are induced by her own\ncarelessness, or inrongn ignorance oi tne\nlaws of her being.' Again, many Female\nDiseases, properly treated, might be\narrested in their course, and thereby prove\nof short duration. They should not be left\nto an inexperienced physician who does not\nunderstand their nature, ana is. therefore.\nincompetent to treat them. The importance\noi attending to female Diseases in their\nearliest stages can not be too strongly urged ;\nfor if neglected, they frequently lead to\nconsumption, Uhronic Uebilltv, and often\ntimes to Insanity. In all classes of Female\ndiseases, nr. fierce s f avorite Prescription\nis without a rival. No medicine has ever\nsuroassed it In " The PaoDle's Common\nSense Medical Adviser," of which K. V.\nPierce, M. D., of Buffalo, N. Y., is the author\nand published, Is an extended treatise on\nWOMAK AND HER DISEASES. Under this\nhead, the various affections to which woman\nis incident are caretullv considered, accu\nrately portrayed, and a restorative course of\ntreatment sutreested.
20cdef87d459501c9e686e0f530678e9 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1913.4835616121259 39.623709 -77.41082 When the snow flies, I like to look out\nof my window and have a day dream\nof the first snow drops, the scillas,\nnarcissus and hyacinths coming up.\nSpring has more than earthly beauty.”\nNo doubt his pride was justified as\nhe counted the rows of tulips—the\nearliest crowns of gold, the snowy\n"Llmmaculee,” the Due Van Thols,\nthe Cottage Maid and tho Duchess of\nParma —all to bo out bright and early\nIn the spring. Then came the fanciful\nparroquets with fringed and corrugat-\ned petals, and for later May, a noble\nline of the Darwin tulips.\nThe Hollyhock Woman agreed that\nIt was a proud showing. Any one who\ntook a bulb catalogue and was willing\nto buy the lists as they were printed,\ncould have blossoming bulbs In the\n so gay that the whole village\nwould walk that way to look at them.\n"I have been thinking," she said,\n“that most of the gardens all through\nour neighborhood look rather melan-\ncholy this autumn. I make a habit of\nkeeping my plot of earth tidy the\nyear around. Of course, you do, too,\nbecause you hire a gardener to work\nat It. Just walk around the block\nwith me, take notes, and then wo\nshall come back, and Ill praise your\nbulb garden to your heart's desire.\nThere is something in the autumn air\nthat makes one long to walk.”\n"R i ght willingly,” said her compan-\nion, brushing the earth from his hands\nand covering his basket with dry as-\nparagus so that no passer by would\nbe tempted to help himself.
1501149cfeffff0aee0acc3a4d456a5f THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1910.0753424340437 43.994599 -72.127742 S. Robertson, has been his constant\ncompanion since 1899, doing the\npersonal things for him which his\nblindness made necessary, reading\nand entertaining him and bringin\nto his uncle the young life w hich a\nboy in the house can always com\nmand. Mrs. Sarah M. Laid has\nbeen a faithful housekeeper for him\npractically all of the time for the\npast fifteen years, making a hom\nand surrounding him with all the\ncomforts of an establishment.\nMr. Sawjcr was very much inter\nested wi h the upbuilding of this\ntown and in its prosperity. AI\nthough never actively engiged in\nits industrial pursuits, he was con\nnected with the old Bradford bank\nbeing its president for a number of\nyears, lie was not particularly in\nsympathy with secret societies\nnever having affiliated with them\nHe united with the Congregational\nchurch Bradford in 1902 and\nserved as a member of the pruden\ntial committee. He never manied\nHe is survived by only one mem\nbcr of the family of nine children,\na sister, Mrs. Ellis McDuffee, by\nseveral nephews and nieces, grand\nand great giand nieces and nephews\nThe funeral w a held from his late\nhome, on Monday afternoon at 3.30\nwith the Rev. Dr. Stahl officiating\nand the interment was made in the\ncemetery on the upper plain\nMr. Sawer proved his affection\nfor Bradford by his last gifts to our\ninstitutions. Public spirit and fine\ndiscrimination .'.re evident m ewrv\nline of the Will which concerns the\ncitizens. His generous cuts wiu per\npetuate his name, and make his per\nsonality a I:ving one to the coming\ngenerations. His public bequcs's are\n?5,(KX).00 to the Congregational\nchurch, to be known
0d90fba6106333993dbad7d61c16fb0c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.2479451737697 41.004121 -76.453816 tlously In tho matter, lest thoy should\nbo discovered, nnd so under the cover\nof night tho box was removed to their\nlittle cottage. Up to tho early part of\nthis week thoy confided their secret to\nno Jiving person, but n serious nffalr\nhaving occurred botweou the boys, tha\nmatter (being at first but vaguely hint-\ned nt) camo to tlio cars of our reporter.\nHo repaired to tho house on Wednes\nday night for tho purpoao of examining\ntho trcasuro fountl. Tlio box In which,\nit was found Is about three feet long by\ntwo feet yido, evidently mado of a\nspecies of cedar, and is firmly bound by\nstrips of iron, running around laterally\nund diagonally, and fastened with long\nnails, clinched iusido. Tho treasure\nconsists principally of ancient Spanish\ngold silver coin, dated from USD up\nto 1530, nnd it is ndjudged that thero hf\nnt Icnst $30,000 worth of them. Besides\nthe coin, tlioro nro sovcral gold buckles,\nand various other articles, seoinlngly to\nhave been worn as ornaments. A great\nnumber of silver ornaments wero In tho\nbox, which lt appeared were used as\nsomo part of their sword trappings.\npleco of parchment found In tho\nbox was so old and musty that no char.\nncters could bo discerned on it.' As a\nwhole, tho discovery of this long hid-\nden treasure forms uo lncouslderablo\nevent in our history, und will throw a\nnow light upon tho adventures of tho\nhardy Spaniards who frequented the\nspot whero now stands Natchez\ncity, centuries ago. A number of in\ndividuals havo visited tho hut, and
0ddd8b3266af0f7e77e7ed838525e53a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.0671232559614 39.745947 -75.546589 party and the slate at heart, Is hope- 0ftPn proven a storm centre. We are\nful In that four Democratic members confident, however, that the four leg-\nof the Legislature relused to bend the (stators who refused to enter ttie\nknee' and bare the neck to the yoke Democratic caucus can find nothing In\nof a boss. That there are other Dem- Mr Saulsbury's record or In the\nocratic members w ho are In accord ) claims of Kent county candidates\nwith these four and will stand with which would justify them in refus-\nthem in the end, we have every rea- ' (,,g t0 accept Mr. Saulsbury as the\nson to believe. Those four honestly : fairly selected choice of their party\nand courageously represent the Dem-I f0r t(le United States Senatorshlp.\nOfrats of their districts, and therq , withthe near approach of the day\nare other legislative districts whose when the Democrats will assume full\nDemocratic voters demand that the j control of the administration at Wash,\nmembers from districts stand tngton this is no time for needless\nwith those valiant fpur. In fact, w-e ^ factional divisions. Having received\nbelieve that the Democratic senti-, the unanimous indorsement of 25\nment of the state, If fearlessly and members of the Delaware Legislature,\nhonestly expressed, upholds the ac- ' jfr Saulsbury is entitled to the »up­\nturn of Senator Williams and Repre- | port of the other four and we are con-\nsentatlves Houston, Cummins ana fident that when these study the mat-\nSchnelder in refusing to be bound by ter In Its broader light, ignoring the\na caucus of the 29 Democratic mem- strictly local points involved, they\nhers of the Legislature to take from will see that as good Democrats ana\nKent county the United States Sen- legislators they should stand with\natorship, to which Kent county, hy their fellow-Demoerats in supporting\nlong usage and right of représenta-1 the party choice.— P hi la. Record, Jan.\nVon gnd Democratic strength and 22.\nachievement, is entitled. In this day 1
03b87975fc3bf0efd1a70ab950a2cf52 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1894.568493118975 37.92448 -95.399981 Troop Suppress s Riot at Primary Elec-\ntion at Pullman A Hob of Women Fol.\nloir Laundry Girls.\nChicago, Jnly 2L The unusual sight\nof militia called to preserve order at\nthe polls was witnessed at Pullman\nyesterday. At the Sixth primary dis\ntrict polling place of the Thirty-fourt- h\nward, located at the Pullman engine\nhouse, a fight was waged between the\nfactions supporting George V Millei\nand Franklin Rober for nomination foi\nthe Third senatorial district. Miller's in-\nterests at Pullman polls were in charge\nof Alderman Chad wick, while the A. IL\nU. candidate, Robey, was supported by\nlarge crowd of the strikers. The lat-\nter claimed that their man was not hav-\ning fair play and that Miller had two\nof the three judges and all the clerks.\nThey placed William Dirkhoff at polls\nas and Alderman Chad- .vic - k\ndemurred, claiming Dirkhoff wa.1 not\na resident of the district This caused\na lively row, and for a time it looked\nas if the crowd which had rapidly in-\ncreased would, clean out the polling\nplaces. The police were notified and\nsent a patrol wagon with Lieut. Bas -s e - tt\nand eight officers to the scene. At\nthe same time some one wired for the\ntroops, and two detach merits of com-\npany F, First regiment, w ere sent on\nthe double quick to the polls. The\nEhow of force prevented any trouble\nand the police drove the crowd back.\nNo more trouble occurred until 4\no'clock, when the laundry girls quit\nwork. When they left the works they\nwere surrounded by a demonstrative\nmob of from 800 to 1,000 women and\nchildren.
01d57ed0f04c5e51d105d7b79bc81b70 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.9658469629123 46.187885 -123.831256 The "Australian ballot system," is\nthe subject of several inquiries from\ncorrespondents, and the plan is likely\nnext winter to be before enough leg-\nislatures to make its general knowl\nedge a matter of interest Tho ballot\nsystem in force in this country does\nnot guarantee secrecy, and it requires\nballots to be prepared by private or\nparty enterprise and served at every\npoll. The latter requisite makes it\npratically impossible to run a candi-\ndate unless he is backed by an organ-\nization large enough or with money\nenough to liavo a man at each polling\nplace with his ballots. Under the\nAustralian system the ballots are\nprinted by the state, and all candi\ndates, nominated a certain time be-\nfore the election, appearjon these bal\nlots, and no other can be used. \nstead of having a separate ballot for\neach candidate, all the candidates for\none office are on tho same ballot, and\neach voter marks his choice in a room\nby himself. Tho result is that no one\ncan know how ho votes, and in somo\nelection laws under this system the\nvoter is prohibited from telling how\nhe voted under penalty, so as to re\nlievo him from pressure ho might not\nbo able to resist The practical re\nsuit of the Australian system is far\nmore freedom of action, collectively\nand individually, for voters and great\ner opportunity for intelligent voting.\nIn order to run a candidate- an ex\npensive organization is not needed,\nand at the election men in the evil\ntrade of buying votes cannot tell\nwhether the vote is delivered and
1409df806b1a605eb3b3de17c94b4967 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.6561643518519 44.939157 -123.033121 (180u) by which Tyrol was transfer-\nred from Austria to Bavaria, Hofer\nwas chosen a membor of tho socret\nTyrol deputation which weut to Vi-\nenna to confer with tho omporor on\ntho condition of tholr country, nnd\nwhen, on tho advice of Austria, the\nwholo of Tyrol In April, 1809, rose\nIn anus, Hofer was chosen tn tho\ncommand of u largo division of tun\nInsurgents, and Inflicted nu over\nwhelming defeat on tho Bavarians at\nSturzlng. Reinforcements sent by\nNapoleon defeated tho Austrluns nt\nWourgl and the Tyrolose nt Feuorslu\ngor, hut Hofer coming to tho rescue\nJ of his country repulsed the HavarliuiH\nwith groat losa at Innsbruck Nor\nj withstanding also Unit Austria aft.r\nNapoleon's victory nt Wagrutn agreed\nlo evnouato Tyrol, Hofer rosolvod to\nmaintain the struggle, and on the\nj 13th or at Berg Isol. routed\nwith grout Bluirghtor a combined\nFrouch and Bavarian force, and com\npletely freed his count, ry from for\nelgn dominion, For sumo time th\ninternal affairs of Tyrol were admin\nIstored by un Independent govern\nmont of which Hofer was tho head\nbut after the peace of Vienna the\nHavarlann again endeavored to assert\ntheir supremacy und after a heroic\nresistance Hofer was compolled to\nfleo for safety to tho mountains. A\nprice was set upon his head nnd on\naccount of the treachery of one of\nhis most trusted followers, he waa\ncaptured January 27. 1810. In a\nchalet lu t)ie i'ugsoyr valley He was\nsunt to Manttiu for trial and on the\n20th of February, by the orders of\nNapoleon, wus exoauted 2 A hours aft- o- r\nhis condemnation. In 1823 his
1e6180a56a8077d6ff65563ff1d56067 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1902.7109588723997 39.78373 -100.445882 have. At the same time it may not be impertinent for us to inquire\nwhat has been done toward carrying out President McKinley's recipro-\ncity policy. He negotiated a large number of reciprocity treaties, and\nnot a single one of them has been ratified. Nor is there the slightest pro-\nbability that any of them ever will be. Aside from the question of\nal expansion,, reciprocity was the great distinguishing feature of Presi-\ndent McKinley's policy, and if we have aourately noted the course of pub-li - e\nevents, not a single step has been taken toward the continuing of that\npolicy which was intended to make trade a little lreer, and mere mutu-\nally advantageous between our our own and other countries.\nEven reciprocity with Cuba has been blocked, and for no better rea-\nson than that a Republican Senate is unwilling to take off a small portion\n the duty on refined sugar, merelly because it will make a cut into\nthe outrageous profits of the Sugar trust, and this in the1 face of the ad-\nmitted fact that without his reduction the American consuming public\nwill not realize the smallest direct advantage from Cuban reciprocity.\nNext we are told that within the first year of President Roosevelt's\nadministration five great national laws were enacted, in all of whice he\nhas been the guiding force and the most powerfulfactor. An Indian who\nwas charged with making three statements only one of which was true,\nanswered that "one truth to two lies was pretty good for an Injun." In\nthis brief statement the Republican platform makers seem to have an idea\nthat if they did as well as an "Injun," it was pretty good for them.\nThe five measures named are the int er -oc ea ni - c
6958ceaecec0935c1c0946a572d3b9af THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0479451737697 39.261561 -121.016059 Intelligence received during the week\nfrom various sections of the coast enables\nus to lay before our readers more authentic\naccounts of the devastation by the Hoods.\nFrom the North, we have news of a reliable\ncharacter, brought by Mr. Van Dusen, road\nagent of the California Stage Company,\nwho had been ns far as Portland. The re-\nports we gave last week of the destruction\nof property along the Willamette below Sa-\nlem were quite correct so far as they went.,\nbut later news informs us of still greater\nlosses. Linn City was entirely destroyed.\nThe Oregon Hotel, machine shops, all the\nmills, and all the warehouses and buildings\nimmediately along the river bank at Ore-\ngon City, were swept away. Buildings at\nCanemah and the wharf were carried away.\nSteamers passed over the falls without dif-\nficulty. Chainpoeg was swept clean of bou-\nses and stores; Butteville suffered compara-\ntively trifliag loss. The low lands along\nthe river on either side, were overflowed,\nand swimming with fragments or property\ndestroyed. The loss at Salem was severe,\nbut not so bad as at first reported. We arc\nrejoiced to learn that the Woolen Factory\nis standing, and was but little affected by\nthe flood. The destruction in its immediate\nneighborhood was, however, very serious.\n the river bank, Du Belles saw mill and\nsome warehouses, with contents, were de-\nstroyed. A vast amount of wheat and grain\nof all kinds was losi. Albany has not suf-\nfered so badly as at first stated. Some hou-\nses were carried off, but the greater part of\nthe town was not materially injured. Lan-\ncaster, Harrisburg, Orleans, and in fact all\nthe little settlements along the river, arc\nwashed clean of houses and property. The\nSantiatn flooded the whole low country\nalong its course, and every sort of buildings\nwere carried off and destroyed, with im-\nmense quantities of produce of every de-\nscription. There is no specific mention of\nlost property at Corvallis or. Eugene. Hou-\nses, barns, bridges, ferry boats, rafts, and\nall manner of buoyant material, floated\ndown the Willamette during the storm. A\nnumber of persons were rescued at various\nplaces along the banks. Dwellings, with\ncandles lighted in them, were seen to pass\nIndependence. Jefferson City and Santiam\nCity both escaped with little loss. Roads\nare almost everywhere ruined or greatly\ndamaged, and scarce a ferry, bridge or oul-\nvert is left in that whole section. About a\ndozen deaths by drowning are already re-\nported, and it is feared that the list will yet\nbe increased.
042bafa8e857a19b965120eac3e58aad THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.4753424340436 40.063962 -80.720915 commencing at 10 o'clock a. m .. the fol¬\nlowing property, that Is to say: rhe north\ntwo-thirds of lot No. 101 of Chanl ne and\nEoff's addition to tho city of Wheeling\nin Ohio county, West Virginia, except so\nmuch thereof as has heretofore been con¬\nveyed to tho said city of Wheeling for\nmarket purposes. Said two-thirds of sail\nlot have a. frontage of fifty-four feet on\nMarket street and run back, of even width,\nto an alley in the rear thereof, on which\nproperty are situated one three-story\ndwelling house with store-room on ground\nfloor and a one-story brick store-room .\nBeing the -same property that was con¬\nveyed to said James a. FUan by Elizabeth\nB. Wlngerter, guardian of Clara A.. Wln¬\ngerter ot al., by deed dated tho Sth day\nof July, 1891, and of record in the office\nof the clerk of tho county court of Ohio\ncounty. West Virginia, in Deed Book No.\n at page 149; and by Elizabeth B.. Anna\nM., Charles A., Ferdinand J., Fred P..\nHannah and Barbara Wlngerter and Catn-\ncrino W. Flaccus by deed dated July ».\n1S91, and of record In the office of tho cleric\nof the county court of Ohio county. \\\\e?t\nVirginia, In Deed Book No. S7« at I>ase\n151. Also lots numbered 1. S, 5, <. 12, 14 ana\n16 In Fllan & Whyte's addition to the sail\ncity of Wheeling, a Plat ot which addition\nIs recorded la the ofilce of the clerk of the\ncounty couti of Ohio county. W est \\ ir-\nginia. in Plat Book No. 1. at page 2. the\nundivided one-half of which lots was con¬\nveyed to the said James A. Filan by John\nII. Whyte and wife by deed dated October\n19, 1895, and recorded in the office of the\nclerk of the county court of Ohio county.\nWest Vlrgina, in Deed Book No. M, at
e1332738ad04e9c670225d4736d407aa THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1922.412385813039 37.451159 -86.90916 rt My mind was mude up the first\ntime there was any talk ef war, and\nyoa had about aa much responsibility\nfor my going aa some little sparrow or\nsomething. Of course I don't mean I\ndldnt pay any attention to the differ-\nent things you ssld, becsuee I always\ndid, and I used to worry over It be-\ncause I wss afraid some day It would\nget you Into trouble, and I'm mighty\nglad you've cut It out. Thst'a right:\nyou be a regular girl now. You always\nwere one, and I knew that all right.\nI'm not as scared to write to yon aa I\nwas to talk to you, so I guess yon know\nI was mighty tickled to get your letter.\nIt sounded bine, but I was glad to get\nIt You bet write to you 1 I don't\nsuppose you could have any Idea how\nglad I waa to get your letter. I could\nsit here and write to you all day If\nthey'd let me, hut I'm a corporal now.\nWhen you answer, this, I wish you'd\nsay how the old town looks and If the\ngrass In the front yards Is ss green ss\nIt usually Is, and everything. And tell\nme some more about everything you\nthink of when yon are working down\nst the 'Bed Cross like you said. I guess\nI've read your letter five million times,\nand that part ten million. I mean\nwhere you underlined that 'you' and\nwliut you said to yourself at the Ked\nCross. Oh, murder, but I was gtud to\nread that ! Don't forget about writing\nanythtng-els- e
a6354bc42f6362d93c427423a645f795 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.0452054477423 35.780398 -78.639099 Then came a dull sense of pain, sickness\nof death ; and the very fiends of hell seem-\ned rioting in my brain, and in the wilderness\nof insanity I cursed and blasphemed as I lay\nquivering on the ground !\nThe bright sun arose and found me a\nprisoner, closely confined in a narrow cell\nand for what ? The horrid truth flashed\nupon me ; I had committed a murder ! The\nimage of my victim appeared before me ;\nthe deep wound, the ghastly look, the quiv-\nering frame, presented themselves to my\nsight, and almost maddened me. The tor-\nments of that hour I can never forget ; ages\nof misery were crowded into seconds : I had\nleisure to reflect. Alas ! what were my re\nflections r in one moment, unguarded\nmoment, I bad been decoyed, betrayed, lost!\nWhat followed? Horror Horror! There\nare no dream3, no visions of night, half so\ndreadful as are the stern realities of life.\nHere was I a prisoner, one wbose career has\nbeen honorable, and whose endeavors were\nto do good, and set a bright example to\nothers now a murderer! A murder cm\nmitted under the influence of liquor. That\ncurse that dark spot upon the mirror of\ncreation, whose power over mortals is almost\nomnipotent. Fatal, fatal hour, in which I\nleft the quiet of my own house to mingle\nwith the gay, the foolish, and the inebriate.\nYes, the inebriate ; for soften it as you will,\nall are so who make liquor the means of\ngratifying a foolish desire to be considered\nfashionable.
09988a5527efc0657814c6d2a53844c0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 reasonable limits. It Is well kuown\nthat one of the principal causes or the\npauic of 1867 was the very great extent\nto which business had been done on\ncredit; and we believe it Is quite as gen-\nerall\\' conceded that the fact of there;\nbeiuir very little commercial paper\nafloat at the end of the war, has been\none of the most importaut assistance In\ncarrying us through the past two years\nwithout a financial crisis.\nThe experience just referred to, of the\ninjury worked by excessive credits In\none case and or tbe benefit realized\nfrom tbe cash system in the other, is in\nItself sufficiently strong to have such\nInfluence iu guiding future action, out\nreason, we think, points in the same\ndirection. The fact Is simply tbis-that\nthe long credit is one by which\ngoods can be bought with Promise; fo\nnav. The cash or short credit method\ncalls for money Unmediately or in a\nvery short time. The tendency wllb\npurchasers w ill always be to aakfor\nlong credit, and a custom of giving\nsuch credit once established can not\neasily be changed until at length some\ncreat revulsion overthrows every thing,\naud a new order of things is started.\nThe wisest course would seem to be\nto keep up the present custom ot giv¬\ning credit for a reasonable time; the in¬\nterests of both seller and buyer will be\npromoted, and tbe total Mtnount of legi¬\ntimate business done in a year will be\nquite as large as if the terms of trans-\nsctious were notes of from six to\ntwelve months.
0c479ad63a9c9690ad1e287e2285f15e DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1884.5040983290326 39.745947 -75.546589 itfordlng an opportunity to vise and admire\nthe beautlfol scenery that stand«1 out In bold\nrelief along Its banks with its palisades aud\nmountain ranges to add to Its natural attrao- .\ntions ; ihere are numerous towns, villages\nand hamlet* to delUht he excursionists as\nthe boat glides along to West Point, wi.are\nthe aadurslonlsts will have one hoar and 3u\nminutes to visit the military schocl while the\nboat runs up to Mewourg, stopping there 80\nminutes oerore returning to West Point, ar­\nriving In Jersey Uity at 0.10 p. m. After\nleaving the Hudson River boat parties wish\nlug to visit Mew York, Brooklyn and Brook\nlyn Bridge can do eo, as the cars will not\nleave Jersey Olty until 11 SO p. m., or they\n©an take the boat for Coney Isl nd, arriving\nen the Island at 7.80, allowing three hours,as\nthe boat will not leave the Island until 10.30\nft. m., allowing the Hudeoa River excurmun­\nits, along with those that do not go up the\nHudson to the Island In Us Illuminated\nbeauty, along with Its blase of fireworks.Par­\nties not wishing to go\nwill have fourteen (M)\ntime they leave the oars until they go\naboard of them for home, sllowlng a good\nlong Hme to visit Mew York, Brooklyn and\nBrooklyn Bridge. After having visited the\nabove places the ticket will be\ndown to Uoney Island any hour\nday oh any one of the Iron boats irem PierNo.\n1, Mew York,the last beat leaving the ial iud\nat 10.80 to bring all the excursionists ott\n»ey Olty, leaving Jersey City at 11 so p.tn.\nWilmington. Seats on ears all number­\ned. ThetrainwillleavetheP,W,AB. e-\nnot, Wilmington, at fra. mMsharp; Chester,\n6.30. Must leave punctually\nthe Stockton at /ersey City at 0^0 a. iu.—\nRound trip tickets, op the Hudson and to\nConey Island, $8 uo. Mound trip tickets for\nthose not going up the Hudson, but visiting\nNew York, Brooklyn Bridge and Coney Isl­\nand. $8.00 . Children's tickets, fl.tO. Dinner\nthe Stockton positively not more than 6o
0ceb83e7d4d07b26b085b1d1b59726cf THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.875683028486 46.187885 -123.831256 ed shall, at all fires, under direction of\nthe Chief of Police, to place ropes or\nguards across all streets on which shall\nbe situated any Duiiding on lire anu at\nsuch other points as may be deemed ex-\npedient and necessary by the Chief En-\ngineer of the fire department and they\nshall prevent any and all persons ex-\ncept members of the department who\nshall be known by their badges or by\nluemincaiion oy uie uremcu ui ma uum- -\npauy, insurance agent?, members or. tne\npress, and owners and occupants of\nbuildings endangered by existing lire,\nfrom entering within the line or guards\nso placed, and any person or persons\nentering within said lines or guards and\nrefusing to go outside of said lines\nwnen ordered to uo so oy any nro po\nliceman or officer of the fire department\nor police officer shall be liable to a fine\nor imprisonment or both as provided\nlor in tins ordinance.\nSec. 3. Xo person or shall\nbreak through or attempt to break\nthrough such blockade or run over any\nline of hose at a fire.\nSec. 4 . All steam engines and other\nmovable apparatus of the fire depart-\nment shall nave the paramount right of\nway through all streets and thorough-\nfares of the city of Astoria when going\ntoafiro and such apparatus, together\nwith all other vehicles contiguous there-\nto, excepting street cars, shall take and\nkeep tho right side of the street, unless\nthe same be obstructed, and all street\ncars in tho vicinity of such apparatus\ngoing to a fire shall retard or accelerate\ntheir speed as occasion may require, in\norder to give the apparatus of the fire\ndepartment the unobstructed, uso of the\nstreet for the time being.\nSec. 5 . No person or persons havinc\nthe control of any vehicle shall wilfully\nor carelessly permit tho same to ob-\nstruct the progress of the apparatus of\nthe fire department while going to a\nfire.
383e8e13f7343d863b482a7a23a33719 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1906.7575342148655 31.762115 -95.630789 fun at the Doctors expense and they\nhad it A young man was found who\nsaid he would drive the cow to the\nDoctor and was posted as to what\nhe should say to him He told the\nDoctor that he was very willing to\ndrive the cow for the price ofTerell\nbut must have his pay in advance\nThis aroused the Doctors dander a\nlittle to think that he had lived in\nthis community so long and thathe\ncould not be trusted for a dollar anrf-\nhe was anxious to know what th e\ntrouble was The young man told\nhim that he could not be responsible\nfor the cow that she might fall into\na gulley and break her neck as he\nhad been told that the cow was blind\nHe had not asked Rogers about her\nsight and as he knew Rogers was\nsomething of horse trader he might\npossibly have worked off a blind cow\non him or at least it looked that way\nto the Doctor He told the young\nman that he could go as the cow\ncould stay where she was As for him\nhe rushed to the phono and called up\nMrs Rogers who told him that Tom\nhad not come home as yet and he-\non inquiry found that Rogers was at\nthe gin and had not gone home He\nsent a messenger down to tell Rogers\nhe wanted to see him before he left\ntown Rogers lpft the gin after a\ntime but the Doctor was on the look\nouL Rogers dodged behind a store\nbuilding and let on as though he was\ntrying to give the Doctor the go by\nRogers got a mutual friend to go and\nsee it the Doctor would not compro-\nmise
216efc8864a8dc16cca7d1026f7c0ee5 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.828767091578 42.217817 -85.891125 made in the payment or a certaiu sum or\nmonev, secured by a mortgage dated tbe lltn\nday of October, a. b . 1H72, executed by Charles\nDavis, and Retsev Ann Davis, bis wire, of Van\nRuren ( Viunty, in the State of Michigan, to\nJano Hpringsteed, of the County of Cass, Htate\nof Michigan, and recoided m the office of tbe\nRegister of Deeds ror tbe County of Van\nRuren, on tbe twelfth day of October, A. d .\n1872, in Liber (3) of Mortgages, on page (364),\nupon winch mortgage there is uow due and un-\npaid at this date the sum of One Hundred and\nFourteen Dollars, and no proceedings at law\nor in equity having been instituted for the re-\ncovery of the same, or any part thereof : No-\n is hereby given that by virtue of tbe power\nof sale contained in said mortgage, and re-\ncorded tberewitb, tbe said mortgage will be\nforeclosed i and tbat I shall, on tbe twentieth\nday of January, a. d . 1875, at one o'clock in\nthe afternoon of that day at tbe front door of\nthe Court House in tbe village of Paw Paw, (tbat\nbeing tbe place of holding tbe Circuit Court of\nsaid County.) sell at public auction, to the\nhighest bidder therefore, tbe mortgaged prem-\nises, to satiafy tbe amount dne on said mort-\ngage, with interest at seven percent, and costs\nand expenses accorded bv law together wttn\ntbe attorney fee provided for in said mortgage.\nThe said premises are described in and by said\nmortgage as follows, to- w- it
17b517c95ed3029521195c79aed79cfc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0260273655506 39.513775 -121.556359 >f all Ihe ills that affect man none are mere terrible\nthan those of a private nature.- -I>readfiil as it is in\nthe person who contracts it. frightful as an* its ravag-\nes upon hisroiistitntlon, ending frequently in desiruc*\nMon and a loathsome strive. Ii heroines of still greater\nimportniiee w hen it is transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such being the rr.se how necessary it he-\nroines that every one having tho least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoll at once by consulting some physician, whose\nrespectathility and education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and jiermeiieiii core. In accordance\nwith this necessity, Dlt YOCNE feels called upon to\nsuite that, h* long study and extensive practice, he\nhas helome perfect master of all those diseasi s which\nconic under the denomination of venereal, and hav>\nmg paid more attention to that one hranch than any\nother physiclHli In the Ended Slates, he feels himself\nbetter to treat them.\nSyphilis In all its forms, such ns ulcers, swelling In\nthe groans, nicer in the throat.secondary syphilis, cu-\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, tertuary syphilis, sy-\nphilis in children, mercnreii! syphilitic affections, gon-\norrhea, gleet, strictures, false passages, Inllanmlloii of\nthe bladder mid prolrale glands,excoriations, tumors,\npostulea. ktc aie as tamilinr lolinn ns the most com-\nmon things of daily ohservntlon.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent cases in a few\ndays, and duds no difficulty In curing (hose of long\nduration, without submitting the patient to such treat-\nment ns will draw upon him the nllghtesi suspicion\nor oblige him to neglect his business whether within\noors or without. The diet need not he changed, ex - I\ncepi in eases of severe inllmnation. There are in Cali-\nfornia patients (amounting to over two thousand in\nthe past year! that could furnish proof of this ; bill\nthese are' matters thot require thl nicest eecresy w hich\nhe always preserves.
3cfe9f557c9081c7ca855dacc1f656fb THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.2479451737697 39.560444 -120.828218 sum, all of which outlay might have been\navoided and business better attend d to, if\nwe had a suitable county building. Peo-\nple are too apt, in m liters of this kind, to\nadopt the penny wise and pound foolish ”\ncoarse of considering the importance of\nthe first cost, and being deterr d from\naction by the fact of its being large, with-\nout tak.ng into considerali u the fact of\nits ultimate saving. Hence many may\ncomplain that so large an amount as it\nwill require to build a good Court House\nand Jail should be taken from the County\nTreasury. Wo ourselves are strong advo-\ncates for economy in the public expendi-\ntures, and would feel called upon to oppose\nthe present proposition were we not satis-\nfied that the benefits to be derived from its\nconsummation will fully repay the county\nfor the expense. A request to our Semi-\n and Representatives in the State Legis-\nlature has, we are informed, been nume-\nrously signed by tax-payers of the county,\nfor a law authorizing the County to levy\nami collect a tax upon property,of «ne\nhalf of one per cent., the proceeds to be\napplied to the purpose under remark.\nIshould such a law be passed, it would nut\nbe oppressive upon property-holders, while\nit would furnish in the aggregate a sum\nnearly if not quite sufficient for the pur-\npose, and at the same time prevent the\ncounty from being burihened with debt.\nThus far the warrants of Sierra county\nhave been promptly paid, upon presenta-\ntion to the Treasurer; and we trust this\nhealthy state in our finances will long con-\ntinue. We would therefore respectfully\ncall the attention of our immediate repre-\nsentatives in the Legislature to the pro-\nposed law, and ask them to procure its\npassage.
14861780624bf2b53726ec3235e7a37e THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1895.4315068176052 37.92448 -95.399981 these tears and sighs, this blood, those sacred\nand unconscious ashes wo tenderly covered\nwith flowers today, thlt flag would have been a\ndishonored rag, the centennial of the Republic\nwould not have been celebrated, the geography\nof the conUnent would have been changed, the\nUnited States would have disappeared lrom the\nnap, an incoherent aggregation of petty com-\nmunities, discordant, bellgercnt, like the petty\nStates of Mexico or Central America, would\nhave been substituted for this continental, in-\ndissoluble, indivisible nation, whose banner la\ndestined to float from the equator to the pole of\nthis hemisphere. The Declaration of Independ-\nence would have been an antiquated relic, tho\nFourth ot July a Jubilee or acspots. the const!\ntuUon aud laws of the United States would\nhrve been like the codes ol JusUnian All the\nglories and traditions of our history, valor\noi our neroes, me wisaom oi our sages, tne elo-\nquence of our statesmen, all that is inspiring In\nour annals or resplcndant in eur example, all\nthese would have been scattered and dispersed\nlike the trivial assets of an insolvent partner-\nship. Freedom would have been a phrase, po-\npular government ,a definition, liberty of\nthought and conscience would nave been sen-\ntences whose meaning would have been found\nin dictionaries and not in the statutes of a free\npeople. Our present would have been an armi-\nstice, with standing armies in eTery capital and\ncustem houses on every frontier; our future\nwould have been an acbyss which no sagacity\ncould penetrate; our past would be a catastrophe\ncontemplated by tyrants with derision and by\ntheir vicUms with despair. Millions of human\nbeings would have been held in slavery,
a89c5b2ec2176a29ac0ed90c686fd1fa SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1852.0040983290326 35.780398 -78.639099 sheriffs' situation become a sinecure, and the\nmanufactures of the country deteriorate in\nvalue : in the face of all these fearful alterna-\ntives, we have vowed our energies, our existence\nto the struggle in which we are engaged, (cheers)\nIgnorance may thwart us, envy may oppose us\nthoae who live upon the crimes, vr gorge their of\nvenal appetites upon tho follies of the people,\nmay pour upon us all the calumny their black\nhearts can create, or their lying lips utter we\nwill still psrscvere, for we know that truth is\nomnipotent, aod in tho end will be triumphant.\nOur principles are too widely known to require\ncomment Neutral in religion, neutral in oli -tic- s,\n(although we arc decidedly of opinion that\nthe temperate citizen is more likely to be of\na better christian and a better patriot as well as\nft truer husband and a better parent than the\ndrunkard) no man is excluded our society on\naccount of his religious or political opinions.\nWith a love, that while it is the essence of the\nGospel, yet is older than it, and eternal as the\nfountain from which it sprung, we regard all\nmankind as brothers. This is not only the theory io\nof our lips it is the profession of our hearts\nand the practise of our lives. We have no foe\nbut intemperance, and wo can know no rest till\nit is completely exorcised. After dwelling nt\n length upon the enormous amount\nof money annually spent in the purchase of in-\ntoxicating drinkB, and in punishing tho crimes\nof which it is the cause, Brother Skelly refuted 01\nthose silly objections which tho uninformed or\nthe interested usually make against the princi-\nples, of the order, and continued : Seeing that\nthe friendship of the world is often fickle, some-\ntimes false, always uncertain, the Sons of Tem-\nperance havo knit themselves into a bond of af-\nfectionate Brotherhood, for the purpose of mu-\ntual suport in the season of adversity. It is the\ncustom of the selfish when forming any friendly I\nassociation, to hold the ties so extreme! v loose\nas always to have it in their power to stra'ten\nor relax them, as circumstances or situations it\nmay render most expedient, snfling upon us\nwhan fortune lights our path, and deserting us\nin the time of difficulty, when we most need\ntheir sympathy and assistance. To obviate this\nevil, to give a systematic direction to generosity, if\nas well as to cement more throughly the frater-\nnal feelings with which we regard each other,\nwe afford each other mutual aid in the time of"\nsicknesi or privation, not given with the cold\ncharity which chills and humbles, but with the\ncheerfulness and affection which, while it affords I\nrelief and generates gratitude.also inspires hope,\nand makes the receiver only feel that he has\nBnoxiiKiw.
40a234b4a069b752bfabe1fe8f4cfcb3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.06420761865 39.745947 -75.546589 In his books Mr. Pyle has often\nlikened himself to one who sits by\nthe wayside to amuse and instruct\nthe weary traveler who. happening\nalong, stops awhile to hear a tale of\nadventure or perhaps a parable\nquaintly told. But his messages have\nbeen various» He baa Indeed lifted\nhis voice to the passerby, and to his\nfellow workers of a younger genera­\ntion his message has been vital and\nsignificant. Ho hud much tol give to\nall the world, but to those who car­\nried like burdens to his and1 sought\nto picture the things they loved he i\nwas a guide and an inspiration. Be­\nhind their crude expression he saw\nthe ever-lllusive ideal and with 9»\nwonderful sympathy could see and\nhelp them to bring to greater clear­\nness the students own dreams.\nMany of us came to him from afar.\nSome of us having to ask the name\nof the city of his residence and know­\ning nothing of his school came out\nof sheer respect and admiration of his\nwork, because we desired criticisms\nfrom the man who could do such\nwork. We found here a sympathy\nand a comprehension of our aims that\nGr illed our hears. Our minds were\nopened to new worlds of thought. Art\nlonger appeared the narrow and\nself-centered thing we had to\nfear and to feel it to be.\nHere was a man who had kept the\ndream, who was saddened to see\nothers losing it. and who cared to\ngive his time to turning our faces\nthat way again, to remind us over\nand over and to implore us never to\nlose or\nideals\nto be a two-fold one, that we must\nremain true to our own ideal and\nalso look lo the need of the world\nabout us. "In every human being,” he\nsaid, “there lies a thread that con­\nnects with every other life. Judt\ninsomuch as we are able to express\nthat underlying thought or emotion\nthat it will be redbgnlzed and felt\nby our fellowman do we succeed.\nIs not enough to exnresg only our\nQwn little Individualities. We should\ngo deeper and touch the underlying\nvital chords of human life in such a\nway that there will be a response."\n“1 well remember.” he continued,\n"the first time I realized this. In an\nexhth*tlon there was a picture of an\norchard.\nrinssed through euch an orchard and\nseetne: a girl leaning on a cart filled\nwith vosv apelec exclMmed. What a\nstunnl-g subject! He got a model\nposed her hv a cart and coaled what\nhe s°w, hut the p'ctnre (uterp.ted no\none He had missed the
190cbbb3945a6c8b269add84d072848f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.8397259956876 40.063962 -80.720915 The oilers aggregated $701,800. Tho\nhighost bid was that of Messrs. Kearfon-\ngood & Myer, of Cincinnati, who offer¬\ned a j)reiniurn of 5.11 on tho whole\nissue, but tho representative of that\nlirm who waB present gavo tho commup\naionors to understand that if his house\ngot tho bonds ho would want to delay\noperations a week or ten days to exam¬\nine into the loan. I .amprecht Bros. A\nCo., of Cleveland, had already exam¬\nined into the loan to thoir satisfaction,\nand as their bid of 4.54 premium was\ntlio second best, tho whole issue of tho\nbonds was sold to them. Ily combining\nsome of tiie bids for smaller blocks tho\ncommissioners could have come within\n$200 of tho bid of tho successful firm,\nbut that $206 and tho increased facility\nof issuing all to one purchaser sottled it.\nOnly two small bids were as low as\n and there were a number for small\namounts as high as five per cent\npremium. Each of tho bidders from a\ndistance had a representative present\nin person to represent tho lirm. Gov¬\nernor Fleming was also hero to look\nafter tho interests of the State Univer¬\nsity, which desired to secure tho bonds\nas an investment for its funds, but bid\ntoo low. There were in all 87 bidders,\nthe bids being for front. $100 to tho\nwhole amount of the loan.\nA prominent banker said yesterday\nthat it was fortunate that tho bonds had\nbeen sold to non-residents, becauso this\nbrings into tlio community and puts\ninto circulation additional" funds, i\nstead of locking up money already here.\nThe premium on bonds paid by Lain-\npreclit it Co. is ^5,155, making the total\namount realized by tho sale $72,005.\nThe leading bids from a distance were\nas follows:
2284fe5973da94ebfba20e4e9fa3f04e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.6407103508905 46.187885 -123.831256 Astoria. August 14th. 1888 .\nCHIEF OF POLICE SALE.\nNOTICE is hereby given that by vir\ntue of a warrant issued by the Auditor\nand Police Judge of the City of Astoria,\nin accordance with an order made by\nthe Common Council of the City of As-\ntoria, by Ordinance No. 1017, entitled an\nOrdinance ordering the Auditor to is-\nsne warrants for the collection of as-\nsessments remaining unpaid on West\n9th street, between Water street and\nuerry street, approveu juiy join, ibss,\nsa(d warrant bearing date the 2j11i day\nof July, 1833, commanding ,u0 to levy\nupon the N orthjs of lot No. L In block\nNo, 110, in the City of Astoria as laid\nout and ro corded by J. Al, Shively, to\ncollect an assessment of thirty dollars,\nwhich assessment was maae ior tne \nprovement of West Oth street, between\nWater street and Berry street, by Or-\ndinance 1045, entitled an Ordinance de-\nclaring the probable cost of Improving\nWest 9th street, from tho South side of\nW ater street to tno souui sme or Berry\nstreet, approved June 29tb. 1888, 1 have\nthU dav levied upon the North 14 of\nlot No. 1, in block No.llC, in Shively's\nAstoria, and on Friday, the 14th day of\nSeptember, at 10 o'clock i. m ., of said\nday in front of the Court House door in\ntho City of Astoria, Clatsop County,\ngon. will proceed to sell the North\nof lqt No. 1, hi block No.llG, in Shive-\nly's, Astoyia, to tho highest bidder\ntherefor, to pay said assessment, coats\nand expenses of sale. Said sale to be\nfor U.S . gold coin.
49afcd7f543a4bac64e866345459c618 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7547944888381 40.063962 -80.720915 lility of regulating the rain-fall.Prol. Es- ii\nicy,who wrote a great deal on this subject d\nomo years ugo, arguing that we might B\nvhen we Imil advanced a little further in o\ncieni't' have rain when we want it in- I'\nitead of wlieu wo don't want it. Aud d\nhere is something of plausibility in the c\nden. For instance, as our own country c\nins liad foul reason to know of late years, h\nifter n great battlo there is almost always l<\ni great rain. I think that is the expert- tl\n;nce of Kurope nnd this country, a'Very ti\nmiforni experience, every since artillery tl\nif a large kind was invented, whereby h\nii time of battlo there is very great con- h\nMission of the atmosphere. Our experi- h\nince tells us Unit there certainly no less n\nivater in the sky or in the atmosphere tl\nivlien we need it most. Wo know now, m\nor instance, for the last three montlis g\niver tlio greater part of this country there a\nlas been a continual absorption ol water a\nrom the earth into the atmosphere.a I\nlontinual drawing up of water and very V\nittlu return ol It; so that wo may fairly c\nionclnde tliat if wo only knew now to n\notfeh the right string we should bo able n\no control and command a supply of rain.\nJut, alter all our speculation, 1 believe the\nain comes just when It's a mind to, and t,\nlot when wo would like to have it, and |,\nirobttbly will do so for some years to come. c\n"llOTC TO MAKE TUB MOST OK IT.-:
090d5106b02bd44102c2badd27cecc88 THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1905.5136985984273 39.739154 -104.984703 guest, looked out and gave a soft,\nsharp, shrill whistle which was an-\nswered and in about three minutes a\nmin walking briskly passed by our\nplace of concealment, evidently on his\nway to the library wihdow. With the\nstealthy spring of a tiger, John\nHenry sprang into the path and\nthrowing his bis brawny arm\naround the neck of Mr. Collyer's con-\nfederate forced him to the ground.\nHe attempted to lesisl. John Henry\nplaced his thumb and fore finger in\nthe man's windpipe and be became as\nlimp as a dishrag. We then lied his\nhands and legs securely with the rope\nwe had brought. John Henry had\nthoughtfully put a kitchen towel into\nhis pocket before leaving the laundry\nand with this wo gagged our man to\nprevent him from making an out cry.\nWe then rolled the gentleman over\ninto the shrubbery, and while John\nHenry kept guard over him with\ndrawn pistols. I took his place and\nhis hat which I donned with some\ntrepidation to act as his substitute.\nApproaching the window of my li-\nbrary I imitated the peculiar whistle\n nearly as I could and it was an-\nswered Irom above by Mr. Collyer.\nCreeping stealhily up towards the\nhouse I waited for results. Present-\nly down came the suspicious little\nhandbag on the end of a rope. I de-\ntached tha little joker and set it\naside. It was quite heavy for a bag\nof its sire. The rope was drawn up\nagain try the gentleman in the library\nand in a few minutes was sent down\nwith a well filled pillow case on the\nend containing my bric-a-brac and\nsome articles of virtue valuable pa\npers. money from from my safe;\nI smds and some rare old I sicks which\nI had purchased in Europe, as subse-\nquent investigation proved This 1\ncarefully detached from Hie rope and\nplaced beside the grip or handbag\nand again the rope was drawn up to\nreturn freighted with my valuables.\nEvidently the gentleman in (he libra-\nry was going to make a clean job of it\nfor this time he had made a bag of\nthe counterpane and tilled it as fuil\nss it would conveniently hold of what
180be731237f7c1913ba5c7db1263638 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.528688492967 40.063962 -80.720915 action indicate their approval of the\nadoption of the amendment as a part ol\nthe Constitution, nor that they woulc\nthemselves advocate its ratification by\nthe Legislatures of the States."\nAfter statiug that a majority of tlx\ncommittee think a refusal to submit tin\nproposed amendment to the States foi\nratification would be analogous to the\ndenial of the right of a party to be bean:\nin court upon a question of private righ\nthe report continues:\n"The agitation for National legislator\nfor the extirpation of the traffic it\nalcoholic poison made and sold to lx\nused oh a beverage win uevur whdc w\ndisturb and finally to destroy the grea\npolitical parties until thev submit to th<\nStates the question of the enlargemen\nof National constitutional jurisdiction »\nas include control of the subject\nWhen decided, if adversely to the rati\nlication, the subject will be eliminate'\nfrom National politics. at least for man;\nyears. If. on the other hand, the pro\nposed amendment should be ratified am\nl>eeome a part of the National law, th\nchief curse of the world would be sum\nmoned to the block of National justic\nand die on the hand of the only powe\nwhich can wield an ax big and shar;\nenough to cut off its hydra head. Thei\nwe shall have peace. But agitation to\nthe destruction of the liquor traffic cat\nnot cease until the evils which it inflict\nupon mankind are removed or the lit\nman race, is destroyed. It is useless t\ncry peace, peace, when there is n\npeace,"
9aa9a1bba8ca7865c2f53757c3b8b17a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.6625682743877 39.513775 -121.556359 The Executive portion of Vigilance t\\m-\nmittee hare issued an address to the gei -\neral Conimittee on the occasion of the r\ntemporary suspension of business. It is “a\ndiarrhea of words and a constipation ol\nideas,” chiefly devoted to the laudation of\nthe Committee, extolling the purity and dis-\nintcrestness of ti e';r acts, and assuring ti c\npublic of what the Committee might ba'e\n'lone had they been disposed. We have cot\nthe least doubt but that the public duly ap-\npreciate the position of the Committee, and\nhave a very general understanding of their\nacts, if not of the motives which prompted\nthem thereto. We doubt not the public\nduly appreciate the cowardly prudence\nwhich which prompts the Committee to re-\ntain the arms which belong to the Ftate,\nwhile our citisens are being murdered by\nsavages and plundered by organized bands\nof robbers. We doubt nut the public duly\nappreciate the act of ihe Committee in plun-\ndering the State of arms furnished by the\nGeneral Government, and selling them to\ntheir hirling soldiery at $4 apiece. Why\nshould the attempt to deny their\ninterference in political matters,when their\nprominent members figured at the different\n^resignation” meetings held in San Fran-\ncisco, and when their miniocs marched off\nto the Vigilance rooms, as prisoners, those\nwho ventured to vote against requesting the\nofficers to resign ? Why talk about the\ngenerosity and.manliness of the Committee,\nwhen they manacled and marched through\nthe streets of San Francisco men whose only\noffence was that of obeying the call of the\nauthorities, and volunteering to sustain the\nlaws and constitution of their country ?\nWhy talk about the purity of the ballot box,\nwhen it is watched and surrounded by an\narmed and self constituted body of men ?\nLet the Committee retain the arms belong-\ning to the State fur the protection of their\nown worthless carcasses, and thus aid the\norganized bands of villiatis to plunder tbe\nminers in the mountains, and the Savages\nto murder defenclcss families, and then in-\nsult their victims bj publishing to the world\nthat no one opposes them but politicians,\nand men who have bo permanent interest\nin the country.
43a11dcb68a8a739b3bfa426798873f9 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1866.6041095573314 37.561813 -75.84108 ground controlling Southern Legislatures,\nand embittered by disappointment In their\nschemes to destroy the Union, there will I\nno safety for the loyal element of the South.\nOur reliance for proteetloif. is now on Con-\ngress, and the great Union party that has\nstood, and is standing by the nationality,\nand by the beneficent principles of free\ngovernment. rFor the purpose of bringing\nthe loyal Unionists of the South into con-\njunctive action with the true friends of Re-\npublican government of the North, we in-\nvite you to send delegates In goodly num-\nbers from all Southern States, Including\nMissouri, Kentucky, West Virginia, Mary-\nland and Delaware, to meet at Independ-\nence Hall, iu the City of Philadelphia, on\nthe first Monday of September next. It Is\nproposed that we should meet at that time\nto recommend measures for the establish-\nment such government in the South as\naccords with and protects the rights of all\ngooJ citizens. We trust this call will be\nresponded to by numerous delegations of\nsuch as represent the true loyalty of the\nSouth that kind of government which\ngives full protection to tho rights of the\ncitizens, such as our fathers intended, and\nwe claim as a birthright. Either the lovers\nof constitutional liberty must rule the na-\ntion, or rebels and their sympathizers be\npermitted to misrule it. Shall loynlty or\ndisloyalty have the keeping of tho destinies\nof the nation 7 Let the responses to this\ncall, which is now in circulation for signa-\ntures, and is being numerously signed, an-\nswer. Notice is given that gentlemen at a\ndistance can have their names attached to\nit by sending a request by letter, directed\nto D. W. liingham, Esq.,
43b92bd9c2600702eed238c0e93a0684 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.43698626966 37.561813 -75.84108 is absolutely essential for tho preserva\ntion of the teeth, and they should be\nwell brushed at least morning and even-\ning, that any feculenco which may be\nattached to them, cither during sleep\nfrom tho stomach, or by day from meals,\nmay not bo allowed permanently to ad-\nhere, causing, firstly, discoloration, then\ntartar, and subsequently, if I may so\nexpress myself, undermining the con-\nstitution of ono or more, as from their\nposition they may be more or less liable\nto corrosion. In order that tho teeth\nshould look natural that is, retain\ntheir natural color a dentifrice free\nfrom the smallest particle of acid should\nbo used at the matin hour, and the\nmouth rinsed with tepid water, for ex-\ntremes of beat and cold aro most highly\nprejudieal not only to their color, but\nalso to their durability; and I know no\nmethod so simple of converting a really\nuseful and ornamental set into ono of\npain and subsequent than\nthe use of washing in either one or the\nother. Tho person v. ho habituates blin\nor herself, to any extent, to hot soup,\ntea, or other drinks, assuredly rivals\nthe friend to tho dentist just named.\nBrushes for the teeth should be of me-\ndium substance of bristle, and those\nmado on what is called tho ponctrating\nprinciple nro best. I would also observe\nthat children at nn early ago bhould be\ninstructed in the use of tho '.ooth-br us -\nand taught the valuo and importance of\ntho teeth, in order to inculcate habits\nof cleanlinoss and a duo appreciation of\nthe ornaments of the mouth. A brush\nproperly selected (not too bard) maybe\nused by children of five years of nge,\nevery morning; and by boing part and\nparcel ot the general ablution, and thus\ndirecting habitual attention to the tocth,\na useful and cleanly Labit will be en-\ngendered whioh will probably enauro for\nthem proper care through life."
13664fe3cf7d53e5d3e9a93592aabf72 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1881.2534246258244 40.832421 -115.763123 Messrs. O. W. UttOB * Co. take (n\ncharge of tba a. rat mark. I fo«nerl\nowned by Knasell * Brwdley. to «uo."\nrow roornltik. Tba alui of tba net\nflrtn will be, by a course ol liberal wo-\nfair (foaling, to retain na regular cue\ntotDria, every p .trou of tbe former pai\ntiea. ami by a strict attention to th\nbusiness to furniab Ho gronuls for di-\nestisfactiou in any qnarter.\nFrank Feruald, ol tbe firm of Payi.\nJ: Feruald. lumber dealer*, baa ju-\npurchased the Beat dwelling hou.\nbuilt by O. H . Bobier, weal of tbi\noffice, and Central Pacific Agent E. * .\nBuaiug, who with bia family baa ,o«\ncopied th» boiihe, baa removed to th\nwidow Iluuter'a on &tb atnet. It i\nrumored that will mainlai\nbich.lor ap.rtuiauta at bis newdoiuicil\ntor but a brief period.\n8am May. be of tba rnrtnine eye.\narreati <1 00 a charge of grind larceny\nlu appropriating a foreign cayuae, bm\na baaring before Justice Wngg.- t t, y. « .\n¦ erday, aud pleaded hia owu case wit\n. u ch convincing rloqneiice and toucl\ntng path »s, that tb i Court waa melt,\nto taara. An lie walkeu forth front tl<\nglootuy Temple of Justice into tb\noticerlul sunlight-mercury 83 above\nthe air of lofty resignation euvelopln\nbia person, together with the Isiub-lik\nl-»ok ol Chrtstisn meekness and forti\ntuJe besutifully blradiug in bia Oori\ncountenance, reudered him tbe Ter\nideal of n representation by one o\ntba old masters.of unappreciated vii-\ntua and injured innocence.
1ddb00aecd029afc7dfe3989dc2bdefe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.5356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 Thornton J. Haiti* in I*»lle'» Weekly. | along through the troplci, a few degree\nThe big Indlaman Richard III. was nortn 01 the equator, Tne yards wer\nrolling slowly down the northeast trad* braced sharp up to the port tack.as th\nwind, one bright morning In October, trade wind waa well to the southwest c\ntwenty days out from Liverpool, bound east at this season.and the ship heele\nfor Calcutta. The captain had Just over slightly and rose and (ell with\ngone bolow to get bis sextant to take steady motion as she rushed alon\nhis noon observation, and the mate was through tbe moonlit waters. Tom'\nsquinting and straining away at the watch was on deck, and he leaned ove\nsun with an old quadrant that made the the knlght-heads and watched the si\nbright orbs of day danee and Jump very foam go roaring off from the cu\nabout the horlson In an unaccountable water and waste Itself In a shower c\nmanner. His featuns were undergoing sparkling gems on either bow. It was\nalarmlbg convulsions, and bad It not beautiful nlgbt The tropic moon, rlgh\nbeen for the ample quid Of tobacco In over the end of the main royal yarc\nhis cheek, the man at tbe wheel might cast long shadows on the huge fabric c\nhave thought he was trying to bite off a canvas. The horizon waa shaded In\nlarge piece of tbe Tropic of Cancer. In thick hate, as Is often the case In th\nfact, he was so engrossed In an astrono- tropica, but the sky wa\nroical feat that, tbe man at tbe wheel cloudless. Tbe soft hum of the trad\ntook advantage of the opportunity to wind In the rigging and the swssb c\nbite off a piece of "navy plug" and ex- water, coupled with the steady rise an\npectorate voluminously Into the corner fall of the ship, produced a soothing ef\nof the wheelhouse gratings. Then, wip- feet on the tired body, so more tha\ning his mouth carefully with the back once Tom caught himself nodding. H\nof Ms hand,' he" smiled complacently felt In his pocket and took out the ptec\naAd cast his eye along the weather- of plug tobacco the sscond mate ha\nleech of the mlzzcn skysall and let It given him, and bit off a chow to kee\nwander down slowly over the whole his jaws moving. He did not care muc\nvast fabric of stretching canvas Until it for the tobacco, but all Ballon chewei\nrested upon the main deck. Here some- and, alhtough BUI had Jeered at hlr\nthing attracted his attention, and he .and tried to take It away, he kept II\nkept his gaze fixed so long at one spot and determined to be a thorough salloi\ntjiat .thp vessel luffed-to nearly three He had been given a chance to become\npoints before he knew what he was man, and he would fight for It and d\nabout, and, had the mate been less busl- the best he could. What If hlB mothe\njy occupied, he would have received a could see him now.on a clipper
b2edc34fc6f74eb4bf18a6dc68ec60c8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.0452054477423 41.681744 -72.788147 same defendants, which was tried to-\ngether with this case, being No.\n24016, with relation to the question of\nliability and damages for the taking\nthe coat of the plaintiff In that case,\napplies to the similar question pre-\nsented by the second count In thit\ncase. For the reasons there stated 1\nfind that this plaintiff is not entitled\nto recover on the second count.\n"The first count is based upon per-\nsonal Injuries, alleged to have been In-\nflicted by the defendants upon the\nplaintiff upon the same' occasion.\nWhile apparently the most serious in-\njuries of which the plaintiff here\ncomplainB were sustained after she\nhad actually gone out of the room\nwhere her son Frank was, lawfully\n(see Memorandum in No. 24016)\nplaced under arrest, I am satisfied\nupon all of the evidence that thlr\nplaintiff in common with her \nband attempted to and did interfere\nto some extent with the officers in the\ncourse of the arrest "and removal of\nher son Frank, and the search for\nbrass knuckles properly Incidental\nthereto and while very likely these in-\njuries might not have been received\nexcept foT the further trouble in the\nkitchen during which this plaintiff as\ndisclosed by the evidence, attacked\nthe defendanta with vigor and mark-\ned at least one of them with one of\nthe pots or pans which she apparent-\nly effectively wielded, still this melee\nwas In fact a part of and certainly a\ndirect consequence of the resistance to\nFrank's arrest and said search inci-\ndental thereto and not of an attempt\nwrongfully to search the premises as\nclaimed by the plaintiff. The plain-\ntiff therefore is not entitled to recover\non the first count of her complaint.
1d9cdbc5d6e92cbc9286bdfa9f0bc7c6 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1900.869862981989 58.275556 -134.3925 Consider dirty-mouthed Bill Mason,\nof Suckerdom, as another samplo of\nsenatorial statesmanship, lie is hardly\nfit for the tambourine end-man of a j\n! fourth rate nigger minstrel show; but\nI stinking and shining, and shining and\nstinking, like a putrid mackerel in tho\nmoonlight, ho fitly represents the Clii-\nj cago river in such a senate, and is a\ntypical "Skunk Creek" crystilizatiou of\nour whole political system.\nShovel more moral ipoeac into tho\nstomach of vour eyes by glancing at a\nnational house of misrepresentutives,\nof demireps, jammed with dime muse-\nj um freaks at bargaiu-counter rates.\nthree for a nickel, and high at that.\nTariff-crank Dingleys, clamorously\nshamming belief in their own stupid\nlie, "The heavier the taxes, the happier\nthe taxees;" little Tadpole Quiggs,\nfrantically striving to blow themselves\nup, with their own fizzle gus, iuto prize\nasses of statecraft; cheap-buffoon Al¬\niens, Dollivers, and Chomp Clarks, with |\ntheir stale sarsaparilla-almauac jokes;!\nSockless Jerries and Sombreroed Bail-!\neys, as uncouth and ignorant and ever j\nready to paw up the dirt, as the long-\nhorned steers that roam their cactus\ndeserts; and a huudred other varieties\nof the queer and outlandish thiugs \nsometimes sees when he has no gun\nwith him.including Amos Cummings,\nof Now York, who voluntarily left u\nthen really respectable editorship to\nlose himself iu this vile herd of misfit\nnonentities aud quizzicalities.\nThey illustrate, with few exceptions, j\nthe missing link theory of the survival\nof the unfittest. They are generally;\nelected on "the American plan" of\nchosing for congress the fellow that can\nbest be spared from the district or the\nstate. If he cannot bo sent to the lu¬\nnatic asylum, the poor house or the\npenitentiary, he is branded "statesman"\naud shipped on to Washington. They\nare first, last and all the time, for Self\nand Pelf. They all spell Paytriotism\nwith a "y." There is not one great\nname or great man among thorn. Not\none of them ever originated a measure,\nuttered a sentiment or conceived a\nthought worthy of remembrance till,\ncock-tail time next morning. Not one\nof them ever had an idea bigger than\nhis contemptible district or state, sec¬\ntion or party. Not one of them ever\nfelt the thrill of an ambition or aspira¬\ntion beyond or above blowing off ill-\nsmelling flatulence, peddling cross-\ni
00dcd6065fe27cc42dd66bcac5111b6a SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.2917807902081 37.53119 -84.661888 A LEAnNEDDISQUISITION\nCRAP ORCHARD April HA fe1\ndays ago one of your citizens W H\nRigging and one of Crab Orchards\nJ S Dameron got Into a dispute abut\nthe length of a perch or polo and re\nferred the matter to me to be aniwer\nthrough tho columns of tho IKTERIC\nJOURNAL Polo occurs both In linen\nand land measure Linear measure Is\nused In measuring lines distance St\nThree barley corns make one Inch 12\ninches a foot three feet one yard 51\nyards or 161 feet one rod polo or perch\n1760 yards a mile eight lurlongs a\nmile 40 poles a furlong three leagued 8\nmile used in measuring distances at\nsea Land or square measure Is used\nIn measuring land It Is measurer\nwith a surveyors or Gunters \nconsisting ot 100 links and is 60 feet\nlong a link Is 7 02100 inches long U i\nfeet make one rod polo or porch 40\npoles a rood four roods an acre\nI once divided a farm by this tablt\nbetween heirs In this county fora law\nper of brilliant ability who was after-\nward governor of Kentucky One or\nthe finest mathematicians and a colic\nflan of this county studying for the\nrevenue service asked me tho meaning\nor a line or bar over a letter I told\nhim It Increased Its value u thousand\ntimes Letters are the Roman means\nf enumeration Figures Invented were\nby tho Arabians When commutations\nwere made by means of letters Arch\nIshop Alsem said Arithmetic Is ai-\nmoat too difficult for the mind of man
03c0aec98bf03dee481d4e3d0d562051 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.3592895858633 40.832421 -115.763123 strawberry and ice-cream festival, to\nconclude with a social dance, ia I* held\nat Freeman Hall altoat the l(>th instant.\nThe project in devised and will be con¬\nducted by the ladies of Elko having a\nreligious turn of mind, the net proceeds\nof the festival to be, as we understand,\ndevoted to the repairing of the church.\nA very pleasant evening may be enjoyed\non the occusiou of the festival, and our\ncitizens will doubtless cheerfully second\nthe worthy efTorta of the ladiea in the\napproaching enterprise.\nThe principal mining property at Min¬\neral Hill, now, is that of the Chriatie\nCompany, of which 1'. 1). Barker ia the\nmanager and one-third proprietor. The\nRentin.-I says their mine shows well, and,\nwh< n work is resuuii d, will doubtless\nyield handsomely. Besides, there is .\n dump of tailings on hand which\nhave been tested und found to be profl-\nable for reduction. It was understood\nnot very long ago that leaching works\nwould l>e erected by the Christie for the\nreduction of the tailings and ore for the\nmine, the co»t of which, it was calculat¬\ned, would lie fully met by the profit on\nthe tailings alone. Propositions were\nmade, also, to the company to purchase\ntbe tailings dump. It was the impress¬\nion among those familiar with the situa¬\ntion that work was to have been started\nup at least two months ago. Mr. Bark¬\ner, who, !>. sides being part owner, has a\nbond of the Christie mines and mill nntil\nsome time iu Octolier next, has not Wen\nheard from recently as to his plans in\nregard to the property.
34879ff1568171c29430611af7269d68 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.8972602422627 37.451159 -86.90916 The necessity of a popular medium fortha\nrepresentation of the prod actions of our great\nartists baa always been recognized, and many\nattempts have been made to meet the want\nThe sueeessive failures whieh have so Invariable\nfollowed each attempt In .this country to esta\nlish an art journal, did hot proje the. lndiflcc-ene- e\nof the people of America, to the claims of\nh!gharL So soon as a proper appreciation of\nthe want and an ability to meet it wen shown,\ntbe publie at once rallied with enthusiasm to\nits support, and tbe result was a mat artistio\nand Commercial triumph THE ALDINE.\nTbe Aldlne while Issued with all of the regu-\nlarity, has none of the temporary or timely In-\nterests characteristic of erdiaary periodical,.\nIt Is an elegant miscellany of pure, light, and\ngraceful literature, and a collection of pictures,\nthe rarest collection of artistie skill, black\nand white. Although each sacceediag number\naffords a fresh pleasure to its friends, the- - real\nvalue and beauty oi The Aldlne will be most\nappreciated after it Is bound up at the close of\nthe year. While tfthsrpublieatlons may claim\nsuperior cheapness, as compared with rivals at\na similar class. The Aldfae is a unique and\noriginal conception alone and anapproaehed\nabsolutely without competition in price, cr,\ncharacter. The possessor of a complete rel-\nume cannot duplicate the quantity of fine pa-\nper and engravings in any other shape or nam\nber of volumes, for ten timet He tint; andtitn,\ntkere it tit eKramo, betidttl\nTbe national featnre ef Tbe Aldiho must be\ntaken in no narrow sense. Tree rt is cosmo-\npolitan. While Tbe Aldina to a strictly Ameri - ra - n\ninstitution, It does net confine itself to tbs\nreproduction of native art.-
0f2917c3237229e62e9564c28a9da062 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.8589040778793 40.441694 -79.990086 made others languish, revived him. He\nwas wont to shiver continually in spite of\nthe panther skin which covered his back\nand shoulders, and the heat of the day\nwarmed his sluggish old blood.\nThe Hebrew Mesa had been his pupil,\nand never had he had the guidance of a\ngrander nature or the teaching of a youth\nmore richly graced with all the gifts ol\nthe spirit. He had initiated tbe Hebrew\ninto all the highest mysteries, and had\nexpected the greatest results for Egypt\nand .the priesthood; and when Mesu\nhad one day slain an overseer who was un-\nmercifully flogging one of his fellow He-\nbrews, and had fled into the. desert, Buie\nhad bewailed the rash deed as deeply as if\nhis own son had committed it and was to\nsuffer the consequences. His intercession\nhad procured. Mesn's pardon, hut when\nMesa had returned to Egypt, and\nthat change had been wrought in which\nhis friend in the tempIS called his apostasy,\nhe had caused his old master a keener grief\nthan by his flight. If Bale had been young\ner, ne wouia nave natea tne man wno had\ncheated his dearest hopes, but the old priest,\nto whom the human heart was as an open\nbook, and whose sober impartiality enabled\nhim to put himself in the place of his fel-\nlow man, confessed to himself that it was\nhis own fault that he had failed to foresee\nthis falling away. Education and dogma\nhad made of Mesu, tbe .Hebrew, an Egypt-\nian priest after his own heart and pleasing\nto the divinity, but when once he had raised\nhis hand to defend one of his own race\nagainst those to whom he had been allied\nonly by human agencies, he was lost to the.\nEgyptians. He was henceforth a true son\nof his people, and whithersoever this high-m ind -
29cd9aabc3e6c431126f33656e5a0826 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1903.5575342148657 39.756121 -99.323985 "AdayortwolaterIfoundasI\ntraveled farther South that the ice was\nbecoming unsafe, and left the river to\nresume my Journey by land, in a leis\nurely way. The bear stuck to me.\nIt had become very affectionate. Then\nit occurred to me to turn into it a\nsource of revenue.\n"I adopted it and taught it various\nt;'Icks, lingering in the vicinity where\nI had quit the ice, for more than a\nweek. When I went out to forage I\nsecured the bear to a tree. On my re\nturn It always greeted me as fondly\nas a dog would have done.\n"Then I started with it giving bear\nhows in the various towns. When I\ngot to Keokuk I found a bigger show\nthan mine in town, and as I was get\nting tired of the I sold my\npet to the manager and resumed my\njourney like a white man.\n"Some years after that while I was\nIn Colorado I went to a show and in\npassing the animals I saw a bear\nwhich looked familiar. I spoke to it\nand It recognised me. It cut up such\ncapers that I persuaded the keeper to\nlet me go Into the cage, and when I\ngot there that bear was so affection-\nately demonstrative that I was posi-\ntive of its identity.\nWhen I quit the cage it moaned, and\nnot long after I ran across the show\nman again and the keeper told me\nmy bear died of a broken heart soon\nafter I had left It. I am convinced\nthat bears can love, and anything that\ncan love never forgets."
1a8a5b31a0018706d95f6a1cb0a53688 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.5136985984273 37.53119 -84.661888 After reading all the law books on\nthe subject nnd finding no remedy that\nis leasable, Gov. Bradley says: "If any\nman can figure out to me how under\ntho existing conditions of kinship nnd\nthorough organization I can satisfacto-\nrily put an end to the Clay county\ntrouble and punish the guilty ones, I\nwill resign my otllco In his favor."\nA new partv to bo known as tho\nUnited Christian Party was launched\nat Des Molnea, la., Tuesday, when It\nnominated a State ticket. Ita platform\nIs: "Wo believe In direct legislation\nof tbo people, and, in order to make a\ngovernment, a government from God\nthrough Christ, wo should bo governed\nIn all things, law making lucludcd, by\nthe standard: 'What would Jesus do?"\nRemembering his own experience\nCol. Breckinridge ejys In tho Lexing-\nton Herald: "Can't tho women of\nLexington get together and oiler a re-\nward for tho capture of 'King' Goebel?\nIf this method should prove on tho\npresent as elTecttvo In ridding\ntho Stato of a nuisance, u3 It was In a\nformer instance, tho feminino portion\nof our population will again deservo\nour undying gratitude."\nCol. Ike Morgan, of Hurrodaburg\ntold tho Cincinnati Enquirer that\nGoebel will get the full strength of tbo\ndemocratic party In our county (Mer-\ncer) Ho was our second choice. The\nState will go democratic by 30,000 , and\nwo do not propoo to let John Whallen,\nIn Loulsvlllo, and tho manipulators In\ntho Eleventh Congressional district\ncount us out again as they did In ISOtI\nIn opening hla campaign for U. S .\nSenator from Texas, Joseph W. Bailey\nsaid that If McKlnloy would step down\nand Bryan should take hla place at tho\nholm of tho nation tho war in tho Phil-\nippines would stop In 48 hours. Ho\nsaid history told of u Roman proconsul\nto slclly wno stoic 9i,iaw,uuu unu uu(\ndeclared that u, military governor of\nthe Philippines appointed by Hannal\ni.i
2c8a4a642598e9591b98f522ed52b541 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.6753424340436 44.939157 -123.033121 bid for the uecessary now capital at\nexorbitant rates. Moreover, immense\nsums are needed to finance daily trans-\nactions at current high prices, not to\nspeak of the heavy increase of costs of\nproduction in all lines. It is hoped,\ntherefore that the government will be\nable to curb the radical tendencies in\nthe legislature, which are not only un-\npatriotic but will if persisted in inevit-\nably embarrass the government in its\nconduct of the war. Incidentally, it\nmay be stated, the delay in the price\nfixing and revenue bill programs is a\nserious hindrance to business,\nAnother factor of uneasiness has been!\nthe gigantic appropriations, reported as'\nhigh as $20,000 ,000,000 for the current\nyear. These are staggering figures. It is\nquite natural to wonder where such vast\nsums are to be obtained without injury\nto the development of industry. There\nis no reason, however, for exaggerated\nalarm. About $7,000,000 ,000 of this mon-\ney will be appropriated to our allies for\nexpenditures here. Another big sum will\ngo to the shipping board for new ships.\nBoth these items must be regarded as\nassets, and the expenditures will stim-\nulate industry, at homo. Our own future\noutlays for the war are estiniatcd at\nabout $10,000,000,000, which snm, huge\nas it may scein, is easily within our abil-\nity to meet, because it is'Bimply auth-\norized and will serve to carry war\nwell beyond the fiscal year. The auth-- '\norization of these vast amounts does\nnot mean their immediate withdrawal.\nThey will be raised gradually, and must\nbe an exhibition to Oermany of our fi\nnancial determination to carry the war\nto a successful finish\nPeace prospects are strengthening.\nThe crumbling of Austria as a result\nof the splendid Italian victories is im\nminent. The allies are also Wearing\ndown their opponents on the western\nfront; while Germany seems unable to\ncarry on any vigorous movement agaiust\nRussia, except through intrigue. Ger-\nmany is beaten but not broken. Presum-\nably her government will not yield, ex-\ncept to military defeat without or to\npolitical pressure within, which is stead-\nily growing. President Wilson's answer\nto the Pope's pence proposals was mag-\nnificent in spirit and sound in policy.\nIt clarified the issues between Ger-\nmany and the allies; so that every Am-\nerican can easily understand for what\nwe are fighting. It showed that the\nUnited States seeks nir gain for her-\nself; but stands for justice and free\ndom between all nations, great audi\nsmall, and reparation for the wrongs\ndone, without vindictivenes or revenge.\nThe president stands clearly for th\nopen door, and is opposed to all forms\nof trade restrictions that would lead to\ninternational friction or jealousy. ni\nboldness in asserting that te present\nGerman-Prussia-
154edf7c366ef81ba71a6ed0d8313461 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1890.078082160071 42.217817 -85.891125 proceding general election for state ollieers, held in\nsaid couuty, and the affidavits accompanying said\npetitions, and as shown by reference to the returns\nand county canvass of the last preceding general\nelection for state officers held lu said county.\nNow, therefore, it is hereby ordered and directed\nby the board of supervisors of the said couuty of\nVan liuren, that au (lection be aud the same is\nhereby called in the several townships in said couu-\nty, pursuant to the provisions of the aforenamed\nact, to ascertain the will of the electors of said\ncouuty, whether or not the manufacture ot liquors\nand the liquor traffic should be prohibited within\nthe limits of said couuty.\nAnd it is further ordered, that said election, as\nabove directed, shall be held on Muday, the 24th\nday of February, A. D. I'); that said election shall\nbe by ballot, and that the ballots shall be in two\nforius, one of which shall contain tho words:\n'Should the manufacture of liquors and the liquor\ntranlc be prohibited within the couuty 7 YES ; and\nthe other form shall be: "Should the manufacture\nof liquors and the liquor traffic be prohibited within\nthe county 7 that every ballot ou which the\nword "les" is found s.iall be counted in the affirm-\native of said prqosition, and every ballot on which\nthe word "No" is found shall be counted lu the neg\native of said proposition; that undr the provisions\nof the aforesaid act all erHons entitled und r the\nlaws of this state to vote for Governor shall be\ndeemed qualified to vote at said election ; that the\nregistration of the qualified electors, the hours for\nopening and cloning the polls, the maimer of voting\naud of holding and conducting said election under\nthe provisions of the aforesaid act, and the powers\nand duties of boards of registration, of inspectors of\nelection, township boards and all other officers, with\nreference to said election, shall be the same lu every\nrespect as lu the case of a general election; and that\nthe laws of this state ertaiuing to the registration\nand qualification of electors, the disposition of the\nballots, the canvass of the votes and declaring the\nresult thereof, at genera! elections, shall be observed\naud enforced at said election, so far as the same\nshall be applicable.\nDated this 6th day of January, Ai D. 1H90.
1d65a3982765c5379c9d1c3989a0f34c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.5027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 A Western inventor writes to one of e<\nthe Bloomiugton papers: "While I Vl\nwrite there is an odd and rough looking Jj.\nobject, about the size of your hat, fasb- tl\nloneil under lha not overly keen edge w\nof my jack-knife, floating about the al\nroom. It will gee and haw, or go to tt\nthe larboard or starboard, according as b\nyou move its tail, or perhaps to speak r(\nnautically, I should say rudder. It is\nmoves KlOrioUBly. by its own Internal ir\npowers, which are imparted by means tl\nof a small olock spring. Its leverage al\nacts entirely on the air, and is what we (1\nall have been so long looking lor.an a]\nappliance that will control the course of c(\ni balloon. More wonderful Ts a little tE\nmachine 1 am also the of, tt\nwhich was also moved by a spring. All fc\ncompleted, I wound it up, and let it go. ji\nQf its own force, like a bird, it darted Ul\ninto the air; but alas! for human frail- al\nty, the spring, running down while its a\nwings were on the upward stroke, it ,j\ncame to the ground, with all the lorce q\nof gravitation acting upon it, andt aa it ei\nwas necessarily a frail creature, it was tt\nsmashed to flinders. The next one I CI\nmake I shall go with, and the power n\nbeing then my own muscles, I shall see it\nto it that it does not run down too sud- t)\ndenly, and that the wings are kept in a a\nBailing or floating attitude until its legs it\nshall strike terra firms." a
1904c8ca345e24f4f566d3b3296d6542 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.97397257103 39.743941 -84.63662 troduced, 121 of which were from Kansas alone.\nAmong the bills were one providing for the re-\nduction of the tariff ; another providing for a\nway to secure information in regard to a postal\ntfilaorranri. and another nrovidine for a rednn- -\ntion of the price of pnblio lands to actual set\ntlers. A resolution was unanimously adopted\nto audit claims for expenses of President Gar\nfield's last illness, and funeral, and consider a\npension for his wife and family. A resolution\nfor a special Census Committee was adopted.\nThe Speaker announced the following special\nCommittee on Expenses attending the illness\nand burial of President Garfield: Messrs.\nTaylor, Pound, Cox of New York, Joyce,\nLefevre, Belford, Blackburn, Sage, Springer,\nO'Neill and Shelley. Robeson wanted a resolu\ntion respecting the Irish agitators incarcerated\nin iniTn.inh.TTi Jail, breathing forth sympathy\nand regret, adopted by the House. Speaker\nEeifer promptly ruled him out of order, and\nnis question not one oi privilege, rxooeson said\nhe would be heard from agaid on the subject\n following bills were introduced and re-\nferred : By Mr. Hubbell, to amend the act to\nreduce duties on imports, and to reduce Inter-\nnal Bevenue taxes ; by Mr. Willi ta, to regulate\nsuffrage in Territories, and to fix cer\ntain qualifications lor omoe ; also, to provide\nfor oaths for juror in trials for bigamy in\nTerritories ; also, relative to the crime of\nbigamy and proof thereof: to provide for the\nregistration of voters in Utah Territory : also,\nto recognize the legislative power of Utah\nalso, granting a pension to the father of the\nlate General Custer ; by Mr. Lord, repealing\nsections of the Revised Statutes relating to tax\non banks, bank notes, and National banking\nassociations; also, to repeal tax on bank\nchecks ; also, to repeal Internal Revenue tax\non medicines, perfumery, etc.; Dy Mr. Burrows,\nof Michigan, relating to the recovery of dam-\nages for the infringements of patents ; by Mr.\nChalmers, to pay the pnblio debt and stop the\nmanufacture of money by corporations.
0724b3e2a05cf66f9f33114cc0689900 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.6753424340436 46.187885 -123.831256 means a storm, and, taking the warning,\nI ordered all the hatches to bo closed\ndown and to prepare for a hurricane.\nThe barometer still continued to fall fast.\nThe lowest it got during tho gale was\n29.10 . At 10 o'clock the wind suddenly\nswept down on us in a perfect fury, and\nin a moment the sea ran mountains\nhigh. I immediately ordored the engines\nto stop and decided to lay to until tho\noyclono had passed, feeling assured it\nwould only last a few hours, and that if\nwo went ahead we should get the full\nforce of it. Tho wind first struck us\nfrom tho southeast and the sea was\nlashed into n perfect fury. Wavo after\nwave dashed on our starboard, but we\nmanaged to keep her head in such a po-\nsition that little harm was dono.\n 10 o'clock tho wind suddenly shift-\ned to t'ao southward, and a terrific\nbreaker, looking like a huge mountain of\nwater, broke oTer cur starboard bow. I\ntoll you, sir, it unnerved mo for a mo-\nment. I havo never soon anything so ter-\nrific I hare seen gales off Mauritius,\nand any ono who has been to sea knows\nthey are bad enough, but this beat them\nall. Tho water fell with a crash on tho\ndeck, knocking down the seamen who\nwere on duty, and hurled them against\nthe bulwarks. It swept tho deck from\nstem to stern, carried away a companion\nhatch and pourod into the cabins, caus-\ning a panic among the passengers, who\nwere kept below. It knocked down the\nchief steward and broke his leg, and also\ncarried away the Iaddor leading to tho\nspar-dec- k.
5c94e39266aefb3334ddb3fdb54657b2 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.7876712011669 39.369864 -121.105448 On Thursday morning, Sept. 23rd, the\nbody of Robert H. Mock, formerly of Bur-\nlington, lowa, and late a resident of Orleans\nFlat, Nevada county, Cal. , wa s found in the\nTruckee river, Utah Territory, three and a\nhalf miles below the lower emigrant cross-\ning, by Messrs. Humes, Moore and Cum-\nmings, and from the appearance of the body\nthere is no doubt he was thrown from his\nhorse and drowned while attempting to lord\nthe river a short distance above, where the\nchannel was much deeper than usual, al-\nthough it did not appear so from either\nshore. Mr. M. left Orleans Flat on the 2nd\nof August, and in company with Charles 11.\nHumes and W. F. Cummings had established\na small trading post at the lower crossing of\nthe Truckee, where they were trading in\ngroceries, Ac., with the emigrants, and pur-\nchasing stock. He had always herded the\ncattle on a range some distance below the\ncamp, and on the morning of the 13lh ult.\nwent down with them as usual. At noon\nhe had not returned, but as he had frequently\nremained at the range day, liis partners\nwere in no way uneasy. Night came and\nstill he was not to be seen or heard from,\nand they, in company with others, started in\nsearch of him, confident that something was\nnot right. At the range they found all the\nstock, except one of the cattle and the horse\nhe rode when he left the camp in the morn\ning. These were found early the next morn-\ning ; the horse, saddled and bridled, was\nfeeding some distance below the range and\nfrom his appearance had not been unsaddled\nsince the previous morning; but no trace of\nthe missing man could be found, and although\nthe country was scoured iu every direction,\nfor several days, it was not until the morn\ning of the 23d that he was found, as before\nstated, in the river. A close examination\nof the body revealed no cuts, wounds or\nmarks of violence, and it was the opinion of\nail present that he was accidentally drown-\ned, hut how, must always remain a mystery,\nlie was interred a short distance from where\nhe was found, and it was truly a lonely\nplace.
0d3766276fa8b31a84210f1dd8ac9e69 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1895.568493118975 37.305884 -89.518148 This city was greatly excited this\nafternoon by hearing reports of can-\nnon, and it was soon learned the rev-\nenue cutter McLane was firing at the\ntug George W. Childs, which left this\nmorning. Soon after leaving the col-\nlector of customs upon information oi\nthe Spanish consul, ordered the Mc-\nLane to overtake the Childs and bring\nher back to port It is rumored that a\ndeckhand by the name of William\nLynch, who was shipped at Jamaica,\nhad furnished the consul with infor-\nmation to the effect that she was\nbound on a filibustering expedition.\nLieut. Hay, of the McLane. says\nthat signals were set for the Childs to\nheave to, but no attention was ppid tc\nthem, and seeing no chance of over-\ntaking her, two solid shots and one\nshell were fired before she about.\nShe was boarded by a crew from the\ncutter, with Lieut. Hay in command,\nand brought into port about 3 o'clock.\nCapt. Swain of the Childs is very in-\ndignant at being fired upon, and says\nthat he knows no reason why such\naction should be taken. He says that\nhe was properly entered from his trip\nat Jamaica and while some slight ir-\nregularities did exist in his crew list,\nif. was owing to the fault of his\nbrokers at Philadelphia and had been\nsettled at the customhouse here. He\nsailed from Jamaica on June 13, and\nafter touching at Point Salina and\nBarrahena for repairs, he sailed for\nKey West, where he arrived on the 3d.\nHe was ordered to Tortugas to be\nfumigated and after remaining there\nseven days, he came back to Key-\nWest.
215c75f6dbb735ad2e8955fedbd74c8c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1880.5396174547157 42.217817 -85.891125 Correspondence of The True Northerner.\nThere is a serious charge made against Gen.\nHancock in connection with the election of 187C,\nwhen the Democratic party came so near de-\npriving tbe republicans of the fruits of tbeir\ngreat victory. Tlie charge is not denied by\nGen. Hancock, and is even admitted by his most\nintimate friend, Gen. William F. Smith. It is\ntbat IIancock was ready and waiting Tilden's\nconsent only, to place himself at the bead of\nan insurrection to place Tilden in tbe Presiden-\ntial chair. He even went so far as to write a\nletter to General Sherman declaring bis belief\nthat Tilden wa3 elected, and tbat should he\ntake the oath of office be should obey Tilden's\norders, and disregard those of the constituted\nauthorities. This is the story tbat was circulat-\ned secretly among tbe delegated at Cincinnati\nand caused tbe stampede to bim. It was only\nthen tbat they were made acquainted with tbe\ntrue qualities of tbeir man ; and it appears tbat\ntbe try he will take his seat " is not without\nfoandation.Tbey knew their man, and had they\nvoted for him they reasoned, if be was so ready\nand willing to fight for the assumed rights of\nanother would ho not do as much and more for\nhimself, under tbe samo conditions? And to\n Democratic party, whope only chance for\nsuccess is in tbe perpertrtion of fraud, and tbe\nmanipulation of returns he seemed ibeir most\nfitting tool. If they become satisfied they can-\nnot win the coming election fsirly, they will\nendeavor to make it " doubtful,' and if this is\naccomplishedtbey cry "be will take his seat.'\nBut this is not all. How many soldiers have\nnot heard of the "United Servica Tetroleum\nand Mining Company," and haw many soldiers\nput confidence and money in it because Gen.\nHancock was its President, supposing because\nhe was the "Company' was an honest one.\nThere isjno proof that Hancock bad knowledge\nof tbe swindle, but be was either no dull or so\ncareless tbat be allowed tbe prostitution of his\nname and rank as Major General in tba Army\nto the vile purposes of fraud, to say nothing of\nhis lack of precaution against the swindling of\nhis friends. Would not a man who at foaty was\ncapable of such a performance, make a mess of\nrunning this government, if he takes his seat ?\nTbe Democrats are making large promises at\nthis time of carrying doubtful states. Maine\nand New Hampshire are now considered doubt-\nful. Senator Blaine is resting himself at Vir-\nginia Spring., and Wm. E . Chandler is yet in\nNew York arranging the campaign.
5c4247157d0b99128ef0fc10ee0670d5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.1027396943175 58.275556 -134.3925 That dear old soul,Governor William\nGooseberry Brady, is out with another\ntelegraphic question. This time he\nwants to know whether or not\nCouncil City is incorporated,\nsays the Council City News. The\nGovernor is a living interrogation\npoint! There are so many things he\nwants to know that it must keep him\npretty busy framing questions by tele¬\ngraph and we would respectfully sug¬\ngest that he formulate and publish a\nspecial code so as to save to the Gov-\nernment ffor we presume it is the Gov-\nernment that pays the bill) the cost of\nhis leugthy telegrams. How much\nsimpler it would be to say simply "Ap-!\npomatox" for "What are beans worth\nin your district?" "Vercingetorix" for\n"Are cauliflowers cheaper this year than\nthey will be next?" "Ichyosaurus" for\n"If you had a brother, would he like\ncheese?" And soon with similar ques\ntions of like importance.\nOutrageous conditions in connection\nwith the government roindeer service\nin Alaska have brought to light,\nand a general overhauling of the whole\nsystem, from the ground up, is promis¬\ned by the interior department. Secre¬\ntary Hitchcock has his dander up, and\nhe is determined that the reindeer graft\nshall be abolished. The maintenance\nof reindeer herds for the benefit of the\nEskimos is still strongly upheld as a\nwise policy of the government, but the\npresent methods of conducting the\nbusiness are roundly condemned.\nWhite men, chiefly missionaries, own\nthe greater number of deer, and are\nusing them for their own benefit. It is\nclaimed that although the original\nreindeer were bought with government\nmoney for the benefit of the native in¬\nhabitants, the animals have been given\naway by thousands to missionary socie¬\nties without price, and that in some\ncases the missionaries are making\nmoney out of the graft. Dr. Jackson\nis known as the father of the domestic\nreindeer service in the far north, for it\nwas through his influence that congress
4c2bd3d601a3c4c5f11d5a7bd25f1f54 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.1684931189752 40.063962 -80.720915 Whereas, Measures are under con¬\nsideration in Congress for the consolida¬\ntion of the public debt, having also in\nview as their ultimate object tho resto¬\nration of the currency to a specie basis.\nResolved, That this association deem\nall these deliberations to bo timely And\nappropriate, and to be demanded by\ntho best Interests of the country.\nResolved, That we deem it to bean\nindispensable prerequisite of ..such\nmeasures that a' systematic plan be\nadopted for the regular redemption of\nNational Bank notes as recommended,\nboth by the Secretary of the Treasury\nand the Comptroller of the Currency.\nResolvedi That without such a plan\nin effective operation, any movement\ntoward the ourtailment of the legal\ntender issues, will inevitably result in\nthe substitution of n currency calcula¬\nted to protract indefinitely the existing\nfinancial difficulties, and to increase\nthe embarrassment, both ot the govern¬\nment and the people.\nThe following is text of the sub¬\nstitute to the new -Finance Bill submit¬\nted by Mr. Stevens: '' "\nThat the act entliled "An act to pro¬\nvide ways and^ nieans" to support the\ngovernment," approved Martin 3, 1866,\nshall be extended and construed to au¬\nthorize the {Secretary of the Treasury\nto dispose of any description of bonds\nauthorized1 by said act to-finch an\namount, in Buch' manner and at such\nrates;*-not less than par; as he may\nthink advisable, for lawful money of\nthe United States, or for any Treasury\nnotes, certificates of indebtedness or\ncertificates of deposit, or otfier. repre¬\nsentatives of.yalue, which have been or\nwhich may. be issued. nnderL: any act or\nCongress, and the proceeds thereof shall\nbe used oply forretiringTreasuiy notes,\nor other oDligations bearing Interest\nissued under any act of Congress; but\nnothing herein contained shall be con¬\nstrued to authorize any increase of the\npublic debt."
0557f16bfd176c415736a6ce8783d6e8 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1894.4260273655505 46.187885 -123.831256 In conversation with a well known\nphysician, the latter said that not only\nwould the people of Portland suffer a\nheavy financial loss, but that an era of\nsickness was In prospect for Its people\nwhen the flood subsided. He stated thlH\nfact was patent to all from past ex-\nperiences of thla character, and as the\npverflow was much greater, and there\nfore covered a larger expanse of terri-\ntory than tlt of any previous flood, It\nwould simply be in the nature of things\nthai an epidemic of fevers and other\nIlls of which the human flesh la heir to\nwould break out upon the water's sub-\nsiding. The sympathy of the entire\ncountry, of course, goes out to Portland\nover the prospect of. such an unfortun-\nate events which, however, not ob\nviate the fact that the metronolls Is\nsituated In a very unhealthy locality,\nand consequently not a desirable place\nto make a permanent residence In. St.\nVincent's hospital has three feet of\nwater on Its floor, something that has\nnever liappened before In the history of\nPortland. In consequence, 20 patients,\ntogether with nurses for them, will ar-\nrive here this morning and take quar-\nters In SU Mary's hospital.\nAs these facts serve to point out the\ndisadvantages under which Portland la-\nbors In the matter of a terminal point,\nAstoria not being subject, nor In any\npossible future danger of a flood, offers\nnatural facilities as a terminal city, and\nIt only needs a combined effort on the\npart of its citizens to bring about such\na result.
4c26ad58508c4bc7a60904993a28690e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.6095890093861 42.217817 -85.891125 drive the whales up on the flats at low\nwater to do the milking and it has been\nthis part of the work which has ab-\nsorbed the attention of the professor for\nmore than a year.\nPatience in the face of all discourage-\nments with a determination to succeed\nfinally conquered. The first captives\nlearned gradually to go of their own ac-\ncord to the milking ground. The herd\nha3 been Increased a few whales at a\ntime until It now numbers 30 and it\nrequires the services of a staff of CO\nmen to carry on tin daily milking.\nJust what the plans of the company\nare Is not generally known and none\nof the officials will say. It was learned\non good authority, however, that as soon\nas the dairy experiments in the way\nof butter and making are com-\nplete and the canning plant is ready\nthe herd will be driven down to an In-\nlet on (he Maine coast, which has been\nfitted for a pasture. There the dairy\nwill be established permanently.\nExperiments have been made recent-\nly in permitting several of the tamer\ncows to go outside the Inlet. These ex-\nperiments have been peculiarly gratify-\ning. In every instance the cow has re-\nturned, indicating clearly her preter- -\nence for domestic life, and on twosep-- j\narate occasions cows of the herd have\nbrought back with them strange com-\npanions. The strangers are now thor-\noughly domesticated and have become\nvaluable members of the herd.\nIf, as is now believed, the whale milk\ni3 of rare medicinal value and proves to\nbe a palatable substitute for the\nnauseous cod-liv -
1bf250416fc196c750dfc2517fc618b2 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5232240120927 39.290882 -76.610759 conclusive refutation of this objection, consisted\nin the broad assertion, and the dogmatical as-\nsumption, that it was impossible in the nature\nof things that it could be so! and that nobody\nbelieved it but those deeply imbued with Ilamil-\ntonian federalism, bankites,and aristocrats!\nAmazing, and overpowering as this argument\nis, Mr. Chairman, I shall attempt to answer it.\nAnd, sir, I assume that the friends of this bill\nhave unintentionally, no doubt, butsubslantially\nadmitted the truth dud validity of this objection.\nI assert that ifthey be sincere in their prutcs\nsions, in regard to the effects of the measure\nupon the currency, in the language of the ho-\nnorable gentleman, it is impossible in the nature\nof things, that it cau fail to produce this effect;\nand I shall now proceed to prove positions.\nSir, we have a mixed carrenoy, consisting of\nbank notes, and the precious metals. It was so,\nlong before the foundation of the government?-\nat the time it was founded, and has continued to\nbe so from that day, down to the present. I re-\npeat, sir, that paper-money was in use in this\ncountry under the colonial governments, and at\nthe time of the adoption of our present form of\ngovernment: and, sir, if it had been intended\nby the framers of the constitution to prohibit its\nuse and establish in this government an exclu-\nsive metalic currency, why did they not incor-\nporate such a provision in the constitution. Sir,\nit must be obvious to every one, I think, that\nsuch an idea never entered the minds of those\nsages and patriots.
0ef4209343f3553b0259f5da1ba6559f THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.6369862696602 46.187885 -123.831256 then rumped him without mercy."\nHere we see the social influence of\nan aristocracy extending from the\nsummit of power down to valets, and\neven to medical classes. Yet this\nvalet had been considered good\nenough to have the princess Augusta\nto be the godmother of his child, and,\nindeed, the whole royal family was\nmost agreeable with him. Everybody\nunderstood that it was the royal\ndnke who had begotten this child by\nt&e wife of his valet\nThe next member of this family,\nthe present queen's uncle, married a\ncommoner, Lady Augusta Murray,\nbut the act was pronounced invalid,\nand then the duke married Lady Un-\nderwood. By both these women he\nhad a series of children, all bastards\nat law, because royalty must not\nmarry in tho kingdom, lest aristocracy\nbecome jealous. The recent " Life of\nGeorge IV. " by Fitzgerald, shows\n this licentiousness of the bro-\nthers extended to the daughters.\nThe princess Amelia, the youngest\ndaughter of this family, is put down\nin all tlie books of the peerage as\nhaving died at tho age of 27, unmar-\nried. The biographer says Amelia\ncalled her father to her bedside when\ndying. Ho came with his son, the\nduko of Cumberland, whoso behavior\nand conversation would havo dis\ngraced one of his own grooms. She\nleft all her property to a friend and\ntho, matter was hushed up in the\nnewspapers, but there is no donbt\nthat this amiable princess was secret-\nly married and that on her death-be- d\nshe conveyed the story to her father.\nCaptain (afterwards general) Fitzroy\nwas the person to whom she was thus\nespoused, with whom she had formed\nan attachment when thrown in his\nsociety at "We j -mo ut- h
1dbbc27eb7429aeb27f5520bdd81a82b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.5273972285643 41.681744 -72.788147 other drinks which are allowed under\nthe prohibition act?\nThere will be opposition to such a\nplan but-- there is a mighty big and in-\nteresting question as far as the legal-\nity of the measure is concerned.\nPlainville is a "dry" tqwn and lias\nbeen for the past two years. The up-\nholders of fhe "bone dry" town would\nin all probability say that when the\ntown voted no license it meant the\nabolition of all liquor heretofore con-\nsidered intoxicating. The "wets"\nwould immediately retaliate by show-\ning the legality of their act under the\ndecision of the courts and the saloons\nmight again be thriving in the town.\nAt the present time near beer is be-\ning sold at all the fountains in the\ntown and the owners of saloons think\nthey are as justified to open and\nsell 2.34 cent, beer as the owners\nof the fountains arc to open a new\nline of business in selling near beer.\nThe techrfioalily of the argument\nwould at least prove of interest to the\npeople. The town votes annually on\nthe liquor question. If the country re-\nmains dry, but the sale of a certain\nper cent, beer is allowed, it is probable\nthat the liquor men of the town will\nendeavor to have the town go wet and\nhave all doubt of legality to sell cast\naside. The people of the town will\nshow much interest in the matter as\nit is probably the first question of le-\ngal importance of its kind ever to arise\nin the town. All rest now upon the\ncourt decisions in regard to 2.34 per-\ncent, beer before a start of some\nkind will be made in the town.
1994ae69bbbd474ce894ff3035e31d94 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.382191749112 39.623709 -77.41082 that ho was keeping three or four million\non deposit at several New York banks.\nThe rumor was investigated, and result-\ned in the discovery that the millions in\nquestion were indeed there, but they\nwere millions, riot of dollars, but of\npounds sterling. News came from Bos-\nton and Philadelphia that there was oa\nmuch more to his credit in those cities.\nIt leaked out that the great London and\nWestminister bank in London was pay-\ning Count do Lisle dividends on eight\nmillion pounds. Bnt these vast sums\nwere but the fringes of the counts for-\ntune. He was a large investor in real\nestate and lands: indeed, a wag started\nthe story that bo had purchased all of\nManhattan island below Canal street,\nwith its buildings and inhabitants; but\nthis proved to bo an overstatement.\nSuch fantastic exaggerations are merely\nillustrations of the impossibility of con-\nceiving really great wealth.\nA million—ten millions—hundreds of\nmillions—the mind cannot grasp the idea\nof snch sums in relation to any single\nowner; one practically about us\ngood as another; and, in the effort to\nbring them within the bounds of com-\nprehension, wo give way to jests and\nfair}- tales. Was Count de Lisles income\ntwenty-five thousand dollars a day—or\nfifty thousand—or more? Whether it\nwere more or less ho certainly could not\nspend it on himself. And yet the innate\ndesire in the human mind to see giants\nand heroes and gods—men who in their\nsingle jiersons are the equivalent of no-\ntions—makes us hope that each new\nmillionaire will find some way to wear\nall his millions ns a garment, or, rather,\nas a skin, in which his own proper life\ncirculates. Surely the wants of man\nare infinite; how, then, can any amount of\nmoney overwhelm him? Be it a billion,\neveiy separate dollar of it ought to bo\ntingling with vitality, and as busy min-\nistering directly to its owner as are the\ncorpuscles of his blood. That any of it\nshould bo lying dead seems a reflection\non human ability—on our intellect and
5a7e04937e2ab0a7d486a052661dfbce EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.160273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 wrote 69 words a minute and Ml\nWhite 55 words a minute.\nTho Underwood Typewriter Com­\npany offered certificates In profi­\nciency for 40 net words a minute.\nThose who received these certificates\nwere: Rose Bernardo, 48 net words\na minute; Joseph Allman, 44 net\nwords a minute: Eleanor Donotrlo.\n43 net words a minute; Beatrice\nEwing, 40 net words a minute: Mur­\nray Hanson, 46 net words a minute;\nAnna Johnson, 4 6 net words a min­\nute; Gertrude Petteraon, 45 net\nwords a minute; Elwood Salter. 41\nnet words a minute; Helen Seller,\n46 net words a minute; Lily Strom-\nwasaer, 43 net word« a minute.\nProfessor Barkley called attention\nto the fact the six prizes were be­\ning offered by those In charge of the\nlocal automobile show tor the best\nessay on the show. Tho prizes ore\na« First, (15; second, (10:\nthird, (5. There will be three prizes\nfor girls and three for boya All es­\nsays have to be In the hand ot Mr.\nCox a member of tho faculty not\nlater than Friday morning. The\nprlxes will be awarded at the show\non Saturday evening.\nAn appeal was made to all the\nstudents of the school by Professor\nBarkley, Albert Haddock, the re­\ntiring president of the athletic as­\nsociation and Hewson E. Lannan, the\nnew president of the association, for\nthe campaign for new members to\nthe association which la being held\nat tho school this week. The associa­\ntion was organtzzed In 1891, and for\nmany years had a large member­\nship. but In recent years the mem­\nbership has greatly decreased In ac­\ncordance with the number ot\nstudents In the school. Out of the
2dd5dcca32fe9243ecce636573da1d55 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.1273972285642 39.261561 -121.016059 CofRT FiEs. —Oor Sacramento correspond-\n«0( Mill attention to a ranter connected with\nthe court fees of the 14th Judicial District,\nwhich require* explanation. The County Clerk\nis required by l»w to collect three dollars from\nevery party commencing a suit in the District\nCoart. This money is paid to the Judge, who\ngives a receipt tor the same; the Clerk is requir-\ned to file the receipt with the State Controller,\naed the amount thas paid is deducted from the\nitliry received by the Judge from the State.\nAocording to the Controllers report Judge\ngearls bad received his entire salary from the\n8tate for the past year. On inquiring at the\nClerk's office, we learned the following facts:\nSince tbo commencement of Mr. Shoemakers\nterm, there has been $1,755 paid in as court\nfees. Of this amount $300 was paid to the\nJudge over a year ago, and $1,465 has been\npaid within the week or two. By some\nmeans the receipt for $300 was mislaid in the\nClerks office, and never forwarded lo the Con-\ntroller. But when attention was called to the\nmatter by the publication of the Controllers\nreport, the receipt was found, and the balance\nof the court fees were paid over to the Judge,\nand the two receipt* have since been forwarded\nto the Controllers office. The full amount of\n$1,755 will of course be deducted from Judge\nScarls salary for the present year. We know\nnothing as to what has become of the eourt\nfees of Sierra county, but the probability is, the\nClerk has neglected to pay them over. So far\nas this county is concerned, we are happy to be\nenabled to state that the matter is all right. It\nis proper to s'ate that the officers cannot, even\nif so disposed, cheat the State out of the court\nfees, without being detected.
308d0fc751352a6c22a2e49b1c5b62d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.4123287354134 40.063962 -80.720915 To-day, my countrymen, we call to 1\nlind the battle cries of Autietam and *\nlettysburg,of Vicksburg, of Chiukamauga j!\nnd Lookout Mountain, of Chancellors- ['\nille. Corinth and Fredericksburg, and J\nearly fivv hundred other battles of the »'\nrar for the Union, and as we behold the a\nmoke of the conflict lifted to the skies wo\nBern to see our patriotic dead asconding p\nrom the torn and bloody sod of the bat- ti\nlefleld, and as they float away from our u\nlew forever we seem to hear them calling v\n3 us, "Faithful until death, nolnorecan fi\nre do. The work is left for you to finish, t\nnd we shall stand on the battlemfcnttf of n\nteaven and be witnesses of your valor, a\nour faith and devotion." Tho men who f\nest so sweetly here to-day under the grass »\nnd the 'flowers, never thought onco of v\nhemselves. If they had thought of them- *\nelves alone they would have been stand- li\nas where you stand to-day, gnd you b\n,nd they would both be sheltering your t\nleads like slaves under some Hag. ti\nI they had thought ot safety, of comfort e\nind home, and wlfo and ohlldron, if they f\nlad stopped to think of pain, and hunger 1\nind death, if their hearts had had room t\nor but one single other thought or atnbi- 1\nIon than God and Fatherland, your sep- i\nilchrea would have not claimed them and t\nheir dark vaults would to-day bo yawning <\n;or you and mo and our children and our\n:hifdren's children through uncoijuU-'d t\ngenerations of Ignomy, degradation and I\nleapotlsm. Did you ever know one mean\nwlltsh man to die for his country? Did\nlie not rather stay at home and growl and\ntremble and complain, and live on and on\nwhen neither God nor country had\nother thought tor him thou for tue awlno\nthat grunted and wallowed at his door?\n1 h»j& alien said and I (eel Unlay more\nintensely tifpr before, that the men\nwjjo died in the uri'j ,9/ jjfttle were the\nhMt pwn rn VO'M »y«r know, and tliat\ntheir memory wust.endure'/orbvjr.\nMen do .not worship jrar tWSjmon\nfor themselvea alone, Tw>>' nlm ftatp
1243bc5e16cbf53c94381f3ebf3ec276 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.8945205162354 40.063962 -80.720915 About a year sgo the Iktklligkkckb pub¬\nlished an exhaustive interview with Mr.\nJohn A. Armstrong, of this city, concerning\nthe railroad tie buaine&s, in which he is prob¬\nably more largely engaged than any other\nman in the country. Extracts from the\narticle referred to have been goiwg the\nrounds of the presi everywhere ever since.\nMr. Armstrong was in Pit»iburgh on Wed¬\nnesday, and a Qimmercial-Gazeltc reporter got\nthe following interesting tali out of him, in\nwhich are some new points:\n"We get our supplies Urgely from the\ncounties of Wetzel. Tyler, Pleasan'a, Wood,1\nWirt, Jackson and Kitohie, in West Virginia,\nand from Washington ana Monroo counties,\nOhio. During the catling season scores of\nmen and boys are employed in felling trees\nand dressing the ties. They are then hauled\nto the nearest course of a largestream, thrown\nin and allowed to iloat ofl until they are\ncaught a boom, which Is generally a mile\nor two from the Ohio river. Thero t'hey lie\nuntil several thousand are accumulated\nwhen we load them into boats and tow them\nup the river. The manner of cutting aud\nhauling the tiesdifferB Is no esjential from\nthose employed in getting out logs in the\nMichigan and Maine pineries. L'.atyearwo\ngot out nearly if notquite a half million ties.\nThis year we did not bring up the riv/r more\nthan naif .'ait number. Ojr contracts have\nbeen with the Fort Wayne & Chicago, the\nPanhandle, the Pittsburgh, ObartierB &'\nYougbioghony and the Pittsburgh, McKeta-\nport & Youtfhiogheny, with a few for the,\nCleveland & Pittsburgh. We a!«3 furnished\ntimber for ]he use of the Pittsburgh, McKees-\nport A Youghiogheuy road and the Uhartiers\n& Yongbiogheny. I guesi we sent all the\nties aud limber the last named road csjd. or\nnearly all. I
1328a1e7459b69e5e922aa5832b68488 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.3975409519835 38.894955 -77.036646 "Under the title of "Trade of China for\n1S05," Mr. Charles Denby. United States\nminister at Peking, has furnished the State\nDepartment with valuable and interesting\ninformation relating to the commercial con-\nditions of that kingdom following the close\nof the war. Notwithstanding the cession\nof Formosa and the closing of the New\nCliang custom house for several months, the\ntrade of China with both "Western and\nAstatic countries increased and expanded.\nTtie trade with the United States, white\nless than for 1&94, was greater than for\nany other yearin the preceding eight. The\nexports to the United States in 1S05\namounted to 15.383.402 tads: the Imports\nfrom this country to 5.G93.132 . taels. of\nwhich more than 3.000.000 tnels were for i\nkerosene oil. It is noticeable from the\nfigures given that in 1S95 tlie import of\nRussian oil exceeded that of American oil\nin quantity and value for first time in\nthe history of tlie trade. This is accounted\nfor by the large stock of American oil im-\nported in 1S94 and held over the year.\n"The close of the war," said Mr. Denby,\n"was looked forward to as the date from\nwhich China was to depart from her j\ntitlKIUUliai JIWHV 4U V1 S&111.A 11(1 1114 iiw .i.wi .-ii -\nand development. While the views or the\nmost enthusiastic have not been realized\nand China has shown a cautious conser-\nvatism, there has been no want of progress.\nSome railroads have been built but as to\nthe general problem of railroad construc-\ntion the Chinese government stands com-\nmitted, to the poticy of using Chinese\nmoney only."\nMr. Denby thinks, however, that this\npolicy will not avail for lines of any great\nextent and he predicts that China will\nresort eventually to the aid of foreign\nsyndicates.
e55644005856e8d62ee33eab094e8037 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.0835616121258 43.798358 -73.087921 actunng interests, but at the same time it\naffords us infinitely more pleasure to sur\nvey the country, luxuriant with vegeta- -\nlon, waving with fruitful harvests, inter\nspersed with cottages and hamlets, set off\nwith groves and shrubbery and flowers,\nhan to look upon the palaces and the equi\npage and the ostentatious wealth of the\nmost splendid cities. For with the coun\ntry, the scene of agricultural life are asso-\nciated ideas of health, and innocence, and\nmanly independence, and virtue, while the\ncity awakens painful reflections upon the\nsacrifice of all these which is there so oft\nen made to the arts and to gain :\n' But though true worth and virtue in the mild\nAnd genial soil of cultivated life,\nThrive most, and may perhaps thrive only there.\nYet not in cities oft : in pioud and gay,\nAnd gain devoted cities. Thither flow.\nAnd as a and most noisome sewer,\nThe dregs and feculence of every land.\nIn cities foul example on most minds\nBegets its likeness. Rank abundance breeds,\nIn gross and pampered cities, sloth and lust.\nAnd wantonness, and gluttonous excess.\nIn cities vice is hidden wi:h most ease,\nOr seen with least reproach ; and virtue taught\nBy frequent lapse, can hope no triumph there\nBeyond the achievements of successful flight.'\nThough all may notaccord with the po\net in the full extent of the sentiments which\nhe has here expressed, all must admit\ntheir verisimilitude ; and in estimatingthe\nadvancement of the nation the real great-\nness, will regard not so much the growth\nand population of its cities, as they will\nthe state and condition of agriculture a\nprofession which ministering most suc\ncessfully to health, to intelligence, and to\nvirtue, may justly claim to stand in the\nhighest grade of dignity.
1c8c5493c284c27828fd7af46dbe1330 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.1383561326738 37.561813 -75.84108 fault is great, but the mercy of God\nstill greater; for your penance, do\nfollows: Go to the nearest market, pur-\nchase a chicken iust killed and still\ncovered with feathers; you will then\nwalk to a certain distance, plucking the\nbird as you go along; your walk finished,\nyou will return to me."\nGreat was the astonishment of the\nlady in receiving so strange a penance\nbut silencing all human reasoning, she\nreplied, "I will obey, Father, I will obey."\nAccordingly, she repaired to the market,\nbought the fowl and set out on her\njourney, plucking it as she went along,\nas she had been ordered.\nIn a short time she returned, anxious\nto tell of her exactness in accomplish-\ning her' penance, and desirous to receive\nsome explanation of one so singular.\n"Ah !" said the Saint, "you have been\nvery faithful to the part of my\norders; row do the second part, and\nyou will be cured. Retrace your Eteps;\npass through all the places you have\nalready traversed, and gather up one by\none all the feathers you have scattered.\n"But, Father," exclaimed the poor\nwoman, "that is impossible. I cast the\nfeathers carelessly on every side ; the\nwind carried them in difierent direc-\ntions ; how can I now recover them 7"\n"Well, my child," replied the Saint,\n"so it is with your words of slander, like\nthe feathers which the wind has scatter-\ned, they have been wafted in many\ndirections ; call them back now if you\nean. Go and sin no more."\nHistory does not tell if the lady was\nconverted; but it is probable. It required\na Saint to give the lesson ; one should be\na fool not to profit by it.
0d9dbf8fe863ace50f6bde2ab916da5e PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.7117486022566 40.441694 -79.990086 FREE TRADE INCONGRUITIES.\nIn the prosecution of its attack on the\nreciprocity policy the Philadelphia Record\nis moved to the following declarations:\n" 1 1 wes an abandonment of the protective\nprinciple to take, the duty off raw sugar.\nIt was an equal abandonment of the pro-\ntective principle to arm the President with\npower to put a tax on coffee, tea or other\narticles which we do not produce, as a\nmeans of levying commercial war upon\ncountries which do produce them."\nTet the present month has seen one\nrecognized organ of the Free Trade party\nattacking Republican legislation for re-\npealing the duty on sugar, which was as-\nserted to be a revenue duty, while another\nwith no less authority than that of Mr.\nHenry Watterson, the standing framer of\nFree Trade platforms, has promised that\nDemocratic supremacy, if it comes, will\n with it the restoration of the sugar\nduties. Are these Democratic authorities\nwrong, or lias the esteemed Record run\namuck on the tariff question so madly that\nit is now unable to distinguish between rev-\nenue and protective duties? Before the Freo\nTraders can justly ask the country to give\nthrm control of its legislation tliey should\nget a sufficient grasp of the question to bo\nable to avoid contradicting each other on\nthe leading details of their policy.\nAs to "levying commercial war" on\nother countries, might it not occur to the\nRecord that a commercial war which h.is\nincreased our trade with the objects of\nthe w?r is a very good thing to have?\nExports to an imports from Cuba, Porto\nRico, Brazil and the other countries af-\nfected by the reciprocity policy have in-\ncreased by a rsateria! percentage since\nthis "commercial
1c9fbadf4035968fa942731eeb5e5985 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.0999999682901 40.063962 -80.720915 Well Atteftte«l <'nro of Cnlnrrli.\nDR. A . P . LIGHTHILL.DEAK Sir:.You\ntreatment in the cure of my Catarrh lum hat\nthe desired effect,and resulted in permanen\ngood to nie( all hough my cose has frequently\nbeen prononnred lncurahle, and I had ex\nImusteil all other rrodes of treatment, with\nout the least benefit. My case whs >o thronl\nnuct troublesome, that by giving a few o\nthe symptoms the value of your treat men\ncan Ihj more readily estimated. For years\nhad been alTlicted with a constant cold ii\nthe head, obstructing my breatning bo as u\nueces>itate me to keep my mouth open du\nring sleep; latterly the discharges becaim\nsolidified and impacted in my nose to sucl\nan extent that It required the greatest exer\n11«»ti to expel them. Hornetiraes these hara\ninmiw would eet in my throat \nme to hawk anil scrape even by I lie hour n\nrelieve myself. My breatli was offensive\nmy memory became impaired. Diamines\nami liRlit head In ess made their appearance\nand of late symptoms of paralysis Bteppe*\nin, and when 1 placed myself under you\naire one side of my face was badly atfecte*\nby this dread disease. My general healtl\nsuffered alike, there was a constant tired\ndrowsy and debilitated feeling, with no en\n: enty to move or act; I felt as tired on rising ii\nthe morning as 1 did on going to my bed, m;\nappetite was capricious and my dlspositloi\nmorose. In that condition I placed mysel\nunder your care, and am happy to state tha\nall those disagreeable and uaugcrous symp\ntoms have entirely left me, and I once mor\nenjoy the beat titsof good health.
09ae54475399970a230e9b5877780600 THE FROSTBURG FORUM ChronAm 1901.4342465436328 39.658143 -78.928357 that a city the size of Frostburg should\nnot have a Board of Trade, or some\nother organization through which the\ncitizens might act in harmony and\naltogether for the citys progress.\nAt present Frostburg is prosperous,\nbut only because of a generousness\non the part of nature. We have black\ndiamonds, but will mother earth con-\ntinue forever to yield up in bounteous-\nness as at present. Even though the\nminers pick should never be laid down\nin the vicinity of Frostburg, is there\nno spirit of progress here that sug-\ngests the idea of doing more than sit\nstill and pluck the ripe banana, or eat\nthe bread fruit already prepared.\nAlthough we do not desire to sound an\nalarm bell, we state it as a fact that\nthe end of Frostburg coal veins will\ncertainly be found sooner or later.\nIt may be twenty-five years, or it may\nbe fifty, but when that time comes\nFrostburg will need other means \nsupport—will need enterprises of a\ndifferent character to employ labor\nand thus support the business life of\nthe city. A man has no right to live\nonly in the present, nor has a city,\nbut in order that future progress may\nbe made, it is necessary to be active\nin the present. What Frostburg could\nhave at present and will need in the\nfuture is manufacturing plants of all\nkinds, ar.d through the medium of a\nBoard of Trade or like organization\nsuch things could be secured. It\ntakes a strong pull, and altogether, to\nput a city in the direct line of progress,\nbut once there it takes a stronger\npull to dump it back into the old rut.\nCant a few of these little hatchets be\nburied, and knives sheathed and let\nthe dove of peace and horn of pros-\nperity settle down over the city? The\ncolumns of The Forum are open to\nany discussion of this- important\nquestion.
255251189adc52676b577d7259f9ee4f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.7739725710298 40.063962 -80.720915 About thia time Charles, who had been\ngone about two yeara, camo home.\nThia la a period in my life peculiarly\ndistasteful to me, and I would fain pats it\nby, were it not necessary to round out my\nstory. He came with many vlcea acquired\nfrom bis aaaoclationa during his abaence.\nHe waa altogether heartless, except in bis\nselfish objects and purposes. He met\nRosa. I cannot even now comprehend\nhow bis old time antipathy vaniahed, nor\nbow anddenly bur opinion ol him changed;\nanfiice It to Bay from that time forward\nmy rival waa my own brother.\nLittle as 1 waa veraed in tho political af-\nfairs of our country, i could hoar all ;\naround me the muttering of a great and\ngathering storm. My father was uii* i\nusually stern and reticent, anil an anxious i\nlight burned always In mv mother's evea. >\nI could comprehend, however, that my |\ncountry was threatened intestine foes, 1\nand in common with all the young men\nin my section, I determined to go to the t\nfield as soon as a blow should be struck. fl\nIn the evening of that eventful day, in r\nApril, my father arrived hurriedly from u\nthe city. He held a long consultation with i\nmother, whom I could hear sobbing in the 1.\nadjoining room. He then, accompanied t\nby my mother, Btepped out into the large r\nspacious dining room, where Charlie aud *\n1 were Bitting, and informed us that Fort J\nSumpter had been fired upon by the t{\nRebels. "My sons," he said, "I had t,\nhoped that God would preserve the unity a)\nof our country and right the great wrong 0\nof slavery without blood ueing »heu. tl\nMen will not hearken to his voice. He p\ntherefore bares his arm and draws the p\nsword. I have but one command for you,
034d0f1f7a66f191f2ea2e9035bcfb47 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.850684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 A prominent Democrat in this city\nand an official In high position came near\nbeing mobbed by negroes l" the Seventh\nward on election day. He had just voted\nat the polling place at Eleventh and\nWashington street s and was moving\naway when be was followed by a negro\nwho had been turned away from the\npolls on account of having a fraduleut\ntax receipt. The negro tailed to the\nofJelal and asked hts opinion\nhe was followed by a crowd of negroes,\nwho were as much Incensed by their\ncolored brother being turned away as he\nwas hlm-cif. The official asked him his\ntime. The negro replied that U was\nWilliam Colton, (probably related in\nsome way to the Pennsylvania carpet­\nbagger,) and that he lived at No 22 East\nWest street. Tbe name upon tbe tax\nreceipt was William Cannon, formerly a\ngovernor of tbe etate, but now dead, and\n was no such place In the city as\nthat he gave as bis residence, and the\nhigh ttfaeial told him so.\nI bis Information Incensed the crowd\nmore than ever and they advanced upon\nhim threateningly and when be tamed\nthey followed him for some distance\nThe offl-rtol turned when be found that\nbe was being followed, and being armed\nwith a revolver, faced the mob. One\nman bolder than the others ad­\nvanced to within a few feet\nof him and used threatening language\nand when told that be and tils fellows\nmost retreat, or be arrested they took to\nflight Had tbe negro who h >dadvanced\nplaced h's haiuis npon the high official he\nwould hare been shot dead in his tracks\nThis is an evidence of tbe feeling ex­\ncited among the Ignorant negroes by the\nInstructions of Mahaffy and the speeches\nof Bloody Knowles and tbe theatrical\ndesperado Bird
171be6951c7b5afbedebc7fa94469a4e THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1899.8616438039066 37.305884 -89.518148 "If churches were occupied, it was only\nas a military necessity, and frequently\nafter their use as forts by the insurgents\nhad made it necessary to train our ar-\ntillery upon them. Prisoners were taken\nwhenever opportunity offered, often only\nto be set at liberty after being disarmed\nand fed. I'p to the time of our departure,\nalthough numerous spies had been cap-\ntured, not a single Filipino had been exe-\ncuted. Such wrongs as were casually com-\nmitted against the natives were likely to\nbe brought to our attention, and In every\ncase that we investigated we found a\nwillingness on the part of those in au-\nthority to administer prompt justice."\nThe commission gives a general view cf\nthe value of the islands, their richness !n\nagricultural and forest products, their\nmineral wealth, and their commanding\ngeographical position. They state that the\nPhilippine islands should soon become one\nof the great centers of the east. Manila\nis already conected by new steamship\nlines with India and Japan, and\nshe will become the natural terminus of\nmany other lines when a ship canal con-\nnects the Atlantic with the Pacific. It can\nnot be doubted that commerce will great-\nly increase, and the United States will ob-\ntain a large share of this. Manila, with\nthe immunity which is has thus far en-\njoyed from that terrible pest, the bu-\nbonic plague, should become a distributing\ncenter for China, Siam. The Straits Settle-\nments, Tonquin, Annum and Australia.\nThe report concludes:\n"Our control means to the Inhabitants\nof the Philippines internal peance and or-\nder, a guarantee against foreign aggres-\nsion and against the dismemberment of\ntheir conntry, commercial and industrial\npiosperity, and as large a share of the\naffairs of government as they shall prove\nlit to take. When peace and prosperity\nshall have been established throughout\nthe archipelago, when education shall have\nbecome general, then. In the language of\na leading Filipino, his people will, under\nour guidance,
30b272ed9fc1c039e43a53cc083eb06c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.1109588723998 42.217817 -85.891125 Coroner Underbill this morning held\nan inquest on the body of a woman\nnamed Catherine H. Voight, residing at\nXo. RS Twelfth street, who committed\nsuicide by opening tho" largo veins of\nher arms with a pair of scissors.\nTho evidenco goes to show that her\nhusband, a machinist in this city, had\npaid his addresses to tho young girl in\nNew York. Sho was of good family,\nand he representing himself in easy cir-\ncumstances, with a comfortable home to\ntake her to, induced her to marry him.\nThey came to this city some three\nmonths since, and took up their resi-\ndence on Twelfth street. It was not\nuntil the girl arrived here that she dis-\ncovered tho truo character of her hus-\nband. The man was a machinist, but it\n diflicult to get work, and ho had\nabsolutely nothing to support her with.\nNot being used to want, this circum-\nstance gave her great trouble, and she\nsoon became melancholy, and finally so\nsick as to require tho attention of a phy-\nsician. On Thursday last, in an unu-\nsual fit of melancholy, sho seized a pair\nof scissors lying upon a table near her,\nand succeeded in cutting her arms so\nseverely as to open the largest veins.\nShe bled profusely, and when found by\nher husband was so exhausted as to be\nscarcely able to speak. Tho services of\na physician were called in, but all at-\ntempts to restore her wero futile, and\nafter lingering in great pain she expired\nat a few minutes past 1 1 o'clock last\nnight.
1fed88ce39faa8e9aa08e75bee0a66ab DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8346994219287 44.939157 -123.033121 writes, "Reason and revelation were\nreconciled, and afterwards the truth of\nChristian Science was demonstrated,"\npage 110- - She stated that Science in\nthe Christian Science text book so simp-\nly and logically that the simple reading\nof that book has brought the healing\nComforter to multitudes of those in\nsickness and distress, and made them\nevery whit whole.\nMrs. Eddy had thus become the dis-\ncoverer of Christian Science, and the\nfounding of its institutional work was\nto follow. In her joy to shnre such n\ngreat blessing she appealed to the spirit-\nual thought of learned men, only to suf-\nfer the rebuff of dignified silence. Her\nfirst ray of hope came when that silence\nwas turned into ridicule and abuse; for\nit meant that she hnd gained at least a\nhearing. Deserted by friends rela-\ntives, and opposed by subtle and power-\nful influences whichever way she turn-\ned, this woman patiently kept her\ncourse in the founding of the various\ninstitutions of Christinn Science, until\nthe movement has spread itself over\nthis world, and all within her own life-\ntime. By her clear statement of scien-\ntific Christianity. Mrs. Kddy has enor-\nmously increased the number of follow-\ners of Christ's teachings. The sick are\nhealed of bodily ailments by reading\nits literature; the sinner may know\nhow to liberate himself from his sin;\nand greatest of nil, the\nis given the power to save Himself from\nthe general belief in sin, so that the\ngood he desires to do, he can do. Mrs.\nEddy has therefore proved, in accord-\nance with the vision in the apocalypse,\nthat a
0a8774e8b98067668659a733636e7d1a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1897.6095890093861 40.063962 -80.720915 Hates for time money for the long\nperiods hardened perceptibly ari l tfr\nInvited some sellta? of long sterlli\nbills for future uses, the proceeds bell\nput into loans. Discount hardened\nLondon and there was active blddli\nthere for gold. Crop prospe is, repor\nof foreign crop shortages and the a\ncompanylng rise In the wheat mark\nall continued favorable to Jho udvau\nin prices of stocks, as did the furth\nreports of current railroad earnlnj\nThe total decline was more thjn reeo\nered in all stocks, but the net gains e\ntend to a point in only a few shar<\nThe rise from the lowest exceeded\npoint in all of the grangers reaching\nin Chicago Gjvattvestern. St. Paul I\nthe group In point of activity, wl\nsules of C5.000 shares. Centr\nrallied 2Vi per cent from the lowest,\nrecovery of over a point also occurr\nIn very many of the western and sout\nwestern railroads as well as In sor\nleading southern railroads. A lur,\nnumiHT or the industrials ana epecu\nties, including a number of the anthr\ncite road a are In the .same categor\nConsolidated » Jus showed a net gain ol\npoints; Metropolitan Traction 2Vi; Nc\nYork Central & St. I .ouls J, and Pu!\nman 1; Brooklyn Union and Illlnc\nSteel each lost a point.\nThe bond market gave decided e\\\ndence of strength on llberul purehast\nwhich advanced some of the promlne\nIssues, notably. Business was In co\nwlderable volume, but the a«gre«a\nshowed a considerable shrinkage frc\nyesterday's total. The totul transactlo\nwere 13,425,000.
233023ea54ddf42be35b117d3d629138 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1910.17397257103 41.875555 -87.624421 tugall Thus all hope of a princess of\nthe blood royal breaking the precedent\nand marrying for love Is for this gen-\neration vanished. For Princess Patri-\ncia of Connaught, the beauty ot the\nBritish court, was also the willful one,\nwho stood out for an ordinary woman's\nprivilege of marrying according to her\nheart and not according to the tradi-\ntions of her rank and the policy ot the\nstate. She refused King Alfonso ot\nSpain, It Is said, and also the Count\nof Turin, and for years has been deter-\nmined to marry a mere commoner,\nyounger son of a mere noble. The boy\nking of Portugal Is five or six yean\nher junior, but Is quite good-l ooki n- g\nIn contrast to her former suitor of\nSpain, Perhaps Patricia yielded to\npersuasions of duty, for It Is Important\ndynastlcally to consummate the politi-\ncal alliance ot Portugal and Britain.\nPortugal not only has harbors ot use\nto the British fleet, but she has vast\npossessions in Africa which the Ger-\nman covets, Nevertheless, what a sac-\nrifice this marriage Is, It it Is to be a\nmarriage. This one beautiful daughter\not Britain's royal house, granddaughter\nof Victoria and also ot the Red Prince\not Prussia, the genius ot the 18'u war,\ngoes to the throne ot a decrepit coun-\ntry, abjures her religion, may be. blown\nup by bombs or murdered with the\nknife, at least have her nerves broken\nas are those ot her cousin, the Queen\nof Spain. One cannot help being sorry\nfor Victoria Patricia of Connaught.
00962350682e65d4a76e5eea4e9f21d5 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.6024589847702 40.441694 -79.990086 Toe second time Is never like the first.\nThe book of experience 'has no duplicated\npages. The mnse of history never uses the\nhektograpb. The second time may be an\nimprovement upon the first. It may have\nmore in it than the first had. But it will\nlack some of the sensations which accom-\npanied the first seeing of the light, or the\nfirst day of tno deed. The novelty, at least,\nhas passed away. We no longer look into\nthe absolutely unknown.\nI thought of this the other day at sea. The\ngreat ocean, it is true, is forever changing\nand never ceases to be new. The last even,\ning of the Journey, as we drew near to\nQueenstown after more tlan a week's ac-\nquaintance with the great deep, the restless\nwater was as interesting and as fascinating\nas it was the first night Ieversawit. It is\nin little things that one finds the difference\n the first .voyage and the second.\nOne is no longor particularly attracted by\nporpoises. Even a whale or two is of little\nmoment. The routine of life on shipboard,\nthe telling of the tfme by the bells, the\nmovements of the sailors, the appearance\nof staterpom and saloon, are now matters of\ncourse. He who starts out on a second\njourney over the ocean feels, as the sopho-\nmore does, the advantage of familiailty,\nand is inclined to account himself better\nthan the freshman, especially if he has been\nexposed to that uncomfortable disease, the\nmal de mer, and bas not taken it, and is\ntherefore reasonably sure thatheisjiot go-\ning to be sick. You will find him saying in\nthe presence of novices who are not by any\nmeans so sure of their own exemption, that\nhe hopes there will be n big blow; this\nsmooth sea he professes to find very monot-\nonous.
23047da28295dde026185c9405436399 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1866.9356164066464 41.004121 -76.453816 AN AGED LADY MURDERED\nA shocking putrnge was perpetrated\nat Howling Greon recently (says tho\nNtishvUlo J)liatch) In tho murder by\nthree negroes or nn old lady nnmed Mrs\nSill. On tho proceeding Saturday sho\nvisited a lawyer's ofllco in that town\nand whllo there mentioned to tho law\nyer in tno Hearing or threo negroes ono\nnamod Lewis that sho had sixty-liv- e\ndollars in money nt home, about a mile\nfrom town. On Monday morning, tho\nwidow's son, a littlo fellow, went Into\ntho Hold, and uftorn littlo, tho wenthor\nbeing cold, was compelled to return for\nhis shoes. On entering tho houso ho\nwas horror struck ut finding his mother\nlying upon the floor dead, nnd covered\nwith her blood. Her head had been\nsplit open nnd lior body frightfully\ngasnod in various parts by an nxo. By\nhis outcries no soon aroused tho \nbors, and iinmodiata search was mnde\nfor tho authors of tho terrible crime\nTho ground being soft nnd yioldy from\ntno rains, human tracks wero soon dis\ncovered. It was noticed that ono track\nwas mado by a shoo run down nt tlio\nside, ntul having three heavy nails and\nn urcuic across tho mlddlo of the shoo\nThese peculiarities soon led to the de\ntection of ono of tho perjietrntors of;\nuioiiwiyi munier. Tho startling news\nsped to Bowling aroen on lightening\nwings, nud when it reached tho ears of\ntno lawyor whom tho murdorod lady\nnan visuod on Saturday, hu guvo iufor\nmutton of tho presence of tho throe\nnogro men. Thoy were nt onco nnnro\nbonded, and upon tho negro Lewis was\nfound a shoo corresponding precisely\nwiin tno tracics leading from tho poor\nvictim's house The wretches nro In\nJail at Bowling areeu.
1172b84b3cecc9ba808a9ec76ee7a456 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.8292349410544 41.681744 -72.788147 had meant war, with all its harsh\nconsequences," Mr. Brown again\ntreads on dangerous ground. For, it\nhas been contended, and with very\ngood reasons, that any action oppo-\nsite to the course pursued by Presi-\ndent Wilson during the past two and a\nhalf years would have thrown the\ncountry into war. Any steps "to as-\nsert our strength," would have meant\nwar. Any steps to do away with the\ncontempt which Mr. Brown and others\nclaim the European nations hold for\nus would have meant war. Any steps\nother than the writing of notes to\nmake Germany check her ruthless\nsubmarine warfare would have meant\nwar. Any steps other than usual\ndiplomatic approaches in dealing with\nEngland and France on the seizure of\nmails and ships would have meant\nwar. Any other way of dealing with\n Mexico would have meant\nwar. And so it goes on down the line.\nThere was only one alternative in\nevery act of President Wilson during\nthose trying days that began with the\nEuropean war. Every time the check-\ners were moved he was in a dilemma.\nEven in the railroad crisis. It was\neither a settlement or a strike, which\nin the end meant an industrial war.\nAnd every time Charles Evans Hughes\ncriticises these policies he can offer but\none substitute, war. Is it any wonder\nthen that there are those who will\nvote for the President because "He\nhas kept us out of war?" Mr. J.\nCalvin Brown if he had a vote would\nprobably cast it that way, because\nthere are plenty of chances yet to get\nin the war, and Brown is a lover of
02eb91ae3f67e86aee46d907a12f5615 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.0534246258244 42.217817 -85.891125 Whereas default haa been made n the conditioue\nof a certain mortgage made by James Uale and Isa-\nbella Uale, his wife, of the township of lutwerp,\nVau Uuren county, Michigan, to Elvira C. llendrlck\nof the village of Paw Paw iu said county aud atate,\nwhich aaid mortgage is dated August 21, A. D.\n19o0, aud wa recorded iu the office of the register\nof deeds for said county ou the 22d day of August,\nA, D 19' HI , on page 23 In liber 69 of mortgages, and\non which said mortgage there is claimed tobe due\nat the date of th a notice, for principal aud inter st,\nthe sum of two thousand a veu hundred and ninety-eig- ht\nand 2S lot) dollars, besides an attorney's fee\not thirty dollars stipulated in aaid mortgage to be\npaid in case ai y proceedings should be taken to\n the same.\nNow, therefore, notice ia hereby given that by\nvirtue of the power of sale ia said mortgage con-\ntained, and of the statute in such case made and\nprovided, I ahall sell at public auction, to the high-\nest bidder, on Saturday, the 14th day of January,\nA. D. 1905, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at the\nfront door of the court house in the village of Paw\nPaw in aaid connty of Vau Uuren (that being the\nbuilding in which the circuit court for said county\nis held) the premises described iu aaid mortgage, or\nso much thereof aa may be necessary to satisfy\nthe amount ao claimed to be due ou aaid mortgage\nfor principal aud intertat, together with said at-\ntorney 'a fee aud the costs of aaid sale.\nThe prem'ses described in aaid mortgage are aa\nfollows: The north-ea- st
0dee74fe81e9ab6f4d065426891905b9 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.8620218263004 37.53119 -84.661888 MUSIC On Wednesday evening at\nWalton l Opera Rouse the people o r\nStanford had the rare pleasure of hear\nlag two well koown and most aocom\npushed musicians Mr Frederick J\nHoffmann Pianist of the College of\nMusic of Cincinnati Bud Mr Carl M\nGantvoort Teacher of Voice In thi\nsame Institution At every classics\nconcert we Und three classes of listen\nera In tho Ural the true musician\nthe Intelligent hearer who listens wltl\nboth head and heart who sees boyoni\nthe more rhythmic melody and harms\nny or tune1 Into the musical conoop\nLion of tbe composer or what Rlemaui\ncall tbo logic of music II The meow\ncomprises tho musically Inclined thou\nwbo perhaps play Beotboven or slni\nScbuman but do not enjoy Bach\nIboy may enjoy Beethoven Sonat\nPatbellque when they do not know tb\nmoaning of nor In the least In\nterpret the thoughts or feelings of thE\ncomposer Classical music must bl\ngrasped by the brain bofdhre It CAD lH\nappreciated by the heart In tbe thin\nclass are those who know nothlngot tbl\ndivine art and only profess an Inter-\nact In It In compliance with the de\nwands ot eocletyladiae and genllimei\nwhO adore rouslo but who really on\ny share the excitement ofa musloa\nperformance In proportion to the tun\nthat pleases their aeetbetto fancy Bio\nof tbeee classes found much to enjoy ti\nlistening to Meeara Hotlmaan set\nOlnLY ort We only hope these gun\ntlemen mar sooa again come thU way\nMlsa Aille Huffman was honored bl\nbeing seleot d to turn tbe music fu\nMr Hoffmann whfob proves tbe son\ntUteooQ Miss Ballou has In tile capabil-\nIty ot her advanced pupils
0d267a7f37ce791cf51c567e6325c1c8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.8589040778793 41.681744 -72.788147 Between Colgate and Dartmouth,\nthere is still little or nothing to choose.\nBoth have the record of playing four\nof the strongest elevens of the n.asT.\non successive Saturdays and of coming\nthrough with three victories and one\ntie game with each other. Colgate\ndefeated Brown, Cornell, and Prince-\nton, and Dartmouth vanquished Penn\nState. Cornell, and Pennsylvania, in\naddition to the 7 to V game, between\nthemselves. On paper it looks as\nthough both would finish the season\nwithout defeat. Colgate will be the\nfavorite against Syracuse next Satur-\nday, though Syracuse is pointed for\nthat game more than any other of\nthe season, and the contest is sure to\nbe a heroic struggle. Dartmouth will\nplay Brown, and unless the Green\nteam encounters a slump after its\nstrenuous battling of the last month\nit should win by a fairly comfortable\nmargin, even without the services of\nits halfback, Robertson.\nPrinceton deserves a world of credit\nfor its splendid play in the spectacu-\nlar game at Palmer Stadium. In the\nashes of a double defeat, Princeton\nspirit found still a spark that almost\nflamed into a victory. With a show-\ning like that, Princeton's football year\nwhatever may betide later, cannot be\nsaid to bo a" failure. Coach Roper\nevidently taught his charges much in\nthe week before the Harvard game,\nand has proved his right to a full and\nfair trial at the helm of Orange and\nBlock football. But Harvard, with\nCasey, could not lose. Of all the many\nstars of this brilliant season, none is\nmore versatile, none is more indomit-\nable, than this ame Casey. He and\nhis team had, in the final test, the\nsame brand of gameness that Prince-\nton displayed, and the resultant tie\nwas highly to the credit of both\nelevens.
0e1892b53259db4baa64a57d45fbee41 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.0915300230217 40.441694 -79.990086 Democratic leaders in the State, who has\nalways been known as an ardent Cleveland\nman. He knows as much abont New York\npolitics as or what Is going on in Massachu-\nsetts, and he was able to speak authorita-\ntively as to the attitude of the Now York\nannex to the Cleveland show. He declared\nto The Dispatch correspondent that there\nwould be no contesting delegation from\nsew York at the Democratic National Con-\nvention If Hill got the regular delegates.\n"The Murray Hill meeting on Saturday,"\nhe said, "was called for the purpose or mak-\ning an effect upon tho rest or the country.\nTho movement has been started In New\nYork In view or the existing conditions for\ntho purpose or bringing forward some one\nas a Presldental candidato upon whom the\nmore advanced portion of tho Democratio\nparty could center. This does not neces\nsarily mean Cleveland, or any one man\nespecially; it simply means, for Instance,\nsome such man as McPberson, Palmer or\nBoies. I think that Is about the of\nchoice in which they wonld stand.\n"Of course, Cleveland has been the favor-\nite of the class or men or whom we are\nspeaking. I presume he still is or many of\nthem, and he is mine, yet there ia no doubt\ntheir ardor has cooled a little on account of\nhis recent course of action."\n"What do you mean by that? Do you re-\nfer to his alleged passivity?"\n"It Is more than that, it is understood that\nsome time since Mr. Cleveland positively\nforbade his friends in New York to take\nany concerted action in his behalf. At that\ntime they were ready and desirous to make\nthe fight for the organization, ancLI believe\nthey could have secured it, had it not been\nfor his prohibition. I do not know what his\nreasons are for this course, and have never\nheard them stated. It is a fact, neverthe-\nless, that his oourxe has greatly disheart-\nened rollowers, not only in New York, but\nalso in other States where it has become\nknown."
249350c4f773398cf90c599318b60718 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.5630136669204 40.063962 -80.720915 From the LeaTeaworlh (K*n.)Tinie* July 20.\nA clear cue of Jeeae Pomeroyism baa\nbeen developed in the instance of the\ndrowning of the young lad Andy Banka,\nwbicb occurred a little over a week ago.\nin tbe river juat above the coal abaft*\n"Babe" Jackaon, a lad who given hia age\nas 17, but who looka at leaat three or four\nyears older, and a number ol other boya\nwere all in swimming at the aame time,\nwhen Jackson, according to the evidence\ngiven in the preliminary examination be¬\nfore United States Commissioner De-\ncompte, day before yesterday, seized\nyoung Banks by the hands and pulled him\nout into deep water. Banka was unable\nto swim, and Jackaon knew it, and yet,\nnotwithstanding the cries, protestation*\nand pleadings of the former, the latter\ndragged him out into deep water, and af¬\nter ducking him under tbe water, him\ngo. Of course, owing to the fright of tbe\nboy and his inability to swim, he went\nunder, and when he came up again cried\nloudly for help. The other boya,\nwith the exception of Jackwn, were\nstanding near the bank at aome dis¬\ntance from the drowning lad, and being\nalinoet paralyzed by the sight before\nthem, and also being afraid of Jackaon,\nwho exercised a sort of terrorism over\nthem, could tlo nothing, while Jackson,\nwan near enough to render assistance had\nhe seen fit to exert himaelf, remained pas¬\nsive and did not stretch out a finger to\nsave his companion. It may possibly\nhave been that Jackson was ao frightened\nwhen he aaw what be had done u to l>e\nincapable of doing anything toward sav¬\ning Banks, but from the general drift of\nthe teitimony it would lead.one to sup-\ntioae
16d6c3b68b68963a017a12f2308ff7ba SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.1410958587012 37.53119 -84.661888 the Initiatory work\nWilliam Calvin aged 00 was killed\nby a train at Lebanon Junction Ho\nwas walking on tbo track\nThe Southern Railway Company has\nbeen fined 82000 In each of three caun\nIn Mercer county Jar alleged discrimi ¬\nnation in freight rates\nWilliam Hudson of Clinton county\ntook morphine In the presence of his\nwife nod loft home tolling her to and\nhis dead body She did so\nChas M Drye for whose arrest as a\nparticipant In the Quarter House\ntight a reward of 1200 was offered was\narrested at Knoxville Teen\nJ T Bradley one of the leading cit ¬\nizens of tbe West End of Boyle la dead\nof asthma He was about 75 and a\nmember of tbo Christian church\nA largo stable belonging to tho Wll\nllamiburg Hotel burned Tbe hotel a\nthreestory frame caught\nseveral times but by the heroic ef\nforts of tho citizens was saved\nTho February term of tbe Clinton\ncircuit court will convene Monday\nTbero are 240 mledemeanor casestbroo\nfelony and two divorce cases on tbe\nlocket besides the equity cases\nA Wllllamsburg dispatch says Wm\nfloloy was bound over in 81000 bond\nfor shooting without wounding Fin\ner became drunk and amused himself\nby shooting at people on tbo street\nA flow of salt water has been encoun ¬\nBred In the sacoed well drilled near\ntllllcdgevllle on the Hiram Johnson\nfarm The well Is now about 1500 feet\nstoppedeweAt\nWm Sharp attempted to force his way\ninto the building Ho drew a club on\nJoel Darnell one of the pupils and In\nreturn was shot In the abdomen by\nDarnell Sharp U in a critical condl ¬\ntion
2c126d55799d154e654777c6760d6bdf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 "Schools and newspapers are about\nthe first things needed jTVthe South. It\nis a disgrafce to our civilfr^tton that\nsouthern politicians afe abTS to lead the\npeople as they do. Had schools and\nnewspapers abounded six years ago, I\ndoubt if the masses of the South could\nhave been forced into ttye« war. The\nlate elections fn these three States indi¬\ncate that the rebellious spirit is stronger\nthan it was three month* ago^ Freedom\nor speech "arid safety of person are; very\nfar from being assured inx»U sections of\nthese States. T believo'thfey havo been\nwon in the cities anil largo towns' und\non the main lines of railway travel; but\nany northern man "who goes Into the\ncountry, whether for business or pleas¬\nure, whether as a resident or a traveler,\nmust walk and talk circumspectly. If\nhe nndertakes to maintain radical sen¬\ntiments on the negro question: his\nfriends will probably; find him dead\nsome morning.*hot from behind, as is\nthe custom of the country,\n"The ex-rebel soldiers nreevery where\nthe best disposed class of citizens, and\nif they alone constituted any given\nstate, I should expect peace and order\nand freedonVto freely* abound at once.\nThe* bad classes are, all the women,\nmoa of the preachers, nearly all the'\nyoung and middle-aged men who did\nnot go into the army, and many of the\nyoung rebel staff officers, officers\nwho didn't see active service. The fact\nthat such a largo proport ion of the offi¬\nces in the gift ol. the people of these\nstates have been filled witty men who\nwere officers in the.reVqli.army does not\nin Itself furnish any argument against\nthe good disposition of the people. The\n«entiment which volpntafily confers\nhonor on a man who lias shown person¬\nal bravery, who has been- plucky and\ndaring and gallant, is.one wo cannot\nafTortl to crnsh.it -isbnb'of the strong\nmoral forces of a nation, and deserves\nnurture rather than r condemnation..\nMoreover, iti ndtn feW cases these ex-\nofficors are of better will and purpose\ntoward the government.than any other\nmen in their respective localities.\n"The negro is no pattern of manhood,\nand the negro soldiers havo doi)etlie\nnation some bad service as well as much\ngood service. Yet, as( tho co-mpon no-\ngroe's faults and failings ure\\ o'ry large¬\nly due to the white with whom he has\nbeen associated, ho the negro soldier\nmay justly say that he has been as good\nas his white officer. For many most\nworthless follows, not to say several\ngreat rascals, have been officers in some\nof the negro regiments qii duty in these\nstates within'tlrree'ltirinths. Tho aver¬\nage conduct of many of the whito troops j\nis neither productive of good order nor\ngromotiveofthe good nfchie of the army;
0c3cc54a1163ebe305b50d6a0f4eb8d9 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.9547944888382 40.441694 -79.990086 A contract for the delivery at Chicago of\n40,000 tons of Kanawha coal has lately been\nplaced at $2 86. Pittsburg coal cannot be\npnt in there at $3. The shipments of the\nKanawha nd C. & O. regions to these\npoints were increasing everv year by six or\nseven million bushels, and there was a cor-\nresponding gain in the volume of railroad\nshipments? These facts were mentioned in\nconnection with the present condition ot the\nlocal trade and in support of the often re-\niterated statements of the operators that\nthey cannot afford to pay more than 2)\ncents for mining and do business.\nRegarding the proposed purchase of the\nlargest of the river mines by an Eastern\nsyndicate, represented by Mr. W . P. Shinn\nand Mr. McConneli, nothing was done yes-\nterday. The 15th of this month had been\nset as the date when an extension ol \noption, on pavment of a consideration,\nwould be required by the syndicate agents,\nprovided they wished to carry on the nego-\ntiations beyond the first of the year. That\nthey have given no indication of desiring a\nlonger period for consideration would indi-\ncate that tbev have made up their minds to\nbe either on or off. They still have until 1\nthe first of the year to close the negotiations.\nThere have been, during thepast week,\ndivers rumors that Joseph "Walton & Co.\nwere preparing to accede to the demand of\ntheir miners for 3 cents a bushel and resume\nwork in a few dayj. It has been said that\nthe bustle of preparation at their mines in-\ndicated plainly that work was to be re-\nsumed. Similar reports were out, not long\nago. iu regard to W. W. O'Neil & Co . and\nwere vigorously deuied bv Captain O'Neil.
03cf530184128be2916737be90a15858 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.3292349410544 40.441694 -79.990086 Evangelical Church in Pittsburg and Alle-\ngheny will take part. It is expected to be\nthe largest and most notable German char-\nitable enterprise that has ever been seen in\nthis city. Hev F. Iluofl, pastor of tho large\nchurch at Smithfield street and Sixth ave-\nnue, is taking a warm, active interest in the\naffair, and there are hundreds of people\nbusy continually in the cause. The fair will\nopen Monday next at Old City Hall. The\nladies in charge will bo there early in tho\nmorning, and hope to be able to servo sup-\nper in tho evening. In any ciso there will\nbe dinner by Tuesday, and dinner and sup-\nper will be served in the hall every day\nthereafter till the end of the week. Ger-\nmans are noted'for their culinary triumphs,\nand it is safe to say that the menu each day\nwill be a good one. The hall will bo decor-\nated appropriately. There will bo \nwork booths, containing articles of all kinds\nfor household ornamentation, and other\nbooths devoted to the sale of more decidedly\nuseful wares. Flowers, ice cream, candy\nand other delights will be on sale.\nWill Have a Change Lnch Bvenins,\nA different programme of music, recita-\ntions, etc., will be prepared for each even-\ning, some of the best talent in the two cities\ncontributing to the general enjoyment.\nThe asylum for which tho money is to be\nraised at tho fair it ill be built as soon as the\nfunds can be raisod. Tho managors of the\norphanage already possess eight acres of\ngronnd at West Liberty, on which there\nstands an old house that has hitherto been\nused for both boys and girls. It is much\ntoo small for the requirements, and when\nthe new edifice is put up, the old houso will\nbe remodeled and given to tbe boys entirely.\nThe new building will be a three-stor- y
01b0c410e58a2c6ddedcff090fdbd063 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.6013698313038 37.92448 -95.399981 Darrell's position wns one of painful\nisolation, For the Ilrst few miles ho\nrodo not far behind tho princess; then,\nafter tho lighting was over and her\n.s afety assuietl, as sho sent no word to\nhim ho fell farther to the rear, and in\nthe last hours of tlio march, when the\nrain hail begun, he lent some aid to\nmen who were struggling with cannon\nIn the roads thnt grow always worse.\nIu Grcdskov on tho second day ho\nformed the acquaintance of an engi-\nneering olllcer nnd wns of some llttlo\nuse In helping to strengthen tho city's\ndefenses. Ho saw Korna occasionally\nnnd learned from him that there had\nbeen a memorable scene between Vera\nnnd Kllziar and that tho prince hod\nsucceeded in presenting plnusiblo ex-\ncuses. The princess, however, had as-\nserted authority, and It was she who\nIssued paramount orders hi tho city.\nThe mlu relented long enough to per-\nmit tlio Russian forco to take up Its\nposition, hemming tlio place, and\nthen began again without violence, a\nslow nnd steady dripping from tlio\nleaden sky. Tho besiegers exhibited\nindomitable energy. They brought up\na surprising quantity of artillery de-\nspite tho state of the roads, yet not\nenough to give them any advantage.\nThe guns wero too light for tho reduc-\ntion of n well fortlllcd place, and\nGrcdskov was fairly well fortified,\nthough at tho time of tho Circassian at-\ntack it had been very badly defended.\nTho tlmo camo speedily when no\nmoro cannon could bo brought over tlio\nroads. Spies reported that tho Rus-\nsians wero hnvlng all they could do to\nbring up sufficient supplies hi tlio light-\nest vehicles and on tho backs of mules\nnnd camels. The game as It stood was\na draw. Tho Russians could not take\nxno town, nna tuo besieged coUId not\nget out. Hut tlio enemy had to hold\ntheir ground only till better weather,\nwhllo tho Circassians had to hold theirs\nforever.
1826c9676b5c0930c6d3fd72ab55b88c THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1899.1109588723998 37.92448 -95.399981 borrows money to get his education\nPurchasing a house and not able\nall down in cash, tlie purchaser\nrightly borrows It on mortgage. Crises\ncome In business when it would be\nwrong for a man not to borrow. Hut f.\nroll this warning through all these\naisles, over the backs ot all these pews,\nnever borrow to speculate uot a dol-\nlar, not a cent, not a farthing. Young\nmen, I warn you by your worldly pros-\npects and the value of your immortal\nsouls, do not do It. There are breaker\ndistinguished for their shipwrecks\nthe llanwuys, the Needles, the Caskets,\nthe Douvers, tlie Anderlos, the Skerrie\nand iniiiiy a craft has gone to piece\non those rocks, hut I have to tell jou,\nthat nil Ihe llnlivvajs, and tlie Needles,\nand the Caskets, and Skerries aro\nns nothing compared with the longlliiu\nof breakers which bound the ocean of\neomiuerei.il life north, south, east and\nwet wilh the white fonin of their de-\nspair ami Hie dirge of theii damnation\nthe breakers ol hot tow.\nIf I hnd only a world!) wenpou tous\non this subject, I would give you the\nfact, flesh from tlie highest authority,\nthat t)U per cent, of those who go Into\nwild speculation lose all, hut 1 have is\nbetter warning I lui n a worldly warning.\nProm the pjace where men lime per-\nil lied ImkIj, mind, soul stand oft.\nstand olT! Abstract pulpit discussion\nmust step aside on thisqiiestlou. Faith\nnnd repentance are absolutely neces-\nsary, but faith and repentance tire u\nmore doctrines of the Hilile than com -m ei ci -
05c75d559c3b25cc6743f515f5982ebc THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.717213083131 40.832421 -115.763123 all tho power an 1 influence of the\nlilaiue ring. w«s us.'d in tho«H> places\nwith n view of carrying the ticket to the\n'country towns, wbicb have always been\nvery evenly divided, with larg. ly in-\ncreated majorities. Thiii. as tho dis¬\npatches indicate, has proved a failure,\nand tbo inference, however, mildly-\ndrawn, ia certainly a.lversu to tbe Re\npublicans. Tho importance of the elec¬\ntion cannot bo considered in any other\nlight <hauof gnat political significance,\nu* u\\>on the result depends to u great\nd. g -eo tbo complexion of every doubt-\nfill State in tbo Union.\nA Portland dispatch of tho I3tli says:\nAt tniduight tbe immense crowds which\nassembled arouud tho headquarters\nof both parti* h tho early p.ut of tbe\nevening, were dispersing. The vote\nhas been very close, but the indications\nare tbo back towns will oti'.sct tho\nH-publicun loss lu tho cities. At tbe\n{{. publican headquarters Davis' diction\nis claimed, as are the House and Senate.\nTbo Republican defeat of one Repre¬\nsentative in the Fourth oud Fifth dis\ntriets is conceded. Ouo huudred unit\neighteen towns give a Republican net\nloss of about 200 ovtr last year. At the\nFusion hindqutrti r» I'luistcd's election\nis claimed by l!,IWil majority, as are\nthree of tivo Congressman.\nA private dispatch suys tbo latest\nreturns indicate that I'iaisted, Fiisiouist\ncandidate for Governor, is elected. Con¬\ngressmen La>M and Miuce, Democrats,\nelected. Anderson, Democrat, elected,\nlu th« 1'irst district .'2 towns give Davis\n18,018, Plaistod 10,32.!, scattering lit).\nIn 31 cities and towns the l'*n«i<>u\n(jain is 'JOJ. The above towns include\nLewislown, Augusts. I\\»rt!aud, Roek-\nland, liiddeford, Aubuin and Skchvo-
1056b17411a37cc5f1c04707da9d749b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6808218860983 39.261561 -121.016059 Lot us henceforth remember that this is a\ncivil war; that the hate of men who have\nbeen fellow-citizens is a hundred fold more\nbitter than the hale of foreigners; that the\nrebels feel their cause to bo as sacred as\never our fathers or any people thought\ntheirs to be; that they have for long years\nbeen taught to hate us and despise us; that\nthe mass of them are profoundly ignorant\nand poor, and that their prejudice against\nus is malignant; that they look upon our\narmy as an invading host, coming to waste\ntheir homes and insult their families; and\nthat by a thousand reasons of conviction,\npassion, ignorance, and fear, they are prac-\ntically united in opposition to the Govern\nmsnt. Moreover, a people so inflamed and\ndesperate, occupy ing 800,001) square miles\n•of fertile soil, will not starve immediately.\nIf a piece of brown paper, by common con-\nsent, buys a loaf of bread, it is a« good as\ngold. Disaffection, disappointment, disgust\nthere may be in individual and in the\nperhaps intentionally exaggerated rumors\nof designing stragglers. But after fifteen\nmooths of war the rebels stand to-day bit-\nter, defiant, desperate; not hoping, of course\nto subdue and overrun us, but expecting to\nhold out fiercely until Europe Interposes.\nLet no one mistake what wc are saying.\nThere is not the least reason for doubt in\nany loyal heart. Bui there Is every reason\nfor keeping our eyes steadily open upon the\n'aots. A man is not depressed or gloomy\n>ecause be thinks a huge nod radical civil\n-ar is not a picnic, to be ended by an or-\nler of the day. ITyou expect to stand on\nbe top of the mountain you must climb,\nind slip, and sweat, and fall, and bruise\nour shins, and up again, and tip. and up\n'be job i« dilYicut, so is this rebellion. But\nt is not in the Yankee nature to be foiled,\n'he tougher the resistance, the more reso\n•itely, with grim good-humor, it settles it-\n;if tg the task.
0730dbb85589b018a8cd04408c72a98e CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1901.5438355847286 39.623709 -77.41082 AN ACT to amend section nine of Article 5,\nof the Constitution of this State, and to\nprovide for the submission of said amend-\nment to the qualified voters of this Stale\nfor adoption or reject ion.\nSuction 1 Be it enacted by the General\nAssembly of Maryland, (three fifths of all the\nmembers elected to aeli of the two Houses\nconcurring,) That the following section he\nand the same is hereby proposed as an\namendment to Arlicle 5, of the Constitution\nof lids Stale, and if adopted hy the legal and\nqualified voters thereof, herein ami ashy law\nprovided, it shall supersede and stand in the\nplace and stead of section nine of said Artde\nSection 0 The Slates Attorney shall per\nform such duties and receive such fees and\ncommissions salary not exceeding three\nthousand dollars, as are now or may hereafter\nhe prescribed by law; and it any States At-\ntorney shall receive any other fee or reward\ntitan such as is or may lie allowed hy law, lie\nshall, on conviction thereof, he removed from\nofllce; provided that the Slates Allot ney for\nBaltimore city shall receive an annual salary\nof forty five hundred dollars, and shall have\npower to appoint one deputy, at an annual\nsalary not exceeding three thousand dollars,\nand snclt other assistants at such annual sal\naries not exceeding fifleen hundred dollars\neach, as tlie Supreme Bench of Baltimore\nCity may authorize and approve; all of said\nsalaries to he paid out of the fees of the said\nSlates Attorney's office, as has heretofore\nbeen practiced.
580ef8958fe23bc9d530761839828537 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.015068461441 37.561813 -75.84108 Much difference of opinion prevails\nas to the relative influence of the male\nnnd female parent in determining the\ncharacters of progeny. According to a\nvery prevalent notion, the malo bestowa\nall valuable qualities, whether of form\nor vigor; while the femnlo is regarded\nmerely as a passive instrument which\nhatches, as it were, the male seed on\nabsurd doctrine long preserved from\nwell merited obloquy as a convenient ex-\ncuse for carelessness and neglect in the\nselection of the female parent. A most\ningenious hypothesis has lately been\npropounded by Mr. Orton in the Month-\nly Medical Journal. The male animal,\naccording to Mr. Orton,, influences es-\npecially the external, and the female the\ninternal organization of the offspring.\nThe outward form, general appearance,\nand organs of locomotion are chiefly de-\ntermined by the male; tho vital organs,\nxize, general vigor, and by\nthe female. Many most interesting facts,\n"of which we subjoin a few, are adduced\njn support of this proposition. There\nare many reasons for believing that Mr.\n(Jrton'B views afford a clue to an impor-\ntant law of physiology. I5ut this, it\nmust be remembered, cannot bo the on-\nly law operating in tho process of gene-\nration, and, as Mr. Orton himself states,\nit must consequeutly be liable to many\nmodifications, und must only be accepted\nwith certain restrictions. Thus the pa-\nrent, which at tho timo of copulation is\nmore powerful and vigorous, uououess\nimparts to tho progeny an unduly large\ntihare of its own most prominent char-\nacters. The mule is the produco of a\nmalo ass and the marc; the humy that of\ntho horio and the ass. Both hybrids\noro the produce of tho same set of ani-jnal- s .
1cf186d83851b2e401cbc81fcf789635 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.1953551596337 29.949932 -90.070116 eight hundred thousand of outstanding issues\ninto certificates of indebtedness would reduce\nthe currency ;o a little more than one hilf its\npresent awount, supposing that to be, as re-\npresented by Mayor Heath, only four millions\nof dollars. There can be no dunbt that the\nlocaltrade, in ordinary circumstances, would\nhave plenty of use for the unfunded remainder\nof the notes, especially as this would consist\nof small bills such as are constantly needed\nfor change. The only questionable aspect of\nthe measure is that it curries with it no dis-\ntinct and positive guarantee against the manu-\nfacture and issue of more city money, to re-\nplace partly or wholly the notes which shall\nhave been received in exchange for certificates\nof indebtedness, and destroyed. To beaure, the\ntheory of the project, regarded as an expedient\nfor remedying an excess, clearly contemplates\nthe restriction of the currency to the amount\nwhich the funding process should leave. But\nit is still possible that this iuliipensable con-\ndition of the remedy may be eva ld a\nfurtive issue of notes; and as long as this\npossibility shall exist, there will be some room\nfor the same suspicion whose blighting shadow\nhas so long rested on this currency. But hit\nus hope that the project in question willop.-\nrate so as to sensibly relieve the local trade\nfrom the pressure of a sulrpllus of currency,\nand that this sense of relief will itself afl':rI\na ground for he:dthful conflulnco in tohe notes\nthat are still in circulation. T'Ihat capitalists\nholding ulrge sums of city money will readi!y\naccede to the proposition to exchange themn\nfor certificates, payable,in United States cur-\nrency, in six years, in annual installments,\nand bhating eight per cent. interest, it would\nlook almost preposterous to doubt. But should\nthey manifest a reluctanoe to do so, the fact\nwould be a striking testizony to the value of\ncity money, in comparison with the best of\nother paper currency, and sould go far to lv-\nassure the iopular mind with regard to tls\ngeneral position of the city finances.
3a5aa21e17f0bd263d28ddad73b9564d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.17397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 Nobody will undertake to denounce\nas either unjust or unconstitutional\nthe simple registry of voters, per se.\n. Such a system Is expressly authorised\nI,y our constitution; and a sort of'reg¬\nistry existed under tho old Stuto as far\nback as wo can remember. A registry\nof voters is at nil times a Judicious\nmeasure; becauBO it removes all ques¬\ntions or disability, whether on account\n<>l ago, residence, pauperism or crime\nfrom tho polls, and determines them at\nnnother time and place, so that thero is\nnothing on election day that need delay\ntho polling of votos or tend to stir up\nviolence. In the present stato of things\na registry would bo more beneficial\nand necessnry than it ever would hnve\nbeen before, evou if it wero not neces¬\nsary to guard the polls against persons\ndisloyal to tho United States and inimi¬\ncal to the State. These aro the only\npersons discriminated against by the\npresent registry law; and this discrimi-\nnat run is made only becatiso their past\nconduct has been such ns to Justiry tho\ncommunity In protecting itseir against\nthem in future until such time as their\n¦conduct gives assuranco that such pro¬\ntection will bo no longer needed. The\nonly feature of tho registry law open to\ntho objection even of this class is the\ntest oath it proscribes. test oath\npinches no one if he has uot been a\nvoluntary traitor U> his Oovernuiont.\nI r bo has lieenand is sincerely repentant,\nhe will not bo urgent ot his claim to\nequal participation in political privi¬\nleges. We venture nothing in asserting\nthat thero Is not ono sincerely honest\nand repentant rebel in tho State (and\nevery such ono has our sinoerost sym¬\npathy in his unfortunate position) who\ndoes not conress that the loyal people\ndo right In denying him a renewal of\nhis forfeited right to vote, while his\nclass maintain tho hostile attitude\nshown by them in tho last fall's elec¬\ntions and still manifested through their\nmouthpieces, the copperhead newspa¬\npers and politicians of the State. IV e\nbelieve there are a few who participated\nin the rebellion that are now honestly\nloyal; but tho number is very small,\nand includes nono who went away as\nleaders. To these loyal few we would\ngladly concede every privilege of the\nfullest citizenship, if it could be done\nwithout conferring power on their yet\ndisloyal and disaffected confederates to\ninjure if not destroy the society and\ngovernment of the loyal people. Be¬\ntween these two classes It is not practi¬\ncable to distinguish In the matter of the\nfranchise, and tho few deserving must\nsuffer with the many uudeservlng\nguilty.
159f0501ef9a44a923a657976f4b0e52 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.6342465436326 40.441694 -79.990086 Tbe forest fires which have been raging all\nover Montana for three weeks and have de-\nstroyed hundreds of thousands of dollars'\nworth of timber, have reached most alarming\nproportions. A gentleman just In from North-\nern Montana reports that on the ranges In\nCboutou county, which heretofore have es-\ncaped, and on which cattlemen were depending\nto keep their stock this winter, thousands of\nhead of cattle are burning. The big com-\npanies have over 300 men out trying to suppress\nthe fire and save tbelr teed, but the small\nstreams are all dried up and the flames leap\nover- - them as quickly as if traveling on an\nopen prairie In two days the fire traveled\nover a section 60 miles wide and 100 ill length.\nA dispatch from the City of says\nHon. John G. Carlisle and wife, accompanied\nby United States Minister Ryan, left therefor\nGaudalajara Saturday night, where they will\nbe given a reception by Governor Cosona, of\nthe Stole of Jalisco. On Saturday afternoon the\nSecretary of the Interior, Romerio .Rubio. gave\na dinner at Tacubaya. at which Mr ind Mrs.\nCarlisle, Minister Ryan andpresident and Mrs.\nDiaz were present. The eatertainmerit is said\nto have been the finest ever given in Mexico.\nMrs. Carlisle was visited by Mrs. Diaz during\nher stay in the city, and by many or the ladles\nof the American colony. Mr. Carlisle bas re-\nceived more attention from Mexican officials\nsince he has been here than any American\nsince General Grant's visit.\nThe defalcation in the Boonville. IncL.\nSostofflce approximates 86,500, and the United
21980e4700a4e7310f48ad6a020be2c4 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.3674863071747 41.875555 -87.624421 has supplied n new summary of\nthe reasons for uniformity of divorce\nlaws throughout all the States mid\nuniformity Is to he gained, he con-\ntends, by conceited action of the sev-\neral State, not by national legislation,\nCongicss cannot pass a divorce law un.\ntil the fciier.il constitution has been\nameuiled, and amendment to the fed-\neral constitution Is next to tho lmpos.\nbio. Xeaily 1,1 years ago a eniiiiulttoo\nof the Auieilcati liar Association de-\nclared thai a constitutional amend-\nment was out of the ipicstlnn. Tho\nInto Prof, Thajer, of the Harvard Law\nSchool, ued to say that this country\nwould never yet another constitutional\namendment on any question, so great\nare the illlllciiltles In tint way. Cer-\ntainly some great ctlsls must niiso\nwhich will mouse tho feeling of the\npcoplo, more than any mere moial\nquestion ever can, before another\namendment can secured, Through-\nout tho South thero Is uualtcrablo op-\nposition to any fuithcr tinnsfer of\npower fnnii tho Slates to the national\nMivcriiuiHiit. It iiiiiv also be milled that\nthere Is less need in the South of laws\nto restrict divorces than In any other\npint of the country. Resides, there ap-\npears no good reason why tho national\ngovernment should do for tho States\nwhat the States can, If they will, bet-\nter do for themselves. Tho States have\nno dlillciilty In getting together on uni-\nform laws relating to money affairs;\nso It would seem thero Is no Insuper-\nable obstacle to their getting together\non n vital question of morals, Since\ntho several States can agree to pro-\ntect the banks, the way Is open to nu\nagreement to protect the homes. The\ncourts of Delaware, nccordlug to Mr.\nDike, are forbidden to entoitaln a suit
081b746693d2fecbe5d89b44b24768d3 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.4002731924206 40.063962 -80.720915 Yesterday morning when court opei\ned at o'clock Mr. .1 . B . Sommerville,\ncounsel for the defense, addressed tl:\njury on behulf of his clients. Hoik\nonly argued from the evidence that tli\nprisoners were not guilty of the shootin\nof Ofllcer Glenn, but lie addressed bin\nself to an effort to convince the jur\nthat whoever did kill Ofllcer Ulenn wi\nnot guilty of murder in the first degre<\nlie spoke for two hours and thre<\nquarters, his words being listened t\nwith the intensest interest throughou\nIIis speech was one well calculated t\naffect a jury, and old practitioners wh\nheard it coinplimentedhim highly.\nWhen lie concluded, Cant. JJ . JJ . Do\\\nener, for the Suite, made the closin\nspeech, lie was earnest, and went ovt\nthe evidence with a force which in in\nhave stricken terror to the hearts of th\nprisoners if guilty. His friends say h\nnever made a better speech in his life.\nCapt. Dovener spoke three-quarters <\nan hour before the dinner hour recesj\nand after the reassembling of court at\np. m . lie continued his remarks fc\nabout two hours. The crowd never fe\noff for moment while he had the floo)\nThe instructions to the jury were the\nagreed unon and read to the jury b\ncounsel, Judge .Jacob adding some legi\npoints 011 his own motion.\nAmong the instructions was one as t\nthe character of the "reasonable doubt\nbeyond which the jury is required t\nbelieve the accused guilty before rende:\ninga verdict of guilty. They were ii\n|structed that such doubt must com\nfrom thoovincnce after a review of i\naud must be of that character that\nwould cau.se a prudent man in the 01\ndinary relations of life to hesitate an\npause. They were also informed that\nthey believed one of the accused tire\nthe'shot which killed Glenn, but wei\nnot satisfied as to which one did so, the\nmust find the prisoners not guilty unlet\nsatisfied that the other was prcscn\nniiHncr ntiil nhnttimr in the crime.\n"All deliberate, wilful, malicious nil\npremeditated murder, murder by lyin\nin wait, by starving, or by poison," the\nwere instructed, "and murder in an a\nteuipt to commit a burglary, robber\narson or rape, is murder in the first d'\ngreo; all other murder is murder in tli\nsecond degree."
1803556c4b43420bae30ccb3ac5e8f37 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.541095858701 40.063962 -80.720915 A* but few persons are aware of the\nimmensity of this boat, a description\nmay be of intercut to those interested.\nThe extreme length in 1125 feel, breadth 53\nfeet, lioor 50 feet, depth of hold 11 feet.\nAdd to this a sheer of 0 feet from amid-\nuliip fore and aft, and a guard 18 feet all\naround, then noiue idea of the propor-\ntion* of Ihiit gigantic vessel may be form-\ned. There are 300 Hour8 in the boat 5\nby 11 inchex, one main kcehion 10 by 20\ninched, two bilge keelsons 8 by 14 inches,\nfour clam us, four pointers, and fourteen\nlloor streaks. The bottom and knuckle\nplank are five inches thick, and from\nfifty to seventy feet long. In no other\nship-yard in this country, perhaps, would\nthese immense timbers be handled. In\nthe construction of this boat over 1,000,-\n000 feet of water-seasoned oak has been\nuned, and 75,000 feet of Florida pine con-\nkuiued in the main deck. Inside a\n?reat quantity of other timber. For\nlistenings over 100 tons of iron have\nbeen lined, 13,000 drift bolts driven, be-\nsides nails innumerable. No one can\nlook at this magnificent boat without\nfeeling improved with lU auperior\nstrength ami nafoty. The tonnage U\nL'rttiiimtcd at »,800 toiiH, Htorage capacity\n10,000 bulen of cotton. Draught, alt four\nfeet, forwurd three feet. Thus it will\nlie tteen two point* of great interest have\nbeen attained; a light draught of water\nmid great carrying caducity. Another\nileparture by theownerHof the Mury Hell\nU the boiler*. They have contracted for\nu buttery (if eight nteel boilern having\nthree time* the tennile strength of iron,\ntlum nurturing entire immunity from ex-\n|»loHion. Tho^nginea will be ilichen\nin diameter with U feet Htroke. WlieeU\n!W feet in diameter, 10.} feet bucket. The\nboat will font when completed about $140,-\n000, and will uiKpicMtionablpr Ihj regarded\niih a marvel of marine architecture.
155b48a784d1fdbd86f154db9fa7c596 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.5259562525298 40.827279 -83.281309 which now strikes you as disagree\nable and unsafe, did you not willingly\nlisten, apparently well pleased, and if we\nare not greatly mistaken, take active part\nin this reprehensible mode of discussing\nthe faults of others ? And are you not,\neven now, doing the same thing toward\nthose who have just left you ? Why\nshouldn't you expect that your faults will\nbe served up for the entertainment of the\nnext person they call upon ? For, " with\nwhat measure you mete, it shall be meas-\nured to you again."\nOne person's manner is very awkward ;\nthat is, it is not formed in the same school\nas your own. Another has no taste ;\nwhich, being interpreted, often means\nsimply that her taste is altogether differ-\nent from yours. One too much ;\nanother not enough. One wastes her\nhusband's property by her extravagance ;\nanother carries her economy to the verge\nof meanness. One disgusts and worries\nyou with long stories of trouble with her\n" help," or sickens you with the praise of\nher wonderful baby. 1 he first is a topic\nwhich all would do well to keep at home ;\nthe second a weakness, we acknowledge,\nyet a very amiable one. But stop and\nthink before you complain of these\nthings. Have vou never drawn largely\non your friends' patience in this very\nsame way ? Through every phase of life\nwe find that it makes a wondenui aui er- en c- e\nwhether it is " your bull that has\ngored my ox, or my bull that has gored\nyours."
15a18673e90d5904d7d54f3792c0d3c5 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.97397257103 37.53119 -84.661888 This is about as nlcoly honey coat-e- l\nlittle pill as 'was ever given us to\nswallow, and shows that Bro. Emerson\nI an adept In tho use of nice poroses.\nWe renew our distinguished considera-\ntion of him and at the same time deslro\nto emphasize that tho "evil" from\nwhich hi paper snatched tho Com-\nmonwealth (?) is not to bo classed even\nwith the imaginary. It is of campaign\nmanufacture entirely and served Its\npurpose. A big bugaboo was mado out\nof the Goebel Election law and tho op-\nposition papers, Including tho Commer-\ncial Tribune, and speakers worked It\nfor all it was worth on the thoughtless,\nand gullible. Goebel wa made out an\nogre, or a veritable Hob going about\nseeking to devour the right of suffrage\n every man opposed to him and a bad\nnun from Bitter Creek generally. The\nCommercial Tribune knew that all this\nwas untrue, but lta desire to add its\nmite to republican success made it for-\nget the 9th commandment. Some fool\nwere fooled, but the 191,331 democrat\ntried and true knew better and stood\nfaithfully by the man, who was malign-\ned without reason and without stint.\nWo thank our esteemed Cincinnati con-\ntemporary for its nice words, but wo\nassure it that wo gave our full and freo\nsupport to tho democratic ticket, tak-\ning no stock whatever in the falsehoods\ntold on lta admira:lo head and satisfied\nthat its administration of Kentucky\naTalrs would be creditable to it and\nredound to tho material prosperity and\nhappiness of the people.
0e566f832c8f3cd16077988af89bd38f PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.3493150367833 40.441694 -79.990086 Mr. Teller admitted the great force of Mr.\nVest's remark as to the unreasonable delay\nin taking up the bill. He understood, bow-ev e- r ,\nthat the Senator who had charge of it\nhas requested that it should be set down for\nnext Tuesday. For himself, be was ready\nto co on with the bill now. He was not\nparticularly wedded to it, but he thought\nthat something better would be evolved out\not it before it got tbrongh. He would not\nBke to seem discourteous to the Senator\nwho had the bill in charge and who (by a\nsort of unwritten lrfw) was entitled to call\nit up. But for that reason he should have\ncalled it up himself long since, and he\nwould not insist now on its being taken up\nup and discussed in the of the Sen-\nator irom Nevada.\nThe presiding officer said: "The Senator\nfrom Nevada (Mr. Stewart) asks unan-\nimous consent that the further consideration\nof this bill be postponed till Tuesday next.\nIs there objection?\nMr. Vest I object.\nThe consideratiou of the bill was then pro-\nceeded witb. Mr. Sherman moved to amend\nthe bill by inserting as a new section a pro-\nvision repealing all laws that require money\ndeposited in the Treasury under' section 5,\n622, of the revised statutes to be held as a\nspecial fund .or the redemption of national\nbank notes, and covering such money into\nthe Treasury; also covering into the Treas-\nury sums deposited under section 4 of the\nact oi June 20, 1874, "fixing the amount of\nUnited States notes" (being section 6 of the\nConger bill).
0f0a169fa3dac7b7e1c6b5846272dc81 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.8808218860984 41.004121 -76.453816 dark night the steamer, in charge of\nthe third officer, ran nearer Into land\nthr.n was consistent with safety. The\ncaptain, flrnused too late, was unable\nto avert the danger, and the vessel\nstruck even as the order was given to\nbring her head out to sea. It Is sat-\nisfactory to know that all on board,\npassengers nnd crew, exhibited cour-\nage ami common sense. There was no\nsign of panic, and it was apparently\nwith good Intent, though In apparent\nbravado, that one man set himself\nto play the piano in order to keep up\nthe women's spirits. The boats were\ngot out quickly and the transfer, de-\nspite a heavy sea. made without much\ndifficulty. Two hours after striking\nthe steamer went down, liows first,\nand the boats made the best of their\nway to shore. The loss of life occur-\nred in landing. The larger boats, con-\ntaining nearly all the passengers, came\nthrough eafely, but the dingy, In\nwhich were eight men, turtle\nin the surf and two of the occupants\nwero drowned. The chief steward's\nboat Is also supposed to have capsized,\nand that Its occupants are drowned.\nSix bodies were washed ashore and the\nloss of life altogether Is thirteen, In-\ncluding two men who perished In an\nattempt to rescue. An old Maori saw\nthe steward's boat trying to effect a\nlanding at How Harbor In a very heavy\nsurf. They appeared to have only one\noar pulling and a steer oar. The boat\ncapsized in the surf, and every man\nswam to the beach. When they touch-\ned bottom, however, they were swept\nback. Four hung to the keel of the\nboat, but were washed off. McN'cllie,\nwho was the only seaman In the car-\npenter's boat, acted very bravely.\nWhen the others became exhausted he\nstuck to the oars, and, single-h ande- d,\nbrought the dingy within two chains\nof the shore, when it capsized, and he\nw:;s dashed on the rocks and killed.
6e1a15cf05c12a1a709d2ce7e87812d1 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.271857891874 35.780398 -78.639099 the time much; better; And then when tho\nfuneral comes off the preacher and the breth-\nren generally need a little, and one can get\nit without sending so far for it.\nThe most of these people make a little\nmore than they need at home, and the sur-\nplus sent to town on Court days, when mast\nof the men and some of the women too have\nto go and stay all day, and they need a lit-\ntle to keep them bright. It is generally\nsold in the street by the qu rt, and the man\nreturns with ' the cash in his pocket. And\nthis is not all. You know some folks will\ndo wrong sometimes any how, and will\nabuse tho blessings of providence. These\nget drunk and remain in town all night.\nThough this seems to some folks a great evil,\nthere is a bright 'side to this tlso. You\nknow town folks think themselves so wise\nand fine that they become proud. Now\nthose men, who "stay all night in town, are\nvery apt to learn the town people that coun-\ntry folks something too they give\nthem some lessons in morals. And they are\napt to have a row and fight, get bruised and\nlose blood ;lrat who" would not bleed for the\nliberties ofEIs country? They are pretty\napt to be indicted for the row and the law-\nyers make something by it, you know, and\nall this keeps money in circulation. If the\nfellow has no money or property, the State\nfoots the bill, and by that means the treas-\nury keeps empty, and all the evils arising\nfrom too much money in the treasury are\navoided. And then if there is any left, it\ncan be sold by those men who are qualified\nwith a good moral character, and have ob-\ntained license to retail to gentlemen and sots.\nYou know sir, this is such a particular busi-\nness, this office of liquor seller, that every\nbody cannot do it. A good moral character\nmust be proved in open court and then the\ncourt gives him license to sell liquor. These\nmen support their families in this way, and\nmake drunkards and keep up lively times\nbesides.
2d0c3d4e4c89c142721cec3f60eb5631 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1907.1821917491122 42.217817 -85.891125 "These parasites are taken into tho\nsystem in uncooked food or raw meat,\nin the form of an egg, which hatches\nalmost immediately. People suffering\nfrom them experience a feeling of lassi-\ntude and are extremely nervous. Tho\naction of the "New Discovery" seems to\nbe fatal to these great worms, and in\nmost cases a few doses of the medicine\ndrives the creatures from the system. I\nwill have hundreds of them brought to\nme before I leave tho city."\nThis 'grewsome prophecy has been\namply verified, for not only hundreds\nbut thousands of Cincinnati people have\nbeen relieved of some of these fearful\nparasites 6ince taking Cooper's prepara-\ntion, and the entire city has been arous-\nedbythofact .\nSome of these parasites are of such\nenormous size as to startlo the \ntion. The statement of Father John\nBaptist Arnolis, ono of tho best known\nand best beloved priests in this section\nof tho country, verifies this. His state-\nment, among others given to the report\ner, was as follows:\n"For years I suffered from what I\nthought was a general run down condi-\ntion of the systom caused by stomach\ntrouble. 1 felt extremely tired all the\ntime, and it was a great effort to attend\nto my duties. I would wake up in the\nmorning feeling as worn out as when I\nwent to bed. If I stood for any length\nof time I would have a pain in the lower\npart of my back and would have to sit\ndown. 1 was very nervous and depressed\nin spirits, and was troubled with dizzy\nspells.
13a40e31250e80b3ee22500fc018f9d7 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1886.1712328450026 46.187885 -123.831256 Washington, Mar. 2. The people\nof Idaho seem to be very fickle in\ntheir desiro to have the Panhandle of\nthat territory annexed to Washing-\nton. Now that the measure is about\nto be adopted, telegrams and letters\nare pouring in from the northern\ncounties of Idaho which are the ones\nto be joined to Washington, asking\nthat the matter be stayed until the\npeople declare their wish in tho mat-\nter. The wholo agitation seems to\nbe the outcome of the tricks of a few\npoliticians. About five years ago a\nfew agitators in the northern part of\nthe territory proposed a plan for an-\nnexation, and resolved to run a dele-\ngate to congress on that issue. Tho\nRepublican nominee, who was from\nthe southern part of Idaho, stepped\nforward at this juncture and gave \npledge that he would vote for\nannexation it elected. On this\npromise, he received the unanimous\nsupport of northern Idaho and was\nelected. But his promises were liko\nseed that fell on stony places. At\nthe last election tho Democrats were\nforced to adopt tho same policy of\nannexation to get their share of votes\nin northern Idaho. The Democratic\ndelegate (Hailey) was olected; al-\nthough he was previously opposed to\nthe division of the territory, he intro-\nduced the bill to carry out the plauk\nin his party's platform, and had it\npassed by the house last week. Now\nthe people all over the territory want\nfurther action suspended until they\nmake up their minds whether they\nwant annexation or not Tho mat-\nter will bo delayed in the senate nntil\nIdaho is heard from.
0b69f951224619a9231b2f9111b425cf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.346575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 All tin* I.MIld They Once Owned Now\nin PonoesKlon of tlie Suxoiih.\nHistorians are constantly reminding\njxjople that there is scarcely a foot of\ntoil owned in England now by the de­\nscendants of tlie Norman conquerors,\nall tho property having gradually come\nagain into the possession of t he Saxons,\n«ho originally owned it. One of the\nrare exceptions to this state of things is\nTrafford Park, which until a year ago\nremained in the possession of the same\nfamily which lias held it for over 800\nyears, the Trafford8 of Trafford. Ran­\ndolph, lord of Trafford, who lived in the\nreigns of Canute and Edward tho Con­\nfessor. dying about 1030, was Hie head\nof this ancient house, which for 800\nyears has employed on unbroken line\nof male successors, whose land has\nnot suffered alienation during all Hie\nohangiea of this time. Tho old place is\nof tho most romantic and pic­\nturesque spot» In all England, and, ly­\ning as it does just without the city of\nManchester, it is greatly admired by\nvisitors. There- ore nearly 2,000 acres\nin the estate. The bull will shortly be\nturned into ft hotel and the grounds\nconverted into parks, golf links, race\ncourses, et 3. A considerable portion of\nthe fine old land w ill be devoted to ship­\nping, as it lies along canals connecting\ndirectly with the ocean. It was only\nlast year that the estate passed from\nthe hands of its old-time owners into\ntlie possession of a company, which is\ndividing it up and selling it to various\npurchasers.
48289ddec8d03af5d9afdf005eb3fbc7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.9657533929478 39.745947 -75.546589 There has just arrived a long delayed shipment of the very popular Nippon hand\npainted china. It comes in a variety of dishes and sets and is so moderately priced that\nit is much in demand for Christmas giving. The pieces are all hand painted in delicate\ncolorings and in floral, conventional and landscape designs. The price range is so exten­\nsive that your choosing is made easy.\nBureau Sets, five pieces, $1.50 to $6.50 the set.\nManicure Sets, four pieces, 75c to $1.25 the set.\nCelery Sets, seven pieces, $1.50 to $4.C0 the set\nOlive Sets, seven pieces, $1.50 to $2.50 the set.\nJelly Sets, seven pieces, $1.50 to $2,50 the set.\nMayonnaise Sets, three pieces, $1.50 to $2.50 the set.\nWhip Cream Sets, three pieces. 75c to $2,50 the set.\nChocolate Sets, seven pieces. $5.00 to $12.00 the set\nTea Sets, nine pieces, $10.00 to $12.00 the set\nSugar and Cream Sets. $1.25 $5.00 the set\nSyrup Cups, $1.25 to $2.50 each.\nMarmalade Jars, $1.50 to $2.50 each.\nFem Dishes, $1.50 to $3.00 each.\nBerry Sets, seven pieces, $3.50 to $6.50 the set.\nCake Sets, seven pieces, $3.50 to $5.00 the set.\nIce Cn om Sets, seven pieces, $5.00 to $10.00 the set.\nSalad Bowls, 75c to $5.00 each.\nIce Bowls. $1.75 to $2.50 each.\nNut Bowls, $1.25 to $2.50 each.\nCracker Jars. $1.50 to $2.50 each.\nBon Bon Dishes. $1.25 to $2.50 each.\nSpoon Trays. 75c to $2.00 each.\nButter Tubs, $1.00 to $2.00 each.\nTea Pot Tiles, 40c to $1.00 each.\nComb and Brush Trays. 75c to $5.00 each.\nPuff Boxes. 30c to $1.50 each.\nHair Receivers. 30c to$1.50each.\nPin Trays. 25c to 85c each.\nBany Plates, 65c to 90c each.\nChildrens Cup. Saucer and Plate. 65c to $1.40 the set.\nChildrens Oatmeal Sets, 65c to $2.50 the set.
094e6d038e78825e3ba0a2e750d90bd9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.0178081874683 40.063962 -80.720915 Secretary of S:ate Walker has issued\nrtificato of incorporation to the Mc\naw'e Run Oil and Gaa Company, a coi\nration which is to have its principt\n}co in this city. It is formed for th\nrpose of boring far carbon oil or pc\nileum and natural gas, and for buyiui\nd Belling such oil or gas nod for con\nucting, maintaining and operatin,\npe lines for the transportation of sac!\nodncts and for carrying on all businee\nrtainin# thereto. The charteris to ex\nre December 1.1930. The sum of $5,00\nbeen subioribsij and $0OQ paid in qj\nid uapital BtCiik, with the privilege o\ncreag:ng t.h« capital stock to $200,000. Thi\narea aro $500 each and are held by J\nVance, J. J . Jones, Kobert W. Hez'.ett\nm. H . Hearuo, Joseph Spoidol, F. J\n H. M . R'tssell, George Hook\nnbfose List and James Cummins, all o\nis city, one chare each.\nA certificate huT alio been granted t<\ne "Cheat River Bjorn and-' Lumbe\nimpany" for the purposo of construct\ng, operating and maintaining a boom o:\npma without piers or dams on Chea\n/er and its tributaries in fucker county\nest Virginia, Jjandfe factories, constrtjc\nW mill3 and auy other wood or wooc\nirkinj: rfjijl gr manufactories, also lo\nlying or holding, isaain# and ceUinj\nuber lands and such other lands aa an\ncessary to the business set forth in sa'u\narter. The principal ollico is to bo kep\n6t. George, Tucker county, West Vir\naia, with a branch o/J»ce at Oil City, Pa\nd at eucty other'placea Way eeem tc\nto'tl>£ J/est interests of said corporation\n(1
00281111ac2c4b33d3b1254e46db7418 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.7109588723997 39.745947 -75.546589 It will be remembered that govern ­\nment officials asked the city to set aside\nthe law and allow medium heavy un­\nderground piping to be used In the\nwork. The Street and Sewer directors\ntoday expressed themselves as grati­\nfied by Ihe governments decision lo\nrespect the city regulations and to\ncomply In the matter of the extra\nheavy piping. For a time it looked as\nthough the government would overrule\nthe city and use medium piping un­\nderground, and this has led to a flood\nof requests from local plumbers to be\nallowed to have the same privilege as\nthe government was taking. Now the\nmatter Is settled for all concerned.\nThe Union Paving Company was ex­\npected to begin work on the paving of\nDelaware avenue yesterday, but had not\nappeared on the Job at today.\nHowever, there are gas and water pip­\ning matters still to be done, so the\nstreet was not quite ready for paving.\nThe work of moving hack the buildings\nand the new sidewalk laying Is pro­\ngressing rapidly. Paving of the street\nbed will probably begin tomorrow.\nThe directors today gave first reading\nto a resolution establishing the curb on\nthe northeast side of Delaware avenue,\nbetween Van Buren and Harrison\nstreets, to remove the offset there.\nThe board also passed a resolution\nallowing the Diamond Ice and Coal\nCompany to build a aiding Joining the\nB. A O . right of way, on Eleventh\nstreet, between Union street and Grant\navenue. A second resolution passed to­\nday established the width of Washing­\nton street, between Delaware avenue\nand Eleventh street, at 62 feet 2 Inches.
46bff43cff4de1973d8a701557a80539 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.3767122970573 41.004121 -76.453816 Tersons early on the scene picked\nup numerous valuables, which, for\nthe most part, were returned to\ntheir owners when possible. One\npatrolman picked three gold watches\nout of the debris. It is believed\nthat there were but few cases of\ntheft, although negroes and for-\neigners are said to have attempted\nto go through the clothing of some\nof the dead before daylight.\nResponsibility for the disastrous\nwreck will in all probability be laid\nat the door of the Federal bill piss-\ned, against the protest of railroad\nmanagers three years ago, requiring\nair brakes upon fifty per cent, ot\nthe cars composing a freight train.\nScores of wrecks in all parts of\nthe country are said by railroad\nofficials to have been caused by this\nlaw. Under its terms the fore part\nof every freight train is braked by\nair. When the first cars are stop-\nped suddenly the rear cars oi the\ntrain bump into the head cars with\nmighty force and a weakened coup-\nling or damaged car causes some\ncar to buckle and fall across any\ntrack that may be adjoining.\nThis was exactly what happened\niu this instance. It has happened\nsix or seven times recently right in\nthe neighborhood of \nbut this time a swift express was\nplunging along on the track.\nCoroner Krause aud a specially\nempanelled jury is conducting an\ninvestigation along this line and the\njury's verdict may contain some\nrecommendation regarding the re-\npeal of the law, and may also deal\nwith the question of the method of\nlighting employed upon cars. Con-\nflicting statements are made regard-\ning the part played by the gas tanks\nuuder the cars in the disaster, and\nthe railroad officials and Coroner\nare making a study of the problem.\nIt is said that no person or per-\nsons will be held in any way in-\ndividually accountable for the kill-\ning and injuring of the passengers\nand . the loss of the two trains.\nKvery witness agrees that it was an\naccident pure and simple. The ques-\ntion remains, however, as to whether\nor not a change in the law might\nnot prevent a similar tragedy.\nPennsylvania Railroad officials\nhave been, flooded with pathetic ap-\npeals from relatives of people who\nwere on the train, and who have\nnot been heard from at home. There\nare still many among the missing\naud some of them were probably\nburned up so badly that no trace of\nthem remains.
10a9d004507c56e4b3e1bb9b7715d616 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1894.6452054477422 37.92448 -95.399981 It was with light hearts and willing\nhands that we pulled out of Vinita, I\nT., on Monday morning and turned\nour horses heads to the north and\nhomeward. Our Btayin Vinita was\nnot a very pleasant one on account of\nthe extreme heat and the poor water\nthat we were breed to use, and so we\nleft there without regrets. We tra- -\nelled north all day and about three\no'clock reached the Kansas line\nThose who heard us come to town\ncan imagine how we crossed the line.\nIt was truly the most pleasant sight\nwe had seen for many days. We\nwould have known we were in Kan\nsas oven if a railroad sign board had\nnot told us eo, because on one side of\nthe road you could look for miles and\nsee nothing but a wire fence and on\nthe other side of the road could be\nseen houses, barns, orchards, hedge\nfences well kept, and in short, all the\n were fairly well improved. We\nfound good water and plenty of it in\nwells as soon as we had crossed the\nlino, also plenty of fruit and above all,\ngood crops. We camped at night on\nLabette creek, four miles north of\nChetopa, iu a very pretty grove.\nHere we made the acquaintance of a\nMr. L. D. Bovee, who is a Kansan\nsure enough. He was very good to\nus and gave us all the water we want\ned to uso, told us to come over and\nenjoy his shade trees, of which he has\nan abundance, gave us a chicken to\nfry, milk for our coffee, all the apples\nwe could eat, told us to help oursel-\nves to his straw and when we want-\ned to buy some oats for our horses ho\nsa id: "Well boys, I have only got two\nfeeds of oats but you may have one of\nthem". After supper he came over to\nour camp and we enjo-e -
133b01ec97f2026cc4ed19423edb6d31 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1902.8479451737696 41.004121 -76.453816 After he had recovered the use of\nboth eyes he began to find out that\neverything was not flat, but that many\nthings had a certain thickness as well\nas length and breadth, and In this way\nbe began to sec solid objects.\nBut even for a year or two after com-\nplete recovery he was unable to decida\nwhether a certain figure was a flat sur-\nface, as In a painting, or a solid body.\nHe was also obliged to learn the dif-\nferent animals and objects, not know-\ning the difference between a cat and a\ndog until he had touched them.\nWe all go through just the same proc-\ness of learning how to see In Infancy.\nTho child may be two or three years,\nor even older, before has control over\nits eyes and can judge of the distance\nof objects tn the room, etc.\nThe care of the eye Is a question of\ngreat Importance for mothers and\nnurses. The eyes of newborn Infants\nshould be carefully washed with fresh,\nclear water, and If anything unusual\nis noticed the physician should be seen.\nThe infant's eyes are speclully to be\nprotected against too bright a light It\nis by no meass an uncommon thing to\nsee a nurse wheeling a young infant in\nthe carriage while the bright sun Is\npouring into the child's eyes. This does\nnot argue against taking Infants Into\nthe sun when tho weather Is not too\nwarm, but the eyes should always be\nprotected against tho bright glare,\nwhether direct or reflected.
744ec91346ab801d16454812267247ce PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.5794520230847 31.960991 -90.983994 A Marvelous Story.— I was bred up in the\ndislike ofthe marvelous, or the stupid wonderful,\nas my uncle called it. I must relate an anecdote\nin point. Some gentleman were dining togeth­\ner, and relating their travelling adventures; one\nof them dealt so much on the marvelous, that it\ninduced another to give him a lesson.\nI was once,” said lie, “engaged in a skirmish­\ning party in America; I advanced tub far, was\nseparated from rtiy friends, and saw three Indians\nin pursuit of me: the horrors of the tomahawk in\nthe- hands of angrÿ savages, took possession of\nmy mind; I considered for a moment what was to\nbe, (lone: most of us love life, and mine was both\nprecious and useful to my family; I was swift of\nfoot, and fear added to my speed. After looking\nback—for the country was an open one—I at\nlength perceived that one of my enemies out­\nrun the others, and the well known saying of\ndivide and conquer, occurring to me, I slacken­\ned my speed, and allowed him to corné bp; we\nengaged in mutual fury; I hope none here (bow­\ning to his auditors) will doubt the result; in a\nfew minutes he lay a corpse at my feet; in this\nshort space of time, the two Indians had advan­\nced upon me, so I took again to my heels—not\nfrom cowardice, I can declare—but with the hope\nof reaching a neighboring wood, where I knew\ndwelt a tribe friendly to the English; this hope,\nhowever, I was forced to give up; for, on look­\ning back, I saw one ,of my pursuers far before\nthe other. I waited for him, recovering my al­\nmost exhaustnd breath, and soon this\nshared the fate of the first. I had now only one\nenemyjçp deal with: but I felt fatigued, and being,
02470d28ff6479c114b2b6b4d992f0f9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.1898906787594 40.063962 -80.720915 A Former Wheeling Man Dead.\nLast evening's Steubonvillo fstar Bays:\nFred Huffman, one of tlio best known\nand most popular men in tho city, died\nlast evening at 4:30 at the residence of\n"William McMillen, o»i Court street,\nwhero he has recently bpen boarding,\naged forty-nino years. It is nearly threo\nmonths ago when ho was seized with\nrheumatism and sinco has been a pain¬\nful Bullerer, but it was only about ten\ndays ago that hia illness assumed jx\nserious phase, and since that time his\nfriends have been apprehensive and\nanticipating tho end. Tho deceased\nwas born in Germany, but came to this\ncountry when a child, hia parents locat¬\ning in ""Wheeling, where ho was reared\nand educated and learned his trado as\niron inoldor at the foundry of A. J .\nSweeney, lie came to Steubenville\nabout thirty years ago andshortly \nwards married Cath'orino Morgan, who\ndied over a year ago, leaving- two sons,\nDarius Charles and James Lewis. At\nthe time of bin coming to Stonbenvillo\nhe engaged with Sharp's foundry and\nhas been connected thorowith almost\ncontinuously ever sinco, for.tho past\nfiis or seven yoars as foreman,\n"Wheeling's Metropolitan SloroB.\nOno of Wheeling's prominent busi¬\nness men was showing a friend from a\ndistant city tho sights yesterday morn¬\ning. Iron works, potteries and glass\nhouses he had often seen, andwhilp he\nadmired these splendid industries as\nexhibited, yet the handsomO stores\nstruck him as beingsomething phenom¬\nenal for a city of Wheoling'B "size. In\nspeaking of a candy house, a jowelry\nstore and a glass and chinaware empor¬\nium, ho said that ono would ,havo to\nsearch through cities three titn'es tho\nsize oi Wheeling to find anything as\nline.
0105403d74f24a4e77a17dd420e7b766 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.2945205162355 40.441694 -79.990086 Steel Company, the largest individual con-\nsumer, still has a large stock on hand and\nwill not be out for a very considerable time.\nBut scores of smaller establishments whose\nyardroom is limited to 100 and 200 tons,\ncannot keep on hand a larger supply. Many\nof them have consumed almost all they\nhave, and are at their wits' ends to know\nwhat to do. They must have Connellsville\ncoke, and wire one broker after another only\nto find there is no such thing as getting it.\nThey then resort to th'e West Virginia coke\nas a makeshift, and find that this has stiff-\nened In price up to the highest notch Con-\nnellsville has reached in recent years. If\nthis strike lasts two weeks longer manufac-\nturers will have to face the dilemma of\neither buying ruinous figures the inferior\narticle or closing their works.\nIn coke it is very difficult to quote a price\nfrom day to day, as is done in most other\nartioles of merchandise. The railroads have\na car service rnle by which they collect stor-\nage at the rate of jl per car per day for\nevery day .a loaded car stands on the track\nafter it has been two days at its destination.\nAs each car contains about 78 tons of coke\nit can readily be figured out that each day's\ndelay after the first two means an increase in\nprice to the dealer of about 5 cents per ton.\nConsequently tbe owner is usually in a\nhurry to dispose of it, and if it has remained\non his hands for two days he will usually\nsell below- -
bfab1048d515de22c6ab08e4292d171b COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.9602739408929 41.262128 -95.861391 takan ap oadar in ? boiaMtoad law, axid prescribed to be #ot up, soch gorersment; tios of toe United state*, aad tbe U&ion\nthe residue d**po.» d of under tbe lawa ; *hali be recognixej and guaranteed by the j of States thereund.- r, and tbat I will ia\ngraimikg .4»ds f >? military hoonti'*, for United Siates. and that under it tbe State i like manner abide by and faithfully *ap-\nmibroad aad oth r purp^aea. it also ap- | sbali,under tbe constitution, be protected i port all act* of U-*ogres* pawsd durtag\npears t&at tbe aal of tbe putiie laode ir>: ugainst invasion and domestic Tiolt-oc*. th« exiatin^; rebeliwo witb reference to\nlargely on tbe increase. It b«i* long t>een The constitutional obligation of the Uni- j slaves to loog and so far as not repeated\na aherisbei opmi i of aow of our wiseat; ted States, to guarantee eTery State ia ; or tnods&ed or beld void by Coagr^sa or\nitltsnm, that tb people of tbe U. S . the Union a ropubiicaa form of gov era- ! bj dscisiaa of tb« Supreme Ooart, ud\nhad a nod aiure tadurui^ inter- i meat and to protect tb« State ia th« MM , tbaji ia like raanncr ttoide by aad faitoful-\nest iu ibe eariy »• ttlem-jnt aod aubstaa- • atated is explicit and full ; bat why ten- j ly support all prociuaaUona of **~ Piu*.\nti*l caUiv&iHm of tbe pebiie i*ad» tban ; dsr tbe benefit of tbis proriaioo only to | idsut s&ad« duriug Ut<s axiatiug rebeiliaa\nw the amauat of direct revtaae to be de- ; a State government set up in this partic- | baring rufarenoe to slaves, so ioag aod\nrirad from tho saio of them. Tbis opin- |ular way "r This section of tbe Coastitu- so far a« not modified or deci»rt*l void by\niM has had a eoatroiliag mflsienee in ; tion eontempiatea a case wherein tbe eie- ! tbe decision af tha Supreao Court, su\n•hapiag the legialattos on tbe subjset of j toeat within a state, favorable to a re- help me God."\noar Natiosal £>m*1a. i may citd as eri j publican government, in the union, may j The\ndsrxfci af tbis tbe liberal maasorea adopt- j be
07ab85dc4b379887a0d512b16bff1775 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.9986301052766 40.063962 -80.720915 lore the election, have aroused aua- s\nplclons that beneath tho surface in that\nRnrtinn thprn ia a riunn nnat/wl fnoUnc* nf\nviolence that finds congenial oxprossion\nin such butcheries as occurrcd at Vicks- (\nburg. It is to be hoped that the two\nC-ingresslooal committees that are now \\\nin tho South investigating tho Louisiana ,\nand Mississippi troubles will elicit such\nreliable information as will enable ull\npersons who deaire to do justice to the r\nSouth (and a large majority o! tho people ,\nhave no other wisher interest) to come f\nto an intelligent conclusion as to what is {\nbest to be done. At Washington the South- j\nern situation is considered gravo. There is (\nevidence that both parties iu Congress £\nlook upon it with concern. Bsforc the s\ntwo coinmittcpg left lor Vicksburg and c\nNew Orleans tho President sent to the\nmembera composing them a personal c\nrequest to call at the Whito House. This t\nthey did separately,and had an earnest in- r\nterview with the President. He told ^\nthem of his anxiety to Bee the Southern f\npeople pacitled, to that end his desire i\nto learn tho exact truth about the situation i\nthere, and just how lar cither side had ^\nbeen to blame for tho disastrous occur- e\nrencea of the pa9t year. Many ol the t\nmembers of Congress,including the Vicks- a\nburg committee, are ol opinion tiiat n\nit Is useless to expect Congress to u\nkeep tho army patrollng tho South, (_\nand unless the disorder ceases it g\nwill be best to remand two or three of the ij\nmost discontented States to u territorial tl\nlorm ol government. Tho President's idea y\nis to put Oen. Tkkhy In command of the\ndepartment ol tho South, leaving General\nEmory in command ol Louisiana, and to 11\nexercise closer watchfulness over tho\nWhite Leaguers than has hitherto been\ndone. It is apparent to him that the\nwhites in Mississippi, Louisiana and g\nUeorgia, are too well organized and tl\narmed to be either peaceable or just. As a\nthe reports ol tho Vicksburg and New ri\nOrleans committees will undoubtedly b\nliavo a airong intluence In determining p\nthe futuro policy ot the government
31e90ac09ccc134d6538fa675c1195af DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.6205479134958 58.275556 -134.3925 "There are still places where you\nhave to watch your atcp or alnk\n(high deep Into hot mud. which\npavea the walled floor In atrata ot\nevery conceivable color. But there\nla no doubt that the valley la grad¬\nually coolnlg off. A year from now\nI ahould not be surprised to ace an\nautomobile road run through the\nvalley when It la realized that the\nValley ot the 8(nukes la one of the\nworld wonden that every tourlat will\nwant to aee. You can't get sick In\nthe valley; on the contrary, I ahould\ncall It a fine place for those who suf¬\nfer from such ailments aa rheuma\ntlam and dyspepsia.\n"There la a One glacier In one of\n(he three clover leaf-shaped valley?\ntha t aubdlvlde the valley proper.\nNear Its base fa a hot lake of the\nmost beautiful color. Into\nwhich fall great chunka of Ice, At\nanother end of the valley la what\nwe call Falling Mountain, down\nwhoae alaty aide, pitched at an angle\nnf about SO degrees, roll continually\nhuge boulders split off by the tem¬\nperature variations from the snow¬\ncapped summit. These are only a\nfew of the Interesting features. To\ntell you all of them would tako the\nentire evening- talking faat."\nIn thin extraordinary netting »ov-\noral thouaand feet of film* wore\nmade scenes for photoplay* whose\nstories arc real atorl«a of Aluakan\nlife, produced under the direction\nof Wyndham (llttens. The featured\nplayer la Herschell Mnyall, known\nto fllm "fana" as the greatest fighter\non the screen. Other Important parts\n.r e living enacted by K>rl Denlaon\nnnd Honor I-sue The photography\nIs under the personal supervision of\nMr. Smith.
29ded2c63b23473ce948733b95835ad3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.2863013381532 39.745947 -75.546589 NY number of children can play this game, all that is needed is a ball.\nThe players stand In a circle equal distances apart and throw the ball\nftom one to the other around the circle as rapidly os possible. It a\nchild misses the ball he must remain as though turned to stone In the\nj position In which he dropped the ball. The “statues" must remain thus until\nthe last person to miss has thrown the ball Into the air and caught It ten\ntimes. It Is lots of fun to see who can stand still the longest. Indeed some of\nthe attitudes of the players are so funny that the other statues almost lose\ntheir balance laughing at them. Try this game and see what good sport It la.\nAnother game that Is lots of fun Is called "Egg Hat."\nboys (or the girls) their caps In a straight row, preferably against a\nfence, slightly tilted so that the ball can be thrown Into them. Then the\nplayers stand In a row a short distance from the hats,\nthe ball and tosses It Into one of the hats,\nscatter and the boy Into whose hat the ball has been thrown rescues It and\nthrows It at one of the players who In his turn throws It Into another hat.\n,If the boy throwing the ball at another player, misses him, a small pebble Is\nplaced in his hat as a bad mark, and when any player misses so often that\nhe has as many stones In his hat as there are players ho must stand a short\ndistance from the other players, who each In turn throw the ball at him.\nThen the game starts all over again,\nthis game.
0e3ab5ce0c2f06958048c673e7b81b7d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.8808218860984 40.063962 -80.720915 men, the story was generally discredited by §\neverybody. Ho gave the correspondent $\nthis history of his life and case: t\n"I was born in 1841 in Somerset town- n\nship, Washington county, and have lived «\nhere ever since. I professed Christ in the o\nPigeon-creek Baptist church in October,\n1858. According to the physicians my «\ntrouble was caused by an injury to thu ti\nspine, supposed to have lieen caused by h w\nfall when I was thirteen years of age. 1 k\nlirst noticed the trouble about three yearn si\nafterward, but it was not until about live g\nyears ago that I became unable to work at tl\nmy trade of carpenter. Throe years ago! tl\nwas compelled to use crutches. Then, aa 0\nI became weaker and my feet gave way, 1 p\nwalked on my kuees ior about a year, at\nThen I ueed a chair in which I could sit \nup, but iny lungs and heart,becoming weak, ci\nabout 31 year ago I bezlan using the fc\nlounge clmir you see out there in\nthat wagon. About this time my tl\ncousin saw some accounts in the si\npapers or persons in Erie who had been r<\ncured by prayer. My case had been given tl\nup by Uie priysiciaus, but my cousin en- n\neoumged mo 10 hope, procured tliu ud« tc\ndresses of the pftrticg cured and wrote to\ntheti} received two letters last fall. My ai\ncousin urged me to take juy ease before tho tl\nUord, l>ut I told him I was conformed to \\\\\nthe will of Cioil, helicviugtbntnw ailiietiou\nwas going to prove a Ucgwiaff to the com in u- vi\nlilty ami result in extending Christ's king- h\ndom. ]le answered: 'Don't thiuk that.\nIt is only the whisperings of the devil. Go si\nto the lard and he will bless you'
399d51fe845e47857a49636b88088bfa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.3510928645517 39.745947 -75.546589 Somebody asks why women do not make good preachers.\nIt might be answer enough to say because they have not often\nhad the chance. But the very question shows what a difference there\nis between the spirit of modern Protestantism and that of the primi­\ntive tribes, who supposed that sacred ceremonies could be spoiled\nbv the mere presence of a woman, and imparted tribal secrets to\nyoung men when the time for their initiation came, with the solemn\naiming that they must never, never be told to women or children.\nThe modern "preacher" is the lineal successor of the savage priest,\nwhose vitally serious business it was to avert pestilence, famine and\ndefeat by the sacred rites that placate gods and drive away evil spirits.\nThese rites had lo be performed with the most punctilious exact-\nness—a slight mistake was held to imply most terrible consequences.\nThey had to be performed persons acceptable to the tribal deities,\nwho were especially selected, trained and ordained for the purpose.\nHow could a tribe, accustomed to be ruled by men, insult the gods by\nputting their publie worship into the hands of a woman?\nThe ancient priest has lost many of his functions. His efforts on\nbehalf of the sick are supplemented or supplanted by the work of\nthe physician, who is sometimes a woman. His works of charity are\nhanded over to special organizations largely manned by women. His\nwork as teacher and custodian of tribal lore has passed into other\nprofessions, now also largely in the hands of women.\nBut until ttie must recent times he still had his pulpit and his dis­\ntinctive garb and ills sense of priestly function. Now, however, he\ndresses like a man of the world, aifila woman may even replace him in\nthe pulpit without shocking the people.
1e79b41e51c2994f4b9b927a7cab099e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.4726027080162 40.063962 -80.720915 uu nutriu iuo u uuuco uuio nuiuu|\nicerte. The music was in charge o\nssrs. Gilmore aud Harvev Dod\nrtb, aud each baud played alternate\nIt was estimated that ten thousam\nitors were present, and at one timi\nht hundred couples were daucini\nidrllles to the same music. The bal\nike up at an early hour, and thl\nrniug's rehearsal showed no sign;\nhe "dissipation."\nue of the pleasant things this morn\nwas this rehearsal. About elevei\nlock, or a little before, the childret\n;an to arrive. Young America ii\njton and vicinity is as lull of enthu\nitn for the Jubilee as his elders, ant\nras delightful to see their sparklinf\ns and happy faces as they begai\nake in the magnificent proportions\nhe building. Parepa auag a soii|\nthem; she is one of the jolliest, hap\nst mortals living, apparently, as ful\ngood temper, and a disposition t<\nige, as her breath is of music, au(\nhas won for herself a warm placi\n:he hearts of young Boston, as wel\njI all those who heard her. I though\nad heard the Star Spangled Banne\ng before yesterday, but when he\nce, like the 'glory that excelletb,\nalike an archangel's above the tei\nusand voices around her, in tho na\njal song, 1 realized what enthusiasn\ns, as never before. Liike many other\n0 have attended the Jubi\nI camo impressed with the idea\nt it was a large humbug, aud fel\nlidedly indifferent in regard to it.\nrechauged my mind, as you doubt\n3 have Jlearned from my letters. I\n1 triumphant success.\nlut I must tell you of the Coucer\n* afternoon. That of yesterday, a\ni know, was of a popular character\nwas becoming the day, and the pop\n>r celebration. To day it was ot\n;ber and more classical cast. Afte\noverture which was reudered finely\nhe orchestra showing daily sigus o\nprovement as they woik longer li\nnpauy, .a grand chorale, "Tj Goi\nHigh," from Mentifhstij, i.N at. 1'au\ns sung. It isdoubilt'Ms in resy to saj\nbut to my taste thcntyle of Meudels\nin's Orations is inferior to those o\nydn or llandel. I would rathe\nye heard "The Lleavens are Tell\n;i".and in some parts of this, as ii\nI Hundred yesterday the chorui\n£ht have been sung with some pro\nety, "All we like sheep-.have gom\nray." In general, however, then\ns little to criticize, and less to con\nnn. Beethoven's Fifth Symphon]\na the gem of the instrumental por\na of the perlormances. The magni\nmt chorus from the Oreatioi\nchieved is the glorious work," wai\naly rendered. The'solo by Mlsi\nlllippa I think fell a little sbor\nthe expectations of her friends\n»
6e4207f9a73b027bae102cda174e1973 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5942622634589 39.513775 -121.556359 he ready to commence washing in about ten\ndays. Cost of this dam about SSOOO.\nWhite Rock. —Two miles above we find\nthe Arab Co., with a flume 154 fettlong and\n50 wide, with dam 200 feet long; Erskine\nsuperintendent. Adjoining this arc the\nDenton's Co.s flume, C 3 feet long; Jones\nCo., 334 feet, and Slate Bluff, 351; making\naltogether a good and substantial work 902\nfeet in length, the whole under the general\nsuperintendance of our friend, Rill Geiger.\nThese companies will have their toms and\nsluices in operation in a very short time,and\nthen “old White Rock will redeem herself.”\nOur stay at this place was rendered very\nagreeable indeed, with the assistance of E.\nS. Oaver, Sec , Capt. Hope and Mr. Geiger.\nThe bank claims here are being worked\nnow but by few companies, on account of\nwater being scarce. One Co. of eight men\nwe are informed are making half ounce per.\nday to the hand, after paying 30 for water.\nThe Hope Co. are running a tunnel through\nthe bed-rock at this place, and have alrea-\ndy advanced a distance of 125 feet. It is\none of the pieces of work we have ever\nseen. After reaching gravel they purpose\nsetting their sluices in the tunnel,an J wash-\ning by hydraulic through a shaft leading to\nit. This claim will no doubt pay largely.\nRough and Ready, and Ohio. —Next we\ncame to these, just above the old High Rock.\nHere we have a magnificent work, and one\nthat does credit to every person connected\nwith its erection. Messrs. A. S., &. M. S.\nHart, the well-known flume builders, arc\nthe contractors; aad without} flattery, wc\ncan say they deserve great praise for the\nmanner in which they have in this operation\nsustained their reputation for skill and en-\nterprise. This flume is 1630 feet in length,\n45 wide wide and six high, and will cost\nabout $40,000. It is all graded, timbers\nlaid, head-dam in, and planked about one-\nthird of its length. Claims wiil be dried\nabout the 15th inst. The plank used in this\nwork will be about 171,000 ft , and hewn\ntimber 150,000 ft., linear measure. The\ndam, one of the best on the river,.is 325 feet\nlong, and is being built under the supervi-\nsion of Capt. Wells.
34db5b8cee81c5c0f17b3686073c68a9 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.1712328450026 40.735657 -74.172367 Hunterdon street; Florence Nolan, aged\n13, 702 North Fourth street, Harrison,\nViolet McDonald, aged 9, 413 South\nEighteenth street; Helen Gellner, aged\n10, 26 Bremen street; Henry Fritz, aged\n13, 380 Avon avenue; Lizzie Lutz, aged\n11, 18 Clayton street; Morris Weinthal,\naged 12,167 Hll.sideavenue; Otto Brock- !\nhagen, aged 12, 416 Lafayette street; :\nGenevieve Ward, aged 10, 181 High\nstreet; Charles Mayer, aged 9, 57(TSou.h.\nTenth street; Elizabeth Shapiro, aged\n12, 212 Camden street; Bertha Krug,\naged 10, 11 WTndsor place, Nutley; John\nQuinn, aged 13, 25 Beach street, Orange;\nJohn Stoll, aged 12. 87 Elmwood ave-\nnue, Jersey City; Clementine Dominick,\naged 8, 173 Honiss street, Silver Lake;\nMollie Lum, aged 15, 527 Bergen street; i\nBertha Koerk, aged 11, 112 Valley,\nstreet, Orange; John Ruscheck, aged\n12, 298 Orange street; Elizabeth Dan-\niels, aged 10, 25 Wilson place, Be levilie;\nNed Crosson, aged 9, 240 Riverside ave-\nnue; George Henry, aged 9, 483 William |\nstreet, East Orange; George DeVito,\naged 12, 204 Astor street; Walter B. |\nSneden, aged 7, Rutgers street, Hilton; ^\nWilliam H. Patterson, aged 13, 250 N.!\nJ. R. R. avenue; May McClellan, aged j\n11, 23 Fanklin street; Adam Berg, aged\n12, 768 South Fourteenth street; Paul\n aged 9, 191 Central avenue;\nMaud G. Savaent, aged 9. 148 West\nKinney street; Tony Boinello, aged 13.\n235 Bank street; Hazel Regenthal, aged\n10,, 428 Bond street, Elizabeth; Marie\nLandrigan, aged 12, 130 Ridge street; j\nFrieda Schadt, aged 14, 484 Eighteenth\navenue; Margaret Kussy, aged 8, 491\nHigh street; Elizabeth Ruckel, aged 14, j\nR. F. D. No. 1, Somerville; Henry j\nSchuch. aged 11, 230 Springfield avenue;\nWillie Fox, aged 10, 221 Fourth street,\nJersey City; Nicholas Henazzi, aged 8,\n219 Oliver street; Edna Keller, aged 11,\n1031 Springfield avenue, Irvington; Jo-\nhanna Fuchs, aged 13, South Ninth\nstreet; Otto Schuch, aged 14, 233 Spring-\nfield avenue; Alexander Hughes, aged\n10, 610 Central avenue, Harrison; Grace\nAdaline Hanna, aged 10, Summit ave-\nnue, Westwood; Matilda Liecht, aged\n10t4, 12 Whittlesey avenue. West Or-\nange; Yetta Miller, aged 15, 54 Leonard\nstreet, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Anna Rack-\nmieck, aged 13, 147 Bowery street;\nPercy Lapham, aged 12, 66 Hamilton\n3treet, East Orange! George Mashek,\naged 10, 39 Ninth avenue; Harriet D.\nHoffman, aged 8, 85 Riggs place, We-t\nOrange; James Archer, aged 10, 373'/j\nCentral avenue; Edward Lynch, aged\n10, 117 Orange road, Montclair; Donald\nMilne, aged 12, 462 South Twelfth street;\nAndrew Meeker,
0d718635e088b2b1e0fb0fb7cab3fce4 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.2561643518518 37.561813 -75.84108 cost, the payment of the same to be pro-\nvided In the manner and proportions de-\nscribed in the seventh section of this aet.\nSec. 11. The commissioners shall have\npower to receive subscriptions and dona-\ntions in money or property, real or per-\nsonal, which shall be applied to the con\nstruction or improvement of said road ; and\nthe said commissioners shall have the pow-\ner to contract for and purchase such stone,\ngravel, or other material as may be neces\nsary ror tne construction and keeping in\nrepair said road ; and if tho commissioners\nana the owners of snob, stone, gravel, oi\nother material, cannot agree on a price de-\nmanded fair and reasonable, the commit\nsioners may apply to the judge of the pro- -\nuhi miio oi me county lo appoint ap-\npraisers to assess the value of said stone\ngravel, or other material, and on the lllinir\nof such application, it shall be the duty of\nlirciuaie juoge oi ine county to appoint\nthree disinterested freeholders, who, after\nbeinjr duly sworn to impartially assess\nthe value of the said or uny port\nof the same, shall enter upon the premises\nof the owner or owners of said materials,\nand assess the value thereof ; they shall al-\nso assess the damages that will accrue to\nthe owner or owners of said material hy\nthe removing of the same through his\npremises ; the appraisers shall within to..\ndays after their appointment, return their\naward to the probata court; tbe judge of\nthe probata court shall, in thirty days after\nthe return of aaid award, on application of\nthe commissioners, furnish them a copy of\nannru ; mereupon said commissioners\nmay enter upon the lands either enoloaed\nor unenclosed, and remove such stone,\ngravel or other material as may by requir-\ned to make a good road ; provided, an ap-\npeal ha not been taken from said award\nin thirty days, M provided in this section ;\nprovided further, that an appeul from the\ndecision of the appraisers may be allowed\ntbe court of common pleas, if taken In\nthirty days after the rendering of aaid\naward ; and if the court of common pleas
279c53e61cd737087a98c9e1b1bc42e1 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1872.3374316623658 41.004121 -76.453816 voto for mo 3 than four candidates, and\ntho six highest In voto shall bo elected:\nand six additional delegates nhall bo\nchosen from tho city of I'hlladolphla.by\na voto at largo In said city, nud In their\nelection no voter shall voto for moro\nthan threo candidates, and tho six birch\nest In voto shall bo declared elected.\nSec 2. Tho following regulations\nshall imply to tho aforesaid election to\nbo helu on tho second Tuesday of Octob\nor nent. mil to returns of tho s.imo.\nFirst. Tho salu election shall bo held\naud conducted bv tho nroner election\noillcersof tho tavcral election districts of\nthocommo ,wealth.and8ha lbocovorn\ned and regulated in all respects by tho\ngeneral election laws or tno common\nwealth, so fir in tho same shall bo an\nplicablo thereto and not \nwith the n ov'sions ofthls act.\nSecond. Tho tickets to bo voted for\nmcmbe.snt Inrironf the convention shall\nhavo ou thooutsldothe words"dolegntcs\nnt large," and on the insldo tho names\nof tho cMidldi'tes to be voted for, not\nexccadlng fo.vlcen in number.\nThird. Tho tickets to he voted for\ndistrict members oi tho convention shall\nhavo ou tho outside tho words "district\ndelegates," nod on tho inside tho namo\nor namc3 of tho candidates voted for,uot\nexceeding tho proper number limited\nas aforesaid; but any ticket which shall\ncontain n creator number of names than\ntho number for which tho votcrshall bo\nentitled to voto shall be rejected; and In\nthe ca3e of tho delegates to bo chosen at\nlargo In Philadelphia the words "city\ndelegates" shall bo on tho outside of tho\nticket.
4045d9c50b668f892b9736a3abaef7dc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0315068176053 39.513775 -121.556359 BY VIRTUE OF a DUCK ETA 1. ORDER is-\nsued out of the District Court. 15th Judicial\nDistrict in and for Itulte Count V and Stale of Cali-\nlofnia against JACOB S-MORRIS , and MARYS\nMORRIS, and in favor of THOMAS IVBM.S , for\nthe aum ill Three Hundred and Ninety. Six. Eighty\nOne-Hundredth* (9396,80) Dollars principal debt,\nwith interest on said sum at the rate of four (-#* per\ncent per month, from the Twenty-Seaenth (271h)\nduy of November. A. I). 1856 . until paid ; Also all\ncosts of suit taxed In the sum of Twenty-Three\nNinety-One Hundredths ($23,W) Dollars;together\nwith sll the accruing costs on said writ, to me di-\nrected and deliven d commanding me to sell all,\nor so much thereof as may be sufficient to pay the\nJudgment above and ah costs of soil, of\nthe mortgaged premises hereinafter described, to\nsatisfy said demands. 1 will on the TWEN I V-SEC -\nOND (22) DAY OF JANUARY, A. l>. 1838 , at the\nhour of two (2) oclock P. M. of sahl da\\ in pursu-\nmice of the requirement* of said writ, sell at public\nsale to the highest bidder for cash, the follow ing\nmortgaged property, described in said order of sale\nns follows towili l.ols number one, two. three,\nfour, five and six, (1,2 ,3 . 4, 5 snd « > in lllock num-\nber thirty-six. (3(1). and tails number one, fwo, flvn.\nsix and seven. <l, 2 ,6 ,«, snd 7.) in Blook number\neight [B]: Also, the lot of ground fronting on Rird\nstrsel eighty [BOl feet, and on lliinloon street thirty-
171beb2206277f68a458ebfb242acdbb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.382191749112 39.745947 -75.546589 Sitting doubted up !>ke a jack- of preventing a howl of indignation. * “ engineer is for anyway, as the!\nI knife on a board bristling with rplinitrsHad the people of Sussex county i Lew Court inferentlaliy gives the I\n, “rooting” for the home boys, or «.ven been given an outline as to what was i Public to understand that any esti-\nexeerating the umpire docs not develop to be done, it is more than likely that mate by the engineer curries no\nyour own muscles, except tin>e oi the gp-ps would have been taken to stop]weight with them, and only actualbids'\nthroat. But the sight o. nine men dri.l - the work by Injunction. As a mat- oh plans and specification» can inflii.- n cc !\no,l to become one intelligent unit, the | tPr 0{ fact, a movement was under- their opinions as to the cost of bridges.1\n«nap and vivacity o: .< sport where way py the members of the Sussex The Index continues and d. - lila-rately1\nthought and action are instanlMM-t-us, County Bar Association, whom we states that “The Levy Court lacks bind-\n exhibition ->f •« pe. -c ct muscular d>- are told to a man disapprove the ness judgment and something more, the\nvclopment and control, the complete plans. The question naturally arises courage to do what they know is right,!\nmastery shown over the laws of motion who was the man or men responsible Everyone knows that the county cannot1\nas applied to a ImlU-all this would for the selection of those plans, and afford a 420.000 bridge nt that point or,\nseem a wonderful spectacle had we not Why were they not made known to for that matter, nt any point, so what\nwatched it since we were old enough to the people of the county? Was there 11s the use of wasting two or three Inin- I\ncrawl out of a cradle And the swift a "SI1ake in the grass?" Unless pres-'dn-d dollars.”\nshifts of fortune in this thrilling compc- | ent tactics are changed it begins to j Now what do you think of that from I\ntit ion appeal to the mobile and cntlmsi- j look as If the “town idlers” will have [ a real Democratic authority
523e4ba7edb53003b913f159676a0e66 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.828767091578 40.063962 -80.720915 BP/. ued by the policemen\nQarmanla ^wembly Rooms, last,\nresolved to avenge the death of thi\nvlcted Fenians in Canada, should\nbe executed, and dared the Cana\nto carry their threats into executic\nThe track of the dry dock and\nRiver railroad was yeaterday exU\nfrom the Park Bow and Ann stre<\nminus through Broadway to I\nstreet to Courtland.\nPatrick Gleason, living on Tu\nBtreet, Brooklyn, was instantly\non Sunday morning by Owen McS\nGleason had gone from his hom<\nthe street to rescue a friend, wb\nbeing attacked by McShane and a\nnamed Thomas liorton, and was s\nby McShane. from the effect of ^\nblow he expired.\nA Herald Washington special\nthat Gen. Averill. Consul Genei\nthe United States In Canada, has\nin the several days, and, alt\nterviews with the President, ha\nWashington to assume the peforu\nof his official duties.\nMatters in Canada are beoomi:\ngrave impoitance, and it is the w\nthe President that the representat\nthe government should be presc\nthe earliest practical period. Gc\nThomas W. Sweeney, it is said. >\\\nrestored to his former rank in the\nted States army on bis own applic\nThe Commauder of oursquadn\nthe Peruvian waters, has refused\nLute the Peruvian flag whon dlsp\non the flagTdWp of Ibelr fl«t c\nRio Grande. It is said that the\nmander of the fleet, Admiral Ti\nbad served in the rebel navy durii\nlate insurrection. The mattor ha*\nreferred by the Secretary of the\nto the Secretary oi State for hi\ncislon. ^ ,
b5f66881760879f5b732794d72f484e5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.7657533929478 39.745947 -75.546589 The only claim put forward crooked profiteers may Increase treasure In wars with which we had\nby the opposition is that the sawing prices under the new tariff law, but no real concern. That momentary\nas compared with the Wilson era Is the people will not bo compelled to paramount of Democratic leadership\nnot enough. Not the high cost of patronize them in view of the fact is rapidly journeying toward the full\nliving, for the coat of living touched that honest dealers will not Increase graveyard of discarded Democratic\na new high water mark during the their prices. Now that the new Issues, Iscludlng slavery, secession, .\nWilson era. Not the treatment of tariff law is in effect the Importers greenbackism, free silver, govern-\nthe World war veteran, for the Re- will cease to finance the campaign mental economy, anti-imperialism\npublican record, from whatever an- to discredit it, and the outcry now and us out of war by un- I\ngle viewed, is better than that of raised against it is not as loud as preparedness for war.\nthe preceding administration, which that which preceded its enactment. | The Democratic party Is lesueless\nleft the whole matter of veteran re- The tariff as an issue will get tho and leaderless. There was once a\nlief in a hopeless muddle. Not the Democratic party nowhere. Two militant, virile Democratic party. *\nold time Democratic profession of years, hence the vastly Improved In- standing for something definite even\nhostility to trusts and monopolies, dustrlal conditions under tho oper- If mostly destructive, which might ,\nfor after six years complete Demo- allons of a protective measure will have been able to take advantage\ncratlo control of both the legislative cause that issue to be abandoned by of the present situation to its own\nand executive branches of govern- Democratic leadership.
0174c43da4bc941b4ffac4f6d7bc070a THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.0587431377758 46.187885 -123.831256 Washington, Jan. 21 Aside from the\nleisurely manner In which the Venesuelan\ncommission Is arranging to prosecute its\nwork, there ar other Indication that '\nthe administration has become convinced\nthat this august body wUI not hav tha\nhonor of settling the great boundary dis-\npute. While It cannot be stated positive-\nly that this belief is based entlraly upon\nany specific reports from Ambassador\nBayard upon the subject, yet there la\nreason to believe that th matter will\nbe terminated shortly, probably within\ntwo month or before a report can rea-\nsonably be expected from th Venezuelan\ncommission, and upon lines that will be\nunobjectionable to our government\nWhile details of the arangement are\nnot obtanlable, and perhaps have not yet\nbeen fixed. It Is believed the basis of it\nwill be arbitration as proposed originally\nby the United States, but with c limita\ntion ttwt will suffice at least to save\nBritish pride and appear to maintain\nBritish consistency. This Is likely to be\nfound In an agreement between Great\nBritain and Venezuela directly, brought\n through th good offices of a third\nparty, not necessarily or probably tbe\nUnited States, to submit to a Joint com-\nmission the question of the title to all\nterritory west of the Bcbomburgk line,\nwith a proviso that if In the course of\nthe inquiry ot the commission evidence\nappears to touch tha British title to tho\nlands lying to the eastwsrd of that line.\nthe body may extend Its functions to\nadjudicate such title.\nThis arrangement will meet the British\ncontention that the original arbitration\nrhall be limited to lands to the westward\nof the line, while still conceding the Jus\ntice of the contention of Prasidont Cleve-\nland, that th lands on the other side\nmay properly be taken into consideration\nIn fixing the boundary. Possibly a sup-\nplementary arbitration will be left to\ndeal with tha question as to the title\nof the tastwari lands, of th original\ncommission dealing with the matter shall\nUnd that the title to tbe lands Is a fit\nsubject for arbitration as shown by the\nevidence produced before it
1db1001cb8cf66ee2ec8875d4bc19be0 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.3986301052764 43.798358 -73.087921 It remains to be seen whereunto this\nmattes iv.il I grow. We add a single re-\nmark at this time. The colonization\nscheme has difficulties which its friends\nseem to have overlooked. Whenever the\ncolony from any cause, shall come to think\nitself competent to elect its Governor and\nmanage its own affairs, where is there an v\npower to prevent? The' Colonization So-\nciety has none, and the United States have\nnone they can exercise there. This peri-\nod must soon arrive if the colony flourish-\nes at all as its friends represent. Where\nthen h the security that h will not become\ncorrupt and openly engage in the slave\ntrade, as well as other, enormities? We\nare no: able to perceive.\nThe Beauties of War. A letter\npublished in the Boston Mercantile Jour-\nnal Quotes an extract from the Florida\nHerald, in relation to the expeuses of the\nwar in Florida as follows :\n" Tiie cost of the and forage\nfor the troops of t'ie regular army, this\nwinter, when delivered to the soldiers, is\n81,049,400. We estimate the, number of\nIndians remaining in the territory, at a\n3000; and the warriors not exceeding\n600; therefore the expense of eatables\nconsumed, in one winter, in the attempt to\nca ch the .said warriors, is $1749. per\nhead. Saving nothing of sugar, coffee,\npotatoes, pickled onions, sour krout, and\nsuch luxuries, the biscuit and pork con-\nsumed by the regular army, this winter,\nwill weigh secen limes more than,A.LL the\nIndians men women and childten, re-\nmaining in Florida !"\nIt "may.' be added, that every Indian war-\nrior killed or captured since the war com-\nmenced, has probably cost the U. States\n840,000 ! This may be considered as ex-\nterminating at a dear rate.\nAt this rate how pleasant it would be\nto have a biush with England! Especial-\nly it we could find some question us im-
0da6067a7a3c69a689abd7d515d6c401 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.8589040778793 40.063962 -80.720915 The speaker was Mrs.. Win. Mover, who re¬\nsides at No. 2301 Woods street. Wheeling. "I\nwas about twelve years old when my catarrhal\ntrouble lirot beican," continued .Mrs. Meyer.\n"My nose woultl stop up, first one side and then\nthe other. Severe headaches ami pains hi my\ntoinph'i every morning.so severe they nfleeted\nmy eyes that J com hi not ceo to read the news-\npaper's until after tlWopaiua were gone. Urop-\nidng back of matter from my head into my\nthroat, causlnij me to hawk anil smli to clear my\nthroat. I had no appoiite. and what little I did\neat would lay on my Ktomarh like »n heavy\nweight, causing four stomach after meals. Thu\ncatarrhal trouble tluallv extended to my ears,\ncausing nliftost total deafness for nine yours.\nEars'bcenino very sore and at times a thick,\n discharge until the lobule of my ear\n%was one solid scab and so very painful I cotild\n'not sleep with Jt at night. 1 was troubled with\nthh terrible ear lull let ion for nine long years,\nspending vast sums of money without leeelv*\nlug any benefit. One specialist had told mo tlio\ndrum of my ear vvus |>artlallv destroyed and I\ncould never'hcnr but little, If any, ngulu This\ndiscouraged me so much I almost rave up tin)\nIdea of »eekinj* further aid. Hut nfbT reading\nthe many cure* being inado by l)r*. Copeland t\\:\nBell. I decided to visit their otbees and rIvo\nthein a trial, ami n pleasant visit It bus beon to\nme, for I steadily Improved froin tlio start, and\nin threo weeks' time my ear was healed. 111 y\nhearing restored agaiu.the first tltco In\nnincycara.
d72cf69c0059b0ac11e878173e473832 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.064383529934 43.798358 -73.087921 the country subject to injury from an in-\nsect or worm, whose appearance is com-\nparatively recent, and whose habits are\nnot well ascertained. He is making dread-\nful havoc in the wheat regions, producing\nin many cases, an entire destruction of ex-\ntensive fields of the most promising ap-- ;\npearance, and has advanced at the rate of\nabout forty miles a year. The same in-\nsect, it is believed, has attacked barley,\nrye, and oats, with an alarming success.\nThe cultivation of barley has 011 this ac\ncount been abandoned in some parts of\nthis State, (Massachusetts) and so has the\ncultivation of wheat in what have hereto-\nfore been deemed some of the most pro-\nductive wheat regious in New-Yor- k .\nThe above is from the Rev. Henry\nColman. Other writers have spoken of\nthe great ravages of this insert, and thou-\nsands of farmers have sowed in hope and\nrejoiced in the promise of their field, but\nin harvest, instead of a rich reward for\ntheir industry, they have reaped nothing.\nAgricultural Societies have solicited the\n information on this subject, and many\nexperiments have been tried, and remedies\nrecommended, but none have been made\nknown, on which farmers confidently re-l - v.\nThe insects have extended their rav-\nages far and wide, and whole districts of\nmany hundred thousand acres ofthe most\npromising grain have been destroyed.\nThis subject is of the highest import-\nance, not only to farmers, but to the whole\ncommunity, and further experiments are\nnecessary, in order, if possible, that a per-\nfect preventative or security may be dis-\ncovered, as it would be of incalculable\nworth to the country; and for the purpose\nof stimulating to fresh inquiries, and call-\ning forth the best Information that can\npossibly be obtained on thi3 subject, we\nhereby offer a premium of rHlKrY\nDOLLARS to any person who shall\nproduce in writing, tor publication in the\nYankee Farmer, the most satisfactory\nhistory of this insect, describing minutely\nits habits, its mode of operation, and the\nsurest remedy against its depredations.\nThe premium will be awarded by the\ndecision of three eminent and experienced
2a54abeb32c3c5d4b6db251202168ec6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.5301369545916 39.261561 -121.016059 “Om> Put” Fhiohtknkd.— It is generally\nsupposed lhat Israel Putnuin ol Revolution-\nary memory, was a pretty brave tnau. The\nstories that bare been related of bim about\nhis desceut into the wolfs den, of bis es-\ncape from the British down the stone stairs\nof iforseneck, and his duel with the British\nofficer sitting upon a keg of onion seed,\nwhich was supposed to be powder are well\nremembered. A correspondent of the Nor-\nwich Courier, however, says that “Old Pul”\nbrave as he was, got thoroughly frightened\nonce in bis life. It wuh in this wise :\nIt is very generally known that a rattle-\nsnake that has been recently killed, and\nwithout dislocating any part will, on being\nraised, recoil in such a manner as to strike\nhis head against the band. When Putunm\nwas alive and lived in Pornfret, some one\ncaught a rattlesnake, and gave an opportu-\nnity to all that came up to test their cour-\nage. But stood the test on the lirst\ntrial; as they saw the head slowly rising,\nand before it touched the hnnd, they were\nsure to drop it. Soon Putnam was seen to\napproach, and every one thought tbnt he\nwould not flinch, as his courage was well\nknown. Being invited to try it, he, after\nsuspiciously eyeing the reptile, took bold\nand raised it steadily, slowly; but no sooner\nbad Its weight fairly left the ground, than\nup came the head and down dropped the\nsnake. A little discomfited by the laugh\nwhich followed the natural impulse that\ncaused him to quit his hold, he again seized\nthe tail, and held on till the head simply\ntouched his hand, when he dropped it again\nlike a red hot iron, amid tbu loud gutl'aws\nof the spectators. Probably Ills courage\nnqver had a severer test t han it had on that\noccasion. Such is the story current among\nthe old men of Pornfret and the adjoining\ntowns.
818f4f99193f016f9fb4275c0be06d31 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.6024589847702 39.261561 -121.016059 ecution issued out of toe Hon. District Court of the\n14th Judicial District, in and for the State of California\nand County of Nevada, to me directed and delivered, for\na Judgment rendered in said Court on the 10th day of\nJuly a. u 1860, in favor of COLLINS k CO. , and against\nHARRIGAN & MULLOY, for the sum of five hundred dol-\nlars and fifty-one cents debt, with interest on the said\nsum of $500.51 from the 10th day of July 1860, at the\nrate of ten per cent per year, together with $60.60 costs of\nsuit: I have levied upon and seized the following de-\nscribed property to wit: All the right, title and interest\nof the within named defendants J. Harrigan and P. Mul-\nloy, of in and to a certain set of Mining claims and Mining\nground located on Jones Bar, on South Yuba River, Ne-\nvada county, and State of California, commonly known as\nand called the Hibernia Mining Co., or John Richards A\nCos. Mining cUims. Also, all of defendants interest in\n to the Mining claims known as the China Mining\nclaims, located on Jones Bar South Yuba river, together\nwith all tools and implements connected with said mining\nclaims, or appurtenant thereto. Also, defendants inter-\nest in and to a certain frame building and the lot upon\nwhich it stands, located on Jones Bar. and occupied by\ndefendants as a dwelling house. Also, all the right title\nand interest of the above named defondents in and to a\ncertain ditch, known as Harrigan k Malloys Water Mtch.\nSaid ditch commencing about one-.talf mile below Hoyts\nBridge, on the South Yuba River, and running to the\nlower end of Jones Bar.\nNotice is hereby given that 1 will expose at public sale\nall the above described property, to the highest bidder for\ncash, in front of the Court llouwe door in Nevada city, on\nWEDNESDAY the 22d day of August a. V . 18C0, between\nthe hours of 9 oclock a. m. and 4 oclock f. M.\nGiven under my hand this 31st day of July a. d. I860.
9b2007035d7d57d18953c4f721610cbe EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4534246258245 39.745947 -75.546589 LACKLEN—In Kennett Sqaar* Pa^\nJune If», 1921. Amanda S. Lacklen,\nwitiow of Samuel Lacklen. Jr., In her\nGftth year.\nRelatives and friends are invited to st-\nt(-nd the fnneral services nt her late resi­\ndence, 227 Meredith street, on Saturday\naiternoon, June 18, at 1 o'clock (stand­\nard time). Interment at Greenhill ceme­\ntery.\nDAVIS—At the residence of his son-in-\nlaw. Alfred S. Roberts, (110 Buvard\navenue, on June 15, 1921, Thomas A. J .\nDavis, of Delta. Pa., aged 67 years.\nFuneral services and Interment mt\nDelta. Pa., Friday June 17, at 2 o'clock.\nPOCKETY—In this city, on June 15,\n1921. May Taylor, wifg of Eugene H.\nDockety. fr\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral service« from the resi­\ndence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rob­\nert H. Taylor, 1104 West Eighth street,\non Saturday afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock\n(daylight saving time). Interment pri­\nvate.\nIIUKILL—In this city, on June 14. 1021,\nKlla B , daughter of William J. and\nAnnie llukiH.\nRelative« and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funeral services at her late resi­\ndence, 2411 Washington on Fri­\nday afternoon, at 2 oclock (local time).\nInterment at Rivarvlew cemetery.\nI1AUPKU-At Richardson Park, Del..\nJune 14, 1921, John H. Harper, aged\n70 years.\nRelatives and friends are invited to ab*\ntend the funeral services at the residence\ncf his stepson, William Hinesworth, Tay­\nlor avenue, Richardson Park, ou Satur­\nday afternoon, at 2 oclock (standard\ntime). Interment at Rllverbrook cemetery.\nMAXWELL—In this city, on June 13,\n1921. James Maxwell, aged 63 years.\nRelatives and friends are invited to at­\ntend the funeral services at his late resi­\ndence, 1419 Riverview avenue, on Thurs­\nday afternoon, June 16, at 3 oclock. In-\nterment at Greenhill cemetery.\nCATTERLIN—In Yorklyn, Del. , c m June\n13 1921, Charles C.. husband of Mary\nIjâmborn.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral from his late roaidence,\nYorklyn. on Thursday morning, at 9\no'clock (standard time). Requiem mass\not 8t_ Patricks Church, Ashland, Del. In­\nterment ut St. Patrlcki cemetery, Ash­\nland, Del.\nNOWAK—In this city, on Jnne 18, 1D21,\nJoseph Nowak, aged 36 years.\nRelatives, friends nnd members of Dela-\nPolish Beneficial Association of M.
12372d78e94886bd48a3d09b2a683568 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.6972602422627 29.4246 -98.49514 To evidence the wonderful growth of this\norder we have but to instance that this enor-\nmous membership has grown from less than\n1500 In 1879, and is now distributing in bene-\nfits to bereaved wives and orphaned children\nmore than $1,500,000, per year, and is an as-\nsurance to the living at a trifling cost, the\nfuture enjoyment ol which, by Its beneficia-\nries, is not made uncertain by technicalities of\nthe law, nor by the dishonesty or incompe-\ntency of corporate management.\nThis powerful scent has spread in Texas in\nproportion as our State has advanced In the\ndevelopment other wonderous resources, and\nshe now receives a large proportion ol Its\nannual distribution of benefits.\nTo manage and control and to perfect the\nworking machinery ol this benevolent Institu-\ntion, at the request of our "Alamo Council"\nyou are convened In the beautllul cily of San\nAntonio, and it is my pleasant duty in behalf\nof Councils "Star" and "Alamo" to extend\nto you and the distinguished representatives\nwho accompany you, that welcome \nyour mission deserves, and which should\ngreet you at the threihhold of this beautiful\nand charming west of our great State, Texas.\nRemember that you are the guests of a\nunited brotherhood cosmopolitan 'tis true,\ncomposed of American, German, Malay,\nSpanish, Mexican, Italian, French and\nEnglish, but all united by the same fraternal\nbonds, seeking nor hoping lor naught but a\nGenerous council rivalry, and for the best ad-\nvancement of the good and ennobling in-\nfluences of our order.\nMany of you, perhaps, visit our cily and\nour section for the first time, and we desire\nthat you return to your homes carrying a\nhappy recollection of our blue skies, our\nsparkling rivers, our green valleys and our\nbcautlfulcily, the cradle of Texan liberty, and\nour lovely women, and that our hospitalities\non this occasion may strengthen the common\nbond that unites us, and prove that your com-\npanions in San Antonio highly appreciate the\nhonor you have conferred on them and their\ncity by holding your Grand Council in our\nmidst.
30b04f6acdeaffac74f850da5702f79b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.0123287354136 39.745947 -75.546589 MANILA, Dec. 1 (By Mail),\nquestion of admitting Chinese and\nother Asiatic labor to the Philippines,\nwhen it comes up before the Legisla­\nture, promises to result In a knock­\ndown fight between the plantation in­\nterests in the Southern Island, who\nare anxious to obtain more labor, and\nthe unions, which arc bitterly op­\nposed to the, plan. .\nGovernor-General Harrison. In a re­\ncent Interview, declared that he op­\nposed the admission of Chinese, on\npolitical as well as economic grounds.\n“Tlie danger of Chinese domination\nIn the Philippines, once the immigra­\ntion bars arc let down, is infinitely\ngreater than the danger of Japanese\ndomination," Governor Harrison said.\n“With the low standard of living in\nvogue among Chinese laborers, the\nFilipinos would soon lose economic\ncontrol of the and In a short\ntime would be, forced to the wall. The\nPhilippine standard of living is so\nhigh compared with ttiat of the Chi­\nnese that competition between the\ntwo peoples is out of the question.\n“A heavy immigration of Chinese\nwould, in my opinion, bo a tremen­\ndous setback in the political progress\nmade by the Filipinos in recent years.\nThe country is now. to all intents and\npurposes, self-governing. The Eng­\nlish language is spreading rapidly. A\nfar greater number of Filipinos now\nspeak English than those who are\nfamiliar with Spanish. English is be­\ncoming the common tongue of the\nIslands, particularly between ttvose\nsections which have different local\ndialects. Although more labor is de­\nsirable, I am emphatically opposed lo\nthe admission of Chinese for these\nreasons.”
12e85983e821b4ac5fd8fd7308e9f6b2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.3101092579943 40.441694 -79.990086 demand; flue, firmer; part skims, 59c.\nPHILADELPHIA Flour dull and weak.\nWheat firm under little offered; No. 2 red\nApril. 90c; May, 9194Kc;' Juno and Jnly,\n9292c. Coin Options Hi m; cnilots de-\nclined ic with only 'moderate demand; No. 4\nyellow in elevator 43c; No. 3 in export eleva-\ntor, 44c; steamer in do, 4646c: No. 2\nmixed in elevator, 49Kc: No. 2 yellow in\ngrain depot, 50c; No. 2 in export elevator.\n47B47Uc: No. 2 mixed April and Mav. 47\n47Jic: Jnne,464Cic; July, 4S46c. o .its\nCnilots Arm but quiet; No. A mixed, 35c:\nNo. 3 white, 37c; No. 2 white. 39i: do choice,\n39K: No. 3 white, April, 37K?3So:Mav Zi\n37c; June and tJnly, 164iJ7Jic. Butter\nqulot Dut steadv: Pennsynania creamerv\nextra, 24c. Egg auiet and easy : Pennsyl\nvania firsts, 3ai4c\nBAI,TIMOErWheatflrm:No.2red. \n96c bid: April, DOKc bid; May, 91?c;\nJnne, 9192c; steamer No. 2 red, U0c bid.\nCorn unsettled; mixed spot, 49Wc bid: April,\n4!to asked: May, 4647c; June, 45ra5Kc;\nJuly, 46c asked: steamer mixed, 45K4Sc.\nOats quiet and firm; No. 2 white Western,\nSSKS9c; No. 2 mixed do, 3433c Kyo\nsteady to firm; No. 2. 880 askea. Hav firm;\ngood to choice medium, $14 00015 00. Pro-\nvisions steady and unchanged. Butter\nsteadv: creamery fancy, 24c; do fair to\nchoice, 2I23c; do imitation. 1920c; ladle\nlancy, 18c; good to choice, 1517c: line, 18c:\ndo fair to good, 15017c: stoie packed, 14l6c.\nEggs steady at I313)c.\nST. LODIs Flour firm, but quiet and un-\nchanged. Wheat No. 2 cash, 88ic; May\nclosed at 83c; July, 79c; August, 79c. Corn\nN'O, 3 oajh, 87c; Stay closed at SSjfc; July,
42d9db85ed529af7c9204c812eecde35 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.5712328450024 42.217817 -85.891125 The consummation of their rebellion\nis recorded in these words: "They\nmocked the messengers of God and de-\nspised His words and misused His\nprophets until the wrath of the Lord\narose against His people, till there was\nno remedy" (I Chron. xxxvi, 10). These '\nwords "no remedy" were used by God\nto open the eyes of a noted Jew of our\nday to see the only remedy, even Je-\nsus of Nazareth, Israel's Messiah, the\nonly remedy for sin and sinners, for\napart from Him there Is none. The\nlast word In the Old Testament as we\nhave It, "a curse," was the means of\nleading another Jew to read the sequel\ntosuchabookandtofindinitHim\nwho has redeemed us from the curse of\nthe law, having been made a curse for\nus (Gal. Hi, V.U.\nHow gracious It was on the part of\nGod, whom Manasseh had so rebelled\nagainst defied, not to take him\naway, as He did Koran and his com-\npanions or Ananias and Sapphira, but\nto permit him to be taken captive by\nthe king of Assyria and carried in fet-\nters to Babylon, that he might have\ntime to think and bo led to repent!\nWhen he was in a miction he besought\nthe Lord his God and humbled himself\ngreatly and prayed, and the Lord\nliea rd him and saved him and restored\nhim to Jerusalem and to his kingdom\n(verses 12 and l.'b. What nn illustration\nof tlie truth "God is not willing that\nany should perish" (II Pet. Ill, 1), and\nhow wonderfully this is set forth in\nRev. ix, where we read of hell being\nlet loose on eartli if perchance men,\nhaving had a taste of Satan's adminis-\ntration, may repent and turn to God\nand escape the lake of flre.prepared for
146774d0b29e0c96a7ae50afde77b2a9 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.9385245585408 41.681744 -72.788147 Perhaps there is no other public\nitem in Now Britain that has occu-\npied the attention of the people more\nthan the recent civil service experi-\nments. The action which has result-\ned in both favorable and adverse crit-\nicism, but principally the latter, is too\nwell known to be again rehearsed.\nSuffice it to state that a recent ap-\npointment was made in which the\ncandidate who stood lowest in civil\nservice was appointed. Immediately\nthere arose a great clamor of pull and\npolitics. Be that as it may, Mayor\nQuigley has come out in favor of civil\nservice and one of his arguments has\nmerit. He contends that civil service\neliminates some of the undesirables. In\nthis connection he admits, however,\nthat there is still a chance to play pol-\nitics with those elegible, but the ben-\nefit Is in weeding- out the ineligible.\nThe mayor and other civil service\nii.dvocates state that the idea of civil\nservice is not to necessarily give the\nman with the highest average the job,\nbut have it given to any one of the\nfive highest. It is argued that a man\nmight stand highest in civil service\nand yet not have the qualities that\nwould make him best suited for the\nposition. But insofar as civil service\napplies to the fire and police \nments it seems as though a plan\nmight be devised so that the highest\nman would unquestionably get the job\nthereby doing away with any hint re-\ngarding the integrity of those having\nthe appointing power, if, as the may-\nor says, any one of those who pass is\nefficient and capable, then what good\nreason is there for positively cutting\nout the intimated political pull and\ngiving it to the highest? If, on the\nother hand, it is thought that among\nthose who pass and stand high there\nis one who would not make such a\ngood appointee the obvious solution\nwould be to rearrange the civil ser-\nvice rules. Make rules so stringent\nthat only those fitted positively and\nabsolutely, in every way, mentally,\nphysically and morally, be entitled to\ntake the examinations. Then there\ncould be no claim that one man was\nbetter fitted for the position than an-\nother. , Thus, the high man could re-\nceive the appointment and all fur-\nther trouble resulting from the alleged\nplaying of politics wou.ld be cur-\ntailed. As the mayor has so aptly\nsaid, the civil service is not a cure all\nin its present state. Then why not\nmake it so, at least as much as pos-\nsible and it appears that there is yet\nroom for improvement?
08c9769beb834b08f0148d796cb936a3 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.5630136669204 39.745947 -75.546589 Nbw Yhhk. July 25. — Letters which\nwere received by tbe Presbyterian Board\nof Foreign Missions, in this city, con­\ntains news of an unprovoked attack\nupon Mia« Anna Melton, an American\nmissionary, who was stationed at tbe\ntime of tbe outrage in a little village\namong the Nea'oriau mountain«, in\nTurkey. Miss Mellon escaped with her\nlife, bnt was mercilessly beaten *ud\nbruised by her assailants\nTbe letters containing tbe story of tbe\nassault are dated from Atuadia, Turkey.\nJune 14 last A little more than a week\nbefore that date Rev, E W. McDowell,\nwith his family, in company of Miss\nMelton, left Mosul, a missionary station\nin West Persia, to go to Atuadia, Tur­\nkey, a journey of five days duration\nHaving reached their deHlinatlotT in\nsafety Miss Melton proposed to continue\non to the mountain village of Durve\nsome miles away. Although the route\nwas a somewhat dangerous one, Mies\nMelton went unattended, save by her\nseivant a native preacher, who was\n-c o nsidered to be wholly trustworthy.\nOn tbe night of her arrival she pitched\nher tent ou tbe roof of a bouse in the\nvillage, as is tbe custom in that country.\nThe preacher slept on the roof abuu'\nleu feet from her tent, and members of\ni he family owuiug the bouse also occu­\npied places not far away.\nlu the mli'dle of the night she w*»\nawakened from a sound sleep by tbe sp\npearance of a man in her teut. The in\n'ruder was arui-d with a heavy stick\nWith this weapon he began to attack\nthe defenseless woman, who screamer\nI lUdly for assistance No one came L\nHer aid, however, and s e was com*\npelted to defend herself single handed\nIn some way she was able to break awn\nfrom her assailant and ran bieedin*\nfrom the teut The mao followed, but\nin tbe darkness missed his footing and\nfell to tbe ground
2f42e74e7444437ee7ce98733ec607e4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.3904109271944 41.004121 -76.453816 The close of the session developed a\nsurprising How of bad blood among the\nItepublicuns. Throughout the session\nthere have been signs of friction be\ntween the two branches nnd nobody\nwould have been surprised at an out-\nbreak at any stage of the proceedings.\nSpeaker McCluin hud three or four bills\nwhich were understood to be iu the In-\nterest of former Secretary of the Com-\nmonwealth William W. Greist, of Lan\ncaster, who is said to be the chief of the\nJustice Klkin taction. It is only just\nto say that a Speaker of the House\nought not to have any bill in the Leg-\nislature. His power over legislation is\ngreat and the temptation to exercise it\nfor revenge almost too much to resist.\nThe Penrose machine dominated the\nSenate us completely ns the speaker,\nwith all his vast power, controlled the\n The Senate killed the McCluin\nbills not because they were bad, and\nsome or them were atrocious, uut lor\nthe reason that they were McCluiu's\nbills. In resentment McCluin, on the\nlast legislative day of the session, slash\ned and slaughtered the Senate bills\nwith merciless pertinacity. He wasn't\nvery particular as to the character of\nthe measures, either. The fact that\nthey were Senate bills wus enough. He\nrefused to permit any of them to be\nconsidered with the result thut more\nthnn sixty Senate bills, good, bad and\nindifferent, fell Into the Legislative\nwaste basket that duy.\nAs a result of this a resolution was\nintroduced into the Senate by Mr.\nBlewitt, of Lackawanna county, on\nThursday, deprecating the "unpardon\nable position taken by the Hon, Frunk\nB. McCluin in the closing hours of the\nsession or the House ot Keprestnta-tives.- "
0c73c1e5daab7a5d7efaa498760982e7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.7499999683769 40.063962 -80.720915 It was a mournful recital of painful\nmemories, and the gentleman turned in\nhis wrath'to blast with the thunder of his\noratory the means that thwarted their\nefforts. Briefly, theu he spoke of the\ncampaign of 1876, the period of suspense,\nthe gentle, heavenly admission of the\nDemocratic party and it* patriptic^eaderb\nto the verdict of jhs Electoral Commis¬\nsion he spoke of tbp vieitiog statesmen,\nof J-fOtilsinna outrages, of the unfitness of\nMr. Blaine for the portion he now occu¬\npies; of Oonkllng, of Jerry Black, and\nread a letter lrom that able lawyer, inter¬\npolating in it as he read choice expressions\nDf his (the speakers). He congratu¬\nlated Wheeling on ita industrial exhibits,\nand hoped for a«continuance of\nMod times, but neglected to tell\nthem that not through Democratic\nlegislation would it continue. The\nspeech of Senator Conkling at Warren, 0.,\n!aat Tuesday, was evidently a source of\nxoublo to the sachem, abd thotte who\njpoke after him, as be and.bis successors\n>11 tripd in yafn to e*pMn away that por-\nIon of it In relation to the South. Mr.\n^uincy is a good talker, and a forcible one\nrum his standpoint, although his rhetoric\ns not finished by any meaus.\nOol. Thompson "comes from the sunny\n (the mountains of Maryland), '-but\ntot the solid South, except solid for the\nJemocracy. He waa, be aaid, "a Demo-\nirat to the bft'ta posh-" Me M»o said he\nrasn'fc much on grammar, which was very\nrue. He also wauted to be a politician,\n>ut "hadn't got learned to be one yet"\ni'he Colonel had an inexnaustiblo lund of\n:ood stories and is a good narrator of them,\nnd these he gave hia hearers in wild pro-\nueion, and so far aa eolhusittsm and mer-\niineut are concerned he excited more of\nbeae than either of the other speakers.\n"Judge Crawford, of Pennsylvania,"\niras next introduced and made a te-\nious speech of hf}|f au hour, in which he\nrieu to show that Pennsylvania would go\n}r Hancock, as last year 20,000 Republi-\nana had atayed awav from the polls in\nbat State and 50,000 Democrat*; these re-\nurvea would be brought out this fall and\nfancock will carry the State. He looked\n) the Qreenbackers and inportuned\nlem to support the party of safe money, c\nud closed by an appeal to the working-\nten for their votes, lie also said in con*\nunion, that the tariff we want ia one that j\nill pay the expenses of the government\njonomically administered.
31262c7448f04028155aed91f96264a3 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.1243169082675 40.827279 -83.281309 our dead heroes are sinking now to\nthe level of the earth. Our debt,\nwhich hung like a hydra over us, is\nnow in such a shape that it no longer\nneed frighten the most timid man\nOur finances are rapidity becoming in\na settled condition. We have noth\ning to do but meet the interest of the\npublic debt Let us now, at this mo\nment, before we got to our people on\ncollateral issues, settle, so far as we\ncan, all the issues that grew out pf the\nwar. I appeal to those bouthern\nmen who call themselves Democrats\nto take this general principle contain\ned in the amendment of the Senator\nfrom Massachusetts; give to the four\nmillion black people in the Sonthern\nStates the right to ride in your cars,\nthe right to stop at your inns, the\nright to go to your schools, and the\nright to worship God in your church\nes, take with it amnesty to the great\nbody of these who are now excluded\nfrom office in the bouthern Mates\nWhy not ? As sure as the earth lolls\n its course, as sure as time advan\nces, every negro man in the Southern\nStates will have every right secured\nby this amendment. You can not re\nsist it. The spirit of civilization and\nprogress demand It No law can be\njustified or maintained that deprives\ncitizens of the United States of rights\nso common and simple as those secur-\ned by this amendment '\nOn the other hand, whj should we\nkeep np this discrimination between\ncitizens who are no more guilty one\nthan the other ? Why should we\ncontinue now, seven years after the\nwar was over, provisions made as a\nmatter of temporary punishment?\nThe debate on the 14th amendment\nwas considered, and acted upon, and\nvoted for in Congress, it was suppos-\ned that when all the States were re-\npresented, when all the States were\nin their places, when every district\nspoke by the voice of its member in\nthe other House, all these measures\nthat grew out of the war would pass\naway. This provision of the 14th\namendment was only a part of the\nscaffolding of reconstruction.
196aa0c99d9dda57b16e73f13ba244af COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1860.54508193559 41.262128 -95.861391 t') von. Let tw, th>-n regard ouraelvee a»\nnsoVi fortunate th:tt, notwithatanding ail\nthe diScultfea with which we have had to\ncoatead ta tbia eoateat, wis hare aeeur.jd\ntae ohoit '-- of the Jtaii jit. We bare not\ngot tbe man the politicians deeimi, bat\nwo have got the od* man whose Euaiica-\ntiou tbe people prefered over all othm ;\naad aa oars u a aatkm in which th. peo­\nple rul*. toe reauh of that twminatifto\nmu/st be a trmuii>h at tbe bai!ot-^>os.—\n[Great applaud] I iudiirnantly reprl the\ncharjrt: wtiteb hae bens made by th - S>;<5«-\nder* and tL.ir ooufwderuta#, that tke n*a-\nj .rity of the Dem,JGtiu.y ia the Baltimore\n(' avention were wedded to a man aad\nno; to principle*. We prefer oar princi­\nples to any man, but it *o ii appealed that\ntbe man for whom we contaadea wa# the\nman of tbe people, mius fur wboai the\nS»tat«a of tie ereat Northweat had ia-\n»i ruefed In a body. And hailing from\nthat section a« I do, 1 tell you that you\nwill bear a good report from it»—\n[Chacrs.j We will hardly take time to\nnotice the iuoasaioaitis our there. Ia all\nthat sect ioa th«sre will be little aaooat •\nagement oifhred u» thaw iW*. , but\nare i^okiju to a bitter atruagle with that\nother, ana more formidable tarnmy, the\nBlack Republican party, which has tri­\numphed iu Dtuuor.;iM State eioctioM aad\nwhich is now expijetiug tu take advantage\nof oar diviaiona and thert by eie«.'.t Lia-\ncoln President of the t aitea States.—\n[''Never, aever "j FeUow citisens. iet\nj tb- remeaibereace that your standard-\n^ frftarer ha« already met and defeated ike\n' rapr«aeietatjve of the Black Re^uLdicajaa\ntutpin; jva with new energy, and incite\nyou on to victory.
0b41992a6d70a79dfa6fd0b83c69081f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.7767122970574 40.063962 -80.720915 The Register of yesterday, in speakiu\nof thu Democratic ticket, with a degrt\nof pleasure and much truth, aays "tL\nConvention yesterday found it impossibi\nto tiii the ticket entirely with first-clai\nuuines," and in so confessing, it ht\nvery mildly repeated the sentiments <\ntill reflecting, good citizens, who als\nagree with the JUffiiter that "the tick*\nnominated is not quite such a one as w\nwould like to see presented in so wealthj\n[wniilous and imj>ortanta|county as this.\nIf we imagine the case us "set up" i(\nthe mildly sorrowful confession ot tJi\nIbyinter, to say nothing of the malady a\nit might be shown unuer a proper diag\nuoais, it becomcs a question of a mos\ndesirous character, when we consider thi\nsocial, political and material interest\nwhich are to bo confided to am\ncontrolled by the persons to b<\nchosen at the coming election. Makinj\nmnfltitutiooB and laws is no child's play\nEvery man, woman ami child is in tin\nhighest degree interested thai those win\nthus liliape our shall bo men u\nlarge experience, and capacity and a largi\nunderstanding of the needs of the people\nWe want men whose judgmonta are ma\nHire, who can provide for the future in thi\nlight of a useful past and an intcliigcnl\ncomprehension of the present. We wan\nmen whoso characters sre formed, anc\nwell formed.and who will bring to thi\ndischarge of their duty, a knowledge o\nour wants, a sober purpose and power t<\nselect the right and avoid the wrong anc\nto do those things alone which will in\nsure goml government and a permanen\ngrowth. 4 majority ol our peoplo op\n|x»cd a Convention. So unwdling wert\nthey to disturb the loundation of oui\nState government, but in this we havi\nbeen overruled by other portions of tlx\nState. Shall we now abandon all hopi\nof having an influence in the formation 01\nthe new Constitution? Other portlonsol\nthe State are sending their ablest men\nMuno( mature years and habits.men ol\nlarge social, legal, mechanical, mercantile\nand political experience.
2a5e56f9b14e5bdac2ce848d18aa5aba DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1917.3575342148656 58.275556 -134.3925 BeginillUK at Cor. No. 1 M. C. on\nline of ordinary high tide, Oastineuu\nChannel, whencc W. C. bears duo W.\n1.46 chs. and U. S. L. M. No. 5 bears\nN. 44 deg. 4 mln. W. 53.32 chs.,\nthence W. 6.95 chs. to Cor. No. 2,\nthence S. 46 deg. 27 mln. W. 5.60\nchB. to Cor. No. 3, thence S. 47 deg.\n48 mln. W. 6.40 chs. to Cor. No. 4.\nthence S. 43 deg. 6 mln. E. 12.04\nchs. to Cor. No. 5, thence 12. .92 chs.\nto Cor. No. 6, thence N. 5.27 chs. to\nCor. No. 7 . thence N. 46 deg. 47 mln.\nE. 9 .06 chs. to Cor. No. 8, thence\nS. 43 deg. 3 mln. E. 9.85 chs. to\nCor. No. 9, thence north 6.68 chs.\ntoCor.No.10,M.C.on lineofor¬\ndinary high tide, said channel,\nwhence \\V. C. bears due south 5.43\nchs.. thence meandering:\n N. 50 deg. 38 mln. W. 3.12 chs.\n(2) N. 43 deg. 42 mln. W.. 3.41 chs.\n(3) N. 43 deg. 60 min. W. 1.05 chs.\n(4) N. 66 deg. 53 min. W. 1.45 chs.\nto Cor. No. 1, tho placo of begin¬\nning. containing area of 18.01\nacres, situated In Lat. 58 deg. 17\nmln. 20 sec. N., Long. 134 deg. 25\nmln. W . of Douglas Island, about one\nmile northwesterly from the town of\nDouglas, Mag. Var. 32 deg. E .\nknown as U. S . Survey No. 472.\nSaid proof will bo established by\nthe testimony of said Rova submitted\nbefore the Register and Receiver, at\nJuneau, Alaska, on the 15th day\nof June, 1917, and by tho testimony\nof the following witnesses: Karlo\nKlvlnieml, Axel Kronquist. Emll\nKoskl, Herman Nlcmela, all of Doug¬\nlas, Alaska, and Win. N . C . Waddle-\nton, of Juneau, Alaska.
1aed08bb73495603abd84002fb83c50f PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1910.741095858701 31.762115 -95.630789 Two men at leas t have given lie\ncounts of their sensations when tliiM\nwere carried off by lions the great es-\nplorer Livingstone and a man nanjed\nWolhuter a ranger of game\nin the Transvaal Wolhuters\nture Is not secondary in interes\nLivingstones experience His\nwhich was attested by the certlflpate-\nof the magistrate of the district was\nsubstantially as follows\nHe was riding along a Kafir path\nabout an hour after sunset It and\nbeen a long march and ho had pushed\non ahead of his companions Hisdof\nbarked at something and a motnein\nlater Wolhuter saw a lion croucblu\nclose to him on the right hand sld\nThe ranger turned his horse sharply\na circumstance that no doubt causei\nthe lion to miss the spring\nWolhuter was unseated At the sani\nmoment he saw another lion comiup\nfrom the opposite direction Tb >\nhorse rushed off with the first lion\nin pursuit and the second lion picked\nWolhuter up almost before he touched\nthe ground and gripped him by \nright shoulder in such a position thai\nhe was face up with his legs and body\ndragging underneath the beast The\nlion trotted down the path uttering n\nloud growling purring noise\nWolhuters sensations were not those\nof Livingstone who said he was in a\nstate of apathy with entire absence of\npain during the time the lion had him\nThe game ranger suffered terrlbj\nboth mentally and physically and T-\nno possible way of escape ThoMon\ntook him nearly 200 yards\nSuddenly Wolhuter bethought him of\nhis sheath knife which he carried In\nhis belt behind his right hip On reach-\ning a large tree with overhanging roo\nthe lion stopped whereupon Wolhuter\nstabbed him twice in the side with his\nleft hand It was ascertained after-\nward that the first stab touched the\nbottom of the heart and that the sec-\nond one slit it down for some distanci\nThe lion immediately dropped Wo-\nlhuter and again the game ranger\nstruck him this time in the throat\nsevering an artery
11249a2da59bc6c7252256a126b32fce THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.9136985984271 46.187885 -123.831256 At this juncture councilman Cleve-\nland said that he considered such\nproposed course unnecessary: that on\nfirst hearing thoso vague rumors\nthough conscious of his own inno-\ncence and rectitude ho had written\nto Mr. Beebe, of the firm of Sutton k\nBeebe of Portland, and had received\nan answer. He read tho letter he\nhad written and the answer. The\nant wer was in tho form of a sworn\nstatement that ho (Cleveland) had in\nno way directly or indirectly, re-\nceived a cent in any way for negotiat-\ning tho sale and that no proffer had\nin any way been made.\nAfter reading this councilman\nCleveland said that there was not a\nscintilla of trnth in the charge, and\nthat he deGed any one to prove the\ncontrary: that he had bought the\npipe, in conjunction with councilmea\nFulton and Gratke, and that three\nfully understood what the was\nto be before Mr. Beebe had tele-\ngraphed to his principals in N a\nYork as to whether or not h"\namount required could be delivena\nfrom the vessel at Astoria.\nUpon hearing theso statements a\nmajority of tho council gave it as\ntheir opinion that the matter was un-\nworthy of further notice, and amo-\ntion was adopted fully exouerating\ncouncilman Cleveland from any sus-\npicion in the matter and expressing\nthe opinion that further investiga-\ntion in the matter was not necessary,\nand unwarranted by tho facts.\nA communication was read from\nchief engineer Worsley, stating that\nit was the intention of Rescue No. 2\nEngine company to permanently\nplace a team of horses in tho engine\nbuilding, to draw tho engine to fires,\nand bv reason of that would ask that\nrequisite changes be authorized in\nthe building. The petition was unan-\nimously granted.
0d6ea8f3a93822c009c128855868e995 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1898.5904109271944 39.623709 -77.41082 “Itook entire charge of the stage\ndirection forfather,” said he in a chat\nthe other day, “and so relieved him\nof all anxiety on that score. I had\ntbe most difficulty In getting proper\nhandling of the temple scone in Sam-\nson, where Samson pulls tho shrine\nof Diana down upon the heads of tho\npeople. I superintended this and got\neverything into working shape, but\ndid not have father rehearse the fall-\ning In of the temple.\n“I knew that the mechanical effect\nwould ta)ce care of itself, so far as he\nwas concerned, and merely placed a\ndummy there so as to arrange that\nnone of tho debris should fall so as to\nhit Samson. Tho effect of this tum-\nbling In of tho scenery was rather\nterrifying. It was tho supers' whom\nI expected to give me the most\ntrouble. Of course I wished them,\nrepresenting the worshipers in tho\ntemple, to make a regular stampede,\nbut I did not rehearse them it\n“Well, when wo played Samson*\ntho first night 1 sees JptS jqat tbe re-\nsult I wanted. Ton ought to have\nseen those ffEpere run off the stage!\nThey thought the whole house Was\ntumbling In on thoni. Tho way they\nwent off that stage was a caution.\nAt least they tried to go, but in their\ntertor they tumbled all over one an-\nother in a heap. It produced a mag-\nnificent terror effect, and tho audi-\nence probably thought it bad all been\nrehearsed to perfection. But tho su-\npers knew better. ”\n“How did they act tho next night?"\n•They didn't act at all. They wore\nso terrified that they never came\nback. I expected that and had a new\nlot ready. The most astounded man\nof all was probably father. Whoa\ntfio whole temple tumbled down\nupon him he was perfectly bewil-\ndered, and as soon os tho curtain was\ndown he turned to me and energetic-\nally exclaimed,
0c5527fb815fc17e3f372f90ed9b7b76 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1885.5931506532218 38.894955 -77.036646 Human naltuo is a curious study, and\nnowhere more so than In a pool- ro o-\nHeie Is a man that takes every tip given\nhim; ho has sometimes lour or live\nhorses Iu a race, and It often takes him\nlive or ten minutes to calculate just how\nho has como out. Again thcro tiro\nmany men whp take their books and\nstudy out tho conditions and public\nf oi in of thu Iiorccs, and then back their\nJudgment. Several of these havo excel-\nlent judgment, notably ono in tho In-\ntel lor Department. Seveial men bet\nwho do not believe In tips, public form\nor anything else. They lako a paper\nwith thu entiles in ouu hand, a lend\npencil in the other, shut their eyes and\njab tlio pencil down, the horso It stiikes\nthey back. Ouu noticeable \nauoui, an amateur ocuurs is tins : wiicn\nbacking their own judgment, If tho odds\nagiihi8ta hoiso are long, they think\ntheir judgment at fault and only play\ntho race light, whereas If tho horso they\nfancy Is ut shoit llgmes, thoy nro twlco\nas apt to play lilm heavy.\nA Teutonic gentleman conceived thu\nidea that theio was pome way to beat\nthe races, and ho fct about to accom-\nplish It. Ho Ilrat got acquainted with\ntlio telegraph operator in ono of tlio\npool roouis; Ilnally ho asked him to\ntako a drink, and thcH made tlio follow-- I\ntie bieak: "You runs do vlro?"\n"Yes." "All right ; vo'll blay do string.\nYou gets de tip and glvo 'cm to mo. I\ncotnci in cr about niuo o'clock and\nblays do horses. After I meets you\nsomevheionn'
30b2f3f473abb275f7fe4e5da2155440 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.9794520230848 37.561813 -75.84108 course through its cells once more. It\nsent forth a low call to the ocean, and\nthe ocean answered with a long-d raw- n,\nthunderous moan, through which yet\nquivered a chord of sublime joy, as if\nmourning and yet rejoicing that now af-\nter the weary waiting and disappointed\nhopes of a century, the moment when\nthe end of all must take place had ar-\nrived; for no great purpose can be attain-\ned without sacrifice, and the oak now\nfelt that the accomplishment of its life-\nlong desire would only be effected at\nthat life's cost Yet it' did not shrink,\nbut gloried in the conviction.\nNow the wind began to rise, and black\nclouds gathered together to witness tne\nfinal scene. The sea bellowed like an\nimprisoned lion, and leaped madly for-\nward up steep bank, as if striving to\nclasp its ancient friend in a last embrace.\nThe tree swayed and strained, and was\nbent hither and thither in the mad\nthroes of its grand agony. Now it seem-\ned to turn towards the ' house, where\nthose for whom it was about to die were\nsleeping unconscious of its sacrifice;\nnow towards the tumultuous ocean,\nwhich for so many centuries had been its\nconstant companion and unwavering\nfriend. Then the wind yelled yet more\nfiercely, the clouds gathered closer and\nmore darkly still, the sea sent a gigantic\nbreaker booming and foaming to the\ncoast, freighted with a last mighty fare-\nwell, and the faithful oak tree, with a\nfinal convulsive throb and wild, apalling\nBhriek of victory, was wrenched away\nfrom its sturdy foothold in its mother-eart- h,
1e41cee3e6753c9ff3177dd144c59b42 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 in the papers could take such a hold among h\nmen. You see those who work in hot iron o\nare constantly receiving hurts in one way or si\nanother, the most common being burns. I\nWell, there is nothing equal to St. Jacobs a\nOil for burns. It takes all the lire out in- n\nstanfly.not after continued applications. \\\nbut imUintlg. Therefore, you will at once d\nperceive that it ia an invaluable remedy to v\nmen who are constantly having their flesh o\nsinged by red-hot iron. Oh. yes, many have ti\nused it iu rheutnutic affections, and I have n\nyet to hear the tirst mau say it failed to give g\nrelief. They keen it in their families, too, tl\nand all swear by it. At the works the men ti\nclub in and it and place it in the hands K\nof the carpenter, who dispenses it when oc- fi\ncasion requires There is seldom a day when\nit is not called for. All use it. You must\nunderstand that a cut from hot iron is not ft\nlike a slash with a knife or any other cold* t<\ninstrument. The iron not only cuts, but it b\ndestroys the tiwucs and leaves a ghastly,\nquivering wound exposed to the air, and a\nfainting, agonized wretch writhing Vitb 0\npain. Many a time I have seen a poor fellow\nthus situated soothed and relieved by the\nSt. Jacobs Oil, as if by magic. Only the\nother day a boy got frightfully cut with a\npiece of hot wire rod wrhil* at work. The\nwound was a vey bad pne. He s uttered
0decd990a57320d0f7670f3f7556d419 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1891.8095890093862 43.994599 -72.127742 The following practical points bare\nbeen gathered from the essays on road\nmaking and maintenance which were\nawarded prizes or honorable mention in\nthe recent competition under the aus-\npices of the University of Pennsylvania\nPublished in book form by Henry\nCarey Baird & Co., Philadelphia):\nIn locating highways in hilly country\nit will generally be found advantageous\nto follow along water courses a prac-\ntice which is very often adopted in the\ncase of railways.\nIn going from a valley over a hill care\nshould be taken to avoid running down\nhill if possible. The advantage of having\na road run close to quarries from which\ngood road metal can be obtained should\nalso be kept in view.\nMoney spent in securing a good, firm,\ndry roadbed will save a amount of\ntrouble in attempting to maintain a good\nsurface and keep it clean.\nCulverts to carry the drainage across\na road should, if possible, be made of\nstone, as timber does riot last long, and\nthe caving in of wooden culverts is a\ncommon cause of accidents. In all cases\nthey should be made' larger than suffi-\ncient to discharge the greatest known or\nestimated quantity of water which has\nto pass through them, and their slope\nshould not be less than 1 in 120.\nThe slopes of all cuttings or banks\nshould be sown with grass seed, so as to\nprevent their being washed away by\nrain and damaged by frost. If the cost\nbe not too great, the surface soil should\nbe reserved and spread over the side\nslopes.
23196d107a643d1a5421b76fbd92b12a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.4616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 The President of the United States\nrho never spoke a word more gratefu\n3 ears deafened with the din of wai\nHen when ho declared the desire of hi\neart, "Let us have Peace," the Se\nretary or tho Treasury, Admiral i>"»r\njgut and many other prominent cltl\n;iib of renown in war, or of peacefa\nistinction, are gathering to parllclpat\n1 tbe ceremonies of Jubilee week ii\nlie city, Irom which tbe fir6t soldie\n:nrted to protect tbe Union.\nTbe stranger approaching tbe clt;\nom tbe West or tbe South, arrives vii\nle Western or Providence Railroads\nhese roads cross each other, but\nsort distance from the depot of the lat\njr road and a Jew steps from tbei\ninctlon, stands the "Coliseum," as tb\nriginators of this grand musical festi\nal have entitled the mammoth build\n>g which is a longdistance t\ntraveler on either of these roads. 1\nan enormous structure of wood, ant\nBald to be, and probably is, th<\nirgest edifice in the country. But it>\nsternal appearance Is extremely de\n»ptive. Covering upwards of tw<\nores, the amount of material whict\nas been used in its construction seem\nImost fabulous, and it is only by con\ndering this that one can realize it\nnmense proportions.\nUpwards of two million feet of lum\ner were used in its erection, at tb\nite of about thirty-five thouBam\niet per day; lour aud a half tons o\nnip-bolts, nearly two tons of ship\npikes, and thirty tons of nails havi\neen consumed. The building is fivi\nundred feet long and three bundret\n)et wide. The walls are thirty-fivi\n>et iu height to tbe eaves ; there is thei\n"
011f55c7f707dfa8c18a140a38e76ef8 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.7472677279397 44.939157 -123.033121 Senator Lewis speaking at a .banquet given him by old\nSeattle friends, Thursday night, called attention to the\nfact that after the war is over this country will face\ntrobble with several countries, and especially with Japan.\nHe asserted that the Mdnroe doctrine would certainly get\nus into trouble sometime, and we must either be ready to\ndefend, or abandon it. The European nations, he thinks,\nwill make renewed efforts to gain a foothold on the\nAmerican continent, and Japan will not always accept the\ntreatment given her in regard to the standing of her peo-\nple in this country and their being denied the right to\nown land. He thinks Japan will demand of her present\nallies that they help her to compel America to grant her\nsubjects the same rights as are granted all other nations.\nAt the same time he thinks the issue in the next political\ncampaign will be whether will enforce her\ndoctrines and bear the expense of the increased necessary\nnavy and the taking over of islands adjacent to us that\nmight be used as a base of attack by foreign powers. This\nhe says we must either do or qualify our Monroe and\nAsiatic doctrines so as to allow the world to come into\nAmerica just as we are demanding to go into the world.\nNaturally, if we fail to grant these concessions the\ncountries we discriminate against will retaliate by ex-\ncluding our goods and later, if this does not accomplish\nthe object, by excluding our people. If we resent this, as\nwe probably will, we will require a strong navy for it will\nmean war, and that war will be fought largely on the\nocean. Senator Lewis discussed the matter at some\nlength and gave his hearers as well as the country at\nlarge, food for some hard thinking.
12e5db4a5e17bbed9c61eec627270e19 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.856164351852 41.004121 -76.453816 tain tribes were at length reduced to\na more or less nominal subjection.\nSubsequently tho championship by\nRussia of the cause of the Armen-\nians in Turkey, for the purpose of\npromoting her designs upon Con-\nstantinople, led to an extensive emi-\ngration of Armenians from the Otto-\nman Empire, and the war between\nRussia and Turkey of 1877 had the\neffect of still further adding a por-\ntion of the Caucasus, populated al-\nmost exclusively by Armenians, to\nthe dominions of the Czar. It was\nnot long, however, before the Musco-\nvite authorities discovered that the\nArmenians declined to become as-\nsimilated. They not only Insisted on\nremaining Armenians and loyal to\ntheir Church, but they likewise be-\ngun to agitate with a view of secur-\ning from Russia the fulfilment of her\npromise to restore tho ancient king-\ndom of Armenia with an autonomous\ngovernment under the suzerainty of\nthe Then, too, the Armenians\nhave the commercial spirit as strong-\nly developed as the Jews, and the\nRussian government began to find in\nthe Armenians the same objections\nof nn economic character which they\nare forever invoking as a pretext for\ntheir oppression of the Hebrew race.\nThat Is to say, they insist that the\nArmenians, like the Jews, have a\ntendency to monopolize all the wealth\nand prosperity, and beggar their fel-\nlow citizens of different race and\ncreed, wherever they may happen to\nsettle. Tho Moslems of tho Caucasus\ndid not need much" encouragement to\nassail their Armenian fellow citizens.\nThey have neither forgotten nor for-\ngiven tho fact that it was through\ntho assistance given by the Arme-\nnians to the Russians that they had\nlost their Independence; that their\nnational hero, Sehamyl, had boon ta-\nken prisoner, and their mountain\nfastnesses overrun and captured by\nthe Muscovite invader.
1a2e313cab5a44cbcfc7284ddda5f8d6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.146575310756 40.063962 -80.720915 A Nhw Thing in Glass..John Mor¬\nris, Superintendent of tbe glass cutting\ndepartment at the Central Glass Works,\nhas invented a new method 4of pressing\nletters in glass. The process is a very\nsimple one. The letters to be used are\nraised on Ihe face of the plunger used in\npr&fitng-the glass in the molds. This\nmethod leaves the glass plate smooth on\neither side, and besides does away with\nany artisticskill in coloring the letters,\nas any one can take a brush and till the\nletters withthccoloringmatter. As glow*\nis the most durable substance known and\nonoof the cheapest, this Invention will\nenable insurance companies to provide\ntho plates which indicate the name of\ntheir companies and which are placed on\nthe property insured at much less cost\nthan the tin plates now in tjie. Theglsss,\ntoo, is capable of any degree of ornament¬\nation, and when the die and plunger nre\nonce made, thousands upon thousands of\nplates may be struck from the mold. The\nsamo may be said of all the varieties of\nadvertising platen and cards which are\nused in great numbers.\nThe model which was shown to ub is a\nplate representing the -Etna Insurance\nCompany, and is a very neat affair. As\nthe design covers a long need, we do\nnot see why Mr. Morris should not be\nable to successfully introduce it.\nTna P. W. & Ky. Railroad..-Mr. J.\nM. Belleville, the newly appointed agent\nof the P. W . & Ky. Railroad, arrived 'in\nthe* city last evening. Mr. Belleville\nstates that trains will rnn Monday, aB\npreviously announced, and that freight\nwill be received on that day for all points\nEast and West. Mr. Belleville has been\nlong in the employ of the PTXJ. & St. L\nRailroad, and la a thoroughly educated\nrailroad man. He strikes us very fa¬\nvorably, and we hope he will prove to be\nthe man for the place. Mr. J. M. Lyon,\nthe clever "traveling auditor," Is also in\nthe city and will open up the office at\nonce so aa to be in shape for Monday's\nbusiness. Mr. Lyon will probably visit\nus frequently hereafter, and we trust the\nboys will always be ready for him.\nPolice Chiw;.There were five addi¬\ntions to the city prison gang yesterday.\nThe Justices didn't do much yesterday.\nTheyjtereu>U out to see the parade.\nGeorge Hess was arretted for disorder¬\nly conduct in the Colored Baptist Church,\nat Bridgeport, and bad a hearing before\nPolice Justice Howell yesterday. He was\nfined $1 and costs.
0ff37c4868c5216184fa44e1c7a5e399 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1900.7575342148655 46.601557 -120.510842 You are hereby summoned to appear within\nsixty days after the date of the flint publication\nof this summons, to wit: within sixty daya af-\nter the 27th day of September, 1900, and defend\nthe above entitled action in the above entitled\ncourt, and answer the complaint of the plain-\ntiff, and nerve a copy of your answer on the un-\ndersigned, attorney for plaintiff, at his othre be-\nlow stared: and in case of your lailure so to do\njudgment will be rendered against you accord-\ning to the demand of the complaint, which\nhas been filed with the clerk of said court.\nThe object of said action is to obtain a decree\nadjudicating and declaring the sum of $13,110 to-\ngether with interest thereun at the rate of fif-\nteen percent, per annum from the 19th day of\nJune, IvKX). together with one half of an attor-\nney's fee of 1.'i0.00 and one half of the and\ndisbursements of thiß action, to be alien upon\nI,ot So 11 in Work No. t',ii. iv the City of North\nYakima. Washington, according to the official\nplat of said City: and declaring and adjudicat-\ning the sum of $1;' ..U 0 together with interest\nthereon at the rate o( IS per cent, per annum\nfrom the Istth day of June, I'JOO , together with\none half of hii attorney's fee of I*00, and one-\nImlfof the costs and disbursements iv this ac-\ntion to he a lien upon Lot Bo 12 in Block No.\ntitl, in the city of North Yakima, Washington,\naccording to tbe oilirial plat of said City; that\nsaid liens lie foreclosed by the sale of said Lota\nrespectively as presorMieu bj law: and the de*\n[endant be'torever barred of all his right, title\nand intorest in said Lots; that the purchaser at\nsui'l sale be let into immediate possession of\nsaid Lots.
0785b55ff9c4dcd4e635788edee3edb6 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.4753424340436 46.187885 -123.831256 Well! dear me." saidonolittlo woman\nto tho writer, "i always heard Oregon-ian- s\nwere a slow going people, but the\nway we have beon rushed around this\ncounty is a caution. Do you always\nrush things so? No? Well, I'm glad of\nit. It would wear out steel, let alone\nflesh and blood to bo on tho jump as wo\nhave been for tho last ten days, First\none place aud then another and I have\nsometimes felt as though I was readj' to\ndrop. Everywhere we've gono people\nhave acted as though wo wero on show. I\nunderstand we aro billed to appear ''for\none night only" in Walla Walla next\nTuesday. My! If I could just see all this\nmagnificent country leasurclj and store\naway some of these sights to call up as I\nchoose, how much better I would like it,\nbnt it is just like going through a conn-tr- y\non a railroad train. And oh, how I\nonvy in your beautiful boats. I nev-\ner saw anything in tho way of steamboats\nso comfortable as iho lf7d West, and\ntho officers are so obliging. 1 think Mr.\nDillingham is ono of tho handsomest\nmen I ever saw. Ho is certainly as ac\ncommodating. Indeed, everyone wo have f\nmet has acted as though enough atten-\ntion couldn't be paid ns. I assure you if\nany of you folks ever como to see us we'll\nreturn the compliment. And now just\nto think we've got to go right back. It's\njust a shame, that's what it it is. Are you I\nsure 1 wouldn't get sen sick if wo went i\ndown to the barr Where s Mr. Swalm:\nOh, Mr. Swalm, (as that gentleman hoY I\niuhfcht) this is like plating 'Hamlet'\nwitn Hamlet leit out. Can I 3011 get\nsome arrangement mado so that we can\nsee the ocean? Just think, hero we're\ngoing home aud when wo tell them in
af105c77b030d9364514e1254935db9d THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0205479134956 39.290882 -76.610759 Persons ignorant of tho nalnre of disease, are not\naw re that many stages mark its progress from the com-\nmencement to 111 full lievelopoment, originatuig in a\nmost simple fori., and through negUct or injudicious\ntrea.aieiit, assume a more aggravated stats el disease,\nand .10case>o abscess, ulceration, pseudo syphilis, can-\ncer. premature old age; often ending in a protracted in-\ncurable state of miserable existence.\nThis institution is under the management anil super-\nintendence of Professor Cooke, MD.D. D.,L. L. D . of\nthe city of Albany. N. Y .. who, after the experience f\nthirty yeara in extensive Hußpitals, in various climates\nand me British Navy, together with tile miiiuiesl atten-\ntion to the subject in private practice, has discovered a\nmode of treatment for Venereal complaints, by which\nho is enabled to effect a perfect cure, in allst.iges, and\ntotally eradicate from the system too most obstinate ca-\nses iu a manner which will not subject the patient \nany confinement, cr hindrance from daily pursuits. And\nail without the use of Mercury, that baneful poison,\nwhich is sending to the grave its thousands annually?-\nthe best effects of which is but to induce a relapse of\ndisease, and finally, while its victim is influenced with\nthe joyful prospect of health, suddenly prostrates his\nenergies and sends him to a premature grave.\nDtsiiuguishcd as the Chancellor ot an University .and\nacknowledged by great professional skilland practical\nexperience to be without arival in his peculiar province,\nall confidential consultations and the advice oi Profes-\nsor Cooke, formerly from London, with a superior col-\nlegiuteleducaiion in Europe, otfei advantages seldom\nderived within the sphere of medical and intellectual\ntalent. Invalids suffering either with disease or lino'\nthe inefficiency of unquablied practitioners ot physic\nand suigery, whose years deny equal opportunities and\nexperience, are reminded that the Lock Hospital is an\ninstitution worthy their patronage and entitled to their\ncsntidvncs.
105fa105142a014c9892373021779437 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.1926229191965 41.681744 -72.788147 ing an astute politician and his rec-- i\nord shows that he has never been de-\nfeated in a caucus. AVhether he can\nwin victory at the primaries is a ques-- j\ntion. But he is acknowledged to be\none of the greatest the city has ever\nhad. That. Quigley's popularity is not\nas great as it might be Is shown by\nstatements from the Swedish, voters.\nThe writer is informed today that\na large majority of the Swedish vot- -\ners are Hocking to the standards of\nAugust Bergsrom ajid Otto Bengston,\nboth deposed by the mayor, and are\nplanning to "get Quigley " At pres-\nent it is much too early to predict the\nvote, but it seems safe that Quigley's\nfollowing in the third ward will be\nsmall, whereas Curtis' will be large.\nIn seeond ward Quigley will nat-- ;\nurally be strong and the fifth ward-- ;\ners sefm to favor him. The rest of\nthe city is uncertain and Curtis and\nQuigley will have a merry fight for\nsuccess at the primaries. One thing\nthat will hurt Quigley is the almost\ncertainty of a nineteen mill tax rate\nWhen a person's pocket is hit he yeils.\nWhen an administration boosts the\ntaxes the voters are apt to "yelp\nWhile the mayoralty race is creat-\ning the most enthusiasm, the contest\nfor the republican registrar's omce\nwin also be an interesting one. The\nveteran William Scheuy will trv and\nsupplant the youthful William Zeigler\nand a newcomer. John Hallin will\nalso enter tne nats, it is said, to try\nto wrest the laurels from these two.\nMany think, however,
0489b11f54088ca13e89f67572f5a904 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.3292349410544 40.063962 -80.720915 The full resolution referred to as adopted\nby the convention reads as follows:\nJUtolvtd, That the great ability, theval-\nuable services, long experience, pure and\nexalted character and unwavering tidelity\nto the Republican principles of our dis¬\ntinguished fellow citizen, John Sherman,\nentitle him to the highest honors and con¬\nfidence of the Republican party of Ohio\nand of the country. His matchless skill\nand courage as a financier has mainly\ncontributed to accomplish the invaluable\nand difficult work of resumption and re-\nfunding the public debt, and made him\nthe trusted representative in public Ii'e of\nthe business interests of all classes of the\nAmerican people. He has been trained\nfrom the beginning of his public life\nin advocacy of the rights of man, and no\nman has been unfaltering in his de¬\nmand that the whole power of the govern¬\nment should be used to protect the colored\npeoplo of the South from unlawful vio¬\nlence and unfriendly local legislation, and\nin view of his services to bis country\nand his eminent ability as a statesman we,\nthe Republican party of Ohio,present him\nto the Republican party of the country as a\nfit candidate for President, and respect¬\nfully urge on the Republican Convention\nat Chicago his nomination.\n/feofceif, That the Delegates at large,\nchoeea by this Convention, are hereby\ninstructed to vote for &n<l to use all hon-\norable means to secure the nomination of\nJohn Sherman by the National Republi¬\ncan Convention at Chicago, for President\nThe District Delegates are respectfully re<\nquested to vote for him.
1a95a304560fd13aefafbe6377e02e75 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.1356164066465 40.063962 -80.720915 of the County Court of ubio County. Weat Vlrglula,\nIn deed ul truat book So. 18, page 267,1 will ou\nSATURDAY, TUS I2rt» DA*O»MABCU, 1881,\ncommendogat 10 o'clock a. u»., soil at the froul door\no! the Court Uuuae of aald.county, the fullowug do*\nscribed property, that U to say:\nA tract of land ou the miuu fork of McKluley's or\nCaldwell'* run adjoining lands of« 'asper Speer. Peter\nKeith and others, and hounued as follows, to-wli:\nBeginning at a white walnut standing un the north\naloe of aald run, about four (4) poles and (our (4)\nfe«t from the run; there noith 86, east 4»poles to a\nstake, corner to Wolf and Keltb, ana itaui'intf in the\ncorner of fence; theme south 14, en.it >j polea to a\nbeech tree, corn-r toiald Wolf; theme >outli an,r*»t\n7 poles to a white otk, corner to laid Wo I sud Caa«\npertipw; thence with nm t'i line south 2i, w»at 22\npoles to a stake, coruir to »ald .*pver; tinnee mjiiiIi\n43H, eaat 16 poles a leech, eoiuer io Mid tipeer;\nthenco louth IAS. wual >8*4 polta to a stake. tinuio\nsouih 57, west 10 poles, croising the run to a slake at\nAlltnsu's feuce; thence north 21, wtn la poles to a\natake in the road uearthitruu, and ou the uorthside\nof It; thence north 21, uaat up a iiuuil ravine about\ntwenty feet to a stake or white oak; thaiice north 67,\nweet 25 poles to the Ixgianing, containing aiiout nt\nacres and thiry five polea more or lens, toother with\nthe buildings, improvements, appurtenances andco.il\nprivilege situate on or belonging to s.ild tru t of laud.\nThe title is believed to J be good, but 1 will convey\nonly the tide vested in me by wild de«l o( trust.\nTkkmb oy 8aut.One-third, andituore II the pur»\nchaaer so elect, caah oil day ot wife, the iialaine In\ntwo «q >al lostalluienta at alz und twelve muu<hs,\nnotes bearirg Interest to to glveu for tie deferred\npaywenta, aud the title retained until payuieut la\nmode in full.
2af34b73182bf96e8ad7ee29497d2763 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1876.9139343946063 39.743941 -84.63662 Jlfter all, it appears that you are more\nto be pitied than blamed, to be regarded\nmore in sorrow than in anger. While\nyour party, for purposes of its own, has\nheld your body up as a shield between\nitself and the people, who have said they\ndo not want either vourself or your\nparty, you have been losing the noblest\noffer of immortal fame and aSection that\nhistory has proffered any American aince\nthe days when George Washington\nwaived his chances of undue political\nposition. We do not say that your cir-\ncumstances and Washington's are pre-\ncisely similar, nor ever analogous, but\nmerely you might have been awarded\ncredit in history for a similar disposition\nto resign power to the people, to whom\nit belongs of right To "you, personally,\nit must necessarily be a email achieve-\nment to have been listed in future an-\nnals as one of a long line of Presidents,\na mere item in a catalogue of chrono-\nlogical facta ; to have your name conned\nby school boys together with that of\nMartin Van Buren, James K. Polk,\nFranklin Pierce, and the interminable\nline to be stretched out to the crack of\ndoom, like those nameless sovereigns\nthat Macbeth saw pass by. We do not\nintend to disparage those gentlemen, nor\nany President we have had, or may here-\nafter have ; but there are in our national\nhistory other names more illustrious\nthan theirs, though their happy posses-\nsors never achieved the Presidency\n the names of their defeated com-\npetitors. The name of John Quincy\nAdams is more likely to be remembered\nfrom his brilliant record in the halls of\nCongress than from the fact that he was\na chronological item in the White\nHouse. The name of Henry Clay, who\n" would rather be right than President"\nis at least as bright and enduring as that\nof Polk ; and that of Winfield Scott will\nlast as lone as Pierce's. It may be true\nthat you had not the shining record of\nAdams or Ulay in debate, nor ine emi-\nnent fame of Winfield Scott in the field,\nneither the one nor the other to rescue\nyou from impending oblivion. But for-\ntune haa tendered you an opening for an\naction more glorious and immortal than\nany of theirs. It was not so much\nwhat Cincinnatua did as what he\ndid not that made him great And\nso it was with Washington, and so\nit might have been with you. You have\nbeen named as the leader of your party,\nand the purer portion of that party have\ndeclared you a man to lead in fact, and\nnot to. be led bv its baser elements. You\nhad but to assert your leadeship, and to\nsay to those baser elements that you could\nnot countenance the devious and sub-\nversive means by which they proposed to\ndefeat popular sovereignty and bring it\ninto ridicule, by utilizing Returning\nBoards in one State and rejecting them\nin another.
67b58bc7cfa2cf31652158a358421814 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.4972602422629 39.560444 -120.828218 Age cannot wither it, nor custom stale\nIts infinite variety.\nTo-day we celebrate the anniversary of\nSt. John the Baptist. To-day, my bro-\nthers, far and wide all over the earth, the\ngreat Masonic family holds its' festival;\nand as the glorious orb of heat and light,\nin his onward march, has successively\ngilded the hill-tops and lighted the green\nvalleys of distant climes, warm hearted\nbrothers, with Joyful eye, looking to the\nEast, and observing the glory and beauty\nof the day, have- wafted a hearty benison\nto us on the western shores, and have real-\nized that when the sun's golden rays should\nillumine the. summits of our lofty Sierras,\nwe would send back, to them a response\nof brotherly love. And to-day, while we\nremember the virtues of our patron saint,\nand now again renew our vows to imitate\nthem, let us mingle with our brethren\nthroughout the globe, in the hope and\ntrust that each succeeding return of this\nanniversary shall us still united in the\nbonds of fraternal feeling, and shall dawu\nupon- the continued triumph of Masonry.\nFollowing the ancient landmarks which\nare laid down for our guidance, we may\nsafely rest with an assurance upon the be-\nlief in its duration until all things earthly\nshall pass away, and time itself shall be no\nmore. If prejudices are engendered against\nus, we must be content to let them exist\nuntil we can show their ill-founded nature,\nnot in loud recrimination, but in quietly\nliving them down by a career of justice\nand usefulness; then, indeed, if detraction\nassail us, we may smile at the impotency\nof its force as its mistaken shafts full harm-\nless at our feet. And let not our answer\nbe made in anger, but let us prove by the\neveryday acts of our lives that the frater-\nnity cannot be an unworthy one, whose\nadmonitions lead us to have “ faith in, God,\nhope in immortality, and charity to all\nmankind.”
20800628f952ee17a43493ce77064162 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1857.0945205162354 35.780398 -78.639099 stones was a very cmteusonc: it seemed\nof no describable shape ; it appeared unfit\nfor any portion of tbe building. They\ntried it at this wall, but it would not fit;\nthey tried it in another, but it could not\nbe accomroodatfcd j so, vexed and angry,\nthey threw it away. The temple was so\nmany years building, that this stone be-\ncame covered with moss, aud grass grew\naround it. Everybody pa sing by laughed\nat the stone; they said Solomon was wise,\nend doubtless all th other stones were\nquite sure it was ueant for nothing.\nYear after year Tolled on, and the poor\nstone was still despised, the builders con-\nstantly refused it. The eventful day came\nwhen the temple was to be finished and\nopened and the multitude was assembled\nto see the grand sight. The builders said,\n" WThere is the top stone ? Where is the\npinnacle ?" They little thought where\nthe crowning marble was, until some one\nsaid, "Perhaps that stone which the buil-\n refused is meant to be the topstone.\nThey thea took it, and hoisted it to the\ntop of the house; and as it reached the\nsummit they found it well adapted to the\nplace. Loud hosannas made the welkiu\nring, as the stone which the builders re-\nfused, thus became the headstone of the\ncorner. So is it with Christ Jesus. The\nbuilders cast hiin way. Re was a plebian ;\nhe was of poor extraction ; he was a man\nacquainted with sinners, who walked in\npoverty and meanness; bene the worldly\nwise despised him. But whea God shall\ngather together, in one, all things that are\nin heaven and that are in earth, then Christ\nshall be the glorious consummation of all\nthings.\n' Christ reigns in heaven the topmost atone,\nAnd well dettrves the praise."\nHe shall be exalted ; he shall be honor-\ned ; his name shall endure as long as the\nsun, and all nations shi 11 be blessed in him,\nyea, all generations shall call him blessed.
86582476eb733e990ae3ebb5a80b9928 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.0560108973386 43.798358 -73.087921 mind to a Lrm reliance upon God, and\ntrust that jhe blessing sought would be ob\ntained. And so at the present day he can\ngive the same assurance, in praying for\nany blessing that we ne. Neither in\nthe one case or the other, are the influen-- !\nces oj tne spirit miraculous. Praying is\nthe same thing, whether you pray for the\nconversion of a soul, or for a miracle.\nFaith is the same thing in the one case as\nin the other; it only terminates on a differ-\nent object, in the one case on the conver-\nsion of a soul, and in the other on the per-\nformance of a miracle. Nor is faith exer-\ncised in the one more than in the other,\nwithout reference to a promise; and a gen-\neral promise may with the same propriety\nbe applied to the conversion of a soul as to\nthe performance of a miracle. And it is\nequally true in the one case as the other,\n no man ever prays in faith without\nbeing influenced by the Spirit of Gcd.\nAnd if the Spirit could lead the mind of an\napostle to exercise faith in regard to a mir-\nacle, he can lead the mind of another\nChristian to exercise faith in regard to re- -\nceiving any other blessing, by a reference\nto the rarae general promise.\nShould any one ask, "When are we\nvnder an obligation to believe that we\nshall receive the blessing for which we\nask ?" I answer :\n(1.) When there is a particular promise, j\nspecifyiny the particular blessing: as where\nwe pray "for the Holy Spirit. This bles- -\nsing is particularly named in the promise,\nand here we have evidence, and are bound\nto believe, whether we have any Divine!\nlnnutnce or not; just as sinners are bound\nto repent whether the Spirit strives with\nthem or not. Their obligation rests, not\nupen the Spirit's influences, but upon the\npovveis of moral agency which they pos-
082a60d23f01243446d4804a19dd21b7 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.889344230672 46.187885 -123.831256 Sec. 1 . Tho Common Council of the\ncity of Astoria shall at its first meeting\nin October of each year appoint fiom\neach company of the fire department of\nthe city of Astoria four active members\nto be recommended by the Chief Engi-\nneer of the fire department to act as\nfin police at and during all fires.\nSec. 2 . That the fire police so appoint-\ned shall, at all fires, under direction ot\nthe Chief of Police, to place ropes or\nguards across all streets on which shall\nbe situated any building on fire and at\nsuch other points as maybe deemed ex-\npedient and necessary by the Chief En-\ngineer of the fire department and they\nshall prevent any and all persons ex-\ncept members of the department who\nshall be known by their badges orby\nidentification by the firemen of his corn-p a- n\nj", insurance agent, members of the\npress, and owners and occupants of\nbuildings endangered by existing fire,\nfrom entering within the line or guards\nso placed, and any person or persons\nentering within said lines orguards and\nrefusing to go outside of said lines\nwhen ordered to do so by any fire po-\n or officer of the fire department\nor police officer shall be liable to a fine\nor imprisonment or both as provided\nfor in this ordinance.\nSec. a . No person or persons shall\nbreak through or attempt to break\nthrough such blockade or run over any\nline of hose at a fire.\nSec. 4 . All steam engines and other\nmovable apparatus of the fire depart-\nment shall liavo the paramount right of\nway through all streets and thorough\nfares of the eity of Astoria when going\nto a fire and such apparatus, together\nwith all other vehicles contiguous there\nto, excepting street cars, shall take and\nkeep the right side of the street, unless\nthe same be obstructed, and all street\ncars in the vicinity of suoh apparatus\ngoing to a fire shall retard or accelerate\ntheir speed aa occasion may require, in\norder to give the app iratus of the fire\ndepartment the unobstructed use of the\nstreet for the time being.\nSec. 5 . No person or persons having\nthe control of any Venice shall wilfully\nor carelessly permit the same Jo ob-\nstruct the progress of the apparatus of\nthf fire department while going ton\nfire.
14eaa615b311abff9aa938cbe009cb19 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.3948087115461 39.745947 -75.546589 LONDON, May 24.—Professor W. A . j\nBone, F. R, S., Llveaay Professor of |\nCoal, Gas and Fuel Industries\nLeeds University, In\nLeeds, described a new method of gas j\nheating without a flame, which, he 1\nbelieves, may work a revolution In\nfuel economy and have very Important j\nIndustrial effects.\nProfessor Bone is one of the great- |\nest living authorities on the subject of |\ncombustion. The new process has\nalready been put Into practical opera- I\ntlon at Leeds. Hot surfaces promote j\nthe combustion of gases In contact |\nwith them and It Is on this property j\nthat the process Is bssed.\nAn explosive mixture of gas and j\nair In proportions for complete com- j\nbustlon, or with the air In ellght ex­\ncess. Is caused to burn without j\nIn contact with the surface of a red |\nhot porous solid, such as a block msde\nof particles of firebrick bound togeth­\ner by some suitable means.\nThe new process, in the form of “di­\naphragm heating.” may be used for\nI coooklng purposes, such as grilling,\nroasting and toasting. A porous dla-\n| phragm, made as already described.\nI Is mounted In a casing with a cham­\nber for Introducing gas at the back.\nThe front of the diaphragm remains\nuncovered. The gas, under slight\npressure, Is made to flow through\nthe porous diaphragm and is Ignited\nas It Issues at the front surface, giv­\ning a white flame.\nIn flowing th,. gas Is gradually mix­\ned with air until the proportion for\ncomplete combustion Is obtained. The\nwhite flame diminishes in size and
1d071b53f947411c6df1fae271bf69b5 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1884.599726744333 39.623709 -77.41082 Thu annual festival of Ml Zions (Haugh*)\nLutheran Sunday School, was held last Sat-\nurday iu the grove of Mr. I). C . Warner,\nabout one mile west of Hie church ami about\ntwo miles from New Midway. The day was\ndelightfully pUasant and the number of peo-\nple in attendant*' was large, the number\nprevent being estimated at 800. A platform,\nhandsomely and tastefully decorated with\nevergreen, Gowers, sheaves of wheat and\nfruits, faced an arrangement of seats occu-\npied by a large audience, and from it tbe ad-\ndresses and short talks were delivered. The\nprogramme for both morning and afternoon\nconsisted of a variety of excellent music and\naddresses. The ministers present were: Revs,\nJ>r. Kuhns, of Westminster ; Jelly, of New\nWindsor; Pendleton, of Baltimore ; Rev. O .\nC. Roth, of Taneytown; C. T. . Fisher, of\nUnion Bridge, and D. M . Lamotle, pastor in\ncharge. Music was furnished by the Union\nBridge Cornet Baud. The organ was pre-\nsided over by Miss Lula Marlz. The Sunday\nSchool, of which Mr Edwin H. Sharells is\nsuperintendent and Mr. L . F . Miller assistant\nsuperintendent, is greatly interested in the\nmissionary cause of tbe Lutheran church,\nand at present is educating two young men\nfor tlie ministry in Hue Lutheran India\n3/issiou scliohl, in GtmUior, India- Besides\nit is ako about to undertake Hie building of\na prayer house iu India. The school is large\nand nourishing, and was never more inter-\nested in doing good and effective work Hum\nunder its present management. The festi-\nval held lest Saturday will long be remem-\nbered as a most successful event in its his-
234d4b3abe4f6945ef90990713758668 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1273972285642 40.063962 -80.720915 one without serious delects, although it i\npromises to insure a real united Germany 1\noutside of Austria. Both unity and pow- t\ncr were wanting to the Germans under r\nthe old Empire, and hence one of the most o\nextensive and populous nationalities hi s\nEurope was in some respects the feeblest i\nfor many yoara. Its members had the\nright, severally, of making war and ol 'J\nforming alliances; a right which thoy ox- 1\nerciscd in sometimes warring against each \\\nother, and against the Kui|>cror, as in the t\ncase ol Saxony in the thirty-years' war, n\nRavaria In the'war of the succession, and ^\nin that of 1805; uud Prussia, whose King, t\nFrederick II, 1 was Elector ol IJranden- I\nburg, wrested from the Emperor of Ger- i\nmany. Silesia, one ol his hereditary States, r\nThe abdication of tho title by Francis 11\nII in 1800 ended Unsold Gernmn Empire, 1\nafter a duration ol a thousand years. Will n\nthe new one lost (is long? On the down- c\nlull ot Napoleon I, and tliu general paeifi- f\n of iCurope, in 1815, a Germanic 1\nConfederation.was formed, which gave the j\nsemblance of a ]>oliticui whole, but in 1\nreality It possessed no strength, even in t\ntime of peace; to restrain by its Diet It's I\nmembers from an infraction of theConstl- i\ntution; It WM somp improvement to re- t\n(luce tlib several hundreds of members of "!\nthe old Empire to thirtyeight in tlie Con- i\nfederation. There were 514 inonarchial\n{States ot very une(|ual extent, and four c\nfree cities, massed into a very imperfect\nunion of reputed equnl sovereignties, but t\nwhich, in tact, were controlled by the two i\nmost powerful inumlx'ito, Austria nnd fc\nPrussia, which withheld several of their t\nprovinces from the Confederation. One i\nof its chief professed objects was the es- n\ntabllshingof representative constitutions t\nin all the States belonging to the Confcd- 1\neration; but this was soon explained in i\nsuch a way that mockeries of constitu-\ntions, like that of Prussia before 1848, were t\nthought to be suflicient to meet the claims i\nof the age. c
3fe3ad8b7a9f83e008cbba30f6c8a87a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.3383561326739 41.681744 -72.788147 Hartford, May 4. As a penalty\nfor overcharging on sugar deliveries\nand in lieu of attempting to make re-\nfunds to the trade affected, Blake &\nBackes, sugar brokers in this city\nhave been ordered to pay $1,000 to\nthe American Red Cross. This infor-\nmation, coming from Washington,\nwas confirmed by inquiry at the\nheadquarters in this city of the fed-\neral food administration for Connec-\nticut. It appears that the violations\nof the administration's sugar regula-\ntions extended over several months\nand the $1,000 penalty well covers\nthe total profiteering by Blake &\nBackes, who are the largest sugar\ncistributors in the state. It was\npointed out at the food administra-\ntion offices that Joseph Reiter, a\nBrooklyn sugar wholesaler, was re-\ncently compelled to donate $1,842 to\nthe Red Cross as the equivalent of\nhis excessive profits from charging\n$17 per 1,000 pounds of sugar. Both\nthese concerns will be permitted to\ncontinue in business they\nhereafter conform strictly to tho ad-\nministration's rules and regulations,\nfurther violation of which, however,\nwill entail further penalties and pub-\nlicity with the possible indefinite, re-\nvocation of their licenses.\nIn explaining the details of the\nviolations, it was said Blake &\nBackes were notified, April 15, by\nRobert Scoville, federal food admin-\nistrator for Connecticut, that the en-\nforcement division of the food ad-\nministration at Washington felt that\nsome penalty should be imposed for\nviolations and that in view of the ap-\nparent impossibility of a separate re-\nfund being made to every Individual\nsugar consumer who had been over-\ncharged, it was ruled that $1,000 be\ncontributed to the Red Cross, this\namount being based on the excessive\ncharges since January 1, during a\nperiod when the administration's reg-\nulations governing sugar distribution\nwere widely known.\nThe specific charges against the\nfirm appear to be that it charged\nmore than twenty-fiv- e
07359ae110bdb7bd97fc8862360352b4 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1898.9602739408929 41.875555 -87.624421 The State Senate's police Investiga-\ntion commission known as the Berry\ncommittee will begin next week the\nwork of Investigating Chicago's police\nJustices. The committee, after u recews\nof several months, came together nt\nthe Great Northern Hotel Tuesdny\nmorning. Those present were Senators\nBerry, Bollinger, Luudlii, Mahoney\nand Dresser. SeiuHor Baxter was pre-\nvented from ntitendlng because of the\ndeath of his father, ami Senator Asplu -wa l- l\nIs serving as quartcrmuMor ou the\nUnited States cruiser Buffalo. The com-\nmittee spent ubout three hours lu con-\nsultation, at which Attorney F. R.\nBliss was present.\nIn tho hotel lobby were several men\nwho were ou the lookout for news for\nLlmlbloui. tho Terrible Swede, for It\nhad lieen given out that the Berry com-\nmittee Intended probing sharply uud\ndeeply Into the administration of tho\nCivil Service Commission, and tho Ter-\nrible Swede wanted udvatico "tips."\nBut the committee evidently is\nthrough with the Civil Service Commis-\nsion the police department. Some\nof the tetlinony taken when tho com-\nmittee was lu session ncvcml months\nago developed many of the well-know- n\nweak spots In Chicago's system of po-\nlice courts, and It was decided to take\nup tho Investigation nnd follow it with\nthe Idea of recommending needed legis-\nlation. Senators Berry and Baxter will\ncollate the laws governing police courts\nlu Chicago; Seunlor Bollinger will\nmake an Investigation of tho Four\nCourts of St. Louis, and tho rest of the\ncommittee will put lu tho week visiting\nChicago s police courts.\nNo oue will be summoned before the\ncommittee to give evidence, for, accord-\ning to Senator Berry, the investigation\nIs not to be conducted on tho theory\nthat tho police courts nro corrupt or In- -\netllclent. The police Justices will be\nasked to nld the commission with sug'\ngestlons and facts, and others who are\nmore or less Interested in Iho police\ncount question will bo Invited to
0c67bb243a92b15a88fabaac9c18c72d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.6561643518519 40.063962 -80.720915 It baa long been known that the intro¬\nduction of iron into alloys of copper and\nsine materially altera the physical proper*\ntiea of the products for the better. Several\nattempe have been made to use iron in\nthis connection, but hitherto without prac¬\ntical success. Experimentally the results\nhave proved satisfactory, but when tried on\na working scale the process lias failed for a\nwant of uniformity in the products. Among\nothers who have directed their attention\nto the matter is Mr. Alexander Dick, of\nLondon, who, after careful experiment and\nresearch, has succeeded in introducing the\niron into the alloy in such a way as to give\ngood results on a practical scale. Thissuc-\ncess is obtained by previously alloying the\niron in such a manner that it is combined\nin definite and known proportions with the\nzinc. When wrought iron is introduced\ninto molten zinc the latter readily\ndissolves or absorbs the former.\nThe exact point of saturation or the\nproportion dissolved or abBosbed varies\n the temperature at which the molten\nzinc is maintained during the process, and\nit is by carefully ascertaiuiug and coutrol-\ning this temperaturo that Mr. Dick has\nbeen able to succeed in obtaining a per¬\nfectly uniform product The metal thus\n£reduced, and to which the name of Dolta\nus been given, is stated to be as much su¬\nperior to brass as phosphor-bronze is to\ngun metal, or as steel is to iron. It pos¬\nsesses great strength and toughness, and\nsamples cast in sand give a breakingstrain\nof twenty-two tons per Equare inch. Torged\nor rolled into bars it shows a tensile\nstrength of more than Ihirty-three tons per\nsquare inch, and drawn into wire of\ntwenty«two gauge it is found to stand sixty-\ntwo tons per square inch before breaking.\nIt has an excellent color, is very easily\nworked,-takes a high polish and tarnishes\nless quickly than brass, and on the whole\nappears to be susceptible of a very wide\napplication both for useful and ornamental\npurposes.
08e1fba5917bcac5e12ba2ff9751edd7 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.4041095573314 40.441694 -79.990086 "Alvln Joslyn,'' Charles L. Davis, who will\nbuild a theater in Pittsburg, was in tbe city\nyesterday, examining the plans of bis house\nwith Mr. Reid, of Evansvllle, of the firm of\nReld Bros., architects. Alrin was found in the\nAnderson, and tne architect exhibited the\nplans to the reporter. If they are carried ont\nas designed, there will be few finer theaters in\nAmerica. The stage will be 55x95 feet, and\nwill be provided with 29 dressing rooms for\nthe actors. AH these rooms will be located\non the first floor. There will be three tiers in\nthe bouse, and Joslyn claims tbat tbe ladies'\nparlor, on tbe ground floor, will cost him S15.00O\nto furnish. He declares he will pnt S200.C00\ninto the honse. While here Mr. Reid will ex-\namine tbe building materials, and they will de-\ncide afterward what to use. The ladies' parlor\nwill be in tbe olden style. There\nwill be smoking rooms for tbe men, a large\npromenade and an extensive foyer. Tbe house\nwill be 100x200 feet in dimensions.\nOne of tbo strongest and leading features is\ntbe number of exits provided. There will be\n70 in all, opening all around the building. Mr.\nDavis says he has reserved 30 feet of clear space\non each side of tbe strnctnre, so that the peo-\nple can get out in case of fire. He will begin\nwork next April, and tbe house will be flnifhed\nin the fall of 1S31. He exhibited a number of\ncontracts made with good people, who will play\nin the bouse, and ho says that nothing bnt the\nfinest and best will appear on tbe stage. He\ncall tho house the Lyceum Theater of Pitts-\nburg. J . M. Hyde will be the General Manager\nand Charles Gordon Treasurer.
3bf45e9a33f2827356f2018f369589e4 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1913.5986301052765 35.318728 -82.460953 tion of Patterson and received a reply\nassuring him that the Senator would\nfight against his confirmation, to the\nlast. But will the Senator stand? We\nare not so sure about it He does not\nappear to have acquired the habit of\nbreaking with a superior officer. When\nPresident Wilson nominated Chas. P.\nNeill, a republican, to be commlssion:\ner of labor statistics Senator Overman\nstarted out to fight his confirmation\nand actually prevented It during the\nspecial session of congress last winter.\nHe declared that Mr. Neill had been\nmanifestly unfair and unjust to South-\nern people in his reports of conditions\nexisting in our cotton mills and\namongst our mountain folks, charac-\nterizing some of his reports as sland-\nerous and declaring that confirmation\nvould not be made without his pro-\ntest. He went so far to file charges\nwith the President reflecting upon Dr.\nNeill's conduct of his office and his\ngeneral fitness for the position, and\nappeared to be on the war path In dead\nearnest. But when the final test came\nthe Senator stated that after talking\nwith the President he had decided to\nwithdraw opposition and the Neill ap-\npointment was confirmed without even\na protest. Maybe the President will\nhave a talk with him about the Patter-\nson appointment and maybe he will\nchange his mind on that, too, with the\nidea that he who strikes and runs\naway will live to strike another day.\nThe nomination of Patterson should\nnot be confirmed and the President\nwould exhibit good sexise by withdraw-\ning it If he desires to recognize the\ncolored race in the distribution of pa-t ion a- ge
9e307864641cfeb0349e571dd31437b7 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.7438355847285 31.960991 -90.983994 The difference between the respect felt\nfor a consistent and honorable statesman\nand a time-serving politician, is forcibly ex­\nemplified by a leading article in the August\nnumber of the Democratic Review, the ac\nknowledged organ of the party whose\nname it bears. Referring to Mr. Tyler, the\nReview, while it commends some of his acts,\nspeaks in the most contemptuous terms of\nhis “miserable want.” on the Bank ques­\ntion, “of any distinct and fixed ideas on the\nsubject;” in the Rhode Island affairs, of\n“ suffering his mind tobe swayed so weak­\nly and so widely from the truth and the\nright;” and on the Apportionment bill, as\n“arguing a feebleness, and a want of all\nclear and manly decision of mi ntf, calcula­\nted to forfeit still more of our respect for\nthe head, than can gain for the heart of\na President so acting.” And it concludes,\ntherefore, that “Mr. Tyler has no chance\nnow left with the Democratic party." How\ndifferent is the tone in which the Review\nspeaks, in the same article,of Henry Clay!\nIt says, “Clay is a fine fellow—he is so\nbold he is so brave;and in thepolitical me­\nlee, he rides thundering along, at the head\nof his host, in the van of the strife, so gal­\nlantly, and with so haughty a crest!\nLike the panache of Henry IV, wherever\nthe fight is hottest and the blows heaviest^\nthere streams its white flutter as the sig­\nma! to his friends of the point of pressure;\nand the direction to which they should fol­\nlow. He is a man, every inch of him —\nworth fighting, worth beating.”
1f29c0adfaeb2cac855621a72f01d026 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.2773223727484 41.681744 -72.788147 When someone .nets out his hammer\nand bangs the head of the editor be-\ncause he meets a word he is not fa-\nmiliar with or prejudiced against, lie\ninvariably displays a great luck of in-\nformation as to the handicaps sur-\nrounding the production of newspaper\nmatter. He ought to take into consid-\neration that the daily news is some-\nthing that must be prepared for the\nmarket with great hurry. There are\nabout eight hours allowed to the\neditor of the daily paper in most\ncities to get into print anywhere from\n40,000 to SO. 000 . words and these arc\nselected from a mass of matter of all\nkinds that may contain from 100,000\nto 500,000 words. It is only because\nof the wonderful efficiency of type-\nsetting machinery and news carrying\ndevices and the efficiency of the news-\npapermen themselves that it is pos-\nsible for Mr. Reader to get his ten,\n twelve, or sixteen, or twenty pages\nof newspaper every day.\nIn the selection and revision and\ntyping and proofreading and making\nup of such a great, mass 'of material\nin type there are a. thousand and, one\nodd steps which cannot be done with\nmachinery, nor by men of little skill,\nand fairly thoroughly and away out\nof sight of the public and wholly\nwithout the assistance of Mr. Reader.\nSo when an error appears, or a word\nseems to have been misused, there\nis generally a fairly good excuse, from\nthe layman's point of view . But tho\nnewspaperman of training does no:\nlook for excuses, but for the elimina-\ntion of them and so it happens that\nhe is each year becoming more and\nmore expert, more and more efficient\nand better able to work quickly and\naccurately whether he be gathering\nnews, editing news, setting up news or\noperating a printing press.
1dca6194e7db24feeea8344eb2834111 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 With all deference to our friend of\nthe Pros, wo must say that his views\nof building up towns and creating a\npormunont prosperity for them, strike\nus as exceedingly ' cribbed and conlln-\ned." If Parkemburg has no other mer¬\nits than her accidental. position as tho\nterminus of the North Western Vir¬\nginia road, then indeed will she speedi¬\nly "retrogude," as affirmed by the\nPrtu. If she Is dependent on the\ntransfer business offered by tho Balti¬\nmore and Ohio Company by reason of\na break In their rail connection, she will\ndwindle most certainly. On the con¬\ntrary If she has solid and enduring\nmerits above and below her soil, as has\nall along been claimed, then she will\nnot bo appreciably effected. The tor-\ntnlnuH of a railroad is hardly a feather's\nweight to any place. Railroads do not\ngenerally terminate in small towns\nor cities.' They may fqr a timo break\nbulk there, hut they ure all the time\nseoking their proper connections\njust as water seeks and And\nits level. Tho idea of blockading travel\nand trade in order to compel it to pay\ntoll in the shape of dinners atthe hotels\nor drayage through the streets, Is or\nought to be of Chinese origin. All told,\nwe venture the present terminus of the\nNorth Western road at Parkersburg\nhas not added an hundred people tq Its\npopulation who will be superfluous af¬\nter tho bridge is built. We think it\nmodi more likely that the dwindling\nproportions of the oil' furor will affect it\nmore than two bridges would; Ctacin-\nnau [l» the natural terminus of the!\nNorth Western road. As well talk\nabout Piedmont being the rightful.tcr-\nminus of the eastern division "of the\nBaltimore road as of Farkersbiug\nheing the termlnous of the North\nWestern road. Cumberland once as¬\npired to that position, but how visionary\nw»s the idea! Neither mountains nor\nrivers compel termini these days! Bell-\nalr, belowus, is tho ostensible terminus\nof three roads, but prsctlSilly thev all\nmerge agd continue right on, and the
349fa5ae851bb4367ce54cc1779b16c6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.1821917491122 41.681744 -72.788147 part in the government. In England\nand France, in Canada, in Russia, in\nItaly in all the allied countries, wo-\nman has either been given or been\npromised a full share in the govern-\nment. We women in America, as we\nask for the franchise during these war\ntimes, are not thinking only of our-\nselves. We ask for the franchise as\na war measure in order to be able\nto give to our government more ef-\nficient service. We point to our allies.\nIt is safe to conclude that these war-\nring European nations are testing all\ntheir legislation by the exigencies of\nthe moment. Whatever they are doing\nwhatever legislation they are putting\nthrough bears directly upon the\nquestion of the war. The first aim of\nevery government in Europe is to\nrender itself more efficient. And if\nthese governments, aiming at greater\nefficiency, have seen fit to enfranchise\ntheir women now, during the war,\nmay we not accept this as a convic-\ntion on their part that granting wo-\nmen the franchise is a war measure.\nAll the great men of Europe who have\nstood out for so long against woman\n have now faced about and\nhave said, as a matter of bare jus-\ntice to woman, and also because the\ncountry needs woman, we must en-\nfranchise her. It is easy enough to\nunderstand this shift in their point of\nview, because they have had presented\nto them the demonstration of wo-\nman's efficiency. They have seen how\nessential a part woman must play in\nthe economic world today. If wo-\nman had abided by the old dictum\nand remained in her home, if today in\nEngland the women should suddenly\nturn their backs on their social obli-\ngations and should say "Our place is in\nmy home, my child is my life and my\noccupation," the allied armies would\nhave to put down their arms and\ngo home. They could not stay at the\nfront. Iet us be sure that this en-\nfranchisement of woman has not\ntaken place because the governments\nwish to reward them for the good\nservice they have done. There is no hon-\nor that we have handed out to them.\nThe governments of Europe have en-\nfranchised their women for two rea-\nsons, and for two reasons alone. -
4f17f70e927b07eacb59fdff72964be4 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1866.1438355847285 41.262128 -95.861391 In tbe middle agt-a. wbr-n the greet lord*\n•ir.d kci>cbu were aiwaya at war with encb\niMber, uae ot ibnu r^aoivud to avenge\niiiij.eif up.so • a« ijiijijor wbo had offend-\n<1 Mm. H ebanc-d tbut on tbe t ry\ntteoikj; fbtn ba bud tuade tbi* reaolu\nticn. be b-. - rd tbut nis enemy waa to pack\n•rear fcu ssvsUe with only a fta a»s.n with\nbim. ft w*ii *goau opportunity tj take\nki* reveaf^ aai ba dvtc raiined not to\nlet U pie-!. Lie sp k«- of tbia pl-in in tbe\npresetcc of hi* ch.pinin, wbo tri.d in\nVtfiu t i pirsu'iJe biut to give it ap. Tbe\ngood man a aid a great dc*! about the ain\nof waat be w^a £oing to do, but\nia v»in. At itngtb, aeetog that all \nword* bad no effect, be aaid, " blj lord,\nkinc>- 1 eanQot p> rt<ua<ie you to give up\nibi.t plan of your*, will you at le*!>t coo-\nacat to cora* witb me to the cbapf-1, tLat\nwe may pray togoiber bafore yow go t"\n1he duk-! coi koc>ted, aud ibe cltaplain\nand Le knelt down to^eth. r in prayer. —\nTben tbe tticrey living Chriatian kaid to\ntbe r^V'-tigpful waftior, " H ill yoa re-\npeat after me. atnUoce by kentenca, tba\nprajtr wbxeb our Lord JiBUf Cbriak\nlauj;bt to lit>• decipleaf"\n4i t will do it," rvpliod the duke.\nlie dfl it accordingiv. Tbe chaplain\n«nid a kenfenec, and tbe duke rcpe-tud it,\ntilt he eatne to the petition, 141'orgivef oa\nour tr»*parse#, aa we forgive tbea tbat\ntropjo* ngainat oa."
3623029a188aa45e994995d1cbf14b07 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.028767091578 41.681744 -72.788147 Washington, Jan. 11. From talks\nwith many representatives and sena-\ntors here, it would seem that the\nmany committees investigating various\nmatters bearing upon the war are only\nhindering those who are actually\ncharged with the duties of setting\nthings" right. Of course, there aro\nthose who say that the investigations\nare doing good, but the majority are\nof the opinion that the country should\nput its shoulders to the wheel and\npush the trouble out not to be con-\ntinually investigating, tying the hands\nof heads of the departments and\ncausing needless and useless red tape.\nWhat has been done has been done,\nrepresentatives say, and the best way\nto win the war is to keep forging\nahead and not to be wasting time in\ninvestigating something which the\nwhole country knows about.\nThose who have followed the af-\nfairs of the country closely since the\nUnited States entered the war know\nthat the country was not blameless in\nnot having sufficient ammunition,\nclothing, and supplies for the army .\nknow, too, that, French and Eng-\nlish are lending us guns now to fight\nwith on the field in Flanders. Every-\nbody knows it. They also know that\nwhile drafted men in various camps\nwere shivering because of lack of\ntents, $300,000 worth of tents were\nleft behind at Camp Upton. And they\nweren't discovered until some amateur\nphotographers took pictures of them\nwhile the snow had them all but bur-\nied. The photos were sent to the War\ndepartment, and then the tents were\nsent where they would do some good.\nThe country knows, through the\nmedium of the representatives who\nwent to the firing lines to see for\nthemselves just how conditions were,\nthat the soldiers there were not prop-\nerly equipped. And still more men are\nneeded, and needed bad. Congress-\nman Dale, of Vermont, said:\n"For Cod's sake, hustle upl Realize\nwe are at war. Send a million men\nto France two million, more mil-\nlions, and men, men, men."\nIn the senate, Wednesday, Senator\nKenyon, one of those making the trip,\nsaid:
23966377a02409763cf1beedfec3811b THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.4698629819889 39.24646 -82.47849 The other day we were passing down one\nof the principal streets of this village, when\nwe were astounded oy neanng an urcnin,\nnot mor than ten summers old, cursing, in\nthe most disgusting and vigorous manner,\nhis mother ! And she oh ! poor thing !\nwhat did she do to correct him 1 She re-\ntorted as follows : "You infernal scamp ; if\nyou don't dry up that 6weoring, and come\nin here, I win kill vou !" Did she really\nentertain that feeling toward her offspring\nthai would have prompted her to tuke his\nlife t We think not. It was merely a\nthreat which failed to produce the desired\neffect and which was seemingly forgotten\nalmost as soon as uttered lor the-c hi l-\nunheeding the wishes of his mother, took\nto his heels and was soon, around a corner,\nwherewe observed him incompaoy\nwith some ragged urchins of about his own\nage, engaged in throwing stones tt a cow.\nMuch need there is for a reform in the\nmorals of our youth but how and by whom\nis i I to be brought about? Can the church\neffect this mucn desired object ? Not alone\nthe assistance of parents is imperatively\nnecessary. The reform must begin in the\nfamily circle. Strict but kind discipline is\nnecessary. The pleasures of pursuing\nRiehl must be held up to the eyes of our ohild\nren, and contrasted, in as strong light as\npossible, with the abject misery entailed\nupon those who do wrong. .They should be\nsent to the Sabbath School, which has been\nappropriately designated as "the nursery\nthe Church'1 and, together with a uniform\nsystem of jtioral Culture practiced at home,\nthe vilest youth may be reclaimed.
29734215d14192f86d72f8c478633244 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 was hint,ton, April 12..The House Co\nmittee on the law respecting the election\nthe President and Vice President, agrc\nupon the bill to carry into effect the p\nvisions of the Constitution respecting\nelection of the President and Vice Pn\ndent of the United States, and direc\nChairman Updegraff, of Iowa, to rep\ntlie same to the House with favorable r\nommendat'on. The bill provides tl\nElectors shall be chosen Tuesday n<\nafter tlte first Monday iu Noveml\niu cvtsijr iuuiui jvuc uxcupt in casei sjx\ntied in sections 147 to 1-0 of the Kevi*\nStatute#; that Electors shall vote on theth\nTuesday in December following their\npointments; that between the\nof the choosing of the Electors\nthe day on which they are to vote\ntitle to the office of elector may be de,\nmined, which, if made by the highest\ndicial tribunal of the State having jurist\ntion, shall be conclusive; that Congr\nsbaii be in session the wcond Wednesd\nin January next after the meeting of e]\ntors, and count the votes; that upon\nreading of the certificates the Presides!\nthe Senate shall call for objections, whi\nif any^ shall be made in writing and si\nstate clearly and concisely without arj\nment, theground thereof, and shall besigc\nby at least one Senrtor and one membei\nthe House of Representatives before\nsame shall be received; that in the eveni\ncontroversy in any State as to appoi\nL.ent or eligibility of electors,\ndecision thereof by its high\njudicial tribunal having jurisdiction sii\nbe conclusive and the vote shall be couni\nin accordance therewith, unleM reven\nby both housei; thr t if there be more th\none judicial decision the two hom.es aii\ndetermine which pbaU be received; t!\nwhen there has been a controversy iu\nStnte and no certified decision has be\ntransmittal, or when two or more so\ncerl5 fed decisions have not been tra\nmitted, the contested votes from such St,\nshall not he counted unless both hou\nconcur therein; and i/ there bo seve\nelectoral certificate from any State and\nsuch judicial decision, the certificate! h\nby both houses to be executed by pro]\nauthority shall be conclusive; that if t\nremit is not reached before the fifth call\nt'ar day after the first meeting of tho t\nojses no hrthcr recess shall be taken\n*er house; that notwithstanding the\ntMons and declarations mentioned,\ntitle to tho office of any person declared\nbe elected President or Vice President, p\nthe title of any claimant thereof, may\ntried and determined by action in\nnaftjre of qiio warranto, and action may\nbrought prior to actual entry or usurpati\nand must be commenced within ten d\na.tor the declaration of election of defei\nant in the Circuit Cou under the Sta\nfor the district in which the defendant*\neither of them reside.
ae7744e21fc46078f574219cbcf594a0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.560273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 that have been unearthed in New I\nMexico," says a bulletin from the I\nWashington, D. C ., headquarters of I\nthe National Geographic Society. I\n"The largest of these, Pueblo Boni-- I\nto In Chaco Canyon, has been in-- 1\ntensively studied by National Geo\ngraphic Society expeditions during I\nthe past six years. Much new In-\nformation has been gathered In re\ngard to these early Americans from I\nthe examples disclosed of their ma-- 1\nsonry, pottery, baskets and Jewelry;\nbut no definite lights has been castl\non the age of their culture, for they I\nhad no calendar. Now this secret I\nseems likely to be found out from I\nthe, examination of what laymen I\nmight consider prosaic old wooden I\nbeams that supported the fiat roofs I\nof Bonltans.\n"Dr. Douglas found some years!\nago that trees in growing not only!\nleave a ring for each year, but that I\noften the character of the ring de\nnotes the particular year In which It I\ngrew. That is, in an unusually moist I\nseason an especially wide or well I\nmarked ring will be left In all the I\ntrees of the region subjected to the!\nunusual conditions. If a living tree\n400 years old Is cut and a recent I\ncharacteristic ring identified, other!\noutstanding rings made in the tree's!\nyouth can be dated centuries' ago.\nThese characteristic marks may be I\nfound In turn among the most re\ncent rings of an ancient log pre-- l\nserved in a sandbank and so nature's!\ncalendar may be followed back still I\nfarther.
2c4110497d46308d363c10a96ef77d19 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9136985984271 39.513775 -121.556359 for some eighteen months prior to July last,\nhad made this town the home of his adoption,\nwhere ho had, during his residence here,\nmade the practice of law his business,\nwith credit 'be succe. - s, and by which he\ncrea c ' . large circle of acquaintances, who\nwere pr u 1 to esteem him a friend. Many\nsad couutcuancesevin e l the general feeding\nof regret on hearing of his decease; and it\nis not at all certain that his place now\nvacated in our community Iy the myste-\nri ins workings of Divine Providence, will\nsoon be so well tilled again\nAs a man ho was mild, gentle, affable and\ngenerous tc almost a fault ; ourteous to til\nwith whom lie had any intercourse. As a\nlawyer, he was attentive, studious, and\nrigidly candid and In nest in all his practice\nand advice, and being of far more than ordi-\nnary talents and attainments, bid fair, by\nbis unremitting application, to stand upon\na very great eminence in his profession.\nCould the prayers and efforts of kindred\nami friends have availed against the ravages\nof disease or the icy embrace of the “stern\nmonster,” instead of n«w lying a marble\nform, cold in the like embrace of death,\nhe would still, by his presence, urbanity\nand kindness, be rendering glad the hearts\nof relatives and friends, and would still be\nascending with rapid flight, eminence\nof fame a .1 I usefulness, up which, with eager\nhaste, he had far ascended.\nHut death not unfrequently among the\nyoung, selects for his victim the fairest\nflower and the most rapidly maturing fruit.\nDeath regards not the fond atlcction of\nparents, the ties of brotherhood, nor the\ncongeniality of friends, and therefore again\nmust the tears of parents flow, the grief of\nbrothers ami sisters be elicited, aud hopes\nand pride of friends he cut off.\nOn Sunday next his mortal remains will\nreceive the last tribute of respect which\nearth can bestow, and find a final resting\nplace under the cold sod. We trust his\nspirit has passed to a nobler, resting place\non the 1 o-miii of his Hod Peace bo with bis\nsoul, and loved and cherished, .be bis memo-\nry. His disease was thought by bis friends\nto be consumption, or perhaps only a bron-\nchial disease ; but we are far from disbe-\nlieving that bis death was hastened by his\ntoo close application to the study amj prac-\ntice of his profession, and his eager anxiety\nto gain a deserved reputation and eminence\ntherein, second to none others engaged in\nthe same pursuit believing this to be the\ncase, on hearing of his death we were forci-\nbly reminded of that prince of similes, made\nuso of by Byron in speaking of Kirks White,\nwhich runs as follows :
091b2651a381a3806b7eb64fcb5c99f8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.1849314751396 40.063962 -80.720915 lie auction tbo fallowing described roal csti\nmentioned in aald Deed of Trait, bounded i\ndescribed aa followa: Beginning at a point\nstake on the line betweun Mr a. Jano Good I\nMra. SJ. L . HUdreth (aa anrveyed by Walter\nSmith, April IB, 1871,) threo hundred foct ear\nthe oaat lino or the Maiaball * Ohio com\nplank road, thence 8,86tf detract A to a sti\nnear the top of tbo river bill, also corner toll\nJano Good aforesaid, thcnco 8. 8!Jf degree*,\n43# poles to a atako on tbo aummit of the dlv\ning ridge betwoen the waters or Boggs' run i\naicmccncn o run. muucu a. go* ui-uruus rr. v\npoint or stake three hundred feet (3C0) east\ntho cut lino of the Marshall A i)hto com\nplank road aforesaid; thouco parallel to a\n by a atralght lino to tho place of\nginning. also tho passway. fifteen feet wido,\nnerved in a deed to James Homes dated Bept<\nher Oth, 1871. Tho piece of ground Ilea in M\nshall connty and Is part of the samo prope\ngranted to Mrs. Huaan L. lllldreth byli.Mcl\ncben by deed dated May 3d. IBM .\nTim or Malx.Cash If the purchaser\nelects, or aufllclent to pay $410 and Interest\n$1,100 from February 1, 1819, and the costs I\nexpenses of executing this trust, and tho t\nance tn throe equal annual installments with\nterest from day of salo The purchaser glr!\nsatlilactory security for tho defcrrod paymoi\nTho title is believed to bo good, but selling\nTrasteo 1 shall only give such title aa is Yes\nin mc by said Deed ol Trust.
3cb77d351eab2a2b6774c3a6aaaaf965 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.0095628099068 40.618676 -80.577293 For example: Suppose a carpenter\nnow 65 years old was employed by a\nbuilding concern for two weeks in\nJanuary, a few days in April, and for\na short time in September of 1937\nThenagainin1938hehadajobina\nmill for a short time in March, three\nweeks in August, and all of Decem­\nber. That is, he worked some part of\neach three-month period in six differ­\nent periods. His wages amounted to\n$50 or more in each of these calendar\nquarters. He would, therefore, have\nsix quarters of coverage. After filing\nclaim for benefits, he should be elig­\nible for monthly payments in 1940.\nIf a 65-year old worker has some,\nbut does not have enough wage credits\nto qualify for monthly benefits, he\nmay continue working in covered em­\nployment and build up these credits.\nIt must be remembered that wages\nearned during 11)37 and 1938 count\ntoward old-age insurance benefits,\nonly if they were earned before the\nworker's birthday. Since the law\nhas been changed, wages earned after\n1938 count toward benefits, regardless\nof the worker's age.\nHere is an illustration: Mr. Mann,\nwho is now 66 years old, clex-ks in a\nstore every Saturday and often helps\nin rush seasons. During two calendar\nquarters of 1937 he was paid $50—\nor more—in each quarter. He also re­\nceived $50 in wages in one quarter of\n1938, then he reached age 65. During\nthe spring of 1939, he was paid an­\nother $50 in wages. Now if he can\nmanage to earn wages of $50 or more\nin the store during the last quarter\nof 1939 and another $50 during the\nfirst quarter of 1940, he will have six\nquarters of coverage and will, there­\nfore, be eligible for monthly benefits\nin 1940 when he files his claim.\nBefore the Social Security Act was\namended, wages earned by a worker\nafter he had become 65 did not count
0fa64a7f1fdc2470013f33225d850197 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.4671232559615 41.020015 -92.411296 Often during an activecampaign does\n1 commanding olliccr call together\nthose in command of the different divi­\nsions of his army, that they may hold\nwhat is termed a council of war, that\nthey may by this meeting, have oppor­\ntunity for a free exchange of knowl­\nedge possessed by each, determine 011\nsome iiuitcdand uniform plan of action\nthat shall lead the army 011 to victory\nand that shall bring sure defeat to\ntheir enemies. So we find in matters\npertaining to peaceful avocations, we\nas a people, living under a Republican\nform of government, select from our\nmidst those that shall ir.eet together\nin our State ami National capitals,\nthat our common experiences in the\nvarious walks of life may be brought\nas it were together, and that from\nthose experiences laws may be enact­\ned that shall be heneticial to us as a\npeoele. This idea has become so\nprevalent that all classes of men,\nrepresenting all branches of business\nand kinds of trade, from the farmer\nthat sows flic seed the fertile soil\nto the engineer that holds the lever\nthat controls the power that drives\nthe commerce of the world, have\nformed themselves into association*\nand hold conventions that they too\nmay make use of these valuable means\nto assist and help them on in life*\nwork. And so it is, that we. who arc\nengaged in a spiritual warfare that\nfar exceeds, in magnitude and import­\nance, any earthly contest, and who are\n(lie sowers of seed thai shall bring\nforth an eternal harvest, and that\nhold tlie lever to a power that uot\noulv controls (lie commerce of the\nworld, but a power that moves and\ngoverns the word and all of the great\nsystem of worlds that surround us,\nhave thought best to associate to­\ngether under the title of the "Iowa\nSabbath School Association," that wc\nmight better promote intercourse and\ndisseminate religious information\namong our Sabbath School workers,\nand to co-operate together in advanc­\ning the cause of Christ,," and thus it\ndear friends, that wc are brought
5ff2a6b91eb57c88fa69ffb8260b03f8 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1913.5246575025367 43.994599 -72.127742 Every year there takes place in the\nPyrenean hlgblunds a remarkable fete.\nIt is held at the boundary stone of San\nMartin, which separates the French\nvalley Bareton from the Spanish valley\nof RoncaL Every year the representa\nUvea of the French peasants assemble\nthere in order to pay the Spaniards a\ntribute, which consists of three calves\nof the same age and the same color.\nand the delivery of the calves is ac-\ncompanied by ceremonies which suffi\nciently indicate that the old inhabit\nants of the fioncal valley were once\nvictorious over their neighbors.\nAt 9 o'clock in the morning the may-\nors of the various villages in the Bare-to- n\nvalley, bravely adorned with their\nblue, white and red scarfs of office,\nmarch up to the boundary stone. In\nfront of the column walks a lad, with a\npike, from the point of which flutters a\nlittle white pennon as a gage of peace.\nThe three calves are dragged in the\nrear of procession at the end of\nlong ropes. Calves and scarfs take up\ntheir position by the stone and await\nthe arrival of the Spaniards.\nThey are soon visible in the distance.\nIn front walks a man clad in sheep-\nskins, who waves a red pennon at the\nend ot a pike as a sign of war. Behind\nhim walks the alcalde of Isaba, the\nprincipal village in the valley of Ron\ncaL and following him come the a\ncaldes of the other villages, their staffs\nof office in their hands. The bulk of\nthe procession consists of shepherds.\nstern looking fellows armed with old\nsabers and matchlocks.\nThe alcalde of Isaba is all glorious to\nbehold in a long black garment fas-\ntened by gold buttons, a tall white ruff,\ntight fitting knee breeches, red silk\nstockings and buckled shoes. A som-\nbrero covers his head, and in his hands\nbe holds the staff adorned with silver\nknobs, the emblem in Spain of magis-\nterial dignity.
1f2861970bed83306a4525456ce3e2f8 LAS VEGAS MORNING GAZETTE ChronAm 1881.1821917491122 35.593933 -105.223897 Gents' furnishing aud fancy goods,\nboots and shoes, and an especially\ntine class ot shoes for ladies wear,\nkeeping 110 groceries, in fact nothing\nloreign to a legitimate lina of tnese\ngoods, intending to have the largest\nand most complete stock ever shown\nin Las Vegas. Owing to this chamre\nwe will sell our entire stock of gro-\nceries, queensware, house fiirn'shing\ngoods, etc., at cost with freight add-\ned, and will also sell our stock of dry\ngood? at greatly reduced prices until\nwe remove to our new stoie. Below\nwe quote prices which will be found\ntar below regular charges, and the\nsfoodb are all of the best bnuds:\nBest Rio CofT.ie, 6 Ihs tor $1.00 .\nXew York C ugar, 8 Ihs for $1.\nBest rice, 10 lbs tor $1.\n llominv, ló lbs f'or$l.\nMichigan dried apples, 12 lbs for $1.\nMichigan Aid n apples, bulk, G lbs $1.\nM'gan Alden 5lb packages, 75c.\nM'gau Alden 2ih packages, 3óc.\nM'gan dried peaches, 12 Ihs, $1.\nChina teas, 50 and 75c per lb.\nThree lb cau poaches 25c.\nThree lb can tomatoes. 20e.\nAll kinds 2 lb canned goods, 20c.\nCalifornia fruits, 3 cans, $1.\nNew York apples, 5 cans, 50c.\nNew York apple butter, 3 lbs, 30o.\nNew York peach butter, 3 lbs, 30c.\nMackerel, 5ib cans, 65c.\nMackerel, 21 b cans, 40c.\nCorned beef, 21b cans. 30c.\nFruits and Flowers tobacco, 75e per lb.\nFlowers Paradise tobacco. 75c per lb.\nSeal of N. C .,65c per lb.\nGilt Edge, Corn Juice, Silver Seal\n'hewing tobacco. 65c.\nDark Navy, 50c per lb.
52f9b2d2207fd8882e12f244c76fafe4 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.815068461441 43.798358 -73.087921 among the erring and perishing millions\nof the human family.\nBesides, if this Institution exhibit, in\nall its provisions" and in all its depart-\nments, a worthy example, it will rouse our\nbrethren elsewhere to worthy efforts in\nsustaining other Institutions, whether lit-\nerary or theological, which they have\nestablished in various parts of our coun-\ntry; and thus it will exert, indirectly, as\nwell cs directly, a salutary and lasting\ninfluence upon thousands of our churches.\nConsiderations like these encourage\nthe Faculty, and they will, we hope, en-\ncourage the Trustees, to unwearied per-\nseverance in the arduous and important\nwork which our Lord has assigned us.\nBut we forbear to suggest some measures\nwhich we should have thought it our\nduty to suggest, had these been ordinary.\n embarrassments which, have been\nfelt so extensively by men engaged in busi-\nness, we are aware, have, for the present,\nput it out of the power of many to do for\nthe Institution what their liberal spirits\nwere devising. At length, however, the\nseverest storm passes away. A period of\ngeneral prosperity will return, when more\ncan be done, at various points, than it would\nbe judicious now to attempt.\nIn the meantime, we trust that the im-\nportance of each of the four departments\nof instruction will be kept constantly in\nview; and that we on whom u devolves\nto instruct, shall each be found faithful in\nthe performance of our duties, so that the\nprofiting of the students in piety, and\nknowledge, and holy skill, may appear\nto all.
b87b6ad9354a6b96e1a65b246a6a9261 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.7136985984273 39.369864 -121.105448 Sand Reservoirs are banked ex-\ncavations ot various sizes, sometimes\nmany acres in extent, usually built at\ntho heads of ravines by damming\nthem across, and are employed to set-\ntle tho muddy water of mining ditch-\nos. Tho temporary rest the water\nobtains in them causes tho dirt it\nholds in solution to precipitate to the\nbottom, the clean fluid on the surface\nrunning off into lower receptacles,\nwhere it is drawn as needed. This\nprevents a great body of sand from\nfilling up the numerous smaller ditch-\nes which feed the claims with water\nand enables tho miner to obtain a uni-\nform head of the same useful element\nby keeping the guage-boxes always\nclear. When sufficient sand has ac«\ncumulated to nearly fill the reservoir,\nit is removed by letting in numerous\nstreams of water through boxes which\npierce inner sides of tho excava-\ntions like loop-holes, and connect with\nthe ditch, being shut with gates when\nnot in use. These streams, rushing\nfrom every direction to a common\ncenter and finding exit through a\nlargo sluice-way at the bottom of the\ndam, of course easily cut down tho\nsand, which flows rapidly off, like\nmelting snow, in a harmless direction,\nfollowing the course of some ravine.\nThe softer sediment, which settles\nlightly on the surface of tho sand, is\na slippery, yellow mud that the\nminers elegantly term “slumgullion.”\nWhen the water has been drawn from\nit, and while it is yet moist, this sub-\nstance presents a curious appearance,\nS5 if it were a large pond of cake-\nbatter just ready for baking, yet its\nglazed surface reflecting the surroun-\nding scenery as faithfully as water\ncould do it.
051e5227ebe8e5cde02e0ff63abde82c PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1887.2315068176054 39.756121 -99.323985 We have no personal acquaintance\nwith Mr. Lamb, editor of the Indepen-\ndent, but take it for granted that he is\na fair minded journalist who would\nnot intentionally mislead or deceive his\nreaders. However, when he says the\npeople of this county are called upon\n"to build a railroad and then give it\naway," we caanot but think he is jok-\ning or very careless ia his statements.\nA.3 we Lave fully explained ia another\nplace the people are not asked to oivk\nanything. Th bonds are in no proper\nsene a gift. In the long run the people\nget back iu tanes alone more than the\nbands amount to. Under the state law,\nthe Company ma3t issue to the town-\nships csrtiticates of stock equal in\namount to the bonds voted, dollar for\ndollar. All this being so, it is readily\nseen that the Independent editor is \npractical jjker, or very loose ia his\nstatements. Kailroad managers have\nsometimes done wrong. Some of them\nmay be "roasting in Hades," bat railr-\noad.- ! , when properly managed, are a\ngreat blessing, to the people. Thero is\nreason in all things, and this bliud , un -\nreasoning, rabid opposition to rail-\nroads is not wise. In time we believe\nthat the general government will own\nand operate the railways of this country\nand the writer sees no serious objection\nto that plan, but the country is not\nready yet to adopt that system, and\nwill not be for many years. We must\ntake things as we find them, and secure\nour railroads in the manner that other\ncommunities have secured theirs. Let\nus have no sophistry nor false dealing\niu this matter, but candid, open, and\ntrunk investigation of the subject in all\nits details.
3ea121b0b0e4f6e4328449d3eae1d32b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.17397257103 40.063962 -80.720915 proper, and is called into action by th«\nCongress, or temporarily when the ac- an\ntion of Coneres*cannot be invited, and Ui\nin case of justifying or excusing peril, be\nby the President in time» of iusurrec- co\ntion or invasion, of civil or foreign* war, an\nwithin the districts or localities where pe\nordinary law no longer adequately in- of\nsores public safety.'' uo\nIt will be observed that of the three tb\nkinds of military jurisdiction which can th\nbe exercised or created under onr Con- w!\nstitution, there is but one that can pre- wt\nvail in time of peace, and that is the; a\ncode of laws enacted by Congress for irn\nthe government oi the national forces. th\nThat the body of the military law has tic\nno application to the citizen, or even to m<\nthe citizen soldier enrolled in mili- let\n? tia in time of peace; but this bill is not ]\na part of that sort ot military law. fori th\nI that applies only to the soldier and not oo\nthe citizen, while contra wise the mili- th\ntary law provided by this bill applies wl\nonly to the citizen and not to the sol- as\ndier. I need not say to the represent*- on\ntives of the American people that their w<\nConstitution forbids the exercise of ju- it\ndicial power in any way bnt one, and w<\nthat is by the ordained and established t*\nCourts. "It i»-equally well known that te<\nin all criminal cases, a trial by jury is of\nmade indispensable by the express ul\nwords of that instrument. I will not oc\nenlarge on the inestimable value of the er\nright thus secured to ev»ry freeman, or
125c938a2b07d3f2579f83816b9793d3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1902.1219177765095 42.217817 -85.891125 She passed the chicken sallad plates\nto the help, and the help gave 'em to\nthe folks, and we all tasted It, but It\ndidn't relish. Still we tried to eat it fur\nher sake. Most of us done it, too, and\nthe coffee wus good, and we cheered\nup some. Mrs. Wiggins didn't eat no\nsallad herself, so she didn't know how\nIt tasted. After supper we all went in\nto the parlor and sot around, and Si\nBarker wus tryln to git up danein, and\nI did hope things would end happy,\nwhen all of a sudden folks began to\nlook pale and say they wus p'isoned.\nSo they seemed to be. One arter the\nother wus took sick, and they all said\nthe same thing it wus the sallad. I\nfelt very poorly myself, and so did \nObedlah. The minister had gone home\nsick, and there wus a regular panic.\nThere wus one doctor there, and ho\nsent fur another, and old Miss Peebles\nsaid it wus like old cholera times. It\nwus awful, anyway, but Jest as we\nwus at the wust, we ladles lyln about\nin the up stairs rooms expectln to die\nand feellu sure It wus arsenic, Mrs.\nWiggins appeared amongst us.\n"Friends nnd feller sinners," she said,\n"we air all ou the p'Int of death, and\nhere, before you all, I make confes-\nsion. I am a thief and a robber, and I\nshall never be pardoned. It wus mo\nthat robbed my husband, and, more\nthan that, I stole the chickens to make\nthe sallad one of 'em from each of my\ngood friends and neighbors. Jedgments\nhas fallen!"
2f6e7b1d6cd5e524b3a1b617b969ba8f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.960382482038 37.561813 -75.84108 Grabill, put the point of my tongue to\nthe contents, and thought I discovered\ntoo much bitterness for Bichloride of\nMercury, and to more fully satisfy\nmyself I applied my tongue again, a\nlittle carelessly, and got more than I\nintended, and was then fully satisfied\nit was Str ychnia, for I had often pu\nmy tongue to solutions of it. So in-\ntense Is Its bitterness that one part of\nit is said to communicate a sensible\ntaste to 600,000 parts of water. I did\nnot swallow a drop of it, hut so soon\nw I discovered it was Strychnia, I\ncommenced spitting so as to cleanse\nmy mouth of it as much as possible,\nfor I knew the instantaneous fatal ef-\nfect of it, sometimes by very minute\ndoses. It was not half minute af-\nter I tasted it till I felt the effect all\nthrough my system, (it acts a great-de- al\nmore powerfully on some persons\nthan others) a. painful numbness and\ndizziness ; thought I was going to\nhave a spasm ; got scared very badly ;\ntold my wife I was poisoned ; took an\nemetic of sulphate of zinc. She told\nsome one to go for Drs. Noble and.\nShepherd, which they did. I kept up\nvomiting a short time; found the shocks\nwere getting lighter; intended to take\ncamphor and itihale Chloroform as an-\ntidotes, but found it would be unnec\nessary, and by the time that Drs.\nShepherd and Noble got here (thanks\nto their, promptness) I was about over\nthe effoots of it,, consequently took\nnothing more.
79309e57df2a90dbb834fb1c42a5ac7c THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.0972602422628 39.369864 -121.105448 Scotland is tannted with first starving her bard, and\nafterwards erecting' splendid uiuuuiueuts in honor of\nhis memory. It is true he cited neglected by the very\nmen who knew hi* wants and had it in their power to\nalleviate them He had dedicated his poems "to the\nNoblemen and Gentlemen of the Caledonia Hunt;” but\nbeyond subscribing lor a copy each, at the request of\nthe Earl of Glencairn, I should like to know what that\ntitled band ever did fur Burns while living, except cru-\nelly degradiug him by a disreputable appointment,\nwith a salary not sufficient to bind decently body and\nsoul together. His income, when he fell sick, was re-\nduced to £3o a year. Lord Hawkesbury declined a\npersonal introduction to the poet, when quartered at\nDumfries: and yet, strange to say, he officiated as one\nof the chief mourners at his funeral. It is difficult to\nreconcile such inconsistency of character. We see a\nvast amount of very small feeling exemplified in our\nown day, even in our very midst. Gold, mid not intel-\nlect is taken as the standard of the man. Hunts was\nshamefully neglected while living, it is true: but it\nd(>eß not follow that neglect of genius is peculiar to\nScotland. No country stands entirely free from the\nimputation. Homer strolled as a balladsingi r, reciting\nnis immortal verses, and seven cities claimed him when\ndead. Socrates was poisoned by the Athenians. Cer-\nvantes, the great genius of Spain, bad not bread to eat\n one period: and Camoens. the solitary pride of Por-\ntugal, perished from want of the necessaries of life.—\nA'oudel died in wretchedness and penury; Tasso and\nAriosto were miserably poor. Whenllucine was asked\nby ismis XIV what there was new in the literary\nworld, he told the French monarch that lie had seen a\nmelancholy spectacle in the house of Corneille, the\npoet, whom ne found in a dying state, without bread to\neat. Can our sister country, England, boast of what\nshe has done for some of her poets? Did not Spencer\nlanguish in miserable poverty? Did not Samuel ISutler,\nthe author of Iladlin'as, owe the decency of interment\nto tile charity of a friend ? Did not Drydeu die neglec-\nted and in want, and,like Burns, was honored with a\npublic funeral ? Was not Savage buried at the expense\nof his benevolent jailor? Were not Collins and Gold-\nsmith wretchedly poor? As for Otway and Chatterton,\nthey were starved to death. I could dwell on this mel-\nancholy subject for lieu rs. All that I can say in regard\nto Barns is this; that the present generation is not ac-\ncountable for the neglect and blunders of the last.—\nThe adoption of any other principle would bo carrying\nout to the letter the old Mosaic law, by "visitine the\niniquities of the fathers upon their children.” We do\nwell if we can give a good account ofour own omissions\nand commissions, without being saddled with tiro\ntransgressions of our ancestors.
01b6cbb98f737c00e9a216adb1706dcc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.1164383244545 39.745947 -75.546589 WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 . —There will he nn\neffort on the part of the senate during the\npresent week to clear np the calendar as far\nas possible prior to taking up the tariff bill,\nwhich, when it is reported to the senate, is\nexpecled to exclude the consideration of\nmost other subjects. The speechmaking\nduring the week is to he devoted to u vari­\nety of topics, including the Stewart bond\nreBolution, tlie Turpie Hawaiian resolution\nand probably the resolution of Senator Hale\ninstructing the committee on finance to\ngrant hearings on the tariff bill.\nThe speeches on the Stewart resolution\nwill ho made during the morning hour and\nthe Hawaiian speeches later in the day,\nSenators Gray and Daniel have given notice\nof speeches on tho Hawaiian resolution for\ntoday, and Senator White of California Is\namong others who probably will address\nthe senate later in week on this topic.\nThe bill to compel railroad companies\noperating roads in tbe territories over\nrights of way granted by tho government\nto establish stations at all town sites es­\ntablished by the interior department is the\nunfinished business on the calendar, and\nwhen it is disposed of the bill to provide\nfor additional accommodations for the gov­\nernment printing office will he taken up\nand acted on as soon as practicable. There\nwill also be a general effort on the part of\nsenators to have private hills or hills of\nminor general importance taken from tire\ncalendar and passed.\nIt is believed that tlie committee on the\njudiciary will dispose of the Peckhnib nom­\nination today, and if so there will in all\nprobability bo at least one day during tho\nweek devoted to an executive session for\nthe purpose of passing upon this nomina­\ntion.
125962e8daaf4bd3d40c06b3148009ca THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.5778688208359 29.4246 -98.49514 among the rocks. The largest one was\nfour feet long, and had 17 rattles. While\nthe men were busy cutting off the\nrattles of the snakes they had slain,\nMiller was overcome by the peculiarly\noffensive odor that characterizes rattle-\nsnakes, and Davis was obliged to help\nhim away from the spot. It was several\nminutes before he revived from the\neffect of the poisoned air. The dog was\nnowhere to be seen. Davis went back\nInto t tie woods to look for him. In pass-\ning the spot where the snakes had been\nkilled, lie saw a number of llvo ones,\nwhich had come out of their holes among\nthe rocks, gliding around their dead\ncompanions, springing their rattles, and\nevery motion denoting fury. Davis beat\na retreat, and went off another direc-\ntion, calling hla dog. Suddenly ho came\nupon tho dog, with Its body Imbedded\nIn a mire hole In a swampy spot. Its\nhead alone was above the surface. Dogs\nbitten by rattlesnakes Instinctively seek\nsuch nlaces and burr themselves In the\nmud. Old snake hunters say that If a.\naog is ame to una swamp muu anu\noovers niinscii wun it. it win invanauiy\ndraw out the poison. Davis left his dog\nIn the swamp, and drovo on to this rlty\nwith Miller. J.ast evening the dog ar-\nrived home, apparently nono the worse\nfor his encounter with the venomous\nreptiles, although It must have beea bit\nten by them many times. The spot\nwhere the snakes were killed Is nfanions\nrattlesnake den. A hunter, known as\n"Twollne."
07183de864d1beb1c5dc378ca85ba004 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4972602422629 39.261561 -121.016059 TV A 1.1. BRANCHES OF1 BOTH THE\n1 arts and sciences, as well ns the Medical Proles\ncion, tpnxalitxi has ever been recognised by men of\njudicious reflection, as both progressive and instruc-\ntive for it is a perfectly well demonstrated lact that\nany individual however astute lie Uniy be, attains\nloan infinitely greater degree of pert jet inn by a\nthorough and persevering continuity to one brnneh\notart, science, medicine, or mechanic*, than it lie\nattempted to accomplish half a dozen —ns in tlie lat\nter Case he would be likely, nine times out ot ten. to\nobtain at most but a very superficial knowledge ul\neither. !n the practice of medicine or surgery, it un-\nravels, simplifies and makes elear to 1 lie srduoiis\nstudent, the mysterious complication* (complicated\nnn account of fhc numerous causes which produce\nthem) which disease* of any kind take upon the hu-\nman system; operating, as thev do frequently, both\non the mental and physical o-gau*. H seeks to re\ncuperuio and restore the (unctions to theit natural\nand proper status, as well as to neutralize nil antag-\nonistic influences to which tb<- system is continually\nsubject. Certain it is. that while the busy allairs ot\nlib- seem to exhaust all our time and attention, the\nincipience and progress ol disease si metiines ol dan-\n and fatal character, approach us almost un-\nnoticed. flow In Its progies* but .tisidious in its\ncourse, a disease, or even the simple disturbance ot a\nsingle function. Iiequeully becomes an affair ot mi\nminent danger when least expected. It' this the at-\ntention of the physician of Spaialiliet is always ear-\nhe-t given. With pr |ivr perceptive power*. added\nto ample experience lie is necessarily able to arrive\nwith unerring certainty to a correct conclusion as to\nthe cuaraetjr of tlie ailment und tlie proper appli-\nances lbr its cure. This 1 have uevei found to fail.\nA remedy properly administered, and at the proper\ntime is sur- to accomplish the object ol its mission,\nprovided it be directed by Die hands ol a skilllul\npin sician, who knows liis business. I need not re-\niterate the old adage, that •■Health is tlie endorse-\nment of Idvinitv.” vent to us for our own benefit,\nand that we should not lor a moment disregard the\nsecret admonitions that tell us to beware lest we tail\nimperceptibly into a lay bvrinthfrom which it will he\nmuch more difficult to escape than if we had given\nproper attention to ourselves befoie venturing so lar.\nConsult your physician before it is too late; c.mfide\nin him, and you'will save yourself an iniinily of sui-\nng-
02dc9006b5b6466436c0ac8f4a6bee76 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.009589009386 40.063962 -80.720915 Fine Dwelling..Mr. Hall, of Ott,\nHall & Co., ia about completing his new\nhouse at the north end of North Front\nstreet. Mr. Hall's grounds extend from\nthe east side of North Front street to the\nriver and comprise nearly or <juiteone\nacre. The site is a most beautiful one.\nThe river view extends from the oily\nwharf far up above Martin's ferry, com*\nmanding too, all that lovelv landscape\nlying back of that town. The grounds\neast of the house have an easy grade to\nthe rivor bank and have been planted\nwith a few choice fruit trees; also rows of\ngrape vines which are designed to form\nan arbor. Grass has been sown and the\nground raked over till it is as smooth as a\ntloor. The grounds in front of the houso\nare faultlessly level and are ready for\nmanipulation by the skilled hand of our\nfriend Bailey, or some other man. The\nhouse inclusive of the Mansard has three\nstories exclusive of the basement, and\nthere are thirteen rooms in it. Its out¬\nside proportions and bay windows give it\nthe appearance of being a roomy house\nand yet it is so in point of numbers.\nWe do not profess to be an architect\nand yet we must say that astyle of arch\nitecture prevails to some extent, which to\nour uneducated eye sacriliccs the living\narrangement of a house to outside show,\nin Mr. Hall's house the parlor and sitting\nroom and dining room are sacrificed to a\nwide hall and stairway. The same may\nbe said ol the second story, where most of\nthe rooms are small and partake too much\nof state room style, all of which is well\nenough in a hotel where it is desired to\naccommodate the greatest number of\npeople in the smallest space, and where\nthe objcct is proflt, not the comforts of a\nhome. The Mansard affords rooms of\nample size,and it seems a pity that some¬\nthing of their proportions could not have\nbeen more evenly distributed throughout\nthe house. Still the builder of a house\nis supposed to know what ho wants, and\nwhat suits him ought to satisfy others.\nPersonal Points..The immortal J. N .\nwas in the city yesterday, and in the af¬\nternoon took his* way westward with the\nstar of empire.
139fecaa0e9bebe56e9da2d68195734b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.28551909406 37.451159 -86.90916 down through the lietl and the holes\nleft open for the heat to escape; anil,\nwhen down to the nroiier temperature.\nagain filled up as before. Xo watering\nwill be neces:iry until the plants iiegin\nto eomo up, when 'they should lie\nwatered freely, aud covering kept oil as\nmuch as Kssible in order to harden or\ntouchen the plants. Cover on cold days\nor frosty nights, as they are very tender.\nUse can? m pulling me plants irom the\nbed, as the game potatoes will send up\na second crop of plants, nearly as many\nas.ine iirsi; ana even a tnini crop win\ncome on in time for a late planting. A\nbushel or potatoes ol Jhe proiicr size\nwill produce from six to ten thousand\nplauts, owing to the variety and treat-\nment of the beds. The Bermuda and\nHtnmsburg will produce the most plants\nto tue Dushei or any .variety I raise. J\nalways plant iu ridges, first plowing my\n about three inches deep. (I\nused to plow very deep, but have tou ml\nthat very shallow plowing is be- -t for\nsweet potatoes.) I then use the harrow\nand roller until the soil is thoroughly\npulverized, theu throw two furrows\ntogether with an ordinary plow, aud\nmy ground Is ready for setting out the\nplauts. We generally set our plants in\ntho evening, say irom three o'cloeK till\nlark. Our ridges are about three feet\napart, and wo set our plants sixteen\ninches apart in tue ridges, m (try, not\nweather set the plants deep aud pour on\neach plant about half a pint of water,\nthen draw around it dirt enough to keep\nthe wet son irom uaKiug and getting\nhard. Never water but one time and\nnever wait for ruin. If tliesedireotlons\nare followed, plants will seldom die.\nWhen the grass and weeds begin to\ngrow on the ridges, we go through them\nwith a common tw o-nor s- o
1a1d54d05abcaa4de1e91c2e53a19de2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.0753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 dent wa* kept very busy during the\nforenoon receiving callers. Minuter\nHatch was early on hand and was fol¬\nlowed by cx-Mlnlster Thuwton, Senator\nMorgan, of Alabama, who paid an ex¬\ntended visit to the hilandj durtng the\nlast summer, and Mrs. Crosby 8. Noyes,\nof Washington. In an Interview with\nan Aesodated Presj reporter, President\nDole said: "I prefer not to discuss the\nquestion of annexation, as tha-i would\nbe eminently Inappropriate at this time,\nduring <tho pendency of the questk»n In\nthe senate. I shall call on the Presiden t\ndurinsr my stay here and of course, shall\ngive him such Information as he may\ndesire respecting pending question* be¬\ntween the two countries. I expect to\nstay in Washington until the end of next\nweek when our trip homeward will be¬\ngin. We shall go from here direct to\nSan Francisco, talcing rhe pteamer there\nfor Honolulu. Certainly I should like to\nsee the treaty ratified by the\nsenate before we leave, tut we will not\nwait If such Is not the case."\nPresident and Mrs. Dole have received\nmany invitations to social functions\nduring their stay here. This morning\nMrs. Dole went to call on a number of\nfriends in company with Mrs. Hatch,\nthe wife of the Hawaiian minister here.\nThis afternoon Major Hlestand, of the\narmy will accompany Mrs. Dole In a\nsoda! call on Mrs. McKlnley.\nThe democratic simplicity of President\nDole's entry Into Washington has con¬\ntinued In -hla quiet life at his hotel and In\nthe simple but hearty good will In which\nInvitations of various sorts have been\ntendered him, and have been accepted.\nAfter spending all day in his room at¬\ntending to correspondence, he went out\nfor the first time to visit the theatre at\nright. The entire party occupied boxes\nat the Lafayette Square to witness\nHoyt's "Staranger In New York."
0523956aa96c4499bd53b270a6497f56 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.4002731924206 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho idol oi tlio national Democracy\nwas shattered against the iron will of\nIlenry Watterson in tho Bourbon state.\nIt was Grovcr Cleveland on one hand\nand Ilonry Wattorson on tho oilier,\nand alternately the influence ot both\nswayed the convention, but in the\nend the counsel of the" groat Ken¬\ntucky editor prevailed against the ad¬\nmiration of all Kentucky Democrats for\na distinguished ox-l'residont.\nWhile in Kentucky the great wnve of\nCleveland sentiment that has swept like\na resistless billow over so many states\nfinds its first barrier, this result"iii'tist be\nalmost enl'-ely attributed to tho influ¬\nence of llcnry Wntterson, for even he\nwill scarcely deny that but for tho great\nproblem of expediency Grovor Clove-\nland is tho choice of threo-fourths of\ntho Democratic^ voters of tho Bourbon\nstate. Watterson's constant opposition\nto the renoniination of Cleveland has\nbeen on the grounds that the serious di¬\n of the Democratic'party in the\nstate oi Now York mnk s tho election ot\neither Cleveland or Hill impossiblp.and\nthat the Democracy must seek its presi¬\ndential candidate outside the empire\nstate if it would hope for victory.\nUntil tho opening of the convention\nit seemed that tlio enthusiastic Clovo¬\nland men would win the day ia their\ntight for unqualified instructions for\nthe ox-l'resident. When tho filial test\ncame, however, on the selection of a\ntemporary chairman, tho elTect ot Mr.\nWatterson's course of tho past week\nbecame apparent, for by a vote of 427\nto 200 the candidate who 6tood as the\nrepresentative -of. the Cleveland forces\nwas defeated by tho anti-Cleveland or\nrather anti-instruction candidate.\nTho anti-Cleveland men gave a wild,\ndeafening cheer of delight whon the re¬\nsult was announced. In response to\nloud cries for speeches, Uronston and\nIlenry Wattorson addressed tho con¬\nvention.
7c2116655d0f79393d5811c3442fd8b7 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.5767122970574 39.369864 -121.105448 S9O, and in ten years $9lO. The latter\namount would go far towards securing the\nold age of an economical man against want;\nor if expended on life insurance policies, or\nInvested in land, would provide for his fam-\nily in the event of his sudden decease with-\nout other means. It is quite probable that\nmost Californiansaverage more than twenty-\nfive cents a day for tobacco, particularly the\nSmokers of the weed. Then too, the ma-\njority of those who smoke “ drink a little\nnow and then,” and the cost of what they\nimbibe, or purchase for others to imbibe in\nthe way of “treats,” must be fully equal, at\nleast, to their tobacco expenses ; thus doub-\nling the above amount to $1,820 in ten years.\nSurely this is worth saving; not for the\nmoan reason that we would thus have so\nmuch more money, but that it may be ex-\npended more usefully, that we may have\nmore means at disposal for aid offriends\nor needy strangers, for the adornment of our\nhomes, for the purchase of rational enjoy-\nments, or for the satisfaction of our higher\nwants. Many an aspiring soul is quenched\nfor the lack of that very coin which goes to\nsupply our daily quantum of “the weed.”—\nMany an ambitious resolve has been puffed\naway in wreaths of laz.ily watched smoke.\nWe have heard a silver piece—our own, per-\nhaps—ringing on the counter of the tobac-\nconist or of the liquor dealer, and thought\n—there tolled the knell of a hope, a prom\nise, a reputation. It is these constant drop-\npings that wear away our capacity for use-\nfulness. Just think—a fortnights tobacco\nor liquor would buy us Plato, or Shakes-\npeare, or Compte ; would put into our\nbands Hie history of our country ; would\nmake us the owners of a compendious cy-\nclopedia; and through either one of these\nmediums furnish us with mental pabulum\nfor a life-time.
17707ce2d4989c7cc80de0ce4f8f3af9 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8538251049888 39.513775 -121.556359 speak of tlie signs of particular diseases, it will be\npr per to take a general \\ iew of symptoms. When n\nperson is troubled or nlilieted with disease, which\ncauses a »enkiies# of the back and limbs, pain in Ihe\nhead dimness ol sight, 10-s ef muscular |uiwfr, pal-\npitation of the heart, irritability, nervousness, dys-\npepsia, derangement of the digestive functions, gen\nera! debility, symptom* of consumption, and many\nOlliers which are better explained than put on paper,\nand require Medical or surgical attendance, it would\nhe wed forthem toiuqnire it liters* i» a physician who\nis competent to attend them, and who undertsiinds\nthe application of medicine, and whose scientific m\ntainmeiits in his profession, and whose age and expe-\nrience enti le him to yours confidence. Considering\nthese things, Dr. Ciiss. 11. Inzer lias concluded to in-\nform you that are afflicted, advertising his place \nbusiness, stating Hull be has been a successful prac-\ntitioner for over twenty five years, and Ims\nATTKNPRIt AND CURED HUNDREDS,\nwhen they have bet n considered by other physicians\nand have been pronounced by them past recovery.—\nTherefore you may rely upon him ns one in whom\nsecresy and the utmost confidence can he placed.\nDr r. 11 . T . would invite all that are nlilieted to call\non him, and if lie does not administer for Ih-tn,l here\nwill be no charge, made. Let no false delicacy pre-\nvent you. but apply immediately, and save yonself\nfrom the dreadful cop sequence* which must follow\nthose w ho neglect to rev*ive attendance.\nDr C. II Tozer's office is on Oth street, near Hie\nllelvidere Hotel, between J and K streets. His rooms\nare so arranged that Hie Doctor can be consulted\nw ithoul fear of molestation.
2316e420a08487b458e628ddf8f4b2b6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.9221311159179 39.745947 -75.546589 the last Democratic Senator elected east consideration. The ablest and\nin this State and at present has the Jbor.t _ competent man should be ,-e -\nhonor of having (he Congressman- ccc*1 a'Jd lot if, not matter in which\nelect from this State, Kfent county cou,1y he resides,\nhad been fairly well and Is fairly\nwell looked after. For our part, we\ncannot consider Col. duPont, who at\npresent still continues to occupy a\nsenatorial scat from Delaware, as the\nrepresentative of any country or of\nany part of the tsato, certainly not\nof the Democratic party, the only\nthing he represents in the Senate is\nthe largest amount of personal\nwealth which any man In the stitj\nhas been able to accumulate.\nWe fall to ace, Delaware being un­\nrepresented in the States Sen­\nate at present except ns above stat­\ned. that there is any claim by any\npart oi the state now that any special\nconsideration should be given to what\npart of the state a United States\nSenator comes from. The State or\nDelaware will have a representative\nof her people in the Senate after the\n4th of March, but only one. He wifl\nbe tlie Democrat to be elected by the\nincoming legislature, which consid­\neration undoubtedly shows that the\nthird contention of our contemporary\nis the onP which needs discussion.\nThis third statement of the State\nNews is that the whole country and\nthe State of Delaware needs at this\ntime its "brainiest, best equipped,\nmost far-sighted, aggressive and pro­\ngressive public man” for the Sen­\nate.
5ade389da508e8078f2cb5eff67fa845 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.3246575025369 39.261561 -121.016059 the &tli day ut April. A. n. 18 52 , a final judgment\namt ilrcrifwas'ii nili riil in the Justice's Conrt of K.\nW. Smith, an :actioi? Justice of the 1oae* in and lor\nthe Township at Nevada. County of Nevada, and\nState of (Tiliforsia. sgain-d GF.OKGF. VANMARTKR.\nand in favor of ilENR\\ ALi. amt JOHN NEW MAN\nheretofore doing business under the firm and name\nof Wall A: Newman, for the sum of $175 50 debt.\n317 60 counsel fees. and $17 05 rests, making io nil'\n$210 05 with interest on the principal at the rate ot\ntwo per cent per month, from the rendition of judg-\nment until paid, together w ith a 11 costs of sale. And\nwhereas, on the said tilth day of April, a. n . 1862 . it\nwas ordered and decreed by the .- aid Court, that tin\nmortgage set forth in plaintiffs complaint before-\nclosed, and the property therein described. to wit\nAll and singular that certain tract or parcel of bind,\nor p»*sessory claim- to public land, situated in Nevada\nTownship, County of Nevada, State of California,\nnear Blue Tent, and about five miles northerly from\nthe-Crtr of Nevada, containing alsmt *5 urres, raid\nland adjoining the land lately hy J. Cooper,\nnow deceased, running thence cast and west along\nthe north lineot sard land being 1100 yards in length,\nrunning 12Syards east of said Coopers north east\ncorner to an oak tree, thence north 350 yards to an\noak stake, and running 181 yards west of Cooper's\nnorth-west corner to a sugar-pine stake, thence hob\nyards to a pitch-pine stake, thence direct to be\nnorth-east corner of said land ; also, the house and\ntot and garden lot enclosed, heretofore occupied by\nthe parties defendants herein, situated on Gopher\nPoint, near Blue Tent aforesaid, together with alt\nami singular the tenements, hereditaments, tranchi-\nses, rights, privileges, and appurtenances thereto be-\nlonging or In anywise appertaining, be levied upon\nand sold to satisfy said judgment interests and costs\nand the proceeds thereof applied to the payment ot\nsaid sums ofmoney us aforesaid. Notice is hereby\ngiven that 1 will expose to public sale all tbe above\ndescribed property to tbe highest ladder for cash, in\nfront of the Court House door, in Nevada, onRAI-\nI'RDAV, THE SEVENTEENTH BAY OK MAY, be-\ntween the hours of nine oclock, a. M..aud 5oclock,\nr. M . Given under my hand this 26th day of April,\nA. I>., 1862.
8b69f39fa2a88b6680f36aadbdc6c5e9 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.2534246258244 31.960991 -90.983994 stantly killed and mangled in a shocking matter;\nhe tossed it about with almost the ease you would\na glove: picking it up and carrying it into the\nwoods some distance, he brought it back into\nthe road, where he threw it down, and then\ntook the huge animal on his tusks, and walked\ndeliberately along with it about a quarter of a\nmilejfhe then attacked negroes and horses, and\ndrove every thing in great consternation far out\nofhispath. Negroes too'k to trees, andin one\ninstance we found and relieved a white man,\nwho had been out fowling, who had been up a\nhuge bay tree with his gon over four hours.—\nAnother white man being closely pursued, took\nup one of two trees that stood close together,\nand escaped most miraculously; the elephant in\nhis great anger struck and pulled down the\nwrong tree, when something else attracted his\nattention. A body of the troops with about 100\nof the citizens had now made their appearance,\n no sooner discovered by the elephant than\nthe whole were put to flight, except the troops,\nwho had taken & position in ambush, on the\nroad side, and gave him a volley while passing\nin pursuit of the citizens on horseback. This\nvolley appeared to have no more effect on him\nthan to cause him to change his course and make\na charge upon the troops, who all fled. They\nsoon discovered him to become entangled in a\nbramble of blackjarks, very well returned to\nthe fire, when he gave wray and retresied across\nthe road and :»uunmiea to one of the other keep-\nersafter receiving about. 30 ballsjand was chained\nto a tree. Nothing contributed so much, in my\nopinion, to subduing "the animal as the thick\nwoods and marshy ground which he could not\nwell get through. If the woods had been open,\nor if he had been on a plain, no doubt but he\nwould have destroyed many more human lives,\nere be had-submitted.
2d0207070ccbbc0576e2232b90be5f97 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.368493118975 42.217817 -85.891125 Before the remains of Dr. Livingstone\nwere consigned to their resting place in\nWestminster Abbey, they were sub-\njected to an examination for the pur-\npose of setting at rest all doubts as to\ntheir identity. It was known that Liv-\ningstone, sometime before h aving En-\ngland, had suffered a fracture of the\nleft arm, and the bone had hover united,\nThis was relied on as the mark that\nwould prove or disprove the identity of\nthe body. On opening the package in\nwhich the body had been placed in\nAfrica, it was found that the lower limbs\nhad be. n severed from the body ami\nturned back, reducing the length of the\npackage to .about four feet. The ab-\ndominal viscera were absent, as were\nthose of the chest, including the heart\nand lunga, The skin the trunk from\nthe pelvis upward was untouched. The\nfeatures of the face could not be recog-\nnized. The whole body was blackened\nand shriveled, the natural result of the\nsalting and baking in the sun to which\nit was Subjected, The arms lay in the\nordinary way, down by the side. The\nskin and tissues were so shrunken that\na practiced eye could readily perceive\nthe mark of the fracture above alluded\nto. Sir William rergussou, who had\ncharge of the pismination, says :\nH The first glance at the left arm net\nmy mind nt rest, and that, with the\nfur! her examination, made me as posi-\ntive as to the Identity of these remains\nSS that there has been among us in mod-\nern times one of the greatest men of\nthe human race David Livingstone.
1a0bbe0029426075b5c339dd45fd3ce5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.1630136669203 39.745947 -75.546589 Staff Correspondence Evening Journal.\nDOVER, Del., March 1.— John 3.\nCrosoy, the Single Tax advocate, has\nplaced in the hands of Representative\nChealra a hill amendatory of the char­\nter af the city of Wilmington. It is. In\nshort, a Single Tax bill for the city.\n"Section 1, That section SO, of chap­\nter 207, volume 17, Laws of Delaware,\nas amended by section 1, of chapter\n003, volume 17. and by section 5, of\nchapter 185, volume 18, of said laws, be\nand the same is hereby further amend\ned by striking out of said section 80,\namended as aforesaid, all that part\nthereof immediately following the\nwords occupied by fire companies, and\nby inserting, in lieu of the part so\nstricken out, the words following, to\nwit: Heal estate shall be assessed at\nthe value of the land exclusive of any\nimprovements that may he in or upon\nit, unimproved and vacant land the\nsame as if it were improved. Buildings\nand all improvements whatsoever shad\nbe and are hereby exempt from assess­\nment and taxation for municipal pur­\nposes. The real estate shall be des­\ncribed with sufficient particularity to\n clearly identified, and, when its\nowner, or owners, cannot he ascertain­\ned, may lie assessed to owner un­\nknown. To better enable said assessors\nand collectors to make assessments\nthey shall have the right to examine\nall records in the county offices kept\nat the Court House In the city of Wil­\nmington, in and for New Castle county,\nfree cf all costs and charges.\n"Section 2. That section 82, of chap­\nter 207, volume 17. Laws of Delaware,\nas amended by section 2, of chapter\n605. volume 17, and by section 4, of\nchapter 185, volume 18. of said laws, he\nand the same is hereby amended by\nstriking out of said section 82, amended\nas aforc.- ald, the words following, to\nwit; 'And provided, also, that the said\nboard, at any time before the day of\nthe city election, after the assessments\nshall be completed, upon the applica­\ntion cf any person who was residing\nwithin the city before the completion of\nthe assessments and was omitted\ntherefrom, shall vote such person for a\ncapitation or poll tax, and shall there­\nupon cause his name to be added to the\nassessment lists.
03770c094828e74a06ef725b973ab5be THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1884.8483606241145 42.217817 -85.891125 grew very rapidly into one of the greatest\nJournals of the West, and Mr. Htorev waa\nobliged again and again to increase its publish-\ning faci ities. Tl.o financial success of the paper\nwas great, and Mr. Storey, as was often said,\nhad more money than he knew what to do with.\nIn lsr" ,7 the Ti ntcs building on Dearborn street\nwas built by Mr. Storey. This was. burned in\nthe great fire of 171, after which Mr. Storey\nbuilt the existing Times building at the corner\nOr Fifth avenue and Washington street.\nFor the past six or seven years Mr. Storey h\ndone but comparatively little In tho matter of\nediting the Times. Tho strain of hard work\nand close application began to tell upon his sys-\ntem, and he was obliged to relax his labor. Ia\nthe spring of ho took a European trip la\nhopes of reuaining his health. While abroad he\nsuffered a paralytic stroke, nnd was almost im-\nmediately brought home. He grew better, and\nundertook to do editorial work again. It was\napparent, however, that tho vigor of his mind\nwas gone. Subsequently ho spent per ods of\ngreater or less length at Green Lake. Wis., Hot\nSprings, and other health resorts. During last\nwinter he was in Philadelphia undergoing medi-\ncal treatment. From thero ho returned rast\nspring in a partially demented and physically\nweak condition. It has been more than two\nyears since he did any editorial work on the\nlimes, and since his return from Philadelphia\nhe has not been at the otlice.\nOne of tho strange ambitions of Mr. Storey's\ndeclining years was to erect for himself a mao -ni fic c- nt
1651d1063081148dd35f57a1e4733ec7 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.8128414984315 40.618676 -80.577293 We now have a very different Far\nEastern policy than we had a year\nor two ago. We are taking a firm\nstand with Japan. Our efforts at ap­\npeasing her are apparently over. This\nnew policy could have been forecast\nwhen the President appointed Mr.\nStimson to the Cabinet. When Mr.\nStimson was Secretary of State under\nPresident Hoover, he tried to effect a\njoint English-American policy which\nwould have stood squarely in the way\nof Japanese empire-building in China.\nThe English, however, refused to come\nin, and the effort failed.\nThere are many conflicting argu­\nments as to whether our current policy\nis right or wrong, necessary or foolish.\nThose who support it say that if we\ngive Japan an inch she will demand\nmany a mile—that every concession\n her simply paves the way for\nnew and stronger demands in the fu­\nture. And, with England at war in\nEurope, we possess the only check\nrein that can be used against Japanese\nambitions to dominate and control all\nAsia, and thus to establish herself as\na world power equal or superior to the\nUnited States and Britain. Further­\nmore, they argue that we have an\neconomic stranglehold over Japan—\nthat if we refuse to buy from her and\nsell to her she will no longer be able\nto obtain the resources that are neces­\nsary to building an empire. And last­\nly, they quote naval authorities who\nhave testified that if war comes, and\nfleet is pitted against fleet, we can\nwipe out Japan's navy in a matter of\nmonths.
130d67806eab1ce4872ae555c55e103f THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1898.3273972285642 33.031451 -111.387343 vi hk-- lie brought suit. At the tnd of\neach if tVir',e two month he presented\nhid e'ttlm to the board of supervisors\nand it was disallowed. He brought\nu;t before a justice of the peace and\nuoUiiiioi judgment. Tho case was ap-\npealed to the district court and Judge\nBaker found for the defendant. The\ncommissioner's claims were afterward\npresented on two occasions and were\ndisallowed. Ko further legal action\nwas taken until last summer, when\nJudge Street and Attorney -Ge ner a- l\nFrazier brought suit for the commis-\nsioner for so much of the salary as had\nnot been sued for. In the meantime\nthe commissioner withdrew the vari-\nous claims which he had presented\nand presented them again in the ag-\ngregate. The case was tried before\nJudge Sloan several months ago, as\nJudge Street was disqualified.\nThere were three theories of the de-\nfense. first was that the law was\nunconstitutional. The second was that\nthe matter was res adjudicata, having\nalready been passed upon in district\ncourt, and the third was that the plain-\ntiff had lost his rights under section\n408 of the statutes regarding the pre-\nsentation of claims to the board of su-\npervisors.- The law required that all\nclaims other than witnesses' and ju-\nrors' fees and claims for salaries must\nbe submitted within six months. The\nabove mentioned claims may be sub-\nmitted any time within three years.\nJudge Sloan in the first place af-\nfirmed the right of the legislature to\ncrta'.e the oll'.j'j of immigration cotn-- j\nnjissi jTier, his saltry to be paid by the\ncounty to which he is appointed. As\nto Uie secvii i oi.teution by the defense\ntlic matter had already been adjud j.\ncated, J'.'j' jo Kloau held that Judge\nBaker's
86af5b88e9dfe18777d8e2f06def9d12 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.3620218263004 39.369864 -121.105448 that of the mighty bird,\n“The condor of the Andes, that can soar\nThrough Heaven's unfathomabledepths, or brave\nThe ftirV of'ahe-northaru hurricane.\nAnd bathe his plumage in'the thunder's home,”\ncan ever rest upon the lofty top of that ma-\njestic peak. He mayhap has “furled his\nbroad wing,” upon that lone and silent crag.\nHow often have we thought, as we recur-\nred to Humboldts description of bis hard\nascent and keen disappointment, how many\nChiraborazos there were in the great world\nof human effort. How many a weary ascent\nhas been made in the upward path of fame\nor the thousand and one ambitionsOf enr\npetty lives, without reaching the last, grand\npoind 'desired-! How many a noble spirit,\nwarm with the'enorgy of youth and glowing\nwife the ardor of genius, has begun fee 'toic\no'! climbing the Chimborazo of his ambitious\nhopes ; has struggled through the tempests,\nand seen them vainly at his feel, to\nfind at last tha-t tire great hof e of his life\nwas gewe—feat tbo stoTTSs had hut whitened\nhis "head and bowed his form, and that he\nmust abandon the long and toilsome effort,\nwith the bitter words upon his lijps, “I have\ndone rauch, but I have failed !”\nindeed, the lives of the vast majority of\nmen, so far as fee culminating point at\nwhich feey aim are concerned, are failures.\nThey do much, but not all that they intended.\nSome deep chasm, which they •caßnetCTos?,\nopens before them in a sudden and wwex-\npected hour, and they behold the summit to\nwhich they aspired, whether of wealth or\npower or fame, towering aloft awed beyond\ntheir reach. Even those whom the world\ncalls most successful are those who most\nkeenly realize that the Chimboraao peak of\ntheir lifes young dream has not been as-\ncended. - Maryvtille Demacrtt.
249daca22d1c7deda8851e5e41a66ace DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.8726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 dieroe. Tne following clergjmeh took\npart ln the ceremony: Tbe Rev. Thomas\n8. Lae, assistant priest; the Rev. Dwight\nHI. Lyman, of Gowanslown, Md., dea­\ncon; tbe Rev. M. Fenne, sub-deaoon,\nand the Rev. J J . McCellln, B. B.,\nor- muter of ceremonies. Tbe Revs. J\nCunningham, of St. Joiephe, and N\nW. Oanghey, of lame'. Md., aoted u„\ncbapiams to Bishop it - u . The Rev«,\nred M. Rowan, of Lowell, Mass., and R.\nbeen Southgate, of New Yoik, served Bishop\nMcore, and the Revs. P. Dessez, of Bt.\nBnlpioe, and J. Tabt, of Bt. Charles\nCollege, «listed Bishop Curtis. The\nreader of the papal dreuments wu the\nRev. William E. Burr, of Corpus\nGbrletl Church, Baltimore. Besides\nthese there were over 80 other olergy\nmen and *00 students from Bt. Bnlpioe\nand other Catholic colleges ln Mary­\nland and Virginia.\nBishop Cnrtls Is SI years old. He was\nborn in Somerset County, Md. At the\nage of 211 he wan ordained a clergyman\n the Protestant EpisoopalChnroh. He\nwu ln obarge of several parishes, anil\nabout twenty years ago went to Balti­\nmore as rector of Mount Calvary, the\nmost ultra of the ritualistic churches of\nthat dlocate. In 1873 be resigned from\ntbe Protestant Eplsoopal Chnrch and\nbecame a Catholic, and In tne latter\npart of that year he wu ordained a\npriest at tho Cathedral by Archbishop\nBayley, who appointed him his private\nsecretary and tbe assistant rector of the\nparish. When Bishop Becker was tranr-\n/erred from the Bee of Wllmiugton to\nSavannah he was appointed his suo-\noeseor. At that time he wm the private\nsecretary of Cardinal Gibbons fid wag\nvery popular ln Baltimore, and on Bun\nday he received many splendid pres­\nent*. amt ug the® a signet ring with a\nbloodstone flom Jerusalem.\nBishop Curtis will be lit Wllmiugton\nnext Bunday and will be formally In­\nstalled ln Bt. Peters Pro-Cathedral.\nOardlnal Gibbons will preach in the\nmorning and Bishop Becker in the\nafternoon.
1811138e91818c7e3c430e45a90b3bc8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.546575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 Lose no time in getting down here; If possible, early each morning, it will be Pleasing not only to you but to us. Our Patrons are taking\nadvantage of the cool morning Instead of waiting until it gets warm. Not that we do not want you to shop Constantly all day, for we do;\nwe are Only looking out for your comfort during This hot weather. Of course you know as well as we know To shop early means much\nas far as comfort goes, So favor us with your presence during this sale Whenever it suits you best. We intend making It interesting during\nthe next two weeks, so Let us give you some of our high grade Merchandise far below market value tomorrow In all of our many depart­\nments, as we were Never better prepared to do this than at this time, Giving at all hours of the day something That is brand new. You\nknow and we know Of course that a sale of this kind is Nothing more or less than the following: Natural saving to be considered in each\n Every department, and you may rest assured When we say that we are going to give you good goods Cheap, we intend doing it. We\nknow you know A bargain when you see it, that is why So many people make a mistake in selecting Thejr goods, do it hurriedly without\nthinking. Let us help you make your selection, and Everything will be entirely satisfactory. You Can get here during the next week Of\nour you know and we know sale, all goods Under price. We promise you every attention, Nothing being too much trouble, as we always\nTry our best to secure the latest and best for You; anything that we do not happen to have Do not say you could not get it; tell us and\nEvery effort will be made to have same in Less than 12 hours. We again thank you for your Attention, and extend a royal welcome this\nand next Week of this big sale. Tell you friends About this. We want every one to Remember just what we say Especially regarding good\ngoods for little money.
195703aa4bcaf66800591bbe9ed0e4df THE UNION FLAG ChronAm 1868.752732208814 36.294493 -82.473409 in the present or past which could rightfully\nsubject me to such an imputation. 1 havs\nbeen acquainted with Mr. Seymour more then\na quarter of a century. He is an nmiable\ngentleman of nnexceptionable private chat -a ct - e r\nand respectable talents, but you know\nas well as I that be has not a single qualifi-\ncation for tbe successful execution of the\nhigh official trust to which he has been nom-\ninated, and be Is especially deficient in tbit\nfirmness of purpose which, in critical emer-\ngencies, is the only safeguard against public\ndisorder and calamity. He has been twice,\nat different times, Governor of the State of\nNew York, and he, in neither case, bad talent\nor tact to keep tbe Democratic party of tbe\nState together more than two years. I should\nregard his election at this juncture, when\nsteadiness o' purpose, decision and\nare so much needed, as one of the great-\nest calamities that could befall the country,\nMoreover, he has been put in nomination by\na convention wbich has openly declared it to\nbe the purpose of those It represents to pay\na greater part of tbe public debt, contracted\nto preserve the Union, in depreciated paper.\nSuch a measure would, In judgment, be\na palpable violation of public faith, pledged\nnnder circumstances wbich should have been\nbinding on all honorable men.\nI see but one source of safety for the conn- -\ntry nnder existing circumstances, and tbat\nis tbe election of Gen. Urant, In bis decis-\nion of character, good sense, moderation and\ndisinterested patriotism, I believe tbe South\nWill have a far better hope of regaining the\nposition in tbe Union to which it is entitled,\nthan under a man whose political career has\nbeen ia aothing more conspicuously narked\nthan In an utter infirmity of purpose.\nIndepentently ol those considerations I\nshould be greatly surprised It tbe people of\nthe United States were to elect as their Chief\nMagistrate a man who was making at the\nAcademy ol Music, oa tbe 41 h of July, 18G3,\na speech deficient in all tbe characteristics\nof an elevated love of country at the very\nhour when Gen. Grant was carrying the vie.\ntorious arms of the Union into Vicksbarg,\nand when thousands of our fellow country\nmen were pouring out their blood on the\nplains of Gettysburg in defense or their\ndomes and tba government wbicn Air. bey\nmonr was doing all la bis power to embarrass\nand discredit.
5d92864e83033b20c7b20b42879aa8c5 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.0260273655506 32.408477 -91.186777 Especially rare are depictions of man in the\nform of drawings or engravings. Rude carvings\nof human beings, dating far beyond the dawn of\nhistory, have been dug up-at Vlllendorf, intoAs-\ntria; at Brassempouy, the Laussel cave, and the\ngrottoes of Grimaldi in France and other places.\nOwing to this paucity of first-hand information,\nreconstructions of prehistoric man from the vari-\nous skulls and bones found at different times\nhave been largely a matter of conjecture. It has\nbeen a case of every one guessing for himself.\nlegion. One group of savants, endeavoring to\nbuild up our remote ancestor from the famous\nrelics found in the Neanderthal, near Dusseldorf,\nGermany; at Spy, in Belgium, and at La Chapelle\naux-Saints, in France, have shown us something\nmaterially strengthening the Darwtnian theory\nthat man is descended from the ape. Another\ngroup, basing deductions on the "man" recon-\nstructed from the Piltdown skull, has endeavor-\ned to prove that prehistoric man, from whom we\nare descended, never became so bestial as the\npossessors of the Neanderthal-Spy-La Chappelle-\naux-Salnts skulls, and that the latter belonged to\na branch of the race which gradually degenerat-\ned until it finally became extinct, while the other\nand superior branch kept on improving until man\nas we know him was gradually evolved.\nThis latter theory, it is expected by the dis-\ncoverers of the prehistoric "studio" In the cave\nof La Colombiere, will be greatly bolstered up\nby what they have brought to light. To begin\nwith, the best known depictions of human beings\nof a similar sort--notably the sculptured forms of\nwomen found at Asil and elsewhere in Frarce,\nas well as the sketches of the human face un-
3577e62e9275a1dcd2863484ee28ff5c NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.2808218860985 40.735657 -74.172367 water transportation in New Jersey has been throttled\nby railroad control is an indisputable fact. The two canals\nof the State were leased by railroads with no other purpose.\nWe can see in the present condition of the Morris canal the deliber-\nate carrying out of railroad policy, which policy is the same all over\nThis country and in other countries. The Pennsylvania railroad, the\nlessee of the Delaware and Raritan canal, did not do with that canal\nwhat the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company did with the Morris\ncanal, after the company had secured the lease. The Delaware and\nRaritan canal proved useful to the company in its business, and it\nhas been maintained for that purpose, but to discourage other trans-\nportation on the canal the rates were put up and made prohibitive.\nIt was shown in a hearing at Trenton on Tuesday night on bill\nfor the regulation of the canal rates that the lowest toll on the canal\namounted to $87.50 for a cargo of 250 tons. There is a charge of\nthirty five cents per ton for the haul of coal through the canal.\nThese charges are so regulated that shippers find it cheaper to\npatronize the Pennsylvania railroad. Only the cheapest kinds of\nfreights can be taken by boatmen on the canal, and Ibese freights\nare usually what the railroads are indifferent to. The policy of the\ncanal lessee has strangled manufacturing enterprise on the line of\nthe canal. It is outrageous that foreign corporations should be per\nmitted to seize upon the States canal system, built up by State\nenterprise and in successful operation, and deliberately destroy it.\nThat was done by the aid of legislatures and without a protest from\nany responsible State official.
31fb291f55bf7563aa0873eabc806725 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.788251334497 58.275556 -134.3925 Notice Is hereby given that, pur¬\nsuant to an Act of Congrese. ap¬\nproved May 7. 1D06, entitled. " An\nAct Providing for the Election of a\nDelegate to the House of Represen¬\ntatives from the Territory of Alaska."\nand an Act of Congress, approved\nAugust 24. 1911. entitled, "An Act\nto Create a Legislative Assembly in\nthe Territory of Alaska, to Confer\nLegislative Powers Thereon, and for\nOther Purposes." and In conformity\ntherewith, a general election will be\nheld on Tuesday, November 2. 1920.\nbetween the hours of 8 o'clock a. m .\nand 7 o'clock p. m . of sald*day, for\nthe purpose of electing the follow¬\ning officers, to- wit:\nA Delegate to the House of Repre-\nentatlves from the Territory of\nAlaska; One member of the Senate\nof the Territory of Alaska; four mem¬\nbers of the House of Representatives\nof the Territory of Alaska; two\nRoad Commissioners for Road Dis¬\ntrict No. One; one Attorney Goneral\nfor the of Alaska.\nThe Common Council of Douglas,\nhaving heretorfore, by ordinance,\nduly designated the voting precincts\nof said town and the polling placea\nIn each thereof, the electors are\nhereby notified;\nThat all duly qualified voters re¬\nsiding within the boundaries of Pre¬\ncinct No. One of said town of Doug¬\nlas. which are as follows; North and\n«cst of Klnzle street, will vote at\nCity Hall Dulldlng. located on Sec¬\nond Street, which building is owned\nby the City of Douglns, the same be¬\ning the duly designated polling place\nin and for said Precinct No. One,\nTown of Douglas.\nThat all duly qualified voters re¬\nsiding within the boundaries of Pre¬\ncinct No. Two of said town of Doug¬\nlas. which are as follows; south and\neast of Klnzle Street, will vote at\nNatatorium Building, located on St.\nAnn Avenue, which building Is own¬\nedbyA.T.G.M.Co..thesamebe¬\ning the duly designated polling place\nIn and for Precinct No." Two, Town of\nDouglas.
061174500124d6245e5e18c181887b0b THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1895.1794520230847 46.601557 -120.510842 kernel does not attain much size before\nit dries and hardens. In many parts of\nJapan and the Sandwich Islands rice is\ngro vi on the hillsides, so that the fields\nhave to do without irrigation ; but along\nlarge portions of the Columbia valley\nthere would be little difficultyin getting\nwater —and an exceedingly good quality\nof rice could be raised. Rice will grow\nwherever wheat will grow, and it can be\nharvested in the same way. At present\nthe highest priced rice is grown in swampy\ncountries; but Mr. Sasaki believes that\nimproved methods of cultivation will do\nmuch to develop the so-called upland\nrice, and that Yakima county lands are\nespecially favorable for such development.\nIt could be raised here in large ijuanti-\nties, and the cost would easily command\n home market for all but tbe highest\ngrade of swamp rice. llf course tbe home\nmarket would be the object to work for,\nthough tbe foreign demand might often\nbe great—as there are frequently serious\nfailures in the rice crops of China and\nJapan. Two years ago there was an in-\nundation in Japan and tbe government\npurchased $11,000,000 worth of rice from\nChina—selling it to tbe people at cost.\nAlmost every year there is some trouble\nwith the crops in one of these countries,\nand sometimes both.\nMr. Sasaki also inclines to the belief\nthat both tea and silk could lie produced\nhere in Yakima, tbe only drawback in\nconnection with tbe latter product being\ntbe fact that it requires woman's care, or\nthat of a man with plenty of time and\npatience.
158b2bb93592e5ff2292d2624ee01a51 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.9713114437866 43.82915 -115.834394 eburch, the Besten had blown out the light»\nand locked the heavy door* behind him.\nBlelgh bell* jingled faintly away out of hear­\ning, and the Blow footsteps of the sexton\ncrunching on the half trodden snow mingled\nwith the tones of the clock in the high tower\n•triking ten. Then a door inside the vestry\nopened, and out of a closet where brooms\nami dust pans were kept an old man came\nhesitatingly. lie made his way very slowly\nup the broad stairs to the main meeting\nroom. At the door leading to the choir loft\nho paused a moment. His hand was on the\nknob, but ho turned it not More slowly than\nbefore ho went down the aisle and dropped\ninto a pew. He sat there in the darkness a\nlong time, his head sunk forward on his\nbreast. A half hour, may be, passed, before he\nrose and marched with determined s tep to tho\nchoir door, and up the stairs to the\nfamiliar loft lie found a mutch in his\npocket and lit the lamp that hung\nnear the bench, where Hezekiah for more\nthan fifty years sung Hods praises and\ncarried the voices and spirits of the congrega­\ntion with him. Tho dim yellow ray threw\ngloomy shadows of the j>ew backs into relief,\njust disclosed tho pulpit at the further end of\ntho church, gavo faint hints of evergreen fes­\ntoons on the walls, and hero and there the\nlaurel worked words “ Emanuel,” “Glory to\nGod in the highest,” and so on, that had been\nplaced there with great toil by the young\nmen and women of the parish in honor of the\nday so near at hand; but had you been there\nyou would have seen only the patriarchal\nform of the chorister with a sadly bitter look\non his face gazing at tho gloom about the\npulpit. Was he thinking how often he had\nstood solemnly thus while the m inister was\npraying) Perhaps so, for after a moment\nhis lips parted, and a tremulous “Amen!”\nuttered softly on a high note, sung to the\nevergreens and the shadows.\nThen Hezekiah looked about the bench in\nfront of him. IIo picked up one of the now\nanthem books brought in by the quartet. He
1a70c86961e4d28941f4c7aa8de1c906 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1919.7876712011669 37.451159 -86.90916 ly exists along the Pacific coast was\nthe most serious which the president\nhad to answer. Ho explained to tho\npoople that ho had been powerless to\nprevent tho rich peninsula from being\ngiven to Japan. England and Prance,\nthrough a secret treaty, had promised\nit to Japan for entering tho war and\nremaining in it. That treaty had to\nbo carried out. Anyway It was not\nChina that was losing Shan Tung, hut\nGermany, which had seized tho terri-\ntory from China In 1893 and h'eld It\never since. Japan had promised, the\nprosldent explained, to return Shan\nTung as soon as tho peaco treaty was\nratified and It was only through tho\nratification ot tho treaty with the\nLeague of Nations Inclusion, that\nChina could ever expect to get Iter\nformer property back. And suroly\nwould get It back, ho declared, through\ntho ratification of tho League. There-\nfore, through the same Instrumentality\n" n o other nation could again prey upon\ntho "Great, patient, diligent, but help-\nless kingdom." As to our being drawn\nInto any European conflict. The pres-\nident pointed out that no direct action\nsuch as the sending of troops to any\npart of tho world to maintain or. re -\nstore order could bo taken by tho\nCouncil of the League without a unani-\nmous vote of tho council members,\ntherefore our vote could at once nega-\ntive any such proposition as sending\nour soldiers where wo did not want\nthem sent. Besides, Mr. Wilson argued,\n"If you have to quench a fire In Cali-\nfornia you don't send for the fire de-\npartment ot Utah."
5b304fc6abca18c62266c34928e05c53 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.7630136669204 43.994599 -72.127742 dairy cows in practically every\ncounty in the country. This\nlarge map will be shown in the\ndepartment's exhibit at the Na-\ntional Dairy Exhibition, at -- St.\nPaul, October 7 to 14. Dairy-\nmen may thus see at a glance\njust how- the cows at home com-\npare with those in any other\npart of the United States.\nThe map shows that 7 counties\nhave cows that average more\nthan 6,020 pounds of milk a year.\nThree 'of these counties are in\nWashington, while Oregon, Cali-\nfornia, Nevada, and Texas have\none each. The exhibit also\nshows an analysis of the census\nfigures made by the Department\nof Agriculture, in which it is\nbrought out that the States which\nlead in average production per\ncow are those in which the high-\nest percentage of dairy are\npurebred. The States are mark-\ned off into four groups accord-\ning to the production of the cows.\nThose, in the first group have an\naverage , production t of 4,427\npounds of milk a year and 42.5\nper cent of the dairy bulls are\npurebred. In the fourth group\nthe average production is only\n1,606 pounds of milk and only\n1.4 per cent of the dairy bulls are\npurebred. In the the first group\nthere is one purebred dairy bull\nto every 10 dairy farms, while in\nthe other groups there is only\none to every 82 dairy farms.\nThe 48 States are arranged in\nthe order of the percentage of\ndairy bulls purebred. Arizona,\nwhere the dairy business has\nbeen of recent development, is at\nthe top of the list, with 91 per\ncent.
16e294d34d1e0ad48b0f309fd85f57e3 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.8835616121257 40.832421 -115.763123 Thk p»ople !.( Iudopondouce, Mr.,\nthe place win re Frank Jitmra in itii-ar-\ncurat' <1, a re lionizing ami beioixing\nthai red-handed murderer and villainotia\nrobber i'H though hi* life bad hern oue\nof purity nutl gooilnea* initead of one\nof dnalardly eiiine. All ag> «. aeie*\nand cln-im a are among In* adu ifra\nII >'0 go, tlicy any, to boar Kriiiik tell of\nhia wonderful eiploita, and ladira, for\nlh<> ptirpoae ol condoling and pUdging\ntheir Influence with the Governor to\naecure In* pardon aliotild be be con¬\nvicted. When ttmt Incaroeraled be w i*\ngivi'U a bare cell, like nnv oilier felon,\nbut aytnpalhizirig oitizena of the viciu\nlly he bad formerly terrorized could uot\nenlure to *"0 him Irantod ao cruelly, *o\na pur*<< wae m id* np, mnl now a m:'g-\nt > I tl e II Hi u-Nol* onrpet Cover* the alone\nfloor nnd rich painting* adorn llio erat\nbleak walU; a in ihognuy li datcnd ond\ndowny feather* have re|il*c-'d lb* dirty\nprinou blank* t* allotted tho runre Com-\ninanplaca cr i initial* wrbo have on'y\ncotntuitted a petty (baft or taken a life\nnr two. l)nlly renewed bouquet* of\nrare Ibiwar* lend their fragrance to Ilia\npriaon atnioapliera, and every conceiv¬\nable dainty aupplatita the priaon fara.\nAt flrat, everybody una admitted to *.«\nthe diatingniahed gnant, but Colonel\nFrank now ««aert* hia right*, and be¬\nfore anyone I* admitted hi* card mint\nAral be *ent In. To be reoeivi-d by the\nontiaw I* n rnaik of proud distinction\neagerly aotight by the dnngbty denizen*\nof Independence. A perann limit bo a\nmurderer and a thief In order lo b» .\nhero ia tbeie dcgcntra'.t day*.
0f47bde3437f1cd1c14c7cb5c6e5d859 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1878.5849314751395 42.217817 -85.891125 Paw Paw was substituted.\nThe chairman appointed Dr. Brown, David\nWoodman and Bus. Parker, tellers, and the\nreal trouble bejaa by an informal ballot for\nSheriff. The chair remarked very forcibly\nemphasising fci remarks with the borrowed\ncane, "Gentlemen we can't have so much noise."\nbut tbe noise continued just tbe same. It\nwould have been as eay to dam with an n\nNiagara, as to keep tbe crowd of nervous and\nexpectant candidates from talking each a little\nlouder than ths rest. Tbe result cf the first\nballot was: Julio Sheldon 43. O. D. Boyce 26.\nE. H. Haines 41, J. J. Pa:g 11, H. P. McFariin\n3, A. M. Brown 1, Geo. W. Wilson 17. Mr\nWilson withdrew from the contest. A demand\nwas made for Sheldon to show himself, where\nupon be blusbingly stood up in the corner of\nthe room and bis friends shouted enthusiast!\ncally for Sheldon. Boyce was then called lor\nand being more used to being a candidate than\nSheldon, he bravely his phiz in the\ncenter of tbe densest crowd. A delegate said\nnow let Boyce'a friends ahout for him, but tbe\ncrowd did not catch the infection, and the only\nresponse was a solitary hurrah from the throat\nof tbe stalwart delegate who proposed the\nshout. Sheldon's good looks and be is a good\nlooking fellow evidently impressed the crowd\nfavorably and the second ballot gave him tbe\nprize, as follows: Sheldon 73, Haines 46\nBoyce 22, Paige 1, and the first blood was de\nclared for Antwerp.\nTbe next thing in orier was an informal bal-\nlot for clerk, which resulted as follows : C, S\nMaynard 69, J. M. Crane 30, E. E. Ocobock 18'\nO. L. Mosier 13. Hiram Baker 1, F. E . Shoudy\n1. fShouav was a delegate.) A second ballot\ngave Maynard 73, Crane 33, Mosier 19, Ocobock\n6, G. W . Smiley 2. Baker 1. Maynard said he\nhad not sought the office and only wanted it if\nhis nomination could be unanimous.
40abce5defe9db08b1af9d651722f93d THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.9547944888382 41.004121 -76.453816 cd condition of tho Island of Cubi con\ntinues to bo a sourco of annovanco nnd\nof anxiety. Tho oxistoncoof n protract-\ned strugglo In such closo proximity to\nour owu territory, without apparent\nprospect of nn early termination, can-\nnot bo other than nit object of concern\nto a people who, whllo abstaining from\nInterferenco In tlio nffalra of other pow-\ners, naturally desiro to sco overy coun\ntry in tno unuisturiiou enjoyment or\npeace, liberty and tlio blessings of frco\ninstitutions. Our naval comtnandors\nIn Cuban waters havo been Instructed.\nIn caso it Hhould becomo necessary, to\nsparo no effort to protect tho lives nnd\nproperly of bonn fide American citizen\nand to maintain tho dignity of tho ll.ig.\nit is nopcu mat ail pending questions\nWilli Spain, growing out of tlio nlfairs\nin Cuba, may bo adlusted inthosnirlt\nef poaco and conciliation which lias\nhitherto guided tliotwo powers In their\ntreatment of sucli questions.\nTo givo Imnortatico anil to add to tlio\ncfllcicncy of our diplomatic relations\nwith Japan nnd China, and lo further\naid In retaining good opinion of\nthoso peoples, and tosocuroto tho Unit-\ned States lis sliaro of tho comnioreo\ndestined to How betwesn thoso nations\nand tho balance of tho commercial\nworld. I earnestly recommend tlint an\nappropriation bo mado to support at\nleast iour American youtns in eacn oi\ntheso countries to servo ns n nart of tho\noiUcial family of our Ministers thcro.\nOur representatives would not oven\nmen no piaceu upon nn equality wnn\nthe renresentatlvos of Great Ilrltan and\nof somo other Powers. As now situat\ned, our representatives In Japan and\nChina havo to depend for interpreters\nand translators upon natives of those\ncountries who know our Ianguago Im- -\npenectiy, or procure, lor tno occasion,\ntho services of omnlovoes in foreign bus\niness housos or tho Interpreters to other\nloreigti ministers.\n1 would also recommend liberal meas\nores for tho purposo of supporting tho\nAmerican lines of steamers now plying\nbetween San Francisco and Jannii nml\nChina, und tho Australian lines almost\nour only remaining limn of ocean\nsteamers nnd of Increasing their ser-\nvices.
1d10fb6d3d5f96404aaf0c1b4c297beb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.2260273655504 39.745947 -75.546589 The Order of the Day fur Monday.\nThe report of the plan for the Stew­\nard's Endowment fond was read by Rev.\nT E Martindale. It was made the order\nof the day for Monday morning. The\nfollowing is the report :\nAll monies accruing to tlie Wilmington\nConference for the benefit of its super\naunuated ministers and after conference\nclaimants shall be divided into two parts,\nto he known and distributed as follows\nThis shall be called the annuity fond\nand shall consist of all monies received\nfrom dividends of the book eoucero.be\nquests, special donations, ine >me from\nconference endowment fund and other in­\nvestments. It shall be distributed by\nthe conference board of stewards on the\nfollowing basis : $10 to every ministerial\nclaimant for each year of effective\nservice in the Methodist Episcopal\nChurch: one half the amount to each\nminor of a deceased minister and one\nfifth of this amount to each child of a\ndeceased minister under fifteen years of\nage, provided this fund be more or less\nthan enough to allow the distribution.\nEach claimant shall receive a prorata\nshare. This shall be known the\n“Nécessitons Fund” and shall consist of\nill monies raised by annual collections\nfor the benefit of its ciaimauts. It shall\nbe distributed by the Board of Stewards,\naccording to the needs of each case, as\nthe present method provides. But In\ndisbursing the fund, the stewards shall\ntake cognizance of the amount received\nby each claimant from the annuity fund\nThe report included resolutions to\nmake immediate efforts to Increase the\nendowment fund to $30,000, respect\nfully appoint bishop to appoint agents\nto cinvass the conference in the interest\no! the conference fund.\nObserve the second Sunday in Septem­\nber as conference claimants day, and an\nearnest appeal that the revenues of the\ncause may increase\nThis committee, to which was\ncommitted the report made of a year\nago to the conference in regard to s\nplan for a stewards' endowment fund,\nwith instructions to consider the whole\nquestion and report at this conference,\nis composed of Revs T. E Martindale,\nRobert Watt, C. T . Wyatt, C. A . Grice,\nWilliam Taylor, William H. Jackson,\nH. 8. Goldey, J. Joseph Smithert, W. F.\nCausey and Joshua Marvel.
128298c93f5fed466422c0edbf3343b2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.4315068176052 39.745947 -75.546589 also won the First ward, where Ar­\nthur Johnson defeated Charles P. Say­\nlor by a plurality of 105. This gives\nthe Republicans eight of the thirteen\nmembers of Council. That the Repub--\nlicans had considered they had a fair\nchance of winning the Ftrst ward was\npredicted in these columns. In fact,\nthe result of the election bore out in\nevery way the forecast made in THE\nEVENING JOURNAL, excepting that\nthe pluralities were even larger than\nhad been estimated by the Republican\ncampaign managers or this news­\npaper. That Democratic discontent\ncontinues was evident from the re­\nsults, while there arc indications that\nmany men have left permanently the\nDemocratic party anq have become\nmembers of the Republican party.\nThe Republican sweep came as a\nkeen to Democratic\nleaders, who had really figured that\ntheir party had a chance to win at\nthe polls on Saturday. The Demo­\ncratic leaders had scoffed at the Re­\npublican claims, and it Is evident that\nthe widespread Democratic disaffec­\ntion had not impressed Itself serious­\nly upon the leaders of that party.\nElections of last November and Satur­\nday last as well as June two years\nago. have served to demonstrate that\nWilmington is strongly Republican\nInroads of the Republicans Into the\nDemocratic ranks can best be shown\nby a glance at the vote In the South­\nern district for assessor on Saturay.\nIt Is a Democratic stronghold, be­\ning all the eity south of Sixth street,\ncomprising the First. Second, Third,\nFourth, Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth\nwards.
54f5f99aee8c6c64494c80ed58aefa5f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0942622634589 41.681744 -72.788147 French vs. City of Mlllville, supreme\ncourt of New Jersey, points out that\nthe city did not become an owner\nof the capital assets of the Insur-\nance company, but waa entitled only\nto share in the profits of the business\nfor the current year, in much the\nsame way that an employs might\ncontract for a bonus, payable out of\nthe profits of the company for which\nhe worked, without becoming there\nby a member of the corporation.\n"Probably the charter of the com-\npany in which you propose to insure\nmakes the policy holders members\nof the corporation, with power and\nauthority to vote for officers and to\nreceive their share of the profits of\nthe business during the time which\nthey are members and making them\nliable for their proportionate share\nof the losses, but limiting the liabil-\nity for losses to five tlmss tho amount\nof the premium.\n'The school district Is authorised\n directed to provide and main\nfain school buildings and this by Im-\nplication authorizes It to Insure the\nbuildings against loss by fire. Mu-\ntual fire insurance companies have\nbeen chartered by our legislature\nand probably the history of Insur- -\nrance in Connecticut would show\nthat fire insurance companies were\nthe first In the field. Our statutes\nrecognize foreign mutuals and pro\nvide means whereby they may do\nbusiness In this state. We have a\nstatute prescribing that mutual\ncompanies stats In their policy the\namount of assessment in which the\nmembers may become liable.\n"It seems to mo that while the\nschool district might be considered\nas a matter of form of going Into\ntho insurance business, it Is a mat-\nter of form only, but that the trans-\naction In spirit and in Its essentials\nIs simply that the school district is\ngoing into the business of getting Its\ninsurance on aa favorable terms as
3e964edacc0347eb8f0bab9c6af3e0fd NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.2479451737697 40.735657 -74.172367 Seven (7) markers.\nBidder* are not to state any price for mate-\nrials and work tor which there is a fixed\namount provided fot in the specification*.\nEach proposal must be enclosed In a MftlM\nenvelope, properly lndorseu with the nami w\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Board of Street and Water Com-\nmijjaloners of tho city of Newark.\nBidders will state their prices in writing as\nwell as In figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposal* tnat\nshould the above work be awarded to them\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following nurnbei\nof consecutive working day*:\nFor McWhorter and Johnson Street Sovrer—\nSeventy-five (75) days.\nFor Coeyman Street Sewer--Fifteen <lo) day*.\nFor Ardsley Court Sewer—Eight (8) day*.\nThe plans and specifications of the work can\nbe examined at the office of the Chief Engi-\nneer of the Board of Itreot and Water Com-\nmissioner? at the City Hall. Said proposals to\nbe by tho consent in writing of\ntwo sureties, or a surety company qualified to\ndo business in New Jersey, who shall at ib*\ntime of putting in such proposals qualify as to\ntheir responsibility in the amount of auch\nproposal, and bind themselves that, if th*\ncontract be awarded to the person or persons\nmaking the proposal, they will, upon its being\nso awarded, become his or their sureties for\nth*» faithful pcr'»/.-mance of said work, and\nthat If the person or persons omit or refuse to\nexecute such contract they will pay to th*\ncity of Newark any difference between th*\nsums to which he or they would have been\nentitled upon completion oi the contract, and\n(.vat which the city of Newark may bo obliged\nto pay the person or persons by whom auch\ncontract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners of the city of Newark reserve to them-\nselves the right to accept or reject any or all\nproposals for the above work,
24f1add3bb27388e285f909f71853951 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.0726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. H . A . Kepner, foreman of the Jtfauter I\nnewa room, waa the ttrat apeaker. Mr. Rep- 1\nner,lnbogiiinlnghtarcmarka,aaeortedthat i\ntho audience had not aaaembled at the\nbeck of politicians for the puruoae of pull- i\nlng the wlrea in the intereato! aomo bun- t\npry candidate, but beeauae the State la do- |\ning n flagrant wrong to her thoufeanda of i\ntolling aona, and to enter their aolemn fend\nemphatic proteat againat It. The ayatpm I\nof convict- labor now In operation In the I\npenitentiary nt Moundavllle the speaker de-\nclared a flagrant outrage on all who toil I\nfor a living outaide of urlaon bars, and a <\nburning eliame on tho honor of the Com- i\ninomvonlth. Thta meeting had been call- I\ned tlmt those opposed to the employment I\nof cheap convict labor might act Intelll- <\ngently in the mattor, ao that when their ]\npetition goea into tho legislature the Leg- t\nlalature may know how to act upon It i\nThe apeaker then turned his attention to i\nthe manner In which the Stato waa doing I\nan Injnry to freo labor.- In d«t«rmlhliiir\nthis question .he maintained that the State\nliuil two classes ol persons to dual with di- ]\nreetly. Between these two clnsses tho\nState must walk, seeing that injustice I\nis iloua to any of the parties concerned. <\nComposing one of those classes are i\ntho men who furnish tho bono and sinew\nfor nil tho productive Industries of the i\nState, who pay the bulk ol the taxes, obey I\ntho laws aim strive to make an honest I\nliving bv hard labor. The other class t\nwhich tho State has to deal with in i\ntills question is tho criminals; the men t\nwho, by tho commission of crime, have 1\nforfeited their citizenship and are under\nthe penalty of violated law. Tho duty of t\ntho State to thesn two classes is plain, i\nShe is bound to protect tho one in life, |\nproperty anil tho pursuit ol happiness; i\nslio is liound to punish the other for their <\ncrimes and put them where they cannot i\nInjure society. Instead of tills, howovor, (\nMr. Kepner nssortod, the State Is clothing c\nand feeding the criminals and using thorn 1\nus instruments for injuring tho vory class 1\nsho should protect.taking from honest 1\nlabor its duo reward, by putting criminals t\nin competition with it. Ilere lie read ox- e\ntracts from tho report of tho directors of 1\nthe Moundsvlllo Penitentiary showing the\nruinous rates ut which convict labor is t\nhired. 1
34069f04b57a993487d19dbaeb8e51b7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.8095890093862 40.063962 -80.720915 Inge avenue, had the roof, the whole x:\nouth wall, and a portion of all the bo\ntber walls blown down; the pastor's Or\nlouse near by was also badly damaged;\nnew three-story warehduse on Sixth\ntreet belonging to Mr. Koenig was in\nprostrated, a portion or a wall only lett m\ntending; the roof ot Barnum <fc Lin- ba\nell's Hotel was somewhat damaged, as 9"\nlso the Mercantile Library Hall; a |\narge portion of the tin roof of Darby's\nnarble building, at the corner of Fifth I\nind Olive streets, rolled up and was\nilown into the street. The greatest\nury of the storm seemed to have been '\npent on the Folytechnlcal Institute, a %\nrery large unfinished building on the »]\norner of Seventh' and Chesnut: two 40.\nmmense chimneys were blown down, let\nmaking a hole in the into which I g1\nhe wind entered and tore up the tin\ntxtfing like paper, and carried a large on\nmrtion, weighing several -hundred Ct\n>oand8, a distance of from two to five at\nilocks; a three story brick honBe ad- 5?\noinlng had the whole rear end foroed I\nn, and Father Keller, pastor of the\nChurch of Immaculate Conception, Its (\nwcupant, was badly hnrt; several other I Lc\nlouses in the immediate vicinity were In\nleriously damaged; several steamboats, ,P\n>lown from their moorings, we're found I a\ntcrdss the river; all the telegraph lines [n\nending out of the' city were prostrated,\nind the fire alarm telegraph very bad- }*\nv cut np; but u portion or the dsmage JC\nlone in the city Is yet known^ and\nlothing has been received from the\nnhntry, where it is expected the
6f1154061c47c10fcaa5bb4f299bf3d8 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.4123287354134 43.798358 -73.087921 this city will shortly put to press a volume\npoems by John Greenleaf Whittier of\nMassachusetts. No American poet, prob-\nably, has over been so highly or deserved\npopular as the author of " 1 he V nson- -\nfor Debt," and few have been less in\ndebted to fortuitous circumstances for their\nreputation. The son of a Quaker farm\nin a retiied part of New England, pos-\nsessing in youth no other advantages than\nwere offered by a common district school,\nhe has risen to the highest distinction as\nauthor, and his productions evidence as\nrare scholarship as fine genius and patn- -\notism. A Christian and a pnnantnropist,\nhis pen has ever been wielded in opposi- -\ntion to every species ot oppression and\nwrong, and he has stood forth the fearless\nasserter man's rights, and of that mercy\nwhich seasons justice and is the chiefest\nattribute of heaven. Yet notwithstanding\nhis acknowledged merit and great popular-\nity, he is Jess generally appreciated by the\nmass of his countrymen than some others,\nowing to the fact that no collection of his\npoems has ever been presented to the peo-\nple. In New England, every school boy\nis familliar with his "thoughts that breathe\nand words that burn," ther, through\nthr newspaper press, and in magazines\nand ballad sheets, they have reached eve-\nry hill and valley made classic by his pen,\nand won for him a place in the hearts of a\nrace deemed, but wrongly so, too cold and\npassionless to be stirred by poet's song, or\nthat enthusiasm more often found in sun-\nnier climes. Am. Baptist.
1737936c2692aa0e36adde7e741258ea PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.4494535202894 31.960991 -90.983994 HESE Lozenges have now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,ÜÜ0\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called the only certain worm de­\nstroying medicine in use, and the greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense and eveu death, without their\never being suspected. Grown persons'are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, wheu\none or two doses of .these Lozenges would speedi­\nly cure them.. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally.'Much more might\n.be said in their, favor, of the safely with which\nthey mal be administered to persons of all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms;of\nthe impotency of most of the preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
31caf1d84e4a3a169d36f959dac69e56 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.478082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 acterizes the present document.\nExpecting exposition from the gov-\nernment in their fight two resolutions\nwere introduced yesterday, which de-\nclared that the war was ended and\ncalled for the return of . troops from\nFrance. These will be clubs over the\nadministration when the Knox resolu-\ntion for separation of the treaty and\nthe League documents comes up for\naction. Should the government de-\nclare that this country ivas at war\nuntil the Senate had ratified the peace\ntreaty in an attempt to delay commer-\ncial relations between the United\nStates and Germany until such a time\nas the Senate had acted, one or' the\nother resolution will be acted upon,\nand probably accepted, which, the Sen-\nators feel, will give plenty of time to\nconsider the League of Nations mat-\nter while the war had been actually\nand formally declared over. The sepa-\nration of the covenant and the \nwould thus be accomplished without\naccepting the tenns as they had been\noutlined to the Germans which are so\ninterwoven with the League.\nSenator Fall, of New Mygo, pro-\nfesses great care for the business in-\nterests and their relations with Ger-\nmany in presenting his resolution for\nthe formal ending of the war. He\npoints out that the PJuropean nations\nare in a position to end hostilities\nmuch sooner than the United States.\nWhen three of them ratify the Treaty\nit will constitute the ending of the war\nas far as those nations are concerned\nand the countries' business men will\nbe able to enter into commercial\ntransactions with the former enemy.\nHis resolution may lie adopted at any\ntime, without committing the Senate\non the League and will allow business\nmen of the United States to proceed\nwith their plans for trade, he says.\nAnother angle of the tight
0200012c21c7cb5ecd9896e2578f9182 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1915.2123287354134 42.217817 -85.891125 he came to Lucerne to get us and she\nwent direct to Rotterdam to get the\nboat August 29th. There had been very\nlittle talk of war until it burst upon us\nand found us helpless to do anything\nbut worry and wait. Papa went to Lu-\ncerne for the quiet rest of at least three\nweeks following the baths; was to have\nperfect rest and no excitement. But\nthe weeks that followed were anything\nbut peaceful, except when we sat as we\nso often did, on the little balcony of\nthe Hotel Central overlooking beautiful\nLake Lucerne, the grand, snow-c app e- d\npeaks reflecting the sunset and watch-\ned the shadows creep up and up and\nthe lights as they twinkled here and\nthere on the mountain side, little\ngroups of lights away in the distance\nalong the shore showing where a tiny\nvillage nestled, and then later the stars\nand a glorious full moon, with no sound\nbut the wind through the trees and the\nwaterfall on the Rigi directly back of\nus; then we would sit vender if it\nOOOld be possible that only a few miles\naway war in all its horror was IBread\ning over the land like wild fire. We\nOOUld not doubt it when day came\nagain with all the proofs filling every\nminute and we scarcely could think\nor talk of anything else. Our letters\nfrom home written usually two weeks\nbefore we received them stopped sud-\ndenly before there was any word of war\nand we began to worry an 1 to blame\nour home folks for their neglect. We\nreceived letters twice during the whole\nmonth of August, A hundred or more\nwere sent back or rather followed us\nhome and we got them in bunches of\nfive and six for weeks after our return.\nBut we did not want them then. When\nwe finally realized what kept our let\ntfl from us we wondered if those we\nsent were also held baek, so we cabled\nthat we were safe and well. However,\npapa was far from well, was under the\ndoctor's care and in bed most of the
597a68a681ca71b337e7255991949e13 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.3520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 uu Uv-nk nun urvu uu uuu UISRUICQ uapi.\nYclch held up a white flig which was\niddled with bullets and several holes 10\nirero shot through his clothing. Dr. Dale, T;\nvho was with him, received a slight 11\nround in the leg. Bascomb Leigh, who 7'\nvas wounded in tho leg. is badly hurt. 00\nlohu Myers, pilot, waa shot through tho m!\nireast and twice through tho leg. He is\nbought to bo mortally wounded. The JP\nSrooks party Bent a squad of cavalry up 811\nho south side of tharlver this evening to\nittempt to capture Cant. Welsh's party,\ntho escaped from tbo botk The Baiter Bi\nide sent out a squad ol cavalry also to an\nlunt Capt. Welsh's party and conduct 8a\nhem into the city. an\nTho Fort Smith traina have been an\nuorellaJtM men or memkeraPdf the Le/ cli\nslaturo from reaching the city from that th\nllrectlon. It is also reported to night wi\nhat tho trains on & F. railroad are th\no be stopped for the same purpose. The »P\nnails were prevented from going south or\njy the Brookltes last night There has\nieen the usual activity in both camps to- tei\nlay, and several arresta were made on 8e\njoth Bides. Notwithstanding the cartel, lie\nt large number of tho members of the flc\n[jcgislataro are here already, and unless to\njrevented by the Brooka party by force, th\n. hero seems to be little doubt that there\nKill be a quorum in both Houses on Hon- nc\nlay. There 1a talk ol the Legislature bi\nneeting at some otherpoint in the State, izi\nlutside of the State House limits. The Hi\neporls to-night state that lour negroes be\n»ere killed and a number wounded on ga\n. he Brooks 'aide during tho attack to day, th\nBrigadier-General Thompson and Cal.\n?owler, ol the Brooka forces, were cap- sic\nured at Uiarkaville yesterday. Weather Fi\nilear and pleasant ^ re
13d7e58d825fc1dee31bc37dba36f60b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.4002731924206 41.681744 -72.788147 ter wxtn otner nations into sucn a\npact, a league to enforce peace, and\nsome one nation attempted to start\nwar and it became necessary to use\nthe combined military forces of the\nother nations to head off this offender,\nCongress would have to declare an act\nof war in order to call our troops or\nsend our navy to the scene of action\nAnd therein lies one of the greatest\ndifficulties in the path of the legaue's\nsuccess. Since the League to Enforce\nPeace was established last year, many\nthings have occurred within these\nUnited States to show that it would\nbe difficult for this country to enter\none way or another into any agree\nment with the various countries, for\nthe simple reason that our citizens\nhere are made up of people from all\nends of the earth, and as soon as any\n was contemplated there would\nbe a howl sent up from some quarter,\nAll these questions, however, come un\nder the head of "entangling alliances"\nand will be treated soon in an ad\ndress by Talcott .Williams, head of the\nColumbia School of Journalism, an ex\nposition of the case which should in\ndeed prove very interesting, as Dr.\nWilliams is one of the best posted men\nin the nation. In fact, the entire pro-\nceedings of the assemblage at Wash-\nington will be well worth following,\nfor President Wilson, when his turn\ncomes to speak, is very likely to utter\nwords that may ring around the world\nand sound the first keynote of peace\nfor the belligerents. Whether the\nLeague to Enforce Peace is to live or\ndie, depends in large measure upon\nthe manner it is accepted or rejected\nby the citizens of America.
24f1c4b95c5cc8453d098ad1e64e25f4 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.727397228564 41.004121 -76.453816 furnished with the tools that will\nenable him to earn an honest living\nin the trades or in business. Being\nable to take care of himself, he is\nnot likely to become a public charge.\nWith children whose home sur-\nroundings are pleasant and refined\nthere is but little need for a com-\npulsory law requiring them to at-\ntend school until sixteen years of\nage. These as a class are not the\nones who play truant, though of\ncourse there are exceptions. There\nare children in this town, and in\nevery town, who need the help of\nthe compulsory law to keep them\nfrom being as their fathers are,\nworthless, lazy, and besotted. The\nfathers are so, because in many\ncases their fathers before them were\nof the same breed.\nAnd here is where the rights of\nsociety attach. It is largely from\nthe iguorant and the depraved class\n the criminal element comes.\nFor them the public must maintain\npoor houses, and jails, and courts,\nand hence it is interested in having\nevery child educated at least suffic-\niently to enable it to care for itself\niu maturer years. This the public\nschool does for them.\nThere are parents who are not\nfit to be parents. They have no\ninterest in the education of their\noffspring, and would rather have\nthem doing something to add a lit-\ntle to the family revenue, either by\nworking, or begging, or stcaliug, it\nmatters little which, than to have\nthem preparing for future useful-\nness by going to school.\nAnd here is where the necessity\nfor a truant officer arises. It is for\nthe vicious bays who stay out of\nschool iu spite of their parents, and\nfor the unfortunate boys whose\nparents do not care whether they\ngo or not.
18fbe4c513559e03e1f703f9ff107477 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1906.1849314751396 43.994599 -72.127742 The second meeting in the inter-\nest of better fire protection was held\nin the Cong'l vestry Monday night\nat which time the report was ready\nby the committee appointed at the\nfirst meeting to draw up a constitu\ntion for a fire association. After\nthe report was accepted and adopted\nwhich consisted of a simple but com-\nprehensive constitution, the follow-\ning officers were elected to serve the\nNewbury Fire Association: pres-\nident, F. It. Meserve; vice pres., W.\nH. Wells; sec, C. M. Slack: treas..\nK. B. Cover; auditor, M. C. Knight:\nexecutive committee. C. II . Oreer,\nW. C. Prentiss, R. V. Darling, the\npresident and secretary being mem-\nbers ex officio. A select committee\nwas appointed to secure a larger\nfund than the fees of the association\nwill afford, this committee is as fol-\n F. C. Russell. C. O. Holton,\nJames B. H de. The new society\nvoted to secure something at once\nin the way of apparatus for the use\nof the fire department soon to be\nformed. The main object fo the\nassociation is to aft'oiV. a necessary\nsupport to the fire department and\nits efficiency in this line will largely\ndeK'iid upon the generous support\nof the citizens. All who are inter-\nested in the protection from fire of\nthe village of Newbury are invited\nto become mem!ers of the Newbury\nFire Association hv paving the en\ntrance fee of Sl.(M). Those who\nhave volunteered their services for\na fire department, and all who are\nwilling to join these ranks, are in-\nvited to meet at Grange Hall, Mon\nday evening. for the purpose of\nforming a fire company.
1e3109ac90f80ee7bd789ee8971551bd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.0068492833586 39.745947 -75.546589 West and David Huzza rd, me owe\nlast named l>e,ug Sussex county mcu.\nBurns, Ewing and Wes! were h.ji\npointed a comm,wee to represent tut\nRegular Republican ten and to call\nunion the L'ulon He pub. A . an eleven ap-\nprtang them cf tide nomination of Clark\ntor speaker and requesting them to ac­\nquiesce in a cunl'erente to be held at a\noclock. This committee found me\neleven Union Republican representa­\ntives assembled at the Fault Dover\nHundred Democrat Club rooms and de­\nlivered Ha message. They were H. \\V.\nHushcheck. W . A . Fartes, Jeton Satter­\nfield, Jahez Jenkins, Q. C. Herring,\nWilliam Tharp, D. H. Frasier, Mark\n!.. Davis, O. S. Rutil, W. P. Short and\nJoseph W. Hunter, Representative W.\nJames Conaway, the twelfth of their\nnumber, being sick at his home In\nSussex. These men, who toad redded\non Tharp speaker, refused to con­\nsider the name of Clark and declined\nto go into a conference. Instead they\nsigned a call for a party caucus to be\nheld in the Hall of Representatives at\n10 oclCCk. All of them signed it and\nit was sent ib tho Hotel Richardson\nand served on the Regulars. The}\nsent hack word that they would not\nrecognize the call, as it wao only sign­\ned by eleven men. that number not\nconst iwulng a majority of the twenty-\nthree Regular Republican and Union\nRepublican members, and two of them\nbeing away sick. Thin action was fi­\nnal. The Regular Republican mem\nbers remained at the Hole! Richard­\nson, and at 10,2'. the Union Republicans,\n'headed hy Walter H. Hayes and Dr.\nGeorge W. Marshall, walked in a bod>\nto the State House for the puTpo?e oi\nholding a caucus of their own.
2b49eeb21464e47081469152a784917e CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1907.0315068176053 41.875555 -87.624421 Why are we content to have our\nfood prepared for ua In secret under\ncondition that to any aane mind cer-\ntainly suggest fraud and treachery?\nWo are not obliged to have these\nthing If wo do not want them. The\nremedies nre slniplo enough.\nAs to tbe "lumpy jnw," tbe tubercu-\nlosis nnd the cancer, put a atop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Let nil the slaugh-\ntering of food animals bo done by tbe\nState lu the light of day, without any\nof this dark lantern business, on equal\nterms ror an. TUoro aro very few\nprivate slaughter houses In Enirland.\nThe cities uud towns run their slaugh\nter nouses unuor medical Inspection.\nBut In England the people do not car\nto bo poisoned In tholr meat\nAnd we need not worry about the oh\nJectlon that publicly owned slaughter\nuousea are an invasion or tbe private\n of business. When it comes te\nlife and death there are no private\nrights of business. No man baa a right\nto saved profits that be makes be-\nspreading disease. We have gone too\nfar on tbe road to public sanitation to\nturn back bcauie aome gentlemau'\nprofit are threatened. Tbe State will\nnot allow you to go around with small-\npox or to coucenl scarlet fever In your\nbouse, although each may be strictly\nyour own affair. Compared with can-\ncer, smallpox and scarlet fever are\nuotblng. If tho State can take radical\nmeasures to stamp out cbolora It can\ntake radical measures to stamp out\ncancer, a million times worse than\ncholera. It It can provldo pest bouses\nfor public safety It can provide (laugh-\nter house for public safety. And It\nduty In tbe one case Is at least as clear\nas In tbe other.
5286d06906f8c48c0b6798015b078ab6 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1859.8972602422627 37.561813 -75.84108 Ho had calculated upon and fully\nexpected to accomplish a rescue of a\ngreat number of slaves. To maintain a\nwarlike position in Virginia for anv\nlefinite period, was not his object.\nThe idea of seizing the Armory for tho\nsake of tho weapons it contained, he\nwill not admit. He says ho had far\nbetter weapons of his own. His occu\npying it at, all was a variation from his\noriginal determination, lie had deci-\nded to take Col. Washington and the\nother prisoners to Harper's Ferrv\nBridge, and there establish a command\ning position, lrom which ho would in-\nsist upon exchanges of slaves for his\nprisoneis. In case ho should have\nbeen dislodged, he would have retreated\nin haste to the mountains, with the in\ntricacies of which ho had made himself\nso much more than tho inhabi\ntants themselves, that ho believed ho\ncould defy all attempts to apprehend\nhim. He had supposed that, after a\nfew diys of successful evasion, he\nwould bo joined by hundreds of slaves\nanxious to escape, by whose aid lie\ncould have perfected arrangements for\nan enormous rescue. This, as I under-\nstand it, was his real plan.\n) he reason ol tho change was, as he\navers, tuat as the night ot the rising\nwas very severely cold, ho suddenly\nconcluded to havo the prisoners taken\nto the Armory, where they would not\nexposed to the weather, anticipating\nno trouble in moving off with them in\ncaso ho could not ellect tho ex\nchanges with negroes before the general\nalarm should spread. Disappointed in\nthis hope ho had only to fight to the\nend.
0b2df54b8e1a61fe6624c2a0e754bee9 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.8838797497976 35.996653 -78.901805 It was only yesterday, continues Reu-\nben, that I was reading of a horrible ae\ncident at a country school house bear\nFavetteville. Ark. Enthusiastic citizen\nincluding many ladies and children, had\nassembled in the building for the pre\nliminaries of a grand celebration. A\nquantity of powder and fireworks of all\nkinds, which had been provided for the\noccasion, were stored in one of the\nrooms. In some way the powder ig-\nnited; the building was blown to atoms,\nand a scene of horror followed. Men,\nwomen and children were buried in the\nruins and devoured by the flames. Such\nas could extricate themselves from the\nburning timbers did what they could to\nsave their friends, but the fire was too\nfast for them, and despite their efforts to\nrescue t he perishing, they was compelled\nto stand powerless and see their relatives\n neighbors either roasted alive or\ncrushed to death by the falling timbers.\nSome twenty or thirty people were\neither killed or injured for life, and the\ncounty lost a school house building\nwhich it could probably ill afford.\nAnd all to gratify an insane desire to\nmske a great noise and paint the dome of\nheaven, in the mistaken idea that they\nwere doing something patriotic and up-\nholding the dignity of the government.\nThen I read in another place where a\nyoung girl, just budding into beautiful\nwomanhood, with the world and life all\nbefore her, was, while attending a similar\ndemonstration, struck in the eye by a\nburning fragment and rendered totally\nblind. Carrying with her through life\nthose sightless orbs and a mutilated face,\nwhat must be her suffering, and what the\nremorse of the man who touched off the
22fd0b8cd1fb9c6a72a850b3de90925b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.187671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 The Piedmont Haahl has been changed\nfrom a nix-column quarto to a seven-\ncolumn folio, and presents a very much\nImproved appearance. The llmM is a\ngood paper in every way.\nMiss Ara l'Vatntoo, the bulla of Wayne\ncounty, who eloped a few days ago with\n. Samuel Biilny, a conductor on the OheBa-\npeaks & Ohio, was overtaken by luir\nbrother in Cincinnati and returned, The\nceremony bad not been performed.\nThe surveying corpB of tho W. Va. A\nPa. 11. K., has been at work near town\nthis week. Something in about to be done\non tbe road.'.bttt what it is (ft wben It com¬\nmence nobody seems ti know and\ntheolll-dals wou't tell..Clurktbur) Newt.\nA party of three burglam inado an at¬\ntempt to'enter tbe residence of Mr. Jesse\nMoMechen, just below Kenwood, a few\nnights ago, but were heard by Mr. Mc¬\nMechen after tbey bail forced a window\nopen. Several revolver Bhota caused u\nsudden departure.\nJohn .Cobb, a miner employed In the\nmine of Carver Bros., at Coal Valley,\nalthough warned, persisted in into\nthe hank o'n the top of a car. lie was\ncaught by tho roof, bent back, crushed\nand partially piralvied, before the car\ncould he stopped. His physician has but\nslight hopes of tils recovery.\nA meeting of the recognized physicians\nof this city was held last /light, and a com¬\nmittee appointed to arrange the reception\nand entertaining of tho State Medical So-\ncloty, wnlchonvenes hereon May lU;h.\nDr. 1'ullsrton was chosen Chairman of\ntbe Coinmittoe, and as one hundred and\ntwenty delegates are expectod to bo\npresent at the Convention, more than or¬\ndinary results may be exported from Its\ndeliberations..CUarlalonStar.\nMrs. Elisabeth Brooks Mills, late of\nJackson county, who died January 0, aged\nHO, wits mother of 10 children, and tbey\nare all livlog, the oldest 70 years, and the\nyouugest -10 years old. They are heads of\nfamilies, ller family consisted of five girls\nand fivo boys. She left 100 grand children,\n115 great-grand children and four great-\ngreat-great-grandchildren. She lived to\nbury twenty grand children, seventeen\ngreat-grand children, and seven daughters-\nin-law.
18752ed021fe7dbcf9e96d2de773ea8e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8101092579943 39.261561 -121.016059 QHEIIIFFH MALE.—Wnereux, on the\nk3 13th day of October, a . v. 1860 a final Judgment\nand Decree was rendered in the District Court of tin*\n14th Judicial District of the State of California, in un i\nfor the County of Nevada, against A. COE and EL\nLKN COE, and in favor of A. D. TOWER, for the sum\nof Twelve Hundred and Seventy Delhirs, prineijv\ndebt, with interest on the principle at the rate of\nthree jier cent per month from the rendition of judg\nnient until paiii, together with all costs of suit ; f ; •\nthe sale o( the following described property, to wit :\nAll and singular, that certain tract, piece or pare I\nof land, situated, lying awl being in the Towhship\nand County of Nuvada, State of California ; hounded\nnnd described us follows, to wit: Commecing nt 1\nstake on the upper side of A. T. Jjiiids water ditch,\non the road hunting from the town of Nevada to lb \nI log, thence running, along said ditch to a stake 0:1\nthe rear of Jones land, thence west Id a stake at a\nfence, two hundred feet, more or less, thence south\nalong said fence two hundred feet, more or less, to a\nstake in a ravine, thence southeast to Little Deer\nCreek, thence northeast to Murchus line, then'v\nnorth to the Red Dog road aforesaid, thence west t >\nthe place of beginning, containing one. hundred an\nsixty acres of laud, more or less ; together with all\nand singular the tenements, heredilment, rights,\nfranchises, privileges, improvements, fruit tree>.\nwater right and appurtenances thereunto belonging\nor in anywise appertaining.\nNotice is hereby given that 1 will expose at public\nsab* all the above described-property, to the highest\nbidder for cash, in front of the Court*House door : »\nNevada city, on TUESDAY the 13th day of November,\na. n. I860, between tBo hours o! 9 oclock a. m . ami\n4 oclock P. m.
4c3dd56ef85edd384f558351b9f4a386 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.1301369545915 39.261561 -121.016059 Kdi. Democrat:—Being favored with a few lei-\nsure moment*, 1 will endeavor to make good\nuse of the time, by polling you upon matter* of\na general character in tbi* vicinity. We art\nfavored with couiidcrable water from the Chalk\nBluff Ditch.'and Star* ditch, but not sufficient\nhowever to *upply our want*. The mines at\nand around Red Dog are very extensive, and\n■ever can be worked to advantage with our\npresent resource* for water. The most impor-\ntant portion of our mine* are situated above all\nthe ditches conveying water to this place, and\ncan only be worked through the medium of the\nSouth Yuba ditch. Should the South Yuba Co.\nfavor as with a branch from their ditch, they\nwould find a ready sale at all times for all the\nwater brought here. The route over which it\ncould be constructs is decidedly practicable,\n could be executed with very little expense.\nMany of the mining companies here are now\nworking their claims with hydraulic* and are\ndoing well. The Dutch Co. on Red Dog hill\ntook from their claims last week betweendhir-\nteea and fourteen hundred dollars—the work\nof four men. Mallory & Co. from the same hill\nrealized thirty ounces—the work of three mea.\nOther companies are doiag equally well.\nThe Odd Fellows have built a large and well\nfinished ball, the basement of which ia used by\nProf. Kennedy in educating the feet ef a num-\nber of tha citizens the proper mode of dancing.\nWe have organized a society, called the\nYoung Mens Senatorial Club ofRed Dog, which\nha* so far been very interesting, and I hop* will\nprove of much good, the Senate having already\npassed a bill for the construction of a Pacific\nand Atlantic Railroad.
379cb01e21186626db9ac64dbaf54400 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1906.891780790208 39.623709 -77.41082 An export examination of a very\ntough clay soil when it was hard and\ndry revealed the fact that on such soil\na layer ofwater two inches deep re-\nquired twenty-nine days and nineteen\nhours to penetrate it; whereas, when\nthis same soil, under the similar con-\nditions, was mixed with two and a\nhalf per cent of Lime the water com-\npleted the percolation in only seven\nhours. If such a soil were located on\nthe side of a hill, and a heavy dash-\ning rain would full on it the natural\ntendency would be to wash down the\nsurface soil, carrying with it the sur-\nface fertility and probably some of the\ncrop growing on it; whereas, if such\nsoil were limed, the water would pass\ndown into the soil so quickly that the\nwashing would he prevented, hut the\n would he retained by the soil\nand the plant would obtained it\nthrough the capillary action of the\nwater and the soil, for Lime not only\nassists the soil in conducting water\ndown into it but also in retaining it.\nIn the case of clay soils Lime binds\ntogether some of the fine particles of\nsand; and in this way diminishes the\nnumber of small spaces opening at the\nsurface of the soil, and hence lessens\nthe amount of water that will be car-\nried off by the evaporation. In the\nease of sandy soil the Lime is washed\ndown into the soil and several inches\nbeneath the surface forms a partial\ncrust through which the water from\nthe surface can readily pass but from\nbeneath which it cannot so easily re-\nturn and penetrate the surface mulch\nof loose sand.
10abe515efe311c5f03a727ba7ff29bb THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.0260273655506 46.187885 -123.831256 Notice is hereby given that by virtuo\nof a warrant issued by the auditor and\npolico judge of the city of Astoria, in ac-\ncordance with an order made by the com-\nmon council of the city of Astoria, by or-\ndinance number 1133, entitled an ordi-\nnance ordering the auditor and polico\njudge to issue warrants for the collection\nof assessments remaining unpaid an tho\nWashington street sewer assessment, ap-\nproved November 29th. 1SS9, said warrant\nbearing data the 80th dny of November,\n18S9, commanding mo to levy npon lot\nnumber ., in block number 39, in the\ncity of Astoria, as laid out and recorded\nby "John McClnre. to collect an assess-\nment of ?, which assessment was made\nfor the construction of a sower in Wash-\nington street, between ponth side cf\nAstor street nnd one hundred feet north\nof tho north side of Vt'ater street, hv or-\ndinance number 1100. entitled an ordi-\nnance declaring tho probible ost of con-\nstructing a sewer in Washington street,\nfrom the south side of Astoi street to one\nhundred feet north of tho north side of\nWater street, npproed July 2." th, 18S9, 1\nhave this day lovied upon lot number ..\nin block number 39, in McClnro's Astoria,\nsaid lot being nsscsscssed to Chas. Eohr,\nas owner, and on Wednesday, the 29th\nday of January, 1890. at 2 o'clock r. sr .\nof said day, in front of tho court hou-- c\ndoor in said city of Astoria, Clatsop\nconntj Oregon, will proceed to sell lot\nnumber .1, in block number 39, in
244b901c0ec6fa4becc6572c15e660fe THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1906.664383529934 42.217817 -85.891125 The state board of equaliza-\ntion, which finished its business\nlast Tuesday, has completed one\nof the most difficult tasks which\nfalls to the elective state officers\ncomprising that board. That\n,they have been ultimately fair\nall should concede. This board\nmeets once in live years, and its\nbusiness is to equalize the valua-\ntion of the several counties of\nthe state to determine the amount\nof state tax which each county\nshall pay. The state is growing\nfast in wealth, some localities\nfaster than others, and this nec-\nessitates an equalization at stated\ntimes to determine the ratio of\nthe county valuation to the state\nvaluation. The wealth of upper\npeninsula counties such as On-\ntonagon, Houghton, Iron and Go-\ngebic, with no interests outside\ntheir iron and copper mines, is\nhard to determine. It seems as\nthough a specific tax on their\noutput would preferable to\ndetermining approximately the\ncash value of such properties,\nwhere their values are mainly\nprospective and dependent on\nthe stock market. Especially\ntrue is this of the copper mines.\nWayne county has received a\nbig boost by the board, and\nrightly it should, determined by\nthe valuation assessed by its\nboard of supervisors, although\nits representative claims it is\nassessed at 101 per cent. The\ntask of the state board of equal-\nization is a thankless one and no\nlocality will be convinced but\nthat it has been presented with\nmore than its share. However,\nthe increased valuation of a coun-\nty does not materially affect the\namount of taxes it pays, if the\nincreased valuation of the state\nis spread proportionately among\nthe several counties. As a gen-\nial Irish statesman remarked,\n"Because it makes no difference\nis the excuse for doing it."
2adc1c1099e2a3129c2afb7350bbf6ab DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.023287639523 58.275556 -134.3925 Alasku is now governed under a code\nof laws enacted by Congress and ap¬\nproved June 6,1900. Since the passage\nof this act the development of the\ncountry has been wonderful, aud legis¬\nlation has necessarily been unable to\nkeep pace with its growth. This act\nwas a great step in advance, and its\nworking has been all that its authors\ncould reasonably expect. It was some¬\nwhat hasti'y constructed and is defect¬\nive in many ways. To remedy these\ndefects and provide such additional I\nlegislation as will meet the growing\nneeds of this country, I think it would\nbe wise to provide some means by\nwhich the Alaskan code of laws could\nbe n vised. To this end I would recom¬\nmend that Congress provide for a com¬\nmission to visit all parts of Alaska,\nstudy the needs of the various districts,\nand make such recommendations\nwhich, if enacted into law would con¬\nduce to the better welfare of Alaska.\nThis commission could preseut in one\nbill nearly everything that would be\nneedful in the way of legislation, \nseems to be constantly increasing.\nmere are. nowt ver, suuie uiaunj v»\nurgent importance which hare need of\nthe immediate action of Congress.\nFirst of importance is the creation\nof au additional judicial division to\nembrace that portion of Alaska along\nthe coast west of Yukutat Bay and ex¬\ntending to the interior for a distance\nof 200 miles. T is proposed district is\nnow embraced vithiu the third judicial\ndistrict and entails work npon the\njudge which it is impossible for one\nwau to do. The increase of business\nof the third judicial divisiou has been\nvery great within the last two years,\nand with the increasing developments\nin Prince William Sound and the Cop- i\nper River valleys the necessity for an\nadditional judicial division is urgent.\nOwing to the present congestion of\nbusiness in the courts of the Second\nand Third judicial divisions, caused by\nthe large amount of litigation, a fifth\njudge should be provided for Alaska,;\nthis judge to be assigned to such dis¬\ntrict as the Attoruey-Geueral might\ndirect as conditions warranted.
1372f081910801ccf7495a122e607562 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1905.546575310756 46.601557 -120.510842 litra ($17.60): that In addition tUaliM\nplaintiff paid prior and subsaajuesM\ntii»-H un»n lot ten (10) for tha yearS\n1B»7. !«»». 1901, I*o2. I*ol and lltfl\nwith Interest to said June 16th. •mOunM\nInk to i.n.- .- n and 17-100 dollar* (tlt.fl\n37i, the total for aald lot ten <!•) !«\\u25a0\nliiK twenty-two and 07-100 4»ttSM\n(122 07); that plaintiff paid prlar aafl\nMiilis. -.p irnt tnxr.li for aald lot alcveH\nMl) for tli.. year* 14*7, 1I»H. tttt. IHfl\nI DOS nml l»04, atnountlnr with Intaraaw\nin niilil JuriH 15th to the amount. jkfl\nthirly-flve nml 87-100 dollara <|M.ff\ntin* total amount due upon and aaratMH\nauld lot eleven (11) heln« nfty-tkraaT|\nand 37-100 dollara (Itl.lTV. whlck af3\nall tin' tmei> due and dellnquant ufl\nunpaid iiKnltmt \\u25a0aid lota; that tha aamiß\nare amit-aai-il for !•>» and I*oo as tkafj\nproperty of the dafandant, Jacob \nler, and nre more than thraa vaaraS\npant due. and bear Intaraat at f)ft*a«S\nIIS) per rent per annum from Mlfl\nJune 15th. I*o6.\nYou and each of you. Including aaMl\nperaona unknown and unknown avrnaea,\nnml reputed uwnera and all paraoaa\nhavlnic or rlnlmln* an Intaraat In aaM\nreal property, are heraby fuilher natl-\nfled mid aummonod to ba and aa-\n- 1 . . - «r within alxty daya after tha aa*-\nvli-e oi thla notlre by publication, W-\nrlualve of tha Drat day of DublleaUaa.\nto-wlt: «0 daya after tha l»th 4ar <\nJuly. 1906. In the abora entitled ua«Tt\nand action, and defend this action tfi\niinnwiT the complaint of aald plalntM\nand serve a copy of your anawar \\u25a0\\u25a0*•)\ntin- underafmied attorney for plalattC\nat hla offli-e below atatad. or par tka\namount, tosether with Intereat. paaaltr\nand coata.
2d1f827fa260fd1d397d856fea4a48bd THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1910.0945205162354 43.994599 -72.127742 Federal License and State Rights.\nThe opimsition to the federal incor-\nporation law is so pronounced that the\ndefeat of the measure is freely pre-\ndicted. Outside of any question of\nparty the state rights sentiment is\nfar from dead, as evidenced by the\nmeeting of the house of governors.\nNor are the state rights people the\nonly ones who are opposing the federal\nlicense law. The corporations them-\nselves are agnlr.st it, possibly on the\nground tli::i t:iey think it easier to\ncontrol some state legislatures than\nthe congress of the United States.\nJust how it will fare with the admin-\nistration's other measures the postal\nsavings bank, ship subsidies and the\nrest is not yet settled, but each is cer-\ntain to arouse a fight My own guess\nwould be that most of the president's\nconservation measures will pass, as\nwill also his railroad recommendations\n of the commerce court and\nfederal licenses, both of which are la\ndoubt. The postal savings bank bill\nmay succeed If Cannon and Aldrich\nare sufficiently cowed, and the ship\nsubsidies bill in some form may win.\nYet congress has a way of smothering\nor sidetracking things that look as If\nthey would go through sailing, and It\nis too early to pr&llct with certainty.\nIs MacVeagh Against Central Bank?\nIn a New York Interview Secretary\nof the Treasury MacVeagh predicts\nthat the central bank scheme of Sen\nator Aldrich a monetary comtmtee\nw ill not pais congress. Of course the\nmonetary commlslson has not yet re-\nported for a central bank, but every-\nbody understands that It will do so\nIn Its own good time. When it comes\nIt is likely to arouse one of the hottest\nfights in the history of the American\ncongress.
11e1183da67a64e176e827f9973a2a2a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.5109588724 39.745947 -75.546589 any Importance. So long as It re- prevent the wide distribution of news-1 The Street and Sewer Department on\nmains a publie service necessary for the; papers outside of their own local area, next Wednesday will petition Resident ^\nnation, performed by tho nation as a It will certainly place an obstacle Ini Judge Rice to appoint a commission to\nwhole, In Us Interest as a whole, It the way of establishing n»w periodicals > condemn strli»s of land 2"» feet In width\nnwkes little difference whether the almost unsurmountable. Nothing ha* along both sides of Ulvervlew avenue,\nman who mails a periodical pays the so much dontcibuted to the spread of between\nactual cost of the service ur whether American democracy as education,\nit is derived from excise taxes or Nothing has done so much for educa-\nfio»u the customs. So far as the treas- tion as cheap literature, and the real\nury Is concerned, so long as the total basis In so a country of cheap\nof money which gels Into It In one magazines is cheap postage. The pub­\nway or another pays the bills, it makes He pays the cost -and always must pay\nno great difference whether the Post It, but It has hitherto been a principle\nOffice shows a deficit or a profit. It is that the public at large should bear\na pure matter of convenience, a ques- the cost of this national service and\nlion of expediency, and it Is highly 1m- not tho Individual,\nportant that the American poople, who We have paid vast sums In this conn-\nmust now examine this act of Congress try for the compulsory education of]\nIn the light of Its effect, should realize our children. We have hitherto felt It\nthat there Is no pies of principle In- wise to Invest a few millions yearly\nvolved here—nothing hut the collec- In this education of adults. Certainly\ntlon of a little money.
03e778dce9296bbf44dae81ea681f765 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.409589009386 39.513775 -121.556359 fur the goods 1 have already bought\nand used? If not, let me stop short\nsud buy henceforth no faster titan I\ncan pay. The old score must be paid\noff as I ran afford it, but not a dol-\nlars Worth shall hereafter fa; charged\nto my run; ing account. If (his con-\nstrains the wife and daughters to wear\ntheir old dresses and tlm sons to wear\ntheir old drc>s hoots and hats till the\nbusy season shall have t nrb d, they will\nmanage somehow to survive the trial.\nLi t the tanner who lives under a\nmortgage or ch onic ■ ebt ask himself\nif he could not s II mmelAin" that would\npay off at least a part of that debt\nSuppose lie has a hundred acres of\nland owes SI,OOO, might he not\nsell of a quarter of his laud, pay off his\nmortgage, and have as much land left\nas he has st< ck for, with means to till\nto the host advantag • ? But very ma.\nny are worrying along under a load of\ndebt who have modi uio o than one\nhundred acres of arable land. To such\nwe say, sell iff if possible enough to\npay your debt and provide you with\nadequate stock am! implements fir the\nresume, n less you are sure your crops\nwill pav off your mortgage when due,\nand dont rely on tne chance of your\nland rising rapidly in value. It nay\ndo so, in lime, it probably will, but the\nsheriff may sell you out, ere that time\nshall have arrived.
1d3f309c5693bb2182a9fe0354ce011c THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.2917807902081 32.612638 -90.036751 got credit for it though I only crossed\nthe t's and dotted the i's and put my\nname to the end of it. But there are\nhundreds of boys and girls who have no\nhelp, and I am sorry for them, and so\nfor many years past I have tried to\nhelp them. Some of them just want\nhelp a little, a few ideas, but others\nwant the whole thing. In fact, one boy\nasked me to write him two, so that he\ncould take choice. Most of them for-\nget to enclose a stamp, and my postage\naccount got to be such a burden that,\nas Rip Van Winkle said: "I swore off"\nand quit answering such letters. It is\nbad manners to write to a man on busi-\nness that does not concern him and ex-\npect him to pay the return postage. I\nreceive many long manuscripts with\nrequest to read and criticise and return\nand tell where to havepublished and\nwhat the writer will probably get paid\nfor them. 1 have two on hand, just re-\nceived" no stamps enclosed' one is a\ngrammatical curiosity. Hardly a line\nthat does not contain bad grammar or\na misspelled word. It takes nearly half\na line for the word "spectacles" and it\nhas 14 letters in it. The word angel is\nspelled angle, and yet the writer ex-\npects to get paid for the story.\nThe other manuscript is an inquiry\n the race problem no stamps and\nit contains 17 questions for me to an-\nswer. Another long letter on foolscap\nwrites of the good' old' times, and says\nin conclusion that if I will answer it\nhe will write me again and put his name\nto the next letter. There is no name to\nthis. He is an Irishman, I reckon. One\nother request I wish to make about let-\nters. Please place your post office ad-\ndress plainly at the top and your name\nplainly at the bottom. Many a time I\nhave passed a letter all around the fam-\nily trying to decipher the signature.\nSometimes I have cut the signature off\nand pasted it on the back of the reply,\nthinking that probably the postmaster\nat the writer's home would recognize\nit. If the post office addressis omitted\nand the postmark on the envelope is\nblurred, as it frequently is, it is impos-\nsible to know where a reply should be\nsent, and if I guess at it and guess\nwrong it goes to the dead letter office.\nNow, you young people must not forget\nthese little things, for they are im-\nportant, specially the stamps. Some-\ntimes we literary men are greatly per-\nplexed to know jvhat to do with some\nletters. One more request. Do not\nwrite to me at Atlanta. I do not live\nthere. My home is in Cartersville, and\nI thought that everybody knew it by
3c9302ecd0e7e3c9953603606f436e67 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6945205162353 39.745947 -75.546589 of Wilmington; Miss Helen Whitfield, of\nFarnhurst; Miss Lydia S. Dockety, Miss\nVera J. Currlnder, Miss Mary Tailor,\nMiss Eva Cttrrinder, Mis? N»!1'» >1«r\nMiss Helen Michael, Mias Grace Ellison,\nMiss Sarah TaloV, all of Stanton:\nMessrs. Joseph Barnes, Earl Bacon, Jack\nElkington, Kennard Naylor, of New\nCastle; Elmer Marvel, Harvey Dickey,\nHarold Mitchell, Alvin Boulden, (diaries\nDickey, William Marvel. Benjamin\nDickey. Jr., William Robinson, Krjyici«\nMichael. Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Dickey, ,dr.\nand Mrs. L. A . Othoson, Mr anJ ^Irs.\nJeff Thompson, of Wilmington; Mr, and\nand Mrs. .lohn F. Bradley. Mrs. Lewis\nDickey, Mrs. McC'allister, Ji4r. and -lr?.\nSamuel Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. George\nWhitfield, of Karnhnrst, and other*.\nMiss May Satferthwait, of Haddonfleld,\nN. J ., and'Samuel Satterthwait. of Mar\nrisburg. Pa., are guests of Miss Bertha\nSatterthwait—Miss Annie Simpson, Miss\nHelen Simpson. Mrs. Elizabeth Mat\nthews and son, Albert Jacobs, Mrs.\n and children, George and Jacob,\nall of Philadelphia, and Miss Florence\nNan. of Wilmington, were the recent\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. William Cilia-\nW)jy_Mr. and Mrs. Howard Taylor mid\nchildren, Norman and Hazel, of Richard­\nson Park, spent Sunday with Mr. and\nMrs. R. M. Lynam—Mrs. M . A . Luse and\ndaughter, Dorothy, and Mrs. Annie Tal­\nley have returned from Providence, R. I.,\nand Newport. R. I.— W i l liam Chambers\nis ill at his home—Mr. and Airs. Benia­\nmin L. Dickey and son, Charles, were the\nweek end guest of Dr. and Mrs. Norman\nL. Beal, of Middletown—Miss Helen Cor-\nnog was the guest of Mr, and Mr*. R. O.\n(urnnder on Sunday—Mrs. \\\\hite and\nson were the guests of Mra. N. K . Cur-\nren on Sunday—Mrs. Fanny Powell is\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pow_\npH—William Michael was the guest of
642060bdf9efeed7389e7b56a8222fdb THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.9030054328578 39.261561 -121.016059 Is rr so?—It is a proper belief that the age of\ntrees can be determined by the “rings or grains\nthat overlie each other in their trunks. Mr.\nJoshua Howard, of Maryland, disputes the fact.\nHe says that these rings counted on the section\nof the tree are not of annual growth, are form-\ned one at every full moon in the growing sea-\nson, and at the latitude of Maryland five a year.\nThis he has frequently proved by felling trees,\nthe age of which he knew. The extraordinary\nage given to trees by the popular rule has made\nmany persons doubt whether it is true.\nHebrew Cemetery.— 'The Israelites of Mokel-\nurane Hill, ns we learn from the Chronicle,have\nfenced in a lot of ground in that place, with the\nintention of using it hereafter as a burial ground\nfor their dead. The enclosure is to be beauti-\nfied with trees, shrubbery, See. The Chronicle\naptly remarks, that nothing speaks higher for a\ncommunity, or evhibits a greater degree of re-\nfinement and civilization, than a correct and\nproper degree of respect the last resting\nplace of those who were lately among us, and\nwhose memory should be honored and cherished.\nDecidedly Cool Operation.—One of the work-\nmen upon Greene's rifles at the Massachusetts\nArms Company's works, was so unfortunate,\nsome time since, as to slit the thumb of bis right\nhand upon a circular saw. Concluding, upon\ninspection, that the member was used up, he\ncoolly went back to the saw. and bolding the\ndamaged thumb with his left hand, made a clean\namputation of it, and then proceeded to have it\ndressed by a surgeon.\nThe New Cent Piece, recently finished at the\nUnited States Mint, Philadelphia, is the size of\nthe old half cent, and is composed of fifty-seven\nparts of copper, seven of nickel and one of zinc.\nIt has a light appearance, with a faint red tint,\nand is in beautiful contrast with the American\nsilver and gold pieces, and will not, as the cent\ndid, tarnish them by contact. The weight of\nthe new is only sixty-two grains—that of the\npresent copper cent is one hundred and sixty-\neight.
20818351eb69a58dc199e78a607f9878 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.1082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 Vbv the Sheriff did not assess Wetzel,\ne did not know. She wanted her just\nlaims against the Company. She has\nights; but she has never been repre-\n?nted here till nor, and now she asks\ner portion of the money. The railroad\nlade Moundsville, and Marshall coun-\n7 was enriched by the Railroad, two\nundred fold. Shall Marshall have all,\nnd Wetzel nonet If you pay it pro\nita, all right. Wetzel is represented\nere now, and although she has not\neen heretofore, I demand her rights,\nMr. Chapline spoke against Mr. Bur-\n>y's amendment. Marshall and\nlarion want all their taxes, and pro-\nose .to cut others off with 91,000. He\nnderstood that Marshall county in-\nlead of carrying on suits at its own\ntpense, was carrying them on at the\ntpense of the State. The State is pay-\nig attorneys. Senators should re-\ntember that if these suits go against t\n we get nothing forever. Therefore,\ne run the risk of losing all and get- t\nag nothing. The amendment of the £\nintlemnn from Marshall will kill the\n11. Althoughbeisainaaofunusual c\nimrnon sense.never saw a man who r\nemed to have more real good, hard s\nnse.but he could not agree with him j\ni this amendment on account of its! £\njustice and inequality.\nMr. Burley said he had to light the\nlent of the whole Senate, it seemed. i\ne could not rely even upon his own t\ntlleague (Mr. Martin), lie was glad c\n'etxelaf last had a representative now,1 C\nit never had before. Wetzel was;\npresented now by the able gentleman c\nl his left. He regretted that he. had\n>w to be informed by the gentleman 'v\nIt. Martin) that he had not represent- Jl\nWetzel county. He would say to »i\ne gentleman, however, that he hoped «
f9bce201307e9ce83975dcad901f5c24 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.7609289301254 43.798358 -73.087921 The reports from two of our Quarter-\nly Meetings have presented the subject of\nSlavery to the consideration of this Meet-\ning, which, whilst engaged in deliberat-\ning upon it, was brought under the feel-\ning of deep interest, ani solemnity. Our\nreligious Society has long since declared\nto the world. its conviction, that for man to\nhold property in his fellow min, is con-\ntrary to principles of immutable justice,\nand a violation of the Divinj Law; and as\noccasions have required, has continued\nfearlessly to plead for the inalienable rights\nof the oppressed.. Africans and their de-\nscendants. This Meeting feels a renewed\nengagement and con;em, that Friends\nmay faithfully maintain this testimony s\nprecoius to the Society, that they may\npermit no political considerations, no\nworldly friendship?, or pecuniary advan-\ntages, to divert them from the faithful dis-\ncharge of their Christian duty, but that en-\ndeavoring to concentrate within the Socie\nty that moral influence which it possess-\nes, and on all suhabte occasions exerting\nit under the openings of Divine Wisdom,\nin the peaceable spirit, and the meek\nand quiet deportment which should ever\nmark the proceedings of our Society, and\nthus avoid behig drawn into any undue\nexcitement contrary thereto, on behalfof\nthis oppressed and suffering portion of\nour fellow men, they maybe instrument-\nal, as they have been in days past in en-\nlightening public opinion, and quicken\ning moral f.eling, so that the day may\ncome "when the heavy burdens may be\nunloosed, every yoke be broken, and the\noppressed go free' and our beloVed coun-\ntry be freed from the stain of the enormous\nevil and sm of Slavery.\nWe desire tha'. Friends will not remit\ntheir exertions on behalf of the people of\ncolor, who are even in the free States, by\nthe influence of unjust and Unreasonable\nprejudice, deprived of their natural and\ncivil rights, and of the equal and common\nmeans of obtaining subsistence and ac-\nquiring property; but endeavor by reli-\ngious, moral, and literary instruction, and\nwatching over their conduct, to raise the\nstanding and ameliorate the condition, of\nthis despised and degraded portion of our\nfellow men.
0851f1986cd88966cb8974a98f4240de THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1900.37397257103 47.478654 -94.890802 encouraged on every hand; Self-re -\nspect bowed in the dust. Lotteries\nflourished, and their agents thronged\nthe streets and crept within the por-\ntals of the church; newspapers were\nfilled with lottery ads. ^ piece of gold\ncovered an inspector's eye, and smug-\ngling was common. Judicial decisions\nwere bought openly. Human life was\nheld cheap, and a single breath of\ndisloyalty was sufficient to extermi-\nnate whole families. Two years ago\nthis month, Dewey's guns not only\npunctured Spanish fleets in Manila\nbay, but punctured this rotten system\nwhich enshrouded the whole archipel-\nago. Dewey's guns spoke loudly, but\nthe fall of Spanish rule and native\ncustoms made a crash, the echoes of\nwhich will sound throughout the ages.\nThe whole world will bless the day\nwhen tyranny ceased and yankeeism\n ushered inro this new field. AljJ\nready great changes can be noted.\nLotteries are prohibited, gambling\nforbidden; papers giving space to lot-\nteries are denied the mail; bull fights\nwill soon be only a memory of pagan\nRome; corruption at the custom\nhouses, which once was highly respee-\nable, has ceased; the marriage laws\nhave been altered, so that the poor\ncan no longer plead poverty as an\nxcuse for the irregular customs that\nave been so long prevalent among\nlarge class of the population; in\nshort, the moral forces are at work,\nand the natives are being prepared\nfor better things, both in social and\npublic life. Uncle Sara has a noble\nwork before him. and be is (IOUIL;- It.\nIn coming years, we believe every cit-\nizen of this nation will be ashamed if
2749b48fcbb2679ceb07de56d9547b70 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.9520547628108 40.063962 -80.720915 lank of France. The standard of silver\now proposed here wa* a standard of lt>\n) 1. He favored auch legislation an\nould place the two metals practically at\nar with each other on some aiire basis, u\niSto the obligation of the Kovernment to t<\nay its bonds in gold, that depended J1\nreally on what should be the coin of the a\njuntry at the maturity of the bonds, but n\nd the meantime the government had in- u\nrest to pay on them, and it should be a\naid with the money contemplated in the g\nuntract when thu bonds were iaaueiL t<\nle argued that silver was the money of tl\nccouiita and tho unit of value under r\nie law of 1792. Was not the grent d\nfbt, incurred on account of the war b\nilh Great Britain iu 1812 paid in silver'.' d\nilver waa money of accounts in all trans* V\nctionaof the Government as well as those 1\nf indebtedness. Aa far as the law wan tl\nunearned the purchasers of our bond* |i\nnilerstood that tliey were payable in ti\nither gold or ailver coin. He also he- I\neved that the country could go on coin- b\nig silver for year* to come at the rate of j\n50,000,000 a year, without disturlring at\nlithe relation between ailver and gold.\nIe believed that with nroper lirniuiion*\nml remonetizitiona of ailver dollar f\nilver could bo maintained at par with *\noldat;aratioof1.1Jto1.There- >\nlonetization of the silver dollar with ^\nroper restoration, would have the effect f\nf making ailver equal to gold. Who t\n>m there who did not lielieve that if gold ^\nliould be demonetized by all nations it "\nromu Mil in value ' And nhnnld K\nII nations demonetize ailver it would\necreani* more iIihii iiow even. The vnl- v\nof llu'xe two iiimIiiIh hh money depend*\nd on their u«o an hucIi. r\nMr. Uawea nnid llinl he represented tt\nStatea>« loyal to theoredit of thu nation "\nh any Htate in the Union. The |ieople ''\nf Iowa intended Mint the obligations of >\nlie Uovi-rnnieiit should l>« ft.Hilled to the\nalter of tho law; that there nhould he no\nepudiation, Hilt it would not do to nay\nbut the Heclion of thirt country that pro*\noned to retnonetixo ailver proponed to\niolato thu National honor. J\nMr. Dftwen quoted from the reiuarkaof ''\nIr. IJeck, delivered ill tlio Senate a few °\naya ago, in rrKard to the Democratic Hl\ninjority having un increase hccjiune that "\narty declared it would not legirtlntu in 11\nlie inlcreat of bondholders, nnd nnid he* 1\nid not think ihut any party could lm\nuill up hy war on the public credit,\nrheth<*r it he covert or open. ,j\nII. I».I.
178d650b0b9b90f34860acdb91ea0159 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.9246575025368 40.419757 -77.187146 streets, Williamsburg, have an only\ndaughter, Claru. Sho is a brunette, 17\nyears old, with bright black eyes and\ndark curling hair that Hows in waves\nover her slight but well developed figure.\nShe returned but a few weeks ago from\nOrange county, New York, where sho\nhas been spending the summer. About\nten days since Mrs. Maunering, while\nlooking over the contents of Clara's\ntrunk, which had not yet been unpack-\ned, discovered a scroll of parchment,\nrichly engraved and ornamented, and\nheld together by a blue ribbon, tied in\na true love knot. She opened and read\na certificate by the Bev. William H.\nWilliams, of Unlonville, Orange coun-\nty, setting forth that John Brundage\nand Clara Manncring wero married on\nthe 25th of August, 1877. Hardly able\nto believe her eyes, Mrs. Maunering\nquestioned her daughter.\nWith some blushes Clara explained\nthat when two or three people came\ntogether In the Catskills the favorlto\nmode of amusement Is the performance\nof a marriage. On the evening of\ntho above dato she had attended a party\ngiven at the house . of a young farmer\nnamed Brundage. It was proposed that\nshe and the host, in accordance with tho\ncustom of tho country, should play at\nbeing married. Accordingly sho stood\nup with Mr Brundage before one of the\nguests, who volunteered to play the part\nof clergyman, and the pair were pro-\nnounced by him man and wife. Hardly\nhud the words, " Whom Ood has joined\ntogether, let not man put assuuder,"\nbeen pronounced when Brundage, de-\nclaring that the marriage was a real\none and not a sham, cluimed her as his\nwife. Tho supposed bogus clergyman,\nhe said was. a minister of the Methodist\nEpiscopal Church, and tho ceremony he\nhad performed could not bo nullified\nsave by a di vorceobtalned by due process\nof law. All this was dono in a Joking\nway, however, and not even when the\ngot tho certificate of tho ceremony did
030ca8ddfcbdd084fb8cbd804e6039ce NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.9221311159179 41.681744 -72.788147 of the Burritt hotel of a Sunday\nafternoon how would that work?\nThe executive board of the New\nl Britain Musical club had been de\nbating; this "noble experiment" all\nlast week. Even the Tiotel manage-\nment, which contributed its ball\nroom as a public aervice, really did\nnot know how many people would\nappear. The showdown came Sun-\nday afternoon, and now there is no\nlonger any doubt about it. The ball\nroom was jammed, and the over-\nflow bulged into the dining room,\nwhere more people were sitting and\nstanding than some folks previously\nhad thought would make up the\nentire audience. The hotel manage-\nment was hard pressed, in fact, to\nfind enough chairs In the vast build-\ning, and before It was over many\na hotel room was minus chairs al -- \ntogether. It was a grand and suc-\ncessful miiKicale from every stand-\npoint and a date wan immediately\nfixed for another in January.\nThe program was one of Im-\npressive values. With such a large\naudience to play and sing to the\nparticipants were upon their met-\ntle and enjoyed themselves par ex-\ncellence. Standing high In esteem\nwas Miss I.ois Thelps, of Plainvjlle,\npianist extraordinary, who began\nand closed the program. If the audi-\nence could have had Its way she\nwould have been playing long into\nthe evening. Then there was Miss\nLillian Josephaon, soprano, a young\nsinger who made her first appear-\nance with the club and attained a\nsterling triumph. Also there was\nJohn A. Lindsay, baritone, the\npolished veteran of many recitals,\nwho enthused by the sea of eager
237852cf07b643a7fe64a224627b557c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.691780790208 39.513775 -121.556359 Sec. 7 . Whenever, on the first day of Jrntinry or\nJuly in any year, there remains, after the payment of\nthe interest us hereinafter prevail I, a surplus of ten\nthousand dollars or ore, it shall be the duty of the\nTreasurer to adverli' e for the space of one week in\nene dally paper published in English, in the city of\nNew York, and for one month in one daily newspa-\n|k r published in English at the Stale Capital, fur\nsealed proposals, to he opened one month after the\nexpiration ol such publications by the Treasurer, in\npresence of the Govern r or Comic roller, at the Stale\nCapital, for (lie surrender ol homls issued limit r this\nAct, which advertisement shall stale the amount of\nmoney he has on hand for the purpose ol redemption,\nand they shall acce| t the lowes proposals, al rales\nnot exceeding par value us may redeem the greatest\namount ot bonds until the auioun' ol cash on hand\nfor redemption is exhausted : ; ,r >vnh/, Imirerer, ill\ncase n sufficient amount ol such bunds shall not be\ntillered, as aforesvi 1, to exhaust the sinking fund to a\nless amount limn ten thousand dollars, then it is\nhereby made the duty ol the Treasurer to advertise\nin two one in New York and one at the\nf apilal of the Stale, for three months, which adver-\ntisements shall state the amount in the sinking fund\nand the number of homls numbering them in the\norder of their issuance, which such luiol is set apart\nto pay and discharge t and if such bonds, so num-\nbered in such advcrtiseu cuts, shall not be presented\nfor payment and cancellation w ithin three months\nfrom the expiration of such publication, then such\nfund shall remain in the Treasury to discharge such\nbonds whenever presented —but they shall draw no\ninterest after such publication ns last aforesaid.\nSec. 8 . The Treasurer ot State shall keep full and\nparticular account and record of all bis proceedings\nunder this Act, and of the bonds redeemed aud sur\nrendered, did bo shall transmit to the Governor an\nabstract of all bis proceedings inner Ibis \\et. with\nbis annual report, to be by the Governor laid before\nthe l.eg slature ; anil all books and papers pertain-\ning to the matters provided for in this vet, shall tit all\ntimes lie open to the inspection id any pa ly interest-\ned, or the Governor, or the Attorney General, or a\ncommittee of cither branch of tho Legislature, ora\njoint committee of both.
532755fc95344bbad15d23740843492b THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.1898906787594 39.369864 -121.105448 The Chinese Problem. —Next in import\nance to the Indian question is that trouble-\nsome query—what shall be done with the\nChinese ? We have allowed the privilege of\nresidence in our midst to about 40,000 semi-\nbarbarous, morally offensive people, who\ncan never become citizens, who have cus-\ntoms worse than any known to Mormonism,\nwho do not learn our language, and who\ncome into injurious competition with our\nown laboring classes, thereby causing fre-\nquent broils and tumults. This is all bad,\nbut how can the obnoxious element be re-\nmoved without wrong on our part ? It is\nproposed to effect this end by gradually in-\ncreasing the present tax on Chinese miners\ntill it shall reach §2O a month. As the great\nmajority of the Chinese come here to dig\ngold, and as they work the poorest diggings,\nthis tax would be more than they could pay,\nand they would be compelled to leave the\nmines and ultimately the country. So rea-\nson the advocates of the bill now before the\nLegislature. They see the evil and take a\ndirect road towards removing it, without\nconsidering how much greater evils they\nmay cause by so doing. They make no al-\nlowance for the of thousands of the\nPariahs in our midst,- who would suffer cru-\nelty from the effects of the contemplated law,\nnor do they stop to estimate the amount of\ndamage that would be done our own people\nwere these Mongolians suddenly removed.\nThe finances of many of the mining counties\nwould be seriously affected, and some of\nthem would be compelled to resort to special\ntaxation ra order to prevent insolvency. But\nthis is a secondary consideration. If the\nChinese are really a social nuisance no scru-\nples of economy should avail to prevent\ntheir expulsion. Humanity, however, de-\nmands a law somewhat different from the\nabove; one that will prevent any more of the\noffensive race from coming here, without\nworking cruel hardships to those already in\nthe country, who have acquired rights which\nare just as much entitled to protection as\nour own. If the provisions of the proposed\nlaw were made to apply only to Chinese who\nshall arrive after a certain date, and if those\nnow here or who shall have arrived before\nthe date fixed, were required to procure a\ncertificate, from some officer empowered to\ngive it, showing the date of their arrival,\nthere would be very little addition to that
0f35248abe76c4e16eac1964fb7fb2b3 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1889.3136985984272 46.187885 -123.831256 The great forest through which\nStanlev recently nassed. which be es\ntimated to cover 246,000 square miles,\nis only a small part ol tne great Afri-\ncan forest which extends almost un\nbrokenly from the west coast, in the\nGaboon and Owowe regions, with a\nwidth of several hundred miles to the\ngreat lakes. This belt ot timber,\ntrending away to the heart of the con-\ntinent in a direction a little south of\neast, is perhaps the greatest forest\nregion in the world. A part of it\nstrikes south of the Congo at the\nereat northern bend of that river, and\nthe country embraced within the big\ncurve is covered witn a compact ior- es - t .\nthe towerinc and wide spreading\ntrees shutting out a large part of the\nsunlight. In these forests com-\npletely shut out from the rest of\nthe world, live hundreds of thou-\nsands of people who are almost un\nknown to the tribes living in the\nSavanna outside. Scattered\nthrough the big woods, within the\nConge bend, are little communities ot\nuatwa dwarfs, ol whose existence\nthe traveler has no inkling until he\nsuddenly comes upon them. Here\nalso, along the Sankurn river, are\nthe tree habitations described by Dr.\nWolf, where the natives lived in huts\nbuilt among the branches to escape\nthe river floods. It was iu great\nclearings made in these forests that\nKund and Lappenbeck discovered\nsome of the moet notable villages\nyet found in Africa, where well built\nnuts, witn gable roofs, line both\nsides of a neatly kept street that\nstretcnes away for eigbt or nine\nmiles. These villages are even more\ninteresting than the street towns in\ntne more sparsely timbered regions\nsouth of them, which were regarded\nas very wonderful when they were\nfirst discovered by Wissmann. It\nwas his account of these villages that\nled bishop Taylor to choose this part\not Africa as the goal he wished to\nreach.
19e63da369ca058f7ecba5d796aec349 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.0396174547157 46.187885 -123.831256 as my mother Buffered from aero"" - ou- s\nsymptoms. As I advanced to mannooa\nmy aHlcUon Increased until the majaoy\nbecame harrasslne and painful, beyond tne\npower ot words to describe. My right leg\nparticularly became fearfullr Involved, the\nleft les being less painfully affected. Fmally.\nabout fourteen years ago, the ulcers onmy\nright leg had eaten through the flesh into\nthe bone. In order to save my life the doc-\ntors determined to amputate my leg below\nthe knee. The operation was successfully\npertonncdbyDr.il . V.JI . MlUer.of Atlanra.\nand Dr. W. P. Bend, ot Llthonla. But thej.\nloss of my leg gave me only temporary re-\nlief. The poison waa still In my system and\nsoonbegan to show Itself again. Inaanort\ntime after large ulcers appeared on myiert\nleg. covering It from the knee to the Instep.\nFrequently while at work I could be tracked\nby tho blood which ooied from tho huge\nulcers, and tho sores and rottenlng holes\nwere so offensive that my\ncould not stand the stench and would move\naway from me.\nLast winter I wa3 persuaded to try S. S . S .\n a last effort I consented to do so, ana\nabout seven mouths ago I began taking the\nSpeclflc I soon began to Teel tbe good effects\not the medicine, the offensive running began\nto grow less and less and Anally ceased, the\nulcers healed, my rlesh became firm and\nsolid, and today, after using twenty-on-\nbottles. I am as hale and stout a man of my\nage as there Is In Ge orgla. I am seventy-on - e\nyears old. but feel now youngcrand stronger\nthan I did when I was twenty Ave. 1 weigh\nabout iw pounds. Nothing Is to be seen of\nthe terrlblo disease, or to remind me ot the\ntorture I suffered for so many years, except\nthe scars of the perfectly healed ulcers.\nI want the world to Know of the almost\nmiraculous cure effected on mo by 8. s . SU\nand I call upon those who wish to know the\nparticulars directly from me to write, and I\nwill consider It a pleasure as well as a duty\nto answer their letters. I refer to Dr. w. P.\nBend, of Llthonla, as to the truth ot my\nstatement.
3a39a40f763c7ec7220ecae7360ec1d2 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1903.7493150367834 39.756121 -99.323985 will set one corner off into a kind\not closet and they will go back and\nforward to that. Give them Just\nroom enough to He down and no\nmore. It is an advantage to have your\nhoghouse divided oft into pens. It\nyou haven't enough hogs to fill up\nyour hoghouse shut off part of the\nspace; give them Just enough room\nto occupy and no more. After you\nhave fed them clean the feeding\nfloor. What would you think of your\nwife If she' let the dishes set on the\ntable from one morning to another?\nSuppose the supper was served on the\nsame dishes. You would say to your-\nself that you wished you had not\nmarried that woman. I would no more\nthink of feeding my hogs on a feed-\ning floor that had not been cleaned\nimmediately after the last meal than\nI would of eating my dinner off the\n dishes without washing. I\nhave done it for thirty years. It is a\nsmall matter. We have a wooden\nhoe made out of a 2x6 three feet in\nlength; have an old saw for the\nlower edge. This is wide enough to\nsweep off three or four feet at a\ntime. If your floor is smooth and\nif you can do it immediately after\nfeeding you can clean it off as clean\nas It swept. By having the floor\nthreo feet high on one side you can\nclean it off mon'h after month and the\nrefuse will not pile up on you. No\nmatter how wet or muddy it is, if your\nhogs are confined In this building\ntheir feed Is always clean. Feed\nyour hogs corn and water. I would\nadd a few oats and perhaps a basket\nor two of raw potatoes once a week,\nbut my main feed would be corn and\ncold water.
2664500acf110ef2e15b814471274bd5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.2945205162355 40.063962 -80.720915 Another perilous tendoncv is the c«ucu\nin legislation. Thoughtful people (leplon\nthe abuse of it which is apparent in thi\nelection of candidates for olhce. But ba<\nas it often is in that sphere there is\nremedy left. It is possible for the people\nto defeat the candidates whom it proposes\nAnd not infrequently they do rise up ani\nshow their superiority to this machlnt\nwhich politicians have devised. Hut ii\nlegislation there is no remedy at least fo\ntlm time. Now, see how the cauciu, ii\nthat department, operates. Men ari\nchosen to go to the Legislature or Congres\nto represent their districts. They ar<\nalways elected becauso at least agoo'd nar\nof their constituents have faith in tnei\npersonal wisdom and integrity. But upoi\ntheir arrival at the neat of govern\nwent they go with the men of thei\nown party into caucut as to much of th<\nlegislation which shall be done. Th«\nprinciples which are assumed are tha\n genuine adherent of the politics\nparty will enter into this consultation, ant\nthat having gone into it he will abide b>\nthe decision. The end of it is that the in\nlividuality of the representatives is lost\n] le becomes a mere unit in the court. Tin\nworst of all is the loss of a consciousnea\nof personal responsibility in regard to al\nthose measures upon which the cauciu acts\nIf there is blame it is rolled over upon thi\nparty. The discussion of public measure\nwhich is so vital to wise legislation ala\nbecomes almost a farce. The decree as V\nwhat shall be done has been issue*\nin advance, by the party whicl\nhannens to be in the mnioritv. The <lr\nbate can be of no avail, except as it ma;\nailed the choice of legislators a year b\ntwo after the deed has been done and tin\nconsequences have been felt. I do no\nquestion the necessity for cousultatioi\nabout important measures.
6464fa31333142ac4a96bcc8012235e0 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.6945205162353 31.960991 -90.983994 liam L. Sublette, for eight or ten years, is ex­\nceedingly good humored, very popular, and as\nbrave as Julius Caesar. The very first warrant\nhe had delivered to him, was issued for the ap­\nprehension of a very quarrelsome and turbulent\nman, who resisted Meek with a broad-axe, but\nMeek presenting a cocked pistol, took the fellow,\nnolens volens. The next, and only case of seri­\nous resistance to our laws, was on the part of\nJoel Turnham, of Mo., son of Mary Turnham of\nClay county. He had assaulted an individual,\nand a warrant was issued by a justice of the\npeace. Turnham was himself constable, and\nJohn Edmonds was deputized to arrest him.—\nTurnham resisted with a large butchers knife;\nbut Edmonds had a pistol with six barrels, well\ncharged. He shot Turnham four times, Hist\nball entering above the temple, when he imme­\ndiately expired. Tnese are all the obstructions\nto the administration ofjustice that we have had,\nand in Edmonds case, he was fully justifiable in\nkilling TurnJjam, even if he had no warrant, as\nT. assaulted him first, and pursuedJiim with great\nviolence to the last.\n“We have now five counties, and two terms\nof the circuit court-in each county in every year.\nWe have but one judge, who discharges the du­\nties of probate judge, chancellor, and what not;\nin fact we have only as yçt circuit courts and\njustices of the peace. Our government was in­\ntended only as provisional, to exist until some\nregular government could be established. We\nadopted the statute laws of Iowa, where applica­\nble to our condition and not modified by our leg-
2926cc245cc52bf02faacd1b24e7ca3c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1912.4139343946063 42.217817 -85.891125 There iraj held Monday afternoon in\nthe offices of Decker A Bailey a ver en-\nthusiastic meeting of grape growers,\nbusiness men and some outside parties\nfrom Chicago and elsewhere to form\nplans for the erection of a modern grape\njuice plant at Paw Paw, and it was the\nsense of those present that such a bus-\niness was warranted from the standpoint\nof a fruit grower and also from the\nstandpoint of an investor. From facts\nbrought forth by well informed parties,\nit was shown that a handsome profit can\nbe made to stockholders in such a con-\ncern, and that even at high prn-e -\ngrapes, such results are obtainable with-\nout raising the price of the juice. A\nMr. B . E . Tilden of Chicago, who has\nbeen ih estigatfofl the industr lo New\nYork state as well as Michigan has taken\nthe initiative in this movement \nDecker A Bailey, and if the enthusiasm\nmanifested by the grape growers is any\ncriterion there will surely be another\ngood grape juice factory in operation\nthis fall. Mr. Tilden has agreed to head\nthe list of stockholders with $5,000 in\ncase a substantial amount cf around\n$20,000 can be raised for the erection of\na plant, others signified their willing\nness to take $1,000; it is proposed that\nthe fruit growers take stock pnyaole in\ngrapes at ?2i I per ton, and also give a\nbonus of grapes to the proposed factory\nalong the same line that has been done\nto the Armour plant at Mattawan, and\nwhich has proven so decidedly satisfac-\ntory to the grape growers in that vicin-\nity, inasmuch as they were preferred cus-\ntomers of the plant, and got more for\ntheir grapes than the growers who did\nnot so contribute. One good feature of
02c52adbd1981c27a6bcacd21f1496e0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.9931506532216 40.063962 -80.720915 The opening session on Wednesday after¬\nnoon was mainly taken up with organizing\nand appointing committees. The absence of\nMr. H . L . Irwin, who was to have presided,\ncreated a vacancy, and 11. K . Lindsay,\nSuperintendent of the Presbyterian Sabbath\nSchool of New Cumberland, was chosen in\nhis stead. Professor Marshall occupied the\nSecretary's desk.\nMr. W . A. List, of Wheeling, delivered a\nshort and neataddresson "Teaching," which\nwas highly commended, as also was Miss\nCampbell's essay.\nThe morning session of Thursday was de*\nvoted to a general discussion of the Sunday\nSchool Lessons of 1883, which were treated in\na very attractive way by the different per-\nsous who engaged in the ditcuasion.\nThe main leaturesof the afternoon session\nwere the children's meeting, an address by\nMiss Taylor, of Wheeling, and an essay by\nMrs. J. A. Smith.\nThe closing session in the evening is al¬\nways considered the most interesting, which\nfact accounted for the largest audience\nwhich has ever yet assembled the Town\nHall. Despite the disagreeable condition of\nthe roads, the people Hocked in from ail\npoints, and the Keating capacity of the hall\nwas inadequa&e to accomodate the crowd.\nIn some parts it was little less than a perfect\njim, but all enjoyed the situation, as it was\nout a token to ine visiting strangers of the\ninterest felt in an important branch of relig¬\nious work in the community. The topic,\n"How shall we deepen the interest in Bab-\nbath School work in our church ?" was to\nhave been discussed by Prof. Hagerman, but\nasiiewas unable to attend, Mr, Llstagain\ndelivered an entertaining address.\nTne concluding topic, "The Rewards of\nFaithfulness," was ably handled by Rev.\nMessrs. Grier and Wilson, after which were\na general conference and adjournment.\nRev. Mr. Pomeroy's presence on tnese oc¬\ncasions haa always done much to break the\nmonotony of the conventions, and his ab¬\nsence thib year was sorely felt, as many had\nanticipateu hearing several of his racy ad¬\ndresses.
3e9e5589a753d6c8bf8397eb63007a3b SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1856.4057376732949 35.780398 -78.639099 and all in vain were her efforts to release\nhim from its fascinations, while a dark fiend\nstood by, scoffed and mocked at her.\nIt is useless to tell how, step by step,\nthis once noble man was led on by the wily\ninfluence of a pretended friend ; down\ndown, into the dark abyss of ruin and deg-\nradation. Suffice it to say he continued,\nafter much persuasion, to drink one glass\na day "just to gratify a friend," 'till at\nlast he learned to love it, and then indul-\nged more and more. He began to evince it\nunder the gaze of his pure wife, and absen-\nted himself until late at night from the\nhome she tried to make cheerful and invi-\nting to him. Often at nightfall might the\nonce merry, happy Carrie now be seen sit-\nting on the doorstep, her pale face reclin-\ning on her wasted hand, and the cold tear\ndrop standing on the blue cavern under\nher once bright eye. No gaze of expecta-\ntion was turned down road, for he had\nforgotten there was one who watched his\ncoming. The vines of the arbor had al-\nmost overgrown the unfrequented entrance\nand the afr was burdened with sighs.\n'Twas not in his presence that Carrie in-\ndulged her grief ;no; then she always\ntried to appear cheerful and happy. Her\nsweetness of temper did not burn with a\ntransient light, but with the steady glory\nof the morning star; yet, all in vain did\nshe bestow kindness and caresses on him ;\nfor them, he returned rough words, and\nall her pleadings threats. Nightly were\nthe lamps of heaven lit, but not to guide\nthe inebriate home; for oft times just as\nthe rosy morn was peeping in upon the ex-\nhausted watcher stealing a few moments\nrepose to strengthen her for greater trials\ncoming, he would return, stagger in and\ncommand food. Arising, she would with\na quick, but tottering step bring and place\nhefore him the greatest delicacies she could\nafford; and he repaid her neither by look\nor tone!
198b9d8177254b4baf9282f18172a44a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.8616438039066 40.832421 -115.763123 ^this morning Senator Morion's remains\n*yero cBcorted to tho benruu by tbo light\ninfantry and pnll-becrera, the infantry\nforming around tbo hearse, (bti pall\n. bearers and n few friends ou loot, some\n<¦( whom parried floral tribute*. Tbo\nlieorso wi}# handsomely covered with\niflnga. Tho arrangements at the court-\nliouio havo been admirable, au>l the im¬\nmense crowd was handled witb but lit¬\ntle confusion. Tho corpso was exposed\nin tbe ceutcr of tho main hall, midway\nbetween tho grand stairway# and an\nelevator, "on either Bido of which a con¬\ntinual flow of people have passed all dny\nand evening. At least fifty thousand,\nsoma say tnoro, liavo viewed tfie re-\n^uains. Tbe «Jscorationg of the galleries\naud main floor aro nentaud appropriate,\nbeing composed of black drapery, witb\nevejgrpop wrcatliB. Contributions of\npoverfl aro in great profusion, some of\nthem coming from Washington, St.\nLouis and elsewhere. Stands of colors\ncomposed of Indiana buttle-tlaga aro\nplaced about tl|e floor, two of most\nhandsomely arranged being just behind\nihe singlo guard* who stand, with arms\nat rest, of tbo bead and foot of tho\ncaskcj. Tbi« evening an impressive\npoena took placo. At half-past 7 tho\nhall was cleared and further ingress\nstopped for tbo tjmo fo admit tbo tela-\nJives and near personal friends of the\nSenator. Thqy numbored perhaps fifty,\nand moved slowly around tbo caskct\ntwo or throe times, tbo orchestra in n\nreinoto gallery playing an appropriate\nselection while they remained. Tbo\ncommittees of tho Senate and tho House\narrived to-day, pud duripg tbo ufternqon\nyiowed ibo remains jn company with\nf}ayprpor Williams. Tho draping and\ndeporafion of tho church is being douo\nunder tho supervision of Gcueral James\nA. Eikon, Assistant Quartermaster, who\niias brought from bis' past at Jefferson-\nville flags ani) pssjBtpnts for that par-\npose. Beprei»outative« of tbe Presi¬\ndent's Cabinet wilf arrivoatll o'cluok\nJo-night. Special trains havo boen riui\nJo-day, bripging ip Jurgo numbers of\npoopjo.
207202a53b6b2493736ddea531a37d58 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1887.878082160071 39.78373 -100.445882 and temperate fruits. Orange aud\nlemon trees of the most thrift growth\nmay be seen in the gardens and or-\nchards. Grapes, apricots, flgs, pears,\ncheiries, almonds, peaches, and ail the\nother fruits to be found in the most fa-\nvored localities, reach here the greatest\nperfection. The very earliest fruits and\nvegetables appearing in Han Francisco\nand other markets is grown in this val-\nley. With respect to early production,\nCapay Valley ranks fully with, if not su-\nperior to, the selebrated Vicaand Pleas-\nant valleys. This fact alone confers a\nvery high premium upon the lanos to be\noffered. Theorchardist, vineyamist and\ngardnerof Capay Vsjley can place ripe\nfruits and vegetables In the Ban Fran-\ncisco and Chicago markets at the hign\nTate usually obtainable for early fruit,\nand front four to six weeks in advances\nof nearly every other portion of the\nbtate of California. Under completely\nanalogous conditions in Vaca Valley,\n h ave reachad a valuation of f ttOOan\nacre, and have proven highly profitable\ninvestments at that price. The lands\nto be offered by the Capay Valley Land\nCompany are in all respects equal In\nfertility, and lie under equal climatic\nadvantages with the most favored or-\nchard and garden lands of the State.\nOneofte leading objects oft he pur-\nchase of this land by a syndicate of per-\nsons Interested in the success of the\nrailroad to be constructed was to secure\nthe subdivision ofthe land into small\nholdings, and to promote the density\nof settlement. Keeping this object\nsteadily In view, some of the largest\nan most fert le tracts will be subdi-\nvided into ten and twenty --acre lots, and\nindividuals will be strictly limited to\nthe ownership of a single lot. Town\nsites wilt be located as nertJ the cen-\nter ofthe tracts as may be found con-ve ai c- a t
1428fbe92920af45a0dd0aeb9e6e95f1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.9904109271943 39.745947 -75.546589 " Wn.MINOTON, Del , Dec 2fl, 1803.\n"To tlie Board of Police Commissioners,\nof the city of Wilmington.\n"Ubnti.kmhn : Answering your letter\nof Inquiry as to tbe right of 'the Coutcil*\nto charge up hills which have not been\napproved by your board against your\nappropriation, I would say; That while\nit la provided in section 8 of the Police\nCommission bill that 'it shall be the\nduty of the secretary of the hoard to\nkeep a correct, copy of all bills for ex\npenses which shall be approved by the'\nsaid board liefere payment,'and in sec­\ntion 18 of tho same that all expensts of\nthe police department shall he p«.ld by\nthe Connell upon bills presented to It\nmat bed with the approval of the B>ard\nof Police C immissioners, and properly\nand'ted by the city In the same\nmanner as other bit's against the said\ncity are now passed Yet these pro\nvisions do not do away with the charter\nright of the Council to conduct the\nfinancial affairs of the city in the manner\nwhich they shall deem best,\n“ The Council should call for an esti­\nmate of the probable cost of your de­\npartment, as required by the act creating\nIt, and In that estimate should be In­\ncluded all items properly chargeable to\nyour acconnt. This is necessary in\nmaking up the tax rate of the city for\nthe year, and should not be changed\nexcept for serious reasons.\n"Should you omit any propor item of\nexpense, or shield the Connell see fir. to\ncharge to your appropriation any bill\nrelating to the proper policing of the\ncity,
3fc6e9680c75b1ba6c37d3fa2dc0e2bf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.6013698313038 40.063962 -80.720915 except in certain independent school dil\nmett, ia tchuol oifloen, cwunly aoperin\ntendenti, district hoards of commoriooer\nand sab-dittnet trustees, ud (or a\naghiLiX authority to make the local schoo\njetiea. The Democratic Legislature ha\nmade provision lor a local option is eaci\ndistrict in regard to the local lery\nWhererer a district to»js that it will no\nauthorize iu board to levy lor school\nthera can be no public schools in that da\ntrict {or 1»o yean, the term for which tbi\nboard is elected, because no such distric\ncan receive iu share oI the Stale fund if i\nrefuses to lery for a local fond. It wil\ntherefore be entirely without fundi am\nconsequently without schools. The pec\npie in such districts, if they hare school\nat all, will have to resort to the o»d-«ty>\nsubscription school; but even if schools o\nthis kind are kept, the "poor scholars'\nwho used to attend those schools at oouatj\neipensc cannot do so newesui some pro\nvision Is made lor them by law. Where\never the public schools »re voted down to\nday, ibis class of children "rill be left ab\nsoluteJy without educational advanuges\nWe hire not supposed the schools U\nhe10 bocL danger from this local option\nhut */bc ot our coteBpomies seem U\nbeiKve that there is it wide-spread ux\nr .accrted purpose to break them down\nthat this local option was enacted in a*\not that purpose, and that to-daj's election\nin counties may result disastrously\nIt is ccrtain that the interest io the elec\ntion will bring out but a light voU\nShould the enemies of the schools turn ou\nactively and their friends largely reaai\nat home, the result Bight be unlcrttmaU\nVrrorsiA..The canvass in Virginia i\nnow fairly opened, both parties havinj\ntickets io the field. The Repubiica\ncandidate . ' o r Governor is Colonel Row\nW. Hughes, and Icr Lieutenant Govert\nor, C . P . lUiisDELL. The * Conservative\ncandidate for Governor is General Jamb\nL Kemper, and lor Lieutenant Govern\nemor, Colonel E R. Withers. The R<\npublicans feel justified by their success i\ncarrying the State for Grast to £ \\pecti\nelect their nominee lor Governor by\nhandsome majority; while the Conservi\ntires profess to believe that they wi\nelect their ticket by at least the same mi\njority they had in 1SC9, which was aboi\n20,000. They argue that thongh ti\nState gave Gram the electoral vote by\nmajority o! 1,814, on the Congre\nsional ticket Virginia went Democrati\nin the same year by over 12,000 majority\nTub Parmbrj' Gras*»b..Within\nlew days past the headquarters of Ui\nNational Grange has been removed froi\nGeorgetown to Washington City. Tt\norder is still growing rapidly, and Tue\nday's report of the secretary shows thi\nthere are now in operation in the I'nite\nStates 5,145 subordinate granges, with\ntotal estimated membership ol aboi\n400,000. Subordinate granges are bein\n'
0ba80c21f3ac34cad904d72f1c297b6d THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.1410958587012 46.187885 -123.831256 est payable out of the net earnings of\nthe railroad company, of four per cent\nper annum, payable on the 1st of February\nof each year, the bonds being secured, by\na certain mortgage executed by the Read\ning Road Coal & Land Company to the\nPennsylvania Company for insurances on\nlives and granting annuities, this' mort\ngage was conveyed subject to certain In\ncumbrances of prior date, all properties\nleased and controlled by the Reading\nCompany and those It might thereafter\nacquire, also properties of the Coal &\nLand Company. Piatt sets forth that he\nIs the holder of a large amount of these\nbonds, the Interest on which became pay\nable on the 1st day of February last A\ndemand was made on the railroad com'\npany to pay him the amount and. It was\nrefused and the company failed up\nto the present time to pay him any por-\ntion of the amount which became due\nand poyable. Tha bill asserts that the\ncompanies though possed of ample funds\nif the same were judiciously administered\nare insolvent in the sense that they are\nwithout fundi? In the shape of cash or\nassets convertible into cash sufficient to\npay their indebtedness actually matured\nor to mature in a short time. There Is\nImminent danger, the bill asserts of the\nproperty being levied upon attached and\ndisintegrated to the Irreparable Injury of\nthe creditors unless the court takes ac-\ntion. The condition of the company is\nstated to be largely the result of tho de-\nmands of loans for which ample security\nIs pledged with the lenders but which the\nloan holders thereof are at present un-\nwilling to renew-
19f049c36452d883989be4d0a979e4fc SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.3082191463725 37.53119 -84.661888 mond and a largo enough forco of\nworkmen will bo put on at once to soon\nbring the building to completion\nTraders James McCurlov and Sween ¬\ney Morgan shipped a car load of hogs\nto the city market Wm Royston\nbought a family horse of Rice of Paint\nLick for eOl Robert C Hamilton of\ntbo Battle vicinity bought the Ball\nfarm West of this place for 2200 He\nwill move to his new property at once\nThelocallodge ofI0 O F willcel¬\nebrate the S2d anniversary of the order\nby appropriate exorcise and a banquet\nto be given In this city on FrldayAprll\n20 ElderARMooreRev L Rob\nInson and others will deliver addresses\nat the Christian church after which\nthe organization will repair to the Ho >\ntel Garrard whore T B Long will\nfurnish an elaborate menu\nTho rain and bad weather generally\nare Interfering with corn planting and\nother work of the farmer Hemp sow ¬\nlag about completed and iho pros ¬\npecte are for Garrard to still draw con ¬\nsiderable revenue from this Industry\nMr Joel T Walker and son William\nbase put Into cultivation their One\npiece of bottom land on tho North side\nof Dlx river and no doubt will make a\ngoodly sum from this field of hemp\nTbo Big Four Minstrels advertised\nfor Friday night showed up In best ap ¬\npearance notwithstanding the very In-\nclement evening Considering the\nweather the door receipts wero fairly\ngood amounting to 27 60 As the\nshow was composed entirely of homo\ntalent with the exception of the mando ¬\nlin player Dan Junes of London the\nwhole performance was pronounced\nvery creditable for a tot of amateurs\nTbo acrobats Willie Fox Logan Horn ¬\ner Tlnslev and Walter Hudson the\nBuck and Wing Dancer Herbert Kin\nnalrd and the end men Will West and\nLewis Herndon were said to\nvery favorably with urofceslonal
246b2c24a55dd429b2fbffccc0a026d2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.2698629819888 39.745947 -75.546589 The reference to the cofjtoler brings\nup the striking fact that as far us I\n. have been aible to discover. It was an\nhumble cobbler who was the pioneer\nSingle Taxer In this city. It may be\nof Interest to the general reader, and\nI am sure it will be to the 1,000 Single\nTax men In Wilmington, and the 1600\nSngle Taxers In cur little state, to know­\nhow the Single tax tree In Delaware\ngrew from a grain of truth.\nI found the Single Tax in the Knights\nof Labor In Camden, N. J .. In 1886.\nI came to Wilmington In \\ugust. 1887\nIn the shops of the Hanlan and Hol­\nling«worth Company, where I was then\nfollowing my trade, 1 got Into a dis­\ncussion with a number of my fellow\nmechanics on "the social problem,”\n1 found them all at sea as to what\nwas the remedy for their hard condi­\ntion. Some of them wonted more tariff\nh*gh as you can get It some of them\nwanted a tariff Just sufUel-nt to cover\nthe in wages, some of them\nwanted free silver; some of- them were\nsoclailistlc and wanted the government\nto run everything.\n. Some were anarchistic, and they ad­\nvocated “knocking h—1 out of the rieh.”\nAnd thiVi there vvére fellows who lack­\ned gray matter. In that they wanted lo\nstop all Immigration and by the great\nhorn spoon, some of those "stop immi­\ngration” geezers wore the sons of Gel -\nman and Irish Immigrants.\nAnd ridiculous to stale, seme of them\nwere Irish and Germans who had late­\nly passed through Castle Garden.\nWell. 1 lit Into 'em. That was my\nfirst week !i* Wilmington.\nThe next day one of the men told\nme “he heard there were some men\ngoing do liy to organlt ! a club about\nthat land business.”\nBy appointment 1 met the young mat«\nthat evening and we Journeyed to the\nhall at Fifth and Walnut streets, now\na macaroni factory, and there I met a\nmiscellaneous audience of some thirty\nmen. AM or nearly all, were stranger. -\nto each other.
2a14bb92e3ce106974aabc5003773fb7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.9931506532216 40.063962 -80.720915 The Sim of this morning says thi\ntin American Annexation League he\nrecently been formed in this city wit\nthe avowed purpose of procuring b\npersuasion or force the annexation t\nthe United States or all countries an\nprovinces of North Ainerioa and all It\nIslands along Us coast. Their uiott\nthe natloual safety of the United State\ndemands the acquisition of all Nort\nAmerica and the West India Inland!\nA number of prominent citizens ai\nmembers of thiB league,and its officer\nare the following well known men\nColonel Geo. W . Glbbins, President\nGen. A . D. Garney, Vice-President\nGen. Geo. W . Cole, Secretary; Gen. J\nE. Keangan, Financial Secretary, au\nGen. James Ii. Coll, Treasurer.\nThe organization Is preparing a\nexpedition for active participate\nin the hofltllltieH going oo 1\nthe Kod Klver country againi\nthe repreBeatatlon of the Cane\ndian Government. The expedltlo\nthat they are preparing is to consist\n1,500 meu, of whom 800 have alread\nbeen enrolled. Twenty-five guides ai\nhere, who are familiar with the Kg\nRiver country, and wl>o will condui\n troops from the last railroadstatlo\nacross the border line. Fifteen hur\ndred Spencer rifles have been atore\naway ready for use. Ammunition an\nother supplieu are also at huud, and r\nfurther great expense is anticipate!\nA prominent railroad man, a membt\nof the League, has promised the troof\nfree transit to within two hundre\nmiles of the border line, and froi\nthat point to the place of operation\nthe rtlllbusters will make their wa\nby forced marches. They will depai\nfrom New York in squads of one au\ntwo hundred men and as quickly «\npossible so aa to avoid detection or di\nlay. The Aral squad will start befoi\nthe 15th of January, perhaps aa earl\nas the llrat of the month, aud the lai\ndetachment, it is expected, will ha\\\nleft the olty before the beglnnluR\nFebruary. Four bodies numbering t<\nKeiuor -mm men nave Biariea mr ue\nRiver already from the fovir oltiea (\nChicago, Buffalo, Detroit anil St. Louii\nThey have probably crossed the bordt\nHue already, but no »«wh lias yet ha*\nreceived from them.
27e1383737c6a4b5edcdd5c4ec40eddd DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.6653005148248 58.275556 -134.3925 The Muir Glacier of Alaska was for¬\nmerly one of the points in greatest\nfavor with the tourist, and for many\nyears the boats loaded with excursion-,\nists were run directly up to the great\nice mass. Such as were inclined to do!\nso, were permitted to land and make\nphotographs and othor observations of\nthe ice field. Occasionally enormous\npieces of the ice would fall from the\nfront of the glacier, and with a mighty\nroar drop into the water. The mass\nwould be lost to sight for a space of\ntime which seemed to be several min-!\nutes, but eventually would come to the j\nsurface, roll over, and settle itself for\nits journey to the open water. Of more\nrecent years, however, this great iceberg\nfactory has been so active that it has\nbeen impossible for the boats get\nwithin several miles of the glacier, and\nthis feature of the trip had to be aban¬\ndoned. In order to make some investi¬\ngation of the matter, Mr. C. L .Andrews\nof Skagwaw, a member of the National\nGeographic Society, made a trip of 1501\nmiles in an open boat, and he announces\nthat the glacier has lost its size and\ngrandeur, and is receding at a very\nrapid rate. The face has moved back\nabout three miles in four years, and in\nthat time the glacier has lost about teu\nsquare miles of area. This rapid re¬\ncession is said to have dated from the\nfall of 1800, when the vicinity was vis¬\nited by an earthquake. Mr. Andrews\nis of the opinion that the end of the j\nMuir as a tidewater glacier is near at\nhand..Scientific American.
05fcf45ebedaceea835344a99c4ae9ca DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.360273940893 58.275556 -134.3925 rohdhouses that dotted the trails in the\npioneer days of the west were a neces¬\nsity caused by the westward march of\nthe star of the empire. They were es¬\ntablished at points where they were\nneeded by the wayfarers, and arouud\nthem grew as time passed, settlements\nor towns. They gave an impetus to the\ntilling of the soil and the settlement\nof the surrounding country, and that\nsituation is exactly true of Alaska to¬\nday. The roadhouse is a prime neces¬\nsity, not ouly to the welfare and com\nfort of the pioneer. the prospector,\nminer, merchant .in short all those\nwho find it necessary to ^travel, but it\naffords as well a base of supplies for\ncontiguous territory.\nThe establishment of roadhouses, for\ninstauce, in the Seward peninsula\ncountry has been the means of saving\nmany lives, has enabled new discover¬\nies to be made and accelerated the\nmineral development of that region.\nAud what is true of the northwestern\nportion of Alaska with equal\nfoice and directness to the great in¬\nterior country, whe;e miles immeasur¬\nably spread seem lengthening as they\ngo, with here and there inviting way¬\nside house* offering rest and refresh¬\nment for "man and beast and mala-\nmute dog." And around aDd about\nthem you may notice the first efforrs\nof man directed to the taming of the\nwilderness and the development of the\nsoil, iu the form of patches of garden,\nwhere fruit and vegetables are grown,\nand where the luxuriant bloom of\nflowers may be seen, gladdening the\nsenses of weary m ushers on the trail.\nAnd from the garden patches on mauy\nau Alaskan tiail is slowly but surely\nbeing demonstrated the potential agri¬\ncultural possibilities of certain great\nsections of the territory, for the road-\nhouse is a miniature experiment sta¬\ntion. Soou these will have been de¬\nveloped into farms, and thus will ex¬\ntensive areas be brought under man's\ndomain and made the homes of a con-
3cb9fb22fb2784edebc044d77faef8b5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.6789617170107 39.745947 -75.546589 east by lands of Jesse Boulden. contain­\ning about two hundred and sixty-four\nacres of land, more or less, saving and\nexcepting therefrom All that portion nf\nthe above mentioned described property,\nbounded and described as follows, to wit:\nBeginning at a atone for this lot and\nother lands now or late of the said Ann lOrtllp, Anctloneftr.spi\nB. Reybold; said atone being In the west-\nside of the New Castle and Frenchtown\nTurnpike Road and forty-eight and seven-\ntenths feet from a corner for lands now\nor late of Wellington Frayer, and twen­\nty-three and seven-tenths feet from a\ncorner of lands now or late of Dr Wil­\nliam T Skinner; thence south forty-six\nand one-half degrees east twenty feet\nto a point In the middle of said New Cas­\ntle and Frenchtown Turnpike Road;\nthence thereby south one-half degree east\ntwo hundred and slxty-two and six-\ntenths feet to another In the mid­\ndle of mild road where the same turns\ntoward Elkton: thence thereby south\neighty-eight ahd one-half degrees west\none hundred and eighty-eight feet to a\npoint; thence across said road and by\nand with said other lands now or late of\nAnn 8. Reybold north one degree west\ntwo hundred and elghty-two feet to a\nstake In said lands, and thence thereby\nnorth elghty-nlne degrees east one hun­\ndred and seventy-nine feet to the first\nmentioned stone and place of beginning,\ncontaining one acre and thirty-six and\nsix-tenths square perches of land, be the\nsame more or less ns by deed of release\nIn the Recorder's Office for New Castle\ncounty. In Deed Record Y, Volume 18.\nPage 563, will orare fully appear.\nSeized and taken In execution as the\nproperly of Schee M. Lorwood and Nel­\nlie C. Lockwood, his wife, mortgagors,\nand to be sold bv
2ce3a92e843b2d72ca33ab5265d3d913 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.850684899797 37.561813 -75.84108 "Wo hope that tho result of the election\nin California, a State in which the Union\nmajority is very large, will serve to show\nthe absolute necessity of party harmony.\nThe liberal party cannot tight within its\nown ranks as well as with the common\nenemy and j et win tho victory. And so\nwe say to our friends in Massachusetts.\nYou have no right to disorganize the party\nupon the issue of prohibition ; and you do\ndisorganize it throughout the country in\ndividing ujxm a foreign issue, when the\ngreat common danger is immediately be-\nfore us. The imperative duty of the great\nliberal Union party of the country is to\nlioltl iUtelf uuitad auct firm until after thu\nPresidential election. There is no episodi-\ncal question which can properly divert\nour main question of national reconstruc.\ntiou, and until that is virtually settled by\nthe election of a wholly harmonious ad-\nministration, it is of the nature of treason\n imperil by internal dissentions the re-\nsults of the war. But these results can be\nsecured only by strict party organization\naud action. Nothing is finally etlected in\na popular system except by party agency.\nPublic opinion is the real power, but it\nacts through parties. Party is the glass\nwhich compresses the rays to the burning\npoint ; and whoever in this country sneeis\nat parties, shows his perilous ignorance of\nthe necessary methods of political action\nunder our CJovernment. Nor was there\never a time when this truth was more evi-\ndent. The full disaster of Mr. Lincoln's\nmurder begins now to appear. The New\nYork World lately labored to prove that\nMr. Johnson was faithfully following the\ncourse of Mr. Lincoln. But, to say noth-\ning more, the striking difference between\nthem is, that Mr. Lincoln always deferred\nto the will of the people in Congress, while\nMr. Johnson defies it. Had Mr. Lincoln\nlived, he would have
11646deabb07c386eab2a52b8c8b9aac DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1899.987671201167 58.275556 -134.3925 cellent stage training. He is a young <\nfellow but on the stage makes an excel- ]\nlent old man. Jimmy Duncan, or the 4\nfeeble minded boy, is both comical and\npitiful. One feels sorry for his appar¬\nent condition and his ridiculous actions\nare very comical. Capt. Klein takes the\npart of the newly married man and acts\nhis part well, while Miss Ella Leon as\nthe bride and her friend IveLovelle are\nattractive features of the play not only\nfor good acting but also for their .pret¬\nty faces. Billy Jones the drinking hus¬\nband does his part well, but really it is\nlots of satisfaction to see him taken\nby the nape of the neck and the seat of\nhis breeches and thrown through the\nwindow and down a (light of stairs.\nTot the street waif is a good part and\nis well acted Fanny Monroe. But\nthis is not near all of the show. Wash-\nena still continues to please the public\nwith her siugiug; she has a beautiful\nvoice. Frank Montrose in his negro\nsketches made a good hit and Duncan\nwith his somersaults splits and balanc¬\nings added a very pleasant diversion to\nthe show. Edith Montrose is not only\npossessed of excellent dramatic ability,\nbut she has a beautiful voice and her\nI singing was one of the best things iu\n;, the entertainment. Her second song\n> was especially good and an attempt\n| was made to hear her again by a\n| stormy and hearty encore,but she would\nf not have it that way and down went the\n; the curtain. A1 Bean's show is all right,\n1 it is what is generally termed a variety\nf show, but really, it is derserving of a\n.
20191990f8badf4ed1c99ce846fd265f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.532876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 The Orangemen's societies in Montrea\nhave surrendered to the Catholic mol\nThey have done this because it wag appa\nrent that to presist in celebrating theii\nanniversary in the usual way, by a paradi\nand proceaaion, would cxpoae them to thi\nfury of a bigoted Catholic horde, and fil\nthe streets of Montreal with riot ant\nmurder. For thus tamely yielding thei\nrights the Orangemen have received th\nthanks of the municipal authorities am\nseveral religious and temperance asaocin\nlions, and such Orangemen as have an,\nfurther introat in the proceedings wii\nto-day repair to the church designated fo\ntheir ceremonies,but not in procession am\nwithout their regalia or banners.\nTo those interested only in the preser\nvat ion of he public peace, this surrende\nwill seem a worthy and commendable con\ncession to tho interests of law and \norder, and it certainly is an llluatratio:\nof the superior forbearance and liberality\nof Protestantism over the bigotry and iii\ntolerance of Catholicism. Hut the cam\nhas a far more serious aspect. Itiaai\nabject and humiliating surrender to\nspirit which grows more audacious am\ndangerous with every concession that i\nmade to it. his this sacrifice of the an\ncred and inalienable public rights of i\nbody of Protestant cirizens to the desno\ntisrn of Ponery, tho crafty and intolenm\ntyranny that dotted Europe over wit!\ninquisitions, planned the massacre of S!\nBartholomew, and haa watered the soi\nof France, Spain, Germany and Ital,\nwith the blood of martyrs. It is a surren\nder to the name faction that in thin conn\ntry has burned churches and asylum8,nn>\ninstigated tho New York draft riota du\nriiiK the civil war.
44beb8a1ae0a3e368ffab313e8a49b1c WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.4589040778792 40.827279 -83.281309 Mr. President: This appropria\ntion bill is the first of a series that\nwill bring before us every branch of\nthe expenditures of the national\nGovernment. It may be well be\nfore we enter into their details to\ntake a general view of our expendi\ntures and of such measures of taxa\ntion as will be necessary to raise\nthe vast sums abont to be appropri\nated. Taxes and appropriations\nare inseperably associated. They\nare the pleasing and painful sides\nof financial legislation. If to ap\npropriate money was the "end all\nand be all" of this and kindred bills\nit would be the most gratifying em\nployment in the world. We could\nindulge in the luxuries of art and\nfancies of statesmanship ; we could\nerect temples for custom-house- s\n cover the ocean with our subsi-\ndized steamers ; we could increase\nour salaries and buy all the islands\nadjacent to our continent. But un\nhappily we can only appropriate\nwhat we first collect by taxation,\nand taxation is a painful process at\nbest, in its natnre unequal, and gen\nerally inflicting more injury to the\nindividual than it confers benefit\nupon the people. Every appropria\ntion bill is a tax bill, and every item\nadded is a draft upon the earnings\nand labor of our citizens, to which\nis superadded the cost of collection\nIf the money is borrewed, then in\nterest is added, and interest is as\nconsumiug to the resources of a na\ntion as it is to an individual. It\nnever rests or sleeps.\n, ESTIMATES OF APPROPRIATIONS
065d45cd50c799a7552c6d21f4de97e6 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.3273972285642 37.005796 -89.177245 wine, eating their brood and meat\nand receiving their lavish hospitalities,\nthere, wnrp. urobably one hundred and\nUTty nona nao coitonj, nnu me rumuinuer\nwere "greasero" und "deud beats" who\nshouldTiavp been kicked out of tho pres-\nence of tbo society br tdmbled Into tho\nriver as one of tho first official, acta of\nthe Hoclety. Every scouudrelly dead\nbeat In the 8tnte, apparently, who want-\ned to rldo free from Chicago\nto Mobile and return and feast upon the\nfat of the laud, had rung himself In as\nan "editor;" and wo noticed editors\nstanding' back while1 these shameless\nscalawags got drunk upon free wine and\ngorged themselves at the banfmet tables.\nThese wretches, of course, made them-\nselves oU'eiisively conspicuous on all oc-\ncasions, and thoroughly disgusted people\nwherever they went and this odl-- ' l\nurn the press of course has to bear. .From\nwhat we saw of the crowd, there seemed\nto no class of people who were not\nready to degrade themselves Into leeches\naud sponges upon the organization for\n,ho free wine, free viands, and free rides\nupon railroads und steamboats. From.\nCcutrahJIIinois wo noticed bun kern and\nbankers' sons side by side with gamb-\nlers and regular cbovalles d'ludustrlo\ncomplacently making themselves at\nhome In the crowd In fact we noticed one\nof the oldp"t residents oi SprJugtleld, X.\nV. Kdwawls, wealthy, stingy antl seltlsh,\nsponging not only his own way but alfu)\nthat of some lady friend, the daughter,\nwe understood, of another wealthy citi-\nzen of Hpringlield, and this man neither\nhas now or ever had even a remote con-\nnection with the press of Illinois not so\nmm h us to subscribe and pay for a paper.\nTo feed and wine and Irve ride these\nshameless (scalawags !s an outrage that\nshould bring humo to the cheek of every\ndecent editor In the State.
01b33d8e1618403d33528796997ecb48 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 next general election. The manufacture:\nare, of course, opposed to duties on fo\neigu breadBtutia, which would mean a\nincrease in the coat of production, bi\nthey are not only willing to admit bi\nanxious to have it understood by the pari\nleaders [that the one sided system\nopening the British markets to natioi\nwhich lew almost prohibitory tolls e\nBritish goods is seriously injuriug thee\nTheir views are shared by their workme\n.the "residuum" which made aud ca\nunmake the preieut Ministry. The e:\nports of iron to the United States hat\ndiminished in money value from JC2.26U\n000 in 1800 to XI,600,000 last year, aud tli\nhostile tariff of Belgium, France, (ierman\nand Husaia have also played havoc wit\nthis branch of trade. Meanwhile the e:\nports of British to Canada are ii\ncreasing, the Canadian tariff of 18<\nhaving been framed to discriminate\nfavor of the mother country m againi\nthe United States; and it is uuggested thi\nall colonial produoe should be admitte\ntree and taxes levied on importations froi\nthe United States. A Ministry of whic\nJohn Bright ia a leading member is n<\nlikely te consont to this, but a formidabl\nagitation will ariso before long, and ia a\nready in the air, to develop trade with tb\ncolonies and ceaie to boy of nations whic\nrefuse to trade with England. This is t!>\nbasis of a new league which may soon bi\ncome as formidable as the old Free Trad\nLeaguet of which Mr. Bright was the moi\neloquent as Cobdeu was the most powerfi\nmissionary,
15c91a171b7e23488fa97b3909a5c570 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.1082191463724 42.217817 -85.891125 Sec. 2. That all persons who served three\nmonths or moro in tho military or naval ser-\nvice of tho United States in uny wur in which\ntho United States has been engaged, and who\nhave been honorably discharged therefrom,\nand who aro now or w ho may hereafter bo Bu-\nffering from mental or physical disability, not\nthe result of their own vicious habits or gross\ncarelessness, which incapacitates them for the\nperformance of labor in such iv degree as to\nrender them unablo to earn a support, and who\nare dependent upon their daily labor for sup\nport, shall, upon making due pro f of tho fact,\naccording to such rules and regulations as the\nSocretary of the Interior may i rovido in pursu-\nance of this act, bo placed on tho list of invalid\npensioners of tho United Statos, and be\nentitled to receive, for 6uch in-\nability to procure their subsistence by\ndally labor, til per month; and such pension\nshall commence irom tne uaie or iuh uung or\ntho application in tho Tension Oflico, upon\npr of that tho disability then existed, and con\ntinue during the existence 14 ino samo in tne\ndegreo herein provided : Provided. That persons\nwho aro now receiving pensions under existing\nlaws, or whose claims are pending in tho Pen-\nsion Office, may, by application to the Commis-\nsioner of Tensions, in such forms as ho may\nprescribe, receivo the benefits of this act; but\nnothing herein contained shall be so construed\nas to allow more than ono pension at the acne\ntime to tho Fame person, or pension to com-\nmence prior to tho passage of this act: And\nprovided further, That rank in tho service shall\nnot bo considered in applications tiled there-\nunder.
021e7e96090e450d44037ae7ca30d2fe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.5630136669204 40.063962 -80.720915 Imeeial Unpaid I" Un laWWnicer.\nMAiianiuu, 0., July -4. Two ol\nWheeling's pitchers were knocked out\nin to-day's game by the heavy batting ol\nthe home team. Up to the fifth inning\nthe Manstield team played a weak game\nat all point*, but after that there was a\nbracing up aud they won the third suc¬\ncessive victory from Wheeling in fine\nStyle. Dunn, who started to pitch for\nthe visitors, waa knocked out n the\nsixth inning, and Kbamus, who relieved\nhim, fell a vicliiu to the home batterain\nthe eighth. Alter the home team got a\nmove on itaell it played a very strong\nname. There was also some heavy hit-|\nting dons by the viators, especially by\nBowman. His home run hit, and one\nbv Morrison, were among the features ol\n game, for they both scored two men.\nBarrett's work as umpire was again\nrather rocky, aud the base ball reporters\nare howling lor his release; they claim\nthat he doesn't know the rules and\nquestion bis ability to understand them.\nThey Bay he is severe ou both clubs, but\nthat Mansfield gets the worst ol hia de-\nclsiona. This kind ol talk, however. Is\nheard here all through tbo season. The\ntruth ol the matter auout Barrett is, that\nin yesterday's game and thatol to-day,\nthe home team won by such narrow\nmargins that the Mansfield partisans\nwere ready to howl, if defeated, that, as\nusual, they had been robbed by the um¬\npire. Ho accustomed to this way of ex¬\ncusing losses are the people here that\ntiioy frequently howl before they are\nhurt.
24f66d80cb5ea557d6c42e05ef6cf685 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1878.0260273655506 37.561813 -75.84108 While it is certain that needless alarm\nIs frequently excited by exaggerated\nstatements regarding food adulteration,\nthere can be no doubt that' many of the\narticles of food met with on our tables\noften contain foreign ingredients, which\nare introduced cither for the purpose of\nlessening their cost or improving fheir\ntaste and appearance.\nFlour is subjected to adulteration with\nother and inferior meals, such as rice,\nbeans, rye, potatoes, and Indian corn,\nthe addition of which cheapens the price\nand in some cases bestows a good color\nupon a damaged or inferior grade, or\ncauses it to take up an abnormally large\nquantity of water. The addition of for-\neign meals to flour is practiced, howev\ner, almost exclusively in Europe, as\nmost of the substances of this class\nused, have in this country a greater value\nthan pure wheaten flour. A more prob-\nable illustration with us is the use of\nalum and mineral substances; the form-\ner is occasionally employed to impart a\nwhite color to flour, the latter, which\ninclude sulphate of lime, kaolin, chalk,\nand bone dust, being used to produce\nincreased weight. It has quite recently\ncome to light that a flour containing\nten per centum of a mixture of chalk,\nplaster of Paris, and barytes has for\nsome time formed a steady article of ex-\nport from Holland into other European\ncountries. The presence of such sub-\nstances as these can be detected by plac-\n the flour in along tube nearly tilled\nwith chloroform, shaking the mixture\nand allowing it to stand, when the pure\nflour will rise to the top of the liquid,\nthe heavier mineral adulterants sinking\nto the bottom.\nBread naturally contains the foreign\ningredients added to the flour from\nwhich it is made; but in addition to\nthese, other substances are sometimes\nused in its preparation. Alum is em-\nployed to prevent the action of the dias-\ntase upon the starch, and to prevent\nthe bread from becoming sour and\nmouldy; and although this salt undoubt-\nedly tends to accomplish these, results\nand imparts a fine white appearance to\nthe bread, its use is not justifiable.\nWhen taken into the stomach it is lia-\nble to occasion acidity and dyspepsia;\nfurthermore, it prevents the solution of\na large proportion of the gluten of the\nbread, thereby causing a decrease in its\nnutritious value. Afar more reprehen-\nsible adulteration consists in the addi-\ntion of sulphate of copper, which has\nthe same effect on the color of the bread\nand on the diastase. Although this salt\nis but seldom employed, and then in\nvery small amounts, its use is to be con-\ndemned in the strongest terms, ns it\nacts as a virulent poison, and its effects\nare cumulative. A simple and delicate\ntest for detecting the presence of cop-\nper is to moisten the suspected bread\nwith a few drops of solution of ferrocy-anid- e
22903066de41b69c3934cc9c8c2ca3b6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.872950788049 40.063962 -80.720915 During the delivery of the decision the\ncourtroom was very quiet, the auditors\nlistening with close attention to every\nword. Amusement was manifested by\nsmiles during some passages, portraying\nthe utter failure of the attempts to Bhow\nthat such a person as Henry L. Morey bad\nsxistence, and there was a slight rustle as\nmany of the spectators turned to look at\none another during the comments of the\nCourt on Mr. Hewitt's connection with the\ncase. When Judge Davis closed by an¬\nnouncing that he should hold the prison¬\ner, General Pryor put the question aa to\nthe amount of bail. The Court said bail\ncould remain aa already fixed, $5,000, and\nthe present bondamen would bo accepted\nAt the suggestion of Mr. Brooke the Court\nconsented to adjourn the of a\nnew bond until Monday next at 12 m.\nIhe counsel for Mr. Ilart rose anil said\nthat witness Lindsey in his confession had\nalleged that lie, the counsel, when con¬\nversing with him before the witness testi¬\nfied, that he remarked "that is all you will\nhave to swear to." The counsel denied\nthis, and declared that he only said to\nthe witness, "that will do," meaning that\ntho interview was ended.\nJudge Davis said he had nothing to do\nwith this, but exculpated counsel from\nany charge of improper, behavior in tbo\npublic proceedings. He referred to tbo\nlatter s conduct in securing tho production\nof the Morey lotter and envelope in court,\narid the counsel expressed his thanks for\nthe Court s remarks. The court-roonAvas\nthen vacated.
a1413b8423c44129ef352561eac694b0 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1938.4178081874684 40.618676 -80.577293 Wheeling, W. Va.— At last Friday\nnight's meeting of the "Buy Ameri­\ncan" committee it was found that en­\ndorsements of the move have been\ngiven by all firms, clubs, associations,\norganizations and individuals in the\ndistrict. The campaign is growing at\na great rate and will be climaxed June\n17 with a parade, bonfire and speeches.\nThe support of the Chamber of\nCommerce was assured the drive in a\nletter received by William Pritchard,\nsecretary of the organization from\nRawley W. Holcombe, manager of the\nChamber, which is reprinted here:\n"You will be interested in know­\ning that at a meeting of the board\nof directors held yesterday, they\nunanimously endorsed the BUY\nAMERICAN campaign which is being\nconducted by the ceramic and glass\nemployers and the employes.\n"We are glad to join you in \nmovement and I sincerely hope that\nit is going to be successful from\nevery standpoint, as it is of inesti­\nmable value to the upper Ohio valley."\nIndividual endorsement of the plan\nwas given by Edward J. Lally, Tom\nGavin and Tom Garden, members of\nthe Ohio county board of commission\ners, after failing to act on the matter\nat a board meeting Friday.\nThe matter was before the board\nFriday as a matter of county busi­\nness but Prosecutor C. Lee Spillers\nruled against the board having au­\nthority to act in the matter, accord\ning to President Lally.\nParade marshals were appointed\nFriday night at a meeting of the plan­\nning committee held in the Labor\nTemple. They will be Mike Finley,\nCharles Davis and J. K. Long. They\nwill announce their aides later.
2072c0096c0af3cd669564959de10d00 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.9684931189752 37.005796 -89.177245 worth rAii nunc than it cost.\nA recent case occurred where a farmer\nto have expanses, omitted tp tftko. his lo-\ncal paper for on'oyear. lie went to mar-\nket on Monday wlth'n load of 33 bushels\nof wheat, and sold it to tho first ono who\noirered him lo more per. bushel than ho\ngut tho week beforo. With a part of tlio\nmoney he bought a piece of 42 yards Jof\nmuslin nt 17c per yard. At ulgUtue met\na nelgbor who had sold his wheat of tho\nsame quality at 10 cents a bushel higher,\nund bought the sumo kind of mubllti'nt\n15 cunts. HIh local paper of Saturday\nhad told him of nn advance of ten cents\nou wheat, aud who pnid It, and ho stuck\nfor that price nnd got It. The name pa-\nper contained advertisement of n\ndealer who sold tho cotton goods at 15\ncontH, and he bought them there. Ho\nmade, or saved. $1,81 on that day's trip'\nfrom thu information gained from ono\nnumber of his paper, while for a whole\nyear it cosu him only S2. Tho sluglo\nnumber, costing 1 cents, was worth to\nhim $1.81 above a year's subscription.\nAnd ho It will often ho through thu year\nnot to mention tho fact that his child-\nren nro growing up Intelligent they\nlearn to read lu reading tho paper, and\nthussavo tlnio nnd expense at school;\nnnd they know what is going on in the\nworld, havo some thing to think of while\nat work, and their heads aro not to\nmuch tho devil's wsrk shop, for lie\n"Hilda somo mlichlef still for ldio hand;"'\nnuu uruius,
1956139992cd7d17b1ec8721e9f2d84c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.3849314751394 40.063962 -80.720915 You folka along the Ohio River bate a\nwrong idea of where the true greatness\nof Weat Virginia really liea. You vain-\nlj imagine that the claah of machinery\nand the din of commerce makeaa locality\nimportant. That's a yankee notion of\nyoura. But out here in the interior,where\nDemocracy does greatly prevail, we de¬\nvote our time to the production of great\nmen and lat steers. You would aay that\nthe latter are more aervicable to the\n8tate; but we, who know better, look over\nyour ignorance, and pursue the ever ten¬\nor of our way. It used to be said that\nWest Virginia was in Harrison county,\nand Harrison county in the town of\nClarksburg; but Weaton haa valiantly\ncontested this heresy. We admit that\nClarksburg haa, so to her\nthousands, but Weston has her\ntens of thousand. Just think of\nit now ! The other morning I aaw\nletting together in sweet converse four\nex-candidatea for the United States Sen¬\nate, to-wlt: Matbew Edmiston, J. M.\nBennett, John Brannon and Wm. E. Ar¬\nnold, and as I gazed upon them. I could\nnot resist the temptation to exclaim, in\nthe words of an ancient writer of some\nnote, "Behold how good and how pleas¬\nant it is for brethren to dwell together in\nunity I" We have hosts of others, equally\neminent and deserving; and in the lan-\nguage of Major lieger, cf Barbour, "we\nare free, able and willing to take any¬\nthing in the way of Public favor, from\nthe Presidency of the United States down\ntoa
1568926d4a1a846cce32a27f961909ce EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.705479420345 39.745947 -75.546589 ■ fort to conserve the interests of the,\n■ citizens and then we were not always!\n■ successful In fact, with the short I\n■ hours and comparative freedom from I\n■ restraint, I feel that under existing;\n■ conditions many thoroughly corape-1\n■ tent men would be willing to become;\n■ City Auditor at a salary of $1,200. j\n■ “In my opinion, however, the office ]\n■ of City Auditor should he abolished\n■ and one of City Controller created; 1\n■ and the Controller should be given j\n■ the power to veto for overcharge or,\n■ Injudicious expenditure of public\n■ funds. This pian has worked wonders\n■ li> the Levy Court cf thi county and\n■ l feel that its application to rnunicl-\n■ pal affairs would be hignly beneficial\n■ to the fax paye In addition, II\n■ would suggest that a citizens com-.\n■ mittee be authorized to carefully ex-1\n■ amine the Auditors or Controllers:\nI books and vouchers at least once each,\n■ year. Such committee could be made (\n■ up of members of the Civic Associa-1\n■ tion, the Board of Trade, and o*her ;\n■ citizens organizations: and should be\n■ elected by the members of ^uch or-1\nIjganizations. If this were the case. 1\n■ l feel that the old story of Burying!\n■ it in the Auditors office might be\n■ changed somewhat; since the mem-1\n■ hers of the committee would\n■chosen by the people themselves, and\n■ not appointed by one who might bej\n■ interested in keeping things quiet.\n■ incidentally, a few citizens would\n■ learn something about municipal!\n■financing.
89367c335e1b5ffe922af050bcbd52a7 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.746575310756 39.560444 -120.828218 “California wants preachers who can\nwithstand something—preachers of the\ntiospcl of Jesus Christ—preachers whose\nhearts Are big and brave—full of the\nwarmth of Christ's loVe fur meti —who are\nwilling to work and preach, and pray out\nof a genuine Christian zeal—preachers\nwho can take hold of mens hearts here\nand fill them with early memories, and\nkindle the hopes of goodness, well nigh\ndead, and renew the longings of by-gone\ntimes when the heavens seemed full of\ngood spirits wooing them to purity.—\nPreachers who can not only reprove, in a\nloving spirit, the sins which all acknowl-\nedge, but give a chance to us poor devils\nto grow better. Wc dont want, when\nnow and then wc get into a church, to be\nmade to feel that we are utter devils—-\n(airly shocking to the tender sensibilities\nof the amiable minister who thinks his\nbest plan of drawing us to a better life is\nby in the highest coloring, the\niniquities for which we are already sorry\nand perhaps ashamed. I know / am a\ngreat sinner—l never go to church to learn\nthat. But when lam edified by half an\nhours painting of all my worst faults, and\nmany which arc neither mine nor any-\nbody's else, it would be pleasant to have\naomething said which would appeal to\nwhat little good there may be crowded\ndown into the bottom of a soul by the\nweary burden which has somehow gath-\nered over it during a hard life. Are wc\nnot utterly surprised, and inexpressibly\npleased when we happen upon a man w ho\ncan be talked to just like other men, al-\nthough he is a preacher! How eagerly\nwc listen to such a man—how gratefully\nwe listen to his counsel, though alas, wc\nmay not follow it—how our hearts warm\ntoward his goodness—how we wish wc\nwere Christians, like him.'
2e0aaecc0770536dab3f1728d1c2f5d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.7438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 tn lie fed and clothed and annuities\nlistrihutcd right. The President does\ncry little for us now. Wo want to Ik*\niclpoil and taken care of forever. They\n»niliI'M lIU'll ii^t-lllK mill unci I'lUirin\nrliiitt^cd ami the privilege of selecting the\nlie new mien themselves. 'I'hev wanted\nJ.itholic priests for teachers, iw they had\nill tliey wanted of other denomination*.\nlie was followed by Spotted Hear, of\nhe Cheyenne Agency, who said it limited\nad to see troops around the council\nlimp while making a treaty. He said\nlis tribe wanted a great deal for the\nlills, hut before tliey sold them the\nvlilte people go and stent them. I le said\nhere were a great many had men in Ins\neservniinn, iind he wanted the Catholic\npriests to educate his people and \nItem wise, lie said this was something\nhat they wanted their (treat Father to\njratit them. He wanted $70,000,000 for\nlie lllitck Hills. The white t»coide put\nheir money out at interest; tlie Indians\nranted to live on the interest >if their\nnoney. lie sjtoke in behalf of the while\nuen and half-breeds of his tribe, and\nivnnted to select these men as traders\nind have several trading posts on the\nigcficics, repeated the remarks of his\niredecessor.wanted dupilicate bills of\nlie annuity of goods that cotne to the\nigehcy, wanted a telegraph ojierator at\nlie agency so he could talk with the\n('resident «|iiick when anything was\nvrong, wanted the soldiers removed from\nlie agencv, wanted the President to give\nvery Indian a house, farm wngon, horses,\nattic and tools.
0c384854fe03fdd9fddd05618666a933 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.401369831304 29.4246 -98.49514 last he had found the place he wanted,\nand hastened tutbocasngrande to make\nInquiries, as to ownership, elc. About\nthe third terrace from thu lake was thu\nbig house, built In the usual style or\nthick walls and elegant patio In the\ncentre, and a little ell to the left, on the\nbanks or a bold, clear stream rushing\ndown from the mountains to the lake,\nwas a puebloclto (hamlet) of some ItOO\nsouls. Don Francisco, to his chagrin,\nfound the place occupied, and under-\ngoing a thorough overhauling and reno-\nvation. The owner was an American\nwho at 1' ret was unvlslble, and whom\nthe set ants said would not see strang-\ners, but on requesting an Interview and\ngiving hi in to vnderstand that I was a\nMexican on n prospecting tour, ho llnally\nhad me shown to his olllce. I found hlui\na man of some DO odd years, about me-\ndium sire, Inclined to be stout, florid\ncomplexion, and with iron gray hair and\nbeard. He had but one leg and giving\nme a sharp look, and a furtive glance\nnbout he Invited me to a seat. His con-\nfidential servant was a negro, who spoke\nSpanish very well, also French. This\nman was the mayor domo, (overseer)\n nominally the boss orthe estate, all\nbusiness being transacted through him,\nTho American told me til a name was\nThomas S. Johnson, and was known by\nthe natives asDonTomas.el Americano.\nI got no Information from him except\nthat he had lived there some four months,\nhaving bought the place from thu heirs\nthrough an attorney, and that be did not\nwish to sell, as be Intended It for his\nhome untlldealh.\nDon Francisco had nothing left hut to\nretrace his steps, but before going con-\nversed with some of the more Intelligent\nnatives, who were nothing more nor less\nthan slaves, or peons, as they are called,\nand learned that from repairs and prepa-\nrations at the big house It was generally\nbodevod that ladles were expected.\nIt suddenly occurring to the reporter\nthat a rumor was current that Marsh\nPolk, the defaulting Treasurer of Ten-\nnessee, who was arrested In this city, and\nbribing the detectives again got under\nway ror Mexico and llnally halted near\nLaredo, sent back to Nashville, tried and\nsentenced to Hie penitentiary, and there\ndied, was really not dead, but that the\ncoIHq contained other substance, and\nthat the arlstocratlo embezzler was again\nIn our sister republlce, he plIedDon\nK'anclsco with insnv nnemlnn.
3a783c4f877cb0bdc42f11e0ae580e5f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.078082160071 39.623709 -77.41082 (lod has been dishonored, His truth has\nbeen scorned, His authority has been set\naside, His majesty has been slighted, His\nlaw has been broken. His name has been\ndespised. No reformation of man can\never make this wrong right. Thus, in the\nOld Testament the goat was offered to\nmeet Gods demands, which were just, and\nto satisfy His holy law. And thus in the\nXew Testament Jesus Christ came to suf-\nfer and to die. Nowadays there is much\nteaching abroad, which magnifies the life\nof Jesus, but the clear teaching of the\nword of God is that only by the shedding\nof llis blood is there remission of sins;\nthe blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanscth\nfrom all sins. Much is said to-day about\nJesus being a teacher, but He said Himself\nthat Spirit, when He is come, would\nteach us all things. Jesus Christ came to\ndo just one thing, namely, to die. that\nthrough His death an avenue might he\nopened up for man to come hack to his\nGod, reconciled forever unto God.\nBut this is not all. The second goat was\nled forth, with a scarlet cord about his\nneck. The hands of the priest were laid\nupon his head. and then the sins of the\npeople were confessed, and by the hand\nof a fit person the scapegoat was led unto\na land that was not inhabited. In this he\nbecomes a prefer illustration of the Lord\nJesus Christ. *The Lord hath laid on Him\nthe iniquity of us all.” and He has carried\nour sins away, ns far “as the east is from\nthe west.”
0416fc5f980eb8e96b36150fa13f2593 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1893.9547944888382 37.92448 -95.399981 O, these regalias and diadems of\nbeauty flung out of Heaven! Kings\nand queens on celebrative days have\ncome riding through the streets," throw-\ning handfuls of silver and gold among\nthe people, but the queen of the winter\nmorning is the only queen rich enough\nto throw pearls, and the king of frost\nthe only king rich enough to throw\nopals and sapphires and diamonds.\nBut I ero a step further and speak of\nthe frost as an evangelist and a text\nof Scripture is not of much use to me\nunless I can find the gospel in it The\nIsraelites in the wilderness break-\nfasted on something that looked like\nfrozen dew. The manna fell on the\ndew, and the dew evaporated and left\na pulverized material, white, and look-\ning like frost but it was manna, and\nof that they ate. So now this morning\nmixed the frozen dew of my text.\nmere is manna on winch we may\nbrcakfast our souls. You say the frost\nkills. Yes, it kills some things, but\nwe have already seen that it gives\nhealth and life to others. This gospel\nis the savor of life unto death or of\ndeath unto death. As the frost is\nmight, the gospel is mighty. As the\nfrost purifies, so the grace ofGo.l puri-\nfies. As the frost bestars the ear h. so\ngrace bejewels the soul. As the frost\nprepares for food many things that\notherwise would be inedible, so the\nfrost of trial ripens and prepares food\nfor the soul. In the tight grip of the\nfrost the hard shells of walnut and\nchestnut and hickory open, and the lux-\nuries of the woods come into our laps or\nupon our tables; so the frost of trial\ntakes many a hard and
4c7334b7586d9a66d3336639843e2e52 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.5438355847286 39.261561 -121.016059 You are hereby summoned to appear and answer\nto the complaint of 8. II. D1KF.MAN, filed against\nyou, within ten days from tho service of this writ,\nif served on you in this county, and within twenty\ndays if served on you in this District and out of this\ncounty, and within forty days if served on you in\nthis State and out of this District, In an action com-\nmenced on the 18th day of April, A. i>. 1861 , in\n„aid Court to obtain a decree ol this Court lor the\nloreclosure of a certain mortgage, bearing date the\n12tli day of October a 1>. 1859 , executed by the said\ndefendant to plaintiff. and for the sale of the premi-\nses therein, and in satd complaint particularly men-\ntioned aud described and the application of the mon-\neys arising fiom such sale to the payment ot the\namount due on four certain promissory notes set\nforth in said complaint, made and delivered to said\nplaiutiif by the defendant bearing even date with\nsaid mortgage and thereby intended to be secured,\nto wit: The sum of 61,500, with Interest thereou\nfrom the V2th dav of October n . 1859 . at the rate\nof two per cent, per month till paid : and it any defi-\nciency shall remain alter applying all ot said moneys\nproperly so applicable thereto, then that Plalntilf\nmay have execution theretbr against the suid defend-\nant, also that said defendant and all and every per-\nson claiming through ornmlet defendant subsequent-\nly to the dale of plaintiff* mortgage and the coiu-\nmencement of this action, may be barred and fore-\nclosed of all right, claim, hen and equity of redemp-\ntion in and to the said mortgaged premises, or any\npart thereof, und for such other and further relief,\nor both, in the premises as may be just and equita-\nble. And you are hereby notified that If you fail to\nanswer said complaint as herein directed, plaintiff\nw ill take judgment against you therefor by default,\ntogether with alt costs ol suit, and counsel fees iu the\nsum of $150 and also demand ot the Court such oth-\ner relief as is prayed for in plaintiffs said complaint.\nIn testimony whereof, I, John 8. I.iuibert, Clerk\n,■) of the District Court aforesaid, do here-\nJ seal. >
0320a17b494bd3d1860b1f37d73d7092 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.001369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 NEWS FOR HIS FRIENDS.\nMr. Charles Fehrenbach, son of th«\nlate John Fehrenbaeh, was made\nvery flattering offer to accept the gen" 1\neral agency of the Covenant Mutual\nLife Association, of Illinois, for the\nState of Delaware.\nAfter due consideration, Mr. Fehren- 1\nbach accepted the position, and has\ntered the well-known insurance firm\nW. S . Hoffman & Co, the companvR 1\nmanager for Delaware and New Jersey.\nMr. Fehrenbach can be seen on and\nafter January 12, 1898, at their office\n836 Market street, Wilmington, Dela­\nware. Mr. Fehrenbach will be pleased\nto hear from or have all his friends to\ncall upon him at said ofTices. To those\nwho are seeking to better their condi­\ntion Mr. Fehrenbach states he will give\nthem a first-class agents contract\nwhich will pay them better than\nanything they ever worked. This r_\npany has put into the field a new pol­\nicy payable monthly, and will issue In­\nsurance policies from $100 to $10,000,\nand in case of permanent totai\ndisability, either from aeoident or sick­\nness, will pay one-half of the amount\ninsured. The standing of the Covenant\nMutual Life Association is beyond\nproach, as it is the strongest natural\npremium company in the United States.\nIts standing can be obtained from\neither R. G. Dun & Co., Bradstreet\nCommercial Agency, cr any of the\ntional hanks. The Covenant Mutual\nLife commenced business and was in­\ncorporated January 9, 1877, and is to­\nday backed by twenty-on© years ex­\nperience, backed by $1,600,000 of assets,\nbacked by over $1,000,000 of surplus!\nbacked by nearly $90,000,000 at risk!\nbacked by over 43,000 policy-holders;\npaid to policy holders over $12,000,000.\nAll policies are in full and immediate\nbenefit. Purely mutual. Profits the\nproperty of policy-holders. No stock­\nholders to absorb its earnings. A con­\nstantly increasing benefit. Return of\nsurplus and accumulations. Free from\nrestrictions of residence or travel. In­\ncontestable after three years.\nW. H. SMOLLINGER, President.\nHON. A. W . BERGGREN.Treasurer.\nB. F. RErMUND, Secretary.
074e5b2cb7fb6b42a19154eec8d13ef4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.905479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 the necessity for mote attention to the\nel.eep business in this section ol the State\non the part of farmers, has awakened sora«\ninterest among them. Sheep raising is ar\nagricultural bonanza, and those who em\nbark in it, and leavo off cattle and horses\nespecially the cattle, will find it out at ai\nearly day. Give us sheep for wool ant\nmutton and less scrub horseflesh. Col. J\nM. Bennett, with characteristic sagacitj\nand enterprise, is turnimr his attention tr\nsheep. Mr. Flanagan,'of Greene county\nI'a., has placed on Mr. Bennett's farm\n000 head of stock sheep. Col. Woodfori\nia now en route from Pennsylvania witl\nseveral hundred head, with which ho wil\nstock big magnilieeut farm in this county\nJudge Thos. A . Edward is in like inanne\nturning his in the eurne direction\nI see that a wool growers convention i\ncalled to meet at l'arkersburj:. I can givi\nthem a short and effective receipt for car\nrj'inir on the business in this State, viz\nKill of the worthless dogs, either by taxa\ntion or bullets, and tho association-wil\nwon see a boom in the demand for &hcej\nfrom the interior of this State.\nOur narrow gauge road is a success am\nis payiug well. This, too, notwithstand\ning it cost about thirty-three percent mor<\nthan wufianticipated. But you know how\nit is; build a house and change the sped\nlieations here and there only a little ami\nlook out for tho contractor's bill tor ex\ntms. We like the railroad and will clinj\nto it as our connecting liuk with tho
10c0231fcd692a01992741d55087ebd1 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.3383561326739 40.832421 -115.763123 require volumes to recount the strug¬\ngles. trials and triumphs through which\ntt has passed to the glorious position,\noccupied by it to-duy. Nor can we be\nallowed to more than refer to the debt of\ngratitude wa owe.thal every man, woman\nand child within our laud owes, to its\nnoble and self-sacrificing founders and\nsupports. One name, however, that of\nIhornaa Wildey. the father of Odd\nirellow ship in America. must not be I\npassed in silince. We never tire of re¬\ncounting the illustrious deeds of the I\ncreat and noble of nil lands. We feel |\nthat we owe a debt of giutitude to the\nheroes, patriots and statesmen, who\nhave sr. often guided our Ship of State\nthrough storm aud tempest, and defend¬\ned her from every foe, whioh run never\nbe repaid. Their records are written\nhigh upon the pinnacle of f.mo the ir\nmemories will ever be green in thJ\n of their graefol posp. -rity ;.ud by\ntthe side of the greatest aud proudest of\nem we place the name of Wildey A\nru leader of men whom no failures\ncould conquer and no reverses disconr-\nage. he devoted his life to the cause of\nfriendship, love and truth. With tn*\nfaith that removes mountains burning\nwithin his breast, there w.i* no sacrifice\ntoo great to be made, no obstacle too\ngreat to be overcome if thereby be could\nadvance the caase forwhich he labored.\nAs worthy adjutants of surh a captain\nwe recoil the memories of Welch. Kntiv-\nisle, Boyd and Mathiot. and proudly\nrefer to Bidgely, Kennedy and Vol,\nBoat. In each aud all of them was\nthat native force which defies and sub-\ndnes all opposition, and with such\nleaders success could only follow. 'I hev\nconquered it by their z<al, held it bv\nprudence, aud drterved it for their\nvirtues.
814a57af10fc9ad6c4853b2fdd17d60b THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.960382482038 40.807539 -91.112923 i;. Alexander on the 18th day of May, 1838, j ^in the ]hic oi-)lig profc86ion\nfor the sum of seventy two dollars and fifty ; Burlington, July 23, 1840.\nocuts, pavablo on or before the 1st day of\nOctober, lfc38, to the said complainant, or to\nhis order, and that none of the said notes had\nbeen endorsed by the said complainant, nor\nhad lie then, or since parted with his interest\nin said notes, or authorized any other person\nto transfer the same for him, and that irame-\ndiatclv ufter placing them in the hands of\nthe said constable for collection as aforesaid,\nthe said complainant left said Territory, and\nwas absent for several months, during which\nabsence, the said Swope departed this life;\nand said noteB by some means got inio the\nhands of different persons, who set up and\nciaiincd the right to collect and receive pay­\nment, for the same, without any authority\nfroin sajd eoiuplaiuant for the same, and that\nnil of the persons thus holding and claiming\npaid notes, were informed of the true situa­\ntion of said notes by said complainant on his\nreturn, which was immediately after the\ndeath of said Swo]*c, and also that the note\nabove referred to, signed by Nicholas Winter-\nstein, and Gideon B. Alexander, by some\nmeans got into the hands of the said William\nBuchanan, who instituted a suit upon the\ntame, in the District Court, said county,\nin the name of the said complainant, far the\nusa of said William Buchanan, without any\nauthority so to do, and having been notified\nby said complainant, of the true circum­\nstances und situation of said note, he is en­\ndeavoring to enforec payment of the same,\ngreatly to the prejudice and injury of said\ncomplainant, and that the said note, was\nmade payable to the said Josiah Luckey. or to\norder, and that the same is not endorsed by\nhim, and also representing that at the May\nterm, of said District Court, 1840, judgment\nwas rendered by default against said Winter­\nstcin and Alexander, for the full amount of\nsaid note with interest, &c, and whereas a\nsummons has been issued in this case, against\nthe said defendant, returnable at the October\nterm of said Court, 1810, which was returned\nby the Sheriff, inn est inventus. Now unless\nthe said William Buchanan, shall personally\nbe, and appear before the District Court, for\n*uid county, setting as a Court of Chancery,\non or before the first day of the next term,\nthereof, to be begun, and held at tho Court\nHouse, in Burlington, on the third Monday of\nFebruary, 1841, and answer on his corporal\noath, the charges and allegations set forth in\nsaid bill of complaint, the same shall be ta­\nken as confessed, and a decree entered in the\npremises according^' . Nov 23d, 1840.
465f720c4559dcf60113bcfa5daf7890 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.223287639523 39.623709 -77.41082 well; meets a woman; asks a diink; she\nexpresses surprise: Jesus speaks of I he gilt\nof God—living water: she desires i!; J< . s\nasks her to call her husband; she s ;ys : 11 ¦\nhas none; has had five; calls Jesus a pio-\nphet; asks about place of worship; true\nworship must he in spirit and in truth.\nVII. Topic: Christs power to restore\nto life. Place: Cana in Galilee. The (tab-\nleaus received Christ gladly. A imbh mm\nof Capernaum heard that Jesus _li.nl enmo\ninto Galilee and hastens to Him to en-\ntreat Him to conic ami heal Ins son: -b's.s\ntold him to return and that his_ son vas\nhealed; the man believed Christs words;\nthe son began to recover at the very hour\nJesus had said, “Tby sou livetb.”\nVill. Topic; The Lordship of Jems\nChrist. Place: Jesus went, to Jeru-alem\nto attend the feast the Passover; Jesus\nsaw an infirm man at the pool of Bcth-\nesda, who had been sick thirty-eight years;\nasked him if he desired to he made wlio.e:\nthe man replied that he had no one to put\nhim into the pool; Jesus to'd him to rise,\ntake up his bed and walk; the man did us\nhe was commanded.\nIX. Topic; Jesus supplying human ue d.\nPlace: Near Bethsaidn on the northeast\nshore of the Sea of Galilee. Jesus and 11 is\ndisciples went into a desert place to bn\nalone; great multitudes followed (hem;\nJesus taught them and healed their siek;\nin the aftcuoon the disciples .suggested that\nthe multitude should he sent away to buy\nfood; Jesus decided to feed them there; a\nlad was found with five loaves and two\nfishes; five thousand men were fed besides\nwomen and children.\nN. Topic: Jesus proves Himself the\nGod-Saviour.
06ce3fdc00961950125fd4d554b75ed0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.0205479134956 40.063962 -80.720915 outlined the constitution of a cb\nbody, and specified in particular\nwork done by the minister. Said\nWhen a company of persons joli\ngether around the truth and tead\nof Jesus Christ, and become pro;\norganized with all its parts they\na congregation of God's people. Sc\nfaith exercised constitutes them\nSaints of God." The purpose of\nan organisation is that Its men\nmay come "into the unity of the f\nandoftheSonofGod, untoape\nman, unto the measure of the sti\nof the fullness of Christ." The et\nbe obtained is that, as indjviduals,\nas an organization, they may gl>\nGod and "be partakers of the in\nUlUUC U1 Uin B1I1IU) iu 1>5UW\nThis outward and visible orgai\ntloD, with Its several parts, ifl\nChrist's own appointment. These p\nIn the order of growth and dev<\nment may bo stated as follows: F\nthe minister; second, the people; t\nthe governing authority. Or, In\nmore suitable order of contlnua\nFirst, the members; second, the\nernlng authority; third, the mini\nL The people are those whom\nchooses and calls together unto\ngrace, to be saints. For "as man\nare ordained unto eternal life, belli\nsays the scripture. People are le\nbelieve preaching of the word\nThe governing authority, called\nsession, Is appointed, designated\nregulated by the gospel of Him\nordained "the powers that be."\nmembers are led to believe by\nDreachlnsr of the word, as also arc\nisters. 3 . But the minister, in a\npeculiar sense, by the will of God, h\ncentral authority and completing 1\nof God's appointed organization. " V\nout the minister the organisation i\ncomplete, and without the mlnistei\nvisible church must soon dlsinteg\nGod well knew this. And, there\nin His word has set forth divine\ndivine guidance and divine protec\nin behalf of His servants, who are\nedtolaborinthemidstofasi\nand wicked world, for the upbuil\nof His kingdom. How much this\nhas to say about God's ministry\nGod's minister! It speaks of their\ning; of their ordination by the la\non of the hands of the presbytery\ntheir labors; of their support; of\narmor with which they must "con\nfor the faith once delievered unto\nsaints"; of their faithfulness in the\ncharge of duties; of their glorious\ntory and the crown for their rew\nIn God's view of it tnere it no\nImportant office in ail the world as\noccupied by the ministers of God.
4243f376ccf98ce0d9468eaed01f9d24 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.5931506532218 39.560444 -120.828218 There was a round tent close by, and\nwe built up a good fife and cooked one\ngood meal before we did anything more.\nI did the cooking while Mick and Bill\nwatched the frying pan, knife and pistol\nin hand. The first pan-full went out of\nsight in a twinkling, and then one of them\nswore that the first man that put his hand\nin the pan again would get his fingers\nchopped off. Andrew Goodyears whole\ncamp were there—lndians and all, fifteen\nor sixteen in number, and would soon have\ncat np all we had. We then suspended\ncooking until we got away from them.—\nWe bargained with J. H. Foster (Cut\nEye,) to take our provisions to Goodyears\nBar, and across the river, for eighteen\nounce's; and in the mean time we got them\npacked from Slate Range to his ranch at\nOak Valley. Mick watched Cut Eye and\nBill packing, and I kept a lookout for\nthem at the store, until provisions\nwere all transported. After this it began\nto snow and rain, and then we bad a higli\ntime drinking brandy and playing cards.\nEvery now and then some one would put\nhis hand through the dolh io front of the\nrudo counter, foraging for a slap-jack\nwhich might be left in the pan Two or\nthree crackers were served out to each\none, and then the can was put under the\ncounter for the next day. I frequently\nsaw some of them putting their hands\nthrough the hole, in fact did so myself,\nas all that we could steal was clear gain.\nWe staid there as long as the brandy\nlasted, and after taking a parting dram\nseparated, I to go back to Cut Eye Fos-\nter s for more provision. The other boys\nprepared to start to Fosters and in the\nmeantime cleared away the snow from be-\nside a log and went to playing cards,\nthough they had not a mouthful to eat.
40007732cb71e3a0a1eda4b8ffd76d9f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9410958587011 39.513775 -121.556359 KUR BECK, VV . If. McCARUEIt and A. VDCAK-\n•■KK are the defendants, corninnnJing me to sell at\npublic sale, certain mortgaged property hereinafter\ndescribed, to satisfy the following demands to wit;\nThe eum of four hundred and eighty seven flftj one-\nhundredths dollars (*487,60), will interest from the\nsecond day of May 1867. at die rate id five per cent,\nper month. Also, the sura of five hundred dollars\ni$500,00), witli intere-t from the fifteen)h day of\nJune 1887. at the rate of six (11) per cent per mouth.\nA Iso, costs of siul taxed, in die sum of sixteen ninety\none-hnndredthe dollars (flA.Kij, together with nil\nthe costs accruing upon said order Therefore, in\npursuance with it e requirements of said order. I\nwill, on the TWENTIETH DAY «>K DECEMBER\nA. I). 18)7, at the hour of oclock, P .M, of said\nday, sell at public sale, to the highest bidder for cash,\nall of the mortgaged property therein described lo\nwit! Situated on the Bar In front of the Town of\nOroville in said County of Butie, and described as\nfollows : Commencing at a stake marked S. W. m VV.\nfill, known us “ Lytle & Cos stake,'* and running\nwest two hundred and twenty-live feet thence north\nthree hundred and seventy (eel. thence east two\nhundred and twenty-five feet, thence to the place of\nbeginning, and known as the “Oroville Steam Min-\ning Company,” together with the appurtenances\nthereunto belonging, and also tho steam engine and\nboiler and everything appertaining thereto, formerly\nlocated on sail premises, but now removed to ttie\nresidence of Messrs. Hedges N. Hannon, now in said\nTown of Oroville,
13c121eb160f8beacdfed27d941ce577 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.57397257103 39.261561 -121.016059 Pelt, Craig, Soggs and other!*, on American\nIlill, ba* been completed,and the work of crush-!\ning cotmuenoed last Thursday, and tho mill has\nbeen running constantly since. Quite a number\nof ourcitizcns went over to see the mill start, and\nit is net dies* to *ay that they were hospitably\nentertained by the gentlemanly proprietors.\nWit, sentiment, and champaign (lowed in great\nprofusion until a late hour in the afternoon.\nThe mill has been built in the mast substantial\nand durable manner, and cost about $10,000 or\n$12,000. It is designed for three batteries, of\n(bur stamps each, though as yet hut two bat-\nteries have been put lu. The lead belonging\nto tbe company is believed to be one of the best\nin this section. It was first opened during tbe\nquartz excitement in 1851, and a mill erected\nto crush the rock; the workmen, however,\nthrough inistnke, got on lo another lead near\n which proved to tie worthless, and the pro-\nprietors of the old mill became involved, the\nwork was abandoned, and the machinery of the\nmill taken away—a common fate of the quartz\nminers of lhatday. The present mill has beeu\nerecti d under more favorable auspices, and we\nhave no doubt the proprietors w,U ho amply re-\nmunerated for thtjir outlay of capital. A large\nquantity of rock has been got out of tbe lead,\nwhich is now being crusbtd, and by another\nweek wc are Confident of being able to give a\nfavorable report of the first crushing. There\narc several other leads in the vicinity of the\nm.ll, which are believed lo lie valuable.\nTha erection of this m II lias done much to\ngive an impetus to the interest excited in quartz\nin this neighborhood, which in time we have no\ndoubt will prove of great benefit to the raining\ninterests of our county.
7603aad37f86076ea323ff7bca10b73c COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1855.7712328450025 41.262128 -95.861391 Compound Fluid Extract Buehu!\nt-or diseanes ol the Baldderand Kidneys, Secret\nDiseane*. mrictures, weakness, and alt dis­\neases of the sexual organs, whether in aisle or\nfemale, from whatever cause they inay have\noriginated, aod no matter of how iouystaao\niug.\nIf you have contracted the terrible disease\nwhich, when once seated in the system, will\nsurely go down irom one ^oueraiion loauolbe.\nunder luuing the constuuliou uud suappiug the\nvery vital fluids ol life; do not trust yourself la\nthe bauds ol Quacks, who start up every day in,\na city like this, and fill the papers with glariag\nfalsehoods, loo Well calculated to deceive the'\nyoung, and thos<5 not acquaiaied with their\ntricks. You cannot be too careful in the seiec\nlion of a remedy in these cases.\nThe Fluid Extract Bucha has.been pteaeane­\n by eminent physcians theg-eatest remedy\never knowu. It 16 a mediciue perfectly pleas •\naut iu its taste, aud very inuocont in its action\nand yet so thorough that it anuihilates every\nparticle of the rank aud poisonous virus of this\ndreadful disease; and, unlike other "cmedies,\ndoes not dry up the disease iu the blood.\nConstitutional debility, brought on by self-\nabuse, a most terrible disease, which has bro'i\nthousands of the humau race to uutimely gravoei\nthus* Hasting the brilliant nopes of parents,\nand blighting iu the bud the glorious aiobitioa\nof many a uohle youth, yiu U; cured by this In­\nfallible remedy. Aud as a medicine which must,\nbenefit everybody, from the simply delicate U\nthe confined snd desparing iuvalid, no equal is\n(j be fband acting both as aeuroaad provent*»\nlive.
17e814eb6ca2177fc7db5f53e3eb1bde THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.89999996829 40.063962 -80.720915 favored free silver,' and now wo have to\noppose it. We favored it then because\nwe thought it was right. Wo opposo\nit now, moat adored master, becauso\nthou tellost us to. Aiu't we a\nhoney of the first water? Did\nevery dog serve his master more\nfaithfully? Did ever a dog wet less for\nit? Oh,' mighty master, wo are ever\nready to serve thee and party. All the\nEay we ask is to be patted on tho back\ny norue local politician and called a\ngood Democrat. Wo ain't got any sense.\nWe don't want any. only enoueh'to vote\nthe ticket It dftn't tnko any sense to\nbe a good Democrat. What a joyful\nthought! We don't have to think.\nWe don't have to worry. Our work is\nall mapped out for us. All that is ex-\npected is to do what we are told. We\ntnanfc thee, oti Uleveiand, that we are\n "We thank thee for the\npanic. We thank thee for the hungry\n:in<t idle men and women in the land.\nWe thank theo for low* prices. Wo\nthank thee for the banks that have\nbusted and the thousands of business\nfailure! since thou hast come into\npower. We thank thee for the hard\ntimes. We thank thee for the rags our\nchildren wear. Wo thank theo for the\nclothes our wife needs and can't get.\nWe thank thee for what thou hast\ndone for the banker and what thou\nhast not done for the people.\nWo thank theo for all theso\nthings becau.ee it is our duty a9 a good\nDemocrat to do so. It may be "against\nthe grain" but we will take our medi-\ncine. We will work our wives to death,\nstarve our children, sacrifice our homes,\ncrucify liberty and kill prosperity, but\nwill never goback on our dear old party,
3216c462e4e72699ce009ffc8fe22f84 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.4616438039066 39.513775 -121.556359 The exodus of Gen. Walker from Nicara-\ngun, closes the protracted struggle in that\nneck of the American continent, for the\npresent, ami will occasion deep regret to\nhis friends in this State and elsewhere\nAlthough it would appear that he was\nobliged to vacate the theater of his many\nvictories and brilliant achievements, even\nhis surrender evidences a spirit and dignity\nthat disarms “at discretion,* of its humili-\nation and accompanying uncertainties He\nhas preserved the honor of his army and\nmaintained the dignity of his position, in\nhis surrender, and during the disasters\nthat lead to it. Hunan foresight nor In\ndoniitahle bravery could avert them, and\nthe war in Nicaragua has closed.\nWe cannot repress the thought that the\nwar in Nicaragua has occasioned about as\nmuch European diplomacy, as the allied\nwar in the but with greater success\nto its interests, and a less sacrifica of hu-\nman life. If is that which has conquered\nWalker in Nicaragua—it is that which has\nconsummated the defeat of the little bund\nwho risked so much for the extension of free\nprinciples, and not alone the bayonets of\nCosta Ricans. The tierce horde of negroes,\ninula!toes, and Indians, poured in upon Ni-\ncaragua, would have been poweless for ev.l,\nif left to their own resources and direction\nThe Monroe doctrine is popular in theory,\nand if carried out in practice, would become\nstill more so. I) übtless, in the course of\ntime, our government will act more fully up\nto the sound doctrine proclaimed long since,\nand cease to permit the secret interference\nof European powers, and find stations fur\ntheir navy in other portions of the globe
23e4af92ffc122685755d9920ddcb80b THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.519178050482 40.832421 -115.763123 Yesterday aftarnnon San F.anciaco\nBlock Exchange adj luruid until next\n\\V»i1u«*d- .y morning, iu order lb it Ilia\nDull* might craao tob. Hi w. tbe Dear*\nanppreea th»ir giowbi. wi-llo lubcie in\ntki Glorious Fouttb wilh p triotir howls,\nMr. Amos Plnn<merof Mountuiu City,\narrived lure from that place lu.t avail¬\ning. Ha is down aft- r supplies, nud\nwill return to th^it now attractive tcgu-ii\naa soon »< bia business at .ba County-\na»at ia diofo.nl of. itfr. I'lumnirr re-\n|M>rta eve lylbiu^ quiet ID Cupa Oiatlict, I\nwith (aad unuiuxlly Cut mid piospecta\ntor rrops and cattla psrticulmly good.\nTbia d<<as not apply fo Charley Wil-\naou, n»«tU*r din a it ft* Ka n Con- y. A*\nba took bia a< at iu tl.v li«ili r'n clinir\nha a»k -d lha if he liid tlio same\nrazor ba hnd uei-d ou him t\\T i cuvm Iio\nfu>a. Itiiug atiawvied afliiu.ativ ly, he\naaid, "Thau give tun I'Motifwni."\nMr. E . Ptnrud ai rived here fio n In¬\nland Mountain l>) bia own convex ance,\nlaat evening. Ilia luauy fiieudenill b«\ngl»d lo hesr tint be lna fully tscoveied\nhi* health, and ia cuv hnuty aa nauul.\nMr. Penrod's atay «iK br brief; bi»\ne.eit being due to a waiter <f buxiuea*.\nUe repoila that water fi-r hydc-mliciug\ntbe mln-c, ia yet sutlloi. nt, but i« rap¬\nidly dltulnlal. loir, and uveiy hum ia tl .\nvoted to nlilismg tbe failing supply.\nTbe yield frnni Ilia lata clean-up u\nrather light, hut rluber ground it now\nbeing entered and betttr returns iii tbo\nfuture ar*
1e223618839cef5809276eefed755812 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.4193988754807 41.004121 -76.453816 The church was originally erected tu 1812, In\nJuly of which year a vestry was duly elected\nnnd organlf.ed, Tho parish was In union will\nand sent deputies to the convention ! and receiv\ned during tho the early years, n their order, the\nministrations of Rev. Caleb Hopkins, Rev, Vm,\nJ'Jdrcd, Rev. James De Pile, Rev. lleiilamln\nHtitclilns, and Rev. George U. Drake.wliose la-- t\nollleial act was November 1, 1810. From that\nlime the parish seems to have been left to Its\nown devices, nnd It was not till June 10, 1871,\nthat (he minute book shows another entry,whlch\nwas a baptism by Rev. John Hewitt.\nThe church was consecrated by the Rt. Rev,\nHenry U. Ondcrdonk, Assistant Ilishop of\nremisylvania, July 15, 1828 ,\nWith oecastanal service's by clergy of somo\n very distant parish, but without Episcopal\nvisitation after tho yenr 1835, the peoplo became\nscattered and olheis occupied the ground wo\nhad neglected, A plot of two acres had been\ndeeded to the Episcopal, Presbyterian and Lu-\ntheran congregations, and they and other de\nnominations were In the habit of using St. On'\nbritd's for worhlp. liy and by there was but\none Lutheran left In the neighborhood, and the\nl'reshyltrians, without formally reliiupiislilng\ntheir right to occupy a portion of the ground,\nhowever, erected a handsamo place of public\nworship two or three miles distant from St. Gn\noriel s, nnd except for funcal occasions in the\nold burial ground, omitted its use. The Metho\ndists had erected n pleasant edifice in the village\nthree miles below, and were gathering a good\ncongregation.
032639c818751457d52837d647283f8b PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1910.4753424340436 31.762115 -95.630789 I must pause here In my story to tell\nwhat I afterward learned of the girls\nhistory Some twenty years before\none passing up one of the fashionable\nstreets of the city on a certain day and\nhour would have seen a party emerg-\ning from a church A young bride and\ngroom were starting in life with every\nprospect of happiness The grooms\nfather was head of a large business\nand the son bad been made a junior\ntner on the day of his marriage\njttlegirfr was jborn to the couple\nand she was taken to church bundled\nIn embroidered and lace garments like\nthe child In the perambulator I have\nreferred to that she might be baptized\nThen in a handsome stone residence\nthere was a christening feast with a\nmillionaire for godfather\nThat was the year before the great\npanic of 73 when one morning it was\nannounced that a great business boubo\nhad failed and down went the other\nconcerns like card houses The father\nand son of this story fell with the rest\nthe father dying of disappointment and\nwounded pride The clothing of the\nbaby girl from that moment began to\n plain then dingy Her father\ndied and her mother lived in want\nThe child grew to womanhood with no\nremembrance of her baby clothes\nWhen her sun arose the sun of her\nfamily set Then her mother died\nThe girl went from place to place\nbegging for a situation but nobod >\nwanted her Then one night she stood\non the bridge The waters below said\nCome I will give you rest\nThe morning after the attempted\nsuicide I went to the courtroom where\nthe good and the bad the unfortunp\nand the unregenerate were brought up\nbefore a magistrate In her turn the\ngirl was led in and placed In the dock\nShe had no defense She simply said\nthat she had got discouraged and\npassing over the bridge on her way to\nher dingy room which she had been\nnotified she must leave on the morrow\nshe bad looked out on the brilliant\nscene then down on the water and\nshe could not resist the call to oblivion\nThe downward slide In life though\nIt had marred bad not destroyed hei\ncomeliness There was evidence of an\nInherited refinement both In person\nand bearing
1644a4304863ddb668c629fefa80822d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.4068492833587 39.745947 -75.546589 time.\nspring suit at one-third the price that you\nwould ai other stores. Prices lower than ever.\nMens Elegant, Haring < Ivercoate at ?4 »>.\nMen's ltiisinesa Hulls $3.50; worth $«. Mens\nKnits $4 50; worth *12 Men's Elegant Clay\nWorsted Kults at *«.!»>; worth *211. Mens Ele­\ngant Black and Blue Cheviot Suit« at *4 2 I\nworth *1:1.Men's Oasslmere Buits at ftUkqworth\n*13 50 Boys Elegant Suits at 88c. and #1.00,\nworth #3.50 . Bov's Suits at *1 00, $3.00 . #2 .4«,\nworth from $3.75 to #«.0O Thousaudsof Men«\nHeavy Working Paula at 5Pc. Elegant Cassi-\n- -- --j Pant« at #0c worth $2.50 .Fine Dress Pant«\n$150, worth #4. Fine Dreas Parfis. #2, worth\n*5. Children's Jersey and Velvet Suits at less\ntnan cost of the goods. Spring Overcoats at\nyour own price. Fine Serge Suits at S>).'.*u\nworth *14. Elegant Imported Sergo Hulls at\n$7. 0 . worth $10. 1,500 Childrens Wash Suits\nat 2iic. Thousands of other bargains. Dont\nbuy a dollar's worth of ciotnlng “anywhere”\nbut o me first and convince yourself that\nwliat is here advertisd are facts beÿond dis­\npute. Thousanos of Childrens Knee Pants at\n13c. lier pair. Lots of Coats and Vests aud odd\nVests at a mere trifle, and many other Im­\nmense bargains. Come and eee them. Costs\nnothing to inspect. Be very carefnl and\nmake no mistake look for No. 228 Mar­\nket street, and be sure you are in the\nright place. Bear in mind there are no branch\n»torts connected with this wonderful Bale of\nhlgh-clase clothing. A chance for t uch won-\ndeiful htrgains occur only once in a life\ntime at 228 Market street. Wilmington. Del.\nCar fare allowed to all persons living outside\nthe city. During this great sale of clotlnng at\nretail the store will remain open frem sin the\nmorning unUllUat night, baturday until l.i\noclock, midnight. All good« soldat urivalr,\nno auctiou. Kee that you get in the right store.\nIicok for the number. 22b, before entering.\nGrand Army knits, with two sets of buttons,\n#8.80 and *8 !».
127435b32342f0df73db5076fecf84de THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1903.57397257103 37.451159 -86.90916 One of the saddest events that has\never affected Hartford people trans¬\npared here last week The very sudden ¬\nness of it was the more heartrending\nIt was tbo receipt here and burial of the\nbody of Jessie Glenn who but a tow\ndays before had left Hartford in good\nhealth and spirits little dreaming of\ntho fateful homecoming\nOn the 18th of the present month\nMiss Jessie in company with Miss Mat\ntic Luce left here for a visit to friends\nnear Eureka Ind The next day after\nthey arrived at their visiting point Jes¬\nale took suddenly ill of scarlet fever\nCombined with chronic throat trouble\nher condition grow rapidly worse\nThe parents of Jessie Judge and Mrs\nJ 8 Glenn were telephoned for and\nleft Wednesday taking with them their\nfamily physician Dr E W FonL\nEverything that was possible was done\nfor the little patient but in a few hours\n sank Into unconsciousness and died\nThursday afternoon\nWord was telephoned back home that\nJewie was dead and a large crowd of\ncitizens in vehicles met the solema cor\ntege the trip having been mode over ¬\nland from the Ohio river Funeral ser¬\nvices were conducted by Rev J C\nPetrie after which her remains were\nlaid to rest in Oakwood Cemetery\nJessie was only a few months dver\nfourteen years oldSho was not only\nthe pride of her parents but one of\nHartfords sweetest girls universally be-\nloved Gentle as a dove fragile as a\nflower she was justblooming into that\nsplendid young womanhood for which\nher tender grace and high Intellectual ¬\nty seemed to be so eminently fitting\nher Her parents and family have the\nheartfelt sympathy f every citizen here\nin the loss of this pure sweet flower\nwhich is cnt short In tha earthly garden\nto bloom perennial above
330353b707399e2969f7566ce816eb45 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1915.8232876395232 35.318728 -82.460953 Back to the public atmosphere.\nMonroe has neither civic consciousness\nnor a live conscience. Civic conscious\nness is the realization that there is a\ncommunity interest," a community\nspirit, a community obligation, that\nrests upon members of a community\nas such. And a public conscience is\nthe realization by all of the duty to\nsecrifioQ ft negative or eren a positive\nindividual advantage when it comes to i\nconflict with the public obligation. I\nBefore you sneer at what we are say- -\ning put your finger upon one fact that\nwould indicate that It is not true. And\nbefore you critiicse us for saying it.\nJust remember that we are telling no\nsecret. Such things cannot be hid\nThey proclaim themselves. We may\nrefuse to admit that they are so be\ncause we fear to meet charge. But\nthat does not prove them untrue.\nIs there onje single thing among\nthose which come about through com-\nmunity cooperation that we can point\nto and say, "Here is something that we\nhave done, in which all had a --part.\niand of which all are proud?" A local\ngovernment is the most complete ex-\nample of, and contains the most com-\nplete opportunity for, cooperation.\nHave we. an efficient town government?\nHave we ever had one? Will we ever\nhave one by continuing "the way we\nare going? Is tere cny spirit of will-\ningness to stani! by r pcovernment,, to\nurge it to be effi eif o ennurage the\nmen that may t - "per o br running it\nat the timet or to cnan ! anything\nfrom them? Are not most of our ideas
3742a588a52b80bfbbf2b3e93caca82d THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5259562525298 39.290882 -76.610759 ON APPLICATION to the Judges of Prince\nGeorges County Court, by petition in writing, of\nWilliam B. SothoroM, of Prince Georges County, stating\ntliat he is now in custody for debt, and praying for the\nbenefit of the act of the General Assembly of Maryland,\nentitled, an act for the relief of sundry lurolvent Debt-\nore, passed at December session, 1805, and the several\nsupplements thereto, on the terms therein mentioned; a\nschedule of his property and a list of his creditors on\noarti, so far as he eau ascertain the same, being annexed\nto his petition, and the said William B. Sotliorim having\nsatisfied me hy competent testimony that lie has resided\ntwo years witliia the State of Maryland, immediately\npreceding the time of his application, and the said Wil\nliam B. Sothoron having taken the oath by the said act\nprescribed, for the delivering up of his property, and giv-\ning sufficient security for his personal appearance at the\n County Court of Prince Georges County, to aus\\vt?r\nsuch interrogatories and allegations as may l: made\nagainst him, and having appointed James Buriiell his\nTrustee, who has given bond as such, and received from\nsaid William B. Sothoron a conveyance and possession\nof nil his property, real, personal and mixed; I is order-\ned and adjudged this 6th of April 1840, that the said Wil\nliam B. Sothoran, be discharged from imprisonment,\nand that he give notice to his creditors by causing a co-\npy of 111 is order to be inserted in some newspaper pub-\nlished m the State of Maryland, once u week for three\nconsecutive months, before the next October term of\nPrince George's County Court, to appear before the said\ncounty court, at the court house of said county, at the\nsaid term, to show cause, ifany they have, why tlio said\nWilliam B. Sothoron should not have the oeuelil of the\nsaid act and supplemental prayed.
1b75e8b2e717037d4a899bc3614a63d2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.7027396943176 40.441694 -79.990086 Among the guests at the Millard Hotel\nyesterday was George O'Neal, who registered\nwith his wife from Belpre, O. His sojourn\nhere was marked by the revival of an old\nacquaintanceship. About 12 years ago Mr.\nO'Neal was a guest at a country dance in\nWashington county, Ohio. One of his friends\nwas George Henderson. During the course\nof the evening George Henderson and George\nO'Neal were elected by a viva voce vote to\nride into town and purchase two boxes of\nWheeling "stogies" for the boys, the smok-\ning part of the preparatory programme hav-\ning been overlooked. George O'Neal wa3 to\npay for the smokers in consideration of be-\ning let out on the trip. Henderson started\naway and the party waited and waited his\nreturn, but waited in vain, for when ho\nreached Belpre he met one his brothers,\nwho lived in the West, at the depot waiting\nfor the night train to go back home. George\nwas prevailed upon to accompany him.\nYesterday Mr. Henderson, who is now en-\ngaged in spreading the gospel about some-\nbody's soda, drifted down stairs from his\nroom at the Millard and, looking ovor the\nregister, strack the name of George O'Neal\nand wife, Belpre, O. It was not many hours\nthereafter when Mr. Henderson, after a tour\nof the tobacco shops' of the town, returned\nto the hotel ana, walking into his old\nfriend's room, observed quietly that there\nwere those stogies and he d had a hard time\ngetting 'em. The old time defalcation was\ncondoned down stairs, nnd thrn the house of\nO'Neal and the house of Henderson so-\njourned amid the mad gayeties of Council\nBluffs.
20ce01c213a312e4142304730869fda0 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1902.5438355847286 37.92448 -95.399981 Engineer Uuland to revcrso his lever\nand cIobo tho throttle. Whon tho\norder was not promptly complied with\nho struck tho englnecr.a blow on the\nhoad with a hoavy club. Ruland was\nstunned for a second, and as tho rob-\nber had raised tho club to striko him\nagain hf said ho would stop tho en-\ngine. Ono of tho quartotto was loft to\nguard the train crew with a drawn\nrevolver while tho other three wont to\ntho oxpress car and demanded ad-\nmittance. The express messenger re-\nfused to open the door and two min-\nutes later a hole was blown In tho\nside of tho car with dynamite The\nrobbers covered the messenger with\nguns and threatened to kill him .if ho\nresisted. The outlaws demanded the\ncombination to the safo, but the mes-\nsenger that ho did not pos-\nsess it, that it was a through safe.\nTho highwaymen then iplaced a largo\ncharge of dynamlto undor the safe and\nblow it open, putting its contents into\na bag which ono of them carried.\nAfter looting the safo the robbers\nentered the passengor coaches and\nrobbed tho passengers of their money\nand jewels. The trio went back to tho\nengine und rejoined tho man loft to\nguard the train crew. They warned\nthe engineer not to move his train for\nthirty minutes and escaped to tho\nhills. It is not known whether any of\nthem had horsos or not. Tho rail-\nroad company has alroadv started a\nposse after thorobbers. Another under\nthe sheriffs of Saguacho and Challeo\ncounties is hurrying to the scene of\nthe hold up to mako an investigation.
0990335faef696300af849167e49d202 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.7794520230848 39.745947 -75.546589 Some remarkable curves are made in,\nthe road to aeoomplish this purpose,\nthe one at Granogue station being the\nmost remarkable. It is so short that on\na dear day the eon will shine squarely\ninto both ends and both sides of a oar\nbefore tbe horse-shoe circuit is made.\nPassengers are often deoeived, and oon-\nclnde that they have made a mistake\nin selecting the shady side of tbe oar.\nBut no less picturesque Is tbe valley\nof the Brandywine when reached. The\noreek is tortuous and so is tbe railroad.\nThe scenery is beautiful. Over there is\na gum or a dogwood tree clothed In\ngorgeous red. There are etately poplars\nand hickories with their bright yellow\nbanners flung out. There are maples\ncombining all oolors, and chestnuts and\noaks that are still battling the frosts In\ndefence of their native green, \nto give up their colors until freih bat­\nteries of the waving elements of the\nweather are brought to bear upon them.\nThis picture of rural beauty is en­\nhanced by herds of cattle browslDg\nupon the fertile green meadow lands\nand b.zily drinking from the limpid\nBrandy wiue. Along the road are sign»*\nof improvement in architecture. The\ntarma^are building more shedding to\ntheir taras to ktep their stock more\ncomfd.û,Aie Turing winter,and they are\npuctlD jur % porches and porticos tc\ntheir dwer sjgs. The yards of weeds\nare giving plsce to spacious lawns,\nrockeries of vines and plats of flowers.\nThe Wilmington and Northern Railroad\nCompany has not yet com mène d tbe\nplanting of flowers at their stations, nor\nis there need for it while rustic nature\nasserts its sway and claims the admira\ntion of the traveler.
0fbf420dbdd56d070c477192f099aabb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.1164383244545 40.063962 -80.720915 I've been at them ofteu to let me th:\nthem premises: but they says no, we\nhave no border l'roin the court to let. is\nWhich the court would rather see 'eui inj\ngo to rack 'an ruin for nothing, than let su\n'em to an honest woman as would pa>r br\nthe rent punctual, and make her penny vo\nout of'em. and nobody none the worse, to\nAnd to sell them, the price is two thou* *r\nsand pounds, and if 1 had it I'd give it an\nthis minit: but where are the likes of\nyou and me to get two thousand nc\npounds? Uut the lawyer h^ays,' 'Miss foi\nKouse, from you one thousand down, pa\nand the rest on mortgigeat £45 the year,' nc\nwhich it Is dirt cheap, I say. So now,\nmy man, when that house is mine, I'm th\n I'm putting by for it o' my side, he\nIf you means all you say, why not save ch\na bit o' yours. Once I get that house as\nand garden, you needn't go to sea no so\nmore: nor you sha'n't. If I am to be ne\nbothered with a man, let me know Pi\nwhere to put my linger on him at all gi'\nhours, and not lie shivering and shak- Hi\ning at every window as creaks, and him\nr»nt at una. And if vou are to proud to in\ndrive tbe linen In a light cart, why I lei\ncould pay a man." In abort alie told to\nhim plainly she would not marry till ro\nshe waa above tbe world; and tbe road pi\nto above the world was through that m\ngreat battered house nnd seedy garden, I s\ninChanoery. oil
3ff60f9a484ca00fda9f43e9162d8c6d THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1908.875683028486 35.072562 -98.243663 Although the average person has lit-\ntle chance to guard against bad eggs\nin the United States, In Denmark they\napparently have solved tho bad egg\nproblem. In that country there are\nsyndicates which control tho ogg In-\ndustry and It Is their duty to keep tab\non the farmers who are In the habit\nof shipping bad oggs to tho market.\nTho headquarters of this egg syndi-\ncate, of course, Is Copenhngon, and tho\nmembers of It aro the farmers them-\nselves. Tho members of this egg syn-\ndicate throughout tho country nro pro-\nvided with rubber stamps which bear\ntho serial number of the member's\ncertificate as well as a numbor for tho\negg. Each egg Is thus stamped with\nthe farmer's name on it, with Indelible\nInk. No. eggs nre that do not\nbear a stamp. So this stamp Is n\nguaranteo of quality. When tho eggs\nare examined in Copenhagen, If they\nnro found to bo bad the shipper re-\nceives notice and Is compelled to pay\na fine averaging about ono dollar of\nour money. If ho makes many ship-\nments of bnd eggs ho Is very quickly\nexpelled from tho syndicate; thus all\nbad and not perfectly fresh eggs aro\neither sold to the vlllago grocer or\nused at home. It has been found that\nthis tystlum workB admirably in keep-\ning tho ojien market stocked with eggs\nthat arp guaranteed to be in good con-\ndition. It is likewise stated by off-\nicers of tho syndlcato that very few of\ntho members havo ever been delin-\nquent with their fines.
1b05eaa48dffe12f1162ebfc5fd9a532 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.009589009386 39.756121 -99.323985 Recent efforts by some of our en-\nterprising citizens looking toward the\ndevelopment of the rich lire clay\nfields on the farm of Mr. J.'lL Close\nand adjoining lands, seem now about\nto be crowned with success. For a\nnumber of years 5Jr. Close has been\ntrying to bring this subject forward,\nstriving to interest capitalists in this\ngreat natural mine of wealth, but he\nhas mot with various objections and\nsometimes almost with derision. But\nMr. C. never lost courage and still\npersisted in the matter, until now\nthat complete tests have been made\nhis good clear judgment is proven by\naotual fact. Some time ago Messrs.\nR. A. Handy, C. H . Edgecombe aud\nJ. Q. Royce associated themselves\nwith Mr. Close and as a result of their\nlabors the attention of some capital-\nists of St. Joseph, Mo . was interested\n the immense beds of clay here. A\nmeeting was appointed in that city\nfor last Saturday. Messrs. Handy\nand Royce went down, and among\nother things an expert was secured to\ninvestigate both the quality and\nquantity of clay. This gentleman,\nMr. Hayes, came up yesterday morn-\ning and is still pursuing his testing,\nbut sufficient has been learned to\nwarrant the organization of a stock\ncompany for the manufacture of fire\nbrick, pottery, tiling, terra cotta, etc.\nThis will probably be done in the\nnear future. Much credit is due Mr.\nClose and the gentlemen associated\nwith him for their enterprise in the\ndevelopment of our natural resour-\nces. Such a plant here in active op-\neration would be a great thing for\nour town, and the undertaking will\ndoubtless meet with the approval and\nsubstantial Bid uf all por oiteus.
0f6f5a318a8107a4ea87ff1082446ef1 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.146575310756 40.441694 -79.990086 I can conceive of a policy of injustice to ono\nof the provinces being carried to an extent\nthat might produce a movement in favor ol\nthe separation of that province from the con-\nfederation, with a view to union with tha\nUnited States. Bat such an agitation, based\non righteous and equitable grounds, would bo\nalmost certain of accomplishing the removal\nof the injustice or the defeat of tbe party in\npower perpetrating it\nThe feeling against America, bredy your\nRevolutionary War, which drove the loyalists\nwho founded Canada into exile by the War of\n1812 and by subsequent misunderstandings, bas\nlargely passed away; but the growth of good-\nwill is a different thing from readiness of\npolitical union, and I cannot help earnestly ab-\njuring you. while we are discussing tbe advan-\ntages which hope to lay clearly before you of\nanother union, to dismiss from yonr minds the\nQuestion of Dolitieal union. I refer to what is\nknown as commercial union or unrestricted\nreciprocity or continental free trade, which\never of these terms may best convey the idea\nto your minds.\nI would ask you to look at the map of North\nAmerica and say whether it is not in violation\nof all the indications of nature that artificial\nbarriers to trade and commence should ba\nerected along an imaginary line stretching\nfrom the Atlantic to the Pacifflc, between peo-\nples of common descent andcommon language.\nwho are engaged in a common aim. namely:\nThe making tributary to their material ad-\nvancement the vast resources of nature, which\nby the bounty of Providence have been placed\nat their disposal.
46f2cfd2a25fa86260cd3fe9f66f5ce3 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.8479451737696 43.798358 -73.087921 ger of a suffering the most appalling and\nrepulsive to the feelings of our nature.\nIt is not difficult to perceive, why the\nRoman government, in its trea'ment of I\nChristians, departed from its usual prin-\nciples of toleration. We know it to have\nbeen their uniform practice, to allow eve\nindulgence to the religious belief of\nthose different countries in whiclr they es-\ntablished themselves. The truth is," that\nsuch an indulgence demanded of them no\nexertion or "moderation of principle. It\nwas quite consonant with the Spirit of Pa-\nganism. A different country worshipped\ndifferent gods, but it was a general princi at\nple of Paganism, that each country had\ngods to - which the inhabitants of lhat\ncountry owed their pesuliar homage and\nveneration. In this way there was po in-\n between the different religions\nwhich prevailed in the world. It fell in\nwith the policy of the Roman government\nallow the fullest toleration to other reli-\ngions, and it demanded no sacrifice of\nprinciple. It was even a dictate of princi-\nple with '.hern to respeci the gods of other\ncountries; and the violation of a religion\ndifferent from their own, seems to have\nbeen felt, not merely as a departure from\npolicy or justice, but to be viewed with\nthe same sentiment of horror which is an-\nnexed to blasphemy or sacrilege. So long\nas we were under Paganism, the truth of\none religion did not involve in it the false-\nhood or rejection of another. In respect-\ning the religion of another country, we\ndid not abindon our own ; nor did it fol-
24a2893842348c8e47a226d6012612d4 THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1911.2753424340435 35.721269 -77.915539 Newton, N. C, April 3, 1911.\nR. F . D. Dept., Wilson Times.\nBrother Carriers and All : I\nam going to undertake to write\na letter for The Times. I am often\ntempted to write but I am awful-\nly bashful like, and feel that I\namtoosmallafrytowritetoa\nnewspaper. However, I am) mak-\ning an effort if I altogether fail.\nI am well pleased with The Times\nas our organ, but there is one\nthing certain however 'willing\nThe Times may be to make our\ndepartment a success, however\nmuch space The Times may al-\nlow us The Times, like any other\npaper will be a failure if we car-\nriers do not avail ourselves of\nthe opportunity and subscribe for\nthe paper and contribute to its\ncolumns, here are many carriers\nin North Carolina who are capa-\nble" of editing a newspaper them-\n arid yet we never hear a\nword from them and still worse\nthey are not members even of our\ncarriers organization and yet\nwhen there is anything favorable\nto the rural carrier happens like\nthe little bird in its nest will hold\nopen their mouth that the crumb\nmay be dropped in - when they\nknew that it was tnrough the in-\nfluence of the members of the\norganized body of rural carriers\nthat brought" about the result.\nWell, the first windy day in\nMarch I was 49 years young.\nMaybe I ought not told my age\nbut my wife is in excellent health\njust now. On the first day of\nApril I celebrated the eighth an-\nniversary of my installation as\nrural carrier on the 3d route\nleading out from Newton.\nDuring the eight years I. had\nmany ups and downs ;
a8077de8d61ea6e4af6eb3408cb1a4b0 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.6671232559615 43.994599 -72.127742 under production and there are 2,000 ,000 acres more capable of cultivation.\nUp to fifteen years ago, this county was a stock raising county. Now it\nmay be said to be an agricultural land. The roads are good, the mountains\nsend down unfailing streams of water while the climate 1s- excellent.\nA fourteen mile ride brought us to the King Ranch, where Mr Joe King\nwas a genial host. Having driven through acres oH King land, we came to a\ngarden spot, with larkspur tall as bushes and other flowering shrubs sur-\nrounding the house, which was itself furnished with art objects from the\nfar places of the world. In 1880 when Mr Chris King came to Judith Basin\nit was as much pioneering project as in the early days. The passing of the\ngreat herds of buffalo made the Indians willing to live on reservations, which\nopened up vast areas in central Montana to settlement. The first settlers\ncame with the idea of raising stock and they were counting on the vast\ncattle range this basin afforded. was so with the Kings. Until the rail -r oa- d\nopened up the territory to homesteaders and! irrigation made the\nBasin into a great granary, their cattle roamed the valley and the hilla,\neven wintering in the Snowies, when severe winter conditions drove them\nto shelter An out door lunch at the Ranch was a pleasant diversion and\nthen the guests traveled further the valley all the time seeing new won-\nders and evidence of prosperity. Mr Moore was a cowboy in the early days\nof the Basin history and he told many interesting stories of those times.\nIn between times, we looked over Lewistown with its paved streets, hne\nchurches, five big school houses, court house and hospital and its industries.\nHere again winter wheat is supreme and the Montana Flour Mills, fourln\nnumber, deliver 4000 barrels a day with a 300 barrel output of cereals. The\nSaphire, Judith and Gold Cross are their trade names. It is no frontier\ntown we would have you know with its cluster electric lights for a broaa\nwhit w&y
04cf8677d0926252b6c46597965184c3 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1893.4616438039066 46.187885 -123.831256 missed him. fhe day he returned a\nfull force was working, and the plate\nhad to be fed swiftly and Incessantly.\nShe watched him coming up the stairs\ntalking to tho foreman. She wore that\nday a full sleeved waist, her tidiest\nsilk one; possibly because she hoped\nshe might nee him, and to feed plates\nat high fpcftd with flowing sleeves\nwith1 one's eyes land mind entirely\nabsent from one's body constitutes\nthn,t carolessnewn of which we have\nbeen warned. Ruth did not know that\nshe was careless no one ever does at\nthe time, but the full sleeve of the\nwaist caught under the feed roll, drew\nher arm against the guides, and In a\ntwinkling had cut an artery.\nNo one noticed the accident more\nquickly than Mr. Simpson. He heard\nher scream and saw fall to the\nfloor fainting. Before the others\nlooked up he was kneeling beside her,\nbinding a handkerchief around her\narm above the wound. They watched\nhim bear her In lite arms to the super-\nintendent's ofllce and lay her gently\ndown upon the sofa.\nA carriage was summoned and a\nphydcian; tlJut the) carriage arrived\nfirst. Mr. Simrxwn left the name of\na hotel and lifted her into the carriage,\nstill fainting, explaining that he was\na personal friend of the girl's uncle,\nand would care for her until he ar-\nrived. A factory girl's family connec\ntions and acquaintances not being a\nmatter of unucuol Importance, the ex\nplanation was satisfactory.\nWhen Ruth's eyes opened on the pa\npered walls of a hotel parlor, she was\nweak and bewildered but the flow of\nblood
17e2cc6ce5ce48749774f7ce6bed5380 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.9356164066464 39.745947 -75.546589 either Professor Baldwin or yourself\nhave occult powers, but ratbsr believe\nyon are, frankly speaking, a fraud of the\nP. T. Barnum order.”\nMrs Baldwin pleasantly replied: “We\ndo not profess to have auy occult pow\ners, aud do not believe in spirits. But\nwe do claim to be skilled In telepathy or\nmental telegraphy. Now 1 want to make\na teat on yon. Please think latensely on\nsome inotdeut In your life and I will re\nlate It to you.”\nThe gentleman tells the story. He\nthought of a time when he was In a little\nport on the Red sea and a little olrcum\nstance oocurred to him. He has soarcaly\nput his mind on tie Ino'dent when Mrs\nBaldwin began and related everything In\nthe affair from beginning to end. Said\nhe: "I certainly was and my\nscepticism was very severely shocked ”\nThe Opera Hr use was crowded to the\ndoors last evening, the sign “standing\nroom only” being dlnplayed long before 8\noclock. There seemed to be no abate­\nment of the Interest which has followed\nthe exhibitions from tbe start, aud whiih\nbas furnished the subject matter for\nmore conjecture and theorizing than any\nthing of a like nature whtch hes ever\noccurred In this city. The little enter\ntalnmaut whleh acts as a frame work for\nthe real work of the evening, was carried\noff in excellent style, although there were\nseveral introductions not In the lines of\ntbe little parlor sketch tn which Edgar\nEly and Miss Alexander play the promt\nnent parts. Mrs Baldwin gave a very\npretty sketch which she concluded with\na neat dance
70d92cff90eb314cefc3bb8248c6bc9d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6178081874682 40.063962 -80.720915 Conduct Bctweex the .Cjcvil and\nMilitary AuTHOinTiF.^.A very con¬\nsiderable degree of excitementpreVaUed.\nin the city on Saturday evening, occa¬\nsioned by the arrest by the city police\nof three men belonging to thel92d New*\nYork Regiment, now doing guard duty\nin this city, and the forcible release of\nthe men, who were taken from the city\nlock-up by order of Col. Axtell, com¬\nmander of the post. Owing to the con¬\nflicting statements in regard to the dis¬\nturbance and arrest, wo are unable to\nsay exactly where the fault lies." . Some\nof the spectators declare that there was\n110 occasion for the interference of the\npolice.that the soldiers were on their\nway to their quarters, and were riot dis¬\nturbing anybody. Others are just as\npositive that they were behaving in a\nvery disorderly manner, and that the\npolice officers only discharged their du¬\nties in making the arrest. When officer\nBrady attempted the arrest the soldiers\nresisted and quite a melee ensued. The\nofficer called on the citizens for assist¬\nance. Several of the bystanders came\nto his and finally succeeded ^ in ar-\n:trresting three of the party. Ono of\nthe soldiers was knocked down and\nstunned by a blow on the head from a\nstone thrown by some one of the crowd.\nOfficer Brady was also considerably\nbruised by blows from a bayonet in the\nhands of one of the soldiers. At the\nCourt House, as the arrested soldiers\nwere passing into the lock-up, another\ndisturbance occurred between James\nfifties and a soldier belonging to the\nsame regiment. In this case we under¬\nstand the soldier was the assailant, the\nprovocation being a remark mado by\nBrucs'iri regard to one of his comrades\nthen under arrest. The combatants\nwere both arrested, but the soldier was\ntaken from the officer by other men titers;\nof the regiment. Brucs was taken into)\nthe lock-up, but was almost immediate-j\nly released by the police officers who!\nsay that he had tirst been called upon\nto aid in makingthe arrest, and second-\n13% that in the last light he was not the\nassailant, and that they had taken him\nin the prison for protection.
03893a95c0818c07ce4de2253bbb2b25 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.9027396943177 39.369864 -121.105448 such an extent that the birds left when Nelly\nmade her appearance, being conscious of\ndanger. We traversed sloughs and marshes. ,\nand walked into several j left our powder\nflask in one, and dropped cur shot pouch iii\nrecovering it, got, the.double barrels mixed\nup with our legs somehow, whereby we fired\nthree times at Nelly, each time coming\nnearer her—an evidence that our ajm wap\nimproving. Soon a flock of ducks passed\noverhead; wc got off a quantity of powder\nand shot in that direction, and were please.d\nto observe that one of the ducks fell in the\nslough. We looked at Nelly. She stood\nmotionless.and rigid; her tail stiffened in a\nhorizontal line with her back-bone, as if she\nhad been partly,impaled by the blundering\ndischarge of our Vamrod. Nelly,!\nsays we, “Die on and fetch it!” Rer intel-\nlectual nose turned slowly toward us, and\nher intelligent eye flashed fc,ack a compre-\nhensive ray. She sprang in, and we ardently\nwatched her black but comely figure, as she\nparted the water from her lithe and sinewy\nflanks. A moment more and the magnifi-\ncent animal had seized the unfortunate duck\n—\\Vho was circling around an imaginary\nglobe, like a Drake—in her powerful jaws.\nThen she started for the other side. We\ncalled her, and endeavored to point out her\nsingular mistake. The brute was deaf to all\nargument; Wc whistled, shouted and finally\ncussed. Then the miserable, mis-begotten,\nlow-lived, flop-eared mangy hound, took our\nduck to the other side of the slough and de-\nliberately ate it up.— Northern Californian.
2142c4cd0b148374da6504158d5b24ac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.9547944888382 40.063962 -80.720915 made towards building the cootcraplatcd\nraiiroad to the northwest. The projectors a,\nofthe Wheeling, Hopedale & Lake Shore All\nKailroad, knew at. the onset that if the in- $\nterest at each end ofthe line became di- wl'\nvided tlie project would tail. But if the Co\npeople could be united the project would\nbe a success, and the road would be built. ^\nNow the question Is: Will yoo divide hi\nthis interest in building up Wheeling Ca\ncreek, when you already have what local\ntrade lies between the interests of the B. tr\n&O.IItothe interestol theP.C.ASt. jja\nL. railroad, by the pikes that are being JK\nbuilt in Belmont county ? Would it not prj\nbe to your interest to keep the road as far f\nnorth as you can, and thus divert all the 'n\nlocal trade can in the direction of 3J,\nyour towns? We think so, and still make wi\ndirect communication with an air line\nroad from the river to tlic lake*, via Hope- JJJ\ndale, Dennison, New Philadelphia, Woos- cd\nter, Ac. If you make the line shorter by 2} cl<\nmiles, via Hopedale, than the old Short JJi\nCreek Route, which is some five or six «\nmiles south of Hopedale, what must the in\nincrease in distance be if you run the line J\nwest rw ol Wheeling creek and Xcw\nAthens, which is some twelve or fourteen\nmiles still farther south, and now you are\nosked to raise some three or four hundred ?"\ndollars to make preliminary surveys, &c.,\nwhen the route already surveyed shows a\nvery practicable one, and the citizens '\nhave given the light ot way almost
8ccdd831ab13ba1a7fdc33e4c44c1a6d THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.4877048864096 40.618676 -80.577293 sonnel selected to put any law into effect very defi-\n; nitely determines the degree to which the purposes\n• of the law are realizable. The administrator and\n; his personnel determine definitions and procedures\nunder the law and so make decisions and rulings.\nThe key to effective administration is competence.\n• Competence in turn is established by information\n! and experience. Academic training is not a sub­\nstitute for experience in labor problems, which\n! alone teaches the feeling, the situations and prob­\nlems that develop in the field of work and labor\n' relations. Civil service procedures that do not\n' give adequate consideration to experience impede\n. efforts to promote ail efficient administrative staff.\n! When the staff is selected, there begins the\n• third stage in labor law. Workers are vitally con­\ncerned to get from of the law,\nwhose enactment they secured, the kind of pro­\ntection for which they hoped. Unions have a con­\ntinuing responsibility to keep in touch with the\nadministration of the law. The administrator\nneeds to know what is in their minds and experi­\nence should provide the machinery by which La­\nbor's advice will be continuously available in the\nformulation of plans and policies. Such advice can\ncome only from official representatives of Labor,\nacting in official capacity. Labor persons on the\nstaff are essential, but they are part of the admin­\nistrative staff and not in representative capacity.\nA goodly measure of the justice flowing from\nadministrative action is conditioned by the wisdom\nwith which opportunities for representation in\nfunctional matters is provided and definite advance\nnotice is given to unions of matters which concern\nthem.
3e5d09195141730cc2dcea38cc449db8 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.0423496951528 44.939157 -123.033121 Youth forced ago slowly backward\nIn the utrugglo, which at times took\non spurts so furious that the Blonder\nblades, becoming more glints of acicu-la- r\nstool, split tho moonlight back and\nforth, up and down, 00 that their meet-\nings, following ono anothor in a woll\nnigh continuous stroke, sent a Jarring\nnoise through tho air. Father Borot\nlost Inch by inch, until tho fighting wb\nalmost ovor the body of Alice, and now\nfor tho first time Hamilton became\naware of that motionless something\nwith tho whlto, luminous faco In pro- fl l- o\nagainst tho ground; but ho did not\nlot even that unsettle his fencing gaze,\nwhich followed tho sunken and dusky\neyes of his adversary. A perspiration\nsuddonly flooded his body, howevor,\nand began to drip across his face. His\narm was tiring. A doubt crept like a\n Into his honrt Then tho priest\nappeared to add a cubit to hla stature\nand waver strangely In tho soft light\nBohiiid him, low ngulnU tho sky, a\nwide winged owl shot noiselessly\nacross Just abovo tho prairie.\nTho soul of a true priest is doublo;\nIt Is the soul of a saint and the soul of\na worldly man. What is most beauti-\nful In this duality is the supreme cour-\nago with which tho saintly spirit at-\ntacks tho worldly and so oftan hero-\nically masters it In tho beginning of\nthe fight Father Boret let a passion of\ntho earthly body tako him by storm.\nIt wus well for Govoruor Henry Ham-\nilton that tho priest was bo wrought\nupon aa to unsettlo but nerves; other\nwise tboro would have been an evil\nheart Impaled midway of Fathor Bo- rot-
2fbec23258ec62be34d957edefc940f3 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.3620218263004 37.451159 -86.90916 The compromise in the interest of\nharmony in the Pennsylvania Conven-\ntion was tmlooked for, and the an-\nnouncement of it was received with\nKreat satisfaction. It is gratifying to\nknow that both Speaker Itamlall ami\nSenator Wallace, wlio have mi long been\nleaders of warring factions, realize that\nthe cause of Democracy is more than\npersonal supremacy, and that personal\ntarifes must fcink out of sight before it.\nBoth certainly had too much at stake,\nin common with the party, this year to\nadmit of divisions, and tlie party at\nlarge could not have lorgiven them for\nfailure to bury tlie Hatchet. According\nto an accounts received here Uameron-Is- m\nwill have its hands full in Penn-\nsylvania this year.\nIt is to Ik regretted that the New\nYork Democrats are not as united.\nYet the situation there was materially\ndillerent. So long as the Tainmanv\nHall and Kelly faction were inoen re-\nbellion and loudly nroclainiini' that\nthey would not abide by the action of\neither the elate or National Conven-\ntion, unless the action precisely to\nmen iiiuiuii, iiieie mis no eintuee ior a\ncompromise. The aclion of tlie regu-\nlar convention is generally regarded to\nhave been all that cou!d"le done con\nsistent witli the dignity and honor of\nthe nartv. The tH'rsonal Interests of\nany Democratic candidate are nothing,\nhut the great principle of majority rale\nis everything, and any man, or set of\nmull, who openly declare war upon it\ncan not ! regarded as true Democrats.\nit seems not unlikely that Mr. Kelly\nis paving tlie way for an attempt to\ncarry out ills bargain to deliver the\nState of New York to Conkling this\nyear, but there are signs that he will\nnot ue aoie to deliver so large a follow-\ning as formerly.\nit does really seem to be an unfortu\nnate circumstance that so many Dem-\nocrats have Joined In the bitter ncrsoual\nattacks upon prominent candidates in\nthe party and more than any other one\nthing that has placed our chances of\nsuccess this year in jeopardy. I am\nnot championing tlie cause or .Mr.
41bf1c7ba2cad0a309a09f4be54c2e90 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.1520547628108 41.004121 -76.453816 From our Regular Correspondent.\nWashington, D. C, Feb. 22, 1909.\nThe President elect and Mrs.\nTaft have arrived in Washington\nand a'e staving nt the home of\nMiss Mabel Boardtuan, whose con-\nnect on with the Red Cross Society\nof which Mr. Taft is President\nmakes her name known throughout\nthe country. The President elect\nis a welcome visitor at the White\nHouse and has spent a laree part\nof his time there since his arrival.\nHe has presented his report on con\nditions in Panama to the President\nwho appears to be highly gratified\nby it and he has had several con\nferences with Senator Knox who\nwill be his Minister of State. The\nquestion of Mr. Knox's eligibility\nfor that position has been settled\nby Congress both Houses \nring in the passage of the ,bill re-\npealing the salary of the Secretary\nof State and reducing it to the stun\npaid before the salary increase was\nmade. Mr. Taft has not doubted\nthe willingnesj of Congress to make\nthis concession but he has feared\nthat Mr. Knox might feel called\nupon to withdraw to avoid un\npleasant criticism. After the con\nference Tuesday though it was\nstated positively that Mr. Knox\nwould accept the portfolio and it is\nnot believed that the Administra\ntion will be embarassed bv auv\nquestion to be raised iu the courts\nlater as to the Senator s eligibility.\nMr. lan accompanied to the\nWhite House the Engineers when\nthey presented their report on the\nPanama Canal. The canal report\ncontains twenty typewritten pag.--
3bcf581c172f7bcff179e49a5aa21cef PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.519178050482 31.960991 -90.983994 streets, in the town of Port Gibson, thence\nrunning along Main street 98 feet to a stake,\nthence N. 78% W. 175 feet, to a stake,\nthence N, 12°, E. 98 feet, to a stake in the\nedge of Walnut street, thence along Walnut\nstreet 175 feet to the place of beginning;\nbeing the same lot of ground sold by Israel\nLoring to the Bank ofPort Gibson, by deed\nbearing date the 29th Dec. 1838, and re­\ncorded in book T., page 162, of the records\nin the office of the Clerk of the Probate\nCourt of Claiborne county, and being the\nsame lot of land whereon the Banking house\nnow stands. Also, the following lot, piece\nor parcel of land, being the South half of\nLots 4 and 5, in square No. 10, in the town\nof Port Gibson, fronting 49 feet on Main or\nMarket and extending back the same\nwidth on Walnut street, 300 feet to Fair\nstreet, being the same property sold by B.\nHughes and wife to H. N . Spencer, by\ndeed bearing date the 4th October, 1836,\nand recorded in book P., page 632—also\nsold by II. N . Spencer and wife to J. O.\nPierson & David Bush, by deed bearing\ndate the 14th February, A. D. 1837, and\nrecorded in book O., page 275—also sold\nby.Wm. M . Gwin, Marshall, to the Bank\nof Port Gibson, as the property ofPierson &\nBush, by deed dated 12th October, 1840,\nand recorded in book U., page 452. Said\nproperty will be sold to pay and satisfy the\namount due to J. B. Thrasher, and the costs\nof executing this trust. Such title as is ves­\nted in us as Trustees will be made to the\npurchaser.
2aae8e43cc93c19a229bb4c091641434 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.03698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 While the Senatorship is unqueation. have been well selected, while elabor-\nnbly the dominant Democratic topic, ate scenic effects have been provided,\nthere was not much of a flurry about Max Hart's "six high steppers” gave\nit among the members of that party a dancing act that was a gem. The\nin the Legislature yesterday or today, members of this troupe, who have\nAU discussion of the Senatorship is been entertaining the people of the\nconfined to whispers or behlnrd dosed Keith circuit for the past two years,\ndoors, and discussion seems to be | are all skilled in the art of dancing\navoided as much as possible. The and their work was fine. The» Delete\nfollowers of Willard Saulsbury feel Sisters, who came here direct from\nconfident that he will be nominated for the Winter Garden. New York, ap-\nSenator, should a binding caucus be peared in a clever singing and danc-\nhcld, on the first or at the most on a Ing ad- John Geiger, as an \nsecond ballot. They claim seventeen street musician, is a splendid enter-\nvotes for him at least out of the 29 tnlner, and it was apparent last night\nDemocrats in the Legislature, It is that he is a big favorite in Wllmlng\nnot so much a question now of wheth. Ion. His work was enthusiastically\ner Saulsbury could gain a caucus appreciated, Romaic and Delano,\nnomination as it Is whether abind- acrobats niui comedians, appeared in\ning caucus will be held. Three Demo- a clever act of their own. The musl-\ncratlc members reofuslng to abide by cal Rough-Riders proved very inter-\na caucus could prevent the election of cstlng. They have a fine military act.\na caucus choice for Senator. This is | Tim show is in keeping with the\nkeenly appreciated by the Saulsbury ; standard set by the management for\nboosters, who are worried as to 1 the year 1913. Mr. Dockstaders aim\nwhether James 11, Hughes, former 1 being to have the shows better each
0b237b8897d93bdf2a8b7cda89aae152 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.2041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 be unjust discrimination for any rail­\nroad to make or give any undue or un­\nreasonable preference or advantage to\nany particular person, company, firm,\ncorporation or locality or subject any\nparticular description of traffic to any\nundue or unreasonable prejudice, delay\nor disadvantage whatever: provided,\nthat perishable freight of all kinds aud\nlive stock shall have precedence of\nshipment. Nothing in the act shall pre­\nvent the carriage, storage or handling\nof freight free or at reduced rates for\nthe state or for any city, county, or town\ngovernment or for charitable purposes,\nor to and from fairs and expositions, or\nfor the tree carriage of destitute and in­\ndigent persons, or to the issuance of\nmileage and excursion tickets, or to\nprevent railroads from giving free\ntransportation ministers of,religion,\ninmates of hospitals and charitable in­\nstitutions, and to the employes of the\nagricultural and geological departments\nof the state ,or thç peace officers of the\nstate, or any railroad officer, agent, em­\nploye, attorney, stockholder, director,\nrailroad commissioners, their secretary,\nclerks and employes, or to any person\nnot prohibited by law. The act shall\nnot have the effect to release or waive\nany right of action by this state or any\nperson for any right, penalty or forfeit­\nure which may have arisen, or which\nmay hereafter arise under the laws of\nI < slate, and all penalties accruing\nunder the act shall be cumulative of\neach other and a suit for recovery of\none shall not be a bar to the recovery\nof any other penalties.
048f01043853af3170bca3f0d6b93c52 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.7991802962456 39.745947 -75.546589 termine the existence of any public ne­\ncessity for the bridge, or the expenses\nincidental to its maintenance, as tho\nact of the general assembly establishing\ntho property, legality and necessity of\nand for the construction of the\nbridge; that Job H. Jackson\nis merely a tax payer in common with\nother tax payers; that he should have\nentered his protest before the bridge was\ncompleted, as he had full knowledge of\nt lie passage of the bill and of the pro­\ncess of the construction of tht b idge;\nthat the acceptance of the bridge was\nnot conditional, but absolute and uncon­\nditional ; that no bridge tender's house has\never iieeu erected, and that such erection\nis not necessary to tho completion of the\nbridge; that the bridge was thrown\nopen for public travel within the \nspecified by law; that a map of the loca­\ntion and plans of the bridge were ap­\nproved by the secretary of war of the\nUnited States, aud met the approval of\nthe levy courtmen, by whom it was in­\nspected; that it Is a public bridge\nand It would be unjust au inequitable to\ngrant auy of the relief prayed for in th.\nbill of complaint for the reason that the\nrelator, having full knowledge of the\nconstruction of the bridge from the time\nof its commencement, permitted it to\nproceed aud large sums of money\nto lie raised by voluntary subscription and\npended thereon until the bridge was\nbstautially completed, without insti­\ntuting any proceedings to stay the con­\nstruction of tho same. In closing, the\nlevy court asks that, the hill of complaint\nIm> dismissed.
07f7cc46c6e9ef0fed041968d5af15ce THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.1219177765095 37.561813 -75.84108 ing"tho Hill regulating tho tenure ofof- -\ntlce recently passed by tho Sennte, also\nlikely soon to bo on our statute books, the\nImpeachment resolution In the hands of\nthe Judiciary Committee, nnrl other politi\ncal questions which have agitated the\ncountry and Congress nro wholly or in part\ndisposed of, the linancca at last seem to be\nreceiving their share of consideration.\nboth by our Congressmen nnd the Tress.\nTwo bills relating to the finances are\nnow receiving the serious attention of the\nHouse. Mr. Hoornn's ISill. ns it U best\nknown, consists chielly of amendments\nand changes in tho present National Hunk\nLaw the most Important item of which is\ntho proposed deduction of circulation from\nthose cities and .Stales which have received\nmore than they would be entitled to under\nan apportionment based upon population\nand resources, and giving to thoso locali-\nties which are now almost destitute a pro-\nviso being mn.le the whole amount of\nNational Bank circulation shnll not exceed\nthe three hundred millions of dollars now\nauthorized by law.\nMn. It.vxn .vi.L's Bill proposes to do\n. way with the National Hank circulation\nill lolo, and supply its place with legal ten-\nder notes, thus in effect nlmlMing the\nNationul Banks. As the old State Bank\nsystem has been almost legislated out of\nexistence by Congress in favor of the\nNational system, this measure involves a\nradical change in the banking interests of\nthe country, which should have mature\nconsideration by our wisest financiers be\nfore becoming tlio law of the land. The\nmere fact that this bill will probably be\nfavorably reported upon to the House, has\nalready had quite a disturbing effect on the\ngold and stock market.\nYour ltepresentative Hon. It. W. Claiikr,\nlias made a very ablo speech before the\nHouse recently on the tinaiiciul questions\nof the hour, which denoted
1d725402ad7eb96ace7fb2cbd8033b6e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.5520547628107 39.745947 -75.546589 V an, exclaimed the taller of the two,\nwho ajo seemed to be the elder, “this is un­\nworthy of your brush!”\nHe examinai the picture again and said\nemphatically; “It's a daub! Why, it looks\nlike you J thrown your brush at the cauvas\nand let the paint slay where it spattered.\nNo, you need not try to stop me, for I'm go\nmg to finish. 1 repeat it, your picture ia a\nmere daub. Ven, youre ecjual to far bet-\nwork and 1 can l -see you turning out such\ntoittgs, even lor>poibo;len§, without protest/*\n"U ell, Fortesone,'' drawled Van, with ex­\nasperating coolness, "if you're through allow\nto say that the picture you revue so un­\nmercifully is the work of my sister, who\nat the present moment standing behind\nAllow me to present you. Florence, Mr.\n1 ortescue. My sister, Van, who has\ncome to stay vith me, Fortescue/*\nThen smiling a little maliciously Van van­\nished and the two so inauspioiously intro­\nduced were left alone.\nA faithful portraiture of Fortcscue's face\nat this moment would have made fame and\nfortune for any artist that could have paint­\ned it. As he looked at the beautiful girl be­\nfore him he realized instantly that he had\nspoken words which he would have given his\nall to recall, and yet there was no escape\niibm them. His criticism of the picture ap­\nplied with equal force to the girl as it would\nhave to her brother had he painted it,\n“»4 it would hut aggravate his predicament\nto attempt to excuse them. And yet—\nHut the young lady broke the silence be\ntween them, and put an end to his thoughts\nof an excuse.
4807abe957d30069fed2d4ec9f5ed2e8 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.1684931189752 44.939157 -123.033121 A plot had been perfected by the\nprisoners at work in Goldsmith &\nLowenbcrg's foundry, to overpower\nsome of tho officers; and at a certain\nsignal, make a break for freedom. Ac-\ncordingly, this morning, at about half\npast eight o'clock, as Warden Collins\nwas coming from tho brick yard on the\neast side of the penitentiary, to his of-\nfice, Mr. Fletcher, one of the over-\nseers, told thlra that trouble was brew-\ning among tho prisoners. As he spoke\nand while passing near the foundry,\nMcKern and Gld Blchamp, the ring-\nleaders, rushed out, followed by about\nthirty of their striped accomplices,\nwho Immediately seized upon Collins\nnnd Fletcher and marched them In\nfront up to a Bninll gate on the north-\nwest side of the prison, where Milford\n was standing guard, tolling\nthe guard that If he shot any of them\nthey would kill Collins and Fletcher.\nNotwithstanding those threats Stillwa-\nter took aim nnd pulled the trigger.\nImt the gun missed fire. Running to\nhis stand he scoured another gun and\nfired at random into the crowd, ln- -\nWantly killing one of the prlsonors\nnamed Charles Brown, the ball enter\ning Ills' head Just above the right ear,\nend ranging downward. At this time\nFlotcher succeeded In freeing himself,\nand closing the gate, prevented the re-\nmainder of the prlsonors from escap-\ning. In tho meantime tho guard fired\nagain wounding McKern, one of the\nleaders, the ball taking effect In the\nlower part of the hip, Just as they\nwere entering the office for the pur-po s- o
13a65618127bec1dec1c832412aaba41 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.8866119902348 39.745947 -75.546589 It the crackers were packed into boxes im­\nmediately after being raked from tho oven,\nthey would “sweat” aud retain an enlarged\nthickness given them by the excessive heat.\nSo they ore dumped upon largo, flat counters\nto dry before they are put into ths labeled\nboxes or barrels in which they are sold. This\nis the usual process employed in th* manu­\nfacture of crackers. In some of the larger\nfactories they are raked off when cooled into\ntroughs with sliding bottoms, which empty\nthem into chutes by which they are conveyed\nup or down stairs. Nearly ail of tho real\novens have the same capacity. Twelve flat\nsheets are the usual complement, and each\nsheet is just largo enough to contain six rows\nof seventy-two crackers each. Each row fa a\nspadeful. Each oven, therefore, contains\n1,584 crackers baking at one time. Tha large\nhouses have from three to five orana. If\nthese ovens are operated, the number baking\nat time would be 9,753.\nThe finest grades of cakes, suck\nroons, citron, cream awl jelly rolls, are too\ndelicate to be trusted always to reel ovens,\nand in many factories are baked In the oid\nfashioned Dutch affairs, which impart such\na delicious flavor to the cooking of our grand­\nmothers. The methods of preparing these\ncakes differ widely. Chocolate icing ts put\non by dropping tho cake upon its flat surface\ninto a bucket of liquid chocolate and scrap­\ning off the surplus from the edges with a\nknife. Stampers of proper design will im­\nprint upon dough almost any variety of de­\nvice. Horseeakes, so dear to the heart of\ni the rural urchin, are cut out in large num­\nbers from molasses dough a number of\nstamps operated at once. The\nsorted to in tho manufacture of tho almost\nnumberless grades of cakes aud crackers\nwhich are turned out by a first class factory\narorof eudless variety.— Baltimore Herald.
29097169fd35f8c6be7a49b2611e1a64 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.1082191463724 40.827279 -83.281309 i lie dowi or oi woou. it snoiuu nut uc\nleft long in cither ; this should be made an\nimperative rule. Oar friends throughout\nthe country, in making their late fall and\nearly winter butter, get the milk in the\nroom where the stove can eiiect it l his\nis sometimes in the buttery, or in the room\nwith the family. Of course here is a great\ndifference of temperature, varying trom\nfifty to eighty degree; eighty degrees\nspoils the milk, hence the cream and but-\nter are ruined. It matters not how clean\nall is kept and how pure the milk, a high\ntemperature will spoil iu uui u is not\ngenerally known. We have known our\nbest butter makers to be suprised at a\nrancidity that had somehow got into their\nbutter, late fall make, t pon examination\nit proved to be the temperature. That\ncorrected, all was right\nBesides, we need not say here mat aii\nthe odors of the room have their influence,\nand are sure to be made sensible in the\nbutter. Prominent among, these are the\ntaste of smoke, tobacco and otherwise ; the\nonion in some instances, and the general\nbad odor giving a flat insipid taste at first\nafterwards a more rank. Some people\nkeep their milk and cream in kitchen,\nwhere all their work is done. This is hor\nrible ; better keep no milk than have no\nfit place to keep it It is difficult to keep\nmilk safe in any house where a cook stove\nis used, as the fames will' find their way\ninto all the rooms. A separate building is\nthe only safe way, or, for temperature, a\nroom adjoining the stove room may be\nused (if a stove itself, a mere heater, is\nnot used in the room, which would be\nbetter,) and the door or some other com\nmunication being kept open as wanted.\nIn the evening the temperature should not\nbe permitted to drop low, but draw the\ncream as soon as possible, so that all is\ngotten. A thermometer of course could\nnot be dispensed with.\nWe need not mention the stables here,\nand vet who is careful enough? The odor\nitself of the place, while the milking is\ndone, .will affect it Too much care cannot\nbe exercised here. If the stables are well\naired and well littered with dry absorb\nents, as they ought to be, and your milker\nis a safe hand, there will be no difficulty ;\nthe keenest olfactories will not detect the\nalkaline taint. But alas! how few are\ncareful enough I Country Gentleman.
34e2ea8c76a8783b26b6914b594c99ce THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.2308742853168 40.063962 -80.720915 Oanxd..A very pleasant caning af\nair came off at Templar's Hall, Malt\ntreat,on Monday evening. .Themem\nMrs of Colombia and Tboburn Lodges\nn consideration of his wortli aa a mat\nind a minister, and as an acknoWl\nttigementof the services he isd ren\nlered In fonndlng the order in this city\nletermlned to present the Rev. Samne\nSteele some memorial of their respec\nind esteem. It was finally decided U\nhave prepared a beautiful ebony cant\nwith massive gold head, suitably In\nlorlbed. The order wss given to Mr\nP Brown to execute, which he die\nin his usnsl thorough and handsomi\nstyle. Everything being in readinesi\nDn the evening nsmed, a depntatloi\nwas sent to Mr. Steele's residence, re\nquesting his attendance at the Hall\nVVhenheientered, Major G. O. Trimble\nWorthy Chief Templar of the Col\nnmbls, on behalf of tbo Lodges\nstepped forward and In brief and lit\nling made the preeentatldi\nspeech. The affair was so totally unex\npected by the Rev. gentleman that fo:\na lew moments he could not say oni\nword, but as U is his business "to' b<\nInstant in season and out of season,?\nhe soon rallied and responded in a nea\nand appropriate address. The follow\nIng 'lfl the inscription: 4lTo Rev. 8\nSteele, from the Tnoburn and Colum\nbla "Lodges, I. O. G. T., 1868."\nMr. 8teele, at the recent session o\nthe West Virginia Conference, was as\nsigned to the presiding eldership of tht\nClarksburg Dlstrlow He leaves for hli\nnew field of labor In.a few days, and wll\nbear with him tbo beat .wishes, no\nonly of the people to whom. :he hat\nmiuistered, but or all who have forme<\nbla acquaintance. While stationed li\nthis city he has been abundant in la\nbors and his ministrations have beei\nattended with success.
990678fab8766246239fe5b2bd722252 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.4616438039066 39.369864 -121.105448 subjoined from a letter to the Alta:\nThe view from the summit is uninterrup-\nted in every direction, and with a good glass\non a clear day, the streets and houses of San\nFrancisco arc very perceptible; sufficiently\nso to distinguish particular buildings. Stock-\nton and Sacramento may be seen under sim-\nilar conditions. Those who are fond of\nwatching the gilding of the earth when Sol\nrises or sets, may here indulge themselves to\ntheir hearts content, but there is a much\ngrander sight than even that, for those who\narc enthusiastic enough to encamp at night\non the summit, that they may see the morn-\ning glories. You will be surprised when I\ntell you that a dense fog, so unacceptable to\nthe denizens of the lower regions, affords this\ngrander sight. I have seen several such and\nthink them most impressive and grandest\nof natures wonders, throwing the sun s ri-\nsing or setting completely intoinsignificance.\nFar as the eye could reach, a slowly moving\nmass of gigantic translucent vapors, travel-\nling in stately grandeur,were spread out hun-\ndreds of feet below ns, utterly obscuring hill\nand valley, as much so as though they had\nbeen what they much resembled, the gigan-\ntic billons raised by a mighty storm; and\nthen as the power of the suns rays dispersed\ntheir force, might be seen peeping through\nthe ocean of foam first one and then another\nhill top, until an archipelago of islands was\nexposed, and the vapors following the va-\nrious inequalities of the land might be\nseen tumbling over the hillsides grand as Ni-\nagras mighty cataract. None who have once\nseen ibis sight are likely ever to forget it.
36a09ca41524dd138345be719f812102 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8319671814916 41.681744 -72.788147 still thinks of himself as a good boy\nj and is eager to be rid of his fault\nBradley coveted his sister's paint\nbox and sinfully secretly, he appro-- I\npriated it His mother discovered his\nthef and, In a spirit which Implied\nthat she was grieved over what he\nhad done just as he must be, she\ntalked the matter over.\nShe told him she did not in the\nleast blame him for wanting such\na beautiful box of paints. But he\npointed out on the very day when\nthey had disappeared, sister 'had\nneeded them to color some maps.\nShe had to go to school with her\nwork unfinished. Certainly that was\ntoo bad. Bister would have a right\nto be very angry with him. What\nshould they do about It?\nBy this time Bradley was trou-\nbled as his mother. Straightway he\nsuggested that he put back the\npaints in the drawer where he had\nfound them, perhaps sister would\nthink she had not looked carefully\nwhen, the day before, she had been\nunable to find them. Surely, his\nmother sgreed, that was a fine Idea.\nBut Bradley's mother did not stop\nuntil she had given further sup-\nport to his Image of himself as an\nhonest fellow. She told him that If\nhe really wanted a paint box he\ncould soon earn enough money to\nbuy one by doing certain jobs about\nthe house and garden.\nThus she made him understand\nwhat he had done. She made lilm\nresolve inwardly never to slip that\nway again. She gave him the means\nof getting what he wanted by hon-\norable methods.
421d4d01b5a2ba0df64f81f261eb13dc THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.6926229191965 41.004121 -76.453816 But at last he managed to surprise\nthe band and. rifle in hand, drove two\nof them into Campo.\nThen, however, arose the question as\ntin- - mt limd i 'f taking them down tn\nthe coast. lie hired a double seated\nvehicle, the onlv one In the phiice.\nBut at once another quest iou pre\nsented Itself. How was he to seat Ms\nprisoners, for either they must be\nnlnceil towiher on the front or the\nbac k seat or separated, botn seemingly\na hazardous choice?\nHe finally decided to separate them,\nand so, with one on the front seat with\nhim and the other behind, he started\nfor the coast.\nThe two cattle runners managed to\ncommunicate with each other by signs\nand at a rough part of the road made\nthe boundary rider, in turn, their\nprisoner. Needless to they then\nmade the best of their opportunity to\nescape over the liorder, but as they fell\nInto the hands of the unsympathetic\nrurales they would have been better\noff if they had submitted to the law of\ntheir own country.\nThis brings one of the somewhat dif-\nferent methods pursued by the Mexi-\ncan government in guarding their side\nof the border. From a cursory inspec-\ntion of the line one might suppose that\nthe Mexican side is not guarded at all.\nYou may cross the line ten times at\ndifferent places and never set eyes on\na rurale, but It is well known that you\nhave clone so nevertheless, and on the\neleventh excursion you are likely to\nfind yourself surrounded by a pictur-\nesque group, who will carry you off to\nJu II If your explanation Is not satis-\nfactory.
a9a6de631d75b5b16485c160dfce8b8b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.0698629819888 41.681744 -72.788147 Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. , all stores\nAmnio, Yito, 410 So. Main St.\nAnihzin, Joseph, 179 Hartford Av.\nAndres, H. Y., 1313 Stanley St.\nArmenian Market Co., 9 Lee St.\nAronson, F 138 Hartford Ave.\nArute, Joseph, 5011 So. Main St.\nBattaglia, Anna, 26 Franklin St.\nBelden Market, East and Belden Sts.\nKerkowitz, M., 6 2 6 Main St.\nBerwikowski. Alex., 63 Booth St.\nBlock, Samuel L., 21 4 North St.\nBodziach, A. J., 814 Stanley St.\nBushell, J., 218 Kelsey St.\nCentra! Market, 63 East Main St.\nChrotowski. J., S9 Broad St.\nCickowski, C, 833 East St.\nCity Av. Meat Market, 13 City Av.\nCity Meat Market, 1S9 Hartford Ave.\nCooked Food Shop, Main St.\nA Cohen, Greenwood St.\nCzarkoski, Paul, 79 Newington road\nDave's Quality Store, Church St.\nDemliek, A., 22 Broad St.\nDeNigris, Aronzo, 64 Hartford Av.\nDiNonno, E. 94 So. Main St.\nDyson & Bloom, 100 Kelsey St.\nEast End Market, 599 East St.\nEconomy Grocery Co. , all stores\nEnterprise Prov. Co., 12 6 Jubilee St.\nFanelli, Rose, 213 Elm St.\nEigenbaum & Nair, 91 Hartford Av.\nFichman. D. M. , 294 Park St.\nFox, M. H., 1 31 Arch St.\nGoogel, "Nathan, 313 East St.\nGubernick, B.. 521 Stanley St.\nHallinan, J. M., Inc., 142 Main St.\nHammer!, F., 215 Elm St.\nHarre, F. E ., 124 Rockwell Av.\nHorwitz, H., Est.. 260 Hartford Av.\nKalkowski. K.. 337 Broad St.\nKalmanow itz, H. K., 4 0 Broad St.\nKata, John, 270 Broad St.\nKatz, Louis, 601 Stanley St.\nKatz & Winn, 179 Dwight St.\nLarson & Root, 690 Arch St.\nLastauskas, Joseph, 179 Kelsey St.\nLazzaro, Joseph, 208 Arch St.\nIjeck, W., 1 10 Rockwell Av.\nLifshutz, M., 33 Hurlburt St.
6c590b4935fae7a48b17a9b2cf198de3 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.146575310756 31.960991 -90.983994 of Mississippi, did, by Deed, bearing date\nthe 25th day of April, A. D . 1840, con­\nvey to the undersigned, Matthew Bolls,\ncertain property an4. estäte therein par­\nticularly described, in trust, to secure\nthe payment of certain debts therein\nmentioned; which said Deed is duly ac­\nknowledged and recorded in the office of\nthe Clerk of the Probate Court of said\ncounty, in book D of the Record of Deeds,\n&-c*> pages 627, 628 and 629, and to\nwhich reference may he had: And,\nwhereas, the said Thompson B. Shaw\nand Marv, his wife, did, by deed bear­\ning date the 29th day of October, A. D .\n1840, convey to the undersigned Mat­\nthew Bolls, certain property and fes\ntherein particularly described, in trust\nto secure the payment of certain debts\ntherein mentioned: which said last men­\ntioned Deed is duly acknowledged and\nrecorded in the office of the of\nsaid Probate ourt, in book E of the\nRecord of Deeds, fyc., pages 17, Î8, 19,\n20 and 21, and to which reference may\nbe had. And, whereas, defaults have\nbeen made in the payment of the\nof money in said Deeds specified. And\nwhereas, I, the said Matthew Bolls,\nTrustee as aforesaid, have been reques­\nted, in writing, by James & Bayly. and\nBayly, Kirker & Yoe, creditors secured\nin said Deed of Trust, to sell the pro­\nperty and estate in said Deeds mention­\ned, in manner and form as required by\nthe terms of said Deeds.\nNow, therefore, be it known, that I,\nthe said Matthew Bolls, Trustee as a-\nforesaid, will, on Thursday the 11th day\nof May, 4843, at the residence of the\nsaid Thompson B. Shaw, in Jefferson\ncounty aforesaid, at 12 oclock, M., of\nsaid day, expose to sale at public auc­\ntion.,
06cc6cf68398c6259b7cbfa3c16e5262 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.9931506532216 40.063962 -80.720915 ado a dispatch from General Roberts, dated t\neak Cabul, z4th, is as follows: "Our success a\nLely yesterday was complete. The enemy's loss s\nlere wassevore. Our losses were live killed, fc\ntiug including Captain Dundras and Lieut,\nho Nugent, of the Engineers, by a premai\n'o- ture explosion when blowing up the towthe\nera of a neighboring village, and thirty- 1\nast. three wounded, the majority of whom are J\nthe doing well. Those of the enemy living '\nto in Cabul wont straight to their houses ['\nws- after the defeat. The Kohistanis and Lo- 1\nre- garia remained in Cabul a few hours, but 15\n'hat all fled during the night. Two of tho "\nctly enemy's leaders, Musuki Alim, a priest,\nfivo and Mahmed Jan, fled early in the day.\nttee Another lender is reported to t\nthe have fled, with Yakobo Khan's eldest son, C\nfol- towards VVardak. The cavalry have gone\ni *"o- in nursuit. The Bala Hiasar nml ihf* \\\nieue city will bo taken possession of this alter- il\naed. noon. The former will be occupied if it\nthe appears certain there is no danger from\nlan- hidden mines of powder. Yakooo Khan's j\nlile wife and mother and a daughter of the j\nTin- late Akbar Khan, who are reported to /\nlint- contemplate flight and who have done all J\nfol- in their power to incito the Afghans, will J\niter- be brought to Shirpur to-day. I have (\nand telegraphed Goneral Bright to push for-\nward detachments from Jagdullak to Leh- »\ntain baba and Latatbaud. I send a force to\nan
616f8af2716e18bc8a03513a246ff42f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.478082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 capable of putting down »rror and\nlifting up righteousness upon which\nall true progress must rest."\nGovernor Hiller Responds.\nThere were calls for Governor MT-\nler to speak, and while reluctant to do\nso, Inasmuch as he had been prom­\nised he would not be called upon,\nthe Governor responded. After some\npleasantries, the Governor said:\n"Now gentlemen, if you will permit\nme to say just a word in which I feel\ndeeply interested and It Interests\nevery citizen of Delaware, and that is\nthis: I feel that we owe a great deal\nto our newspapers, to our newspaper\nmen, to tbe press. Our state of Dela­\nware is suffering now from the lack\nof three essentials, good roads, im­\nproving farming, and a reorganization\nof our educational system. It Is for\nyou, gentlemen, of the pen and pen­\ncil who are the great power (hat can\nstimulate the interest of our people\nin modern methods. It\nis you who can bring (o a realizatloniHBpB^B^MBMp\nthe man out. in the rural district what I* Hoffman. Gea H„Mr0o'PB?\nhe should do to support modern edn-1® Hamilton. R . M . Finden, I'm. •\ncation, and I would a?k of you gen- Coyn*, Chas. L . Story. Irving war-\ntlemen of Delaware who form and ner, Benj. B. Allen. Richard Repp#»,\nmould public opinion, because there j Charles M. Banks. S. H. Baynard, W.\nIs no doubt that you do, that you will , G. Bryan, City Solicitor Daniel O.\nsupport and assist our State Board Hastings. Richard W. Crook. John A,\nof Education in the work which It Is Montgomery. President of Council 8.\nnow doing to promote better educa- H. Benson. Jr., Miller Stradley Wal-\ntional conditions in the rural districts, ter D. Bush, Jr.. Frank J. Davis;\n“ Now, gentlemen, the gentleman on Levy Courtman C. W. Gooding, Hope\nmy right here (Judge Gray) suggest- Wilson, District Attorney John P.
82f4d661283001b3bb29859717989a8e THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.9330600776664 39.290882 -76.610759 pearance of greater lightness would have been\ngiven ifthis water table had been placed about\nIt to 2 higher.*\nThe small arch over the road called the Via-\nductarchhasaspanof20feet, and ariseof 5\nfeet, with abutments s 1-2 feet high, leaving a\npassage of 13 feet in height. This areli has the\nsame general form as the large one. The space\nbetween these two arches, a distance of 12S feet\nas well as the space south of the main arch of\nabout 150 feet; is_ tilled up with a closely laid\nstonewall. On the wall, and over the arches,\nthe Aqueduct is built in the following manner:\nFirst, Concrete, that is, a mixture of cement,\nfinely broken stone and sand, is laid to a depth\nof 1 1-2 feet, and shaped to receive the inverted\nareli, which consists of two courses of brick.\nThis arch lias a span of 6 3-4 feet, and a versed\nside of 9 inches. Between these courses of brick\nover the main areh, in order more perfectly \nensure the prevention cf leaking, iron plates are\nplaced 5 S of an inch thick, end cemented toge-\nther with iron cement. On each ol this arch\nwalls 6 1-9 feet thick are built ot stone, lined on\nthe inside with brick. In these nails, running\nthe whole length of the work, a distances of\n450 Icet, longitudinal openings are lelt l> inches\nwide, for the purpose of interposing a stratum of\nair between the water and the atmosphere, as\nbeing the best protection which could be afforded\nagainst the frost.\nThese openings, as well as the large ones in\nthe spandrels before referred to, also serve to\nconduct away any water which might find its\nway through the masonry, though the last is\nnot very likely to take place. Over thespace\nbetween the walls last mentioned, an arch of\nbricks inches thick is sprung, and the whole\ncovered with earth to the depth of about 3 feet\nto protect the work from injury by frost or any\nother cause.
0c24ea38b8fe154a6dfe91706ecf1632 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.6753424340436 40.441694 -79.990086 Tho position taken by your correspondent\nin your issue of Sept. 2, that Roman Catholic\nmissionaries were spreading the gospel in\nMassachusetts, 400 years prior to tbe birth\nof Columbus, is calculated to suggest soma\nvery interesting questions. At tbe time of\nColumbus, the rotnndity of tbe earth was\nvery generally denied, and the project of the\nnavigator was very generally held to\ne chimerical.\nAt that time tbe Roman Catholio Church\nwas near the zenith of her power, and her\ninfluence in all matters was potent. A\ndeclaration coming from her, that the earth\nwas rotund, that lands lay beyond the sea,\ntnat the Cross had been planted there and\nthat tho sons of the Church had given cen-\nturies of earnest effort to Christianizing\nthose pagans, wonld have conclusively set -tlo- d\nthe question nnd made the task of Co-\nlumbus a conmarativelveasv one.\nIf such information lay in tho Vatican,\n so vitally on so vital a question,\nhow is it accounted for that tbe Church was\nsilent and was as much surprised at the dis-\ncovery of a "new world" as were those who\nhad no possible access to such information?\nThe student who surveys man as he reveals\nhimself In the light of ethnology, or as he\nstill further disclosed himself when viewed\non the broader plane of anthropology, and\nWho surveys history, not alone from its\nwritten pages, but rather from its philoso-\nphy, is not to be at once diverted from his\nconclusions, though it is his due to treat all\nhonest dissent with respectful consideration.\nIn this connection it would be very perti-\nnent to Inquire as to thenatnre of the offend-\ning of Galileo and why it was that he was,\nunder threats of pains and penalties, com -\npelled to retract his promulgated views on\nterrestrial physics?\nWAJirnsf, Septembers.
2a8c7ebc5e6fba4ed539267cf565cbf1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.9575342148655 40.063962 -80.720915 TuiScv »Ul deal with the evenu of tha y«r 1SS0 politic!\nla lu own fMbJon, now prettjr well uodemood by ty of r<\neverybsdy. From January 1 to December SI ti will who d\nbe conducted aa a nfwipap*r, written la the tugilib found*\nlanguage, and printed for the people. tbe utt\nAa a newipaper. ill* Bi'.v belle vee In getting all the tbe 1U|\nnews of tbe world promptly, aod presenting it to the equal I\nmoat Intelligible abape-the ehapa that wlU enable lu dilltol\nreader* to keep w U abreast of tbe ago with tbe least effectii\nunproductive expenditure of time. ThegrtatNt In* eleiito\ntareeito tbe greatett number.that Utha law control* next V\nHag 1U dally tnike*up. It now bai a circulation very thepol\nmuch larger than that of any other American news- tbe pn\npaper, and enjoya an Income wbkh It li at all tiuiei olBceaJ\nprepartd toepand liberally for tbe benefit of lu read* JMOT1\neta. People ot all ooudl ions of life ami all waya of extras\nthinking buy and read 1 lit Uvn; and they all derive Waihl\nMtisfsctton of some eort Irom lu columns, for they lug tb<\nkeep on buying and reading it. arouo\nIn lu cummenu on men and aflklre, Tita tit?* be- eelvea\nlleves that only guide of Mltay ahould be common ludlgn\naenee, Inaptred by genuine American principle and cou.ln|\nbacked by boneaiy ot purpoee. For ibis ration It U, oueqtn\nand will continue to be, absolutely independent J the tit\npart/, class, clique, organlution, or Interest. It U f< r cMrli\nmi, out or nons. it will contiaue to praise what isand rl|\ngood and reprobate what li evil, taking carsthai In lb"\n1 iDguago la to the point and plain, beyond the poasl- looklu;\nbUlty of beln< misunderstood. It ia uclnflueuml a stead\nbj uoUtm that do not appear on the surface: it baa pie\nno opinions to Nil, eats th >se which may be bad by ^rtt\nany purchaser for two csnta. It balsa Injustice and li«atru<\nraacailty aren more than it hates unnecessary words. of IMC\nIt abbora Jraude, pities fools, and deplores ulnconi- Our\npoope of etery species. It will continue throughout the D\nthe yoar 1880 to chastise tba Am class, Instruct the culuui\nNcood, and discountenance tba third. All houest won t\nmen, wltb honest convictions, whei her aouod or mis- per, ai\ntaken, are ita friends. And TijsBpn wakes no boors IiUi\nof telling the truth to ita friends and about lta frienda The\nwhenever occasion arises for plain speak log.
0bd660213934c216ffc6be0a5f5f0b6d OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.187671201167 41.020015 -92.411296 I tiust I shall be pardoned for saying so\nmuch. I leel the dangers plainly surround­\ning us, and could not say less. I must,\nhowever, desist, for the pressing work of\nthese closing days of the session imperative­\nly demands my attention. I trust our labors\nhere for tho present may soon be brought to\na clo°e, and that I may get back to Iowa—\nthe place I love best. I feel the ueed of\nrest. I feel that I owe it to my family to\nbe with them more than has been possible\nin view of my official engagements, for the\nlast twenty years. I feel that official lile\nhere is beset with untold perplexities, with\nbut little to lead any one to struggle to keep\nin it. I feel tho absolute necessity, too, of\nso my energies ag to save at least\na little money for my family, a duty which\nI may say to you, I have thus far, to a great\nextent neglected. This, four years experi­\nence satisfies me, I cannot dofrom my pres­\nent salary, 1 feel thatothers can better dis­\ncharge tho dutiesof my present position,\naud more acceptably meet the wishes of tho\npeople. I feel that the place, though ever\nso honorable, (as it is, to be an American\nSenator is to my mind the highest of earth'\npolitical honors), has no Buch charms as to\nlead mc to sttuggle for its retention. In\nmany respects 1 know I shall regret leaving\ntho many, very pleasant associations here\nformed, I feel truly that no man ever had\ntruer or fincerer friends than I have in the
11692f773917dd237373486e0f50ddfb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.7301369545917 40.063962 -80.720915 September 84%o85o, uloaing at 85c; October W^a\n85>4c, cloaingat 85&o; November 80%c; Decem¬\nber »7k^j; Jauuary 88ko; May 02)^0. Stocks of\n5rain lu atoro and afloat September 21: Wheat.\n, 8 3 8 .051 buahela; corn, 1 .185,106 buahela; oata,\n430,323 buahela; rye, 10 ,080 buahela; barley, 7,000\nbushels; malt, 12) 812 buahela; poua, 7 .not) buah¬\nela. Corn, receipt* 182,770 buahela; ex¬\nporta -10,686 bushel*; lalea 661,000 buahela\nof future* aud 183,000 bushel* of apot;\nmarket fairly active; ungraded mixed\n40|4«41)<0S September lO^io; October41c; Novem-\nbet41ko; Dcccmber 4i&a415£o.cloaingat4l&o;\nMay 42ku Oata. receipts 111,000 buahela: aalea\n221,000 buahela of futurca aud 110,000 buahela of\nspot; market firmer; apot No. 2 while 28Ka;\nmixed western 2la28#c; white do29a36)fo; No.\n2 Chicago 27o27V(o. liny and hopa quiet. Coffee,\noptions stead' and 16a26 point* dowu; Septem¬\nber 16.70*15 85o; October.November, December,\nJauuary, February. March aud May range 15.65a\n16.76c; Auguat 15.45ai6.ti5c; apot Klos 10)$o.\nsugar, raw Too; rcllned ateady. Molaaaea du»l.\nKlco ate&dy. Tallow and rosin dull. Turpen-\ntiuu lower at 4S'.£c. Keg* firmer; western 21c.\nCut mcata atcady. Lard quiet; western steam\nfl.37%o: 6.23c: October 6.30o; Novem¬\nber 0.20c; Doccmber A.ISc; January H.I80; Feb¬\nruary 6.22c; March 6.80c. Uutter firmer; weatern\ndairy OalStfc; creamery 12a24o. Chccao strong\nand quiet; weatcru GKafic.\nChicago, Ocnt. 23. .Tho wheat market to-dar\nwas actlvo and strong but itmotllcd. 1 he crowd\nwub disponed to flgbtahy of tho near futures, and\nfieptcmuar waa again auspiciously regarded on\naccouutof thu amall warehouse atocka of grain\nlu coutract. Feuding the announcement of thu\nvlsiblo supply figures, business in the pit waa\nrather light for a time, and it waa tho postiuK of\nan Increase of only 1,400.000 bushels, wheu 1,750,-\nUX) to two million waa expected, that gayo the\nmarket its eloping strength, it closed active aud\nbuoyant at a net gain for the da; of l^o In Sep¬\ntember, ljio in Octobcr, and Kc In Decemt>er\nand %c In May. Corn moderately active, closing\nstead; and a shade blither. Oata active and\nhigher, l'rovlaloua, very little doiug, with\nprices a shade blither. Flour ittady and un-\nchanged. Wheat, cash No. 2 spring 70Xo; No. 8\nspring 07aG8c; No. 2 rod 70)$u; September 70^
1038659f5ab45a723498787c3cd811b6 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.009589009386 40.441694 -79.990086 once or twice follows the presence of a stranger\nit should be attributed to him, and, therefore,\nthe most noticeable thing about him, his\nglances, which those who are watching him al-\nways see. Post hoc, ergo propter hoc, is the\nmost common of the delusions of the vulgar,\nand it would have been almost wonderful if,\nafter th'e great massacre which accompanied\nthe entrance of Marie Antoinette into France,\nBhe should not have been credited with that\npower of causing misfortune whiph ber future\nhistory seemed so terribly to verify. From her\nhusband to the Princess dc Lamballe, whomso-\never she favored, died by violence. Theremark-abl- e\nthing is that the superstition is frequently\nnot provocative of hate, the malefic influence\nbeing held to be independent of tho will of\nthe person possessing it, to be in him, in fact, a\nresult of God's jrace or the Devil's, and not of\nany of his own. Pio Nono, for instance,\nwas loved and reverenced by thousands who\nnevertheless could not bring themselves to\nforego the gesture which in Italy deprecates su-\npernatural eviL whenever they looked at the\nPope. Why the converse belief, that in the\nGood Eye, should not exist, we cannot explain\nexcept by supposing, what is certainly true,\nthat fear makes, of all emotions, the deepest\nimpression. Tho prisoner remembered Judge\nJeffrey's "terrible eyes" jears after he would\nhave forgotten them utterly if they had been\nbenevolent; yet really kind eyes, eyes which\nchildren and dogs trust without hesitation or\nscrutiny, are. in spite of the novelists, exceed-\ningly rare. Their glance ought to be sought by\ntho ignorant who, it should be observed, be-\nlieve in good omens as well as bad, and good\nluck as well as ill luck; but it is not. They at-\ntract, but no superstition grows around them.
a4f27e0418328aa5ceafa6ed735f1963 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.546575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 he still had pitching ability in his\nleft arm by holding the Burritts to\none hit In four innings, but then\nhe tired and was found for five runs.\nThe Burritts fell on Cabelus for\nten runs, all unearned but the result\nof heavy hitting, in the first two\nframes. Cabelus added to his trou\nbles by failing to go after a pop fly\non Budnick, and a few minutes la-\nter Budnick had some more good\nluck when he dashed for home on\nLuty's hit. Joe Argosy thought he\nhad a force and failed to touch the\nrunner, but while the. Burritts were\narguing this out the Rangers caught\nGrail trying for home and Luty\nrunning to second, ending the in-\nning. Three errors, a hit batsman.\nand two hits brought in six more\nin second, the climax of the rally\nbeing a home run by Grail, the ball\nstriking Just inside third base and\nbounding sharply into foul territory\nbeyond that bag.\nJack Argosy took Pete's place and\nturned back the Burritts. fanning\nfive in a row and holding them safe\nuntil they found him in the seventh.\nThe Rangers had been able to score\nvery little in the meantime, and this\nrally, added to another in the ninth\nwhen three consecutive doubles with\ntwo out. brought in three run off\nCasey, put the game away. The\nRangers threatened only in the sev-\nenth, when the first three batters\nsingled, but Rose settled down, fan-\nned the last two batters, got three\nIn a row in the eighth, and made it\nsix straight by setting down Wltham\nin the ninth.
359ffded7bbb2ea98a4f24e45abe0b01 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1907.9465753107559 41.004121 -76.453816 And Whereas after such thorough\ninvestigation and earnest considera-\ntion on behalf of the request pray-\ned for, Council are of the opinion\nthat the request must be refused\nfor the following reasons :\nFirst. Council refuse to set a\nprecedent in the way of a certain\nspecified rate of tax which iu all\nprobability might be used as a guide\nfor future Councils in making any\nappropriation which might increase\nthe rate of taxation.\nSecond. If such precedent should\nbe set it would not be fair to future\nCouncils because couditions may\nchange to such a degree with the\nTown of Bloomsburg having iu\nmind the fact that this municipality\nmight be called upon to centralize\ntheir sewer system at great cost,\nwithin a short time, as well as other\nconditions might arise, and\nalso the fact that the Library might\nso change in its management and\nbenefits to the Town that it is our\nopinion the Town should use its\nown judgment in makiug any ap\npropriation annually.\nThird. The amount asked for is\nIn our opiuion, quite excessive.\nFourth. The vear of 1007 is\nmore than half passed away and\nbut four months of the present\nCouncilmauic year remains, and\nthat at the beginning of this year\nand when estimates were being\nmade to guide Council in its rate\nof taxation no request was made for\nsuch assistance, the act 01 June\n10th. IQ07. authorizing same, not\nhaviug been passed. Council, how\never, after deliberation have come\nto the conclusion that the request\nas made should have some consider-\nation.
1fe8e7d16be34bc51b2d84357ed8cd24 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.8972602422627 39.261561 -121.016059 A Queer Way to Kti.i . One's Sei.k.—A New\nOrleans paper says (bat it German shoemaker,\nliving mi Josephine Street, between Annuncia-\ntion and Chippewa streets, Fourth District,\nNew Orleans, attempted to commit suicide late-\nly by cutting a tremendous gash in his throat.\nHe took the precaution to place u liar across\nthe door to prevent heimf disturbed; but some-\nhow the people around got wind of it, and\ncrowded up to the door jink alter he had inflict-\ned the wound. We learn th"'. afler he made\nthe gash in his throat he took a bottle of wine,\nand, uncorking it, placed the mouth into the\nwon d. and let the wine run in until it bubbled\nup and ran over, mixed with his blood. To\nprevent the crowd from advancing, he k-pt\n at them bottles and lasts. It was\nsome time before any one would attempt to\nenter, and It was not until some person present\nhad pulled off a dour for a shield, advancing\nbehind it. that he was finally secured by throw-\ning the door on him. He had Commenced ta-\nking another Imttle of wine through his artifi-\ncial throat before he was knocked down. lie\nwas placi d in a cart and taken to the Charity\nHospital, where his wound, an uglv hut not a\nfatal one. was attended to. This is the first case\nwhich we recollect of where a mail ever acted\nin socli a singular and unaccountable manner.\nWheie he got the idea of pouring wine down\nthe wound would he hard to say. Wo don't\nthink it could lie beat.
13a632e255a1a4386f19a6e487f56e0d THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.5493150367834 40.832421 -115.763123 Till* Prltirc liaiKriul's (Vill.\n'flia will of Trince Napoleon is pub¬\nlished. It is written in his own hand\nan 1 nt Cliiselliurst, February 2'i, luT'J.\nFollowing are tho ehief points; I die\ntn the Catholic apostolic aud ltornsn\nreligion, in which I wag lorn. I desite\nthat my body shall be buried near that\nof my father, pending tho time wheu\nthey toth shall be transported to where\nthe fr under of our house rt poses in the\nmidst of tho Frcnch people, whom we\nhave like ljlm dearly loved. My last\nthought will be for toy country . It is\nfor France that I would wish to die. I\nconstitue my well beloved mother, the\nEmpress Eugenie, my sole legatee, she\nbeing charged with attending to the\nfollowing legacies: I leaie 200,000\nfrancs to my cousin Prince J. N .Murnt;\n leave 100,000 francs to M. F . l'etrio\nin gratitude for his good services; I\nleavo 100,000 francs to M. le Baron\nCorvisnrt, iu acknowledgment of his\ndevotiou:I leavo 100,000 'ratios to Mile\nde Launiat, who has always shown her¬\nself no attached to my mother; I loavo\n100,000 francs to M. A . Filsn. my old\ntutor; I leave 100,000 francs to M. L .N.\nConnean, 100,000 francs to M. N . Es\npint****, 100,000 francs to Captain A.\nIlczot, my oldest friends. 1 desire that\nmy dear mother shall pay n pension for\nlife of 10,000 francs to Prince L. L\nHonnparte; a life pension of 5,000 francs\nto 51, llacbon, my old csqtiery, and a\nlifo ponsion of 2,00?) frnpes to Mcne.\nThierry and to Chlinauti. I desire that\nall my other servants bo novor deprived\nof their situations.
2a4ced14e072cd3956edd743decac6e7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.6863013381533 41.681744 -72.788147 Congress may soon adjourn. The\ncountry is sound financially and com-\nmercially. We are sure of the most\nprosperous year in agriculture that\nwe have ever experienced. The same\nis equally true of all the chief in-\ndustries. Wages are high and farm-\ners and working men are, likely to be\nfree spenders. This means an active\nconsumption demand for many lines\nof merchandise. Transportation probt\nlems are less acute than a year ago.\nNew tonnage is being turned out at a\ntremendous rate by Great Britain and\nthe United States and other nations,\nwhich means that there will be less\ndifficulty in transporting foor anr mu-\nnitions across the Atlantic than has\nbeen the case in the last six moths.\nAs aresult exports will continue right\nalong, notwithstanding the embargo\non food shipments now force and\nwhich has caused a setback in our\nforeign trade. Our railroad problem\nis also less acute than was the case\nthree or four months ago. Big traffic\nduring the next three or four months\nis a practical certainty. For the sev-\nen months ending with July, 106 of\nthe larger railroads, according to the\nInterstate Commerce Commission,\nhad total revenues of f 1,230,681,000,\nan increase of more than $138,000,000\nfrom the, corresponding revenues of\n1916. The net revenue during the\nsame period was $368,000,000, com-\npared with $360,000,000 a year ago.\nBetter results should appear during\nthe closing months of the year, ag\ntraffic is heavier. Some concessions\nhave been made to the roadss and net\nreturns should correspondingly im-\nprove, especially as the shortage in\ncars is being largely compensated for
17b2e979948eba3dad888aac632f0967 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.7821917491121 40.063962 -80.720915 The hair of which wigs aro made ia col- si\nlected by special drummers in Germany ?\nand France. England and Belgium are\nbut poor markets for hair, not because of\nits scarcity, for both English'and Belgian T\nwoman have the finest heads of hair in the\nworld, but because they will not cell it.\nWhen collected, it is put through a clean- *\nintr process severe enough to fetch the dirt c\nout of an elephant's hide, and then dyed\nseveral times over. The best hairdressers\nnever buy hair from the hea'l or from fc\nprivate hands. To this mle, however, 01\nthere are two exceptions. Perfectly white oj\nhair is so rare thftt it is grabbed oagorly j'\njronj uiiy tiumxi-, uuu u uueitu price niwu a>\n(or it. Natural ourling hair is also of consid- u\nerable value. A good wig of white hair w\ncosts about $40, and (this is a secret of the J\ntrade and cau only be told in whisners) tl\nthe material cf which wigs are is 7[\nclipped from a frstive goat and never fram Jj\nthe human head. A peculiarly soft, silky *t\nkind ol snow white hair originates on tht> [J\nangora rabbit A perfectly white and (\nabundant wig of white human hair would c<\ncost $1,000 at least, a price which few °|\nwould b« willing to pay. Daad hair i. o.,\nliaif out from the head after death is never ti\nused by any touBorial urtut worthy of the jj\nname. Indeed, it can not beused toanyad- tj\nvantage as it will neither curl twist nor ci\nmanipulate, Hair cut from a living head ia ,l '\nnot dead, a I »ct which can easily be proved E\nby taking a hair and stretching it out to i*\nits utmost capacity. It will thea contract *\nquickly back to its former position, It 5\nwill live for a couple of years or more J.\nafter having V960 cut, and when itdieothe P<\nwig, front or switph becomes Utqp, rough, J\ndisheveled and useless. oi
3bd259b417400a1b3b71ee1eb14c0aee THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.9465753107559 40.063962 -80.720915 While there la nothing In the reading\nto arouse noisy or demonstrative en*\nthuslnsm iu ati audience, t here la eve-\nrythlug to impress and delight such an\naudience aa that assembled last even-\nlug. There are doubtless aoine puriioua\nliving who have aeen and heard Sir\nWalter Scott, aud they certainly inuBt\ncherlah the memory of that meeting na\namong tbe most tnomorablo eventa of\nIheir Uvea, liut ll la not more note¬\nworthy, nor will ll be cherished longer\nor more pleasautly, thau the ocOuaion\nuffordedlast evening for the first Mine\nto so many or Mr. Dickens' hearera,\nMr. Dlckena la ua great a genius In no¬\ntion aa Sir Walter Scott.lie haa given\nua great delight to the world, aud haa\nmoved far more deeply aud touched\nmore powerfully the deepest springs of\nemotion and affection In the human\nheart thun even that great maater of\nhuman nature aud the English tongue;\naud he will take aa high a place as he\nin the immortal literature ortbericheat\nlanguage now apoken or wrltteu on the\nearth. To hear auuh a man read one of\ntbe aweeteet und choicest of hla own\nproduotlouB, will be an eveut in tho\nlife of any man worthy or remem¬\nbrance, aud it would be a tradition for\nhia descendants if the happier\nfortuue of our day not1 bring\nit within the peraoual experience\not more pcraous than ever read or\nheard of Sir Walter Scott durlug hla\nlifetime. It was clearly aome aucb\nthought aa thla..thoughts or the Au-\nthor aud his Worka, aa well ua of the\nRender and his immediate perform-\nance, that stirred tbe heart or laat even¬\ning's audience, and prompted the bear-\nty aud prolonged applause which\ngreeted Mr. Dickeua aahe walked upon\nthe stage, with rapid step, and calm\nand seir-possessed air, aa or oue quite\nat home, and, though a stranger, sure\nor a cordial welcome. Mr. Dickeua Ib\ntwenty-five years older than when he\nvialted ua before. Hla appearance, of\ncuurae, haa changed correspondingly.\nlie haa not by uuy meaua the look of\nan old man, though bis muatuche and\nbeard aro thickly sprinkled with gray;\nhia hair la thlti uud bruahed forward\nover the crown or hla nead,audhia\ngeneral air and manner thoroughly In¬\ndicate sound health and digestion, aud\nu hale, hearty good sense and good hu¬\nmor. He acknowledged the applause\nwhich greeted his presence by a quiet\nbow, repeated once or twice aa the up-\nlilause continued, aud then aaid that\nbe was to have the pleasure of reading\nA Christinas,Cbral,lu four parts.which\nhe forthwith proceeded todo(anuouuc-\ning tbe title or the Drat part, "Marley'a\nGhost."
2cd023bd01237af7f5d09b2f432061cc OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.7520547628108 39.513775 -121.556359 In thus laying bare to public view this\nsynopsis of our main intrinsic features, upon\nthe right development of wnich our prosper-\nity depends, I know, indeed, I lay myself\nopen to retort —even to the charge of pre-\nsumptous conceit. If I cttect my object, I\ncate not: that of bringing clearly before\nthe scrutiny of the public view our true po-\nsition, If there is opposition to meet let us\nmeet it boldly, from whatever quarter it\ncomes If we have deep water to swim, let\nus strike out manfully and fearlessly. It is\nmadness to believe our interests and those of\nMarysville are identical—that to subserve\nthe one is to subserve the other. Common\nsense points out the contrary. If by su-\npineness we permit ourselves to be colonized\nwe deserve, as an invited penalty, to l ave\nour natural progress postponed Our claims\nto public favor are palpably inferential from\nthe course of reasoning I have pursued. If\nwe consult our true interests, it is to net\nwith alacrity; but our communion and sym-\npathy must lie with Sacramento In respect\nto that city, Marysville has counter pur-\np'sss. and will urge them with all her\nstrength to thwart her Between those two\ncities there is war of tact, in which Sacra-\nmento will conquer, she possessing a natural\nand Marysville an unnatural position These\nmay be unpalatable comparisons enf iced\noccasionally by unpleasant nllu-ioti', but\nthey are necessary to impress the public\nmind with a transparent array of facts—to\ncncoutage the timid citizen to settle amongst\nus, by showing him that ho will have a\nbright, solid and certain future. As citi-\nzens in common with those of other locali-\nties, our future is important to us, and all\nour energy, vigor and talent must be unre-\nservedly brought forward to enhance the\nbusiness prosperity of our town. This re-\nquires tact, capital and alacrity—not bois-\nterous meetings and impotent resolves Our\nincorporation and orderly government of our\ntown —giving all prudent security to person\nand property —the vigorous development of\nour local treasure, by our merchants yield-\ning nil due sympathy to the enterprising\nwith the healthful impetus we nff.rd to ag-\nriculture-all valuable in themselves ns con\nfributive sources of prosperity —do not uni-\nted, constitute a lever to move us to grett-\nuess Were these our only resources, the\nflig it of cur ambition would be contracted.\nOur whole energies must be directed to the\nconsummation of rail communication with
1ab4bd35c2a9d1d09a96ae77fee425b8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.7144808426938 41.681744 -72.788147 John A. Donnelly who was in West\nValm Beach, reported leveled by\ntropical storms, huve been fruitless\nand new efforts are being made to-\nday to determine whether the for-\nmer local resident, her husband and\ntheir infant chill have been victims\nof the hurricane.\nMr. and Mrs. Donnelly went to\nWest Talin Beach three years ago,\nMr. Donnelly later assuming the\nmanagement of the Flamingo thea-\nter and the Tower theater. Mrs.\nDonnelly is the former Miss Mildred\nTobin of this city.\nThe hurricane has already swept\nover thousands of miles of sea and\nland, devasting parts of the state\nof Florida and moving onward to\nGeorgia and South Carolina. Thou-\nsands have already been killed and\nthe property loss has run into bil-\nlions of dollars.\nWest Palm Beach, the city in\nwhich the Donnellys are located, is\nbelieved to have borne the brunt of\n storm. The city is harder hit\nthan was the city of Miami in 1926,\nearly advices say. Thousands have\nbeen left homeless and the business\nand industrial districts have been\nlaid low. Martial law has been set\nup and relief agencies are rushing\nsupplies and medical assistance.\nBecause of the complete demoral-\nization of means of communication\nin and about West Palm Beach, lo-\ncal relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Don-\nnelly have virtually given up hope\nof locating them through these\nmethods and will probably resort\nto government agencies to obtain\nthe information they have eagerly\nsought since the storm broke.\nThe sum of $1,500 has been set as\nNew Britain's quota in the Red\nCross appeal for funds for victims of\nthe hurricane, according to a tele-\ngram received this morning by\nKalph H. Benson, secretary of the\nNew Britain Chapter of the Ameri-\ncan Red Cross.
4b0b0e9c4f3c66944026f03ef1a26ac2 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.2397259956874 41.681744 -72.788147 There was never any doubt that\nGermany and her principal accom-\nplices were seeking to thwart and\nprevent the efforts of the Allies to\nsettle the future of central Burope on\nbroad lines of nationality and radical\nrights and that Hungary would op-\npose the setting up of a strong and\nstable Slovak nation between herself\nand Germany, just as Germany bitter-\nly opposes the establishment of a\nstrong and united Poland as a buffer\nbetween herself and Russia.. But it\nseemed incredible that in order to\nprevent this Germany, and still less\nAustria or Hungary, would be willing\nto destroy the whole political fabric\nand hand over the country, if only for\na time, to absolutely anarchistic ele-\nments. Kvents of the last few days\nhave, however, proved this is so\nand that Germany is prepared to do\nwhat Hungary has already done in or-\nder to avoid compliance with the\npeace terms imposed by the Entente\n'Allies. The latter now have the\nchoice of leaving the loyal Czechoslo-\nvaks, Poles and Rumanians to defend\nthemselves as best they can or of\nsending them all the aid possible.\nUnless they decidB, and deoide quiokly\nto do the latter there is a strong pos-\nsibility that fire and sword, anarchy\nant desolation will sweep over central\nK'urope and Germany will ultimately\nemerge from the welter the winner of\nthe war. One of the first answers to\nthe action of Karolyi in obedience to\nhis German masters is the occupation\nof both Berlin and Budapest, by En-\ntente troops.
20cee56b5729fa499f3ceb4ac87c1268 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1914.4479451737698 39.456253 -77.96396 Highland and Shenandoah.\nThe most reliable means of pro¬\ntecting nurseries and young orchards\nfrom the insects is by collecting then;\nin bags or umbrellas from the trees\nduring early morning or late even¬\ning when they are somewhat torpid\nThe collections should be undertaken\nat first appearance and repealed each\nday. Ordinarily repellents such as\nkerosene emusion or carbolic acid\nsolution seem to have very little ef¬\nfect in preventing oviposition of the\nlocust. Recent experience indicates\nthat trees thoroughly sprayed with\nBordeaux mixture are apt to be avoid¬\ned by the cicada, especially if there\nare other trees or woods in the neigh¬\nborhood on which they can oviposit.\nIn view of the difiiculty of control¬\nling the insect on a large scale after\nit has once it is well to\nadopt any precautionary measures\nthat may tend to essen or distribute\nthe injury. Forewarned, much injury\nand loss may be avoided by negleting\nall pruning operations during the win¬\nter and spring prior to the expected\nappearance of the Cicada in order to\noffer a arger twig growth and dis¬\ntribute by this means the damage\nover u greater surface.\nAnother precaution, when a cicada\nyear is expected, is to defer the plant¬\ning of orchards, especially in the vic¬\ninity of old orchards or forest land,\nuntil the danger is past. The same\nadvice applies to budding or grafting\noperations in the fall and spring prior\nto the cicada's appearance. Much\ndisappointment arising from injury\nto orchards or valuable nursery stock\nmay thus be avoided.
12e34253eabb3cfca7a04854dc9e5414 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1907.201369831304 43.994599 -72.127742 earn plenty oi money; una me\ndiligent exercise of his intellectu-\nal gifts made him valuable to\nsociety. There was nothing with-\nin reasonable reach of a man of\nhis profession which he could not\nhave, but over what should have\nbeen a splendid career hung al-\nways the shadow of his remark-\nable propensity. The precise di-\nmensions and particulars of it\nwere not definitely known to\nmany persons. A few men who\nhad a mania like his doubtless\nknew absolutely; a good many\nother men knew well enough;\nand there was practically a pub-\nlic property in the knowledge\nthat he had, and gratified, canni-\nbalistic inclinations of much\ngreater intensity and more curi\nous scope than those that com\nmonly obtained among careless\nmen. There was an honest preju-\ndice against him. Persons of con\nsiderable indulgence to eccentrici\nties of deportment disliked to be\nin the same room with him. Sen\nsitive stomachs instinctively rose\nagainst him. Yet he was tolerated\nfor, after all, nobody had \nseen him eat a baby.\nSubstituting White's particular\nand loathsome mania for that of\n"eating babies," the aptness of\nthe simile becomes very marked.\nThen Col. Harvey pays his re-\nspects too Thaw thus:\nOne day another man quite a\nworthless person knocked him\non the head, and let his pitiable\nspirit escape from its body. It\nmade a great stir, for the man\nwho was killed was very widely\nknown, and his assailant was also\nnotorious. There followed pro-\nfuse discussion of the dead man's\ncharacter, qualities, and achieve-\nments. His record was assailed,\nbut it was also warmly extenu-\nated. When it was averred that\nhe was an ogre, the retort was\nthat he was not a materially\nworse ogre than a lot of other\nmen, and that we must take men\nas we find them, and make spec-\nial allowances for men of talent.\nWhen it was whispered that he\nate babies the answer was that\nthat was absurd; that whatever\nhis failings, he was the helpful-est- ,
194a622088195f65e40871bf64f96189 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5423496951528 39.513775 -121.556359 In regard tc our foreign policy, to which\nyou have referred in your communication,\nit is qiitic impossible for any human fore-\nknowledge to prescribe positive rules in ad-\nvance, to regulate the conduct ot a future\nadministration in ulf the exigencies which\nmay arise in our various and t-vrr changing\nrelations with lonign powers. The Federal\nGovernment must oi no. csslly exercise a\nsound discretion in dealing with iiiternalion -\nal questions as they may occur, but tins un-\nder the strict responsibility which the Exrc-\nutive must alwaws feel to the people ol iho\nUnited States and the judgment of posteri-\nty. Vou will, then lore, excUf*- mo io. not\nentering into particulars; whilst I In in dly\nconcur with you in me geuevul seuiimcut,\nthat our loreign «flairs ought to be «< uduct-\ned with wisdom a*»d ftrmuess as to as-\nsure the prosperity of tlie people at home,\nwhilst the interests an I honor ol our coun-\ntry arc wisely but inflexibly maintained\nabroad Our foreign policy onght ever to\nbe based upon the principle ot doing justice\nto all nations and requiring justhe from\nthem in return; aud troiu this principle I\nshall never depart\nShould I be placed in the Executive chair,\n1 shall uso my best'exertions 10 cultivate\npeace and fiiemHiip with nil nations, b. lir-\nving tliis to ho our high-st policy as well os\nour most imperative duty; hut at the same\ntune I shall never forget that in case neces-\nsity should arise, which I do not now appre-\nhend, our National righis and National\nhonor must be preserved at all hazards and\nat any sacrifice
b0345829c2d85b86ada1095be546f760 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.8838797497976 39.261561 -121.016059 Emigration to Sonora.—The “ El Clamor\nPublico,” of Los Angeles, says: We have been\ninformed that a Frenchman, residing in this\ncity, is at present occupied lu a negotiation with\nthe Governor of Sonora, with the purpose of\norganising in California a colony, composed of\nFreuchmen, Spaniards, Germans and Italians,\nfor the purpose of cultivating the land and ex-\nploring the rich mineral country to the north-\nwest of the province of Sonora.\nVigilance Committee in Illinois.—A band\nof regulators has been organized in Illinois, to\nabolish the den of thieves and desperadoes that\ninfest Bloody Island, near St. Louis. It has\nbeen for some time a favorite resort of theirs,\nas it affords them a shelter where they can keep\nout of the reach of the St. Louis police. Num-\nbers of them have often gone into that city and\nescaped before hands could be laid upon them.\nWaylaid by a Lion.— As B. Beffls, of Trinity\ncounty, was crossing one of the mountains iu\nthe northern portion of county, in company\nWith a friend, a California lion, six feet three\ninches and a halt iu length, sprang from a covert\nupon a nnile he was riding. A dog which was\naccompanying the party, immediately seized\nthe lion by the throat, and he received live shots\nbefore hef.'ll dead.\nA Grizzly Killed.—On Monday, the 10th, a\nlarge grizzly was killed about eight miles from\nFrench Camp, on the Stockton and Stanislaus\nroad. He was making his way from the edge\nof the woods to the Stanislaus, wheu he ms\ndiscovered by Mr. Van Voler, who follower. im\nfive miles, during which time he fired four rifle\nshots, the last of which proved successful.\nCotton.— A comparison between American\nand East Indian ootton shows a difference of oue\nhundred per cent, in favor of the former. The\ncotton of the East Indies Contains twenty-five\nper cent of waste, while that of the United States\ncontains only twelve and a half. The fibre of\nthe latter also exoels that of the former.
0b5ba0b0d243e0277d9c0b2dca0da445 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.0835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 The Pittsburgh Orchestra.\nAt this week's concerts, the thlr\nteenth In the season's series, will b\nheard as soloist Miss Leonora Jacksor\nviolinist, a young lady scarce twenty\none years of age. who has won the ad\nmiration and esteem of the flrst critic\nof Europe. Miss Jackson studied flv\nyears with Dr. Joachim, of Berlin, am\nin many respects she Is the most fa\nmous pupil of this, the leading violii\nteacher of the world. She has the charr\nand grace of a young girl and Ne\\\nYork critics have pronounced her play\ning beautiful. Her flrst appearance Ii\nthis country after her work abroad wa\nwith the New York Philharmonic So\nclety about four weeks ago. ard thl\nwas followed by engagements with th\nBoston Symphony and with Mr. Thom\nas. in Chicago. Miss Jackson is one o\nthe most interesting soloists shal\nhear at the orchestra concerts this sea\nson. At these concerts she will pla:\none of the loveliest of the classic violii\nconcertos, namely, the G minor of Maj\nBruch, and In the second part of th<\nprogramme she will play with orches\ntra the canxonetta of Tschaikowsky\nand Ernst's Hungarian airs.\nMr. Herbert introduces his new sult<\nin the orchestral programme this week\nThis suite, written for Pittsburgh, hai\nnever been heard before and a surprisi\nis in store for those who attend th*\nconcerts this week. Other numbers an\nthe Symphonic prologue to Shake\nspeare's "Othello/' by Arnold Krug, th\nGerman composer, and the Valse Ch\nnHrn. bv Rubinstein.\nThere are always good scats to di\nhad for the evening concerts and i\nbest choice for the afternoon.\nThe programme in full 1b:\nSymphonic Prologue to Shakerp^are's\n"Othello"
1a3f73d7149ca85b2974a27cfc37e4b6 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.8260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 A man called at the insurance office\nand gave the name of George L. Bel­\nlows, representing himself to be .in the\ninsurance business. He offered his ser­\nvices to the firm as a soliciting agent,\nbut wanted a salary. He was politely\ninformed they were not paying salariée,\nbut working their agents on straight\ncommissions. Bellows then went to\nBaltimore, and a week later returned\nand sta ted he was going to try his hand\nand see what 'insurance was to be had\nin Delaware. He went' away snd w*-\nturned again with an accident circular\nand asked the firm to purehaee tea poli­\ncies, which was done, and ten addi­\ntional ones were also purrha« cd. After\ndisposing of the sanw, tlhe firm con­\ncluded not to have anything to do with\nMr. Bellows under any consideration,\naa ita suspicions fere srouscu.\nLater cn a well-known business man\ncalled on Mr. Hoffman, one of the firm,\nand was shown a receipt of $1 for a\npolicy of insurance with the firms\nname signed thereto, was Imme­\ndiately pronounced a forgery, as the\nfirm allows no one to sign Its name out­\nside of the confidential clerk im the of­\nfice. Since then the firm has been be­\nsieged by a large number of business\nmen with the same kind of receipts,\nwhich are in the ordinary form of a\nstationers printed receipt.\nMr. Hoffman, or his clerk, informs all\ncomers that they have been swindled\nand the firm wants Mr. Bellows if he\ncan be found, to answer the charge of\nforgery. He left Wilmington for the\nlast Gme about two weeks ago. Magis­\ntrate Kelley, Magistrate Daley, Consta­\nble Windish, R . G. Titus, Ross Robin­\nson, a man named Derry, Nicholas\nJenny, William H. Hanna, three per­\nsons in the Central Bank, and dozens of\nothers, each of whom was swindled out\nof a dollar. Mr. Hoffman's loss is $60.\nBellows is described as a man of\nabout 45 years old, five feet ten inches\nin height, slight build, iron gray hair\nand gray mustache,\nhailed from Philadelphia.
1fd83da0242639098a285072e76b0dad CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.8260273655505 39.623709 -77.41082 while ago lie fed the hungering thousands.\nIt was 11; 1 yesterday He touched new life\ninto the maniac boy ami smoothed the\ndeep furrows from a fall* r's brow, i his\nmorn lie drove (ho lever from the ski; one\nin Peters home, and mayhap, on; (lie day\nis done lie will whisper the hope oi a pure\nand holy life lo the harlot at the well.\n\\Vo have not 100-much thought of the\nworks cf .leans as the acts of one fellow\nman toward others. \\\\ lien viewed accord-\ning in this standard they are seen to he\nthe highest realization of man's highest\nideal. Christ was Aviso when He said, “Be-\nhold My works,” ior according lo the find-\nings nt the best thought of all Hie ages no\nworks are more beautiful or niglier God.\nThe mere force, beauty and holiness of\nHis m-is prove His kinship with the divine.\nBut this was not enough lo satisfy a Jew.\nThe Christ they Avert1 looking for AATas to\ndemonstrate His divine power by the\nmight and conquest arms. They had it\nall cut and dried ilist Avimt the Christ\nshould ho and ih>. He avus suddenly to ap-\npear out cf the heavens or out of some se-\nquesti red A-.ny of life, attended by great\nwonders. With the sword He was quickly\nto overrun the world and set up in Jeru-\nsalem a power that would rule all nations.\nAny love or philanthropy that could he\nworked in would be all l ight, but before\nall else Messiah must he the messenger of\nGinl's Avrath against the nations, visiting\nhem Avilh defeat and disaster, that the\nJen might rule supreme.\nTims it was that to the questioners of\nHis day Jesus proved to he a stumbling\nIdo, !:. Did they (hid in Him a more than\nhuman newer? Yes. thov conceded that\nliny did. As they saw Him restore the\nimm-iated body of'the leper, nr infuse new\nlife into the palsied form or open the eyes\nof the blind, or raise the dead from the\nleave, they were bound to recognize a more\nthan human power.
13341aace9d9ddfb325ab94b81d0eb43 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.30464477712 39.369864 -121.105448 The most interesting event under this head\nduring the past week was the completion of\nthe large iron pipe of the Eureka Lake Ditch\nCompany, and the introduction of water\nthrough the same to the diggings ofl San\nJuan Hill. Only an experimental bead of\nabout 150 inches was let on, but the full\nstream of 1500 inches will soon be\nto the great joy of the miners and a depen-\ndent community. This amount of water in\naddition to the still larger quantity afforded\nby the Middle Yuba Canal, will cause\nmany claims to be worked that are now lying\nidle, and insure more regular operations in\nall others. The pipe is 1700 feet long, and\n36 inches in diameter at the receiving end,\ntapering to 24J inches. It receives the wa-\n from a flume on the hillside south of\ntown, is laid along the surface ol said hill to\na reservoir at its base, crosses the reservoir\non trestles and boxed in, thence passes un-\nder ground through the town onto the hill\nnorth of it, where the diggings are situated.\nThe company had to pay pretty roundly for\nthe right of way through garden and build\ning lots, and give permission besides tor at-\ntachment of cocks to the pipe and free use\nof water for irrigating and domestic pur-\nposes. The pipe was manufactured ia this\ntown by Francis Smith and J. B. Low. The\ncost of it we do not know, but it is proba-\nbly about £IO,OOO or $12,000 , which is said\nto be considerably less than a flume would
16f98762692ff6c0267fad45d6d77bcc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.3575342148656 40.063962 -80.720915 1. And we are disposed to urge, as a tie\niiirtii rule, tho propriety <>| avoiding de\night travel in railway cars. How absurd! he*\nwill perhaps be said. Is this not one Si/\nf the grand improvements of this meth- wl\nil of travel, that the nights can lie used, p<>\niul that you (tan sleep as comfortably as tin\n1 your bed at home';1 Is jl not great Mi\nft in to gut over the ground while you are\nsleep, and save tin* weariness of the long M\nay stretchy Nevertheless, we say, don't l'»\nmvOl by night, unless you are in a hurry en\n) meet some engagement, to see a dying coi\nlend, or to reach your lecture-hall, when Mi\niie trains have been detained. A bagman tul\nr a "bummer," who must have all hia wl\nay-time lor tralllc, may bo excused for }h<\nraveling by night, lie has no purpose in\nf spiritual Improvement or physical de- 001\nght. But one who Is traveling for health \nr pleasure loses much in the wear and tin\nfar of nerve which night travel Involves erl\n'he thin light, llickering and faint, is an\nulnoufl to tlio pyes, and tlm sleep which\nsnatched and broken, In not relresliing. wi\nIven the nice bed and the clean sheets of uii\nPullman palace-car are no guarantee to\n>r genuine rest; there is as much wake- !«\ni In ess, as much lltful dreaming, as much tin\n;ar ol nocturnal prowlers, aiid much <>«\nions danger in case of accident, in these\nalace-cars, than in the more open cars, bu\nrhero they tumble and t<»ss ujion the tru\nI'ats, but are ready to move when the I"'\nliock come?. Not a lew |>erBorisf who T1\nbought sleeping ears a wonderful inven- ' » »f\nion a lew yearn ago, now ,religiously Wl\nvoid them, and prefer to watch in the tin\nther coaches, ratherthan be hived in the mv\nliwe cells and the hot air of those splen- bu\nid cages. gb
1fc4a715a37e1d1fe68799d479a22422 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.360273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 Points are awarded in each heat\nthe rider scoring the greatest num-\nber at the conclusion of the three\nheats will be declared tho winner.\nThis style of race Is very hard on\nthe riders but great for the spec-\ntators as there is almost constant\nbattling from the crack of the gun\nto the finish of each heat.\nAiming to give Hartford fans the\nbest racing possible. Manager Cad- -\nwell has signed Victor Hopkins, the\nAmerican champion, as one of the\nfour contenders. Hopkins, "the corn\nfed wonder from Iowa," is a favor-\nite with the local fans and, won sev-\neral exciting races on the Velodrome\ntrack last season. He will have to\nbe at his best to win, as the three\nbest ten mllers in the racing game\nare being up to oppose him\nat the opening race of May 16th.\nEven though a rider win the first\ntwo heats, he wtll have to secure a\ncertain number of points in the third\nheat to win first money as the points\nin the third heat are greatly In\ncreased over the first and second.\nThis week, the three star riders who\nwill give battle to Hopkins will be\nnamed in our sport columns, with the\ncomplete program.\nHarry Horan, a native of this city\nand one of the leading professional\nbike riders In the world, will appear\nIn a special match race of one mile,\nthe best two out of three heats.\nHoran has numerous friends in this\ncity who annually take a trip, to\nNew York to watch him perform in\nthe six-da- y
5e3b20c7a66c0daa1acfcdc9f29ca626 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8346994219287 39.261561 -121.016059 13th day of October, a. v. 1860 a final Judgment\nand Decree wan rendered in tli<* 1 Strict Court of th*>\n14th Judicial District of the State of California, in and\nfor the County of Nevada, against A. COE and El.\nI.EN COE. and in favor of A. i). TOWER , for the sum\nof Twelve Hundred and Seventy Dollars, priiHtyi*.\ndebt, with interest on the principle at the rate of\nthree per ceut per month from the rendition of Judfr-\nment until paid, together with all costa of suit; for\nthe sale ot the following described property, to wit;\nAll and singular, that certain tract, piece or parrel\nof land, situated, lying and belwr in the Towhsty,\nand County of Nevada, S ato of California ; bounded\nand described as follows, to wit: Commeciug at a\nstake on the upper side of A. T. Laird's water ditefj.\non the road leading from the town of Ne vada to Ke*l\nDog, thence along said ditch to a stake oq\nthe rear of Jones' land, thence west to a stake at a\nfence, two hundred feet, more or less, thence south\nalong said fence two hundred feet, more or less. to a\nstake in a ravine, thence southeast to Little Deer\nCreek, thence northeast to Muroba's line, thence\nnorth to the Red Dojc road aforesaid, thence west to\nthe place of beginning, containing one hundred and\nsixty acres of land, more or less ; together with all\nand singular the tenements, hereditment, rights,\nfranchises, privileges, improvements, fruit trees,\nwater right and appurtenances thereunto belonging\nor in anywise appertaining.\nNotice is hereby given that I will expos# at pubic\nsale all the above described property, to the highest\nbidder for cash, in front of the Court House door in\nNevada city, on TUESDAY the 13th day of November,\na. T>. 1860, between the hours of 0oclock a. si. and\n4 oclock l. M .
5259116eb1fbe40ab227ad2f56d008a5 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6972602422627 40.063962 -80.720915 "YouiireiifhiWIofencroiichiuir? No.\nWe livo l>y whikt wo Hhiiot or Huh, Mutt\nami I. Mutt's my brother. Jl's not\nmuch; lull if von ehoosu to throw n lino\nwith lis, It will lttiiku you ousy nliout\nMlnviiiK "* long us you please."\nThere wiutn HtmlKhtlbfwuril delicacy\nill thiH that I likcu. I remained witli\ntho Steuduiaus, therefore. We went\nover to ftee tho mound In tho evening,\nwhich proved to bo much smaller than\nthat at Eliwibethtown, thirty miles far¬\nther dow.il thcriver, in which wasfouiid\ntho famous "mound stone" that sopun-\n7.1ed French navans. Our mound was\ncovered with a thick undergrowth,when\nwe first saw it; was oval In shape, and\nabout twelve foot in height. The next\nmprnlug U was opened by the farm-\nowner, (who wanted it out of the way to\nphint potatoes,).Abel T assisting\nand digging with tho best of them. A (-\nter half a day's work we camo to an In-\ncTiUitatjon of day, baked hard, as byin¬\nternal heat. After thin had been peno-\ntrated and carefully- removed we discov¬\nered a stono block or altar, immediately\nin Iront of which lay n skeldloii, and\nthe ornaments, tomahawk, etc., of u\nchief. Forming a complete half-circle\nwith this, and in front of tho altar\nwere thirteen other, skeletons, their\nheadp $oWards the el^ief, tho bonus of\nthe arms crossed as in obeisance. The\nR!lli of "ur discovery lay in the. fact,\nthat abbiit these infejrfor bohos was\nhi-aped a lightish, oily, brown dust,.\nburnt hnmuu llesh, in u word.proving\nthat these skeletons belonged to erimi-\nnals or prisoners sacrificed nt tho death\nof tho chief.
3ca185f3be690a60b1ba731fb75d19ad THE LADYSMITH NEWS ChronAm 1905.209589009386 45.463023 -91.104036 By delay in pressing his pursuit of\nRussias defeated and demoralized\narmy to Tie pass, Field Marshal\nOyama has afforded Gen. Kuropatkin\ntime to sort out the disorganized units\nof his command and restore his forces\nto at least a semblance of order. So\nfar as known there is no considerable\nforce of Japanese nearer Tie pass\nthan six or eight miles, but in Russian\nquarters there is a feeling of appre-\nhension that some turning movement\nof which there is no definite informa-\ntion is in progress. From Japanese\nsources, it is reported that many\nstraggling parties of Russians, cut off\nfrom their commands in the retreat\nfrom Mukden are surrendering upon\nthe appearance of Japanese troops.\nThe council of war summoned by Em-\nperor Nicholas is reported to have \ncided yesterday that the\nWar Must Be Carried Forward.\nThe ail-important question of financial\nmeans, however, is said to have\nreached no solution, the situation be-\ning complicated by the reported decis-\nion of French capitalists not to negoti-\nate the loan recently offered by St.\nPetersburg. The probability, as re-\ngarded in St. Petersburg, seems to be\nthat when Gen. Kuropatkin has com-\npleted the task of reorganizing what is\nleft of his army he will be permitted\nto return to Russia and that the com-\nmand in Manchuria will be intrusted\nto Gen. Sukhomlimoff, whose war ap-\nprenticeship was served under Gen.\nDragomiroff, who has been regarded\nas one of Russias foremost scientific\nsoldiers. It is possible, however, the\ncommand will go to Grand Duke Nich-\nolas Nicholaieviteh.
05dbe328a0498d8899785b5b8b6f9978 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.5696720995245 44.939157 -123.033121 ground that If triumphant they may\nbo trusted to prove falso to every\nprinciple which In tho last eight years\nthoy havo laid down as vital. There\nia nothing oxporlmontal about the\ngovornmont wo ask tho people to con-\ntinue In power. In dealing- - with the\ntrusts wo do not havo to explain why\nthe laws wore not enforced, but to\nIKjInt out that they actually have been\nenforced Assuredly it is unwise to\nchange iwllcles which havo worked so\nwoll, and which arc now working so\nwell. Wo havo placed tho finances of\ntho nation on a found ground basis. So\nlong as tho Republican party Is In pow-\ner, tho gold standard is solid. That\nwhenever It next arises there should\nbo a readjustment of tho tariff sched\nules la nndoubted, but such changes\ncan bo mado with safety only by those\nwnoso (lovouon u uiu imuuiiuu m\n itarlff is beyond question.\nWo bollevo in reciprocity with foreign\nnations on tho terms outlined liy Pres-\nident McKinley's last speech, In which\nho urged tho extension of our foreign\nmarkets Uy reciprocal agreements\nwhonovor they could bo mado without\nInjury to American Industry and labor.\nWo havo already shown that our pol-\nicy Is to do fair and equal Justice to\nall men. Construction of the canal Is\nnow an assured fact. Uut most cer-\ntainly It Is unwlso to entrust tho car-\nrying out of so momentous a policy to\nthoso who havo endeavored to defeat\ntho wholo undertaking. A party is\nworthy only In so far as It promotes\nna'Ional Intorest, and evory ofllclnl,\nhigh or low, can servo his party he3t\nby rendering to tho people tho best\nsorvlco of which ho Is capablo. Effect\nive govornnumt comes only as a result\nof loyal tho
1ae2563dc5e71c29f0e22911440abe51 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1891.17397257103 39.756121 -99.323985 Ashland, Wis., February 2G. The rush\nfor government lands bids fair to excel, in\nsome respects, the celebrated onslaught on\nOklahoma. In tho face of a blinding snow\nstorm, with no shelter, the filers held their\nposition in lino in front of the United states\nlana otlice from Friday mght over Sunuay\nTheir determination borders on frenzy. The\nman who goes to sleep now is in danger of\nlosing his place, and there are larse numbers\nof men standing arouud to slip in the line\nwhere others tall from sheer exhaustion.\nMiss Hattie IKnickelbine. who occupies sev\nenth place, is allowed to go to a hotel during\nthe night. She is very plucky and the men\nare courteous to her. Xhey were standing in\na foot of snow, but dry goods boxes and\nstraw and benches are being distributed along\nthe line, which affords some relief. A long\ntent made of blankets, sheets and overcoats\ncovers about half of the line now. Albert\nVincent, at head, has received several\noners tor his position, refusing one ot JJ.UUU.\nImmense crowds are attracted by the sight.\nTwo men from Duluth crowded into the line\nahead of their proper places, and there are\nmurmurings along the line that they will be\nmobbed unless they take their proper place.\nThe rush is even greater than that at Wau-\nsou. as the land is much more valuable, and\nthe line was formed two days earlier. Many\not those in line went through a similar expe\nrience at Wausau, and the awful exposure\nand loss of sleep is telling on some of them.\nHaggard and benumbed with cold, they can\nhardly lift their hands. Hot coffee and sand-\nwiches are dealt out to them from temporary\nlunch counters, Mhlch have been erected close\nat hand. Among those in line are a large\nnumber of settlers who have come to nie on\nthe land upon which they have squatted, and\nwhich they wish to make secure by tiling.
0c35c063e210b598f7e58e9463fba258 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.519178050482 40.441694 -79.990086 affected by acids.\nTests made with much care show that the\naddition of a fraction of one pr cent of alumi-\nnum greatly improves the quality of cast iron,\nrendering castings more solid and free from\nblow holes, removing the tendency to chill, in-\ncreasing the strength, elasticity and fluidity of\nthe metal, and decreasing shrinkage.\nA vaujablb fact is mentioned by Prot\nDenton as having occurred in his investiga-\ntions showing tbe necessity of good lubrication\nfor slide valves. He statesjtbat in a locomotive\nhe bad cut down the supply ot oil to the valves\nfrom one pint in 75 miles to one pint in 160\nmiles tbe result of this change being that, as\nsoon as the valves got hot, two men could not\nhold the reversing lever In place when tbe\ncatch was taken out of tbe notch.\nA prize of $2,000 Is offered by the Municipal\nCouncil of Paris to the inventor of an electric\nmeter giving entire satisfaction, and Ave prizes\nof f40O each to the Are inventors whose meters\nbave given"the most satisfaction. Should \nmeter only be suitable for measuring one kind\nof current only half the prize will be given.\nTbe city is to bave the right to manufacture\nfor its own use, free of royalty, any of the\nmeters to which prize are awarded.\nA method is described In La Samatne det\nConitructeurs tor preserving cast Iron from\nliability to rust, at the same time insuring a\npleasing surface. In accomplishing this, the\ncasting is first thoroughly cleaned, washed in\ndilute acid, and, when dry, the surface is well\nrubbed witb a metallic brush or a file, and then\npainted several coats with raw petroleum, care\nbeing taken that each coat be thoroughly dried\nbeforo tbe next is applied On the last coat\nbecoming dry, it Is to be well rubbed with a\nstiff hairbrush, tbe result being an attractive\ndull polish, capable of resisting a high degree\nof heat and not susceptible to any attack by\nrust. This condition may be Indefinitely pre\nserved and improved by the occasional applica-\ntion ot a single coat of petroleum, followed by\nbrnshlng.
08cea08f73f1d17f82205872fd827411 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.568493118975 40.827279 -83.281309 The Irish Cilizen declares: "It. is\na matter ot regiet that Mr, lTrtirnl.riif j\nlias thus gone over to the Orane\nmen, because this bloody blunder\nwipes hiin out a3 a public man. Many\nhad even the good hope he might be\nour next president, but that is ail over.\nIf his partj' now were mad enough to\nput hiin in nomination, he could never\nsretone Irish Catholic vote ntone.\nBut Governor Hoffman is answerable\nfor the hole of it. we say it with pain,\nis guilty of every drop of blood shed\nthat day. Perhaps this Dutchman,\nHoffman, felt that, in that hour Ihe in\nfinance of common affinity, and dtem\ned it obligatory ou hiin to stand by\nhis distant relatives.the Anglo Orange\nGoths, who are ever true to the \nions, pious and immortal memory ol\nWilliam the Dutch adventurer; and\nllr.s man dares to veil his diabolical\nacts under cover of law and order.\nWe charge that he hau violated law\nand broken a special statute in this\nvery instance Out upon the wretch !\nLet his name stink forever in the ros\ntnl3 of all the true and Ihe good. Let\nthe cry of the orphan whose home he\nhas left disconsolate blast him ; and\nlet the hot tear of the widow, whose\nheart he has made sore, rot him in\nhis prideof place and imperious des-\npotism. The greatest mistake mad--i -\nthe whole massacre business seerns\nto be that Mayor H ill did not arrest\nJohn T. Hoffman for interfering with\nthe peace of the city."
06cb5eeda45b499107ba74ef7d248afe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.4342465436328 40.063962 -80.720915 years of the past decailc#Uere was a great\nwar in this country, in which the inosi\nstui>endous military power wits Invoked\nfor the settlement of thus negro question 1\nThat this war was waged until the whole\nresources of nearly one half the Union,\ninvoked by the juirty that undortook tc\nmaintain the bondage of the negro ami\nwith it the subjection ot the country tr\ntholaslt of his owner, were totally ox\nhniidtctl and the power of that party, botli\niu a military and i»lUical way, uttcrh\nbroken by the fortunes of thnt war ? l)c\nthey not know thnt by the decree of tin\nvictorious government, whom rights aiu\nlowers, by the laws of nations and tin\nusages of war, became absolute in tin\nmatter, the negro was declared to bo\nman, has been made a free Amcrlcat\noitiEeni aml armed with the Imliot to una\nhie. him to .protect bis. rights V Do thej\nnot seo that a signal revolution has bier\nwrought not alone in the charter of tin\ngovernment out in tne opinions aim kou\nmrnts of tho people, which could not to\nmany years, if (or a generation, bo re\nversed by any political agency, and whlcl\neach succeeding year will make the poo\npie more and more reluctant to disturb\nThey have taken .appeal alter appeal t<\nthe people,At intervals sufficiently long t«\nafford ample time ffSr j>opu1ar reftectim\naud reaction. Yet election after elec\ntion came and passed while the settle\nmeut was pending; hut no reaction canu\nand the disposition of the question wen\nunerringly forward to its logical consum
1b8e4f84b3b5e3dc2819a2af0c82035b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1894.2342465436327 46.187885 -123.831256 That the president of the United States\nis perplexed by the Bland bill Is Known\nto the country. It Is only fair to say\nttiat his solicitude over the situation\ndoes "hot partake exclusively of the\ncharacter of a personal perplexity. On\nthe sound money side of the president\nare the New York, New England, New\nJersey and Pennsylvania Influences that\nmode his second presidential election\npossible; the bankers who were so con-\nfident that he was a rock of financial In-\ntegrity, Impregnable and immovable.\nThese are represented by the New York\nchamber of commerce, which has given\ncogent expression to Its Judgment. They\nare supported' By the record of Mr.\nCleveland thus far, and, what Is quite\nns much to the purpose, the formidable\nfact that the Carlisle bond subscription\nwould have been a total rollure If It hnd\nnot been the understanding the\nBland business, developing la the\nnow before the president, should be put\nout of the way. Mr. Carlisle certainly\nallowed this much to be Implied. Mr.\nCarlisle's weakness Is that the majority\nof his party, as represented In congress,\nwas bitterly against borrowing money,\nnd want to Issue paper In flat form.\nThe Wall street end of the democratic\nparty prevented the failure of the loan.\nIf there had been a serious misgiving\nubout the Bland bill if the veto of the\npresident had not been counted upon\nwhich millions, the public credit Itself,\ncould depend with unqualified assurance\nthe treasury would not have been sup-\nplied with New York money. The threat\nwhich hangs over the president, and It\nIs believed Intimidates him, Is by thei\nsilver men In direct terms, that If he\nvetoes the Eland bill they will kill tariff\nreform.
cb8c606d87f6c488a6ab67b37ee5cd64 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.3164383244546 43.798358 -73.087921 united, retaining their present bloody and\nferocious disposition. Those who will mob\nnow would murder then. It were as ration-\nal to talk about rtfrsning war, .slavery,\nwhoredom and piracy, as to talk about re-\nforming the existing systems of practical\ntheology. The latter are as far from genu-\nine religion and sound morality, as the for-m- er\nare from humanity and purity. To re-\nmove the corruption, anti Christianity and\nungodliness of the existing church organiz-\nations and institutions, would destroy their\npresent identity. They are the same hin-\ndrance to every good work that Albert\nBarnes, a doctor of divinity, showed them\nto be to the cause of Temperance greater\nthan all other hindrances. Their ruling\nprinciple, that the end sanctifies the means\ntheir immoral and idolatrous doings aris-\ning from it their unnatural, darkening, de- -\npraviug, desolaiing machinery, all being set\naside, and their gags, blinds, and let\nters, being thrown off and put away, liht\nwould rise up from obscurity and break forth\nas the morning health would spring up\nspeedily and abound righteousness would\ngo out unrestrained and overspread ihe face\nof the earth. Salvation would run everv- -\nwhere like rivers of water. Redemption\nwould soon be sung by all kindreds, and\ntongues and people under the whole heav-\nens. Wrath, bitterness and sttife would be\nhushed. Sorrow aud sighing would flee\naway, belhshness would be uprooted from\nihe world. Benevolence would fill all\nhearts, and peace and joy reign forever.\nBrother Peck's work, in undertaking to\nidentify me with theological sects such as\n" Unitarians, Socinian, Universalisl," &c.\nis a theological trick that he has fallen\ninto by keeping bad company -- a trick un-\nworthy of one of his apparent general hon-\nesty and sincerity of inteuiioti.
35ff9d7a6ac3595a01e964884b808735 WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1915.9767122970572 35.318728 -82.460953 If you want a job, ask Uncle Sam.\nIf you' want an employee, ask Uncle\nSam. The service is free. Distance is\nno object Your postmaster will act aj\nmploying agent and the Government\nwill do the rest\n"The national employment bureau'\noperated, under the auspices of the De?\npartxnent of Labor, will receive appli-\ncations for employment for many indl\nvidual in the United States; it Is ready\nto nnd help ror employers, ine oDaec\nis not only, to bring the personless job\naLd the 'jobless' person together, but\nto put the 1skt person;, in jthe right\nplace. 11 13 One OI Uie uagscB. imuga\ntie Government of the United tSates\nhas ever undertaken.\n"I earnestly commend the facilities\nof this bureau .not only to any and all\nemployers but to all individuals seek\nIng work. Women can make use It\nas freely and readily as men.. The\nsuccess of the entire plan now depends\nupon the willingness with which the\naverage wage earner seeking a position\nwill make use of the Government s aic\nin getting the job.\n"The Department of Agriculture and\nthe Postoffice Department are both co-\noperating with the Department of La-\nbor to makeT the object a success. Em-\nployment blanks have been sent to all\npostmasters of the country and to\nevery field agent of the Department of\nAgriculture.. These hlanks may be had\nupon- -, request flmployers will state\nupon them the number and kind of em-\nployees . they are in need of, and em-\nployee will specify, in turn the kind of\nwork they want It makes no differ-\nence what kind of workit is; it may\nbe housework, stenography; farming,\nbricklaying.
1549bc66ab0734fa5ac61ba1336f94bf CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1899.5356164066463 41.875555 -87.624421 The City Council should nsk for the\nfollowing Information:\n1. The Comptroller shold bo directed\nto report forthwith to the Council, at\nIts next regular meeting, what, If any,\nreceipts hnvo come to the city from\ngas companies under the provisions of\nany of the gns ordinances; what, If\nnny, strict lamps are being supplied\nwith gas by the Ogden Gas Company;\ncapacity of the plant, nnd If snld com-\npany or nny other Is performing the\nlabor of lighting nnd extinguishing\nsntd lamps, nnd what, If nny, contracts\nhave been let to gns companies for sup-\nplying the city with gns, together with\nthe name, or names, of said compnny,\nor companies, and the amount of which\nsnld contracts have been let, nud by\nwhat authority.\n2. The Corporation Counsel nnd the\nComptroller should be Instructed to re-\nport forthwith to the Council whether,\nIn accordance with the provisions nnd\nrequirements of the resolution of Feb.\n20, the franchise of the Economic\nGns Compnny was duly forfeited nud\nIts pipes and equipment recovered to\nthe city, nnd, whether nny permit has\nbeen Issued granting nny other com\npany the use of snld pipes, nnd nlso\nwhether nny measures have been taken\nto recover to the city Its rights and In-\nterest In tho pipes nud equipment of\nother gns companies, which, by eva-\nsion nnd Infraction of their ordinance\nnud franchise contracts, have forfeited\nsaid franchise and their plant and\nequipment to the city, nnd what, If any,\nmeasures have been taken by tho city\nto recover peunl sums on bonds filed\nby nny of the above named companies\nns surety nnd guarantee for the per-\nformance of their obligations to tho\ncity nud to gns consumers In genera),\nunder the terms of nny franchise\nwhich nny of said compnnlcs through\nevasion or noncompliance with nil tho\nterms and requirements of snld fran-\nchise have forfeited.
0842bcacd4c2529c5ad930ba9bb3c123 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1907.8315068176053 42.68333 -96.683647 Huron district, C. E. Haxer, presiding\nelder; Alpena. John Kays; Blunt, to be\nsupplied; Carpenter, A. R . Little, fa­\nvour, R. J . Gluc.kler; De Smet, Henry\nPreston; Esmond, B . W . McEldowney;\nFort Pierre, turrit Janssen; (lettysb' .rit.\nJohn Wood; 1 lighmore, Tl. K . WulUs:\nHitchcock, O. r. Boslaugh; Harold, John\nW. Hartley; Huron, Duane Rifenbark;\nIroquois, Joseph Stinwden; l^etianon. J .\nD. Stevens; Midland, I*. W. Darlins;\nMillet, O. \\V. Butterfield: Ottuinwa. R .\nB. Hayes; Philip and Oulmi, P. I . King:\nPierre. A . S . I.ittle: Red11 eld. J . S. Hark-\nness; Rockliam, (\\ O. Ti'ullock; Sand-\nsark, to be supplied; Seneca. Thomas\nSimmons; Tulan. J. H. Walsh: Wessing-\nton. John Clayton; Wesalnpton Springs,\nJ. M. Tlbliits; Welsey, Fred Rawlinson.\nAberdeen district, Ceorge F. Hopkins,\npresiding elder; Aberdeen, J . . Taylor;\nAudover, N. F . Sanderson;; Ashton, J. E .\nNorvell; Bath, Columbia and Putney, E.\nE. Dean; Bowdle, supply. G. H . Clark:\nBristol and Butler. J. M . Hunter; Brit-\nton, \\V. D. Peeble; Carlisle and Tolstoy,\nsupply. H . B . Downs; Claremont. N . P .\nJohnson; Conde, supply, F. Tanner; De-\nvoe and Evesbard. F. I*. Brornatfhlen;\nDoland. Li. L .. Layne; Frankfort, supply,\nJ. U . B'rown; Frederick, supply, W. H.\nTu!lis; Groton. J. E . L<ombard: Hecta,\nsupply, Ij, C. Yeoman; Uerried and Pol-\nlook, supply, G. T. Matthews; T.an^-\nford, supply, W. C . Conrad; i.eola, sup­\nply. \\V . W . Cadle; Mellette, R. E . Tar-\nleton: Northville, S. S. Spitz; Rowsoe,\nsupply. E . E . Simmons; Selby, H. U .\nHasting*; Warner, supply, J . W. Shoe-\nmate.
133aad49d16aee8b3e9cd76a69212772 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1900.105479420345 46.601557 -120.510842 Palmer Mountain Prospector: Con-\ngressman Jones is seeking advice on tbe\nsubject of how to vote on the hill intro-\nduced to lease about all the available\ngrazing lands in the states of Washing-\nton and Oregon, which really means all\nthe vacant land belonging to the United\nStates. He asks this advice to come\nfrom the rural editors, believing that\ntbey will come nearer to the public\nopinion, and we hasten to give a chunk\nhot from the tank. First we should say\nsize up the situation, and if tbe vote is\ngoing to be close, better loom up in tbe\noffing until such time as you are bailed\nby tbe engineer in charge of the scheme,\nthen get on tbe winning side. It is bad\npolicy to be voting against a winning\nproposition. Second, it is money to a\nsyndicate to have this bill pass it won't'\nmake much difference one way or tbe\nother what a few country editors think.\nThird, if the bill is booked to pass, do\nnot kick against any of its provisions,\nfor ifit is drawn for beads syndicate wins,\ntails, Oregon and Washington lose.\nFourth, you better vote as you please,\nwhich you will do anyhow. Fifth, and\nseriously, just at a tine when there is\nabout to begin a large immigration to\nthese states and when perhaps 10,000\nlittle pieces of land in each state will be\ntaken up by an actual settler in every\nnook and corner of tbe state, it would be\nmuch better to leave tbe lands as tbey\nare, and allow these 10.000 farmers have\nfree use of them.
236f263cf650a3dd51649155e45a2354 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1888.8374316623658 39.756121 -99.323985 which position is one requiring skill\nto fill acceptably. In former years\nhe was a practical echo--l teacher and\nis spoken of by those who were in po-\nsition to know as & very earnest, eff-\nicient and popular one. He is a man\nof good education and a courteous\ngentleman. Wherever he is known\nhe commands respect because of his\nupright life and correct deportment.\nThe Herald takes pleasure in assur-\ning all its readers who are voters that\nthey need have no hesitency in not\nonly voting but working for Mr. Col-\nby on election day. He is a gentle-\nman in every way worthy to fill the\nresponsible position to which he was\nnominated and we hope to see him\ntriumphantly elected.\nFor Surveyor. W. B. Stubert of\nMarvin, is the nominee for County\nSurveyor. Mr. Stubert has filled this\nposition several terms and is as well\nknown by the voters of this county\nperhaps as any resident of the county.\nHe has had many years experience as\na practical surveyor, and no doubt is\nthoroughly qualified to properly dis\ncharge the duties of the place. Ho\n long been a resident of the coun-\nty, is a consistent and an attive Re-\npublican, and should receive the solid\nvote of the party. Let him be elected\nby a good majority.\nFor Commissionbr For member of\nthe Board of Commissioners we have\nJohn Hahnenkratt of Arcade. Mr.\nHahnenkratt was for a long time a\nsuccessful farmer and respected citi-\nzen of Taylor county, Iowa. He has\nbeen for many years a citizen of this\ncounty and is one of the most suc-\ncessful farmers in Phillips county.\nHe is a well informed intelligent\ngentleman who reads and thinks as\nwell as works. Financially he has\nbeen quite successful and it is n fair\ninference that a man who knows how\nto financier for himself will know\nhow to financier for the county. He\nis one of the owners of the splendid\nnew three story brick hotel now being\nerected in Phillipsburg. The Her-\nald can most conscientiously recom-\nmend Mr. Hahnenkratt to the voters\nof the district. We believe he will\nprove to be a very good and efficient\nmember of the Board. Let him be\ntriumphantly elected
7e95faa534bc46009ad2ba4de711b57e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.80464477712 39.513775 -121.556359 i\\ V this day it appearing to my satisfaction as\n.1 udtre of the County Court, in and for Untie\nt 'oun'y. that the Hoard if Supervisors in aail for said\nComity, did. on the J4;h day of September. A. I>. one\nlleuiriind eight hundred and titty.six. dei»|are t iroville\nto lie llie Count; seat of Hutle Coim'y from and after\ntin- said Iweniv-lbarth dav of September it. It. TSaP,\nin pursuance ol an net eiititied An Act to change and\nlix the County 'eat of Hullo County, approved A.areb\nHull. 1 s.V ; ai <1 it further appearing lomy satisfaction\nthat llie present lunldim's i t vvliioh the said Inurl has\nliei-n held, and in widen Ihe Records have been kept\nin the town of Hiilwell, are unsafe a* a place old.\npusitory for said Records, and that the same is liable\nlode iruetion by lire, in reason of being eon\nslrueled enure «.f wood. And it Inrlln-r appearing\nthat there is no (niiMiiu' in the town of Hidwell. suit\nable for holding the terms of ibis Court, and In sal. Iv\nkeep its Heeords trout lire or other calamit y. and it\nappearing that I tie town of t trie Hie is a 111 place to\nho | the terms ol H is Court, and that aside and com\n'tn.dinus brick building in siiid town has been ten-\niienat tin- eounty as county buildings.\nIt iv therefore ordered, ad indued and decreed, that\nthe clerk el the County Court.in and for Hulle\nCounty, forthwith remove his office and the Record'\nthen-if . to l irov ille. in Ihe ImiPling seleeied by the\nsai l Hoard of Supervisors as Couit.y llmldings, and\nibat In- do Hid I an-acl the business of hissaid ofttee.\nii iln* town nf Oroville,
0c00e6835f22725db7df5c5ab9b57b1f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.1575342148656 58.275556 -134.3925 Taking all thiugs into consideration,\nAlaska is a pretty good country, but,\nin the main the bragging about it has\nbeen overdone. So mauy have formed\nthe idea that all they have to do is to\ncome to Alaska, spit on their hands.\npresto-change and they are bubbling\nover with wealth. The story of Alaska's\nriches has been overtold. The rocky\nshores contain much gold, but it is\nonly to be got by bard and persistent\nlabor. The beautiful iulaud seas are\nfilled with fishes, but the fishermen\nendure many perils iu their pursuit.\nIt is not so easy to grasp a fortune in\nAlaska, lu fact the settler and the\npioneer should be given every encour¬\nagement, aud the "home government,"\ninstead of seeking ways and meaus to\nhold back the country oifer\nevery possible inducement. The tim¬\nber should be his for the taking; no\nrestrictions should be placed on the\ntaking of game, and in every way\nshould he be helped to make a home\nand build a competence. Our legisla¬\ntors have not realized this, or else they\nhave been influenced by the agents of\nthe corporations. A few grasped quick\nwealth, but the large majority have\nlabored on and endured. Eudared the\nhardship of neglect, the torment of\npersecuting taxes, the lack of represen¬\ntation, laws made by Congress ignor¬\nant of our needs, aud officers set over\nU9 who were not in sympathy with our\n"renditions. Alaska will some day not\nouiy ask for home rule, but will rise\nup and demand it, and that in no un¬\ncertain terms.
030d603c80e55e9c393176ee11a08b21 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1888.646174831765 39.756121 -99.323985 Minnesota thirteen cents, and Wisconsin fifteen and\nt hree quarter cent on the hundred dollars. The\nordinary running expenses of this state for salaries\nand maintaining state Institutions are over one mil-\nlion a year, aud toe last legislature piled up appro-\npriations for another million a year which hsre to\nbe wrung from a people heavliy burdened with\ncounty und municipal taxes, llow ts this exhaus'.ing\ndrain to be checked? How are the people to secure\ntax reduction and a mote equitable distribution of\nthe burdens of taxation? Can these needed reforms\nbe secured uniess the next state officers and legisla-\ntors are men of integrity and men who cannot be\nwaycdfroia their duty?\nThis is only one of the issues The ever Dressing\nand ever present railroad issue must be met and the\nlines must be sharply denned between honest men\nwho will faithfully represent the people, und \nrogue who want to tell out or intend to use their\npositions for levying blackmail. Brazen throated\nrailroad poll iciana and professional jobbers will, as\nusual, howl themselves hoarse over the national\nissue In order to befojr the taxpayers, and teric to\nkeep tat; issues in which the people are more vitally\nconcerned in the background. They will discuss\nprotection and free trade when the people want\nto hear about revision of the state assessment laws\nand laiiroad regulation. Tliev will fight over the\nbattles of the war. but make no reference to the\nscandalous debauchery of our legislature and the\nlaw defying course of the railroads. It remains\nto be seen, how ever, whetner the people or a stats\nthat i r.uidly boa.ts its Intelligence can be deceived\nand distracted by sr.clt tactics. It remains to be\nseen whether they wl!i bilndly support yellow dog"\ncandidates becau-- e
23e2f66185c33981a8b5bcc828f7b67f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2041095573313 40.063962 -80.720915 The Speaker.The Chair also wants to be mil\nunderstood about this matter. The Chair hat\ndesires to state that if the gentleman rises Ne\nfor the Duroose of rnakini* nnv Pniwelinn fit®\nthe Chair will recognize him, bat if he inti\nrises for the purpose of making anv criti- des\ncism on the Chair,the Chair-will take occa- ont\nsion to call him to order. jusl\nMr. Money."I rise in my right as a lud\nmember of this House to protest against "or\nthe language used by the Speaker, as a hoc\nbreach of the decorum and privileges of this nol\nHouse." Here Money was again interrupt- Tin\ned by loud cries of order on the Republi- me\ncan side and by a continuous rapping of exc\nthe Speaker's gavel, while Mr. Camp (N. Spc\nY.) and other Republicans that ant\nthe words spoken be taken down and read No1\nfrom tho Clerk's desk, to which demand pla\nMr. Money gave concurrence. I ai\nThe Speaker."The Chair will order the <?d\nSergeant-at-Arms to see that the gentleman\nnow preserves order.the gentleman will thu\nbe seated. The Chair will state again that [A|\nhe has no desire to be oppressive in 1\nany sense on any member, but mo\nwhen any gentleman insists upon making a he\nspeech out of order, the Chair regards him- sen\nself bound to call him to order. If the ^\ngentleman from Mississippi desires to mnke Hoc\nany explanation or correction in what he oth\nsaid the Chair will recognize him, but will the\nnot recognize him for the purpose of mak- mai\ning an assault upon the Chair out of order.
de8bf56f41fa4a758f06e649e75855d4 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.6369862696602 43.798358 -73.087921 ligion of happiness and joy. Eut as no\ngood could be expected without the divine\nblessing, before proceeding further, I re\nquested them to join in earnest prayer for\nth.it blessing, and that they might have\nthe bpint of God to teach them. Mr.\nSandys then offered up the sacrifice of\nprayer and thanksgiving; and never did\nI see a greater apparent seriousness. The\npoor people, piostrate on their faces, made\ntheir responses in the most solemn and\naudible manner. Mr. Deerr nexi calve\nthem an affectionate and. earnest address\nupon the necessity of feeling their state\nas sinners; of believing in Christ, of re-\nnouncing their old habits, and of obedi-\nence to the Son of God.. His subject\nwas, As many of you as were baptized\ninto Christ, have on Christ. We\nthen proceeded to the most important part,\nthe examination of the candidates for bap-\ntism. They were questioned as to their\nknowledge of their own state arid condi-\ntion of their responsibility to God of\nthe character of God of Jesus Christ\nof the way of salvation of the obligation\ninto which they were about to enter, and\nespecially in reference to their motives,\ntheir expectations, and their future habitB.\nOn these and other topics they gave is\nsatisfactory answers as could have been\nexpected: it rather exceeded, than came\nshort of what we had looked for. Two\nwere found deficient. One, an old man\nof a fine open countenance, could not re-\npeat the Fourth Commandment. He raid\nhe had it in his heart; but being nn old
0f3f8149d5432f75118b6aa612f91600 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.6726027080163 40.063962 -80.720915 The extensive improvements that are\nbeing made.at the Grand Opera Home\nthis season are about completed and tbe\ncbango in the appearance of the interior\nia very markod; it le so decided in fact,\nthat patrons ol the place will acarcely\nrecognize it whan it la thrown open to the\npublic under its new name and manage¬\nment next week. The splendid improve¬\nments that have been made were done\nunder tbe personal supervision of Colonel\n0. U . tienther, the lessee and manager,\nand Major J. V . L . Hodgera, Secretary of\ntbe tlall Association. Tbe house\nbaa been renewed and refurnished In\nevery part. The celling ia prettily free-\ncoed In light tinta that gives the place a\nlight and cheerful appearance, and this\nedict ia heightened by the delicate paper\nused. on the walla. Tiiu seating arrange¬\nment baa been entirely changed ami ia\nnow on tbe most approved plan. There\nla an easy slope upwaids from tbo stage\nto the rear tbe bouse, eucb row of suats\nbeing higher than the one in front ollt.\nThe pit for the orchestra baa been lowered\nand tbe stage haa been rebuilt. The or¬\nchestra seats are enclosed in a handsome\nheavy railing and the chaira uaed in that\natc'.iou are elegant, being provided with\nracks for hat, coat and cane, foot rests, etc.\nA new ticket otlice has been put in and\nother improvements made.\nTbe house will be opened next Monday\nevening by Miss Kittle Khoades and u\nsplendid company specially engaged for\nthis season. The bill for the opening\nnlgbt ia a double one, "I'ygnisliun and\nGalatea," followed by the modern comedy,\nentitled "Hough Diamond." There will\nbe a change of programme every evening\nduring Mica Khoades engagement of ouo\nweek. In her company, this season, Mies\nKhoades has several vocalists, and hor\nwardrobes are said to be charming. Miss\nKhoades is an actress whose painstaking\nell'orts have caused her to grow rapidly in\npublic favor.
270ac4ddb85324025218303b7dce2556 RED RIVER PROSPECTOR ChronAm 1903.7684931189751 36.694288 -105.393021 "I observed a custom In all those\nItalian cities and towns through which\nI passed that Is not used in any other\ncountry that 1 saw in my travels;\nneither do I think any other nation in\nChristendom doth use It, but only In\nItaly. The Italians, and also most\nstrangers, do always at their meals use\na little fork when they cut their meats.\nFor while with their knife which they\ndo hold in one hand, they cut the\nmeat out of the dish, they fasten the\nfork, which they hold in the other\nhand, upon the same dish; bo whatso-\never he be that, sitting in the company\nof others at meals, should inadvisedly\ntouch the dish of meats with his fin-\ngers, from which all the table do cut.\nhe will give occasion to offense to all\nthe company, as having transgressed\n laws of good manners, in so much\nthat for his error ho shall be at the\nlnast browbeaten, if not reprehended in\nwords. This form of breeding. I under-\nstand, is generally used In all places\nof Italy, their forks being for the most\npart made of iron, Steele and some of\nsilver; but these are usod only by gen-\ntlemen. The reason for this curiosity\nIs because the Italian cannot by any\nmeans endure to have his meat touch-\ned with fingers, seeing that all men's\nlingers are not alike clean."\nNot until the middle of the Seven-\nteenth Centniy did England's nobility\n!iegln the use of forks, but they came\nInto use slowly, and even In the early\npart of the Eighteenth Century gentle-\nmen who traveled carried a knife and\nfork, because the inns were not likely\nto have them.
0e24e1ccb2283f02325ad69dd1e6f737 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1896.8702185476118 41.875555 -87.624421 Is true of raw potato grated nnd applied\non a cloth, the cloth being next the gar-\nment, the raw potato with Its Juice be-\ning on thojnjurcd flesh. It must be\nremoved ns'soon ns dried, but It actios\nhi marvelous In severe burns.\nChildren suffer from earache which\nmay be cured by tho fumes of chloro-\nform. To apply It mako a funnel of\npaper, drop Into It a bit of cotton sat-\nurated with tho chloroform. Press the\ncotton In by blowing Into the, large end\nof tho funnel. The application of a\nhop bag heated will often case the pain.\nTho simpler tho homo remedies the\nbetter. They nro quite as efficacious\n) and are safer. Salt, lemons, hot water\nform a pharmacopoeia complete enough\nfor use without the doctor's directions,\n In accidents and croup. The\ncurative effects of salt have novcr been\nknown ns they should be.\nSoro and Inflamed eyes are relieved\nby bathing with snlt nnd water. Sore\nthroat yields to n garglo of tho same,\nflic most obstlnnto coses of constipa-\ntion can be absolutely cured by the per-\nsistent use' of half n teaspoonful of salt\nIn a gloss of water tnken Just before\ngoing to bed, or the llrst thing In the\nmorning. Constipation Is one of the\ncommonest evils.\nBaths of salt nnd cold water will\nrouso a sluggish skin to action and will\ncure cold feet. Salt used occasionally\nIs n good dentifrice nnd keeps the teeth\nfree from tnrtar. Salt nnd water used\non tho hnlr now and then stops Its com-\ning out.
253b0e82c4f543882b37fb97e147d6f5 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.0423496951528 40.807539 -91.112923 ity jn any age of thc world. Until tliirtr\nwas discovered, the consumption hid betn\nsidcrcd as thc certain destroyer of a |\nportion of the human race. Scizinp the voc\nthe middle aged,and the old, iniiijcriminii:\nand plunging them into an untimciy pr\nWho haft not beheld with sorrow, theblw;\ngirl, end the young man, who but a fewc:\nbefore, promised to make ornaments lose,\nand thc world, nipped, as it were, in thes\nand consigned to the world of spirit?, iK;\nthey were appearing upon the staircofirUi\nFortunately for suffering humanity, lis;\ncovery of this medicine, has struck frcs:\ncatalogue of diseases, thc terrors of the :•\nhorrible malady that has ever ivither«i\nhopes of man.\nIt is an Indian remedy, that was disci\nin thc year 1830. Dr. Fa li. having rcric?\ntwelve years in thc neighborhood ofthc-C\nIndians, and having been surprised at tii:\ndcrtul fact, that not a single case nl conn\ntion had ever been known to take placer,\nthem, was induced to believe that they ms\nin possession of some for this niMtiiir\ning of all diseases. After much cxertior,\nterm of more than three years, spentEti;\nvals amoug those children of theforest, ik\nfor this desease was obtainrd and itslife pre*\ning principles are now offered through tl*!\ndiurn of this mcdicinc, to all mankind, f:\nproof of the fact that all the Indian tribess\nAmerican continent possess a knowledgeo';\nremedy, it is only necessary to roinark:\nthere is not one single instance on r««\neven a traditional account among t.')tm,K\nIndian ever having died of consumption. ;\npurely a vegetable composition, and onec/:\nmost innocent medicines in the world,UK;\nall otlicr articles of medicine used by the Ik\ntribes, it is simple in its composition.\nDirections.— Persons afflicted with cot®\ntion, nust take half a tea spoonful three\ntimeii per day, with the addition of a WF\ntul just before going to bed at night. Fa!\nafflicted with this dreadful diseafcbjWI\nns above directed two or three months,\nfind themselves entirely clear of thepw5\nbreast and free from the cough, that acts\nnic8 thc consumption.
850e7c6d809c8989fbdc6ba8356c4f22 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4589040778792 39.261561 -121.016059 Every intelligent and thinking jierson must know\nthat remedies handed out for general use should\nhave their effleaev established by well tested expe-\nrience in the hands of a regularly educated physi-\ncian, whose preparatory study fits him for all the\nduties he must fulfill; yet the country is flooded with\npoor nostrums and cure-alls, purporting to be the\nbest in the world, which are not only useless, but\nalways injurious. The unfortunate should he far\nTtct i.AR in selecting his physician, as it is a lament-\nable yet incontrovertible tact that many syphilitic\npatients are mademiserable with ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it Is a point generally conceded\nby tlie best sypbilograpliers. that the study nnd man-\nagement ofthese complaints should engross the whole\ntime of those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. The inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, comonly pursues one of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used by t lie syph-\nilitic patient, in consulting nominal physicians of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths ot them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medical knowl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisements and jkis-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their ieter\nFunk “institutions,” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Iersons living at a\ndistance in the country are more apt to be duped by\ntlie lying notices of quacks ttian citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J. C. YOUNG\nwould say that be is the only regularly educated\nphysician in California now advertising, who de-\nvotes bis whole time to the treatment of venereal\ndiseases. Office, "61 Clay street, opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom 9 a. m..to 8p. a.
16b5712dec3ae36593072bf2d9c30cb7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.5520547628107 41.681744 -72.788147 valued at over $2,500,000,000, and the\nentire harvest at over $20,000,000,000,\nwhich would go far toward meeting\nour national outlay for the war. In-\nterior merchants are stocking up with\nmore confidence, though high prices\nand great credit expansion occasion-\nally induce a desirable mixture of\nconservatism. In the industrial field\nsteel seems to occupy leadership. En-\nlarged demands for export, for rail-\nroads, for oil, shipping, building and\nother industries are inevitable, and a\nnumber of plants are running 70 per\ncent, of capacity and over, which is\nmore than at any time since the loss\nof war contracts. Buildings is be-\ncoming more and more active owing\nto urgent demand for housing and\noffice room; and the call for new in-\ndustrial plant is only less urgent than\nmight be expected because a large\npart of war construction on these\nlines is being taken up by peace in-\ndustries. Conditions in railroad traf-\nfic are improving, the volume in the\ngrain districts having already visibly\nincreased. In merchandising lines,\nsummer quiet temporarily prevails,\nbut preparations are order for an\nactive fall trade. Labor is well em-\nployed, despite the large number of\nmen back from the war. The unem-\nployed are few, and advices from\nmany directions report a scarcity of\nhelp which is undoubtedly true. A\nconsiderable number of alien labor-\ners are returning to their native\nlands, and more are expected to fol-\nlow, but not so many as extreme es-\ntimates indicate. The outward move-\nment movement is swollen by those\nheld back during the war. The cer-\ntainty of securing better work and\nwages here than in Europe will,\nhowever, be a deterrent upon any\nexcessive efflux. The high cost of\nfood, clothing and shelter is an im\nportant factor in the outbreaks of un- - j\nrest which appear here and there in\nthe form of strikes. Such conditions\nare the inevitable result of five de-\nstructive years such as the world\nnever saw before or ever imagined\npossible. The only effectual cure for\nsuch a famine is more economy and\nmore product. Only on such lines\ncan the world-wid- e
9970a2505bf2518ee8813c5d7d278be5 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.3219177765093 39.261561 -121.016059 tion to me direct*.i and issued out of the Hon. Lh trict\nCourt of the 14th Judicial District in and for the County of\nNevada and State of California, on a judgment rendered in\nsaid Court on the 12th duy of March, A I*. 1 W 6K iu favor\nof A. D. TOWER , and against JAMF,S CULBERTSON, J. H.\nHARBIN. A. SWART and JAMES MeCAMRRlI GF. for the\nsum of five hundred and *eveuty four dollars andfifty ets\nwith interest on tlie said sum of $574 60, at the rate of\nthree per cent per month, from the rendition of judgment\ntill paid, together with $72 25 cost* of suit: I have levied\nupon and seized the following described property whfolt wes\nberetofoie attached the 15th and 18th of Jan. 185*. to wit:\nAll the right title and iot*re*t of the said defendants in and\nto the Virginia Bite.., with all the branch ditcher. , res er\nvolrs and appurtenances thereunto belongin'/. Air,o all the\nright title and interest the above named defendant,\n(Jan e* Culbertson), in and to a certain Toll load, known\nas the Washington Toll Road, commencing at the cit v of\nNevada, and running to the top of the* hill in the direction\nof Alpha and ashlngton. Also a certain ?ew Mill in\nWashington Township, known as the A1 ha Saw Mill, with\nall the Timber Bight, Engine. Boiler, Buildings and ap-\npurtenance 4. taken as the property of James Mct am bridge.\nSaid mill being situate*! about one-fourth nf a rnile from\nthe town of Omega. County and State aforesaid.\nNotice ia hereby given that I will expose at public *alo\nto the highest bidder for cash ie front of the Court /louse\ndoor In the city of Nevada, all the abovo described proper-\nty on TUESDAY the 13th day of April a. d. 1M8. between\nthe hour* of 10 o'clock a. m . and 4 oclock r. m . b> satJsfy\nand pay said judgment.\nGiven under my hand this 23d dav °r
2edf76ba93704a86e24f8dd973d4a7bb SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1905.5931506532218 43.624497 -72.518794 came among them whlle I was there.\nbtit this time I dld better. The natlve\nmethod of treating cholera ls to go into\nthe bushes with guns and huut evll\nspirlts. The lessons I leamed ln the\nIrnk country proved vnluable. I sue-\nceeded in stopplng humnn sncrlfices.\nThe people of Banzam, where I prac-\ntlced, claimed thnt some one had beeu\nduttlng the sacred groves, nnd they\nhunted for those crlminals all the tlme,\nletting me do all the practlclng.\n"After thnt I determlned to get into\nn colder climnte, nnd for one winter I\npractlced nmong the Korinks, up near\nthe base of the Kamchatkau peninsula.\nMy methods were too mild for them.\nThe way a natlve physlcian treats a\nslck man there is to catch him by the\nheels and drag hlm around the house.\nThenlfhedoesnotgetupandgoto\nwork aud pretend he is cured, he ls\nkllled. I saved a couple of patients by\nmassaglng stiff muscles.\n"That prnctice was too strenuous for\nme, 2nd the iiext year found me study-\nlng new systems of mediclne up In the\nAustralian bush. Here I came in con -f ll - ct\nwlth the 'blackfellow' doctor, who\nIs quite as effectlve as the ordlnary\nAmerican quack. These doctors fly up\nlu the alr at night and come down\ntrees, nnd they throw Bristol diamonds\nat patients during the darkuess. They\nhave, according to their patients, a\nbone in thelr stomnchs, and splinters\nof it nre to euter thelr patients\nand cure the dlsease. They see old\nman kangaroos in their dreams nnd\nthey carry 'plongges,' or blg clnbs, with\nwhlch they touch enemles and cause\nthem to dle. No man among them ever\ndles a nntural death but all are killed\nby wltchcraft, and the maln treatment\nof natients consists ln leavinc them\ninone'Tmn --nuuuug me-v mr-\nls the best part of thelr system. They\ndid not take kiudly to my treatments.\n"Por two years I fought galloping\nconsumption among tbe Maoris in New\nZealand but it was useless. One can't\ncure consumption, and it would take a\nceutury to educate tbe natlves into\npreventive mensures and by that tlme\nthey will be all dead. The women\nwear f urs, heavy cloaks, flannels, rngs\nnnd wraps whlle making calls and then\ncome home and dress in n thln cotton\nskirt. They seek pleasure at the dnmp-es- t\nspot they can find, and the edge of\nn swarap ls thelr favorite buildlng site.\nThe men wenr overcoats in summcr\nand leave them off in winter and they\nall llve tgotber.\n"They are dylng llke sheep, but they\nrefuse to change thelr customs, so there\nls no use for physlcians what they\nueed is grave dlggers.\n"Flnally I wound np my career as n\nphyslcian among the Hawnlians and\ncorabated the priests trying to practlce\nmediclne whlle they huuted wltches\nand evil splrits. I was not ethical and\ngot little trade."
0eafaa966fad90d65ac5694391365f11 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.6972602422627 39.745947 -75.546589 Edward Trusty, colored, was ar\nraigued on the serious charge of arson\nin the first degree, a capital offense in\nthis Btate Shortly after m dnight this\nmorning Officer McLaughlin was passing\nFifth and Church streets wbeu he was\ninformed by Trustys wife, who lives on\nFifth street, between Church street and\nthe railroad, that there was fire in her\nhouse. He found the flames in the\nfront room of the ballding, which was\nframe, aud extinguished them, although\nthey bad gained considerable headway.\nBefore be raaohed the house the attiser saw\nTrusty leave it it. He also found that some\none had stuffed paper in a hole in the\nfront door and then ignited it. The\nevidences of arson were so appsront that\nhe arrested Trusty. When arraigned the\nprisoner expressed his desire to proceed\nwith an examination, bat on being\nInformed of the magnitude of the charge,\nrequested that the hearing be set for\nFriday morning, to which time he was\nheld, without, \nS.rgeants Shields and Evans drew the\nnet, around two houses of ill-fame last\nnight. They found several cases of beer\nand whiskey in eech house. This morn-\niog charges of keeping houses of prosti­\ntution and selling liquor without license\nwere made In the Municipal Court against\nLizzie Moore and May Smith. The former\npleaded not guilty to both, and her case\nwas continued until Friday morning.\nThe Smith woman pleaded not guilty of\nselling liquor but guilty of the other\ncharge. At the request, of City Solicitor\nElliott she was fiued $30 and costs for\nkeeping the house and the other charge\nwas dismissed\nThe case of William Polk, charged\nwith selling liquor without a license at\nRosendale Park, was again continu» d to\n9 oclock a. m . to morrow\nThe charge of assau't on his brother,\nbrought against John Hemphill, was dig\nmissed on payment of costs\nFrank Warner, charged by bis wife\nFanny with assault Sunday morning,\nwas fined $1.
0d2b40573f8d5485dfea5af2a741074b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1914.1931506532217 39.623709 -77.41082 said town of the age of twenty-one years\nand upwards, being citizens of the United\nStates, who shall have resided in said\ntown for and during the space of six\nmonths preceding, shall, on the second\nMonday of April in each and every year\nat the usual place of holding elections in\nsaid town, elect five commissioners, who\nshall have resided within the taxable lim-\nits of said town one year preceding the\nelection, one of whom shall he designat-\ned by the voters as president and another\nof whom shall he designated by the vot-\ners as secretary; the said commissioners\nshall enter upon the discharge of their\nduties within ten days after their election.\nSection 317. The president shall pre-\nside at the meetings of said commission-\ners and preserve give such di-\nrections as may he deemed necessary to\ncarry into effect the provisions of this\ncharter and perform such other duties as\nmay be assigned him by the commission-\ners; the secretary shall record the min-\nutes of the meetings of said commission-\ners in a well-hound hook and shall per-\nform such other duties as may be assign-\ned him by the said commissioners; in case\nof death, disqualification, resignation or\ndeclination to serve, of either or both the\npresident or secretary of the board of\ncommissioners, the vacancy shall bo filled\nfrom the surviving commissioners until\nthe next election for such officers; the\ncommissioners may allow such compen-\nsation to the president and to the secre-\ntary for their service as to them may\nseem righi and just.
1542f503b195b899093667d532fa9686 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.0753424340437 40.063962 -80.720915 lug erected by tin* State, nor has any ap\npropriation ever been inado except in r\nMingle instance ami then upon condition)\nso harsh, that they amounted almost to i\nprohibition. At last the State has locate*:\nit4 Capitol there, and the people be\nlieving, ait Utey had a right to Mieve,'. tliai\nthe men who voted lor the resolution\nreferral to, knew what they were about\nanil that like State would not break (aitli\nwith any part of it* citizen*, proceeded U\nthecx|>endUurcof large sums of money\nand are this very day at work completing\na building tluvt nhall lie a credit to them\nselves and tlie Suite. I can understand\nthe power of intercut that mav coui|>cl the\nimmediate representatives of rarkersburg\nClarksburg and Grafton, to endeavor tr\nopen again a content in which, howevei\nmuch the State may loose, they may eacli\nexpect advantage; but 1 cannot umlcrstam\nhow those not ho oowerAillv control w\nsin ntld enter upon what may be for then*\nselves and the Suit*? so filial a step. Nol\nonly does atteuuit carry us back t<\nthe old unsettled oruer ofthmgs, in regart\nto the scat of government, but it nuikii\nrutataililn ll«n iiiu-nilii' ill'othi'f dtlfslums Ami\nthe untitling ofaiT our Institutions; for\nwho shall any that if one jmrt forgets U\nkeep its faith tlio other shall retneuibci\nitii fiiith. It fci an admitted fact\nsuppose that Charleston has more friends\nthan any other<"i<r point; it is also knowr\nthat the third ilistrict stands by It, a* out\nman. // w known that no om jtLtrt\nnm thin tUty rally strength enough to fining*\nthe UKotion; hut If a combination shotili\nresult, who could blame that district frou\nforming its alliances and waging its hat\nties, ft would not he Just and no mar\nwould for an instant think of reflising pro\nper appropriations or privileges to am\npart or the State; but it is known that a*\nlegist one of our institutions was locatcc\nby the solid vote of the thinl district. Ii\nis also known that the vote nearly decid\ned the location of the other two
06413b0bcc316b21db00e712a71b0194 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1893.9904109271943 42.68333 -96.683647 If any peril to life and property calling for\nany anon martial array bad «listed Great\nBritain and other foreign powers Interested\nwould have been behind the United Htates in\nan effort to protect tbetr clttaens. Bnt hey\nBade no signs in that direction.\nThna it appears that Hawaii waa taken poe-\naaaaion of by the United Htatea forcea wltbont\nthe eonaant or wish of the government of tbe\nlalanda or of anybody else ao far aa la shown,\nezeept the United Mates Minister.\nThe provisional government thns pro­\nclaimed was, by tba ierme of the proclama­\ntion, "to exist antll terms of nnlon wltbtbe\nUnited State* had been negotiated and agreed\napon." The United Htatea, pnrsnant to prior\nagreement, recognlied this government with­\nin an honr after the reading of tbe proclama­\ntion, and before I o'clock, In answer to an In­\nquiry on behalf of Queen and her cabinet,\naanonnoed that ha had done so.\nWhen onr Minister reoosnlseil the Provision­\nal Government the only basis upon whloh It\nrested waa the fact that the Committee of\nPublic Safety hud In the manner above stated\ndeclared It to exist. That It wan not in such\npoasesalon of tbe Government property and\nagencies asentitled It to recognition la con­\nclusively proved by a note found in the flies\nof the legation at Honolulu addressed by the\ndeclared bead of tbe provisional governmc t\nto Minister Stevens dated Jan. IT, ltf-s, in\nwhich he scknowledged with expressions of\nappreciation tbe minister's recognition of the\nprovisional government and stated that It is\nnot yet In tbe posaesslon ot tbe station tiou»o\n(the piaoe where alarge number of tt:e (jueen's\ntroop* were quartered), though tbe same hail\nbeen demanded of the Queen'a officers In\ncharge.
515d998007d06004893709cc3161008d THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.8835616121257 39.369864 -121.105448 THE nrc able to annonnre that the Agri-\ncultural and Mechanical University ot the Stateof\nCalifornia, will commence its first session on the iSd\nof November next. It is a private enterprise. They\nask no gift or donat on of a generous public. They\nask only to bo patronized. An institution oflesrning\nmust, iike every other enterprise, be deserving, to bo\nsustained: if worthy, the pub ic will support it well; if\nnot, no bequest of dying millionaire can make it sue*\ncessful. The University is a business onterprise. its\nprojectors are workingmen. They intend to make it\nin every way worthy tf the people of the Uolden State,\nconfident that (he people will appreciate their efforts-\nIt is a working man's college. We believe that the\nfarmer and the mechanic need an education just as\nmuch as the lawyer and tin* doctor, the common mail\nas much as the professional gentleman. Has the far-\nmerless need of brains than the attorney or the inven-\ntor—than the physician:' The colleges of the present\ntime are cherishing mothers for young physicians and\nlawyers ami preachers: but the sou of toil finds them\nstep-mothers who thrust hint aside for long-gowned\nyoung profes-or who intends to ri- above labor.\nOur University shall be mother to the laborer who.with\nthe sweat on liis brow and the smut on his hands,stands\nforth in the true dignity of his race—the full grown\ndeveloped man.\nTlie Board have located their Institution at liealds-\nhni g, in Sonoma county, on the bank of Kussian river-\nin one of the most beautiful and healthy sections of\nour State, embracing lands unsurpassed in fertilityon\nthe Pacific coast. A system of manual labor has been\nadopted for the purpose of imparting practical as well\nas theoretical instruction in the various branches ot\nAgriculture and Mechanics, and also of lessening the\nexpenses of the student, one-half of whose board bill\nfor the present session we propose to take in labor, to\nbe performed at such hours as- will not interfere with\nthe pursuit of a regular course of study, for which tho\nusual rates will be allowed.\nA farm and steam power are connected with tho\nUniversity. A large and commodious boarding-house\nwill be ready for the reception of students, where the\nyoung men will be under the immediate supervision of\nsomeone of the faculty. Connected with the Univer-\nsity is an Academy, for which the same system lias\nbeen adopted.
059b3fef1076b5d3a3075e576f63ba79 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.7164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 Paris,September IS..The 7«m;;j«tat<\nhit Prince Louih Napoleon will urriv\no-dny at Chateau do Dauve Naumai\nBelgium, on a visit to Due de Ferna\ntfuniez, who in nllied through his wii\no the Monlijo family. lie will remai\nhero under the pretext of hunting.\nLondon, September 18..A correspomi\nnt of the Xcws sayn that bin coming 9\nlearthe French frontier during the dec\noral period has occasioned the remari\nhat there arc pome who think that he i\nIreaming of the laurels of Stra.*burg am\nJoulogne.\n'o Intori .TleNNiigefo the Governor\nSan Francisco, September IS..Th\noil owing dispatch wju telegraphed to\n!av, after consultation with » number n\nending men:\nCo J/i.« Excdlcncy, Gov. Int'm^Sa^amenlc\n1 exceedingly regret the necessity o\ntilling jour attention to the luwlesBnea\nml mcih violence now uml for severa\nia^s past taking place in the immediate\nicinity of the State capital, in the ad\nuining county of l'lacer. 1 fail to ootid\nliat the authorities of that county havi\nd yet made aitempt to Ruppress th<\nrmed bodies of men engaged in driving\nut and burning the property of the Chi\nlese residents. I decire to remind you\nExcellency that in the letter addressed t<\nlie Committee of Safety you took occa\nion to intimate that the prompt actioi\nliken by them prevented the lawless acti\nrom becoming widespread. I simph\nall your attention now to thelnwlessncn\nn Placer county, that you may by youi\niroiuptness as Chief Executive of thi\nState prevent these outrages from becorn\nwidespread. I have no desire t<\n>oint out your plain duty. You havi\nbumlunt precedent by the recent occur\nencen whereby the State and Xationa\nuthorities have put down mob violence\n.iMiut uiki iinuiiiimy oemami m you\nlands that protection accorded under oil;\n;i>veriitnenl to high and low. Kveti tin\n,'hinamen, who have como hero unde\noleum treaty obligations, have a righ\no demand that their lives and propert;\nhall he protected the name an that o\nlewons of the most favored nation.
2dbf234999d656ee43f081d1043b1236 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.2999999682902 39.369864 -121.105448 We have for this religion and those who pro-\nfess it, the same respect that we have for other\ndenominations; hut no more. We shall oppose\ntheir design to alter the school law as we would\noppose the same design advocated by any of the\nother Churches. The law should not be changed.\nThere is no necessity for it. The Roman Cath-\nolic enjoys its benefits equally' with the Episco-\npalian, the Methodist, the Presbyterian, the\nUnivcrsalist, or the Infidel, If one can have it\nchanged to suit his purposes, so can the other;\nand the evident effect of such license would be —\nnot to lend the countenance of the Government\nto support one State religion—but to foster fifty\ndifferent sects, and also to aid in strengthening\nthe hands of those who would strike at the\nfoundation of the whole religious fabric.\nThe bill introduced into the Legislature byr\nMr. Montgomery is a Jauus-faced concern. In\nits first section it seeks to convey an impression\nat variance with its one true and only object.\nSays the first section—“No books, tracts or\npapers of a sectarian or denominational charac\nter be used or introduced in any school\nestablished under the provisions of this act, nor\nshall sectarian or denominational doctrines be\ntaught therein, nor shall any of the public\nschools established under this act receive any of\nthe public school funds, which has not been\ntaught in accordance with the principles of this\nact; provided, however, that any school number-\ning at least thirty pupils, established or adopted\nby the parents or guardians of such pupils, shall\nhave the right to apply, through a Board of\nTrustees, for said school* to the State Superin-\ntendent of Public Instruction, to be enrolled\namong the public schools under the appellation\nof a free public school, and to receive a pro rata\nshare of the public school funds, subject to the\nfollowing regulations and provisions :\nFirst—That the usual branches of common\nEnglish education shall be well taught in such\nschool for at least five hours a day.\nSecond—That no religion be taught therein,\nunless such be the will of said parent, or guardi-\nans ; and in no event shall such religious in-\nstruction lessen the five hours of secular educa-\ntion.”
141713a3922d59aa338b7443d04d6536 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.719178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 Br vlnuool a deed of tnui mado bjr Jamc* A.\nKIM U> tho undesigned ttuateo, dated on tho 17U>\nd»r of Juuo, In tho year ikm, and recorded in thi\nofllco ol the dork of the County Court ot Marahau\ncounty, Wat Virginia. in Deed ol Tnut Book No,\n4, folio 25.1 will Mil at public auction, at the front\ndoor of the Court Houaool Harahall couuty,\nSATURDAY, 84th DAY 0* 8KPTKMMKK, 1887,\noomwniclug at ton o'clock A, if., a certain tract ol\nund aliuate on tho water* ol Hickman, a brand]\nof Kfah crock, In Marahall county, Wcat Virginia\nnd bounded u lollowi Beginning at a hlckorj\ncomet (uMfd KfcelntheSfanhaliandWetielooun\nir fine north NH° wwit l« polea to a atone pile la\nKitw'a line: theuco north 8J eaat 69S pole* to\niwku and W. 0. bush In road, an agreed corner\nbotvrc«n iVfeiaou, lilce and KUw; thence aoutt\nWH *»»t SB t10101 ,0 a "tow nwur the road; thono*\nnorth 61' \\u*t IB polea to a atone; theuco aouth 66'1\nwcat U polca to au oak; thenco weat 11\npole* to a Llckorn thenco north M° wost 22 pol«\nfoW.O corucr betwocu Ulce and Xfaw: thenoc\nsouth W wtM lOiX pole* to a buih cornor ol Val\nonllue ltroman: thenco north 44 polo to a itoai\nwiihlu onfl rod ol a fugar marked u a ooruor\nthcuou north 41° wtat I t polott to a mono lu a Uoolco\nHue ou uorth bank ol Hickman? thonoowith ulO\nIIiio uorta «8H° rut W poles to a mono noar a pine,\ntiieooewnih 01c cut M pole* t«a W. O .j thenot\nt)5SJ c«»t 16 polca to a W. 0.} thcneo north 42° out\nM|k)Ii* toivdraiu; thcnconorth42° eaat 27 polo\nto & rod oak; thonco north 17° cut 63 poloa to i\nav] oak; thence north 80° cm!% poloa to a buah,\nthcnco north 84° cajjt 85 polca to a iiugar: thcnoi\n1011th C4° cMt 180 pole* to the temporary Una and\nwith tlin ume «on\\h 2° oait 255 polca to the begin\njilB#. conUluJug lour huudrod and aoren acre*\nand tbruo-lourthio! an aero, bo the tamo morooi\nlew
060ba03f210520e3949537aa33ff6e7f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.3493150367833 39.745947 -75.546589 No. 8. A lot of land beginning at a point\non the easterly side of the Boulevard TOO\nfeet north of Nineteenth street; theme\nthereby northerly 50 feet: thence easterly\nat right angles to the Boulevard 9s feet,\nmore or less; thence southerly and paral­\nlel wllh Twentieth street to feet to Lea's\nline; thence thereby westerly and parallel\nwith Jefferson street 33 feet,\nless: thence by a line at right angles to\nthe Boulevard lit feet 9 inches, mors or\nless, to the place of beginning.\nNo. 9. A lot of land beginning at a point\non the easterly side of the Boulevard 50\nfeet north of Nineteenth street; thence\nthereby northerly SO feet; thence easterly\nmd at right angles to the Boulevard n't\nfeet 9 Incites, more or less, to lam's line;\nIhcnce thereby westerly and parallel w ith\nJefferson street 59 feet, more or less;\nthence by a line at right angles to the\nBoulevard S3 feet 1V4 Inches, more or less,\nto the place of beginning.\nNo. A lot of bind beginning at the\nnortheast corner\ninti the Boulevard; thenc\nthe Boulevard 5® feet: thence easterly at\nright angles to the Boulevard S3 feet l1«\ninches to Lea's land; I hence thereby\nsouthwesterly 37 feet to a corner for .said\nlands; thence thereby southeasterly 37\nfeet to Nineteenth street; thence thereby\nwesterly 95 feci to the place of beginning.\nNo. II . A lot of land bounded by Klgh-\nleenth street. Park lane. Willow laue an 1\nNorth Hide Improvement Company's land\nhaving a frontage on Eighteenth street of\n■90 feet. Park lane about 175 (out. Willow\nlane about 45 feet.\nNo. 12. A lot of land beginning at the\n(outhwest corner of Eighteenth and Tat-\nnall streets: thence thereby xoniherly\ntiling Eighteenth street HI feet 9 inches;\nthence westerly and parallel wllh Tatnall\nStreet 13 feet 3 Inehes to lands of Whit­\ntaker: ihence northerly by suld lands 141\nfeet 9 inches to Tatnall street, and thence\nnastcrly 14 feet 3 Inches to the pt\nbeginning.
195a192ee7dce7d73f27670d7b4990a6 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1882.5630136669204 37.53119 -84.661888 American scientists are again dis-\ncussing the connection alleged be-\ntween the operations of railways and\nthe amount ot rainfall. It is regard-\ned as remarkable fact that before rail-\nroads were extended to the Pacific, tho\ncountry lying between the Sierra Ne-\nvada ond Rocky Mountains wcro sub\nject to an almost continuous drought.\nSince then, however, the country has\nbeen visited with frequent talis ot rain\nWhat produced the change? is the\nquestion. Some suggest that it is due\nto a change in the electrical state of\natmosphere, produced by the conduc\ntion of tho subtilo Hunt into the region\nof the iron rails. Others assert that\nit is caused by tho atmospheric disturb-\nances arising from tho frequent pass-\ning and repassing of trains. It is\nshown that up to 1854 the United\nSlates had been visited by\ngreat and general droughts, butsinco\nthat there has been no such visitations;\nor, in other words, that tho buildlngof\nsuch n vast network of railways as has\nbeen constructed in tho lost quarter of\na century has had the effect of promo-\nting the fall of rain. Sinco the gener\nal introduction of railways in Europo,\nalso, there has been no drought such\nas previously at short intervals caused\nwidespread distress. In the case of\nEngland it is remarked that although\nthe climate has been always humid\nthere has been a growing excess of\nrainfall during tho period of railway\nbuilding, until now she gets far\nmore than is beneficial to the crops.\nThis has been noticcablo to an almost\nalarming degree in the past fow years.\nWe give theso conclusions for what\nthey they are worth.
078e0e7a66e44a2eea90c439c02edf59 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.57397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 "When will the ooal oil and natural gas\nprobably lie exliau.U«l(”\n“That Is impawnhie to calculate. We can\napproximate the amount of deposits of the\nooal lieds very closely, but with oil aud gut\nit is different, as there is no way to tell bow\nmuch a well will yield. We have only to\nwait, and we have no warning of the ex­\nhaustion of a supply in advance The pres­\nsure forcing out the gas or oil is exactly the\nsome throughout the time it is being worked. ”\n“Is the report of the discovery of oil in the\nRockies plausibler\n“It is □ et at all unlikely, as oil lias already\nliooii found In tliat ■sgion at very near the\naltitude ot 4,509 feet, which is the figure\ngiven In describing the locution of the new\nfind. But It is rather mure likely to tie met\nin a rolling country. The formation of those\ndeposit, is very interesting. you know the\nrocky stratas of the earth on plains run quite\nlevel or only undulating, while in mountain­\nous regions they are often found very much\nbroken up, somatimes the ris ks standing on\nend or heaved up in a broken masa Now,\nthe condition that best invites the gas aud\noil deposits la very readily understood.\nWhere the rocky strata Is uiuiulatmg ll\nforms great domes, which act as reservoirs\nfor gas, which accumulates there as well a. -\noil The former, naturally the lighter, is\ntirst found, and then often when that is ex­\nhausted the oil below spouts up, aud below\nthat, heaviest of the three articles, comes\nsalt water. Ho that when an oil well gives\nup briny fluid it is safe to say its wealth has\nlieen practically exhausted, though in some\nInstances there is a second yield for a lim­\nited period of oil. -\nMother Karth 1s Full of Fire Wood.
1ce0d7e03314b919d0d5b9aed116c946 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.042465721715 39.745947 -75.546589 Ponahbe, Thomao C. Doud, Harry Em­\nmons. Howell 8, England. George A\nElliott, Dr. J. A . Etlegood, nr. A, E.\nFrantz, William' M. Field, John O.\nFhrra, Peter J. FOrd. J . N. Gawthnop,\nAlfred Gawthrop, John G. Gray, F. L\nOilpfn, John 9. Grobe. Pr. William H\nHVtneker. Holstein Harvey, William 8.\nHtMe*. Jair.'o H. Hoffecker, Jr.. Wil­\nliam G. Hill, Joseph E. Holland, C. O.\nHelsler, Rev. Georg-* C. Hall, Edgar\nM. Htoopre, Job H. Jackson, W. H .\nKenwtnrthy. WlUHnrn W Kennend,\nJames O. Knowles, A. E. Kru«e, W. F .\nKurtz. William Ijawton. Cblonel W. A.\nijtMotte, Harry W. lArwe, John R.\nIjamVeon. W . W. Lbbflell, Dr. J . Paul\nLitkena, John B. Mhrtln, J. H. Ma-\nhaffy, Pavld MbCtoy, Rev. T. A. Mc­\nCurdy, Benjamin Nlelds, Patrick\nNeury. W . B . Nbrton, O. C . Nallor.\nOtho .Vow andi O, C. Purdy, Pr. J. P .\nPy-lo. Willard Hail Porter. W, T. Por­\nter, H. P . Rumford, George H. Rob­\ninette. John S. Rowell, John Mi Reg­\ner«, A, S. Reed, Joseph A. Richardson,\nJohn Richardson, Jr.. Robert H. Rich­\narde, Harry Sttoeckle, William Sa tils-\nbury, 8. Redmond Smith, A. E. San­\nborn, W. H. Caleb M. Sheward,\nJackson T, Shaw. M. P. Satterthwalle\nDr. F. B. Smith. J . Fmest Smith. A\nO. Thatcher, Henry B. Thompson,\nDaniel W. Taylor. Frank Tnytor\nTbcmlse J. Talley, Uwln C. VBnde-\ngrifit, C. A. NTanTnimp, Charles E\nWhite. H . H . M'ard, J. Harvey MTiUe-\nmnn. Francis M: Walker. William O\nMTilteley, E. T. Warner, Charles War­\nner, Jr., Alfred D. Warner, W. T.\nMoe<brook. C. H . Simmons, John S.\nMullln, Henry C. Robinson, M. A\nMtode, C. H. Shaw, Jt., president Dela­\nware Electric and Supply Co.; W.\nPeW. Dimmick. president Harlan and\nHollingsworth Oo.; S. K. Smith, treas­\nurer Harlan and Hollingsworth Co.;\nJohn O. Hartmann, President Hart­\nman and Fehrenbeah Brewing Co.; C.\nW. Puaey, president, and T. H . Savepy,\nvice-president of Puaey and Jones Co.;\nG S. WOodward, cf Mroodward &\nBtru.; Colonel A. G . MrCbusland. su­\nperintendent Wilmington and North­\nern Railroad Company; W. IV. Lob-\ndeil, president. Chnrleo F. Willlston,\nireosurer lAtbdell Car MTteel CO.;\nGeorge Mr. Remington, president Rem­\nington Machine Co.: Preston Lea\npresident William I>>a and Sons Co.;\nGeneral J, Parke Pwffles, president\nAmerican Iveather CO.\nBishop MOnaghan did not attend\ncwng to other business.
00231a2d3a193987b5c75fbdaa577902 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.7827868536228 39.745947 -75.546589 lug the misstatement. The fact is that remained there as a correspondent. As tliat they were coming to see thodiffer-\nfew of the employes of the factory have a war correspondent ho remained long enee between free trade and protection,\never received aid from this excellent and with Gen. Buell, and some time with Mr. Treat expects to see tlie Democratic\nhumane organization, and Mr. Treat has Gen. Burnside, and then soon after party converted from free trade to pro-\nbeen assured bv the wives of gentlemen begun to figure as a financier. Ilia first tection in less than t wenty five years He\nknown throughout the State tliat they venture was with Horace White and gave many illustrations iif the wagespaid\nare indignant at the charges of "a labor A. G. Hill m tho formation of a news- the laborer and the prices for\niugmiin,” given publicity through the paper syndicate, which was probably the goods iu Delaware in the old Democratic\nEvery Evening, and false as to them in first of the kind now so numerous. Soon times, and the advance on both during\nevery particular. It is not becoming to after tho war Mr. Villard married a the present era of Republican ascendency\nspeak of Mr. Treat s charities und he will daughter of the noted William Lloyd He read from an old almanac of the time\nnot do it. but. the ladies of tho Benevolent Harrison, and for a wedding tour took her ,,f William Henry Harrison, the platform\nSociety will ns they say lie has always been 'Vlth.Ill!-1 '»Germany, where ho reported 0f the Republican partvof that time Mr\nI lie most liberal contributor to the Societys 1110 Au»tro-l russku war of IbOo.
14baad8b34f7ed0329f8fc4b2e5ace93 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1885.3794520230847 38.894955 -77.036646 01 ntu'.mi'.n I linvo Iho honor to laolno n,\n"clipping" from tho Jim ami Xuei 'eglitti\nof this datBioiitnlnliiK wliat Is purpprtod to\nbo tho tfsllrcpiiy of onoeleorge W. Simpson,\nof the Urm of Simpson, Mclntlre k Co, of Bus\nton, and beg that yen placo this lettor upon\nthe record 8 ot your court as my denial ot his\nlellectlons upon my lutegrltyi\nTlint I told him that I was Intlm tto with tho\nl'ajmatter Ocnornl or had any Inlluouco with\nlilm la fal9u: that I tutnuil a buttoi onlerovor\nto Gelt beeauso tiofT claimed that ho was not\ngetting his share ot conn acts la fatso; that I\ntold him It he wanted any more contracts t\nconio to mo and I would securo them 1a fatso;\nDint I tcld lilm that I could havo secured 10,- -\n000 pounds ot nutter for the Oreoly lliltot Ex\n1 or that I turned It. ovor to (l.ilT, Is\ntnlte. In fact every word of tils testimony, as\nhe Las glveu It, is ti tlestio ot falsohood fiom\nbi'akii.lni! to endltiu.\n'lhclolluwlngls tho truth: He ideorgoW.\nKlmpcoi called at my often tho latter part ot\nApt 11, 1S8I, In the capacity ot a dotectlve, mid\nolfeicd met tho agt ncy tor his butter. Ho said\nhis ( bject In circling It U mo was because ho\niiEileis'eod I lepresonted manufacturing\nIieuites lu their biiBlncsswItlitlioGnrorumont,\nnud had largo contracts with tho Bureau of\nProvisions and Clotlilug, and asked It such was\ncot the case. 1 replied Unit I was bidding on\nnoarly everything adxertlBed for by that bu\nrenu, and xvas tho lowest bidder 011 a largo\nliuniDerot nrtlelefl, nud mentioned boot and\npi rk ns among them. Ho thou asited It I was\nnet well acnualulod with tho Paymaster-noil-ora- l.
1bb747b99e0d18209b7692b88a4c28e5 THE COLORED CITIZEN ChronAm 1894.6726027080163 46.592712 -112.036109 S. A. Swiggett was born in Mary-\nland, May 19, 1834. When he was 13\nyears of age, at the death of his\nmother, he was placed In charge of\nrelatives in the country. BRecoming\ndissatisfied he walked to Cambridge,\nthe county seat, and made his own\ncontract with a gentleman to learn a\ntrade. After completeing his trade\nhe emigrated to Cambridge City, in\ndiana, at the age of 19. Three years\nlater he removed to Blakesburg,\nWapello county, Iowa. In December\n18i,he married a farmer's daughter.\nIn August, 1862, he recruited a com-\npany which was assigned to the\nThirty-sixth iowa Infantry as Co. "It"\nand of which he was elected captain,\nand participated in all the engage-\nments the regiment was in, and on\nApril 95, 1864, a desperate hard\nfought battle, he with 1400 others\nwere captured and taken to Tyler,\nTexas, arriving there June 10. On\nAugust 16 and December 28 he escaped\ngetting 180 miles away the first, and\n976 miles the second time, but was re-\ncaptured both times and taken back\nto Tyler. After being a prisoner\nabout fourteen months and being con-\nfined in two stockades and a dozen\njails in Arkansas, Louisiana and\ntexas, (and now trying to get into\nthe Lewis and Clarke county jail) he\nwas finally turned out. the war having\nended, his company and regiment\nhaving been exchanged four months\nbefore. After returning from the\nwar he followed merchandising except\n- ainterval of four years in which he\nwas twice elected sheriff of Wapello\ncounty, Iowa..
1a84a196260f61fc63f5ff59fe1be0c9 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1898.7630136669204 46.601557 -120.510842 cline tn price ol all products of the soil\nand of real eetate to the extent of one-\nhalf since tbe demonetization of ailver\nin 1873, made the restoration of ailver ac\na money metal the foremost question ol\nthe age. A thousand dollars, he said,\nburied in tbe earth, idle and unproduct-\nive, in a few years had so appreciated in\nvalue aa to be able to buy three times the\nproducts of the soil now that it would\nwhen buried. He epoke feelingly of the\npatriotic valor of our soldiers in the late\nSpanish war on land and sea, unparal-\nelled in the annals of warfare. He fa-\nvored the expansion of national territory\non the lines laid down in the Kllensburg\nplatform, and held that there was a nat-\n. Ural law governing the growth o( na-\n and their social and political pro-\ngress, on lines running from south to\nnorth and from east to west, and in ac-\ncordance with this law the United States,\nfrom manifest destiny, were following\nthe law of their being and would rise to\nthe pinnacle of human grandeur. The\ngovernor illustrated thia law by a refer-\nence to human events extending back\nto rem .test antiquity. He rinsed hia\n1 speech amid prolonged applauae.\nJudge Treble then introduced Hon. W .\nC. Jonee with a fitting eulogy of the gal-\nlant congressman.\nMr. Jonee opened by briefly recalling\nj salient featuree of international diplo-\nI macy and tbe Cuban rebellion tbat led\nlup to the Spanish American war, Th"\nI democrats and populists in congress\nwere foremost in their denunciation of\n'Spanish barbarities, culminating in the\ndestruction
0a81c8521402ea2748c9cb3617ad66a3 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.5915300230217 37.451159 -86.90916 this luvcment over other pavements.\nThe only brief he was employed to pre\npare related tome merits oi tne uelioi-ye- r\n& McCIellan, who were anxious to\ncontract with the House Appropriations\nCommittee, to construct this pavement.\nFor his services iu this case Gen. Gar-\nfield received $5,000 from DeGolyer &\nMcCIellan. Tliese are essential facts,\nstuleil without malice and from his-\ntory, concerning the connection of Gen.\nGarfield with the DeGolyer pavement\nmatter. There is testimony to the effect\nthat the pavement was a fraud, but we\nhave nothing to say about that. Gen.\nGartieltl ditl not know enough about\npavements to know this, or he would\nnot. wc candidly say, have advocated\nthis pavement. There is testimony to\nthe cllcct that S0J,0!M) outside of these\n!?.,0 0 0were used iu other legal expenses;\n there is no reason to Mispect that\nGen. Gartieltl knew of this. The profit\nin this business was immense 1X1 jier\ncent. but there is no reason to lielieve\nthat Gartieltl knew this. Gen. Garfield\nreceived this fee on the lL'th of Jury,\nIS7:!. In December following, antl\nafter, he was tho conspicuous advocate\nin the House of the Hoard of Public\nWorks of the District of Columbia. We\nhave set down naught in malice. If\ncalled upon by the friends of (Jen. Gar-\ntieltl, aud if he wishes it, we will sub-\nstantiate from public records each state-\nment we have made in this matter.\nWe intend here, however, to drop this\nsubject, for there are far graver reasons\nthan those which grow out of these facts\nwhy Gen. Garfield should not be el ect- ed'- to
098d868b2a34e2ee6d0454494e301742 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.4753424340436 39.745947 -75.546589 GRANT—In this city, on Juns 21. 1909.\nEdward E. Grant, aged 26 years.\nRelatives, friends, members of Mlnqua\nTribe No. 8, 1. O . R. M,, and employes\nof the Wilmington City Railway Com­\npany, are Invited to attend the funeral\nservices at hl» late residence, No. ISOS\nScott street, on Thursday morning. June\n24th, at 9 oclock. Interment at Qlenn-\nwood Cemetery. Smyrna. Del., on arrival\nof train leaving Wilmington 10.44 , with­\nout further notice.\nWOLF—On June 22, 1909, at Newark, Del.,\nDr. Theodore R. Wolf, aged 59 years.\nFuneral services at his Tale residence.\nMain street, Newark. Del.. on Friday,\nthe 25th Inst., at 10.30 o'clock. Interment\nprivate.\nBALDWIN—At\nJune 17th, 1909, Henry Furlong\nwin.\nFuneral servloea will be held at Bald­\nwin Memorial Church. TVaterbury. Md..\nFriday. June 28th, at 5 o'clock. Carriages\nwill meet train leaving Washington.\nBaltimore and Annapolis Terminal, Bal­\ntimore. at 3.45 p. m.\nVAIL—Tn this city.\nHannah Elizabeth,\n11am Vail. In her 91st year.\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral services at the resi­\ndence of her son-in-law, Harvey David­\nson. No. 201 West Nineteenth street, on\nThursday morning. June 24th, at 9 oclock.\nInterment at St. Cemetery.\nM11.1,ER—On June 21st, 1909, Cherlcs\nMiller, aged\nRelatives an\nInvited to attend the funeral services at\nhis late residence, near Sllverslde, Bran­\ndywine hundred, on Thursday afternoon,\nJune 24fh. at 4 o'clock. Interment at\nBethel Cemetery.\nMcGHORY—At New Ca«lle*Del., on June\n21st, 1909, James MoGrory, aged 68\nyear».\nRelatives and friends are Invited to at­\ntend ths funeral on Friday morning,\nJune 25th, leave his late resldenèe. Tenth\nand Delaware streets, at 8.30 o'clock.\nHigh mess In Rt. Peter's R. C. Church\nat 9 o'clock. Interment In St. Peters\nCemetery. Please omit flowers.\nO'HARA—In this city, on June\nHugh J. O'Hara, son ot John\nthe late Ellen OHara.\nRelatives, friends and employes of the\nP., B. A TV. boiler shops are respectfully\nInvited to attend his funeral from his\nlate residence. No. *15 Kirkwood street,\non Thursday morning, at 9 o'clock. Sol­\nemn requiem mass at St. Mary's Church.\nInterment at Cathedral Cemetery.\nFLOWERS—Tn thla city, on June 19lh\n190». Parker R Flowers, aged 72 years.\nRelatives and friends are mvlted to at­\ntend the funeral services at the residence\nof his son-in-law, Robert Cantler, No.\n416 East Fifth »treat, on Tuesday even­\ning, June 2?nd. at 8 o'clock. Interment
002e440ce37d7a6659c2c423caa67200 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.6816939574478 40.063962 -80.720915 commencing at 10 o'clock a. m . , the following\ndascril/ed real citato, situated in Ohio county.\nWest Virginia and known as a part of the Cherry\nHill Farm, and described as follows: Beginning\nat a wild cherry tree on Short crecla corner to\nland* of Mitchell Waddle and Willlim Busby;\nthence with *aidBu*by's line south 42%° west\n82 poles to a Htouo; thence south 'JO#6 west\n50 7-10 poic< to a stone; thence south tW3 east\n:t MO poles to a stone lu the run; thouce up said\nruu with the menndor* thereof, south im-west\n14 MO poles. ami south SOW" west 22 2-10 poles to\na stone in the line of lann«of George taw tell;\nthence with his lino south S0>v oastto 0*10 poles\nto a stone in the connty road corner to other\nlands of Robert B. Wayt; thence with said road\nnorth 27Va° oast 12 4-lu poles; thence north 44WB\neast 17 7-10 thence south HfW cast 20 9-10\nDoles; thcnce north80° oast 12 2-10 poles; thence\nsouth 38%" east 25 2-10 poles; thence south 40%°\neast'22 510 polos; thenco south 71?/rfJ cast 15 8-10\npolos: thence south 75j4° east 12 polos to a point\nin said road, from which a marked beech on the\nnorth side of the road bears north 6® west 21\nlinks; thenco leavluesaid road south .150w<yU\npoles to a stone, formerly a lynti, corner to\nlands of Augustus Ridgely; tbeuco south 77%"\neaM 90 poles to a stone, formerly an cltn stump,\nin the line of land? of Mitcncll Waddle, on the\nsoutn branch of Short creek: thence down said\ncreek, with said Waddle's line, north 4lVf west\n14 9-10 poles to a stone; thence north lt»v east\n32 6-10 poles to a stone; thence north 5" west\n32 4-10 poles to a stone; thence north 12° west\n47 6-10 poles tonstouu. formerly near a
ae242266347d88d5bc2a6d0e1f95df32 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.132876680619 41.262128 -95.861391 Third—A bill graeting to tbe Ptesi-\ndent, at bis discretion, the power of bus-\np«ndirtf> tbe wrH of habeas corpus.\nIn tbew measures it wtii be readily p«r\nOtiivad that tbu powers over the sev«rai\nStates po»so#«aa by tb« Pjrusidwt uf tilo\nUnited States will be practically tbe\npowers of tbe Autocrat of all tbe Bos-\naiita, or tbe powers of aa absolute des­\npotism- But tbe plea upon wbtefc tbese\nmeasures are urged--tbe plea of the\nemancipation proclamation, tbe danger-\nooe but overwbrhning plea of **mi!iUry\n•eeeesity"—will carry tbett tbrosgb. —\nOld fsabicned aoasfirvaute* mny say tbat\nthis is thetvrar.t's pleu of necessity, for\nwbicb their fs no necessity . tbey may say\ntbat these-thing* create a federal dictator,\noverthrow all tbe aback* and balances of\ntbe constitution designed to goard tbo re­\nserved local rights of tbe State# aod of\nthe people; but all such remonstrances\nwill fail, in ri»w of the extremes to\nwhich tbe uacofisutakoaai powert ef Coc-\ngress may be stxiuued.\nPower is always stealing from the many\nto tbe few. "This is &n old axiom, the\ntrucbof which has been proved in tbe\nexperience of every nation and tribe on\ntbe face of tbe globe, of modem or an­\ncient times. Wp not, however, go\nfurther to rtle eastward than Rome for a\nereat revolutionary movement wbicb will\ni apply to oar present position ; and here\nwe have a suggestive example in tbe ooti-\nc«'!>jion of E'jwer granted by the Roman\nSenai- ,o Julius Cue ..r, 'lhe d.-twcrat-\nie party around hi.:., alarmed at the\nrapid strideis of tbe StNUe to a dieta-\ni.y>sbif>, attempted »j fai.id it off by tbe\nassassination of Ca;sar; but the rsault\noperated only to mak • "coi.fusiun *varse\ncorrfonnded." A dictatorial triumvirate\nfollowed, and next aaotber Woody civil\nwar, and next tbe ootopi te triumph, nn-\nder Auoustut, of tbe impeltai w». •• -liab-\nment attempted by his uncle. So Napo­\nleon tbe First, on'tbe ruins of tbe first\nFreneb republic, set up bia imperial sway;\naad though pulled down by tbe hostile\ncoalitions of Europe, bis dynasty has\nbeen revived and dourishe* under his\nnephew, Napoleon tbe Third, end upon\ntbe rains of the second repabite. So\nCromwell, appointed the Proteeto* of\nEngland, found it ueceasary to play the\npart uf a rigid dictator. So Washing­\nton, in bis day, mi^bt lave put on tbe\nmantle «f an absolute devpot; but he\npre||Wed the nobi r uistixuuoB of die\n"Father uf his Country,
331a5400b2533618fccc33bbea9f7c8d WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.6598360339506 40.827279 -83.281309 wnensaui iioyt wrote that we\n"decided that Democrats ought not\nto be believed," he asserted what\nwas untrue and he knew it! When\nsaid Ilovt wrote that tee asked the\nClub to say Amen to that particular\npart of his speech" he asserted what\nhe knew to be untrue !\nWhen said Hoyt said and wrSte\nthat 'the Organ man lie! when he\nsaid it" he said ire "lied" when he\nwas asserting what was not true, and\nhe knew it When Henry A. Hoj-- t\nwrote "we move it should recom\nmend him to the 'Father of Lies'\nthroughout eternity," we can only\nreply that when near Henry A. Hoyt\nwe are about as near that old dragon\naswedesiretobe:\n.bvery word wo said in those re\nmarks were from manuscript, well\nknowing that this base maligner\nwould do just as he has and,\ntherefore, we are prepared for the\nfalsifier of truth :\nIn those remarks we did use the\nword "traitor," in refering to those\nsouthern traitort who sought to de\nstroy our great Republic, and we\nsaid if the Greely men in the north\ndesired as a party to join hands with\nthem "over the bloody chasm they\nmight do so, but we would not! If\nsaid Ilovt feels that he belongs south\nof that "chasm" then no wonder\nthat he felt at. Will an v true dem\ncrat deny that "traitors," crimsoned\nour land with blood, and sought to\ndestroy our Union ? When you do\nso, if you dare, we are ready to show,\nfrom Horace Ureelej' s pen that such\nwas the fact, and as democrats en\ndorse him now, because of his "ton\nesty," they must believe what he\nsays.
da3a34781cc9da5fe5a055882f9ad2b0 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1855.4479451737698 35.780398 -78.639099 neighborhoods there is now a good Sabbath\nSchool supplied with books by the Trajt So-\nciety. 217 children, 19 fathers, and 15 moth-\ners, are being instructed every Sabbath in .\nthese schools, many of whom are now able\nto spell and read, who two years ago knew\nnot the alphabet. There are two churches\nbeing completed in two of the neighborhoods,\nand a good school house in another, and an\nod grog shop in the other is used for the\nschool and preaching. Many of these, who\nwere heretofore reduced to beggary and dis-\ngrace by the bottle and other vices, are now\nsober, industrious and respected, and several\nhave been hopefully converted to God.\nThe Reports of the other Colporteurs whose\nlabors now extend over about 40 counties in\nthis State, show a similar degree of igno-\nrance, destitution and degradation, and also\nsimilar from their religious visits\nand the printed truth left behind.\nI am greatly cheered in seeing the hand\nof Providence guiding this humble work in\nNorth Carolina, which is very manifest in\nthe raising up of Colporteurs and bringing\nin means for the work. An excellent man,\nunder embarrassing circumstancps, agreed\non one day recently, to become a Colporteur,\nand the next day a gentleman proposed to\nme to give the usual Colporteur's salary,\n$150, to help support this Colporteur.\nAnother well qualified man walked 10 miles\nto see me about engaging as a Colporteur, to\nenable him to do more good to souls ; and\nthe day after his visit two gentlemen told\nmo they would help liberally to pay his sal-\nary every year. And others are giving $20\nand $50 to constitute them Life members and\nLife directors of tho society some of these
0f53bb13ff9fb3b3cb3b5454ea8eab62 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1894.2616438039067 41.004121 -76.453816 leads to peace, liberty and safety."\nThen the Democratic party will be ir-\nresistible and invincible, simply be-\ncause it ought to be."\nThis form of organization has been\nadvised by every Chairman of the\nNational Committee and by every\nChairman of the State Committee,\nsince i88, and under the solemn\ncommand of the State Convention,\ntwice spoken, it is the duty of every\nDemocrat, in official relation with the\nparty, to promote it by every means\nin his power. It is urged by the Chair-\nman of the Ways and Means Com-\nmittee of the House as the surest, per\nhaps, the only means of saving the\ncause of tariff reform in the great\nstruggle, which approaches, and it is\nlooked to with hope and confidence\nby the Cleveland administration, en\ntitled, as the latter is, to the cordial\nunited and organized support of the\npeople, whose rights and interests it\nis endeavoring to protect, with such\na system completed, as contemplated\nby the btate Convention and party\nauthorities, touching, at least, if not\ncovering, every election district in the\nState, challenging monopoly m every\nneighborhood, the success tariff re-\nform in the coming elections would\nbe assured, and there would be no\nmore monstrous Republican majori-\nties in Pennsylvania.\nThe Democracy of Pennsylvania\nshould at this moment be organizing\nto the best advantage for the cam-\npaign of this year. Under an unjust\nappointment we have but ten seats\nin Congress. We can not afford to\nlose any of them, and we ought to\ngain others. The Democratic ad-\nministration and our gallant Demo-\ncratic leaders in Congress have a\nright to expect that we will not betray\nthem in the hour of trial by permit-\nting the loss of a single member, who\nmay be saved. A Legislature and a\nfull State ticket are to be chosen and\ncountless local offices, of inestimable\nimportance in the aggregate, are in-\nvolved and dependent upon the spirit\nof the Democratic party and the\nefficiency of Democratic organization.\nShall we yield these mighty stakes to\nthe enemy in advance, or shall we\nmake a fair fight for the who'e of\nthem? We can, at least, hold our own,\nand it is not at all impossible to\nsweep the field.
045d66d349b59572ce640d9f12c56a3b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.6543715530763 40.063962 -80.720915 In other words the working people\nunder Republican rub.*, were able to\nlive well and pay fur their groceries,\nclothes and rents and taxes, and put\nby as surplus for a rainy day over\nseven hundred million dollars.\nNow all of the above enormous sum\nhas been Invested for the benefit of the\ndepositors. The Denver News talks as\nif It was kept in the bank cellars and\nbelonged to the bank officers. If the\npoople who have borrowed tliks money,\npay it back In depreciated sllver.whleh\nthey would have a right to il.j If free\ncoinage Jh estubilsred, the depositor\nmust be paid in this same money and\nthis will necessarily lose forty-seven\nper cent, or nearly one-half of what\nthey had saved and put by, disregard¬\ning everything else but this one fa;t.\nthat free coinage would practically\nsteal under the sanction of law, one-\nhaIf of tho hard earnings of labor ought\nto make every workman In the land,\nnot only vote against If, but work\nagainst it with all his might and main,\nas disgraceful the nation and disas¬\ntrous to his fellow wage-earners, llere\nis another hard fact fir a worktagman\nto^put In his pipe and smoke. From\n1870 to 1880 saving deposits increased\nfn»m 549 millions to 819 millions.from\n18S0 to 181)0 from S10 to 1.5C0 millions,\nfrom 1890 to ista under the MeKlnley\ntariff, from 1,500 millions to 1.785 mill¬\nions. In one single year of IVmoeratlc\nadministration and pdlcy-five bunks\nwere closed.the nuntiier of depositors\ndecreased W.900 and instead of any In¬\ncrease In deposits, thirty-seven uillll »ns\nwere withdrawn to support families\nwhere heads could not find work and to\nkeep the wolf from the door. Now dur¬\ning the whole of this Mm.', silver was\ndemonetized as so rail I. but it did not\npreveut the laboring classes from pel¬\nting a good living and saving nenriy a\nbillion of dollars under a republican\nparty, while in one single year with\nfinancial conditions as far as silver\nmen were concerned remaining the\nsame, but under Democratic rule, all\nsavings was stopped and instead tho\nfund heavily drawn on.
677108ad1f4a6f9bc64d5e93e5570155 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.9139343946063 43.798358 -73.087921 irsvi umy nas nousion avowee mat nis\nacts were promoted by the highest author\nity within the United States, but a gener\nal officer of the army of the United States\npresents himself, with forces, upon the\nMexican frontier. His first orders are to\npreserve perfect neutrality ; and his par-\nticular attention is called to one of the ar-\nticles of the treaty between the United\nStates and Mexico, by which the contract-\ning parlies bind themselves to restrain\ntheir respective Indians, within their own\nlimits. Gcneial Gaines having arrived,\nis at once in correspondence with the\nTexan officers, and despatches to Wash-\nington "information derived from the\nhighest authority in Texas" this, too,\nagainst the most positive information giv-\nen to General Gaints, by respectable and\nintelligent people, that misrepresentations\nof all kinds were fabricating, and would\nbe invented to induce him to cross. Up-\non the information thus given at Wash-\nington, by Gepe.ral Gaines. Mr. \nLass writes that he hns laid before the ex-\necutive his letter, and that his construc-\ntion, in the uncertainty of the boundary\nbetween the United States and Mexico\nbeing acquiesced in, he, General Gaines,\nis authorised to cross the Sabine river,\nand proceed as far as Nacogdoches, 75\nmiles within the Mexican territory. This\npermission is given, however, only under\ncenain contingencies ; (and I am certain\nthat these have not been present ) Here\nI must be permitted to ask, (and 1 address\nmyself to every American who loves his\ncountry, and is proud of it,) how it can be\nmaintained, under any pretext that honor\nwould suggest, or justify, that thefrontitr\nbetween the United States and Mexico is\nuncertain; for a long time after the ac-\nquisition of Louisiana, the United States,\nexercised jurisdiction enly to tt.e Rio\nHondo, but six miles West of Nachitoches,\nthe intermediate territory between this\npoint and the Sabine riv-er - ,
25b271468a12f18ac1d349cd8f8ddd33 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.56420761865 41.681744 -72.788147 leasing the high pressure from the\nair chamber, he opened the door lead-\ning to the crib above and gave ihe\nalarm to men at the surface of the\nlake. Superintendent Johnson sum-\nmoned villagers and led the first res-\ncue party of villagers down the eleva-\ntors and into the tunnels. One hun-\ndred and fifty feet from the bottom of\nthe shaft they began to fall, overcome\nby fumes. Dolan who had resumed\nhis post in the air chamber, rushed\nafter them. He saw a flash of light\nin the darkness. It proved to be\nJohnson's flashlight which he 3till\ngrasped where he had fallen. Dolan\ndragged him to the bottom of the\nelevator shaft and then went back. Al-\nmost dead himself, he dragged Peter\nMcKenna to safety. Then he col-\nlapsed. Others from the crib took\nthe three up th elevator and they were\nplaced aboard boats.\nIt was two hours later that Van\nDuzen, organized the second rescue\nparty on shore and to the crib.\nWith his men he descended into the\ntunnel. They found Michael Keough\nof the first rescue party still alive and\ndragged him out. They went in again,\nonly to suffer the same fate which had\nbefallen the first party. Finalfy four\nof them managed to stagger back to\nsafety. Jhe others did not come out\nuntil the third rescue party was or-\nganized and went after them.\nGas Found Three Days Ago.\nIt became known today that work\nin the tunnel had been suspended\nthree days ago because gas was found.\nIhe men sent into the tunnel last\nnight went to work believing the gas\nhad been eliminated.\nThe construction job on which the\nloss of life occurred is being done by\nthe city with direct labor. The acci-\ndent is the first of any consequence\nsince the new tunnel was started in\n1914. The tunnel is to cost $1,500,000\nand will connect with a filtration\nplant designed to give Cleveland pure\nwater.
0dff9535c2b4a2b1717b807aa3e22435 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.028767091578 37.561813 -75.84108 The attention of the Legislature has often\nbeen called to the rapid increase ot\nindebtedness and expenditures, but it is\neo important that I do not hesitate to repeat\nwhat has heretofore been said. The whole\npeople of the State are deeply interested in\nthis subject The burdecs borne by the cities\nand towns must De snared, in part ai leasr,\nby all who transact business with them.\nThe town and the neighboring country have\na common interest, and, in most respects,\nmust be regarded as one eommunity. I sub-\nmit that, to the subject of local indebted-\nness, the General Assembly should apply\nthe principles of the State Constitution on\ntbe subject of State indebtedness.\nUnder the provisions of the eighth article\nof tbe Constitution, the State debt, notwith-\nstanding the extraordinary expenditures of\nthe war, has been reduced from over twenty\nmillions, the amount due iu 1851, until it is\nnow only about six millions. An important\npart cf the constitutional provisions which\nhave been so successful in State finances is\nthe section which requires the creation of a\nsinking fund, and the annual of a\nconstantly increasing rum on tbe principal\nof the State debt Let a requirement an-\nalogous to this be enacted in regard to ex-\nisting local indebtedness; let a judicious\nlimitation of the rate ot taxation which\nlocal authorities may levy be strictly adhered\nto, and allow no further indebtedness to be\nauthorized except in conformity with these\nprinciples, and we may, I believe, confidently\nexptct tbat within a'feAyfars tbe burdens\nof debt now renting upou the cities and\ntowns of the State will disappear, and that\nother wholesome and much needed reforms\nin the whole administration of our municipal\ngovernment will of necessity follow the\nadoption of what may be called ihe cash\nsystem in local affairs.\nUnder any limitations and safeguards\nwhich the Legislature may adopt, a very\nlarge discretion must necessarily be com-\nmitted to the local authorities. Tbe wisdom\nof its exercise will depend mainly on the\ncitizens themselves. In order to secure an\nhonest, economical, atd efficient adminis-\ntration of a city govemmr nt, the best citi-z -i- ii\nof all parties must unite and act to-\ngether.
2841eedf18d39564158df273200c6a40 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1876.6926229191965 40.832421 -115.763123 A mining suit is now pending in Sam\nFrancisco, in which is involved a legal\npoint of paramount intercut to the\nowners of stock in incorporated mines.\nThe old Trustees of tlio Knickerbocker\nMining Coriipany havo sited out an\ninjunction to restrain lion. S . H .\nWright, County Judge, from issuing\ncertificates of election to llio Trustees\nchosen at it recent election by tho dis¬\nsatisfied stockholders of llio company,\nwho voted 11 majority of tho stock, and\naccordingly succeeded in choosing a\nUoard of Trustees opposed to the old\nniauagcmeiit. The complainants al¬\nlege that tho new Trustees were elected\nupon tho representation of f>3,000 of\ntho 100,1)00 shrres of tho stock of the\nKnickerbocker company, and that more\nthan 5,000 shares of that number were\nvoted by persons who were merely\nTrustees and did not own tho stock,\nwhich in claimed by the plaintiffs to\nhave been illogal under tho provision\nof the civil codo of California, citing\nsection 311 in proof of their complaint.\nThis section provides that no person\nshall vote at any election held by a\ncorporation unless ho or she is a burnt\nJhle stockholder. It is u settled \nthat a Trustee lioldiug stock for anoth¬\ner person iB not tlio owner contemplat¬\ned by law, as in many instances tho\nTrustee does not know for whom ho\nholds tho stock, but still in tho cvont\nof an election, unless a transfer is had,\nho can vote it. Section# 322 of the\nsame Codo clearly defines tho owner\nof tho slock as tho pledger or person\nor ostoto represented. The most im¬\nportant point in the case in (pies t ion Is\nllio effect which tho law referred to\nhas upon past elections at which Trus¬\ntees havo been permitted to voto stock\nfor other parties. Tho law leaves mi\ndoubt as to ils effect, bul is so framed\nthat it does not invalidnto liny regular\nelection at which such stock has been\nvoted without protest, although it con¬\ntains a clause which provides Hint such\nan election may bo set nsido upon tho\npetition of absent stockholders. no mat¬\nter how few. The Knickirhocker envy\nwill probably be decided at once, and tho\nresult may cause considerable Itoiible.\nto many companies of which llu\n. olllcwr b havo been eleclcd by tho vol*\ning of Trustees.
1692713ae031260541bc6f5aaf33eb2b THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1902.9246575025368 47.478654 -94.890802 You are hereby notified that the following\ndescribed piece or parcel of land, situate in\nthe County of Beltrami and State of Minne-\nsota, and known and described as follows,\nto-wit: Thesouth-east quarter of the south-east\nquarter (SE!4 of SEJ4) of section twenty nine\n(29i in township one hundred and fourty-four\n(144) range thirty-six west of the 5th principal\nmeredlan, according to the Government sur-\nvey thereof. is now assessed in your name;\nthat ontheninth day of Mav, A.D. 1900at the\nsale of land pursuant to the rCal estate tax\njudgment, duly given and made in and by the\nDistrict Court in and for the said County of\nBeltrami on the 21st dav of March A. D . 1900 in\nproceedings to enforce the payment of taxes\ndelinquent upon real estate for the year IK91\nfor the said of Beltrami the above\ndescribed piece or parcel of land was sold for\nthe sum of one and seven one hundredths dol-\nlars and the amount required to redeem said\npiece or parcel of land from the said sale, ex-\nclusive of the cost to accrue upon this notice,\nis the sum of one and seven one hundredths d )1-\nlars and Interest at the rate of 12 per cent per\nannum from the said ninth day of May A. D .1900\nto the day such redemption is made, and that\nthe said tax certificate has been presented to\nme by the holder thereof, and the time for re-\ndemption of said piece or parcel of land from\nsaid sale will expire sixty (60) days after the\nservice of this notice and proof thereof lias\nbeen filed in my office.
60b627e6461c199f7c62b9fb3332f277 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 Jtedew, form Sporty.that is likely to\ncome into much power very won, unless\nunder the stimulus of some such outrage\non popular';TighUaatthb strangulation ol\nthe French'ltepubHc. Four-filths o( their\nnumber are dlstniQChised by the present\nsttllrnge lmvs, which with' till their recent\namendments/ «tiir exclude more than\nthree-tilths of nil the adult male subjects\nof the Quoin. .The Republicans of JSng- J\nland, therefore, occupy much the same I\nreiauuu iu 110 luivio ao ,iua iw^uuiimuu ui «\nthi Southern States 'did, prior to I\ntlie enfranchisement of the negro. |\nTiicy, are Uio representatives of' a t\ngagged constituency. Nevertheless, the t\nexistence of this vast Unrepresented con- I\nstituency Is the ghost that will not (\nI'down" in English politics. It is nearly 1\nas influential aslfit voted, because it con- <\ntains tho materials of the coming 1\nlion, and hiw, also, the support of the re- «\ncently enfranchised clairi. Tim English a\nmonarch/la mined, afld tho disfranchised i\n"threo.fllths" ore tho powder,that fills the i\nmine. The English, Government is liko\nan iccbirg thnt'has drifted down trom the s\npoles toward the tropics, untli-the warm 1\nwaters of the Gull Stream have melted t\ndown its base «nd (eft it top-licayy. By r\nand by.it will turn over, in a manner that f\nwill be a specthclo to the world, bringing n\nup its-present depths,and lifting them t\ninto mountain-peaks. Through the dread 1\nof this revnlsion,. tho disfranchised class c\nhnve an influencojj^Engliuid not unlike\nthat which tlie a(avery. <jujostion hail in t\nAUIHILO UUU1U M4li JIIH.\nIt was Ibr this vast underground con- n\nstltucncy- that Protesor lieesley s|>oke, h\nwhen be said:
241d6cad896cff84cce85d91c4db0086 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.0778688208359 29.949932 -90.070116 A l'RACTICAL JOsI ON AN EsTtritsLI LaDr. -\nA very extensive practical joke was perpetrated\n) esterday on Mrs. Ilarrison Gray Otis, well known\nto the world for her numerous acts of benevo-\nlence and charity. Some wag, it seems, had sent\na large number of bogus invitations to members\nof the haut ton, asking their attendance at a re-\nception to be given at her residence, No. 41\nMount Vernon street, yesterday afternoon. Not-\nwithstanding the severe snowstorm, a very large\nnumber of persons responded to this Invitation,\nand at one time the street in front of her dwelling\nwas completely blocked up with their carriages.\nBut these were not the only people hoaxed.\nInnumerable orders were sent to artisans of all\nkinds-to plumbers, painters, carpenters, gas.\nfitters, etc.- to come and perform little jobs of\nrcpairing about the house-each job minutely\nspecified in the order. Other orders were sent to\ncoal dealers, flour-dealers, ete., to bring\nstated quantities of their respez:t•e kinds of mer-\nchandise, to be delivered at stated times. Even\nthe services of an undertaketwere brought into\nrequisition to lay out the body of a upposed dead\nchild; and in response to an advertisement in the\nHerald, members of the felloe tribe were brought\nto fill out the miscellaneous and variegated assort-\nnentr. Who the author of this strange hoax in,\nwe are unable to state-but all the facts of the\ns. -e have ueen placed into the hands of Detective\nleeds and his sseistante, who will probe the mat-\ner to the bottom. The several ordersare written\n,I es many drifferent styles of handwriting. Mrs.\nii s bore the irflition very quietly and did not\nslow the matter to disconcert her at all. Two\nI olicemnen from the third station were sent to the\nirouve to turn away the victinlized persons as fest\nas they arrived.-
1e2f0fab42d345719162ebd67b0ab4b2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.015068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 "Well I guess they are our talent too,"\ntorted the youugster without stirring.\n"I am glad," continues Mr. H., "to*\nthat America docs not allow the Cobd\nclub to indulge its penchant for warni\nand cautioning the universe without a\nply. The story of the boy and the hogi\nquite answer enough.\nI have heard many American's critic\nthe imprudence of the Cobden Club, I\nMr. Hatton's opinion is worse than th\nHe Bays: "The English proposition\nAmerica is a trifle one aided and child!\n"you farm and we will manufacture. Y\nsend us corn and beef, and we will Be\nyou clothing, knives and forks." Amer:\nhas a laudable ambition to be somethi\nmore than a mere tiller of the soil, and c\nof these days if their cousins in the c\ncountry are not careful they will flud tl\nFree Trade has reduced the people to\nmere diggore and delvers in the bowels\nthe eartuTfor England is emptying her it\nmines into the lap of Belgium and Frar\n(not to mention America and other con\ntries), and her own raw mater\nmanufactured into iron goods of all kin\nwhich in her own markets under sell 1\nown manufactures. It is a fact that ht\ndreds of Englishmen earn their livelihc\nby getting iron ore and smelting it ii\nbars for continental workmen to manuf\nture into useful and ornamental articles\nEnglish markets. It is just as well to\nmind American protectionists that th<\nare thousands of intellectual men in El\nhind, who are anti-free traders, and w\nsee in. the Cobden club the "dry rot" c\ngreat and glorious oountry,\n8uch words are very strong coming fr\nan Englishman, and the interviews wh:\nMr. Dalton reports are still stronger.\nUUITISU MANUFACTURES OR FREE TKADI\n"Our export trade with America ip dea\nlaid a member of the Birmingham Ohaml\nof Commerce. "A large flrtp of Auierh\nmerchants who used to do a large exp\ntrade in iron-mongery with the Uni\nStates no longer sends out a single artii\nout, instead, sella here American meroh\ndise imported from the States."\n"What is your opinion of Ameri<\nwares?"
0c9f19f596bef6d69ab0edc17ea7e31c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.1684931189752 39.261561 -121.016059 Mtstiwovs Los* or a Boats Gnaw.—Tbs\nChicago I*reia states that a boats erew *f nine\nuisa, which left Little Sauble for Pent Water,\ndistant fifteen mile* on Lake Michigan, on\nChratmaa day, with a supply of preriaions for a\nlumbering party, hare perished, under circum-\nstances of peculiar mystery. The boat in which\nthey embarked carried a sail, and all the neeee-\nsary appliances for her navigation, and was\nseen to pass Pare Marquette, distant about three\nmiles from the place of departure, Just at dark\nof the same day, and very near in shore, with a\ncalm state of the lake and weather. About\neight in the evening they were beard crying for\nhelp off Pare Marquette Clay Banks, when a\nMrs. Bon called to them from the shore, it being\nso dark aha could disoern nothing, and several\nvoiees answered in reply, saying that they had\nlott their oars and eoald not get ashore, and\nwould all be lost unless they had assistance.\nMrs. Bon was alent, and wontatonce adistance\nof half a mile for two men, but when they re-\nturned with her to the place, all was still. The\neries of the men, it is worn heard by sever-\nal other*, wh* say they were afraid to loav* thoir\nhouses. There was a light breeze during the\nnight and the next day. At noon of Saturday,\nthe boat drifted en the bar off Pere Marquette,\nwith two of the crow lying dead under the\nthwarts, and some rsmnanta of the cargo, but\nno traces of the rest of the crow. The mast of\nthe boat was unstepped, but etill stood nearly\nupright. The whole party of nine men would\nseem to have perished, but through what mean*,\nis meet incomprehensible. The night was by no\nmeans a severe one, the lake was smooth, and\nthe men were all experienced eailors and relia-\nble men, but apparently not one survivor is\nloft to toll tho tale. A few of the lighter arti-\ncles composing the beats eargo, have since drift-\ned ashore, bat nothing gives nay clue to the\nprobable fate of the entire anfortunate crew.\nTheir names were Geo. E. Spears, George E.\nValentine, Charles Peterson, Christian Rasmus-\nKia, James Dawson, Frank McAllister, Samuel\naalop, Peter Hansen, and one anknowa. They\nleft Chicago the week previous for the purpose\nof engaging ia lumbering operations.
2de91b065f8592435b90b0c36dd54b40 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.7849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 American Nhect Iron in Kugluui\nThere is nuw being shown in Birminj\nhaiu district an extraordinary specime\nof iron-iuaking in the United states,\nis a portion of a sheet of very thin ironso\nthin that, though its surfaco dimci\nsions arc I inches by J{J inches, yet i\nweight is only 3} grains apothccarie\nweight. The breath of the nostrils wi\ndrive it away almost as if it were tl\ncinder of burnt paper. The thinness\nitself very surprising, but the extrao\ndinary part of the matter is that the iro\nbus been made from what the Amer\ncans term a "muck bar".obtained froi\na Danks puddling furnace at I'itti\nburgh without being reworked. Tin\nan extreme thinness of iron, which it\nalmost impossible to secure from tl\nvery liest materials worked and n\nworked many times over in the usui\nway, has liven got from iron in the stal\nof criidcness in which it was found upo\nleaving a mechanical puddling furnaci\nIt is assumed that the iron has been mad\nfrom tlu> ordinary district pigs, and tl\ns|tccimen is deemed to demonstrate tli\n value of machine pudtlling ns prm\nticed by the producers of the icon. An\nthe specimen has an ini|iortant commei\nciul as well as a scientific significant\nThere is to the Knglish iron-makers tli\ndisagreeable inference that if crude iro\ncan bo woiked to such foil as is d<\nKi'rilH'd, (lion that sheets of greater thicl\nness, but still of a thinner tin\nbrings them to the narrowest gam\nembraced in tlio sheets genera 11\nmade in that country, and which realii\nvery high prices, idiould bo produceil b\nthe United States iron ma^tcrd at tignri\nmuch below those at which alone later\nand button iron, for instance, can I\nmade in Knglund that the Americar\nmunt lie in a portion to succcssfull\ncouijetc with the Hritinh iron muter f<\nthose kind-* in hit home market. Men i\nthe trade who have seen the specime\nare expressing the belief that theAine\nican should Ik? able to com|k>te with tli\nKngli*h maker in tlio Antipodean, Cob\nnial, the Russian and the Chinese mai\nkets, whither large consignment* of Ilri\ni-li idicct iron are constantly going.
284fdb712995bc6d145dff00727efd69 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.28551909406 39.369864 -121.105448 Complaints of hard times are not confined\nto the mining regions. If the miner often\nfails in his arduous search for metallic\nwealth, so does the culturist of the lower\ncountry in his more legitimate pursuit.—\nWhile the one complains of scarcity of gold,\nthe other laments over drouth, or smut, or\nis poor in the midst of abundance for want\nof a market at remunerative prices. The\npeople who inhabit the agricultural portions\nof the State have been wont to think they\nalone enjoy true prosperity, and contribute\nto the genuine progress of the country ; but\nexperience has demonstrated that uncertainty\nof title and unprofitable grain crops are quite\nas disastrous to individual hopes as reverses\nin the gold fields. It is not eVen true that\ndiscontent and a proneness wander are\ncharacteristics peculiar to the mining popu-\nlation, for the prevailing silver excitement\nhas its victims everywhere alike, and did\nnot St. Helena humbug the calm plowmen\nof Napa and Sonoma as thoroughly as if\nthey had been knights of the pick? When\nthere is no craze whatever about new dig-\ngings, the settlers of the valleys, the listless,\nunambitious, unthrifty squatters on Spanish\ngrants, weary of their location as of that\nthey abandoned in the East, and start up or\ndown the coast, since they can go no farther\nwest, in search of a new place to“settle”.—\nHence it is that we see in a Los Angeles pa-\nper such a paragraph as the following, urg-\ning efforts for the development of the min-\neral resources of Southern California as a
15d30198e37d0d4dda260695abb384cf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.4260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 The Medical Society of the State\nWest Virginia met in the Souther\nMetbodistChnrcb, at 3 p. sr .\nThe President, Dr. H . \\V. Brock, i\nMorgantown, occupied the cliair.\nThe Secretary, Dr. A . IX . Thayer,\nQrafton, was present.\nThe Bpssion was opened with prayi\nby the Rev. Mr. Way, of Clarksburg.\nDr. J . W . Ramsay, of Clarksburi\nchairman of the Committee of Arrangi\nments, welcomed the members to th\ncity in the following address:\nMr. President and Gentlemen oj the ifei\nical Society of }Vcst Virginia:\nIt becomes my pleasant duty to grei\nyoa und give you a hearty welcome\nour city. A welcome in behalf o! tl\nmedical profession and citizens at larg\nIt is a little more than two years sine\nwe were bade welcome to fo\nthe purpose of organizing this society\nThe gentlemen who were most activ\nin the effort to affect the organizitioi\nwill remember with what marked in\ndifference themembersofUie professio\nof the State treatedthe calf, and how r<\nluctantly they contributed in any wa;\ntoward its accomplishment. Our worth\nPresident will remember also, our di<\nappointment when he found how in\nappropriate were the remarks we ha\nmatured for that occasion, ootwitl]\nstanding we were willing to com pro\nmise on more liberal pHnciples for th\nsake of effecting an organization. Th\nregulations were not all we could d(\nsire, but time and labor have effecte\nsome wholesome reforms; and we Bin\ncerelv hope that in a few yeara the prit:\nciplesoftbis Association may beth\nrnllnn unirir n T I ha nrofacainn in thl
23b2363bfe3d39204b61584c8e5861db PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1916.3647540667375 39.456253 -77.96396 making body and court of final resort\nis the general conference, which Is\ncomposed of an equal number of min¬\nisters and laymen sitting together In\ndue body with equal rights. This\nbody elects a president and an execu¬\ntive committee which continue in of*\nflee four years. No change can he\nmade in the constitution without first\nsubmitting the question to the annual\nconference by way of an overture\nand it must receive a majority vote\nof two-thirds of all the annual in¬\nference and so certified by the pres¬\nident to become a law. The church\nhas no bishops nor presiding eldqrs.\nEach annual conference elects a pres¬\nident from its own body for a term\nof one year and a standing district\ncommittee to which the business of\nthe conference Is referred during the\ninterim of its sessions. church\nproperty, except schools and colleges,\nis owned and controlled by the local\ncnogregations without interference\nfrom any source whatever.\nThe West Virginia annual confer¬\nence will be represented in the gen¬\neral conference at Zanesville by ten\nministers and ten laymen elected by\nthe annual conference which held its\nsessions in Grafton last August.\nThe conference will be in session\nabout two weeks and will elect editors\nof all the official papers and Sunday\nschol literature. It will' elect the\nvarious boards of the church and a\nsecretary-treasurer to each. Amoncr\nthe important measures to be consid¬\nered will be one to group and officer^\nall the annual conferences of the"\ngreat (Southwest for more aggressive\nwork. The educational interests of\nthe church will be at the front and\nmany other important matters will\ncall for consideration.
297b2691fa4f50b7c6bafec317d57085 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.5259562525298 40.832421 -115.763123 in holiday attire. Tlierd wet* to\na aa»u quite a lar/o number o( visitors\ntrwii tbe n< ighboriug tuwua and v*!U^a\n>Bd an unusual throug of ladiaa and\nfeklMreb ia draasoa of pure white, pre.\nae tiled i iuoiil refreshing holiday ap*\npeai'unce. f |\nThe dfygood* stores, aud other bus¬\niness hoiu. S. all of which were kepi\nopen. were tilled With customer*. Tha\nsaloons slso did a flourishing buiioes*\nfrom daylight till Uie it pigbl: All day\ntho crowds moved to aud fro tbrougti\ntha town in aearch bf kiciteuiebt,\n^reaming along from plaoe to place,\nb Uatem there waa LUoU^ht to bo some¬\nthing to be ftcub.\nTbe ptoceesion formed on Coinmer-\ncutl street Iu the following order:\nGrand Marshal ao<i six mounted police¬\nmen: Elko Cornet Baud; Co. D; Elko\nGuard; Carriage couutaiuiug OAlcers of\nthe Day j Car of State, forty\nyouug misses, representing tho different\nStales; Dclega'.iou from LkUlolllet itl-\ndust lies; CititrUs on foot, mounted aud\niu carriages; Kill Taylor's "Busted"\nCalifornia outtit; Chinese Baud; Hop\nSlug Company; Shosbouu backs,\nsquaws aud pnpuoses.\nTho _ procession morod northward\naloug Third Btrect to Idaho, up Idaho\nto Sixth, Sixth to Juniper, thehc-e west\nto Fourth at Freeman Hull, where the\nfnlli-wiug literary turcmca wero enjoyed\nby a large and brilliaut audience: Hon.\nO. H . Shepherd, 1' reside it of the Dayi\nmade a few openiug remarks 111 his\nmost graceful nnd felieitous manner,\nllev . A . J . Compton offered up a brief\naud appiopriate prayer, after which tho\naoug "America" was appropriately ren¬\ndered by the youug misses of the public\nschool. IIou. J. A . Pal'uer, of Carlin,\nread tbe Declaration of Independence\niu good voice aud mann r.
0877e0dd9e585d6016bffd4ef0e50973 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1895.5849314751395 37.92448 -95.399981 morning's text "lie that formed the\neye, shall lie not see?" The surgeons,\nthe doctors, the anatomists and physi-\nologists understand much of the glories\nof the two great lights of the human\nlace; but the vast multitudes go on\nfrom cradle to grave without any ap-\npreciation of the two great master-\npieces of the Lord God Almighty. If\nGod had lacked anything of infinite\nwisdom lie would have failetf" in cre-\nsting the human eye. We wander\nthrough the earth trying to see won-\nderful sights, but the most wonderful\nsight that we ever seo is not so wonde-\nrful as the instruments through which\nwe can see it It has been\na strange thing to me for forty\n. years that some scientist, with\nenough eloquence and magnetism,\n not go through the country\nwith illustrated lectures on canvas 30\nfeet square, to startle, and thrill, and\noverwhelm Christendom with the mar-vo- ls\nof the human eye. We want the\nicye taken from all its technicalities,\nand some one who shall lay aside all\ntalk about the pterygomaxillary fis-\nsures, and the sclerotica, and the\nchiasma of the optic nerve, and in com-\nmon parlance, which you and I and\neverybody can understand, present the\n.s ubject. We have learned men who\n2cen telling us what our origin is and\nsvhat we were. Oh! if some one should\ncome forth from the dissecting table\nand from the class room of the univer-\nsity and take the platform, and asking\nthe help of the Creator, demonstrate\nthe wonders of what we are!
145901c365f4e2c15eaae87b4155c698 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.6589040778792 32.408477 -91.186777 and lying on the hillside looked at ease upon\nglorious sunset and wondrous moonrlsd then\nsought a snug shelter and spent a snug evening.\nThe simple lift may be followed in Hawaii\nvery successfully by the see, though here one\nmay be tempted, as Beatrice Grimshaw says, to\n"go native" a little too much. Bare feet and a\nholoku (native dress) seem suitable costume,\nand once taken to, It is bard to return to the bur-\ndensome trappnpgs of conventionality and cold\nclimates. Of course, on the beach at, or near,\nHonolulu, the haole (white person) would not\ndream of such a thing, but "on the other side the\nisland" many Indulge in this dream.\nTo the newcomer a thatched shelter appeals\nas the most appropriate welling, as the right\nsetting for life on coral strands, but in these\ndays of prosperity and display one has to search\nfar in Hawaii before coming upon such simplicity.\nNot long ago I stumbled upon the deal, a little\nshack close to the sea, yet pleasantly \nfrom its glare by rows of feathery iroawood\ntrees, and here I cast anchor for a season of\nlaziness. It was very pleasant for awhile, very\nrestful and restoring. At night I went to sleep\nto the sound of the sm. mornings was awakened\nby the song of the skylark. A dip in the ocean\nwas followed by breakfast under the ironwoods,\nthen a stroll along a winding road and a view,\nover the hedges of spider lilies, over the distant\ncaneflelds, of misty mountain valley, lofty peak\nand dome. Afterward a hammock in the alley\nof Ironwoods; or canoeing with a native fisher\nman; or lying In the sands Idly watching a holoku\nlady put her head down into a box with a glass\nbottom and peer about the waters in pursuit of\ndinner. In the cool of the afternoon, clad In a\nbathing suit I indulged in "barefoot joy" along\nthe beach, took a second plunge, then donned a\nfresh holoku and went in to dinner. And the\nday was done.
d74073fd1bf39196002adc23dd000e9a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0397259956874 41.681744 -72.788147 cipal Louis P. Slade yesterday after-- i\nnoon declaring Captain Marion Za\nleski and Albert Havlick, forwards\non the school team, ineligible for\nparticipation in basketball for the.\nrest of the season because they play-\ned with an outside team at the be-\nginning of the season.\nThe decision was reached after a\nconference between Principal Slade\nof the New Britain school and Prin-\ncipal Hyde of the Hartford school\nMr. Slade's attention was called to\nthe fact that a rule existed which\nbars members of any team from\nplaying out the team schedule after\nplaying, with outside teams.\nThe conference was brought about,\nMr. Slade said after he received a\nletter from Principal- Clarence\nQuimby of South Manchester High\nschool caling his attention to the\nfact the two players were mem-\nbers of the Burritt A. C . team. He\ncalled on Principal Hyde and asked\nif the Hartford team was conform-\ning to the rule and when he was in-\nformed that it was to the extent that\none of the Hartford players is barred\nfor that reason, he agreed to bar the\nNew Britain players. Ho said he be\nlieved it was only fair that Now\nBritain should conform to the rules\nin the same spirit' as Hartford. This\nrule will concern itself only with\ngames played under headmasters'\nrules, I'rincipal Slade said. The piay- -\ners will do eligible for the Collegiate\nPreparatory game and the game\nwith the Cannon Hall team of Strat-- ;\nford which are not played under\nthese rules.
24d3ab0df06e7d5c0c23d96d278c5152 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1880.129781389142 40.419757 -77.187146 Mb. Ennen t l.tinillsburg Is still with an\noccasional event of Interest to the general\nreading public, one or two of Which I will\nnote for their benefit.\nOn Monday evenlnc the 19th of Jannarr the\nRev. John (Isrman of Shnrmansriale addressed\ntlie people of tliti community at the Presby\nterian v;nuren juncture Koom, on the subject or\nTemperance. Mr. O. Is an experienced hand\nat the business, from both aspects of the sub\nject ;iro and ron, having at one time been a\nlavern keeper and now Tor many years having\nbeen a temperance advocate and preacher of\nthe Gospel. IIS II withal generous In hi\ntreatment of the poor fellows who are the vic-\ntims of the appetite for strong drink. He says\nIt u not tue mean, stingy man who is so much\nIn danger, as the generous young chap, who\n"plants" his laBt quarter on the counter and\nsays, " Come boys, who cares for expenses."\nIt la often too the bright, Intelligent man of\nthe country who Is addicted to this vice. From\nthese points of view be argued the Importance\nof saving these liberal and Intelligent ones for\nthe welfare of the community and the benctlt\nof the church of Jesus Christ. They are lost\nto usefulness as citizens and to duty and liber-\nality as christians. These are Important facts\nand reasons. Coming, too, as they do from\none who knows by a wide observation and\ncomparison of the facts and truth of them at\nleast In his experience, they should have their\nweight with all good people in\nand out of the chnrch. Duncannon has no\nbroils of any account by reason of Intemper-\nance. Landlebnrg, or Spring township, I am\nsorry to say has, or recently has had. At one\nof the sales held In that township there were a\nnumber, some say rorty or more young men,\ndrunk and boisterous. It Is alleged that they\nbrought stimulants with them. This is proba-\nbly true, but they added to what they brougbt\nafter they got there. One man by the name\nof Morrison was turned out of the grounds by\nthe parties residing on the place, but afterwards\nkept bis stand on the public road unmolested.\nIt is alleged that he had hard clderand beer(?)\nwhat kind we don't know. The Sheriff and\nConstable had belter make It their business to\nfind out, as both of them weroon the grounds,\nso that there may have been have been no\nviolation of the license law, which has been\nenacted to protect us from Irresponsible people\nselling that which intoxicates, If we are by the\nchurch to be protected from "Irresponsible"\ntemperance advocates.\nwe have had another event, more pleasing\nIn Its nature. This was the presence and\npreaching of a colored brother, Rev. Boslcy.\nAs you had him In your community previously\nto our having had him here, it may not be\nnecessary to relate what be said. People in\nother parts of the County will pibbably be\nfavored by him with an opportunity of hearing\nhis story, and can then judge for themselves.\nUe Is "quite a good specimen,"
0ccddb766c31814e5710394ce41a3538 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.4698629819889 40.063962 -80.720915 Xhf vouiik IUUU ol 1'll> "owsi'upori\nwhoaiiimi'ly "wrlto up" Jlothany col-\nlf»'i coiniuoncoment noldout lull to\nillo« llio opportunity to «li|i to toll\n,bou! "Botlmuy, .IttliiR liko ltomo on\niH scvun hills, wllh ,ll° «'aMle Bulhlo\nKiuJiiU >t* pootio way botwoon." Now.\nthat iuhv bo vor.v woli onco ill n while,\nbut this your it doesn't no. Tho «o«ot»\nii h are still there. and llethany hor-\n,.K rrowiu them lika jewels, but\nimHiiiHIo is minus.it's drlod up. So\nti(.ra is an opportunity KOtm until tho\npnllouien ot tho army vviio proiulo over\nV'a;l# S.im'i woathor ilopartmout will\nt olly ordor some moisture or lu»o »n\nipprjpriiition tor rain maclliuos paisod.\nl'ctliany't filly-fourth annual com¬\nmencement was held yestordav, and in\nwvfral waye ii was one of ttio most on-\n tbat batuboen hold during the\nL|'l conturv career ol this noblo initi-\nration ol learning. Moat important, the\n«e«il»'' waa almirablo Irom a purely\ncommencement point o( vlo*. 01\ncurio the lariuor IrloniU ol tho Institu¬\ntion would not have kicked alrrmluitly\nliaJ a eood noakini! rain come down,\nbat thon it iiiust bo remembered that\nism can couio moat any day, bnt com¬\nmencements "come but onco a yoar.\nThe skv was pleasantly overcast, ']1>M\nSjI's ravi boini; agreeably absout. The\ncroud, too, was ono ol tno best seen at\noid llethany in many a day, showing\ntlist the collok'o in "till dear In tho hearts\nol Us oid tuno admirers and grailuatot,\nilielattor boini! presont in la«o num¬\nbers, as was soon at the mooting ot tlio\naluionatn tho altetnoon.
252fe7762bec64c68f9e89ee5036e5c2 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.9549180011638 29.949932 -90.070116 The Georgetown Watchman says that one of its\ncitizens realised $100 in coin for the rent of four\nacres of land, being one-third of its product.\nTwice that amount has been realised in this lo-\ncality, and nothing thought or said about it.\nA correspondent of the Houston Times, writing\nfrom Bryan, 7th last., says: " Cotton still pours\ninto Bryan in a steady stream. To-day the streets\nwill be thronged with cotton wagono, cold as it is.\nBut, unless ye send us some better news. the mar-\nket is hlikelyto remain fiat. The confidence of\nsellers, however, it the speedy stiffening of the\nmarket, is unabated, and I believe with them. Pe-\ncans arehere from the Wichita, in large quantities.\nand sell at $3 a bushel. Mr. Whaley, who was one\nof Gea. Wheeler's special scouts during the war,\nand who was captured by his own side while they\nwere trying to make their way into Texas, at the\n' break ap,' has just arrived here from Gaines-\nvillp, Cook county. He informs us that the rain of\n frontierby Indian depredations is far greater\nthan the press has ever made known. He left his\nfarm and moved to the neigborhood of Gainesville,\nand is a few days after the whole of his aeighbor-\nhood was ' oleaned up' by the Indiana. A short\ntime since, six white men bad a desperate anad\nbloody battle with thirty or forty lndiuas. The\nwhites were led by two young menanamed HBolbs,\nwho were desperate on aceount of their looses.\nThe lndians lst about seven killed, and a great\nnumber were wounded. The whites hadone young\nman killed and three wounded. Both the Holbs\nhad their horses shot under them. Geo. Hasleton\nhas now taken command of the frontier and pro.\nmises to kill the last Indians if they rob and murder\nany more. He asserts that he will make an ex-\nample of the first Indian agent or antler who is\ncaught trading with the Iodians. as they know\nthat the nladian trade what is robbed from the\nwhites, and buying from them actually encourages\nthese robberies. "
107429b487714873626a62087019589b DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.7958903792492 58.275556 -134.3925 watched him through the open door\nand vouch for the following: Sitting:\nat the table with nothing but stale*\nbread he drew forth the treasured j'i£\nwhich he bought last Christmas, and\npouring a brimming cup said to him¬\nself: "Now old boy, if you will eat\nthis bread you may theu driuk this\nwhisky. All light partner, l'il d ) It.**\nHe then set to work and filled himself\nfull of the dry bread; then carefully\ntaking the cup, smelied of the bjver- .\na«e, but shaking his head addressed\nthe drink, saying, "you are good alt\nright but cost too much money.**\nThereupon he poured the whisky bacif\ninto the jug, thus bribiug himseif an i\nthen beating himself out of the bribe^\n"All aboard for the Fiat City\nSpecial!" was the announcement mide,\nat Iditarod, the last frontier camp o£\nAlaska, a few days ago. It marked the*\ncompletion of construction of the>\nFarthest North railroad iu America,,\nand the inauguration of passenger aui\nfreight service. The Flat City Special\nruns from Iditarod to Flat' creek,\ndistance of seven miles. Located at a\nplace so inaccessible that the owners\nhave no fear of that baue of railroad\nmagnates iu the United States, the in%\nferstate commerce commUaiou, a \nof 83 one way and $5 for a round trip\nis charged. The auriferous placer\nmines will be worked out aud the rail*\nroad abandoned, it is believed, before*\nthe department officials will get there^\ntape unwound and make a visit to tht*\nplace. The railroad is not an elaborv %\nate affair, nor are the cars furnished iu\nthe ornate manner that distinguishes!\nthe railroads operating between Seattle\naud poiuts to the Eaat aud South. Iu\nfact, one might say, the Northern railt\nroad is slightly primitive. It ia con.\nstructed of wooden rails, laid ou ties\nmade of spruce logs, aud the cars arc*\nopeu trucks made from the same kiu(J\nof lumber with steel wheels, especially\nimported from a Seattle foundry. Th$\nlocomotive is 17 mule power. Its in¬\nauguration followed the driving of a\ngolden spike by Fred Wilson, one of\nthe owners, and a jovial celebration ou\nthe part of the spectators. Meals are\nnot served en route, except to tha\nhardy animals which form the looorno'.\ntive. The passengers content them\nselves with a lunch takea iu their\npockets. The traiu makes the trip iq\nless than two hours. Ou one occasion ^\nit established a record by covt*ritjl<\nseven miles iu an hour aud
28552e8d6897dbea5a1aae14915d15ba THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1902.3630136669203 46.601557 -120.510842 Taxes for the year IMS. amounting to IA.OS.\npaid on the 24th day of October, 1901; taxes for\ntbe year 1H97, amounting to Jf 1.:;.., paid ou the\nJ ith day of October. 1901; taxes for the year\niv.*,amounting to (4 04, paid on the 24th day of\nOctober. 1901; taxes for the year ls' .ay, amount\nsuit t.i \\u2666* iti. paid ou tbe 24th day of October.\n1901: taxes for the year 1900. amounting to 18.49.\npaid on the 24th day of October. 1901; taxes for\nthe year 1901, amounting to Xj'.- 'io. paid ou tbe\nJUst day of Marcb, 1902.\nTotal taxes paid on account of said certificate\nof delinquency numbered l.'iT.l . *2jj.o2j all of aalal\nsums so paid bearing Interest at the rate of ill\nteen percent per annum from date of payment,\naud said certificate of delinquency bearlug a\nlike rate uf interest from date of issue, respect-\nively. ;..si are further notified that I will\napply to the Superior court of the state of Wash\nington in and lor said county, for a Judgment\nforeclosing my Hen against the property here-\niubefore mentioned, and you are hereby sum-\nmoned to appear within sixty days after tbe\ndate of the first publication of this summons,\nto-wlt Within sixty days after the Mli day of\nApril, 1902, exclusive of said first day of\npublication, and defend-tbls action or pay the\namount due. and ln case of your failure so to\ndo. judgment will be rendered foreclosing said\nlieu for said certificate of delinquency, taxes,\npenalty, interest and coats, age! nst the landa and\npremises hereinbefore mentioned, according to\ntbe demand of the complaint herein which han\nbeen Sled with tbe Clerk of the above entitled\nCourt. Any pleading or process many be serveal\nupon tbe undersigned attorney for plaintiffat\ntbe address herealter mentioned.
0b9008b811c64def0b4b6d593b0b910a SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1905.5356164066463 43.624497 -72.518794 derful vniietles of Jnpnnese goldflsh\nhnve been bred. It ls reported thnt\nIn feudnl dnys, even when fnmlne. wns\nnbrond ln the lnnd nnd mnny people\nAvere stnrvlng, the trnde ln goldtlsh\nwns flourlshlng. The demnud nt pres\ncnt appenrs to be Avlthout llmlt. nnd\ntho ontput shows n substnntlnl In\ncrenso ench yenr. Mnny thousnnds\nof people mnke n lhing by growlng\ngoldflsh for markct, nnd hundreds of\npeddlors cnrry tho flsh through the\nstreets nnd nlong the country ronds\nIn woodcn tubs suspended from a\nshoulder bnr.\nThe leadlng goldflsh centre Is Korl\nyamn, ncnr the nncient cnpltnl city\nof Nnrn. Hero nre 350 Indepcndent\nhrcedlng estnbllshmcnts, whose yeniiy\nproduct runs fnr into the mllllons. One\nfnrm which I vlslted wns stnrted 140\nyenrs ngo; nt flrst it wns conducted\nmercly for the plensnre of thc owner,\nbut it evcntunlly becnme a commerclnj\nenterprlse nnd is now very profltnble.\nTho hlstory nnd methods of \nculture ln Jnpnn constltute n verv en\ngnglng theme, not less Intcrestlng to\ntho blologlst than to the flsh culturlst.\nSome of tho current Americnn idens\nof the mnnner ln which tho remnrknble\nvniietles hnve been produced nre'pre\nposterous, nnd evoked much merrlment\nnmong the Jnpnnese when I mentloned\nthcm. Nntlonni Gcogrnphlc Mngnzlne\na tjuro i'or the Iimuteratlon Evll\nIn nn interesting nrtlcle ln Hnrper's\nWeekly on the immlgrntlon problem,\nBroughton Brandenburg considers n\nnumber of Miggestlons mndo by vnri\nous nuthorltles proposlng solutions of\nthe questlon. Some of these sugges\ntlons he dlsposes of ns follows:\nPresldent Roosevelt (If correctly re\nported: "A tnx of 25 per hcnd."\nThe Immlgrnnt nierely wlll hnvo thnt\nmuch more to borrow.\nDr. S. M . Gregory, Psychopath, Belle.\nvue Ilospitnl:\n"Immlgrnnts from more slowly-mo-\ning Europe hnve their mlnds nnd bod-le - s\novertnxcd by Americnn city llfe.\nSo induce them to ndopt rurnl llfe."\nHow?
09d766f90379c103c3999cd8c1e9d0f8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.2937158153713 40.063962 -80.720915 White Pine Compounc\nT8 NOW OFFERED TO THE AOTJUIUXJU\nX throughout the country, after havui\nbeen proved by the test of eleven years. 1\nthe New England States, where ith inerli\nhave become as well known as the tree froi\nwhich, in part, it derives its virtues.\nThe White JPine Compound Cores\nSore Threat, Colds, Coughs, Dlptheria, Broi\ncbltls, Spit ting of Blood, and Pulmonary A\nfactions generally. It is a remarkable Ri\nmedy for Kidney Complaint*, Dhtbetes, dl\nAcuity of Voiding Urine, Bleeding from th\nKidneys and Bladder, Gravel, and oth\ncomplaints.\nThe White Pine Compound\n"It was early in the spring of '52 that th!\ncompound was originated. Amen bar of in\nfamily was j'flilcled with an irritatlou of tb\nthroat attended with a disagreeable cough,\nhad for some months previous thought tbf\nn preparation having for its basis the insld\nbark of white pine might be to compounde\nas to be very useful in oiseases or the thro*\nand lungs. To test the value of it in the ca*\nalluded to. I compounded a small quantlt\nol the medicine that I had been piannlni\nand gave it in teaspoonful doses. The resu;\nwas exceedingly gratifying. Within tw\ndays tbe irritation of the throat was remo\\\ned. the cough subsided cud n speedy cm\nwas effected. Soon after this, I seut some t\na lady in Londonderry. N . II ., who had bee\nsufleriug for some weeks lrom a bad cougl\noccasioned y a sudden cold, and had raise\nmucus streaked with blood, she soon fonn\nrelief an i sent for more. She took abou\nten ounces of it, aud got well. J . H . Clark«\nEsq., ed tor of the Manchester I.'ally Mirro:\nmade a trial or tbe same preparation in th\ncase of a severe cold aud was cured l mmed!\nately. He was so highly pleased with the w\nsuits, and so confidentof success attending 11\nsales, if placcd before the public, that n\nfinally pursanded mo to give >1 a name, an\ngend It abroad to benefit the fcoffering. I\nNovember, 1855, I first advertised It unde\nthe name of white Pine Compound. Intw\nyears from that time there had been wholt\nsaled in Manchester alone one hundred do!\nlars worth, where it took the lead of all th\ncough remedies in the market, and it s*ii\nmaintains that position. There is good res\nson for this; it is very soothing ana hfalin\nIn Its nature; Is warming to the stomach an\nf>leasaut withal to the taste, and is exceed\nugly cheap.\n"As a remedy for kidney complaints th\nWhite Pine Compound stands unrivaled. 1\nwas not originated for that purpose, but\nperson in using it for a cough was not oul\ncured ol the cough, but was also cured ol\nkidney dlfllculty often years standing. Sine\nthat accidental discovery many thousand\nhave used it for the same complaint, an\n: have been completely cured."
1132f1c897288c9e8257807166d8c50c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9301369545915 40.063962 -80.720915 shawls of every sire and quality, and the\ngreatest varieties of styles ever brought, to\nthis market. Particular attention of the\nwholesale trade is respectfully Invited to this\nWFUR DFPARTMFNT..Particular atten¬\ntion has been given to this stock, and do not\nhesitate in taying that we have the largest In\nthe city, ranging fmm SlO to S100 per s**t.\nBED BLANKETS.-White and colored .very\ncheap; colored and white coverlets and quiltK,\nBLACK AND FANCY CLOTHS..Good\nblack, all wool, fine cloth, for 82 50 per yard.\nMEN'S WEAR..Kentucky Jeans, Tweed,\nCassimeres. Ac., from 50c up.\nFLANNEL DEPA RTM EST..Good heavy\ntwilled and plain for 50c; fancy shirting flan¬\nnel; fancy French fllanel, Rob Roy flannel:\nextra heavy country flannel. Saxony flannel;\nreal Welsh flannels; shaker flannel, and many\nother kinds too numerous tomention, at very\nlow prices; 500 bnlmoral skins, the finest \ntion ever presented to the citizens of Wheel¬\ning; good heavy high colored from. 13 to S10.\nHOSIERY AND GLOVES. -The largest and\nbefct assortment at greatly reduced prices.\nWOOLEN NET GOODS..Fancy shawls\nnubias, hoods, letzgins and wristlets or every\nvariety and latest designs; undershirts and\ndrawere for ladies and gents, at very reduced\nDRESS AND CLOAK TRIMMINGS..A\nvery large assortment of the latest styles of\nornaments, buttons, gimps, cords and f\nin set* and otherwise.\nWHITE GOODS AND EM BROIDERIES..\nA full line of white goods of all the different\nkinds. Collars in sets, Ac. Good linen hand-\nkerchlefc from 12V£c up.\nLadles'belt ribbons and buckles In silt. Jet\nand steel. Also, a great variety of grenadine\nand lace veils Some exceedingly handsome\nstyles. Also, hair nets, en Irely new, and\nhundreds of other articles too numerous to\nmention.
07d963fd01bcb4b055211204f972e91a PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1905.6945205162353 31.762115 -95.630789 Of the J Rceso surrey j thenco w with\nline of tho J Kceso surrey to the n w cor\nienco n with tho o lino of the Swanson\naugh surrey to tho s w corner of the N\nJker surrey thenco o with s line of said\nto tho Neches rlTer thenco up said river\nin o corner ct tho > U Walker survey\nw wltatao n lino of said Walker surrey to\niCornerotthoSwaascnYarborougbsurTey\nn with the n lino of Swauson Yarborougb\nto the n w corner of said surrey thenco\ntho w lino of\nr to the s w corner of same Swanson Yar\ngh surrey thenco e y 1th tne a line of said\nen Yarborougb surrey to tho n w corner\n8 1C Pierce survey thenco so with tho\naof S R Pierce surrey to the l SteCTy n\ni thenco n e with said lino to the n corner\nblctty sanrey thenco s o with the n e lino\nStelfey surrey to tao division line In\narTey between Popo and John Skcen\na w with the division lino to the s w line\nline of tho P Steffy surrey thenco >\nI tbo s w lino to a corner of said stctTy sur\nIsenco a w with the n w lino oftheJ Luco-\nfito tho w comer of said Luco survey\nbin wwiththeneUno ofthoKenedysur\nitaen corner thenco a w with the n w\ntho w corner thenco a o with tho aw\nthe a corner of said Kenedy survey\naw wltn thenwlinoofS M Wardens\nto thow corner of said survey thenco a\nEr tho a w lino of said ardca survey to tho\ner of the said Warden survey thence a w\nHie line of tho A Atkinson survey to\nw corner of said Atkinson survey thenco-\n1th tho n e line of the J Gibson surccy to\nf Southerlands s o comer thence n to\nrlands n e corner thenco w to Southcr\nn w corner thenco a to tho J Ulbson\nhence with tho said Ulbson lino to Tur
121c500d5e1c19a1f46b02c76590562f THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.7712328450025 46.187885 -123.831256 In California we have a press to which\nthe public seems to lend adherence and\nsupport and which recognizes no right ot\nproperty, no rule of Justice. They charge\nthis press with being mercenary, and\ndevoid of principle, and claim that it\nexpounds, as living truths, sentiments\nmost dangerous arid ainlareKlstlc. They\ntake the existence and continued prosper-\nity Of such a press aa an index to the\nsentiments of the community, and argue\nthat our condition Is akin to that ot\nMexico, where no stranger may feel se-\ncure In Wis property rights, and where\nBuccess invites the rapacious onslaughts\nof the thief; if not as a. brigand, then aa\na confiscating rascal, who robs under cov\ner of elastic laws. There 4s not an en\nterprlso of any magnitude In California\nbut what Is at the mercy of the boodllng\nlegislature and the . .u n speakable press;\nthere is not a stock or bond which does\nnot suffer In value and In Security from\nthe attacks of these two enemies of\nprogress; there is not an Insurance com-\npany, not a waiter company, that has not\npaid tribute to the rascals pf the press\nand legislature, to obtain immunity from\nunJuoO demands' and aggressions that\nthreatenek their very existence. The\nwhole state knows the truth. At the\nclubs, In the cafes, and wherever men\nmeet, discuss these things, yet, con-\nfessing and deploring their existence, they\nmove .neither hand nor foot to cure the\nevfl. Last week we wrote of Mr. John\nT. Doyle and hts published! attack on\nsome California bonds. Since then a gen-\ntleman has ca'Med our attention to a sim-\nilar 'line of conduct on the part of Mr.\nDoyle toward several! other enterprises\nof local interest, and! detfared such a'\nto be a detriment to the state. But\nwe have many Doyles, and many Examin-\ners to puWlsh their lucubrations. Indeed,\nthe daily papers regard1 It as a feat' of\nJournaStem 'worthy of the highest approba-\ntion, If they can but "scoop" a rival in\nsome sickening sensation that will black-\nen the reputation of a citizen or Impair\nthe credit of a home corporation. Among\nthem there Is no effort at upbuilding, no\nthought of strengthening local credit, no\nIdeal of solidifying the Interests of the\ncommonwealth. That the state may offer\na united front against Its neighboring ri-\nvals, who seek to Invade our territory\nand wrest from us our trade and com-\nmerce, Is a matter of small .Interest to\nthe press. They are more concerned at\nnursing a devilish spirit of hatred toward\nthe succesful and catering to the depraved\nappetites of the debased.\nIt Is one of the ironies of fife that the\nshrieking,
16b8cd6f004f6e8c2cb75703166657b2 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1841.2671232559615 40.807539 -91.112923 said county, his certain Bill of Complaint,\nrepresenting in substance, that Samuel M.\nLambard on the 8th day of May, 1S40, was\nindebted to the said complainant in a certain\nsum then due and owing, &.c ., for the re­\ncovery ot which the said complainant insti­\ntuted an action of Assumpsit in said District\nCourt, and al the same time sued out of\nsaid court, a writ of attachment against the\nlands, tenements, goods and chattels, &c., of\nsaid Samuel .M. Lambiird, which said at­\ntachment was personally served 011 said Lam­\nbard and levied on the 11th day of May,\n1840, on lots No. 695, and G96, in the city\nof Burlington in said county, and on the fol­\nlowing described piece or parcel of land,\nsituate in said county, lo-wit : Lot No. 2, in\nSuction No. 5, 01 Township 69, N. Range\nNo. 2 west, beginning at a point 16 rods, 6\nfeet from N. W. corner of the land convey­\ned by Benjamin Tuckcr and wife, to Richard\nF. which said beginning point, is N.\n7 degrees, 10 minutes east of Barrett's corner,\nthence N. 7 degrees, 10 minutes, east 20 rods,\nthenee west 32 rods, thence north parallel\nwith first mentioned line, 20 rods, thence\neast to the place of beginning, and contain­\ning lour acres. And also, that at the Octo­\nber term of suid court, lb40, said complain­\nant recovered judgment against said Lam­\nbard in said action for $393,20 , together with\ncosts of suit, &.C ., and that at the time of\nthe rendition of said judgment nor since, had\nsaid Lambard any property or effects in the\njurisdiction of said court, that could be\nreached by execution. And also, that the said\nlots, 095 and 696, attached as aforesaid, as\nthe property of said Lambard, have not been\nsold under execution aforesaid, judgment in\nconscquence of the said Lambard not having\nany title nor interest in the same that could\nbe sold, the title to the same, still being in\nthe Government of the United States. And
1425868383ba44f5fffffbba71c99e67 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.4890410641806 40.063962 -80.720915 Union College Commenccmc\nScHwnxTTADT, Jane 27..fleorgo \\\nCurtis delivered the Chancellor's add\nhere at Union College to»dav, and inc\ning made the following eloquent a\nsions to President Hayes :\nA public spirit so lofty is not confi\nto other ages and distant lands. You\nconscious of its stirring in your soul,\ncalls you to courageous services, an\nam here to obey the call. Such patr\nism may be ours. Let it be your par!\nvow that it shall be yours. liolllngbr\ndescribed a patriot an a King. 1 can\nagine a patriot President In an Amerii\n1 can see him the choice of a party,\ncalled to the administration of the f\nernment when sectional jealousy is\nfiercest, and party passion inflamed,\ncan imagine him seeing clearly wha\njustico and humanity. The Natic\nlaw and National welfare requi\nhim to do, and he resolved to dc\nI can imagine him patiently\nduring not only the mad cry of pa\nuaie, mu muni oi recreant, ana tr\nor and coward, but what is harder to b\n. the amazement, the grief, the den\nciation of those aa sincerclv devoted\nhe to the common welfare'6! the coun\n1 imagine him punliin^ firmly on, tri\ning the heart and the Intelligence of\ncountrymen; healing wounds, correct\nmisunderstandings, planting justice\nsurer foundations, and, whether\nparty rise or fall, lifting liin coun\nheavenward to a more perfect Union\npeace. This in the spirit of a patriot!\nthat crowns the commonwealth with\nsplendor of moral law, the invnlners\npanoply of a State and of a great nat\nand a happy people.\nThe honorary degreo of L.L . D . \\\nconferred upon Wm. A . Wheeler, \\\nPresident of the United State*.\nBrief speeches wero made by Goveri\nRice, George Bancroft, General Key,fi\nretary Schurz and Senator Bayard.'\nAfter the singing of Auld Lang S\nthe President and party withdrew and\nuirneu to uosion, lo DC present at\nbanquet by the city.
06f6714e93253babc395af4c78dcf440 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 flick, anil don't think I can eat them."\n8ho gave him no reason whatever to\nthink she had taken nolson. Neither\ndid the upbraid him for abusing her, or for\nHeducing her from her homo. Witness\nwas in town all day Tuesday, and made no\neffort to elude the officers who were\nsearching for him. The reason he was not\nat work was because lie did not feel well.\nHe never went to West Alexander with\nthe girl, and was never married to her.\nW m. F .^Shaw, the next witness,testified\nthat ho lived on 18th street, in East Wheel¬\ning. On a Sunday evening about three\nweeks ago witness met Kate Forsythe on\nthe stroet, and accou>]>anied her up as far\nas the liino House. She said sue was\ngoing to stop there. Mr. Hine, jr., came\nto the door when they knocked, and when\n-tho girl told him she wanted to board there\nhe said it was "all right," and she went in.\nWitness left her at the door. Witness saw\nHerron at his stable that but had\nno conversation with him about Kate.\nSaw her on Sunday evening last near Mat¬\nhews' lK>ttling cellar, where Herron joined\nher and walked up street with her. Didn't\nsee Herron again until Moudav morning,\nwhen Herron told him she was sick. Wit¬\nness had not been out of town during the\ndav.and had no idea of going out of town.\nMarton Thornton, proprietor of the Caj>-\nital Restaurant, testified that Herron came\nto his place with a ladv on Sunday even¬\ning about 8 o'clock. They each ate a dozen\nraw oysters, and while in the restaurant\nappeared to be very friendly.\nThis closed the evidence, and the jugr,\nwithin a few moments, returned a verdict\nto the effect that Kate Dickol, alia* Minnie\nIllack, had come to her death by poison\nadministered by her own hand.\nThe remains of the i>oor girl were last\nevening removed from the Rine House to\nthe residence of her grandmother, just\nback of St John's German Lutheran\nChurch, from whence the funeral will\nlikely take place to-day.
158725c1133d1736d938f499b5798932 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.7090163618195 41.681744 -72.788147 Indications are that the much\nprophesied probate judgeship fight\nwill not develop any startling sur-\nprises and that the next term will see\nthe genial judge, B. F. Gaffney, occu-\npying that position. (He has done his\nwork well and is well liked and by a\nmajority of the voters a change is\nnot wanted. The Berlin delegation,\nwhich has four votes, is said to oppose\nhis reeleotion by a vote of three to\none. The New Britain quartet how-\never, is understood to be solid for his\nrenomination and if that is so, he will\nbe reelected. If however, one New\nBritain vote went against Gaffney and\nthe tie could not be broken, the place\nwould be left open and he would prob-\nably be reelected along on the demo-\ncratic ticket. Two local opponents,\nwith the reported three in Berlin,\nwould defeat him. It has been \nthat the Berlin contingent favored At-\ntorney B. W. Ailing. It is also said\nthat Judge John H. Kirkham might\nbe found in a receptive mood. No\nknown active campaigning has been\ndone however, and at present it looks\nlike the judge again.\nThe announcement that Richard\nCovert is to oppose Howard M. Steele\nfor the nomination as representative is\nthe only real stir in the political field\nduring the past week and some de-\nclare that the good natured second\nwarder will give the safety commis-\nsioner a hard tussle. Mr. Covert has\nalways been a hard working republi-\ncan, a great booster, and his personali-\nty has won him many friends. Wheth-\ner or not he has any real following\nthat controls real votes is problemati-\ncal however. On the other hand Mr.\nSteele is a well known citizen, prom-\ninent in republican politics,
142316103da6035b84eb9c086dfc0a21 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.5575342148657 40.063962 -80.720915 ould still see the men Irom where I wa\nsaw another passing np and down o\nlie opposite Bide ot the train; think li\nfas tiring at me, also. Borne or the pa\nsogers asked me to get into the train, e\nliese men were firing at me, and I wool\ne the cause ol them being killed. I the\nrent to' the sleeping car at the rea\ntill trying to get a revolver, an\nrglng the passengers to keep quiet e\nline men were robbing the baggage ca\nwent out ol the ladies' car up to th\nink, and thenco to the engine. Tw\nalls passed through my clothing, whil\nwas on the bank. These Bhois cam\n' oin the south sido oi the train. I di\not seo any man on the north side thet\ndid not see or hear anything more ol th\ntasked men. Alter the passengers gc\n I went forward to Investigate th\nause of the wreck at the hind true\nf the smoking car. I found the fith plat\nsd been removed Irom the rail on th\north side, disconnecting a rail at botl\noils. A rope and strap were tied in th\nolt holes ol the disconnected nil at th\nest end and the rope passed under th\nrath rail across tho ditch and up on t\nic bank. A pleco ol rope was a In\nHind on the bank which seemed ti\nive been broken from the other, i\nas a new rope about the size of a com\nion bed cord, the west end was loose o\nis rail. Wheu I saw it it was only\nw inches Irom the south rail. The liin<\nucks of tho smoking car were still ot\nio track. We had been running eigh'\ncn or twenty miles an
301d24f35df76ea8e61b8c23c58b181d NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.4795081650982 40.735657 -74.172367 The plans and specifications of the work\ncan be examined at the office of the Chief\nEngineer of the Board of Street and Water\nCommissioners at the City Hall. Said pro-\nposals to be accompanied bv the consent. 1n\nwriting, of two sureties, or a surety company\nqualified to do business In New Jersey, who\nshall, at th#? time of putting In such pro-\nposals. qualify as to their responslbilty in\nthe amount of such proposal and hind them-\nselves that if the contract be awarded to the\nperson or persons making the proposal, they\nwill, upon its being so awarded, become his\nor their sureties for the faithful performance\nof said work, and that.If the person or per-\nsons omit or refuse to execute such contract\nthey will pay to the City of Newark any\ndifference between the sums to which he or\nthey would have been entitled upon comple-\ntion of the contract and that which the City\nof Newark may be obliged to pay the per-\nson or persons by whom such contract shall\nbe executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commis-\nsioners of the City of Newark reserve to\nthemselves the right to accept or reject any\n all proposals for the above work as they\nmay deem beat for the Interest of the city.\nBidders and Sureties are hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section\nof (he law creating the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners, approved March 2fith.\n1891. that the bond or bonds to he given for\nthe faithful execution and performance of\naaid public work shall first be approved as\nto sufficiency by ths hoard, and as to form\nby the counsel of the board, and no pontract\nshall he binding on the city or become effec-\ntive or operative until such bond Is so ap-\nproved. and the president of the board shall\nhave power to examine the proposed bonds-\nman under oath, If he shall *o desire, or\nshall be so Instructed by the board, hut the\nboard will not be bound by any stttement\nthat may be mode by such proposed bonds-\nmen. but shall have full power and absolut##\ndiscretion In the whole matter, and this pro-\nl vision shall he referred to In anv advertise-\nment inviting bids for any such public work\nBy direction of the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners of the ClW of Newark.
2b8d645e8d0a1db1d4e36801bfc43ffd OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.3794520230847 39.513775 -121.556359 Villians, stir a muscle, if ye dare,\nand the devil shall have his own !\nAt tile moment tin,* bystanders inter-\nposed, and an arrangement was > If *ct-\ned lor an immediate interview of honor\nbetween Dugan and the elder Inudn r.\nflic parties, attended by i swy in of\nexcited spectators, proeeelcd forlwith\nto tin* bank ot the Im (iraude, oppo-\nsite the site where the city of IJrowlls-\nvillanowstmb,andwerep! < ! iu\nposition by tin ir respective second .\nIt was the hour ol mi ini dit, and the\ngreat nieri'im nn> n, like a magic\nlamp of the purest chrysolite, brimming\ni ver with the celestial gory, gave a\nluster nearly as vivid as that of day,\nand ineffably more chaste, more rm\nchanting, more divine, such as the\nsweetest sin:! • ul angel, til : must\nholy light of heaun.\nli dl a mion e, or less Indore tie;\ndeath signal, Dugan exclaimed, in a\ncalm, clca r v .dee ;\n♦Assassin and swindler! I will not\nkill you, for y>u are not lit to die ; hut\nI will cripple your elbow for l:f*. s »\nthat your icd right hau l shall in ver\nmore uidd the instrument which\nshould only be touched by the lingers\noiag*nibinm!\nThe word was given, and with the\nlast echoes the weap ui of tli ; bravo\nVi ginian rumedon Die night air, mid\nhis built shattered toe oltiers arm at\nthe piecise point indicated, while tin*\nmurderous duelist had nut timu to poll\nhis trigger, and the remit niiig All* ns\nshrunk from a similar earnestly prof-\nit red ordeal.
040bafbe78e188287491e2ba6fb281bb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.264383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 Nearly nyear ago, in April, 1S03, tho\nboard of education decided to roplaco\nthe burned structuro with a now and\nfiner building, and tho board's architect,\nMr. M . F . Geiaey, was instructed to pre¬\npare tho plans. Thoso were submittod\nto the building committee and to tho\nboard, and accepted, and in the same\nmonth the board awarded tho contract\nto Shrako & Sous, of Now Matauioras,\nOhio. Work was coiuuiencod early in\nJune, and has been prosecuted pteadily\never since. To-day the completed btiild-\ning is a sterling testimonial to both\narchitect and builders.\nIt ia oonstruciod of stock brick, two\nand one-half stories in height, and con¬\ntains nine largo nicoly ventilated and\nlightod rooms. The basoment is also\nwell lightod and contains in addition to\ntwo largo playrooms, tho heating ap¬\nparatus. O11 tho first floor thoro are\nlour school rooms with all tho neces¬\nsary conveniences. Three of these\n will bo in use as school rooms,\none tis a laboratory which is fitted up as\ncompletely as any in tho city. On the\nnorth side" of the building is situated\ntho principal's ollico. On tho second\nlioor are four school rooms and a class\nroom, which like those on tho ground\nlloor are finely lighted.\nYesterday nearly all of tho teachers\nand a number of tho scholars were at\ntho building putting in pictures and\notherwino beautifying tho various apart¬\nments. In tho grammar room are pic-\nturos of tho martyred President, Abra¬\nham Lincoln, and Hon. Benjamin K.\nBruco, formerly regi«tor of the United\nStates treasury, ami ono of the fore-\nmoat colored men of tho nation.\nFollowing is the corps of instructors\nat Lincoln: Principal, Prof. J. McLI.\nJones; teachers, MissKtnma J. Barnev,\ngrammar; Miss Sadie Beaalcy, A; Mis»\nMamie McAIechen, 15; Miss Klla S.\nJones, C; Miss Fannie B. Lee, primary.
158e28170e2524a31269e9a0175ec0b9 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.6095890093861 40.441694 -79.990086 Learned Men Meet in London to Discuss\nMethods of Improving the Health Lead-\ning Scientists of the World Will Take\nPart in the Proceedings.\nLoxdox. August 10. The seventh annual\nsession of the International Congress of Hy\ngiene and Demography opened in St. James\nHall, in this city, this afternoon. At an\nearly hour this morning the royal yaohtleft\nPortsmouth for Cowos, Isle of Wight, the\nobject of the voyage being to bring to Eng\nland the Prince of Wales, who was to preside\nnt tho Congress. His Highness arrived in\nLondon in good time and when he called tho\nCongress to order there were 8,800 delegates\npresent in tho Hall. Among the more prom-\ninent delegates in attendance were Prof.\nPasteur, of Paris, and Prof. Kooh, of Berlin.\nMany of the leading doctors ana scientists\nof Europe will take part In the deliberations.\nWhen the Prlnoe of arose to make\nhis address of welcome he was heartily\ncheered. lie discoursed learnedly on hy-\ngiene, and said that the people were exposed\nto many sources of danger, owing to the ex-\nisting state of factories, from overcrowd-\ning, and from the unsanitary conditions of\ntowns. He wns happy to say, however, that\nstatistics showed a marked Improvement in\nthis direotion. whioh might snfe.v be taken\nas an earnest sign of the increased good to be\nncconiplised by scientists in the future. The\nwork of the Congress will be arranged to fall\nunder four chief division indicated by its\ntitle hygiene and demography.\nVarious Things to Be Talked Over.\nIn tho first division there will be nine\nsections namely: "Preventive medicine,"\nunder tho Presidency ofSir Joseph Fayrero;\n"Bacteriology," under the Presidency of Sir\nJoseph Lister; "Tho relation of the disease\nof animals to those of men,"
7baf5e53d462115cfe0197709faed3c4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.395890379249 41.681744 -72.788147 If Sylvia had told the truth, she\n(Would have said that there was\nnothing In the world she liked more\nIthan to watch the grass grow, as\nRanny put it. She had never done\nanything so pleasant as to walk\nthrough the country lanes and across\n:the green fields with Ranny, talking\njto him lazily, or reading to him as\nithey lolled under a tree or a hedge.\nBut she would never admit It, she\n'told herself proudly. If he was tired\nof the country and the quiet, it\nmeant that he was tired of being\nwith her. It meant that he was\nsick and tired of the honeymoon and\nWanted to get back to things he was\nused to the crowds of people, the\njazz, tho noisy streets of tho city\nand the friends ho had there.\n"He's sick of me!" Sylvia quietly\ntold herself the truth.\nBut her smile had never been\nmore brilliant than when looked\n!at him with those flirt's eyes of hers\nland said: "Ranny, I'm lonesome for\ntown, too. I'll pack this morning."\nIt took her an hour to put their\nthings Into the two bags that they\nhad bought, and to straighten up the\nIrooms tho bedroom that looked out\nInto a leafy tree with a bird's nest\nin It, and the sitting room that look-le- d\nout onto the lawn.\nRanny was standing out on the\nlawn, smoking. He had told her to\nsend the bags down by the bel-bo- y\nwhen they were ready.\nThat meant that he wasn't coming\nupstairs again that he wasn't going\nto come again into the room where\nthey had been so deliriously happy,\nto give her one last remembering\nkiss. It meant nothing to him the\nhappiness that they had shared\nthere together, then.\nShe bit her quivering lip as she\nstood there, looking down at his\nwell-love- d
0967874c8a4955e698159030e6be0718 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1873.7136985984273 41.020015 -92.411296 General JfrinkerhoJl iu the newspa­\npers, in co.incction with free-trade\nopinions. This bring* to mind an in­\ncident in his history, when, in the\npieiuitmle of his lieu-trade devotion,\nne had entered upon the work iu Ohio\noi organizing on I of existence the\nprotective policy of the Uepublican\nparty, in hit- appeals to the people,\nhe had a coat and ait argument w hich\nwere inseparable companions iu those\nby-gone stumping* of the State. This\nhero ol the mass-meeting, it appears,\nhad purchased a garment of foreign\nmanufacture throughout, wbiclr he\nwas accustomed to wear when mak­\ning his harangues before assemblies of\nhis fellow-citizens, with very much\nsuch purpose as iuduced Vallandig-\nhani to carry about with him in his\noratoric perigrinations, for popular\ncxhibitiou, a double eagle of United\nStates mintage. Wc cannot reproduce\nhis exact language, but this was his\nmode of reasoning:\n"My ft-ienils," he say, with\ninsinuating unction, this coat was\n"made in Loudon, England ; the cloth\n"cost, so much per yard iu that city, it\n"would cost so much iu America; so\n"much for lining, buttous aud so on,\n"there ; so much for tho same articles\n"here. Iu London this garment was\n"bought for.$ll; iu Ciucinuati it could\n"not be purchased for less than $'28.\n•'.See how you are robbed by a pro­\ntective taiitt. It compels you to pay\n"two aud a half prices for one of the\n"necessaries of life. It puts its haud\n"iu your pocket aud clutches away\n"your hard eaanings to swell the opu-\n"lence ot" manufacturing nabobs. It\n"is a tyraut that oppresses you, one\n"aud all, iu the prostituted name of\n"beuefieience. It is au enemy to you\n"and yours, that ambuscades the rights\n"aud iuicrcsU ot labor under the\n"mabkiug preLeuse of guarding and\n"exteudiug them.
25fbbe367d4a7628aca2d9590a2481fd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.8155737388686 40.063962 -80.720915 Several references have been mads in Vc\nese col unms-of late, to the fac t that W\nttingon the result of the coming gen- fl^(\nnl election was being carried on in this bv\nty in un unusually heavy and lively pii\npie, and the same Btate of affaire inay c0'\nsaid to exist this campaign in nearly\nery city in tho country. It was not oi\nitil yesterday, however, that anything TL\nie a furore of excitement, occasioned l°l\nr political betting, was created here;\nit yesterday afternoon political and '\nitting circles, and business circles as It.\nell, were considerably agitated over\nto announcement that Mr. Iienry ^\nhmulbaeh, the well known head of W£\nio Schmulbach Brewing Company, of t,u\nlis city, had endeavored to make a bet 0f\n$1*0,000 that Harrison will bo a\nected President, but had been unable 8h\ndo so for the reason that the men who frj\nere to put up the Cleveland money had\niled to come to time. As soon as this ]jc\n»camo rumored about everyone was cii\niger for the particulars, and the office en\nibby of the McLure house, where tho be\nit 'was to have, been made, became Up\nowded with we'll known politicians an\nid prominent men about town, all busy jnj\niscussing the matter and inquiring as ch\nthe details, which were ns follows: pj,\nLast Saturday there arrived at the oh\nicLure Ho.ise two well-dressed, genteel jcj\nloking men, who registered as VV. A . m,\nlunter and ltobert Farubam, both of\now York. They had been here but a\n...
144fea301e5290c05bf47fb10c1e6a5e CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1899.8616438039066 41.875555 -87.624421 THIS LAW, known a the "OAS\nCONSOLIDATION ACT," empowered\n11 existing gas compnules to consol-\nidate with and merge Into a single cor-\nporation, "which shall be one of said\nmerging nnd consolidation corpora-\ntions," nnd Inasmuch ns this ACT, con-\nveying purported authority, grants to\nall then existing gns companies In the\ncity of Chicago certain exclusive rights\nand privileges, not contemplated by or\ngiven them by any ordinance of the\nChicago City Council, and as the right\nto issue franchises and prescribe terms\nfor privileges granted thereby Is ex-\npressly reserved to and held to be In-\nherent In the City Council by tho State\nConstitution of 1870, which provides\nthat tho State Legislature shall not\ngrant and cannot convey rights and\nprivileges la the streets of cities to cor-\nporations or Individuals, except by and\n the consent of tho local authori-\nties (meaning tho City Council), It is\nunconstitutional on that paint.\nLET US LOOK AT SOME PERTI-\nNENT FACTS relating to this point;\nIn ordinances passed by tho Chicago\nCity Council, prior to tho passago of\ntho "Gas Consolidation Act," and un-\nder and by vlrtuo and existence of\nsuch ordinances, certain bonds, con\ntracts, privileges and obligations were\nassumed by certain gas companies, In\nreturn for franchises granting them\nprovisional rights in the use nud occu-\npancy of tho streets, always subject,\n'however, to the reservations held In\nbald ordinances for tho benefit and pro-\ntection of tho people comprising the\nmunicipality of Chicago, tho Intent nnd\nobject of which provisions Is apparent\nand well known, and In such ordi-\nnances It U expressly stated, reserved\nand provided, to wit:
377310b733b9148782f8c6651337109b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.2616438039067 40.063962 -80.720915 Hn. Candle Betnrm .to Her Kailve\nLand."Unmanly Crnelly- or Can-\ndie, Who Has Befaied "to Smuggle\na Few Things" for Her.\n"There, it isn't often that I ask you to\ndo anything for me, Mr. Caudle, good-\nness knows! and when I do, I'm always \\\nrefused.of course. Oh, yes! anybody j\nbut yonr own lawful wife. Every oth- j\ner husband aboard the boat could be-\nhave like a husband.but I waa left to 1\nshift for myself. To be sure, that's J\nnothing new; I always am. Every\nother man worthy to be called a man,\ncould smuggle a few things for his wife\n. but I might as well be alone in the\nworld. 2?ut one poor half-dozen 01 silk\nstockings could you put in your hat for\nroe; and everybody else was rolled in\nlace, and I don't know what. Eh? .\nWhat, Mr. Caudle? fTAat do J want J\nicith silk ttockingsf Well.it's come to\nsomething, uow! There was a Lime, I <\nbelieve, when I had a foot.yes, and an\nankle, too; but when a woman's\nmarried, she has nothing of the sort, of\ncourse. No; I'm not a cherub, Mr. \\\nUMuaie; don't say that. I know very \\\nwell what I am,\n"I dare say now, you'd have been de- <\nlighted to smuggle for Miss Prettyinan? 1\nSilk stockings become her I You wish 1\nMiss Prettyman was in the moon f Not\nyou, Mr. Caudle; that's only your art.\nyour hypocrisy. A nice person, too, ]\nshe'd be for the moon; it would be none\nthe brighter for her being in it, I know.\nAnd when you saw the Custom House\nofficers look at me, as though they were\npiercing me through, what was yonr j\nconduct ? Shamelul. You twittered j\nabout, and fidgeted, and flushed up as *\nifIreallywasa smuggler. So Iwasf 1\nWhat had that to do with it? It wasn't\nthe part oi a husband, I think, to fidget j\nin that wav, and show it. You couldn't j\nhelp it f Huoiph 7 And you call your- I\nsell a person of strong mind. I believe ?
1878d47e55e959d21fd1bb3b1a3741cd PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.1082191463724 31.960991 -90.983994 was imposed on him in the year 1815,\nby the judicial tribunals of the country,\nfor a gross contempt of court, attended\nwith a assumption of authority and\ndangerous infraction of the Constitu­\ntion—declaring martial law and sus­\npending the writ of habeas corpus,\nsubsequent to the period when the\nratification of peace was known to him.\nMy extreme reluctance to give any\nvote for which I should not be prepar-\nto furnish a plausible reason, if ques­\ntioned by those who have the right to\ninquire into all matters connected with\nmy legislative action here together\nwith an unaffected disposition, bn all\nsuitable occasions, to comply with the\nreasonable desire of the people of my\nState, as furnished by a legislative ex­\npression of the public will, indtice me\nto inquire upon what ground this claim\nis intended by the Legislature to rest.\nupon the ground ofa private claim,\n1 would respectfully ask the“ favor ter\nbe furnished with the testimony laid\nbefore your honorable bodies, which\nmust no doubt be ample, to have con­\ntrolled your decision so promptly after\nthe lapse of seven and twenty years.\nIf on the other hand, it is intended\nto be on the ground of a mere\ngratuity, I hope I shall stand excused\nfor hesitating long, and consider well,\nbefore I subject myself to the unmeas­\nured censure so liberally bestowed on\nthose who voted a gratuity to the wi­\ndow ©f the late President Harrison,\nwho did not stand charged with any\noffence against the Constitution and\nLaws of his country.\nIf I labor under a misapprehension in\nsupposing the claim to rest on either of\nthe grounds above referred to, then I\nknow of none, other than that of a\npolitical claim, upon which the Legis­\nlature could have requested me to vote\nfor a remission of that fine, and, in\nwhich event, as I could not approve or\njustify the object, I should claim to be\nexcused from aiding in the'accomplish­\nment of die end.\nAb inquisitive mind might be excus­\ned for asking why, after the lapse of so\nlong a period, this question is pressed\non the first Whig Congress that has\nconvened for upwards of one-eighth of\na century? And why, when the pow­\ner was in the hands of Gen. Jacksons\nfriends, they did not themselves exer­\ncise it? And an uncharitable mind
1f5f6663bf06c226b56657f56cc2703b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.7164383244547 44.939157 -123.033121 Vngainundo, the western traveler ex\nperienced in the ways of the east.\ncatches sight during a stroll through\nthe bazaars of on Arabic blade tlmt\ntakes his fancy. It hangs high at the\ntop of the open booth, on the raised\nfloor of which serenely squats the pro-\nprietor, with folded legs. Vngamundo,\nas from the merest curiosity, pauses\nto run bis eye over the countless ar-\nticles, suggests with a half stifled\nyawn that the scimitar looks like what\nmight be a convincing weapon in the\nbands of an enemy, ventures to hope\nthat the merchant Is enjoying fine\nweather and strolls leisurely on. The\nshopkeeper continues to puff drowsily\nat his woter bottle until the western-\ner Is all but out of earshot Then he ap-\npears suddenly awake and drones\nout a lunpuld Invitation to return.\nVagojnuudb pays no heed to the sum-\nmons for 'Oino moments, gaze9 ab-\nstractedly upon the wares displayed\nIn another booth, then wanders slowly\nback. The merchant hopes that the\ntraveler Is enjoying the best of health,\nInvites hiu, to squat in the bit nf\nspace not already occupied by himself\nor his wares, offers a cigarette and\nfulls to discussing the state of the cot-\nton crop In .be delta. By the time the\nsecond cigarette Is lighted be turns the\nconversation deftly to the scimitar and\nremarks that though It Is bung umong\nhis wares rather for ornament thau\nfor sale It Is possible he may some\nday tire of beholdlug It and part with\nIt for perhaps 1.000 plasters.
28f9bfd7c4c7562ded6ecaa1da02f618 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7246575025367 40.063962 -80.720915 Thk Mexican news is not wortli print¬\ning, much less telegraphing. The de¬\ntails give no information to the general\nreader, and there is little reliance to be\nplaced 011 any of it. One day we have\na story that the Liberals are driven into\nthe sea, and the next day conies a re¬\nport that they are rising all over the\ncountry, and that Maximilian is think¬\ning of leaving. But while no confidence\nis due to the stories, on the one side or\nthe other, wo may rest on general prin¬\nciples, and every reliance may be\nplaced in the uniform character of the\nMexican people, who have never sub¬\nmitted to any sort of rule, good or bad,\nfairly inaugurated or imposed by fraud\nor force. The turbulent people of that\nunhappy country will never submit to\nthe intrusive government of Maximil¬\nian, as they have never submitted to a\ngovernment of own election. So\nlong as France consents to uphold his\nthrone, at heavy cost, and with little\nbenefit to herself, so long will it re¬\nmain, and no longer. Meantime, we\nlook upon it as of very little conse¬\nquence to the United States whether\nthe insurgent portion of the Mexican\npopulation, which includes about two-\nthirds of the whole, are revolting\nugainst a foreign usurper or a domestic\none. If any stable form of govern¬\nment could be established in Mexico,\nof almost any character, so that it pro¬\ntected the rights of property and per¬\nson, it would bo of much benefit to us.!\nWe should of course prefer a republi¬\ncan rule, and all the sympathies of the\ncountry are now with Juarez; but any\nkind of government that the Mexicans\nwould agree to, would be an improve-\nment upon the condition of chronic\nrevolution that bus so long prevailed\nthere.
1379fbd42cece74d173b593f8c15b52e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5849314751395 40.063962 -80.720915 BaLHMOEB 13TD <JHUj KaILBOAI/..\nWith the return of peaoe we find men\ngiving their attention and directing\ntheir energies to those thir^ -which\nare calculated to advance the interest*\nof trade and commerce. Old enter¬\nprise* are resuscitated, new ones de¬\nveloped, and the energies which have\nbeen directed to the prosecution of the\nwar are now employed In repairing the\nwaste, which wm the necessary conse¬\nquence of the de»perase itrag^le which\nwould have almost UAally exhausted\nany other nation. But we find the\nAmerican people resuming their usual\na vocations with a readiness and confi¬\ndence that betokens a firm faith in the\npresent and future prosperity of the\n'¦ountry, and which also proves that1\nfinancially the business portion of the\ncommunity are in a sound condition.\nDuring the war the Baltimore and Ohio1\nRailroad wss one of the great thorough¬\nfares upon which the Government re¬\nlied Sor the transportation of troops\nand supplies to the field of operations;\nin fact was a link almost indispensa¬\nble, snd without which the war\nmust have been greatly prolonged\nand West Virginia been left to her own\nresources and the mercy of her foes,\nTliis road a/ford**] the most dtrwt com¬\nmunication to the Capital from the great\nwest, and afforded facilities and ad van-1\ntapes to the government, which could\nnot have )Mfn attained by any other\nronte. The line of th" road, running\nalmost its entire length through what\nmay be termed the dl«pnt«i torritoiy,\nit was nw^ngaHly a heavy sufferer'\nfrom the frequent and destructive raids\nof the enemy. It* cars and locomotives\nhave Wn fr*n*?enfly destroyed, its cul- ,\nverts and bridges blown up. Bnt the;\ndamages have always l»een repaired as!\nif by niagje. The com pa ny seems to have!\nbeen ready for every emergency, and\nwith a degree of enterprise and deter¬\nmination never equaled by any similar\ncorporation, have met (with but very.\nl/rief delays,) all demands made upon\nits resource*.
6304f93f36cb0ecf69de33b4cc523b18 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.993169367284 38.729625 -120.798546 weed with amt lee, and glowing with intelligence.\nThat day wans day of joy.\nThe doors wsre opened at half-past ais\no'clock, and at the commencement of the eser-\ncite* (half-peal aeree), them were nearly one\nhundred and Bfty present, which wsa quite a\nlarge audience, considering the recent bad\nweather. The Brat of the exercises were dec-\nlamation* by the larger scholar*, and were well\ndebarred. After Iheae came a few abort dia-\nlogue*, which were alto well spoken, and a tab-\nleaux—the Dying Brigand—w hich was played\nto perfection, and gave the most entire satisfic-\nlion. Then came the little ones with their\npiece* of poetry, which were *o prettily said,\nthatercry one looked plcaiant. The longer di-\nalogue* were *poken, and etch in turn received\nwith much applause. “Nell Flahertys Drake”\ndisarmed the deacon of hit lancttmotiinua lace,\nand made bold tight to his rest bullona.\nNo scholar who came upon the stage, failed to\nperform hi* part All did Ihemtelrea moch\ncredit The audience behaved admirably, sod\nall seemed highly pleated with the entertain-\nment The exercises closed st a quarter peat\neteree oclock. The school is untler great ob-\nligations to Mr. Lewis, for the use and lighting\nof bis Theater, fur which, I hare no doubt, be\nhas msnr tbsnks. Thanks, slso, to the musi-\ncians, who tendered their serriecs gratuitously.\nThe school iato a flourishing condition. The\nninety received, which amounted In fAO after\npaying all expenses, will be expended in repair-\ning the school bouse. Orest credit Is due to\nHr. 0 . P. Strie, (be teacher, in getting op the\nexhibition. The school will be closed until\nabout the 7th of January, when it will again\nbe opened. Yours,
09114fb5bf59def92911201220d724a8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.5630136669204 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Stephen B. Weeks, very promi­\nnently associated with history and\neducation, biography and bibliograp­\nhy, bearing the highest honorary de­\ngree Johns Hopkins Unlversary be­\nstows, tells me that it was in all prob­\nability another distinguished North\nCarolina Senator who quitted the Uni­\nted States Senate for the reason that\nwas attributed to Senator Mangum.\n”1 have heard that it was for this\nreason that Senator Nathaniel Macon\nretired from Ihe United States Senate\nwhen he was about, seventy-five years\nof age,” said Mr. Weeks. "Senator Ma­\ncon resigned his seat in Hie Senate\nabout the year 1830. I have frequent­\nly beard from distinguished men of\nNorth Carolina that, Ihe reason wrhy\nSenator Macon retired was because of\nIlls belief that, it would be expedient\nfor him to give up his place while he\nwas still in possession of his facul­\n He lived in retirement for sev­\neral years after he resigned, and must\nhave been about eighty years of age\nat the time of his death. I am per­\nsuaded that the association of the\nname of Senator Mangum with such\naction is Incorrect.\n"Senator Mangum was only forty-\nfour years of age when he resigned,\nin 1836. He had presumably a very\nbrilliant political future. There is to\nbe published shortly a record of Ihe\nlife and times of Senator Mangum,\nand reference will be made to the\nfact that he was President of the Uni­\nted States Senate and was so promi­\nnent and able that he was conspicu­\nously named as an available candidate\nfor Ihe Whig nomination for Presi­\ndent. He was a North Carolina Whig.\n“Senator Mangum did not retire\nfrom the Senate because public life\nhad wearied him.
1439ead39e38d7f14dace6e65309694b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.3082191463725 41.681744 -72.788147 is all too frequently lost sight of and\nprogress is thereby greatly retarded.\nThe state hospital is to be regarded\nas a social welfare agency and a cen-\nter of information and useful service\nwhich can be confidently appealed to\nin dealing with the problem of men-\ntal disorders in the district which it\nserves. In states where a state sys-\ntem of care of. the insane has been\nmost fully developed, the lines of pro-\ngress have been towards the applica-\ntion of this view. Developments have\nbeen made for the purpose of bring-\ning the district hospital into more\nintimate relation with the needs of\nthe various communities in the dis-\ntrict. In some states nurses from the\nstate hospital and sometimes a physi-\ncian are sent to the . communities to\nbring the patient to the hospitals. Out\npatient departments are conducted in\nvarious parts of the district where\npersons who wish advice concerning\nmental disorders may apply. Social\nservice workers are employed vit.-i - t,\nat. their homes, patients who have\nbeen discharged from the hospital or\nwho may have applied at an out pa-\ntient department. These contacts\nwith the communities have an educa-\ntional value and furnish means by\nwhich the hospital may contribute to\nthe management of the problem of\nmental disorders as they occur in the\nhome, in the school and in the com-\nmercial, industrial and social life of\nthe people. Instructive literature re-\nlating to the naure, causes and treat-\nment of mental disorders, and to the\nutilization of the resources of the hos-\npital, is widely distributed. The phy-\nsicians of the hospital aim to infoi--\nthe medical practitioners of the dis-\ntrict and the public, by means of\nscientific papers and addresses, con-\ncerning the conditions met with in\ntheir patient?, and the purposes and\nplans of the hospital. By these meth-\nods, a state hospital becomes an ag-\ngressive agency for dealing with men-\ntal disorders throughout its district
0fc3fb56a07a55dbdbdeb68421bc1936 THE FLORENCE TRIBUNE ChronAm 1899.03698626966 33.031451 -111.387343 Few readers are aware that our w ar\nships carry boiler makers who are\nofteu called upon to perforin perilous\nrepairs, and, in cases of emergency,\nthese men go inside of the boiler or\nfurnace, which, but a few minutes be-\nfore had been filled with boiling water\nor red hot coal. There is no task too\ndangerous for these men to do. One of\nthem undoubtedly saved the Castine\nfrom destruction in the harbor of San\nJuan. The Castine went into action\nunder full speed. The furnaces were\nheated to the highest degree, forced\ndraught being used. Without warning,\na fierce hissing noise was heard inside\none of the furnaces. A socket bolt in\na back connection at the fnrthest in-\nterior extremity of the furnace had\nbecome loose, springing a leak. The\nsteam was pouring m upon the fire,\nthreatening in a few minutes to put\nit out and stop the progress the\nvessel, if it did not cause a terrific ex-\nplosion. All in the boiler room knew\nthat, unless this hole was stopped,\ndisaster was a.t hand. One of the boiler\nmakers, named Huntley, ordered the\nforced draught turned off and the fires\nbanked. Taking a plank, he threw it\ninto the furnace on top of the wet,\nblack coal with which the fire had been\nbanked, and then climbed far back to\nthe place where the steam was rush-\ning from the loosened socket. For\nthree minutes he remained inside the\nfurnace. His friends drew him out of\nthe door; the forced draught was\nturned on, and in a few minutes the\nship was proceeding on her way as\nthough nothing had happened. In view\nof such deeds a3 this, there is little\nwonder that the engineering corps in\nour navy is receiving1 the hiehest\npraise on every side. Scientific Amer-\nican.
2962d6bb53e185549ad51714e1a4e4a3 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1903.250684899797 47.478654 -94.890802 The fine team of St. Bernard dogs,\n••Spark" and "Flash," that have\naronsed the admiration of so many\nWinnipeg small boys, and the inter-\nested attention of the grown-ups as\nwell, by appearing on the street at-\ntached to a handsome sled, and driven\nby a ruddy faced, good natured gen«\ntleman, are threatened with trouble.\nThe Rev. F . E. Higgins, the owner\nof the fine team, complains that he\nwas stopped on Main street Wednes-\nday by a frantic looking individual,\nwho ran hallooinar after him with loud\nvoice and demanding his uame with\nunceremonious audacity, telling him\nat the same-time that he would be ar-\nrested for abusing his dogs by com-\npelling them to draw his sled and self.\nA large crowd soon gathered to the\nscene of the trouble, to find that the\ngentleman who was so wildly bela-\nbouring the stranger was Mr. A . J.\nAndrews. stranger, who is mis-\nsionary to logging-'camps and pastor\nof a church in Bemidji, Minn., quietly\ngave his name, and said be would\nwait until a policeman came to make\nthe arrest. A policeman came and\nmade some inquiries, but no arrest\nwas made. It :s understood that Mr.\nAndrews will lay information toward\ngetting the Rev. Mr. Higgins to an-\nswer the charge of cruelty to animals.\nMuch indignation was expressed by\ncitizens for the way in whieh the\nstranger was treated by Mr. Andrews.\nOne individual was heard to inquire;\n"Why has Mr. Andrews not laid com-\nplaints iu a hundred other cases if he\nIs anxious for police court excite-\nment? Very frequently doge are seen\nless than half the else of those mag-\nnificent animals of Mr. Higgins, sing-\nly drawing full grown adults along\nour streets- Dogs tw.-e also commonly\nused for sleds In the north and west.'''
17fb4bedcbbd1bb240dc0fc5b066b8ce THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1901.4890410641806 37.92448 -95.399981 up In luxury nnd enso to lift their\nhand, here and there a hand might\nbe lifted. Hut ask those who had an\nnwful ltnrd time nt the start to lift\ntheir hands, nnd most of the hands\nwould be lifted. The heroes of church\nund stnte were not brought up on\nconfectioner' nnd cake.\nHut nij subject lakes another step.\nThrough medical science and dentistry\nthnt has Improved the world's masti-\ncation und stronger defense ngnlnst\nclimatic changes and better under-\nstanding of the laws of health human\nlife has been greatly prolonged. Hut\na centenarian Is still a wonder. How\nmany people do you know a hundred\njears old? I do not know one. We\ntalk of n centur ns though It were\na very long reach of time. Hut what\nis one century on enrth compared\nwith centuries thnt we nrc to live\nsomewhere, somehow ten centuries,\nn million centuries, a qiilntllllon of\ncenturies? We nrc all determined to\nget rend' for the longer life we nre\nto live after our extt from things sub-\nlunar. We nrc waiting for more pro-\n opportunity. We have too\nmuch business to nttend to now or too\nmuch pleasure to nllow nn thing to\ninterfere with Its brilliant progress.\nWe nre waiting until the wind blows\nIn the right direction. We are going\nto sow, nnd sow the very best grain,\nnnd we are going to raise nn eternal\nhnrvest of happiness. We like what\nyou say about Heaven, nnd we are go-\ning there, nnd nt the right time we\nwill get ready. Hut my lungs nre\nsound, my digestion Is good, the exam-\nining physician of the life Insurance\ncompany sajs my heart beats just the\nright number of times u minute, nnd I\nam cautious nbout sitting in a draft,\nnnd I observe nil the laws of h.vglene,\nand my father and mother lived to be\nvery old, and I come of a long-live- d\nfamily. So we adjourn and postpone\nuntil, like the farmer suggested by\nmy text, we allow the seedtime to\npass, and sudden pneumonia or u reck-\nless blccle or an ungoverned automo-\nbile puts us out of life with all its mag-\nnificent opportunities
25cf69ca3e7579e8e7f2cd6b040fcec3 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.9410958587011 39.369864 -121.105448 He did not call the Spirit-land a State,\nbut a geographical locality—a place for the\nmind. Heaven he called a State. He held\nthat man is progressive in earth-life and the\nlife hereafter, and that mun is the climax of\nthe first sphere or plane, and from this he\npasses into the second or Spiritual sphere,\nand, finally, from the second to the third\nplane, and so on to the sixth sphere or plane,\nwhere the refined particles and essences from\nall the earths finally culminate. He main-\ntained that the Spirit-land was as substan-\ntial to Spirits as our earth is to us, but that\nit was composed of the refined particles of\nall the earths. He said there wore numerous\nearths, but one Spirit-laud or second plane;\nthat the Spirit land sustained a similar re-\nlation to all earths that the brain of man\ndoes to the different organs of tiie and\nthat the earths were permeated with spiritual\naura similarly to the shafts of the suns light,\nand that all earths were there represented\nas every organ of the body is in the brain.\nHe said the milky way was composed of\nclusters of suns and planets, and that the\nSpirit-land was in the milky way, or rather\nbetween it and another belt of suns and\nplanets. The sixth sphere, plane or degree\nis the last of the series of the present order\nof development. In the course of time the\nearths will gradually cease to germinate,\nand the last generations will pass from them\nwithout experiencing what we call death,\nand, when the earths shall have exhausted\ntheir vitality, they will themselves die, and\nibeir vitalities will culminate in the sixth\ncircle or degree, and then a new creation or\nseries of refinements will begin, and so on\nad infinitum.
084e96e556683ea9d023b89e20cb2a42 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.1191780504819 39.745947 -75.546589 With sue !) clumsy numerals, arithmetical\nprocesses are practically impossible, though\nthe people practice a sort of crude addition,\narriving at the number of a largo series of\nobjects by grouping them together in five*.\nIn counting the ordinary numerals are used.\nThis is also the same as iu the other dialects.\nThey originally hud no standard of dimen­\nsions for space, but' of late years have learned\nto use the fathom in trading for cloth, etc.\nTime is measured by the sun and stars,\nexample, the star Arcturus is the seal netters\nIhnepiece. When ho is iu the east, spawn is\nnear, and it is time to stop fishing. The year\nis divided into four seasons«—early winter,\nwinter, early summer and summer,\nlunar months are known by name. The rest\nof the year “there is no moon, only the sun.\nThey begin to count the moon from the\nearly autumn, the time when the women \noff into the little tents to work on deerskins.\nThe first moon—roughly shaking, October—\nis “the time for working, i, e ., se wing;” No­\nvember, “the second time for sewing;” De­\ncember, “the time for dancing” (this is the\nseason of the great semi-dramntic festivals);\nJanuary, "great cold,” or “little sun” (in this\nmoon the sun just reapjienrs nt noon); Febrn-\nary, “the time for starting” (on the winter\ndeer hunt), March, “ the time for starting\nhome;” April, “ the time for making ready\nthe boats” (for whaling) ; May, "the time for\nfowling,” and June, “the time for bringing\nforth young" (when the birds lay eggs).\nThey dourly distinguish “today.” "yester­\nday" and “to-morrow;” but “day before yes­\nterday” and May after to-morrow" are the\nsame; and beyond that all is “some time ago”\nor “some time hence" (the same word), till it\ngets to be “long ago” or “by and by.”
4cfde273402d87d309679e3c393d052d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.0095628099068 41.681744 -72.788147 ished Skating Good Notes.\nThe Connecticut Light and Power\nCo. will meet the property owners\nct the Blue Hill district this week\nor next to discuss the petition for\nlights to be Installed In the Blue\nHill section of the town. A special\nmeeting will be called which all\nthose interested in the proposition\nwill be invited to attend by the com-\npany. The company haa made a\nthorough survey of each individual\nhouse, whose owner Is Interested in\nhaving lights installed, and has\ndrawn up a list of figures covering\nthat particular person's property.\nCompany officials say that they are\nvery much interested in me project\nand are confident that the scale of\nortces they have drawn up will be\nagreeable to the Blue Hill residents.\nAt present the company has lights\nin Kensington. Berlin and Ber-\nlin and hopes to add the Blue Hills\nto Its list. Statements made re-\ncently pointed out that the officials\nof the company desire too high a\nprice for installing the lights but\nthe company claims that it has not\nissued a fixed price yet and the price\nquoted by various owners in town\nwaa a great deal In excess of what\nthe company intends to offer the\nowners. No set price can be offered\nbecause the condition of each resi-\ndence differs, it la said, and, there-\nfore, each owner will be given tho\nfigures covering the cost of his par-\nticular house at the special meeting.\nThe petition calls for lights In the\nBlue Hills for a stretch of about two\nmiles, which, at the present time, Is\nilluminated by gas lamps and other\ndevices.
695379c48358b6a7d0113729a9daf7e0 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.5219177765093 31.960991 -90.983994 On or about the 13th day of Dec. 1841, I\ntaken with a violent pain in the side near the\nLiver, which continued for about five days,and\nwas followed by the breaking of an ulcér* or\nsomething inwardly, which relieved the path a\nlittle, but caused me to throw up a great quan­\ntity of offensive matter and also much blood.—\nBeing greatly alarmed at this, I applied to a\nphysician, but lie said he thought he could do\nbut little for me except give nie some Mercury\nPills, which I refused to take, feeling satisfied\nthat they could do me ho good; many other rem­\nedies were then procured by my w ife and friends,\nand none did me any good, and the discharge\nof blood And corruption still continued every\nfew days, and at last became so offensive I\ncould scarcely breathe. I was seized with\na violent cough', which at times caused me to\nraise much more blood than X had done before,\nand my disease continued in this way, still\ngrowing worse until February, when ell hope of\nmy recovery was given àp« ând my friends all\nthought I would die with a galloping consump­\ntion. At this moment, wpen my life was ap­\nparently drawing near to ä clqse; T beard of Dii.\nWistaäs Balsam ok Wild.Cherry, And got à\nbottle, which relieved nie immediately, and by\nthe use of only tfiree bottles of this medicine,\nall my pains were removed, niy cough and spit­\nting of blood and .corruption ehtirely stopped,\nand in a few weeks mÿ health was so far res-'\ntored aa to enable me to work at my trade,\n(which is a Carpenter) and up to this time I have\nenjoyed good health.
00faf9158671472e6404e6a55e424b46 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.732876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 "Tlic Gj«t Will ma ie in ui'a bj 1) (truoil,\nSU lf |w*r, s.ak wumau't wul.'\n"All, not a poor weak girl," you sav;\n"but artful and designing and capa¬\nble of entagling you in the net, liefure you\nare aware of it." ISdiaw! ^ oil know\nwhat the girl is aiming at well enough, hut\nyet vou cannot lie the man you should lie\nand force her to cling to her dignity\n(thereby retaining your own), but you\nchoose io point your linger to the mother\nand sav, "she is to bo blamed."\nI have known the motlierof many a coarse\nand unrefined girl to be the verv sold of\ngentleness and refinement herself, willing\nto sacritii-e her owu life almost to keep the\n(laughter's feet firmly In the path of a true\nlady, but the girl lias fallen in with a diss\nof persons who exercise complete control\nover her, and who try to impress her with\nthe that it is childish to be tied\nto her mother's word; foolish to notice\nthe advice given. .She thinks her company\niilmrmlug and delightful. Perhaps she\nis a girl with very little real strength of\n'character to sustain her. What are the\nconsequences? Sly walks, woll planned\nmeetings with entire strangore, dashing\nhmis with irresistible winning ways.\nShe doc* not stop to ask who and what\nthev are. She has grown out of such\nthing* AU the gentleness and delicate\ngirlish feeling that h?r mother iins endeav-\njorpd to t|l| her heart with are long since\ncast aside, as though tltsy wore nothing.\nAs the llirl grows older her better nature\nmakes au attempt to throw off these evil\ninfluences, but they cling to her like a\npoisoned vine, tainting her whole being;\nill spnse of degnulittiutt creeps over her\nwhen s|ie is thrown in contact with those\nverv tiersons who helped her throw away\nher dignity. Of course,
22ad6bdf5ae941f887357c68d2c9873d DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.0726027080163 44.939157 -123.033121 stand firm and to insist on the things hey demanded when the Btrike was\ndeclared. She did not advocate anything iirlawful or teit't:ice to tho Iaws\nin any way. Yet she was deported, and for no othor reason than that the\nmino, owners wanted her removed. Tho state officials, always cowards when\nMammon appears on the scene and potbollicd wealth shakes its purse, readily\nobeyed the commands of tboir master and sent the militia to escort this old\nwoman from that soction of the country. She had a right to be thore and she\nlad violated no law; why then this outrage at the behest of the mine owners!\nShe is only a woak old woman. She has no money, but she has what corpora-\ntions have not a hoart. She also has a bitter tongue, and this is what tho\nfatted sepulchors of American money liberties feared. It is somothlng\nfor this poor old woman to be proud of that she made these great ones of\nthe money world, show their fear of her and of tho truths she told. Here wo\nliavo a picture that may woll make u all sit up and study. On tho one sido\nis an old woman, penniless out armed with truth, taken by force from the place\nshe duire to bo 'n, nud removed because someone elso did not want her thoro.\nShe was deprived of her rights as an American citizen at the behest of Wealth.\nHho had vlolatod no law. She had not wroeked a bank, or betrayed a trust.\nShe had not impoverished thousands in wrecking the Now Haven or some\nother railroad and taking the results of the crime to herself. She had never\ncorrupted a legislature or debauched the voters.
32794de3df00e6e32ba7b8cdf8b1af84 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9575342148655 39.513775 -121.556359 nnmili". nf their treiilmenl. I fniind t/i my niiiitiern-\nhin mirror. Hud in"(■ ■■ <1 nf relinf, the hympinms he.\nemne nmn' nliirinlmr in llii'irtinlnrn, find, helmtlnld\nliv nne that my iliwum', hnite' princvpnlly conllnnd In\ntint hniili, mmllriiii' winild he nf Illl>(!i>il«eijni'iici' I\ndi'wpidre.l ni ever r* ninmy my heai; h. ."irenifh mid\neneruv; mid a" it hi"! re"nrl, nnd with Inn n faint\nhnpe railed npnii Hr <l. it Vav w hn, ntier I'xamlmiiK\nmy ca«n prnaerili.al xntnu me Heine wliieh id ill" l in-\n*t indy relieved me nil he cl nli pH iii mid di//ine>« Hi\nmy li, ad. I' . licolirmp'd 1 1' till" re"lilt, I rn.mvMtl In\npl.iee mr"i II ininieiliiiiflv iinder hi* rare, nnd hy a\n"■ i i i ad liernliee In Id idirei liniiMind ad v irr, in V head\nlincaiai ■ 'n n, my idea* enllecled. Hie ei ni"liinl pa in\nin my inn k mid ttrnlii* me weakni "* nl my Kinh. ,\nIhn XiTV. 111"reiu'l inn nf in v whnle In id ymi I Ii" \nn«l al •7 in nr exeilemenl; the in tea it tli r< ij y and evil\nfurr mlniL lhn"ell di.ir* <1 and want nl ('••nflileneii\nill other*: the iin apiilil iiy in "tiidv, mnl want of te".\noliilinn: the friuldfol, nxciilmr, mnl at llioe" plea«nr-\naide dn i.iii" ul niifht. follownd hy involuntary din.\neharK"". hav# all dirappenred; and in (aid 111 two\nmi null" idler liavluK vnu.illleit the line lor, I lell anil\niii"piml l*y a 11*• w 1 1Ii"——iluii ll'n which, hut it "hurt\ntjiiin nko I I'nlilerv. plan'd In end hy til) own hand.\n\\\\ nlli a view to t! i lard the iliilorlililltleIrnm I all i ntf\ninln Ihn h iiidx nf locompnlntit ipmck", I deem It my\nduly 1.1 nlfer tin* ii stimuny in ihn merit mid skill nf\nHr. i /.npkay. amt rncnnuiu nd Into to nil who may\n"land in lend nl medical ml vine. lietn« ii""iired hy my\naw a i xperii'iiMe, Inal nliee nn h r Ida rare, a radleal\nami iieriuuu''lil cure w ill ho nlfi'clnd.
4a88d9e61a4941fbd546186455b3d33f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.1243169082675 40.063962 -80.720915 the present year, and of whom it is\nexpected they will so manage said farm\nthat the greater amount ol revenue to\ntho county will be derived therelrom,\nwith that object in view, visited tho said\nlarm upon the 2!ld ultimo, and wonld\nrespccttully report they found tho farm\nis very poor and most of the tillable soil, I\nin their opinio# very thin or poor at\nthe present time, caused by continuous\nlarming year alter year, without\nproper rest or manuring so necessary to\nkeep up the lertility of soil; and the fenc-\ning very poor (except the new paling fence\nthat has been put up sukc it became the\nPoor House farm.) Ana whilstyourcom-\nmitteo is of the opinion that very |)oor\njudgment was displayed in the selection\nol this farm tor the purpose for which it\nwas bought and now used, yet we cannot\nignore tho fact that it is mm the Poor\nHouse farm, having upon it (built by the\ncounty) a large, commodious and substan-\ntlftl brick ImiMlnp with «11 (hit mivlwti\nimprovement, (such as being heated by\nsteam and supplied with water Ipim cellar\nto garret, with hose attached throughout 1\nthe house,) lor the use ol the agent anil\nthe paupers, together with a brick baru\nand stabling underneath, costing, the\nfarm included, over tllty thousand dollars, <\nwhich makes this substantially the Poor\nlluusc and Poor House farm of Ohio\ncounty, if contiuueU tin such, for years to\ncome, and as such we will liave to deal\nwith it as it came from the hands of our\npredecessors. A very largeportiou of this\nfarm is Btecp hillsides, partly covered with\nheavy woods, and the balance covered I\nover with undergrowth ol different kinds, I\nwith here and there a cleared spot, wlrtch\nproduces Borne pasture, hut this part of\nthe farm does not produce the amount\nnf nnatnro il oltnulH ami wnnlil II 1\nly cleared nir and kept clean. There was\nlast spring some forty to fifty acres of said\nsaid farm sown in oats, and upon which I\nclover (seed was sown, parts of which t\nmake a pretty good uppearance, and other t\nparts don't look as though it would\namount to much. Upon parts of thf i\nfield now sown in clover we noticed tho i\nprospects were very good for a good crop I\nof blackberry bushes the coming season, t\nbnt indeed such is the case pretty nearly\nall over tlio farm. There was some t\ntwelve to fifteen acres in corn last season,\nwhich had the appearance of being a
28ff02661c4c5f32b529ace2f85263cf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.905479420345 39.745947 -75.546589 White driving along the State road\na few miles below New Castle about\n9 o'clock last evening ln an automo­\nbile bound for his home at Franklin\nCity. Va., Henry T. Doughty, aged\n35 years, was caught under hla over­\nturned machine and burned to death.\nWhat caused the fatal accident wlH.\nin all probability, never bo known, as\nMr. Doughty was alone at the time\nhe met his death.\nThe first known of the accident was\nwhen Marshall Burris and George\nPaxson, a crew of the Wilmington\nand Southern Railway Company,\nfound tho machine burning in the\nroad. Tho trolley crew, not thinking\nany one was under the machine, pro­\nceeded on their way after sending\nword of the burning auto to this etty.\nPolice Captain Kane and several\npatrolmen proceeded to the scene of\nthe accident and found Mr. Doughtys\nremains the machine.\nAt first it was not known who owned\nthe car or who Die dead man was, but\nlicense tag No. 5284 Virginia, gave the\nfirst clue. This was is*ticd%to Henry t.\nDoughty, a dealer in oysters at Frank­\nlin City. Later it was learned that Mr.\nDoughty had stopped at New Castle,\nwhere "his gasoline tanks were refilled.\nAt the time Mr. Doughty also purchased\nfive gallops of. oil.\nIt- is thought that the Ford car own­\ned hy Mr. Doughty turned turtle\nwhile speeding down tho road and\nthe gasoline Ignited. When Police\nCaptain Kane arrived the machine\nwas a twisted mass of wreckage and\nunder this the hotly of Mr. Doughty\nwas found- The lower limbs were\nburned off and the body was almost\nburned to a crisp-\nUndertaker Clewelt, of New Castle,\nremoved the remains to his place of
11444c0bef8651a1e5060bebf84e0a7b FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1918.4287670915778 35.318728 -82.460953 Seventh district, where juage xnos.\nH. Calvert, of WaKe, is oppuseu wy\nW. B. Snow, Police Judge W. C . Har-\nris, and Percy J. Olive, all of Raleigh\nand Wake county, and State Senator\nWillie M. Person, of Franklin. In\nthe Thirteenth district Judge W. J .\nAdams has opposition in the person\nof John T. Bennett. Judge E. B.\nCline retired from the bench in the\nSeventeenth and the contest for his\nermine is between M. H . Yount, of\nCatawba, and T. B .Finley and C. G.\nGilreath, of Wilkes. Judge M. H.\nJustice finds two opponents in the\neighteenth district, Welch Galloway,\nof Transylvania, and J. Bis Ray, of\nYancey, while State Senator W. J .\nHannah, of Haywood, and Capt. A .\nM. Fry and former Solicitor Thad D.\nBryson, of Swain, are desirous of\nsucceeding Judge Garland Ferguson\nin the Twentieth, latter having\nannounced his purpose of retiring at\nthe expiration of the present term.\nTwenty solicitors are to be elected\nthis year and seventeen of these now\nholding the positions are asking for\nreelection. Solicitor Abernethy, of\nthe Fifth district, retires to become\na candidate for congress and Solicitor\nShaw, of the Sixth, decided not to\nrun. Solicitor Geo. W. Wilson is op-\nposed in the Fourteenth by J. L.\nJones and Marvin Ritch. The Ab-\nernethy vacancy is sought by "J. L.\nHortori, R. E . Whisnant, J. K. War-\nren and Z. V. Rawls; while J. Frank\nWooten, Jas. A. Powers and Jno. A .\nGavin is e'ach hoping to succeed So-\nlicitor Shaw in the Sixth district.\nThere are fewer contests for State\nsenator and local offices than usual\nover the State and this is apparently\nto be the nearest approach to a "po-liticle- ss
0fec0cc482d19199e35f67ada319e081 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.6024589847702 40.735657 -74.172367 Beglnnlng at the Intersection of the centra\nUne of Central avenue with the boundary\nline between the city of Newark and the\ncity of East Orange; thence northerly and\neasterly along the various courses of the\nsaid boundary Une to the boundary line be-\ntween the city of Newark and the Town of\nBloomfield; thence along the various courses\nof the boundary Une between the city of\nNewark and the Town of Bloomfield to the\ncentre line of the stream now or formerly\nthe boundary line between the city of New-\nark and the Township of Belleville; thence\nalong the centre line of said stream to the\ncentre line of Bloomfieid avenue: thence\nalong the centre Une of Bloomfield avenue\nto the Morris Canal; thence along the vari-\nous courses of the Morris Canal to the centre\nline of O-ange street; thence along the centre\n of Orange street to the centre Une of\nFifth atreet; thence along the centre Une of\nFifth street to the centre line of Central ave-\nnue: thence along the centre line of Central\navenue to the boundary Une between the city\nof Newark and the city of East Orange and\nplace of beginning, shall constitute the\nEleventh Ward of the said city.\nSection 12. Be it ordained by the Com-\nmon Council of the city of Newark that\nall that part of the said city of Newark\nbounded a« follows:\nBeginning at the Intersection of the centre\nline of Tyler street (formerly called Sand-\nford atreet), with the centee Une of New\niork avenue; thence along the centre Une of\nNew York avenue and a Une In contlnua-\n:ior of the same to the Pennsylvania Rall-\noad. Passaic branch; thence along the\nPennsylvania Railroad, Passaic
2451a52d9f770132a72447d1450092b3 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.06420761865 43.82915 -115.834394 men are improved in tlie German gymnasia.\nA full curriculum of studies, probably of the\nacademic or college preparatory grade, will\nbe, it is thought: adopted covering four\nyears time. Some restrictions as to dress it\nIs proposed to adopt, not amounting to uni\nform, but making short, loose, light attire,\nwitn no pressure whatever about the waist,\nand hygienic shoes compulsory, leaving the\ngirls ail day long as much at liberty as boys\nin their gymnasium dress. Pupils will be\nmeasured on entering, and an average gain\nof two and a half inches about the chest, five\ninches about the waist, one and a half inches\nabout the arm and an inch about the forearm\nis what is looked forward to as the desirable\nresult of the first years bodily training and\nexercise of the typical slim girl of 17.\nThat such a school would succeed Dio\nLewis experiments at Lexington years ago\ndemonstrated. W hether the plan, as at pres­\nent entertained, becomes anything more than\na plan or not, there is no reason why the\naverage woman should not add teu-fokl to her\nenjoyment of life and out of door living by\nI'u llivating the noble a rt of walking. A deli­\ncate woman, properly dressed, and who\nknows how to walk, can walk twenty-five\nmiles of a summer afternoon without injury\nwhan an equivalent amount of other exercise\nmight produce serious injury. Walking is\nthe natural and normal exercise and hurts no\nwoman who sets i ightly about it. A woman\n is unaccustomed to vigorous walking, in\norder to become a good pedestrian, should\nlook first to her shoes. These should be broad\nacross the forward part of tho foot, offering\nnot the least obstruction to tho free move­\nment of the toes. The heels should be low\nami broad, and they should fit rath er snugly\nabout the heel and instep. The full dress\nequipment should weigh upon honest scales\nnot more than two and a half or three pounds,\nand should hang from the shoulder without\nany band, pinned or buttoned or laced about\nthe waist. No woman can walk m a corset.\nTho walker must l>e comfortable enough to\nlie unconscious of her attire. A hat that\nshades the eyes is in order.\nSo prepared, try any dista ce that does not\nprove fatiguing as an iuitial experiment. It\nwill probably oe from a mile and a half to\ntwo miles, and must be walked at a brisk\npace, three miles and a half an hour being a\ngood limit. When this can be done without\nache or foot weariness, and a well woman\nought to have no difficulty at the first trial,\nincrease the distance during the leisure days\nof the summer vacation daily, m aintaining\nthe same gait, and fifteen miles a day for a\nweek or fortnight in succession, twenty-five\nmiles on any occasion that demands it, will\nbe found within any ordinary capacity with\na month or six weeks training. —Eliza Put­\nnam Heaton in New York Mail and Express.
103aa55e5bf47e3749abcfa5cc816d11 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.1356164066465 38.894955 -77.036646 but easily accounted for. Al .ustou h\nbeen mndo to tho aJmliablosjitbiu unlet\nwhich tho store Is managed. A part or this\nBittern finds cxprrielon lu curtain inexor-\nable rules, to wlik h employes aro required\nto conform; and lufrli gcuicnt of anyoftticu\nrules Is followed by Immodluto dfsraUsal.\nInference may bo made to sumu of them\nrules, ai d, peihaps, the moat Important one\nIs that cmploiis aro required to represent\ngoods just as thry an, so that patrons\nhnoi. Just what Ihcj orobujlng. If goods,\non examination at llo homis of purchasers,\nnro not found to be prccttn a represented,\ntho proi rlctors of tho "Dou Mnrcho" aro\nnot only Milling to refund their patrons'\nmoney, but will feel lodibted to customers\nfor calling attention to the error.\nA second rulo Is to mark goods at the\ntfarfattbolouestprlca at which arcputa -b l- o\nhouso afford to mil, for cash for,\nbelt remembered, tho "Lion. Marcho" dom\nn cash business exclujlvclj and to permit\nno deviation from eald pier, under any\ncircumstances whatever.\nAnother peculiarity, which has fieri ed to\ntnsrlre thu confidence of patrons lu tho\n"13c u Marcho," Is tho fact that their no vt\npaper advertisements atato things Jiut a\ntbiy are; and ladles hao lonrned that tlicy\nwill find Just the goods described, at Just\ntho prices quoted, In Just thu qtuntltlos an-\nnounced. In a word, tho trutu Is toll, an\nladles have found It out. Ibis system of\nt qua re dealing has contributed ery largely\nto the success of the establishment.\nOf courro tho store U crowded with\ngood, and Its capacity frequently trl I to\nthe utmost, particularly iu busy seasons;\nbut tho best possible advantage Is taken of\nthe space at disposal. 1 he
00f999ba40d56b9efd60936737247d88 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.305479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 Nkw Yoiii, April 21,.Tbe programme\nor the meeting of the Ecumenical Math- k,?.\n)diat Conference in London has been ma\nigreed upon by the American and British Hn\nlections of the Executive Committee. The\nAmerican Methodists, including the Cana*\nliana, will appoint nineteen eaaayista and Dr,\nlineteen invited speakers. The following wit\nire among the rules agreed neon for the eig\n[overnment of the Conference: pas\nThere will be four general divisions for get\n>upose of organization and equity and out\nraternity. The first division will iuclude Ihi\nhe British Wesley an Methodist churches; ter,\nhe second division, the other J.;\nJrltiah Methodist churches; the third tra<\nlivision, the Methodist churches in Bui\nhe United States and Canada having ed\nOplscopal forms of goveiumeut; the fourth A 1\nlivision, the nou-Kpiecopal Methodist rivi\nihurcbea in the United States and Canada, wei\n£ach chnrch carries with it ita missions ove\nind atilliated conferences. A business pan\nlommltiee of 25, appointed by the mem- poi\n>ers the Executive Committee, Is to resi\neceive aud report upon all questions, res- lie\\\nilutions and communications not em* hoi\niraced in the regular programme, gag\nt is to appoint a presiding oflicer sho\nlally from the several divisions in rota- lint\nion, aud to uominato for the continuation wrt\nif the Conference at its Urst session four\nlecretaries, one from each division. Each\ntaper is limited to twouty minutes, the\nnvlted speakers to ten. Thereafter other Wo\npeakers may Bpeak on each topic not ex\nceding live minutes each, tho whole tiipe li\nlevoted to each aubjeut being limited to rib1\nmo hour. The Conference will meet in tnn\nJity Road Chapel, Londou, Wednesday,\nleptember 17, 1881, and continue until twc\nloptember 20, inclusive. Thero will be ed.\nwo sessions a day, except Saturdays, and the\nhe hours of session will be from 10 a. m.\no1p.if.,andfrom2:30p.m.to5p.m.\n'he first day will be occupied with Bishop\nlimpson's sermon on "Christian Unity" wai\nnd address of.welcome. wh
5071dfef711ea3238ed613723ad660ad THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.9657533929478 39.261561 -121.016059 An ordinance, to provide for\nthe Impounding of certain animals.\nThe Trustees of the < Hty of Nevada do orila in asfollows:\nSection 1. It shall be the duty of the Pnundmas-\nter to fake up and impound all horses, mules and\ncattle, including cows, calves, oxen and bulls, found\nrunning at large within the limits of the city.\nSec. 2 . Every animal taken up nnd Impounded\nshall he kept not less than three nor more than ten\ndays, nnd if not reclaimed within that time, the\nIoundmnster shall sell the same to the highest bid-\nder fiir cash;and upon the payment of the purchase\nmoney, shall deliver such animal with a hill of sale,\nsigned in his official capacity, to the purchaser. The\nsales shall be held at the Pound, between the hours\nof 10 o'clock a. M . and 12 oclock m.\nPkc. 3 . The owner of every animal impounded\nmay reclaim it and take it away, upon proving prop-\nerty and paying the fees nnd charges allowed to the\nPoundmaster, which lees nnd charges shall he as fol-\nlows: For impounding each animal, one dollar; for\nkeeping and feeding them, fifty cents each per day\nduring the time they are in the Pound. And in ad-\ndition to the above mentioned fees and charges, the\nPonnilmastershall lie allowed ten per cent, commis-\nsion on the sale of such animals as are not redeemed.\nPkc. 4 . The Poundmaster keep a book in\nwhich he shall enter a particular description of each\nanimal taken up and impounded: the date it was\ntaken up, the date it was redeemed, if redeemed, and\nby whom, and the amount of fees and charges for its\nredemption; the time it was sold, if sold, and to whom;\nthe price it biought, the fees and charges due upon\nit; and on the first Monday of each month, he shall\nreport to the Trustees in detail all the facts this sec-\ntion requires him to keep a record of.\nPkc. 5. Alter deducting the fees and charges al\nlowed by section four of this Ordinance, the Pound\nmaster shall pay the amount accruing from each sale\ninto the City treasury, taking the Treasurers receipt\ntherefor, ami if at auv time, the owner shall prove\nto the satisfaction of the Trustees, that he was the\nowner of any animals sold under the provisions of this\nOrdinance, he shall have an order drawn on the\nTreasurer for the net amount paid in by the Pound-\nmaster from the sale of such animal.\nPkc. fi If any person shall resist, oppose or inter-\nfere w ith the Poundmaster or his assistants while in-\nthe performance of the duties imposed by this Ordi-\nnance, he shall, upon conviction, be fined in any sum\nnot exceeding one hundred dollars, or be imprisoned\nnot exceeding ten days, or by both such fine and im-\nprisonment.
eb919687183c52fad0808bd402c2ef77 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.1712328450026 39.560444 -120.828218 Sec. 3 . The officers of this company shall\nconsist of a board of five trustees, any three\nof whom shall constitute a quorum for the\ntransaction of business; and one of their\nuumber shall act as president of this com-\npany, a secretary, and treasurer, all of\nMhora shall be stockholders, and each hold\ntheir respective offices for the term of one\nyear, or until their successors are elected.\nSec. 11. Each share of stock shall bo\nliable to assessments not exceeding in all\none hundred dollars, to be paid in such pay-\nments or instalments as the Board of Trus-\ntees shall direct, due notice of which shall\nbe given personally, or by having the same\npublished in sonic newspaper in the\ncity of Marysville, not less than thirty\ndays previous to the time of the payment\nof any assessment.\nSec, 17. The annual election officers of\nthis company shall take place in Marysville,\non the lirst Monday in April of each year;\nand the principal places of business shall be\naL Marysville and Oak Valley, or at any\nother point that may be selected by the\nBoard of Trustees.\nSec. 20. The Trustees are hereby author-\nized to appoint six Commissioners, from\ntheir own number or otherwise, to receive\nsubscriptions to the capital stock, and to\nissue certificates as hereafter provided.\nSec. 21 . The Commissioners appointed\nagreeable to the preceding section, shall,\nbefore entering upon the duties of their of-\nfice, file a bond with the Treasurer of the\ncompany for the sum of five thousand dol-\nlars, payable to the stockholders of the\ncompany, for the faithful performance of\nthe duties of their office, the said bond to\nlie approved by a majority of the Board of\nTrustees.
1c7eae9fabc60b255919df285ac4d394 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.2863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 ties, boasts publicly that the Democrats\niro in power for the first time in 18 years; 0\nind that they do not intend to stop until d\nthey have wiped away every vestige of the }l\nRepublican war measures. Forewarned is «\nforearmed, and the Democrats began f1\nproperly on a moasure signed by Abraham }>\nLincoln. The picture was a striking one, «\nind the strange time had come when men P\nfresh from the battle fields of rebellion b\n:ook their seats andproposed to repeal the rj\nlaws enacted, while they were trying to\nlestroy the Union. ®\nThe Vice President of the Confederacy ®\nlad stated that for sixty or aoventy years d\nareoeding the rebellion from the founda- P\nion of the Government, the South, though\nn a minority had by combining with ®\nvhat he termed the anti-centralists in the\nS'orth, ruled the country. And In 1860 c\nhe same gentleman'said in a speech be- **\n'ore the Georgia Legislature that by a re- v\nurn to Congress the South repeat\nhe experiment with some success. He\nBlaine) had read that speech at the time «\n>{ its delivery and had littlo thought that\n10 would live to see tho prophecy fulfilled. p\njut now we seo those measures matured 1)1\nn the Democratic caucus in which the 01\nSouth has an overwhelming majority of "\nwo-thirds In the House and thirty out P1\n)f thirty-two Senators, 23 whom a positive\nind pronounced majority participated in w\nvar against the Union either in civil or S(\nnilitary situations, so that our legislative n(\na shaped and fashioned by a caucus in\nvhich the ex-Confederates have a majority\nind Mr. Stephens' prophooy is realised. al\nVery appropriately the Conjjress controlled to\n>y the South says to the President, the\nemaining branch of the Government .\nsleeted on republican principles in oppo- if\nlition to the party now in power, that he\nihall not exercise his power to voto a bill.\nL'hey ask if we call it revolutionary, coninued\nMr. Blaine, to put amendments on j,
6208487026f6de6857ad0c3eef9003ff THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9631147224752 39.261561 -121.016059 SHERIFFS SALE—Whereas, on the\n1st day of December, a. d. 1860 a final Judgment\nand Decree wae rendered in the District Court of the\nFourteenth Judicial District of the State of Califor-\nnia, in and for the county of Nevada, against M. A -\nk W. I*. I.. WINHAM, and infavor of W, H. SEARS,\nMARK PJXLEY. and others, Ibr the sun of Three\nThousand Six Hundred and Ninety-Seven Dollars\nand Eleven Cents, principle debt, with interest on\nthe sum of Two Thousand Three Hhndred and Seven-\nty-One dollars at the rate of two per cent per month\nfrom the ren diton of Judgment until paid, together\nwith all costs of suit, for the sale of the property\nherein described, to wit: That certain piece or par-\ncel of mining laud situated in North San Juan\nMining District, County of Nevada, and bounded as\nfollows; Commencingat a pine stumn at the north-\nwest corner the Golden Gate Companys ground,\nrunning thence southerly one hundred and eighty\nfeet, more or less, to a stake; tlieoce aastwardly\nthree hundred and twenty feet, more or less to a\npine stump ; thence southwardly one hundred and\neighty feet to a stake: thence easterly eighty feet to\na stake ; thence southerly one hundred and eighty\nfeet to a stake; thence westerly one hundred and\nsixty feet to a stake ; thence northerly one hundred\nand eighty feet; thence westerly along Eureka Tun-\nnel Cos, line three hundred and twenty feet, more\nor less, to a stake ; thence north four hundred fret,\nmore or less, to a stake at the brow of the hill;\nthence east eighty feet to the place of beginning ;\ntogether with all the ap| urtenaneea thereunto be-\nlonging or in any wise appertaining. Also, one full,\nundivided one half of the Golden Gato Tunnel, with\nits appurtenances.
4ff48768845de503d3d3c9749eea249c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.4589040778792 41.004121 -76.453816 Ncxl ilay llicto was a great dinner nt\ntlio master's I101110, nntl Tnraakn mnilc\nhimself very busy In the kitchen j bo\nhelped to cook tbo illnner, rarili.il iiinn\nnnd dishes, nnd was Hko it man with\nthree, linnth. Hut all this tlmo bo did\nnot Cornet bin own business ; for iw soon\nus nil was ready, ho took n peasant,\nwhom bo bad bribed for tbo purpose,\nHinearcd hi in with honey, nnd stuck\nhim full of black feathers, and then\nbado il nt creep Into tbo great stovo In\ntbo dining ball and do as ho had been\ntold. Presently In camo nil tbo guests,\nmid sat around tho trtblo; find among\nthem camo tho prior of tbo monastery\neloso by. Now bo (as It happened) took\nIds scat exactly opposlto tbo stovo In\nwhich Tarnska's man was hidden.\nWell, Just as dinner was beginning, the\ndoor of tbo stovo opened quietly, nnd\nout popped u black, horrid looking\nbend, nil covered with black feathers,\nBut no 0110 noticed It but tbo prior, who\ngot n terrible start. After a tinio \nbocio peeped out again, nnd grinned\nand put out bis tongua nt tbo prior,\nwho fell all of a tremble, and began\ncrossing himself nt n great rate.\n" Heaven prcsorvo us," says bo to him\nself, " what ovll can I havo dono that\ntbo devil should bo sent to torment mo\nliko this, mlsernblo sinner that I um I"\nTho thought bad hardly passed tnrougb\nIlls mind, whon suddenly tho boglo\nJumped out of tho stove, with n great\nwhoop, and began dancing round tho\ntabic. Then nothing was heard but\n" OdearI" and "Help, helpI" Away\nran nil tho guests, one faster than anoth-\ner ; two or tbreo fainted and rolled un-\nder tho tnblo; tho master seized his\npistol and rushed after tho boglo, fol-\nlowed by ono or two of tbo gentlemen.\nAs soon ns thoy wero gono Tarnska\nmade a clean sweep of tho plate.\nWhen tbo master camo to think over\ntho matter, and remembered how\nthings had gone, ho was so wild that\nyou could not bavo held him with a\nen rt-ro p-
4f461f68745a27d39fd15e6f887ad2b9 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.7356164066464 39.261561 -121.016059 Bi-ack a\\d Ykj.low.—There appear* to\nbe considerable negro agitation in Haj ti.\nso that the Colored Question is not euHrely\nconfined to the United Staten. In Havti\nthe black* have Income jealousof tin n«\nlatoes, and feeling that the lattter exsreo\ned too much intiuence iu the Government,\nhave got up a conspiracy to overthrow the\nreigning administration, and put a darker\nshade of authority in its place, President,\nJefTrard is himself nearly black, his tlesti\nbeing of a cinnamon hue, but he admits Him\nsaffron colored gentry to liia counsels and\nIs said to favor them too much, on account\nof their being gonerally the most wealthy\nand intelligent class. Tho blacks are iu h\nlarge majority, and they have a great dis-\nlike for mixed shades, looking with much\nmore favor on the whites of lire island, with\nwhom they affiliate eery well. Advices up\nto the 8th instant say liint a vast conspira-\ncy had been discovered at Aux-Cayes, Je-\nremie, and other places, and several revolt-\ners l>een arrested. These have the pro*\npectVbefore them of being shot or otherwise\nput oot of the way, whilst the Government\nis on the track of a good many others, using\nextraordinary efforts to discover Hie ring-\nleaders. The revolt seems to be entirely\nfounded on the question of caste. No dis-\nposition is shown to chnnge the form of\nGovernment, ail being better satisfied with\na Republic than with an Umpire, but the\nw hole rebellion is got up simply to give tho\nblacks the lion's share in thaadministration\nof ntlairs. and thus humiliate the mulattoes.\nSalomons.late Prime Minister under the Era-\nperor Soulonque, is the choice of a majority\nof the conspirators for their ruler, and ho\nhimself is an ambitious fellow who, wo sus-\npect, lias rather more to do with the trou-\nbles than he would care to have the author-\nities know. He is of ns sable a complexion\nas the most fastidious May-tiger could ask,\nand lias an unnprootable prejudice in favor\nof his own color.
00509aabb7579c119424bdc22384f4a1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.0260273655506 40.063962 -80.720915 ilecall attention to t)>e i^roat Incroaso\nin criminal charge* and nays: From\nmy some timo experience in tho prac¬\ntice of criminal law, 1 am of opiuiou,\nthat tho nxcosalvo criminal chnrgea\nlargoly result from tho following roa-\nsons: Many justices of tho peace, and\nconstables havu a custom of iiisiituiin'r\nfelony cases, which aro not in fact\nfelony chops,-but which are small mis¬\ndemeanors, and upon trial the vordict\nof tho jury will bn (or misdemeanor.\nThis retiult is well known at the timo\nthe cage* aro instituted and the felony\ncharge wan mado for tho purpose of\nmaking large coats payable out of the\natato treasury. Thia is dono in a vast\nnumber of initancos. In some cases\nthere in no ground for tho charge oven,\nbefore tho justice, and tho caaea are dis¬\nmissed boforo tho justico and tho costs\naro charged. In many iiiHtaucea\nit ia plain coiluaiou between tho\njustice of tho poneo and tho nonsta¬\nble, and it ia well known that tho\nchargo cannot bo unstained oven boforo\nthe justice. The above described prac¬\ntice-) alono cost the state thousands of\ndollars, and they aro the chief causes of\ntho largo criminal charges. Ilia remedy\nis to enact logialatiou providing that\nunder a justice's commitment, in-\ndictmoutaud trial in tho circuit court\nfor felony and a verdict for misde¬\nmeanor, that these coats should not be\npavablo out of tho state treasury, 'ibis\nwill nave a two-fold effect. In tho first\ncase, the small misdemoanor costs will\nnot pav tho parties eugaged in thia prac¬\ntice. In the secoud place, tho coats be¬\ning paid by tho county, these pooplo\nwill bo moro careful in instituting crim¬\ninal proceedings as tho charcea are to\nbo paid out of tho county and thoy will\nbo Uetcrrod from thia practice by the\nfact tiiat tho pooplo interested in county\nmatters will resent this action, andjwill\nlook aftor thoso who add to tho burdens\nof tho county which are tho burdens\nmost plainly seen aud understood. Au-\nothor potent cause of largo criminal\ncharges is the conveyance of criminals\nto tho (penitentiary by the aheritls.\nThia will aggregate in a year a very\nlargo sum. Tho sheriff haa a good al-\nlowance for each prisoner so convoyed.\nHe haa coats, foes, aud expenso9, largely\nin excess of tho actual cost of tho trans¬\nportation of tho prisoner, and in a\nlargo county, onoof the greatest emolu¬\nments of the aherifl arises from tho\nconveyance of prisoners to tho peni¬\ntentiary.
2bfb5f52d11b2de16bfb048ec0c6dc54 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.2117486022566 41.681744 -72.788147 tend to show how baseball in this\ncountry is handled. They intend to\ngo into every phase of the national\npastime and show how the ball play-\ners who are signed by the big leagues\nare controlled from the time they\nleave the sand lots. A description of\nthe Federal league's formation and\nits handling by Gilmore also will be\ngiven the court. The papers declare\nthat Organized Baseball bought off\nthe associates of the Terrapins, and\nthat Baltimore, as a. result, was the\nchief sufferer in the transactions that\ncaused the amalgamation of several\nFederal league clubs with those of\nOrganized Baseball.\nAccording to Janney, one of the\nchief reasons for the Baltimore Feds\ntaking the matter into court is that\ntwo recent decisions indicate that tho\n will be decided in favor of the\nTerrapins Tn the same court where\nthe impending suit is to be tried the\nFederal judge recently decided that\nmotion pictures are within the scope\nof commerce and in this city Judge\nHand of the Federal court ruled that\nvaudeville actors come within the\nsame scope, because both films and\nthe actors travel about the country\nand cross the lines from many states.\nWill Attract Much Attention.\nIn going into the damage feature\nthe Traps will shap how they were\ncompelled to sacrifice their $90,000\nball park to the highest bidder, Jack\nDunn, at $25,000, and on deferred\npayments at that.\nThe case, no doubt, will attract a\ngreat deal of attention, because of\nplacing baseball within the bounds of\ncommerce.
23aac54c79f8da0964e9525e947dd307 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 Tlie Hanks and the Currency.\nThere is some apprehension that\ntrouble Is brewing in the National Bank\nNote circulation. The New York city\nbanks held£a meeting on Tuesday to\nperfect a plan to restrict the use of Na¬\ntional Bunk currency, by sorting coun¬\ntry notes and running the issuing banks\nfor greenbacks. It is stated that one of\nof the city banks is selling national\ncurrency at thirty cents per one thous¬\nand dollars discount. The operation is\nmore spiteful than necessary. One of\nthe great advantages originally sought\nin a national currency, is uniformity of\nvalue in all parts of the country, and\nthis was believed to be secured by the\nsame responsibilitv of the Government\nfor its ultimate redemption, and the re-\ncoivability of xill alike iu nil parts of\nthe country for all payments to the\nGovernment, except customs. If the\nbanks themselves make a distinction\nas is projK>sed at New York, a war\namong the banks is inaugurated at\nonce; with what result cannot be fore¬\ntold. Thut the city banks require some\nlittle concession on the part of the coun¬\ntry banks,-whose circulation so largely\ntends to the commercialccntres, \n1h> denied, but whatever is right and\nequitable should be adjusted between\nthe city and country banks without\neomiug l»efore the public. The move¬\nment at New York is understood to in¬\nclude all the bauks of the three cities,!\nNew York, Philadelphia and Boston,\nin the Clearing House arrangement of\ntheir respective cities. We see it stated\nthat of the one thousand five hundred\naud forty-eight banks established tin-\nder the National system, one thousand\nand twenty-nine 'have selected New\nYork, Boston and Philadelphia. as\nplaces of redemption for their notes,\nwhile two hundred and seven have se¬\nlected Cincinnati, Chicago, Pittsburg\nand other provincial points. This leaves\nthree hundred and twelve banks which\nhave made no selection whatever. Itis\nbelieved by not a few that if this sys¬\ntem is adopted it will l»e a blow struck\nat the National banking system ; that\nit will have the effect of localizing the\nNational bank circulation, whereas it\nought to be general. The country\nbanks, it is needless to say, are opposed\nto this system of redemption, which\nwould compel them to constantly keep\nbalances ut one of the financial centers\nnamed.
2386e27ba7addb36b927f41399959099 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.7904109271942 40.832421 -115.763123 ISii.iy s.voni, t.iiih I am nivpiiiint-\neil with Lute and ii.im Dorsey; last Sat¬\nurday afternoon was in a corral on tho\nright haml Hide of their stable: s^ldlcil\nup my liur.se; heard a vow in the other\npart of the stable; p ud s»o attention to\nit; after a wliilo hoard Sain Dorsey say,\n"(Jo.l d. n yon, if you don't yet out of\nhere I will give you Home more;" that\nis all I heard; this was iib.ait 'J or I!\no'clock in (lie afternoon; don't kuow\nwho Sain Dowry wan talking to; sat\ndown a few miiiulcn in front of the sta¬\nble before 1 wont to saddle my hor.ie;\nw\\v I iU'.o Dorsey a while before the\nins.;; 15 or - . > minutes before that time,\ns>itti:5;< isi front of the fitablu, saw n man\nwith Lute Dorm-y who was training\nli'ilsjs; don't Uiir.v.* his name; Sum I >i>r-\nsey was telling thf in, and iioinn other\nman sat there on the Ix-neli; don't\nknow wlia the man was; don't know\n this man wn;. when the expression\nwan lined by Dorsey; the vidua was in\nthe corral at tho left of the rear of tho\nstable; 1 was in the right hand corral;\ndon't know who was in the corral e.t the\nlime; recognized the voice when 1 1 '.er.vd\nit as Sum I'oracy's; heard more talking\nbut couldn't understand it; the conver¬\nsation was in a loud and apparently nn-\ng-y tone; did not hear I he sound of any\nblows or contention; came around to\nwhere they had the fuss; asked Sam\nhorsey what it was about; he said sonic\nloafer had come in and was lying on the\nhay, mid lie nskvd him to leave . that\nthe man jiiiuj>ed him and he struck him\nover the head with a pitch-fork ; this\nwar. Sam Dorsey that said this; did not\ns'.c the man; saw .Mr. Clark, who keeps\ntho Depot hotel, and some other man in\ntho stable; did not see I.nte Dorsey\nwhen I went round to where the fuss\noccurred.
06687d07b2dd2ee389c89f0cf445e2f8 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.4057376732949 29.949932 -90.070116 8. We profoundly deplore the untimely and\ntragic death of Abraham Lincoln, and regret the\naccession of Aadrew Johnson to the presidency.\nwho has acted treacherously to the people who\nelected him and the cause he was pledged to sap-\nport; usurped high legislative and judicial func-\ntions; has refused to execute the laws; has used\nhis high office to induce other officers to ignore\nand violate the laws; has employed his executive\npowers to render insecure the property, peace,\nliberty and life of the citizens ; has abased the\npardoning power; has denounoced the national\nlegislature as unconstitutional; has persistently\nrertned, by every measure in his power, every\nproper attempt at the reconstruction of the states\nlately in rebellion; has perverted the public\npatronage into an engine of wholesale corrup-\ntion, and has been justiy for high\ncrimes and misdemeanors, and properly guilty\nthereof by the votes of thirty five senators.\n9. The doctrine of Great Britain and other Eu.\nropean powers that because a man is once a sob-\nject be is always so, moast be resisted at every ha.\nzerd by the United States, as a relic of a feudal\ntime not authorized by the law of nations, and at\nwar with our national honor and indepenlence.\nNaturalized citizens ought to be protected in all\ntheir rights of citisenship, as though they were\nnatural born, and no citizen of the United State..\nnative or naturalised, must be liable to arrest and\nimnprisonment by any foreign power for acts done\nor words spoken In this country,and if soarrested\nand Imprisoned, it is the duty of the government\nto interfere In h!s behalf.
7aabbd197ee3cf0298b9b2c353942cb9 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.1082191463724 39.261561 -121.016059 On all the various forms of Chronic diseases, including\ndiseases of the Lungs, Liver, Stomach. Heart, Kidneys,\nand Spleen,—a cure guaranteed in Rheumatism, Neural-\ngia, Amaurosis, or nervous Blindness, Pick, or nervous\nHeadache, Apoplectic and Congestive fullness of Brain, Ep-\nileptic, larylectic and Hysterical affections.\nCancer Cured without the use of Knife,\nand attended with little or no pain also Tumors, Ulcers,\nFistulas, and all the various forms of diseases pertaining\nto the EYE and EAR. Diseases of the reproductive\nor genital organs will receive special attention.\nDr. SNYDERS practice in Chronic and Surgical\ndiseases have been extensive, having been many years\nconnected with an Infirinary in which patients were re-\nceived from all parts of the Union, whose diseases were of\nthe most desperate character. Of these he failed to cure\nin a very few instances, in which there was any reasona-\nble prospect of success, he has restored to healt h and use-\nfulness hundreds who bad given up all hope of recovery,\nand who had suffered for years relief, under the\ntreatment of many of the most distinguished Doctors of\nthe age. Dr. S. will visit iu the City or country, those\ncases which require personal examination and Surgical\nSkill—Invalids, living at a distance, who cannot make it\nconvenient to consult Dr. Snyder in person, (although\nhe would prefer seeing the patient at least once,) by send-\ning a carefully written description of the origin and history\nof bis or hor case, with its symptoms, and its treatment\nheretofore, with a correct statement of his present condi-\ntion will enable the d«>ctor to judge pretty accurately of its\ncurability, and enable him to prescribe the proper reme-\ndies, anti give the necessary instructions requisite to effect\na cure. A volume of testimonials of such oases could be\ngiven, received from patients in all parts of the country,\nwhom he has cured, and who it was never his pleasure to\nsee. DR. SNYDER deals iu no secret nostrums—his pre-\nscriptions are prepared in accordance with the latest im\nproveinents in Medical Science.
283ad213ceadcc46f1df75e66d3f7275 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.346575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Menton said he hoped the amend­\nment would not prevail, as this ordi-\nunjce has no connection whatever with\nthe Interest on loans 7 and 8.\nMr. Baynard thought that the amend\nment was unwise, an the commission­\ners could get around it by negotiating\nthe bonds at a discount.\nMr. R. H. Taylor said that the com­\nmissioners could not do that, an the law\nwould prevent their negotiating them\nbelow par. He thought this ordinance\nshould be passed, as the commission is\na creature of the corporation and there­\nfore the city is bound for their acts.\nUnless some action was taken this mat­\nter would result in a law suit, when it\nis more than probable tbat tbe city\nwould have a heavy hill of costs to pay.\nCouncil should do their duty iu this\nmatter whether the commission did\ntheirs or not, and if they dont then\nmake them do it, same as they\nthreaten to make Connell do.\nMr. Barney moved that the further\nconsideratiou of tbe ordiuance be post­\nponed one week, but tbe motion was\nlostbyavoteof12to8.\nA vote was then taken on Mr. Merris\nTaylors amendment to make the rate\nof Interest 1 per oent., but It. was lost.\nMr. Farrell moved to make the\ninterest 3)^ per cent., and after some\ndiscussion the motion was adopted, and\nthe ordinance, as amended, passed,\nsubject to the approval of the Mayor.\nCouncil then adjuured.\nDuring the evening the following bills\nwere-passed and orders drawn : Public\nBuildings—Adams & Brother, 88.\nBtreets—Isaac P. Granger, $95 83; Wm.\nT. Thompson, $58, John Giionage,\n$91.20; Frans Gingleback, $104.18; pay­\nroll, $10181. 8ewers—Wilson Vande-\nver, $32.50; James McKendriok, $100;\nP. Combs & Co., $122; pay roll, $J61.12\nFinance—Pay-roil of President and\nmembers of City Council, $687 84;\ntreasurer, Board of Public Éducation,\n$7,500 .
1578b14d6d4e5c783f14854d11f300a9 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1895.6232876395231 41.258732 -95.937873 malntalnance either by hand .or brain or\nboth as eligible to membership, and numbers\namong Its members men of every profession,\nand calling In life,\nThe objects of this order are to assist each\nether Id obtaining employment; toencourage\neach other In business; to establish a sick\nand funeral fund; to establish a fund for\nthe relief of widows and orphans and U) aid\nmembers; and to aid members who, through\nProvidence, may be Incapacitated from fol\nlowing their usual vocations, In obtaining\nsituations suitable to their afflictions. The\nmembership of this order Is composed of\nwhite male citizens born In the United\nStates, or under the protection of Its flag.\nThis order has existed for nearly fifty years,\nand Is at present, rapidly spreading through\nout the United States. As an American born,\nand having the welfare of yourself aud\nfamily at heart, as well as that of the nation\nat large, we would most heartily Invite you\ntobecome amemberoftheV.A.M asItla\nthe only Order In existence founded \npecially to promote the Interest, olevate\nthe character and secure the happiness of\nthe American mechanic and business man.\nIt therefore appeals to the bead and heart\nof him who wields the pen as well as to him\nwho swings the scythe or wields the sledge-\nhammer of the mechanic. In Its councils, a\nfree discussion of principles relating to the\nfostering and care of the Interests of Indi-\nvidual members Is permitted; but nothing of\na political or sectarian character Is ever al\nlowed to be discussed. It has no affiliation\nwith such Institutions as Trades Unions,\nKnights or Labor, Sovereigns of Industry, or\nthe like, and desires not to control either\ncapital or labor, as It would be doing a gross\nInjustice to many of Its members, who are\ntaken from both classes. The membership\nof the Order Is scattered from Maine to Cali\nfornia, and from all points co lies Ihe glorious\nnewt that the Order is gaining great strength\nIn all Jurisdictions.\nAn endowment branch
094fe69d222e131bb30a4e6d8e1a9f67 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.0945205162354 39.745947 -75.546589 A large audience, composed of mem­\nbers of the Teachers-Parents Asso- j\nelation, and of church members and I\nI friends heard another entertaining\nand Instructive talk given by Mr. and\nMrs. William K. Crosby, in Central\nChurch last night. Mr. Crosby urged\nthat the world was getting better\nevery day, and spoke of the marvel­\nous Improvements made in the last\nquarter of a century. He said that no\none would wish to go back to tallow\ncandles after the modern method of\nsimply pressing a button. Mr. Crosby\nsaid that when steamships were in­\nvented, people were as afraid of them\nas they are now of aeroplanes, and\nIn the next fifty years they will prob-1\nably think aeroplanes very common­\nplace things. Mr. Crosby gave this as\nan illustration that the world will\ngrow bettor In material, moral and re­\nligious during the next few I\nyears, and everyone should feel opti­\nmistic about things.\nMrs. Crosby spoke of Ireland, chief-1\nly of Bangor, where the Crosbys have\ntheir homo. Mrs. Crosby showed I\nsome remarkably beautiful Irish era-1\nbroidery. Of great interest was\nhandkerchief, a facsimile of the last I\nhandke rchief designed for Queen Vic­\ntoria. it had been designed by Mr.\nCrosbys brother, and he thought Mrs.\nCrosby might like a facsimile. The\nhandkerchief was of fine linen, plain\nexcept for the royal Initial and de­\nsign of a crown In one corner. A ;\nhandsome centerpiece and scan were\nother pieces of embroidery shown.\nMrs. Crosby passed around a large\nnumber of photographs, the Giants\nCauseway and a jaunting car being\namong the subjects. Mr. Crosby in- I\nterpoluted that automobiles were now\nto be found In Ireland as well as
0923d79f8bc9319f936d61b576338ccf THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1889.6616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 The Ferry View Sabbath School held a picnic\nIn Oliver Van 1'elta orchard Wednesday,'aud the\nScotch Ridge Suuday School hold one at Picken's\nGrove yeaterday,\nThere waa u bad break In the water main In\nClark'a addition hut eveyiug. about 0 o'clock,\ncaused by the firemen, who had beeu practlclug\nshutting off the water suddenly.\nThree Histcra of Charity havo arrived- from\nNaxam. Ky. to teach lu the St. Marya school,\nnuda fourth Sister, will urrivo in a day or two.\nTho school will opeu nextMouday.\nTo-morrow night the Bona of Veterana will at-\ntend toe fair and festlvul at the Allmmbra rink,\nWheeling, in a body, making the trip on tho\nsteamer Climax. The faro toali will be 26 cents\nfor tho rouud trip, lueludlng admlaalou. The\nboat will leave a17:BU,\nThe hook aud truck and ono hose reel,\nwith a full complement of men, went to Wells-\nvllle yesterday to take part iu the. firemen's\ntouruameut. The races did not como Off yester¬\nday as was advertised, however, and the uiou\nhave remained over till to-day.\nBcrnardusBocclnno, tho Italian who waa shot\nby Marshal McMaaleri, of Mt. 1'lcaaant, a few\ndays ago whllo trying to escape, returned to this\ncity yesterday from BteubeuvUlo, where he gave\nboud for hla appearance at court. Tho ltallau\nstill auUta-a severely from the wound.\nMartin'a Kerrv will be well repreaoutcd at the\nforty-first auuual fair of llelmout county at St.\nClalravllle next week. This is a lieluiouicounty\nlustltutlouaudlf eucouraged thla year will go\nforward with rapid strides. The Secretary, Mr.\nR. C. Myor, Is pushing the fair, aud It will bo\nlarxcly attended.
b85c24eaf2bb5ed99ae8a2cfd2e48096 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.228767091578 39.261561 -121.016059 jgUvatte Jlcmocat.\nThe Government and the Mineral Lands.\n—Attorney General Bates, in an opinion as\nto the beat method of protecting the newly\ndiscovered coal fields on the public landa of\nCalifornia, makes the following important\nsuggestions relative to making the mineral\nlands of the Government a source of reve-\nnue to the Treasury:\nI do not know that the Government has\nany well settled polic/ in relation to its\nmineral lands. On some of them settlers\nand intruders are allowed to enrich them-\nselves without hindrance or the exaction of\ntribute, whilst on others persons In posses-\nsion have been restrained from working the\nmines by process of injunction, obtained at\nthe instance of the Government. In my\nopinion, the time has come when the gov-\nernment should adopt a policy which, whilst\njust and liberal to settlers and miners will\nturn a portion of the stream of wealth which\nflows Trom these mines into the National\nTreasury. We are now struggling under\nthe finaucial burdens imposed by the work\nof suppressing rebellion, and in searching\nfor new of revenue, it seems to me\nthat the rich mineral fields of the public\nlands in California and elsewhere should\nnot lie overlooked. The method of extract-\ning revenue from these mineral lands,\nwhether by a tax upon the production or a\nreservation of a part thereof, or by a lease\nof the lands, as well as the amount of rev\nenue to be thus derived, are questions for\nthe consideration of Congress. Examples\nof the manner of dealing with public lands\ncontaining minerals, are afforded by the act\nof 11th Jaly. 1846 (9 statute 37,) which au-\nthorizes the President to sell certain re\nserved lands supposed to contain lead ore;\nand the act of March 1,1847, (9 statute 14fi)\nto provide for the sale of mineral lands iu\nthe State of Michigan. Whether these stat-\nutes furnish suitable precedents for legisla-\ntive action in relation to the gold fields of\nthe Pacific States and the intervening ter-\nritories. will be for Congress to decide; as\nalso whether the newly discovered coal\nfields of California shall be embraced within\nsuch legislation.
d0bafd021e7aac327f982af28ae8eb6c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.8835616121257 41.681744 -72.788147 For here in Cincinnati former con-\nvicts and gangsters are ready to tes-\ntify either for state or defense.\nIn the ballroom of a downtown\nhotel, last night, a man who served\na sentence with the former "King of\nBootleggers" pulled a revolver from\nhis pocket, tapped it significantly,\nand said "a bullet in there goes for\nanybody who thinks that Remus is\ngoing to be tapped for this racket."\nThat sounds too melodramatic to\nbe true, of course, but it actually\nhappened. There is not a reporter\nassigned to the case who hasn't\nheard a threat of violent death\nfrom at .least one of the many pros-\npective witnesses in the case.\nAH of which keeps the tempera-\nture on high. There are those who\nbelieve that anything may happen if\nRemus is permitted to cross examine\nFranklin Dodge, Jr., the former\ndepartment of justice operative he\nconsiders as the lover of Mrs. Remus\nand his arch enemy. After the roar-\ning attack upon Taft and Basler,\ntwo of the three alienists appointed\nby the court hurried forward to con-\nfer with Judge Shook, Their conver-\nsation was not overheard. But, us\naffecting Remus' sanity, testimony\nlhat did not go into the court rec-\nords must figure. One reporter\nswore that before the vocal explo-\nsion Remus turned and whispered:\n"Heres' a good lead for your morn-\ning papers. Watch me burn up\nTaft" and after it was all over and\nthe jury had gone out to Eden park,\nwhere Remus shot his wife on Oct.\n6, while she was cn route to n\ndivorce hearing to testify against\nhim, Remus asked whether he had\nbeen "effective."
005a6e474b788dc94a77bc17eb1d25ac THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.5942622634589 42.217817 -85.891125 metal had depreciated in bullion value\nto 05 cents an ounce. If with a coin-\nage of only 58,000,000 in 80 years silver\nwas at a premium, and if with a coin-\nage of $129,000,000 in 18 years, it had\nfallen off in bullion value 50 percent,\nthere must surely be some cause other\nthan the coinage for the fluctuation.\nThe cause is clearly shown by the\nstudy of a few further figures. To go\nback to 1853, when the disproportion\nbetween the production of the two\nmetals was the greatest, the world's\nproduct of gold was 7,520,000 ounces\nand that of silver was 31,300,000 ounces,\nor only 4.10 times as much as gold.'\nThe same year the product of gold in\nthe United States was 3,144,000 ounces,\nand that of silver only ounces.\nIn other words we produced almost\neigty times as mun; ounces of gold as\nwe did of silver. From this time on\nfor twenty years there was a gradual\ndiminution in the amount of gold pro-\nduced in the world, and a steady,\nthough not very rapid, increase in the\nproduction of silver, till in 1872 the\nworld's production of the latter metal\nhad increased to 61,100,000 ounces,\nwhile that of gold had fallen to 4.820,- 0 0- 0\nounces, the proportion being 12.C8 .\nIn the United States gold had fallen to\n1,741,500 ounces, and the silver had in-\ncreased to 22,237,000 ounees.\nIn 189'J. when the Sherman law for\nthe purchase of silver was repealed,\nthe world's production of gold had\nrisen to 7,009,000 ounces, while that of\nsil
2b4ef334ba2fa46fc839f46353c5bb52 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.3520547628107 40.735657 -74.172367 Camden streM to the rear line of lota fronting\non the easterly side of Camden street; thence\nsoutherly along the same to the rear line of lots\nfronting on the northerly side of South Orange\navenue; thence eoatTuly along the same to the\nrear line of lots fronting on the westerly side of\nMorris avenue; thence northerly along the same\nto the rear line of lots fronting on the souther-\nly side of Bank street; thence easterly along\ntho same to the rear line of Iota fronting on the\neasterly side of Newton street; thence souther-\nly along the same to Thirteenth avenue; thence\neasterly to a point opposite the rear line of lota\nfronting on tho easterly side of Wallace street;\nthence southerly along tho same and aoroaa\nSouth Orange avenue to a point opposite the\nrear line of iota fronting on the aoutherly aide\nof South Orange avenue; thence eneterly along\nthe same to the renr line of lots fronting on the\nwesterly side of Jones street; thence aoutherly\nalong the same to Fifteenth avenuo; thence\neasterly along Fifteenth avenue and Court street\nto a point opposite the rear lino of lots fronting\non the southerly able of Springfield avenue;\nthence easterly along the same to rear\nline of Iota fiontlng on tho westerly side of\nHoward street; thence southerly to the rear line\nof lots fronting on the northerly side of Court\nstreet; thence easterly along the same to the\nrear line of lota fronting on tho easterly aide\nof West street; thence southerly along the same\nto the rear line of lots fronting on the southerly\nside of Baldwin street; thence westerly to the\nrear line of lots fronting on the westerly aide\nof West street; tlypnce southerly and across\nWest Kinney street to the rear line of lotr\nfronting on the southerly side of West Kinney\nstreet; thence easterly along the fHmo to the\nrear line of lota fronting on the westerly side\nof Quitman street; thence crossing Quitman\n| atrept at a point about 200 feet south of West\nKlnner street to the rear line of lota fronting on\nthe easterly side of Quitman street; thence\n! southerly along the same to a point 100 feet\nI north of the northerly line of Spruce street;\nj thence westerly and ncrosa Quitman street to a\npoint 100 feet west of the westerly line of Qulb-\ni man street; thence southerly to Spruce streets\nthence easterly to Quitman street; thence south-\nI
2d5eedd84b59fcc77e54e9b0d27140b1 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.5027396943176 39.513775 -121.556359 Sec. I . The sum of one thousand dollars is hereby\nappropriated out of any money in the Treasury not\notherwise appropriated to pay the expense Hint may\nbe incurred iiy Mie Treasurer in having said bunds\nprepared, but Die Comptroller shall not draw Ids\nwarrant on iheTreasury for this amount until there\nis money therein to pay the same.\nSec. 5 All persons having any of the claims against\nihe State of California, entitled lo he funded as here-\ninafter speeitled, shall, upon the presentation of Ihe\nsame to mo Treasurer ol the Suite, receive in ex-\nchange therefor a liond or bonds of lint Stale of\nCalifornia, provided for in the tir-t seal in of ibis\nAd; but no bond shall be issnid fora less sum than\nlive hundred dollars, nor fur fractional purls of a\nhundred dollars, lint the Treasurer may issue cer-\ntificates ol «ueh ('acilonal parts not bonded, which\nsaid cerliflo tea shall be Irmisleraiile and entitled to\nbetnnded as before provided The Treasurer shall\nendorse, on the hack of each claim so received mid\nliquidated, the dale on wnieh lie received the same,\nand trom whom, and the number el ibe bond issued\nin excliiu go thereto- , a nd such claim shall oe filed in\ntheottlce if die Secretary of Stale.\nSec li. For the pay men I wit bin twenty years of I lie\nprincipal and interest of the bonds issued ibis\nAct, there shall he levied annually, until the bonds\nare paid, and promptly collected In Ihe sum manner\nas is or may he provided by law fur ordinary state\ntaxes, s tax of thirty cents on ench one hundred dol-\nlars of the assessed value ol real amt personal pro-\npertv tn the Stale, and the fund derived from this\nlax ahull lie set apart and applied exclusively lo Ihe\npayment of the interest on the bonds herein provid-\ned, and ihe tlnul redemption ol the principal of said\nbonds, and the faith of Ihe Stale of I'ulifor in i-\nin reby pledged for the payment ns herein provided\nof the*l oinls issued by virtue of tlds Art, and the in-\nterest thereon mid all moneys that may be received\nby the Stale of California Coin the United Slates\nGovernment on account ol the Civil 1 nnd, so called\nare hereby irrevocably pledged to the payment ol\nthe principal and mteia *1 on the bonds issued under\nIbis Act A wilful refusal or neglect by Supervisors\nor any other officer lo l> vy or collccllhe lax imposed\nby Ibis Act. shall he a misdemeanor, and the p, rsoii\ner persons convicted thereof shall he removed trom\nofli ;e and punished by u line not exceeding one thou-\nsand dollars. or by imprisonment in the county jail\nnot e\\c- edieg six months, or by both such lino and\nImprisonin' nt,
09a55b920b821e801827b3739c0d2bbe THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.9493150367834 42.217817 -85.891125 the late war. Mr. Illalr introduced a joint res-\nolution for a constitutional amendment to pro-\nhibit the manufacture or sale of liquors. Mr.\nMorgan offered a resolution for a military\nacademy west of tho Mississippi, to educate In-\ndians for tho army. Mr. Hoar introduced a bill\nproviding for tho use of a patented ballot-bo- x\nand counting device. In the Houso of Ilcpre- -\nsentatives Mr, Randall raised objections to a\ndeficiency appropriation of $20,000 for printing\nthe Supreme Court records. The death of\nThomas H. Herndon, of Alabama, was an-\nnounced, and an adjournment was taken.\nThe Senate was in session Ices than two\nhours on the 6th inst., and accomplished very\nlittle in tho way of legislation. Petitions wore\npresented from the Legislature of Nebraska to\nso amend the law to force railroads to take\nout patents on their land grants, and from the\nAstoria Chamber or Commerce to forfeit lands\ngranted to tho Oregon Central railroad. Mr.\nGarland introduced a bill to release tho Mem\nphis and Little Rock road from condition\nwhich unjustly affected it, and to adjust\ndifferences on account of customs duties on Iron.\nMr. Cameron presented a measure to raster to\nthe market certain lands in Minnesota and Wis-\nconsin roserved for dams and reservoirs. Mr.\nGroome handed in an act to construct the Mary-\nland and Delaware free ship canal as a means\nof defense. Mr. Lapham proposed an amend-\nment to tho Constitution giving women the right\nof suffrage. Tho House was in session but a\nfew minutes, and accomplished nothing. Roth\nhouses adjourned over to tho luth.
47457ff0fef4557b4868fa7f7f22763a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.519178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 impoworin^teorttio&MWtadstotje\nlid partly byiliu. absence, gC-Mr.- Briglii\nmil Mr; Disraeli.'' The' Tatter-was 'nevii\nlull.merciless ho often was,bu( dull\nlever. A gentleman who sat for many\ncare ill the reporters' gallery, told m<\nlie other day uu anecdote of tho inannci\nn which Duraoll contrived td 'sly the\nnost bitter tlUnga,to.Jila.iooponcnts and\ntill keep"witUTtiTlipWunds of parUamen\nnry rules. Ono of his devices was tc\nraw an imaginary portrait ofsome w retell\n00 baso to live, and whllo doing this, tc\nook at the Speaker and point with hit\ningcr, as if unconsciously, at the parser\nvhom he Intended thus to describe. Thus,\nin one night, when Mr. Gladstone wac\nIttlng in his accustomed place on the\nipposite, side of the. tsblo,; aud.Dte\nnell' was J Speaking, .he bS&n Uc\nketch the character oi some Im\niginary ocrson, whom ho lnvtste<!\nvilli attributes which were recognized \nperfect but ludicrous travesty of some o:\nilr. - G ladstone's peculiarities. Then sud\nlenly turning round to that ho stood witt\nibHice to the Speaker and 'his right' sid<\noward Mr. Gladstone, he raised his hanc\nind pointed it at Gladstone's fhee, while\n10 kept his eyes fixed oo tba S|>eakor\nAnd do you mean to tell me," lie exclaim\nid, "that Hit man, s6 lost .to nil sense o\nustice; Mu solemn charlatan who parade\niretenso for piety, this wrctcli wliO'bar\n>*r8il«iy'VbMrays tlie '.t'nut," ^c-Wlll\nivcry MCtnhnking bis finger it ptxfr GIftd\ntone, as if in accident, but pointing hii\nInmmntntlnna Rn thftfc flMIT flllllft WG11'\nlouicnmi rankled in bis breast. Thesi\nmcoimtors,'however, liave left no;bid\n>lood behind them; and behind the scenoi\nmil oven before the scenes, everywhen\nuve in tho House of Commons, the Pre\nnier and ex-Premier are cxcellext friends
1cf4735b2abcf6a05e1eb119430bae12 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.7109588723997 58.275556 -134.3925 Lieut. Faauk L. Austin, of the United\nStates revenue cutter Unalga, is regis*\ntered at the Rainier Grand. Since the\nvessel's return from a three months*\ncruise of Alaskan waters a short time\nago, Mr. Austin has been popularly\nknowu as "Deacon" Austin, says the\nSeattle P. 1 . He was called upou the\nofficiate at the nuptial ceremonies of\nMiss Elizabeth Faraquer, of Austin,\nTex., and a Mr. Hannah, at St. Paul\nisland, about a month ago. Mr. Hannah\nis a government agent of Alaskan flsh«\neries and looks out for the safeguard¬\ning of the seals. He corresponded with\nMiss Faraquer about two months ago\nfrom Bristol bay, where he was then\nstationed, asking her to come immedi¬\nately to St. Paul islaud, where he\nplanued to be located at the time bis\nbride-to-be arrived. Miss Ferraquer ex¬\n considerable difficulty in\nreaching the island, finally being\nforced to travel on a government tug.\nOn arrival she found no trace of Mr,\nHaunah. In the meantime Mr. Hannah\nhad missed connections and he could\nnot get from Bristol bay to St. Paul\nisland. The revenue cutter Unalga was\ncruising about Bristol bay iu the latter\npart of July and Lieut. Austin, hearing\nof the predicament Mr. Hannah was in,\nafter a consultation with the captain,\noffered to oonvey him to the side of his\nbride to-be. When the Unalga, with\nMr. Hannah aboard, reaohed St. Paul\nisland there stood the pretty Texa9\ngirl on the very edge of the wharf,\nLieut. Austin, who is empowered with\njudicial powers, was immediately\ntagged to officiate at the nnptial cere¬\nmonies. He consented, and Miss Fara¬\nquer became Mrs. Hannah.
bb9fd9b4ba55f9e39d4ce4b787e08459 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0698629819888 39.513775 -121.556359 IMPORTANT TO MISERS, TRAVKEEUS , RTO\nfBYHERE is no malady of deeper Importance either\nS in a medical or moral liglil of view, to wldctc\nthe hitmm* family is more liable than that arising\nfrom impure connections.\ntsn medical man it is the duly of every physician'\nto look at disease as It effects health and life, and ids\nsole object should be to mitigate, as far as lies in his\npower, the bodily suffering. Human nature nt best Is\nliiil frail, all are liable to misfortune.\nOf all ihe ills thed affect man none are mereterrible\nthan those of a private nature.—Dreadful as it is In\nthe nersou who contracts it, frightful as are its ravng.\nes upon his constitution, ending frequently in destriio.\nion and a loathsome grave, it becomes ofsi ill greater\nImportance when it is transmitted to innocent off-\nspring. Such being Ihe case how necessary it be-\ncomes that every one having Ihe least reason to fenr\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\nto it at once by consulting some physician, whose\nrespecsathility nnd education enables him to warrant\na safe, speedy, and permanent cure. In accordance'\nw ilti this necessity. DU. YOUNG feels called upon to.\nstale Hint, by long study and extensive iiraeiiee.be\nhas heleme perfect master of alt those diseases which\ncome under the denomination of venereal, and linv*\n paid more attention to that one branch than any\nother physician in live United Slates, he feels himself\nbelter qualified to treat them.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such ns ulcers, swelling in\nthe groans, ulcer in the throat,secondary syphilis, cn *\nInneons eruptions, ulcerations, lerlnary syphilis, sy-\nphilis in children, mefcnrenl syphilitic affections, gon-\norrhea. gleet, strictures, false pac«ages, inflamntion o"\nIhe bladder and protrate glands,excoriations, tumors\npustules. Site., aie as familiar to hint ns the most com-\nmon things ot daily observation.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent cases in a few\ndays, and finds no difficulty in curing those of long\nduration, without submitting the patient to sin li treat-\nment as will draw upon him the alighiesi suspicion,\nor oblige him to neglect Ids business whether within\noors or without. The diet need not he changed ex-\ncept in cases of severe inlhimalion. There are ill i'ali.\nforma patients (amounting lit over two thousand in\nHie past year I that could furnish proof of Hits; but\nthese are matters thotrequire Ihi nicest eecrosy which\nho always preserves.\nAll letters enclosing $lO, will he promptly attended\nto. Office hours from it A.M.toHP M. Address -f j\nf. YOUNG, M. <> . Express Ruildings, corner of\nMontgomery anti t bill torn inn st rents, over Wo lis .* arj\ngo At Uo.s Express Department.
073738bb38da4ceb9b402190c1bb4eed CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1878.6589040778792 39.623709 -77.41082 are loyd cries lor a change. A change\nof financial policy, like a change in\nmedical treatment of a sick man, may\nbe beneficial or it may be fatal. If\nthere is to be a change let it bedeter-\nmined by reason and sound judgment\nOld parly leaders are in considerable\nof a muddle on the subject. The les-\nsons of the past ought to be good\nguides for the future. In Gen. Jack-\nsons time the national finances and\ncurrency was regulated by a great\nUnited States Bank. The brave old\nGeneral considered it a monster of\naristocratic power and corruption.\nHe felt called upon to put it down. —\nHe called upon working-men particu-\nlarly to stand by him in his great\nfight. As a general thing they re-\nsponded to his call. They triumphed\nand the big Bank prostrate. Its\ndownfall, however, was followed by a\ngreat increase of State banks, and the\nmore banks the more money, such as\nit was. One of their dollar notes\nmight be very good in Frederick\ncounty but would not buy a full dol-\nlars worth of goods in Baltimore\nNobody groaned worse over that kind\nof currency than the workingman.\nThen came the war, needing millions\nof money to carry it on and save the\nUnion. Tho governments right to\nissue paper money is very question-\nable but the war left no alternative.\nThe government accordingly issued\ngreenback paper dollars. Next it is-\nsued bonds. It exempted the bonds\nfrom taxation. It paid the interest\non them in gold. Then it made tho\nbonds the basis of a national banking\nsystem. The old state banks changed\nto national banks.
006884af4dc2457b60014732947a6032 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.5383561326737 40.063962 -80.720915 A'/iy.Carolina head 7c; Carolina cholco f>)i\nCarolina prime <>H?; Louisiana prime 6K\nJava I'earl «Ho: broken 4>{c.\nSyrups- Clio ice sugar syrups2Cc; 8uRar Byru\n28o30c; lloney Drips 28c; Vermout Maple Drl|\n(Ivugallou kegs,75c; ten gallon ki'tm7»*»c; half hi\nreli* 70c; barrels 7tc; ltixby Maple Syrup (hi\nrels) 6' . c; lilxby Maple (,'i barrels) ft8c; llixl\nMuplo(10Rrtllou kegs) C0o: liixhy Maplotogi\nIon keen) Me; liixhy Maple (quart cum) ft\nSugar House (dark) 20a'22e: (2c additional to hi\nbarrels). New Orleans Molasses, fancy uuw cro\nWo; cholco 4»e; prime 45c; lair 40c; mixed roc\nNo»v Orleans 43e; baker'a Rood 25ft.;oc: ub»olute\npure maple syrup, Ration catis, 81 00; K Rail)\ncans pure uiujdo 81 10 per Ration; \\\\ gallon cu\npure maple, 81 10 per gallon\nJ'riwMoiut.Largo H. C. hamsU^c; medium\nC. hama JlJlJc; small 12>$c; S.C . breakfast haci\nSkc; H. C. shoulders 7c. nldci 7a7>ie; buci\nthouldcrs 7c; batn beef 10c; ordinary heef !>\nfamily meivj pork & lb plccca 114 60; beau por\nline clear lid W.\nlard-Pure In tlorco 7}{c; M lb. Hi\n75;c; Chicago lard, In tlu pails. 3 lbs., Mic; t\nl>ull*, ft lhH., 8%o; tin palls. 10 lb*., 8:|fce; l\nliAlls. 20 lbs., H>4c; tlu palls, 50 lbs., 8c.\nSugar.Cutloaf 8c;cuhea.Jic; powdered V,4\ntranulatcd standard 6kc;atnndiird.confoetlouei\nK (r>kC; ColumWla A Uj<c; atandard Windsor\nifjic; American AC}ic;wh|to extraC Cc;stau\nird yellow &%e; Knight's yellow 6Jie.\nCo/w-Ureou collet?.Fancy Golden Itlo 21\nfancy Rrocu'22c; choice green 21c; roasting grail\nDo; Java '.Mo; roasted iu packages-Ohio Vi\nU;y Itlo 25o; Pan Handle 25c: Arbuckle\nJO/a roaated -25o. liulk rousted'23%c; Old Oo\nirnnieut Java roasted 35c: "A" grade Hlo '23c.\nWai.Youur Hyson por lb., 2oa00c; gunpov\nler, '25alftc; imperial, 35a50e; Japan, '£1*704\nJuIoiir, £Ja75c; BouchouR, 22aC5c.\nOufulia-titar, full welnht, 10c; Taraflluo, pi\nlb., lite; mould, per set, loc.\nVinegar-Choice elder, I0al2c per gal.; statu\nird city brands, lOallc per gal.; couutryl3*l/\n^er Kill., oh to quality.\nChu»c.lB quoted as Jobbing at 8%c for prhc\nwestern;9j for full cream; Hweitzcr liil'J>v\nictording to quality; Llmhurwer, 13c; factor1\n,0c
22dd949b9ce4f788d3bad4ffd4b60509 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.3767122970573 40.063962 -80.720915 (loud Up In . Blase of Glory.\nCincinnati, 0., May 17..With to*\nday'a concert will terminate the moat\nsnccesaful musical fefltival that baa ever\nbeen held'in America, alike in maaical\nexecution and in attendance. In spite\nof the rain yesterday afternoon and even*\ning the hall showed the same fullness,\nwhile outside the multitude of carriages\nrequired skillful, energetic management,\nby the police to prevent an inextricable\ntangle. The musical spirit seems to have\nrisen in the audience in each concert.\nAt time* they are hushed to a remarka¬\nble degree for sucb a vast multitude,\nand this evident appreciation of the\nefforts of the singers upon the part of the\naudience has its effect upon the former,\nas ia shown in the remarkably fine exe¬\ncution of the chorus in the varioua num¬\nbers, especially in the Msaaiah, Wednes¬\nday, and last night's chorus in the third\nact of Wagner's Meistering.\nThe scenes upon the streets to-day are\nbut a repetition of tho»e of the past few\ndayn an regards the coming and going\nof throngs visitors, notwithstanding\nthe inauspicious weather. It seems evi¬\ndent that the festival has a strong hold\nupon the public. The rain has ceased,\nbut we have in place of it a cool northeast\nwind and clouded sky.\nMiss Rollwagen, a Cincinnati singer,\nwho was to render the aria "Nlsce al\nboeco," by Handel, this afternoon, is suf*\nfering from an inflamed throat, and Miss\nCrancb has been substituted.\nTo-night will be given (or the first time\nin America,LisxtV'Misia8olennU,",com¬\nposed for the dedication of the Basleek\nIn Gran. The difficulties in rendering\nthe Messiah for the chorus and orchestra\nare very great, and it is to the praise of\nall those taking part that the work will\nbe performed during the festival.\nThe Berlioz symphony,Bomeo and Ju¬\nliet, which will be rendered after the in¬\ntermission, is looked forward to with\ngreat interest. The soloists are Miss\nCarey and Messrs. Adams and Bemmartx.\nThe piece consists of instrumental move*\nmenu illustratingsoenrs from thstragedy\nunited into a whole by a prologue and\nsongs, which were written by Berlioz him*
b4e87575f9546fa69fbcfbf306ec9b7b PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.0698629819888 31.960991 -90.983994 tion no (58) fifty-eight in township no thir­\nteen of range no three, East, intersects\nthe said creek, thence South thirty de­\ngrees, East twenty-five chains and six\nlinks to a stake, thence North twelve de­\ngrees, West sixteen chains to a Holly,\nthence North seventy-seven degrees thir­\nty minutes, West ten chains to a stake,\nthence North thirty degrees, West fifteen\nchains and eighty links to a Lynn tree,\nthence North thirty-three degrees, East\neleven chains to the said creek, thence up\nthe said creek, following its meanderings\nto the place of beginning,, containing in\nall twenty acres; also, the following tract\nparcel of land, to wit: Lots numbered\nfour, five and six of section no fifty-eight\nof township no thirteen of range no three\nEast, containing one hundred and seven­\nty-five [more or.less;] also, the fol­\nlowing tract or parcel of land, bounded\nthe North by land now owned by Duncan\nH Miotyre,on the East by lands owned\nby Nathan Pickett, Mrs. Hall, William\nCooper, R P Brown and J G Heard, on the\nSouth by lands formerly owned by said\nBrown and said Heard, on the West by\nland known as the Willis tract, and con­\ntaining, by metes and bounds of survey,\nfour hundred and eighteen acres, and be­\ning part of section no fifty six of township\nno thirteen of range no three, East, and\npart of section no four of towuship no\ntwelve of range no three, East, all lying\nadjoining each other, in the county of\nClaiborne and State of Missississippi also,\nthé following €hmcd\nJVegro Slaves; to icit:\nEdith,
707d3b95ac9c4ef9e0aa662449eac7eb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.7958903792492 41.681744 -72.788147 After a residence of one year In\nNew Britain and 46 years in public\nlife In the old city of Brooklyn,\nnow the borough of Brooklyn of the\ngreater city of New York, and, .read\ning from time to time in your val-\nuable paper, suggestions of a new\ncharter for tho city of New Britain,\nand that a charter commission had\nalready been appointed to revise\nthe charter, thought I might make\na few suggestions that might help\nin some way that might be bene\nficial to the citizens and taxpayers\nof this city. Only a short time ago\nI read in your paper a speech by\nSenator Hall in which ho said the\ncharter of New Britain was anti-\nquated and way behind the times,\nand absolutely needed revision, and\nI certainly, after looking over the\n fully agree with him. Dur\ning the first of September while\ndiscussing the charter with the sec\nretary to His Honor, Gardner C.\nWeld the mayor of tho city, I ask\ned the meaning of an assistant po-\nlice judge. In no other city have\nI ever heard of an assistant judge.\nI have always heard them spoken\nof as an associate judge and only\non Monday or Tuesday night of this\nweek I saw an article by Judge\nAiling regarding the assistant ju lge\nand suggested at least for two police\njudges. I think police magistrate\nwould sound better and if two .po\nlice magistrates should be authoriz\ned, I would say that no person be\nappointed to that position unless ho\nwas a practicing lawyer of not less\nthan flvo years In the practice of the\nlaw.
8f68e42f44b2019bd9c013c339e838fd EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.741095858701 39.745947 -75.546589 dermining the red autocracy of Bol-\nAt shevism. Addressing the Tenth Con­\ngress of the Communist party, Len­\nin e said, according to the official\nBolshevist “Pravda" of March 10.\n1921, that "The relations between\nus (Bol/lhcviki) and the peasantry\nare not what we had believed them\nto be,” a nd added that "these rela­\ntions represent a peril many times\ngreater than all the perils threat­\nened by the Deniklne, Kolchak and\nYudenltch campaigns put together,"\nThe peasants' opposition to Bol­\nshevism and reaction makes for q\ndemocracy In Rusaia. Another fac­\ntor, the existence of complicated na­\ntional problems in Russia, points to\na federated democracy as the only\npossible structure of the future Rus­\nsian state. The separatist move­\nments in Russia are of very recent\norigin. They not exist before\nthe revolution, from March to No­\nvember, 1917, i. e ., up to the mo­\nment of the Bolshevist coup d' etat.\nThe formation of Independent border\nstates was due not to the national\naspirations of the peoples compris­\ning these states, but to the fact tha'\nBolshevism took possession of the\ncenter of the Russian state, and these\npeoples naturally could not consider\nthemselves longer bound to this cen­\nter. Foreign Intrigue on the pari\nof some powers Interested In Rus­\nsia's disintegration also dontributed\ngreatly to this situation.\nFuture democratic Russia Is not\ninspired by any Imperialistic aims\ntoward these peoples,\nsive force« of Russia have always\nrespected and defended their\ntional aspirations.\ntral Russia is re-established, she will\npropose a federal union to the
0ee410f61308b8b8572493559633e51b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1897.23698626966 46.187885 -123.831256 "It is most satisfactory to the on-\nlooker, a well as to the citizens and\nproperty owners of Astoria, to see the\npromptness with Which the city coun-\ncil Is meeting the railroad company in\nthe movement for the development and\nestablishment of future business in\nthl9 comunlty. The Introduction In the\ncouncil Friday night of an ordinance\nproviding for the improvement of\nTwentieth street from Exchange to\nCVnunercial. and the approval of the\nengineer's plans for the extension of\nCommercial street from Seventeenth,\nmeans that as soon as the railroad\nhas finished the depot and depot\ngrounds, and the track la laid In to\nIt from the present terminus at the\nO. R. & X. dock, ample facilities will\nbe afforded the public for reaching\nthe de.Hit. Not only this, but on every\nhand, both in Astoria proper and the\noutlying suburbs, new building are\neither In course of construction or\nunder contract; numerous exchanges\nof property have taken place, and oth.\nera are In prospect; manufacturing\nenterprises of various kinds are under\nconsideration: the new shipyards of\nthe Astoria Iron Works are well un-\nder transcontinental railroad con-\nnections have already been made by\nthe new road, and if ,'the people of\nthe city push the good work along\nand work together In harmony.through\nrain and shine, heat amdi cold, for\nthe one great object to make Astoria\na port nothing short of a cyclone\ncan prevent a good start being made\nthis season and the ultimate, accom-\nplishment of every old resident' life-\nlong desire."\nIt give us much pleasure to copy\nthe above from the Astorlan of last\nSunday. We are glad, indeed, to hear\nof the helpful outlook for that cdty.\nIt Is gratifying to learn of the dispo-\nsition of the people of the Gateway\nCity to unite and pull together for\ntheir common good, and thus to work\nout the great destiny their situation\nand surroundings make possible.\nThe people of Salem expect to hear\nfrom the porjectors of the Astoria rail-\nroad, Messrs. Bonner and Hammond,\nas soon as the transcontinental con.\nnectlon is completed.\nWe bespeak for them a) splendid\nwelcome and substantial help In the\nwork of conectlng their Oregon Cen-\ntral property with their
0e388d529eb1319ef1dcb81b310ef1f9 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1895.2808218860985 37.305884 -89.518148 the receipts are running at the rate of\n$305,000 a day, and the expenditures\nare at the rate of Sl,015,ot)0 a day.\nIf the same ratio obtains for the\nbalance of the fiscal year, the ac-\ncounts will stand: Expenditures,\n5370,475,000; receipts, S315,725,0iK. This\nwould leave an excess of expenditures\nover receipts of S r,000,000. The ex-\npenditures are pared down to the low-\nest limit of economy consistent with\nfixed appropriations made by law and\nare likely to be increased rather than\ndiminished. The increases in this fis-\ncal year have arisen from two princi-\nple sources, namely: Appropriations\nby the last congress made immediately\navailable and the quarterly interest\npayments on the $105,000,000 of United\nStates bonds issued within fourteen\nmonths to protect and strengthen the\ntreasury gold reserve.\nSo far this month expenditures on\nthe "civil and miscellanous account,"\nthe account that carries the principal\nitems made immediately available by\ncongress, are $300 in excess of the cor-\n period last month. It is\ntherefore to increased receipts that\nthe treasury must turn to bring the\ntreasury receipts and expenditures\nclose together and bear out the esti-\nmates laid before congress, which\nclaimed at the end of the fiscal year\nthe deficit, which is now $42,000 ,000 ,\nwould then be only 320,000,000.\nImport statistics yesterday made\npublic by the bureau of statistics hold\nout a hope that the increased rev-\nenues from sugar duties may come\nup to the estimates. Indications of a\ngeneral revival in commercial pros-\nperity are also pointed to as promising\nequally satisfactory results from other\nsources of revenue.\nThe question as to what amount of\nmoney will or will not be derived from\nthe income law seems to be the only\nimportant doubtful factor left in the\ntreasury calculations, and this can\nonly be solved when the supreme court\nmakes public its decision in an author-\nitative way. This will probably be\ndone to-da- y,
2b549de5830250561f122491866e391d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 . In the discussion ou the question of\nAmendments in the Young Men's\nChristian Association Convention at\nMontreal recently there were some re-\nmarkabie facts stated. First, was the\nstatement of the Philadelphia dele-\ngates. Their membership is very large.\nTheir arrangements for interesting\n'young meu are extraordinary. Free\nlectures ou science, classes for the study\nof almost all languages, sociables, Bible\nclasses and prayer meetings, are a part\nof their machinery. To these they had\nadded the chess table, dominoes and the\nlike. But experience hail proven\nthat even these apparently harmless\ngames were, in the rooms, of very\n(doubtful value. At the hour of uooii\nprayer,the attendants would find young\nmen busy with their games, and which\nthey pursued throughout the hour. It\nled also to other demonstrations unde¬\nsirable in such a place. It was 6oon\nsuspected that that which was so\n at home was of doubtful ser¬\nvice there. So they determined to\nabandon every game of chance as a\nmeans ot attraction to their rooms. It\nwas shown, too, that the only Associa¬\ntion which had ever introduced a bil¬\nliard table had ruiued two sons of a\nleading family by its fascination, lead¬\ning them io the billiard saloon, and all\nits pernicious adjuncts of bad men and\npoisonous liquors. The Association\nitselisoon dud. The experience of one\nof the leading 1'amilieK in Montreal,\nwho Introduced a billiard table luto\ntheir house for their sons, and their\nsubseqneut ruin by beiug drawn luto\nthe society of billiard players aud their\nsaloons, fell ou the multitude present at\nthe time with great power. All felt\nhowdaugerous were these experiments,\nand how impossible It was for the Con¬\nvention to encourage what had alreadj'\nworked so much harm.
5179846cf02e7e15ba49d4f9a1faa970 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.519178050482 42.217817 -85.891125 as young Sheridan asked his father.'\nAs the clouds of azure smoke rolled\nabove my hoad I conjured up, peeping out\nof each curl, tho face of some dozen fair\ngirls I had known or still knew. As the\nfeatures blended with th wreaths and\npassed in review before my eyes, I delib-\nerately rejected each passing judgement\ninto thin aiV')cucatir tho ceiling of my\nroom. One had a nose too blunt, another\nanose retrousc sofar astoturn up;a\nthird was too tall ; a fourth had too large\nafoot; a fifth had bad teeth ; a sixth\nlaughed too muoh ; a seventh talked too\nloud; an eighth had too big knuckles; a\nninth had hair on her lip ; a tenth sweet\ngirl could'nt bear the smell of asafeeti-da- ,\nand of course was out of the question\nfor a doctor's wjfej an eleventh had bad\nbreath, and the twelfth wore spectacles\nmy abomination a young girl.\nThese feminine faces all ascended above\nmy head, and disappeared slowly into thin\nnir evaporated with tho smoke that had\nproduced them. But somehow a sweet\nface seemed to linger in the bluo cloud\nth;it curled from the very end of my ci-\ngar. Her blue eyes, her pleasant smile,\nher graceful head and shoulders, her ex-\nquisite hands and incomparable foot all\nwere onco more visible to me as I had be-\nfore seen them, and almost fallen in love\nwith their possessor. But al.n, she was\nmy cousin 1 and I had been informed by\nFan ay's Puritan mother that it was a\nmoral sin to marry cousins, for the Bible\nsaid so. So I let this sweet face melt\naway towards the ceiling, an ascending\nangel, and sighed, half resolving to turn\nHoman Catholic, that I might get a dis-\npensation from the Pope ' to marry cous-\nins.'
06c2108a6f2b185b8f4a76401803235a CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1894.6999999682903 39.623709 -77.41082 acntative Meyer, of La., the important\nfact that he and President Cleveland\nwere unalterably opposed to free sugar\nat this time, which is taken to mean\nthat the bill placing sugar on the free\nlist will be yetoed should Senutorßlack-\nburn succeed in his. announced inten-\ntion of getting it passed by the Senate\n—it has already passed the House with\nonly eleven dissenting votes —at the\nshort session; also that he and President\nCleveland fayored and would be glad\nto use their influence for legislation pro-\nviding for the payment of the full bounty\non all sugar made up to the date upon\nwhich the new tariff went into opera-\ntion and for the payment of the differ-\nence between the bounty and the duty\nupon this years entire crop of sugar.\nThis last was probably intended to soften\nthe disappointment caused by his final\ndecision not pay the bounty on the\nsugar that hail been made up to the\ntaking effect of the new tariff, which\nhas just been officially announced.\nAmong the newest political rumors\nsufficiently important to be mentioned\nis one that Secretary Gresham may be\nsent to the Senate if the Illinois legis-\nlature should be democratic, notwith-\nstanding the endorsement which has\nalready been giyen to the candidacy of\nMr, Mac Vcagh ; another that Senator\nJones became a populist only for the\npurpose of influencing that party to\nendorse the candidacy of Senator Cam-\neron, of Pennsylvania for the Presidency\non a free silver republican platform,\nand still another, that Senator Davis of\nMinnesota, is shortly to be brought out\nand boomed for the republican Presi-\ndential nomination by a strong combi-\nnation composed of men who do not\nwish either Harrison, McKinley or\nHeed to be nominated.
122297351973e9e0f50db26238f56e05 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.2260273655504 37.451159 -86.90916 "That is truer'\n"What sort of a man are you then,\npray?" resumed the Little Countess in\nher brief and abrupt .tone "I cannot un\nderstand it very well. By what right.\non what ground do you despise me? Sup\npose I am really guilty oi an the intrigues\nwhich are attributed, to me; what is that\nto you? Are vou a saint yourself? a re\nformer? Have you never gone 'astray?\nAre you any more virtuous than other\nmen of your age and condition? What\nright have you todeapiB.ms? Explain!''\nWere ! guilty ot the sentiments which\nyou attribute to me, madame, 1 should\nanswer, that never has any one, either in\nvour eex or mine, taken his own morality\nas the rule of his opinion and his judg\nment upon otners: we live as we can, ana\nwe judge as we should; it is more partic\nularly a very frequent inconsistency\namong men, to frown down unmercifully\nthe very weakness which they encourage\nand of which they derive the benefit For\nmy part. I hold severely aloof from a \ngree of austerity, as ridiculous in a man\nas uncharitable in a christian. And as\nto that unfortunate conversation which a\ndeplorable chance caused you to hear.\nand iu which my expressions, as it always\nhappens, went lar .beyond the measure of\nmy thought it is an otlense which I can\nnever obliterate, 1 know; but I shall at\nleast explain frankly. Every one has his\nown tastes and his way (.understanding\nlife in this world; we differ so much, you\nand I. in that respect that I conceived\nfor .you and you conceived for me, at first\nsight, an extreme antipathy. This dispo\nsition, which, on one side at least, mad\name, was to be singularly modified on\nbetter acquaintance, prompted me to some\nthoughtless manifestations of or\nand vivacity of controversy. You have\ndoubtless suffered madame, from the vio\nlence of my language, but much less I\nbeg you to believe, than I was to suffer\nfrom it myself, after I had recognized its\nprofound and irreparable injustice.\nThis apology, more sincere than lucid,\ndrew forth no answer.
008e70ad3e54c758420d4de82c71e299 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.332876680619 39.261561 -121.016059 The Assembly Committee, on State Hos-\npital!!, having examined the Insane Asylum,\nconclude their report as follows:\nIt would be a pleasure to your committee\nif they could report as favorably of the cu-\nrative department of the iustitutiou as we\nhave been enabled to do of the sanitary, po-\nlice, and financial departments. The gen-\neral health of the inmates of the institution,\nit is true, is good; but the first great and\nhigh object to be attained by aud through\nthe institution, is the restoring of those\nlamentably unfortunate creatures to rcasou\nimmediately, or in the briefest possible pe-\nriod, aud also discover, disclose, and treas-\nure up. new light and knowledge upon the\nsubject of treatment, whether moral or\nmedical, in this startling malady. The aid\nthat this State might, aud should, thus give\nto science, and thus indirectly greatly aid\nafflicted humanity beyond her borders,\nwould add power and luster to her pillar of\n well worthy to be sought for by\nher. In these things, in the opinion of\nyour committee, the institution has not at-\ntained what is reasonably expected of it.\nIn the first place, your committee found\nthat a record of treatment of cases has not\nbeen kept; their treatment and progress\nfrom lime to time has not been recorded.\nThis neglect, in the judgment of your com-\nmittee, should uot be lightly passed over.\nBy referring to the law establishing the In-\nsane Asylum, we find that the Superinten-\ndent bad tbe power to employ attaches, (as\napothecaries,) if more help was needed, to\neuable him to do full justice, particularly\nto the curative department. In consequence\nof the neglect to keep a case book, tbe ex-\nperience of the institution is lost to science,\nand lost to tbe institution; for her past ex-\nperience cannot, uuder existing circum-\nstances, revert to her future good to auy\npractical degree.
2535e3dbf1d05c71dd0b596036ce580e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2178081874683 40.063962 -80.720915 reproached with this distrust but was\ncultivated and held on to by his\nbis Union friends, Mr. Lamb now\nseemingly feels aggrieved. What cause\nhas he to manifest any such feeling?\nDid he expect to go over to tho enemy\nwhom ho had so long been opposing,\nnml who throughout the war, and ever\nsince, lutve been in opposition to all he\nprofessed, and turn his guns upon his\nold friends, and they remain silent in\ntheir own defence? Assuredly Mr.\nLamb, after his denunciatory address,\ncould have expected no less, but a great\ndeal more, as we conceive, than was\nsaid in oflr comments upon that docu¬\nment. Ho is well aware that In no\nspirit of asperity, but "more in sorrow\nthan in anger" did we take up his con¬\ntradictory position and set it forth to\nour readers. That contradiction alone\nconstituted tho attack of which Mr. L\ncomplains. If our citations \nthe record, accompanied as they\nwere by language so entirely re¬\nspectful, constitute an attack, what\nmust be said of such lan¬\nguage as that in which Mr. Lamb re¬\nfers to the Governor of the State, bis\nsubordinate officers, and tho members\nof the legislature,.in his published ad¬\ndress. Certainly-in view of the asper¬\nsions cast upon the membership and\nthe policy of the Union party of/he\nState in that address, we might have\nl>oen excused for replying with\na groat deal more warmth to Mr.\n!.:tmb. But at the start, and through¬\nout, wo determined to jivoid even the\nseeming of personality, and to treat Mr\nL. with all that personal consideration\nwhich we have ncvor ceased to feel foi\nhim. lie has no causo whatever tc\ncomplain of us. He must find the ex¬\nplanation of his peculiar sensitivenesf\niu tho unfortunato position into which\nho has at last drifted.
f23851fcf6f693bbf4fb1d1a3e0ece40 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.4698629819889 41.681744 -72.788147 for Gray and Jaglowski went t\nwork and fanned Matis and Fitx\nPatrick to close tht inning.\nThe Corbin team could do noth-\ning in tha matter of acorlng In their\nhalt of the inning but the winner\ntied the score in their turn at bat,\nW. Preisser walked to open th\nframe and stole second. Goeb ad\nvanced him to third on beautiful\nsacrifice bunt down the first baa\nline. Vincent then hammerd a trlplo\nto left to score Preisser.\nThere was no scoring In the tenth'\nbut a single by W. Preisser and an-\nother triple by Vincent sent over\nthe winning run in the eleventh.\nAfter Patrus and Haber ha!\nclouted their homers W. Preisser\nwas sent to the mound, to relieve\nNestor who ook second. Preisser\nprevented any other scoring in tho\nthird although he walked two men\nafter two were out He was nicked\n one in the fifth due to a ball\ntaking a bad bound.\nHaber opened this inning for Cor-\nbin by beating out a grounder ta\nHillstrand. Bates sacrificed, Haber\ngoing to second. An infield out put\nhim on third. Heinzman then hit\nan easy grounder towards shortstop,\nbut as Vincent went to field it, tt\ntook a freak hop and went for a\nsingle, scoring Haber.\nThat ended the scoring of tho\nlosers as Preisser kept them com-\npletely subdued from that tlmo\nthrough the eleventh. He got into\nseveral tight places but managed to\npull through on each occasion.\nWith two out in the seventh Jag-\nlowski drove out a triple but tho\nnext man made an easy out. Jasper\nreached third after two were out in\nthe eighth after beating aut a roller\nto Vincent and going all the way to\nthe hot corner when Ostf-ta-
01d59e7e7a988b9700171ecaefbf13d1 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1895.6041095573314 41.258732 -95.937873 was organized In Philadelphia on the 15lb\nday of July, 1845 . lu Hrst Inception was for\nthe protection of Mechanics and Working\nmen alone, and for a number of years none\nbut operative mechanics and worklngmen\nwere admitted to Its membership; but the\ngreat Interests of princlpleslnvoived in lu\nexistence, caused a departure from that\nplan, and the Order has for years existed and\nexlsU today as an order of speculative me-\nchanics, recognizing every one possessed of\nthe birth requlremunU, who works tor a\nmalntalnance either by hand or brain or\nboth as eligible lo membership, and numbers\namong lu members wen of every profession,\nand calling in life.\nThe objects of this order are to assist each\nother in obtaining employ ment; to encourage\neach other in business; to establish a sick\nand funeral fund; to establish a fund for\ntbe relief of widows and orphans and to aid\nmembers; and to aid members who, through\nProvidence, may be Incapacitated from fol\nlowing their usual vocations, in obtaining\nsituations suitable to their afflictions. The\nmembership of this order Is composed of\nwhite male citizens born in the United\nStates, or under the protection of lu flag\nTbla order has existed for nearly fifty years.\nand Is at present, rapidly spreading through\nout the Dnlted States. As an American born,\nand having the welfare of yourself and\nfamily at heart, as well as that of tbe nation\nat large, we would most heartily Invite you\ntobecomeamemberoftheD.A.M asit1\nthe Order in existence founded es-\npecially to promote the InteresU, olevate\nthe character and secure the happiness of\ntbe American mechanic and business man.\nIt therefore appeals to the head and heart\nof him who wields the pen as well as to him\nwho swings the scythe or wields the sledge-\nhammer of the mechanic. In lu councils, a\nfree discussion of principles relating to the\nfostering and care of tne lnteresu of indi-\nvidual meubsrs is permitted; but nothing of\na political or sectarian character la ever al\nlowed to be discussed. It has no affiliation\nwith such institutions as Trades Unions,\nKnlghU or Labor, Sovereigns of Industry, or\nthe like, and desires not to control either\ncapital or labor, as It would be doing a gross\nInjustice to many of lu members, who are\ntaken from both classes. The membership\nof the Order is scattered from Maine to Call\nfornla, and from all polnuco ues lhe glorious\nnews that the Order is gaining great strength\nIn all Jurisdictions.\nAo endowment branch s also''Connected\nwith the Order, both national and -- state,\nwhich Insures those who seek lu benefits,\nenabling them to leave a sum, which is In all\ncases substantially and promptly paid, to\nthe dear ones, when death marks lu mem\nbers for Its own.\nIt seems very strange Indeed that the\nAmerican does not feel Inclined to become\nso peculiarly national In his ideas and as\noclatlons as do tbe English, French, Oer\nman, Irish, and other nationalities.
18f62bc763cd41dc0051eeaae27b4f6f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.691780790208 40.832421 -115.763123 aid of cbolora niorbaa afUr two or\ntbr»a days iudiipoailii n. and died after\nfour boar* of eiolt-nt iiloaaa. All ef-\nforta to raotura bar (rottd nnaTailiusr,\nthough continued for aoma time, owin£\nto tha I if el i k* appearance of the gifl'a\nface. liar ebeeka blainl redder than a\npeony, otberwia* aigna of death w ra\n.eidenL Doctor* aaid that aba «>i\ncertainly dead. Her father waa aux-\nioaa aud directe » that the cooler aboald\nnot be allowed to touch bcr bo ly. The\n. ecoud day afterwarda th« funeral took\nplace. The cofflo waa placed open in\nthe family Taolt, and waa watched dar¬\ning tbe night. Aa tuany people ware\nllriii in tbe bvlirf that life waa not\ngoue, tbe fath»r bad <he bidy remored\nout d«y t'» bia bom;. Gl'vinum waa\ntri«-d without i ffect. though tba \nla 'y°« fac" looke 1 a* though aha were\n. till in brilliant health. Tha ordin»ry\nttiti were made, burning the fle-h to\n. *e if tt would bliater, and l»ncinz to\naea if blood would flow. Tbe teat*\nfailed and aigna of dtaooipoaition ap-\n| eared, finally, ou tbe aa-urance ol\na-Trral doctor* tb*t abe wai dead, tbo\nb - ly waa tgalii t <krn to the raull.\nThe brigbteuing of h-r oheeka were at¬\ntributed by Dr. Btreator to an enlarge¬\nment of the oapilliaiiea at tbe time\nMiaa Linkinayer had tbe meat'** some\ny> are ago. Following tbia wua au al>-\nnornial depoait of red coloring u. attar\nin the cbeek* which retnuine I after the\nblo<>d b ad left the face. The father re-\nfn».d to allow a pnat u ort> to examina¬\ntion, stid be baa takin n.e
0243b340dcb74f1c3b03b2c945a6c3e8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.4863013381532 40.063962 -80.720915 of degrading himself or imperilling the a\ncause by an untimely struggle for personal v\naggrandizement, he said, we propose to t\nmake in this campafeu a calm, earnest,\npatriotic appeal to tne people of Ohio, i'\nWe expect to show them, whatever may P\nhave been the service of the Republican b\nparty in the past, the material interest 1«\nof the masses and the safety of local self c\ngovernment alike demand a change of\nadministration. Ne party that ever ex- tl\nisted could have held power as long as the a\nRepublican party has neld it without det- h\nrimertt to tne public welfare. It is high\ntime for a change. It can't bo for the «\nworse; it will certainly bo for the better. S\nThe Republican party emerged from the \nwar amtd the plaudits of a vast majority s\nof the people of the North, but with Lin- e\ncoin's assassination and Johnson's politi- t\noal murder it lost popular leadership and\nfell into the hands and under the control S\nnot of men who bore tho heat and burden 11\nof the war, but of a money aristocracy,\nwhich grew and fattenou on their b\nsacrifices. It turned its back to the a\nsoldiers and its faoo to the bondholders, ti\nIt confiscated tho interests of the masses *\nand piled mountain high the fortunes of d\nthe favored few. Fearing to submit its\nfinance measures to the judgment of the a\npeople, it enacted them in secret, shunned\npopular discussion of them and blinded (\ntliu nonnlo « !»!» Moainn otwl n»A>..J!.
70a6b53113b2d36dd1192d750080046c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4397259956875 39.261561 -121.016059 BttoDcr.oATft vs. IIkai.th.— Prof. Hamil-\nton, in an able address on hygiene, to tho\ngraduates of the Buffalo Medical College,\ndenounced broadcloth as an enemy to exer-\ncise, and, therefore, to health. He says:\n'American gentlemen have adopted as a\nnational costume, broadcloth—a thin, tight-\nfitting, black suit of broadcloth. To for-\neigners. we seem always to be in mourning;\nwe travel in black, we write in black, and\nwe work in black. The priest, the lawyer,\nthe doctor, the literary man, the mechanic,\nand even the day laborer, choose always the\nsame unvarying, monotonous black broad-\ncloth—a style and material which never\nought to have been adopted out of the pul-\npit, because it is at the North no suitable\nprotection against cold; nor is it indeed any\nmore suitable at the South. It is too thin\nto be iu the winter, and too black to\nbe cool In the summer; but especially do we\nobject to it because tho wearer is always\nafraid of soiling it by exposure. Young\ngentlemen will not play ball, or pitch quoits\nor wrestle and tumble, or any other similar\nthing, lest their broadcloth should be offend-\ned. They will not go out into the Btorm,\n1localise the broadcloth will lose its lustre It\nrain falls upon it; they will not run, because\nthey have no confidence In the strength of\nthe broadcloth; they dare not mount a horse,\nor leap a fence, because broadcloth, as ev-\nerybody knows, is so faithless. So these\nyoung men, and these older men, merchants,\nmechanics, and all, learn to walk, talk and\nthink soberly and carefully; they seldom\nventure to laugh to the full extent of their\nsides.
4f36d30c526b24d53c0927212a4c7f82 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.0068305694697 39.745947 -75.546589 Special to THE EVENING JOURNAL.\nDOVER, Del., Jan. 8 --The State De­\npartment yesterday issued certificates\nof incorporation to the Sadlold Glue\nCompany, which will engage in the\nmanufacture and general distribution\nand treatment of glue. The corpor-\nalors are chiefly of New York city and\nthe capital stock Is $100,000 .\nThe Williams Wall Paper Company\nwas Incorporated to engage In the\nmanufacture, patterning, printing and\nproduction and sale of wall paper.\nThese incorporators are of Pittsburg,\nand the capital stock is $25,000.\nB. Lowensteln (incorporated) became\na chartered company to engage in the\npurchase and Importation of foreign\nproducts, and goods, wares and\nmerchandise. The incorporators are\nof New York city, and the capital\nstock is $800,000 .\nThe Baltimore and Washington Con­\ncrete Company was chartered to en­\n In general manufacture. Importa­\ntion and contracting for public and\nprivate works and contracts. The in­\ncorporators are of Baltimore, and the\ncapital stock is $<0,000 .\nThe Worthington Roller Screen Com­\npany was incorporated to manufacture\nand sell curtain and window novelties,\nventilators, roller screens, and the\nWorthington sash lock. The incor­\nporators are of Baltimore, and tile\ncapital stock is $40,000.\nB. Lowenstein and Brothers Dry\nGoods Company obtained a certificate\nof Incorporation and will engage In the\nmanufacture and sale of dry goods and\nto engage in the business of manu­\nfacturing merchants. Importers, ex­\nporters, Jobbers In dress goods and\nhousehold linens. These incorporators\nare Edward M. Neary, Anton J. DUt-\nmar, Rafael Brill, William A. Young\nand Alfred Héctor of New York city.\nThe capital stock is $2,250,000.
1ddadc2b5ce246ab67a4798540ac41d0 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1917.741095858701 42.217817 -85.891125 Winter wheat succeeds best ou corn\nlaud. The best crops have been ob-\ntained In many localities where the\nwinter wheat has been sown with s\none horse (drill aJoub Sept. 1 between\nthe rows of standing corn. In north-\nwestern Minnesota this method Is re-\ngarded as the best. Winter wheat may\nalso properly follow some early crop\nsuch as barley, early oats or early po-\ntatoes. It can follow wheat or late\noats, provided they are off the land\nearly enough to permit plowing and\nsowing In season.\nEarly plowing of stubble land is es-\nsential to a good crop. It is important\nthat contact be established as soon as\npossible between the furrow slice and\nthe soil beneath. To facilitate this,\ndisking the stubble previous to plow-\ning is advisable when time will allow.\nAfter plowing the land should be disk-\ned and harrowed sufficiently to Arm the\nsoil and to preserve the moisture. Such\n also helps to kill the weeds\nand give good growing conditions. Dur-\ning a dry fall rolling or packing the\nsoil with a corrugated roller will help tc\ninsure germination and prompt growth.\nAfter the rolling the land should\nagain be harrowed to leave it loose and\nslightly ridged on the surface. In some\nplaces winter wheat is sown with a\ndisk drill in standing wheat or oat stub-\nble. The purpose of sowing it in this\nway is to gain the protection of the\nstubble for the winter wheat. While\nthe stubble undoubtedly gives some pro-\ntection, this method cannot be generally\nadvised, for the reason that wheat sown\niu this way is likely to be weedy and\nsometimes germinates ioorly. Sowing\nin the stubble should be resorted to only\nin extreme cases. It is essential that\ntho soil be In good condition, though it\nshould not be rich enough to cause the\nwinter wheat to lodge.
19cdc1c796adc0e4ce83fc5a91a956ad NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.7630136669204 40.735657 -74.172367 Said above first and second tracts being sub-\nject to an agreement entered into by and be-\ntween Alexander Grant, William H. J^ee and\nGeorge W. Martin, dated October seventh,\neighteen hundred and seventy-five, and recorded\nin the office of the Register of Essex County in\nBook Tj-18 of Deeds for said county on page 252,\nproviding for the erection of a party wall on\nthe northerly side of said premise* .\nThird tract—Beginning on the northerly side\nof Kinney street at a point seventy-seven feet\neastwardly of the northeasterly corner of said\nKinney and Church streets; thence running\na.ong Kinney street south sixty-one degrees\neast twenty-five feet: thence north twenty-nine\ndegrees east eighty-seven feet six inches to the\nline of lot number 10; thence north sixty de-\ngrees west twenty-fiie feet; thence south\ntwenty-nine degrees west eighty-eight feet to\nthe place of beginning.\nAlso the following described lands and prem-\nises located irr the City of Newark, County of\nEssex and State of New Jer*ey. more particu-\nlarly described as follows;\nBeginning at the southwest corner of Wash-\nington School House lot in Eesex street; thence\n(1) along said street fifty-four and one-half\nlinks to the corner of Aaron Ward's lot; thence\n(2) south fifty-nine and pne-haJf degrees east\none chain and seventy-six links to the rear of\nthe lot owned by Johnson Martin; thence t3)\nnorth two degrees and thirty minutes east forty-\neight links to the rear of Aaron \nthence (41 north fifty-eight degrees west one\nchain and eight links to Essex street and place\nof beginning.\nSaid last mentioned tract being subject to the\ngrant of a pc petual right of passageway in nn\nalley running along the northerly line or said\nproperty as spears from an agreement made\nbetween George W. Martin and wife and John\nG. Crawford, dated June 6. 1873 , and recorded\nin Book 617 of Peods for Essex County, page 541.\nIncluding the Inchoate right of dow'er of the\ndefendant Althea J. Martin In the undivided\none-half part of all tbe above described prem-\nises; together with all ar.d singular the tene-\nments. hereditaments and appurtenances to said\npremises belonging or in anywise appertaining.\nThe above premises will be sold free and dis-\ncharged of the life estates in them or anv of\nthem of the complainant, Charles Marcy Zeh\nMartin, and of the defendant. Fannie Mai- Sea-\nman; and the first and second tract* will be\nsold free and dear of a mortgage for nine thou-\nsand dollars held by the Fidelity Trust Company\nThe premises last described will h* noid\nsubject to the taxes due the City of Newark\nrmounting to two hundred and twenty-four dol- j\nlars and thirty-eight cents, together with Inter-\nest and costs.\nThe attention of purchasers is directed to the\nj following clause of the decree under which this\nj sale Is advertised, affecting the third tract aboie\ndescribed:
20d9f09e1831735f4cd913590c843ac7 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1916.7827868536228 36.620892 -90.823455 claim to auid property, wnloh action la return-\nable on tne first day of the next term ot said\nCourt to be held at the courthouse in the City of\nDoniphan, Klpley oounty, Missouri, on Monday,\nNovember, lath, ItllS, when and where you may\nappear and defend aald acton otherwise plain-tlli'- s\npetition will be taken as ooiiteased and\nJudgment rendered accordingly. Yon are fur-\nther notified that the petition tiled with the un\ndersigned olerk. In vacation, on the 18rh day of\nsepieuioer A. u- - ivio, is Terinea uy me biuiib-v - lt\nof plaintiff's attorney and allegee that plain-\ntiff verily belluvew that there are persona Inter-\nested In the aublect matter of the petition whose\nnames ha cannot Insert therein because they\nare unknown to him, that aald unknown defen-\ndants have obtained and derive their claim to\nthe nronertv hereinbefore deaorlbed from Wll- -\nnelm Carl Void, deceaaed, Henry C. Btiardman,'\ndeceaaed, David uiendenning, deceaaeo, jamei.\nTripp, deceased, O. P . deceased, John\nP. r'agln, deceased, W. C. Culbertaon, deceaaed.\nStephen Collin, deceased, Myron D. Colenian,\ndeoeased, Wiihelm Brass, deceaaed, Ambrose P.\nStanton, deceaaed, George F. Tower, deceaaed,\nMelvln J. Clark, deceased, B. K. Noble, deceas-\ned, B. T. Feed, deceased, L. 8. Hcrantnn, de-\noeased, Auatln Rlohardaon, deceaaed, Wm. 11\nKichsrdaon, deoeased. Joseph Byrnes, deceaaed.\nHugh B. Wilson, deoeased, Jamea M. Defreea\ndeceased, James M, Uatu, deoeased, Chauey\nSoott, deceased, Zacharlaa Klndea, deceaaed,\nVictoria H. Defreea, deceased, Benjamin Hhnly,\ndeceaaed, Benjamin Hliealy deoeased, Addlaon\nK. Burna. deoeased, David Glendeulng, deceaa-\ned, Jamea Trip, deoeased. Boatwick l Noble\nd. oeaaed, John B. Cook, deceased, J. M . Shir-\nley, deceased, Ed Q. Bawling, deoeased, A. K\nPerkins, deoeased, John B. Ooocn, deoeased.\nIsaac Boyer, deceased, D. C . McPheraon, de-\nceaaed, J. L . Horn, deceased, Alplionao P.\nSmith, deceased, 13. W . Wright, deceaaed, lo -uld a- s\n8. Horanton, deonaai d. H. l . Ilunh,\nW. W . Csrnev. deceased. Thomas Fos
09d81d8836ea5b9494851a7e44897520 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.091780790208 39.745947 -75.546589 He was asked by a representative of\nthe Evening Journal the other day to\n♦ell the secret of his* long drawn out\nyouth and activity.\nWith a cheery laugh he responded:\n"Moderation in everything. "\nThe colonel talks Interestingly on all\nsorts of topics, but particularly of the\nhappenings of his boyhood. He also\nis enthusiastic over his collection of\ncurios, and about many of his posses­\nsions, he tells many a strange and In-\ntereuting story. He was only six years\nold at the time General Infayette\nmade his memorable visit to this coun­\ntry. but. he remembers every detail of\nthe famous Frenchman's stay In Dela­\nware. Ho rode in his fathers\nrlage with the committee that drove to\nthe Practical Farmer to receive the\ndistinguished visitor, and can accurate­\nly describe the decorations of Brandy­\nwine bridge, which then was a covered\nstructure. After being entertained in\nthis city, I^afayette went to New Castle.\nUpon arriving there, the guns at the\nold arsenal, which now is used as a\nschool, fired in his honpr. The\nguns wereslx-pounders.and were named\nthe Wasp and the Hornet. He was es­\ncorted to tht residence of George Read,\none ot the signers of the Declaration\nof Independence, by whom he was en­\ntertained, and where a soldier guard\nwas stationed to keep out the rabble.\nIn the evening, the General was the\nguest of honor at the wedding ot Miss\nDorcas VanDyke. of New Castle, and\nCharles 1. DuPont, of Wilmington,\nwhich took place at the home ot the\nbride, at the corner ot Pearl and\nDelaware streets.\nThe old house still Is standing in a\ngood state of preservation and now Is\noccupied by David Boulden.\nThe Read house is perfectly pre­\nserved and it would be hard to find a\nhandsomer. The doors and wood work\nare ot solid mahogany, and are beauti­\nfully hand carved. The house which\nis very large, is surrounded by exten­\nsive. well-kept grounds, and commands\na splendid view ot the Delaware river.\nAt one time it was occupied by John M.
2de04f462544fee0959d23188d04df18 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1908.1980874000708 42.217817 -85.891125 It is ordered that said petition will be brought on for hearing and de\ncreeattlte March term of this Court, to be held at 1'aw Paw in the\nCounty of Van Uureu, State of Michigan, on the loth day of March, A. O.\n1508, at the opetiieg of the Court on that day. and that all persons inter-eate- d\nIn such laads or aiiy part thereof, desiring to contest the hen\nclaimed thereon by the State ol Michigan, for suclt tai es, interest and\ncharges, or any part hereef, shall appear in said Court and hie with the\nclerk thereof, actinic as register in chancery, their objections thereto, on\nr bef.kre the torst day ef the term of this Court above mentioned, and\nthat in default thereof the same will be taken as confessed and a decree\nwill be taken and eutered as prayed for in said petition. And it is fur\nther ordered that in pursuance of said decree the lands described in said\npetition for which decree of sale shall be nude, will be sold for the\naeveial taxes, ioteiest and chatgis thereon as determined by such de-\ncree, on the rirst Tuesday in May thereafter, beginning at 10 o'clock a.\nm. on said day. or on the day or day subsequent thereto may be nec-\nessary to complete the sale of s;Jd lands and of each and every parcel\nthereof, at the otlice of the ctuuiy treasurer, or at such convenient P'ace\nas shall be selected h him at the county neat of the County of Van\nUuirn. "iUte of Micluuan; aed that the sale then and thete made will be\na public tle, and eacU parcel described in the deciee shall be separate-J - y\nexposed for sale for Ihe total ta; s, interest and charges, and the sale\nshall be made to the person paying the full amount charged against such\nparcel, and accepting a conveyance of the smallest undivided fee simple\ninterest therein; or, tt no person will pay the taxes and charges and take\na conveyance of less than the emire thereof, then the whole parcel shall\nbe ottered and sold. If any parcel of land cannot be sold for taxes, inter-\nest -- nd charges, such parcel shall be passed over for the time being, and\nball, on the succeeding day, or before the close of the sale, be\nand if, on such second otter, or during such sale, the same cannot be sold\nfor the amount aforesaid, the Couuty Treasurer shall bid off the same in\nthe name of 4he state
1095f36334405f1b0958437f540fb48a THE WILSON TIMES ChronAm 1911.0260273655506 35.721269 -77.915539 Raleigh, N. C, Jan. 9 . The Gener-\nal Assembly began its second week\nof work with the wheels of the leg\nislative machinery well in motion, but\nmarked with the shadow of a great\nsorrow, because of the death of Rep\nreseutative Stewart, of Montgomery,\nwhich occurred on , Sunday in this\ncity, and to attend whose funeral the\nmembers of the customarmy commit\ntee were appointed, and at this writ-\ning are gone on the sad mission.\nThe delay in the House in getting\nwell down to work is, of course, part\nly due to the tardiness of the Speaker\nin announcing the standing commit\ntees.none having been appointed (ex\ncept the Committee on Rules.)\nBut the Speaker is not to be ad\nversely criticsed for this, because it\nis much safer and better for the\nState to adopt Davy advice\nand go slow (if found advisable) in\norder to select the best man fitted re\nspectively for the post to be assigned\nto them. For there have been some\nnotable "misfits" in the naming of\nthe chairmen of these committees in\nprevious Legislatures, due possibly in\nsome measure to the exercise of too\nmuch haste in their selection.\nThe committees just announced -- by\nSpeaker Dowd appear to be fitting\nselections on the whole, and I have\nheard no serious criticism of the per\nsonnel of the more important ones\nAt least not yet. That there will be\nsome unfavorable comments from\nsome quarters relative to the naming\nof certain heads of committees is to\nbe expected. For it has ever been\nthat way and no man in his position\nhas yet entirely escaped the scalpe\nof the would-b- e
2cf1f82e0eff82dc1cb198fde6c7bc7a CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.6980874000708 41.875555 -87.624421 new net marks n step forward. It pro-\nvides that every physician In the State\nshall report to the local authorities the\nname, age, occupation, place of employ-\nment and address of every person\nknown by lilm to have consumption. Tin1\nreport must bi mnde within twenty-fou- r\nhours, and the record Is to be kept\nsecret. In casn of the vacation of nny\npremises by a person suffering from\nconsumption, or of the death of such u\npatient, thq physician In charge or the\nowner or occupant of the premises must\nnotify the health board of the fact, nnd\nthe premises itc not to be occupied\nagain until they have been disinfected\nand cleansed. In case the orders of the\nhealth board nro disobeyed that body\nmay post a placard on the premises con-\ntaining the following notice: "Tuber-\nculosis Is a communicable disease.\nThese apartments have boon occupied\nby a consumptive and may bo Infected.\nThey must not be occupied until the \nder of the health officer directing their\ndisinfection or renovation has been com-\npiled with. This notice must not be\nremoved under the penalty of the law\nexcept ,by tbo health officer or others\nduly authorized " There are other pro\nvisions In the net for the prevention of\nJnfectlon through careless habits, noti\nfication or the recovery or persons, t.tc.\nA certain amount of discretion Is\nlodged In the health officers, but non?\nIn thoso whose duty It Is madeito re-\nport cases of tuberculosis In nny stage.\nConsiderable dllllculty Is apprehended\nIn tho enforcement of the act, and there\naro those who fear that some sufferers\nwill hesitate to consult n physician and\nbo "reported," lest tho secrecy of the\nrecords bo violntod In somo way. Ex-\nperience should throw light on such\nquestions as these. Meantime nn edu-\ncational campaign will doubtless be\nnecessary to removo opposition to the\ncompulsory notification fenturo among\nthe more Ignorant elements of the
00f0d520bb464c115a079532573295d7 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.0698629819888 37.005796 -89.177245 to make, have, nnd use a common seal, nnd\ntho samo to renew nnd alter nt pleasure, and\nshall be, and ure hereby vested with all pow-\ners, privileges and immunities which nro or\nmay bo necessary to construct, complete and\noperate a railroad, with single or douolo track\nfrom any point opposite or within two miles\nof a point opposito tho city of Cairo, in tho\nStato of Illinois, to any point on tho Mobilti\nand Ohio railroad, between tho city of Col-\numbus, Kentucky, and tho Stnto lino between\ntho States of Tennessee and Kentucky, nnd for\nthat purposo to enter upon and takoposscssion\nof so much land a may bo necessary to con-\nstruct, complete and oporato said railroad and\nit appendages, nnd if said company cannot\nngreo with tho owner or owners of said land\ntaken as aforesaid, application may bo made\nto any Justice of the I'caco of tho county in\nwhich tho land may bo situated, who, \nupon, shall issuo hi warrant directed to tho\nsheriff of hi county requiring him to sum-\nmon a jury of twenty bona fide houso keep-\ners, not related, or In any wise Interested, to\nmeet on tho land, or as near it as is practica-\nble, to bo valued on a day named in said\nwarrant, not less, than ten nor more than\ntwenty day after tho issuing of tho same,\nand If anyofthejurors shall fail to attend, said\nsher'lf thall forthwith summon as many jurors\na may be necessary with thoso in attendance\nto complete the pnnel aforcaid. From them,\neach party, or the attorney or ncont of either\nparty, if present; if not, then tho sheriff for\ntho party absent, may strike off four jurors\neach, and tho remaining twelve shall act ns\ntho jury of inquest of damages, after having\nbeen sworn by the sheriff Justly nnd imp ar -tinll - y\nto fix tho damages which the owner or
1476b54963ebc7ac7beb2b192f5b92fb WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.372950788049 40.827279 -83.281309 Until the arrival of a medical man\nmuch may be done for a sufferer from\nsudden illness or an accident; but, as far\nas possible, medicines and meddlings of all a\nkinds with the internal arrangements of\nthe body should be avoided.\nWith this caution we will proceed with\nour hints, most of which we owe to an\nadmirable little work called " Till the\nDoctor Comes," recently issued by G. P .\nPutnam & Sons, of New York.\nIn Case of Burn. If the victim of the\naccident be a woman, it generally hap-\npens that hr clothes are burning, and\nthe first thing to be done is to put ut the\nfire. Begin by being very cool yourself,\nand then be prompt and energetic. Make\nher lie down on the floor, and roll over on\nthe flames until you can come to her as-\nsistance. Seize a coat, a or a\npiece of carpet, and after covering well\nyour own hands for another patient will\nnot be needed at such a time wrap her\nup and extinguish the flames by smother-\ning them. When the fire seems to be\nout, drench the patient well with water,\nelse the cinders of her clothes will burn\nher. Then give her a drink of something\nwarm and stimulating and send for the\ndoctor. In the meantime, If the doctor\nlives at a distance and it is necessary to\ndo something before he comes, remove\nthe clothes very carefully, cutting and\nripping wherever necessary, and cover\nthe burns with soft linen cloths, wet with\nmixture of linseed oil and lime -wa te - r,\nor, if this is not convenient, with milk\nand water, with a teasponful of carbon\nate oi soaa aaaed to a pint o tne\nture. Or, if this is --
39497ba36203b11183748a5a8642d035 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.4342465436328 39.745947 -75.546589 “In these simple heartfelt words, j gay nothing of differences In race\nthe spirit of the present communed an,j jn institutions, political and so-\nwith the spirit of the past and drew ; cjaj_ seem each to form an almost\nfrom It Inspiration. Gathered to- impenetrable barrier to the growth\ngether today to commemorate those ; af mutual understanding. This fact\nwho have gone before us. do we not \\ j„ the great obstacle to Ute spread of\nfeel that we are richer for the toll.thc the spirit of fraternity. If we exam-\ndevotion, the simple living and right ; jne minutely the course of human\nthinking of the men and women to conflicts, we find that they proceed\nwhom this sacred place Is the most not so much from malevolence as\nappropriate memorial ? Students of ; from misunderstanding. How to deal\nart not come hither to survey the] with this phase of life Is the great\nglorious ruins of a by-gone age. Stu-1 problem of humanity. Mlsunder-\ndente of world-history may not seek standings of facts are serious enough.\nIn our rolls the names with which hut the means of overcoming them\nto embellish a dramatic page, but, are always at hand, if we see lit to\nwhile auch things may be profitable, resort to them. Far deeper and far\nthey by no means constitute the whole more elusive are the mlsunderstand-\nof the warp and woup of life. To a jnps that spring from misapprehen-\ngreater extent than we are wont to j glon of motives, of Ideals, of asplra-\ntmagiue, the world is Indebtd for its Hons. To misunderstandings ot this\nprogress and ita peace to kind all differences contribute: and,\nh/r°eB. who daY da
17444ff047111f0888daebe45a4c4762 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1878.9273972285641 39.743941 -84.63662 early breakfast before work, a midday\ndinner, with an interval of rest, and a\nsupper after the day's work is over, have\nlong been proved Dy experience to oe\nthe most conducive to health. For the\nbusiness man a later breakfast, a mid-\nday luncheon and a late dinner after\nthe day s work is over, is tne oest ar-\nrangement For literary men, who\nwrite more in the evening than during\nthe day, an early dinner and a light\nsupper will be found to be the most ad-\nvantageous for steady work. Idlers to\nenjoy life, if they possibly can, should\ndine early if they intend to spend the\nevening at theaters and the like, but if\nthey accept dinner invitations freely\nthey should be careful not to eat to\nmuch at the midday meal. The break\n hour should be determined in great\nmeasure bv the hour of rising ; hut in\nevery case food should be partaken of\nbefore the material business or the day\nis commenced. Those who like to take\n" constitutional" before breakfast\nwould find their appetite whetted and\ntheir walk made all the more enjoyable\nif they took a little milk or cafe au lait.\nwith bread or biscuit, before starting.\nWork done before breakfast is always\nirksome and fatiguing, and on that ac\ncount is verv likelv to be badlv done.\nThe last meal should be sufficiently late\nfor the whole not to be absorbed before\nretiring to rest. To a person in health,\nthree meals a day ought to be quite\nsufficient, and the practice of continu\nally " taking something ' is sure to bring\non indigestion.
0613018606166e101e7a5e9d26a9af1a THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1879.2479451737697 40.419757 -77.187146 found myself alone in the world, with\nonly a tolerable education and my quick\nwits to help me to the wealth I was de-\ntermined to acquire. The road to for-\ntune is a rough one, and few reach it\nwithout the aid of accident or influence.\nI had no influence, I trusted to the chap-\nter of accidents. Nature who had been\nso lavishly kind to me, pointed out the\nway. I was determined to marry an\nheiress ; I had tha good fortune to at-\ntract the attention of Miss Farrell.\nTrue, her reported wealth first drew me\ntowards her and I spared no points to\ngain her love. In this I was successful\nbeyond my hopes. It was a great tri-\numph for the poor broker's clerk to have\ngained the prize from his wealthy and\naristocratic competitors. was my\nlove altogether mercenary, for though\nher fortune was tbe first incentive to\nseek her heart and hand, when that '\nheart was mine, my love had become so\nintensified I would have married her\nwithout a penny."\nIt was strange tbat this strong and\nwise man of the world should thus pour\nout the very secrets of bis soul to a sim-\nple and ignorant woman. It appeared to\nbe a relief to Jno. Waldron to let down\ntbe mask of placid reserve he bad worn\nbo long, and make a full confession.\nThere had been a dreamy monotony all\nthese years in his mind, and It was like\nopening a long closed room and letting\nin the daylight it purified his soul.\nShe sat and listened without comment,\ntoo much astonished, indeed, to speak,\nand he continued:
04c47b3751e5aa3500cbeb1b09435123 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1884.4357923181037 40.832421 -115.763123 puny to which Hop Lee belonged, ad¬\nvanced the amount which Hop Lee had\npaid out, and the woman was conveyed\nto hiin by the Chinese Administrator of\nthe dead man's estate. China Jim held\nher for about two years. He claimed\nthat the original owner, who did not be¬\nlong to the Hop Lee Company, had for¬\nfeited his title to her. There were sev¬\neral attempts made to ki.lnap her, but\nwith the assistance of the woman, who v\nwanted to remain with him, Jim always\nout-generaled his enemies. Finally ono\nnight a few months ago, they found Jim\nout of the bouse and a couple of China¬\nmen made an attempt to take her away\nby force. The woman fought and made\nsuch a noise that Jim, who was in the\nneighborhood, heard it and came to tho\nrescue. The kidnappers opened tire ou\nJim, seriously wounding him, but he\nsucceeded in killing one and the other\nlied. Jim was placed under arrest, but\nit was sometime before ho was able to\nnpjieiir before the Justice for examina¬\ntion. In the meantime, there was a trial\nunder the "higher law" in tho Chinese\nCourt, which tribunal agreed that Jim\nwas to give up the girl and not be prose¬\ncuted, and that the escaping party should\nalso go clear. This was easily \nas all of tho witnesses on both sides wire\nChinamen. A Mongolian who professed\nto be keen for Jim's conviction up to tho\nexamination, when tho time arrived,\nkept out of the way and could not l»«\nfound. No witnesses appearing, of\ncourse Jim was acquitted. Shortly af.\nforwards tho prosecuting witness, who\nhad disappeared, showed up again, took\nthe woman to San Francisco or Hacro-\nliiento whero ho sold her for $!»50, and\nhas returned to Tuscarora and opened a\nstore in Chinatown. Tho woman Was\nevidently attached to Jiui, for she stood\nflnnljT with him through all of his troub¬\nles, but when the Chinese Court decreed\nher to another, she submitted without a\nmurmur, as sho very well know that\nopiamiUou meant death to herself and\nher lover. This may appear to be a\nstrange condition of tilings iu a country\nwhich expended so much blood and\ntreasure iu tho abolishment of Africau\nslavery, but the alxjvo is a correct and un-\nexBggeraUd relation of the circuiustan.\nees as they occurred right hero iu Tus¬\ncarora. Hitch transactions are by no\nmeans rare on tho Paciflo Coast, nor\nwill they become so whilo Chinese slave-\nry and Chinese "higher law" are rir-\ntnally encouraged by men high iu the\nKxecutirr, Lvghlatire nu<l Judicial d».\n|H»ttioenta of our Mntlonnl K"venuuonl.
49fee3a81152f83c979330c23e45dade DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.8890410641807 58.275556 -134.3925 There was a little spat between the\njudge of the district court and the\nmunicipal magistrate this afternoon\nDver the arre9t of three women of the\njnderworld who were arrested on war¬\nrants charging them with disorderly\n*nd drunken conduct as they were get¬\nting aboard a boat to carry them to one\nDf the vessels bound for Seattle says\nthe Nome Gold Digger. It appears\nthat the women were witnesses for the\ngovernment in the case of the United\nStates vs Dallagiovianni, which was\nconcluded this morning and after they\nhad placed a bond in tho municipal\ncourt, they appealed to the district at¬\ntorney. He and J udge Moore conferred\non the matter in chambers, and when\nthe case of the United States vs Mose\nRosencrantz, in which Judge Murane\nis an attorney, was called this after¬\nnoon. Judge Moore took advantage of\nthe opportunity to draw the attention\nof Judge Murane to fact that this\nmatter of tampering with and perse¬\ncuting the government witnesses\nthrough the medium of the municipal\ncourt for purposes of spite, would have\nto cease. Judge Moore intimated that\nthe same thing had been practiced be¬\nfore and that if it happened again, he\nwould cite the offending parties for;\ncontempt of the court, and instruct the\ndistrict attorney to bring the matter\nto the attention of the grand jury.\nJudge Murane replied that he thought\nthat the criticism of the court was\nunjust and that the statement was\nuntrue and not founded upon fact.\nJudge Moore interrupted and in\neffect told the municipal magistrate\nthat he was on to all the curves,\nand that his four years of experience\nin Nome had made him very much\nwiser to the conditions, and that if he\nheard of anything more of the kind,\nthere would sure be a prosecution for\ncontempt of court.
1ef93e2b825184d1eb8d3e99587dfd6a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.269125651437 39.745947 -75.546589 This action on the part of General\nHu Pont has caused much feeling to\nbe stirred up through Sussex county,\nnot against General dnPonf hut\nagainst thP obstructionists who seem\nbent on harassing and delaying tho\nboulevard wherever possible. Not only\nhad the road given employment to\nseveral hundred men. but scores of\nothers intended to work on the road\nfrom lime to time when their services\nwere not required on the farms.\n"There Is one thing sure," Haiti\nColonel John O. Townsend, of Selby-\nville, while in this city today, ''Sus­\nsex eounly wants (hit boulevard and\nneeds the boulevard ”\nNo movk had been made today to\ntest. In Superior Court, nt. Georges\ntown the constitutionality of the bou­\nlevard corporations law. If an attack\nIs made on law It Is though that\nthe duPont Road Incorporated might\nhave to defend it, if it were defended\nat all. it was said today on good au­\nthority that General duPont has\nmade no arrangements to defend the\nlaw with lawyers who have been\ncounseling with him regarding the\nboulevard project.\nSecretary of States Charles\nRichards, of Georgetown, was a Wil­\nmington visitor today. He knevy of no\ndevelopments so far a« the -govsrqoe-\nwas ccticerned iu the boulevard situ­\nation, he said\nGeneral T Coleman duPont was at\nbis office today after an abseuce of a\nfew days down the state at “Th«\nMoors.” He was busy receiving callers\nand apparently not worried over the\nroad holdup. He said he knew of no\ndevelopments in the boulevard situa­\ntion.
18f7993b2dba52cfedbd5263a95ac379 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0068492833586 41.681744 -72.788147 cate, Inc., its chief handler, was\n205,643 bales, two round bales being\nfigured as one square bale, valued at\n$42!,700,000. A fleet of 26 vessels\nwas specially chartered to transport\nt liese cargoes overseas to Murmansk.\nItemlttances of money to finance\nthese transactions were reported re-\nceived hero frpm Moscow via Eng-\nland. Bankers and brokers in Lon-\ndon were said to collect a continu-\nous "service" fee for acting as go- -\nbetween, for the two countries.\nKurs gathered by Russian trap-\npers and coming here in part ex-\nchange More estimated at more than\n$ S,0ll0,000 . Tha Antorg Trading\ncorporation handled $6,600 ,692 of\nthis, and Centrosoyus America, Inc.,\nrepresenting tho Russian "coopera-\ntives," reported furs the principal\nitem In Its list, of imports here.\nThe soviet union will likely con-\ntinue to in the Amercan cotton\nmarket longer than Its economists\nend agriculturists had expected.\nThey had drawn up a five -ye -\ngrowing plan by which Russia's over\ncotton crop was to have caught up\nwith the demand for staple by its\ntextile Industry some time in 1926.\nThe cotton mills however, it is now\nreported officially, have expanded\ntoo rapidly for these calculations.\nCotton mills in ltussia, after\nslumping to 5 or 6 per cent of pre-\nwar production in 1920, are now op-\nerating on a 65 per. cent basis, says\nFrit!! V. Kllevltz, president of All.\nRussian Textile Syndicate. He says\ncotton gins increased tliore from 43\nin the last year to 67 at the open-in- e\nof 3 925. The quantity of fin.\nished goods had been doubled In the\npast two years, and Mr. Kllevlts
0a822fd8c26140d427957aa5c084ba0b THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.6945205162353 39.369864 -121.105448 But in spite of this shifting and\ntransitory character,our mining towns\nare not the abandoned and disorderly\nplaces that might be supposed. Am-\nericans carry with them, wherever\nthey go, the institutions which they\nprize; every immigrant is a State in\nhimself, and his first care is to estab-\nlish laws. These may not be perfect\nnor always regular according to legal\ndefinition; but they answer the cardi-\nnal purpose of all law—and that is,\nprotection. A sense of justice, how-\never rude, pervades the inchoate com-\nmunity, and only occasionally docs\nnational prejudice, stimulated by de-\nsire for gain, operate to the injury of\neven the meanest alien.\nThus it happens that the regulations\nof self-congregated miners, iu the\nform of public meetings, presided\nover by proper officers selected from\nthe crowd, and their deliberations\nrudely published,come to be sanction-\ned as laws by the State, and respected\nby its Judiciary. It is the preroga-\ntive of Americans so to make laws,\nand it is their glory that they seldom\nmake them unjust. Apart from obe-\ndience to these, mans individ-\nuality can assert itself unchecked; —\nhence these floating communities ex-\nhibit the richest variety of character\nanywhere to be found. Men from\nevery State, from every country, and\nof every condition mingle as equals.\nThe honest miner is not ashamed to\n“hake hands with the lawyer, nor does\nthe lawyer deem his soft palm conta-\nminated bj the horny touch of labor.\nHardly a man can be found but whose\nback has at some time, whatever his\npresent condition, been bent over the\nflinty bosom of his mother earth.\nThe pickaxe might well stand with\nus as the emblem of equality.\nLabor overcomes all things, says\nthe classic proverb; but it never before\novercame anything so nearly invinci-\nble as cast,or the artificial distinctions\nwhich germinate in even American\nsoil, as do the most loathsome weeds.\nI love to contemplate this rough equa-\nlity in mining communities. Eveu so\nrude a realization as it is of the phi-\nlanthropists and poets dreams, fills\nme with pleasant speculations and in-\nspires my soul with new hopes for\nman.
2fd112eefba97c1602acf61af7fd28d9 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.493169367284 58.275556 -134.3925 The Record-Miner intimates in a\nnasty sort of a way that John G. Heid,\nnational republican committeeman\nfrom Alaska, has not exercised his pow¬\ners for good and evil along the lines of\nthe most good and the least harm to\nhis constituents. Jobu has been acting\nrather chaffy lately. What was the use\nin him going back to Washington and\ntelling Teddy all about Judge Brown!\nand his doings? Brown hasn't been !\nhere long. He has hardly been seated\nin the judicial chair loug enough to!\nget his feet warm, and then just as\nsoon as John won out in the local po¬\nlitical fight, be had due and proper no-!\ntice that Brown was one of his constit¬\nuents (?) What Johu should have done\nthen was to nave "Duriea me natcnei\nand not kept on slashing It:\ndon't seem that John knows who his\nconstituents are, anyway. He's an old\ntimer, and has got it in bis bead that he\nowes some consideration to the fool\nfellows who came nphere years ago and\nbuilt log cabins and lived on fish; when\nthe boats only came once in a month\nor two; those fellows with the boruy;\nhands, and the claim in tbe bills. John\nthinks they are bis constituents, but he\nis away off. These nice easy boy»* who\ncame up with a change of socks and a\nfederal appointment only a few years\nago, but who have by industry and\nthrift, gathered in mines, saw mills*\nwater works, town lots, rows of cot¬\ntages, &c., until they have become men\nof affairs.these are John's constitu¬\nents, and he should know it without\nbeing told.
930f7b573504433bb98cc31615280118 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.7493150367834 41.681744 -72.788147 Of the 270.000 application blanks\nsent out today, 144,000 went from\nthe main office at the capitol, 39.000\nfrom the Bridgeport branch, 3 5,00"T\nfrom the New Haven branch, 15,000\nfrom the New London branch. 17,011\nfrom the Waterbury branch and\n10,000 from the Stamford branch.\nHowever, no mail orders, except for\nreservations of particular numbers,\nyrill be filled at the branch offices!\nThe new application blanks have\nbeen simplified. Three of the ques-\ntions previously required to be an-\nswered have been withdrawn and\ntwo others have been combined Into\na single question. The applicant is\nno longer required to Indicate by\nwhat kind of motive power his car\nIs propelled nor to give the bore and\netroke. In the place of the two\nquestions formerly asked, as to the\ncolor of the car body the color\nof its running gear, single question\nasking the color of the car appears.\n"The department will endeavor to\nreserve for any applicant the num-\nber assigned to him In 1326, either\nfor January 1, 1927 or April 1. 1927,\nprovided a completed 1927 applica-\ntion, accompanied by the necessary\nfeet and a written request for that\nparticular number Is received at the\nHartford office or any of the branch\noffices on or before November 15.\n1926," says a notice enclosed with,\neach of the application blanks.\nThose who receive their new\nplates In advance are cautioned by\nthe notice, not to display them on\ntheir cars until the last week day of\nDecember. 1926. Remittances arc\nrequired to be made by check,\nmoney order or express order. Ther\n,1s no charge for postage on numb'--
1e5612569960111380420578fdcbd7fc CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1874.5246575025367 39.623709 -77.41082 ogy accustomed to be employed when\ntreating of Comets in general. The word\nComet itself comes from tlie Latin Coma, a\nhair or Lions mane, as it is frequently\nrendered by classic writers. The proprie-\nty of this derivation Is plain to all, for the\nComet is nothing else, at least in appear-\nance, than a cluster of hairy stars dispersed\nin the shape of a lions mane. That lumin-\nous point near the centre of the Comet is\ncalled the nucleus (Latin, mix, a kernel),\nand the outer circle wliich encompasses\nthe nucleus, is called the hair, or nebulosity,\n(nebula, a mist, Latin,) This nebulosity\naud nucleus combined, are termed the\nComets head, and that luminous train\nwhich sparkles in the heavens like a spray\nis called its tail. Although all have now\nnearly agreed ns to tlie vaporifle constitu-\nency of Comets, yet it remains an open\nquestion, tlie precise nature of this\nvapor is; and because some say one tiling,\nand some another. Rather than tire tlie\nreader we shall abstain from quoting opin-\nions, and live content with letting the\n“doctors differ” for tlie present.\nWhat most interests us now, seeing that\nwe have over our heads, one of those un-\ntoward nightly visitors, is whether or not\nComets are “dangerous things;" and if it\nlie true, as is generally believed, that they\nsometimes visit the earth, and play hobby\nwitli its in inoffensive inhabitants.\nThere have been found men to assert al-\nmost anything. Flint awful day spoken,\nof by tlie Holy Evangelists, which tlie Hon\nof God declared was hidden from men ami\nangels, used to lie calculated with so much\nprecision in days gone by, tha. tlie hour\nand minute, nay, even the second at which\ntlie dread event wonld take place, were
56904f8b4be5fa613ed062cf49e06446 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.7904109271942 42.217817 -85.891125 bill will be passed. If we do not\nintend to defend the rights of tho col-\nored mam, we should not have given\nhim any rights. We must do it. In\nTexas, out of 000 murders, not one has\nbeen a Democrat, and no man is pun-\nished. There they have been accus-\ntomed, according to the Dem-\nocratic theory of physical power\nfor governing, to regard the slave's\nlife as subject to the will of the\nmaster, and they still regard the\ncolored men in the same way. When\nsixteen were wantonly merdered in\nTennessee the other day, aud the\nPresident proceeded against the mur-\nderers, the Governor of Tennessee pub-\nlished a protest. Iu Louisiana they\nhave defeated insurrections.\nMr. Logan recited the fact in regard\nto the Kellogg election and the action\nof Senate, when he thought that\nthere was no election because of fraud,\nbut it having been settled by the State\ncourt and Congress aud the President\nthat this was the existing government\nof Louisiana, he considered an attack\nupon it as insurrection. They have\nbeard from the President, and the only\nfault to be found with his action there\nis that Penu was not arrested and tried\nfor treason. Shall not our sympathy\nbe excited by the sight of hundreds of\nour people murdered like dogs? Are\nthese Democratic murderers aud in-\nsurgents fit to govern our country ?\nNo ! when their theory is wrong\nand their action is rebellious aud\nmurderous. The Southern States are\nsaid to be in a bad condition. Who is re-\nsponsible? They say the cause of this\nis the " carpet-baggers.-
1d079fc6b457966964e5aa559e7fa67a IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.4506848997971 43.82915 -115.834394 A correspondent of Thf Medical J 'rc t , of\nLondon. eoimmiDlMte» to th at Jonrn»l tue\nfollowing aecouut of « skeleton manufactory,\nwhielt he receuely hud nil opportunity of visit­\ning. The establishment Is located in the\nplain of St. Dennis, France, and consists of\nlarge wooden buildings, comprising one main\nstructure and several annexes.\nThe large hallooutaius two rows of immense\nkettles, the emanations from which are, as\nmight be supposed, far from agreeable, even\nto au olfactory apparatus used to the atmos­\nphere or a dissecting room. These kettles\nserve for ridding the bones of their adhering\ntendons through boiling. The disarticulation\nof the skulls which I« performed separately,\nconstitutes tin; most delicate part of the opera\ntiou. Iu the case of children or young adults\nIt is effected through an ingenious process\nconsisting in filling the cerebral cavity with\ndr) peas and then immersing the skull iu\nwater. Through the effect of such immersion\nthe peas swell and bring about a dislocation\nof the most delicate sutures.\nAfter the bones have been submitted to u\nprolonged boiling they are carried to tables,\nwhere young women carefully scrape them in\n to free them perfectly from the soft\ntissues that adhere to them. Certain special­\nists obtain very high wages for this work, es­\npecially those who prepare very delicate bones,\nsuch us those of frog*, lizards, etc.\nAfter being scraped the boues are bleached,\neither through the action of chloride of lime\nfor cheapskeletous or tha t of the sun for high\npriced ones. Finally they go to a special work­\nroom, where they are assembled, mcuuted up­\non brass, aud articulated.\nThese final operations require a profound\nknowledge of osteology, uioug with an artisti c\n:*ye. In fact, it is necessary to select from a\ncollection of ail sorts of bones those that can\nbe well enougn assembled to look as if they\nTime from one and the same individual. The\nothers are sold singly lor the use of students\nof limited means, who are eunteut with a por­\ntion of an unmounted skeleton, i t it is curi ­\nous to find that sex has a great influence op\nthe market value of the bones, a beautiful\nfemale skeleton being usually worth 20 or 25\npercent, more thuu a male one of correspond­\ning quality.
083a8a77c6385566279f26aa2f31e7e0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.9493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 By virtue ofa deed ofTiuit nude by\nland Miry, his wife, to the uid*tii|ned'imii*\ndated the lit day of January, 187j. aud dmr m!\nended In the Clerk's office ol the lounty Cwm .1\nOhio county, Weat Virginia, In Deed of iruiitrj\nMoitgigo ilook Mo. 4 , pages 405 and 40tf, will M\nFRIDAY, tho 23th diy of December, ikj,\nBeginning at 10 o'clock aim. of alddif.Kthi\nfront door of the Court llouaeof Ohlocu'untr.ii\ntha thy of Wheeling; Mil at public auctU tilth*\nfollowing described property, ttut U touviu\nthat certain piece of lana lying and beiiaoctbi\nwatcri of Gleu'a Run, In hid county ol tihio uj\nbeing part of the land belonging to tne late An4n«\nP. woods and adjoining the lands of WlluaJ\nWelahaua, the htlri ol David Gardner, droud.\nmd tno belra of Andrew P. Woods, dem^uS\nlalniug 18 acres, S roods and 10 nmhea, ai,. t bemj.\ned and deacribed aa via: BtglnDloait u\nelm corner to Garden and lUsllly oti tb« wuodi'\nline; thence up the Run Road otoyA" Klmojodi\nand 842%"' K 20 polea to a rake ou the wuth 44\nof laid road, thence a 13J K10 2i-. uo >olri toi\nstake; thence 8 2° £ 18 6C-1UO polta lutiuii\nthenceb81°W47 78-100 pah*toacormr to a)j\nWelahaus on original tract line and wltn hli li*\nand Hid tract Hue a Ci° W 23 64-100 polu toorktnul\ncorner of tract now a corner on the liu> ul ail\nGarden and with h a line (mother origin .l)tf*\nE 88 IC-100 polea to the beginning, to^tli «ni\ntne Improvements thereon and the henuiwm.u\nand appurtenantea belonging thereto, u.tpotf\nonly the coal underlying tne old tract.\nTkbmh or Balk.Three hundred dollinui th\npuichR-f money in caih on tbediy of uk, atj iu\nretldue of tbe uid nnrchan tuonej on tbe lit iiij\nol January. 187d, with Interest on
85c89f0d11e9a3135944a987a03f0b7a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.547814176027 39.513775 -121.556359 At the session of the Legislature succeed-\ning Lis return from Europe, he was elected\na Senator in Congress, and presented his\ncredentials in the l imed States .Senate, on\nthe Bth of December 18.4; where he was\ncontinued by the unanimous vote of the De-\nmocratic members of the Legislature, until\nthe 4th of March 1816- In that year he was\nappointed by President Polk to fill the first\nplace in his cabinet, as Secretary of State.\nThe best authority for the ability and fidel-\nity with which he discharged the duties of\nthat high position, is to be found in the pub-\nlished records of the country, la the Sen-\nate he occupied a position us the proudly\nrecognized equal of the most distinguished\nmembers of that august body.\nHis natural dignity of deportment, easy\nand coucilitury manners —bis well-estab-\nlished reputation, unsullied by a blot or u\nblemish, secured to him not only the entire\nconfidence of the Democratic side, but gave\nhim, with the opposition a strength and in-\nfluence possessed by few illustrious states-\nmen, whose brilliant taleuts adorned the\nSenate of the United States. The Democratic\nparty of the whole country then recognized\nJames Buchanan as one ot its must gal.ant,\nable and faithful champions.\nHis successful contests in intellectual\npower with the two greatest living ora-\ntors, Henry Clay aud Daniel Webster, in\nthe celebrated discussions upon the Veto\npower,” the “ McLeod ca-e,” and other im-\nportant questions embracing the vexed one\nof the Tariff, iti which the Hou. John Davis\nof Massachusetts, became his most promi-\nnent adversary, conclusively proved that he\nwas deserving of the exalte i opinion, then\nentertained, of his abilities as a statesman\naud of his de'otiwn to the principles of the\nparty to which he belonged.\nThe signal ability with which Mr. Buchan-\nan pcrlor-mod hid high and responsible du-\nties as Secretary of Si.ate is exhibited on the\nhighest pages of the National Record At\nthe close of Mr. Folks presidential term.\nMi' Buchanan enjooed his friendship and\nunlimited confidence, us it existed at the\ncotunu neemeut— and that confidence and\nfriendship mutually entertain'd, only ter-\nminated at the death of the ex-l resident.\nOn the accsssion of Mr. Fierce to the Fre-\nsidency, Mr. Buchanan was appointed Min-\nister to England. It is needless to say teat\nthe selection gave general satisfaction. Iho\nimpression derived from hi** past diplomatic\ncareer, and especially from his able and\nbrilliant correspondence on the Oregon\nquestion, in 1846, that the honor and inter-\nests of the country would be sale in his\nhandsjhaa been amply justified by the events
010f581eef55fd3ba61456dafe86204e THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.1516393126392 37.451159 -86.90916 In looking over the last issue of the\nOhio County Sew, I was somewhat\nsurprised when i read the communica-\ntion of "Pine Apple," in which he ad-\nvertises the young lady from South\nCarrollton who taught music here this\nwinter. I don't propose to justify the\nyoung lady hi going in debt and then\nnot paying her hills, but do think it al-\ntogether hi bad taste to advertise her,\nwhen there are so many men guilty of\nthe same thing. I would scorn to lie\nthe author of an article of that kind. It\nis true the loss of $50 may lie felt and it\nis equally true that the loss of several\nhundred dollars may be felt more ns\nsome (Kirties not more than UK) miles\nwest of here can abundantly testify. I\n wish to east any reflections upon\nMr."Pino Apple," or any one else, nor\ndo I wish to get up any controversy\nwith any one. Doubtless this young\nlady ivent iu debt expecting to pay all\nshe owed, and it may lie that all her\npatrons never paid her, so it was im-\npossible to settle with her creditors.\nMr." Pine Apple,"! ask you how many\nmen have done worse than this lady\nhas done'.' how many, 1 say, have\nexiieeted to realize more thau they did,\nand when their ships came In the cargo\nwas not great enough to meet all de-\nmands, aud have had to make assign-\nments in bankruptcy, or buy their own\npapers in at oO cents to the dollar, or\nsome other reduced price, as tney count\nnot pay any more.
0fec22df69d7f2e8725db2b3803fdc26 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.1246575025368 40.063962 -80.720915 The growth of the obaervanceof 8t. Valen¬\ntino's Day is shown very clearly by the hooka\nat the poutofHce. In 1881, the day before the\nDay there were handled at the Wheeling of¬\nfice 424 piece*; lut year on the same day\nthere were 1,027 valentiea received and de¬\nlivered. The thirteenth in 1881 came on\n8uuday, which explains the small number.\nThis year on the thirteenth the number of\nvalentines handled was so small as to indi¬\ncate a decided failing of the custom, the\nfigures beiug 471). On St. Valentine's Day\nin 1881 there were 1,800 pieces\nhandled, and on the following day 898\npieces. Last year on the fourteenth 1877\nvalentines passed through the office, and on\ntheiliteenth 1118; while yesterday the large\nnumberof 2170 were handled by the clerks\nand The force at tbe office were\nworked nearly to death, and ceuld they pass\na retracive Jaw, St. Valent ne'a name would\nnot henceforth be among me canons.\nA pleasing feature of tbe valentine trade\nthis year is tbe large number purchased by\nparents or other friends for children. The\ninnocent pleasure thus conferred is one of the\nredeeming features of the occasion, and one\nwhich will help to keep the old custom alive\nfor generations to come.\nTbe scenes at tbe stamp window of tbe\npostcflice yesterday were amusing to every¬\nbody but the young man who handled tbe\nlittle pieces of paper and made change. An\nobservant student of human nature could\nhave guessed a whole story from the manuer\nof the individuals, old and young, who ap¬\nplied for "ones" aud 'twos."
0bb5fed583b906e5ab434023cd80ae06 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.2835616121258 39.745947 -75.546589 olute man of you. I never allow myself to\nexceed tho limit, no matter how strongly\ntempted I may be. If I find myself yearn­\ning to smoke more than my allowance, I\nmerely "raise the limit,” which phrase Is, I\nam told, also used iu tho wicked but fas­\ncinating game of poker. This Is a simple\naud easy thing to do. Say your limit is 3\nounces of tobacco a day, and you find by\nconstant experiment that duty impels you\nto use 2% ounces, then raise the limit to 8\nounces, which leaves a margin for accidents.\nEvery man, patriotic man, has bis re­\nsponsibilities to his country, and if every­\nbody suddenly stopped smoking aud drink­\ning what would become of the reveuuef\nLooking at the matter, then, from the lofty\nstandpoint love of country, every man\nshould fix his limit ns high as his conscience\nwill let him. I place my limit at 185 ciga­\nrettes a day, and I never exceed it. I have,\nhowever, been gradually compelled to raise\ntbe limit from tho simple box of 10, at\nwhich 1 began, to the number just men­\ntioned, as I acquired greater and greater\nfacility iu the use of the cigarette.\nThis shows what may lie done by constant\npractice and assiduous attention to the task\nundertaken. I set down these simple facts\nwith no desire to boast. It is not genius on\nmy part at all, but simply dogged persever\nence. Any ablelxslied man may accom­\nplish the same degree of moderate perfec­\ntion merely by putting his mind to It. —\nRobert Barr in Idler.
0bf04c975935d5e24fcaf0a6c768cf3a CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1882.319178050482 39.623709 -77.41082 Celery is the most difficult to grow\nae well as the most delicious of *ll\nour garden vegetables. It demands\ndeep, rich, mellow soil, and a tolera-\nbly moist season to produce it in per-\nfection; and requires more labor than\nany other crop grown. The seed may\nbe sown either under glass about\nApril 1, or in the open air as soon ns\nJaud can be made ready, say April\n15 to 20. It is a very small seed and\nmust not be sown deeply. We some-\ntimes eow with a machine in an onion\nfield, sowing celery in every sixth row,\nwith five rows of onions between.\nWhen the seed is sown in a hot bed,\nApril 1, it is a good plan to mulch\nthe surface to keep it moist, and avoid\nwatering till the seed is up. It is slow\ntp germinate and will not usually\ncome up before 15 days from sowing,\nsometimes even more time is required.\nThe plants in the seed-bed will need\nfrequent watering, but will be better\nwithout the glass except on frosty\nnights, and will be ready to set out\nfrom the 10th to the 20th of May.\nWhen it is to set celery out in\nthe field as late as June or July we\ntransplant from the seel bed to a\nplant bed about May 10th giving the\nthe plants about four inches each day\nand watering frequently in dry west ti-\ner till transplanted to the field, The\npiauts are set in the field io rows <\nfeet apart with 12 inches between the,\nbunches. The wide space between ihe\nrows is to admit of plenty of room for\nbanking in the autumn. Tbe eld En-\nglish fashion of planting in trenches\nHhd banking up in summer is entirely\ni.oi of date; much belter celery is\ngiown on level ground and banked\nonly tluee or four weeks belore it is\nharvested. In dry weather celery is\nmuch benefited by watering, but if the\nUnd has been prepared as itsbould be\nby plowing under about 20 or 30 cords\nper acre of good horse dung in the fall,\nthere will belittle need of watering,\nmanuring in the drill will notanawei\nwell for celery unless it is fine manure\napplied very early in the spring and\nwell mixed with the soil. If course\nor lumpy it will injure the tender\nroots.
0db8de1d6fe2dd0afd96c8b2923cd885 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.2581966896882 40.735657 -74.172367 First avenue; thence running (1) easterly par-\nallel with said First avenue one hundred feet;\nthence northerly parallel with North Fifth\nstreet fifty feet; thence westerly parallel with\nFirst avenue one hundred feet to North Fifth\nstreet; and thence along North Fifth street\nsoutherly fifty feet to the place of beginning.\nTho first described tract consists of lots 14\nto 47 both Inclusive, on block C on map of\nproperty of the Knickerbocker Life Insur-\nance ComjJhny, surveyed by Van Duyne A\nl'oung, surveyors, in 1886.\nThe second described tract, being the tract\nexcepted, consists of lots 12 and 13 In said\nblock on said map.\nTract 2—Beginning at the corner formed by\nthe intersection of the easterly line of North\nFifth street and the northerly line of Ablng-\nton avenue; thence running easterly along ths\nnortherly line of Abingdon avenue two hun-\ndred feet to the westerly line of North Fourth\nstreet. thence northerly a long the westerly\nlino of North street five hundred and\neight feet and fifteen hundredths of a foot to\nthe southerly line of Berkeley avenue; thence\n•westerly along tho southerly line of Berkeley\navenue two hundred feet to North Fifth street;\nand thence southerly along the easterly line of\nNorth Fifth street five hundred and eight\nfeet and fifteen hundredths of a foot to the\nplace of beginning.\nExcepting and reserving therefrom the fol-\nlowing described lands;\nTract l— Beginning at the corns former by\nthe intersection of the easterly line of North\nFifth street and the northerly line of Ablngton\navenue; thence easterly along the northerly\nline of Ablngton avenuo one hundred feet;\nthence northerly parallel with North Fifth\nstreet forty-five feet and sixty-five hundredths\nof a foot, ihence westerly parallel with Abing-\nton avenue one hundred feet to North Fifth\nstreet; northeasterly along the easterly lino of\nNorth Fifth street forty-five feet and sixty-\nfive hundredths of a foot to the place of be-\nginning.
3d140e9931552c7f4da35fe623e5886e SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.9520547628108 35.780398 -78.639099 linmnr of tho hov who lonced for adven-\nture, new scenes, and regular employment.'"'\nIf is preparations were 60on made, and in\nthe month of March, 1748, he 6ct out with\na young relative of Jairfax, for the wild\nlands of the West. 1 havo frequently visi-\nted the scenes of his sojourn in the valley ;\nand I never behold tbcm without realizing\nas i', were, the actual presence of the ar-\ndent boy, I sec him crossing the Shenan-\ndoah, at what is now Berry's Ferry, in\nAshby's Gap, and no trait of his appear-\nance is wanting. I sec the bright-face- d\nyouth with his curling hair, his clear eyes,\nLis erect form, and firm lips. lie carried\nhis rifle, surveying instruments, and knap-\nsack strapped behind his saddle keeping\na sharp lookout for Indians or other game;\n wended thus his way, toward 'Lord\nFairfax's,' as he calls it in his brief journal\nthat is, the old house of 'Green way to\nwhich I have referred. After a shoit so-\njourn here, where he laid down some sur-\nveys, and admired the splendid trees, he\nproceeded towards the Potomac. Ascen-\nding the banks ot that stream, he went op\nthe 'South Branch' valley ; and after sur-\nveying the region, returned to Grcenway\nCourt. Here, after his various expeditions,\nhe seems to have met Lord Fairfax, who\nhad removed west of the Blue Ridge, and\ntaken up his residence in the wilderness,\nnever to return to England more. It was\na wild life, and a singular character, which\nthe youthful Wasdiinjjton now lived and\nlouked upon. Lord Fairfax was a true\nNimrod. He had brought to the new world
010e5e8a955855d03ee07e6dd38fbc4e THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1885.815068461441 40.832421 -115.763123 dated October 17th, says:. The Cabinet\nand Cuiii;irMiiiiul discissions va tlip I\nlarjfi' reform lucns ares give rise to many j\nrumors. A recent editorial in »J«e Bos- i\nton Herald creates much coiniueijt. It\nbints that a loan to Mexico might per-\nbaps be raised ill the United States, the\nGovernment of the Istter country guar- i\nanteeing the interest I hereon, in cousi.l- !\neratiou of ceitaiu trade concession*. A I\nscheme for free trade between the two j\nltepublics, the Unit d Stat s to p.v\nMexico *J5,0(>0.00:i nnninlly, is bciug\ntalked up. Karopeatt inercautile in-\nterest.s tire opposed to the piojrct on tin-\nground that such a treaty would destroy\nall the European impoitiiig hu.sine. - s .\nAmong the Americans the plan is\nthought to be * wise one, as it would\nlead to a gieat increase iu trade, open,\njug up eutire Mexican uiaiket to\nAmer.cau luaiiu ucturers ami bunging\nthe two countries into very intimate uu.l\nIrfeuil.y relations. The Mexican edit¬\nors who recently traveled iu the United\nStates believe in a closer commercial\ncomn ciiou with tbnt country.\nThe removal of Judge Vincent, Chief\nJustice of the Supreme Court <.f New\nMexico, is still mi iiuiuiated topic iu of-\nfioial circles, aud the mole the matter is\nlooked into the blacker, it becomes.\nFraudulent luuU entries have formed h\nfruitful source of investigation l>y the\nCommissioner ol the General Land Ot-\nflce. and it is said that there have becu\ncrooked transactions all through the\nWest, wherever Government lands ure\nlocated. Iu regard to New M. xico, it\nhas becu discovered that one Iu. -grial\nAbeytia is put down as haviug acquired\nland iu 1K77 in New Mexico, ami of\nhaviug sold it in
354a55c922f169d59003bcc2bc0754bd THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.6734972361364 37.561813 -75.84108 amrrsvated by the presence of scrofulous matter,\nhave been radically cured in such numerous In-\nstances, in cverv settlement in the country, that tha\npublic do not need to be informed here that it is la\nmost cases a speciuc and absolute remedy.\nScrofulous poLon is one of the mont destrnctiv\nenemies of our race. Often, this unseen and nnfvlt\ntenant of the orzunism nndcmiinei the constitution,\nand invites the attack of enfcebliniior Cit.il disease,\nwithout ex'itinir a suspicion of its presence. Again,\nit seems to breed infection throuirhout the body, ami\nthen, on some favorable occasion, rapidly develois\ninto one or other of its hideous forms, cither on th\nsurface or anions the vitals. In the Litter, tuber-\ncles may be suddenly deposited in the luutrs or\nheart, or tumors format in the liver. These facta\nmake the occasional use of the BarnapariUa u a\npreventive, advisable.\nIt is a mistake to suppose that so ton? as erup-\ntions or humors appear, there must be no scrofulous)\ntaint. These forms of derauireinent may never\noccur, and yet the vital forces of the body be so re-\nduced bv ita subtle airencv, as materially to impair\nthe health and shorten the duration of hf8. It is a\ncommon error, also, that scrofula is strictly heredi.\nMry. It does, indeed, descend from parent t" child,\nbut is also enirendered in persons born of purs)\nblood. Low living, indiirestion, fool air, licentious\nhabits, nucleanliuess, and the depressing; vices eren.\nerallv, produce it. Weakly constitutions, where no\nfortified by the most constant and judicious care,\nare peculiarly liable to it. Yet the roiwst, also,\nwhose turbid blood swells the veins with aa appar-\nently exuberant vitality, are often eootaminuiet,\nand on the road to ita consemienees. Indeed, a\nciasa or condition can depend on immunity from\nit, nor feel iusbasible to tbe importance of an effec-\ntual remedv.
338c214ccc8c693a5212502dac2cf6c1 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1912.7991802962456 39.456253 -77.96396 \\\\ v on i (tin side. and, I hellevo, tiicm J\non thi! other side, con ray that obovc |\ntho temptations of political do he, !\nabove ii o strenuous feellng3 evok* d\nhy thi most exciting session, that in\ntho hivh position you ociupy, the sec¬\nond highest j-oeiticn In the gift of tho\nstate, that yon huve boon fair, honest,\ncapable and ennrtvous, and It tho*o is\nany ono in this ecnatc* who can com¬\nplain of any unfair treatment or ruling\nor discourteous act which you have\ncommitted in these days in which you\nhave presided over this senate, I have\nnever heard a rel'crcnce to it. I do not\nbelieve that any one feels that you\nhave boon otherwise than the menly\nman, the dignified pre-.idinglofTie.'.r and\nthe courteous gentleman iu overyti *>*»\nwhich you have done and said in this\n ion. 1donotknow,in my tcme-\nwhat. long experience i«i these mat¬\nters, where a presiding ofllc^r hr.s had\na more trying experience than, h.v/e\nrou iri thi^ session. A senatw evenly\ndivided, differing in thought an:', opin¬\nion, naturaLiy on tho one si do e.ipect-\nir»L5 things which they rhould not have\nand ou the other side cer.tkdpe.tfug c-o-\ntion which, Bubrnittod to cold. calm\nreason, could not be permitted. 1\nknow of no one better than yourself\nwho could have fulfilled the duties of\nhonestly end fairly presiding between\ntheee evenly balanced powers.\nAnd now, ?rlr. President, as a token\nof the high regard In which you ara\nhold by tho members of this? senato,\nrepublican and democrat, I am asked\nby them to present to you thl.i sliver\nsalver, and, If you will allow r:.«> to\nsay, fclr, it is a very beautiful or >.
20805b6a28213749521480368f60bdbb THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1886.8123287354135 40.832421 -115.763123 I>»eit tbia mean ilml ho i» i (i ivernor\nwould hi«n a tncHatire comprding the\nrancher* nnd atockm. - i i of El!io comity\nto build foiicea along the line of tin-\nCentral PitciAc ruilroid? if ho wimtdo\nth« run< her< uikI atocktnen ol K ko\ncounty tliink of it? Or doe* it me.iU\ntb.it ha would *i.;o the Mi i i i Uill ve¬\ntoed by Governor .Vl.i>n«? M-vither* 01\nthe Miner* and \\t -o i.hiic« Uai i n of\ntilorey e mnty, wlint think y<>n of it V\n"Eternal vigilntioe in the price of Lib¬\nerty" no* a- ill the inlaty ptat. Arc yon\nwilling to bin I yottraelve* hand nod foot\nby «l< cling thin millionaire Governor ol\ntbia Mrttfr / Siau I by the mm who Btood\nby yoj th« hour of your direat di«-\ntri'<i and depoait ycitr Uillota lor Jewitt\n"W. Adama on the aecon I of Xorrliilier,\nDid Mi. Rieveimon nieiti tbut if lb\nttiltoitd corp If..tiou* o. til ia Mtitle lol .\nb ed meant re* through 'lie Le^i»l*ti)rc\nr< It aaing tln-m from th-ir jnat obli«a\nlion* to the Ktntc in the mitltr ol\n'rii|bl« b rd fne» tlnit be *t>nl<! catic\ntion the in'finU'O* nieaenh-? Wlmt d<\nthe toiling ma** M thilik »l thin |>r>>| o-i\n?loot I* Mr. Rtevenaon owned l»*ly\n. nd aotil by the corporation* thr.t are\ndrindio|i tlia life blood out of the peo.\nhieofihitKlal*in orlerth.it a few\nUiay roll In leianr end wealth? Ciliteiio\n»f Nevada, ana*' r then question* nt Ibe\nballot bos by voting for Adaina nO<t\nBi.ll.
f5c3d9c495b26bb323c4617e9c0adcf1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.3483606241145 41.681744 -72.788147 objection to a continuation of the in-\nquiry. Well, well, and again, well. If\nthere is one cabinet officer whom\nPresident Coolidge has been strongly\n"for" it has been Secretary Mellon.\nHis suggestions have been accepted by\nthe president as perfect and, especial-\nly when they first appeared, as Im-\npossible of being improved upon. Of\ncourse the Mellon proposals did not\ncome through .with all the eclat pre-\ndicted, but that is another matter.\nThe Interesting point at the moment\nis why this attitude of complacency\ntoward such an inquiry on the part of\nthe republican leaders? Have they\nsomething up their sleeve; do they\nthink that the investigation wil prove\nsuch, a fiasco and that Secretary Mel-\nlon and the bureau will come out with\nsuch flying colors that tho \nwill be discredited? Or do they feel\nthat the attitude they have held up to\ndate namely one of appearing to block\nall investigations has been an unpop-\nular attitude in the people's sight?\nDo they fear that further objection to\nthrowing some light on the way things\nare done at Washington under this\nadministration will give the impres-\nsion of being nfrald of the develop-\nments which might come were the In-\nvestigations carried further?\nOr and the thought is( a revolu-\ntionary one, scarce believable have\nthey reached the conclusion that they\nare tired of standing by President\nCoolldge's friends; that they don't\ncare if they show the people in how\nlittle esteem they, these leaders, hold\nthe chief executive; have) they decid-\ned that, at this last minute, Presldeot-
02a0d2f59e13c0d95a5d3d2ecd115839 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.7082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 In this office, as we write, thero are but\ntwo left of all who a month ago were em-\nployed in the editorial, counting, and com-\nposing rooms, and our pressman is down\nwith the fever. Strangers to the office, as\nto the business, are attending to our af¬\nfairs, whilc.tho only, editor left on duty\nalternates,-through 10 hours a day, he-\ntweou his desk and a case. This is our\npersonal inoasure of the dreadful opidem-\nic, and surely it is a sad one. Our experi¬\nence is one. we will never forget, and it is a\ncommon one. The fifth epidemic we hnve\npassed through, Uiis surpasses them all in\nthe horrors it has uncovered. Parepts\nhave deserted children, and children par-\nrents, husbands their wives, but not one\nwife a husband. Men have dropped dead\non the streets, while others died neg¬\nlected. only to be discovered by the death-\nspreading gases from their bodies. Minis¬\nters of the GtJ^pel, carrying messages of\npeace, hurrying from huuse to house,have\ntiad their weary feet arrested and their\nwork staid by the pestilence that walks in\nthe noonday as at night The priest, ad¬\nministering the extreme unction, and the\nbride of Christ, piping the death-damp\nfrom tho forehead of those whoso friends\nand kinfolks arc far away, are almost para¬\nlyzed in the sacred act, and die even before\nwe know they are sick. The business of\ntho hour i& tha succor of the sick, the\nburial of tho dead, and the care of the\nneedy living? 'Thelast words of those who\nare well are at night farewolls to the dead,\nand the first in the morning: "Who lives\nand who has died?"
2e5e3140c5d6d20bb0c6be88748efdce EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.1164383244545 39.745947 -75.546589 Haring shown that the alarming retardation exists,\n8ct us pass to the causes which, Mr. Twltmyer says,\nhave caused It. They include absence, late entrance,\n111 health, curable defects, lack of parental Interest,\noutside interests, slow mentality, malnutrition, physi­\ncal dofecta. the use of tobacco, lack of application and\nforeign parentage, ft will bo sorn at a glance that\nmany of those causes am removable. Absence, late\nentrance, curable defects, lack of parental interest,\noutside Interests, malnutrition, the use of tobacco and\nlark of application all may be done away with if tho\nparents will co-operate with tho Board of Education,\nSuperintendent Twitniyer and the other school officials.\nIll health, slow mentality, physical defects and foreign\nparentage will bn more difficult I« eliminate as retarda,\nlinn causes, but It certainly will be possible to reduce,\n co-operation nnd mental stimulation, their evil ef­\nfects to a minimum. It is a crime against childhood\nnnd the community for a parent to fail to do .his or\nher duty in these respects and to fall to second heart­\nily the work that, our educational system is doing.\nOne of tho Important things recommended by Super­\nintendent Twltmyer Is that the school children »hall\nhe put. under medical supervision. That Is done In\nmany other cities and the results have been beneficial\nnot only to tho children but also to tho communities\nat large. If such supervision will make ailing Children\nwell, cure defects, stimulate slow mentality, restore\nnutrition to normal and lead the fioys addicted to Iho\nuse of tobacco t« abandon its use, it. will be money\nwell spent to employ such medical supervisors.
00cbab33b7b6cc07adcbcb3e524b8782 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.1082191463724 46.187885 -123.831256 Since the flood is gone at Salem\nmany comparisons are made with the\nhigh water ot 18G1, and many who\nwitnessed both freshets estimate that\nmore water was carried this year than\nin the other flood, although by their\nmeasurements the water was not so\nhigh by from 18 to 20 inches. Others\ngive it as tlieir opinion that the pres:\nent flood lacked only a foot of being\nas high as tho former one.\nIndependence people heard a cry\nfor help Tuesday night that touched\ntheir hearts. It wr.s the voice of a\nman from the middle of the river,\nshouting for assistance. No boats\nwere at hand, and the appeal could\nnot be answered. Soon the cry grew\nfainter and fainter, as the current car-\nried him on. It is thought he was\nclinging to a log, as an object of that\ndescription was carried by while tho\nvoice heard. As nobody has been\nrecovered, it is probable the man\ndrifted with his log to shallow water\nand escaped to the bank.\nThe steamer Lvfline arrived in\nPortland last Friday night a few min-\nutes before G o'clock from the Cascade\nLocks with 100 passengers and the\nmails. Beyond Tho Dalles, the road\nlieing open to Omaha, a double line of\nsteamboats with barges has been put\non the upper river route to transfer\ntho freight and passengers. At first\nthe steamer Harvest Queen mado the\nrun from The Dalles to tho upper\nCascades, bnt the blockade has caused\nan increase ot bnsiness, resembling\nthat of old times, so that not only\nwas the steamer I). S . Baker placed\non the route to run in conjunction\nwith the Queen, but also a number of\nlarge barges, which are to bo loaded\ndown with freight and towed to the\nCascades.
09970bb314b38b2413faa5a4fe6a0cfb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.8671232559614 40.063962 -80.720915 tho National Road. about two and a half miles\ncast of the city of Wheellug; beginning at astike\non the east tide of the said road, and thesouthwest\ncorner of a tractolland on the 20th day of\nJuly, IBM, conveycrt by Adam Fitchner and wife\nto Jacob M. Wardcnjithenco north 2tf.45 west\n16.17 poles; thence north CG.lS east 412$ poles;\nthence south 21 east 15.70 poles to the line of the\nland conveyed a* aforoald to said Warden:\nthcncc south 01.52 west 40j* poles with the line\nof the land conveyed as aforesaid to Eald Warden\nto the beginning, together with tho right\nof way along a lane twelve feet wldo runulug\nwith and adjoining the northwest line of a parcel\nof land, (near the laud conveyed by said deed\nof trim) on tbo 20th day ol July, 1852. conveyed\nby Adam Fitchner aud wife to Edward M. \nalso tbo right to tbe use of the large spring\nin another and contiguous part of said farm,\nwith the further right to lay water pipes from\nsaid spring to any of tho land couveyed by said\ndeed of trust. But all subject to tho concurrent\nand Joint Interest of certain otber persons, spedlied\nin said deed Irom (aid Fitchner and wife to\nsaid Edward M. Norton: tbo said property above\nconveyed being tho same which was conveycd\nto the said John Henry Tlemann by George W.\nRobinson and wifo by deed dated January 22,\n1800, and of record In the land records of Ohio\ncounty, in Deed Book No. 55, page 131.\nTerms ok Sai.E -Ono third, or a* much more\nas tbo purchaser may elect, cash In hand on the\nday of sale, and the balauco in two equal Installmonts,\npayable respectively in six and twelve
00dd57970b3802a543a9ea4578b2259c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.0999999682901 39.745947 -75.546589 One of the best installées of what thé\nstatue of auy great muu should lie—at\nany rate, in the respect of its situation,\nits perspective with regard to other me­\nmorials iuul the local estimation itt\nwhich it is held—is the statue of Long­\nfellow at Portland, by Mr. Franklin\nSimmons. It is a dignified seated figure\nof the poet in bronze, occupying a con­\nspicuous site in the best part of the\ntown, in the middle of a square which\nis now known as Longfellow squure.\nThe statue was raised a few years ago\nby a fund solicited through a wide field,\nhut chiefly obtained, I believe, iu Port­\nland. The, sculptor was chosen through\nthat curious local spirit which has nf-\nfccted unfavorably many of our archi­\ntectural and other monuments. He was\n selected because he was a\n“Maine man,” though he hud never\nseen the poet. However, the result in\nthis case seems to have been happy. The\nstatue has much beauty, und the like­\nness is said to be excellent.\nThis statue stands in the poet* native\n■ town, as is entirely projier. It may ap­\npeal every day to the eyes of thousands\nof young people, lionI very much as he\nwas born, who should see iu it the sug­\ngest ion of possibility for them. Poetic­\nally It makes 'the stronger faucy the\ngenius or spirit of the man still linger­\ning among the scenes of his youth, and\nit symbolizes the satisfaction which ev­\nery man feels to have his name remem­\nbered in his native town.—J. E. Cham­\nberlin in Atlantic.
0f8911fe55a87ef4620ec7840c849ae1 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.8237704601802 39.290882 -76.610759 City aiul County of Js'ew York, ss.? Moses\nH. tJrhmeU, of the city of New York, being du-\nI. sworn, dotli depose and say, that he lias read\nthe depositions of J. D. Stevenson and others,\ncontained in the Standard of this morning, and\nthat the same, as far as they implicate this de-\nponent, are untrue; that this deponent never did,\ndirectly or indirectly, employ the said James B.\nGlentworth to go to Philadelphia or any other\nplace, for the purpose of procuring persons to\ncome on to this city for the purpose of voting;\nnor has he any knowledge or belief that he was\nso employed by any person or persons; this de-\nponent remembers that previous to the fall elec-\nlion of 1838, there was a report in this city,\nwhich was believed by this deponent, that the\nLoco Foco party of Philadelphia and other pla-\nces, intended to send to this city persons not en-\ntitled to vote, for the purpose of voting their\nticket; and that it was therefore deemed \nble by this deponent and others, that persons\nwho were well acquainted with the residents of\nPhiladelphia and other places, should attend our\npolls, for the purpose uf detecting any such ille-\ngal voters, if any such should appear; that this\ndisponent never had any conversation with said\nGlentworth in relation to his going to Philadel-\nphia, nor did he even know tli.it he laid gone to\nPhiladelphia until some time after he had gone;\nthat the first knowledge of deponent that he was\nin Philadelphia arose from reports or letters in-\ntimating that the said Glentworth was about\nemploying persons to conic on to this city for\nthe purpose of voting; that this deponent, imme-\ndiately after hearing such reports, was consulted\nby R. M Blatohford, Simeon Draper, Jr., and\nJames Uowen, as to the most effectual mode ot\npreventing the consummation of such plan, if\nany such was contemplated by the said J. B.\nGlentworth ?and that thereupon the letter fol-\nlowing was sent to the said J. B . Glentworth.
0d1578793ce819e0c475c46e1208c8e9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2616438039067 39.745947 -75.546589 I, James F. Price, Mayor of the city of Wilmington, being desirous of co-operating with the Federal and State governments In all respects, deem\nIt wise in the present crisis and in this formal manner to assure all residents of foreign birth who reside in this city and who may be perturbed\nby the fact that the United States has become actively involved in the great European war, that they need fear no invasion of their personal or\nproperty rights so long as they go peaceably about their business and conduct themselves in a law-abiding manner.\nI may add that the United States has never, In any war, confiscated the property of any foreign resident unless such confiscation was justi­\nfied fully by his own hostile acts, and there is no reason to assume that there will be any departure from that policy in the present emergency.\nI take this formal means of to all foreign-born residents of the city of Wilmington that^ so far as my official and personal influence may be\nexercised, and so far as my official position as the head of this municipality will enable me to control the policies of the several departments,\nauch foreign-born residents will be protected In the ownership of their property and money and that they will be free from personal molesta­\ntion, so long as they obey the laws of the United States of America and of the State of Delaware and the ordinances of the city of Wilmington.\nI also urge the native-born citizens of this city to treat with courtesy and consideration all such foreign-born residents so long as they\nshall so conduct themselves as to deserve such courtesy and consideration, and to maintain, In the present crisis, a calm and considerate atti­\ntude toward all men, women and children, without regard to their nationality.
197763c485d04cbd263f9dcaaab6eada THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1885.3082191463725 39.743941 -84.63662 New York, June 11, 1884. Dear Forbes:\nWhen I promised to write you during my\nleave I hardly expected to shower, such\nfavors upon you within a fortnight after\nleaving you in Denver. But the fact is, I\nhave, as usual, a request to make. Don't\nfeel in. your pocket for your check-boo- k,\nfor this time I am not going to ask a loan.\nI met an old friend of mine at a reception\nlast evening, Mrs. Harwood, whose hus-\nband was Major in the Seventh Cavalry.\n8he played the dickens with my heart ten\nsummers ago, and I have not seen her\n: since. But in the interval she has mar-\nried, become a widow, and, if reports are\nto be trusted, has broken a dozen hearts.\nWell I I did not start out to write you the\nhistory of my first love affair, or the fate\nof the heroine, but to tell you that Mrs.\n is going to Colorado for the sum-\nmer, and that I have suggested the Park to\nher if she wants the best of times in the sim-\nplest of ways. Why I did it l ean not im-\nagine, for I have heard of her as a belle of\nthe gayest New York set, and she does not\nlook suited to Arcadian simplicity. But\nshe seized .upon my proposal; said she\nwas leaving the "beaten road" in order to\n(ret just the attractions I held oat, and to\nthe Park she seems bound to go. PossiWy\nwhen she reaches Denver she will decide\non some other place, but my knees are\nknocking together lest she may carry out\nher present plan, and hate me as its author.\nNow for the favor. Will you, when you\nvisit the hotel, look over the register for\nMrs. Alice Harwood's name, and, if you\never find it, will you look her up?
14dc07f3a0580cb8c2e35afba7a799e9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.8397259956876 40.063962 -80.720915 A singular explosion occurred thla\nlornlng in a shaft leading to the Lake in\ninnel, which resulted in the aerloua\nJury ot four of the workmen engaged m\ni excavating dirt. Two ol the men\nad descended to work when they dls* hi\njvered gas bubbling up through the\naler which had leaked through the m\nurblutc. They signalled to be hoisted tt\np. Thereupon their places wore\niken by Thomas Jackson and Jauiea\nrlbbln, who, after reaching the bottom,\nIso signalled the holsters above. When\nItbln thirty feet of the top they caused\nle bucket to be stopped and one of\nlemlita match to see If the atmos*\nhere was really affected by (lie-damp,\n^mediately the gas ignited, followed\ny mu explosion like tiring or cannon,\nrlbhen was blown out of the bucket fa\nud If 11 to the bottom of tbe shaft, N\n JiKlksoU. buvini? H tlrm hnltl. hulri M\nla poaltlon hikI was drawn up lo the h(\nurface. lioth were severely burned, J.\nut Orlbben received additional inju- (6\nihb irnui tlie full which threaten to ui\nrove fatal. Two men hi the mouth of\nle shaft were blown several feet, and ec\nlieir facea nud hands burned. One of a|\noem looking into the abaft at tlie tltne ai\n'je match was lighted, aaya he saw a L\nauie run down the abaft before the ei\nxploslnn, and he Inatlnctlvely turned el\nis head away, but was severely burn- V\nil nevertheless. Orlbben was drawn ft\nf> aa noun aa possible and his injuries It\nromptly attended to by physicians and si\nis family. The frame work was dam- di\nRed but the pan was expended in the 1«\nKplosion, and the excavating will be tl\njntluued. r(
22c9d128454b1a0188907671c3598944 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.6671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 tern loft In doubt, but nothing new or im\n|H»rtnnt was revealed. After some discussloi\nof a proposition to tp and ascertain wliethe\nit wan possible to distinguish persons in tH\nroom In which the explosion t<H>k place\nwhen the shutters were shut, II was decldei\nnot to do no, the jury agreeing to take th\ntestimony on that polni of Prosecuting Al\ntornev Jordan, who hod In the cmirw uf hi\nInvcyligutliMiH visited the house and plane)\nhimself In the position occupied by Hhafle\nwhen he claims to have seen a man and w«i\nmnn in the room. Mr. Jordan considered i\nu physical Impossibility to see any object ii\nthe room with the shutters closed.\nIt took the jury hut a short time to arrlv\nat a verdict, which was rendered.\nThe verdict is that "Maud Shepard came 1\nher death by the explosion of a carbon oi\nlamp, and that no one Is to'blame, or no rc\nsensibility attached to any one."\nThe verdict will probably not satisfy tlios\npersons who have persisted from the first ii\n tiiat something was wrong, Th«\nshort time occupied iuarrlvitigatthodecisioi\nwith such a large array of testimony, and n\nmuch of !lt conflicting, seems to mark th\nwork of the iury as superficial. And the in\nformal way In which the deliberations wer\ncarried on prevented the l>cst results of th\nexamination. Several of the jurors.two ii\nparticular.evinced a desire to get through a\nquickly as possible without regard to the rc\nsuits, which looked singular under the cir\neumstanres, When Mr. Jordan directed hi\ninquiries to ascertaining whether a mancouli\nhave escaped from Maud's room without be\ning observed, by climbing out of the fron\nwindow of the adjoining room upon the roo\nof a small portico, and thence by the lattlc\nwork to the around, one of the jurors referre<\nto asked, "What good does it do to ask al\nabout the whole house?" It leemi unfortu\nnote that this disposition should haveseeme<\nto prevent that thorough and exhaustive in\nVNtlgation which alqne would have *atlsfle<\nthe minds of the public that the verdlc\nreached was a true one.
0fc63466af4040af3af48138f6bcdfff THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.4671232559615 40.063962 -80.720915 On Account of tho Christian Endeavor\nconvention at Bclhtlro, Mrs. W, I». 1'or-\ntor will not bo hero on Friday overling\nto organize a primary tonchen' union\nto study and use improved methods fur\nprimary work in tho Sunday schools.\nMrs I'ortor is BUporiiitondont of tho pri-\nmarr department of tho Ohio Sunday\nSchool Association, and will como later.\nA. 15. Gilmoro wrote a letter to (.ion*\neral Asa \\V. Bunnell tho other day,\ncongratulating him on his nomination,\nand rucoived a nice letter in reply.\nGiliuore livod in SpringUold, Burundi's\nhomo, for many jean.\nIlev. S. J. Bogle and llov. S. B. Groves\nofficiated at tho fuueral of Mm. L . W .\nJones yesiorday afternoon. Tho pall-\nbearers wore 15. Groves, llobert Car-\nmicbael, H. Barrand George Bottlos.\nTho L'nitod Prosbytoriaus expect to\nre-paper and paint their church aud put\nin now seats before they olect u pastor,\nwhich will not bo before August. The\nchurch will bo closed during July.\nTho Broadway paving case, set for\n in tho circuit court, has been\ncontinued until tho caso of John C.\nllayneve. tho nty has boon Bottled ia\ntho supremo court.\nJohn Pollock has bceu elected chair*\nmart of tho Bolinout county Kepublicau\nceutral committee, W. T. Uewettson\nsecretary and E. G . Amos treasurer.\nMisses Anna and Maiuie Boyd, daugh¬\nter* of Mr. and Mr?, E. C . liovd, leave\nthis morning for Cabell county, \\V. Vu.,\ntoHpeud the summer with thoir uncle.\nMm. William Mann, who has been\ntick with typhoid fever soveral weeks,\nis getting along nicely. She is now able\nto nit up a little each day.\nMrs. J . A . McKinnoy and daughter,\nElla. of Denver, Col., who liavo been\nvisiting relatives hereabouts, loit vester-\nday lor Pennsylvania.\nMrs. Hoffman, residing at Colerain,\nwas knocked down by a cow and hail\nher arm broken. She is tho mother of\nWilliam Hoffman.\nA large number of Martin'* Ferry\nnooplo will attend tho Christian En¬\ndeavor convention at licllairo to-day\nand to-morrow.
5581ba592d1aa3c47734056711604a7c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1913.7876712011669 58.275556 -134.3925 Fake Wireless Heroism\nOne continually hears of the wonder\nful braveiy di* played by the intiepid\noperators of the Marconi Wireless Sys¬\ntem. In fart a glowing reporiorial re¬\nview of any wreck or accideDt at sea is\nhardly complete without the stereo¬\ntyped rcfereuce to the nobility of the\nbra^e wireless operator who stuck to\nhis poet until the last boat had left the\nship, ad lib-ad uauseaui. The truth of\nthe matter is that the wireless operator\nusually occupies one of the safest\nrooms on the ship, being on the upper\ndeck, and therefore hnTiu# I he Hi>t\nand best chance to escape any dan« r,\ne^en if he does remain until the lust.\nWot so with the engineer, stoke? s, oilers\nand water tenders, who are down in\nthe eugiue room or ttoke hole, and\nwho likewise remain at their posts un¬\ntil the very last hope is gone, but who\nrarely any eco'.iums therefor.\nThe wit pleas operator ban to stay at\nhie post. It be did uot, he would cease\nto have any excuse for his existence, as\nthe only benefit to the ship and its pas¬\nsenger* is at a time of danger aod re\nmain at his post sending out full de\ntails of the disaster until i-uch time as\nhe must take to the small boats. That\nis the reason the government insists\nupon wireless operators being placed\non vessels. The captain aod orew\nstand by their posts. The soldiers and\nthe pailois have been doing it heroic-\nally for centuries past. The wireless\nopera* or would be a pretty poor speci¬\nmen it he fell d: * u iu tiuie of danger,,\naucl all thi» tot a! i.ut hit* b areiy nmy\nbe good publicity as a stock jobbing\nschtme, but it certainly makes the old\nmariuet s laugh.. Railway and Marine\nNews.
27ba554d9cd1130d706ff17f84063603 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.132513629579 43.798358 -73.087921 which have escaped the ken ofthe most\ninquisitive. Nor do we expect to approach\nt! near to the moon or the other planets\nas to tell what are the trees, or the birds Jc\nanimals, which may there grow, or live\nand move. We leave such extraordinary\nfeats to those who are more visionary, cr\nmore during than we are. But we 'hope\nand intend to keep up the character and\nspirit ofthe Magazine, in presenting sol-\nid and useful articles, which may be in-\nstructive to a portion of our readers, and\nnot considered wholly unimportant to li-\nterary men. We consider the whole Uni-\nted States as our field, though not ours ex-\nclusively; and we ask the favors of perso\noftaste and science, to communicate im-\nportant facts, and natural & work?\nof art, for the benefit of all our friends\nAs republicans we feel that we are of the\nsame family as those in the south and in\nthe wrest as friends of improvement or\ngood morals and good learning, we wish\nalso to be considered of the same family --\nIfwe can do anything by our labors to\nincrease and strengthen this sentiment and\nfeeling, we shall be ready to do the work.\nWe would call the attention of our pres-\nent subscribers to the terms of the Maga.\nzine, and to the notice in our last number\nrelating to the subject. It is very impor-\ntant for us to know who propose to con-\ntinue taking the Magazine, and to receive\nthe very small sum charged for it in ad-\nvance.
a76f3b9acc6980304ca99b187e754496 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.3410958587012 35.780398 -78.639099 plowed as close to the ditch as you can ; then\neommence and plow around the hill, throw-\ning it all down hill of course plowing close\nto what Imp already been plowed ; continue\nplowing round till you finish in the middle\nof the hill, when the land may bo said to bo\nflushed up. If it be planted in corn, couv\ninfnoe at the bottom of the hill and lay off\nthe rows around the hill, but not all round,\nthe name n.s it was plowed. Run the first\none .oiuid tho bottom of the hill, and the\nnext one will bo a little shorter, the others\nwill drop back a little, till the short rows on\ntop will work out at the centre of the bill.\nHills cultivated in this way will not wash ;\nfor if water was to get past one row, it\nwould be retained in the next. If the land\nis plowed deep, thre need be no fear of its\nproducing well. Hills require deeper plow-\ning than level land, as we require them to\nretain moisture, which they cannot do the\nway they are usually scratched about 3 inches\ndeep. The first rata that comes washes all\ntho loc8C earth to the bottom of the hill, and\nleaves the corn standing on the bare clay,\nsickly in appearance and diminutive in size.\nYou tpcak to a farmer about it, and he will\ntell you it don't pay for tho work on it in dry\nseasons, and in wet seasons his low grounds\nare inundated. This is all his own fault in\ncultivating his hills. Never use less than a\ntwo-hors- e
4b8a56d7bf2478dddb77fd9a5388714a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.3219177765093 40.063962 -80.720915 Tbla day camo the plaintiff* by tboir attorney\n,nd upon motion of tho plaiutllTa the attaehmu\nn aaid cauao Is docketed. The object of sal\nultbelnirto recover from the defendant eight\nnd 91-100 dollars with interest thereon from tb\nOth day of doptember, 1870, until payment an\nbe coats of tho subject of this suli\nnd to enbject to ths payment th?re<\nhe propertr attached; and tho order of altacl\nDentin slid caiohavlne been thla day rotun\nd by tho tiherlff of this county, executed b\nBvylnj; upon tho right title. Interest and ei\nate of tho defendant in lot No. 38 and In poi\nlon« of lots Not. 39,17 and 30, on the wmI aid\nif Main street, between Adams and Waahlogto\ntreuts. la the city of Whee lng. Ohio count)\nVsst more fully described in the ri\noturn of the Sheriff on said order of al\nachmcnt; and the defendant not harln\nteen served with a copy of aald order of attacl\naent or with procesa lu said suit and it appeal\nng from an affidavit filed therein, that said d»\nnudant is not a resident of tho State of Wei\nrirglnla, it Is ordered by th« Court that said di\nendant is requlrred to appear within one mom\nIter the date of the flrst publication or thlsoi\nler, nd do what is necessary to protect his li\nerest: and this order shall be published an\noated aa roquired in section 18 of chapter IS\nf the Code of Wcat Virginia, concerning oi\nera i t publication.\nAnd this matter Is continued.\na copy tustc.
22155e02a7380d98a63832d61a436dd0 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1880.1953551596337 42.217817 -85.891125 The social habit of drinking at bar?.\nwhere cash member of a party, having\nbeen 'treated" by another, considers it\nnecessary to treat every other member,\nhas at la3tuttiacted tLe attention of law-\nmakers. Tho Iowa Legislcturo has a\nbill beforo it to abolish tho custom and\nmake it a punishable oifense; and, al\nthough such a proposition can never\nbecome a law, it is significant as show\ning public dislike of a custom which no\ndrinking man wants to bo the ilrst to\ndisregard. This habit of standing treat\nis the cause of more physical and mental\ndi&comlort than every other convivial\ncustom combined; a respectable mnu\nwho feels tho need of a glass of wine or\nspirits and there aro hundreds of thou-\nsands of such men, in spite of all that\nthe temperanco people say to the con-\ntrary approaches a bar, and finds, per-\nhaps, several acquaintances who aro\ndrinking, who invite him to j'oin\nthem. When ho has dono so, and drank\nall he came for, his spirit of independ-\nence prompts him to return the invita-\ntion, which is accepted by the others,\nbecause it would seem discourteous to\nrefuse ; then those who have been treat-\ned make haste to return tho compliment\nfor fear of seeming mean, and the end\nis that four or five men, each of whom\ncame for a single glass of liquor, retire\nwitn several times as mucn as they\nneeded or wanted. A eillier.habit does\nnot exist among sensible men. If a\nman's reputation is so feeble that its ex-\nistence depends upon tho price of sev\neral glasses of liquor that nobody wants,\nit is not worth saving. Tho man who\nhas not the moral courago to drink what\nho wants, and only tbat, gets far moro\ninjury than benefit from his potations.\nNew York Herald.
540542b443d2a2ff745357287a2142a1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 The Financial Trouble# in Xe w York.\nXbw York, August Hi..The Com¬\nmercial says the market is calmer to¬\nday than might be expected. Until It is\nknown what amount of certificates is\nout, there will doubtles be great cau¬\ntion in lending all but firms In the\nbest standing. If it were known that\nthe issue readied the largest possible\nfigures (twenty-eight and a half mil¬\nlions) there would bo severe contract ion,\nfor it woitid then be clear there must be\nheavy losses and failures somewhere.\nThe probable extent of the issue will not\nbe known until it can be ascertained\nwhether anything can bo obtained from\nKetchuui iSi Co., in compensation. It is\nunderstood that Morris Kctclium has\nstated his condition able to pay fifty\ncents oil the dollar of his liabilities.\nWo are not assured whether that is \nposed to include the liabilities on ac¬\ncount of Edward Kctchuiu's forgeries.\nWe hear of some cases of tho selling of\ncollaterals, it is rumored that a firm\nin the stock and gold business has\nfailed.it requires confirmation.\nThe Post states that tho losses of\nKetchem& Son, by abstraction of bonds\nand other securities, is two-and-a-lialf\nor tlirco millions. The name of the\nfirm was only used as a deception by\nKetchum, and. that on the day of his\nflight, when he obtained on a check\nthree hundred thousand dollars.\nThe losses of Mr. Graham will foot\nup over a million dollars. i\nBrokers and others possess shares in\nthe losses of from forty to one hundred\nand fifty thousand dollars. Four mil¬\nlion dollars is the lowest statement of\ntho total loss, it is thought the figures\nwill finally show.
8b6f43ab2b43c7cdeda85023c6e93831 THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1858.8671232559614 32.36431 -88.703656 of the State. The Charleston and Mem-\nphis Road passes along near our Northcn\nliorder, cntring the State in Tishomingo,\ntraverses it about thirty miles. And we\nhave in progress, in addition to all those,\nthe Southern Roud, passing through the\nCapital and intersecting tho State from\neast to west. Thus we now have roads in\njirogress, which when finished will bring\ninto almost every part of the State, the fa-\ncilities of social and commercial inter-\ncourse. But none of these roads are yet\ncompleted, or even so near their comple-\ntion, as to give but partially the public fa-\ncilities for which their construction was\noriginally undertaken nor are they yet so\nfur advanced as to give remunerating divi-\ndends to those who have so nobly embarked\ntheir capital in them. The question which\nnow presents itself for your consideration\nantl solution is, how can these various\nroads lie coiupleteal, in any \nlength of time and their betefits tliffused\nto the whole people of the State.\nI have reflected anxiously upon this\nsubject ; and am constrained to say to\nyou, that I can see no means for their\nearly completion but by the interpo-\nsition of State aid. The\nand patriotic, portion of the people, who\noriginally entered upon these great works,\nhave exhausted their means, and the cred-\nit of the difl'erent companies is so much\naffected by the panic nnd distrust of the\nfinancial crisis of last season, as to be val-\nueless for any useful or practical purpose.\nThe bonds of the different companies are\nin some instances entirely unsalable ; and\nin others where they can be sold it is at\nthe most ruinous rate of discount. Thus\nmaking tho roads to coat much more than\ntheir true cash value and in the end in-\nevitably throwing a heavy loss upon the
27e08f8a64ea203f1a35b9747ef04118 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.5027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 cuaaing the sad event.\nMr. HaroM Snmmera, a lawyer of tbia\ncity, said in an interview with a Republi-\ncan reporter thia morning: I waa quite\nwell acquaint?!? with Getteuu His name\nia Charles (iotteau. During the winter of\n1878-7'J he had a de«k in my otlice lu thia j\ncity and attempted to practice law here.\nHe had but little businena unit seemed\nvery poor. Though it was wiuter he went\nabout with only a thin summer coat on.\nlie waa not a foreigner, as reported, but 1 8\nthiua waa of French descent. I uaed to t\nregard him as a little insane in that respect.\nHe had aoiue theory in regard to the e\nmeanirg of the Bible and cfoimed it waa t\nnot generally uuderatood aright. Some t\ntimua he would a*t the whole day iu his\nc Dice and read the When 1 entered (]\nthe otlice I sometimes found him on bin c\nkiiuew praying. He also published some a\npamphlets on religious aubjecta, which 0\nwere keft for aale at the book atorea. lie u\nwasagooddealintheroomsoftheV.M. M\nU. A., and took part in the weekly prayer .\nmeetings there. I regarded hiui aa a ||\nbarinieaa fellow, but very eccentrio. Ue |\nhad aome business after he left the city, p\nParties uaed to call for him occasionally in p\nregard to mattera that they had entruated c\nto him. Among those who knew htm ia ti\nJudge Mallory, iu whoae court he had ^\npracticed for sometime. The Juugestatea c\nthat he waa a tali, swarthy, ill natured fi\nlooking fellow who waa certainly not en- 0\ntirely aaue. In the municipal court it T\nwas stated that he waa known aa the de-
777dcf39c78d13d6979c845ca8cc7b27 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.8346994219287 39.745947 -75.546589 Under Article X we would be bound to go to the assist­\nance of England in all her contests and wars in which, as re­\ncent events have shown more and more, she is unable to pro­\ntect herself. We would be compelled to guarantee to her the\ncontinued possession of-all her ill-gotten booty throughout\nthe world. We would make permanent for all time Eng­\nlands possession of Ireland, India, Egypt and South Africa,\nand would put back for generations the hopes of mankind.\nV)e would make certain the continuance of war and the per­\nmanence of tyranny. We would fasten upon Ireland and\nIndia the chain of English Dominati n, and not alone prevent\nany American assistance to those countries, but guarantee\nAmerican assistance to England's tyranny and oppression.\nWe would become moral partners in every act of Lloyd\nGeorge and his fellow-statesmen in their campaigns op­\npression and aggression against peoples struggling to be free.\nHis speech of recent date shows the extent to which\nEnglish statesmen are willing to go in order to hold posses­\nsion of Ireland. We would endorse his present methods in\nIreland, which are the negation of government and the\npudiation of civilization. To talk of bringing the cause of\nIreland before the League under Article XI is futile puer­\nility or arrant hypocrisy.' England and her closest allies\nwill own and control both the Council and the Assembly.\nWhat reason has any sane man for believing that she would\nlet her agents settle the Irish question for her when she has\nso long and so often refused to settle it herself! It would\nhe fairer and more effective to leave the question openly to\nbe decided by Lord Robert Cecil, Sir Edward Carson and\nHoratio Bottomley.
06ae5e46b000a4632adb448b2100163f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1899.664383529934 39.623709 -77.41082 been in this perilous situation for more Ilian\nan hour aud to those present minutes had\napparently lengthened out ten (old. Anxiety\nhad quadrupled aud the ashen faces told of\ntheir grave apprehensions and, as might lie\nexpected, great perplexity of mind. No time\nwas to he lost and experienced, strong aud\ncourageous men were hastily sought for and\nsoon found one iu the person of George Lidic\nwho was quickly on the spot and immedi-\nately descended to the almost lifeless body\nand to which he adjusted the proper appli-\nances and by willingbands at the windlass\nboth weic brought to the surface, George\nall right but Clarence still'aud chilled to the\nmarrow, unconscious and but a lew minutes\nfrom deaths door. At this juncture heavy\nsighs of relief went out from the multitude\nthat had gathered aud many were the willing\nhands to assist in bringing back life and vigor\nto the unfortunate young man Brisk rub-\nbing ami oilier proper restoratives were re-\nstored to and with magic effect for within\n minutes he had recovered sufficiently\nto be removed to his home in town and iu\nless than thirty hours after the young man\nhad resumed his daily visits to Roddys. The\ncircumstances leading up to the foregoing\narc simple and can be briefly told. The young\nman, inexperienced In this line of business,\naud his uncle, Charlton Fogle, had contracted\nto displace the water and otherwise clean out\nMr, Wisolzkeys well, and although the usual\nmethods of testing the purity of air in wells\nrestored to with nothing apparent to indicate\ndanger in any way, yet, iu prosecuting the\nworn lie from some cause or oilier was dis\nallied and rcndcicd unconscious, and the rest\nol the story lias been told.\nBird, the very excellent and highly valued\nfamily mare belonging to Mrs. E . K . Rouzer\ndiep last Friday of lockjaw, brought on by a\npainful wound on one of her [egs.\nEdward Baxter is having a well dug on the\ntract ol land that he recently purchased of\nthe Rouzer estate.
03d3d9508a6983a68003197245ce59de THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1901.6205479134958 46.601557 -120.510842 chant. The covered wagon contained a\nstereopticon show, and after varying\nfortunes the little family arrived here,\nthe woman obtaining employment at\nthe Chicago restaurant. The husband\nsecured a position as cook in a neighbor-\ning camp. Kitty was young and hand-\nsome, and the husband, several years\nher senior, lieoame possessed of a morbid\njealousy and made her quit work at the\nrestaurant. He allowed her,-however,\nto work circus day at her old place.\nSuspecting that his wife was not true,\nhe bored a hole through an adjoining\nwall of the restaurant and with a con-\nfederate, a "Peeping Tom of Coventry,"\nhe kept close watch on his wife and the\nproprietor of the eating house. Pres-\nently, he alleged, he espied the propri-\netor during a lull in the business mak-\ning love to his wife. Wringing his hands\nin rage and grief he rushed into the next\napartment and accused his wife and the\nproprietor with unseemly conduct. In\ntears shame at the unjust accusa-\ntion the wife denied that she had been\nguilty of ii lestionable actions. A war-\nrant was sworn out by the irate husband\ncharging the proprietor of the restaurant\nwith violating the seventh command-\nment. A cloud of wi»ness were sum-\nmoned to impeach the man and woman\nliefore Justice MacCrimnion, and a trial\nwas held behind closed doors. The wit-\nnesses were excluded except one at a\ntime, and reporters and the public gen-\nerally denied access to the hearing.\nFred Parker defended the accused pro-\nprietor, and County Attorney Guthrie\nappeared for the state. The testimony\nfailed to convict the man or impeach tin-\ncharacter of the woman.\nOn Monday morning Mrs. Schriner,\naccompanied by her daughter, left for\nSpokane and the husband remained be-\nhind to nurse his wrath. An equitable\ndivision of the personal property was\nmade, the woman reserving a new piano\nstored in Spokane for the best end of\nthe bargain.
15572ab2b7d54b91acfedfdf27419511 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.541095858701 39.745947 -75.546589 Of all the sjKirls I have engaged in,” said\nProfessor Donaldson to the reporter, “swim\nming 1 believe to tie the best for the health.\nFor h dozen years and more swimming has\nbeen my only exercise, and, although I\nengaged in a sedentary occupation in this\ntown all winter, 1 am in pretty good condi\ntion. Feel my muscle."\nThe reporter, being Invited, put bis hand\non Professor Doualdsons biceps and on bis\nthigh. They were as hard os boards.\n“1 find that swimming is the best physician\nI (Orer liai," continued lYofessor Donaldson.\n“1 havent hnd a doctor in ten years, aud\nnothing is the matter with ma To what do\n1 attribute my health! To salt water, in the\nfirst place. Did you ever observe the change\nthat takes place in a society belle when she\nquits the round of and Uves for a\ntime at tho seashore! The ebango can best be\nnoticed by contrasting tho young womans\napfiearnnce a few weeks after bIio has taken\nher daily plunge at the seashore with that of\na woman who is fresh from the city. Th»\nwoman who has bathed is vigorous and\nruddy, while the new arrival ts languid and\npale. It rimy not be that the young woman\nwho has bulhed has gained all her muscle und\nplumpness by swimming. Shu has lain In the\nsand part of the afternoon, taken a hearty\ndinner, and slept well o' nights.”\n“Is swimming difficult to learn!"\n“Du the contrary, it Is very easy. But ou»\nthing is necessary—confidence. Tbero was a\ndtu-iuus example of this in my experience.\nNot long ago 1 taught a walkming big fellow,\nwho must bave weighed 2fib pounds. He
25c80a0c2a92e2de9ea4720f6245335a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.0696720995245 58.275556 -134.3925 such questions to the imm'noii challenged as\nmay he necessary to test his (nullifications\nas a voter at that election. The Judge may\nhear such other testimony and consider such\nother evidence as is proper on the question.\nA majority of the Judges shall decide the'\nmatter If tlie challenge is decided against\nthe person offering to vote, the hallot offer-\ned must, without examination, he destroyed\nin the presence of the said person by a. Judge\nor Judges of election: if determined in his\nfavor the hallot must he deposited in t lie\nuro|>er ballot box. If the person so chal-\nlonged refuses to answer fully any questions\nput to him touching his qualifications as a\nvoter, the Judge* must reject the hallot.\nThe election board must caute one of the\nclerks to keep a list showing: First, the\nnames of all persons challenged ; second, by\nwhom challenged; third, the grounds of\nsuch challenge; fourth, the determination\nof the board upon such challenge.\nCANVA8S1NO AND RETURNING THE VOTE\nSection 23. As soon as the polls are finally\nclosed on the evening of the day <>f election\nthe Judges first open the hallot boxes!\ncontaining the votes cast for Conncilnien\nand commence counting the votes, and when\nthese are counted and the result* ascertain¬\ned it shall l>e cheeked with the poll list, and\nall ballots replaced to be counted again as\nprovided for in section 24 of this Ordinance.\nThe Judges shall then open the ballot boxes\ncontaining the Votes cast for members of the\nSchool Board and proceed in the same man*\nner. In no case shall the boxes be removed\nfrom the room in which any election may be\nheld until ull the ballots are finally counted.\nCOUNTING OF HALLOTS TO HE PUBLIC\nSection 24. The counting of ballots shall in\nall cases be public. Ballots, after having\nbeen counted and checked as provided for in\nsection 1 < above, shall be taken out carefully\none by one !>y the Judges of election, who\nshall open them and read alotuf the name of\neach person voted for and the office for\nwhich every such person is voted for; pro¬\nvided that no more ballots shall he drawn\nfrom the box than enough to check with the\npoll list.
11edb5b4ace1681128bc53eae2b308c0 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1911.5657533929477 58.275556 -134.3925 Declaring that their business and tha\ninterests of the city have been injured\nby alleged mi-etatements made in aa\neditorial in the June issue of Hamp*.\nton's Magazine, under the title, "An\nOpportunity for Congressional luvesti*\ngation," the business men and the com*\nmercial organizations of Cordova hara\ncombined efforts and obtained legal ad*\nvice on what course of action to pur*\nsue. The statement to which the Cor*\ndovans object says that the Copper\nRiver & Northwestern railroad has\nabandoned Cordova harbor and moved\nto Controller bay upon land recently\nopened by President Taft. The citi*\nzens assert that this statement is in*\ncorrect, and thaL it has resulted in\nturning investors and home-builder*\nfrom Cordova aud is injuring the bus*\niness of the city.\nA careful investigation the eatU\nmates made by the managers of tha\nbanking institutions of Fairbauks indi¬\ncates that the placer outputs of the dis*\ntricts tributary to Fairbanks will reach\na total of 65,000,000 for the year 1911,\nThis is a conservative estimate. Unex*\npectedly rich pay and acceleration of\nthe quartz output may bring tha\namount up to $6,000,000, thereby equal¬\ning last year's output. Up to June 1,\nthe time by which moat of the winter\ndumps have usually been cleaned up,\nthe receipts by the banks approximated\n$1,000,000. There has been no lack o (\nwater and the labor supply for the pur«\npose was satisfactory. Indications are\nthat the water supply will continue to\nsuffice, but the supply of labor, amy b$\naffected by the reports of new strikes,
02c3689fc5aff29a9d1f4eb6b43bcd8a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1892.7991802962456 42.217817 -85.891125 There are also to be elected by the electors in each\ncongressional district Into which the state is divid-\ned, oue elector of Presideut and Vice President, and\none alternate elector of President and Vice Presi-\ndent, the ballots for which shall designate the num-\nber of the congressional district aud the persons to\nTie voted for therein, as district elector and alter-\nnate district elector of President and Vice President\nof the United States respectively.\nAlso, on the general ticket a Governor, Lieuten-\nant Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer,\nAuditor General, Commisssouer of the State Land\nOffice, Attorney General, and Superintendent of\nPublic Instruction ; also a member of the State\nBoard of Education iu place of Samuel S. Babcock,\nwhose term of office will expire December 31, 1892;\nalso an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, to\nfill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Allen B.\nMorse; the tenn of office will expire Dec. 31 , 1893 ;\nalso a Representative in Congress for the Fourth\n District of this State, to which this\ncounty belongs; also a Senator for the Eighth Sen-\natorial District to which this county belongs; also a\nRepresentative in the State legislature for the Rep-\nresentative District comioed of the county of Van\nBuren; also, the following county officers, viz.: A\nJudge of Probate. Sheritr, County Clerk, County\nTreasurer, Register of Deeds, rroecnting Attorney,\nCounty Surveyor, two Circuit Court Commissioners,\nand two Coroners.\nYou are also hereby notified that at said election\nthere will be submitted to the people the question\nof a convention for the purpose of a general revis-\nion of the Constitution of thin State. That each\nperson voting forsuld proposition shall have written\nor printed or partly written and partly printed on\nhis ballot the words; "Convention for the purpose\nof a general revision of the Constitution of this\nState Yes;" and each person voting against said\nproposition the words, "Convention for the purpose\nof a general revision of the Constitution of this\nState -- No."
22a6fdd5b7f196a609a40ec98e007934 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.6808218860983 40.735657 -74.172367 ing on the easterly side of Hayea street: thence\nsoutherly along the same to the northerly line\nof Fifteenth avenue; tnenre easterly along the\nsame and across Springfield avenue and Court\n■treat to the rear line of lots fronting on the\neasterly side of Belmont avenue; thence south-\nerly along the same to the rear line of lots\nfronting on the northerly side of Avon avenue;\nthence easterly along the same about 45 feet:\nthence southerly to the southerly line of Avon\navenue; thence easterly along the same to the\neasterly line of Hillside avenue; thence south-\nerly along the name for a distance of about 85\nfeet; there® easterly at right angles to Hillside\navenue 100 feet: thence southerly and parallel\nwith Hillside avenue to the rear line of lots\nfronting on the southerly Fide of Clinton ave-\nnue, commencing with and Including street No.\n320 and 322 Clinton, avenue: thence westerly along\nthe rear line of lots fronting on Clinton avenue\nto the rear line of lots Wonting on the easterly\nside of Hillside* avenue: thence southerly along\nthe satne to the southerly line of Blgelnw street:\ntnenee westerly along the same to the westerly\nline of Hillside avenue; thence along\nthe same about 37.50 feet: thence westerly and\nparallel with Bigelow street about 96 feet;\ntheneo southerly to the rear line of lots fronting\non .the. southerly side of Bigelow street; thence\nWesterly along the same to the rear line of lots\nfronting on the easterly side of Belmont ave-\nnue; thence southerly along the same to a point\nabout 250 feet aoqth of the southerly line of\nBigelow street: thence westerly and parallel\nwith Bigelow street to the rear line of ots\nfronting on the easterly side of Ridgewood\navenue; thence northerly along the same to the\nsoutherly line of the corner lot designated as\nNo. 156 Ridgewood avenue; thence westerly\nparallel with Bigelow street and including the\ncorner lot design.-ted as No. 155 Ridgewood ave-\nnue to the rear line of lots fronting on the east-\nerly side of Badger avenue; thence southerly\nalong the same to a point about 100 feet north\nof-- the northeniy line of Peddle street; thence\nwesterly and parallel \\ujth Peddle street to the\nwesterly line-of Badger avenue; thence south-\nerly along the same- to the northerly line of\nPeddle street; thence westerly along the same to\nthe point or place of beginning.
232817029746376d06ef10441a7f3f2f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1905.0671232559614 58.275556 -134.3925 Ou the islauds west of Juneau pros¬\npecting continues. The apparent col¬\nlapse of a large, ill-advised enterprise\non Kodmau bay is a noteworthy event:\nit appoars to have been the result of\nlarge investment in equipment before\na workable ore body was opened up.\nIn the Wrangell district, south of Ju¬\nneau, the one producing gold mine\nclosed down. There are a number of\nprospects; some of these yield chal-\ncopyrite and pyrrhotite in commercial\nquantities; others contain gold and\nsilver ore. To the south is the Ketchi¬\nkan district. Though this region first\nattracted atteutiou some years ago as\na prospect for gold and silver lodes,\nmore attention is being given to its\ncopper, which is yet undeveloped. Sev¬\neral gold veins were worked in a small\nway during 1904. Of more import, how¬\never is the systematic development of\na copper property at Niblack Anchor¬\nage, ou the east side of Priuce of Wales\nisland. Kasaan peninsula, 20 miles\nnorth is also the scene of active devel¬\nopment of copper properties; and ou\nits north side a 100-ton smelter has\nbeen erected. Another smelter, with a\ncapacity of 250 tons, has been erected\non the west side of Priuce of Wales is¬\nland, to treat the ore of the Copper\n property. In the latter a\ntunnel is being driven destined to cut\nthe orebody 1,100 ft. below its outcrop.\nLode miuiug is practically coufiued\nto Southeastern Alaska. The Glad-\nhaugh mine, on Prince William, is the\nonly copper mine iu Alaska which has\nreached the productive stage. The ore\nis'chalcopyrite; and the mine, being on\na good harbor which is open through¬\nout the year, has the same low freights\nwhich are enjoyed by the tidewater\nmines of Southeastern Alaska. The\nsame district contains other bodies of\ncopper ore, many of which were pros¬\npected. The Apollo mine is on Unga\nisland; it has been a large producer iu\nthe past, and after several years of\nsmall production is reported to have\ntaken a new lease of life. The ore is\n. ree milling. The Big Hurrah quartz\nmine, about 40 miles east of Nome, has\nattracted attention because it is the\nonly lode deposit iu this placer dis¬\ntrict which has reached a productive\nstage. It appears to be au example of\nthe success possible for careful man¬\nagement, even under adverse condi¬\ntions. The capacity of the mill has\nbeen increased to 20 stamps, while the\nmine workings have reached a depth of\nnearly 150 ft The attention of mio-
293e581e9aff86bb744745ee367f1a6a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1912.5860655421473 42.217817 -85.891125 ly wasn't very expensive, though it\nwas a nuisance we got a collie.\n"Collie was a fine blue ribbon dog,\nand my husband was a lot prouder of\nhim than he was of his whole family\ncombined. He'd strut up and down in\nfrrnit of the house by the hour airing\nthe dog, just as of the dog hadn't been\nout the whole blessed day airing him-\nself! Collie used to get the best of\ndog biscuit and choice cooked bits of\nmeat. He wouldn't even look at tho\nthings that ordinary dogs eat. and we\ndidn't expect him to. His beauty and\nlineage entitled him to the best and\nwe gave it to him willingly.\n"However, when summer came we\nplanned to go away as usual. We\nthought we'd go west, the first\nthing was to plan for was that Collie\nshould be well taken care of. We\nasked all our friends who knew Collie\nwell to take care of him in our ab-\nsence, but they all refused, gently but\nfirmly I couldn't think why. Finally\nmy husband asked a friend of ours out\nin the countrv to take, Co!!ie, and he\nconsented, we fienl Collie out there\nthe day we left on our little trip.\n"At our first stopping place we fund\na telegram saying that Collie refused\nto eat, being evidently lonesome with-\nout us. We laughed and said he'd get\nover It. So we went on. At the sec-\nond city there was another telegram\nsaying that Collrb hadn't eaten for\ndays and that we'd better return. We\ndid.
1d9ba8618401ac3846fe57dd71ff639c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.9794520230848 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho World's special says: Represent¬\natives of the Fenian Interest aro urging\nthe .State Department and tho Presldeut\nto recommend Cougress to demand that\nreparation shall be made by tho British\nGovernment for tho imprisonment of\nAmerican cltieens lit England.\nA New York weekly (ournal announ¬\nces upou what It terms high authority\nau alleged plan of Mr. Johnson for\nrunulng next fall a candidate for Pres¬\nident, a Governor for New York and a\nUnited States Sonator for that State.\nWo have tho highest authority hero for\nsaying thattho President never heard\nor the plan until It was rend to him\nfrom the paper nbovo named.\nThe Herald's special says, members\nof tho House of Representatives stale\nthat It Is a notorious fact that all efforts\nto relievo the immediate necessity of\nthe finances or Nation, havo, upon\nreaching (he Fiuanco Commlttooof tho\nSenate, beon suppressed, or at least\npromise to remain unnoticed until their\nutility will become greatly lessened.\nThe action asaiust contraction, a meas¬\nure decidedly popular with western\nmembers, has inetthls late, and beucc\nthe sovore remarks to which this course\nof procedure has given rise.\nThe Times' special says, the House\nspecial commlttee to Inquire Into the\ncause of the delay In settling the addi¬\ntional houuty claims, find that tho to¬\ntal numl>er of claims lllodnpto Decem¬\nber 1st, ItfOT, wss 412,000. Of these 278,-\n000 remain unsettled. The delay arises\nIn great part from the lack of foros\nemployed, and tho committee report\nthat all has been done which could be\neipeotedof a force No reduced. It Is\nvery avldeut from the report tiiat the
5650a75c3001bad2dbbdf89660955c8b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.4877048864096 39.261561 -121.016059 Sac. 5. There shall be and is hereby levied upon every\nmale inhabitant of the City, of twenty-one years of age\nand upwards, a poll tax of one dollar, for the year ending\nMay 1861 ; and it is hereby made the duty of the Marshal\nto collect the same.\nSic. 6. The Clerk of the Board shall prepare and deliv-\ner to the Marshal proper blank p*>ll tax receipts, which\nshall be numbered and signed by the Clerk. Upon the\nEitvinent of each and every poll tax, theMamhal shall de-\nver one of *aid receipts, countersigned by himself, to the\nperson so paying.\nSec. 7. To enforce the collection of the poll tax, the\nMarshal may siexe so much of any and every species of\nproperty owned or claimed by auv person liable to and re*\nfusing to pay said poll tax. a * will be sufficient to pay the\nsame and costs of seixure. and may sell the same at any\ntime or place, within the city limits, upon riving a verbal\n one hour previous to such sale ; a delivery of tbo\npossession of the property by the Marshal, to any pur-\nchaser, shall be deemed a sufficient title in the purchaser.\nAfter having deducted the poll tax, for which such prop-\nerty was sold, and the necessary fees and cost* of sale,\nthe Marshal shall return the surplus money, If any there\nbe, to the owner of such property. Any person indebted\nto another, liable to a poll tax and neglecting or refusing\nto pay the same, shall be liable to pay the same after ser-\nvice upon him, by the City Marshal, of a notice in writ-\ning, stating the name or names of the person or persons\nso liable, and owing such poll tax, and may deduct the\namount thereof from such indebtedness.\nS*c. 8. The Marshal shall keep a correct list of tha\nnames of all persons paying their poll tax, and shall re-\nport the same to the Board on the first of each month.\nPa&sed June 1st 1860.
1ffdfe08df354d205e0ddfdf9e0471b3 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.669862981989 39.513775 -121.556359 in the canvass, could wc have reconciled\nsuch a course with our duly to the public as\na journalist, and to that high-toned and\nhonorable party to which we profess to be-\nlong. That party through its convention,\nwas a sailed as corrupt by a traitor that\nhad been nourished in its bosom, and\nhad repaid honors conferred by the people by\nacts of aggression against the property an 1\npersons of citiiens Assailed by the vilest\nlibels and infamous slanders of these cor\nrupt schemers against the public weal, and\ntheir suborned tools and venal press, we\nshould have been recreant to our duty to\nthe public, hail we failed to expose the cor-\nruption and dishonesty of those who would\nusurp and prostitute the Judicial bench of\nIbis district. In this age of special and cor-\nrupt legislation—we have shown that Lewis\nand his supporters have endeavored to pilfer\nfrom the public, and it has not been denied\nWe honestly believed him to be one of those\n public men who consider any-\nthing short of direct embezzlement of public\nmoney as lair and honorable, have present-\ned incontrovertible evidence of Unit belief,\nin the records of the Legislature and of the\ncounty, and they have been answered by\npersonal attacks upon ourselves. We believe\nwe know our duty to the public, and cannot\nbe prevented in the discharge of that duty\nby the libellous assaults of those who com-\nbine to plunder a tax paying public.\nThe matter is now before the people, and\nwc have never doubted their ability for self-\ngovernment. We believe the efforts of those\nwho are engaged in corrupt schemes against\nthe public interests, have not succeded i»i\ndeceiving the intelligent voters of the Dis-\ntrict into the support of unprincipled men\nand corrupt measures This morning it re-\nmains with the people to say who shall be\ntheir rulers and judges—to-night that power\nwill have passed beyond their control for a\nterm of years. May God help the right.
290bca66cd7b3972f27c40a835975953 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5040983290326 39.290882 -76.610759 In boyhood, it was my hap to venture the\npeace, comfort, and good cheer of home, upon the\nhazard of carrying the "ventures" of our goed\ncitizens, to other and distant climes; and though\nraanv years have, since then, roll'd their onward\ncoarse, heralds of our approach to the gloom of\nthe grave, memory, oftentimes lingers upon the\nmany incidents which liappen'd during that peri-\nod, and the feelings which they awaken'd. Among\nthe most Interesting, is the recollection of the\npleasure produced by a sight of the naval button\nof the land of the Eagle. I fancy thai I can sec\nmvself, even now, keeping harbor watch in some\none of the ports of the Pacific Ocean, keeping it,\nas youngsters are frequently discovered doing, by\n"following in the footsteps of my predecessor,'>\nand occasionally not contenting myself with a\nservile imitation of his locomotion; but, abso-\nlutely, by settling down in the seat upon \nwindlass, which he has vacated, and resting my\nhead upon the windlass bitts, give evidence of a\ndesire to perfect myself in all the duties of my\nstation. Perchance I remain undisturbed by the\nhoarse voice of the mate breaking the stillness of\nthe night and my slumbers, with his hateful\n"who has the watch," and the mind escaping its\nclay prison, wings its flight to the land of my\nbirth, and my love, and holds sweet converse\nwith the light-hearted laddies and lasses of old\nDeptford Hundred. Agaie, the vcary patrol is\nkept, and the eye rests upon the little bay or in-\ndentation where the gallant Perter demonstrated\nthe supremacy of the American Button; and you\nnotice withwhat hot and eager haste the pilgrim\nbillows of other climes roll in to do homage to\nthe place where "the Cobblers and Tinkers" of\nour gallant navy won for themselves and their\ncountry, an imperishable renown.
6ac4b017b443f89613b45b5668d3b0bc PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.6753424340436 31.960991 -90.983994 We further certifj-, that we have used his Pills\nin our families for several years, and find them\nto be a valuable, efficient and safe medicine for\nthe cure of diseases for which they are racom-\nmended. That they are in high repute in this\ncommunity, and of the celebrity and good ef­\nfects of die Pills, we have heard much from this\nand tho various other States in which they are\nso extensively used. We think them worthy of\nhigh recommendation,\nW F Boyakin, Pastor of the Baptist Church.\nThomas Harrison, Minister M. E Church.\nJohn Reynolds, Ex-Governor of Illinois.\nWin McClintock, Clk Commissioners Court.\nJohn D Hughes, Probate Justice.\nRichard Hay, Recorder St. Clair cmmly.\nIVC Kinney, Clerk St. Clair Circuit Court.\nJames Mitchell, Post Master.\nJ L D Morrison, Rep. in the Legislature.\nSetli Catlin, Rep. in the State Senkte.\nL D Cabannee, Proprietor of Steam Mill.\nThis is to certify, that we have used Dr.\nChampions Vegetable Ague Medicine, and also\nIns Vegetable Anti-Bilious, Anti-Dyspeptic,\nPurifying and Cathartic Pills in our families\nfor several years, and have also learned much\nof their celebrity and good effects great\nnumbers of perrons that have used them in their\nfamilies. We -do think them very efficient and\nvaluable medicines for the cure ot diseases for\nwhich they are recommended, and consider\nthem well worthy the highesr recommendation.\nMaj James Pearson, Twigg county, Georgia.\nIra Dufree, M D, Marion county,\nJ Matlock. Merchant. Cuthbert,\nCol John Dill, Fort Gaines,\nW ll Rawson. Merchant, Lumpkin,\nRobert Ware, M d, Columbus,\nW S Middlebrooks, Planter, Jones,\nAlex Lowry, M d, Jefferson,\nA C Holbert, J P. Dorrville,\nMaj J McGuffy, Cayuga,\nJ I Louis, merchant, Auburn,\nCol W F Dillon, Oakley,\nS B Simmons, Planter, Roselaune,\nCStancill, merchant, Carrol\nG Stancill, merchant, Greenwood,\nG W Lake, merchant, Grenada,\nJ Thompson, si d, Greenwood,\nJudge Carbry, Coffeeville,\nB B Arnold, Planter, GrabaH,\nJ B Meek, merchant, Lrtuisvilfo,\nJames Lowry, merchant, Raleigh,\nD FN Turner, P Af, A/onticello,\nSami Gy ne, P Iff, Brookhavcn,\nE B Taylor, merchant, Gallatin,\nED Ward, Druggist, Canton,\nM C Cayce, merchant, Sharon,\nIV Anderson, P M, Sumpter county, Alabama.\nG H Shelden, merchant, Gaston,\nW Af Gilmore, Planter, Pickens co.,
64860da0316a1955a8490697b42babd5 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.209589009386 44.939157 -123.033121 have contended from the tlrst that he\nwns entitled to at least one Insanity\nhearing every year.\nOver h hundred witnesses have been\nculled upon each time Thaw's case has\ncomo up. some of them being brought\nfrom Purls, Berlin and London to tes-\ntify. The request by the district attor-\nney to have the evidence In the latter\nhearings rend from the records of pre-\nceding ones was fought and defeuted\nby Thaw's attorney. Therefore the\nHtnte faces tho necessity of gathering\nwitnesses from distant points and\nHpt'iiillng prodigious huiiib hereafter.\nThe litigation Is said to cost Thaw\ntwice ns uuirli ns the state. Legisla-\ntion has been proposed to limit the\nfund for the Btate's putt in Thaw's\nhearings to $20,000.\nThe most recent upheaval over Thaw\nIn the greatest sensation slnco the first\nmurder trial. It has been freely de-\nclared, nnd elements of the\ncharge proved, that Thaw has been a\n"meal ticket" for pardon brokers.\nThe position of Hiierluteiidiiit Bcott\nnnd Dr. John R. Russell, head of the\nState Hospital For tho Insane et Mat-\nteawan, were assailed by the testimony\nof John N. Anhut. a young attorney\nrepresenting Thuw. Anhut declared\nthat he hud received $25,000 ns a re-\ntaining fee from Thaw and that Dr.\nRussell had asked hltn for $20,000 to\ncertify thnt the prisoner had become\nsane. Dr. Russell's alleged proposal to\nAnhut wns virtually an offer to give\nthe prisoner his liberty, ns the physi-\ncian's word describing Thaw ns sane\nwould hnve caused the letter's release.\nThe scnndnl first wns disclosed by\nthe assertion by Dr. Russell thnt V, F.\nClark, secretary of the state Inquiry\nii!!inlsnlon, hnd used Governor S ul -f'r' - s\nname to gain Thaw's relense.
235fffd09e9e225e3ef054a33ce91fa2 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.932876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 MORTGAGE gALE.\nDefault having been made iu tbe payment of\na certain mortgage, executed by Clannda Bent-le- y\nto Edgar D. Darling, bearing date the 15th\ndav of November, 1870, aod recorded in tbe\noffice of the Register of Deeds of Van Kuren\nCounty. Michigan, in liber 1 of mortgages, on\npage 205, on tho 30th day of November, 1870,\nwhich said mortgage and note collateral there-\nto was on tbe 15th day or November 1876, by\nsaid Edgar D. Darling assigned to Christina B\nKnowles; which said assignment was recorded\nin the office of the Register of Ueedi of Van\nBuren county, Micbigau, on lbs third day of t\nDecemoer, 1877, in liber 18 of mortgages, on\npage 291, upon which mortgage there is claimed\nto' be due at tho date of this notico tho eum \nflvfl bnndred Bftventv nine dollars and eighteen\ncent?, sad no suit or proceedings having oeen j\ncommenced to recover tLe same, Notice is lere- -\nby given that on Monday the 4th dayof .March,\n1878, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, 1 eliall sell\nat public auction, to the highest bidder, at the\nfront door of tho Yaa Buren County Circuit\nCourt Houee ia tba village- of Paw Paw, the\npremises described in said mortgage, to satisfy\nthe amount due at that date ou said mortgage,\nand leal costs, together with an attorney fee\nof thirty dollars' covenanted for therein, which\npremises are described in said mortgage as the\nsouth half of lots ten and eleven in block thirty\nfour in tbe village of Paw Paw, according to\nthe recorded plat thereof, in Van Buren county\nMicbigau.
2b4b3d1b84008f56c22501868ebb4057 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1879.6369862696602 37.561813 -75.84108 It mny be fairly aid of the administration of\nPresident 'laves that it lias honestly, economi-\ncally and faithfully conducted the-- public busi-\nness iu ail branches of the public service.\nBeside tbe ordinary functions of the duu\nmafic service, the State Department has given\nincreased imixirratice to onr consular service in\nthe collection of valuable information that has\nenabled our merchants to largely increase their\ncommerce. 1 he Iudi.'iti ahntrs h;tve never been\nmore successfully conducted. Very important\nret'orms and improvements have been made i;i\nthe Navy Department. I am officially advised\nbv the Commissioner of Internal TWenne that\nof the $113,448 ,830 05 collected auring the\npast year, from internal taxes, every dollar has\nbeen accounted tor, and for the past, three\nyearsrthe whole amount collected. $343.0S.S ,- 1 7- 8\n57. has been paid into the Treasury, ex-\ncept $2,780 13, which is secured, and for\nwhich shit is pending. collection of these\ntaxes has hecu made in the face of tiie greatest\nobstacles by reckless viol itors of law.\nIt is elaiuicd that tbe reduction of appropria-\ntions was made in spite of the most vehement\nand determined resistance of the Administra-\ntion. This is not f ine. The amount estimated\nby the Treasury Department to Congress for\nthe ordinary expenses of the fiscal year 1879\nwas $138,107,04 8 77, white the actual appro-\npriations made by Congress were $140,304,- 30 - 0\n21, or $8, lOC.t 'iiO 4 Hn excess of the sum\nestimated. And so for the ordinary expenses\nof the Government the estimates presented to\nCongress for the fiscal vear ending June 30,\n18M, amounted to $120,107,812 0.h, while\nthe appropriations made by Congress for the\nordinary expenses oi the Government for that\nyear amount to $1 n'J.404 ,047 70, showing an\nexcess of approt rial ions overestimates of ?32.-20l.j3- 5
25b9e0f91d045339004ec2f3a3ff100c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7821917491121 40.063962 -80.720915 ovA Davis?" asked an English-\nofit returned soldier the othorday.\n"I^/wouId be blasted ornel to be hang-,\ning him, yon know. Now,what do you\nIntend to do with him?" The soldier\nreplied that they proposed to borrow\nthe Island of St. Helena and shut him\nup there as the English did; Napoleon.\nA Xsw Bedford lady, who was in\nioston on Saturday, ustoundod a fe¬\nmale pickpocket, who inn crowd hod\nthmsthor hand Into tho lady's pocket,by\nturning and coolly Inquiring, "Why do\n~ ou put your hand in my pocket, when\nhave ray purse here In my hand t"\nIt is said that no single instance of a'\nsubmarine telegraphcable being injured\nby a fish Of any kind or size has yet oc-\ncurred. Every creature with fins flies\nfrom it, so that it faros much better\nthan the wire ou land in India, whore\nthe' monkeys are persuuded that tho\npoles and lines are erected for them to\nuse in gymnastic exercises.\nThere are about fourteen hundred\napplicants for tho fourteen places on tho\nmedical stafTof tho tho regular army\n fact that one hundred and twenty\ndollars a month is so great an attraction\nfor medical men between the ages of 21\nand SO augurs well for the sanitary con¬\ndition of tho country. During sickly\ntimes young doctors make vastly more\nin legitimate business.\nCou S. P . HKurnsLuax, of tho regu¬\nlar army, former inajor-gonoral of vol¬\nunteers,' is ordered to join his regiment\nat Hart's Island aud report to General\nWessels, who was a captain in tho for¬\nmer's regiment in Mexico. It is sug¬\ngest that at this rate oho or two more\njsrars would practically reduce him to\nthe rank of second lieutenant.\n*P6KnA'says "the quality bf mercy is\nnot strained," but the telegraph says\nthat henceforth the attorney-general's\noffice' will be a sieve through which all\napplications for pardon must' pass.\nSomebody haS eStlmuted1 that fifty\nthousand people .will"visit Kuroi>e an¬\nnually for the next two years; each\nwill Expend on tho tour two thousand\ndollars', and tho whole sum of'oho hun-\ndrod million. (^Murs tu gold ^rlll thus\nbe taken out of tho country.
199c551bd2cfaf8dd05196c7b4db82ec EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.2424657217148 39.745947 -75.546589 In Briscoe Lord Cleveland gets a1\nnan who was tried out by Connie!\nMack and shipped to New Orleans af- !\ntor he bad fell a victim to malaria.!\nLord looked like a real live wire when j\nhe first Joined the Athletics and\nmany experts predicted that he would ]\ncrowd Seybold for the team. But the j\nyoungster's health gave way and It !\nhas taken him two years to acquire !\nbig league form again.\n(Tank Chance will have four men\nthat have seen big league ball before.\nThey are Catcher Archer. Outfielders\nStanley and Haydon. and Pitcher Kroh. 1\nArcher was with the Detroit cham­\npions In 1907 and caught one of the '\ngames of the worlds series, says the\nSt. Louis Globe-Democrat.\nThen he went to Buffalo, and now i\nhe Joins the club against\nplayed In the greatest series of base­\nball. Pitcher Kroh was twice tried out\nby the Boston Americans and shipped\nto the minors each time. Outfielder\nHayden was a member of the Red\nSox as well, but after his famous en - |\ncounter with Höbe Ferris In which\nFerris kicked Hayden In tho Jaw, ho\nwent to Rochester and to Indian­\napolis. Chicago took him last fall\nand he aided the Cubs to win the pen- i\nnant. Stanley was a member of the !\nWashington club for two years and i\nwas noted for his ability to field. |\nWeakness at tho bat caused him to;\ndrop out of the American League.\nThe New York Americans are \\\nscheduled to try out a few men who j\n1 have been "up” before, the comebacks i\nbeing Ward, Knight, Brockett\nHughes. The last two were with New 1\nYork before, and perhaps have been '\nonly "covered up” this time. Ward |\nuse to be with the Phillies and Jumped i\nto the Tri-State league, while Knight\nserved a year at Baltimore after being 1\nlet out by Boston.\nCincinnati gets Roth from Mllwau- j\nkce, Roth having been a member of\nat least three big league clubs prior\nto his signing with Milwaukee, Wal-\n1 ter Justus, bought from Lancaster by\nSt. Louis, had a brief trial with De­\ntroit. while Cleveland and St. Louis\nformerly tried Catcher Sturnagle, now\nsecured from Altoona by Brookljn.\nCatcher Starnagle touted as a wonder\n1• > !>' uoit writers, cnee worked tor
b18c26ef93c2fb13d4eecb6995f5a69c VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.9931506532216 43.798358 -73.087921 heard what the prophets said, that prophesy\nlies in my name,.saying, I have dreamed, I\nhave dreamed. How long shall this be in\nthe heart of the prophets that prophesy lies?\nyea, they are. prophets of the deceit of their\nown heart; which think to cause my people\nto forget my name by their dreams which\nthey tell every man to his neighbor, as iheir\nfathers have forgotten my name for Baal.\nThe prophet that hath a dream, let him tell\na dream; and he that hath my wot d let\nhim speak, my word faithfully. What is\nthe chaff to the wheat? .saith the Lord.\nIs not my. word like as a fire3 saitii the\nLord ; and like a hammer lhat,breaketh the\nrock in pieces? Therefore, behold, l am\nagainst the prophets, saith the Lord, that\nsteal my words one from his neigh-\nbor. Behold,. I am against the prophets,\nsaith the Lord, that use their tongues, and\nsay, he saith. vBehold, 1 am against them\nthat prophesy false dreams, saith the Lord,\nand do tell them, and cause my people to\nerr by iheir lies, and hy their lightness ; yet\nI sent ihem not, nor commanded them ;\ntherefore they shall not profit this people at\nail saith the Lord. And when this people,\nor the prophet, or, a priest shall ask thee,\nsaying, what is the burden of the Lord?\nthou shall then -- s,ay unto them, what bur-\nden? I will eyei forsake you,, saith, the\nLord. And as for . the prophet, aod the\npriest, and the people, that shall .say the\nburden of the Lord, I will even punish that\nman and his house."
487fa27d81c53f5edea1592701d5f032 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.43698626966 39.745947 -75.546589 School District No. 10 .\nstreet; School District No. 11, 1,1* Oil-\npin avenue. Bchool District No 12. 1823\nI-ovcrlrg avenue; School District No. 3 .\nSchool No. 13 . Seventeenth and Union\nstreets; School District No. 14, «1418\nRivervlew avenue; School District No.\n15 2*19 West Eighteenth street.\nEIGHTH WARD—School District No.\n1, 518 East Seventh street; School Dis­\ntrict No. 2. School No. 8. Seventh and\nSpruce streets; School District No. 3.\n423 East Eighth street; School District\nNo. 4. 800 Pine street; School District\nNo 5. 900 Lombard street; School Dis­\ntrict No 9. 429 East Eleventh street;\nSchool District No. 7, No. 20 School,\nTenth and Spruce streets.\nNINTH WARD—School District No..\nI. 1222 Claymont street; 8ehool District\nNo. 2. 8cbool No 17. Sixteenth and\nClaymont atreet». School District No. 3.\n900 Vandevor avenue; School District\nNo 4 4 Vsndever avenue; School Dis­\ntrict No. 5. School No. 12 . Twenty-sec­\nond and Market streets; School District\nNo 6. Thirtieth and Market streets;\nSchool District No. 7 . 1810 West street;\nSchool District No. 8 . 507 West Twen­\nty-first street; School District No, 9.\n2213 Boulevard; School District No. 10 .\n2235 Market atreet; School Diatrict No.\nII, 408 Twenty-fourth street;\nSchool District No. 12 . 2504 Washington\nstreet; School District No. 13. 218 -West\nTwenty-ninth street; School District\nNo. 14 . School No. 2*. Thirtieth and\nMadison streets; School District No. 15 .\n605 West Twenly-flfth street.\nTENTH WaRD—School District\n1 1002 West Fifth street; School Dis­\ntrict No. 2 . 1006 West Third street;\nSchool District No. 3. School No 15,\nThird and Harrison streets; School Dis­\ntrict No. 4. 1016 West Second street:\nSchool District No. 6. 107 South Van\nBuren street; School District No. 8.\nSchool No. 10 . Elm and Adams str. -st.\nELEVENTH WARD—Bchool District\nNo. 1 . 427 South Harrison street; School\nDistrict No. 2 . School No. 19, Oak and\nHarrison streets. School District No. 3 .\n808 Maryland avenue; School District\nNo. 4. 444 tleddea street.\nTWELFTH WARD—School District\nNo 1. 1306 West Fifth street; School\nDistrict No. 2. 229 Broome street;\nSchool District No. 3 . 1 South Franklin\nstreet; School District No. 4 . 1421 West\nFourth street; School District No.\n5. 124 Ruth street; School District No.\n6 1834 West Fourth street; School Dis­\ntrict No. 7, 8chool No. 25. Third and\nBayard avenue; School Dlatrlct No. « .\n2122 Loneasier avenue.
34b1c961f78706eb1b1f8a1830b040c3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.8975409519835 42.217817 -85.891125 mittees in order that auch influence as we pos-\nsess may be exerted in behalf of such a canvass\nof the votes actually cast as by its fairness and\nimpartiality shall command the respect and ac-\nquiescence' of tho American people. This, as\nwo understood it, was a request to\nwith you for the purpose of ioflueuciug the\nactiou of the Retnruing Board iu toe discharge\nof its duties. The President had requested us\nto attend here to witness, n t to influence,\nsuch canvass, and such request by bim was not\nintended to limit ns to wi'nt es the count of the\nvotes actually cast, but the entire proceedings\nof tho board in reaching a reonit as to the\nvotes legally cast to be counted. Wo are grat-\nified to Jearn that you concur with the President\naud with us in this understanding. You also\nstate that you aro fully aware that both the or-\nganization and action, whether judicial or min-\nisterial, of the Returning Board of Louisiana\nwere beyond any authoritative control from\nwithout, and that it would be tho height \narrogance aud folly to attempt to alter the\ncustoms of a State of which we are not\ncitizens, or to obtrude our interpretation of\nthe laws upon thoe whose duty it is to admin-\nister them. Wo may, therefore, as we think,\nassume that you will agree with us that it would\nbe arrogance equally to attempt by our concert-\ned action to influence the proceedings cr result\nof courts of Justice, or of boards acting Judi-\ncially, and henco we are gratified at being atle\nfrom the language and tenor of yonr letter to\nassume that you did not wish to confer with us.\nfor the purpose of Influencing tbe action of the\nReturning Board, but only to secure euch co-\noperation on our patt as would euable us joint-\nly .with yourselves to witness the proceedings\nthroughout. A conference for such a purpose\nwould now seem to be unnecessary, as we leain\nfrom a communication just received from the\nboard, which appears to us to accomplish\nthat which by joar explanatory note\nyou desire to attain by the proposed\nconference.
0c0568ec7b75639bc9a714e32de6e274 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1861.1794520230847 37.561813 -75.84108 increase in times paai.1t ia evident that during\ntb coining year t lie conmiinplion will reach\nnear one million bolllea. Thia iiiiuienae amount\neouM tiercr liaTe been aolJ but for ths rare\nmeJiciunl properties coiitnined in the prepara-\ntion, and ilie annclion of Ilia moat prouiiueut\nphyaiciuna in llioa aections of (ha cottutrj\nwhere tt arlicla ia best known, who not only\nrecommend tit liiltera Io their patient, but\nar ready al alt limaa to frire testimonial Io ita\ntflicacy in all caara of atonmchio derangemculs\nand th diaeoaea resulting Ihererrem.\nThis ia imta temporary popiilnril, oblntneil\n1 y extraotUiunry ctlort iu I lie way ef trum-\npeting the qualities of lb Killers, but a solid\nesli jmlion of an invaluable medicine, which la\nUeaiiued to bo aa enduring aa tint iiaelf.\nHosteller's Biomacu Itinera hats proved\na uousenu to regions wner lever ana aril\nand various otbar ' oniplnjul liav\ncounted their victims j hundred. To b\nabl Io slat confidently that th "Hillers"\nar a certain cur for Ih Dyspepsia and like\ndiseases, is to Ih proprietor a source of un-\nalloyed pleasure. It remove all morbid Dialler\nfrom lb aiouineli, purifies th blood, and\nimparls renewed vitality lo the nervous ayatern,\ngiving it that loti and energy iudiapeuaabl\nfor Ih restoration of health, il operates upon\nthe slomach, liver, snd olhor digewiv organ,\nmildly but powerfully, and aoon restores them\nloaeendilion essential to Ih healthy discharge\nof the function of nature.\nElderly persona may use th Cillers daily aa\nper direclious on th boll I a, and lhy will Slid\nin II asllmulant peculiarly adapted l coniforl\ndeclfliing year, a it is pleasant to Ih palal,\ninvigoraluig Io th bowel, xeellent aa a Ionic,\nand rejuvenating generally. W hav Ih eri-dc u- o
55430f36a1f405d1eddfd8fb3c042815 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.9904371268467 43.798358 -73.087921 Some years ago, a young man emigra-\nted from New Hampshire to the state of\nLouisiana where, after he became set\ntled, he formed with a quarteroon slave of\nhis own, one of those (contubermal) con\nnexions, so common in the far south, as to\ncarry with them but little disrepute. Two\ndaughters were the fruitof their connexion.\nThey were not grown up, when the moth\ner died, a slave. The father was careful\nto bestow on them a good, if not an accom\nplished, education. Through mere neg-\nlect, as in the case of their mother, he did\nnot emancipate them according to the\ntorms required by law. The eldest had\narrived at the age of sixteen the other at\nfourteen. At this time the father died\nleaving his two handsome, well educated\nand tenderly reared daughters, with a\n estate, as it was supposed, for their\ncomfortable support.\nA brother residing in New Hampshire,\non hearing of his death, went to Louisia-\nna, to attend the adjustment of the estate,\nand to the interest of his neices. He en-\ntered on the administration, and, to his\ngreat surprise, found, after he had made\nconsiderable progress in the payment of\nthe claims, that the estate would, in all\nlikelihood, prove insolvent. He continu-\ned, however, to discharge them as they\nwere presented, till all the resources of the\nestate were exhausted, except his txeo nei\nces, who, by the laws of Louisiana, were\nslaves and assets in his hands. So mon-\nstrous a thing as selling them had never\nonce entered his mind. He was. however.\nreminded of this remaining resource, by\nsome of the creditors whose balances\nwere undischarged.
063d899b9d1929c14a9014176df51056 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.278082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 Itsilaa demonstration Tho Timpe, new\nthat lhe npcechmAktng is over, puts\nthe situation in a clear light with tho\nfollowing remarks:\n“The words pronounced by M. Lou­\nbet and the Duke of Genoa, and es­\npecially the telegrams exchanged be­\ntween M. Louhet and the king of Italy,\nstamp the proceedings at Toulon with\ntheir true diplomatic significance.\nFrance and Italy yesterday gave one\nanother, officially, the title of friends,\nwhich accords so well with Ute fra­\nternity of their genitai and blood. This\nis an event which must not bo dis­\ntorted nor wrongly interpreted. Hut\nthere in little risk of exaggerating its\nimportance, which, taking everything\ninto consideration, is considered. Both\nItaly and France have greatly changed\nsince the time of Bismarck and Crlspi.\nWo cannot yet say what fruits yes­\nterday will bring forth, but we augur\nmuch therefrom."\nThe Journal ilea TMtafs nays the\nevents at Toulon wiil leave a happy\nsouvenir In the history of Franco and\nItaly and their rapproachincnt will\nhenceforth rank as an established,\n and proclaimed fact.\nM. Hcnotaux, tho former minister cf\nforeign affairs, In an interview. Is\nquoted as expressing tire opinion that\nthe Toulon demonstrations were a val­\nuable indication of the pacific senti­\nments animating the powers. The visit\nof the Italian squadron marks the end\nof a painful period of tension in the\nreturns between France and Italy, and\npoints to an evolution of the senti­\nments of tho Italian government to­\nwards France.\nAt tho lunch on board tho Lepanto,\nthe flagship of tho Italian fleet, yester­\nday, the brilliant function was held\non the gun deck, which was trans­\nformed Into a banqueting hall. Foot­\nmen belonging to the household of\nthe Duke of Genoa, in scarlet livery,\nserved the tabic, which waa bsauLjtuliy\nadorned with gold plate and por­\ncelain centerpieces, filled with flowers.\nThe golden sorvlco was used for M.\nLouhet ami the Duke of Qanoa, a\nsilver service was used for (he attend­\ning minister«, while a valuable Saxon\nporcelain service was u.ad lor tho\nother gamuts.
01b272aa82fb20a3d6cc3e10f7248a84 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1892.4986338481583 43.82915 -115.834394 Mr. App leton , breeder and owner ol\nthe famous Jersey cow, E urotl»«, ,?a\nh is addres* before the New York I,TM\ners, cal ls attention to one rule in forcine\ncows that may be of service in all feed!\ning for profit, and that is, that fl»\nrou ghness of grass must be fed after th.\ncow h as eaten all rich ground feed tbe\nwil l tak e says the American Dairyman,\nT he ob ject is to get as ranch rich imiter-\nmakmg food In her as she can zssimi.\nlate. Th is can best be accomplished\nwith a well-composed ration which rele­\ngates h ay and grass to the rear, by feed­\ning ih e ration first and all she will eat\nof it, then topping off with the \nThe fact is that hay and grass are losing\ntheir grip, so to speak, with the scien­\ntific feeder. Wh ile it is not practical to\ndo away en tirely with the roughness of\nthe farm, yet it is beBt to keep it down\nas m uch as possible, consistent with the\nwell being of the cow. It seems to be\nmore nsefnl in helping digestion than\nin any intri neic merit of its own. While\ngrase is probably the best single feed lor\nmilk-making, it certainly is not so good\nas a well-composed ration, except it may\nbe for a few days in the summer time,\nwhen the rai ns and temperature seemto\nco m bin e to bring the grass to perfection.\nBu t th is is an exceedingly limited time.
059088ec07c9e076f9f368883cc5418b THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1905.8342465436326 46.601557 -120.510842 preclstlve of the Joke.\nAlfonso's reckless speeding through\ntbe streets of Madrid In his automobile\nbaa repeatedly been commented upon\nIn the Madrid papers, and It has been\nsaid that the attempt of the late Maura\ngovernment to compel the King to atop\nbis breakneck speeding wss tbe real\nreason why the cabinet fell. Premier\nMaura, at an audience with the King,\npointed out tbe danger of using tha\nstreets of Madrid as a race course, and\nthe fact that the municipal laws were\nbroken by bis Msjesty. Alfonso was\ngreatly angered over the remarks of\ntbe premier, and at once demanded the\ngovernment's resignation for Imperti-\nnence. The resignations were banded\nIn and a new government was formed.\nA more serious phase of this young\nKing's Independence of thought and\naction Is with the mother\nwho hss devoted her life to bis educa-\ntion and rearing. Her care has made\nhim a healthy, sturdy youth, although\nhe promised to Inherit all the physical\nweaknesses of his sickly father. He te\ncapable of great physical endurance\niiikl can stand up under fatigue that\nwould exhaust men of apparently\ngreater strength. Although he has al-\nmost reached his majority he follows\nstill tbe dally routtne laid out by hia\nmother when In 1801 hia royal curls\nwere cut and be set out to prepare\nhimself for his high place.\nNotwithstanding the devotion of his\nmother, the King Is said to be lacking\nIn respect for her, and many stories\nbearing on this attitude are told.\nThese, however, nro circulated by hia\npolitical opponent* and denied by his\nsupporters.
64918ec9f05872d66c433fdba4b223fb OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.974043684224 39.513775 -121.556359 H N Ihe matter of die declaration of cerlnin streets In\nU the < arllon trac t to he highways, and to alter the\nroad to McConnells f erry. It is hereby ordered that\nIhe present road running from the termination of\nItird, Robinson and .Montgomery streets in the town\nol i troville to Butcher Ranch in said county, he. and\nthe same is h-rein declared vacated as a public high-\nway. And it is further ordered Unit He- said Itird,\nMontgomery and Robinson streets of said town of\noroville. he extended as public highways across the\ntract of land known as the Carlton Tract, and ad\njoining said town of oroville. Raid continuations of\nBird, Robins'll and MontgonJfery street, to ho sixty\nsix feet in width, and extending in directions parallel\nwith each oilier, according i« the plan or serve) of\nsaid Carlton Tract, made by M. 11. Earley. And it is\nfurther ordered that the slrewt marked Fourth Ave-\nnue. according to (he plan and of the said\nCarlton Tract tie. and the same is hereby declared to\nlie a public highway—the said Avenue to is* sixty six\nfeet in width, and extending across said tract of land.\nAnd it is further ordered that so muel. ol tlie first.\nSecond. Third, filth Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Av-\nenues, as lie between Robinson and Montgomery\nsi reels, according to the plan or survey ol said M. 11.\nFarley of said Carlton Tract now on tile in tin* effi e\nof the county R'seordnr of se.id county, be, and the\nsame are hereby declared to be public high ways, all\nol said highways to tie sixty feet in width. And it\nis further ordered that tin- road now laid out Irouithe\ntermination of Hie sain Robinson street, across\nthe Butcher Hunch, to its inaction with Hie old road\nbe, and the same is hereby declared a public high-\nway, said highway to be sixty six feel in w idlh.\nAttest Hie foregoing a true copy.
05a28b11a019c9480304c73ec6f46f0b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1891.6890410641806 42.217817 -85.891125 It now appears that there is a strong\nlikelihood of nearly every lire insur\nance policy now in force in Michigan\nbeing declared invalid by reason of the\nFerguson act lowering the explosive\ntest of burning oils made from petro\nleum. Michigan never had but one law\nwhich afforded absolute security to con-\nsumers of kerosene. That law not only\nprovided for the Hash test of 130 deg.\nFahrenheit, but it also introduced the\n"chill test,"lirst discovered by Dr. R . C .\nKedzie, of the agricultural college, for\ndetecting adulteration with paralline,\na substance which injured the illumin\nating properties of oil, but by its m\nchanical action under heat hindered\nvaporization, and thus enabled manu\nfacturers to palm off upon consumers\nan article that was below the standard\n by law. Tho introduction of\nthe freezing test was a death blow to\nthat kind of knavery, and some manu-\nfacturers acknowledged that Dr. Kedzie\nwas the only person who had success\nfully checkmated them, and obliged\nthem to furnish to Michigan people a\npure oil. Further evidence of this is\nfound in the fact that the Standard Oil\nCompany spared no labor or expense\nto secure its repeal, which was accom\nplished (if our memory is not at fault)\nfour years later. The Hash test had\nalso been gradually reduced from 150\ndeg. to 120 deg., which was regarded by\nmost experts as allowing no margin be\ntween consumers and the danger 1'mc,\nbeing only ten degrees above tho low\nest standard recognized as safe by in\nsurancc conipauies.
06cf3eeba6451b9e554e92d4390feb89 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1892.9959016077212 41.258732 -95.937873 "He led us to the lake, where we saw\na sight that I shall never forget. In a\nspace where the wind had blown the\nsnow from the ice a flock of seven deer\nhad been cornered by a pack of five\nwolves. The deer couldn't get out on\naccount of the deep snow, and the wolves\nhad k.Jed three of them when wqgot\nthere. While we were blazing away at\nthe brutes the crow flew overhead and\nshouted his approval. We killed the\nwhole puck, and Abe felt so good that\nhe rolled over on the crust several times.\n"One day in the spring the crow aw\na fisher catch a rabbit and carry it to a\nhole in a basswood tree, thirty feet from\nthe ground. My brother and I were\nchopping near by, and Abe squalled\naround till he attracted our atten-\ntion, when he flew up to the hole\nwhere tho fisher was concealed. We\nchopped the basswood down, and the\nfisher skipped out and ran up a hemlock\n to where the leaves were so thick\nwe couldn't see it. Abe flew up, alighted\nabove the fisher and begun to squall, and\nsquinting through the foliage below him\nI could see enough of the fisher to fire at.\nI banged away, and down came Mr.\nFisher with a ballot in his hoad. Abe\nfairly laughod when tho fisher tumbled.\n"One morning I found six pullets on\nthe floor of the hen shanty. A mink had\nkilled them, and that night I set two\nsteel traps and put one of the pullets be-\ntween. In the morning a mink had it\nforefeet in one of the traps and one of\nits hud feet in the other. Abe tagged\nme in, and when he saw the mink strug-\ngling to get out he ran up in front of it\nand began to yell in Its face. I let the\ncrow torment it, and while my back was\nturned the mink caught Abe by the neck\nand bit him so hard that he died in a\nfew minutet."
05266a9193bc0dbe1de8fbeb759077e7 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.3219177765093 43.82915 -115.834394 true and the town is able to Cope\nwith other towns and is the King of\nlive Little cities. A Newman can be\nseen any day ready to invest. If\nyour girl is obstinate just Walker\ndown to Weiser and show her your\ncorner lot and she wii! have vou.\nThis Sommer may be lively though\nwe are not putting on Ayres about\nit. Some fine wheat is being put in­\nto the Hopper at the mill. Our Hart\nis warm towards newcomers and we\nwant Moore. A Page from our his­\ntory will show that we Grab at every\nchance to advance our interests. We\nare not Lyon to you but mean what\nwe say. Our girls have Ivory teeth\nand some of them Curl their hair and\nsing like a In the Sommer\nthey depart to the mountains for a\nnice Sommercamp by the banks of\nsome stream where they fish while\nthe bovs smoke a Cobh pipe. Some­\ntimes a prominent citizen will send\nhis Gallaway to school, though we\nhave a good school here. Our fanner\nBurns the sagebrush off his land which\nwill raise anything, owing to the fine\nclimate which is so healthy that a\nDeadman is a rarity. We have hay-\nfields, Butterfields and Brassfields.\nThe fields are all quite Green. What\nis Haworth? Considerable, my dear\nsir. It takes a good many Pence to\nbuy a ton. Our town is quite Townly\nand dignified and Lockwood start an­\nother paper which is a Signal success.\nPlease Hand your neighbor a copy of\nthis Number.
33dd489052ac3ae4085d24cd84cee59d THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.732876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 water se muddy that be o uld not drink. Raid\nthe lamb how can that be when I am further\ndown the stream than you are? Saul\nthowolf:Iamsurethatsheepiaiuacon-\nspiracy to destroy tho woIvom, bo bo destroyed\ntho shoop. That in the way it is with these\nmen down South who raise the cry of con-\nspiracy among tho negroes as a pretext for\ntheir destructiou. They are convicted in tho\ncourts almont without evidence; they aro\nkilled ou suspicion ; they are hunted forSBBnsa\nment, and their condition is now worse than\nit was before the war, and will coutiuue to be\nunless the government is able to vindicate its\npi rWOfl and its pledges. There is a heavy task\nimposed upon Democratic newspapers and D\nmocratic orators in the North. You will re-\nmember before war, the Democratic press S3\nNorth was required to deny or to excuse, or\nto justify tho murder ol abolitionists through\nthe South, ami when the war came on thev\nlabored to prove that it was brought ou by\nNorthern abolitionists, and that they alono\nwere responsible for it. You remember that\nduring the war, when our prisoners were mur-\ndered at Libby and Salisbury, Amlersonvdle\nand other ptleon none in tiie South, how the\nDemocratic nroaa in the North, and their ora-\ntors, labored to dony those things, or to show\nthat they were uot so bad as they neeme i to\nbe. aud bow they said finally, many of them,\nthat we treated rebel prisoners as badly as\nthey treated our. Aud after the war was\nover, and even while it was going on, iu this\nState and in thia town, many of tou will re-\nmember, when the State wan honey combed\nWith secret societies, the Houh of Liberty,\nwhen they wero meeting iu this city night af-\nter night, and not only here, but in every\ncounty m Indiana, conspiring to assassinate,\nto release rebel prisoners, to seize all tho arms\nin the State, and take the State of Indianaout\nof the Union line you will remember how\nconstantly and persistently tho exiatence of\nthat society was denied up to the very last\nmoment, and denied most strongly by those\nwho were the members of it. When at last\nwe. seized the aims here, seized their papers,\ntheir ritual, their constitutions, ar.d when the\nl ulled States government had armnted many\nof the
350e9407058b4f46ce1b788543722c2e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.8041095573312 58.275556 -134.3925 Fairbanks Weekly Times: That Fair-\nbatiks mid the Tanana valley can\nsupply not only enough vegetables for\nits own consumption, but can and will\nsupply a good part of the products to\nbe consumed throughout the whole of\nInterior Alaska, is being demonstrated\nthis year more than ever before On\nthe steamer Tanana, which left yestei-\nday for lower and upper river conuec\nlions, a large shipment of vegetables\nwa-i made, and for the balance of the\nseason each boat will take a good sized\ncargo of garden produce from here.\nSeveral year ago it was not thought\npossible that Fairbanks could ever pro\nduce enough potatoes and other vege¬\ntables for its own use, yet several of\nthe most prominent agriculturists in\nthe district claim now that the farmers\nhere can produce more than they can\nsell. It. is for this reason that they\nare shipping to Ruby, Iditarod and\nother lower river points, where they are\ngetting substantial prices.\n"Abide with me, fast falls the even'\ntide," says the Whitehorse Star. The\nusual winter schedule on the White\nPa*»s railroad which connects White\nhorse Skagway-By-The Sea ("Blest\nbe the tie that binds") will be inaugur¬\nated on Monday, Oct. 2fi, after which\nday and date only two trains each way\nwill pass over the roaTin one week of\nseveu days and about the only thing\ngoitig on in this locality after that date\nwill be interest on those bonds and the\nwater of old Vukon as it silently wend?\nits way toward tiering sea. It is with a\nfeeling akin to saduess that the people\nof Whitehorse contemplate the semi-\nseldom winter service on the tailroad. t\nFondly they will kiss their milk cans\ngoodbye, knowing that empires may\nfall before they see them again, lie-\nseachingly they will beg of the train\nconductor to leave with them his\npicture or a lock of his hair, knowing,\nnot what ravages Time may work on\nhis contour (whatever that is) before\nhe returns. How the prayers of our\npeople will voice the united request-.\n"Keturn, O Spiingr you giddy young\nthing." There is a possibility that the\nservice may be reduced to one train\neach way weekly before tho pussy\nwillows pu«r again,
0be09ddef5dc6f33507cb8d3d6b0169d THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.2581966896882 29.4246 -98.49514 Washington", April 3. The caucus of\nRepublican Senators this morning was\nnot very fully attended. The eduoatlon\nbill was tho only toplo of discussion, and\nseveral amendments proposed by the\ncaucus nommltteo were approved by the\ncaucus. The chief amonir them were\npropositions to reduce the aggregate ap\npropriation io oeiween fiu.uuu.uiu anu\nSSO.00O.00U. (The bill In the present\nform calls for 5103,000 .0)0). To make\nxuo money nvauauie ouiy upon requise\ntlon bv the States under certain restrlc.\ntlons nsto accountability, and to require\nits distribution to counties according to\npopulation anu illiteracy.\nCincinnati, Aprils. Matters continue\nquiet everywhere In the city. Tortious\nor the barrloades on Syoainoro street,\nnear the Jail, remain as rallying points\nin caso or any further attacks. The\nlower part ofthe court homo will soon\nbo protected by boards to keep out the\ncrowds. The mllltln on duty, the Sev-\nenteenth regiment, patrol Hie sidewalks\nall around the court house und lull, nnd\nkeep everybody approaching nearer\nman lue ourosione. iiiougu almost\nevery building In the vlolnlty Is marked\nby bullet holes, which ordinarily woutd\ndraw crowds of sight seers, thero nre\ncomparatively few people about and\nthey keep moving.\nSr. Louis, April 3. T . II. Wickes,\nSuperintendent of the Pullman Palace\nCar company, has gone to El Paso, and\non Saturday next will lnaugurato a Pull\nman oar service' on the Mexican Central\nroad. The Pullman company now has\n15 cars at El Paso whloh leave Saturday\nand the service will thereafter be dallv,\nThe Mexican Central road is now open\nfor business, and General Sunerlnteml.\ncnt Robinson wishes this palace car\nservice to commence nt onoe. T. U.\nParker, trafilo manairer of the Mexican\nCentral, Is now at Boston arranging\nthrough rates from St. Louis to the City\noi juexiro. iuo iime iiom nere will ue\n00 hours at first, but this will be short.\nened before long. The distance is 2J0O\nm lea.
19d668d5e149e5aa6c31918407e92f48 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.1986301052766 29.949932 -90.070116 foot bet amblera alle in 1:574.\nWe now come to the summer meeting of the\nAmerican Jockey Club, which began on the 30th\nof June. This meeting was intended ehiely for\nthe entertainment of the people who were sure to\nassemble in New York from all parts of the\nUnited States to attend the Democratic Presidesa\ntial Convention, on the fourth of July. A good\nprogramme was laid out, sad there was plenty of\nsport; but the attendance at the course was\nsmall, and politics was the all-absorbing consider-\nation of the time. The first race was a mile and\na quarter, for all age; it was worn by Nemseos,\na speedy daulhter of imp. Eclipse and Boho, by\nLeziaston, in 2:12). She beat a strong field in\nLeanester. Lizzie Rogers, Raquette, Jubel and\nLocal. The race was Westcheeter Handicap,\na mile aend three quarters; fifteen entered and\nfive ran. Flora Mclvor, a four-year-old filly, with\nninety-five pounds up, was brought out in a flee\ncondition by Doctor Weldon, and won it. beating\nNorthumberland. 3 yearn. 83 lbs.; Clara Clarita, 4\nyears, 92 lbs.; Eagle, aged. 104 lbs.; and Onward,\naged, 118 lbs. The time was 3:124. Onward was\nlast. The next race was a sweepetakes, for two-\nyearolds. five furlongs ; Invercauld, by St. Al-\nbans out of Eleanor. won it, beating the colt by\nEclipse out of Fidelity, the colt by Eclipse out of\nan Arlington mare, and Sapphire, by Bslrowine;\ntime, 1:061. The fourth race-mile beats, for all\nages-wite won by R. B. Connolly in two straight\nheats, beating King John, Metalrie. General\nYorks. Local and Egotist. The time was 1:47--\n1:474.
485658d92b9b66121dde1bb8d15431da THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1858.9602739408929 42.217817 -85.891125 heKniiWH'dgc, naua severe ami mjuuous\ncffect'irpon her. But as these particula.s\nare of less consequence, I will say no more\non thjspoint. In course of time we both\nrecove remand, on gaining sufiicio it strength\nagaiu took passage on a trading vessel to\nCeylon, in search of a better climate.\nWo went. to the mountainous regions of\nthat tropical Islaud, near the city of Kan-d - y,\nwhere --the air is cool, aud, to most peo-\nple, healtMct than other parks of India.\nThereto, jtved many mouths in compara-\ntive quljybut fever agaiu overtook hor\nwho.waHho mother of your child, and\nthough she lingered long aud suffered\nmuch, noT human means could restore her.\nHere lporuj sensibilities became more acute\nas she failed in strengtl', and with tho first\nloi. of hopo. of recovery, 6hc became anx\niously distressed to secure reftoration oi\nher dear little child to its bereaved father.\nShe was incessant in exacting promises\nfrom mo that, if 1 lived, E. should bo tak-\nen, or rent back safely to you. From these\ndemands I had no wish to escape. My\nonly anxiety was to do anything in my\npower to afford a small consolation, in the\nstrongest assurances I could make, that her\nwishes should be carried out. Although,\nafter tho mother waa gone from mo forev-\ner, the poor child became dearer to me.\nSho was all I had left. Yet, ru I had prom-\nised her poor mother, and as that mother\nhad sacrificed tho world and cverything'ou\nearth for my sake, I had not tho slightest\nthought or wish to neglect the discharge of\niho responsible, and to mc,fearlul duty.\nDuring all her laM illness, she regretted
0c23d47d112b1d48eee728636d02cabe THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.1575342148656 40.063962 -80.720915 ft ft IV, E X'J 80-10'J |ole« to a stake; theuco N 24Jf° E\nh"l UJ-IUO j»ole» to two white walnuts; thence N 4U}«\nI. »:! imle« to the beginning, containing 133 acres 1 rood\nand ;i7 |>erelies, more or less.\n. u I ran.iHitinntng ni Mia lait mentioned Hake\ncorner to the tint tract aforeaid; thenoo N 64W\n19 80*100 poles to a red oak; thence N M)£e W 11 pole*\nto a attitup; tlicnrc N 4V W 12 12*100 pole* to a itake;\nthence N 50>< W 12 |«lea to n Hake; i hence Ji 71V\nW 224S-100 poll* to a Make; thence « 20%' \\V 20 76-lUO\npole* i*> n aiuke; thence 8 v* <* 30 umu) pule* to a\n*Uke; thence S 48}«r W 2030-100 |K>lt» to a sycamore;\nthence s Ml\\V 20 jxilca to a bitter «lni; theuce a\nn'^4 W 22 poles a dead beech; thence 0 C3° W 18\npoiea to stump on the l>aiik of Short Creek; thence up\nnaid creek with the meandering* iffJ pole* to tvca>\nnioro nt the mouth of a run; thenco N 24?^c h 107\ns-inn pole* to thel(eginuiiitf, containing 80 acre* and\nWlMilt*, more or lea*.\n3d Tract.IteKtnniiiK nt «M lunt uientloned stump on\nthe bunk of Short Creek, down ihe creek with lu\nmeunderinxH 178J4 |ole»; thenceSSU3 K47^ |>o!efl ti>\nn i>lotie; thence ft 23 W >2 21-100 nolea Uj a beech;\nthence s ill I'. IS 24-100 |xilit to a (lead tree; thunev\nSSU'i 2.V.h-1u0 |«olc* to a stake; thence b20>'4'>W\n20 7r»i0'j p ilei to aalake; thence S 27J \\V 30 4O-100\n| oli# to u slake; thence S 48)4° W 2(5 3C-100 pole* to a\nnwMiuore: ihence S .Vl*£r to' SO |Ktlw lo a bUterelui:\nthence
23e9caf98ba27dc4cbc9a450b94c07ad DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.4972602422629 58.275556 -134.3925 It was made plain to Senator Dietrich\nSunday night, that Skagway wants ter¬\nritorial government and wants it bad¬\nly. There was not a discordant note\nat the meeting of the chamber of com¬\nmerce and other citizens that was held\nSunday night, at the chamber of com¬\nmerce room, and when the motion was\nput that it was the sonse of the peoplo\nof Skagway that they would be satis¬\nfied if the congress which will have its\nfirst meeting next winter would give us\nthat and nothing more, there was none\nto vote nay..Alaskan.\nThe Atlin Claim rejoices over recent\nreductions in freight rates from Puget\nSound points to Atlin. On less than\ncar lots the tariffs range from 83.15 to\n85.05 per hundred pounds.. The Special\nCommodity rate, shipments of not less\nthan car-load lots, is cut down to 82.75\nper 100 pounds, while potatoes, which\nlast year co6t 85.05, this year will cost\nonly 83.75 per hundred in small ship¬\nments. Tho rato on hay, last year, av¬\neraged 870 per ton and oats 801 per ton\nfrom the Coast, will now average 852.50\nand 817.50 per ton.\nThe secretary of the Fishermen's\nUnion on the Eraser River, is authority\nfor the statement that there will be\none of the greatest strikes on the Eras¬\ner this year that has ever been known\nin British Columbia. The fishermen .\nare still holding out for 18 cents per\nfish during and 17 cents during\nAugust, but the canners still object, to\nthe flat rate and demand that the fish¬\nermen come to terras on the sliding\nscale. The difference lies between the\nfiat and sliding rates. The union has\ndeclared a strike commencing July 1,\nif the canners do not agree to grant\nwhat they ask.\nOn May 3d a marriage ceremony was\nperformed under the skies, in front of\nthe Commissioner's office at Kayak,\nsays the Valdez Prospector. The con¬\ntracting parties were Jacalo, an Indian\nfrom Chilkat, and Florence, an Indian\nwoman from Yakiitat. It is more or\nless of a romance. It seams that Flo¬\nrence was one of the three or four\nwives of Chief Johnson, of Juneau, and\nwhen the edict was proclaimed in Ju¬\nneau annulling the marriages of all\nbut one of the polygamus Johnson's\nwives,* the present Mrs. Jacolo was\none of them. She emigrated to Yaku-\ntat, and during her visit there she\nniet her husband. In the meantime an\nold and decrepit squaw at Chilkat\nwanted Jacolo to jump the broomstick\nwith her, but as Jacolo had met Flo¬\nrence it was all off with the Chilkat\nrepresentative. The bride and groom\nstayed o\\i the island for a week, until\nthe wrath of the centennarian had\nsomewhat abated, and then returned to\ntheir home accross the bay. This is\nprobably the first marriage of any kind\nthat has taken place in this district.
53b1cf624c15cc002fbc66d06bd5c72b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.0863013381531 43.798358 -73.087921 have been sustained in a course of educa-\ntion. But never have the churches and\nauxiliary societies furnished the necessary\nfunds, in season to meet the regular ap-\npropriations. The consequence of this\nhas been that some very worthy individ-\nuals have been disappointed, and led to\ntransfer their relation to the Parent So-\nciety, and the Secretary has been obliged\nfor a number of years past to borrow\nmoney to meetthe quarterly returns of the\nbeneficiaries, while the Board have been\nobliged to be moderate in encouraging\napplication. At the present period it is\nwell known that money ifborrovved at all,\ncan only be obtained for a short time, and\neven then with no liitle difficulty. The\ntreasury of the society is now, not onlv\nempty, but at least one hundred dollars\nare needed to meet appropriations made at\nthe commencement of this year. And\nin a little more than two months, or\nin first part of the month of April.'two\nhundred dollars more will be needed to\nmeet the bills of the young men.\nNow these things ought not so to be. We\napprehend, in short we know, that there\nis wealth enough and benevolence enough\nin the churches in this Slate to meet the de-\nmands of this Society, and abundantly sus-tai- n\nall the beneficiaries now under pat-\nronage, and twice as many more But\nthere is not union of effort, or system\namong us as there evidently should be\nTo remedy this evil, it has been proposed\nto form Young Men's Education Societies\nm all our Associations. A form of a con-\nstitution has been published in theMinut-- s\nof the last Convention, and this has now\nbeen scattered through the State The\nyoung men in the Woodstock Association\nhave formed an auxiliary society, and will\nno doubt do much for the cause of edu-\ncation.
19fee2f557a1f8ba441020ab21e94504 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.519178050482 42.217817 -85.891125 peaceful habitations around. This erup-\ntion lasted for several weeks, the village\nof Myvatu became a prey to the fiery\nelements, and the whole country for\nmore than f0 miles around was devas-\ntated. More than 800 of the people are\nreported as having been rendered home\nless. Early in March there seemed to\nbe a general upheaval of the earth in the\nwhole central portion of the island; new\nmounds, as it were, rose to the surface,\nsome to a height of several hundred feet\nand over 1,000 feet in diameter at the\nbase, amid tremendous shocks of thun-\ndering beneath. They split open at the\ntop and vomited forth their burning con-\ntents upon the surface around them,\ncovering a distance of. 200 miles. Ten\nthousand people are said have lost\nnearly all their possessions, and the re-\nmainder, who live nearer to and along\nthe coasts, some 40,000 in number, are\nthemselves too poor to Support IQOfa\nvsst number oi n edy people. Several\nhundred persons arc also reported to\nhave perished. The world renowned\nGeysers have dried np tince th i terrible\neruption began, and hMcad of water,\nthese mysterious funnell emit immense\nquantities of hot smoke and ashes, winch,\n(luring the night, rising several thousand\nfeel into the air, appear like gigantic\ncolumns of flam less lire, visible for hun-\ndreds of miles. It is said that no his-\ntoric record of any volcanic eruption any-\nwhere in the world compares with this,\neither in territory over which it extends,\nthe number of newly- ope ne- d
2a694414ac45a5de95ab129b063819a3 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.3547944888383 32.408477 -91.186777 to bear interest at the rate of five\n(5) per cent per annum, payabl e\nsemi-annually, the principal and in-I\nterest of said bonds to be payable in I\nsuch amounts and at such places as\nthe governing authority may deter-\nmine, within the period of thirty-five\n(35) years from the date of the\nbonds; and both the principal and in-\nterest of said bonds to be secured by '\nIa sufficient tax to be levied and col-\nlected each year in accordance with\nArticle 281 of the Constitution and\nlaws of the State of Louisiana, the\nproceeds from the sale of the bonds at\nnot less than par to be used in con-\nstructing and improving the public\nloads and highways within the Par-\nish of Modison, Louisiana.\nBE IT FURTHER ORDANIED,\nThat there shall be published in the\nofficial journal of the Parish of Madi-\nson for thirty (30) days a notice\nof the said special election, said no-\n to embrace substantially all\nthings above set forth and also notice\nthat this Police Jury will meet in open\nsession at the Courthouse in Tallu-\nlah, Louisiana, at 1 o'clock P. M . on\nFriday, the 13th day of the month of\nJune, 1919, and then and there nro-\nceed to open the ballot boxes used\nin said election, examine and count\nthe ballots in number and amount, e "\namine and canvass the returns au ue-\nclare the result of the said election.\nBE IT FURTHER ORDAINED,\nThat the President of the Police Jury\nbe and he is hereby authorized and\ndirected to have the necessary ballots\nrinted for the special election, whid\nballots shall contain the foregoing\nproposition and be drawn up in ac-\ncordance with law and the provis-\nions of this ordinance; and he is al-\nso authorized to arrange for provid-\ning the ballot boxes, the necessary\nblanks for tally sheets and compiled\nstatements.
41f10166d54f2629521667fc7bf40862 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4342465436328 41.681744 -72.788147 "I am sure that since you came\nwe had kept him so busy that possi-\nbly she might have turned her at-\ntention to Rodney Maxwell and I\nwas much surprised when ahe made\nher appearance here tonight for I\ndid not invite her.\n"I canot tell whether she thought\nshe was invited or not, but tomor-\nrow I'll make Phil confess his share\nin the invitation business.\n"In the meantime, Lyra I consider\nyour visit very timely. He seems to\nhang upon your words and think a\ngreat deal of your advice. Tell him,\nwill you not, how ruinous it would\nbe for him to fall in love and mar-\nry a girl now while he Is so young?\n"Natlee Jones Is smarter than\nmost girls of her age. She la more\nclever than Phil certainly you\ncan find some way to put the case\nbefore him in the right light."\n"Why don't you tell him, yourself,\nAnne?" asked Lyra rather thickly.\n"Oh, he would not pay any atten-\ntion to me I am only his mother.\nMothers, my dear, bear sons and all\nthrough their childhood and youth\nthey give their very heart's blood\nmake them good citizens as well\nhappy individuals, only at the\nend to see these sons gayly lay all\ntheir love and appreciation at the\ndancing feet of a girl like the one\nout there clasped in Phil's arms.\n'You know I gave him that car\nabout Christmas time with the un\nderstanding that he must make up\nhis conditions and enter college at\nthe spring term."\n"Has he done this?"\n" .My dear Lyra,
1ec6baa07732b67eaf4e00b8d026b5c9 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1877.5273972285643 37.561813 -75.84108 The rapid progression of the remarka-\nble storm of the 2oth, as indicated by\nthe dispatches, is a most interesting\nstudy. Beginning apparently in the\nwestern part of Nebraska, it swept over\na track of country including the north-\nern portion of Kansas, the southern\npart of Nebraska, the northern part of\nMissouri, and almost the whole of Iowa,\nIllinois, Indiana and Ohio, in its de-\nstructive course eastward. It appeared\nto travel due east, until after traversing\nIndiana it took more of a northeasterly\ncourse, when the northern portion of the\nfront of the storm seemed to be in ad-\nvance of the southern portion. The\nstorm struck Chicago at 1 :20 p. m . with\ngreat force, and lasting twenty minutes,\nduring which heavy rain fell.\nIt struck Kankakee, Illinois, \nnoon, three miles north of which the\nCincinnati express was hurled off the\ntrack bv the violence of the gale. It\nstruck Danville, Illinois, about 12:30\np. m ., unroofing houses, uprooting trees.\nand bringing heavv loss to the farmers.\nBy 3 p. m . it reached Fort Wayne,\nIndiana, prostrating telegraph wires and\nfences and damaging crops. Toledo and\nTittm, Ohio, were reached later in the\nafternoon. The southern portion of the\nstorm's front struck Richmond, Indiana,\nat 3:45 p. m . ; Sidney, Ohio, and Aurora,\nIndiana, at 4 p. m . ; Cincinnati and\n.Springfield at 4:0 p. m . ; Columbus,\nOhio, at 5 p. m . ; Zanesvillc and Lan-\ncaster, Ohio, during the evening. At\nall points the disturbance passed it is de-\nscribed as short-live-
1092d380d037b3b8ccd4ffcbd6497ad7 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1900.2178081874683 37.451159 -86.90916 teeth the whole course of justice in the\nCommonwealth of Kentucky Shall W\nS Taylor whether he is the lawful\nGovernor of that State or not be ullow\ned to intervene between the law am\npersons charged with murder If he\ncaw do soIf he may interpose armed\nforce to prevent the arrest and trial of\nof men charged with the gravest crime\nknown to the law then the State of\nKentucky ia under a dictatorship and\nconstitutional government is for the\ntime being abrogated\nIt is not necessary to traverse the con\ntention which Taylor sets up as an ex\ncase for pardoning Davis and Powers\nbefore they were even arrested the ex\ncase he makes for sending militia to\ntheir rescue Even if it were apparent\nthat u conspiracy existed for the purpose\nof convicting certain men of Goebeli\nmurder the frustration of such a con\nsplracy is the province of the courts\n time prerogative of time Governor\nFor Taylor to assume in advance of\neven a preliminary hearing that Davis\nand Powers are to be railroaded to\nprison or to the gallows is an insult to\nthe judiciary of Kentucky as well as B\nusurpation of the judicial power of the\nState and of the nation It is in effect\nan assertion that the State courts and\nthe Supremo Court of the United States\nwould connive at such a conspiracy and\nthat Powers and Davis would be hanged-\nor imprisoned unless Taylor interposed\nto protect them Tho assumption is\nmonstrous and could proceed only from\nlaylor whose contempt for law has been\nids distinguishing characteristic during\ntime last six weeks\nWilliam Goebel was foully murdered\nThere is no dispute as to that It hap\npens that be occupied a prominent posi-\ntion politically but Is that circumstance\nto IIIIrVl ads a ghlejd 9 Isis murderers f
558a11eec061d6fcbb644954c7cb15d8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.409589009386 40.063962 -80.720915 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.\nA Couple or Yonnjr Gentlemen who\nn r e DlNH|;reeably ClrcnniNtHnced.\nBin tliia week's issue of -VoaA'a Times\nami J/rsjBijfr we find the following\nquestions and answers:\nQdbtios.."I have been two years\nacquainted with a young lady, for whom\n1 ®°te*;tain * Tery grea* regard. Part\nor the time I have been abseut from the\ncity, and we have corresponded regu¬\nlarly, her letters breathing a deeper af-\ntection than wonld a sister's, and I was\nl«*lo believe that I was not whollv in-\nditterent to her. Since my return to the\ncity I have visited her regularly every\nweek, and, recently, proposed to her,\nfully expecting from her previous con¬\nduct that she would accept me. She\ndid not give me a satisfactory answer,\nhowever, and when I pressed her for\nthe reasons, Ac., replied that there was\na 'family affair/ and that she could\nnever marry. begged her to let me\nknow the cause, which she did, and I\ncold her that it need be no bar to our\nunion. Now, she still withholds her\nConsent and refuses to engage herself\nalthough she acknowledges there is no\nperson she likes better. Tell me what\nI ought to do, and how I ought to act\nin the matter?"\nAnswer..All you have to do is to\nwait, with commendable patience, until\nthe lady shall have changed her mind;\nfor, if she really loves you, she will\nnow discover it, (provided you continue\nto devote yourself to her earnestly and\nexclusively,) and change her mind ac¬\ncordingly. Ladies do not know their\nown minds half the time in such mat¬\nters; and when time and constant asso¬\nciation make them feel quite familiar\nwith favorite gentlemen, a true affec¬\ntion will always suggest to them a\nnearer and dearer companionship,\ns-.
132913b3e55378a1a729fa12e1a33740 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1869.5164383244546 40.827279 -83.281309 monument to them, and at the\nrequest of these gentlemen I\nam about to make to you a very few\nremarks, which are incidental to the\noccasion and suggested by it.\nWhen I look around and see, as\nI now see, so many: brave men who\nwere by my side in that memorable\nbattle, among them his Excellenc.y,\nthe present Governor of Pennsyl-\nvania, General Geary, and others\nwho were with me at that time ;\nwhen I look back and think upon\nthe noble spirits who then fought so\nwell, and now sleep the sleep that\nknows no wakening; gallant. Rey-\nnolds, my bosom friend, as well as\nmy right hand officer ; brave Vin-\ncent, and Zook and Weed and oth-\ners, far. more in numbers than I\nhave time or words to mention, tny\nfeelings are those ot mingled sad-\nness and joy sadness, my friends,\nto think that there ever was an oc-\ncasion when such men should be\narrayed in battle as they were here,\nthat we should have even been call-\ned upon ns we were called upon on\nthis field to defend the flag of our\ncountry and Government, which\n been handed down to us from\nour forefathers ; sad to think of the\nmourning and desolation which\nprostrated our whole land, North\nand South ; sad to contemplate the\ndestruction of life which we here\nwrought in obedience to our high\nest dutv. I am filled with sadness\nto think of the hosts of mourning\nwidows and orphans left throughout\nthe land by that dreadful struggle.\nSuch melancholy thoughts naturally\ncome upon us. At the same time\nI feel gratitude and j'03' gratitude\nto the Almighty who directed the\nevent and selected me as an humble\ninstrument, with those then around\nme upon this field, to obtain that\ndecisive victory which turned the\ntide of the great war, and settled\nforever, I trust, in this country, the\nprinciples of personal liberty and\nconstitutional freedom. Applause.\nI feel gratitude, too, that our fellow\ncountrymen have been moved to\nsuch respect and honor as we are\nnow paying to the memory of those\nmen who, in the discharge of their\nduty, laid down their lives, proving\nby the highest sacrifice man can\nrender, devotion to the cause they\nwere defending, graticude to those\npresent t o-d a-
05abd4f090d8d5791e018951c33d1096 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1877.0041095573313 40.419757 -77.187146 We got to the lake about eight o'clock,\nbeing about the firs t ones there ; but\nthey kep' a comin',and before 10 o'clock\nwe all got there. There was about 20\nold fools of us, when we all got collected\ntogether. And about 10 o'clock we sot\nsail for the island. Josiah bavin ' felt so\nanimated and tickled aboutthe exertion,\nwas worked up awfully when, just after\nwe had got well out onto the lake, the\nwind took his hat off and blew it away,\nlie had made up his mind to look pretty\nthat day, and be so dressed up, that it\nworked him upawfully. And then the\nsun beat down onto him ; and if he had\nhad any hair onto his head it would\nhave seemed more shady. But did the\nbest I could by him ; I stood by him, and\npinned on his red bandanna handker-\nchief onto his head. But as I was flxin\nit on, I see there was something more\nthan mortification that ailed him. The\nlake was rough, and the boat rocked, and\nI eee he was beginning to be awful sick.\nHe looked deathly. Pretty Boon I felt\nbad too. Oh, the wretchedness of that\ntime ! I have enjoyed poor health con-\nsiderable in my life, but never did I en-\njoy so much sickness, in so short a time,\nas I did on that pleasure exertion to the\nisland. I suppose our beln' up all night\na'niost made it worse. When we reach-\ned the island we was both as weak as\ncats.
065a6be627f83e0949270af6d91015c1 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1867.6397259956875 37.561813 -75.84108 The Colored Farmers in Ohio.\nA correspondent of the Cincinnati Com\nmercial, who has just visited the colored\nsettlements of Rumley and Carthagena, in\nShelby and Jlereer counties, Ohio, em-\nphatically contradicts the report that the\nblacks are idle and shiftless. He says :\nIn thirteen days' travel, I have visited, I\nknow not how many colored farmers'\nhomes, have seen their lands and posses-\nsions, have listened to their simple tales of\nearly struggles and after successes, have\neaten at their tables, slept in their beds,\nand knelt with them round what, after the\npious fashion of white folks, they call the\nfamily altar; and I have not smelled\nwhisky or any other Vile smell, heard an\noath, or a word of rudeness and obscenity,\neaten off a dirty tablecloth or witnessed a\nsingle case of poverty or want. My bed-\nroom has often been carpetless, but the\nfloor has been clean ; I have sometimes, at\nthe first glance of the day, looked at a\nnioely whitewashed ceiling ; as often, per-\nhaps, at the big hewed beams, rafters and\nshingles, all in sight, and all of honest\noak, unsullied by either or cobwebs;\nand at other times I have interested my-\nself during the first few minutes of the day,\nby noticing the primitive frescoing of my\nchamber walls, done in Egyptian style,\nwith clay tempered with straw.\nI was told that the colored settlers were\nshiftless, and but barely lived by such cul\nture as they gave their farms. I have found\nthat the majority more than live by the\nculture of their farms, that in all years of\nfair crops they increase in worldly gear\nana tne gooas ot nie. l was prepared to\nnna tuem In most eases miserably poor.\nI found them in almost all cases blessed\nwith a sufficiency, in many cases with\nabundance. I was told they lived from\nhand to mouth. I have found many of\ntheir smoke houses rejoicing in plenty,\nand their barns bursting with abundance.\nwas told by men (mark it) not paying a\ndojlar a year for the support of schools or\njails, or any other indispensable adjunct of\ncivilization, that it. would be a burning\nshame for niggers to vote ; and I ' found\nthese niggers they were pal e- fac e- d,
2a4fef4f33cb0227202fca88a68c992d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.091780790208 39.745947 -75.546589 furnish the public with an artlcJe in is. milk-borne, it Is a wise course for Compare these conditions with those- nomleal1y obtained In either the whole\nkeeping with the economic demands, any city to safeguard Its milk supply known to exist in some Wilmington nr Ik or In one of Its product*, ror\nIt is preposterous to suppose that an in every reasonable way- It is not places, where ice cream is made ftin n who wants to undergo a steady gorg-\naergregation of disgruntled farmers, necessary in all instances, and cer- insanitary surroundings; where milk ing of eggs? To be sure, some of the\nwith no knowledge of the milk-plant tainly in Wilmington at the present is handled In fqul basements or in elements in milk are to be founp In\nbusiness, could come to Wilmington time is inadequate, to force eompul- equally obiecüionable outhouses. ror- other substances, Mien ns lettuce anu\nand sell a better product at cheaper sory pasteurization of All milk. This innately, these are very much In the other vegetables, but in no oilier food\nprice. It must he remembered' that should be done in. the Icc cream In- minority. Sucti should be wiped out. are found all essentlaH lo human\nthe milk sold In Wilmington comes dustry, and most of the tee cream The public diouW take no chances, life. At 13 cents a quart, its cheap\nfrom these same farms, and some of manufacturer* observe tills Very neo- The concerns whose reliability Is un- food-\nit is returned tu producers because It cssary health requirement without questioned, whose physical appear- 1er Cream as a Food,\nis not up to the standard required by compulsion. It Is possible, in my opin- J ifnce Indicates the substantiality of Too many persons look upon ice\nthe local milk or ice cream plants. If ion, to permit a raw milk supply of t hoir product,
2614617d45de0e80f39d871a2c74e677 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.460382482038 42.217817 -85.891125 town a few days ago tosubmit some plans\nfor a fine home, and the gentleman with\nwhom ho was doing business expressed\nsurprise when he was told that the blue\nprints and designs were Mr. Young's\nown work, saying he did not suppose\nthere was a man outside of the cities\nwho could do such work.\nSeveral of the finest residences in\ntown are Mr. Young's work. Two of\nthem built last year are that of M. L.\nDecker and the Presbyterian parsonage,\nside by side on north Kalamazoo street;\nthen there is E. G. Thayer's "Riverside"\nhome a little farther north on the same\nstreet, and the neat cottage homes of A.\nHathaway and J. E. Potter. These are\nfair samples of his work, and can be\nreadily seen by any' who contemplate\nbuilding, and all will find a talk with Mr.\n pleasant and profitable before\nstarting to build, whether he is given\nthe contract or not.\nHe intends in the future, in addition\nto furnishing plans for his own contracts\nto make a specialty of plans and specifica-\ntions for homes and business blocks, and\nhe solicits business in this line not on?y\nat home, but in surrounding towns.\nThose who are going to build will find it\na distinct advantage to have an architect\nwith whom they can personally confer\nand have their own ideas incorporated\nin the new home, and The True North-\nerner has no hesitancy in recommending\nMr. Young as entirely competent to fur-\nnish plans and specifications for any\nkind of a home, from the modest cottage\nto the mansion, complete in every detail,\nand at as reasonable a price as is consist-\nent with good work.
34a23d443bbdb7c7645d1596ce1c3550 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.2561643518518 39.745947 -75.546589 firent and Sewer Department? Whose\nw ork has necessarily expanded and In-\noreased more than any other depart­\nment of the city? Whal advance has\nthis department received to assist It\nIn" meeting the Increased and Imperious\ndemands made upon Us resources? I\nanswer, nothing but the criticism of\nthe public, and. yes, the pipes, to stimu­\nlate It to do a dollar's worth of work\nfor every fifty ctnts placed ;>t Us dis­\nposal. And. then again, condemned in\n(tiling terms when It sees the necessity\nof overpowering to some extant its ap­\npropriation ln erde- to not stand\nsquarely across the city's pi ogress and\ndevelopment, Ihere criticisms have\nfallen upon me personally, as the lash­\ning of a horse with an Impossible load.\n"I looked forward at first, after my\nappointment, and counted the years\nthat lay between that Mine and this.\nAs the years went by 1 began to count\nthe months, then the weeks and finally\nthe days that led up to the time when\n1 should lay down the burden of this\nwork, and but few school boys ever\napproached their graduating day with\nmore g< nuine pleasure than I hailed\nthe coming this day During the\nexistence of this department the area\nof the city has increased 13 per cent:\nmiles of streets, 20 per cent: miles of\npaved streets to care for, 100 per cent:\nmiles of sewers since 1894, 100 per cent;\ncast of cleaning streit« since 1894, 122\nper cent: cost of removing ashes since\n1894, 27 per cent: coat of cleaning sew ­\ners since 1894, 149 per cent; cost of\nlamps and lighting since 1894. 31 par\ncent; cost of street repairs since 1894.\n77 per cent: cost of salaries since 1894,\n108 pi r cent; coat of street sprinkling\nsince 1894 , 462 per cent,\nsewer repairs, an irregular Item, ibut,\nof course, very much Increased our\nfermer figures.\nThe only decrease that we are able\nto find In any calculation that we are\nable to make is in the appropriation\nto this board, which, not withstanding\nthe very large increase to all other de­\npartments, and the very large increase\nIn the work and labor of this Its an­\nnual appropriation has been decreased\n28 per cent.\nfeel warranted In speaking of these\nmatters with the earnestness that I\nCould there be a greater absurdity
0d6bbfffc1233582cd76e49f0b561285 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8101092579943 39.513775 -121.556359 Tin: English Poet-Laurf.atk.—\nTennyson belonged to a period tn Eng-\nlish annals somewhat later than the one\nwith which we are now engaged, hut\nthe whiil of political events wild not\npermit a recurrence to the inviting\npaths of poetry and literature, and he\nwill, perhaps, not regret being fd.ic« d\nbeside his great compeers, lie has\nopened a new \\ein in English poetry,\nand shown that real genius, even in\nthe most advanced stages of society,\ncan strike a fresh chord, and departing\nfrom the hackneyed ways of imitation,\ncharm the world by the conceptions of\noriginal thought. llis imagination,\nwide and discmsive as the dreams of\nfancy, wanders at will, not over the\nreal a.s much as the ideal world. The\ngrottos of tic sea, ihe caves of the\nmnrmaid, the realms of heaven, are al-\nternately the of his s"iig. ills\nversification, wild as the S"iig of the\nelfin king, is broken and rrogular, hut\noften im xpi esdvely chai ming. S <nv\ntimes, however, this tendency lends\nhim into conceit ; in the endeavor to\nbeoriginal. he becomes fantastic. There\nis a freshness end originality, however,\nabout his conceptions, which contrast\n•strangely with tin* practical and inter-\nested views w h eh influenced the a-e\nin which he lived, and cotnhutcd not\na little to their deserved success. They\nwere fi It to be the more charming, ho*\ncause they were so much at vari ■ ncc\nwith the prevailing ideas around him,\nand re-opened those fountains of ro-\nmance which nature lias planted in\nevery generous bosom, but winch are\nso often closed by the cares, the anxi-\neties, und the livaJry of the world\nSOft.
19fcb77ecb5eb4d23553750537eb1210 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1903.4205479134957 58.275556 -134.3925 Joseph Koggendorf, a native 01\nWisconsin, aged 3(3 years, died at\nTread well, 011 Saturday, May 30th, 1003.\nFuneral services were held at the Con¬\ngregational church, on Monday, June\n1st, Rev. Krause officiating.\nThe two men, Polvi aud Koggendorf,\nwere employed at the Mexican mine,\nby a contractor who was cutting a\nraise from the 550 to the MOlevel.\nThey came to their death from in-:\nhaling powder smoke. When the night.\nshift came out of the mine, the usual\nround of holes was lired and the air J\nturned on to clear out the smoke. It1\nwas found afterwards that wheu these\nshots went off a rock struck the air\ncock and mashed it flat so that it fail¬\ned to allow the air to escape. When\nPolvi and Koggendorf went to work\nthey entered the raise, supposing it to\nbe clear. Shift Boss Eaton came along\nthat way a short time afterwards and\nhearing unusual souuds, procured help\nand rushing into .the raise, fouud Fred\nTatom in an unconscious condition aud\ncarried him out. Polvi and Koggendorf\nwere also quickly out by the\nother men. Dr. Moore was hurried to\nthe scene and every effort was made to\nbring the men back to life, with success !\nin the case of Tatom, but the other two\nwere too far gone. They were both ex-\nperienced miners. Polvi had worked at\nTreadwell for about one year, and Kog¬\ngendorf for more than 10 years.\nFarewell Gathering.\nLast Thursday evening the friends of\nRev. and Mrs. F. C. Krause and Mr. and\nMrs. Walter Gould gathered at the Con¬\ngregational church to express their ap-\npreciatoq aud good feeling for the\nabove mentioned, who are about to de¬\npart from Douglas for other parts. An\ninformal program of songs, recitations\nand speeches, passed the fore part of\nthe evening, after which all present\nwere ushered into the church parlors,\nwhere the ladies had prepared an ele- \\\ngant supper. The only thing to mar\nthe pleasure of the eveniug was the;\nthought that it was perhaps the last\nevent at which the pastor and wife and\nMr. and Mrs. Gould would be present\nin this city.
1549b789c5daf550077886c9337f70d3 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1890.0945205162354 43.82915 -115.834394 It has lieen probably noticed th at line*\ncross each other on the margin of a chromo.\nThese are the registering marks; ami enable\nthe print er to place the sheet in the same\nrelative position every time a new stone is\nused and a new color applied. These lines\nare drawn in the original tracing and appear\non each stone. Wheu the first color is p rint­\ned very small holes are punctured in each\nsheet at the intersection of these lines, very\nflue holes are also drilled in corresponding\npositions on each of the subsequent stones,\nand the holes in the i>aper are to correspond\nprecisely with the holes iu the stone, aud\nthus as each additional color is put on a per­\nfect register is secured and each color falls\njust where it belongs.\nThe next process is to make the chromo\nhave a rough surface like an oil painting. A\nstone uow prepared which has a rough sur­\nface, similar to canvas. The chromo is then\nlaid upon i t and passed through a press with\nheavy pressure. When it comes forth i t is\nan exact imitation of the painting. It U\nthen varnished, and thus you have the chro­\nmo ready for the market.\nThe world is yet practically dependent on\none quarry in Bavaria for its lithographic\nstone. Stones have been found in France,\nEngland, Canada and the United States, but\nnone possess the qualities of the best German\nstones. A bed of lithographic stone has been\nfound in Sequatchie valley, not far from\nChattanooga, and the investigations so far\nindicate that it will yield stone of a very fine\nquality. If it should prove so, i t will be 'lit­\nerally a gold mine. The finer quality of\nstone is today worth thirteen cents per pound,\nand iu very scarce.—Nashville (Tenu.) Times.
09c635608e4e5c9fd95de2940bb447fc THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.3538251049888 37.305884 -89.518148 From the time so far back that his-\ntory is lost in myth, the River Nile has\nenriched the land, therefore the annual\nNile flood is the most important hap-\npening in Egypt.\nThe ancient Nilomcter, at the south\nend of the island of Iioda. just above\nCairo, is one of the most interesting\nsights of the place. The water enters\nfrom the river by a culvert into a well\n13 feet square, with a graduated stone\npillar in the center. On each side of\nthe well is a recess six feet wide anil\nthree feet deep, surmounted by a point-\ned arch, over which is carved in relief\na CuSc inscription, and a similar in-\nscription is carried all around the wel!.\nconsisting of verses of the Koran. A\nftaircase goes down the well, from the\nsteps of which the initiated may read!\nthe height of the water on the pillar;\nbut they are few in number, and tha\n sheikh of the Nilometflr.\nwhose duty it is to keep the record, ia\na person of some importance.\nThe Nilometer dates from A. D. 661;\nand in the archives of Cairo may ba\nfound the daily record for 1,000 years. ;\nAfter the river has, begun to rise ita\nheight is daily chanted through tha\nCairo streets until it reaches 16 cubit 3\non the gauge. At this point the Khali;\nel Masri, the old canal that flow\nthrough the heart of Cairo, is opened\nL'p to this point it is dry.\nThere is no more interesting cert\nmony in Egypt than the annual "cut\nting of the Khalig," as the opening cf.r\nemony is called. It takes place be\ntvveen August 5 and August 15.\nDays before, preparations are being\nmade for the festival. Tents, with in-\nnumerable lamps, are placed along the\nwall on the one side. Frames for all\nmanner of fireworks are erected on the
32e1b5705782e05fd2e8eaa0099b4806 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.1164383244545 39.513775 -121.556359 n»V VTRTFE OF AN EXF.i l T ?»oV Issued ont\n3S of tin* |*ii net Court. Nmill Juditi il District,\nIn uiul fur the County of Untie mi l Slate of Califor-\nnia, u> me directed and delivered. commanding me\nat in ike the sum of nine him lre»l and seventy-eight\n! turl y -«i< him- tin it Iredlhs dollars, whh interesi there*\nmi nil the rnli- oi two per cent iht iimhili from Hie\nsixth it iy ot Novi'inl* r \\ I* I* >«■ mi l tin* birth* r\n.mu of thir*v—ev>* i ninety-two otie-hun Iredllt* del-\nI no* with in'erest thereon ,il tin* mto rut*- ol temper\neelit |»-r iiiiiillin, from tlie t**ulti day ot .l:m iim A\nI). 1 Soli, mill coiii tan t. la lh<* m n of iiiii •111*11\ndolliin ami eighty-dv« cent**, to- iher "iili j I tin*\ncons accruing on said writ, wherein Cribs v I irtsh\n ilit* pi.Hindis and leorgo Vi . Ron* i» t.i.* delen t-\nsuit, 1 turn* ii*i/. *1 and !vvl**il upon mi*! w ill cell at\npublic ■eilt* to Un* highest Iml.ler for cuih. on tin*\nfourteenth day uf February, A . I* I' m, at lll** h ntr\n111 two oclock, r . M„ all of the right, title mi l In-\nterest ol the hlkivi* mimed ilefen hint, in and to all\no| that certain piece or parcel of Iml ty iit -t and In-\nhut situate In iFhir Township, on Ihn east cide of\nIVother river, in Butte County, Culilortitu, compri-\nsing I hr. i* 11 mirier nect ioni of laid, mil eon it it ntiiut\nwhat ii known as Kont'i Ranch, iilutil»*d ni**>iit olio\nmile he low Mot 'otiliella Ferry, together with nil and\nsingular the tenements. hereiliinine its ami upper:,—\nminces Iherennto belonging, or in any w ice appertain-\nhut.
6db0b5fbb79c2fd369ac6720a3861a51 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.2726027080162 39.745947 -75.546589 to participate in the fiftieth anniver­\nsary exercises of the battle of Get­\ntysburg on the battlefield on July 1,\n”, 3, and 4. Is now making Us plans.\nTho Legislature appropriated $2,000\nto assist in defraying expenses of\nDelaware's old soldiers, whether they\nwore (he blue or the gray,\nmission in charge of Delawares part\nIn the celebration comprises Gover­\nnor Miller, Richard G. Buckingham,\nof Mill Crock Hundred.\nSatterfield, of Dover, Senator W. F.\nBlackstone, of Georgetown, Colonel\nH, B. Cavenaugta and Mayor Chaun-\ncey P. Holcomb, of New Castle. Mr.\nBuckingham, a veteran who is proud\nthat he was a high private, is a for­\nmer member of tho Legislature, and\non behalf of the Commission he is\ngoing ahead with many of the ar­\nrangements for the three days trip\nof the Delawareans.\nAn official circular of information\nfor the veterans who expect to at­\ntend the celebration\ncentennial of the battle of Gettys­\n has been issued by the Penn­\nsylvania Commission, dutlinlnfc the\ntentative suggestions for the exercises\nat which the men of the Union and\nConfederate armies will unite for the\nfirst occasion celebration.\nA great camp has been arranged to\ncare for 40,000 veterans, only veter­\nans to he accommodated. This has\nbeen laid out hy the Quartermaster's\nDepartment of tho United\nArmy. The State of Pennsylvania,\nwhich is the host, has contracted for\nthe largest tent In the country for\nreunions. This tent, which\nat Altoona last Fall during the\nercises commemorative of tho semi­\ncentennial of (he War\nconference, will be pitched on histor­\nic ground, near the camp, and will\naccommodate 12.600 persons.\nThe Tentative Program.\nTho outline of Ihe tentative\ngram Is as follows:\nJuly 1, Veterans day with exer­\ncises under direction of the Pennsyl­\nvania Commission, tho\nin-chief of Ihe Grand Army of the\nRepublic and the United Confederate\nVeterans.
1d36d04f866ca6bc91a386cd6a0b7014 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.9164383244547 39.745947 -75.546589 Then there 1« the very great danger\nthat the sum realised on an insurance\npolicy by the widow will be lost in whole\nor iu part through injudicious invest- \nmeat. Ordinarily she is umicqimlutcd\nwith the rules of business and little cap­\nable of guarding lier interests against tin-\ndesigns of sharpers. If (he secrets 'were\nall revealed of eases where, through nat­\nural trustfulness and lack of worldly\nwisdom, widows hare east “all their liv­\ning,” not Into the treasury of the Lord,\nbut Into the coffers of sleek and sancti­\nmonious swindlers, the story would he at\nonce instructive and appalling.\nTo the man who knows these dangers\nthe question is not so mueli shall he in­\nsure his life as how shall he insure his\ninsurance. For life itself is not so un­\ncertain as money. Really the average\nmans chances surviving his wife are\nbetter than her chances of keeping what\nhe bequeaths her intact and productive.\nNow suppose he desires to arrange in\nadvance the investment of his estate, to\nwhom enu he most safely entrust it?\nNot to Individuals, surely, for they may\nprove incapable; or if capable, dishonest;\nor If both honest and capable they may\ndie within a few years and the properly\nfall into strange hands. A corporation,\nwhich cannot die. is indisputably the best\ntrustee. And what corporation better\nthan the Insurance company whose stu;\nhillty and fairness ho investigates uud\ntests as a policy-holder? Ollier corpor­\nations will not guarantee definite returns\nupon trust estates; they simply promise\nthe best procurable, less reasonable\ncharges, if only the insurance company\nwould consent to extend its beneficent\nrelations after a uiau's death, amt pay his\nwife an income!
461713278938ee9ec5f6ebc24d8935cb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.7383561326737 41.681744 -72.788147 To the Editor of the Herald:\nWould you pull the lever or push\nthe button that would send a soul or\nbrother into eternity? Do you believe\nthat this custom belongs to our mod-\nern civilization? The Governor of\nMissouri has signed the bill that will\ndo away with this relic of the dark\nage. The big men of eleven of- our\nmost progressive states could see no\narguments in favor of the death pen-\nalty, and repealed the act. If capital\npunishment were a benefit to the\nstate, the great state of Wisconsin,\nwhich abolished the death penalty\nyears ago would show a larger percen-\ntage per capita of homicides, than\ndoes Illinois, whose territory borders\non hers. Statistics show that in 21\nof the states having the largest num-\nber of crimes per capita, ,not one state\nhas abolished capital punishment.\nIf capital punishment is necessary\nand right why shouldn't we let all the\npeople witness the act. If legal exe-\ncution is right and a good thing it\nshould take place out in a large field\nwhere all can view the scene and prof-\nit by the experience. Why continue\na brutalizing form of punishment\nwhen it serves no economic, moral \nother good purpose? No plan for\ndealing with crime can rightfully be\nmaintained simply because it is ven-\nerable. It does not protect society\nfrom its actual or possible murderers.\nIt is not deterrent of the crime for\nwhich it is the punishment. It is not\nin accordance with Christian and hu-\nmane twentieth century policies for\ndealing with offenders. Can you imag-\nine Christ dealing out this kind of\npunishment, and yet He said to follow\nhim. The Attorney Generals of 16\nout of 22 states interviewed, state in\ntheir opinion that capital punishment\ndoes not tend to diminish crime. It is\nworking on the wrong end, on the ef-\nfect instead of the cause. Did it ever\noccur to you that a criminal might be\na young soul in the race family, and\nthat he needs instruction and culti-\nvation instead of suppression and\ndeath? He is a spark of the divine\nwhich cannot be destroyed, only tem-\nporarily set up to break forth again in\nsome form in the future.\nAs the "Good" people of our coun-\ntry, our responsibility is something\nappalling. We, as an organized socie-\nty, invite human souls to come to\nearth through the gate-wa- y
07d69029a48f0a9bd07fe3e6f42a46fa EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.387671201167 39.745947 -75.546589 cleaning of stables to abate the fly j\nnuisance, has had a town cleaning ]\nday, and paid for two drinking foun-\ntains In the town; the school vlsltng\ncommittee adopted the home credit !\nsystem In the schools, and purchased\na reference book for the library. Ten\nnew members were added during the\nyear, making a total of 70- The club\nwill furnish a room in Delaware Col- (\nlege for Women.\nMiss Eunce Anthony, for the Twen­\ntieth Century Club of Smyrna, report- |\ned a membership ot 159, and a pay­\nment of $200 on their mortgage, re- |\nducing it to $800. During the year\nthey assisted in a campaign against\nthe fly; helped with the clean-up\nday: helped to create sentiment for\nthe protection of trees; and assumed\nlocal management of the Chautauqua,\nto be held in their town, 6-12 .\nThe Swastika Club of Delmar.\nthrough Mrs. S. M, Yingllng, reported\n105 members. Many socials and oth­\ner sessions had been held during the\nyear. A book reception brought iu\n75 new books for the library.\nAmong the good works accom­\nplished by the Avon Club of Felton\nwas the organization of an alumni ot\ntheir high school, for which they de­\nfrayed the expenses; a historical ad­\ndress by Judge H. C. Conrad and an\naddress on the Panama Canal.\nThe Milford Club, through Mrs. O.\nP. Pierce, congratulated Itself on\nbeing hostess to the Slate body. They\nco-operated with the Town Council\nand the Boy Scouts for a “clean-up"\nweek, and they purpose to make Mil­\nford even more sanitary and beauti­\nful than it now Is. They have had\ndelightful musicales and lectures dur­\ning the year.
02f5a1cc8940baf35e373a8bad17ee8e CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1887.7630136669204 39.623709 -77.41082 one of tbe ferries from Constantinople comes\nin and lands about a thousand passengers.\nThey see (he Giaour, with tha stovepipe hat.\nHe is Igallanting a|Mohamm*dan lady. The\nrumor reaches tbe kaimakam, or governor of\nthe island. We return to the scala after our\nsail among the islands. We drive her to her\nhome in the carriage, which is waiting. What\nis the result t Before I take tbe boat that day\nfor Constantinople my driver, borae* and car-\nriage arc arreeted by order of the kaimakam I\nThis is Indeed an adventure not provided\nfor by any instructions from the state de-\npartment. At once I send a remonstrance to\nthe kaimakam against the arrest of one in\nthe employ of the American minister. It it\ncouched in unabridged terms, such as are em-\nbraced in tlie word interterritoriality.\nIt is ncedleas to say that this proceeding\nreached tlie prefect in the city, and I fear\nthe sultan and |ialac,e alto. There bos\nbeen an apparent infraction of the Turkb'.i\nlaw, which forbids a Mahometan woman,\nunless of princely rank, to be seen upon the\nstreet with any man, and more especially a\nChristian. The plug bat made a prime facie\ncase. However, the natter was decorously\nsettled, as It should have been; for the kai-\nmakam had exceeded hit authnrity. It was\na matter outside of hit jurisdiction. Hit con-\nduct was arbitrary. He bad no warrant or\nprocess for the toisur* of the horses, the\ndriver or carriage. If there had not be* nan\nOriental princes* in the case —who exhibited\nsome sensibility in relation to her royal in-\ndependency, which perhaps she hail over-\nstepped—the matter might have figured in\nour diplomatic corresjiondeiice. A* it was,\ntha affair wo* properly settled without a pur-\nsuit of tliu governor. My impression Is thst\nhe did not know the quality of tne lad/nor\ntlie capacity of tlie minister.
1c6e2f4875669a176d6f4540deff7a5e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.5657533929477 58.275556 -134.3925 After tho applications have been\nproperly prepared and executed they\nmay be either presented to tho\nTrustee at his ofTIco or mailed to him\nat Ilox 1091, Juneau, Alaska. A\npost-office money ordor or cheek on\na Juneau bunk in nil amount suf\nflclent to cover tho assessment\nshould accompnny the application.\nThe deeds which will he given by\ntho Trustee to the lot claimants\nmust bo acknowledged before an of-\nfleer authorized to take acknowledg-\nmonts of doeds. the cost of Whloh\nIs to be borne by the grantee. The\ncharge for taking the acknowledg¬\nment will bo fifty cents for each\ndeed and this amount should be sent\nto the Trustee at the same time that\nthe assessment Is paid.\nAll applications filed prior to Aug¬\nust 21st. will be considered as\ntiled simultaneously for the purpose\nof making lot awards and In sill\nrases. In which no conflicting claims\nto tho same lot appear, deed or deeds\nwill Issue to tho claimant whose ap¬\nplication has been filed If he Is\notherwlso entitled to the same, but\nIn all cases where two or more appli¬\ncations arb filed for the same lot\nprior to August 21, 19 IS, the Trus¬\ntee will sot a date for a hearing nt\nwhich all claimants may appear and\noffer evidence of their respective\nclaims to priority und the Trustee\nwill thereafter Issue Ills deeds In ac-\ncordanco with the final dotertnlnn-\nlion of said enses. All applications\nDied subsequent to August 21. 1918,\nwill bo considered In tho order of\ntheir filing.
8ef4a45a75f30cd70ae95391736f155a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.5027396943176 39.261561 -121.016059 glrvada jPrmimat.\nThibvte of Affection.—The visitor to our\nvillage cemetery will discover, that within the\npast few weeks, a marble monument has been\nerected over a couple of graves in the southeast-\nern portion ofthat receptacle of the dead. The\nmonument is a marble shaft, resting upon a\nsandstone pedestal—the whole about twelve feet\nhigh, and forms the moat prominent feature of\nthe locality. It was chisled by Mr. Mereadv, of\nMarysville, from the California gray marble,\nand erected by Mr. John McCoy, of Sebastopol,\nin this county, to mark the final resting place\nof two brothers, the history of whose demise is\nsomewhat sad, and may he related in a few\nwords: Austin T. and Andrew O. McCoy, the\nbrothers w ho repose beneath the shaft, in lbod\nwere engaged near mining in u deep\nopen cut. Austin was so busily engaged at his\nlabors that lie was ignorant of an immeuscslide\nwhich had begun to move, and threatened the\nlives of those who stood in its course. Andrew\nsaw the imminence of his positon, and forget-\nful of his own safety, cried out to Austin, who\nheard his voice in time to make his escape,\nwhile Andrew was caught, and crushed to death.\nAustin was so affected at the circumstance that\nhe fell into a profound melancholy, and com-\nmitted suicide in the September following. This\nis the brief and touching story of the monument,\nwhich is a beautiful testimonial of the surviving\nbrothers affection, and is viewed with more\nthan ordinary interest by every one who visits\nthe spot. —[San Juan Press.
f44775a123e02e96d6e1056ea889f8c0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.009589009386 41.681744 -72.788147 believe in a building contractor\nholding the office but he had no\npersonal grievance against Mr. John-\nson. Fred S. Spencer also stated\nthat he had signed the petition un-\nder the impression that, it was an\nattempt to get Mr. Dow in office.\nTony Sharr told the. gathering\nthat he had no charges to make\nagainst the building inspector but\nhad signed the petition merely be-\ncause he wished to sec "Old Man"\nDow get the position.\nA. L. Raymond, electrician, like\nthe majority of the signers, said\nthat he had no charges to prefer\nagainst Mr. Johnson but he did not\nbelieve in a building contractor' s\nholding the position.\nMr. Simpson stated that the build-\ning commission had never receivi i\nany complaints against the work of\nMr. Johnson. He frequently ask-- d\nif the contractors that the\nbuilding commissioners, and nDt\nthe builders, appointed the inspec-\ntor to office. In regard to a contrac-\ntor holding office, he said that he\nunderstood that a contractor ha\nheld the position for years in Ne.v\nBritain without any complaints be-\ning registered against his work. He\nalso stated that the building com-\nmission was confident that the in-\nspector was fully educated in car-\npentry, electrical and plumbing lines.\nSpectator Start Argument\nAs he finished, a young man in\nthe crowd by the name Of Evans\nstarted a verbal argument with Mr.\nJohnson and stated that Mr. John-\nson had the advantage over other\ncontractors because people went to\nhis office, to seek information about\nthe building code. etc.. with the re-\nsult that Mr. Johnson had a great\nopportunity lo get contracts from\nthem.
1f2bae800586fe69ad54540ef09835e0 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.2726027080162 37.53119 -84.661888 Tbcnla of Danville visited the famlly\nof John Ford Lewis Whitt was called\nhome by the sudden death of hit father\nWe are always glad to hear from tho\nOttonholm reporter as we are only a\nfaw miles apart We never hear any\nthing from our sister town only throu h\nthe columns of the I J\nA Sunday School will bo organU\nat Sugar Grove next Sunday Every-\nbody Invited to attend and help In tho\ngood work We bad a good Sunday\nSchool last summer and hope to have a\nstill better one this season\nAneel Green has moved to the Crt\nTurnbull place As Mr Green la aI\ngood citizen we give him a hearty wel\ncomo Into our vicinity and Invite him\nto help us In our Sunday A\ndaughter ot Marlon Hunt Is 111 of ty\nphold fever Mrs G A Adami h81\nbeen called to nurse her Elmer Ad\nama Is on the sick list\nNo darker shadow nor deeper Jloom\never gathered over home and commu-\nnity than when the death of Calvin\nWbltt was made known Ho was In\nusual health ale a hearty supper Dnd\nwent to a neighbors for awhile On\nreturning homo he complained of his\nbreast hurting him Everything tbat\nloving hands could do was done but\ndeath relieved his suffering only a few\nmoments later Qe was perfectly con\nsclous of his death and told his famlly\ngoodbye A happy home circle Is bro-\nken a kind husband and loving father\nIs gone and all our hearts are made\nsad
07a46fbb7f68d3aab4a25e020d7e3853 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.560273940893 40.441694 -79.990086 Dedication of the Odd Fellows Orphans'\nHome at Laurel Station Postponement\nOf the Hotel Kenmawr Theatricals A\nNeat Summer "Wedding Social Gossip.\nThe Odd Fellows' Widows and Orphans'\nHome at Laurel, was dedicated yesterday.\nEvery train for that station yesterday was\ncrowded with members of that order from\nall the cities and towns within 100 miles of\nPittsburg. Besides the dedicatory services\nit was a day of fraternal reunion and all\nkinds of sports were enjoyed. The arrange-\nments were complete and the success of the\naffair was duo to the management of Dr. G.\nA. Mueller, John W. Honey, C. C. Cricks, S.\nS. Hagar and T. B. Cook.\nAn ode by the McGarvey Quartette opened\nthe exercises. The addess of welcome was\ndelivered by Hon. John A. Myler, P. G. Mas-\nter. It was one of Mr. Myler's characteristic\nspeeches and much enj oyed by the audience\nFollowing a selection by the quartette\nMayor Gourley made an address. Mayor\nWyman made a short speech. The other ex-\nercises consisted of address by 11. H.\nGraham, Grand Patriarch; solo by Miss Mcr\nGarvey: formal dedicatory exercises by the\nofilcers of the Grand Lodge and Encamp-\nment of Pennsylvania; musio by the Daugh-\nters of Kebecca, of Beaver county; address\nby W. Ed. Marsh, Grand Master; oration by\nJ. B . Nicholson, P. G. Sire: benediction by\nBev. M . D. Lichiltor.\nThe business of the home will be con-\nducted by a board of 27 managers selected\nfrom members of the corporation in July\nof t;ach year. Those elected in July. 1891,\nare: J. A. Myler, H. C. Mindel, A. H. Book-\ning, G. A. Mueller, S. S. Hager, Thomas B.\nCook, C C. Criks, W. A. Irwin, E. E. Ander-\nson, W. N. Patterson, D. W. Shaffer, W. M .\nMcLaln, John H. Morrow, W. H. Stewart,\nMrs. Mollle M. Cricks, Mrs. A. S . Bassett,\nMiss M. Clark, Mrs. Abbie Lynch, Mrs. J. D.\nWi ey, Mrs. B . J . Campbell, Mrs. Alice Jamie-so - n ,\nMrs. L. Watts, Mrs. T. Gill,Mrs. S.
1b38751fc0ab43e5ee80f13bd421bfde THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4041095573314 40.063962 -80.720915 West Liberty & Bethany Turnpike and on\nthe waters of the south fork of flhort Creek and\nof Woods' Run, that is to say:\nMo. I Containing 311 Acres, 2 roods\n38 perches, known as the Benjamin Kelly farm,\nbeing the same which was conveyed te raid\nIsaac I» Kelly and other*, by James Kelly\nard wife, by deed dated September 13,\nIBM, and of rccord in the office of the\nClerk of the County Court of Ohio county in\nDeedBook No. 41. page 504, and or which tract\nan undivided half was conveyed to Isaac B.\nKelly by Uanii-1 F. Jacob and wife by deed dated\nOctober", 1868,and of record in said Clerk'a\noffice in Deed Book No. 55, page 21.\nNO-2, containing02 Acres, 1 rood and\nSS perches, being part of a tract of 303 acres, t\nroods and 36 perches, known as the James Kelly\nfiim, which was conveyed to lu*c B. Kelly bj\nIsaac Kelly and wife by deed dated September\n16,1864, and ofrec.rd in ttesaM Clerk's office In\nDeed Book No. 48, page 816, the tract to be sold\nbeing the part remaining to nild Isaac B. Kelly\nafter nts conveyance of 251 acres and 39 perches\nto Daniel F. Jacob by deed dated October 7,\n1668, of record In said Clerk's office in De»d\nBook No. 55 . page 25.\nNo 3 Containing 74 Acres, 2 rcod«. 25\nperches, being same land whlcn was couvejed to\nsaid Isaac B. Kelly by Blljih Pogue and others\nby deed dated April 1,18*7, and of record in eaia\nClerk's office In Deed Book No. 53, page 197.\nMo. 4 containing 10 acres 3 roods 10\nnsrehea. be in? the same land conveyed to said\nIsaac B. Kelly by Geo. W . timlth by deed dated\nNovember 17, 1964. and of record In Bald\nClerk's cfflce In Deed Book No 43, page *72.\nPor tbe metes and boanda of said several tracts\nreference la nude to tbe deeds aforesaid, and to\nthe sild decree of sale in tbls came.\nThis land Is among the most valuable farming\nlard in Ohio county. Each'iract la acceeeibie by\ngood road*, and la well watered and well ft need.\nOn tract No. 1 there la a good brick dwelling\nbonoe, i tenant bons s. a large barn, all necesaary\noutbuildings and a large orchard. On tract No.\ni there is a good double log boose, stable and\nother outbuilding*.\nSaid four tracts adjoin one another and form a\ncompact body of land, but they will be to!d
3f99b1953964e24ef42d3bf106921ec8 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1911.8616438039066 43.624497 -72.518794 rose to blow again tho fountain of\nvater Bpouted hnrdly a boat's length\nnway. Two liarpoons wero planted,\nand tho whale sounded sank dccp\nin thp water and tried to run away\n0nd rid himself of the big barbs\nthat wero torturing him.\nTho whaleboat with its crow of\nBiven men"spcd through the wator1\nwith tho spced of a hydroplanc.\nWhen tho whalo roso again a third\nh&rpoon gavo his dcathblow to'\nliijn. When they towed him to the\nshoro and dragged him whero ho\nwould bo lof t high and dry at low;\ntidc they found that he measured\nmoro than a hundred feet in lengtlu\nIt was a good day's work for thcso\nfishcrmon. Each , of thom mado'\ncnough monoy from his share ot\nthis whalo to kcep himsolf and his\nfamily in comfort a ycar. Thoy\nconsidcrcd thomselvcs lucky jm& so\ncut out the two grcat jawboncs.\nOno of tho Payncs bcgged thcm for;\na gatewny to his farmetcad, and\n"thcy'wcrc set up thero.\n.Probably the Block islanders of\nthoso days had heard tho story of\nJonah and tho whale, but had paid\nscnnt attention to it. By and by\nhowcver, they bcgan to recall that\nJonah was an capccially unlucky\nporson, or at least his namo had\n. becomc a sailor's Bynonvm for mia- -\nfortunc- - So strong did this fecling\nof distrust of tho gato arched over\nby tho whalo's jawbones becomo\nthut they hatl not been in placo two\nBummcrs beforo thero was not an\ninhabitant on Block island who\ncould bo pcrsuadcd to pass through\nthis "Jonah's gato' as it came to\nbo known.
544777894684bbe200b0de76ff3016b5 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1921.57397257103 36.000618 -88.428106 "To B. Dunton, New York. Strike Is\nsympathetic and not subject to com-\npromise. Malls moving regularly, but\nall other traffic suspended Indefinitely.\nMy office closes today, and my resig-\nnation, effective at once, goes to you\non Fast Mall tonight."\n"Now one to Mr. Chadwlck, and you\nmay send it In code," he directed\ncrisply. Then he dictated:\n"See newspapers for account strike.\nHatch and eight of his associates were\nkilled last night In railroad wreck.\nDunton has demanded my resignation\nand I have given It. Have plan for\ncomplete reorganization along lines\ndiscussed in beginning, and need your\nhelp. At market opening\nsell P. S. L . large blocks and repur-\nchase in driblets as price goes down.\nRepeat until I tell you 'to stop. Wire\nquick If you are with us."\nJust as I was taking the last sen\ntence, Mr. Ripley and Billoughby came\nIn, and Mr. Norcross took them both\nInto the third room of the suite and\nshut the door. An hour later when\nthe door opened and they out,\nthe boss was summing up the new or\nders to Billoughby: "There's a lot to\ndo, and you have my authority to hire\nall the help you need. See the bank-\ners yourself, personally, and get them\nto Interest other local buyers along the\nline, the more of them, and the smaller\nthey are, the better. I'll take care of\nPortal City, myself. I've had Van\nBrltt on the wire and he Is taking care\nof the employees yes, that goes as It\nlies, and is a part of the original plan ;\nevery man who works for P. S. L. Is\ngoing to own a bit of stock, if we have\nto carry him for It and let him pay a\ndollar a week. More than that, they\nshall have representation on the board\nIf they want It. And while you're\nknocking about, take time to show\nthese C. S. & W. folks how they can\nclimb back into the saddle. Red Tower\nIs down and out, now, and they can\nkeep it out if they want to."
11e7aa4409cb5204c830918cf4f3fcea CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1910.3082191463725 41.875555 -87.624421 Tho art of Munchausen arrived at\ntho stngo of the newspaper hoax early\nlu tho last century, The hoax in its\noriginal form was meant to be found\nout soonor or lator. It wns generally\nn wild geographical fantasy or pipe\ndream and Its purposo was half hu-\nmorous and half mercenary. In its\nllrHt stage It waa meant to create a\nactuation among' the news -re adi n-\npublic upon "Ub appearance in tho\nhows columns, In Its second stage it\nwas kept allvo ns long as posslblo\nwhllo Its perpotrntors told it in tho\nform of pamphlets and broadsides,\nmaking nil tho profit posslblo out of It.\nIn Its last stage, when found out, it\ndepended upon tho humorous rapaci-\nties of tho public, which loves to bo\nfooled, to tnke It in good part u\njoko. In Its final effect It generally\nworked out as a lino advertisement for\ntho newspaper that published it.\nOne of tho earliest and most success-\nful deceptions of this sort wns the fa-\nmous Moon Hoax, which was pub-\nlished by tho New York Sun In 1835,\nThis was an entirely apocryphal ac-\ncount of observations supposed to\nhave been made by Sir John Horschol,\ntho English astronomer, with an enor-\nmous telescope at the Cape of Good\nHope, Sir John was placed on record\nns finding on the moon seas, rivers,\nplains and mountains; and,' more In-\nteresting still, animals and plants\nmuch like those of earth, and Anally\nwinged human beings,\nThe hoax was wonderfully success-\nful. Scientists Journeyed to the office\not the paper to ask for those so often
04ff43fa3a9c5402be9fe3ec446675e2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1898.727397228564 46.187885 -123.831256 Captain Doig cam In on th Lydgai\nyesterday and tells the story of th break-\ning up of tbe raft. It wa taken outsld\nthe Heads by th tug Relief, against h\nadvice of Captain Howe, and ther\nturned over to the collier Progresso and\nanother steamer. The weather was heavy\nat the time, the mouth of the river being\nobscured with fog. and the breaker rolled\nmountains high. Despite thl. th raft wa\ntaken to sea. although several local\nwaterfront men Insisted that such actio\nwould be disastrous.\nWhen the Relief turned the raft over t\nthe steamers she was welt In the channel,\nbut the steamers soon began drifting to-\nward the jetty. The tug swung together\nand the raft set In toward Clatsop spit,\nat the northeast end of the Jetty. Th\nweather was heavy and the great boom\nrepeatedly struck, two of the after chain\nparting. Then the bulkhead gave way and\nthe raft began breaking up. i.unareds of\npiles broke from the and soon th\nsea waa strewn with log.\nMeantime the tugs were almost together,\nthe heavy weather making It Impossible\nfor them to keep apart. The current and\nwind set them In toward the Jetty, where\nthe water shoal rapidly, and great waves\nbroke over them. Th steamers mad\nevery effort to keep the raft off the Jetty,\nbut were unsuccessful for an hour. During\nthis time the raft was pouncing wlia\nevery wave, and the piling broke loos la\ngreat quantities. Finally the tugs man-\naged to swing apart, and tha raft waa\nslowly towed away from th spit.\nThe men on the lightship saw th pre-\ndicament of the raft They say the after\nend was carrfed away and that th log\nwere breaking from the boom by the hun-\ndred. Much ot the piling later drifted\npast th lightship. Whether or not tha\ntugs struck and were damaged Is not\nstated. However that may be. they con-\ntinued on the way south, towing tbe
1142452e73b687fc6616d69956a2b67b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1907.4890410641806 42.217817 -85.891125 powering common council of Dowagl-a - e\nto license and. limit number of sa\nloons In that city: same as to villasre\nof Harriett.! : same as to city of Cadil-\nlac; same as to village of Tekonsha:\nrame as to village of Luther; same a\nto village of Portland; authorizing\ncommon council of city of St. Joseph\nto accept surety bonds from liquor\ndealers; authorizing village of Morlej\nto license sale of intoxicating liquors;\nauthorizing village of Perry to accept\nsurety bonds from liquor dealers; con-\nferring additional powers on village of\nCaro for regulation of liquor tratllc:\nsame as to village of Nashville; pro-\nhibiting manufacture and sale, except\nby druggists, of intoxicating liquors in\nvillage of Tekonsha: authorizing com-\nmon council of city of Stanton to regu-\nlate tratlic; restricting liquor\ntrallic in city of St. Johns; authoriz-\ning village council of Olivet to pro-\nhibit liquor tisitlic within said village;\nsame as to village of Fdmore; same\nas to village of Keeso; same as to\nvillage of Lake Odessa; same as to\nvillage of Caledonia Station; same as\nto city of West P ranch; same as try\ncity of St. Joseph; same as to village\nof North Itranch: s;,me as to Koehler\ntownship. Cheboygan county; same as\nto city of (Jrand Lodge; prohibiting\nthe maintenance of a saloon within\nfifty yards of any public school in\nOttawa county: permitting village\nof Ford to regulate saloons; same as\nto village of Shelby; general statute\npermitting acceptance of bond if is-\nsued by Michigan corporation as sure-\nty for liquor dealers.
00de1c5a47037a4cc034a3ea118bdc98 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.1109588723998 41.741039 -112.161619 Tho principal lender and speaker\nnmong tho peasantry was ono Tomas\nFauchol, who had recently como fromi\nParis, and who appeared, for somo\nreason, to havo' an especial hatred for\nMonsieur lo llaron. Dnt tho latter,\nwhose attention wns engrossed by his\nbooks nnd papers, know nothing of\nthis, ns ho rnrely went abroad, ana\nseemed to grow more reserved and'\ngloomy ns tho days wore on.\nThe 14th of July tho anniversary\nof tho French nation's Independence\ncamo and went; nnd, on tho night!\nof August 10th, tho Assembly hnvlng\nremoved from Paris all tho regiments\nsuspected of being loynl to tho king,\nthere was no armed forco to reslsti\ntho mob that, Insnno with blood-thirst -\npassion, broko into tho Tullerles.\nbutchered tho king's nttendants, and,\n away, as prisoners, tho fow who\nwero still nllvc.\nOver tho chateau In Lnnguodoc,i\nthat August night, tho same stars that\nglittered abovo tho carnngo of Paris\nshono upon a scono of peace. But\nMonsieur lo Bnron's heart was grow-\ning heavier, and his wnkeful eyes\nworo fixed upon tho stnrs, as ho lay\nIn bed looking out of tho window. A\nforeboding of evil crept chillingly\nnbout him, and a noto of coming woo\nscorned to sigh In tho wind stirring\namong tho ollvo nnd peppor trees that\nmado a small grovo outsldo.\nBut In his chamber boyond, Jean,\nunconscious and happy, slept a sleep\nsuch ns could nover moro ho known\non earth by tho king's llttlo son,\nwhom, only a fow months since, tho\ntwo lnds Jcnn
57965dc86a35133852ad3fc22a24c13f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1917.664383529934 42.217817 -85.891125 Take notice that the bill of com- -\nplaint in this case is filed to bar any\ninterest, right, title or claim which\nyouqranyofyouhaveinandto\ncertain lands and to quiet plaintiffs'\ntitle hereto, said lands being situated '\nin the county of Van Buren, Michigan\nand described as The north half of\nthe north half of the north west\nquarter of section nine, town four\nsouth range fifteen west; and the\nnorth thirty acres of the south half\nof he north half of the north west\nquarter of section nine, town four\nsouth range fifteen west; also that\npart of the south west quarter of sec-\ntion four described' as, Beginning at\nthe south quarter post of said section\nfour running thence north on the\nquarter line 2011 feet, thence west\n578 feet, thence south 44 degrees and\n 'minutes west 121 feet, thence\nsouth 23 degrees and 30 minutes east\n97 feet thence south 40 degrees west\n102 feet, thence north 47 degrees and\n30 minutes west' 93 feet, thence south\n44 degrees 30 minutes west 258 feet,\nthence sputh 39 degrees and 30\nminutes east 303 feet thence south 48\ndegrees and 30 minutes west 325 feet\nto center of highway, thence north 40\ndegrees west in center of highway\n177 feet, thence south 78 degrees and\n30 minutes west 277 feet to the\nbanks of a creek, thence south along\nthe banks of said creek to a point\n14G0 feet west of the quarter post of\nsaid section thence south to section\nline, thence east 1460 feet to the\nplace of beginning, 'said description\nby metes and bounds containing fifty-tw- o\nacres more or less.
09eef1b6e072fe55261230aff1d99207 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.3520547628107 43.82915 -115.834394 “and tell John that dinner is ready"\n“Go," answered John, "and tell Beter\nI am on hand. ” “ Here, puss," saysJohn\n“ tell Betsy this pudding is remarkably\ngood, an d I will lake another plate of it\nif she pleases. ” "Go tell John, ” answers\nBetsy, “ that 1 am glad lie likes this\npeach sho rtcake, anil lie shall hare three\npieces if he will."\nSo fo r years they kept their rows, but\ntold their love and got on famously. It\nis a gen eral fact that friendship grows\ns trong er by a short separation and cor­\nrespondence by pen. A man or woman\nw il l say sweet or true tilings in a letter\nth at tliey would not say first by month.\nI do not quite understand this, but I\nknow it is true. Friends treasure let­\nters, an d friendship never is quite itself\nu ntil a few letters liave passed, i en­\nco urag e young folk to write letters to\nlearn tlie a r t of talk ing well. One wonid\nsuppose i t would be tiie other way—that\ngood talk ers should write well.\nHow came it about that the tongne\nand adjacent organs got control of lan­\nguage? Possibly Dido can explain this.\nShe leaps and bounds about me in over­\nwhelming joy. Her nose is in my face\nand her paws on my chest. At last, ut­\nterly unable to express all her emotion,\n th ro w s back lier head and explodes\niu a bark . It is nothing but an explo­\nsion, but it is a great relief to her.\nThat is the beginning of speech in all\ncreatu res —only a noise made by the\nru sh of emotion through tho mouth.\nBy and by this noise is modified to ex­\npress differen t emotions. The dogcan ex­\npress a dozen passions and resentments,\nand yet mo st of these are told by th»\ntai l and tlie body in general.\nThe next step is, or was, to modify\nth ese sounds into musical roles. Th«\nbird does not enunciate first, but sings.\nThe lower races sing well aud talk\nbadly. The highest art is to sing well\nan d talk equally well. So language\nslowly gets stolen by a certain set of\norgans that at first had little to do with\nit. The legs and hands come less into\nplay to tell emotions; the tail, which\nlias done so much animal talking, is\nabo rted. 1 think it is aborted mainly\nbecause i ts functions are mostly passed\nov er to tlie tongue. 1 have not heard\nw h ether tlio tailed tribe of Africans wig\nthose appendages in friendly greeting\nlike dogs or not. 1 would not own a\ntailless cat or have a horse's tail even\nclipped of its hair. It is to abbreviate\nspeech; it is to lop off the organ of ex­\npression.
c5107d08ad10298427bfe429316b34d5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.732876680619 41.681744 -72.788147 With New Britain baseball fans\npatiently awaiting the advent of\nSaturday afternoon when the P. &\nF. Corbin baseball team of this city\nwill make Its greatest bid of the\nseason against the Stamford Gas &\nElectric club for the state industrial\nchampionship, the two teams to be\ninvolved in the epic clash are hard\nat work getting ready for what will\nbe the most gruelling contest of tlvi\nentire campaign for both of them.\nThe P. & F. Corbin crew has an-\nother practice session scheduled be-\nfore the game takes place while\nStamford has had several workouts\nduring the week. The members of\nboth clubs are in the finest shape\npossible and the biggest guns at the\ncommand of the two managers will\nbe sent into the fray.\nThe contest is scheduled to start\nat 3:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon.\nStamford has a long trip ahead of\n while festivities at the P. & F.\nCorbin outing at Lake Compounce\nwill be over at that hour.\nThe Corbin team will use the same\nlineup that has brought it through\nthe Industrial league campaign this\npast season and also through the\nseries with the Sokols for the cham-\npionship of the city. Jagjowskl.\nmost likely, will be the choice of the\nmanagement for pitcher but Berger-\non and Gray, two other slabmen,\nwill be ready for a call at any time.\nThe Stamford team is called the\nclass of teams in the southern sec-\ntion of the state while there is no\ndoubt that the Corbin crew holds\nthe same position in this section.\nCorbins have defeated both Hartford\nand Torrington in the preliminaries\nin rather easy fashion.\nPlenty of confidence has been ex-\npressed by both teams and a real\ngood battle is being expected.
05cc9c61c7ae57b10bc288cce3488483 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1895.0260273655506 46.601557 -120.510842 reigned on this earth many centuries be-\nfore the dawn of Christianity, will bo\nhonored on the i.' sth of this month by\nevery faithful Chinaman the world over.\nIt will be the twenty-first year since the\nbirth of Kwong Sin, the reigning emperor\nof China, »ud the 46815t since ths birth\nof Quong (iong, who is known and rev-\nerenced aR the father of his country. He\nis renowned as the martyr of honesty, the\nlil>eral giver and the happy hearted mor-\ntal. In "Lv Twoi," the book of the\nprophets, it is recorded that he was so\ndearly beloved that the very ground he\ntrod on was ever afterward sacred.\nThe day observed as New Year's by\nthe Chinese is likewise observed by the\n'Japanese; but, owing to the slight differ-\nence existing between the countries\njust at present, the lack of respect felt for\nKwong Sin, and the prevailing hard times\n— it is given out that the celebration this\nyear will not be on tlie usual scaleof mag-\nnificence; which probably signifies that\nthere will be fewer lire-crackers, less punk\nburned, a diminished quantity of rice\nwine imbibed, and that the number of\nducks, pounds of pork and bird's neat\ndelicacies for the customary three days'\nfeasting, will be greatly curtailed. A\ncelestial laundryman who percolates aqua\nbetween his incisors upon the linen of the\nBarbary Coast inhabitants was questioned\nregarding the comiug holidays by a Hi i:\nAi.D reporter; but his answers, given in\npigeon English, were anything but satis-\nfactory, and if reprinted verbatim would\ngo far toward queering this highly moral\nfamily weekly with church members
c6012d72ea64a374272348c0a65dda65 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.4315068176052 43.798358 -73.087921 of high authority, that the subsistence of\n9,000,000 of people costs, in raw produce,\nnot less that 72,000,000, or 8 for each\nindividual per annum. According to this\nestimate, the annual product of this great\nbranch of national inductry is $350,000,-00 - 3\nmoe, at present, than it was in 1735;\nwnich is more than twice the value of the\n. vhole cotton mooufacture of the country,\nin 1831. Now if it costs $350,000,000 to\nfeed the increased population of 9,000,- -\n000, then to feed the present population of ;\n17,500,000, must cost near $700,000,000 ! j\nWhat an amazing agricultural product,\nfor so small a territory ! And yet, it is\nthe opinion of practical men of the highest\nrespectability in Englaud, that the raw j\nproduce ot the island, might be well nigh\ndoubled, without any greater proportional\nexpense being incurred in its production.\nThat is to say, 35,000,000 people\nmight draw their subsistence, from that\none little speck in the ocean ! Now we\nhave a territory, moro than fifteen times as\nlarge as the Island of Great Britain ; and\nwhat should hinder it, when it comes to he\nbrought under no higher cultivation than\nsome parts of England and Scotland, from\nsustaining a population of five or six hun-\ndred millions 01 people ? This would irive\nto Virginia something like thirty millions\nto Illinois and Missouri about the same\nnumber, each to Y. York near ttcenty- -\nfire millions, and so in proportion to ihe\nother states. I am quite aware, that this\nestimate will be regarded as extremely\nvissionary and inci edible, by many of\nyour readers ; but no more so, than it\nwould have been thought, in the middle of\nthe last century, that England, Scotland\nand Wales could ever be made to sustain
0d00fe5b5c52ae2ea9898ca9e068f663 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1900.0342465436327 41.875555 -87.624421 The Illinois District Telegraph Com-\npany has apparently no right to the\nstreets of Chicago and no right to do\nbusiness here.\nWhy, then, Is It permitted to do hoV\nThe following opinion, given by the\nCorporation Counsel to the City Coun-\ncil, explains Itself:\nGentlemen: In compliance with an\norder passed by your honorable body\nat Its last regular meeting, directing\nthat the Corporation Counsel report "by\nwhat authority the Illinois District Tel-\negraph Company Is establishing olllees\nand doing business lu the city of Chi-\ncago, nnd ii!bo If tho Western Union\nTelegraph Company has the right, un-\nder Its franchise, to delegate the power\nto another corporation to use Its lines\nnnd conduits to transact business with-\nout tlrst obtninlug an ordinance from\nthis Council," I beg to you that\nI can find no authority from the city of\nChicago granting the Illinois District\nTelegraph Company tho right to oper-\nate in this city, and, In tho absence of\nhucIi a grant, I am of tho opinion that\nthey have no legal right to so operate.\nTho Western Union Telegraph Com-\npany does not opernto In tho city of Chi-\ncago by reason of nny nuthorlty grout-\ned to It by tho City Council, but has\ntho right to operate hero under the an\nthorlty of an net of Congress, passed in\n180(1, which authorizes all telegraph\ncompanies which have nccepted tho\nprovisions of that act to operato on all\npostronds in tho United States, and a\nlater act dellnlng every public highway\nto bo a postroad. This authority, how- ve r-
17ad9995ae4ab469f1efed53b1cc5e75 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.9657533929478 39.745947 -75.546589 the commission was removed and a new\none appointed. New lines were drawn\nand these took In all of the Improve­\nments, the state claiming riparian rights\non all beyond these lines In the mean\nwhile the United States Supreme Court\ndecid ed that the lines drawn by tbs first\ncommission were jnst and must stand,\nand the city, on the strength of this\ndecision, began suits against the owners\nof the Improved property outside the\nlines. These companies or corporations\nare engaged in trying to effect a compro­\nmise by which the city will drop Its salts\non condition of receiving valuable whatf-\nage concessions. The Tacoma News is\nfighting this and is collecting [data from\nall over the country.\nMayor Shortlldge laid the communi­\ncation before the Street and Sewer De­\npartment last evening and asked for In\nformation relative to it.\nColonel Moore, who la probably as wall\nmated on this qnestlon as any man In\nWilmington, said that In New Jersey an\nowners riparian rights extended only to\na fixed low water mark. Should that\nmark be moved farther oat in th* stream\neither by the deposit of earth or other\ncause, the land thna formed belonged to\n state In the event of its sals the owner\nof property Immediately abutting had the\nfirst right to purchase and a sum is fixed\nby law for the new land. He cited an\ninstance where a hotel In Atlantis City\nwhich two years ago lay immediately\nthe ocean now lies acme fifty feet Inland,\nowing to the filling In of the coast line.\nParties through misrepresentation sue-\noeeded lu buying this strip, bnt the sale\nwas set aside by the commission and tbs\nowners of tb* hotel given a chance to\nbuy It, which they did.\nIn this state tb* owner of the property\nhas rights to low water mark and any\nIncrease by deposit or other\nbelongs to him. In connection with this\na singular condition of affairs was cited.\nThe intersection of Front and Church\nstreets lies right on th* Christiana front.\nIf continued t right out to the harbor\nUnas, tb* two streets would cross at\nright angles leaving a triangular piece of\nland, the ownership of which would\ndonbt. Of course there may never be\na possibility of the question requiring a\nsettlement but If It ever should, the\nUnited States, the state and the city\nwonld be claimants.
dc51abc51d1ccbd41c66f48a9e23a888 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.1904109271943 41.681744 -72.788147 The game will be the final contest\nof the night. It n the battle for\nwhich every person interested in the\nleague has been watching w ith great\nexpectancy. The question that is up\npermost in the minds of the spec-\ntators - whether the Stanley Workj\nwill lie down and let its fellow mem-\nber win the honor cr it will put ev-\nerything it has into the game and\nmake it nececsary for the Stanley\nRule and Corbin Screw teams to\nplay a post season contest. A defeat\nfor the Rulers will cau.re a tic be-\ntween it and the Screw shop and\nthis tie will be played off probably\non Friday of this week. No definite\ndate has been ret ponding the recult\nof the Stanley family clash.\nStanley Works has a reason for a\nvictory. It b in fourth place at the\npresent time but it can go into a\nthird place if it winr. Thio will\nhappen of course if the Cabinet team\ndefeats the Rucswin outfit in the\nopening game of the night.\nTho Gascos can take a toe hold on\nfifth place for the season if they de-\nfeat Landers five.\nSeveral tics are possible in the\nfinal league standing. One is a draw\nbetween the Stanley Rule and Cor-\nbin Screw. Another is a third place\ntie between Russwin and Stanley\nWorks. A third possible, tie is one\nbetween Fafnir and Cascos. There is\na possibility of a lie between Corbin\nCabinet and P. F. Corbin for sev-\nenth place or if Corbin Cabinet\nshould win it would finish in a tic\nwith Fafnir for sixth place.\nThis is the finish to one of the\ngreatest basketball seasons in Indus-\ntrial League history. The great fin-\nish was the end of the first season,\nsix years ago when Corbin Cabinet\nand P.
812a6fcf9799fd2392003140d64aed21 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8128414984315 39.513775 -121.556359 thousand eight liundrml ami li ly.six. deo|ure ana tile\nto he ihe Co ml; sf.t of Untie County front and after\nthe maid I weiily.'nanb day of Si pletuber /. D . 1\nin purmiiaiiee ol mi net eii'iiii *! A a Act to change and\n(l\\ the County Seat of liulte County, npiimved March\nliltti. |s.'i ' ; : atid it further appearing tutuy satisfaction\nIll'll the present buddings it w in.ili the maid Colin lias\nt iff a held, and in ivhi.ui the Records hate been kept\nin the town of Itidweil, are iiumnfe as u plan* old'\npo-ulory for said Records. and that the same im liable\nto tie tmclion by lire, by re.imen ol Ibeir being eon\nstriieteil entire ~f won.! . And il fnrtlo'r appearing\nthat then* is no building in the town ol Itidweil. suit\nable lor holding the ti rin' of i hi' Court, and to mafi I,\nkeep its Records from tire or other calami! y, and il\nappearing tliatlbe town of < lor die is a plan* In\nhind the terms of this I dint, and Hint n stile and com\nmi.dioits brick bnildinif in mnid town litis been ten\ndereil tin* county as county buildings.\nIt u therefore ordered, adjudged ami decreed Ihal\nthe Clerk el the County Court.in and for Unite\nI duulv. forthwith remove him ottiee and ihe Record*\nthere if. to I Iroville. ill the bilihlilllf selected by the\nmi id Uourd of Siirier v imnrm am C. itiii.y Itnib lings, and\nbin lie do ami i anmiiet lie* businemm ot himmaid office,\nn tin* town of (iroville, us the Comity '■Vat of Unite\n■Aonily. And il im further ordered, that the term'ol\n-aid t d irt, front and after l lie maid twenty loiirlb day\nol September. AI) Is.Mi, lie held 111 the said towiloi\ninn ilie until otherwise ordered.\nAnn it im further ovde'el. that ihe Clerk ot the\nCounty Court in at d for liutte County, issue an tinier\nund* r Ho* seal of said Conn, in conformity w ith this\norder.
067e3767943b4718d3178069f230a270 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.5505464164644 40.063962 -80.720915 PAUPERS' WAGES.PABPERs'rOOlJ.\n"So much for tho wagos.and rem em-\nber that thoro are thousands of men and\nwomon frantic for the chanco to get\nsuch earning!. Lot us see how thoy )\neat.lotus eoe If the free trado cry that\n. tho amatlor wages will buy more moat\nand inoro clothes and more shelter,\nTake my case, paying $20 a woek for\nthroe rooms and board for mysolf, my\nwife and little girl. Could, 1 got my\nAmerican moalB oven at that high ruto?\nNot much! I scarcely saw a vegetable ]\nat breakfast, and I was astounded ono\ndav whon our good and gracious land-\nlady kindly offered to cook us a steak if\nwo would buy It I once grew hungry\nfor some oysters, and pala sixty conts\nfor half a dozon. As I did not liko tho\ntaste old pennioa with which thoy\nwore impregnated I loft four of thorn on\nmy plate. English oysters do not suit\ntho American palate, and Idid not have\nwealth enough to cultivate a tasto for\nthoin. 1 had ono peach during tho two\nvAflm that I wm across tho water, and\nfor that I paid twelvo conts. I paicl tlio\nsamo for a Nowtown pippin, but I\nwould not buy tho common applos that\nworo olToroil for salo in tho streots. The\ncheapoit strawberries that I ovor bought\nworo twolvo cents a pound, and 1 novor\ngot a grape (or ioai than sixty conts a\npound,' whilo they woro ofton quoted as\nhigh as SI 1!5. Tho choapest tomatoes\nworo twolvo cents npount.,and tlioy ran\nas high aa twonty-four conts.\n"Croam is almost an unknown luxury.\nOur shopkeepor, a man who had
9a54dec4f0ea6b92e820f0260517e22a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.1246575025368 39.745947 -75.546589 ideas around these handsome material»,\nbut the creation» are congenial to repro­\nduction in a variety of fabrics and by no\nmeans limited to any particular list. It\nis one of the fortunate circumstances of\nFashion, for if the dresses liked best could\nonly 1« copied in their original materials,\nvery little would be gained by the woman\nwho practises economy by tewing for\nherself. The main thing is to select fabrics\nthat are supple and easily handled in the\nachievement of soft and youthful effects.\nA frock that responds adorably to the\ncasual requirements of dress, is developed\nin dark blue foulard silk, combined with\ncharmeuse. The overblouse, which is of\nthe satin, has a deep gathered tunic and\nis held in at the waist with a deep girdle\nof foulard to correspond with the founda­\ntion. At the sides tne tunic is slashed and\ntrimmed with braid and buttons, this\ntrimming being repeated on the waist\nsection of the blouse, either side of the\nfront. There is a deep, narrow opening,\ndisclosing a vest of foulard, but the round\nneck is collarless. sleeves are slightly\nbelow elbow length, flaring alightly.\nCreators of smart fashions have devoted\nmuch attention to the treatment of the\nwaistline, as has been previously men­\ntioned in this correspondence. Always it\nis posed below normal, if there Is sash or\ngirdle to indicate the waistline, but just\nas frequently it ie entirely ignored, as in\nthe princess effects which are constantly\ngrowing in favor. For the woman of\nattractive figure there comes a bewitching\nmodel in dark blue puasywillow taffeta. It\ncloses at the left side and is gathered at\nthe underarm edges to form a draped\naffect front and back. There Is no sug-\nÏest ion of restricting band at the waist.\nlelow the hips the skirt is laid in plaits\nand tiny panels of silver ribbon are Intro­\nduced. Collar and vest are of the same\nribbon, a touch of embroidery being added\nto the vest and outer collar. The trimming,\nthough simple In effect, is very artistic and\ndeveloped in such well-known stitches that\nno extended experience in needlework is\nrequired to reproduce It. This same model\n'
0163a7cb632cbed1fb8dac27e70dd512 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.4397259956875 41.004121 -76.453816 The Bellefonte Watchman of last\nweek says: "An interesting fact\ndeveloped at the Memorial day ex\nercises at Pine Grove Mills on Mon-\nday. Rev. John Hewitt, pastor ot\nthe Episcopal church of this place,\nmade the memorial address and in\nthe course of his remarks he stated\nthat he had been a soldier in the\nConfederate army and in 1861, just\nat the breaking out of the war, he\nhad been captured and held a pris\noner at Fort Beauregard, on the is- -\nlaud of St. He.eua, off the coast of\nSouth Carolina. Later in the day\nhe aud Capt. W. H. Fry, the well\nknown veterinarian of that place,\nexchanged confidences and the fact\ndeveloped that Mr. Fry was one of\nthe detail or skirmish party who\n the reverend, or private\nHewitt as he was at that time, and\ntook him a prisoner to the Island,\nMr. Fry being at the time a mem\nber of the Forty fifth Pennsylvania\nregiment which was in charge of\nthe fort. The further fact was also\nbrought out that Rev. Hewitt and\nCapt Fry are the same age to a day\nand that they both enlisted on the\nsame day, the former in the confed\nerate army and the latter in the ar\nmy of the north, so that in the lives\nof the two men there has been co-\nincidences enough to justify the\nwarm friendship that has already\nbeen formed between them."\nMr. Hewitt was rector of St.\nPaul's P. E. Church of Bloomsburg\nback in the seventies.
3a08d7e083c699b47fa26440a3bd2353 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1905.4561643518518 42.217817 -85.891125 providing for construction of a bridge\nin Ada township, Kent county: amend-\ning law providing better drainage for\nhighways; authorizing townships to\nborrow money for highway purposes;\namending law for incorporations of\nvillages relative to expenses of con-\nstructing sewers: relative to the loca-\ntion of drains in Kent and Tuscola\ncounties; authorizing special assess-\nments for drains, etc.. in Highland\nPark. Wayne county: establishing a\ntownship roa I system in Farmingfon\ntownship. Oakland county; prohibit-\ning dredging of Thoinapple river in\nNashville. P.arry county, without con-\nsent of the common council; authoriz-\ning corporations f use highways for\npublic improvements in Fmmet and\nCheboygan counties: creating and es-\ntablishing a state highway depart-\nment, makiig an appropriation there-\nfor, and providing for the ap-\npointment of a state highway com-\nmissioner; prohibiting dredging of Prai-\n river. Kouald township, Iowa coun-\nty, without consent of township board;\nproviding for removal of obstructions\nfrom highways in Ilranch county; pro-\nhibiting laying and extending of drains\nInto, along or from Rush lake, Huron\ncounty: providing for locating and es-\ntablishing of drains in Iowa county:\namending county and township road\nsystem law: authorizing Midland coun-\nty supervisors to appropriate money\nfor a bridge across Tittaba wasseo\nriver: regulating use of automobiles on\nhighways of state; authorizing forma-\ntion of corporations for purpose f\nestablishing and maintaining water\npower: amending law relative to open-\ning of highways and private roads;\nauthorizing use of public streets, etc..\nfor transmission and distribution of\nelectricity: relative to conversion of\nWest Side Pig Hitch. Crand Rapids,\ninto a sewer: amending law for elec-\ntion of Saginaw county drain commis-\nsioner; authorizing
2f0e926925ff3c6f0f83b55dbab7d831 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.8013698313039 39.745947 -75.546589 attend the funeral services at Wesley\nM. E. Church, northeast corner Linden\nand Jackson streets, on Friday afternoon,\nat 2 o'clock. Interment at Rlvervtcw\nCemetery.\nTHOMPSON.- On October 19, 1909, Mar­\ngaret MoFarlln Thompson, aged 47\nyears._______________________ j_____\nRtfl^iH-es and friends are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral from her late residence.\nWashington avenue. New Castle. Del., on\nFriday afternoon, October 22. Services\nIn Immanuel Episcopal Church at 3\noclock. Interment In the church yard.\nOBRIEN —In this city, on October 20th.\n1909. William J., son of* James and\nSophie OBrien, aged 21 y«ira.\nRelatives, friends, members of Divi­\nsion No. «. A. O. H., and employes of\ntho V., B. and W. boiler shop are In­\nvited to attend tho funeral services from\nthe residence of his No. 81« Pine\nstreet, on Saturday morning, at 9 oclock.\nRequiem mass at St. Marys Church. In­\nterment at the Cathedral Cemetery.\nJENNINGS—In this city, on October 18th,\n1909. Bridget, widow of the late Mar­\ntin Jennings.\nRelatives and friend* are Invited to at­\ntend the funeral from the residence of\nher son. Thomas Jsnnlngs. No. 815 East\nEighth street, on Thursday morning, at 9\no'clock. Requiem mnsa at St. Marys\nChurch. Interment at the Cathedral\nMrCCLLEM—At Philadelphia, Ps.^H\nOctober 16. 19(B. Addle F.. wife of\nThos. S. McCullen. In her 38th year.\nRelatives and friends of the family are\nInvited to attend the funeral services, at\nthe residence of her father,. Elisha F.\nBarton. Marshallton. Del., on Thursday\nafternoon. October 21. 1909, at 2 oclock\nwithout further notice.
0f4e3b3adecb46b1ee36ab852f5c052f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.1191780504819 39.745947 -75.546589 Take ycur pencil, put on your think­\ning cap and go to work, and no man\ncan convince himself that Mr, Addicks\ncan be elected to the Senate any time\nIn the future. You are already con­\nvinced that he cannot at this sesden.\nbecause at leas', ten Republicans there\nwlM never vote for h'.m, tut they do\npropose to votf for every man in the\nstate who would fill that honorable po­\nsition In the United States Senate with\nhonor and credit to the state. Will the\nUnion Republicans prevent the elec­\ntion of a senator?—Sussex Republican.\nAnd It came to pass that in the year\nwhich is known as 1900, a great hurri­\ncane moved the load of Delaware and\nthe people thereof were swept into the\nsea, and there was not left In that\ncountry man, "roman or child. And\nafter a time behold there came a new\npeople, straightway made unto\nthcmsfilves new laws and a new Con­\nstitution and, behold, they elected a\nsenator!—Milford News.\nAguinaido lias been whipped again\nat Manila. More peace Jubilees are\nnow In order. — The Delawarean,\nTheVciitloal wires of some of the\nsenatorial candidates at Dover must\nbe grounded, or otherwise out of work­\ning order. —New Castle News.\nThere is no Rtct better known about\nthe Philippines than that cockfighting\nhas from time out cf mied been the\nchief popular spOrt of the natives, Yrt\nhere Is the Filipino Junto at Hotvg\nKong gravely charging that somewhat\ncruel and demoralizing practice\nagainst the Americans! They would\nhave the world believe that George\nDewey took to Manila the first game­\ncocks ever seen in the archipelago.\nTaat Is of a piece with the bulk of\ntheir representation«. It gives the\nworld a fine notion of their fitness for\nself-government.
4ed1c89bec7423ed7b2c4a7d820e848a PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1917.3027396943176 39.456253 -77.96396 Stephen Street from Queen Street\n1 > Circle on Berkeley Place, John\nStreet from Water Street to Winch¬\nester Avenue, First Street from Win¬\nchester Avenue to Kentuckey Ave¬\nnue. porter Avenue from First Street\nlo King Street, Samuel Street from\nKing Street to Burke Street. King\nStreet from. High Street to Square.\nKing Street from the Cumberland\nValley Passenger Station to Tennes¬\nsee Aenuve, Burke Street from Cem¬\netery Gate to Charles Street, Martin\nStreet from High Street to Charles\nStreet, IPice Street from Woodrow\nStreet to Charles Street, Church\nStreet from Stephen Street to Itaco\nStreet, Maple Avenue from Stephen\nStreet to Exchange Place, Boyd Ave¬\nnue to "Stewart's Addition" from\nRace Street, College Street from\nJohn, Street to Commerce Street,\nSouth Queen Street from Square to\nSteplion's Monument, North Queen .\nStreet from Moler Avanue to City 1\nLimits, Spring Street from John\n to Raco Street, Water Street\nfrom Stephon 'Street to Martin\nStreet, High Street from Moler Ave¬\nnue to King Street, Eulalia Street\nfrom High Street to Rnssler Street,\nLiberty Street from High Street to\nQueen Street, Center Street, from\nLiberty Street to Burke Street,\nSwartz Street from Burke Street to\nKing Street, Pennslyvania Avenue.\nQueen to Albert Street, Union Ave¬\nnue from Queen Street to Second\nStreet, Moler Avenue from Queen\nStreet to City Limits, Albert Street'\nfrom Moler Avenue to Strine Avenue.\nThird Street from Liberty Street to\nPennsylvania Avenue, Second iStreet\nfrom North Queen Street to Pen-\nsylvania Avenue, Hooge Street from\nLiberty Street to Pennsylvania Ave¬\nnue, Frederick Street from* Hooge\nStreet to Madison Avenue, Terrace\nStreet from High Street to Queen\nStreet. Adams Street from Queen\nStreet to Hess 'Avenue. Hobs Avenue\nfrom North Queen Street to Eliza¬\nbeth Street.
0c11a7a67770502715b488d5138aaac1 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.3849314751394 40.441694 -79.990086 spread of the flame was past, but the de-\npartments named tvere completely ruined.\nThe mot serious losj occurred in tho\nstructural shop or bridge works. An addi-\ntion to that plant had been made only a lew\nmonins ago, ami none was uciug pusnea in\nthe department both night and day. About\nIM) men w ere employed there, and some very\nvaluable machinery used, cutting, dressing\nand niiKing machines, lathes and planers\nand riveting apparatus. There were 1 hy-\ndraulic and 3 steam engines and 17 different\npieces- of flue niachiner, the estimated cost\nif which is put at $75,0(W. Many of them can\nbe repaired and will not be totally lost.\nA number of orders wcio about linishedor\nin coulee of completion, one of them an en-\ntire floor of the new Masonic Temple now\n built in Chicago. It was Just com-\npleted and shipments on it were to have been\nwnnmenced yesterday afternoon. Tho plant\nwas to have turned out all of that work, hav-in- c\ntaken the contract off the hands of tho\ndefunct Columbia Iron and Steel Company.\n"Work had already begun on all floors from\nthe sixth to the eighteenth, tho one de-\nstroyed being the fifth. Another orderabout\ncompleted was a large ono lor the Lessig\nHi idge and Iron Company, of Chicago.\nThe other .serious loss might bo said to\nbavc occurred in tho straightening shed,\nwhere tons of finished I beams wero warpocl\nand sprung by the intense heat, all of which\nwill have to be dressed over. In tho roll\nhouse about 100 rolls wore similarly affected\nand will have to he redressed.
1c258307ffc570592ff9efc7f8e2360d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1894.2315068176054 40.063962 -80.720915 Sonntor Stewart ArivUr* Illm i. Con-\nI'oiitratu IIIn Forces for ltallot.\nWashington, I), a, March 25..Sona-\ntor Stewart, ot Novada, has writtou a\nlottor to J. S . Coxey, cominnudcr of the\nurmy of tho Commonwoal, in which ho\npays: "The preservation of lifo, liborty\nand tho pursuit of happinoss wag in¬\ntrusted to tho people under tho consti¬\ntution of tho United Statos. A froo\nballot was tl;o means by which tiio\nsovereign neoplo could retain the\nrights acquired by tiio patriots who\nfi i11'« .ti>0 in('opondohco and estab¬\nlished tho goverumont of the United\nMates. Thoro liavo boon no Washing-\ntons, Jefforsons or Lincolna elected\nI resident of tho Unitod Statos in tho\nlast two decades. A soulless despot of\nalien origin is monarch of tho commer¬\ncial world. His narno is monoy. His\ninstruments of oppression aro banks\nami bonds. Ilia servants aro admin¬\nistrative and logislativo bodies. Tho\nlues of rsovemtor approaching. An\nopportunity for tho pooplo to strike for\nliborty will bo again presented. The\noiu parties, which have surrendered tiio\nrights of tho pooplo to tho rule of cou-\ncontratod capital will ask for a ronowal\not their Icnso of power at tho ballot box.\nhvory moyenient of tho pooplo to obtain\nrelief outside of tiio forms of law will bo\ndenounced as anarchy. Tho purso\nstrings of tho nation are hold by Con-'\ngross under tho dictation of the admin¬\nistration, and tho Prosidont is com-1\nmandor-in-ehiof of tho army and navy\nof the United Statos. Every attempt to\nplace the ballot under federal authority\nhas thus far beon successfully resisted.\nl.ot your army bo reinforced by tho\nmillions of tho unemployed and by tho\nwealth producers of tho nation, and bo\nthoroughly mobilized for the battle in\n. ovembor, when a victory for tho rights\noi man against tho despotism of banks\n?nii ,
3af117df4e661208cf609b3c0b8828bf DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.6352458700162 58.275556 -134.3925 By means of a pair of long han¬\ndled wooden tongs, curved to fit\naround the fox's nec|p. he picks out\nof the huddling crowd any fox he\nchooses. Then taking the creature\nby the nape of the neck, he drops It\nInto a gunny sack and tics It up. A\nboat load of these squirming sacks\nIs then taken back to the ranch,\nwhere the foxes aro killed by hang¬\ning. so ae not to Injure their skins.\nThe pelts ;;re stretched, fur side In.\nover wooden frames, and set out to\ndry. Kvery day they must be\nt.crapc<l carefully until all blood and\ngrease are removed.\nMr. Llljegren and his partner.\nMr. Wagner, who has been with him\ntor the prat few years, sell the pelts\ndirect to great fur house In Lon¬\ndon. There they are graded Into\nlots which bring different prices.\nLast season some of the pelts sold for\nover $:tlO nplece.\nAt the bead of a most picturesque\nlagoon on I'cak Islund stands the log\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Appleby, and\nadjoining It that of young Mrs.\nAlice Southworth. whose father. Mr.\nMcPheraon. now living 011 Vashon\nIsland. I'uget sound, started the fox\nraising on I'cak island. Numerous\nbooks, a piano and a vletrola furnish j\nuniuseniciit and occupation for lels-\nuse hours. Mr. and Mrs. Appleby\njoined in the stampede to the Shu-\nshanna strike several .years ago. and\ncan tell many Interesting stories of\nthe hardships of that memorable\nfiasco. It was their wedding Journey.\nIleforo her marriage Mrs. Appleby
05e7048465b70b82213acc8310cde87f THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1906.2452054477424 41.741039 -112.161619 Jobu P. Holmgren, Dear River City.\nOne of the advanced grades of farming\nIn this section Is raising sugar beets, and\nIn this there' may be success or there may\nbe failure. The first requisite Is fertile\nsoil, of a medium sandy loam, which\npreferably should be fait plowed, to a\ndepth of eight or nine inches, and not\nharrowed until spring, as the frott aad\nthaw of winter will aid in pulverizing\ntho surface, aud the winter moisture will\npenetrate to a greater depth, and reduce\nthe number of irrigations the next sum-\nmer. If spring plowing is done it is well\nto firm tho soil by Homing crosswise and\nlcnirthwiso and harrow it Immediately\nafter to return the moisture. The seed\nbed should be worked until it is fine and\n a beet growing la garden cul-\nture on an extended scale. Ground on\nwhich luccrn has grown from five to ten\nyears baa fertility sulllclcnt to produce a\ngood yield and particularly if potatoes\nare grown the first year after luceru,\nthough oats or othtr grain might be\ngrown first, and this Is only to glvo tlmo\nfor tho roots to decay before planting\ninto beets. Beets can be successfully\ngrown the first year after luceru, by\ngathering oil the roots. lJut them In a\npile and haul them ou again next season.\nThey contaiu excellent fertility.\nPlanting should be done about April\n10, but care should be takcu not to plant\ntoo early, while tho ground Is too cold\nand not too lato so that it will not ger-\nminate the seed.
1475ea0e1d924daf575f9f8392a0a728 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.4479451737698 39.745947 -75.546589 H. E. Miles, Chairman of the Indus­\ntrial Training CecUon for the War\nEmergency Council of National De­\nfense, said: This war is a war of ma­\nchinists and of mechanics. There are\nmanv Idle men in some sections of the\ncountry, but the draft is lessening their\nnumber somewhat. About one-third of\nfhe army at the front must consist of\nskilled men for repairs and mainten­\nance. We must take over groat num­\nbers of skilled men from toe non-essen­\ntial trades Into war production. Wc\nmust slop hiring and firing and pursue\nInstead toe EnglMi and French method'\nof fitting each man lo the Job he is to\ndo. Every employer of 300 men or more\nin France has been required lo place a\ntraining department in hte plant. The\nEnglish Ministry of Munitions \nmakes the same requirement in Us con­\ntracts for supplies. A start In to is di­\nrection has been made In America, a\nlaundry shirt ironcr was able after\nthree days training In the Bridgeport\nTrade t-che,«ii to len«i a milling machine.\n"It i« coming to be said that women\narc mure skilled than men In light ma­\nchinery. Of course this Is a gross mis­\nstatement. A high class of women arc\ncoining in, and both men and women\nare sticking belter because % they know\niheir work bi tter. One of the biggest\nthings we must do now Is to make our\nwage raies with the utmost intelligence\nand then never rut them until the end\nof the war. ibis will give us from 20\nto 50 per cent, greater production in\nmany places.
52c02c1b0c069a101dafbe6eff3bfc2b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.6808218860983 40.063962 -80.720915 Is the time for all caltuund euiuliil men to 1\nilojiutlcotn tho great qualities alike ot j1\nmind and ot character which have cnablod\nMb Napoleon Bonaparte, for nearly the\nlifetime ol a generation, lo All the most '\nconspictow positions In tho civilized r\nworld with so much skill and force, wltli c\nno nincli prudence and forecast, and snclt *\na varied capacity as will insure to lib 1\nname, In tho annabol our Uines, a place r\nus marked and as marvellous as that of £\nany sovereign recorded in hbtonr. Tlipue '\nmistakes oiTib reign which can Iw clearly 11\ntraced to errors of judgement on his own\n|iart, may easily bo paralleled alike «i tn\nnumber and as to magnitude In the rsrwr '\nof any one of the very moat \namong tho ruins nf msnklad The «ur- h\nrender of the Third Napoleon b a tuiren- h\nnor in wntcn an uie worm may nyoiuv, u\nHftTC pcrcluinco tlio very monarch who b\nrecc^vtp lti Tlip cry which went up lu ill\n*>me parts ot Europe yesterday, hailing a t\nnew Empcror ol Germany In the stead of fl\nthe failing Emperor ol Uio French will lw V\naery of evil omen to victorious rniany a\nIfit bs hoarrtnnd answered by her. Let J\nus.hope for tho Rake of Germany; of Eu- tl\nrope and ol t)\\o world, that if the victor o\nof Sedan prove no wiser, the great people, f\nat leant, whom to-diiy he liolda in tlic II\nhollow ol his hand, may not; bo dragged p\nhy triumph into sharing his wisdom.
19ffba8d2de9a42535a4be8d0026ff5d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.6808218860983 40.063962 -80.720915 steamboat express train which lefl\naiuauj uus morning, was thrown from\nthe track by a switch being carelessly\nleft open. The train was running fast\nand on a curve the engineer gave the\nsignal to brake and jumped from his\nengine* The locomotive plunged idjc\nthe sand and turned over. The thre<\ncoaches next to the baggage car run to\ngether in the form of a tellescope, anc\nwere left lying in a heap with the bag\ngage car. The loss of life and injury tc\npassengers generally was confined t<\nthese three cars. The following is i\nlist of the killed and injured.\nKilled.David Creighton, Newtown\nC. E.; Larry Shaughney, Rochester\na railroad employee; Luciu9 Owen\nbrakesman, Clyde; Mr. Smith, Glovers\nville, N. Y .; N . Somers, Rosaborn, N\nY. Wounded.A . H . Stone, Oppen\nheim, N. Y ., head slightly; Mr. anc\nMrs. Wm. Somers, Decatur, N. Y.\nslightly; Miss Downing, Rome, 'bad\nand head severely, F. H . Harrington\nNo. 19, Maiden Lane, N. Y ., head slight\nly; Mrs. P . J . Parker, Buffalo, heat\nslightly; W. L . Vail, Florida, N. Y .\nslightly; W. T . Witts Murray, N. Y .\nhead slightly; Jas. A . Spell, Senec*\nFalls, broken shoulder and side; Mr\nand Mrq. A . Seymour, Llbana, {oft Y.\nbadly bruised; C. S; Peters, Syracuse\nbadly bruised; H. C . Peters, New York\ninjured in the leg, arm and heac\n W. H . Iceland, Rochester\nshoulder, W. L, Lantry, Oneida, shout\nder and hips Injured slightly; A. L\nWhortly, Kalamazoo, Mich., jaw bro\nken; A. DeForrest, Ann Arbor, Mich,\nslightly; David Taylor, Jersey City, o\nthe firm oft Colgate A Cflf., N. Y.r in\nternally; Aaron Stone and wife, head\nshoulders and hips; Thomas Oliver\nTordban, slightly; Mrs. W . N . Thomai\nand -son, Beloit, Wis., slightln; Mrs\nChapman, severely; J. Q . Johnson\nEast Saginaw,slightly; E. Derby, Court\nland, slightly; Mrs. Hannah Rocheston\nhead and arm; Andrew Tracy, N. Y .\nslightly; James Goujd, fireman, Pal\nmyra, slightly; John Supple, Detroit\nleg injured; James Elliott, New York\nslightly; John Pacey, London, C. W .\nrite broken; C. Demster, Gloversville\nseriously; Mr. Rice, Oswego, shoulder\nbroken; J. W . Swan, Medina, head anc\nshoulder hurt; Mrs. Swan, arm an<\nhand broken; Mr. Page, Binghamton\nslightly, Mrs. Newitt, Cal., some in\njured; Mr. Newitt, slightly; Mrs. N\nSomers, Olloegh, arm and back, badly\nHoiaceHoyt, Decatur, N. Y ., internal\nly: Frank Moseer, engineer, severely\nW. J . McDonald. Cal., slightly, extri\ncated by his two sisters; William Ryan\nRochester, slightly. The bodies of th«\ndead and the injured were brough\nto this city at eight o'clock P. M., ant\neverything is being done thfct can bo fo\nthe comfort of the sufferers. Thebodie\nof Shaughnessy and Owen were left ii\nthe wreck as they could not be immedi\nately removed.
169397c16b6c65f370b00d695b5be11e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.678082160071 43.798358 -73.087921 soon as the fruit ripens ; the plants to be\nin fruit beds the spring following.\nUur own experience leads us to recom\nmend, that the pines and scarlets be plant\nin a loose, rich, and pretty moist soil,\nour climate being dryer than that of Brit-\nain, and the strawberry demanding a\ngreat supply of moisture when fruiting.\nTbe mode o planting is generally in the\nbeds containing two, three, or four rows.\nwith alleys of two feet between them.\nThe soil should be well dug and pulver- -\nzeu, and the situations open and exposed\nthe sun. The larger crowini? kinds to\nmay hare intervals of two feet between\nrows, and f 18 inches between the\nplants in the rows; the smaller growing\nkinds may be planted closer. Keen cuts\nrunners three times in a season we\ncat thrrn once, and leave then the\nnew plants that take root in the bed?,\nmostly to grow, His culture may be the\nmost perfect, but ours is attended with the of\nleast labor, thecobt of which is there triv-\nial to what it is here. Keen plants the\npines and hautboys 2 feet by 18 inches\napart, and the scarlets 20 by 18 inches.\ntie louna among the many different kinds\nhautboys, one which . had the male\nblossom on one plant and' the female on\nanother;, and experience soon taught him,\nmai io reuuer mem irumui, ii was neces m\nsary to mix the two kinds in his beds, in\nthe proportion of one male to eight fe\nmales. Air. Laogworthy, of Cincinnati,\nand Mr. Downing, of Newburgh, think\nthat .the male and female blossoms prow\non different plants in other kinds
1f806c6a4a7bef42e71e8aa0f235fbc2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.0863013381531 40.063962 -80.720915 FTNDER AND BY VIRTUE OP AI\nvJ order of the Supremo Court of the Btat\nifNew York, made at a special term therec\nleld In the City of Now York, on the 8d day 0\nkugust, 1880, xiu the matter of the petition c\nhe Trustees of the Bathbono Petroleum Com\nmny of West Virginia," appointing the nndei\nilgned Receiver of all the real and personal t\nate, debts, property, equitable interests, right\naid things In action of said company, the under\nilgnedtoII, on the 85thDiTOfMAactf, 1870,Kths\nMing a court day) between the hours of 10 a. u\nind 4 r. x ., sell at pubic auction, to the highes\nSdder.atthe front door of the Court House c\neasants county, State of West Virginia, all th\night, tltlo and Interest of tho said Toe Bathbon\nPetroleum Company of ,Weat Virginia, of, in am\no the following real fetate situated In.tho count;\nkUQ OUUO in«t raonuunoa, »iux ub x rout\nPreeh, and boundod.as follows, to wit: Begii\nilng At a stake and two ayeamorss. pointer* i\nraylor's lino, thanco two degrees east\njighty poles to a white oak; thon'co north ssvei\n: md degree# east, eighty-four poles to a blac\nink; thence south seventy degree* oast, nlnetj\nnine poles to a stone pHo and pointers: thonc\nlouth twenty-two degrees west, one hundred am\nlixty-slx poles to a hickory; thence north eight]\nneven and a half degrees weet, eighty eight pols\nto the beginning, containing one hunaredT an\n(wo acres oy surrey, "bo tho same more or les<\nBeing the same premises conveyed to the sal\nrke Rathbone Petroleum Company of West Vil\nrinla, by John Q. Adams, personally, and a\nrrustoe, and Henrietta T. Adams, his wife, b\nSeed dated the 80th day of May, IMS, and r<\ncorded in the Recorder's office of Pleasant\ncounty aforesaid, in Deed Book No. 4, pages 1\n"tuuh or SAtB-CJash In hand on day of sab\nThe original title pspsis, abstracts aad maps <\nthe foregoing property may be seen at any tim\nbefofc the day of sale, npon application atth\nlaw once of Sands A Wilson, Parkersburg, W«\nVirginia.
03c287c69c26069f6b34a0bdcc54279f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.5942622634589 40.063962 -80.720915 Naw York, August 4 .Cotton quiet and\nsteady at 11 D-lOall 11-lGc; futures barely\nsteady. Flour weak; receipts 19.000 barrols;\nuuperhne western and State $3 7fia4 60; com¬\nmon to good $4 25a4 60; good to choice $4 70\nb7 00; white wheat extra $4 50a5 00; extra\nOhio $6 10a7 00; St Louis $4 50a7 50; Min-\nneaoti patent process $0 00a8 75. Wheat,\nnioderatn export and speculative trade; re¬\nceipts 197,000 bushels; No. 2 spring $1 08a\nI 09; ungraded rejected 94^ca$I 00H; So. 3,\nII 05Kal 00; No. 2, $1 (W^al 09; No. 1,\nII10X; steamer No 2 red $1 05H&1 05^;\nitcaiuer No. 31 Olal 01&; mixed winter $1 05\nU 00, ungraded white $100; No. 3 , $1 00& No.\n1, $105; No. 1 do. wiles 18,000 bushels at\nII 08&al 10; No. 2 red August, sales 200,-\n) 0 bushels at $1 08Kal 09; September, sales\n208.000 bushels at $109al 09& October, sales\n112,000 bushels at $1 10. Cora, mod-\nirately active and higher; receipts 215,000\nbushels; ungraded 45a46&c; No. 2, 48a485<c;\nNo. 2 August 47J£a48Xc: September 49Kc.\n[jata Ho better, light oirerings; receipta 62.-\n)00 bushels: western mixed 38Kc; white\nivwtern 39a45c. Hay steudy and in gcod de-\nnaml. Hops dull and tending downward;\nyearlings, 7al5c. Coiree quiet and unchang¬\ned. tiugarquiet and tinn; fair to good retlning\n'%u7%c. Molasses quiet and unchanged,\n[lice steady and in good demand. Petroleum\nlull; United 94%c; crude 7a7Kc; refined\nWc. Tallow, demand fair and market firm\n»t O^aO^c. Kosin quiet and uuchanged.\nrur pen tine steady at 24c. Eggs dull and tend-\nng downward at 12aI3c. Fork heavy; new\nness $14 45al4 50; ordinary brands$15 25a\n>5 50. Fair and fancy cut meats quiet and ]\ntominal; long clear 7&c; short clear 8^c.\n[iard firm and in fair demand; ptimesteady\nit $7 57Jla7 00. Butter quiet aud steady at\nL4a26c. Cheese in fair demand and market\nirm at 7a9%c.
04c8c969d603499ff9ced66b57dfbb69 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.2753424340435 40.441694 -79.990086 New Yobs, April ia The crews of incom-\ning coastwise steamships tell of terrible storms\nalong the Southern coast The Ocean line\nsteamship Chattahooche arrived from Savan-\nnah this morning with 120 careworn and Badly\nbattered passengers. On last Sunday morning\noff Cape Hatteras a tremendous sea swept her\nhurricane deck, carrying away the stanchions\nand ventilators. At II o'clock Sunday night\neveryone on board was aroused by the crash of\ntimbers and the roar ot water pouring into the\nmain saloon. The passengers tumbled out Into\nwater waist deep, strapped on life preservers\nand sat up the rest of the night Eight passen-\ngers were quite Seriously injured by flying\nglass and fragments of furniture. The cap-\ntain stopped the engines and'the vessel was al-\nlowed to drift for 48 hours. He used all the oil\non board to break the combing of the waves.\nMonday at 10 o'clock this engines were again\nstarted. The Chattahooche had drifted 200\nmiles out of her course. The vessel has several\n in her bow and part of the bridge is car-\nried away. The port side from stem to stern is\nsplintered and smashed. Five of the state\nrooms are completely demolished. The Chat-\ntahoochee arrived here three days overdue.\nThe steamer Iroquols-- r of the Clyde line, came\ninto port early y in little better condition\nthan the Cbattoochee. She encountered the\nsame storm off Cape Hatteras. The first sea\ncrushed the after cabin on the hurricane deck\nand tumbled tons of water down into the first\ncabin where the passengers were at breakfast\nThe steering gear was thrown out of order and\nwas repaired only with the greatest difficulty\nby the assistant engineer, who was held by the\nheels over the stern of the vessel to do it Sun-\nday night several sailors were injured by a\nwave which again flooded the hold. The cargo\nshifted, the vessel began to labor and the 200\npassengprs were just about ready to give up\nthe ship when the storm cleared away.
0295622f3fdea97bf1af1b5a09b7258f IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1893.3027396943176 43.82915 -115.834394 road employe, living at Edmoml station\nat the time tlie lands were opened,\nb red a quarter section. IHh right\nentry was contested by Eddy It. Town\nsend and decided in Iiis favor bv tlie lo­\ncal land officer, hut on appeal tin- C,\nmissioner of tlie general land office, the\nSecretary of the Interior, and the Dis\n•riet t ourt mid tiie Supremo Court i\nOklahoma successively sustained Town\nscud's entry, and Smith aii|a<aled to tli\nSupreme Court of tin* United State\n,1listice Brewer announced the decision\nof the court in an opinion review\ning the fads and law in the ease, con\neluding with the statement that any one\nwho was within the 'Territorial limits at\nthe hour of noon April 22 was. In laitl\ntin- letter and spirit of tlie statute, di\nqualified to take a homestead therein.\n Assistant Secretary of State lias\nl-ccn directed by Secretary Gresham\nto examine more thorouglrlv than ha.-\nta-cn customary into tie- personnel of\nthe State Department, with the view, it\nis undcrshssl, of determining the fitness\nof the employes for the positions held bv\ntlicm. It is re|Mirted, and on gisst\ntlionty. that tradition and precedent\nwill not obtain in the State Depart\nduring tlie incumbency of Secretary\nGresham, and that there will Is- less red\ntape and greater dispatch of busincs-\nhereafter. Secretary Hoke Smith lias\nalready Is'gun to carry into effect hi-\npolicy of dis|s'lising with the servie,\nall incompetent clerks in his dcjxirt ment,\nor those amsiinted purely for political\nreasons. Under the direction of Chief\nt lerk \\Vanile, the individual reeonl of\nthe clerical force of the census office is\ning thoroughly examined, and all tin
202946a845dafb1bafda96ffbf0fa8cc DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.3575342148656 58.275556 -134.3925 Capt. Wallace Latigley, one of the\noldest steamboat men on the Yukon\nriver, was a passenger for the North\nlast week on the Humboldt. The cap¬\ntain will operate the steamer Tana this\nsummer between Fairbanks and the\nInnoka, and the steamer Pup on the\nupper Innoka and lditarod livers.\nLast month the census bureau an¬\nnounced that the white population of\nAlaska was over 40,000 and might go\n50,000. Dr. Romig, in charge of the\ncensus enumeration iu the Southwest¬\nern Alaska divisiou, thinks that when\nthe census is completed, it will largely\nexceed the department's estimate.\nJohu Rosene, whose fertile brain has\nbrought him iuto the limelight on\nnumerous occasions, now proposes to\nspread the gospel of Alaska among the\nScandinavians that they may be in¬\nduced to settle iu various parts of the\nterritory. expects to bring at least\nfifty thousand of them iu a short time.\nThe government realized the sum of\n$20,530 from the sale of the equipment\naud spoils of Japanese seal poachers\ntakeu April 8, 1900, at Unalaska. The\nKinsel Maru aud equipment was sold\nfor $4,Q00 aud the Sakai Maru brought\n§150. Fred Shroder bought both. Six\nhundred and sixty seal skins were sold\nto Ike Rosenberg for 838.00 each.\nThe Copper River & Northwestern\nRailway company is having topograph¬\nical and townsite surveys made at Chit-\nina, where the company will shortly\nopen up a new townsite. The town of\nChitiua will be situated at the junction\nof the Copper river and Chitina rivers,\nand will be the junction where the\nFairbanks trail from Copper Center\nwill meet the railroad when completed\nthis summer from Copper Center.
0630566399af10f84aba5fc4ed734ded CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1901.2178081874683 39.623709 -77.41082 This misfortune came upon us unan-\nnounced, Frank Hesson, without a thought\nas to probable effect upon our sensitory\noiganism, having upon that ever memorable\ndale, Wednesday, M uch 6lh, phoned us the\ngram announcing our appointment to the\nclerkship to the House Legislative committee\nF.xtrn Session of the Maryland Lcgislatuie.\nYea, at last the gods have smiled upon us—\nFortuna Seeunda and when the warrant is\ndrawn and paid for our services we willhave\nearned and been enriched by our first dollar\nof official salary. This confession may not\nbe a discreet one, as it may be assumed that\nho who has been content to serve his parly\nwithout "recognition” for a period of thirty\nyears—dating that service from the attain\nmeul of his majority—may sately be omitted\nin any census of probable aspirants fur place\nof considerable honor and emolument in the\nfuture. That such may not be the construe\ntlon put upon the dilatoriness ofour aspiring,\nwe are prone to explain that It may not bo\nwhollycharged up against us—this debar.\nmcnt£from the crib—others having had\nsomething to say about It; and now, that wo\n been inoculated with the virus, wo fear\nthat others will, as we have been wont to do,\ncomment upon our suddenly acquired and\nvoracious taste for the sweets of office. It\nhas been a more or less engaging study with\nus, this amazing development of a hitherto\nunsuspected idiosyucracy, latent but living,\nand requiring but the faintest and most del.\nicate tickling of the polilical.pap palate, to\ndevelop an appetite, the like cf which, lu its\novermastering control of the faculties and\ndesires, may not be found outside the cata-\nlogue of depraved tastes.\nWe have the honor and emoluments at.\nlacked to the Clerkship to the House Com*\nnnltee on Legislation, of which Hon. Lloyd\nWilkinson is chairman; the duties are pleas*\nant and not arduous, although our utter lack\nof acquaintance with such duties, for a time\nmade us timorous to a degree. The members\nof the committee, Messrs. Wilkinson, King,\nLehmeyer, Long, Sigmund, Waters, Wolfe,\nStewart, Clark, Walbacb and Orydcn, (the\nlast two republicans) are of the ablest men\nin the House; they are workers, affable and\npleasaut with rach other and with their\nclerk.
1a70ae5229d01df5f46546a5fea721f0 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.474043684224 37.561813 -75.84108 No, gentlemen, the late war was not\nmere prize fight for national supremacy. It\nwas the outgrowth of tbe conflict of irre-\nconcilable, moral, social, and political\nforces. Democracy had its lot with tbe\nmoral, social, and political forces of the\ncause which was lost; the Republican party\nwith thoso which triumphed and survived.\nThe preservation of the results of that vic-\ntory devolve upon us here and now.\nDemocracy has no traditions of the past,\nno impulses of tbe present, no aspirations\nfor the future, fitting it for this task. The\nreaction of 1874 has already spent itself in\na vain effort to realize the situation. It has\nsimply demonstrated that no change in the\nmatliiuery of government can be had out-\nside of the Republican party without draw-\ning with it a practical nullification of the\ngreat work of reconstruction, financial\nchaos, and administrative revolution. The\npresent House Representatives has suc-\nceeded in nothing, except the development\noi in unu lucupacuieg.\nFrom the inception of the Republican\nparty in 1855, it has kept pace with the\nprogress of the times, accepting each added\nresponsibility, of war emancipation, taxa-\ntion, and reconstruction, till the brightest\npages of American hittory are but the life\nstory of the Republican party.\nOt the whole mass of administrative\namendments and legislative enactments,\ntakes the responsibility without apology.\nhas often erred, but it has never feared\nact, and through its action the Nation has\nlived. There has been corruption, but when\nit was discovered the order went forth, "Let\nno guilty man escape," and the order has\nbeen executed.\nThere has been a want of harmony, tut\nplatform unwavering in its declaration\nprinciples, with candidates worthy of it, will\nweld together as of old into an unconquera-\nble army, the great liberty, loving,
010f1843dd4aee6a2b579988f1f52002 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.5027396943176 40.441694 -79.990086 though it is estimated that 100,000 people will\nbe present the police provisions will be am-\nple to prevent any unpleasant occurrences.\nAllegheny to Celebrate Over Here.\nAllegheny will be largely represented at\nthe Schenley Park celebration. There being\nno public demonstration arranged for on\nthe Nortbside, the greater part of the popu-\nlation will doubtless accept Mayor Gourley's\ninvitation and join with Pittsburg in doing\nhonor to the great national holiday.\nThe policemen will be stationed at points\nwhere the crowds v, ill be congregated from\nthe entranco on Forbes street to the cxtroine\nlimits of the park. They will patrol tho\ngrounds as carefully as they would their\nbeats. Two headquarters for lost children\nwill be established, in chanre of police\nmatrons who will care for all children lost)\n brought to them. Huggies will De at\nhand in case it becomes necessary to take\nany of the youngsters home. A telephone\nsystem is being erected by the use of which\nincase of accidents or other trouble the\npolice force can be concentrated in a few\nmoments. The prison van, "Black Maria,"\nwill be taken to the park and kept in a con-\nvenient place In case arrests are necessary.\nChief Brown vesterdav sent word to all\nthe streetcar and traction companies, noti-\nfying them of the necessity for making ex-\ntraordinary arrangements to prevent acci-\ndents at the street crossings, and wherever\nthere may be danger by reason of the\ncrowds. The police were also Instructed to\npay especial attention to this point. Tho\nMayor & preparing and will y
2440ddb6e13e7e8240420789f2622593 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1902.423287639523 58.275556 -134.3925 The Al-Ki called in at Killisnoo yes¬\nterday with a load of lumber. She\nwent from there to Sitco Bay with can¬\nnery supplies. They begin fishing for\nthe cannery about the middle of June,\nI understand. Mr. C. E . VanHuebner\nreturned last Monday atternoon from\nDouglas, where he had gone on a busi¬\nness trip. He went alone iu his dory,;\nand the Indians were much worried for\nfear he would be shot while sleeping.\n"Bad Iujun kill him while he sleep,"\nwere the comforting words to mo when\n1 told them that he went alone. Years\nago it was not safe for a white man to\ngo alone half that distance, bat he nor\nI are not in the least alarmed now.\nThe week before Easter Father Soba-\nleff was going to the store in the even¬\n He had to go down several steps,\nand the third one from the top was out.\nNot knowing it, he went through and\nfell a distance of ten feet, striking his\nside on a step, breaking two ribs and\ninjuring himself internally quite badly.\nHe lay quite a long time before anyone\nknew that he was hurt. Not returning\nas soon as his wife thought he should,\none of the boys went to look for him\nand found him in great agony. He was\nhelped to the house, and his wife\nbathed him and did all she could, but\nno doctor living there, he was not prop¬\nerly attended to. He had to go to Sitka\nassoon as he was abletogettothe\nsteamer. The doctor there bandaged\nhim up and he returned on the same\nsteamer. He is getting along nicely\nnow.
56754576bee191c97c5df4c6e74e1064 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.1164383244545 31.960991 -90.983994 But we cannot bring ourselves to believe that\nthe Cabinet of Washington will pursue a line of\npolicy so inconsistent with its pacific professions,\nso injurious to the honor of its country. We will\nnot easily believe that they are inspired by the\npaltry desire of pandering to the passions of the\nmob, and ministering to a lust of empire. That\nthere are men in America who long for a war\nwith Great Britain is, we fear, no less true than\nthat there are men in this country to whom a\nwar with the United States would be by no means\nunwelcome. But we would fain express a hope\nthat the statesmen of the Republic are no more\namenable than the Ministers of England to the\ninfluence of the most violent or the most thought­\nless among their countrymen. And, more than\nthis, we firmly believe that in both countries the\nreal strength of public opinion is arrayed against\nbelligerent policy. The relations of commerce\n—the affections kindred—identity of origin,\nof language, of laws—the common pursuit of\nsimilar objects, the common prevalence of simi­\nlar sentiments, and the common deference to the\nsame principles of moral action—bind the two\nnations together by ties which it would be atro­\ncious to sever by the sword. We are two peo­\nple, but we are of one family. We have fought,\nbut we have been reconciled. Let us hope that\nneither the memory of ancient feuds, nor the\njealousy of present power, survive foe recorded\namity which ended a sanguinary struggle. That\ntwenty-five years of peace and commerce have\nhumanized our mutual feelings—have tamed\ndown our asperities and subdued our jealousies\n—might be deduced from the present intercourse\nbetween the citizens and subjects of both coun­\ntries: it might be inferred from their private lan­\nguage and their public documents, from their\nconversation, and from all that is respectable\namong their newspapers. And melancholy in­\ndeed will be the lesson taught by history, if it
aeec888ae14dcc35d8e10bb2d4a53f63 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.5575342148657 39.369864 -121.105448 The Force of Gunpowder. —The estimated\nforce of gunpowder, when exploded, is at\nleast fourteen thousand seven hundred and\nfifty pounds upon every square inch of the\nsurface which confines it. The force of gun-\npowder depends upon the fact that, when\nbrought in contact with any ignited sub-\nstance, it explodes with great violence; a\nvast quantity of gas, or elastic fluid, is\nemitted, the sudden production of which, at\na high temperature, is the cause of the vio-\nlent effects which are produced. The reason\nthat gunpowder is manufactured in little\ngrains is, that it may explode more quickly,\nby facilitating the passage of the flame among\nthe particles; in the form of dust the parti-\ncles would be too compact. The velocity of\nballs impelled by gunpowder from a musket,\nwith a common charge has been estimated\nat about sixteen hundred and fifty feet in \nsecond of time when first discharged; the\nutmost velocity that can be given to a can-\nnon ball is two thousand feet per second, and\nthis is only at the moment of leaving the gun.\nIn order to increase the velocitv from sixteen\nhundred and fifty to two thousand feet,\none-half more powder is required; and even\nthen, at a long shot, no advantage is gained,\nsince, at the distance of five hundred yards,\nthe greatest velocity that can be obtained is\nonly twelve hundred or thirteen hundred feet\nper second. Great charges of powder are\ntherefore not only useless, but dangerous; for\nwhile they give but little additional force to\nthe ball, they hazard the lives of many by\ntheir liability to burst the gun. The veloc-\nity is greater with long than with short guns,\nbecause the influence of the powder upon\nthe ball is longer continued.
21e17daa363c59496c376d2be5b54101 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.2999999682902 40.063962 -80.720915 ItitotUiiiT IIomk..About *lx o'clyc\nlast evening, the body of Antony Ilea\nmm of Christian Hew, who dic<l on Satu\nday Inst at Notre Dame, Iml., in char*\nof hid brother arrived at the llridgepoi\ndepot and wan from thence brought ovc\nto the residence of hi* parents, corner\nMtli ami Main streets. At All inter vie\nwith Mr. Clement Hess, we learned tin\non Wednesday. March 21th, his hrothc\nwith other student* of the school, was o\nthe enmpn* jdaylng ball. The ball wi\nthrown straight up in the air and will\nrunning and looking up, young Hess an\nanother young man not seeing each otlic\ncame into violent collision, such was tli\nforce of tho shock with which the bin\ncamo together that Mr. Hess' front tcetl\nof the lower jaw with tli\ngums was broken in, ami the forehead\ntho other young man was also hrokci\nIn Addition, both young men sullere\nsevero contusion alnuit the uptter of tliel\nbreasts. Although the wounded jaw wr\npainful and young Hess complained no\nnml then, of some pain in his breast, (i\nstill continued to go about his duties, an\nthere wa* no Apprehension of seriou* ri\nnits. It was not until within some foil\nor five day* nreviotis to hi* death that li\nwas romfined to hi* room and bed,and m\nuntil within a day of his deAtli were hi\nslmptnms considered alarming, althong\ntho young man hlnwelfhad expressed tli\nopinion that be was going to die. 0\n. Saturday last he died, and ft dispatch cor\ntainlna tho sad announcement, was tli
2ef9c66670ad91eb62fd33d8353734f0 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.0095628099068 41.875555 -87.624421 have tbo right to expect that tbo off-\nicials whom they liavo entrusted with\ntlio enforcement of tho law, will give\ntlieiu every posslblo protection provided\nby tho law, nnd tho statutes of the\nStato of Illinois arc so liberal In tholr\nconstruction ns to glvo to tlio munici-\npality full power to control all of thoso\nthings which way in any way effect tbo\nhealth of tbo icoplo.\n"Undor the provisions of nn net to\nprovide for tbo Incorporation oi cities\nnud villages, approved April 10, 1872,\n(Itcvlsed Statutes, Chapter 24, Section\n02), tlio councils lu clues nnd tbo presi-\ndent and tho board of trustees In vil-\nlages are empowered to regulato tho\nsalo of meat, poultry, flsh, butter,\ncheese, lard, vegetables nnd all other\nprovisions; to regulate tho salo of\nbread and to prescrlbo Its quality; to\nprovide for tho Inspection of all arti-\ncles of food ; to what shall con-\nst ituto a nuisance and to abate same\nand to fine all who permit nuisances\nto exist ; to appoint a board of health\nnnd prescribe Its powers nnd duties;\nTO DO ALL ACTS AND .MAKE ALL\nUEOULATION8 TO PHOMOTE\nHEALTH OU TO PREVENT DIS-\nEASE; to direct location nnd regulate\ntho management nnd construction of\npacking bouses either within the limits\nof tho corporation or within ono nillo\nfrom Its boundaries; to comiwl tho\nownor of nny grocery or any unwhole-\nsome or nauseous place to cleanse and\nabate or remove samo and to regulate\nIts location. Under tho provisions of\ntho same law, municipalities nro em-\npowered to Impose fines, not exceeding\n$200 for ench offciiso, or Imprisonment,\nnot exceeding bIx months, for tbo viola-\ntion of any of Its ordinances."\n"Asido from tho specific provisions of\nthe law, quoted above, the ono pro-\nvision,
079a5e253ec84731b7a026f22ed70a73 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1898.0397259956874 41.875555 -87.624421 "Yes, yes, yes. Where else should I\ngo? Where else should I go?" he reiter-ate-\nlu a dazed and uncertain manner.\nAfter which, Kvelyn was scarcely sur-\nprised to hear that her uncle did not feel\nwell enough to come down stairs again\nthat evening, but would take some re-\nfreshment lu his own room,\nFrom that day, though Kvclyn's llfo\nwas full of ease ami luxury, it was very\ndull. At first she thought she could\nnever be tired of rnnmlng over the beauti-\nful Hampshire hills, and through the rich\npasture lauds uud water meadows, or sit-\nting, lost lu the recesses of the park, lis-\ntening to the sounds, nud Inhaling tho\nscents by which she was surrounded. But\nnfter a while sho became so accustomed\nto tho monotony of her new life that \nbegan to miss the variety of the old one.\nCooking dinners nnd running messnges,\nand mending clothes may not lie interest-\ning, but It Is more suitable employment\nfor n gregarious unlmnl thnii solitary\nbrooding, Ami Mr. Cnryll shut himself\nup utmost entirely In his own room, Tho\nreturn to the scene of nil Ills joys nnd dis-\nappointments had brought memory back\nIn such a flood upon his mind ns almost to\noverwhelm him, .nud ho found himself\nquite unequal to the task which ho had\nset himself to do, He did not, however,\nforget Ills duty to Kvelyn Bayne, Ho en-\ngaged nn ndmlrnhlo resident governess to\nfinish her education, nud gnvo her every\nother advantage which money could pro-\ncure, But the girl began to sickcu lu an\nutinosphcro eo artificial to Int.
e72ea94bc64dbc777f948a1439da9eb0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.0560108973386 41.681744 -72.788147 Hartford, Jan. 21 . A piesentment\nwill be mado to the superior court by\nthe extraordinary grand Jury Investi-\ngating tho alleged frudulent physl- -\nclans practicing in Connecticut follow-\ning the session of the grand Jury next\nweek. This was announced today by\nForeman Henedlct Si. Holden who be-\nlieves the work of the Jury has pro-\ngressed to tho point whero a present-\nment to tho court which created It is\nwarranted. This presentment will be\nIn the naturo of a report of tho Infor-\nmation that liusljeen gathered by the\njury In its probe, together with rec-\noil) mondations relative to prosecu-\ntions. If any nre deemed warranted.\nThe Jury will resume fts sessions on\nJanuary SS, and will continue its de-\nliberations sufficiently lona to permit\ntho examination of some very Import\nant witnesses and records that will be\n'laid before it. It is confidently ex-\npected, however tho jury will \nagain before tho end of the week, to\nresume its inquiry whenever the occa-\nsion seems to Warrant.\nHarry T. Hruudlge, reporter on tho\nSt. Louis Star, who started the probe\nin Connecticut after he had purchased\ndiplomas in Missouri through the di-\nploma mill, will again bo a witness\nbefore the grand jury on Monduy.\nThe information Mr. lirundign Is ex\npected to reveal to the grand Jury this\ntime is es peel ml to be the clinching\npoint against tho Missouri colleges\nconcerned In the diploma mills. which\nhad such a bearing on the investiga-\ntion In Connecticut.\nSenutor Charles O. Cook of West\nHartford und George A. Harmon of\nSufflr ld. appointed a committee of lhe\ngrand Jury lo Investigate, the Middle\nsex college ft medicine and surgery\nat Cambridge and the Hoston college\nof physicians and surgeons ur ex\npected to go to Hoston tomorrow to\nmake their Investigations,
52541e86aa66b10ab50515b3a63c0183 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1839.7547944888381 40.807539 -91.112923 ficed "an article" in several of the pa­\npers in your city, in relation to\ndiamond necklace" worn by a lady\n(daughter of Mr. Wm. 3wJ»m? the in­\nventor and proprietor of the celebrat­\ned Panacea) at a ball at the United\nStates' Hotel, at Saratoga Springs,\nand speculating on how many bottles\nof that "remedy" must have been\npoured down "the public throat'''' to\nhave purchased "the precious brill­\niants" estimated, according to rumor,\nat $20,000! Visiting at Saratoga at\nthe time, and the subject being one of\ngeneral conversation, there is a little\nhistory connected with those jewels\nwhich I will give, as it was related to\nme. I do not vouch for its positive\naccuracy, but merely mention it as a\npassing "on dit," which demonstrates\n there are two sides to a question,\nhowever insignificant—here it is: A\nlew yetfrs ago Mr. Swaim received a\nrequest from one of the reigning mo-\nnarchs, through the medium of a Min­\nister Plenipotentiary, or an "Envoy\nExtraordinary," to proceed immedi­\nately to Europe, for the purpose of\nadministering his personal adviice, in\nrelation to "an aggravated case of\nScrofula," with which a prominent\nmember of the royal family was afflic­\nted. Mr. Swaim considering it im­\nportant to test the effects of his. rem­\nedy in so hi^h a quarter, preparatory\nto its introduction in similar cases,\nover the whole continent of Europe,\nsailed without delay in the packet\nship Susquehannah, from Philadelphia.\nThe case in question, although it had\nbaffled the science and the skill of the
16fd6620bf1d6984bdea9c3f0860f649 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.5876712011668 40.063962 -80.720915 In the ovonine Mr. Goo was again n\ntackod on tho eubjoct, visited tho tro\nsaw tho ruin and boliovod. The nov\naproad and crowds eaino to viow tl\nruining troo. Some pooplo thougl\nthat tlio drops resembled toars mo\nthan rain, as tho showor was nov\nvory lioavy. In tho ovoulng, as tl\ndurknoss grow, pooplo But around ai\nhoard the slow drip, drip, until it wi\nas gonorahy called tho "weeping"\ntho "ruining troo." Townrd mornir\nit eousod. It appoarod ulwuys to 1\nhonviost during tho hottost part of tl\nday. It novel dampouod tlio grout\non which It foil. Tho loaves woro novi\nunduly moist, and yot tlio pattor of tl\ndropi could bu heard, and the fallir\nshowor shono in tho sunlight, althoutj\ntlioro was liovor a cloud in sight.\nThen 0110 day It happened that\ngrnngor, who hud come tu «ou tl\nfamous troo, took up a cortulu uosltia\nthat throw tlio stinshiuo on tho ruin e\nthat tho prismatic colors woro soel\nInstantly tlio nuws wont round tin\n"Mrs. (Joo has private rainbow In lu\ngarden," nnd tlio crowds who visitc\ntho piano became moro donto. As sti\nrlos will grow, a sun, moon nnd tliri\nstars woro added by popular rumor I\nthe list of curiosities In MrH. Goo\ngarden, but the rainbow nnd tho woo|\nlug troo woro tho only phunomonu o\nview. Many woro tho ootljsoturoi mail\nas to tho reason of tlio falling molsturi\nand In tho month during which\ncontinued onouuli folk loro, suporstitio\nnnd trudltlon sometimes bunting on tli\nsubjoct nnd aoiiiolli>loa wholly Irruli\nvnnt woro pourod into Mrs. Goo's e«\nl'eoplo advised hor to dig beneath tli\ntree bocauso there must bo tronsui\ntlioro. Others said: "No, aomo on\nbus boon murdorod hero long ago.\nTho old colored gentleman, who is wo\nknown in tlio vicinity, said ttint tlior\nwas only one reason for tho rain nn\nolio u«o for tho tree. Hits of It, ho m\nsertcil, would provo Invaluable «\ndivining rods for finding wntor, and h\nhniod Ills assertion on tho luct "that d\nruin wnu't dure fur nillllu."
0c87c8918fc2a2592f3d5523bdea2ba3 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1903.9986301052766 41.004121 -76.453816 This hopefulness for success is\nsupplemented by the belief that\nPresident Rooseve;t, who, it is ad- -\nmitted on nil sid.s, will be the Re- -\npublican candidate, has lost pop-- 1\nularity and excited among con-- 1\nervative Republicans the apprehen\nsion that his election next year\nwould threaten the public tranquil- -\nlity and bring disaster to the great\nbusiness interests of the country.\nBut while the Democrats believe\nthey see a chance for their nominees\nin 1904, they realize that candidates\nmust be selected who will inspire j\nthe conlidence of the people, and\nthat principles must be enunciated\nthat will not create alarm for the\nfuture in the eve::t of Democratic\nsuccess. The inquiry further shows\nthat the Democrats in Congi ess, and\nespecially those States whose elect-\noral votes are assured to the Demo-\ncratic candidates, are not influenced\nby partisan or personal preferences\nin the choice of a candidate for\nPresident. Their desire for success\nis paramount, and they appear will-\ning to surrender their individual\npreference for that man who may\nbe by New York and\nother States north of the Potomac\nand Ohio rivers who, in the judg-\nment of the delegations from those\nStates, can command the united\nsupport of the Democracy and pre-\nsent reasonable chance of winning.\nThe electorial vote of New Yoik\nis regarded as essential to Demo-\ncratic success, and, therefore, there\nseems to be a very general disposi-\ntion to consult the leaders of that\nState and to accept the candidate\nwho will receive the support of the\nNew York delegation in the con-\nvention. Taking the consensus of\nopinion of Democrats in the two\nHouses, the preference is for Gor-\nman, but this is contingent on his\nindorsement by the New York dele-\ngation. If that delegation shall\ndeclare for Parker in the belief that\nhe can command greater strength\nin the East, and especially in New\nYork, than Gorman, there can be\nno doubt, judging from expressions\nol Senators and Representatievs,\nthat Judge Parker will be the nom-\ninee of the Democratic Convention.\nAs a rule, the gentlemen ap-\nproached declined to b-
32f495f0e51bb961a450e927f5e8d317 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.0178081874683 58.275556 -134.3925 Acting on the order of United States\nJudge Tucker, the saloons of Nome\nwere closed tight all day last Sunday,\nfor the first time in the histoiy of the\ncamp. The town of Ketchikan tried\nclosing its saloons on the Sabbath day,\nsome years ago. The first week it\nworked flue and everybody was pleased\nbut very dry. The next Sunday every\nman in town had a bottle cached, aud\nsome had two or three. By noon the\nstreets wore full of drunks and several\n8gbts bad disturbed the peace and\nharmony of the village, aud by supper\ntime the police bad lost oontrol of the\nsituation. A gang of toughs made a\nrougbhouse in a restaurant, and kicked\nthe plate glass frout into the street. By\nthe following Sunday the saloon men\nwere notified that they might keep the\nback doors open. Henoeforth, all was\npeace. When any chechaco judge lands\nin Alaska with the idea in his soft\nSouthern brain that be is 6ent to sift\nout the wheat from the chaff and make\nthe rugged Northlander change his\nways all at ouce,gi?e him a for\nMorningside. No people in the #orld\nmore thau Alaskans know the bitter,\nblasting curse of drink, ooue may bet¬\nter tell the horrible story. But who\ncau better tell of the wintry night\nwhen feet and hands were numbed with\ncold, and the long trail seemed to have\nuo end, till the glittering light of the\n"gin mill" showed, a blessed haveu of\nsafety aud warmth, but all the ohorch\nes had long been closed. The saloon\nin Alaska bears little resemblauce to\nthe low grog shop of the tenement dis¬\ntrict in the orowded metropolis or the\ngilded places of sin where our lords of\ncreation spend tbeir subetance. Not\nby a damned sigbt. And the reason\nfor the difference is that the saloons of\nthe North are frequented by men. The\nsaloon is the forum, where questions of\nstate oome up for discussion. It is the\nmart where comes the first reports of\nnew discoveries, and where grab stake\nagreements are made, and where mines\nare bought and sold. It is the meeting\nplace of men of affairs, the olub house\nof the pioneer.
0bb3782b0886e168c563f60ddb45e4e0 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.0671232559614 41.681744 -72.788147 Alice insisted that sessions of the\nboard of relief are open to the pub-\nlic. He claimed to be in possession of\nlegal background for his argument\nthat not only agrieved property ow n-\ners, but also any taxpayer has a\nright to come before this commis-\nsion and protest against any assess-\nment, either on the ground that it is\nexcessive or too low. It is a public\nmatter, this business of taxation. Al - -\nlee continued and the operations of\nthis elective board are subject to re\nview, both as to decisions arrived at\nand methods by which these decis-- I\nions were reached, he argued,\nChairman Managan countered with\na claim that property owners are en\ntitled to all equitable relief and\nshould be permitted to present their\nfacts without jeopardizing their own\n For example, the chairman\npointed out, a man who feels justi-\nfied in asking for a reduction should\nnot be required to warn prospective\nbuyers that the income from his\nproperty is not satisfactory, that the\nhouse was not constructed along the\nmost modern lines, or that repairs\nwill soon be needed. The same condi-- j\nlions, it is pointed out. might be\nfound in other properties in the\nsame market, but ihe owner who\ndoes not come to the board of re- -\nlief is placed in a better position to\nsell. Those who agree with Mangan's\npolicy say that any other stand\nwould put the board of relief in the\nposition of real estate spies, gather-\ning information to be used against\nthe interests of the very people for\nwhose benefit this board was creat-\ned.
37da360bb9e8dd1ff3e4542bda59aa7f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1219177765095 40.063962 -80.720915 TblngBiire"workin" down bcrc. P«\nty Is a grant despot, and what, in tii\nlegislature, is called democracy Is the vc\nquintcsenco oi tyranny. Every moasu\nthat comes short of its demands Is pi\nupon tho rack and drawn out to tho 1\nquired length, even if it pulls the joints\npiccca; or if too long, has its legs, so\nspeak,sawedoil'by tho knees so as to\nit to the iron strctcher in such cases ma\nand provided. Every public officer,\nmatter how well qualified, if a Republics\nIs to have bU head chopped oil. This\nbcinir done lust as fast as the irullotl\ncan bo worked. Tho process Is Just\nUtile mean somotlmes. Wo lrnil n samj\nof tho small potato kind tho other day\ntho Bonato. Tho present law requires t\nHoard of Public Works appoint, t\nlirst week In January, a board of diri\ntory for tho Penitentiary to serve for ti\nyears. This was done, as tho law provi\ned, and the present most excellent boa\ncommissioned for tho next two yea\nHut the hungry cormorants wanted to f\nInto tho Ponltcntlarv. where tli\nought to have been long ago, a\nactually hovered uruunil until, w\nmost Indecent hnito, tlioy rushed a\nthrough the Hvnato requiring tho Incoml\nGovernor to appoint an entire now Boi\ni tho very uext dnjr alter ho comes li\n[lower, and turn out tho preaont one. T\nwaa done to loathcr tho noat of Super\nI tendent and lmve it nico and warm To\ncertain doftnet Ohio county Democi\nCol. Curtia it to be run down; no,"\nJ with Ilia head." Tobeauroliolathoh
1cf3110bd81000ac7755842d7bea4c33 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.187671201167 38.894955 -77.036646 A gentleman who (s represented m\nbeing prominent In HaUimoro and Ohio\nHallway circles gives nn Interesting ac-\ncount oE tho progress of negotiations\nthat finally resulted In tho present ileal,\nwhereby the Sully syndicate secure 80,- 0- 0\nshares of II. nnd O. stock for $10\n(100,0(0. When tho new lino was com\npletedto IMiUaiklnhla It found Itself\nshut out orls'tw ork ocept ns n do\npendent of rival lines. Tho attempt of\nMr. Garrett to enter New York was\nwatched Itf Mr. Gould with Keen In\ntercst. Mr. Gould, to rid lilrmilf of\nhis strongest telegraphic competitor,\nendcmoicd to place himself In a post\nHon In which ho could dlctato terms to\nMr. Garrett, require tho latter to trans\nfcr tho 11. and 0. telegraph bv stem to Ilia\nWestern Union In return for nn en\ntrance In Now York over tho Jersey\nCentral. In Hie mcantlmo Air. Gould\nlibel his friends ueuirul Mich u un\nJimy Central that tliey could force\nsuch nn Issue on Mr. 0 melt, whlto tba\n11 nnrtCJ ;wiutonvIthIls plans by pur-\nchasing tbo btaten Island terminus an\ncompleting Its road to Pntlndctphta\nAs n railroad question, It was ubsurd\nfor the managers of the II. and O to at\ntempt to control thousands of miles of\nrailroad In tho Kouth simply to secure\ntiio prom or. tut trniiiciherurom over\ntho forty miles of Its Washington\nbranch, but tbu gentlemen who co itrol\ntho M.UtK) miles of roid In tho Siulh\nsought Hie 11 nnd O to obtain an outlet\nIn the metropolis o tho country. The\npresident of the 11 and 0. gaveahcirty\nvulcomo to the new comers that woul\n(eud to Inercaso the business of\nhis (ompnti), and an arrangement\nwaseiTectcd to tho mutual ndvantngd of\nall Interested, and It may also he said\nhe Is cne of the principals of tho great\npjndlcutc.
2627bb80bdb5b876262b77daee6de84e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.3767122970573 58.275556 -134.3925 On the 24th rlay of April, I860, seven-\nteen Swedish and Norwegian Lutheran\nministers, and about an equal number\nof lay delegates, representing thirty six\nScandinaviiu congregations, met in\nChicago and decided to organize the\nabove-named synod. These ministers\nand congregations had until then been\nconnected with (he English Northern\nIllinois Synod, but on accouut of vital\ndoctrinal differences, the Scandinavian\nforefathers felt that they could no\nlouger continue their connection with\nthat body. That they were not very\nmuch mistaken is shown by the subse¬\nquent hist ory of tho Augustana Synod.\nThe congregations represented at t ho\nChicago meeting in 1860 were composed\nof poor, newly arrived immigrants. The,\ntotal number of communicant members\nin (lie congregations represented being\nonly 3,753. The primitive church build¬\nings numbered 21, and no other prop\nerty was owned by these fathers. The\nstatistics of the Augustaua Synod for\nthe year 1000 show the number of min-\nisters to be 611, number of congrega¬\ntions, 1,002; communicaut members,\n1G3,473; total number of members, 254 ,-\n- 645; number of church buildings, 06f>;\nvalue of church property, §8,077,862;\nnumber of teachers in Sunday schools,\n8,081; number of scholars in same, 60,-\n3ll. In connection with these figures\nit must be noted that the Norwegian\nchurches severed their connection with\nthe Augustaua Synod as early as 1870\non account of difficulties arising from\nthe difference in language. This separ¬\nation was altogether friendly and was\naccomplished with the best mutual un¬\nderstanding, the brethren\norganizing their own synod, which has\nsince developed to a large body.\nAt the time of the organization of\nthe Augustana Synod it was also de¬\ncided to found the Augustaua College\naud Theological seminary, which was\ndone, the institution being located at\nPaxton, 111., but some years later re¬\nmoved to Rock Island in the same\nstato, where it today owns magnificent\nbuildings, located very beautifullv,\nwith a commanding view over the city\nand the Mississippi river.\nUenides this central educational in¬\nstitution founded by the pious aud in¬\ntelligent fathers, the Augustana Synod\nnow owus eight other institutions of\nhigher learning. These are; Gustavus\nAdolphua college, St. Peter, Minn.;\nBethany college, JL»indsborg, Kans.;\nLuther college, Wahoo, Neb.; Upsala\ncollege, Kenilworth, N. J.; Northwest-!\nern college, Kergus Falls, Minn.; Ttiu-\nity college, Hound Oak, Texas; Minne\nsola college, Minneapolis, Minn.; and\nCoeur d'Alene college, Coeur d'Alene,\nIdaho. These institutions represent a\nproperty value of £$83,677, number of\nstudents enrolled in 1008 was 3,24-1. To\nfittingly commemorate it* jubilee, the\nsynod has now collected an endowment\nof $250,000 for Augustana College aud\nTheological seminary. This sum has\nbeen voluntarily subscribed aud paid\niti by the Swedish population of the\nUnited States. Some very prominent\nmen have from time to time been\nstudents at this synod's institutions of\nlearning, men such as the late Governor\nJohn A. Johnson, of Minnesota, aud\nthe present governor of the same great\nstate, the Hon. A. O. Eberhart, not to\nmention others.
26abe985343a6401a8dba3f684fdb84a THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.8397259956876 37.005796 -89.177245 His officers havo prepared a statement\ncorroborating Capt. Washington's de-\nfence, in every particular, and add that\nho told them to keep a close look out for\nany hail or cry of assistance. This order\nthey obeyed, and they assert that they\ncould seo no person either about tho\ntho wreck, on shoroor In the water:\nThey also denotinco tho statement said\nto have been mado1 by Howard Crouse, to'\ntho effect that ho proposed landing and,\nthat Capt. W. objected, aa a wilful and\ndeliberate lie, and say that as Crouse,\nwhile drunk, ran the Submarine aground\nat tho head of Island 40, (where she now\nIlea and must lie until tho river rises,\nbeing somo distance out of the channel,)\nand was discharged fort it, ho thon made\nthis statement for tho first tlmo, which\nprovcahlmto boa malicious liar..\nCapt. McCordof tho Ollvo Branch cor-\nroborates tho statement of tho fact that\ntho Submarine lay at Grand Tower,\nalongsldo of tbo Olive Branch, for \nhours after thoStonowatl took fire.\nCopt. Crane, of the Belle Msmpbls cor-\nroborates tho statement of tho violonce\nof the wind, and says that on that night\nhla boat was sarercl times upended,\nthat Is, her stern blown around up\nstream, while unier way between Capo\nGirardeau and ths wreck. As ho passed\ntho place where tho drowning persons\nare represented to have been, in a few\nminutes after the Submarlno passed, ho\nthinks it likely hi also passed persons\ndrowning in tho river, yet ho saw or\nheard no person el'.her on tho bank orln\nthe river, und did tot laud his boat until\nfour miles abovo tlio wreck, and then\nonly from curiosity to ask what boat it\nwas, as ho was notballcd, even there.\nWe aro therefore compelled to bellovo\nthat although Capt. W. did wrong in not\nsending out his yawl, yet tho error waa\none of judgment an4 not of a bad heart,\nand that his conduct is therefore ex\ncusable.
55b93749e5752f39067be5b97a872564 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.6452054477422 31.960991 -90.983994 ehaff before the breeze. And I think it likely,\nthat if the different banks held your liability\nfor sixty or seventy thousand dollars, your wit\nand wisdom would discover many ingenious de­\nvices to enable you to forget the constitution.\nThe balance of my debts wore incurred in the\npurchase of my land—the dower of widow Stacy\nm the plantation of her deceased husband. I\ngave her one thousand dollars for her interest in\nthe land; that is, I paid her $500 down, and\ngave her my note for the balance. To enable\nto raise the $500 which I paid, I made my\nnote and got it discounted in the Grand Gulf\nBank, where the money was advanced to me.—\nNow they tell me that the inon-y I got from\nthe bank was no account, and that I ought not\nto repay it—a piece'of advice which accords\nprecisely with my feelings, as might be expect­\ned, since my advisers have generally been bor­\nrowers of one bank or another, as well as my­\nself. Our worthy school master affirms that\nthe money was good when it was loaned us,\nand would be good now, if we had complied with\nour engagements with the banks. And indeed\nthere seems to be no use in denying, that if*one\nin ten of us had paid our notes at maturity, the\nbanks would, all of them, have no paper in cir-\nculation, or else must have been furnished with\nthe means of redeeming it. For if we had paid\nour notes in the paper of the banks, it would\nhave been no longer in circulation, or if we had\npaid in silver, agreeably to our premises, why\nthen the banks would have had it ready to re­\ndeem their paper on presentment. So the school\nmaster proves that the default of the banks is a\nconsequence that resulted inevitably from the\nprior and much greater default of us, who bor­\nrowed first their capital, and then their notes\nissued by them on the faith of our notes and\nsecurity. The school master argues further,\nthat if the identical money which I borrowed\nfrom the banks is not already redeemed, itmust\nbe in the hands of the widow or of some other
093432afab47b515a3eeea558fc361e4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.8808218860984 40.063962 -80.720915 him. Young Hunter la now a mere g\nbummer around Oharleatown, bragging\nto atrangers of bla featB In the rebel\narmy, whereas be never had an acored- a\nlted place In that or any other, exoent u\nthe mob which asaaaslnated Thompson. I\nand a number of rebels aasnred me that\nHenry Hnnter waa worae off than the d\ncorpses of the raldera. Ilia father la ti\none of the huge pleoea of mannerly ooncelt\nwho degrade Virginia, while they f\nImpose npon It by their Bwaggerlng, I\nRoatarlng and lordly pretensions. A\nttle village lawyer, of peaoock alra,\nhe la eerloualy believed around It\nObarleslown to bo a national man,\nwhose excursion through the States £\nwould cull np the legal fraternity like J(\nthe parading of the skeleton of Daniel ii\nWebater. With his thuinba In hla but- d\nton-holes, and head thrown back t<\nlike a terrapln'a, he aaya: 'By the bars tl\nsinister or the Old Domtnlon, air,we'll a\ntlx this thing! Wg% ahowthis admin- y\nlatratlon, sir, what wo mean!' And so V\nthis poor being deludea himself, and (J\ndeceives bis townamen,.forbidden by ri\nthe laws of Weat Virginia to praotioe b\nlaw, bat doing it by proxy, and cbletly 1<\nIn chancery oases; so that It la aald he\nbaa more Inoome now than before the\nwar. The most untortunate place Mr.\nAndrew Hunter ever had to Ull waa to J\nnroaeanta John nm»n. uml n« iii.hu* for *i\nthis prosecution, we might through }*\nbis village and never think of reading }'\nMr. llunter'a sign on hia window-abut- J\nter. The most honorable association ho J\nhas is his oouilnahlp to General David r\nHunter. Beyond these inoldental con*
136fa0703abb2776783933748a2ea99b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.4221311159179 39.745947 -75.546589 "The sun on a hot day makes It\nsufficiently difficult to work on the\ndecks Of a steel vessel,” said G. O .\nMaeonarhle, head of the Harlan wel­\nfare and service bureau, this morn­\ning,” without having to breathe in all\nthe bad odors from the garbage plant\nin discussing tho situation this\nmorning, Dr. Hanby, president of Ihe\nhealth board, remarked that, from\nwhat he hart learned, as long as the\ncrematory, which was burned, was\nIn operation, and no animals were\nrendered, there was no odor and no\n■complaint. This crematory worked\nby what Is known as the "dry" meth­\nod. The old crematory, which was\npressed Into service after the\nUtilizes the "wet" method.\nResidents of the Tenth and Elev­\nenth wards have been in favor of\nImmediately taking steps to secure\nan injunwtilon Sgninsl Ihe sanitary\ncompany At the solicitation, how­\never. of P, Belnkoevskl. who conducts\na drug store at Maple and Van Buren\nstreets, and was a member of the last*\nBoard of Health, they have decided\nto take tha matter up with Uie new\nBoard of Health. In the event noth­\ning Is done by tho board to stop\nthe they will go to court.\n"People in our part of the city,\nincluding many Influential business\nmen." says Mr. Belnkoevskl, "feel It\nIs « crime to permit this thing to go\non and endanger the health of the\ncitizens of these wards for the sake\nof getting a few (pounds of grease\nnut of old meat. The residents feel\nthey are just as respectable as those\nIn other sections, and It 1« wrong to\nsubmit little children to the annoy-\nanoe and dangers of the foul odors\nmahufaelurad at the crematory."\nJphn Ptaluszka, editor of "Polonia"\na Polish paper, and John BORUOkl,\nwho owns a haberdashery on Mary­\nland avenue, are prominent members\nof a committee of residents organ­\nized to fight the nuisance.\n" Everything was perfectly satisfac­\ntory," said Mr. Hlenknwskl today,\n"while the crematory people w-tp\nusing what Is known as the dry\nprocess of reducing the garbage; hut\nthe odors coming from there this\nweak aw mot the ordinary' ones com­\ning from garbage, but have the dis­\ntinct and unmistakable smell of\nburnt meal, which at times Is so\nnauseating people who breathe it are\nunable to retain their food in their\nstomachs."
1dfe63312abb6b2643596b81108f7da5 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.409589009386 58.275556 -134.3925 With an ever increasing flood of\n. iion returning homo from tho war\nto lake up anew tho tasks of civil\nlife, 'many of them with greatly\nchanged ideas of life and ambitions\nand In a quandary an to Just what\nto do, ure appealing to tho Depart¬\nment of the Interior for Information\nis to the IntontloiiH of tho govcrn-\nuent In It* proposed plan oj provid-\niiK fnrms for soldiers.\n8urh a deluge of requests hut*\niieon received from tho men who\nvoro tho uniform iih to emphasize\n. ho lesson of all other wars that tlioj\nwvlco men, hecuuse of army life,\nwlili Its openness and nctlvlly. I\nlargely seek out-of-doors vocations\nThe Interior Department hus ul-\nready explained to more than 40,- I\n000 men that the development of IU\ndans rcHts Hololy with Congress. It\nIs expected that early In the extm\nsession there will ho Introduced bllh\n. overliiR tho farniH-for-soldlors plnn\nIlriofly, the Department is sayiiif'\n'hut. If such legislation is passed,!\nvork will begin at once In the de\nvelopmont of cooperatlvo farm set¬\ntlements for soldiers and sailors In\n nil of the States. In prncti-\n. ally every state In tho Union there\nare largo areas of land suitable for\ntills purpose. There Is dry land In\n'ho West that needs water, which\nan be provided by building dnms\nuid cunnls. In the Kust are lurge\nareas of cut-over or logged-off tim¬\nber lands from which It will be noc-\nossury to blow the stumps mid clour\noff tho underbrush. In the South Is\nu lurge umount or cut-over Innd and\niwump land which must he drained.\nMany of the soldiers have askeil\nif It will bo possible for them to ob¬\ntain a Job near their homes by\nclearing. Irrigating and improving\nfhese lands. That uguin depends\nupon the uctlon of Congress In pro\nvldlng money for construction. The\nplans propose that these settlements\nbo scutered nil over tho country, sol\nthat it would be possible for every\nhonorably discharged soldier or sail¬\nor or marine to work near his old\nhome. There would be work of all\nkinds in connection with these set¬\ntlements. from the highest technical\nand clerical positions to that of la¬\nborer.
2da4ba070e6a156244fe1b560dda5073 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.0479451737697 41.681744 -72.788147 Paris, Jan. 17 . The agreement for\nthe renewal of the German armistice\nsigned by Marshal Foch, Admiral\nBrowning and the German armistice\ncommissioners Thursday provided for\nthe renewal of the armistice from\ntime to time after the month for\nwhich the extension runs, until the\nconclusion of peace, subject to the\napproval of the Allied governments.\nThe principal terms of the renewal\nare substantially as has been already\nreported. In addition there is a\nclause by which the Allied command\nreserves the right to occupy that part\nof Strasbourg defenses comprised by\nthe forts on the eastern bank of the\nRhine and a strip of territory from\nthree to six miles beyond. Other\nclauses provide for the substitution for\nsupplementary railroad material, fixed\nat 500 locomotives and 19,000 cars by\nthe protocol of December 17, by large\nquantities of industrial and \ntural implements, and give control of\nRussian prisoners in Germany to Al-\nlied and associated delegates for re-\npatriation. German headquarters at\nBerlin will act in collaboration with\nthe Allied and associated relief or-\nganizations in this phase of the work.\nThe naval clauses provide that all\nsubmarines must be turned over in-\ncluding all submarine cruisers, mine\nlayers, sweepers, salvage ships and\nfloating docks for submarines. They\nalso stipulate that the building of all\nsubmarines must cease and those on\nthe stocks must be dismantled or de-\nstroyed under Allied supervision.\nGermany undertakes to turn over\nall Allied ships still detained in Ger-\nman ports. The clause providing that\nGermany shall place her mercantile\nmarine at the disposal of the Allies in\nreturn for food supplies says that the\nagreement in no way affects the final\ndisposal of those ships.
018aebfc0fa4a22c956549ed1a772b8a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.6616438039066 41.681744 -72.788147 OSS IN BRITISH TIAILHOADS.\nChe National Bank of Commerce, of\nvv.York, in the current issue of the\nmmerce Monthly, published by that\n;titution, declares that the operation\nrailroads in Great Britain cost that\nvernment $11 9,000,000 from the be- -\ntning of the war until the close of\n18, and further claims ,that it will\nHt the people $370,000,000 to main- -\nn the roads during- the present year,\ncording- to the statement the aver-- e\nnet operating- revenue of the roads\nceeded the same for 1913. The rail- -\niys had been granted, by the govern -\nant, an amount equal to their net\nborne in 1913 as a yearly recompense\nlien they were taken over in 1914.\nhe government is liable for tho\nkount of wear and tear on the roads,\nd, despite the fact that it appeared,\n the government appropria\nble, that the roads had made about\n1,000,000 during the war, which\nme to them in guaranteed returns,\nere is a loss of $119,000,000 owing\nthe replacement of equipment\npiich must be made. The amount of\n00,000,000 is figured as covering\nbar and tear during the four years.\nThis year, as traffic has fallen off\nbnsiderably, it is estimated . that the\nvenue will be $725,000,000. The cost\noperation, also estimated, owing to\n3 greater price of labor and ma- -\nrials, will total $881,000,000 and, on\np of this, the government must pay\nthe roads the annual guaranteed\nIvenue which will put the cast of\ntinning the roads up to the price of\np70,000,000 for the government.\nAlthough the British Isles possess\nfery good rail systems and the serv- -\ne is thoroughly excellent, there are
086c533ad99348eedd7c6e1615ddac12 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.4616438039066 40.441694 -79.990086 There may have been pocket pistols in tbe\ncrowd, bnt it so their effect was not visible, for\neverything, though hilarious, was decorous.\nMessrs. A. V. D. Wattersou and Joseph Brown\ntook a straw vote to determine which way the\nwind blew on the Constitutional amendment\nquestion, and it resulted: Lawyers, for 76,\nagainst 90; Great Western Band, 17 for, 1\nagainst; waiters, 4 for, 21 against. The Judges\ndidn't vote. Some called it\nand others "on the fence."\n"The weather might have been better, and vet\nit wasn't uaa, considering tnat there was\na dancing platform in tbe grand pavilion\nwith an area of over 6,000 feet, beside\nshooting and other pavilions covering as much\ninoie space and all sorts of recreations were\npatronized. Some tried baseball, but the most\nseductive game, apparently, at least, was\nquoits, and one thing was demonstrated, viz.:\nThat the game is in its decadence, the older\n"boys" generally getting away with the\nyounger. A few of the latter pitched respec-\ntable game, but the majority of the experts\nwere above 40 years of age. It was even ru-\nmored that Mr. William Swisshelm was so far\ncarried off bis moral pins as to pitch a game\nfor a prize ot a walking stick. How-\never that may be, he and Commissioner\nMcKeo and Noah Shaffer, Esq., got away with\nall the young fellows except Alex. Gilfillan and\na few other country bred voutbs who bad got-\nten an education around various blacksmith\nshops. Gilfillan was an adept at ringers and\nleaner, making as high as one each at one\ninning, but Swisshelm's steady gait counting\ngenerally one and sometimes two against com\nmissioner Mercer. Mr. Henderson inscribed\nvictory on the banner of his side. Mr. Mercer\ngenerally put the rings in the right place, but\nthey generally refused to stay there, while\nSwisshelm's disregard of technicalities counted\nIn general average, Mr. Hall was also one of\nthe elderly boys who cut the combs of the\nyoungsters.
32c45f6209076fc0bc18de6ee69f1603 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1915.2835616121258 37.451159 -86.90916 tlen Is the one that ooacerai tho nor\nConization of the finances ot the stata\non a sound bueineee basis. It Is doubt-\nful whether there Is a private bull- ne s- e\nin Kentucky that could continue\nix minims u n were urgsaizeu ana\nconducted like the business of Ken-\ntucky. Our state is an enormous busi-\nness enterprise that receives and\nspends more than $7,000,000 annually.\nThis money comes from the taxpay-\ners, and thpy have a right to demand\nthat every dollar paid by them for the\nmaintenance of the government ren-\nder a dollars' worth ot patriotic ser-\nvice, and that every person elected\nor appointed tp a government posi-\ntion render honest labor and do a full\nday's work. The people have never\nobjected and never will object to pay-\ning for good service and good govern-\nment, prqvlded they got good service\nand good government. If I am elect-\ned governor, my first message to the\ngeneral assembly will deal largely\nwith the business conditions, of the\nstate and will recommend that the\nstate's financial system be reorgan-\nized, waste and extravagance be elim-\ninated and the taxpayer protected,\nand an equitable. Just and progres-\nsive system of taxation and business\nestablished. I am going to uso\nevery power I have to have the debt\nof the state paid off and her business\nput in shape so she can meet her obli-\ngations when thoy fall due. I shall\nwork for a more efficient administra-\ntion of the affairs of the and\nshall stand for the right kind of econ-\nomy in all public matters. I am un-\nalterably opposed to any Increase In\ntho tax rate. I believe with the prop-\ner business management we can solve\nour fiscal problems without any In-\ncrease In the tax rate. I shall use my\nInfluence In having a law passed that\nwill call from Its hiding place Intangi-bi - o\nproperty, that is largely owned by\nthe rich and is escaping taxation, and\nforce It to bear Its part of the ex-\npense of maintaining tho government.\nMany, many other wrongs exist and\nwill continue to exist until the busi-\nness of the state is reorganized. If I\nam elected governor I shall recom-\nmend that no appropriations be mado\nexcept In cases of emergencies, until\nthe present financial condition of the\nstate is corrected and It is In a posi-\ntion to pay her appropriations when\nthey fall due. I shall recommend\nnhnllfihln? nverv uselnss office, and\nthe right kind of economy In every\ndepartment of the government.\nWhenIwasachildIusedamin-\nnow hook, a thread and a worm and\nfished In a hole of water about two\nfeet deep that was'under the roots of\na sycamore tree that stood by the\nbank of a creek. A person may fish\nIn this hole of water all his life and\nho will never catch anything but min-\nnows, because only minnows inhabtt\nIt. If he does not go to the larger)\nwaters hewlll never know tho differ-\nence that comes from the-
178b6ba667f85303c483b48bd1e5148f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.3356164066463 39.745947 -75.546589 “I am pleased to observe,” he says\nin a recent letter, “that with his,usual\ngenerosity the average congressman\ncontinues to be willing to send seeds\nto his particular friends at the pu'bHc\nexpense. Some years ago two of my\ngrandchildren were Instructed by their\nmother just before Christmas that, as\nthey had a great many playthings\nwhich they could dispense with, and\nmany poorer children had no play­\nthings at all, it would be a generous\nand 'benignant act for them to, gather\nup a lot of their miniature household\ngoods for distribution among the less\nfortunate urchins of the neighborhood.\nThe two "kids,” a girl and a boy (the\nlatter the younger of the two), im­\nmediately went up into their play­\nroom and after a little while were\nheard coming downstairs, the boy de­\nnouncing whole proceeding as al­\ntogether wrong so far as he was con­\ncerned and the girl declaring in a very\nsolemn manner that It was our duty,\nas mamma 6aid, to give away things\nthat we liked and to be good to the poor\nchildren and to furnish them with nice\npresents. But as the boy howled de­\nspairingly his mother investigated the\nsackful cf playthings which his gener­\nous sister was about to bestow upon\nthe poor and found, to her amazement,\nthat It contained none of the property\nbelonging to the little girl, and that all\ncf her generoisity consisted in giving\naway the playthings of her brother.\n“Congressmen in the distribution of\nseed at the expense of the public Treas­\nury exercise the same sort of gener­\nosity and love for the farmer.” —Chi­\ncago Record.
0312e08728b0611753c72926b96493be THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.319178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 Chicago, lus., April 28 .The market eloaed I\nteruoon at about the highest point scored dur\newcck, with wheat 3c under the blithest flgu\nJd slnro the prcxent advance In prices w\ntugii rated three weeks ago. and 4%c over\noslugono week ago. The market recovered\nrely from the depremlou of the two preceed\nlys, and was held welluptotho maximum flgu.\n*iug to more rxcltiug war news aud good exp\nqulry, IJritUh cou oU were quoted lower, br\n(cline not appreciable under tliose of yesterd\nit a war feeling appeared to pervade the air ra\nstlnctly and -short traders were generally\nIced to cover their trades agaiust any_possi\nippeuings between now aud Moudfty. The si\nng price for wheat was %o higher tliau the cl\ng ytstcrdsy aud uuder good demaud values:\noved lHc, then eased off aud olosed l%c high\nicre was some good iuquiry for shipment,\naa quantity was takes Tho tone of the fore\ni markets we o firm, with uo apprecia\ntangc In prices. There was an improved spect\nire trade in corn and prices avenged higher, c\ng Mc over yesterday. The receipts were model\nit the shipping demand wsxgood. There ws\nod demand in oats, aud the market eloood\ngher with a firm feeling at the close. Provisii\nlied fairlv actlvo aud st.ongcr.' Me*a pork adva\ng 10al2j£e, closing firm. Fiour Ann and\nlaugel. Wheat ruled Arm and higher u|\n receipt of more exciting forelku ne\ncompanies by a decline in consols. The mar\n«ued hc higher, rote steadily, and closed 1\ngbcr than yesterday: sales ranged: April S&ti\nused at *9c: May SS%aii9%r, clo*wf at 60J\nme 90%a9lHc, dosed at OIK: July 92j£a9fc, olo\n94c; No.2springti^a89c:>'o 2red95s97e; N<\nil NXsWc. Corn, moderate, specula!\nurine.** transacted, prices thtiwiug an ndvancc\ncat the close over yesterday: cash 47Ka47}\npril!4«Jia47>ic, dosed at 47tfc; May 4^al\nwed at 4?Uonc 475fa4#2c, closed at 48\nYaC\\ July 4*Ka4sIie, closed at 48^c. Oats, fli\nIth gco<l demaud, prioes advancing %c over j\nrdav; cash SIJ4aS5o; May MH/O&Up, closed\nKc; June S5)4a35J6c, dosed atasjfe. Rye fir\nn.2,07c. Barley nominal.' Flaxseed ca»y; Nn\nf8al S9. Mas pork, fair demand, prloca rul\nal2)$c higher; cash 111 76 all MO; ; May ftl\n60. closed at til 77^811 SO; June fill 80all\nOied at tU all 90; July fill 90*12 02* do.\n112 OOali o:yr Lard, quiet Wut a shade firm\nAh fi.99afi.92ke: May (UwXafiWJfo closed atfi.\nUtfc; Juneffi93afi.97)<c, closod atfi97Xc; J\nJ2Ha7.06c. Boxed.veau Arm; shoulders 4.85a4.4\niort rib 6.Wa5VJ>Cc; short t*»r G.2te&:\nhisky Arm at 9110. Sugars unchang\ni produce exchange butter waswosk: creami\n)4o2tc; dairy2^a24a E^ss'ew atllHc.\n. saw York, April 25 -Flour, receipts 19,2911\nIs; exporta W62 barrels: msrketsUooger and\nstances 10al6o per birrcl higher: superdnew\nn and Slate H 50a4 00: common to good ea\ninitprn mid Si.hIh ftl Tiki
99aad7e4b1d11bf366ac67058cd40412 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.9164383244547 31.960991 -90.983994 o democracy of Copiah county have Demag Adams, the U. S. Marstal i\ncarried off the palm of unblushing irripu-\ndc.uce, from all competitors throughout the\nUnion, At a meeting of the “faithful,”\nheld in Gallatin on the 7th Nov., it was\nresolved that the Whigs since they came\ninto power, have, amongst other high\ncrimes and misdemeanors, actually, low-\nkuei) the standard of morals, and there­\nby brought the nation intodisrepute. —\nOnly think ot that! Locofocoism preach­\ning homilies on morality ! ! A party, whose\nevery political step has ever crushed vir-\ntun— -that has upheld and tolerated actual\nstealing on the port of some of its favorites\nthat has reached power and retained it\nby means of demagoguism and fraud, the\nmost disgusting and glaring—has the un­\nblushing hardihood to prate about morality\nA more faction, devoid of anv political\nprinciple, held together bv the cohesive\nforce ot plunder, as one ol its own great\nleaders testifies, begins to read public lec­\ntures on the beauties of virtue! A party,\narrayed in open hostility to the sober re­\ngulations of society, and opposed to the\ncalm progress of law and order, sets itself\nup in this latter day as a guardian of the\n morals! A party\nhands have hung out the piratical flag of\nRepudiation, and theieby cast an indelli-\nble blot upon the American name, draws\nthe mask of virtue upon its own hideous\ndeformities, and dravvlc out sanctimonious\nmoral lessons ! ! Clutching with one hand\nfive millions of gold, the property of for\neigners, [refusing even the interest oï the\nloan,] locofocoism gracefully waves the\nother in horrid declamation upon the\npassing loveliness of honor and virtue and\nmorality! Verily, there are strange\nthings in this small world of ours! For\nthe first time, wo begin to think that pos­\nsibly there may be some truth in the con­\nfident prophecy of Parson Miller, that the\nlast day draweth near.\nAs a party, tlie locofocos have done\nmore towards impairing moral obligation\nand tarnishing the fame of the U. States\nthan any party that ever had an existence\nin the Republic. Our remarks apply to\noui opponents as a party; and whilst we\nthink that in this application they merit\nall v e have said, and much more that we\nmight have added, vve cheerfully acknow­\nledge that very many individuals of that\nparty are high-minded and honorable gen­\ntlemen, who utterly repuduite rrtüdia-\nTr on.—Southron
2ca028d20e70b61de2cc408208883e54 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.219945323568 39.261561 -121.016059 The People of the State of California, to JAMES If.\nGRANT, Greeting:\nYou are hereby summoned to appear and answer to tbe\ncomplaint of C. A . PECK and W. C . COLEY, doing busi-\nness under name and style of Peck A Coley, filed against\nyou, within ten days from the service of this writ. If\nserved on you in this County, within twenty days if serv-\ned on you in this District, and out of this eounty, and\nwithin forty day* if served on you in the State and out ef\nthis District, in an action commenced on the 7th day of\nJanuary A. I). I860 in said i ourt to obtain a decree ef\nthis Court for the fnr«*closure of a certain mortgage, bear-\ning date 3d day of November A. I>. I860 , executed by thw\nsaid defendant to Alex. J. Johnson, and assigned to eu*\nN. B . Daman and by said Daman assigned to these plain-\ntiffs. and for the sale of the premises therein, and in said\ncomplaint particularly mentioned and described, and the\napplication of the moneysarising from such sale to tbe\npayment of the amount due on m certain promissory note,\nset forth in said complaint made and delivered to said\nAlex. Johnson, and assigned to one N. B . Daman, and\nby said Danmn assigned to these plaintiff*, bearing evea\ndate with said Mortgage ami thereby intended to be se-\ncured, to wit : The sura of $250 w ith interest from the\n3d day of November A. D . 1856, at tbe rateof3.V{ per\ncent per mouth till paid ; and If any deficiency shall re-\nmain after applying all of said moneys properly a* appli-\ncable thereto, then that plaintiffs mnv have execution\ntherefor against the said Defendant, also that sgiddefend-\nant an«l all and every person claiming by through or un-\nder him subsequently to the date of Plaintiffs mortgage\nand tbe commencement of this action, may be barred and.\nforeclosed of all right, claim, lien and equity of redemp-\ntion in or to the suid mortgaged premises, or any part\nthereof, and for such other or further relief, er both, i*\nthe premises as may be just and equitable. And you ar*\nhereby notified that if you tail to answer said complaint\nas herein directed. Plaintiff will take Judgment against\nyou therefor by default, together with all costs of suit,\nand also demand of the Court such other relief as is pray-\ned for in Plaintiffs said complaint.
0a6adb4fd81de8467e902ae4ab438acc THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.028767091578 39.290882 -76.610759 quantities of it have been eobl in New York, Pluladel\nphia, and Pittsburg. The bottles containing the medi-\ncHie, as well as the stereotyped hills which cover each\nbottle, has been so neatly and closely copied by those\nengaged in counterfeiting them, that it it difficult to do\ntect them, and which indeed can alone be done by a\ncritical examination. At to the spurious Panacea, itis\na most wretched and deleterious compound, calculal\ncd to do, us it doubtless hat done, great injurs to tin\nconstitutions of those who maybe so tmforilnnte IIS tc\nuse it. If there be any tiling within the range nf human\naction .more immoral or wicked than another, it is\nwhere an unprincipled being jeopards the health anil\nlives of his fellow creatures, as in the present instance,\nlor filthy lucre, and palms upon as a genuine medi-\ncine ot universal reputation fbr its sanative quality, s\nunlit villainous counterfeit, whose constituent proper\nties, instead of possessing tire power of curing, tend only\nto deceive snd blight tire hopes ofthe invalid, if sot per\nmain nllytfldestroy his health.\nHuviug discovered tiie author and agents in this inja\nrious fraud upoa the public, aa well as upon my own ui-\nterets and being influenced by a sincere desire to pu\nnish the aggression of the former, and throw the pane\nply of protection around the latter,l caused some weeks\nsince stilts to be instituted in the U. States Court for\nPhiladelphia, against the parties concerned in line nefa\nnous affair; regular reports ol which when adjudicated,\nwillbe published for the public information, and to warn\n? lie unprincipled against tlie danger ofdepredating upon\n\\
328597cbee95d7ea7d3764e0d56cfe31 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.5136985984273 42.217817 -85.891125 Xow it is very improper doubtless in\nBrown to come to life jut at this mo-\nment. One lover too many is as de-\nstructive to the happiness of a conscien-\ntious girl as one too few. If Emilia had\nbeen trained in society, her joy at hav-\ning two lovers would have had no alloy\nsave her grief that there were not four\nof them. But it was one of the misfor-\ntunes of her solitary and peculiar edu-\ncation that she had conscience and\nmaidenly modesty. Wherefore it was a\nsource of bitter distress and embarrass-\nment to her that, at the end of a long\nletter from a neighbor who had taken\na notion after years of silence to write\nher all the gossip of the old village, she\nfound these words: 44 Vour old friend\nBrown did not jump into the sea at\ngrief his rejection, after all. He\nhas written to somebody here that he is\ncoming home. I believe he said that\nhe loved you all the same as ever."\nThe greatest grief of Emilia was that\nshe should have been so wicked as to\nbe giieved. Had she not prayed all\nthese years, when she could pray at all,\nfor the safety of the young student?\nHad she not prayed against storms and\nicebergs? And now that he wascoming\nher heart smote her as if he were a\nghost of some one whom she had mur-\ndered ! Whether she loved him, or\nEdward, or anybody, indeed she could\nnot tell. But she would do penance for\nher crime. And so when next she\nheaid the quiet voice of the 44 long\ntrapper," asking for her, she refused to\nsee him, though the refusal all but\nkilled her.
2d5a5be1f442c41defe18a93fa73613f PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.1191780504819 31.960991 -90.983994 HSSES Ijizejiges hav,e now been in use, in\nthe Southern and Western States, upwards\not twelve months, during which lime «hey have\ngained for themselves a popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine In over fiö.UUO\niliey bave proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe means of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of ihe raost blooming children and youth,\nsevering the corda of affection, and forever blast­\ning the fondest hopes of the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably proven, that they\nmay well be called rhe only certain wo m de-\nstroving medicine in use, and ths greatest dis­\ncovery ever made for expelling th« various kinds\nof worms that so frequently apd distressingly\nannoy both children and adults. Many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense and even death, wiihont their\never being suspected. Urowo persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doelored for\nvarious complaints without any benefit, >heu\none or two doses ofthese Lozenges would speedi­\nly euro them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasao'. to the taste,, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Much more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey mav "beadministered to persons of all ages\nand sex«?«; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nihe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of \nthe impotcncy of most ofthe preparations which\nheretofore have heen presented to the commu­\nnity as a remedy.
8a990e34d356ed84583d8d60037aa76a THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.17397257103 39.369864 -121.105448 Some Facts about Mexico. —M,\nLerdo, a Mexican statesman, and the\nauthor of the law of the Commonfort\nadministration for secularizing the\nchurch property, has published some\ngeneral statistics of that country, ex-\nhibiting its resources and capacities.\nThe population in 1854, when the last\ncensus was taken, was 7,859,564, and\nhas not much increased since then. The\nwhole area of the country is 834,140\nsquare miles. Sonora and Chihuahua,\nthe states we covet, on our southwestern\nborder, are the two largest in extent,\ncovering 124,000 square miles, or one\nfourth of the whole country. The pop-\nulation of these states is 294,000, or\none twenty-fifth of the whole population,\nshowing that they are very sparsely pop-\nulated as compared with the other states.\nNot one-eighth of the arable land in\nMexico has been put under cultivation;\nthe annual agricultural products are\nabout $260,000,000; the annual yield of\ngold and silver $24,000,000; and of\n articles $90,000,000. The\nannual exports amount to $26,000,000,\nand the imports to $28,000,000—very\nsmall amounts for so fertile aud populous\na country. Nearly half the imports are\nfrom Great Britain, aud only one fifth\nfrom the United States. The expenses\nof the government are about $25,000,-\n000 per year, and the national debt has\nincreased lately at the rate of ten mil-\nlions annually. The church property is\n$300,000,000 and its revenue $80,000,-\n000 per year. Mexico has every mate-\nrial resource for a prosperous country.\nWith a permanent government, even if\nit were not a very good one, provided it\nmaintained public order and protected the\nlives and property of its citizens, it\nmight become a rich country. Fleeced\nby a corrupt hierarchy and left ungov-\neraed by the struggles of its ambi-\ntious factions, its decay is rapid, aud it\noffers itself an easy prey to the rapacity\nof its stronger neighbors.
6df968ad604106540db1b1c3be490e65 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.5259562525298 41.681744 -72.788147 owned It, and one is as silly at si-\nxty as nt sixteen. Stiller! And yet\nthe Jewel was too precious. So Hon-r - y\nhad the copy made, and once or\ntwice I wore It. I wonder If all realit-\nies are shams, and nil shams realities.\nAnyway, I have the copy, and If that\nwould do you any good, I am quite\nsure thut you are welcome to It."\nI turned my head away, lest she\nobserve the gleam In my eye. It was\nwith difficulty that I kept my volco\nsteady, as I assured her that I would\nbe most grateful if sho would lend\nme the imitation for a few weeks,\nHalf an hour lator I left her. For\nthe first time since I had definitely\nadopted my new profession, I felt\nsick at heart. For Mrs. Adams had\n that I stay to tea with her.\nKnowing her poverty, I was loath to\nadd tho slightest expense to hor\nstraitened budget. Yet it was not\nthat which made me swallow her\nfood and drink with effort; it was\nthe fact that this brave old lady, who\nsomehow mndo me think of a Aiaset\napple, wrinkled as to skin, but sound\nand sweet within, thought me to be\nas honest aa herself. She questioned\nme about my life, my family, and I\nfed her lies. I was sick and ashamed,\nand wrathful at the weakness which\nmade me feel this way when I left\nher. I sent her the finest box of\ncandy the eity could provide, yet\nsomehow seemed to feel that my gift\nwas an insult. For a moment I was\ntempted to abandon my project...\nthen my own
0adb3fd0307d02450fc3a6df513b9a88 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.3273972285642 40.419757 -77.187146 loved him, and wouldn't have anybody\nelse, and so the old Judge was at last\nobliged to give bis consent; hecouldn\nrefuse her anything ; but it went very\nmuch against his grain, though, and he\ndid It very reluctantly. He always had\nthe idea, and he never got over it to his\ndying day, sir, that Waldron had taken\ntlie advantage of his good looks to win\nhis daughter's heart, not for herself, but\nfor her money ; But I think the judge\nwronged him there, for there never was\na better or more devoted husband than\nhe made. The old Judge made his will,\nand settled the estate upon Lilian and\nher children, and tied it up in such\nway that Waldron could never get hold\nof it, even if his wife wished to pass it\nover to him ; but for all his doubts, he\n him up In business and took him\nhome, for be could not bear the idea of\nbeing separated from his daughter. They\nbad a very happy household, and the\nold man must have seen that his daugh\nter never regretted her choice ; but he\nwas quite old going on seventy and\nonly two years after the marriage just\nlong enough to fondle his grandchild a\nlittle. They do say, but I will not vouch\nfor the truth of this, that when he was\nsinking fast, he called Mr. Waldron to\nhis bedside and thus addressed him\n"It may be John, that I have wronged\nyou I am going now where all will be\nmade clear to me. Wealth is a great\ntemptation ; men will do most anything\nfor money. Treat her well, for without\nher you will have nothing. It all goes\nto Lilian and her children."
1b9c2a639eee24eb7cd688424514f895 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.683561612126 31.960991 -90.983994 and jumped upon the cart.\nI can give no details of the combat that\nfollowed* J had too much occupation my­\nself to attend to what my companions\nwere doing. We were attacked by at\nleast twenty wolves at once* After dis­\ncharging my two pistols, I armed myself\nwith an axe that George gave me. The\nfight lasted a quarter of an hour;certainly\nthe'scene was one of the most terrible it\nis possible to imagine. At length, and\njust as I was splitting the skull of a wolf\nthat hung on to one the wheels of my wa­\ngon, a shout of victory resounded along\nour line, and again our enemies fled, but\nthis time it was for good.\nThree of our men were wounded, beside\nNicholas who wa9 still alive, but in a des­\nperate state. We were obliged to \nthe horse that had been lorn by the wolf.\nBy daybreak, a passage was opened\nthrough the wall of snow, and we resum­\ned our journey. The evening of the same\nday we reached a small village, where we\nfound an inn, that under any othercircum-\nstances would have been pronounced\nabominable, but which appeared a palace\nafter three such days as we had passed.\nThe following morning we parted from\nour friends the carriers, leaving George\n500 rubles to divide among them.\nAll now wont well. Thanks to the inv\nperial order with which we were provided\nthe best horses were always for us, and\nwhen necessary, escorts of ten or twelve\nmen galloped on either side of our sledge.\nThe country was flat and the pace good,\nand exactly a week after leaving the Ural\nmountains we entered Tobolsk.
3331d7cc2aa21c7ba805c008b37f3bf4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.8342465436326 40.063962 -80.720915 l'o ourpebple marryiug outside of the Jew- f\nifch fold, tortwo clistinct reasons: i\nFirst.We are still the bearers of God's\ncovenant, and the all-pervading holiness of t\nour religion finds its cnlmitmtiiig-jM>int in j,\nour deep-rooted couvicion of Israel's great j\nmission among the nations. That mission, y\nthe promulgation ol God's law and truth c\namong all men, is not yet fulfilled, and the t\nday "when the eternal shall be king over f\n;df the earth, when the eternal shall he ae- t\nknowledged one, and his name one," has j\nnot yet dawned over tho world. Next to g\nthe*importance of our belief in one God is\nthat,of,our being commissioned to carry i\nand spread this belief until it shall have ^\nreached every- human heart. Jtisa cardi-\nnal article, it is a fundamental doctrine of j\nour faith. is, in fact, the ronilitio nine- t\nt/ua non of the''Mosaic dispensation. The \\\nconsciousness of this grand mission, which r.\nexplains the never-disturbed hope for the f\npromised''' Messianic time,' has at j\nuit (fines proved the most powerful means \\\nforHic'preservation of* Israel. Vet no;\nwe are the means und that mission is the t\nend! 'Israel is tho divine instrument', both\ndirectly and indirectly, to bring all man- e\nkind nearer to God. Now, in order to j\nfinally accomplish our mission we must re- n\nmain intact; we cannot atlbrd to bo pre- f\nmaturely merged into and Reabsorbed by j\ntho ub yet unredeemed inaFs of humanity.\nWe admit Christianity has, done- noble\nwork in this direction; It has\nproved a powerful and wonderful 'J\nagency. But this is no reason why we 1\nshould lose our
241c8320a54bc33d52c495d2d0604781 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1905.0616438039067 44.939157 -123.033121 so much, for I am innocent, if it had\nliappoued nnywhoro but hero in Salem,\nbut I lind a good start and my shnro of\nfriends horo, nnd thon to end it all bV\nbeing placed under arrest, and drained\nthrough tho courts la hard. My cose\nwill bo up boforo tho sunromo court\nabout tho 10th of next month, and I\nhave not tho alight oat doubt but that I\nshall be acquitted, but at tho same timo\nit ia wry annoying, to say tho least, to\nknow that jteople will ny, 'that wan\nwaa under arrest for stealing once,' "\nIt will bo remembered that tho Ryan\nensi origiuntod from a foot race held\nin tho road nonr the baseball park the\nweeK following tho stato fair. Roth,\nwho is an Alhinu came to Sa.\nlem to show tho farmers a thing or two\nami baeked a foot ruoer named Ileus\nton against a man named Morris, who'\nwaa lmeked by W. C . Raymond, weh\nbacker putting up $2000 in the Uaa.h\nor Hyan, who waa to aet as stake-\nholder. Tho race was run, and Roth's\nman fell down, losing tho raee, and Hy-\nan said that he thon paid the\nstake ovor to Raymond, but Roth\nelnittied that his man would havo won\nthe rate had It not been for bis acci-\ndent, and had llya, who was in Rw\nburg o bwiti!, wt under arrest for\nstealing the stakes, ltyua says that\nthe mmr Raymond, to whom he pai.l\niho money, leaMtl! to that fact in tho\nmftiioo nuirt lmt U.I
0552fbe8e395e159f1c069a205121eca PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1888.129781389142 39.756121 -99.323985 poop and forecus:le and is quaintly\nrigged alof L Her deck is covered with\ntroops, and from her ports and cabin\nwindows bright lights stream through\nthe darkness. At the heel of the bow\nsprit stands an officer, with irichly\nlaced coat and feathered hat, who\npoints to shore as though showing the\npiuee of landing to a ludy who is lean\ning on his arm. Suddenly a shriek of\nhorror is heard, the lights disappear\naud the vessel slowly sinks. This ap-\nparition is said to be the specter of the\nflagship of a fleet sent out by Queen\nAnne that was lost with all on board.\nIn 1752 the Dutch trading vessel\nPalatine was wrecked on Block Island,\naud the story is told that the wreckers\nmade short work of stripping her and\nBetting tire to the hull. As she drifted\nblazing off the coast it is said that a\nhuman form was visible amid the\nflames, the form of a female passenger\non the wrecked craft, left to perish by\nthe wrechers. Since, and usually \nthe anniversary of the wreck, a phan\ntom ship with blazing hull, charred\nspars, and scorched sails and rigging,\nhas been seen cruising off Block Isiand,\nand has been regarded by coasting\ncaptains as a sure forerunner of bad\nweather and disaster.\nThe legend of the famous ocean\nspecter, the Flying Dutchman, has\nformed the theme of song and story\nuntil its salient features are familiar to\nthe landsman as the tale of the Cock\nlane ghost, vet few realize that Van- -\nderdecken is still cruising, bringing\ndisaster to every craft he encounters,\nas he battles the storms of the South\nAtlantic iu futile attempts to double\nthe Cape of Good Hope, as he swore to\ndo. in spite of God or hatan, if he sailed\ntill eternity. Vanderdecken's craft has\nbeen usually sighted to leeward, mak\ning good weather under full bail against\ntVe force of a gale that causes other\nvessels to run under bare poles.\nCotton Mather tells how a new ship\nsaUed from Xew Haven, 1017, and was\nnever heard from.
05e378de90454be86115395ebbe9f2ea THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.4287670915778 40.063962 -80.720915 The men of -glorious memory wh<\nlelped found the state are passinj\niway. Governor Plerpont, Archl\n-arnpbell, Senator Boreman and man:\n>thers have gone, taking with then\nhe benedictions of a grateful people\ntValtman VVIlley and a few others of tin\nrreat leaders remain to encourage ant\niclp us with their wisdom and experi\nmces. Those now concerned in publii\niffairs follow these great men closely\nmd the duties and responsibilities tha\n*05ted upon the founders of the stat<\nlave fallen upon us. Those who found\n?d the state reared a monument tha\nivlll perpetuate the memory of the!\njreat work. I .oyal "West Virginian,\nvill not allow their names to die; thej\nlid tlirlr duty wisely and well, not onlj\nor their fellowmen hut for the stale\nrhe good they did will abide and gi\n>n forever.good Is ns immortal th\nsoul, and never dies. Let us see to i\nhat in meeting responsibilities equally\nis great, we too. do'good, and hell\nhe generations that come after us. a<\nLhat unborn men and women will rls<\njp to bless our names and memories a,\n, ve "bless these who have gone befori\njs. The. best way to live.in. the heart!\n)f men is to do good In our lives. Thl;\nnoting commonwealth Is still' in it\nformative period. We of the presen\nire laying the foundations for the fu\n;ure. The responsibility Is upon thos«\nif us now concerned In public affair*\nmd especially upon the press of th<\nante, of moulding, Inspiring and fash\nionlng the tastes, habits, manners\n;u«toma and character of the people; ii\nv word, starting, the traditions of t'h<\nstate, which, when established, will las\nthrough centuries.
426500222aed06c9391575288b281c70 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.382191749112 41.004121 -76.453816 A gentleman had two pairs ot\npigeons living in dovecots placed side\nby side. In each pigeon family there\nwas a father and a mother bird and\ntwo little ones. On a certain day the\nparents in one dovecot went away to\nget food, and while they were gone\none of their little birds tell out of the\ndovecot and down to the ground. The\npoor baby bird was not much hurt,\nstrange to say, but it could not get\nback, for it was too young to fly.\nNow, the parents in the other dove-\ncot were at home when this happened,\nand it seemed as If they said to them-\nselves: "One of our babies might fall\nout in Just that way. We must do\nsomething to make the dovecot safer."\nAnd then this careful father and\nmother went to work. They flew\nabout until they found some small\nsticks. These they carried to their\nown dovecot, and there in the door\nway they built a cunning little fence\nof sticks, not so high but that the lit\ntie pigeons could look over It, but\nhigh enough to keep them from ever\nfalling out of the dovecot as their lit\ntie neighbor had done. The owner of\nthe pigeons, who had seen the bird'\nling fall and had put it back into its\ndovecot, watched the birds the whole\ntime as they gathered the sticks and\nbuilt the fence across the doorway,\nThis is a true story, and it is often\ntold to some children In Boston by a\nlady who knows the owner of these\nvery pigeons.
320226e824308be5375cc7afa6cd5d1c THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.4753424340436 37.451159 -86.90916 The people, especially those fond of\nsporting, have for some time been consid-\nerably exercised over a horse "race which\ntook place Saturday, on the Laccfield\ntrack, bix miles 60uth of this place, be-\ntween the yellow mare, owned by Rich-\nard Fitzlnigli, of your county, and "Slip-\npery Jim," owned by W. II. Brown and\nClay Stinsou, of Caneyvillc.\nPursuant to agreement, the contestants\nmet on the ground Saturday, and prepared\nthemselves for the coming contest.\nThe distance to be run was five hut)\ndred ami sixty yards.\nBy 12 o'clock a large and varied crowd\nassembled on the ground to witness, as\nevery one supposed, a close contested race,\nfor both horses have attained a vpry eu\nviable reputation in the way of speed,\nand, besides, the stakes ponied up on the\nrace amounted to no meager sum to many\n us in Grayson.\nFortuuateny for both the contestants,\nthe track was in good condition, and the\nday not exceedingly warm for this season\nof the year. Mr. Brown had run "Slip\npery Jim" against many of the fastest\nhorses in this county, and in every race\nbe had carried off the laurels, and the\nsame is said of Mr. Fitzhugh's animal,\nconsequently both felt confident of gain-\ning the race. But a majority of the crowd\npresent were induced to the opinion that\nthe "Yellow" would win at least they\nwere so sanguine of it as to bet two to one\non her. It is said that many of these\nbets were accepted. At two o'clock the\ntwo horses were led on the track, and\nproceeded to the starting point, Mr. Fitz\nhugh being his own rider, and John\nSouth Mr. Brown's.
049bc802615404bc9449efe874597c99 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1885.2534246258244 41.004121 -76.453816 The benefits that result from the in\nternal use of tho hot water must be\ndue, in part at least, if not wholly, to\nheat, said Dr. Ambrose L. Itanney in\na recant lecture before tho academy\nof medicine in this city. Some of its\nellecs aro manifested almost immedi\nately in organs connected directly with\nthe digestive apparatus.\nine water may be taken in doses of\nfrom one goblet to ono and a half. An\nordinary goblet contains about ten\nounces. Tho dosa must bo mod I fi id in\naccordance with its effects.,\nIt must be drunk hot, and not warm\n(110 to 150 degrees). If necessary,\nfifteen minutes or more may bo con\nsumed iu sipping a goblctful. Wood-\nen cups provent tho water trom cooling\nquickly. Tho water Jtnay bo flavored\nwith lemon, sugar, salt, gingor, etc., if\nnecessary, but it becomes very agreea-bl - \nto tho palate without such after tho\npatient has taken It for a short time.\nI lie doso must bo taken ono hour\nand a half beforo each meal, with abso-\nlute punctuality, and 0110 at bed time.\n1 atieuts have the first doso broucht to\ntheir bedside and consumo it beforo\nrising. Tbo passage of tho fluid into\nthe intestines, or its absorption beforo\ntho meal, is insured by this rule. Tho\nquantity taken daily mcst bo modified\naccording to the effects produced.\nII10 temperaturo ot the water should\nbe increased as fast as tho patients can\nbear it. It is remarkable bow liitth a\ndegree of heat somo patients can en-\ndure after taking hot water for months.\nAt first such a temperature would\nblister tho mouth. Below 110 de-\ngrees the heat is not sufficient, as a\nrule to have any effects save as an\nemetic.
14933560b390dfa369698ccd670f37d9 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.0808218860984 40.441694 -79.990086 Messrs. W, H. Clearwater and G. N. Kuntzsch\nbegan their pool match last evening in the\nGrand Central Rink for 200 a side and the\ngate receipts. There was a large audience\npresent and one of tbe most exciting contests\never seen in this city was witnessed. At vari-\nous times the audience became so excited that\ncheers were lond and long.\nThe contest is bslng pUed on a Brunswick\n& Balke table. 5 bv 10. The match consists of\n600 bails that Is the player wbo pockets that\nnumber first will bo the winuer. Tne contest-\nants are among the very best pool players in\ntbe world and last evening they displaced their\nskill to perfection. Several times each man\npocketed all the 15 bills straight off tbe reel.\nThe playing was of the best kind and it is safe\nto say the contest will be a close one.\nHarry Bushart was referee and commenced\nthe match at S o'clock. Kuntzsch scored first\nand for the first hour held a good lead. Clear-\nwater then plajed magnificently and not only\noverhauled the Syracuse man, hut passed Tiim.\nKuntzsch fell to the rear and was J2 points be-\nhind, loward the close be showed extraordi-\nnary skill and au idea of tbe excitemeut may\nbe formed when it is stated thar Clearwater\nwas IDS and Kuntzsch 19i and the latter "in\nplay." He had only six balls to get and there\nwere nine on the table scattered all round. But\nbe fell to pieces on a very simple shot and\nClearwater soon pocketed tno balls making\nhim 200 to Kuntzscb's 19L Lven the plaiers got\nexcited at tbe finish as each made some very\nbad plays.
b1d70d01384e8d185a7ac946e567868a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.195890379249 39.261561 -121.016059 tbe New York Ilerald, was arrested on the\nlfltb ult., by order of the Secretary of War,\nand sent to Fort McHenry, as a spy. It is\nalleged that he forced bimeelf Into the War\nDepartment, and read certain telegraphic\nmessages, which put him in posse*sion of\nGovernment secrets. Secretary Stanton\nIssued an order, in tvbich, after rehearsing\nthe circumstances of the arrest, he says:\nNewspapers are valuable organs of public in-\ntelligence and instruction, and every proper fa-\ncility will be afforded all loyal persons to pro-\ncure, on equal terms/ information of such pub-\nlic facts as may be properly made known during\ntime of rebellion. But no matter how useful or\npowerful tbe Press may be, like everything else,\nit is subordinate to the national safety. Ihe\nfate of an army, or the destiny of the nation,\nmay be imperrillcd by spy in the garb of a\nnewspaper agent. The nation is in conflict with\ntreason and rebellion, and may be threatened\nwith foreign foes. The lives and fortunes of\n20,000,000 ofpeople, and tbe peace and happi-\nness of their posterity in tbe loyal States; the\nfate of the public liberty and republican govern •\nment forever, are staked upon the important\nissue. The duties of the President, his Secre-\ntary, and every officer of the Gcrternment, and\nespecially in the War Department and military\nservice, are, at the moment, urgent and solemp\nduties—the most solemn and urgent that ever\nfell upon men. No newsgatherer, or any other\nperson, for sordid or treasonable purposes, can\nbe suffered to intrude upon them at such a time\nto procure news by threats, or spy out official\nacts which the safety of tbe nation requires not\nto be disclosed.
0107255fd8f2644993917de060f0e0c4 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1894.8726027080163 39.756121 -99.323985 few days after this meeting I went to\nFort Morgan, Colo, and while I wt,s\naway this circular letter was issued\nfor and in behalf of Messrs. Tadlock\nand Adams, as agreed on. It was, as\nyou see it, thereby cutting out almost\nour entire ticket. And when 1 return-\ned borne, Mr. Van Cleave spoke to me\nabont sending out letters, but did not\ntell me there was anything in them\nmore than agreement. He also stated\nthat ''we couid not get August Veeh\nto sign them, and you was not here."\nSo I took it for granted that it was a\nmatter mj Dame was not connected\nwith, and paid no m3re attention to it\nand thought no more about it until\nlast night, (November 6), after leav-\ning the A. 0. U. W. lodge in compa-\nny with several members of the same\norder, it was proposed to go up to \nspeaking a while. It was then near\nten o clock, When we got into the\nhall my name was sprung as one\ndemocrat going back on our entire\nticket, and this letter was read, and\nthere were a goodly number of our\ndemocratic voters in the crowd, and I\nwas accused of bartering my princi-\nples' away for a mess of pottage. And\nin justice to myself, when the speak-\ner was through, I asked permission to\nput myself right before all the world,\nand my fellow democrats that were\npresent and those not present. And\nI told them I had no apology to make\nfor being a democrat, that I was\nproud of it, that I was a democrat\nfrom principle and not for pottage,\nand that I bad no knowledge of my\nDame being to any letter of the kind,\nand when I made the statement I was\nhonest in itr
0fb1be41a6cf867dba65c99454f465dd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.7164383244547 40.063962 -80.720915 that Miss Burrill, Cnptain Ilowgate's 0j\namilinr, lias gone to meet tlie departed ex\n;flptaiu. It seems tlmt when tho Captain,\n>y accident or design, was allowed some\nnoutlis ago to slip through the more or\ness greasy liugers of the Deputy Marshals, be\ni^uanl was nut over the house in which cr\ndiss Burrill lived, and n detective he\nras detailed to dog her steps, ra\nHie was watched with tho custo- ha\nnary carefulncsa of tho District of oc\nColumbia Deputy Marshal for n while, then\nlie deputy and his assistants got interested w\nn tho Star route trial and gradually forgot di\niliss Burrill. That enterprising young ov\nudy slipped off one night, taking her Ki\nyagon train with her. The -deputy mar*\nlials and detectives were once* more on br\nheir most vigilant mettle. They searched |h\n vacant room of the llown bird, and ha\nlien followed a dozen dilFcrcnt routes, hi:\nach warranted to be the routo taken by\nIibs Burrill. They have not found her yet.\nuey tound, however, that sbe lmd\nteeu preparing for llight for some Cc\ninie. General Hazen, tho Chief at\niignal Service Oflicer of the army, being re,\nsked about the Howgate case, replied that\nie had recently seen the Attorney Gener- lul\n1, and that he expected tho civil suits of\ngainst Howgate to secure possession of th<\nlis real estate here would be tried at the th\nlext term of court. This properly amouuts an\n» over $100,000 in value, andas Iiowgnte's gh\nctual stealings amounted to about $150,* tu\n00, the Government, on the te<\nhole will be fortunate to get bo much of mi\nIs money.
057921dfb95355c8e953a869aef1f420 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.7301369545917 29.4246 -98.49514 On Saturday the Light repreientallvc heard\noft little tnmsnce ins wsi given ihe particu-\nlars of It on condition that the names of the\nprisons should not be mrnlioned.\nThe story, as told by the deserted wife to the\nLight representative, is as follow,: About a\nyear ipi St. Louis belle becsme acquainted\nwilh a hind.ome man, who professed to be a\ndrummer, and their acquaintance ripened into\nlove. They were married quietly and lived\nhappily together The huibsnd frequency\ntaking Journeys from home, saying that he\nwss on the road, and wrote frequently Irom\nSan Antonio, Austin and Houston. About\nthree months ago he took a trip and has not\nsince been heard ol. The wife was then in\na delicate condition and when her baby was\nborn, she resolved to seek her husband to\nwhom she is devotedly attsched. The only\nclue she had letters found in his drawer\nwhich were from a female In San Antonio,\nand were of such a character thst a wife would\nwrite to her huibsnd. This doubt only Inten-\nsified her desire to meet her husband, snd\nshe arrived in San Antonio on Friday. In-\nquiries of the writer of the letter showed that\nher husband had been s'ayioc In the city for\ntwo mnthswllh the woman referred to and\nhad tone off to Dallas. He was not married\nto that woman and never spoke ol his St.\nLouis marriage, but other mines were sprung.\nHe was recognized by his photograph to be a\nnoted Chicago gambler sad has the reputation\nof having a wife in that city. The wlf left\non Sunday for Dallas and espressei confidence\nIn the legality of her marriage, although she\nknows that he has deceived her In msny\nways.
2f2d7bcbdf9499e16ab177d3e72f7eba DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.460382482038 44.939157 -123.033121 world would have opened up such op-\nportunities to young peoplo? Thero\nIs none equal to our beloved land,\nand tho doors of opportunity still\nswing outward. So long as Iho public\nschools aro open, and so long as In-\ndustry and ambition will bo rewarded\nwithout regard to how humble may\nhavo been the origin of any citizen,\nyoung men and young womon need\nnot despair of accomplishing some-\nthing for themselves. Without the\nadvantages of college educations and\nwith none of the drawbacks of wealth\nor the handicap of society, these sub-\njects of This all.too egotistic and per-\nsonal sketch have so much to be grate-\nful for that they fool they can never\nrepay tho debt of gratitude to tho\ncountry that has supported them and\ntho people who have encouraged\nthem. Why should wo not feel proud\nto uphold Its Institutions and never\nturn our backs the laws, or the\nflag, or tho constitution! that allowed\ntho triumph of these principles that\naro lifting tho wholo mass of the\nAmerican people to standards of Intel-\nligence and prosperity that are un-\nknown In other countries and Impos-\nsible under other governments. Tho\npoor man and the adopted children\nfrom other shoro3 have here avonues\nto success and a broad highway to pro-\nminence and distinction, that is open\nto all. Let no man despair and' say\nthat wo ought to have a different sys-\ntem of carrying on this government.\nLot no man seek hastily to overthrow\nwhat has so fairly stood the tests of\ntlmo and experience. While much\nthat we havo said has been unseemly\npersonal, we rej'olco at this opportun-\nity to Inculcate tho principles that\nour land Is the beat undor tho sun and\nour country tho most perfect human\nInstitution yet discovered,
1f85130798495ebec8102f44a00c07e6 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.4057376732949 40.114955 -111.654923 Speaking of kissing didnt you suppose every ¬\nbody know that n kiss on the stage of a theater-\nIs Just a hollow show as little like the real thing\nas n painted treo Some friends of ours a little\nway out of town got up a very clever play last\nwinter and had a professional coach and all that-\nIt was for a charity hospital Well Mrs Smith\nand her husband were both In the cast but Mrs\nSmiths best steno was with the hero her lover\nThe play was a great success but poor Mrs\nSmith found a queer chill In tho nlr when the nf\nfair was talked over afterwards with some of\nthe women on the board of directors at tho hos ¬\npital It was only later still and In a roundabout-\nway that she found they thought her beautiful\nkiss was far too real to be proper And wasnt\nher husband mad when ho heard of the \nWhy you know tho stage effect Is the emptiest\nshow As a matter of fact all that happened\nwhen his taco bent so close over hers was her\nown frantic whisper For heavens sake let mo\nstraighten your wig Its sliding over one ear\nDid you over seo them rub noses In New Zea\nland Thats tho limit Of course you dont often\nhavo the chance for Its only the aboriginesthe\nMaoris that do It and now a good many of them\nare civilized out of all their native picturesque-\nness Just as our American Indians etc Dut out\nIn tho mountain district whore you go to see the\ngeysers and hot springs there are a few that keep\nup a queer mixture of store clothes and primitive\nmanners Theres a native girl there who acts as-\na guide through tile geyser regionshes really\nquite well educated and upto date butdont\nyou know how some coquettish French and Ger-\nman
0a6f3496666918945d4960a0e362cc6a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.6041095573314 40.063962 -80.720915 IZ McSwords; on the aouth, rout h west and cast ai la\ntown by the plat ami papera accompanying the |»*peri j\nled in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of\nMOblocountr In thccausclu cbanmytu which The- 11\nlore Fink and wife wer* complainanta and lUnlel\nunc'a executors and othrra were defendants, the emit\nau of tame being what it olin.1 th« iwt iii» mil-\noil parcel, together wlthndl the improvements up«n\nild tme lutx; ulso tb« right of waygrsuteri \\>jsurccmeu t\nAinon MaJwords, trustee, Hutu. \\W l'hlllips and 1\nlie to Mid Gcor<e H. Fuubel, ol record ia the (Jerk's\nBreof the County Cjurt of said Oilo county hi Deed\nook 83, page 298. Also all the following described\n>«1 e*tat«% lying and l*jug situated on the lower\nart' of Zinc's Island, and adjoining the lota\nl»ve named: 'Beginning at a stake In the Mne of the\nmpti.ld and Marietta and Cincinnati lUllrosd\nnet and corncr to laud* of John Smith, John Fink\nnd said Genre H. Faulwl; thence with Mid Foubel'a ,\nne seven and one-quarter d«Km*, east twenty\nud one-quarter poles to n stake la the hedge fence\nlid corner to land* of laid Fan1*1 and other land* of\nmoo McSwords, trvatc#; tbence with aald hedge ;\nmee north eighty degrees, eaat HI con poles toaaUke,\nlrner to lands held by II. W . riillllps thence north\nIne degrees, weal twenty and one-quarter poles to a\n;akc; tneuceaoutb eighty-one degrees, west fourteen\noles to p'ace of beginning, containing one acre, three\n>ods and thirteen aud three-fjurths poles, together j\n1th all and singular (be improvements upon said last\named tract of laud.\nThe; abote described land is well fenced aod\nas «rectcd upon It an elegant m-ldence, barn and\ntber hnlldlngs Usideit a slaughter-house, Ice bouse\nnd other Improvements, and is al under a high state\nf cultivation. The title to the above, which the\nuitoe will courcy, Uunexoeplk>uab'e.\nTkkus of tiALK..tine thousand dollars or is much\ntore of the puichase luo ey as the purchaser may\nlert to pay In ca«h, and tbo residue it four equal Iniallmetita
59688af12e800f02799eab9eff674d62 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.632513629579 39.745947 -75.546589 Accompanying Chief Blacks report\nwas one submitted bv (he superinten­\ndent of police and flro alarms,\nlatter recommends the installation of\nnew fire boxes at Tenth and Franklin\nstreets. Fourteenth and Pine streets.\nConcord avenue and the Boulevard,\nand at Sixth and Poplar streets. He\nalso suggests that a new cable for use\nof the department be laid across the\nChristiana river at Third street bridge.\nAt present the department uses the\ncable of the eDlawaro v-and Atlantic\nTelephone Company.\nNationality of Prisoners.\nAccording to nationality^ of persons ar­\nrested. the United States shows up with\n2451 white prisoners and 965 colored pris,\noners. Next comes the natives of Ireland,\nwith 203, to be followed with Poland of\n69. Italy has to Its credit 144 natives. The\nremainder of the countries represented on\nthe court docket and number of pris­\noners who gave these countries as their\nnatal place follows;\nAustria, 11; Australia. 1; Canada. 3: Cen­\ntral America, 2; England, 36; France, 4;\nGreece, 9; Germany. 60; Hungary, 6; Nor.\nway, 2; Nova Scotia. 16; Russia, 39;\nSweden 6; Servla, 1.\nAccording to trades, the largest num­\nber arrested were laborers, their number\nbeing 2350. According to the age, the\nlargest number arrested were between the\nages of 30 and 30.\nThe white males and females led the\nnumber of those arrested with, a total of\n3173. For drunkenness alone 1292 were ar­\nrested and 6900 lodgers were accommo­\ndated. The fines and costs collected\namounted to $9439.42 . The dog tax collected\namounted to $2952.10 and the cost of feed-\n/hg prisoners amounted to $456.57.\nDuring the year there were 3040 wagon\ncalls.
23f5ca9721bba3be354b35e258f3c73b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.9136985984271 40.063962 -80.720915 Wasuihotox, November 20.."I don't\nsea that there la any reason why the Ben-\nate will not be reorginirid," said Senator\nSherman to your correspondent this after¬\nnoon. "It may not De done immediately,\nthe Senate doesn't hurry a matter, you\nknow, but a resolution to take up the sub¬\nject can be conjiJertd at any time."\n"1 notice that the Post this morning con¬\ncedes the (act that Senators Mahone and\nRtddleberger will act with the Republicans.\nDo you know anything about it?'\n''No; but it Is a fact that without tho\nVirginia R^adjusters we have a majority of\ntwo, and with their votes, four."\n".But If they wore to vote with the Demo¬\ncrats it would create a tie and a dead-lock."\n"Y«; but X- do not antiulpate anything\nof that sort, especially afttr the attitude\nthe Democrats of Virginia have acsamed\n them. The Democrats are more\nopposed to the Readjustee than they are\nto the Republicans. X can't see that there\nwill be any opposition to reorganization..\nWe may not doit immediately after the\nopening of Congress, but the principal offi¬\ncers will be first changed, and after them\nthe subordinate. There is no reason why\nthe matter should be hurried at all."\nOn the subject of the probable course of\nthe Virginia Senators, the Star this evening\nsays: A Star reporter was informed to day\nthat Senators Mahono and Kiddlebeiger\nhad positively decided that they will not\ngo to the Republican Senatorial caucus.\nThey will act with the Republicans, and\non that ground will strongly insist npon\nthe election of George Ciorham »9 Secre¬\ntary. Manono and liiddleberger claim that\nGorham la the regular Republican nomi¬\nnee, and that be is entitled to election.
25070170e99e6a1ae9fcdfd3ee2d728a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1875.9602739408929 42.217817 -85.891125 main entrance and demanding his sur-\nrender, one of them was shot dead, and\nthree o'hers were dangerously wounded,\nand the attack was abandoned.\nThe Governor of Arkansas published\nan additional reward for Hill's arrest,\nand hastily packing a few articles he set\nout with his wife and children for Upper\nArkansas, where he knew of the exist-\nence of a band of desperadoes whose\nmembers be bsd resson t believe would\nprotect him. He was overtaken at Con-\nway Court House, and baiting his wsgon\nand admonishing his wife snd children\nto keeji their places, he steppt d forth in\nthe face of his pursuers, snd in a few\neloquent word t ld them why he had\nquitted North Carolina, at the same time\nassuring his pursuers that he w old not\nbe taken alive. The gallantry of the\naction opsrstld in his favor, and the pur\nsuit was abandoned. Constant pursuit\nhad nlready made him morose and quar-\nrelsome, and he began to think heavily\nand to the gambling tsMe as a\nmeans of support, (hie day in Septem-\nber, 1846) while lested tit bfsnkJsst he\ntold his wife that he had a premonition\nof death, and felt that lie should be\nIdllsd that day before sunset. Calling\nhis son William, a bright hoi of four-\nteen, lie ma Is him swear to kill the man\nwho should kill his lather.\nXhe Circuit Court of pope county\nbeing in session, he attended it with a\nyoung man named Howard, who WSJ SB\ngaged to bis eldest daughter. As soon as\nthey reached the village Hill began to\ndrink and exhibited an unusual disposi-\ntion to QusrreL He Insulted every one\nhe met, and finally threatened to clean\nthe Court House ; he dashed into the\ncourt room, to the consternation of\nJudge, jury and lawyers. Young Howard\ntried to restrain him, but, glaring like a\ntiger, hi turned upon the youth and felled\nhim to the floor, at the same time draw\ningapistol, and exclaiming.
074091073bdd6937fec37b2942a26c4a PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1907.0397259956874 31.762115 -95.630789 Oh I my dear replied Lady Isabel\ndont speak of 1L It was a most tragic\nmoment for me when I wanted to In-\ntroduce LadyMasslngham The old\ncat flatly and absolutely declined to be\nIntroduced at least of course she\nwrapped It up fairly skilfully but she\nmade It quite clear she didnt wish to\nknow poor Mrs BarrlngtonBrown\nand then the Evlngtons followed suit\nand even the Vernons shied at her It\nwas awful for me you cant imagine\nhow awful it was my dear Marjorie\nYou sec it made It so awkward In-\nventing excuses and things\nPoor dear I said sympathetically\nYes and Vernon wasnt there to\nadvise me what to do Not that his\nadvice is ever any good but still Its\nalways a comfort to tell somebody\n If they only laugh or say d-\nHow did you eventually manage\nit I asked with interest\nLady Isabel hesitated Well you\nsee It was frightfully difficult but\nluckily Ive a perfect genius for diplo\nmacy Ill tell you what I did I had\nan Inspiration it was nothing less\nYou know tthe Princess Polloskl was\nthere and you know what a dear old\nthing she is and how fond she is of\nVernon and me and I told her about\nthe nice Englishwoman who was so\nawfully charitable and generous and\nall that and I made Mrs Barrlngton\nBrown give me an Immense cheque for\nthe Red Cross something or other to\nhelp the Russians and we organized\nat least I did a sewing party for\nmaking woolly things at least Mrs\nBarrlngtonBrown
2ce79a4d987726e85ec17b5d06bb2e5a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1882.0698629819888 39.743941 -84.63662 When Mr. Scoville resumed his argument to\nthe jury, he was interrupted by Gnitean who\nsaid he would like to address the jury. Mr.\nScoville stated to the Court that the prisoner\nhad a paper which he desired to read and in\nwhich there was nothing objectionable, and asked\nthat he might be given permission to read it.\nThe Court nodded assent, whereupon Guiteau\nrose and read from a paper which he held in\nhis hand, from which we reproduce the follow-\ning sentences: . "That if the Jury believe that\nI believed it was right to remove the President,\nbecause I bad special divine authority so to do,\nand waa forced to do it by the Diety, they will\nacquit on the ground of transitory mania.\nSickles, McFarland and Hisoock were acquitted\non the grounds of transitory mania. I am here\nas my own counsel, ana, as statea at tne open-\ning of the case, no one can represent me to\nthat jury. I know my feeling and my inspira-\ntion in removing the Pxesident, and I bave set\nit forth to my satisfaction in my speech, pub-\nlished and I ask your Honor, in the\nname of justice, in the name of the American\npeople, to allow me to address the jury of my\ncountrymen when my life may be at stake."\nMr. Scoville resumed his address by\nreferring to the unfair treatment ' to which\nthe defense had been subjected by the proe-\neoution, and Corkhili particularly, since the\nday of the killing. Mr. Corkhili, he said, ex-\nercised the right to say who should or who\nshould not risit the prisoner in jail, and he ad-\nmitted enemies to interview Gnitean under the\ndisguise of friends, and had made it a point to\nsave every utterance of an injurious nature\nmade by the prisoner and destroy all sayings\nthat would in any way inure to his benefit.\nBooville also severely critioised the prosecution\nfor refusing to permit the prisoner to address\nthe jury. He desired to impress upon the jury\nthe fact that Judge Porter was a great orator,\nand he desired them to well weigh the facts\nthe case and not permit themselves to be\ncarried off by bis eloquent utterances.\nPorter, he said,
2add4156d2c1c9bcae119979616344ca EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.0726027080163 39.745947 -75.546589 gated this matter and find that the\nbuilding and grounds committee at a\nmeeting of the Trustees of the Poor\nthroe or four months ago, was fequest-\ned to examine the condition of the bath\ntubs and the hath rooms and that the\nsaid committee later reported to the\nTrustees of tho Poor that tn their opin­\nion nothing could be done to Improve\nthe old bath tubs, hut recommended the\npurchase of new tubs Just as soon as\nthe Trustees of tho Poor considered\nthat they should expend the amount of\nmoney necessary to purchase new\ntubs; that tho committee further re­\nported that disinfeetants were being\nused In the bathrooms and In their\nopinion the sanitary condition of tin-\nrooms could not be Improved consider­\ning the class of patients in tho insti­\ntution. using the rooms.\n"The Grand Jury also criticised the\nquality of the meat purchased by the\ninstitution and further recommended\nthe use of tee to preserve the meat. The\ncommittee have found that at the lime\nthe Grand Jury visited the institution\non May 11. 1909. that the refrigerator\nwhich was used for the storage of\nmeat was being repaired as bud been\nleaking. As to the quality of the meat\npurchased for the use of the Inmates,\nwe have found that James W, Foster,\nour superintendent, at the time the\nGrand Jury visited the Institution and\nsince that time, has been using cuts\nfrom the meat purchased for the In­\nmates on bis own table and have never\nbad any complaints from Mr. Foster\nor his family as to the quality or con­\ndition of the meat. That on the\nthirty-first day of March, one thous­\nand nine hundred and nine, at the\nsuggestion of tho superintendent, a\ncommittee was appointed to make a\ncontract for Ice for the Institution for\nthe year 1909: on April tw-enty-elghlh,\none thousand nine bunded and nine,\nthe committee reported to the board\nthat the contract for Ice had hcen\nawarded lo Charles Warner Company;\nthat on the tenth day of May the\nCharles Warner Company delivered to\n1 the institution 145 pounds of ice; that\non the twelfth day of May the com­\npany delivered to the Institution 2,9r>n\npounds of Ice: that on the eleventh\nday of May. at the lime the Grand\nJury visited the Institution, there was
8c09345b58c38e79db27558f5348f68c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.3493150367833 31.960991 -90.983994 the Southern and Western States, upwards\nof twelve months, during which time they have\ngained for themselves a “popularity unpreceden­\nted in the annals of medicine. In over 50,000\nthey have proved an infallible remedy for the\ndestruction of those reptiles within which are\nthe mean« of sweeping off hundreds and thou­\nsands of the most blooming children and youth,\nsevering the cords of affection, and fore ver blast­\ning the fondest hopes ef the parent. So great\nhas their efficacy invariably pfoven, that they\nmay well Iw called the only certain worm de-\nBtroying medicine in use, and the greatest die-\ncovery ever made for expelling the various kinds\nof worms that so frequently and distressingly\nannoy both children and adultä. many diseases\narise from worms, and occasion long and in­\ntense suffering, and eveu without their\never being suspected. Grown persons are very\noften afflicted witn them, and are doctored for\nvarious complainte without any benefit, when\none or two doses of these Lozenges would speedi­\nly eure them. They are a certain remedy, and\nso pleasant to the taste, that children cry for\nthem, and eat them as readily as a common\npeppermint Lozenge. Wherever they have been\nused they have received the most flattering\ncommendations from physicians, heads of fami­\nlies, and the public generally. Muoh more might\nbe said in their favor, of the safety with which\nthey may be administered to persona r«f all ages\nand sexes; of the vast extent and magnitude of\nthe suffering and death occasioned by worms; of\nthe impoteneyof most ofthe preparations which\nheretofore have been presented to the commu­\nnityasafeme
2065c3147bfac136a8febaf2d207673e THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.1657533929476 35.072562 -98.243663 "Once upon a time," said llttlo Har-\nry's grandmother, who had been pre-\nvailed uiKjn to tll a fairy story, "thero\nwm k poor old woman who had to\ntake qulto a long Journey In a street\ncnr. Tho niotormnn was careful, when\nho saw her waiting, to stop his car\nexactly at the crossing, so that sho\ncould got alranrd without stepping in\nthe mud, which was very deep In tho\nstreet, and the conductor reached\ndown kindly and carefully helped hor\nup the steps. The platform was crowd-\ned Altli men, who considerately press-m - i\naside so that the poor old woman\ncould get Into the cnr without a groat\ndeal of trouble. .Many people stood In\ntho aisle of the car, but all of them\nmoved forward voluntarily tho\npoor old woman tried to get In, thus\nmaking It unnecessary for her to stum-\nble over the foot of any of them In\nordor to get past the door. The only\nman who had n sent wns a cripple,\nwho was wedged In between two Inrgo.\nrichly dressed ladles, nnd who could\nnot have surrendered his place to tho\npoor old woman even If he had wanted\nto do vo. Hut It was nol noconsnry\nfor Mm to exhibit any gallantry. A\nvery beautiful and stylish looking\nyoung lady stood up Immediately nnd\noffered her seat to the poor old wom-\nan, who accepted It thankfully. Hut\nthe beautiful young lady snld: "I do\nnot deserve nny thanks. I havo done,\nonly what It was my duty to do."\n"Gee,
1108b24bd33cf15f1f361d870c2e0504 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.0397259956874 40.441694 -79.990086 (SPECIAL TXXXrUlAH TO THZ DISPATCH. 1\nWashington, January 14. Bepresentv\ntlve Burrows' bill to increase the efficiency\nof the Pension Bnreau proposes, to increase\nthe medical staff of the bureau from 22 to 29\nmen, with a considerable addition to their\nsalaries all aronnd. The staff now consists\nof a medical referee at $3,000 a year, an as-\nsistant medical referee at 2,250, two sur-\ngeons at 52,000 each, and 18 medical exam-\niners at $1,800 each. The Burrows bill in-\ncreases tbe salary of the medical referee io\n54,000 and of his assistant to $3,600; adds\none more surgeon, and raises the salaries of\nall to 53,000, and increases the number of\nmedical examiners to 24, at $2,500 salary.\nSince Commissioner Baum came in,\nefforts have been made to improve the\nefficiency of the Pension Bureau lorces, and\nan appeal has been made to Congress to ap-\npropriate enongbrmoney io make the desired\nchanges. The Commissioner considers that\nhe needs at least SO more medical examiners,\nin order to bring his business to the\npoint where the whole force can work to tbe\nbest advantage. There are now about 1,500\nclerks employed in the Bureau. They have\nthe handling of the claims in their early\nstages, turning them over to the medical\ndivision for final adjudication on technical\npoints. The result of the disproportion be-\ntween the clerical and medical force is that\nin the medical division, the papers of thous-\nands of unfinished cases are stacked up\nawaiting attention. This congestion causes\na general demoralization of the office, and\nall the work suffers in consequence.\nIt would be cheaper in the long run, in\ntbe opinion of tbe Commissioner, to increase\nthe medical force now sufficiently to keep\nabreast of the clerical force, and thus expe-\ndite the clearing np of the docket The\nmost expensive way of dealing with such\nbusiness is to have one part of the office\nwith more on its bands than it can possibly\nattend to, while another part has run so far\nahead as to have got lazy.
12a51c61f863dc61ed306bd659e3ca5e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.2445354875026 40.063962 -80.720915 'the girl come hero from St. Louis\nseveral days ajio, and wont to a well-\nknown rosortun C'olwell streot, and en-\ngagod board. Sho remained tboro until\nSunday, when alio was taken away by\n. Superintendent of l'olico I)' .Mara. She\nclaimed that alio was nineteen youra old\nami lind u right to do as sho pleasod.\nWhen told sho would liavo to go buck\nto St. I .ouis, slio threatened to kill hor-\nsell. Sim told a terrible tale ol woo. in\nwhich eho places her brothor in any¬\nthing hut a brotherly light. Bho said\nthat iior parents wore dead, and that\nahewoultlcoino into conaiderabio money\non I.or twonty-first blrtlidav. She said\nthai alio lived with-an older brothor\nafter Iior parents died, and that irhen\nblu was but fifteen years old ho made a\n assault upon hor, and repeated\ntlieso assaults frequently in tho six\nmonths that followod. Slio left his\nlicuso and went to livo with an aunt,\nllithreatonod to 1:111 her if sho aaid any¬\nthing about what had occurred. Ifo\nafterward, so sho says, wont into court\nan I had himsolf appointed hor guardi¬\nan, and ho has kopt all hor money.\nSho says that it is tho eamo brother\nwin has cent after hor, as ho wants to\nplato hor In u convont where alio will\npraiticallv bo a prisoner. Tho girl is\nquite pretty and seemed to havo been\nwe'l raised. Sho gavo tho namo of\nMniel Furguson at tho placoBlns atop-\npedl but, of course, this was fictitious.\nShe will bo sent back to St. Louis.\nSuperintendent O'Mara says ho doos\nnotbolieve tho girl's story.
9caf0784ebb8f91ed5f4c021b4b4eedf EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.4698629819889 39.745947 -75.546589 To the Stockholder* «f\nPANTA SnSANA Oft CORPORATION.\nPlease rake notice that at a apeclal meet\nIn/ of the board of directors of the Hanü»\n«tuaana Oll Torporutlon» duly called and\nheld on June 1, 1021, the following réso­\nlution was unanimously adopted:\n**Resolved, That In the Judgment\nef its board of director«, ft I« ndvls\n»•hie and meat for th** benefit of Santa\nSusans Oil Corporation, that «aid\ncorporation should he dissolved;\nd to that end and as required by\nlaw, that a meeting of the stockhold­\ner* of said corporation' to take ac­\ntion upon this resolution, be and It\nhereby la called to be held at the\nprincipal office of said corporation,\nlocated at 7 West Tenth street. In\nthe city of Wilmington, county af\nNew bastle, and of Delaware,\nan the 12th day of July. 1821, be­\ntween the hours of 10 -• « -lock In the\nforenoon and S oclock In the after­\nnoon. namely, at 12 o'clock noon of\nthat day. and that the secretary of\nthla corporation be and he hereby la\ndirected vrlthln ten days after the\nadoption of thla resolution to can»«\nnotice of the adoption of thla resolu­\ntion to be mailed to eaeh stockholder\nof Raid corporation residing In tbs\nUnited Btatea and xlao beginning\nwithin ten days to cause a like\ntlee to be Inserted In a newspaper\nFublished In the county of New l'ai­\nle. State of Delaware, at least three\nweeks successively, once a week next\npr«*cedlng the time appointed as xfora-\nSHid for said meeting of stockhold\nera."
863fb8d1b4cd14cc5bc8ce4fb644d03d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.4890410641806 41.681744 -72.788147 were rather jumpy. Phillip was all\nthe time thinking that Pat would\neither telegrath or telephone. With\na man's usual egotism, he could\nnot think that she would let him go\nwithout at least one more good-by- e.\nMrs. Tracy had the same feeling,\nand every time the telephone rang,\nshe rushed over to it. Never before\nhad John Aukland left her without a\nlingering farewell,\nHowever, at tho end of the week\nshe saw in one of the Paris papers\nthat Major Aukland had gone to\nTurkey with the Near East expedi-\ntion, and a friend told Phillip one\nevening that he had seen Pat leav-\ning the station for Switzerland, con -\nsequently they both became calmer,\nif not happier.\nNeither mother nor son referred\nin any way to the absence of Pat or\nJohn Aukland In their conversation,\nwhen they were perhaps more In\neach other's thoughts all the time\nthan any one or anything else.\nPhillip had to leave Paris for two\nor three days go and get his dis-\ncharge papers. During that time his\nmother hnished up the shopping and\nso kepi herself too busy to think\nmuch about anything.\nAll the time, however, she kept\nasking herself if again she had made\na mistake, for Anne Tracy had come\nto see that her Interference between\nPhil and Natlee had been a great\nerror of Judgment.\nShe felt better when on the Fourth\nof July they stood on the Rue de\nRivoll and cheered the American\ntroops as they marched up that his-\ntorical street, escorted by the crack\nregiments of England, Belgium,\nItaly, Canada and Australia.\nPhil lifted his mother high' In the\nair and said, with more pride and\nenthusiam than she had heard him\nexpress since she had met him\nabroad: "We're proud we're Ameri\ncans, aren't we, young lady, and\nwe're glad we're going home."\n"Yes, Phil, I shall be so glad to\nget home that it seems to me now I\nshal! never want to go away again,
44985bb68612f6cd8a250dc05d1a2d64 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1917.2808218860985 36.620892 -90.823455 entering the roon found hi man laying\non tha only bed in tba room. Covering\nhim with hie gun he told the man, to\nlick up bia bands and get up as he\nwanted hUu. St. Ledger wanted to\nknow if he bad a warrant for him and\nwat told that be had Lewit then hand\ncuffed him and told tha women folk to\nget ready to go along with them. They\ndemured and wanted to change their\nclothes, but were told to got ready n a\nhurry and come aionjfY a the warrant\nincluded the whole outfit. Tha party\nstarted and Lewis marched them up Hie\nrailroad track for three.miles, or until\nbe got tho outfit over tha line Intn\nMissouri and""1n the presence of the\nother officers when he told "them lliey\nwere free. They were Immediately\ntaken In charge by the officer with tbe\nresult recorued following:\nJohn St, Ledger, 86 years old, named\nae corespondent In a Divorce filed Janu\nary 25. 1017, by Jasper Sr Hutohmson,\nagainst hit wife, Anna Hutchinson,\nwas arrested last Sunday at Success.\nArk., arid w,bronght to Harrison ville\nby Constable Lee Hattop.\nina omcer in order to make the \nwat compelled to use a little strategy.\nThe offender waa'located through tbe\npereonat efforts of Mr. HntohJnson, and\nhe aooompanied the officer to the state\nUna in Ripley county, Mo, Mr, Hatton\nscoured the tervloet of a deputy sheriff\nin Kiploy oounty, who in his own man\nper inuueeu pt. L .eagr to acoompany\nmm aorost ma line. There be wat re.\nleated by the deputy sheriff and , Mr.\nHalloo immediately plaoed him under\narrest. With St. Ledger waa found\nMrs, Hutchinson and the fourteen-yea- r\nold daughter. Marlon. Tbe entire party\nwaa oompelled to walk a dittanea of\nnlaa miles ead the roads were muddy,\nTh petition In which Mr. Hutchinson\nasked for divorce staled that tha couple\nwere married. March 26, 1902, and that\nthey lived together until Deoeinber 10,\nlaio, wnen sue left ostensibly to visit\nher pareott tb Kansas, taking with her\ntheir only daughter, Marlon. The de-\nvelopments Indicate that Mrt. Hutchln-to- n\nthortly afterwards met St, Ledger\nIn Kansas City and that they went to\nArkansas, where he expected to do dy-\nnamiting for a dredging oonoern.\nThe Hutchinson family were living\non a farm a abort distance from Harrl-
2e76c0ef97d34283f7e13e737b5fe150 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.387671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 and more scientific way. The British\nfarmer is told that he must keep abreast\nwith the progress of the day, which is\nteaching how food can be rendered much\nmore profitable at a radioed expenditure.\nBv the adoption of improved methods of\ntillage it has been demonstrated over and\nover again that forty bushelaof wheat can\nlie raised to the acre as easily as twenty,\nsubject only to the vicissitudes of\nthe season, and that the doubling\nof tho crop is equivalent to doubling\nthe aaraags, with little or no extra\ncost for labor. This reasoning is quite aa\napplicable to our own fanners of the\nAtlantic seaboard as to those of Great\nBritain. Both have at their own doom, as\nit were, a market for all they can produce.\nIn respect to wheat and they cannot\nfix the price. That is fixed by them by\nthe rates which these cereals bring when\nlaid down in their market. If the price\nfor wheat in Baltimore is one dollar per\nbushel the Maryland farmer has in Ills\nfavor tho diflerpiipo between the cost of\nthe wheat at the fanner's home at the\nWe«t, and what hia own whoat will fetidi\nwhen marketed. From Chicago alone the\ncost of transporting Western whoat to\nBaltimore is thirteen cents a bushel, and\nthis is tho Maryland farmers' margin to\ngo upon. If, then, tl'ecostof labor being\nabout the same, he can bring up his land\nto even tllfl ssroo point of fertility aa\nWestern lands, bo Is |» ft)? bent position\nboth aa to profits and tlio v»lup of l|is l»,,\nproved property..llaltimm Sim.
2017c0efe32ca02822981221ea13c398 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.1575342148656 40.063962 -80.720915 The temperance revival inaugurated ai\nby converts of Mr. Murphy is still in nc- ci\ntive progress in our city, anil up to the ei\npresent time upwards of seventeen bun- t(\ndred perilous have signed the pledge. Of Hi\ntheHo many were recognized drinkers and In\nnot a few habitual drunkard*, and ho far b<\ntheir reform seems genuine and complete, ai\nSeveral saloons have alrendy gone into. ni\nor rather out of.li«|iii«lationf and others t,\nwill necessarily follow at an early day. S»\nTwo well-known di**ifated characters re- m\nHolved to make an effort ai reform Satur- hi\nday, and put their name* to Murphy's Ik\ncards, Recognizing thu^dvstrability of In\nhaving Home place of rc«ort an a substi- et\ntute for the .saloons in which many of the r<\nnigners have l>een accustomed to spend so hi\nmuch of their time, the Young Men's N\nTemperance Union have rented and at\nhandsomely furnished a room in the tirst \nstory of the Centennial Hotel building, "j\nand will formally open it ns a reading d\nroom to-morrow evening. A committee w\nwaited upon our citizens yesterday to so- ti\nlicit donations of books, magazines and 01\nnewspapers, nnd, we are glad to say, met ui\nwith success which is an evidence of a w\ndeep interest in the welfare of the pro- « u\nject upon the part of the public. A lunch ni\nwas kepi in the room from noon till ten fc\nat night Saturday, and the room was ai\nthronged during the whole' time. The 01\nroom is large, light and airy, anil is heat- o "\ned with hot air. Handsome and substan- gi\ntial tables and chairs were purchased at in\ncost from Arbenr. & Holliuan, who gener- ui\nuiialy donated the freight charges. Mr. wi\nM. Craft, the jeweler, presented a costly a\nregulator, and various others gave tine h;\npictures, which ornament Lite walls.
19c314da2265f55f2a53e5ce21de0b53 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.332876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 the following described real estate, viz:\nAll those twelve certain lots, pieces or\n«.reels of land (being Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8,\n.9.11,12,13.14and15ofSection29ona\nmap of Creston Land and Improvement\nCompany! situate In the city ol Wilming­\nton aforesaid, bounded and described as\nfollows, to wit:—\nBeginning at the corner formed by the\nIntersection of the southerly side of\nWashington street with the easterly side\nof Twenty-seventh street; thence easterly\nalong said »Id«' of Washington street one\nhundred arid twenty-five feet and four\nInches t|> a corner: thence southerly par­\nallel with Twenty-seventh street two hun­\ndred and forty feet to another corner:\n■tnenco westerly parallel with Washington\nstreet one hundred and twenty-five feet\nfour Inches to the aforesaid easterly side\nof Twenty-seventh street, and thence\nthereby northerly two hundred and\n feet to the aforesaid south­\nerly side of Washington street and place\nof beginning. Be the contents thereof\nwhat they may.\nThe following described portion of tbs\nabove lot of land I» released: Beginning\nat tho corner formed by the Indersectlon\nof tho southerly side of Washington street\nwith the easterly side of Twenty-seventh\nstreet Alienee along said side of Washing­\nton street one hundred and twenty-five\nfeet four Inches to a corner: thence soutb-\nM] md parallel with Twenty-seventh\nstreet one hundred feet to another corner,\nIhenoe westerly und parallel with Wash­\nington street one hundred and twenty,\nfive feet and four Inches to the aforesaid\neasterly side of Twenty-seventh street\nand\ntired\nthe contents what they may.\nSeized and taken In execution as the\nproperly of Robert McCatilley. Jr.,
3e61728194ef7908c06b71b5de25adca PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1912.1871584383223 39.456253 -77.96396 language, quit pass ng ttie hat" to the\nwhite man. Tlrs makes a coward of\nany race, or person. You must really\nlook to build the race up to a self sup¬\nporting i a*is. and when you men can\ntruly ui deist and that you are not to\nhave more than the race can give, you\nwill levin to think of augmenting the\ncapacity of the race to give more. That\nme ns to seek v ays and means for the\nrace to have more to g:ye It can only\nget, an appreciable amount of that\nwhich is by entenng the fie'd of crn-\nmerce. It is after all, the commercial\nmen who are the real kings of the\nworld, and until tlie Negro can make\nbis name read up n these pages he is \nback t*umber Now there is another\nthought which I wish to bring to your j\nmind, and that is, how you should j\nmake high ranking rnditaiy officers\namong the American Negroes, which j\nwill add no little importance to the\nrace in America. Since Annapolis and\nWesf Point have refused you, you\nf-hould Fetid your children at once to\nthe military schools of other countries,\nand when Amenct finds that, you are\ndoif g this, you'll find even the- doors of\nher academies opening to you I «ell\nyou that you m «y say all you will, but\ncowaidice never won a battle. A brave\nheart also ptoduces mucn. and the\nowner works in many wa^s. I am *\nflim believer in s.ra>egy, but not in\ncunning; in science, but not in scandal.
6e5c9dddeb94b2f9f0824bc089be5402 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1921.6123287354135 43.994599 -72.127742 You have been thrilled by inspiring poetry and eloquent oratory.\nNow you have to listen to a little unembellished prose, and rather\nthan take the risk of perpetrating an extemporaneous speech I shall\nread some words written for this occasion out of deep convictions.\nI have been honored by an invitation to utter a somewhat per-\nsonal word as a sort of connecting link between two wars an hun-\ndred years apart. My father was a volunteer in the war of 1812,\nwhen the British invaded our northern border by way of the historic\nChamplain, and were defeated at Plattsburg. My son, as a volunteer\nin the service of his country, was 18 months over the seas in the\nworld war, where he suffered much from deathful furqes and other\ntorments revelling in the 'hell of war. The sire went forth against\nthe Briton; the son, with the Briton, against their common foe.\nI attempt neither parallel nor contrast between these wars. I\nsimply raise this question, What were we taught about war, its\nrighteousness or its wickedness, its potency or its futility, between\nthat autumn day when my father started for Plattsburg and the\nspring day when my son returned from France? The history of a\ncentury of wars the world over, theory and practice of war in\nthe United States, and by citizens of the United States, since 181A\nshould have taught us some lessons in regard to the real nature ana\nthe inevitable consequences of the thing itself. After all, upon the\nwhole, has warfare justified itself, or has it been weighed in the\nbalances and found wanting? Has not the story of iU atrocities\nconvinced some of us that there must be a more excellent way .\nNow let me not be misunderstood. I would not if I could, I\ncould not if I would, abate one jot from the honors of the patriots\nwhose names are inscribed on this tablet or of other American\npatriots by the million who, like these, offered their own life as a\nsacrifice for country and the right as they were able to see the\nright. They need no words of eulogy to furbish the luster, nor\ntablets of bronze to perpetuate the memory of their devotion But\nI should deem it no tribute to their nobility of soul for\nmv voice in praise, either of war in general or of wars in particular.\nl common with others I come of a race of warriors. According\nto the genealogical records of our family, one of my ffjandfath ers
2178c9ca17ed4a6a03713a1fbb539347 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.2663934109999 43.798358 -73.087921 M. Yes, with all my heart yes,\nbrother, 1 am extremely fond of thm. I\npresume you take, a plenty of them, you\nhave a fine stream here, I perceive.\nD. Yes, quite fine indeed. As you\nsay you are from the institution at M., I\npresume you are in pursuit of a place\nwhere you can bestow your labors for the\nbest good of the cause of our Redeemer?\nM. Yes, I am. Brother F. who di-\nrected me to call on you, informed me that\nyou had a small church here of about 60\nmembers, and that there was an extensive\nfield for labor where there might be much\ngood effected; and that it would requiiea\nman of deep piety, firm decision, and per-\nseverance, and one that would be content\nto live grow up with the place. Per-\nhaps I should think of making a stop with\nyou, but 1 feel that the Lord has called\nme to ano'her portion of his vineyard. I\nam told there is a destitute church in the\nvillageofS., (where the pastor has been\ncalled to the city of T.) with a fine house\nand bell, and a good parsonage, where I\ncan have a salary of about 500 dollars. I\nhope you may soon find a man that will\ngo in and out before you, and be the in-\nstrument in the hand of God in the up\nbuilding of his cause in this p'ace. That\nbell calls us to dinner, does it not, deacon?\nD. Yes I was so much engrossed in\nour conversation that I did not notice its\nringing.
fb7b17f796b991c611a5778324e7b957 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.264383529934 41.681744 -72.788147 Neither Chief W. C . Hart or De-\ntective Sergeant W. P . McCue have\ndecided whether they will make ap-\nplication for the rewards offered for\ninformation leading to the arrest\nand conviction of the murderer ef\nPoliceman James Skelly In this elty\non October 12, 1924. There was a\nprice of J,500, $3,000 of which was\noffered by the state and 1500 by\nthe New Britain Herald, on the head\not the patrolman's assassin, who, a\nJury decided last Saturday, was\nGerald Chapman, in addition to 50\nwhich the federal authorities had\noffered for the arrest of Chapman\nas an escaped convict.\nThese two officials did without\nquestion furnish Information which\nwas of assistance In bringing about\nthe capture of the famous bandit\nWhether they will share In the re-\nwards will likely depend on the\nattitude of the court which will un-\n be called upon to decide\nhow it will be "distributed. There\nis also a possibility that County\nDetective Hickey will be counted in\nwith those who get the money.\nThe New Britain officials are in-\nclined to give the major part of the\ncredit to the Muncle policemen, who\nactually placed Chapman under ar-\nrest and they feel that the latter\nare entitled to a large part If not\nall of the reward.\nThe belated story of Jiow Chap-\nman's capture was effected came to\nlight today through the discussion of\nrewards. When Detective Sergeant\nWilliam P. McCue of this city no-\ntice an express tag on which wss\nwritten .the address of Dr. Harry\nSplckerman of ; Muncle, Indiana,\npasted on the bottom of a bag sup-\nposed to have been owned by Chap-\nman, the Information was relayed\nto the Muncie police.
4907077c97b1990e9ff698529159258a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.28551909406 39.745947 -75.546589 Johnny carves the dining room mahogany, and mother weep«. He\nwanders up the street In the dangerous path of automobiles, and\nmother weeps again. He appropriates some small change from where\nIt has been left on the kitchen shelf; still mother weeps. Johnny has\ncommitted a theft. And yet because mother always dissolves Into\nInjured tears Johnny has been given no aid In discriminating for him­\nself between this type of misdemeanor and that.\nIf mothers only could think up as many kinds of punishments as\nchildren And naughty things to do!\nFor that Is what life does to us. If we grown-ups always knew\nwhat the punishment would toe, what decreasing restraint would we\nfeel In breaking the" lawl Suppose the only result of speeding an\nautomobile were the payment of a fine Instead of sometimes broken\nbones. Or that money alone could pay for the destruction of prop­\nerty instead of the added possibility “getting a bad name with\nour neighbors," and social ostracism. The fear of serving a term has\nkept many a man from committing the crime his revenge would bave\nconsummated had he been sure money alone would have paid. Fitting\nthe punishment to the crime is a law of the adult world, and It la this\nsame world that Johnny must learn to find his way about in.\nHe must learn to classify his misdemeanors; those which are moral,\nlife theft; those which are wanton, like property destruction; those\nwhich are foolhardy, like running into danger. They'll not give him\nalways the same knocks when he grows up. so why should he be led\nto expect they will now? The price cannot be paid in every ca?e by\nhis mothers tears nor his own remorse.\nThe kiddies, dear little souls, have to learn as kiddles to pay, be­\ncause childhood Impressions are the lasting and fundamental ones.
6a4c11e5ed43f50c49acbbacd169bee8 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.6753424340436 31.960991 -90.983994 streets, in the town of Port Gibson, thence\nrunning along ?4ain street 98 feet to a stake,\nthence N. 78e-, W. 175 feet, to a stake,\nthence X. 12°, E. 98 foet, to a stake in the\nedge of Walnut street, thence along Wainut\nstreet 175 feet to the place of beginning;\nbeing the same lot of ground sold by Israel\nLoring to the Bank ofPort Gibson, by deed\nbearing date the 29th Dec. 1838, and re­\ncorded in book T., page 1C2, of the records\nin the office of the Clerk of the Probate\nCourt of Claiborne county, and being the\nsame lot ofland whereon the Banking house\nnow' stands. Also, the follow ing lot, piece\nor parcel of land, being the South half of\nLots 4 and 5, in square No. 10, in the town\nofPort Gibson, fronting 49 feet on Main or\n street, and extending back the same\nwidth on Walnut street, 300 feet to Fair\nstreet, being the same property sold by B.\nHughes and wife to H. N. Spencer, by\ndeed bearing date the 4th October. 1836,\nand recorded in book P., page 632—also\nsold by H. N. Spencer and wife to J. O.\nPierson & David Bush, by deed bearing\ndate the 14th February, A. D. 1837, and\nrecorded in book O., page 27«£—also sold\nby Wm. M . Gwin, Marshall, to the Bank\nof Port Gibson, /is the property ofPierson &\nBush, by deed dated 12th October, 1840,\nand recorded in book U., page 452. Said\nprpperty will be sold to pay and satisfy the\namount due to J, B. Thrasher, and the costs\nof executing this trust. Such title as is\nted in us as Trustees will be made to the
0651b3e1d388b030e9694138ee5cdc1a THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.3794520230847 39.743941 -84.63662 features of that system have been in use ever\nsince The peculiarities of bidding and the\nmethods by which the rings' have controlled the\nroutes are so many and so varied that they can\nnot be described here They will be better un-\nderstood in connection with the history of\nspecified routes. The looseness of the law con-\ncerning the increase and expedition, and the\nreckless interpretation of it for the benefit of\nfavorites, will also appear more clearly in the\nexamples described. The service has been put\nby Brady upon routes through regions where\nmails could not be carried at all, and favorites\nhave been paid thousands of dollars for the\nwork which could not be performed. Service\nhas been increased or expedited upon the os-\ntensible basis of a petition or recommondation,\n such changes were not only unnecessary,\nbut were also condemned in advance by Postmas-\nters. In short, the discretion given by the law\nhas been stretched to the utmost conceivable\nto limits in order to put money in the pockets of\nthe ring firms. Honest bidders, in some sec-\ntions of the country, long ago discovered that\nthey could get no government work, except\nto through some of these favored middle men.\nwho "farmed the revenues," as the Romans\ndid of old in the provinces, and there was a\ncolor of law for .all this. Few, if any, instances\nof increase or expedition can be found recorded\nin the department which are not supported by\npetitions and statements, and within the dis\ncretionary power or the second Assistant r'os t -ma s t- er
152b5ba6531d6c71540cb318ef338294 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.160273940893 39.745947 -75.546589 We odor to our subscriber* the most\nbeam Iful art wotk ever published at a\nmerely nominal cost. Thla la an entirely\nnew work, every plate belli«: made es­\npecially for It. It. 1* 'railed "Fsutotm\nFslutiuge of the Woild ”\nEvery picture la described by the\nbrightest and beat of America's writers\non art subjects. These descriptions are\nnot technical or prolix—but bright and\ninteresting. The committee of selection\nbaa approved every picture that appear*\niu these portfolio*. This is sutlioient\nguarantee that nothing inartistic will\nLe admitted The committee of selection\nconsists of Will Cailton. Horace Bradley\nand Chevalier Angelo Del Nero A\nmoat careful selection of enhjeota has\nbeen made. Old mythological and re\nllgtous piclnrea will have no place In\nthese portfolios. We have eelec ed at­\ntractive, interesting and pleasing sub\njecl*. pictures thst tell a story or arouae\nau that amuse and\nrecreate—that Instruct and Inspire.\nThe materials fort bis publication have\nbeen gathered ont of the most famous\ngalleries and Ouest private ool lent Iona In\nthe Old World and the New. Eminent\nartists are represented, such ns: Alma\nTadema. Boss Bonheur, Botiguerean.\nCorot Dore. L)> taille, Dopte, Kssllake,\nQerome, Hoffmann, Bunt, Kuans, Bldg\nway Knight, Lauuseer, Makowskl,\nMskart, Meyer Von Bremen, Millet, Mil­\nlais, de Murillo. Mcbeffer, Benjamin\nConstant. Jules Breton, Bierstadt. Heard,\nJ. O . Brown, F S Chinch, Glffotd,\nWhistler, Hart, Toby Rosenthal, etc.\nRut the minor artists and young as\npirauta for aitlatlc honnta - whose names\ntie not yet household words, l ave not\nb» en overlooked. The Committee of 8e\nlection have often chosen a meritorious\n»nd pleasing picture by a comparatively\nunknown artist In preference to an nnat\ntractive subject by a painter of promi­\nnence.
156912bd34fb635dff8c817f6fa12bec THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.6068492833588 40.063962 -80.720915 The Memphis Daily Post cites tho fo\nlowinir as flxamnlm nf t.)m fiiunraiiio\nerations of free Tabor in that vicinit;\nThe first case is that of a Germa\nplanter, well-known to tho people\nMemphis, who has a plantation\nabout three hundred acres of rente\nland. He rents out this land to fain\nlies of freedmen, givincr them one-hal\nthe crop. He supplies them with plo\nanimals, tools, seed and provisions, fc\nwhich they pay him from their share <\nthe crop; the mules and tools beir\ntheir property at tho end of the seasoi\nOn this plantation peace, industry ao\nthrift are very marked, and the crop\none of the most promising in the coui\ntry.The other case Is that of a respectab\nplanter living south of Memphis, wl\nhas a valuable plantation of seven\nhundred acres. This place he rents i\nshares to seven of his former slave\nand one white man, a Frenchman\nTho negroes have nearly one hundre\nacres each, hire their own help, mab\ning their own bargains. The plant<\ngives the negroes one-third of the cro]\n furnishes them with everything\nIn this case, too, the mules and too\nare to be the property of the negroes i\nthe end of the season, they paying f<\nthem from the crop. On this place tl\ncrop is looking splendidlv, and tw\nbales to the acre Is considered certaii\nunless unforseen dangers arise. E\nthis arrangement some of his formi\nslaves will make over a thousand do\nlars, clear profit, after paying all e:\npenses, basing the calculation on t)\npresent promise of the crop, and tl\npresent price of the staple.\nThe Hon. Pierce Butler is personal!\ntesting the difference between freed ar\nslave labor on his extensive rice plai\ntations, in Georgia, and with suoh\nprospect of success that, as he is not<\nfor his candor and religious principle\nhis ultimate judgment must be give\non the side of freedom.\nOf more than three hundred colon\npersons, once his slaves, liberated t\nPresident Lincoln's proclamation, ai\nthe triumph of the Union arms, all b\na few have returned and accepted tl\nwages he has offered them.
9ab2e9d28fa21239d42e9c2046a4567b SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.1657533929476 35.780398 -78.639099 "The aged gentleman seemed to com\nprehend, in an instant, the whole melan\ncholy facts. He staggered to a seat, after\nmotioning to his servants, and exclaimed :\n'"Too late, too late ! I feared as much.'\n" His men seized my husband, now yel-\nling and foaming, cursing and threatening\nand bore him, despite his struggles,\ninto the yard, where they securely\nbound him, and placed him in the wagon.\n"'You doubtless surmise,' began the\nstranger, in a voice hoarse with conflicting\nemotions, 'that I am the parent of that un-\nhappy man, yonder. Many years ago, he\nwooed a beautiful girl, much resembling\nyour daughter, sir ; but she proved false,\nforsook him, and became the wife of his\nbrother, my eldest son. The perfidy of\none who was dearer than life to Ar-\nnold, caused insanity, from which he even-\ntually recovered, as wo thought. My el-\ndest son, after his marriage, went to Italy,\nwhere he yet renfains. No symptoms of\n have appeared since . that period,\nexcept when his brother's name or that of\nwife, was mentioned. He became ha-\nbitually moody and dejected, until this ac-\nquaintance with your son then he became\nmore lively ; and it was with pleasure that\nsanctioned hi3 design of visiting here.\nbelieved that the cheerful, genial nature\npoor Virgil was to restore my misgui-\nded boy to his original self again. Pour\ndays ago, a letter reached me from Arnold.\nwas written in a wild, incoherent style.\nclosed with these words :\n'"I have found my love transformed\ninto an angel the daughter of my host.\nShe wilPbe mine soon mine, mine. No\npower on earth can snatch her from mo\nunless great God ! she forsakes mc for\nbrother !' And then followed strange\nunintelligible sentences, from which I could\nonly gather that,, haunted by his own\nbrother's perfidy, he feared that Virgil\nwould snatch his bride from him. I haTe\nriddp.n niorli anit Aov tr
0c584c575cfb42da06f0eaed7c1ad4f2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.5915300230217 40.441694 -79.990086 The work on the new boat being' built by\nThomas F. McClearv Is progressing finely, and she\nwill soon be ready for her boilers. She is now In\nthe river opposite urunot's Island.\nOnly one lock at the Davis Dam can now be\nused. This causes much delay In getting boats\nthrough. One of the gates was broken Monday,\nbut Is expected to be repaired by y.\nTHE Acorn came down the river yesterday to lay\nIn a supply or provisions. This boat has been en-\ngaged about the coal mines for sometime, butre-por- ts\nbusiness dull, as there Is no demand for coal.\nIt took the H. K. Bedford two days to come In\nfrom Wheeling. She was delayed by fog and low\nwater. It took her an hour to get through the\nlocks at the dam. which ordinarily requires only\nabout 20 minutes.\nThe last lght rise turned ont to be only a "run.\nout," and that or short duration. The river Is\n to fall rapidly, while there Is no pros-\npect of an early rain. There was little business\nalong the wharf yesterday.\nThe Tide vade her usual trip from the Browns-\nville wharfboat to Homestead yesterday. The\ncrowd of loungers about the wharf was as large as\nusual, and the police had to be called in to keep\ntbe crowd from Interfering too much with the\nwork about the boat. The cargoes on the Tide In-\ncluded a number of cots and a large amount of\nprovisions for the mill workers.\nTHE beartrap at the dam was closed yesterday,\nand a break In the dam that occurred the day be-\nfore repaired. This caused the water below to\nfall rapidly, and precluded all hope of any more\nboats getting In for some lime. At one time the\nwater rose 22 Inches within an hour, and the Voy-\nager. George Shlras and Josh Cook, being ready,\nput on steam and were soon safely past the trap.
3a6c6e2c91c9f4a45b773004dc0cbc02 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.3401639028032 40.063962 -80.720915 The partlzans ot the Administration\nMmlng to be the Republican party an<\nntrolling Its organization, have attempt\nto Justify such wrongs, and pallia!\nch abuses to the end of malntalnini\nrtlzan ascendancy. They have stooi\nthe way ot necessary Investigation am\ndispensable reform, claiming that no se\nins fault could be found with the pres\nat administration of public affairs; thu\niking to blind the oyes of the people\nley have kept alive the passions and re\nitments of the late civil war, to us<\nam for their own advantage. They havi\nlorted to arbitrary measures in dlrec\nnflict with the organic law, instead o\npealing to the better Instincts and la\nit patriotism of the Southern people, b;\nitoring to thom those rights the enjoy\n:nt ol which is indispensable for sue\nisful administration of their local af\nrs, and would tend to Inspire then\ntta mora patriotic andhopeful nations\nsling- They hare degraded them\nTea, tUl the name of their ;par\nis no more Juatly entitled to thi\nnfldence of the nation, by a baso sy\nphancy to the dictates ot executive\nwer and patronage unworthy of Repnb\nan freemen. They hare sought to si\nice the roice of juat criticism and stlfii\na moral sense of the people, and to sub\njate public opinion by tyrannical part]\ntcipllne. They are striving to main\nin themselves In authority for selfisl\nda, by an unscrupulous use of thi\nwcr which rightfully belongs to the\nople, and Bhould be employed only it\n0 service of the country.\nBelieving that an organization thus let\nd sontrolled cannot longer be of servlci\nthe beet Interests o! the republic, w<\nve resolved to make an independem\npeal to thesober judgment, conscience\nd patriotism of the American people.
623e03d7ef182a9ef6a2d87bf1a156a3 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.5575342148657 39.261561 -121.016059 A'oti ere 1 ercbv summoned to apj ear and answer\nto the complaint of8 H DIlvIMA V filed again*',\nyon. within ten days from the service ot this writ,\nif served on you in this county. and williin twenty\nda vs ir serv ed" on you in this ] istiicf and out of tbit\ncoiinty. and within forty days if served on you iu\nthis State and out of this District, in an action com-\nmenced on the 18th day oT April, a. l>. 1861 , in\nsaid Court to obtain a decree ot this Court lor the\nforecWmjirt «.f a certain nrortcage. bcitritg daletht\nloth day of Oct tibet a i>. IHfvJ. executed hv the said\ndefendant to plaintiff, and for the sale ot the premi-\nses therein, and in said coin; luint particularly men-\ntioned and described and the application ot the men-\nuv aiising from such sale to the payment of tbs\namount due on four certain promissory notes set.\nli.rtli iu said complaint, made and delivered to »aia\nplaintiff by the defendant hearing even date vvilt.\nsaid mortgage and thereby intended to he seemed,\nto wit: The Mini ot Sl.50n, with it Brest \nfront the 12th dav of October A )). 059 . at the rate\noftwo per cent. |c» month1ill;aid ; in d itany defi-\nciency sliall remain after applying all ot said moneys\nproperly so applicable thereto, then that I hunt iff\nniav have execution thereloi m-a iris tlie said defend-\nant. also that said defendant and ad and every per.\nson claiming through i rundei defeiidant subsequent-\nly to the (late of plaintiffs mortgage and the com-\nencement of this action, may be hart ed and fore-\nwed id all right, claim, lien and equity of redemp\n. .. >n in and to the said mortgaged premises, or any\nl ait tlieieot' and lor such other and fuitl er telief,\nor both iu Inc premises as may be just and equita-\nble And you are hereby notified that if you fail to\nanswer said complaint as herein direct* d. plaintiff\nwill take judgment against you therefor by default,\ntogether vvitli all costs id suit, and c< untel fees in the\nsum of $150 and also dc and of the Court snclt oth-\ner relief as is prayed for in plaintiff* said complaint,\nin testimony whereof. I .
0de09bb36b3871e4aa2fdf5c8bbbabd8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.091780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 The man behind Goebel, like the ur\nfortunate contestant for the govornoi\nship, also had an ambition, it wa\nnone othc,* than Senator Joseph (\nBlackburn. This doughty Kentuckla\nwent into the fight last year for th\npurpose of having himself returned 1\nthe United States senate, Und to con\nsummate his scheme he joined the Got\nbe! forces, an act that at first astounc\ned decent Kentuckians, but there wet\nso many other surprises in the can:\npaign that followed that Blackburn\nstultification was lost sight of. Thei\nhas been no much said about the boas!\ned honor of the Kentucklan that Sens\ntor Blackburn's peculiar conduct rc\nquires a little ventilation on that poin\nIt Is said that the lachrymal senate\nwept when he heard of the shooting c\nGoebel. On another and more tragi\noccasion he not only opened the four\ntain or His tears Due maue a vow mo\nsounds rather peculiar in the light c\nrecent events In Kentucky. On Apr\n11, 1895, Colonel Sanford, a Democra\nand secretary of the Traders Bank c\nCovington, ICy., was shot and killed b\nWilliam Gocbel. Sanford was a pei\nsonal friend of Senator Blackburn, an\nleaning the cofiln of his murdere\nfriend, with tears streaming down hi\ncheeks, he prayed God to grant him\nlife long enough to avenge Sanford b\nburying Gnebel In "the depths of publl\nexecration " How he has fulfilled tlu\nvow made in a frenzy of pasflio\nagainst the man who slew one whoi\nho declared was "more than a brothc\nto bim," is well known. Since the con\nmencement of the campaign last yet\nin Kentucky he has been cheek by jov\nwith Goebel. The legislature bcin\noverwhelmingly Democratic Blackburi\nof course, got the prize he was afte\nat the expense of stultifying himself t\nforgetting the murder of his frlera\nana espousing me muruerer.\nGoebel wee not so fortunate. And a\ntcr being discredited by his own eta\nC tlon commissioners it was no other pei\nt eon but Senator Blackburn who urge\nhim to carry his infamous cause into\npartisan body that was only too willin\nto reverse the verdict of the peopl\nWe do not know when Senator Blacl\nburn will have occasion to again tur\non the ever abundant fountain of hi\ntears, but "we do know that true'Kei\ntuckians have reason to weep for hlr
3c1440d726b86d400bb18577b36195c8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.4221311159179 39.745947 -75.546589 There are so many women at the\npresent time who are forced by cir­\ncumstances to find some means of self\nsupport ttint any new suggestion as to\nways and menus Is always received\nenth”slnstically.\nThe story of a woman tn one of the\nlarge cities seems to show that every\none must have some special gift, be It\nsewing, housekeeping, cleaning or busi­\nness, an.! every one should seek her\nespecial talent until she tl$£s it. This\nrule should really hold good even If\nmoney is not a necessity, for a talent\nmay always bo turned to the aid of\nanother or others, ns the case may be.\nThe particular woman of the story\nwas left n widow and penniless, with\na rooted objection to dressmaking and\nmost other forms of employment by\nwhich the average woman seeks to\nearn hor living. Finally she decided\nthat, although her hands were long\nand slender her fingers of tho\nmost artistic type, she could do noth­\ning luit handle fine lace and frills, and\nshe therefore sought and obtained\nsome delicate fabrics to clean and\npress. For two years site supported\nherself by this work, although not en­\ntirely to her own satisfaction.\nOne day she happened to pass a\nstore where glass and other fragile\nworks of art were sold, and her artis­\ntic temperament caused her to enter\nto more closely examine the beauties\ndisplayed In showcase and on the coun­\nter. Once there her long, fine hands\nstrayed toward the bits of marble un­\ntil the manager of the store saw her\nand approached to ask her to rend the\nusual sign forbidding visitors to han­\ndle the pieces, but as he watched her\nhe changed hts mind and Instead re­\nmarked on her lightness of touch and\nasked her if she would enter bis em­\nployment.
3902cf45ad8d30803cec3a4eb4a23f1c DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.2945205162355 58.275556 -134.3925 Scvorul yearn uk« Torn O'DrJcn. a\nsourdough Alaskan, took up a piece\n"r Kr,,uiiil on the Douglas beach not\nfar frotu the end of the government\n. o acl leading to Cowoe creek. He I\nl»ullt hlniHelf n cabin and started\nclearing the land to plant a garden.\nThe clearing in thlw Instance con-\nslated In bulkheadlng along the\nbeach and wheeling the aoll down\nfrom the hill abovo hla place to lilt\nwith. Fertilising wai done by gather¬\ning aen weed, burning It nnd scat¬\ntering the auhes over he ground. I\n""" 'lulto a task for a man of hla\n;»KO, lie being over GO ycura old, but\nho worked early and late and had\nperhaps something over half au ncn\nof excellent garden land.'\nKor two aeaoona ho planted thi\nground to vegetables nnd raised goo<\n. r opa of root vegetublea and sltullu\ngarden truck. He said that no on<\nwould give him a job becauao h.\nwaa too old, but ho worked liardei\nand accomplished more than many\nmen half his age. It waa hla Idea to\nindependent.Just to grow enough\ntruck to give him a grubstake foi\nthe winter and no to exist.\nAfter two neanona he evidently\nbecame tired of that way of living\nfor last spring passorsby noted that\nthe cabin was and the gar\n.ion uncultivated, and many specu¬\nlations were heard as to what had\nbecome of the old follow.\nAfter some Inquiry It was dlscov-\nerd that some time last spring he\nloaded his skiff with grub and left\nfor the neighborhood of Snettlsham.\nlie had had his eyo on a trapping!\nlocation near there, ahwut ten mile*\nfrom salt water and many miles\nfrom any neighbor. He left one day\nand has never been seen olncc. He\nhas been gone a year now and no\none knows whether or not he reached\nhis destination. Most likely ho did\nand has built his camp and Is trap¬\nping and hunting In the neighbor¬\nhood of hla now home.\nTom O'llrien is a sourdough of\nsourdoughs. He has been in Alaska\nmore years than ho can reckon back\nand la typical of that old race of\npioneers who are now fast dying off\nMe and three partners wore the first\nto discover gold irt the Portymllo in J\nIssc- He has had a grasp on for¬\ntune several times, hut had never\nbeen able to hang on.\nHe either lost his life going on his\nlast stampede after furs or, if still\nalive. Is leading a life to his choice\nand wll lonil his days among the Al¬\naskan hills.
c2d7b6500ce720379f618d90a8aeecf4 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.6926229191965 39.261561 -121.016059 ents of his father, to rally aroit id that banner\nwhich he had eptnt hislje in u/ihuhlinj—the ba liter\nol the L\\i o i. II • wii- iviiuy to follow the Whig\nstand -i\\d as the Douglass lollow.d the heart ol'\nUruce—a-> long as it waved, lint that Hag was\nno longer to be seen on the battle-tieid. It\nmight yet be unfurl, d. After d nth there was\nthe resum ct on. lint ut present there was no\nWhig organ /at on, and the only party of the\nL'ii on was that of \\vh cli Mr. Bucha.iun and\nDreckinr dgc were the cuiid dites:\n•Mr. Clay referred to the utt mpt to implicate\nMr. liuclta .an in the charge of bargain iv.nl cor-\nruption. On that subject lie propo-i d to take\ntli■testmo vof hisownfather, aidlier.ad\nfrom Mr. Clay's I tt. r to show that lliichan-\na i had co..ductedhms.Ifinthatalfaras aman\nof truth a <1 honor. Hj should b l.eve what h.s\nfttth r sa d before otliers. liesiil s the ev.deuce\nlie had r ad, th re was oth r testimony bearing\non the sain.; point. It feeling and eloquent\nt.rins he lvfurr d to the heavy weight ut that\ncharge against his tilth, r, and how gulla itlv and\nbravely he lead borne it. Tim ik God. , it d id\nbforehslathr! aidnowh■wasproudtosay\ntli re 1 ed ota mat who would whisp r it,\nlint Mr. liuclta in i was free from all connection\nwith th matt. r.\n■ Mr. Clay co iclud'd w'tli in i lnqunt appeal\nto his fellowcit / ms, esp cially Old I. ne Wings,\nto give I lie r cord ill support to tli • Union t.ck t\n—to Ituc'nanan and Breckinridge •
467b4710bff6493df32cd3911dfc4f62 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0342465436327 39.513775 -121.556359 Tr*YVTUTI E OK A DECItET. I, ORDER IS-\nAjß sued cut of llie District Court. 15lh Judicial\nDistrict in and for Unite County, and Male of “'a li-\ntornm against J AO* >B 8-MOHUIS, ai d MARY S.\nMORRIS, and in favor of THOM 58 U K1.1.8 , for\nthe sum ot Three Hundred and Ninety Six, Eighty\nOne Hiindredllis <S: siil.Bo) hollars pr.ncip-il debt,\nwilh interest on said sum at t ho rale o' four (4 , per\ncent par month, from the Twenty-henenih (21th)\nday of November. A, D . 1858 until paid ; Also all\ncosts of suit taxnd in the sum of Twenty-Three\nNinety-One Hundredths ($4.1 ,00) Dollars; together\nwilh all the accruing costs on said wrli, lo modi,\nreeled and deliver- <1 commanding me lo sell all.\nor so much thereof as nay tie s.trtTicienl to pay l tie\njudgment above specified and ah costs (-1 suit, of\nthe inorlgngid premises liereinafler ih-serihed, to\nsatisfy said demands. 1 will on tile TWEN I 5 -BEC—-\nOND (24) DAY OK JAN A. D. 1868. nl Ihe\nhour of two (2) oclock I*. M. of said da\\ in pursu-\nance of the reqniremoitls of said writ, sell at public\nsale to thu highest bidder lor cash. Ihe following\nmortgaged property, descrilu d in said order of sale\nns follows lo wit! Kola number one, two, three,\nfour, five and six, (1,2 ,3. 4 , 5 and ii) in block num-\nber thirty-six, (3fi). anil I .ms number one. two, live,\nsix and seven, (1, 2, 6 .8, and 7.) in llhiok number\neight [B]; Also, the lot of ground fronting on bird\nstreet eighty [SOI feet, and on Hunloon sire»*l thirty-\nsix [36] loel, being The lot of ground nl the corner of\nBird ami Hunloon streets, on which the old Metro-\npolitan Theatre formerly stood. The lots of ground\nabove specified heiijr described necording in the\nmap or plan of Hie Town of Ororille, wiiteli is filed\nin the county recorders office of butte county, and\nsaid property l« all siluatod In the Town of Orovllle\naforesaid
0bbbeabedfa6261b1c257f035f610d96 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1918.6041095573314 42.217817 -85.891125 Said job will be let by sections.\nThe section at the outlet of said\nDrain will be let first, and the remain\ning sections in their order up stream,\nin accordance with the diagram now\non file with the other papers pertain-\ning to said Drain, in the office of the\nCounty Drain Commissioner of the\nCounty of Van Buren, to which\nreference may be had by all parties\ninterested, and bids will be made and\nreceived accordingly. Contracts will\nbe made with the lowest responsible\nbidder giving adequate security for\nthe performance of the work, in a\nsum then and there to be fixed by\nme, reserving to myself the right to\nreject any and all bids. The date for\nthe completion of such contract, and\nthe terms of therefor, shall\nand will be announced at the time\nand place of lotting.\nNotice is further hereby given,\nthat at the time and place of said\nletting, or at such other time and\nplace thereafter, to which I, the\nCounty Drain Commissioner afore-\nsaid, may adjourn the same, the\nassessments for benefits and the\nlands comprised within the "Shafer\nDrain Special Assessment District"\nand the apportionments thereof will\nbe announced by me and will be sub-\nject to review for one day, from nine\no'clock in the forenoon until five\no'clock in the afternoon.\nThe following is a description of\nthe several tracts or parcels of land\nconstituting the Special Assessment\nDistrict of said Drain, viz: T. 2, S.\nR. 14 W. Waverly.\nN.E.UN.E. N.E.VSec.25.\nE.VzS.E.
238602c1c7833633f5328ddb97a99b05 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.028767091578 58.275556 -134.3925 In tho name of the Territory of\nAlaska, you are herhy commanded\nto ho and appear In tho ahove en¬\ntitled court holden at Douglas, In\nsaid Division of said Territory and\nanswer tho complaint filed against\nyou in the ahovo entitled court\nwithin thirty days after tho com¬\npletion of the period of publication\nand service of this summons upon\nyou, and If you fail so to appear and\nnnswor for want thereof, the plain¬\ntiff will apply to the court for the\nrelief demanded in said complaint,\nn copy of which Is filed with the\nCommissioner of the above entitled\ncourt. The relief demanded in said\ncomplaint Is for judgment against\nyou for the sum of Eight and 60-100\n($S.r>0) dollarn for delinquent taxes\non personal property owned by you\n the Town of Douglas, with inter¬\nest thereon at the rate of eight per\ncent per annum, from the first day\nof November, 1917, and for costs\nand disbursements.\nThe order for the publication of\nthin summons wnn made and dated\nthe 20th day of December, 1917.\nand the period of |)iihllratlon of wild\nHiimmonH Is bIx weeks, the first pub¬\nlication to be njado on thu 21st day\nof December, 1917, ami the last\npublication thereof on the 25th day\nof January. 1!>18, and the time\nwithin which you are required to\nappear and answer said complaint\nIh or. or beforo the 25th day of\nFebruary. 1918.\nIn witness whereof, I havo here¬\nunto net my hand and affixed the\nseal of tny court thin 2<>th day of\nDecember, 1917.
3727119b73ba255ce1b1bfcb07895f8c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0561643518517 39.261561 -121.016059 Reuef foe the Sufferers.—The citizens\nand property holders of Grass Valley, as we\nare informed by a gentleman who visited that\nplace yesterday, subscribed and paid over, on\nSaturday last, the stint of $2,300, and a check\nfor that amount was forwarded to the Howard\nSociety, for the relief of the sufferers at Sacra-\nmento. This speaks well for the liberality of\nthe citizens of our neighboring town—they\ndid not wait to get up a “benefit concert" for\nthe purpose of drawing a dollar from the pock-\nets of those who can illy afford to spare it at\nthis time —but those who could afford it came\ndown with their hundreds, fifties and twenties,\nand in that manner raised a respectable sum\nwithout calling upon those who find it a diffi-\ncult matter to provide the necessaries of life\nfor their own families. Nevada is getting up a\n•concert,” and those who have the matter \nhand will doubtless do all in their power, and\nmany will do more than they ought to do, to\nswell the receipts to a respectable sum. But\nthe largest amount that we can expect to real-\nize w ill not exceed one-fourth the sum already\nsent by our neighboring town; and if we would\nnot be made the laughing stock of every little\nvillage in the State, other efforts must be made.\nNevada gave more than all other towns in the\nState towards carrying on the Pah-ute war,\nand whenever a proper effort was made the\nmost of her wealthier citizens have never failed\nto subscribe liberally for charitable purposes.\nWe cannot hope to raise more than $500 by\nthe concert, and if nothing else is to be done,\nit will be better to give that to one or two poor\nfamilies whose farms have been destroyed in\nthe valleys, and say nothing about it.
399a143d5897bd1b6af63dd2c74abf6d CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1920.8428961432403 39.623709 -77.41082 Kohlweyer Rosa C L, rep. Thurmont\nKelly Rose M, dem, Zentz Mill\nKelly Alice G, dem, Zentz Mill\nKelbaugh Carrie V, dem, Thurmont\nKelly Catherine S. dem, Thurmont\nKern Alice D, rep, Thurmont\nKelly Anna W, dem, Zentz Mill\nKelly Minnie G, rep, Thurmont\nLawyer Elina M, rep, Thurmont\nLawyer Milton O, rep, Thurmont\nLaymon Rose E, rep, Thurmont\nLiclie Anna M, rep, Thurmont\nLate Howard F, rep, Thurmont\nLewis Goldie A, dem, Thurmont\nl.eatherman Lizzie A, dem, Thurmont\nLaymon Savilla A, rep, Thurmont\nLidie Rosa E, rep, Thurmont\nLaymon Josephine, dem, Graceham\nLoy Elenore M, rep, Thurmont\nLittle Joseph L, dem, Zentz Mill\nLong Mary B, dec, Thurmont\nMartin Belva L, rep, Thurmont\nMartin Maude P, rep, Thurmont\nMathias Elizabeth A, rep, Thurmont\nMcGill Caroline F, dem, Thurmont\nMackley Rose M, rep, Thurmont\nMackley Mary C, rep, Thurmont\nAliller Emma L, rep, Thurmont\nMartin Ella C, dem, Thurmont\nMackley Laura R, rep, Thurmont\nMcCarney Mary K, rep, Thurmont\nMonshour Lottie E, rep, Thurmont\nMiller Mary A, dem, Thurmont\nMartin Edith, rep, Hoovers Mill\nMartin C, rep, Thurmont\nMartin Bessie A, rep, Thurmont\nMcKissick Sarah E, rep, Thurmont\nMessner Mary E, rep, Thurmont\nMiller Archie C, rep, Thurmont\nMartin Glades A D, dem, Hoovers Mill\nNicodemus L Blanche, rep, Thurmont\nNogle Bertie B, rep, Thurmont\nNicodemus Mable J, rep, Thurmont\nOrndorff Mary E, dem, Thurmont\nOtoole Mary C, rep, Thurmont\nPowell Hanah E, rep, Thurmont\nPowell Estella C, rep, Thurmont\nPowell Lillie B, rep, Thurmont\nPrudhomme Lula E, dem, Thurmont\nPowell Mary C, rep, Thurmont\nRhodes Minnie C, rep, Thurmont\nRogers Ruth K, rep, Thurmont\nRouzer Lourie A, rep, Thurmont\nRice Marie E, rep, Hoovers Mill\nReisler Sophia R, dem, Thurmont\nRouzer Eugina G, dem, Thurmont\nRoddy Mary H, dem, Thurmont\nRoddy Florence C, dem, Thurmont\nRorer Ruth O, dem, Thurmont\nRipple Emma E, rep, Thurmont\nRouzer Martin L, rep, Thurmont\nRowe Elmer T, dem, Thurmont\nRidenour Amanda C, rep, Thurmont\nRidenour Charles E, rep, Thurmont\nSpalding Walter K, rep, Thurmont\nStoner Mary S, rep, Thurmont\nStocksdale G Viola, rep, Thurmont\nStoner M Gertrude, dem, Thurmont\nSpeak Margaret J, rep, Thurmont
1934b1298c9948e1ab0d444a4e8e4959 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.6287670915779 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho river «u rising slowly last even*\niff, with 34 inches in the channel.\nThe Science departed for Parkcraburg\n10} A. If.\nThe Karon is off the docke at Gallipo*\ni, and will resume her placo in the Par*\nereburg trade in a few days.\nThe steamers Comfort, Phaeton and\nempent are making their regular"tripe#\nThe Scout came down from New Cum*\n?rlaml yesterday and returned with two\nirge*.\nIhe Hornbrook will leave for Parkers*\nnrg this morning at 10} o'clock.\nThe O'Neal la being overhauled at\nteubenville, and will resume her regu*\nir trips neit week.\nWe clip the following items from the\n'ommereial Gazelle:\n|The packet* la the Lower Ohio are\netting all the freight they can carry.\nA number ol pilots are contemplating\nbartering a light cralt boat, making\ntrip to Cincinnati to look at tho river.\nMadison now hoaata three shipyards.\nlie Upper, Middle and Lower, the latter\nun by tho old reliablo Com, Fry and\n'upturn Dan Morton. All are doing u\nushing business.\nThere are a number of largo rocks in\nbo river at the "Trap," "Merriman" and\nther places between hero and Beaver,\notneof which are now high and dry, and\nliey ahould bo taken out of the way be*\nore there is a rise. These rocks have\neen the cause of sinking a good many\nargefl and coal boata within the past few\near*, and our coal boata within the past\njw years, and our coal men, for their\nwn protection, should see to it that they\nre removed to a place where they can do\no harm.
108f1c8a5fdd5a56a7bcd827ea99fbd8 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1895.760273940893 46.187885 -123.831256 During the past month there has been\na great deal of bonding done over on the\nwest slide of the bay, and1 a visit to the\nengineer's office shows that not a 1'lttla of\nIt is being platted ready to bo placed\non the market. Of course, there la bound\nto 'be a great deal of worthless property\nput up for sale, but It is safe to say\nthHt anything along the waterfront, on\neither side of the bay,, will go off 1n a\nhurry. The bunding of the Young's Bay\nbridge, so that people can reach the west\nside without taking a boat, will give an\nImpetus to the movement of property\non that side, especially to that nearest\nthe bay. Property owners on this side,\nhowever, do not fear the boom that Is\nexpected by the westsiders ,and are going\nmerrily on preparing for the good times\nthat jre expected with the conrmencment\nof railroad construction.\nThere is a growing sentiment among\nbusiness men and property owners that\nthe chamiber of commerce membership\nshould at once be augmented. An effort\nshould be made to attract industries to\nAstoria that will give employment\nsklXed labor. Through the chamber of\ncommerce a world of good be done\ntn this line, and nothing should stand in\nthe way of the citizens getting together\nand starting the. ball rolling.\nIt Is altogether probable that the prop\nerty owners on the east side of the city\nwill be very liberal with their water\nfrontage to anyone seeking to locate an\nenterprise here demanding such a site,\nA Portland firm are now considering\nproposition from the Alderbrook people\nto locate a crash and door factory In that\npart of the city, and It 1s probable that\nft Will be accepted. Other parties owning\nproperty In that end of the city are\nworking for similar enterprises,\nOne thing is certain; there wl' .O r.ot be\nmuch of a stir In Astoria, even though\nseveral hundred men are at work build,\nIng the railroad, until the parties here\nwho are most interested get in and adver\ntise the cfty abroad. As a certain prom.\nInent imerchunt remarked yesterday:\n"Every man In Astoria! should take\ncopies of ths local papers, at least once\neach week, and send to his friends. If\nanything of advantage to the city ap-\npears, mark it with a blue pencil, and\nsend It to as many acquaintances as he\ncan poswibly afford.
10c95df6e9deed15365950705f8e76bd THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.4726027080162 39.369864 -121.105448 An Exquisite Story, by Lamartine. —ln\nthd tribe of Neggdeh there was a horse\nwhose fame was spread far and near, and a\nBedouin of another tribe, by name Daher, de-\nsired extremely to possess it. Having offered\nit» vain for it his camels and his whole\nwealth, he bit upon the following device, by\nwhich he hoped to gain the object ol his de-\nsire: He resolved to stain his face with the\njuice of an herb, to clothe himself in rags,\nto tie his legs and neck together, so as to\nappear like a lame beggar. Thus equipped,\nhe went to wait for Naber, the owner of the\nhorse, who he knew was to pass that way.\n'When he saw Naber approach on his beauti-\nful steed he cried out in a weak voice, “I am\na poor stranger; for three days I have been\nunable to move from this spot to seek for\nfood. I am dying; help me, and Heaven\n■will reward you.” The Bedouin kindly\noffered to take him up on his horse and\ncarry him home; but the rogue replied, “1\ncannot rise; I have no strength left \nNaber, touched with pity, dismounted, led\nhis horse to the spot, and great diffi-\nculty set the seeming beggar on his back.\nBut no sooner did Daher feel himself in the\nsaddle than he set spurs to the horse and\ngalloped off, calling out as he did so, “It is\nI, Daher. I have got the horse and am off\nwith it.” Naber called after him to stop\nand listen. Certain of not being pursued,\nhe turned and halted at a short distance\nfrom Naber, who was armed with a spear.\n•You have taken ray horse,” said the latter.\n“Since Heaven has willed it, I wish you joy\nof it; but I do conjure you never to tell any\none how you obtained it.” “And why\nnot?” said Daher. “Because,” said the no-\nble Arab, “another man might be really ill,\nand men would fear to help him. You\nwould be the cause of many refusing to per-\nform an act of charity, for fear of being\nduped as I have been.” Struck with shame\nat these words, Daher was silent for a mo-\nment; then springing from the horse, re -\nturned it to its owner, and, embracing him,\nled him to his tent, where they spent a few\ndays together, and became fast friends for\nlife.
474f38bc69cb35d97ef9fa39e5c67c0c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.1410958587012 41.681744 -72.788147 New London, Feb.' 51, Lieut.\nLeslie P. Arnold! pun of the world\nfliers, who Is the guest of friends\nhero (or a few days, announced to\na gathering of acquaintances In the\nnoma of Dr. J . H. Gancy Thursday\nnight that on Aucuat 13, 1917, lie\nwoa married at the Llttl Church\nAround the Corner, New York city\nto Mildred Avery, a nurse, who is\nnow on duty nt the hoine of Churlea\nPrentice, at 875 Williams street, a\nfew doors from the homo where tho\nlieutenant Is a (ruest. Miss Avery\nhas confirmed the lieutenant's an-\nnouncement of the marriage which\nLieut Arnold says, wm the culmina-\ntion of a childhood romance,\n, Lieut. Arnold made the announce-\nment in donylng published rumors\nof his engagement to Priscilla Dean,\nwell know movie actress.\n"Wo are friends, nothing more,"\nsaid the lieutenant In speaking of\nthe connection Miss Dean's name\nwith his own. Tho report of the en.\neasement had its 'Origin In Mil-\nwaukee, where lie had a speaking\nengagement at the same time that\nMiss Dean was filling a personal en-\ngagement at a theater, the lieuten\nant said. Meeting at a hotel, lie and\nMiss Dean renewed an acquaintance\nof a year's standing, he said, when\nthe world fliers were, at Hollywood\nTheir pictures were taken In the\nhotel with that of Mrs. Dean,\nmother of Miss Dean, and put of that\ncame the rumors of the engagement,\nArnold declared.\nWhen married Arnold was a man\nIn the ranks he said. He had just\nreturned from the Philippines. He\ntelegraphed Miss Avery to meet him\nIn New York. She responded and\nthey were wad. They separated on\ntheir wedding day and have met but\nonce since, and then for only a few\nmoments.
13754e7f486d81f1065dc5a369951a54 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.6407103508905 31.960991 -90.983994 “Mr. President, there are some foreign­\ners who always remain exotics, and never\nbecome naturalized in our country ; whilst,\nhappily, there are many others who.rea­\ndily attach themselves to our principles\nand our institutions. The honest, patient\nand industrious Germnn readily unites\nwith our people; establishes himself upon\nsome of our fat land, fills his capacious\nbarn, and enjoys in tranquility the abun­\ndant fruits which his diligence gathers\nround him; always ready to fly to thé\nstandard of his adopted country, or of its\nlaws, when called by the duties of patri\notism The gay, the versatile, the philo­\nsophic Frenchman, accommodating him­\nself cheerfully to all the vicissitudes of\nlife, incorporates himself without difficulty\nin our society. But, of all foreigners,\nnone amalgamate themselves so quickly\nwith our people as the natives of the \nerald Isle, In some of the visions which\nhave pasred through my imagination, I\nhave supposed that Ireland was originally\npart and parcel of this continent, and that\nby some extraordinary convulsion of na­\nture, it was torn from America, and, drift­\ning across the ocean, was placed in the\nunfortunate vicinity of Great Britain.—\nThe same open-heartedness; the same ge­\nnerous hospitality; (he same careless and\nuncalculat'ng indifference about human\nlife; characterizes the inhabitants of both\ncountries. Kentucky has been sometimes\ncalled the Ireland of America. And, I have\nno doubt, that if the current of emigration\nwere reversed, and set from America on\nthe shores of Europe instead of bearing\nfrom Europe to America, every American\nemigrant to Ireland would there find, as\nevery Irish emigrant here finds, a hearty\nwelcome and a happy home!”
0c496c0dfec8620818f17a6e37065851 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.7219177765094 29.4246 -98.49514 from what the papers say, San Antonio is\nmaking slow progress in organizing her short\nline railroad to the gulf, yet her worthy all-\niens have ample surplus money to construct\nthe road, with such aid as could doubtless be\nsecured along the projected line of the road.\nThe Importance ol such road to that city. can\nhardly be estimated, and notwithstanding its\nconstruction would add immensely to the\nvalue of property in the Alamo city, it seems\nthat those who would be the greatest gainers\nby its construction, because of their large\nproperty interest to be enhanced by reason of\nthe road, ore the parties who are least inclined\nto Invest their money. The wealthy men of that\ncity seem to overlook the fact thit with the\nconstruction of the road the which\nthey would have invested would come back\nto them with compound interest. But the\nwant of enterprise among this diss of citizens\nis not confined to San Antonio it is found in\nGilveiton and most other Texas cities. This\nwant of enterprise or public spirit contrasts\nstrangely with the enterprise which has made\nthe Northern and Northwestern men the ad-\nmiration of the world. In the cily of San An-\ntonio there are many streets which are ren-\ndered almost Impassable during the wet\nseason, yet through the influence of some of\nher wealthy citizens her people voted down a\nproposition last year to vote a few thousand\ndollars for street Improvements, and the same\nresults will probably follow In the election\nsoon to be held there for the same purpose."
109d661d95c4889b4e0ede76de0fa83a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1894.4150684614408 42.217817 -85.891125 Once a year the Nation stands, in\nmemory, in tho awful presence of its\ndead. The American Congress has set\napart the 30th of May as a solemn na-\ntional holiday. All civilized countries\nhave their holidays; some are observed\nfor ono purpose, others for another.\nThe 25th day of December is commem-\norated by the common consent of the\nchristian world as tho anniversary of\nthe coming of the Savior of mankind,\nwhose simple, loving precepts havo\nemancipated the race and who, by the\ngentleness of His example, has softened\nthat asperity and fierceness, born of\ncenturies of warfare and sharp conflict,\nand started the world along tho high-\nway of civilization and brotherly love.\nThe 4th day of July is obserred and\ncelebrated because it proclaims tho cul-\nmination of a long and vehement clamor\nby our revolutionary sires for relief\nfrom Hritish oppression and tyrauny.\nOn that memorable day the ultimatum\nof a long suffering and liberty loviug\npeople was reached and the civilized\nworld notified that the colonies "are\n of right ought to be free and inde-\npendent states."\nThe 22d of February marks the anni-\nversary of the birth of that great soldier\nand exalted statesman whose devotion\nto the cause of human freedom made\nhim the most colossal figure of his time;\nwhose patriotism and valor placed him\nat the head of the colonial armies;\nwhose zeal and enterprise as a military\nleader achieved for the cause of the\ncolonies the most brilliant victories and\nfinally crowned their arms with a last-\ning triumph; whose wisdom and pru-\ndence laid broad and deep the founda-\ntions of the Republic; whose unllagging\nadhesion to the principles of a repre-\nsentative democracy enabled him to\nbrush aside the alluring temptation of\na glitteringcrown; whose great services\nwere but inadequately rewarded in his\nelevation to the first magistracy of tho\nnation he had been so largely instru-\nmental in founding and whose place he\ndid so much toward fixing in the fore-\nfront of the family of the great powers\nof the earth.
085bb1ee32d1ef1f52e59297efadffad THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1875.8068492833586 41.004121 -76.453816 uonai com currency as tho standard ol val\nlies regarding depreciated, inconvertible\npaper money m time of peaco as both niju\nrious and disgraceful. And from this posh\ntiou they cannot depart without danger of\ndissolution and extinction as a great nation\nal party. Hut the holding to sound princi\npies of public policy, established by the\nteachings of political economists and vindl\neated by tho history of nations, docs not\nexcludo considerations of expediency and\njudicious action in their application. Tho\nyear alter tho Democratic piatiorm of 1872\nwas adopted, a panic smote tho peoplo ot tho\nUnited States, first in tho great cities nnd\nafterwards throughout tho country, from the\npressure ot which wo havo not yet recover\ned, then, and now, wo had and havo a cur\nrency in circulation composed of legal ten\ndcr and of national bank notes, both provi\nded, and virtually issued by tho government\nol the United btates. J agreo that a rea-\nsonable and prudent man, taking into ac\ncount the existing money of the country, (if\nwo may call it such,) and tho existing pros-\ntration of business, may pauso and hesitato\nlong, in tho application ot radical and com-\nplete remedies, such as theory suggests, for\nexisting evils. Therefore, there has been,\nand there is, a pretty general agreement of\nopinion, that tho immediate resumption by\ntho government of the payment of its obli\ngations in coin shall not bo pressed that\nsuch a measure is impracticablo.it the mo\nment, aud probably cannot bo accomplished\n tho very near future. Thero must bo\npauso given : there must bo preparation\nmade; tho government and tho peoplo must,\niu various ways, prepare themselves for tho\naccomplishment oi that great ouject. incre- -\nlore. so tar us men are proposing deluy. and\nwitli delay preparation for rcsumption.so far\nns recent party piatiorms in umo and in tins\nhtato ol either political party iook to mea-\nsures of alleviation and of preparation for a\nreturn to tho only constitutional standard ot\nmoney, my judgment and my sympathies go\nwith them ; and I beliovo I speak for a ma\njority of tho Democracy of Pennsylvania,\nwhen l bay that bcvnnu tuo limit and scopo\nof theso remarks, which I now submit to\nyou, they aro not prepared to go, aud that\nany charge or supposition that they desiro\nto launch government upon an experiment\nof expansion mid inflation is unfounded\nan Imputation upon them which tho future\nwill repel as it will repel all other present\nforms of falsehood nnd mistake. That upon\ntho question of currency and money our\nparty ftands firmly In tho old ways, immov\nably for the principles which they have\nalways neiievcd and proiesscu and tins posi-\ntion, and tho desire and intention to return\nto tho former condition of things, when coin\nwas tho standard ot valuoaud tho uonstiiu-tio- u\nof tho United Stales which requires it\nwas enforced, aro plainly consistent with\nprudence, with deliberation, and with all\nproper measures oi preparation lur uiu\neouiplislimcnt of that great purpose.
2f9730b617636bc7aa9144046f07c184 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1880.974043684224 37.451159 -86.90916 ahle features which we are glad to see are\nDcingaoneaway wun in tne new aspirant\nfor favor, called the "Home Ijunn." man\nufactured by the Home I .imp Co., of Cincin-\nnati. The great objection to most ether lamps\nis ineiriia.uiiiy 10 oe upsei, tne irounie to\nkeep them In order, and the poor light given\nby them. The New Homo Lamp Is Nickel\nliaicu.anu nimosi MOJ.muie or me Mmient\nnmn: It has a handsome ornamented clnmn\nby means of which tho lamp can boat once\neasily ndjustcd In any position upon the cen-\nter table, piano, music rest, sewing machine,\ndesk, or, by means of n handsome bracket.\nwhich goes wuii mo lamp, can lie placed\nupon the wall, and In whatever position it Is\nplaced It Is absolutely safe. This is the great\neaiure oi excellence, out me xew Home\nLamp coi.ii.ines also the patent burn.\ner, a minis indicator nud match Ixix. No\nlamn lias ever neiore neen received with such\nunusual favor or received such strong recom- -\nmenuaiions irnm ine leading journals ol\nClsclunatl. It is also endorsed by Mich men\nas the mavoraiin nostmaster. several lnsnr,\nanco presidents and express agents of that\ncity as the safest, most convenient and beM\nhim i. made i ue company uesires .genis in\nthis locality, and nny smart lady or irentle- -\nntan can make a handsome iueomn durlu?\nthe next six mouths bv canvasslni? fur its\nTlicie is naruiy a uozen lumuics in this coun\ntry who win uoi want one. and its price is so\nlow as to bring It within the reach ofall. For\nfurtner information auuress, Jionic Ijimp\nCo., Cincinnati, 0.,mcnUonlngour paper Mid\nmev win gne 3011 tu.t iKimcuiars una ex\nelusive territory to cauvoss In.
18e7155829e040eae1f1bb8b7c7eed5e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.5164383244546 39.745947 -75.546589 Billy Leachs son came along and\nsaid “West looked to be n greater\nterror than Wild BUI Crouch and\nCy A'oung in their palmy days,\nAH at once there was a noise and\nI found out Parkside had a Rainey\nwith them and had, resurrected the\nover jovial Duncan. Every one here\nhas known Duncan from the days\nof the C. A. C. vs. Brownlown.\nSome one asked Duncan ahou* Hilly\nHlggina, Lige Johnson. Dick Little\nand Fisher. He knew them all.\nThen Coffin went out to warm up.\n"Say Mr. McCaughnn," asked a fair\nfan, “Is that Mike Maloney or Rddla\nFahey theyve brought over." When\nAlex assured them that "Red" Maher,\nScarborough and Bradford were not\non the team the girls began to look\nclosely at Donohoe, Taylor and oth­\ners.\nThe Game is On.\nWell, (he game started but New\nCastle did nothing until Parkside\ngot busy and scored two runs. After\nthat there was nothing to It but New­\ncastle. The old town hoys started\noff with three runs and when the first\nhalf of fhe ninth was over the board\n 8 to 4 In New Castles favor.\nThat pitcher West had the KlrkwooJ\nPark bunch guessing for fair and they\npounded Coffin a dozen of times\nfor safeties until the Vandcver ave­\nnue twirler lourd that New Castle Is\na dangerous fighter for the Del-Mar\npennant. Carlin 1s a lively youngster.\nHp can wallop the ball, plek up Ilk®\na fiend, cover ground like -i bird\nand Is a base siealer to perfection.\nElmer Pedr'ck Is ns happy playing\nball as he is quoting passages from\nthe Book of Prayer. Cobb also Is\nthere as a catcher and all-round\nplayer. Despite his age, no Del-Mar ||\nfirst baseman has anything on Old\nMan” Connell. You hear me Dave.\nAnd, by the way, you did well in your ||1\nselection of umpires, two of whom\nare from this old town. The Waers\ncannot be beaten In this work.\nWhat's the use of telling yon about\n• he ball players for yon have seen the\nhunch. bu( you didn't hear 876 lusty\nthroats cheer McDevitts aggregation\nuntil the clouds cleared away. Thats\nwhy I am writing you about It. While
1bc5d52f08c6a0a0f2162f4d90d53441 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.5986301052765 40.063962 -80.720915 plans upon the prospects and results o|\nagriculture. Without in any degret\nwishing to underrate the Importance 01\nthe latter, It Is necessary to keep Ir\nnitrht the wonderful march of Industry\nWe are rapidly panning from an agrl\ncultural Into a manufacturing popula\ntlon. In 1880 there were 7,600,000 per\nBonn employed In agriculture and 3,400,.\n000 In manufacturing. In 1890 .the totali\nwere 8,400,000 and 6,090,000 ragpectlvcly\nDuring this ten years the Increase it\nentire population, according to the cen\n8us, was 25 per cent; the Increase li\nagricultural employments being only li\nper cent, while that in manufacture\nwas nearly 60 per cent. The next cen\nus will certainly show a very mucl\nlarger development of industry. Flgurei\ncould be added, showing that agricul\nture has little more than held Its owr\nduring the past ten or twenty years\nwhile the mineral and manufacturing\nindustries have doubled and quadruplet\ntheir output many over durlnf\nthe same period. The object of thes<\nremarks is to Impress upon the readei\nthe Importance of the Industrial "boom'\nwhich the country Is now experiencing\nand which has never been approached\nIt far outweighs In importance In tht\nsum total of prosperity any Increased\nbenefits that the agricultural altuatloi\nIs likely to offer. In the Iron trade ant\nIts various branches extraorfllnarj\nconditions prevail. Furnaces and mllli\nare running to their utmost capacity\nhigh prices fall to check demand; larg<\nadvances have been made In wages; th<\ndemand Is legitimate, not speculative\nand Is expected to continue for anothei\nyear at least. Export orders nre fre\nquently refused to satisfy home de>\nmands. The textile trades are ahar\nIng the Improvement; cotton mllVbuIld\nIng In the south Is progressing at ar\nextraordinary rate; and throughout th<\nwhole country the wheels of iridustrj\nnre humming at a rate never before ex\nperlenced.
2c067998ff99f11deb0fbcbaa5e70796 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.9630136669202 40.063962 -80.720915 CLEMENS FARMS.\nBy virtue of two deeds of trait mado bj So\nbleskl Brady, Trustee, and Mrs. Catherine E\nClemens, the one dated the 10th day or Novcm\nbor, 1870. and the other dated the 1st day ol\nApril, 187), and both of record In the Clerk'i\nomco of the County Court for Marshall county\nWest Virginia, one In deed book No. 19, page 91\nand tbe other in deed of trust book No. 1, pagi\n39,1 win offer for sale at Pabllc Auction, at th<\nfront door of the Court Bouse of Ohio county\nWeet Virginia, on\nTHURSDAY, the 8th Bay of January, 1874,\nat 10 a. sc ., the property mentioned and do\nscribed In the two deeds or traita aforesaid; th«\nsame being the tract of land tor some time knowi\naa the CLEMENS FARMS, situated In th<\ncounty or Marshall, West Virginia, on thewa\n or Wheeling Creek, at the month of StnlTi\nRun, and dlatant about two miles from Bin\nQrovo Station on tho Bempflold Railroad.\nThe said Farm Is divided by Stall's Run InU\ntwo farms or tracts of about equal size, each con\ntalnlng about 177 acres. Nearly all of the lan4\nis nnder a Meh stato or cultivation; Is very rid\nand beantlfolly located. Upon the south or eas\nportion there is a large stone mansion house\nwith all the necessary outbuildings, and npoi\nthe other part there Is a good tenant house.\nSaid Farms will be sola;either separately, or\ntogether, to suit purchasers.\nTho Trustee will, on application, give any in\nformation that may be desired aa to Unna, con\ndltlons, £c., and he also has a complete plat ant\nsurvey of the land, showing lta extent, lines\nfences, improvements, &c.\nTurns ajso trade known on day of salo.
09901f3015cdca0d9d3d30831d4e1c8c THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.476775924661 39.290882 -76.610759 cember, 1827, Mr. Crawford wrote to Mr. Baleh,\n(Mr. Un Buren's Nashville deputy,) whom he\nimmediately rewarded on coming into office, that\n"rfie could ascertain that Calhoun would not be\nbenefitted by Jackson's election, he would do him\na benefit by communicating the information" to\nMr. Crawford. In Januarv, of the same year,\nMr. James A. Hamilton, (another of Mr. Van\nBuren's deputies,) was at the Hermitage and ac\ncompanicd Gen. Jaekson to New Orleans. In his\nletter of February 24, 1831, published in the\nEvening Post, he admits that he had "much con-\nversation" with Alajor Lewis on the subject, and\nat tlie request of Major Lewis, he volunteered to\n"ascertain truly, what occurred in Air. Monroe's\ncabinet deliberations inrelation to a proposition,\nsupposed to have been made,to arrest Genera'\nJaekson for his conduct in (Seminole) wir,\nand to inform him (MajorLewis,) of the result."\nAccordingly, he relumed from New Orleans bv\nway of Georgia, and at Augusta wrote to Mr.\nForsyth, requesting him to obtain from Mr.\nCrawford a statement in relation to the said pro-1\nposition in Mr. Monroe's cabinet "to arrest''\nGeneral Jackson. From thence he came on to\nWashington and induced Mr. Calhoun to believe\nthat some one Was endeavoring to make an im-\npression on General Jackson's mind that such a\nproposition had been made (to wit, to arrest\nGeneral Jackson) in Mr. Monroe's cabinet, and\nthat General Jaekson, whose election was then\nsupported by Mr. Calhoun and his friends, was\nabout to be assailed on that point. Air. Calhoun\ntold hiui, as he asserts, that no such proposition\nhad been made or even thought of.
33de51cfd36f2994070a838cc467aa36 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1882.7219177765094 39.756121 -99.323985 We do not expect to have as big a\nfair at Phillipsburg Sept. 27, 28, and\n29, as they had at Topeka, but we ex\npect to have a better one. Come every-\nbody and bring your "pumpkins and\nthings" all along. Unfortunately our\ncounty was not represented in the ex\nhibits at the State if air, although she\nmight have made a good showing\nOur box did not get there m time.\nAsonofMr. andMrs. A.W.\nTracy, who is attending the school .for\ndeaf mutes at Wyandotte, In company\nwith several other young people sim-\nilarly unfortunate, were on the C. B.\ntrain Wednesday morning on their\nway to that institution. We were very\nmuch interested in the prompt manner\nIn which they carried on their conver\nsation and amusements, showing that\nthey were receiving valuable instruc-\ntions in their school. One little fellow\nwho was making his first trip, looked\non in astonishment. expect to .see\nyoung Mr. Tracy become a valuable\ncitizen, notwithstanding his mistor\ntune, as he is a 3roung man of more\nthan ordinary mental force\nPhillips County was pretty well\nrepresented at the State Fair and Re-\nunion. We noticed Frank Strain and\nson, John W. Lowe, wife and daugh\nter, O, W. i5icKtoru ana wife, Joseph\nYoungand wife, Barnet Bump and\nwife, Ititner Smith and son, E. B.\nMorton, Isaac JJixon Isaac,. Hawjeyi\nHenry Vincent, Miss. Watson, Miss.\nKidd, A. Troup and, wife, W. W .\nGray and wife, Thomas Falkerson, J.\nP. Sullivan, liill Hoover, Cieo. White\nC. E . Don Carlos, Dr. L. L. Whitney\nand wife, G. W. Young and wife, Mr".\nTaylor, t. o. tiranger, and wife, John\nBissell, E. V. Warner, Col. Picket,\nMrs. J . V. Close, 8. G. Nay, Thomas\nCox and ye editor, wife and boy. All\nare home safe and glad of it.
0032efa59cf80f202fd4266e4e2ea563 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.0041095573313 43.798358 -73.087921 which have combined to close the hand of\nchanty against the colony, are those florid\nand glowing descriptions that have been\ngiven of the pecuniary ability of the peo-\nple, the docility and tractabilily of the na-\ntives, the fertility of the soil and the gen-\neral resources of the country. Visitors\nfeeling a feverish interest in the colon)',\nand prurient to disseminate news, have\nvisited only the best houses in the colony,\nwhere every nerve has been strained to\nmake a decent exhibition, and feeling no\ndisposition to dive into the infections of\nhospitals, and make the gauge of disease,'\nthey have assumed what they there saw as\nthe general measure of circumstances, and\ngone off and reported accordingly.\n" When individuals who feel but a gen-\neral and indefinite interest in the colony,\nhave heard that the natives are throwing\naway their idols to the moles and bats of\nthe earth, and en masse becoming Christ-\nians ; that the slave trade is withering un-\nder the moral breath of the colony that\nthe country produces every thing, and j\nthat grows without labor, and\nthat the colonists have only to pluck the\nfruits, eat and be happy, they have rejoic-\ned in the success of the scheme, to which\nthey cannot rid themselves of a feeling of\nindebtedness, but to which the bounties of\nnature have precluded the necessity of any\npecuniary offering from them. This!\ntampering with a disease, may lull the pa-\ntient for a while, but its effects will be to\nsuffer the complaint to acquire strength\ninsuperable to all attempts at cure. Where\nis there a country on earth more fruitful\nin. resources than America ? But where\nwould the colonies, planted on those shores,\nnow be, had they not been sustained by\nthe powerful hand of European patronage?\nOn all the principles of human calcula-\ntion, they would exist now, only as a his-\ntoric fact, that an attempt had been made\nto colonize that country."\nThe reader, by recurring to the part\nwe have placed in italics, will see that the\nLiberia Herald deprecates the fallacious\nreports about the prosperity of the colony,\nwith which our anti-aboliti- on
d4af1886ff07ae1e56250fd669fd7d32 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.0315068176053 41.681744 -72.788147 bers, has the following to say:\nThere is much more to the Lions\nclub than merely coming to a meet\ning once a week, listening to a\nspeaker, singing a song or two and\nthen repeat the same thing the fol-\nlowing week. The Lions club and\nevery other club of the same cali\nbre ought to have a big objective, a\nbig incentive. They should use their\npower and means to further pro\njects of a public nature. The fol\nlowing resolution is presented for\njour perusal and approval.\n"The board of directors of the\nLions club of New Britain acting in\ntheir official capacity as the welfare\ncommittee of the Lions club do here\nby submit as a worthy project for\nthe Lions club for the year 1825, the\nfollowing resolution:\n"Whereas There are many chil\n in our public and other schools,\naccording to the records of the\nschool departme.it, who are suffering\ntrom defective vision, whoso parents\ncannot afford the services of a spe-\ncialist and the expense of procur-\ning suitable glasses, and\n"Whereas tha alleviation of this\ncondition is not met by any other\nagency in the cityof New Britain:\n"Be it resolved That the Lions\nclub of New Britain assume as its\nchief objective for the year 1925,\nthe obligation of assisting such chil-\ndren whose parents cannot afford the\nexpense of doctor's services and the\nprocuring of suitable glasses, and be\nit further resolved that in order to\nmeet the probable expense entailed\nIn affording aid in all worthy cases,\nthat the Lions membership under-\nwrite this expense to the extent of\n$10 a member, as a minimum."
8ee74f5de4788b34718b88566ccdfd31 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.360273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 still talking to himself, "Peter Rab-\nbit had come up to this young or-\nchard and sampled the tender bark\nof the trees it wouldn't have sur-\nprised me at all. But it does sur-\nprise me to find Johnny Chuck doing\nanything like this. I'll keep an\neye on that young fellow. 1 I see\nhim up in one of these young trees\nagain I'll set a trap for him and\nmove him. He can't hurt the old\napple trees, but he can kill these\nyoung trees without half trying. I .\ncan protect them from Mice and\nRabbits by putting wire around the\ntrunks, but if Johnny is going to be\ntrue to his Squirrel blood and turn\nclimber, wire protectors will be of\nno use. Now, I've got to get a new\ntree to put In place of this one, and\nit will take a new tree two years\nto be as big and good as this one\nwas before Johnny Chuck killed it.\nThe little rascal!"\nFarmer Brown's Boy went Over to\n house. He wasn't out of sight\nbefore Johnny Chuck was sitting on\nhis doorstep. He watched Farmer\nBrown's Boy go, and It didn't once\nenter Johnny's head that he had al-\nmost made an enemy of Farmer\nBrown's Boy. No, sir. it didn't en-\nter hifl head once. But he almost\nhad done that very thing. You eee\nFarmer Brown's Boy had planted\nthose young apple trees himself and\nhe was looking to them to bring\nhim In some money In a few years.\nAs for Chatterer tho Red Squirrel,\nwho was the cause of all this trou-\nble, he had scampered over to the\nOld Stone Wall, along the Old Stone\nWall to the edge of the Green For-\nest, and now was his usual saucy,\nImpudent self as he oponed a nice\ncone to get the seeds. Already he\nhad forgotten all about the scare\nthat Johnny Chuck had given him\nby climbing that young apple, tree\nafter him. He was ready for new\nmischief now.\n(Copyright, 1916, by T. W . Burgess)
30235607b951f553fa80d318c42a7675 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.5164383244546 39.261561 -121.016059 Clvn, Waii in Ohio. —A telegraphic despatch\nfrom Cincinnati furnishes a brief account of the\narrest, by the United States Marshal and his\ndeputies, offour persons charged with harbor-\ning fugitive slaves. Subsequently, a writ of\nhabeas corpus was taken out and served by the\nSheriff, who waB backed by a large number of\ncitizens. The Marshal resisted the State officers\nshots were exchanged between the parties; but\neventually the United States officers were ar-\nrested and conveyed to Springfield, there to an-\nswer the charge of resisting the Sheriff while in\nthe discharge of his duty. Here is a collision\nof the stockholders of tile Underground Rail-\nroad Company and the federal authorities that\nwill create an iutensc commotion.\nThe New Cent. —Sixty thousand dollars of\nthe new cent, comprising six million pieces,\nwere paid out at the Philadelphia Mint on the\n25th and 26th of May, and orders were still\ncoming in from all quarters the Union, even\nfrom the South and Southwest, where the old\ncent never obtained circulation. Nine presses\nare engaged at the Mint in making impressions\non this new coin, the whole force of the estab-\nlishment being employed upon them, and the\nsum of $2786 40 in cents is thrown off each day.\nA Colored Man Elected to Office.—Tbos.\nHowland, a colored stevedore, has been elected\nwarden in the Third Ward of Providence, R I.\nThe result it appears was brought about through\na joke, but it turned out to be a reality, and a\nfew days ago Howland demanded to lie sworn\ninto office. His election, upon examination, was\nfound to be legal, aud he was thereupon sworn\nand entered upon the discharge of his duties.\nSenators A. P. Butler, of South Carolina, and\nJames Bell, of New Hampshire, are dead.\nHon. Fayette McMullin, of Virginia, has ac-\ncepted the position of Governor of Washington\nTerritory.
0f35e1b819aac16b1b051d932ff922b9 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1883.5794520230847 37.53119 -84.661888 Sunday is appropriate. Oa a week day,\nout of time and keeping. Our congrega-\ntion was good Monday night, but only 3\nconfessions. Perfect liberty in preaching\nand all apparently interested. I verily be\nlieve the above explanation is the true one.\nSo Tuesday night though the rain\nthinned the audience, the attendance and\nattention were excellent. But only 1 con-\nfession. The penplo are becoming much\ninterested. The dear LORD baa given me\nfavor with the people, I am happy to say;\nand I feel sure the Scotch will receive my\ngospel. It gives me deepest joy to write\nthis, for I was really nervous about Scot-\nland, knowing how fearfully Calvlnlatlc\nand orthodox they were; until I cast my\nburden on the Lord and resolved to try and\nplease Him instead of laying myself to\nplcaso tho Scotch. Then I had perfect\npeace and no trouble in winning the hearts\nI wanted to gain for Jesus. O blessed way\nto accomplish everything.\nWe have also visited Roslin Chapel,\nwonderful old structure with such carvings\nin stone on pillars and roof that the like\nof it can scarcely be found elsewhere. One\npillar, wrought by an apprentice, it ia re-\nlated, was no much better than his master\ncould execute, that in a rage at being ex-\ncelled by Ida underling, he struck him a\nblow with a chisel, from which he died.\nThe pillar unlike all the others, aud far\nthe most elaborate, is called the "Appren-\ntices pillar" to this day.\nYeiiterday we went over Newb.itlle Ab\nbey, the country seat of the Maiquis of\nLothian
01c382990ddff4edd9b6b53b33ea2484 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.6051912252074 37.53119 -84.661888 urday he was able to draw as pretty a\nlot of 200 pound blocks ns ono would\nwish to see. The machinery is run\nnight nnd day nnd three blocks are drawn\nevery hour, though moro could be. Mr.\nCreighton says there never was better\nwater for ice making than nt the water\nworks. Tiie average temperature of the\nwater he has to use over the country is\n04, some ruuning as high as 70, but\nthis is o7J; ordinarily it takes 30 hours\nto freeze a block, hero only 31. Three\nmen can mannge tho busiuebs after ev-\nerything gets straight and ns the same\nongineeis will run nlso the water works\nnnd the electric plnnt, it is figured that\nice can be produced nt 07 cents a ton.\nThe company hns nn oiler for nil it can\nmake at ;7 ton, so it will be seen that\nthere is big money in it, even if the cost\nis $1 or more a ton. Tho capacity of the\nplant is eight tons a day. The novelty\nof seeing ico mndn drew n tremendous\ncrowd to the works Sunday and Mr.\nCreighton did his best to show every-\nthing to his visitors, till once the building\ngot so thick with citizens of African 'scent\nthat he had to let loose n spray of am-\nmonia, and in less time than it takes to\ntell it, every last one of them had va-\nmoosed. Wo are indebted to Mr.\nCreighton for numerous favors and\nmuch information. Ho hns proven him-\nself a clever and capable man and nil\nwho have had business with him will\nregret that his time to leave is eo near at\nhand.
3a4ef41cb3c44289c1ef28eddc31b74d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.5164383244546 39.745947 -75.546589 Visitors from other planets would\nget most terrifying Impressions of us\nwere they to depend exclusively upon\ncertain dally papers for their Informa­\ntion as to our doings A superficial\nglance at almost any edition of a cer­\ntain class of modern newspapers would\nsuffice to convict us of total depravity.\nHow could they help thinking that we\ndid nothing but. steal and murder and\nget drunk, plus a thousand other\ncrimes and scandals? We who have\nlived on the planet all our lives know\nthat generally speaking the dally\npapers deal with only one side of our\nlife, namely the seamy side. It is not\nthat the modern Journalist Is such a\ndevotee of depravity himself, but ex­\nperience has proved that the doings\nof depravity sell more papers than\nthose of goodness.\nIf our visitors would remain a while\nwith us we could show them such a\ndeal of goodness as would lead them to\nchange their opinion of us. We would\nundo the effect of the sensational pub-\nlication of the alienation of the af­\nfections (?) of Mrs. Greens husband\nby a Miss Brown, by introducing them\nto a hundred single women who mind\ntheir own business envy no woman\nher husband. To offset the defalcation\nof Deacon Jones as exclusively told in\nThe Morning Blaze, we could name\nthem off-hand a score of deacons who\ncan keep a set of books without a\nsingle thought of the salubrious cli­\nmate of Canada To neutralize the\nsickening force of the startling moral\nbreak-down of the pastor of the church\nof the good shepherd, we could point\nthem to a hundred thousand ministers\nof the gospel who are strictly Immune\nagainst stock gambling or five oclock\ntea flirtations.\nThis is>not an exhortation to the press\nto risk its circulation on a line of\ncopy which It Is sad to say. the paper\nbuying public does not seem to crave.\nIt Is simply a little word to the mod­\nern reader to bear In mind that the\nbadness that is getting such a' volum­\ninous blazoning Is after all small and\nimpotent compared with the goodness\nthat gets little or no blazoning When\nyour eyes rest on head-lines that fell\nof atrocities, Infidelities, dishonesties,\nrecall the many unchronicled kind­\nnesses. fidelities, heroisms and loyal­\nties that keep the world sweet and\nsane and hearten men for the battle of\nlife.
10ff06935ad94ac23e86ce14f3de9d7a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1895.1821917491122 41.004121 -76.453816 George Steers, to bring the cup to this\ncountry. Here it has remained ever\nsince, and has become known to fame\nas the "America Cup," and as the most\nimportant trophy of yachting suprem-\nacy in the world. Probably no other\nquality manifested by Americans has\nproved so irritating to John Bull aa\nour sucess in defending this trophy,\nwhich he still regards as the "Queen's\nCup," and seeks with bulldog tenacity,\nto take back to England. The Eng-\nlish yachts Cambria, Livonia, Genesta,\nGalatea, Thistle and Valkyrie, and the\nCanadian yachts Countess of Dufferia\nand Atlanta, have all tried for the cup,\nand been beaten by Yankee yachts and,\nskippers. These contests have attract-\ned the attention of the whole world,\nand led to most important changes in\nyacht racing and designing on \nsides of the Atlantic, bo that at the\npresent time the sport absorbs the at-\ntention of emperors, princes, lords and\nmillionaires, as well as of all whoever\nsaw a sailboat or who love the excite-\nment of international contests.\nThe most absorbing Interest is taken\nin the coming contest on both sides of\nthe Atlantic. The challenger is Lord\nDunraven, who made the unsuccessful\ncontest with the Valkyrie ln 1893. He\nis having a new yacht built, which la\nto be ninety feet ln length on the wa-\nter line. It will also be named the\nValkyrie, and will be built by Watson,\nthe famous English yacht designer,\nwho planned the Thistle and the first\nValkyrlo and many other famous Eng-\nlish yachts, including the Prince of\nWales" cutter Britannia.\nEnglish yachtsmen
0d44728234347dda4a1db5ba945cb295 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1887.1301369545915 39.743941 -84.63662 muii purpose alter oeiioeranng on tne an\ndetermined upon. They came prepared to'\ntake this-- life of this man. The crime with\nwhich Mussel was charged had been .commit\nted a number of days before. There was m\nsudden shock at that period to overcome the\nreelings and blunt tbe understanding of these\npersons, and br the enormity of tbe crime\nrender tbem in a manner irresponsible for\ntheir acts. On the contrary sufficient time\nlor tne cooling of passion had elapsed; and\ntbey came with deliberation and premedita\ntion, and unlawfully deprived a human being\nof life. What further need I say to you t If\nMussel, when he slew his victim, was guilty\nof the crjme of murder, were not these perpe-\ntrators of the second crime also guilty T It is\nan unpleasant duty, gentlemen, but not tbe\nless imperative for the court to call your sol\nemn attention to this state of facts; and it is'\nyour sworn duty to examine all tne circum\nstances and ly render your nnoing.\nDuring your deliberations your Foreman\nwill be the presiding officer, and you will find\nit convenient to appoint one of your number\nto act as clerk or scrivener. You should keep\nno record of the testimony before you, other\nthan is sufficient to inform the Prosecuting\nAttorney of yonr findings, and thus assist\nhim in formulating indictments and even\nthis record should then be destroyed, as oth\nerwise the evidence of witnesses or your find-\nings might become public.\nFifteen persons, with the proper qualifica\ntions, constitute a Grand Jury,. but twelve of\nou only need eoncur in finding an indictment,-'o -\nmar, if convenient, make your meetings'.\nand adjournments conform to the meetings\nand adjournments of court and use such dil-\nigence in vour investigations as mar be com-- "\npatible with the important work you are re-\nquired to perform; remembering that all of\nyou mnst be present when evidence is heardj\nor a vote on the finding of an indictment\ntaken.
3a7f1dfe1c2fca2f75b0c784c9aa411a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.746575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 holder*, October 5. 1021.\nYou are hereby notified that a special\nmeeting of the atoekholdera of Huron\nMetals Company will be held at Room\n410, 40 State street, Poston. Massachu­\nsetts. on October 5, 1021, at 10.30 oclock\nin the forenoon, for the purpose of con­\nsidering the dissolution of the company,\nIn accordance with the following resolu­\ntion of the Board of Directors:\n• RESOLVED—That in the Judg­\nment of its Board of Directors, it Is\nadvisable and most for the benefit of\nHuron Metals Company, that said\ncompany should be dissolved and to\nthat end, as required by law, that a\nmeeting of the stockholders of said\ncorporation, to take action upon this\nresolution be, and it hereby is called,\nto be held at the office of said com­\npany, located at Room 410. 40 State\n Boston. Massachusetts, ou the\nfifth day of October, 192L at 10.30\noclock in the forenoon of that day,\nand that the secretary of this cor­\nporation be and he hereby is directed\nwithin ten days after the adoption\nof this resolution, to cause notice of\nthe adoption of this resolution, to\nbe mailed to each stockholder of said\ncorporation residing in the United\nStates, and also beginning within\nten days to cause a like notice to be\ninserted in a newspaper, published in\nthe county of N\nDelaware, at least three weeks, suc­\ncessively, once a week, next preced­\ning the time appointed, as aforesaid,\nfor said meeting of stockholders. ”\nAs two-thirds of the stockholders mus.\nassent to such dissolution, you are urged\nto sign And return the enclosed proxy, if1\nunable to be present In person.
61b010102b1adf6ab21a58b95aece341 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.6999999682903 39.261561 -121.016059 poor nostrums and Vurc alls, purporting to be the\nbest In the world, which are not ofily useless, but\nalways Injurious. The unfortunate should he I'AK\nthtlau in selecting Ids physician, as it is a lament-\n•iM» vet incontrovertible tact Hint many nypnilitic\npatients nre mad® miserable with ruined constitutions\nby mal treatment from inexperienced physicians in\ngeneral practice; for it is a p< int generally conceded\nby the best svphilographers, tlist thestndv ami man-\nagement oftheso complaints should engrossthe whole\ntime (.r those who would be competent and successful\nin their treatment and cure. Tlie inexperienced gen-\neral practitioner, having neither opportunity nor\ntime to make himself sufficiently acquainted with\ntheir pathology, coinonly pursues one system of treat-\nment, in most cases making an indiscriminate use of\nthat antiquated and dangerous weapon, mercury.\nMore caution, however, should be used by thesyph\n patient, in consulting nominal physicians, of\nthe advertising class, as nine-tenths of them are im-\nposters, who assume German, French, or other\nnames, and are without any claims to medicalkm wl-\nedge. These knavish rascals infest all large cities,\nand, by means of their lying advertisement and pos-\nters, they induce the unwary to enter their Deter\nj. nn'l; “institutions.” and unmercifully fleece them\nand poison them with mercury. Persons living at a\ndistance in the country nre more apt to he duped by\nthe lying notices of quacks than citizens.\nIn view of the above facts, Dr. J . C . YOUNG\nwould say that he is the only regularly educated\nphysician in t'atifornia now advertising, who do-\nvotes his whole time to the treatment .funereal\ndiseases. Office, 751 ( lav street, opposite the Plaza.\nHoursfrom 9a. m..to 3 P. M.
1a8a53fccb61c7629fb1ba455137ccd4 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1884.1379781104533 37.561813 -75.84108 laid would be hatched out before the\nlast cells would be reached, and\nwhen the queen has reached the op-\nposite end of the hive from where\nshe began laying, the cells at the\nother end will be ready to refil, so it\nis plain to be seen that she could\nnot lay any more eggs if the hive\nwere twice as large. The hive should\ncontain no ventilators, as bees do\nnot require any more ventilation\nthan what they get through the en-\ntrance, which should be wide and\nshallow, and supplied with blocks\nfor contracting in cold weather, or\nfor weak swarms. When bees are\nput into a hive, no matter what kind,\nthe first thing they do is to close\nup every crack and crevice through\nwhich air may enter or escape,\nleaving no opening but the entrance,\nand so we conclude that they do not\nrequire ventilators, or Nature, that\nunerring teacher, would have taught\nthem to leave some air holes for\nthat purpose, and then they possess\nthe power to ventilate their hives\nwhenever they require it. They can\nlower or increase the temperature of\ntheir hives at will. Every bee-k eep-\nhas doubtless observed his bees in\nvery hot weather, around the en-\ntrance with their heads close down\non the bottom board and their bodies\nelevated at an angle of 45 degrees,\nand turned towards the entrance and\ntheir wings in very rapid motion.\nWell, they were ventilating the hive,\nand if it be opened at such time,\nevery bee in it will be found going\nthrough the same motions.
3f6a91c48e1abf97536e5d7b0f66aaa8 THE COLUMBIA EVENING MISSOURIAN ChronAm 1921.3712328450026 38.951883 -92.333737 Sybil John via Joe Thornton Virginia\nHale Virginia Roswell and Ola Smith\nThese ten were chosen only from the\nseventy six who were in the Columbia\nHigh School for the four vcars Their\ngrades all average above S to F\nSince the senior class took such an\nactive interest in the schools outside\nactivities some of the popular men in\nathletics will leave vacancies on the\nteams The entire basket ball team was\nromposcd of seniors with one exception\na opliomore Basil Gwinn This team\nwas a record breaker for the school and\nwas one of the best Columbia High\nSchool lias turned out for some time\nThe class holds many letter men among\nthem Ocil Coggins who was captain of\nthe football team this year He has two\nletters in and two in football\nKcginald Underbill lakes with him a let\nter in basketball and football Ceogre\nWowdorth wlio for the year held the\nVlace of center on the football team rnJ\nlias a letter in football graduates How\nard Evcrhart has three letters in basket-\nball in which he distinguished himelf\nas a guard and also has a letter in foot-\nball William Stephenson has a letter\nin feclball as also does Harlan Hibbard\nwho received one letter each in basket-\nball and football Hibbard is primarily\nnoted in the High School for his leader\nship in Columbia High Schools enlhusi\natic songs and yells this year\nRaeliall was nol a major sport this\nyear although the senior clas took an\nactive interest in it and there was much\ninterclass rivalry
006160c0f51d91923581d5b5d43795fb NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.195890379249 41.681744 -72.788147 at the council meeting this week that\nthe provision which calls for the\ntabling of the report of the board of\nfinance and taxation for a week af-\nter it is reported to that body should\nbe eliminated and in accordance with\nthat view an amendment to the char-\nter was proposed and it will be tak-\nen up by the legislative committee\nwhen the, report reaches the\nat Hartford. The only reason for this\namendment is that It delays matters.\nThe idea in the first place was that\nthe members of the council should\nhave an opportunity to think over\nwhat the report said before taking\naction upon it. This looks like a\nsound reason because adopting a re-\nport involving close to three quarters\nof a million dollars may easily be\nconstructed as. being a very impor-\ntant matter. It may be that the\ncouncil feels "that sufficient publicity\nis given the work of the board of\nfinance and taxation before it reaches\nthe council chamber and that there\nis no reason for any further delay. It\nis difficult to see how any good can\nbe accomplished by this proposed\n It may be claimed that it\ndoes no good but it has been of some\nvalue and even if it has not it has\ndone no harm and no good reason can\nbe advanced for its repeal. The city\nseems to be bent on making changes\nof one kind or another in the charter\nand this will account for the amend-\nments rather than that there is any\nparticular reason for it. It is always\na good plan to improve a document\nof this kind but changes are not de\nsirable unless this can be done. There\nare apparently some who still believe\nin some of the old ideas of manage-\nment, notwithstanding the fact that\nexperience has shown that they did\nnot always produce the best results.\nThe older members of the common\ncouncil are dropping out and it is\nannounced that more are going to re-\ntire this sprng. It is always a mat-\nter of general regret when a good\nmember declines to serve any longer.\nGood members are sometimes bard to\nget and once they are obtained it is a\nloss to the city to have them retire.\n,
0d7d55891331c3e3a1c7bb77da694a4a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1896.5177595312184 42.217817 -85.891125 aches; that's a sign that the kidneys are\nnot working properly; it is lame; another\nsin, the kidneys are out of order. The kid-\nneys, vou know, are the filters of the blood,\nbut filters sometimes get clogged up.\nThis means in their case that the blood\ncourses through the entire system impreg-\nnated with poisonous uric acid, bringing\non many a disorder which, if neglected,\nmeans disease perhaps incurable. And\nnow about the cure : Don't take our word\nfor it; read what others say :\nMr. David C. Oaks is proprietor of tho\nwell known hardware and paint shop at\nS?2') East Mala Street, Kalamazoo. Mr.\nOaks has suffered a great deal from kidney\nailments; ho described his condition and\ncure as follows: "I had a bad, lame back,\nwhich I suppose was caused my kid-\nneys ; was confined to my bed during bad\nattacks. I might say, from time to time,\nI have been in that condition for years.\nThe urinary organism was affected, urine\nbring scanty, highly colored, and difficult\nin passage. I was ia a bad shape when\nI irot a box of Doan's Kidney Pills, about\nwhich 1 had heard. I have used now\ntwo boxes of them, and the pills have\nremoved all tho pain and trouble. Then?\nwas a marked improvement right from\nthe first, ami it has continued ri!;t\nalong. Doan's Kidney Pills are the right\nthing in the right place."\nFor sale bv all dealers price, 50 cents.\nMailed bv Foster Milbum Co.. IJutlalo.\nN. Y., sole agents for the U. S . Remember\nthe name, Doan's, and take uo other.
30a39f4d14feb4a815ccaae79e9e57f0 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1910.0534246258244 39.623709 -77.41082 more of this mmsetise between you\nand young Herbert.\nThat was all The major congratu-\nlated himself that his order would be\nobeyed, uud Miss' Janet pul on a look\nand assumed the attitude of a broken\nhearted girl not long for this world.\nThe mother became worried and pro-\ntested. and Hie major became a little\nbit anxious and talked about spring\ntonics, though he had no li®i of coun-\ntermanding Ids order All might have\ngone well If the grocer who supplied\nthe house hadnt called his delivery\nboy a slouch and u lazyhoues aud If\nthe sai(l boy hadnt Ured up uud unit\nhis Job. Another took his place Just us\nMiss Janet wanted to send a note to\nher lover real bad. The change of\nboys perplexed her for a moment, and\nshe hadnt time to go Into explanations\nfurther than to hand him the missive\nand U) cents and mention Mr Herbert.\nThe boy grinned and nodded, and the\nwagon rattled away, and ten minutes\nlater he was perusing letter. His\nname hapiietied to la? Herbert, and he\nhappened to be a vain boy, and he fur-\nther happened to believe that Miss\nJanet had got struck on him. It was\na proud moment for him. for he al-\nready had another girl on the string.\nShe worked In a shirt factory, and\nshe wasnt u tony girl, hut he loved\nher He was also Jealous of her. and\nuow was his chance to get even.\nMr Herbert did not get the note In-\ntended for him: Miss Janet did not get\na reply ns expected: the mother saw\nnew cause to belltfve that her daughter\nwas not long for this world, and the\nmajor sighed and wished that some\none would come in aud listen to his\nwar stories That grocers boy had\nbrought butter, eggs and potatoes, but\nbe had left a load of curbing care be-\nhind him Next morning brought\nsomething like a sudden thunderclap.\nMiss Janet received a letter mailed at\nthe village posiottlee the night previ-\nous
4c4f2bff4a28220eb5c5c01a5ff9c4a8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.1986301052766 39.261561 -121.016059 The commercial supremacy of Northern\ncities has been among the chief causes of\nthe secession movement, by creating a jeal-\nousy on the part of the less prosperous\ntowns of the Southern seaboard. The New\nOrleans. Mobile and Charleston papers Lave\neach prophesied that secession would make\ntheir respective cities the great commercial\nemporium of the New World, and ruin the\ncommercial cities of the North. Similar ar-\nguments, thongh to a less extent, were made\nuse of to influence the people of the border\nStates to secede. The Norfolk (Va.) Ar-\ngus, in one of its issues previous to the late\nelection in that State, said:\nLet Virginia take her proper position at once\nas the leading member of the Southern Confed-\neracy, and Norfolk and Portsmouth will spring\nup into great cities, which will ultimately con-\ntrol the vast commerce of the New The\nworkings of the Federal Government have\ndwarfed the cities of the South, and no port ha*\nfelt in a greater degree the disadvantages of\nFederal legislation than our own.\nLet Southern and Western trade be once\nfreed from that great commercial maelstrom.\nNew York, and it will come pouring into our\nlap. Norfolk is the natural seaport of North\nAmerican trade, but the diversion of its legiti-\nmate commerce from New York to its harbor\ncan never be accomplished except by a dissolu-\ntion of the Union. While we should never have\ncountenanced the destruction of the American\nRepublic for the sake of the great prosperity it\nwould bring Virginia and her seaport, yet now\nthat the North is driving us to a separation, it\nis most comfortable to refect that this forced\nseparation brings us to the promise of great\nwealth and prosjierity.
112ec2d1da4a6b9aaca7577913b5774d THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.8534246258243 32.408477 -91.186777 ools. escorts Fran from the tent. He\nt1llh her Gregory is a wealthy man,\ndeeply interested in charity work, and a\npillar of the church. Ashton becomes\ngreatly interested in Fran and while tak- b\nina leave of her, holds her hand and is y\nseen by Sapphira Clinton. sister of Rob-\nert Clinton, chairman of the school board. 0\nFran tells Gregory she wants a home b\nwith him. Grace Noir. Gregory's private\nsecretary, takes a violent ditike to Fran\nand advises her to go away at once. (\nraan hints at a twenty-year-old secret.\nnd Gregory in agitation asks Grace to\nearv the room. Fran relates the story d\nbf how Gregory married a young girl at\npringfield while attending cole and\nthen deserted her. Fran is the child of\nthat marriage. Gregory had married his\npresent wife three ears before the death\nof Fran's mother. Pran takes a liking to (\nGregory. Gregory explains that\nrn o the daughter of a very dear friend\nwho is dead. Fran agrees to the story.\nMr Oregory insists on her making \nhome with them and takes her to her\narms. It is decided that Fran must go to s\nschool. Grace shows persistatent interest\nin Gregory's story of his dead friend and I\nhints that Fran may be an Imposter. s\nFran declares that the secretary must go.\nGrace begins nagging tactics in an effort\nto drive Fran from the Gregory home. but\nMrs. Greory remains stanch in her\nfriendship. Fran is ordered before Super-\nlntendent Ashton to be punished for in- t\nsubordination in school. Chairman ClIn-\nton is present. The affair ends in Fran\nleaving the school in company of the two\nmen to the amazement of the scandal-\nmongers of the town. Abbott, while tak- q\nIng a walk alone at midnlgnt, finds Fran F\non a bridge telling her fortune by cards.\nShe tells Abbott that she is the famous\nlion tamer. Fran Nonpareil. She tired of\ncircus life and sought a home. Grace tells\nof seeing Fran come home after midnight t\nwith a man. She guesses part of the\nstory and surprises the rest from Abbott.
05ed3b7049ea65ba59440d34b0355474 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1888.3401639028032 39.756121 -99.323985 Prsident Arthur offered Mr. Conk\nling associate justiceship of the su\npreme court, which he declined. Af tei\nhis retirement from politics he devote\nhimself to the practice of law, in whicl\nhe enjoyed signal success. It is statec\nthat when he left Washington after hii\nresignation he was compelled to lor\nrow money to pay his fare to New\nYork. He had never been a money-\nmaker in public life, but as a lawyer he\nenjoyed large fees. A friend and ad-\nmirer thus wrote of him a year ago:\n"The intimate friends of lioscoe Conk-\nling say that, as he grows old, he is\ngradually losing that aecerbity and\nimperiousness of manner which in the\npast drove so many men from his side\nand lost him the position of one of the\nforemost political of the country.\nWhen in New York city and, having\nto all intents and purposes given up\nhis Utica home, he is never absent\nfrom it now, except when the demands\nof his profession call him to the su\npreme court at Washington or the court\nof appeals at Albany he is a steady\npatron of the opera and of the theatre,\nwhere he loves to go behind the\nscenes, a habitue of the parlors of the\nManhattan club, and a visitor on\nodd nights at the Hoffman house cafe."\nMr. Conkling was becoming compar-\natively rich when his last sickness came\non. He never made any money in poli-\ntics, and when he left the senate found\nhimself responsible to the extent of\nsome $20,000 for the debts of a friend\nwhose security he had gone.
34ee4e4e4418a29ca6effd027c9bee3e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.560273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 Owing to the delay In the Paymaster\nGeneral's office in pay ing the additional\nbounty, the soldier claimants have be¬\ncome very impatient. Some have very\nnaturally taken the impression that\nthe claim agents thronghout the coun¬\ntry have collected the money and are\nusing U. Whatever else may be laid to\ntheir charge, we are satisfied this im¬\npression is a mistaken one.\nThese bounty claims are paid by a\nPaymaster's check for the $ 100 on New\nYork, which check is made payable to\nthe soldier claimant, or to his order.\nOt course any bank or banker, and al-\nmost any merchant, in the United States\nwill cash this check. But no one will\nor should cash it till the soldier himself,\nin person, writes his own name on thei\nback of the check. This is because ill\nIs payable to the soldier's order ouly.\n the Claim Agent would have to\ncommit a forgery to get tbe money\nafter he got the check. It is not to be\nsupposed that an attorney would thus\nrender himself liable to tbe penitentia¬\nry. A claim agent must be most anx¬\nious to let tbe soldier know whenever\nhis olaim Is paid. He cannot get bis\nfee till tbe soldier signs the check, or\nratber endorses it. Now if an agent\nhas one hundred claims, be has, say at\n95 per claim,9500 interest In tbe bounty,\nand would be'more interested to have\nIt paid soon.than the soldier who;wiIl get\nonly f#5. Depend upon !t, every soldier\nwill bear promptly from bis agent\nwhenever his claim is paid. Congress\nhas appointed a oomtniuee of three;\nCongressmen to remain In Washington\nafter the adjournment of Congress to\nnrge on and facilitate the payment of\nthess claims.
2ac60244b69da25d1cb9386457f73f79 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.1794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 r. V . Cor. nf tH>i. VomiMiriai. ^\nThe influences which affeot the gold pre- n\nilunis are but few. p\n1. So fiir as lesUlation is cftneerned, n\nIiere is notliing to fear. Since the recent H.\nxpression of opinion In the Senate against C(\nxpansion of the currency, there w no ^\nhnnceofuny measure of inllution being u\nassed by Congress. If Sherman's Fund* (j\nig Bill becomes a law, we will perhaps 8l\ne able to get a portion of the new loan gI\niken abroad on cheaper terms than we tj\now pay. But it it (,loes not become a u,\niw, the Secretary of the Trcasuir has 0]\ntiter efficient means of action in his hands.\n2. fo far as our crcdlt abroad affects lit j,\nold market, wo in a better way than, w\nver we were before. The one thousand y\ndllions of Government bonds held In rt\nInrhnn hftvo fitonrtllv risen in value VCar .1!\ny year since their exportation till now !L\nley are all oa tlie very vergo of par, some ]c\nf tliem having octuahy reached tlic par j\naliic. The markets of Europe show their M\nlith In onr credit by taking our paper, In ,v\nonstantly Increasing quantity, at our own\naluation. Congress gavo them reason for q\nlis fhltli last session, \\vhco it repeated tho ^\noclaration that tho principal as well as nl\n:ie intorist of our bonds was paynblo in c|\noin. It seems, too, that the decision ol ^\n:ic Supremo Court lias strengthened their IU\nasuranco in our financial morality.
e7589f46482747b3ff3ccc40b855dda1 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.0589040778793 31.960991 -90.983994 taining the observations of such men as Dr.\nDurbin, with Dr. Robinson and others; for hereby\nwe share, at least, with Europe the honor of\nsome of the best works on the geography and\nantiquity of the Holy Land. In this land, every\nscene has its sanctity or its peculiar stirring\nemotions; every name awakens some association\nof wonder, of reverence, or at least, of laudable\ncuriosity. This being the case, we opened these\nvolumes with delight, but with some feelings of\ndespondency, that, here are two more volumes of\ntravels in Palestine; we closed them with respect\ngratitude to the author, that he has succeeded\nin making plainer and more intelligible many of\nthe Prophecies resjiecting this Land of wonders.\nWith the most profound veneration for the\ntruth of the sacred writings, he does-not \nto submit to the test of dispassionate inquiry,\nand o? comparison with the records of scripture,\nevery legend of which this land of wonder is\nso inexhaustibly fertile. Tfie interest of Pales­\ntine and its neighboring province^ is, and must\never be inexhaustible—the Palestine of the pa­\ntriarchs, where the pastoral ancestors of the\nJews, having been summoned from Messopota-\nmia, settled with their flocks and herds among\nthe agricultural tribes of its earlier inhabitants\n—the Palestine of the chosen people, with all\ntheir solemn and eventful history—the Palestine\nof our Lord and his Apostles—the Palestine of\nJosephus, with the awful wars which ended in\nthe abomination of desolation in the Holy City\n—the Palestine of Pilgrimages numberless, of\nJerome and his monastic companions—the Pa­\nlestine of the Crusades, of Richard Cœur de
4e49aabe7f1a71783c3c76980aa14fed OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1874.9219177765094 41.020015 -92.411296 NKW YOBK,Dec. 2—Nearly all the ahif-\nowners who have been waiting oa a settle,\nment of the Longshoreamen dlffienltlta, be­\ngan work loading and unloading tn Brook­\nlyn, lloboken and Jersey City, as well as\nNew York, employing non-society mtn in\nevery instance. Some of the heaviest Anna\nannounced their intention of ntvtr again\nemploying any Union men. All apeak well\noi the claia of labor offering. Skilled long­\nshoremen being attracted Irora abroad, and\nlarge numbers of men from the coal minini\nregions are applying for Work, which\nreadily furniahed tbem. Occasional alight\nskirmishes oocnr between tht itriken and\nnew laborers, but no serious dietnrbaacts.\nThe steamship and sailiog vtttel owners\nare both confident that their troubles are\nover. A convention of longthortmen last\nnight formally rescinded the older fo? a\ngeneral strike, and union men were author-\n to werk for anybody who would pay\nthem the old ratea except atavedorea for tba\nfirm of Wtlth Broa., with whom the diffi­\nculty leading to the strike originated.\nAltered United States reglateral bondt\nrecovered in the office of the mythical firm\nof J.J . Batchelder & Co., have been Idea-\ntified at a part of tht securities stolen from\nGlenn's rails National Bank foar.ysan\nago. Tbe bonds were coaetaled under the\ncarpet on a floor of a New atreet ofloe.\nTliey included two five tbomaad dollar\nbonds and one for ten thousand, from\nwhich the original numbers and netnea of\nthe bolder had been erased with chemicals\nand others Inserted. The recovered bonds\nare to be introduced in evidence to day la\nthe case of George 8. Hill, the Philadel­\nphia prisoner, who the detectives say is\nBatchelder ft Co.
37f725458394ddf15da4d73c2d691c82 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.7136985984273 42.217817 -85.891125 In van Kara on the west and Harney's\nPeak on the east, the other two corners\nof a triangle that will cover the best\nportion of the Black Hills. Around\nInjan Kara were long, wide valh J\nstretching into sloj.es and miniature\nprairies, with hen.' and there a gypsum\nbed jutting out, white and ciear, lest\ntoe eve should tire with the constant\ngreen. Around Hartley's Peak, sharp,\nrugged Boenery, steep granite moun-\ntains, and rocks that AM as imposing as\nthe mosques of the Bo phorus. Nar-\nrow, cozy valleys, full of llowers and as\ncool as grottoes; rushing, bibbling\nstreams, aud miniature cascades, as if\nthe little brooks of the hills were try\nto ape the noisiness of the mountain\ntorrents. And the whole cluster, this\nbeauty spot OH AO almo t blRSS, totally\ndeeolstS prairie, embraced by the two\narms of the Shyeiii.c .\nThe Black hulls do not cover an area\nmuch larger than 0 hslf of MssSSCnU\nsetts. A line drawn directly through\nfrom north to south would not measure\nmore than 100 miles ; another from\neast to west would be less than 80. The\nsides of that triangle I alluded to do\nnot measure mOfC thau 10 miles j and\nthe majority of the intervening terri-\ntory is wooded hills. The best way of\nentering the hills, if you ever want ho\ngo to the gold fields, my reader, is to\ncome here, to Bear Butte, and follow\nCuster's trail. It took him along time\nto find a way out, and it will take you\nlonger to find a way in, if you attempt\nit in this region. Another entrance can\nbo made at Inyan Kara, at the south\n1 est, if you start from the Union Pacific\nrailroad, and you will find gold almost\nfrom the very start. Gypsum w ill come\nfirst, then mica, then the velvet valleys\nwith their golden lining. These two\ncourses are the most feasible, but of\ncourse trails may possibly be made else-\nwhere. The extreme southern ranges,\nthe ranges of the east and northwest,\nare almost impassible because of the\niteep declivities and the abruptness of\nthe foothills.
068add0a051b29b2bb6b39694f40c52d THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.3438355847286 39.560444 -120.828218 The bill lately introduced into the\nLegislature by Mr. Pratt, giving to the\nGovernor the power to appoint auctioneers,\nand to limit the number according to his\nwill, we consider a flagrant violation ofthe\nrights of one class of business men, whose\ncalling has always been legitimate and\nhonorable. It is one step more toward\nthe one-man power, so inconsistent with\ntrue Democratic principles—a measure\nthat will deprive several hundreds of our\ncitizens of the right to pursue what has\nhitherto been their only means of support,\nunless they are fortunate enough to come\nunder the great seal of gubernatorial pat-\nronage. It is too much to expect that\nappointments will be made out of the\nparty that happens at the time to be in\nthe ascendency, and that some time or\nother the law will be taken advantage of\nby designing men, to further their own\npartisan though such may not be\nthe case during the present administration.\nAll good statesmen, democrats and\nwhigs, believe that the powers vested in\nthe Governor are already great enough.\nThe duties of his office are already suffi-\nciently onerous without adding to them\nthe appointment cf petty officers in every\nlittle town in the* State. But argument\non this question is simply ridiculous.—\nThe bill we regard as the oflsping of a\nwatery brain, a miserable arrangement to\nkill time, and one that will meet with al-\nmost universal condemnation from the\nbetter part of all parties.\nGold is Washington Territory.—\nAccounts from Washington Territory,\nstate that gold has been discovered there\nin considerable quantities, and that quite\nan excitement exists among the people.\nStabbed.—Mr. Dosb, one of the pro-\nprietors of the Shasta Courier, was dan-\ngerously wounded in an affray on the 25th\nult.
036554571ffdee25dd9057b23f2139d0 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.6079234656447 40.735657 -74.172367 Proctor's Park Place Theatre will\nagain resume its ministrations to the\namusement-loving public with mati-\nnee and evening performances Mon-\nday, when one of tbe moat attractive\nbills ever presented in the local home\nof vaudeville will be placed on view.\nThe bill represents an all-star aggre-\ngation of entertainers.\nWhile it would be difficult to pick\na headliner arbitrarily, thia distinc-\ntion will probably be accorded to\n"Volant" and the "Flying Piano," one\nof the most mystifying acts on the\nvaudeville circuit. It prevents the\nweird and almost uncanny spectacle\nof a musician revolving through the\nair. seated at a baby grand piano, and\nexecuting tbe most difficult passages\nwith absolute technical mastery.\nThe bill will also serve to present\nsuch talented vaudeville artists as\nMiss Fanny Brice, who was re-\ncently featured in the Ziegfeld "Fol-\nlies." in which she scored such a pro-\nnounced success by reason of her In-\nimitable singing of coon songs and\npopular ballads. Mias Brice is a New-\nark girl, and should receive a warm\nwelcome from her old friends and ad-\nmirers In this city. Another promi-\nnent member of this clever company\nof entertainers will be S. Miller Kent,\nwho will have the support of a capa-\nble company in presenting "Tbe Real\nQ„ without exception the cleverest\ndetective playlet ever written\nAs a feature of the bill motion pic-\ntures of the recent parade and outing\nof the Louis V. Aronson Business\nMen's Association will be placed on\nview Those pictures were taken un-\nder the personal direction of F. F.\nProctor.
1c5803de2ac96554e01833186ae05aea OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0808218860984 39.513775 -121.556359 fat HE People of the B;hie ot California,To Phillip\n8 Urie l, Creeping : You are herubft required U>\nappear in an action brought against you by the\nabove nmued .PigiuUffiii the District Cdurl of the\nFifteenth Jinlicint IJirttricl, in mid for thu County id\nKittle, nr-d to aiiMVerTlie Complaint 111* il therein,\n(a copy of which accompanies this .summons .) with-\nin teii days (exclusive of the day ol service.) after\nibe service on yon of tills Summons, if servi d within\nthis Comity ; if servod out of this County, but with-\nin this Judicial District, within twenty days * or if\nout of said District, then within foriy days- or Judg-\nment by default will be taken against you.\nThe said action is brought to obtain judgment for\ntho recovery of the sum ot Two Hundred and I illy\nDollars, and interest thereon al the ralo ol per\ncent per aiimtpi from the second day ol July lust,\nand for a IbTn e b,r the foreclosure i ( a certain\nmortgage deed* ami for Ihe sale ol die mortgaged\npremises known as the Slaughter (ironmt of.i . A.\nPlait .8: Co , and more fully described in Plaintiffs\nComplaint herewith served; and for Execution\nagain st other property of Defendants, if said inert-\n.gaged premise/ should bo Insufficient to satisfy the\njudgment herein, am! for costs of suit, and ii you\ntuil to appeal* and answer the said Complaint ns\nabove reunited, the Plaintiff will apply (o the Court\nfor the relief ii his Complaint demanded.\n—-—. i Glvjii under my hand and Seal of ibe\n•skai.. { District Court of the Fifteenth Judin il\n— ) District,ibis Fourth day of December, iu\nti e year of our Lord otic thousand eight hundred and\nllfty-eov ii.
0018cf3c20b3c9b1607ac608341f5064 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.7246575025367 40.441694 -79.990086 I believe tbat all clay roads can be main-\ntained m good passable condition by tbe same\nrules be works under. Our farmers have not\ngot the means to macadamize or pave tbe thou-\nsands of miles of country roans, but they have\nhorses and time. Thus with plows to cnt tbe\nditches down, and road scrapers to move the\nmaterial up on the middle of the road and to\ntrim it ud again after wagon travel has rolled\nit down, they can make the best roadway\npossible a roadway which I regard as a better\naverage for either hard pulling or nice driving,\nsummer and winter, than Forbes or Highland\nvulcanite pavements, which are sllpperv and\ntreacherous in ram or winter and very difficult\nto haul a heavy load on In a hot day. I believe\ntbat if Commissioner F. were appointed a\ncblef State officer of highways three years,\nwith power to select bis assistants in each\ncounty, that even it he bad but little funds in\naddition to tbe general road tax, he would\nin that time put every clay road iu the State in\nas good condition as there is any necessity for,\nand farmers and others Interested would find\nlife worth living.\nThe important facts seem to be that a road-\nway with three feet of drainage on each side\nkeeps dry as a natural result: that a proper\ncurve allows tbe rain to run off immediately;\nthat sneb a body of clay has just about tbe\nproper amount of moisture to become more\nand more compact under travel, and tbat as a\nresult it sheds the water and that all things\nwork together to produce tbe desired result\nThis at least seems to be the case on Shady\navenue, East End.
11ac5e189262b42ee610e2f7395c624c WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.146575310756 40.827279 -83.281309 of the kind, had no books nor forms; yet\nI was determined to do things up strong,\nand in a legal manner, so I proceeded to the\nhotel, bearing in my arms one copy oi ine\nRevised Statutes, one ditto Webster's Un-\nabridged Dictionary, oue copy Urg e-s i ze- d\nBible, a small copy of the creed and arti-\ncles of Faith of the Congregational\nChurch, one copy of Pope's Essay on Man,\nand a sectional part of the map where the\nvictim lived. Having placed a table in\nthe middle of the room, and seated myself\nbehind it, I. in trumpet tones, called\nthe case. With that the young man and\nwoman, with great alacrity, stepped up\nbefore me. Having sworn them on the\ndictionary to answer well and truly all\nthe questions I was about to ask, 1 pro-\nceeded. I told the young man that, being\nan entire stranger, I should have to ask\nhim to give bail for the costs. Having\nheard this so very fiiquently in court, I\nthought it indispensable. He answered, if\nI meant thj fee for performing tbe cere-\nmony, he would deposit it then and there.\n 1 did not know exactly what I did\nmean, I magnanimously waived that por-\ntion of the ceremony. I then told him it\nwould be necessary to give bail to keep\nthe peace. This he said he was willing to\ndo when he arrived home, and I then\nwaived that point also.\nHaving established to my satisfaction\nthat they wanted to get married, and that\nthey were old enough to enter into that\nblessed state, I proceeded to tie the knot\nI asked him if he was willing to take that\nwoman to be his wife He said he was.\nI told him that I did not require haste in\nthe answer ; that he might reflect a few\nminutes if he wished. I told him she\nlooked like a fine girl, and I had no doubt\nshe was; but if the sequel proved that he\nhad been taken in, I did not want to be\nheld responsible. I said be must love,\nhonor, and obey her as long as the lived ;\nhe must not be "snappy" around the\nhouse, nor spit tobacco juice on the floor,\nall of which he promised faithfully to\nheed.
9b0766ace90a9f552e91ff3a601ddb77 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8237704601802 39.513775 -121.556359 To |>r, 11 , lit inliuiinii. Corner Jackson ami\nMontgomery streets, San Nrancisco —|)enr Sir:—lt\nis wiili yleii'iife lliat We notice Ihe mil tided sne-\nce*s which has attended yoa in your practice since\nyoiir rn-iilence in Ibis stale, now ever seven years.—•\nThe trend yon have done mu I the skill you have i*iit-\ncised In the cures Hcd tome nndi r onr observation\nmak•ItonrdulyInleiitheknownto(In*worldand\nmore particnlarjy to those now suffering yvith disease.\nMost of n* were well acipiain eil with yon whilst yon\nresided al Mormon Island, and witnessed there some\nremarkable car, s which yon effi red on patients\nwhose cases were pronounced hopeless hv eminent\nphysieians. We have also seen wind yon have done\nfor some of onr friends now residing al ('olonni anil\nIlaci-rvill.*, who alter much pesnaslon and indnee-\nmenls on onr |> cnnsenied to go find see yon, w hen\nHiey had almost de-p tired of their lives. They did so\nami ret nrneil, and are no w living hal * and hearty men j\nand read r. il this nn!i> e should reach your eye unit\nyon ar* afflicted, lat ** onr advice and go lo Hr 11T.1.N-\n-I M ANN. and von will never regret il\nHear Hoi t t. receive with onr most hearty wiihea\nfor your fnlnri* welfare the assurance that we believe\nyon to he one of onr most fulfilled and experienced\nphysicians in the Vale.\nFurctßP k II.» vwaan. 1\n(propr Miners Hotel ) f\n.Tai on Wink i K'i ass\n(p r i.reeiiwn d Hiewery,\nJons ilEonoK,\nA KOPST II All SE,\nJos ki*ii Wn I a ass,\nl nai its Hiss.\nT
07bd5dd8dc0b9181cb62b089874a1de1 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.7794520230848 41.004121 -76.453816 neither side would get both candi-\ndates fijr County Commissioner.\nMr. Schuck knew this or ought to\nhave known it, before he announced\nhi tus.'lfaSfi candidate, and when\nhe did announce subject to the\nrules of the Democratic party,\nwhether nominated or defeated, if\nhe is now an independent candi-\ndate, it seems that he is not willing\nto abide by the rules of the party\nof which he claims tube a memb r.\nAs to Mr. Bogart we cannot see\n'hat he has the slightest grievance.\nHe wis fourth in the race in num-\nber of votes received and second in\nvotes on the North side. The best\nevidence that Mr. Bogar'. is not the\nchoice of the party for a second\nterm is the fact that he did not get\nas many votes as his opponent on\nthe North side. Democratic \nMr. Schuck was deprived of t lie\nnomination because of the rules of\nthe party, and it he is a good, loyal\nDemocrat he wculd not now be a\ncandidate, but take his defeat man-\nly, and Mr. Bogatt was deprived of\nthe nomination because he did not\nget as many votes as his opponent\non this side. A very good season.\nMen who subscribe to the rules of\nthe party, and announce themselves\nsubject to these rules, and then are\nwil.ing to abrogate them or go back\non them so soon are not eu'itlcd to\nthe voles of loyal Democrats. If we\nare to maintain our supremacy aud\nmajority in this County we must\nstand by the ticket and its nomi-\nnees. Neither Mr. Schuck nor Mr.\nBoirart have anv claims udoii thi\nDemocratic voters of this County\nfor County Commissioner
9947064fe7617e68d18db301f050af5f THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1767122970573 39.261561 -121.016059 The fine ship Polynesia, Capt. George S.\nWoods, lying oft Market street wharf, was\ndiscovered to be on fire about half past 12\noclock this morning, and the City Hall bell\nsounded tbe alarm. Tbe flames weie tirst\ndiscovertd coining out of the after hatch,\nand every exertion was made at once by\nCapt. Woods to smother the flameR. Fifty-\nmen were furnished by Capt. Middleton, of\nthe U. S . sloop St. Matys, together with\nportable force pumps, which were used, as\nwell as the pumps of the ship, so vigorously\nthat tbe efforts were supposed to have bet n\nsuccessful. At 8 oclock this morning the\nfire btoke out afresh and soon gaiued such\nheadway that her total loss seemed inevi-\ntable. The steamer Anna, Captain True-\nworthy. made fast to her, intending to tow\nher, but great difficulty was experienced in\nunmooring Iter, as tbe lire was too hot to\nget at her windlass. Her chain was linully\nsawed oft by Charles Hare, at the water's\nedge, she was then towed to south beach\nwhere she now lays on the fiats still burning.\nHer masts and decks are all gone. Captain\nWoods bad a narrow escape in attempting\nin save the U. 8 . mails for Honolulu and\nChina, in which attempt tie was unsucoess\nful. The Polynesia was to have sailed for\nChina on Saturday, hut a portion of Iter\ncrew deserted, and were afterward put on\nboard by the police. The crew are sup-\nposed to have set her on fire and are now\ntinder arrest and in irons, on board the St.\nMary8. We believe she was consigned to\nCharles W. Brooks <& Co., and was owned by\nJames Ilunnewell, of Boston, w litre she was\ndoubtless insured. Her consignees and Mr.\nBacon, the agent of the underwriters, were\npromptly on hand, and did everylhing in\ntheir power to save Iter. The wrpek will In-\nsold at auction to morrow morning, at It)\no'clock. She registered 1,084 tons, and was\nvalued at abottl $50,000 .
0903931026df960d3c09654514633d57 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.2835616121258 39.513775 -121.556359 Tel 'graphic dispatches from Washington\nannounces the basis of anew Treaty with\nMexico. It embraces the acquisition of So-\nnora and the Sinaloa, with the command of\nthe Cult of California on the one side, in\nc moderation of a sum of money as an\nequivalent on the other Mr. Buchanan, it\nis said, has made known his views on the\nsubject, and the matter will bo considered\nby the Cabinet in a few days.\nGov. Geary, of Kansas, who has resigned\nhis office and is now on his way to Washing-\nton. has published a statement in the St.\nLouis papers giving the reasons that impel-\nled him to the course he has taken From\nthe statement it appears that the Bierce ad-\nministration are responsible for all the dis-\norders that afflicted the Territory. \nGovernor states that fifty men mere under\noath from the day he entered the country\nuntil he left, to assassinate him if his official\nconduct did not meet their approbation He\nalso says that half the story lias not been\ntold with regard to the attrocities commit-\nted by the pro-slavery men.\nCalifornia appointments hud not been\nmade at the latest dates.\nOn the 14th of March a frightful railroad\naccident happened near Hamilton, Canada.\nNearly one hundred passengers were killed.\nAnother dreadful railroad accident hap-\npened on the Pennsylvania railroad. At\nAltoona station an emigrant train standing\non the hack vasrun into by a heavy freight\ntrain, crowding the rear car into tha one\nbefore it, and causing the instant death of\nten of the passengers and mutilating teu or\ntwelve others.
022e26e8d250d27acce3d3396b9ad9ea THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1884.8702185476118 46.187885 -123.831256 he begins work on it in August. It\nis usually possible, on a windy day, in\ntho dry time to get a fire started which\nwill run a good many rods in the green\ntimber. This fire will kill and burn up\nmost of tho brush, and consume much\nof tho rotten wood on the ground. It\nwill also kill the green timber. Wo may\nsuppose that the settler makes a prelim-\ninary burn on 50 acres. It might take a\nweek to do this. A groat many fires\nwould havo to be started, feeble ones en-\ncouraged, or the firo checked by counter\nburning if running in a direction not\ndesired. In somo places tho brush would\nbo simply burned off at tho roots, and\nnot burned up. Any quantity of logs\nwould be left half burned on the ground.\nBut on the whole the bum would be\nready without more trouble to be seeded.\nTho best time for this is just before the\nautumn rains in October. Grass seed\nscattered in the ashes in the fall makes\nabundant pasturage for the succeeding\nyear, Our settlor thus has pasturage se\ncured a number of years. Ho wants to\nget land ready for cultivation. As soon\nas tho preliminary fire is out ho must go\nto work in the most eligible spot to gath-\ner up tho brush and haul up tho logs in\npiles to burn. Ho can soarcely get along\nwithout a yoke of oxen in this work. The\nlarge spruce trees, whioh remain stand-\ning, he can boro and burn down. He\noan boro from a dozen to twenty iu a\nday. The hemlocks which remain stand-\ning ho oan easily burn out by piling\nbrush and logs around their roots.\nWhen he has brought tho solid timber\nto the ground it must be cut open by\nsaws and rolled together to burn. There\nwould still be left roots in the ground,\nbut it is not the habit of either hemlock or\nspruce td strike very deep root and a large\npart of them, as well as tho butts of tho\ntrees, would be reduced to ashes. If the\nsettler is clearing on the side of a hill he\ncan roll the lengths of tho logs down as\nhe outs them off. An able-bodi-
0b669e249fc4f6cdcc860a831a6608b1 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.8123287354135 40.441694 -79.990086 Section 1 Be it ordained and enacted by the\ncity of Pittsburg, in Select and Common Coun-\ncils assembled, and it is bereby ordained and\nenacted by the authority ot the same. Tbat tha\nUnion Line Street Railway Comoany, its'\nlessees, successors and assigns shall have tho\nright, ana is bereDy authorized to enter upon\ntbe streets and hichways Included within its\nroute, to wit: Beginning on Brownsville ave-\nnue at its intersection with Carson street;\nthence along Brownsville avenue to Washing-\nton avenue; ihence along Washington avenua\nto Allen avenue; thence along Allen avenne to\nSecond street; thence along Second street to\nAsteroid way; thence along Asteroid way to\nWasbington avenue: thence along Wxshlng-to- n\navenue to Brownsville avenue, and thence\nalong Brownsville avenue to Carson street, to\nconstruct, m Intain, operate and use during tba .\nterm named in its charter. Its railway, as afore-\nmentioned, with double tracks or with single\ntracks, with tbe necessary sidings, tu rn-o ut- s\nand switches, and to use electricity as a motive\npower, and also to erect, maintain, operate\nand use an overhead electric system for tba\nsnpnly of motive power, and to erect, main,\ntain and use in tbe streets or highways be-\nfore mentioned posts, poles or other\nsupports as said company deem convenient for\nthe support or maintenance of sucb overhead\ns stem, under and subject, however, to ibe pro-\nvisions of a general ordinance, entitled "A gen.\nera! ordinance relating to tbe entry upon, over\nor under on the use or occupation of any street;\nlane or alley or any part thereof for any pur-\npose by passenger or street railway companies\nor by companies operating- passenger or street\nrailways, and providing reasonable regulations\npertaining thereto for tbe public convenience\nandaletr," approved the23tbdayof Febru.\nary. A. D. 189a\nSection 2 That any ordinance or part of ordi-\nnance conflicting with the provisions of this\nordinance be and the same is hereby repealed\nso for as tbe same affect- this ordinance.\nOrd 'ined and enacted into a law In Councils\nthis 29tb dav or September, A. V. 1830.\nH.JP. FORD, President of Select Council.\nAtLest: GEO. BOOTH. Clerk of Select\nCouncil. GEO. L . HOLLIDAY. President of\nCommon Council. Attest: E. J. MARTIN,\nClerk of Common Council.\nMavor's office. October a TS90. ADoroved:\nH. L GOURLEY, Mayor. Attest: ROBERT\nOSTERMAIER Mayor's Clerk.\nRecorded in Ordinance Bonk. vol. 7, page 513,\niui ua v ux uctuoer, jx JJ. lOWL.
05e8c609b415f2b2432631e7b1813ab8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.5849314751395 58.275556 -134.3925 After the applications have boon\nproperly prepared and executod they\nmay be cither presented to tho\nTrustee at his office or mailed to him\nat Ilox 1091, Juneau, Alaska. A\npost-office monoy order or check on\na Juneau bank In an amount suf\nflclont to cover the assessment\nshould accompany the application.\nThe deeda which will bo given by\nthe Truatce to the lot claimants\nmust be acknowledged beforo an of¬\nficer authorised to tako acknowledg¬\nments of deeds, the cost of which\nIs to be borne hy the grantee. The\ncharge for taking tho acknowledg-\nment will be fifty cents for each\ndeed and this amount should bo sent\nto the Trustee at tho name time that\nthe assessment is paid.\nAll appllcatlona filed prior to Aug¬\nust 21st, will bo considered aa\nfiled simultaneously for tho purpoae\nof making lot awarda and In all\ncases, In which no conflicting clalniH\nto the same lot appear, deed or deeds\nwill Issuo to the claimant whose ap¬\nplication has been fllod If he is\notherwise entitled to tho same, but\nin all cases where two or moro appli¬\ncations nro flled for the same lot\nprior to August 21, 1918, the Trtis-\ntee will sot a dato for a hearing at\nwhich all claimants may appear and\noffer ovldonco of their respective\nclaims to priority and the Trustee\nwill thereafter Issue his deeds in ac-\ncordanco with the final determine-\nHon of said rases. All applications\nfiled subsequent to Auguat 21. 1918,1\nwill be conaldered In tho order of\ntheir filing.
133bc12c7bfe2eb3355b15d45b63ce87 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.8041095573312 44.939157 -123.033121 sented at the Grand opera house.\n"The Traveling Salesmn" depicts in-\ncident's from the dally life of a com-\nmercial traveling man, and Mr.\nForbes has been as successful In this\nplay as he was In portraying life be-\nhind the scenes in his other great\nsuccess, "The Chorus L'ady."\nThe story of "The Traveling Sales-\nman" concerns Bob Blake, a drum-- 1\nmer for a cloak and suit house, who\nfinds himself marooned in - a small\nWestern city on Christmas day. At\nthe depot he inquires from the agent.\nBeth Elliott, about the departure of\nthe next train. Beth answers him.\nand her manner Is such that B'ake\nImmediately falls in love with her.\nShe finds out that Blake ha9 not had\nhis dinner, and. as It is too late to\ndine at the hotel, she Invites him to\nshare hers. He learns that she Is the\nowner of a supposedly worthless \nof land that Is to be sold 'for taxes.\nIn the second act Is shown Blake's\nroom in the hotel and a poker game\nis played that Is said to be the fun-\nniest ever shown on the stage. Dur-\ning the game Bob overhears some talk\nbetween a man named Royce and\nMartin Drury relative to Beth El-\nliott's land. He learns that the rail-\nroad company Intends making some\nimprovements, and that Beth'? land\nIs wanted. Drury proposes to Royce\nto buy the property in at the tax\nsale, and Bob decides to frustrate\ntheir plans. He attends the sale and\npays the taxes as the representative\nof Beth, and saves her property. Beth\nsells the land to the railroad com-\npany, but as she is under the legal\nage to execute the agreement, she\nmarries Bob, who. as her husband,\nbecomes her legal guardian, with full\npower to make the transfer.
22b634ce09db0aa71b9ba5ae19406f35 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.9767122970572 41.004121 -76.453816 session nt Captain Trnman's store,\ndown by tho dock! Outside the wind\nhowled nnd shrieked through the rig-\nging of the fleet of coasting vessels\nwarped alongside tho Main street\nwharf, nnd unconsciously the men\nhitched their chairs closer to the fire\nns n fiercer blast rattled the windows.\nPuting a temporary lull In the storm\nCap'n SI Tut tie broke tho silence with\nthe following narrative:\n"'Twits Jest sech a Christinas eve\nns this, along back In the eighties,\nwhen I was roiindln' old Hatteras in\nthe good ship Tlrzah Ann. You recol-\nlect her, don't you? Hailed from Green-por- t\nand could smash through any gale\nthat ever blowed.\n"In course 'twas some wet on deck,\nand the further wo pounded along the\nrougher It got. nnd finally we had to\nturn nud run afore the wind. Never\nsaw sech a gale to hang on! Wo\nplowed through seas could only\nguess tho height of. And dark! You\ncouldn't sec your hand afore your face.\n"There was five of us aboard, nnd\nwe was pretty well tuckered out next\nmornln', but daylight showed no lot- -\nup, and, to make things wuss. a heavy\nsnow sot in. Seemed as if it turned to\nIce to wunst soon ns It hit the deck.\nand afore you could say 'Jnck Robin-\nson' the riggln was froze solid, and n\ndozen men with axes couldn't have\ncast loose the dory.\n"Along nbout six bells the fust mnte\ntook the wheel, nnd I went below to\nget a bracer, when there come a heavy\ncrash, and both mnsts went by the\nboard. I went up the companlonway\nIn two Jumps, but afore I reached the\ndeck the water was pourln' into the\nfo'castle in tons, nnd the ship begun\nto henve nnd wallow like n stuck pig.
070d47d31cbe0b393da3b26474f883e0 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.1079234656447 37.53119 -84.661888 It la for the purpose of awakening an\nInterest among farmers especially In\nCasey and adjoining counties who are\nreaders of this paper In the cultivation\nof ginseng with the hope that they\nwill give the matter their careful at ¬\ntention that this article Ie rrltteo\nThe high prices paid by dealers have\ncaused the wild root to be so eagerly\nsought after by the sang digger that\nIn many pms It Is well nigh extinct\nbesides tho rich north hillsides and\nvalleys wherd it mostly grew have\nbeen cleared and cultivated to such\ncrops as corn wheat tobacco etc and\nsaw mill and timber men working out\nthe timber have thus destroyed Us net ¬\nural home all pointing to the fact\nthat its cultivation must become more\nand more profitable and that the do\nmand must In the near future look en ¬\ntirely to the cultivated root for the \nply Then wo will have better prices\nwhen a sufficient quantity baa been put\non the market to give it a market val ¬\nue Doubtless nil who read this have\nseen the plant growing wild In Its na ¬\ntive environments and know that it Is\na plant the dried root of which Is of\ngreat value in ton markets of the world\nYet all are not aware of its full value\nwhen In perfection growth and form\nand of the high estimate of that value\nwhen cultivated As this article Is\nwritten for the farmer aod especially\nfor those of small means who are de ¬\nsirous of finding some ready means of\nIncreasing their income as well as a\nsafe Investment for small savings It\nmay interest them to know that the\nmen who have made the greatest sue\ncess In the business are men of just\nthat condition In life
0a39184a50b4c9275034e7da5a71f42b THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1896.0068305694697 43.994599 -72.127742 of tho variable star. Why tthould one of\nthose dmlau,, orbs Wituiu a few short\nweeks, peril Bps within u few days, per-\nceptibly wane and wax in brilliancy\nwhen- compared with a neighbor of sim-\nilar but permanent brightness?\nIn one particular class of stars those\nof the type to which Algol belongs it\nis now believed that the fluctuation re-\nsults from a partial eclipse, an adjacent\nsphere, perhaps entirely dark, rotating\nwith the brighter one around a common\ncenter. But this explanation does not\nappear to fit many cases, and bo far as\nthe majority of these curious objects is\nconcerned the problem is still unsolved.\nThe variability of a considerable\nnumber of stars was first detected by\nmeans of photography, and some rather\nsurprising discoveries of this kind have\nvery recently been by xroressor\nS. L. Bailey, in charge of the Harvard\nstation at Arequipa, Peru. Here and\nthere, scattered through the heavens,\nthere are certain misty patohes which\nare resolved by a good telescope into\nclusters of distinct stars. Sometimes\nthese groups are globular in general\nform and contain hundreds, even thou-\nsands, of separate bodies. Very few vari-\nables have ever been detected in these\naggregations rjitherto, but now Professor\nBailey finds in comparing photographs\nof the same region taken in succession\nthat a certain cluster in the constella-\ntion of Serpens and designated as No.\n5 in Messier 's list contains no less than\n46 variables, and that another in Canea\nVfinatici f Messier 81 contains 87. The\nfirst of these two groups contains about\n750 stars altogether, and the latter one\nabout 1,000.
1c74c7c4290f2ec09b27f33531b22bfd THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1868.752732208814 41.004121 -76.453816 Oi.i Hadkm, who was tho Slii'iU or\nCiller of tho Amb trllio I'licnmiieil In uu\nOa.sU of tho Desert, lintl it dtiughter\nwho" lmiuo win Otuulii ; bIio whs mj\nlienutirtil thnt slio was huriiniiied tho\n.Star of tho luist. She nlwuys appeared\nvelletl, nml ported for it Port In tho\n,iniaj;iimtioii of tho poor Araby. Her\nfather idolized her, and sho loved her\nfttliLT above all tlilnH, after Allah.\nTho old Sheik lind often been asked by\ntho hiiih of tho Sheiks of tho most vali\nant and richest tribes for tho hand of\nhis thuinhtor, hut ho had as often re-\nfused, for how could ho mako up his\nmind to' part with Ills beloved Ouaihi'.'\nIt was sho who made lilm happy In his\nold days, it was sho who prepared his\nhouka and helped hint to .sorgo and\nother eordlal.s, which Impart renewed\n.strength and vIp;or to old nge. On \nreturn from a journey In the Desert,\nnml under tho biiriiinp; sun, It was\nOuaUa who wiped tho dust from his foot\nand preimrcflfllorefreshlng b.th. When,\nat tho clostfflftlio day, ho sat in front of\nhis tent.onlilsl'crNlau carpet, with his\noks crossed under him, enjoyinir tho\novenlno; breeze, his beloved Omnia\neither rend to lit in from Uio Hook of\nWNdom, or delighted liiin by the\n.strains of her melodious voice. In ono\nword, Ouada was tho pritlo nml happi-\nness of her old father, nnd tho children\nof tlio tribe had exhausted nil thelltfiircss\nof their rich and imaged language to ex-\npress their admiration of her.\nOno day a deep gloom, settles down\non all tho tents of tho Oasis. Tho old\nmen, women mid children nrohceu run-\nning about with anxious looks nnd\ntears In their eyes, and ono would have\nasked If miiiio pestllcnco wasnol declni-i nnt ln- g
129dbf6025270e102d6a4c3c6ff4e11b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.5164383244546 40.063962 -80.720915 Niw Yobii, July 7,.John Warner, a\nUU, bald-headed mas, with a fringe of\ngray hair (bowing under hit bat, and a\nblack moustache tinged with gray, hired\na hall bed room on the fourth floor of the\nHat 102 Went Tenth street, about two\nmonth* ago. He waa accompanied by a\nboy of 14, a likely young fellow, whom he\nintroduced aa bia son Joaeph, The land¬\nlord did not inquire into his business or\nantecedents, and as the new lodger attend¬\ned to bia own business and refrained from\nmeddling with the aliairs of others, he\nwent bis way day by day unobserved and\nundisturbed by hia fellow teuauts.\nBeyond the casual observations that he\nwaa a Canadian no one knew much about\nhim, He came and went at regular hours\nand at night he and the boy always slept\ntogether in the bouse. Kirly this morn¬\ning piatol shots were beard coming from\nthe room occupied by the Warners.\nThese aroused the neit door lodger and\nthe landlord and they tried the door. It\nwaa locked and no answer to their\nknocking. Then they broke the lock and\nlooked in. The elderly lodger lay on the\nfloor partly dressed with a big pistol in hia\nhand. There waa blood on the carpet.\nThe police were at once notified and an\nambulance was summoned.\nMr. Warner had hia trousers on and had\nevidently gone about hia bloody deed with\ndelllieratlon. On the window alll stood a\nsmall looking glaes besides three or four\npistol cartridges, lie had apparently used\nthe glaaa in fixing bia aim tnat the bullet\nshould not fail to kill him after he bail\ntaken bia son's life, The boy lay In bed\nin hia night shirt with hia head on bia\nright arm as he had slept, shot through\nthe left temple. He breathed, but was\nsenseless. It waa clear that the father\nhad shot him sleeping. The father after\nshooting his son turned the pistol to bis\nown head, sunt the second bullet through\nhia own brain and dropped dead. There\nnothing in the room to furnish any clue to\nthe mystery of the double crime.
2885df75b27e4b84e8f33c5bc010e30e THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.7254098044425 29.949932 -90.070116 lated saud controlled exelelvely by te pe•litil\npower of each State, respetively; and aay\nattempt by CongOress, on any pretext whatever,\nto deprive asy State of this right, or interfere\nwltb this exercise, is flagrnt userpation of\npower, whch cano find so warrant in the Constitu-\ntion, and if sactioned by the people wil subvert\noar form of government, and can only end In a\nsingle, centralised, ooneolldated government, In\nwhIch the seperte existence of the 8tstes wil be\nentirely aborbed, and an unqdlled despotinm\nbe es'ablished in place of a fderal Union of\nequal Btaten; that we regard the reecotrtioo,\nacts of Congress, so-called, as usrpatten.,\nunconsttutional, revolutionary uad void thatS\nour soldiers and sallor who arried the hag of\noar country to vitory against a most gt-\nlant and determined fee must ever be grate-\nfully remembered, and all the guarantees given In\nthefavor must be hithfully carried Into exeen-\ntion; that the publ. lands should be distributed\namong the people, and should be disposed of\neither under the pre-emption of homestead laws,\nor sold In reasonable quantitles, and to none but\nactual occupants, the malmum price as estab.\nlished by the government; when grants of the\npublle lands may be allowed eusearily for the\nencourugements of important peblo Improve-\nments, the proceeds of the sale of ruch I•ido, and\nnot the lands themselves, should be so applied.\nThat the president of the United States. Andrew\nJohnson, in exercising the power of his high office\nIn resisting the aggresions of Cogrem on the\nconstitutional rinhta of the Stare sad the people,\ns entitled to the gratitude of the whole\nAmerican people; and on behalf of the Demo-\ncraei party we tender him our thankste for hli pa-\ntr'otic effrts inathat regard.\nUpon this platform the Democratio party appeal\nto every patriot, uicleding all the conervative\nelement, and all who desire to support theOoesti\notiton and restore the Union, forgettilg all put\ndifferences of opinion, to unite with us in the\npresent greet struggle for theb liberties of the peo-\nple, and that to all rosuch,to whatever perty they\nmay have heretofore belonged, we extend the\nright hand of fellowehip, and hll all such oo-\noperating with ue as friende ad brothers.
287725729d0b377a42455b4c0fe31348 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.2972602422628 40.063962 -80.720915 srkct active, Arm and higher; advanced fialOc; ?\nmmon to gtxal mixed 90 65a7 IK: heavy packing V\nid s-hippliig 87 20*7 60; light 80G6a715; skips and A\nCattle-'Roocipts 5,000 head: shipments 2,400 head, fI\narket very dull snd weak at 10al5c lower, mak- 9fl\ng a decline of 20tS0c since last week; e* ports w\n10a7 60; good to choice shipping WG0a70U; Ni\nmmon to fiJr 95 COoC 4U; ml Jed butchers' stock I»\n60*6 40, stockersand feeder* 933*a8&0. Pi\nBheep.Receipt* S.toO head; shipments 1.800head, nl\nsrkct Ultl) active; Interior to fair 9i 25aft 75; me- 91\nurn to good 90 '20ft0 50; choice to extra 96G5a7 00; el\niorn 91 (5*5 85. ^\nThe Jowrnaf'i LiveriKjol special says: Best Ameri- K(\nn cattle I5a16){d: best sheep 17a22d, at\nNiw York, April 18,- Dkv Gooui-Kxprtr'i ot °\nitton goods for tne week 3.798 packages, and since\nnuarv l, 1882, a total of 4:1.161 packages, lu wide 78\nin leu fabrics the forcholce styles is very A,\niod and choice lawusand foulanli are in active a'\nstributlon. i'rinU are being distributed with\nuch regularity to the rapid reduction of slock.\nbile all specialties are * Id to arrive. Shirting\nints, also white ground fanclca are In improved U\nquest. American dress slika, also handkerchiefs, rc\ntitans and other silk fabrics are in good request id\nswek»aro unimportant. In cotton gcods the\niVUtblo transaction* are of more lin o-Uneu than\nie open sales and considerable buslnoa has been\nid out for the near future. Hoolcn goods are\nilet but the dcllverld are ot much steadiness\neueral trade ia of modest proportions, but in the\nMence of orders to-day lia report is as usual.\nBoston, April 18..Wool-Moderate trade: Ohio\nid Pennsylvania cxlm 4U42j; Sflrhlgan and Wi*insln\nUecccs 88a4lc: combing and delaine seleo*\non 41a48c; unwashed combing, eoane and toed\nm '24s30c; uuwsshod fleeces 18aOo; pulled 25a&0a (\nTrrUfTtax, Pa., Aprll l8. - *on opened atTVVc
006b0ac57cab1b189021078c261ddc91 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.2945205162355 39.745947 -75.546589 blda for State Bonds, subjeet to condi­\ntions named below, will be received by On;\nunderalgned to b.i opened at the State\nHouse, Dover. Del., at ft a m., on May\n1st, A. D . . I9«i. These Bonds, numbei.d\ntrem l to 26U Inclusive, will be Coup m\nHundt, of fne <1 momlaaUoli of IKflU e |\nbearing dale of June 1st, A. D .. 199Î. and\nwill be payable at the Farmers' Bank.\nDover, Del., on June lat. A . D. . 1932. They\nwUl bear Interest ut the rate of 4 per cent,\n■per annum, llkewlso payable at said\nFarmers' Bank. Ml tile llrel day of June\nand December of\nprincipal sum remains unpaid, upon pre­\nsentation of Coupons representing semi­\nannual Installment« of Interest. These\nBund* by the of the statute author­\nising their issue will he exempt from tax­\nation for any purpose by this State,\nEach bid or proposal must be In writing,\nniust state the bidders' full name and\nplace of iiMddence. and must be for «I\nleast ten perci ntum of the umount of tho\nloan, nnd each bid must be accompanied\nbv corfJfied cheek 4o order of tho Statu\nTreasurer for five percentum of the\n•mount of the hid, which shall be re­\ntained and held\njllanee of the bidder wllh his undortak-\nng In that behalf. In ease any bidder to\nwhom the whole or any part of the lean\nshall be awarded falls or omits for tho\nspace of ten days after the date of auch\naward to pay the State Treasurer the
1648ac28968031ab88c322fa2e419908 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1908.4658469629123 43.994599 -72.127742 luesday and Wednesday the\nOrange County Convention of the\nW. C. T. U. was held in Grace\nChurch. During the day sessions\nmucn ot interest in the work was\ndiscussed bv the different delegates.\nIn the evening the principal speaker\nwas miss Uinstine linhnsr ot Lon\ndon, who held her audience's at\ntention while she pleaded for the\ncause for which she is snendimr her\nlife. Although the W. C.T . U. is\nthe largest organization of women\nin the world, 10,000 unions being\nin this country alone, there is\nstill a need for a larger member-\nship. Mothers are needed for the\nsake of the children, girls are needed\nbecause they are energetic and en-\nthusiastic, even the men are wel-\ncome as honorary members be-\ncause it aims to crush the traffic\nwhich is the great enemy of man.\nAdvertising is a great means of\nspreading the gospel of the Society,\nbut it is done in different ways:\nhere by public meetings, in England\nby posters gotten by the city\nofficers, signed by the Health Offi\ncers, and paid for by the public\ntaxes, telling the effects of alcohol\non the system. The evils of strong\ndrink were reviewed briefly, but f\nme statement was maae tnat ngures\ngave us no comprehension, neither\ndid the story of those, whom we\ndid not know, stir is, really. It is\nonly by the few cases, which we\nourselves know, that we come to\nunderstand what the evil really is.\nLondon with closed saloons during\nthe two days of Queen Victoria's\nfuneral, San Francisco, dry, after\nthe earthquake, were cited as ex-\namples of what the dry reigme\nmeant. The South came in for its\nillustrative use. She affirmed that\nthere are blind tigers and broken\nlaws whether under prohibition or\nLocal Option; but she affirmed that\nProhibition was surer of enforce-\nment than a License law because it\nwas easier th keep a law which said\n"not any" than one which "tried\nto say how much or how little.
1f1f27c6595e365b50cc1068d10cedb7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.7554644492511 39.745947 -75.546589 On the premises, at 4 p. m„ sharp. Most of\nthe property offered is on high, solid ground\nover Eleventh Street Bridge. This section is\nreaching a prosperous basis verv rapidly, and\nsubstantial improvements are going up on\nevery side. The Pullman Car Works, the\nDelaware Terra Cotta Works, and the newly\nstarted Vt ire Manufactory create a lively de­\nmand for houses. The brunch of the City-\nRailway Company, now in operation, has cer­\ntainly added to the value of properties here,\nand we see no good reason why prices should\nnot steadily advance. The balance of the pro­\nperty is most beautifully located on a com­\nmanding site on Eighteenth street, and over­\nlooks tiie City Park and the Brandywine. 1201\nHeald street is a corner store and dwelling,\ntwo-story brick, 17x85, 7 rooms, built 1886,\nwith alley privilege. 1222 and 1224 Forrest\nstreet, are each two-story brick, lot 14x51, a\nrooms, built 1386, with alloy privilege. 108\nWest Eighteenth street, is two-story brick, lot\n26x125, 8 rooms, with front porch, front lawn,\nside yard, and alley privilege.\nThe lots are on Thatcher. Heald, Davis,\nPeoples, Dure, Twelfth, Thirteenth, Four­\nteenth. Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Eighteenth and\nTwenty-second street*.\nThe sale will commence at 4 p. m . sharp,\nwith No. 1, and proceed mainly in order of\nnumbering Omnibus will leave 810 1-3 Mar­\nket street at 3.40 p. m.\nTerms ok Sack. For the lots, 20 per cent,\ncash as forfeit money, the balance m\nequally divided at tbrse and six months. Dis­\ncount of 3 pnr cent, for all cash. Deeds dc-
08ffe0e79d819d7ba474dc68f38c6142 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.7986301052765 29.4246 -98.49514 In opening his discourse Ihe reverend\nspeaker said there were some passages\nof scripture that can not be well under\nstood without the context or best under-\nstood In connection with that which\ngoes before, Ibat we can not understand\nwithout we know these connections.\nThere are others, however, that possibly\nare best understood without ; probably\nwe can get moro out of t lie in without\ntbo context. The context answers lo\nthe question, How, when, why, and\nwhere; but there are passages which In\norder to get at their true meaning,\nwe are called upon lo separate from\ntheir surroundings and just look down\nnt the profundity. He remembered\nwhen visiting the wonderful Wahculla\nSpring at Florida. Its surroundings are\nvery beautiful. It Is a very picture of\nraradlse, and If one get n boat\nand sail out on Its margin, one forgets\nthe Irees surrounding H. While Ihe\nfoliage Is beautiful, there Is something\nabout the sublime depths that lo be\nappreciated needs to be separated from\nIts surroundings. The water Is so clear\nthat a pin dropped can be seen at Ihe\nbottom, and so profound are thu depths\nthey have never been fathomed; down,\ndown, these crystal waters How. the\nmore we look Ihe more they are Illumi-\nnated with the magloeolors of rainbows.\nSo It Is with some ol these passages of\nscripture; to understand many you\nmust look at the surroundings, how,\nwhen and why, what waa said and seen,\nbut there are others where one looks\nInto the depths ol It and the deeper\nyou look the more the surrround-Ing- s
2e3f14204e44ada070a6905d04712a21 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.332876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 eighteen years had been a banker In\nIndians, was made the first Comptrol­\nler of the Currency by appointment of\nPresident Lincoln. Two years later Mr.\nMcCulloch succeeded Samuel Fessen­\nden as Secretary of the Treasury and\nheld that position until 1869, in that\nperiod successfully meeting that ser­\nious problem of paying off the Union\ntroops at the close of the Civil War\nand bringing order into the finances\nof the nation. Fifteen years later he\nagain became Secretary of the Treas­\nury, holding the portfolio until Cleve­\nland's first administration began; and\nthe manner In which he was asked to\ntake his old cabinet post probably\nstands unique iu the history of Amer­\nican cabinet building.\nAlthough, following his retirement\nfrom the Treasury in 1869, Mr. Mc­\nCulloch retained bis legal residence In\nIndiana, he nevertheless made bia\nhome In Washington a part of each\nyear. He was engaged In some very\nimportant banking and financial work;\nhis services were much sought by\ntankers generally, and he frequently\nwas called upon to give professional\ncounsel to the Administration.\nMr. McCullouchs Washington home\nwas well out In the suburbs, about,\nhalf an hours drive from city's\nboundary. One afternoon, shortly af­\nter he had returned thither from busi­\nness. he v;as Informed by a servant\nthat the President of the United States\nwas In the reception room and had\nasked to see Mr. McCulloch.\nIt was most unusual for a President\nto make such a call, and Mr. McCul ­\nloch was not a little surprised by the\nintelligence that the President was\nawaiting him below. But while he was\npreparing to go down stairs and re­\nceive the President, the thought oc­\ncurred to Mr. McCulloch that General\nArthur was the first of all Presidents\nto accept dinner invitations to private\nhouses, and so probably, while passing\nthe house, the President had been\nseized with a desire to pay a little so­\ncial call on a former Secretary of the\nTreasury—that, in fact, the President\nwas simply breaking another long\nstanding precedent by paying a per­\nsonal call upon a private citizen.\nFor a few minutes after the two\nmen met, the President and Mr. Mc­\nCulloch chatted Informally, the Presi­\ndent seaktng of the beauties of nature\nas he had discovered them In the vicin­\nity -of the Soldiers' Home, where he
dc24b66da8eae6078c35c68d90c8492b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1842.223287639523 43.798358 -73.087921 Messrs. Reed, Wing & Cutler Gent.\nI feel it a duty I owe the public, and es-\npecially to hundreds of my fellow beings\nwho are now suffering under different dis-\neases of the lungs, to give you a statement\nof the good effects I have experienced\nfrom the use of the Vegetable Pumonary\nBalsam. Having from my youth up been\ntroubled with different complaints of the\nlungs, such as spitting of blood, a dry\ntroublesome cough, frequent hoarseness,\nwith severe fits of coughing, and indeed\nall the symptoms of consumption, and from\ntime to time I have consulted several emi-\nnent physicians, and have taken much\nmedicine, but I received little or no relief\nand at last they told me there was no help\nfor me; that my case was beyond the\nreach of their medicines. In the spring\nof 1827 was advised by a friend to try\nthe Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam. I ob-\ntained two bottles, and on trial 1 was sur-\nprised to find so sudden and effectual re-\nlief which it gave me, and after --using it\nabout five weeks al! my complains were\nentirely removed, and I was restored to\ngood health. Since that time I have kept\nit constantly by me, in case of the appear-\nance of any of the above complaints.\n1 have known a large number of cases\nwhere all other medicines have failed of\naffording any relief, the Balsam was at\nlength resorted to, and speedily effected a\ncure. I would therefore recommend to\nevery person that has any of the above\ncomplaints, on their first appearance to\ntake the Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam,\nwhich they will find a s.ife, convenient j\nand positive cure.
50a5dc0a99ab4f57b448316291d58a7e DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.0260273655506 58.275556 -134.3925 holding the election, and the necessary\npostage and stationary shall be audit¬\ned by the judge of the district court of\nthe division in which the precinct is\nsituate, and when so audited the same\nshall be paid by the clerk of the dis¬\ntrict court of the same division out of\nthe same fund and in the same manner\nas the incidental expeuses of the dis¬\ntrict court are paid.\nSec. 11. That the governor and ex-\noffico secretary, shall constitute a can¬\nvassing board for the district of Alas¬\nka to canvass and compile in writing\nthe vote specified in the certificates of\nsaid election returned to the governor\nfrom all the several election precincts\nas aforesaid. They shall declare the\nperson who has received the greatest\nnumber of votes for Delegate to be the\nduly elected Delegate from Alaska, and\nshall issue and deliver to him in writ¬\ning under their hands and seals a cer¬\ntificate of his eloction. The said can¬\nvassing board shall meet to perform\nthe duties and work aforesaid at the\noffice of the governor on the first Mon¬\nday of October in the year in which the\nelection is held, and shall continue\nwith such work and duty from day to\nday until the same is completed. In\ncase it shall appear to said board that\nno election return as hereinbefore pre\nscribed has been received by the gov¬\n from any precinct in which an\nelection has been held, the said board\nmay accept in place thereof the certi¬\nfied copy of the certificate of election\nfor such precinct received from the\nclerk of the district court and may\ncanvass aud compile the same with the\nother election returns. The ballots\ntransmitted to the governor by the\njudges of election of the several pre¬\ncincts as aforesaid shall by him be\ncarefully kept and preserved until the\nend of the term for which the Delegate\nchosen has beeu elected.\nSec. 12 . That the members of said\ncanvassing board shall each be entitled\nto a compensation of six dollars per\nday for each day actually employed\nin the work, and the judge of the dis¬\ntrict court who is a member of said\nboard shall in addition receive the\nsame mileage and traveling expenses\nin connection wito his duties ou said\nboard that he is entitled to receive in\ntraveling to hold court at any place\nfrom his home, and the same shall bo\npaid in the same manner and from the\nsame fund as the latter are paid. The\nsaid board may employ a clerk to aid\nthem in their work at a compensation\nnot to exceed five dollars per day. The\nper diem compensation of such clerk\nand the members of the board shall be\npaid by the governor out of his contin¬\ngent fund.
586e09f5f51ee499f21d2db7e78ce8d7 THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1861.2972602422628 32.36431 -88.703656 she was wholly ignorant of the levy of\nthe attachment of Gates and Pleasants on\nsaid boy George, or she would have given\nbond aa in tbe other casea, and interposed\nher claim 4c\nThe bill uravs an injunction, that the\njudgment and order of sale be set aside,\nas to the boy George Ac\nAn answer is bled by bates, and pro\ncontesso taken aato Imman, the constable\nwho claima to have levied this attach-\nment without taking the property into\nhia possession. Gates in his answer de-\nnies from information the gift, charges\nthat it was fraudulent, that the boy\nGeorge belonged to her father Mosely\nadmits the levies or the several attach-\nments by constable Vernon, that bonds\nle, were given and property replevied,\ndoes not deny that the property imme-\ndiately returned to the possession of Jane\nK. Flint, aa stated in the bill, nor does be\nstate that Imman the constable who claims\nto have levied attachment, ever bad\nthe possession of the boy George, under\nhis original levy. lie denies tbat Jane\nh. t lint bad no notice ot tbe levy or his\nattachment Ac.\nAnkkAgreement is filed showing the\nclaiinVand bond Ac, filed by Jane E.\nFlint, and records waived. The testimo\nny of Jane E. is taken in open court, who\nproves the gift from her father, and that\nthe boy haa len in her possession ever\nsince she gave the claim bonds to Vernon\nAc, Ac. Objections are urged against tbe\ncompetency of her testimony on several\ngrounds, all of which it is not material to\nconsider in the view we take oi this case.\nOn the bill and answer it must be taken\nas true that the boy George never was le-\ngally in the possession of the officers who\nclaims to have levied this attachment. If\nhe ever made a levy it waa abandoned by\nhim, or the levy waa void for want of
59f6dc32eabb3fbddf5ef6185155319d COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1861.4643835299341 41.262128 -95.861391 two thousand five baadr«d dollars; to (be\naegrstary Mid iatep«t«r, in full for bis\nst rvices, me saia of two thousand dollars,\nand the President of the United State*\nshall bt and h>? is hereby authoriird to\nantAe such proi-is ton for tbe eoutingent\nexpt>8s«s of tbe said oommia«>ioii on lite\npart of tbe L'uited ^Utie# a» sbaiL to turn\na[ pear reasonable and proper.\nSac. 4 And be it further enacted, That\ntbe asid jaouuuaiuoer, oa t&e part of tbe\nLuitod ^uttea, iu oonjunctioi) with the\ncoiomisaiotier os the part of New Grana­\nda, shall bo and he h hereby authorised\ntu make nil needful ral'» and regulations\nby. oonuuetiog tbe basinets of their said\ncouuat^sioi}; flicii ruiee aad regulation*\nnot contravening the Constitution of tbe\nUnited States, the provisions of tbis act,\nor the prorisiotMi of tbe *aid convention.\naac, 5, And b« it further macled, That\ntbe Secretary of btate is hereby authori­\nsed aad rta^uirad to traastuiL to the said\ncommissioner *uch paj -r or records re­\nlating to tbe aaid conuuission as be may\n proper, or as nay be eaitftd for by\nth :said eonmissiouers, and at tbe termi-\nnstioti of tbe commission, ail the records,\ndo luments, and all other papers which\nhave been brought before the commis­\nsioners, or which may be in possession Of\nvh ir Secrsuuy, »l>ail Im; deposited ui the\nL> partment <.f {State Prvvidtti, That\nthis section 8 Kali not be so on it rued a^\nto prevent th^ commissioner on tbe part\nof Mew tiraaada from depositiue ia tbe\ns*id Uepartmeut uerudsd oopits or du­\nplicate*! of papers filed on benaif of his\n(iovemtneiit intUcail of originals.\nSbc. tj. And be it further enacted,That\nsf*jo sugiresb h» by aay claiaiant that a\nwitness wnuae texUmuay may be decmct]\nimportant to him refuses or is unwilling\nto testify in regard te his claim, it shall\nbe competent for said Board of t,'ommis-\nsiueers to lasnu a oocamisaion to some\nsuitable person to Ukke ibe testimony of\nsu ,-h witu»'M, ;»nd such witness may be\ncompell' d to appear and testify before\nao-ih comBiissi'Mn r* m the same manner
d91d8bf3b8fe797396a684448cfefa5d THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.5164383244546 40.618676 -80.577293 ONE TERM'S TOO MUCH FOR WARING\nIT IS A fortunate thing that the American\nLegion elects a new national commander every\nyear at its convention; because the current head\nof this veterans' organization, Roane Waring, a\nlire-eating reactionary southern corporation law\nyer, deserves the year's turkey lor the most ob\nnoxious public pest. Waring is the kindly gentle­\nman who recently suggested shooting strikers and\nunion representatives, and he has frequently\nvoiced his antipathies towards the men and\nwomen who are breaking all production records in\nthe war effort, suggesting that they all be drafted\ninto the Army if they get involved in "labor\ntrouble." We have yet to hear a peep out of this\nchauvenistic blatherskite about shooting crooked\n;md inefficient corporation managers who sold in\nferior steel, electrical equipment, copper, motors\nand other vital war materials to the (Jovernment.\nMr. latest dubious contribution to\nthe war effort, according to a United Press report,\nwas his luifnane suggestion that lierlin and Toky<\nbe burned to the ground to insure a lasting peace\nand that Italy should not be permitted to sur­\nrender because the United Nations then would\niiave to feed the Italian people. "1, for one," lie b\nreported to have said, "don't want any less food\nhere in order to enable us to feed Mussolini and\nhis gang." We are indeed surprised that this\nmodern Atilla did not also suggest the razing of\nHome, the historic and cultural center of Christen­\ndom. When Mr. Waring's records are relayed and\nbroadcasts to the peoples of (Jermany and ltal\\\nwe are certain that they will be over-joyed by this\nbarbaric threat and immediately throw down their\narms, rather than fight to the finish—or will they 7
1a5b20d5b932a5f964ea20053838280f MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1885.1301369545915 39.78373 -100.445882 The case of Wells, Fargo & Co.\nvs. John Rogers, which is now be\nfore the District Court, is rather a\nstrange one. About four years ago\nthe Bodie and Carson stage was\nrobbed three times in as many\nweeks, by two highwaymen named\nSharp and Jones. To stop these\ndepredations a shotgun messenger\nwas put on the route, and the first\ntrip he made, the stage was again\nattacked, but this time one of the\nrobbers (Jones) was shot dead. A\nconsiderable amount of money, in\ngreenbacks, was lost by the com-\npany on the two previous occasions.\nSharp was shortly afterwards cap-\ntured, and is now serving a sen-\ntence in the State Prison, and he\nstates that at the time Jones was\nkilled he (Jones) had a large \nount of money concealed about his\nperson. When Jones was buried\nhowever, no money was found on\nhim, and it has recently been\nbrought to light that a man named\nRogers, a resident of Smith's Val-\nley, whose home is near where\nJones was killed, took the money\nfrom the dead robber as he came\nby and found the body lying in the\nroad. The money was in bills of\nlarge denominations and the fact\nthat Rogers had lately tried to\nchange some large bills led to his\nbeing suspected. It is understood\nthat Rogers admit9 that he took\nabout $200 from Jones, and offers\nto return that amount; but Wells,\nFargo & Oo, claim that he must\nhave taken in the neighborhood of\n$1,800, hence the suit Elko Post.
26e0f30b723b657e8812e6d9ceb66339 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.346575310756 40.832421 -115.763123 Hormllsluff on Dear Bprf.\nA Chicago diipitch of th« 24th nit.\nthai remark* npcn the meat market:\nThe quick Kale of ca'.tlu rtceived in the\nUuion Stuck Yard* to-day at price* 10\nto 20 cents higher than Satuiday'e luteal\nmaking ths tales almost at the top\nnotch for the year, and far beyonnd the\nprevious year*, bring np again tbe'aeri-\noui question among ths restaurant! of\nadvancing the rutes for meat served.\nSome of them have already taken this\nstep.but concertcd action is likely unless\na very spsedy drop comta. Housewives\nare alarmed at the steady rise in pricea\nof meats, and the hatchers and some\nfamilies in the lower walks of life have\nbeen obliged to givs up entirely the use\nof n>e:it. With all theadvnuce on price\nof liviug there is a disposition on the\npart of the employers to re luce rather\nthan advance wages, snd liborrrs are\nconfronted at the ra:ue moment with \ndifficult combination of reduood wrgoa\nand increased expeuses. Ths increase\ncornea not on luxuries which are rela¬\ntively cheap, but on the actual neces¬\nsaries of life. Wheat aud orn and\ntheir products, potatoes, vegetal lts and\nmeats are compara>irely higher, and\nsome of them are actually higher in this\nmaiket than in the flush limes succeed¬\ning the war when gold was at a great\nprtmium. l'eople who have considered\nthemselves fairly well-t >-Jo are now\ncampillad to look carefully into the ex¬\npense question aud lo economiz»ashsrply\non the daily li\\in^ expenses. Alarmists\nsee in this state of affairs a promise of\ndisaster to employers and employed.\nSome blame the Hoard of Trade, for\nluanipulitiiug utaikrt* ; others account\nforil by the overcrowding ol cities aud\nthe expanse of couutry where crops are\ngrown, but all agree that there mutt be\nsome chuug* b< f^re long if daugeroui\ndoiroatic troubles ate to be avoided.
550cae641c940597dae0a6bb5026547c OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8319671814916 39.513775 -121.556359 Our citizens were startled yesterday after-\nnoon by ilie cry of fire, occasioned by the\nI'Sii tial burning of a building adjoining Mr\nBis.- etCs Liquor Store. Hy the prompt and\nefficient efforts of those near by, the flames\nwere extinguished before any very material\ndamage had been done The fire originated\nthrough the cai elessncss of some one who had\nthrown a lighted cigar into a pile ol rubbish\nin the rear of the building. Uur energetic\nfiremen were on the ground as soon as poss-\nible, after the danger was over, with their\ntitir and magnificentportable ehichtn roust,\nor /my ruck, us it has been facetiously term-\ned— fortunately however, their services were\nnot brought into requisition, and amidst the\ncheers of the admiring spectators, the 'fire\nnnnihibitor' was drawn by its gallant com-\npany to fbe and imposing structure\nthat has been so appropriately erected for\nits reception by our liberal and public spirit-\ned fellow citizens. We frequently see ad-\nvertisements in the city papers, offering for\nsale fire engines and their appurtenances,\nhut with a high appreciation of the etticacy\nof our Department us it exists at present,\nour citizens apparently deem it unnecessary\nto go to further expense in purchasing an\nengine, building cisterns, or in otherwise\nmaking further provisons against a gexeral\nconflagration. But that we do need one or\nmore engines, and a properly organized Tire\nDepartment, is becoming more and more\nevident every day. Let our citizens lake\naction in this matter immediately. Me uie\namply supplied with water, and there is no\nplausible reason why we should not be pro-\nvided with the proper means for using it.
0d1c415508798c1f1edd07319b618b74 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1895.7219177765094 37.305884 -89.518148 Farts and Figures Collected by the\nLeague of American Wheelmen.\nThe racing man and his many\ntroubles have been attracting so much\nattention of late there is a tendency to\nforget the League of American Wheel-\nmen has anything more serious to\noccupy its time. The fact remains that\nracing and the matters pertaining\nthereto are but a side issue and have\nlittle or nothing to do with the actual\nbusiness of the league. The league,\nwhich was formed in lSsO. had been in\nexistence but a short time when it was\ndiscovered the roads of this country\nwere vastly inferior to those of other\ncountries. In view of the fact that\nbicycle riding was poor sport on any\nbut the best of roads the league took\nup the matter of arousing interest in\nthe question. Starting with a purely\nselfish motive the subject has grown\ntill now the league is pledged to all of\nits vast membership continue the\nagitation till success shall crown the\nefforts to secure favorable legislative\naction on the question.\nIn order that the movement mig'.it\nprove a success the fanrer had t be\ninterested, as he it was the principal\nburden of the improvement would fall\nupon. At the outset the wheelmen\nwere unfortunate enough to incur the\ndislike and antagonism of the rural\nelement through the fact that the\ncourts had to be resorted to in order to\ndecide that the wheel was a vehicle\nand entitled to a share of the ruad.\nThe farmer contended that the bicycles\nscared their horses, and as a result\nthey were greatly opposed to allowing\nthe rights of the road to the advocates\nof the new method of transportation.\nThe matter was fully settled in the\ncourts, and in a number of instances\nthe misguided farmer was compelled\nto pa for the machine that his wrath\nhad impelled him to drive over.
04beaeab88d99cc187f3e5e5184d2cc7 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.215068461441 37.53119 -84.661888 In the circuit court Clerk J W\namllton assisted by Tom Wberritt\nJailer Rots Sheriff Lawson with bll\nipullei and all the other officers or-\ntbe court are rendering efficient lervi\ncel Tbe following have been sentenc\ned to the penitentiary Jack Johnson\nItraDd larceny two years Buck Burn\nIlde colored cutting and wounding\nODe year Pearce Carpenter hog nealI-\nDJI one year The case against J C\nSilerfor killing Dr Poynlz at Pain\nLIck was called on Tuesday M F-\nRout was appointed to summons 60-\nmen from the county to bo examine\nas jurors The testimony was beget\non Wednesday afternoon and the case\nII in progress today Thursday Doth\nfamilies are prominent and a deep in\nrest li manifested The defense I\npresented by Col W G Welch Hon\nR H Tomllnaoo MesirtJ M Roth\n \nCommonwealth by State Attorney\n0818Y County Attorney J I Hamll\nton Gov Bradley Messrs Robert\nardlng W I Williams J E Robin\nlaD W MeG Johnson\nDANVILLCh srlare had 12-\nvery fine sheep and several lambs kill\ned by stray dogs Logan Donny suffer\ned a severe sprain of his right leg\nwhllo engaged in breaking a YOUD-\nJhorse A letter received by Mr H E\nooltolk from Congressman Gilbert\ncontalDs official notice of the order es\nblltblng freo mall delivery In Dan-\nv1le beginning June let The Dan\nvllle Order of Elks has made arrange\nmODh for an elegant reception at Its-\nclub house on the evening of April 0-\nJohn Durham a brakeman on the L d\nN shot and severely wounded Holtoi\nWhite a colored man while the train-\ns stopping at Parksville Advocate
6cb362a7f1db50c25a3e188189dd2234 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.7445354875026 38.729625 -120.798546 Here is practical Republicanism for you.\nThe resolutions are posi tire, pointed, un-\nmistakable. In Ohio the Republicans arc\nneither ashamed nor afraid to declare\ntheir doctrines and opinions, knowing full\nwell that the Republicans crcrywhere feel\nas they do, but deem it prudent for a while\nto conceal or deny their real sentiments,\nin order to deceive the unsuspecting. Let\nthere once attain power, and they will at\nonce throw off the mask and appear in\ntheir true colors—be as bold and ultra as\ntheir Ohio confederates.\nSuch arc the real sentiments of Califor-\nnia Republicans, but they strenuously\ndeny it, and at the same time endorse Se-\nward as their leader. There never existed\na more sectional man in the Union. He\ngoes arm in arm to work for the obnoxious\n of Abolitionism, with such men\nas Wcndel Phillips, Ilor. Greeley, Pryne,\nBeecher and Giddings, the latter of whom\nwas one of the prime movers at the Chi-\ncago Convention that nominated the Tail\nsplitter;" he introduced one of the promi-\nnent resolutions that is in the Republican\nPlatform; he is one of the oldest veterans\nin the party, in fact he is the originator,\nfounder and builder up of the sectional in-\nstitution, and what his sentiments are,\nmust be the party's. Who can forget the\nlanguage used by this functionary while\nstumping bis .State for the Republicans V\nIt was there he prayed “ to God that the\nday might come when the negroes of the\nSouth would rise en masse, and with Brit-\nish bayonets totally annihilate the white\npopulation.”
0564253c3b64915e38ec1d19b555e53d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.5438355847286 41.681744 -72.788147 beautifully played game at St.\nMary's field yesterday by a 53 score.\nTony West and Bergeron hooked up\nin great pitchers' battle with 'West\ngetting the decision through two\nfinely executed squeere plays by his\nmates that netted four runs. The\nNorwich club played a great game\nof ball, catching the Falcons dead on\ntheir feet with cleverly laid bunts.\nBergeron was in rare form and\nthough touch up for ten hits, he\nkept them well scattered and sent\neight men back to the bench via the\nstrikeout route. West hurled his\nusual strong game especially with\nmen on tho bogs. The Falcons kept\nthreatening in almost every inning\nbut were able to put over the run-\nners in hut one inning when thry\ncrashed four hits in a row in tho\nfifth to score three This ral-\nly put the Falcons in the lead for\nthe first time during the game. The.\nNorwich nine came back strong In\nthe seventh and eighth to tie the\nscore and go info the lead.\nThe entire infield of the Norwich\nclub gave a snappy exhibition of\nteam work that was without a doubt\nthe best fielding seen here this year.\nIn the third Moore raced in to short\nfrom center field to make a great\ncatch of Kopec's bid for a hit.\n"Starhead" Budnick played the\ngame of his life at third. He made\nthree stops that were little short of\nimpossible and tossed his man out at\nfirst. Two fly balls that were badly\ncarried by the wind wore caught\nby him. He raced from third and\nsmeared them behind the catcher's\nbox.
141a024d1c56835c79c569ccd696e730 THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.0972602422628 40.419757 -77.187146 works for some time. Yesterday, at the\nhour above designated, while Murphy\nand another mechanic, Ed. H. Heller,\nwere about to tighten a belt which had\nhern thrown from the pulley for that\npurpose, and were standing on a plat-\nform about twelve feet above the ground\nHeller engaged In lacing the belt and\nMurphy holding it up with his right\nhand by some unaccountable occur-\nrence Murphy's coat sleeve caught in\nthe shafting while the powerful engine\nwas making about 250 revolutions per\nminute, and before he could extricate\nhis arm he was carried upward against\nthe pulley, where he braced himself\nwith a powerful effort with his left hand\nand actually Btood the fearful strain un-\ntil his right arm was wound up in the\nbelting and torn off about half way be-\ntween the elbow and shoulder. The un-\nfortunate man then dropped to the floor,\nhis fellow workmen gathering around\n as soon as pdssible to render assist-\nance. The engine was then Btopped and\nthe mangled arm removed. Had not\nthe unfortunate mechanic (who is a\nstrong, muscular man) braced himself\nwith a deathlike "purchase" he would\nmost likely have been carried among\nthe machinery and horribly mangled.\nHe was assisted to walk to Dr. Free's\nofllce, opposite the works, where, after\nthe bleeding stump was bound up, he\nwas placed upon a street car and taken\nto the hospital. Dr. DuNott, assisted by\nthe faculty, made a clean amputation of\nthe arm about an hour after the acci-\ndent occurred, cutting off the ragged\nstump about three Inches below the\nshoulder. Murphy is married and has\na wife and two children residing in one\nof Mr. Tlppett's tenant houses on In-\ndian alley, south Harrisburg. He was\ndoing well as could be expected under\nthe circumstances at nine o'clock last\nevening. HarrMnirg Patriot.
0a906be896c7d67369c260022c9d1f7b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6762294765736 39.745947 -75.546589 \\\\hal the women of this eoimlrv\namt particularly those of Delaware\nare doing in peace times for the Red\nf.ross will b; the subject of lee-\nlures, demonslnllons motion pictures\nand e\\iiHills of work at the Delaware\nSlate Fair lhal opens Monday at Kla-\nriiere and continues live days.\nKxperls in many branches of work\nand sp akers of national reputation,\nwith motion picture dims prepared\nspee ally to llluslr.ile some phase of\nHip work the Bed Cross Is doing will\nmake up dally programs, all of whir\nare free to the public and to whie\nevery one Is invited.\nThere will be sptvval limes for cer­\ntain Tenture« and Him« and special\ndays for nv n and women when lec­\ntures and pictures of particular iru-\nporlancc to them will be the pro­\ngram The work among children and\na playlet for their especial bonelll\nand education will be another fea­\nture of the many that have been as­\nsembled for the display. will be\nthe most pretentious exhibit ever as-\nstnibled by Hie Bed Cross in Delaware\nand the first tlm- that the Stale Fair\ntnanig ment has invited the Bed Cross\nto provde such an Interesting and\neducational display.\nTh- entire exhibit Is under the\nBureau of Hygiene of which Mrs. Jo­\nseph Bancroft is the director. Mrs,\nBancroft is- ass'sled by Miss Mirfam\nF. Carson who will act as a super­\nvisory rtiaracler over the entire ex-\nhtblt. which for purposes of conve­\nnience has been divided into\nsections—First Aid Tent. Womens\nand Childrens Bitremi and auditorium\n! where lectures and motion picture\nwill he shown.\nIn the First Aid tent which will be\nIn chnrxe of Miss Caroline Rebelen,\nsuperintendent, of publie\nnurs-s there will be a complete dis­\npensary installed. In order to care for\nany accident eases that may arise or\nany patron of ttie Fair who may need\nImdieal attention. There will be\nphysicians and nurse« constantly in
118487a75ddfa7c8201a18a478aeb7fe PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.042465721715 40.441694 -79.990086 For the last nino months tho Forge works in\nquestion a very large concern have used\nnothing but water gas, with most satisfactory\nresults to the company. In tho.first place, it\ngives a moro intense degree of heat than can\nbe obtained by any other means, a matter of\nimmense importance in the manufacture of\nsteel and other metallurgical operations. For\ninstance, it is asserted that 30 chargss of steel\nper week can bo turned outbya furnace heated\nwith water gas, instead of the 11 charges which\nwero the weekly output with Siemen's pro-\nducers. Not less is tho gain for illuminating\npurposes, the light being steady, powerful, and\nentirely freo from noxious fumes and soot.\nBut all of these advantages would count for\nlittle wero the cost much higher than that of\nthe previous agents.\nIt is here, however, that inventors claim\nthe greatest gain of all. It is asserted that\nwith fuel at 89 a ton, and labor at 3s 6d per man\nper day, tho gas can be produced for a fraction\nless than 4d per 1,000 cubic feet. At the Leeds\nworks the saving is estimated at 10,000 per\nannum, with much better results, ton, for the\nsmaller outlay. Even if tho cost were thrice as\nmuch, neither coal, gas nor electricity could\npossibly compete on that ground. But it is ono\nthing to supply a factory; quite another to\nprovide for the illuminating and heating re-\nquirements of urban population spread over\nlargo areas. Petroleum gas can be used, within\ncertain limits for the former purpose, but when\nit was attempted to be employed somo years\nago as a public light, the experiment was\ncrowned with utter failure.
3fd1d2651436e70afd4dc6f288d58f58 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1913.009589009386 39.456253 -77.96396 Now back to the rsal subject. The\nNegro leaders have not proved that\nthey expected lo win by playing fair,\nand thus they lose by others playing\nfoul. A man who Uils to make a\ngood point.when he can. should he\nlose, will have no sympathy from the\njudges,;but their contempt instead.\nTh'.s 13 the case with all humanity\ntoday. The leaders throw awav\ntheir tricks, as they say .because tb«y\nwould not dare to taku op stakes\nshould th«y win. I say try to win at\ntim^n and Bee&if there are not some\nplayers just as fairj §s themselves.\nThe Negro leaders have seemed not\nto rely upon their lollower§,and thu3\nwe see them forever trying to com¬\npromise with their antagonist, Then\nthey should quit the game. Win,\n*nd then give it up like men if you\nhave to The Japanese, won from\nRussia, and when 6be had proved\nthat she was the mistress,\nretired because Russia proved a\ndespot rather than a sport. Now\nJ «pan is living in glory and self\nconfidence, while Russia is in con\ntinual trouble and suspicion. She is\nwipe enough to know that her own\ntricks shall c*use htr disgrreeful end.\nNegroes have been so neglectful and\ncareless with their own, that white\npeople fear to trust thara with their\n(ibe white peoples') interests If\nihey wire not so eager Jo g^t the\npraise of the white man, th<y (*be\nNegroes would bav* more of bis ('he\nwbi e man'*) confidence and respcct.\nKven your enemy hatts your eon\nardice, or adroiren yonr courage.\nThe most of you seem to forget that\nthe word "race" means a contest\nbetween similar beintjH, in a similar\n"*ct and under sitnliar cordniore.\nTnus you have been satisfied to\nbring your boree in last; to the dis¬\ngust of all the judges and backers.
2fcaf7b9a41dacc731e7aa18b1c7d2c7 LAS VEGAS MORNING GAZETTE ChronAm 1881.023287639523 35.593933 -105.223897 brakeman, named George Calloway,\nand whom she had loved well but not\nwisely. At this discovery the boy\nwas arrested and bound over to court.\nOn the way to jail, however, the wily\nyouth succeeded in eluding the officer\nand escaped from the city, from which\nday ho has never been seen here. Af-\nter this little episode a New York\npolice paper published an illustration\nof the escape, and also gave a some-\nwhat touching account of the girl's\nwrongs. Among those who read the\narticle and viewed tho picture was\none Solomon C. Phillips, a rich wid-\nower, who lives away out in Iowa.\nSomehow or other the story struck a\ntender chord in his soul, and with\nIrue manly feeling lie determined to\nfind out something more of her, and,\nif she proved as worthy of his love\nand pity as the article had lead him\nto believe, to make her his wife. Ac-\ncordingly lie wrote her a letter, stat-\ning the toward her that had\nstolen over him upon reading of her\nsad case, and asking her to corres-\npond with him. Miss I5ellc was\ngreatly puzzled at receiving such a\nstrange missive, and went to her par-\nents for advice. After much discus-\nsion and the calling in of some conf-\nidential friends it was decided to write\nto Ihc postmaster at Phillips' place\nof residence, and . learn whether\nor not the gentleman was what he\nclaimed for himself. An answer soon\ncame, saying Phillips was of the\nstanding and character named, that\nhe owned considerable property, and\nwas all together a very Hue lellow.\nThis statement settled the mind of\nMiss Bell in the matter, and she re-\nplied to the gentleman's letter. To\nthis an answer came, and was in t urn\nacknowledged by the girl, until at\nlast Phillips asked her for her heart\nand hand. This was accepted, and\nthe Iowan came on here and met the\nobject of his affection.
348fe5ea3239402e7a29498f742726fd DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1919.9082191463724 58.275556 -134.3925 8. «'I- \\V 1 :s:i ch*., 8. 18- W.. 1.42\nha.. S . 10 W 4.S5 die.. to Corner\nNo. 2.; extending thence 8. 65* W\n7.58 eh*.; thence N. 7* W.. 8 .24\neh*. thence N. JO* W.. S.57 ch». ;\nthence 8. 87*' W., 4.79 ch*.; thenre\nN. :I2 W.. 18 .26 ch*; thence N. «5*\nK., 4.09 eha; thence N. 33* E.. 2 .89\ncha.; thence N. 34* E., 10 ch».;\nthence N. 64' IS.. 4.84 cha., thence\n3. 48* E., 6.63 ch*.; thenco menn-\nderlng the went hunk or Ciimo Creek\n8. 16* V.'.. 3.89 cha.. 8. 22* E.. 3.82\nch*.. 8. 66* K.. 1.8# ch*.. lo th«-\nplace of beginning. application or\nThoma* Murray, IIimnRli. Alaska;\n6-3000. A trad of 125.38 acre*. de\nncrlbod by mete* anil hound* fol¬\nlow*: Beginning at Corner No. 1 . \nhemlock stake set In ground on the\nsouth line of the Alexnnder hyme\n-"H- .nl. lovered by Mat f-1860 whence\nCorner No. 4 of tho *aid claim bwn\nS. 45* 15' W.. 5 .55 ch*.: extending\nthence N. 4,r. If.' E. 24.72 cha.:\nthence 8. 76" K 18 41 cha.; theme\n8. 0* 30' E. 16.24 ch*: thence 8 4' .\n::i)' W 29.84 <-h*; thenc- S. 31* 30'\n\\V 29.89 ch*.; thence- N. 4* 32' W.\nI 27 cha.; theme N. (.83 cha.; thence\nN 35" E.. 14.27 <h*.; thence N. I\n30' W.. 4.63 ch* thence N. 35* 30'\nW.. 23.71 cha.; thence N. 41* 30' W.,\n16.40 cha.. to the place of beginning,\napplication of \\V K. Martin. Juneau.\nAlaxka; l.lat 6-3007. September 26,\n1919. C. M . BRUCE, A**l*tanl <>ni\nmisaloncr of the General >.¦ nd Office.
0ac37a9e0cb30991e21c25da2903c936 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.0013660885954 39.745947 -75.546589 Important (Titltan i.etiers i'ulilistie.L\nNkw Yong, Jan. 1.— The Herald publish«»\neight lettere written by the Chilian authori­\nties to Minister Egan und Captain Schley,\nof the Baltimore, explaining Chili's attitude\nconcerning the Baltimore affair. Minister\nMalta wrote Minister Egan a sharp note on\nOct. 37, iwn, In which he said Chili was do­\ning all she could to find out who was at\nfault, and that she alone lutd the full right\nto punish the guilty. Minister Matta say*\nthat the throats of the United States are\nnot and will not be accepted in this or any\nsimilar ease; that Chili recognizes no one»\nauthority fur judging her criminal affaire\nhut her own courts, and that os souq as the\ninquiry is finished is; (Matta) will toll the\nUnited States oil alsmt it.\nTwo letters contain reports of the duel\nmagistrate of Valparaiso, In one dated Oct.\n3S, the chief of police of the city denies that\nthe police committed the brutolttios charged\nagainst them by the Baltimore soilore, aud\nsays that the police only the riot in\nan ordinary manner. Hu says Biggin was\nshut by some one in the mob and was cared\ntor by a policeman. Tho chief thinks Cap­\ntain Schley was very imprudent to send hi»\nmen ashore during such turbulent times.\nOn Oct. 30 Minister Matta assures Egan\nthat due justice will la* dune.\nJudge of CriAius Foster, under date ot\nNov. !!, reports to Minister Matta that the\nwhole affair was a row of no international\nimportance whatever. He says the Balti­\nmores sailors themselves say that the polit»-\nhelped them materially and protected them.\nOn Nov. 11 Intendente Arlcgui, of Valpa­\nraiso, assured Captain Schley that he liad\nordered the police to protect any of Schley»\ntends that might come ashore, but inti­\nmates that Schley will be prudent, in view\nof the troublous times, if be keeps his men\non board ship.\nNov. 9, Minister Matta asks Minister Egaa\nand Captain Schley to assist Chili in her ef­\nforts to ferret out the guilty ones by giving;\nwhat evidence they have.
99eb79e8524bc4691de5e1e26068a0df VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1839.9821917491122 43.798358 -73.087921 It shall yet come to pass that there shall come\npeople, and the inhabitants of many cilies; and\ndie inhabitants of one city shall g to another,\nsain, Let us go speedily to pray before tlm Lord,\nand to seek the Lord of hosts; I will go also."\nThe first Monday in January isapproach\ning, and we would not that it should pass,\nwith so little note of preparation, as the last\nyear. Let him who readeth the prophecy\nunderstand, and surely none who attentive-\nly consider the 8th chap. Zechariah, can\ndoubt the duty of Christians, with respect\nto this important subject.\nNot a few ministers, churches and Christ-\nians, in our own land, have, we believe,\nnever yet even heard of this Annual Con-\ncert, for else, how can we account for the\nfact, that thoe who believe in the efficacy\nof prayer, and particularly of prayer,\nshould refuse to say, "I will go also."\nIs one day in a year too much to conse-\ncrate to plead for a world, for whom the\nSavior died? And do not new and pecul-\niar motives, this year, throng thick upon us\nto urge the performance of this duty ! While\nthe Jews in great numbers, are returning to\nthe land of their fathers, shall not we pray\nthat they return to' the God of their fathers\nand no longer look for a Messiah to come\nbut confess Christ'to be Lord, to the glory\nof God the Father, and cry with Thomas\n"My Lord, and my God?" Shall not one\nspecial prayer for Jews be offered in each\nmeeting? And when we remember, that it\nis computed theie are now 16,000 in this\ncountry, how can we hold our peace, and\nnot "nrav for Jerusalem " --
120823f8897b701f9d1e9963727a70cc THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1881.4945205162355 37.561813 -75.84108 tion of perpetuating the memory\nof the gracious Christian act which\nhad been fcers. Not as a enlcgium,\nbut as a help and incentive to each\nand every one to use opportunity,\nto each and all not to fear criticism,\nbut to rise with circumstances and\nabove surroundings. This thonght,\non consultation, took the form of a\nportrait to hang in the .Presidential\nMansion, always a remindcr.always a\nmonitor, to be forever a cherished or-\nnament in theXation's drawing-room- ,\nAn Executive Committee of seven was\nchosen, to whom were entrust-\ned all the details of the work; a com-\nmission of well known men and\nwomen from the length and breadth\nof the land gave their names and in\nters! to it. At Mrs. Hayes des re,\nDaniel Huntington, of New York\nwas selected as the artist. H\ngave hi j work at large discount.\nPleased with the comnvsGii, de\nlighted with, the winsome women\nwho so courteously time and again\nmade the journey from Washington\nto give him sittings, the work grew\nrapidly and in the last days of the\nsojourn of President Hayes at\nWashington the completed portrait\nwas sent to that city. It had pass\ned triumphantly th6 ordeal of loving,\njealous friends in Xew York and in\nWashington ; it received the highest\nencomiums from the one who would,\nof necessity be the most severe critic\nPresident Hayes imself. It was\nformally received at the Executive\nMansion by President Garfield, and\nhangs on a panel in the east room,\nthe complement to the lovely por-\ntrait of Martha Washington. But\nthe exquisite jewel is to have appro-\npriate setting.
5d5401c8f6d4c806844feac3c2f63864 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1914.0260273655506 39.456253 -77.96396 out the country are interested as to\nthe experiments which are to be made\nto try to cure Joseph \\Y. Darling of\nthis city. The buy is suffering from\nan unusual malady which results in his\nwriting and drawing everything up¬\nside down Everything reverses itself\nto his vision, and it is believed that a\nsurgical operation will be able to rem¬\nedy the ailment.\nThe leading physicians of the city\nare taking a great interest in the boy, #\nand several schemes are being worked\nout in the hope of bettering the boy's\nsight and making his vision in every\nway normal. Dr. \\Y. P . Melody, city\nphysician, is convinced that the ail¬\nment comes from a lesion of the brain\nas a result of an accident, ami the boy\nis to be treated by him tirst to give\nhim an opportunity to disprove or sub¬\nstantiate that theory.\nJoseph is a remarkably intelligent\nboy. tie ia nine years old, but his\nphysical development is that of a boy\nof four, as he has spent months at a\ntime in various hospitals following an\naccident which affected his sight and\nruined his health. This happened when,\nhe was two and a half years old. He\nwas lifted from the tloor by his head\nby a caller at his home and so injured\nthat his neck and spine became prac¬\n useless. Abscesses formed at\neither side of his neck, and his spine\nfinally developed a bad curvature.\nThe boy was treated at a local hos¬\npital for nearly a year following the\nmishap, and. as in that time he did not\nhave one sound sleep because of his^\npain, the physicians were assured that\nhe could not live and had him taken\nto his home to die.\nIt was not until Joseph was well\nenough to go to school that it was\nfound that his sight was affected. He\nwas an apt pupil, but his teachers sent\nword to Mrs. Webb that he insisted?\nupon fooling at his work and did ev¬\nerything upside down. He protested\nthat he was doing the best that he\ncould and insisted that he never had\nwritten or drawn anything upside\ndown since he had been at the school.\nThey asked him then if he knew what\nupside down meant. He said yes and\nImmediately drew a picture as it^\nshould be. right side up.\n"That." said he. "is upside down,\nand 1 never do my work that wajr."\nContinued surveillance convinced hisl\nteachers that the boy was sufifering\nwith some defect of vision, and since\nthat time he has been examined by al¬\nmost aH of the physicians in Detroit,\nall of whom have been unable to say|\njust what causes the ailment.
0f5c3d1eeec7ea98902aa50527c65ea6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.960382482038 40.063962 -80.720915 Tim I*. r. Presbylnry of Whaling in«t\nnt Wnrnock'H oil 'luemlay nnd I lev. J . II .\nI.ltli'll, nf Wheeling, wan chosen modern-\nlor. I(«*v. W . II IVruuson, of wnlontown.\nit-Mgind IiIh eluwaw there to uccept a full\nfrom tiw LVP. church nt Xunlu, and i»U\naction was upproved. Mr. Monitor, u pin*\n. I -hi i>r Allegheny. preached two trial Her¬\nmans, nnd wun heartily sUHtulnod by thU\nsession I.f ill.' riiHliytoiy. They th«;ii\nK«W"tnl dtlegiitea to lie general ni»«»eml*J>*\nMi«*. 11 Mir. lo lie helil lit Rack Inland. Ill,\nwhich resulted mm follows: llov. J . II.\nI,null. WhrnllflK: JUv. J . II Spencer,\nNew Alliens; ItoV. J . II. llleketts, llu .\nmoni; Eiders John Hullois, Delia Ire; A. J .\nMeFar In ml, Ht. Clnlraville. and Mntniul\n<iordon. li. c . Hovd, of Murlln'u Furry,\nwas selected an ultrriint.» . Tho Il**llalr«*\nchurch wan recommended to general\nassembly for usslslnnce.\nThere will be literary exercise* In tho\nlllKh School io*morrow afternoon, and\nihey proinino lo l»n unusually Interesting,\nhaving In en specially prepared uh u boll-\nday entertainment. Parents. put roiis,\nalumni and others Interested are cordially\nInvited to attend these exercises. which\nconstat of recitations, omtlons, vocal and\nInstrumental music, debute and a repro-\niluctlon of the Firm Continental Congress\nby tho boys of tho C Class.\nTho steel works resume* operations tills\nmorning and will probably run until Iho\nnight before Christmas. There are evi¬\ndences of prcpaiollon to start the second\nfumnco at the mill, though no uuthorl-\ntatlvo statement bus been made, it IiM\nbeen repaired and the plumbers Imvo con¬\nnected up all tho pipes In It, all of which\nIndicate* it Is to be iihcd. The outlook\nIs dial tIiIh plant will bo In full oporullon\nbefore long.
0a114f3abd127d49dac356242c655d7f EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.401369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 Snob Is the snhgtance of the affidavit\nwhich ho mado and signed. Subsequently\nho said ho had had with him a consldora*\nbio sum of monoy wlioirheonibarkud; but\nfearing that It would be stolon daring his\nsojourn In tho steerage of the Paris, he\ngavo his purso for safe keeping to one De\nVerno, a cabin passenger. No suoh name\nappeared on tho saloon list of tho vessel.\nWhen closoly questioned about the iden­\ntity of tlio pnssongor, the Hon. Perclval\nadmitted that ho had no existence, and\nthen denied having aver said thut ho had\nglvon his purse to nny one.\nContinuing his autobiography, tho\nyoung man said bo had boon a member of\ntbo Clifton college orlcket team and had\nnttainod sonic distinction as a football\nplayer. His father had great woalth, be\nadded, consisting chiefly In vast coal and\niron inities noar tlia towns of Neath,\nDowllss, Hrltton Forry and Swansea.\nThe young man did not explain why, If\nbo was the eldost son of earl, he should\nadopt tho title of honorable and Inscribe\nit on bis card instead of tbo rightful ap­\npellation of lord. This, with tbe few oth­\ner Irregularities in his statement and a\ngenerally contradictory appoaranoe, led tbe\ncommissioner of immigration to restrain\nhim from tbo freedom of the city until\nthe United .States consul at Cardiff, to\nwhom a cable dispatch has beon sent, can\nbo heard from.\nAn examination of tbo list of British\nnobility allows that tho only Carmarthen\nis fioorgc tiodolphln, tho present Marquis\nof Carmarthen. He is the son of tbe Duke\nof Ijeeda and was born in 1802 and was\nnot marriod until 1884. As the young\nman claims to be noarly 31 years old, It is\nqulto clear that he cannot be tbs son of\ntho marquis. The marquis' residence is\nDo Vcrc, Kensington, aud not in Cardiff.\nThe general impression is that the Hon.\nF. Perclval belongs to a much lower social\nstratum than that which ho lays claim ta
fb7dbacaa6508d3cbe6cab803cc503ea VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.3428961432403 43.798358 -73.087921 Sir James Thornkill was the person\nwho painted the inside of the cupola of St\nPaul's London. After having finished\none of the compartments, he stepped back\ngradually to see how It would look at a\ndistance. He receded so (ar (still keeping\nhis eye intently on the painting) that he\nwas gone almost to the very edge of the\nscaffold without fe:ceivingjit. HaJ he con-\ntinued to retreat half a minute more would\nhave completed his destruction, and he\nmust have fallen to the pavement under-\nneath. A person present, who saw the\ndanger the great artist was in, had the\nhappy presence oi mind suddenly to snatch\nup one of the brushes and spoil the paint-\ning by rubbing it over. Sir James, trans-\nported with rage, sprung forward to save\nthe remainder of the piece. But his rage\nsoon turned into thanks, when the person\ntold him, "Sir, spoiling the painting, I\nhave saved the life of the painter. You\nwere advancing to the extremity of the\nscaffold, without knowing it. Had I call-\ned out to you to apprize you of your dan-\nger, you would naturally have turned to\nlook behind you ; and the surprise of find-\ning yourself in such a dreadful situation\nwould have made you fall indeed. I had\ntherefore no other method of retrieving\nyou but by acting as I did. Similar, if 1\nmay so speak, is the method of God's deal-\nings with his people. We are all natur\nally fond of our own performances. We\nadmire them to our own ruin, unless the\nHoly Spirit retrieves usfiom our folly.\nI his h? does by showing us the lnsufn\nciencyofour works to justify us before\nUod, and that i4 by the deeds ol the law\nno flesh living can be justified.
1cd9ac63ee757fd956297c5664df5925 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1884.596994503896 39.78373 -100.445882 IS WITHOUT A DOUBT THE MOST\nIT Kfliarlk, useful and Permanent Tomc to\ntne reproductive organs ot botb sexes Known.\nIt acta directly upon tbe nervous system. It\nrestores debilitated functions of the principal\norgans of the body and unsurpassed as a Ner-\nvine. It is a powerful, permanent an 1 deter-\nmined Aphroiisiac. It is an Alterative and\nAperient of excellent fine quality It relieves\nweakness and pains in the kidne s; it prevents\nlosses from tne system from unnatural cauee?;\nit cures frontal headache, pimples on the face,\nloss of memory, relaxed condition of the t er\nvous system, indisrestion. sour stomach, dia\nbetes, and alt urinary troubks. Those who\nhave fail d to obtains cure should immedi\nately (rive the Vitamzer a trial. It i- - the Kino\not It has never failed in a single case. The\ncompany will pay $50 for a case it will not\ncure no matter whether complicated or not.\nThe combination of the Vitalizes is such that\nit cures both simple and complicated cas.\nThis is owing to a practical experience of SO\nyears. Dr. Abernetby & Co. will guarantee a\nperfect cure in every case taken under their\ntreatment and special advice. Time required\nis from one to three months tre itment. If the\ngreat Vitalize fails, the money paid for the\nremedy will be refunded or S500 forfeited.\nCall or write f"r our observations os Mas\nhood, whica will enable the sufferer to answer\nthe necessary questions, so that racb can nave\nthe proper remed' forwarded suitable for bis\nSrsciAL Casb Cl'kscltatiom Free Con
31c5c657fe9548301c5604f7380b2bd6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.4521857607265 40.063962 -80.720915 Many minor matters, aflectlng munlcl- n\npal health, comfort, advancement or pro- h\ntectloo, art constantly being subjected to a\nvigorous discussion In various quarters, a\nWhile tlie truths ovolved and ideas tug- c\nElated frequently gain a mere local hear- tl\ng. A bare abatract ol the gleanings of *\na single day's exchanges will show how ci\nearnestly kindred city populations are n\nstruggling against evils akin to those 8\nwhich we endure. Debt, overtaxation, a:\ninsufficiency ol supplies of pure water, ti\nImperfect sanitary precautions anil police q\ndeficiencies are staple subjects or com- ii\nplaint In New York city ;the annual U\ncharge tor interest now exceeds eight mil- o\nlions ol dollars, ana yet there is an in- m\ncessant demand tor the;lssue of more in- ai\ntercst bearing municipal bonds. In Mew c\nOrleans an irate taxpayer complains that fi\na property at (18,000 in 1863, on ci\nwhich he paid $44, is now assessed at\n<20.000 and subjected to a State tax of tl\n$410, with a prospect that the torthcom- p\nlag levy will be $970. The returns ol the ai\nNew York city sanitary inspection to the p\nBoard ol Health present an array of facts ii\nand figures indicative of a dreadful neces- ci\nslty lor purification, which is sufficiently tl\nIllustrated by the statement that thou- n\nsands of Inspections have been made by a\nthe health Inspectors (the list Including w\n802 tenement nouses); that the disinfecting tl\ncorps have visited ninety-four premises a\nwhere contagion* diseases were found, and ti\nthnt two hundred deaths were caused last\nweek by local diseases. We may weir\npause to consider how much similar work\nis done, and how much remains undone, ei\nin our own city. In
58eda270b7aac84b8766873bf9fc2ec7 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1862.6479451737696 35.780398 -78.639099 ted upon, and fcubdusd.'thereeklss spirit\nof the soldiery, are those wlittfh arc born\nin the heart itself, upon the field of battle.\nThere is something irresistible in the ap-\npeal whith tho Almighty makes when he\nstrikes from yonr side, in tho twinkling of\nan e v, your friend and comrade, and 'lew\nnatures are so utterly depraved as to en-\ntirely disregard the whisperings of the\n"still small voice V which makes them-\nselves so vividly heard at such a moment.\nEvery, man nnconsciously asks himself,\n' whose turn will come next," and when\nat the termination of the conflict, he finds\nnimseit exempted from the awful fiat that\nhas brought death to his very side and all\naround him, his gratitude to his creator\nis alloyed, though it may be bat dimly,\nwith a holier emotion, which for the time\nrenders nim a wiser better man. In\nthis aspect the recent battles have done\nmore to make religious converts than all\nthe homilies and exhortations ever uttered\nfrom the pulpit. A man who has stood\nupon the threshold of eternity while in\nthe din and carnage of a fight, has listen-\ned to eloqnence more fiery and imprcssivo\nthan ever came from mortal lips.\nIt is not strange therefore aa yo go\nthrough various camps, even ou a week\nday, that your ears are here and there sa-\nluted with the melody of a choir of voices,\nrich, round and full, sung with all their\nseriousness and earnestness df true devo-\ntion ; or that before the lights are out in\nth evenitg, manly tonei are heard in\nthanksgiving for the blessings of the day ;\nor that the Bible and Prayer Book are\ncommot books upon the mess taW
33a3388b68958ee006f69d8840a95001 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.828767091578 41.681744 -72.788147 Expenses Exceed Estimates.\nThe simple reason for the failure of\nthe great enterprise to meet the ex\npectation3 of its sanguine promoters\nis that expenses have far exceeded the\noriginal estimates. The building of\nsanatoria for consumptives at a cost\nof $7,500,000. was an Important fea\nture which has not been realized be\ncause of lack of funds to build. The\ndoctors of the United Kingdom have\nprofited greatly through Insurance\nAct, according to popular belief. In\nthe beginning there was a deadlock\nbetween the government and the Brit-\nish Medical Association over the terms\nof payment to the official physician.\nj Those chosen were to have several\nhundred people accredited to them,\nat an annual rate of $1.50 per per-\nson including iiriiRS to be furnished\nby the doctors. The compromise gave\n doctors a maximum of $2.25 per\npossible patient. The estimates of\nthe total cost of medical attention\nunder the act were about $8,000,000\nfor 14,700.000 persons, but the ac-\ntual results are not known.\nBefore the Insurance Act came into\nforce newly fledged doctors thought\nthemselves fortunate if they could\nearn from $750 to $1,000 by assist-\ning older practitioners, and for this\nthey were expected to work very long\nhours. Under the act many young\nmen are credited with earning from\n$5,000 to $7,000. the fortunate ones\nbeing those whose surgeries are sit-\nuated in the poorer class and working\nclass districts. The doctors have a\nstrong counter balancing grievance in\nthe slowness of the government to\npay them. Most of the accounts for\nthe year 1914 have not been sctthf\nyet.
49f5010de7d1ddd1565981bcf80c3ae2 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.0560108973386 39.369864 -121.105448 Tub Society Islands and their Orange\nTrade.—Since the discovery of gold in Cali-\nfornia, a large trade in oranges has sprung\nup between that country and the Society Is-\nlands, where this delicious fruit grows in\ngreat profusion. Most of the oranges come\nfrom three islands of the group—Tahiti\n(where the French have a garrison,) Hua-\nhina and Roeta. About five million oranges\narc annually exported, for which about seven\ndollars and a half per thousand is paid, de-\nlivered on board ship. The trade is in the\nhands of a few foreign merchants at Papute,\nin Tahiti, who takeforeign goods in exchange\nfor fruit, which is gathered and brought to\nthem by the natives. The oranges are passed\ndown from the trees by youngsters, and\ngathered by women into baskets made of the\nleaves of the cocoanut tree, and taken thence\nto the place at which the vessel is lying to\nreceive them. There they are placed in a\nlong thatched house, and when collected in\nsufficient numbers, are wrapped in leaves by\n women. A smart woman will wrap\n1,200 oranges a day by which she can earn\nabout eighty cents. The fruit grows luxur-\niantly in every direction, in valleys and ra-\nvines which run from the seaside up the\nsteep mountains. The oranges grow wild,\nbut the trees arc claimed in districts by dif-\nferent natives, through hereditary descent.\nBefore the California trade gave a special\nvalbe to the fruit, it was free as water and\nalmost as common. The natives formerly\nmade an intoxicating liquor, called orange\nram) from it, but this practice is now given\nupi The orange season commences in Feb-\nruary and ends in September, during which\ntime the trees may be seen at once in the\nvarious stages of blossoming, green and\nhalf yellow, and ripe fruit. In the spring\ntime the fruit is picked green; in the summer\nhalf yellow, and in the fall ripe, those being\nthe conditions in which they are found by\nexperience to keep best for exportation.—\nCalifornia consumes nearly the whole crop\nof fruit.
12f4a56aab19e82ea6412268cd950898 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.0724043399616 37.561813 -75.84108 taken, new signs of returning health will appear; aa\nthe blood improves in streugth and purity, disease)\nwill diminish, and all foreign and impure depottits,\nnodes, tumors, cancers, hard lumps, etc., be re-\nsolved away- - and the unsound mode aound and\nhealthy ; ulcers, fevr sores, sy phvlitic sores, chrooia\nskin diseases gradually disappear.\nS. In cases where th ynem Has been sallvaterf,\nand Mercury, Ijtiicksilr r. Corrosive Sublimate (the\nprincipleconstituent in theadvertisedSarsaparillas,\nassociated in some cases with Hyd. of Potatsa) hare\naccumulated acd become deposited in the bones,\njoints, etc., earning caries of the bones, rickets.\nsptnai curvatures, contortions, white swellings,\nvaricose veins, etc., the S 4KV4P A Rl L.L .1 4 will\nresolve away these deposits and exterminate the vi-\nrus of the disease from the system.\n9. If those who are taking these medicines for th\ncure of Chronic, Scrofulous or Syphilitic diseases,\nhowever slow may be the core, "feel lftter.' and\nAnd their genrnl health improving, flesh and\nweight increasing er even keeping its own, it is m\nsure sign that the enre ti progressing. In these\ndiseases the patient either fets better or worse the\nvirus of the disease is not inactive; if not arrested\nand driven from the blood, it will spread aud con-\ntinue to undermine the constitution. As soon as the\nA4RMAPARILLI 4 maltee the patient feel\nbetter." every hour you will grow better and increase?\nin heajth, strength and flesh.\nThe great power of this remedy Is in diseases that\nthreaten death as in Consumption of the Langs and\nTuberculous Phthisis. Scrofula, Syphiloid Diseases,\nWasting, Degeneration and Ulceration of the Kid-\nneys, Diabetes, Stoppage of Water (instantaneous)\nrelief afforded where catheters have to be used, thus)\ndoing away with the painful operation of using these\ninstruments, dissolving stone in the bladder, and in\nall cases of Inflammation of the Bladder and Kid-\nneys, in Chronic cases of Leucorrhea and L tenne\ndiseases.
43d2fdedcbc767329aed2d9b1e817671 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.8479451737696 41.875555 -87.624421 state's attorney of Cook County, In\nthe conduct of his office and In the\nsafeguarding of the institutions of our\ngovernment, la engaged In work\nwhich Is of most vital Importance not\nonly to the people of the city of Chi-\ncago and Cook County but to every\nAmerican citizen within the State of\nIllinois and the United States;\n"Whereas, His fearless and honest\nattack upon the abhorrent crime of\nJury tampering and his Investigation,\nexposure, nnd prosecution of the en-\ntire ring of Jury fixers is absolutely\nIndispensable for the safety of our\nJudicial system and the protection of\nour government of law and order;\n"Whereas, His attack upon the dan-\ngerous cancer in our pdbllc official cir-\ncles, called 'graft,' haa unraveled con-\nditions which must result further\ninvestigation and prosecution to check\nthe growth of the evil and stop the pil-\nfering of public and private pockets\nby the grafters In public office;\n"Whereas, His successful attack of\nthe graft ring in labor circles has\nbeen a body blow to the dishonest\ndrones in labor organizatlona and nn\nImpetus for good. work to persons In-\nterested In legitimate and lawful or-\nganizations of labor;\n"Therefore, Be it resolved by the\nStato's Attorneys' Association of Illi-\nnois, in session at Springfield assem-\nbled, that Individually and collectively\nwe Indorse the splendid work of our\nmember, John E. W . Wayman; that\nwe urge him to continue It until the\nend regardless of pleas, Influence, or\nstanding of the men who may be hit\nor exposed.
0bc0c7903940510ccf07f71c7842456b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.1794520230847 41.681744 -72.788147 only team which has not been elim-\ninated in the race for the title, to-\nmorrow night. This will be the sec-\nond game of the card at the Tabs'\nhall, and the program will be well\nbalanced with a good first game and\na good third game.\nThe first game will be a battle in-\nvolving Corbin Cabinet Lock and the\nStanley Works and the last game\nwill feature the P. & F. Corbin and\nFafnlr Bearing teams.\nThere are still four teams which\nare in a position to capture the sec-\nond place position. They are the\nStanley Rule, Stanley Works, Faf-\nnirs and Russell & Krwin. Of this\nnumber only the Stanley Rule has\na chance to gain a first place posl- -\nj tion. This can happen only if the\n'Corbin team loses all the\ngames remaining on its schedule\nwhile Stanley Rule is winning all\nthat remain on its alate.\nAfter tomorrow Corbin Screw has\nlone more game and its opponent on\nthat occasion will be the other mem-- j\nher of the Stanley family, Stanley\nWorks; Stanley Rule will have three\nmore games, against Landers, Ntw\nBritain Machine and Russell & FJr- -\nwin. A victory for Stanley Bute may\nmake it possible for that quintet to\ntie Corbfn Screw for the champion-\nship as the season ends.\nIf the Stanley Rule loses while the\nStanley W orks and Fafnlr teams are\nwinning all three teams will be\nclosely bunched for second place.\nTl.n DkIapd will ha fi(fl,nvills' t tl\nposition and the other two rivals\nwill be within a game of them.
380123228ca9774e5ebc0376c169b0f9 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.1188524273932 37.561813 -75.84108 "With Mr. Stanton I had no com-\nmunication, director indirect, on the\nsubject of hm reinstatement, . during\nhis suspension. I know that it had\nbeen recommended; to the President\nto send in the name of General Cox,\nof Ohio, as Secretary of War, and thhs\nsave all embarrassment a proposition\nthat I sincerely hoped he would enter-\ntain favorably, Gen. Sherman seeing\nthe President at my particular request\nto urge this, on the 13th.\n"On Tuesday, Mr. Stanton reen-\ntered the office of Secretary of War.\nGon. Comstock, who had carried my\nofficial letter announcing thaf, by Mr.\nStanton's reinstatement by the Senate,\n1 had ceased to be. Secretary of War,\nad interim and Aho saw the Presi-\ndent open and read the communica-\ntion, brought back to me. from the\nPresident, a message that he wanted\nto see me that day at the Cabinet\nmeeting, after I had made known the\nfact that I was no longer Secretary of\nWar ad interim. At this meeting, af-\nter opening it as though I were a\nmember of his. Cabinet, when remind-\ned of the notification given\nhim, that I was no longer Secretary\nof War dd interim, the President gave\na version of the conversation alluded\ntoalready. In this statement it was\nasserted that in both conversations, I\nhad agreed to hold on to the office of\nSecretary of War until displaced by\nthe Courts, or resign, so as to place the\nPresident where he would have been\nhad I never accepted the office. Af-\nter hearing the President through, I\nstated our conversation substantially\nas given in this letter. I will add,\nthat my conversation before the Cabi-\nnet embraced other matter not perti-\nnent here, and is, therefore, left out.\nI in no wise admitted the correctness\nof the President's- statement of our\nconversation, though to soften the evi-\ndent contradict ion of my statement,\nI said, alluding to our first Conver-\nsation on the subject, that the Presi-\ndent might have misunderstood me\nthe way he paid, that I promised to\nn s"gn if I did not resist the reinstate-\nment. I made no such statement. I\nhave the honor to be,, very respect-\nfully, your obedient servant,
1cc6bd00775df8d74bfb2292bd135cf9 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.0232240120927 41.875555 -87.624421 Ihiplds, New York and a dozen more\nhave the same story (o tell, Men\nhave held up their right hands mid\nsworn to deal Justly In all things.\nThey have taken oaths before the\nvery people tney nave piumiereil.\nThey have cast a relleetloii against\notllclal Intcgrlly In tills country that\nIt will take years to wipe out. And\nthey were trusted! That hurts more\nthan anything else. You expect the\nthug to be dishonest. The burglar Is\na criminal, and no one believes that\nhe will be anything else. You bar\nyour doors and guard your vaults. For\nhim you keep the gun and the dog.\nHe Is tlie enemy of society, nnd plans\ncan be made to defeat his enterprise\nnnd punish his wrongdoing. Hut how\ncan you guard against the who\nlooks honest, who has been honest,\nwho Is selected from among his fel-\nlows for honor, who makes every\npromise that the law mid the public\ncould ask to demand, and who steals\nfrom his friends the people because\nhe has the opportunity) Do you won-\nder that there are men who Insist that\n"every man has his price?" Do you\nwonder that tho simple Integrity that\nonce surrounded men no longer con-\nvinces? The robbers In high places\nhave done more than pilfer a few\nthousands of the public trons,urles.\nThey have shaken conlldciice in nat-\nural Integrity the honesty that ex-\nists for honesty's unks. The lemedy?\nWho shall name It? Punish crooks\nwhenever and wherever possible, but\nthe most will be done with the young-\ner geiu'ratlou.
240492d29a157fd91e814dd3d151d43a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.9219177765094 37.561813 -75.84108 who employed some notorious burglars\nto break open the safe, abstract certain\ndocuments, and deliver them to Alex-\nander, who was to have been arrested at\nthe instant of receiving the stolen prop-\nerty, and so involved in a felony, by\nwhich means the investigation of Har-\nrington's clients would be broken down.\nIt happened, however, that Alexander\ndid not answer the summons of his door-\nbell, and the plan failed to that extent\nThe evidence before the Congressional\nCommittee was of such serious character\nthat the Treasury Department took cog-\nnizance of it so far that it affected the\nofficers of its Secret Service Depart-\nment, and that branch of it was thorough-\nly investigated by a law officer, whose\ninformation being submitted to the Sec-\nretary of the Treasury, that officer dis-\nmissed from the employ of the Govern-\nment Whiteley.Nettlesnip, and the rest,\nand, indeed, reorganized the Secret Ser\nvice Division altogether. In the course\nof time the Grand Jury had the case\nsubmitted to tkem, and Harrington, Wil-\nliams, Whiteley, .and Nettlesnip were\nindicted for a conspiracy to commit bur-\nglary. Their trial on indictment is\nthe case now drawing to an end. The\nchief evidence for the prosecution is\nsupplied by one of the burglars named\nHayes, who turned State's evidence, and\ntold a startling story of the negotiations\nconducted by Whiteley and Nettleship,\nby which his professional services were\nsecured for a price and a guarantee that\nhe would not nave to remain in jail long.\nDuring the past week some ot the de-\nfendants in the case have procured the\narrest of Hayes on a charge of perjury,\nbut this is in some quarters neld to be\nonly a trick to discredit his story with\nthe jury. There are many episodes con\nnected with the case which have a\nspecial interest,' such as the spiriting\naway of "important witnesses, and the\nrelease on nominal bail by application of\none of the alleged conspirators of an\nalleged confederate. The District-A- t\ntorney Harrington being on trial, the\nprosecution of the case has been in\ncharge of Assistant Attorney-Gener-\nClement H. Hill and A. G. Riddle, Esq.,\nof the Washington bar, who was special\nly commissioned by the Department of\nJustice.
75def2c0c4c9fb2bac38877d24be018f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.6095890093861 44.939157 -123.033121 Peter is not like his famous namosako of some 1000 years ago. He Is just\nthe opposite, lie denies nothing, but goes out of his way to admit almost ev-\nerything, especially if it Is bad about tho big transportation coinpanioa, in-\ncluding the Wolls Fargo express company. Peter oases his conscience thus:\n"Tho common carrier has, in many Instances, been satisfied to look upon\ntli o distress of tho farmer with Indiffornnco and has given small concern to a\nglutted market. Ho usually gets his before the stuff is dumped and sends a\nglib talking agent to express sorrow to tho producer and collect any balanco\ndue on tho freight and then sets about to encourage an increase in farm ton-\nnage next year, but now those mighty agencies of commerce are looking toward\nthe marketing side of the fanners' problems and the common carrier nover\nfaced more golden opportunities for usefulness than now confront him."\nWo hope ho feels better after getting that load his mind, but ho certain-\nly told nothing that tho public did not know long ago. That is the reason he\nadmits it so cheerfully. He, as tho lawyers say, "confesses and avoids." Tho\ncompanies were bud, but now they lmvo found a way by which they can como\nto his relief and their own and at the snmo time bo good. Kvorvono who\nhas ever had business with an express company knows that it would take tho\nlast acorn from a blind sow with nino suckling pigs, in a nice business way, of\ncourse, and have the pigs jailed for squealing, besides, Then Peter, just to\nmak in all feel good, 'fosses up for tho companies, and shows somo of tho\nthings they have done, ami points out that the companies are now all good and\nwill not do such things as gouging the public any more unless they get a\nchance and that tho Ethiopian has changed his skin and tho leonrd is now\nspotless,
3e64f8bcfc3824225a679d15a2a0aa70 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.2945205162355 39.261561 -121.016059 Tub Gentler Sex on the “Cook.”—Jef-\nferson, in bis volume about doctors, bas\nsome stories concerning women duelists,\nwhich are introduced into the work because\nsurgeons must dress wouuds given by fe-\nmale fighters as well as men duelists. We\nquote the following from his book :\nThe ftw duels fought between women\nhave,, for the most part, been characterised\nby great ferooity. Madame Dunoyer men-\ntions a oase of a duel with swords between\ntwo ladies of rank, who would have killed\neach other had they not been separated. In\na femenine duel on tbe Boulevard St. An-\ntoine, mentioned by De la Golombiere, both\nthe principals received several wounds on\ntbe face and bosom—a most important fact\nillustrative of the pride the fair sex take ia\nthose parts. Sometimes ladies have distin-\nguished themselves by fighting duels with\nmen. Mlle Dureux fought her lovor An-\ntoinette in an open street. Tbe Actress\nMaupin challenged Dum'eoy, but be declin-\ned to give her satisfaction ; so tbe lady\nstripped off his watch and snuff box, aod\nbore them away as trophies of victory. The\nsame lady on another occasion having in-\nsulted in a ball room, a distinguished per-\nson of her sex, was requested by seve-\nral gentlemen to leave the entertainment.\nShe obeyed, but forthwith challenged and\nfought each of tbe meddlesome cavaliers—-\nand killed them all! The slaughter ac-\ncomplished. she returned to the ball room,\naod danced in tbe presence of her rival.\nTbe Marquis de Nelse and the Countea Pol-\nigoac, under the regency, fought with pis-\ntols for tbe possession of the Due de Riche-\nlieu. In about 1827, a lady of Cbateauroux\nWhose husband bad received a slap in the\nface, called out tbe offender, and severely\nwounding him in a duel, wiped off tbe stain\nfrom her lords honor. Tbe most dramatic\naffair of honor, however, in tbe annals of\nfemale dueling, occurred in the year 1825,\nwhen a young French girl challenged a\ngarde du corps who had seduced her. At\nthe meeting tbe seconds took the precau-\ntion of loading without ball, the fair princi-\npal of oourae being kept in ignorance of the\narraagemeot She fired first, and saw her\nseducer remain unhurt. Without flinching\nor trembling, or changing color, she stood\nwatching her adversary, while he took a\ndeliberate aim, (to test her courage.) and\nthen, after a painful suspense, fired in the\nair.
1b16b46e0e620a0588c49e8547f0efb5 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.9821917491122 42.217817 -85.891125 annual pilgrimage to Europe, He took\nwith him all his disposable funds, vary-\ning by Npnrt from twenty to forty thou-\nsand dollars, but probably nearer the\nformer sum than the latter. Before he\nsailed he signified to our grandfather\nhis intention of making a somewhat ex-\ntended tour, ..nd also gave him to un-\nderstand that he eontemplated making\nt purchase of uuusnal importance and\nmagnitude. If ho had been a little\nmore explicit mnoh trouhk might have\nbeen saved, but it was never Ja.'s Way to\ntalk much over his affairs vith BBjOUe.\n"He sailed early in the spring, and\nreached the Old World in safety. I\nhave seen some of the letters hO wrote\nduring (hat last jonrney all brief, curt\nSpisties, teliiug little but !' 6 State of\nhis health, the place from whence hv\nwas writiug, and the probable date of\nhis departure for another point, The\nlast con u try to which he went was Hol\nland. He stayed some time at Amster\n and then went to Rotterdam,\nwheio he remained sevt m weeks ; but,\nBS usual, his letters contaiued no intel-\nligence reepeeting his business transac-\ntions. At length word was roc. i fed 4f\nhis approaching return. He t4)ok pass-\nage direct from Rotterdam in i sailing\nvessel, but he WBS not destined to reach\nhome alive. The cholera broke 4ut on\nboard of the ship before sho had been\nmany days out Ol sight of land, ami\nStephen Carr was one of its curliest vii\ntirns. It was supposed that the viru-\nlence of the disorder, and its speedy\ntermination, prevented him from mak\ning known anything respecting his\nproperty, fie was accustomed always\nto travel with his precious merchandise\ncarefully concealed in nooks and cor-\nners among his baggage ; and on this\nlast voyage his purchases must have\nbeen ot unusual value, and were either\nstolen or so carefully concealed that\nthey were never discovered. Nor have\nthey ever been found from that day to\nthis."
344f81c8dc12ae6207d30a1bb367bbf2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.6789617170107 40.063962 -80.720915 Our Commissions to Agents\nKxceed those of every other establishment\not the kind..proof of this can be lound In\ncomparing our premiums with those of\nothers roa Clubs or ths bask size, In ad-\ndition to which we claim togive better goods\nof the same character.\nHe urtil tend to Agents fret of charge:\nfor a Club of 30 and Three Dollars,\ndoz. good linen Shirt Fronts; 1 set ttolld\nGold (Studs; all Wool Canlmere lor Pants;\nfine white Counterpane, large size, elegant\nBalmoral Skirt; 20 yards brown or bleached\nSheeting, good quality, yard wide; 1 elegant\n100 Picture Morocco-bound Photo. Album; l\ndouble len« stereoscope and 12 foreign\nViews; l silver plaited engraved 5 bottle Cas-\ntor; l elegant Sua Pan; with Ivory or sandal\nWood Frame, featuered edge ana spangled;\nI' Steel Carving Knife anu Fork, beat\nquality, Ivory balanced handle: 1 handsome\nbeaded and lined Parasol; 2D yds. good Print;\n1 very fine Damask Table Cover; 1 pr. best\nquality ladles' Serge Congress Boots; 1 doz.\nnne Linen Towels; % doz. Kogera' best SBver\nDeaaert Forks; l Ladies' large real Morocco\nTraveling Bag; 1 fancy «*\nelegant silver\nKings; 1 doz. Lac\nfitocaings; CJenta' heavy chased solid Uold\nBlng; l pr. Ladles' high cut Balmoral Boots;\n1elegant Delaine Brass Pattern; 1 Vlolln and\nBow. in hox complete; 1 set Jewelry, pin, ear\ndropik, and sleeve buttons.\nFor » Club of 50 snd Five Dollar*..\nI black or colored Alpacca Dress Pattern; 1\nsot Lace Curtains; 1 pr. all Wool Blankets;\nassr? ^uu.s^u^iri0 »5s\nGold Scarf Pin; yds. very fine Csaslmere,\nfor Pants ana Vest; 1 set Ivory balanoed\nhandle Knives with silver
258c8cb5be7e39e14fa5ed72d53bd256 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.7575342148655 39.745947 -75.546589 Co.. Glanding. Herman ..........\nCo., Wilmington City Electric\nCo., Albert H. Jacobs...............\nChadwick. Harry .....................\nCloud. John J. .........................\nCo., Pure Oil ...........................\nCo., Gem Grocery ...................\nCo.. Gem Grocery ...................\nCo.. The Puritan ................... ..\nCo.. Cofer, R. L.........................\nCohen £ Filkelsteln ..............\nCohen £ Filkelsteln ..............\nCann, C. G....................................\nCo., Consumers Grocery ........\nCo., Golden Eagle Tea ..........\nConley. George .........................\nCo., Newark Shoe, The ........\nCo., Eureka Post Card ..........\nCo., Wilmington Decorating..\nCo.. Brockton Shoe, The........\nCohn, Julius ..............................\nCo., Newark Optical .............\nCarr, Margaret C........................\nCo., Diamond State Bottling..\nConaway £ Bro., James P. ..\nCannon, Samuel .....................\nClark. Joseph W.......................\nCo., Union Painting.................\nCooper, Jacob ...........................\nCooper, Jacob ...........................\nCo., Kiamensi Springs.............\nCohen, David ............................\nCampbell, Benjamin .................\nClark, John T., Co...................\n Middleton Garage and Re­\npair ............................................\nClconti. Franclsca ...................\nCook, Jacob J.............................\nComegys, Edward J...................\nCamper, Fred D..........................\nCo., Harman J. £ J. N....... ...\nCo.. Acme Grocery, The..........\nCasino Pool Parlors ...............\nCapitol Billard & Pool Par­\nlors ...........................................\nCarey, A. L..................................\nConnor. Edward F....................\nCopes, William J.......................\nCasey. William A.......................\nClaringboid, Thomas R.............\nCann. Charles G........................ ..\nCo., American Stores ............\nCohen & Finkelstein .............\nConaway, J. P. £ Brother ...\nChase. Robert M........................\nCo., Bartow Tyre ...................\nCooper. Perry ............... .............\nCannon, Samuel ...................\nCo., Peoples Railway ............\nCo., Peoples Railway ............\nCo., Peoples Railway ............\nCo., Peoples Hallway ............\nCo., People's Railway ............\nCo., People's Hallway ............\nCo., Harmouson Drug ............\nCo., Confectionary Supply ...\nCo., Reynolds Candy ..............\nCo., Elsmere Provision..........\nCoter, R. L................................
1ed62c84d2d6191d9d7802ed7e3c91c8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.4260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 PiTTSitinoH, Pa., June 4..The Amalga¬\nmated Association of Iron and Steel Work¬\ners held but a brief session this morning,\nand then adjourned for committee work.\nDuring the session a resolution was adopt¬\ned complimenting Hon. M . A. Foran, of\nCleveland, for the stand taken on the arbi¬\ntration bili before Congress. There is con¬\nsiderable goesip among the delegates as to\nwho will be their officers next year. Pres¬\nident Welbe will be opposed by Mr. P . F .\nKeney, of Friendship Lodge, of this city\nSecretary Martin will be opposed by John\nCunningham, ol the West End Lodge, and\nJames Tyson, the ex-Assistant Secretary.\nFrom the opinion expressed by delegates\nthe vote will be close.\nThe afternoon session was taken up with\nroutine business and an address by Gen¬\neral Master Workman Powderly, wuo \nited the convention by invitation. In the\ncourse of his remarks he advised the\nAmalgamated Association ol Iron and\nSteel Workers to join the Knights of L»-\nbor, Said he: "l'he day Is coming when\nall branches of labor will come into closer\nrelations with one another. 1 am here\nfor the purpose of thanking you\nlor yonr kind reply to my re¬\ncent letter, and to convey to\nthis convention the friendly greetings\nand personal feelings of delegates who\nrecently attended the Knights of Labor\nconvention In Cleveland. I can assure\nyou that as far as 1 am concerned, and 1\nmink I voice the general semiinsnt of our\nbody, that whether the Amalgamated\nAssociation cornea into onr body or not\nthe band of sympathy and encourage¬\nment will be freely tendered them when¬\never needed.
57fddab93519cc12d9c5d7edbdc1df47 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.1821917491122 39.261561 -121.016059 every item of news sent over the felegruph\nwires is got up for i fleet by the Govern-\nment. The following me his comments up\non the report received liy telegraph of the\nBtirrend-T of Fort Done son:\nNow, if a man had no common sense, all\nthis would go down beautifully as it was in-\ntended, but the official at Chicago should know\nthnt the city and county of San Francisco con-\ntains a great many Yankees who are smart at\nguessing, and that they have actually discov-\nered that this Fort Donelson affair is not a\nmountain but a mole hill after all —a windmill,\nattacked by fifty thousand men. It was a mere\noutpost containing some two thousand men, of\nwhom five hundred, or less, went off, and fif-\nteen hundred, or less, were taken prisoners.\nGen. Johnson was not taken prisoner, for he\nwas there, but Buahrod Johnson, a Briga-\ndier from Tennessee. General Buckner of\nKentucky, was not there, but in his place they\nhave got a Col. Buckner, and to suppose that\nFloyd and Pillow and five thousand men could\n“steal away” without the knowledge of their\ncomrades in the Fort is sheer nonsense. Gen.\nZollicoffer, will yet be found “alive and kick-\ning,” and the proportions of this victory will\nturn out to be hugely magnified for the Lon-\ndon market during the discussion of Gregorys\nbill in the British Parliament. It may, too,\nturn out to be « dearly bought victory, for I\nsee by the New York Tribune that every rebel\nkilled by the Federal army prior to the 1st of\nJanuary last, has cost the people of the United\nStates $100,000. Your readers can estimate\nthe value of all tue rebels of the South at this\nrate.
62a6e8e35c1470e4d04c46f050794a0c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.8013698313039 39.261561 -121.016059 Shortly after settling in his new Indian borne,\nhe became acquainted with a young widow, and\nnotwithstanding the disparity in their ages, he\nmarried her. Bonne three weeks after this mar-\nriage. he discovered by his wifes accouut of\nher early life, that she was no other than his\nown stop-child Mary. She had married live\nyears before, and her husband, James Lachlan,\nmet with a violent death iu a clearing tw o years\nafterward. About three years after Galloways\nsecond marriage, he happened one day to be in\nLawrenceburg, on the Ohio river, six miles\nfrom his residence, when a man by toe name\nof Galloway was drowned oB'a steamer at the\nwharf. The body was recovered in Galloways\npresence, and from the appearance of the fea-\ntures, and corresponding name, he began to\neutertnin a vague idea that it might be bis on-\nly brother John. Information gained from the\ncaptain of the strengthened by the suspi-\ncion be had formed, and ascertaining that the\nunfortunate man had a family in the vicinity,\nand at the time of his death was on his way to\nthe west to enter lund. Galloway resolved to\nreturn with the captain and find out the truth.\nHe did bo, and found his suspicions correct.\nHis brother had a large tract of land, a large\nfamily of children, for the most part girls, and\na wife in ill health. After consulting with bis\ndeceased brothers tvi'e, he concluded to take\ncharge of the farm. Accordingly he went back\nto Indiana, sold his efiects there, and in com-\nfiany with his young wife, returned, lias been\niving within six miles of this city for a length\nof time now .going on ten years. This story\nis literally true, with the exception of tin-\nnames of the principal characters, which we are\nforbidden to use.—[Wheeling Intelligencer.
40f2b79e758ce41831fe6bf631373912 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.409589009386 40.063962 -80.720915 To-day will be observed u a legal\nholiday in New Tork, and perhaps In\nother parti of the country. The grave* of\nthe fallen aoldlem of .the Union In all the\nNational Cemeterlet, and in many that\nare not National, will be atrewn with\nfljwera In commemoration of their heroic\ndeeds. A peculiar feature ol the day In\none ol the leading National Cemeteries of\nthe country will be that the graves ol\nConfederate soldiers will also be strewn\nwith Bowers. Tbo Secretary of War on\nTuesday last announced that today\n(Saturday) tho grounds ol Arlington\nCemetery would "bo opened to all\norderly persona who desire to decorate\nany of the graves within that Inclosure."\nThis Is tho first time that each a thing\nhas boen allowed on Decoration Diy In\nthat cemetsry, and is of attention\na showing tho soliencd tone ol public\nopinion In regard to the war. Irdocs not\nIndicate any chang® of principlo among\nthe people, but simply algnlflca that tho\nUnion element ol the country no loogcr\n[eels disposed to cherish resentment\nagainst Its lallen Iocs. Wo arc, In other\nwords, qpming to that point expressed in\nMr. Sumner'* battle Dig resolutions, lor\nwhich, two years ago, he wus condemned\nIn Uasuchusett8, and from which con- .\ndemnaMon he was relieved before ho died.\nWo are willing to blot out all\nInsignia that can keep alivo a sectional\nleeling. Tho speeches that will be made\nto-day will be very different Irom thoso\nthat were made fur tho first two or thTeo\nyears succeeding the closo of the war.\nFor the moat part, the men who have
02d80e4e19e0d519d7adcd47ee378b7a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1878.9109588723998 41.004121 -76.453816 E.P. Kuiikcl's celebrated Hitter Wins ot Iron will\neffect uallj cure ltver complaint, Jaundice, dyspepsia\nchronic or uei rous debility, curonlo dlarrlia-a ,dtseas-\not tue kidneys nni all diseases arising from a disor-\ndered liver, stomach or Intestines, such as constipa\ntion, flatulence, Inward piles, fullness of blood to tlio\nhtud, accldlty of tho stomach, nausea, heartburn,\ndisgust for food, fullness or wslght In tho stomach,\nsoro eructations sinking or fluttering at tho pit of\nthe stomach, swimming ot tho head, hurried or dt\nbreathing, fluttering at tha heart, choking or\nsuffocating sensation when In n lying posturo dim-\nness ot vlilon, dots or webs bctorj th-- j sight, dull\npain In the head, dotlCency of perspiration, yellow,\nness ot tho skin and eyes, patn In tho side, back\nhead, chest, limbs, etc., sudden flushes of heat,\nburning In tho flesh, const int Imaginings evil and\ngreat depression of spirits. Price tl buttle. Hcwaro\nof counterfeits. Do not let your drugjlit palm off\nsomo other preparation of Iron l3siys Is as good,\nbut ask for Kunkel's Hitter Vtlno of Iron. Take no\nother. Kunkel's Hitter Wine ot Iron Is not sold In\nbulk only lntl bottles, V.. V. Kunkel, proprietor.\nNo. 559 North Ninth Htrcot, Philadelphia, fa told\nby all druggists and dealers everywhere.\nTnpt; Worm Ucmovvil lllvc.\nHead and all complete, In two hours. Nofeo tll\nhead passes. Heat, rm and stomach Worms remov-\ned by Dr. Kunkel. 2 .19 North Ninth Street, Philadel-\nphia, Pa, sendforclrcular. For removing Scat. Pin\nor stomach Worms call on your druggtrt and ask for\na bjttlo of Kunkel's Wonn Hjrup, prlco 11. It never\nfalls Common senso teacnes It lapo Worm be re-\nmoved all others can bo readily aostroyed.
2dd8897e727720033f167ed7b53a2700 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7931506532218 40.063962 -80.720915 ) Uu W/utllng MtUlgmar.\nYesterday was a grand day lor the Ko\nabllcansof Mineral county. I cansaftlj\nir that Governor Stovcnson aud Senatoi\nAlley addressed Hie largest political\nlectins thatteverassembled In this county\nho Republicans wore even surprised\nlemselves at'thoturn out, but the most\nirpriscd and chagrined set I ever saw\nere the Democrats. Their faces wore ai\n>ng as fence rails, and they soon with'\nrow from sight "cursing the Radicali\ntund the corner. It was a large orderly\niceting, not a few of the fair sex gracing\nle occasion with their presence.\nAt 11 o'clock His Excellency commcnc\n1 speaking, the Court House being pack'\n1 with an enthusiastic audience. Th<\novcrnor was in one of his happiest\nloods and was checrcd to the echo. For\nl hour and a half be spoke, handling\nenerel and'State politics in an able anO\nitisfuctory manner. Especially did \novcrnor refer to a charge made by H. G\navis in a speech that a Governor had otfor\n1 $5.00 a head (or every, man the regis\nars would strike off the list ot voters, buf\nlat finding there were so many he had tc\nraipromUe it at $2.50 perhead. This the\novernor pronounced emphatically, It\nhole and in part, from beginning to end,\nfalsehood and a slander. Alter briefly\nipiyiug tothese and similar personal mat.\nrs, he resumed his discourse, which be\nincluded amiddeafenlngopplause.three\niccrs being given for tho Governor and\niree cheers lor the State ticket, which\nado the Court House ring. At the con'\nunion, the crowd was Informed that n\neo dinner, ready to bo served up, was\nwaiting tuemon the tablo in tlio base\nlentot the.Court House. The ladies arc\nipcciuily efitltldd to credit fofr tbclr aid in\nle preparation of tlio repa8t, the
0d56c9c5d93089bb76f829dbf8ccc848 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.5027396943176 41.681744 -72.788147 same as it will any fighter and, be-\nlieve me, he is going to take some\npunishment from Ritchie before ten\nrounds are over. It may be argued\nthat Freddy made both Rivers and\nCross look positively foolisn. ut in\ndoesn't prove anything. Cross in\nparticular has been made to look like\na novice every time he met a clever\nman, or a man who elected to fight\nhim cleverly. Ritchie told me the\nnight he was to box Cross that he\nwas satisfied that he could beat Cross\nat his own game of slugging and that\nhe would fight him that way, as he\nwas champion and In making his\nfirst appearance before a New York\ncrowd did not want it said that he\nran away from an opponent. I told him\nto pay no attention to what the\npapers would say, 'that Cross, carried\na dangerous and he would be\ntempting fate to mix it up with such\na hard hitter, but Willie was confi-\ndent and determined to stand toe to\ntoe with Leach and show New York-\ners he was a "regular" fighter. That\nhe did and won is of course a matter\nof ring history.\nHowever to get back to next Tues-\nday's match. Ritchie can box clever-\nly when he wants to do so. No less\nan authority than Packey McFarland,\nwho taught Willie much that he\nknows of boxing tells me Ritchie is a\ncorking good boxer who can make it\ninteresting for either Welsh or him-\nself sparring for points, and that\nWillie would probably surprise the\nBritish by fighting a scientific battle\nuntil such time as he got ready to\ntest his strength and superior hitting\npowers against the English boxer's\nspeed and footwork, and after ten
6f8ead427444725121cdea71d1899f31 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.5560108973386 39.513775 -121.556359 “Committee of “33”—in the name of God\n—in the name of your wives, if you have\nwives—of your sisters, if you have sisters—-\nof your mothers, it you were not suckied by\nvipers—in the name of honor—in the name\nof manhood —let a weeping wife see the let-\nters of her imprisoned husband before they\nare sullied by the eyes of your guards or\nyour censors What fear you of this woman?\nIs she a Queen Regent, and are ye a con-\nclave of rebels, that ye expect assassin ition\nfrom her emissaries ? Has she any power?\nIs she not bound hand, foot, soul and body ?\nWhy, a Caesar would have been contented\nwith such a hostage as you hold, in the very\nencampment of the heroes of Morvcn and of\nAlbion Richelieu, the priest, \nfrom the cradle, would have blushed at such\ncowardice ; his eye would have moistened at\nsuch objectless cruelty. Spain had her Tor-\nquemada, but the confessor of Isabella wod\nhave garroted a member of the Santa Hcr-\nmandad for such cowardice. You hold her\nhusband, the lather of her babe, and yet\nfear a single, almost friendless woman! I\nhave been a friend of the vigilants and still\nam; I never saw Judge Terry in mylite;\nbut 1 have travelled, and have seen men in\nCouncil and in the field; 1 have seen cities\nsacked and hamlets burned ; but 1 never saw\na man that would add one pang to an hon-\norable womans heart to save his lile. God\ndosotome, and morealso, ifIdonot now\nand forever keep my soul unsullied from\nsuch meanness.”
f97f43cddf87425adc25d60431361dbe NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.03698626966 41.681744 -72.788147 242 errors for an average of .961.\nXew York was third with a .1171\naverage; Chicago fourth with .S70.\nand Washington and Cleveland tied\nfor fifth and sixth with B6S. Boston,\nwith a .065 mark was seventh.\nOnly one player, Willie Kamm of\nthe Chicago White Sox retained his\nfielding championship. Kamm de-\nfended his third base post at a .078\nclip, accepting 4' chances and mak-\ning but It errors in 145 games. In\n102S. he fielded .077.\nJoe Judge. Washington veteran,\nled the first basemen. Ho played in\n142 games, made J.S23 putouts and\nSS assists and only six erros for an\naverage of .I'fG. Lew Fonseca of\nCleveland, nevv American league bat-\nting champion, was second to Judge\nwith a .005 average.\nCharles Gehringer, Detroit's youth-\n second baseman, was the best\ndefensive player of the year around\nthe keystone station. He had 404\nputouts. 5(11 assists and but 2" er-\nrors in 154 games for a .075 mark.\nGehringer also participated in 03\ndouble plays. John Hodapp of Cleve-\nland had an average of .077 but he\ncompeted in only 72 games.\nShortstops were unusually medio-\ncre in defense, the averages re-\nvealed, witli Joe Holey of the Ath-\nletics best with a .063 average.\nBoley played In only iS games. His\nrecord was 161 putouts, 220 assists,\nand 5 errors. Leo Durocher was\nsecond with a .05S average.\nAl Simmons of the Athdetics and\nFred Sehulte of the Browns tied for\nlirst place among the outfielders with\n.OS 3 averages. In 112 games at
4a00bc67f4400ff71f93fc5e4e6af9c1 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.3647540667375 42.217817 -85.891125 The Chinese exhibit at the World's\nFair Is filled with pleasing surprises.\nSome of the most magnificent articles\nof furniture are a part of this wonder-\nful display. The carving and inlaying\nof Ivory, bone and wood illustrate the\nmarvelous skill of the Chinese.\nModels Included In this interesting\nexhibit show the homes and home life\nof the Chinese, their weddings and\nfunerals, Chinese tea house, restau-\nrant and shop, Chinese weaving and\nsome of the beautiful silks and wear-\ning apparel of the Chinese and their\nmethods of manufacturing them.\nOne feature of the exhibit Is two\nmagnificent Chinese beds, each of\nwhich has the appearance of being a\nsmall house of great beauty. One is a\nsummer bed, the other for winter. The\nsummer bed is hand carved and inlaid\nwith Ivory and bone figures and land-\nscapes exquisitely carved and so\nskillfully Joined as to appear a part of\n wood. The bed and furniture are\nof carved bamboo. The bed consists of\nan anteroom, with tables, chairs and\ntea stands, and in an inner room, which\nis the sleeping apartment, there is a\ncouch with coverings of gauzy silks.\nThe winter bed is still more elabo-\nrate. It consists of three compartments.\nThe first contains four chairs, a tea poy\nand a chest of drawers. This Is the sit-\nting apartment The second is the dress-\ning room, and the third is the sleep-\ning apartment, or the couch itself. The\nfurniture is of rosewood inlaid with\nivory carving of. birds, flowers and\ntrees. The couch is covered with silks\nof the finest texture and In gaudy col-\nors. The sleeping compartments are\nlighted with Chinese lanterns of silk\nhung at the outer entrance, while the\nlight enters through gauze panels, hand\npainted and in forms of rosewood in-\nlaid with ivory figures.
03acbf6b9b499c5f84424dceb3935c01 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1898.4397259956875 32.612638 -90.036751 also hold an excess of moisture, which\nproduces coarse crops, but light soils\nhave a lack of moisture, which causes\ntine crops. So that which is gained in\nquantity is frequently lost in quality.\nA clayey loam is especially fruitful\nof one sort of plants; a sandy loam is\nlikewise productive of another division\nof vegetables; a loum of clay and sand\nequally proportioned sustains both\nkinds profitably. Plants are generally\nraised later in the interior than they\nare by the sea. Climate governs the\ntime of harvest and the distribution of\ncrops, but soil modifies the effect of\nclimate and the distribution of types.\nTil us, hard wheats are the consequence\nof warm climates, while soft wheats are\nthe consequence of cold climates. White\nwheats are the consequence of light\nsoils, while red wheats are the conse-\nquence of heavy soils. Likewise, large\n dark tobacco is the consequence of\nheavy soils, while the thin and yellow\nleaf is the consequence of light soils.\nSince animals depend either directly or\nindirectly on vegetation, we infer\nthat large animals are the conse-\nquence of luxuriant vegetation, while\nsmall animals are the result of thin\nvegetation; at any rate, the small cat-\ntle of Norway, the smalt race of Lap-\nlanders and the dwarfed plants of\nSweden indicate it Experience shows\nthat the, chestnut, peach, fig, castor\nbean, pine, carrot, beet, English fiat\nturnip, mangold, egg plant, potato,\nradish, squash, tomato, Watermelon\nand rye are most fruitful on the light\nand dry soils, It likewise shows that\noaks, wheat, beans, clover, flax, hemp,\noats, timothy, parsnips, grapes and\nndtop flojrisu in heavy soils. It more-\nover shows that eane, sorghum, corn,\nbeans, pess, cabbage, cucumbers, cel-\nery, rhubard, strawberries,
55a26f8fa5576981dcae07ea54a537a8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.8671232559614 42.217817 -85.891125 Betsey Ann Davis, of the county of Van Bu-- I\nren and tate of Michigan, to Emley Johnston\nof Decatur County in the Stato of Iowa, (who\nwas. at the time or tbe execution of said mort- - '\ngage, a resident of Van Buren County in tho\nState of Michigan and recorded iu the office\nof the Itegister of Deeds of Van Buio:. ounty\nState of Michigan, in Liber (3) of mortgages on\npage (362), aud on which mortgage and not\naccompanying tbe same, there is due at this\ndate and unpaid the sum of nc Hundred and\nFourteen Dollars and Thirty Cents, and no suit\nor proceedings at law or in oquity having beou\ninstituted to collect the amount now due and\nunpaid, or any part thereof, which is secured\nby said Notice is hereby given that\nby virtue of the power of sale contained in\nsaid mortgage, and in pursuance of the Statute\nin such case made and provided, there will be\nsold atipublic auction to tbo highest bidder at the\nfront door of the Court House in the village of\nPaw Paw, Van Buren County in the State of\nMichigan, on Tuesday, Ibt third day of Feb-\nruary, A. 1)., 1875, at 12 o clock at noon of said\nday, the premisee described in said mortgage,\nor so much as may be necessary to satisfy tbe\namount duo or unpaid on said mortgage with\ninterest at seven per cent., and the coata and\nexpenses acarded by law together with the at-\ntorney fee provided for in said mortgage. Sid\npremises being described an follow
0dabe39d76917cbf3251934391e79729 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1903.1410958587012 41.875555 -87.624421 The celebration of centenaries. which\nbegan vigorously In this country In\nKS75, with the centenary of the battle\nof Lexington, mid litis been proceed-\ning at a lively rate ever since, Is be-\nlieved by some gooil people to bo\ngrowing tiresome, mid they call for\na halt. If tho practice Is stopped, It\nwill be because formal celebrations\nhave become monotonous, not because\nthe list of Important centenaries has\nreached mi end. The year 1803 was\nprollllc of events deserving of recol-\nlection If not of celebration. So far\nas the United States Is concerned the\ngreatest event of 1803 was the Louisi-\nana purchase. That transaction dou-\nbled the original area of the nation\nmid coiillrmed Its destiny of grandeur\nto which Hie revolution ouly opened\nthe way. The territory thus peace-\nfully acquired by President Jefferson\nfrom France for nominal sum of\n!?15,0i,(Ki(i. or less than $12 u square\nmile, extended from the Gulf of Mex-\nico to Canada and from the Mississip-\npi to the Rocky Mountains. Jefferson\nmade the purchase without authority,\nand there were critics who denounced\nhis act as fatal to tho constitution.\nThe Louisiana Purchase Centenary\nwill be duly celebrated at St. Louis by\na world's fair projected upon such n\nscale Unit It caniiot he got ready till\ntool. Ohio was admitted to statehood\nmi the tilth of February, 1803. It was\nhi tlie same year that the Miami Ex-\nporting Company opened the Ilrst\nbank In Cincinnati. The twelfth\namcuiliuent to tlie constitution of tho\nI'liltcd States was submitted to the\nStates for ratlllcatlon or rejection on\nthe 12th of December, ISO. '!. It reiu e- di e- d\na defect In the electoral system
33753c4b38fe33bfcf89ff2296d5c1a3 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.4549180011638 37.561813 -75.84108 Sir For more than three months the\nCommittee on Naval Affairs of the House of\nRepresentatives has been investigating the\nNavy Department and the naval establish-\nment. To this investigation, conducted in\nvarious and distant parts of the country,\nand extending over the wool time of the\npresent administration, and into the details\nof all its transactions, every person sup-\nposed to have any complaint against the de-\npartment has been publicly invited. The\nexaminations have been conducted in secret\nsession without notice, and, of course, with-\nout an opportunity for\nexplanation, or suggestion by any person\ncomplained of. During all this time, in the\nabsence of any specific charge made against\neither myself or any officer of the depart-\nment, 1 have remained quiet, with the idea\nthat the testimony when finished would be\npublished as a whole, and that when it was\ncomplete in all its parts, each false charge\nwould be accompanied by its refutation,\neonBdent that where no really ex-\nisted, none could be made finally to appear.\nBut the publication of portions ot unfinished\ntestimony in detached parts has, as was to\nbe expected, afforded an opportunity for\ncharges and insinuations niade in public\nnewspapers utterly false in fact, and founded\nupon lalse inferences, from the testimony as\npublished, which will fall at once to the\nground, when the whole facts are known.\nUnder these c rcumstances I demand, as a\nmatter of public right, not only for myself,\nbut for any officer of my department against\nwhom anything is supposed to appear, a full\nand speedy opportunity to be heard in\njustification of every matter charged, and\nthe regulation of every false influence that\ncan possibly be made, and I also demand\nthat this hearing be held in open session of\nthe committee, to the end that public justifi\ncation may follow as speedily as possible\nthe charges ana insinuations uiauc awiir\ndie action of the committee, 1 remain
04d178a9e406f3ac8093dcf2b082f5ca THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1892.2308742853168 41.004121 -76.453816 Until the beginning of the present cen-\ntury, it was universally believed that\ngiants, of a size far exceeding those\nwhich are exhibited in our times, form-\nerly existed, either as nations or as indi-\nvidual specimens. This belief was based,\nfirst, on the asserted discovery of colossal\nhuman bones; second, on supposed scrip-\ntural evidence ; third, on the evidence of\nvarious ancient and mediaeval authors.\nA reference to the first volume of Cul\nver's "Ossemeuts Fossilos" will show that\nthe bones of elephants, rhinosceroses,\nmastodons, etc., have been exhibited and\naccepted as evidence of prehistoric\ngiants. Even so good a naturalist as\nJhiffon fell into this popular delusion\nand figured the bones of an elephant as\nthe remaius of human giants. Saint\nHilaire, in his "Uistorie des Anomalies\nde rOrgainsation," notices several of the\nmost famous of these A gigantic\nskeleton which was found at Trapani, in\nSicily, in the fourteenth century, was at\nonce pronounced to be that of tho classi-\ncal giant, Polyphemus, and his height\nwas calculated at 300 feet. It was\npointed out that the bones differed in\nform as well as in size from those\nof a man, but this objection was easily\nmet by the question, Why, if his\nheight was sixty times as great as that\nof an ordinary man, should not his form\nalso be different ? Many less celobrated\n2i ants were subsequently exumed in\nSicily, and the existence of the "Osseous\nCfenerus" described by De Quatrefagea in\nhia "Rambles of a Naturalist" fully ac-\ncount for such discoveries at an epoch\nwhen few could recognize the differences\nin form between the bones of an elephant\nand those of man.
3c338151d2da8c96ddbb00f5676fc437 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1906.987671201167 40.114955 -111.654923 Snyder fie case was called for tila\nin Septetmber but owing to the ab\nsencu of material witnesses for the\nstate It was again nolle prossed and a-\nnew information sworn out\nThis case was standing against\nSnyder when death entered tho final\nnollo prosequl The cases against Ut\nhoff and Hitter growing indirectly\nout of a bribery committed some years\nago are the only entries on the court\ndockets to remind St Louis of her\nfamous municipal scandals\nEd ButlerI the boss politician who\nwas three tunics indicted and twice\ntried for bribery liars had his troubles-\ntoo Butler was first Indicted for at-\ntempting to bribe members of the\nboard of health to award him a con\ntract for handling the city garbage-\nHe was tried In Columbia Mo \ned and sentenced to three years In the\npenitentiary hut escaped when the\nsupreme court decided that as the\nmembers of the boaid of health were\nnot olllclalh they could not be bribed-\nHe was next indicted for handling a\nboodlo fund of 17500 to havo passed\na bill providing for the lighting of the\nstreets with gas Instead of electricity\nlie was acquitted of this charge at Fu-\nton Mo and In that respect conslt\nered himself lucky Soon after ids\nfirst Indictment his soninlaw Join\nfault died Before ho was tried on\nthe second Indictment his favorite\nson John H Butler who hnd been\nfaithful to the old mans Interests tell\nsick and died This blow broke Bu-\ntlers heart and hurt him worsn than\nall of Folks prosecutions
192f1863ac0a877320bc4b0bb58874a9 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.7027396943176 39.513775 -121.556359 Fee 9. It shall be the duty of the Treasurer to pay\nihe interest on said bomls when the same to 11a due.\nout ol said interest fund, it sufficient, and if said fund\nbe not sufficient, then to pay the- deficiency out of\nthe General Fund ; proi iihd. that tlie Comptroller of\nState shall first draw his warrant on Ihe Treasurer,\npayable to the order of said Treasurer forthe amount\nof interest money about to become due, w hich said\ninterest warrant shall he drawn at least one month\nprevious to tlie maturing of ihe interest.\nSee. 10 . It shall hr Ihe duty of the Governor and\nComptroller to altAiid, at least once In each month,\nat the Treasurer's office, while said bonds are being\nissued, to examine all claims received by tin* Trea-\nsurer as aforesaid, and cause same to he regis-\ntered and cancelled in such manner as to prevent\nthem from being re-issued or pm in circulation.\nFee. 11 , The fallowing are specified as the claims\nwhich are entitled to he received and funded under\nthis Act: First, Civil bomls of the Stale issued under\nthe funding Acts passed in the years 1851, 1F52.1 >3\nisjj. glut IFSft, which are now outstanding, with in-\nterest due on the sum** when presented, as appears\nhy the coupons. Second, Comptroller's warrants\ndrawn under the sanction of law, toe civil expenses\nprior U» January Ist, A . I). IW7 , ami now outstanding\nand unpaid, but the provisions of ibis Act shall not\nauthorize the funding ot any of those warrants, the\nregistration and endorsement of which were cancelled\nby the provisions ot “An Act to cancel the registry-
642759bd41974ce59b747deb85cb0a8c SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.1082191463724 35.780398 -78.639099 on Foreign Affairs, has presented to Congress\na long and able report relative to our unadjusted\ndifficulties with the Government of Spain\nThe report first sketches the history of\ntrench and Spanish power on this continent,\nshows the great importance of the acquisi-\ntion of Louisiana under Mr. Jefferson, and\nthen proceeds to demonstrate the vast ad-\nvantages to be derived from the acquisition\nof Cuba. He sho ws that the agrfoultural,\nthe manufacturing, the navigation, and the\ncommercial interests of the" United States\nwould be greatly advanced by tho acquisi-\ntion; while at the same time the control of\nme Mexican Uult, winch would follow the\nacquisition, would at once place this coun-\ntry, and especially the Mississippi valley, in\na position of power not only highly favora-\nble, but indeed indispensable, our increas-\ning commerce rnd to the full davelopement\nof the resources of that valley. Still, the Re-\nport makes no departure from the policy re-\ncommended by the President in relation to\nCuba. Desirable as is the acquisition of that\nisland, it is proposed to be obtained onlv on\nhonorable terms; and the Committee think\nthe time has arrived when the means to be-\ngin negotiations on a substantial basis should\nbe placed in the hands of the President.\nThe Committee therefore recommend the\npassage of a bill placing thirty millions of\ndollars in the hands of the President, to en -a b- k\nhim to "conclude with the goverument\nof Spain a treaty of amity, and for the settle-\nment of all differences, including the cession\nof the island of Cub.i ."
07c880a7438f386d6563330e338efd15 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1905.1904109271943 41.875555 -87.624421 freely. Hut when we turn to the\nbeauty special to man, tho beauty that\nIs his own Immediate aim, wo tlud\nthat, owing perhaps to our too great\nwealth or excessive application, to the\nscattering of our efforts, lack of con-\ncentration or to the want of a certain\ngoal and tin liicnutestt'blo starting\npoint, we appear to have lost almost\nall that the ancients had been able to\nestablish and make their own, lu all\nthat regards purely human esthetics,\nlu what concerns our body, our ges-\nture., our clothes, the objects we live\nwith, our houses and gardens, our\nmonuments, even our landscapes, we\nare groping so timidly, wo display such\nconfusion uml Inexperience that one\nmight truly believe our occupation of\nthis planet to date but from yesterday\nand wo are still ut thu very be-\nginning of the period of adaptation.\nFor the won. of our hands there\nexists no longer ii common measure, mi\naccepted rule or conviction. Our paint-\ners, our architects, our sculptors, our\nmen of letters and we lu our homes,\nour cities seek In a thousand differ-\nent contradictory directions for the\nsure, the undeniable beauty that tlm\nancients possessed so fully. Should\nono of us by any chance create, Join\ntogether or discover n few Hues, a\nharmony of form or color that should\nIncontestably prove that the mysteri-\nous, decisive point had been attained\nIt would be regarded as the merest\nhazard, as an Isolated and precious\nphenomenon mul neither the author\nnor anyone else would be able to re-\npeat It. Fortnightly Hevlew.
3d78076f16ce02890c51eda3383cb152 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.0342465436327 40.063962 -80.720915 ill probably not be known until Mr. be\nilton breaks his sllenoe; but there are on\n>me facts which can be given to the an\noblic which will, help raise the pall that vii\njvers the houshold ol one lamfly. In ap\n303, Henry C. Bowen, proprietor, snd mi\nheodore Tilton,editor ol'the Indtpendml, an\nere shining lights and pillars ot txi\nlymouth church. In June, 1803, Bowen bo\nused the summer at huHcm In Wood- so\nock, Vt. He h&d but recently burled uti\ns wife, and felt keenly her loss. He og\nrote frequently to Tilton, to whom be Cc\nmtided his sorrows. In one ol the let- pr\nrs written on June 21st, 1803, Bowen ex\niflected In a most serious manner on the eai\nlaracfcr ol the pastor ol Plymouth ye\n The subsUnco of the letter was, an\nitt he (Bowen) bid refrained too long, tio\nid his knowledge of his paator must be loi\nven to the world. Bpeclfic acta vera, ha\nlarged which can readily be Imagined, co\nhese charges were never (eriously con- cot\ndered by Tilton until several years after, XJ.\nhen a circumstance oocnrred (which thi\nily Mr. Tilton should stale, he having in\n10 correspondence in his possession) gr\nhich disturbed the relations that for so an\nany years had existed between Mr. Til- fr<\nm and his pastor. From that day Tilton a'}\nm been a stranger to Plymouth church, ot\nho matter was again brought up, and at tu\nic suggestion of Bo wen, an open letter na\nas written to Mr. Beecher, demanding Ei\niat he is
1e04d8cefb0aec9df5fc916d856d5451 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1875.4397259956875 39.743941 -84.63662 object for which you have been brought here.\nI want to say a few words for you to think\nabout, and I do not wish you to say anything\nnow until you have had time to think about it.\nI have always been a friend of the Indian, and\nam very anxious to do what I think is best for\nthem. The country where you now live, as you\nmust be well aware, is entirely incapable of\nsupporting you, if the government should cease\nto support you. By the treaty of 1868, clothing\nwas guaranteed to you for thirty yeais, and\nprovisions enly for five years. How! The\nfood and provisions which have been given you\nfor the last two years have been a gratuity on\nthe part of Congress. It may be taken from\nyou at any time, without any violation of the\ntreaty. My interest now is tor make some ar-\nrangement with you by which yon and your\nchildren will be' secure for the future. .As I\nsaid in the beginning, it must be evident to you\nthat if supplies of food were withheld by "the\nwhite people, it would be entirely impossible\nfoi you to live where you are. Another thing\nI would call your attention to is this: You must\nsee that the white outnumber Indians\nnow about 200 to one, taking ail the Indians\nwithin the United States. This number is in-\ncreasing so rapidly that before many years it\nwill bo impossible to fix any limits in your ter-\nritory where vou can prevent their gohur. it\nwill become necessary for the white people to'\noe aoie to go irom one place to another,\nwhether occupied by Indians or not, just as\nthey now go from one State to another, For\ntins reason it is very desirable that, while you\nhave a friend here to look after tout interests\nyou shah be situated where you will be able to\nget support Deyona any oonnngency. i do\nnot propose to ask you to leave the homes\nwhere you were born and raised without your\nconsent. I want to point out the advantage to\nyou and to your children, if you will make such\narrangements as will be proposed to you.\nThere is a territory south of where yon now\nlive where the climate is mnch better, and the\nbuffalo more plenty, where lands can be purchas-\ned, where grass is much better, and game is\nmore abundant, including large game, where\nthere is good pasturage for animals, and where\nyou can have teachers sent among you to\nteach the art of
04c1bd5f31dce3e833d5e56a2f24b9dc THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.6260273655505 42.217817 -85.891125 that populistic, free silver, 10 to 1, cheap\nmoney brand of "silver," with all its at-\ntendant vagaries and chose the follow-\ning delegates to attend the "silver"\ncounty nominating convention: W. C .\nWildev, M. D. Buskirk, Geo. M. Lyle,\nP. B. Ocobock, L. E . Shepard, M. H.\nPugsley, Wm. Kirkwood, E. M . Snow,\nWillis Clapp, L. C. Hurd, Prank Cutter,\nA. Brown, W. R . Sirrine, E. L . Warner.\nTho chairman of this caucus was M. D.\nBuskirk, the secretary B. P . Bryar.\nWhen this caucus had completed its\nbusiness and adjourned, another was\nimmediately called to order, with M. D.\nBuskirk as chairman and B. P. Bryar\nsecretary. Strange to relate, not only\nwere the oflicers tho same, but the mem\nbers also by some subtle influence,\ntransformed in the twinkling of an eye, to\ngood old JetTersonian democrats, cherish\ning the principles of ancient organ\nization, firmly attached to its traditions\nand lovicg all its ancient landmarks.\nThis caucus chose the following dele-\ngates to the democratic county nominat\ning convention: II. A. Cole, Frank\nPugsley, T. J . Cavanaugh, H. L. McNeil,\nJos. Davey, I. W. Hulbert, G. W . Lee,\nB. P. Bryar, Edson Woodman, P. E.\nStevens, P. W. Rhodes, O. A. Rice, A. L.\nFree, Harry Wilson, W. H. Mason.\nBy a coincidence as strange as the\ncalling of the two caucuses at the same\ntime and place, the "silver" and demo\ncratic county convention have both been\ncalled to meet at South Haven to- m-\nrowat10a.m.\nWhat a farce!\nCannot the deluded members of the\n"silver" contingent see the long ears of\ntho old democratic party sticking through\nits disguise? They will hear the bray of\ntho beast when the futility of the " sa u-s au ge-
23fb07ba16d0d40718520fd38a84d2a0 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.9139343946063 32.408477 -91.186777 A word as to its past. The city\noriginally was old Uskodama, first a\ndistrict capital of Thrace; then a Ro-\nman capital under Hadrian, and the\nobject of Goth vandalism as early as\n378, when it was wholly destroyed. In\nthe thirteenth century the Latin em-\nperor and the Bulgarians fought a\nfearful battle here, after which Adrian-\nople experienced an era of peace until\nabout the year 1361 when the Sultan\nMurad I. captured it. In 1365 he made\nit his home and such it remained,\ncapital of the empire, until the fall\nof Constantinople, when it was re-\nduced to a sort of sub-capital. Since\nthen its career has been uneventful.\nThe city was taken in 1720, and here\nwas signed the Peace of Adrianople, C\nby which Russia returned to Turkey\nall she had taken away and fixed\nthe boundaries that remained in force 1\nsubstantially until 1878. when the Rus-\nsian's re-entered the city.\nThis much learned, it was to look\nup ad fnd the guide at hand, already\nordering a cup of coffee and toast at\nour expense, as is the custom. He\nwas a loquaieous, French-speaking\nSpanish Jew, and it behooved us to\nwatch keenly to bargains.\nLike everyone else, we walked 13\nthe street; through narrow cobbled\nalleyways, with stores built right up\nfrom the curb, and Jews, Moslems,\nArmenians and Bulgars, and, above\nall, gypsy boo. lacks, each in distinc-\ntive costume, uirging by. The street\nled off in devtos-wise, crossed and\nrecrossed by other mases, until it be-\ncame evident that no stranger in his\nsenses would attempt Adrianople\nalone.
05190bb84f4fe413d15c5decc8a142a5 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.37397257103 40.441694 -79.990086 possible to estimate; but even had it been\nexhausted (whioh is not supposableh there\nwould still remain ways in which Europe\ncould get gold from us through borrowing\nhere, were the pressure urgent enough to\nJustify the cost of suoh operations.\nOn one point we may quite safely bo conf-\nidentthat in spite of the shallow prophecies\nabout the loss of gold threatening serious\ndanger from the operation of the new silver\nact, neither the gold already exported nor\nany further early .amounts that may possi-\nbly follow, can be fraught with anymore\nserious Inconvenience than a temporary\nstringency in the local money market. It\ndoes not seem to bo sufficiently appreciated\nthat, within recent years, a very important\nchange has ocourrea in the distribution of\ngold, so far as respects the United States.\nBetween the years 1862 1877 inclusive, wo\nmade a net export oft $585,000,000 of gold;\nwhile during the period of 1878 to 18?C we\nmade a net import of $180,000,000, there hav-\ning been only three years within the last 13\nduring whicn the export of that metal has\nexceeded the import. With such a largo and\nproeressive accumulation of 'this metal, it\nsurely cannot be such an alarming ciroum- -\nBiuiiuu win we nave exported some $2,uuu,uou\nsince the beginning of April, and especially\nwhen there Is "such a clear prospect that the\nnext naryest win put us so largely in a cred\nitor relation to Europe as to bring back to us\na large portion of the cash remittances we\naro now making. During 'the week ending\nSaturday we shipped over $8,000,000 gold,\nmalting u iuuu ui uvcr$i,vuv,wu since uan\nuaryL
0d7dd72a7c0bada1d558c4a2821cc4e5 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1869.17397257103 29.949932 -90.070116 MRS. (;arNT.- Geo. A. Townsend writes: " We\nfeel the most perfect and serene confidence in the\nspirited, handsome and graceful lady who is to be\nthe mistress of the mansion under General Grant.\nller education, parentage and social opportuni-\nties have abundantly qualified her to grace the\nWhite House. Her father, Mr. Dent, was the pro-\nprietor of an estate and a home comparable with\nany between New Orleans and St. Louis, in those\ndays when that part of the world contained the\ngentleman planter par ezrelence. He spared no\ngenerous pains to make his boys Influential and\nais girls accomplished. Mrs. Grant was the flower\nof the family, and in her sagacity of head and\nheart she was probably the first person in the\nland to express sympathy and appreciatioo of the\nqluiet young cade*, her brother's classmate at\nWest Point. She was the tried companion of his\npoverty and earlystruggles, and when the war\n her of him she manifested a constancy\nof conflDence in his virtue and ability which never\nfor one moment faltered. At the darkest periods\nof fortune she believed in his stay, and fought his\npraises in civil life as bravely as he followed the\nSouthern Cross in his campaigns. Josephine will!\nbare no larger bomage when both (;rant and Bo-\nnaparte have mellowed into history than Mrs.\nG;rant. Unlike Josephine, she has submitted to\nthe decrees of good fortune with blameless\nmodesty, and republican womanhood has no more\nezquisite example at this day than Mrs. Grant.\nBer care of her children, whom she teaches to be\nself-relIant as well as obedient, and the domeetic\nand religious influence she exerts over her hus-\nband, are not unobserved here. The taste of her\ntoilet, adapted to a naturally graceful and stately\nfigure, has passed the gauntlet of the most in.\nvridious criticism. It is with more reason than the
ef0efda6ac87d56e41bda7a822156775 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.78551909406 41.681744 -72.788147 to have been as extensive and as\nloyal as any man in public in this\nslate ever had. For many years\nafterwards, as congressman and as\nsenator he was greeted wherever he\nwent, as the legislative sessions at\npolitical conventions and at gather-\nings of his party associate with a\nwarmth that could hardly be de\nscribed In words. When starting his\npolitical career in the state capital\nwhich was to lead him to a place of\nhigh influence in the national capi-\ntal he Inherited from the older men\ntouch of the love and affection they\nhad for his father, Augustus Brande,\ngee, speaker of the house in 1S61,\nand who for many years was a poli-\ntical power In eastern Connecticut.\nIt Is recalled that when Frank\nBrandegee was speaker and\nhad ascended the rostrum to be\nsworn, his father quietly made his\nway through the crowd which was\nextending congratulations to tb\nson and silently extended his hand\nto Frank and In a fatherly way, with\ntears of joy In his eyes, embraced\nhim. It was said by many who wit\nnessed it that the scene was a touch-\ning one and It exemplified to all the\nbonds of affection between father\nand son and between the Brande-gee- s\nand their mutual friends.\nNot alone among the republicans\nwas Senator Brandegee beloved but\nhis friends of other political faiths,\nIn spite of the heat of political bat\ntle which often raged In the days\nwhen Brandegee was active In the\nstite always liked to meet and be\nwirri him.
0d53e6ea83d8b315f35b50184b96e031 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.1246575025368 39.745947 -75.546589 aggregate rm-nthly wage of obout $400.-\nOri, and they will be employed till the\nspring breakup. Lumbermen look for a\ncontinuation of the present era of ae-\nti'-lty end high prices for a long time.\nIndeed they expect never to see he\niiw pricesforpine of the pa=t fw\nyears. The supply ts becoming more\nand more limited year by year, as the\nforests are entered by such an army of\nchoppers, and the standing plno yet re­\nmaining uncut Is rapitly becoming the\nproperty of mnnufacturlng corpora­\ntions large enough to hold till they are\nready to cut, while the demand la In­\ncreasing at n rate faster than the cap­\nacity of mills. A very large share of\nlumber cut In this region, especially In\nlower grades, goes Into boxes and pack­\ning cases, and that the price of (heae\ngrades should have advan ed 80 per\nc nl In the past nine months Is an in­\ndien Hon of how tremendous the de­\nmand for boxes has become.\nLumbermen of thla district have nev-\ne* before made sales for the succei fl­\ning year before late In the winter, or\nuntil sowing began In the spring. But\nI =t week sales were made here of\n. " riOO.OOO feet of the lowest grades of\nthe cut to be made after next April\no top prices. Several mlUs sold their\no' riee «-e sons of these grades, re-\n< rivlnc $10 50 for what was worth $6.50\npat February. $1.1 for what then\nbrought $8.50. and $6.50 for a grad«\nthnt In pnst year» has been considered\nworth almost nothing and thnt has\nle-en Ogured as about paring the s w\nbill, B"ery lumberman who will dis­\npose of his product in adv nee Is being\nimportuned to do so, and 400.000,00«\nfeet of Duluth lumber chuld be sold in\nn week to buyers from New York. New\nLngand. Eastern Michigan and Chica­\ngo, This would Ue practically all n xt\nyears cut for the mills on deep water\nIn this harbor.\nThlpments by wnter to these Eastern\npotn'e out of Lake .- -uperlor will exceed\n),000 000,000 feet, and a single months\nf rwnrdlngs are more than was sent In\na, whole summer so lately as 1887. More\nthen 125 ships have been engaged ex­\nclusively In.the carrying ot lumber\nf>om this lake to the Eist this year,\nnnd at prices that have paid profits\nthnt would buy the shl> a nt lest\nurines values. Many a ship contract­\ned last spring for the season with an\nn greement that tho lessee might buy la­\nter In the year at a then agreed figure,\nhas already been bought under the op­\ntion out of Us own net profl s tor the\nsummer. Rates have been more th n
385f3b1e3cada22450d1e4326cbc94d2 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1903.9794520230848 42.68333 -96.683647 Clans may be bought for tO «nts or\nFou may substitute for that »patron\nsaint of Christmas a card boa r<n figure\nof a boy or girl in winter «;art»iUr one\n>f an angel/with a trumpi Jolu-w\nChristmasrtidings.\nA surprising quantity>of pinlt\\and\nwhite popfted corn can bethought*ffer a\nfew cents, and if strung I upon strings •\nand festooned on the uppcir branehet? it\nwill look very pretty, as# will also crtan\nberries similarly used. Snowlwtlis i of\nwhite cotton festooned|to the > ends)of\nthe boughs and smaill pieces > of Ihe\n*ame scattered all overfthe tree^giweta\nvery pretty snow effect!\nA yard of tarlatan --costs 10$ < eats.v\nand little stockings cut! from it|newed\nwith gayly colored yarn and tilled\nwith candies are a great a<iditlo®-\nColored candles. 6 ceots a dozen, and\ntin holders for them at 3 look very\npretty. this way a tree may be at­\ntractively trimmed at/from $1 to $2.\nSprays of red berried hoBIy tied here1\nand there on the tree tend/to brighten\nIt. The box that holds the#tree may be\ncovered with thick moss, bits of bro­\nken mirror being interspersed to rep­\nresent water. A box of tin soldiers, ai\nNoah's ark or a wooden#village, a gift,\nfor one of the children^ might find its!\nIrst use In populating ft his miniature t\nlandscape at the foot of*tiic tree.\nIf you want an expensive tree noth­\ning is prettier in the way of ornament i\nthan the colored balls of the shops.\nHang these numerously from every\nbranch and have festoon# of smaller1\nones from branch -to bmnch all around\nthe tree from top to bottom.\nUse plenty of the tiuwls representing\nfrost and icicles and the Utile balls like
18ad1fd1e65c8d3d6fd9e56ead3bd291 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.217213083131 38.894955 -77.036646 And he is indeed a charming fellow, this\nPresident of theirs. Large, stout, jovial,\namiable, prepossessing, with a kindly smile,\nlie really won my heart completely during\nthe ten minutes that I chatted with him.\nHere one cannot say by way of a joke.\n'Do you want to go up into the obelisk?"\nOne does go up here and without fatiguing\none's seir, since there is an elevator in the\nbuilding which works admirably.\nWhat shall I say to you or the Cnpltol? It\nis an imposing and yet simple building.\nWhat of the deputies and the Senators?\nAs with us, they do a good deal more talk-\ning than legislative work. They are more\nfree and easy, and they are not so reserved\nHowever, this is quite natural In a country\nwhere, in order to be elected deputy, one\nhas only to be the father of eighteen chil-\ndren, all of them born in the same district.\nIf the same conditions were imposed on us,\nwe might succeed In making a successful\nright, against the increasing depopulation of\nFrance. What would not one do' to become\na deputy? It is true that it is not in the\npower of every one to become the father or\neighteen children. At the same time. It is\nvery unjust that only the men should l)e.\nrewarded for acts of this kind. It Is rather\non the women that an honorary distinction\nshould be conferred.\nThe food at an American hotel is certainly\nunsatisfactory. The chickens are served\nwholly ra wand theducksafe also uncooked\nwhen they are put on the table. I cannot\ncompliment the American culinary artists.
a3f431b696a8a4f572b738cbdd8cbf2a THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.5876712011668 39.261561 -121.016059 John Henry Kimball, a poor miserable vagrant,\nwithout home or place to lay his head, was arrested\none night last week, at San Francisco, and confined\nin the station house on a charge of vagrancy. In\nI860 Kimball was one of the wealthiest men of San\nFrancisco, his possessions being valued at $200,000,\nbut for solne years part he has gained a precarious\nlivelihood by the work of his hunds. He was ex-\namined the next day before the Police Judge, and\nstated that he was willing to work if he could find\nemployment; but it was evident that the tremendous\nreverse of fortune had unseated his mind. After\nhis discharge, a man who had known him in more\nprosperous days, took him in charge, with the in-\ntention of finding him suitable employment.\nA gentleman lately arrived at Marysville, from\nCarson Valley, informs the F.xprcss that a Territo-\nrial Convention was in session at Genoa when he\nleft. Sixtv-one members were in attendance. The\nobject of the Convention was to absolve that part of\nthe Territory from Utah, and establish a government\nof their own for the protection of their lives and pro-\nperty until thov can get a Territorial government\n by Congress. They designed electing a\nGovernor, Judges, and all otfioers necessary in such\ncase. Much unanimity of opinion prevailed, and\nthe ordinary political issues which prevail in this\nState are wholly absorbed in the Territorial question.\nMr. Chnrles Stephens was severely injured on\nThursday last, in San Mateo county, by a threshing\nmachine, lie fell with his left foot against the\ncylinder, the teeth of which lacerated it in a shock-\ning manner. A portion of the foot will necessarily\nhave to be amputated. By a presence of mind very\nunusual under the circumstance, Mr. S. sprung at\nthe moment of falling, so us to throw his body some-\nwhat awnv from the cylinder, otherwise he would\nprobably finve lost his entire leg and perhaps liis life.\nTwo Germans, named Adam Fuchs and Henry\nBertram, were arrested at Sacramento last Wednes-\nday, just as they had started out to settle an atluir\nof honor. Their seconds had agreed that they should\nfight with holster pistols, loaded wiih cork balls—-\ndistance fifty paces. Bertram was very indignant\nat being arrested. He desired, he said, no greater\nglorv than to “die on American soil, after the man-\nner of the Americans.”
499e7cde212ed7b2bdd687ca2027b99e WESTERN CAROLINA DEMOCRAT AND FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1915.305479420345 35.318728 -82.460953 Mr. and Mrs. C . E. Brooks brought\ntheir honeymoon, which extended Over\na. number of states, to a close Wednes-\nday when they arrived in Henderson-\nville with Mrs. Brooks' two children\nin the automobile in which the bride\nand groom toured Florida, extending\nthe journey in their car to Henderson-\nville. Mr. Brooks left Hendersonville\non April 3 for DeLand, Fla., to claim\nMrs. Carrie Stanley as his bride and\nwhile the object Of his mission was\ngenerally understood, no authentic\nstatement to the public had been made.\nThey were quietly married and imme-\ndiately set out on an automobile tour\nto Miami ,Fla. After spending some\ntime in DeLand upon their return, Mr.\nand Mrs. Brooks left for Henderson-\nville via Atlanta. Mrs. Stanley was a\nvisitor Hendersonville last summei,\nwhen Mr. Brooks was very attentive to\nher. He visited in Florida on Thanks-\ngiving. ; It Is understood that Mrs.\nBrooks' home in DeLand will remain\nopen and that she and a part of Mr.\nBrooks' family will spend the winters\nin Florida, where Mrs. Brooks is said\nto hold considerable property Mr.\nBrooks, who has - had a successful\nbusiness career in Hendersonville,\nhaving held the office of county tax\ncollector and received other political\nhonors, now being mentioned In con-\nnection with the race for the office of\nmayor, is cashier of the Citizens bank.\nMr Brooks is a man of numerous\nfriends, who will be interested in his\nmatrimonial venture. The following\naccount of the wedding from a DeLand\npaper will be of interest:
2c06a91a97ca60a7325bee99e1aaa03e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8811475093605 39.745947 -75.546589 James M. Satterfield, Esq.. George above conclusively bears out our con- agement all differences in matters of\nW. Teho. Dr. R . S . Stevenla. W .1 - tention, and proves that J. Frank AI- leadership than at the primaries, and\nHam W. Richardson. Dr. McKeiway. Ice and the other local wreckers were nowhere else is It possible for a\nWilliam Denney. Chief Justice James working with the Democrats n an broader or more decisive verdict to\nPennewlll, Hon. Harry A. Richard- ' effort to defeat the whole Republican ! be reached.\nson. William D. Denney. Elmer P. tücket. And these wreckers wtere Therefore, we contend that every\nHorsey. George M. Jones, Esq., Dr. | engaged by Alfred I, duPont, to as- man who has only the best interests\nRichmond Steele. Dr. James H. sist tr'm in purifying Republican po- of the party at heart will consent to\nM ilson. Walker Mifflin. H. Rldgely | I tlcal conditions in Delaware, and yet leave all issues to he settled at the\nHarnngton. Dr. James E. Carroll. ; every last one of them is so nasty primaries. The people can al-\n. lohn B. Wharton. S, M. Harrington, and dirty that the famous Gold Dust ways be trusted, the party-wreckers\nDr. C . dej. Harbordt, D. Mifflin Wil-. Twins, with an unlimited supply of to the contrary notwithstanding, and\nson, Thomas W. Wilson, W. L. Clay- j powder and brushes, could not, in a the fundamental principles upon which\nton, W. H . Baker. E. F . Wood. R. A . i thousand years, cleanse his filthy hide, the institutions of our free, glorious\nHopkins, Samuel H. Barker. D . C. AI- | And just so filthy as are the w-reck- country were founded were those of\nfee. .1. A H'rons. John Carrow, A, R | ers 's the man whose jingling gold major'ty rule, and the man who in\nBenson. Capt. J. T . Buckson. E, B paid them for their traitorous work, thought or act'on den'es or repudiates\nT-oiiderbough. H. D. Dqrzback. Wil- H\nliam M Hazel, J. II Hnzel. Prof. Wes- squarely back of the\nley Wehb. C . TV. Johnson. John TV. party of Delaware.
0bdd8410328b19a69953a1dc6d6760f8 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1885.0397259956874 29.4246 -98.49514 mutt be submitted to tho property taxpaycis,\nrotors of the city, and. If sustained by a ma-\njority nf jtho votes polled, such loan shall be\nlawful. All bonds shall specl.'y for what pur-\npose tbey wrro Issued, and shall not bn sold for\nlcsitban their par value; and when any bonds\nare Issued br tho cltr, a fund sbatl bo provided\nto pay tbo Interest and S percent per annum\non the capital, as a sinking fund, toroJcem the\nbonds, which fund shall not be dlvertod or\ndrawn for any otbor purpose; and tho City\nTreasurer sbatl honor no draft drawn on raid\nfund except to pay Interest or to redeem the\nbonds for which It was provided; and for tho\npayment of such loan to lovy a special tax over\nand above the tax allowed by thlsact;\nprovided the rate of tax shall not exceed\ncf 1 pet cent, and tho rato otlntcrcst paid\nahslt not exceed T per cent.; provided, also, no\nloan shall be made for any otbor purpose r\npurposes other than those connected wile tbo\ncorporation of said city; and no loan shall bo\nuado to aid any private enterprise, rall.'oad or\nundertaking not under fho management and\ncontrol of tbo City Council, Tbo sinking fund\nfor tho redemption of any loan ordebttobo\nInvested, as fait as tho same accumulates, In\nUnited States Interest bearing bonds, bonds of\nthe Bute of Texas, or 'In tbo city bends; end\nsuch bon Is, and the Interest of f aid bond, to\nbo roin vetted and to be solJ when mo sury,\nto pay debts or loa's.
9400fab2efc712581e7787045f78518f THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.560273940893 39.261561 -121.016059 tjv AI.T . BRANCHES OF BOTH THE\n1 arta and sciences, as well as the Medical Proles\nsioa. *}*oiality has ever been recognized by men of\njudicious reflection, as both progressive and instruc-\ntive for it is a perfectly weW demonstrated fact that\nany individual, however astute lie may be. attains\nto an infinitely greater degree of perfection by a\nthorough and [sa'severing continuity to one branch\nofart, science, medicine, or mechanics, than it lie\nattempted to accomplish half a dozen—as in the hit-\nter case he would be likely, nine times out of ten, to\nobtain at most but a very superficial knowlwlge of\neither. In the practice ofmedicine or surgery, it uu-\nravels, simplifies, and makes clear to Hie arduous\nstudent, the mysterious complications (complicated\non account of tiie numerous causes which produce\nthem) which diseases of auy kind take upon the liu-\nnan system; operating, as they do frequently, both\non the mental and physical organs. It seeks to re-\ncuperate and restore the functions to their natural\naud proper status, as well as to neutralize all antag-\nonistic influences to which the system is continually\nsubject. Certain it is, that while the busy affairs of\nlife seem to exhaust all our time and attention, the\nIncipiency and progress of disease, sometimes of dan-\ngerous and character, approach us almost un-\nnoticed. Slow in its progress but insidious iu its\ncourse, a disease, or even the simjdedisturbanee of a\nsingle function, frequently becomes an affair of im-\nminent danger when least exi>ected. To this the at-\ntention of the physician of Speciaiitict is always ear-\nliest given. With pn per perceptive powers, added\nto ample experience, lie is necessarily able to arrive\nwith unerring certainty to a correct conclusion as to\nthe character of the ailment and tlie proper appli-\nances for its cure. This 1 have never found to fail.\nA remedy properly administered, ami at the proper\ntime, is sure to accomplish the object of its mission,\nprovided it be directed by the lauds of a skillful\nphysician, who knows his business. I need not re-\niterate the old adage, that “Health is the endorse-\nment of Divinity,” sent to us for our own benefit,\nand that we should not for a moment disregard the\nsecret admonitions that tell us to beware lest we fall\nim|»erceptibly into a lay by noth from which it will he\nmuch more difficult to escape tlian if we had given\nproper attention to ourselves before veuturing so far.\nConsult your physician before it is too late; confide\nin him, and you will save yourself an infinity of suf-\nfering.
2201dbc42e79db8d51e20b0352ee8a2d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1909.8972602422627 58.275556 -134.3925 Ou the 17th ii)9t. Henry Bratnober\ncompleted negotiations for the pur¬\nchase of a three four ths interest in the\nYoung miue ou Chichagof island. Ed¬\nward De Groff still retains one fourth\ninterest. Mr. DeGrofFs faith in the\nfuture of the mine is so great that he\nrefused to dispose of his interest.\nBratnober is supposed to be represent¬\ning a Bratnober syndicate, says the\nSkagway Alaskan. The price paid by\nthe syndicate for its share is not made\npublic, but it is supposed so bo more\nthan 8100,000. The Young mine was\ndiscovered about four years ago by\nRalph Young and John Newell, natives,\nwho transferred one half interest to\nDeGroff, Kelly and Gamble, aud under\ntheir management the mine has paid\nfrom the start. So much rich float was\ntaken from the surface that when\nsacked aud shipped to the smelter it\npaid for all the development aud the\ninstallation of a stamp and roller mill\naud electric power plaut. Over §150,000\nhas already been taken out.\nA representative of the Fair¬\nbanks Times sends that the\nfollowing account of conditions iu the\nIditarod after the freezeup: "The close\nof the season of navigation and the\nfreezeup makes it possible to estimate\nwith some degree of accuracy the num¬\nber of people in the camp. Counting\nthe stampeders at the neaiest points on\nthe river, who will make their way here\nover the trail very soon, the number\nwill be betweeu 1,200 and 1,500. Con¬\nditions and prospects still warrant a\ncamp of this size. On discovery there\nis a uniform paystreak of four foot dirt\nrunning five cents to the pau. It it, all\nshallow, from 12 to 14 feet in depths\nExcellent prospects are being opeued\nup on Slate creek, and there la great\nactivity there. Like the re&t of the\ncountry it wants prospecting, and the\nwork bO far has been necessarily slow.\nLots of cabins are going up on Oitor\nand in the neighborhood. The wnole\ncouutry is staked from one end to the\nother. Everybody is satisfied that he\ncame, aud everybody is sure that the\ncountry will be a winner."
1023ee22b8ac971dcc9cebff975c3d0b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8863013381533 40.063962 -80.720915 The Weston "hundred mile" iarce\nwas played out here to-night, or rather\nit stopped short, with nine miles lack¬\ning of lis being pluyed out. I have no\npersonal grudge against Westou, not\nhaving been as some have."done out"\nof a few stamps by his failure.uoc in¬\nability.to come to time, but I have a\nstrong feeiiug thai (hose who "hacked\ntheir opinion'* that he would do the\none hundred miles, havo been viciiin-\nized by.somebody. Just look at ii.\nWeston sets out oil his ouo hundred\nmiles Journey, does half ot it With per¬\nfect ease, guiuiug time all the way, and\nwith no signs of fatigue; makes three-\nfourths of the journey, still ahead of\ntime and uot suffering In the least;\nswings along on the last part of his\nBtretch at the rate of tlve miles and a\nhalf an hour, as fresh as a lark, and has\nbut nine miles more to go, with three\nhours and seven minutes to do in,\nwhen he.no, not he, but the men wtio\nhave him in charge.declare that he\ncan go no iurther; that bla feet are\nbadly swelled, and (hat to accomplish\nthe nine mites might peril his chances\nof performing the wulk to Chicago\nwithin tho stipulated time. Swelled\nleet, indeed! Who ever heard of a man\nwith badly swelled feet loping along\nhour after hour at the rate of from fi%*e\nto dve and a half miles per hour? His\nfriends (?) say be will do the huudred\nmiles yet, beginning near Cleveland.\nPerhaps he will, iu fact, I feel assured\nhe can and will, ifhe ispermitted, but I\nhave no desire to bet on the fact of his\ndoing so.no, thank you ! The horse is\na noble animal, and honest, but he is\nmade the instrument of designing men,\nand Weston Is a noble specimen of hu¬\nmanity, and probably houesi, but there\nare some things about his tramp which\nhave an ugly look.
11066bb9b9d595d53ae5c5d9c6da4fb7 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.1630136669203 38.894955 -77.036646 Be was not a total abstainer, butquietly\nsaid, when asked his principles upon tlie\nliquor question, that he knew when he had\nenough, and never drank to excess.\nThis was true. However, into the life\nof every man who drinks at all, there\ncomes nu evil hour. Then he drinks too\nmuch. It may have been so with this\nreporter. The incident or his taking one\ndrop too much, and its consequences are\nbetter told by himseir. The day after\nits happening he was in sackcloth and a\nTurkish bath. He told inquiring friends\nthe following story: "I seldom drink. You\nall know tills. I know when I've had\nenough. This last assertion is false. I\nwant to say that no man who puts the\nawful stufr into his stomach can calculate\n his capacity Is exactly nttaincd.\n"I went to a banquet a night or to ago,\nand though wine flowed freely. I diank no\nintoxicants. I went heme after llnlshing\nmy work and got up at 10 o'clock the next\nday, feeling poorly. I went in the Neil\nHouse and met a friend who insisted on\nmy taking a drink. He was to anxious that\nI was really afraid of insulting him, so I\ntook one. We had another and I foget\nwhether ive had one more'.\n"I was handed a telegram fiom a Cin-\ncinnati paper, telling me to interview Mrs.\n.McKinley on a certain matter. It was\nfor an afternoon sheet, and I had no time\nto waste. I sent my card to the guber-\nnatorial apartments, and received word to\ncome up.
38a1a3ffdd3c194985d17f229d2c1e1f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1868.1571037935134 37.561813 -75.84108 Mill the men began to feel uneasy,\nand two months and a half after the\ndiscovery, one of them, named Ben-\nnett, came down to San Francisco\nwith some specimens to post himself.\nHe showed the little nuggets to some\nacquaintances, and one of them hap-\npened to know that Humphrey had\nbeen a gold miner, so Bennett was\ntaken to him. A look satisfied the\nGeorgian of the character of the met\nal, and when he was told that these\nlumps had been picked up by men\nwho were not miners, he declared\nthat though there had been some rich\ndiggings in his native State, there\nwas no place there as rich as the race\nat Sutter's Mill. He determined to\ngo thither at once, and tried to per-\nsuade son'e friends to accompany him,\nbut failed, he went alone. The\nmorning after his arrival at the mill,\nin the first week of April, he went out\nwith a shovel and got several dollars\nin his first panful, and after trying!\nseveral places and finding gold every\nwhere, he made a rocker and sat down\nto work regularly, washing out the\ngold rapidly. Marshall and his friend\nsaw how it was done, and in three\ndays after Humphrey's arrival every\noccupation save gold mining was\nabandoned in that neighborhood, and\nmen who had been glad to work a\nweek before for a dollar a day were\nnot content unless they were making\nthirty or forty dollars. The news\nspread, and California became famous\nand great. $1,000,000,000 have flowed\nfrom the fountain that was discovered\nby Marshall and opened by Humph-\nrey. San Francisco Alta California.
0e541117a9f6a1b061e055f630fdb8d9 FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1918.869862981989 35.318728 -82.460953 cans have succeeded in capturing\nboth the House and Senate by close\nmajorities and a battle rdyal for the\npresidency two years hence is in\nprospect. The result of last week's\nelections is considered a repudiation\nof the President in some quarters.\nThere is cause for encouragement\nin the addition of New York and\nOhio to the democratic column this\nyear and the electoral votes of these\ntwo states in 1920, with those of the\nsolid south, would practically assure\nthe presidency to the democrats.\nFurthermore, the state of Massachu-\nsetts has given Senator Lodge a de-\nmocratic colleague, the first demo-\ncrat .to be thus honored since that\ncommonwealth was organized more\nthan a century ago. Considering the\nopposition of Senators Lodge and\nWeeks to President Wilson ,the \nsult in the Bay State is highly grati-\nfying to the Democracy and especi-\nally to our great commander-in-chie- f .\nThe defeat of Governor Whitman and\nthe gain of a number of democratic\ncongressmen in New York State is\nalso heartening, as well as significant,\nand Colonel Roosevelt is privileged to\nrejoice over the losses in his own\nstate ,along with the small republi-\ncan gains in other sections of the\ncountry, if he finds consolation in the\nfact. It is not so bad after all and\nif1 the Democracy continues to grow\nin popular favor during the next two\nyears, at the same ratio it has increas-\ned numerically since Mr. Wilson be-\ncame president, the republican lease\nof power now in prospect will be\nshort-live- d .
1de93b1abe8578806c8274905d9b90ba THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1906.0890410641807 42.217817 -85.891125 place. He knew that the olii.\nthis giant Institution would prove\ncr in dodging the blows that bo .\nfllin, but Ibis did not discourage '\nfrom going about the task. Ann\nwith authority to lake testimony In a;.\nstate in the Union, he announced lb: t\nit would be of 110 avail for meihlwrs y\nthe oil trust to flee to Florida or Cali-\nfornia or other congenial climes, as be\nwould pursue them until he found\nthem and obtained the Information\nnecessary to the success of the inquiry\nhe had been charged by (Jovernor Folk\nto conduct. He began his work of\ninvestigation in New York because the\nchief operations of the big trust nr\nconducted fi;om that great commercial\ncenter. Although New Jersey Is suppos-\ned to be the homo of the company as a\ncorporation, there is only the Hudson\nriver It and New York, and on\nlower Broadway thei" Is a big building\nwhich contains the main otlices of the\nInstitution. Here Is the oMice of John\nI). Rockefeller, Its president, and here,\ntoo, Is the sanctum sanctorum, guarded\nby faithful servitors, where Henry II.\nRogers, the vice president and active\nhead of the Institution, directs its mani-\nfold operations. When Mr. Hadley es-\ntablished headquarters in New York\nhe did not send out engraved invita-\ntions to Standard Oil ollicials ns If he\nwere Inviting them to a .r o'clock tea.\nHe bhl them to his reception In the of-\nfice of Commissioner Sanborn by\nmeans of what in the phraseology of\nthe law Is known ns a subpoena. A\nperson who receives nn Invitation of\nthis kind may not send regrets.\nFor some reason the Standard Oil\nmen evinced a reluctance to see the
8417c7cce16979a3715a28e536500912 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.727397228564 39.261561 -121.016059 he rebel States, with their great staple,\nwhich they unhesitatingly .confided in as\nthe most potent power in the world, has\nnot, In a preceptihlc degree, weakened the\ntinancial strength of the North, while the\nease with which it has carried the burdens\nimposed upon it, has demonstrated this\nstrength to exceed vastly, not only (ho\nestimate of the most sanguine among our-\nselves, but has excited the astonishment,\nand shut the mouths of those who predicted\nbecause they desired, our speedy collapse.\nWe have, consequently, uebieved a vic-\ntory of far greater value than mere success\nin the field. Tbjs In the outset may he no\nind'oation of the (Inal result—It may he duo\nto skill and enterprise of u leader ou the\nono side, or imbecility and incapacity ou\nthe other. Such matters may he only acci-\ndents, which are corrected as affairs pro-\ngress, and when real strength cau bo\nbrought into action agaiust decided inferi-\nority. Results are then giaduated just to\nthe degree of the resources and ability that\neither party can bring into the field.\nWhatever construction consequently may\nhave been put, so far, upon the events of\nbattles, or of military operations, the North\nhas steadily gained in moral position, and\nin the respect entertained for it by foreign\nPow ers, Their journals may depreciate,as\nmuch as they please, military capacity,\nbut they well understaud that our material\nis of the finest quulity, and that we have\nreally displayed much greater military ap-\ntitude, and achieved greater success, than\nhave European nations, when first plunged\ninto hostilities after long periods of peuce.\nWe are every day gaining on their confi-\ndence and respect. Hut this is not the on-\nly. nor the greatest achievement of our\npeople. The war has disclosed an unity—-\na nationality among them, such as has ex-\nisted, under similar circuStances, umong\nno others, for the rcasou that this national-\nity is bused upon the idea thut society and\ngovernment us they exist at the Nudb, are\norganized in u manner so as to promote, in\nthe highest degree, tho welfare of every\nmember and subject of them. Where such\nconviction is deep seated arid universal, no\npossible cause of internal discord exists.\nThere is, in fact, the most intimate and ne-\ncessary relation between the prosperity and\ninternal harmony of the North. The one is\nonly a sequence of the other. The connec-\ntion between a good government and a fa-\nvorable material condition is fully seen,\nand society is never ungrateful to Tts bene-\nfactors, when they ure appreciated, it is\nnol a case where envy or jealousy ever\ncame in to mar the tiuiversal sentiment of\ngratitude aod respect.
19db5598c9b595c2df35534ce87a8778 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.0150272907813 43.82915 -115.834394 The individual practice* of tho sih\nowners of this country are so varied\nand the plans of raising silage so dil\nferont that it is difficult to lay dowi\nany definite rules in regard to silag.\nfeeding. The original idea of cn-ihig«\nwas to secure by some means a* gi »'*»\na growth of fodder as possible, pa\\ in^\nno attention to grain hearing ahm^:\nwith stalk growth. By this plan silage\nwas largely “greenness amt water,\nand in feeding it a great quantity was\nnecessary for a ration, and so, perfotce,\ngrain in form of oats, bran, linseed\nmeal, and like nitrogenous foods had\nto be f»;»l to give a balanced ration.\nUnder this system we heard of cows\nconsuming bushels, each, of silage pet\n•lay, and a large grain ration in ad­\ndition. In the early days of ensilage\nmen told me they from sevcnty-fiic\nto one hit ml red pounds per day to\ngr»/*yn animals, and the effect was\nmuch as it would be to gorge an ani­\nmal on any other sort of dilute food.\nIt was not long before the advocates\nof exclusive silage feeding discovered\nthat the **:ition was too bulky, and that\nnot only was it belief to direct the\ngrowib of the silage fodder towards\ngrain-bearing, but that there must be\na rotation of crops on the farm. Ibis\nimplied some clover and tame bay, a\ncertain amount of stalks from field corn,\nW'bieli should be fed along with tin*\nsilage; and so from these cau*»*s there\nhas been a reduction in the amount of\nthe daily silage ration; and to my\nknowledge last winter from twenty-live\nto fifty pounds, along with other feed­\ning materials, was about the average\namount fed.
8946034b69ccf30bea651885a24880f8 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.0945205162354 41.681744 -72.788147 A committee of three, consisting\nof John E. Lamb, Stanley S. Gwilllm,\nand George A. Case, was appointed\nby President Henry Trumbull of the\nChamber of Commerce last night to\nInvestigate the desirability of having\na town court in Plainville. A bill,\nin the form of an incomplete draft,\nhas already been submitted to the\ngeneral assembly by Representative\nRobert B. White to provide such a\ncourt, this action being to get such\na bill filed In time and permit the\nestablishment of a court If the\ntownspeople desired. The opinion of\nthe chamber in the matter was asked\nby Mr. White, and the committee\nnamed last night will look Into the\nproposal and report back before the\nchamber expresses Itself.\nWilliam Wilbur, chairman of the\ncommittee dealing with the "boost\nPlainville" sign, reported that pre-\n bids for placing such a\nsign on the side of the new Sequas-se- n\ncorporation building have been\nfound favorable. The old shack on\nrailroad property next to the build-\ning will be removed. The owner,\nBert Paeon, has accepted an offer\nfrom the corporation and will take\nthe shanty away. This will leave the\nface of the new structure clear and\nallow an unobstructed view of a\nsign if placed there.\nChairman Burton H. Phelps of the\nbuilding code committee said that he\nwould make a final report In one or\ntwo months. There has been some\ndebate on licenses for the building\ntrades. A committee to arrange for\nthe annual banquet of the chamber\nwas appointed. It consists of Ralph\nL. Seymour, James E. Usher, Ed-\nward P. Prior, Joseph McCarthy,\nand P. A. Lyman.
02af1277684be5dc4625f3d9fc835f09 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.6589040778792 39.745947 -75.546589 Intimespastmanyremarkableevent»must\nsave escaped general attention; but in these\nlay* the uows|mper reporter is everywhere\nst once, a* it were. One of these busy and\nuseful public servants, connected with The\nNew York Dispatch, recently rescued from\nsblivion a scene, “a thrilling incident,” lie\n.•ails it, of which, but for his timely appear\nanoe, the world might never bave Issu d\nA brawny man, clad in a blue shirt and\noveralls, and with a dinner pail In his hand,\nwalked siowiy down an east side street one\nevening lost week. He »sotted to bethinking\nof something pleasant, for, ns lie walked, he\nsmiled and muttered to himself.\nNear the middle of tlie block he paused, foi\nright before him was a grout) of children\nstanding in front of a tenement htsiso. Tlu-\nchildren were evkiently waiting for him, for\nthey broke out at once, “Hera lie I” anil\nbegan to dance amt ca|wr like msuL\nA brood grin broke over the face of Uu\nworkman, but when ho tried to ns»vo on Un-\nchildren flocked around him so Utah I» wiu\noomi»illed to stop, Tlw door of thu houaf\nopened, and a young woman came out, lead\nlug a little boy by the band. Thu children\nwith one voice exclalmol, “AhT and tin\nboy ran to the man and was quickly seised it.\nhis arms and repeatedly kissed.\nThe crowd had by tola time grown ves->\nlargo, and women and children, in a babel o!\nvoice», shouted themselves hoarse\nFinally the man and the boy went into thu\njjQUt^aisl thj jrgwd began to ecaM/er. Still\nllngtwliijj Clio scribe tswayed again to lean\nwhut the matter wax Boeing a little gjr!\ncome out of the door, ha wont to Iler mal in\nquiredi
0339ecffb502471abe14a06f5d3a6803 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8811475093605 39.513775 -121.556359 C .bulge of the Comity Court, in and for Untie\nComity, that the Hoard j 1 Supervisors in amt for said\ni!. unity. did. on the 211 h day of September, A. I>. one\nthousand eight hundred mid titty.six, denpire Orovtlle\nIn be the Count' sent of Unite County from and afler\nlln* said iweilty-lbarlh day of September A. I>. IS.Vi,\nIn pursuance oi mi act euiilietl An Act in change and\nfix the Comity Seat of Butte County, approved March\npith, is,Vi; and it further appearing to my -atisfaclion\nthat tlie present buildings ii w hiah the -aid Court lias\nbeen held, mid in which the Records have been kept\nin tin* town of Hidwell, are unsafe as a place <if de-\npository for said Record*, and Rial tie- same is liable\nto destruction by fire, by reason of their being con-\nstricted entire ol wood. Ami il further appearing\n there is no building in the town ol Hidwell. suit-\nat.l * for holding tho terms of this Court, mid to safely\nkeep its Records from lire or other calami! y. and il\nappearing I hat the town of Oreille is a tit plane to\nho i Hie terms of Ibis Court, and that u side mid com\nmi llions brick building in said town ha* been ten-\ndered the county as county huiMtngs.\nIt is IherelTire itrdored .aid judged alkl decreed, that\nthe Clerk el the County Court, in mid lor Butte\nCounty, forthwith remove his office and the Records\nthereof, to Urovillo, in the building selected hy tho\ns.iil Hoard of Supervisor* a* County Puddings, and\nthat in* do and t iiusncl the business of bis said office,\nat lie* town of Uroville. ns the County Seal of Hutto\niejuty. And il is further ordered. Hint Hu* terms ol\n-
17e03ada677922109a738746980d5ca4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.9301369545915 39.745947 -75.546589 The c«*e grew out of the Importation\nof cigarettes into Tennessee from\nNorth Carolina. They were taken iutc\nthe State In the ordinary sized cigar­\nette package®, »bout' two »byrtwtlr* bû­\nches. and these packages were loosely\nthrown Into baskets, which were un­\ncovered. The claim was made that\ntbeae-clgnrette packages were what Is\nknown to the law as original package*,\nbut without clearly defining an origi­\nnal package, the court held that It wa*\nclear that such packages could not be\nno considered. Justice Brown, In pass­\ning upon the case, said that the pack\n•gee were obviously made up with the\nview of evading the law. and a* he\nnpoko he held one of the little olgarett»\ncases up to the view of his auditor*.\nOn tbi* point, the decision of the State\ncourt, to effect that the package*\nwore not original, was fully confirmed.\nOn another phase of the case the\nBUto court was not «0 fully endorsed.\nThe Tennessee court had held that cig­\narettes ore not an article of commerce.\nWith this view Justice Brown took\ntasue, and be delivered quite a dis­\nsertation upon the subject Whatever\nle an object of barter and sale is. ho\n•aid, an article of commerce, and must\nbe so recognized. Tobacco had been\nsuch an article for 400 years. It had\nbeen made the subject of taxation, and\nindeed, had become more widely scat­\ntered than any other vegetable. Prob­\nably, be added, no other vegetable has\ncontributed so much to the comfort\nand solace of the human race. This\nbeing the case, It was entirely beyond\nbounds to say that tobacco
9e60f53f3439c9b034b8527f8fc01d90 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.3082191463725 47.04502 -122.894872 Itould haw made a zuccusful attack upon\nEngland he certainly notdd not leave nig—-\nlected the opportunity, It is known that\nhe projected an attack from the purl of llnu-\nlougue, but he denim-d :freiwards from this\nplan. Let us now compare his resources\nwith those of his imperial tn-phew.\nNapoleon llunnluttt: needed no pretence\nfor a war with England; indeed. alto never\ngranted him a moment of eordiul peace; but\nLouis Napoleon can ?nd no respectable pre-\ntext for war. He cannot allege that he is\nbound to revenge the insulin given to his\nuncle by the British Government, for over\nthe grave of the Great Emperor. whore, re-\nmain?werc solemnly delivered by the l'ln-\nEllah (internment to (he Prince do Join\n\\'ille. demanding them in the name of\n1 France, a new friendly understanding (m-\n- - lcnle rnnli'l/t) was concluded between France\nland England. Marshal Soult. long the op.\nponenl of the ann of Wellington, was\nsent to London as Enihassador, on\nthe OCtlsion of the necthalu? of Queen Vie-\ntorin to the throne. Louis pllllllppc paid a\nfriendly visit to Windsor Castle, and the\nQueen returned the Tlalt. It was generally\nacknowledged that eternal peace and friend-\nahip ought to reign between the two coun-\ntrie< ; peace societies were formed in the ct-\nties London and Paris, for the purpal' . oh:-\ncuring endlesa peace throughout the globe ',\nand only four months ago, at the funeral\nceremonies of the Duke of Wellington.\nFrance was represented by her ordinary\nEtubaasador at the Court of St. James,\nCount WaltWs'lty, natural son of the Great\nanoloon. If, under such circumstancel,\nNapoleon 111. should make an unannounced\nand unexpected attack upon England, as is\nrumored, he would give great offence to\npublic opiuiomhoth at home and abroad; and\npublic opinion hair risen to such powvr these\ntimes, that he who haa it agaimt him is al-.\nready half lost. Napoleon I, at the height
0f7b4d40beea422dd51892d36ec0418e THE LAMOILLE NEWS ChronAm 1878.0041095573313 44.593941 -72.616505 The two most important choraoteuistics\nof a guest are tact and observation, and\nthese will lead yon to notice and do just\nwhat will give pleasure to your friends\niu their different opinions and ways of\nliving. Apply iu its best sense the\nmaxim : " Wheu you are iu Rome, do us\nthe Romans do."\nUnless you have some good reason\nfor not doing so, let your friends know\nthe day, and, if possible, the hour when\nyou expect to arrive. Surprises are very\nwell iu their way, but there are few\nhouseholds iu which it is quite convenient\nto have a friend drop in without waruiug\nfor a protracted visit. If they know that\nyou are coming, they will have the\npleasure of preparing for you aud look-\ning forward to your arrival, and you will\nnot feel that yon are disturbing any pre-\nvious arrangements which they, have\nmade for the day.\nLet your friends knew, if possible,\nsoou after you arrive, about how loug\nyou menu to stay ith them, as they\nmight uot like to ask the question, aud\nwould still find it convenient to know\nwhether your visit is to have a duration\nof three days or four weeks. Take with\nyou some work that you have already\nbegun, or some book that yon are read-\ning, that yon may be agreeably employ-\ned when your hostess is engaged with\nher own affairs, nnd not be sitting about\nidle, as if waiting to be entertained,\nwheu her time is necessarily taken up\nwith something else. Make her feel\nthat, for a small part at least of every\nday, no one needs to have any responsi-\nbility about amusing you,\nA lady who is charming as a guest and\nas a hostess once said to uie : " I never\ntake a nap in the afternoon when I am\nat homo, bn. I do wheu I am visiting,\nbecause I know what a relief it has\nsometimes been to me to have company\nlie down for a little while, after dinner."
7c1af1b633b83e16ede4d1dec1a484e9 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.6369862696602 31.960991 -90.983994 ment acta to destroy, defeat or obstruct remedy,\nthen it pervcris its powers, and directs them, to\ndefeat the very end lor which it waa instituted.\nStich action of the government being in opposi­\ntion to the ends for which ft was instituted,\nwould in my opinion be void. For no power\ncon fared wiih a view to effect a particular ob­\nject can be effectually used to defeat that ob­\nject. This is plain common sense.\nBut where there is a right, and an effectual\nremedy to enforce that right, it is but a question\nof expediency w'hether the legislature} shall\nchange the remedy.\nThe statute commonly called the “Briscoe\nBill” as it passed the House of Representatives,\nobstructed and Was framed to obstruct remedy.\nI was therefore opposed to it, because it seqmed\nto me to be in opposition to thje end for which\ngovernment was instituted, a stroke a't the\nvery foundation of organized society and legal\nobligation, bringing the doctrine of repudiation\nin its most Obnoxiop« form mtoour private deal­\nings and individual rights.\nThe amendments made in the Senate I appro­\nved, because they, to some, extent, preserved\nthose rights* to protect which, with all other\nrights, government was instituted.\nTo so much of the original bill as merely de­\nfined The fr.otlc of proceeding against banka, to\nascertain whether they had or had not forfeited\ntheir charters, I had no objection. For if a bank\nhas forfeited its charter, the government has n\nright to resume the grant, and pul an end to its\ncorporate existence. For the benefit qf the com­\nmunity, it should do so, and the more simple the\nmeans trf reaching that end Jbe better. But they\nshould not iïnpàir t he existing rights of its Credi­\ntors.
06d944c46716e7fc7daf25ebcaf394a8 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1896.7554644492511 37.305884 -89.518148 A horse died at North Andover, Mass.,\nthe other day. In whose stomach was\nfound over a pound of nails.\nBarnuin's trick horses are fairly beat-\nen by a team of old work horses in\nWesley, Me., that the driver left stand-\ning in the field for a moment, hitched\nto a mower. In his absence they cut\ntwo neat swaths completely around\nthe. field. witJiout missing a spear of\ngrass, turning the corners accurately.\nAll efforts to trace the capercalzie and\nblack game imported in Aroostook, Me. ,\nfrom old Sweden last spring have proved\nfruitless. Now and then conies a rumor\nthat they have lieen seen or heard. They\nhave doubtless retreated to the deep\nCanadian pine forests, and the bene-\nfits of their importation will be reaped\nia future years.\nFew hunters have returned from the\nwoods with more satisfaction than \nfelt by Miss Jennie Eliot, of South S e-be - c .\nMe., who recently saw two fleer\ngrazing in her father's mowing field,\nand succeeded in getting an excellent\nphotographic snap Knot at them. In\nthe picture one of the dr is in the\nattitude of leaping, all four of its legs\nbeing off the ground.\nA sword fish strayefl away from home\nand friends a few davs ago and lost his\nlife while exploring the old basin in- - !\nside of the old breakwater at Iilock\nIsland, It. I . When his presence liecame\nknown half a dozen men, one with a\nharpoon, went on the breakwater, and.\nwhen the fish was near the instrument\nwas thrown, with the desired result.\nTt is said that this is tine first fish of\nthe kind ever know n to have been seen\nin the basin.
13e541be536306037f21b72acbca301a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.042465721715 40.063962 -80.720915 ploy of the Pennsylvania liailroad Com- J\npony. Phillips was a bricklayer in lialii- G\nwin township, and Lewis a practical iron drei\nworker. They built a miniature mill at n-,\ntheSoBth Side end of the Tenth street\nbridge, in which Oliver kept books while P"r\nLewis and Phillips looked after tho prac- tior\ntlcal part of the work. will\nThe outfit consisted of two puddling and thai\none heating furnsco and the product was hen\nwheeled away on barrows. From this cole\nhumble beginning has grown tho great hen\nfirm of Oliver JiroUiers Jt Phillips which to t!\nnow employs 4,000 men. Among their eflo\nvarious establishments may be mentioned diti\nthe .two mills on Tenth and Fifteenth adi\nstreets, South Side, two on Woods run in the;\nthe lower part of Allegheny City and a the\nsteel mill and two wire mills on thoSouth the\nSide. One of their largest ventures was ford\nlU6j manufacture of barbed wire. Some part\nnigh teen months ago Harry Oliver visited poll\nEngland and on his return iiniiortcd I I\nworkmen and erected a steel mill of.\nwhinh it had been impossible for informs- ions\nion seekers to obtain entrance. Theprocess fron\n8 bid to be a bettor one than the well odly\ncnown Musset process. The firm hag frou\njcen uniformity successful and their gresi\n>rpfitshavo aggregated millions. Three O'H\nrears ago Mr. Lewis retired from the Arm Stat*\nivorth a fortune of several millions. The fecti\niresent liiombers are II. W . Oliver, Jr., tyke\nWW; Oliver, George Oliver, J. B. Oliver, Stat<\nf. SI. Phillips and several relatives of the atan1\nriginal proprietors. Harry W. Oli- crati\n'er, jr., is tho best known mem*\n>er of tho firm outaido of this city, and\n>y reason of his candidacy for United her\nStates Senator in 1881, and his member- «ticc\nhip Jin -tho Tariff Commission, Ho has into;\nteen known as one ot tho Stalwart Re- 'ntu\nlubliean leaders in this State, and a lib- men\nral contributor to campaign funds, but un(i\nius never held any local office. His rail- crate\noad speculations have been on a large MrV\ncale, and he is said to have cleared $400.-
06ba6de88a1ec614730deb088eb07da0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.0698629819888 39.745947 -75.546589 Beglnnlng at s corner limn stone In the erly parallel with Tatnall street and pass-\nnewly laid out public road, near tenement lug through the middle of the division\nhouse (said corner lime stone being situ- wall between this and the adjoining\n«led at the easterly terminus of Valley house slxty-one feet and six Inches to the\nstreet, ns at present laid out): thence southerly side of a three and a-half feet\nnorth 33'., degrees east along the middle wide alley; thence along said side ot Sid\np( »aid public road 447 feet to the middle alley easterly parallel with Hamilton\nline of the Delaware Western railroad; street eleven feet to the westerly side ot\ntheme along the said middle line ot said a tour feel wide alley leading from Tenth\nrailroad ns now located and constructed, to Eleventh streets: thence along sold al-\nweslerly about l.WW feel to the point toy side southerly parallel with Tntnall\nwhere the easterly side of 8t. Mary's street »Ixey-one feet and Inches to the\nstreet, extended, would Intersect »aid aforesaid side ot Hamilton street: thence\nmiddle line of said railroad: thence along thereby westerly eleven feet to the piece\nthe easterly aide of Bt. Mary's street of beginning, be the contents thereof\nabout 992 feet to a point on tho line of what they may.\nJohn Mitchell's line, and thence thereby No. 8 . All that lot of land and dwelling\nIn a westerly direction by the several house thereon erected, situate In tho city\ncourses and distances thereof, to the of Wilmington aforesaid. Beginning at s\nwesterly »Id« of Charles »treel, und point at tho distance of one hundred and\nthence thereby In a northwesterly dlrcc- twenty-eight feet four Inches from Tal­\nlinn 270 feet to the northerly side of nail street, on the northerly side of I lam-\nllawlcy street; thence easterly crossing Uton street; thence through the middle of\nCharles street about 4« feet to Ihe Inter- the division wall between this and the ad-
0aa48238918dda0552b1e6441adb959e THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.0671232559614 38.894955 -77.036646 This fact proves that the hills were\nplaced there after the surface formation\nhad been completed, and further corrobora-\ntion is found in the substance buried be-\nneath the hills. Borings have uncovered\ngreat cottonwood trees with the branches\nall intact, and bones of antelope and sand-\nhill crane two animals which still linger\nIn this unfrequented region, though other-\nwise almost driven from the State. Even\nhuman bones have been dug up, the remains\nprobably of early travelers caught in the\ndangerous sands during some unrecorded\nstorm. Under these conditions, especially\nif the storm is rotary, like the famous tor-\nnado, this region forms a natural death trap.\nNo satisfactory explanation of the hills\nhas ever been advanced. Early and less\nwell informed investigators thought they\nmight be a remnant of some heavenly body\nwhich by chance had encountered the earth\nafter the surface formation was practically\nfinished. Some even went so far as to de-\nclare them to be a remnant of the nucleus\nof comet. Later on, when the cataclys-\nmic school of geologists was in the ascend-\nant, they suggested that some mighty\nprehistoric cyclone, as it swept through\nthe country, had collected the sand and\nhad deposited it here, where the force\not the storm was expended.\nScientists of the present day are dis-\nposed to find a more simple explanation.\nThey say that as the island sea subsided\nthis stretch of land may have been up-\nlifted somewhat so that It formed an\nisland and the action of the waves col-\nlected and deposited the sand about its\nborders. Then, after the water had dis-\nappeared, the land sank to a level with the\nsurrounding territory, thus leaving behind\nit the heaps of sand in the form of hills.\nThe theory, though it does not account for\nall the phenomena, is, perhaps, the most\nrational yet proposed, and It will proba-\nbly be found to have considerable truth\nwhen the complete history ot these hills\nshall be discovered. Chicago Chronicle.
47a5a183325df8c8af7eec49c01a4edc THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.2964480558085 40.618676 -80.577293 T'HE war in Europe has already disrupted world\ncommerce and brought reorganization of pro\nduction within all countries. It has greatly in­\ncreased the gold reserves of the United States b.v\nthe flight of capital from other lands. In addition\nthere has been a marked flight of European indus­\ntries to this continent—some permanent, some\nonly for war-time production. Industries from Cen­\ntral Europe have sought refuge in United States\nand Canada. A conspicuous symbol of this move­\nment is the well-known Bata Shoe Company. The\nBata plant was one of the show places of Czecho­\nslovakia. American methods of mass production\nhad been imported into this factory mill in an agri­\ncultural section of Moravia. Among these peas­\nant people the ways and traditions of feudal\nEurope were still the controlling way of life. The\npeople were very poor and unaccustomed to hope\nfor better things. They accepted the industrial\ntread-mills of the harvest fields and the authority\nof the land-owning families. Niggardly wages\nwere better than the revenues from feudal agri­\nculture. low-priced shoes made their way\non the markets of the world in competition with\nthe shoes of better-paid workers. This company is\nbuilding a branch in rural Maryland, expecting to\nduplicate social and economic conditions prevail­\ning in its plant in Czechoslovakia where a great\nwalled factory was surrounded by dormitories for\nworkers, with the stores, services and recreation\nagencies necessary for community life. The fac­\ntory took advantage of depressed labor conditions\nand maintained rigorous authority and discipline\nthat limited the development of the people.\nIn the mill town now under construction in\nMaryland with its technically modern provisions\nfor work and housing American Labor insists\nthere shall be equally modern provisions for labor-\nunion organization for collective bargaining and\nAmerican standards of hours and wages. We have\nlearned full well from fugitive industries fleeing\nlabor legislation with advanced standards, and\nbuilding up low standards in depressed areas,\nlessons that help us to meet the problem created\nby refugee industries if they seek not only refuge\nfor themselves but for un-American practices.
a0cb580f8972cb95beb68d3c94073e4e PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.0095628099068 31.960991 -90.983994 ON Mouday the 15th of January next, àn\ninstitution of learning, of a high order, Tor\nthe education of young ladies, will be opened in\nthis place, under the above title. Experienced\nand accomplished teachers will be procured in\nall the departments, and a regular course of in­\nstruction, thorough, systematic and exact, will be\npursued. The best selection of text books will\nbe adopted, and when once established, will not\nbe changed without urgent reasons.\nA regular merit and demerit roll will be kept,\nexhibiting the progress and standing of each pu­\npil, an abstract of which will be forwarded\nmonthly to her parents or guardian.\nA strict and uncompromising discipline will\nbe enforced, yet tempered with kindness and\naffection, and no pupil will be received whose\nparents afce unwilling to yield to this highly ne­\ncessary and salutary regulation.\nWhile the general policy of the school will \ndecidedly Christian in its character, the young\nladies will be left free to enjoy their own predi­\nlections, and will be required to attend worship\nat such church as their parents may desire. No\nyoung lady boarding in the Institute will bfe al­\nlowed to contract accounts at the stores, or\nleave the premises except by special permission\nor in company with a teacher.\nThe beautiful scenery and location of Port\nGibson, its excellent health and good society\ncombine to render it in all respects, one of the\nmost desirable situations for a literary residence\nin the South West. And parents or guardians\nwho trust their daughters to this establishment\nmay feel perfectly assured that no pains will be\nspared, not only to promote their intellectual\nimprovement, but also to fôrm their character\nafter the most approved models of excellence, as\ndeveloped by refined society and Christian mo­\nrality.
0196b99fa9ec5f575c05e9467d639c62 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.4178081874684 37.451159 -86.90916 each attempt in this country to eitab-1U- U\nan art jonrrni.'Mid not prove tno indiSce-en- ce\nof the peoplo of America to the claims of\nnigh art. fco soon as a proper appreciation of\nthe want and an ability to meet it were shown,\ntbe public at once rallied with enthusiasm to\nits support, and the result was a rreat rtUtia\nand commercial triumph THE ALDINE.\nme .utine wane issueii with all of the regu-\nlarity, has none oftrje. temporary or ttmt'y in-\nterests characteristic of ordinary periodicals.\nis an elegant miscellany of puro, light, anil\ngraceful literature, and a collection of pictures,\ntho rarest collection of artistic skHI, in black\nand white. Although each succeeding number\naffords a fresh pleasure- to its friends, the real\nvalue and beauty of Tho AUine will be most\nappreciated after it is booed up at tbe close of\ntbe year. While other may claim\nsuperior cheapness, as compared with rivals of\nsimilar class, Tho Aldine is a unique and\noriginal conception alono and unapproached\nabsolutely without competition in, prieo or .\ncharacter. The possessor of a complete vol-\nume cannot duplicate the quantity of fine pa-\nper and engravings in any other shapo or num-\nber of volumes, fur ten lime t't tmt; and tien,\nthere i iht chnmo, tclaV.'\nThe national featnre of Tea Aldine mast ha\ntaken in no narrow tense. True art is cosmo-\npolitan. While Tbe Aldine is a strictly Ameri- ra - n\ninstitution, it does not eonSne itself to tha\npeproduction of native art. It3 mission is to\ncultivate a broad and appreciative art taste, ono\nthat will discriminate on grounds of intrinsia\nmerit. Thus, while pleadingbefore thepatrona\nThe Aldine, as a leading cbtraeteristie. tho\nproductions of the most noted Acr -i ea -
02ad0ac16e0f3dc11fc0916ec6c88e52 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.423287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 the billot waa renamed, the fourth\nbillot mowing a steady gam for Maeaey.\njYfjw tlio voto was auuouuced a number\ntl alight change* were made, mainly\nfarorabJe to Cameron. The couuty of\niconic then changed her solid vote of j\niwdvaffom Wiae to Cameron. This was\nreceived with prolonged applause. Change\nfollowed change in rapid succession from\nWin to Cameron amid great confusion. ]\nThe iriemidof .Maeaey and Grovnr Asked\nj<i s* to retire /or consultation. No atteu-\nliio wupild to the request and the cou- 1\nfoiioo continued to increase. While it was j\nit in height Cion. Mahotie appeared j\nbefore tha Uonveution, aud wasoeiiHual,\nirwiwl with thundering applause. In an\niutin* order waa restored and he pleaded\nhrhiuiouv ami begged for fair play to\ntfibown, am! that the deU'gationa who\nvfetai to retire might he allowed\nto do io, aud that proceedings he '\nwiwnded daring their absence. \nfarther objection heing made the Maa- J\nuyimlGrover men loft the building. Oq j\ntheir return the fli-crotary proceeded to <\ntill the roll over for thu chftngea. When |\natHjat half of thu counties had been called\nit btrins evident, from thu numerona\nchimed in favor of Cameron, that the\nnominition was a fixed fact. At this\npoint Miaaey put in an appearance and\nwupMttd with great applause. He said\nbe would not deity the fact that he had {\nuntil now indulged in feeling* akin to\nIkttofhiifrieudsin the convention, am]\nippolofiied hr any liDwrties ne mi|(rit\ntilt io addreasing them. The cause of re*\nadjaitmcnt in Virginia waa bio cause. Be\nhad nurtured It in its infancy, foatered It In\nill tooth, battled with it iu its manhood\nand would not desert it in its old ago,\nWhat be had done waa lor the caaie of\nVirginia and her people.
27422cc4fdb0fc6bc758d7b9ab79994f THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.2452054477424 32.408477 -91.186777 Many were the famous characters\nproduced on the circuits of early days, i\nsays Mr. Arthur W. Spaulding in '"The t\nMen of the Mountains"--men fearless\nin danger, unwearying in labor, endur-\ning in privation, powerful in exhorta-\ntion, ready in wit, and often prepared I\nto use physical as well as spiritualI\nmuscle in their combats with the devil t\nand his human agents.\nAmong the most interesting of them\nwas Lorenzo Dow, a roving preacher t\nwhose work was not confined to the\nmountains or the frontler; for although\nhe labored from the high peaks of\nNorth Carolina to the banks of the\nMisssissippi and from Georgla to Can-\nada. he was well known also along the\nAtlantic coast, and even in England I\nand Ireland. Restless and eager, he\ncontinually traveled; nor would he\nmarry until he had found a \nwoman who would promise that she I\nwould spare him from home twelve\nmonths out of thirteen.\nHis proposal of marriage, a letter\nthat is, I think. unique in the dellb-\neration and caution with which it ap-\nproaches the subject, ran as follows:\n"If I am preserved, about a year I\nand a half from now I am in hopes ofi\nseeing this northern country again;\nand if during this time you live and\nremain single, and find no ohe that\nyou like better than you do me, and 1\nwould be willing to give me up twelve\nmonths out of thirteen, or three years\nout of four, to travel, and that in for-\neign lands, and never say, Do not go\nto your appointment, etc. -for if you\nshould stand in the way, I should pray\nStoGod to remove you, which I believe
34832ec6befca8213e683bd25879d22b THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1857.9383561326738 39.261561 -121.016059 and Order of sale to me directed, aud issued out of the\nHon. District Gourt of the 14th Judicial District in and for\nNevada County and State of California, on a judgmentren-\ndered in said Court on the 30th day of October a. i » .\n1857, in favor of C. A. Frisbie, and against Emil Smith\nfor the sum of seven hundred and sixty seven dollars and\ntwenty-two cents, principal debt, and interest on the said\nsum of $767,22 at the rate of three per cent per month\nfrom the rendition of judgmentuntil paid, together with\ncosts of suit taxed at $20,95 for the aale of the following\ndescribed property to wit : All that tract of land situated\nin the County and State aforesaid, and bounded as follows\nCommencing at a large pitch-pine tree, thence running\nnorth 30* west, 24 -60 chains to a cedar tree with an\nburnt through the butt; thence south 60* west 65 chains\n a small cedar in a ravine close to Kn pp creek; thence\nsouth 30* east, 24-60 chains to two small «ak trees stand\ning together; thence north 60* east 65 chains to the place\nof beginning; said tract of land Wing one and a half mile*\nfrom the “Devils Back Bone.”’ (so called,) and between\nSnow Tent and Cherokee and containing 159 and 9-100\nacres, together with all and singular the tennements, he-\nreditament* and appurtenances thereunto belonging.\nNotice ii hereby given that I will expose to public e»l*\nall the above described property to the highest bdd *r fw\ncash, in front of the Court House door in the city ot Neva-\nda, on Tuesday the 24th day of November a. p. 1857, be\ntween the hours of 10 oelock a. m. and 4 oolock T. M., *°\nsatisfy and pay said judgment.\nGiven under my hand this the 3d day of Nov. A . D. 1857 .
2615b0c963d955ee1949c71d414e4562 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.7254098044425 42.217817 -85.891125 let her go alone, and they rowed olf to-\ngether in a tremendous sea, encouraged\nby perceiving that nino persons were\nstill clinging to the forepart of tho ship.\nThe father, after many vain attempts,\nsucceeded in landing on the rock, and\nmaking his way to the wreck, while\nGraco rowed off and on among the break-\ners, doxtromdy guiding her little boat,\nwhich, but for her excellent manage-\nment, would have been dashed to pieces\nagainst the rocks.\nOne by one, with the utmost care and\nskill, the nine survivors were placed in\nthe boat and carried to the lighthouse,\nwhere Graco lodged, fed and nursed\nthem for two whole days, before the\ntho storm abated enough for communi-\ncation with the mainland. One of them\nwas a lady whose two children of eleven\nand eight years old had actually been\nbuffeted to death by the waves while\nsho held them in her arms, and who was\nso much injured herself that it was long\nbefore she could leave her bed.\nThe vessel was the Forfarshire, a Urge\nsteamer plying between Hull aud \ndee. Her boilers had been out of orJer,\ntheir leakage had rendered tho engines\nuseless, aud when the storm arose the\nship was unmanageable without her\nnteam, and was driven helplessly upon\ntho Fern Islands. The only boat had\nbeen lowered by eight of the sailors,\nwho were pushing off in her, when ono\ngentleman rushed upon the deck, seized\na rone and swung himself in after them.\nThese nine were picked up by a sloop,\nand saved. Of tho others, the whole\nnumber had either been drowned in\ntheir berths, or washed off the wreck,\nexcept four of tho crew and five passen-\ngers, whom Graco Darling's valor had\nrtflcned. The entire number of the lost\nis not known, but more than forty had\ncertainly got ou board at Hull. Some\nsailors at Sunderland went out to the\nwreck during the storm at the peril of\ntheir lives, but found only corpses to\nbring away. Graces noble conduct\nrang through England, and every testi-\nmonial that couid be offered was sent to\nher. We believe this brave girl soon\nafter died of decline.
010a38a26c17bcedb7454285d3e75ec6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.5520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 gales tossed them about in a terrific sea.\nThe gale subsiding tke Captain was uhle\nto set his ycsHel's head to tho eastward.\nIcebergs were frequently seen in that\nlatitude at that time, and a sharp lookout\nhud to be kept. The ice wns avoided,\nund the shin continued her courso. Tho\nweather remained exceedingly heavy\nand there were rare periods or calm.\nA miccesuion ol heavy gales came on\nand it wan impossible to take observations;\ntlie course wiih taken by dead reckoning\nthroughout, Froru the beginning to tlie\nend of the paasago th« Captain saw the\nsun riso and set only once, and during\ntlie remaining days the weather was too\nthick to permit him to take observations.\nDuring all the trials, IIcyter(the "crew,")\nbehaved in a most patient and manly\nspirit, never complaining, and the bravery\nof the two men to bo emulated by\ntfceextfaoadlnary endurance of a'lplemliu\nbrindled bull terrier, which noro uii mo\nsufferings ol the long journey with as\nmuch rortitudo as his fellow voyagers.\n< >n Thursday last the vessel nulled 130\nmiles. On Sunday last she was oil' tlio\nFWnot, and then hs I'rlmflrez and his\n"crew" felt themselves In comparative\nsflfcty, they amused themselves with\ncatchlngayoung shark. YVhllo following\napiece of beef a noose was slipped around\nhis tail, and he was polled on board. Ilia\ntall was hung at the bowsprit, where it ia\nstill to l»o observed. The speed with\nwhich the passage was accomplished is\nnot the least extraordinary feature In the\nvoysgo, lor the little vessel actually beat\nlargo ships, many of them having taken\nthirty-eight days Irom Now York to\nQueenatown. The littlo vessel was ex*\npeeled to leavo Cork for Liverpool,
5de2ba49c574091ed0309a6df9bb8c68 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.7684931189751 40.063962 -80.720915 'ThePiaulelri was Joyous as a lark. tini\nwas here arid' there; at his side and a\nOthers' lideilaitum. Nobody could bay\nWW ,(«>m lopkjng at hlscoiuuewaiwhi\nwas going on within tho mind and bear\nof Mr. Sheds: In a moment hd: was o:\nthe box, and had driven round to tho fron\nentrance, ready for passengers.; i Befor\nthey wore all.; aboard there was a pipe\nalready filled, tTmiwanted a llttijo'flro. t'\ncompleto'tHe 'perfectly satisfactory1 stot\nfor a pipe to he ln:on a morning like that\nCpleh ..Sheds needn't have taken' thi\nRouble lo go toJils .apartment "Jn«t fo\nsomething, as he said, for ho knew wel\nheWrat Just for nothing.that is, notbinj\nto speak of. 'And when he was returning\nit,would beiliseless to say that he had no\nexpected to meet.» .young person whom\nby reaspn of,his early training, hq alwayi\ncalledMa-ri-ab, for that Was Qic rai^pn li<\nstood In'that narrow passage wily, scratch\nlug luclfers and.lotting thcipgo'<6u:,,as i\nsomtiiowhe could get no'iightin Ills pirn\nAnd ib,en, he Knefcyewbody ouj\naids w^s waitingTor hint,.and that young\nbluo-tv'ed person cttmo' alcog humming in\nOld German "air,'lio stood tliero.\nstupidly, and scratched another match\nand,held ,out hla pipe, and brought, th<\nflame near (t, and hesitated, and ^yaa jut\ngoing to. pay,' "JIa-rilah, I-pX-r," but lii\n^nlydrewat his pipe, and hold the "fin\ntoo fyr.,away; and then, without sayinj\nanother'word; wdlked to tlio dqor,/Icapcc\ntoUiobox, and Was^on his, way fit taitn\naccountably swift, speed tOwardi Stan\nlilift's Exctange.'.' fed" the fa& jiarii\nliteresii,without kooMngwhy.hallsniller\nto^hericH'and "then'found herself hal\nblushing," and standing thero saying noth\nineat all, and scarcely oven bcedl ng Hans\nwho camenear-jmjt-thenl~with~a-super\nfluoua 5q(l-joJl;(gje<^pdj,que»t(9n concern\ning domestic economy.\nThe driver on the coach was. not ui\nflmint.tliat day ai.usuaL/./For somoioi\naftiarcnt reason ho handled hla wlilp ln:a\nnervous manner, clipping off the tops ol\ntlio flowers-as he reached them on the\nroadside,,and for many a mile' holding in\nhis mouth n pipe well filled, but emitting\nno smoke. Interrogatories met onlj
90a06b7b5af37f8c6b2537d5098ed709 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.5082191463723 43.798358 -73.087921 Immediately we found ourself, by retro-\nspective vision, a spectator in the hall of\nthe nation's representatives in time of ses-\nsion. Good men and true were there, and\non the whole, and at last, considerable bu-\nsiness was done ; but yet, at times, and of-\nten, what scenes ! what scenes ! Ojr fac-\nulty of comparison is provokingly unman-\nageable; we cannot help its playing pranks\neven upon dignitaries, so called. You\nknow that iE?lus is the classic god of the\nwinds. Well, our wild figure maker lik-\nened this magnificent hall to the cave of a\npolitical iElus. The god here keeps hi\nstorm forces pent up in some hundreds of\nman shaped wind bags or, rather, wind\njars. To look down on them from a safe\nplace up high, one side, what a conglome-\nration ol black topped portents they seem.\nHere the elemental monarch opens them\none by one, see them let fly. But some\ntimes they pour out in such quick success-sio- n,\nthat one would think that half of them\nwere belching at once. What gushinjj,\nand rushing, and roaring, whirring, whiz-\nzing,' and whistling round the great cave,\nthe very jars themselves near cracking\npiecemeal and flying through each other\nin flitters. Another thing is very curious.\nThese tempest streams never get back into\ntheir vessels again. Nevertheless, ihey\nare all, sooner or later, laid laid, all snug\nand silent within the folds of the news-\npaper, and sent thereby far and wide:\nwindy seeds of a thousand fold harvest of\nwind, whirlwind?, and tornadoes, through\nihe great open political hemisphere. The\niEolus of old was a puny puff blower to\nthat legislative wind god in his capitolian\ncave. A certain philosopher, Gall by\nname, is the Epy who first discovered\nhow the people may manage weathers of\n(hat sort.
04235a3824dffbd8af202c7d3ed28a51 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.5986301052765 42.217817 -85.891125 the buildings where the Woodville oil\nworks were located ; the buildings are\nswept away ; and Hoevh r V Cole's glue\nfactory lies a complete wreck, some of\nit swept away aud the rest of it is lying\nin ruins on the spot. Going up East\nstreet to Madison avenue, and keeping\non up Madison SVettUe, every foot of\nground repeats the same monotonous\ntale Of devastation.\nButcher's run, as many of our read-\ners know, runs w s northerly direction\nfrom O Hera street. The character of\nthe ground is that of a narrow valh y,\nor rather gully, from fifty to a hundred\nand fifty feel in width, shut iu on each\nside by high, precipitous hills more\nthan two hundred feet high. Along\nthe bottom of the same is the eivt k, its\ncourse follow i'd by Madison avenue,\nwhich fie piently crosses the run in its\ncourse up the ravine for some miles.\nFor a considerable portion of the way\nthe run was conducted through severs,\n tlie entire ravine, for two miles\nfrom its opening, was closely built up\nwith houses fronting immediately on\nthe street, and built up olofM against\nthe hills on either side.\nNot a single bridge is left of the nu-\nmerous structures by which Madron\nvenue crossed the run. All are swept\naway so completely that hardlv a ves-\ntige of them remains, and bed it not\nbeen for the assurance of thoeeSO\nOUainted with the locality, that at all\nthese plscei bridges were built, we\nshould hardly have thought it possible\nthat there wt re any bridges there.\nThe work of devastation commenced\nsome two miles up the run. To ai tempt\nto giye an account of tlfe property de-\nstroyed would be an almost hopeless\ntask. Every house bears the marks of\nthe Hood, and whole blocks were swept\naw ay, hardly leaving a foundation stone\nto mark the spot where they stood.\nThe suddenness of the flood is de-\nscribed most graphically by those who\nwere in its course.
1f8774cb2e66d98902e5a65554c5eddc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.5876712011668 40.063962 -80.720915 yesterday, sold up to 42hc, And finally olosed ^\nto, 2co?eryestcrdty tauy eora na on jester- I\nshowed Uio most marked AdvAnce And closed\nThe cxcltcmont In coru hud a ttlmuiAtlng K\n:t on o-itH butosus ml the crowd oltrado slu am\nnt left their pit to either look on or t»ko a ft*\n1 In tho corndeAl. Whoat, No. iiHiirlug noinlNo.\n2 red 7lJic: Atmust GOaGMq, ciwfue r'\nHJo; Heptombcr 70}<a71j/c, closlug at 70mq; vm\nbor 72«a78o, closing At 72}$c: November lv/h\nJo (tom,e<wb No. i 4lo; August 40X;alOVic,\nng at tie: Hoptemher 40)£a42%o, cloMn« at l2o;\nber-UXAhJ^'j, closlint ut 430: May 44>{aHM»c.\nng At 4uM«o> OatH, cash No. 2 JSa'iSX" August £*\ni26Hc. closing At25Mo; Boptomber\nber 26%H27}{iO, closing at '27c. Kve. cash No.\nIc. li.ir.oy, nominal PlaxNeed, No l, 91 00. «m\npork, caaii, 81& 00; year fill 05a12 CO, closing At\n0; January 512 00al2 07. closing nt 812 05 L*rrt, p\\\nGG2Ku0.ti6o; Augiut A MaG 02%c. closing at If\nfo; Heplember 0.t>7M»6 73o, closing nl(}.7^o- ***\ntier 6 76a0S2%c, closlug at g.82%0; Jauuary\n0 nyfi, closing at 0.72>^c llacou, ribs fg]\n£a<i.lwj; shout Jew 5.80a5 90c. Whisky, 81 10. ^\nirs, cutloaf 0}£aG^v, granulAtod 0J<o; stand-\nirl0i!'2c. Eggs weak; fresh candled'lftj^&llc' K.\nJLXDKt.pnu, August 2,-Flour quiet and weak IrJ\nat quiet but hi her; Vo. 2 red August 78%a .\nt; September SOVfltfO^c: Novomber 82Ha88<*. p*\ni, very strong under higher icooits from Iho I\n; futures2c higher, but wholly nominal in\nuco of speculative tmdlng: August 4SaM3c; ~\nember and October 49)Ubi\\!}i. Onto quiet No.\nxed 3Q>$c; No 8 white 84%^&Kc; No. ' 2 whlto\n37o: futures quiet; No. 2 vvlilto August ^\ni; September 33^a3tJ<n; October 3ti^a36%c;\nsnbor 8lKafl6c. Uutter Arm and in fair oe*\nd. Eggs dull and \\ve*k; western llraU 13%k\nCheese qule: and coaler.\nLP.no, August 2 -Wheat actlvo and steady:\nand August 7334c; September 75o October\ni; December 79c. Cot-d active aud higher\n43c: September 44o; 0 tobfcr45>£c; May 47c Ulgl\nquiet; ca>h a d August 2l%c. Clover seed\nt; No. 1,8! 40 bid.\nfciNNATt, 0., August 2.Flour paav. Wheat Wro\n?r. fork quiet ** nUky active. liuttor, sugar\nchceuo firm. Eggs heavy. Vou
7d102e10f786d0a7ae610f3bfd68ac83 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.8342465436326 41.681744 -72.788147 daughter of Harriet Stovens and\nCollis Sperry Hough. Her early life\nwas spent in that city, later mov-\ning with her parents to Plainville\nwhere she was married on . June\n8, 18S2 to Mr. Tinker. For a num-\nber of years, Mr. and Mrs. Tinker\noperated a shoe business in the old\nRoot block on North Main street\nunder the name of M. H. Tinker.\nIn 188 0, Mr. and Mrs. Tinker moved\nto this city, where Mr. Tinker died\nin 1808. In 1907 Mrs. Tinker en-\ntered the bakery department of the\nstore conducted by the late Mrs.\nMcKay. For the past fifteen years\nshe had been in charge of the bak-\nery department of the W. B . Wood-\nruff store on Main street\nMrs. Tinker was a member of\nOlivet Chapter. O. . S .. No. 29,\nholding the office of treasurer at\nthe time of her death: a charter\nmember of Newton S. Manross Post,\nW. R. C. No. 9 of Forestvllle, later\ntransferring to G. W. Thompson, W.\nR. C, of Bristol: a member of Sarah\nE. Reynolds Tent, D. of U. V.;\nMagnolia Rebekah lodge and of\nBristol Grange No. 116. She was\nalso actively identified with the ac-\ntivities of Trinity Episcopal church\nduring her residence here.\nSurviving Mrs. Tinker are one\nsister, Mrs. Laurie E. Frisble; one\nniece, Ms. Miles M. Smith: two\ngrandnleces, Harriet and Barbara\nSmith and one grandnephew, Paul\nSmtlh, all of Shaker Farms, Conn.\nFuneral services were held at 2\no'clock this afternoon from Trinity\nEpiscopal church. Rev. John Wll-kl - ns\nofficiated and Interment was In
7db6e842742208e1e666b480255583df NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.9575342148655 41.681744 -72.788147 Ai Uie days go by it becomes\nclear to her that she is in love with\nhim. But about the time she firmly\nmakes up her mind that she cannot\nmarry Staley her mother announces\nthe engagement and she resigns her-\nself to marrying him on the tenth of\nJune. Then, along about the tenth\nof May she walks Into the back yard\none morning to look at a new car\nthat her mother has bought, and\nthe new chauffeur, who Is polishing\nit, is Pat France! He admits that he\ntook the job because it enables him\nto be neav her until the time of her\nwedding and Lily wonders if that\nwedding will ever take place after\naU. For she falls more and more\ndeeply In love with Pat, and while\nhe says she never will make poor\nman's wife he Is just as madly In\nlove with her. He takes her to meet\nhis friends, the Jettersons, and she\ninstantly detests Sadye Jetterson,\nwho is flamboyant and loud and\ncheerful. Then she goes to meet his\nfamily his mother and father and\nsister, Florence on a night after\nStaley Drummond has learned\nabout her attachment for Pat from\na discharged maid, Carrie. The next\nmorning Mrs. Lexington, determined\nto get rid of Pat, tells htm he will\nhave to wait on table that night Pat\npacks up to go, and Lily makes a\nquick decision to go with him. Mrs.\nLexington stops Pat in the yard, and\nLily comes up to them to hear the ,\nnews that her mother doesn t want\nher to marry Pat until the next day.\nShe asks why.
303d6cac22be4cb511a70cc453796f7f SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.932876680619 35.780398 -78.639099 jure herself by marrying the man of my choico\nI grew beside myself I intensely hated\nyour father, who truly was worthy of the af-\nfection and respect of every one. I vowed\nFanny should, on a certain day, become the\nbride of Mr. Morton and she, as yon are\naware, tho night before the appointed day,\nelcrped with your father. Oh I Annie, for -giv - o\nme, but I cursed him. Even in my hot\nrage I could not curse my child but resolved\nnever to see her more. When passion wore\noff, the yearning to sec her became intense,\nand on the day your dear mother came to the\nhouse to see me, I felt an almost irresistible\ndesire to clasp her in my arms and never more\nto part with . her. But that resolve I had\nmade in anger, and wicked pride triumphed,\nand wrote those cruel words, which sent\nher from me. My mind ras greatly trou-\nbled, so without telling any one my inten-\ntion, 1 sailed for Europe. I remained here\nfor years, so vou now know, dearest Annie,\nthe reason when Fannie was in distress, I\ndi4 not relieve her. I never received the\nnote she sent mc, for I was then in Germany\nliving the life of a hermit Then after\nyears had passed, and sorrow, and bitter re-\nflection had" silvered these locks, and taught\nme whence to procure comfort, I longed to\nreturn to my native country, and see my\nchild. 1 was ready to love her husband as\nwell as herself. 1 went, but I could not find\nthem, and could gain no information concern-\ning them. I became very unhappy,so, settling\ny affair. I returned to Europe, and have\nbeen wandering about ever since.
28fe4f77f5e40f64c1817accd637d63c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.264383529934 39.745947 -75.546589 agricultural aspect of this holiday is m\nseen in the phrase “That It Is to be | Km\nIkeptIntheseasonoftheMonth of:W\nRipenings,” when the barley sown ln I IP\nwinter has become ripe and when an | Si\nI offering consisting of an omur (one- \\ JR\n! half gallon) of barley was brought In [m\n1 gratitude to the Giver of all good, j «»\ni The historical significance of the j mV\nj festival has over-shadowed Us agrl- fQ\nI cultural aspect. As the Feast of | s?\nFreedom It commemorates the cman- W\n<1 pallon of Israel from Egyptian | IU\nbondage and the peoples entrance | Ä\nInto the dignity and destiny of na-1 ttl:\ntlonal life. It thus marks the birth { S'\nof tlie Hebrew people. The main | >N\ncharacteristic of Its celebration has | lif\nalways been domestic; In the hoipcs | SS\n families and the Invited friends | |jN\ngather on the first evening (In or-1 M\nthodox homes also on the second\nevening) to recount In song and story\nand amid appropriate symbolism the U|\ndeliverance of Israel. The main\nsymbols of this Seder Service arc D\nthe Roasted Lamb Hone, reminding GO\nthem of the lamb that was slaughter-\ncd as a sacrifice of the covenant; u|\nsecond, the Matzah or Unleavened |P\nBread, to be eaten during the whole\nweek, recalling not only the hasty ESI\npreparation with which the Israelites\nhurried out of Egypt. but also their n\nabsolute reliance upon Ood and read- Ml\niness to trust in His leadership of\nthem; and the bitter herbs suggest- jfi\ning vividly the bitter life of their H\nforefathers In Egypt which, even to- ' IS\nday have not lost their poignant ap- n\nplication.
0474309238c032e0d264bebdb6b01017 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.8866119902348 40.735657 -74.172367 while one was counted off the cham-\npions' hurler.\nNext to Joe Wood, the one and\nonly reliable Ed Walsh, of the White\nSox, had the most success In this line\nof business. He set the Red Sox and\nAthletics down without a tally, while\nCallahan's lads scored the huge total\nof one run for him. Walter Johnson,\nthe speed ball hurler of the Nationals,\nsucceeded in winning only one game\nof this kind, that from the Yankees.\nNap Rucker, of the Superbas, and\nGeorge Suggs, of the Reds, were next\nto Hendryx in the National. Each of\nthese was bracketed oil two occasions.\nBoth of the Brooklyn southpaw's wins\ncame over the Pirates, while Suggs\nput one of his games over the Pirates\nand the other over the Superbas. The\nrest were evenly divided by six hurl-\ners, each winning one contest.\nHere are the games in the major\nleagues that were decided by 1 to \nscores and the liurlers who won them:\nAmerican League—-Detroit 1, Cleve-\nland 0, Covington: Washington 1,\nNew York 0, Johnson; Detroit 1,\nBrowns 0, Works; Chicago 1, Wash-\nington 0, Lange; Cleveland 1, New\nYork 0, Kahler; Boston 1, Detroit 0,\nWood; Washington 1, Browns 0,\nHughes; Chicago 1, Boston 0, Walsh;\nCJeveland 1, Boston 0, Gregg; New\nYork 1, Washington 0, Caldwell; Bos-\nton 1, New York 0, Wood; Boston 1,\nWashington 0, Wood; Chicago 1,\nPhiladelphia 0, Walsh.\nNational League — Cincinnati 1,\nPittsburgh 0, Suggs; Brooklyn 1, Pitts-\nburgh 0, Rucker; Cincinnati 1, Chi-\ncago 0, Fromma; Chicago 1, Pitts-\nburgh 0, Cheney; Cinolnnatl 1, Brook-\nlyn 0, Suggs; Pittsburgh 1, Boston 0,\nHendryx; Pittsburgh 1, Boston 0,\nHendryx; Brooklyn X, Pittsburgh 0,\nRucker; Philadelphia X, Cincinnati 0,\nRlxey; Pittsburgh 1, Chicago 0, Hen-\ndryx; Brooklyn 1, Cincinnati 0, Ragon;\nCincinnati 1, Philadelphia 0, Benton;\nNew York 1, Brooklyn 0, Tesreau.
16b0bc15f8d3dbadc2ddf1ed4781f98c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.423287639523 41.681744 -72.788147 The announcement that a band of\nNew Britain rentpayers are to assem-\nble and take steps, if possible, to al-\nleviate the high cost of renting in the\ncity gives promise of a thorough in-\nvestigation of the methods of the\nlandlord hereabouts if nothing else.\nNew Britain is, like many other\ncities, suffering from a certain per-\ncentage of grasping property owners\nwho are not hesitating to take advan-\ntage of the scarcity of living quarters\nand forcing their prices to the highest\nVpoint. Rents have increased as much\nfus fifty, and in extreme cases, one\nhundred per cent, during the past\nyear or so, although there is at these\nprices a big demand for apartments.\nWhat has become of the Taxpayers'\nassociation ? Several months ago the\nofficials of this organization undertook\nB campaign to lower the proposed tax\nrate and were successful. One of the\nthings were to result from the\nproject was a scale of rent that was\nnot to be increased and possibly be\ndiminished. Several landlords were\nmembeii3 of the association and were\nable to show the voters that a reduc-\ntion in tax rate meant a reduction in\nrent because of the lowered "cost of\nupkeep. Still, since that time, the\nrents have been steadily climbing.\nThe Herald is not in possession of any\nfigures dealing with that particular\nsubject but would be interested to\nknow whether any of the landlords\ndirectly involved have found it neces-\nsary to raise the rents in their build-\nings since the campaign. Why does\nnot the Taxpayers' association take up\nthe reital proposition at the present\ntime and inquire into the costs of\nplaces to live, the reason thereof and\nthe possibility of remedying the mat-\nter? Our taxes were lowered by the\nassociation.
a8089e0235deb5bbaabcec854a4b8239 THE EASTERN CLARION ChronAm 1859.7219177765094 32.36431 -88.703656 their diminished heads and pale their in\neffectual fires we related how he had re\nceived his first instruction in the art from\na practitioner, who really was the Count\nde Grisy, but whose traveling title was\nSignor Tor.ini. This man, on Iloudin s\nshowing, passed through a variety of ad\nventures, wonderful as any related by Eu-\ngene Sue or Alexandre Lunjas.\nOne ot these adventures is reiaieu in\nHoudin's Autobiography, yet unpublished\nin this country, and we here take the lib-\nerty of throwing it into our own less at\ntractive word, in order to condense it\nwithin reasonable newspaper bounds.\nWhile in Rome, an invitation reached\nTorrini to exhibit before no less a person\nage than the Supreme Pontiff. The occu\npant of the chair ot St. Peter at that \nwas that very estimable old gentleman.\nPope Pius the Stventh. It was not to be\nthought of by any conjurer with a proper\npride in his art, that only the ordinary\ntricks should be exhibited before his Ho\nliness. Something new was to be hit Uv\non something which woultl astonish, be\nlong borne in memory ant! talked of, as\nwholly wonderful and inexplicable.\nWithout searching for such a thing\nchance, that inventor of all inventions\nthe most ingenious, caine to ai.l him.\nThe very evening before Torrini was to\nshow off before the Pope and Conclave\nand other high dignataries of the Church.\nhe happened to be in the shop of one of\nuie nrst watchmakers ot Home. A ser\nvant came in to inquire whether the wato\n..r I.- -
0da58329eef3fb5b897483fd069b92dc THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.842465721715 46.187885 -123.831256 "It was in the spring of 1877," said\nMr. Jack, "when I was conducting a\ntheater here that the idea impressed\nme that this city was very poorly pro-\ntected from fire. In fact there was no\napparatus at all, and at the closo of\nthe entertainment one evening I called\nthe attention of the audience to the\nfact, and suggested that something bo\ndone. The next morning D. C. Ire-\nland, then mayor of the city, called on\nme and at noon of the same day old\nDad Ferrel, long since dead and gone,\ncalled around. We talked the matter\nover and the result was that we de\ncided to get out the old hand engine,\norganize the boys and drill them.\nTho old engine was fixed up and\nthe very next day we had occasion to\nput it into use. It was a matinee day\nand the theatre filled with chil-\ndren and ladies, when the fire bell\nrang. The house was emptied and\nwhen we got out we found a fierce\nblaze in somo building back of the\nhalL Nobody seemed to know what\nto do or which way to turn, and when\nI told them to get out the old hand\nmachine they laughed at me. I finally\ninduced them to assist me, however,\nand we ran the old concern out and\ngot water on the fire after about $23,- 00- 0\ndamage had been done. We\nstayed the progress of the flames, how-\never, for tho wind shifted and by\nwetting down the old tree on the\ncorner of Second and Benton streets\nwo checked the fire."\nIn a fitting manner Mr. Trenchard\nresponded and the meeting adjourned,\nMr. Jack afterwards visiting the mem-\nbers of Engine Company No. 2 in\ntheir parlors.
066a32eff1bc739bf8c5a3b31a2959fc THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.3319671814916 29.949932 -90.070116 Without desiring to arrogate to myself superior\nwu:dom, it ap-pears to me that I can propose a\nplan which will accomplish this without entailing\ngreatexpense. BSupose that the different rall-\naad companies whose lines have termini on Canal\nstreet, shJould unite in building a line of road from\ninceCanal street terry to Basin street and back-\nthus forming a circular track running entirely\n:,round that part or Canal street where its entire\nhtshese is lo'a'e4. and pasilng the entrances to\nit of all those streysq apon which there are raRl-\nrads- t e expense of runLing this road to be\nh, rue by each company in accordance with the\nim- unt of benefit received from it; no extra\niharge being mande for traosport'tlon upon it. By\ntis. means lurry street road would be put in con-\nrtection with tLe ferry and steamboat landings,\nthe Custom and Post O()ffice, and with all\nSeter lines. For instance, say that a perseo\nrhr,uld arrive from the country on a steam-\nb, at, or from across the river by the\nferry, and desired to go to the upper\nor lower limits of the city, his baggage consisting\nf cnlty a valise. At present he would have to\ntake a cab, at the expense of a dollar, or walk to\nthe statli-u of the car he wished to take, with his\nvsliee in his hand : no pleasant job, even when it\ndoes not rtoe. But, by the road I propose, he\ncould take a car near where he landed, pay five\ncentts into the box, receive in return a cheek\nwhich would entitle him to transportationon aay\nlie he saw fit to take, to reach which he would\nnot be mtcess.tated to walk further than across
33f20e4baa789696b891c80fa94b018e OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9931506532216 39.513775 -121.556359 out of Iho District Court, Fifteenth Judicial\nDistrict in and for Untie county in d Mute of ituti-\nlornia against A. MAURI I F. Jr uml SARAH AN A\nMAURICE,and in favor of CH A RUES H MKDIiKM\nand St, \\V. HANNON , for the sum of four hundred\ndollars (S4<MI bo) principal, with interest mi said turn\nat Ihe rale of live (5) p*r cut. per month from tint\nsecond day of June A l> 1557 until paid; nl-nnll\ncostsof suit taxed in the «i in ol nineteen and fitly*\nilve one hutidrellis dollars cSUI 55) together with all\nthe costs accruing on said writ, to me directed and\ndelivered, commanding me to sell nil of Hie mort-\ngaged promises hereiunlti r described In satisfy said\ndemands, J will on the twenty-third illd) day of\nJanuary A It 1858 at Ihe dour of two eg) oclock I*\nM. of said day presenc with the re<|uiremeiits of\nsaid order, sell at public sale to Iho highest bidder\nfor cash the following in or gaged | r opt rty.dccnlieil\nin said order of sale as I. Mows, to wit: the not I h\nhalves of lots number seven <7>niid eight (X) in (dock\nnumber thirty two (32) as designuti d on iln> t lot of\nthe town o! Oroville in the county of Unite and Mate\nof Cahlornia, and hounded as follows, to w ilt com-\nmencing sixty-six ((Hi) leet west of the south-west\ncorner of Dos iter and Robin von streets running along\nDowner street sixty six (lit!) 'eel, them e southerly\none liundred and thirty-two [l32] in I, thence casies-\nly sixty-six (fitil feet, thence northerly one hill, (red\ntiiirly-two I IJ'.l lent to the beginning, together with\nall and singular the tenements, her. ilituincnis and\nappurlelMißCis thereunto belonging or in anywise\ntippurunning.
efe39c8011647498ba65ca30e5110101 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.2068492833587 41.681744 -72.788147 I stand for economy, honesty and\nexperience and the following princi-\nples: Liberal administration of pub-\nlic affairs: real municipal economy\nthrough wise expenditures; one term\nas mayor, that term to be conducted\nfor the best interests of the city and\nnot to foster political future: home\nrule for New Britain, the creation\nor confidence in our ability to con-\ntrol our own affairs: a square deal\nfor city employes, no forced politi-\ncal contributions; freedom of politi-\ncal talk; advancement on merit and\nan honest day's work for an honest\nday's pay; openfng up of breathing\nspace in congested districts; munici-\npal swimming pools and comfort sta-\ntions; unemployment relief through\ncarrying out of necessary public\nwork; adequate and liberal relief\nfor the worthy poor, but not one\npenny for waste, graft or impostors;\nconstant protection of the unorgan-\n small consumers against un-\njust increase in public utility rates;\nhonest city contracts in accordance\nwith the law and no personal fav-\noritism; frequent, frank and com-\nplete accounts of the city's activi-\nties; aggressive action in attracting\nbusiness and creating continuous and\nenlarged prosperity in New Britain:\nkeep taxes down by elimination of\nwasteful expenditures at City hall:\nin these days, or always for that\nmatter, to get anything wortli while\ncosts money and oftentimes wise\neconomy calls for wise expenditure\nof money; removal of all rubbish\nand ashes (excepting steam ashes\nused for manufacturing purposes)\nfrom ail private bowses, apartment\nhouses and business houses, which\nwill help to eliminate tires and un-\nhealthy conditions in this city.\n"If these suggestions meet the ap-\nproval of the public, I hope they\nwill cast their votes for me at the
1ac3d9c168a435536e3959db46524b1b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1917.2178081874683 37.451159 -86.90916 After the comic ."pursuit" picture\nmovie directors were ut their wits' end\nuntil tho most famcus lmprcsnrlo of\nUnocknbout fun Invented the motif of\ntho custard pie. A custard pio bom-\nbardment has two very strong elements\nof humor concealed in its action. Ono\nis surprise, and the other Is mossiness.\nThere nro lots of nice people who think\nit is vulgar and outrageous to laugh nt\nsuch elemental liiiinor. yet there is\nsomething fundamentally funny In see-\ning n body's face projected through the\nsoft goo of a custifnl pie."\nx It you do not believe this try It some\nday on your neighbor when he pushes\nhis head over tho fence to say good\nmorning or to borrow tho lawn mower.\nHit him full on. butter side out, with\na custard pio and see whether tho re-\nsult is not funny or tragic. A hnlr of-\nten divides the two. If you make this\nexperiment you will learn only a\ncomplcto bullseyo Is funny. If tho pie\nshould hit ou the edge or only partial-\nly break, the Joke Is held in suspense\nand spoiled, but if you "moon him" 1\nassure you the neighbors tor miles\nround will all laugh. My . tho number\nof custard pics that wo have wasted\nwhile one of the comedians perfected\nhis tcchnic and nlmt A good custard\npio thrower Is Invaluable lu the comics.\nIc Is queer that the pie must bo custard.\nThis same director also Invented the\ncomedy police, who have had more\ntrouble with the real pollco than any\nactors on the screen. Tho humor of\ntho wild exploits of these volaUlo ofll.\ncers of tho law is based upon two\nmotifs. Ono Is tho collapse of dignity,\nand tho other Is a kid deslro in the\nhearts of nearly all of us to seo author-\nity get it In tho neck. Rob Wagner In\nSaturday Evening Post.
2d7391f20b887bf9174b82b6bef184e8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.850684899797 42.217817 -85.891125 ing on petition for appointment of an adm'r;\nGtjtruio BeU appointed, bond ot administrat-\nrix filed and approved, appraisers appointed,\nand order to Lear claims by tho Courr. Estate\nof Isaac M. Parker, daceased: hearing on pe-\ntition for appointment of an adin'r; adjourned\nto Nov. 21. Estate of Oren L. Ross, deceased:\nbearing on petition to revive commission on\nclaims; order opening tha estate for 20 days,\nand Nov. 28th appointed for hearing claim of\nGammon & Deonncr. Estate of Myers child-\nren, minors : annual account of guardian hoard\nand allowed. Estate of Deles U. Warner, de-\nceased : petition of Lydia A. Warner for ad-\nministration of the estate; day of bearing,\nNov. 24 . Oct. 27 Estate of Thos. J . Nogglea,\ndeceased: final account of W. L . Thomas,\nadm'r, filed day of hearing, Nov. 21.\nOct. 28 Estate of Martin Stover, deceased:\npetition of Elizabeth Stover for administration\nof the estate ; day of hearing, Nov, 21. Estate\nof David Linsenmeier, deceased: petition of\nSusana Linsenmeier for administration; day\nof bearing, Dec. 1st. Estate of Edward E.\nParker et al., minors: petition for appointment\nof a guardian; Catharine Parker appointed.\nOct. 31 Estate of Orsemus Williams, de-\nceased: last day of hearing claims; heard and\nallowed and adm'r ordered to pay debts.\nNov. 3 Estate of Mary J. McDamels, mi-\nnor: petition for appointment of a guardian;\nJames Bradt appointed. Estate or Willie L.\nWhitford, minor: petition for appointment of\na guardian ; Wm. II . Robertson appointed. Es-\ntate of Almon B. Covey, deceased: first day of\nhearing claims; last day, Jan. 6tb, 1880.
0cb95a018d0d577e6d81f2259a50d0ad THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6068492833588 40.063962 -80.720915 There is a growing controversy on,\nhands in relation to Berkeley and Jef- .\nferson counties. Old Virginia claims1\nthem, and West Virginia also claims!\nthem. It is more than likely the dis- j\npute will go before Congress at the next;\nHession, if not before the Supreme Court,\nWo propose briefly to state the nature;\nof the difficulty. Berkeley and Jeffer-j\nson were not included in the forty-6ight\ncounties named by the net or congress\nadmitting West Virginia into the Unb>n.\nThat act however referred to the act of\nthe 13th of May, 1862, passed by the\nLegislature of Virginia, which ceded\nforty-eight counties, unconditionally,\nand three counties (Berkeley, Jefferson\nand Frederick) conditionally, to the\nNew State. The condition of the ces¬\nsion of those three couiities waft that\nthey should, vat an election to be held\n"for the purpose." ratify the? Constitu¬\ntion of West Virgihia.1 This two of\nthem, Berkeley and Jefferson, did, on\nthe 28th of May, 1863, and Gov. Peir-\npoint so certified under the seal of Vir¬\nginia to the then Senators and Repre-\nHcntatives of in Congress. So\nfur as the consent of the Old and the\nNew State to the admission of the two\ncounties was needed, they had it to the\nfullest degree. On the 31st of January,\n18IS3, the Virginia Legislature passed\nan express act allowing Berkeley coun¬\nty to take a vote on the question on the\n28th of May following, which she did,\nat which, as we have stated, thej\npeople voted to come in, by a large\nmajority. The (tame legislature passed\na similar enabling act for the county of\nJefferson on the 4th of February, 1803,\nand she, in like manner, on the 28tli\nof May following voted to come in.\nThe Legislature of West ATirginia, on\nthe 5tli of August, 1863, passed an act\nto receive the former county, and on\nthe 4tli of November following a simi¬\nlar act to receive the latter county.\nAbout I ho consent, therefore, of the two\nStates there can be no question. The\nwhole difficulty turns upon the word-1\ning cf the act of Dongress admitting\nWest Virginia. That act reads as fol-\nlows:
4f8fd09a2481f9f43ef65044e108c185 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.3849314751394 41.262128 -95.861391 tion of the long desired object acd aim of\nthe Black Republican party. We find\nwhile they have prtiended to wage the\nwar for the proeervatiosi of the Union and\nthe enforcement of the laws, that it waa\ncommtnc. d and waged for the purpose of\nabolishing slavery under the pretense of\na "Military Necessity." They have made\nthe love of the Union and patriotism of\nthe people aid them in carrying out their\noriginal design, audibly now stand a fair\nchance to accomplish both of their long\ncherished objects—the abolition of star\nery and the dusxAuiion of Ihs Union\nEver sincc the formation of the Black\nRepublican party, its leaden have both\nia and oat of Coagress, strives to prove\nthat the Sooth waa a tax upon the North\n— that the North sacrificed near four bun\ndred miliiooa of dollars every year for the\npurpose of maintaining aad defending the\nSoath; aad that the North would be bet­\n off if the South were out of the Union;\nyet when the South proposed to withdraw\nfrom the Union, these same leaden be­\ncome the finest advocates for a war to\nforce the South to remain in the Union\nBut their hypocrisy ia manifest to every\none who has heard tbtir leaders proclaim\naa we have, "We don't want the South to\ncame back into the Union, but we want to\ngive her a darnation licking before we let\nher go." Or in the language of another,\n"Go out—the South can't go oat—we will\nwhip her in, and when we have done that\nand freed her niggers, wa will kick her\noat." Such are the views of the Repub­\nlican leaden "hareaboata"—thia ia the\nsum and substance of their patriotism and\nlove for the Union. The proclamation of\nGen. Hunter, though it pretmdt to be\nbased on a "military necessity," is noth­\ning bat carrying out the original design\nof the party.
2a1d0c0d7256bee6c38b2bd685771cb1 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.4835616121259 39.261561 -121.016059 I was in the cabin when the watch came\nand reported to me a man on the main roy-\nal mast head. I gave orders not to disturb\nhim, then went oil deck, and found that be\nwas working at the royaimast head, with a\nmarlin spike round his neck. He stayed\nthere about a quarter of an hour after he\nwas first seen; then came down the royal\nyard, clap, ed his hands to warm them, and\nwent out upon the port royal yard arm;\nknocked the rigging on and made the sail\nfast; afterward went to the royal masthead,\nwith half his body above the truck; came\ndown upon the royal yard, and warmed his\nhands as before; went out on the starboard\nyard, knocked the rigging on, and made\nthe sail fast on that side. He next came\ndown upon the topgallant yard, and per-\nformed the same work as on the royal yard.\nHe afterward went on each side of the\ncross-trees, examined the mai-thcad, and\ncame down into the main yard and did the\nsainthing, lie next got into the slings of\nthe main yard and stayed about ten min-\nutes, examining the slings and of the\nmain yard; then came upon deck, where he\nwas seized by two men but could not be\nawakened, drawing a knife, and exclaiming\nthat they were all his enemies. He after-\nward walked into the forcaslle and into bis\nberth, where he was woke up. He said he\ndreamed lie bad been doing some sailor-\nwork. At two, on Monday morning, he\nagain came out of his berth and went up on\nthe royal yara, loosed the yard aud gaskets\nof the sail, and came down to the maintop;\nwent up the mizzen topmast stay and loosed\n(he mizzen topgallant sail and tnizzen roy-\nal; came down the mizzen topgallant stav\ninto the maintop, and then upon the rail;\nrau along it, went up the fore-rigging and\nloosed the fore royal and fore-topgallant\nsail; th n came down, and was going to\nloose jib, but returned to the deck, gath-\nered all the loose belaying-pins, went for-\nward to the forecastle, and threw them into\nhis berth. He then wiped bis feet on the\nchest, and went into nls bunk, where he was\nwoke up and was quite surprised at seeing\nthe belaying pins in bis bejth.
087c247a8e7724882b98ddcaafe1877a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.1980874000708 40.063962 -80.720915 NEGRO EXODUS INVESTIGATION.\nThe Senate Exodus Committee to-day\n3xamined Henry Adams, (colored) of\nLouisiana. He swore that the coloniza¬\ntion council was a secret organization, the\njbjectof which was to batter the condition\n)f the colored people. This plan of action\nivas flrat, to appeal to tho President to en¬\nforce the laws and protect their rights,\nthen appeal to Congress to set apart a\nTerritory for them, or to appropriate\nmoney to aid them to emigrate to Liberia}\nind finally, if they failed in both, then,\nwitness said, "our object was to appeal to\nmother government outside of the united\nStates to help us away from thjs country\nto uo thore and live under their Hag."\nlie said the negroes did not lose all hope\njf bettering their condition till 1877, and\nonly then because they saw that the South¬\nern State Governments would pass under\ntho coutrol anil into tho hands of the\nvery men who had owned them as slaves.\nThe fueling prevalentamong thonpgroes,\nbe said, was "to go away anywhere in\nClod's world to get away from these men."\nThe reason, he said, that bo many of our\npeople are going away is because a large\nmajority ot the white people who held\nslaves treat our people so badly. In many\nparte of the country our people might as\nwell he slaves as free. He thought over\nflye thousand had already emigrated from\nLouisiana and that the movement wm on\nthe increase. Tho fear was prevalent in his\nBection of the State that 9 Democratic\nPresident would be elected and then the\ncondition of colored people would be s*tijl\nworse than at present, and it would also\nbe more diflicult for them to emigrate.\nThe feeling, he thought, was stimulating\nand hastening the exodus now.
323f49ab6c7c5efcac27c8758990e88f THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.23698626966 37.451159 -86.90916 U C Whlttaker Defendant\nBy virtue of a judgment nnd order of\nsale of the Ohio Circuit court rendered\nat the March term 1000 In the above\ncause for the sum of HO> with Interest\nnt the rate of 0 per cent per annum\nfrom the Hd day of October 1000 until\npaid subject to the following credit ii\nApril 10 100r awl 47 05 costs herein I\nwill otter for sale by public auction at\nthe court house door in Hartford on\nMonday the 2nd day of April IIKW\nabout one oclock p m upon a credit\nof six months the following described\nproperty to wit\nA tract of land in Ohio county Ken ¬\ntucky bounded as follows Beginning\nat It stone T H Ambroses corner on\nthe Whitesville road in the originalline\nthence 7 tIIW 141 poles to a stone Mrs\nVineyards corner In the original line\nthence with her line Sonth 11 Wet\nS > poles to a stone In William\nLakes line thence with his line N N-\nP 23 lolt1I to ti stone thence with said\nroad N ill E aai poll to It stone thence\nX SOE 14polesto astone corner to\nWin Lake and 1 H Ambrose thence\nwith Ambroses line N 4i E 08 poles\nto It stone on said road thence with\nsaid toad N 10 E 14 poles to the begin\nning contalniuing UOJMl acres more or\nless or sufficient thereof to produce the\nsums of money ordered to be made\nThe purchaser will be required to ex ¬\nacute bond with approved security im\nmediately after sale\nTills 112th day of March 10CO
198d5260cb6e88a3d69580b24b9ad9d6 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.0452054477423 39.513775 -121.556359 any sudden snap games. It make' Hie\nwhole matter just as clear as mud, with its\nprofound arguments and deep political phi-\nlosophy. No sooner was Gwin elected, than\ncircumstances which transpired years ago,\ninduced the Union to believe that such wod\nhe the result, and "recent events have con-\ntirmed” "the correctness” of its "conclu-\nsions'! Remarkably astute Union ! If that\norgan knew half as much abont the affairs\nof its pet Know-Nothing institution, as it\nprofesses to know about the democratic par-\nty, it would render Kuow-Nothingism eter-\nnally triumphant. But it has not the power\nto use the great sagacity with which it is\nendowed for the benefit of its party. After\nan event has transpired, it sees how it was\ndmeat„oncc, and still more, was of the\nopinion that it would be so all the time !\nThe press of California is extremely fortu-\nnate the possession of so much far-seeing\nsagacity and ability ! Three cheers for the\nSacramento Union, who knew that Gwin\nwould be elected—us soou as he had his cer-\ntificate in his pocket! The old hum !\nThe fact is, these humbugging papers see\nthe death of their hopes and aspirations in\nthe union of the Democratic party of Cali-\nfornia; and no sooner is the breach between\nBroderick and Gwin healed, than they turn\ntheir endeavors towards effecting another,\nthrough which they hope to gain position\nand power. Their condemnation of the\nSenators elect, and fulsome praise of these\nwho were disappointed in an honorable am-\nbition, will fall harmless. With a Congres-\nsional delegation acting in concert, and the\nparty united and harmonious at home, we\nshall laugh at their efforts to divide and dis-\ntract us, as we do now at their truly won-\nderful and sagacious fulminations.
198cea5edf1325fa18d4e47d30c9b440 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 The election of vesterday siojply\nmeans that the people of Virginia, so\nfar at least as Richmond can be taken.;\nas a Representative of that people, turn\nnot with the spirit of the craven and,\nthe renegade from opinions which their\nkith and kin have died for.\nIt is, even among those who were re-\ncently the armed foemen of the State,'\na subject which deserves respect and;\nadmiration. For the people of the\nNorth could hold the people of Virgin-1\nia in but slight respect did they toehold\nthem, in such an occasion as that offer- j\ned by the election of yesterday,?fawn-\ning "and cringing to opinions which'\nthey had hitherto opposed with their1\nvery lives. Doyalty to Government J\nmust and will assuredly come, but it is\nnot the work of prestidigitation.it is\nborn only of the slow and mysterious f\nprocess of time. While no open plat-\nform of political creed placed be¬\nfore the people, it Is clear that the pro-\ntestations of a pseudo-Unionism on the\none hand, met by a politic reticence on.\nthe other, gave the voters the true issue\nupon which they were called upon to\ndecide, and all who*e pride and love of\nState cling to the Old Dominion, willi\nrejoice to-day that the decision has been I\nmade in favor of good men and true. !\nWith no interference from the mili-\ntarv authorities.the voters of this city!\nhave given expression to their feelings.\nand opinions in a matter which does1\n110 discredit to the better annals of the\nState, and which is calculated to dash;\nthe hopes of the wild dreamers of radi-\ncalism for their future schemes of inter-!\ntyrenee in our State policy.\nThe Itepublie is*more discreet and do- j\nprecates the result, while it admits the,\nreal point on which the election turned, j\nIt says:
4575217f530785e05bcd8786374df867 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.3082191463725 39.369864 -121.105448 At the battle of Rivas in June 1855he was\none of fifty-six men contending against six\nhundred, and received two wounds. In the\nretreat he walked nineteen miles, after hav-\ning fallen in a pit and sprained his ankle. He\nreturned to California in September of 1855,\nto get cured of his wounds, which compelled\nhim to go about sometime on crutches. On\nthe sth of December of that year, he again\nsailed for Nicaragua, accompanied by one\nhundred and ten men,with *whom he joined\nGeo. Walker at Grenada. At that time he\nwas not entirely recovered from his wounds,\nand obtained a furlough, upon which he went\nhome to New York- In March of i-836 , he re-\nturned again to Nicaragua, in time to be in\nthe fight of Rivas of the 11th of April, as a\ncommander where he was a second time\nwounded. He was also at the battle of Mas-\nsaya, on the 10th of October, 1856 . From\nthence he went to Grenada, and thence sailed\nfor New York, on business of Gen. Walkers\nGovernment. He again returned from \nYork to Nicaragua, and was on the steamer\nJ, N. Scott, descending the San Juan river,\nwhen the boiler of that steamer exploded,\nkilling some twenty men, and wounding some\nthirty orforty others. He was blown by the\nexplosion twenty or thirty feet into the air,\nand injured, although not very severely.\nAgain he returned to New York, and from\nNew York again to Nicaragua, on the steamer\nFashion, This time he was accompanied by\nforty men, with whom he landed at the mouth\nof the Colorado river. With this smallforce\nhe captured Castillo, defended by eighty sol-\ndiers and six pieces of artillery; taking thir-\nty-nine prisoners without the loss of a single\nman. Sometime afterwards he was arrested\nby Commodore Paulding, together with oth-\ners of the Nicaraguan Army, and taken a\nprisoner on the man-of-war Wabash, to the\nAtlantic States. Subsequently, he started\nback for Nicaragua on the schooner Susan,\nand was wrecked within sixty miles of his\nport of destination. He left New Orleans for\nSan Francisco on the 13th of January, where\nhe arrived a few weeks ago.
1064ebf1d6441860ec6cea6da5858762 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.6616438039066 39.745947 -75.546589 VOllUE. FOR THE PURPOSE OF RE\nloovingthe anhes, dirt,etc. , a» aforesaid,\ntheoitvwi l he divided Into four district»,\n1 I nf portion of the city «hm of t he centre Hue\nof Shipley street and south of the centre Hue\nof Seventh hMvH, tnolttdtncr all ninth and east,\n«he ohrlntiauH r|v«r. will be known ae the\nFirst district. All that portion of the city\nof tho rentre line of Shipley <*rreet from\nseventh teTenth street, anti «ant of |h* centre\nline of Orange street from Tenth to Brandy\nwine creek, and north of the « entre line of\nSeventh street. Including all north and east of\nBrand> wine creek, will he known a» the\n]cond district. All that portion of the city\nwest of t he centre line of Shipley street from\nSeventh to Tenth Htreet, and from cent\n of Or&nue wired from Tenth to Brandy­\nwine creek and north of centre line if\nSeventh street and couth of Brandywine\ncreek, will he known nn the Third distric t.\nAn • «U that portion of the city west of tho\ncentre Hoe of Shipley street, and south of the\ncentre line of Seventh «'rest and north and\nwest of the ( hri liana river, will be known\nas the fourth district. The First Distric t\n»hall be removed on Mondays, the Second on\nTuend a) «, the Third on Wednesdays and the\nFourth on Tbursd*«v«of each week.\nContractors will he required to uHe proper\ncare In the hard lieg of recent« ole« for ash*»\nand rubbish. They will be held responsible\nfor any damage done the same amino: from\neareles'vnesH of drivera or other persons in\ntheir employ.
133730fb48384c16229eced0349edafc THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.9136985984271 40.063962 -80.720915 whero the amount of the bond exceeds ti\nlive thousand dollar?, by a postmaster of u\nthe first, second, or third class, in a sum 0:\nto be designated by the Postmaster Qen- 0!\neral in the advertisement of each route; to tl\nwhich bond a condition shall be annexed, p\nthat if the said bidder shall, within such q\ntimo alter hi9 bid ia accepted a9 tho Tost- ^\nmaster General shall proscribe, enter into tt\na contract with the United States ol tl\nAmerica, with good und Bufllcient sure- Sl\nties, to bo approved by tho Postmaster m\nGeneral, to perform the service proposed c<\nin his said bid, and, further, that ho shall b!\npcrlorm the said service according to his tt\ncontract, then the said obligation to be tb\nvoid, otherwise to bo in full force and\nobliuation in law; and in of failure ol\nany bidder to enter into such contract to 8U\nperform the servica. or. havingexcrntoii n\ncontract, in casu <>l lailttro to perform Ct\nthe ecrvice according to lila contract, he 0j\nand his sureties shall bo liable for the p,\namount ol said bond as liquidated dam- at\nsges, to be rccovcrcd in au action ol debt «\non siid bond. No proposal shall be j(\nconsidered unless it shall be accompanied 8a\ntiy such bond, and thcro shall have been X;\natUxcd to said proposal the oath ol the D\nbidder, uken before an officer qualified to\nadminister oaths, that ho has tno ability, m\npecuniarily, to fulfill his obligations, and di\nthat tho bid la made in good faith,' and pc\nwith the intention to cuter into contract ro\nand perform the service in caso his bid is bi\nacccptcd. .
0e4db2fef7e23cd6d74ad17cddcf86fd NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1918.8178081874682 41.681744 -72.788147 which abound in this part of France\nand most of them represented the\nwork of four years. The majority of\nthem were of elaborate rustic con-\nstruction and usually had shell proof\nshelters connected with them. Fur-\nniture and decorations taken from\nthe French inhabitants of neighbor-\ning villages formed the principal in-\nterior equipment.\nOne of the most unique of these\nofficers' quarters was located in the\nlittle village of Euvezin, about 20\nmiles from Metz. There were two\ntiers of rooms with broad balconies\nin front and all lighted by electricity.\nIn the lower floor was an elaborate\nsitting room, containing richly up-\nholstered furniture, a piano, oil paint-\nings inlaid tables and beveled mirrors.\nThis apparently was the headquarters,\nof a high officer, for in it were found\nmany maps, plans a telephone\nswitchboard. Outside was a bowling\nalley and a small swimming pool.\nAt one side was a wine cellar well\n.stocked with applewine, beer and ther\nbeverages dear to the German heart.\nImmediately adjoining was a shell\nproof dugout, 4 0 feet deep and cap-\nable of holding 60 men. Next to this\nwas a shoemaker's hut where a num-\nber of women's shoes and slippers\nwere found, indicating that the Ger-\nmans had women in their trenches.\nHigher up in the Avoods was a veg-\netable farm and overlooking all is an\nobservatory, which gave a surpassing\nview of the country for miles around.\nEverything was confusion. Uni-\nforms, rifles, pots, dishes, books, and\nall kinds of military paraphernalia\nwere heaped about everywhere, in-\ndicating that the Germans had fled in\ngreat haste.
175d2b3018aeb3d755fc21498349926b THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1897.0205479134956 38.894955 -77.036646 Taris, Jan. 7 . The marriage of Alisa\nEdith Lyman Collins of New York to\nReich id Bey fCountCaykowski),an attache\nof the Turkish embassy at Rome, took place\nIn this city at I o'clock this afternoon, In\nthe Church of St. Germain l'Auxerrois,\nnear the Louvre.\nThe porch and main aisle of the church\nwere covered with carpet and the edifice\nwas filled with a large and fashionable\ncompany of guests. The interior of the\nchurch was profusely decorated with\nflowers, palms, white chrysanthemums,\netc. The bride walked to the altar upen\nthe arm of her father, Afr. Clarence L.\nCollins of Ner York. Miss Collins wore\na white satin robe with a train three yards\nin length, adoined with English point\nlace on the front of tho skirt, flounces,\ntrain, and cor.sage.\nThree bouqurts of orange blossoms were\nattached to the side of the skirt,\nand tho bride carried another bouquet of\norango blossoms In her hand. Her veil\nwas of rich English ioint lace of the rose\ncluster pattern. Tho bride's train was\nsupported by a tiny miss, a niece of Airs.\nCollins, the bnde's mother, the little one\nwearing a directoire costume.\nTho bridegroom followed the bride to\nthe altar and was accompanied by his\nmother, who wore, a diess of steel gray\nvelvet. They were followed by Airs. Col-\nlins, mother of the bride. Airs. Collins\nwore u rich green paillete velvet costume\nand a green velvet bonnet with small\nfeathers. She was accompanied by a\nbrother of the bridegroom.\nThe services were conducted by the Abbe\nde Breon, assisted by five priests. The\nbridef being a Protestant, the couple were\nmarried in the church by virtue of a papal\ndispensation.
19c436891de6b5ff636222ee03d3208d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.9002731924206 41.681744 -72.788147 The Telephone company explained\nto the selectmen a few days ago that\nit proposed to put its wires in a larger\ncable than is now in use ,and it would\nbe necessary to have the container re-\nmoved from poles and placed under-\nground. They asked for permission to\ndig a trench from the exchange on\nWest Main street to a point near the\ncorner of East Main and Whiting\nstreets. Although not anxious to have\nthe macadam or pavement disturbed,\nthe board was willing to make the\nchange possible and the permit was\nreluctantly granted.\nContractor Ley brought a force of\nmen here this morning to begin the\nwork and by 10 o'clock a trench sev-\neral feet long had been dug througV\nthe amieslte on Central Square. After\nthe pavement been badly dam-\naged the laborers discovered that tht?\ngas main was in its way and it would\nbe necessary to dig a second trench.\nSelectman Johnson called a halt on\nthe work and explained that a second\npermit would be withheld until the\nboard could discuss the situation.\nPersonally he would oppose granting\nthe application. He thought the com-\npany showed an absolute lack of ap-\npreciation for the favor shown it when\nit failed to investigate the location of\npipes or otherwise avoid doing un-\nnecessary damage.\nThe contractor's men were at a loss\nto know what course to follow up to\nnoon and they spent some time try-\ning to locate the highway commission-\ner and representatives of the Tele-\nphone company in the hope that the\ntangle might
08968b932dcb9d3389bcaf4a15a244d7 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.0753424340437 39.745947 -75.546589 Another mystery cropped to the sur\nface Saturday, lu the finding of the dead\nbody of John Jones aged 19 years, of\nNewark, lu a pool of water about fifteen\ntuches deep, near Coocha Bridge, The\ncorpse was found by Hermau Oyett,\nseveral yards from the road. The coat\nwas cut, and there was a wound over\nthe left eye. Dyett drew tho body to the\nbank of the pool and notified the\ncoroner, who, with Deputy Coroner\nChandler and Detective Witsll, made a\nthorough Investigation, as a result of\nwhich Joseph W. Poore, an uncle of the\nlad, now lies in the police station under\nsuspicion of having caused the death.\nThe facts as learned by Detective\nWitsll were that Poore aud Junes, started\nto drive to Klkton, Friday night. In a\nbug* y owned by the boys father. Hatur\nday morning the team was found near \nwood just south of Newark, the horse\nand fore wheels on one side of a set of\nbars, and I be rear wheels on tbs other.\nPoore was at Djelts bouse about 1\noclock Saturday morning, and was\nallowed to sleeps In the cow shed all\nnight He had on a hat which he said\nbelonged to Jones Oa Saturday morn\nlog he walk'd to Glasgow and boarded\na train for Klkton. .\nIn Elkton It was learned that Poore\nbad been there aud had sloppsd at the\nhouse of » niece He first stop, ed at the\nFelton Housi, where he washed his face,\nwhich was bloody and dirty, and later\nbought a hat at Frank P. Prices store,\nafterwards throwing away the one be\nwas wearing. He then bad his hair eat\nat a nearby barber shop The old bat\nfound by Detective Witsll In the
04891b10752c0338a75e85d3f8f437b2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.6534246258245 40.063962 -80.720915 Three is a Cbowd.Some people saj\nthree Is a crowd. As a general thing sncl\npersons are enjoying single blessedness\nA young gentleman and lady of Eaa\nWheeling gave utterance to the sentimen\na few days since, and they did It In genu\nine earnest, too. They went outbugg]\nriding, going out the National Road to\nwards St. Clairsvillo. They got out abou\nfour miles or so and were enjoying them\nselves, of course. When they had gottei\nthat far the young man got careless in hi\ndriving. Young people olten do the sami\nthing. When the couple started from be\nfore the door of the young lady's parenti\nthe young man wis driving carelu\nenough, lie was sitting up straight ii\nthe buggy and wag pulling atapressuri\nol about forty pounds to the aquan\ninch on the reins, having one ii\neach hand. To have looked a\nthem you'd have thought, well, now\nthat horse a hard puller and no mistake\nAnd the young man drove so cleai\nthrough town. But when they got ou\non tlio road, away from the city, the horsi\ndidn't seem to require so much attention\nThe young man found he could managi\nthe reins with one hand just as well &\nwith two. It's funny that ho should havi\nmade that discovery, but he did. Am\nthen tho young man commenced con\nsldering what ho would do with that lei\nhand and arm. Why, he almost wishei\nho had no left arm. Tho subject becami\npainful to consider. lie would lay hi\nhand down on tho blanket, then on hit\nknee, then he wpuld put it in his pocket\nthen take hold of the lappel of his coat\nthen commence and do all over again\nBut Anally, just through force.just be\ncause he could find no other place.hi\nlaid it along on tho back ol the seat
1ca78abbe62bcfff31d3be69f3772d86 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.0534246258244 37.451159 -86.90916 Lion had tremendous strength Dur ¬\ning his captivity In Germany he gave\na terrible demonstration or his physical\npowers The son of ono of the ward ¬\nens was a youth locally renowned for\nhis muscular strength and lit his as ¬\nsurance Invited the royal captive to an\nexchange buffets The yduug man\nby a cast of the dice won the right to\nthe first stroke and struck tko king a\nstaggering blow on the side of the\nbead It was then the kings t urn and\nhe landed a blow just behind ids op ¬\nponents ear BO heavy that tjb0 man\nwas Instantly killed\nThis Incident Is used In Sir Walter\nScotts famous historical none Ivan\nhoe where King Richard thb Black\nKnight and the jolly outlaw Friar\nTuck have an exchange of buffets\nwithout however any fatal result\nDom Pedro I emperor of Brazil Is\nalso on the list royal strong men\nOn the occasion of d carnival bo ar ¬\nranged matters so that he was stand-\nIng on the bow of the royal ljarge be ¬\ntween two of leis stateliest courtiers\nSuddenly ltho midst of the festivity\nthe king reached out grasped a court ¬\nier with each hand and nftcrholding\nthen for a few moments squirming la-\nthe air and begging to be released ho\nrelaxed bin jjrlp and allowed them to\ndrop plump into the water amid the\nfrantic applause of the huge crowd\nthat had assembled to view their mon ¬\narch The king joined heartily In the\ngeneral hilarity bpt what the drenched\ncourtiers thought about this exquisite\njoko Is not recorded\nPeter the Great of Russia Ilka Char-\nlemagne possessed great physical as\nwell as mental power His years of\nwork as blacksmith and ship carpen ¬\nter had so developed a naturdlly pow-\nerful
25acaf0fd303e428dc9d3bf479328a81 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.5931506532218 37.53119 -84.661888 We publUh elsewhere In this lieu\nthe action of the democratic committee\nf jr this county on last Saturday relative\nto the method of nominating candldaK\nfar judge and commonwealths attor-\nney We heartily approve of this ac\nton and of the end It was Intended to\naccomplish The chairmen of the con\nmlttces for the four counties composln\nthe judicial district constitute the dli\ntrlct committee whose duty It Is to de\nIsrrnloe the time and manner of select\nfag the party nominees These chats\nmn are but the creatures of their re\nspectlve committees being removabl\nby them at thou pleasure and It sees\nonly proper andrlght that they shout\nreceive and obey instructions from tbe\nbodies of which they are Intended to be\nbut the mouthpieces Nor Is it open to\nany doubt whatever that the democrats\nnot only of Lincoln but of Garrard\nBoyle and Mercer the voters tbe\nboys In the trenches prefer a pri-\nmary election to a delegated convex\ntlon and that they prefer it very\ngreatly We have taken some pains to\nascertain by Inquiry the part\nfeeling on this subject and we con-\nfidently aver that eight democrats out\nof ten in this district are of this mind\nNor are tho reasons far to seek A\nprimary expreses the will of the entire\nparty not that of an Inconslderabli\nfaction only It gives to each member\nof the party lull opportunity from 6\noclock in the morning until 4 oclocl\nin the evening to indicate hIs choice\nhad in the most convenient way at hi\nhome voting place instead of at the\ncounty courthouse It gives to his vote\nthe same potency It protects it with\nthe same privacy and safeguards It\nwith the same care and with the sami\nlegal sanctions as are thrown around t -\nat a regular election It la simple It\nIs perfectly fair to every candidate It\nIs attended In a district of only lour\ncounties with less expense even and\nleer annoyance than any other method\never devised and above all it Is a cer-\ntain and unmistakable declaration of\nthe real choice of the people In point\nof convenience
553f40598ca92a05d541b98407838201 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1917.6589040778792 41.681744 -72.788147 : Yankee Hustle Impressive.\nWilliam T. Hardy, who returned to\nan Atlantic port after spending three\nmonths in France, said that the\nFrench people had expressed their\nadmiration of the manner in which\nthe American army officers with the\nexpeditionary force have cut through\nthe regulation red tape. Recently an\nofficer wanted to telephone to a city\n60 miles away from his camp and was\ninformed he must wait eight hours.\nHe got a line in ten minutes by ap-\npealing to the comander of his di.\nvisions. The next morning a detail\nof the United States Signal corps was\nbusy running a special telephone wire\nfor the use of the American officers.\nTo reach a camp 50 miles from a\nsupply base it was necessary to travel\n150 miles by a circuitous railroad\naccording to Mr. and the\nAmerican commander got permission\nto start the construction of a direct\nroad after the first supply train ha-. - l\ntraveled to the camp.\nWilliam Dugan of Rochester, N. Y,\nreturned after serving three months\nwith the American Flying section at-\ntached to the French army He will\njoin the United States army Aviation\nCorps. Fift(pn ambulance drlver3\nalso arrived on leave.\nThe passengers on the liner were\nalarmed after breakfast on Aug 20\nwhen four shots were fired from the\nstorm gun at a submarine about a\nmile away on the quarter.. The ship\nwas swung at right angles, and four\nexplosive shells were fired at the sub-\nmarine disappeared. On the prev-\nious night a wireless message wa3\nreceived stating that a steamship had\nbeen sunk in nearly the same posi-\ntion.
0931a8c12367ea2fac923bdf5f2b8686 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1889.4835616121259 38.894955 -77.036646 Washington, 3uno20. Editor CrtVd:\n"Washington ,hns now been a member of\ntho Lfcaguo fOr fotir Seasons, n great\ndeal of money has been spent, In that\ntime and many experiments mado. The\nteam has undoubtedly been Strength-\nened each 6crt9on, and this season par.\nticularly so, yet Iho club Is but lilllfc if\nally moro effective than It was the first,\nyear pf Its existence. Tho men cannot\nbe blamed for this poor Bhowlng, for\ntheir individual nvcrages uro sufficiently\nhigh to justify good wOrk. It scorns td\nmo that thd Indefinable something\nnecessary to mnko whnt wo cali a\n"learn" Is Utterly lacking in tlio di-\nrectors of the.club; they don't seem to\ngrasp the baseh.ill idea, and whllo they\n,are entitled to nil credit for having in-\nvested thclrmoncy generously "they\narc on tho other hand tlesen lug of ecu- su r- d\nfor not recognizing their wcakiieis\ni'nthis respect and delegating tho work\nto.moro capahlo hands. What the club,\nwants is a manager with a fair idea of\n'thc.game.niid executive mind sufficient\nlo Influence all parls of tho field from\ntho, players" bench. Then with such a\ncaptain a3 Irwin wo wguld all get a\nbcttcr,rcturn for our money. As to\nMorrill It is apparent from his work\nhero that ho has not tho qualities to\nenable him lo control tho minds of lih\nfellow men, and consequently cannot\nipmmand. His reputation as a captain\nwas made before the days of team work\nand was diic to hs Intelligence and In-\ntegrity,, and not to any cxcculive ability\nhe possessed.
11492b7db0c77e4eb2ebc46ab0dcb758 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1895.2205479134957 41.004121 -76.453816 Would you cure to be so situated that you\nouuld reduce t lie innrtgue ugalnst your homo\nby paying off a small umniiut monthly and\nal the end of eaeli year reeelve credit for all\npaid? With interest being charged only on\nremaining port inn of loan.\nWould you like to buy your lauilly a homo T If\nso, ri au inu ouowing :\nI represent a Company that, has embodied In\nlis plan all the features enumerated above and\nmany more, fan you see any reason why you\nshould pay a large Interest for money when you\nhave goou security t i an you present nnv gooa\nreason why It. In not as well to receive pimlls\nearly as to wait lrnm 7 to in years as one unes\nn many of the Associations 1 Is not the re\nduction oi yearly better than waiting\nmany years tor proms t iiorrowera under tne\nlan represented uv me assume absolutely no\nrisk as each $l.ou paid on the. loan Is credited\non the mortgage, thereby reducing It lu pro-\nportion to the amount paid.\nbuilding Associations have benefitted hun-\ndreds of thousands, ho did the old earn that\nwere propelled by horses, our plan Is as tar\nsuperior to building Associations as the trolley\ncars are to tue om aniniuau u norsecarsystem.\nMy time Is too much occupied to answer ques-\ntions for the curious, but those seeking Infor-\nmal Ion for the betterment of their condition\nwill receive full Information promptly, we of-\nfer nn Investment, to those who have a small\namount to save monthly that has no superior\nas to safety and seldom equaled fur proilts.\ntall or write.
1225df3bb2c530b86458febf921cfd55 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.519178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 The followhig statement of William J.\nougbliu, of Bommlile, Mass., in ao remark*\nble that we beg to ask for the atteutiun *1\nur readers. He says; "in the fail of XH7U 1\nras taken with a violent bleeding of the lunifs,\nillowed by a severe cough. ] soon began to\n)oee my appetite and flesh. 1 was no weak\nt one time tuat I could nut leave my bed. In\nie summer of 1877 I was admitted to theCity\n[capital. While there the doctors said 1 bad\nhole in my left luug aa bigasa half dollar,\nexpended over a huudred collar* in doctors\nnd medicines. 1 was so far gone at one tirao\nreport went around that I was dead. I gave\np hope, but a friend told me of Dr. William\nlall's Balsam for the i laughed at\nly friends, thinking that my case was incur*\nble, but i got a bottle to satisfy them, when\nj my surprise and gratification I commenced\ni feel better. My hope, once dead, began to\nsvlve, and to-day 1 feel In hotter spirits than\nhave tor tha past thrte years. <\n"1 writ* this hoping you will publish it.\n) that every one inflicted with Diseased\nungs will be induqpd to take Dr. Wm. Hall's\naiaam lor iue bungs, wiu De convinced mat\noimuaiption can be cured. 1 have taken two\noil lea, and can positively ray thai it has\none more good than all the other medicines\nhave taken since my sickness. My cough\nas almost entirely disappeared and I shall\nn>n be able to go to work," bold by drug*\nlata.
2fe24c2984994e83c0380c903ae75304 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1869.7493150367834 41.004121 -76.453816 Comm'ttee liad toldhlm that if hhttate-mcn -\nof facta were correct, ho was this noni-\nluce: that Jlontourcountv was ontltled\nto thonomlnation andJIr. Hiickalewhn.il\nproved It in an artlclo written thrco\nyean ao ; that Mr. Rnclcalow had not\ndono hli duty In tho Senatoin opposing\nnml ilcnouuciiijr llaillcal misrule; that\nho (Jlr. II.) had kept Dr. llrowcr In\nofllca for sovcral years aa Assistant As\nsessor; that Peter Ent had said no ono\nshould bo nominated iu Conference but\nMr. U.j that Col. Cake, of bad political\nantecedents, was in favor of Mr. li's\nnomination ; and that Mr. B. had held\nhigh position nnd had an advantage of\nprestige over him as ho was but a poor\nprinter. Ho also delivered himself of a\nmass of twaddlo upon tho subject of Mr,\nWilhington'a chango of vote in Confer-\nence. That chango was not according\nto parliamentary law and usago, bo- -\ncauso It was Inconsistent with n rule of\ntho Pennsylvania IIouso of Itcprcsenla\ntives and decisions founded thereon!\nTho nnclcnt practice of changing votes\nIn tho Roman Scnato ho made light of\n uarclay's Digest (published In 18G5\nby order of Congress) was derided as an\nold musty work quite unworthy of at\ntention. Besides, ho said, Mr. Wlthlne-\nton before changing his vote had cono\nto Mr. Buckalcw's room and there a\na consultation had been held, with the\nuoor bolted, and tho chango of voto con\ncocted. Tho foolish man did not know\nwhen ho said this that most of tho per-so-\nIn his audience had in, hand at the\nraomcnt,sHpsofMr.MeyIcrt'8 statement\nllatly contradicting and overthrowing\ntho wholo of this story. Ho said sun-\ndry things of little importance about\ntho Columbian nowpaper, - a nd de-\nnounced Senator Jackson (whoso Con-\nferees did not support, him. iu Confer-\nence) very strongly. Ho denied that\nho had paid M'NInch money for his\nvote, but did not deny that others had\ndone so, nor did ho explain at all the\nsuspicious and frequent intercourse be-\ntween himself and M'NInch before ahd\npending the Conference as well as1 since.\nA 9 In theso disclaimers ho hid omit-\nted ono Important fact, Mr. Clark asked\nIf it was-no-
62d64cef7b57ba89ecae6dd4ce384604 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.2808218860985 39.369864 -121.105448 Narrow Escape.-—Fa Friday last Hugh\nJones was engaged in the Tivictic claims, bn\n■Junction Bluff, not far from Sebastopol, raising\na shaft and blasting, when an accident occurred\nfrom which he narrowly escaped with his life.\nThe tunnel is six hundred feet in length, and the\nshaft is being raised at the back end of it. It has\nnow reached a height of about one hundred feet,\nwhere the atmosphere is mephitic, and requires\nto be removed by a current of fresh air, forced\nsteadily in by a bellows from below. Jones had\nlighted ghc fuses of two blasts, and retreated\ninto a side-chamber, to avoid their effects. One\nof these blasts exploded, by which a stone was\nhurled into the chamber where Hugh had taken\nrefuge, knocking down one of the posts which\nsupported its timbers, causing the loose earth\nand gravel to fall upon Hugh, and bury\nhim beneath its bulk. His brother, who was in\nthe tunnel below, called outto know"if it would\nbe safe to come up ?” Hugh replied—“ Not yet.\nthe other fuse is ignited.” Just then the second\nblast went off. The brother again asked, “Is all\nright ?” but received no answer. As soon as the\nsmoke had cleared sufficiently away, he ascended\nthe shaft, still calling upon Hugh, without a res-\nponse. lie entered the chamber, and discovered\nthe object of his search lying beneath the fallen\nearth and gravel, not materially injured, as it\nafterwards proved, but embraced in a profound\nstupor. Other assistance was soon at hand, and\nthe insensible man was borne below into the\nlight and fresh air, where he soon recovered.\nThis incident will give the distant reader some\nidea of the perils encountered in the life of a\nCalifornia miner.
0b6a402e07d47d18bc01b367e32cca80 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.146575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 The Plainville Realty company has\ncompleted the building of 49 houses\nin the East Broad street and Linden\nstreet districts. The work was finished\nlast month and had covered a period\nof several months. James E. Bent,\nof Hartford, contractor, had charge\nof the work and made a remarkable\nrecord for this section by completing\nmore than half of them last June.\nThe building are of one and two ten-\nements the majority of them being\none story. This district will eventual-\nly be the finest of Plainville and stand\nout as a selected section of thje town\nThere still remains some dozen or\nmore bouse;; to be occupied. Tho\nPlainville Realty company is con-\ntrolled by John 11. Trumbull, Henry\nTrumbull and F. T. Wheeler.\nThe majority of the tenants are\nworkers of the Trumbull Electric\ncompany but there are however,\nothers who live there. The project\nof building this group of houses was\nstarted when the housing situation\nbecame so serious shortly after the\nv.jr. The town was Crowded with\nworkers and there was always a\nshortage of The first\nnumber of houses which sprung up\nwere quickly occupied and aided con-\nsiderably in relieving the situation.\nThere is no fear of a shortage in the\ntown at present, as with the closing\nof the two large factories, the\nStandard Steel and Bearings plant\nand the Bristol Mills, many moved\nfrom the town. The Standard Sljel\nworkers were outsiders and with the\nclosing of tho plants, naturally moved.\nThe houses built contains all im-\nprovements and are not built on the\nstyle which the usual factory tene-\nment is. The entire ground of the\nRealty company covers 135 acres and\nextends almost to the side of the\nmountains, beyond the swampy dis-\ntrict. A new street (Linden street)\nwas recently made which extended\ninto the new district, and comes out\nupon the trolley tracks near the\nTrumtJull factory. A concrete walk\nhas been laid and the houses will soon\nbe built along this section.\nOr.e feature the Realty company\nhas cor.rr.nMshd. is the draining of\nthe swanmy land beyond the hous-\ning district. There Is a brook run-Min- g
2e8730a524591f7e52823feab65e4ec2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.368493118975 39.745947 -75.546589 who paid higher tribute to the aris­\ntocracy which Intellect creates.\nHe moved around among tha com­\npany. pulling all his guests at their\nease, saying a few kindly words to\neach one and making It manifest that\nhe. more than any one else who was\nthere, found pleasure In the occasion.\nThose were fortunate who re­\nmained after almost, all of the guests\nwere gone, for they had opportunity\nlo hold Informal but delightful con­\nversation with Col. Ingersoll. Could\na competent stenographer have been\nthere to record In his note book the\nwit, the philosophy, and the wisdom\nwhich characterized Col. Ingcrsolls\nconversation ami then have published\nthese remarks, the public would have\nlearned that Col. Ingersoll was not\nonly a master of oratory and rhetorld,\nbut that he also had remarkable tal­\n for Intimate conversation.\n1 sat with Col. Ingersoll for an\nhour one Sunday evening after nearly\nall the guests hud departed. The con­\nversation turned upon oratory, and I\nhappened to mention to the colonel\nthat I had heard, only a few days be­\nfore, that Senator George F. Hoar,\nwho represented In part Massachu­\nsetts in the Senate, had said when\nspeaking to a friend of Edward\nEverett that the great orator was\nprobably the most artificial of all\nAmerican speakers, although he had\na woqderful gift, of concealing hla\nartifice) Senator Hoar was quoted as\nhaving said that Edward Everett\npracticed his gestures before a look­\ning glass, studying the proper effect\nand the best methods of emphasizing\nhis thoughts by gesture.\n“I dont care what Senator Hoar\nsays,” Col. Ingersoll replied.
26d788bce0c51a006e7c38b7f86f34fd THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.987671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 well done. ulia Lldft Gaily and\nMlaa Phillio liruuuello saug a duett\nwith great tweetne*. Mlaa Florence\nEchols aud Mlaa Annie Hubbard presi¬\nded at the organ with thejr usual grace\nund perfect mastery of tbo instrument.\nMaeter Haw tell® Hang tbe Reformed\nDrunkard's long,and Mlaa K. Sawtelle\n. 'Father, dear father oome home" with\npowerful effect upon the audience..\nMuch credit ladne to Mra. A .Qregg, and\nto Mr. Joy, the maater of theoeremo-\nniea, for getting up the exhibition and\ncarrying it tbroagh bo successfully. A\nvery pleaaant eplaode not in the pro¬\ngramme, waa tlio presentation to Key.\nSamuel Steele and lady, by Mr. Joy, on\ntbe purt of the fttenda of the Paator\nund lady, of seventy*flve dollara..\nWe congratulate Mr. Steele on tbe auc-\noeaaof his labors in the Chaplin# Btreet\ncharge. Golden opluiona tbua wanl-\nfoatea are more nlghly appreciated\nthan tbe Intrlnalo value of tbe gift. We\nlove to see such friendly feelings aub-\nalat between and people.\nWe are told that at tbe urgent aollcl-\ntation of large nuinbera who were\npresent and witnessed the exerclaea,\nthe programme will be repeated in\nWashington Hall, on New xear'e eve¬\nning. We hope to aee nn immeuae\nnumber in attendance on that oocaalon.\nCome out and bear the children.\nThe teaobera and scholars or the\nSunday School oonnested with tbe la-\nland.M. E . Ohurob, gave an exhibition\nin tbo Ohurob of tbnt denomination on\ntbe Xaland, Ohrlatmaa night. The ex¬\nerclaea oonalated or addreasee. eesaya\nand dialogues, Interapersed with music.\nAll acquitted themsolvea creditably.\nThe attendance waa good, considering\ntbe character of the weather, which all\nwho had occasion to be out, will remem¬\nber waa not very favorable. All prea-\nent were highly pleased, and ahould\nthe school conclude to give another\nsuoh entertainment there will be no\ndifficulty in Ailing the largest room on\ntbe Island. We are told that tbe re¬\nceipts were quite handsome.
19bd151f055887aab1e7d54a0db0c672 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1885.1136985984272 37.561813 -75.84108 Thoe who have the root of the matter\nin them ride out the storm, battered by\nwind and wave, it may be, but safe. In\nspite of exceptions, experience confirms\nthe poets w ords;\nSweet lire till' uses of Rilvoi-stly- .\nWhich, like the Uiiut, iikI.v unii venomous,\nWears yet u precious Jewel In his hewl."\nBut experience equally teaches that\nprosperity is not so well borne, even by\nthose w ho are sustained by Christian\nfaith ami Christian purpose. The temp-\ntations of adversity are few and gross,\nthe temptations of prosperity are many\nand subtle. If there hna been any unde- -\nvelopod virtue in the soul, adversity\nmay be trusted to bring it out: but it\nthere has been any hidden vice of char\nacter in the heart, unknown even to its\npossessor, prosperity is all but certain\nto nurture it to mil growth, l tie battle\nof one in adversity is largely and often\nwholly with things outside of one's real\nself; the coullict of the prosperous man\n be waged with Iocs willnu the\ncitadel. Conseoiieiillv, while many\nemerge trom adversity not only un\nharmed but positively ennobled and\npurilied by the conflict they have under\ngone, prosperity .seldom tails to relax\nthe moral fiber, to blunt the keenness\nof moral perceptions, to make conscience\ntolerant ot evil, even it it has no disas-\ntrous effects ou outward action.\nOf course, hero there are except ions\nagain. Not every prosperous man is\nspoiled by his prosperity. We have in\nmind men and women who hav e math\nthe noblest use of the prosperity Cod\nhas given them, who have overcome the\ntemptations of their lot, nnd in recti\ntude of conduct and purity of character\nleave nothing to bo desired by the most\nexactiii": moralist. let they are excel)\ntions. The constant warnings of the\nScriptures and the daily experience of\nevery observing man testify to the fact\nthat the tendency of worldly prosperity\nis to debase character, to lead men to\nforget the life to come in th"ir
38097eb8926ba49763546d2ebec75f48 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1855.905479420345 41.262128 -95.861391 lW«*i had proceeded but ft short distance be«*\nfore 1 heard the piuugo of the animal behind\ninc. 1 leaped with mows than human enorgy»\nfor it was life or death ! In a moment thi)\ncatamount gave another shriek, M though ht|\nwa£ a (raid he would loose hia pre?. At th*\nsamu instant Iyelled at the top of mr >voic«»\nto my wife, and in a moment 1 saw h*rap>\nproachthe door with a lighted candle.\n<(With what vividness tho moment oeniftt\nto my mind! The catamount was not $t> far\nfrommu a* 1 was fioiu tho houae. 1 droppe*l\nmy bat, the only thiu^' icould leave to suy\nthe progress of the beast. The fic*t momeiit\n1 fell prostrate iu my own cabin!\nlitre the old settler paused and wiped th*>\ndrops from his brow ere he proceeded.\n4>llow long 1 laid when 1 fell 1know not,\nbut w hen I was roused to consciousness, 1\nwad lying on my rude couch, and wif>)\nwa« bathing my head with cold water, and\niny children were gaaing anxiously aims.— *\nMy wife told ma ihat as soon as f fall\nimmediately shut ihe door and barred i\nwhat fhekueiv not; and as soon as 1 wasfal\nleu ai d the door closed, aiearful spiing wa.\nmade upon it; hut the door was strong and\nbarred, and withstood the spring of the beast.\n"As soou as 1 WiW fully recovered, Iknelt\ndown and offered the most fervent prayer to\nthe Almighty that ever pa^^ed uiy lips or ever\nwill a^ain. My family and myself short I}'\nretired, but no sieep vi»ited mc that night.\nIn ths morning, when my little son, six veart\noi l, told me that he saw the eyes «f tin*\ncoll in the window in tho night, 1 knew this\ncatamount had been watching to gain admit­\ntance ; but our windows, you will poreeive,\nare not large enough to permit a c atamount\nto enter.
7d77eb0d305de1b7f3964b3c43d331ac THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6808218860983 40.063962 -80.720915 Deep regrets lire expressed at the re¬\nmoval of tlie Nuviil Academy from\nNewport. It deprives tliein of u trade\nof nearly JfiOO.OOO a year, and rolls many\nfair maidens of tlinlr accustomed moon-\nllght ramble by the seaside, iind pros¬\npective chances of inutrlniony.\nSaved ny 11 Kit CniNor.tN e... A young\nwoman in South Eastern Kngland, had\na difficulty with her lover, and resolved\non suicide byjumping from a precipice\nsix hundred feet into the sea. She\ncaught bv her crinoline inatreo, and\nwus unable to ilisengugo herself, Sl-\nnally, alter hanging all day, lier lover\nfound and.rescued lier, after which the\ndifficulty -was adjusted.\nTlie census of Illinois Is completed,\nand the grand total of its population is\nin the neighborhood or 2,200,000.\nFivemillion, seven hundriiHl and for¬\nty thousand and seventy pedestrians\nvisited Central Park last \nThe Louisville Journal publishes a\ncall for a convention of tho representa¬\ntive men of the Order of Freemusons of\nthe United States, to dovlse some means\nto assuage the temper and bitterness of\nfeeling between the North and South.\nWestern Hoo Trade..The Cincin¬\nnati Price Current says, "Tlie doslre to\ncontrnct=fer hogs for November con¬\ntinues, nnd eleven dollar^ Is offered and\ntwelve is asked, but not many offering,\neven at tho litter rate.some asking $11\ngross. Expectation among the Inte¬\nrior operators and farmers ere high,and\nfarmers generally are not disposed to\nsell. It is next to impossible to buy\nstock hogs, as feed is so abundant that\nfarmers have no hogs to spare, there be¬\ning moro than food enough, In case the\ncofofitopBjuuttve well, to fatten every\nhog in the country lorgu enough to fiit-;\nten." i
28b69d29b09e314b1a624b33965f23ef EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.5833333017101 39.745947 -75.546589 From (the Detroit Tribune.\nAn Indiana woman has secured a ver­\ndict for damages in the sum ot $8,000 from\na man who kissed her six times. He\nmust have been « tremendously hard kiss­\ner or else she must have been easily\nsusceptible to damage. Certainly only\nan Indian« Jury could figure out how u\nwoman can be damaged by a kiss or even\nby six kieses In rapid-fire succession.\nThat woman i» nmd« 40 be kissed Is prov­\ned by the fact that «he I» so klssabie.\nThat she can readily »land being kissed\nIs »roved by more numerous Instance«\nthan need to be mentioned. Had thla\nwoman lost her nose or a foot In a rail­\nway accident the damage would have\nbeen tangible. But bow can Hunt which\nla « delight to so many women be a dam­\nage to another? kiss Is a strangely\nharmless thing. You can give one with­\nout losing anything and get on« without\ngaining «nythlng. You can gnve one and\ngot one at the »urfl« iiiimc, ami neither\nlos« nor gain « cent'« worth. That some\nwomen may object to being kissed by\nsome men 1« probable and natural. But\nthat »he kiss of one man should be Inex­\npressibly delightful to a woman while\nthat of another man should be actually\ndamaging do her seems Incongruous and\nimpossible. In Itself, ln «II that 1« mate­\nrial about It, In ad that the law can lake\ncognizance of. a kiss Is a kiss, no mat­\nter whence it come« or wither It goes.\nTrue, there Is a subtile sentiment about\nIt that gives It wondrous shades of dif­\nference. But what do «ober judges and\nserious jurymen know about that?
8276a8727109bd24693db9681cf152cf SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1863.9520547628108 35.780398 -78.639099 v vIi,wiiaio uiiu iivvuauuiis proper i Di\nthe relative rights and obligations be-\ntween the Confederate and United States\nUnder treaties entered into vvitli foreign\npowers prior to the separation which\nhas taken place, but this tender on our\npart was declined. Hence, as we have\nbeen refused the benefits of these trea-\nties, they certainly have ceased to bo\nbinding, and in the opinion of the Pres-\nident our relations with European pow-\ners aie now controlled exclusively by\nthe genera! rules of the law of nations.\nLegislation upon the suljcct ol finance\nis earnestly recommended. Although\nthe magnitude and duration of the war\nwas not at first anticipated, still the re-\nsources of the country a.e so ample and\nthe spirit of the people so devoted to the\ncause, that leliei" is within our reach.\nThe financial policy of the Government\nsince its formation discussed, and the\nPresident contends that whilst the pro-\nvision of the Permanent Constitution in\nregard to direct taxation cannot be car\nried into effect in the mode pointed out\nit is plain that the duty ol Congress is to\nexecute the general intent of the Consti-\ntution by making the tax uniform\nthroughout the country? These consid-\nerations are greatly enforced by the re-\nflection that an attempt to apportion the\ntaxes amongst the States, some ol which\nare wholly or partially in the occupation\nof the enemy, would subvert the whole\nintention of the framers of the Constitu-\ntion and bo productive of most revolting\ninjustice, instead of that just correlation\nbetween taxation and representation\nwhich was their purpose to secure.\n. With large portions of some of the Slates\noccupied by the enemy, what justice\nwould there be in imposing bh the r.
22ce9b1dcccf9011242d0efb7577727a OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.5767122970574 39.513775 -121.556359 Pec. 7. Whenever, on the first day of Jrnnaryor\nJuly in any year, there remains, after the payment of\nthe interest as hereinafter provided, a surplus of ten\nthousand dollars or ore, it shall be the duly of the\nTreasurer to advertise for Ihe space of one week. In\none daily paper published in English, in Hie city of\nNew York, and for one month in one daily newspa-\nper published in English at the Plate Capital, for\nsealed proposals, to be opened one month after Ihe\nuxpiralion ot such publications by the Treasurer, In\npresence of ihe Governor or Comptroller, nt Hie Plate\nCapital, fertile surrender of bonds Issued under this\nAct, which advertisement shall stale the amount of\nmoney he has on hand for the purpose of redemption,\nanil they shall accept the lowest proposals, at rates\nnot exceeding pur value as may redeem the greatest\namount ot bonds until the amount of cash on hand\nfor redemption is exhausted ; provided, however, in\ncase a sufficient amount of such bonds shall not be\noffered, us aforesaid, to exhaust Ihe sinking fund to a\nless amount than ten thousand dollars, then it is\nhereby made the duty ol the Treasurer to advertise\nin two newspapers, one in New and one at the\nCapital of the Plato, for three months, which adver-\ntisements shall state the amount in the sinking fund,\nand the number of bonds numbering them in tho\norder of their issuance, which such fund is set apart\nto pay and discharge; and if such bonds, so num-\nbered in such hdverliseii ents, shall not be presented\nfor payment and cancellation within three months\nfrom the expiration of such publication, then such\nfund shall remain in the Treasury to discharge such\nImiikls whenever presented—but they shall draw no\ninterest after such publication as last aforesaid.\nPec. 8. The Treasurer oi Slate shall keep full and\nparticular account and record of all his proceedings\nunder this Act, and of the bonds redeemed and sur\nrendered, and he shall transmit to the Governor an\nabstract of all his proceedings ninter this Act, with\nhis annual report, to be by the Governor laid before\nthe Legislature ; and all hooks and paper* pertain-\ning to the matter* provided for in this Ad, shall at all\ntimes be open to Hie Inspection of any pa ly interest-\ned, or the Hovel nor, or the Attorney General, or n\ncommittee of either branch of tho Legislature, or a\njoint committee of both.
043ac1a96706be2c18099a5840724b57 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1887.7849314751395 43.82915 -115.834394 nother, grandparents and great-grand\nparents attained a high average age b\nsupposed to have a much better chanei\nof long life than one whose forefather*\nhave been short-lived. Probably then\nis much truth in this idea; but it is not\nimprobable, and tin* point seems wort)\ncareful study, that longevity is affecte»;\nindirectly rather than directly by in*\nheritance. It may well he that tin\ndescendant of loiigdivod folk is apt tola\nlong lived, not solely or chiefly bocaus*\nhe inherits constitutional peculiarity«\ntending to length of life, but becaus«\nho inherits qualities leading to temper\nmice and abstinence by which life i-\nprolonged, or even simply boenu*«\ntemperance and abstinence have been\nencouraged during his youth by ex\nHtuple and by precept\nConsidering the question of longevity\nfrom this point of view, the case ol\nLouis Cornnro, which has always beet\nbought most becomes ful\nalso of encouragement.\nIn the first place, it must bo reinem\n»»Med that Oornaro (who was born a1\n/«mice about the year 1167) was a mat\n*f weak constitution. Moreover, fron\nthe age of eighteen to that of thirty-fiv«\nhe purs.Ksl courses that would him\nseriously taxed the strongest constitu­\ntion. Life at thirty-ti/e was a burdei\nto him because •>f tin*disorders brought\non by riotous living and indulgence it\n•very kind of excess. The next flvi\nrears were passed in almost unrcmilted\nsuffering. If«* was told by his phy-\nicians. when forty years old, that, noth-\ng could prolong his life for more tlmr.\nwo or three years, hut such life as re\n»mined to him might be less painful\nImn the years he bail recently lived if\nie would adopt more tompel ate habits,\nif ever then? was a case whom inherited
5c3d478142e6917ea57a63530a13ac7c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8292349410544 39.261561 -121.016059 Appointment of James Marriott.—\nSome five or six months ago, Mr. James Mar-\nriott was appointed Justice of the Peace for\nBloomfield township, to fill the vacancy caused\nby the resignation of Justice Denison. Mr.\nMarriott is a candidate for re-election, and we\nare informed that charges have been made that\nhe obtained his appointment by fraud and col-\nlusion with the Board of Supervisors. Iherc\nis no truth whatever in the charge. The facts\nare simply these: It was understood in Bloom-\nfield that Mr. Denison intended to resign, but\nnot known at what time. Mr. Marriott, being\nan applicant, got tip a petition, which was\nsigned by over eighty voters of the township,\nand left it with a member of the Board, to be\npresented when Denisons resignation should\nbe acted on. Some three or four weeks subse-\nquent to that time, Denison sent in his\nresignation, and represented to the members\nof the Board that the cases on his docket re-\nquired that a successor should be appointed\nimmediately. In consequence of this represen-\ntation, and it being two months before a regu-\nlar meeting of the Board, a special term was\nheld and Mr. Man-iott appointed. A day or\ntwo before the appointment was made, an in-\nformal election was held in soaoc of the pre-\ncincts of the township, at which Mr. Carter re-\nceived a majority of the votes; but this was not\nknown to any members of the Board until sev-\neral days after. There was some dissatisfac-\ntion in relation to the appointment, but that\nwas occasioned by the men who signed Mar-\nriotts petition having changed their minds after\nthey learned that Mr. Carter was an applicant\nfor the place.
17987e855d1122d509fef9c2366eaf7e SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1873.732876680619 43.624497 -72.518794 Watch casc, Miss Saralt George ;\ntoilet sct, Miss Laura E Walker;\nworstcd ilowers, Miss Nellio M. Lillic ;\ntoilot sct, Miss Eva Galc ; wall bas -k e- t ,\nMrs W Crowell ; wax flowors and\npair of lamp mats, Miss Enuna Ad-\nams ; wax Ilowers and sofa pillow,\nMi5s Clara Twombly ; worstcd tidy,\nMiss Sarah George f 2 tidies, Mrs A\nS Boyden ; toilot set, Miss Laura E\nWalker ; autuinn wrcath, Miss Abbie\nCrowell ; pair of slippers, Miss Enuna\nL liussell ; shcll baslcct, Mary It Kcl -l e- y\n; 3 lamp mats and watch caso, Miss\nLuetta AYood ; pin cushion, Mrs J 15\nDanforth ; cmbroidercd night drcss.\nMiss Dora Lillic ; canvas tidy, Miss\nAbbio Crowell ; sofa pillow, Miss Liz -z i- e\nTownscnd ; 2 tidies, Mrs C S Ilolt ;\ntoilet sct, Miss Ilattio Chaniberlin ;\n bandcd lily, J II Pratt; pair\nlamp mats and tidy, Mrs Gco W Nyc ;\ncut Ilowers and pair fancy stockings,\nMrs Boubcn Rand ; canvas tidy and\nslipper casc, Miss LizzieCliainberlin ;\ntidy, Mrs 0 II Chaniberlin ; shcll what\nnot and monument, Mrs Ainelia C\nLuce; autuinn wrcatli and cross, Miss\nLaura Frcnch ; cmbroidered chcmise,\nMiss Rosa Wood ; worstcd watch casc,\nJliss Eva Gale ; tucked night dross,\nMrs A Wood ; 2 rustic frames, Amc-li - a\nC Luce; pair lamp mats, shcll\nfiainc and tidy, Mrs. Julia Gambell ;\nslipper casc, and rag bag, Mrs W C\nDanforth ; watch casc, Miss Rosic T\nAYood ; tuckcd suit of underclothing,\nMrs Ella Gambell ; tidies, Miss Jen-ni- o\nL Gitl'oi'd ; crystalizod cross, Mrs\nJane E Aikcns ; tatting and crochet\nwork, Clara Twombly ; tidy, Enuna\nAdams ; toilet mats, acrap-ba- g
03614d665ed38591233b7006dcf9094b THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1867.278082160071 41.004121 -76.453816 Well. sir. Ids opinion Is entitled to\nrespect, nnd tho course which ho ndopts\nupon a public question, and especially\nupon such a public question ns this, is\none which may well causo those who\nare juniors in the publieservico to pause\nand reconsider the positions which they\nmaintain, ll moso positions are opposed\nto mat which no assumes.\nBut, sir, let mo call the attention of\ntno senate to ono lact witn regard to\nhis exposition of his sentiments on this\noccasion. Has ho arcued this bill?\nHas ho come iu his remarks within the\nfouroorncrsofithls enactment . Iso. sir.\nHe told U3 that under tho circumstances\nwhich exist outside this Chamber with\nreference to considerations which relate\nto tho luturo policy and conduct of men\nin the Southern States, induced to\nglvo ins voice in ntvor oi tins measure.\nsir, no maucs a spcecn nero upon a ques\ntion which is not before us ; lie makes a\nspeech hero upon the question ot tho ac-\nceptance of tho law. if this bill bo enact\ned into a law, by the people of t ho South.\nHo thinks it is expedient that they\nshould accept it, and his speech may bo\ntaken as the expression of his opinion\nto co for what is worth, to havo whatso\never ol welgnt it maynient with those\nta wnom it is really addressed.\nI say the speech of the Senator from\n.. Maryland uid not constitute an argu\nment in favor ol tho bill; that it was\nratner an argument ii,i i.tvor oi itsuic-\nccptance.
04ff2588c615dc93fa906f21d8fb3f29 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.2999999682902 40.441694 -79.990086 Many Varieties of Wild mowers.\nLeafy and sun lit slopes through the woods\nwere freely sprinkled with four or five varieties\nof exquisite wild flowers. The starry petals of\ntbe hepatlca aro already beginning to drop. The\npendant "Dutchman' Breeches" are in their\nearlj prime. As every lover of nature knows,\ntheir native beauty and grace is sadly maligned\nby their prosaic and practical name. In the\nshort, green grass of tho pastures the exquisite\n"bluets" bloom in dainty blue clusters ready\nfor the picking.\nPeople on their homeward trip carried, in\nmany Instances, bouquets of tbe wild flowers.\nIt was curious, and sometimes even touching,\nto note the eager attention with which\nthey were regarded bv women and children m\ncity streets, doorwrajs and windows people\nwho had not been able to get beyond brick\nwalls and pavements, and to whose weary\neyes these tiny mosengers brought visions of\ntbe sweot beyond and wistful memories of tbe\nwoods and byways of bygone dajs.\nTho devotees ot aquatic exercises were not\nslow in accepting the mild weather and smooth\nwater to streich their mu&cles after a long idle-\nness. Skiffs and boats of all degrees shot to\naud fro un the Allegheny aud Moaongahela,\nand brilliant patches of many hues denoted\nwhere some fond young man was proving bis\ndevotion to bis best girL Neither was the small\nboy lelt out of it, and dozens of them paddled\nabout near sboro on extemporized rafts.\nThe dndesand masheiswero out in force.\nThe first warm bunday for weeks was too much\ntorthe "dear boys'" nerves, and they swarmed\nthe streets arrayed in trousers a yard wide and\nof a light and gray hue.
0e1f664155142ef55a44ada8e0be99cb PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4685792033495 40.441694 -79.990086 kown that scenery painted for a theater\nmost be made far brighter in Its color than\nnature and much mote vivid in Its contrasts\nof light and shade or else it will seem dull\nand tame. For the same reason actors and\nactresses have to color their laces to avoid\nlooking pallid, and to declaim instead of\nspeaking conversationally to be heard.\nArtificial Better Than the Real.\nThere is even a venerable legend that a\nperformer on the stage once won great ap-\nplause by the skill with whioh he mimicked\na squealing pig, and that when a Jealous\nrival sought to supplant him by hiding a\nTeal pig under his cloak and pinching it\nnntil it squealed the audience unanimously\npronounced the living animal far inferior to\nits artificial imitator. So, if platform speak-\ners confined themselves strictly to tacts,\n would have no success against more\n.Imaginative competitors.\nThere is always, too, enough real misfort-\nune in the world to afford foundation for im-\npassioned denunciations of the supposed\ncauses of it. lEvery man has his business\ntroubles and disappointments, and toeverv\nman they seem of vastly more importance\nthan the troubles and disappointments of\nother people. When, therefore, he hears la-\nmentations over the evil plight of the coun-\ntry, piesent or imminent, his inclination is\nto join in them and to adopt the remedy pro-\nposed, provided its efficiency is plausibly\nenough advocated. I never knew the time\nyet when some one or more of my friends\ndid not insist that his business was not\nworth doing, and who had not an infallible\ncure for the evil by some legislative meas-ui- e .\nThis widespread discontent and nope
1d99763a542eb23ef177ea4d53f7ca10 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.6205479134958 40.063962 -80.720915 QCmyoutellushowyoucameto\nwrite that letter of dejpondency, dated\nFebruary 5tb, 1872, to Mr. Moulten T\nA. I would come back from a wholo\nweek's lecturing and would bo perlectly\nfagged out, and the first thing after getting\nhome there would be some confounded\ndevelopsment opening on me. In this\nstate of mind in which I had not longer\nany resistancy or rebound in me. I\nwould work a wholo week out, and that\nis tbo way I happened time and time\nagsin. On one of these occasions I went\nto Moulton'* store, Moultoa bad always\ntreated me with the greatest personal\nkindness, he ntver had refused by day or\nnight to seo me or listen to me, I never\nsaw him out of mood toward me. After\nthe flrit few months he treated me as if ho\nloved me. On this occasion 1 went down\nto his store to set: and hi* lace was\ncold towards mo. I proposed a walk with\nhim, and be walked mo in such a way\nthat it seemed to mo as though it was\nirksomo to havo mo with him, and as\nthough he wanted to shako me oil. Any-\nthing like that all but kills me, I don't\nwish to push myscll on anybody, to leel\nthat I have pushed myself upon any hu-\nman being who does not want mo Li\nenough to kill me, and to be treated\nthus by him at that time mado it seem to\nme as though the end of the world had\ncome, for ho was the only man on the\nglobe 1 could talk with on this subject. I\nwas shut up from every other human being.\nI could not go to my wife; I could not «o\nto my chilareD; 1 could not go to my
06b25190fa7fa5bac3d1c8ea0fcb453f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1897.2479451737697 39.623709 -77.41082 Nobody in Walnut Creek dreamed dt\nquestioning that Judge Graball ran\nthings legal pretty much to suit him-\nself. Ho Rob was reasonably Content ad\nshe sat ut Mrs. Paynes side and took\nnote of Mr. Howell, who, she had heard,\nwas now firmly engaged to Miss Win !\nfold. And Mrs. Winfold, her gossips\nhad assured her, said over it: I l really\nwas mighty sorry for Jack Talbot, port\nfellow I But, then, Alice never bed, a\nyou might say, iucouridged him. Her\ngoiu erbout with him had been mostly\nbecause his mother was so insistent\nAlice never had (ho least idear of him\nas or husband, though he wanted bet\nbad, so bad she did but hope ho wouldn't\ngo an take ter drink over not gittln\nher. But no girl couldut, not ef she\n been well raised, think er missin\nsech er chance as Mr. Howell. Why, It\nwould be flyin in the face er Providenct)\nan brother both. Brother never did fa-\nvor Jack Talbot air was jest de-lighted\nover Alices ingagemeut. Of cose hd\nhad never let on ter the Talbots how hd\nfelt—ho couldn't, not on account of thd\nsto an them workin so many niggers—*\nbut for my part I was glad ter let out\nthings. 1 was so tired er bein perlite\njest from the teeth. An then ter think\nwhat cr romauts it was—Mr. Howell\nfalliu in love the very minute be raw\nAlice! Sech cr compliment! Now, ef\nonly Ninesy done us well in marry in—:\nshe couldnt noways do no better— I\nwouldnt have nothin more ter wish for\nthis side er heaven.
4aaeefb42af2f9282fb4fe1e694e170d UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1906.3547944888383 42.68333 -96.683647 In looking up the title to a piece of\nland in Greenwood, Me., an old deed\nwas found which contains an amusing\ndescription. The last clause of the de­\nscription is, "Thence as crooked as you\ncan go to the north line of the Phillips\nacademy grant."\nThe Torikawas of Oklahoma are re­\njoicing over the birth of a son to Rail­\nroad and Mollie Cisco, members of that\ntribe. It Is said to be the first birth\nfor nearly three years IN the Tonkuwa\ntribe, which has been rapidly dimin­\nishing In numbers.\nC. H. Baldwin of Montpelter. Vt., LA\nthe owner of a fresh water pearl which\nIs valued at $350. The pearl, which\nweighs twenty-eight grains and Is very\nperfect, was found lu the town of\nWoodbury by a boy who sold his dis­\ncovery rights for $25.\n"The attempt to introduce some "va­\nriety Into men's evening dress," says\nthe London Express, "by the adoption\nof braided trousers, double coat cuffs\nand plaited shirt fronts has ended \nfailure. Fashion is now compelling a\nchange to the old and simple style."\nJapan has just entered the peanut\nmarket with a grade of nuts which is\nattracting attention. English walnuts\ncome from California, France or Italy,\nwith France furnishing the largest sup­\nply. The prices which rule throughout\nthe country are fixed by an association\nof growers in California.\nCoinage of copjrer is unrestricted lu\nChina, and debasement of the curren­\ncy is said to threaten In consequence.\nThe coinage In 1SMM was 1,745,000,000\npieces, and with all the mints in opera­\ntion It is thought that the coinage In\n1900 will mount up to the enormous\nnumber of 10,413 ,000 ,000 pieces.\nMount Matautu, on the Island of\nSavali, Samoan group, has covered\nthirty square miles of land around it\nwith lava, and a stream twelve miles\nwide is flowing Into the sea. The lava\nla thrown up 1,200 feet and at latest\naccounts had Increased the height of\nthe mountain since Aug. 21 by 3,000\nfeet.
274181cd4302b7b4f846a39da5914466 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.4068492833587 32.612638 -90.036751 BUT and the circumstances and\nevents surrounding our text. Wonder-\nful have been their experiences dur-\ning the montH which has elapsed since\nthey escapeT from slavery in Egypt.\nThe wind has plowed a pathway\nthrough the midst of the sea, the wa-\nters with a mighty roar of judgment\nhave swallowed up their relentless ene-\nmies, the wilderness tree has yielded\nits boughs to sweeten the bitter wa-\nters of Marah, the camp has been made\nat Elim under the sheltering grove of\npalm trees and beside the gurgling,\ncool wells of water, and there the\nweary people have rested. How God\nalways brings the soul to the oases\nof Elim after the trying wilderness\njourneyings and the bitterness of the\npools of Marah have been passed! But\nfinally "the pillar lifts and\nmoves on and the children of Israel\nreluctantH strike camp and follow.\nOn into the wilderness of Sin they go\ntowards Sinai. The way is rough f?ri"d\nhard, and the food they have brought\nwith them is growing scarce. They\nare face to face with they thought\nstarvation and death, but instead\nthey were face to face with God's full-\nness and bounty. The barren sandy\nwastes of the desert were to spread\nthe table and Heaven was to rain her\nbread upon it from which the hungry\nchildren could eat their fill and want\nnothing, neither have anything over.\nBut notwithstanding that the cloud\nwas still hovering over and leading\nthem, assuring them of God's pres-\nence, forgetting how the mighty hand\nof God had stricken Egj-pt-
2bfae0c5c227a7209ecd0936314b6e27 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.8342465436326 40.063962 -80.720915 ote to Governor Blackburn on the 10th ^\nit they intended to attack the Louisville hi\nNashville at Colesbtirg soon. Governor d<\nickburn received the letter at Yorktown, jj1\na mrnuti u over w uie ruiiruuu uuwiurr jn\ns, but In doing thin and organizing, tli\nferal days were lost. Detective Harry Tl\nuen, ol Cincinnati, <1. W . Hunter, of w\nadstown, and .Sum W. Adams, of this\ny, organized an attacking party, which\na under the direction of Hunter, the\nin who enptnred Oroto Kennedy. The m\nme met at Kuiwellviile Friday evening, (0\nd numbered sixteen men, selected with in\nwcial reference to their cool courage, ai\ney were armeil to the teetli with Win- m\nwter rifles, bouble-barrelcd shot guns ln\nd pistols. They arrived at 4 r. « . at tlie\nuse of Ilites, near Adalrnville. where the f\njbers were known to liavc a few ci\nys previous. They surrounded the nf\nuse, a large two-stoir frame, and |a\nilted for daylight About ft a. it., m\nte went to the liarti where some of the fa,\nbsc were concealed and was detained. , t\no others then aroused the inmalesof the w\nuse and every winilow was covered bv tii\ninter's men. After several calls a half- (|r\ntted son of Kile's was seen to step out\nthe tipper portico and crawl to the edge\nd peep over lietween the lialustcrs and\nor as if looking for some one. Home of\n! men were ready to lire upon him V\nnlrlnif Mint !io u*na nnn r\\t IIia rntiKaru 11\ntin Billed ami tnld to get Irnck into the 5'\nimp, which lie Instantly did. Hunter, ! ,\nlams and Hardy then approached the '/\nnl door while the others came up from
363ca20a99e26b1121785d21abd66056 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1920.941256798978 58.275556 -134.3925 night of Novomber 28 that wan of'\nquite Ion k duration. Tlic entire\nisbie system of that section wim put\nout of commission by the quake ami\ntho cableahip Burnside Is now In\nwestern waters making repairs.\nThe Seward Gateway of Norember\n29 elves the following description\nif how It alfocled that city:\nKor more than SO second I losl\nnight 3"wurd experienced a sorer\nearthquake shock. Starting about\n10:06 the quuke, which apparent!:-\nmoved from east to west, shook over¬\nbuilding In the town with more or\ness violence. The thick concrete\nvalis at the power plant -roeked t«\nand fro, the walls of the Gilder\nbuilding cracked and trembled.\nShelves Vere emptied of their con¬\ntents. 'Mocks were stopped in many\nof tho public buildings and homes\nMerchandise was upset and tumbled\n*bout in the stores. The buildings\niwayed more than several Inches.\nMany people were frightened ami\n<tartlod, those who had\nnever experienced a tremble before\nThe dork and the buildings on the\ndock were shaken mightily, Nevor\nbefore In the memory of the oldest\ninhabitants has such a severe trem¬\nble hit this community. The dwel\nlings located along the foot of Mar¬\nathon and other hills wore shnken\nmore than those in town. The pat¬\nrons of the Liberty theatre were In¬\nclined to make for the street when\nthe quake started but changed their\nminds and returned when they felt\ninsured that it was orer. The first\n<how for which the usual capacity\ncrowd had gathered was completed\nabout ten mintutes prior to the\ntremble and the crowd which had\n:>acked the house were on their way\n>o their homes. All In all. It was\nome shaking. Severe enough for\n. ve rybody In town and today there\nis no person In Seward who wanti>\nto feel another.
03413f5c4ac77c77d2c5afd8b868d881 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1876.5532786569015 42.217817 -85.891125 who rose from a cabin boy to be a General com-\nmanding with Stark at BenniDgton, and under\nGates at Saratoga. Connecticut Bent Roger\nSherman, shoemaker, lawyer and judge, who\nhad studied while working at his bench, and\nhad become a profound lawyer on borrowed\nlaw books ; Huntington, afterward President of\nCongress, and W oicott who defended the Con-\nnecticut coast against Tryon, and, later, made\npeace witlr the Six Nations. Kb ode Island sent\nHopkins, who had introduced a bill into the Rhode\nIsland Assembly to aboli-- h slave importation.\nand had, at the same time, emancipated his\nown slaves ; and Ellery, whose house was\nburned by the British army as oon m it took pos\nsession of the island.\nDelaware Lad elected Rodnev, who rode\neighty miles, as already stated, to be present at\nthe vote for indeeijdence ; Read, who had\n his colony to contribute for the suffer\ners by the Boston Port bill, and McKean, the\nonly man who served In a Congress through\nthe whole Revolutionary war. The South Car\nolina delegates, forming at first the only dele\nRation wbich had united in opposing independ'\ndence, were equally united in finally approving\nand practically sustaining it. Middleton losing\nbis fortune in the cause. Hay ward being scarred\nforj life by a gunshot woiind, and both, with\nlutiedge, being Imprisoned for a year at St.\nAugustine by the British ; while young Thomas\nLynch, who had come from the London Temple\nto espouse his country's cause, escaped the\ndangers of war only to be lot at sea at 30.\nlhese were all natives of the colony from which\nthey came ; but North Carolina ani Georgia\nwere honorably represented by what we should\nnow call "carpet baggers.
0996cfcd819b895eeeea965851267684 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.4671232559615 40.441694 -79.990086 supplies, and these are bought in frequent\norders to take advantage of fluctuations iii\nprice. The market has little to support it;\nthe situation in Rio and Santos is quiet, whilo\ntbe feeling In London and Havre is reported\nfirmer. Receipts In Rio for two days have\nbeen 22,000 bags. The New York market is\nnominal at Vl cents for Rio on spot. Total\ndeliveries for six days were 32,337 bags, and\ntotal stock at three principal ports is 155,333\nbags against 311,590 same time last year. The\ntotal visible supply is 245,101 bags, in com-\nparison with 457,226 bags this date last year.\nWere It not for the expected liberal receipts\nin Rio, the home statistics wouldhave an im-\nportant bearing on the market.\nIn a speculative way there was a good deal\nof unloading of long coffee on the pressure\nto sell at Havre and increasing movements\nin Brazil to the seaboard. The business by\ndays was as follows: Saturday, 20,750 \non a decline of 10 points for Angust, and\nother months unchanged to 5 points decline;\nMonday, 37,750 bags on a decline of 30 points\nfor September, and other months 20 to 25\npoints decline; Tuesday, 36 ,500 bags on 5\npoints advance for June, 10 points do July,\nand other months 15 to 25 points advance.\nSugar is the uncertain quantity of groceries.\nDealers in general are of the opinion that\nprices are at the bottom, and that now is a\ngood time to buy.\nGreen Coffee Fancy, 2425c: choice Rio, Z2H\n23,'c: prime BIo. 22c: low grade Bio, 20)321Hc;\nold Government Java. 2930c; Maracalbo, 2S27c;\nMocha. 2931c; Santos, 21M2S)ici Caracas. 24)i\n23Kc ; La Guayra, 25)26)$c.\nKOASTEDdn papers) Standard brands,24)ic;lilgh\ngrades, 2G29)c: old Government Jaia. bulk, 30)\n(333KC: Maracalbo. 271329c: Santos. 2VfK3c: nea.\nberry, 30s; choice Rio. 25c; prime Rio, 24c; good\nBio. 23c: ordinary. 20ac.\nSPICES (whole) Cloves, 1516c; allspice, 10c;\ncassia. 8c: pepper, 13c: nutmeg, 75(380c.
360847bc3fafba4f77d5223fd95d9b0e THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1919.160273940893 42.217817 -85.891125 10 Any former registration of a\nwoman to enrbk; her to vote on a\nbonding proposition or at school\nmeetings, is not sufficient now. Every\nwoman must register with the Town-\nship or City Clerk now to entitle her\nto vote at elm lions.\n11 On April 7, 1919, the voters of\nMichigan will vote, not only for the\nelection of many officers, Including lo-\ncal officers, Justices of the Supreme\nCourt, a Superintendent of Public In-\nstruction, Members of tbe State Board\nof Agriculture, Members of the State\nBoard of Education and Regents of\nthe University, but they will vote up-\non several Important amendments to\nMichigan's Constitution, including an\namendment relating to the liquor\ntraffic and an amendment providing\nfor good roadn. More than half a mil-\nlion women should register in Michi-\ngan between the present time and\nApril 7, 1919. The Republican party\nIn Michigan has advocated Woman\n The State Central Commit-\ntee of the Republican party adopted\nresolutions favoring Woman Suffrage\nmany time. Many Republican State\nConventions declared In favor of Wo-\nman Suffrage before It was adopted.\nWithin the last six years Republican\nlegislatures in Michigan have submit-\nted the question of Woman Suffrage\nto the voters of the state three times.\nIt waa beaten in 1912 at the polls. It\nwaa again beaten at the polls In 1912.\nIt carried in 1918, and Is now an es-\ntablished fact. Unless the women of\nMichigan register and vote generally,\nMUe yood will result from giving them\ntbe Tote, and they cannot vote if they\ndo not register. The Republican party\nf Michigan calls upon every woznaa\nta Michigan who will be 21 years old\ncr over on April 7th next to go to her\nTownahlp or City Clerk NOW and ret -late - r\nas a voter, and appeals to her to
05bd70d93c7778252632e481d607f109 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.478082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 Spocral Correspondence Evening Journal.\nMilford, June 24.—T he general topic\nof conversation hero Is the proposed\nnew High School building. Every­\nwhere upon the streets are seen groups\nof men, discussing this subject. To­\nday. for the first time, the citizens will\ntake a general interest in the election\nto bo held for school commissioners.\nDeprived by the terms of the school\nbill from expressing their wish upon\nthe subject, the only chance they have\nto assert their rights will be In the\neffort to elect those whose views ac­\ncord with their own.\nThis bill, which was engineered\nthrough the State Senate last Winter\nwithout the knowledge of the taxpay­\ners, does not permit those who have\nto pay the bills to express their pref­\nerences upon the subject. As one of\nthe supporters of It remarked: “These\npeople do not know what they want,\nwo know better than they do." The\nmen who are so eager to push this\nmeasure through are men who own\nvery little property to be taxed, there­\nfore they can view with complacency\nthe unnecessary burden they propose\nplacing upon their neighbors, whose\nreal estate far exceeds their own. The\npresent school buildings are amply\nsufficient for the accommodation of\nthe scholars who now attend and could\n made most efficient by the united\nboard It so desired. The higher\nclasses In the schools are very limited\nIn numbers, as is shown by the fact\nthat none graduated In the North Mil­\nford school this Spring, while there\nwere only two graduates In the South\nMilford school. The taxes are now\nvery high, as the town is already\nbonded for a considerable sum, and\nthe working man who now finds it\nhard to pay the taxes upon his modest\nhome Is also opposed to any Increase.\nThe present bonded Indebtedness of\nthe town is $45.000, to w hich would be\nadded the $18,000 for the new school\nbuilding. A bill was prepared last\nweek by Colonel Theodore Townsend,\nmember of the Town Council, to\nraise a loan of $17,600 for the Improve­\nment of the streets, but found few\nsupporters. The men most prominent\nfor their Intelligent and sincere Inter­\nest In the good of the town are op­\nposed to the proposed change as being\nunnecessary at this time.\nThere are two large school build­\nings and an efficient corps of teachers.\nAmong those who are opposed are\nJohn B. Smith. Charles Barker, Wil­\nliam Humes, Robert Williams. Joseph\nHolland, Daniel Hirsh, Samuel Kin­\nder. Dr. James Stanton. P. F. Causey,
0f6175127ce2c81be2dd970b0aaaadc2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1892.2117486022566 40.063962 -80.720915 Snt:.For two yours and ovor I havo\nboon trying to Impress ourpooplo with\nItlic* (act that the I.ntki.lioc.vckh is tlio\nfbost paper West Virginians can. read. I\nhavo always been un unsworvlng lie-\npublican, behoving that party is better\nable to administer tlio ailairs of this\ngovernment than the Democratic party.\nJiut it is n question in my mind whothor\nor not Borne otlier party will not in tlio\nfuture havo something to say about it.\nDo it understood 1 am not a third party\nman. On tho contrary, I havo opposoil\nIn my huinblo way all tho third parties\n_ wo havo had sinco tho war, believing\n'they havo been used as tools in tho\nJiands of the Democratic party to\n"weaken tho Republican party.\nI notice in the prinelplou anuouncod\nby tho People's party that, among other\nthings, they demand that tho govern¬\nment issue tender notes and pay\ntho Union soldiors tho diH'ereuco be¬\ntween the depreciated money in which\nho was paid and gold. Whllo in all\nprobability this is adoptod more for\npolicy than through real sentiment, it\nnevertheless strikes mo that tho Repub¬\nlican party lias loftagapdown justhere.\nFirst it would bo 110 more than just\nand right to nay tho soldier in good\nmoiioy what tho government promised\nhim. Socond, tiio government is abloto\npay it. And, third, tho .Republican\nparty lias beon in power and, so far as\nI am aware, thero has beon but little\neffort mado to pay it. Again, if I am\nnot mistaken, ail commissioned officers\nhavo been paid 33 1-3 per cent on their\nwages. Now, if it is right to pay it to\ntho officer, why not to tlio private?\nWho got the big wages and who got\nnothing? ^
0826829c81cd453ee658e47fbecc8c91 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.1219177765095 39.745947 -75.546589 The Senate killed the Senate bill in­\ncorporating the Kent Savings Bank,\nIn which Governor Hunn is named as\nan incorporator.\nSenator McFarlln, to prevent any\nrecurrence of Mayor Boyd's commit­\nment bills, introduced an act limiting\nthe monthly fees of municipal officers\nfor commitments to twenty dollars.\nThe House, by a tie vote of 15 to 15,\nkilled the Honst) Single Tax bill fix­\ning th» manner in which real estate\nproperty shall be assessed.\nThe Single Tax bill taxing vacant\nlots in Harrington was recommitted.\nThe Single Tax bill tabmrdlhrdl nu\nIn the House notices were, given of\nbills as follows: To fix first Saturday\nin June as time for holding school\nelection In Kent and Sussex; to allow\nattorney-general a contingent fund of\n$1.000; to provide different method\nof appraising restrained goods; au­\nthorizing the City Court clerk of Wll-\nmtnfftrtn to issue marriage license«;\nextending until July 1, 1892, the time\nfor collecting 1899 taxes In the city of\nN«w Castle; to repeal the act requir­\ning the city of New Castle to pay $600\nto road commissioners.\nSenator Brasure s anti-cigarette bill\ncame up In the House this morning. A\nmotion to recommit it. made by Rep­\nresentative Moore, was defeated by* a\nveto of twenty to twelve.\nMr. Clark read a letter from a ha­\nbitual cigarette smoker In Delaware\nCity urging Its passage.\nRepresentative Roherlcon moved to\nm»k< MB special order for next Thurs­\nday. Thts was voted down, and the\nHouse parsed the bill by a vote of 20\nto 13.
179e2ecc9211ee9819895e9dc58cfb56 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1900.5082191463723 40.063962 -80.720915 token hold of the other delegations and\nfrom all parts of tlic hall, men came\nplunging through the throng, carrying\ntheir state emblems. They became\ndensely packed in front of the speaker's\ndesk, and yelling and cheering like\nmaniacs they strove to raise the name\nof their state level with that of New\nYork. The effort was useless, however,\nand held Arm by the Tammany men, j\nNew York kept its place. The Georgia\nmen, wrought up by their failure to\nequal New York, maiio a rusn ror the\nspeaker's Htiinii. They went through\nthe crowd with a force.that no oppoel-\ntlon before them could prevent, and\npushing, shoving, clawing and cheer-\ning, they hoisted their man upon tho\nplatfprm and lifted him upon a chair.\nThe effort was successful and New\nYork was eclipsed once more. Keller Is\nno small man to hold aloft In a crowd\nof struggling, pushing men the\nTammany crowd was ready to drop.\nConvention Became Frnntic.\nTh? convention by this time was in\na state of frantic excltemcnt. The men\nfrom Hawaii, carrying their large ban-\nner came down the aisle, followed by a\nshouting mob which bore all before* It.\nThe band Struck up "The Stars and\nStripes," and to Its Inspiring strains the\ncrowd commenced to ma^eh around the\nlloor, yelling like mad men, waving\neverything that could be lifted Into tho\nair. Hats, handkerchiefs, umbrellas,\nstate emblems, banners and the nation-\nal colors were united In a conglomerate\nwave and beneath it marched a crowd\nof men fairly beside themselves with\nexcitement. With flushed fuces, down\nwhich the perspiration rolled In\nstreami, many without«couts and vests,\nthey went round and round the hall,\nRhoutine. vpllincr and aereamlnnr at tho\ntop of ttiel- voices. Those delegates who\ndid not Join In the .march lent most
3093ec302b5b7b979eb8c7123070758f THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1910.8397259956876 40.114955 -111.654923 Her condition was desperate her\nprospects gloomy beyond expression-\nShe was alone In a small power boat\nwhich would bo helpless the sport of\nwind and waves after perhaps 30\nhours That boat was alone in the\ngreat expanse of the Pacific ocean\nSomewhere about there were islands\nprobably Indeed on the charts those\nseas were dotted with points of land\nbut they were small Inconsiderable\nuninhabited unknown In that little\nboat she might pass close by many-\nof them without seeing them She hind\nprovisions such ns they were and\nwater sufficient perhaps for a week-\nor ton days After that unless she\nlanded somewhere she would drift on\nuntil she starved nnd died If a storm\ncame the launch probably would not\nsurvive it liar chances of escape In\nany event were worse than problem\natlcal The end was almost certain\nlimit she was happy Tho first rea\nray of happiness which hind entered\nher soul since the beginning of the\ngreat awakening which led culmln\nated In frightful scene of the\nnight Illumined her being As sho sat\nIn the stern sheets her hand on the\nsteering wheel listening to the steady\ndrumming of the motor seeing tho\nblack water broken Into foam by the\nboats bows flash by her keeping the\nlaunch steady on her course by the\naid of time compass needle her eyes\nturned ever and anon to the fast di-\nminishing point of light which marked\ntho rapidly disappearing yacht and\nshe realized that site was free She\nhall hurled out of her path and let\nshe exulted In her own prowess It\nwas something of a salve to her soul\nfor the wretched humiliations which\nhind been heaped upon Itsho hind\nhurled out of her path and stricken\ndown as arty other animal might have\nBono him who had brought liar to this\nawful pass She was away front him\nfree Horn him Sho wns once more\nso far ns wind and wave allowed the\nmaster of her fate tho mistress of her\ndestiny-
54aeab0ab4bf41c1b6ca18f32eef5b3c EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.3986301052764 39.745947 -75.546589 they have driven their stakes, hoisted\ntheir canvas roofs, clapped their plat­\nforms into place, clattered the chairs\nbenches Into order, hurried through\nthe thousand strenuous tasks of the\nfirst morning, the service of the seven\ndays' engagement has Just begun.\nThere is always something about the\ntents or ground to make ready for\nthe dally shifting of entertainments.\nCbsutauauaa in this section are run\nlike a progressive game Here Is a\nchain of the towns: Call them A, B and\nC and D. etc. There is an average,\nsay, of 89 miles between them. At\nevery Chautauqua the program ts\npractically the game In event* and In\ntho order In which they come. Train\nservice la fairly good In this part of\nthe country. The btg Florentine Band\ncrowd off the train at A on the flret\nday. At night they are resting up for\nthe next days concert at B. Perhaps\nas they board the esrly mornings ex­\npress town B. where tt !e the Chau­\ntauqua first day, they catch a glimpse\nof the seven singers of the Tyrolean\nAlpine Company taking their first\nsurvey of the town the band is leav­\ning. Or they meet Frank Dixon, the\nspeaker for the second day at A, Just\narriving with hi* suitcase. The Ty­\nroleans and Mr Dixon will be leaving\ntho town within the next twenty-four\nhours to go the way of the first-day\npeople. At the same time the third-\nday entertainers and speakers will be\nor their way to take their places.\nWherever the band appeara. tt is the\nfirst day of the Chautauqua In that\nplace Wherever Mr. Dixon appeara\nIt 1» the second day. Mr. Pearson's\ncalendar through the whole season\nI fegtster* Just as consistently, the third\nChautauqua day. One man besides\nthe roustabout crew of college boys,\nand the leaders of the junior work\nbelongs to a town through the whole I\nweek
1cc92c6f490231cf5c9e160866ffeaa4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.6068492833588 40.063962 -80.720915 "1 believe our countrymen are indebted J5n\nyou for having discovered. -perhaps I j[\nould say inveuted.me as a poeslbio, |a1\nongh most improbable, candidate lor the\nesldeocy. Allow me thentothank yoti |~\nr your early and Irank demotratration. 1 f,\nn In no contingency be counted on j)f\nur side ns a women BUilrago candidate, o,\nyou forcibly and justly say, there is -p,\nt even a remote possibility of my ulti*\n»tely adapting myself to this end. My \\\\\nJerence wltUyour crowd is too vital, j(\ni» rmilCHl i" pt-Tiiiii iuu iwwi miii^uum »((\nearner to bopo lor my conversion. I am j0\nowing old nnd my opinions nro tolera- 34\n1 llrm nnd advanced. The (cmtilti of 17\nc Laura Fair typo, who kills her piira- 21\n:nir whom she claims as lier rightful ail\nInlty, and gives tho lie In open court\n wifo whom sho has doubly ra\nidoweel, In my nverslon. llut why |{,\nould any man bo (lie cnndidiua u\nrPresidento! the woman suffragists? 11\niglcally anil consistently 1 reel that this 1!,\nndldato should he n woman. HI10 ought, ty\norcovor.tohoonc thoroughly emancipa1\nfrom the absurdity, lolly, narrowness\nd baleful conservatism wlilch laln too (j(\n1 tooutgrow. Could you not find one who\nnatmtfMi in hf»r nun nrrqnn nnd liiatnrv i..\nint yoti so lellcitously term 'the liberal Bu\nought o! this enlightened ago}' Let\nr lib one who has two husbands, after |n\niort, lives In tho anmo house with them w;\nith; sharing the couch of one hut hearing t|,\ni! name of the other to indicate her im- |n\nrtiallty. Perhaps tho cause and candi- pf\nte will be so fitly mated that there will ng\nno ocraslon, even under the
0d354811f02c48273c05bd8444374cc8 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1899.815068461441 42.217817 -85.891125 When ho came down to the office Fri-\nday morning, he was confronted with\nthe usual programme for the Sunday\nmorning edition. Tho News was one of\ntho few evening papers to issue a Sun-\nday edition, and it had always been re-\nmarkably successful financially. There\nwas an average of ono page of literary\nand religious items to SO or 40 pages\nof sport, theater gossip, fashion, so-\nciety cind political material. This made\na very interesting magazine of all'sorts\nof reading matter and had always l)een\nwelcomed by all the sulscribers, church\nmembers and all, as a Sunday necessity.\nEdward Norman now faced this fact\nand put to himself the question, "What\nwould Jesus do?" If ho were editor of\na paper, would he deliberately plan to\nput into the homes of all the church\npeople and Christians of Raymond such\na collection of reading matter on the\nono day of the week which ought to Ik?\ngiven up to something better and holi-\ner? He was of familiar with the\nregular argument for the Sunday paper\nthat the public needed something of\nthe sort, and the workingman especial-\nly, who would not go to church any-\nway, ought to have something enter-\ntaining and instructive on Sunday, his\nonly day of rest. But suppose the Sun-\nday morning paper did not pay. Sup-\npose there was no money in it. How\neager would the editor or tho proprietor\nbo then to supply this crying need of\nthe workingman? Edward Norman\ncommuned honestly with himself over\nthe subject Taking everything into\naccount, woiii Jesus probably edit a\nSunday morning paper, no matter\nwhether it paid? That was not tho\nquestion. As a matter of fact, The Sun-\nday News paid so well that it would be\na direct loss of thousands of dollars to\ndiscontinue it. Besides, tho regular\nsubscribers, had paid for n, seven day\npaper. Had he any right now to give\nthem anything less than they had sup-\nposed they had paid for ?
0d521b920ef063d2519019dab1b8401d UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1887.7794520230848 42.68333 -96.683647 THE receptiou committee report that the\ncelebration in Chicago in honor of Preii-\ndent Cleveland cost about $10,000 , and\nthat th -y have motiiy e tough in their\nhands lo delray all in lebtedn.'sa.\nAN aeronaut nam d Hathaway ascended\n(oah ightof oneliiousanI fjetin a bal­\nloon sit G il' simr.; . III ., the other day, and\ninaiie llie descent with a parachu•« in\ntlmiy s couds. Hj struct thj ground\nvery 1 ghtly anil rem unad Htandiug.\nlii.cr .Nl' >nvesti«a'.ions into the wor vin^\nof the i'ugetsoa id ca^totns di.-itr.ot by »\nspecial a^ent of th i trj-wury havi re-\nsniud in some atartling develop ents.\nThe Chines - came across the border in\ndiowi-, aiiii l.OO'i ot-ruficatts, which «erc\nto be issued under Ihe law to ou(>.on:\n di uppeur^d lioni the Port Town-\nlend cusloui hou^o nnd were hubhi-q h ut y\nEre enle I I v Mongol ans, who hatl never\nefoie been in tlie country. An immense\nqu utily ot opium has betn brought nitc\nPortl .nd, wuich neVtr p aid a i cnt of duty,\nand IU many instances it came through\nwith th- coiiusion o customs officer be­\nlonging to the siimd district.\nTHE Catholics are making determined ef­\nforts to i^i.-t ho d ot tho schools in certain\nwards in P ttsburg. .Father McTu-he, prin­\ncipal of the Mouoiiuaiiela school, iK votes\nhalf an hour to religious instruct on when\nthe iilti inoon stu in-ure over . It is hoped\nto introduce tins plan lulo other schools by\n(be election of piici ts >.• principal.
084a4a600b3a8d99f0d60f703c70a59b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1894.891780790208 39.623709 -77.41082 One of His Experiences.\nFor thirty-eight year* Capt. Loud followed\nthe sea, most of that time as master of a ves-\nsel. ana upon retiring from the water was ap-\npointed by the Secretary of the United States\nTreasury to superintend the seal fisheries In\nAlaska, which position he held five years, lie\nrelates one experience as follows:\n“For several years X had been troubled with\ngeneral nervousness and pain In the region\nof mv heart. My greatest affliction waa\nsteeple sness; It was almost Impossible at any\ntime to obtain rest and sleep. Having seen\nDr. Miles* remedies advertised I began using\nNervine. After taking a small quantity the\nbenefit received was so great that I was posi-\ntively alarmed, thinking the remedy con-\ntained opiates which would finallybe Injuri-\nous to mo; but on assured by the drug-\ngist that It was perfectly harmless, I contin-\nued It together with the Heart Cure. Today\nI can conscientiously say that Dr. Miles Re-\nstorative Nervine and New Heart Cure did\nmore for me than anything I had ever taken.\nI had Iteen treated hy eminent physician*\nIn New York and San Francisco without ben-\ntit. f owe my present good health to the\njudicious use of these most valuable remedies,\nand heartily recommend them to all afflicted\nas I was." —Capt. A . P. Loud, Hampden, Mo.\nDr. Miles Restorative Nervlnoand NcwCure\nare sold hy all druggists on a positive guaran-\ntee, or by Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart,\nInd., on receipt of price, il per bottle, or six\nbottles for *S, express prepaid. They are\nfree from all opiates ana dangerous drugs.
976bda32c7158134738e2ac0c54fc539 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.546575310756 39.261561 -121.016059 The Northern people exult over what\nthey ere proud to call there-opening uf the\nMississippi. That they virtually power the\nriver, and can lire It for purpos e of war in\nunquealionalile, but that the river is open\nto their commerce, or of oilier service to\nthem than a* a road for iron clad vessels,\nis untrue. Until the Southern Confederacy\nie deetroyed. the Mississippi cannot again\n••ecoine a channel for commerce. While a\n•ingle point upon itw vast extent, on either\nbank, ie acceeeible to hoelile partieH, it can\nconvey armed verrele only, and although\nthey have New Orleans and the principal\nstragrtic poeilion nbore if, they have not\ndriven tin Confederate!* from many hun-\ndred milee of ite shores, whence they can\natop trade and passage ai* completely at by\nthe gun* of Fort Iillow or Columbus.\nTli! fall of New Orleana and the conse-\nquent conquest of the Mississippi, was a\nheavy blow to the Confederacy, and dimin-\nishes its resources for supplies. Hut it is\nfar from lieiug irrelrieveable. The recov-\nery of that river will lie as easy as its loss.\nVictories in tlie North will compel the Uni-\nted States to recall its troops, \nyellow fever does not do its work, in tbe\nnext <50 days, so effectually as to leave none\nto recall. New armies will lie formed in\nthe States which border that river, which\nwill retake New Orleans. No treaty ot\npeace is possible which would leave tbe riv-\ner iu the hand* of the North. An effort\nwill be made to render the great city at its\nmouth a free town, like Hamburg and Bre-\nmen: hut it will be an indecisive war and\na drawn battle only which will render the\nproject possible. The people of the'Missis-\nsippi. country and town, are entirely Siu-\nthem, bitterly hos'ilc to the United Slates,\nand. without an exception, resolved forev-\ner to la- enlistment parts of the Confedera-\ncy. If the Confederacy lives, it will be im-\npossible to give that river and Its valley\nanv political connection other than nature\nordains for it. Reyond the separation from\nTexas and Arkansas, and the loss of tbe\ncattle supply we might obtain from that\nsource, its present possessions by the ene-\nmy is of no real importance In the actual\nwar or in the future rendition of the coun-\ntry.—[Richmond Examiner, June 14-th.
1bc82b53de4f3dea498d4cfdb1483941 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1888.0341529738414 43.82915 -115.834394 Prince, of London, had the courage\nto say that “no man can rightly call\nhimself an English gentleman who\nshakes hands with John L. Sullivan.”\nMr Prince meant thereby “the first\ngentleman of England,” otherwise\nhis Royal Highness, Wales. The\nreverend gentleman was bold but\nright in his expression. Tho men\nwho assume to bo models of gentility,\nand yet recognize thu bully Sullivan\nwhose slogging brutality lias not\nstopped at the prize ring, but has\nbeen visited upon women, weak men\nand inoffensive persons, are not fit to\nfix the standards of dooaney. All the\nnewspaper reporting of the prize ring,\nall tho defenses made for athletics,\nall the pleas in support of the manly\nart," all the recognition that kings\nand princes cun give it and its high\npriests, will not make prize fighting\nanything than brutal work, de­\nbasing and demoralizing to the last\nextreme. When the Prince of Wal» s\nshook hands with slogger Sullivan he\noffended decency and outraged\ngentility. Not that the Prince is\nvirtue itself, or that Sullivans associa­\ntion would especially damage his\nsensibilities, but because, as heir ap­\nparent to the throne of one of the\ngreatest nations of earth, he had no\nright to give public recognition and\nindorsement to a slogger, a fellow of\nthe slums, whose abnormal develop­\nment of muscle happens to make him\nan unequal antagonist for most uien.\nAny influence that casts its weight in\nfavor of this lawless man, and prize\ntighter, and beater of small men;\nthis gross and vulgar animal; puts\nitself upon a level with him, and\nthat no self-respecting man all such\nare gentlemen—will do.
25d76ddc3193c8ce67b446d458e0a726 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.4631147224752 40.063962 -80.720915 Tiik never-ending contest b&twc\n<'.»pital nnd Lnbor Is freshly illiisirnl\nin the Sixth lleport of the Trad\nUnion Commission just Riven lo I\npublic in EnglRiul. Messrs. Rrlggs\nCo. Iiftd lK'«*n for 1*01110 timeproprieU\nof largo collierits in II10 Wost Ypi\nHhlriMihtrici, when they fonnd the\nselvis compelled, in J865, to place th\nestablishments on an entirely differ*\nfooting. Strikes, quarrels,complain\nand "play-days** had hccotno so coi\nmoil that the buniacsa was unmanaj.\nable. Hardly a fortnight passed wit\nout a day, or two, of stoppage, and t\nminers.it \\h Mr. Brings himself wl\ntells the story."seemed utterly rec\nless as to what loss they inflicted** up<\ntheir . mployers nnd fellow-work me\nAt this juncture, nnd under the pre\nsure of these difficulties, the firm adop\neil the resolution of admitting the\nwork people to a participation in tl\nprofits of theconeern. The olti part no\nship was dissolved, ami in itH pin\nwhs constituted a new company, unci\nthe limited Liabilities Act. The oaf\ntal was divided into l»,000 shares of J1\neach, of which number the old proprii\ntors retained in their own hands C.OO\nor two-thirds of the whole, and there\nwere offered to the workmen and tl\nptihlie. Hut this was not the whole\nthe scheme. It was announced that aft\nthe computation of profits at the \nthe year, a distribution would be mm\n011 the following terms: Ten ni>r n..\ncovering all ol»«rgo«, was to bo allott«\nto capital, iind it any excess of proli\nthen remained, it was to l>o diviili\ninto two equal parts, one part to go\nfurther remuneration of capital, ai:\nthe other to l»e distributed in the shf»|\nof u bonus proportioned to earning\namong all other persons.miner\nngonte,"r serventa.employed in collie\nIt will be observed that, acoordin\nto this system, the old proprietor\nns holders ol a majority of tho share\nwould still possess the contr\nof the business; but the work pei\npie, on th«» other hand, would have tl\nprivilege of taking shares if th<\npleased, and would enjoy the prospe\nof a bonus whether thvy took shares\nnot. Nothing could \\>e more remarl\nable than the rcsuMuof tnis ex perlroei\nas relHted before the Commission, t\nthe masters tirst, and bv the men ther\nselves afterwards. The scheme, ti\nthough it was distrusted at tlrst, ai\nalthough comparatively few shar\nhave been taken by the colliers, w\nentirely successful. There has been\nstrike at tin* uorktt from Unit liino\nthis. Financially. too, thoezporlme\nhas succeeded. Before tho change t\nold firm rarely obtained n protlt of t\nper cent on their capita}; iudecd,\nKome years they only cleared tii
0563d7fa1c35cb76dcda3deb45178f7a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.1904109271943 39.745947 -75.546589 As if the stand off between Senator\nPyle and Representative Npruance\ntheir Police Commission bills were not\nenough, City Council complicates matter\nby bending to Dover a bill to reorganize\nthe much abused board in which Mayor\nWilley end Commissioner Jester have\nplayed such a bold hand. Even the bold\nhliud of discharging Detectives Hawkins\naud llatton did nut deter their Republi­\ncan brethren from rushing Into the fight\nto sacrifice Jester aud save the mayor.\nThe new bill provides that the mayor\nof the city of VViliuiiigtou and two sober,\ndiscreet persons shall constitute the\nhoard. The two commissioners shall be\nelected in 1893 and every two y ears there­\nafter Oue commissioner elected shall\nbe from the district north of Sixth street\naud oue from tl e district south of Sixth\nstreet. Removal from the district Bhall\nlei minato- his *erm of office and City\nCouncil shall fill the vacancy,\nuiissiouer can be removed for cause by a\ntwo-third vote of City Council,\nmissioner shall hold any other municipal\noffice and swear to non-partisan\ndealing* and bond for$ 10,01)0. The mayor\nshall he chairiuau e<-officio and ihe chief\nof police shall be secretary. The com­\nmissioners shall have control over the\ntire-alarm and police telegraph systems.\nThe sal • ry of the office is fixed at $500.\nThe force aud salaries are as follows;\none chief of police, $l,20ii; two captains,\n$»00; unlimited number of sergeants,\n$800; fifty four patrolmen, with power\nto iucrease, at $760 each ; one matron,\nsalary not named; oue physician, three\nyears' experience, $300. Any person\nmaking use of badges, whistles or calls\nshall be fined from $> to $20.\nsball enter a drinking saloon except in\noiscliarge of his duty.\nThe board must make an estimate of\nIts monetary needs iu May of each year\nand Cuuucli must make a suitable ap­\npropriation, and provide a $1,000 con­\ntingent fund, for which the commission­\ners are responsible to the judge of the\nMunicipal Court. It is presumed that\nthe $1,000 contingent fund is to pay for\nsecret service.
069199fd7a3077abb4c135b77eb053be THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1908.4877048864096 41.741039 -112.161619 The one picture of her which I was\nlucky enough to see had been taken\nwhen she was six. nnd meant nothing\nto roe in the hi of Identification. For\nall I knew I might have passed her on\nthe road. She became to me the\nPrincess In the Invisible Cloak, pass-\ning me often and doubtless deriding\nmy efforts to discern her. My curi-\nosity became alarming. I couldn't\nsleep for the thought of her. Finally\nwe met, but the meeting was a great\nsurprise to us both. This meeting\nhappened during the great hubbub of\nwhich I have just written; and at the\nsame time I met another who had\ngreat weight In my futuro affairs.\nThe princess and I became rather\nwell acquainted. I was not a gentle-\nman, according to her code, but, In\nthe historic words of drug clerk, I\nwas something Just as good. She hon-\nored me with a frank, disinterested\nfrlendflhlp, which still exists. I have\nyet among my fading souvenirs of\ndiplomatic service half a dozen notes\ncommanding me to get up nt dawn and\nride around the lakes, something like\nIt! miles. She was almost as reckleLB\na rider as myself. She was truly a fa-\nmous rider, and a woman who sits\nwell on a horse can never be aught\nbut graceful. She was, In fact, youth-\nful and charming, with tho most mag-\nnificent black eyes I ever beheld in a\nTeutonic head; witty, besides, and a\nsongstress of no ordinury tnlent. if I\nhad been In love with her which 1\nsolemnly vow I was not! I should\nhave called her beautiful and exhaust-\ned my store of complimentary adjec-\ntives.
6876104b699087c40e6b6f4357a93ebe THE COLUMBUS WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1920.941256798978 31.830337 -107.638526 Bnnla IV. N. M, Dec 7Up lo\ntoday then) had been no comment\nfrom State iAiid Commuisioncr Nels\nField or memliers of His office staff\non lh report of tho special revenue\ncommission which severely criti\ncises certain phases of land depart\nment administration, says a writer\nIn tho Albuquerque Herald, nor has\n(here lieen ony comment as to recent\ncharges of the Alhuqunrquo Jour-\nnal's report, that the department la\nrun by a "hunch of clerks." Hot ti tho\nrevenue commission's report and\nIhe newspaper charge that Land\nCommissioner Field spends little or\nno lime Jn (ho office nnd lliat hi1\ndocs not exercise supervision over it.\n"We have been puuled as lo Jiul\nwhat to do," said una department\nhead, "when the commissioner Is\nnut of (own, as he sometimes has to\nbe if the land administration is to\nhave proper attention. Wo want to\nplease Ihe revenue commission, and\nthe Albuquerque Joiirunl, mid ev\ncrythlng, and while it would be\npleasant lo put all.tho. details up lo\nthe commissioner nnd only work\nwhen bos the nlllre, It would\nixirl of slow up thn proceedings for\npatrons of tho office; In fact II\nwould probably rut down Ihe rev\nenues considerably rlghl off Ihe reel.\nKo, in a desire lo do our duty and\nkeep happy we have put our case\nup to llio auditor of tho taxpayers'\nassociation, who Is n friend of ev\neryliody hi the office, who has shiiI\nsome time In the capital, ami who\nprobably knows more nlxnil tho land\noffiro Hum any one else directly or\nIndirectly connected with tho spe\ncial revenue commission, none of\nwhose memliers have ever lieen In-\nside Ihe office in nil official capacity\nso far as wo know. Therefore, en\ntirely on our own restmnslhlllty\nund In our capacity as cllitens and\nwithout the knowlediie or council!\nof the ciimmlsslouer, the land oiTlee\nstalf Joined In a Idler lo Mr. Sle- -\nphens, asking for his advice. It Is\na sort of unofficial 8. 0. S. and we\nare hoping for a quick rescue.'\nA copy of the Idler referred lo\nfollows
24fbcd28b72d10909d0618fee96418fa NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.2479451737697 41.681744 -72.788147 he has been in attendance at the\nannual session of the New York east\nconference, and began preparations\nfor the removal of his household ef-\nfects to Darlen, wheTe he has been\nassigned to spend the coming year as\npastor of the Methodist church. His\nappointment to the pastorate of that\nchurch was made at the closing ses-\nsion of the conference last evening.\nRev. C . R . Thurston, who has been\nlocated at Greenwich for the past\nfew years, was named to succeed him\nas pastor of the Plainville church.\nWhile Mr. Lawson's transfer from\nIhfs place was not unexpected, the\nannouncement of the change was re-\nceived with genuine regret by the of-\nficial board and other members of\nhis church, besides residents having\nother religious beliefs. He was \nly esteemed by all who came in con-\ntact with him and it was hoped that\nthe conference would see fit to grant\nthe petition of the officers of the\nchurch and would send him back here\nfor another year.\nMr. Lawson. came here four years\nago, succeeding Rev. J. A. Churchill,\nwho died recently in1 Middletown.\nDuring the period he served here\nthe church has made encouraging ad-\nvancement and every year has shown\na healthy gain in membership. Its\nfinances are also in good shape and\nMr. Lawson's successor should be\ngreatly encouraged by the conditions\nobtaining at the present time.\nThe retiring pastor will conduct ser-\nvices at the church Sunday and will\npreach his farewell sermon at that\ntime. He will move next week to\nDarien.
26bdd07fcc0f8251abbbdefd263e0566 RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1906.1657533929476 36.620892 -90.823455 lara, belonging to the Capital School Ku.ids of\nthe following described School Townships In\nsaid countys Jn the Several amounts set opposite\nthereto, refpectlToly, Tin: Capital Scneol e'dnd,\nS12S, and Interest on same to dale, Sail)'.; for.\nwhich said sum of borrowed monoy tue said\nJ. M . Joyner as principal, with W, M. Rice, J.\nA. Barnes and Jotin F, Patterson aa securities,\neieouted a bond to the said oounty, bearing\ndate the 10th day of May, 1W1, In which said\nbond the said principal and securities arce ana\nbind themseWes to pay to the said county, for\nthe use and benefit ot the school fund hereinbe-\nfore mentioned, on or before tbe lutii day of May,\n103, the ssld sum of borrowed money, with In-\nterest thereon from the date ot said uond, until\npaid, at tne rate oi eigu V1 w"\nsaid interest to be paid annually the 10th day\nof May, In each ana erery year, unui un wo\nrfeht shAnirf he naid off and discharged\nAnd whereas, laoonsldersUonot the premise\nand to secure the payment of said sura of bor\nrowed money, wnen tne same soomu oeuuin\ndue, on the Kith day of May, 1S00, the said J. M.\nJoyner, and W, M. Joyner, hi wire, eieouted\nand delivered to tne said oounty, tor the use and\nbenefit of the said school fund their certain\nmoruage deed, whereby they conveyed to the\nsaid ooanty the following described parcel ot\nland, lying, being and situate to th oounty mt\nRlnley. stat aforesaid, vli:\nAll of the southeast quarter Of th northeast\nquarter, and all of the northeast quarter of ui\nnortheast quarter that Ilea west and south of\nthe old bed ot Forshe Creek la eeotlon thirty-thre- e,\nand all of th northwest quarter of Ui
0ca653515893fe4db01ed0caf721a1d0 THE IOLA REGISTER ChronAm 1891.9438355847285 37.92448 -95.399981 Awful News From tho Czar's Dominions\nThirty Millions In a Starving Condition\nTiftoen Thousand Deaths in One Night.\nPa kir, Dec. 2. A diplomatic commu-\nnication from Russia which I have seen\nbrings terrible news. Over 30,000,000\nhuman beings aro literally dying of\nhunger. In somo of tho Russian prov-\ninces bordoring on tho Volga the peoplo\nare keeping themselves alive by eating\nthe bark of trees. This awful state of\nthings is aggravated by the blunderiug\nmethod of tho Russian administration.\nFor instance, a few weeks before tho\nissue of the ukase absolutely forbidding\nthe exportation of cereals the railway\ncompanies wero ordered to allow nono\nof their cars to bo used for the trans-\nport of this grain. Tho companies im-\nproving on this order stopped the trans-\nport corn. Two million sacks of\ncorn were actually rotting in the prov-\nince of Odessa, while a few miles away\nmen and women wero starving and all\nthis through tho criminal stupidity of\nthe officials. Tho distribution of the\n50.000,000 rubles ordered by the emper-\nor was effected in tho same way. In\nthe province of Jaroslaw money was\ngiven to the peasants for drink. Next\nmorning 15,000 men and women were\nfound dead on the highways.\nAs a natural result of all these\nhorrors the general misery has driven\nthe people to overt acts of brigandage.\nIt is dangerous to walk through some\ndistricts after dark, and the trades\npeople are obliged to barricade their\ndoors as if they were in a besieged\ncity. Thefts and burglaries are of\nevery-da- y
019b96c672969916026f44f4cdfdf5af THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.1575342148656 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Iiart McDonel, a member of t!i\nfirm of Ityan & McDonel, one of tb\nlargest construction contract firms ii\nBaltimore, baa been making his bead\nquarters at the McLure for the past wee]\nor ten days. During that time Mr. Mc\nDonel has been busy mapping out\nwork of considerable magnitude\nwhich his firm has contracted t\ndo about here, namely, the con\nstruction of a mammoth rouni\nhoifeo aud tho accompanying shops fo\ntho'Baltimoro & Ohio Railroad cornpan;\nat Benwood Junction. Ityan & McDont\nalready have a big railroad contract 01\nhands, tho construction of tho raucli\ntalked about Belt Lino in Baltimore,bu\nthat will not deter them from atari\ning in on the work at Benwood just a\nsoon as tho question of the ownership c\nono remainiug parcel of land is settled\nThis parcel is ono of about sixty-fou\nacres, owned by Mrs. McMechen, whic!\nadjoins the ninety-live acres recently ac\nquired by the Baltimore & Ohio just bt\nlow the Junction station.\nMr. McDonel has already on tli\nground eight car loads of tools, tw\nsmall shifting engines and a big steac\nshovel. This shovel will bo put into ub\njust as noon as the negotiations over tli\nland referred to are settled. The bi\n hill just below tho Junction eta\ntion, through which the Baltimore i\nOhio's main line makes a cut, is to b\nleveled^ down and the dirt taken iron\nthere is to be used in leveling Uj\nthe bottom land lying between th\ncompany's main live and the river. Th\nbatttrtirland being leveled up tho Ohi\nftiverroad's ir«ick will be moved overt\nthe river bank and on the land so level\ncd, the bi^ round house and shops wil\nbe built. The round house will havi\naccommodations for llfty or sixty loco\nmotives at,one time, and the shops wil\nbo correspondingly large. The estab\nlishment of tho round house an<\nshops at thla point practically mean\nthat a town will bo started near thero o\nelse Benwood's population will be ver;\nmaterially increased for it will requiro\nsmall army of men to man such a plan\nas is contemplated. When this work i\ncompleted, which will be in tho nea\nfuturo for as soon as tho lam\nnow in dispute is acquired th<\nwork will bo pushed forward rapidly\nthe headquarters of the machinist re\nr>air forces of tho fourth division, mail\nline, the Npwark-Bellaire division ofth\nCentral Ohio, the Uempfield and possi\nuiy uvu ut wuicu ui.ucit> win jjiuuiiury u\nat Benwood.
6378a566f5c9374efe32f57dd22f9d39 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1870.6671232559615 39.24646 -82.47849 In tbia g of enterprise, at moat\npoinU tbe march of improvement is\nonward. Can, you claim it for Me\nArthur? Old landmark! are wiped\nout; oewonej re iwpklly be(ng jB tra-\nduced. Many of thi citueag.of Wo\nArtaar, and probably other parte of\nVinton eounty, cm remeatber when\nthe ehorteet and oheapeet route by\nwhich they could obtain their supplies\nfrom the East, woe by canal or wagons\nto Pittsburg, thence on the steamers\nby met to Gallipolis, Ohio, from there\nby wngons to MoArthur, 'occupying\nmore time and coating more for trans-\nportation from Gallipolis to MoAnliur\nthen it now snouiq require to ormg\nthem from New York to your doors by\nrailroad. Do your present railroad\nfacilities furnish you with transport\ntion at those rates, or in the absence ol\nany competition do they not require\nyou to pay such ratee aa\nalmost Your town i\nbeautifully situated in a healthy local\nity, surroundedjon all sides by a fine\nagricultural country, and in the midst\nof one of the richest, if not the richest\nmineral district in the state or per-\nhaps in the world. Coal and iron ore\nof superior Quality and unlimited Qimn\ntity are all around and under you, f.lso\nlime. salt, and burr stones in vastquan- -\nJities, in some places so easily reached\nthat all you have to do is to remove the\nslicht covering of earth that nature\nplaied over it, apparently to protect it\nfrom climatio influences, and you have\nthe rioh and almost inexhaustible beds\nof iron and coal lying in hilt view be\nfore vour eves, ready for removal to\nany point where they can be converted\ninto that articlo which it is so conve-\nnient for all to have, sometimes called\ngreenbacks.
26bfa1d77a005cd1347d12acc5e10e18 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.8534246258243 39.745947 -75.546589 if the line of the Tagliamento be »Ponse and such a renaissance from\nabandoned, then, os the map discloses, defeat as were the French,\nthere Is behind this, some ten or a | We really know very little of mod-\ndozen miles, the line of the Livenza— ern ltaIF Fifty years Is only a short\na river which parallels the Tagliamento. t,tne in 1,16 Wstory of nations, and It\nbut is very much smaller. Behind this ls hardly more than flfty years since\nIs the lino of the Plave, which Is a t,le Italian peninsula was marked In\nlarger stream than the Tagliamento 1,10 geographies by numberless states,\nand Is perhaps fifteen miles behind the semi-independent, subservient to alien\nLivenza. Standing behind either the dynasties, mutual iTals. The idea that\nLivenza or the Piave, the Italians would there could be a unified Italy was re-\nstlll cover Venice; but if are garded with contempt and amusement\ndriven beyond the Plave their next de- two generations ago. The dreams of\nfenslve position must be behind the Mazzinl, the cool calculation of Ca-\nBrenta. which will necessitate the vour* these seemed equally fantastic\nevacuation of Venice and bring the t0 the Europe of Metternich, to the\nGermans within range of Padua and Europe which had taken Its political\nVicenza. The loss of the Bronta line form at the Congress of Vienna,\nwould send the Italians back behind the ( ,f Italy proves to be a welded na-\nAdlge and mean the surrender of the tlon; if the spirit of unity which saved\nwhole of the province of Venetl, In- France, which has saved France a\neluding Verona, whlrh Is stronglyfor- dozen times in the past, Is manifested\ntilled, but could hardly resist Austro- ln the Italian Peninsula, the present\nGerman heavy artillery.
55cb28132b3fdafe3718999af167c4cb THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1861.1273972285642 39.369864 -121.105448 An Eccentric Woman Gone. —“Lola Mon-\ntez died at New Nork January 17th.”\nSuch is the brief announcement by Pony\nexpress. Lola was a remarkable woman,\nand as she once resided in this county, it\nmay not be improper to devote a paragraph\nto her memory. She was Irish by birth, and\nperhaps forty years old at the time of her\ndeath. Her talents were of a sprightly al-\nthough not very profound order, and her\nmanners free and easy, with a certain degree\nof polish, which rendered her society pecul-\niarly agreeable to gentlemen, among whom\nshe almost entirely associated. She spoke\nEnglish, French, German and Spanish with\nfluency, and in a mixed company, such as\nusually attended her court, addressed each\nof her visitors in his vernacular language.\nShe accepted an introduction to whoever\nwas presented, and conversed on national\nmore than local topics. At the age of eigh-\nteen she was considered among the hand-\nsomest women of Europe. Her first marriage\nwas to an officer of the British Navy, named\nHeald, whom she deserted. Subsequently\nshe became mistress to the King of Bavaria,\nwho created her Countess of Lansfeldt, and\nover whom she exercised great influence.—\nSome of his innovations at her suggestion,\nupon old forms, aroused the fury of the\npeople, and she was to flee the\ncountry to save her life. As an actress and\ndansevse she met with some success, but was\nnot brilliant as either. She visited Califor-\nnia several years ago, on a professional tour.\nPatrick Hull, at that time an editor and\nprominent man in San Francisco, returning\nfrom a voyage to the East, happened to be a\nfellow-passenger on the ship with Lola, be-\ncame enamored, and afterwards married her.\nThe alliance, on her part, was entirely from\nmercenary motives. His friends deceived\nher by representing him wealthy, while his\nexchequer was really iu an impoverished\ncondition. When she discovered the trick,\n(as she termed it,) she shook her husband\noff. Having purchased a cottage at Grass\nValley, she occupied it for more than a year.\nAmong her pets were a grizzly bear cub, a\nhorse, a monkey, a parrot, and numerous\ncanary birds. Here she had, as the succes-\nsor to Hull, a husband of convenience, whom\nshe completely demoralised. From this\npoint she went to San Francisco, and\nunder the protection of a new lover—a cer-\ntain young actor named Folland—sailed\nfor Australia. On the voyage Folland was\ndrowned, which, for the first time perhaps\nin her life, rendered her inconsolable. The\nnext that we hear of her is in New York\nwhere she died.
063d8d96f173993eaa579eaa4025e038 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.9027396943177 40.063962 -80.720915 to hold the kcifo and lork in /our hand,\nand equally eoepiclooa to atlck theni in\nyour pocket, Ihe lady recommend* that\nyou lay then down "on the nlilalra or\nEieceol bread," ao aanottoaoil the cloth.\nIra. Beecher ought to remember that we\ndo not receive $26,000 a year, and three\nmontha at tbe White Uountalna, and are\nnot, therefore, likely to be proelded with\naolltairea. Eren in thecueol thoeeper-\nsons who tin allord such luxury. It seems\nto us to be asking a great deal o£ them to\ntake It off for the parpo«e of propping up\na greasy knife and fork. And then, if a\nman lays down his solitaire in company,\nhe takes a great riik of never seeing it\nagain thin side of the grave. It were\ncheaper, we take it to grease the table\n and pay the damages after dinner.\nbur a new cloth, if need be, and take the\nold one home for a horse blanket. The\nhorses would not kick because of a grease\nspot or two. A mule, though, would kick\nthe roof off the stable on a much less\nprovocation. "On the solitaire or piece\nof bread." Looking at it again, we see in\nit a holefor a man to crawl oat of who\nhas no diamond. But why would not a\nbiscuit do just as well as a piece of bread?\nOr, in the absence of either bread or bis*\ncuit.a fellow is liable to eat them, you\nknow.how would a cold potato do? Or,\nagain, bow would it do to wipe the knife\noo jour hair, and.but these things will\nuggest themselves to a man in sii emer*\nR«ncy.
1bcc0ce9790c2e3c543e2c8fcd00264a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.0122950503442 39.745947 -75.546589 lining membranes are roughened or I heir muscular tone\nI» so much Impaired that the blood Is not forcibly and\nread.Iy propelled onward. It 1» most frequent In veins,\nwhere tho circulation Is naturally slow, and It rarely\nI occurs In capillaries. The thrombi formed may shrink\nand dry lulu leather-llhe masses or calcify, forming phlo-\nj bolllhs (In veins) or soften and bo absorbed or suppu­\nrate; or they may organize, ns nft?r tbe ligaturing of nn\n, artery. Some of tho causes of thrombosis are: wounds\nand other Injuries, inflammation see Ublebitla; I'hlog-\nmaala), pressure nn n vessel, fallnru of the propelling\npower of Hie heart, ns In caaes of marasmus and ex­\nhausting diseases and bacterial Infection of the blood.\nTho symptoms of thrombosis are thosn of tho arrest of\nIhe circulation and differ according to vessel affected.\nThey Include passive hyporneinla, venous dilatation, swell­\ning of adjacent parts, gangrene, anasarca of an extremity,\ndo. Tho treatment varies according to the seal of tho\naffection. Sec Pathology, also general article Paralysis.\nTllltOMBUN, In anatomy, a plug ,r clot formed In a\nvessel and partially or totally closing It. If It remains\nat Its place of origin It I» called a primary thrombus; If\nIt. has grown beyond Its original limits It Is n propagated\nth-omhus; carried hy the blood-nurrcnt from a distant\nblood vessel and forced Into a smaller one, obstructing the\ncirculation, It becomes nn embolus, A thrombus consists\nof coagulated fibrin entangling In Us meshes red and white\nblood-corpuscles or of coagulated lymph, in lymphallcs,\nand the term has been applied (milk thrombus), to nn\naccumulation of curdled milk In a lactiferous tube.
24c2eff32b3f6010f1bd45d96c078ec6 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.4287670915778 39.261561 -121.016059 Extension of the Telegraph.\nA dispatch from Placerville, says that th«\nOverland Telegraph party passed through\nthat place on the 3d lust. The train was\ncomposed of twenty-seven loaded wagons,\nand accompanied by forty men. We learn\nfrom the Virginia City Enterprise, that Mr.\nStreet, the general superintendent of the\nline, has been in Carson City for the past\nfew weeks, perfecting arrangements for the\nspeedy extension of the wires eastward. He\nhas contracted with parties there for\nenough taraarac poles for one hundred and\ntweoty-flvc miles of the route, and seventy-\nfive men are to be employed, all of whom\nwill be in Carson City by the 10th lost. Mr.\nStreet will precede the teams with a band\nof workmen and guides, and endeavor to\nhave tbe poles ready for the teams as fast\nas they Arrangements have been\nmade by which a battery will be taken along\nby tbe party, for tbe purpose of telegraph-\ning tbe Pony news to California as they\nprogress with the work, thus daily lessen-\ning tbe time for transmitting Eastern intel-\nligence. The Eastern end of the line, from\ntbe Missouri river to Sait Lake, will be con-\nstructed by the Western Union Company,\nand the Western end by the California Con-\nsolidated Company. After it is completed\nthe companies will be merged into one. It\nis thought that both lines can be completed\nto Salt Lake by the first of December. Tbe\nentire work is to be constructed in tbe most\nsubstantial manner, and it is believed that\ndispatches can be sent through from tbe\nMissouri river to Sau Francisco without re-\npeating more than once.'
13756f6ceb367fda1bcf035582e66c4b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.4506848997971 40.063962 -80.720915 A writer in a St. Louis paper i» »rB"\ning tho iinportnnce of deep cu['"£®\nthe soil ns n means of preventing the\ndiseases which appear oni the grape. In\nthe preparation of soils for permanent\nvineyards, too much stress cannot be\nplaced upon the importance or drain-\n, ,uo and deep stirring ot the soil. It\ncosts heavily to do this; and in son e\nplaces it is Impracticable; but, Sn the\nend it is economical to do so. Not alone\nare diseases of the vino and fruit pre¬\nvented bv such culture, but the causes\nor diseases or plants and grams a re re¬\nmoved by such management of the\nS°A H A o. B . Worthen of Hancock\ncounty, Illinois, sent samples ..r wine\nof their tirst vintage to .the American\nInstitute Farmers* Club,\nwhich were highly commended by good\njudges. The following Is their mode ot\n""Di'Sawares wore picked September\n14- eatawlias October 12; sorted and im¬\nperfect berries removed, ground in a\nwooden lluled mill, the Catawbas being\npressed immediately, and Delaware*\nalter remaining eighteen hours. Iho\nvat of the wine-pleas is\nthe follower being moved by a 3y& inch\nwrought iron screw, 5 feet long.\n gallons or the must was put in\na wixlv-tive gallon cask, and a syphon\ninserted, one end lilting the bung air¬\ntight, and the other placed in a vessel\nof water, the thermometer in tho cellar\nIndicating G5 d. g. Fan. The must com¬\nmenced fermentation in about _fori\\-\neight hours alter being placed in the\ncask. When the gas ceased to bubble\nup through the water, the cask w as tilled\nfrom another one, and the bung placed\nlightly over the hole for u week, when\nit was driven in tight.\n"Tlie wine cellar or vault is built in\nthe aide of a lull, and Is sixty feet long\nand eighteen feel wide in Iho clear, and\neleven aud a half reel high lu the cen¬\ntre of the arch; iho walls are ot liiuo-\nslone, two leet thick, and arched o\\er\nwith the same initeriul; side w ills are\ncarried up to the lop of the arch, und\nthe space between tilled with eartli.\nThe cellar has a limestone floor, plas¬\ntered with cement, making it rat-prool\nand water-proof. A good well of water\nis in ".he cellar, and a large cistern out¬\nside, eight feet in diameter and fourteen\nfeel high."
0c3c85232974ddace0733261ac8ec736 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1906.319178050482 44.939157 -123.033121 ready to have all tho windows, heating\npipes nnd water and illuminating fix-\ntures put in place. A day would be\namplo time, economically utilized. And\nas to tho cost, in this estimation $350\nwould bo (sufficient to build a good, ar-\ntistic, comfortable little houso of seven\nrooms. Another feature whijh he in-\ncidentally mentions is that such a\nhouso simply could not burn, would not\nrequire repairs, as walls, floors, stairs,\nroof, cellar, and, in Bhort, everything\nbut tho doors and windows, would be\nof cement. In point of beauty, such\na structure would bo as readily of ar-\ntistic design ns any other. In dura-\nbility it would llterably defy tho gnaw-\ning tooth of time.\n"Just say for me, says Mr. Edison\nthat I havo tried it nnd it will\nwork, and that I would do it mvself\nns a business if I had tho time, which\nI haven't. I'vo been working all day\nand all night, a fow odd hours ex-\ncepted, for 40 years, and I caw't begin\nto get through with my own work. But\nsuch houses as I havo outlined would\nunquestionably be tho very thing for\ntho man earning small pay. Tho rich\nman might nt first look nskanco at such\nhouses, but tho timo will come when\nthey will livo in them too. I will see\nthis innovation a commonplnco fact,\neven though I am in my COth year, for\nI ought, accidents barrod, to livo 20\n. years more, at least, and insldo of 10\nyears you will bo living in n cement\nhouse."
0a8802fc805aff9f71a0ef27ecba03d3 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1892.3620218263004 39.756121 -99.323985 I, the undersigned, had tome dimcnltr with mv\nwue, jealousy oeing me cause. The woman be\nns a great deal the younger accused me ot cruelty\nana appi lea ror a divorce, aliening cruelty an the\ncaaae. Thereupon Judge Bertram issued an\nder of three hundred dollars to be paid by me\naa follow, two hundred dollars within fifteen\nday and one hundred dollar within thirty days.\nHe aleo issued a restraining order preventing me\nfrom selling anything. A mortgage of four hun\ndred dollars being past due, with interest, back\ntaxes, store bills and minor debts, and not being\nable to meet my obligation and comply with the\norder, 1 was arrested on the 5th day of December,\n1691, and taken to Oberlin before the Judge-\nwhen 1 rrqeeatod him to remove the retraining\norder and 1 would comply with his order, but he\npositively refused, lie also refused to modify the\nmoney order, but instead ordered me in jail\nand kept there until I did comply with his order.\ngot amdarita from Are as responsible men aj we\nbare to prove that bia order was too extreme for\na man in uij circumstances but said Judge refus'\ned to look at them, neither would he have them\nread. lie also ordered all the personal prupsrty\nsold consisting of six head of horses, seven bead\not cattle, about one hundred tons ot hay and mil\nlet, wagon and harness, and divided the proceeds\namoug the lawyers, the woman and court costs,\nbut still demands of me to comply with his order.\nAny man of ordiuary intelligence knows that the\naverage farmer cannot comply with an order like\nthis. On the 5th day of May said Judge grauted\na divorce to the woman without allowing me to\nintroduce any evidence, aligning all the property\nto the woman, real and personal, leaving me vir\ntually homeless and almost pcuuiles
10529dedd000a650b84555461596fa04 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1914.746575310756 58.275556 -134.3925 was recently in the hills, says the Sew¬\nard Gateway. The sheep were so plen¬\ntiful that they appeared in flocks, not\nless thau six hundred having been seen\nin one day. On one occasion two foxes,\na black one and a red one, trotted iuto\na flock of the sheep in full view of the\nhunters. George Cotter, a member of\nthe party, says that the sheep just\nstopped grazing for a moment to look\nat the intruders and theu went on feed¬\ning as calmly as ever.\nThe seeming apathy in matters poli¬\ntical, which has prevailed for several\nweeks past, has been broken and candi\ndates for legislative honors are spring¬\ning up thick and fast throughout the\nThird division, says the Cordova Times.\nAt this time there are four candidates\nfor senator iu the field; T. C. Price, of\nCordova, democrat; Dr. W. II . Chase, of\nCordova, Wickersham; O. P. Ilubbard,\nof Valdez, Frame nominee, and George\nGoshaw, Chisana, independent. Seveu\ncandidates for the legislature are now\nin the running. Thomas H. Holland,\nChitina, democrat; Dr. David Knik, in¬\ndependent; John Lyons, Valdez, repub¬\nlican; J. H . Ingram, Valdez, republican;\nAl. White, Valdez, independent; J. J.\nFinuegan, independent; C. Day, \\ al-\ndez, Frame nominee.\nThe power schooner Polar Bear, Capt.\nLouis Lane, which left Seattle April l>,\n1913, with a party of scientists and\nhuuters, and which was froz9U iu the\nArctic near Flaxman Islaud last winter,\narrived at Nome on Sept. 22d, from the\nArctic Ocean, by way of Siberia. Most\nof the hunters and collectors left the\nschooner last winter and made their\nway to Alaska seaports overlaud, taking\nsteamers to Seattle. However, Samuel\nJ.Mixter.of Boston, representing the\nSmithsoniau lustitutiou, and George S.\nSilsbee and John Heard, Jr., both of\nBostou, sportemen, remained with the\nboat all the time and arrived there with\nher. Captain Laue retraced his steps\noverland to the Polar Bear last spring\nand resumed command of her. Captain\nLane, who has had many years' experi¬\nence with the Arctic ice, gives it as bis\nopiniou that Vilhjalmar Stefansson\nand two companions, who left Martin\nPoint March 22, headiug north over the\nice iu search of new land, will never be\nheard from again. In his voyage along\nthe Alaska and Siberian coasts, Lane\nkept a lookout for cairns that Stefans-\nson and bis companions might have\nbuilt, but found no trace of the miss¬\ning explorer.
397d8ab1842824226f44e739434c5452 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.2917807902081 41.875555 -87.624421 Is Incurred to Innocent liiimau beings\nwho ndght accidentally throw the\nspring of a trap gun causes many of\n(lie apiarists to prefer to keep an\narmed guard over their beehives.\nThe Cnitey bottoms, situated a short\ndistance from Wharton, are the natural\nhabitat of many blink bears. The ani-\nmals seem to have n 'keen scent for\nhoney ami they inn lie nightly Incur-\nsions Into the adjacent territory In\nsearch of n feast of their favorite\nsweets. One hear can play havoc with\nan apiary In short order. He knocks\nthe stands over one hy one with his\nponderous aws and quickly tibtslns\nan opening' Into honey apartments. The\nn vera go bear has a large capacity for\nhoney nud one of the animals has been\nknown to clean up a score of bee\nstands In a single night.\nHenry Carter, who has a large Hplary\nIn the Holing neighborhood, had an ex-\nciting cxHrlcncn with two honey lov-\ning hears recently, lie has a pack of\nliear dogs which have been used prin-\ncipally to guard his bees against the\nattacks of bruin. The kennel of these\ndogs Is clone to the hives and no Is'iir\ncared to tcutiiro cloe to the sjiot. A\nneighbor borrowed the iaek to trail\ndown some that had been giving\nhim trouble and failed to return the\ndogs at night. Mr. Carter was awak-\nened about midnight hy noise which\ncame from Ills orchard, where his boo\ncolonics were located. He quickly dl\nvlucd that a bear raid was on. Ho grain\ned a rllle hurried out of the Iioiiko to-\nward tho apiary.\nlie took a sudden backward Jump\nwhen a big blnck" lear rose iimii his\nhlud feet from behind a boo hive ami\nstarted toward him. Mr. Carter fired\nat the animal at close range. Thf bul-\nlet wounded bruin and stopiod his pro-\ngress temporarily. At this moment Mr.\nCarter noticed another bear running off\nfrom another part of tho aplnry. He\ntook a shot at It, hut must have miss-\ned, us no sign of blood was found aft-\nerward. The first bear which he had\nwounded soon regained his feet and\ngot so close to Mr. Carter as to strike\nnt him viciously with ouo of his paws.\nMr, Carter bounded behind an adjacent\ntree, where ho got in two more shots\nfrom his rlflo beforo the hear could\nreach him. These bullets put nu end\nto bruin. The liears had completely\ndestroyed his apiary lieforo he arrived\non tho scone. Wharton Cor. Memphis\nCommercial Appeal.
121ec6871b413c1447fa79e862b7f9c5 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.5560108973386 39.745947 -75.546589 "Appraising preserved nationality\nas the first essential to the continued\nprogress of the republic, there\nlinked with it the supreme necessity\nof the restoration—let us say the re­\nrev calment—of the constitution, and\nour reconstruction as an industrial\nnation. Here Is the transcending\ntask. It concerns our oommon weal\nat home and will decide our future\neminence in ttie world. More than\ntiu'se, this republic, under constitu­\ntional liberties, has given to mankind\nthe most fortunate renditions for hu­\nman activity and attainment the world\nhas ever noted, and we tire today ttie\nworld's reserve force in Uie great\ncontest for liberty through security,\nand maintained equality of opportun­\nity and its righteous rewards.\n"it is foily to close our eyes to out­\nstanding finds. Humanity is restive.\nTimet I of tlie world is in revolution,\nthe agents of discord and destruction\nhave wrought their tragedy in pathetic\nRussia, have lighted their torches\namong other peoples, and hope to see\nAmerica as a part tiic «read Red\nconflagration. Ours is the temple of\nlibenty imd*T the law, and it is ours to\ncall the Sons of Opportunity to Its de­\nfense. America must not only save\nherself, but ours must be ttie. appeal­\ning votoe to stiber Uie world.\n“More than all else the prcsent-<lay\nworld needs understanding. There\ncan be no peai* save through com­\nposed differences, and Uie. submission\nof the individual to the will and weal\nof the many. Any other pian means\nammci ly ami its rule of force.\n“It must be understood that toil\nalone makos for accomplisimsii and\nadvancement and righteous posses­\nsion is the reward of toil, and its\nincentive. There is no progress ex­\ncept in tile stimulus of competition.\nWhen competition—natural, fair, inn\npelting competition—is suppressed,\nwhetlnr by law, compact or conspir­\nacy, we liait ttie march of progress,\nsilence tlm voice of aspiration, and\nparalyze the will for achievement.\nThese are but oommon sense truths\nof human development.
1fcaf9d69b9e514412ddb41d10411eeb CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.3301369545916 39.623709 -77.41082 We have bad occasion to say once or more\nin the past that the muddle into which the\nWestern Maryland sale matter had been per-\nmitted to drift, would result in the final act\nbeing the entrance upon the scene of injunc-\ntions, mandamuses or oilier species of litiga-\ntion. Now that it seems certain that the\nFuller syndicate is about to win the fight,\nwe read the following veiy significant sug-\ngestion made by the Reading representatives\nin a statement published in Mondays Newi:\n“Mr. Fuller guys in au interview published\nin the Baltimore Sun of Saturday last that\n¦it appears that the question of who it is\nbeet to sell the road to has narrowed down\nto a choice between the Reading Company\nand our syndicate. The situation has resolv-\ned itself into one of money—who will give\ntbe most for the road in cash?" Well, sup-\npose it has, has Mr. Fuller any reason to be\nsurprised? Does he seriously believe that\nany taxpayer will quietly permit the \nCouncil to throw away about twelve hun-\ndred and fifty thousand dollars good money\nin pursuing the Fuller syndicate “intima-\ntions”? Will mtch a sale eland for a moment\nin the eourtef Could any member of the City\nCouncil justify himself to Ids constituents\nwho are knocking at the doors of the City\nCouncil for better pavements, more parks,\nmore light and other things which cost\nmoney? We assume that Mr. Fuller and his\nassociates were telliug the exact truth aud\nwere acting in good lailh with the City\nCouncil and the public when they formally\nslated that they would not “under any cir-\ncumstances” raise their bid, because they\nmust kuow that if this statement made iu\nthis solemn fashion, is not found to be worthy\nof belief, it will discredit any statement they\nmake to the City Council? Assuming that\niheir bid remains twelve hundred and fifty\nthousand dollars below the Reading bid,\nupon what do they base their hope that they\nare “still in Hie game?
0d92e77d46481e64cb2d5e383fec8473 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1893.5356164066463 37.305884 -89.518148 should be wiped with a damp cloth and\nrubbed dry with a raft toweL Silver\nhandles should be rubbed frequently\nwith whiting. Celluloid, ivorine, bone,\netc., require the same general treat-\nment as ivory and pearl. The handles\nof knives, no matter what the material,\nshould never be allowed to stand in\nwater. The water, particularlv if\nit is hot, loosens the handles\nfrom the tang and also dulls them. A\ntin or granite ware pail or pitcher\nsnould be kept exclusively for knives.\nWhen used it should have some water\nin it, but not enough to come up to the\nhandle of the knife. As soon as the\ntable is cleared the knives should be\npnt in this, to remain until the time\nfor washing them.\nIf you have no regular case for the\n they may be kept in one made\nof canton flannel. To make this take\na piece of flannel about three-q uarte r- s\nof a yard wide and cut off twenty-on- e\nInches. Fold over eleven and a halt\ninches of the selvedge end, leaving a\nsingle thickness of about four inches\nat the other end. Baste the doubled\npart together; then stitch it into twelve\ncompartments, Bind the bag with tape\nand sew tapes on the single flap at the\ncenter. Of course, the flannel is on\ninside. When steel cutlery is to be put\naway for any length of time melt pure\nmutton suet and dip the steel part of\nthe knives and forks in it When cool,\nwrap in tissue paper and then in thicker\npaper or canton flannel Ladiea' Horn.\nJournal.
60d1dfadec8d0cd5af35b32b601a0e35 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8128414984315 38.729625 -120.798546 My dear Douglas brethren : I intend to\ntalk to you, at this time, about the folly\nand sinfulness of worshiping men. The\nheathen bowed to images of wood and\nstone, and some worship unclean beasts.\nBut we of tbi» generation have been guilty\nof the meanest idolatry of all in worship\nioga little lumpofcorrupt flesh and blood,\ncalled Stephen, now defunct. A few weeks\nago, when we ladcned our vessel with rum\nand whiskey for our brethren, who were\nsent as missionaries to the port of Char-\nleston, in the foreign land of South Car-\nolina, to preach the gospel of Drcd Scott\nand Popular Sovereignty, and gave (hern\ngold and silver wherewith to hoy their\nbread and meat, our departed friend was\nfull of promise, and high uplifted as the\ngod of Democracy, and all who would fall\ndown and worship him should have their\nrewind. But, alas! our brethren have\n to us with nothing but bis un-\nseemly carcass. “And devout men car-\nried Stephen to his burial and made\ngreat lamentation over him.\nAnd it came to pass when our chief\npriests and elders were gathered together\nin Convention at Charleston, that many\nof tile heathen of that region would not\nfall down and worship our golden calf.—\nAnd we said unto them they were wrong;\nthat the golden calf would give them\nmany indulgencies; that he would give\nthem bourbon w hisky, apple-jack and\nred-eye as beverages, and had promised\nnine hundred and ninety-nine thousand\nforeign missions, post oflices and custom\nhouses, and to take live hundred uhi\nftigit-s into his cabinet But all Ibis\nwould not avail. Nary a bowel of com-\npassion would be moved amongst them,\nand therefore our brethren returned to us.\n"And devout men carried Stephen to his\nburial and made great lamentation over\nhim.”
6328a3c16773cb8be3093785decca471 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.3356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 Certain Journals liarkig icep fit lojci\nre the employment whal they tei1\nivate counsel In the prosecution of II\ncFarland ease, and to connect my nan\norewilhi I feelimpeUedJo state the fae\ntfiey are, wlilcli 1 was lo'rblddiSn to c\nthe witness stand. Daniel McForlai\non trial for the murder of Albert 1\nqliarilson, and his defense Is insamt;\ne only defense possible'Ittivlew of .11\nneeded facta. . 'Of the meats of that d\nlse I was not called to pronoum\na witness, anil I have nothli\nSly * ID< -ttfljr uuiar. mpwu\ntrust thovMurf> impaneled w\nnder a true verdict thereon, in the llgl\nall the evidence that may be adduce\nhave not the faintest wish that th(\nould regard it with levity or nntovor\n3 prejudice. Bsteeminf the hanging\nlane man a mistake, I should 'contec\nito the hanging of one that was insai\nth horror; and whether his loss (\nwon was impelled by truth* or fklsehoo\nikes no difference in the eyo of the la\\\nY interest in this case centres not In U\ning, buttho dead.' Albert D. RichaP\na was mv friend. I have travelled at\nmped wflli him when wo were almo<\nme upon the vast solitude ot the Plain\nd knew him as brave, generous at\nbio. I never lieord any one breathe\nlisper to his discredit until this troubl\nmc. Thai he could, be guilty^f> sodm\n; a wife from he husband*, coi\niiy to all I ever knew or believe\nliim.that het copld deiiboratel\niolve to install n woman known to hii\nlewd and wanton, as the mother of h\nildren, is to mo utterly incredible,\ni sure that the troth; which; uriderlii\nIs tragedy, has not yet been told, at a\nents fi not generally undvrstood. Kiel\ntlson is deiid, and cannot speak for hln\nf, his memory must be vindicated fc\nb cllorta otjliisjmo'iving friends, or n<\nall, amlihitjae efforts must be nut fori\nder great .disadvantage. | Tlie othi\n>ry has possession of the public ca\ntwcrful influences and interests are a\nted in its support Every scoundr\n10 looks upon woman merely as c\nitrument of his lust, and never aide\ne in distress, except to make her h\ney, rushes Instinctively to thcconclusk\nat Richardson was a seducer. He wan\nevidence of this but such as he flnt\nhis own breast; and every one accu\nnedto lookonawifemerelyasasp\ns of property, whereof the title cann\nalienated by abuse, any moro the\nshe were a horse or dog, natural]\n:line to tbo sumo verdict. Anxioi\nly that the whole truth in the premlsi\nould 1h? developed, and thnt my docea\nfriend's memory should bo vindicate\ntin unjust aspersions, I called on tl\njtrict attorney a few days before that a]\ninted for the commencement ofthiSjUii\nasthim i/ ho, d»ircd:any aid'in pie\nmitig this duty assigned him ^y
82934786df17f1745653b3f1819de1f0 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.228767091578 39.560444 -120.828218 South America, this year, will not ex-\ntend beyond Cape Horn; and the North\nFoie will be exactly in ninety degrees of\nlatitude. Those who lose money will\nlook sad, and those who are in want of\ncash when they borrow, will want it more\nwhen they come to pay.\nLocomotives and auctioneers tongues\nwill run hist. People will talk about the\nend of the world, but it is ten to one that\nthe solar system will not run against the\ndog star between now and next December.\nSea-serpents, this year, will be hard to\ncatch, and none but a conjuror will be able\nto get a quart into a pint pot. Those have\nwooden legs will suffer little when they\nfreeze their toes. Wigs are expected to\nbe fashonable among the bald, but blind\nfolks will have some difficulty seeing.—\nDivers steamboats will blow up this year.\nQuadrupeds will go upon four legs, pret-\nty generally; and cows horns will be crook-\ned. The fate of lottery tickets will be\ndubious; but whoever is President, water\nwill run down hill and ducks will waddle\nas heretofore. The world, this year,\nwill turn upside down, but not in conse-\nquence of the Governors inauguration.\nThe crops of hay will depend upon the\nweather, but whether it rains or not, there\nwill be plenty of sand at Cape Cud.—\nWhoever sells his house to buy moonshine\nwill hardly get his money's worth.—\nWhoever run® to catch the rainbow, will\nget out of breath for his pains? for all\nthat, eastern ladies may be had for buying.\nBut, most of all, there will prevail this\nyear a horrible epidemic, worse than the
61c04215c12737756d62b38624c3ff69 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.7445354875026 39.513775 -121.556359 ilifir ixistonet* nan Inni » nlll l■> n>>o\nThose valleys are always pioductive\nend cl tilt'd with a most luxurious\ngrow th 1. 1 indigenous grasses or clover.\nI'iu* herding arid pasturing of animals\nin great numbers in these valleys dur-\ning tbe long drouth of the summer\nmonths, has already become an estab*\nbshed jiolii v with tbe cattle lot decs of\nC lifoinia, util riot till the snows of\nwinter b' ir n to fall around, do they\nleave their cmd and s lubriotis moun-\ntain retreats, f>ra winters stav in the\nlower 'all v country. In adopting this\nplan in the pa-tm age of animals, they\n•ire kept np n irrcen and nutiicious\nto el at tniliin' expense the entiie year.\nAs all tln se mount in valleys are 1 1 a-\nver-i d by never failing streams o| the\n water, and often eneouii ass nir\nlakes of considerable extent, ami all\nsui rounded bv m elolii'eiit forests, ma-\nny of tin m are being made the per-\nmanent borne ot the Settler and bis fa-\nmilv ; mid the uniform good success\nthat Ins thus far attend'd the intro-\nduction and cultivation of fnut trees in\ntin -e vallevs, and I lie facilities for rut-\nting bav of the fine>t ijn:il l ly an 1 in\nanv ijii imil v for supplying the cutis\nstantlv increasing d> maud among tile\nfoothills and mining districts, renders\nit certain that at no di-'aut day, tic ir\nmore permanent occupation will be re-\nalized, laying the foundation for yet\nanother source of prosperity to 1-i Do-\nrado eouniy, for I'd Dorado covers a\niidDi'v re 41 n of this mountain conn*\n1 1y . —PlncervVU Amerlrnn.
7cdbe8ac76c15f4e104e43870a384307 THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.8589040778793 39.768333 -86.15835 Near the mouth of Coal Creek, where the Company has\nlarge quantities of lands salt water has been diiwoTered\nequal in Quality to the Kanawha. This water was pro\ncured some 35 years ago by boring. Boon after, the On\nondaga salt finding its way down the Wabash and Krie\nCanal, Mr. Thomas, the proprietor, finding hlmeelf un- -\naoia to compete wun it, abandoned the manufacture, lu\nhis boring he encountered that which recently dis\nclosed facts prove to have o coal oil.\nThose lands all lie in cloe proximity to the Wabash\nand Kris Lanal, some of them cpon Its banks.\nMr. John McManomy, the tui:if atrent of the com\npany. Las retumed from a tour ot observation of the oil\nregions of Pennsylvania, convinced that the lands leaded\nby the company, in Fountain and Parke counties, has,\nso far as the general lorn, stion of the country and the\nsurface indications pretent themselves, a stong analogy\nla the and mineral substances as found on French\nCreek, Pennsylvania, where the greatest quantity and\nthe most valuable oil is found Mr. McManomy has pur\nchaned for the company the most approved machinery.\nwun ani toe natures necessary for operation, and is pre\nparing with experienced workmen the speedy develop-\nment of the hidden treasure of the lands of the company.\nAH the indices of coal oil, found in localities where it\nhas been procured, are strongly marked in various lo-\ncalities of the lands of the Company, affording every\nrational prospect ol success. Trie company tninks it nn\nnecessary to make any other reference to the character\nof the lands, otber than the report and map referred to\n$100,000 of the stock, being 2,000 shares, Is proposed\nby the Company to be offered in the market at onn- ha- l f\nIts par value, being 925 per share, for the purpose of\naiding the Company in a speedy development of tho\nlands.
049123df74354480331c81d33763e5c2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4002731924206 40.441694 -79.990086 The Examiners In the Combine Salt Begin\nTheir Task The Companies Admit\nMany Points, but Require Proof That\nTheir Roads Are Parallel.\nHabbisbubo, May 25. This afternoon\nthe examiners in the Reading combine suit,\nCharles H. Bergnoer and J. C . McClarney,\nof this city, qualified and had a brief sit-\nting. Attorney General Hensel, Deputy\nAttorney General Stranahan and George\nNauman, of Lancaster, associate counsel\nior the Commonwealth, were present, as\nwere also M. E. Olmsted, general counsel\nfor the defendant corporations, and Will\niam B. Lamberton, resident counsel for the\nPhiladelphia and Reading Company.\nAgreements were put in evidence and\nmaps showing location of the different rail-\nroads the Attorney General statin? that\nhe was prepared to prove certain things un-\nless the defendants admitted them. Mr.\nOlmstead agreed to furnish data as soon as\npossible showing the amount of trans-\nported by the various railroads to tide-\nwater, all general orders issued since the\ndate of the lease by the Philadelphia and\nReading and Lehigh "Valley Railroad Com-\npanies, the promoters and stockholders of\nthe Port Reading Railroad, the names of\nlessees of the Lehigh Valley Coal Com-\npany's lands and the relations of the coal\nand railroad companies.\nHe refused, however, to admit the sug-\ngestion of the Attorney General that the\nLehigh Valley and Susquehanna Railroads\nare parallel and competing, or that thev\nhave the same termini and extend through\nthe same towns but on different sides of a\nriver. On such points.he said.the Common\nwealth would have to produce proof. After\nreplications had been hied by the Attorney\nGeneral,joining issue on the matters alleged,\nit was decided to have another sitting Wed-\nnesday, June 1, at 3 p. jl
1b6e641e9199a1e230c119545379ffe1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.0698629819888 39.745947 -75.546589 When the English Lutheran Church wanted someone to serve as a trustee; when the Wilmington Trust\nCompany wanted someone to run and build up its real estate business; when the housing movement needed\nn secretary and treasurer; when the New Castle County Mutual Fire Insurance Company wanted somebody\nto he vice-president; when the trustees of the Delaware Stale Hospital at Farnhurst wanted someone to\nserve as president; when the AVilminglon National Defense Committee wanted someone to get funds, and\nwhen the Masons needed someone to manage a new temple project, there was a general chorus of "Let\nCharlie do It!" In fart, It Is surprising how many things the people of this city hove been willing to “Let\nCharlie do!” We have no doubt that he has noticed (heir liberality of thought and action in that respect.\nIn fart, this "Let Charlie do it!" has become almost a ronArmed communal habit. Wo suspect that even\nwhen he was o little hoy and coal and wood were to lie carried, snow to he shoveled and chores to be\n his Ave brothers ami his one sister were generous enough to say, time after lime, “Let Charlie do It!"\nThe Arst business venture of Mr. Kurtz was with George W. Stone, who was in the ship chandlery and\nmanufacturers supply trade. While there he noticed that Wilmington real estate »vas not moving os rapidly\nselling as advantageously ns it should. So he opened a real estate oilier, raised the banner of competition\nand yelled, “Let Charlie do III” Our community heard and heeded the call. When he went to the Wilmington\nTrust In 1903, he took his real estate business with him and it has hern three ever since.\nHe Is a member of the Wilmington City Club, (he Wilmington Whist Club and various other or­\nganizations. But his real club is in his handsome home at Claymont and his best enjoyment Is associa­\ntion with his wife, his two sons and his daughter, tint there, no doubt, it Is a real pleasure for him\nto hear someone say, from time to time, “Let Charlie do HI"
2d0ab158c69b16fe9b2015d8635d6981 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1868.596994503896 39.24646 -82.47849 ever any before so universally adopted into\nuse, u "every rwHsitry and among all classes,\nas this mild last Saonu Pill. Tha obvions\nreason is, thnt ilia a snore reliable and fai\nmore effectual remedy than any oilier. Those\nwho have tried il know that II cured them:\nthose who have not, know that st cure neigh\nbors snd friend, and all know that what it\n.doe ones A does always I list It never (ails\nthrough any fault or neglect of its composi\nUon. W have, and can show, thousands np-o- n\nthousands of certificates of remarkable\ncures of the following complaint, but such\ncures are known in every neigritiorhood, and\nwhy should we pu btish them. Adapted to sll\nsges snd couditioas In all climates; containing\nneither casseaol or any deleterious drug, they\nmay b taken wUh snMy by snrWxiy. Their\nsugarcoating preserves Ihewierar fresh snd\nmakes them pleasant to lake, while being\n vegetable no harm can arise from their\nuse in any quantity.\nThey operate hy their powerful influence on\nthe internal viscera to purify the blood and\nstimulate it into hearty action, r more the ob-\nstructions of the slomsch, bowels, liver, and\nother organs of the body, restoring their ir-\nregular action to health, and by correcting,\nwherever they exist, such derangememenls\non are the firstorigin of disease.\nMinute directions are given in lha wrapi\nonthe box forth following complaints, wuich\nll.e- - e Pills rapidly cure.\nFor dyspepsia or indigestion, Llstleasness,\nLanguor and Loss of Apiwliie, they should be\ntaken moderately to aiitnulaie the stomach\nand restore its healthy lone and actior.\nFor Liver Complaint and its various symp-\ntoms, Billious Headache, Sick Headache,\nJaundice or Green Sickness, Billious Colii\nand Billious Fevers, they should be judicious-\nly taken for each case, to correct the diseased\nactiou or remove the obstructions which came
1a0b4366473bc2617722fe425393cdb2 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.6863013381533 37.53119 -84.661888 At Junction City, Boylo county, for\ntbo past two years, hns been located\ntho X. Freeman it Co. , business con-\nducted on a broad gauged metropolitan\nplan. Tho management claim thnt\nthey soil nny and everything In tho\nhouse furnishing line, and tho plan of\nselling on credit, on terms of periodical\npayments, makes It so that tho mot\nhumblo in life can enjoy the comforts\nof desirable, furniture and houso fur-\nnishings. The method of business was\nwelt portrayed In a sale made In tho\npresence of tho special editor of this\nIssue, and the unique conditions easily\nshowed the great benefits of such ti\nllrm, and their generosity In faith.\nSummarizing tho deal in question, a\nyoung man, believing in tbo virtues of\nmatrimony, had become a benedict,\nand to start In life bad only the lovo\nthat defies fatalities and S3 In cash.\nWith frankness related to the head\nof the corcern, his condition and wants.\nThe $3 he tendered as first payment on\nsuch good as tbe firm saw fit to entrust\nhim with. What that $3 accomplished\nIn getting furniture and furnishings\nfor that now home, was a colossal sur\nprise to the disinterested spectator a\nbed room set, stove, chairs, kitchen\nfurniture, window shades, floor mat-\nting, wall decorations, etc, were seen\nto pas from the house to the largo\nfarm wagon in waiting. This Is only\none of many Instances of tho kind.\nwhere practically speaking, tbe home,\nentirely, Is furnished and tbe purchaser\nallowed his own time to pay for tbe\nfurniture and furnishings.\nIn two years tho business has grown\nuntil now tbe spacious quarters at\nJunction City aro inadequate to care\nfor tbe great congress of stock, neces\nsary to supply tbe dally wants of their\ncustomers.
525ff7ca893a3ccd13ef07d9e1122ec7 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1858.0178081874683 39.513775 -121.556359 sued out of ".ho District Court. lith Judicial\nDistrict in and for Butte County, and .Mato of Cali-\nfornia. «*ain»t JACOB g-MORRIS. ard MAP.VB\nMORRIS, and in favor of THOMAS WELLB, for\ntha aum of Throe Hundred and Ninety-Si*, Eighty\nOne-Hundredths ($396.80) Dollars principal debt,\nwith interest on said sum at the rate of four (I) per\ncent per month, from the Twealy-Senenth (27th)\nday of November. A . I). 1356 . until paid ; Also all\ncosts of suit taxed In the sum of Twenty-Three\nNinety One Hundredths ($23,90) Dollars; together\n■with ell the accruing costs on said writ, to me di.\nreeled and deliverrd commanding me to sell all,\nor so much thereof as may be sufficient to pay the\nJudgment above specified and all costs of stilt, of\nihe mortgsgul premises hereinafter described, to\nsatisfy said demands, 1 will on the TWENTY-SEC-\nOND (22) DAY OF JANUARY, A . D. 1833, at the\nhour of two (2) I. M. of said day in pursu-\nance of the requirements of said writ, sell at public\nsale to the highest bidder for cash, the following\nmortgaged property, described in said order of sale\nr.i> follows to wit: Dots number one, two. three,\nfour, five and six. (1,2,3. 4, 5 and 6) in Block num-\nber thirty-six, (36). and Lots number one, two, five,\nsix and seven, (1, 2,6 ,6 , and 7.) in Block number\neight [R]; Also. Ike lot of ground fronting on Bird\nstreet eighty (80] feel, and on lluntoon sire"! thirly-\nr.x (361 feel. being the lot of ground trl the corner of\nBird amt lluntoon streets, on which the old Metro-\npolitan Theatre formerly stood. The lots of ground\n•hove specified being d< scribed according to the\nmap or plan of the Town of Oroville, w hich is tiled\nin tno county recorders office of Uuite county, and\nsaid property is iillsituated in the Town of Oroville\naforesaid.
358ea51ba63154936ffbcdc5079fd410 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.5068305694697 31.960991 -90.983994 ize the Whig vote*, contrasted with the Lord Brougham. —T ho following is an\nsteady increase which characterizes the extract from the speech of Lord Broug-\nDemocratic votes. From 1828 up to 1843, ham on the Texas treaty. From this it\nthé result of each succeeding election would appear that the*rumor of the BriP*\npre-ents a gradual increase in the Demo- jsb Government intending toentc into a\ncratic vote, with the exception of- two treaty with Texas for the purpose of inter-'\nye trs, whilst,on the other hand, the Whig fering with the institution of slavery in\nvote exhibits sitlgular ebbs anu flows, the Untied States is ali humbug :\nshowing conclusively that it is only on ■ “It was stated in the merican papers,\ngreat occasions, and when mighty princi- that it was on whal his noblç friend and\npies and measures are at stake, that that himself had said, on the occasion to which\nclass of the American people to the he had referred, that the American Soc-\npolls at all The Democratic voters np- retary founded his ooinions ns to the ne\nI'oAr to be like regular soldiery in the cessity and propriety nf taking this step,\nfield always under arni£—always ready Now, it was a most preposterous and most\nat a moments warning—alwavs prepared groundless opinion, that any person in\nto march in solid phalanx at the first tap Parliament—that nnv statesman of this\n(if the drum, year after year. On the country—entertained the slightest wish\nother hand, the Whigs are like an ill-dts to interfere with the municipal rcgula-\ncipfined body of millitia., who come out tion* of the United States. ,There was\nonly on particuh.tr emergencies, but, when not a shadow of reason for the supposition\nthev are roused, coming forth in over- that he—(he could answpr forhrmselfj\nwhelming numbers, and carrying all be- and could also, he was sure, answer for hie\nfore them.
0a32798e59c1bf54b29b671c48d08a9c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.160273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 Dbnvxji, Col., February 27..William\nFarley, who has just arrived from th(\nMedicine Bow country, tells the story of c\nthrilling bear hunt in which two old front\niersmen lost their lives. Farley and twe\ncompanions James Wilson and Jake\nShultz, were on a projecting trip on the\nLittle Pass cieek, which debouches into the\nMedicine Bow fork of the North Platte,\nSouth of Elk mountain. It has been the\ncommon belief that for years that rich\nplacer mines existed in this nook of the\nIiockies, and the little party started out\nlast fall in quest of the bidden gold. They\nselected a valley spot at the continence of\nLittle and Big Pass creeks for their prin¬\ncipal camping place and the locality where\nthey should meet in the event they sepa¬\nrated in the mountains. Here they\nerected a permanent deposited\nthe bulk of their supplies. About a mile\nfrom the junction of the two creeks heavier\ndams spread over the valley, extending\nsouth for miles into a labyrinth of ponds\nand rush falls. These are almost impene¬\ntrable owing to the thick and distorted\ngrowth of cottonwood and low oak, heavy\nihaparral aud the swampy formation. They\nire even very difficult to explore in winter\nwhen the ponds are frozen. The solitude\nind means of Hiding found here make it\nthe retreat for every description of moun¬\ntain animal, from the grizzly and lion to\nthe coyote and rat. Soon alter Farley aud\nbis partners located at the forks, early in\nOctober, the footprints of a huge grizzlv\nbear were discovered in the neighborhood.\nTraps were set for the kinj? of the moun¬\ntains, but he did not enter them.
2129f8533d132c760383c25704632b58 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.4835616121259 40.063962 -80.720915 A long discussion between Butler and\nGen. Boynton took place relative to the\nconversation about the alleged expendi¬\ntures of money in Louisiana, and at its\nconclusion Gen. Boynton retired.\nEx-Marshal John £, G. Pitkin was\nsworn and testified that he had a conver¬\nsation with James E. Anderson on the\nsubject of the protest of the Parish of\nEist Feliciana and desired the reading of\na prepared statement in regard to the\nmatter. After discussion it was decided\nto permit the reading of the statement as\na part of his sworn testimony, which\nwas to the effect: That Anderson swore\nto, first, the protest in his (Pitkin's) pres¬\nence; second, the protest mentioned by\nAnderson never existed to the knowledge\nof witness, and third, the protest was\nbanded to Pitkin by Anderson duly\nsworn to, and to the of hia recollec¬\ntion there were no blanks in the document\nwhich Anderson has sworn had been'filled\nby parties unknown to him. He thought\nit very probable that the third protest\nbad been framed by Anderson, while he\nwas under the infiaence of liquor. He\n(Pitkin) in his statement challenged any\none to state that be ever attempted to\npersuade Anderson to do aught contrary\nto the law. He thought it very probable\nthat he bad mentioned to Anderson that\nif be could do so conscientiously it would\nbe well to make a p/otest, he (Pitkin)\nbeing personally aware that thecondition\nof affairs in East Feliciana Parish were\nnot altogether pacific. The statement is\nvery voluminous, and refers also to the\nconversation had with Anderson in Wil-\nlard'e Hotel, touching various oonversa*\ntiocs between that gentleman and Stanley\nMatthews.
87c7902775254277b86d9af631db650b COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1865.5493150367834 41.262128 -95.861391 Id thc*a remarks we do not Inten J to\n«M4 a«j r;Se«tioB apon tbe geati.taca\nwbo Ti»itdd our city and garc an audi-\neace to owr cituens. £tctt man is pre-\n•Haed to be a gentleman until the eon-\ntrary i> ihown; but every uiux that U a\ngaUemois is not aa ab! a Hngin«cr, nor is\nItpTopcr for meo by resolution to cn-\ndorse men either as gcntlc-meo or cn^i-\naecrs, until they know something about\ntfcons. TbU inacb for the resolutions.\nWe understand tLit Mr. Sswmour, tbe\n£qginccr of tha Compaoj, real rifb\nMay sneers, an article from Ttu Bcc r,\nia which we stated that the Oi b. w\nroute was fifteen miles lon^f r tlnn the\nitraight rontCj and that he correckd our\nQtatgaacut by giving as hi said tbc exact\ndiCereBM ki the length of tbe two \nwhich was a frsctioa less than mns miles.\nWe gate tbc distance from oar kaowl•\nof tbe country, and from tb? routj *.•\n•apposed (never having s«fcn i; siruo the\nroad was located) tbe road woald pwrsu?\nM tbe so-called ox-bow loate, and wc\nare happy aow to bo alio to correct f<by\nMthonty" our former statement. Wc\nalso made a statement tint if tb? citizens\nof Conocil Bloffi and Omaha would deed\naa* half of the real estate ib 4%: tit its\nto the P<ic;5c liailroad Compr.iv.\n•we presumed tbat the straight route wculd\nbo eatirclj praciicabl:. Tj this tb.' Ea-\ngiaeer of the Company dtaau'rwl and ap­\npealed to Judge Bloomcr, who, we ao-\nderstand, sustained the demurrer, and\ndecided that tach ware not tbc ticks o'\not oar i'iiu.'iis, bat only tha. (:iaUuidu ;i\nvisw oi Cwi. Babbitt."
aeedddd2eaeca7aabfb2127f9f263a1a THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.6188524273932 32.408477 -91.186777 rdoos release Madeline from the idol\ntand force her to follow them.\neAs they land stunned, in the dark-\nhmess below, they are immediately set f\nyupon by some more of the Hindoo r\ngang and overpowered. The Orien-\ntals then imprison each one separately\nin alcov cells, locked with steel grated\n,tdoors. When the doctor and the po-\nglice are thus imprisoned, the Hindoos\nr bring Mandeline down into the cellar\nand show her the captives. One of the\npriests then moves away a section of\nthe floor with a lever, disclosing a\nfirey furnace with huge tongues of\nflame leaping up through the opening.\nThe priest threatens they will be\nthrown into this furnace unless Made-\nline tells of the hiding place of the\ndiamond they are seeking--the Sun\nof Siva, from the idol's eys. Madeline\nis unable longer to hold out against\nthe dusky and even thought\nthe doctor and the police advise her\nnot to tell, she finally consents to\nproduce the ill-fated gem.\nShe tells them that it isina safe\ndeposit vault in one of the city's\nbanks. The Hindoos arrange to send\nMandeline under guard with two of\ntheir members, who dress themselves\n~. s chauffeurs. They accompany her\nto the bank and even to the vault\nwhere she unlocks the drawer and\nshows the Hindoos the much-sought-\nfor gem. For a minute they foup\ntheir watchfulness as they greedily\ngaze at the diamond. Mandeline is\nquick to take advantage af their care-\nlessness, and with a quick leap she is\nout of the vault and slams the door\nshut and locks it, making the two Hin-\ndoo rascals prisoners. Mandeline im-\nmediately informs the police, and they\narrange to rescue the doctor and the\ntot.er officers.
4fde8e37997071585affc67f0a81feef NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.2090163618195 41.681744 -72.788147 place he has worked in the theater\nbusiness, he found.\n"New Britain audiences appreciate\nanything that requires skill regard-\nless of what type of an act it is,"\nMr. Finn declared. He pointed out\nthe fact that acrobats, regarded by\nsome as an unpopular attraction, re\nceive tremendous applause if they\ndo something skillful or out of the\nordinary. Previously an orchestra\nwm a great attraction, but of late\npeople have turned against this typo\nof entertainment, unless there are\nmany novelties. Then it scores heav.\nily, he declared.\nThrough his wide experience as a\ntheater man in Boston, Worcester,\nLynn, Brockton, New Bedford, Sa-\nlem and Cambridge, he has had an\nopportunity to compare the New\nBritain audiences with those of these,\ncities. Probably (he only dilfertnc--\nin the vaudeville fans in this city\nand others is that the New Britain\n do not like travesty, regardless\nof who is starring in the act. Some\nof vaudeville's headliners have rot\nno t with success in this here. An-\nother peculiar sidelight on New\nBritain audiences is that they will\nnot applaud during a difficult acro-\nbatic trick or dance step a.s is done\nin most audiences in other cities.\nThe people wait until the trick or\ndance is over and then applaud.\nAsked if the vaudeville people n --\ngard New Britain as an unresponsivo\ncity, Mr. Finn said it depended upon\nthe act. If the turn does not go\nover, the "variety stars" blame the\naudience, but if it is a success they\nheap words of praise on tho heads\nof the New Britain people.\nPeople in this city are not Inclin-\ned to write the manager expressing\napproval or disapproval of a parti-\ncular show.
1ded88cc837b5ba022320c10ecb4ae6f THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.7254098044425 39.369864 -121.105448 'James'Lankford, residing in the neighborhood\n•5f Marietta, Ohio, had a ternblc'fight with three\nehormous spotted black snakes, a few weeks\nago. lie had been repairing a barrow by the side\nof a large tree, in one of his helds, when a strange\nsensation came over him, paralysing him to such\nan extent as to render him powerless. He felt\nconscious that danger was approaching, yet\n•eemed unable to save himself. He heard a rust-\nling Cbise on the tree beside him, and was par*\ntially aroused from his stupor by a snake six feet\nfour inches in length, and seven in circumference\nstriking him on the back, passing over his shoul-\nder, around his body, and under his arms. An-\nother snake coiled itself around his body. Seeing\na third approaching, and aroused to desperation,\nhe seized an axe which he fortunately with\nhim, and by a lucky blow severed ft in two. This\none was five feet eight inches long. He then\nturned his attention to ridding himself of his\nother two foes, at that time beginning to tighten\nthemselves unpleasantly around his breast. A\nsevere contest ensued, lasting twenty minutes,\ndaring which Mr. L . was thrown down several\ntimes. The snakes kept up a continual hissing\nnoise, and emitted a fetid, sickening odor. At\nlength, the largest snake, in endeavoring lo\nstrike Mr. L. in the mouth, at which ft made re-\npeated efforts, was seized by him, back of the\nneck, between his teeth, and crashed. It in-\nstantly let go its coil and fell to the ground. The\nthird snake also let go, fell, and made its escape,\nMr. L. being too much exhausted to attempt a\npursuit.
123da1f3ebd84d4b612c3e53b316e888 THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1910.7630136669204 40.114955 -111.654923 She looked at him with a sudden\nsinking of the heart Had this godlike\ncreature roaming tho woods this faun\nof the island been denied a brain\narticulate speech Was sho doomed\nto spend the rest of her Ute alono in\nthis paradise of tho Pacific with ft\nharmless madman forever by her side\nWhat a situation was that In which\nsho found herself\nShe was a highly specialized product\nof the greatest of universities In\nscience and in philosophy sho was n\nmaster and a doctor She should havo\nhad resources within herself which\nwould enable her to be Independent of\ntime outside world a world In which\nher experience selfbrought had been\nbitter In which the last few weeks\nhad been one long disillusionment-\nAnd yet she was now overwhelmed-\nwith craving for companionship for\narticulate speech as if she had never\nlooked Into a book or given a thought-\n the deep things of life If this\nman beside her would only do some\nthing say something be something\nrather than a silent satellite forever\nstaring In wonder If sho could only\nsolve the mystery of his presence an-\nswer the Interrogation that his very\nexistence there alone presented\nHer future her present Indeed\nshould have engrossed her mind What\nshe was to do how she was to live\nthe terrible problems In which his\npresence on the Island involved hoi\nshould have been the objects of her\nattention they should have afforded\nfood for thought to the keenest oi\nwomen She simply forgpt them in\nher puzzled wonder at him It would\nhave been much simpler from one\npoint of view if she had found tho\nisland uninhabited and yet since tho\nman was human and alive in spite of\nher judgment her heart was glad that\nho was there
0425c97b722994ff697b215d22929f65 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.360273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 Apparently the desertion of helpless babes\nby their natural protectors hM gotton to be\ncommon hereabout* This paper has re*\ncentlv given accounts of two suoh oases in\nthe city, and now another oomes from Bel*\nmont county. A well dressed young woman,\napparently 18 years of age, went from\nIfellalre to Jacobabnrg on theft., Z AC. road\nThursday. The conductor, when his tralu\narrived at the station, called out, "Jacob#-\nburg," and supposing all paaiengers were off,\nstarted up. He discovered presently, that\nhia lady passenger wu atill on the train, and\nwhen asked why abe aid not get off, she t>aid\nahe did not know they had passed her atop*\nping place. It was Mining very hard and she\nproposed to go ou to Kelsey'a and walk back\nafter the rain, which she did. In the even*\nlug abe made her hppearatice at the store of\nJ. D. G'.over, saying that she was from Arm¬\nstrong's and asked to stay all\nnight, as it was getting late and she\nwas tired. 8be was given her suppe-,\nand at bed time retired with her child\nfor the night, in the morning she did not\nmake ber appearance and the family hearing\nthe child co iug went to the room and found\nthe child the only occupant, the mother hav¬\ning disappeared. Search and inquiry were\nmade, but no tidings of the mother oould be\nobtained-she bad mysteriously disappeared.\nThe event has created considerable excite¬\nment in and arouud the quiet village aid a\nlarge number of people hare been engaged\nin talking up the affair. In the mean time,\nthe baby, which ia said to be as pretty as a\nrosebud, was at once taken possession of by\nthe family of Mr. M . Trimble, where it will\nfind a much better home than with tbe ap¬\nparently heartleas mother .who thus aban¬\ndoned it.
722f6628cb5267b9f9ba7efdb8161656 THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.8726027080163 39.768333 -86.15835 at any time alter twenty yers from the\nIDlh day of January, lb Iti, at the pleasure of\nthe State, and until redeemed is transferable\nupon surrender in tb city ot New York.iu books\nprovided for that purpose by the Agent of\nState there rtsident, by endorsement thereon,\nHid according to such other rules and forms a\nire cr msy te prescribed lor that purpose. And\nlor the pajmei t of the interest and redemption\nof the principal aforesaid the faith of tho Mate\nof Indiania is irrevocably pledged "\nTbe t wetty years leferred t j will expire on the\nl!).h day of January ncx', aud the question first\no be considered is whether these stocks I all\ndue at that time, and whether the coutract\nmade by the State rtquires that pay ment shall\nbe made on that day. lly some it has been\nured that tbe words, "at the pleiaureof the\nState," are to be treaded as surplusage, and the\nmoney bed to fa.l due precisely at the end of\nthe twenty years. In support oi tins view it is\nargued that because a State cannot be compell-\ned to pav her debt by legal process, tbe pay-\nment will in atl cases be at "the pleasure of the\nStute" I fail to perceive the force of this, and\nmust hold that the laDguage in question means\nju-- t what it says, that tbe State may consult\nher own convenience as to the time of making\n unless there is something in the history\nof the transaction, out of which this form ol\nindebtedness sprang, or something coutained in\nthe law creating it, which required that a d. Ha-\nrnt construction should be rut upon the Ui. - -\nguage. The naked legal effect of tbe iutru- -\nmeiit, if not modified by history or provisions of\nthe statute creating it, I take to be this: That\nuntil the end of the twenty years the State has\nno right to require the creditor to take their\nmoney, and thus stop the pa) meet of the inter-\nest, but that the money waa to be paid at some\ntime after the end of the twenty years according\nto tbe pleasure and convenience of the State But\nthis pleasure of the State must be reasonably\neiercied, so as not to defeat the payment of\nthe principal sum absolutely. The construction\nI have heard contended for, that the State in ty\ndeter the pay ment of tbe priucipal twenty five.\nfifty, or one hundred years, or in fact forever,\nprovided the interest i promptly paid, cannot be\nmaintained: for that would be to defeat t'ie ope-\nration of the concluding sentence of the instru-\nment, above quoted, which solemnly pledges the\ngood faith of the State for the payment of tbe\nprincipal as well as the interest. This solemn\npledge would be a nulity if the State was at\nliberty to defer the payment of the principal for-\never.
0e46f0a1eba6a5688564ed9c8b3b1245 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.8101092579943 39.745947 -75.546589 The sooner the people of the State of Delaware make\nup their minds that the convention system of nominat-c\nIng state and county tickets Is a miserable failure,\ndesigned for the benefit of a few men who want to\ncontrol the nominations, the better It will be for all\nconcerned. The state and county conventions recently\nheld In Delaware are good examples of this fact. To\nbring the matter closer to home, It Is only necessary to\nrefer to the recent Democratic convention held in\nGeorgetown. It was evident to every ordinary intellig­\nent man that one man virtually controlled the whole\nseries of nominations. That man was tho . county\nchairman and a stronger ticket, composed of far better\nmen, could and would have been nominated bad the\ndelegatee not been under obligations to vole for the\nmen the county ring, headed by the chairman and\nabetted by certain others, desired to nominate. Good\nmen were sacrificed that the ring might have Its sway,\nand this Is but one of the many Instances In years\nthat have tended to prove that the convention system\nof nominations is merely the means by which a few\nmen gain their ends. There Is only one way to get\nbetter nominations, and that Is to have the direct\nprimary, as championed by Theodore Roosevelt, and a\nlittle study will soon convince all Intelligent men that\nthat Is the way to Improve the personnel of every\nticket nominated In this county and state, and In the\nUnited States, for that matter. The question is, how\nmuch longer do the voters of Delaware intend to allow\nthe politicians of both parties to tell them what they,\nmust have? It Is up to the people to say that they\nwill have a direct primary system, but they are not\nInclined to take this stand. Instead, they are willing\nto be servile tools of the politicians awhile longer In\norder that the said politicians may continue to pull\nthe legs of the taxpayers. How easy we areflf\nany wonder that the politicians have such a poor opin-
0b99670f11f56a4d61834e13978e0907 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.4808218860985 40.441694 -79.990086 An important decision made by the Supreme\nCourt, with reference to tho provisions of the\nBrooks law, has just been received. The case\nwas that of a farmer in Crawford county,\nnamed John W. Altenbaugb. Though not a\nliquor dealer or keeper of a hotel or restaurant,\nAltenbaugh was indicted in September, 1888,\nfor furnishing liquor to persons visibly affected\nby intoxicating drink. He had been previously\ntried and acquitted of furnishing liquor on\nSnnday. The case was taken to the Supreme\nCourt. In tbe opinion handed down by Justice\n'Williams, a clear definition of that portion of\nthe Brooks law relating to the furnishing of\nliquor is given. Justice Williams says:\nIt is true that tho general provisions 'of the act\nof 1837 relate to and are designed to regulatethe\nsale of liquors by the various classes of venders\nknown to the law. They are not directed against\nthe use or by the individual citizen, and\ntbey do not Interfere with his right to supply his\ntable with them or furnish them to his family or\nhis guests. Bnt when he goes beyond this limit\nhe goes beyond the protection to which a citizen\nas such is entitled, and bis acts become a subject\nor police Interest and control.\nTbe seventeenth section or the act or 1887 pro-\nvides that it shall not be lawful for any person,\nwith or without license, to furnish by sale, gift or\notherwise to any person any snirltuous, vinous,\nmalt or brewed liquors, on any election day, on\nSunday, nor at anytime to any minor, person of\nknown intemperate habits, or person visibly\naffected by intoxicating drink. This provision is\nnot confined to dealers, but t directed against\nany person. The thing forbidden is not tbe sale,\nbnt the rnrnlshlng, or Honors to one visibly\naffected. Whether the fnrnishlnj-
0ffce39411bc9ec2d4308a6ca42efa8f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.301912536683 58.275556 -134.3925 The council met Monday night as\nusual. The bond of Judge O'Connor\nwas approved and ordered filed. No\nclaims against the city were presented.\nThe report of J. F . McDonald as mar¬\nshal, also as chief of the fire depart-\nmeut was presented and placed on file,\nThe council got through with its busi¬\nness and adjourned at an early hour.\nThe Douglas Harmony Band has is-1\nsued invitations to its many friends iu\nJuneau and Douglas to join iu the cel¬\nebration of the first anniversary of the\norganization, at Natatorium Hull, on\nWednesday evening, April 20th. The\nboys have asked for patronage and sup-\nport 011 numerous occasions, but in j\nthis instance they invite their friends\nto enjoy the pleasures of the evening\nas guests of the Band.\nRev. F . C. Krause, formerly pastor \nthe First Congregational Church of\nthis city, addressed a large and atten¬\ntive audience, in that edifice last Sun¬\nday evening. Mr. Krause told of his\nexperiences on his trip down the Yukon\nlast summer, the places where he had\npreached, the climate, the people, the\nnatives, and many other things of in-\nterest, especially to Alaskans. He\ndwelt particularly on the Esquimosaud\nthe etforts being made in their behalf,\nMr. Krause is of the opinion that, al-!\nthough their sufferings may be allevi¬\nated, as a race they are doomed. Mr.\nKrause has unbounded faith in the\nfuture of the great north, and deplores\nthe general lack of knowledge of this\ncountry among the people of the\nStates. At the close of the service he\nmet many of his Douglas friends who\nstayed to grasp his haud.
71ed562267882d22b98f54c613388e63 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9246575025368 40.063962 -80.720915 Imbroglios among the stockholders,\nState proxies, Ac., of our various rail¬\nroads are becoming fashionable. We\nhave recently had reorganizations of\nthe officers and boards of directors of\nthree leading railroad companies, the\nRichmond <fc Danville, Virginia Cen¬\ntral, and Orange A Alexandria, and\nin each instance'. a violent partisan\nspirit has been manifested, and in some\ninstances considerable personal feeling\nhas undoubtedly been engendered. The\ncause of difficulty has been the inability\nof the individual stockholders to agree\nin their choice of officers for the com¬\npany, with the State proxies, who rep-\nreserttthe Interests 6f the Stated. Natu¬\nrally enotfgb, with the overwhelming\nmajority of Individual stockholders,\nwho have themselves" been confederates,\nit constitutes no cause' of political re-\nproach, and is nO proof of incompe¬\ntency, to ^have been during the late\nwar, as "Bill Arp" says, a "rebel\nso-calledNot so, however, with\nthe Slate/. proxies, and thus, in\nevery instance, collision has ensued.\nFour-firths of the individual stockhold¬\ners of the Danville Road, preferred\nGeneral Johnston as President, but\nGovernor Peirpoint expressed the opin¬\nion that his election would be Injudici¬\nous. and, the State proxies voting\nagainst himi he was defeated.. So in,\nthe case of the A Alexandria\nRoad, John S, Barbour, was elected by\na large majority^ but>the State proxies,\nunder the guidance of. Lep'is MacKen-\nzie, bolted tho Convention,~ and elected\nanother. In the case of,tho Virginia\nCentral, Col. Fontaine, yfho has been\nPresident for twenty years, was defeat\ned by the State proxies, who voted: for\nWm. C . Wickbam, late a Brigadier\nGeneral of Cavalry, and'meruber of the\nConfederate Congress, but always\nknown, during the war, to be a Union\nman at heart, fighting not for political,\nconvictions, but merely in obedience to\nEublic sentiment. Considerable feeling\nas been evinced respecting these elec-\ntions among that portion of the com¬\nmunity which is interested in these;\nroads, and they have been free¬\nly commented upon by a por¬\ntion of the press. Tho Enquirer, in\nits issue of yesterday, assails Governor\nPeirpoint, for having interfered im¬\nproperly in the affairs of the Railroads\nto further partisan purposes. It is to\nbe deeply regretted that difheuties\nshould nave occurrred,involving politi¬\ncal or other question*, than loose of\ngeneral qualifications, but the com¬\nmunity of Richmond will require\nmany evidenoeaof an illiberal, partisan\nspirit, before they will receive as Just\nsuch a charge against Governor Pelr-\nSolnt.
2a229802621e1d8506d6ff1af29b1276 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1907.869862981989 39.623709 -77.41082 guant and hard of features, with dis-\ncontent and restlessness marked in her\nface. She had a book iu her lap, but\nshe read very little. For her, too. Hie\npast was nearly done, nnd the only fu-\nture before her was that which has to\nbe reached by crossing a certain river.\nAt a table, a bundle lu her lap, sat a\nwoman still young, not more than thir-\nty, at work diligently, even fiercely,\nnever lifting her head from her work,\nbut sewing ns if for life. Persons ex-\nperienced in such matters would have\nrecognized that her work was of a\nvery difficult and beautiful kind, em-\nbroidery of tbe highest art, which\nshould be worth large sums of money.\nShe was dark, of regular complexion\nand beautiful still, with a shapely bead\nnnd regular, classical features, and had\nshe raised iter eyes from work you\nwould have perceived Hint they were\nsuch ns a painter loves to gaze upon\nnnd to draw, deep and dark and limpid.\nBut they were full of sadness; there\nwas no light of laughter in them; nnd\no;. her lips there was no light of sralies.\nIt was the face of a woman no longer\nhappy. While she worked, her lips\nmoved continually, as if reproaching\nsomebody—perhaps herself.\nThe table liad a few magazines an<>\npapers upon It. There were the Illus-\ntrated aud the Queen, nnd certain\nharmless and godly periodicals such as\ncommittee* of Institutions consider\nadapted to the intellect of lady resi-\ndents. Nobody, however, though the\nroom was pretty full, was reading.\nPerhaps this was due to the fact that\nit was Thursday evening, so that the\nweekly papers were stale. Perhaps,\nhowever, it was because the XJeoYiie iu
ce24f3fa9d361f0c6b0210f22d3a859e THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.2726027080162 40.618676 -80.577293 Wages are paid out of the results of joint la­\nbor, are limited by the ability of the company to\npay, but must not fall below minimum standards\nnecessary to conserve human life. Costs of living\nare not a basis tor fixing wages but only one of\nthe standards to test the adequacy of wages.\nLabor is paid for what it produces as well as\nfor those intangible personal contributions which\nevery partner in a going concern must make.\nThe payroll is only one of the items included\nin cost production. In the following industries\nwages constitute a small proportion of total ex­\npenses: chemicals, 11.3 per cent; blast furnaces,\n5.1 per cent; petroleum refining, 5.2 per cent;\nmeat packing, 6.1 per cent. For 75 defense and\nrelated industries wages constitute only 15.7 per\ncent of total out-pay. Increased wage rates entail\nrelatively drains on the incomes of the ma­\njority of industries, but are essential to main­\ntaining the welfare of the majority of our citizens.\nIn addition, practically all contracts covering de­\nfense production make generous provision for\nshifting the greater risks in defense production\nfrom employers to the government.\nIt is unthinkable that labor's income should be\ndetermined in any other way than by collective\nbargaining. Free enterprise depends upon the em­\nployer's right to contract and free labor upon its\nright to contract covering terms and conditions\nof service. Wages must not be fixed for "stabil­\nizing" or freezing purposes. War industries are\nmaking profits and can afford to pay workers ade­\nquately. If profits are excessive, they will be re\n(iuced by taxation. Likewise workers' wages are\nsubject to taxation, and the larger their incomes\nthe larger their tax payments.
0f907afcd801f4c01052ec13674d28c0 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.6753424340436 40.063962 -80.720915 very sensible hits. After giving hia his\ntory of 32 years in this country, showing\nhe waa truly a laboring man, and that hit\nintetest* and sympathies were all witfc\nthe workingmen. He said he felt it e\nduty to advine them not to be hasty, but\nto iiauso and consider lest they mighi\nfind themselves sold out to the Demo\ncrats after the election, which he fell\nsure would do them no good. He said\nthat though he did not approve of GrnntV\nlast Administration yet Haye« had beer\ndoing all right, and he called upon ani\none to say wherein he had not. He be\nlieved Haves would do the Terv best he\ncould to remedy the existing evils, no*\nthat the question was before the country\nand at any rate it was the beat policy tc\n a«k the party in power for what wai\nwanted, and if refused then there woulc\nbe time enough to make a new party\nwhen he would likely be with them.\nMr. B . thought that the man, who bj\nhis toil and honest skill had risen tc\nwealth, instead of being called a rascal\nshould be honored, for were we not al\nstriving for the same object?\nHe wanted no more greenbacks bal\npreferred to come to specie payment, s(\nthat a dollar would buy a dollars worth.\nHe wanted a currency that was not al\nways fluctuating in value and unsettling\nthe trade of the couutry. Capital, h«\nsaid, could not prosper without labor\nnor labor without capital. When hi\nhired to work for a man he wanted him\nto be able to pay the wage*.
9ee65b7572362b0f80cde48d9f7d743c THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.3346994219287 40.618676 -80.577293 potisms of the world are the negations\nor opposites of these principles, all of\nwhich result in Tyranny. And dissent\nis given no voice in a Despotism.\nThe couiILdn|j^}ic_Cett.tuiiy hstimfc*'\nDemocracy and Despotism isynow on.\nAt the present it is confined*o coun­\ntries across the seas. There is no guar­\nantee that this conflict may not reach\nthe Western Hemisphere. No man can\ntell what a day may bring forth. This\nis no time to take a chance with any\nparty or group which may drive us in­\nto such a conflict, either through prop-\naganela methods or through the secret\nbetrayal of our country.\nWhile we, as a people, may choose\nwhatever form of government we\nwant, we will not tolerate the highly\norganized movements now in oper­\nation which seek to disrupt our Gov­\nernment through unlawful methods,\n our law-enforcing agencies\nin the performance of their legitimate\nduties, stir up the people to commit\nacts of sabotage, and create anarchy\nand disorder among all classes through\nsubversive practices.\nFor the accomplishment of their\npurpose they have honey-combed our\nindustrial plants with agitators, sys\ntematically trained thousands of\nspeakers and leaders through whom\nthey seek to capture the labor move­\nment, developed a widely distributed\npress and general literature, organized\nradical youth movements, and set up\na concrete program for the promotion\nof general disorder.\nThey have perfected powerful or­\nganizations which owe supreme allegi­\nance to foreign countries and to alien\ninfluences whose major purpose it is\nto create a revolutionary movement\nwhich will affect every nation in the\nworlel—including our own—and this is\nto be accomplished through treachery\nmaliciousness, sabotage and universal\nlawlessness.
0b52bda92c3dc669ed10dc10a58a2e29 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1889.028767091578 39.745947 -75.546589 mu.in I i! , ) total number affected, 07;\nnuauig. «-■up;«- 1 under ruins, 30; total, 87.\nSixty-seven ( rum* hud been removed from\ndie ruins. Tue list ,,t dead follow»; Thomas\nJones, aged 30 years, bricklayer, single, Al-\nicghuuy; Georg < Mason, skull crushed; John\nHill, 13 years old, colored boy, employed C3\nbootblack in barber shop; diaries Fritch, 1Ö\nyears old, employed in barber shop, found\nstanding in the shop with a snungo in his\nhand; Samuel Stringer, US years old,\nprinter in Juergen's office, lived in\nAllegheny;\nyears old, live«! at Allegheny, en ­\ntombed in the Weldin building; beard\ngroaning in the afternoon, but it was impos­\nable to save him; William Goettman, 17\nyears old, employed as clerk in Thomas\neathor store, imprisoned in falling walls;\nJoseph Oehring, Pi years old, Allegheny;\nJohn Uodgersao, carpenter, home at Castle\nShannon; George MoGough, single; Samuel\nBrown, aged 30, carpenter, Allegheny; John\nDonnelly, bricklayer, Nunnery Hill; Richard\nCarroll, bricklayer, Allegheny ; Leonard\n- Ui itThauer, bricklayer. The body of Suuiuol\nBrown, Jr., a young carpenter, was taken\n>ut of the cellar of Willey building. His\ntoad was crushed to a jelly, his body\ndoubled, with bis hands up to his head.\nA wheelbarrow which be bod been using\nwas alongside of him. A young man was\nat the spot where ho was killed when the\nbody was taken out Said he, with the tears\ntrickling down his face; T just missed what\nmy la-other Ham got, because I was sick. I\nwasnt working, anil that's how 1 escaped.”\nIn addition it is stated by Assistant Chief\nSteel, of the fire department, that os many\nas twenty others may bo still under the fallen\nstructures. Others express a fear that sev­\neral ladies who were in Weldlu's book store\nwhen the crash came did not escape, while\nsome entertain a fear that some unknown\nmen arc lying dead in Spencers alley, which\nis filled with greet piles of brick and timber.\nThe truth of the matter appears to be that\nthe accident was even more far reaching in\nits deadly effects than was at first supposed,\nand that the horrible results will not all be\nknown until the last brick has been removed.
054d59db79809d1144609cf03b6da4f1 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.5986301052765 40.441694 -79.990086 tbe best physicians in the county, but his skill\nwas no avail in tbe case of his wife, who kept\nher bed for more than two years. One day\ntbere was no grown person about the house and\nher little boy came running In with a bad cnt\non bis finger or band, bleeding profusely. With\ntrue motherly forgetf ulness of sell, she sprang\nup, found bandages and properly dressed the\nwound: then sitting down to rest she looked\naround: everything seemed so pleasant and she\nfelt so nicely, she decided not take her bed\nagain, and she did not She lived several years\nlnthe enjoyment of comfortable healths\nJames Waters, the recluse of Horse\nIsland, near the mouth ot tbe Detroit river,\ndied a few days ago. He lived tbe life of a\nCrusoe on the island for 40 years, and little !s\nknown of him except he came from England.\nHis only companions at tbe time of his death\nwere two dogs and 40 cats. Among his per-\nsonal effects a wonderful fowling piece\nthat was proved by a manufacturer's mark to\nhave becu made in England 200 years ago. It\nIs called a pontoon gun, and was used by the\nhermit in tbe wholesale slaughter ot water-\nfowl. Tbe length of tbe gun is 11 feet its di-\nameter at tbe muzzle Tyi inches, and at tbe\nbreech &K inches. It bas a flint lock, and one\npound of powder and three pounds ot shot con-\nstitute a charge. With one discharge of the\nweapon he often killed 60 or 60 waterfowls.\nAmong the original documents pre-\nserved in the Interior Department at Washing-\nton, the most interesting are the relics of 1780,\nabout 23 of which, hardly averaging the size of\nan encyclopedia, are safely stored where lock\nand key protect them from the casual visitor.\nTbe most striking feature of thee books is the\nremarkably legible writing with which the\nfounders of the Republic recorded the name of\nevery bead of a household in the United States.\nThe census-taker-s
4ad6828e9af0eda6a748beb9756b7591 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.7712328450025 41.681744 -72.788147 The fine thing to me about this\nworld's series is to find that a lot\nof folks haven't forgotten me. I've\nbeen in the oil game for years, and\nlearning to crack out a freeze proof\noil is simple compared with pitching.\nIf we don't get the right mixture on\nthe oil the first time we can try\nagain, but the pitcher has only one\nguess and after the ball goes into\nthe bleachers he hasn't any chance\nto retrieve himself.\nThe opening game was almost\nperfectly planned and I think the\nAthletics deserved to win because\nthey took advantage of chances and\nthey were best when they were\nthreatened. We old timers have to\nstick together, and even if I am\nrooting for the Cubs I have to root\nfor Ehmke. The old head won the\ngame over the youngsters who will\nhave their day sometime.\nI haven't any criticism to offer of\neither team. The errors were part\nof the game and young English had\n least one tough ball to handle be-\ncause it bounded in a funny way to\nhim. But that didn't really count\nFoxx's home run settled it. If\nHornsby had been able to hit the\nball at all in the third inning the\nresult probably would have been\ndifferent, as it probably would have\nmeant that Ehmke would have been\nout for a pinch hitter and that Eoot\nwould have finished the game.\nThe turning point of the whole\ngame, I think, was when Ehmke\noutsmarted Hornsby and struck him\nout. Hornsby was way back on the\nback line of the box laying to step\nin and hit a curve and Ehmke shot\na fast one past him for a strike,\ncatching him unbalanced and then\ncurved him with a slow and then a\nfast curve. It was fine pitching and\nfine control and It doesn't mean that\nHornsby isn't a great hitter. In fact\nyou can't fool a dumb batter it is\nthe smart ones who get fooled worst--
0560d74c6733ad4ece87785fe7576dee THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.3849314751394 43.994599 -72.127742 filled with blood," "Oil, for a closer\nwalk with God," "What various hin-\ndrances we meet" and "God moves in\na mysterious way. " Yet was he so over-\ncome of melancholy or black bile that it\nwas only through the mistake of the\ncab driver who took him to a wrong\nplace, instead of the river bank, that\nhe did not commit suicide.\nSpiritual condition so mightily affect-\ned by the physical state, what a great\nopportunity this gives to tho Christian\nphysician, for he can feel at the same\ntime both the pulse of the body and the\npulse of tho soul, aud he can administer\nto both at once, and if medicine is need-\ned he can give that, and if spiritual\ncounsel is needed he can give that an\nearthly and a divine prescription at the\nsame time aud call on not only the\napothecary of earth, but the pharmacy\nof heaven. Ah, that is the kind of - or\nI want at my bedside, one that can-\nnot only count out the right number of\ndrops, but who can also pray. That is\nthe kind of doctor I have had in my\nhouse when sickness or death came. I\ndo not want any of your profligate or\natheistic doctors around my loved ones\nwhen tho balances of life are trembling.\nA doctor who has gone through the\nmedical collego aud in dissecting room\nhas traversed the wonders of the human\nmechanism and found no God in any of\nthe labyrinths is a fool and cannot doc-\ntor me or mine. But, oh, the Christian\ndoctors! What a comfort they have been\nin many of our households! And they\nought to have a warm place in our pray-\ners as well as praise on our tongues.\nI bless God that the number of Chris-\ntian physicians is multiplying and some\nof the students of the medical colleges\nare here today',
0269b74145c9bdb04085903d6c794343 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.491780790208 39.623709 -77.41082 extremely fertile and the different\nshades of green look veiy pretty. The\nriver winds down through the valley\nand empties into the Pacific ocean that\nlies glittering in the west. This river\nis only distinguishable by its sand lied\nas it, like manv others in this country,\nruns upside down with the sand on top\nand the water underneath. Looking\nup the valley toward the east we can\nsee what remains of the San Diego\nMission surrounded by olive trees, very\nold ones planted by the Mission Fath-\ners. The day we were at Mission Cliff\nwe were able by going out on the\nlookout platform, to see the mountains\nsixty five miles away covered will)\nsnow, while surrounding its everything\nwas green, even tho roofs on houses.\nIt was hard to realize that botli could\nbe in tiie picture. Connected\nwith this little park is an Ostrich farm.\nThere are about fifty live ostriches\nhere, and are considered one of the\nhomeliest and sturidest of birds. The\nmale birds are quite vicious; the kick\nof one of these birds is quite filial.\nThey haye no feathers on their legs or\nunder their wings. When they wish to\nchallenge another bird to a fight they\ndrop on their knees and wave their\nwings in the air. The feathers of the\nwings and tail are used for commerce.\nWhen the birds are through molting\nand the new feathers grow out, before\nthey become soiled the birds arc pluck-\ned. This is veiy dangerous and many\ntimes the hit da seriously injure the\npluckers. The ogga are hatched in an\nincubator as the female bird docs not\nget iu captivity.
20fc31394bee0da5385a4270fabb1390 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1886.3438355847286 39.623709 -77.41082 Commissioners, and in any case in which\nsuch permission is granted tlie manure shall\nhe removed to the rear of the premises upon\nwhich such stable shall be erected, and in any\nevent it shall lie removed once a month, and\nfor any violation of lids Section, the owner\nor owners of the said house, wall, fence or\nstable shall pay a line of five dollars for ev-\nery day the same shall continue, but not ex-\nceeding twenty dollars at any one time; and\nproceedings shall thereupon be taken to re\nmove said house, fence, wall, or stable.\nSec, 3. It shall he lawful for any person\nengaged in building or repairing any house,\nto occupy one-half part of any street, lane\nor alley, clear of the pavement in front of\nthe lot on which such house is building, or\nrepairs are making, with the materials nec-\nessarily used in making such building or re-\npairs, until the same he covered or repaired,\nand thirty days thereafter, and no longer,\nunless by permission of the President of\n of Commissioners under the penalty\nof forfeiting one dollar for eacli and every\nday the same shall be permitted to remain\nthereafter; also to occupy one-third part of\nsuch street, lane or alley, with plastering\nand other materials necessary for plastering\nsuch house or building, for sixty days, and\nno longer, unless by permission of the Pres-\nident of Board of-Comraissioncra, under the\npenally of forfeiting one dollar for every day\nthe same shall be suffered to remain there-\nafter ; tint no fine for violating this Section\nshall exceed the sum of twenty dollars.\nAnd any person occupying more than the\nproportion of the width ofthe street, lane or\nalley permitted by this section shall forfeit\nand nay a line not exceeding twenty dollars\nnor less than one dollar.\nAnd be it farther enacted and ordained by\nthe President and Board of Commissioners,\nthat tliis ordinance shall take effect from the\ndate of its passage and t hat any or all exist-\ning ordinances inconsistent •herewith, arc\nhereby repealed,.\nMay 13 80 Ot.
29d4eeba0cfb1ca5bbdf2bdc601b2295 FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1916.7991802962456 35.318728 -82.460953 Under and by virtue of a decree of\nthe Superior Court of Henderson\nCounty, the undersigned appointed as\ncommissioners of the court to sell for\npartition among the widow, Mrs.\nJosephine Morgan and the several\nheirsv to whom the said lands had\nbeen devised by J. P. Morgan in his\nlast devise, the decree of sales having\nbeen made by consent of all the\nparties at interest, we will on Mon-\nday, November 13th, 1916, at and be-\nfore the court house door in said\ncounty in Hendersonvilie, between the\nhour of 12 o'clock noon, and 3 o'clock\np, m., sell to the highest and best\nbidder or bidders, all of the said Mor-\ngan lands at Rugby, near the French\nBroad River, on the public highway\nleading' from the Captain W. D. Mil-\nler Farm to. Horse Shoe Station \nthe Shaw Creek section, the said land;\nconsisting of two lots or tracts, one\nknown as the tract bought by J. 'P.\nMorgan from J. P. Johnson, contain-\ning 19 acres, mere or less, and being\nin woods or grove also what is\nknown as the home place, on which\nis one of the finest building sites in\nWestern North. Carolina, also the old\ndwellings, outbuildings, a. most excel-\nlent well of water and some out-\nbuildings the xact number of acres\nin this tract is not now known to\nthe commissioners, but perhaps ia\nfrom 60 to 75 acres, the title is well\nsettled and the - boundaries well\nknown and the land will be offered\nfor sale in separate lots and as a\nwhole and the bid --or bids accepted\nwill be those that aggregate the largest\nsum.
25410ca15c0d9b5d50d0480fc6ce7641 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.392076471109 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho West Virginia Enterprise, o\nCharleston, an organ of the colored peo\nplo, thus speaks of tho selection of Rev\nC. II. Payne (colored) as a elelegate U\nChicago, by the Third District Rt-publi\ncans: "Tho selection of Rev. C. H\nPayne as a delegate to the National Re\npublican Convention by the Congresa\nloniU Convention, which mot in this cit;\nSaturday, May 12th, was an action b;\ntho party that binds every colored Re\npublican to it and its principles witl\nunswerving fortitudo and endurance\nSuch actions will unito tho colored force\nwith ties more lasting than time an<\nmore endurable than the cliffs tha\nbe;stud our mountains. Thisrecognitioi\ncame to us, not because the party wa\nafraid of losing our support, for the;\nknow us to bo men of pnnciplo and no\nmen of They know that as Ion;\nas tho grand old party's banner is em\nblazoneel, as it is, with the emblems c\nliberty and truth, equal right* to all mei\nand protection to American labor w\nwill stand by her and bend all our enei\ngics by justico and right to make he\nsuccess assured. Wo look upon tho ae\ntion of this convention as being th\nbeginning of better things in the future\nRev. Payno made a good hit when h\nsaid in lus speech after his election, the\nho did not tnank tho convention for thi\nhonor as coming individujdly to hin\nbut he was grateful to them in tho nam\nand interests of hi# poople who mako u\nbo important a part of the population e\nThird Conirmwional district. Th\nshows 80 plainly the man ho is."
1f4e359e26fbee57777aba944d183c2b CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1900.7383561326737 39.623709 -77.41082 tliis at first because she is refined and\npretty. But n week or two ago I dis-\ncovered she was in love with me and\nwished to marry me. Perhaps she did\nnot say so in so many words, but I\ninterpreted what she did say and her\nactions correctly. 1 know.\n•Then I realized for the first time\nthe power stie had over me. 1 followed\nher merest suggestion without being\nable to tell why—except that it was\nhypnotism Sometimes these sugges-\ntions were spoken, sometimes uot. At\nany rate, 1 obeyed them."\nIt was remarked that perhaps Mr.\nPutnam, because of his previous ex-\nperience with hypnotists, was an un-\nusually good subject and the young\nwoman was simply experimenting up-\non him. Mr. Putnam shook ids head.\n“No; lias an object. 1 am not go-\ning to tell you how I found out it was\nher intention to marry me, but it was\nin away that loaves no doubt in my\nmind as'to her intentions. She has re-\nsolved upon it, and my trip to the li-\ncense office was simply for my own\nprotection. I have no objections to tla-\nyoung woman personally, but I do not\nintend to marry lior If 1 can help It.\n"I know from what I have done at\nher suggestion that it would lie an\neasy matter for her to come here some\nmronlng. place me In her power and\ncompel mo to obtain a license, and\nmarry her. While in a hypnotic state\nmy actions do not betray the fad to\nany one. and, therefore,
156f2e95b20e15e8024d1ed272945e04 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1906.5630136669204 37.451159 -86.90916 The Stout liiKtltulloiiH nro part of the\npublic school xvstrm and are headed\nby the best educators In the state For\nInstance L D Harvey former stale\nsuperintendent of public Instruction\nupon completing his term was at once\nengaged as city superintendent In Me-\nd nomonle at a larger salary than that\npaid In the state otlke He refused an\noffer to take charge of the public\nschools of Cleveland to remain at Me\nnomonle Other Instructors are of the\nsome high grade and draw better sal\ngrits than can be secured elsewhere\nSenator Stout believes as well In mu\nnlclpal Improvements and one of his\nactivities has been the building of\nmodel roads around Menomonle Ho\nsecured a governmental crew to show\nthe farmers of his county how to build\nroads anti then kept up the agitation\nuntil once rutted country highways be-\ncame as boulevands to the ordinary\nrond In older parts at the state\nThis agitation of his for clean and\n cities has taken root In the\nstate and this last spring has been\nmarked by a wave of agitation In n\ndozen cities of the state At Delavan\nthe work done was chiefly on the part\nof school children to show farmers the\nneed of having better roads Even In\nMilwaukee the Idea has taken root and\n40000 school children have banded to-\ngether to keep the back yards tree of\nsmall articles offensive to the eye\nIn Sheboygan the school children\nformed a Green Button brigade and\non one day In the early spring the city\nwas literally swept clean The children\nbegan work each In his own back yard\nand when they had finished with the\nyards thousands of brooms were wield ¬\ned In the streets to gather the dirt Into\npiles where the wagons loaned by the\ncity carried the dirt away\nWausau also furnished teams and\ncity laborers free to old the school chll ¬\ndren In the work of cleaning up
5c01576f974b04a7f0ab6deb60b788f8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.6260273655505 39.745947 -75.546589 Having been "stung” once the con­\ntractor will hardly prepare hjs ma­\nterial again in advance of contract,\nwith the result that work on the\nMississippi river next year will be\ngreatly retarded. The working sea­\nson on the Mississippi Is also neces­\nsarily limited as the high waters do\nnot recede generally before June, and.\nconsequently, the period for active\nwork Is considerably shortened.\nOn the 35-foot project on the Dela­\nware river between the sea and Phila­\ndelphia, two or three government\ndredges are constantly at work, to­\ngether with dredges owned by private\ncontractors. Over a million dollars a\nyear is being spent on this project,\nand, if the river and harbor bill Is\nnot passed soon, the government\ndreges will be laid up and the forces\non them discharged, while work un­\nder will be reduced to a\nminimum in order to cover office ex­\npenses and the care of the plant. As\nthe Delaware is one of those rivers\n(hat silt up quickly. It is readily seen\nwhat abandonment of work on the\nchannel means to the large shipping\ninterests of the Quaker City.\nWhat is true of the Delaware Is\nequally true of the channel between\nthe Gulf of Mexico and the city of\nMobile, Alabama, at the head of Mo­\nbile Bay. This channel -Is 33 1-2\nmiles long with a width of 900 feet\nand a depth of 26 feet at low tide.\nSince the establishment of this chan­\nnel commerce has grown by leaps\nand bounds, and it has required un­\nceasing efforts on the part of the\ngovernment to maintain the channel\nat its present dimensions.
0d97a8193dfe15aaadfafd8770215bc7 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ChronAm 1900.5849314751395 47.478654 -94.890802 Washington, July 31. — There is a\ngrowing expectation at the state de-\npartment that news of the utmost Im-\nportance may be forthcoming at any\nmoment from Peking. It was even\nthought that something might be re-\nceived yesterday, but this hope was\nJoomel to disappointment. The few\ncablegrams that were received referred\nto minor matters and did not touch at\nall upon conditions in the Chinese\ncapital. It is known that a second ef-\nfort has been made by our own gov-\nernment to get another message from\nMr. Conger and that nearly all of the\npowers also have resorted to private\nagencies In their own interest with a\nlike object. The fact has just been\ndeveloped that one of the last acts of\nthe late Col. Liscumb before his death\nat Tien-tsin was to undertake the dis-\npatch of a spy to Peking. Gen. Dor-\nward, the British commanding officer\nat Tien-tsin, also sent cut two messen-\ngers, and it Is believed that Jap-\nanese did the same. Up to date not\none of these messengers has returned\nto Tien-tsin, nor has there been a\nsingle word heard from any of tbern.\nThis fact, however, has not caused the\nabandonment of hope, and this is true\nIn particular of the message expected\nfrom Mr. Conger. Minister Wu is, per-\niaps, the basis for this hope on our\npart, and he maintains an unshaken\n'onfidence in his original assertion that\nthe news, when it does come, will show\nthat the legationers are alive. The\nmessage reported to have come\nthrough Missionary Wilder at Chcfu\nis regarded as most promising. Min-\nister Wu had no cablegrams himself\nyesterday, nor had the state depart-\nment any directly from China. Nothing\n"urther has been heard as to the date\nset for the beginning of the movement\n'rom Tien-tsin toward eking, and it is\nsaid here that this is a detail that\nmust be fixed by the military com-\nmanders upon the spot.
018c0c63f405117029bb33a3f446dce2 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1883.6369862696602 37.53119 -84.661888 tation. These reports I have nut at all re-\nvised and it could scarcely be expected that\nmy editors should know all thl and act ac\ncordingly. Aud so abnoxlou pauages\nhave crept into both book. Yet I hope\nthe beat and that the truth will outweigh\nall and win lis way iu spite of handicap.\nAud while on this topic, jutt let me say\nthat not one penny of profit, in a pecunla\nry way, is to accrue to me from Mr. Price's\nbook. I gladly furnished him what mate-\nrial I had In making up hi volume, trust\ning bint to cull with delicacy and judg-\nment from records never intended for the\npublic. Thl be Iim done with the true in-\nstincts of a gentleman and the judgment\nof one who know by experience what the\ngeneral public wants In acb a case. Be-\nyond this connection persooal good will\nand affection, which have both strengthen-\ned with more Intimate acquaint ance and a\nwith that the work In Kentucky might be\nworthily chronicled, there Is no other, of a\nbutlness character. Never will I accept a\ndollar in the way of remuneration or com\npliment from this record of my own life\nand labor. I feel humbled for my genera\ntion In ever maklrsg tbls disclaimer, but it\nI needful and I therefore make it, so that\nno one can truthfully charge me with ve-\nnality In this matter. Aud I will also state\nthat I do not have the sermon published\nfor profit. I have uked Bro. Greenwood\nlo reduce the price of "God's Love Story"\nlo $1, If It can be done; and If there should\nda a call for aubseuueat volumes, to put\nthem at a low a price as the expense of
118125a87fb1c8caecb0949bb40dc114 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.7630136669204 40.735657 -74.172367 spectators crowded on the floor. Joe\nFairchild, who acted as referee, refused\nto call many fouls. Play was started\nat 9 oclock. Joe Harrison, the crack\ncentre of the New Yorkers, received the\nball on the side from the Cells' part of\nthe court and caged the first bail.\nStumpf. the home team jumper, who\nmade the only three gonls scored by\nhis team, tied it up with a neat one\nfrom the centre of the hall. Bralower,\nthe crack fast guard of the visitors,\nwas next In line, and he made a beuu-\ntiful one-hand shot near the foul line\nBefore the whistle blew for time in the\nfirst half, Bralower made It count six\nfor his team. The first period ended\n6 to 2 in favor of the Roosevelts. Im-\nmediately after play In the final\nhalf, Stumpf grabbed the leather on .a\nswift pass from Welsh and made a\nclean cage of the ball under the basket.\nA foul was called on the New Yorkers\nfor some unknown reason and Stump/\nsucceeded. The Manhattanites were\ngiven a free throw, the locals being\nreprimanded for pushing, and little\nSeverln sent It through the net. Cat-\nterall and Stumpf scored fouls for the\nCells” In the half, while Severln tal-\nlied another. The Celluloids will meet\nthe Mereurys, of New York, at Cellu-\nloid Hall next Thursday night. John\nF. Monahan, Democratic candidate for\nsheriff, was present at the game last\nnight und threw the first ball. Tt\nseemed to be a Democratic house after\nMr. Monahan was urged to make a\nspeech. The lino-up:\nCelluloid.
37c0b602e520d4e94df6165edccdd14c THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1876.8975409519835 41.004121 -76.453816 tiio Presidential office by ballot, and proper\nreturns of the votes so cast xhall bo made,\nunder seal, within ten days, to the Secreta-\nry of finite or other ollicer lawfully perform-\ning the duties of such Secretary in tho gov-\nernment of the State, by whom tho said re-\nturns shall bu publicly opened iu tho pres\nence of the Chief Ktccutivo Magistrate of\nthe Stutc, and of thu Chief Juslico or Judge\not thu highest Court thereof, and the said\nSecretary ,Chief Magistrate mid Judge shall\nassign to each candidate voted for by a suf-\nficient number of citizens, a proportionate\npart of the electoral yotes lo which thoSlato\nshall be entitled, iu mauncr following, that\nIs to say : They shall divide the whole mini\nher of votes icturned by the whole number\nof tho Slate's electoral vote and the resulting\nquotient shall bo the elcttoral ratio for the\nState, and shall assign to candidates voted\nfor one electoral vote fur each ratio of pop\nular votes received by then; respectively, and,\nif necessary, additional electoral votes for\nsucccsalvc largest Auctions of u ratio shall bo\n to candidates voted fur, until tho\nwholo number ofthe electoral votes of tho\nState shall bo distributed; and the said offi\ncers shall thereupon niaku up and certify at\nleast threo general returns, comprising tho\npopular voto by counties, parishes, or other\nprincipal divisions of thu State, and their\napportionment of electoral voles us afore\nsaid, ami bhall transmit two thereof, under\nseal, to tho scat of government ol tho United\nStates, ono directed to tho President of tho\nSf nateund'ono to tho Speaker of the House\nof Representatives, and u third unsealed re-\nturn shall bo forthwith filed by tho said Sec\nretary iu his office, bo recorded therein, and\nbo ut all times open to inspection,"\nTlieso provisions, with u few slight chan\nges uf phraseology iu the remaining text of\ntho Constitution rendered necessary by\nthem, will constitute a complete, workable\nAmendment, by which several objects of high\nimportance will be secured.\n1. It will render almost impossible the\nelection of a minority man in u contest be-\ntween two candidates u peril very nearly\nif not actually incurred in the recent elec-\ntion,
0330fe63c2308c417d3a0d15be92bab6 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1889.8835616121257 43.82915 -115.834394 Four lots of lambs, of ordinary grades,\nwere feil by Professor Rotxrts, to deter­\nmine the coat and rati,» of increase, from\ndifferent fixxls. not only of the ca rasa,\nl>ut of wool also. Fro m Novemli er to\nApril—five months—the lambs were\ngiven quite a variety. The four lots con­\ntained throe lambs each. One lot. was\nfed on a car!omicc-us diet, having all\nthe whole corn and timothy hay they\ncould eat. with half a ]x>und of nxits each,\nthe estimated cost of the food being $2.70.\nAnother lot was given food of a ni'ro-\ngenouscharacter, e, nsistiagof 223 pounds\nbran, 10(1 pouuds cotton seed meal, 313\npounds clover and 100 pouuds roots, the\ncost Ixiing $4 (Ti. The other lots were\nfed on mixed nitrogenous foods, for com­\n witli tile first two loti. A re­\nmarkable result was that the lambs feil\non uitrogeuc.us food drank much more\nwater than the others, nearly four times\nas much. While the cost of ttie carbon­\naceous food was $3 70, less ttian that ol\nthe food of the other lot $4.(irt), the gain\nfrom th e carlxmaeeous food in the five\nmonths was 48.70 pounds, the gain from\nthe nitrogenous foods 71.31 pounds, the\ncost of the gain from the carbonaceous\nfood $7 59; and the cost of tue gain from\nthe nitrogenous food $0.02. The increase\nin wool was alBO in favor of the nitrogen­\nous food; the first lot shearing 4.25\npounds and the second 7.31 pounds, or\nan increase of 72 per cent, in lavor of the\nnitrogeuous fools.
015074fcb7c7b698c38029bbb0d21e6d EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.0452054477423 39.745947 -75.546589 did not make any reply, “Well, Im\ngoing to be the next senator or there\nwill be a vacancy,” be said. The remark\npaused from lip to lip, the Addicks\npeople commending him for bis firmness,\nand tha Higgins people condemning him\nfor his obstinacy\nWhen tbe Higgins men are asked\nto the condition of affairs they say that,\nwhile there is no change to all outward\nappearances they think that t he chances\nfor a break of the deadlock are growing\nblighter hour by hour.\nThere is a marked absence in tbe at­\ntendance ot the adherents of both men\nand tbe Hotel Richardson looked deserted\nyesterday afternoon and last nyenlng\nSenator Higgins seemi perfectly sat\nisHed with having mad« the election of\nAddicks an imposblbllity, and Is content\nto let the future take care itself\nwill remain la Dover until some definite\nresult is reached.\nTbe question has arisen as to bow\nmany votes it takes to elect s senator.\nIt was generally supposed thst tbe suc­\ncessful man mnst receive 16 votes, a\nmajority of the 30 This supposition has\nbeen knocked all to pieces by Secretary\nof Slate Smilbets, who has informel\nSpeaker Watson that a majority of a\nmajority of the members oonld elect\nFor instance, a majority of 30 is 16 and a\nmajority of 16 is 9. If only 10 members\nare present and one man get» 0, be will\nbe the senator This same rule applies\nto any number from 10 np to 30\nNo decision has yet been reached as to\nwhether the General Assembly will have\nto remain here and ballot on Saturdays.
16896dbb4f08591571cd3d954b2c07bb THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1897.6315068176052 41.004121 -76.453816 rich people occasionally obtain en\ntrance, because it is so convenient In\nan emergency, especially in etwee of In-\nsanity. 4ne of the strangest scenes ev-\ner witnessed In this abode of diseased\npauperism was when a once distin-\nguished Chicago lawyer and son -in- la - w\nof one of our richest bankers, wat\nbsctoght thither a hopeless lanatlc. The\nunfortunate patient la only thirty\nelghCead yet wtiat a strange career\nhe has experienced! Beglaatng a pool\nboy, he rose to be one of Chicago's\nsmartest lawyers, and having graduat-\ned from the office of Emory Storrs\nthis was a sufficient introduction to\nthe highest patronage. Business rap\nidly poured upon htm and Die profes-\nsional rank enabled him to marry the\ndaughter of a Wtoll street caprtaftflt,\nFrederick D. Tap pan, president of ths\nGallatin National Bank, rn the midst\nof this splendid success he yleided to\nthe of speculation and soon\noperated in the most reckless manner.\nProfit and loss alternated for a while,\nand then the ratter Increased so fear'\nfully that in his attempt to recoup he\nembezzled several large estates en\ntrusted to hla care. To sustain his sys\ntern under this Intense excitement he\nhad recourse to strong drink, which\nonly completed his ruin, and he left\nChicago In disgrace and under Indict-\nment. New York was his next resort,\nbut he continued to sink until he turns\nup among the wrecks at Bellevue Hos\npital. A sad picture, aud skm! a very\ncommon one. the chief point of Inter-\nest being the rapidity of the work of\nruin, as he Is only thlrty-e!gh- L\nTwo men who have been more or\nlees prominent la the public life of this\ncity, and who are yet young, active\nand agrrewlve. have recently attracted\nconsiderable attention.
57ddfbb697475a25fd4bfe794ce656b1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.719178050482 41.681744 -72.788147 Whati you and I studied history\nas boys we studied about kings and\ntheir paromours and the stories of\nbattles. That is not history. You\nwant to know what caused the bat-\ntle, the human heart throbs and\nmotions behind the whole thing.\n"Years ago I was pastor In the\nstock yards in the city of Chicago,\nIn I'pton Sinclair's 'Jungle District.'\n1 became acquainted with men who\nworked In the fertilizer plant. It is\nwhere they grind up the bones and\ntake the waste of the animals iind\ngrind it up in the form of dust. The\ndust fills the air and It gets into the\npores of the men's skin and into\ntheir hair. A man may unit li i 3 job\nand bathe for a week and you can\nstill smell the fertilizer on him. ' But\nmen would work there, and carry\ntheir pay home throw it unop-\nened Into the wife's lap. What do\nmen do these things for'.' For love!\nIn other wordr, the history that no-\nbody knows is the history of unseen\nforces, the things that you do not\nmeasure in the laboratory. The big\nthings In life are not the things that\nwe see about us; they are iot build-\nings and railroads and mountains.\nThe big things that really count in\nlife are the things that the preachers\nand school teachers talk ahout.\n"People like to brag In this mod-a -\ncivilisation about the big things!\nwe have done. They will show you\nithe hig bridges, and here in this\ntown you will point to the big fac- - '\ntorles, and you will look at them all\nand smile and say, 'We did that.' But\n.what was the real first cause behind\nthe whole thing the something
1e940988624fc400def085fe0f9debb1 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1900.7547944888381 58.275556 -134.3925 Charles Anderson came down from\nj Sumdum last Monday to do some do-\nvelopmeut work on the claim in the\nSecond basin located by him and Rob¬\nert Semple last June. He has already\ntakeu out some of the finest specimens\nor galena and gold found here yet.\nThe Spruce creek side of Windham\nbay has been pretty thoroughly pros¬\npected this last summer and most of\nthe ground to the summit, a distance of\nfour miles, has been located and the lo¬\ncators are satisfied that they have got\ngood claims. The most of the work\ndone so far has been uncovering and\nprospecting the claims. The assays ob¬\ntained have been very satisfactory.\nSome of the boys are talking of put-1\nting in a one or two stamp mill ou some\nof the claims and work the ore as it\ncomes from the tunnels. There are\nsome very rich pay streaks the ledg¬\nes which will more than pay the ex¬\npense of developing the mine.\nThe miners are now turning their at¬\ntention to prospecting Silver creek.\nThis stream enters the Shuck river\nabout two miles south of Spruce creek,\nand is about eight miles long. There\nare about twenty small streams enter¬\ning into it, all of which pan more or\nless gold. Silver creek drains about\ndouble the amount of country that\nSpruce creek does and is harder to\nprospect on account of the inaccessi¬\nbility of the canyons. Any place where\na man can get into the canyons he cau\nmake from five to fifteen dollars per\nday working placer in the low water\nseason. The same mineral belt that\nruns through Snettisham, Sumdum and\nSpruce creek crosses Silver creek near\nthe junction of the North and South\nforks. Five claims are already located\nwest of the forks.
07619a0ba837c0131fefc165dd9a5177 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.7712328450025 40.063962 -80.720915 brought against Ur. La Farge has d's-\nclosed to the public that a great number\noi society women posa as models for their\nartist friends. This has been a matter\nfamiliar enough among art circles since\npictures were fashionable. A well-shaped\nwoman is no less vain of her form than a\npretty wotqan is conceited over her face.\nTo have her sbspely contour portrsyed on\ncanvsss Is one of the greatest gratifications\nthat a finleyproportioned womincan have.\nBo it is vary usual among certain light¬\nheaded society girls to follow the example\nof Napoleon's sister, who sat for a\n"Venus" to Csnova, to posa for artiils\nwhose atcresy they can depend upon.\nSome of them ait half draped, but others\nevince no hesitation to pose nude, with\nthe proviso that another girl's bead shall\nbe used to complete the figure. They are\nnot Indeed patient models. They wantto\nchatter all the time of the sitting, and\nhave hard work to hold a posa steadily\nfor even live minutes. But the artist who\nis popular in society circles csn iind s\nluxury of models that an obacure painter\ncannot. One of our cleverest young art¬\nists has just finished a nude Hebe, lu\nthe progress of whose painting he\nused feur different young society girls sa\nmodels, who felt highly complimented al\nbeing asked to pose for the various charms\nof the figure. It is perhaps unnecessary\nto state that neither their parents the\npubilo knew anything about it.\nIt is not, however, always an easy\nthing for the artist to find in the general\nrun of models exsctly what be wants to\nsuit the subject of his picture, Two or\nthree years ago one of our finest painters\nwas in despair to set a certain figure for\nhis composition. None of the profession¬\nal models would suit him and he had al¬\nmost relinquished the idea of his picture,\nwhen, to distract his mind, he went to\nthe theatre one night. It was a burlesque,\na thing of tinsel and music aud pretty\ngirls. Suddenly, during the progress of\nthe piece, the artist uttered an exclama-\ntiou, and jumping from off his chair,\nrushed ont of tho house, lie made his\nway to the stage door aud sent his card to\nthe mansger. The name on the card was\na great one, and the mansger was obsequi¬\nous at the sight of it. When the artist\ngained admittance behind the scenes he\nrequested that the chorus girls should\npans before him in review. As they tiled\npast he watched each one closely, and,\ndnally, discovered the girl whose peculiar\nfigure had attracted his attention in front,\nBe at once engaged her at a salary double\nwhat she earned at the theatre and car¬\nried her off triumphantly. The picture\nwas finished and achieved a groat success\nat the spring exhibition of the Acad-\namy.
50ae44c0127c2ee38d50dcc2d1d3b561 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.1516393126392 43.798358 -73.087921 The idea of honor is associated with\nwar. But to whom does the honor be-\nlong ? If to any, certainly not to the mass\nofthe people, but to those who. are partic-\nularly engaged in it. The mass of a\npeople, who stay at home and hire others\nto fight, who slep in their warm beds and\nhire others to sleep on the cold damp\nearth, who sit at their well spread board, &\nhire others to take the chance of starving,\nwho nurse the slightest hurt in their own\nbodies and hire others to expose themselves\nto mortal wounds and to linger in com-\nfortless hospitals, certainly this mass reap\nlittle honor from war. The honor be-\nlongs to those who directly engaged in it.\nLet me ask, then, what is the chief busi-\nness of war? It is to destroy human life,\nto mangle the limbs, to gash and hew the\nbody, to plunge the sword into the heart\nof a fellow creature, to strew the earth\nwith bleeding frames, and to trample them\nunder with horses hoofs. It is to\nbatter down and burn cities, to turn fruit-\nful fields into deserts, to level the cottage\nofthe peasant and the magnificent abode\nof opulence, to scourge nations with fam-\nine, to multiply widows and orphans.\nAre these honorable deeds ? Were you\ncalled to name exploits worthy of demons,\nwould you not naturally select such as\nthese ? Grant that a necessity for them\nmay exist. It is a dreadful necessity, such\nas a jrood man must recci! from with in-\nstinctive horror ; and though it may ex-\nempt them from guilt it cannot turn them\ninto glory. We have thought that it was\nhonorable to heal, to save, to mitigate\npain, to snatch the sick and sinking from\nthe jaws of death. We have placed among\nthe reverend benefactors of the human\nrace, the discoverers of aj.ts which allevi-\nate human rufferings, which prolong,\ncomfort, adorn and cheer human ;if?, and\nif these arts be honorable where is the\nglory of multiplying and aggravating tor-\ntures and death ?
18491402df395f263df58998177c4368 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.6506848997972 39.745947 -75.546589 (From the 1aunton, Mass., Gazette.)\nOver in the town of Wrembam, Mar«.,\neveryone is agog with excitement. A child\nwho hail been physically deformed for four\nyears, and who was the object of the pity of\nthe entire town, has bad her limbs straight­\nened out, her head again made erect by the\nstraightening of her neck, and is running\nabout town*now with the freedom and aban­\ndon of any child.\nMary s! Fuller is the name of the little\ncripple. Many of onr readers will remem­\nber lier. She is but n child of eight years,\nand has spent the past four years in lied,\nhopelessly crippled. Rheumatic fever four\nyears ago attacked the nerves and cords of\nher lower limbs and neck, so that the former\nre drawn all out of shape and twisted and\nbent backwards in a pitiable manner; and\n cords of the latter were so tightened on\none aide as to draw her head down on her\nshoulder. Her arms, too, were helpless, and\nneighbors hearts bled at Ihe little ones suf­\nfering. The progress of the disease reduced\nher to a skeleton, and the poor mother has\nalmost given herown life for thatofthc child,\nin lier untiring watching at the little ones\nbedside. F ur years of watching! four vears\nof waiting! and at last the child begun to\nmend, her cords relaxed, her nervous system\ngathered strength and power, and to-day, as\nstated above, she is running about the town\na vigor, us and happy child.\nMom, physician« applaud, and new methods\nIn nerve treatments have been successfully\nvindicated. Formerly the surgeon would\nhave been called on in this ease to straighten\nthe limbs. Now th* idea is to work in har­
13dd26ff89f92f4c03db0246357dc6e3 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1874.9246575025368 42.217817 -85.891125 R. V. Piircb, M D . buffalo, N. V.: I wiMft\nto add my testimony to the wonderful cura-\ntive properties of your Alt. Ext., o r Golden\nMedical Discovery. I have taken great in-\nteract in thin medicine ainoe I first lined it.\nI waa badly afflicted with dyapepeia, liver de-\nranged and an almost perfect prontraUon of\nthe nervous system. Bo rapid and complete\ndid the Discovery effect a perfect cure that it\nseemed more like magic and a perfect wonder\nto myself, aud since that time we have never\nbuen without a bottle of the Discovery and\nPurgative Pellets in the houtie. They are a\nsolid, sound family physician in tho house,\nant. ready at all times to fly to the relief of\nsickness without charge. We have never\nhad doctor in the house sinoe we first began\nthe use of your Pellets and Dicovery. I have\nrecommended the uso of these medicines in\nsoveral severe aud complicated cases arising\nfrom, as I thought, an impure state of the\nblood, and iu no one case have they failed to\nmore than accomplish all they are claimed to\ndo. I will only meutiou one as remarkable\n(though I could give you dozens) Henry\nKoster, furniture dealer of this place, who\nwas one of the most pitiful objects ever seen,\nhis face swollen out of shape, scales and\neraptiOM without end oxtcndiug to his body,\nwhich WaM completely covered with blotches\nand scales. Nothing that he took seemed to\naffect it a particle. I finally induced him to\ntry a few bottles of the Golden Medical
0ad3778bf4aa80d927703c247f5acff8 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1882.3986301052764 41.004121 -76.453816 "Then rushing to the house, and\ncalling wildly at every step for help, I\nbegan an eager, trembling search for a\nrope, which J soon had knotted linnly\naround a Btout, crooked old pear tree\nstanding near the well. Then I called\nagain to tho poor, groaning victim be\nlow. I bade him grasp the rope tight\nly aud let mu pull him up. But it was\nno use. My only answer was another\nmoan, so low and deep that 1 thought\nthe poor wretch was dying.\n"What to do 1 did not know. No\nhelp had come, nnd I feared to lose n\nmoment by going after it. But I was\nyoung and strong and nerved with tho\ncourage ot desperation, so 1 did not\nhesitate, long. How I managed it suc\ncessfully I never could tell, but I ltt\nmyself down by the until I reach\ned tho bottom ot thai dark abyss and\nfound tho helpless being, whom Provi\ndence had sent mo to rescue, too mucl\ninjured to move a limb.\n"As gently and quickly as I could, in\nthat awful situation, 1 fastened the\nropo around his body and lifted him in\na more convenient position to be drawn\nup; then hand over hand, like a sailor,\nand blistering the skin as 1 went,\nslowly climbed to tho top again, where\nI found my father and two or three\nanxious neighbors just begiuing to\nrealize what had occurred. It was well\nthey had come, for my girl's strength.\ntry as 1 would, could never huvo drawn\ntlint large, btiong man to tlio surface;\nnor could ho have lived much longer\nin me (icaniy gases oi mo out wen.\n"Ho seemed more dead than living
4b4a2ee59e7091ef8c215acd4570d2e0 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.3538251049888 40.618676 -80.577293 President Roosevelt's frankly politi­\ncal speech of April 20th gave no clue\nto his intentions concerning the third\nterm—he simply said that the Demo­\ncrats must nominate a pair of "liberal\ncandidates" if they are to win. The\nWashington observers continue to\nfrenziedly debate the question of his\nrunning again. At the moment, the\nmajority seems to feel he will not, but\nwill keep mum until the convention\nmeets in order to maintain control of\nthe delegates so far as possible. Dis­\nmissing the President, Secretary Hull\nstill seems most popular with the rank\nand file of Democrats, as well as with\nofficials high in New Deal circles. No\none takes the Farley-for-President\nboom very seriously — best guess is\nthat Big Jim is simply cementing his\nhold on the Democratic organization,\nhas hopes of receiving the vice-presi­\ndential nomination, and would like to\nsee Hull head the ticket.\nWithin Republican ranks, the Van-\ndenberg candidacy apparently has fal­\nlen on rather evil days so far as the\nvoters are concerned — Dewey has\nbeaten him badly in the open tests.\nAt the same time, Vandenberg has\nmany supporters in the upper circles\nof the party, including men who are\nextremely potent in handling conven­\ntion delegates. Taft has made a good,\nif non-dramatic showing, and is much\nin the running. Dewey, of course, has\nmade almost startling progress, and\nhas yet to lose a state in which his\nname has been entered. He has proven\nthe best vote getter the GOP has re­\ncently produced. Even so, seasoned\npolitical commentators still discount\nhis chances about 90 per cent—the Re­\npublican leaders, with the possible ex­\nception of Landon, are cool toward\nhim, think him too young and inex­\nperienced.
294dede1e34995a2cfafd108a456faa2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.269125651437 37.561813 -75.84108 The Turkish wife is not a slave ; the\nchief fault to find with her is that she\nhas too lofty a seuse of her own dignity,\nAn advocate of femalo rights would\nhave some difficulty in ersuading her\nthat her lot was pitiable ; she has never\nenvied the emancipation of Christian\nwomen, whose free ways shock her\nwhile she has noticed that they get much\nless respect from nierfof their faith than\nthat which is invariably vouchsafed to\nherself. She vails her face with no more\nregret than a western lady unvails her\nShoulders. Turkish women are not shut\nup. They go out When they please, at\ntended by their odaliks, if rich, or hold-\ning their "children by the hand ; and their\nmagpie voices fill the bazaars, for they\nare noisy W herever they pass,\nmen ot all creeds stand aside dcteren-\ntiallv. If a husband meets his wife in\nthe street he makes no sign of recogni\ntion. If he perceives iter halting betore\na draper's stall and gazing significantly\nat silks dearer than he can afford, he must\npossess his soul in resignation, mutter- -\nme, "Mashallah I" Tins respect for wo\nmen prevails also in the home circle,\nand it comes naturally to the Mussulman,\nwho has been taught from his boyhood\nto behave courteously to the other sex.\nThe western conjugal expression about\n"wearing the breeches," has its Turkish\ncounterpart in the phrase to live under\nthe slipper:" and it is to be feared that\nnot a few Turks know the taste of this\nimplement of uxorial persuasion. A\n6treet-port- er
0441806077a91008cc5dbca0464bb58a THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1883.5630136669204 37.561813 -75.84108 To the Editor of the Enquirer\nA correspondent or tlie Cmeiunnti Journal '\nstates in the issue of tho 27th inst., that "I\nhave been in the habit of scratching Demo-\ncratic tickets, and that I did not vote for Gov-\nernor Allen, but voted for Governor Hayes.\n1 he Journal of yesterday, referring editor-- :\nially to the matter, says : "It is not a bolt\nfrom this ticket the present one I. but tlie re\nsult of a chronic habit.\nIf this paper and others that are abusing me\nhad wished 10 have known and stated the\ntruth, they could easily have obtained it ; but,\nas misrepresentation only is intended, I feel\ncompclli d, in justice to uiy.self, to state that I\ndid vote lor Governor Allen each time that lie\nwas candidate, and, further, that I never\nvot, d for a Hi publican in my life and would\nnot do so this fall if the . Democratic Conven-\ntion had nominated a Democrat.\nAs it stands, it is simply a choice between a\nRepublican and a "political gymnast," whose\nelection means a reorganization of tho old\nDemocratic party ("'Ibe New Democracy," 1\nbelieve Judge Hoadly calls it! on a basis as un-\nstable as the candidate himself. I will vote for\nJudge ForaktT, not because 1 Isvlieve in lleputi-lica- n\nprincipl, a, hut because I believe that the\ndei'iat of Judge Hoadly will preserve those ot\nthu Democratic party, by putting a quietus in\ntho future on crprtu'i wj i'lliilnu(es, who have\nno political principles.\nTlni old ship "Democracy" can easily stand\nanother defeat, hut
1339b4755e57e9fba7e1ac0199b0f8c1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.683561612126 39.745947 -75.546589 Board No. , 1 —Francis W. Talley, M\nDavl* Truax and J, Paul Green.\nBoard No. Î -. John A. Gee.\nBoard No. 3—Herbert Gilley.\nBoard No. t—Joseph Haggerty.\nThe men wi*l get the regular pay of\nsoldiers and expense charges, and will\nwear Hie army uniform. They will be\nloaned to the local board until Janu­\nary 1. After that date, they will prob­\nably be detailed lo other military ser­\nvice by the War Department.\nJoseph C. Dougherly, clerk In Gocal\nExemption Board No. 3. will be trans­\nferred to the chemical service gas de­\nfense division next week, and will be\nlocated in Philadelphia.\nRegistration card» lilted'out by men\nunder the new draft ages who will be\nout of the city on September 12, are\npouring in upon the loeal boards. The\ncards of ail men registered away from\n must be in the hands of their\nlocal board by September 12 at the lat­\nest. Every man who will not be home\nnext Thursday should go Immediately\nto a local bçard wherever he is. fill\nout a registration card, and forward\nIt to his home board.\nThe number of such registration\ncards already filled out in Wilmington\nis more than keeping the local boards\nbusy. Board No. 2 asks for a volun­\nteer registrar to report immediately and\nwork dally, as one is urgently needed.\nJosepti Wiggles" orlh. chairman of\nGocal Board No. t. lias sent out an ur­\ngent call for registrars for the 18-45\nregistration on next Thursday. The\nboard oflic os, on the second floor of the\nold court house. Tenth and Market\nstreets, will be open all this afternoon\nand evening to swear In volunteer reg­\nistrar*.
39d01a2dc3b25dce2bddbc800b1f5db7 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1848.7226775640052 43.624497 -72.518794 rtuckbrld;e, deacribed aa lollowa, lo wlti bi'glnullij at a\nbeech tree atunuiiig on tlie nortn nne 01 uarnaru, nortii\ncalrrly corner ot ticorge W. l'ackurd'a land, Ihence 32\nroda on aald llne orUamard to a atake nnd atones atand- -\nInc Iu tlie line, thcucc 140 roda n ilralshl toabranch\nalumpa atnnding on Ihe hnnk ot' Ihe brook, Ihence up\nrltoney Ilrook 9d rod to thr mouth ol Ihe 1'erMns Urook,\no cnlled, boundeil on Ihe brook, thence up the Verklni\nUrook, so called, 98 roda lo flrai ineutlnncd bound. That\non the aaine da) thc said Judiun l'ackurd, Jr. exccutcd a\npromioory nolc or that daie ror the tum ofi 110.50, and\ndeilvcrcd to and nvide pajable to Ellua Kejea or order,\nin alx yeara Irom Ihe 4lh duy ol July next alier ita dale,\nwith lulereat anuually. That on the lamc day thesahl\nJudaon I'uckard executed to Ihc said Judaou l'ackurd, Jr.\na derd ot said dcxcrihed landa, and Ihe apprrtlnancca,\nduly nuknowlrdsnl aud recorded, anid deed having Ihere- -\nin iiccindttion provming inut u aaiu juuaun.jr. paiu up io\nIhe aald Eliaa thr raid note according lo iis Iruc intent\nand mennliig, Ihen aald deed tu he biudlng in law upou\nIhe said Judami l'ackurd, nnd upon llie aald Ellan, but It\nraid nnle waa uul ao lo Ihe aald Elias according lo\nita Irue Inlrni und mranlug, Ihen the anid deed lo be null\nand vold In l.iw. Thal tlie aaid noic wlitn fodelivrred lo\nthe said Ellns waa Ihe propeny ot ihe aaid Ellai, wllhonl\nany nccnuntlug to thc aaid Judo:i l'ackurd, or any olher\nperaon Ihcrerur. Thnl the said Eliaa dcparled this llfc ou\nor about Ihe 9lh day or July, A. U. 1811, IhH Iho aald\nHiimuer A. Webbcr anrrwnru on Ihe Sih day or Auvsust,\nA.l). 1811, waa duly appoinled ndmnifairalor ol' Ihe\nsooda.challel aml ctute ol the aald Ellns Keics, In due\nfcinn uriiw. That on Ihe I8lh day ol November, A. D,\n1811, Ihe rald Judaon Jr. rircuted a rondlllonal deid 01\naald prrnilar lo Ilanlrl Alklni orilnruard In aald county.\nTti.i" thc said Judaon l'urkard on Ihc 2d day ol'Aprll, A.\n1). 1817 . by hia deed duly ncknowlcilgtd and rrcnnlri,\nnaalxncd and released to Ihe aaid Suinncr A. Webbcr a\nuduilnlktralor aa a'ores.ilit,all hl llio anid Judauul'ackard'a\nrlght, tiilc nnd iniereat In aud lo Ihe ubove descnbed\nprcmiaea, thereiu, aelllug lorlh that liu rxcriilrd his tM\ndccd In Ihc a.ild Judaon Jr. Tor Ihc brnrnt ol' saiti Ellas\nKeri. That hiid notc haa not nor Im nnj part Ihereor\nl.crn pnld, und jiraylng a lorccloturc of the eiiully of
0d3ae3b2784b40c319798e8f7587f4f6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.132876680619 40.063962 -80.720915 one company going up and one going down\ntho ravine.. One nutn at length came in xl\nsight of Johnny, sitting down in the grain,\nhis yellow head Just showing over the H\ntop. lie rode up quietly not wishing to\nfrighten liim, and Johnny did not look up\ntill ho heard the horse. Then he rose up j\nand looked very earnestly at tho man.\n"Do you know where my father 1st" he A |\nasked, in a weak; trembling, voicc, the\nbig tears standing In his blue eyes.\nThoro were loud shouts of rejoicing, i> i\nllrjngofguns, and blowingof boras, to let\ntho rest of tho company know ho was ""\nfound, and Johnny's father, almo6t beside Hl\nhimself with Joy, took him up in front ol\nhim on his horse, and carried him home. 0it\nHo bad brought along lood forbim, so the\nnone liny Hit! tint have tn wnlt till loir\nlie got homo lor somcthlug to eat, and I'll\nwarrant Johnny never knew before how\ngood bread and butter could taste. It nel\nwould he hard telling who waa the most\nglad, Johnny or his family, when ho was 1011\nrought home alive and well. )n\nThe Average City Dwelling House. pr|,\nFma IU S<AtiU\\flc AmirttM.\nTlio average city dwelling house of 1871 utl\nIs not what it ought to be, when contrast-\ned with the vast improvements made In\nall other departments of construction, bot\nUuiltto make as much show as possible\nwith the least expenditure, It is a delusion lh<l\nto the Inexperienced buyer, and u snare\nto tho tcnaut, who has not yet learned the\ndefects that a year or two of use will be bo\nsure to develop.\nA young couple beginning their expo-
44b2d5f96d54354d769355987a8f1497 THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1865.9520547628108 39.768333 -86.15835 institution, ngainst the pledge of the jr(K)j\nname of the StUe, in the act of last session that\nwe would establish a separate institution.\nThe !ilh'j:atitii that nn Agricultural C'olb-g- e\ncould not tand alone might furnish a good\nri'asoii niraiiist reeeivin; tlie Congressional\nirrant; but now It was aecjteil,it was no goxl\nargument that we should divert this fund fn m\nthe purpose for which it ha been ollcrcd and\naccepted. He objected to the details of tho\nbill iu the matter of the asaitrumcut of the land\nscript to the Truste',. Tlie Trustees would\nhave .2H,(X)0 acres of land worth, say, foTH),-i sn - i .\nThe taxes ujmiii tins land would" become\na charge upon the State of an annual ex 'tense,\nnot less than fT.OtJO or .OO. Then there w as\nthe expense of locating tlieat' lands the three\nCommissioners and the Trustees all receiving\ntrav lingiixiens's and t a day for the time\nemployed. Then the management of land\na bind ottice of twenty years standimr\ncould not get along with, for less than jt,oo\na year. Then the lands were not to lie sold for\nless than a dollar an acre the purchaser to\npay six per cent, on the purchase. Then if the\npurchasers do not pay promptly, these Com-\nmissioners are to declare forfeitures. A novelty\nin law. Did not the gentleman know that the\nmatter of forfeitures would he regulated by\nthe laws of Missouri, or of the State where\ntie land may be located? Then the bill pro- -\nv ides for a College Kert to be made annually\nto the Governor, which the (lovernor i to\ncause to I' printed, at an expense of probable\ns.i,o) or jl,oo) more. Thus he showed up an\nannual exju nse involved in the passage of this\nbill of alx.ut V ti.iHHi. merely ti et up this school\naud put it in operation making u bv to much\nthe poorer th .n we miyht have been had we\nnever aeeopted this prant. Upon the question\nof location, manitcstly the In- s- t
13fcaa6b618ae8e71ee20ab5a72f94a1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.1931506532217 39.745947 -75.546589 sion. It Was known that sooner or\nlater the members themselves would\ndiscover their cramped position, and\nthe general public held its peace. It\nis clear to everyone that, with railroad\ntracks on all sides of the premises, it\nis impossible for the club to spread it-\neelf without being run over. What\nearthly opportunity has a man to\nplough when his horses are rearing\nand plunging to the ringing and\nwhistling and rushing' of passing\ntrains, and to the clang and olatter of\nfreight trains being made up on the\nsidings? What incentive is there for a\ngirl to plant seed and grow vegetables\nwith long lines of rapidly-moving ob­\nservatories whisking by the scene of\noperations at short intervals? None\nwhatever. Combinations of capital\nand the appliances which they employ\nto declare a dividend or work their\nway out of receivers' hands paralyze\nlegitimate agricultural effort. But one\nof two courses is open to the club. It\ncan memorialize the Baltimore and\nPhiladelphia Railroad Company and\nthe Wilmington and Northern Rail­\nroad Company to stop running their\ntrains and to tear up the tracks; or it\ncan watch for an opportunity to move\nout between regular trains, and run\nthe risk of being run down by specials\nwhile getting clear of the premises.\nUnder existing conditions agriculture\nand socialculture have no opportunity\nto work side by Side. Close associa­\ntion ih the field of human effort is a\n out of the question. Agricul­\nture sits on a barbed-wire fence and\nsighs while socialculture plays cricket\nand lawn-tennis or bruises the bosom\nof nature with golf-sticks. The only\npart that agriculture plays in the day's\ndiversion is after the sport is ended.\nThen it pushes the heavy roller over\nthe field and crushes out all signs of\nthe conflict. Such a condition is not\nnatural. It cannot continue. The laws\nof nature demand a change, and it is\napparent that it is about to come.\nA Country Club will materially as­\nsist in the work of raising agriculture\nout of the slough of despond and social\ndiscredit. It will give the farmer an\nexcuse for putting on a more jaunty\najr, and induce him to remove his\nseedy garments and substitute a golf­\ning -outfit thersfor. He will come into\ntown with his head up in the air in­\nstead of sneaking in and expecting\nevery moment to be called upon for\nan excuse for his presence. Under the\npatronage and protection of the Coun­\ntry Club he will not feel out of place\nanywhere. He will become the fad. He\nwiil be the lion of the hour at our pink\nteas and black coffees. We shall wel­\ncome him at our chocolatalres, and\nthe manly step of the tiller of the soli\nwill not shock and shatter the deli­\ncate social atmosphere which clings\nabout the precincts of the New-Cen-
2e2d4e001539a9b7982f02433f5c9c84 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1868.5232240120927 41.004121 -76.453816 penso for its production. Tno timo\nwns when In rough nnd uneducated\nneighborhoods, all tho nccessiblo fruit\nwas regarded as n sort of common plun-\nder, and It wns considered hardly nec-\nessary oven to ask tho owner for tho\nprivilege of tilling pocket or basket,\nwhether In day timo or In tho darkness\nof night. This nge, wo are glad to say\npassed away, and gavo placo to tho sec-\nond era, known strictly as that of steal-\ning, when tliofruit wns taken only in\ntho dark, or when tho owner had gone\nfrom home. AVo aro sorry to say that\nthis era seems to bo wonderfully pro-\nlonged, and wo linvo by, no menus en-\ntirely got rid of It. Hut public opinion\nIs Improving oven In this respect, and\ntho moro Intelligent do notsoo wherein\nit Is better to strip ntlno young tr co of\nn crop of delicious pears than to break\ninto a granary and carry off a bushel of\nloin adozon pullets. Indeed, it usually\nhappens that tho fruit has cost moro'\ntimo nnd care, nnd perhnps moro money\nthan tho grain nnd poultry.\nWo havo already stated that littlo Is\nnow said on this subject, but wo know\ntho still to bo a formida\nble ono. Many aro deterred from\nplanting tho best fruit trees for fear of\nthose animals, which aro to them moro\nformhlablo than unruly street cattle,\nknown by tho nnmo of vngrnnt boys,\nWo havo been apprehensive that tlio\ngeneral sllonco on this subject has not\nbeen favorable to tho Improvement of\npublic opinion and wo cannot havo n\nthorough euro until public opinions be-\ncomes enlightened. It was only n few\nmonths ago that wo had the best pear\ntroo In our garden entirely stripped of\nUs crop in a single night. Suspecting,\nfrom soveral circumstances, Including\nIds tracks In tho soft soil, tho man who\ndid it wo sent n servent immediately\nlo inquire of him If ho had nny pears to\nsoli, aware that ho cultivated none of\nhis own. Wo knew that If ho wcro\ninnocent, ho would merely say no, nnd\nthink nothlugfurther ofthoinnttcr, but\nif guilty, ho weuld know by tho In-\nquiry being mado nt thnt timo that ho\nhad certainly been detected. Tim res-\nult was, that although a near neighbor\nho avoided us for tho next six weeks.\nI'ossibly this hint may bo of use to\nothers who aro similarly nnuoyc-d-
0db679a02a2db15051574f599f6f5d69 THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1890.1410958587012 38.894955 -77.036646 In New Orleans tlio vico of playing\ntho lottery is n croze, a mania, and the\nproposition may bo safely ventured\nthnt if it were possibla to look into tbo\npockets of every mnn and woman and a\ngreat many of Hie children of the me-\ntropolis of the Gulf State n lottery ticket,\nana oftlmcs a roll of them, would be\nfound. Tho city lias, from tlio time\nof Its foundation, been a gambling\ncentre; tho Latin blood of its first\ntcltlcrs took kindly to games of chance.\nand this trnlt had only to be fostered\nto make it a rage. For years it lias\nbeen fostered by the lottery nnd It has\nbecome a rago. To day this town Is the\ngreatest gnmbling centre of the country,\nnnd the eleventh day each month 'is\nlooked forward to with an expectnncy\nthat is as painful to tho observer ns it Is\nto tho observed. Plans nro made by\nthousands, castles in the air arc bullded\nhigh, business men count on the ro\nsuit to help them pay a note\ncoining duo, their clerks expect to\nstnrt in business for themselves, tho\ndrunkaid looks forward to a lonsj de-\nbauch, the shop glil looks longingly in\nthe dry goods store window nt the rich\nfabrics displayed there, grasping nor\nticket the lighter, nud the professional\ngambler feels of ills "roll" and waits with\nuiUinrd calm but inwnrd anxiety for\nlLo coming lime when tho great wheel\nin the Academy of Music will turn and\nlet him know his fate.\nAnd when the great eleventh dry
28b03ec62c20606bb5d34645ecd41dfc OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.43698626966 41.020015 -92.411296 of the Beecher trial and briefly sums\nup the case. It is supposed to befrom\nthe pen of Geo. William Curtis, and\nreada as follows:\n"Thus far we have endeavored sim-'\nply to tell the story of the case with­\nout interjecting into the narrative our\nown personal sympathies, prejudices,\nor judgment. Those sympathies are\nnevertheless very strong, that Judg­\nment is rery clear. Under a careful\nanalysis the evidence against Mr.\nBcechcr utterly fails. It would not\nsullicc against a man much less strong­\nly intrenched in public esteem than\nhe: agaiust his pure life and noble\ncharacter it breaks in vain, as the foam\nof the angry ocean against the cliff\nwhich it can obscure but cannot de\nstroy. The case is one of conspiracy\nagainst a good and great, though care­\nless man, but a conspiracy which grew\nrather than was formed, which was\nthe natural product of tho jealousy of\nself-conceit rather than the deliberate\ncontrivance of greed. On the one\nside is a man the greatness of whose\nheart and the of whose sym\npathies are at once his genius and his\nweakness; on the other is a man whose\ninsane jealousy is the natural thongh\ndeadly fruit of an insane self-conceit,\nimbittered by a spirit of personal and\nfell revenge. He U aided unconscious­\nly by the idolatrous affection and the\ntoo implicit obedience of a weak, mor­\nbid, and suffering wife, and by the\nshrewd devices of a "heathen friend."\nThe key to the comprehension of\nthis whole esse is Mr. Tllton's frank\ndeclaration, "I resolved to smite Mr\nBeecher to the heart." The arrow\nwas well fashioned, the bow well\nbent, but the destroyer has failed of\nhis purpose; and when posterity,\nwiser than we, reads the history of\nthis case, it will honor, not less than\nthe noble achievements of Henry\nWard Beecher's noble life, the no less\nnoble fsiture of the patience and mag­\nnanimity ot his only too cblvalrlc and\nunhappily unsuccessful endeavor to\nshield *'all the Other hearts that would\nache" from the publication of tho fam­\nous Brooklyn scandal."
d9c072fa6f5cd7a38dfe3cf09048d102 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.5164383244546 41.681744 -72.788147 The losers threatened during the\nentire contest but thtfr enthusiasm\nled them into some poor base run-\nning and as a result several rallies\nwhich they started were nipped be-\nfore they had done any damage. In\norder to keep the winners in check\nduring the early part of the game\nthe West Ends were obliged to exe-\ncute three double plays.\nThe champions put one run over\nin the initial frame and this was\nsufficient to keep them in the lead\nuntil the fourth when the Cardinals\ngot a man around. The former\nmade their run on a pass to Basil\nand a double by Wojack. The win-\nners counted on successive singles\nby Surko, Daly and Zembke.\nThe next scoring came in the.\nseventh when the West Ends seem-\n to sew up the game with three\ncounters. These came after two\nwere out and no one on as the result\nof a pass to Al Blanchard, a scratch\nhit to shortstop by Fiizpatrick and\nerrors by Erickson and Suess.\nThe winners got one of these back\nin their half of the inning on dou-\nbles by Zembko and Klopp. As it\nwas nearly 4 o'clock at this time and\ntwo other teams were waiting for\nthe diamond an agreement was\nreached by the managers of, each\nteam that the game should be called\nat the end of the eighth.\nTh West Ends went out in order\nin their half of the inning and the\nCardinals went to work. Suess went\nout on a fly, hut Fink reached first\non a pass.
0c14974cfe1b11bb1e3680fc9b733d27 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.7958903792492 40.063962 -80.720915 Rsv. \\V. 0. Cattell, D. D., Secretary of *\nhe Board of Ministerial Relief, addressed *\nho Synod at considerable length, urging 1\ntpon it the necessities of increasing the F\nunds for that purpose, and making v\nilear the necessity for providing susten- a\nince for aged ministers. 1\nThe report of the standing committee\nin increasing the value of the meetings\n>f the Synod was read and accepted, and i\necommended after being discussed,\niev. R. H. Fulton and Rev. W. 0.\nCampbell wero added to the committee.\nThe Judicial Committee has five cases 1\n>efore it for settlement at this meeting, g\nJase No. 1, that of Rev. J: McDowell r\nigainat the Presbytery of Erie for dis* ;\nlolving pastoral relatione, waa the only\n>ne on which the committee was pre- i\njared to report, Its recommendation f\n*as that the case No.1betriedbya r\n:ommibsion, later the commission i\nivas named as follows: Rev. W. R. c\nBingham, D. I)., Rev. J . C . Ilickman, r\nD. D ., Rev. George B. Stewart, Rev. 1\n3eorge H. Hall, Rev. A . E . Spooner,\nRev. W . D . Roberta, and Elders James t\n3. Patterson, Thomas Graham, Dr. S . L. i\nJepaon and Charles H. Wills. i\nAt 4 p. m. theSynodwent into prayer c\nmeeting for the outpouring of tho Holy s\nSpirit upon the Synod and the churches i\nwithin its bounds. After the singing of t\na hymn, the reading of a chapter of the t\nicripturo and a prayer, the narrative of i\nthe state of religion was read and adopt* t\n2d.# After the prayer meeting the necro- c\nlogical report was read, showing sixteen t\ndeaths among the ministers of the 1\nSynod puring the past year. A
60254f9b7aaea67d4e2889677f9e1094 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.5027396943176 31.960991 -90.983994 HOLLENBECKS GROVE, ILLINOIS , 1800 & 44.\nDear Clarinda: I got here two weeks\nand here I shall certainly end my days.\nGarrison, that came out with me, left me at\nShekigo, and I was glad on it, for never did see\nafellersticktoagalashedid to me, andit\nwarnt for nothing nether—but he dipnt talk of\nmarryin me, but was just hangin5" round me,\nbut I told him to keep his distance—thats the\nway to use such fellers. Ive a notion hes in a\nfix with a gal down in Kaintuck—any how, I\nwouldnt look at him now, for Ive had five fei­\nlere to spark me since I cum here another wants\nto cum, but I give him the bags: One of my\nsparks has got three quarter seeshuns and a\nhous, is six foot tall, and four yoke and\nis a widdorer, and wants to marry me next .week,\nbut I shall wait and see if I can do enny better,\nfor between us, widdorers, are 60 queer, and\ntaik right up so, they always friten me—but\nhowsutnever, I spose they don't mean more than\nuther men. This country is very large and so\nis the men, and the prarys they say is rollin\nbut I dont see but they are as still as any other\nplace. Meeting is scarse here and wheat dont\nfetch but 2 and 6—hay.and potaters they almost\ngive away, a^d sich lots of children—the un-\nlèelin mothers feed their babys on pork and po­\ntaters on account of milk sickness in the country,\na purty way to grow babys I guess youll 4hink.\nNow you must come out, I know youll make
f28e8f2ec2119e2f5a1d0c92e170346d THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.4205479134957 39.560444 -120.828218 Scandalous. —ln Mexico everybody is\nsupposed to be an ex-President who wears\na clean shirt, and keeps his hands washed.\nSlaver Seized.—The U. S. brig Perry\nseized the brig Glamorgan on the coast of\nAfrica lately. The Glamorgan arrived at\nBoston in charge of U. S. officers, and the\nofficers and crew were held to answer to\nthe charge of engaging in the slave trade.\nThe Santa Fe mail arrived at St. Louis\non the 25th April, bringing intelligence of\ntwo fights between the U. S . troops and\nthe Apache and Utah Indians, in one of\nwhich the troops lost 21 killed and 18\nwounded. The Indian loss is unknown,\nbut supposed to be very great.\nMrs. Frelinghuysen, wife of the Hon.\nTheodore Frelinghuysen, died at New\nBrunswick, N. J., on the 2d of May.\n tornado of unusual violence passed\nover New York on the 27th April, doing\nconsiderable damage. During the day the\natmosphere was extremely sultry—tor-\nrents of rain fell, accompanied by thunder,\nlightning and bail. Much damage was\ndone to the shipping. The air-ship Errics-\nson was sunk, having on board several la-\ndies and gentlemen, but all escaped in\nboats. The vessel will yet be saved.\nThe New Orleans Delta says: “The\npress in the North is unanimous in con*\ndemning and discountenancing the\nsociety ofKnow Nothings. The National\nDemocrats of New York have resolved to\nrun Judge Bronson for Governor. Thomas\nBragg has been nominated for Governor\nof North Carolina, and Judge Pollock\nfor Governor of Pennsylvania. The bill\noriginated by Miss Dix for the relief of\nthe indigent insane, has been vetoed.by\nthe President.
0d9122905b1280bd8dea2dbafbb02f2b NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.2308742853168 40.735657 -74.172367 Section 1. The cars of any street railway\ncompany shall not be allowed to obstruct the\ncrosswalks of any street.\nSection 2. It shall be the duty of the motor-\nmen and drivers of the cars to give ample\nnotice to the drivers of vehicles and pedes\ntrlans of their approach, and also to afford\nall reasonable opportunity for them to avoid\ncollision or accident.\nSection 3. All trolley cars, when comUig to a\nstop to take on or let off passengers, twill do\nso on the near corner of an intersecting street,\nexcept where trolley stations are designated\nEvery car stopping to receive or discharge\npassengers before crossing any intersecting\nstreet, shall stop ao that the fender of such |\ncar shall be, when the car has stopped, not j\nless than ten feet from the line of such in-,\nterseettng street.\n8ect1on 4. No person having the control of\nthe speed of a street railway car in \nstreet shall, except in case of accident or to\nprevent injury to persons or property, allow\nsuch car to go within ten feet of a car or\nother vehicle in front of his car.\nSection 5. No person having the control of\nthe speed of a street railway car shall allow\nit irf any street to go against or afoul of any\nperson, vehicle or thing whatsoever, nor shall\nany such person fail to stop his car at any\nplace in a street when directed by a police\nofficer so to do.\nSection 6. No person having the control of\nthe speed of a street railway car passing\nalong a street shall fall to keep a vigilant\nwatch for all teams, carriages and persons, es-\npecially children, nor shall any such person\nfall to strlko a bell several times in quick\nsuccession on approaching any street at least\none hundred feet from any street crossing,\nand on approaching any team.
00286454713d891391855400ed91ccf7 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1840.2499999683769 43.798358 -73.087921 spirits be the way to prevent its extension,\nwhy. would not this be the way to prevent\nthe extension of the other sins mentioned 7\nTheie is more or less lewdness in Vermont.\nWhy, then, in order to prevent its exten\nsion, should there not be license given for\nbrothels. making it a respectable busi-\nness, clothed with legislative sanction, un-\nder proper restrictions ! And so of gamb\nling, and other sins and public nuisances.\nWhat redeeming quality or feature has\nthis sin of dealing in, and using, human\npoison, that it should receive the sanction\nand aid of law? What other immorality\nreceives legal sanction and aid? Either\nthe traffic in this poison is an immorality,\nor it is not. The opponents ot the resolu-\ntion and the advocates of licensing the traf-\nfic, may take which side of the proposition\nthey please, and they lose their case they\nshall be made to condemn themselves. Or\nstate tlie proposition differently, if you please.\nThus : Either alcoholic poison, to be used\nas a beverage, is a legitimate article of\ncommerce, or it is not. Now, on the one\nhand, if it be allowed that is a legitimate\narticle of trade that the traffic is no im-\nmoralitywhat right has the legislature to\nprohibit it to one and guarantee it to anoth-\ner, any more than to do the same thing in\nregard to grain, or any other commodity ?\nIt is manifestly an unconstitutional viola-\ntion of free trade. On the other hand, if\nthis poison, as a beverage, be acknowledg-\ned to be an illegitimate article of commerce\nif the traffic be an atrocity, a sin against\nuod and human society what 'right has\nthe legislature of Vermont to license it?\nThis, too, i9 a violation of the constitution\nof the State, which enjoins the prohibition\nof vice, and the promotion , of virtue, nam-\ning Temperance, particularly. But the un-\nconstitutionality of the thing is of trivial\nimportance, compared with its heinousness\nbefore God. What ! Will the people of\nVermont, and the legislature of Vermont\nacknowledge the atrocious sinfulness of this\naccursed abomination, and then turn direct-\nly about and sell indulgences for it? li-\ncense men to commit this sin this horrible\noutrage upon mankind and the Jaw of God ?\nAre death-warran - ts
08c0852f1328819386c1b885998ac6e2 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1885.1356164066465 42.217817 -85.891125 Orand lUpids; by Mr. 1'ark hurst, to amend Hec\ntlon fiurti, Howell, relative to trials of lsaes of\ntacts: also, to i rohibit taxation of attorneys'\ntees in Circuit Courts In certain cases; by\nMr. Itlcharrtsen to amend tha act authorU-ni- r\nthe sale of the Michigan Central ItaJ I road;\nby Mr. Dodge, to lue a patent t Eira Jones;\nby Mr. l'ost, to detach territory from ltoscom-tno- n\nTownship and attach It to Neater Town-\nship, In ItOHCotnmon County; by Mr. larkhurst,\na resolution callinc upon the Commissioner of\ntho Land Oince for Information aa to the case of\nsales or swamp lands and t be amounts belong-\ning to each county; adopted, mils passed on\nthird readtng: House bill No. ftJ and 7,\nto prevent the killing of quail except In No-\nvember. House b II Na Hi, amending Section\nsuf.1 . llovU. relative to partlt ou of real estate.\nHouse bill Ao. 31 , amending Section COJ7, How\nell. A resolution was Introduced by Mr. li rant\nto Investigate the sending of prlnonors to the\nlouU House of Correction by Justices. Laid\nover one day. AdJU Gen. Itobi rtton submitted\nan estimate of the aniount It would take to\nequalize State lountle in accordance with the\nprovlsiona of llouae bill So. 6A\nHouse bill organization of societies\nand the Senate bill for the preservation of art\npassed the Senate on the 11th last, liills yere\nIntroduced to authorize guardians of lneane\njcrHons to carry ont contracts of their wards; to\namend section H73' .i , Howell, relative to assign-\nments; appropriating money for the Northern\nAsylum for the Insane; to amend section 5701,\nHowell, relative to the discharge of mortgages;\nto amend sections, 3177, a:i7H, an1 :;37' .,\nHowell, relative to railroads. A bill to require\nthe UHd of Lells oa teams during the wlntor\nwas patneJ. It is t) be applicable to the Upper\nPeninsula only. In the lionse.the following\nbills were Introduced: To Incorporate (Had win\nvillage; to amend Section Tool, Howell, relative\nto ejectments; to amend the act incorporating\nAlpena: for the organization of military forces:\nto amend Section '9J7, Howell, transferring\ncases in Justices' courts ; authorizing Ulencoe,\nLake County, to collect school moneys and in-\nstitute proceedings against embe tiers of school\nfunds; to appoint a State Live S ock Sanitary\nCon mission: to establish Hoard of llulldlna\nCommissioners in Detroit ; to amend act P3 of 1875\nrelative to offenses against property; to make\nunlawful the payment of laborers in scrip or\nstore orders: to amend the act relative to ti sh-s hoo - t s
020b44202f3bc2e97abef090f6f63c36 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.3630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 villi bjick, A calcb bimn SO feet long at the\niead of Thirtyillth street sewer to protect 1\nnouth o( icwcr, 82,450; repairing and puiutlng\nuarket street bridge, S-. 5U); bench roarfts for city\n;radc*, §2UU; Seventeenth street bridge, bulauco\niu eoutract, 310,89s 00: ono street sweeper. $426;\nJharles street, cobble pavement. 52,400; Twcuietb\nstreet. Main to Waler, cobble pavement\nmd curt?, S'J>G; Alley H, cobble pivemcnt, 8-176;\n;radeaud gravd north Huron street, Zaue to\nMew Jet>ey. $1,231); new curb forThird and West i\ntrceuj, gjyS: new curb, both sides Jacobs street,\nTwenty-third to Twenty louith, SC25; pave 1\n«"ltU cobble Alley P and 12 Inch crock sewer in\niame alley from Twenty-Second street to Alley\n. 0 . SG60; new curb south filde Twenty-fourth\nitreet between Koff aud Jacob, $142; new curb\ns'lneteenib street from Woods street to Alley O.\n!I60 27; tweuty Inch crock sewer In Twelfth ,\ntreet from wharf to Chaplino street, 15 Inch\newer from Chaplino to Jacob,12 inch sewer from I\nlacob to Jligb, 12 inch sewer in Alley C {row\nilevcnth to "lwelfth, and a 12 inch sewer In Jioff ,\nrom 820 feet north of Twelfth to Twelfth, to\nloaiject with Twelfth street, Sfi,200; 12 Inch crock\newer iu Market from Tenth to Eleventh, S-lr>7 60 1\nwelvc-lnch crock sewer In alley A. Twcu-\ny seventh to Twenty-eighth, $:iw 00; fifteen-\nnch crock sswer, Sixteenth street, from Cbnp- J\niue to Koff, with drops at City Building. JIS500;\nwelvc-inch crock sewer, on Seventeenth street,\nrom Wood to alley 1-', 8:110 00; twelve-inch\nrock sewer In alley Fourteen, from Kofi' to J\nilley K, $23000: twelve-luch crock sewer.' In al- i\ney between North York and North Huron\ntreew, /rom north side of Hew Jersey street,\nouth to tower in alley meeting North\nI'ork and North Huron streets, S'-&0;\nvrolve-inch crock sewer in alley between South\niurou and South York from Delaware street ]\niouth to ilrst cross alley, $33!) 25; twelve-Inch 1\n:roek sewer In alley between North Huron and \\\nVtbasb street to eoniicet with Indiana street\newer, $7aG 00; elghteen-Inch crock sewer iu\necond alley couth of Oluo street, commencing\nit aouth Hroadwny and running west to Hock j\nIvor: twelvo-lnch crock sewer lu alley running\n>amliel with South llroadway to connect with\niighteen-Inch sewer, including stono work,\n(2,757 bO] pimingSevontoenth si reel to grade of\nialtlmore tfc Ohio railroad, $75 0u.\nA number of East Wheeling people\nmeat the meeting to lobytho *if-\n;eenth street paving scheme. Several of\n. hern addresaed the committee, but the\nBoard of Public Works' estimates did\nlot even come up for discussion.
0a514ccbc4c0e30e15924bf8d0c345b0 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1885.4452054477422 43.82915 -115.834394 Commenciag at the east end center stake on\nwhich is posted the original notice of relocation by\nthe Elmira Silver Mining Company and running\nthence in a southerly direction 300feet to a post\nmarked “S. E .,” thence runningin a westerly di­\nrection 1000 feet to a post marked, “S. W ” tlience\nrunning in a northerly direction acrosa the west\nend center post or stake 600 feet to a post marked\n•*N. W ” thence running in an easterly- direction\n1000feet to a post marked "N. E .” thence running\niu a southerly direction 300 feet to the east end\ncenter post or stake, the place of beginning.\nSaid claim running in an easterly and westerly\nkirection along said vein or lode. Also the mill\nsite described substantially rs folluws:\nCommencing at a posti» whicha copyof the orig­\ninal notice of location was posted, about 150 feet\nwesterly from a large blaqk rock on the side of\nBear Creek, commonly called Smith's rock, sbout\n125feet south westerly from the dwelling house of\nJoseph Rohbins. and about 75feet west of said Bear\nCreek, oi Smith. Fork, running tlience in a south­\nerly direction about 830feet to a post about 250feet\nwest from Bear Creek or Smiths Fork, thence east­\nerly across said Creek 400feet more or less to a post\nthence in a northerly direction 500feet, more or less\nto a post on the southern bank of Wolverino Gulch\nthence westerly about 400 feet to the center of the\nchannel of said Bear Creek or Smith's Fork thence\nwesterly np said creek about 600 feet to a post,\ntlience in a westerly direction about 225 feet to the\nplace of beginiug. Said Mill site embracing five (5)\nacres, and lying west of and adjoining the Banner\nMill Site on which is situated the quartz mill be­\nlong ug to the Elmira Silver MiningCompan-,
121f3f681bb2ee06c125b99cce093996 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1895.4863013381532 46.601557 -120.510842 and decree of foreclosure issued oat of the uld\nsuperior court in tbe above entitled actiau.on the t\n- '>th dayfof June, 1K95, In favor of aald plaintiff\nand against the Mid defendant Wetley V. Jouee.\nfor tbe principal miro of sixteen hundred fifty-\nthree and la-100 dollars, with intereat thereon\nfrom June %!nd, IKb until paid at the rate of\ntwelve per cent, per annum, and the further\nmini of one hundred aud fifty dollara tl. 'iO.MO) I\nattoruey'a fee> and costs of suit arcountrnK to\nthirteen aad 40-100 dollan. and Increased coata,\naud commanding me to levy upon and make\nsale thereof, and whereu the aald Judgment ia\na foreclosure of a real eittate nmip given by\nthe aaid defendant Wesley P. Jouea toCrippen,\nLawrence & Company, and aaalcued to'V. H,\nAllen, plaintiff herein, upon tbe following real <\nemate altuate in Vakima County, State of Wash\nlUKtoa. 1. . « it. Tbe southeast qaarter, *r>-. of\nthe uorthwent quarter, nw' v Tbe north naif,\nii' a the aoutnweat quarter, i«U, and the\naoHthwest quarter, awl» of the southwest quar- i\nter, iw!, of section tweuty one, 21, township\nthirteen, It, north of range ulnetean, 19, east of\nWillamette Meridian, centaiuing one hundred\nand sixty, luo. acres, more or lews.\nNotice la hereby given that In obedience to\nstld command. 1 have levied upon, and will, oa\nSaturday, tbe .Tin day of July. lwi. between\ntbe honra of > o'clock a. in., and 4 o'clock p. m .\nto wit: At the hour of 2 o'clock p. ui.,ofMid\nday, at the front door of the court house in the\ncity of North Yaklua, Yaklma county,\nWashington, sell at punlic auction to tbe high-\nest and best bidder, tor cash, all of the above\ndescribed real estate, or a sufficient amount\nthereof to satisfy said judgment. Interest, at-\ntorneys' fees, costs and increased costs, aud that\nby tbe terms of aald decree tbe plaintiff may\nbecome the purchaser at aucb sale.\nDated this *th day of June, M»5.
c4766935c71346c9b01c3aa64a732a83 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.4808218860985 47.04502 -122.894872 lets, I will give the result. Lavina this\nplnce in company with some other gentle-l\nmen. we took rt“ trail "hen: mg about north.\nwest whivh we followed a distance of aboutl\nif) milef, nll of the way through the wood.\nsome partol which was heavdy timbercd,l\nwhile other pints had been burned over and\nmost of the helVy timber consumed, and\nmight be cleared o?' 111. .1 tri?ing expense. —\nAt the diltlnce above mentioned we came\ninto I most bountiful pnirie, two or three\nmiles in length. Ind from one to two mile;\nin hreadth, lyinfon the east hrlnch of the\nClichllil. Judging the qualit of the soil\nfrom the burden ofvegetation hereJlhould\n suppose it must. be very rich. A Very'thick\nicost of green gnu covered the whole prli.\nrie full eighteen incth height. Three or\nfour fumiliee have already settled here. and\nintern in room for more. Following down\nthe (hehalig in Ibout I mile we found In-\nother pnirie perhaps I mile or I mile and I\nbelt in breadth, pin of which had been\ntaken by a Mr. Hogue, who is residing on\nit with his famil . From there on to the\nfork! of the Chehdjs, I distance of four or\nlive miles, we pused some two or three\nother prairies. the land being 11l olthe my\nrieh bottom llnd, easily cleared, and will\nloon be Occupied by industrious settlers.—\nAt the Forks there is quite I largo rlirie.\nA gentleman has just taken a claim fare.—\nThe I think name day will lie I pro'minent\npoint. It is considered the “bend of nlvi-\nltion
1bacbf87555a1f656e4db75b54e67526 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.3493150367833 40.063962 -80.720915 Uouae of Common;, noblemen, ,\nhiftlinnn. ilpiwnns nml h larm* nninl>or\nof Americana were present Dean Bradley '\nand Mr. Lowell entered the Chapter I\nHouse arm in arm. The dean made a 1\nshort speech, in which he said he heartily <\nsympathized with the object of the meet- >\ning. He paid a high tribute to Mr. Lowell 1\nand said that he was eminently fitted to t\nperform the duty of unveiling the 6tatue. b\nThe ceremony, he Baid, would add an- t\nother, link to the many that already bind ^\nEngland and America. 8\nMr. Lowoll replied that he would have s\npreferred that the task of unveiling had (\nbeen entrusted to worthier hands, but the t\nfact that the bust is a gift of the late Rev.\nDr. Mercer, of Rhode Island, through his\nexecutrix, Mrs. Pell, supplied that argu- c\n(bent of fitness which wonld otherwise\nhave been absent. We continued: "All\nthe waters of the Atlantic cannot M ash out ^\nof the consciousnets of either Nation that\nvre hold our intellectual property in com- w\ntnon. Tho literary traditions and fame &\nDf those who shed lustre upon our a\nrace remain an undivided inheritance.\nColeridge's works are a companion and\nteacher in the happiest hours of our youth, a\nind in old age the radiant images oi T\nfouth which we have lost. Purely there ti\nire no* friends bo constant as poets. si\nA.mong them none are more faithful than n\nColeridge. Juat fifty-one years ago I be- y ,\nMine a possessor ot a pirated American\neprint of Coleridge, Shelly and Keats, ri\nmd I trust I may be pardoned p\nfor the delight I took in it tl\nDoleridge was a metaphysical teacher .\nind interpreter, whose services are incal- vv\nsalable." Mr. I<owell said he admired es- c<\njedally the "Ancient Mariner" far more ai\nndeed, than "Clirittabel." Mr. Coleridge Vi\nvas a man of artless simplicity and yet a t)\ninished scholar, although not exact* He\nwed much to tho poetry of others but n]\nnost to his own native genius. He was H\ndcture^quo in the best sense of the term. ^\nMr. Lowell concluded: ''This is neither\nhe time nor place to speak of Coleridge's\nonduct.to himself, his family or the x,\n?orld. He left behind him a great name,\niet those who are blameless cant the first\ntone at one who might have been better\nisd he possessed tno business faculties\nrhich make man respectable. He left us an\nuch a legacy as only genius and genius c|\nlot always can leave." [Choers.]\nLord Coleridge returned thanks on be-
3358905776782dc4ab8adc29592b0228 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.080601061273 41.681744 -72.788147 clay tablet that lay buried for more\nthan three thousand years and writ-\nten in a language that had been to\ntally forgotten for almost that long\nhas just been deciphered by Profes\nsor Edgar H. Sturtevant of Yale Uni\nversity, who presented his discover\nies at a Joint session of the Lingulstie\nSociety of America and the Ameri\ncan Phllolological association held re\ncently in Cincinnati. The tablet was\nbought from a dealer in antiques for\nthe Yale Babylonian collection by tne\nlate Professor Albert T. Clay. Where\nthe dealer got it is not known, but\nits appearance, the shape of the\ncharacters on it. and particularly the\nlanguage of the inscription suggest\nthat the ultimate source is the vil\nlage of Bodhas Keul, ninety miles\neast of Angora, the present capital\nof Turkey. Very likely, Professor\nSturtevant said here today. It was\nstolen by a laborer during the exca-\nvations carried on by the Ger-\nman archaelogist, Hugo Winkler, In\n1907 and !0g.\nThe language and inscription ts\nthat of the Hlttlte empire, which was\nvery powerful tn the fourteenth and\nthirteenth centuries B. C, and whoso\ncapital, Hattusas, was on the site of\nBoghai Keui. Its power was broken\nand the capital destroyed about 1200\nB. C . by Invading barbarians from\nEurope. The very existence of the\nHittite state In Asia Minor was so far\nforgotten in later centuries that the\nname cameto be applied to the\nsouthcrmost province of the empire,\nwhich had been erected into en in\ndependent state. Hence it is that the\ncenturies 3. C . called the peoples of\nNorthern Syria Hittltes, Just so the\nAssyrians of the eight and seventh\nHittites mentioned in the Old Testa\nment were really Syrians; Uriah the\nHittite, whose wife attracted King\nDavid's amorous attentions, had no\nconnection with the Hittites of Asia
0190917554a7bfda41de21261943b5fb OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1877.409589009386 41.020015 -92.411296 From lb* N«W York TIBMB, May, 23.\nThe opposition to Mr. Il&yes'ai tion\niu South Carolina and Louisiana still\nobtains expression in many earnest\nRcpublicau newspapers. They con­\ndemn what he has done in those states\nas at variance with the principles and\npurposes of the party which elected\nhim. Some of them go further and\narraign him as a betrayer of a great\ntrust, and, therefore, as no longer en­\ntitled to the party's confidence. It is\nnecessary to exercise a discriminating\njudgment before determining the rel­\native value of these criticisms. Per­\nsonal pique often puts on the garb of\npatriotism ; and many an outburst of\nindignation may, in the world of pol­\nitics, be traced to an individual sense\nof wrong. After makiug allowance\nfor influences of this sort, enough\ngenuine feeling remains to be worthy\nof respectful consideration. It is not\na groundless or unreasonable feeling.\nOn the contrary it reflects the impress­\nion produced on honest republicans\nof tho more radical type, and is un­\ndoubtedly shared in strong republi­\ncan states to a larger extent than san­\nguine supporters of the President\nhave been willing to admit. Wc have\nnot attempted to conceal our sympa­\nthy with it, or tosuppress the remon­\nstrances to which it has led. As long\nas the President seemed to hesitate,\nor to seek in democratic professions\na justification of tho course, which his\ninterpretation of duty had prompted,\nemphatic protests were in order. —\nAnd when the decisive steps had\nbeen taken, two states which had\n_iven republican majorities were\nhanded over to the democracy, self-\nrespect required the declaration that\nwhat was called a policy of concillia-\nton, was, in fact, a surrender whose\nconsequences time will develop.\nHaving reached this stage, it seems\nto us that for a time, at least, the con­\ntroversy should bo closed. Some\nphases of it may hereafter be revived\nby the natural currcut of events: but\nwhat can be gained, meanwhile, by a\nmere reiteration of complaints, how­\never just, or of allegations, however\ntrue? If the soreness and indigna­\ntion which large numbers of republi­\ncans, could be of the slightest avail,\ntheir daily exhibition in the newspa­\npers might be looked for as matters\nof course. But in politics, displays of\ntemper are good only so far as they\nmay be necessary for the vindication\nof sincerity, or for the production of\nsome practical result. Tho former\nobject lias already been attained. The\nvindication of the integrity of'the re­\npublicans who disapprove of the Pres­\nident's policy is as complete as words\ncan make it. What, then, is the prac­\ntical result that may be anticipated\nfrom a repetition of inquiries which,\nabstractly considered, are unanswer­\nable, but which relate to proceedings\nthat arc absolutely ended ?\nWhat the President has done in\nSouth Carolina and Louisiana cannot\nbe undone. Assail him in newspa­\npers, make war upon him in Congress\nstill the cause of otrense will remain\nuntouched. Hampton and Nicholls\nwill continue Governors. Thejr
27b412f82b8984975ba42bc00bc529bb THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1873.4287670915778 42.217817 -85.891125 doc captives, and by them interviewed. He\nsays that several of Jack's bust warriors w anted\nto leave him and come into our camp, and put\nup 1 job on him. His gnu was returned bun.\nand he was allowed to depart on bis mission,\nHardly had tins arrangement been effected\nwhen the rifle in thehsndsof Btesmtx .at Prank\nwss aocidentally discharged. Borers Modoc\nwho stood With uplifted bands decamped at this\npoint. The accident was explained tot harlex ,\nand all suspicion of foul play removed, when\nanother accident osused Charley mors annoy-\nance. Capt. HssbrOOCk's command reached\nthe edge of the creek as Charley came OTOT\nthe bluff, and of course be was gather. I in as\na prisoner a second time.\nTwo hours afterward bo was released and\nsent after the fleeing IfodoOS, but he failed to\novertake them. Not a shot other than the ac-\ncident nl one was tired. Had Hasbrouck formed\nthe desired connection on time, the entire\nband would been killed or captured. It\nwas impossible for his command to accomplish\nthe task. His troops did all that could be\ndone by any man. Uhey rodo over fragments\nof lava and one mile further than tho distance\nridden by Capt. Jackson's command.\nThe hiu. rise resulted in the surrender of\nBoston Charley, Princess Mary, sister of Capt.\n.lack. Rlack Jim's woman, live other fenialo\nModocs from t to 00 years of age. and the cap-\nture of seven ponlei and mules.\nThe Modocs actually slipped from the grasp\nof the troops. There was no help for this re\nsuit. Jacks retreat this time whs inside of\nthe canon through which runs Willow creek.\nThe canon has precipitous sides, averaging\nforty feet high. There are few places where\nthe canon can be entered by troops within six\nmiles of Jack's last home. The Modocs es-\ncaped by running down the csnon, ho now the\nModoc captives will try to wean more of Jack's\nwarriors from him.
20087163669d60b5da118f3534b172fc NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.160273940893 40.735657 -74.172367 within the following boundaries:\nBeginning at the point of intersection of the\nsoutherly line of Thomaa sti«et and westerly\nline of Mulberry street, thence westerly along\nthe southerly line of Thomas street to the\neasterly line of New Jersey Railroad avenue,\nthence southerly ah ng the same to the south-\nerly line of Aetor street, thence westerly\nalong tho same to the easterly line of Austin\nstreet, thence southerly along the same and\nacross Emmet street to the souther y line of\nEmmet street, thence westerly along the same\nabout 26 feet, thence southerly and parallel\nwith New Jersey Railroad avenue about ICO\nfeet, thence easteily and parallel with Emmet\nstreet across New Jersey Railroad avenue to\nthe easteily line of New Jersey Railroad\navenue, thence southerly along the same to\nthe southerly line of Wright thence\neasterly a ong the same about 60 feet, thence\n^outherlv and about parallel with New Jersey\nRailroad avenue to the southerly line of Miller\nstreet, thence easterly along the same about 60\nfeet, thence southerly and parallel with New\nJersey Railroad avenue about 100 feet, thence\neasterly nr,d paralle with Miller street about\n25 feet, thence southerly and parallel with\nAvenue A to the northerly line of Pointer\nstreet, thence easterly along the same to a\npoint about 100 feet east of the easterly line\nof Avenue A. thence northerly and parallel\nwith Avenue A about 100 feet to the rear nine\nof propert:ee fronting on Vanderpool street,\nthence easterly and parallel with Vanderpool\nstreet for a distance of about 475 feet erst of\nthe eaeter y line of Avenue B, thence north-\nerly and
10acd60c867e99affd8c3d0a1195a4e9 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1881.3986301052764 39.743941 -84.63662 reputed author of "Bock Me to Sleep,\nMother," a correspondent of the Cincin-\nnati Commercial gives the following\noutline:, " 'Florence Percy,' or Miss\nChase; had a romantic life and a check-\nered one. She is at present editing a\npaper in Maine. She lives with her\nthird husband, an intelligent man, at\npresent in . Europe . temporarily. Her\nfirst husband was MarahallTaylor, who'\nfell in love with her through her poems,\ncorresponded became engaged," and\ncame from California to Washington to\nmarry her. She never had seen him\nLnntQ the day she met him, at the train,\nwuen uie license was lmmeaiareiy pro-\ncured and the1 ceremony performed at\nher father's house. After a few years\nthe marriage contracted without any\nprevious acquaintance proved unhappy.\nThey separated, she retaining little\ngirl, christened with her mother's nom\nde plume, Florence Percy. Afterwards,\nwhile traveling abroad, she married an\nartist Paul Akers, to whom she was per-\nsonally devoted, and whose death, after\na short f period of matrimonial happi-\nness, was the severest blow of her life,\nfollowed as it was by the loss of a baby\ngirl of his. Then passed years of loneli-\nness, when a third marriage, of respect\non her part, but of love on the port of\nher husband, gave her a pleasant home\nand kind" attention, and resulted in the\nbirth of a third .daughter, a child now\nfifteen years of age, phenomenally beau-\ntiful and gifted.- Mr. Chase, the father\nof Florence Percy, lives in Washington,\nnear the Navy Yard. He is a robust\nfine-looki-
25e807c09df883bd27a47f5596601842 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.6095890093861 39.745947 -75.546589 ous loss to both clashing elements—\nand to the public. To continue. It\nwould be to make such loss accu­\nmulative. The Interests of parties\nconcerned, Including those of the\npublic, urge Immediate settlement.\nCessation of the strike is the only\nanswer that the problem admit\nand this answer Is within the pow­\ner of the Immediate parties to work\nout. Failure, or rather refusal, so\nto work It out would be Inexcusable\nand would challenge the govern­\nment to resort to stern and direct\nmeasures for protection of the pub­\nlic against the menace thus raised.\nThis Is no time for delay over the\napportionment of blame for the ex­\nisting situation. It Is time—past\ntime—to end the struggle.\nThe longer this problem remains\nunsolved the harder it becomes.\nRealization of this Is driven homo\nby the fact that deterioration of\nrolling stock and Incidental compli­\ncations are dally making It more\ndifficult. It Is charged by leaders\nof certain railroad labor organiza­\ntions not Involved in the shopmen's\nstrike that, as a result of Inefficient\nshop work, railway equipment Is be­\ncoming unsafe to an extent that\nthreatens to endanger not only the\nworkers but the traveling public.\n charge may or may not bo\nwarranted by the facts, but It serves\nto complicate the strike Issues. For\nIt points to Increasing trouble for\nthe railroads In operating transpor­\ntation facilities and warns the pub­\nlic of the rise of additional matters\nof dispute. It Is significant that\nrailroad labor leaders who are\nstressing the deterioration of rolling\nstork as cause for alarm largely\nbase their position on solicitude for\nthe public. This sounds a note that\nshould be held to. come what may.\nThe hour for real leadership In the\ntransportation Industry has struck.\nThe situation calls for leaders that\noan guide the conflicting elements\nout of the wilderness In which they\nhave wandered. Accomplishment of\nthis task depends not only on abil­\nity to lead, but on willingness to be\nled. Let the solicitude for the pub­\nlic asserted by the railroad labor\nleaders In the matter of rolling-\nstock deterioration bo extended to\nall elements concerned, and let it\nbe enlarged to Include the public's\nwelfare as well as Us safety—and\nthe way out will he easy to find. A\nway to settlement must eventually\nbe followed—and the sooner this\nIs done the better for all Involved.
137cce382be81fc5620e03705271324c THE ALLIANCE-INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1894.028767091578 40.8 -96.667821 There are those who think the work\nthe Nebraska Farmers' Alliance is\nended; that while tbe bankers of tbe\nstate keep op their organization with\nthe avowed purpose of "better lnflueno\ning legislation" In their bhalf, while\nthe merchants, manufacturers, lawyers,\ndoctors, men of every trade or pro'\nfesslon, find, It to their interest to keep\nup organizations to aid each other and\nook after their political welfare, tbe\nagriculturalists of the stato and nation\nhave no Interest in common sufficient\nfor the existence of an organization, but\nshould leave their financial and political\nbusiness for office seeking politicians to\nook after. It grieves us to think how\nlittle has been accomplished by the\nAlliance com Dared with all that is\nnecessary to be done before the farm\nersof the state obtain anything like\nustloe. At times we grow weary and\ndiscouraged when we that the\nwork of the Alliance Is hardly begun\nand tbat after tbe weary years ot toil\nof tbe best men and women ot the state\nwe have hardly taken a step on the\nroad to Industrial freedom. We know;\nthat although we may not arrive there\nour children will enter Into the promised\nand, and we can make their trials\nfewer and llsrhter. even If we live not\nto see the fall light of freedom for man-\nkind. We work In the knowledge that\nour labor ot education is not In vain,\nsome one, sometime, will arise and call\nthe Alliance blessed. Meanwhile to us\nwho have learned "to labor and to wait"\nthere come sometimes sweet glimpses\nof the land beyond, and it seems so\nnear, the road so short, that we can not\nhave long to wait to enter and possess\nthe land.
3c89ea455843e286410f98d596175bc4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1930.1767122970573 41.681744 -72.788147 Gaillard did not actually collect\nany money because one pt the places\nat which he called was the office of\na man who was known not to bo\ninterested in purchasing liquor. Al -\nthough Mr. Alcorn did not refer to\nhim by name, it was evident that he\nreferred to 13. J . Skinner, chairman\nof the board of directors of the\nSkinner Chuck Co.\nGaillard and Character had an\nautomobile, Mr. Alcorn said, and\nCharacter remained in it while Gail-\nlard made the calls.\nJudge W. F. Mangan who repre-\nsented Gaillard and Character, said\nthat the latter had absolutely no\nrecord anywhere. Ho said Charac\nter had nothing to do with tho of\nfense and had no more part in it\nthan had the cases of potatoes\nwhich were found in the automobile.\nAs to Gaillard. ."udge Mangan said,\nthere was no question that he must\nbe punished. However, tho game he\ntried lo work was not as bad as the\nordinary game which is\nsometimes successfully operated be-\ncause nobody who was approached\nwas takn in by his representations\nand anybody who might be misled\ninto giving him money, would be a\nviolator of the liquor law.\nJudge Mangan further said that\nGaillard, after being arrested, had\nsent for County Detective Edward J.\nHickey and told him everything he\nwanted to know about the case. As\nto a penalty Judge Mangan sug-\ngested six months in jail for Gail-\nlard. He inadvertently told the\ncourt that Gaillard had already been\nin jail three months and Judge Jen-\nnings remarked that as he listened\nto the state's attorney and the de-\nfense counsel, hd had come to the\nconclusion that a six months' sen-\ntence vas sufficient.\nMr. Alcorn, however, called the\ncourt's attention to the fact that\nGaillard had bnen in jail three\nweeks instead of three months and\nJudge Margan hastened to assure\nthe court that he had meant to say\nthree weeks.
4fab3ad16591eba7c09548a6a3a94a6d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1856.788251334497 39.261561 -121.016059 The Prospect in Nevada.—TLo California\nAmerican, of Friday last, makes an estimate of\nthe probable vote of the several counties in this\nState—the whole of which, footed up, gives the\nState to Fillmore by about ten thousand ma-\njority. Nevada county is put down as good for\ntwo hundred majority for Fillmore. This is\nabout the same mnjority that Johnson had last\nyear over Digler, and the estimate was probably\nformed upon the result of that election. The\nAmerican appears to be oblivious to the fact\nthat hundreds in this county have withdrawn\nfrom the Know Nothing order within the past\nyear, and arc now working with the Democracy,\nwhile the ranks of the Republicans are mainly\nrecruited from those who voted the K. N . ticket\nat the last general election. Between Fillmore\nand Fremont, from present appearances, the\nvote will be a close one in Nevada county, but\nthe vote for Buchauun is almost certain ex-\nceed that given for both the other candidates\ncombined. The news by the next two steamers\nmay have a tendency to modify the result, as\nbetween Fillmore and Fremont, but under any\ncircumstances Nevada may l>e set down for\nBuchanan by from ten to twelve hundred votes\nover either of his opponents. Our friends in\nother counties can rely on this as a fixed fact.\nThe K. N . papers are continually prating\nabout the “reaction” in favor of Fillmore, but\nno one believes in these representations; and\nit is admitted on all sides that the real contest\nis between Buchanan und Fremont. A few of\nthe more sanguine Know Nothings still cling to\nthe hope that Fillmore may be able to carry one\nor two States, and that the election will be\nthrown into the House of Representatives, but\nthe general impression is that he will not get\nthe electoral vote of a single State.
2f31c8f6874ed64da1c580ff4de3995b DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.4494535202894 44.939157 -123.033121 whether voluntary or compulsory; the\nrequirement of military drill on the\npart of all male students of some of\ntho state educational institution!) ot\nthe northwest was denounced us ty-\nrannical, since it demands that tax-\npayers violate their conscience in this\nmatter if they hold to Friends views\nof war and war preparation; and the\nauthorities of the nation were urged\nto seek ior the peace of the world and\nof tho United States, not by\nforce but by the power of truth and\nlove and justice. The following reso\nlution was made a part of the records\nof the yearly meeting:\nResolved, That we pledge our love\nand loyalty to our country, and de\nshe always to be willing to make any\nrightful sacrifice iii the interests of\ngenuine hut that we can\nnot permit a false idea of patriotism\nto blind us to the fact that wo owe\nour love to all mankind, and must not\npermit i o be circumscribed by geo-\ngraphical boundaries; and hat we must\nplace our loyaltp to Jesus Christ above\nour loyalty to any man or set or men,\nbeing true to our couscientius convic-\ntions at whatever cost.\nYesterday was full of devotional ser-\nvices on the part of the great gather\ning that filled the yearly meeting\nhouse. Services were held at 8 o'clock\n11 o'clock, 3 o'clock and 7 o'clock,\nwith the Bible school and the Chris\ntian" Kndeavor meetings also largely\nattended by visiting delegate.\nToday has been occupied with con- -\nsnferiuuon of tn,e Jsiblo vhool and\nmissionary
72a6edaea50dd9fde5f9227061870a33 THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8592895858633 38.729625 -120.798546 American Giri.s and Matrimont.—\nAmerican girls of good education, says\nHarper'» Week ly, do not know how lucky\nthey arc. Every American girl who is\nsane and sound—and many arc neither\nthe one nor the other—tins not one, but\nmany chances of marriage. It Is very\ndillereiit in Europe. In the country towns\nin England marrying men are so rare that\nit is quite common to see a dozen charm-\ning girls, all well educated, pretty, and\nlady-like, lighting for a half-starved corate\nor a wretched attorney. Among English\nmothers match making is carried on to an\nextent wholly unknown here ; and not\nfrom mean motives, but from sheer neces-\nsity. In Prance no father expects, his\ndaughter to get a husband unless sho\nbuys bini. Every man who has a daugh-\n begins, when she is ten years old, to\nsave money to buy a husband. Paps and\nillumina deprive themselves of luxuries/\nand even necessities, to amass a respecta-\nble sum ; the hoy s education is cut short\nin order to swell the daughters purse. In\nproportion to its size is the quality of the\nhusband. A father who can give his\ndaughter half a million of francs will ex-\npect a General or a Senator, and so on\ndown. In Germany, ami indeed through-\nout Europe, n father who expects his\ndaughter to marry, must buy a husband.\nIn America, hearts tiro conquered not\nbought. Any good girl, however poor,\ncan always, if she will, obtain a husband\n—and one she « ill be proud of and every\nway worthy of her hand and heart.
826ab9dd969cd26cb0a76b5c832bd8f8 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1860.8702185476118 35.780398 -78.639099 Prof. O. J. Wooi : Dear Sir ; In the Utter part\nth year 1852. while attending the State and\nNational Law School of tie State of New York,\nhair, from a cause unknown to me, commenced\nfalling off very rapidly, m thar in the short tpace of\nsix montb8,the whoie upper part of my scalp was\nalmost entirely bereft of its covering, much of the\nremaining portiou upon tbe side and back part of\nmy head shortly after became gray, so that you\nwill not be surprised when I tell you that upon\nj:j return to the State of Indiana, my more\ncasual acquaintances we e not so much at a loss\ndiscover tbe cause of the change in my appear-\nance, as my more intimate acquaintances were to\nrecognise me at all.\nI at osce made application to the most skill-\nful pbyiscUns the country, but, receiving no\nassurance from them that my hair could again be\nrestored, 1 was force! to becme reconciled to my\nfate, until, fortunately in tbe latter part of tbe\nyear 1857, your Restorative was recommended to\nme by a druggist, as being the most reliable Hair\nRestorative in use. I tried one bottle, and found\nmy great satis'action that it was producing\nthe desired effect. Since that time, I have used\nseven dollars' worth of your Restorative, and as a\nresult, have a rich coat of very soft bla;k hair,\nwhich no money can buy.\nAs a mark of my gratitude for your labor and\nskill in the production of so weaderful an article,\nhave recommended its ufe to many of my friends\nand acquaintances, who I am happy to inform\nyou, are using it with like effect Very respect-\nfully, yours,
631fd99d939fd04a1bfb6631c478352e THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.4112021541691 39.290882 -76.610759 never cease to ascribe to us the selfish and grov-\nelling spirit which actuates them. They seem in-\ncapable of imagining that there is such a thing\nas disinterested patriotism. And we now tell\nthem again, that our log cabins are not intended\nto gull or to insult the good sense of the people.\nThey are intended to rebuke a calumny uttered\nby one of themselves, that the virtuous Harrison\ncould be bribed off by the donation of a log cabin,\na barrel of cider, and S2OOO a year. They are\nmeant also to show that we are not ashamed of\nour candidate because lie is not affluent, has to\nlabor on his farm, and is plain and simple in his\nhabits; and that he possesses all that purity of\ncharacter so generally ascribed to the farmer, or,\nif they will have it, to the dwellers inlog cabins.\n are intended to show that we are the bone\nand sinew, who live in plain and unpretending\nhouses, and are determined to liberate our coun-\ntry from the weak, corrupt, and ruinous adminis-\ntration which has so long abused our confidence,\nthat they are a type of the republican manners\nof our ancestors, who, with their stern virtue\nfreed us from a foreign yoke, and gave us the\nfree constitution which tee reverence, and which\nyou have polluted, which you are attempting to\ndestroy, but which tee teill preserve.\nThese are the laudable objects of the log cabin\nemblem. It is emblazoned on the standard which\nis leading us to victory over as faithless a band\nof public servants as ever existed in any age.\nLike the stars and stripes in the days of Wash-\nington, it has carried terror into the ranks of the\nenemies f liberty.
70e3db8bce2e15a5ea425cd0e745abc0 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1854.546575310756 35.780398 -78.639099 ror does the compliment lose any of its weight,\nwhen it is borne in mind that I amnot a member of\nany organization, whose object is to carry out these\nreform measures ; nor have any pledges been re-\nquired of me, as to the course I would pursue if\nelected to the Legislature.\nNow, from these premises, I think I may bo at\nliberty to draw this conclusion, viz : that the paci-\nfic though decided views which I have ever enter-\ntained in my private conversations on the Bubjeet\nof reform, havo been appreciated by my Iricnds,\nand that they are willing to believe that, if placed\nin a public position, I would neither be ashamed or\nafraid to acknowledge and sustain a principle,\nwhich, as a private citizen, I have deemed to be a\ncorrect one. Thus far, I trust, their confidence in\nme has not been misplaced.\nAnd I am sorry to disappoint in the least degree\nthe wishes expectations of my friends j but I\nfeel constrained to say, in all candor, that I havo\nno aspirations whatever for legislative honors,\nor for political preferment of any kind ; therefore\nit will hardly be expected that I will canvass for an.\noffico which I have in reality no ambition or desire to\nfill. Yet should my friends see proper to place my\nname upon their ticket and vote for me, whether or\nnot, (as I am informed it is their intention to do,) I\ncannot object to it nor would I, if I knew I would\nnot get ten votes in the county.\nAU I can say in addition is, that if elected, I shall\ntake my seat and discbarge the duties of the office\nwith what little ability I may have. As for the\nresolutions, I must be permitted to add, after a care-\nful examination of them, that I do not see that they\ncontain any sentimentthe least " anti-w hi- g"
3245ba065be11b291f7fa0b540d7353e THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1871.0534246258244 41.004121 -76.453816 To think that car tli should bo so lair,\nHo beautiful so bright a tlilnn;\nThat naturo should come forth and weir\nHuch Ktorlousnpp.irelllnu;\nThat sen nnd sky should Uvo and kIow\nWith llshl.and love, ami bollnoHs),\nAnd yet men ne'er seem to know\nHow much uOodof lovu can blos\nHowdet p their debt of thankfulness.\ne seen tho sun go down, nnd light\nLlko lloodsof gold thu western sk-y-\nWhen every trco and ilower was bright,\nAnd every pulse was beating high.\nAnd tho full soul was gushing love,\nAnd longing for Its homo above\nAnd then whi n men should soar, If ever.\nTo tho hi nil homo of thought and soul,\nWhen IlfoM degrading ties fchould Never,\nAnd tho lreo spirit spurn control\nThen have I seen, and how my cheek\nIs burning with tho sliamo I feel,\nThat truth 1 ln tho words I speak\nvo seen my fellow creatures steal\nAway to unhallowed mirth,\nAs If tho revelries of earth\nWero all that they could feel or sluuo :\nAnd glorious heaven wero scarcely worth\ni heir passing notice or their care.\nI'vo said I was u worshiper,\nAt woman's hhrluo yet even thero\nI'vo found uuworthliKss of thought;\nAnd when I deemed I Just had e.iught\nTherndlanco of that whole light\nA hlch makes earth beautiful nnd bright\nWhen eyes of llro their Hashes sent,\nAnd rosy lips looked eloquent\nOh t I hnvo turned away and wept to find\nItenealh It alt a trilling mind.\nI stood lu ono of thoso high halls\nhero Uenlus breathes lu sculptured slono,\nWhcte shaded light In soltuess lulls\nOn pencilled beauty. They had gone,\nWhoso hearts of llro and hands of skill\nHad wiought such power; butyet they spoke,\nTo mo lu every feature still,\nAnd fresh lips breathed and dark cjos woke,\nAnd crimson cheeks Hushed glowingly\nTo life-an-
3e1c9a46e61a6b0ac324b33879f1d34a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.4397259956875 39.745947 -75.546589 up In great mouthfuls To Germany Which will win, the Germany-Rus- j understood and acted upon the àbso\nIt was "time to act in Russia" the mo- ala that Germany Is striving with ; i„te community of interests between\nment the Czar was overthrown, and might and main to create—and Its ere- these little nations and ourselves\nGermany began acting then with Im- atlng—or democracy? Upon that Issue Czecho-Slovaks and the Jugo «lav\nmense skill and energy and has not lost hangs the fate of everything that man- the outposts of our own liberties\na minute or a second since. Vor want kind has built up from the lime when they are free, our own freedom is s»\nof a definite policy," says a writer ln Langton and Fltz-Waller extorted oure. jp they are left slaves of the\nThe London Times, "we day by are »he great Charier from King John to Hapsburgs, who in turn have come to\nlosing the chance oven to rebuild upon »he time wuen the Parliament of Eng- be but puppets of the Hohenzollerns\nthe ashes of Russia." This writer fore- land extorted Its rights from the then that family of congenital crimi\nsees the re-establlshment of order In Stuarts, to the time when the Amer- nais will be able, after a season of re*\nRussia after the present German-plan- lean people unfurled their Declaration (-operation, to begin again Its scheming\nned confusion has reduced the country of Tndenpendence on these shores and for world masterv. and the whole\nto the lowest point and In the future the time when the French people weary struggle will have to be fouaht\na Russian-German alliance again men- stormed the Bastille , Shall all these | anew.
23cd9fd370a162d69d2dbe8fabd97a81 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.3975409519835 58.275556 -134.3925 The fact that the entire south part of\nthe city, including all that portion\nlying between the saw mill aud the old\nBear's Nest mill, has been without any\nfire protection in the past, is one of the\nthings that has led the council to take\nthis step. In addition to this is the as¬\nsurance that in case of a big fire in the\nbusiness portion of the city, the pro¬\nposed pipe line will furnish an unfail¬\ning supply of water at a high pressure.\nThe scheme was suggested, and made\npossible by the magnanimous offer of\nSupt. MacDonald, of the Tread well, to\nallow the connection to be made and to\nfurnish the water in the case of the ex-1\ntreme necessity, as mentioned above.\nThe matter has not been settled\nas to whether the pipe will be laid on\nthe surface, depending entirely upon\nperfect drainage to keep it clear of ice\nduring cold weather, or, by burying it\ndeep in the ground, below the possibil¬\nity of frost, make it doubly secure.\nThe question of the improvement of\ntLe thoroughfare between Douglas and\nTreadwell, was also under discussion.\nThis includes the laying of a good plank\nroad along the line of the old railway\nas far as the town limits on the south,\nwhere it would be taken up by the city\nof Treadwell and continued as far as\nthe Treadwell store. It is very probe-!\nble that this will be done, but action is\ndeferred pending the final decision as\nto the manner of laying the pipe line.!
2405878effcedfec7605c2c7cce27b64 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.8835616121257 40.063962 -80.720915 Fatal Accident.-On Sunday evening\nlast, between 4 and 5 o'clock, nnian named\nCurly, employed at Kidd's Coal Works,\njust west of Bellafre, while walking on\ntho railroad track near the works, was\nstruck bv a freight engine and instantly\nkilled* flis right arm was torn otf, and he\nwas otherwise disfigured and mangled.\nMat. Fogerty, the engineer of tho train,\nsays he did not see Curly until the engine\nhad patted Aver him. Curly was a man\nof intemperate habits, and had been\ndrinking liard since Saturday, yvhen he\nwas paid off.\nPostponed..Thecaseof Isabella Thomas,\naim Belle Clark, charged with attempting\nto produce abortion upon Lizzie Baker,\nwinch was to have come up before Justice\nWait yesterday, was jKistponed until\nWednesday afternoon at '1 o'clock. The\npostponement was rendered necessary on\naccount of tho Prosecuting Attorney lieing\nengaged at tiit* llobrecht inquest. Tho\ndefendant is still in jail.\nJtEYM ANN is digging another well at liih\nbrewery, and is having bettor luck than\nwith the lirst It will be remembered\nthat he went down 075 feet before strik¬\ning water when' digging the first well,\nwhile the second gavo him all tho water he\nwanted at thirty-five feet. What makes\nthe thing more singular, is that tho two\nwells are not more than forty yards apart.\nThe Council Committee on Htreots, Al¬\nloys and Grades met at the stone bridge,\nwhich crosses tho creek at Main street, yes¬\nterday afternoon, for tho purpose of ex¬\namining the structure as to its safety for\ntmvel. The bridge is very old, and the\nabutment at tho north end appears to bo\nfliving May. Tho committee will proba¬\ncy recommend that the nccewarv repairs\nbe made to guard against accident.\nA .new schedule went Into effect on the\nWheeling and Kim Grove .Street Railway\nyesterday, l.'uderthe new nrmagement\ntho firnt ear loaves 1 ltli street at 7:110 a. m .\nami the last at 0:35 r. >r, running every six¬\nty-five minutes during the day and ove-\nninjf.
0caae91e254c0f3efb39539f2a3f01bc CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1902.5219177765093 39.623709 -77.41082 There they buried Abraham and Sarah,\nhis wife; there they buried Isaac and Re-\nbeksli, bis wife, and there I buried Leah,”\nand that must have been a great proces-\nsion which started from Egypt to Canaan.\n1 can think of another procession a little\nlike it. In 1881, not far from Luxor, a\ngreat find was made of kings and queens\nat a place called Del El llaliri, For a long\ntime the tourists had been picking up\npieces of jewelry and other valuables\nwhich the scholars knew belonged to tho\nkings and queens of other ages, and at\nlust after much work it was found that\na discovery had boon made of tho greatest\nvalue, and when the representatives of the\nGovernment made their way to Del El\nBahri they really found the mummy of tho\ngreat Pharaoh and others who were bur-\nied him. These bodies were taken\nout of tlie place of hiding, carried to the\nNile and floated off to Cairo, and it is\nsaid as tho procession moved along tho cel-\nebrated river the Egyptians lined the hank\nall the way to the city, threw dust into\nthe air, fell upon their faces and cried\naloud, “Tharaoh the great has come again!\nPharaoh the great has come again!" It\nmust have been like this when Jacob was\ntaken back to Canaan, “Jacob, the great,\nlias come again,” hut at last they reach\nthe cave of Machpelah. and they place\nhim there to rest. Abraham is there with\nSarail and Isaac with Rebekali and Jacob\nwith Leah, and there they shall wait until\nthe tomb is opened by the coming of\nChrist, and hand in hand they shall go\nforth to meet Him. May God speed the\nday.
08dcadd83756429ca6ad5bb55e964372 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1884.1215846678303 39.623709 -77.41082 “Yes, Stator Boggs, the was——"\n“Call mo Becky, Deacon Dodson. "\n“Ah youll call me Josh I"\n“Yea, J-J -Joshua,” and I know Aunt Becky\nput her gingham apron up to her face. Ton\nyears of courtship, and I doubt not this was\nthe first time she had addressed him by his\nChristian name. I thought surely the deacon\nwould sec his chance and throw both arms\naround her neck, fold her to his big breast,\nand say: “MyBecky, my own, own Becky."\nThat is about what 1 should have done, but\nDeacon Dodson Is older than I, and has passed\nthe gushing point of life.\n“1 hev been a-thinkin about somethin a\nbig, long time, Bister Bo —that is, B-Beck-y.\nIve been a-thinkin tbet—”\nWbat on earth could the man be waiting\nfori Had he fainted Had his tongue been par-\nalysed by U>e burden thrown upon itt I\nstrained my ear, but could catch no sound.\nLong, long, oh, how provokingly long the\nsilence dragged. At last 1 heard a kiss—yes,\nI could not have been mistaken, It must have\nheeu a kiss—and then a few soft sob* that\ntold of tears of joy in Aunt Beckys eyes.\nHad (heir souls read each other in the dark-\nness, and flowed together In eloquent silence\nos their cheeks lay clone against each other!\nIt must have been so, for after Deacon Dod-\nson hod gene away. Aunt Becky stood and\nlooked out at the window a long time; and\nwhan she turned bock and lighted the lamp\nto put Bobby to bed there were tears in her\neyes and a happy smile on her Up* that
2729ba80d48d03226d53e46d208d6491 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1917.83698626966 58.275556 -134.3925 at the liars she would ulways glvo\niuii the 'I'll always bo a sister to\nyol' spell and toll mo that sho hail\npromised to attend the noxt neigh¬\nboring potlarh with Wood tick Wll-\nII aa or Huhblt-lloartod John.\n"lut tho cold winter of which I\nstarted to tell you ratno on apaco.\nDay by day It grew colder and\n(Inallr both the sun and the moon\nfroze fast to their moorings and\nncltlur of them moved for a week.\nIt w:u something florce.\n"Tien It was that gaunt famine\nstulke4 In our village and tho plain¬\ntive unlls of starving children were\nwafted out on tho night zephyrs\nas the) were spanked and laid on\ntheir night shelves without suppors.\n"Thljgs went from deplorable to\nworse throughout tho vlllago until\nthe top*) that housed the family\nto willed tho Soro-Eyod Suge Hen\nbelonged wus reduced to tho last\ntlvo pouids of fish grease. Then It\nwas ttiut father unnounccd In\nthe couiuil house that tho first buck\nwho laid a moose at the door of his\ntepee woild be given tho hand of\nthe Sore-tyed Sago Hon in marriage.\n"It wai me to the timbor without\nitelav, for I well know that. In order\nto outdo Woodtlck William, I must\nbe up ant doing with u heart for\nany fato. There wore but two of\nus in the race, as Habbit-Hearted\nJohn said ho would pass.\n"It was lute iu the day when we\n-itartcd. m< going east and Wood-\ntick Willi. in going west. That\nnight four nehes of bluo snow fell.\nbut I kept bravely on my course.\niiuoyed up ty tho thought thut, In\n. u s e I won. the Soro-Eycd Sage Hen\ntvould honciforth occupy my tepee\nwith the lntlncible right to get up\ninletly at nffht and go through my\nimuts. That very thought kept me\nwarm in the neighborhood of my
093abf1e2ec9b5bfb0e4bc05ade6df64 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.6789617170107 44.939157 -123.033121 The Southern Pacific is charmingly frank and equally\npolite. Answering a complaint that a certain mill could\nnot get cars for hauling its logs, the managers write the\nPublic Service Commission explaining it satisfactorily.\nThey say the reason there are no cars for the logs is that\nthe company had to use the cars for the purpose of haul-\ning the finished product from the mill. That explanation\nshould satisfy almost anyone except of course the fellow\nwho wants cars and cannot get them. No reasonable\nman can dispute the fact that the same cars cannot be\nengaged in hauling logs to the mill and the finished\nproduct, the lumber, away at one and the same time. If\nthe mill cannot get its lumber hauled away it has no use\nfor the logs, and once it has no logs it will not need any\ncars to haul its lumber away for it will have none to haul.\nHere are all the elements of logic applied. The premises\nare stated and the conclusions irrefutable.\nFollowing out this line of reasoning it will be seen that\nthere is no reason for complaining about car shortage.\nThe producer should remember that when a car takes his\nproduct to market he cannot expect to have it ready to\ncarry more while it is being returned to him. It cannot\npossibly be traveling away loaded and coming back empty\nat the same time. This is'on the well known principle that\nvmi cannot eat vour cake and have it at the same time.\nThe shipper disposed to complain should remember that\nhe must give his carload ot stuti time to reacn tne marKeis\nnnrr the oar to rret hack before he thinks of complaining.\nWith this system in operation tne car snortage wouiu\nno lonrer exist for the shipper would have one going or\ncoming and what more can he reasonably desire? Why\nshould a millman be in a hurry to have his lumber hauled\naway when he has no more logs.'
1459fe042f95c90811ea1b21a08f7877 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1903.5027396943176 42.217817 -85.891125 dressed alike in blue plaid calico skirts,\nwhite and gray lawn waists, with\nbright orange ribbon sashes tied in\nFnug little bows at the back. Their\nhats were white straw, liberally\ntrimmed with red and yellow tarlatan\nand masses of pink and red roses. The\ndistinguishing feature of one was three\ntiny pink feathers, while the other had\nthree white feathers. One woman was\nfat and the other lean. One man was\nyoung ami the other's age might be\nanywhere from thirty to lifty. for his\nface was covered with a beard of the\nKansas variety. The poor little baby\nwas handed about by all four, and just\nwhich two were the parents of the\nchild could not be determined. If tho\nbaby had a memory its recollection of\nthat day would be varied, for it had\nall sorts of experiences.\nThe typical village supplied t!ie\nmusic the soprano high' and thin,'\nalto timid and meek, the tenor fond of\nhis own voice and the bass with a big\nvoice and correspondingly big figure.\nThe anthem done, the squire of the vil-\nlage introduced the speaker, who, with\nhair brushed smoothly back and his\ncoat buttoned to his throat and one\nhand thrust between the buttons and\nthe other behind him in true oratorical\nstylo, advanced to the front of the\nplatform and was rewarded with a\nbreathless silence. Fourth of July ora-\ntory Hashed and burned and. sizzled,\nand when with great impressiveness\nlie said he would "rather be right than\nbe king" waiting for the full sentence\nto be fully appreciated, he concluded\n"of Snain." the little joke received\nits full meed of applause, and each\ncomrade turned and bowed to the\nother. Indianapolis Tress.
1b64bc075778705cddc6680a2a6934e1 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.519178050482 44.939157 -123.033121 against G. L . Brown, as treasucrer,\nto enjoin the payment of two certain\ncounty warrants:\nNow on this 9th day July, 1897, it\nappearing to the court that u suit for\nInjunction lias been Instituted in the\ncircuit court for this connty, by G. A.\nIlunsaker, as plaintiff against G. L.\nurown as treasurer ror Marlon co as\ndefendant, to enjoin him from paying\ntwo certain county warrants, aggre-\ngating the sum of $2242.03 , Issued by\nthe clerk of said county to Messrs.\nPugli & Gray for making certain re-\npairs and improvements to the county\ncourt house, and It further appearing\nto this court that there is a good, mer-\nitorious and valid defence to said sum.\nIt is hereby ordered that Geo. G.\nBingham and John A. Carson bo and\nthey arc hereby rotained as attorneys\nto assist in the defense of said suit In\ncase the said county treasurer shall\n it necessary or expedient to\nmake a defence to said suit.\nDistrict Attorney Haydcn was seen,\nand sayB he never asked for assistance\nas he had plenty of deputies. Besides\nhe says ho certainly will not appear\nagainst tho county in such a proceed-\ning. He notified tho county treasurer\nnot to pay the warrant until their\nlegality could bo tested, and further-\nmore that he had expected to bring\ninjunction proceedings as soon as his\nduties would permit. Ho could not\nconsistently take tho side of defence.\nCounty Treasurer Brown was seen,\nand states that Commissioner Wat-eo - n\ncalled for him to anncar before\ntho court, when ho was asked If ho\nwished tho court to employ legal as-\nsistance for him In the injunction\ncase. 110 statcu tuat no naa con-\nsulted the prosecuting attorney, and\ndid not know what lie would do\nuntil ho had further time to consider\nthe matter.
a892f378f9e7ebb876f843aa187b45bf VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.6863013381533 43.798358 -73.087921 and nearly all the family in bedj I made\nknown to Cinque my business, and asked\nhim if he was willing to go and search ;\nhe instantly sprung from his bed and\ndressed himself, as did Grabbcau and one\nor two others, and as I requested only a\nfew to go, no more went with us. We\nhastened to the spot, and Cinque and\nGrabbeau were soon in the river in search;\nthey continued until we thought it of no\nfarther avail," and suggested to them, the\npropriety of going home, and of coming\nagain, if it was their pleasureearly the\nnext morning. They did so, but, in about\nhalf an hour, Cinque and Grabbeau with\nsome 10 or 12 more came down to search\nagain. Lwas surprised t5 see them, and\nenquired why they came. Banna replied,\n'me think me hear you say your brother\nin water, me no sleep, we come find.'\nYou are mistaken, said I, not mv brother,\nmy friend. ; " w look, we Snd."\nSo alj laid aside theirclotbes, and into\nthe river they went, and searched above\nand below the dam,, until 12 oclosk at\nnightwben I requested the tn to go home\nand come early in the morning, if thv\nwere willing. They all went home, and\nvery early in ihejiiorniog some 20 or 25\ncame again and resumed the search, and\ncontinued it until the body Was found,\nwhich was about 8 o'clock." A. M. Their\nzeal and perseverance was highly com-\nmendable; their exposure to danger was\nunaccountable, two or three of them went\ninto the forming water below the dam,\nwhere it would have been impossible for\nany American to have escaped alive with-\nout assistance.' 'Bystanders looked on with\nperfect amazement; and with no small de-\ngree of apprehension for their safety. A\nprocession was formed to convey the body\nto his late residence, they all joined the\nprocession. On Monday afternoon, the\nfuneral was. attended at.the church, they
78d246b6d3b93c884c244ad18b78c29a THE SEMI-WEEKLY MOUNTAIN DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8975409519835 38.729625 -120.798546 creature so beset with troubles before ?\nNow I've just got to lay everything aside,\nanil go down to play cook myself, while\nbaby swallows buttons, needles, and siti li\nthings, and Tommy raises Bedlam gener-\nally. Perhaps I can keep him quiet for\na few minutes with a howl of bread and\nmilk. The cat has knocked the miik\npitcher over? Well, that corresponds\nwith the rest of the day, charmingly.\nRaining hard ; I might have prophesied\nit, and all the line clothes out on the lines !\nMercy on us, two o'clock! why where\nhas the day slipped to? Mr. Sage will\nhe here in fifteen minutes, clamoring fol-\nlila dinner, and everything is behindhand !\nThere, thats just like you, Sage ! I\nsuppose you think it's manly, and snarl\nlike a cross dog, because nothing\nbut beef and greens for dinner. You ne-\nver did like em ? Sage, I don't believe\nyon know wlut yon do like on Mondays.\nYou wish Mondays were abolished ? so\ndo I, Sage; and I wish cross husbands\nwere, too ! You seem to think I have no\ntrials ! There, he's gone, and I know 1\nhave been pettish, and lost my temper—-\nhut who can help it. I'd like to know.\nI'm always half-crazy on Mondays. Poor\ndear Sage, I know he cant cat greens—-\nhe shall have something hot for supper, if\nI have to conk it mysi 11. If theres any\none thing that tries a woman's patience\nmore than another, its “ bine Monday.”\nMauv.—Who docs not love the plain,\nyet beautiful name, Mary? It is from\nthe Hebrew, and means a
2686908427512acfc41b1bf784db38d0 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1902.6726027080163 37.451159 -86.90916 The Cincinnati Enquirer says Mr\nisaac H Franks of New York who\nrenlded in this city for several years\niIs at the St Nicholas arranging the pre ¬\nliminaries for the organization of the\nfirst subsidiary company in Cincinnati\nfor the State of Ohio of the Wireless\nTelephone Company of America\nI have just returned remarked Mr\nFrank from a visit to Mr Nathan\nStnbblefield the Inventor of the wire\nless telephone at his rural home near\nMurray Calloway County Western\nKentucky He Is about 40 years of age\nand has devoted the greater part of his\nlife to ffarming when not engaged In\nconducting electrical experiments He\nIs devoted to his home and family and\nthough very much reserved and non\ncommunicative to the world at large\npossesses much in all his\nviews and a tenacity of purpose in his\nlife and work which Insures success In\nhis undertakings For 13 years in the\nrepose of his rural retreat he baa quietly\nconducted his experiments in electrical\nphenomena chief ambng which was his\nunceasing and finally snocesafnl efforts\nin solving the problem of transmitting\nMrlStubblefleldi\nof hIt system of wireless telephon was\ngiven at his home Murray Ky New\nYears Day 1903 He installed his ap ¬\nparatus in the courthouse yard and\nmade seven different connections in\nvarious parts of the town with business\nhouses law offices and hotels\nSlmllltaneonatran8D1las1on of vocal\nsound music and whl 1convena\ntions were accomplished and the result\ndemonstrated beyond question the fact\nthat he had made possible telephoning\nwithout wires
0ec84037e3d6110393f808e452e8f7b9 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1898.9712328450025 42.217817 -85.891125 heart and by tho nwi;;io of its fraKraneo\nhad conjured up tho tear wet face of his\nlittlo pirl as fho hail plared it between his\nlips, and after looking at tho cigar and\nsurreptitiously kissing it ho had always\ncarefully wrapped It tip In its covning of\ntin foil again and restored it to his pocket.\nHis comrades in Company K all knew\nthe story of tho cigar, and when his body\n. Was found in tho chaparral and tho shat-\ntered ciar in his pocket book it was han-\ndled with tender, reverent care, as a sacred\nthing, to bo returned to Tom's wifo in tho\ntall cast sido tenement In New York city.\nThere was moutnlng in tho houso of\nTom HatTerty's widow for many days after\ntho tidings of his together with tho\npocliXViook, reached Now York. Tho\nincnjH forget fulness of childhood saved\nMabel from tho brooding sorrow which\nconsumed her mother. Hut why her fa-\nther had noj smoked tho cigar sho could\nnot understand. Neither could sho ap-\npreciate why ho had not taken it to heaven.\nTho idea of her father being happy in\nany place where he could not smoki) was\nridiculous to her childish fancy, for sho\ncould not remember her father In his\nhours of easo without a cigar in his mouth.\nHut tho cigar, with the hole inado by tho\nMauser rlllo ball through tho middle, was\nplaced, with tho other littlo mementos of\ntho dead man, in tho bottom drawer of\ntho bureau, where it was hidden from\nMabel's sight for many months.
1a26f8568a29f646637c689cf9d244c4 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1909.3027396943176 37.451159 -86.90916 The question of forage crops for pigs\nIff one which is of decided Importance\nas it Is well known thru the use of\nprofitableCowpeas far\ngiven better results at the Mississippi\nstation It Is stated than any other of\nthe crops tested In one season the\ncowpeas were grown on thin bill land\nand produced 3W pounds uf pork per\nacre when pigs wore grazed upon\nthem Tho next season the crop was\ngrown on good valley land and pro ¬\nduced 483 pounds of pork per acre\nTie pigs were turned on the pasturage\nwhen the cowpeas were ripe Alfalfa\nwithout grain was found to be little\nmore than a maintenance ration for\nhogs The pigs used In the tent which\ncovered two years ranged from three\nto twentyfour months In age\nAlfdlfa covcr rape and blue grass\n corn were compared\nwith rations of corn and ship stun\nand corn and sklmmMk at the Mis\nlOUr station The cornmeal which\nwas of medium fineness was mixed\nwith water to the consistency of a\nthick dough and was fed twice dally\nin such quantities as would be eaten\nwithout waste In the sklmmilk ra\ndon the meal was wet with milk In ¬\nstead of with water The green crops\nwere fed twice dally Immediately Alter\ncutting and were supplied ad libitum\nThe rape was rather large and coarse\nand only the fresh green leaves wer\nused Some of the alfalfa was rather\ntoo mature and coarse to be eaten\nwith relish but the remainder was\nconsidered of fairly satisfactory qual ¬\nity The red clover and blue grass\nwere for the most part young and ten ¬
c552e173841b6351cb0868b6f5b30831 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.599726744333 39.513775 -121.556359 To i\\e Editors of State Journal;\nGentlemen.— l have observed an arti-\ncle in your issue of the 30th ultimo, upon\nthe subject of the interception of a letter\naddressed by Gen Howard to B. W . Leigh,\nK-q, and the terms of that article call lor\nmy reply. It is true that the heinous crime\nseems to have been committed somewhere,\nfor it is publicly confessed by those who ap-\npear to speak by authority, but you may\nbe in error when you hasten to the conclu-\nsion that the crime was committed in this\ncity, and at my office. However, lam quite\nwilling, and even anxious that the facts shall\nbe brought out, whether they implicate this\noffice or any other.\nThe very day on which the matter was\nfirst made public, I proceeded to investigate\nit, and the only success I have yet met with\nis simply in having traced it through two\nor three informants up to the Executive\nCommittee of the Committee, who\nI am told, were furnished a copy of said in-\ntercepted letter. Whether that body will\ndivulge the name of the criminal party, re-\nmains to be ascertained.\nBesides being one of the highest criminal\noffences, this matter is also calculated to en-\ngender su-picion against this office, and cre-\nate wide distrust of the whole mail system,\nand therefore 1 feel it my duty, to leave\nnothing undone which may tend to the de-\ntection of the criminal in this case The U,\nS. Statute provides—-\n“That if any person shall take any letter\nor packet, not containing any article of val-\nue or evidence thereof, out of a Iost Office,\nor shall open any letter or packet, which\nshall have been in a Post Office, or in custo-\ndy of a mail carrier, before it shall have\nbeen delivered to the person to whom it is\ndirected, with a design to obstruct the cor-\nrespondence, TO PRY INTO ANOTHER'S\nBUSINESS OR SECRETS,
1a1d186febc59b98d7d901e543a6a1a2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.905479420345 40.063962 -80.720915 The Elizabeth Timet has this: Ave\nsad caso of accidental shooting occurr\nWednesday evening up near Create\nthis county, in which Floyd Vanda\naged about twenty year?, and a son\n. Marshal Vandal, shot himself in t\nthroat with a Winchester ritle, the b\nranging upward into his head. He w\non hid way home from -Crouton, ai\nshot a bird, and, in reloading tho gu\nit is supposed that he loft it cocke\nand an accidental jar produced the d\ncharge, with tho result above name\nThere is no hope of recovery.\nThe Baltimore and Ohio Railro\nCompany, through M. V . Richards, la\nand immigrant agent, has sold a tract\nland in Hampshire county, on tho li\not tho road, containing over three hu\ndred acres, to a party from Weste\nPennsylvania. The purchasers n\nfarmers who think the land especial\nadnpted to their work, and will set!\nupon it in a short time. They ropt\nthat many other families are desiro\nof moving to tho same locality in \\Y<\nVirginia if land can be purchasod\na reasonable price.\nThe president of the West Virgir\nConf'Tonco Seminary at Buckhann\nannounces that a jubilee service w\nbo hold nt tho seminary Friday cveni\nand night, December i, 1893, colobrati\ntho payment of the debt of $20,000 tl;\nremainuil when Rev. Hutchinson to\ncharge. lie has certainly done a splc\ndid work in clearing tho institution\ndebt in such short time.\nTho widely published reports 61 t\nexistenco ofsmallpox in Harrison \nTaylor counties aro said by responsit\ncitizens of both counties to be untri\nThero is not, nor has thoro been, a cj\nof tho difcease in eithor Clarksbui\nFleraington or Graiton, while the si\npicious case at Bridgeport, it is n<\nstated, is simply chicken pox..Fa\nmont Jlcfi* Virginian.\nThero is a patient at tho hospital i\ntho insane who aavs that he was vu\nwell acquainted with Noah of biblic\nfame. Ho described tho ark as an on\nnary flatboat, and says that the flo\nwan nothing more than a freshet. Tl\nsame individual aho irreverently insii\nthat ho husked corn with Jesus Chri\nOn Saturday the city of Kovser co\n1)rated tho installation ot her new wai\nworks. Addresses wore delivered\nRev. J. II. Moore, Hon. C. W. Dail\nanil Rev. J . 0 . Thompson. There w\na display of tlie power mid effectives\nof tho water works niter tho speaki\nand a cumptiro in the ovonin.' .\nThe lnnibernion on the line of t\nBaltimore &Ohio and West Virginia\nPittsburgh railroads mot at Buck ha\nnon Novomuor 0 and etlected an orgs\nization. W . & Price, of Clarksburir, w\nolucted president aud A. II. 'A'inchest\nsecretary. An adjourned meeting w\n^pointed for tho 22d at Woston.\nAt Craigsvillo, Nicholas county, M:\nRachel Roo while standing in front\ntho lire her clothing caught fire, and I\nfore tho flames could bo extinguish\nshe was seriously burnod about t.\nbody, from which it is feared sho w\nnot recover.
029210c50b931fd72cb641c0f9a85075 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1895.8835616121257 40.063962 -80.720915 since tho verdict had boon rendered\ntho defense had coma int. t imn >. li mi of\nnow information ami additional cluotof\nvital iinporiatii'o to tin* case, and which\nwould result iu ilo inns' acquittal. Sub*\naoquont to tho trial, he cm tinned, they\nhad obtained information of n person\nwho had known l'ituaol whon l»o llvod\nat 131(1 Calluwhlll alroot. i'liii porinn,\nJllauoho A. iiuunignn, had inaio Milt*\ndavit in nulifluni'k) in follows:\nIn Anu'ii'it, I'llM, mIio kopt n cltfar\nstore nt lXi\\) (Jni'owhiil atroot, and had\nknown and talked with i'iotzol, thou\nknown («m Porry. On Ail .'nit Hi), in liur\nstore, tho told him she would have to\nInnvij tho store and vi»*it n dyinu frioml,\nwhoroupon I'ioizol spoke of llio uncer*\ntniutim of lifo, Having ho hnd mom\ntroubles than any one wmiM nnopoio,\nutnl that ho would not cam if it wai \nwho wfls dying instead of her friond.\nllo' Hpuk) of his many trouble* and\nadded Hint "tho nml would nomo soon,\nus ho could not staii I it muoli loni*or.\nAll liii action 1 and words tended to\nshow thouirhti of suicide,\nl)lstrlat Attorney Graham a .lea I thai\nbolero Hi 1 application ho pa mod Upon\nMr«. lUnnigaii ha called to tho stand.\nMr. Kotan, who rn\\»> »clalod with Shoe*\nmaker, replied that ho h id boon unable\nto Unit her; thai tho allldavit had bnoil\nprocured hy John Hwoekler, a detective,\niitiil that counsel would not permit hor\nto testify until tliny had an npporimilty\nto examine hur privately und «ift tho\ntrulh of lior statement. in roiponm to\nquunlious from llio nourt Mr. Hioetna*\nkar thou mid llto allldavit had boon\nwrittnri hy hliuiolf at tho dictation of\nMrs, 11 mi n ifian.
2fb792e862447514fe9fabd9a96ca6f0 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.4166666350436 39.745947 -75.546589 which gets the worth of the dollar out\nof every dollar expended.\nOur policy has been more or less\nimprovised, subject to damaging vari­\nations and changes and sterilized by\nan niter lack of competent military\ndirection. Could the navy be purged\nat once of Danielsism and the in-\neompetency and muddling which Dan­\nielsism represents, we should soon be\nable to lighten the burden of naval\nappropriations, for we should be able\nwith relatively less expenditure to\nmaintain a navy with a military effi­\nciency increased si least 100 per cent.\nThe minority report properly lays\nstress on the fact that the worst fea­\nture of the navy at present is its civ­\nilian-ridden administration. Mr. Dan­\niels is unwilling to surrender his mis­\nused control into the hands of a naval\ngeneral staff. He Is unwilling to pro­\nvide men and officers enough to keep\nin commission the ships which we\nhave. He tries to conceal the short­\nage of men by continually shifting\ncrews, an older battleship in\nreserve whenever a new battleship is\ndelivered. Ho has delayed the con­\nstruction of the capital ships already\nauthorized so as to escape the neces­\nsity of admitting that he has skimp­\ned on the personnel.\nThis year, as the minority report\nshows, the secretary has asked for\nappropriations for only 76,000 seamen,\nalthough 82,000 are required to furnish\ncrews for the existing fleet on a peace\nbasis and 96,000 are required to fur­\nnish crews for it on a war basis. The\nmajority of the House committee rec­\nommends a peace strength of 78,500.\nBut why pare and scrape In such mat- a\nters—the more so since, if we get into i\nwar with a naval power, we should\nneed at once 20,000 men for auxiliar­\nies, as welrtts the 82,672 for the war­\nships now available?\nThe minority report is not a mere\npolitical indictment. It is a temper­\nate. intelligent, statement of the navys\nneeds.. If it indicts the present admin-
37800aaadf6764079d111e905339377f DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1921.4972602422629 58.275556 -134.3925 The Douglas Island News wan'\nstarted In Douglas on November 23.\n1898. having been moved from\nWrangell, Alaska, where the plant\nwas first set up on Juno 8, 1898.\nThe first owners and publishers\nwere Charles A. Hopp and A. G . Mo-\nDrlde. brothers-in-law. who operated\nIt on a partnership baels tor about a\nyear, when Mr. Hopp purchased his\npartner's Interest. Mr. Hopp con¬\ntinued to publish the "great relig¬\nious weekly" until five yoars ago.\nwhen he sold out to E. J. White.\nMr. Hopp subsequently went to the\nsouth and died shortly afterwards.\nHaving previously been always\nIssued on Wednesday, when Mr.\nWhite assumed charge he changed\nthe day of publication to Friday.\nJust three years ago Mr. White\nassumed the position of Chief of the\nTerritorial Bureau ot Publicity and\nrelinquished active management of\nthe paper, although still owning all\nof It. J. It . I<angseth assumod \nmanagement of the News and J. F .\nHcnson became editor, and these\ntwo men have operated tho plant\nuntil now. With them the continu¬\nation of tho Douglas Island News\nwas more or lens a labor of love.\nthe former lutvi'tg been connected\nwith the paper for more than a\ndozen years and the latter having\nfirst worked on It almost nl.ieteon\nyears ago. when he entered tho of¬\nfice as "devil" under tho thon com¬\npositor. Fred Henshaw.\nThe plant for a long time has not\nbeen a profitable one and was only\n-ontlnued because tho men operat¬\ning It were able to have other Inter-\n- ¦ .in that took part of their time.\nThe Douglaa Island News claims\ntho distinction of being tho oldest\nweekly paper in Alaska to have\nnever missed an Issue in the twenty-\nthrco years of its existence.\nThe paper will perhaps be missed\nisa
5948897a32473f04f34e65e395321e92 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5560108973386 39.290882 -76.610759 Calcutta Gazette, May 7.\nTHE GREAT STORM IN ORISSA.\nFrom a Correspnulcnt at Poolee.\nOn Thursday the 30th of April, one of the most\nviolent storms ever remembered in Orissa, visi-\nted the strtion at Parte and surrounding district.\nThe wind blew from the nortli east early in the\nmorning. The surf was unusually high and roar-\ning. Out offices were levelled, and clouds of\nsand buried every thing; but the disasters of the\nday were as nothing in comparison with what\nthe night brought. The wind suddenly shifted\nround to west and south west, and commenced\nin ail its fury. Every one sat waiting for the\nworst, running from one room to another, as the\nhouse gave way, and when the genersl rush came,\nit was fearful, the wind and rain so boisterous\nthat one could stand erect exposed to them.\nThe darkness of the night totally prevented any\ncommunication from one house to another, and\nit was not until morning that the whole truth\ncould be known. Alas! every bungalow in the\nstation has bfcen destroyed?not one is there that\ncan possibly be inhabited. One solitary pucka-\nhouse stood the buffeting of the storm, as it would\nappear, intended as a refuge tor the destitute.\nThe city has suffered tea great extent, in-\ndeed; every house has been blown down, but the\nimmortal remains of Juggumaut lie undisturbed\nin bis celebrated temple. The surrounding\n'ages have bce equal sufferers, and a camp be-\nlonging to the revenue surveyor, about twenty\nmiles distant, was totally destroyed. Large\ntrees strew the road, and many lives have been\nlost in consequence.
0acebe796219ce2d5d527bb36242cf1e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.3510928645517 40.063962 -80.720915 Very Doll, Flat nod Unprofitable.\nIttiburjh Ifanufaclurvr of Yttterdiy.\nThe lull has not abated in the least, and\nj, if possible, more pronounced than\nver. Men old in the business say they\ntave never known such utter stagnation\na the trade. This, after a period of such\nctivity as was witnessed in the six or\neven months ended in the early part of\n:ebruary, is like a transformation scene,\nnd is almost bewildering. Owing to the\n9W price of pig-iron, the dearness of the\naw material from which it is made, the\ntfgh price of labor, the large stocks of for-\nigu iron in the East, and small demand,\nurnaces are blowing out in various parts\n>f the country, no less than twenty that\nell iron in this market having gone out of\nilast within the last ten days. A company\nn the Shenango Valley that owns two\nnrnaces, will, if thev have not done so al-\neady, blow them both out.something\n has never been done by them before.\nIt the moment it is impossible to give\nven approximate quotations, but 2^ cents\nor manufactured iron, the rate fixed by\nbe Western Irou Association on Wednes-\n!ay, is equivalent to $20 for neutral iron\nnd 25 for red-short. With first-class Lake\nluperior oce at $12 a ton in Cleveland, or\n18 for enough ore to make a ton of pig-\nrun, without taking into account the\nreight from Cleveland to the furnace, and\noke at $2.50(«,3 per ton at the ovens, it\nrill readily be seen how impossible it\nrould be to make iron to sell at $25.\nManufactured iron.Trade continues re-\noarkably quiet, anil as the season is about\n,t hand when even in ordinary years dull-\nless commences to be felt, it is scarcely\nirobable that there will be any activity\n?efore the latter part of the summer.\nNails.The card rate remains at $4, but\ntails are selling at $3 50.
23b787b1496ad1d0d1cf95dd517ecd19 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.5794520230847 40.063962 -80.720915 were tatter at any time or in any'countr\nthan they aro hero in tho United State\nnotwithstanding what Mr. Turner may an;\nrho strikes to which he constantly refei\nus showing tho unsatisfactory condition\n(lie laboring class, to my mind just sho\ntho contrary of what ho wants to prove.\nIu the good old Democratic times fc\nwhich .Mr. Turner sighs, such things di\nnot happen, hi cause tho poor laborer, fc\nwhom hissoul goes out in longing, coul\nnot alford such a luxury'. lie was glad if h\nlouud something to do ut any price. ]\nwas that or starve or go on Governtner\nand. But we all know that Uuclc Sam'\nhas been fearfully cut up since that tinn\nand it will not be long before the halanc\nwill begone. Then there will benothiu\nfor tho poor man to fall back \ntho theories of Mr. Turner should li\nbrought intopractice.which a merciful Go\nmay forbid. I do not know where. Mr. 1\n;:ot his statistics from, by which lie ligurt\nthat an iron worker, for the luat year (\ntwo, earned but $1 31. I should judge\nmust be news to your fellows up then\nwho just now indulge in the luxury of\nxtrike, and equally no his repeated asse\ntion of'JO to 100 per cent paid dividends t\nstockholders of pampered corporation\nIt Mr. Turner believes what be says and\nanxious to strike a bonanza, the writer ca\nput him on the track by which he can hi\n,lt>: come tho owner of shares in a variety\nL roncerns at fifty centson the dollar down\nmere nothing, To speak seriously, all M\n| Turner has wiid or am say, I have hear\n,
229ea25f61ad2d75905100f1bc112326 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.146575310756 39.745947 -75.546589 tn the mid-spring of 1883, I was a\npassenger upon a steamboat scheduled\nto run from Jacksonville, Florida, up\nthe Ht. Johns river to Stanford, locat­\ned at the end of steamboat navigation\non the river. To make the trip required\na journey lasting from about 7 oclock\nIn the evening until noon the next day.\nAmong the passengers was E. K .\nFoster, Jr., son of a distinguished law­\nyer of New Haven, Connecticut, who\nwas In his early life a very prominent\nRepublican and a warm personal\nfriend of Abraham Lincolns. E. K .\nFoster, Jr„ was one of the pioneers,\nso to speak, who went from the North\nto Florida soon after the close of the\ncivil war. He foresaw the possibilities\nof Florida as an orange producing\nSlate and had mad« a venture in an\norange plantation.\nAround Mr. Foster, on the steamers\ndeck, collected a number of the pas­\nsengers, who were much Interested as\nhe pointed out various orange groves\nthat lined the banks of the river, told\nof ownership, and spoke of some\nof the difficulties which the early de­\nvelopment of the orange growing bus­\niness In Florida had met with.\n“But the most Interesting by far of\nthe orange groves upon the river," Mr.\nFoster said. "Is one, that Is located\nnear Mandarin. I never see It without\nthinking of the extraordinary signi­\nficance associated with Its ownership.\nIt, is the gove that was bought, by\nHarriet Beecher Htowe. Within It\nstands her winter horn«, or did as long\nago as her health and that of hr hus­\nband, Prof. Stowe, permitted them\nto make the journey ©very winter from\nNew England to Florida.\n“The special significance to which I\nrefer lies In the fact that Mrs. Stowe\nwas really the first person of the\nNorth to fix the attention of the North\nupon the magnificent winter climate\nof Florida, and the opportunities that\nwere opening to that State to engage\nIn successful rivalry with the West\nIndies and with Italy for command of\nthe market In the United States for
1f9eed86a6d9a1d813e2582cf9201bec THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1900.1082191463724 32.612638 -90.036751 So we art all going on opening and\nshutting this divinely constructed in-\nstrument the hand ignorant of much\nof the revelation it was intended to\nmake of the wisdom and goodness of\n(iod. You can see by their structure\nthat shoulder and elbow and forearm\narc getting ready for the culmination\nin the hand. There is your wrist, with\nits eight bones and their ligaments in\ntwo rows. That wrist, with it bands\nof fibers and its hinged joint and turn-\ning on two axes on, the larger axis\nmoving backward and forward, and on\nthe smaller axis turning nearly round.\nAnd there is the palm of your hand,\nwith its five bones, each having a shaft\nand two terminations. There are the.\nfingers of that hand, with 14 bones,\neach finger with Its curiously wrought\ntendons, five of the bones end\ning roughened for the lodgment of the\nnails. There is the thumb, coming\nfrom opposite direction to meet the\nfingers, so that in conjunction they\nmay clasp and hold fast that which\nyou desire to take. There are the long\nnerves running from the armpit to the\n4ti muscles, so that all are under mas-\ntery The whole anatomy of your hand\nus complex, as intricate, as symmet-\nrical, as useful as God could make it.\nWhat can it not do? It can climb, it\ncan aft, it can push, it can repel, it\nCI n menace, it can clutch, it can deny,\ni, can affirm, it can extend, it can\nweave, it can bathe, it can smite, it can\nhumble, it can exalt, it can soothe, it\nrun throw, it can defy, it can wave.\nIt tan imprecate, it can pray.
033b2ff28d07af136c4a8d82c5b03f1b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.4385245585408 40.063962 -80.720915 The matter uv a Presidential candi\ndate hez opprest me, arid hez also ex\nercised the gigantic intellex who con\ngregate at the Corners. Wo hev deal\nded that C'heef Justis Chase won't dc\nWe kin support hitn cheerfully for hi\nmethod uv conduktin the impeachmen\ntrial hez satisfied us uv hi* hankerii\nfor a standin in our party. Beside\nthis haviu made a start, we conside\nhitn safe anyhow. The man wich kii\ntake a nominashen at our hands, o\nidentify liissolf with us, may alluz b\ncountid onto. The Ablishnists neve\nforgive sich, and their ain't no othe\nplace to go. When Johnson and Doo\nlittle and that crowd lea tho Ablish\nniats, I knew where tliey would lant\nb tier than they did. J>yacilis (leceJl&U.\naverni, wich bein translated into thi\nvulgar tongue, means, the road to hel\nis macadamized. Hancook won't do\nbecoz our Snthern brethren hov «\nprejoodis again tho flag he drawd hij\nsword under. Pendleton would ausei\nthe west, but tho east Is opposod to Ilim\nSej'moure wood do tho east, but tin\nweBt is opposed to him. I therefore\nnfter givin the matter niatoor consider\nushen, hev decided to propose for th<\nposishn, the name uv Jethro'Ij. Kip\npins, uv Alexander county, Illiuoj'.\n1 liev the lollerin reasons for insistiti\non his tiominashen.\n1. Ho is geographyically level. U3\n on tho map, il will ho seeu thai\nthat county ^n Iilinoy is tne oxtrean\nsuthwesierly part uv the State. Jt is 1\nNorthern county with Southern ideas\nAcross tho river is Kentucky, west i.«\nsoutheastern Missoury and east i» low\nor Injeany. They grow tobacco ihere\nami 3 earn afterslave labor ez intense.j\nez wo do across tho river.\n2. Nobody knows him. The uame o\nJethro Ij. Klppins hez nevpr tilled tlx\naonndin (rump of lame. With him <»i\nour tikkitseveral pints wood bo gain\ned. Ou all tho questions on whicl\nthere i» a doubt in the minds of tin\nDemocracy, Jethro L. ICippins is uti\ncommitted. He is unembarrassed will\nviews and on troublesome question\nhez nary an opinyun. The troubl\nPendleton bez with tho groeubax wool\nnot affect him, neither would any U'\nthem other questions which are ruthe\nembarissin thau otherwise. Ho he1\nbut one political priuciplo, which li\nholds ik enuff lor any ono man. am\nthat Is Democracy, exit hez biu.ez it is\nund ez it may be. He beleoves lirrnl;\nin thecusa uv Canan, ho holds close t\nOnesimus and Hagur, and hez sworn\nsolemn oath that no nigger shal eve\nmarry a daughter uv hizzen. This no\nbio sentiment which alius strikes a rc\nsponsive cord iu every Dowucl-ati\nlnizzum would be emblazoned on th\nKippina banner.
1b1a88eba7cbf6a48f529c7d8f55c81a THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1853.1547944888382 47.04502 -122.894872 court of the Icapedive counties, at their\nApril term, to decide whether or not they\nwill levy a tax a! four mills on the dollar\non all property in their respective counties.\nsubject to taxation. Each board of commis-\nsioners dull certify their decision to all the\nother muslin; and it' it ahall appear that\nall the courts have decided to levy the tax,\nthen it shall bu the duly ol' the courts to\nlevy said tax at the July term {or the year\nlsoa—levy said tax as other taxes are levi-\ned, and to he collected in the some munner;\nand at said July term, at which the tax is\nIlevied, the chunty commissioners of the\ncounties of Lewis, Thurston and Pierce\nshall each appoint a road commissioner, and\nthe three 30 appointed shall comtitute a\nhoard of road commissioners, who shall\ntake an truth or af?rmation to faithfully dis-\ncharge their duties; they appoint one\nof their number, President of the hoard—r\nthe president ofnid beard shall give bond\nand security in the Isum often thourand\ndollars for the faithful performance of their\nduties; he shall have power to draw for,\nand receivefrom the different county treas-\nurers,-tha full amount of the tax so levied\nand collected. The board of commission-\non, or a majority of them, shall pews-d to\nopen-adput in repair threads coats-n\nplated by the act, either by employing por-\nsonato laboron the crime, It somtsch per\ndim, or let contracts for ":5 performance\nof said work, or any part of the same.\nWe are fully at the opinion that ifprop-\ndy= managed, either one or both of said:\nroads may he completed this year. Let,\nfor in?nity, 3 thousand dollars of said fund\nha inverted in provisions, and conveyed\nassess the mtsins, to meet the immll\namalgam! to allhy the (earl of those
1e2ba3b393693daebbad574268a9f269 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1921.6863013381533 39.623709 -77.41082 stage or screen would say If he were\noffered 12 bushels of potatoes or a\nham for an evenings work?”\nIt was the old grouch himself, speak-\ning to a fellow worker during the\nlunch hour In a busy downtown office,\naccording to the Chicago Dally News.\nThe old grouch hod Just finished read-\ning an article In w'hlch present-day\nsalaries of strige and screen stars were\nspoken of, and It might be said that\nthe reading of this bit of news cer-\ntainly did not tend to brighten up his\ngloomy disposition the least bit.\nBut the fact remains that people\nequally as well known In their day\nworked an evening for potatoes, a ham\nand other trifling amounts, for the old\ngrouch himself said he knew It to be\na fact. One of his co-workers asked\nto be shown and he was.\nIn the good old.lyceum days back\nIn 1852, when John B. Gough was In\nhis prime, It Is disclosed that he re-\nceived about $1 a each lecture\ntaking about three hours.\nAnd It can be seen from files of\nnewspapers that once at Andover,\njf. H., those responsible for the lecture\npaid Mr. Gough with a ham Instead\nof with currency, and the speaker was\napparently satisfied with this fee.\nRalph Waldo Emerson, who was one\nof the shining stars of the lecture\nworld during his day, was glad to ac-\ncept $5 as payment for an evening,\nwhile the old grouch pointed out that\none time Henry Ward Beecher was\npaid 12 bushels of potatoes for an\nevening of his time.\nAccording to the records. It was In\n1859 when the cost of lecturers started\ntor rise. During that year the Salem\nlyceum astounded the people of that\ncommunity by paying Daniel Webster\nSIOO for a two-hour talk, and it\ncreated a mild sensation.\nTills doubtless started something,"\nfor after that prices continued to rise.\nIn the 70s Mark Twain held out for\nand received S3OO a night.\nThen Beecher,
d6893d14c18d9f335ad3510adb132576 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.8808218860984 39.560444 -120.828218 After a careful perusal of “ Echo to\nAlice,” I cannot, do not wish to, think\nthat it was intentional on the part of B.\nP. C . to place the innocent in afalse posi-\ntion, and yet the intelligence (as manifest-\ned in his communication) he does possess\nalmost creates the impression that one so\nwell posted could hardly have confounded\nan Express Office w ith a Post Office.\nYour old friend, the Doctor, I am hap-\npy to say, justly commands the respect of\nthe community in which he resides, and\nwhile he, together with many of his friends,\nadmire and commend the motive which\ndictated the “Echo to Alice,” we stillcau\nbut regret that B. D. C . iu his fancy did\nnot select a place more in consonance with\nfacts, rather than place a worthy citizen\nin an unenviable position, improperly, not\nonly before this community, but also be-\nfore his numerous friends in some of the\nmore eastern States.\n there no balm in Gilead ” for the\ncure of this moral leprocy, that seems to\nhave fastened upon the very vitals of soci-\nty within our State ? Vice in all its Hydra\nheaded deformity, boldly stalks throughout\nthe country! Men in high places lend\ntheir influence, by participating in the\nlowest depravity, in open day. The sot is\noften elevated to distinguished political\npositions; the soulless libertine receives\nthe commending smile—as he glories in\nhis own shame—while he recites the suc-\ncess of his last affair, in which, perhaps he\nhas, fiend-like, destroyed the peace of a\nonce happy family ; plunged another de-\nluded victim into the lowest depths of\ninfamy ; vauntingly sneers upon the spirit-\ncrushed and dishonored husband, and fear-\nlessly laughs as he hears the timid shriek\nof the helpless children, calling upon un-\nworthy bloated representatives of Justice,\nto punish the destroyer of all their earthly\nhappiness, that makes their existence a\n“
0738d417fa4639301d7ee71bd6107d51 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1883.8342465436326 39.756121 -99.323985 notorious fact that since the first settle-\nment of this county, and up to the time\nmy term of ollice took effect a great\ndeal of surveying had been done by in-\ncompetent operators and consequently\ncorrections on such work wheie after\nconsiderable time has elapsed and more\nor le.s improvement being made, accor-\nding to lines supposed to be correct,\nwould naturally cause bad feeling?, but\nsuch was never the case after the work\nof an other surveyor, for if one or more\nof the interested parties were dissatis-\nfied they payed no attention but coolly\nwaited for the election of a new survey-\nor. He was called, the line changed, and\nsome other of the parties became dissat-\nisfied, and under the Statute of 18G8,\nLaw3 of Kansas, changing of lines\nwould never end, and no person was\nbound by the acta of a county surveyor\nor his deputy: section 166 page 303,\nreads as follows : (Any survey made by\nany county surveyor or his deputy, shall\nbe taken as evidence in any court in\n state but shall not be conclusive,)\nbut'on the contrary notwithstanding the\nfacts as to litigation over some of my\nwork having taken place, which I am\nfree to admit, but for this reason, that\nwhenever I am called to'estabiish a sur-\nveys I work under the laws amendatory\nand supplemental to chapter 25, gener-\nal laws of 1868, for the purpose of mak-\ning the boundaries of owner? of land\npermanent and unalterable, and where\nany one of the parties feel that their\nrights have been effected, he or. they a3\nthe case may be, must appeal from the\nreport of the surveyor within thirty\ndays or the lines and corner becomes\nfinal and of Record in the office of\nRegister of Deeds, and in no other way\ncould the matter be settled, and it is\nwell understood that where a disputed\nline exists it is certainly easier,, to settle\nthe question now than" after the value\nof the land has increased. The low\nprice of land in the early settlement of\na country, and the incompetency oi
174ac7c385dc34a84369e3be9044b511 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.1898906787594 40.063962 -80.720915 Wh« n caked iu* to the authorship\nthe letter Senator Cullom Mid that It\nhod written it it wan a private comm\nn I cation to a friend and not intend\n(or publimtlon. lie continued:\n"But while I haven't the evidence, y\nJ know us well a* thnt the hum In ah!\nIng bphlnd me that McKinley'a artl\nni-n Mr-* all around Illinois. Thfy r\npeclally tamper with the country dl\ntrlct« and ore working up MeKlnl\ndelegation*. Since the Jove f*aat\nJanuary, which unexpectedly preaent\nriy name at Bpringifold na a preahle\nil.il candidate, AJliron'jt men have ke\nout of lUlnola. Hut McKlnlcy'a rn\nore up and down and tlrelei\nMark Hunna hai liocn in Chicago\nnftlnfif th«- carvnjiu. I lmve no fun\nnnd no dlnpoaltkn to make that kind\n canvaaa. if I would aemj out w\npaid men to Ohio <>r Iowa. >.r nrty of t\nrtnte.t committed by resolution to r\noompetit r«\\ they would hardly fall\nexclaim nznlnpt tin- pwlJcr,\n'MeKlnley In stronger In Illlnoln thi\nIn Ohio. I believe, i know hi*\nstronger In TlMnola than in Indlar\nMeKlnley la remnrkahly atrong In Si!\nmrl, Iowa, Kunwin and Nebpaali\nWisconsin unci ai:v-ntiji-.n. tiivvn«n>\npartly a cornpM r< action wno;* t\nfarm«*rn on tli° .Mi?bJ'*?t of the tariff.\nIt In railed. with pro*tariff enrnesitm':\nMc.Klnfey It.tfi also made u xyntctna\ntour of Illinois upon- it Rorlen of occ\nf»h.n« taklnpr different line* of count!*\nappearing J» nil the principal crnte\nnfimvInK himself, n«d he t« good on\n*how. ti> the K^nrral body of the pc\nph."
0a694336477fc7bbcf1e30374827b5e9 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1904.6680327552622 39.623709 -77.41082 against those who “make haste to get\nrich”—that is, they who, despising the laws\nof God, take a short cut to prosperity.\nTheir wealth ij poverty; their gain is loss.\nThe mistress who holds back the just\nwage from the maid; the borrower who re-\nfuses to return to the lender; the govern-\nment that debases its people with debased\ncoin, may temporarily gain; but such\nwealth destroys the possessor and is like\n(lie wreckers handful of coin, gleaned from\nthe beach to which he lias beguiled an\nargosy; is like the camp followers bun-\ndle of lags .-. tolen from the breast of men\nslain m battle; it like the coin of Judas-\nonly blood money paid to buy a potter*\nfield wherein liberty and justice and pros-\nperity shall at last be buried .n the grave\nof dishonor. Way in the Old Testa-\nment we have Moses saying: “Thou ahalt\nnot have uiverse measures in thy sanc-\ntuary.” The words call up for u* a scene\nfrom that far off time. I here are booth*\ntvith baskets of figs and grapes and golden,\na-hcat and bottles of oil and silks and\nsloths, and the merchant has two et* of\nscales —one scale, with a large pan, in\nwhich he buys the grapes from the hus-\nbandman, and another, with a “mail pan,\nin which he sells the grapes to the house-\nwife. And the King begins I" pay his\nmen in debased coin, and honesty and in-\ntegrity and justice arc being exterminat-\ned, and there is growing up a people with\nlying King and lying merehai Is and false\nwords. The old prophet rises in his anger\nand says:
1886ea8610eb124410d3d7f0c16c45d1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1891.0835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 wild nod gorgeous colorings, to listen to 10\nthe loar of their glorious waterfall, to\nsail over their silent iocbs. tremble in L'D\ntheir m<ghty storms, is to corns very close ro\niu thought and sympathy to that grand\nand noble race which alt the ltoman le- r "\ngiors could not conquer. Its desperate, K'\nfateful loyalty to the House of Stuart can\nnever be fully understood until you have lu\ntramped from the Western Ocean to the m\nGerman, nnd wandered on Culloden 1,3\nMoor, Macbeth, King Duncan and Mai- u\ncolm Oanmore, are mere creatures of J*\nbhakwpeare's fancy, until you find\nin the muety records of old Inverness »\nthat they onco walked it3 streets nl\nwith all of your own passion, ra\nhope, ambition; and until you have t0\njHtood on Tumnabaurich, by the 01\nNessside, you have never really known P!\nHugh Miller, stone-mason, great-heart\n sage. Despite Dr. Jbhnnon's match jc\nleBS apostrophe to lona, the story of\nOolumb's saintly isle, of the Christian\nenlightenment emanating from it to the ^\nwhole British Isles and the greater part\nof Europe, when nearly all the scenes tl\nlighted by the first fires of apostolic sac- it\nridce had partially relapsed into super- ta\neiitioua barbarism) is as dreamful as the n\nlegends of the uoly Grail, until you ei\ntiave stood among the majestic ruins of b\nlona and wandered along fia "6ftraid*na- o\nMarbh," where lie countless chiefs, ci\nfriare, abbots and kir.ge, After you Lave i*\npassed an hour iu the ancient church- tl\nyard of Grej friars, in Edinburgh, you 0\nwill begin to realize who were the Gov i(\nenantws of Scotland, and what they a\nendured for their consciences' sake (tl\nWhen you have come lo the ruins of o\n.
1c3491dd4a8ca5ff9c1c9f6b236837f9 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.4972602422629 40.827279 -83.281309 to erect, construct and complete such additions to th\nbuildings, on the Infirmary Farm, necessary for tbe\naccommodation of tbe paupers of tbe eoun ty, accor-\nding to the plana, descriptions, bills .of materials,\nBpecmcauoiiH ana estimate, wnicn nave ueen reg-\nularly approved and now on file In the Auditor's\noffice and onen to tbe insnection of all interested.\nwhen (on said 13th day of August 1870) said sealed\nproposals will be opened by said Commissioners\nand contracts awarded to the lowest resnonsible\nbidder or bidders, each bidder being required to file\nan acceptance bond with his bid, drawn in the sum\nof five hundred dollars, as liquidated damages, in\ncase the party to whom the contract may be awar-\nded, should fail, in proper time, to enter into writ-\nten contract with the Board of Commissioners and\n bond to the satisfaction of said Commissioners\nfor the faithful performance of his duties under said\ncontract, as provided by law in such cases. First a\ncontract for furnishing on the ground,where such\nimprovments are proposed to be made, tne amount\nand quality of brick as specified in said filed bills of\nmatorials &c. 2nd a contract for furnishing all\nnecessary materials (except brick) and erect, con-\nstruct and complete such additions to said buildings\non the said infirmary farm, as de tcribed in said ap-\nproved and filed bills of materials, plans, specifica\ntions, descriptions and estimates, froviueo: tnat\nnothing herein contained shall bar any party of\nboth contraots, and further that at tbe same time\nana place all petitions for and remonstrances\nagainst such proposed improvments will be heard.\nBy oraer oi tne commissioners.
2fb0f0a8ce0186bfc969a005ec6b2ab0 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1905.4726027080162 39.623709 -77.41082 complained of crocks crossing and the ob-\nject of so much complaint, will shortly be\nspanned with a suitable bridge f.nd connec-\ntion made with the adjoining road that will\nobviate any farther trouble in crossing win-\nter or summer. The mountain road east of\nthe bridge is altogether too bad to satisfy ft\nreasonable public, too narrow and crooked\nand heavy grades so as to make unfit for a\npublic road where so much heavy hauling is\nwanted to be done and for light traveling is\nto rough. In the minds of some, tlie public\ncould be much belter served and be of best\npublic good to open up a new road from the\nbridge running cast passing the widow Day-\nhoofs to Mr. llemlers thence past Mr. Eck\nenrodes to connect the public read at the\nbranch west of Mrs. Orndoi if and using that\n to the Frederick and Emmitslmrg road\nat or near Mr. Smiths, then across to Mr.\nDoiseys, then to the Kldge and Mottcrs Sta-\ntion road at Mr- Troxells, making a double\ntrack road, same as that passing between Mr.\nOrndoi ff and Mr. Charles Dorsey all the way\nthrough. Such a road connecting the Eylcrs\nValley road at the new bridge at one end\nand so prominent a road ns the Bidge road\nal the other end would he of vast importance\nto the public, further, a road almost without\na hill, the only route that a road could be\nbuilt without very hcavv hills and trouble,\nsome streams to be bridged. This route\ncould he made a road of vast importance to\nthe public and meet the demands of the\npresent trend of good road ala reasonable\ncost, either to open or keep in repair.
0aa8d9408ba92c5acf9b0caa3a0bc94f DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1886.5986301052765 39.745947 -75.546589 The New York World, speculating on\n(be wealth of the late Hen. Samuel J.\nTilden, and the probable disposition\nmade of it, says: "Mr. Tilden's for­\ntune has been estimated to be from\n17,000,000 to «10,000.000 From a good\nsource it is learned that the estate is\nworth about |9,£p0,000. It is under­\nstood that Mr. James C. Garter drew\na will for Mr. Tilden two years ago,\nwhich he executed. It is said that\nafter making this will the Governor\nwas not entirely satisded with it, but\nwhether he made any alterations in his\nwill sinoe is not known.\n1 It has long been known that Mr.\nTilden had intended to bequeath his\nbeautiful city residence in Gramercy\nPark, with its large and valuable co-\nlection of books, to toe city for u*h aw a\npublic library. Io Deotmoer, 1883,Mr.\nTilden stated in an interview with a\nclose and valued friend that be had al\nways intended to leave his Dooks the\ncity for a puoilo library, and be con\nsldered it fitting to erect a handsome\nand substantial treasure louse for the\nliterary gems. He concluded that the\nbest place for this building would be on\nthe site of his old Gramercy Park resi­\ndence. He bought the adjoining build­\ning, and, lettiug Mr Vaux, the archi­\ntect, into his confidence, erected a\nhandsome structure,admirably adapted\nor a library and literary institute.\nUnder his will the Gramercy Park\nhouse and a large collection of books\nwill be left in trust to the city tor a\npublic library. Tne trustees are Mr.\nHenry Watterson and Mr. Manton\nMarble, of Kentucky, and Mr. John\nBigelow, of this oity. The value of the\nbooks and engravings is said to be at\nleast «100,000. The buildings when re­\nbuilt caused an exptnditure of ueaily\n«500,000 . Altogether the property with\nits contents is worth «1,000.000. The\namount of the endowment is a matter\nof conjecture.
f343281ad7eed1915633007cb8f2b376 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1845.8671232559614 31.960991 -90.983994 us, should forget for his wlmle life the deciduous who have been captured and liberated by British which is here specifically mentioned as being to conjecture which fegiort, the North or South,\nnature of his existence, and be clinging to some men of war since the passage of your act,'Judge lawfully and by this commandment made sacred- would“ suffer most by such an event. Forone,\npetty stem, or delighting in some accidental Jay, an American abolitionist, asserts that one ly hi»? Prominent in the catalogue stands his I should not object, by any means, to cast my lot\nbreeze, that creates pleasure by the very agita- hundred thousand, or two-thirds, have perished “man servant and his maid servant,” who are in a confederacy of State* whose citizens might\ntion which may force Him from his hold. Not between their capture and liberation. Does it thus distinctly consecrated as his properly and all be slave-holders. I endorse, without reserve,\nthat to fall would be. the worst which might be- not really seem that Mr. Grosvenor was aproph- guaranteed him for his exclusive benefit in the much abusedsentiment of Governor MDuf-\ntide the leaf; to drop down like the half, yellow et? That nearly all the “impossibilities” of 1787 the most solemn manner. You attempt to re- fie, that “slavery is the corner stone of odr Re­\nfoliage before us, to mingle in the richness ol have vanished, and become as familiar facts as vert the otherwise irresistible conclusion, that publican edifice;” while I repudiate, as ridicu-\nthat upon which it rested, to add to the good our household customs, under the magic influ- slavery was thus ordained by God, by declaring lously absurd, that much lauded but no where\nquality of that of which it formed apart, aqd to ence of steam, cottpn and universal peace, yet that the word “slave” is not used here, and is accredited dogma ot Mr. Jefferson, that “all men\nreturn a portion of what it had gathered—nay, if this wonderful prophecy still stands; defying time not to be found in-the Bible. And I have seen are born equal.” -
429d6df4e86384141b686c917352e940 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.4999999682902 39.745947 -75.546589 GETTYSBURG, Pa.. July 2—Unless\nthere Is a decided drop In tom. «ra­\nture or this section is deluged by\nrain, the death toll of the Union and\nthe Confederate reunion now in pro­\ngress here promises to be very large.\nThe suffering is Intense. Torrid heat\nand a heavy percentage of humidity,\ncoupled with the change in their\nusual habits of eating and drinking,\nare causing dozens of the old soldiers\nto collapse and the hospital corps Is\nalready overworked with three f ll\ndays of the reunion still to come.\nThe brown army tents are verta-\nble ovens. For two days now thbre\nhas been practically no breeze. And\nmany of the veterans were complete­\nly worn out by the long, hard trip to\nget here. Most of them would have\nbeen better off had they remained at\nhome, but they were not to be denied\nthe privilege of moving about among\nth"ir comrades and paying\nwhat will probably be the last public\ngeneral tribute to the armies of the\nSouth and of the North in the days of\n1861. So the government officials are\ndoing their best to care for their\ncharges in every way and are hoping\nfor a change in weather which would\nprove of great benefit.\nThis was military day. The forces\nof the North and the South are being\nspecifically honored. In the hig tent\nwhere all of the formal functions are\nheld the veterans assembled to listen\nto praise of the heroism shown by\nthe twin armies. Eulogies of the\nNorth were sounded by a major-gen­\neral, John R. Brooke, of Pennsyl­\nvania. while those of the South were\nrecorded by Sergeant John C. Scar­\nborough, of South Carolina. And as\na climax to the two efforts came the\nreading of the martyred Lincoln's\nGettysburg address by Barry Bulk-\nley.
0228eada8e735d6df7b25acf3d173ceb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.7383561326737 39.745947 -75.546589 NOTICE - TO THE HONORABLE\nJudges of the Court of General Sessions\nof the State of Delaware. In and for Now\nCastle county;—We. the undersigned free­\nholders and respectable cit zone of the\nThird ward, of the city of Wilmington, do\nhereby certify that D. W . Lync.i Co., the\ntenants and occupants of the «true situ­\nated at N. W. corner Fourth and Madison\nstreets, in the Third ward, city countv\nnnd State aforesa'd, and desc Ihe ! in thrlr\napplication and who aie a;»tl cants for a\nlicense on Monday, the 4th day of Novem­\nber. A. D., 1607. h Iht the next term of\nsaid court, for the sale cf intoxicating\nliquora in quant'tles not less thin one-\nLaU gallon ther. ln. rot to be drunk on the\npremises; they being retu'lers of\ngouda, wares aqd merchandise; the aggre­\ngate coat value of their stock consallv\nkept on hnnd for »ale is net less than five\nhundred dollars; they are men of full age,\nsobriety and good moral character; that\nsuch sale of Intoxicating liquors at said\nplace is necessary to accommodate the\npublic; that they are the oeeupnntn\nof said house, and the following respect­\nable citizens of said ward at least tweive\nof whom are aubstantnl frrehod r<* of\nsa d ward, recommend the «aid applica­\ntion, viz:\nThos. F. McEvilly,\nL. W . Ellis.\nK. Abberger.\nThos. M . Monaghan,\nKdw.C. Bobbins. Jr,\nTho<*. E . Newell,\nPatrick Dunne.\nM chad Hafttch,\nHenry Wltsll\nI'an'el K.Haughcy.\nJames O'Hara.\nJohn P. H^ardon,\nTh ma< Duffy,
5d690ded8b9518b28a268ce1f104d53d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1925.9465753107559 41.681744 -72.788147 same effect s a threat to put a child\nin a dark closet and, much against\ntheir will, the leaders have been\nforced to consider Qulgley's prefer-\nences or at least show rewnect for\nhis suggestions.\nQulgley's all star show was brought\nout. two years ago when the bosses\nof the republican party decided they\nwould name Fred M. Holmes for\nmayor. No sooner did the announce-\nment appear in print than the wires\nbegan to burn and Quigley told\nheadquarters to make a change.\nConsternation ruled anight. in\nthe end, Quigley was successful in\nforcing the withdrawal Of Holmes\nand the substitution of Judge Ailing,\nw ho was acceptable to Quigley. That\nJudge Ailing was defeated was no\nfault of Qulgley's.\nThe second ward promises to stage\na revival of show this coming\nspring. When George Quigley sets\nhis jaw and says he is going to do\nthus and so, It. Is usually a safe bet\nthat he goes through with his inten\ntions. For some, time there have\nbeen rumors (hat he would kick over\nthe traces in the coming primaries.\nThis rumor is borne out by his state-\nment yesterday that the G. O, P.\nmachine must be careful when It\nstarts to pick a candidate.\nNew Britain men who attended the\nweekly luncheon of the Hartford Ad-\nvertising club last Tuesday were\npleased to shake hands with Frank\nLeroy Ulanchard. who was editor\nof the. Now Britain Herald from\n1SSG to ISflO. Few residents will re-\ncall Mr. Blanchard although he. was\nwidely known in New BrKain at that\ntime.
02489f0937c5844b18c5c1e33859477d THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1887.5712328450024 46.187885 -123.831256 now. J . Douglass is nt the buoy\ndepot busy putting Uncle Sam's\nlight house property in repair.\nThere have been G9 deaths in this\nvicinity since January 1st, 1887.\nVery few occupants in either city or\ncounty jails. Pete Olsen, the original\nand only Pete Olsen, is saia to oe\nheading this way from Nestucca.\nThere are thirteen beneficial organi\nzations in Astoria. But little grad-\ning or street work has been done this\nsummer. The Scandinavian Benevo-\nlent society will have a pleasant time\non their picnic next Sunday. The\nmail boat arrived down at 4:30 yes-\nterday afternoon. The fakirs, street\noperators and other beats have let\nthe town pretty well alone this\nmonth. Verv few marriage licenses\nare being issued. Thistles in the'\nvicinity of Union town are a spreud- - I\nmg uuisance that yearly increases in\narea. American ships are carrying\nlumber from the Sound to San Diego\nfor S7 a thousand. Astoria the\ncoolest and pleasantest oity in the\nUnited States in summer and has tho\nmost equable climate in winter.\nOnly one runaway yesterday: horse\nwith sulky, ran around block, threw\ndriver ont, fell down, up again: little\ndamage: several children scared\nSteamer Gen. Garfield goes to Tilla-\nmook to ply on the bay. Many boats\nlying idle alongside canneries: but\nlittle inducement to go out No.\nOne's Amoskeag is still out of service.\nThat new stable of Capt Flavel's\nlooks more stylish outside than an\nordinary dwelling house. Sherman\nand Ward are doing a rushing busi-\nness. The salmon vessels aro fast\nfillinc up with cargo. The school- -\nhouses are netting a good coat of\npaint inside and out The sale of\nseats at the New York Novelty Store\nolosesatG:45 Saturday evening: first\ncome, first served. A man is coming\nfrom New York with SIO.OOO to start\na ziupiCE iac&ory. a nre is sum com\nfortablo of evenings.
0809f554d8aaf95689760e41e1cbee93 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.6616438039066 40.441694 -79.990086 Finally the clear blast of the bugle was\nheard and tho cry went up, "They're at tho\npost." A wild rush was made for tho open,\nand then evoryone waited, eagerly clutch-\ning bits of pasteboard that were eitcor to\nenrich them or break them.\nIn a few moments Bashford, wearing the\npeacock blue and yellow sash of the Bash-lor- d\nManor Farm, and ridden by I. Lewis,\nappealed on the track, followed by the Maid\not Athcl filly, Osric, Lamplighter, Lester,\nCbnradu, Lew Weir, Anna li, Huron, Newton,\nTammany, Silver Fox, Ceo Jay Jay, Lavish,\nTringlo, Yorkville. Belle nnd King Cadmus.\n"They're off." "They're off."\nIt was true. Mr. Caldwell had caught\nthem all it ell in motion and had secured a\nmagnificent start. Yorkville Belle was the\nfirst to show, but her was slight,\nnnd Mars, Anna B and Lavish, Tringle and\nHis Highness were lapped on her, with\nthe rest not a length away. Murphy at once\ntook a restraining pull on the Belle, but slio\nwas full of racing, and for a quarter she was\nin ftont, followed by Merry Monarch, who\nwas capped bv Huron, with Anna Band\nDagonet next. Then Dagonet,with a wonder-\nful burst of speed, took the lead and Ills\nHighness nnd Huron both moved up. As\nthey swung Into the strotoh thero was littlo\nto choose between Huron, His Highness,\nYorkvillo Belle, Dagonet, Mars and Bashford.\nTho excitement was intense. Men wero\nbreathing hard, women wero clinching their\nhands, but not a word was spoken. Anyone\nof the half dozen horses appeared to have a\nchance. Suddenly Overton shot
2171d98ee16dae0c00022cee16745350 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1917.719178050482 39.623709 -77.41082 On a certain summer morning the\nunknown maiden ran across the street\nbareheaded to speak to a young lady\nof her acquaintance. Just then Phlneas\nTalbot came along. Just then, us well,\na man came along leading a cow.\nEvery sight was a new sight with her.\nShe missed the blackberry bushes and\nbullthlstles growing In the pasture.\nShe was nervous. She was perturbed.\nPresently she grew excited and afraid.\nAll at once that cow concluded that\nthe would return home before some-\nthing awful happened. She started on\nher return down the street Just as the\ngood-looking girl started across the\nstreet for her home. She made for the\ngirl with a bellow and her head held\nlow down. There was a scream of ter-\nror—other screams from pedestrians,\nand Phlneas Talbot hud Jumped two\nfeet high. He saw and realized every-\nthing In a moment. It was his duty to\ngo to that girl's rescue. Bashfulness\nchained his feet for half a minute.\nThen a sort of crisis seemed to come.\nHe must do It or die. He rushed out\nInto the street and grabbed cow\nby the horns and prevented a tragedy.\nThe cow tossed her head and lifted\nPhlneas clear off the ground. She\nswung her bend to and fro and swung\nhim with It, and In one of her swings,\nIntended to land him on the roof of a\nhouse, she fell down and her owner\ncame up and recovered his rope.\nPhlneas wasnt much the worse for\nhis hero work. He was gone almost be-\nfore the good-looking girl hud real-\nized her danger and recovered from\nher fright. A small crowd gathered\nand she was conducted across the\nstreet, and every one had a word of\npraise for the daring young man who\nhad seized the opportunity as well as\nthe cow. Phlneas hurried down to his\nshop, and he sat down to commune\nwith himself, and he soon saw another\nghost rise up before him. Although\nhe hadnt been in society much, ho\nknew the rules of good breeding. He\nhad saved that girls life and he must\nrail upon her to talk the matter over.\nIf he didnt call she must think him a\nboor.
2a729f39104b25b798f2bad1a7e713f1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9767122970572 40.063962 -80.720915 The paper in which this article ap¬\npears is edited by Its old conductors\nwho did so much to convince the peo¬\nple of North Carolina before the war\nthat they were living under a despot¬\nism. The editors found no freedom lu\nthe old as they find none in the new\nUnion. What Is to bo done with such\nmen? What is to l»o done with those\nfor whom they eater? Are we to take\nthem into tho Government and tell\nthem to mould its policy! Are we, in\nother words, to give up to such men,\nsimply because they refuse to be re"\ncondlcd to tho Union? Since one ele¬\nment or the other is to rule in this land,\nought it to be those who were success¬\nful or those who were defeated in the\nwar? To be compelled to hold the\nSouth by armed occupation is certainly\nnot an agreeable prospect to the\nmind of any American. We trust»\nthat the' loyal Stan's will not be\ncompelled to thus maintain the\nUulon. There is no reason why they\nshould be after the keen edge or the\nrecent strife wears away. The great\ncause of all our difficulties is wiped\nout, and why should tho two sections,\nboth now free, be aliens ? Community\nof language, laws, and the\ngreat arts of commerce and trade, will\nunite us sooner or later, as we devoutly\nbelieve. But at all events the Union\nwill be maintained. There are worse\nthings to eoutemplato than holding the\nSouth forever by armed occupation. A\ndismemberment of the Union would be\nintiuitely worse. Tho people will never\ntolerate two nations within these States.\nWe will bo one in name if not in heart.\nThe South will be held and ruled. She\nwill be compelled to pay taxes and to\nconform to the laws in all respects. She\ncan do as she, pleases about sending\nrepresentatives to Washington or hold-\niug elections and otherwise harmonic-:\ning herself. That is a matter for her\nconcern, not ours. It is well enough to\nlet her pout now. Let her represent*-\ntives go home since they cannot take\nthe oath taken by xll who are in Con-\ngross. If she elects better men they\nwill bo admitted in *11 doe time. TW\nloval States are uot to be bullied into a\nsurrender of the principles involved in\nthe war. The rebellious States are the\ndefeated party. The issues made by\nthem are obliterated. The victorrf and\nnot the vangulshed have tho right to\nsay what shall be the policy of the whole\ncountry.a policy that shall operate
808d2f6c2c4ef8d82c74ec7c9f6066f9 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0534246258244 39.290882 -76.610759 net of tlio Catholie faith. I speak of the abuses\nthat have been practised in the name of the Ca-\ntholie religion, and in conectien with the fact\nthat there is nothing in the Constitution of the\nGeneral Government, which can prevent the\nestablishment of the Catholic religion by en-\ngrafting it upon the constitution of any indil\nvidual State, and that it is in the power of\ndesigning men, wherever they control the le-\ngislation of a single state, to establish the Inqui-\nsition as a part of its civil polity. You, the Ca-\ntholics of the United States, are as deeply inter-\nested as we, the Protestants, in preventing this;\nand to discuss how far the purpose of Bishop\nEngland, in unitingChurch and State, foreshad-\nows this event, is a measure which yon should be\ntl*> last to condemn. It willnot do for him to say\nthat the prejudices, which exists in the minds of\n are unfounded. It will not do for\nhim, in his character of Inquisitor General, to\nproscribe all investigation, and to denounce all\nwho may question the integrity of his purpose.\nWe, the Protestant people of the United States,\nhave opened our doors, and permitted him to\ncome among us. He is suspected of harbouring\ndeep designs against our peace and your liberties.\nIt will not do for him, a stranger,whom we have\nmade welcome, to denounce us,when we propose\nto enquire into the truth of these suspicions. That\nhe is suspected, he admits. Instead of argu-\nments to prove his innocence, he gives us inso-\nlent denunciation, and thereby confirms our ap-\nprehensions of his guilt; and it is a striking fea-\nture of this eontoversy, that,as it was in Spain,\nso it is here; to resist the authority of the In-\nquisitor General immediately brings up the idea\nof the "eair and the "gibbet,"
3da0330562eaa3065a0879e3b36dacef OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.1547944888382 39.513775 -121.556359 Y VIUTIK OF AN EXECUTION issued out\nif the District Court, Ninth Judicial District,\nin and for the County of Untie mi I .-lute of Califor-\nnia, to me directed and delivered, commanding me\nto make the sum of nine hundred and seventy-eight\nthirty-six one hnndrodttmdollars, w iili interest there-\nim ao llio rale of iwo per cent per month from the\nsixth day of November A It IH.i'i. and the fnrllier\nsum of thirty-seven nliiety>two otie-lomdredllis dol-\nlars witli interest thereon at the rate rate of ten per\nI cent per annum, from the tenth day of January A,\nj I). 18-iti, and costs taxed, ui the su n of nineteen\ndollars and eighty-flve ceni together w ith all the\n| costs accruing on said writ, wherein Crafts x Parish\nare ho plaintiffs and teorge W. is the defend-\nant. t have seized an I levied upon and w ill sell nl\n) public, sale, to the highest bidder for cash, on the\n' fourteenth day of February, A . 1) 1557, at the Itmr\n| of two ocloak. F. M ., all of the right. title and in-\nterest of the above named defendant, in and to all\nol Ihat certain piece or parcel of l and ly imc and In—-\niut; situate in Ohir Township. on the east side of\nFeather river, in Untie County, California, compri-\nse! ; three (jnarter tied ions of land and c.oiistttn; mg\nw bat is known ns Kent's Ranch, situated about one\nmile below McConnell's Fern, together with all and\nsingular the tenements heredtiame its and upperv-\nnances tlioreunlo belonging, or in any wise appertain-\ning.
05b8f0ae0507212e0aa79b00805d8d03 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.401369831304 40.063962 -80.720915 St. Louis, May 20..Philip Pfarr, n\nGerman living on a road several miles\nfom this city, wus murdered about half*\nant nine lost night by n negro, name un*\nnown, and hi* wife, about to become a\nlother, ravished. It appears that a\negro man, about 25 yeari old, culled at\n'farr'a house about live o'clock last\ninning and asked for work. He wan\naid ijy Mrs. Pfarr that they wanted no\nelp. Ho called again about 7 o'clock,\nfter Mr. Pfarr liad returned from his\niborin the field, and was again (old that\n0 help waa wanted. About 0:30 p. m .\nfarr and hi* family were aroused by\nnoise in the yard and by the balking of\nbe dog. Pfarr went out to see what was\nhe matter and was by the negro who\nisit'ed the houae in the evening, who\ntruck him a violent blow on the head,\npparently with some blunt Instrument,\nnd his akull won fractured. Mrs. Pfarr,\nrfao followed Ukp to the door, wai then\nnvagely seized oy the negro and forced\n5 give up what money was In tho house,\nfter which she was hrutallv ravished.\nkfter the negro had fled, Mrs. Pfarr\nragged he/ inacnsiblo husband to tho\nouse and aroused the neighbors. Every*\nling that was powible wa< done for him.\nfo remained unconscious until noon to*\nay, when he died. Intense excitement\nrevails in the neighborhood, and twenty\nlountcd policemen have been scouring\nje rfOod* and fitlds all day, but at last\ncounts had found no traco of tho fiend-*\nh murdoror.
1fe33058d1418de3febb2d4e686d994a RIPLEY COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1913.1410958587012 36.620892 -90.823455 liWl we bad another drought uud\nhad no one to advise us and pur\naverage yield was 9 bushels. We\ncan't argue around tacts. What does\nour soil need to make it grow clo\nver? An expert cun examine it and\ntell us. The people of Pettis county\nhave tried for yours to grow alfalfa\nand have lulled in nearly all cases.\nLast year they got a farm adviser\nwho lias tested over 800 samples ot\nsoil a. id iu every case tbeowuer bos\nsecured a perfect set d this wonder\nrut hay crop. Hut vou cunt get a\nslunu of uny crop if your seed wont\nsprout. The next in importance of\nHie farm udviser's duties is to test\nour need. Tbis dont mean to take a\nbuiici full of seeds and plant them iu\nthe garden all in a pile if u\nbunch of surnuls come up pronounce\nit good seed. It means to lane a\nlest wtaeru euch seed is examined to\nsee if it neuds up a strong healthy\nsprout or a small weak one that\nwont produce a plant half as large\nus it ought. It also meaus to exam\nme tne seed to bee it it contains u\nlot ot weed seeds. In a lot ot sum\npies of cbvor seed tested by Sam\nouruau in Pettis county be found\nis high as 40 per cent ol weed seeds.\nHow cau we expect to have clean\nclover hay if we plant half clover\nand half weeds? How can we keep\na Uelu In clover unci timothy more\nnan one year if we have planted\nuough weeds in it to choke out all\nour grass? In Pettis county theud-
13d9b85f781693d151126053e734b5c7 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.815068461441 40.735657 -74.172367 Bidders are not to state any price tor ma-\nterials and work for which there is a fixed\namount provided for in the specifications\nF^ch proposal must be enclosed jn a sealed\nenvelope, properly indorsed with the name of\nthe bidder and of the Improvement, and di-\nrected to the Hoard of Street and Water Com-\nmissioners of the City of Newark\nBidders will etate their prices in writing as\nwell as In figures.\nBidders must specify in their proposals that,\nshould the above work be awarded to them,\nthey will bind themselves to finish and com-\nplete the same within the following number of\nconsecutive working days:\nGrafton Avenue Grading— Fiftv <60i days;\nClinton Place Flagging—Twenty (20) days.\nThe plans and sped..cations of the work can\nbo examined at the office of the Chief \nof the Board of Street »nu Water CommlMlon-\nera at the City-Hall. Said rropoeala to he ao-\ncompanfed by the consent In writing of two\nsureties, or a surety company qualified to do\nbusiness in New Jersey, who shall, at the time\nOf putting In such proposals, qualify as to\ntheir responsibility In the amount of such pro-\nposal, and bind themselves that, if the contract\nbe a war ed to the person or persons making\nthe proposal they will, upon Us being so\nawarded, become his or their sureties tor the\nfaithful penormance of said work: and that if\nthe person or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsuch contract they will pay to the City of\nNewaik any difference between the sums to\nwhich he or they. would fiav* been entitled\n2S» c^pJLelt*on, °l
1192748ad9236609ec2e4d4698826e69 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 The l'r«tld#at Heokln* a Temperate M»n\nf »r h Mebrnakn I'oittnmterjthlp.\nWasuikutox, April 12..There ii a curl*\nous story connected with the postmaster-\nehlp it Kearney, Nob. The President se¬\nlected lor the position a man named Mor¬\ngan and sent in his name to the Senate.\nThe cue was referred to Senator Wilson,\nol Iowa, Who hau prepared a favorable re¬\nport, but before submitting It to his col-\nleagues on the Committee on 1'oetolllrea\nand 1'oBt Roads he thought be would like\nto see a report which belearned had been\nmade by a postotllce Inspector in regard\nto tho man. So he sent to the Postmaster\nGeneral for the report. Mow, It so hap¬\npened that this report had heon sent to\nthe White House, and the President, bo\nsoon as learned that the Senate had\nsent (or it, made haite to withdraw Mr,\nMorgan's name, because the Inspector hid\nreported that .Mr. Morgan wai in the\nhabit ol occasionally getting Intoxicated.\nAfter having withdrawn Mr. Morgan's\nname for fear that he would be rejected\nthe President selected the man baying the\nnelt heaviest Indorsements, one Watson\nby name, and sent his name to the Senate\nfor continuation. The nomination of\nWalaon was telegraped from this city, and\nthe very night he received the news of\nhis good fortune he went on a protracted\nspree, which, It Is understood, la not\nwholly llnished yet. The committee has\nprepared an adverse report on Watson's\ncase, and the President Is now waiting for\nhis rejection, so that he can try hla hand\nat another nomination.
3ed496ff3ad185a0301d71bfd6d2f5c7 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.6397259956875 39.513775 -121.556359 In case of a vacancy, from any cause,\nin the office of the District Judge, the Gov-\nernor shall fill the same by granting a com-\nmission. which shall continue until the elec-\ntion and qualification of a Judge in his\nplace. A Judge to till the vacancy shall be\nchosen at the first general election subse-\nquent to the occurrence of the vacancy.”\nThis law was passed May I'Jth, 1853, and\nrepeals the Act, so far as it conflicts with it,\nas quoted by Juris, and Mr. Williams under\nthe Act passed at the last session of the Le-\ngislature, and the Act of 1856, regulating\nthe terms of the District Courts, cun, and no\ndoubt will, hold the regular terms of our\nCourt, in August and November. Heuce\nibe Governor did not call for any election to\nfill a vacancy to occur between the 2d of\nSeptember and tlie Ist of January next for\nthere will be none, and the case of the Peo-\nple vs. Rrenharn docs not apply to our Judi-\ncial District Rave you any idea, Mr. Ed-\nitor, why the paper referred to, does not\nhoist name of Mr. Lewis for the short\nterm of the District Judgeship ?\nit is unnecessary to argue the constitu-\ntional question now, for there is but little\ndoubt that it will warrant the law of 1863-\nin reference to this matter.\nRut it looks to me, that Juris-Consolt is\nnot anxious for us to have any Court; per-\nhaps he is interested in another matter,that\nis the all absorbing topic of the day, name-\nly: the election Would not Juris rather\nhave no Court and let the numerous cases\nnow on ducket, and most of which will be\nready lor trial on Monday next, go over en-\ntirely, than to run the very slight chance of\nthe unconstiluiionality of the judgments\nwhich might be rendered.\nThe case here presented, appears to be\ntinctured with the same spirit that pervades\nthe excusatory article in a later issue of tho\nsame paper, in reference to the non holding\nof the regular terms of our County Courts.\nLet us wait and see what Judge Williams\nwill do. ills duty is prescribed by law, and\n1, for one, believe be will do it unflinchingly.
1ff29a50365df58f3e11927ecc1bfcf0 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1902.8315068176053 32.612638 -90.036751 In cases where bronchitis has become\nchronic from want of proper treatment in\nthe earlier stages there is nothing so good\nas Dr. August Koenig's Hamburg Breast\nTea, in conjunction with which is strongly\nadvised the use of St. Jacobs Oil as an out-\nward application, along the? front. of4 the\nthroat, from close up under the chin to well\ndown to the top of the chest; the one rem-\nedy assists the other, and, as intended, they\nwork in complete unison. The wonderful\npenetrating power of St. Jacobs Oil en-\nables it to reach the adhesion of foreign\nmatter which lines the bronchial tubes and\nwhich makes breathing more and more dif-\nficult. As these adhesions become inflamed\nand enlarged, St. Jacobs Oil causes such ad-\nhesions to break away, making expectora-\ntion easier and more free. Dr. August\nKoenig's Hamburg Breast Tea, drank slowly\n very hot, soothes and heals the parts,\nis comforting and quieting, stops the cough\nand relieves the breathing. This manner\nof treatment (and there is no other two\nremedies that will work together so suc-\ncessfully) reaches the difficulty from the\noutside and the inside at the same time.\nSt. Jacobs Oil reaches the roots of the ad-\nhesion, and assists Dr. August Koenig's\nHamburg Breast Tea in clearing them; then\nboth remedies act in unison in healing and\ncuring. The above remarks apply with equal\nforce in cases of asthma, croup, whooping\ncough, enlarged tonsils, and all bronchial\naffections. Every family should have St.\nJacobs Oil and Dr. August Koenig's Ham-\nburg Breast Tea always in the house in or-\nder that they may be promptly used in the\nfirst stages. Often the maladies develope\nwith wonderful rapidity, and complications\ntake place with equal suddenness.
37f0cf1626d188bcd3a231df63961773 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.4397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 mo ciciuouia ui J-ucm uuu wrung, mm j\nwhich Is right in God must be r&htTn i\nman, and the essential ([lality'tftBm f\nmoat be the same betweep ruler and rnled," J\nat one end ol, the law or, the other. If j\nthere is that which la wicked In me, stab-' |\nJectiug me to eternal penalty, with what j,\nkind of reason can I turn rocndand-ooo - j ,\nfees my guilt, and then worship ths same '\nact in God? That which Is wlckcd In J\nman ii wicked in God, and u much wort* J\nat It if more pernicious in a being at tin A\nhead ol government than it is In the fa- a\nsignificant being at thk bottom ol govwn- J\nment There mtut be the same a\nJustice, the same benevolence, the same a\nmercy, one uniform platform both lor\nhinflhat'rules upon the circle 0/the earth' tl\nand lor them that .are ruled in th? *\nlower parts ol the earth. In the New\nTestament then appears a new germ,\nwhicS/elthb&gh'lt .£totdeveIoped,.la1 .J\nboth by John and Paul opened In anch-% j\ndegree as,to make Its development quite a\npossible'and almost with ;tuf }\nnot derived from the .pattj 6at;<WiT«d- a\nIrom the future. According t# this theory o\nwe are born not with Adam but with °\nChrist; our roots take hold not ol the n\ntoll of MeBbat ol the lollof Jerusalem; u\noar theory ii to bo evolved not from, the ®\npoems of antiquity, bttt we ire ttrtakt "\nthe clearer light that shines in Jesoa »\nChriit, and ere to determine the Bjatem ij\nunder which we llye by the New Tata- ij\nment teaching. Mow, the imperfoctlona §\nol the race and its necessities are recog- n\nnixed Juat u clearly under this as under £\nthe ola ylew. Minister! are afraid of £\nanything that will open the door to laxity s\nof doctrine-, tteyaay If yon comfort mei *\nSHSK^ssiSJ\nspirituality; and that iaajust fear, and II £\nthere waa only one way to keep men from E\nthe doit, it would be fuatifiable to teach «\nthat way; bnt it la not the only way, it r\nIs the pnorert way; there Is* more manly $\nquality than fear; It ia not .the learoi j\npoverty that man* men work aimnch
7d3858bf14dcd648c2905fd704121f51 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1858.5904109271944 35.780398 -78.639099 loons. His wife instead of trying to win\nhim lck by gentle words and kind atten-\ntions, irritated him by continual reproach-\nes Soon oil his timo was spent at the\ntavern ; and not long since, 1 met him on\nthe street so drunk as to bo a complete nui-\nsance. Then, my dear, dear friend, let me\nItcxech you, whenever you arc tempted to\n. be fretful or exacting, think what effect\nyour actions may make upon a sensitive\nspirit, and let your was ever le "ways of\npleasantness, and all your paths be peace"\nTo you, yonpr hntbntd, allow me to\nmake a few remarks. You are now enter-\ning upon the serious duties and sober reali-\nties of life. You have won the undivided\nlove of n gentle, guileless heart. Guard\nwell priceless treasure ! Whenever a\nword of reproach arises to your lips, or a\nharsh look clouds your brow, remember\nhow much she has given up for you. Think\nof Iter leaving family and home and cleav-\ning alone unto uu. llemember that you\narc all the twrld to her, for to none other\ncan she look for protection or support.\nOh! never let her regret the hour she\nplaced her joung affections in your keep-\ning. Again, I leseech you to cherish well\nthat frail flower, that mm have chosen to\nblossom nearest rour heart. The human\nheart is a strange mystery, and its impres-\nsions are ineffaceable. iJeware then, how\nyou impress the heart of her who looks up\nto you for instruction and advice. And\noh ! I were of Ike iciue cup.
414cfcdabd708764ae380f90e6fcab8a DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9136985984271 44.939157 -123.033121 At first it was thought that foul\nplay had played a part in the old\nman's condition, but after an exam-\nination was made by Sheriff Minto,\nit was found that Slough was subject\nto heart trouble, and had fallen last\nnight a few feet from whero he was\nlying this morning.\nWhen discovered this morning\nSlough was bloody about the face,\nwhere he had struck when falling,\ncrushing the right cheek bone, and\nhis hands were badly lacerated from\ntho barbs of the wire fence which he\ngrasped, evidently In an effort to pull\nhimself along toward his home. He\nhad come to tho city yesterday after-\nnoon to purchase some medicine for\na sick horse on tho place, and when\nnear tho bridge, it is presumed, he\nA small amount of money was\nfound in his clothing today, and\nthere was no that lie had\nbeen assaulted or robbed. The in\njured man did not regain conscious\nness today, and is unable to give an\naccurate account of the Incident. Ho\nwas removed to the Salem hospital\nwas remove dto the Salem hospital\nas soon as possible, and physician\nare working hard in the attempt to\nrevive him. His condition this after\nnoon is very weak, but there is hope\nfor his ultimate recovery.\nSlough is 70 years of age, and has\nbeen a resident near Fruitland for\nsome time. He and his brother are\nengaged in farming and raising stock\nThe old man was not addicted to\ndrink, but several people said that\nthey saw him stagger some while re\nturning afoot toward Fruitland, and\nit Is possible that the man was at\ntempting to reach his home, and, be\ncoming weaker, fell on the bnJge.
16576964e4e21bce0ed6f4b8a9317a13 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1884.1215846678303 39.743941 -84.63662 r irst. The people l represent are anx\nious that ElDorado and Eaton should be\nmade points on your road. It will give\nthem a direct northern and on indirect\neastern outlet, that they have long de-\nsired, and for which they have hereto-\nfore made several fruitless efforts. That\nformer failures had a depressing effect\nupon their hopes and retarded earlier ef-\nforts to secure the location of your road\nwas perhaps natural, if not excusable.\nSecond. Being now aroused and en\nthused on the subject, I say, with confi-\ndence, that they have the ability to per-\nform and will perform whatever they\nmay undertake to do in connection with\nthe location of vour road as indicated\nabove. This is the point upon which a\nconference with you would have been\nvaluable, and 1 hope satisfactory. Of\ncourse you would ask : What will your\npeople undertake to do ?\nI will say frankly that I had intended\nto ask : What will you require our peo-\nple to do, as a condition precedent to un-\nquestionably obtaining the location of\nthe road as they desire ? I would have\nhoped to have arrived at a satisfactory\ndisposition of one or the other of these\nquestions by a conference ; and before\nthe matter is finally disposed of, if it is\nyet open, permit me to hope that our\npeople will oe more heard by your\nBoard. My real hope was that 1 could\nobtain from your Board a definite propo\nsition that would insure them the road\nupon their complying with it. I would\nhave submitted to them any reasonable\nproposition you would have made, with\na feeling of confidence that it would have\nbeen accepted and performed by them.\nIt is upon such a proposition from you.\nthat I hope our people will be more fully\nheard, as I have said.\nAs indicative of what I would deem\nreasonable, I will say that our people\nwill give or procure the right of way and\nnecessary depot grounds and raise $4,-0 0- 0\nper mile of good dollar for dollar\nstock of the Company between the I. B.\n& V. crossing and Eaton. I am not ad-\nvised and cannot now speak of the pros-\npects south of Eaton, except that I hear\nthat they have $30,000 of stock already\nraised at Winchester that might be made\navailable in the event of the road taking\nthat direction from Eaton. While I am\nnot prepared or authorized to make\nstatements in reference to the prospects\nfor right of way and stock south of Ea-\nton, I know nothing that should deter\nthe people from making an effort to se-\ncure the right of way and a given amount\nof stock per mile on that portion of the\nroad.
1a103c0e4aca154601d405e77c5c289f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1915.4616438039066 42.217817 -85.891125 I heard lately of a plan adopted by\none young woman that has worked out\nwell with her, and might be of use to\nsomeone else, says a writer in the\nPittsburgh Dispatch She lives at\nhome, but must help the family excheq-\nuer, and this is how she does it:\nHer one talent lay in her good taste\nin dress. She had an Instinctive feel-\ning for what was becoming, not only\nfor herself but her friends, and was\noften called In to consult over a pro-\nspective new gown. So that is what\nshe determined to do professionally.\nShe let her friends know that for' a\ncertain sum she would give advice on\ncostumes, helping to arrange a whole\nwardrobe, and from friends she soon\nbranched out to regular clients.\nShe goes to the house of her em-\nployer and looks over everything the\nlady has. She gives definite Instruc-\ntions as to what each qr suit or\nwaist requires to bring it up to par.\nShe advises as to the most becoming\nstyles and colors, and lists what new\ngarments are necessary. Of course she\nregulates the expenditure according to\nthe purses of her various clients.\nShe has made a success. Many wom-\nen do not know what to wear, what\nsuits them best, what to put together.\nShe tells them. She also saves them\na good deal by her cleverness in adapt-\ning wtmt looks hopeless. She can also\ntell where you should go for mate-\nrials; she has addresses of tailors,\ndressmakers and sewing women, and\nknows they can do what they promise.\nShe is thoroughly up in her chosen\njob, In fact. She also makes a point\nof attending carefully to the details\nof a costume, making sure that each\nitem will harmonize. The work Is ex-\ntremely interesting, and it pays both\nher and her clients.
060fc92775cb7fcd9582e640ee2b1e36 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.4178081874684 40.063962 -80.720915 laaao W. Hall was born in Mellwood\ntownship, Guernsey county, iu 1810, when\nthe county wis yet nnrescued from the\nwilderness. lfis father, John Hall, emi¬\ngrated irom South Uarolinia to Ohio in\n1805, preferring to face the dangers of the\nuutried wilderness rather than amid the\ndeah-potsof slavery in the South. He\nwas married to Phoebe Webster,and Isaac\nW. was their stcond son. After a com¬\nmon school education he engaged in the\nmercantile business in Quaker Oily, then\nthe town of Mellwood, when hut nineteen\nyears old. and during the sixty-six years\nof bis residence there he steadily grew in\nwealth and in the esteem of his fellows\nuntil at his death. He was at once the\nwealthiest and the most respected cltizan\nof the town and community. He was\nthree times married, the Drat time\nto Margaret Thomas, by whom he had\none child who is now Mis. Hugh Keenan;\nthe second time to Kdiabetli Vail, by\nwhom he had one son, John K. Hall, now\ncashier at the Quaker Uity National Dank;\nthe third time to Sarafi Uurnere, who\nsurvives him. Always a faithful member\n the church, aa were hiB parenta before\nhim, he wju also a man of enterprise and\nrare businesa ability, combining with all\nan honesty that was never questioned and\na gentlessness of heart that is rarely\nfound. He loved goad, the true the\nbeautiful. Children and (lowers slfortled\nhim delight at all times. No man was\nmote loyal to the banner of the union\nduring the dark days of rebellion and no\nmail iruvanf hid llintinv innru frualti tn /nr.\nward thu end wt> looked to. A devoted\nRepublican at all times, h enover awervod\naside by any heresies, balievlng implicitly\nin the mission aud the future of his party,\nand giving liberally of bis wealth to the\ncampaign fund ol bis party, be was a\nmodel partisan. He was connected with\nevery enterprise of moment tbat has been\nprojected in this county lot the lost hall\ncentury. At the time ol his death he was\na stockholder and n director of the Cen¬\ntral National bank of Cambridge, Presi¬\ndent of the Quaker City National bank,\nand a stockholder and director of the\nBaltimore a Ohio railroad, Central Ohio\ndivision.
4eff331fced4ac9f86fb36b53c3acd29 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.401369831304 39.745947 -75.546589 Repayments hy the Allies are uncertain,\nliquidation of this debt have hardly begun and will probably pro­\nduce small results within the next few years. Congress never con­\ntemplated the use of interest or principal returned by our European\nborrowers for general Treasury purposes,\nact this foreign debt discharge fund was specifically set aside for\nthe redemption of Liberty Loan bonds or of other outstanding gov­\nernment bonds. Section 3 of the act reads;\n"That the Secretary of the Treasury, under such terms and\nconditions as he may prescribe, is hereby authorized to receive on\nbefore maturity payment for any obligations of such foreign\ngovernments purchased on behalf of the United States and to sell\nat no less than the purchase pries any of such obligations and to\napply the proceeds thereof and any payment» made hy foreign\ngovernments on account of their said obligations to the redemption\nor purchase at not more than par and accrued interest of any of\n United States bonds issued under authority of this act, and If\nsuch bonds are not available for this purpose the Secretary of the\nTreasury shall redeem or purchase any other outatandin.T interest-\nbearing obligations of the United States which may at such time be\npurchased at not more than par and accrued interest."\nThe government sold the Liberty bonds used as a basis for for­\neign credits on the understanding that these foreign credits should\nbe employed to redeem them. Tt was a moral and legal commit­\nment which there ia no reason for breaking away from now. Only\nthe desire of the bonus supporters in Congress tb give something\nwithout seeming to impose payment for it on the country prompts\nthis continuous harping on the foreign debt as a sufllclent source\nfor bonus disbursements. Mr. Watson was disingenuous and reck­\nless in telling the Indiana Republicans that the bonus fund rabbit\nran be drawn out of the foreign loan hat
179f25940572edd470571829e2533d54 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1897.7493150367834 43.994599 -72.127742 undersecretary of state for for-pi g- n\naffairs. He is credited with haying\nmado anywhere from $500,000 to\n8 1 , 000, 000 out of the rise. His appear-- I\nace as a dealer on the Chicago hoard of\ntrade was a surprise to all sorts and\nconditions of men in the Windy City.\nHeretofore Joseph Leiter has been\nlooked upon as simply a society man.\nHe has devoted himself assiduously to\nsociety in Washington, New York and\nChicago, and it was the last thing the\nbrokers expected to see him jump into\nthe arena of trade It was thought that\nthe Leiters had forsaken trade forever,\nand Joseph was expected to spend money\nrather than make it.\nLast winter Mr. Leiter chartered a\nyacht and went cruising around the\nWest Indies. He is well known in Lon-\n where he has been on visits to his\nsister and was supposed to be a harm-\nless gilded youth. All of a sudden he\nbroke forth upon the Chicago board of\ntrade and before the old stagers real-\nized what was going on had wrested a\nfortune from the fray. When the word\nwent around that "Leiter was in heavy\non the bull side," the knowing ones\nsaid: "I guess not. The wheat pit has\nno attractions for Levi Z. Leiter."\nWhen they were informed that it was\njosepn who was '"m, " tne board was\nso astonished that it nearly suspended\nbusiness to get its breath again.\nIt seems that Mr. Leiter has been\nspeculating in the wheat market for six\nmonths, but only his brokers knew of\nit. These brokers were called the "All en- -
154175ee0b0a5c23b924dfce9cd9b4b6 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1885.850684899797 40.063962 -80.720915 Shortly before noon, yesterday, the no\niayou packet, Josio \\\\\\, left for New 0\neans, where she will be formally turn*\nver to her owners and eater into her ne\nrade. Capt. T. Citnpbell Sweenty, wh\nias been hare for eome tirao watchio\nver her construction, and who owns\neading share in her, wa# in cotnmani\nle was accompanied by bis wife andalf\nii8 son Campbell, Jr., who arrived froi\niew Urleana Thursday night and went c\nlerk on the new boat. Ed. Sims an\nJon McDonald were her pilots; the\nrill take her as fir a9 Louie\n'ille. Copt. John Sweeney, c\niweeney & Son, of this city, who had fu!\nbarge of ber construction from the dran\nngof the plans to the last finishing touch\nnd his wile were also on the boat. The,\nre going to New Urleaus/ In additioi\n»Ir. Charlie Botlley, who goes to Nei\n)rleans to visit his father, and who wil\nemain there for some time, employed b\ntod ley Bros, as ho was here, Mrs. Prince\n;ho goea to Natchez to visit her husband\nJapt. Tom Prince, who in in command c\nhe New Courior there, Miss Jano Millet\nrhogoesto Memphis to visit am\nJol. Thomas Sweeney and wife, who wer\nojntf to Cincinnati on a visit to relative!\nrerti pacueiikcio uu iuu uunt.\nCaptain John Sweeney had the hull a\nho old Saline, the machinery of whicl\nrfis used in part on the Jessie W., loartei\npith 8,000 or 10,000 bushels of coal. Thi\nnil not wake it necessary to atop any\nr'here except for provisions and wil\njave a goodly number of bushels fur salt\nbout 5,(XRJ at the leant, on the arrival c\ntie boat at New Orlwans. In addition, th\noat, by the time she reaches Cincinnati\nrill have about 3.000 »arr«lsef apples oi\noard. After pacing Cincinnati sh\nill make no stops of any account.\nThe boat was built ».y Sweeney & Son\nI this city, for a small cotton trade. Sh\nj neatly put up in every respect, and th\nrm confidently looks forward to receivini\nrders for other boats on the strength o\nle impression she will make. Stveenev'i\noats have already acquired an enviabli\njputation on the Mississippi. Tho big\nlegantT. P . Leathers capped the cliina:\nnd compelled all to acknowledge the liui\nork that can be turned out by this cele\nrated Wheeling tirm.
2e6565aaf460ac3f20b2369fd1122418 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1866.532876680619 41.004121 -76.453816 DECLINE OP RADICALISM\nOnh by ono tlio Radical members of\nCongress aro being repudiated by tho\nnominating conventions of their party\nRice, of Maine, has been dropped: Mor\nrill, of Vermont, has refused to allow\nhis iiaino to go beforo the people for ro\nnomination ; Grinnell and Kasson have\nbeendeleated; and Hill has been shelvod\nalong with his Radical associates. In\nour State the indications aro that Radi-\ncalism will soon bo at a ruinous discount\nStevens may hold Lancaster, but in\nother districts tho contest will bo fierce\nnnd determined against tlio present\nRadical members. Kelly, and O'Neill\nmid Myers, and Thayer, will havo to\nface constituencies outraged by tho man\nnor lu which they have subordinated\ntlio real interests of tho country to ne-\ngro equality and partisan aspirations.\nTho business of Philadelphia lias been\nterribly disturbed and shattered bv the\nwar and events growing outof thesuine,\nOur commercial rivals aro taking ad\nvantage oi circumstances to press us\nstill further lu the wrong direction, and\nour representatives have, by\ntheir votes, aided in keeping trade and\ncommerce irom our city. Thoy hav\nfollowed tho mud and heady current of\nRadical malice, and opposed all meas-\nures calculated to reunite tlio sections\nand allow Philadelphia to occupy her\nold place among the business marts of\nmo nation, tiio votes ol .tlio men\nnamed have stood in tlio way of all ef\nforts to benefit tho trado of this city\nThey proclaimed by their action that\nPhiladelphia is against holding any in\ntcrcourso with tlio people of tlio South\nern States, and theso men wonder why\nnil tho trado of that section Is not poured\ninto tlio laps of our merchant. They\naro learning now what It costs to uphold\nand support tho Radical party, and If\ntlio present Radical members bo\nthey will receive another lesson.\nPhiladelphia should bo represented by\nnational men, and If tlio merchants and\nmen of business study their own wel-\nfare and thnt of tho city, they will\nchooso at tlio coming election. Age,
176d87bd9d7b20c0c8cea0301ecd559c THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.8890410641807 46.187885 -123.831256 'But hold on," some one says, "you\nhave not thought of the objections to\nthis measure you so freely endorse."\nWe have; thought of them for days\nat a time. There are plenty of objec-\ntions. We could fill this column with\nobjections to it, but the least of the\nbenefits to be derived from it out-\nweigh the whole lot. We believe in\nthe rule of the people. We have suf-\nficient faith in Astorians to believe\nthst thev nan safely be trusted with .\ntho work of saying who shall be chief j\nof police or city attorney or police\njudge or auditor or any otner omce\nin the eift of the people. We would\nrather any day leave it to a popular\nvote than to tho notions of one man\nand the whims of six others. We\nbelieve that in city and county and\nstate and national affairs the nearer\nyou can get things to the people, the\nmore power you give tho people and\nthe more tho people have to say in\na direct manner about public matters\nthe better it is for all \nWho is it that does not know that if\nthe people of this city, the men that\nwork for a living, the men that pay\ntaxes, the men that have to earn\nmoney to support themselves and\nfamilies, the business men, had the\nsay about affairs in this city during\nthe last two years that things would\nhave been different? Instead of\ndamning the mayor anl abusing the\ncouncil the people have now got this\nthing in their own hands. It is for\nthem to say who shall serve them and\nwe again congratulate our citizens!\ntnatsucu is tne existing tact.\nLast winter we opposed the pas-\nsage of the amended charter contain-\ning the claust that made it necessary\nthat a man should pay tax on $500\nfor the reason that it looked unfair,\nand had too aristocratic an air about\nit to go down with us. It has been\nour fortune to be without a dollar\nmore times than one, but we had\njust as much judgment and intel-\nligence about how to cast onr vote\nwhen dead broke as the more for\ntunate,
1415d8deebdd88e1f558747545bf1f0b THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1943.2479451737697 40.618676 -80.577293 Of course, ti ' newspapers try to make it appear thai higher wages are\nthe only real threat of inflation. They warn about "silk shirt" eras and luxury\npending of workers. They seem to think that workers have surplus funds left\nafter paying rein, "axes, swollen prices for food and buying war bonds. On\nwhat? So far as we know, the average pay for factory workers in this country\nslill around $4o a wi>ek. It' an expert can tell us how a family can live on\nthat these days we would nominal*! him as lloudini's successor.\nFor it is a far! that American workers are now caught in a vice and tied\nhand and foot by rigid wage controls and unchecked price increases. The cost\nof living and wa-e, have to be brought back into a reasonable relationship,\notherwise, there is going to be serious trouble on the front in America.\nAmerican workers are willing and eager to undergo hardships to help\nspeed the day of \\irtory. They are ready to lighten their belts. They welcome\nrationing of scarce goods, so that everyone can have bis fair share of what is\navailable. They-'jire cheerfully paying higher taxes than ever before in their\nives because thej know it takes money to win this war.\nHut no human being can be expected to work his head off a nd I lien find\nhimself hijacked of his earnings without protesting against being robbed by\nthose wiio are mill ing unconscionable profits out of this war.\nWe don't pretend to know who is responsible for high food prices. Hut the\nGovernment, whi< n forbids higher wages, had better find out promptly and\nforbid increases in the cost of living with equal severity and effectiveness.\nThis is only ju-Jifice.
4abcf728f39006d384dfd18c0a10763d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.4726027080162 39.261561 -121.016059 The staff consists of the aids, the adjutant\ngeneral, tho engineer, tho quartermaster\nand commissary generals, Through the ad-\njutant general all orders arc couveyed to\neach particular part. Ily the quartermas-\nter general nil transportations, and vehicles\nand horses arc furnished ; by the commis-\nsary, nil supplies ; by the engineer the top-\nography of tho country is thoroughly ex-\namined. the prnctibility of passes determ-\nined, fortifications built or attacked. Then\n♦ he slaff of the army becomes its eye and\nall its faculties. The general simply deci-\nding the movements of the army on the\nfsets and elements thus furnished. In the\ngrand French armies there was a chief of\nthe staff or head of the Bureau. In Napo-\nleons time this chief of the staff was Mar-\nshal Berthier, deemed one of tho ablest of-\n of the French army. Napoleon knew\nthe value of a good staff, and had abler\nmen in it than were at the head of the di-\nvisions. If an extenmvo army should be\nformed, this should always be the case.\nIn the statement we have made it will be\nseen that there is a strong similarity be-\ntween a modern army, well organized, and\nthat of tho Romans. Our company corres-\nponds with the Roman Century, and onr\ndivision to the Roman Legion. The Ro-\nman Legion, when full, contained (1000 men.\nwhich comprehended a portion of auxiliar-\nies. and were divided so ns to include all\nkinds of sorvice. A Roman Legion was a\ncomplete army in itself, and tho experience\nthen and now is that a compact body or\nforco of (1,000 men, is as lnrgc as can be
0556d4ef7a36c89e20288a2b34085059 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1887.305479420345 43.994599 -72.127742 That name takes me back to childhood\ndays when Ed Bliss drove old "Beckey"\nand "Ben" as he called his horses, whistling\nalong, (Ed was always whistling those\nclays) with anywhere from two to a dozen\nboys onhiswagon,forhehadtobeinabig\nhurry or heavily loaded, when he did not\ntake on every little chap that called for\na ride. I remember ('twas in haying time,\n1837) I rode on his hay rack to the meadow\nnear uaiawm Druine. as it was then called.\nWhen he had his load readv to start for\nhome, "Eph" Martin passed ine up with his\nfork, I took hold of the tines of the fork and\nwas safely loaded. I had a nice ride till we\nhad got over the bridire below Col. Barron's\nold red mill, (on the site now occupied by\nthe brick mill) when the load went over\nand I went When Ed dug me out I\nhad a broken foot by having it caught some- -\nwnere. ur . rooie Demir awav. soiure Aus\ntin fixed the foot. Well I did not hanker\nafter any more rides on a load of hay that\nsummer. The last time I saw Uncle Ed,\nas he is now called, was election day (pres\nidential ) Nov. 1852 . The men are not very\nplenty who have naturally more good qual-\nities than Edmund P. Bliss, though there\nare plenty who have less.\nTwenty years ago tins summer I went\nback to Bradford. At White River Junc-\ntion I met George Baldwin, on his way\nhome from Brighton, where he and James\nArmstrong had been with cattle. I enjoy-\ned the visit with him and got a heap of news\nabout Bradford, generally, and the old South\nRoad in particular.
af8e7109b66803bce8ff798c1a94c591 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.6753424340436 40.618676 -80.577293 counteractive. Every single article or\nmention of organized labor appearing\nin any paper or in any speech in your\ncommunity should be answered. Don't\nlet any remark go unchallenged. You\nmust take issue with every false ac­\ncusation. But remember, in writing to\na paper or a group, don't accuse or\nabuse them. Take the stand that you\nknow that if they had been in full\npossession of the facts they would not\nhave printed or made the statement\nobjected to. Don't make extravagant\nstatements. Don't make hot, blanket\ndenials and wild charges.\nRemember if you keep your temper,\nyou have the advantage. You can\nwin anything in a democracy without\nthe support of public opinion, but\nsince you are public opinion, you are\nin a position to counteract all the\nsteps being taken against you.\nSecond, constructive propaganda\nThe truth must be administered, it\nmust be positive, and it must be con\ntinuous. But first of all, be sure you\nhave an absolutely clean house. Look\nat your own group carefully and\n before someone else does\nGet your union in perfect shape, so\nthat you know that not only is every\none working for it, but working in\nthe right place. Then start out to sell\nit to the community. Find out what\nspecific cases of prejudice there are\nagainst you. If you're right, fight this\nadverse propaganda. If you're wrong\nmake the necessary changes and ex\nplain publicly that you have done so\nJoin in every civic affair you can\nBe ready to serve on committees; at\ntend all meetings; have something to\nsay on all important subjects, even if\nit's only a brief word from one of you\nto agree with a previous speaker,\nthat all will know where you stand\nEstablish in everyone's mind that or\nganized labor as represented by your\noutfit is a group of which the com\nmunity should be proud, that it ca\nalways be depended upon in an\nemergency, and that its members are\ncivic minded and ready to do more\nthan their share in any community-\nenterprise.
7c8c8bc38e15e7d4e033f73b6f5b468d COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.6150684614408 41.262128 -95.861391 of a "'borne guard" -company, with Afelaimiog to reaila ia Saedsafty, Ohk.\ni^oad of armed m^a sorrowodad the wa- ' came to" this ejiy aau tatrotlufiad 'hia-aaif.\ng-jo aod told Tailey he waa going f» ar- i to *uauol A, Sargtmot, B«g.t mm a|tata\nr at him. Tali^y told tbe driver togo on, agent, doteg bbiam fr» rd«iB No. '1\na« he tboaght tbara waa no danger. At \\ ifetrapohtaai Hail Bfoak) aad «xpr««aad\nthia the Captain ordered the aouad to |« daiire to'SnTMt^ A«dttal<l«rabU astuoi\n£.e; tbOT did ao ntt not ooo of in« ahoU ic citj property. Mr. iSargeitt, da#ming\ntook f-fiect. At thia juaotttra Tailey i himself jotyqaate u< vbiaasiM .i :uai>>m-\ndraw hia rotulver and fired av U»»f aqo-id ; er of sa'Jw&ry a calibre, j^aceti hmuwif^\nt»'o ah<*ta, hat ikqi <ImI aot Dtfk« tfet< j at bar »er*w% aad witb ail to-"\nJdst an f alley #r«d a man <f fh» a*»e -if j q«wite atteatioo. m» abow her saefa dig!\nAl irgan raiaed a window iuWtMMM aa*rl bla r«ui -jiws« aa'he cofitrolUad. Lata on\nb" and fired at Tailey tht< fcuni t.tkiSjg #f-]tb# Weat aad Soutfi aide* wera Aowb to\n1< et in hi a bead killing biio lMUiiw. - -- 'hjj, aiHlterms af sale stated. Aatoag\nV hen th(? news -if 'fc.; doatb >jf EatUjj|o£h#r property «iioh aiha de#ir«d ws pur-\naj-reau througu to<- diiforeas portto&a ;jf i c&aaa waa oa# for aianaf&ctunajj por­\nts 0 oauQty asodr^da id jar*t«'mw «*r« j&»*», for bet broth«. Thi# sb« aaiaet*\nO«MEiiii*0§ ttf av«fe iwlaatb) «>d tlk-v ! ed oo State atreel, at th« pn«se of #3,00<.- -\npi oceeded to Sigooraey where tb«y tbtnki A beaa#ifiii raaidence lot, lio f«et «qp»i c,\ntl..-
3307452682e2d810f25d0adc2c0a8700 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1917.187671201167 41.875555 -87.624421 tret, and alternate!:\n1. Thoa. 8. Hayes; p. B . Carr.\nII. W . O. Swing; A. P . Daaforta.\n74. B. H. Jonea; E. B. Wtalta.\nII. R. L . Piper; J. J . Kllckenger.\n79. W . w. Carroll; W. W. Dealer.\n81. C. C . Parker; A. J . Frailer.\nIt. O. F . Conley; J. R. Zoll.\n87. Jaa. W. Flnley; J. C. Paul.\n9. J. M . Kelley; O. A. Wattera.\n7. C. P. Bemli; B. 8. Nlchol.\nM. r. S . Tkomaa; Jerry MoCarby.\n101. r . A. Bledsoe; A. J. Douglaa.\nIll J. I. Davis; C. T. Harris,\ntil. P . D. Sughrua; W. Erlckion.\n(II. P . L . Howard; A. M. Baraaa.\n117. T . P . Phlager; J. H. Voes.\nIN. W . P . Skeehan; W. Devlla.\n111. C. H. Dalton; H. B. Holt\nill. O. O. McCarty; P. O. Roorka.\nIII. Jno. Fowler M. Ingham.\nMl. O. 0 . Craig; R. Trogdan.\n117. L. If . Hough; B. P . Bradley.\nW7. M. B . French; Q. W. Melbourne.\nW. W . A. Sharpe; C H. Stanley.\nIII. J . L . Lamport; J. C. McOuan.\n104. W . J. Smith; P. H. O'Connor.\n10. D. W . Marshall; T. Nltson.\nIII. M . p . Cooper; A. 8 . KuykendaU.\n101. D. S . Craig; J. A. Bonham.\n'08. E. Pread; W. M. 8toTanson.\n111. D. Naney; C. B. Blackburn.\nMl. H. Hill; P. C . Zlel.\nMl. A. W . Stowman; W. B. Wbalay.\ni77. P. P. Mllle; E. E. Flanagan.\nM. B. p . Congdon; J. B. Bhortatl.
2be315a53784d767a99efe1d6ba89089 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1916.8538251049888 44.939157 -123.033121 New York, Nov. 4. It was not at nil\nsurprising in view of tne ' numerous\ncross curernts that the market for stock\nexchange securities should have display-\ned a degree of irergularity this week,\ntn the first place is the important con-\nsideration that the national political\ncampaign has about reached its point of\nculmination; then there has been (2)\nthe sinking of another t ran s- Atl ant i- c\nstenmer with Americans on board under\nconditions suggesting at one time the\npossibility of a renewal of the subma-\nrine controversy . between Washington\nand Berlin; (3) the successful offering\nof another large loan on behalf of the\nBritish government in this country; (4)\nthe announcement of a second extra div-\nidend of 1 per cent by the dicrctors of\nthe United States Steel corporation and\nthe publication ot another favorable re\nport of quarterly earnings; (5) the ad\nditional importation of gold on large\nscale, and (6) the continuance of the\nremarkable activity in industry and\ntrade that has for so long a period\nbeen such an outstanding jind favoring\nfeature, ihese are the more important\nnews events of the week.\nThe national election, as a factor, in a\nfew days may be dismissed as an im-\nmediate influence in the financial situa-\ntion. The technical position that has\nbeen assumed by many market operat-\nors is that a success of the political\nparty that for so long has been identi\nfied with the principle of a protective\ntariff would mean greater security for\nthe .industrial corporations which had\nbeen so greatly benefited by the foreign\ndemands incidental to the war. A pro-\ntective tariff would tend to restrict in\nour home markets competition of the\nproducts of cheap labor in Europe. But\nthe tariff in present circumstances can-\nnot well assume importance as an im-\nmediate influence.
05e6b37615d5ffd4edf48c2431179df2 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.015068461441 39.513775 -121.556359 As a medical man it is the duly of every physician\nto hs-V at disease as it effects lis r.ltl» mill lit*-, ami his\nsole object should he to mitigate. ns lar n* lie. in his\n(tower. Hie liodil) suffering. Unman nature at beat is\nbut frail, all tire liable to misfortune.\ni M all the ills tli.it affect man none are mere terrible\nthan those of a private nature. —lireiidlul as it is in\nthe person who contracts it. irightliil .is are its ravag-\nes upon his constitution, ending frequently in deslrm>\ntion and a loathsome grave. it becomes ot still greater\nimportance when it is transmitted to tine cent off-\nspring. Such being tin* case linw necessary it lie-\nconies that every one foiling the least reason to fear\nthat they have contracted the disease, should attend\ntoll at'once by consulting some physician, whose\nrespectiilhilil) and education enables him lo warrant\n:i safe, speedy, and permeneiil cure. In accordance\nwith this necessity, UK YOTNC feel* called upon to\nstate that, by long study and extensive practice, he\nhas tielome perfect master of all those diseases which\ncome under the denomination of venereal, hnv»\nmg (mid more attention tolled one branch than nnv\nother pliysiclan in the Tailed Slates, be feels hims*df\nbelter qualified lo treat litem.\nSyphilis in all its forms, such as ulcer*, swelling In\nthe groans, ulcer in the throat.secondary syphilis, cu -\ntaneous eruptions, ulcerations, lerlnnrv syphilis, sc\n(iliilis in children, inercurenl syphilitic amnions gon-\norrhea, gleet, slriclnres. false pas-ages, inllamaiion of\nthe Idadder and prolrnte glands.excoi unions. ttirnors,\n(losttiles. Me,, aie as familiar lohlni as the most com-\nmon tilings of daily ohsori allon.\nThe Doctor effects a cure in recent cases in a few\ndays, and finds no difficulty in curing those of long\nduration, without submitting the patient to sin h treat-\nment ns will draw upon him the alighlesj suspicion\nor oblige hint to neglect Ids business w hether w ithin\noors or w ithout. Tite diet need not he changed. ex -\ncept in eases of severe liitlainat lon. There are in I'.di -\nfornlii patients iamounting lo over two thou uni in\ntin. past year) that could (urnish proof of Hits: hut\nthese are' matters thot require thi nicest eecresy which\nhe al wavs preserves.
5c3996c6c716fb4f5fc5b4e2073b455a NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.582191749112 41.681744 -72.788147 That was a nice point raised by\nthe board of public works when it\ntook up the matter of objecting to\nthe passing of a heavy truck la- Je -\nwith stone through the streets, par-\nticularly over the permanent pave-\nment which suffered as a result. The\nmatter has been amicably adjusted\nwithout resorting to any legal pro-\nceedings and the truck will cease its\ntrips , through the city but the great\nquestion as to its rights remains un-\nsettled. The fact that the truck will\nnot be run over' New Britain's streets\nIS all that Engineer Hall desired\ndone, but whether the city had the\nlegal right to stop it is what interests\nthe public. It was Chairman Hum-\nphrey who raised the point, at the\nmeeting of the board of public\nj WOrks and the engineer was directed\nto take the matter up with the cor-\nporation . counsel. The question of\nthe damage done to pavement by\nheavy trucks has always occasioned\nmuch discussion in city \nand it has also been considered in\nreference to dirt roads to the extent\nthat there has been more or less de-\nmand for wide tires on trucks so\nthat the wheels might not cut into\nthe highway. All know what a dis-\npute there has been over automobile\ntraffic and the damage it does to 'ma-\ncadam. It will be recalled that when\nthe city macadamized North Stanley\nstreet it was considered' a good piece\nof work and yet in a short time the\nbed stone near tne corner or Allen\nstreet and along by the cemetery be\ncame visible from the wear and tear\nof automobiles and the road ' was\npractically ruined. Of course motor\nists pay a license and are as much\nentitled to the privileges of the streets\nas any one else and the main ques\ntion has been to obtain a pavemant\nthat will stand up under this traffic.\nOnly the real permanent pavement,\n"however, will do it and now comes a\ntruck weighing- . -
4a902a26cf2150dc959afaee56d4ae7e THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.1953551596337 40.114955 -111.654923 talwu to doport all that can bo\nbrought un er the Ilw-\nTho hIghest March wind which had\nstruc11 ChIcago In thirty years com\nmonced carlyon tho 6th from the\nscuthwest and wrought much damage\nIII tho owntown lstrlct\nAccordIng to P H Abbott secro-\ntary of tho Oreat Northorn branch 01-\ntho Order of Telegraphers troublo Ie\nbrewing over tho new schedulo ot-\nworldng hOUl3 for oper tors\nTwo negroes Curry Hobertson aud\nJohn Henry wore lynched near Hawk\nInsv11l0 Oa an thetr bodlcs burned\nThey wero charged with tho murder\nof 1Ir and 1Irs Warren Hart\nA vIolent galo has swopt tho coasts\nof tho BrItish Isles 1hero have been\nnumerouS wrecls of small cmtt Most\nof thcm woro on tho east coast of Ire-\nland AllogcUler about twenty lives\nhavo becn lost-\nAnnouncement was mn e last weol-\nb the 118sourl PaclllcIron Mountain\nrailway sstem thlt after Mluch 10\nthe services of 2000 mon omployed In\nthe companys shops In St Louis will\nno longer be requlred-\nA now social movement of national\nsea po has established hcadquartors \nKansas City Thoso Into rested aro-\nlIteralj and professional men anll\nthe object Is to mll < o tho spirit of tho\nunIversity a forco In polltlC-\ndIhree men wero burned to denth-\nan fifteen others Seriously Injured by\njumping from wIn ows In a lire which\ndostroyed threo worlnnens shaclls on-\ntho north side of Manhasset bay slYs-\na Port Wasl lngton L 1 dIspatch\nSonatorclect W O Dradloy of\nKentucky haS glv n out a formll\nstatement announcing hlmselC In fl-\nvor of the nomInation of Vlco Presl\ndent Falrblnls tor tho presIdency by-\ntho Republican natlonll couventlon-\nAt tho dIrection of Secrotary 1art\nthe openIng of hlds by the IsthmllU\nCanal commissIon for supplies of ce\nmont set for March 12 has been ex-\ntended until Aprlt 13 Tho commie\nsian expects to pllrcltase 4600000 bar\nrelo of cemont-\nHafe blowers robbed tho Mount\nOrab hanle In Mount Orau 0 forty\nmiles eaSt of Cincinnati of 3000 and\nescaped In I buggy The oxploslon-\nshattored the vaults partially vrecl-\ncd the banlc building and shocke tho\nentire vlllago
1de0880b1781f2b69a65c6936d0ecbbb THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1882.1684931189752 42.217817 -85.891125 I'he suhscqunit military career of Garfield\nfully susiaiin;d the brill. ant beginning. With\nhis new commission die was assigned to the\n(.omnemd of a brigade iu the Army of the Ohio\nand took part iu the second aud decisive day'rt\nlight in the grcit hatllo of Shiloh.\nTlei remanid'. r of the year lSfi2 was not cs-- p\nci illy event tul to Garliold, as it was not to\nthe armies with which ho was serving. His\npractical sense was called into cxerciso m con-\ntemplating tlie task assigned him by Gen. Buell\not reconstituting bridges and n -- establishing\nlin s of railway coMimuuication for the army.\nHis occupation i a tins useful but not brilliant\nHeld was variedly serv.co on courts martial of\nimportance, in which department of duty ho\nwo. a valuable icpuUtiou, attracting tho no-t - ee\nand seeur.ng ihe approval of tho able and\nem. iieut Ju Ig i Advocate General or tho army.\nTtiit of itself wa warrant to honorable fame,\nfor among tlie great men who in t'noo trying\ndays gave themselves, with entire devotion, to\nthe service of their country one who brought to\nthat service the respect, learning, the most fer-\nvid eloquence, toe most varied attainments,\nw ho in luc day of triumph sat reserved and si-\nlent and craleful, 4,as Francis Beak iu tho\nlour of Hungary's deliverance," was Joseph\nHot, of Kentucky, and in his honorable re-\ntirement ii" enjoys tho respect and veneration\nof all who love the union of the States.\nEarly iu ISM Garfield was assigned to tho\nhighly important and respon-dbl-
8adbdc4281952fc35f1a7e97e0fea0fa THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1922.3410958587012 43.994599 -72.127742 educated in the public schools and\nNewbury Seminary, and before reach-\ning man's estate, he had offered his\nservices and his life to our nation in\norder that this government should\nnot perish, serving in the 12th Ver-\nmont regiment Company H. On re-\nturning from the war he settled\ndown to the peaceful pursuits of ag-\nriculture and on Jan. 11 , 1865 was\nunited in marriage to Ella, daughter\nof A Hazen and Marie Lang Hibbard\nof Bath, N. H. An ideal home was\nestablished, in which three daugh-\nters came- who proved a joy and a\ncomfort to their parents and who re-\npaid them for their watchful care,\ntheir education and the environment\nof a Christian home with filial love.\nAll are living, Charlotte, now Mrs\nFrank Gunnell of Harworth, N. J.;\nMisses Frances and Anna of Newbury.\nMr Atkinson was a modest, rather\na retiring man, who loved his home\nand his occupation, that of a farmer.\nHis home was beautiful for location,\nsituated on a bluff overlooked\nhis broad acres of meadow land, with\nthe Connecticut in the distance.\nTruly his lines were cast in pleasant\nplaces. Since the death of his wife,\nwhich occured Nov. 13 , . 1913, his\nhome has been presided over by his\ntwo daughters who have done every-\nthing in their power to make his de-\nclining years happy. This mcdest\nman would shrink from an eulogy, or\nhavink his virtues extalled, his life\nwas his eulogy, for nearly a century\nthe name of Atkinson has been as-\nsociated with the Annals of our town,\nit is a synonym of good deeds. It is\ntrue that which is said of the dead\nis a matter of entire indifference to\nthem. They are beyond censure or\npraise. But the memory of the good\nmen do in their lives should be\nsacredly preserved by the living, and\nfor the living. All the pleasing as-\nsociations, kind and charitable deeds,\njust and faithful actions of those\ngone should continue to warm, cheer\nand correct their survivors.
4244143651a2e06d5b0abc590fc3eb56 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0589040778793 40.063962 -80.720915 ie previous assault. The latter officer s\nefforts to raise men in Texas for Juarez\ndo not seem to meet with success. It is\nsuspected that Crawford has a new fi¬\nnancial speculation in his eye. which\ncan be greatly subserved by the cap¬\nture of Matamoras, which is thought\nto be much dearer to him than the Mex-\n*°The^mperinlists are reported to be\npreparing for a new and vigorous o»m-\npaign in the North. A statementof af¬\nfaire in Mexico, prepared by the Impe¬\nrialist for circulation in Europe, depicts\na fine and flourishing condition -of\nmatters under Maximilian's rule. It\nrepresents that the Republican military\nforces huve nearly all disappeared, and\nthat the remnant oi firmed op[josition\nto the Imperialists which Btill exists,\nhave degenerated into mere predatory\nbands of robbers, and that order and\ncivilization are being rapidly establish¬\ned throughout the country under the\nbenign sway of the Emperor.\nAn investigation by the Provost Mar¬\nshal into the attempt to capture the\nImperialist gunboat, at levee near\nMatamoras, records some facts as here¬\ntofore published.\nCapt. Nelson Plato, formerly Acting\nChief Quartermaster of the army of the\nJames, has been appointed Supervising\nQuartermaster of the Rio Grande. Capt.\nW. H . Cochrane of the 18th Pennsylva¬\nnia, has been appointed Depot Quarter¬\nmaster at Relazoa.\nThe execution of Martha Grinder, at\nPittaburjt yesterday, is described by the\nHerald's special as an awful scene..\nThe wretched woman fell a distance of\nabout three feet, owing to an oversight\nin adjusting the rope connected with\nthe upright under the trap. Herfallwas\nnot sudden, and the neck was not dis¬\nlocated and she slowly strangled to\ndeath. Tbe knot, too, had slipped, and\nthe circulation of the blood on tbe right\nside of tbe neck was wholly uninter¬\nrupted. Her death was literally a hard\n°'TheCashier of the Farmers' and Citi¬\nzens' Bank. Brooklyn, modifies the\nstatement that their messenger boy was\nrobbed of $70,000 in checks. It was\n97,000, making the amount stolen\n8,000.
29ac52445b3d5932fb69540dba30a941 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1882.2452054477424 42.217817 -85.891125 The Republicans at a caucus held at tho\nCourt Houso cn Wednesday afternoon, nom-\ninated tho following ticket: Supervisor,\nCharles W. Young ; Clerk, Charles 11 Ilutch-in- s;\nTreasurer, Joseph ,W. Luce ; School In-\nspector, 2 yearn, Clarilni Thompson, 1\nyear, Emily M. Heckert ; Com'r of Highways,\nHenry Hinckley ; Justice, Ashbel II. Herron ;\nDrain Com'r, Geo. Ik Prater; Constables,\nWm. n. Filley, John E. Showcrman, Clayton\nM. Nash and Henry W. McCain?. Tho nom-\nination of Mr. Young, with but ono vote\ncast for any other candidate, was only an-\nother proof of tho able manner in which he\nhas served the towns hip in that capacity for\ntho lost two terms. Ho has been p.ccurata\nand careful in performing tho duties of his\noffice, and has an influence cn thy board of\nsupervisors unsurpassed by any of its mem -b en - ?,\nand it is in place that Paw Paw\nneeds tho riht man for supervisor more\nthan in all others. Chas. E. Hutchins, tho\nnominee for Clerk, is tho gentlemanly clerk\nin Puller's store, ami is a capable, temperate\nand upright young man and will fill tho posi-\ntion with credit to the township. Joseph\nW. Luce for Treasurer, has been a resident\nof this town for over 40 years and is well\naud favorably known; was a soldier, nnd will\nmako an honest and efficient officer. Henry\nHinckley is tho present Highway Com'r, and\nis thoroughly conversant with tho duties of\nhis offico and makes a good officer. Geo. E.\nPrater is a strong candidate, and will make n\ncareful Drain Com'r. Placing on tho ticket\nMiss Claribd Thompson and Mrs. Emily\nM. neckert for School Inspectors, was a\np,ocd select t'n. They nro efficient teachers\nin our school and oro eminently qualified\nfor tho position.
6b0ff765d06f7183605fb92a33c081d4 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.7684931189751 39.369864 -121.105448 cordance with your request, when Weiparted\nat San -Juan, on Tuesday, to furnish you\nwith-some items of intelligence relative to\nthe Weaver Ditch, I take up the pen, though\nrather reluctantly, for -I have-just walked to\nthis place from Eureka, twenty miles dis-\ntant having walked from here to thcpe.yes-\nterday, and fed slightly weary. IJut I will\ntry to scribble something from which yon\nmaybeabletopick upafactortwo, ofin\nterest to a portion of your readers.\nYesterday, accompanied by Mr. Geo. Lcet,\nof Columbia Hill, and who is one of the su-\nperintendents of the work on the Weaver\nbitch—Messrs. Isaacs and McDonald being\nthe other two—T walked to Eureka, most ef\nthe way cn-the-locatefi line of the ditch, and\nam inclined to think that I know something\nabout it. My motive for looking into the mer-\nits of ibis enterprise, like all other human\nmotives, has been prompted by unmitigated\nself interest. I own an interest in a tail\nsluice, below Columbia Hill, which must re-\nmain the next thing to valueless, as long as\nthe Columbia Hill miners refuse to use \nother 'tvf.te'r than that with which they ex-\npect to be furnished bythc aforesaid Wea-\n- ve r Ditch. 1 wish to tread on no mans\ncorns, ' no r run a tilt against ariy mans pet\nWhims, butit is my interest to have ffetmi-\nners,, up here, at Work; and the sooner they\nset to work, tbtheifer it will be fcfrtv grtat\nniurfy of us. This being the state -of the\nease, I am naturally anxious to have the\nColumbia Hill men supplied with water; 1\nam just as anxious that they sholild be speed-\nily .lecdinmodated.\nWell. I trudged after rtiy friend, Mr Leet,\ntearing my clolhes tc.pieees-in the chanpar-\nai, and tmng'myrelfto death climbing the.\nsteep hill sides'; blit I was determined to\nget an idea and I got it. The mountains are\ncertainly very picturesque and very grand,\nbut, to the pedestrian, they are awfully fa-\ntiguing. In spite of myself, for I am but\nlittle given to the rhyming mood, I could\nnot help improvising a perverse parody on\nthe chorus of Saxes admirable song of-the\nRailroad-:
213d185dabb13d1372cb42d16eeb8f25 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.4178081874684 40.735657 -74.172367 tract or parcel of land and premises situate,\nlying and being In the City of Newark, Essex\nCounty, New Jersey:\nBeginning In the northerly line of Spruce\nstreet at a point therein distant seventy-five\nfeet westerly from the northwesterly comer\nof the same and Monmouth street at a corner\nof lot No. 63 on a map made for John Boylan;\nthence running northerly and along the west-\nerly line of lot No. 63 one hundred and\neighteen fleet nine and one-half Inches to the\nsoutherly line of lot No. 60; thence westerly\nalong the line of that lot and also partly\nalong lot No. 68 twenty-five feet: thenc4\nsoutherly and along the easterly line of lot\nNo. 66 fifty-nine feet nine and one-half Inches\nto the northerly side of the frame piazza of\nthe House standing upon the premises hereby\ndescribed; thence running, westerly along said\nnortherly side of said piazza one and one-half\nInches to the comer of the\nsame; thence southerly- along the westerly side\nof saldVhbuse standing upon the premises\nhereby described fifty-nine feet to the north-\nerly line of Spruce street aforesaid, and thence\neasterly along the same twenty-flve feet to the\nplace of beginning.\nBeing the same premises conveyed to the\nsaid Samuel D. Strum and Dora Kins (formerly\nDora Strum) by three deads, one from George\nWolf and Mary Wolf, hi« wife, dated May\n31, 1904. and recorded in book P-37 of deeds\nfor said county on pages 343-346; the second\nfrom Fannie Flschman and husband, dated\nSeptember Ilf. 1907 , and recorded September\n14, 1907; and the third from Alfred Flschman\nand wife, dated September 19. 1907, and re-\ncorded October 18, 1907 , In said Registers office,\nthe said Samuel D. Strum being described in\nsaid deed as Samuel Strum, and the said Dora\nKina being described in two of said deeds as\nDora Khln.
32aba2495066ef8bcecc259eea25201e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.0835616121258 40.063962 -80.720915 y the General Gyvernment, is $4,000. -\n000; yet on Dec. 1, 1865, the State debt\nwas nearly half a million dollars less\nthan on Jan. 1, 1861. Under the cir¬\ncumstances, the reduction or even re¬\npeal of the ordinary State tax of two\nand a halt millions of dollars is possi-\nble with entire safety to our finances;\nalso the local taxes of bonds, mortgages,\nAc. The Governor then gives a highly\ninteresting statement of the action of\nPennsylvania in the prosecution of the\nwar for the Uniou. He alludes to the\npromise of the Federal authorities to\nreimburse the State for the expenses of\nthe emergency troops and the failure of\nCongress to do so, and recommends the\nLegislature to adopt measures to bring\nthe subject again before Congress. He\nconcludes thus:\n''My uniform course during our\nlate war was to avoid the discussion of\ntho Policy of the General Government\nwhile giving a hearty support to the\nNational authorities in all their meas¬\nures to suppress the rebellion. I shall\ncontinue to pursuethesame course dun-\ning embarrassments necessarily\nconnected with the entire restoration of\nthe country. The principles expressed\nin the message of the President will re¬\nceive my cordial support."\nWashington, Jan. 30..The Hons# bv\na majority of 30 votes refused to pass\nthe resolution admitting Messrs. Byers,\nKyle and Johnson, from Arkansas, to\nthe privileges of the floor. In other\nwords refusing to extend to them the\nsame courtesies extended to the gentle¬\nmen from Tennessee,\nMr. Stevens, or Pa., reported a bill for\nsupplying deficiencies in certain civil\nl^jgenaitures lor the year ending Jane,\nMr. Fessenden introduced a bill which\nwas adopted, authorizing the payment\nof $10,000, or as much thereof, as is\nnef»isary to defray the expenses of tho\nJoint Committee on Reconstruction.\nMr. Harris presented the petition of\nmen in the signal corps asking to be\ndischarged from the service, which was\nreferred to the military committee.\nMr. Trumbull, from the judiciary\ncommittee, reported a resolution that\nJohn P. Stockton is entitled to a seat in\nthe Senate as Senator from New Jersey,\nwhich was ordered to be printed.
05dce972d70b1fb3e6335713c326d52a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.3456283836774 40.063962 -80.720915 . The Confederate cemetery near tin\nold Bull Run battle-field will bededica\nted next Saturday. Ithas been made b]\nthe women of that neighborhood, whc\nhave had a large number of bodies o\nrebel dead gathered up and re-buried\n. The secret service force of thi\nTreasury Department has lately cap\ntared foar notorious counterfeiters an<\n>25,000 in counterfeit £10 greenbacks\nThe lettering ot those counterfeited ii\nwell executed, while the vignette o\nLincoln on the left of the note, and\nfemale figure and the Treasury seal 01\nthe right,are rather poorly done. Still\ntliA onnprfl] nnnPHrnnPA rtf flm nnf,\nwould make it dangerous, as it is wel\nprinted on bank note paper. The cap\nture was made at Marine City, Michi\ngan. The fifth counterfeiter succeedet\nin making his escape. One of thosi\ncaptured was severely wounded with\npistol shot. All four are now in jail.\n. The little town of Shanghai, situa\nted in the northeast part of the count:\nof Warren, Illinois, was completed\ndestroyed by a tornado which visited i\nSunday afternoon, about 4 o'clock\nThree persons were killed outright. 1\nlarge number were wounded, hov\nmany is not known. The tornadi\nmoved in a northeasterly- direction\nThe Bame tornado visited a point ii\nIowa, some six miles west of Musca\ntine, earlier in the arternoon. Its per\nformances were rather erratic, ascend\ning and descending at irregular Inter\nvals. Whenever it touched the earth i\nswept everything before it. In one in\nBtance it picked up a large stone in\nhrnnlr nrwl sant If f»rnaViJno> fhrnnah th\nroot of a houBe, and trees were takei\nup by the roots, carried through the aii\nand dropped a mile distant. Tne hone\nand barn of Mr. Hoop were complete^\ndestroyed. A Methodist Church wa\ncompletely swept away. The congre\nnation had left it but a few minutes be\nfot e and had gone to the river to baptiz\na numberof persons. No lives were loa\nat this place, but quite a number c\npersons were badly injured.\n. John Minor Botts has written a let\nter declining to be theRepublican candl\ndate for Governor of Virginia, and say\nin? that he would like to be chosen a\none of the United States Senators froc\nthat State,
0306b8217be835e1a38f8c0ed8c66003 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1899.8205479134956 32.612638 -90.036751 awhile, and when the fourth day came\nher tea sets r.nd wood n dolls were put\naway and the family shrine lit with\nseven tapers, for her years.\nThe Welcome Cut was renoved from\nthe hospitable door, and they mourned.\nAside from the mere loneliness of the\nsituation Sum See wan faring well. No\nroyal daughter of the Right Houses\nfared better in a lifetime. She ate of\nthe glazed brown pork nimbly and\nfeasted with the freedom of a rat inn\ncorner cupboard. She and the friendly\njoss looked solemnly at each other over\nthe viands and said nothing.\nIt iras so high to the shelf that it\nseemed like standing up to a lunch\ncounter to eat, hat Sum soon found a\nway of retiring to the floor with \nbites and there enjoying herself.\nAr.d when the fifth day came they\nfound her there when the joss house\nwas opened for airing and worship of\nthe smiling man who sat there.\nThey would have been horrified at the\nfamiliarity of Sum See with His Great'\nness if they could have known, but she\nsaid nothing of her conclaves with the\nRuler of the Destinies of the Faithful\nFollowers, and as she looked fat and\nwell they said nothing.\nThe food for the departed spirit had\ndisappeared, and it was well that the\nreligious miracle should be told of.\nThey did not know that Sum See had\neaten it all. and that she had burned\nthe leavings in a pan in the oven win re\nshe had first seen the eat.
246594055f74985aa1fa370135040c84 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.9712328450025 39.513775 -121.556359 BV VIRTUE OK A DECRETAL ORDER Is-\nsued out of the District Court. 15th Judicial\nDistrict in and for Hutte County, sod Stale of Cali-\nfornia. attain* JOHN W MILLER and In favor of\nWILLIAM NUTTER, for the mini of Seven Hundred\nand Ninety-throe and Twenty-nix one-hundredth* Dol-\nlars, ($703 36-K)0,) principal ami interest of Debts,\n- with Interns! on said- .u ni at '.hr rate of two (2) tier\ncent, per month from the rendition c,f Judgment\nuntil paid ; also, all coats of suit taxed in the sum el\nTwenty and Ten one-hundredth* Dollars, HS3O 10-lh 'i)\ntogether with all the costs accruing upon said writ,\ntome directed and deliverel, commanding me to\nsell all of the mortgaged premises hereinafter de-\nscribed, to satisfy said demands, I will on the\nTWENTY-SIXTH day of DECEMBER. A. D One\nThousand Eight Hundred and Plftv-Seven, at the\nhour of Two (2) oclock, P. M . , of said in pur-\nsuance with the requirements of said Order, sell at\nPublic Hale to the highest bidder for Cash, Iho lot-\nlowing mortgaged property described i.i said Order\nof Sal •as follows, to wit: All that piece or parcel of\nLand lying and being in the Tow n of Oroville. Coun-\nty of Unite, and 8 aloof California, eommencing on\nMontgomery street, at the west comer of the Orleans\nHotel, and running hack them eat righ' angles with\nsaid street, one hundred and thirty.two fj ; t-»y feel\nthence at right angles easterly, ninety (••(»)\nthence at rigid angles northerly one hundred and\nthirty-two (l'(3) fe«l to Montgomery street, thence at\nright angles westerly along said Greet ninety (<HI)\nleel to the place of beginning, embracing the ground\non which the Orleans Hotel stands, on lllock Nine-\nteen, (IP.) together with all and singular the Term,\nmenls. Hereditaments, and Appurtenances ihereonio\nbelonging or in any wise appertaining.
4eede51bce03928bddbe144d418e1fd6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.078082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 The Springfield team failed to win\na bout In the clashes staged here\nlast night Comparing in no way with\nthe team that used to represent the\njClty of Homes In the past, the\nSpringfield boys, one after the other\nproved to be hardly any match for\nthe solid, smashing opposition from\nthe Connecticut boys.\nFour other knockouts dotted the\ncard of 10 fights making a half\ndosen kayoes In all during the eve-\nning. Dominlck Frisco of this city in\nthe 122 pound class put George Neno\naway in two minute and SO seconds\nof the first round. Dom Snick was\naltogether too good for the visiting\nscrapper and Neno was satisfied to\nstay down when he was down.\nCharlie Day of Springfield In the\n115 pound class, had to quit In the\nsecond round to escape punishment\nat the hands of Frank Nichols of\nTorrington. A towel thrown in from\nthe corner saved Day from a beating.\nJimmy DiSante of Springfield was\nno match for Jackie Basil of Bristol\nin the 128 pound class and he was\nstopped by a towel in the first \ngiving the fight on a technical\nknockout to Basil.\nJoe Ryan of this city, converted\nwrestler, suffered a like fate at the\nhands of Phil Sica of Torrington In\nthe 147 pound class. Sica hit Ryan\nwith everything and Ryan was done\nin less time that it takes to tell.\nThe best fight of the night was\none staged between one of the sec-\nonds for the 8pringfield team and\nseveral of the spectators. Unable to\nstand the razzing that his boys were\ngetting at the hands of the partisan\nfans in the bleachers, the Springfield\nhandler started to argue. He got a\npunch on the chin and then the po-\nlice rushed him out of the hall. The\npolice were awarded the decision.\nOn the regulation card. Kid Carter\nof Middletown and Frankie Rice of\nthis city weighing 128 pounds, put\nup the best scrap of the night. Rice\nwon In three rounds of furious\nfighting. Carter failed to be aggres-\nsive In the first two rounds but he\nstarted to fight like a tiger In the\nthird. This should be a good return\nmatch.
0b0f03831ef4ddb1da4316017f56b1de THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.5493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 At about ten o'clock last night the\nntfMimrr .Trwnnli Hiirhnr rnnninir hptwenn i\nthin port and 8t. Joseph, Michigan, left j\ntill; latter port with a cargo of Irult. At l\nmidnight, when about thirty-five miles (\nfrom Bt. Joseph, tho Barber won discover-. (:\ned to ho on llro, and in a few moments ii\ni\\ho was completely enveloped in flames. |\nThe panic waa dreadful. All but the (\nu\\irking crew wore ill thoir berths, and 1\nthV'y rushed out almost entirely destitute r\nnl clothing. As is usual at such times, 1\nevery ayalTabfe portable objcct was seized\nand thrown overboard and occuplcd by 0\ntho frightened fugitives. There happened |\nto lie n smnll rail on the tipper deck, n\nwhich was taken by four of tho crow, «\nwho got upon It, while those possessed of n\ncool heads loosened the bouts and got i\nInto them. As soon as the struck /\ntho water ;thoeo who had Jumped over (\nboard took to them, and for a lime it was »\nreared that all would ho swamped. Tho [\nvessel burned like (Hinder box, tho lurid |,\nHumes lighting up tho heavens for miles |,\narouml. About an hour before tho bo*( g\nwent down, tho stenmer Corona, nttract- f,\ned by tho blazing steamer, came down c\nupon her, and picked up some eighteon t\npereons, and tho propeller Van lloolet e\ncamo at about tho same time, and saved\ntwelve others. Two persons only arc ]\nmissing, a deckhand and a watchman.\nTho cargo consisted or fruit, which was |\nnil liial 'Plin .T/iarmli Itarhni* until it innnml.\nt'liiss boat, and was valued at $25,000, |i\nwith an Inaiiranco of $7,000. 8I10 was v\nnwncd liy Mr. Chapman, and commanded f\nby James Snow. The cauno of the llro u\nla unknown. Ii
01493dfbb505d6cd31bad704548b8593 THE CAPE GIRARDEAU DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1900.4178081874684 37.305884 -89.518148 bills were sighted. Gen. French has\nsecured an excellent flanking position\non the northwest. There is something\nirresistible about this advance. The\ntroops have been splendidly handled,\nand the Boers, completely outma-\nueuvered, have been forced to abandon\ntheir positions at the first appearance\nof the British flunking force.\nMany Trausvaal burghers are now\ntrekking homeward, and it is safe to\nsay that the most irreconciliable\nTransvaaler at last recognizes the\nhopelessness of the struggle. Most of\nthe farms in the northern part of th\nFree State, where the ties of blood\nwith the Transvaal are strongest, havi\nbeen deserted. This section has been\nflooded with false tales of British\ncruelty; reports of the burning of\nfarm houses and the eviction of women\nand children, in the hope of inducing\n'.he burghers to remain with the com\naiandoes, but the evidence all points\nnow to the existence of a permanent\n;nmity between the Transvaaalers\nand the Free Staters, each accusing\nthe of treachery and cowardice,\nIt is regarded as unlikelr that the\nTransvaal government will go to Ly\ndenburg. where food is scarce.\nA body of Boers, mostly on foot, it.\ntrekking hard towards Verenninging\nfrom the direction of Heilbron. The\nsondition of the British troops contin\njcs excellent, although the cold nights\nare very trying. They are able to\nmarch three miles an hour.\nThe Boers have destroyed every\nbridge and culvert. They are said to\nregard Klipriverberg, north of the\nVaal. as a position of great strength,\nand talk of making themselves im\npregnable there.\nIt is reported that the population of\nJohannesburg! in a high state of ex\ncitement. The Boers, who are passing\nthrough northward, threaten to blow\nup the mines, and, in view of their\nwanton destruction of everything else,\nIt will not be surprising if they carry\nwt the threat.\nThe British are more interested,\nhowever, in grazing and in the water\nsupply than in the mines.
06f4218c3e3ae9bb1c31277bd4fdff70 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.1434425913276 29.4246 -98.49514 pot on n big tire, or a mustang pony\nwhen tlrst lassoed, and In his ell'erveslng\ncnsscilness denounced tho absent rcpor- -\nor In tho most offensive terms. This\nHood of slang and personal nbuso was\nentirely unprovoked, and without ex-\ncuse, as can he seen hy consulting the\nLtmirof .January 10, 1SSI . When tho\nreporter got back to tho olllce, several\nhours afterwards, ho was Informed of\nthe opproblous terms which C. P. Smltii\nhad used about him. In the absenco of\nany adequate provocation, and of Ids\nbeing attended by his body guard, and,\nunder these circumstances of exaspera\ntion and Insult ho wroto and published\ntho article which llgures as the ground\nwork of the lndlotmcnt. Smith was the\naggressor In the matter, he cume to tho\nLight olllce In u hostile attitude, ho was\naccompanied hy his body guard, and \nthough told the reporter was then ab-\nsent, ho applied opprobrious epithets to\nhim. lint! the reporter been present\nthe law would have Justified him In giv-\ning Smith a sound drubbing out of hand;\nand as he was absent It justlllcd him In\nhandling him without gloves In tho local\ncolumn, which was under his care utul\ncontrol. He did vltrollzo Smith ; but hi\nused no language which comes within\nthe definition of libel In the penal code.\nOn the 12th Smith again came to tho\nLiaitT olllce with an Increased body\nguard and gave vent to a fresh deluge\nof abusive epithets towards tho repor-\nter. This drew forth nnother article\nfrom the reporter and Smith published\nIn both the Times nnd Express an arti-\ncle highly personal and abusive. Such\naro the true facts without gliding, var- -\nsjilsh, or
8c3133f067dc267129bde6b0d2a29a5e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.050684899797 39.261561 -121.016059 never aescended to gross personalities, as Forney, and the\nCalifornia Senator have.” To this burst of feeling, Mr.\nBigler replied, that if the reconciliation sought depended\nupon the contingency which the President had named, he\nleared it would never be accomplished. Douglas, he con-\ntinued, was not the man to desert his friends in an emer-\ngency ; and, even if he was, be would nevertheless cling\nto Forney to the hitter end. These words seemed to hare\ntouched the President in a very tender point, for it is said\nhe fiercely responded : "Then let Douglas look to his\nfriends. With me, It is war to the knife.” And war to\nthe knife it has been. Douglas has already fallen under\nthe official ax, anti Braderiek has been ostracised by the\nparty at the command of the President.”\nSlavery in Nebraska Territory.—A bill to\nabolish slavery in Nebraska was introduced at the session\nof the Territorial legislature which has just concluded.\nThe report of the minority of the committee to which „it\nwas referred, recommends the Indefinite postponement of\nbill on tbe ground that such legislation is unnecessary.\n" Slavery,” says the report, "does not exist in this Terri-\ntory in any practicable form, and cannot so exist without\naffirmative legislation, recognizing the right of property\nin slaves, and regulating the mode of protecting and con-\ntroliug them, and of enforcing that right. The abstract\n under the Constitution which is claimed by some, is\nin fact only an Inchoate right, which can have no practi-\ncable importance in the absence of local police regulation\nupon that subject.” The authors of the report think that\nby leaving the subject strenuously alone, Nebraska will\ngrow old in her career of glory, and the word Slavery, ei-\nther for positive or negative purposes, will never disgrace\nthe t' .ir pages of her statute-book.\nA Double Ei.ofemext.— The Cleveland (Ohio)\nBlainelealer, of a recent date, records the following : “A\nyoung German, on the West side, eloped with his employ-\ner's wife, and went to Grand Rapids. Michigan, where\nthey were married. The interesting pair took all the\navailable articles in the house with them, such as spoons\nlinen, etc. The bereaved husband took matters coolly,\nwent about his business, and made no outward show of\ngrief. last week his wife, having become sick of her new\nhusband, left him and returned to her old one, fetching\nback with her the spoous, linen, etc. Old husband qui-\netly welcomed her back to his bosom, and the woman\ncongratulated herself on the pleasant upshot of her fool-\nishness. But “pliancy her pheliuks” when awakening\non Sunday morning she ascertained that herhusband had\n•loped the night before with the hired girl, thepatr taking\nwith them the spoous, linen, ets.,as tother pair had done\nbefore them.”
2933a2bd634d0e1ee43b3c2f2f7cb08d DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1902.5575342148657 58.275556 -134.3925 On motion of Councilmen Olson and\nKelly it was voted: That the school\ndirectors be authorized to borrow\n$3000 for one year. This amount being\nnecessary to make up the deficit\nin the building fund, and to be\nused in the erection of a public\nschool building, as per plans submit¬\nted, in Douglas; the same to be repaid\none year from date with six warrants\ndrawn on the public school fund.\nThe bond of the city treasurer was\nhanded to the council, and on motion\nreceived and ordered placed on file.\nDied, at St. Ann's Hospital, Douglas\nCity, Tuesday, July 22nd, 1902, W. M .\nD. Keller, a native of Ohio, aged 28\nyears. Funeral services were held to¬\nday at the Congregational church at 2\no'clock p. m ., Rev. F. C. Krause offici¬\nating. Mr. Keller was employed as\nwatchman at the Treadwell and a short\ntime ago had a leg injured so severely\nthat amputation was necessary. The\nwound did not heal readily and a sec¬\nond operation was performed. He was\napparently progressing finely toward\nrecovery but a turn for the worse sud¬\ndenly developed, and he passed away\nTuesday morning. He leaves a wife,\nwho arrived a few days after the acci¬\ndent, to mourn his untimely end. The\nkind ladies of Douglas are doing all in\ntheir power for this stranger in our\ncity in the hour of her bereavement.\nAt Juneau last Sunday the good ship\n"Rasmussen" launched. It was\nmanufactured by H. B . Hansen at his\nship yards for Mays & Ellis, mining\nmen, who operate at Wyndham Bay\nand Eagle river. At the launching were\nthe following prominent gentlemen: H.\nB. Hausen, builder; Toots Nugent,\nchief engineer; Ike Winn, pilot; Fred\nRasmussen, spectator, and a big bunch\nof elastic-necked people who wauted to\nsee the Rasmussen get it where it was\nwet. Mrs. Rasmussen busted a jug of\nwine over her bows and declared her\nname. This ship is about six broom\nhandles long, wide enough to accom¬\nmodate Dennis Milan's feet and has a\nspeed of seventeen knots.every three\nweeks. This packet will run in opposi¬\ntion to Harry Jordan's canvas rowboat.\nThe Douglas Natatorium and Gym¬\nnasium is now under the management\nof Mr. Chas. M. Johnson, Mr. R. A.\nChisholm having resigned. At a meet¬\ning of the stockholders held Monday\nevening it was voted to levy an assess¬\nment of $25 a share on all stock of the\ncompany for the pan ose of liquidat¬\ning outstanding indebtedness. It was\nalso decided to incorporate, under the\nlaws of Alaska, as soon as. practicable.\nThe new management has introduced\nseveral new features in the way of en¬\ntertainment for the patrons of this\npopular resort, chief of which will be\nweekly dancing parties, the first ol\nwhich will be held tomorrow evening\nMiss Hinds will be in charge of the of¬\nfice in the afternoons.
10d1f5a072d0535da5c0e3437e137ffb EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1895.9958903792492 39.745947 -75.546589 Chief Dolan and the police anthorlties\nare determined to break np tbe congre­\ngating of boys and yonag men under\neighteen years of age, in pool rooms, and\nthe keepers of these places have been\nnotified of tbe azleteuos of tbe law\ngoverning the matter, ■\nquestion Is In chapter 287, volume 18.\npassed at Dover, April 81, 1887, end\nreads aa follows;\nSection 1. That any person who shall\nkeep, maintain or exhibit, by himself,\nbis agent or servant, any table, tmple\nmont, device or thing, upon or with\nwhich any game la played with cards,\ndice, balls, or any of them, or with any\nother Implement or thing with which\ngames of chance nay be played, and\nshall permit or suffer to be played thereon\nor therewith any game which shall\ndirectly or Indirectly bring any pecun­\niary or other compensation to pay snob\nperson, whether such computation he for\ntha use of ti<e bouse, room or structure\nor pay aball be to rent, hire or pay tare\nId which auch game Is played, or rent,\nblreor pay for the nee of table\ncard, dice, balls, cues, Implements, de­\nvice, or suy or all of them, or whether\ntbe playing of such game shell only Und\nto increase tbe trade, custom or sales of\nsuch person of any goods, wares, mer\nchat.dise, or articles kept for sale by such\nperson, or shall lu anywise directly or In­\ndirectly acorns to tbe benefit of such per\nson, and whilst any .such game Is being\nplayed shall permit any minor under tbe\nage of eighteen years to be present, ex­\ncept such minor shall hs a member of bis\nown family, or be atcompsnled by bis\nparent or guaidlau, «vary such person\nshall ba deemed guilty of a misdemeanor,\nand upon oonvlotluu thereof shall for\nevery offence ba fined not less than $10\nnor mote than $100, or Imprltoasd for a\nterm not leas tuen un dey» nor more\nthan s'x mouths, or bath, In tbe discre­\ntion of the court.\nTbe principal offenders ere keepers of\nrooms on tbs aossn and East Side, and\nsome of tue plaças are veritable hot beds\nof crime. The »Ulcers bava been directed
6d9ebadeabd55b0f2fcb05bd0e50d62e THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1860.6051912252074 37.561813 -75.84108 eligibility to office, the exact relations\nbetween federal and local authority, the\nconstitutionality of banks and internal\nimprovements, the regulation of the cur-\nrency, and the distribution of the pro-\nceeds of the public lands, arc no longer\nagitated and discussions upon them are\nonly to be found in our past history,\nund in the fossil remains of extinct par-\nties. It may in truth be said that old\nthings havo passed away and all things\nhavo becomo new.\nThere was a time, not very far back\nin tho past, when Slavery was universal-\nly admitted to be a wrong in te, unwise\nin practice, detrimental to both individ-\nuals and communities, and against the\nspirit and genius of our free system.\nNow, however, it is declared to be di-\nvine in its origin, the highest typo of\nhuman and indispensable to\nthe maintenance of a democratio repub-\nlic Formerly it was regardod as a con-\ndition to be constantly reduced, nnd f-\ninally to bo extinguished. Now, on the\ncontrury, the demand is urged that it\nshall be extended, and made controlling.\nHero I find the cause or source of the\ncreot political issue of the present.\nShall Slavery become a national institu-\ntion and a governing power in tho coun-\ntry, or shall it remain as tho Constitu-\ntion left it? This is not un inquiry pro-\npounded by us of tho North, but forced\nupon us by our brethren of the South.\nThey inquire an answer at our hands,\nand we ennnot avoid response if we\nwould. Silence upon our part, under\nthe circumstances could not be constru\ned otherwise than us affirmative of their\nclaims.
2b1d4556e1e05ee993329c8563db2ee0 THE EATON DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1882.395890379249 39.743941 -84.63662 Their faces are the faces of angels\nchiseled in marble ; but the pallor is\nunhealthy, and the liveliness of the\nAmerican girl is, to a great extent, in-\ndpient disease. It is. like their beauty.\npart of that nervousness which is afflict\ning their race. Their minds are un\ntroubled by the cares of housekeeping,\nfor most of them live in hotels or board\ning houses. In Europe they contract\nin marriages. But they soon fade, and\nwnue the Hinglish matron, and even her\nsister of Canada, who leads much the\nsame kind of life is still in her prime,\nthe once beautiful American is often a\nlean, hysterical haunter of health re\nsorts. The future is not a pleasant\nprospect. As men of leisure depart\nfrom the busy multitude, it is difficult\nto see what they are to do with their\nmoney. There is limit to the number\nof greenbacks which a people can spend\non a house, and even a modest fortune\nis cumbersome to carry about in dia-\nmonds and watch chains. They can, of\ncourae.alwaya go to Paris, but a Tuileries\nAmerican, as this hybrid Gaul used to\nbe called in Napoleonic days, ceases to\nbe an American, while if he stays at\nhome, it is hard to see how the rich\naverage republican is to spend his money\nin any other way than that which has\nproduced, and is increasing the nervous\nness of his race. Competitive examina-\ntions, . which will, in time, add their\nworry to the endless voting and electing\nof the present time, are calculated to\nintensify the trouble. But for long the\nevil will not be much noticed. The\ncountry will be fertilized by a continu-\nous stream of fresh-face- d,
0f096bd279e67ff6f4452c6320c1caa1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1887.1219177765095 40.063962 -80.720915 . / aiiceilug. lu (hu uuunty of Uulo, and btato of\nwort Ylrgiuia, that la to wiy: A portion of Lot No.\n."ine (V) luKiuuro r*o. ton (IU). which lot laslluated\nn u tho wuth eaat coruor of Market mid Eleventh\nSrceu. and asld portion la bouudod ai follow*:\niM.nulug on the eaat tide of Market ilrceiatthe\niouuweu corner ou Market atieet of tho portion\nnt Mid lot conveyed to oliuon Uorkhulnux by\nchiritrd. Maitlu, by deed dated October 17. I87i,\n»u(l refolded in tho Clerk's oUico of tho County\nL'uurt of i^ld Ohio county lu deed book M at piigu\nv Mtd UM uauicd corner being Uiu centre ol the\nVu-'uimi wail Doiwcen tho houao uud More in ImO\noa-upicd by AuWouy Uollucr, aud tUo Uoumj ueit\nwuifl men occupied oy »ald tt. Al. bicwart; thence\nruiiiih'K,u HU ***lcr,y dliuctlou through the coutto\nu: Mill wivU wltu the Uuool llorkheiuKr Ufiy feet\nHid uirco luchef to a coiner lo wiuio\nMuk Urn noiUioJt corucr ol Iho property lieruby\nconveyed; tiituco ruuuiug in a southerly direction\nWilli iiorklioluiur'a lino hoveuteen leei and not\niui'jict t-> iiorkhclUHT'a extreme »ouih wmt corucr.\nniiiii b to »#y, hla corucr, wulch in a aouthwuki\nctmurcl Uiu propcity conveyed to him by uUd\nta*riiyb Martin una is lurUier nouili Uiuu any\noilier corner ou tho wc«t uiuu thereof); ihcuco ruu»\nsiiiKiu # vvcaurly direction througu thu centre of\nmcaivUlou wall bctweeu tliohuUMj oscupled by\nMiilstwvitri Mild tho ouo next Bouth liicrcol io the\niwi»iilooI Market HutJt. u olntauco of ufty feet\n»uj thraj luetic* aud Iroui thcuco noveutucu lea\nIix luchul to tho place of bcgluulug, bclug the\nnine jiru,.criy couvoyed 10 said b. ilurkiicliuer by\nJc:ein;ah Hurry huu wife by deed dated Alarch li,\njssU, and recorded lu Uju oillce of tho Clerk of tho\nCount; <-ourt ol Ndd Ohio couuty lu deed book tfr.\niaiu MJ.aud by wid ti. ilurkhtluier aud D.
46f3abcd181e32f1b4afe34c724b6005 THE HAWK-EYE AND IOWA PATRIOT ChronAm 1840.443989039415 40.807539 -91.112923 Chancery side of the District Court for the\ncounty of Lee aforesaid, against the abovo\nnamed defendants, praving for relief generally\nin the premises set forth in said hill, and for\nInjunction, against the eaid defendents, which\nwas allowed him,—also for a subpana, for the\nsaid defendants, to appear and answer to raid\nlull of complaint, and for an order of publi-\nca ion against the said Enos Williams, as an\nabsent, and non resident defendant, who was\nsuch at the tune of the filing of said bill,—\nand which said bill sets forth, and charges,\namong other matters, that a certain portion\nof the property belonging to the estate of the\nsaid Nathaniel Kriapp, that is subject to ad­\nministration, and liable for the debts against\nthe said estate, is in the possession of the said\ndefendants, and particularly, an interest in\ncertain town lots situated at Fort Madison, in\nthe county of Lee aforesaid, specifically des­\ncribed in said bill, and which, the said\nNathaniel Knapp, in his lifetime, made valu­\nable improvements, all of which said proper­\nty is in danger of being lost to said estate,\nby the improper and fraudulent conduct of\nsaid delendants especially the said Enos Wil­\nliams, who has been fraudulently attempting\nto convert the same to his own privute usa\nand benefit,—and praying that the said de­\nfendants may be ir.joincd from selling, or\notherwise disposing of any part of the proper­\nty belonging to the said Nathaniel Knapp*\nestate, which is in the hands and possession\nof the said defendants, or either of them, or\nfrom concealing, or removing the same, or\nany part thereof, and from all attempts, by\nthemselves, their agents, or attornies, to in­\nvest themselves, or either of them, with the\ntitle to any part of said property, to the\nprejudice of the legal representatives and dis­\ntributees of said estate and praying for a\ndecree that the said defendants account with
29f998ddfe57a0ecda634a3a18a72b5f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.1849314751396 40.832421 -115.763123 tiik i»i»TKicTrmmTor thw\nNinth Judicial nialrtct. nf lh* *kat» .#\nNrra.la. In ai»l fur lli<> t oiinty nf Kl In, hllia\nI Irk* y, rU nlllT. r.k-«li..t lima. H . IHck*y, d*.\nAc l"li hmifhl In lh» IHilrlfl rnwl .* lk»\nKlnlb Ju-lh lal I'lalrlt t nf lh* DUI< «f Kitrt*,\nlu »n>1 inr III* I'nunty nf Klko, anil Ik* «'.!».\n1-lalM llnl In lb* nfflr. nf lha lierk of Hl4\nlHelrtct rnnrt.\nHr >Uirnf K*»» a arnda ffilni »« ThM.\nR. Mck*y( II* endanti V.-n ar« limliyrN|iliMl\nfnapnoai In >n anion hmnrnl airala.l y-nby\nlh* arwiTa batnari I'lainl ft. In lb* I >1 lilcl I «.rl\n<4 IUe Ninth Jndlclal In.trlrt nf lha Rt a la *f\nNevada, In anil firth* I 'mint; nf Kifca, Mi b>\nanawer Ilia complaint Aled tli* rein, within\ndate. *lclti*lt* of tb* *y o| hii (.- tflarlka\na»r»tr* nn yon tfllila nun moua. If \nwllblu thl* Connty, or If aerted ¦>*( *f tbla\nCoimly, Hit In Ihla I'Mrlr t, wltliln twenty day. I\nolherwlae, within forty daya-ir J»rt*a»«»t by\ndefault Rill lir taka<i again. I yon, acr»idtk« I#\nthe nrayrr of aald mmplalnl.\nTi a aald action la tirmiitht In nliUIti a darraa\n<4 Ihla Cntirl (1|eaol»|n« lha Ivmda of RMirl-\ntanny nmr e Hating between Ilia plali lilt and\n¦W-ndai.l, on Ihr ifiniml lh I defendant h«a\nlor more than Ian teara willfully inflected I*\n|*n»Mefnr plaintiff. lha common nece*»nrt»« «f\nlifa. Al.o . ll>al plaintiff tia.a lh- poraraal*a a#\nUu4r two minor children, and for aucli "'bar\nand further relief aa lo tha Oar I may ...aa\nJnat and r<)nlUM*.\nAnd yon ara li*rehy nnllAed that If yum fntt\nto a|>|M-ar and atiatrer eal.l ruaHtlnl aa aVwaa\ntr>inir*d, lha aald I'lalmlff will Apply to lb*\nt'ouil for III" fallal therein demanded.
097e2dedcbf09c0712b9ae2e7a1b7357 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1897.2342465436327 39.745947 -75.546589 Judges of the Court of General Sessions\nof the Peace and Jail Delivery of the\nState of Delaware, In and for New Cas­\ntle county. We, the undersigned, re­\nspectable citizens and substantial free­\nholders of the b irst ward of the city of\nWilmington, do hereby certify that Wil­\nliam Baxter and Matthew Baxter, trading\nus William Baxter & Bro.. the owners and\noccupants of the store situated at south­\nwest corner of Fourth and Shipley streets,\nm the Urst ward, city, county and state\naforesaid, and described In their applica­\ntion. and who are applicants for license\non Monday, the 10th day of May. A. D .\n1897, being the next term of said court, for\nthe sale of Intoxicating liquors In quau-\nllllcs not less than one half gallon tnere-\nin, not to be drunk on the premises, they\n licensed retailers of goods, wares\nand merchandise, the aggregate cost value\nof their stoek constantly kept on hand for\nsale Is not less than five hundred dollars.\nThey are men of full age. sobriety and\ngood moral character; that sufli sale of\nintoxicated liquors at said place Is neces­\nsary to accommodate tin- public; that\nthey are the owners of said store, and the\ntrue rental value Is five hundred dollars,\nand the following respectable citizens and\nsubstantial freeholders of said ward, at\nleast twelve of whom are resjiectable\nfreeholder of said ward, recommend the\nsaid application, viz:\nHarrv Christy,\n■lames Christy,\nJohn Bader,\nE. J . McManus,\nJames McKenna.\nDonlel McCusker.\nWin. Flemming,\nFred Well. Sr.,\nJulius Gunther.\nJos. Niedermaler.\nA. H .iuhcr.\nAndrew Wilhelm,\nJames 11. Harkins. James Brown,\nJohn Brown,
313628532c17338d07ac117c12c5d43b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.719178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 ml feeling than those who border\nocean. The shores of Maine, where\near or two of our lives was spent\nd two ol the happiest we ever spent),\npressed this Idea upon us. The old\nan puts men down, Us mighty voloe\nresses vice, It counsels a brave, en*\netlo life. Courageous men are apt\nbe honost. A great many of the\n»s of life come from want ol well\nced nerves, and a hardy habit of\nad and body, that loves effort and\nnot sbrink.rrom difficulty and dan*\nThe life of the fisherman farmer\nthe Bea-shoro Is just this kind of\ntil life that one fancies might make\nood Christian philosopher out of a\nin man. He 19 dependent on Qod.\nIs every day held In the hollow of\nhand.he la dally conversant with\nasjeaty and a power that he cannot\n1st, and that Insensibly shapes his\nlence we have often been struck\nh a flavor of shrewd, houeat\nidness in the dwellers by the sea.\nthink toauch fishermen peaceably\nQdlng their nets, came the call of the\nof Mary, who, when he had to\niose his twelve apostlea, went not to\nwise men and the philosophers ol\nworld, but to the fishermen by the\nof tiallilee, There la a flavor In\no\\ui j \\Jl IUU ClOIIHUIIDlOi Ak IB lull\nbe '.tiiUKeH of boats und nets, anil\nlight* of flahes. Simon Peter girds\nllaherman'a coat uuto him, and\nnged Into tbo water after JeauB.\ni disciples come after blm, dragglug\nnet lull of liable. Oa the shore\ny Und a tiro of coals, and fish laid\nreou, und bread; and be who made\nfcea and all that la therein, appear*\nhem, familiarly Haying, 'Come and\ne.' Then, on dark, stormy nights,\nIn# and rowing, tbey meet the calm\nus walking on the waters.walking\namlly, aa if be were merely out lu\nown dominions walking for
21ece04edea8b28aeb8687e18ce7104f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.4685792033495 40.063962 -80.720915 The Conference Committee of the ire\nand steel manufacturers haa prepared n\nanswer to the workers' proposition for\ntlfree months' shutdownpn order to di\npose of stock. Tho answer states tin\nthe proposition is too indefinite to I\nentertained; that it states tho men wi\nremain idle in particular mills until tl\nowners see lit to pay* lust year's seal\nthen they will go to work. Accordir\nto this, one mill might run while con\npeting plants are idle, and thus seem\ntho mnrket and destroy all effects of tl\nshut down. If the workers will guarai\ntee to keep nil mills closed for tho nine!\nduys they will then seriously consider i\nIf not, they will defnnnd the reductioi\nTho Amalgamated Association of Ire\nand Steel Workers devoted Monday\nsession of the Convention to discussir\nthe report of the Committee on Cons!\ntution. Secretary Murtin's report is\nfollotfs: The tjueHtion of dividing woi\nin tho sheet mills' came up llrst. 1\nmills running two turns when one tui\nis laid off, the other turn alternates wit\nthe idle turn, so us to give ull men on\nployiuent. In some three turn mill\nhowever, when one turn tins been In\noff this has not been done. The Coi\nvention decided that tho alternate By\ntern is upplicuble to these mills us wt\nus two-turn mills. A is in tl\nprogrumme regarding naturalization. Tl\ncommittee reported thntitshould beeo\nstrued to mean that only charter mei\nbers must be citizens of the Unit<\nStates, or liuve out their lirst papers.\nIoni? discussion followed, and uolcgat\nargued that the resolution meant th\nany person desiring to l>e a member\nthe order must become naturalized or\na citizen. This portion of the report w\naccordingly tabled. A recommendatic\nwas received from n lodge asking th\nthe age at which a boy is eligible to b\ncome a ptiddler's helper or heater\nchanged to from fifteen years toeiglitet\nyears. This was argued at length at\nfinally knocked out. The eouventio\nthen adopted the "remainder of the r\nport and adjourned.\nQuotations from'the Kastern marke\nshow that the prices there and here ai\nabout the same, except in bar iron,\nwhich the East has slightly high\nprices, its quotations being SI !K) to SI 8\nwhile here it is put at from SI 80\n$1 75. And in connection with ti\nclaim of low wages in the East, tl\nworkers here say that while a nugdli\nthere gets only $.'} 85 per ton, lie is c\nlowed an extra helper, paid by the firt\nwhich is not done here. This would\na large degree even up matters, as tl:\nKastern puddler can thus work up uioi\niron.
0c62ebde47328541273e72e5ab83333d DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.1109588723998 44.939157 -123.033121 Tho first question that an Anierl-ca- n\nputs to tho voters is what I vota\nfor, high license and regulation, or\nhypocrisy and outlawrey? My Diag-\nnosis of this question is, wo and our\nfore fathers, including tho courts,\nhavo been trying to regulato tho sa\nloon and the liquor traffic for moro\nthan a century in this country and\nto no avail. Now tho sum is, the\nliquor people will not abldo by a law\nthat suits them not. Can you find\na saloon keoper who adheres to tho\nlaw, gives no drink to a minor, or\ntells a habitual drunkard ho "needs\nhis money at homo with his family\nand can't get moro than one or two\ndrinks per day, or that he must pay\nhis honest debts before ho can\nsquander his mouoy so? Oh no,\nthat woud hurt tho trade. Wo must\ncatch all tho minors too, to perpet-\nuate business whether their par-\nents consent to It or not. If we cau\ngot them, Is argument enough..\nThis, an American, speaks as one\ninformed in tho Inside work of\nliquor people. He saye high license\nor outlawery? Does ho mean we\nwill abide by the law if you let us\ndo as wo please, or we will bo out-\nlaws and not obey the law if you put\na restraint on us? It Is not the\nProhis that will bo the outlaws,\nSuppose tho majority of voters de\ncide to favor liquor in the next elec-\ntion and the prohis begin to howl as\ndo tho liquor men when they are\nbeaten, and defy the law and blame\ntho wets for the trouble, you would\ncertainly see it in a different light.\nYou would say tho Legislators or\ntho voters in their wisdom thought\nbest to retain license and wo must\nobey the law.
33f49b60cabaadb5bae45349d793f993 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.6616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 As we swept out from the Island pier\ninto the bay, headed for the "sharking\n'round," t'.r. the channel leading into the\nhay south of the Island, the scene was\nsufficiently inspiriting without the zest of\ndie exciting entertainment promised us,\nTwo other bonis houud on the same er-\nrand, and with stills tilled by the same\ncrisp, invigorating breeze fresh from tun\nH-oan , preceded iin and sought linsuccess-\nliilly tokeep ahead of our saucy ( rait; and\nwre we were on tlie grotmd anchored and\nwith llnw out boforo our compelfihrfl eanio\nup. The lines used are of hall inrii ropo\n- or the size ol nn ordinary "clothes line"\narmed with stout hooks of wrought\niron with heavy barbs. The hooks are\nconnceted with the lines by n strong Iron\nchain of sulllcient length to prevent the\nsavage IIhIi from severing the eord with\nhis teeth, though sometimes an old shark\nis sagacious enough to make a dash to-\nwards the surfftoo when hooked, and in-\ntercepting a mouthful of the unprotected\nline frees himself In a moment. Our yacht\nwas provided with six lines, about the\nlargest numbor that can bo safely\nfrom one boat, und long before we reach*\nm1 the sharking ground those of the party\nwho had Becurelmooks were busy getting\nthe lines straightened and the hooks bait-\ned in readiness for the sport of the day.\nThe matter of baiting the hooks properly\nwas taken in hand by Captain Doughty's\nright and leftliowers, sturdy Ffank Rey-\nnolds and sturdy Tom Duntbn. Half a\ndozen largo-sized sea-trout (the "weak\nfish" of northern waters) were halved and\nHtrung upon each hook, with the supple-,\nmaptary appetizer Intlic way of a fo*\n"spots;" tlic wuoio lorming a mamoi oan\non thtr hook ample for a good sized chow-\nder. The moment the anchor was drop,\nped, out went the hooks, and the cxclted\ntlshere, find the almost equally excited\nxpectatorn prepared themselves Tor Htir-\nring times and immediate business. Hut\nwo lmd reached (he ground rather .nx)\nsoon. The tide was still rirtinto£ nut, car-\nrying the lines fur oil' to the stern. Homts\nminutes passed with no bites or signs of\nsharks, and some ol our impatient ones\nbegan to express the opinion that sharking\nwas a humbug. Then somebody sung\nout
e07f2e59a709c06e9b5d791643c568f0 THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.554794488838 39.560444 -120.828218 a Presbyterian—her family ofthe strictest\nsort. The consent of the girl's father was\nrefused; but love was stronger than aught\nelse; the girl was secretly married to her\nlover, and a mon h passed away. When\nthe secret was discovered, the rage of the\nold man was terrible; he said little, but he\nacted promptly. Ere four and twenty\nhours had elapsed, the young man was\nbetrayed into the hands of the Puritans;\nhe escaped on the journey to London, and\nvowed revenge. The news came that his\nwife was dead—dead of a broken heart;\nand the oath of vengeance was renewed.\nCharles 11. was restored; persecution\nbegan in Scotland; and among those who\npersecuted most bitterly was a pale-faced,\nnoble looking soldier—the widowed man\nwho had sworn revenge. While staying\nwith his troop at a Scottish hamlet, at the\nbase of one of the loftiest hills of Scotland,\na highland woman brought hews of a\ncovenanting gathering; she betrayed it all\nfor a Scotch pound and a couple of glasses\nof whisky. There was to be a gathering,\nand a young girl was to be married to her\nplighted one, in simple presbyteriau\nfashion, and in the open air. The troop\nwas soon in motion, the spot soon gained;\nthey halted for a moment, and looked\ndown through the at the\ngathering in the valley below. It was a\ncalm, beautiful picture. The pastor, grave\nand solemn as one of Israel's leaders; the\nhappy look of the young man rfs he took\nthe trembling hand of his he rothed—the\ngroup gathered round; the old men and\nthe little children—all seemed so calm and\nstill, as if they felt the peace of God within\ntheir hearts as God's sunshine fell upon\nthem. A moment, and the soldiers gal-\nloped forward; a shout from the hill- the\ndischarge of a rifle—the shrieks of the\nwomen—the volley of fire-arms, and sol-\ndiers and Puritans were mixed up to-\ngether. M ost of the group had fled; those\nwho remained were prisoners. Two were\nslain, and those two the newly-wedded\npair, hand clasped in tand, they lay upon\nthe grass—dead ! And the end of the\nstory is to is: that beautiful girl, whose\neyes were closed in death, who had been\nhaunted out of life by that vow of ven-\ngeance, was none other than the soldiers\ndaughter—the child of his melancholy\nunion, of whom, till that day, he had\nnever heard. It is a melancholy episode\nin a terrible history, and gives to the wild\nbeauty of the spot where it is said to have\noccurred an additional and pathetic\ninterest.
5ea04d428e5085783802984f02566daa VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.6972602422627 43.798358 -73.087921 man fo dull as not to communicate to him\nif a free conversation were opened\nsomething, which he would have been\nvery sorry not to have heard. It was t\nnoble observation ; and the practice which\nit implied, no doubt, contributed much to\nthat deep knowledge of human nature, for\nwhich' this great author is so much distin-\nguished. But it is not as a fine sentiment,\nor ns a useful maxim, that I urge this mu-\ntual respect. I say it is a duty. I will\nlisten to no language of haughty preten-\nsion, or fastidious taste, or over - re fi ne- d\ndoubt;Isayitisaduty. Isayitisa\nduty, most especially binding on all Chris-\ntians; yes, binding upon all who make\nany pretensions to a belief in the religion\nof Jesus Christ. And remember, too, my\nbrethren, that it is a duly which will one\nday be felt, which will enforce conviction\nthro' sanctions more commanding, thro' a\njudgment more awful, than that the\nsages, or the preachers of this world.\nThere is an hour coming, when all world-\nly distinctions shall vanish a.vav; when\nsplendid sin. with all its nrile. shall sink\nprostrate and cowering before the eye of\ntne eternal Judge; when the modest mer-\nit that it could not look upon here, na',\nwhen the virtuous poverty that was spurn-\ned from its gate, shall wear a crown ol\nhonor when Dives shail lift uphiseves,\nbeing in torment, and Lazarus shall be\nborne in Abraham's bosom to the presence\nof the angels of Gol when the great\ngulf which shall separate men from one\nanother, shall separate not between out-\nward splendor and meanness, but between\ninward, spiritual, essentiil purity and pol-\nlution. Let the judgment of that hour be\nour judgment now. That which will be\ntrue there is true here is true now. Let\nthat severe and solemn discrimination find\nits way into this world ; for it is written,\n44
015a6f886e803ae231da55d908fca285 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1916.78551909406 41.875555 -87.624421 trst, aad alternates:\n1. Taoa. 8 . Hayes; F. B. Carr.\ntl. W . O. Swing; A. P . Danforth.\nJ4. K. H. Jones; E. B. Whlta.\n(. K. L. Piper; J. J. Kllckenger\nf9. W . W . Carroll; W. W. Donley.\n1. C . C. Parker; A. J . Frailer.\nL O. V. Conley; J. R. Zoll.\n47. Jat. W . Flnley; J. C. Paul.\nM. J . M . Kelley; C. A. Walters.\n)7. C. p. Bemls; E. 8. Nichols.\n01. F . 8 . Thomas: Jerry McCarby.\n04. r . A. Bledsoe; A. J. Douglas.\n111. J. I. Davis; C. T . Harris.\n'. IS. T . D. Sugbrua; W. Erickson.\n18. F. U Howard; A. M. Barnes.\n17. T. F . Phleger; J. H. Voas.\nH). W. Sheehan; W. H. Devlin.\n111. C. H. Uslton; H. B. Holt\n186. O. O. McCarty; P. O. Rourke.\n'VI. Jno. Kowler; M. Ingham.\n:08. C . C . Cnttg; K. Trogden.\nU7. L . M Hough: B. K. Bradley.\n177. E. B . French; O. W. Melbourne.\n88. W . A Bhnrpe; C. H. Stanley.\n'88. J . L Lamport: .1. C. McGuan.\n108. W. I Smith. P. It. O'Connor.\n(OS. D. W . Marshall; T. Nltson.\nIS. M K. Cooper. A. 8 Kuykewlall.\n01. D. 8 . Craig, J. A. flonbam.\n109. E. Krad: W M Stevenson\nIS. D. Naney. C . K' Hlncknurn.\nMS. H. Hill. F C. 7.lnl\n148. A. W. Stew man; W K Whaley\n77. F P Mllle: K B Flanagan\n100. B. F . Cnngdnu: .1
0c15706d921089fb36c132707adcdca3 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.1684931189752 40.441694 -79.990086 The Silver Leaf Society, of Mount Washing-\nton, held a social at the residence of Miss An-\nnie Jessop Monday. The evening was pleas-\nantly spent by music and dancing. Among those\npresent were: Misses Jennie, Carrie and Belle\nNaysmith, Celia, Florence and Annie Jessop,\nEmmaTurbett, Sadio Lynch, Mamie McCoy,\nFlorence MoCleary, Blanche Lowen. Georgie\nAshford, and Messrs. Frank and Robert Jes-\nsop, William Naysmith, George Annieer,\nThomas McCoy, Samuel Pear, James Barber,\nWilliam Tranter and Edward Turbett.\nA very enjoyable affair took place Thursday\nevening at Mr. and Mrs. William Bell's resi-\ndence, S3ii Penn avenue, the occasion being a\nmasquerade surprise party in honor of their\nniece. Miss Effie Thompson, of Colorado.\nAmong those present were Misses Florence\nLowstedder, Lizzie White, Ettie Stowe, Bailie\nSmith. Callie Willmot, Hanna Lowstedder,\nFlorence Pitts. Hattie Adams, Carrie Adams,\nJennie Cane, Mrs. Lyons, Mr. and Mrs. Hamil-\nton; Messrs. E. Turbert, S. Parr. William\nNasmith, All McCain. Will Smith, John Battey,\nWilliam Hamilton and Will ChaUinor.\nMrs. Joseph Pauline gave a very pleasant\ndonkey and card party at home. No. 24\nAckly street, on Thursday evening. The\ndonkey prizes were won by Mrs. H. Herd and\nMiss Romayne McKown. An elegant supper\nwas served at 11 o'clock, after which dancing\nwas indulged till a late hour. Among those\npresent were Misses- - Laura Stauffer, Agnes\nStauffer, Laura Pendleberry, Emma Cushlng,\nRomayne McKown, Mr. and Mrs. Pendleberry,\nMr. and Mrs. Herd, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Campney,\nMr. and 'Mrs. Gardner, Messrs. Wiseman,\nHerd, Boggs, Cushing and many others.\nMiss Clara Donehoo, of the West End, cele-\nbrated her birthday last Friday evening hy\ngiving a party to her young friends. The fol-\nlowing were among her guests: Mrs. May and\nAnnie Wherli, Edith Bullock, Addie Smith"\nAlfa Norris, Mary Ryan, Mary Emma Lock-har- t,\nErnie and Sheila Wettongel, Ivy and\nPearl Leach. Eldie and Ella Jones, Laura\nJack, Cora Walters, Ettie and Maggie Bradley,\nMary Herriott and Jennie Doneboo; Messrs.\nFrank Andrews, Thomas Bradley, Ralph Gra-\nham, Mark Stewart, Martin Roeser, Robert\nGray. John Ashland, James Evans, David\nHarris, George Herriott, Eddie Beck and\nWillie Donehoo.
2aac584062e7b34b5a5f1ccc73758d31 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.815068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 But do not expect thene glasses, which ,\nenable the eye to work at the ttroper dis- j\ntance, to be of any use in seeing things \\\nfurther away; that would be impossible, t\nA glass cannot change its form, like the ,\neye, which, by some mechanism irnper- t\nfectly understood, alters its conformation \\\nfor every distance. Those using the lower e\nnumbers of glasses will hardly need help t\nfor distant oojects, unless it be for pic- d\ntures hung in a gallery, or books on the d\nupper shelves of a library. For Buch oc- a\ncasional efforts a glass of greater focal t\nlength may be necessary. Get the glasses\nset in plain blue steel; the dazzle of gold ^\nframes is trying and Injurious. See that f\nthey are of pure glass, free from all specks, t\nrays or globules, of equal thickness, and of\nequal form. The best test of the purity of h\nthe glass is to hold it before a flame. To a\nsee if thoy are quite truo. hold them obll- j,\nqnely over print; If the gtasics are correct £\nall the letters will preserve their proper r\nshape in spite of the oblique glass. Or 0\n the glasses slowly from the book to v\nthe eyes, and if any of the letters appear t|\ndistorted, the substance is not uniform. 0\n»A very important matter in choosing j\nglasses is to ascertain whathnr hni»» «v«-1\nare equally worn, and need the same a\nnurabor of glass. Inequality of condition y\nla far commoner than la generally sup- t|\nnosed. Headaches la one temple more\nfrequently than In the other, or peculiar\noccupations, may cause this unequal wear. z\nOr the left eyo, like the left hand, lags t\nbehind, and does not do its fair share of f\nwork. Then, like the left hand, it be- a\ncomes through want of exercise weaker ,\nthan the right.one is worn out with la- i\nbor, the other depraved with ease; and n\nthe latter condition Is generally the worst t\nof the two. This is one thing that can ),\nbo best decided in that necessary inter- c\nview with a skillful oculist. Hut if from fa\nany cauao the eyes have worn iiregularly, .\nthe two compartments must be fitted with\nglasses of different powers.\nThe right focus found, see that the cm- t\nttrof the tjlau is directly opposite the onto-
48f39a506d39213e847dcd5e79132b94 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.187671201167 43.798358 -73.087921 eastic step, good appetite, and ruddy cheeks wiW\nfoJow. Once more remember, the origina and\ngenuine is made at 375 .Bowery.\nSPITTIJVG OF BL O OB. This disease con-\nsists of a discharge of booJ, often frothy, from\nthe mouth, brought up with hawking &f coughing,\nand is usuay accompanied with difficaly of\nbreathing, and some pain in the chest. Some-\ntimes it is preceded by an oppression at the chest,\ndry tickling cough and sight shooting pains\nThis disease is aways more or ess dangerous.\nThe great danger is that these symptoms may ter-\nminate in consumption, aud immediate remedies\ncan alone save this end. But Dr. Taylor's Ba-sa-\nof Liverwort is a sure remedy, and to show\nits unoara 7eed success, certifies of cuies from\n4JI citizens, and many physicians, will be pub-\nlished in a few days.\nJSTER VOUS DISEL1SES 8f WEAKNESS.\nDr. Tayfor's Basam of Liverwort, made al 375\nBowery, is assuredy an exceent remedy for\nthese diseases. My vife has been more vr less\nill for ten years. She was extremely nervous,\nnd at times so weak she could not attend to\nher domestic duties By the use of this medi-\ncine, her strength is wholly ies!ored, and she is\nas healthy as I can wish her to be. My address\nis at Dr. Taylor's office.\nCURE OF CONSUMPTION Mrs. Mar-\nin, a worthy member of my congregation, was\ntaken ill some time since with a cold, pain in the\nbreast and some difficulty cf breathing, and in\nfew days thereafter she had a violent cough and\nviolent pain in the sides, which no medicine\nwould relieve. She continued in this way for a\nong timo under the medical care of Dr. Rea, but\niinaHy became consumptive, and was evidently\nnear the end of her earthly sufferings, when her\nbrother persuaded her to try Dr. Taylor's Balsam\nof Liveiwort When she commenced this medi-\ncine it did not seem to agree with her for a few\ndays, but by lessenmg the dose, she found it an-\nswerer? admirably : it relieved her cough and her\ndifficulty of breathing instankr: and we had the\npeasure of witnesiing her rapid recovery to health.
82e31a11f24bf1e4cbc60709a83cba4a THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1841.0616438039067 39.290882 -76.610759 'And yet Giovanni de Montecorvino, a pious\nbishop of our holy church, is said to have con-\nverted such a prinee to the true faith nearly\ntwo centuries since.'\n'The power of Ged can do any thing, Lord\nArchbishop, and I am not one to question the\nmerits of his chosen ministers. All I can an-\nswer to this point is, that I hud no scientific or\nplausible reasons to justify me in pursuing\nwhat may prove to be as deceptive as the light\nwhich recedes before the hand that would\ntouch it. As l'sr Cathay and its position and its\nwonders, we have the better established evi-\ndence of the renowned Venetians, Marco and\nNicolo Polo, who not only travelled in those\nterritories, but sojourned years at the cooit of\ntheir monarch. Rut, noble gentlemen, wheth-\ner there is a Prester John or a Cathay, there\n certainly a limit to the western tide of the\nAtlantic, and that limit I am ready to seek.'\nThe archbishop betrayed his incredulity, ia\nthe upward turn ef his eyes: but having his or-\nders from those who were accustomed to be\nobeyed, and knowing that the theory of Co-\nlumbus bad been gravely heard and reported\non, veers before, at Salamanca, he determined\nprudently to keep within his proper sphere,\nand to proceed at once to that into which it\nwas his duty to inquire.\n?You have set forth the advantages that you\nthink may be derived to the sovereigns, should\nyour project succeed, Senor,' he said, 'truly\nthey are not light,if all your brilliant hopes may-\nbe realized; but it BOW remaineth to know what\ncondiliens you reserve for yourself, as the re-\nwards of all your risks and many years of anx-\nious labor.'
1c37fbabf8d5926b3dfdd053edf0c617 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.223287639523 40.063962 -80.720915 lii relation to the election, powers and dutle\nof Sanitary Committees and Board of Healtl\nof Wheeling, and which Is recorded am\npublished in the printed Ordinance Book o\nthe city, bearing datel8tf7, pages 3 to 7 incln\nHive, of the supplement, all of which shal\nbe taken and regarded as applying to tht\nHealth Officer, his agents and other person\nemployed by him nnder this ordinance.\nStcc. 3 . To enable the Health officer thi\nbetter to discharge the duties of his office, hi\nshall have authority to niakefe rcqulsltloi\nIn writing upon the Street Commissioner fo\nthe removal of all nuisances and offensivi\naccumulations in the streets and alleys; am\nif he deems it essential to the more tborougl\ncleansing of the gutters and sewers, he ma:\nalso command the assistance and service o\nthe Superintendent or the Water Works, ii\nsupplying water for that purpose, and, wltl\nthe consent of the Council, he shall hav\npower to employ agents or assistants, labor\nors, or other persons, when necessity re\nquiros; hut in timo of danger u\nthe health of the city, when the occasloi\nshall be too urgent to allow a oonvenlen\ntime to consult the Council, the said Healtl\nOfficer shall have power, and it shall be hi\nduty, at the cost of the owner or ownen\nshall he or they refuse to comply with thi\nterms of his order, without delay, to orde\nand contract for the immediate cleansing o\nUlSlnreCUUR or lmprovemBUi III HID aauimij\ncondition of any lot, grounds or tenement\nwithin the corporate limits of the city, ant\nhe shall have authority and right to ente\nupon any grounds, or lot, or house, in tin\ndischarge of the duties of the offlce.\nskc. 4 . If the owner or owners, agent o:\nagents, occupier or occupiers, of anygroum\nf or tenement in said city shall rofuse to com\nply with any order or notice nerved upoi\nhim or them by the said Health Officer o:\nhis agent* for the removal of filth or lmpu\nTitles of whatever character connected witl\nsuch ground, grout?ds or tenement house o:
3e47d7aed6b913e53d6c16a01700b8ad UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1911.1849314751396 42.68333 -96.683647 There are two trackless trolley street\nrailways in Bremen run by a system in­\nvented by a local engineer named Koeh-\nler, who was born in this city and is »»\nyears old. The patent is owned by a stock\ncompany composed of local capitalists.\nOne Kne runs from a central point to the\nresidence portion of the city through one\nof the principal residence streets in the\nsuburbs. The other runs from the terny-\nnus of the Bremen municipal government\nline at the suburb of Arsden over the\nhighway three miles to Arsdendamm, an­\nother suburb. Both connect with the\nregular trolley lines and receive their\npower from the central station and both\nwere established by the municipality as an\nexperiment. The cars are about the size\nof an ordinary automobile omnibus, seat-\ning eight people on each of the \ninal seats, or 16 altogether. But they are\nmuch lighter in weight; there Is no rat*\ntling of machinery or odor from gasoline,\n'and they run as smoothly as electric\nstreet cars. The ordinary speed is 12 miles\nan hour, but with more powerful ma\nchinefy the speed could be increased.\nThere are two overhead wires, forming\npositive and negative conduction, upon\nwhich rides a small carriage on wheels\nThis carr!age is connected with the car Av\nmeans of a flexible wire rope that \\«\nlengthened or shortened automatically, ac­\ncording to the tension upon it, and Is\ncapable of a radius of 45 feet, so that the\ncar can go to either curb of the road,\nbeing steered precisely like the ordinary\nbus. It goes up to the sidewalk to tak*\non passengers. It turns out to avoid othe«\nvehicles.
101e316ad494a5bbab7808b1797818ff THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.8945205162354 40.063962 -80.720915 Tho annual report of General Slier-\nnnn iifl.ii. ulntiiii* llin onnopnnlilpnl limllii\nif t(iu various command*, sayn: The ag* j\n[regato strength of the lino of the army j\na (>1,510 enlisted men, made up as f»l-\nown: Five regiment* of ortllfery, 270 i\nifliceri* and 2,004 men; 10 regiments of j\navalry, 422 ollicers and 7,20(3 men; 25\negiments of infantry, 848 oflicers and j\n1,000 men; available recruit*, hospital\ntewards, ordnance sergeants, Ac,, 8,321. J\n)uring the pant winter the troops in the j;\n)epartmenti of Missouri and Texas were (\nmployed in an arduous and severe winter n\namnaign against the Indians on the 1\ntoruer and tlie staked plains, that have\nor vears been engaged in depredations t\nn the Texas and Kansas frontiers, re* r\nlilting in their disarniamentand subjcc* (\nion to authority. If the military com* t\nnanders can have control over the sup* g\ndies needed by these Indians as they j;\nlow have over their persons, I am con* \ninced by my recent visit that a condition a\nif peace can bo maintained. The Sioux a\nlavo recently made incursions into (|\n(orthern Nebraska, mostly to steal cat- b\nle and horses from the farms along the Q\n'acillc Railroad and north of it. Gen* J\nral Crooks is of the opinion that the\nrhole army, acting defensively, can not p\nirevent incursions, and suggest* that (]\nroops be stationed in the midst of the n\nndians so as to watch them and pre* «\nent their leaving on tho pretense ii\nf hunting. This is Impracticable unless g\nhe army can have the supervision of the ]\necessary supplies of these tribes within (1\nhe reservation, which is now not the u\nase. The reports of the several com- j ,\nlissions which have, under military en* a\nort*, recently been engaged In explor- B\nng the country and in negotiating with <j\nho Indians, will throw much light on\nI.: . . a .al.lxnt II...
7da61b3da8ff2d1b6258d1ebf79d44e4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.146575310756 41.681744 -72.788147 I look It to bo rmora talking, but\nnon of that party drank another\ndrop during tho trip. Thia I only\non Instance, I'v en It happen\nhundred time Mayb you can ac-\ncount for It Th only way I hv\not accounting for It I that Ameri-\ncan hav got out of th habit of\ndrinking and, like (he baby peolaJ.\ntot I wa talking about, they find It\nhard to get their hand In again or\ntheir stomach In again, whichever\nway you want to put It.\n"Taking all my experience on an\nAmerican liner Into consideration I\nmuat aay that th big majority of\nAmerican ar drinking much differ-\nently, They used to shoot th stuff\nIlk they did everything else In a\nhurry. The American drinking man\nwaa 100 per cent American. He\ndidn't drink like the European any\nmore than he work Ilk the Eu-\nropean. While ho may not be eo\nneat about It and while he may hi'\na lot of lost motion, th American\nwill turn off a Job In about half the\ntlm the European will. It th\nam with hi drinking. Th Eu-\nropean would tak a day or at least\nan afternoon to his drinking, ami he\nstood up well under It because he\ntook It easy. You know the old spy-\ning about take It easy and you'll last\nlonger, don't you?\n"But the American shot his v.4\nlike he shot his affairs blng, bibb -\ning. Get me? He was too busy to\ntake It easy. That was the trouble.\nBecauso he refused to take his Irlnks\nslowly and quietly, the drys had\nenough horrible examples to appall a\nsufficient number of voters and we\ngot the Eighteenth Amendment\n"I'll never forget the night when\nan organizer for the union addressed\nus barkeeps down in Thirty-fift- h\nstreet That was ten years ago, and\nI ask you if you wouldn't have\nhanded the bird, as the English say,\nto a guy who, ten years ago, told you\nNew York was going dry. Well, this\norganizer was talking to a lot of us\n.u nion barkeeps and he warned us of\nthe necessity of keeping our mem-\nbership solid.
143147fc2311b872b6bfa784207f8639 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1919.1767122970573 39.745947 -75.546589 Df the Slate of Delaware shall consist | Health, shall not exceed In any one\nof seven members who shall be bona I year the sum of five thousand dollar* :\ntMe residents of the Slate of Delaware and provided, also, that In the event\nand of the counties of the said State i of an epldem o or pestilential disease\nfrom which they are appointed. Four i occurring In any county, city or village\nof the members of the said Board of 1 of the State, the Board of Health of\nHealth shall be physicians of sk 11 andthe State of Delaware «hall forthwith\nexperience, duly qualified to practice 1 cause all needful sanitary measures\nmedicine or surgery under Uie provl- and precautions to be taken which the\n«tons of Chapter 27, of the Revised emergency may call for, and which\nCode of the ?tata of Delaware Three (may be consistent with law. and shall\nof said membe s shall be residents of < be by the governor, said ip-\nNew Castle County and two each of!rpo,al tobe expressed In wrlfng; and\nKent and Sussex counties. At the ex- ! the »aid board, wtih the approval of\nplration of the terms of office of tho the governor, is authorized to draw- up-\npresent members of the ?tatc Board of on the State Treasurer In favor of the\nHealth of the Slate of Delaware and j hoard for an additional amount, not ex-\never thereafter, the governor shall ap- : cecdlng five thousand dollars In any on ■\npoint the member* of the State Board year to be paid out of any unapproprl-\nof Health for a term of four years; ated money In the 5.ate Treasury, to\nprovided, however, that any vacancy, he applied and expended by the sad\nhowever caused, shall be filled by ap- board, with the approval of the govein-\npointment by the governor for the un-, or. In carrying out such needful sanl-\n► xpired term.
4a9962c9e613e509a60934fd6a4528ec THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.4002731924206 39.369864 -121.105448 Theodore Darker writes from Romo :\nIn Europe you see many things which\nseem strange to an American. Take the\nuse of wine. If lam right, the Europeans\nconsume about 6,500 ,000.000 gallons of wine.\nIn France, leave out of account the pasture\nland which is not ploughed, and the forests,\n•of the actual arable land, one third is de-\nmoted to the culture of the grape. Yet there\nare immense districts where no wine can be\nraised at all. I see it stated that the Gov-\nernment returns make it appear that the\npeople of France drink 850,000 ,000 gallons\nof the vine, and the calculation is that the\namount k.not much less than 1,000 ,000 ,000 I\nYet I dont believe, in the year 1859, there\nwas so much drunkenness among the 39, -\n000,000 people of France as among the 3, -\n000,000 Yankees of New England 1 I have\nbeen four months at Rome; there are wine\nshops I am out doors from three\nto six hours a day, and I have never yet seen\na man drunk ; now and then one is merry,\nnever intoxicated. The Romans, Italians,\nFrench, etc. , ar e quite temperate; they drink\ntheir weak wine with water, and when they\ntake liquors, it is only a little glassful at a\ntime, (which docs not make a spoonful.) I\ndont believe there is a bar in all Italy where\nxneu step in and drink rum and water, gin\nand water, etc. Excessive drinking is not\nto the taste of the people. In the north of\nEurope, aud even in Switzerland, it is not\nso. The English, without help from the\nIrish and Scotch, drink about €OO or 700, -\n000,000 gallons of beer every year, not to\nspeak of the wine, spirits, etc. , they take to\nwash it down withal. There is drunkenness.\nSo you find it in Scandinavia, in Holland,\nand North Germany.
280a7fa10cc9a82a2bc4c1fb6c196089 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1911.8123287354135 39.745947 -75.546589 government loans in war days, was\nmade by the late John Murray Forbes\nof Boston, who was a trusted adviser\nof the Lincoln administration and one\nof the ablest men of affairs of his time\n—the creator of the Chicago. Burling­\nton and Quincy Railroad, and at on 4\ntime the head of the American mer­\nchants engaged In the China trade.\n“I think.” said Mr. Coe. who knew\nMr. Forbes well, “ that the swiftest\ntransaction involving a large amount\nof money that occurred In the United\nStates during war days was one iu\nwhich John Forbes was a participant\nIt was one. too, which did a great deal\nto prevent the sailing from the\nports of Great Britain of privateers\nbuilt for the Confederate navy. 1 ought\nto say by way of preface that Mr.\nForbes and Salmon P. who was\nLincoln's first Secretary of the Treas­\nury, were Intimate personal friends\nfor years before the outbreak of the\nwar and Mr. Chase, when governor of\nOhio, had intimate knowledge of the\nmanner In which Mr. Forbes develop­\ned what is now the Chicago, Burling-\nton and Quincy Railroad out of a little\nunfinished railroad In Michigan Chase\nhad great respect for and confidence in\nthe judgment and ability of Mr Forbes\nas a financier on large Unea. He sent\nmany times to Mr. Forbes to visit him\nat Washington In the first months of\nthe Civil War. and advised with him as\nto the best method of raising money\nfor the conduct of the war.\n“I think it was in the spring of 1862,\nalthough it may have been the late\nsummer, that Secretary Chase visited\nNew\ntelling
dc289ca169f138031d74585e78e1acc5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.57397257103 41.681744 -72.788147 Rev. Edwin E. Aiken will occupy\nthe pulpit at the Newington Congre-\ngational church Sunday In the ab-\nsence of Rev. John A. Moir, who te\nspending a vacation in Canada and\nexpects to be away until September\n1. Rev. Mr. Aiken, who is a teousin\nof E. Stanley Welles, is occupying\nthe parsonage for a few weeks. He\nhas recently returned from Ichang,\nprovince of Huper, China, where he\nhas been a missionary for 42 years.\nHe is a native of Newington, having\nbeen born in the old parsonage on\nMain street which is now owned by\nFrank D. Root. His father was min-\nister at th local church from 1857\nto 186". In the latter year the fam-\nily moved from Newington.\nGraduating from Yale university\nin class of 1881, he attended Yale\nDivinity school from which he was\ngraduated in 18S4. He remained\nanother year as a post graduate and\nin 18S5 was sent to China by the\nAmerican Board of Foreign Mis-\nsions. His last previous visit to the\nUnited States in 1912.\nRev. Mr. Aiken has not been In\nthe section where there was any ac-\ntual fighting during the recent na-\ntionalist uprising in China. He has\nhowever gained a ready insight into\nthe conditions there. It is his opin-\nion that although China has been\nfriendly toward America, that atti-\ntude has changed somewhat because\nof the fact that the students who\nare generally inrlentified with the\nnationalist movement are inclined\nto want national independence and\nare more aggressive than Chinese\nof the past. They are not, however,\naltogether hostile toward America.\nRev. Mr. Aiken' son, Rev. Edwin\nE. Aiken Jr., filled the pulpit at the\nchurch last Sunday. He is occupy-\ning the parsonage with his father.\nThe vacation Bible school, which\nhas been held annually for the past\ntwo or three years, will open Mon-\nday or Tuesday of next week. No\nfee will be charged for atendance.\nThe school will meet five days a\nweek lor two weeks in the parish\nhouse of the Newington Center Con-\ngregational church.
2b8c718f1ba7c3135285c9b849d75b91 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1882.7109588723997 40.832421 -115.763123 Silonlaj'i r»pul»e of Arabi Pulu is\nregar ted us a complete success lor tbo\nEnglish, who tin. I uever calculated upon\nLiru nttackiug them in Kiicb a manner.\nTl>« euemv did not retire until the Eng-\nli h dually adruncrd. Arabi It ft about\n20.1 dead and wouuded ou the field.\nTbo wounded state llint t!» English\nrigbt was attacked by fire battalions of\ninfantry, w tb five guns and 500 cavulry\ntinder tb'.' c immand of M <>hmoud t'nsha\nSami, Irom Salihtvah. The euemv ha I\nal'ogeth< r l.'.OiM) men. Sntr.r.lat night\np used quit tly, the eneiuy hiving dis-\nopp are<l b.tiud the oi.trencluuentK\nAt da) break Siuday th < English b-gun\nto throw up nllo pits arouud Kassastdti,\ninorj-r t> pruveut Arabi approaching\nne*r enough to shell the camp\nIt wuh not through any fault of tbo\nrebel leader* tluit the attack yesterday\nby Arahi Pasha was unsuccessful. For\nn quarter of mi hour the position of the\nEnglish force aud ramp looked cx-\nceeuiugly riiticul. as the infantry wna\niu danger of bing outflanked. The\ncommanding position* were all in \nenemy's hand*, while lino alter line of\nhis tnfuu ry and cava ry were sern\ncrossing the sandhills. General Lovo\ncame to the relief of the British inTnn\ntry with a cavalry forco anil thieatemog\nthe euemy'rt 1 ft, forced him to ill list\ncontinuing his dauking inoreiueuts.\nTile rebel ciVulry fell back >nl (or\nhalf an hour, etch tried to get around\nthe otti. - r . \\Vu»n the enemy saw their\ngtiLH taken, they baited nod made a\n>h>v of adraucing ut if to recapture\nthem, but a volley from the inatiu*s\ndissipated that idea, aud they contin\nued their ri tuat.\nThe Higlmd Brigade, which Irft\nSaturday, only advanced twelve miles,\nllie weather was extremely hot and the\nWen Buffered teinbly. Two of them\ndied from >-un stroke aud a few oth- rs\nare not expeoteti to live. Two hundred\nmen fell out of ttio rauks during Satur¬\nday's march. Egyptians at linir El\nUtvar appeur to hare brought up oue or\ntwo mortars of heavy calibre. Toe fire\nfrjin them, however. i* so inaccurate\nthat they are practically inoffeusive.
128a51a4a28d579039b9563fef809cf4 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.2616438039067 41.681744 -72.788147 and Nora Warren Roche. He re-\nceived his primary education in ihe\nschools of New Britain and was\ngraduated Irom the New liritain\nhigh school In 190,r . Thereafter he\nattended Holy Cross college and was\ngraduated in 19n. He then en-\ntered Yale law school and was a\nmember of the graduating class of\n1912 and in the same year was ad-\nmitted to the Connecticut bar. He\nbecame associated in the offices of\nJudge John Walsh and Judge James\nT. Meskill, both of whom were\nmembers of the firm in which Heniy\nP. Roche's father, the late Judge\nJames W. Roche was an active\nmember. Later Henry P. Roche be-\ncame associated with Joseph T.\nOlover and at the time of his death\nwas associated in the practice of\nlow with Thomas J. Cabelus.'\n"In 1927 he was appointed a judge\n the city and police courts of New\nliritain. over which, he presided un-\ntil his death on the Kith day of Jan-\nuary, 1929. at the age of 41 years.\n"The cleat h of Judge Henry P.\nRoche has brought great sorrow to\nthe hearts of a large host of friends.\nAs a judge of the city and police\ncourts he brought to the duties of\nhis office a sincerity, conscientious-\nness and ability that won the esteem\nand admiration of lie members of\nthe Bar. He was a good lawyer, of\nsterling1 character and high ideals\nand his work in the courts was an\ninspiration to his fellow lawyers.\n"Alvvajs modest and retiring, his\nwas a sweet and lovable personality.\nAlthough he was ailing for some\ntime, it was his remarkable courage\nand spirit that made it possible for\nhim to have performed,
13c362821ad0e5c692321fbc37da1724 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.1301369545915 58.275556 -134.3925 Ad exchange especially commends\ntwo points io the report of the recent\ngraud jury. One i9 that a special fund\nbe placed at the disposal of the U. S.\nmarshal for the purpose of hunting\ndown criminals, and the other that\nnatives be punished for soliciting\nliquor. About tifty per ceut of the\ncases of a criminal nature that take up\nthe time of the federal courts in Alaska\narise from the fact that the natives\nhave a liking for the white man's\nwhiskey. The government invests\nthousands of dollars each year in dig¬\nging up these cases and bringing them\nto trial, and has a corps of trained ex¬\nperts to find them, for if they do not,\nthere is always a danger that they will\nlose their jobs to others more expert.\nSo, it is uot strange many a poor\nIndian is led into evil way9, and a\n"peddler" is baled into court, where he\n% b tried and very often convicted upon\nthe evidence of the Indian victim and\nthe government agent, who In some\ncases is suspected of knowing in ad¬\nvance that a crime is going to be com¬\nmitted. Any oue who has thought\nseriously of the matter will now admit\nthat the federal plau for separating the\nthe Alaska Indian from liquor is a flat,\ndismal failure in so far as the natives\nare concerned, and an infernal nuisance\nto the white men who ate forced to\nspend days and months of valuable\ntime listening to the foolish tales. And\nuow for Alaskans to ask that still\nfurther technicalities be tacked on to\nthe matter looks like the climax of\nfolly.
d0a11bcd935fad8d59c477efcb57594f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.6789617170107 41.681744 -72.788147 Wed Watcrbury Man Jiocd of\nSewerage System Is Felt\nBecause members of the Chamber.\nof Commerce at a meeting hold last\nnight decided not to hold an outing\nthis year, there has been a great\ndeal o( discussion by merchants and\nother citizens today against the de\ncision of the chamber. Until two\nyears igb the outings were hiore or\nless of an annual event with the\nchamber. Last year plans were\ncompleted for the outing but after\na large number of tickets had been\nsoldsthe affair was suddenly called\noff. It is the consensus of opinion\namong many that several of the\nchamber members who are employ\ned in local fMMries have enjoyed\noutings of these concerns and don't\nfeel that it Is essential for the cham-\nber to hold an outing.\nAt the meeting last night, which\nwas not well attended, several mem\n voiced their opinions in: regard\nto the outing and the majority felt\nthat none should be held this year.\nOne of the prominent members of\nthe chamber is alleged to have\nstated that it la a difficult problem\nto furnish transportation to these\noutings and that, the whole affair\nseemed to be a question of those at-\ntending receiving free automobile\nrides to the shore. From what could\nbe learned today there were several\nchamber members present who do\nnot own automobiles and who would\nnot give vent to their thoughts\nafter the above remark was alleged\nto have been made. According to a\nmerchant who was present the mem-\nber who Is alleged to have uttered\nthe above remark but recently pur-\nchased an automobile and in other\nyears had been dependent upon\nfriends to take him to the place of\nthe outing.
03e44fcd93d3015b09460ab77b84f018 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1886.878082160071 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. Jos. Duncan, o! East Wheeling, hat\nl|een confined to his hoino for eovoral\nmonths, ivith luug disease. Little hopes\nare entertained oi his recovery,\nMr, John X. Clemens died yesterday\nafternoon at his home in Pittslmgh. lie\nformerly lived In Wheeling, and will be\nremembered bv old residents. His father\nrecently died Horn.\nC. (1. llewllt, oftho U. 8. Ariny; II. J.\nMuglnr, of Grafton, J. J . Oriswoil.of New\nAlexander, 0.: IS. 14. Nowton, of Wash¬\nington, I'a.j \\y. J, Shaffer, of Tnnnelton,\nwere at the Mcl. iro yesterday.\nBon. J . Marsh liagaus ol Morgan town,\nwas at tho McLnre House yesterday.\nThis well-known Htpubllcin was elected\na member ol the House of Delegates at\ntho list election. He will be ono of the\nleaders In t'ust body,\nMiss Minnie Gilchrist entertained \nnumber of her frionds In on Informal\nmanner at her home at Lsntherwood last\nevening, including several from tho city.\nMiss Gilchrist leaves to-day for Clarks¬\nburg wfoerp sbp will spend tho winter.\nAt the enumeration r| It;v. Alfred A.\nCurtis, as Bishop of Wilmington, which\nsolemn catomonlal took place at Balti¬\nmore on Sunday Isst, Ulght R»v. J. J.\nKaln, Bishop of this diocoso, officiated as\nFirst Assistant Conwcrator, filling the\nojjlcs next to tho Cardinal's.\nIt Is oa|d that [)r. it, 8. Harvey, former,\nly of Wheeling, wm recently nqmlflatcd\nfor the Legislaturo iu Slioshouo county,\nIdaho. A paper out there says of liimi\n"Hoc" Is a Democrat of the Vallandlgham\nbreod and was never known to soar a\ntlckot. Ho is straight, two-stamped goods,\nand possesses ability equal to the emer¬\ngency.
0ff2a58ce8b54722b7e6f92425b9c86e THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1895.9027396943177 38.894955 -77.036646 Is attained to this fact, though It is a\nnubjecv ta-- c every ma.i at times touthesnn.\nHe wai a consistent number of E Street\nBaptist Church and of LaFayettc Lodge,\nF. A. A M. lie was exempljry In his habits\nand did not dnok.\nHe spent Sunday eveuing with his fam\nily ami ieemt-- 1 then to be in normal Health\nand spirits. He retired at bis usual hour.\nYesterday morning he arose at 7 o'clock,\ndressed In hl3 regular buiiness clotbesiand\ndescended lo tbe breakfast room, where\nhe ate In the company of his mother and\nhis brother, Frederick R. Parks.\nIlls family noted" nothing wrong about\nhis manner. Alter the meal lie went to\nbis room, the third story front, na was\nhis habit before going to his office.\nThe weapon, a double action\n was pressed against bis face\nnear the mouth.\nThe ball passed upward through the\nbead, broke through the top of the skull\nPand lodscd in the ceding.\nPolly Slaughter, the house maid, was\ncleaning up the rooms lu the second story\nwhen she heard the report of the pUtol\nniul tho thnd nf numclhlnf- - nn tt fell to the\nfloor above her. Sl.e hastened tn the door\nof Park's room and It yielded enough for\nher to sec that a man was lying ou the\nIljor with feet against the door.\nWith a Ecreani ebe hurried to the parlor\nfloor, and notified Mrs. Parks that some-\nthing awful had happened in Mr. George's\nroom. The mother rushed np stairs, and\napplying all her strength to the door poshed\nit open rar enough tosce the bloody spectacle\nwithin.
18df8712f20fd7a54b7aeb18c4b54630 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.9275955967921 39.745947 -75.546589 New York, »Doc. 5. —In the absence of\nJehu D. Playback William E. Dinlgo pro-\nftuhxl at the sworn! day's session of tin» Chris­\ntian conference at Chickwing luill. The\nRev. Vincent 1iscck, jumtor of a.Hobotuian\nmission church, was the first fjvakor. Ilo\nsaid that the «30,000 Bohemians in thh> city\nwere, contrary to general nssumptioa, a\npeaceful lot, well dis; tosetl toward church\nanil religion. But the Bohemian colony wiw\ncursed with the tenement house system of\ncigarmaking, prolific of many evils. Once\nfairly prosperous, it had within recent years\nsutTertHl privation and want.\nThe Bev. Antonio Arrighi, minister of the\nItalian chapel at the Five Points IIousa of\nIndustry, urged the necessity of educating\nhis countrymen, who come here without evil\nintention, but densely ignorant of the nature\nof free institutions. They must be reached\nby iiursonal effort or not at all.\nRev. II. Monroe (colored) apoko kindly\nof a Catholic church that hud re-enforced\nthe three Protestant places of worship in\nstriving with the tough colored element in\nThompson street. About 7,000 of the 80,000\nnegroes in the city attended church, ho said,\nmid their nine churches were filled every\nSabbath night. But the Hunday school work\nwas behind, and workers were badly needed.\nDr. MacArtbur, of the Calvary Baptist\nchurch, thought it was the duty of the com­\nmunity to receive the immigrants, but to\ninsist that they must stay as Americans.\nThey should be brought into the churches.\nHe thought little of mission churches. The\nl> st churches wore none too good for the\npxirest, and they should bo always open.\nAt the evening fusion the Hev. Richard\nHartley presented the results of nineteen\nyears of work of the Baptist city mission.\nBeginning with an annual collection of
0938c2543cb89cdeb00d5ead223c141a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.1136985984272 39.745947 -75.546589 sert big rcu-noiiK;rar.se« agin' the bill,\nto Scnater MeredfYn an Representa­\ntive Jester. Sum cf ttw grjrb at Farn-\nliuret has sent mo wurd as hew they\nhav to go to dansin' skml over in\nWilmi.ngton, an' they couldn think of\neoenln home om that late trane ef\nthem germs wuz cut loose. Jason Da-\nvCs. George Moore. Paul Gillis, John\nLevy, Harry Lyons, Samuel Sanders,\nThtmas Parry, Henry Mbore, Jim\nKKvfngi on. Leslie Wite, an Dave Mar­\ngin has sent a remon»;reuse to Seni­\nler M tFarXn agin the passage cf the\nbid, Taey say as hew ef them germ*\nyFs nt an tramps over their wheat\nor ttys up on there outbildlns an busts\nshinstics off they're again to hoi the\nStatt liable fur damiges. Theyre put­\ntin iren bars to their winders an'\nsendin' there famlles into Wilmington.\nA feller named Cambell riles frum\nNewark as haw he has to go to Farn-\nhurat in the evenin leve there\nlate at nit*, an that ef the bill posses\nhe's got to stop fur fear of them germs\ngiftin' out an eatin' bis boss. To-day\nI got a letter from a Na Oassil feller\nnamed Bakin. He sez he's bin goin\nto Farnhum fur sum time, an that\nef this yere germ blit passes hes got\nto atop, fur them germs has got a\ngrudge agin hfm- A fetter who sines\nhisself Mister Orossland of nere Sent\nGeorges, sez hell go a-gunnln fur ev­\nery member as votes a.gin the bill, fur\nhe dont propose to hav his soahel\npleahur broke up ef he knows hisself,\nan he thinks he doe*. Young Frank\nMickoy is afeerd he'll hav' to git up\nat da'Xte an' help feed an curry an'\nrub down them germs, an he's a kick­\nin', too, fur hes gtot somethin else to\ndo Jes now. The cnily feller uip there'\nas his perferkty satisfied is Docter\nHanker.
05c29beae988897451e90bec655db6d2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.250684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 great difference in the two intentions\nis now very apparent and becoming\nmore so every day, because in each\n• a sc the means employed has proved\nIneffectual to bring about the success\ndesired. Addlcks (ht as the means has\nnot brought the success these republi­\ncans desire. The party as (he means\nhas not brought success to Addlcks.\nConsequently they are both compelled\nto seek other help. Addlcks has turned\nto the democratic party, he has\nreived and is seeking more assistance\nin that quarter—in fact he thinks his\nsalvation depends upon it. But how\ncan this action on the part of Addicks\nbe acceptable to the republicans who\nhave been willing to use Addicks as a\nmeans to defeat these same demo­\ncrats and when we say same we mean\nJust what we say. because the very\nsame who ns leaders and di­\nrectors of that party have made it a\nstench in nostrils of all good Dela­\nwareans and so unbearable to repub­\nlicans that they are willing to accept\nany means that promised delivery, are\nrtic very same democrats who are now\nplying their trade of vicious political\ndebauchery and trickery as democratic\nemissaries of Addicks. Is It any wonder\nthat good republicans are becoming\ndisgusted with Addicks, bis loaders and\nhis methods! Is it any wonder that\nself-respecting republicans who have\nhcretofoic supported the union repub­\nlican ticket and who must think and\ndo as the Addlcks leaders dictate, or bo\ndamned as traitors, are rebelling\nagainst such leadership and propose to\ndemand that honorable republican suc­\ncess m ist be the first and great object\nof mu who desire to pose as their\nleaders.
06e0d0b398cce12db7e06372c868ec65 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.3356164066463 40.063962 -80.720915 The sense of smell becomes impaired, th\neyes are weak, and, as the Inflammation ei\ntends up the eustacelan tubes into the lutei\nnal ear there Is partial deafness with throt\nblng. humming or ringing noises in the eaj\nJn sleep the Catarrhal matter is uncor\nscloubly swallowed, which, In time, d<\nranges the tomach and impairs dlgestloi\ncausing dyspepsia and a multiplicity of dli\ncord ant symptoms, "which are often mil\ntaken for other diseases. To the foregolm\nadd the fact that every breath of air draw\nInto the lungs Is drawn oyer the disease\nsurfacs, femerlng with Catarrhal matter, an\nwho can deny the assertion that to neglet\nCatarrh Is to invite Consumption:\nConsumption is tne one prevailing diseas<\nat the present day, with which the youn\nand mfddle'ageu die. And yet very seldoi\ndo the lungs receive the primary shock J\nla first 4,a cold in the head," which resolve\ninto Catarrh, from which the su:ec\nfeels t o alarm, until, step by step, itxeachc\nthe lungs, when all attempts at cure are 111\ntie better than blind experiments.\nWith every Incentive to enjoyment an\nusefulness, there are hundreds all around u\ndying In the morning of life, of CoiiMimj:\ntion, who can iook back six months, a yea]\nor longer, a* the case may be, to a time whei\nIt was "but catarrh." Neglected at a tim\nwhen (properly treated) a cure was possible\nsilently and almost Imperceptibly it ha\ntransformed the bright, raddy features c\nyouth into the dull, wan listlessness of pre\nmature age, as it has drunk up the vltalit;\nfrom the blood and fluids of the waste\nframe, and now, when hope is dead, and tb\nlife forces one by oue are ebbing away, th\nmind turns mournfully backward to Mwha\nmight have been," and tremblingly forwar\nto what soon must be,
7e538ee69eb8c4570759fbed0aa2619c NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.987671201167 41.681744 -72.788147 told Judg.. Roche that I'ilree is one\nof Ihe best men in the country in the\nconstruction busin ss but he is un-\nfortunate in his appetite for liquor.\nOnce before he had a narrow escape\nfrom being charged with this offense\nand whatever disposition was made\nin the. present instance, it should be\na warning to him to leave drink\nalone at leart while operating a car.\nAttorney Smith of Meriden entered\na plea of guilty for Pierce and asked\ntor a money penalty rather than a\njail sentence. He said Pierce is In\ncharge of some very important con-\nstruction work for the H. Wales\nLines Co. of Meriden and on Decem-\nber 20 he was in New Britain to en-\ngage, labor. At the home of one\nlaborer he drank what he thought\n mild wine but as he was driving\nalong West Main street near the\n"Midway" he realized that the wine\nwas more potent than he had be-\nlieved. In an Instant his car had\ncollided with one driven by Charles\nGifford, aged 27 of 15 Kelsey street.\nMotorcycle Officer W. S . Strolls\ntestilied that he made the arrest be-\ntween 5 and C p. m. and Pierce was\nnot in tit condition to operate a car.\nGifford. having been unable to pro-\nduce, his license or certificate of reg-\nistration, was fined $3 on the first\ncharge and discharged on the sec-\nond. He told Judge Hoche the cer-\ntificate of registration was not in the\nplace he expected it to be when he\ntried to find it after the accident.\nLater he found it in the car.
4b4081c6f99c0a9efee56e0a2b02951d COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.3657533929477 41.262128 -95.861391 In le4o or '47, i was thesuperintendent\nof a cocoanut estate belonging to a Mr-\nArmitage, situated about twelve miles\nfrom Negumbii. A roeue elephant did\nconsiderable injury to the estate at that\ntime; and one day, hearing that it was\nthen on the plantation, a Mr. Lindsay,\nwho was proprietor of the adjoining prop­\nerty, and myself, accompanied by seven\nur eight pepie of the neighboring village,\nwent out, carrying with us six ridetf load­\ned and primed. We continued to wtiik\nalong a path which, near one of its turn*,\nhad some bushrs ou one side. We had\ncalculated to come up to the brute where\nit had been seen half an hour before; but\ni no sooner had one of our men, who was\n|walking foremost, 4*en the animal at the\nI distance of sotne fifteen or twentv fath-\n| oros than he exciaimcd : "There! tliere!"\nj and immediately took to his heels, and we\nail followed his example. elephant\ndid not see us until we had run souie fif­\nteen or twenty paces from the spot where\nwe turned, when bn gave us chase, scream­\ning frightfully as he caiae ou. The Eng­\nlishman managed to climb a tree, and the\nrat of my companions did the samo ; as\nfor mvseif, I couid not, although 1 made\none or two superhuman efforts. But then-\nwas no time to be lost. 1he elephant was\nrunning at me with bis trunk bent down\nin a curve towards the ground. At this\ncritical moment Mr. Liadsey held out hi*\nfoot to me, by which, with the help of\nthe branches of the tree, which were time\nor feet above my bead, i managed to\na branch. The elephant came directly to\ntb» tree, and attempted to forc i it down,\nwhich tie could not. lie first coiled his\ntrunk around the stem, and pulled with\nall his might but with no effect. II; then
1a7ca625c5c5ae241c7eca07d5c602de THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1900.5082191463723 41.004121 -76.453816 ter. They cluster upon the twigs and\nsmaller branches often crowded to\ngether on the under side of the twigs.\nwithin the past few days the eggs,\nwhich are very numerous under the\nbody of each scale insect, have been\nhatching and the young insec'.s, mere\nbrown specks, are moving about by\nthe thousands over the twigs. These\nminute bark lice walk up the twigs\nwaving their delicate antenae, in\nsearch of more tender food on the\nnew growth. When they have found\nit they insert their tiny beak, a suck-\ning proboscis and become fixed for\nlife feeding upon the juices of the\npeach tree. A few of them can do\nno appreciable injury to a tree, but\nwhen they nppear by the thousands\nas they do this season damage\nis caused by them, and remedial\nmeasures should be adopted. The\nmost satisfactory remedy for these\nscale insects is kerosene emulsion made\nby the usual formula sent out by the\nExperiment Station and applied with\na spray pump hojc: wnne tne young\ninsects arc creeping about and before\ntheir mature scale covering is devel-\noped, their destruction with this in-\nsecticide is quite easy and sure. Not\nall the trees in an orchard will be at\ntacked and it is necessary to treat\nthose only which are affected.\nThe orchardist should have a hand\nmagnifying glass to make frequent ob-\nservations to determine if the insects\nhave been killed by the application\nand if any have escaped with life after\ntwo days a second application should\nbe made.
5a92dee666b9829e708d75e6b28cf196 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.9767122970572 41.004121 -76.453816 In 18GS and was in failing circumstan\nces; that ho gavo a bill of sale of the\ngoods to Evans upon some terms which\nhad reference to tho payment of his\ndebts; that ho continued in possession\nof tho storo fur about thirteen days af-\nter tho salo when Evans took possession\nof tho goods and proceeded to tell most\nof them out by auction on various\nevenings during tho months of Ausust\nand September, and that somo other\nproperty covered by tho bill of salo was\nnppliod by Hartman, or by him and\nEvans about tho same time to tho pay-\nment of some small debts which tho\nformer owod. Tho defendant nlledced\nthat tho proceeds of fho auction .sales\nand of somo private sales mado by him\nwero applied by him to tho payment of\ncertain ol u.utman's debts pursuant to\na proierenco of creditors.mado by Hart\nman when tho bill orsalo was executed,\n that iu fact ho hud paid out to cred-\nitors about $75 more than had actually\ncomo into his hands. It appoarod ho\nnau paid back debts to tlio amount of\n$G50mid $100 besides on a ball debt.\nbut the value of tho goods which camo\nInto his hands was In dlsputo mid was\nnot clearly ascertained. Besides his tes-\ntimony and that or Hartman were In\ndirect coulllct as to tlio terms and oh- -\nJects of tho original contract of sale\ntho defendant averring that ho was to\npay tlio preferred debts (including ono\nor the bank debts ou which lie was en\ndorser) and that his engagement to do\nso was tho consideration for tho transfer\nto him of tho goods, while Hartuian\nasserted that'tho transfer was mado to\nhinder creditors and to nllow him to go\non with his business and pay creditors\nin a sonrowhat different order ot prefer\nenco.
a51b6be75c045405e2a467cee5fe3685 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.2991802962456 41.681744 -72.788147 Newfoundland and Labrador. It is\nabout 20 miles distant as the crow\nflies from Point Amour, on the shore\nof Newfoundland, Labrador, where\ntoday a lighthouse is located and a\nradio station, both maintained by the\nNewfoundland government. Greenly\nIsland also boasts a lighthouse of its\nown. I.ts keeper is a very interesting\nman indeed and considerable of a\nmechanical genius. Most of his\nnights arc spent in tending the light\nand his days in sleep and in careful\noiling and tending the machinery\nnecessary for its operation. He has\nquite a little machine shop of his\nown in the building connected with\nthe lighthouse. Several years ago he\nwas the only man along the Labra-\ndor coast who could boast a motor\ncar. This car was a product of Hen-\nry Ford's factory in Detroit and was\ndriven on a wooden track laid down\nfrom shore to shore over the round-\ned back of the I have ridden\nwith the owner and Sir Wilfred\nGrenfell over the island more than\nonce. Gasoline Is the means of lo-\ncomotion. When the trip has been\nmade across the island south to\nnorth, the car is put in reverse and\nyou ride backwards north to south.\nIt gives quite a sense of speed to be\nshooting along over the rocks on\nthe wooden track at the funeral\nrate of 10 or 12 miles per hour and\nhas been a source of no little diver-\nsion to multitudes of fishermen and\nvisitors on Greenly Island.\n"As I remember it, this island is\nremarkably smooth and rounded\nover the surface. Many of the fishing\ncrews from William Job's Sons fish\ning fleet at Blano Sablon (White\nSand) Newfoundland and Labrador,\nhave been accustomed to spread\ntheir great nets out over a smooth\nrock for hundreds of yards, drying\nthem and mending them there in the\nsunshine.
a696f35ed9b2000055b86ff0be60d711 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1923.560273940893 41.681744 -72.788147 Bedroom sceije farces which really\nare laughable but which are not suf-\nficiently suggestive to annoy anyone in\nthis modern age are the exception,\nand it is the exception that the -ne -\nToll Flayers feature in at the Palace\nin Hartford this week in their presen-\ntation of 'The Girl in the Limousine."\nAs usual, all the members of the com-\npany are excellent in their parts and\nin this week's show Frank McHugh\nhas the leading role in lieu of Jlr.\nHoward who has been suddenly called\nto California. Asa leading man, Mr.\nMcHugh could not be Improved upon\nIn this type of play. Master of light\ncomedy, skilled in quick repartee and\nfacial expression, this popular player\ncarries off the male honors this week.\nMary Ann Dentler, the leading wom\nan, has a winsome uttie pan \nFrances Williams, as the austere Aunt\nCicely from the west who is the acme\nof propriety, plays her part most con-\nvincingly. Others are equally happily\ncast, William Blake as the jealous\nyoung newlywed; Harold Kennedy as\nBiggs, a butler who loans his clothes\nand gets caught in a lady's bedroom\ntans wearing apparel; Victoria Mont-\ngomery as l.ucla Galen who also gets\ninto the bed room mixup, and Kuth\nThomas, as Bcmice Warren, another\ninvolved in the sleeping apartment\nmuddle. Frank Bishop has the part\nof a chauffeur, small but necessary to\nexplain the mystery, and James Coots,\nnewcomer, goes at top speed\nthroughout as Dr. Jimmie Galen who\nthinks he sees things. Jay Hay and\nEdwin Vail have minor parts tfs\ncrooks. In a word, the play evolves\naround young Mrs. Neville and Tony\nHamilton.
206574f6a41ae0938d9668cfcf4ccd6f NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.2909835749342 40.735657 -74.172367 549 5 Morris Potoker, 40 Beacon.10 85\n14 Charles Genaldo. 42 -46 Beacon.1 97\n19 Abraham Lenner, 50 Beacon.1 97\n550 21 Max Rodburg. 59 Beacon.2 97\n552 2 Alfred Poplk, 23 Beacon.2 97\n553 18 W Mol Insky. 20 Jones.2 97\n557 2 Samuel Schilling. 73 Jones.1 97\n15 B Zyndka, 69 Jones.1 97\n28 Paola Colciano, 61 Jones.2 97\n551 18 Peter F Smith. 61 Jones.5 91\n20 Valentine Wagner. 49 Jones.4 94\n559 8 M Strouch, 45 Jones.2 97\n9 M Lefsky. 45 Jones.2 97\n22 B Klaper. 43 Jones.2 97\n27 Peter W Smith. 41 -39 Jones. 4 94\n360 3 N Rothstetn. 35 Jones.2 97\n15 Z Odesky. 29 Jones.2 97\n561 35 Michael Bates. 3 Jones.2 97\n563 19 Felix Nufrio. 72 Hayes.2 97\n565 9 Brewing Co, 40-28 Hayes..788 00\n34 Rocco De Stefano. 17 Hayes.4 94\n566 20 James Seen. 35 Hayes.2 97\n28 James Montefusco. 39 Hayes.2 97\n567 33 Morris Ramo, 57 Hayes.1 97\n570 4 Louis Barish, 43-41 Bedford.4 94\n5 Louis Keeler. 43 -41 Bedford.1 97\n15 Eupllo Bonavlta, 33 Bedford.2 97\n20 Saverto Azzara. 31 Bedford.2 97\n23 S Azzara & Co. 29 -27 Bedford... 3 94\n571 14 Felgenberg Bros. 19 Bedford.5 91\n572 3 Flllippo Tngallina. 5 Bedford.2 97\n5 A Tamburro. 5 Bedford.I 97\n27 F Tenore, 8 Bedford.2 97\n574 15 Reives & Golden. 34 -36 Bedford...3 94\n23 Newark Fireproof Sash and Door\nCo. 42 -44 Bedford.. .3 94\n30 Charles H McKee. 41 -50 Bedford .4 94\n576 6 N J Chandelier Co. 16 -18 Prospect
11875230e8aa1f7aee1e4a8763db6349 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1899.891780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 Last night at 8:30 o'clock, Mr. Conra\nHirst h walked Into the cigar store c\nM. IS. Hashar, on Sixteenth street, al\nmost within the shadow of the clt\ntuilding. to buy cigars. Mr. Pashar, c\nthe time, was engaged at his desk, I\nth^ room at the rear. As Mr. HIrsc\ntame in. Mr. Bashar walked out int\nthe store. Just at this moment, a lh\nIng bundle ot rags.or what both me\nthought »vas such.shuffled'out froi\nbehind the counter. It was a little co\nored girl, nine or ten years of age, an\nin her hand she had two dollar bill\nand throe silver dollars. The littl\nthing actually had the effronteiy <\nclaim she had come Into the store wit\nthe money, but the open money drawt\nand its disarranged appearance ga\\\nthe He to her statement, and Mr. Bai\ntar promptly took the money. He the\nallowed the girl to go, but ex-3quit\n. Arklp Informed the police, and Lleuter\nant Suppler hurried out after the youn\nthlof. He came to the girl, accoir\npanied by a boy compunlon, on th\nPostofllce corner, and they were brougl\nto police headquarters. .The girl'\nJJiXIIIt? HUB i\\IIUIC ncuiliU, UIIU IMC UUJ\nCash Brown, the latter known to til\npolice on Hcveral former occasions c\nJuvenile depravity. The girl confesse\nshe took the money, and that she ha\nalso entered the same store last Satui\nday and taken $3 12, an amount whic\nMr. Basilar aald he missed that nigh\nThe girl implicated others in the theft:\nincluding Mary Jane Miller, daughtt\nof Mrs. Maggie Miller, who Is said (\nreside at 1(M0 Chapline street; Dav\nSmith and Nell Robinson, colored boyi\nami George Bradford, a white bo:\nThe Miller girl, she said, "put her up\nto the thefts. The Miller girl and th\nRobinson and Smith boys were late\narrested, hut all were released o\npromises of future good behavior. M:\nand Mrs. Hearne, who were greatly dl?\ntr-ssed over the occurrence, promise\n1" make good the $3 12 theft of last Sal\nvt lay.
210467b9fd9963ac4c8d0f1b3101ae0c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.5931506532218 40.063962 -80.720915 >osom or the venerable "mother of t\nitates." A large majority of the south-\nirn eoil of our State sympathised with\nbe rebellion, and Illy conoeal their ut- J\nor oonteiupt for what they speak of\nbe *ao called Btate of West Virginia.'\nHere, then, within a -very few years\nwill be the question.and the motive\nand the purpose of those who secured\n. bo location of the capital at Charles-\non, was to hasten the return of West\nVirginia from whenoe she came.\nInextricably burdened with an op«\npreeslve system of taxation, as our ag\nrlcultural classes soon must be, our\npeople In their desperation may, like\nthe prodigal, return to the parent roof,\nVirginia, rich in historic fame, in\nnatural resources, Is now awakenlngjo\nuew life.* Her slave-ocraoy.a thing of\nbe | an; emigration from the is\nitifUHing new life Into all her lndnatries,\ntnd at the very time, loo, when our j\npolicy is one of repression. Is it not ]\nnotorious that more people are leaving\n>ur Stale than come to us. That our\npresent system of taxation is unwlaeia\ni prevalent conviction, On a farm\nworth 15000. taxes in West Virginia\nwould be about fiX); in Pennsylvania\ntbout |40.and double the present rates\nmust be iinpoded In this State ibis year\nor next, if our various public build-\nlogs are to be completed. i\nWhat, then, In view of all these faolo,\nIs the duty of our people? It la to send\ngentleuieu to Wheeling well qualified\nto repreeeut us, and the Slate at large,\nand keep the 'blind puppets' at home\nwhere tbey can do no mischief.\nThen the next aueatinn
039c8842f0e8c839b2243b8ad340dca2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6260273655505 40.063962 -80.720915 White Pine Compound\nTS NOW OFFERED TO THE AFFLICTED\ni throughout the country, after bavine\nbeen proved bv the t«t of eleven year». In\nthe New England states, where its merits\nhave become as well known as? the u«* from\nwhich, in part, it derives its virtues.\nTlie White Fine Compound Care**\nSore Throat, Colds', Coughs. Dlptheria,\nBronchitis, Spitting of Flood, and Pulmon¬\nary Affections generally. It Ls a remarkable\nRemedy for Kidney Complaints, Diabetes.\nDifficulty of Voiding Urine. Bleeding from\nthe Kidneys audBladder, Gravel, and other\ncomplaint*.\nThe White Pine Compound,\n"It wbn early in tbe spring of *52 that th<n\ncompound whs orijrfnated. A member of my\nfamily was afflicted with an irriLat:on of the\nthroat attended with a disagreeable cough. I\nhnd for some months previous thought that\na preparation having for Its basis the ln<ide\nbark of white pine might be mi compounded\na^ to be very u>eful in di*earen of the throat\nand lungs. To tettf the value of It in the\nalluded to. I compounded a small quantity\nof the medicine that I hail been planning\nand gave It in teaspoonful dosea. The result\nwas exceedingly gratifylng. Within two\ndays the irritation of the throat was remov¬\ned, the cough hubsided a speedy cure\nwa* effected, soon after this I sent some to\na lady In Londonderry, N. H., who ha«i been\nraffenng for some weeks from a bad cough,\noccasioned by a sudden cold, aud had raised\nmucus btreaked with bl od. She soon found\nrelief and sent lor more. Hue took about\nten ounces of It, and got well. J. B. Clarke.\nEsq., editor or the Manchester Dally Mirror,\nmade a trial of the same preparation in the\ncase of a severe cold and was cured immedi¬\nately. He was so highly pleased with the re-\nsuits, and so confident in tucceesattendim; its\nMdes. if placed before the public, that he\nanally persuaded me to give it a name, "'"1\nsend it abroad to benefit the suffering. In\nNovember, 1855, 1 firet advertised it under\nthe name of White Pine Compound. In wo\nyears from that time tikere had been whole¬\nsaled In Manchester alone one hundred dol¬\nlars worth, where it took the lead of all the\ncough remedies in the market, and it still\nmaintains tnat position. There is good rea¬\nson for this; it is very soothing and healing\nin its nature; is warming to the stomach and\npleasant withal to the taste, and Li exceed¬\ningly cneap.
24e791c81c1f4427a3c9b4630a181013 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.2589040778792 39.745947 -75.546589 A voluntary was then rendered by the\nchoir, entitled "Shout a Loud Hosanna,"\nafter which the Rev. William L. White\nwas introduced and spoke very feelingly\nof the relations that he bad had with\nEpworth; of his start in the work from\nher altars; of the many good and faithful\nministers who had served her during\nmany long years; of her long struggles\nwith délit, and discouragements, and of\nher evident "getting a move on,” having\nmoved twice and now of the progress\nthe church had made at her present lo­\ncation; of the bright prospects that were\nabend of hcr. aud closed by saying that\nthere was one who would never forget\nEpworth and that one was himself, for\nthe benefits he had received at her hands.\nA solo and chorus by Miss Pearla\nSmith aud the junior choir then followed,\n which the Rev. Dr. Smith was In­\ntroduced to the audience, and very en­\nthusiastically received.\nHe remarked at the beginning that he\nwas somewhat embarrassed because of\nthe many "extravagant" eulogies that\nhad been pronounced iu his favor by the\npreceding speakers, and only hoped that\nthe predictions would lie more than real­\nized. He was here, he believed, through\nDivine Providence, and had llie convie\ntion that, ho was just where God wanted\nhim to be. He was here for serious busi­\nness. and hoped lo be the means and in­\nstrument in Gods bands of bringing the\nmembership to higher\ntheir Master. His remarks were directed\nmore especially at the spiritual life of the\nchurch, and he impressed all with a man­\nly courage, a strong purpose to do good,\nand a determination lo lift the member­
15aa480c5217f588d18420559ff1b0fd THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1886.7301369545917 41.004121 -76.453816 had to come before every diocesan con\nvention of tho church durinc tho en\nsuiug three years, and now it is to\ncome before the General Convention\narrain for final aotion. What that final\naction will bo it is hard to say: but\ntho indications aro that tho proposed\nbook will not be accoptcd in its present\nform. Extremo high churchmen are\nfouud opposing, because it does not eo\nfar enough to suit them, and they wish\nto defer any revision uutil they are\nstrong enough to control it themselves.\nBroad churchmen aro also found op-\nposing it because tho revisers have\nbeen too timid on the ono hand, and\ntoo ecclesiastical on tho other; whilo at\ntho same timo tho book as revised\nwould denrive them of much of tho\nliberty which thoy now enjoy under\ntho vaguo lubncal wording oi mo\npresent book. They, therefore, equally\nwith the hign enurenmen, wisnio uo-f e- r\nany revision until they can direct it\nin lines of their own choosing. When\nto these two classes are added those\nwho have learned to love the Prayer\nBook as it is, and who aro therefore\nopposed to change on sentimental\ngrounds, it will be seen that there is a\nstrong opposition to tho Book Annexed.\nDr. W . 11. Huntington, nowover, ana\nthoso who aro so enthusiastically work-\ning with him, believe that after a full\ndiscussion tho convention will accept\ntho proposed book. If such should bo\nthe case it is the opinion of many in\ntho church that tho Episcopal Com\nmunion would bo vastly strengthened\nthereby, as its liturgy would be bettor\nadapted to tho needs ot mo age.\nTho proposition to chango tne namo\nof tho church from "Protestant Epis-\ncopal" to somo designation as "Ameri-\ncan Catholic" will doubtless again\ncomo up, and though tho proposition\nappears to be growing in strength, it is\nnot possiblo that it will be seriously\nconsidered. Very different in charac\nter is tho petition which will bo pre-\nsented to tho convention urging somo\naction looking toward a union with\ntho other great Protestant bodies.\nThis petitiou will bo signed by a largo\nnumber of clergymen and laymen of\ntho church; and though its signers\ndoes not boast of their Catholicism, it\nbreathes a spirit of tho truest Catholio-ity-
4fa8b8c55178aef0920366b640348180 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.2698629819888 31.960991 -90.983994 Holding these opinions then—holding that the\nbest, if not the only means, for the country to\nmaintain i s position among nations, and preserve\nits territorial, maritime, commercial and neigh­\nborhood rights, and, at the same time, the bles­\nsings of peace, is to bring forth the military re­\nsources of the country and prepare it for the\nshocks of war—holding these opinions, we were\nprepared to welcome the very forceful, candid and\nexplicit message of the President which we\npublish to-day, taking the subject of the national\ndefences in hand, unequivocally recommending\nthe improvement and extension of all our means\nof defence and active war. We do, therefore,\ncordially welcome it, and hope it may deeply im­\npress both Congress and the country. We wel­\ncome it as emphatically a peace message. In\nperusing it we felt, for the first time, some assur­\nance that peaceful relations might be maintained;\nand we believe they will be maintained, if its re­\ncommendations be carried out. and the country\npresent as it ought, a united front to its adversa­\n If one party in these great contests be pre­\npared for war, and the other naked of armor, there\ncan be but little hope ofpeace save in concessions\nnot to be thought of by a brave people. Especial­\nly must this be the case in contests that enlist\nsuch feelings as avowedly rankle in the hearts of\nEuropean Governments toward this country__\ncontests not to be settled in the adjustment of an\nisolated question, but the cause of which is per­\nmanent and its object to subdue and humiliate.\nIf our country continue naked as she is, it is not\nreasonable to count on the forbearance of adver­\nsaries who have the great advantage of entire\npreparation, and who may anticipate at least in\nthe first stages of a conflict, little ofthe horrors\nof war except those they inflict. With both par­\nties well equipped, however, and alike able to de­\nfend and destroy, the terrors and fruitlessness of\nsuch a conflict may well present themselves to\nthe minds of both, and in their contemplation lead\nto peace.
113a6c74c40533a2c057e11283a9924f CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1899.1849314751396 39.623709 -77.41082 The sir is first admitted into z cylinder\nwhere it is compressed to one-tenth Us\nvolume; this compression means that the\nreduced volume of air has become very warm\nand in order to cool it, it is passed in pipes\nthrough a tank containing cold water, which\nreduces It to the normal temperature, and\nand that means that the same amount of air\nis carrying only a portion of its beat sufficient\nto keep at a normal temperature a volume\nof one-tenth its original volume. In this\ncondition it is passed into a second cylinder\nwhere it is subjected to a further compression\nof 1000 pounds to the square inch, and after\nbeing again cooled it is passed into s third\ncylinder where it is put under s further\ncompression oi 3400 pounds per square inch.\nThis makes the volume very small, and it\ncan be readily seen that when this air is left\nto suddenly expand to its original voluma\nthis small amount of to so Urge a vol-\nume would bring it to an enormously low\ntemperature, but not yet sufficiently low as\nto cause it to become a liquid. After leafing\nthe third tank it passes through a long pipe,\nwhich is encased within another pipe; after\npassing through this it is released but caused\nto pass back through the larger pipe, and\nthus reduces the temperature of the air in\nthe smaller pipe to that of the compressed\nair on its sudden expansion, and leaves this\nair in its compressed state at a temperature\nas low as the compressed air has attained on\nits sudden expansion. ThU air in the smaller\npipe is now released into a tank where it can\nresume its original volume, but the mere mite\nofwarmth in it has to suffice for the larger\nvolume and this brings the larger volume to\nsuch a low temperature that it becomes a\nliquid and we have before us the wonder of\nthe age, liquid air.
7a222ebfeecada34720ff044facd4fc2 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.7109588723997 39.369864 -121.105448 The truth of the statement embodied in\nthis caption, so far as California is con-\ncerned, needs not to he proved by argument,\nalthough many unsound thinkers are fond\nof asserting the worthlessness of mines and\nminers. W. If. Rhodes, in the course of his\neloquent but unpliilosophical oration at the\nMarysville Fair observed that “a mining\npopulation—no matter how rich the mineral\ndeposits— is the poorest, and great mining\ncountries the weakest and most unprosper-\nous on the globe.” He then very inaptly\ncompared the mining regions of this State\nwith those of Mexico, South America, Asia\nand Europe, and rhetorically asserted of the\nminer, “that his pick is like the fiery hoof of\nAlarics courser—wherever it is driven into\nthe earth grass never grows again.” Now\nthe simple fact is that California owes her\nrapid progress and present eminent position\nto her prolific mines. Without the\ncountry would at some time have been set-\ntled, doubtless; but these have been the great\nstimulant, and will continue to be for many\nyears. Agriculture and the mechanic arts\nnow come in as adjuncts, and will ultimately\nbe chief elements of our prosperity, but at\npresent they are dependent upon the mining\ninterest. Any mineral country w hose miner-\nal resources can only be developed by in-\ntelligent labor and heavy investment of cap-\nital, must be prosperous. Were our mines\nso rich, as in the early days, that fortunes\ncould soon be picked up by idle vagabonds\nand flying adventurers, they would indeed\nbea curse. As it is,demanding persevering\nindustry and the outlay of much capital,\nthey retain a Lardy people in the State, stim-\nulate and'supporl other branches of indus-\ntry, become thronged with thrifty and fixed\ncomunities who cultivate the soil for its
1bd741fa33c81c2bc52240d9aa0acf91 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.2117486022566 40.063962 -80.720915 The question of electing Presiding\nKlders is not n new one. It goes hack\nalmost a- far us the history of Methodism\nin this country. The theory of the El-\ndership if that those who occupy the po-\nrtion are the representative* of the\nHishops. They are, however, amenable\nto their respective District Conferences,\nalthough not elected by said Conferences\nkit appointed hv the presidiug Bishop.\nWhen Mr. Wesley organized the Church\nin this country he suggested the selec-\nlion of a few Elders, and the (ieneral\nConference elected 12 jKjrsons to act ns\nsuch. To these 12, as to the original 12\nApostles, ihe destinies of Methodism on\nthis continent were largely committed.\nllidlirwt Auluirv ntul tlio dljlrint rnnfor.\nences found them so necessary in carry-\ning on the work that they agreed to en-j\nlurge the number, and gave them their\n name, viz.Presiding Elders.\nThey were regarded a* the |iersonal repre-\nsentative* of the Bishops, although not at\nfirst appointed by theui. "Their power is ho\nconsiderable that it would by no meant*\nbe sufficient for them to l»e responsible to\nthe Bishops only for their conduct in\noffice." This was the opinion expressed\nby Bishops Anbury and Coke, at the very\noutset of the existence *»f the Presiding\nKldership as an order in the church. As\nfar back as I7S0 it was laid down in the\nrules of the church that these Elders are\nelective, and their duties were defined to\nlie "to travel through his appointed dis-\ntrict; to administer baptism and the\nLord's Supper; in the absence of the\nbishop to take charge of all the deacons,\ntraveling and local preachers, and ex-\nhorters; and to change, receive and hus-\npend preachers."
0f4eb40467065810682a30143e66e30a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.7027396943176 39.745947 -75.546589 This phrase, recently applied to tem­\nperance literature by tho saloon defend­\ners. Is not a familiar one to temperano«\npeople. If ever there was a mine "salt­\ned" to deceive. It Is the mass of stuf*\nnow being published by the advocate«\nof license. The article that recently ap­\npeared In tho dally papers about Elkton,\nfor example, has scarce a semblance of\ntruth In it except names and dates. I\nwas In Elkton a few day a after the\nnameless Investigator, who evidently Is\nashamed to sign bis production, had\ncompleted Ids errand. 1 learned from\nreputable men whom ho Interviewed,\nthat they gave him a good account of\nthe Local Option law of Cecil county,\nand Its successful workings. Not one\nword of all these truthful representa­\ntions does he mention. On the other\nband there are always to be found\npeople In every community wno be­\ncause of life-long prejudice against ail\nprohibitory measures, or because their\nmustness Is heavily subsidized by tha\n"trade,'' or because they have felt the\ngrip of the law, which Is all too well\nenforced for their who can\nnever see any god In temperance legis­\nlation. The unfair and generally falsa\nstatements of such people as these,\nhave bet>ii eagerly published.\nOf the lust twelve years I have lived\nnine years in Cecil county nearly equal­\nly divided between the two towns,\nwhere prohibitory law Is most diffi­\ncult of enforcement. The remaining\nyears I have been called on to travel\nthroughout the county constantly, my\nprofession making it a duty to bo In­\nformed on this subject. During much\nof this time I have had as much to do\nwith tho work of law-enforcement aa\nany other private clllsen of the county,\nand I know that the Local Option lav/\nhas been well enforced. That there\nhave been violations Is not denied, and\nthat liquors has been smuggled In over\nthe borders, ami secured through the\nexpress companies (which latter Is yet\nlawful) Is freely admitted. But 1 know\nthat the amount of liquor disposed of\nIn tho county has been so greatly re­\nduced as to make the “trade" dospera o\nIn their efforts to secure a return to\nlicense.
3f3a4133bb281c51f076aa74a6f4dd0f THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.960382482038 39.290882 -76.610759 manly murdered! The New York Courier of\nthe llth says, that some suspicious circum-\nstances led to the apprehension of a house car-\npenter named Peter Robinson:\n"These circumstances were, that he has re-\ncently had in his possession a gold watch, and\nbeen unusually flush of money, and a remark\nhe made when purchasing lumber to floor a cel-\nlar?that he had paid ofl'a mortgage Mr. SUY-\nDAM held on his property, but did not dare take\nit to the Clerk's Otfice to be cancelled for fear\nhe should be suspected of being the murderer\nof "Mr. SUYDAM,"\nOn his arrest yesterday, his replies to the\nquestions put to him were confused and inco-\nherent, and in consequence the Mayor deter-\nmined his tiouse should be searched. During\nthe search one of the officers observed that \nought to take up the floor of the cellar, which\nhad been laid down in the night, since the dis-\nappearance of Mr. Suydam.\nRobinson endeavored to dissuade them from\nit, saying that if they did, the house would\nfall down. The otficcis, however, persisted,\nand there tound buried three fet t under the\neaith the corpse of Mr. Suydam, the head\nbearing evident indications of violence, which\nhad caused his death. An inquest was sitting\non the body at 7 o'clock last night.\nThe conviction was general in New Bruns-\nwick?indeed, we hardly see how it could be\notherwise?that ROBINSON was the murderer.\nThe mortgage deed was found in his possession,\nwith his signature torn off. We need scarce\nadd, that the highest excitement in conscquenc\npievailed in the quiet town of New Bruns-\nwick,"
04431e87ec6b26163bc9869de8d3fd1a THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.5356164066463 40.832421 -115.763123 Tim Ret-no Itiver lleveille of tho Dili\ninstant rccqnlH tho following: Lust\nSaturday afternoon ly horriblo accident\noccurred on the f upp.or Clifton grndo.\nAn old miip named John Millar was\ndriving p six-horsu tonin, hauling u lonil\nof wood, ,wliep tUo harness becaiao in\nBomo uinuuer disarranged. Miller got\nin between tbo whilllotroo and tlio \\va"-\non to fix tbo disarrangement, wlien tho\nteam (darted, crowding him up against\nt'10 lionk nud knockiug him down. Tho\nwheels on tho off side of tho wagon\npassed over hiii loys, crushing r.ud\niuuDgling thoin in a frightful muunor.\nShortly after tho accident hnpponed, a\nman who \\vaq passing with n wagon\nfound Miller lying in tho road, and\npickcd him Up and carried blip to Mar-\ntili Bong's place, corner Main and l'nio\nptreetij, p\\ul as soon as possible Dr.\nWixoin wr.u summoned. Tho Doctor\nfound lliat ono had boen broken in\ntwo placea and tho other bo terribly\nmangled that amputation will undoubt¬\nedly bo necessary. Tho bones wero\nbroken and tho flesh ground almost to\n0 pulp, tho kg only being held together\nby ono artrry and one cord. Dr. Wix-\npiu did what was necessary for the relief\npf Miller, but thinks tho amputation of\npno of tho lcg3 can not posSiMy bo\navoided, hut tho pther 0110 can bo\nsaved. Miller is a (ieriurin, aged about\nCO yearn, and has lieeu a striving and\njndustrious man. llo owns ranches in\nItalian canyon, and waa engaged in\nhauling wood therefrom, under contract\nwith tho Manhattan Company. IIo is\nwell known in town and groat sympa¬\nthy is felt for his tuisforlmio. This af¬\nternoon wo wero informed by Dr.\nWixom that Miller was unconscious,\nand that hi* chnnuoti for lifo wero voiy\nblight.
15c2a9512132090ab80adf6bde20e829 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1879.6397259956875 42.217817 -85.891125 They intend to establish him in the\narmy with the rank of Major General;\nand, to do this, propose to pass a bill\ncreating an additional Major General,\nand authorizing the President to appoint\n1 ltz John Porter to tho vacancy thus\ncreated. The number of Major Generals\nis now fixed by law at three, and, in\norder to return to that number after a\nbrief period, it is proposed that the act\nappointing Porter to be Major General\nshall provido that no further appoint-- '\nmentis or promotions shall be mado to\nthat rank until tho number of Major\nGenerals is reduced below three, which\nnumber will be again fixed as the maxi-\nmum of that rank. This plan would\nobviate the necessity of forcing Gen.\nMcDowell on the retired list to make\nroom for Porter, and would at tho same\ntime prevent the promotion of Gen.\nPope, who is first on the list of Briga-\ndier Generals. Gen. Pope entered\nthe military service in 1842, he cannot\nbe far from tho age G2 when\nho may be retired. It will be seen,\ntherefore, that this plan would practi-\ncally exclude Pope from being promoted\nto be Major General, because it is quite\nprobable he would reach the retired\nlist before Hancock, Schofield or\nPorter, supposing that McDowell's re-\ntirement made room for him. Thus\nthe effect of this plan of Porter's friends\nwould bo to punish Gen. Pope, while\nelevating Porter. It is hardly fair, per-\nhaps, to intimate that such is the pur-\npose of Porter's friends, but the f ict\nthat Pope is the officer who brought the\ncharges upon which Porter was dis-\nmissed, and that the rosult of that gen-\ntleman's vindication is to operate inju-\nriously to Pope, will lead many friends\nof that officer to infer that such a pur - pos - e\nentered into the general plans of
13abf5fdb20b5241ba38cfd4fffb7094 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.8534246258243 39.745947 -75.546589 Trenton, Nov. 8. —The fight in New\nJersey was almost exclusively on the race\ntrack issue. The bills legalizing pool sell­\ning nnd the licensing of race tracks In the\nstate, which w ere passed last year by the\nlegislature, aroused the religious element\nin the state, nud since the day of their\npassage there has been a constant agita­\ntion for their repeal.\nThe agitation was successful, and an\nantirace track majority wus elected in the\nassembly. Returns received this morning\nindicate that the Republicans will control\nthe next assembly by u majority of 9. Last\nyear the Democrats had a majority of 10.\nThere were elections for senator in eight\ndistricts. The Republicans carried five of\nthem surely and possibly six. Mr. Brad­\nley of Asbury Park is in doubt, This is a\nRepublican gain of 5 and 6 in the\nsenate. If Bradley is elected, the senate\nwill stand II Republicans to 10 Democrats.\nIfheisnot,itwill be10fo11.\nAccording to the latest returns tho seu­\nate will be compos«! as follows: Camden,\nMaurice J. Rogers, R.; Essex, Michael T.\nBarrett, D.; Gloucester, Daniel J. Packer,\nR.; Salem, J. Ward, R.; Somerset, Lewis\nA. Thompson, H.: Union. Foster M. Voor-\nhees, K.; Warren, Christopher F. Statatcs,\n1),; Monmouth, James Bradley, R.\nCape May re-elects Ross for the assembly\nby 500 majority. Middlesex county elects\nServis», Democrat,for sheriff, and Beckman\nand Harkins, Democrats, and Selover, Re­\npublican, are elected to the assembly.\nIn Union county Voorhees, Republican,\nis elected senator. Cross, Gooding and\nBergen, Republicans, ure elected to the as­\nsembly, This is a Republican gain of a\nsenator and assemblyman. Essex county,\nSecond assembly district, elects Duncan,
2196af5e455da82f68838b7609d74591 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.1191780504819 58.275556 -134.3925 >T.r. K . Donaldso.., bookkeeper fori\n(be Northern Come ercial Company at\nIvan part, received a letter this week\nfrom a cousin at Co'dfoot with the fol¬\nlowing information about the new\nCLandla" district says the Yukon Val¬\nley News: "You must nave heard by\nthis tim» of^ the new strike made on\nthe Chatidlar about sixty miles from\nt ;io point. There has been nothing\nmuch done as yet, as it was almost im-\nros3ible to get grub over there until\nthe past few weeks. Last fall on the\nbead of Big creek (one of the largest\ncreeks in the district, being forty rniies\nloDg) Newton, Bolds aud Jones were\npanning and raised good prospects.\nNewton went out oue morning and\npanned 652 out of the gravel in two\nhours.all fine money, luey after¬\nward set up boxes, and owing to the\nshortage of water were only able to\nshovel about five minutes at a time.\nTheir shoveling paid them about a dol¬\nlar a mi mie per man. This creek has\nmany small ones entering it nearly its\nwhole I Dgth on v.Lich good prospects\nhave been found. There are also many\nmore creeks which have prospected\nvery well, namely, Big Squaw, Little,\nSquaw, Tobin, Woodchuck, Big Mc-\nClellan, Little McClellau, Rock, Dic¬\ntator, Grave, Slate and numerous\nothers. The formation of the country\nshows that it has had a run of gold\nthrough it for a uumber of miles.\nMany the best ground is still to\nbe found. It looks more like a placer\ncouutry thau any iu this section, the\nhills being worn down smooth, the\ncreeks mostly large but well confined\nbetween the bills, making prospecting\nmuch easier. In most places wheu you\nget well to the head of the creeks there\nis very little timber, and in many\nplaces they have to haul it teu or\ntwelve miles. There is quite a number\nof new comers in the section already\nand manj* more they report on the way.\nBut I think, myself that the best trail\nwould be from Tanana, as there is a\ntrail which the mail carrier has to\nBettles; also od6 to Coldfoot, aud a\ngood trail cut to the digging from this\npoiut. The distance is about the same\nfrom Fail banks via Circle and Fort\nY'ukon as it is from Fairbanks via Tan-\nana, Bettles and Coldfoot, the latter\nroute beiog the better one owing to the\ngrub supplies, as a man can travel\nfrom Fairbanks to Tauaua light aud\nthrough to Coldfoot, where he can get\nhis supplies, have them freighted or\nhaul theu) himself the balance of the\ntrip, about sixty or sixty-five miles,\nthere being cabins up all along the line.\nComing the other way they will bare\nto take sufficient supplies to carry\nthem to Circle, then to Fort Yukon;\nthere they have a baal of about 170\nauiles to take their provisions."
743656026bfb2c4356597b29d0dd9a47 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.6898906787594 39.290882 -76.610759 privilege to witness, it was understood early\nin the da v that several distinguished strangers\nwere in town, and that among those who would\naddress the meeting, were Gov. R . K. Call, of\nFlorida, Gov. Jaines Barbour, of Virginia, 1 lon.\nMr. SJicppard, of North Carolina, and Mr. Dr-\noits, Whig Elector for the district of Richmond.\nThe members of the various Whig Clubs of\nthe city repaired at an early hour to their meet-\ning places in the respective wards of the city,\nand from thence, accompanied by music, banners\nand transparencies bearing appropriate mottoes,\nmarched, to Monument square; numbers of the\ncitizens had ready assembled when the clubs\narrived, and*the large area 'n front of the Court\nHouse was lit rally crammed. The Court House\nyard from winch the speakers were to address\nthe meeting was most tastefully decorated. The\nnational flag hung in festoons over the\nreslrum, the trasparencies, with their mottoes,\nand the banners of the various elubs of the uity,\nwere placed along the side of the stand, and\nlarge streamers, bearing upon them the name of\nTippecanoe, (the noted battle field recorded 01)\nthe pages of our country's history, which freed\na lar"e portion of our territory from the terrors\naf the tomahawk and the scalping knife.) doated\ninthe breeze, and when the present distresses of the\ncountry, caused by the mal-administration of our\nrulers was adverted toby the speakers, the eyes\nof the vast assemblage were turned to that name\nwhich has become synonymous with Harrison,\nand the same enthusiasm that animated their\n"sires in battle," seemed to say in stronger lan-\nguage than can be written, that Ac who, to use\nCol. Johnson's expression, "had never been de-\nfeatcd in battle," should triumph as signally in
2614e819ff32609d91233a4bbcf7d7f4 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1875.3986301052764 41.020015 -92.411296 "The ghastly spectacle of nine ani­\nmate, bat yesterday the pride of the\ncity, charred and consuming in the\nsmouldering fire, was indeed a repul­\nsive feature of the scene presented to\nour citizens yesterday. Tho half\ndozen people who wero early on the\nground unite in stating that the moans\nof the dying brutes were almost hu­\nman like. The barn contained a con­\nsiderable quantity of hay, and we en­\ntertain no dontet bnt that the same\nfiend who recently poisoned Mr. Greg­\nory's valuable dog, fired tho building.\nSo far as the burning of the barn was\nconcerned, it scaroe occupied ten min­\nutes. From the date of the alarm un­\ntil the structure fell, and tho work of\nthe fire flend was accomplished to all\nefiect, not a quarter of an hour elapsed.\nAs stated the barn contained nine\nhorsee, one of them valued at $1,500.—\nOf that number Mr. Gregory owned\nseven, and Mr. IUyburn, with the\nWheeler & Wilson eewlng machine\nagency in this elty, two. Mr. Grego­\nry aleo lost five carriages aud a spring\nwagon, lap robes, harnesses, and all\nhis blacksmith tools—the same being\nIn his ahop in tbe roar portion\nof the barn. His lose ia very sever*\nand will hardly fall short of $0,000,\nupon which was insurance of\n#3.000 . The stable waa owned by D.\nF. Eicher; was estimated worth $1,500,\nand was insured In tbe St. Paul Flro\nand Marine Company for $800. The\ncity ecales, whioh were, but are not,\nimmediately iu front of the livory\nbuilding, passed in its checks without\nInsurance, at a loss of abont $350.\nAugast Sehnltz's blacksmith and wag­\non ahop was well stocked with mate­\nrial, tools, and contained several new\nwagons, the latter belntf saved. The\nbuildings were insured lor about half\ntheir worth—$300—and tbe tool*, and\nvehicles for #400 Mr. Schuliz's loss\nIs about $1,000. Michael Nolan estim­\nates his lose at $100; tbe Deetken Bros,\ndruggists, at $125; Mr. Guittar, at\ntil00;Mr. J. D. Edmuuson, at $50;\nMr. John Hammer at $U50.upon which\nthere was no insurance; tbe stable up­\non Bernard and Eisnian's lot was\nworth abont $75; the woodshed of\nMrs. Jackson $59; and the building\noccupied by Mr. llamtner and owned\nby 11. L Gnanella, abont $400. This,\nwe believe, pretty nearly gives tbe\ncorrect amounts In Individual losses.\nOne feature of the iire wss the num­\nber of people who arrived there first.\nNot less than seventeen hundred men\nand boys were the first on the ground\nand the last to assist when called np­\non.
32799eefd1a195e476b7fd164ac33abe THE SPANISH FORK PRESS ChronAm 1908.3866119902348 40.114955 -111.654923 In his letter of Invitation to the\nconference President Roosevelt said\nThere Is no other question now\nbefore the nation of equal gravity\nwith tho question of conservation of\nour natural resources and It Is tho\nplain duty of us who for tho moment\nare responsible to take inventory of\nthe natural resources which havo been\nhanded down to us to forecast the\nneeds of the future and so handle tho\ngreat sources of our prosperity as\nnot to destroy In advance all hope of\nthe prosperity of our descendants\nTim need for such a conference Is\nIllustrated by a few facts vouched for\nby Investigators Government experts\nsay that between 300000000 and 400\n000000 tons of coal were lost In 1906\nby penny wise and pound foolish\nmethods and that the total so wasted\nsince the beginning of tho Industry\nIs 60000000000 tons Millions upon\nmillions of horsepower are going to\nwaste through failure properly to\nutilize and conserve tho waterpower of\ntho Unltrd States\nTho construction of at\nthe sources of streams In which flood-\nwaters may bo stored to be released\nat periods of low water Is expected\nnot only to keep the waters at a con ¬\ntlnuous Ilevel but prevent the destruc ¬\ntion of property by floods maintain\nconstant levels for navigation and to\ndevelop water power\nAt tho present rate of timber con\nsumption It Is estimated that tho price\nof every kind of lumber will ho about\ndouble the present price only ono do\ncade from today-\nIt Is said that tho total Iron ore\navailable In tho world today Is 25\n000000000 tons of which threefifths\nIs In tho United States Should the\nrate of consumption continue to In\ncrease In the United States In tho\nsame ratio that It has In tho course of\nthe last score of years at tho end of\ntwo centuries there would bo no\nmore ore to bo mined-\nIn the United States thero is an area\nof 175000000 acres of land\nto reclamation
23921a9de64877d827ecedba317ab8c1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.9221311159179 40.063962 -80.720915 I gave him several facts in regard to the\nget up of his nigs, which he adopted, and\nthanked me for, one of the most impor¬\ntant of which was the use of the steam\nhoBe for repelling boarders. In July,\nJ88?, James {{.Porter asked me why I did\nnot go to New Orleans after my boat. I\nreplied that I could neither borrrow, beg\nnor steal money enough to get oat of\nWheeling. He replied tnat his check for\n$600 was at my service at any time. That\ngave me hope, and I borrowed $100 from\nhim. I pledged my watch for $75, and\ngot $60 from six steamboat men,\nand I left for New Orleans toon After by\nway of New York, on a pass from Gover¬\nnor Pisrrepoint, who also gave me a rec¬\nommendation to General B. F . Butler.\nIn twenty-four days ont of New York I\nwas at New Orleans, or about the 18th of\nSeptember. As soon as couId, I laid my\nletter before General Butler, and repre¬\nsented to him that the Morning Light was\nmy steamboat, but if the Government\nneeded her and had use for her, to use\nher, and I was sorry that I had not twen¬\nty more to place at bis disposal.\nAfter seven interviews be received me\nkindly and asked about the boat. In the\nmeastlipe I hs4 solji onfall of % fpr\nIS,000 to A. J . Buffer, brother of B. F,, op\ncondition that he should obtain her re¬\nlease from the Government.the Govern¬\nment had been using the boat from the\n23d of May preceding. In November I\n¦old the other half of ner for $9,000. On\nDecember 6th, I aimed a receipt as bavin of\nrpcjJlvM thq boat from the Government. 1\nnever baipdsisesfoo- of her one moutnf\nFrom the time I went down there, although\n[ was in command of her for ths Govern-\nnent and Butler's brother. In Jnly,
23298cb1a212c92491a4b0706fcd3cf9 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.301912536683 40.063962 -80.720915 . Two darkeys in Richmond eng»i\ned, last Thursday, in breaking up c\niron came across un old bomb she\nwhich they got to pounding with tlx\nhammers, wheu greatly to their su\nprise it exploded. The darkeys wc\nlaid out at full length but not injure\n. The Virginia Convention Frid\nnicht. at eleven o'clock, adopted t\nconstitution by a vote of 51 to 26. Thi\nRepublican members voted again9t\n. The Virginia Conservative Exec\ntive Committee hue made a call foi\nState Convention, to meet at Rlchmo\nMay, 7th, to nominate State officers.\n. The Vicksburg papers give soi\naccount of a horrible and mysterio\nbutchery committed last Saturdt\nnear Omega, Louisiana. On that d\nthe people of the neighborhood discc\nered the house of Mr. Henry Keenan\nbe burning, and on repairing to t\nspot, found that Mrs. Keenan and I\ntwo children had been murdered a\nburned. On further search the body\nMr. Keenan was found about two hu\ndred yards from the house, covei\nwith leaves and bark from the tre\nwith ten bulletholes his back. Th<\nwas no living person on the premis\n. One of the severest epidemics\nscarlet fever ever known in this cou\ntry has prevailed in the city of Bost\nduring the past year, and still conti\nU6B, though the number of deaths\ngradually diminishing. The wh<\nnumber of deaths from scarlatina fr<\nthe 1st of January, 1867, to the 1st\nthe present month haB been 428. Th<\nwere deaths from Scarlatina in all t:\none of the sixty-five weeks included\nthis statement. The greatest numt\nIn any one week was thirty.in t\nweek ending December 14,1867. T\ngreatest number in any month\nseventy-eight.in the four weeks en\ning Decemcer 23. The epidemic seei\nto have reached its higbt about t\nmiddle of the mouth.\n.Arrangements nave ueeu uiuuo\nhave the four armies.of Tennessee, 1\nCumberland, the Ohio and of Georgif\nmeet at Chicago on the 15th or 16th\nDecember next, to have one comm\ncelebration, instead of haying separe\nmeetings, as heretofore. As soon\ncertain arrangements are completed\nChicago, the official announcement w\nbe made.
3866b59687729a1d87a4ad8c9f1a5f73 THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1905.7821917491121 39.739154 -104.984703 Jules Verne been enriched in his parly\nthirties through sales o f Ks first\n“scientific” novel, “Five Weeks In a\nBalloon.” it is possible that the world\nmight never have had Its “Twenty\nThousand Leagues Under the Sea.”\nor “Around the World In Eighty\nDays." But those who have been In-\nterested by Vernes wonderfully in-\ngenious tales do not like to think of\nsuch a possibility. To them he was\nenergy personified, the father of in-\nvention realized, an ever-bubbling,\nsparkling, joyous fountain of youthful\nspirits and hope, even la old age.\nThat he worked well under arrange-\nment with a publisher whereby he\nreceived' a moderate but regular in-\ncome his career attests, and he Is not\nalone in this. One of the most suc-\ncessful of writers for boys\n—at least from the boys standpoint,\nand from the publishers—worked un-\nder similar contract for nearly a gen-\neration. excepting that he received\nSI,OOO for each book produced.\nWe fancy that some of the younger\nAmerican writers—yachting In thf\nMediterranean, speeding along Fifth\navenue in a SIO,OOOmotor car. build-\ning castles in Newport, Spain, and\nelsewhere—may think of Jules Verne\nas doubtless they have thought of\nMilton; or. if they never heard of\nParadise Lost. " as they have thought\nof Hawthorne. Thoreau, Emerson. One\ncan imagine them saying, with a sym-\npathetic shake of the head. “Poor old\nchap! Grinding away nearly sixty\nyears lor a beggarly four thou! Won-\nder why the dickens he didnt try ad.\nwriting or put the blacksmith joke?
8c85c29a9f5a8456df88475d1d08a69f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1927.1493150367833 41.681744 -72.788147 driving east on School streef, craain\ned into the side of the truck. Alt--\nBrooks of 9 East Road, driving west\nin a roadster, noticed that he was go-\ning to strike the two cars and applied\nhis brakes. His car, however, slid on\nthe Icy pavement and struck tho\ntruck. The truck and th coupe driv-\nen by Beaton were both badly dam-\naged while the car operated by\nBrooks escaped with a bent fender\nand damaged running board.\nAll three drivers appeared before\nProsecuting Attorney Robert J\nStack this morning, their cases being\ncontinued until Thursday, Marc 3\nto permit them to settle the damages\namongst themselves.\nJudge Mink Addresses Realtors\nJudge S. Russell Mink of the pro-\nbate court was the speaker at the\nannual meeting of the Bristol Real\nEstate board held last evening at the\nElks club. The subject of his dis-\ncourse was "The Value of Me-\nchanics' Liens and Notice of Liens to\nthe Real Estate Men."\nThe opinion was expressed that if\nthe contractors \nwould ser e a notice of liens as soon\nas they have delivered any material\nor started work on a certain job, this\nwould give tha realtors an oppor-\ntunity to arrange for mortgage loans\nand. to know exactly what encum-\nbrances were on the property. Judge\nMink cited several Instances, show-\ning where, if liens had been placed,\nconsiderable trouble would have been\navoided. He also stated that the lien\nlaw is rather complicated, several\nphrases in the state statute being\nsubject to different interpretations.\nCare should be exercised in the\ndrawing up of Hens so that it would\nbe impossible for a tieup to occur\nlater by the incorrect wording of\nsuch Hens, he stated.\nAppraisal Committee Appointed\nThe following appraisal committee\nhas been appointed by President\nWilliam F. Smithwick of the Bristol\nReal Estate Board to serve during\nMarch, April and May; C. V. Mason,\nof C. V. Mason & Company; W. K.\nTracy of Tracy and Driscoll and W.\nJ. I'helan of the W. J . Phelan\nAgency.
0884afe93c6be69fd54eed441e6fb360 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.7136985984273 37.53119 -84.661888 E B Protberoe formerly of this\nplace dropped dead at Higgitisport 0\nof beurt dlbeube Besides u wile four\nsons Including Mr E E Protberou\nVVDO lived here for years survive Mr\nProtberou was a good man nod u lwc\nmiller Hu ran J H Baugbmun a\nJoe mill ut nights fur several inoum\nayeurorHJago\nTbo school hero conducted by Prof\nR L Brown cud MUs hobo Thur\nmond is progressing nicely and the\narmy of chMdrun under their care are\nlearning rapidly This Is the second\nyear MUs Thurmond has taught horn\nand she Is as popular with the pupils\nis shn Is with parents\nCharles Ketsllng who had both foot\nmt oft In a railroad wreck at Bloom\ntold a year ace IB running a restaur-\nant at Brodhead and furnishing L N\nmen with lunches He has cork foot\nbut with the aid of a crutch and mini\nets almost us well nit tho morn\norluonte of uc Ho furnishes some\nlays as many as 100 lunches\nMr Parker and his crow of bed\nuring men are headquartering at the\nirlih Hotel bore and are furnlfhlntr\nthe good people of this section with n\nyew and splendid spring which thev\nnaiufacturc at Brodbead He awl\nhreo of his assistants are about n\nwarm democrats as ono moots In u\nnonib of Sundays\nThe democratic club J Hnrvp\nDunn president and Granvillo Owen\neoretary now has lit members This\nl s toad considering tho foot that the\nClub la only two weoks old and there\ntre only about 100 democrats In the\nIrodhoad precinct At tbe meeting\nSaturday night Mesur Tbarpe Wat\ns m Tyree and Clemonta made rousing\npdifibei Tho next meeting will be\ntold Saturday night week when one or\npore speakers from n distance will ad\nbest the clut-
25f6b64cc1bae81d1b30baa1b520b86b THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1888.0860655421473 42.217817 -85.891125 A cable dispatch from Paris says an at\ntempt was made to kill Louise Michel at\nHavre. She was making an addroas at a meet\ning of Anarchists when a man in tho audienco\nnamed Lucas suddenly arose and, pointing a\nrevolver at the speaker, fired two shots at her.\nSho received a wound in tho head, and tho\nlobe of one of her cars was torn away. Lucas\nhad a narrow cscapa from lynching at tho\nhands of the infuriated Anarchists, and it was\nonly tho timely arrival of gendarmes that\nsaved him. Ho was locked up. Tho condi\ntion of Louise Michel is reported serious\nMr, Cox, Nationalist, member of Parlia-\nment for Clare, was arrested in London, after\nleading (ho Irhh police along chase, and taken\nback to Ennis, wherja ho will hi tried for ad-\n proclaimed league meeting. A row\noccurred at the railway station at Galway be-\ntween acrowd which was awaiting the arrival\nof Fathers Burke and Fraucii aud tho police.\nTho latter charged tho people, using their\nbatons freely, whilo tho crowd rotaliatoJ by\nthrowing stones and bottles. Several persons\nwere injured, among tbera a member of the\nMunicipal Council, who roceivod throe cuts on\ntho head from a policoman's baton.\nThe tenants of Donegal havo resolved to\nwithhold the payment of rents during tho\ntime that Mr. Blane, member of Parliament\nfrom South Armagh, and Father McFadden of\nGweodoro aro kept in prisor. Mr. Blanoand\nFather McFadden aro now in tho Donegal JaiL\nTho former is charged with making spoechos\ntending to iucito tenants to resist the authori-\nties, and Father McFadden is chsrcd with\nholding anti -poli-
0ab29122385383fd23e1a62428dbf1ec THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1897.360273940893 42.217817 -85.891125 would be an outrage. It would pre-\nvent a man leading a tlcccnt, honest life',\neven if he was so inclined. It would\nalso, they argue, elrive men to more\ndesperate crimes after their release,\nfor the brands would be a barrier to a\nlife of anything save crime. Of course,\nthe mark would be valuable frequently\nas a means of Identification. For in-\nstance, if a Kentucky gentleman should\nle returning home in the early hours\nfrom a sociable game of (American\ndraw at his club, or some other little\nentertainment, and should meet a\n.Ft range man in the hall carrying olT\nthe family plate and valuables, all he\nwould have to do to verify his suspicions\nthat the man was a burglar would\nbe to look at his cheeks, says the New\nYork Journal. If the letter "P" stood\nout on each side, he need doubt\nno longer. The intruder is a thief, and\nto prove h.s identity the state of Ken-\ntucky has burned in its affidavit that\nthieving is his regular vocation.\nOn the other hand, it is not impos-\nsible in these days of ingenuity and in-\nvention to circumvent the designs of\nProvidence in tho form of the official\nbrander of the state. Skin grafting is\nas common an operation these days as\ntho pulling of an aching molar, and the\nreleased convict could, mt a reasonable\ncpen.se, have the brand cut out and\nnew skin grafted in its place. And thus\nwould the ends of justice, be defeated.\nThere are arguments on both sides of\nthe measure,and the supporters of each\nwill toss them at each other with\nvehemence and earnestness when the\nbill comes up for passage.
2bd609afbfee1699051d1a66c7431131 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1882.37397257103 42.68333 -96.683647 Cathartic Pills\nComWno the choiepst, cntii:irtl« jjrlndt i. ->a\nin irti-dii ino, iti proportions aeeitrutely';. I-\njustol to aerttro m-tivirv, eirtainty, H:HI\nlinitormity of elTeet. Thoy are the rrsult\nof years of oari-ful st.idy atnl nr- .ieti'al n.\nIieriineut, and are tlie uvmt cfioetual rem­\nedy yet discovereil /ur diseases rrutw.l liy\nderangement of the stmnaeli, liver, n til\nbowels, which retpiire prninpt anil cl'feetisal\ntreittni'nt. AvKit's f'n.t.s ure spoil.iUy\napplienl-lii to tlii.i rlas i of itiHeases. Tie jr\nact <lirtvily on the <li^e.stive ."nil otiiir.ii -\nlativo processes, anil restore regit it.tr\nhealthy action. Their txtensiva ttso lij*\nJiliysii iatis iti their prtv-Uce, and hy ufi\ncivili/ed tin! Ions, U one of tho i>i:::;y\nproofs of tlieir \\alue ns a sale, sure. n:i<l\nS rfei tlv reli.iMo pttrpntivc incili. i;.%\neing compoundnl of tlie conee;:ti;it. 4\nvirtues of purely Ve^etuhlo sttlwtatma,\nthey aro positively free from enloiiK-l\nany ininriuti.4 ami can l.-a ailtu;.i-\nIsteteJ to childri'U with iKTrcct safety.\nARM's PII.LS arc an C^ffr-etnal ctire for\nConstipation or Ccstlvi-aewa, Im!! , h\ntiim, l»y?ip>psia, l.oss of\nFotii Stoniiieli an»l llienlli, T>l£7.;ite\nHeadache, iMi.; ot Jlonwy, ?»umhti.\niiiliott'-Mess, .lijun'Iice, KhcuiRiiti- .nl,\nKrtiptions nml SUln IMsoasos, l>t'uji.-.y,\nTt"»ors, _ Vi'ortnitralKiti, t.'oii^.\nGripfs, IIlj-eni'-. y, Oijt:t\nPiies, IJisoi-ilors of tho Livei', RUii »!J\noth-r tlisi-ases resultitt^ Inuti a Uisordcrcd\nattt'.a ol tlie ili;,vsiive upparatas.\nAs a Dinner I'ill tiiey liave no ctpia!.\nWhile gentta in tlteir action, theso TIT.14\nare the most thorough a id «eai< ljing catl: - . f .\ntic that, can I so eni]iloveil. and never give\npain unless the hnwels are inflamed, and\nthen tlicir influence is hen'inj* Tiiey stins#.\nlate tin; appetite iin-.l di ftestivo orRiois; tiiey\n•inernt.- to purify find f-rtri.- h the Wood, a::4\nimpart renewed health ami vigor to tin#.'\nwhole system.
0667bd58aab6ac456b599f69ee158c02 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1886.7356164066464 40.832421 -115.763123 The evening rtur reiterate* ilK b* lief\nthat SeCretaiy Untiling hi» beeu till-\ndeted the Australiau tui»iiou, with a\nvitw tuao-UiiUj a sel leuieut of lb.\nkilvrrqu st.ou >u lUi tuiuvy by tiled\niu^ a combination be.weeu licruuli)'\nAu>.ria alii i* u >»ii for tile lu.ili.lcu-\nuuce of a bi-mctaluc curnuc) ou tut\nbnu ot tue i«.tliil Caivu. The uilii'lt\n«wctU po»ii.vely imt luo ap.wiiiiUMa:\nLa . been ic.l to tuc U.citiuu oi liccivU\nry Uauuiug h.aistif.\nThe llr|'tit>iici!iii> ol *Viodine comity\nlUude tiie following UollllUatioU*: Sen¬\nator, William 1 ii i.upwi ; A>.<t mblyuien,\nIJ. M. Fri »l, 1>. S. li.tliaiin uud X. U\nlluggerimtti ; Sheriff, liicliaid Nt»li;\nCierk, X. V . Joli. u; Tre.t*iircr, I>. It\nUoyd; llecorder, C O l' nter; At«-«\n?or, W. || . Mtlui.ii>; Surveyor. E. L\nbudget; District Attorney, I'ieree\nhvuii», riiij.t . of Sebo>iU Hi v, Wi.liuui\nLucas; l'uldic Aduiiuistra nr. S. II.\nC.irj>euter, Comity C>mmi**ioueM, J.\nSiiodgiaBx utid William Merrill.\nAt Lo* An; le» Friday, an E'tj'Uh\ngaidcner uumed ISnyutou »bu»nl lilt\nwife, who with her loi.r small children\nnought protection in the house nl u\nneighbor iiuiui'd II. Kipp.\nItyntoti followed, uud iitiiiu,* to imlnee\nhi* wife to iiceompuuv him, pn-lied up-\n. n the door and without u word shot\nher drnd llovntou then turne I u:hiu\nMr. Kipp, nged <>0 ycura , shooting linn\nfilially, and before liciiiii divinmd by\nI neighbor* shot Nettie, the old Ul ili'n\ndaughter, mortally wounding her. Tne\ndemon only escaped lynching thiough\nthe celerity of the officer*, who till iried\nbin to jail before a crowd ha I collect >1\nThe glove contest between John I,\nSullivan uud l'rutik lleurUI at I'lit-hiirg\nSit unity tii^lit emlnl by the iut'lfsr\neuce of the police nt the clone of tile\nsecoa 1 ronnd. the Kparriitp having nterg\ned into ii rougb-ai d-;utnl>le ri.Ut . mid u\nWi«« wilb ilitlicuUy tuit the men were\nfteparaU-d . Stllliva i Will however de¬\nclared the victor, lleuild being evident-\nIt over lui.tclied. Stilii van exhibited\nlux n - .nil fennTy;iit one time lu tk u^j it\nd ,th at a repo. ter who weut for lux pin\nto| to protect himself troui iKsaillt b>\nthe big sludger wbo was then lurced\nhack by ih » |kj1.uo
fe22cac0ad894b9cdd6e7c2ffad02a4a THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1854.7849314751395 39.560444 -120.828218 The Times !f Iranscript has the follow-\ning account of the defeat of Count Raous-\nset De Boulbon, at Guaymas.\n“He attempted to land at Guaymas in\na small cutter with two guns, ten barrrcls\npowder, and one hundred and fifty stand\nof arms. He, however, got ashore before\nentering the harbor, where the vessel lay\non her beam ends for two days, and in the\nmeantime was compelled to heave over-\nboard his guns and his powder which was\nwet. However, when he landed he pro-\nceeded to Gov. Yanez, of Sonora, and had\nan interview with him. The Governor in-\nformed him that he must leave the coun-\ntry, as the populace were deadly opposed\nto him. The Count assured him that he\nintended to keep perfectly quiet, to which\nYanez answered that as long as he did so\nhe need fear nothing. In the \nabout thirty Frenchmen marched up the\nstreet and took possession of a bouse\ncalled the French Hotel, from where they\nopened a fire upon the Mexicans, who sur-\nrounded the house, and out of thirty\nFrenchmen who entered only two were\nleft alive. On the next day, July 11th,\nthe engagement in Guaymas took place.\nThe Mexicans numbered over one thou-\nsand strong, the French and Dutch about\nfive hundred. The conflict was terrific,\nand many whom Count Raousset counted\nupon to aid him were among the things\nthat were. Our informant states that on\nJuly 11th he counted over sixty dead\nbodies (Frenchmen) in the streets, and\nmany more had died of their wounds. The\nMexicans fought from the tops of their\nhouses as well as having field pieces\ncharged with grape, chain and caunister,\nwhich made sad havoc among the French\ntroops.”
01973318800c2d0dabbb258b5536918d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.2808218860985 40.063962 -80.720915 Thicker and thicker llowed the tid\nemigration into Minnesota and Wis\ninsiu, following the navigable river\na matter of course, aud more am\nore uneasy and crowded" felt Wal\nr Brown. At length his wife died\neonora was then sixteen, aud engage*\nbe married to a handsome younj\napper by the name of Watson", wh\nid joined her father in business.\nThe death of the mother had made i\nicessary to postpone the wedding; an<\nthe interim olcj Walter decided t\nove into northwest Minnesota. Noigh\n>rs were getting too near aud huntinj\nid trapping were bad. As the younj\nan had proved up and preempted\nlarter section of land near Taylor'\nalls, bo did not wish to either aban\n>n or sell it just then, and persuadinj\neonora to agree to write to him, h'\nide her an alTectionate good-bye.\nBrown lived in Minnesota for thre\nfour years in peace and quiet, liud\ng good trapping and hunting grounds\nhen all at once young Watson arrived\nid rqpewed the proposition of mar\n with Leonora. The old man hat\n>out determined to move no more, au<\nid accordingly located and preemple<\nveral thousand acres of land aDou\nm, aud learning from Watson that in\nid money enough to do likewise, pro\nised that he should go down to St. Pau\nid buy land warrants with his money\nid take up all the land he conic\nwing." lie might then marry Jj3\nlor'a, and they two would go to work\nid after building plenty of stabling\nJ., would get a good stock of cattli\nid sheep, and try and lead a pasiora\ne for the rest of their days.\nTo this proposition the young mat\nartily assented, and after returning\n>m St. Paul, went bravely to work ii\no woods, felling trees for building\nirposes. It was agreed tirst that thej\nould butld a new hewed log hons<\nr the united family, as Watson had\nly got up a small single room cabin,\nlen the wedding was to take place\nid the two men would again resume\neir work.
4e964cd077d8303afa8a1027f7f0ef6f THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1941.6369862696602 40.618676 -80.577293 Uppermost in many million Ameri­\ncan minds right now is this question:\n'What effect will defense priorities\nhave on the supply of goods for civil­\nian use?" At this time, it is impos­\nsible to give an exact answer to that\nluestion. But, judging by informa­\ntion from Washington and the indus­\ntrial centers, it looks like we're going I\nto have enough of all the necessities\nind many of the luxuries of life to\nkeep us going in comfortable style.\nThere will be shortages in some lines,\nhut there will be no grave disruption\nof the American economic system or\nthe American standard of living, un­\nless some unlooked-for cataclysm oc­\ncurs. A lack of some important ma­\nterials will make the use of substi­\ntutes necessary, hut, according to the\nxperts, these substitutes will be genr\nrally adequate quality and rea­\nsonable in price. Here is how the\noutlook shapes up at this writing:\nCLOTHING: No serious shortage in\nsight, though there is none too much\nleather on hand, in the light of mili­\ntary needs. Prices will probably go\nconsiderably higher for shoes and\n^uits. In the case of lower price\ngoods, quality may have to be low­\nered. Within a few months, silk stock­\nings are expected to entirely disap­\npear from the market, and there is\nnot enough nylon and rayon to sup­\nply the demand. However, new types\nof cotton stockings are being de­\nveloped, and are said to be excellent.\nAUTOMOBILES: It has not yet\nbeen dec ided to what extent produc­\ntion will be cut. Hest guess is that\n1942 output will he at least 25 per\ncent under the record level estab­
1633aa5c9ae75ddf22fc45ca9604ea7d PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1883.0671232559614 39.756121 -99.323985 thoric and light complected. He stated that\nhe had suffered from urinary troubles from\nchildhood, and that he had "doctored" a\nhundred times, each time improving sdtne ;\nafter which. In a short while, he would relapse\ninto his former state of misery. I prescribed\nthe usual therapeutics known to the profes-\nsion with the same result that my colleagues\nhad obtained. He got better for a while and\nthen worse again; in fi.ct, so bad that he had\nto lay off for some time. lie suffered intense\npaiu; so much so that I confesa I had to re-\nsort to hypodermic injections of morphia. My\ndruggist, who knew how disgusted I was with\nthe case, although not willing to desert the\nman, advised me to try a remedy from which\nhe (the druggist) himself had derived great\nbenefit. As a drowning man catches at a straw,\n prescribed this remedy, not letting my pa-\ntient, however, know what I was giving him;\nand, although not a believer in nor a ratron\nof "patent medicines," I n.ust confess that\nafter my fireman had taken one bottle ho\ngrew much better. I made him continue its\nuse for a period of two months, with the most\ngratifying results; it really worked wonders,\nand he owes his cure and present perfect\nhealth solely to the remarkable power of\nWarner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, tLe\nremedy which I prescribed, and he used.\nfrinee the recovery of the m n above men-\ntioned, I have given considerable thought to\nthe subject of acute nephritis, or kidney diffi-\nculty, and I find that its manifestations are\nmost remarkable. It often appears without\nany special symptoms of its own, or possibly\nas a sequel to some ether disease.
3fd4f859da19eb75676a0f0f9c483353 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1909.0808218860984 41.875555 -87.624421 n matter of fact, tho modern home\nneed not hang Its head In shame nnd\nsorrow, nnd Is In no danger of con\ndemnation. It has dono very well con\nsidering Its prehistoric nnd even his\ntoric past, nnd It goes on Improving.\nWith nil Its lniMrfcctlons and these\nIt shares with other human Institu-\ntions nnd with human nature Itself\nIt manages to put to tho front millions\nof tolerably healthy, tolerably moral\nand tolerably Intelligent men nnd wom-\nen to do tho work nnd carry on the\ncivilisation of the known world. It Is\ntrue that extrcmn poverty, like Idle-\nness In luxury nnd parasitism, Is bad\nfor maternity, nnd It Is truo that In too\nninny homes the provisions for child\nculture nrc still sadly Inadequate. Hut\nIt Is not truo thnt wo have reached tho\nparlous state where "the woman re-\nfuses to go back, tho homo refuses to\ngo forward, nnd marriage waits." Fow\nof us would send woman back to slav\nery nnd abject dependence If we could,\nand most of us understand that wo\n If we would. Revolutions do\nnot go backward, nnd the progress of\nwoman Is assured. As to the home,\nIt never has been so unrcasonnblo ns\nto refuse to advance. It advances\nslowly, to bo sure, but this shown wise\nconservatism nnd a due realisation of\nIts solemn responsibilities. The home\nknown that not everything Is advance\nwhich Is so described In formldnblo\nvolumes nnd nt sociological meetings,\nnnd It wishes to bo certain of the next\nstep beforo taking It. Industrial, .edu-\ncational nml social 'conditions nro re-\nacting on tho homo ns on other basic\nInstitutions. Our various problems are\nInterdependent, nnd no sovereign rem-\nedy for nil our Ills Is In sight. Society\nIs struggling, developing, making ex\nperiments, accumulating knowledge. It\ncannot glvo Its entire tlmo nnd atten-\ntion to tho future, for tho slmplo rea\nson thnt man docs not Hvo by high\nthinking alone. Wo must uso such light\nns wo hnve to make tho modern home\na fit place for nil who dwell In It. To\nImprove education, to eliminate unnec -e sn r- y
1654b662e78e37ca17a07ccdfdc5e016 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.9219177765094 41.262128 -95.861391 eral of the State, we find Aat iowa has\naaat H,U9 soldiers Ate Ae ftsld. It A\na fair estiaMts A say aat of tha abors ,\nnumber 40,000 are ratsn. Tha Govern\nor appointed men to visit e»ery r«gim«ni'\nand iake Au soldiers rote Thest mes m\nmmt c^ses warn rabid Republicans, and\nwars appoAAd aat only A rsaairs the i\nrotes, but to do ap Ae electioneering for\nthe Repubiioan ticket. What has beeu :\nAe result of all Aeir labors f Tha re :\ntorna show Aat 11,874 votes wer* oast\nfor Ae diaamon-abolluoa tickst, and |\n,i 15 votes wsrs cast for tha Dsaaoaratic |\nuciteu What ass As inferences A b«;\ndrawn from Ais State of facts t Tbe I\nfirst, inferenoo to be drawn whea we ooa\neider the facts, Aat As Uw aaAorixing\nAe soldiers vote ta be Aksa originated\nwiA tijo Repabiioaas, aad was a Etepub-\nIrean measure, Aat Ae commissioners\nsppcuued to take As rote were Republi­\ncans, aad Aat nine oat of every tan of Ae\nColeaeU in command were Republicans\nwe say the first Aferencs A be drawn\nfrom this stitte of facts, is, that the en­\ntire Republican soldiers rote was palled.\nb rum Ae facts Aat A most eases As\nDemocratic tickets ware destroyed—Aat\nAe soldiers were told Aat candidates\n•on Ae Democratic ticket were all "Se-\neeah aud disloyal," aad from Ae faot\nAat all tickets wiA the names written A\npencil were rejected, and Aat Democrat*\nwem put A Ae guard-bouse tor election­\neering for the Democratic tickst, Ae se- j\n9ood iofersnos A be drawn, is, that a\nvery large majority of Ae Democratic:\nsoldiers did aot vote. The Democratic |\neoidiera b«Ag ail trae Union maa, and\nBearing it asserted by their commanding\noScers, and by tbe commissioners, Aat\nAe Democratic candidates were all "S«-\ncesh and dialayal," aad jbaaartajt that\nAs Republican candidates wers disiaytl\nAboiitioaista, Aey refrained from votA(,\nwhich aooounts in part f«r Aa smailasss\nof At soldiers vols.\nH a majority of «*• asldteee wars Re-\npublicans, why did Aey aot vote As Re­\npublican ticket, when Aa polls weca\nopened in Aeir camp? Why eoald aat\nAe Republican Commissioners, Colonels\nand C iptains, get more than 14,874, out\nof 40,0uu to vote ?\nIt is clear from As vote returned, after\nall Ae dforts mads by As Republican\nleaders to secure Ae vote of Aa soidietn,\nthat, then are 25,126 Democrats to 14,-\na74 R.jpublicans ia Ae Army from Iowa,\nand no other rational conclusion can be\ndrawn from all Ae facts connected with\nAe soldi ore vots.
47a4ba6231595b2369d07e43c8da6383 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.541095858701 40.063962 -80.720915 clean and unclean animals, their week¬\nly day of rest, and whole domestic ar-\nrangements were a wonderfully de¬\nvised system for directing the attention\nof the whole community to the cultiva¬\ntion of the most perfect health of body,\nas one ol the first of religious duties.\nAbout a generation ago, Dr. Combe,\na physician, ot Edinburgh, who in\nearly life had uearly died for want of\nsufficient care, went everywhere over\nGreat Britain and America, lecturing\non health, and publishing works on\nthe constitution of inan, calling atten¬\ntion this subject as a religious duty,\nincumbent on all. His lauguage was\nnot always correct, and bis idea* were\nsomewhat restricted, but they met a\ngreat want in the popular mind, and\ncreated of a very neglected subject. His\nlectures gave phrenology a start in this\ncountry, and everything connected\nwith physical culture. And though\nsome terrible blunders were made, they\ninspired a class of men who have been\nexperimenting and growing in thecon-\nscientious feeling that the cultivation\nof health, by all suitable exercises and\nrepose alternately of each organ, is the\nduty of every individual; one with-\nout which he cannot perform aright\n other duty to himself, his fam'ily\nor the community.\nThere is a sort of idea, popular with\nsome, that Christanity has done away\nwith all this religion of the body. Tnere\ncannot be a greater aud more pernicious\nmistake. Christianity has stamped a\nvalue upon every human life never be¬\nfore conceived, and health is a part ol\nlife.it is life. When St. Paul said that\nbodily exercise profiteth little, he spoke\nof Pharisaic exercises in which Juda¬\nism iiwd degenerated.mere forms with¬\nout life. But when the same writer ar-\ngued, as a sufficient proof of the sin of\ncertain immoralities, that ho who com-\nmilled them siuned against his own\nbody, he implied that all neglects and\ncourses of life injurious to health are\nrepuunent to the very foundations ol"\nall true religion. ' -This is for your\nhealth" was the sufficient reason in bi«\neyes why be should command men to\ntake food, and even wine is enjoined\non a sick man f<>r the same reason,\n"Thou shalt not kill" embraces morel\nthan mostthink. Christian science has\ngreatly added to the average length of\nlife, and yet it has not done half its\nwork yet.
03d655371fd37035ba2ee03f93225094 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.2315068176054 31.960991 -90.983994 Sec. a . Be il further enacted, That in all cas- court so that process cannot be served on them,\nes in which any Court of Probate shall make and the said executor, adininistratoror guardian shall\nenter ajudgment and decree against any party make affidavit of the fact, and the said Probate\nlitiganttherein, or agrfinst any executor, admntis- court thereupon shall cause publication to be\ntrator or guardian for payment of a sum of money made in some newspaper, in this State, citing\nby said jatrty litigant, executor, administrator or said absent heirs, legatees, distributees or ward\nguardian to any other party entitled to the same, to appear befiwe said court on a day certain not\nby the terms of said judgment or decree, said less than sixty days from and after the first in-\ncourt shall have [tower to enforce a compliance sertion of the citation or notice, to show cause\nwith the terms of saidjudgment or decree by pro- why such account should not lie allowed, and\ncess-ef ^crifacias issued by said court returnable decree made thereupon accordingly; and, \nto a term of said court not less than six nor more any such legatee*, distributees, heirs or said\nthan eigfit months from the test of said writ, wards, shall lie minors or insane, such citations\nwhich process shall be executed by the sheriff; of as to them shall be served on their guardians\ntlie proper court, upon the lands and tenonuwts, by name amd character and m case such minor\ngoods and chatties of the party against whom tire and insaiiP persons shall have on guardian the\nsame shall issue, or by process of attachment said Probate court shall appoint a guardian or\nagainst the person of the party against whom the guardians ad litem, residing in the jurisdiction\njudgment or decree «hall have been rendered; of said court, who shall be cited as aforesaid, and\nProvided, timt na such attachment shall issue, may appear in the cause in the same manner as\nuntil the,party against whom the same is prayed guardians ad litem, may do in a court ofequity,\nshall have been cited to appear at some regular
311582d890ef8f847ea2d8b19b79977a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.5136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 Mfiimlvlllii Itaiif Mm...I\nhigan, ctarly yesterday morning, a \\v<\niwu ami wealthy farmer, aged ulx\nr years, named Oliver Oonk, was h!\nmortally wounded by a fellow nam\nrvov Ward, who had jiwt rcturr\nn the Htate Penitentiary. Mr. Co\njiiHt loll the hall-room of the (Jrur\ni> Hotel, where he had been attend!\nMice, for tho purpose of going lion\nicn lie reached tho street he mot Wa\n(>, alter a few words,drew liin rovob\ndischarged the content* of one bar\n»Mr. Cook's neck, the ollect of whi\ni to completely paraly/o his limbs, a\nnow lietjn a critical condition.\nI'ftKTCII KlM.fl IIIHKATItr.il AND HIBTI\nihout one weok sincoEilwrtrd Tltcoi\nding at Maysville, Dekalb court\nnoun, while engaged in a violent c<\n/ersy with his father about some hi\nw his revolver and discharged tho c<\nIs of three barrels Into the abdomei\nold gentleman. Ho then seized\nmm NirucK inn Hiniur wirn wna Null\nncnr. a fearful blow, uilllctlng a ill\nhuh wound. Neither will probal\n Titrnmb was at once arrest\nit was only lijr the greatest efforts\nSheriff that lie was saved Ironi liel\nnliccl by tlio infuriated neighbors.\nA'YOUNO LADY KU.I .fl tlKllBKt.l'.\nit Haiem, Marion county, Ills., on I'\nevening last, Miss P. M . Wiikisoti\nlily respected yofflijt lady, acclden\ntherself with a revolver, infllctini\nrtalwound. The following»re that\nnstances: Mr. Bohman, of St. Ijouis\ning gentleman to whom she was\nmarried the following day, arrived\nhomo. At her reqbesl, ho opened\nnk to show his wedding suit; he pass\nseveral articles for horlnspection, a\ndly drew out a revolver, which she a\nlied to examine; while doing so it v\nidcntly discharged, tlio ball enteri\nribs and ranging downward |>onetr\nthe stomach. Hhe lingered In gri\n[tilsh Tor a lew hours, when sho\nni. Her affianced husband has In\ndered partially insane liy the sad\nrence, and ha is continually watcli\nfriends, fearing that lie will inflt p\nal injury upon himself\nINOtlt.Alt SHOOTtNO AFFAII1 IN Ptttl
1463ac7ca0286a75151ef580799ad69f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1883.9520547628108 40.063962 -80.720915 The House where the murder occurred\nwas occupied by "Old Joe," anolher Indian\nnamed Nikolai, Mr. Carter and Sewall\nPlummer, the owner of the house. The\nmurderer*, Hopkins and Tamer, pa-sod\nthrough "Old Joo'a" room to the kitchen,\nwhore they fonndPlummer and the Indian\nNikolas and wile and a little girl. H°p-\nkins' Brat worda were "You vo got a lire,\nbut it you hadn't I'd mako it hot pretty\nquick/' Soon alter Turner asked Hum¬\nmer to drink. Both entered l'lummer'fl\nroom. Nikolas succeeded in getting out\nol the room with the lamily, a though. Hop¬\nkins attempted to prevent tbem. While\nthe drinking was going on "Old Joe\nand wife locked their bed-room\ndoor and went to bed enly to bo dragged\nforth again by the murderers who, alter\ndrinking buret in the door, seized Old Joes\nwife, threw her on the bed in the kitchen,\n she was ravlBbed by Turner while\nHopkins attacked Old Joe, who tried to do-\nfend his wife'ahonor. Ilopkinastrnck the\nIndian a blow on the temple, knocking\nhim down and jumped on his head, Binting\nthe nails of his heavy boots deep into tho\nIndian's face. UopkinB then ravished the\nwoman. After accomplishing tueir pur, -\nP03e the murderers went upstairs aud at¬\ntempted to enter the room oorojiied by Car¬\nter and family. Carter told them they could\nnot enter. They tried to force tho door.\nCarter then opened a window and by tho\naid of a water spout got h'8 family safely\nout of the house, came to the village, and\nnotified the officers, and arrests followed.\nThe verdict of the coroner's j ury was that\nJoseph H.mius came to his death at tho\nhlndB of Louis E. Hopkins, Lorenzo II.\nTurner being accessory to the murder.
0cdb6a5d025f5cb38d47fc52c9548012 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1890.0534246258244 40.441694 -79.990086 Now, who is this being you want me to trust\nin and believe in? Men sometimes come to me\nwith credentials and certificates of good char\nacter; bat Icannot trust them. There is some\ndishonesty in their looks that make me know\nI shall be cheated if I confide in them. You\ncannot put your heart's confidence in a man'\nuntil yon know what stnff he is made of, and\nam I unreasonable this morning when I stoi to\nask you who this is that you want me to trust\nin? "No man would think of venturing his life\non a vessel going out to sea that had never\nbeen inspected. No, you must have the cer-\ntificate hunc amidships, telling how many tons\nit carries, and how long it was built, ana who\nbuilt it, and all about it. And you cannot ex-\npect me risk the carco of my immortal inter-\nests on board any craft till you toll me what it\nis made of, and where it was made, aDd what it\nis. When, then, I ask you who this is you want\nme to trust in. von tell me he was a very at-\ntractive person. You tell me that the con-\ntemporary writers describe him. and they give\nthe color of his eyes, and the color of his hair,\nand they describe his whole appearance as\nbeing resplendent. Christ did not tell the\nchildren to come to Him. "Suffer little chil-\ndren to come unto me," was not spoken to the\nchildren; it was spoken to the Pharisees. The\nchildren had come without any invitation. No\nsooner did Jesus appear than the little ones\npitched from their mothers' arms, an avalanche\nof beauty and love, into his lap.
15428ca7fa221263a4de4e41e3cc4f1d THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1858.9547944888382 39.261561 -121.016059 On all the various forms of Chronic diseases, including\ndiseases of the Lungs, Liver, Stomach, Heart, Kidneys,\nand Spleen,—a cure guaranteed in Rheumatism, Neural-\ngia, Amaurosis, cr nervous Illindness, Pick, or nervous\nHeadache, Apoplectic and Congestive fullness of Bruin, Ep-\nileptic, Parylectic and Hysterical affections.\nCancer Cured without the use of Knife,\nand attended with little or no pain also Tumors, Ulcers,\nFietulas, and all the various forms of diseases pertaining\nto the EYE and EAR. Diseases of the reproductive\nor genital organs will receive special attention.\nIH*. SNYDERS practice in Chronic and Surgical\ndiseases have been extensive, having been many years\nconnected with an Infirmary in which patients were re-\nceived from all parts of the Union, whose diseases were of\nthe most desperate character. Of these he failed to cure\nin a very few instances, in which there was any reasona-\nble prospect of success, be has restored to health and use-\nfulness hundreds who nod given up all hope of recovery,\nand who had suffered /or years without under the\ntreatment of many of the most distinguished Doctors of\nthe age. Dr. S . will visit in the City or country, those\ncase* which require personal examination and Surgical\nSkill—Invalids, living at a distance, who cannot make it\nconvenient to consult Dr. Snyder in person, (although\nhe would prefer seeing the patient at least ©nee,) by send-\ning a carefully written description of the origin and history\nof his or her case, with its symptoms, aiui its treatment\nheretofore, with a correct statement of his present condi-\ntion will unable the doctor to judge pretty accurately ofits\ncurability, and enable him to prescribe the proper reme-\ndies, and give the necessary instructions requisite to effect\na euro. A volume of testimonials of such cases could be\ngiven, received from patients in all parts of the country,\nwhom lie has cured, and who it was novor his pleasure to\nseo. DR. 8NYDKR deals in no secret nostrums—his pre-\nscriptions are prepared in accordance with the latest im-\nprovements in Medical Science.
08138a8c9c357dd8a19f6ea47420772f THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1895.6808218860983 42.217817 -85.891125 Formal Notice of III Nomination.\nThe news of his nomination found\nLincoln at Springfield in the office of\nThe Journal. Naturally enough, he was\nnervous, restless and laboring under\nmore or less suppressed excitement. He\nhad been tossing ball, a pastime fre-\nquently indulged in by the lawyers of\nthat day, and had played a few games\nof billiards to keep down, as another\nhas expressed it, "the unnatural excite-\nment that threatened to possess him."\nWhen the telegram containing the re-\nsult of the last ballot came in, although\napparently calm and undisturbed, a\nclose observer could have detected in the\ncompressed lip and serious countenance\nevidences of deep aud unusual emotion.\nAs the balloting progressed he had\ngone to the office of The Journal and\nwas sitting in a large armchair there\nwhen the news of his nomination came.\nWhat a line of scenes, stretching from\nthe barren glade in Kentucky to the ju-\nbilant and euthusiastio throng in the\nWigwam at Chicago, have broken\nin upon his vision as he hastened from\nthe newspaper office to "tell a little\nwoman down the street the news I" In\nthe evening his friends and neighbors\ncalled to congratulate him. He thanked\nthem feelingly and shook them each by\nthe hand. A day later the committee\nfrom the convention, with George Ash\nmun of Massachusetts at its head, called\nand delivered formal notice of his nomi\nnation. This meeting took place at his\nhouse. His response was couched in\npolite and dignified language, and many\nof the committee, who 'now met him\nfor the first time, departed with an im-\nproved impression of the new standard\nbearer. A few days later he wrote his\nofficial letter of acceptance, in which he\nwarmly indorsed the resolutions of the\nconvention. His actions and utterances\nso far had begun to dissipate the errone-\nous notion prevalent in some of the more\nremote eastern states that he was more\nof a backwoods boor than a gentleman.
13d573a9a361936f16bb591771bf7610 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.9520547628108 40.827279 -83.281309 to accompany him with a sufficient force\nto protect him In caso of need. A small\nsurveying party sent out, on reaching the\ncoast," was treacherously attacked at a disad-\nvantage. Ample opportunity was given for\nexplanation and apology for the insult.\nNeither came. A force was then landed.\nAfter an arduous march over a rugged and\ndifficult country, the forts from which\nthe outrages had been committed were gal-\nlantly assaulted, and were destroyed. Having\nthus punished the criminals, and having vin-\ndicated the honor of the flag, the expedition\nreturned, finding it impracticable, under the\ncircumstances, to conclude the desired con-\nvention. I respectfully refer to the corre-\nspondence relating thereto, herewith sub-\nmitted, and leave the subject for such action\nas Congress may see lit to take.\nThe Republic of Mexico not yet repealed\nthe very objectionable laws establishing\nwhat is known as the free zone on the fron-\ntier of the United States. It is hoped that\nthis may yet be done, and also more stringent\nmeasurvs may be taken by that republic re-\nstraining lawless person 9on its frontier. I\nhope that Mexico, by its own action, will\nsoon relieve this government of the difficul-\nties experienced from these causes.\nOur relations with the various republics of\nCentral and South America continhe, with\none exception, to be cordial and friendly. I\nrecommend some action by Congress regard-\ning the overdue installments under the award\nof the Venezuela Claims Commission of 1806.\nThe internal dissensions of that government\npresent no justification for the absence of an\neffort to meet their solemn treaty obliga-\ntions.
3871a8024701d3a252a7a9e9c8a22173 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.6479451737696 41.681744 -72.788147 (The New York Sun says that this\nquestion has been asked: , "Does ap-\nplejack' add to the welfare of the\ncountry?" The query Is indeed a\ndeep one. Applejack has its uses.\nThere are many men of eminent re-\nspectability, who attend church, pro-\nvide for their families and vote the\nstraight ticket, who never consult a\nphysician when their pipes become\nclogged or their liver refuses to work,\nall having a domestic remedy of their\nown, one of which is applejack and\nmolasses in. case of a cold, very pre-\nvalent at this season. Gentlemen who\nhave been afflicted with hoarseness\nhave gained vocal power by a few.\ndoses of this well known family rem-\nedy taken every few hours. Once the\npatient begins to feel his larnyx im-\nproving, his speech gaining, his utter-\nances more clear, the doses may be\nlessened In number and quantity, and\nwhen he has become sufficiently con-\nscious recovery and shows an in- -,\nclinatlon to move around, he should\nbe gently but firmly . induced to retire\nto his room and if possible to bed.\nThis medicinal combination has a\ndouble effect. It brings cheer to the\npatient. . The man who has felt that\nthe world, will never have any further\ncharm for him, that he will never\nagain be able to enjoy himself, has\nshown marvelous .recuperative powers\nafter the first dose; his spirits become\nbuoyant and he will laugh sometimes\nbe moved to song and the world, his\nprospects for unbounded pleasure and\nfinancial prosperity will at once as-\nsume gigantic proportions. The phy-\nsical effects are also very noticeable,\nthe patient gaining strength from the\nfirst use of the remedy. This medi-\ncine should only be taken internally.\nThe applejack can be purchased at\nany drug store, the molasses at the\ncorner grocery and the mixing may\nbe done anywhere.
4eef89134940bb20dd589bd577385625 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1906.395890379249 42.217817 -85.891125 small country llelglum assumes quite\na large place lu International affairs.\nft has equipped poiar expeditious\nwhich have been successful in bring-\ning back valuable scientific data per-\ntaining to the far north and the far\nSouth. Its ruler is practically the abso-\nlute monarch of the Kongo Tree State,\nand he is engaged in commercial en-\nterprises which give him a place as a\ncaptain of industry as well as a sov-\nereign. The leadership in matters of\nexploration which Belgium has taken\nhas prompted King Leopold to extend\nan invitation in its name to the arctic\nexplorers of the world to form a com-\nmunity of Interests, a sort of polar\ntrust, by means of which the results\nof their explorations may be classified\nand made known to the world in the\n advantageous manner. Through\nthis plan It, is expected that arctic and\nantarctic explorers will act in concord\nand receive more liberal support.\nIn this phase of his character Leo-\npold of Belgium appears In the light of\na patron of science. In others he poses\nas a patron of art and literature. But\nIn some departments of his activity\nthe king of the Belgians appears in a\nless favorable light. Ills fondne.ss for\ncertain favorites of the theatrical\nworld is notorious, and he is known to\nspend money freely in gratification of\nthe whims of stage beauties who\nchance to please his fancy. It Is an\nopen secret that the conduct of the\njrray whiskered monarch in the com-\npany of these friends does not always\ncomport with the dignity of his throne.\nBut therf-
4b3486f29f48776434eb627825e6fc77 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.2698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 Mr. L -ine, without any apparent |\nshame, tin-illy gratified this desire by\navowing that he, yesterday, intended\nto vote for the bill, his action therein\ncontingent upou some adjustment\nwhich could not now bo made. This j\nwas what Judge Trumbull wailed lor,\nand he at once fasLened Lane, by ask-\nhini if he wanted it understood that his\nvote was to bo giveu in consideration\nof something, or, in other words, that\nitwastobo giveuas a partofabar¬\ngain. There was great interest to hear\nMr. Lane's answer. Ho was very care\nful not to deny tho suggestion, aud the\ngalleries aud the Senate were left to be-\nlievo that Mr. Lane found reason, \\t'ith-\nin eighteen hours, to change his pur-\npose on this most important measure.\nThere is, of considerable query\nlas to tho means used to effect this,\nchange. He answered by saying that\nthe fierce speech of Mr. Wade, made\nlast night, was the cause.\nTho debate between Mr. Wado <ind\nMr. Lane having closed, Mr. Doolittlc\ngot the floor on the veto message. Hp j\ndistributed complimeuts pretty freely\namong the members of the Judiciary\nCommittee, and other members who\nsupported the bill, and theu made a\nlong andlabored speech to show that |\nthe Johnsou. policy of reconstruction\nwas inaugurated by Mr. Lincoln.\nJudge Truuibull'aud Mr. Henderson\nworried him seriously with questions,\nand brought out the point very clearly\ntbat; Mr. Lincoln never by word or\ndeed indicated a belief Umt Uie .Execu¬\ntive could dictate as to tho admission of\nmembers of Congress.
b31952eb1af3132acb5d3dc902d1ee2f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.4753424340436 41.681744 -72.788147 HARMLESS\nFor us to tell you what SANGKINA can do for yon if\nyou ore too FAT, would seem exaggerated but we will\nrefer you to the extracts of a letter lately received from\nfi graduate nurse Her letter is at yonr disposal at onr\noffice for inspection.\n"Since my early youth." says this nnrse, "I have\n"been overweight, and a constant sufferer from the symp-\ntoms which usually accompany this condition For more\nthan twenty years I had oontinnally tried to pet rid of\n. this awful burden of superfluous flosh.bnt with no success.\n"The knowlMce pnined in my long training to become a grad-in.i-\nnurse, and my conrtant contact with phynirionsof all types\noirered me no relief. I wan always depressed and took no pride\nin anythinsr, because of mv condition I was aluays tired, \niwhen I bad done little work, and mr brain refused to work I\nwas hecominira very unattractive old woman, and the outlook\nwas most riepresMiifr.\n'Til KN KOI Nl SANGR1N AI Ftartcd tikir it and wtu\noverjoyed beyond my fondest d reams to note the results!\n"In three and one half months I lost thirty pounds my genera\n. herdth was improved I have no discomforts at any trme. and my\nfatigue has entirely disappeared Kveryone tells me that I look\nten years younger, and ran truthfully say that I have exner-:ienr-\na complete rejuvenation by tins wonderful treatment."\nWhat this nure says, many other have said ahout SANGRI-' -\nIt has been used by thousands of men and women with\n,snrces and without harmful result SANGRIN A is not sold\n(under false promises of overnight reduction
182b61140ef657bc7f05ab21515f3c87 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.869862981989 39.745947 -75.546589 complish this end It Is necevary that\nthe money received by lur up u the\ndeath of her husband shall be a provi­\nsion that will continue during her life.\nHow can a lump sum answer this\npurpose? Unless the sum Iss large that\nwhen safely Invested it will yl Id an In­\ncome adequate to her support. It 1»\nnecessary that she should live In pert\non tho principal. Gradually, then, this\nfund will be diminished, and in the\ncourse of time It will ho exhausted. If\nshe could know whak her length of life\nwould be, she might readily MlV.de her\nfund In such a vay as to recur» her\nagainst want In old age. This being\nImpossible, she. Is nearly certain to suf­\nfer in one or the other two ways. She\nwill spend the money tc fast, and ko\nbecome destitute when, by reason of\nold age and failing strength, her needs\nare greatest and her capacity fer self-\nhelp least; or, on the other hand. Im­\npelled by the dread of a dependent Id\nage. she will honrd and pinch and d»-\nprive herself of what she per­\nhaps with the result that at her own\ndeath the greater part of the fund pro­\nvided for her comfort through her hus­\nband's self-denial and loving fore­\nthought will go to strangers.\nThen there Is the very great dan­\nger that the sum realised cn an Insur­\nance p.llcy by the widow will be lost\nin whole or In part through injudicious\nInvestment. Ordinarily she Is Unac­\nquainted with the rules of business\nand little capable of guarding her In­\nterests against the designs of sharpers.\nIf the secrets were all revealed of\ncases where, through natural trustful­\nness and lack of worldly wisdom, wid­\nows have cast "nil their living.” not into\n'.he treasury of the Lord, hut Into\nthe offers of sleek and sanctimonious\nswindlers, the story would be at once\ninstructive and appalling.\nTo the man who knows these dan­\ngers the question is not so much shall\nhe insure his life as how shall he in­\nsure his Insurance. For life itself Is\nnot so uncertain as money. Really the\naverage man's chances of surviving hie\nwife are better than her chances of
065422afb63a1b5c153bba710698884a THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1883.0890410641807 42.217817 -85.891125 hospital, and signal service. A bill was re-\nported granting the riynt of way for a rail -i ca - d\nthrough the Fort Smith military reser-\nvation. Tne Tariff bill was taken up hi com-\nmittee of the whole.and Mr. Kelley declared\nit the best ever submitted to Congress. It\nwas agroed tliat genend debate on the meas-\nure should cloee at 5 o'clock in the afternoon\nIn tho Senate, on Jan. 27, a petition\nwas received from tho council of the Six Na-\ntions of Indlans,asking a recognition of their\ninterest in certain lands in Kansas. Some\nwork wa done en the Tariff bill The Howe\nFpont the dav in committee of the whole on\nthe Tariff bil. Mr. island criticif cd the ac-\ntion of the dominant party for its delay in\nbringing in the Tariff bill and in attempting\nto choke tho pending measure through the\nHowe and Senate without duo considera-\ntion. It has been whispered around that,\nunless this Congress paired this or n\nfim.lar bill, the President would call\ntil extra tesrion. That statement as held\nover this Congress to prevent duo considera-\ntion of the Fubject. In y to Mr. Keiley's\nquestion asking authority for the statement,\nMr. liland said he bad seen it stated in the\nmblic press. Mr. Reagan said he heard it\nrom a Senator who bad it from the Presi-\ndent, Mr. Kelley did not think the iTotulent\nproposed to offer a bribe to the Democratic\narty to prevent legislation on the subject\nJIr. lliand opposed the bill, which he said\nmeant deah to the agricultural interests i f\nthe country. Mr. Converse concluded a\nlong constitutional argument with tho\ndeclaration, that though it was within the\npower of Congress to protect special indus-\ntries, it was not proper policy to be followed.\nMr. McKinlcy, a mcmltor of the Ways end\nMean3 Committee, recognized the general\ndemand for a revision of the tariff. A Ion"\nand somewhat exciting discussion ensued\nconcerning increased duties on cotton ties.\nThe Marquis of Lome ooupicd a seat in tho\nmembers' gallery of the House, with Speaker\nKeifer. while Mr. MeKinlev spoke on the\ndegradation of labor in Kngland. An in-\ntroduction to members followed, when the\nvisitor was conducted to the Senate cham-\nber and presented to the leading Senators.
09f62eac82ca105c180f9eb73394f945 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.1871584383223 40.063962 -80.720915 be the brat name that conld pi\nelected. There ere objections n<\nuuch as it ia somewhat awk- ra\nit certainly is significant. The K.\nhern has been suggested, and f.i\ne to confess that that Bounds tli\nsr. Bnt as opposed to Ohio, bt\ni every way preferable. The ai\n'News" aays that the original d<\nas to have an Ohio League and so\nmention should be carried oat gc\nly returning to only Ohio cities, tn\nlonnd very well, but as long as Tl\nhio cities do not come te the gc\nany sssurauca of supporting a Hi\nI impracticable. pi\nties as Golumbus, Toledo and it\nirould not be content with base r.\nniebed by inferior clubs, and ol\nbat the wholu thing woald m\nif Ohio were alone relied upon, at\ncities do uot want to bo bam- \nIt is not unlikely tbat tbe time l'i\nrben tbey will nnite with tbe di\nis of other States, and form a 3:\norganization. There are cities 1C\nthat would do well in tbe bi\nid unless the Ohio cities that H\nmake some show of being self- cc\nthey will in time be dropped of\ne is no claim wade tbat Ohio st\nillicient cities large enough is ie\nto make the League a success; in\nertion is made that they have at\nquisite baie ball enthusiasm. H\nas our choice for a name eim- Hi\n3 we bad heard of none better, io\nthe meeting last month other tb\na been suggested and they are w\nprlate. The propriety of again ao\nquestioned, however. At any in\nadopt the name of a single M\nn .affair that reaches',beyond its C;
2055d9b099c11e82937f874d084fa214 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.5164383244546 40.063962 -80.720915 Ideas grow. A lew humanitarltns,\nWilliam Lloyd Garrison, Geoige\nThompson, the Beechers, Dr. Tvng, the\nTappaus, Frederick Douglass, Charles\nLennox Redmond, Peter H. Clark, Jno.\nJ. Gaines, Joe Henry, William.Sumner,\nWilliam Burnett, Salmon Chase, Chas.\nSumner, John Brown."his soul is\nmarching on".Thad. Stevens aud old\nlien. Wade, are but a few of those who\nplanted radical ideas in this country.\nHave they planted in vain? I remeui-\nher when Kentuckians poured like a\nllood or damnation troin slavery's hell\niuto a sister city to kill the "niggers,"\nsimply because they were free and\nmaking an honest living. I saw some-\nthing of that horror, but there is one!\nthing which history has not recorded,\nlor history was the black man's enemy;\nthat is this, there were live white men\nkilled in 'hat mob to every one colored I,\nman. Covington and Newport |ilit on\nsackcloth; there was u geueral\nmourning or those untimely taken off\nwith all their wins upon "their heads,\nHere in our native State we will admit I\nthat the colored people have been com-\nparatively free from the effects of mob\nlaw heretofore, under the old regime,\nfor this reason : Slavery existed, and\nthe negro being a slave, of courso be- j\nlonged to the rich white man, and he\nsaid touch him if you dare, but lay the\nweight of your little fluger upon him, j\nyou greasy mechanic, or you toiling la-!\nborers, and we will drive you off the\nState, or send you to the State's Prison,\nor hang you, or shoot you down as we\nwould a mad dog; and the poor white\nman, debased as much by slavery as\nthe colored man, cringed the supple\nknee to the dark image 01' the slaveoli-\ngarchy.
0334ea1e1843a47fa1a87476ebc6e2d4 THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.5082191463723 35.072562 -98.243663 thoy put on tho screws to shako out\nhis holdings In tho Air Line, must\nhave n lino on It that tho Judgo Is\noverboard. Tho old gentleman can\nkeep things going for six months\nlongor without Jeopardizing any of tho\nromnlnlng trust funds, of which ho hns\nsome two millions, nnd while his wlfo,\nwho Is nn Invalid, knows tho judgo Is\nIn some trouble, sho does not suspect\nhis ronl position. Ills daughtor says\nthat when tho blow came, that day of\ntho panic, wlion Helnhart jammed tho\nstock out of Bight and scuttled hor\nfather's bankors and partners In the\nroad, tho Wilsons of Dalttmorn, sho\nhad a frightful struggle to keop hor\nfnthor from going Insane. Sho told\nmo that for three days nnd nights sho\nkept locked In their rooms at their\nhotel In Daltltnoro, to prevent him\nfrom hunting Reinhnrt and his lawyer\nKottybouo nnd killing them both, hut\nthat at last sho got him calmed down\nand togothor thoy havo been planning.\n"Jim, It was tough to sit thoro and\nlisten to tho Bchefucs to recoup that\nthis old gontloman nnd this girl, for\nsho Is only 21, havo tried to hatch up.\nThe toars actually rolled down ray\nchocks ns I listened; I couldn't help\nIt; you couldn't either, Jim. Hut at\nlast out of all tho plans considered,\nthey found only ono that had a tint of\nhopo In It, and tho serious mention of\noven thnt one, Jim, In nny but pres-\nent circumstances, would make you\nthink wc were dealing with lunatics.
24c39dc9cfdfb0450a4ec41b69743783 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.987671201167 40.063962 -80.720915 CLEMENS FARMS*\nBy virtue of two deeds of trait made by 8c\nblcaki Brady, Trustee, and Mrs. Catherine B\nClemens, tho one dated the 10th day of Novem\ntor, 1870. and tho other dated the 1st day o\nApril, 1871, and both of record in the Clerk*\njillco of tho County Court for Marshall counts\nWest Virginia, one in deed book No. 19, page 91\nand the other in deed of trust book No. 1, put\n19,1 will offer for sale at Public Auction, at^tE\nFront door or the Court Hooae of Ohio count)\nWest Virginia, on\nTHURSDAY, the 8th Daj of January, 1874,\nit 10 . * ., the property mentioned and d<\nicribcd in the two deeds of tnuts aforesaid; th\niamo being the tract of land lor some time know\nis tho CLEMEN8 FARMS, situated in th\ncounty of Marshal!. Wert Virginia, on tho wa\ntcrs Whoellng creek, at the mouth of Btull'\nRon, and distant *boat two miles from Elc\nQrovo Station on tho Benpflold Railroad.\nTho said Farm it divided by Stall's Ran fab\nLwo farms or tracts of about equal size, each con\ntalnln* about 177 acres.. Nearly all of tho last\nIs under a fclgh state ofcultivation; is very rid\nind limn ti folly located. Upon the south or eu\nportion there is a large stone -mansion house\nwith all tho necessary ontbuildlngs. and upoi\nIhe other part there is a good tenant house.\nHa1d Farms will be oldjeither separately, ot\ntogether, to suit purchaser*.\nThe Trustee will, on application, give any in\nformation that may be deslrod as to Urmt, con\nlitlons, Ac., and be also has a complete plat am\nsurvey of the land, showing its extent, llnei\nfences, Improvement*, Jbc.\nTrans ad so made known on day of sale.
1dd31f17c6be83042b7e9c8825a27b35 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.6397259956875 40.735657 -74.172367 The plans and specifications of the work can\nbe examined at the office of the Chief Engineer\nof the Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners at the City Hall. Said proposals to be ac-\ncompanied by the consent in writing of two j\nsureties, or a surety company qualified to do\nbusiness in New Jersey, who shall, at the time\nof putting in such proposals, qualify as to\ntheir responsibility in the amount of such oro-\nposai, and bind themselves that, if the contract\nbe awarded to the person or persons making\nthe proposal, they will, upon Its being so\nawarded, become his or their sureties for the\nfaithful performance cf said work, and that if\nthe person or persons omit or refuse to execute\nsuch contract they will pay to the City of\nNewark any difference between the sums to\nwhich he oi they would have been entitled\nupon completion of the contract and that\nwhich the City of Newark may be obliged to\npay the person or persons by whom such con-\ntract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commission-\ners of the City of Newark, reserve to \nselves the right to accept or reject any or all\nproposals for the above work, as they may\ndeem best for the interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified that\nunder the provisions of the seventh section\nof the lew creating the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners, approved March 28. 1891 .\nthat the bond or bonds to be given for the\nfaithful execution and performance of said\npublic work shall first be approved as to suf-\nficiency by the Board, and as to form by the\ncounsel of the Board, and no contract ahall\nbe binding or the city or become effective or\noperative until such bond is so approved, and\nthe President of the Board shall have power\nto examine the proposed bondsmen under oath.\nIf he ahall so desire, or shall be so Instructed\nby ths Board, but the Board will not be bound\nby any statement that may be made by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full power\nand absolute discretion in the whole matter. \\\nand this provision shall bs referred to in any\nadvertisement Inviting bids for any such pub-\nlic work.
836ccebb2dbfbaab05a7ae75186c08d5 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.6980874000708 39.261561 -121.016059 8nc. 5. There shall be and Is hereby levied upon every\nmale inhabitant of the City, of twenty-one yeare of iff*\nand upwards, a poll tax of one dollar, for the year ending\nMay 1861 ; and it is hereby made the dnty of the Marshal\nto collect the same.\nSac. 6. The Clerk ol the Board shall prepare and deliv-\ner to the Marshal proper blank poll tax rwteipts, which\nshall be numbered and signed by the Clerk. Upon thw\npayment of each and every poll tax, tbe Marshal shall de-\nliver one of said receipts, countersigned by himself, to the\nperson so paying.\nSec. 7. To enforce the collection of the poll tax, the\nMarshal may siese so much ofany and every speciee of\nproperty owned or claimed by anv person liable to and re-\nfusing to pay said poll tax, as will be sufficient to pay thw\nsame and costs of seirure. and may sell the same at any\ntime or place, within the city limits, upon giving a verbal\n one hour previou- to such tale; a delivery of thw\npossession of the pro,-, y by the Marshal, to any pur-\nchaser, shall be deemed s sufficient title in the purchaser.\nAfter having deducted the poll tax, for which sueh prop-\nerty was sold, and the necessary tees and costs of sale,\nthe Marshal shall return the surplus monev, if any there\nbe, to tbe owner of such property. Any person Indebted\nto another, liable to a poll tax and neglecting or refusing\nto pay the same, shall be liable to pay the same after eer-\nvioe upon him, by the City Marshal, efa notice In writ-\ning. stating tho name or names of the person or pessnnn\nso liable, and owing such poll tax, and may deduct tho\namount thereof from such indebtedness.\nSxc. 8. The Marshal shall keep a correct list of the\nnames of all persons paying their poll tax, and shall re-\nport the same to the Board on the first of each month.\nPassed June 1st 1860.
129f2ba4fea271e5f0c4ab854eb6cb28 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.891780790208 40.063962 -80.720915 Far beyond this poiut even, still\nthronged the tide of pedestrians and\nvehicles, and it seemed that cariosity\nwas Insatiable. Asa truly remarkable\nIllustration of javenile enthusiasm, we\nmay mention the fact that the printer's\n"devil" of the Leader, a lad of four¬\nteen, walked the entire distance to Berea,\nfourteen miles, keeping up with Wes¬\nton and arriviug on time. It is need¬\nless to add that be is an ardent admi¬\nrer of the great walker, (which, by a\nsignificant coincidence, is the name of\nthe ambitious youth,) and he finds no\nwords too strong to express his feeliuss.\nAs the shadows of gathering twilight\ncame on, the number of followers grad¬\nually lessened, vehicles drew out aud\nreturned, and those on foot, with the\nhouorable exception named above, fell\nby the wayside, panting and weary,\nand went into camp for & short time,\npreparatory to tbe return Journey. Sev¬\neral of the carriages, however, kept\nwith the party to Berea.\nIt was decided to have supper at the\nlatter place, and two of tbe attendants\nwere sent ahead to make arrangements.\nA very large crowd, composing the\nmajor portion ot the denizens of that\nquiet town, of all ages, classes and con¬\nditions, bad early in the af¬\nternoon, It having been expected tbat\nthe guest would arrive by three o'clock.\nAfter three hours of patient waiting, the\nprocession appeared through the dim\nstarlight, aud at forty minutes past six,\nWeston entered the Berea Hotel. He\nreceived a most cordial welcome from\nthe crowd, and the Berea Cornet Band\nployed several fine airs, from the roof\nof a building opposite. Supper was\nsoon announced, and the pwrty sat\ndowu to an iuvitiug meal, prepared un¬\nder the especial supervision of Mr.\nNokes, the hospitable laudlord. It was\nsoon dispatched, Weston eating with\nhis usual relish. A largo number of\nthe young ladies gratified their curiosi¬\nty by receiviug introductions to Wes¬\nton, and serenely happy were they who\nhad the good fortune to procure auto¬\ngraphs. In the parlort- Weston re ¬\nquested music, and two young ladies\nsang tor his entertainment, with which\nbeseemed to be highly delighted. At\nEra>eut writing, 8:40, the party is still\nere, expecting to leave for Grafton at\n9 o'clock, and will spend the night at\nthat place. The night is dark and tbe\ntravelling difficult. Weston says he\nwill probably make auother trial of the\nhundred mile feat, ou Friday, starting\nfrom Toledo.
1d14854f6138c541d2a9b6358e96655e THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5273972285643 40.063962 -80.720915 round t! cluster too ninny fond nicliio-\nIcs. for it ever to Is- forgotten, or liylit-\n>• thought of as an unmeaning tinny,\nbe old llay—its coui|M>*Hion ami siruc-\nIire, filtered into ami Issunie part ami\narcel of llie contest liirottyh w hich we\nave just pteesisl. We miylit Is* hutiiil-\nit vs I bv a foreign fis* anil our llay re-\niviin tin* same ; hut the sueis-ss ol the\ntehelpoii would have turn that glorious\nanuer iii I w •>,obliterated it from aimuiy\nic tilings in this world which haven\n•temporary nieaniny,ami tnude it hut\nie reprisveiitalive ol frrriluiH lo*t—bv\nur un wort Illness. Itut thank <*isl, the\nay Inc. nassisl throuyh the conllict till-\nirnisbisl t lie st ripes :<|11here. I lie stars\nII bright, and tin* a/ure ol heaven rc-\n from its Id lie Held. Is-t no house\nercaftcr Is1 without it. Make it, my\ndenilii, a hotisehold yissl. leach your\ntile nnes its history. I.et their spirits\nwell with pride all'll patriotism MS yon\ns'ounl to them thedisslsof their patriot\nithers, or “shoulder your eriitelu-s and\nhow how fields were won,” Is m ath its\nraeeful folds—and then impress upon\nteni til.nvietion that its honor will\nuni Ih. in their kis niiiy.\nAll honor, praise mid glory to the\nrave mi ll who have Isirne that llag\nloft, and placed it; above the reach of\n•aitor iiamlN or foreign f,s -s . The liv-\nig among them, shall Is' the cherished\nlid honored objects, of a guileful ,-01111 -\nv's care; the memory of those who\naye so cheerfully oiler, -I
778962e57006bdc68c33a707fa741e32 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.8975409519835 39.745947 -75.546589 Life insurance companies have flg-\nures to prove Uiat there Is a steadily\ndecreasing death rate In all ages up\nto about forty-Ave in men and about\nflfty-flvc in women, but for ages over\nthese, the death rate Is steadily In­\ncreasing. The decrease is due to the\nuniversal campaign against the dis­\neases of Infancy and the modern pre­\ncautions taken to prevent such dis­\neases, while the alarming Increase in\nthe death rate Is due, almost entirely,\nto the diseases which attack adults.\nMany have found quick deliverance\nfrom the use of Plant Juice, the famous\nherbal stomach medicine, which Is\ncomposed of a combination of roots,\nherbs, barks and berries of numerous\nmedicinal plants. Dally testimonials\nare received, telling of the wonderful\nbandflt obtained from uale of this\ngreat preparation.\nOne of the most recent Is that of\nMrs. Emma Boss, a popular Wilming­\nton lady at No. 1130 Lancas­\nter avenue who tells how her daugh­\nter, 12 years of age, was restored to\nhealth by Plant Juice. She says:\n“ Plant Juice certainly brought about\na wonderful change In my daughter\nwho is 12 years of age. Nothing that\nI prepared for her would tempt tier\nto cat; she could not keep the light­\nest kind of food In her stomach; she\nhad dark circles under her eyes, was\nalways constipated, her longue was\ncoated and she had a bad taste in\nher mouth; she lost all desire of\nromping and playing with the other\nchildren: she had to remain\nfrom school for she was so weak she\nwas not able to get about. I had\ntried many medicines and treatments\nfor her without any benefit,\nwhen I heard so many people 1\nknew talking of Plant Juice 1 decided\nto get a bottle for her.
01f5e65d9af236d0715ef30d7dc88b02 CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1908.5259562525298 41.875555 -87.624421 No sonBlblo person believes that\ndrugs do not nffoct tho brain, and\nyet this doctrlno scorns to tit In with\nso many facts that soma clour demon-\nstrations of Its fallacy Is much need-\ned. It Is tho physician who should\nbe asked whut ho has to say on the\nsubject, bwauso naturally he Is the\none best qualified to know whatever\nIs known about both drugs and brain.\nMoreover, lately ho has mado great\ndiscoveries about the relations of tho\nbrain to tho mind by observations,\nwhich ho alone could make, of tho\neffects of local Injuries to brain mat-t o- r\ncaused by disease or by accident.\nBut how different the facts about\nthose two subjects are from what\nmost peoplo Imagine, ho shows by\nsaying that drugs no moro affect tho\n than Insanity does that Is, not\nat all! except alcohol, which Hoes\nInjure tho brain, though not at all\non account of 'Its mental effects, but\nfor tho very different reason that al-\ncohol has a chemical affinity for the\nalbumen and fats ot tho tissues.\nBy this chemical action It slowly\nnltors nnd'damnges brain tlssuo, but\nthis result In no wlso differs from\nsimilar alterations produced by al-\ncohol In tho tissues of tho llvor and\not the kidneys.\nTobacco Is a powerful poison, and\nyet no autopsies can show tho least\ndifference botween the brain ot a life-\nlong smoker and that of one who\nnever lit a cigar. Likewise the brnln\nof an opium fiend is indistinguishable\nfrom any other brain, and so on for\nthe rest. Everybody's Magazine.
3d0c7491b74b06093183bd49c26cf2fe EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1909.9027396943177 39.745947 -75.546589 emanate from It, but tho gas it gener­\nates is probably Its worst primary- ef­\nfect and the only way to do away with\nthis Is to remove the cause. STUART'S '\nDYSPEPSIA TABLETS go to the rom !\nof this trouble. They attack the gar\nmaking foods nn<1 render them harm- j\nless. Flatulency or w-lnd on the stom­\nach simply cantiot exist where these\npowerful and wonderworking little\ntablets are In evidence.\nTHEY WERE MADE for this very\npurpose to attack gas making foods\nI and convert them into proper nutri­\nment. This is their province ÿjvl of­\nfice. A whole book eould be written\nabout them and then dot all told that\nmight be told with profit to sufferers\nfrom this painful disease, dyspepsia\nIt would mention years of patient\nand expensive experiment in effort to\narrive at this result—of failures Innu­\nmerable and at last success. It would\nmake mention of the different stomach\ncorrectives that enter in to this tablet\nand make It faithfully represent aM.\nRTUART'8 DYSPEPSIA TABLETS\nare not alone Intended for the sick, but\nwell folks as well; for tho person who\ncraves hearty foods and wants to eat\nheartily and run no risk of bad effects,\nthey act like a charm and make eating\nand digestion a delight and pleasure.\nThey keep the stomach active and en­\nergetic and able and willing to do ex­\ntra work without special labor or et»\nfort. Don't forget this. Well people\nare often neglected, but the STUART\nDYSPEPSIA TABLETS have them in\nmind.
1f99d48ca5cb95b813ed6a2a7c21c099 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.7027396943176 40.063962 -80.720915 That section provides, in effect, that\nwhen any person offers to vote, if his\nvote be challenged, the Supervisor\nand Inspectors shall refuse to receive it,\nuutil he produces to them his atlidavit,\nsworn to and subscribed by hint, iu the\nparticular form set forth iu the act.\nThey are to reject the vote, if the oath\nbe not produeod, notwithstanding the\nperson offering to vote may possess all\nthe qualifications of a voter required,\nby the constitution of the State.\nDuring the last session of the legis¬\nlature, I earnestly opposed the passage\nof this act, contending that the Legisla¬\nture had no authority to pass it, and\nthat, if they had, tiie measure was in\nitself inexpedient and unwise. Subse¬\nquent reflection has served to conlirm\nthe views I then entertained.\nThe right suffrage is the foundation\non which rests the wholo structure of\nrepublican government, ami is there¬\nfore properly defined and regulated by\nthe constitution itself. To prescribe\nwho shall be their own constituents is\nno part of the legislative power. In\nevery State of the Union, this is done\nby the constitution.not by legislative\nnets. The Legislature may pass the\nnecessary laws to carry into execution\nthe provisions of the constitution on the\nsubject, and there their authority ends.\nIn our State at least, no authority over\nthe right of suffrage has been granted\nto the legislature, except in a single\nparticular hereinafter noticed. Yet our\nLegislature, delegated by the people to\nexercise only tlio powers conferred by\nthe constitution, have assumed the au¬\nthority to prescribe who shall be the\nconstituency of the State.
188e893979fc60811010dac7302e055c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1383561326738 40.063962 -80.720915 Memphis, Tennessee, February 18.\nAn Avalanche Little Hock special"say\nWhen the roll was culled only thirtei\nmembers were present, the same as yc\nlerday, not a quorum present, and M\nHadley moved an adjournment till Mo\nday. Air. Thierson had a motion to oil\nbut the President disregarding it, puttl\nmotion to adjourn, which was carrie\nMr. Thierson declared thisuadamnab\noutrage on the rights, infamous, ungcntl\nmanly, and unparliamentary." At tli\npoint tin! impeachment managers appea\nml. The announcement of the Senate ai\n(ourriment was again' nuule, arid returnc\nwithout iui|>cachmcnt. Articles of in\npechment against Chief Justice McClm\nwere presented in the House bj Mr.l'oi\ngett. McCluro is charged with conspl\ning with Governor Clayton to cm\nLieutenant Governor Johnston. Tl:\nurticles, after three hours discussion, wei\nudoptcd by a vote ot 44 to 30. The vo\nwas reconsidered, and laid on the tabl\nMr. Podgett ollercd another resolutio\nreciting the Governor's refusal to give u\nthe olllco alter impeachment tl\nHouse, and memoralizing the Preside!\ni)l the United States and Congress\ngrantee a republican form of governmci\n10 the people of Arkansas, and to prote\nthem lrom fhu usurpation of Clay to\nUnder the rules the resolution lies ovc\nThe House adjourned till Monday. Tl\nSherill reported to the Buprcuio Cou\nHint lie luui been unable to get u person)\nservice on the Lieutenant Governor,\niinswcr why the Chief Justice's injunctk\nto prevent his acting us Governor not\nlie made permanent, hutluul left notic<\nThere will he two Governors anil nrob\nl)ly two Justices on iMonday. Claytc\nreiuses to surrender his ofilcc, and M\nUluro is understood to do tho same,\nis thought that Johnston will appoint\nsuccessor to McCluro at once. Clayt<\nlias the House guarded, and is swcariii\nin ull tho militia lie cau get. Very fe\nsunposo that the Supreme Court lias d\nclacd to give warrants to servo before tl\nurticles of impeachment are proserin\nugainst McClurc.
167a60444c20faf361aa263605f427c0 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.2808218860985 42.217817 -85.891125 When an iron surface is exposed to the\naction of water, or of moist air, it speed-\nily becomes covered by a film of pro-\ntoxide, or ferrous oxide, which consists\nof 56 parts by weight of the metal to 1G\nparts of oxygen. The ferrous oxide\ncontinues to attract oxygeu from the\natmosphere, and is gradually con-\nverted into another compound the\nsesquioxide, or ferric oxide, which is\ncomposed of twice 5G parts by weight\nof iron, and three times 1G parts by\nweight of oxygen. The ferf ic oxide, in\nits turn, gives up some of its oxygeu to\nthe as yet unoxidizediron beneath it.and\nthe ferrous oxide thus formed is gradu-\nally converted into ferric oxide by the\naccess of air through the spongy layer of\nsuperficial rust which covers it. In this\nway ttie first formed film of rust exposes\nto the the surface which lies\nbelow it ; and hence the rust becomes a\ncarrier of oxygen to the deeper parts of\nthe iron, util the latter is completely\ncorroded and worn through. Many at-\ntempts have been made to protect iron\nsurfaces by the application of some kind\nof paint or varnish ; and these attempts\nhave, of course, been to some partial\nextent successful. Such coatings, how-\never, have no real adhesion to the metal\non which they are placed, and are liable\nto scale off or to perish in a variety of\nways. Even when the coating is gen-\nerally sound, the- smallest flaw in its con-\ntinuity will give entrance to the enemy ;\nfor the rust from the exposed spot will\nspread laterally under the coating, and\nmay be all the more dangerous and de-\nstructive from being partially concealed\nfrom view.
119450ddbe704f8247b8b13dcb07a6c4 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.4166666350436 40.441694 -79.990086 The Chilean affair was also a victory, and\ntho President was highly conspicuous at the\nfinish. But even there he must divide\nhonors with his Secretary of tbe Navy, who\nbuilt and armed cruisers between nightfall\nand morning, for two weeks after the\nChileans were down on their knees In nbject\napology, and with Commander Evans, whose\nmartial demeanor gave the Chilean admiral\na terrible cramn, we must not leave out\nTracy and Evans.\nThis administration has vindicated the\nhonor, of tbe American bog. Now, for tho\nfirst time in 20 years, American meat pro-\nducts ore admitted into every European\nmarket on the same terms with tbe meat\nproducts from other lands, and in some\nmarkets on terms even more favorable.\nI have had somo difficulty in figuring ont\njust wuo nas uono cms. uerrainiy it was\ndone by the agents of tbe State\nDepartment, by Mr. Held In France, by\nMr. Phelps in Germany, by Minister Grant\nIn Austria, and bv our other ministerial\nrepresentatives. If I remember right. Mr.\nIteld began this work and with a hostile\nParisian press, a hostile French pnolic, a\nhostile Chamber of Deputies, and at the first\na hostllo Government to contend with, ho\ngave such a character to the American hog\nas to enable It to force its; way rot only Into\nthe French market, but Into every other.\nNow my exoellent friend. Secretary Rusk,\nhas said that he Is very much obliged to Mr.\nBlaine and the State Department for the\nable assistance they have rendered him in\nsecuring the admission of American meat\nproducts abroad. This seems to me to mean\nthat It was Busk himseir who did It.
2fcaac597381378cac032349c53c547c SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.532876680619 37.53119 -84.661888 Lebanon An indulgent father and\nhusband li gone but let those who are\nloft to mourn his lost strive to live DS\nho lived that wo may die as he bas died\nHo joined the Baptist church 10 ycarl\nago and since then ho had lived a\nfaithful member Ho was kind to ev\neryone and always exerted a power for\ngood Ho was a prosperous farmer and\nsuccessful the accumulation of tbls\nworlds goods Ho was the best farm-\ner and one of the best men In Lincoln\ncounty A neighbor said to the writer\nHe sowed good seed along the path or\nlife and his children reaped In the fear\nand admonition of tbo Lord DII\ndeath was duo to a complication of dll\neases but he was ready and willing to-\ngo and be at rest under the shade of\ntbo trees beside the still waters la the\nland that Is fairer than day Deatb Is\ndeprived of Its thcgravo Is rob\nred of victory This Is a momentof In\nconsolable sorrow to hit family and\nfriends of Ineffable Joy to him when\nthe angels came In the life of dear hue\nband and father Mr Lawrence will\nbe missed for his true moral cbrlstU\nvirtue His funeral was conducted by\nhis old pastor Rev Carmlcball\nRockcastle at his homo near Whlto\nOak School House and his remains\nwere followed by a long procession or\nhis sorrowing friends to the last roe\nIng place In Lancaster cemetery to\nawait tbe resurrection morn when let\nIt be hoped his loved ones will Join him\nIn praises of God eternally Let his\nblessed memory be enshrined In our\nhearts for we know ho Is at peace an\neverlastingly happy with the heaven\nhosu far above all else\nPapa Is gone but not forgotten\nNever will his memory fade\nSweetest thoughts will ever linger\nAround the grave where be Is laid
00a6913d362561bcbfbc0e26a80380d4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1888.8101092579943 40.063962 -80.720915 The Water Works Committee of Cou\noil and tho Hoard of Water Commiesio\ners were to have had a joint meeting la\nevening, but as a quorum of tho commi\n( tee failed to appear, nothing wab don\nThe meeting was palled to cousider whi\ni promises to be a deficit in the Board\n; finances at the end of tho year, tho t\nsuit of the extraordinary expenses tl\nBoard was forced to meet by reason\ntho Hoods of July ]f) and August 2\nThose floods swept away natural gi\nI pipes through which the Wat\nWorks received its fuel, free\ncost, and necessitated tho e:\npenditure of $1,313 81 tor coal. Th;i\nhowever, was an unforseen expem\nthat was small in comparison wil\nthat mado necessary by the wasliii;\n o! large ai|U expensive mains\nMain street and Caldwell's run. Tor\nplneo theso and nialte them permanen\na work that is Mill in progress, so till\nthe South Side might havo a water su|\nply. has or will, cost about SI8.7U\nThis, as all know, was a work that ha\nto be done. In ease the weather p«:\nmitu t||i! contractor to complete th\nnew reservoir tliia year, aboi\n$27,000 will bo demanded, which, it a\nthat amount hns to bu paid out, wi\nleave a sliortago of about $11,600.\ncan be readily seen that had not tli\nfloods ounsod an unexpected outlay (\nabout $20,000 there would have been\nhunilus of something over $8,000 at tli\nend of the year. Another effort to hoi\na meeting will be made to-day.
3d512ed6384c3d58f972a67c88398485 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.1438355847285 40.063962 -80.720915 is been asserted that ten per cent o\n>nic neUT mechanically mixed witl\nnon air, is not so detrimental t<\nh as two per cent in air that has beei\nmed by respiration aud the exlmla\nfrom the Jungs, skin and body cloth\nic complete remedy is a regular aut\nlant supply of Iresh air from without\ncontrivance has us yet been invent\nhich will dlspenso with thai mos\nomic and thorough mcuns of ventila\n- the great naturul ventilator oi\ni.\\hoopenfir&plac&.which becomc\n10 more efficient if a fire burn upoi\nearth, ond an inlet for pure air exis\ne window. The interchange bctweei\nitrata of air of dillerent temperature\nbo extremely slow, unless they to\ni«l liv nifltulinn Ah thn n*nlri»if nit\nfrom its warmth, and lluds no outlet\nRuntdM* >t tho top of tho room a\nxpenso of cubic space for respire\npurposes, henco tha importance of\now lot down at the top in tho vcuti\ni of an occupied room.\njvos ami Ibmuces, though convcnien\nwonomlcal modes ol warming house;\ni>t fuvor or assist tho ventilation ol\ni, are, therefore, far interior, In\nary point or view, to the open grat\nre-place. It is more difficult to ven\n) a cliwo room In summer than ii\ner, lor the reason that there are n<\nIn summer tocreato a draft or (III\ntho air, but It may bo sufficient t<\nthe windows at tho top and the bot\nand the flro>place, which should ncv\ndosed at flight when tho doors ar\nIn cool weather, "instead or askim\njives," says Dr. Gcorgo Derby, o\non, "with now littlo luel can I warn\nuiuso, bv stopping tho Hues and III\nflcent wlndow-cracks which the cat\nera hare left, the ipicstlun should b\nmuch can I afford to pan for Ires:\nilles of pure air, moderately an\n. l ly wanned and distributed wlthou\n;o? I cannot lielp Mii'vlng that th\nof family health and lianplnAw, In\nration, would lw more Increased h.\nid expenditures for this purjiose tha\niny oilier." Again, hu says ol til\nor pure air, "Tho best way is to (reel\nIt that It is expensive, but worth 111\ney it coals."
78373b9d25f9b3b1248a20aa30da4b38 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1859.8260273655505 39.369864 -121.105448 I went with two of my brothers-in-law\non a fishing excursion, about ten miles from\nhome, and camped out over night. Four\nmiles of the distance we made by wagon,\nand the remaining part of the way we were\ncompelled to walk, packing our blankets on\nour backs, through thick woods. We crossed\nmoose and bear tracks several times, but\ndid not meet any of the animals, fortunately\nfor them. At last we reached the fishing\npond, which is situated at the foot of one\nof the highest mountains of the State. We\nmade a camp out of boughs, and a fish-\ning raft out of dry logs, and, after all prepa-\nrations wore completed, pushed out upon\nthe lakes desolate surface—our right of\npassage being disputed by two loons, which\nkept up an unearthly yelling. In about an\nhour we caught more than thirty trout, some\nof them weighing over a pound each. ~Tt\nwas fine fun and paid well for our journey.\nOn returning to camp, this is the way we\ncooked our trout: procured a forked stick\nfour feet long : ran one prong through tho\nfish from tail to head, along the back-bone,\nand on the other prong placed a piece of\npork about the length of thc'fish, pressing\nit down sticking the fork into the head;\nthen held the fish before a hot fire, turning\nit constantly, so that it was well basted with\npork grease, until done, when we served it\nup on a birch chip, seasoned it with salt and\npepper and ate it with our fingers. This\nwas the entire cuisine of the best meal I have\never eaten. On our way home, next day, we\nshot several grouse and pigeous and ate\n.heartily of blueberries and roseberries —the\nlatter very luscious.\nLet me say here, that Maine is certainly\nthe place where they raise wen—that is, so\nfar as size and strength are concerned. That\nwriter in the Atlantic Monthly was correct\nwho said men here are known by the size\nof the plank they can shoulder. Owing to\nthe exigencies of the lumber business, most\nparts of Maine would be worthless without\nlarge men, and their existence there is an-\nother instance of the wise adaptation per-\nceivable in all of natures works. There,is\nanother thing I have particularly noticed :\nwherever you see any one, no matter what\nage or sex, clothed in home made cloth, you\nwill find a healthy constitution and a face\nflushed with red blood. The spinning wheel\nand loom are harbingers of health.”
08511646afa9f06a5549350e7e871eb6 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.346575310756 46.187885 -123.831256 Section 3 ot the act entitled : "An act to\nprovide for the protection of the salmon\nfisheries of Alaska,'' approved March '1, 1SS9,\nprovides that :\n"Section 3. That section 195G or the Re-\nvised Statutes or the United States Ls hereby\ndeclared to include and apply to all the do-\nminion or the United States In the waters\nor Kehring Sea, and it shall De the duty or\nthe President at a timely season in each\nyear to Issue his proclamation, and cause\nthe same to be published for one month at\nleast in one newspaper (if any such there\nbe) published at each United States port of\nentry on the Pacitic coast, warning all per-\nsons against entering such waters for the\npurpose of violating the provisions or said\nsection, and he shall also cause one or \nvessels or the United States to diligent I v\ncruisc said waters and arrest all persons anil\nseize all vessels round to be or to have been\nengaged in any violation ot the laws or the\nUnited States therein."\nNow, therefore, I, Kenja2HX Hakkisox,\nPresident ot the United States, pursuant to\nthe above recited statutes, hereby warn all\npersons asainst entering the waters or\nHehring Sea widiin the dominion ot the\nUnited States, for the purpose of violating\nthe provisions or .'aid section YX&, Revised\nStatutes ; and I hereby proclaim that all\npersons found to be, or liave been engaged\nlnany violation ol the laws or the United\nStates, in said waters, will be arrested and\npunished as above provided, and that all\nvessels so employed, their tackle, apparel,\nfurniture and cargoes will be seized and\nforfeited.
0be1fca705f1042f86fb7ed7e10491be THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1896.6762294765736 41.258732 -95.937873 the defense of their property, and\nopening the door, were met by a crowd\ntrying to get in. A short, sharp strug\ngle took place In which our people,\nthough few in number, were able to\nbeat off their assailants, till, an alarm\nhaving been raised, help began to ar-\nrive from the village close by, when\nthe assailants withdrew. In the melee\na man who was in the forefront and\ntrying to get in was struck down,\nstunned and dragged inside; and after\nward, when a light was struck, to the\namazement of all, proved to be none\nother than the ruffian leader himself.\nWhat to do with him they did not\nknow. He was a most dangerous prls\noner for them to have on their hands.\nfor when the other side should know\nwhat had become of him, there would\ncertainly be an attempt at a rescue.\nAnd If he were let go, he either\ntake revenge, or take himself olT, and\nthen his confederates would come to\nour people and demand that he be pro\nduced, and if they could not do It,\nwould claim and represent to the au-\nthoritles that he was put out of the\nway by them. That would have meant\ntheir ruin. There was nothing else to\ndo than to hold on to him and inform\nthe authorities and get them to take\ncharge of him as soon as possible.\nMeanwhile, for safer keeping, he was\ntransferred to a house In the village\nclose by. This was done at daylight.\nDuring the forenoon the ruffian's\nconfederates made an attack on our\npeople in their own part of the vil-\nlage, paying no heed to a couple of\nmessengers sent by military officers\nto preserve the peace. The object of\nthis attack was partly to recapture\ntheir leader and partly to pillage our\npeople.
4fdbb37e148a4cd81e5a3d4f6cacaa8f NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.691780790208 41.681744 -72.788147 league covenant as it stands. Under\nno circumstances must there by an\nlegal or moral obligation upon the\nUnited States to enter into war or to\nsend its army and navy abroad or\nwithout the unfettered action of con-\ngress to impose economic boycotts on\nother countries. Under the constitu-\ntion of the United States the congress\nalone has the power to declare war\nand all bills to raise revenue or af-\nfecting the revenue in any way must\noriginate in the house of representa-\ntives be passed by the enate and re-\nceive the signature of the president.\nThese constitutional rights of congress\nmust not be impaired by any agree-\nments such as are presented in this\ntreaty, nor can any . opportunity of\ncharging the United States with bad\nfaith be permitted. No American\nsoldiers or must be sent to fight\nin other lands at the bidding of a\nleague of nations. American lives\nmust not ba sacrificed except by the\nwill and command of the American\nipcople acting through their constitu-\ntional representatives in congress.\n"This reservation also covers the\nsubject, of mandates. According to\nthe provisions of the covenant of the\nleague the acceptance of a mandate\nby any member is voluntary, but as\nto who shall have authority to refuse\nto accept a mandate for any coun-\ntry the covenant of the league is si-\nlent. The decision as to accepting\na mandate must rest exclusively with-\nin the control of the congress of\nthe United States as the reservation\nprovides and must not be delegated,\neven by inference, to any personal\nagent or to any delegate or commis-\nsioner.
14fd76ebc79c19ef5eccd863f5a18c20 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.1027396943175 32.408477 -91.186777 Mr. McReynolds apparently wants\nIt definitely understood that the gov- t\nernment does not intend to surrender\na thing for which it has contended. He\nglad apparently that there is an op-\nportunity to settle out of court many\nof the caes against the trusts, but\nhe is determined, It is said, that no\none shall think his department or the\nadministration is yielding ,one thing\nwhich it does not believe it is right\nto yield. It is held by the department t\nof Justice offcials that in all of the\nagreements with big corporations thus I\nfar reached the department has ob-\ntained all things which it has demand-\ned. The attorney general has let it\nbe known that it is his intention to\nbe guided by no other policy in any\ncase. Briefly, corporations to escape\n mast "come to Washaing\nton to agree to proposed terms."\nIn the case of the American Tele-\nphone and Telegraph company a direct\nquestion was put to the attorney gsen-\neral: "On what terms can we square\nourselves?" Mr. MeReypolds took a\nlong time thinking ona this case and\nthen he told the officials exactly what\nthey would have to do to make their c\noperations omply with the law\nagainst the trusts. It is said that the\ncompany officials sought a eompro-\nmise, beina unwllinag to give over\neartain proltable things whleh they\nthought under ertain constructons t\nmight be considered to be within the\nlaw. PIlnally the term fixed by the\nattorney general were accepted in\nevery detail and the telephone and\nteleSraphb people were net particularly\nsour-faced over the surrender situa-\ntion.
7124be56cd9bf435d5272e7734511dee THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6999999682903 40.063962 -80.720915 To raise a legion of 10,000 men, one\nmillion dollars is necessary to l>egiii\nwith, and this is a great want at present.\nIf that sum could be raised there would\nbe abundance to arm, clothe, and feed\nthe legion until some, points iu this\ncountry, such as Matnmoras, could be\ntaken, and a few million dollars raised\nby requisition.\n*A commissioner is now in Browns¬\nville, with instructions from St. Loda\nde Texada, Minister of Foreign Adairs,\nto raise a loan of $1,000,000, then to\nraise a legion, buy so many stand of\nritles, so many rounds of ammunition,\nsix batteries of rilled guns, so many\nrounds of shell aud case shot, «&c., hut\nthe commissioner cannot raise the loan\nand will not do the rest witli no funds,\nas it would bo folly. The facts are\nthese: There is to be no war at present\nin favor of Mexico. The order to Gen.\nSheridan shows that. The Liberal party\nwants aid from the United States, anu\nis without it. If 10,000 to 20,000\nmen can be raised for the party, it may\nrepiin power.\nThe Herald's Vera Cruz correspon¬\ndence, to the 1st, says:\nThe Imperialists are in a state of in¬\ntense excitement and joy over the olli-\ncial announcement by Marshal Baziuc,\nof two Imperial triumphs.\nIt seems that the rumor which we\nhave so olten previously had of the\nflight of Juarez aud the taking of his\ncapital by Maximilian's forces, has at\nlast proved true. They entered it on\nthe loth of August. The other Impe¬\nrial victory was the occupation of the\ncity of Henuasillo, a place of less than\n0,000 inhabitants, which the Republi¬\ncans had previously evacuated. These\naffairs, though of no great importance,\nwere being made much of in celebra¬\ntions by the Imperialists, and a special\nsteamer had been dispatched-from Vera\nCruz for France, to convey the intelli¬\ngence, and yet this affair is insignifi¬\ncant, compa'red with the success of the\nLiberals at Tehtiacan.
1da61d5f19d619e2b56cec45488e2f1a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.1082191463724 40.063962 -80.720915 the earlj part of the market. ualM murkily b*\niogmoro easily effected., owing to the presenc*\nof » larger number of Philadelphia buyers thsu\nthere bu been for a week or two past, Thelt\npurchases gate ft tone to tbe uiarkot tb»t\nIt would not otherwise have had, and\nin advance ol about tfc may be reported on\nmost of tho sales, tbe lower grades sympathy\nIng to some extent wltb tbe effect* produced ou\nths medium ftnd top cattl*. Tbe quality of tbe\noflorlngs will coinparo favorably with those ol\nlast week, though tbe number or tbe topa weru\nnot at great ti It waa tben. The market cloeed\nrather dull. Quotations W,i cents, wltb but\nfew sales at tbe lower price.\nPrices to-day for beef cattle ranged as follow*fery\nbest on sale to day BKQSjfe; that general y\nrated first quality 4Jitt8;gc; medium or good\nair quality 4*®4Xc; ordinary thin iteers, ozt u\nmd cows 5tfMfcc; general average of the maikat\no-day oa4xc; most of tho aales are from4Jtf*\ni,Sc. or the recelpta 1188 head came irotn\nJblo, 318 from Virginia, 187 from West Vlr\n;lnla, and T8 from Maryland. Total receipts for\nhe week amounted to 1614 head, against I,t36\nist week, and 1,369 the corresponding week or\nut year: and the sales during the wee* amount\nd to 1178 heed, Against 1788 head last week, and\n050 the week or last year, and\nrare aa follows: To Baltimore butchers 188: to\nastern spoculatora 311; to Tork county, Pa,\neaters ltol; to Washington city and county 108\nHoos.There has been another light tun ol\ntogs again this week. The proepecis as they\nppeared and were noted, at .the time ol eloalajr\nor romarks last week, have been fully realized\n>n Monday prices *dvanoed to 8jtf®9 east*, ow\nig to tho condition of the Western markets a*\nnmary cause. Prices hare held firm sine* then,\nad so continued, with (air prospects of ruling\nbout tbe utnu for some day*, notwithstanding\nn Increase lrflxpected receipts. This Addition,\n1* anticipated, will be raaaily absorbed with\nut materially affocting rate* for some days,\n[notation* 8*(&9 cents not. Receipts this week\n,135 head, against 7,101 laat weak, and 10.081\nune time last year.\nBiia&r-TUo receipts this week shows con\nderable falling ;off since our last report, and\nrices have advanced near H cent, and tb* mar\net has beon fair. The quality of the Sheep will\ntrdly compare favorably with thatof last week,\nhere has been a fair demand during the week\nuder tho limited recolpts, and price* will be\ntallly affected by anv material lncreaae in the\nceipta. There has been but little Bastern daana\nduring the weok. Quotation" 4vdKV\nccelpt* this vnlc llSd'uoid, agalauaiiM tin\neok, tuil 3,011 inrne Ume lut jear.
2fd3d454067adf442d14899729e26077 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.2117486022566 39.745947 -75.546589 HE MORNING NEWS expresses opinion, in\ndiscussing the proposed amendments to tho\nduPont Boulevard act, that the benefits to prop­\nerty that will attend the construction and opening\nof that magnificent thoroughfare arc doubtful.\nThat is an evidence of narrow-minded provincial­\nism that shows one of two things—that the per­\nson who makes that pica never has been in a\nsection blessed with a comprehensive system of\ngood roads, or that, if he ever visited such a sec­\ntion, he wore a hoodwink. The truth of the mat­\nter is, and it has been demonstrated in hundreds\nof progressive communities in this country, that\nno good road ever has been built without benefit­\ning the owners of abutting and adjacent proper­\nties. It may be said truthfully that when the du­\nPont Boulevard has hcon opened to traffic from\nthe Pennsylvania State line on the north to \nMaryland line on the south, the value of proper­\nties along the road will increase. Certainly it\nstands to reason that if General T. Coleman du­\nPont is willing to give the road to Delawareans\nand to pay all just damages to the individual prop­\nerty owners adversely affected, those property\nowners who arc affected beneficially should ho\nwilling to allow those benefits as proportionate off­\nsets to such damages. That is the rule in all pro­\ngressive communities. It applies not only to the\nopening of streets and other thoroughfares, hut\nalso to the building of sewers and the many other\nthings that are worth while in civilized American\ncommunities. In reality, in most places the area\nof benefit and the assessments thereon extend far\nbeyond abutting property. Therefore it will be\nseen that the amendment proposed hy General\ndupont is unusually liberal in its provisions.
11ac49e50777482380739d40dd268763 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1896.629781389142 40.063962 -80.720915 Miss Mary Abigail Dodge, writer,\nbiographer and controversallst, widely\nknown under the pen name of Gail\nHamilton, was a native of the town In\nwhich she died, having been born In\n1S20. At the age of ten years she went\nto Dr. Clark's private schol In Cam-\nbridge. She was graduated from Ips¬\nwich academy at the age of twenty. In\n1851 she went to Hartford as assistant\nIn the Hartford high school. She re¬\nfused to take the customary examina¬\ntion, but was given the position with¬\nout doing so. She was also instructor\nin physical science In this school for\nseveral years and was subsequently\ngovernness in tlx1 family of Dr. Gam-\nalel Bailey, of Washington. D . C . . the\neditor of the National Era. to which\npaper she became n contributor.\nIn 1SG5-7, she one of the editors\nof Our Young Folks, a magazine fop\nchildren, published In Boston. FronT"\n18S0 until a Mtle over a year ago, she\nliad lived most of the time with her\ncousin, Mrs. .Tames G. Blaine in Wash¬\nington. In the course of this daily con¬\ntact with the Blaine family, Miss\nDodge was led into a very close friend¬\nship with Mr. Blaine, and at the death\nof the latter, she became his literary\nexecutor, being in possession of all his\npapers and documents of value to her\nas his authorized biographer. She was\nengaged, as frequently as her health\nwould permit, on Mr. Blaine's biogra-\nphy from the time of his death until\nher illness of Jast year, and it is thought\nher untiring devotion to the work was\ninstrumental in bringing about that\nprostration.
3a9f866e7950de5ff1db9419abbcd6ea SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1903.2917807902081 37.53119 -84.661888 committee who have been attacked\naro men of the highest character and\nstandingmen who have at heart tho\nbest Interests of their party and who\nwould never let their friendship for\nany man put In danger tho success of\ntho party They believed that a pri\nmary was the fairest and best means\nof nominating candidates for stato\noffices and for that reason they called\nIt The court of appeals has decided\nthat they had a right to call It under\ntho law and tho action of tho commit\ntee has been fully vindicated\nThese members of that committee\ncomposo the subcommittee which has\nin charge the conduct of the primary\nThe names of those men aro a guaran\ntee of fairness and Impartiality The\nchairman of tho commute Is the\nlion A W Young who within tho\nlast year has been nominated without\nopposition by tho democrats of his\ndistrict to be their circuit judge An\nother member is Judge J M Lasstng\nthe present circuit judgo of his die\ntrict and tho nominee for the next\nterm without opposition The other\nmember Is Mr Mott Ayres tho editor\nof a leading democratic paper In West\nern Kentucky No one will dare as\nsail tho and Integrity of\nthese gentlemen among tho people\nwhere they live and who know them\nAs far as it Is In their power they\nwill see that every candidate for every\noffice will havo absolutely fair treat-\nment Tho attacks mode upon those\nmen come only from tho brutality of\nhopeless rago and tho man who says\nthey will not give him fair treatment\nknows that he has no chance to win\nfairly and la seeking to make capital\nfor the republican party\nIt has been and is now my desire\nto conduct this campaign upon the\nhigh grounds befitting the dignity of\nthe office of governor I havo refrained\nfrom all personal abuse or attacks up-\non my opponents and those wno have\nbeen against me I shall not now al\nlow myself to bo dragged down to the\nlow level of demagogy and charlatan\nism in a race for tho highest office in\nthe gift of the people of the state I\nhave been patient and forbearing un\nder a fight made upon mo by my ene¬\nmica so vicious so corrupt and so full\nof falsehoods that It has not been\nequaled since the desperate and slan ¬\nderous campaign waged upon my la-\nmented
22281ea0f5104a99662daeae23e31613 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.856164351852 58.275556 -134.3925 I took tho train for Tuglakaba ,\nabout 12 miles from Delhi. This was\nDelhi in 1360 A. D. It was built by\nTuglak, who began to reign in 1321.\nis a magnificent ruin. The walls are\nabout 90 feet high on an average and\nthe circumference of the city was about\nfour miles. Tuglak did not get on well\nwith Nizamud-din, the saint who lived\na few miles away. The saint was bull\ning a water tank; Tuglak was building\nhis city and palace and wanted men.\nHe took away Nizam's men. The saint\nput them to work at night, Tuglak no¬\nticed that they were sleepy, found out\nthe cause and told the dealers not to\nsell Nizam any more oil for his lamps.\nBut tho saint evidently did some smug¬\ngling, for devout Mahometans claim\nthat he turned the tank water into oil\nfor the lamps. Tuglak acknowledged\nthat Nizam was a saint, but Nizam was\nunfortunate and prophesied that his\ncity would be desolate, uuiu habited or\ninhabited by Uugas. The place is des¬\nolate enough, for everywhere are im¬\nmense ruined buildings, most of them\nbeing beautifully carved. There are a\nfew Gugas (outcasts), but they have\ntheir mud huts stuck to the walls \nold palaces, mosques or tombs. 1 went\nalong one underground passageway\nseveral hundred yards long. On each\nside was a string of stone rooms or\nchambers, each about 15x20 feet. There\nwere probably over 200 rooms. I asked\nthe guide if they were prisous or cells,\nand he said no; that they were the\nladies' apartments. "You must remem¬\nber," said he, "that when those rooms\nwere occupied you could not see the\nstone walls at all. The walls were cov¬\nered with tapestry, the floors with car¬\npets, there were couches, divans, lamp9\nand ornaments. They wero lighted ar¬\ntificially as the Indies preferred it. The\nrooms did not look like cells theu." In\none place for over a hundred feet the\nroof seemed to be covered with a thick\nblack velvet about four feet wide. As\nI approached it broke up into thou-\nsands of bats. They were nearly as\nlarge as a robin redbreast. I had to\nkeep my hat over my face as they could\nnot see me, and hundreds of them flew\nstraight for my face. I have seen mauy\nsince, but never as many as that time.\nI will not describe tho fort or palace.\nThe two together are larger than Ju¬\nneau.
3ad3baafd1c06e29ae01fb622a02d336 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1907.5027396943176 58.275556 -134.3925 shows that the district is going forward.\nIf tha curtailed work of 1907 can pro¬\nduce such a result, it is probable that\nnext year will see a vast increase in the\nwealth taken out of the giound.* The\nthird beach liue ha9 maintained its rep¬\nutation. Its deposits are as rich as they\nhave been thought to be. The paystreak\nwherever opened up, has proved ex¬\ntremely valuable. All along the line\nfrom Sullivan & Merger's strike on Sun¬\nset creek to the rich claims on Has¬\ntings, the story is the same. Every\nclaim has something to say for the\nwinter's work. It is true that many of\nthe richest claims are in litigation.\nThis is unfortunate, but it will coutioue\nto be the case uutil Alaska gets new\nmiuiug laws. It is likely, however, that\nthe dumps on the disputed claims will\nbe op before the season cloeea.\nThe net result will run over 87,000,000.\nIt is also pleasing to learn that Caudle\nwill exceed all its past records by wash¬\ning up $1,000,000. Some of this money\nwill find its way to Nome, and much\nwill be expended in further develop¬\nment and prospectiug work. This can¬\nnot fail to uncover further rich depos¬\nits in the Candle district. Altogether\nthe prospects for 1907 are very bright.\nThe outpouring of all this money will\nreact on every department of civic life.\nIt will stimulate business. It will give\nnew life to the coastwise shipping trade\nand will encourage the Seattle and\n'Frisco shipping firms to put ne* boats\non the run. By and by the genius of\nthose who are ever planning the good\nof Alaska, will discover some aveuueof\nproduction that will help to reduce\nfreight rates.
010e265efc107cbe69354dfa56a8c082 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.2041095573313 31.960991 -90.983994 Right of Search. Among other items of intel­\nligence wc notice a speech delivered in the\nHouse of Commons, by Sir Robert Peel, in which\na distinction is made between the right of visi­\ntation and the right of search, and it is conten­\nded by thc Hon. Baronet that the former has ne­\nver been abandoned by Great Britain. We give\nan extract from thc speech below:\n“There must be some great misunderstanding\nupon this subject; but, considering the import­\nance of maintaining this right, a right not pecu­\nliar to England; considering that\ntending for a right which is thc only security\nagainst fraud, against thc grossest abuses by\nparties interested iu this iniquitous traffic; con­\nsidering that we are now the advocates of a\nprinciple necessary for the interests and securi­\nty of all maratime nations, it is my duty to\nstate, in the fice of the House of Commons,that\nthe claim to the right of visitation contended\nfor in tho despatch Lord Aberdeen has not\nbeen relinquished, and on this subject there was\nmade no concession whatever, and that to the\nprinciples laid down in the despatch of Lord\nAberdeen we adhere at this moment. (Cheers\nfrom both sides of the House.] With respect to\nthe treaty which we have entered into with the\nUnited States, in signing that treaty we consi­\nder that we have abandoned no right of visita­\ntion. We did not understand from thc United\nStates that they entered into that treaty with\nany engagement from us to_ abandon the right\nof visitation» which is not necessarily connect-\ned with the question of the slave trade. We\nthought that it was a step in advance when the\nUn:tod States professed a readiness to detach a\nnaval force to the coast of Africa for the pur­\npose of suppressing the slave trade. We did not\naccept the detachment of that naval force as an\nequivalent for any right which we claimed; yet\nTTVe-
3c4c519d7e440cbcd9a0650e30ee5ff0 THE SNOWFLAKE HERALD ChronAm 1917.1657533929476 34.51147 -110.079609 New Mexico Senator Again Champions Rights of the U. S.\n[Editor s Note —Pres. Wilson has been threatening to\ngo before the Congress and ask for authority to take\nwhatever action necessary to protect American lives and\ntheir property. It appeared that he put off his action\nfrom day to day, and the Congress is about due to adjourn.\nIt appeared that Democratic Senators, not caring to “em-\nbarrass!?)” the President by giving him the wanted au-\nthority without his asking, were about to allow the Con-\ngress to adjourn, and no action. Sen. Fall of New Mexi-\nco, the nations champion of American rights, in order to\ndelegate the necessary authority upon the President be-\nfore adjournment, introduced a resolution to grant the\nPresident his wanted power. The Democrats were sur-\nprised but allowed the resolution to go to the committee\non Foreign Relations. Their surprise indicated either \ntwo things, that they were going to allow Congress to ad-\njourn without clothing the President with such authority,\nor that they did not believe the President would come be-\nfore that body to ask for such authority. Be it remem-\nbered that it was Sen. Fall who was the first public offi-\ncial on the American continent to raise his voice against\nthe wholesale murdering of Americans and the destruct-\nion of their property by Mexicans, both in and out of Mex-\nico. Sen. Falls reward for such championship for the\nlives and property of his countrymen was an insinuating\nrebuke by the President to the effect “that only those\nwith interests in Mexico were howling their objections.”\nTo use the Presidents exact words: “A traffic in false-\nhoods designed to create intolerable friction between our\ngovernment and Carranzas in the interests of certain\nowners of Mexican properties.”
19d032ee820fb8ec082eb429d30abc81 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.3273972285642 31.960991 -90.983994 against all resolutions, as we have not adopted\nhis amendment, he goes against the whole.\nWell, sir, be it so; the gentlemans course may\nno doubt be a cause of great regret, and he may\nconsult his personal dignity by standing alone\nanother five years and waiting in solitary gran­\ndeur till all the Senate and all Congress shall\nflock and congregate about him. Achilles in\nhis tent! Yes, sir, Archilles in his tent! [laugh­\nter.] I would still recommend the lesson to\nwhich I have once referred—know thyself! It\nis the wisest lesson that any man can learn.\nMr. President, [continued Mr. Critten­\nden;] I have no pleasure in this sort of ani-\nmadversion—it gives me no satisfaction\nwhatever; but I cannot and will not sit here\nand allow such language and such airs of\nsuperiority and supercilous arrogance with­\nout a reply. We have had quite enough of\nit and to spare, and from the same quarter.\nThe gentlemen seeks by vehemence of ges­\nticulation and volume of sound to give effect\nto he is pleased to say; and really, sir,\niin some of his gestures the gentleman is not\nonly offensive hut really alarming. Not-\nwithstanding some reasonable measure of\nnatural courage, gentleman not accustomed\nto arms, and whose training has only been\nin bodies of a political character, might suf­\nfer some personal apprehension. Sir, the\ngentleman may get up a panic here, and\nthere is no telling what may be the effect of\na panic. I have heard of panics in armies\nproducing effects most terrible; I have heard\nof stampedes and many other things equally\nterrible; but here sir, we have been told\nthat the resolution we have adopted is a mis­\nerable, paltry thing, that the Senate is pal­\ntering in a double sense; that it is hiding be­\nhind the bush; that it is skulking from\nsponsibility and presuming to differ from the\nlouse of Representatves. And all this is\nbrandished over us with a magnificence of\nstyle and manner that really, sir, I scarce\nknow where the Senate stands and what is
0a813a1cc2b134844ac96fd2f2627114 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.6232876395231 40.063962 -80.720915 It is a growing grievance among our\nNatal Caffres that they cannot pur¬\nchase a wife owing to the rise in the\nprice. It used to be about ten cows or\nho.perhaps less; a bouncing girl could\n00 got for fifteen. But now twenty\noows, on the coast, at any rate, is the\nminimum cost to a man of getting mar¬\nried. The old men, and the feeble or\nidle, add wife to wife by means of the\ncattle for which their sons toil; but\nyoung and strong men are unable to\nmarry. Formerly the wars between\ndifferent tribes gave the young men op¬\nportunities of acquiriugboth Cattle and\ngirls in the form of booty, while the\nloss of life in war among men at mar¬\nrying age left a ohronic preponderance\nof girls, and made them in proportion\nmore plentiful and more easily acquired\nthan now. Hut under the British Gov¬\nernment peace has reigned,the are\nbalanced, and a monopoly Is fast being\ncreated. We need scarcely point out\n1 he effect upon morality. The natives\nsee no evil in polygamy per ue; to them\nit is a custom sanctified by antiquity\nttn.d prescription. Yet we cannot but\nthink that they could be brought to see\nthat polygamy ana woman barrier, as\ncarried on among them, are incompati¬\nble with the existing order of things in\nthe colony, and cannot last long. The\nIndian Government is moving upon the\nsubject, and the arrival of a new Gover¬\nnor of Natal affords an appropriate\nJuncture for the consideration of mat¬\nters involving a new policy. The young\nmen probably need no convincing; and\nby securing the participation of the na¬\ntives in any scheme for checking poly¬\ngamy a great step would be attained.\nOpinions differ widely as to the com¬\nplexion of the measures that should be\ntaken: Some favo.-
08340d85d3bce53541363e043bf26bf2 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.57397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 FROM THE PARSON'S SIDE.\n“As usual the Morning News i6 mix­\ned in its news items,” said a friend of\nCharles F. Parson» to the Wayfarer.\n“The report of the habeas corpus pro­\nceeding in Parsons case is no excep­\ntion to the rule. The facts of the case\nare as follows: On last Sfetnday after­\nnoon Charles F. Parsons, an employe\nof the Delaware Mercantile Company,\nwas arrested without a warrant by De­\ntective MeVey and placed In the cus­\ntody of the chief of police, wh* con­\nfined him in the City Hall. On Tues­\nday Martin E. Smith, his counsel, who\nis associated with Artemas Smith, pe­\ntitioned Chief Justice bore for a writ\nof habeas corpus, which was granted.\nArgument was heard on the case at 7\n on Wednesday night, and the\nprisoner was discharged, the judge de­\nciding that he was illegally arrested\nand confined. How far Detective Me­\nVey has transgressed the laws of the\nState of Delaware, as laid down In sec­\ntion 1, chapter 271, volume 12, of the\nLaws of Delaware, may furnish hitn\nserious food for thought for several\ndays, and finally. It may, like Banquos\nghost, rise to disquiot him. Besides,\nit is probable that the proper parties\nwill have to face a suit for damages be­\ncause of the false Imprisonment.”\nSince the above was received by the\nWayfarer it appears that Parsons has\nleft town without claiming the per­\nsonal effects in the possession of the\npolice, and that he is wanted by the\nauthorities of Philadelphia.
41eace7e2279bed71c4a743b707d22c6 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1907.6999999682903 31.762115 -95.630789 boys grown men in tact\ntramped hundreds of miles norths\nfrom their kraals on the boutht\ncoast of the continent to seek work\ntheCityorCId Yotsofuui Jou\nare they to their tribal chiefs the\na call to arms as In the recent Zul\nrebellion will send tbeui hurrying I\nhot haste homeward to enroll in thel\nregiments It Is difficult to identify\nIn their smiling faces the descendant\nof the fierce warriors who made thi\nZulu name a nightmare throughout\nSouth Africa for nearly afentttry\nThey hire their rickshaws from the\nowners paying at the rate of about\nthree shillings or 75 cents a day\nand receiving all their earnings The\nrickshaw is in general request In Jo-\nhannesburg being cheap comfortable\nand just adaptable to two persons sit-\nting rather closely Hence\nIt plays a loading tart in bringing\nabout flirtations and Is requisitioned\nIn dozens on moonlit nights In winter\nwhen the band is scheduled to play at\nthe Wanderers club grounds and the\nstifling boat and the dust storms are\nnullified by a brisk canter through the\nempty streets The Zulu rickshaw\nboy would consider himself dishonored\nin the eyia of bis brethren If he did\nnot attire himself In garments of an-\nesthetic valun The specimen shown\nin the Illustration appears to have\ncombined the horns of the Evil One\nwith the wings of the seraphim It-\nIs probable however that this com-\nbination possesses some weird secret\nsymbolism of its own known only to-\ntho wearer As he files swiftly along\nthe road toward his destination utter-\ning
06e4c408bd1fbd495da7d903c9e5207f PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1891.5767122970574 39.756121 -99.323985 work of sending out circulars designed to\nshow the farmers of tbe country that it was\nto their advantage to hold back their wheat\ncrop, was actively proceeding in this city as\nwell as St. Paul, because of its location in\nthe great wheat belt. Ayer says there hare\nalready been 4U0,0U) of these circulars sent\nout from Washington, and during the next\nfew days an average of 100,000 a day will be\nmailed, until more than a million circulars\naltogether are issued. The circular, he said.\nm aiso re puuiisnea in about z,uw weekly\naper with which this bureau is connected,\ne remarked that he need not say that the\ncircular had brought about any result, but\nne naa noticea in tne recent market reports\nthat, as a matter of fact, the actual move-\nment of wheat was 140 car loads less than\nhad been estimated. Ayer the informa-\ntion that the issue of such a circular by the\nalliance men was in contemplation became\npuunc prematurely about two weeks ago,\nwhen the circular was in course of Drenara- -\ntion, and was published in a newspaper. The\nnnai aeciaion to issue the circular had not at\nthat time been made and many leading alli\nance men are unaware of it, but it since bad\nbeen determined on. He explained that the\nexocutive committee of the alliance had not\nacted on this matter) and that by the circular\nno order was given to hold back tbeir crop,\nthis being contrary to the methods of the\nalliance. What is done by the circular is\nto give the farmers information as to the\nfacts in regard to tbe world's wheat crop,\nwith the suggestion that wheat, some weeks\nlater than the present time, would bnng\nhigher prices.
2248d38418ec22008c1372ee91c97ebc EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.0041095573313 39.745947 -75.546589 Injured—D. J . Partella, mail clerk,\nWashington, D. C „ seriously; William\nAvery, a Baltimore and Ohio engineer,\nseriously; O. W . Ryan, Baltimore, seri­\nously; C. A . Young, mail clerk. Ha­\ngerstown, Md., seriously; I\\. R. Souser,\nNapier. Pa. , se riously; Charles Henry,\nPhiladelphia, slightly; C. B. Smith, Al­\nlegheny. Pa., slightly; J. Matthews,\nChdVenne, Wyo., slightly; J. R . Wat­\ners, Huttonsvllle, W. Va., slightly; M.\nR. McKinley, Rock Island, 111 . , slightly;\nH. A . Hall, Gainesville, W. Va., slight­\nly; P. J . Lazy, Chicago, badly bruised;\nFrank W. Brenner, head cut; S. J .\nJones. Summit, Md., slightly; B. J .\nLehman, Washington, D . C. , slightly;\nJ. A. Barton, Chicago, slightly; I. N.\nHay, Meyersdale, Pa., slightly.\nThe train which was ditched was\nthe through passenger which left here\nat 8.40 yesterday morning, bound for\nNew York. It was a full vestlbuled\ntrain, composed of engine, baggage\noar, postal car, two coaches, sleeper\nand Pullman chair car. In going down\nthe steep grade one and half miles\nwest of Olelicoe the engine jumped\nthe track at the curve, and the entire\ntrain piled on top of It. Probably the\nonly thing that prevented a wholesale\ndeath list was the fact that the heavy\nvestlbuled cars did not break up In\ngoing over the embankment.\nThe work of rescuing the injured\nhad to be done quickly, because the\ngas tanks In the cars were exploded\nand set fire to- the wreckage. The\nflames spread rapidly, and in a short\ntime the entire train was burned. The\nengine was completely demolished,\nand the two dead men, when taken\nfrom the debris were horribly man­\ngled. Collins was one of the oldest\nengineers on the road. As soon after\nthe accident as possible a relief train,\nwith physicians aud surgeons, was\nsent to the scene from Cumberland,\nand the injured were soon after taken\nto Meyersdale, Pa., where every atten­\ntion was paid them.\nGeneral Superintendent Woodford\nsays he has been unable as yet to as­\ncertain the cause of the accident.
0e5efd8e77fa9e52389310de533ecaf4 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1893.0315068176053 40.063962 -80.720915 "See any mosquitooi this morning;\nla a favorite greeting on a cold tiny, li\nif any ono wishoa to aeo aomo of tho 1\ntie blood-auckera iu midwinter lie ci\ndo bo, and right lioro in Baltimore, ni\nthey are not in a museum, olther.\nWhoro could a moequito liido to <\ncapo tho nippping brouth of Jack l'rot\nSurely no ono would bo such a fool\nto keep a little menagerie oi hia ot\nconstating of theso offspring of tl\nwildsof NmvJorjoy! If tlioro aro ai\nof them alivo they must havo a wat\nsnug homo to pass the winterl\nTho licit Lino tunnel is tho pin\nwhoro tlioso mosquitoes aojourn. Tl\nworkmen in tho headings find plenty\nmosquitooa. Tho tomporuture is neat\ntho snmo winter and summer, and\nthe Insects tho tunnel is a harbor\nrofugo from wintry blaats. It may\ncold and bluBtory abovo ground, b\ndown in the big hole undor Howa\nBtrcot it la moist and warm always. (\ndown there with an overcoat on ai\nyou will bo in a porapiratipn in a U\nminutes, and oven if leave yo\nheavy coat off you will uo uncomforl\nlily warm, and "will aoon nnrsplre. So\nIs not aurprlalng that tho mosquito\nllvo down tliore. Tlioro is plenty\nboat and sulUciont molaturo to at\ntheir tastes, and tlioro they llvo t\ntvlntnr thrnfinh ilrinlrtnnr in Tfnli\nblood .it ovory meal. lor tlio Inborn\ndown thoro itro chiefly from tho land\nopora singers and organ grindors.\nTho Uaa and Abtiie uf WhUkoy.\nThis subjoct could bo dwelt upon t<\nconsldornblo length, nnd yot ran\nwould romain untold, but all agree tli\nthe uso, tho proper uso ol puro r\nwhiskey Is an absoluto necessity, eapo\nally BO now, when nature Insists up\nbolng stimulnted, All rogular physi\nans proscribe ryo whiskey, and jusl\nclaim that Klein's Silver Ago and D\nquosno Whiskies are most rellab\nThoy do this not only became they ha\ntried them but bocauao tho leading h<\npitaln uso thom.find them tho be\nstimulants in tho world. Silver A\nsells for $1.50 and Duquesne for $1.\npar full quart. For sale by all dealt\nand druggists. Ask for them or send
2ea498d7dadda5bd7ab78bc96dbde5e0 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1904.4795081650982 42.217817 -85.891125 Owners of the Lakewood resort at\nPugsley's lake have planned for the form-\nal opening of the place June 20. Recent-\nly taken over by F. and L. E. Colli nber-r- y\nof Chicago and subjected to an over-\nhauling that has resulted in marvelous\nas well as pleasing changes, the delight-\nful spot so well known to citizens of Paw\nPaw will become a mecca for a throng\nof well known residents of Chicago who\nwill bo attracted by the sylvan beauties\nof tho "gem spot of Van Buren county."\nIn keeping with the importance of the\nrehabilitation of Lakewood from the\nstandpoint of the neighboring county\nseat, is the generous and gratuitous pro-\nposal of tho famous "Diamond Four"\nquartet that gained considerable fame\nduring the memorable campaign of 1890\nwhen it formed a part of the. special\ntrain party that toured Ohio and Indiana\nin tho intertst of Major McKinley, to be\npresent at Lakewood upon the occasion\nof the formal opening. Messrs. E . II.\nHenning, first tenor; William McKinley,\nsecond tenor; Christ Sorenson, first bass,\nand William E. Fields, second bass,\nwhose merry quips and jokes set to\nmusic provided harmonious fun for the\nlistening voters during tho inci-\ndents of tho national campaign, havo\nnotified Mr. Cofiinberry that they will\nvisit Lakewood, paying all of their own\nexpenses, to sing for the guests of tho re-\nsort. These sweet singers have provided\nthemselves with a number of musical in-\nnovations and guarantee the residents of\nthe wolverine state who may take ad-\nvantage of the invitation to attend the\nformal opening, a feast of song, a treat\nin tho way of humor and some very\npleasing vaudeville numbers for which\ntwo of the quartet are especially quali-\nfied by reason of their experience in the\nbig circuits of the vaudeville theaters.\nLong conscious of the charms of the\nPugsley lake region and fully acquainted\nwith tho opportunities for healthful and\nresting visits to the . resort, Paw Paw\npeoplo might well givo heed to the\nCoflinberrys' announcement of the form-\nal opening. In addition to the special\nfeatures that will bo provided by tho\nmusicians from Chicago, tho program\nfor tho entertainment of risitors will bo\nof sufllcient importance to make it worth\nyour while to drive out to the resort. A\ncordial invitation is extended to all to\njoin and make merry. The Maple City\norchestra will furnish music.
15c2af4c5686af18105c79509141e47e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.0972602422628 39.745947 -75.546589 pan out Mr. Ludgate will be extremely\ndisappointed, particularly as the ex­\nperiment has already cost him $14.\nLast spring\ncome here trout Ashing, declared thac\nIf he could only get some grasshoppers\nhe would be willing to pay liberally for\nthem, as he believed they would prove\ngreat bait along the trout streams. He\npointed out the fact that trout could j\nalways obtain plenty of worms and\nflies when the season opened, but that\nthey had to .wait until August for\ngrasshoppers. He would be willing to\npay two cents each for some, and h*\nknew scores of other sflherraen who\nwould give as much, he said.\nThis set Mr. Ludgate to thinking, and\nwhen grasshopper time came he hired\nall the boys In the neighborhood to\ncateh the insects at the rate of one cent\n Tîfty. He sent his own children out\nIn the flelds, and when the crop had\nbeen gathered ho possessed a.bout sev­\nenty-ft Ve thousand hoppers of all kinds,\nages and sizes. As fast as the Insects\nwere taken they were placed In a corn-\ncrib. which had been made air tight\nby pasting paper over the cracks. The\ncrib was then filled with hay and bank­\ned with leaves to keep It warm within.\nThus far during the winter the grass­\nhoppers have stood the cold, and Mr\nLudgate sees no reason why he should\nlose more than ten per cent, by spring.\nHaving little else to do. he is now\nmaking boxes In which to ship the in­\nsects when the fishermen want them.\nIf he can get twb cents each for the\nhoppers he will make about $1200.
19c6ce90a00bcbfdec258a1f5b9547c3 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1883.760273940893 41.004121 -76.453816 muuuu oi us qnuuiy us a preventive oi\ncrime. Alter a murder is proven be-\nyond doubt and scnlenco imposed tho\nway to tho gallows has so many bends\nand turns nnd dubious resting places\nthat it seems almost as difficult to hang\na convicted man as to convict a sus-\npected one. John McGinnis, who lias\njust received from the governor a nine\nty day reprieve m order to determine\nwhether or not ho is a crazy man,\ncommitted an unprovoked and brutal\nmurder, September 30, 1881. Ho kill-\ned ono woman and tried to kill anoth-\ner. Oil his trial his guilt was brought\nhome to him beyond a shadow of doubt.\nIn tho past two years every devic3 in-\ntended for the protection of innocence,\nbut used to balk the courso of justice,has\nbeen exhausted to keep the breath of lifo\nin this guilty wretch. His lastdodge,\nnow that all the sinuosities of the law\nhavo failed to open for him a loophole\n escape, is to feign insanity. That his\ninsanity is feigned wo aro well advised;\nbut sympathetic doctors and lawyers\nhavo so, prevailed upon tho executive\nauthority that tho criminal has secured\na reprieve pending a medical examina\ntion. In tho interest of justice there\nshould be no more fooling in this affair\nor any other of tho kind. As tho\nboard of pardons and tho governor\nshould be thoroughly informed in every\nsuch case, why should not tho board of\nlunacy bo called iu to give an authori-\ntative opinion before delay is secured ?\nA murderer now takes his chances be-\nforo a jury to determine his guilt ; be -f - o\no the supremo court to determine tho\nregularity of tho trial ; before tho board\nof pardons and the governor to consi-\nder how tho quality of mercy may be\nstrained to his advantage, and MoGin-\nnis has caried his caso ono step far-\nther. Let tho board of lunacy look\nafter him.
737b0fa33fb86326edddf1b5db79403e VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.105479420345 43.798358 -73.087921 How obvinut is it that the treatment to\nwhich cattle are subjected by man, sep-\narates him from his fellows and from\ngoodness in many modes. By using cat-\ntle for food and in cultivition, there is\nnecessitated the appropriation of so much\nn? ore land than would otherwise be re-\nquired,' that true civilization and harmony\nare pushed aside by brutality and discord.\nOne acre would amply supply an individ-\nual with food if be worked it by his own\nhands, whereas, if he employs cattle, four\nacrrs will ct least be required lo provide\ntheir food, and to make up for the smaller\ncrops from the same extent of surface un-\nder the rougher agriculture. Instead of\nenjoying the consociation of his intellect-\nual und lovefil neighbors,. the cultivator\nof the soil is constantly surrounded by de-\ngrading animal companions, to which be\nis the servant and very slave, while he\ncruelly enslaves them. He waits upon\nhis horses and oxen, tends his cows and\ncomforts his hogs; much of his time, the\ngreater part of his regards, skill and\nhis attention are' devoted ;to. waiting upon\nthem, while his children and himself in\nboth, mind and body are comparatively\nneglected. Even the American farmer\nwho set up for himself as soon as he could\nsave money enough lo buy u feehold, be-\ncause he did not choose to be another\nman's servant, is contented to be waiter\nand cook and housemaid to a collection\nof animals rendered dirty and diseased by,\nhis rule over them. He provides their\nfood and their houses, waits upon them,\ncleans their skin and carries away their\nordure, anJ fancies he is not injured but\nbenefitted by the process. The accumu-\nlated filthy manure he spreads over the\nfields and thinks he is enriched Jby it.\nEven the. man 'who can keep but a single\npig and feeds it upon corrupt refuse, con-\ngratulates himself on a slice of che;ip pork,\nunmindful o( the doctor s bill and the dir'y\ngarden which assuredly follow. The ne\ngro slave is not so deeply wronged as the\nman who is tubdued by his own appetites
0c62a5e08c3dc361db079d2b6dfbd56b THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1890.0123287354136 46.187885 -123.831256 transit across the continent\nJohn Palmer of Union city Mich, is\nthe inventor of the baggage check\nsystem. In early days he was in\ngreat demand, for his violin enlivened\nmany and many a winter night One\ngreat annoyance he experienced was\nthe constant trouble people had in\nfinding their coats, caps, bats, wraps,\nrobes etc, after the party broke up.\nIt was announced that there was to\nbe a big dance at Burlington on\nThanksgiving evening, about 1850,\nand Mr. Palmer was to have charge of\nthe music. He knew that there\nwould be a terrible crowd there and\nthat there would be lots of trouble\nwith the clothing, and he went to\nwork to devise a plan to obviate it\nThe more ho planned the further he\ngot from a solution. So the night\nbefore the party he dread-\ning the work of the morrow. He says\nthat about 3 a. sr. next morning he\nwas aroused by a queer sensation; that\nin front of him, as it were, were two\ncards just alike. What did that mean?\nHis work for the day came to him,\nand he asked the question, "what do\nthe two cards meanf Well, after\nstudying on it a long time he seemed\nto solve the mystery. He got out\neight cards, marked them in pairs 1\n1,22,33 44 and one ofthogreat-\nest blessings to the business world was\nborn. Now for the first test He had\nfour children; he took their shoes and\nstockings, tied each lot up by them-\nselves, put tags 1, 2, 3, 4 on each lot,\nand put them away. When the chil-\ndren got up they inquired for their\nshoes.
0803ec868f1c5c223472d272635491f2 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.8232876395232 46.187885 -123.831256 efforts. The proposed convention can\nbe held without the Portland board of\ntrade being represented, and if we can\nhave a representative in congress who\nwill enlighten that body regarding the\ntrue status of the matter, we may get\nliberal aid from the government for the\nimportant enterprise of opening one of\nthe largest rivers of the continent to\nfree navigation. But to accomplish our\npurpose, we must have only this one\nthing in view an open river. We must\npin our political creed to this single\nidea, and must have no party friends\nwho arc not unequivocally pledged to\nthe support of this measure. And in\nthis connection we will remind the\nmembers from Eastern Oregon, that\nthe names of this committee, which has\nreported adversely to a united effort in\nfavo.r of opening the river, constitute\nsome probable candidates United\nStates senator during the coming special\nsession of the legislature. They are\neither apathetic or antagonistic to this\ngreat enterprise, and their election to\nthe senate would jeopardize the devel-\nopment of this section of the northwest;\nand no redress could be expected from\nthe grievances which are now retarding\nthe growth of the inland empire.\nWe cannot blame the concentrated\ncapital of Portland for making an effort\nto retain the status of that city as the\ntrading center of the country tributary\nto it; neither can any blame be attached\nto other sections of .the state if they\nthink that their interests will be better\nsubserved bv looking to other shipping\npoints, it i'ortianu can maintain the\nrailroad supremacy in Oregon, she will\nalways grow and prosper, and the tribu-\ntary sections will simply maintain a\ndependent existence.
3de7a563b0e50185a30990b8bdc71ef2 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.0260273655506 40.735657 -74.172367 erly along the same at right angles to Edwin\n>lace 26 feet to the plaoe of beginning.\nBeing known as lot No. 51 on revised map «ff\njroperty belonging to Catharlna Wensel tn tha\n!7|ty of Newark, made by Borrle and Krefear.\nlurveyors, July 8th, 1907-\nForty-fourth tract—Beginning In th# north-\nerly line of Edwin place at a point therein\nlist ant 375 12-100 feet westerly from the north-\nvest corner of the same and Willoughby street;\nwhence running westerly along the aforesaid\nIne of Edwin place 73 76-100 feet, more or less,\nto the westerly line of property of Catharlna\nAeuzeJ, hb shown on said map; thence northerly\nCong the same 26 02-100 feet; thence easterly\niftrallel with Edwin place 72 87-100 feet, more\nir less, and thenoe running southerly at right\ningles to Edwin place 25 feet to the aforesaid\nline of Edwin place and place of beginning.\nBeing known as lot No. 52 on revised map of\n•roperty belonging to Catharlna Wenzel In th*\n71ty of Newark, made by Borrle and Kretnar,\nlurveyore, July 8th, 1907 .\nForty-fifth tract—Beginning In the southerly\nline of Edwin place at a point therein distant\n!76 18-100 feet westerly from the southwest,\n•o me r of the same and Willoughby street:\nthence running westerly along said line ef\nEld win place 52-100 feet, more or lees, to the\nwesterly line of property of Catharlna Wensel.\nis shown on said map; thenoe southerly along\nthe same 40 02-100 feet; thence easterly parallel\nw!th Edwin place 76 92-100 feet, mors or less:\nthence running northerly at right angles to\nEdwin place 40 feet to the aforesaid line of\nEdwin place and place of beginning.\nBeing known as lot No. 53 on revised map of\nproperty belonging to Catharlna Wenzel In •he\nCity of Newark, made by Borrle and Krelner,\njurveyors, July 8th, 1907 .\nForty-sixth tract—Beginning In the westerly\nline of lot No. 57 as laid out on revised map\nof property belonging to Catharlna Wenzel In\nthe City of Newark, made by Borrle and\nKrelner, July 8th, 1907 , at a point therein\ndistant 40 feet southerly from the southerly\nline of Edwin place; thenoe running westerly\nparallel with Edwin place 78 92-100 feet, more\nnr lese, to the westerly line of property of\nCatharlna Wenzel as shown on the aforesaid\nmap; thence running southerly along the same\n26 01-100 feet, thence easterly parallel with\nEdwin place 77 80-100 feet, more or less, to the\naforesaid line of lot No. 57, and thence run\nnlng northerly along the same at right angles\nto Edwin place 26 feet to the plaoe *f\nbeginning.
3b33d4dc6b2fc1ed1c55685bde48b304 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1921.278082160071 41.681744 -72.788147 Esq., was appointed an agent to take\ncharge of this protest and procure\nthe signatures of the voters thereto.\n.In the following spring New Brit-\nain elected Eathan A. Andrews, a\nWhig, and George M. Landers, a\nDemocrat, as its representatives to\nthe general assembly. It was prob-\nably a prearranged plan that the rep-\nresentatives should be from the two\ndifferent parties. At the opening of\nthe May session. 1851) New Britain's\ntwo representatives and agent , ap-\npeared, claiming that two representa-\ntives should be allowed as a matter\nof right under, the state constitution\nand in due time their claim was al-\nlowed. It has been stated that "the\nclaim might not have been allowed\nhad not the legislature been so even-\nly divided In politics that neither\nparty cared to lose a vote." To what\nextent, if any. politics entered into the\nsaid decision I cannot state. Possibly\nthe result might have been different\nIf both of the representatives elect\nhad belonged to one party. In any\nevent this decision was only for the\ntime being. The matter was not per-\nmanently decided until 1853. when\nNew Britain's claim to the right of\n two representatives, as the\nresidue of the old town of Berlin\nwas completely vindicated. The house\nof representatives "Resolved. That the\ntown of New Britain Is justly en-\ntitled under the constitution of this\nstate to two representatives in the\ngeneral assembly," and a joint reso-\nlution was passed repealing that por-\ntion of the resolution dividing the\ntown of Berlin to which New Britain\nhad objected. In other words, so\nmuch of the said resolution as limit-\ned New Britain to one representative.\nNo one, so far as I know, has in-\ntimated that there. was any political\nmaneuver in connection with the leg-\nislative action of 1853, whereby it\nwas established that, for the purposes\nof town representation. New Britain,\nrather than Berlin, was in fact the\nold town. That Is to say. it was what\nremained of the old town of Berlin\nafter a new town, upon its own pe-\ntition, had been made from the said\nold town. The act of Incorporation,\nby giving to New Britain the old rec-\nords of Berlin made New Britain in\nfact the old town, The matter waa\nsomewhat complicated and confused\nhv re&sorVof the extraordinary fact.
21504189f63e42ef9d932d8b1fe2f1c1 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1883.7136985984273 29.4246 -98.49514 Chicago, September 17. A special meet\ning ol the passenger agents of the trunk lines\nwas held here this morning for the purpose of\nendeavoring to harmonize the differences, and\nprevent the threatened cut of $4 in the passes\nger rates between Chicago and Buffalo by the\ngrand trunk meeting, which lasted till 3\no'clock and resulted in the restoration of har\nmony. Joint Agent Moor assures the Asso-\nciated Press that there is now no danger ol a\npassenger war, that the penalty provided\ngainst any cut In the rates, compelling the\noffcndlne line to redeem all cut rat tickets at\ndouble the full rates, and that the passenger\norganization is tn tne most satisiactory condi\nHon mat it nas Deen in since its acception,\nSan Francisco, September 17. A party\nof 12 Americans, who fled from Guymas, ar\nrived last night. They said the people were\nleaving that city by the hundreds. There was\n a house but contained some victim of\nthe fever. The authorities have given over\nthe work ol burying the dead to a pack of\nhired Indians, who went Irom house to house,\ncarrying the bodies of those supposed to be\naeaa or aying. i ne boaiet were Durica to\nrapidly that mistakes occurred. Many are\nput underground while still living, mis\nmainly due to ihe disease, which at the critl\ncal turnini' noint leaves the patient In a com\natote state, which, by an Indian undertaker,\nit mistaken for death. The whole city it\npanic stricken. The merchants have closed\ntheir stores and nailed the doors and the res\nlaurants are all closed. No assistance Is ob\ntainable. Reports from Hcrmoslllo state that\nthe fever Is raging there. At Mascolin It Is\neven more frightful than at Guymas. All who\ncould were leaving for the mountains, carrying\noff what bedding they could pack, and a little\nfood.
530bee5e3d28411567ff0e2ba3824320 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1944.2636611705627 40.618676 -80.577293 the Army News Service is honest and objective in\nits news writing—a point never doubted by the\nAFL; while he ignored entirely the main com­\nplaint presented by labor. This was the charge\nthat; over-emphasis of certain types of news con­\nstitutes biased, anti-labor propaganda in spite of\nthe fact that, taken item by item, the accuracy\nof such news stories cannot be questioned.\nEnough comment trickles back from the fox\nholes to prove that this over-emphasis has al\nready taken effect. The G.I. diet of labor news\nseems to be limited to strike stories plus an occa­\nsional dribble of reports on production records.\nThe anti-labor attitude of the average serviceman,\nclearly an outgrowth of this diet, is a danger\nsignal that even the War Department recognizes.\nTo "foster mutual respect and confidence," in\nfact, the Department has made it a practice in\nrecent months to arrange for visits of labor and\nmanagement groups to Army camps throughout\nthe These visits, the Department seems\nto believe, are the only antidote needed.\nWe would like to make a suggestion to Secre\ntary Stimson. To "foster mutual respect and con­\nfidence," organized labor would like to arrange for\nvisits of groups of servicemen to production cen­\nters throughout the country. Following the\nexample of the Army, the visitors would be put\nright into the factories next to union members on\nthe production lines. They would attend union\nmeetings, enter into discussions on post-war plan­\nning, 011 housing, on reconversion problems. They\nwould line up with their union hosts to give blood\nfor the lied Cross, to buy War* Bonds, and to make\ntheir contributions through the Labor League for\nHuman Ilights to the Red Cross and the National\nWar Fund. And, again following the example of\nthe Army, they would be issued labor's G.I. equip­\nment in the form of rationed food, over-priced\nclothing, over-crowded living quarters, difficult\nand trying transportation.
1f62c95a698a7fbf313f8d26d8e66da2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.6452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 But there are those, your early com¬\nrades, whose noble forms are not seen\nwith you to-day. William F. Temple-\nton, Joseph H. Pentecost, Benjamin S.\nStewart, William H. Walker, Peter A.\nBlomberg, Cyrus S. Barker, Thohias\nDonley, John Clemens, Samuel Pi Ew-\nIng, Tsaac R. W. Garrettson, William\nGray, .Louis Hager, Jacob Hartstein,\nCharles Heer-Alexander Howell, Hor¬\natio T. Hamilton, Robert D. Jobes, Jas.\nW. Lowry, Simon W. Lewis, Henry H.\nLindloy, John W. Lavery, Jacob L.\nM'Cullougli, Joseph E. M'Cullougli,\nJohn B. M'Keevor, Thomas M'Keeyer.\nJohn Marsh,* Henry C. Odenbaugh,\nSimon S. Russell, George M. Robertson,\nThomas Reichter, William S. Simcox,\nWilliam Sanders, Aaron Templeton,\nJames B. Thompson, Andrew Thomp¬\nson. Thomas B. Templeton, John S.\nWeiricli, John Wherry; thus reads the\nnoble roll of honor of those who laid\ndown their lives that their country\nmight be saved. When the sun shall lie\nshorn of its rays and the moon shall\nvanish forever.when the heavens shall\nbe rolled together as u scroll and the\n angel of the Apocalypse, stand¬\ning on land and sea, shall say that time\nshall be no more,.still then will the\nglory of these names be as the imper¬\nishable adamant. But not until a re¬\nunion shall be effected in a better world\nwhere mothers who are widows, and\nchildren who are fatherless, and hearts\nwhich are tenantless of friends, shall\nonce more meet with the fond objects\nof tlieir love,.not until then will any\nwords of sympathy that you. or I can\nexpress, or any gratitudo that a nation\ncan give, become a balm that will soothe\nthe offerings or .fill the aching void in\nthe families, relatives and friends of\nthe honored ones 1 have na^ied. Verily\ntheir names are written upon a roll\nthat is far more imperishable and full\nof fflory than any that earth can givo;\nfind their spirits now walk upon the\nstreets of a golden city whose palaces\nwill protect them, frcO from tlie'march,\nbivouac and battle, in peace and happi¬\nness forever!
468fc106572b2ed9e69c3090e39c56d4 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1906.6589040778792 46.601557 -120.510842 without allowing the air to escape. We have hundrrds of Irttcrs from satisfied cusiomcis stating\nthat tlicir tires have only been pumped upc<n' -e/>r twice in n whole season. They weiu'i no more than\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting quuhnrs being t;iven by several layers ol thin, specially\nprepnrcd fabric on the tread. That "Huldinn Back" .sensation cummonly felt when riding on uspliall\nor m>li roads is overcome by the patent "basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being\nsqueezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular prm ol tliest\ntires is JS.SO per pair, but for advertising purposes we are makini; a special fiutoiv price to Ihe ridel\nof ontv |4.t*>pei pair. All orders shipped same dsy letter is received We snip CO D on approval\nYou do not pay a cent until you have examined aud found them strictly as represented.\nWe will allowaeaahrtlncoiiht of 5 per cent (thereby makinK the price »4.R5 jkr pail) ifyou send\n CASH WITH IIKIIKKand enclose this advertisement. We will also send .>in nuk*l\nplated brass hand pump and t».i Sampson melal puncture closei s on full paid orders (the** metal\npuncture closers to W used in ca»e of intcntion.il knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tires to be returned\nat IKK eapense if lor any reason they Hie not satisfactory on examination.\nWe are perfectly reliable and money st-til to us is as sale as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster\nBanker. Kxpress or Freight Agent or the Kditor ot this paper about us. If you or.lrr a pair ol\nthese tire«, >ou will find that they will ride easier, rvn fasirr. arear K-tiei. la-i longer ami took\nfiner 'han any lire you have ever used or seen a' any price. We knu» thai yon will tx-s .> well pleased\nthai when you wunc a bicycle *o» will ghe 1:- you oriler We want you to tend u:s a sin.ill trial\norder at onct\\ ht nee this remarkable tire otTer.
9d07d2bffeb2b6244b792065e889c00d NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1926.5575342148657 41.681744 -72.788147 Yesterday proved even hotter\nthan the day before, the maximum\ntemperature reported being 114 de-\ngrees between 2 and 8 o'clock in\nfront of the Ncri block. Added to\nthis was the fact that there was al-\nmost no breeze, and the human and\nanimal inhabitants of the town suf-\nfered greatly. Poctors report many\ncases of heat prostration, but none\nof them serious. Several factoiies\nsuspended operations.\nThen, last evening, clouds which\nhad been hanging in the western\nsky for several hours suddenly be-\ngan to crowd forward and caught\nthe town almost unaware with a\ndownpour and electrical display.\nStorm followed storm throughout\nthe night, culminating in a terrifiic\none about 'dawn today. A veritable\ncloud burst descended upon the\nstreets, a strong gale uprooted \nand the display of lightning was\nexceptionally vivid.\nSeveral huge trees were blown\ndown near the northern end of\nCook street, some being split about\nten feet from the ground and others\nbeing uprooted by the wind. Luckily\nall of those trees were on the east-\nern side of the streetl and fell away\nfrom the road, so that traffic was\nable to continue itninterrupted. The\npower at the Benzon factory on\nWhiting street was cut off, appar-\nently by lightning, but the installa-\ntion of new fuses permitted the\nplant to continue work today. It\nis believed that a bolt of lightning\nwas responsible for a forest fire in\nthe Scott swamp district shortly\nafter 9 o'clock last night.\nForest Fire Threatens riomca\nHomes along tho Plalnville-Farmingto-
016c1df3bd46443f8e6943543fc19b3c FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER ChronAm 1916.9904371268467 35.318728 -82.460953 Stepp that certain mortgage recorded\nin Book 32 at Page 57 of the Records\nof Deeds of Tru3t and Mortgages for\nHenderson Couaty, to secure the pay.\nment of certain Notes therein describ-\ned, given cs part purchase price of\nland hereinafter described and vth\nas default has been made in the pay.\nment of said notes and Interest, now\ntherefore, by virtue of the fower of\nsale contained in said Mortgage and\nfor the purpose of satisfying said in-\ndebtedness, interest and cost and ex-\npenses the undersigfd will on Mon.\nday. January 8th, 1917 m 11:30 a. m. .\nat the Court House door in Hender-\nsonville, Henderson County, offer for\nsale to the highest bidder for cash the\nland conveyed by said mortgage, which\nis bounded and described as follows:\nBeing in the township of Henderson-\nville, of Henderson. State of\nNorth Carolina and known and desig.\nnated as follows: Beginning at a red\noak on the north side of the Devil's\nFork road, the beginning corner of a\ntract of land com eyed by Baring to\nR. K. Stepp, and runa with said road\nN. 59 W. 420 feet to a stake in road,\nthen with same N. 48 W. 800 feet to a\nstakethenceN.3 1--2 E.2190Nottoa\nbunch of maples in the line of an en-\ntry on the North side of Devil's Fork\ncreek. Then with the line of said en.\ntry S. 84 E. 1067 feet to a black gum,\ncorner of said tract, then S. 26 W. 174\nfeet t a pine stump, corner of Baring\nold tract. Then with lin of same S.\n3 1-- 2 W. 2688 feet to the beginning.\nContaining 58 3--
40f1ef516cfc16deae8d88cbb84d37a7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.5301369545916 40.063962 -80.720915 ners of the Catholic societies, or banner!\nand badges and mottoes which signify a\nsuperior allegiance to a foreign power!\nThey would have as much right and rea\nson. Suppose that political parties were\nto assume this Irish temper, and that neith\ner party were able to endure the sight o:\nthe lampoons and caricatures and per\nsonal gibes in the banners and transparen\ncief; what a nice thing they would mak<\nof elective government! And this wouli\nbe the way if the Catholic Irish had theii\nwny. They have been a little civilized a\nto political processions, so that they hav<\nlearned to keep their temper down. Is il\nnot time they were learning it in the mat\nter of religious processions? Hurely the]\nmake the largest drafts on this toleration\nIn this country, under the Americai\nhabit equal rights, self-control ant\nobedience to law, we have politic d pro\ncessions in excited canvasses, bearing ul\nsorts of gibes and lampoons at the oppo\nsite party; but it is seldom that even\nslight disturbance is caused by them, ani\nthen tho sentiment of both parties con\ndemnstbe violence. A tune is fumilia:\nhat is understood to be jteculiar tooni\nside during the great civil war, but it\nnittying maiurus w> uuc in tue iiunu\nWhile tli« immense slaughter ofthecivi\nwar is vet (real), ami heart* are sore, tbi\nrabid literature ol the couquered cauw\nhas free circulation, and excites no tein\nper. And in the same Southern citie\nproceniooa ol the late rebels have paradei\nto decorate the gram af rebel soldier!\nand processions ol patriots to decorate tin\nKnives of the Union soldien, without an;\ncollision.
25330328ef549cd41820937cbfe0ce51 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1913.7438355847285 44.939157 -123.033121 Tho farmers havo had a hard uphill fight for good roads for years and now\nHint victory is in sight, they should not look tho gift horso in tho mouth, but\ntako what tho gods nnd tho auto riders provido and ask no questions.\nAnother phoan of the matter is that if tho city folks aro willing to dig up\nand help build tho roads they aro certainly entitled to have somo of them\nbuilt for their ploasuro and convenience, as woll as tho farmer is to have thorn\nbuilt where they will do him tho most good. In other woids, thero must be\nconcessions on both sides, and in tho end all will bo cared for. Tho United\nStates spends about if 200,000,000 yearly on roads, most of which is wasted, or\nhas been so heretofore, through lack of knowledge of road building. Wo can\nspend throe, times that and not miss it. Wo spend yearly for picture shows\n a million dollnrs a day, and wo burn up about tho samo amount yearly in\npipo and cigars, not to mention the larger bill for drinks, plain and mixed.\nThe city folks will have to concede something to tho farmor if they expect\nhim to stand In help pay tho bill, A Columbia River highway is all right, but\nof no intercut to tho farmor who wants a road to his homo town, so he can got\nhis crops to market, A Pacific, Coast highway, whilo possessing much scenery\nand boing a delightful drive for tho auto owners, would not help tho farmer\nRt his crop to market over a mud road, and whilo ho drives Bill and Susio over\nan almost impanjibl road with half a ton when thoy should haul threo times\nthat, he does not enthuso over the scenic routes. Tho lakes and mountains in\nthe country road mako him weary of pastoral scenery and bucolic, sentiment,
1055dcb4779d8249d72664acd06bd2ed COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.0945205162354 41.262128 -95.861391 AS OBDSAN'CB to vacate and abolish parts of\ncertain street* and itrfrti and alley* ia Mrs.\nPcxry'l Add!u00 to the City of Coaacil Biuflk.\nSec. 1 . Be it orlaii>e4 by the Cnffnjon Cooncil\nof the atys-f Council Bluff*. That *11 the t*«l» aod\nalley* ia th*t portion or Km Ferry's Addition t*\nIhe tilyif Cunncti Bitiffi, j;tn»ted <m the B H of\nthcSW >< of *ectinn So *» towrnhtp S«. 18 N*\n. f rainif Kg 44 wcjt; aad *! »•* '30 *cre# off the e«st\nclilc .if the w tf of the «»1'1 i» K if sai<l section.\nb»jisg t» uiy rod< »n wMth *ad one bofldrH »r.d\n•ixtv rrM« in length, containing in all one honored\na.Tf's With the excepti«»of Broadway rtreet wtikh\n1, tu bv *nl fi'Tnain a public highway without any\nclaim of dam-**** tr«ni the prc^-nt owiitt uf 'aid\nrrli (.state or bn a.iieni Trorn iaid city of Ooiucil\nB!u(Tm for tbe u*e and right :>f way for -<aid rtrect\n11 no* ;.<c«ted on aad tkrougb 'ail pretni»e« be and\nthe «aaie are hereby vacated and ab6liab«.\nTh<' streets and alley« fc-rrty raofct#<l asd abfti-\niiihud. bfiTK tbvse c.ir,taine<l ail that purtien of\n»*!<! Addition east of a lm^ due north from a point\n330 feet ea^t frota th*1 aoaUi-west cornet of said\ntddu.iD 8.04 the 4iri?eti or part* of strati hereby\nvacated and abolitfied being naroefl >•» tbe Becord\nPlat or s;«tl Ad<liUon a* Brown, ByiuU'l, Perry.\nr„rest,Ci*y High Uoand, Webster, JeflSrwn, awl\nCalhoun atreets\nSec S That Lftecltf of CotUK,ii Biuff» beret® re\nliiMioiah aii^l»tm» l<> the stree S and alleys lb that\ni rtioacif •«*1 Addition de*cnbe<liD *«tua one of\nihis ordi!ia«e (with the eiieptiou of Uroadwty\n•et) aud t8at Uerealter it #hjli be the I ur of tbe\npr .per *««f'»»or» iu rttaiiog a»*fes»raetit:. against\naiJ real estate .ieaciibed m section one of this or-\ndinaoc* a» ..ae butxire.1 acres for valuattsr. aod Ui*\nnun to ane»< »ajl «r.e bntidredacreaof Undwith-\noat regard t tberecordedpiataokauwiedgedby Ad-\nelin>» M B ?erry aad recotdvM IQ the Becorder'i\nofttce of Pottawattamie county, Iowa, oti saldprcd-\nis«a aa^.l plat being hereby abolished, the »*ii\ncity of Clonal Bluff* retaiaias oaty th« righto!\nway for Broadway «treet as aow iocaleit Utrooah\nsaid one lanJre.1 a-:re».\nAu»ri. v»i, May 3d. I6SS.\nAt^et
17f6fbc4ab6b98057bbba30ad2953205 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1888.1653005148248 46.187885 -123.831256 his friends wished it than because he\nbelieved in it, and then he put it in\nhis pocket and went home.\nThere wero three candidates for the\npresidency in 1884 besides Blaiue and\nCleveland. The Prohibitionists nom-\ninated St. John and the Greenback-er- a\nBen Butler, while some conglom-\neration of nondescripts nominated\nBelva A. Lockwood. St. John is not\nso much ot a saint us he was, and the\nfew prohibitionists that I know think\nthat he stole the livery of heaven to\nserve the devil in. At all events he\nis not likely to be nominated again\nthis year. Ben Butler is just the\nsame Ben Butler now as then. Ponr\nyears have increased his wrinkles and\ndecreased his hairs but otherwise he\nseems unchanged; yet the fact is \nis getting old his voice is not as\nstrong as H was, and while his mind\nworks well it does not work so quick-\nly. He does not take the same inter-\nest in politics as he did, while he\ntakes a good deal more interest in\nmaking money. .. He was always\nthrifty but ho is getting frugal. He\ncould have a presidential nomination\nagain it he wanted it, but I don't\nthink he cares for that little luxury\nthis year. Belva Lockwood is the\nonly candidate of four years ago who\nmade money out of tho presidential\nrace. It gave her a national adver-\ntisement which she has utilized in\nseveral lecture tours. She has grown\nhandsome as well as rich, and, liko\nButler, would be likely to get anoth
0e36d60f62c3e70cafa12002ac942faf PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.732876680619 39.756121 -99.323985 'l'he final scenes at the First Metho\ndist church, where the funeral serv\n3ce was held, and at the beautiful\nWestlawn cemetery, where the body\nwas consigned to a vault, were sim\nple and impressive. The service at\nthe church consisted of a brief ora\ntion, prayers by the ministers of\nthree denominations and singing by\nsi quartette. The body was then\ntaken to Westlawn cemetery and\nplaced in a receiving- vault, jending\ntne time when it will be finally laid\nto rest beside the dead children who\nwere buried years ago.. The funeral\nprocession was very imposing and in\ncluded not only the representatives\nof the army and navy of the United\nstates, but the entire military\nstrength of the state of Ohio and\nhundreds of civic, fraternal and other\norganizations. It was two miles Ions-\nOne of the most pathetic features of\nthe day was the absence of Mrs. Mc\nKinley from the funeral services at\nthe church and cemetery when the\nbody of her husband was laid to rest.\nSince the first shock of the shooting--\nthen of death and through the or\ndeal of state ceremonies, she had\nborne up bravely. Hut. there was a\nlimit to human endurance and when\nyesterday came it found her too weak\nto pass through the trials of the fiiv.il\n Through the open door\nof her room she heard the prayer of\nthe minister as the body was borne\nout of the house. After that Dr\nllixey remained close by her side and.\nalthough the full force of the ca\nlamity had come upon her, it was be\nlieved by those about her that there\nwas a providential mercy in her\ntears, as they gave some relief to\nthe anguish of the heart within.\nThe line of the funeral march from\nthe eh u rch to the cemetery was about\niy3 miles in length. The route was\nnorth on Tuscarawas street from the\nchurch to Lincoln street, west on\nLincoln street to West Third street\nand north one square to the gates of\nthe cemetery. For hours even before\nthe time set for the commencement\nof the funeral exercises at the Me\nKinley home the streets along- the\nentire length of the line of march\nwere crowded with spectators. From\nthe gates of the cemetery to the\ndoors of the church there was, on\neach side of the street, an almost\nunbroken line of soldiers and on all\nthe intersecting- streets detachments\nof the militia were posted about 100\nfeet from the thoroughfare upon\nwhich the cortege rfas to go and no\nbody was permitted to pass in either\ndirection.
1f8769cbb6ce7ced8012cf8d2a3b301f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1879.2616438039067 40.832421 -115.763123 ir.R. Smith is erecting npoa his prem¬\nises near the north extremity of Piety\nBow, a barn twenty by thirty feet in\nextent and two storie* In bight. They\nare not much cramped for room ap on\nthe hill, aa the lots are saaceptible of\nbeing extended in depth a dlatanc* of\nabout four miles, and by taking in the\n¦uoantaina, ail infinitum.\nJ. Spence'a ten-male team loaded\nwith floor her* yesterday and started\nfor the Duck Valley Indian Reserva-\ntion. The floor is sent oat by Agent\nJohn How for the use of the Western\nShosbones. The property and provis-\niona of that portion of th* tribe which\nwas located upon what was known aa\nthe Carlin farm, haa been loaded upon\nAgency teams which are now on the\nway to the Reservation in Valley.\nWe lesrn that the Indians are preparing\nto pat in a good crop of grain and vege¬\ntables in Dack valley this season, thirty\nacres of the former being already sown,\nand a Urge area is being plowed and\nprepared (or planting. The I soda of\nthe Reservation are of the very beat\nquality for cultivation, and ai'.nirably\nwatered by never failing atrea da.\nWe are informed by the agent ot\nWella, Fargo A Co., at thia place, that\nthe company haa just adopted a reduced\nschedule ot expnss rates upon thia\nCoast. The redaction ranges from ten\nto twenty-fire per cent below former\nratea, affecting chiefly tb* tranaporta\ntion of am all packagea; four pounda\nand under, in the carrying of which,\nthe company is obliged to compete with\nthe mails. Considerable reduction,
1fe21ab62ef42479692d686e1e71c98d WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.7027396943176 40.827279 -83.281309 Btoiril. That to view of the rapid settlement of\ntbe country, the residue of tbe public domain\nshould be kept mainly for actual settlers, ibe\nhomestead laws shou a be so modified that when\nhonorabl discharged Union soldiers and sailors\nclaim the benefit of the same, the period of their\nservice shall be deemed a part of tbe time of oc-\ncupancy necessary to acquire title. Grants of lands\nto aid in the building ot railroads should be made\nonly where necessary to open tbe country np to\nsettlement, and under such res rictions as will fa-\ncilitate the occupation of public lands.\nlienlmt That wefavorevery p acticable reform\nIn the public ser ice. State or national, in the di-\nrection of greater purity, simplicity, efficiency,\nard economy of administration; that the adminis-\ntration of our Mate affairs by our Stale officer--\none and all. has been in every respect character-\nized by snch ability, honesty, and integrity in tha\ndiscbarge of official duties that it demonstrated\nthe wisdom of tbe choice of the people who have\nthus them with high and responsible po-\nsitions, and entitles them to the thanks, esteem,\nand conddenre ot every citizen of this State\nIttsotrl. That tbe administration of President\nG ant has been wise and pr ident. It has impar-\ntially executed the laws, iaithfully collected and\nhonestl app.ied the revenue, greatly reduced the\npublic debt, and enabled Congress to lighten the\nburden of taxati n. It has Inaugurated a humane\npolicy n dealing with the Indians, favorable alike\ntt economy, civilization, and peace upon ou bor-\nder. It haa preserved and strengthened our friend-\nly relations with foreign power, and ta ad-\nvanced the honor and dignity of the United States\namong tbe governments of tbe world. It has at\nail times been delcreotial to tbe will of the people\nand studious to promote the public welf re. it\ndeserves and receives our hearty approval.\nBfroirtd, That we know no duty more urgent\nthan to mature anl enforce new safegna da ot the\npurity of elections, ai d to effect a thorough re-\nform of the evil service.
032c079d2eacc2a53605592cab77aa80 SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1859.223287639523 35.780398 -78.639099 after we became better acquainted, she told\nme her history. Her name was Iola Tivoli.\nHer father was an American, and her moth-\ner an Italian. Years before, Walter Tivoli\nhad left his northern home, for a tour\nthrough Europe, the home of his ancestors;\nand while passing through Italy had been\ntaken very ill, and was kindly nursed by\nMrs. Benoni, a lady of considerable wealth.\nWhen he began to recover, ho was attract-te- d\nby the gentleness, beauty and intellect\nof her daughter, and ere he left, he had\nwon her hand and heart. He brought his\nyoung wife to America, but the child of sun\nand 6ong, could not long endure the colder\nclime and manners of her husband's home\nand friends, and pale consumption lit up\nher eye with an unearthly lustre, and pain-\nted her cheeks with its deathly beauty.\nAgain Tivoli carried her to sunny Italy,\nher home, in hopes that old associa-\ntions would prove effectual in removing\nher malady. But all his care and love\ncould not cheat death of his prey, and after\na week's sojourn in her mother's home, she\nconsigned her infant daughter to her care,\nand breathed her last sigh upon her hus-\nband's faithful heart. After her burial,\nTivoli left his infant daughter with her\ngrandmother, and wandered about misera-\nble and unhappy, until at last he received\na dispatch, stating that business of impor-\ntance connected with his estates in Ameri-\nca, required his immediate attention ; and\nafter making a long visit to the grave of bis\nEda, he left his Iola and returned alone.\nIola remained until she had attained her\nfifteenth year, when the death of her grand-\nmother left her alone. Her father then\ncame and carried her ta his home in tbe\nnorth. Ere she came to America,-
11927f4fd87c14c37064143a644def90 IDAHO SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD ChronAm 1891.97397257103 43.82915 -115.834394 first blow str uck at the monarchy. Louis\nXVI. and Marie Antoinette were known\nto the Parisian in)b as the baker and the\nbakers wife, and the unfortunate an­\nswer of the Queen when h er s ubjects\nwere starving was remembered until the\nguillotine had severed the destinies of\nthe house of Capet from those of France.\nLittle more than one hundred years\nlater another cry is heard. This time in\nAmerica. It is not a cry for quantity of\nbread, but of quality. Everywhere adul­\nteration is common in articles of food,\nand es)iecia!ly the twin pois ons amm onia\nand alum are used to adulterate our bak­\ning powders by th e greedy and merciless\nmanufacturers. Many States have strin­\ngent laws on food adulteration, yet they\nfail to check the evil. It is the in­\ncrease. The iast repoit of the Dairy and\nFoo 1Commis si oner of New Jers ey shows\n17 per rent, or nearly half of the food\npreparations submitted to him for exam­\nination were adulterated.\nSometimes the adulterants used were\nfound harmless, and in these oases the\npurchaser would be only swindled, b ut\n,n many insta nces rank noisons were\nlonnd iu articles of every day consump­\ntion. A large percentage of cann ed veg\n•■tables, such as peas and string beans,\nsere found to contain copperas to give a\ngreen color, and a numberof bakingpow­\nders had been doctored with ammonia\nto give an artificial leaven ing st rength\nand so permit of earn ing more waste\nmatter. In these cases there is not\nvnlv fraud, but danger to the public\nhealth.
334534b698af93e474304378d3aa5755 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.3510928645517 41.681744 -72.788147 Kyle's carnival, operating on va-\ncant Whiting street lots during the\npast and present weeks, has aroused\nthe ire of the merchants, and com-\nplaint to the selectmen was made to-\nday through the merchants' com-\nmittee of the Chamber of Commerce.\nI. J . Rlrnbaum, spokesman for the\ncommittee, said that carnivals which\nwere allowed to come into town took\na great deal of money away with\nthem money which otherwise might\nbe spent in local stores and kept in\ncirculation here. The merchants do\nnot object to carnivals which are\nsponsored by various local organiza-\ntions, ha explained, but it did op-\npose those which have no Plain-\nville connections.\nTho aelectmen today expressed\nsurprise at the complaint registered\nby the merchants. They said that\nno objection had been raised by the\nresidents of the district in which\nthe carnival had Itself. Man-\nager Kyle obtained a permit from a\nthe town. It was explained, and as\nlong as there was no complaint that\nit was a nuisance, the selectmen\nwould not consider taking any steps.\nThe permit would not be revoked as\nlong as the carnival was conducted\nin orderly fashion.\nThe carnival is a diminutive affair\nconsisting of a fcrris wheel and sev-\neral booths containing wheels of\nchance. Last week it operated on\nthe vacant Whiting street lot of D.\nC. Peck, while this week it has\nmoved further down the street. The\npermit covers only these two weeks.\nMr. Birnbaum said he knew of In-\nstances where men were spending\n14 and $5 a night on the wheels of\nchance at the carnival. The select-\nmen appeared to be inclined to\ndoubt that tho show was taking In\nany such sums.
2773ef637accb518e4e14c49c53364c7 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1915.4945205162355 58.275556 -134.3925 A mountain prospector Id the Cook\ninlet country recently came down\nWoodrow creek to Anchorage and an¬\nnounced to the people there that the\nstream was the outlet of a small lake\nin the mountains. The laborers in the\ntown who are working for 37 ^ cents an\nhour and furnishing their own tools,\nimmediately assembled for the purpose\nof giving a name to this newly discov¬\nered body of water. Many different\nnames were suggested, but finally an\nIrishman, who had been strenuously\nobjecting to handling a No. 2 in Alaska\nfor §3.00 per day and find your own\ntools, "drawled out, "Call it Rocke¬\nfeller." It went like Bryan's famous\n"Crown of Thorns" speech at Chicago\nand that beautiful body of pure aqua\nwill forever go thundering down into\nhistory cursed with name of that\nlabor tyrant. Knowing it to be im¬\npossible to stem the tide of popularity\nfor the name of the lake the govern¬\nment at once took steps to have Wood-\nrow creek re-christened, whereupon the\nthirty-seven and a half centers, getting\nwind of the movement by their Uncle,\nimmediately reassembled and unani¬\nmous consent was given to the Irish*\nman who had no shovel, the honor of\nre naming the creek. He arose with all\nthe dignity of a Parnell and the quick\nwit of Paddy Ford, of the Irish World,\nand said, "Aw hell, we'll call it Mears."\nAnd even the waters of that beautiful\nstream as they wended their way down\nthe rugged mountain side to the deep\nblue sea, falling over the pebblestones\nin their way, chuckled, "Good, good."
7e154ed1731df999d565981c975faa12 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.8073770175572 39.745947 -75.546589 "Plant Juice is certainly the great­\nest medicine in the world and it was\nthe only one of the numbers of med­\nicines 1 have taken, that restored me\nto health. For months T have b.ecn\ntroubled with my stomach and I\ncould not digest the lightest kind of\nfood; it would ferment In my stom­\nach and cause gas to form; I would\nbe doubled up with pain and I could\nnot sleep at night; I was constipated\nhad pains in my back; 1 lost in weight,\nhad poor color in my face; all this\ntime 1 had been doctoring and spent\nhundreds of dollars on medicines\nwhich did me absolutely no good.\nMy druggist recommended Plant\nJuice to me as he said he had hever\nheard so many people speak so highly\nof any as he had of Plant\nJuice. I took his advice and started\nto take Plant Juice. The druggist\ntold me I would not have to pay for\nit if it <H<1 not relieve me; but I cer­\ntainly was glad to pay for it for aft^\nthe first few doses I got so much ben­\nefit I continued to take it and now\nI have a fine appetite, sleep fine at\nnight and have not a pain or an ache.\nI have gained 4 pounds in weight\nand have a good, healthy color. My\nwife's father and mother when they\nsaw the \\Vnderful benefit I got,\nstarted to take Plant Juice also with,\nthe same fine results. My recovery\nis nothing short of a miracle and J\nwould advise everyone who suffers\nwith stomach trouble to take Plant
156767baefae6d7fd14ad26e5c618868 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1904.2663934109999 39.756121 -99.323985 In an address to Missouri dairymen\nRobt. Pethbrldge said: Successful\ndairying cannot bo carried on where\nlabor is short, or where the hired\nhelp Is lacking. In my travels I find\nthis to he a great complaint among\ndairymen that they cannot get help,\nbut I am sure it is mostly their own\nfault, for I can name many successful\ndairymen who have no difficulty in\nthat line, because they are treated in\na proper and business like manner.\nsuch as fair wages, regular hours and\nliberal treatment. He must compare\nthe dairy help with the city laborer\nin wages; they will vary in different\nparts of the country In hours of la\nbor; the city man has his 10 hours\ndally and pay for overtime, whereas\nthe country marl as a rule works\nlonger hours and no pay for overtime,\nThis is one of the great objections\nof the man working on the farm, for\nI have known by experience that\nmany a day I have been at work 14\nhours in the field with a team and pre-\nvious to that did the milking \nfeeding of ten cows and four horses,\nand then at night have to do the\nsame thing again, when I ought to\nhave been studying or taking some\nrecreation to improve my mind and\nbody, to render it better fit for the\nduties of the morrow. Liberal treat\nment will do more to bring employer\nnd employed together, than wages\nThe giving of a cottage with a garden\npatch and allowing them to keep\ncow for the use of the children in ad\ndition to the weekly wage gives the\ncountry employer the advantage over\nthe city and more work can be ac\ncomplished and your man can be re\nlied on, which Is very important. Ir\nthe hiring of labor, there are many\ngood dairy hands comjng from Eng\nland, Ireland, Germany and Scan\ndlnavian countries, who are glad to\neet a lob when they arrive in New\nYork, and they naturally seek an em\nployment agency, and those who wish\nto hire this class can make applica\ntion, and they will not be disappointed\nif they are willing to do the fair thing.
0b5ebf72fdd849a23174f54c0e5416fa PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1902.423287639523 39.756121 -99.323985 According to the officr al statement\nof the federal bureau of statistics,\nAmerican packers sent to foreign\ncountries during the month of April\nfresh beef valued at $2,321 ,162 , $1,000,- 00- 0\nworth of canned and salted beef\nand $5,651,245 worth of fresh and salt-\ned pork. The mere statement of\nthese figures would indicate a plenti\nful supply of meats. But a compari-\nson with the export figures fur April,\n1901, will remove the impression, f or\nin the month last noted the fresh beef\nexports were .$2,986,279, or $665,117\ngreater than in April, 1902. The\nfalling off in pounds was" even more\nmarked, the drop being from 33,116, -04 - 7\npounds in April, 1901, to 22,661, -80 - 1\npounds last month, a decrease of\nsome 33 per cent, despite the induce-\nment of higher prices abroad. In\nApril, 1091, the average price of ex-\nport beef in Chicago was close to 9\ncents per pound the average price\nlast month was 10 5 cents\nAs to live cattle we exported only\n18,902 last April, valued $1,048,942,\nagainst 35,368 exported in April, 1901,\nvalued at $3,146,018 a falling off of\napproximately 50 per cent both in the\nnumber of cattle and in the value.\nOf live hogs we exported only 591 last\nApril, valued at $6,190 against 1,386\nfor April a year ago, valued at $14,658\na falling off of 57 per cent in the\nnumber exported. If the figures here\nnoted taken from the official bulletin\nof the treasury department do not\nindicate a falling off inXhe meat sup-\nply then it would be difficult to de-\ntermine how that could bs shown.\nAnother point worth noting in the\nmeat situation is this: liast month\nshowed a heavy gain in the amount of\ncanned meat exported, and a slight\nincrease in the export of salted beef,\nin spite of the advance in prices.\nThis shows that the American pre-\npared meats are not losing favor and\nthat the packing companies are mak-\ning the best possible use of the poorer\ngrades of cattle, the latter always\nshowing increase when fed stuffs are\nhigh Denver News.
11bd92f96cf512e5f1b9f1b8010b9067 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1876.7609289301254 37.561813 -75.84108 The question being on agreeing to\nthe fourteenth House amendment,\nMr. Finck moved to amend the\namendment by adding to the end of\nsection 24, the following proviso :\n"Provided, that whenever any per\nhaving a certificate authorizing\nhim to teach school in county in the\nState, shall present and exhibit to\nthe Board of School Directors of any\ntownship of the proper county a cer-\ntificate signed by the local directors\nany of the districts of any such\ntownship of having taught any num-\nber of scholars resideng in such town-\nship not less than twenty, who hare\nnot attended any of the other com\nmon schools, or other schools named\nthis act, of the township during\nthe year, and who have been enumer--'\nated for school purposes, stating the\n of scholars taught, and the\ntime they were in attendance, the\nsaid township board shall draw the\nproper order for the pro rata amount\nwhich such person shall be entitl\nfor such services from the school\nfund, taking into consideration the\nnumber of scholars so taught and\nthe time employed by such teacher,\nand the same shall be paid from the\nschool fund, as in other cases ; and\nfor the purpose of ascertaining such\npro rata sum, the said board shall\nascertain the total amount of school\nfund for the proper township, appli-\ncable to each youth entitled thereto\nupon the principles above named."\nThe foregoing amendment was de It\nfeated by a large majority, but if the\npeople of Ohio desire to have their\nschool funds divided we know of no
23efae6b0e3089cf346161442276eb6c OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1872.908469913732 41.020015 -92.411296 even his death to give him this super­\nnatural character among ibe bumble\npeople of his own land.\n''This is tbe true touchstone of the\nheroic man and the heroic age—if liv­\ningheisa toiler, and if dead heis a\npri nciple. Lincoln needed no lapse\nof years to become immortal. In one\nflash of blinding light lie became pan­\noplied into the religion of the peoples.\nAs in the old tragedies, after the fall\nof the hero came the fanfare of the\ntrumpets and the eutry of the forces,\nso alter Lincoln had gone from Wash­\nington came iu the victorious soldiers.\nIt seems to mo uo such touching pa­\ngeant was ever seen. There was not\na regiment with halt' its supplement of\nmen. There was scarcely a soldier or\nan officer with a whole uniform. There\nwas scarcely a banner but was black­\nened with smoke and riddled with the\nfiery hail of tight. Yet as it marched\npast the reviewing Generals, past\nGrant, and Sherman, and Stanton, and\nthe representatives of the Old World\nall in a gala dress, no one doubted any\nmorn that this was the greatest army\nthat ever went to war. As in that\n and inspiring picture of Kaul-\nback, which shows the legendary fight\nof Atilla, there are two fields and two\ncontests, one between the soldiers\nstriving in deadly conflict on tbe turf,\nand the other a shadowy battle, set in\nthe upper air. among the ghosts of the\nheroes slain below, so all hearts that\nday were divided In reverence and\ngratitude between our two armies, the\none on its way homeward, crowned\nwith love and laurels, preparing its\nown unselfish disarmament, aud its re­\nturn to the peaceful interests of the\ncountry it had saved; and the men ot\nthe other, invisible forever in those\nwasted columns who had gained their\npromotion on the battle field to a high­\ner and wider sphere of duty, fulfilling\nnow the scheme ol the Lord of Hosts\nin some activity above the clouds.\nThus they passed on, tbe victors and\nthe martyrs. Out of the army into\npeace, out of sorrow into holy memo­\nries. And with the sweit and thril­\nling sound of the bugles, and the ris­\ning lust of the columns smitten into\ngolden glory by the sun setting over\nGeorgetown Heights, passed away the\nHeroic Age from Washington.
13eaa6b10355a7318312108e0657f0de DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1904.5696720995245 58.275556 -134.3925 his gruesome find to Deputy U. S .\nMarshal Ramsdell, who accompanied\nby "Jack the Swede," immediately left\nfor the scene, and returned with the\nbody of a man about 40 years of age, 5\nfeet nine inches high, weight about 155\npounds, sandy hair and beard. He was\ndressed in overalls, two pairs, blue\nshirt, black cloth coat and black felt\nhat, had on pair white canvas glove9,\nand had S4G.25 in cash. There was\nabsolutely nothing by which the man\ncould be identified, and part of his\nfaco, hands and wrist aad feet were\nfrozen. The corpse was lying in a pool\nof ice water, which partially concealed\nit, and may never have been found but\nfor the accidental detour of the hunter.\n| .Council City News.\nW. Gordon Campbell, a California\nboy who recently returned from the\nTanana country, probably had as hard\nand thrilling an experience in that\ndistrict as almost any prospector in\nAlaska. Together with a companion,\nWarren Merritt, he lived for forty-\neight days last winter on rabbits.\nIncidently two grouse, four eagle's eggs\nand a goose was added to this bill of\nfare, in addition to a stray loan, lank\ndog that chanced to wander into camp,\nbut otherwise it was rabbit three times\na day. The men went the country\non a prospecting tour. They were very\nsuccessful. They found dirt as rich as\n20 cents per pan and staked out eight¬\neen claims on the Chisana River, head\nwaters of the Tanana. The winter was\na mild one, and while going down Jack\nCreek the ice broke and the prospectors\nlost everything but guns and blankets.\nIt was a life and death struggle then\nuntil they reached Tanana Crossing,\nwhere there is a government telegraph\nstation. After a great deal of hard\nlabor they succeeded in constructing a\nraft eighteen feet long and three feet\nwide. Strapping guns and blankets on\nthis, they wore able to make much\nbetter time, although their parapher¬\nnalia was wet from the time they start¬\ned until the end of the journey. Mer¬\nritt, who is older than Campbell, could\nnot get off the raft unassisted when the\ncrossing was finally reached. Prior to\nreaching their destination they did not\ntaste food for twenty-four hours. What\nfew rabbits they were able to get before\nthat time were for the most part dis¬\neased, and the two men were in a ter¬\nrible condition. Mr. Campbell, in\nspite of the trouble ho had in the north,\nis going back just as soon as he can get\n! another outfit.Seattle Times.
1dfc595ef64195bfdfcaa93c1397fc3d THE WASHINGTON CRITIC ChronAm 1887.705479420345 38.894955 -77.036646 Evcrjbody know Allen O. Myers oT\nthe Cincinnati Ihi'iuircr. He erne on\nhero jcBteiday for the purpose of in t't\nlog arrangements to accompany the\nPresident ou his "swing around the\ncircle" In vaober. This morning he\ncalled nt the White Houso to see Col\noncl Lamont about tho matter. About\n12 o'clock to day a Cm no scrlbo ran\nup against him in the rooms of the tin\n'juiicr, on Fourteenth street and Peun\nslvanla avenue, and In u few minutes\nafter wart's bal tbe Ccoro Washing tan"\nof the 1 nqmrtr talking about the situation\nIo Ohio, Cleveland's popularity, ele , etc\n"lam talking now," enld bo, "as a prl\nTutu citizen, and, to tell ttie truth, Clove\nland Is popular with tho people. Of course\nsmorg the politicians and the LVimrer'i\nwlrg rt the Democracy bts name Is not\n ulth that enthusiasm that I shoild\nlike. UuttfoMot to tell you I'm a labor\nmin, mil this fall I believe we will elect be-\ntween fifteen and twenty members of the\nLegislature; and If that Is done we will hold\ntbe balance of power."\n'W hat about the prohibition men I\nWon't they hurt tho Kepuhllcans ?"\n"lhe 'dry vote will this fall exceed that\nof laityear by about 5,000. They will come\nfrom botli pjrtles lu tbe rural districts the\nDemocrats are all opposed to wbUky."\n"Is tbe Democratic party In good trim t"\n"They are In good, shape. I think the\nchances for electing Powell aro fair,\nloraker will run way behind his ticket "\n"How are tbe Democrats of Hamilton\nCcunty, the stronghold of the SWte f"\n"How aio tkey f Well, I told Limont\nthis morning Dint the Democratic
13add8932623bfa65b41046f34d4035b EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.6561643518519 39.745947 -75.546589 Nine carloads of Democratic workers\nand t.belr friends pulled out from the P,,\nW. A B. station this morning at 9 15\nThe passengers represented Wilming­\nton's delegation to Dover, where the\nDemocrats of Delawaro meet in tbe Kent\ncounty conrt house to-day, pursuant to\na resolution of the Democratic State\nCentral Committee.\nOne day coach on tbe re»r of the train\nwas unoccupied, having been reserved\nfor the remaining 50 of the 03 county\ndelegates outside of Wilmington. Before\nthe train reached Clayton it was loaded\ndown, having taken a score of enthusi­\nastic politicians on board at every atop,\nbeginning with New Castle.\nTheiraiuwasa very heavy mo and\nengine No 100. a mammoth locomotive\nof the P., W. AB, In main line, drew\nthe big load of human freight. Conductor\nHawkins was in charge.\nAmong the prominent politicians who\nwent to tbe state capital yesterday\nto prepare themselves for a good days\nwork to day were: Wlliard Saulsbuiy,\nJohn F. Callahan, Patrick Neaiy. John\nT. Dickey. C. C . Montgomery, William\nCooch, L Irving Hsndy, E K. Cochran,\nJ Harvey Whiteman, William Hau'bnry.\nMr. Handy, before he left,expressed him\nself as being confident that he would win\nthe nomination for CoDgress.\nThe threatening weather soon gave\nway to a bright sunshine and then\nDover became the Mecca for politicians\nfrom all parts of the state, Kent county\nIn particular. Late reports from Dover\nthis morning were to the effect that\nhundreds of teams had come into town\nfor tbe day and tbe streets were\nthronged with Important citizens who\nhad corns to advise about the nomina­\ntions. Later In the day the aun went\nunder a cloud and real old Democratic\nweather prevailed.
31f42314e08661f24838c94baa4b363b NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.4713114437866 41.681744 -72.788147 New York, June 21. The first two\nregiments of the New York National\nGuard to respond the call for service\non the Mexican border left this city\ntoday for the state camp at Beekman,\nwhere it is expected that about 18,000\nmen would be assembled when the\nstate mobilization is complete.\nRegiments leaving today were the\nSixty Ninth Infantry ard the addition-\nal six companies of the Twenty Sec-\nond Engineers, two companies of\nwhich already were at camp Whit-\nman. A part of the First Signal Corps\nalso started for the camp today '.o\n. prepare the telegraph and telephone\nequipment there.\nTomorrow the Seventy First Regi-\nment will leave for the camp and dur-\ning the remainder of the week off-\nicers of the New York division expect\nregiments from other parts of the\nstate will arrive there.\n departure of the artillery regi-\nments for the state camp is being de-\nlayed by inability to obtain horses. It\nis not considered likely that they will\nbe ready for complete mobilization\nuntil next week.\nMost of the other New York city\nregiments are in their armories await-\ning the order to start for the camp\nand meantime are recruiting to bring\ntheir enlistments to full war strength.\nAt the present rate it may be two\nweeks before this is accomplished.\nEmployers continued their an-\nnouncement that men serving in the\nguard would receive pay while absent.\nPercival Hill, president of the Ameri-\ncan Tobacco company notified all the\nmanagers of that company that its\nemployes would receive pay in full and\ntheir positions would be held pending\ntheir return. Many Arms in the silk\nbusiness signed a similar agreement.
12ced6e4901ffca4a1d7c7c4c41e617e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.1547944888382 39.745947 -75.546589 Our Lord came as the the world's Re- losing their share of tho great prize\ndeemer, but before dealing with the of this Gospel Age.\nrace as a whole he selects the Church Whoever Is now blessed with the\nclass—disciples. The love and loyalty hearing ear, whoever now bears the\nof these oro tested by their call to call of dlsciploshlp, whoever now uc-\nwalk contrary to the general tendon- cepts tho call and becomes by conse-\ncles of tho world—upward along the cration a follower of Christ, has tho\nnarrow way, at the end of which they opportunity of erecting a faith slruc-\nare promised eternal life—glory, honor turc which will stand all the storms\nand Immortality and association with of life, because built upon the Rock,\nthe Redeemer In hts groat work of the Christ Is (his Rock of Ages. Not only\n Kingdom. Then he will is ho the great Redeemer, but to those\ndeal with humanity now going down now called, ho Is the groat Exemplar,\non the broad road to death—recover- In whose footsteps all shall follow who\nIng them and giving them glorious op- desire to become Jolnt-helrs with him\nportunltles secured by his sacrifice. I In his Heavenly Kingdom. Those who\nThe present call to dlscipleshlp Is I essay to become his disciples and who,\nthrough the narrow gate of full corse- 1 nevertheless, neglect a careful follow-\ncration. even unto death. In tho foot- j Ing of his Instructions are building\nsteps of the Master, and few there be, false hopes, building upon a tounda-\nwho find and willingly walk this way. tlon which will not stand the storms\nThank God that the masses of hu- and trials of life, which are specially
1c21cd181cc13f813fab4364815c0c20 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.678082160071 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr, Lynn thought there should be a\nspecial committee appointed to investi­\ngate the subject while Mr. Willits sug­\ngested that the Comptroller was the\nproper perNon to look into it.\nCommissioner Armstrong arrived by\nIbis time, and moved to refer the bill to\na special committee, whereupon Mr WH­\nIR» moved to amend by referring it to the\nComptroller.\nMessrs. Willits and Chandler called for\nthe original motion, Xlessrs. Lynn. Meg­\nginson and Armstrong voted in th:> affir­\nmai ive, and Messrs. Willits and Elliott\nm the negative. Mr. Chandler did no;\nvote, and President Lynn declared the\nmotion prevailed.\nMr. Chandler said lie would not vote,\nns he did not care what became of the\nit,,». President Lynn said he would a|i-\npoint Mr. Willits and Mr. Chandler on\nthe Investigating«'ommittee. but Mr. Wil-\nlils said he would not serve, because the\nquest ion had not beerf decided. President\nLynn then declared it had been decided,\nus Mr. Chandler would not vote.\nAt the request of Mr. Willits, Mr.\nKnowles read the law relating to the re­\npairs to the Voshell Slislleross ilams.\nIt set forth that the county shall lie put\nto the expense only of maintaining that\npart of ground actually used as a road­\nbed. and bus nothing to do with maintain­\ning the inilldam, other than the planking\nmill bridging over it. The county is re-\nqnired to maintain the bridge ifor a width\nof twelve feel, beyond which the owner\nof the property is required to take care\nof it. Action on the motion was deferred.\nConsiderable routine business was\ntransacted. Comptroller Kelley an­\nnounced that lie had sent a claim of $1. -\n617.35 to the Kent county Levy Court for\none-half the cost of repairs to Fleming's\nbridge, which is in both New Castle and\nKent counties. As yet he has not re­\nreived the money, but the Kent court may\nlake up the subject in October.\nThe -committee to investigate the kill­\ning of sheep on the farm of Vincent O.\nHill, in Blackbird hundred, recommended\nHint no allowance lie made to Hill.\nThe bill of James B. Pryor. Jr., of\nBlackbird hundred, for sheep killed, was\nallowed.
184c84f05b58cf1528971806ad7cfc1e WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.727397228564 40.827279 -83.281309 That is not all We found that,\nwith all this, we could reduce taxa\nlion largely. Instead of coiitiuuiiiii\nto pa)' off this debt, at this rapid\nrate, we wauted the uext genera liou\nto help, lor this debt was incurred\ntor their saks as well as our own\nSo we passed iu Congress a bill Te\nduciug your intern I and voiir ex\nlerual taxation, your internal reve.\nlutie luxes and 011r lai'M dunes,\nlurowing otf 55 millions of i.iu -r na- l\nrevenue taxes, and 25 millions of\n;intT duties, striking otf at one blow\nSO millions of taxes, one fourth, of\nall the remaining taxs resting 01\nthe people of the United Suites\nNow1wanttoaskyouifau ad\nministration that in eighteen mouths.\nwithout an increase of taxation\ncan ii crease your receipt over 80\n of dollars over the previous\nadministration can reduce your ex\npeuditures 100 nii'lious, cau make\nyour currency worth 62 millions\nmore, can pay off in the same time\nno millions ')i your ueot, and can\niu the same time strike otf and re\nlieve llie people troin 80 millions\nof dollars of burdensome taxatiou. I\nask you if that administration is not\nwoitli the continued confidence of\nthe peop e. I believe the people all\nover the country will say "Well\ndone, good and faithful servants\nMr. Coltax concluded as follows.\nWhen we came into power, slav\nery ruled in this laud ot ours; i\ndominated in Cnugress; itcontrollet\nPresidents; it muzzeld pulpits, i\nbroke the power of every party that\ndared to speak aganst it. We grap-\npled with it. Willi one hand we
12def9b4fd5357af40aa1f269490e462 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.5849314751395 39.745947 -75.546589 The shop windows in Berlin are full of\ninterest for the American. Shopping in\nBerlin is widely different from shopping in\nany American city. To begin with, the\nshops are much smaller. There are only a\nhalf dozen really large shops, comprising\nthree or four floors, in Berlin, and only two\nwhich partake of the character of th» Bon\nMarche in Paris. Except in the few large j\nshops one must lie prepared to have his pur­\nchase handed him done up in a newspaper,\nfor instead of wrapping paper German\neconomy compels the dealer to buy up back\nnumbers of the daily journals. In all the\nmarkets and butcher shops this is used,\nand even in a flue confectionery shop you\nmay have your candies wrapped in a large\nprinted advertisement. In some of the\nlargeand more fashionable shops the strings\ntaken off the goods as they come in at\nwholesale are tied and used again\nto secure the parcels of the retail trade.\nShopping as Americans know it—namely,\nthe going about from store to store examin-'\ning and pricing until one lias found exactly\nwhat one wishes, and at the price one\nwishes to pay—is unknown in Berlin. There\none is not expected to enter a store and ex-\nami ue goods unless one is prepared to buy\non the spot. If the clerk thinks for an in­\nstant that you are not pleased and may not\nbuy, his manner changes at once, and ho\nwill not show you any more. But if ho is\nconvinced that you really desire lo purchase\nhe will be exceedingly attentive. If, how­\never, after having considerable shown you,\nyou are not satisfied and leave, you may\nexpect positive rudeness on the part of tho\nclerks, whereas if you buy live pfennigs\n(1JT cents) worth you will lie politely\ntreated.
9057d53a093487c33d6842992efc45fe OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8073770175572 39.513775 -121.556359 It is not often that a community of oift-\ns. ie barbarians, *, n shape of miners, have\nbad the same opj ' i tunity el becoming en-\nlightened ujioti the lending political ones-\nturns of the iiay, us ourselves. The light\nhas broke through at last, ami tiiio- y- rtion\nof OKI Dutte may, wifJi tolerable ccrlaiuty,\nt o set down ns tight ?i<!» np\nVon have doubtless, ere this, been inform\nc l by the llou ex member, ex-returned\nfrom his cx-Atlaatic S'jruru, that his eon-\nBtiluents at e quite as numerous in this iduco\nits those whose black banner be is marching\nunder. The only un i greatest ddUeulty he\nencountered here, was how to dispose ol a.\nJackass load of do ciments and IStatc new.-t\npapers, which the Central Cuimuittee of that\nprogressive, pioneer squad. had overloaded\nhint, it seems, for our especial benefit. He*\nport says, however, that he bartered his\ntrust, or mist ike, gut over the hid among\nthe 1 reticii and Dutch, ami commenced sell-\ning oil his stock, but he found the market\nUnite dull, as they were well supplied and\nhad a low left. The next move was form*\nhorn ot "rot-gut, nnd accordingly, tne Ito\nb trier a f rein on t and 1* i llmore documcntr fo?\na smile, but it Was no go; mir French and\n(lerinan neighbors would not agree to a\ntrade ot that kind, lor any such documents.\nlie finally concluded that he had got into\nthe wrong pew, begged their par,lon, and\nlilt. Ho brought up on 1- j encli Creek, wlter j\nhe nut wi.it a lew Dnchatinn acquaintances\nwho treated him to a “gin cocktail,” and ;v\nwarm dish of mule soup, for which he pro-\nposed an address on the velvet question, but\nwe all thanked him very kindly, and bid\nhim:i d i c u. lielefttheMime, d«ir
184b6d7308f01ef96ab792d95f5e7e69 THE MORNING TIMES ChronAm 1896.8510928645517 38.894955 -77.036646 It will be remembered that Judge Cox was\nappelated by President Hayes, and 1 1 Is con-\nceded that It will tic the paper thing for\nliin tc await the incoming or a Republican\nPresident befure leaving the bench. Should\nbe retire before next March It would leave\nthe place tc. be filled by President Cleve-\nland, and In view of these facts It is almost\ncertain that Judge Cox will bold ou for as\nleast several months more.\nV. hen questioned about this state ot af-\nfairs the only reply he would give was\nthat lie might retire In several months or\nIHisMbly earlier. There Is hardly any doubt,\nhowever, that he will await the Inaugura-\ntion of President McKlnley so that las\nsuccessor shall be a Republican.\nThis brings about the as to a\nsuccessor. It has been suggested that\nHarry E. Davis would be elevated to the\nbench should Judge- - Cox retire during Pres-\nident Cleveland's administration and there\nis little doubt but what he stands the\nbest chance. Ills attitude on the monetary\nquestion has cemented the friendship ex-\nisting between Mr. Davis and President\nCleeelatid and his high standing in the bar\nassociation Would give him much prestige.\nAnother much mentioned is J. J. Darling-\nton, of the Georgetown University. Just who\nwould take Judge Cox's place, should he\ndefer his resignation until the incoming ad-\nministration, is not known. Thisnew phase\nhas been so recent that the lawyers havu\nhad little chance to speculate among them-\nselves, and there has been no mention of\nnames in this connection.
0dafe02d793f7fd28eeceeaff0982553 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.5520547628107 44.939157 -123.033121 091 Carl Holman A'eatch.\n692 Bert Allen Victor.\n093 Edwad Gordon AVallace.\n004 Harry Bexford AVilson.\nt5 .Toseph A. Benjamin.\n(Wti Henry Scott Bolinger.\n097 Dr. Philo Glenn Brown.\n01S reeil Gordon Bunnell. ,\n099 Bnlph AValdo Coffin.\n700" Earl Bogart Cotton.\n701 Curtiss Baskett Cross.\n702 James Purl Daniels.\n703 Bobert E. Davey.\n704 A'erne Domogalia.\n705 Ben H. Dragcr.\n70C Harold Erskino Eakin.\n707 Ivan Le Farmer.\n708 Bertrand Thomas Ford.\n700 Chester Burton Fraser.\n710 Carl David Gabrielson.\n7HAlbert AVilliam Henry Gille.\n712 Clyde Coalfleet Graham.\n713 Louis Dalrymplc Griffith.\n714 Eugene Amnion Hancock.\n715 Elwood Scott Hnrtnian.\n710 Chas. Baymond Hursh.\n717 Bert William Kook.\n718 Ben Levy.\n719 Harrv Morris Levy.\n720 Joseph Linsey McAllister.\n721 (Hen John McCaddam.\n722Htigh Carnnhan M:cCammon.\n723 Thomas McGilchrist.\n724 Joseph Willard Miller.\n72.5 John Robt. Mills.\n720 Rov Henry Mills.\n727 Harry Detniar Mitchell.\n72SFred Alexander Mitchell.\n709 Will Taylor Neill.\n730 Chester Burdiek O'Neill.\n731 Paul George O'Neill.\n Gny Glenn Qnackenbiish.\n733 Ralph Lawrence Hcharf.\n734 Ralph Paine Schindler.\n735 Emdon Frit Hlade.\n730 Frank Herron Spears.\n737 Flovd L. Ttter.\n738Ralph AVilfred AValton.\n739 Horace B. AVliite.\n740 Alonzo Bert AVilson.\n741 Horace Allen Wrlsort.\n742 Trov Dexter Wood.\n743 Fred Aslier Ackernuin.\n744 Charles Elmer Bates.\n745 Earl Glover Beck.\n7 4.0 Clifford Earl Bowen.\n747 Joseph Harold Botts.\n749 William Francis Patton.\n750 AVilliam AValter Cnrtis.\n751 Fred John Domogalia.\n752 John Bedford Dye.\n753 AVilliam Peace Ellis.\n754 Howard Hill Force.\n755 Earl Franeia Gleason.\n750 Richard AValter Hathenll.\n757 Porter Gnthry Heath.\n75S Harold John Hickersen.\n759 Rov I.. Hixrn.\n700 Theodore Charles Irwin.\n761 Boy Servais Keene.\n762 okler Kerr.\n703 Kent Simeon Krape.\n704 Bav I.aA'erne Lewi.\n765 Jake Lumen.\n706 Roland Chester McCalhster.\n767 Gus McMahon.\n76S James McClelland.\n709 Howa'd Frederick Miller.\n770 Ivan Merl Mover.\n771 Joha Bvron Nond.\n772 Chas. E . Olcott.\n773 Andrew A ictor irvnn.
519340497b5bf4f5309b6baf76bb5bf1 THE STATESMAN ChronAm 1906.2999999682902 39.739154 -104.984703 fXBOMiPnOBi Made in all sire*. It is lively and easyriding, very durable and lined inside\nwith a special quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small punctures\nwithout allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from mtisfied customers stating\nthat their tires have only been pumped uponce or twice in a wholeseason. They weigh no more than\nan ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of thin, specially\nprepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding Hack" sensation commonly felt when riding on asphalt\nor soft roods is overcome by the patent * Basket Weave" tread which prevents all air from being\nsqueezedout between the tire and the rood thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these\ntires is pi soper pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a specialfactory price to the rider\nof only |4*> per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received. We ship C.O .D . on approval\nYou do not nay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented\n will allow a nuh discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price ff4.fiA per pair! if vou send\nFI LL CASH WITH ORDER amfenclose this advertisement We will also Emf crnHSil\nplated brass h*nd pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paidorders (these metal\npuncture closers to be used in caseof intentional knife cuts or heavy gashes). Tirea to be returned\nat OCR expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination.\nWe are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safeas in a bank. Ask your Postmaster\nBanker. Express or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about us. If you order a pair of\nthese tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear better, last longer and look\nfiner than any lire you have ever used or seenat any price. We know that you will be so well pleased\nthat when you want a bicycle you will give us yourorder. We want yon to seod us a small trial\norder at once, hence this remarkable tire offer.
0b499f907d74201741f0bf5f8df3bae7 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.7964480558085 29.4246 -98.49514 Hendricks may get down on his knees\nand beg every man In Indiana tot his\nvote, the verdict will bo that the oonnt\nof '70 was a righteous one.\nBrownsville seems to be the storm\ncenter In the Seventh district. The\n"reds," ltentfro's friends, have captured\nthe city after n bloody tight.\nHnrd having been deleated at the\npolls, hopes to be elected by his tree\ntrade friends In Congress. Of such Is\nthe free trade Democracy.\nThe bulletin board In front of the\nBlaine and Logan headquarters was too\nsevere n strain upon the nerves of the\nDemocratic Central olub.\nA prominent pawnbroker In our city\nIs holding almost the entire Turner hall\nticket In soak. It will be a gloomy day\nwhen the returns come In.\nTwo M. D.'s running for the Legisla-\nture. The State needs dootorlng and\nIlexar proposes to furnish the\ndoctors one or them nt least.\nDr. V.O.King Istoogood a man, with\nloo much good, old Wlilg blood in his\nveins to run well upon such a mongrel\nticket as the Turner Hall allitlr.\nThe Ohio Waterloo has demoralized\nthe "Central Democratlo club," and\nthey have left the Pavilion and retreat-\ned to their old quarters, Krlsch hall.\nDr. V.O.King miisthnvo left all tho\nplunder he got out or Louisiana politics\nbehind him, as he has never dlsnlaied\nany of It since he came to Texas.\nWash Jones hod 2701 majority In the\nl'. luhth Conirresslonnl illnrlrt. ir tin.\nprotectionists will cast their votes for\nBurns, Miller Is a defeated Individual.\nHod Ihe ltemibllcana been ilrfonti.il In\nOhio the Democrats would have claimed\nthat the result settled the national\ncontest. Its n poor rule that won't\nworn uoitt ways.
0196bfeaf4ddd0c81ad9e7c7ee826b82 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1895.1438355847285 42.217817 -85.891125 terest became due and payable on said mortgage on\nthe 2'Hu day August, A. D. 1K94, which said sum is\nstill due and unpaid, and more than sixty days have\nelapsed since the same so became due, unpaid and\nin arrear, tho said Margaret H. Smith, said assign-\nee and owner of said mortgage, has and does de-\nclare the whole amount of said mortgage both prin-\ncipal and interest to be now due and payable.\nThere is now due and unpaid on said mortgage at\nthe date of this notice the sum of .V2.6, and no\nsuit at law or proceedings in chancery having been\ninstituted to recover the amount due on saia mort-\ngage, or any part thereof. Now, notice is hereby\ngiven, that by virtue of the power of sale in said\nmortgage contained, and statutes in such cases\nmade and provided, I shall, on Saturday, the lHth\nday of May, A. D. 1MD5 , at 3 o'c lock In the afternoon,\nat the north front door of the court house for the\ncounty of Van IHireu, Michigan, in the village of\nPaw Paw, lu said couuty, (that belug tho place for\nholding the circuit court for the county of Van Dar-\nen, Michigan), sell to the highest bidder, the premis-\nes described in said mortgage, or so much thereof\nas shall be necessay to pay the amount then due ou\nsaid mortgage, and the legal costs of this proceed-\ning aud of said sale. The said premises to be sold are\nkuowu and described as the certain lands situate\nand being in Arlington Township, Van Duren coun-\nty, Michigan, viz:\nSouth-we- st
6ab30d90da4ba0af5fd716c60d0df93f THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.9877048864096 39.261561 -121.016059 The Snow Stobm.—We are now in the\nmidst of the severest storm which has visited\nthis section since the winter of 1852-63 . It\ncommenced snowing on Saturday evening, and\nlias continued at intervals up to the present\ntime. The snow was a foot deep around the\ncity on Monday, and since that time has melt-\ned olf about as fast as it fell. The roofs of\nnearly all the brick buildings leaked, the water\ncoming through many in streams, and frequent-\nly bringing down the plastering. On Monday\nnight the roof of the New York Hotel settled\ndown several feet, on account of the weight of\nsnow, pressing the walls out, and causing a\ngeneral scattering of forty or fifty inmates.\nThe stable of J. S. Wall, on Spring street, was\ncompletely leveled the same night, and several\nother buildings more less injured. Last\nnight the roofs of Temperance Hall and of\nWithingtons shop, commenced settling, but by\nbracing up the walls and shoveling off the snow\nthe buildings will not be materially injured.\nThe roads above have been rendered almost im-\npassable for the time being. The Alpha stage\nstarted up on Monday, but finding four feet of\nsnow on the ridge the driver was compelled to\nturn back. Two sleighs were started up this\nmorning, but we have not heard of their pro-\ngress. Yesterday morning there was six feet\nof snow at Eureka, five feet at Snow Point, and\nfour feet on the ridge above North Bloomfield.\nIt must have fallen to a considerable depth on\nthe Henness road, but we have seen no one\nfrom above Eureka, and do n*t know to what\ndepth it has fallen on the summit.
3c199606f800c1c3213e53bc77443bf1 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1914.6013698313038 41.681744 -72.788147 now, will be renominated. He was\nthe only local candidate, on the re-\npublican side who was defeated two\nyears ago, Mr. Landers, his opponent\ncarrying the city by about 200, while\nMr. McMillan as the progressive\nnominee polled almost 14 00 votes. It\nis understood that Mr. Towers Is de-\nsirous of making another try for the\noffice and republicans are willing\nthat he should have the opportunity.\nIt is impossible to say now how much\nof a figure the progressives will cut\nin the New Britain election this fall.\nIt seems to be pretty generally ad-\nmitted and it is not denied by the\nprogressives themselves, that they\nwill not poll as large a vote this year\nas they did two years ago. The\nsentiment is not as strong although\nit might not be impossible for them\n poll a heavy vote with a popular\ncandidate. They put their best foot\nforward as he did In 1912, when they\nnominated' Mr. McMillan for senator\nwho received such support that it\nplaced him well up with the leading\ncandidates on the progressive ticket.\nThe republicans do not appear to\nhave anyone especially in view for\nrepresentatives, except that there is\nsome talk of renominating the two\ncandidates who won at the last elec-\ntion, Mr. Mueller and Mr. Crona, and\nthere is still less interest on the\ndemocratic side, the general trend of\nthe conversation being that Senator\nLanders Is likely to be nominated for\ngovernor and the places for senator\nand representatives will be open Lo\neveryone. If the democrats expect' to\ncarry New Britain for these offices\nthey will need to put forward their\nbest men.
4679587238d778dd5887ac9522f2de8a WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1872.8702185476118 40.827279 -83.281309 There is, in the treatment of the present\nepidemic, a very essential point to take into\nconsideration, and which relates to the hy-\ngienic attendance of the affected animals.\nRest, as soon as affected, is essential, as if\nthe animal is kept at work the disease will\nprogress, and may prove fatal in a few hours.\nThis is a part of the treatment I think veter-\ninarians ought to insist upon very firmly.\nGood hygiene, by proper and comfortable\ntemperature of the stables, blanketing ac\ncording to the condition of the ambient at\nmosphere, bandaging ot the extremities after\na good hard rubbing, wiping of the nostrils\nwith vinegar and water, are also recom-\nmended; feeding, of course, requires much\nattention and careful handling warm gruels,\nscalded mashes, and oats mixed with flax-\nseed. In a few cases, roots, turnips\nor apples ; these to be given according to the\ncondition of the bowels.\nI would also highly recommend proper\nventilation, cleaning of the stables, of ma-\nnure pits, whitewashing of the stables, and\nthe free use of disinfectants.\nPerhaps, for the sanitarian, the most im-\nportant question is that of contagion. In-\nfluenza is considered by some authorities as\nboth contagious and infections, while oth-\ners, of no lees superiority, deny it entirely.\nI would say that I do not consider it as\neither, and that the result of my observa-\ntions make me still stronger in my belif.\nFor this reason do I regret the late order of\nSecretary Bontwell preventing the importa-\ntion of horses from Canada. If contagious,\nIt is too late; if not, it will only increase our\ndifficulties in the horse trade.
11bd0ef6d6233045100d9d240795f4eb THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1868.8183059793057 40.063962 -80.720915 lour passenger coaches, ITve Bleeping\njars, a freight nod baggage oar and an\n;x press car. Tbree coaches and two\nleeplng oara were thrown from the\nLtaek and are completely wrecked.\nMrs. M . C . Tylor, of North Etalon,\nPa., who bad been making purchases\nIn New York, waa killed oatrigbt.\nJohn Davidson, a railroad contractor,\n3t Lyons, Wayne county, was fatally\ninjured about the bead. He waa brought\nto the Delavan House and died this\nmorning, The following Injured per-\nsons were also brought to tbla city and\ncared (or: Mrs. JohnDavidson, Lyons,\nInjured internally; Pliny S. Sexten,\nPalmyra, bruised about the bead; E.\nM. Bailey, of Rochester, N. Y ., bruised;\nJohn Heamsten, wife and tbree chil-\ndren of Philadelphia;.Mr.H . was severe-\nly buruod and bruised; Mrs. H . waa\nBlightly injured and the children es-\n unhurt; Mrs. J . Adolphus slight-\nly Injured; Jerome W. Rogers, of\nRochester, N. Y . Injured In the spine\nand right side dangerously; Julius\nRegamann and Olto Regamann, father\nand son, or New York, father internal-\nly injured and also on the leg aud\nabout the bead; tbelattej not seriously;\na German, name unknown, oollarbone\nbroken; the engineer, W. H . Reese, es-\ncaped unhurt; the fireman sustained\nsome alight bruises, and about 20 other\npassengers were slightly iojnred. The\naccident Is attributed to carelessness on\nthe part of the Railroad Company In\nfalling to have a splintered rail re-\npaired. Fortunately the stoves held to\ntheir fastenings and thus the wreok\nwas saved from conflagration. A num-\nber of prominent railroad men were on\nthe train going westward. One of their\nnumber, Mr, Davidson, was the only\none injured.
0ff7370847f4b9068998af77e55d9693 THE AMERICAN ChronAm 1895.4506848997971 41.258732 -95.937873 malntalnance either by band or brain or\nboth as eligible to membership, and numbers\namong Its members men of every profession,\nand calling In life.\nThe objects of this order are to assist each\nther In obtaining employment; to encourage\neach other In business; to establish a Rick\nand funeral fund; to establish a fund for\nthe relief of widows and orphans and to aid\nmembers; and to aid member who, through\nProvidence, may be Incapacitated from fol\nlowing their usual vocations, in obtaining\nsituations suitable to their afflictions. The\nmembership of this order la composed of\nwhite male citizens born in the United\nHtates, or under the protection of Its flag,\nThis order baa existed for nearly fifty years,\nand la at present, rapidly spreading through-\nout the United States. As an American burn,\nand having the welfare of yourself and\nfamily at heart, as well as that of the nation\nat large, we would moat heartily invite you\ntobecomeamemberofthe U,A,M., asItIs\nthe only Order In existence es-\npecially to promote the Interests, derate\nthe character and secure the happiness of\nthe American mechanic and business man.\nIt therefore appeals to the head and heart\nof him who wields the pen as well as to him\nwho swings the scythe or wields the sledge\nhammer of the mechanic. In Its councils, a\nfree discussion of principle relating to the\nfostering and care of the Interest of Indi-\nvidual members Is permitted; but nothing of\napolitical or sectarian character Is ever al-\nlowed to be discussed. It ha no affiliation\nwith such Institutions a Trade Unions,\nKnights or Labor, Sovereigns of Industry, or\nthe like, and desires not to control either\ncapital or labor, a It would be doing a gross\nInjustice to many of It members, who are\ntaken from both classes. The membership\nof the Order Is scattered from Maine to Cali\nfornia, and from all point comes ihe glorious\nnews that the Order Is gaining great strength\nIn all Jurisdiction.\nAn endowment branch
26e4f7065ae16a5c38d94616581d8668 THE COLUMBUS WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1920.9030054328578 31.830337 -107.638526 period or about soven months; (Ills\nact on our part certainly created a\nstain or war between us and (he\nrepublic or Mexico, even (hough no\nactual declaration or war was\nmade; under' the authorities a\nstatq or war may, and oftentimes\ndoe, exist between nations, with\nout ony declaration or war being\nmoue uy etiiicr.\n((6e Arco el ol, v. tho Stalo or\nToxa. 202 H. W, pago 051.)\nI am not, In possesion of data\nand Information llmt, will enable\nme. ,lo tell whether tho relations\nbetween our country and Mexico,\nwhich wero certainly broken and\ninterrupted by our LVinjif the port\nor vera Cruz, and which ucuon on\nour, part cortalnly did create a stalo\nof war between Iho two roifntrlc.\nhadjbecn composed al Iho timo tho\nassault upon Columbus was made\nby Mexican troops so as to\nhave changed (hat condition of i\nstale or war between Iho two na\nlion Inlo ono of amity and cordial\nrelation. If such chango had tat\nen place, this phase or tho case\nnow under consideration Is not ap-\nplicable, and becomes absolutely\nInconsequential and unimportant\nIn deciding It, If . on tho nlhcr\nhand, our relation with Mexico\nhad nol been reinstated, bul Uio\nstate of war still continued lo oxist,\nthen (his point becomes very ma\nterial and essential liecaiiso In that\nenne iv is pinin 10 sen inni uiesc lie\nreudanta would havo been prison\nenuof war, and should have been\nI rea led and dealt with a such Be.\ncording to tho rules of civilized\nwarfare, and certainly our civil\ncourts would have no Jurisdiction\nof.wlutovrr In the case.
0b6b3413e6504d6f0e2efe83af5f9d92 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1893.0260273655506 39.745947 -75.546589 Baltimore and Washington. 4 3516 01,910,\n1015, 1100 am. 12 06. 12 50,81 05,2 08.4 24,5 17\nto■3,668.746,820pm.134Bnight.\nTrains for Delaware Division leave for:\nNew Castle,8 15,U23am.260,340,440.615,\n661),9«1pm,1209night.\nLewes, 8 16 am, 4 87pm.\nHarrington, Delmar and way stations, 8 15\na m. Harrington and way stations, 2 50 p ni.\nExpress for Dover, Harrington and Delon,r,\n18am,437pm,1201night.\nExpress lor Wyoming and Smyrna. 6 60 u m.\nExpress for Cape Charles, Old Point C om­\nfort and Norfolk, 11 18 a m, 12 01 night.\nLeave Philadelphia, Broad street for WI1\nlujton, express, 8 80.7 30, 7 25. 8 31. » in. 10 £0,\n1083.1118ain, 12 10,81225. 13D,202, 340.3EH,\n401 430,508.*618,580,566,617,700,740.1116.\n11 '■ p tu. 121« night\nAccommodation, 6 20,7 35, 10 38.11 82 a m.I Î8,\n828.8HI,4 «1,437,622.838,1003,1040,1138p.m.\nSunday Trains—Leave Wilmington ion\nPhiladelphia, express, 1 66. 2 55, 4 20, 8 60, # 0,\n1151 am, 130.3 05, 6 04, 6 10,5507 606.7 06.7 5,\n» 12 m. Accommodation, 7 00,806 a m, 12 It,\n45,41)5.820,10Mpm.\nChester, express, 165, 4 20 , 8 50,9 00,116] a.m ,\n1 :!?, 6 04. 5 58, I 06, » 13 p m. Accommodation,\n7on,806am,13in.145,405,630,725.1U30\nNew York, express. 1 55, 2 68, 4 30, 7 00,\n1005,II51 am. 1210, 187. 805, 405,610, 666,\ns »,4621,7 06. 10 30p m.\nBoston, without change, 5 56 p m.\nWest Chester,via Lamoxin, 8 05 a m, 6 30 p m.\nNew Castie, 9 51 p m. 13 06 night.\nCape Charles, Old Point Comfort and Nor­\nfolk. 12 01 night.\nMiddletown, Clayton, Dover, Wyoming, Fel­\nton, Harrington, BridgevlUe, Seaford, Laurel\nand Delmar, 12 ill night.\nBaltimore and Washington, 4 35, 801, 10 18\nam.120«,1250,&17, *608,746,82D nm, 1249\nulgli' Baltimore only. 6 06 p m, 12 13 night\nI.save Philadelphia, Broad street, loi Wll-\nmlngton, express. 8 5D, 7 2D, 9 10, 11 IS a tu, 11 1U,\n430 598, 700, 740,835,1116, 1130pm, 12)8\nnight.
2e8f8ae4612e94759804649852aad23f OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.9112021541691 39.513775 -121.556359 entitled to one Member of Assembly.\nWere the other counties of the State\nrepresented in this ratio, the House\nof Assembly would be composed of\nbut seventeen members, whereas it is\ncomposed of eighty members. It is\nso with regard to Senator. Butte\nand Plumas, which together cast\nabout eight thousand votes, elect one\nSenator, while the counties of Santa\nBarbara and San Luis Obispo, with\nan aggregate vote of five bundled\nand seventy-five, also have one Sen-\nat or. The San Francisco Herald\nmentions other glaring inequal ties\nin the present representation. Thus\nTuolumne and Stanislaus counties,\nwith an aggregate vote of 8884, have\ntwo Senators, and San Francisco and\nSan Mateo, with a vote 12,1159, ha ve\nfour Senators, while the twelfth Sen-\natorial district, composed of Siskiyou\nTrinity, Humboldt and Klamath,\nwith a vote of 1700, and the four-\nteenth district, composed of tire\ncounties of Butte and Plumas, with\na vote of about 8000 thousand, as\nabove stated, have only one each.\nI ut though a very great inequality is\nobservable in the Senatorial appor-\ntionment, it much more glaring in\nthe lower House. Thus, San Luis\n()bispo, has one representative, while\nSiskiyou, with 4327 votes, has only\none also. Klamath, with 101 votes,\nhas one representative, while the ad-\njoining county of Trinity, with 2084\nvotes, wields only an equal influence\nin the lower House. Unless the\nLegislature elect shall adopt some\nmethod to equalize the representa-\ntion, the 191 votes of Klamath will\nwield the same influence in the Leg-\nislature of 1858, as the six thousand\nvotes of Butte. The Herald sug-\ngests that a fair apportionment wod\nho one senator for every 11000, and\none Bepreseutative to every 1300.\nThere are 33 Senators, and allowing\none senator to each 3000 votes, the\naggregate would be 0900 votes, which\napproximates to the vote of the state.\nThe result would be similar in the\nease of the representatives of whom\nther arc eighty. It is to be hoped\nthat the Legislature will devise some\nmeai to remedy the inequality, and\npern i us to enjoy equal rights under\nago rnment to the support of which\nall c ibute.
490a152a98854e0d226a831b9355e402 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1905.4534246258245 41.004121 -76.453816 Wellman Serrell tells about an air-\nship MaJ. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler,\ncommander of the army of tho James,\nordered to be built soon after the 10th\narmy corps moved Into Virginia.\nAll the commanders desired to\nknow what the enemy was doing, and\nMr. Serrell says that "when the as-\ntronomer Gen. Mitchell commanded at\nPort Royal during the Civil War, the\nmatter was discussed with his chief\nengineer officer, who brought forward\nthe proposition to make a machine\nwit jut inflation, and exhibited a tin\nmon d that wound up with a string\nand handle and spun like a humming\ntop and would fly into the air 100 feet\nor hiore vertically, according to the\nforce exerted upon It, and would car-\nry a bullet or two if the itrlng was\npulled hard enough."\nGen. Mitchell died, and, upon Beeing\nwhat the tin toy did, Gen. Butler ex-\npressed the belief that a machine\ncould be built to the air.\nDrawings were made, the theory be-\ning "to Imitate the little tin model and\nadd to Its gliding planes. The draw-\nings," according to Mr. Serrell, "show-\ned four fans to lift, two above an en-\ngine, two below, and two fans to pro-\npel and steer, one in front and one be-\nhind; the rear fan on a shaft that\nmoved in a horizontal segment, so as\nto change the direction of the push,\nand make the rear fan not only a pro-\npeller, but a rudder at the same time.\nAcross the machine was to be a\nhorizontal shaft, on which on either\nSide of the machine were to be glid-\ning planes and automatic balancing\nballs. These were to slide in and out\nso as to maintain an equilibrium.\nThe body of the machine was to bo\nabout 62 feet long and shaped like a\nthick cigar. It was to contain fuel\nand water and a high-pressur- e
09377d14d080105cd2f4950e5ffb533c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.7827868536228 44.939157 -123.033121 printed on tho back, giving tho fhll\ninformation regarding tho truancy of-\nfense. Tho summary of tho compul-\nsory education law Is as follows:\n"As soon as tho school opens, the\ndistrict clerk must give to tho teach-\ner a rovised copy of his last census\nreport, showing tho nnmo nnd ago of\nevery child, and the name and ad-\ndress of each child's father or guar-\ndian. It Is necessary for tho teacher\nto hnvo this informntlon in ordor to\ncomply with tho compulsory educa-\ntion lnw. Every child In tho district,\nwho has reached tho ago of nine\nyears, must attend school regularly\nduring tho wholo tlmo tho school la\nIn session, After the child rcachc3\ntho ago of fourteen yenrB, ho is not\nrequired to nttend, provided he le\nregularly and lawfully engaged In\nsomo useful If riot so\nemployed, ho must nttend until ho\nbecomes sixteen yenrs of ngb.\n"In Rilc XLIV, pngo 1C7, of tho\n'chool laws of 1907, tcncliors ore\nauthorized to require excuses from\npnrontB, elthor In person or by writ-\nten note In all cases of absence or\ntnrdlncss, or dismissal boforo the\ncloso of school. Section 104 of the\nsame law provides that tho teacher\nmiiRt count all unexcused abscncoi,\nand thnt no excuse alinll bo nccoptcd\nexcept sickness of tho pupil, or of\nsome member of tho pupil's family,\nwhich makes attendance Impostlble.\n"Tho comnul'ory law does not ap-\nply to olghth grndo Graduates, or to\nchildren' who nro attending Borne\nothor school rogulnrly. It does not\napply to chlldron betwoon nlno nnd\nten yenrB of ago If they llvo mon\nthan ono nnd one -h a- lf
2061dd286d377283f8230b607e96f8f8 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1906.7164383244547 58.275556 -134.3925 The rails shall offer no more obstruction\nto the crossing of vehicles thau can be\nreasonably avoided. Where the tracks\nherein provided for, cross those of a railroad\nor another railway, the rails of each shall be\ncut or altered that the cars of each can pass\nw ithout obstruction. Upon the completion\nof the construction or repairs, the streets in\nwhich such construction or repairs have\nbeen made shull be left in as good condition\nfor public travel as they were before the\ncommencement of such work.\nPoles shall be of wood or metal, their loca¬\ntion and height shall be subject to the\napproval of the street committee. They\nshall be painted such color and to such\nheight as the street committee shall order.\nAll electrical currents used by said grant¬\nees, their successors and assigns, must he\ncared for so as to insuro sufficient return of\nthe same along its own metalic \nto prevent any damage or injury to any\nproperty of the Town from such currents.\nThe Town of Douglus reserves the right to\ncompel said grantees, their sucessors and\nassigns, to adopt n reasonable economic\nmethod in actual practicable and successful\nuse under similar circumstances and condi¬\ntions, for the operation of said line, so as to\ninsure such return .of said current. All\nequipment shull be of first quality and shall\nbe instulled so us to interfere as little as\npossible with other public uses of the street.\nThe cars used in operating such linos of\nrailway shall l>o of an approved pattern and\nconstructed for the convenience and safety\nof the passengers. They shall he provided\nwith brakes and other necessary appliances\nfor the protection of life. The grantees,\ntheir sucessors and assigns, may propel its\ncars either with steam.by electricity, cable,\nor by each or by other motor or motive\npower.
0be61a23e2c8ac7e6093887adbd5f6b8 THE PADUCAH SUN ChronAm 1901.6890410641806 37.083389 -88.600048 change the very institution\nhe stands lint could we not enact a\nlaw making an attack upon hla life a\nmime of special odium No we can\nnot turn our faces toward the dead\ndays of sedition laws A free republic\nmUll go forward not backward The\ntroth Ii he cannot be protected If\nthe love of hla countrymen and the\nspirit of liberty cannot shield him\nhen he mast take the risk and we\nmud take It with him He and we\nare shut up to thisI lie mUll dla\nharge his duty ao faithfully and fear\neaaly that If he falla he falls at his\npat tearing to his countrymen this\nalleviation that he waa worthy of the\nplate he filled And has William Me\nIlnley fulfilled these conditions It\nIi not a time for eulogy Any words\nwere out of plate today that are\nnot aa simple strong and manly ai\nthe men himself And It la not easy\nto speak these For while It would\nbo difficult to find any man In mol\nern publio life concerning whom an\nadmiring testimony baa been 10 ant\nform beyond a few salient trait\nhis Belfnatralnt and thoughtfulness\nfor others hit to his wife\nwhich In tta simplicity constancy\nand dignity has touched the hearts\nof the whole people his good nature\nthat peculiarly American quality\nai a New England poet baa called It\nweak of course If misapplied but\nbeautiful In Ita own genial place i and\nhit religions faith and conilitent\nObrlitlan life beyond these few sal\nLent traita there ii little In hit charac\nter that lends ilaelf to description\ntint this does not mean barrenness but\nfollnen Hli great force la In hit\npersonality It cannot be defined\nIbis marvelous force penonallty 1 It\nIIi not learning nor culture i It la not\nbrilliant for persistence It Ila not\nwealth nor the power to make It It\nIla not a matter of striking pretence or\nof honored lineage It IIt a power\npurely ipirltuaL You now and then\nmeet a man 10 genuine ao trout\nworthy sowho can saythat you\ninsensibly follow his leadership you\ndo what be wants you to dot Do you\naay that this sloe not appear to be the\nhighest and most effectlre equipment\nfor a statesman The history of\nnation especially of our own nation\nprove that It Is The explanation IIi\nsimple
7fc263da50b0063231a61b339f07814a EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1922.187671201167 39.745947 -75.546589 than H* long and were glued Into all j fine silk; these flsh lines and silk\ncorners and around ths Inside of the; strings may be shellaced and al-\ntop edge of the sides as at f; after the j lowed to become thoroughly hard,\ngljie was thoroughly hardened those | The most difficult thing Is the plac­\net f were planed off to receive the top | Ing of the frets In the fingerboard.\nJ later. Tha neck was whittled from a ; which regulate the Angering and the\npiece of soft white wood or poplar, | pitch of the string. The frets may\nand the dowel g of the neck fitted to j be made of a piece of tin about *4”\nthe box by boring 94” holes through wide, doubled over to make the top\nthe ends of the box to receive It, | edge round so It will not cut the string,\nglued In Its place, and nailed through j and fitted Into a fine saw cut made\nthe end of the box Into the neck where j '4* deep which must be so placed as\nthey Joined. The bass bar d was made ] to make the correct tone. The best\nand glued on the under of the way to do this la to string the lnstni-\ntop as at d after which the Î* hole ment, and by moving a piece of wire\nwas cut In the top and the sounding 1 back and forth find the correct loea-\npost h 94* In diameter, Just enough tlon by comparing the tone with a\nhigher than the Bides to stay In place piano or other Instrument of correct\nwas glued upright on the bottom, tone. Make every tone and half tone\nWhen this had sot, the top wae glued for an octave, the octaves first, then\non ths sides and glue blocks f, and a the fifth, the thirds, the tones and the\nweight placed upon It until the next half tones. Such an Instrument may\nday when the glue had thoroughly have from four to eight strings, or\nhardened. The box was then care- may have five double strings as In a\nfully smoothed and sandpapered; the standard mandolin. It may be played\nnut, saddle and bridge were whittled with the Angers, or with a plectrum or\nfrom maple and glued In their places; picker, which may be made of a dts-\nnote that th# neck Is cut below the carded totolse shell comb. After ths
26e414d02aba25b47d71256aa220f7a3 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1880.3073770175572 37.561813 -75.84108 declaration of its existence and pur-\nposes, it was announced that "wines,\nliquors and cigars" would be pro-\nvided in its rooms. The Massachus-\netts Total Abstinence Society issued\npromptly an "Appeal to the Public,"\nin which they say that the eminent\ncitizens composing the new club\n" cannot but be aware that intern\nperance of the grossest kind has usu-\nally its commencement in the cus-\ntoms of social life : that the social\nglass and the social cigar are the\nprimordial germs of those habits\nwhich crowd our hospitals with lu-\nnatics, our almshouses with paupers,\nour penitentiaries with criminals, con-\nsign multitudes to an early and dis-\nhonored grave, and fill uncounted\nfamilies with desolation, mourning,\nand woe. They cannot but know\nthat intemperance is the Pandora'6\nbox from which issue most of the\nevils the human race. In view\nof these premises, the members of\nthis board would regard themselves\nas recreant to their duty to the pub-\nlic if they did not make this appeal,\nand reproduce the fact that laymen\ncf great eminence, and particularly\nthat clergymen of the highest stand-\ning, have thus, by their public acts,\ntaken issue with the friends of tem-\nperance, sealed their own lips against\nits proper advocacy, thrown the\nweight of their example into the scale\nof immorality, and tempted young\nmen into the paths of rain. It is\nalways a matter of great regret when\nirfiuential laymen do anything to de-- j\nrave tho public morals ; but that\nregret passes into astonishment\nwhen consecrated lips are defiled\nTyith 'wines, liquors, and cigars,' and\nreaches its culmination when they\nproclaim it to the world.''
177014ae2963e76182f858ef84826fd8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1901.719178050482 39.745947 -75.546589 Tronlde that had been brewing for some\nlime in tlie family of Frederick King\nculminated in a row of no mean propor­\ntions on Wednesday night, when the hus­\nband made an assault upon his wife, ns-\ning as weapons a chair and a frying pan.\nKing is employed in the stables of the\nBavarian Brewing Company and 11 v\nwith ids wife, Catherine, and their nine\nchildren at No. 707 Scott street. Accord­\ning lo Mrs. King's testimony, Frederick\nwent home from Ids work on the night\nin quest ion in n state of partial intoxica­\ntion. To use her expression he "sneaked\nin," and went to (lie kitchen where she\nwas engaged in preparing supper for the\nfamily. When lie entered the room he\ngave lier a black look mid said he would\ngive her 11 Idiirk eye "like the woman up\nthe street.” referring to a neighbor whose\noptic had Is-en decorated by lier husband,\nt)ue word brought on another, when\nfinally King picked up a chair in one\nhand and with a frying pan in the other,\nadvanced to tlie assault. He burked Ids\nwife up in a corner and reaching over the\nchair, her iihont the head and arm\nwith tlie |ian. He then picked up the\nlump and hurled it into the yard. These\nactions caused his arrest.\nWhen phiissl upon the stand. Katie\nKing, the eldest daughter, corroborated\nher mother's statement.\nKing did not deny the assault lint al­\nleged that ids wife and daughter threw\ndishes at him, one of which struck the\nlump and overturned it, and he was com­\npelled lo throw if out to prevent the house\nfrom lieiug set on fire.\nAs the prisoner find no witness lo prove\nhis story. Judge Churchman iui|Hised a\nline of $2(1 and costs.\nDrunkenness and disorderly conduct\nfurnished the bulk of (o-day's cases as\nlifteen offenders fared the court on those\ncharges. For acting in a disorderly man­\nner along tlie I*., W. £ B. railroad, Ed­\nward Fonder, colored, was fined $3 and\ncosts. Michael Dolan was charged by his\nsister in-law, Margaret Dolan, with being\ndrunk and acting disorderly in her house,\nNo. 608 East Tlilrtis'nrh, yesterday. Sirs.\nDolan testified that the man was a nui­\nsance and she did not want him iilsmt her\nbouse. A line of 13 mid costs was ini-
0aa212791f20d045f0c7461a6492acd4 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1890.97397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 It ffippenpos with ticket and siîpcïlKtributingrat\ntho poilu, except as may bo duno for cUiCllonter-\niu»* purposes.\ni^tinK a solid iron enclosure, it can bo 44 locked\nup” in ouo second and is, therefore, “raid proof,”\naa it may be upset and rolled over without dis-\narranging the count or proventing an inunediato\nresumption of tho election.\n11 registers on an outside register, exposed to\nthe public view, tho total numbers of voles caatr-\nup to any inatant.\nIt counts and registers the number of votes\ncast for each candidate up to any instant as fast\nas voted, in a secret, closed compartment, in­\nvisible to voters or to any election officer, until\nthe polls close. Then the board unlocks ami\nopens a sliding door, when th« exact number of\n' ôtes ior each candidate is shown iu plain largo\nH eures, opposite the printed name of each can­\ndidate, when it only remains for tho board,\nclerks and public to trascribe the result to tho\ntally sheets and sworn report n.ts usual.\nNo voter can take advantage of any careless­\nness contusion of any election officer and\nthereby vote twice—except tbut ho should bo ex­\namined and admitted by tho board of inspectors\ntwice, which is not likely to occur.\nTho Myers system approaches tho original\nballot nearer than the paper ticket. Balloting\nme.;ns secret, inaudible voting in contra dis­\ntinction to viva voce voting, 'i he word ballot\nwas originally derived from, ballet;-?, or the\nsmall halls formerI y used, therefore, voting with\nthin machine ia “ Voting by Ballot. ”\nIt does not require any candidate or party to\nprint tickets its tho small amouulof printing re-\ntired is done at public expense, therefore, the\ncritorious man of small means lia» equal ad-\n;:itago with his wealthy ccnii>otitor.\nMr. Myers Inis visaed foreign countries\nand 13 familiar with European systems, and\nhas carefully studied all tho recent legisla­\ntive acts in thn country designed to secure\ni reform in tho matter of voting and hasincor-\nJ porated tho best of tlio various propositions\n: into a proposed legislative bill the adoption\nI of which means tho use of his macMno with
bbfeb8da5e789823868ecd28c0c8feab VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1838.332876680619 43.798358 -73.087921 Legislative. The Resolutions in fa-\nvor of abolition, and against admitting\nany State into the Union, with slavery,\nwhich passed the Senate, the other day,\nwith one vote in the negative, were dis-\ncussed yesterday in the House, by Messrs.\nBlake, Gray, and Ruihven of Boston, and\nBrown of Lynn, in favor, and Allen of\nMendon, and others. Mr. Bacon of Sand\nwich, moved the previous question, which\nprevailed, and the , Resolves passed by a\nvote of 151 to 52. No State in the Un\nion has gone to the extent of these Re-\nsolves. The same men and the same par-\nty have passed them now, that two years\nago upheld young Mr, Lunt, as Chairman\nof a Committee, in driving from the Hall\nthose who appeared to advocate much less\ndecisive measures. Martineau has\nimmortalized that proceeding, and the\nChairman, in her Recollections of Socie-\nty. Boston Press.\nThe earthquake which has recently\ngone through some of the south eastern\nstates of Europe, appears to have nearly\nruined Bucharest : upwards of 300 hous\nes have been thrown to the ground, and\nthe number of deaths acknowledged bv\nthe government amounts to 60, although\nit is said that the real returns are with\nheld, in order to conceal the extent of the\ncalamity. The shocks lasted from Tues\nday, Jan. 23, to Friday the 26th. Two\nout of every five of the churches, public\nbuildings, and the mansions of the nobili\nty are so shaken, that they are expected\nto fall from day to day.\nThe N. Y. Legislature closes its sess\nion to-da-y .
86c42390ecaf50eb36e6a1411ab0ab5c SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1862.5712328450024 35.780398 -78.639099 came up to rny batteries yelling and shout-\ning, and I mowed them down with grape\nand canister at half range. It was a glo-\nrious victory ; but I could not persuade\nour men that it was a glorious victory for\nthem. I therefore yielded to the wishes\nmy heroic boys and resolved to toll tho\nrebels on. When the belligerents at Se-\nbastopol gained a brilliant battle they held\nthe field; my abandonment of Melvin\nHill was, therefore, different from anything\ndone at Sebastopol! flatter myself that\nhave seriously crippled the enemy by\nleaving another large lot of sick and woun-\nded in his hands. I had almost forgotten\nstate that I have abandoned in all about\nfiftv of my magnificent Parrot and Napo\nIcon guns. The enemy will be compelled\nto a large number of horses to trans- -\nport tnese gun, and it is aimcnii 10 imag-\nine how starving rcbeldom can support\nsuch a burden. It is very gratifying to\nreport the excellent health of my men,\nnotwithstanding their fatigue. A report\non the 1st July that Stuarts cavalry was\nin our rear, developed the fact that our\nuntiring boys could march five miles in an\nhour ! That they might march with great-\ner ease, all throw away their knapsacks\nand overcoats, and several thousand threw\naway their gns. Nothing of this kind\nwas done at SebastopgL\nI am now on the banks of the majestic\nJames; whales and "catfish are disporting\nin its ycllowisa waves.; the gunboats and\nfleet float proudly on Us glassy bosom ; the\nBoft zephyrsentTyxSo its' surface."
1eb5eb371d5345490a4a65ae46a10f89 DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.3273972285642 44.939157 -123.033121 "To one inmate it was a pleasure to\nwatch the conflicting emotions of jnv\nplay across his fentures at the niiiiiv\nlong pnwt familiar sights such as the\nfruit trees in bloom and cows in the\nfields. And with many, if not all, the\nsentiment was the same. This feeling,\nto be fully understood, must be felt.\n"The warden's attitude was that of\na father taking his loved ones to a pic-\nnic. He appeared to be getting all the\nenjoyment out of the situation Hint\nhe could stiind mitely. lie was fully\nprotected in all ways as there is the\nstrongest loyalty among the men. And\nif there had been, which there was\nnot, any weaker brother, he most as-\nsuredly would have been brought to a\nsense of1 his iu short order.\n"It is hard to imagine the lofty\nideals Mr. Murphy has in view to aid\nin benefitting those in his care. And It\nrests with us to back him up. We can\nand will make good. Of course we know\nit is hard to convince the public that\nwe are in favor of brotherly love, hon-\nor and fidelity. Six months ago if a\nman went outside to do one dollar's\nworth of work it cost the state about\nsix, with two or three gun guards. .Now\nthere is a hundred or more outside and\nthey have no guns over them. We hope\nto sec before long an advertisement, at\nthe penitentiary for the stile of "light\nartillery." As long as we have a wan\namong nswe can be men."
08c893bdb51b07992dbe8c17c710720b DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1910.6068492833588 58.275556 -134.3925 According to information brought\ndown from Norton sound, Loui9 Lane,\nson of the former Nome operator, with\nhis power schooner, the Helen Johnson,\nwas the first to land in the Nome dis¬\ntrict this spring from the outside. The\nJohnson left Seattle early in May,\nbound for Bering sea on a walruB hunt,\nand she landed a party on the shore\nnear Nome in advance of the steamer\nCorwin, or any other craft. Lane had\na peculiar experience with his crew,\nwhich was composed entirely of Eski¬\nmo. When suffering from certain tem¬\nperamental strains the Eskimo refuse\nto understand any English, much the\nsame as a Chinaman will profess ignor-\nauce of anything that is said to him\nunless he feels conversationally in¬\nclined. Up in the fog which envelopes\nBering sea, Lane navigated craft\nfor Nome with difficulty, which was\nenhanced when bis Eskimo quarter¬\nmaster suddenly developed a total ig¬\nnorance of English. When Lane called\non him to port his helm the native was\njust as likely to do the opposite. To\nhim, "port" or "starboard" ceased to\nmean anything. Life in the northern\ncountry develops versatility and Lane\nsoon surmounted the difficulty. The\nEskimo are great tea drinkers and\nknow what tea is. Also they have a\nweakness for the pickled pork, which\nChicago packers send to the Arctic in\nlarge quantities. So Lane stuck a lump\nof sugar at one side of the wheel and\ntacked a slice of pork to the other and\nin place of "starboard" and "port," his\norders were "sugar and "pork" until he\nlanded his craft safely in Nome.
d134d0982b975f0d6733338589e7486b VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.6095890093861 43.798358 -73.087921 made, in the proceedings of the National\nTemperance Convention last week, to the\nreading of a manuscript address sent on by\nthe President of the American Temperance\nUnion, John H. Cocke, of Virginia. The\naddress contained the following entire par-\nagraph, to which I annex a few remarks:\n"I must not omit to present our glorious\nreform under another aspect. I mean its\nadaptedness to the moral improvement of\nour slave population of the Southern States.\nLike the blessed gospel it is suited to all\norders and degrees of men. And l am sure,\nin this assembly, everything connected with\nthe moral elevation of this much neglected\nrace, can not fail to be interesting. 1 there-\nfore state what I do know that the Tem-\nperance reformation is one of the most\npowerful means, and of the readiest and\neasiest application (provided always that\nthe master is prepared to the right ex-\nample, and this may be assumed as a sine\nqua non to success) for the most prompt\nmoial improvement, and that degree of in-\ntellectual elevation which must precede,\nwith the slaves of the Southern States, any\nfeasiblescheme of future gradual emanci-\npation. "And lo this glorious 'result, 1 be-\nlieve, a majority of ihe intelligent and re-\nflectingunbiased by party zeal and polit-\nical designs, are looking forward with hope\nand confidence, and before now would have\nbeen prepared to act in commencing ihe\nprocess, but for the illjudged measures of\nultra abolitionists. God in his providence\nwill sooner or later indicate the course by\nwhich this curse shall be removed from our\nland. Till then we must be contended to\nperform the part assigned to our day and\ngeneration, of preparing for the mighty\nchange, by not 44 despising the day of small\nthings."
1bdf2b0914c856bf698c95b3a6412717 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.050684899797 39.745947 -75.546589 Delawares Josiali did not rame from such foolish stork. He is n son of Josiali and llnreiell Ann Pep­\nper Marvel, of Sussex county. A farm near Georgetown was the place of his birth, which occurred on\nJanuary' I«, INfiti. Thai's more Hum half a century ago, and no Pharaoh Xeeho has arisen in Delaware since\n(hen to rnh him nf Ids crown us a Prince of Good Fellows or of Ids life ns a public-spirited eili/en and an\nactive and an uneumprotnUiiig Democrat. His civic creed contains three fundamental articles: The broad\nsmile, Ihr cheerful salutation nod the glad hand. He's prarlieed that creed ever since he wits a Hide fellow.\nII has brought war-bride dividends in Hie shape civic, social and polit b id good-will.\nAir. Marvel received Ids elementary education in s issex enmity piddle schools. Subsequently he taught\nschool in Hint section of the Stale and we have been informed credibly Hud he often frowned upon pii-düstie\npractices which hr bad often practiced nod in inslnnc.' s introduced in Hie palmy periods of Ids \nWell, anyway, Delawares Josiali, wlio never met Pharaoh Nreho formally, infi emally.\nbelligerently: who glories In the fact that he was not Hie original Josiali, and wh\nhe would rather he u live Delaware lawyer and Demoend Ilian a dead-nnd-gone Judean King, read law under\nHie Hon. Judge Gray, and was ndnilHed lo practice in IK9L He begun immediately to brighten up the\nsombre side of the law and has been at it ever since. Perhaps his only real failure was (he collapse of Ids\nmovenienl lo have Hie Thief Justier, his Associate Judges and the members of Hie Delaware bar wear, in court,\nshirtwaists, and lo dolf coats and vests in Hie gay and variagated dog-days when shirtwaists were in\ningne for men. Despite that collapse of a cherished scheme, he continued to praeliee law alone, and with\nsuccess, until 189«. Then his brother, former Judge David I. Aland, (nined him, and Hie law linn of Mar­\nie! A Aland was formed. Later Josiali O. AAoleoll. now a l olled Stales Senator, became a member of Hie
7c3489296f19a42ca27414996bfe9380 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.7986301052765 39.261561 -121.016059 oflava. It would be safe to say, that on this little\nspot of ground one thousand boiling, steaming\nsprings exist, and so loud is the sound produced by\nthe escape of the steam, that it is impossible to dis-\ntinguish the Yoice of a man ten feet from you. In\nsome of these springs there is a kind of sediment,\nabout the consistency of common mush, which sim-\nmers and gurgles, and, at times, entirely closes the\naperture, which is invariably succeeded by a deafen\ning explosion, in the escape of the confined steam.\nEverything smells strongly of sulphur, which may\nbe gathered, in some instances, in large pieces, but\nis mostly found adhering to the rocks, in the shape\nof a palpable powder—the effect of chiystalization.\nThere is also another mineral, produced in the same\nmanner, resembling quinine in its color and forma-\ntion, but to the taste, like alum, and there is no\ndoubt but that is alumine. On one side of said\nflat there is a kind of chalk, white as snow, and re-\nsembling plaster pari* after having been prepared\nfor casting. There is a little plain of this, about\ntwenty yards long, and half that in width, as level as\na floor. But what is the most remarkable feature,\nis a stream of cold pure water running through the\ncentre of the flat. You can safely move among the\nsprings, by submitting frequently to an envelopment\nin suphurou* vapor. About one mile from this flat,\nat an elevation of three hundred feet above it, there\nis a round lake, in diameter, about fifty yards, which\nis in a continual state of agitation, resembling the\nboiling of a cauldron ; the earth around it is almost\na blood red. These springs are situated on the head\nwaters of the north fork of Feather River, near Las-\nsens Jeak, and not far from theburning Mountain.
9603bc9cfe64451fd4c1d4ef12a0272e THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.3383561326739 39.261561 -121.016059 An Ordinance providing for the licensing of Dogs. Tlie\nTrustees of the City of Nevada do ordain as follows :\nJSkc, 1. From ami after tho first day of July a. i>. 1858 ,\nit shall not be lawful for the owners or other persons hav-\ning the charge of dogs to allow thorn to run at large within\nthe corporeal limits of the town of Nevada except as pro-\nvided lor in this Ordinance.\nSue. 2. Every owner or other person having the charge\nof dogs shall |>ay for a license for keeping each dog the\nsum of five dollars per year, payable in advance at the\nMarshals office.\nSjbc. 3. The Marshal shall provide for each person ap-\nplying for a license under this ordinance a brass tag, stamp-\ned with a cousecutivo number, which tag shall be securely\nfastened upon neck of the dog for which the license is\ntaken out. lie shall also furnish to the person taking out\nthe license a receipt tor the amount of money |iaid w ith\nthe date of the license a receipt for the amount of money\npaid, with the date of the license.\nSkc. 4. It shall be the duty of the Marshal and watch-\nmen to kill and remove all dogs found running at large,\nthe owners of which shall not have complied with the pro-\nvisions of this ordinance; and all persons ocstructing tho\naforesaid officers in tho performance of their duties under\nthis ordinance, upon conviction, may bo fined in any sum\nnot exceeding one hundred dollars or less than ton dollars;\nor, in default of payment, by imprisonment not more than\nten days in the city jail.\nPassed June 9th, 1858.
2259d29d583d9a746b2c5c65ea6912ad SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.409589009386 37.53119 -84.661888 THE act 10 of the executive comm\ntoo of the Second Railroad district In\ncalling a convention for Oct 1 to nom-\nInate a candidate for railroad commie\neloner and naming July 3 as the date\nupon which entries shall closoi Is most\nreprehensible and such trickery II\nbound to hurt the democratic party De\nwell as weaken the candidate at whose\nInstance the snap work was done We\nare surprised that Mr McChord would\npermit such an unfair effort to shut oa\nother candidates for the office and If he\ndoes not call upon the committee to reo\neclnd Us hasty not to eay foolish tiC\ntlon he will live to regret it The rail-\nroad commissioners are not voted for\nuntil November of next year and It ts\nBilly to say the least of It to nominate a\ncandidate a year or so advance of\nthat election A Frankfort dispatch\nsays that both the committee and Mr\nMcChord are being roundly roasted\nthere for taking auoh snap judgments\nthc other candidate for the office and a\nsimilar state of affairs exists hero and\nelsewhere whore justice and fatrnee\nare respected Notwithstanding Mi\nW P Walton editor of the Lexln ton\nDemocrat has been an avowed candi-\ndate for a year or more Mr McChor\nand his committee which be seems to\nhave under hypnotic control professe\nto be in absolute Ignorance ot the fact\nthat anybody but the present Incum-\nbent aspired to that office A recall of\nthe lob put up Is demanded by Mi\nWalton and his frlende and if Mr Me\nChord and his committee of three\nwant to do anything like the fair thin\nthey will cheerfully concede to such\nwishes
74e171ec35f1af03a4e95ec57afc38ab THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1859.0315068176053 39.261561 -121.016059 A Mammoth Work. —Arlijiant Ixihe in Virgin-\nia.—Mr. Ellett. the engineer, is engaged in a\ngrand scheme for improving the navigation of\nthe Kanawha river, by forming a vast reservoir\nor mountain lake to feed that stream during\nlow water. A correspondent of the Lewisburg\n(Va.) Era gives the following iuforination rela-\ntive to the contemplated improvement:\nThe object is to form an inland lake or reser-\nvoir of water, to keep up the navigation of the\nKanawha river. The reservoir, which we are\nnow surveying, will be made by making a dam\nbetween the mountains, across Big Sewell creek.\nThe dam Is to be 945 feet long, CO feet high,\n400 feet thick at the base, and 45 feet at the\ntop. At cither side of the dum will be made\nimmense sluices, to carry the water away which\nwould naturally flow over the dam when it gets\nfull. The sluices arc to be made of masonry,\nof the most substantial kind. The water to\nIs; kept in this lake until it is needed in the Ka-\nnawha, when it is to be let ofT as it is needed to\nkeep up the navigation of the river. The means\nof letting it off will be by means of locks. Yon\ncan form some idea of the amount of water it\nwill hold when I tell you it is to be 25 miles\nlong and from 1000 feet to ljf miles wide. There\nis an immense amount of speculation about this\ngreat work—the probable cost, Ac. Mr.Taylor\nsays the dam will cost above $200,000 . The\ncost o'- the land will be the greatest dtawback\non the enterprise. It will cover about 50,000\nacres of land, besides 50.000 acres more which\nwill have to be paid for by the company, be-\ncause it will be of no account to the owners,\nbeing all mountain land and remnants of farms.\n1 suppose $1,500,000 will not buy the land and\npay the damages.
2869aca92f51fa222f34183caf6089b6 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1919.3356164066463 41.681744 -72.788147 The Chinese delegation understands\nthat the council was prompted by the\nfact that Great Britain and France\nearly in 1915 and in Mwh 1917\nagreed to support at the peace confer-\nence the transferring to Japan of the\nGerman rights in Shantung. To none\nof these secret agreements was China\na party nor was she informed of their\ncontents when invited to join the war\nagainst the Central Empires. The for-\ntunes of China appear thus to have\nbeen made objects of negotiations and\ncompensation after she had definitely\nallied herself with the Allied\nApart from this, it is least open to\nquestion how far these agreements\nwill be applicable inasmuch as China\nhas become a belligerent.\nThe claims of Japan referred into\nthis agreement appear moreover to\nbe scarcely compatible with the 14\npoints adopted by the powers associ-\nated against Germany.\nIf the council granted the\nclaims of Japan for the purpose of\nsaving the league of nations, as is in-\ntimated, then China ceases to com-\nplain, believing it to be a duty to\nmake sacrifices to such a noble cause\nas the league of nations. She can-\nnot, however, refrain from wishing\nthat the council had seen fit, as would\nbe far more consonant with the spir-\nit of the league now on the eve of\nformation to call upon strong Japan\nto forego her claims animated by a\ndesire for aggrandizement, instead of\nupon weak China to surrender what\nis hers by right.\n"China came to the conference with\na strong faith in the lofty principles\nadopted hy the Allied and associated\npowers as the basis of a just and per-\nmanent world peace. Great, therefore\nwould be the disappointment and dis-\nillusion in. China over the proposed\nsettlement."
112ed0e506fe150b9341bb98d303e610 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1892.3155737388686 39.745947 -75.546589 BALTIMORE AND WAHHINGTON.N 54,\n702, *8«7.»1008a.m.; »12ID. *2.0* SBo, •« 40,\n*0 24 *7 57p.m. daily.\nBALTIMORE aud Way\nf 55 p in. dally.\nBaltimoie and principal stations on Phlls-r\ndelphla Division, )0 06 a. m„ dally\nNEWARK, DK.I-, »4 54. 7 03. *8 «7, »10 06 a m.\n•12 lu,2 66, *4 40, *6 24.7 36, *7 *7.11 10 p m dally,\nPlTTHBUKti*8 47, a . in., *4.40 p. in. daily.\nCHICAGO*847 a. m„ *4 40 p.\nCINCINNATI AND Mt. LOUIS.\nm.-i 7 57 p. ro. l-oth dally.\nBlNUBRLV ACCOMMODATION.\n: 55, 7 35 and 11.1(1 p m., dally.\nLANDENREUO ACCOMMODATE: weak\ndays, 7IS,IIIS, a. rn. 265and466pta.sag*\ndays«3(1a.m.aud440p.m.\nTRAINS LEAVE MARKET MT. STATION.\nFur Philadelphia week daya. 8 86,6 '*-7 $L\n•83,*«33, *1138, a m.; 1242, 246. 386. »4»\nD n*. Sundays, 030 a mi1242,246. 356. »41\nP For Baltimore, week days, 6 .35 , <160 38,\n•«33, Ml86 a. in., 3 45, p m. Banda?,630\nand• 26am,\nBaltimore and prlnolpal stations un Phila­\ndelphia D “Islon. « 38 a. m„ dally, except\nBanda- Mandai ». » 25 a tu.\nFo —andenuerg and way «tattoos, seek\ndays, 660, 10Ml,a. m;2«6,6IX)nm. ean-\n»26am; 600 p m.\ncago, ami Plttsbnrg *8.25 a in, dally,\nsxreri Sunday; *3,'A p. m„ dally.\nCincinnati and Ht. Louis. *n.*t, a. on. tally\nexcept Sunday\nLV. PHILADELPHIA FOR WTLM.NGTOH\nWeek-days, *4.16, 8 00, 7 86, *816 8 40 •» M,\n1000,Ml35a.m..1300noon.M48.160. 800,M2»,\n•405 480, •* *5,480.H51,880, *722, 310. LOU.\nand11.30p.m.\nSunday, *4 15. *00, *8 16, 880 •9 33, U00.\n•1135a m.,12 00, noon, 160,800, *4 05, 430. *»»L\n830,M 22,810,1010 and1130p. m.\nTelephone, No. 193.\nRates to Western points lower than via any\nother line, C. O . SCULL, Uen.l Pass. Agent.\nJ. T . ODELL. OeneralManagar. ________
bb6a6a1b1a80591180ed7ad0ea49a5f2 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1836.9330600776664 43.798358 -73.087921 ers. It has lately become very common\nfor incorporated railroad and steamboat\ncompanies, to advertise conspicuously, j:i\nthe above words, in order to screen them,\nselves from liability in case of the loss or\nmiscarriage of any baggage entrusted to\ntheir care. To test the legality in regard\nto the operation of such an advertisement,\ntwo suits have recently been instituted\nagainst the Cathden and' Ambov Railroad\nCompany, in both of which full and am-\nple damages were given for the plaintiffs.\nAn action was tried on Tuesday of last\nweek, in the Supreme Court, be'fore Chief\nJustice Jones, in which the above compa\npany were defendants, and Mr. Ralzamon\nBelknap was plaintiff, for the recovery c;\na trunk entrusted to their care for trans-\nportation to Philadelphia.\nIt was urged on the part of the defen-\ndants, that the missing property had net\nbeen left in the care of any of the ageii's\nof the company, but merely placed in\nthe office while the plaintiff was paying\nhis fare as a passenger ; the advertisement\nannouncing that the company wc re net\nresponsible, &c. was also read in court\nOn the part of the plainliffit was contend-\ned, that although the defendants did give\nnotice that tbey refused to be responsib'e\nfor the loss of property falling into their\npossession in the regular course of their\nbusiness operation, under the sanction and\nby the operation of their charter, yet their\nedicts were utterly futile and of no avail,\nand they were liable, both in equity and\nlaw, for the loss or destruction, under\nsuch circumstances, of any chattels or\ngoodi belonging to other persons. In his\ncharge to the jury the learned judge co-\nincided with the "plaintiff's counsel, and\nthe jury awarded dnmages in the sum of\n&300 for the plaintiff. So that all ba?-:ao - - e\nis noi at the owner's risk. N. Y.
00ba13c8c14772853109f4a8e898c203 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1877.741095858701 42.217817 -85.891125 some kind of festivities, for example.\nIt pays for the use of grounds, pays for\nmusic, pays lor retreshmeuts, gets S2\nworth of tickets and &t worth of bills\nprinted either at a newspaper olfice or\nsomewhere else, and then expects free\nadvertising from the paper to an extent\nactually worth from $2 or $3 to 10.\nThe mere announcement of a picnic, so-\nciable, or festival is an advertisement.\nand ought to be paid for. The result is\nthat a generous proportion of the profits\nol nearly all entertainments of this kind\nis money which rightfully belongs to\nnewspaper publishers. Then, after the\nthing is over, the managers will come in\nwith a long string of resolutions, with\nwhich to rob the publisher of more vaiu- -\naoie space, ine trutn is tnat space in\na newspaper represents money. It is\nworth money to the publisher. There\n no more reason why he should give it\naway than why a merchant should give\naway his goods. Part of the space of\nthe paper is sold to business men for\nadvertising mrposes, the rest of the\nlace is devoted to interesting reading\nmatter. On the last the publisher de-\npends for the attractions which shall sell\nhis paper. Either space repn sents cash\nto him. Yet the business man who buys\nspace to the amount of 2 often buys a\ngratuity of local space to the amount of\n$1 or 2, or even more. The managers\nof festivals, picnics, or other home en-\ntertainments may not buy 1 cent's worth\nof space, but all the same expect the\nfree gift of several dollars' worth of\nspace. The minister, who never adver\ntises, may want space to the amount of\n81 or 82 weekly, lor tho advertisement\nof coming sermons.
bfb6bd29a575a39220ba823bd8954fbe PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.2424657217148 31.960991 -90.983994 WILL offer for sale, to the highest bid­\nder for cash, before the court bouse door\nin the town of Port Gibson,Claiborne conn-\ntv. on Monday the 29th dav of May next.\n[1843,] between the hours of 11 oclock a\nm and 3 oclock r m. the following tracts,\npieces or parcels of land, in said county,\nto wit: Lots 3and 4,section 43, township\n10. range 3, East, containing 408 acres;\nLot 2, section 45, township 13, range 3,\nEast, containing 36 acres; Fractional sec­\ntion 13, township 13, range 4, East, con­\ntaining -17 ncrcs; I«eta 3 iuhI 3, eoction 12,\ntownship 13, range 4. East, containing\n135 acres; West half of lot 2, section 32,\ntownship 14, range 4, East, containing40\n; Lots 5 and 6, section 33, township\n14, range 4, East, containing 198 acres;\nLots 1, 2, 3,4 5, sect ion 36, township\n14, range 4. East, containing 341 acres;\nWest half of lots 3 and 4, section 37, town­\nship 14, ranfe 4, East, containing 298\nacres; Part of section 38, township 14,\nrange 4, East, containing 70 acres; South\nhalf of section 42, township 14, range 4,\nEast, containing 392 acres; West half of\nNorth West quarter of section 42, town­\nship 14, range4, East,containing98acres;\nNorth West quarter of section 13, town­\nship 14, range 4. East, containing 196\nacres; Fractional section 25, township 13,\nrange 3, East, containing 325 acres; as­\nsessed as the property of Charles A La­\ncoste, Thomas Bernard and Lemuel Pit­\ncher, ami will he sold, or as much thereof\nas may be necessary to pay $29 43 cts.,\nthe State and county Tax due thereon for\nthe year 1842, and all costs.
0f0b31d05bdd89985d1a5f4a15886b04 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.3493150367833 39.745947 -75.546589 One interesting firm of America's\nbusiness which Wilmington can\nlay claim to is the firm of Sayer\nBrothers. Inc.. Dyers and Cleaners,\nwhose* estabiishement and works\nis located at Eighteenth and Mar­\nket streets, with branch office. 1'104\nDelaware avenue. This firm as\nwell as the citizens of Wilmington\nhave something that they can well\nbe proud of. and can furthermore\nboast of having the only, most com­\nplete modern plant of its kind in the\nState of Delaware. This business\nwas started less than sixteen years\nago on a very small scale and suc­\ncess has been its reward. It is an­\nother example of equation of\nAmerica, plus persistence with\npush equals success. The father\nof the original Ann of Saver\nBrothers, composed of Abram, Wil­\nliam H. and Isaac, came to this\ncountry a little over sixteen years\n and located in Philadelphia\nwhile his family was quite small\nand became engaged in the tailor­\ning business. A short time after­\nwards his family joined him. and\nas these boys grew up they were\nput to work cleaning. Dressing and\nrepairing garments in order to\nhelp out the family fortunes.\nIn the early days the term\ncleaning was not used in the trade.\nThose engaged in this work called\nit whisking. The tradesman was\ncalled a whisker. Thai was long\nbefore the art of dry cleaning was\nknown about or even thought of.\nThe so-called cleaner of today,\nunless he has a modern up-to-date\nplant, is not much better than the\nold-time whisker, whose tueihods\nare to hunt for the surface spots,\nsimply remove them, and pay no\nattention to the ground-in dust and\ngerms that the garments ultimes\ncontain.
1b1125dcbaea81b69810f3eab1e0bc66 THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT ChronAm 1884.5532786569015 29.4246 -98.49514 will lnsplro a sinking faith and despair-\ning heart to new action, A vessel lit a\ntremendous storm had been tossed about\nuntil but ono mast stood. Rigging\ngone, compass gone, no way to ascer-\ntain the, whereabouts of the vessel. The\npassengers and many or the crew gave\nup to die, supposing that they were In\nthe midst or the ocean. But suddenly a\nwhite bird settled down upon the mast\nand new hope dawned, nnd with u new\npower nil hands pulled for the shore.\nAs long as a man can hope that long\ncan he keep his. head above the water,\nbecause he has something to work for.\nA great many people are like amateur\nartists. Thov cover their nalette with\na sample of all the colors ordinarily\nused, and with and maulstick\nIn hand alt down before the canvass,\nNo oony. no original Idea, no knowledge\nnor experience, hence or course, no\npicture. Others may have all or the gra-\ncious opportunities given tbem by a\nKind oieator iney coma ask, anuyet\nhave no hone or accomplishing the ob\nject, and then comes an utter relusal to\nput forth even an effort. So God lias\ngiven to all men this Incomparably val-\nuable blessltig, Hope. This given, all\nother blessings may and will be em-\nployed; every opportunity Improved;\nevery propitious circumstance used.\n2. Not only Is hope a great stimulant\nIn life, but It restrains as well.\nTho bone ot attaining a certain amount\nof wealth restrains many merchants from\nInvestments, which, If not reckless, are\nat tho best but uncertain.
2f6f5dbe46a00860ec758b7ffe724588 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.582191749112 40.735657 -74.172367 Crippen was finally arraigned and\nneld for a further hearing on August\n8. when he may interpose any objec-\ntion that he has to his extradition.\nDr. Crippen announced that he would\nnot resist his return to England His\ncompanion In flight. Miss Ethel Clare\nLe Neve, was to have been arraigned\ntoday, but her custodians reported to\nthe court that she was too ill to appear\nShe was later taken to a hospital\nMiss Le Neve is described as fearing*\nsobbed and moaned as she tossed'on\nher cot In the early hours today. When\nshe arose this morning she was handed\na cablegram, which read:\n■'Tell all yon know."\nThose who saw this message say that\nIt was signed "Papa."\nIt is known that Miss Le Neve's\nrather in London has stoutly main*\ntalned that bis daughter was Innocent\nof any knowledge of the crime and that\nshe believed herself to be the lawful\nwife of Crippen, supposing that his\nfirst Wife had met a natural death after\ndeserting the doctor.\nThe authorities are confident that the\nwoman will give no more trouble than\nCrlppen promises to. and that as soon\nas the fifteen days of grace provided\nby the extradition laws of Canada have\nexpired both prisoners can be returned\nto London without any hitch.\n steamer Montrose upon which\nthe fugitives were arrested while the\nvessel was still 160 miles from this port\nyesterday, arrived at her pier here at\n1:35 o'clock this morning.\nThe prisoners were hastened through\nan enormous crowd of curious ones to\nthe provincial Jail, where they were\nplaced in separate cells for the night.\nHere they got a few hours sleep, the\nbest rest which they have had since\nthey fled from London on July 9, short-\nly before detectives found In the cel-\nlar in the Crippen home the bit* of\nhuman flesh which, the author! tie*\nhave tried to establish, once went tp\nmake up the body of Belle Elmocd,\nCrlppens lawful wife. Today both pris-\noners appeared refreshed.\nIt is hoped that Crlppen and hla\ntypist can be sent back to London on\nthe steamer Royal George, which will\nsail on Thursday. However, under the\nfugitive offending act the prisoners\nhave a right to remain here fifteen\ndays before their departure. This\nperiod affords them opportunity to\nseek release through habeas corpus\nproceedings. Crippen also may exer-\ncise his right as an American cltlsan\nto appeal to the American consul hero\nand so make sure that his rights are\nnot infringed. It Is doubtful If Crippen\navails himself of either chance for\ndelay.
044409abd4a2b3ad476b16160aa7ea46 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1898.1493150367833 39.756121 -99.323985 D. Hoard, the president of the National\nDairy union, is a strong advocate of\ngood roods; his experience has taught\nhim how essential they are to dairy\nfarmers. As vice president of the Wis-\nconsin League for Good Roads, Mr.\nHoard has most forcibly stated the ease\nfrom the dairyman's standpoint.\n"Modern dairying," says Gov. Hoard,\n"is usually grouped around the cream-\nery nnd the cheese factory. On good\nroads, where from one to two tons of\nmilk can be hauled to the factory with\nease and safety, the cost is naturally\nlower than where a much less quantity\ncan be hauled. It follows then that the\ncondition of the ronds is a direct living\nfactor in the cost of hauling. A limited\ncalculation would give you, I think, a\nnew view of the situation. There are \nWisconsin, for instance, about 2,500\ncheese factories and creameries. To\nench one of these every morning there\ncomes an average of say 40 farmers\nwith their milk. Now that number of\nfactories or creameries represents 100 ,-00- 0\nfarmers who certainly ought to be\ninterested In the improvement of roads\nfrom a business standpoint. In all\nkinds of weather, every morning in the\nyear, rain or shine, good roads or bad\nroads, must they take their milk a dis-\ntance varying from half a mile to five\nmiles to the factory, and haul their\nskim milk back over the same route.\nDairy farmers as a rule are the most\nenterprising and progressive of any\nclass of farmers. Does "not t heir own\nfortune as well ns good name require-tha- t\n'they get together' nt every cheese
e7138f4f571c6386e9306f04bcd62b3c SPIRIT OF THE AGE ChronAm 1853.9520547628108 35.780398 -78.639099 No License. Some time previous to tho\nlast term of Guilford County Court, we heard\nfrequent mention of a pcti'don, numerously\nsigned in town and country, to be presented\nto the Court against granting licenses to re-\ntail spirituous liquors. The petition was not\nread before the Court ; but on the application\nof C. A. Gillesoio for an order to renew his\nlicense to retail, the fact of ftrongly organ-\nized and united opposition to any license was\ndeveloped. We think most of the regular\nmembers of the bar had been retained, on\none side or the other, and the matter was ably\nargued before the Court by Messrs, J. 'l.\nMorehead, Gorrell and Gilmer Morchad\ninfavorof the application, Mr. Gorrell against\nit, and Mr. Gilmer in a plain, dispassionate\nexposition of law, and duty and obliga-\ntions of the J usticcs under it. The applicant,\nwe believe it is admitted, comes as nearly up\nto the requirements of the law as to the char-\nacter prescribed for a retailer, as any man\nwho has ever applied ; but the vote of the\nMagistrates on the bench showed their strong\nfeeling of opposition to the business. The\nvote stoo l, nine in favor and eighteen against\ngranting the license. No other application\nwas made; and now there is not a single li-\ncensed retail shop in the county. A fair op-\nportunity will therefore be now presented for\njudging of the effect of the 'critter' coming'\nby the quart instead of the gill.\nThe above gratifying paragraph is an edi-\ntorial from the Greensboro' Patriot, and we
076e8e1571fa038c45bed9a77a10aab4 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1888.7609289301254 39.745947 -75.546589 the oommlttee on publia boildlngs.\nMr. MoKenney doubted whether a\ncorporation was required to give bond.\nHe thought he woaldnl mind going on\nthe bond himself.\nMr Qalnn also thought that thongh\na corporation has no soal it oonld bs its\nown seonrlty. He moved that the Olty\nSolicitor be requested to give his opin­\nion of the matter.\nMr. Dlllln said that the asking for\nbids had been done aooordlng to law,\nand tbe law requires a bond to aocom\npany the bid. That bond has not been\nfurnished by tbe Gas Company, aud U\ntherefore should be ruled oat.\nmoved to award the oontraot to ihe\nBleotrlo Light Company.\nMr. Bharkey moved to postpone the\nmatter tor one week.\nMr. Roberts thought Oonnoll was try­\ning to shirk Ue duly. Why \nIt had been before Oonnoll long enoagh\nalready. Members all have tbelr minds\nmade np bow they Intend to vote upon\ntbe measure. He was ready to vole\nnow. Why send It baok to the oommlt*\ntee? Is there something to be done that\nwont bear bringing to the light? Let\nthe members of Oonnoll fsos the mania\nlike men. He wanted the best light for\nthe least money, and that was the way\nbe intended to vote.\nMr. 8barkey still thought the matter\nshould bs postponed a week.\nMr. Bower said that he knew Edward\nBatts, president of the gas oompanjr,\nwell, and there was nobody who would\nnot take bis word as quick as any.\nMr. Qalnn Insisted that the City Bo-\nllottor should bs heard, bnt Mr. Beale\nthought not. A
a84ac107932d471c6253e098cf158a2b OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.54508193559 39.513775 -121.556359 had set out on a tithing excursion to tho\nWest liranch near Dogtown. lam happy to\nhe able to inform you that they have re-\nturned without having lost a man or meeting\nwith any very serious or disastrous adven-\ntures. The only mishap which occurred on\nthe outward bound passage was the breaking\ndown of the carriage, which was happily ac-\ncomplished without the breaking of any\nbones, owing, doubtless, to certain preser-\nvatives with which the company had wi-cly\nand bountifully supplied themselves. Hav-\ning repaired damages at a blacksmith's,\nwhich providentially lay in their way, they\nproceeded on their journey, and arrived\nsafely at the beautiful village of Dogtown,\nwhere, at the principal, and, I may say, the\nonly hotel, they were provided with every\nluxury which the place, afforded, and at\nprices, which, under the circumstances,\nthey could not but consider “dog cheap.”\nThe principal object of the expedition was,\nperhaps, us successfully accomplished ns\ncould have been expected; though owing to\nto the scarcity of grasshoppers the high\nprices demanded for them by the citizens of\nDogtown, there were some interruptions to\nthe operations which, wc regret to say, has\nresulted in the disappointment of the friends\nof Jabez Sawin, who counted their chickens\na little too early in anticipating a dinner\nfrom the piscatorial labors of our friends.—\nIt is due to truth and tc justice to say that\na certain law and order gentlemen in the\nparty, a gentleman, by the way, of the first\nwater, high in the military rank, and\n“handsome” withal, clandestinely appropri-\nated a largo number of the best fishes to his\nown individual use, whereby the general\nfund was so considerably diminished that\nenough only remained to furnish a single\nmeal for the company, of which they par-\ntook on their return journey, and in the\ndiscussing ol which, they were honored with\nthe assistance of one of the high dignitaries\nof the county cf liutte, to whose aid may,\nperhaps, bo attributed the safe arrival of\nthe party to their homes.
0154408c4f092e4fee686b07f090df26 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.8975409519835 41.681744 -72.788147 circle of Americans. The Methodist\nMission board made use of him in\nthe central office in New York for\nseveral years. At the same time he\nbecame noted as a popular speaker\nIn Chautauqua circuits.\nIn 11123 he joined the staff of\nYenching university, a union Chris-\ntian university in Peking. Three of\nthe leading American missionary so-\ncieties the American board, the\nMethodist Mission board, and the\nPresbyterian Mission board and\none British society, the London Mis-\nsionary Society of England, united\nto establish a first class university\nfor north China under Christian\nauspices. For one year Mr. Hung\nwas active in helping to secure funds\nIn America for this university. Re-\nturning to China in 1923 as profes-\nsor of church history An the theolo-\ngical school, he won the confidence\nof his colleagues and the student\nbody so fully that, although a young\nman without extensive experience,\nhe was elected in the following year\nas of the college of arts and\nsciences and in this position gave'\nthree years of service in raising the\nstandards of scholarship in the stu-\ndent body and guiding the develop-\nment of the university. Mr. Hung\nwas one of the growing number of\nChinese on the staff who, with their\nAmerican, British and European\ncolleagues, were eager to establish\na Christian' university in which\nChinese leadership should be funda-\nmental. During the years of Mr.\nHung's deanship, the university was\nreorganized in several particulars so\nthat eventually it was albe to regis-\nter under the ministry of education\nof China, the first Christian college,\nto be accepted in that way.\nIn 1927 Mr. Hung resigned from\nthe deanship in order to devote him-\nself particularly to the development\nof the department of history and of\nthe university library, his work\nbeing notable in each of these fields.\nIn 1928. upon the establishment of\nHa rva rd-Ye nc hin -
40706702f58f7fc8fba201930dc27e57 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.6095890093861 40.063962 -80.720915 A. few days ago two young ladies*-\nMi-s Ella Turley and Misa Emma Fiaher\n. accompanied by two joung genu.\nJohn Fisher and "Uomp" IiODD.maue an\nexcursion over Fisher's mountaio, ascend-\niut! through the Gap leading from the\nresidence of. Wm... JJaker, Esq., about\nseven miles from town When about\nbull way tip they stopped -at the well\nknown cave. and dismounted lor the pur-\npose ol making* an exploration, liiey\nweut in, after Mr. Fisher had gone in and\ni. farted tlio way clear. After walking\nabout and satisfying their curiosity, they\nileteirained to sit down and listen for\nixHinds oi mother earth. Taking a seat j\nou a rock they commenced chatting and 1\nlaughing, when, suddenly, from the J\ncrevices of tlio wall a large rattlesnake\ncrawled towards them. It went directly (\nover the skirts of Mis Turley's dress, j\nonly about two Inches from her 1\nbody. She rivited her eyes upon the (\nreptile, but was so much lrightened\nibttt she couldn't move. It is well she 1\ndid not, or the fangs of the snake would\n pierced her body. It crawled 1\nslowly over her drcsa, and continued its\ncourse towards the month of the cave, f\nwhere it stopped. Here it quietly rested, I\na* though bent on guarding the entrance..\nOf course, for-the time being our young\nfolks were prisoners, and we may well\nimagine the thoughts which flished £\nthrough their brainy. Those were mo- 1\nmeats of terror. But fortunately, Mr. 1\nFisher remained on the outside, and seo- 1\niug the snake at the opening, ho quietly t\nprocured a sharp pointed stick, and cau- 8\ntiously crept up to the snake, and with J\ntrue aim run the point of the stick through 1\nus body, and then securely pinned him to J\nthe ground. Here he held him uutil Mr. 1\nliObb approached with a club, with J\nwhich he soon put an end to the varmint '\nThe girls then came out, nnd one cried, j\nand then all laughed, and congratulated\neach other on not getting "killed dead."\nThe snake measured about four feet, and\nlmd ten rattles and a button.
1cdd5be8f389a39656677b011a9324e2 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1878.7739725710298 37.561813 -75.84108 She was getting along very nicelv.\nThe widower was a shy and warv lish,\nbut who can resist a widow who lias so\nmany griefs as a husband killed in a rail-\nroad accident and a suit against the\ncompany, particularly if she has no chil-\ndren? 'What widower in easy circum-\nstances can resist a widow who has art\nenough to make love to his motherless\nchildren, in a circuitous fashion, and to\nget his little girls so attached to her that\nthev will come to Iter house every dav,\nand" are never happy unless with her. It\nwas not the candy and the nuts that\nthev always had from herthat held them\nto her it was her sweet nature, her pa-\ntience and uniforrii kindness, and the\nunaffected interest she took in them.\nLittle Jennie never got on so well with\nher lessons, and as for Tommy, how\ncould he help adoring the woman who\nmixed mathematics and taffy in such \nlightful proportions, and who never met\nor parted with him without a kiss, such\nas the fondest mothers present or in ex-\npectation, could give a child ? The elder\nchildren (the eldest was only twelve), all\nloved her, and it was not long till the\nfather, who had got tired of perpetual\ngames of whist with three other widow-\ners, found her society a thing not to be\ndespised or lightly considered.\nOn the Kith of this month her case\nagainst the railroad company was decid-\ned in her favor. That decided the wid-\nower. In the most psompt manner he\nproposed, and she jTomptly accepted\nhim, and the wedding day was fixed for\nthe 25th inst. Proper preparations were\nmade for the event ; friends were invit-\ned, the feast was prepared, and all par-\nties looked forward to an auspicious\nunion that should make a great many\npeople happy for a great many years.\nAlas ! for fate.
0267857ea6ee4278b64598c65fb34b7f THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1870.6287670915779 37.561813 -75.84108 taiu in the wars of Napoleon I. There is\nthis difference, however, between the val-\niant captain and the Emperor. He lost\nhis bodily perfection in the service of his\ncountry under the great Napoleon, while\nthe present Emperor lost his by excesse-- i in\nLondon, New York and Paris. The cap-\ntain had an iron constitution, and could\nendure a surgical repair without inconven-\nience. For instance, when he lost a leg in\nbattle, he immediately procured a wooden\none, which he could use so well that it did\nnot prevent his going on fighting for his\ncountry all the same. When a cannon\nball carried away his stomach, he had a\nleather one inserted in its place, which\nwas, if anything, better than the original.\nWhen bis brains were injured by having\nthe top of his head shot off, he had them\nscooped up and repaired. An unexploded\nshell that was buried between his shoul-\nders at one of the great battles, be carried\ntill the day of his death, of which, in fact,\nit was the real cause, in this wise : While\nthe captain was sitting by the fire, dream-\ning of his campaigns, his wooden leg by\naccident began to burn, and in a \ntime the tire communicated with the shell,\nwhich exploded, blowing him to atoms.\nHe was much astonished at the noise, and\nhaving served his country long and well,\nhe did not think it worth while to pick\nhimself op, and put himself together; so he\nthen and there ended his career. The Em\nperor ol France has hatr quite as much\nneed of repair, as had the gallant captain,\nbut has not been able to stand the surgic\nal operations necessary. Instead of re-\nnewing, his physicians have resorted to\nconstant patching up. lhe consequence\nis that ue is inhrm all over, from the crown\nof his head lo the soles of his feet.' He\ncannot ride on horseback, and the Em\npress has procured for him a light carriage\nto use in his military campaigns. Wheth-\ner it is to be drawn by a horse the report\ndoes not say. Quite likely it is some such\narrangement as legless and paralytic beg\ngars use to push themselves about the\nstree ts a sort of hand velocipede iu which\nthe Emperor can trundle himself over the\nbattle field. A pretty spectacle that will\nbe to French soldiers, who have read of\nthe old Napoleon in that well-know- n
3c34bc95ae300cf48a14729219469314 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.132513629579 41.681744 -72.788147 Tuesday will be the anniversary of\nwhat is probably the wildest night\nthe city of New Britain has ever\nknown. It was just It years ago, on\nthe evening of February 21, 1917,\nthat the city suffered front that af-\nfliction which has ever since leen\ndesignated as "the firebugs." Seven\nfires within three hours sent the city\ninto an uproar, bringing out every\npiece of fire apparatus in New Brlt-- ,\naln and requiring the calling of help\nI from Hartford, Bristol, Plainville,\nand Waterbury. Both local com-\npanies of militia were called out ana\nfor 24 hours the city was under\nmartial law, but no further fires\noccurred. Neither was any trace ever\ndiscovered as to the identity of the\nperson or persons who set the biases.\nThe country at the time was o\nthe verge of breaking off its rela-\ntions with Germany and all attention\nwas focused on the increasing possi-\nbility of war. There was great trou-\nble, but it all seemed far off and\nNew Britain was discussing the situ\nation with detachment and relish-\ning its own security. Thus all was\npeaceful at half past five In the\nafternoon as the city contemplated,\nthe celebrating of Washington's\nBirthday on the \nTen minutes later Officer Charles\nJohnson had discovered a fire in The\nParisian, a women's apparel shop on\nEast Main street and the terrible\nevening had begun The fireman\nupon arriving found two fires burn-\ning in opposite end.i of the cellar,\nbut they were able to extinguish\nthem before the damage hod mount-\ned above 1200. They returned to\nheadquarters, only to be called out\nagain when flames broke out ag-l- n.\nin the same establishment\nJust before 6:30 o'clock came an-\nother rail which summoned them to\nthe fruit store of Albert Lose across'\nEast Slain street from the car'ier\nfire. Here paper bag had been\npiled in the cellar and ignited, show-\ning Incendiarism. The flames broke\ninto the neighboring establishment\nof Herman Schmarr and caused a\ntotal damage of about 1500.\nA diversion was created at 4:46\nwhen the bottom fell out of an oil\nheater In the residence of John\nPinches on Emmons place. The loss1\nwas negligible, but this fire, the\nonly one which seems to have been\ncaused by anything other than In-\ncendiarism, was later responsible for\nthe panic which resulted from the\nbelief that the firebugs were ex-\ntending their operations to the resi-\ndential district.
1ecb61f3e3678fbac25a6f3857913cda CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1917.5301369545916 36.000618 -88.428106 Railroads and Telephones.\nAlready the 230,000 miles of rail-\nroad In the United States have ben\nvirtually commandeered by the advi-\nsory committee, which, through Chair-\nman Willard, can Issue to them more\narbitrary orders than President Wil-\nson, under the most drastic law, prob-\nably would care to Issue. This is a\nvoluntary service of the railroad and\nadmittedly possibly Is Intended as an\nanswer, to some of the railroad criti-\ncisms In congress.\nOne man also now governs the tele-\nphoneTheodore N. Vail, president of\nthe American Telephone and Tele-\ngraph company. For the first time In\ntelephone history regulars and Inde-\npendents are working side by side for\nthe good of the country. More than\n10,000 miles of wire have been set\naside for the special use of the army\nand the navy some of the other\ndepartments. Modern methods for\nusing the telephone are being Intro-\nduced and new systems Installed, one\nof which will cover completely 'the\nsignal service in the field. Washing-\nton Is being taught how to use the\ntelephone properly and a new central\noffice with a capacity of 10(000 lines\nis being provided.\nIn the mobilization camps and\namong the lighthouses and coast guard\nstations new telephone facilities are\nbeing created, requiring 300 miles of\nsubmarine cable, 300 miles of pole\nand more than 13,000 miles of wire.\nThe soldiers of the National Guard\nwho are guarding railroad bridges\nand water supply systems have been\nput in touch with headquarters. If\nsecrets could be told, the story of the\nextension of the telephone service In\nthe navy would make the people sit\nup.
1d596b9f4394510a68ceb8c06fd5bb72 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1887.319178050482 39.78373 -100.445882 simply took the versions of several\nmen who were his pets, and what\never they said was enough for bim.\nThese men imposed on him and\nas he judged everything according\nto what they said, they were practi-\ncally the bosses of the place. This\ncaused great injustice and hard-\nships to be worked. It was more\nthe fault of his pets than him, yet I\nthink he was to blame for not giv-\ning all the cases his personal at-\ntention. All this made a bitter,\nsulkey, feeling and he was hated.\nSome of the prisoners he allowed\nto carry, knives. Jack McTage\nrushed up to Charley Angel in '85\nand stabbed him in the head. It\nwas a deliberate attempt to kill, but\ni few days after that he was taken\nnto the office as clerk. This made\na bad feeling; McTaee had in\nprison before for assault with in- -\nent to kill, and this was his second\nterm. He was made a bookeeper\nof, and allowed to eat with the\nguards. We all thought that mak\ning an officer of such a man was a\npremium n bad behavior.\nOne morning Dobe Willoughby,\nn for murder for life, picked a row\nwith William Kelso in the dining\nroom. Kelso avoided the trouble\nand tried to pacify the other, when\nhe was stabbed three times with a\nknife The cut on his arm re\ntired a suri'eon and he was laid\nup several weeks. Bell fined Kelso\nten days for being cut. and only\nut thf assailant in a dark cell on\nthe best of grub. Kelso asked Bel'\nf he might be permitted to produce\nevidence to show the facts in the\nuse, and Bell said:
159fce0e6fa4aa2eb3a0d3268de362ab CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1906.9164383244547 41.875555 -87.624421 Why nro wo content to have oar\nfood prepared for us In secret uadsr\nconditions that to nny sane mind\ntalnly suggest fraud nnd trcucltery?\nWo aro not obliged to have\nthings If wo do not want them. Tks\nremedies nre slmplo cuough.\nAs to tho "lumpy Jnw," tlio tubercu-\nlosis and tho cancer, put n stop to pri-\nvate slaughtering. Let all the slaugh-\ntering of food animals bo done by ths\nStatu In tho light of day, without say\nof this dark lantern business, on equal\nterms for nil. Thcro nro very few\nprlvuto slaughter houses In Kngu4\nTho cities and towns run their slaugh-\nter houses under medical luspectloa.\nBut In England tho iwoplo do not cars\nto bo poisoned lu their meat.\nAnd wo need not worry about the ob-\njection that publicly owned slaughtsr\nhouses nro au Invasion of the private\nrights of When It comes Is\nllfo and death thcro nro no private\nrights of business. No man has a right\nto saved profits that ho milk by\nspreading disease. Wo havo gone to\nfar on tho road to public sanitation to\nturn back bcauso somo gentleman\nprofits nro threatened. Tho State will\nnot nllow you to go around with small-\npox or to conceal scarlet rover In roar\nhouse, although each may be strictly\nyour own affair. Compared with caa- co - r ,\nsmall)ox and scarlet fever ars\nnothing. If tho State can take radical\nmeasures to stamp out cholera It caa\ntako radical measures to stamp oat\ncancer, a million times worse tfcaa\ncholera. If It can provide pest uou.ee\nfor public safety It can provide slaugh-\nter houses for public safety. And (te\nduty in tho ouo case Is at least as clear\nas In the other.
039ca2dc0dc6aaceb8b3f60c5a49f50e THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.7383561326737 46.187885 -123.831256 If there is one locality more than\nanother where the voice of common\nsense is never listened to it is in that\nvery extensive one where fashion\nreigns. Who over thinks of listening\nto the suggestions of the former, when\nthe decree of the latter potentate has\ngone forth? Tight sleeves for the\nladies, and tight continuations for the\ngentlemen is the fashion, supposing.\nTlie advocates of common sense pro-\ntest, saying, it is impossible to move\none's limbs in them ; I cannot bend\nthe knee before the portrait of my\nfondest hopes, says one; I cannot\nget my hands to the back of my head,\nsays another, which is far more im-\nportant. And fashion replies, I can-\nnot satisfy all tastes. My laws are\nmostly made for the unreflecting; if\nyou reflect 3ou will never be satisfied.\nThat which yon complain of now is\nonly a temporary inconvenience;\nwhen I can no longer tighten in your\nlimbs, sleeves and leggings will take\nsuch ample proportions that the real\nsizeofanarmoralegwillbe asub-\nject for divination. Fashion has no\nrespect of person ; if high heels are\nintroduced for the benefit of short\npeople, low heels never intro-\nduced at the same time for people\nwho are already taller than they care\nto be. The latter must wait their\nturn for the opposite fashion, and\nthen unusually short persons must\nhavo their boots made to order if the'\nwish to reach up to the elbow of their\nsuperior in height, or Bubmit to be\nlooked upon as dwarf by tall people,\nif they prefer to keep in the fashion.\nFashion pretends to have an eye\nfor beaut j' ; if this be true, she enacts\nat least that all her followers be\nmodelled after the same fashion.\nThey must hae heads and faces of a\nuniform size and shape, that the hat\nor bonnet of the season may become\nthem all, and they must have a uni-\nform tint of complexion, that the\ncolor a la.mode may suit "it. Those\nwho study fashion in dres3 at the ex-\npense of their personal comfort are\nsurely wanting in common sense, yet\nwemostofusdoso,anditseemsas\nthough we like doing so, since the\nfashionable and uncomfortable article\nis preferred to the unfashionable and\ncomfortable one, though it may cost\nmore than double the price of the\nlatter.
056093e57412656716dbfe432af36511 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.5767122970574 40.063962 -80.720915 flaw Yoa*, July L9. - Cotton quiet and Arm\nat U/fal2Ko; futurea steady. Flour doll; \\\nreceipta 20,700 barrels; exports 10,450 barrels; !\nauperflne weatetn and State 13 90a4 60; com-\nmon to good extra $4 80.fi 30; good to choice\n(& 7ft; white wheat extra |6 23pB !M;\nextra Ohio |4 «1a6 76; Ht. I^ouia $4 8.1»0 75;\nMinnesota potent |0 2la8 20. Wheat inactive,\nclnsitjg firm: ungraded spring 0?c; ungraded\nredtl0/al27}<;No.8do$1lWal22; No.2\ndo $1 24Xa 20k; steamer do |1 2tal 21^;\nNo. 2 red $1 28 mixed winter $V2i^al 2214; )\nungraded white $1 17al 23>4; No. 1 do, safes\n5.61)0 bushels at tl 26al 25J4; steamer do\n$1 20; No. 2 red July, sales 100,000 busheli at 1\ntl 26Hal 26J4. closing at tl 20; Atignst, sales\n381X00 bushels At $1 2l«al 27, closing at\ntl 37; September, ea'e* 4 2,000 bushels at\ntl :'0«al 28X, closing at $1 27October\n 684 OOo bushels at $128^al30Ht closing\nat |1 20K Corn opened \\i to kc\nuetter, closing weak; receipts 323,000\nbushel*; exports 280,000 hnshels: un-\ngraded 49a68c; No. 8, 61 Xo; steamer\n54a644*o; No. 2, C8i50c. No. 2 white. 60c;\nsteamer white MV«o; No. 2 July ad8c;\nAugust 67-Kn'iHc; September 68Jia69c. Oato,\ndemand active and nrices have advanced: re\nwdpts 82,060 bushels; western mixed 4fl»48c;\nwhit" 4Na0lc. Hay demand fair and mar*\nket firm at 60a65c. Hops quiet and steady.\nCoffee, demanu fair aud market tlriu; Kio\ncar roes quoted at 9Kal2Xc; job lotaOKa\n13Jic. Sugar steady with fair demand; fair\nto good refining quoted at 7Ka7#c. Molasses\ndull and unchanged Kic* qui»tand steady.\nPetroleum dull unchsngad. Tallow steady at\nOJtfafl&c. Rosin quiet and un hanged. Tar-\npentine dull aud wak at41a41 He. Eggs dull\nand unchanged. Pork stronger and moder*\nateiy active; new mess $18 0oal8 CO. the lat*
4e40bbb0241022f037a7314ae1f9d274 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1919.6013698313038 36.000618 -88.428106 Considerable excitement prevails\nin Dickson and surrounding com-\nmunity today over the striking of\na big gas well by the Tuxbury Oil\n& Retining Company, who have of-\nfice headquarters here, at Cumber-\nland Furnace, in the north end of\nDicksnn county, today about noon.\nSo great w is the volume and force\not ttie gas that it lifted the tools,\nweighing 3,000 pounds, clear out\nof the hole, and then b'gan spout-\ning stones and rock as big as hen\neggs all over the. landscape.\nIt was necessary for the men\nworking on the well to shut off all\nthe fires in the boiler and black-\nsmith forge and shut down the\ndrilling until the gas either blows\nitself off or until they get in ma-\nterial with which ta shut it It\nis understood that if they can get\nrid of the gas they, will drill on\ndown deeper for oil, which pro-\nduct they were seeking when the\ndrill entered the gas How.\nThe gas was found at about 300\nfeet, and oil men now on the Held\nstate that it 13 a certain indication\nof an oil field in this county. The\nnews of the big gas flow was her-\nalded with much interest and en-\nthusiasm by oil men and prominent\nbusiness citizen? alike of Dickson\nand community, and many rushed\nin automobiles to the scene of the\ndrilling to witness the blowing off\nof the gas. There has been consider-\nable prospecting for oil in Die! S n\ncounty,' especially for the pastier-era - l\nmonths, and no doubt the de-
1432c7bbcc8a8dffc0302f248d3ff9aa THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.919178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 The first occupant of this chair presl- c\ned over a House ol sixty five members\npresenting a population far below the ti\nresent aggregate of the State of New C\n'ork. At that time, in tho whole United p\ntates, there were not fifty thousand civ- tl\nized Inhabitants to be found one hundred n\ndies distant from the flow of the Atlan- tl\nc tide. To day, gentlemen, a large ma- v\nirity of you come Irom beyond that n\nmit, and represent districts then peopled a\nnly by tho Indian and the adventurous fi\nontiersman. The National Government c\nnot yel sa uiu as many 01 lis citizens; b\nat hi. Ibis brief spin ol time, less than n\ndo lengthened life, it has under God's\nood providence extended its power until n\ncontinent is tlio Held of its empire and I\n the majesty of its law. n\nWith the growth ol new Stales abd h\nle resulting changes in the centres of tl\nopulatlon new Interests are developed, e\nval to the old, but by no means hostile, G\n[verse but not antagonistic. Nay, rather a\nta all thesointerests in harmony; and the p\noe scienco of just government is to give o\n> oicb its full nnd lair play, oppressing o\none by undue exaction, favoring none t!\ny undue privilege. It is this great lesson o\nliicb our dally experience » teaching a\ns, binding us together more closely, e\ntaking our mutual dependence more h\nlanifest, and causing nsto feel, whether o\ne live in the North or In the South, in t<\nle.Bmt or in the West, thai we have in- t\nsod but "ono country, one constitution,\nae' destiny." c
01e1ed62946389accd82f64aaf582dc6 THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1878.3712328450026 37.561813 -75.84108 stage as well as on." He is not particu-\nlarly careful in the use of adjectives,\nand can probably put more emphasis\ninto the word "damn" in\nconnections than any hackman in the\nmetropolis. The other evening he was\ngiving a story, which may not be new\nbut which was jnst as etfective, about\na bad boy, a but his other terms may\nbe guessed at. Well, he said the father\nof the boy came to him and said:\n"Friend and brother, I have a very bad\nboy, and I don't know what to do with\nhim. lie is a wonderfully,. an extraor-\ndinarily bad boy. Why, he'll lie, and\ncheat, and swear; he'll run away trom\nhome aud frighten us all to death; he'll\nput cats, tied up light, in his' sister's\nbed, and I know he'll steal if he gets a\nchance. That boy, be. assured, will\nbring down the sorrows' nf his gray\nmother iu hairs to the grave. Do take\nhim, Charlie, and a minstrel of\nhim. I don't care a continental what\nbecomes of the boy. Do tike him!"\nTo this the mins rel replied that he\nwas engaged in aaother kind of train\ning, and continued: "lour system ot\ntreatment, sir, is all wrong. You are\nfailing to develop the genius and edu-\ncate the tastes of your possibly de-\npraved son. Try a new plan. Buy tlie\nboy a new suit oi clothes, a stylish suit,\nand travel with i.im. Show hi in the\nbeauties and wonders of his own coun-\ntry. Take him to Chicago; take him to\nWashington; teach him to love nature,\ntunnels, and politics. Read to him in\nhistory, .Beadle's or anybody's. Take\nhim to IIib Mammoth Cave; take him to\nJersey City; take him to Boston. By\nall means take him to Boston, and take\nhim to Bunker Ili'.l. Educate his mind.\nThen take him to the monument, take\nbim to the top of it, and kick the\nlittle rascal off."
34ef4d6c4220149ea5fdf5866556c119 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.9139343946063 40.063962 -80.720915 desirous and able to overthrov\n: the Stale Government at any tirni\nif not prevented by the power ot the Uni\nted State*. We cannot doubt that the ef\nfeet of all tlieM things waa to prevent\nfull, free and fair election, and to intimi\ndate the colored voters and the white Re\npublicans. The very formation of a whit\nman'* party waa a menace of terrible im\nport to those who remembered Colfa:\nand UoBsier, and the convention. Thi\npress was filled with threats of violence\nThe agreement to discharge laborers, th\nsuggestion that wild beasts are tamed bj\nhunger, was evidence of the same spirit\nThe overthrow of the State Qovernmen\nby the White League on the 14th of Sep\ntember; the turning out large numbers o:\nparish officials in the eountry, compel]\nin* them to flee for their lives; the tear\nful lesion of Coushatta; the formation\narming, and drilling of the White Lea\ngue, the natural successors of thi\nKnights of the Camellia: thesi\nthings in a community where there L\nno legal punishment for polilica\nmurder, must, in the nature of things\nhave filled with terror a people timid am\ngentle like the colored population ol\nLouisiana, even if we had not takei\nabundant evidence as to special acts o;\nviolence and crime and their effects or\nparticular neighborhoods. In view o\nthese facts, we do not hesitate to find thai\nthe election of 1874 was neither full, free\nnor fair; that in large portions of thi\nState the usual means of instructing and\npersuading the people, of organizing anc\nconducting a campaign, could not be car\nried on by Republicans without dangej\nto their lives, and that many more voteri\nthan were needed to give the .Republican\nparty a complete victory were preveniec\nfrom voting at all or coerced into voting\nthe white man's ticket. It was to declar«\nthe result of auch an election that the\nReturning Board met at New Orleans ic\n1874."
c251c1a2af043bb15cfdc2128bb4e3ac OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.821038219743 39.513775 -121.556359 whoso ; edit oaten base !+en published, t/nt,\nto gain <ln tmphati'ally and knowingly\nassert, tum lt ni iwrntit thsofa/l the old of-\nficers and nu n of Fn in out's hattallion , and\nothers of foreign birth living in Califor-\nnia m Ibid uinl in lb 17.\nThat this declmitioii of mine may be prov-\ned, 1 intend having, if possible, their pref-\nerences polled on tiio day of election.\nWith the exception of about a half dozen\nin this city, ami the same number in other\nparts of tli.) State, to whom Jocdaliner ham\npromised office under Fremont, 1 do not, at ■\nler talking with and hearing from several'\nhundreds, learn of any more going for him\nla sneaking o( Fremont's qualifications,\nthey nearly all use the same simile—that\nhe is not tit to be a town constable, (the'\nlowest grade of an executive oflice)and could-\nnot be elected to that post where he resided,\nand was well known.\n1 was not aware until informed by the'\nHerald, that l)r. Gwiu had any of my pam-\nphlets for circulation Certainly no man-\nought t« know more about Fremont's intel-\nlectual powers and knowledge of political\neconomy than the I) >ctor —he having been a\n oher of the Convention at Monterey in\nIbW (to which body I also was elected but\ndi I not attend) when Fremont, as is alleged\nby some of his supporters, told its members\nli 'W to make the Constitution —in fact was\nttie principle framer of it (which information\nth ugh I may rein irk in passant was never,\nstrange to say, made known till lately.)—\nLb G win was also a colleague of Col. Frc- ■\nmant during ihc hitlers short career in the\nU. S . Senate, an 1 1 know that Gwius csti-\nm itc of Ins abilities privately and candidly\nKtir. -s s e I, was then and siner> precisely what\nI have stated in my pamphlet.\n'i «.i or Bid well ot Butte, in w'lich county\nthe llitraM says Lb Gwiu has been circula-\nting the aforesaid documents, told mo of a\nsneering'j the or sarcasm on the California\nrepresriiial'ion going the rounds of the polit-\nical ein ! es at Washington during the tall of\nI Mb. The sory is told in one of my arti-\ncles i.gaivist Fremont, published in a Sacra-\nmento paper in January IH'il I hope the-\nnigger organ of that city will hunt it up\nand republish t.
3681329fbc5f576a0a1f06af057a953d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.8123287354135 40.063962 -80.720915 vrvm the Xortmber Galaxy.\n"iNow, tliat corpse (said the undertaker\n>atting the folded bands ol the decease\nipprovingly) was a brick.every wayyo\nlilm ln> wnmi hrlrk. He WAS SO 1*01!\niccommodating, and so modest-like an\nlimple in his last moments. Friends warn\nid metallic burial case.nothing els\nvould do. / couldn't gut it. Ther\nvarn't going to be time.anybody coul\n>ec that. Corjwc said never mind, shak\nliin up some kind of a box lie coul\nitreteli out in cumfortable, he warn't pai\nicular 'bout the general style of iu Sal\njo went more on room than style, an\nvay, in a lust tlnal container. Friend\nMinted a silver door-plate on the coflli\niignifying who ho was and wlior' he wji\n'mm. 2*ow, you know a fellow couldn1\noust out such a gaily thing as that in\nittle country town like this. What (li\nrorpscwiy t Corpse said, whitewash hi\n>1d canoe and dob his address and gencn\nlestination onto it with a blacking brus\nmil a stencil plate,'long with a vers\n,'rom some hymn or other, and p'nt hit\nlor the tomb, and mark him C. O. D\nmil just let him skip along. L\nsvarn't any more distressed than yo\nL»e.on the contrary, Just as carm and co\nected as hearse horse; said that hejudi\n;d Hint wher' he was going to, a bod\nivould find it considerable better to a\nirnct attention by a picturesque mori\nilmracter than a natty burial case with\nwell door plate on it Splendid man li\nivas. IM I've dnither Uo for a corpse lib\niinn 11 any i ve lacKiuu m suvt-u\nriicre's some satisfaction in burvln' a mn\nlike that. You feel that what you're doin\nis appreciated. Lord bless you, no's 1\n?ot planted before lie spiled, lie was pe\nfectly satisfied; said Ins relations meat\nwell, perfectly well, but all them prepan\nLions was bound to delay the thing moi\nr>r less, and he didn't wish to be kcj\nlayin' around. You never see such a clea\nhead as what lie had.and so carin and s\ncool. Just a hunk of brains.that wi\nwhat he was. Perfectly awful. It was\nripping distance from one end of tin\nman's head to t'other. Often and ovt\nagain lie's had brain lever n-rnging in on\nplace, and the rest ol the pile didn't knoi\nanything about it.didn't affect it an\nmore than an Injun insurrection iu Ar\nzona affects the Atlantic States. Wei\nthe relations they wanted a big Itinera\nbut corpse said he was down on
2ee5390740b089a7beb3bda8da78ae04 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1870.97397257103 40.827279 -83.281309 would be that General Lee had not\ndied either in his youth or patriotic\nmanhood, or even that he had not\ndied earlier than he did, by the law,\nwhich penalty would have atoned in\nsome measure for his crime.\nMr. Morton protested against the\nconsideration of the resolution ; he\nhad heard what he had never ex-\npected to hear a eulogy upon the\ncharacter of General Lee in the Sen-\nate of the United States, aud that,\ntoo, in the sight of the graves of the\nvictims of his rebellion. This man.\nGeneral Lee, was, of all others in\nthe rebellion, the sinner, he had sin\nned against the light and knowledge\nof his revolutionary ancestry. His\noath of fealty as an officer of the\nUnited Slates.his finished education\nand high abilities, all forbade him\nthus to sin, and the enormity of his\ncrime could not be concealed by\n his grave with flowers of\nrhetoric. In a word, it was now\nproposed that the Senate should\ngrave.y consider the proposition to\ndegrade the memories of the patri\notic dead at Arlington by removing\ntheir bones to less hallowed grounds\nin tender consideration of the wid\now of the arch rebel, the most wick\ned in the rebellion, or in history.\nMr. Sumner desired that parlia\nmentary law should be administered\nupon the present occasion with the\nutmost rigor, with a view to the most\nsummary disposition of the resolu\ntion. He had nothing: to say about\nGeneral Lee except that his name\ntood high upon the catalogue of\nthose who had imbrued their bands\nin their countrymen's blood. He\nwas content to hand him over to the\navenging pen of history. He re-\ngarded the resolution as indicative\nof the sentiments of the political as\nsociated of the-
4d446aee0b01e79f25c4a5f4a6706c0c THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1908.580601061273 42.217817 -85.891125 in addition to tins, the Republican\nplatform reCOOO mentis the adoption of\npostal MVingS bank system in which,\nof couraa, the Government would be-\ncome responsible to the dcpoeltora for\nthe payment of principal ami Interest,\nit is thought that the Government\nguaranty will bring out of hoarding\nplaces much money w hit h may bu\nturned into wealth producing capital,\nand th it it w ill be a great incentive for\nthrift in the many small pl8C0S in tbe\ncountry having now no savings bank\nfacilities which are reached by the Post\nOttee Department, it win bring to\nevery one. however remote from finan-\ncial centers, a place of. perfect safety\nfor depoaits, with Interest return.\nObjections to Democratic Proposal to\nEnforce Insurance of Bank Deposits.\nThe Democratic platform rococo\nmentis a tax upon National banks ami\nUpon such Stale banks as may come\nIn. In the nature of enforced insurance\nto raise a guaranty fund to pay de-\npositors of any bank which fails. How\nState banks can be Included In such a\nscheme under the constitution is left\nIn the twilight zone of Slates rights\nami Federalism so frequently dimming\nthe meaning and purpose Of the prom-\nises of the platform. If they come In\nunder such a system, they must neces-\nsarily be brought within the closest\nNational control, ami so they must\nreally COS 10 to be State banks and be-\ncome National banks.\nThe propoeltiOO is to tax the honest\nand prudent banker to make up for the\ndishonesty and imprudence of others.\nif the proposal were adopted exactly\nas the Democratic platform suggests,\nit would bring the w hole banking sys-\ntem of the country down in ruin.\nThe Republican party prefers the\npovt;l savings bank as one tiled, safe,\nand known to be effective, and as\nreaching many more people now with-\nout banking futilities than the new\nsystem proposed.
acda803c2b1da4eb5e19097ea6a131d6 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.6369862696602 39.369864 -121.105448 fore these girls and make a satisfac-\ntory tour of the room without step-\nping on their toes, and to sic down,\nand dispose of ones hands without\nputting them into ones i.ucket, is an\nachievement which few boys can boast.\nIf a boy can get so far as to measure\noff ten yards of tape with one of these\ngirls, and cut it short at each end, he\nmay stand a chance to pass a pli .le-\nant evening, but let him not ilatter\nhimself that all the trials of the even-\ning are over. There comes, at .ast,\nthe breaking up. The dear girls don\ntheir hoods, and put on their shawls,\nand look as saucy, and michievnus,\nand unimpresible, and independent,\nas if thev did not wish any one to go\nhomo with them. Then comes the\npinch, and tho boy that has the most\npluck makes up to the prettiest girl,\nbis heart in his throat, and his tongue\nclinging to the roof of his mouth, and\ncrooking his elbow, stammers out the\nwords-“Shall I see you home?” She\ntouches her finger to his arm, and\nthey walk home about a foot apart,\nfeeling as awkward as a couple of\ngoslings. As soon as she is in-\nside her own door,be struts home, old\nthinks he has really been und g »ue\nand done it. Sleep comes to nun. at\nlast, with dreams of Caroline and\ncalico, and he awakes in the morning\nand finds the doors of life open to him,\nand the pigs squealing for breakfast.\nWe have passed over churning and\nlearning the catechism, because we\nwere fearful of making this article too\nlong, although we might have talked\not butter that would not be persuaded\nto come, and of the impression and\nperplexities of a boy of a literal turn\nof mind, and head that measured sev-\nen and a quarter, wh n asked ..hut\nthe chief end of a man was. B- yhood\nis a green passage in mans existence,\nin more senses than one. It is a\npleasant thing to think over and to\nlaugh about now, though it was seri-\nous enough then. Many of our pres-\nent trials are as ridiculous as those\nwhich now touch the risibles in the\nrecollections, and when we get to the\nother world and look back upon this,\nand upon the infancy of tho soul\nthrough which we passed here, we\nhave no doubt that we shall aria over\n#
3d5c2c608391113bebf51ca95e8380e5 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.1816939574478 41.681744 -72.788147 Lake street by a young doe this\nmorning, frubtrated an attempt by th\npolice to corner the animal. Th\nyoung animal had wandered Into tha\ncity and waa runulog around tha eo\ntlon near Lake afreet and Grove hilt.\nIn a panto, according to a report sent\nin to tha police.\nPatrolmen Horbert C. Lyon and\nLincoln May were sent out with th\npolice patrol and located the fright\nened doe In a field. They made an\nattempt to corner It and succeeded In\nturning1 It Into the Stanley Work\nyard. Th deer took refuge In a\nsheltered corner but a the police\nclosed In, It shot from It hiding place\nand sailed over tha fence with a foot\nto spare, a easily and gracefully a\nan airplane leaving the ground.\nBefore tha could resume the\npursuit two dog took up the chase,\nand th terrified beast practically flew\nalong High street, easily outdistanc-\ning the dogs which soon gave tip the\nchase and returned with drooping\nheads. Having tost track of the ani-\nmal, the police returned to the sta-\ntion where a call came In Immediately\nafter that the deer had been caught\nIn the yard of the Corbln company at\nElm and Chestnut streets by several\nboys. The police went there and the\ndoe, making frantic effort to rain Its\nfreedom, waa loaded Into a closed-i - n\nauto, truck, and taken to th Shuttle\nSfeadow lake, where It wa turned\nloose. The deer did not wait to thank\nits deliverers but took to It heel and\nwas soon lost sight of la the distance.
02e32a4d1156c6a377f5e1dea30f18c3 THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1877.842465721715 40.832421 -115.763123 The nature of the criino for which ho\nwas condemned, together with all tho\nlegal proceedings connected with his\ncuso up to the time of his execution, is\nfamiliar to our readers and requires no\nrecapitulation. That tho sontcnco of the\nlaw was n just one, nono will attempt to\ngainsay, although tho natural sympathy\nfor a miserable mortal reduced to so\ndesperate u strait would havo been\nquite content with a mitigation of tho\npunishment to be intlicted. Such ex¬\nhibition of feeling is but human, and,\ninstead of being regarded as objcctional\nweakness, is really an honorable tribute\nto advanced humanity.\nAt Crozier'H request, but few persons\nwcro admitted to witness tho execution;\nnnd just beforo the fatal noor.c was ad¬\njusted, ho composedly addressed thoso\npresent iu the foliowiug words :\n"I say this, my friends: I am\nshortly to be launched into eternity for\na criuio 1 did not commit. a murder I\ndid not commit. I din believing there\nis justice beyond tho grave ; it tribunal\nwhere there is no corruption nnd where\nmoney is not required. I lose my life\n 1 bad no money ; I hope for a\nbetter life. I say, my frieuds, steer\nclcar of my courso ; the ways I followed\nbrought mo to this doom. I hopo you\nwill all profit by my fate. This, my\nfriends, is all I liavo to say."\nlio then joined with tho Rev. Mr.\nTrousdale, bis spiritual adviser, iu the\nhymn, ."I'm goiu;.; homo to dio no\nmore," and at the conclusion of which\nho bado all " good-bye."\nNotwithstanding, but few wcro ad¬\nmitted within tho cucloaurc, a largo\ncrowd collected on tho outside, that\ncould readily hoar what transpired.\nCiozier bad reached tho 18th year of\nhis ago, uud was of a good family; dis¬\nsipation and evil association having,\nas bo truly said, brought him to an\nignominious ending of hi3 career.\nWe learn that tho father of the de¬\nceased was twico ta.ido Marshal of tho\ncity of San Francisco, and is still liv¬\ning Komcwhero in Texas; that his par¬\nents mij-'ht never ln'tvr of his terrible\nfate was poor Hob's most cherished\ndesire, ami God grr.nt that they never\nwill.
173e5f4cc0ba386ece91d85f70ef685f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1880.8510928645517 40.832421 -115.763123 hnni from hi* ancle. II . L . Uot«y,\nwhether he tu conteUd with Ubor\nmoTemcDte, Col. Bliss letffd to hi*\nfeet with a qsick objection, bat tb«\nCourt allowed llie answer. Tbe witness,\n. aid, "All I know with regard to bis\nbeing acquainted with the Ubor move¬\nment ia he abowed me a certificate of\nmembership." Tbe croea examination\nwaa then undertaken by Col. Bliss, who\nbrought ont tbe additional facta that\ntbe wittieaa bad been in Lyun three or\nfucr time* a year and clapped on* night\n*1 bia atep mother* a, Clara D. Moray.\nCol. Blia'a tried tu eutrap the witneaa,\nwhat relation she waa to H. L. Morey,\nbut the wittieaa replied: "She waa my\nfather'* second wife; 11. L . Morey waa\nmy father'* brother. Clara D. Morey,\nwaa atill alive, and when the witueas\nwaa in Lynn lived on Boston atreet.\nTho witneaa having *aid the place\nwhere bo met H. L. Morey wa* on Main\natreet. corner of Washington Aveune,\nCol. Bliss said in thnnder tone*, "don't\nyon know that there i* in Lyun, Ma**.,\na known aa Maiu atreet, "No\nair," aaid the witness in tone* equally\ndi-cided, "there ia a Main *treei in Lyun.\nMaaa." Wall, ssij Col. Bits* belore\nthe Court could atop him, "I'll aatiafy\nyon and everybody elao of that." The\nremark waa indignantly objected to by\nMr. Brooke, and the Court promptly\natrnck lb* offensive remark out. The\nwitneaa deacribed that what waa called\nMaiu atreet, in Lynn, ran from tbe City\nHall near down to tbe wharvea. The\nlaat time that I aaw 11. L. Morey wa* at\nmy brother'a house in Lawrence, in\nJaue 1870. My brother'* name ia Fran¬\ncis A. W. M itvj.\nCol. Bliss uaked bow he came to l>e\npreseut in Court, and Mr. Morey said\nthe man that cmuo af tor him got a tele¬\ngram from the Democratic headquarters\nto come here. That was on Saturday\na<ld the man that came for him wa* A.\nP. Clark of Lawrenoe, who told him\nthat his expenses would be paid. He\ngot here Saturday night, about II\no'clock, and went at onco to the Demo¬\ncratic Committee rooms.
0b725fc9bf1d4fb9f771230c5c6e1085 OTTUMWA WEEKLY COURIER ChronAm 1878.1767122970573 41.020015 -92.411296 Holding the opinion which I ex­\npressed in my annual message, that\nneither the interest of government or\nthe people of tho United States would\nbe promoted by disparaging silver\nas one of the two precious metals\nwhich famished the coinage of the\nworld, and legislation which looks to\ncontracting the volume of intrinsic\nmoney to as full a measure ot both\nmetals as their relative commercial\nvalue will permit, would be neither\nunjust nor inexpedient.\nIt has been my earnest desire to\nconcur with Congress in the adoption\nof such measures to increase the sil­\nver coinage of the country as would\nuot impair the obligation of contracts,\neither public or private, or injurious-\naffect the public credit. It is only\non the conviction that this bill does\nnot meet these essential requirements\nthat I feel it my duty to withhold\nfrom it my approval.\nMy present official duty as to that\nbill permits only an attention to the\nspecific objects of the bill, which\nseems to me the Constitution has iu\nsuch way provided. The bill pro­\nvides for the coinage of silver dollars\nof the weight of -0.2 .^ grains each, of\nstandard silver, to be a legal-tender\nto their nominal value for all debts\nand duties, public private, ex­\ncept where otherwise expressly stip­\nulated in contracts. It is well known\nthat the market value of that num­\nber of grains, standard silver during\nthe past year has been from 90 to 92\ncents as compared with the staudard\ngold dollar. Thus the silver dollar\nauthorized by this bill is worth from\n8 to 10 per cent, less than it purports\nto be worth, and is made a legal-ten­\nder for debts contracted when the\nlaw did not recognize such coins as\nlawful money, in such insufficient\namount to circulate and put au end\nto the receipt of revenue iu gold, and\nthus compel payment of silver for\nboth principal and interest of the\npublic debt. #1,143,493 of the bond­\ned debt now outstanding was issued\nprior to February,1875, when a silver\ndollar was unknown in the circula­\ntion of this country, aud with ouly\nthe convenient form of silver bul­\nlion for exportation. #5s:;.410,350 of\nbonded debt has been issued since\nFebruary, 1S73, when gold alone was\nthe coin for which bonds were sold,\nand gold alone was the coin in which\nboth parties to the contract under­\nstood, that the bonds would be paid.\nTheso ^bonds flowed into the mar­\nkets of the world. They were\npaid
1bb23505c246ee8b62d8139544977ce5 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1891.0863013381531 40.441694 -79.990086 Napoleon's Kctreat From Moscow.\nThe extremely severe weather from which\nEurope has been afflicted lately is abating.\nIn the meantime there is hardly any doubt\nthat the one or two survivors of Napoleon's\nterrible Eussian campaign of 1812-1 - 3 have\nhad ample opportunity to compare notes.\nThe winter in question was hardly as severe\nas a dozen that could be mentioned in the\nlast century, but it is particularly notable\non account of the tremendous loss of life in\nthe retreat of the French army from Eussia.\nUnder the circumstances a short resume of\nthe part the weather had to do with the\ndisaster ought to be interesting here.\nWinter set in early that season. The\nFrench army began its retreat on the 18th\nof November; Napoleon leaving the\nMuscovite empire on day following.\nOn the 23d the evacuation of Moscow was\ncomplete, and the entire army was marching\ntoward Smolensk: with the snow Jailing\nheavily and steadily for a number of days\npast The Frenchman, Larry, tells us that\nwhen the army started, a thermometer which\nhe carried registered 15 Fahrenheit That\npart commanded by Ney, escaped from the\nEussian troops, by whom it was surrounded,\nbt crossing the Dneiper, which froze over\nthe night before they started. The day be-\nfore, Eussian troops with cannon had crossed\nme Jjwina upon the Ice. The cold then\ndiminished and on the 24th it thawed, bnt\nimmediately grew cold again, and from the\n26th to 29th during the terrible passage 'of\n"tue Berezina, the water contained numerous\nblocks of ice,out none of them sufficient to\nsuggest-th-
692e3ea5efcf7912246baf49f8f6b87c PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1844.1051912252074 31.960991 -90.983994 vention, the friends of Mr. Van Buren country shall be reduced to a choice\n^holding on to that old machinery of between the odious and grinding Sub­\nparty discipline and subordination, de- Treasury Scheme, and a National In-\nrived to them from the cur.ning order stibition of Finance, properly guarded\nof the Jesuits through the bloody Ja» .against abuse by the jealous restrict\ncobinical Clubs of Revolutionary tions of its charter, as well as by a vi-\nFrance, by which one or two active gilant public supervision and control\nspirits are enabled to suppress the will 1 do not believe that a sober judg-\nand control the movements of vast and ment of the people, under the pres-\nenlire bodies ot men,) imperiously de- sure of such an alternative, would\nclare that he, and he only, shall be the find any cause ofquarrel against those\ncandidate ol the party. Is it time who, fiee from constitutional difficul*\n»hat honorable and patriotic men, as ties on the subject, should go for the\nthey respect the dignity of their charac- latter, in preference to the former,\nter, the privileges of freemen and and And as to the Distribution of the\nthe sacred principles of Republican proceeds of the Public Lands, that\nGovernment should unite in one gene- stands necessarily and evidently ad-\nrous and virtuous struggle to overthrow journed as a practical question, till the\neffectually and lot ever, the tyranny ol revenues of the nation, compared\na system which, if now submitted to, with its expenditures and engagements\nmust finally convert our noble popu shall be in a very different situation\nlar Institutions into the worst of all do- from that in which they are likely\nruinations—that of an unscrupulous to be for years to come. My own\nand sordid party oligarchy.
3559827ad34aee0da147fc8774b96bb9 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1917.5301369545916 39.745947 -75.546589 realization of exactly- what the facts without the ability to prove Its worth. ! docks that a great many ships are being ' William Abel, who formerly lived in\nare and is speclflca^y true in a can- The government judges a man by his held up and early yesterday morning a Shawtown, but up to n few days ago\nvass of the engineering schools of act|on when the crisis comes, not by i trans-Atlantic liner was held for con- mode South Wilmington his homo, «it\nthe country it Is found that there are wbat be gays he thinks he cun do. In siderable time while naval officers, arrested at Fourth and Market street*\nroughly three poHlions open for Wnr perhaps talk counts for as little 1 I «larded her opposite this city. There [ by a s|>eeial oflieer. lie was made to another operation,\nevery man available. In this state aR |n any other situation, action for : l»ve been numerous instance* of show his registration card, and it was\nthe engineering department o. the ng,rp Our young men who have any I er« iieing held up onjioslto this port,| alleged that ho hod registered in New\nco.lege has had requests for thirty .inclination along technical lines some of which have lieen made to put Jersey under an assumed name, lie is\nmen with only seven men available. • | should bo made acquainted with the about and return up the river a* far as charged with having stolen a horse be-\n"The war is at present being fought | facta as seen by our government Owner's Point from where they haw longing to James Montgomery for whom land avenue,\npy engineers at home and abroad, it They must be made to understand been allowed to again start on thslr way he worked in Centerville some time ago.\n1* stgntflcanf that the first men to go an(j appreciate the patriotism of the down to the sea.
07e2ee201b0d532e7c0daafdcad6f036 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1898.187671201167 46.601557 -120.510842 [\\u25a0•r the -urn ol iiiir'ccn handled forty eight\n: hihl an iod(ltMK.'iT)dollarv; the farther ram ol\none Handri-d (llflu.00) *it»n»r«* h-< hh attorney*\nfat; the farther ran *»f Fourteen (sl4 im) tiiiUam\neoata of nitt, with intore" - 1 on »hi<i rami at the\nrate ol 7 per eenl per annum from the it-th <Im>-\nof February ltw, until paid* mnl commanding\nnif to make *»'-\\u25a0 "f the proi*erty hereinafter de*\ni M-rltied mionlintr lo law h"il nrai'tlre "f thli\ncourt. "Hi-i Order "f !*ale hii-1 I' < ree "f fore\nrlrwure ta the foreeloaure of a nul eatate mort\ntfue on the following deacrtbed i<. ipertj .to *n\nCota numbered Five ( •) . >ix {&,. s eve n (7) hu<l\nRight (H), In Work number Forty Aye (»"). ami\nIxit number Thirty-two ;j). in number\nFifty (\\u25a0**). hM hi tbe 'itv oi North Vaklma.\nVaklma i-ounty, WHhtngtoti, hi rordlng to the\nrecorded T»i»*T thereof now of record In the office\nof the County Auditor of \\u25a0 Id conutj nml utate\nNotice I-* heie*ij given that in aceordaucw with\npaid command I will on the */d da. ol .prll, \\\nti. l*?t\\. at \\l:'M n'rlork In the afternoon of aaid\nday, a* the frout door of the roun Honaa. In\nthe city of North Vaklma, Yakm-H iTnunty,\nBtateof Waahlngton ( veil at public anctlou r« |\nIthe blgbeat ami beat bidder for cash, all ol the\nJwithin deacrtbed property <>rio much thereof\nm- may lie requited to Mtlaty platntlfT'i judge\nment, atturney'i fee»se«Mitp,lntereal ami Inrreai\ni«l ci ait, ami bj the tern;- ol Mid order i»i Rale\nand ilrt rt
15b498ee54003d1e584f0f87dc97a69e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.97397257103 39.745947 -75.546589 most invariably langer than those of\nNovember, it seems not unreaeonaibie\nto believe that they will be sufficient\nto bring the total for the year past the\nbillion and a quarter line. Certainly\nthe record for the year will by far sur­\npass that of any preceding calendar\nyear. The November experts are not\nonly the largest in that month, but\nthe largest in any month in the history\nof our commerce, while, as already in­\ndicated, these of the eleven months\nending with November are larger than\nthose of any full calendar year prior\nto 1898. Of breadstuffs the exports\nfor the eleven months ending with No­\nvember, 1898, are the largest in our\nhistory, bring $277,136.341, against\n$228,211 ,017 in the great exporting year\nof 1892. Provisions are $148,417,860,\nagainst $125,297,007 in the eleven\n c( 1892. Cotton amounts to\n$192,323,301. a figure »lightly below\nthat of 1896, though the total number\nof pounds exported by far exceeds that\nof the corresponding months in any\npreceding year. 1 icing for the eleven\nmonths 3.436,082,504 pounds, or, meas ­\nured in tales. 0,722,283—a larger total\nin bales or pounds than that of any\nfull calendar year preceding.\nThe import record of the year 1898\nwilt be as remarkable as that relating\nto its exports, but for opposite reu­\nse ns, the total imports for the year\nbeing lee» than those of any calendar\nyear since 1885. For the month of No­\nvember they were but' $52,109,560,\nwhich was slightly lees than these of\nNovember, 1897, and les», with three\nexceptions, than thoee of any Novem­\nber since 1885. For the last eleven
39adfcf2d937dc5cc9c5272d97a0c359 DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1918.1438355847285 58.275556 -134.3925 Meantime, employers should encourage\nthe enlistment of their men in the ship\nbuilding army which the Government i."\ncreating and in which labor may volunteei\nwith the assurance that it will not be called\naway from its j>eaee-time duties until nec¬\nessity requires. The building of ships is of\nimportance scarcely surpassed by that of\ncreating our army, and the men who enlis'\nto make this building a success are per\nforming a duty as patriotic as the man win\ndons a uniform and shoulders a gun.\nThe United States can exert its ful1\npower against Germany only when each\nindividual citizen recognizes his duty and\n|tcrforms it. It is the duty of business now\nto forget its personal interests for the time\nbeing for the benefit of the whole nation\n. . Business as Usual" has come to be rec¬\nognized as a slogan as unjustifiable as it\nwas impossible of fulfillment. We cannot\nhave ''Business Usual" while the war\nis in progress, and we should not have it.\nAny attempt to continue business alotip\nthe lines of peace-times success is wrong,\nno matter by what name it may bo called.\nThe phrase "On with Business" has been\nsuggested now as a successor to "Business\nas usual." those who propose it acknowl¬\nedging the mi worthiness of the earlier\nslogan. It is a distinction with scarcely a\ndifference. Business has become a second¬\nary consideration, and the sooner this is\ngenerally recognized the better for the\nUnited States and her allies. The first\ntask of this country is to make war, and to\nmake war successfully with every bit of\nspeed that can be coupled with success.\nThat is the business of the entire country.\nAnd only when every possible measure\nfor the successful accomplishment of this\ntask has been taken should thought be\ngiven to the ordinary business of the na¬\ntion.
33453a0fa5eb271f67ab69108b714f92 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.7136985984273 40.063962 -80.720915 Another civil war 1b foreshadowed 0]\nnless the freedmen are placed on an it\nquality with their previous masters, u\nr this cannot be accomplished the rad- p\njal partisans, with a raging thirst for ja\nlooa and plunder, are again ready to e,\navade the Southern States and lay n;\nraste the country not already desola- q\n3d, with the sword in one hand and the b\narch in the other. p\nThese revengeful partisans would q\nsave their country a howling wilderiess\nfor the want of more victims to a\nratify an unsparing cruelty. If they £\nhould succeed in indicting on the n\nountry another war it would be more\nBrrible than the war from which we tj\niave just emerged. It could not be t\non fined to the Southern States, but\nrould extend itaelf the length and &\nireadth of the United States, and only e\nlose with the overthrow of the best 0\ntovernment ever devised, and the des- {j\nruction of the finest country on the face |j\nf the globe. t]\nIf such should be the fate of our great t!\nepablican empire the cause must not 8I\ne sought for in our campsbul\nu the forum thronged with inflamma- tj\nory orators and aspiring demagogues, a\npltb souls dead to their country's honor {j\n, nd spotted with corruption. K\nI need not tell this great assembly of J\nfflcers, soldiers and sailors, most of ft\nrbom have been engaged in many per- B\nlous battles defending their country n\nuu luuii - uvuuii j o uuuui, turn n nr\ni a great evil and the greatest that can A\nefail any country or people. It has r\nver been the curse of nations and the n\nause of all the oppression imposed on 0\nhe people of Europe. If you would\n;uard your once free and happy and 8\nprosperous country from oppression v\nnd oppressive taxes beware how you ti\nncoornge war; nor demagogues who,\no .gratify ambition or revenge, would ^\nLrench their country In blood. Loss of j,\niberty commences with oppression and p\nippression follows War. f\nThe United States as conauerors can r\nifford to be just and magnanimous; p\nrhe brave are always merciful and £\ngenerous. i As President Johnson said, i\nhave had wftr enough; let there be £\n>eace. Recollect that the recent
1226718089f22d8493d953b775fb312f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1880.3811475093605 40.063962 -80.720915 Some of these sre close questions, con*\ncerning matters that most people do not\ncare to talk about to strangers; but, when\nit is considered the communications are\nneeded by the government for its uses, and\nare made confidential by law. thereahonld\nbe no hesitancy in giving them freely to\nthe enumerators. In matters of business,\ntrade, agriculture, manufactures, com¬\nmerce. mining, railroading, other trans¬\nportation, insurance, expressing, tele¬\ngraphing, and kindred subjects, the in¬\nquiries take a broad range, and in some\nrespects tbe information to be thus col¬\nlected will be an improvement on* all for¬\nmer censuses. This, it may be repeated,\nis guarded in the same way as to its pri¬\nvacy as family matters are. The enum¬\nerators are bound by oath, and under se¬\nvere penalties of fine and imprisonment,\nto reveal it to no one, except in their offi¬\ncial reports to official and they\nare bound in the same way.\nThere are provisions also for collecting\nthe valuation of real and personal estate,\nby aggregates from towns, cities and coun¬\nties; the aggregates of taxes assessed for\nall purposes; the number of colleges,\nacademies, schools of all kinds and school\nfunds; the number, character and condi¬\ntion of public libraries; statistics of news¬\npapers and periodicals; tbe seasons and\nthe crops; prices of labor; matters relsting\nto religious worship; and of pauperism\nand crime. Some of this, as well as much\nthat relates to mortality, railroad, tele¬\ngraphs, insurance, Ac., taxes, valuation\nand real estate, is to be got through cor¬\nporate authorities or other agencies out¬\nside of the enumerators. All of it is im¬\nportant for government purposes, and\nshould be given promptly and cheerfully\nto those authorized by law to mske the in¬\nquiries and collect the information.
01a4b916a7a0ffe34add7de837bea505 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1885.4643835299341 41.004121 -76.453816 No tax rate has yet been fixed by the\nTown Council. At the regular meeting last\nweek nn adjournment wns had without ap\npointing another date. Tho question will\ntherefore, go over for one month, or a spec\nlal meeting must be called for tho purpose.\nNow that tho I lino has come when Hi\nmoney ought to bo coming luto tho Tow\nTreasury, It would bo In order for the Couu\nell to stop fooling and get down to business.\nThe luterests of no taxpayers requires any\nof Hie members of Council to persist longer\nIn their stubborn refusal to do something,\nand further delay may necessitate an appll.\ncation to the court for a mandamus to com.\npel tno officers of tho corporation to per\nform tho duty Imposed upon them by\nlaw. If Hie majority favor a low rate, let\nIt bo so fixed, ami tho closo of tho year\nwill show tho wisdom or folly of this. Tho\nsolution the illfllculty ought to bo no\ndlDlcult matter. Any one who can mak\nfigures can easily estimate tho expenso o:\nrunning tlio corporation for thu year, and\nto lay a tax insulllcicnt to meet these ex\npenscs would ecrtalnly not be wisdom,\nWlillo the taxpayers demand an economical\nadministration of town nllalrs, they do not\nwant penurlou9ncss,iior do they want an in\ncrease of tho debt by a falluro of tho Coun\nell to provldo for necessary running ex\npenscs and tho payment of interest ou\nbonds, Ac. There must be a compromise\nsomo tlmo on this matter, and why not at\nonce? If each sido will yield a little,\nfair rato may bo agreed upon, and the dif\nficulty euded. A further refusal of both\ntides to adjust this matter will not bo in\nthe interests of tho people, whom thoy are\nolected to rcprcseut, and will bo simply an\nexhibition of stubbornness, not at all cred\nitablo to public otllcliils.
0829c815e637b85d9bc7b77b3abb6695 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.215068461441 39.745947 -75.546589 Teresa Falclola, nn Italian peasant\nwoman met recently with nn extraor­\ndinary adventure. Near her home, lu\nthe village of Quanta, which nestles In\na spacious vabey, Is a high and wood­\ned mountain and there It was her\ncustom to go several tltaes u week\nfor the purpose of collecting firewood.\nbring this wood down from the\nprecipitous mountain to her cottage\nwas quite an arduous task. Therefore,\nshe sent 11 down by means of a strong\nnietal wire, stretched from the valley\nup to tho mountain top.\nA few weeks ago she and her little\ndaughters ascended tha mountain, aud.\nafter gathering three goodly bundles\nof wood prepared to send them down.\nJust, however, as the mother had fas­\ntened the first bundle to the wire, and\nhad launched It on Its downward\ncourse, her wedding ring became\ncaught In the rope with M-hlch tho\nbundle tied, and in a flash she\nvu carried off her feet and swept\ndownward Into tho valley. Half para-\nlized with fear, her little daughters\nwatched her us she sped from their\nsight with amazing swiftness, and\nthen they ran down the mountain,\nfully expecting to find her lying dead\nat the end of tho wire.\nAnd their fear was quite natural,\nsince the mountain top from which\ntheir mother had been torn la eight\nhundred yards above the valley. For­\ntunately, their fears proved to bo\ngroundless. They found their mother\nentirely uninjured Yet. miraculous.\nIndeed, was It that her life had not\nbeen crushed out of her at tho end of\nher perilous descent. It »ould have\nbeen It her fall had not been broken\nbefore she reached tho earth by some\nfriendly branches,\nwood, too. was In some measure a bul\nwark against the shock.
2027aa1d3a4002e0f40058ac9ec56578 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.932876680619 42.217817 -85.891125 not have those sultry hot days so ofton en-\ncountered thero or evou in Michigan. Neither\nare we favonnl with the gentle zephyrs of the\ncyclone and its companions, thunder, light-\nning and hail. In winter, the blizzard is at-\ntracted by the trado winds and is compelled\nto seek other and less hostile llelds for its\noperations. The soil is deep and rich; plenty\nof timber and water; thousands of good\nhomes can bo obtained by simply coming\nhere, at little or no expense. The industries\nof the country aro so numerous and varied\nthat I havo not timo nor spaco to mention\nthem ; the mechanic and laborer ean always\nfind employment : tho laws of tho territory\nare good and r.re . as a general rule, enforced,\nbut tho oppoitunity for educating our chil-\ndren is not as good as wo could wish. One\nor years hencehowever, and that difficul-\nty will be surmounted. If you havo a good\nman of the clerical order, who wants to work\nin the vineyard, please send him out here.\nWe are burdened with book agents, machine\nagents, and all other clauses of agents, but\nthoso of tho Lord. Thero is ono thing, Mr.\nEditor, I wish to mention, and that i, there\nthero is no chance for n lightning rod pedlar\nto make a living at his vocation hero ; light-\nning rods aro unknown even by the name.\nIn conclusion, let n.e Ray that our country\nwill show that what I have said of it is true\nand, as I was a true northerner during the\ngreat rebellion, I still remain so. If this\neffusion does not find its way intoyour waste\nbasket, it may, erhaps, bo the means of\nsecuring to some ono a good home.
1142ed43f1c8a4a8719a7e50d19f0d81 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1910.4808218860985 40.735657 -74.172367 George C. Beesley, aged 9. 49 Race\nstreet, Bloomfield; Mildred C. Strong,\naged 12, 89 Stewart avenue, Arlington;\nMadeline D. Johns, aged 6, 303 New\nYork avenue; Gerald Lyman, aged 13,\n3594 Richmond terrace, Staten Island;\nLeonora Applebaum, aged 11, 23 Ster-\nling street; Francis Tarroll. aged 7, 68\nLock street; A'lbert Conroe, aged. 8, 104\nHunterdon street; Ethel falburn, aged\n10, 382 Bank street; May Nestor, aged 8,\n59 Baldwin street; Genevieve Moffett,\naged 12, 24 Lincoln Park, Orange; Cath-\narine O'Brien, aged 14. 33 Mott street;\nErma Ewald, aged 13, 213 North Six-\nteenth street, East Orange; James\nLally, aged 10, 115 Walnut street,\nBloomfield; John Callmano, aged 11, 51\nRunyon street; Anna Glegerich, aged\n10 318 Ogden street; Edmond Fnrlie, Jr.,\naged 6, 33 Orleans street; Mildred\nSmith, aged 11, 200 Ege avenue, Jersey\n Arthur Rutted, aged 7, 429 High\nstreet; Victoria Elmey, aged 8, 205 Chls-\nton avenue; Mary Brown, aged 13, box\n13 Hilton; Sylvia McKenna, aged 10,\n298 Fourteenth avenue; Elsie Welch,\nuged 10, 89 Bnldwln street; Floyd\nHover, aged 10, 417 Broad street; Edna\nGanod, aged 13, 49 Llncolfi street; Rob-\nert Costello, aged 12, SI York street\nJersey City; Matilda Jackson, aged 12,\n96 Walnut street, East Nutley; Frank-\nlin Henry, aged 9, 209 North Ninth\nstreet; Helen M. Dick, aged 13, Basking\nRidge; Isadore Steinberg, aged 11 143\nNorth Park street, East Orange; Wood-\nruff Btssell, aged 7, 76 Hollywood ave-\nnue. East Orange; Jacob Schwartz, aged\n10, 157 Boyd street; Allan Gordon, aged\n12, Astor avenue, North Arlington; Isa-\ndore Fasman aged 10, 849 Summer ave-\nnue; Otto Kretschmer, aged 11, Hotel\nKensington.
0bca76e38b37a88927e3a3aa2600995f THE WEEKLY ELKO INDEPENDENT ChronAm 1875.5027396943176 40.832421 -115.763123 n me," lie replied, swelling out his chest.\n"Well, s'poscn' you were a widow?"\n"Yes, madam."\n"And s'poscn' one of the boarders gave\n,'OU a breast-pin?"\n"I sec. madam.'1\n"And s'poscn' lie smiled, at you, and\nlent you (Hietry, and asked you to ride out\nin Sunday, and the neighbors whispered\n(round that you were engaged ?"\n"Proceed, niadam . I congratulate you."\n"No, you musn't, for, s'poscn' nfter all\niliis he suddenly began to claw olf, and\nlidn't smile on you any more, and didn't\n[iraise your cooking, . mid took another\nwoman to the minstrel show?"\n"All ! the traitor! Perhaps lie has trans¬\nferred his affections to some one.eisc."\n'.That's what 1 think. I know it's a\nlittle delicate, but I'm all alone in the\nivorld, you see, and I want to know if\nIherc isn't a law to hear on him? It isn't\n.ijjht to go mid encourage a lone woman\n me and then claw oil'.*'\n'.lie ought to lie roasted alive, he had !"\n"1 don't know as I'd want him arrested,\nnit I'd like to have you call on him ami\n¦take threats. Tell him he's lixble to\nState Prison for clawing oil' this way. I\nlull you it's a pretty serious thing to go\nmil encourage a woman of my age and\nllicn skulk around behind the hen-coop\nill of n sudden. Isn't there a law?"\n"Less see? I hardly think there is."\n"Well, you can call on him. Take him\ndone . look fierce. have your handcuffs\nin sight. Just tell him that you know\nill about it, and that I'm good-hearted,\n|ileasant. rich, and that he better be care-\nlid how lie pri'.nces around or he'll think\ni tornado struck liini."\nThe ollicer prom iced, nnd she rubbed a\n;loud of Hour olf her hands and ran tip the\n|>ath with a light heart.
44fb3d08ebba52cda3d4974e41cad843 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1904.3155737388686 39.745947 -75.546589 degree». en«t fl 2-5 perche«, «outh 41% de-\ngroes. east 4 2*5 perch», »outh 24ty degrees\neast 7 4-f> perche* to a »t*ke In land of\nKlun.l: thence wl-th «*4d Klund» kind und\nthe middle of *the dHvhdon ditch souith 75\ndearer« wf»t 45 1-5 perohe«; thence »tll\nwith »aid Klund4 land and the middle of\nthe ditch ««»nth 6 degree« west 4Vi perches\nto the M ir*h lane: »thence therewith.north\nVi*« decree« with H1^ perches in the other\nmanth meadow of «old Klund: t.hence with\nsaid Klund« land end the middle of the\nditch, nort.h 1R1^ degree» oa«t 19 3-5 per­\nches: thence »tin w^th »aid Klund*« land\nnorth 62 «legreee west «1-5 perche* 40 the\nsaid Wllham Forrest's land; thence with\n•th»* tend and the mldd'e of the dfctch north\n3*\\ «legrees e**t 1« 1-10 perche» to the top\nof the hank on Brandywine creek and\nplace of beginning. Cont«1nlng*'«lx «crew\n■and K8-100 of an acre of land, be tihe same\nmore or le«».\n3—A certain dot of hind «ituatted In\nBrandywine hundred. New Ca#Oe eowMy.\n beginning «t * line «tone in\nthe line separating hind« of Wm. C.\nTvodge from lam!» 'late of fhrlstlno Per­\nkin«. deceased, whleth «tone 1er set at ordi­\nnary high water mark on the bank of the\nDelaware river; *ihene« northwesterly\nalong »aid Wm. C . I/Odge« line 266 feet\nmore or ie*« to the right of way of bhe\nPhiladelphia* Wilmington wnd Baltimore\nrailroad; thence southwesterly »long the\n«nid Une of nntd railroad 150 feet 2H inches\nto a point whloh 1» 1BA feet from »aid\nTynlge« Mne measured bv a right angle\nline; thence »outhenatcrly and parallel\nwith Hwld T^odge» Mne. and 150 feet there­\nfrom. to low writer» mark n the poki-\nwire liver; theike nortt»e»*terlv and wt\nright angle* «to »aid la«t moaned Une 150\nfeet: thence nonhweeterly and at rlgh»\nangle« ito laid 1»«t named Une to ««Id\nline stone, being Khe nteoe of bogrlnnlng.\nseized and taken In execution a« the\nproper* v of A this Dredging Company, n\ncomoration of 'the State of Dois ware,\nand to be «od by
223adba4c014461583f89f23fdb8437c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.9712328450025 39.261561 -121.016059 Thjs Captubb of Bkaukokt.— Beaufort,\nSouth Carolina, was taken powession of by\nthe Federate about the 15th of November.\nA day or two previous, three gunboats\nwent up the river to prosper the place, and\nreported the town entirely deserted by the\nwhites. A Port Royal correspondent gives\nthis aceount of the condition of the town,\nand w hat they found there:\nSome score of the best houses were\namong others, those of Col. E. Rhett, Ur.F\nott and Col. Bramwell and every budding\nshowed evidences of the panic which had seised\nthe inhabitants, and the saturnalia of the ne-\ngroes after their departure. A few aged slaves\nafforded us some information. When it was\nknown that the rebels were in flight from their\nbatteries on Hilton Head and Bay Point, the\nwhites in Beaufort immediately commenced\nleaving. Piano fortes stood out on the side-\nwalks, guitars and other instruments lay in dif-\nferent stages of dilapidation upon the \nments, and the entire place seemed the very\npicture of ruin and desolation, We ordered\nthe negroes to show us the way to the arsenal,\nand here we found preperty belonging to Uncle\nSam which well repaid us for our journey. Inc\nentire Fresnel lighting apparatus formerly used\non Hunting Island and Martins Industry was\ndiscovered, in excellent condition, except tna\nthe massive brass work was somewhat tarnished\nfor want of cleaning. One light is revolving,\nthe other fixed, ana both apparatus were im-\nported for the purpose from France at a cost of\n87,000. As Commodore Dupont is desirous of\nimmediately laying down the buoys in this\ngreat harbor of Port Royal, and rendering it a\nsecure refuge and anchorage for shipping, 11\nwould scarcely be possible to over-estimate the\nvalue of our discovery. The entire machinery,\nlamps, burners, clock-work, etc. , are now safely\non board the Wabash, and will soon be replaced\nin their former place.
38a7f4f6a4d93d3e3fee2c913631855a DOUGLAS ISLAND NEWS ChronAm 1916.2226775640052 58.275556 -134.3925 Section 3. The assessor must, between xne\n)Oth day of June and the fourth Tuesday hi\nJuly of each vear. duly list all proj>erty in\nthe Town of Douglas subject to taxation for\nmunicipal purposes, and must duly assess\n. aid property at its just and fair value, to\nIbe person by whom it is claimed, owned, or\nin whose possession or control it was at 12\no'clock m. on the first flay of June in the\niame year, if known, or if unknown he shall\nassess said property to "unknown owners,"\nbut a mistake in the name of the owner or\nsupposed owner of the pro|»erty shall not\nrender the assessment thereof invalid.\nSection 4. On or before the fourth Tues¬\nday in July, of each year, the assessor\nmust complete his list, assessment and\nassessment book and must make and\nsubscribe an affidavit to his assessment\nbook that his assessment therein contained\nit a full, true and assessment of the\ntaxable property in the Town of Doug¬\nlas to the best of his knowledge and\nbelief for the year (stating it), and\nmust deliver said assessment book to the\nClerk of the Town, together with all listH.\nbooks, statements, charts and maps relative\nthereto, ancf take a receipt therefor.\nPrior to the delivery of sivid books to the\nTown Clerk, the assessor shall notify by post\nrard each and every person residing in the\ntown whose property has been assessed, and\nshall likewise notify all peraons whose prop-\nerty has been assessed and who reside else-\nwhere, provided that their address is known\nstating iu said notices the valuation- placed\nupon his real and personal property, that\nthe assessment for the year will be filed\nwith the Clerk of the Town on a certain day\n(naming it), and the date, time and place of\nthe meeting of the Common Council, sitting\nas a Board of Equalization.
050b28d5b9b1ad54d688d94766412adc CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1894.3794520230847 41.875555 -87.624421 Qunnnh Parker Is chief of tho\nComanches, says tho Littlo Hock\nUnzettc. Years ngo n wngon train\nwus nttneked In Texas by the raiding\nnnd marauding Comuuchcs und all\nbut ono infant girl killed. She was\nraised by tho chief and married his\nson, who, at tho death of his futhor,\nwus also chief. Hie rangers defeated\ntho Indians In n Imttlo nnd captured\nthe woman und her Infant child.\nSho could only talk Comaiicho and\nhad almost lost ull resemblunco to\ntho white race. Sho wus taken to\nIter people, but sho longed for her\nlndlun homo and her husband, nnd\nsoon pined away and died, Tho\nchild wiis put tit school nnd wns being\nraised ns a white child. Ho wus\nculled by tho name his mother wns\nalways saying "Quutiuh," tho nnmo\nof his father. A bitter wurfaro wns\nnil this tlmo kent up unremittingly.\nIt Is history thnt there wus always\nwar on tho border. At they\nsucceeded in recapturing tho child.\nHo wns much moro llko u white Her\neon In looks than his mother after her\nlong captivity, und ho also bnd tho\nways mid education of a white man.\nHo was chief when his father died\nand hus bcon for u number of years.\nHo held the surname of his mother,\nhaving un Indian given numo nnd nn\nEnglish surname. Owing to his edu-\ncation nnd his mother's trentment\nwhllo with them, ho hits always been\nfriendly to tho whites. Ho has done\nmuch to make pence, nnd is trying\nto chillzo his tribe. Ho favors and\nworks hard with his people for allot-\nment in sovoralty of their lauds, and\ntho sale of tho surplus to the govern-\nment. Ho recognizes the udvnntnges\nto his people from contact with tho\nwhlto man, und If tho Comanches\nover amount to anything In civiliza-\ntion It will bo duo to tlio efforts of\n(juuiiuh Parker.
207cedb617285d5aa342cf04ecf3f764 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.0123287354136 40.618676 -80.577293 cessively stringent regulation, heavy taxation, and\ndirect and indirect subsidization by government of\ntheir principal competitors — remain the same\nThere can be no real prosperity in America so long\nas an industry which spends billions a year for\nsupplies in normal times, which employs hundreds\nof thousands of well-paid workers, and on which\n\\ve depend for the transportation of the great bulk\nof the products of our farms and factories, can\nlook forward to nothing save increasing deficits.\nThe political problems affecting the public ser­\nvice industries are similarly unsolved. The politi\ncians do not seem to have any more damaging\ntrade treaties on the fire, but you never can tell.\nA cloud of price-boosting legislation hangs over\nthat field in which the consumer is most directly\ninvolved: retail distribution. The mass distribu­\ntion agencies of the nation, which have made such\nnotable strides in reducing costs of almost every\nnecessity and luxury of are under attack.\nShould these agencies be destroyed, as some ex\ntremists in Congress and elsewhere seem to de­\nsire, the effect will be to reduce the standard of\nliving of every one of those millions of families to\nwhich the budget problem is an ever-present wor­\nry. Here, then, is another great issue, directly af­\nfecting us all, that must be settled before national\nstability can become a fact instead of a hope.\nThe related problems of debt, taxation and\nfiscal policy are likewise a drag on progress.\nThough we are now carrying the heaviest tax bur­\nden in our history, the national debt goes steadily\nhigher. Investors are frightened, money needed\nfor industrial expansion cannot be obtained in ad­\nequate amounts—and again depression is further­\ned. The average individual does not yet realize that\nwhen a treasury check is signed in Washington it\nis in effect drawn against his own savings and in­\ncome.
2f239c73ed59d28af5644cac42f36a37 CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1903.2315068176054 39.623709 -77.41082 there were not more beyond the shores al\nSpain than the fifteenth century yet knew\nof, or much farther than the world wns\nalong astronomically when David shep-\nherded his Hocks and musingly watched\nlb* stirs hovering above the Judean hills.\nAud we should be stimulated in the di-\nrection of coming into closer quarters with\nthe sublime facts of the spiritual world—\nGod, tool aqd all the eternals, if we would\nkeep closer company with those impulses\nof oil's, those spiritual appetites, that in-\nstinctively lean and extend themselves in\nthe direction of that suspected but un-\nknown world. There is not an impulse yet\ndetected iu our nature, whether physical\nor menial, that has not been found in\ncourse of time to be co-related with some-\nthing outside that precisely matches it.\nThirst means that there is water, and the\nwater is there wailing. The eye means\nthat there is light, and flic light is there\nwaiting. The budding interrogation iu the\n mind means that there is truth, and\nthe truth is there waiting. So far as we\nhave yet gone the inward impulse lias\nshown' itself to bo an infallible prophecy\nof an outward reality that perfectly fits it.\nAnd those great longings of flic soul that\nswell within as in our best and freest mo-\nments, so gnat sometimes as to lie beyond\nour power to articulate, these, too, it is\nfoolish and stupid in us to treat as less\ntrustworthy and infallible than are the\nquieter appetences of the intelligence nt\nthe coarser instincts of the body. There is\nno safe creed 1lint, does not start in witli\na confession of faith in ones own superb\nself—superb in the sense of being gifted\nwith powers 1-hnt put him in direct rela-\ntion with tlic rocks under him, the air\nabout him, (lie great God overhead, and\nthe eternal realm of Spirit, human ami di-\nvine. And that gives a man something to\ngo upon.
2476ec76639264da7a0fb124dd6400ab THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1878.3630136669203 40.063962 -80.720915 Niw Yobk, May 10..Bishop McCos-\nkry hu sent the following letter to Bishop\nSmith, of Kentucky, the presiding Bishop,\nwho has, in conseqence, revoked his call\nfor a special meeting of the House of\nBishops for June 17:\nNew York, May 4,1K&..Right Rer-\ntrend and Bear Brother: 1 hereby with¬\ndraw my letter resigning the jurisdiction\nof the Diocese of Michigan, dated March\n11,1878, and I beg to inform you that I\nhave abandoned my intended trip to\nEurope in conaequence of painful events\nof recent occurrence. It is my purpose\nto remain in the country for the present,\nin order that I may be easily accessible to\nall whose duty it may be to see me. With\nthe strongest desire to vindicate my\ncharacter, 1 find it impossible to meet\ncharges which have taken no >ahape ex¬\ncept vague and varied one put before\nthe public by. newspaper rumors and\nabusive goeeip. Reiterating my emphatic\nand solemn denial of all the scanualoua\nallegations against me, I hold mjself\nready to meet any definite charge made\nby any responsible parties.in comformity\nwith Title II., Canon 9, Section 2, Sub¬\nsection 1, of the Digest. The above course\nof action, I am authorized to say, meets\nwith the approval of those brethren of\nthe Episcopate whom I have had the op¬\nportunity of consulting. I began this note\noy announcing the withdrawal of my res¬\nignation. I conclude it by saying that\nthis is done to give opportunity for the\nvindication of my character. So soon as\nthis end shall be attained, my reaignation\nwill be renewed, because of my increas¬\ning physical infirmities. Most faithfully\nand affectionately, yours,
a1f6ccfe7694d102aeaa0bf8e9acf5ea OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1856.8838797497976 39.513775 -121.556359 \\C.\\RI)—Prompted hy an honest desire of my\nheart, I wish lo lay heloro llio piddle n earn\nwhich ilosorvr* a high eominmidiilinn, not only a* an\ntuU ol seionldU* skill, lint that rl lot nanny also. Aluuit\ntwo yours ago, I suddoidy, and from ennsr* unkmtxxn\nto nio. *ol/od with a 111 of it|illo|i-y.xvhieh, owing to\nmy inahilily lo moi l llio exponso* eoii*o*|uent upon a\nthorough nirdhud trouliuent,and the ■lisi onriigoinoiil\nI mot xx iih mi altoinpting it, soon heeanir *urlt in* I\nwas llini lod lo IndieVo) a* lo ilofy tho skill ol a phy-\nsician. 1 was Iroquoully whilo in nitrsud of rny rail\ning, thrown down lo the ground without the *nclitosl\nwarning, and although Insensihlo lo tho agonn■*. I\nyet despised the miseries of my life,nnd *ooli lonriinl\nlo look upon those xvho would nuidor me assistant'll\nor slndp me from danger usumunies who sought to\nprolong ihe miseries of my existence. \\\\ Idle in lids\nMale, mid having previous lo my althclinn lasted Hid\nswiols of life, 1 once mure was indtici d In attempt\nseeking aid of n jihysielan,nnd. hy recommendation,\ncalled upon Dr. LJ. I 'sapkii. 1 told him rny cir\ncuiostances and my inahilily to reward Idm for his\nservices, regardless ot which, however, he at once\nundertook my cose, and with Ihe blessing of Hod I\nwas once more restored to perfect health. Unable\nto reward him for the boon which I enjoy «l present,\nand yet conscious of my indebtedness. I consider it\ndue io myself and to all the atftictcd to make Ihe case\npublic, in' order thill those in need of medical advice\nmay find a physician in w hom every confidence can\nhe placed
09bcc4c2709d9ec7b93b3fd1af9daf86 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.2561643518518 40.063962 -80.720915 TBg Oaiam CF THS SOUS SVSTBM.\nMr. Spencer's reasoning w«s aubstant\nall; as followa: Oiven a mus o[ dlffusi\nmatter, luch ai we And in an existing n\nbula, what would be its action 1 Belt\nat tlrat la a nearly homogeneous conil\nUoD| as renrdilcomtltution and dooslt;\nthe mutual attraction of its atoms woul\ntend towards a concentration about tl)\ngeneral centre of gravity. At first its pri\ngresB would be slow, sinco Its eitreni\ntenuity of aggregation implies a wide dii\ntrlbutfon of matter through a vast reglo\nofspaco, and a consequent feebleness <\nattraction among its constituent partlclet\nMoreover, the condensation of matter in\nvolves the production of heat, whicb\nuntil dissipated by radiation into gut\nrounding space, would counteract th\ngravitating tendency of the nebular sub\nstance. This, however, being graduall;\novercome, the atoms of matter would ap\nproach toward contact, until between cer\nlain masses chemical union wonld occui\nBut chemical implies molecula\nmotion or the disengagement ol heat, am\nwill impart a greatly Increased tempera\nlure to the condensing body. The com\nbination of atoms produces molecules\nwhich by Iheit superior gravity will teni\nto collect in masses or floccoli, dense\nthan tbe idrrounding matter. These floe\ncull, from their greater weight, will no?\nmove fatter towards tbe common centr\nof cravitv. not in dirppt linpa.sin*\nthe lighter ana more slowly mot\ning medium will offer resist\nance,.but in a curved or indirect route\nwhose direction will lie determined by th\nshape of the mass, and the character c\ntho surface It will present to tho opposing\nmedium, much aB a sheet of piper or i\nkite will act in falling through the air\nBut it will soon happen that the large.\nJocculi, or those whose shape gives then\nwhile tailing, the greatest angular veloci\n',y, will cause the surrounding medium t(\ngradually yield to this inward and
1619a232ba6ecfcc612936b8aef85791 THE CAIRO EVENING BULLETIN ChronAm 1869.2999999682902 37.005796 -89.177245 struction of said road, and may Issuo\nbonds in such sums as they may deem\nsufficient in payment of such subscrip-\ntions to said stock, or ef such donations,1\nsaid bonds not to bear a greater rate of,\nInterest than ten per cent, per annum,\npayable either within tho State, or at\nso in point without the same, and not to\nrun longer than thirty years, and a tax\nof not more than one dollar on each hun-\ndred dollars' worth of taxable property\nmay bo levied and collected in tuch town,\ncity, county or township, per annum, to\npay tho instalments on such, stock or do-\nnation, or to pay the interest and princi-\npal, or either, of bonds Issued in pay-- ,\nmeut of such stock or donation, and said\ntowns, cities, counties or towushlps, may\ndonate any swamp or overflowed lands,\nor tho proceeds thereof, or any other dis-\nposable property In aid of the construc-\ntion of said rpad, provided thut no such\nsubscription or donation shall be made,\nno such bonds shall be Issued, no\nsuch tux shall bo levied unless a majori-\nty of the leKul voters of said town, city,\ncounty or township, shall voto for the\nsame, at an election to be held under the\norder of tho corporate authorities In cases\nof towns and cities, and of tho 'county\ncourt in cases of counties or supervisors\nof townships as is now urovlded for by\nlaw, or as may bo hereafter provided for;\nand proviueu rurtucr, mat a majority 01\nlegal voters at any such election shall bo\nheld as a majority of the legal voters of\nof any such township, town, city or coun-\nty, and that tho questions of making a\nsubscription or donation, of issuing\nbonus ami laying taxes, may oc submit-\nted as one question, or as separate ques-\ntions at such election, and cither or all\nof said qucstl6bs may be submitted loan\nelection at any time iu the discretion of\ntho parties authorized to call such an\nelection; thirty duys notice of such elec-\ntion to bo given as in cases of county\nelections.
042bf8864de9e58542a7dea42bf82f43 THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1892.632513629579 43.994599 -72.127742 McKinley hill having had a chance to be\ntried is proving to be for the best\ninterests of the country This is very\nevident to all honest readers and ob-\nservers. But yet there has been nothing\nto make a decisive mark in that direc-\ntion. All parties expect the coming\nelection in v erinont to mate that de-\ncisive mark to be the index finger to\npoint the course for the future. Of\ncourse Vermont will be republican,\nbut a majority ol only fifteen thousand\nwould indicate that democracy and\nfree trade are to prevail, while a ma\njority of twenty thousand and up-\nwards would surely indicate that the\nwhole country is swiftly swinging\nback to its faith in Harrison and pro-\ntection as exhibited four years ago.\nThere are republicans enough in\nVermont to give a majority of thirty\nthousand in September if all vote.\nLet no man who loves his country stay\naway from the polls at that time. A\nlarge majority for the republican can-\ndidate for governor means encourage-\nment to all over the anion.\nand discouragement to democracy.\nLet every man resolve that he will be\non hand himself and see that his neigh-\nbors do not stay at home. It is said\nwith too much truth that republicans\nare fair weather politicians. Seme of\nour friends express dissatisfaction\nwith the new ballot law, and a few\neven go so far as to say they will not\nvote at all. This is hardly the decis\nion of a reasonable man. The act of\nvoting is very simple under the new\nlaw and there need be no trouble or\nmistake about it. Let every voter be\non hand and he will find the wav made\nvery plain and easy for him to vote for\nwhom he wishes, and no one the wiser.\nIn Massachusetts where the Australian\nballot law has been tried all are pleas-\ned with it. It is simple enough for\nthe voters provided the officers do\ntheir duty as they probubly wil'.\nDon't fail to vote for state and conntv\nofficers town reprcMiutative and jus\ntices.
10c4257c21e97aae62703f2a066e4170 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.519178050482 40.063962 -80.720915 From the Chicago Tribune, Julu 5th.\nIt is time tliat the public mind, f\nleast of the Western, Southwestern »n\nPacific States, were definitely turned t\nthe question of the future location c\nour National Capital as one demanding\nnot merely discussion, but speedy a<\ntion. When the National Capital wa\nlocated at Washington, Louisiana, in\nclnding its undefined trans-Mlssiasipf\nterritory, had not been purchased frot\nFrance. The Union consisted of a nai\nrow belt of Slates running alon\nthe Atlantic from Maine to Ueorgii\nPhiladelphia was very nearly the oea\nter of territory and population. Wash\nington, therefore, was as near as neei\nbe to the centres of both popuiatio\nand area, and seemed likely to becom\nneareras area and population increaset\nOur center of population has slue\nmoved westwurd very near the clt\nof Columbus, Ohio, and our center c\narea is, by a singular coincidence c\nnames, at an unbullty city of Coluun\nbus, on the lino of the Union Paclfi\nrailway, one hundred and twenty mile\nwest of Omaha. Our center ol populu\ntion will approach our center of are\nquite rapidly for some years yet, bu\nwill never yeach it, and pobabiy wil\nnever go farther to the west or sout\nthan St. I^onis. However great uia;\nbe the growth of the country west c\nthe Missouri, 1L can never sustain s\ndense a population as that to thd est\nof it. The arguments founded on cen\nCralitj/ of area and population utiich le\na former generation to locate the capita\nat Washington, now prevail in favor o\n,S't. Louis,
0688b6be8202899f77db172bbb81ab10 THE DAILY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1907.0561643518517 35.072562 -98.243663 In tho Now York markot Italian\nPavonazza nevor soils for less thnn\n?12 por cubic foot. It is a badly shat-\ntered marble. Tho Stevens couuty\nmnrblo duplicates all of tho Italian\nmarkings, surpasses It in beauty, pre-\nsents a perfect solidity, and can bo\nqunrrled and sold in New York for tt\nlcr cubic foot with a not profit of\n?3.70 per cubic foot.\nTho beds from which this matchless\nmarblo comes rlso from tho sandy flats\nof tho river, nppenrlog in somo places\nin long, unbroken slopes up which ono\nmny climb to a height of D00 to 700\nfoot abovo tho rlvor level, traveling\non solid marblo all tho way. Thoso\nslopes aro In many places smooth and\nsolid, tho pattorn of tho marblo show-\ning unbroken nt tho surfneo. In othor\nplnccs tho mnrblo rises abovo tho\nriver level in great bluffs, ono abov\nnnother. In mnny places tho marblo la\nfound in smooth floors at tho summits\nand In broad slopes drooping to tho\n banks. At tho surfaco it is re-\nmarkably solid, indicating that tho\nbeds Ho undisturbed to n great depth,\nIts broad, unbroken surfaco of whlto\ndisplaying bold marking of bluo and\nJot black. Frequently tho top of tho\nmass can bo found floors an aero in\noxpanso which nro as smooth, hard\nand ovon as a rolled and leveled h"\nphalt pavements.\nA great deal of tho marblo at tbol\nsurfaco Is cream tinted nnd Is crossed!\nwith Jet blnck veins, resembling lr\npnttorn tho fnmous Pnvonnzza marbl\not Italy, but much moro solid nnd hi\nfree from tho pit holes which damage!\ntho Italian product. It takes an ex-- l\ntromoly high polish and retains it, and I\nits toxturo Is douse, uniform and very!\nflno crystalllno, showing In many!\nplaces marked transluconcy. Thoro Is'\nono tract nlono of this mnrblo destined\nto rlvnl tho Pnvonnzza which contains\n1,310 acres nnd which Is cnpablo of\nproducing tho finest mnihlo for cen-\nturies to como without exhausting tho\nsupply.
0c196b03bb8a4b52c1a7edf083e2c811 THE GARLAND GLOBE ChronAm 1910.2890410641805 41.741039 -112.161619 Republicans In congress are spec-\nulating a good while in advance,\nIt la true, as to what the Dem\nocrats will do if they secure control ol\nthe lower house in the Sixty-s eco n- d\ncongress. The Democrats themselves1\nare consulting privately as to what\nwill be best for them to do If they\ncome Into a partial possession of the\nlegislative fat of the land.\nThere is practically no chance thai\nthe sennte of the United States can\nbecome Democratic before the yeai\n1913, when a new administration alsc\nwill take hold of the reins of power\nTherefore If the present minority\nparty should become the majority In\nthe house in 1911 It could not hope\nto secure the passage of much legls\nlation that would receive the sanction\nof the senate and the president.\nSome of the Democrats say that th\nbest thing that their party can do il\nIt In getting control of th\nhouse is to start straight at the work\nof formulating and passing an out and\nout downward revision tariff measure\nthen to send It over to the senate tc\nbe killed. Tho militant Democrats\nsay enthusiastically that this 'Is the\nonly way to impress on the country\nthat they they are true to their old\nstandards and that they believe the\nway to decrease the price of living Is\nto attack high prices through the high\ntariff. Some of the prominent minor\nIty members believe that If on com\ning Into power in the house the Demo\ncrats pass a tariff bill that the conn\ntry, seeing that they have the courage\nof their convictions, and having come\nto the belief that the tariff Is toe\nhigh, will see to It that a Democratic\nsenate is returned and that a Demo\noratlc president is elected to succeed\nWilliam H. Taft.
65c47b9fac4ef800e1b522958b6457d4 UNION COUNTY COURIER ChronAm 1913.1383561326738 42.68333 -96.683647 The men were convicted last Thurs­\nday of having violated the criminal\nsection of the Sherman anti-trust law.\nOne of the defendants was gi ven\nthree months in jail, while three oth­\ners were sentenced to nine months and\nthe rest to one year.\nGeorge Hdgener, of Dayton, Ohio,\nseeretai-% of the company, was given\nthe lightest sentence, of three months.\nWilliam Blphun. treasurer: Alfred A.\nThomas, of Dayton, and Jonathan H.\nHay ward, of New York, were given\nnine months in jfcJi. The following\nwere sentenced to f>ne year:\nEdward A. Deeds, Dayton, vice pres­\nident; William A. Musxy. Dayton;\nWilliam Pflum, Dayton; Robert Hat-\nterson. director; Thomas H. Watson,\nsales manager; Joseph JB. Rogers, as­\nsistant sales manager: Alexander C.\nHarned, salesman; Frederick S. High,\ndistrict manager, lioston; Pliney Eves,\ndistrict manager, San Francisco; Ar­\nthur A. Wenter, Columbus; George li.\nMorgan. Charles T. Walmeley,\nChicago; Charlen A. Snyder. Elisabeth.\nN. J .; Walter Cool. Denver; Myer N.\nJacobs. Pittsburgh: Mont 1., l„astlv.\nDetroit; Karl 11. Wilson, Lt>» Angeles;\nAlexander W. Sinclair. New York;\nJohn J. Range. Washington; \\V. J*.\nKeith, New York: William Cummins.\nBrooklyn: J. e. Laird, Toronton; W. C.\nHowe, San Francisco; £. H. Epper-\nson. Minneapolis.\nBefore passing sentence Judge llol-\niister, denied the motion of the de­\nfendants for a new trial and declared\nthe defence had toihruUted no new evi­\ndence, he had come to the conclusion\nthat the verdict had been upheld.\nThe bond of President Patterson was\nincreased to $10,000. the securities of the\nother defendant* remaining the same.\nFormal notice of an appeal to the\nI'nited States circuit court was given\nby attorneys for the defendants and the\nappeal Is expected to be filed within\na few days.
b970d893ea493f84f241dd010f2bd6cd NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1929.3493150367833 41.681744 -72.788147 Mrs. Yarosh testified that she\nneeded 615 a week for the support\nof the children, whose ages are 11,\n9. and 8 years. She did not know\nwhere her husband was until she re-\nceived a letter from him In Passaic\nabout ten weks ago. Later he came\nhome and gave her 87. and at Easter\ntime he gave her $10. About eight\nweeks ago he gave her 820 and on\nMonday this week he gave her $5.\nIn reply to Attorney Irving I,\nRachlin, who represented Yarosh.\nMrs. Yarosh said he had never been\narrested until yesterday but he often\ndeserved to be punished for beating\nIng her. They have been married 12\nyears, she said, and own two houses\nin Plainville which he built. She tried\nto help him by working, because\nthey lost one piece of property when\nthey lived In Seymour and of the\nreasons she would not go to Passaic\nwas her fear that they would lose\nthe Plainville property.\nYarosh testified that he went to\nPassaic because he could not find\nwork as a carpenter in New Britain\nand he did npt care to work in\nfactory for 40 or 45 cents an hour,\nas he had many bills to meet. He\nwas willing to have his wife and\nchildren live with him In Passaic,\nor he would take the children there\nif his wife did not want to go. He\naccused her of being neglectful of\nthe children but Judge Traceskl re-\nmarked that the appearance of the\ntwo who were in court indicated that\nthey were well cared for.\nAfter court, Mr. and Mrs. Yarosh\nindulged In a battle of words, each\naccusing the other of infidelity.\nJohn H. Cray, 17, of 15 Tuttle
429a508086de0965190f76c51e16c6f6 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1858.9246575025368 39.369864 -121.105448 The lessons of economy and retrench-\nment so severely tanght our extrava-\ngant brethren of the Atlantic States du-\nring the great financial revulsion, maybe\nstudied and practiced advantageously\nby thousands of our own mountain prod-\nigals. Our recklessness has gained us\na very unenviable notoriety; our disso-\nlute habits, intemperance, and gaming\nproclivities have become proverbially\ncharacteristic. Nor, at the present time\ncan we perceive any material diminution\nin the prevalent evils which so grievous-\nly afflict and curse us, notwithstanding\nthe numberless essays and sermons, sa-\ntires and editorials that have flowed\nfrom brains of nearly every calibre till\nthe subject has become hackney'd and\n“familiar in our—ears—aa" bar-room\nwords. Strange it is, but none the less\ntrue, that our deplorable follies and ex-\ncesses are in a great measure attributa-\nble an extreme phase of the Ameri-\ncanism “Go-ahead-ativeness”—to which\nslow-plodding industry and economy are\ninvariable antagonisms. It is really\ncurious and lamentable that a national\ntrait, the very soul of our unparalleled\nprogression, the grand basis of our pres-\nent eminence and prosperity, should be-\ncome prolific of so much evil and ruin\nwhen perverted or mis-directed.\nBut the consequences are palpable\nand inevitable. Instead of striving per-\nseveringly for the rewards of laudable\nambition, we indulge in erratic flights\nbeyond the pale of legitimate enterprise,\nand pursue glittering bubbles and\nWill-'o-the-wisps in the realm of reck-\nless hazard and rash speculation. Our\nrestless and impatient desire for sudden\naffluence has become a chronic passion,\namounting in many instances to abso-\nlute infatuation, whereby we are ren-\ndered deaf to the dictates of common
39f009fe354cd00f213b5e5c73a998a7 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.519178050482 32.408477 -91.186777 t reasonably large room, but so dimly\nlighted as to be scarcely visible from\nend to end. I could discern men pres-\nent, a number of them, lounging about\non chairs, their outlines being fairly\nrevealed, but the light was not sum-\nclent to glyv, me any impression of\ntheir faces. It seemed quite possible\nthat I might slip In unobserved, and\npasr among them unrecognized except\nthrough arccident. But the risk of dis-\ncovery was too great. I must find some\nother point of entrance.\nThe private doorway through which\nWine has disappeared gave me the\nthought that there might also be oth-\ners. I dare not follow after him, but\nif there was another opening to be\nfound I was perfectly willing to ex-\nplore into its mysteries. The search\nwas brief, yyt the very nature of the\nrough board wall made concealment\nimpossible. Iehind the dangling coats\nI uncovered what I sought, and not a\nmoment too Even as my hand\ntouched the exposed latch, a murmur\nof voices la the outer entry reached\nmy ear--there were new arrivals be-\ning questioned. and admitted.\nThe panel slid back silently in its\ngrooves, and I peered through the re-\nVealed opening into absolute darkness.\nAll I could be sure of, as exhibited by\nthe dim light of the passage. was a\nalnxie step downward, and then ap-\nparently a strip of earth Boor. I dare\nnot wait and meet those entering;\nthere was but one choice of action. I\npressed through thq orifice, forced the\npanel hack into playe, and stood erect\nin the intense darkness and silence,\nlistening for the slightest sound.\nI was still motionless, my heart\nbeatang fiercely, when several men en-\ntered the passage I had just left.\nPrsslng my ear against the thin crack\nI distinguished words so as to piece\ntogether scraps of conversation. It\nseemed to me there were three voices
3fc77a1915bee95996e111dedc3abf2f DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1915.9356164066464 44.939157 -123.033121 The value of tho lands is inestimable\nfor they are the gateway to ocean com\nmerce. That tho railroad deems them\nof great value goes without saying,\nand there is no reason why taxation\nshould be further delayed.\nThe facts are that the railroad ic\nplaying fast and loose with the public\nIt has filed with the assessor of Lincoln\ncounty an alleged list of pnrt of its\nholdings, but in most cases the listr\ncover lands that are being occupied and\nused Dy private owners, and its obvious\npurpose in offering to pay taxes on\nthose tracts ia to dofeat the private\ntitles therein. But for large areas, of\nunoccupied tide and marsh lands on\nYnquiua and Alsea bays and their trib-\nutaries, which it claims to own and to\nwhich in any other than a tax proceed-\nings great value bo attached, it\nis making no return to the assessor.\nIn viow of these circumstances I be\nlieve your honorable commission should\ntake steps towards having these lands\nplaced on our tax rolls. Tho plain citi-\nzen when he buys a tract of tide laud\nfrom tho state is compelled to submit\nto assessment and taxation. Why, there-\nfore, should this magnificent grant to\nthe railroad stand exempt t\n"A great deal of sympathy is be-\ning wasted on this same railroad in\nsome quarters today, oVer tho losses it\nis said to have sustnined in connection\nwith tho taxation of the O. & C . lnnd\ngrant. Rome of the energy now being\napplied in this quarter would hotter\nserve the peopl if devoted towards\nseeing the railroad pay its fair share\nof the taxes on its Lincoln county hold-i ngn- .
0f9f29fba9f03092c206ab39451fa874 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.7547944888381 40.063962 -80.720915 The question Is sometimes asked,\nwhy the regular profession are so utltP\nwhy they do not-seek oul aud cultiyate\nthe acquaintance aud friendship of\nthese outside, irregular doctors.men\nof wide-spread reputation who are so\noften noticed in newspapers and hand¬\nbills, aud whom so muny.rjeh and re-\nspeotnbK> people follow after and em¬\nploy. We do not take them iuto our\nconfidence, and treat them as profes¬\nsional brothers, for the same reason\nthat we would not advise a young lady\nto take a drunken man into her confi¬\ndence, aud marry him with the expecta¬\ntion that she could make a good hus¬\nband out of him after She got him in\nher possession. We expect iu these\ncases, though there may be exceptions\nto the general role, to fiud, somewhere,\na screw loose that should hold the\nmoral machinery together, that we\ncannot fasten. Besides if we have a\nfriend and fellow traveler, we desire\nhiin to travel the same road and under\nthe same colors that we do, and \nstraggle oil upon straiigq roads, into\nstrange places atid-amoug strange com¬\npany that we kuow nothing about, for\nwo niHy find ourselves iu trouble some¬\ntime when we least expect it. Still\nsome of onr respectable ladies will\nmarry druuken men, and some of our\nrich, respectable arid leading "citizens\nwill follow after and patronize these\nempirics who travel through the land,\nhunting fools to give them money.\nWe often meet .with-men .who seem to\nhave good souseftb'OOt some tbiiigS; but\nexhibit an almost entir« l»MJk of it. in\nothers. We know inert' who 'are wise\nenough not to call on u blacksmith to\nrepair a valuable watch, or a sailor to\nmake a suit of tine clothes, who will\ntravel the country over hunting old\nwomen, Indian doctors, spiritualists,\ncaucer-curers, and such doctors gener¬\nally as make great pretensions aud\npromises to repair either some real or\nimaginary Ailments of their own bodies,\nwhich they lear are hurryiug them to\nthat country where moueyand worldly\npower are of no avail.
2422fcf9dcfbc53f0df74f3908a773ad EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1894.0890410641807 39.745947 -75.546589 Galleries Dangerously Crowded.\nTbe crowding in at the doors, however,\ncontinued until Speaker Crisp, who had\niieen nervously uoting the dangerous pack­\ning of |>eople, interrupted the roll call long\nenough to say that it waa in the Interest of\nsafety to human life that the dooyway\nshould be cleared. He Asked tbe doorkeep­\ner of the gallery to\nclear out some of\nthose wbo stood iu\ntbe entrances, so\nas to make those\nalready inside as\ncomfortable as\npossible without\nbeing iu danger.\nIt was next to im­\npossible, however,\nto at once execute\nthis order, as there\nwas absolutely no\nroom for the eject\nment of those who\nhad found entrance into the aisles, but tha\npolicemen kept pressing back tbe people\nuntil they had materially reduced the dan­\nger that was so very apparent. When Mr.\nReed, the first speaker, aroee at last to de­\nliver the final plea for protection, the over­\nhanging galleries were black and dense\nwith spectators who them. Ev­\nery Inch of space upon the floor was taken.\nIt was a brilliant as well as a large as­\nsembly. Only 10 of the 854 members of the\nhouse were absent. Many grave senators\nand other distinguished personages wera\non the floor, and in the galleries were Mrs.\nCleveland, Mrs. Vice President Stevenson\nand other ladias of eminence and dlstlno-\ntion. mB\nthe champions of the two economic sys­\ntems followed—Heed, Crisp and Wilson—\nwhile their partisans made the air vocal\nwith their shouts of approval.\nThe appearance of the speaker of the\nhouse upon the floor engaged in debate\nwas in itself a remarkable as well as an un­\nusual thing. Each of the speakers seemad\nto be in bis best form, and the speeches\nwhich they delivered will rank among tbe\nmost brilliaut of their Urea When these\nwere finished, Mr. Wilson, who spoke laet,\nwas lifted on the shoulders of hia admiring\ncolleagues and carried triumphantly from\nthe ball amid a scene of unmatched enthu­\nsiasm.
66510e85b9ffad7870dcf5185c6d06ee THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 it T II KltKAS, u lltiel Iiiih been flits I In the\n\\\\ District Court of the United Slates\nthe District of Went Ylrv;iiilu, on tin Slh dnv\nn| July, Wti, hy Inn let. II. fterry it I it 1 Wll\nham lv. \\V*Htiii.Willlam II Dunlciy, I hone\nW heeli mni KIUn«l»'th Dnnlcxy, imitmi\nIII hllsllless uildel Ihe (Inn lUUne alaf style nf\nImnlcvx A <o., njrjdlist Ihe ~teanii«i.il "Dll.\nCITY." her elimnes, n|t|Mii I. tackle, outllt,\nanil ruiuUuiv, mid uitaiiisl nil ix-istiii Inter-\n\\eldin' Ini iheir mleresls therein, Inrthe mi-\nson* e.iid eiuist in Mild hl« I uunUonisI, and\npraying themmil |ihid-sh and umnlilnns ni\nthcMiid ft turf in that In half In lie tnade. ami\nthat all jN-rsniis Intcrc'lisl III Haiti sti-amlmid,\nilei eiiiilin n | >| til ni, tinkle, outllt, alul tin\nlilllllt llUiy liccilcil 1" HUSH 1 the plcinist\nami all Ih-Iiii' had. that tlulMild\nsteamtxsd. Ini enitlin appunj, tackle, out til\nami furnllure, may Inrljlie eaus< in suit I Ills I\nlliclllotasl, Itcixiudclillicd ami snld In I sty tin\ndemands nl III* ' libellant* .\nNull', lla lefnle, in pursuance <*1 lilt- llinll-\nitlnn under Ihe st-al nl Ihe salt I I null In Hie\ndireeteil ntltl dellvcrrsl. I tl " herein tiixe\nlie In*tiis' In all |h rsnlrs claiiniliu the said\nsteamboat, her cnelne*,tackle,outfit, apparel\nami furniture, nr in any manner inti rcstisl\ntin rein, that they l«- and nitpcar l« fore the\nmid IHsiil. Court to lie licit! in and Mr the\n1 >i li n t nl W'i st Vlivlnia, on W edlicsdity, tin-\nJi.th tiny nl July. !*■>, :d Undock in the.-\niiiMiimi that duy. dl tile Hume shall lie a day\nnljurlsillelloll, nllk IMise nil the next daX nl\n<
020e33f4de403c4c481d88531de456ca THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1875.5520547628107 40.063962 -80.720915 In Kansas, Nebraska, Minnesota and\nIowa the reports show that the crop will\nbo largely in excess of last year. In the\ntwo first named States the depredations\nof the grasshoppers have been slight\nl/nless some unfooked for calamity occurs\nthe producers will realize a far greater\nreturn for their labor than ever Before.\nIn Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio. Mis-\nsouri, and the eastern States, there is\nuverv nriMiwct of a far better viold than\nheretofore, and the production will be\nfar in excess of tho consumption. The\nnroduct in these hIoIch is represented is\nbeing much superior in qualify to that\nof former yearn. It is notable that (or\ntho first time in twelve years the South\nwill raise sufficient bresdstuffii for home\nconsumption. This will, of course, re*\nlieve the £forth from tne necessity of\nshipping grain in that direction, ana en*\nable us to supply the deficiency in the\nEuropean markets. Oats promises an\nextraordinary yield in some sections\nheavy rains that hove faillen recently\nhave the grain somewhat, and the\nchintx bug elsewhere caused some damage,\nbut there is every indication that tue\nyield will be 45 to GO bushels to the acre\nand in invny sections much larger. Rye\nand ttarley promises well. These crops\nare not extensively grown, but there li\nevery indication that the supply will be\nfully equal to the demand, torn is not\nyet matured in the northwest.\nin Alabama. Mississippi, Georgia and\nsome parts of Arkansas and Tennessee\nthe crop has been harvested and are more\nabundant than for many years.\nIn Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Ohio and\nIndiana tho crop is backward, but unless\nfrosts should occur previous to the mid-\ndle of Hepteuiber there is no reason to\napprehend a short crop.\nIn Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan\nthe backwardness of the crop is audi that\nthere is little hope of more than half a\ncrop, but as these Htates raise but little\ncorn the diminution of the crop there\nwill have but little influence on tue sup*
13cb5b899b539975aa5d230c58b06e19 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.5109588724 40.063962 -80.720915 We would especially, at this time,\ndesire to rail upon our souls and all\nthat is within us, to laud and magnify\nThy name for the great and marvelous\nvictory which Thou liast recently grant¬\ned u«-- over these wicked and seditious\nmen who sought the destruction of the\nnation's life ami the overthrow of its\ninfluence for good in the w^orld. We\nacknowledge and bewail our sins on\naccount of which Thou didst hide Thy\nface and permit this heavy trial and\ncalamity to l>efall us. O, Lord, we have\nsinned, both we aud our rulers, in fail¬\ning to recognize and improve Thy mer¬\ncies as we should have done, iu pro¬\nfaning Thy name, desecrat ing Thy Sab¬\nbaths and too frequently dishonoring\nThee in the character of those elected\nto enact, interpret and execute our\nlaws. Our falsehood, fraud and lust,\nour pride, oppression and intemperance\nhave culled long and loud for Thy dis¬\npleasure. It is of Thy mercy we are\nnot consumed. We pray that we may\nbe duly sensible of the demerit of these\nour misdoings, and that forsaking our\n we may with hearty repentance\nand true feith turn to Tnoe who host\nthus permitted us.to 1>e so sorely umitf-\nten and who alone'can heal us.\nWe bless Thee that there is mercy\nwith Thee, that Thou inayest be feared,\nand for the many tokens of that mercy\nof which we have been the unworthv\nund yet highly fawrd recipients. We\nbless Thee for the iiiuatrious und noble\nstatesmen, patriots aud warriors,\nwhom, in the hour of darkness and ad-\nI versitv, Thou did'st raise up, qualify\naud appoint for the suppression of trea¬\nson and the defense ot freedom, £right-\neousness and truth. We bless Thee for\nthe wisdom of their counsels, and the\nheroic skill and valor of their arms,\nwhich, on land and sea, at length lias\nbrought us victory and peace. We\ngive gloiy to Thee,*0 Lord Slost High,\nlor the lofty and intelligent patriotism\nwhich so generallv and generously\nstirred the hearts ot* young and old,- ot\nmen and women, and which, in the\nmoment of supreme decision, led to the\nspeedy establishment, equipment and\nperformance of such armies and navies
30e2355049e77b770e3b1ebf090aedf1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1874.0890410641807 40.063962 -80.720915 do I think the theory of psychic lore\nadvanced and argued ao Ingeniously ar\nably by a committee of scientific me\nbefore the Dialectical Society of l Loodc\na year or ao ago, will meet the difficult!\nol the question. I belter# also that tl\nexplanation cannot be nude by any lav\nor principles ol pure phyiictl aclenc\nThere waa Intelligence in many ol tt\nanswers we reaeived, and physical lav\ndo not ascend to, nor exert an Influent\nIn the domain ol intelligence, thought\nan J, memory. Neither do 1 believe\npossiblo to make the explanation bytt\nordinaYylaws ol psychology or me la\nphysics. It seems clear to me that w\nmust transcend tho ordinary laws an\nlimits by, and In which the hums\nmind operates for our explanstioi\nI believe it mnst be accounte\nfor by. tho agency of tpirits. Tht\nfar the so-called Spiritualist will g\nhamlluband with us. But what ipirii\n«al power Is It? Here will part <jon\npany with us. From this point to th\nend ol my argument I quote the Bible e\nauthority. 1 assume that its testimou\nwill bo regarded by all Christiana as au\nthoritative on this subject, whether th!\nbe regarded as a scientific question or no\nOn the authority of the Bible we cann<\nadmit, with the Spiritualist, that tliej\nphenomena are attributable to the spirit\nof our departed friends. It is clearly tli\nteaching ol God's Won), that we jutv\nthe scenes aud companions of oar nati\nral lives as soon as we pan into the splri\nworld. Christ said to tho thief on th\ncross, "To-day thou eliak be with mo i\nParadise." But where Is Paradise 1 Sit\nphen says, "lseo the Heavens opened, am\nthe Bon ot man standing at the right bam\nol God." And the Apostle Fcler at Pen\ntccoataays ol Christ, "Whom the lieacen\nmust receive until the restitution of al\nthings."
151bc85bee5ad9c1edbaf064b7e89ebd THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.7301369545917 39.261561 -121.016059 Diking Inuian Attack on a Hunter's\nCabin.—A muni daring attack wan made\nl)v Indian* on a hunter'* cabin on Dec\nGum Fork, Shasta county, on the room-\ning of September 5th. The Hometown\nArgus gives the following particular*, de-\nrived from one of the partiea who was\nshot and nairowly made bis escape:\nThe cabin was the dwelling of a hunter\nnamed Dartee, better known bh 'Old lied,”\nwho ha* lived in the mountains of Califor-\nnia and Oregon since 1845. Hi* place wa*\ncomprised of a comfortable cabin surround-\ncd by a garden, and U not more than 18\nmiles from Arbuckle, a mining camp. At\nthe time of the attack there were three\nwhite men on the premise*, viz : Dartee,\nLux and Forzee. Lux aro*e early in the\nmorning, and went out too get some kind-\nling wood, which he was engaged in collect-\ning. when he htard the hallooing of Indians,\nand on looking around be discovered an In-\ndian his rifle pointed at him, when be\nattempted to throw himself on his hack,\nbut received the ball in his shoulder on (ail-\ning. lie Immediately urose, and ran to the\nhouse aod informed his comrades. The\ndoors were closed, aud each man took his\nstation, and from their positions they were\nenabled to kill two ludians by shooting\nthrough place* between the log*. All this\ntime the Indians, who were well armed with\nrifle*, and in large number*, were firing in-\nto the house. They then, finding that their\nfiring had no effect, commenced throwing\nfirebrands on the roof of the cabin, setting\nit on fire, which those inside fought to pre-\nvent, bat were compelled to leave when\nthey saw it wa* impossible to save it. They\nthen started for a log hut about a hundred\nyard* distant, one following the other,\nwhich they succeeded in reaching, but find-\ning it no place of safety, took to the brush,\naod reached Arbuckle in safety.
0c7461f735e629732c9abe563be57ff4 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.1684931189752 37.451159 -86.90916 bratcd formula: "Judgewhetheryouhave\ndone anything to me!"\nJtainer uissausucu wuu myseii, as you\nmay imagine, after these three mean little\ntricks, I directed my steps toward the\nforest, in order to hide as much as! poasi- -\nsible from the light of day. I walked\nabout for nearly an hour without being\nable to shake of tho prophetic melancholy\nthat oppressed me. Perceiving at last,\non the edge of one of the avennes that\ntraverse the forest, and under the shade\nof some beech treee, a thick bed of moss,\n1 stretched myseir upon it, together with\nmy remorse, and it was not long before I\nfell into a sound sleep. Hon Dieu! why\nwas it not the sleep of death ?\nI have no idea how long I had been\nasleep, when I was suddenly awakened,by\na certain concussion of the soil in my im-\nmediate vicinity; I jumped abruptly to\nmy feet, and saw, within five steps of\nme, on the road, a young lady on horse-\nback. My unexpected apparation bad\nsomewhat frightened the horBe, who had\nshied with some violence. The fair eques-\ntrian, who had not yet noticed me, was\ntalking to him and trying to quiet him.\nShe appeared to be pretty, slender, ele-\ngant I caught a lapid glimpse of blonde\nhair, eyebrows of darker shade, keen eyes,\na bold expression of .countenance, and a\nfelt hat with blue feather, set over one\nLear in rather too rakish a style. For the\nbetter understanding ot what is about to\nfollow, you should know that I was at-\ntired in a tourist's blouse stained with red\nochre; besides, I must have had that hag-\ngard look aui startled expression which\nimpart to one rudely snatched from sleep,\na countenance at once comical and alarm\ning. And to all this, my hair in utter\ndisorder, my-
1352002674513bf88fa14c406954c53a THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1894.6808218860983 35.996653 -78.901805 knentally wabblin about instead of walkin\nfright ahead in do middle of de road. Two\n.w eeks ago tonight I was in a store when\nBrudder Waydown Bebee cum in dar an\ngot measured fur three shirts an ordered\ndat dey be made to button behind. He\ndidn't seo me, an I was so paralyzed da$\nI couldn't hev spoken to him if he had.\nAll my life I has bought unbleached cot-\nton at G cents a yard an had de ole woman\nmake my shirts, an dey was shirts same\nits George Washington, Henry Clay and\nAbraham Linkum wore. De shirt dat but-\ntoned in front, wid buttons costin 6 cents\na dozen, has bin good nuff fur poets, war-\nriors an statesmen. De homemade shirt\nMassed de Declarashun of Indenenenc\nj It won liberty fur this nashun. It el'ared\nle forests an plowed de prairies an laid do\nXoundashun fur our present greatness. De\nadeah dat de time has arrove when a pus- -\npon airnin seben a week an hevin\ninly one lung left to breath with feels\nhit he must hev 12 shillin shirts to be in\ndo swim jest takes my breath away!\n"A few nights ago I met Brudder Elder\nToots in a drug store. De elder am an\nole man. Any one to look at him would\nbay dnt he was sot to stay sot. I hev al-jl- us\nconsidered him a man widout any fool-\nishness, an you kin emagine my surprise .\nwhen he boldly inquared fur scented soap, :\nvaseline, cole cream an tooth powder. lie\nInctually turned away from a 10 cent tooth-\nbrush an took one at 25! Did George j\nWashington inquar' fur scented soap be- -\nfo' he crossed de Delawar'? Did Patrick\nHenry hold a bottle of vaseline in his\nhand when he closed dat memorable speech\n"by saying, 'Gin me liberty or gin me\ndeath' Did Abraham Linkum go an brush :\nhis teeth wid pink powder befo' signing\ndat emancipashun proclamashun? Shake- -
23ef6e89efe7da336802946bd9e7f738 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1866.9684931189752 40.063962 -80.720915 voice, "That's so").too long have w<\nbeen compelled to live by the labor o\nour hands, while millions of dollars\nworth or property has stretched out in\nhands to us to come aud spend it\n[Long continued cheers.) Too long\nhave we been kept out of this imposing\nedifice.out of its auditorium, its choir\nIts chancel and burying ground (voice\n"Yes! yes !") while our eyes have beei\ngreeted with the notice of "Keep off th<\ngrass," which has cropped out upon thi\nsoil rightfully our own. (Applause.\nAnd now it is high time that we insist\ned upon having our own (hear, hear)\nparticularly as Lhe people worshipping\nthere, and tor so loug a time eujoyiuj\ngospel privileges at our expense, do no\nappear to bo uriy better Christians thai\nthousands of others who have neve\nreceived any such favor at the hands o\nthe heirs of Anneke Jans. (Sensation.\nAccording to the report just read, il\nappears to bo a "close thing" betweei\n number of dollars involved, butii\nis probable that the number of bone\nfide heirs will be considerably reduce*\nwhen their claims are put to lhe test\nBesides, many of them are in feebl\nhealth, and will not survive the issm\nof the suit now pending. It might b\nsuggested that a great many new heir\nwould be born in the meantime, bu\nthese being subject to infantile dis\neases, such as cholera infantum, croup\nmeasles, and sweetmeats (according t<\na table recently compiled by the "Lon\ndon Life Assurance Company,") wouli\nscarcely survive in any considerabl\nnumbers,to share in the distribution o\nthe property.\nAt the conclusion of this liarangui\nthe speaker sat down amid the heart:\nand long-continued silence of the uii\ndience. After the quiet had somewha\nabated, the chairman anuounced tha\na dispatch per cable had that momen\nbeen received from the heirs of Annek\nJans assembled in Exeter Hall, Lon\ndon, aud which he would read. It wa\nas follows:
254492971d206060a38eba6aeec1752d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.4330600776664 40.063962 -80.720915 know that lie will not reward thcli\naffections. Bo Mr. Colfax will probably\ndisappear from tho political arena.\nOr the platform the VoUMalt speaks\nrather irreverently. Tho platform do\nmands civil aervice relorm, which had\nbeen laughed at by the politicians o!\neither party, does not mean the reform o:\nthe civil service any more than they in\nteed to abolish the franking privilege\nwhich has also been demanded by tht\nPhiladelphia resolutions. Tho plailorm\ndemands a tariS which shall adjust th(\nduties so as to aid in paying remunerative\nwages to labor and promote the Industrie:\nand prosperity of the whole country. Thh\nis a humbug. Duties aro taxes, and taxei\nare burdens, whether they are couchet\nin fine phrases or not. The idea that tht\nprosperity of a country can bo promoted\nby taxation is ridiculous. The queatior\nis, how can taxes be so imposed as tc\nraise the necessary revenue with the leas\nhardship to the people. This qucstioi\nneither the Philadelphia nor Cincinnat\nConvention has approached, nor will thi\npoliticians touch it until the people havi\nlearned to understand and will givi\neffective expression to their will. Thi\nassurance that the land\nshall not be given away to cor\nporatlons 1b not distinguished by thi\ncharm of novelty. It would be a novelt;\nhowever it Congress would make up if\nmind to live up to it. So far Congres\nhas not developed any disposition to do sc\nThe resolution concerning bounties ti\nthe soldiers wo remember to have reai\nbetore, but as nobody has manifested th\nwicked intent to Btop those bounties doe\nnot mean much. That the relations be\ntween capital and labor shonld bo recog\nnized in legislation is a declaration lookini\nto political electionering more than practi\ncal legislation. We confess our inability ti\nfathom its meaning. We are refreshei\nhowever by the assertion that the claim lo\nlemale suffrage shall be treated with th\nrespectful consideration. Do our politi\nclans tear the candidacy of Victorli\nWoodhull, or do they dread a charge ol\nbloomer brigade, led by the irrepressibli\nDr. Mary Walker. The platform con\ntains many good and besuUtul things; al\nplatforms do; liut the difficulty as Charle\nFrancis Adams so well puts it in his lei\nter, is not as to professions but as lo thei\nexecution. There is the rub.
116817ce4933fe3a9269e1099516c38f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1872.493169367284 40.063962 -80.720915 oootrol thera. The teitlraonv of our w.,\nwm, of all cIumi, tMAUm the ft? 5.\nChkrrt Fictokal will and (Ion rti,tv',ri\ncure the afflicting dlwnler, of the Tlrai t\nLungs beyond any other medicine, 11* ^\ndangeroaa affeotloal of the I'uImoutT iw.\nyield to 1U power; and aua o(\nlion, cured by thii preparation, art >, r\nIv known, to remarkable a. hardlv l0 CT'\nllevod, were they not proven berood a;,mY,\nAs n remedy it li adequate, on which Ure lilt,\nmay rely for full protection. By curine CootW\nthe forerunner* of more icrioui dl*ea<e li\nunnumbered llvei, and an amount of 'mlWml\nnot to be computed. It challenge, trial and ra\nvlncei tlie mo»t «ceptlcal. Everv fumllr thoa',.\nkeep it on band as a protection ngaln»t d* tub\nand unpercelved attack of Pulmonary Affectioti\nwhich are easily met at first, but wh'lch beco*.\nIncurable, too often fatal, If neglected. Tentier\nlungs need tills defence; nnil It la unwise u\nb« without It. Aa a safeguard to children, am.j\nthe distressing diseases which beset the Thimt\nand Chest of childhood, Cueury I'kctoiul\nla Invaluable; for, by It* timely u*, uiuhi\ntudea aro rescued from premature grates, iaj\nsaved to the love and affection centred on then\nIt acts speedily and surely against ordinary co!d»,\nsecuring sound and health-restoring sleep, .vj\none will suffer troublesome Influenza and pam.\nful Bronchitis, when .they know ho* eaiih\nUioy can bo cured.\nOriginally the product of long, laborious, a&j\nsuccessful chemical investigation, no cost or toil\nis spared in making every bottle in the ota*\npossible perfection. It may be confidently *\nlied upon as possessing all the virtues it hu'eT*\nMthlbited. and capable of producing cam i,\nmemorable as the greatest It has ever effected.
165f5047a5b7a449bc8e3d657956fe39 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1921.8342465436326 39.745947 -75.546589 came to ns, we may fittingly petition that moderation and wis­\ndom shall be granted to rest upon all who are in authority, in\nthe tasks they must discharge. Their hands will be steadied,\ntheir purposes strengthened, in answer to our prayers.\n“Ours has been a favored nation in the bounty which God\nhas bestowed upon it. The great trial of humanity, though\nindeed we bore our part as well as we were able, left us com­\nparatively little scarred. It is for us to recognize that we have\nbeen thus favored, and when'"we gather at our altars to offer\nup thanks, we will do well to pledge, in humanity and all sin­\ncerity, our purpose to prove deserving. We have been raised\nup and preserved in national power and consequence, as part of\na plan whose wisdom we cannot question. Thus we\ncan do no less than hold our nation the willing instrument of\nthe Providence which has so wonderfully favored us. Oppor­\ntunity for very great service awaits us if we shall prove equal\nto it. Let our prayers be raised, for direction in the right paths.\nUnder God, our responsibility is great; to our own first, to all\nmen afterward; to all mankind in Gods own justice.\n“Now, therefore, I, Warren G. Harding, President of the\nUnited States, hereby designate Thursday, the twenty-fourth\nday of November, to be observed by the people as a day of\nthanksgiving, devotion and prayer; urging that at their hearth-\nsides and their altars they will give thanks fer all that has\nbeen rendered unto them, and will pray for a continuance of\nthe divine fortune which has been showered so generously upon\nthis nation.”
37377b745dec33aea631615b3381d7ba THE HIGHLAND WEEKLY NEWS ChronAm 1874.6342465436326 37.561813 -75.84108 positive manner, he said, "You must go,\nsomebody else will take care of the meeting."\nI went with him, not knowing what trouble\nhad agitated him, but vaguely thinking I\nmight learn the solution of the recent\nthreatening letter. On the way I asked\nwhat was the 'reason of .this visit, to which\nhe replied that Mr. Tilton would inform me,\nor words to that effect. On entering his\nhouse Mr. Moulton locked the door, 6aying\nsomething about not being interrupted.\nHe requested me to go into the front\nchamber over the parlor. I was under the\nimpression that Mr. Tilton was going to pour\nout upon me his anger for colleaguing with\nBowen, and for the advice of separation\ngiven to his wife. I wished Mr. Moulton to\nbe with me as a witness, but he insisted that\nI should go by myself. Tilton received\nme coldly but calmly.\nAfter a word or two standing in front of\nme with a memorandum in his hand, he be-\ngan an oration, in an unfriendly spirit, that\nI had sought his downfall, and spread in-\njurious rumors about him, was using my\nplace and influence to undermine him, had\nadvised Mr. Bowen to dismiss him, and much\nmore that I can't remember, and he then de-\nclared that I had injured him in his family\nrelations, had joined with his mother-in-la-\nin producing discord in his house, had ad-\nvised a separation, had alienated his wife's\naffections from him, had led her to love me\nmore than any living being, had corrupted\nher moral nature, aud taught her to be in-\nsincere, lying, and hypocritical, and ended\nby charging that I had made improper pro-\nposals to her.
1ef34b6e3161734bb6e89dbcc622b90c THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.5587431377758 39.290882 -76.610759 More recently we have found bottles cast n a mould\nprecisely like our own, but "Swaim'fl Panacea" New\nYork isblown in the glass, instead of "Swaim's Pana-\ncea." Philadciykia.\nWe have received repeated advices from he West In-\ndia islands that our empty bottles are purchased up at\nhigh rates, for the purpose of refilling them with a spu-\noiis mixture: and of die tiipusands of bottles of Swaim's\nPanacea annually sold in our principal cities, we can\ncollect but very few of the empty bottles, as they are\nmade use of in various ways to defraud the proprie tor\nand to deceive the public.\nWe have known instances of three botdes being made\nout of one, by mixing a portion of Sarsaparilla Syrup\nwith the genuine Swaim's Panacea, thereby retaining\nsome of its virtues.\nIn Philadelphia, lately, a large order was received he\na mercantile house for Swaim's Panacea a mould\nn exact imitation of our own was made, and die ordrv\nupplied?and recent advices from Brazils inform ustluit\na vessel from Amsterdam had arrived at Ripdc Janeiro,\npartly laden with bottles precisely like our own. We\nhave also in possession a book printed in Germany, a fac\nsimile of our own hook of cus%sand certificates.\nFrom all these circumstances it willbe seen that he\ngenuine Swaim's Panacea is counterfeited and imitated\nto a considerable extent; and as these imitations are not\nonly a fraud upon us ? but will necessarily protract the\nsufferings of invalids in those diseases where the genuine\nmedicine might have proved efficacious, we must rely\nupon the public to purchase the Swaim's Panacea only\nroiiiauthentic and respectable houses and dealers, who\nobtain their supplies either from our Labratory in Phila\ndelplua. or from our accredited and General Agent,\nliENRY JOHN SHARPE, No 46 Pine street,
14d607351290ec7095ed57546ac0b62b MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1906.1410958587012 39.78373 -100.445882 The argument advanced concedes\nthat if Judge Mrrrv had gone to\nReno and entered Ihe on?er in open\ncourt it would have been goc 1, but un-\nder this contention if he had steoped\nthrough the door in'o the chambers\nand made it, it would have been void.\nOrders extending th3 time for filings by\nare business usu?lly, or propei.y as\ntransacted in chambers and under\nSection 2573 can and oug'it to i hp\nmade as effectually in apy rart of the\nState by the judge having the case in\ncharge, as if made by him in cham-\nbers or in open ccurt. Judge Murphy he\nwas merely acting for Judge Culler\nduring his vacation, tut by analogy\nthe construction Jimed, if adopted,\nwould, in every cise where a distiict\njudge dies, resii)? or is succeeded,\ninvalidate the crders extending time\n section 197 made out of court\nby his sucessor :t office, although\nthey are of that character ordinari'y\ngranted in chambers. This would\nmean a distinction and two rules for\nfiling orders of the same kind,\nand that the judga- who had tried the\ncause as Judge C crier had done in\nthis instance, could make the order in\nchambers, while his successor could\nso make it only in the cases tried by\nhim, and would huve to be in ccurt\nto make these shrnle orders extend-\ning time in actions which had been\npreviously tried by another judge.\nAppellants desired and were entirl-e - d\nto the time granted for the pur\nDOSe 0f enabling them to secure fton\ntne collrt reporter who had left the\nState a transcript of the testimony\ngiven on the trial, which would ena-
0e362d60b96e019975684dd36bab7c38 DAILY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1884.5368852142785 39.745947 -75.546589 1 cot bedstead, 1 Iron beadstead, 4 wash\nstands, with marble top». 24 mahogany eano\nseat bed room ohstra.a lot ol Windsor ohalre,\nparlor hair-cloth mahogany furniture, con­\nsisting of 4 sofas. 4 divans, 4 largo chairs, 12\nwall chairs, 2 reception chairs, 2 marble top\noentre tables, 2 stools. X largo mirrors, man­\ntle vases, large vase of wax flowers, parlor\nlamp. Dining room furniture : 1 large ma­\nhogany extension table 12 lect long, 1 cherry\nextension table 18 fest long, lot of chairs, 6\nwalnut tables of dttlerent sises, 2 sofa pll\nlows, 2 large picture«, 7 lamps, 2 docks. 1\nsewing macblne, 2 large refrigerators, 1 near­\nlynew;1goodhat rack,1 gummat, lot of\nstair rods, 1 good oook stove and oooalng\nutensils and contents of kitchen; l churn, lot\nmilk eans scales, wash tubs, etc.; 8 bedroom\noartêts,some nearly new ; 2 parlor carpets,\n1 dialog room oarpe;, several stair carpets\nand 1 new rag carpet never nsed ; also seve­\nral lots of other 1 largo drugget, 7\nÎood feather beds with bolsters and pillows,\nbalr mattress. several husk mattresses ;\nalso bed clothing, sheeting, t->wells, napkins,\ntable cloth», table cover*; hams, pickled\npork, vinegar, fish. 6 large cedar meat cask»,\nlot oi barrels,lot of goo i benches, lot of small\nbaskets, 1 large chest for keeping bed cloth­\ning, 1 largo copper kettle, 1 largo porcelain\nlined kettle, a lot of Mason jars all In order ;\nalso lot of large stone jars, lot of carpenter\ntools, half boshd mearnre, cro^-bar wash­\ning machine, carriage robe, lap rag, hedge\nknives, small furnace, lot of hay by tbe ton,\n1 Dt of wood by the cord, and a great many\nsmall anloles not mentioned. Bale will\ncommence promptly at time mentioned. No\npostponement\nTerms; Al> sums of twenty dollars and\nunder, each. On all sums over that amount\na credit of six months will bo given by the\npurohoser giving a bankable note with an\na proved Indormer ; interest from date.
4d2f987d211328eb4eff14981543a33b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.4452054477422 40.063962 -80.720915 West Liberty A Bethany Turnpike and on\nthe waters ol the sooth fork of Short Creek and\nof Woods' Hun, that la to say:\nNo. I Containing 3 I I AcfOS, 2 roods,\n89 perches, known as the Benjamin K^lly farm,\nbeing tho same which was couv«red to raid\niaaac B Kelly and others, b/ James Kelly\na« d wife, by deed dated drptombcr S3.\nISM. and of rccord In tbe office of the\nClerk of tbe County Court of Ohio county in\nDeed Book No. 4L pape 604, and of which tract\nt>n undivided h ilr was conveyed to Isaac B\nKelly by Oanlrl P. Jacob and wife by deed dau-d\nOctober 7, J8G8, snd of rocord In aald Clerk's\noffice In Deed B jok No. 55, page 24.\nHo. 2, conuiutBic 62 Acre*fl food «nd\n89 perch te, being part of a tract oi 803 acrro. 8\nroods and 30 perches, known as the James Kelly\nfa.rn, wnich was convoyed to Isaac B.Kelly by\nIsaac Kelly and wile by deed dated Scomber\n16,2864, ond ofrec rd lu tt csald Clerk's office in\nDeed Book No. 48, page SIS, tho tract to be so!d\nbeing the part remaining to said Isaac Kelly\nafter h's conveyance c f 881 acre* and 8b perchie\nto Daniel P. Jacob by deed dated October 7.\n1688. find of rccord !u said Clerk's offlco in l)«cd\nBookNo.CS pweSS.\nNo 3 Containing 74 Acres, 8 roods. SB\npercnta, bstngsameland whicu waaoonveyed to\npaid Isaac BTKel.y by Ji!|j.ih rogue and others\nby deed dated apri! 1,18 >7, andof record in said\nU.erk's office in Deed B00U No 53, pace 197.\nNo. 4 containing | 0 acres 3 roods 10\npenhes, being tho same land conveyed to sjid\nIsaic B. Kelly by Oco. W. bnuth by deed dated\nNovember 17, 1864. and of record In said\nClrrk's effice In Deed Boi k No 48, pagofcTi.\nFor tho metes and bounds of *aid eoycral tracts\nrecreate Is madn iotbc dtn-da aforesaid, and to\ntho sWd decree of sale in this ccu?o.\nThla laud is among the moetva'.uable farming\nlard In Ohio county Ejch'iratt is acccfalblc by\n«ood road*, and is well waiend and well f»nced.\nOn tract No. 1 there Is a good brick dwelling\nhnuHc, 2 tenant buns s,u lur^u burn, ailnecawary\noutbuildings and a largo orchard. On tract No.\ni there Is a g,*Kl double tog house, stable nnd
21c0ef4f8a16d0ffb1d2987d4fdb253c SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1883.856164351852 37.53119 -84.661888 S.vtral wtVs ajo w innil a ptra.\ni vntih In willed we stated that John Mor- -\ng(lnCK(Jl,U ilctlli, primarily, lo tlie In.\nsane Jealousy of nwofuan, We e In tbe\nStanford IsrrtniOB Jot'RXAt. that the Cai -l U- le\nittrtun, a piper with which we do\nnet exchange, denounce our statement a\na foul ilandrrand ourselfasan infamous\nslanderer Tetajnally, we know nothing\nabeut It We did not triln with Morgan'\ncrowd and were never an admirer of the\nman. either before or during the war. We\nknew him to be a rw long before the out\nbreak of tLe rebellion ai,d Lave frequently\nheatd of his exploits ameng the women in\nEtet Tenntee and elsewhere while a sol-\ndier from members of his command. Our\nstatement was based on the declaration of\nreputable gentlemen, who were under him,\nand one of whom Is one of the firat phyl\nclaai and surgeora In this country, a Ken-\ntucky of standing and nc!ty,\nwho told us only a few days btfore we pen-\nned the pargriph that started the Mercury\nman lo howling, the facs that we alluded\nto rather than partlcularixed Moreover,\nwe can truthfully asert that many month',\nprubably a yer, before Morgan m-- t hi\ndeath, he was warned by a gentleman, now\na resident of Indians, who held a promi-\nnent poitien under him, probibly on his\nstall, that, between Mrs. Williams and Mrs\nMyers, of Greenville, 1 e would be killed\nWetellthetalea itwistoldusandby\ngentlemen who would not lie about it. It\ntaems the Myers womtn was abuxom.dash-lo- g\nwidow, who attracted Morgan's atten-\ntion, and the Intimacy between them was\nieenled by the former woman to that ex\ntent that she betrayed him t,o hi enemies\nThin I the gist of the story as related to u.\nWe believe it to be true, became wa have\nconfidence in the woids of our Informants.
2f99bb6d98e3d620deaf434dcd0fcea7 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.9246575025368 40.063962 -80.720915 A heavy snowstorm occurred\n!Onsin yesterday, delaying trainB.\nGovernor St. John, of Kansas,\nin temperance at Chicago last even\nAdvices from Northern Wiscor\noggera, encouraged by six inches o\n, r e doing lively work in tho woods\nThe management of the Illinois\nactory havo resolved to reduce tlu\nif their employes from 10 to 15 per\nThree persona connected with tl\nniasionerof Revenue's otllce atltie\n/«., havo been arrested on charges\n;ory, in connection with the lato ei\nNoah D. Smith, clerk and deputj\nor of customs at Jilemphis, haB abs\n{e ia $1,600 short in .his aocoun\nias been in tho employ of Collector\niV. J . Smith for six years.\nTho continued depression in tl\nrade has caused a temporary stop\nvork in the guide and bar ueparti\nhft Allentown rollintr mill. Jlirmirir\nlundreifniou out Qt°cmpioyweut.\nAt a joint session of the Cberol\ntte atia Council Hon. Samuel \nsleeted Chief Justice of thoSuprea\n)f tbc Cherokeo Nation, and Hon.\nind J. 33. Mayer, Associate Justicei\nThe body of an unknown man, i\nrears old and of medium size, wt\nmi the beach in SnriDsfleld to\nPennsylvania, yesterday, dressed i\nyith a gingham shirt and colored $t\nIn the sale of securities'pf t|io\njtste Sayings Ban}: at Chicago, Si\n:he poto of 0. D . Spenyer, its aba\nPresident, for 'three quarters of a\niollara, wiuj ^nopfcpd do>yi} to a\noianfor^Ol.\nDr. Uharlea postman. Dean c\nsriey Medical College."Boston, was\nby a deputy "Pnitw states Marsha\nday, on a charge of using the ma\njhtent lo defraud. IIo -was jailed,\nocquently relpa#et\\Qu hail,\nA letter from General Grant to\nCameron, of Pennsylvania, fs madi\nin which General Grant asserts 1\nin'YUz John Porter's innocence\nquests Cameron to use his influen\npair the injury alleged to have bi\nPorter,
58f8ea16e449181f090c62aff2bfdc28 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.6616438039066 40.063962 -80.720915 nehes peeping out from the little rllts\nand slips under the shelter of tho broad\neaves of the root, and from beneath the\nlloor ol its square, blull body, where, i\npoised upon its circular base, it could bo\nturned to face the prevailing wind. The\nwind, too, bad its share in adapting it lor I\ntho artist's use, for from long blowing I\nagainst its study front, and broad, sweep- 1\nIng, milk-white soils, it had gradually t\ncanted it back many degrees out of the <\nperpendicular. Strangers.and there were <\nmany who came up to look at It.would I\nthink it could not much longer withstand 1\nthose strong bretzjs forever lunging at it i\nupon its ei|>osed position, and the creak- s\nIng and moaning it made, if at work, 1\nwould lead them to expect its immediate i\ntoppling over. Groat would be their sur- t\nprise to hear, if they chanced to speak \\\nwith its old master, Amos Gower, that It f\nbad liko that ever since ho was a i\nboy, and that he had beard his lather say t\nthat he too had never remembered it t\notherwise. It stood but a littlu back upon s\nthe turl from the white, winding chalk 1\nroad leading up to it, and as tho hugo s\niails, whirring and roaring through the t\niir, swept round and round, their ends, in j\neach succeeding descent, looking as If they t\nmust strike the earth, and only sweeping o\ndear ol it by some foot and a-half, one I\nHesitated almost to pass it, so wild, inex- ti\nwnble, aud menacing did it look. It had i\nlieen said moro than once that a barrier i\nshould be set up to prevent the unwary ti\nirom going 100 near, aa u uiow irum unu\nul those revolving beams would surly be li\nlatbl. But tbero never hai been any ac- t\ncident. Who would ever go too nearV g\nNone but the deal, or blind, or mad.
6a67f8c527faa7d3d8408d6deb8987b8 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.0945205162354 39.261561 -121.016059 The presages of a desperate winter are\nmultiplying. Ear and wide, upon tho con-\nlnent, financial clouds gather over the pol-\nitical and industrial prospect. Tho New\nWorld conflagration threatens to consume\nthe materials of prosperity to millions on\nboth sides of tho Atlantic. At homo the\ndisastrous prelude has already begun; fore-\nrunning, wj cannot but anticipate a period\nof general suffering, in which naturally and\ninevitably tho poorer classes will endure\ntho utmost bitterness of tho blight. Nor is\nit possible, notwithstanding tho sincere re-\nports of Sir Robert Peel, to doubt that Ire-\nland will be called upon to undergo an-\njthcr ordeal, comparatively lenient perhaps,\nyet aggravated by tho diminish! d cupacity\nof England to relieve her. We know that\nthe fair weather prophets are auguring dif-\nferently; thry subsist, of course, upon arti-\nficial confidence; they are nothing, if not\ndeclaiming about the unexampled fortunes\nof the British empire. But all this rhapsody\nwill not set a single mill going, will bring\ncomfort to no Lancashire cottage will neith-\ner open a cotton murket nor create a cot-\nton supply. Surveying the broad arena of\nEurope, can it bo honestly affirmed that the\naspects of the season are cheerful? There\nis no panic, but the same time there is\nno approach to a settlement of existing\ncomplications in Italy. The French hori-\nzon is in all directions dark, ominous ami\nmelancholy. Austria stands upon the\nbrink of a civil war. and Russia is return-\ning to barbarism. The French nation, not-\nwithstanding commercial treaties, is not\nbuying of us with any particular enthu-\nsiasm. Turkey can hardly bo kept afloat;\nand elsewhere statesmen must work at (be\npumps to prevent the peace of Europe from\nsinking into fathomless depths of slaughter.\nIn the United Kingdom matters nre not\nimproving. A humble test is afforded in\nthe dullness of the statute fairs; wages have\nfalleu 20 percent; old men, in the agricul-\ntural districts can scarcely secure employ-\nment at any price; tho unhireil multitudes\nthreaten to bo dismally large, and to them\ntho winter threatens a long series of sore\nprivations. And then what of that mighty\naggregate to which the cotton poel gives\nlabor and life, that four millions, stricken\nby civil war beyond tho seas? Their earn-\nings bavo withered from a livelihood into a\npittance; they aro struggling witli want;\nsoon they may have to face starvation; for\nthem the times are hard indeed—"half time”\nis “bard time* with a vengeance.
260043dae71c7c838e6c5cf8e39747b8 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1869.3931506532217 40.063962 -80.720915 aggerated. Tbe President said b\n,x' would have tbe State registered with a\nhJ little delay as possible.\ne(j A bill contraoted by Secretary Sewar\nier in telegraphing over tbe cable, to Rev\nln_ erdy Johnson, has been presented t\n, ut Secretary Fish by the agent of the Tei\nDg egraph company for paymen}. It con\nslBts or a single item and amounts t\nt0 140,000. Mr. Seward, it seems, wa\nk. allowed cheap rates on hiB messagei\n, l!. and so became rather verbose. Who:\nr this bill came in he refused to pay il\n, p. it therefore fell to the succeeding ad\n!uB ministration. Secretary Fish decllnei\nj a to pay it, and when it was presented t\nfreemen i uruui uuetrni ii> iu uuvmr\nGeneral Hour for an opinion, which fa\n1b now engaged on.\n Government has received tw\ncable dispatches from Reverdy Johnao:\nin regard to hiB attempt to secure ih\nrelease of Feiiian prisoners and wlia\naction was taken in regard to direc\ntions from the State department to cal\nthe attention of the Fngllth Govern\nment to the cases of Col. Wm. G . Hal\npine and others. The first dispatcl\nfrom Johnson was in effect that the re\nply he received was a list of rfbou\ntwenty Fenians that are not to be re\nleased. Ue made another attempt am\nwas answered by a reiteration of th\nBritish Government with a determina\ntlon not to release any more Fenians.\nIt is slated that Secretary Rawlins i\ndetermined to secure protection to th\nog lives of Union men In the South. Hi\nLes will probably declare martial law ii\nl._
0820bd7d4c0283ca1a9f317cdb0abe77 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.8315068176053 40.063962 -80.720915 KvkbvboI'Y now knows,that, but tor\nthe presence ami interposition of the\nmilitary, 110 white und no colored Con-\naervative could have voted but at tho\nperil ol his life..Richmond Whig.\nExactly. It in now your ox that is\ngored. That makes all the difference in\nthe world. Time was when it whs ortho¬\ndox uuioug the Virginia chivalry to\nmob and maltreat a white mail who\ndared to vote or advocate Republican\nprinciples. You set that example to the\nblacka and they are inclined, it seems,\nto follow ancient usage. You raised a\nstorm that you cannot now control.\nYou sowed the wind aud are reaping\nthe whirlwind. I>o you recollect your\nominous utterance when the Republi¬\ncan convention that met in this city in\n160o proposed to hold ita next meeting\nIn Richmond? Maybe your words\nssnk into tho recollection of the\ndarkey*. Who knows? Over here\nwe do not In your humilia¬\ntion nor tnook because your fear has\ncome. Nothing of the sort. But we\nsimply remind you that the violent and\naelllth spirit of slavery aud secession in\nnow working out its natural results.\nIt was you, the pretentious, arrogant,\nprohcrlptive aud selfish whiles, that\nlguored the rights aud trampled under\nfoot the citizenship of your own kill*\nami kin In days gone by. Now you\ngroun ltiMlily because the chalice of\nyour own compounding in commended\nto your Hps. Nothing would do you but\nslavery, rebellion ami war. Heboid the\nDead Sea apples turned to ashes iu\nyour bauds. You talk an though you\nexpected u higher civilization of the\nnegroes than youever exhibited to t hem.\nYou always boasted ot your superior\ncivilization. The negroes are holding\nthe glass up to your eyes, ami it is for\nyou to see yourselves us others have\nlong seen you.
da241a311d8f97efe65ab0e6fb186f33 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.219945323568 40.618676 -80.577293 Washington, D. C. —A nation-wide\nprogram to enlist support of legisla­\ntion now pending in Congress which\nwould require the employment of\nAmerican citizens on skilled work in\nthe new construction program in the\nPanama Canal Zone was launched this\nweek by President William Green of\nthe American Federation of Labor.\nMr. Green sent a circular letter to\nthe officers of all State Federation of\nLabor and Central Labor Unions\nstrongly urging them to wire their\nSenators to vote for such legislation\nwhich is incorporated in the McCar-\nran amendments to both the Army\nand Navy Appropriation bills.\nThousands of ailens from the West\nIndies are employed by the United\nStates Government in the Canal Zone\nat an average pay rate of 25 cents an\nhour, Mr. Green These men\nare not only laborers, but employed\non skilled jobs. They are taking these\njobs away from American citizens to\nwhom the Government pays 25 per\ncent higher rates than those prevalent\nin the United States.\nAt a time when unemployment is\nso widespread, jobs on the Panama\nCanal Zone construction program\nshould be reserved for American citi­\nzens, Mr. Green insisted.\nThe United States Government op­\nerates most business activities in the\nCanal Zone, as well as the canal itself,\nthe Panama Railroad and the Panama\nRailroad Steamship Lines. The rail­\nroad anu canal alone now employ\nabout 3,000 Americans and 12,000\naliens. More than a third of these\naliens are now employed in positions\nabove the grade of common labor,\nsuch as railroad trainmen, railroad
26eaa0addfa5660644cf905b6eb8be93 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1870.746575310756 41.004121 -76.453816 fin. 10. Tlio assessors slmll each receive the\nsamo compensation lor tno time neccs-sam -\nKnrni. in liftionnliiir llio duties thereby enjoined\nnt isprovldeilby law lor tlio pcrfounauco ot their\noilier llUUOS to UO Jiaiu uy inu tuuniv tumimw\nloners ns lu other cases; and H shall not bo law-\nful iurunv assessor to assess n t ix uealiibt tiny\nperson whatever within ten days next preceding\n(lie electlou to o held on the second Tuesday lu\nOctober lu any year, or w Ithln ten days next be-\nforo uny election for electors of rresldcnt and\nvicei rcsuieiiL oi mo uniieu niaves: any vioiu'\ntionof this provision shall bo n misdemeanor\naud subject tho olllccts so ntTendlug to a lino uot\nexceedlni' ono bundled dollars, or to linnrison\nmcnt not exceeding three mouths, or both, ut\nuie uiscrciiou ot luecouu,\nr. 11 . On tho petition of flvo or moro citizens\nrf i whimIv kttilliitr iiiiiIai- mtli 11i:it tlinv Yur.\nilv lid 11 vn tiiiit rrrtinln will tin urncilPPil at inn\ntieciiou uuuiu iu uo ucui iu any uiairiui, il kiiiui\nbo tho duty of tho com t of common picas ofsuld\ncounty, it in session, or Ifnotn Judgo theuof in\nvacation, lo nppoint two Judicious, nnd in\ntelligent ciuens or tnocountr louct usoverseera\natsaiti eieciKtii; suiti uverseeis suuu uo sciccicu\nJ rum dlilereiit nol It leal lurlics. wheio tlio in- -\nspcetors belong lo dltlereut parties, and whero\nuoin oi saui iiispcciui s iiciuijy iu iitu saum jiuiui\ncal lmrtv. both of tho ovtirseers shall bo tnkeu\nfrom thoopposlle political parly; said overseers\nshnll have the rinht to boureseut with tho olllccrs\nof tho election, during tlio whole tlmo tho bume\nis held, tno votes count en nnd tno returns mado\nout und signed by tho election olllccri-- ; to keepu\nlist ol voters.it tney fee proper; to challenge nuy\nlerbou ollcrimr lo vote, and inlerroiialo iiim nud\nlis witness ttnderoath. In rcifrird to his rlirht of\nsuiiiage at sau eiecuuu, auu 10 examine his la- -\nicrs piiHiuceu; nni ino oincers oi ham eietiiou\nire rodtilred lo ntlord losald overseers so elected\nund appointed every convenience uud facility\nlor the dischamo of their dutle: audlfatd elec\ntion oinctrs suau reuiso io permit sum oversows\nlobe present, nud perform their duties as ulore-sai-\nor H Ihey shall bo driven nwuy Iroiu tue\ntHiiisny vimcuceuiui imimiuuiiuu,uii ine votes\niillid at such election district may bo rejected\nuy miy iriuiiiiui iuy
066a52eb833d30d927773575387d6723 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1889.2205479134957 46.187885 -123.831256 Under this method of obtaining\nsurveys no special form of applica\ntion is required: but before a survey\nof any township can be considered it\nis necessary that a petition for such\nsurvey be forwarded to (the office of\nthe surveyor general ot uregon, or or.\nWashington, signed, so far as practi\ncable, by all the actual settlers in\nthe township, giving the number and\nrange and general description or tne\ncharacter of the land. It should\nshow: What portions of the township,\nif any, cannot be surveyed, and the\nreason why it would bo impractica-\nble to survey; what portions are suit-\nable for agriculture; what portions\nare more valuable for timber than for\nagricultural purposes; what portions\nare mountainous, rocky, swampy, etc. ;\nwhether there are indications of\nminerals and ot what kind. If there are\nstreams or bodies of water that re-\nquire meandering, an approximate\nestimate such meander lines should\nbe shown. The petition should also\ngive 'the number of actual settlers\nand their postoihee address, and in\nwhat portiou ot tho township they\nare located, the character and condi-\ntion of their inhabitancy ot the land,\nthe extent and value ot their improve\nments, the use made of the land, and\nthe quantity under cultivation. The\nsituation of the township in respect\nto lines of public communication and\nthe progress of settlement of the\ncountry should be described, and all\nfacts and circumstances stated which\nwill enable an intelligent judgment\nto be formed as to the propriety of\nmaking the survey applied for.\nIt all items of information herein\nmentioned cannot be given with ex\nactness, an approximation, as near as\npossible, should be made. Only peti-\ntions for the survey of an entire town\nship or the surveyable portion of the\nsame can be considered.
0845d93a532728cd9c2395a85809fa6c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.554794488838 40.063962 -80.720915 tained that this woman was an Orange\nProtestant ol ibe strictest order, and\nthat ber mind had been dwelling on\nreligion for some lime past. Another\nwoman, who came irom Massachusetts,\nwent otf into a trance and became pos-\nsessed oi the spirit of an "Indiau," She\nscratr.bled over the precipice in an ag-\noniziug way, causing tbe spectators\ngreat terror, and gave vent to a lot o!\nunmitigated twaddle about squaws,\nwampum, and tire-water. She spoke\niu broken Knglisa that still had a twang\nol Yankee land about it, and the noble\nravage that possessed her seem-\ned to have been a uwriel Brave, as be\nwanted to get home to Lis squ.tw, be-\nside? being down on firewater. Shortly\nafter this Indian got back to his happy\nhunting grounds, another medium be¬\ncome filled with the spirit of JLola\nMonte/, who smiled gracefully, flirted\nfrightfully, and went deeply into a\ndiscussion of woman rights. £>ome\nof the mediums present declared\nthe was to strong for the\nclairvoyant, and the shade of Lola\nwas left in peace. In about an\nhour after this, tbi- same medium was\npossessed of another spirit and cried\nout, "ho for a fiddle and fine plat-\nlorm," and behold! the etberial sub¬\nstance of tbe late ".Jim Crow" was\namougthe crowd. The medium's ca¬\npering caused the j;upiag rustics ranged\naround, great astonishment, aud oue\nbig ne^ro wench said, in evident fear.\n"God a-merc) ! what am deui dar? Ob,\ngolly!" Everybody enjoyed the fun,\nand amiability was tbeorderof the day.\nThe rain interfered a little With the\ndancing, but among one thousand or\ntwelve hundred people, there are al¬\nways sure to be some adepts in the art\nol amusing,and a party from Mr. Con¬\nway's theatre, Brooklyn, made the\nwelkin ring with songs and comical\nspeeches. The boat led at six, aud in\nau hour after the party was lauded at\nChristopher street in a pelting rain\nstorm.
46c8762825a8cde0b1cfdf3b56a7ac43 THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1909.919178050482 41.004121 -76.453816 made from it. closely resemble in col-\nor nnd flavor those made from tho\ncranberry. It is rather singular that\nIts season of maturity also coincides\nwith that of the cranberry.\nA strictly tropical plant, the rosello\nIs very sensitive to frosts, says Coun-\ntry Life in America. This, together\nwith Its peculiar habit of blooming\nlate In October, regardless of the time\nwhen the seed Is planted, has restrict-\ned Its cultivation to tropical and sub-\ntropical regions.\nThe roselle Is nn nnnunl, and con-\nsequently seed for planting must be\nsaved every autumn.\nAs usually planted that is, In Feb-\nruary and March -- the roselle attains\na height of from live to seven feet.\nThe large yellow flowers, ench with a\nred eye, fade before the day passed,\nand the subsequent enlargement of\ntho calyxes Is then very rapid. In less\nthan three weeks they attain their full\nsire and are ready for picking.\nThe fruit Is seen at present In local\nmarkets only and Is sold by the qunrt.\nUs excellent qualities for making a\nsauce so closely Imitating in flavor\nthe cranberry as to deceive the very\nelect are not well known by the pub-\nlic, or it would be a formidable rival\nin the South to that fruit, on which\ntransportation charges are necessarily\nhigh owing to the great distances it\nmust ,bo transported." The crisp and\nJuicy appearance of the roselle Is di-\nminished by being too long in tho\nhands of the dealer, but this does not\nIndicate deterioration of its useful\nqualities.
1484a6f51de6b67cf81d50821a35ac3b CHICAGO EAGLE ChronAm 1904.6543715530763 41.875555 -87.624421 draw big crowds every pleasant after\nnoon uml evening. The nrruy of clever\nand Ingenious attractions "Along the\nPike," is siillicleiit hi itself to pro-\nvide u generous measure of mirth pro\nvoking and entertaining material, yet\nthe liberal policy that has marked Ihe\nresort since its opening offers many\nnew outdoor features from week to\nweek, and some of Ihe most attrac-\ntive exhibitions heroic Hie public. Tlie\nregular afternoon ami evening con-\ncert by a capable band Is one of the\npopular realities, mid commencing next\nMonday lids music will be furnished\nby Hrcdlleld's Military baud of in\npieces, one of the best organizations\nin the middle west, Including solo\nnumbers by recognized artists al each\nconcert. Closely following Html day\nof the Schwaben Vercln celebration\nnext Sunday, when the children will\nhold forth lu all merriment and the\ngood I line or Hie fatherland, Hie Illi-\nnois Naval Reserve will have their big\ncaning and picnic on next Tuesday,\nIncluding games and sports and many\npastimes, ami at night a plcturesipie\n thrilling exhibition will be the\nartillery drill. Madame I.IIJcus, who\ngives a perilous' and sensational high\nlire dive, will appear hi her Until ex-\nhibition on Sunday, and Is to be suc-\nceeded by Madame Patlme, an Orien-\ntal performer of beauty and nerve, who\nwill make a perilous slide for life along\na slender wire from a tall elevation,\nwhile suspended by her hair. On the\nfollowing Saturday will lie the big\nouting ami picnic of the Chicago\nXoiiaies, Hip crack exhibition company\nof Hie Seventh Regiment, and during\nthe afternoon and evening there will\nbe sham battles, contest between the\nsoldiers ami Indians ami a number of\nother Interesting contest uml exhibi-\ntions. Tho principal commanding oill-\ncers of the Fulled States Army will\nservo as Judges of the drill, and Ik\nwill be one of Hie most popularly at-\ntractive events of the year. On the\nnext day Hie Italian societies of Chi-\ncago will have a big celebration, Thu\nSchwaben Verelu fesllval will be ex-\ntended to Include next Monday.
211fe7c223a81da21bfea3aa15d912df THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.6287670915779 40.063962 -80.720915 lorean opposition to the treaties then\nrgani/.ed a general political move,\nlent and preached for itg inspiration\nverywhere that the treaties were de- j\nigned for the actual transfer of the j\nountry tojoreignern, and succeeded in\nworking up'tho prejudice of the people 1\ngainst foreign intrusion so «« to solidify\nletn against allowing the King to\nnrry out the treaties. The result was that\nle sovereign .soon found himself without\njpport among the people, and he openly\n)u«bt that olJapan and a few foreigners c\n1 the harbor. The Queen opeul)* sided f\nith the King, as she had an ambition f0r\n>rei«n associations. The dissatisfaction 0f c\nle Coreans soon became insurrectionary, j\nnd finally revolutionary, and, as Was\nsared, has terminated in the assassination *j\nf both the King and his Queen. Grave\namplications are likely to result from I\niese assassinations, and the revolution of 0\n Coreans against the treaties will natur.\nIly place the .United States and England\ni opposition to both China and Corca,\nith possibly Russia added to the latter '\narty and Japan to tho former.\nThe Bank of England has increased the\nite of discount from 3 to 4 per cent\nIn the Commons, this afternoon, the \\\npeaker read a letter from Judge La Who n s\nnnouncing the committal of Gray. Mr. e\nHadstone stated that precedents in cases\nmilar to that of Gray s show that appoint- I\nlent of a committee is the proper course: I\ni me present period ol the season, how- c\nver, it is too late to secure the appointjent\nof a representative committee. He c\nid not, moreover, know anv way in which '\nle committee could release Gray, if F\nley wished to do so. He, therefore,\nlatle a purely formal motion that the let-
023a8e87755229c69bd5f662a054d7fc VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.9547944888382 43.798358 -73.087921 Sec. 1 8.. It shall be the duty of the as-\nsessors in each town, in the month of Sept,\nbf each year, to meet and revise and cor-\nrect all errors that may be discovered in the\nlist , of such town, agreeably to the pro-\nvisions of this act and make duplicates\nthereof, one of which shall be deposited\nwith the town clerk of such town, and the\nother shall "be delivered to the Clerk of\nthe House of Representatives on or before\nthe 'second Thursday of October in ea:h\nyear; and it shall further be the duty of\nthe listers or assessors of each town, in the\nfirst week in Sept, in the year of our Lord\none thousand eight hundred and forty two,\nand the first week of September every five\nyears thereafter, to meet and designate one\nof said listers or assesors, whose duty it\nhall be to meet at the usual place of hold-\ning county courts io such county, except\nthat the listers in the county Benning\nton shall meet at the stone church of Arl-\nington, and the listers in'tbe county of\nChittenden at the town house . in Willis-ton- ,\non the third Tuesday in September\naforesaid; and such listers or assessors,\nso nut, shall . appoiot a moderator to\ngovern said meeting, and proceed to aver-\nage the valuation of the real estate of the\nseveral. towns in their respective counties,\njustly and equitably, comparing onq, with\nthe other, deducting from or adding to the\nvaluilion of said amount, so assessed, as\nthey may deem proper; and the listers or\nassessors, so met shall cause a certificate\nto be endorsed on such lists, describing\nsuch alterations as they may deem pro-\nper to make, which certificate shall be\nsigned by tne chairman of such meeting;\nand such lists shall be returned to the re-\nspective towns, so certified and averaged;\nand such lists, so returned and so certified.\nshall stand for tne valuation ot the real\nestate for the succeeding five years ; and
05b91d4d539ba51d315f2c065f044f21 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.6543715530763 40.735657 -74.172367 faithful performance of aald work; and that.\nir the person or person omit or refuse to\nexecute such contract they will pay to -the\ncity of Newark any difference between the\nauma to which he or they would have been\nentitled upon completion of the contract and\nln*t which the city of Newark may be\nobliged to pay the person or persona by\nwhom such contract shall be executed.\nThe Board of Street and Water Commis-\nsioners of the City of Newark reserve to\nthemselves the right to accept or reject any\nor all proposals for the above work as they\nn^ay deem best for the Interest of the city.\nBidders and sureties are hereby notified\nthat under the provisions of the seventh\nsection of the law creating the Board of\n8treet and Water Commissioners, approved\nMarch L'Sth, 1^91, that the bond or bonds \nbe given for the faithful execution and per-\nformance of said public work shall first\nbe approved as to sufficiency -by the board,\nand as to form by the counsel of the board,\nand no contract shall be binding on the city\nor become effective or operative until such\nbond is ao approved; and the president of\nthe board shall have power to examine the\nproposed bondsmen under oath, If he shall\nao desire, or shall be so Instructed by the\nboard, but the board will not be bound by\nany statement that may be made by such\nproposed bondsmen, but shall have full\npower and absolute discretion in the whole\nmatter, and thia provision shall be referred\nto In any advertisement inviting bids for any\nsuch public work.\nBy direction of the Board of Street and\nWater Commissioners of the City of Newark.
1005fef6159110694ab062abb5a57149 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1896.960382482038 46.187885 -123.831256 If it is true that the government con-\ntemplates the construction of two ad-\nditional dry docks on the Pacific coast,\nas announced by the Washington cor-\nrespondent of the New Tork Post, then\nis one of Astoria's greatest opportuni-\nties in its history presented. V, 1th a\nshort, easy and safe entrance, a depth\nof water sufficient to accommodate the\nlargest vessel afloat, perfect shelter\nfrom the heaviest storm that blows,\nfresh water and plenty of it, with room\nenough at one time for all the vessels\nIn the navy, this harbor offers more ad-\nvantages as a naval station in time of\npeatt, and would be more valuable as\na base of offensive and defensive opera-\ntions in the event of war than any\nether point on either coast One of the\nwonders of our naval history is that\nthese have not been recognised\nand utilized long ago, but it Is proba-\nble that the absence of railway connec-\ntions has had much to do with this\nstrange lack of appreciation. It is un-\nlikely that the government will locate\nany mor? drydocks on the Pacific after\nthe construction of the two now propos-\ned in the next century, and if Oregon's\nrepresentatives in congress permit these\nnew docks to go elsewhere than In the\nColumbia river it will be a fatal blun-\nder, both from the standpoint of the\ngovernment's Interest and the develop-\nment of Oregon's resources. The Cham-\nber of Commerce ought to appoint a\nstanding committee to look after this\none Bubject, and when the right time\nomes no reasonable amount of money\nar energy should me spared in bringing\nthe claims of Astoria harbor to the at-
24badfeb142fabd568b7307b377c348c DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL ChronAm 1910.3931506532217 44.939157 -123.033121 If over a bunch of councilmen\nseemed to have the shivers and to\nshow a hesitancy to voto it was when\nthe ordinance providing for tho con-\nstruction of a sewer In block 77 came\nup for final passage. The old sewer\nIn this block was laid by the property\nowners about 20 years ago, and is so\nhigh at pno end that it cannot be\nconnected with the city sower. Tho\nproperty owners petitioned the coun-cit- y\nto relay it, and it was voted\ndown last night. When the matter\ncamo up for consideration Council\nman Stolz said it was setting ' .a bad\nprecedent to pass the bill that it\nwa a matter that the property own\ners should pay for, and not tho city.\nCouncilman Carson asked. to be ex\ncused from voting, as the matter had\ncamo up he was ill, and he had\nnot had tlmo to Investigate it, and he\nwas referred to tho committee on\nquest was granted. This Bet the\nexcuse bee buzzing in councllmanic\nheads, and Councifman Stolz, who\nhad spoken against the matter,\nwanted to be excused, because he did\nnot like to voto on it, and this\nbrought out an inquiry from Council-\nman Lachmund as to whether a\nCouncilman could sit idly by and not\nvote. Tho mayor stated that a coun\ncilman present was presumed to\nvote, and finally Councilman Stolz\nvoted against the' measure. When\nthe name of Councilman Moflltt was\nreached another balk came, as ho said\nhe was not familiar with tho meas\nure. Councilman Lachmund again\nprotested, and said he wanted to see\nthe councilmen vote their convic-\ntions, but Councilman Moflltt did not\nvote.
2490245d2f015363c56f391fde467802 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1871.878082160071 42.217817 -85.891125 There are few parts of England more\nwild and desolate than the mining dis-\ntricts of Cornwall. Nature, as & coun-\nterpoise to the treasures which 6ho has\nlavished on this region, has given to its\nexternal features a most forbidding as\npect. The eye takes in a prospect of\nDieaK ana uarren plains, wun neuner\ntree nor shrub to protect the traveler\nfrom the wind that sweeps across them,\nand presenting danger at every step,\nfrom the numerous shafts by which\nthey are intersected. It is truly an in-\nhospitable country, and tho nature of\nits inhabitants quite accords with its\nunfriendly characteristics. They are, to\na great extent, repulsive in appearance,\nforbidding in manners and cruel and\ncunning by natural disposition, and\nseem hardly to have risen much above\nthe barbarous state of their ancestors.\nIt was late in the autumn when I visi-\nted this region, towaid the close of\na gloomy day that I found myself at the\nresidence of Capt. Thomas so I shall\ncall him a man whom 1 had met in Lon-\ndon, and who had persuaded me that the\nonly sure way to make a fortune was to\ninvest a trifle of ready money in a copper\nmine. He held the rank of captain, by\nthe custom of the country, as a mine,\nlike a ship, is conducted by a captain\nand officers. The captain was rather a\ndecent specimen of his class; for, where\nthere is to many combinations of miner,\nsmuggler, wrecker, and consequently\nrutliian, a man of even tolerable man-\nners ami address is something. My\nworthy friend, however, had one be-\nsetting weakness, which I afterward\ndiscovered. He would have considered\nit quite admissible to have robbed his\nown father rather than not have robbed\nat all.
a174e289c24b385a2065cf9ec6a1fe75 THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1939.5301369545916 40.618676 -80.577293 As we progress into summer, busi­\nness seems to be taking a steady, if\nsomewhat slow, turn for the better.\nFor a considerable number of weeks\na well-supported "recovery" move\nment has raised the industrial activity\nindexes. A representative index, Busi­\nness Week's, touched the 100 mark to­\nward the end of June, marking a 25\npoint betterment over the same period\na year before. Forecast is that the\nbarometer will reach, and may pass,\nthe 105 level during the summer. All\nthe forecasters apparently feel certain\nthat improvement will continue into\nthe fall at least\nAs has happened in most of the\nprevious upward movements, the dom­\ninant part is being played by the con\nsumers' goods industries—the makers\nand distributors of those many articles\nwhich all of us buy, use, and wear out\nat intervals. Retail trade, as\nis to be expected, is doing nicely. The\ncapital goods industries, on the other\nhand, present a far less optimistic\npicture. Residential building is keep­\ning some of them going at fair levels\nnow—but when fall and winter come,\nthere will almost certainly be a sharp\nlet-down in building. There is com­\nparatively little non-residential build­\ning, aside from a certain amount of\ngovernment work, going on. So the\nheavy goods industries, on which the\nbulk of employment and purchasing\npower in this country depends, must\nexist largely on the outlet for goods\noffered by home construction—and\nthat is not a healthy state of affairs.\nIf, for instance federal subsidization\nof home building were to be stopped,\nit could be expected that the severest\nsort of depression would instantly hit\nthe basic industries.
288bb08d703f1de504b443ceb4314924 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1915.7684931189751 41.681744 -72.788147 W. C . Edes is chairman of the commis-\nsion, and his two chief aids are Lieu-\ntenant Frederick Mears, late superin-\ntendent of the Panama railroad, and\nThomas Riggs. Jr., who has done much\nsurveying in Alaska.\nThis is not the pleasant pursuit that\nthe engineer in the states has a cut\nhere, a fill there, a nice bridge over a\nplacid stream, with long, level stretch-\nes in between. No, before he can call\nthe job done, Uncle Sam must study\nsome of the Goliath glaciers of the\nfrozen north and their moods; he must\nhew a patoh in the granite sides of\nmany a mountain top for his iron rails;\nhe must throw spidery bridges across\ngaping ravines which summer fills with\na frothing torrent and winter locks with\n wall of Ice; he must stem the cur-\nrents of raging rivers long enough to\nbuild concrete piers, all trussed to-\ngether with beams of the stoutest steel;\nhe must battle all the while with win-\ntry blasts and freezing ice and snow\nand howling, biting, vengeful winds.\nThe men and the machinery that\nhave torn the way between two conti-\nnents down at Panama has been drawn\nupon to battle with the barriers that\nare thrown across Alaska's peaks.\nPanama's lessons have been learned.\nThe new Job will be even more thor-\noughly accomplished than even that\nherculean labor.\nThe health and personal safety of the\nmen who are to do the battling with\nthe storm giants of the north are of\nprimest concern, just as it wae in Pan-\nama.
496d6121b6b588a223bdade9da2017af THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.864383529934 40.063962 -80.720915 At a Cabinet meeting to day there wai\n> conversation of long continuance witl\nregard to Cuban affairs generally, and thi\nposition occupied by the United States 01\nthat subject Thero wss no different\nimong the members or a fall Cabinet ai\nlo our duty in the premises, present ant\nprospective. While awaiting necessar]\njfflcial information, there is no donbt tha\n[he Admiral and Commanders ot ourfleei\nin the Cuban waters, will be, if they havi\nnot already been instructed to ob9crvi\nthe orders issued in the spring of 1809\nWhen the report came to the Navy De\npartment through the press and telegrami\nif the several American vessels, thej\nlaving been searched by the Spanist\nmnn.rif vir in thn Rritinh wnfnrn nnil nr\ntbe high road of tho nations in the Gul\nif Mcxico, tho Government, then as now\ntook the position that while the United\nStates Government wished to ob\nserve strict in regard U\ndifficulties existing in the Island of Cuba\nthey could not consent that our merchanl\nresselB should be molested in their law\niul pursuits, or overhauled and examined\nunless they were found committing somi\nviolation of Spanish authority. This the]\n:ould only do by landing arms and mu\noitions o( war. Tho waters betweei\nOuba and tbe United States being uaedoi\ni greathighway ol nations, vessels ahoulc\ngot be molested, unless they were wlthli\ni marine league ot the Island, and nol\nsven then unless detected in some over\nict. It is probable the fleet in the Sontl\nAtlantic Willi be increased without dclaj\nind one or more vessels sent to Bantiagc\nDe Cuba. Discussions have taken placi\ninofficial quarters as to the course thli\ngovernment ought to pursue in case Spaii\nshould be unable to enforce the principle)\nnf international law or violate those ap\nplicable to tho highway of nations,
b1a8a9a6fde4c940bf4158eb95c72b95 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1841.6287670915779 43.798358 -73.087921 When we mourn for those who are taken\nfrom us, is it consistent,that we should\ndecorate our person with fine apparel,\n"and study fashions to adorn the body ?'\nHow absurd, how ridiculous it is, to see\nthose whose hearts are laden with grief,\nwho mourn with a sorrow that refuses\ncomfort, giving directions about the cut of\na garment, or the texture of the cloth :\ninstead of devoting ourselves to the sol-\nemn duty of committing the moital part\nof the loved lost one to its parent earth,\nand giving back the dust to its kindred\ndust, in place of preparing our minds to\nmeet the same universal destiny, we are\nconsidering how we shall look, and how\nwell our "mourning" will become us.\nThe custom incurs an unnecessary ex-\npense. At a time when we require' all\nour united means, when perhaps the chief\nsupport of the family has been taken awar,\nand Ave have been under all the expense\nwhich sickness invariably brings wkh it,\nhow little can we then afibrd the addition-\nal expenditure of clothing which we do\nnot really want, and which, in many in-\nstances, such is the absurdity of the laws\nof fashion, can be worn for anr o'.her\npurpose. Again, the necessary expenses\nincidental to a luneral are all we should\nincur at such a time, and those we should\nreduce as low as possible.\nAnother unnecessary expense is created\nby procuring coaches for the pleasure of\na host of friends of the family. ..These\nfriends must attend the funeral, and of\ncourse coaches sufficient for the accom-\nmodation of all, must be hired, ehe we\nappear mean in the sight of very particu- -\nLlar friends ; thu3 the survivors, often a\nwidow and helpless children, are burdened\nwith expense they can ill afford, or incur\ndebts they can never pay.\nWhere our circumstances are such that\nwe can afford these extravagancies, we\nshould, avoid them as much as possible, in\nconsequence of the example it sets to oth-\ners, and the evil effects on society.\nAn instance occurs to us which is much\nto the point: Some years ago, a young\nman, who had been a fellow apprentice\nwith us, died, after a lingering illness of\nseveral months. His mother, an aged\nwoman, and very infirm, nursed him\nfaithfully, as only a mother can nurse her\nchild; long before his death,- th- e
02366c9e0b9c9b97650be4eea87c2958 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1912.0696720995245 40.735657 -74.172367 Sealed proposals are hereby solicited by the\nCommittee on Printing and Stationery of the\nCommon Council for printing and binding\nthree thousand (3,000) Common Council man-\nuals for the year 1912. according to the follow-\ning specifications:\nManual to comprise approximately two (hun-\ndred and fifty (250) pages, size of page to be\n4x5Vi Inches, single column composition, on\nsixty pounds super calendared white book\npaper, bound with flexible leather covers, on\nwhich there shall be four lines of gilt print-\ning, similar in all respects to the Common\nCouncil Manual of 1911. Cost of cuts or half-\ntones to be included In bid.\nCopy to be furnished from time to time,\nbeginning Immediately upon the acceptance of\ntlfb contract and ending ten days thereafter,\nContraot to be concluded within twenty (20) I\ndays after the fljtal delivery of manuscript.\nThe Committef on Printing and Stationery I\nwill be In seselon, fourth (lour, City Hall, to ;\nreceive and open bids on Tuesday, January 89,\n1912, between the hours of 8 and 8.35 p. m.\nBids must be presented then ond there. Bids |\nivlll be opened at promptly.\nBidder* will state prlceB in writing, as well !\nas In figures.\nAll proposals to be accompanied by ths con-\nsent in writing of two sureties, who shall i\nhave qualified as to their responsibility In the\namount of such proposal and hind themselves I\nthat if the contract be awarded to the pergon j\nor persons making the proposal they will, upbn\nIts being so awarded, become his or their\nsurety for the faithful performance of said\nworlu and that If the person or persona shall\nomit or refuse to execute such eontraot they\nwill pay to the city of Newark any difference\nbetween ths sums ts^ which ho or they would\nhave been entitled upon the completion of ths\ncontract and that which the city of Newark\nmay be obliged to pay the person or person*\nby whom such contract shall be executed.\nThe Committee on Printing and Stationery\nof the city of Newark reserves to itself the\nright to accept or reject any or all proposals\nfor the above work, or waive any defects\ntherein, as it may deem beat for the Interest\nof the city.
163b37e45fa3250dbb7c59173d767d36 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1842.6863013381533 31.960991 -90.983994 mounting to the cleoiest demonstration\nthat the distribution among the Spates\nof the proceeds ofthe sales of the pub­\nlic lands will be infinitely more con­\nducive to the ends of justice and lo\nthe relief of the People from their em­\nbarrassments, than the devotion of the\nsame funds to be swallowed up in the\ninsatiate gulph of the ordinary annual\nexpenses of the Federal Government—\nto perish in the using like the nine\nmillions of the fourth instalment prom­\nised lo the States, the seven or eight\nmillions ol Indian trust and Navy pen­\nsion funds, all sunk, during the Van\nBuren Administration, w ithout leaving\na wreck behind.\nThis review ofthe reasons of the\nPresident for objecting to the passage\nof the bill might be extended far more\ninto detail, and all leading to the con­\nclusion that they are feeble, inconsis­\ntent, and unsatisfactory. It remains\nonly for the House to take, by yeas and\nnays, the question upon the final pas­\nsage ol the bill, and as the majority of\nthe committee cannot indulge, even\nhypocritically, the absurd hope of a\nmajority either in this or the other\nHouse of Congress competent lo the\nenactment of the bill into a law, they\nleave the House to determin what fur­\nther measures they may deem necessa­\nry and practicable by the legislative\nauthority in the present calamitous con­\ndition of the country.\nThey perceive that the legislative\npower the Union has been for the\nlast fifteen months, with regard to the\naction of Congresss upon measures of\nvital importance, in a state of suspend­\ned annihilation, strangled by the five\ntimes repeated stricture of the Execu­\ntive cord. They observe that, under\nthese unexampled obstructions to the\nexercise of their high and legitimate\nduties, they have hitherto preserved\nthe most respectful forbearance to­\nwards the Executive chief; that while\nhe has, time after time, annulled by\nthe mere act at bis will their\nsion from the People to enact laws for\nthe common welfare, they have forborne\neven the expression of their resentmewt\nfor these multiplied insults and injuries\n— they believed they had a high desti­\nny to fulfil, by administering to the\nPeople in the form of law remedies for\nthe sufferings which they had too long\nendured. The will of one man has\nfrustrated all their labors and prostra­\nted all their powers. The maiority of\nthe Committee heReve that the case\nhas occurred in the annals of our U-\nuion, contemplated by the founders of\nthe Constitution by the grant to the\nHouse of Representatives of the pow­\ner to impeach the President of the Uni­\nted State»; but they are aware that\nthe resort to- that expedient might,-in\nthe present condition of public affiurs,\nprove abortive. They see that tboj\nreconcilable difference of opinion Jf\nof action between the Legislative ar\nExecutive Departments of the.GMeeï
1985824650291f2ed5cc6357c8dd0f33 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1879.7493150367834 40.063962 -80.720915 vaugut uuiu uiuai urn mo omors, ana b\n16 dropped his head. I Bald, "Yea bad i\n»ttsr atop before you fire." He dropped 1\nlis eyee and said,"You bad Jut about as\ntell hush. If I was an officer you night t\nret me to go back, but I sllus obey orders. (\n[am.a private and am under orders." I 1\nrelieve these are his words verbatim. J\n[bis fellow fired almost in Johnnie's t\nace, and, be it remembered, each J\n>ne fired two barrels, and the great broad 1\nitalrway was all the time crowded, and at c\n10 time did the firing cease. Another 1\nsune. I held him with both hand^tiU he 1\n[trenched himself free.exolalmlngashe c\nlid so, "Go away, d.n you 1" I held Roe- I\nler by the arm with which he held tho ;\nu with which ho was chopping out the s\n I laid to him, "Stop. 1 Implore (\nfou by the God who made yoa and before i\nwhom yon have so soon to appear, to stop, \\\n1 beg yoa by the mother who bore, by the <\nihonghtof your wife and children, don't 1\nlo this deed. Have you not a wife and (\n:hildren?" "Yet" he said,"and so had i\nMr. Rally." "Well," said I, "will tho 1\nmurder of an Innocent man give John\nSolly's wife a husband, or John Gallv's\nchildren a father?" Cornelia, thinking\nbe was listening, began to plead to bim in\nperson, when be said: ''Go back, d-n\nyoa, or I'll blow your d.n brains out"\nWell, I'm glad he got his reward losoon.\nSome one, who was jast pushing me away\nlubuuui, Baiu: "wouia VOU Snootawo-\nman?" "Yes," d.n her; I will shoot any-\nbody who gets In my way." I don't
050dfd9bb57c18dd082dc8fce9ca0b7e THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.908469913732 39.290882 -76.610759 the high undfllating prairie lands are as well, if\nnot better, adapted to the cultivation of the win-\nter grain than the best lands of N. York, Ohio,f r\nMichigan. This may arise from the nature of\nthe soil, whieh being a deep sandy loam, is not\nliable to be thrown up by the frost.?Many of\nour farmers have succeeded in raising from forty\nto fifty bushels of first rate wheat from the acre.\nIndian Corn of the flint kind is cultivated here\nwith great advantage and yields about as large\na crop as the best lands in the middle and eas-\ntern states; but we do not consider that the\nnorthern part of the Territory excels so much\nin the corn crop as in the roots" and small grains.\nHere, indeed, nature seems to have combined all\nthe requisites the production of the esculent\nroots in the highest degree of perfection.\nThe Galena potatoe, which is celebrated for its\nsuperior excellence on the Mississippi and all its\ntributaries, is produced in the northern part at\nlowa, and the portion .1' Wisconsin lying adja-\ncent, and the yield is from four to five hundred\nbushels to the acrt, without any particular care\nin cultivation. Onions are produced no where\nin the United States equal to those of lowa and\nWisconsin; they can be raised from the seed ina\nsingle season from 15 to 20 inches in circumfer-\nence, and the ground so covered with them that\nitcan scarcely be seen, the Aula Baga, beet,\nturnip, and in fact every esculent root from tem-\nperate climates, the cultivation of which has\nbeen tried by our farmers succeeds equally ell w
520f5bcf416714526f7e8af53ebd7893 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1924.2991802962456 41.681744 -72.788147 the bet over a score of cities and\nget better odds. Such bets as he\nmade at the tracks were for his own\naccount, and generally be lost, so\nthat the small bettora who spied\nupon him, hoping to learn which\nhorses the company were backing,\nsuspected that he bet to blind them\nto the real identity of the horses\nthe "killings' were made on. They\nbelieved that the Long Investment\nCompany waa winning vast sums.\nAa a matter of fact, the Long In-\nvestment Company did not bet at\nall, KIrtin did not believe In gam-\nbling. Yet, oddly enough. Big Jim\nLong believed firmly and unshak-abl- y\nthat, if he had complete con-tr- o l\nof the finances of the company,\nhe could beat the races. He was\nconvinced with the capital of\nthe Long Investment Company he\ncould corrupt enough Jockeya and\nowner to pay dividends legitimate-\nly and make a fortune for himself.\nLong would have been an easy vic-\ntim of the game he was helping\nperpetrate upon the public. Kirtin\nhad no such illusions. Long had\nonce argued the point with KIrtin\nIn the privacy of the back room In\nNew York, and Kirtin had called\nhim a fool, with variations, prefix\nand addenda. And, aa Klrtln sent\nhim five thousand dollars a week\nwith which to keep up the front of\nthe Long Investment Company,\nLong had not pressed the poipt.\nNeither had he been convinced.\nIt waa against Big Jim Long that\nHardshell Oalnes cherished th on\nhatred of his life. It had started
00387ae73d204dfd726480326b0bd0e8 OROVILLE DAILY BUTTE RECORD ChronAm 1857.8890410641807 39.513775 -121.556359 the permanent recovery of his liealtn. Horne down\nby the distressing symptoms incident to (he vicious\npractice of oncmitrollablu passion in youthtdepr' -s -ed\nm body and mi ml: nimble to perforin even tint most\ntrilling duty imposed upon the d illy uvoeailou, of\nlip,*, i sought tne advice of many physicians, who at\nlirsl regarded my disease ns ol trifling import.mee—-\nhut Bias! nfler a lew weeks, and in several instances\ninuinhs, of their trealinent. I found to my iiiiut'era-\nhle Horror, that instead of relief, the s)mptoois lie\ncame more alarming in their torture, and. In-ing o d\nby one that my disease, being principally confined to\ntho brain, medicine w ould he of lilt e coit-'equ- nee. I\ndespaired ol ever regaining my heal h. strength mid\nenergy; and ns a last resort, and w ith Lot a taint\nhope called upon Dr. t'zupkny w ho, alter examining\nmy case pres. rih.fd some medicine Wliicti almost in.\nsioitlv rt.lieve.t me ol the dull pain and di/ziness j i\nmy head. Encouraged by this result, I resov -d to\nplace myself iintlu diatrdv under his care, mill by \ntrial adherence to his Uirod ions and tul vii e, toy head\nbecame dual, my ideas collected, Hie constant pain\nin my hack and groins the weakness ol my limbs,\nthe nervous reaction of my who'e body on tb • » tghl-\nest alarm or excrement; the nilsaaliiro| y and evil\nlorclio bugs; theselfdis rust and want of eooddeuce\nmothers; ttieincapahi ity to study. and want of res-\nolution: the friuh'.ful, exciting, and at limes pleastir-\nable dreams at night , followed by involuntary ids\ncharges.Amivi: all disappeared; and in fact in two\nmonths utter having consulted the Doctor, I fell as il\ninspired t.y a m-w lift—that life which, but a short\ntime ago I contemplated to end by my own hand.\nWilli a view to gu. 'ud the unfortunate trout lulling\ninto Hie horinls of imiompo'ent quacks, 1 deem it my\nduly to offer this testimony to the merit and sk ill of\nDr.V/.apkay. iind recommend him to all who may\nstand tti need of medical advice, being assured by my\nown experience, Inal once under his cure, a radical\nand permanent cure w ill he effected.
4396ec706abe3e445fbd014462720b8f THE POTTERS HERALD ChronAm 1940.6598360339506 40.618676 -80.577293 President Duffy and Joseph M.\nWells, head of the U. S. P . A. Labor\nBoard, will be co-chairmen of the\nparley. It is expected that the open­\ning session will be turned over almost\nentirely to the opening addresses of\nthe two spokesmen as they give the\nviews and aims of their respective or­\nganizations as represented in the re­\nquests. Propositions to be considered\nfirst will also be determined at this\ntime. It is thought those of the\nBrotherhood will have initial call be­\ncause that privilege was granted the\nmanufacturers in 1938.\nOriginally set for Tuesday after­\nnoon, the conference was postponed for\none day at the request of the Broth­\nerhood in order to give the conferees\nenough time to review the many prop­\nositions thoroughly.\nAs was the case two years ago, a\nmember of the Executive Board will be\nmissing because of illness. Third Vice\nPresident George Chadwick, bags\npacked and ready to leave East Liv­\nerpool last Sunday, was too sick to\nleave. His physician told him he must\nremain at home for a few days. In\n1938 Sixth Vice President George\nTurner was prevented from attending\nthe conference by a leg infection. Sec­\nond Vice President Frank Hull, now\non the west coast, will also be missing.\nIn addition to President Duffy, of­\nficials present are First Vice Presi­\ndent E. L. Wheatley, Fourth Vice\nPresident Charles Zimmer, Fifth Vice\nPresident George Newbon, Sixth Vice\nPresident George Turner, Seventh\nVice President Charles Jordan, Eighth\nVice President Joshua Chadwick and\nSecretary-Treasurer John McGillivray.\nConferees present are:\nLocal Union No. 4—Ray Hammond,\ncaster, East Liverpool, Ohio.\nLocal Union No. 9—Ben Jones, kiln-\nman, East Liverpool, Ohio; Thomas\nNeal, kilnman, East Liverpool, Ohio.\nLocal Union No. 10—Fred Mc­\nGillivray, handler, East Li\\-erpool, O.;\nFrank Duffy, turner, East Liverpool,\nOhio.
16620ec26e747c3a3d7a3ef42f5a91d4 WYANDOT COUNTY REPUBLICAN ChronAm 1871.1273972285642 40.827279 -83.281309 But. sir. we are told that this is an\nodious and unpopular tax. I never\nknew a tax that was not odious and un-\npopular with the people who paid it. I\nthink if the Senator from Pennsvlvania\nwould go into some places in Philadel-\nphia be would tind that the whisky tax,\nwhich is so popular with ns, is uiidodu- -\niar there. 1 know that in Brooklvu oeo- -\nple have organized armed resistance to\nthe collection f the whisky tax. have\ncombined and confederated together,\nand we have had to call out nine hun-\ndred troops of the United States to go\ntnere anu eniorce tne wuisKy tax. Those\npeople denounce it as unjust and une-\nqual. We do not thiiix so. Sir, if you\nwould only levy taxes which in the\nopinion of every body, or even of a ma\njority, are not unequal and unjust, you\nwould nave sucu a tax law as . 1 have\nnever yet seen.\nW hen you come to examine this in-\ncome tax you tii.d that it applies, it is\ntrue, to only about sixty thousand peo-\nple, but those sixty thousand people do\nnot pay their proper share of other taxes.\nWhy ? Can a licit man with overflow-\ning revenue consume more sugar or\ncoffee or ten, or drink more beer or\nwhisky, or chew more tobacco than a\npoor man ? You tax tobacco at the same\nrate per pounil, whether it is tobacco\nfor the wealthiest or for the poorest.\nHere ia case ot inequality admitted by\nall ; and so all taxes produce inequality ;\nbut when in a system of taxation you\nare compelled to reach out to many ob\njects you must endeavor to equalize\nyour general result oy reaching all\nsources of taxation and do the best you\ncan to equalize in that way.\nTherefore, when it is complained that\nthe tax on an article consumed is unjust\nupon the poor, because the poor have to\nconsume a greater proportion of their\nincome in its purchase than the rich, we\nauswer that to countervail or meet that\nwe have levied a reasonable income tax\nupon such incomes as are above tiie\nwants and necessaries of life. That is\nthe only answer, and it is a complete\nanswer; because, if you leave yoursys-- !\ntern of taxation to rest solely upon cons-\numption, without any , tax upon prop-\nerty or income, you do make au unequal\nand unjust systun.
13753b371d4edb0815999c3e311a0576 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1871.6999999682903 40.063962 -80.720915 party generally abjured the new depar-\nlure, avowing their purpose to praetl-\ncully set aside reconstruction and the\nI'jiiistitutional amendments, and in Ohio\nu s in California, the people wiil again,\nus tliey have since 1851), reject the Demo-\ncratic'party, its candidates, its doctrines,\nils principles, lenders, and organization.\n'Hint there are silly men in tho ltepub-\nlicitli ranks, and that the party has not\naltogether escaped tho corruption Inci-\ndental to a long lease of power in the\nlleneral and State Governments, is most\ntrue that there aro men In the Kepubli-\ncan party, claiming to be statesmen, who\na r e ignorant and unsafe depositaries ol\npolitical power, and even worse, as lead-\nith, is not to lie denied; Hint the popular\niiiinil is slrongly diaposed to reform, to j\nI'llhl changcs nl policy on certain issues,\nmill In stilislitntc men of bruins and ex-\nperiencc lnr the many harlequins who\nhave bccome objects ol disgust, is boyoiul |\nrimlrnversy but still peoplo prefer s\nIn I'liilure anything rather than another\ndose of what is called "Democracy." i\nNever In tiio history of the country was <\nthere a party having such opportunities\nliirHiiccess, and yet so destitute uf ability\nto win public conlidonco. The people of\nllio country are In favor of a general am-\nin-sly, and are opposed to the species of\nlegislation which seeks to establish mar-\nlinl law in timo of peaco; hut, so utterly\ndevoid is the Democratic party of public '\nI'nnlidence, that tile class ol men who\noppose amnesty and vote fur martial law t\ncan get elected to Congress over the most\nrespectable Democrats. The people posl- (\nlively will not trust Dial parly witli the t\nreins ol government of a Slate. They 1\nprefer to elect any blackguard who may j\npush a county convention rather than a 1\nmnn who continues lo prattle of a while c\nman's government and of the "Infamous (\namendments." i
403fd80ebcfa72012b2cfc818fc8995c CATOCTIN CLARION ChronAm 1912.6024589847702 39.623709 -77.41082 Bon of Daniel Boone. 1s 75 years old.\nBut the old water mill Is older than\nhe. It was built In 1830 and forelghty-\ntwo years has been grinding corn and\nwheat within ten miles of Kansas City.\nThe hands that hewed Its walnut\nbeams and fashioned the hickory pins\nthat keep Its weathered boarding In\nplace moldered Into dust a half cen-\ntury ago. but the old mill grinds on\nJust as patiently, as fatlhfully, as un-\nmindful of passing time and genera-\ntions as It did long years before this\ncity was dreamed of.\nYou pass your hand over the sur-\nface of a walnut beam, hewed out by\nthe ax of John Fltzhugh, elghty-two\nyears ago. and lay your fingers In a\ngaping notch Just as his ax blade left\nIt, and think of the changes that have\ncome to Western Missouri since then.\nWestport Landing grew out along the\nold wood road It bridged with\npaved streets the miles between it\nand Westport and overflowed south-\nward and yet the old mill wheel turn-\ned and the corn was ground to meal\nbetween the homemade stones of rock\nquarried on the bank of Indian Creek.\nSince this mill was built the com-\nmerce of the Santa Fo Trail came,\nflourished for a Hmo and died; and\nthen the rush of forty-niners to Cali-\nfornia flowed past It, and after them\nthe railroads came and passed on to\nthe Pacific, and with them the legions\nof pioneers like the clouds of locusts\noverspreading all the land beyond to\nthe westward. The Mormons of Inde-\npendence, who brought their grist to\nthis mill, departed to found a new em-\npire beside the dead sea In the un-\nknown desert. Past this old mill, Just\ntwo hundred yards to the east, where\nthe big elm leans out over the creek,\narmies
27b93adda8ff05fd918bd561aa304652 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.015068461441 40.063962 -80.720915 person whose forehead is broader than sh<\nc out'K ih uuiiiu. uoi. juna w. rorney tut\nvercaiue to tho store, but there was an- an\nlierperhon who purchased his tiles here, on\nd the hats fitted the colonel exactly, eai\nhen ho wanted a new article he would cm\nud here, and it was no trouble to fit. He idi\nda good head. Prof. Allen, of Uirard de\nliege, has a remarkable head, lie takes be\nusame size hat as ex-Governor Curtin, tlx\nhough neither could -wear the other's of\nt. Curiin's head is short and bulgy at uic\nL' bnck, while the professor's is long and po\nghtly wider at tho back than in front, of\nio circumference of tho heads of these gm\no gentlemen is the same us was that abi\nex-President Martin Van liurcn, yet the suj\nter would have appeared odd with the tin\nt of either of tho persons named perched icii\nhis A umall front and large wli\nck is the typical German head. The nil\nliladelphia newspaper men have strange nit\nads, and the most of these fellows are gig\ncer in their ideas. The boss politicians apj\nve good heads all through, and if it were ant\nt for offending them I would lay the\netches of their uraniums before the pub- wh\nThe largest hat that I have seen re- sin\nltly is that made fora monstrosity living sto\nTurlington, X. J., and the hat held a "N\nshel. The man's head is so big that he Itt-i\nmot carry it, and he is compelled to lie a (*\nbed nearly all the time. Men who re- it\nuh lints over the "eight" sizo are not dec\nill balanced, and the only one I know are\nU'lin liiltfU llilt lif (lin» dninwiitin.. So »l. ~\nmdinghis spare moments at Kirkbride's. to t\nv uVenice size of heads is seven and
19dc6b600efbfc1f4c11c0c1885b69ec PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1884.3510928645517 39.756121 -99.323985 ing their time to ask for volunteers to go\nto New Caledonia as wives for convicts\nserving out sentences in that penal colo-\nny. Fifty women who answered this ap-\npeal were shipped the other day from\nBordeaux, and when they arrive at\nNew Caledonia they will be divided be-\ntween the two religious establishments,\none at Noumea, and the other atBourail.\nThe convicts of the first class that is,\nthose who have distinguished themselves\nby good conduct, and who are according\nly to be rewarded by land grants are in-\nformed of the arrival of the women.\nThose who are unmarried, or who are\nwidowers and desire to get married,\ngo to Noumea or to Bourail, where\nthey are allowed to make their choice\namong the women, ui course, they\nare not forced to make a choice, nor are\nthe women forced to marry if the men\nwho select them do not please them. The\nauthorities introduce the and wo-\nmen to each other and allow them to act\nas they please. During the last century\na more rapid and more curious system\nwas in force. When the women arrived\nthey, with the men, were drawn up in a\nline facing each other. The name of a\nman was called, and then the name of a\nwoman, and when the list had been call-\ned over the couples were at once married.\nAs for the women who volunteer to ex-\nchange their cells in St. Lazare and the\nother prisons of France for a husband\nand perpetual exile in the islands of the\nPacific, it is safe to say that they are nei-\nther the youngest, the prettiest, nor the\ngentlest of their sex. But, then, those\nwhom" they are to marry are not fellows\nwho can excite much sympathy, and\nthey ought to consider themselves lucky\nthat they are given land and allowed to\nfound a family.
4aa8b461054ef7b3f1760d9bc1b3e4d7 THE PILOT AND TRANSCRIPT ChronAm 1840.3784152689234 39.290882 -76.610759 Lwenpoot., April 3G.? Traveling, at fifty-\nix nilcs \\u25a0* hour. ?The ten feel wheels at-\ntached- to the locomotive engines eiofrfoyed\non the Great Western Railway, not being\nfound fully to answer the expectations-of the\ndirectors, they have altered their.plan, and\nin future wheels of 7 feet diameter-only are\nto be employed. The-result has bee-n the\nattainment of the speed of 5G miles at> hour.\nOn Saturday the 28th ult. the Fire Fly., a new\nengine on this principle, manufactared by\nMessrs. JoE.es, Turner,and Evans- . of thcVia-\ndueh Foundry, at Newton, made an experi-\nmental trip from Paidington to Reading.?\nThe speed throughout, was equal to one mile\nin one minute 11 3-8 seconds, or. an average\nof fifty mites and a half per hour,, two miles\nof the road were, however, got over at the\nrata of 5G miles an hour. This is. the great-\nest speed at present attained in the history of\nlocomotive power; what will eitimately be-\nthe greatest, it is impossible to foretell.?\nMessrs. Jones & Co. have since-forwarded a\nsecond engine from their wanks to Londoou\nand they have four others ia of\nerection for the use of the Grent Western\nRailway Company.\nEXTRAORDINARY MEMORY. There is in\nBramplon Wesleyan Sunday School, a Rule\ngirl, under eight years of age, who can com-\nmit to memory, with a few hour's aoliee,\nany chapter in the Old or New Testament.\nLast week she said to one of the teachers\nthe whole book of Hebrews, and the 11th\nchapter of St. John, together containing 350\nverses. She completed the whole within an\nhour and twenty minutes.? Derbyshire paper.\nPRIECS or AMERICAN STOCKS, April 29.?Ala-\nbama ss. 1858,81; Indiana ss, 1861, 82; Illinois\n6s, 1870,80; Louisiana sterling ss, 1844, 89 a 90;\nNew York ss, 1860, 864; Ohio6s, 1850?60, 91;\nPennsylvania ss, 1856 to 1864, 764; Tennessee\n6s, 1868, 87 a 8; United States Bank, 144 a 15;\ndo. Debentures, 974 ex div; City New York Life\nand Trust, 79.\nFrom the London Morning Chronicle, May 1.\nMONEY MARKET AND CITY NEWS.?Thurs-\nday.?The business transacted in the English\nfunds were limited; the closing prices of Consols,\nboth for money and account, being the same as\nyesterday. A farther advance, however, of Is
0aa041bb2ae58a6b98f7becd539c6a9f THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1898.7082191463724 32.612638 -90.036751 ligion than we ourselves have. The\nmost of that which you do to benefit\nthe souls of tins generation you will\neffect through your own behavior. Go\nwrong, aud that will induce others to\ngo wrong. Go right, and that will in-\nduce others to go right.\nAway with all your gloomy talk\nabout departing from this world! If\nwe have served ourgeneration.it will\nnot be putting out into the breakers;\nit will not be the fight with the king\nof terrors; it will be going to sleep.\nA friend, writing me from Illinois, lays\nthat Itev. Dr. Wingate, president of\nWake Forest college, North Carolina,\nafter a most useful life, found his last\nday on earth his happiest day, and that\nIn his last moments he seemed to be\npersonally talking with Christ, as\nfriend with friend, saying: "Oh, how\ndelightful it is! I knew you would be\n me when the time came, and I\nknew it would be sweet, but I did\nnot know it would be as sweet as it is."\nThe fact was he had served his gen-\neration in the Gospel ministry, and\nby the will of God he fell asleep. When\nin Africa Majwara, the servant, looked\ninto the tent of David Livingstone and\nfound him on his knees, he stepped\nback, not wishing to disturb him in\nprayer, and some time after went in\nand found him in the same posture and\nstepped back again, but after awhile\nwent in and touched him, and, lol the\ngreat traveler had finished his last\njourney, and he had died in the grand-\nest and mightiest posture a man ever\ntakes on his knees. He had served\nhis generation by unrolling the scroll\nof a continent, and by the will of God\nfefT on sleep.
0452c49f64f0dd6129aef8cfc7dabb7c THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1887.2863013381532 43.994599 -72.127742 Light wood sticks are much used for these\ndressy parasols and are ornamented with\ncarving, sometimes in three sections, at the\nend, or they aro countersunk or inlaid with\ndarker brown wood, or are made liko doubled\nflat or triangular sticks or in imitation of\nbamboo, or they are twisted in the even twist\nso fashionable in all furniture and aro finished\nwith a knob of faceted crystal, or of the\nwood or of enamel or of jet, either black or\ncolored. Mottled sticks with gilt or silver\ntops, and those of natural wood with hooks\nor rings, are very stylish and of great length;\nthe ferrule at the top corresponds with the\nstick and is also very long.\nA bow of ribbon of many loops and o\nbright color trims the handle, and narrower\nribl&n is tied on the ferrule. After the lace\ntrimmed parasols, and those with beaded\nstripes, and the open beaded medallions \nshow a color beneath them, are many sim\npler ones of stripes, or with plaid borders\nhaving also small plaids in the middlo, and\nfor pluin use there are also pongee covers, or\nthose of dark silk black, blue, or brown\nwith hair stripes of bright colors, or with\nalternate stripes of contrasting colors, each\nhalf an inch or an inch broad. Some of the\npongees have embroidery all over them, the\nground of long stitches making a background\nfor daisies or medallions. Black grenadine\nparasols are over red, green, or other color,\nwith a frill of lace, and light wood handle.\nFor children are satin striped parasols with\ntwisted handles of light wood. New sun um\nbrellas have a large ball of dull gilt next a\nmottled wooden handle, or a crystal ball, or\none of black with white enamelled flowers or\nleaves, or else a hook of natural wood tipped\nwith ivory. Harper's Bazar.
ce215c246773744a56bf2d287adc33d6 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1863.1904109271943 41.262128 -95.861391 formed to continue, when united by so\nunnatural a bond as hatred, and tbe Un­\nion tba* formed is unworthy of prearva-\ntion. The people of the North may be\nwilling to support legitimate Govern­\nment, bat we much doubt whether they\nwould be willing to bear the burthern im*\nposed by governing 10.000,OOU of\npeople against their consent. So far aa\n1 am concerned I hare never felt that\ninterest in tbe people of the revolted\nStates, than I would have imposed upon\nthe people of tbe North, the bondage and\nservitude of debt, to extend a Govern­\nment over tbem, against their consent;\nuor has the relation of master and slave\nbeen so abhorrent to me, that I would at\nany time during the existence of the\nUnion, have disturbed tbe peac? and har­\nmony tbe Government, a single hooi^\nto have liberated every slave in the land,\ni have no more kindly feelings for those\nwho are dictatorial, proud, and arrogant,\nfrom wealth accumulated by the labor of\none whase skin is white, than i have for\nthoaa who are dictatorial, proud aad arro-\n?.- »nt, from wealth accumlated by the\nlabor of one whose akin is biaek. It\nmay be laas offensive, to those who woaid!\nbo the champions of freedom, to call the\none an operative and the other a slave,\nbat here, where you and I have cast our\ndestinies, we do not eat our bread from\nthe sweat of operatives or slaves, nor\ndo we expect, for all time to come, to pay\ntribute to the demands of thos? who do.\ntf tbe South valued slavery more than the
3c8a9eb3ac9357b12154028177265d6b PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1917.705479420345 39.456253 -77.96396 To elect officers of their ilk was\ntheir game, and to do so, most all\nthe time was spent to that end. The\nGrand Lodge has been carried to\nall the inconvenient places possible\nto keep the klick in power.even\nonce taking it to Moo re field, where\nthey had to go by stage from Keyser\n. 1 2 miles. Nearly thirty years ago\none of the keenest of rascals stole\nand squandered $107.50 and never\npaid it back. An insurance plot\nwas disgracefully attached to ma¬\nsonry and hundreds and hundivds\nof dollars gobbled up by the ring.\nHowever, a change, thank heavens\ntook root two yeais ago in Pirkers-\nburg, when men of honor, who love\nthe order kept their solemn vows\ntriumphed, and passed a resolution\nthat instituted ro ation in office.\nThey fought it hard but died iu their\nown dark deeds. will be no\nmore sham elections. There will\nbe no more grouping, clicking and\ntricking time away at future Grand\nLodges. The only man to be added\nto the official body will be the pur-\nsuviant.an appointee of the Grand\nMaster, but Alfred K. Goodwyn, of\nMinefield being Deputy Grand Mas¬\nter took the chair and has honored\nit, because he is clean and honor¬\nable. A better Grand Master has\nnever filled that place, and Xegro\nMasonry is destined to go onward\nand upward under the new regime.\nlo destroy what was dune at\nyarkrsburg last year.rotation in\noffice as the whites do.the dying\nrecalcitrants lobbied and bickeied\ntogether until the evening of the\nclosing day s session, witli no busi¬\nness done on account of it. Not¬\nwithstanding the clever people of\nClarksburg prepared the finest re¬\nception ever given the Grand Lodge,
02e64b4890513b355039baada3ccf0b9 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1889.195890379249 40.441694 -79.990086 The Alarralnc Increase of a1TrOHble That U\nMenacing the People of All Classes It\nMast Be Stopped, but How\nThe number of prominent men and women\nwho have been dying recently is very large and,\nstrange to say, nearly every one was the victim\nof one trouble, namely, pneumonia. We hear\nof these prominent people because tbey are\nprominent, hut there are thousands who die of\nthis same dreadful disease suddenly and of\nwhom'the world never hears. It Is safe to say\nthat during the cold season fully half of all\ndeaths arise from pneumonia.\nThis is a most mysterious disease. It comes\nsuddenly and works, quickly. It must be taken\non the start if at all, and any person who feels\na tickling in the throat, a tightness of the\nchest, a dry cough, difficulty In raising or pain\nIn coughing, should beware! That very moment\nis the time to and by stimulating the body,\nhealthily throw off the germs of the disease be-\nfore they grow. There is only one certain way\nby which that can be done, viz, by the use of\npure stimulants, and it is now generally admit-\nted that Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is the only\nreliable form In which pure whiskey is y\noffered to the public This grand and pure com-\npound is not a common whiskey, but a sure and\nabsolute remedy. It has saved more lives\nthreatened by pneumonia, checked more con-\nsumption and preserved more health than any\nother chemical discovery of modern times. Its\npopularity proves this. Care should be exer-\ncised to secure only the genuine, and under no\ncircumstances to take a cheap substitute which\nis declared to be just as good. Take pneumonia\nin time, for even if it is checked, unless taken\npromptly, it may run into consumption.
0d73a9021006b9c30d657e8e91f45f01 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.0315068176053 40.063962 -80.720915 It will be remembered that 1n the argu¬\nments that were adduced from the condi¬\ntions In Kansas by the calamity ellver-\nltes great stress was laid upou the al--\nleged fact that the state was mortgage\nridden, and that the farm?rs were groan¬\ning under a mountain of debt, for which\nthe gold standard wat held responsible,\nwhile the "money power'* was held up as\nthe vampire that was sucking the life-\nblood from the agricultural Interests of\nthe state. Free silver, it wne held by Mr.\nBryan, of Nebraska, and the Papullstlc\nstatesmen who were the principal pro¬\nducts of Kansas when other crops were\nscant, was the only remedy that would\ncure the Ills. Nature and Nature'® law\nof supply and demand had nothing to do\nwith It. The situation was wholly \nto the wicked gold standard and a lack\nof cheap money.' When the sound money\nmen declared that there was plenty of\nmoney, and all that was needed was\nbountiful crops and a demand In the\nmarket for them to bring the money\ninto the agrlcultural.reglons of the west,\ngood prices for products and prosperity\nfor the farmer, the claim was encored'\nat, and even to this day Sir. Bryan is\nsetting up the absurd claim that the ag¬\nricultural communities are no better off\nthan they were eighteen months ago.\nIn Kansas alone the enormous value\nof«the crops, and the great demand for\nthem at good prices, give the lie to these\ncalamity walls, and every clajm made\nby the 60und money advocates has been\nverified by the fact that there Is no
11f6d4fb5b21f86be7793e67416f0968 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1905.9465753107559 31.762115 -95.630789 sincere christian a devoted husband CarolinaFloridaKentuckyArkansas-\na loving tender father we can bnt Kansas Colorado North and South\ni wonder why such a life could not be Dakota Iowa Minnesota Wisconsin\nI spared witb all Its influence for good Michigan Missouri December 21 22-\nNo one could know him in his daily and 23 with limit of thirty days\nlife without realizing that his wan a The best gateway to the southeast Is\npractical Christianity To have spoken that of Memphis and as the Rock\nan unkind word would have been ut Island enters the Union depot there it-\nterly foreign to bis nature no matter gives conn cHon3 with all lines with\nwbat tbe provocation and yet he had ont tho delay and annoyance of trans\nthat firmness which is always found in fer of passengers or baggage across\na man of strong character His pro town and greatly lessens the \ntenslors wero nothing hia life every j bility of missing the outgoing trains\nthing His patience in his long illness Through cars will be placed at many\nand his thoughtfuiness for others wero points in Texas to rnn via Memphis\nperfectly phenomenal We cannot advice of which will be given all In\nBoo why bo was taken from bis quiring passengers\nhappy home but God knows best and Tbe ronte lies through the beautiful\nsome day we shall understand Tbe i Indian Territory and the heart of tbe\nhearts of their host of friends go out best section of Arkansas giving the\nto his bereft wife and child but finest scenery of any line\nwe know God will comfort their hearts Totbe north the Rock Islandhas\nand some timo they will meet their double daily service to Chicago Kan\ndear one whore parting comes uo sis City and other points including St
02265850df7e83cd1296e059dfa77497 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1902.6041095573314 39.745947 -75.546589 If East Side has not been misin­\nformed. there is a muddle in the Union\nRepublican politics in the Seventh\nrepresentative district in Kent county.\nFour well-known men are desirous of\njoining in the shout of the name “J.\nEdward Addlcks” some two hundred\nP* more times next winter. Early ini\nthe spring, the Union Republicans\nslated T. Elwood Warren, a prominent\nfarmer, better known to the Addlcks\nmen as "Woodie Warren, and a good\nfellow generally, to represent the Sev­\nenth (Speaker McCoramons district) In\nthe new Legislature. Warren, too, was\nanxious to get In the game of prolong­\ning the election of a United States sen­\nator, and It was thought that every­\nthing was fixed. Recently it developed\nthat Daniel K. Murray, of Viola, a\nhard political worker, and son of\nGeorge H. Murray, the old Republican\nleader, had legislative and Addicks-\nvoting and that he had\nuletly solidifiedhls delegatlon.Thenthe\nAddlcks leaders made a coup detat,\nand brought out “Rem" Barnard, a\nprominent young man of Camden, and\nson of Colonel D. P. Barnard. Barnard,\nwho Is young in politics, could, of\ncourse, divide Murrays delegation,\nturn his delegates over to Warren and\nthen be in line for election as repre­\nsentative two years hence.\nMeantime, however, it is said, George\nM. Fisher, of Wyoming, who still has\nlegislative aspirations, has been shown\nan opening for himself by his friends\nto succeed Speaker McCommons, and\nIt is declared that Mr. Fisher Is going\nto make the run. Now. worst of all.\nIt is positively declared that Mr. Fish­\ner Is going to stay In the race.\nJust where this pulling apart of\ndelegations Is going to leave Speak«\nMCOommons with his canvass for clerk\nof the peace is a puzzler.
ff53831593fc75f62f1623abfa06357f THE SIERRA CITIZEN ChronAm 1855.015068461441 39.560444 -120.828218 the movements of the French, believing\nthat a general attack was made by the\nallies, at once detached a part of the force\nof his corps against the English force, for\nthe purpose of affecting a division. Prince\nMenschiboff, os his side brought to Lc-\npreodz's aid all the cavalry he could com-\nmand. Then there occurred a most san-\nguinary struggle, which was prolonged\nuntil night. The Prince, in his report,\nadmits a loss of 4,000 killed and wounded,\n□e adds that the loss of the allies was at\nleast equal. According to his report\n22,000 Russians were engaged in this af-\nfair. lie announces that he is about to\nconcentrate all his force now at Bakschi-\nseria, Simpberopol and other places, and\nexpresses his hopes of decisive success.—\nlie adds the allies arc reduced to \nmen, notwithstanding the partial rein-\nforcements they have received.\nAn occurrence of the most horr'ble na-\nture has taken place. The great Hospital\nin Sevastopol was set on fire by the shell\nof the allies, and was burned to the ground\nwith all its inmutes, 2000 sick and woun-\nded. This frightful oc< urrence is parsed\nover as quietly as possible in the English\nand French papers, but it demands the\nmost pointed attention.\nOfficial Russian news, by the way of\nVienna states that from the sth to the 9th\nnothing of importune had occurred at Se-\nvastopol. The allies were fortifying the\nposition cu the left bunk of the Ichcauaya\nas strongly as possible. The Russians\noccupied the right bank. The bombard-\nment of the city continued, but the breach-\nes were always repaired.
430dd465e5ead9075d9e91fc24f34681 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1907.732876680619 39.745947 -75.546589 Oklahoma Instanos.\nTaking up the aecretarya speech-\nmaking tour In detail, Oompers con-\ntlimes on In part;\n"Une of the reason* which ho gava\nfor advising the people of Oklahoma to\nreject the constitution was that In his\nopinion It contained a bad and dan­\ngerous limitation upon the power of tha\ncourts to grant and enforce writs of\nInjunction.V .~■ ~\n"The Injunction, ho declared, “waa\none of tha most valuable, bénéficient\nand effectual Instruments of law and\nJustice. It was even more necessary\nfor the projection of the poor than of\nthe rich and to limit It In any way\nwould put more power In the bands of\nrich criminals and oppressor*.\n"The provision to which ao seriously\nobjected did not, however, limit power\nto Issue Injunctions. It only limited\nthe power of Judges to punish alleged\nviolators of Injunctions, to sand them\nto prison for alleged contempt of court\nwithout trial by Jury. It la to In­\ntervention of a Jury between the In­\njunction and the sentence for contempt\nthat the secretary took exception.\n"It docs not appear that he was In\na humorous mood. He seemed wholly\nIn earnest when ho argued that It was\nessential to the protection of the peo­\nple that Judges should have power to\nfind men guilty of contempt and give\nthem prison offences without referring\nthe facts of the case.\n"It shows that he has not changed\nhis position since hts campaign In Con­\ngressman Littlefields district last ycar.\nNow. as then he Ignores all the funda­\nmental and vital objections to the\nabuse of the injunction and the conse­\nquent abolition of trial by Jury In labor\ncases. He still seeks to evade the\nIssue, to find sophistical reasons for\nupholding a ngonsfrous abuse. He was\none of the early Injunction Judges and\nas statesman and politician he la evi­\ndently determined to defend his record. "
0d97be6bf786a667205c7540d86ab838 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1902.9027396943177 37.451159 -86.90916 Elder McGarvey may find himself IIn\nthe predlcament a former resident of\nMillersbnrg once was The Mlllenburg\nman was bitterly opposed to organs He-\nw a Methodist and his church bought\none The man withdrew and joined\nthe Presbyterians It wasnt long before\nthe Presbyterians bought one The man\ngot his letter and put it in the Baptist\nchurch They Immersed him and the\nsteam had hardly quit rising from his\nclothing before some one rolled in an\norgap He demanded a letter got Iit\nand joined ie Disciples It wasnt\nover two months before the Disciple\nbought the finest organ In town Be-\ngot his letter on application but had\nno place to put it Mall the churches had\ninstrumental music Just at that time\nthe Methodist organ got of order\nand refused to emit sound The organ\nhater immediately rejoined the Method l\nlets He was marked for reference\nand called on to lead in prayer While\nhe was addressing the throne a mem\nbey of the choir got to caressing th\norgan keys Somehow they dislodged\nthe sparrow nest that had been built\nin the worksand the organ loudly pro\ntested against the spirit of the prayer\nThe man was asking for the suppres ¬\nlion of reedinstruments He sprang\nto his feet and demanded his letter got\nit went to Battle Ridge tour miles\nover in Nicholas county and joined\nthere In a year that church got an\norgan The man moved West but to\nthe end of his life he was pursued by\nranging organs
376684142d824a0476e9d694075b645b THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1905.9301369545915 37.451159 -86.90916 and then they have a right to register a\nvigorous kick unices that law Iia en ¬\nforced by the powers that be It has\nnot been and the same party that baa\nBO far refused to enforce that law the\nsame party that repealed the imprison\nment clause in the Sherman antltrnst\nlaw thereby pulling the fangs of the\nlaw now oaks for a lot moro law not\nto be enforced but to build up a polit ¬\nical machine Rate\nWhen a man has lived aa long aa I\nhave right here nnder the shadow of\nthe dome of the Capitol has seen all\nthe skullduggery practiced on the dear\npeople and sees the veneer and the hol ¬\nlow mockery of it all he gets dls our\naged and disgusted when the people\npersUt in believing that Teddy Iloose\nvelt lis a little tin deity and can do no\nwrong The truth Iin that he is an over ¬\nIrated author and an polltl\nclan lie Is one of the best and the\nslickest and the smoothest and the\nquickest sidestepping politicians who\nrever entered the White House and the\npeople will one day come to know him\nat his true valuation I told you all\nin this correspondence many times that\nhis Panama Canal project would be\nthe flattest failure on the face of the\nearth It 1la getting around to the point\nwhere the people can be able soon to\nsee the truth The report of the con ¬\nuniting engineers who recently visited\nthe Isthmus of Panama and made a\nstudy of the conditions thereexisting\nreported in favor of n sealevel canal\ninstead of the lock and dam system\nThat sort of n system requires more\nlegislation by Congress thus delaying\nthe game for several more years and in\nthe mean time we have pent 60000\n000 and not a shovel full if dirt has yet\nbeen dog How long oh Lord bow\nlong
163aabe577ef0b12a09f5c9bc3e81888 PHILLIPSBURG HERALD ChronAm 1901.2890410641805 39.756121 -99.323985 nutmeg is to some a pleasing addition,\nsays the Washington Star.\nIt should be borne in mind that the\nnickel chafing dish should never be\nimmersed in dish water. As soon as\nthe contents of the dish are used, pour\nli a little water until ready to wash, to\navoid sticking and drying. Wash the\ninsides with hot suds and rinse; but\nmerely wipe off the outside, giving it\na final polish with the chamois. If the\ndish is rough, grease and salt may be\nused for cleaning instead of water.\nIn roasting a saddle of mutton re-\nmove the skin from the top and the\nfat and kidneys from the underside.\nEoll the flaps under and tie into a com-\npact shape. If a large saddle is used,\nthe tail is usually left on. Dredge with\nsalt, pepper and flour, and roast in a\nhot oven, basting frequently. WThen\nthe flat is brown and crisp turn and\ncook the upper part. Allow only about\nnine to each pound, as mut-\nton should be served rare. In carving\ncut slices the length of the saddle,\nand parallel to the backbone. Then\nslip the knife under and separate them\nfrom the rib bones. After the top is\ncarved, turn the saddle and cut the\ntenderloin from the under side in the\nsame way. Serve with currant jelly.\nTo make lemon cheese cakes take\nsome good puff paste, and with'it line\nsome patty pans; fill them with the\nmixture prepared as follows and bake\nthem a delicate color; they may be\nserved hot or cold: Take the weight\nof four eggs in butter and sugar, dis-\nsolve the butter, mix in the sugar and\nthe grated rinds of two lemons over\nthe fire and lastly the yolks of the\neggs. Stir till thickened, but not boil-\ning; then pour into it the strained\njuice of two lemons; stir till nearly\ncold. This mixtMre, if covered down\nlike jam, will keep good for some\ntime.
05d0709007458a554c35367b645094d9 THE DURHAM DAILY GLOBE ChronAm 1892.9795081650982 35.996653 -78.901805 thing to do with the successful growth\nand maturity of the plant. We cannot\nexpect a perfect plant from imperfect\nseed. And we are impressed with the\nfact that many of our farmers do not give\nthat attention that is absolutely required\nlaising their tobacco seed to make a\ncomplete success of it, and it may not be\nout of place to call their attention to\nsome of the causes of imperfect seed and\nunsatisfactory growth of the plant. It is\ntoo often the case that our farmers plant\ndifferent kinds of tobacco on the same\npiece of land all intermixed and then\nturn out seed plants in close proximity\nanother seed plant of a different kind\nand tke two plants to some extent hy\nbridize and pruduce seed that are not\npure of either kind. Not only so, it is\nsometimes the case that they allow plants\nrun to seed and bloom near their seed\nplants. This is all wrong Tobacco\nplants should never be allewed to bloom\nthe field where you have seed plants.\nn fact plant should never bloom be\nfore it is topped if you want the best yield,\nand it is of the utmost importance that the\nseed plants be watched closely and allow\nno succors to bloom on the seed plants, but\nbe careful to keep them all pulled off so\nthat all the branches that bear seed be\nof the same age and seed all mature at\nthe same time. We often see on the\ncontrary, green seed aDd seed fully ma\ntured on the same plant. This should\nnot be. Only the first blooms should be\nallowed to remain, the latter ones should\nbe broken off and only those or the same\nare remain. It is too often the case that\ntoo many seed are suffered to remain on\nthe same plant and none ever mature\nfully as they should do. No good far\nmer will ever think of planting anything\nm the very best seed corn or seed wheat\nor fieea oais. I nen wny not use uie\nsame precaution with your tobacco seed,\nit is just as important.
1e0d38243bd614792af316bc1bf1ec8c THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1867.9136985984271 40.063962 -80.720915 "k^JH^owledgmentor the Old\nana New luatamenta to bo the inspired\nWord or Ood, and the only infallible\nrule of Faith aud Practice.\n"2. That la tho United Church the\nWestminster Confeaaionof Faith ahall\n1)0 received and adopted, aa containing\nthoSysteui of Doctrine taught in tho\nHoly' Horipturea; it belnK underatood\nthat thla Confeaalon is received in ita\nproper hlatorlcal, that ia. the ChIvIoIs-\ntic or Reformed sense. Whilst the Con¬\nvention recotnmoiid the foregolug Ba¬\naia, tliey wish to be underatood aa\nrecogulslng tbe orthodoxy of the\nLarger Hnd Shorter Ctteobism*. or the\nHeidelberg Catechism, and of the\ncauons of tbe Svnod ofDort.\n3. That tbe United church shall re¬\nceive and adopt tbe Presbyterian Form\nol Cuurch Government.\n4. The Book of Psalms. which is of\nDivine inaplrution, well adapted to\nthe state ol the Church iu all axes and\ncircumstances, and should be used in\nthe worship of God. Therefore, we re¬\ncommend that n new ami faithful ver¬\nsion of the Book of Psalms be provided,\naa soon as practicable. But, inasmuch\nan various collections of Psalma are\nused in tho different churches, u chance\nlu this respect ahall not be required!"\nI observe that one of the Presbyteries\nof the Keforiued Church (New Side), baa\nalready spproved what waa done at the\nConvention. Oa the pari of the United\nt resbyterliuiH there has not beeu shown\nas much readiness to fall in wlib the\nmeasure. Let us Lope that while tbey\nset deliberately, they may not refuse to\ndwell In unity with their brethren on\nthese terms.
01aec0c3bc8a8c6cfffa7d51613ba7e2 PITTSBURG DISPATCH ChronAm 1892.3456283836774 40.441694 -79.990086 ARGUMENTU1I AD PECUNIAM.\nAn inquiry into the view by which the\nbusiness interests of Sioux Palls look at\nthe divorce industry of that thriving town\narouses unfavorable comment in the New\nYork Pott. That journal finds a striking\nevidence of depravity in the fact that the\nrevenue which the fame of the place for\nsure and swift divorce is bringing in\nc.iuses the people benefited to regard it\nwith complaisance if not with enthusiasm.\nOne prominent suitor for divorcc.made a\nprosperous season for the business inter-\nests by spending 510,000 while waiting for\nthe favorable decree, besides making lib-\neral gifts to the churches, and her new\nhusband also made the money market\neasy. Consequently, the inquiring cor-\nrespondent finds one lawyer declaring\nthat the notoriety secured by tho attacks\non Sioux Falls does no harm, as "it adver-\ntises us abroad and brings, thousands of\ndollars here," and the popular temper of\nthat locality is exhibited by the fact that\na correspondent who wrote a scorching\nattack on the divorce business was\npromptly invited to leave town.\nIt is sad to learn that the, people who\nmake money by a abuse of this\nsort should find plenty of those stereo-\ntyped phrases by which to relieve their\ninnermost conviction that a thing which\nswells the total of sales must be on the\nwhole a tolerably good thing. There is\nsomething familiar about those pet terms\nof bringing money here, spending thou-\nsands of dollars among the local mer-\nchants, and tho popular indignation at\nany attack on the general vested interest.\nThese expressions,, common to the wor\nship of the pecuniary deity, awaken in the\nmind memoriesof similar arguments from\nother localities and with regard to other\nthings. Of course, they have never been\nheard of in New York. The esteemed\nPost would never be guilty of compound-\ning the' sins it is inclined to by damning\nthose it has no mind to. It would not\npoint the finger of scorn at Sioux Palls\nfor letting pecuniary motives influence\nopinion, while using exactly the same,\nthough, perhaps, more skilfully wrapped-u - p\nlogic with regard to combinations to\nenha'nee the necessaries of --life, to inject\nvalues into dropsical stock, and to swell-th- e\nfortunes of manipulators of s t oc k-ga mbli n-
0f92e48701a2a47cc5d0b2412ceef597 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1865.9958903792492 40.063962 -80.720915 Mit. Ri.ai.vk, a member of the House\nfrom Maine, proposes that tho national\nGovernment shall assumothc war debt*\nof the several loyal States. The matter,\nhas been referred ton select committee.\nIt will be easy to lindjplenty of resolu-,\nlions among the debris of hint fall's po-1\nlit leal canvass recommending this\nmeasure. Hut those resaluHons were\nadopted by the conventions of the par¬\nty which was everywhere defeated.\nThey would, therefore, scarcely be\ndeemed favorable to the adoption of the\nproposition. In the present condition\nof the national treasury, it appearn to\nIn* injudicious lo Increase tho volume'\nof the public debt by, perhaps, hun-1\ndredsof millions of dollars. It . Ih ob-\nvlous that the Secretary ofl be Treasury\nstaggers under Iheload which he Ih car¬\nrying. It might involve the greatest\npublic disasters to add lo thut load, not\na feather, but a of them. We must\nrecollect that our camel's back is not\nso strong that il may never break under\n'theload which may bo Imposed upon\nII. The load is heaviest liow. Ills not\nyet arranged so that II Is most manage¬\nable. It is not packed. The ohliga-\ntions which the Treasury must meet in\nthe next three years and the duties the\nSecretary believes it(.wes to the collll-\ntry, make it well nigh impossible lo in-\ncrease these obligations without plac-'\nlug it beyond the powers of lie- Secre¬\ntary to fulfill the present obligations,\nthereby complicating our financial af¬\nfairs more than they are complicated\nto-day. y\\s to the solvency of the Gov¬\nernment there Is no question. Hut Just\nas a solvent firm would in a time of\n!embarrasHiuent refuse lo augment Its'\nliabilities, the government must lake\nlest it promises more Iban it can
10762115fcd56a3c4299d5391a4246e1 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1898.4397259956875 40.063962 -80.720915 The iron and steel trade this week\nIs practically what Is was at last re¬\nport. In no particular line Is there any¬\nthing startling shown, and from all\npoints come reports of about the same\ncondition. About the only new feature i\nBhown in the eastern market is caused\nby the breaking of the southern pig j\nIron combination. In the New York\nmarket each southern furnace Is going\nIt alone. The foundries are placing\nmore orders, mainly for southern\nbrands, at rates 25c per ton below\nthose quoted recently. The finished\nlines show no snap, and the trade Is\ndull. At Philadelphia pig iron prices\nare hardly as strong as they were a\nweek ago, as Increasing stocks ore\nhaving an effect on the market.\nMany of the eastern bar mills are on\nsingle turn. Sheet Iron prices are be¬\ning shaded, and buyers are holding off.\nThe structural mills are running full\ncapacity, and business plates con¬\ntinues good. A fair aggrogate of pig\niron is being sold in the Chicago mar¬\nket, with southern sellers doing most\nof the business. Considerable bar trade\nis going, and plates are decidedly firm.\nCincinnati reports the plgjron market\nas being demoralized by the practical'\nbreaking up of the Birmingham Fur¬\nnace Association. Buyers now want\nlong delivery. The war seems to hove\nchecked the business of the car works,\naB some have withdrew from the mar¬\nket and others has asked for deferred\nshipment of material ordered some time\nago. The structural trade Is satisfac¬\ntory, while sheets and plates are good.\nAt Cleveland trading In pig Iron Is con¬\nfined to foundry and grey forge, as the\nBessemer producers are still waiting\nfor the valley price ngroed upon. There\nIs a fair demand for structual, plates\ncontinue active but bns are dull. In\nthe Wheeling district trade shows little\nor no change, \\
4d2c9fb7c2d2663859173dd788442068 PALESTINE DAILY HERALD ChronAm 1908.28551909406 31.762115 -95.630789 Mr J C Munro for years with the\nA R T company and who has spent\nthe past several years in tills section\noffering suggestions to the growers of\nEastern Texas is this year showing\nhow tomatoes should be grown for\nmarket in order to get the benefit of\nhigh prices on the early shipments\nHe now has fourteen hundred plants\nin his open field and many of them\nhave tomatoes on them as large as\nguinea eggs Mr Munro says he will\nhave ripe tomatoes on the market he\nfore the majority of people have\nplants in bloom On the fifthday of\nJanuary of this year he planted in hot\nbeds and kept his beds at normal\ntemperature by use of fire under the\nbeds On the tenth of February he\nhad his plants ready for the cold\nframes and he planted them In the\nframes four inches apart each way\nand on the eighteenth of March he\n them to the open field\ntaking four inches of soil with each\nplant and setting in the field The\nresult has been most gratifying for\nnow he says he has hundreds of the\nplants with big tomatoes on them\nMany of the tomatoes are as large as\nguinea eggs and are growing nicely\nHe has fourteen hundred plants in all\nand they are vigorous and fruiting\nnicely Air Munro says he will have\nripe tomatoes on the market before\nmost people have plants even in\nbloom This gives him a big advan ¬\ntage because all growers realize that\nthe early tomatoes are the ones that\nbring the fancy prices Mr Munro\nsays any one can do what he has done\nIf they will go about it in the right\nway This is a record and should be\na valuable object lesson to other\ngrowers It is a safe prediction that\nMr Muro will get good money for his
99fa546c9850be80dd179afe380906c9 VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1843.37397257103 43.798358 -73.087921 nals with any power of enjoyment I cannot\nvery easily divine. That the rovers,.\ncan and does in the most arbitrary manDer jl\n,UftC uway e means or enjoying life We\nknow to be an indisputable fact in the new'\nworldaswellasin ,he0,d :And al\nresult we cannot be surprised when we sec\nit plainly avowed that its first object is cjr\nmatntenance, and to do something for ir,di\nviduals is but secondary. That first ohj.r\ntoo is a cruel reality ; while the second is a\nfalse assumption. Fight for itself it caii and\ndoes, to the cost, oppression, and if RtpJ u\nthe annihilation of individuals; but a to\nfurnishing any one in return with any row\ner of enjoyment, it is a difficult problem,\nunless is thereby meant the distribution of\npatronage and public wealth amongs: s\ncorrupt members.\nLet us look at the first clau?e in the most\n manner ; let us give to it even a\npartial construction, such as pcli.icianj\ncould not decently go beyond, siill how il.\nlusive are these state pretensions. U,A7\ndoes ihe state give us the means cr "i!ie\npower of enjoying iu safety aud tranquil, :y,\nour natural lights, and the blessing ci\nThe power of enjoyment which the Mare\nconfers -- it would be difficult to dUc.:ver.\nThat it neither gives us " our natural ri:U,''\nnor " the blessings of life," will 1 st ppose\nbe confessed by its warmest advocaie.\nOur natural rights, whatsoever :hev are, are\nantecedent lo all wriiien constiiuiions, and\nin fact I presume the tnr.kir.g of a consti,u -lio- n\nis the exercise of one of our na'ural\nrights. As to the blessings of life the state\nhas not yet pretended to confer bcalili,\nstrength, vigor of mind, moral character,\nreligious vitality, though in som--
31c2e0dcc191cdea4a747ca27c606968 NEWARK EVENING STAR AND NEWARK ADVERTISER ChronAm 1911.215068461441 40.735657 -74.172367 10, 193 West Kinney street: Jerome\nWeingart, aged 10, 116 Church street:\nNew Brunswick: Albert Bernauer, aged\n9, 132 Niagara street; Mildred PhllUp.3 ,\naged 12, 728 Summer avenue: Peter\nPhillips, aged 13, 634 North Sixth street:\nLeRoy Shrader, aged 10, 265 Elmwood\navenue, East Orange; Gussle Ecker,\naged 10, 22 Jay street; Thomas Mc-\nGinty, aged 13, 28 Jay street; Ralph\nRelchenthal, aged 9%, 329 Broad street;\nRaphael Malanga, aged 9, 202 Eighth\navenue; Francis Bbjmauer, aged 10, 133\nNiagara street: William Hempel, aged\n9, Hawkins street; Edward Messer,\naged 12, 441 Eighteenth avenue; Jerome\nSutton, aged 13, 283 Armstrong avenue,\nJersey Cltst; Eddie Pflrrmann, aged\n15%, 22 Seymour avenue; Gertrude\nFritz, aged 11, 380 Avon avenile; Ber-\ntha Koeck, aged 10, 112 Valley street.\nOrange; Tessic Bulliaids, aged 13, 38\n street; Dorothy ,Hefele, aged 9,\n11 Helen place; Richard Hahne', aged\n9, 181 Boulevard, Summit; Henrietta\nHelmstetter, aged 11, 329 West Klnnej\nstreet: John Kreuts, aged 18, Pilot\nplace. West Orange; Grace Lyons, aged\n10, 594 North Fifth street; Willis F.\nMiles, aged 8, Greylock avenue, Belle-\nville; John Calimano, aged 11, 61 Run-\nyon street; Lillie Wolln. aged 10, 36\nCharlton street; Etta Lesser, aged 15,\n66 Belmont avenue; Elizabeth Stamm,\naged 9, 38 Montgomery street; Elsie\nMogg, aged 8, 309 Falrmount avenue;\nSidney Rosenthal, aged 7, 293 Hunter-\ndon street; Wilbur A. Cole, aged 7, 31\nSpruce street. Bloomlleld; May Moran,\naged 13, 144 York street, Jersey City;\nLizzie Shaufus, aged 12, 9 Barbara\nstreet; Gretehen TJaden, aged 9. 395\nClinton avenue; Stephen Golinski, aged\n10, 39 Beacon street.
312e091cdb8a559b8f8f35ef48451c4d THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.6808218860983 40.063962 -80.720915 need not bo discussed. A stately\ncourtship ctiiled in n loruial pro|tosal, and ||(l\nthat in marriage. Thus the husband had\ntriumphantly secured the help mate ap\nparc ntly exactly suiting his ldeasof whstl c"\nids wife hould be, and t.»r two or three lei\nyears the union seemed to justify the do- wi\nliberate niceties of its establishment tl.\nThere was, however, something more iu\nthe individuality of tbo wife than had\nbeen taken into account by the theory ol 't'<\nsocial fitness, and by the time their child lb\nwas old enough to be no novelty there t"\narose between the parents an incompati- co\nbilify of which neither could designate W)\nthe exact beginning. Some slight ditler- jRi\nsnce deepened and spread until it had run\ntoo lur for adjustment without material 1,1\nmutual concession, aud finally took 1°\nthe lortn ol tacit hostilities. Like ly\n.Mr. Dombey in the novel, me nuaoanu wi\nthought the injury bis, anil, like that tjt\nwonderfully truo type <>l this class, again\nwas irritated into the idea of coercing his\ninsubordinate lady. To punish tnadame\ninto submission, if not penitence, was his\nplan, and this besought to do by severely tlr\ncontracting her supply of money. Alas bi:\nfor the wisdom of the wise! how often it f\nreachcs the same end as the folly of the en\nfoolish! Nut the less an impetuously $1\nproud beeiuse she liad as good as m\nsold herself in marriage, the wife fiercely oil\nre-ented the very practical means adopted so\nlo tcach her anew that she was a depend* cl\ncut, and resolved to teach her lord a les- to\nson in his turn. One evening in 1SC9 he 12\nreturned from business to find his home re\noccupied by the servants only, and a brief .\nnote informing him that wife and child S3\nhad left him forever. In his utmost wrath ei'\nat the event he could not accuse the ma- so\nternal fugitives of that which should Hi\nassure to him the sympathy of at\nmankind; and where 6uch sympa- B:\nthy csnnot nt all be counted uimui ct:\nby >\\ mind not thoroughly disingenuous, a l.'i\nsense ot injury very soon softens into a at\nbom ficent reproach of conscience. A few pr\ndays pondering over his troubles fir\nbrought the deserted husband to the con- pi\nvictiou thai tender heiirt hs well as hard cl\nhead should have some office in domestic\n| government; and this wholesome rcflcc\nitlon resulted in the discovery that his\nJ heart was tAklng the aupiemacy at last, h,\nand thai he must regain LU wife at any\ncoat Months of inquiry amongst her ,\nSouthern kindered elapsed before he had ,,\nascertained thai she nnd tho child had\ntaken retuge with old family friends in a
1ee70b76203b170dc5f4b9927607c551 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1861.346575310756 39.261561 -121.016059 the statement. Governor Downey may\ntake my word for it, that all the uniformed\nmilitia in this State, in a body, cauuot rec-\ntify Ibis difficulty, and the first blood shed\nwould throw this whole State into a civil\nwar as dreadful and disastrous us now\nwaging on the Atlantic. The Governor has\nbeen iulluenced in a very singular manner\nin the whole of this business—not that I de-\nsire to be understood in saying that the set-\ntlers are right in all they do. He made a\nfutal error at the inception of the affair In\nsending |W. Governeur Morris here, and\nhis presence was construed by the settlers\nto be antagonistic to their cause. Mr. Mor-\nris himself did not detract Irom or remove\ntheir prejudice by his line of conduct. The\nsettlers, or rather the defendants in the\nChabollu case, are wrong in not taking an\nappeal to the Supreme Court, instead of de-\nmanding a recognition their “bill of\nrights,” which substantially demands a war-\nrantee title if they purchase, and. if evicted\nthey shall be paid for their improvements,\nit is to be feared that ultra men on both\nsides are fanning Ibis difficulty, which por\ntends so disastrous a result to the interests\nof the whole State. There are but few ran-\nches in this valley on lands to which titles\nhave been quieted, aud if the San Francisco\nmilitia think they have inexperenced men\nto meet, they err. The rumor is, that the\nmilitia are to oust the settlers on the Cha-\nbolla ranch at night. I, for one. do not de-\nsire to be within vision when the attempt is\nmade, and it is to bo hoped that better\ncounsels will prevail—that the military aid\nwill not be invoked at present, and thatthe\nsettlers will take care not to neglect their\nlegal rights, aud carry their cause tbtougb\nevery avenue of law.
4b42a19d253c99ab2c5168cefbc2e5a1 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1920.7062841213824 39.745947 -75.546589 "The court shall consist of 15 mem­\nbers: Eleven Judges and four deputy\nJudges. The' number of Judges and\ndeputy judges may be hereafter in­\ncreased by the assembly, upon the\nproposal of Ute council of Uie League\nof Nations, to a total of la Judges\nand six deputy Judges."\nThe manner of choosing the Judges\nby the different national groups Is\nprovided. The members of Uie court\nare elected for nine years. The presi­\ndent nnd vice-president of the court\nserve for three years. The seat or\nthe court is established at The Hague,\na session shall be held each year, be­\nginning June 15, and an extraordinary\nsession may be called whenever nec­\nessary by the president of the court,\nwho must reside, at The Hague. The\nfull court of 11 Judges shall git. but\nIf 11 are nnt available nine judges\nshall suffice to constitute the court.\nThree Judges »It in chambers annu­\nally to and determine summaiy\nprocedure. Salaries of the court are\nfixed and expenses borne by tha\nLeague of Nations.\nArticle 31 gives the court Jurisdic­\ntion over suits between Slates The\ncoiirt Is open by right of States be­\nlonging to the League. Other States\nmay have access to it under condi­\ntions provided by the League.\nArticle 33 provides:\n“When a dispute has arisen be­\ntween States and it has been found\nImpossible to settle It by diplomatic\nmeans and no agreement has been\nmade to choose another Jurisdiction,\nthe party cximplalning may bring the\nease before the court. The, court\nshall, first of all. decide whether the\npreceding conditions haye been com­\nplied with : If so. it shall hear and\ntermine the dismite according to the\nterms and within the limits of the\nnext article.\nThe questions which the court Is\ncompetent to determine\nmembers of the League are given as\nfollows ;
1b3e718537a7292052ed415d1b4c0e52 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.5860655421473 40.063962 -80.720915 he said that the Democrats wen\nmaking a great noise about the Kepub\nlicans "putting their foot in it" or\nthe Capital question. He didn't think ii\nmuch of a scare-crow after all, and if it it\nwe are not crows to be scared. The Deui\nocratd are getting up over this question i\nbig boob-for a very Jittle horse. The mat\nter is of verrlittle importance, and ofnol\nenough importance to be the means o!\ngiving the country away to the Democra\ncy. Henry M. Matthews,-their candidaU\nfor Governor, is an ex-Coniederateaoklier\na defender of Bennett and Burdett, who\ngave it as his opinion as Attorney Genera\nthat it was right for them to" keep al\nthey could get and get as much more ai\nthey could. Tlie Democratic State ticket\nii composed of ex-Confederates al\nthrough, the ex-Confederates will\nsupport it. It looked just as dark to ui\nbefore when wo beat them, and we maj\ndo it again. Gen. (ioff was a gallant\nsoldier, and laid in prison at Libbv foi\nthree weeks under sentence of death*. Hi\nis a man entitled to all honor, and everj\noneofuswilldoallwecat\nto honor him. lie is withoir\ndoubt the most popular candidate tha\ncould have been nominated, and will leai\nus on to victory. Two of the Democrat!)\ncandidates for'Judges of the Supremi\nCourt were Confederate soldiers, and thi\nother was a Confederate sympathizer\nThe Democratic party claims to be tin\nworkingmen'a. party, yet it [original\ned ihe odious income tax before the war\nand now wants to pay oil' the working\nmen with worthless tog money.the sauji\nkind that during the war took$50 to pa;
06ededc6495d3bf85311eeea0e474c7d THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1898.1712328450026 32.612638 -90.036751 possibly we had made a mistake when\ngiving the order. Wishing to save the\ntime of one or two years' growth, if\npossible, we ordered the best\ntrees. They were shipped in good\ncondition and were set as soon as re-\nceived. They were well set, allowing\nall roots their natural position. We cut\nany roots off that would otherwise be\ncramped or bent up and cut off all in-\njured or mangled portions of roots.\nDid not dig all the holes before begin-\nning to set the trees as some do, but set\nstakes for the trees and then brought\nthe trees out to a convenient place in\nthe orchard, covering the rocts with a\nquantity of wet straw and moss with\nblankets over this.\nIt takes very little hot sun and still\nless of drying w ind directly on plant or\ntree roots to affect their The\nspot selected for the trees had been\nplowed very deep and thoroughly fitted\nbefore the. trees came. Kuch hole was\ndug for the particular root that was to\nbe planted in it. After the hole wns\ndug the tree was placed in position,\nwhi n man No. 1 held it there and\ntramped the fine soil about the roots\nas man No. 2 shoveled the dirt in. After\nthe trees were planted we cut them\nback or pruned them until they had\nthe appearance of a whipstock, and\nthat about 3 feet in length.\nIt seems almost a waste of growth\nand the wrong thing to do to prune a\nnice shaped tree so severely, but our\nlimited experience in this line has\ntaught us that it is the thing to do, and\nthat the nee will soon more than make\nup in growth for this "setback."
018114f53c6ecba26f8ebb5ed916bd25 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2068492833587 40.063962 -80.720915 Washington, March 10..Tbe N»'\nDepartment U making buiy preparatio\nlor an expedition from San Francisco\nMarch ol the Jeannette. As there w\nnot a veeael in the navy fit lor an acti\ncruiae, it was neceeaary to purchase tl\nMary and Helen, a ateam whaler, at $101\n000, lor that service. That vessel w\nbuilt and equipped lor (00.000, makii\nclear prollt on her conatruclion of $40,OC\nShe made one cruiae into the Arctic, tl\nproilti ol which nearly il not qui\nequalled her tiret coat ol conatruction,\nthat her recent ownera are about $100,01\nahead by tbe tranaaction. This is rei\ndered poaaible by tbe fact that we have\nnaval eatabllahmeut without a navy in an\naenae. Nearly all information avallab\nabout the Arctic, is due to whalera ou' it\nPanlfln ulila anil nrlvuta untumrii\non the Atlantic coastt. Channel\ncurrents, tides, and renin, of 01\nAlaskan waters are almost unknown \nentirely unauthentl cited by official Ame\nlean surveys, while hundred* ol navi\nofficers are ambitious ol making recori\nlor themselves, but are prevented by tb\ncomatose condition ol our naval estaollal\nment. The revenue steamer Corwii\nwhich went into the Arctic and crulae\nall ol last summer at an expense ol onl\n$25,(XX) or f>10,000, made more extende\nand practical researches relative to the p<\nsltion ol Herald Island and Wrangl\nLand, while searching for the Jeanetu\nthan nad ever been reported by any Unite\nSlates vessel in those waters before. Th\nOorwin will make a crulae this Bummer t\nKretiebu* Sound, on the north Alaalt\ncoast. One reeult of the search for th\nJeannette may be to eet the navy at wor\nto llnd out something about our Norther\nwaters, and produce some charts of valu\nto navigation. There should be seven\nnaval vessels constantly at work in Alask\nwaters.
8a258d83b44dcafdd0b29d4d9500a8f9 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1846.2123287354134 31.960991 -90.983994 By referrence to these reports it will be\nthat about three times as much has gone to the\nBritish North American Provinces as to England\ndirect, and hence through Canada to England;\nand that, even with this advantage in our favor\n— our wheat goingthat way with but little more\nthan a fourth of the duty that is paid on that from\nthe continent of Europe—yet from us they have\nhad but about one-tenth of their supplies, as sta­\nted by Lord Ashburton, for the reason given by\nhim, viz. the low price of labor in Europe. It is,\ntherefore, clear, that instead of a repeal of the\nEnglish corn laws being a benefit to this country,\nwe now enjoy advantages that then would be lost.\nIf, with a discrimination in our favor of eleven\nshillings on the imperial of eight bushels\nof seventy pounds each, or nine bushels of sixty-\ntwo pounds each—being twenty-nine t ents on\nsixty-two pounds through Canada—with what\nhas gone direct, we supply Great Britain with\nbut a tenth part of the wheat and flour she im­\nports, how would it be if her corn laws were re­\npealed, and this advantage was lost? Could we\nthen supply her with more or with a greater pro­\nportion? Let those who would barter away pro­\ntection to our great interests and our territorial\nl ights for this phantom, this fallacy, answer these\nquestions. If they thus sacrifice these great in­\nterests or otherwise destroy or prostrate our pros-\n^f/ky» the people will hold them responsible.\nYVhat is England doing? With one hand John\nBull holds out a bait and in the other a naked
1b6f12ac0d6ffa8a5d1d980d34e00ab8 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1888.561475378213 39.745947 -75.546589 Mr. Shroeder says:\n“I admit that in the immediate\nfuture my business interests would be\nmuch benefited by the passage of the\nMills bill. I am in favor of a revision\nof the tariff laws so that such changes\nand alterations may be made as the\nbusiness interests require, but my ex-\nserience aa a manufacturer and a busi­\nness man has made me a protectionist\non principle. The protective tariff ad­\nvanced the prosperity of the country\nmore in ten years than a tariff for\nrevenue only did in fifty years. The\nprinciple of protection was forcéd upon\nthe country by the war, but it was\nmaintained and defended by the Re­\npublican party for twenty-seven years\nand has now been adopted as the car­\ndinal point of the Republican plat­\n I struggled and managed to\nscratch through and live\nworkman and employer before the\nadoption of the protective tariff. I\nprospered aa soon as protection against\nthe cheap producta of the starving\nworkmen of Europe was granted by\nCongress: those employed by me tiegan\nto earn wages sufficient to live in com­\nparative comfort, while before they\nhad a great struggle to find work and\nwages enough to keep body and soul\ntogether. The Democrats are for leas\nprotection. Some of them are for\nopening the doors a little wider; others\nare in favor of taking them off the\nhingee, but all are in favor of a free\nimportation of the products of the\ncheap labor of Europe and Asia,though\nthey will come into direct competition\nwith those of the skilled and unskilled
081bb9466c033370196dcdb81c58d81c THE NEW BLOOMFIELD ChronAm 1878.4616438039066 40.419757 -77.187146 he always upsets the buckets of syrup\nand tramples round in the sticky sweets\nwasting more than he eats. The bear's\nmanners are thoroughly disagreeable.\nAs soon as my enemy's heod was\ndown, I started and ran. Somewhat out\nof breath and shaky, I reached my faith-\nful rifle. It was not a moment too soon.\nI heard the bear crashing through the\nbrush after me. Enraged at my duplic-\nity, he was now coming on with blood\nin his eye. I felt that the time of one of\nus was probably short. The rapidity of\nthought at such moments of peril is well\nknown. I thought an octavo volume,\nhad it Illustrated and published, sold\nfifty thousand copies, and went to Eu-\nrope on the proceeds, while that bear\nwas loping across the clearing. As I\nwas cocking ray gun, I made a hasty\nand unsatisfactory review of my whole\nlife. I noted that even in such a com-\npulsory review it is almost impossible\nto think of any good thing you have\ndone. The sins come out uncommonly\nstrong. I recollected a newspaper sub-\nscription I had delayed paying, years\nand years ago, until both and\nnewspaper were dead ; and which now\nnever could be paid to all eternity.\nThe War was coming on.\nI tried to remember what I had read\nabout encounters with bears. I couldn't\nrecall an instance in which a man had\nrun away from a bear in the woods and\nescaped .although I recalled plenty where\nthe War had run from the man and\ngot off. I tried to think what is the best\nway to kill a bear with a gun, when you\nare not near enough to club him with\nthe stock. My first thought was to fire\nat his head, to plant the ball Wtween his\neyes ; but this is a dangerous experi-\nment. The War's brain is very small,\nand unless you hit that the bear does\nnot mind a bullet in his head that is,\nnot at the time. I remembered that the\nInstant death of a War would follow a\nbullet planted Just back of his fore leg,\nand sent into his heart. This spot is\nalso difficult to reach unless the bear\nstands off, side towards you, like a tar-\nget. I finally determined to fire at him\ngenerally.
34c3bdf89afc7f8bd99de09ceafa29f4 PIONEER PRESS ChronAm 1915.1383561326738 39.456253 -77.96396 How Beer Resembles Bread.\nWhen we come to consider the rela¬\ntion of beer to food we are struck by\nthe analogy of beer and bread. Bread\nis made from cereals; so is beer. Tho\nbread with little water is solid, the\nbeer with more water is liquid. The\nyenst is employed in both. It produces\nalcoholic fermentation in both. It con-\nverts both into palatable and readily\ndigested food. P.oth contain alcohol\nand carbon dioxide. Beer contains\nfrom 3 to 4 per cent alcohol and is not\nintoxicating when taken in ordinary\nquantities. Beer also has bitter and\naromatic bodies derived from hops,\nwhich give it an acceptable flavor and\nproduce tonic effects. Further, beer ii\none of the foods free from bacteria*\nYou might be afraid of water, of inilk,\nbut the method of making beer, \ning, heating, pasteurizing and filtering\nit completely free beer from bacteria.\nBeer is food and wholesome. It con*\ntains carbohydrates and albuminoids\nand mineral materials required by out\nsystem. It is appetizing. It aids di¬\ngestion, has enzymes.\nI myself have been familiar with the\nuse of beer as an article of food from\nmy childhood. I remember the barrel\nof ale in my father's cellar. When I\nwas seventeen 1 went to Germany ta\nstudy and learned to use beer as an\narticle of food at the University of\nGoettiir;en. My first experience really\ncame soon after I reached Goettingen\nwhen I made a walking tour through\nthe JIarz mountains with three other\nAmericans, and 1 remember to this\nday with satisfaction how I enjoyed\nat some roadside "gasthaus" my "but-\nterbrod, scb weizerkase and bier."
24a9df168f960be898e1c9c95d0b439e EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1914.6287670915779 39.745947 -75.546589 One of the moat prominent features\nof the war is the friendship manifested\neverywhere for Americans. The vvar-\nIkuiikI Americans arc being shown every\ncourtesy, not alone In Berlin, hut in Mu­\nnich, Frankfort and elsewhere. The\ncivil authorities have taken the lead\neverywhere in making the involuntary\nstay of the Americans pleasant. The\nleading newspapers eulogize Americans\nand in their editorial columns urge all\nGermans to show every consideration\nand kindness to Americans.\nThe offer of the American colony ot\ntheir church in Berlin for use as a hos­\npital and the statement that the Amer­\nican Red Cross has included Germany\nin its comprehensive relief plans, has\ntouched every German heart. Not alone\nis this the ease, with the stores, but it\nis the rule in private houses and thous­\nands of Germans are wearing crossed\n and German flags on their\nbreasts. The display ot American flags\nis second only to Hint of German and\nthey outnumber the Austrian, From\noutward appearances it would seem s"\nthough the United States were the third\nmember of the Triple Alliance.\nThe Berlin Chamber of Commerce has\nopened a long list of German families\nwho are willing to take Americans who\nare without funds to board without,\ncost to (hem. Many of the hotels an­\nnounce they are willing to trust Ameri­\ncans who need food or lodging and that\nthey can send (lie funds when they get\nback to their bodies.\nThe'Hotel Adlon, where fully 75\nper cent, of the Americans visiting\nBerlin slay, is trusting scores of\nthose in Berlin and is actually ad­\nvancing money to them on their per­\nsonal "I n Us.”
cab091fd1f1cde9bcdf0531adcb4ab4d VERMONT TELEGRAPH ChronAm 1837.8342465436326 43.798358 -73.087921 On the whole, the Northern F.inatics\nor Madmen, as their enemies are ple.ised\nto style thorn, have abundant reason to\nthank God an l take courage. The cause\nof freedom is the caus;? of goodness and of\nGod. Losing righteousness and hating\noppression, we cannot doubt that he will\nappear for the deliverance of the oppress-\ned, and wiil at no distant day, break the\nyoke of their bondage. The si jns of the\ntimes give promise lo this. The civilized\nworld are w. iking up on this subject.\nAnd just in proportion to the attention\nwhich is given to the subject is the clear-\nness with which the utter inconsistency\nof slavery with the principles avo.ved by\nthe founders of our nation, and the fram-pr- s\nof our Government, will be seen\nAlready has it become obvious to every\ncandid, reflecting mind, that nothing short\nof the extermination of slavery can save\nour country and its government from be-\ncoming, at no distant the scorn, de-\nrision and contempt of every intelligent\nand virtuous community on the globe.\nEven now, we confidently ask, where is\nthe American, who, in any foreign coun-\ntry, can hold up his head and stand erect\nin vindication of the honor of his country,\nas the home of the brave and the land of\nthe free, should the simple question be\nasked, what is the condition of the mill-\nions of its colored people ? Fellow citi-\nzens, when we think of this we are griev-\ned we are ashamed ; we blush for our\ncountry's disgrace ; we are stnng to the\nquick by the consideration of the derision\nof the tyrants of the old world to which\nour southern institutions expose the sa-\ncred name of liberty. But more deeply\ndo we feel the wrongs of the slave.\nWe behold him in his degradation, reduc-\ned to the condition of goods chattel, driv-\nen in irons from the metropolis of this land
4d00939997b449ae565fd7b934e5db1f THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1873.3136985984272 40.063962 -80.720915 Oil. SAGE'WTATARRH REMEDY\nIt Is the'only form of instrument yet InTentc\nwith which fluid modlcino can bo carriedhigh r\nand perftctly applied to all parts of tho affectrd Bl\n»al pwMKca. and tbo chambers or cavities con\nmunlcatlng therewith, in which sores and nice*\nfrequently exist, and from which tho catarrhal d:\ncharge generally procecd*. Tho want of meet,\nin treating Catarrh heretofore has arisen Urge\nfrom the lmpoealblllty of applying remedies\nthese caritica and chamber* by any of tho on!\nnary methods. This obstacle in the way of %\nfee ting cares Is entirely overcome by the lnvtnt!<\nof the Douche. In uslnfr this instrument, the Flu\nh carried bv its omi weight, (no smdRiw. forcing\npumping Miaf required,) up one nostril la a ft\ngently flowing stream to ttio highest portion of ti\nnasal passages, passes into and thoroughly clear\nesall tho tubes and chambers connected therew u\nand flows out of theopposite nostril. Itauselsplea\naut, and so slmplo that a child can ondentii\nIt. Fall andf directions a\ncompany cach instrument. When wed with th\ninstrument, Dr. Sage'it Catarrh Remedy cures r\ncent attacks of <»Cold In tho Head >M\na few applications.\nSymptomnof Catarrh. Frequent hea,\nache, discharge falling into throat, somettaej pr\nfuse, watery, thick mncua. purulent,offenm e. i\nIn others a drynosa, dnr, watery, weak or iuflam.\neyes, stopping up Or obstruction of nacal pawace\nringing in ears, dcatacrs, hawking snd coughii\nto clour throat, ulcerations, scab* from ulcer\nvoice eltored, nasal twang, offensive breath, in\npaired or total deprivation or sen*e or imell ai;\ntaste, dizziness, mental dcpre^lon. low of apr>\ntite, indigestion, enlarged tonsils, ticklinjr couc!\nAc. Only a few of ttnwo symptoms arelikelj\nbe present in any case at one time..\ni»r. We'i Catarrh Remedy, wh.\nused with Dr. Piercc'n Na*ul lloiii h.\nend accompanied with tiio cuutiUutional trn.\nment which la recommended In tho pamt l.:\nthat wrap* cach bottle of tho Remedy, is a i;i\nfeet i«T»ccifle for thl* loathsome dl»ea*c, and tl\nrroiirl«torofferi«.
89944655e4fb0b7fb1c6fb423386543e NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1928.1625682743877 41.681744 -72.788147 Finn Bowling Party.\nBristol's population, according to\nfigures now available, is estimated\nat ;s,031 persons. This is based 011\nthe total school enrollment of 6.655\npupils, computed on an average of\n4.; 13 persons to a family. This\nfigure shows a decrease from in;7,\nwhen it was estimated that the popu-\nlation was 29,205. The decrease this\nyear, however, is explained by the\nfact that the rate per pupil is 4.212\nas compared with 4H, the average\nused last year. The school enumera-\ntion this year shows an increase of\nH55 pupils in the city schools over\n1!)2T, and had the same average been\nused, Pristol would show a popula-\ntion of ".9 .94S. It is the belief of\ncity officials, however that the fed-\neral census of Bristol in 1930 will\ncredit the city with a population in\nexcess of 30,000.\nBristol's growth has been rapid,\nthe population more than doubling\nsincxj 1910. The for that year\nshowed IS, 503 persons and in 1920\nthe federal figures credited Bristol\nwith a population of :o.f ,20. In\n1900, the population was 9,643 .\nPossible of more interest, however,\nis the comparison of the grand list\nof the present time with those (f\nprevious years dating hack 2S years.\nTho net grand list, officially an- -\nnounced last Saturday morning by;\nthe board of assessors was $52,224.- - 1\n556. In 1900 it was $5,721,937, in\n1910 it was $10,455 543 and in 1920\ntho total was $30,372,095. In other\nwords, Bristol's grand list at the\npresent time is approximately ten\ntimes greater than in moil, five times\ngreater t han in 1910 and almost dou-\nble what, it was eight years ago.\nThis large increase is explained by\nthe expansion of tho local factories,\nthe largo number of new residential\ntracts opened up and the rapid in-\ncrease in real estate values.
53dd5a3f28eb5556496803ea44d3ea37 THE HYDRAULIC PRESS ChronAm 1860.4959016077212 39.369864 -121.105448 Thompson k Kitchen Oft this bill, have been\npaying well ever since the completion of\ntheir funnel. The last two fhos, Just about\nthe tithe they were ready to clean up, the\nblocks in that portion of their sluice extend-\ning throngh the cht and tunnel have been\nremoved and the gold and quicksilver taken\ntherefrom by some party or parties Unknown.\nA miner, who had recently eotne upon the\nhill and purchased a small tail flume, was\nsuspected as being the party Who bad com-\nmitted the robbery. Ou Sunday morning\nlast, the residents of the hill assembled and\nwent in a body to the cabin of the accused,\nwhom they arrested. They made a thorough\nsearch of the cabin, and found secreted in\nhis bed a purse containing gnld dost, about\nwhich, When interrogated, the accused gave\na very conflicting account. He at first sta-\nted that this gold bad been taken ont of\nsome tailings washed by him at Moors \nOne of the miners, who had previously liv-\ned at the Flat, went up there and made in-\nquiries about him, and was told that the man\nhad washed tailings there, but took nothing\nof consequence out of them. He then re-\nturned to Grizzly Hill and compared the gold\nfound in the purse with that taken out at the\nFlats, and from Grizzly Hill. The compari-\nson showed conclusively that it was Grizzly\nHill gold. The man then confessed that\nthere was considerable more gold in the\npurse when found than when it was hid, and\nthat some enemy of bis must have put the\ngold in the purse, in order to fasten the guilt\nupon him. The miners then told him that\nthey could not permit a man of his charac-\nter to live among them, and if found on\nthe hill the next morning, (Monday) they\nwould give him a severe flogging. He took\nthem at their word and left.
09d9939bcef951a3c6bcfca19c64427b THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1882.360273940893 40.063962 -80.720915 ied to get tho use of tnc Capitol buildiiig, ol\nut tta^Midu't work: then I wanted them n<\nget Hie old fruit house opposite the Cathe- to\nral, but Council couldn't see it. Now, I've\nBen watching this wall every day, and it c\nown worse and worse. Look at thoae plates E\niat hold the girders that were put through; ci\n>e how they are bent. See how those fotin- tt\nitlon atones have parted. Look at these 11'\naeks in the wall," and in rapid succession is\n10 Wad places were pointed out. at\nThe wull is really worse than a large por- hi\non of our citizens realize, and will surely\ntvein some day. Tt does not indicate when rc\nwill slip by crack?, but goes all at oncc. hi\nhere aro cracks in tho bricks where ono's y\nit can almost he put in. Tho stone wall *rr\n tno uty building lot from Wash- ai\nigion Jlall is alio bulging outward, the press- « >\nro of tho sand behind evidently being very ui\nrong. Col. Boring does not consider tho be\nHiding at all safe, and many others share of\nus opinion. Ho. thinks the city could mako sh\noney by renting a place until 1885. when\nsession of tho Capitol Building will bo\nid. The present city building site would\nunraand a good price; tho sand, of which In\nlero is a large quantity, is the best in tho bc\nt.v for building purposes and would Fell\nell. Council men taking a look at tho build- «\nIT in «1)1V lima linv. !.. Ih\nmilitlon and ao'veral have said, "It will =\nrely come down on our heads some ni^ht." 5\nCam, and see the cream damask table linen i\nisellat10andGOcentsperyardat Geo. G j\nJtll'8. 3
34f41905a6f9af1fdcc5c60ec8948cb3 CARROLL COUNTY DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1913.2753424340435 36.000618 -88.428106 greater freedom our methods may in\nsome respects and at some points\nseem heroic, but remedies may be\nheroic and yet be remedies. It Is our\nbusiness to make sure that they are\ngenuine remedies. Our object is clear.\nIf our motive is above Just challenge\nand only an occasional error of judg\nment is chargeable . against us, we\nshall be fortunate.\nWe are called upon to render the\ncountry a great service In more mat\nters than one. Our responsibility\nshould be met and our methods should\nbe thorough, as thorough as moderate\nand well considered, based upon the\nfacts as they are, and not worked out\nas if we were beginners. We are to\ndeal with the facts of our own da\nwith the facts of no other, and to\nmake laws which square with those\nfacts. It is indeed it is neces\nsary, to begin with the tariff. I will\nurge nothing upon you now at the\nopening of your Bession which can ob-\nscure that first object or divert our\nenergies from that clearly defined\nduty. At a later time I may take the\nliberty of calling your attention to re-\nforms which Bhould press close upon\nthe heels of the tariff changes, If not\naccompany them, of which the chief\nis the reform of our banking and cur\nrency laws; but Just now I refrain.\nFor the present, I put these matters\non one side and think only of this one\nthing of the changes in our fiscal\nsystem which may best serve to open\nonce more the free channels of pros-\nperity to a great people whom we\nwould serve to the utmost and\nthroughout both rank and file.
18930bfc99fa23a5d6135b3c8baf3187 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1887.7986301052765 42.217817 -85.891125 The Atlanta Constitution, edited by Mr.\nGrady, tho gentleman who mado the famous\nspeech .it tho New England dinner, m the\ncity of New York, concerning tho New\nSouth, speaks good words for prohibition in\nGeorgia, as obtained nnder tho local option\nlaw of that state. Among othor things, it\nsays: "It was said that prohibition in a\ncity ko largo as this was impracticable, that\nit would not prohibit, that trado would bo\ninjured, that taxes would bo increased, that\ntho Btores in which tho liquor business was\ncarried on would not bo rented for other\npurposes, that the same amount of whisky\nwould bo drank with tho law as without it,\nthat tho city would only miss tho revenue,\naud that it would only be a death blow to\nAtlanta's progress. It has beenj eight-\neen months since tho election and twelve\nmonths since the law went into effect. We\naro prepared thus from observation to note\nresults, l'rohibition in this state does pro-\nhibit. Tho law is observed as well as the\nlaw againet carrying concealed weapons,\ngambling, theft, aud other offences of like\ncharacter. If there had been as many peoplo\nin favor of carrying concealed weapons, of\ntheft, gambling, etc., as thero wero in favor\nof the retail of ardent fpiriU twelvo months\nago, law against these things would not havo\nbeen carried oat as well as it wa against the\nliquor trade. Iu consideration of tho small\nrunjorily with which prohibition was carried\nand tho largo number of people who were\noppoxed to Reeing it prohibit, the law haa\nbcru marvelocsly well observed.''
18b0d5566299285fd8fa7730d61811e6 THE CANTON TIMES ChronAm 1903.8095890093862 32.612638 -90.036751 The following story of Indian magic\nwas told me by the person to whom it\nwas told by the late Lord Lytton. I\ngive it in my own wordsv for the excel-\nlent, though humiliating, reason that\nI have mislaid the manuscript, says a\nwriter in Longman's Magazine.\nWhen in India Lord Lytton often\nsought out conjurors, but never saw\nany but the usual feats, such as the\nmango tree trick and the basket trick.\nThe method in each case is known, or,\nat all events, plausible explanations\nhave been given by Mr. Maskelyr.e and\nother experts. On one occasion Lord\nLytton liked something in the looks\nof the conjuror who was performing\nin an open space before his house.\nAfter the ordinary exhibition, his lord-\nship asked the magician if he could\nnot do something more out of the com-\nmon way. The man said he would try,\nand asked for a ring, Lord Lyt-\nton gave him. He then requested an\nofficer tc take in either hand a handful\nof seeds; one sort was sesame, the\nname of the other sort my informant\ndid not know. Holding these seeds\nand having the ring between bis finger\nand thumb, the officer was to go to a\nwell in the corner of the compound.\nHe was to dispose of the seeds in a cer-\ntain way I think on the low vall\nround the well, into the depth of which\nhe was to throw the ring. All this\nwas done, and then the magician asked\nLord Lytton where he would like the\nring to reappear. He answered "in my\ndespatch box," of which the key was\nattached to his watch chain, or, at all\nevents, he had it with him on the spot.\nThe despatch box was brought out.\nLord Lytton opened it, and there wtp\nthe i ring.
13611f62fb76ce73161e276a0c12cee7 THE NEW ORLEANS CRESCENT ChronAm 1868.3811475093605 29.949932 -90.070116 first section of that act to the case of Mr.\nStanton is, that its application is doubtful.\nItin fact, Mr. Stanton conies within It, the act\ndone by the president does not remove him, and\nbe is still secretaryof war. It was at most an at-\ntempt on thepartof the president which he might\nwell believe he had a right to make. The eei-\ndtnce utterly fails to show any design on the part\nof the president to effeot his purpose by force or\nviolence. It was but the simple issuance of a\nwritten order, which failed of its intended effect.\nTo depose a constitutional chief magistrate of a\ngreatnation, elected by the people, on grounds\nFU slight, would, in my judgment, be an abuse of\nt!,epower conferred upon the Senate which could\nc,,the justified to the country or the world. To\n,cstrue such an act as a high crime or \nrmeanor, in the meaning of the Constitution,would,\nwhen thepaselons of the hour had time to cool, be\nlooked upon with wonder, if not derision; worse\nthan this, it would inflict a wound upon the very\nstructure of our government which time would\nfailto cure, and which might eventually destroy it.\nMr. Fessend, n next argued against the second\narticle, showing that a vacaney having been le-\ngally made, the president had a legal right to\nmake temporary appointments, even without the\nconsent of the Senate. If, consequently, Stanton\ndulesLotcome within the first sectiin of the civil\ntenure act, a legal vacancy existed, and the ma-\nteiial part of the accusation in the second article\nisgone. The first two articles failing, the third.\nfourth, ffth,sixth, seventhand eighth most fall\nwith them. Article nine is, in my judgment, dis-\nproved by the evidence In regard to the speeches\nof the president.
0e4d1f4d8e558350b861eba5e1ce5f4a THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1890.7684931189751 40.063962 -80.720915 CAMPAIGN ANNOUNCEMENTS.\nHon. \\V. 1». Hubbard'* Appointment*.\nWalkerivillv, Uraxton county, October 8.\nFull l.lck, Ilraxton county, October'J.\nKrHUiL'towti, llraxtou county, Oct. 10,1 p. in.\nSutton, liraxton countj*.Oct. It. 1 p . m .\nNVcitoti, U-wU couuty, Oct. 13, 2 p. n>.\nLout Creek, llnrrlaon county, Oct. II . 'J t>. tn.\nWitt Mlllord, IlnrrlMincounty, Oct. II, 7 p.m.\nc:Urk»tjur«. Ilarrbon couuty. Oct. 15,7:80 p. ra,\nCameron, Mauliall county, Oct. 1». 1 p. ni.\non«I, Marshall county, Oct. H, 7:'i0 p. m .\nMliMlebourncKylcr couuty. Oct. 20 ,2p. in.\nVJrlr, Tyler county. Oct. 21, 1 j». tn.\nfrhlloli. Tyler county, Oct. 21,7 p. in.\nCentral Station, Doddridge co, Oct. 22, 7 p. in.\nNew Milton, I>cKl*lri(lKu cjutity,Oct.23,2 p.iu.\nWent Union, Doddridge county, Oct. 21, l p. m ,\nC»pt. II, 11 . liovniBr'n Appointment*.\nMoundKvlllo. Manball county, Oct. 13, i p. ta,\n(larkaburg, Harrlaouconnty.Oct. 18,7;3U p.in.\nWetton, l.ewla county, Oct. W . I p. ni..\nMutton. county, Oct. 2L\nWent Union, Doddridge county, Oct. 24,1 p m.\nNew Cumberland. Nov. 3,7:3o p. ui.\nlion. O. W . Atklnsou'a Appointment*.\nPUtorivllle, Tyler county, Oct. 0,7 p. m .\nMUldlebourtii', Tyler couuty. Oct. 10 ,2 p. in.\nt.'cuivrYlUe, Tyiercouaty, Oct. 11,1 p. in,\nHblrley, Tyler county, Oct. 11,7 p. ni.\nCenter Point, Doddridge couuty, Oct. 1 .1,1 p.m.\nHalrtn, Harrlaou county, Oct. 1J, 7 p. in.\nFardlv, Hanrbon county, Oct. II . 1 p. m .\nI.uiul.crport, HnrrUou couuty. Oct. M, 7 p. in,\nHrldgeport, Harrison cauuty, Oct. 15,vt p. nt,\nciarkabunr, Ilurrlaou county, Oct. 15,7::5u p. in.\nGraltou, Taylor couuty, Oct. Ii>, 7::xi p. m .\nFairmont, .Marlon couuty, Oct. I", 7:.'W p. ra .\nCameron, Maiahsll county, Oct 1«, 2 p. m .\nHherrard, Marnhall county; Oct. 20 . 2i>, ni.\nHand Hill, Marhl>nll county, Oct. 21,21». m ,\nltenwood, Mundmll rouuty, Oct. 22,7:80 p. m .\nNew Martinsville, Wetzel couuty, Oct. i3.
a65701c2de0b75df2c8bae757b24f7ed THE UNITED OPINION ChronAm 1921.8808218860984 43.994599 -72.127742 time we would have got our courage\nup to talk automobile with George\nClark, as we are given to understand\nthat George believes that a nimble\nninepence is better than a slow\nshilling, and that is just the kind of\na fellow the world likes to deal with.\nWe have not seen George for a long\ntime, but when he was little he was\nawful pretty, and he has just one of\nthe best of mothers. I shall surely\npet a pair of those genuine Campton\nPants of George Brummer, as most\nall the other fellows sell for $5, and\ntwo cents is just as much to me as it\nis to any one else; a'nd that reminds\nme, I was to get an outing night\ngown. I was going to try Washurn\nCompany for that, perhaps if he sells\n right I will buy two, as I may\nhave to chance one before 'Spring.\nGeorge Goudie tells us that he ha a\nfurnace that is cool in summer, and\nhotter than the D I in winter, that\nla inst u.Vint I wnnt. and I shall cer\ntainly call on him. I shall have mv!\nold hair mattress fixed un by C E\nWoods as he will kill all the bugs\nand never tell anybody. If I have a\ndurnpd cent left. I will put it in that\nLisbon Savinps Bank, which has a\nfifteen million rurplu. as I know the\nTreasurer, he married a Newbury\ngirl, and that is enough to make him\nan honest and darned good fellow. I\nam told that there are some more\nstores in Lisbon, but I don't think I\nwill call on them.
125c39a56f26b7b86aaf93ac2e116802 MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1904.389344230672 39.78373 -100.445882 Foster v. Fuller, 6 Mass 58; Woods r.\nRidley, 27 Miss, 119; tiermania Bank\nvs. Michaud, 30 L. R. A. 2b (Minn. ;\nwhere he submits a disputed question\nto arbitration without express limita-\ntion of his liability, Riddell v. Sutton, 5\nBing, 100; where a judgment states\nthat it was renderer against him as ad\nministrator if the facts or record show\npersonal liability. Rich v. Sowles, 15\nL. R . A. 850, Vt., and under the same\nrule and more directly executors have\nbeen held personally liable for the\npayment of legacies, upon their ag\nreement or implied promise to pay the\nsame, Davis, Reyner, 2 Lev. 3; Evans\ny. Foster, 14 L. R . A. 117 (Wis.) In\nPerry v. Cunningham, 40 Ark., 185, the\nacceptance by an administrator of an\norder drawn on him by a creditor of\nthe estate conditioned to pay "as soon\nas accruing rents of the estate would\npermit" rendered him personally lia-\nble upon receipt of the rents. An ex-\necutor becomes bound personally up-\n his promise to pay the debt of the\nthe testator in consideration that the\ncreditor will forbear for a time to\npress his claim, bishop on Contracts\n(Enlgd. Ed .) Sec. 1252, 1 Story on Con-\ntracts (5 Ed.) Sec. 361, and the cases\nthere cited. These principles are also\nreiterated in 1 Bishop on Contracts\n(8 Ed.) 128 and in the elaborate note\nmentioned n the brief, 52 Am. Dec,\nbeginning at P. 118.\nThe objection that the plaintiff can-\nnot maintain the suit because she was\nnot a signatory to the contract is un-\ntenable under Milaini v. Tognini, 19\nNev. 134, and under the decisions cited\nthere and in 9 Cyc, P. 377 to 382. In\nluat case this court said:\nThe precise question presented is\nthis: Can a plaintiu maintain an act-\nion on a simple contract to which he\nis not a party, upon wnich he was not\nconsulted, and to which he did ont as\nsent, when it contains a provision for\nms benefit? Besiues the statute wbicn
2529923d82c158b2f5ad8769a5b77230 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1918.6808218860983 39.745947 -75.546589 momhors of (Jlty Council In a rncc«» of\nthat hotly last night which lash'd fifty\nminutes and at 11» conclusion tho In­\ncrease was allowed In the shape of a\nbonus during tho continuation of the\nwar. This Increase will bo met by the\nempowering of tho police commis­\nsioners by Council to use 63 per cent\nof Uia unpaid wages duo to vacancies\nIn the department each month.\nFollowing Die recess and after a reso­\nlution providing for tills Increase had\nbeen passed without a dissenting vote.\nCouncilman Hopkins, of the Sixth ward,\nsaid he thought Die commissioners, dur­\ning the time they were having trouble\nIn securing patrolmen, should favor the\nNegro race by appointing one or more\nNegroes to work on the patrol If they\nwould not appoint men of that\nto Dio ranks as patrolmen. Mr. Hop­\nkins he thought this should be\ndone for patriotic reasons.\nCouncilman Robertson approved the\nsuggestion, other Councilmen also fav­\nored the appointment of Negroes on the\nforce. Councilman Cathcart said he\nwas a resident of Philadelphia when\nthe first Negro patrolman was appoint­\ned there by a D«miocratlc mayor and\nthis man had acquitted himself with\nhonors as had others of the Negro race\non the Philadelphia police force.\nIt was Intimated that the Councilmen\nwould address a communication to the\npolice commissioners on the subject In\nthe near future.\nIt was statod by Mr. Robertson that\nthe proposed bonus to be applied to\nthe department would become effective\nfrom August 1 last, and It was stated\nthat it would amount to between $150\nand $200 a year per man. The patrol­\nmen recently asked for an Increase of\n$200 a year.
1a82a2cef7bb881e73c04c4b9a4c5f02 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1898.1712328450026 39.745947 -75.546589 We often hear such expressions as\nthe path of the earth being fixed in\nspace. There are few, if any, things In\n'he domain of astronomy that can ho\n(ailed fixed in space. In fact, there are\nunceasing changes going on, but these\nchanges are generally so alow ns to es­\ncape the notice of a superficial ob­\nserver, and fortunately they are peri­\nodic, so that they fall within the possi­\nbility of computation. The earths path\nIs not fixed since the ecliptic changes\nUs position among the stars, in conse­\nquence of which the obliquity of the\necliptic undergoes a very slow change.\nAt present it is a few seconda more\nthan 23 degrees 27 minutes, but in\nabout 15,000 years it will be reduced to\n22 degrees 16 seconds, after which it\nwill begin to increase again. This\nchange is so slow and within such nar­\nrow limits that it cannot produce a\nsensible alteration In the seasons. As\nto the physical means of sustaining\nlife on the earth there cannot be any\ndoubt that, of all the pursuits to which\nman. can devote Mmself, agriculture is\nthe most important. Agriculture is\nonly possible under conditions that de­\npend upon the seasons, which, as we\nhave said before, depend upon the rela­\ntive position of the ecliptic to the\nearths axis, which amounts to Hie\nsame thing, to the equator.\nNow, here presents itself a highly in­\nteresting problem, viz; “What would\nIxs the most advantageous position of\nthe ecliptic to the equator in order to\nproduce the most advantageous effect\nupon the solid and tillable portion of\nthe .surface of the arth for the pro­\nduct on of all things that maintain\nphysical life? A much larger, ns well\nas a much smaller, angle than the\nactually existing one between the\nplanes off the ecliptic and the equator\nwould produce very' material changes\nin the seasons and the climate, and\nthe question is whether such changes\nwould ameliorate or deteriorate these\ncondition» which are necessary for\nmans production of the necessaries of\nlife? The answer la that with the nc-\ntnaffly existing obliquity of the ecliptic\na maximum benefit is attained, so that\nin this case, as she does in all other\nrase?, nature has chosen the happy and\ngold -n medium. To benefit the meet Is\nthe ileal of all motives, and here again\nnature sets us an example worthy of\nimitation. And It cannot bo otherwise,\nfor nature Is controlled by an all-wise\nand beneficent Creator. Who, in His\nloving care for ns, has ordered and ar­\nranged all things so as to ho of the\ngreatest possible benefit for us.
0f5ebaf35fba8a61d5923f197302f0ce SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1900.8671232559614 37.53119 -84.661888 Tin nhdaulty of gome men reaches\nalmost to the sublime For Instant\nthat of Don M Dickinson of Mlcbl\ngan who held n portfolio In Cleveland\noiblncl Almost before the result or\nTuesdays vote la known bo waltzes to\nthe front and says that the democrat\npirty must be reorganized and that It\nis a thing to bo Jest red by both etc\nmoots of the democratic partyth\nsilver and gold men It was only tbrn\nBryans defeat that the desired organl\nzitlnn could be brought about Honci\nit was this year the gold men pave their\nstrength to McKinley Instead of eat\nting up a candidate as In 18UO Nov\nthat they have unloaded Bryan tbey\nwill bid adieu to their temporary al\nlies the republican party and don the\nsword and buckler of the oldfashlonoi\ndemocratic type A ho adds III\nalready in circulation for slgnaturegfoi-\na union on a declaration of principle\nthat will win four years hence As Mr\nDickinson has passed through the dlf\nfercnt stages from belofra radical free\nsliver democrat to a gold worshlppei\nand on Into the republican party be Is\nnot nor will ho be accepted as the\nleader for such a movement The dem\nocratlo party will doubtless be reorgan\nIzed so as to unite the factions for vie\ntory but such men as Dickinson make\ntbo desired end longer of accomplish\nment by rushing In where angola would\nhesitate at this juncture to tread\nThere is time enough for consideration\nofa reorganization especially since the\nrepublican party mistaking endorse\nment for license Is likely to furnish all\nthe reasons for the democrats gcltlcg\ntogether nod marching In solid phalanx
4280f0e23eef83e450b4ea7c5f4ad844 THE MADISON JOURNAL ChronAm 1912.856557345426 32.408477 -91.186777 a coward's act. I am ashamed of it.\nI'm so mad with love foi you that I\nscarcely know what I am doing, but\nI will make a clean breast of it now.\nI loves Louise Rosser after a fashion\nbefore ever Newbold came on the\nscene. We were pledged to each oth-\ner; a foolish quarrel arose, she was\njealous of other girls-\n"And had she no right to be?"\n"Oh. I suppose so. We broke if off\nanyway and then she married New-\nbold, out of pique I suppose, or what\nyou will I thought I was heart-brok-\nen at the time, it did hit me pretty\nhard; It was five or six years ago; I\nwas a youngster then. I am a man\nnow. The woman has been dead long\nsince; there was some cock-and-bull\nstory about her falling off a cliff and\nher husband being compelled to shoot\nher. I didn't believe it at the time,\nand naturally I have been waiting to\nget even with him. I have been hat.\nIng him for five years, but he has\nbeen gQod to you and we will let by-\ngones be bygones. What do I care\nfor Louise Rosser, or for him, or for\nwhat he did to her, now! I am sorry\nthat I sald what I but you will\nhave to charge it to my blinding pas-\nsion for you. I can truthfully say that\nyou are one woman that I have ever\ncraved with all my heart. I will do\nanything, be anything, to win you."\nIt was very brilliantly done; he had\nnot told a single untruth; he had ad-\nmitted much, but he had withheld\nthe essentials after all. He was play-\nIng against desperate odds, he had no\nknowledge of how much she knew, or\nwhere she had learned anything. Ev-\nery one about the mining camp where\nshe had lived had known of his love\nfor Louise Rosser, but he had not sup-\nposed there was a single human soul\nwho had been privy to its later devel-\nopments, and be could not figure out\nany way by which Enid Maitland could\nhave learned by any possibility any\nmore of the story than he had told\nher. He had calculated switfly and\nwith the utmost nicety, just how much\nhe should confess. He was a keen\nwitted clever man and be was fighting\nfor what he held most dear, but his\neagerness and zeal, as they have oft-\nen done, overrode his judgment, and\nhe made another mistake at this june-\nture. His evil genius was at his el-\nbow.
33d9f12d7ffbe0f794d59508f663fbae THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1870.0698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 In th« Hoaaeof K0pfr*9Utir* Mc\n(U_r, prndin;; th*K*nalf Mjbatiusuiffir %\nBingham* hill Ut admit Virginia.\nMr. Blnjffiain *ak! It woul<l be borne\nthe journal of the lloune that more Uu\nthree to me of the membm hvi «lr«-Ur\nf.»r the admbwiori of Virginia without rt\n<!iUon*. That vtrte woull commend it*\nto the apftrura! of the country. He h\noo apob«gv to makt l»ere or eiaewberr I\nthe pmltloa which he had been mamta\nai»! which he now reilerakxl.tbat it w\nnot in the jiower <>f Cotigrtm hf exactii\nfundamental rondition* in the adinitwii\nof a MlaU- ti> Injure what could not\nhuiUmately inJoreed »«» ail other rttal\nThat being *>, he w»kcd that the State\nVirginia l*e admitted under the Senate bl\nl!«* eulogize*! the Constitution of Virgin\naa ln-ing more liberal than the Cot»Ul\ntion or any Hute weat of the Altaanli\nIf be thought that undrr tbU bill V irgii:\ncouid Im* »ubj*<'ted to OWlitifflU Will"\nmii'lii Ij< (iniKkMl mi NVw York\nOhio, he wwr would vote f«T the bill\nMr. Cox uggmtcd Uuit the Senaf b\nwan m ohnoxTou* a* tin? bill reported\nthe Keeonitruction Committee and wM\nwhm voted down by tlw IIoum*.\nMr. llinghain replied tint It wan n\nquite *» obnoxUnin. He hoped the Hon\nwould concur In the Senate amcndmcn\nHi* chief ourpnae hu to >»tatr to the ge\ntlenien on hN own aide of Ute houne.\nMr. IJtiUer, of Manwicliu*ctt*~\\Vhh\ntide of the Houw \\* that? [laughter.]\nMr. Ilingham (Indignantly V-*'The ge\ntienian i» very wi*e.wUe iwyond li\nyearn. He cannot read me out of the pa\nty w ith which 1 am 0>»oCiatcd. nor can\nblot out my record, Vulgarity 1* not w\naMiiiuption U not |n>wer. There wan i\noocaftfon for the Inquiry.\n'A nit'* a ft-atfoer and a **»Pn a m«l.\nAu bnnrat man la tb« nohlMl work of llotf."\n(Laughter. and much excitement on tl\nHnor j
0391ebc5f45368282dc5d0ffc1ae29d2 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1877.2698629819888 40.063962 -80.720915 He has drawn this doctrine from Sc\nlure, not from science or from reason\nthough lie finds that both scienco\nreu. -i .n fail to furnish evidence of the\nsibility ot r di"embodied state r,i\neciou* existence. Let us edd that ho\nnot sought fur the doctrine, but embrs\nit at Grit unwilling ai a teaching\nScripture which hccoold not escape,\nhas had no rri-hio disturb the Jour\ntions of a iaith in which ho rested bi\nfied, and no ambition to introduce no\nties, but be believes that the B\nnowhere teacbcs the immortality of\n!*oul a? we commonly understand t\nterm, bat distinctly teacbcs the rove\nlie ban been careful, too, to set fi\nthe reasons which have prompted\nthus to array the evidence that convir\nhim, and the chief reason is that the c\ntrine of Purgatory, saint worship, M\ndairy, modern spiritualism and m\n superstitions must be woun\nunto dea< b by the acceptance of this (\ntrine. Another, and perhaps a not\nimportant, consideration set forth is t\nthat in the author's view modern scit\nis steadily making it more and more\ncredible that there can be consciousi\nwithout a material bodv, and hence\nterialkm, the most hopefea* form of a\ni»m, isstendily gaining ground. It we\npose to material ism the doctrine of\nimmortal soul, Vhich h still consci\nafter death, we strengthen the ham\nthe materialist in bis attack npon\nfoundation of the system. If, on theot\nband, we relinquish this theory, and\ngard man » * an inseparable whole, a be\nwho can be conscious only in bodily\nistence, we leave the materialist to *13\na windmill of old superstition. He\nno weapons with which* to combat Gi\npromise of a resurrection and an imn\ntality afterward."
56bc9ae96ee3680b1115b2e9b24f651c THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1860.8975409519835 39.261561 -121.016059 Notice la hereby given, to 0. M . Tomlin inn,\nJ.C. Birdseye, C . X. Felton, and all persons holding\nor claiming liens, under the provisions of nn net of\nthe I**gi*lature of the State of California, entitled\n“An Act for securing Liens to Mechanics nod others,\napproved April 18th, 1866;”and the act auplimentu-\nry to said act approved March 18th 1857; and an act\nto amend an art entitled “An Act for securing Liens\nto Mechanics and others, pased April l'Jth 1866, up-\noroved April 22d 1868;” on the pre mi sea described in\nplaintiff* complaint filed in the ul»ove entitled ac-\ntion, upon which plaintiff claims to hold a li*»n to\nsecure the sum of $639,60 . and costs anil disburse-\nments alleged to he due plaintiff, as Contractor, by\n(>. M . Tomlinson, one of said defendants: via. A\ncertain Elevator Flour Mill. Ware-House. Flume and\n thereunto belonging, together with\nthe land upon which said buildings and superstruc-\nture* are situated, and a convenient space around\nthe same for the convenient use and occupation\nthereof; and known ns Tomlinsons Elevator Flour-\nMill and Ware-House, situated lying and being in\nthe Township of Nevada, County, of Nevada and\nState of California, on the land known hm Tomlin-\nsolis Diggings, on Mnnxunitn llill. near the city\nlimits of the city of Nevada, and bounded on the\nnorth by the mining claims of William Maltman &\nCo. , a nd built and lately uncoupled by said (). M . Tom-\nlinson, and more particularly described in plaintiff's\ncomplaint. You are hereby notified to he ami ap-\npoar in said District Court on Monday, the ;id day of\nItocember I860, and during the regular term of Kiid\nCourt, and to exhibit then and there the proof of\nmid Liens.
045c86907a6e291e0844cd2264ecbb15 THE VINTON RECORD ChronAm 1866.201369831304 39.24646 -82.47849 Public events of great import-\nance have recently transpired.\nHappily, for the people and the\nperpetuity of the Union, the war\nhad been brought to a termination.\nThe great mass of the Southern\npeople soon restored order, and\ncommenced reviving their civil or-\nganizations. They voted and\nelected Legislatures which repealed\nthe ordinances of secession. They\nelected State and other officers.\nThey repealed the clauses of their\nState Constitutions in regard to\nslavery, atid adopted an amend-\nment to the Constitution of the\nUnited States forever prohibiting\ntheir system of servitude. The\npeople of every State in the South,\nexcept Texas, and she was taking\nlike action, had organized their\nState Governments. In official or\ncorporate capacity, these States\nstood in the same relation to the\nFederal Government as the States\nof the North. The rebellion ceased\nto exist. The Constitution became\n was operative in the whole\nUnion. Nor were the authorities\nof the Federal Government inactive.\nThe armies were gradually with-\ndrawn. Excepting the arrest of a\nfew persons, the people of the South\nwere left undisturbed, and were\nencouraged in the work demanded\nby the Constitution. The action of\ntheir State Legislatures was recog-\nnized by the Federal authorities as\nlegally essential and binding.\nTaxes were laid and collected off\nthemarid the burdens imposed by\nthe Constitution were . acknowl-\nedged and borne. The whole peo-\nple of the South were struggling to\nbury their sufferings and calamities,\nand had, heartily, yielded them-\nselves up to a full allegiance to the\nGovernment of the United States.\nUnder these circumstances, and as\na still further evidence of a total\nrepudiation of every other Govern-\nment, they elected persons to rep-\nresent them in Congress.
1d092f1a2c907978d45f59a39ced4909 SEMI-WEEKLY INTERIOR JOURNAL ChronAm 1899.332876680619 37.53119 -84.661888 A typographical error In our lust\ncommunication made us say that tho\ncounty G. A. It. would hold their meet-\ning hero May 20, when it should have\nboon May 30th, which will bo on Tues-\nday. Somo of tho old veteran were\nbothered over tho error and they hope\nthl correction will have tho widest\npublicity Ksslblu. Tho reunion and\ndecoration services will bo held ut tho\nMlddleburg Cemetery. Our people uro\nvery enthusiastic over entertaining tho\nold soldier thl year, and a largo crowd\nIrom all over thl and adjoining coun\nties are expected. Congressman Bore-lu- g\nand Judge George Denny have been\nInvited to make addresses and If tho\nLoot Cause Is represented Col. It. J.\nBreckinridge will bo asked to speak.\nThere aro same rod In this neck\n(and It said to bo worse in other parts\nof thu county i, who uro not pleased at\nall with tho act'on of tho republican\ncommittee of two or three men naming\nP H. Taylor, for representative, und\nmany of them vow, thul hu will never\ngo to Fruukfort by their votes. If tho\ndissension among tho republicans of\nItuseull Is un ihlng like that of Casey,\na good democrat could win. It Is In-\ndeed u pity that such men u the\nMessrs. Stones, cither J. Boylo, Geo.\nP.. or Brjunt, would not accept tho\nnomination. Hither could win. Tho\nrow still continue in tho g. o . p. In\nCusoy, and If tho democrats would only\ndo tholr part, era long sho will bo\nfound In tho demoaratlu column as of\ntho good old days of yore.
0e991b03342cb788a5e9cef8be67d4b8 THE YAKIMA HERALD ChronAm 1901.3520547628107 46.601557 -120.510842 The hearing disclosed facts showing\nthat Mr. Thomas was not criminally re-\nsponsible for the loss of the money.\nAlex. McAllister was the main witness\nfor the state. In a brief way he stated\nthe part he took in the formation of the\nplans for the company and admitted that\nit was the understanding when he paid\nthe $500 to Thomas, the treasurer of the\ncompany, that in return he was to re-\nceive ten shares of stock for the same.\nThomas had also paid in fIOOO, but the\nother stockholders had not yet paid in a\n•cent. This money was advanced by Mc-\nAllister and Thomas, as it was under-\nstood, to purchase machinery, etc., so as\nto facilitate the operation of the plant,\nantl that the equivalant for it was to he\npaid for in stock as soon as the stock-\n' holders should get together aud organize.\nMcAllister admitted these things, but\n, he did not admit that the money was to\nbe used in the purchase of material till\nafter theorganization had been perfected.\nMr. Thomas stated that it was the un-\nderstanding when he received the money\nfrom which was in the pres-\nence of Frazer Pollock, that the money\nwas to he applied in connection with his\n', own in the purchase of the machinery,\n[ nothing lieing said whether this should\n' be before or after the organization. So\n: accordingly orders had been placed for\n; the machinery, which were afterwards\nI recalled, and some machinery of an old\ncheese factory had been secured to be\nused in connection with the operation of\nthe plant, and with it all considerable\n! expense was incurred. But before any-\nI thing was finally settled about the or-\n! sanitation, trouble arose between the\n! members of the company, or in other\nI words they fell out, and so the whole\n. thing was blocked and work on the plant\njstopped. An attempt was made to effect\n• a settlement with Mr. McAllister. Mr.\nThomas offered to bear two-thirds of the\n, loss and pay over the balance in hand\n'if McAllister would hear one-third, but |\ni McAllister would not accept these terms\nand nothing came of it. Who it was\n. 'that used the money was not divulged\n:
24d24f458d33459bd4e585a9c3a92403 THE HARTFORD HERALD ChronAm 1875.187671201167 37.451159 -86.90916 stated. Johnston robbed the United Stales\nExpress Company in St. Louis some twelve\nyears ago, and for this served a six years\nterm In the penitentiary. Afterwards he\nbecame a pirate on the Mississippi, and\nJias committed many daring robberies.\nJohn Woods and Bill Johnson (colored),\nhis confederates, are in jail awaiting trial.\nAnastacio Moreno writes as follows from\nBio Grande City to Mr. Martin Van Mer-\nrick, of San Antonio: 1 went, to the Ran\ncho de la Grulla and had a good opportu\nnity to see the destruction and robberies\nthat were caused by the soldiers belonging\nto the command or Oen. Uatcli. I hey\nbroke open doors and trunks and stole ail\nthe money they found in them; they tore\nnpall tbeclothingof ladies and gentlemen.\nand broke furniture, etc On the 4th of\nthis month CFebniarO twelve nerro sol.\ndiers went to the fiancho de la Grulla,\nwhile Don Antonio "Villareal was at the\nRaocho, and several other persons, these\npersons having been requested that if any\nmore soiaiers went mere, to avoid an en-\ngagement, and that he (the Judge) would\nthen inform the General. So these twelve\nsoldiers broke open doors and stole all they\nwanted; then Don Antonio Villareal went\nto notify the General, but the General\npaid no attention to this, and said there\nwas an officer with the soldiers. The\nJudge is discontented with the General.-\nThe Baucho is entirely abandoned and\nnobody wants to come again for fear of the\nnegro soldiers. All the Kancneros are\nopposed to the proceedings of the military,\nTtliey have suffered too much. The Ban- -\nchos are being left desolate, and there is\nno hope of the General putting a stop to\nHUH.
1cddf58ba72fbeed2df237035db19dc9 THE DAILY MORNING ASTORIAN ChronAm 1885.23698626966 46.187885 -123.831256 yq like the- volunteer journalist\nfried if he is young, and boiled, if Ho\nis old but we like him. The good\npeople who lie awake nights devising\nplans to improvo their daily paper,\ndoubtless think they aro doing the\nworld a great service, and they are\nnot If a journal is not properly con-\nducted, the DUbllC will find it nni\nThe subscription list and advertising\npatronage will tell tho business man-\nager that something is wrong, and\ntho remedy will bo applied without\nontside assistance. There are few\npeople who would have tho impu-\ndence and enfrontery to stop a phys-\nician on his way to visit a patient,\nand tell that physician that he was\npursuing exactly the wrong course of\ntreatment, and would surely kill his\npatient. Nobody but lunatic would\ninterrupt a judge in the midst of his\ncharge to the jury and say: "See\nhere; you aro not giving those twelve\nmen the proper instructions; vou\nought to know better than thatl"\nPeople don't rush into a dry goods\nestablishment in breathless haste and\ntell the proprietor that ho made a\nmistake buying calico last week, and\nonght to wait until next week. Our\ngreat millers and manufacturers are\nnot besieged by a horde of wise idlera\nwho aro loaded to tho muzzlo with\ninformation about the proper time to\nbuy wheat, or the necessity of limit-\ning product until the demand in-\ncreases. They are allowed to attend\nto their own business, and if they do\nnot conduct it properly, decreased\npatronage warns them of their dan-\nger.
b8e0151b23dc6ebe67e1a5b71bb34e01 PORT-GIBSON HERALD ChronAm 1843.9904109271943 31.960991 -90.983994 ON Mouday the 15th of January next, an\nInstitution of loaming, of a high order, for\nthe education of young ladtes,'will be opened in\nthis place, Under the above title. Experienced\nand accomplished teachers will be procured in\nall the departments, and a regular course of in­\nstruction, thorough, systematic amt exact, will be\npursued. The best selection of text books will\nbe adopted, and when once established, will not\nbe changed without urgent reasons.\nA regular merit and demerit roll will be kept,\nexhibiting the progress and standing of each pu­\npil, an abstract of which will be forwarded\nmonthly to her parents or guardian.\nA strict and uncompromising discipline will\nbe enforced, yet tempered with kindness and\naffection, and no pupil will be received whose\nparents are unwilling to yield to this highly ne­\n and salutary regulation.\nWhile the general policy of the school will be\ndecidedly christi&n in its character, the young\nJadics.will be left free to enjoy their own predi­\nlections, and will be required to attend worship\nat such church as their parents may desire. No\nyoung lady boarding in the Institute will be al­\nlowed to contract accounts at the stores, pr\nleave the premises except by special permission\nor in company with a teacher.\nThe beautiful scenery and location of Port\nGibson, its excellent health and good society\ncombine to render it in all respects, one of the\nmost desirable situations'for a literary residence\nin the South West. And parents or guardians\nwho trust their daughters to this establishment\nmay feol perfectly assured that no pains will be\nspared, not only to promote their intellectual
2c1b084f4f7b161267915290546b2fef THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1876.8866119902348 40.063962 -80.720915 flour barrel rolled over the rowswill bring\nthem into subjection. In harvesting\npull and put six rows together, and let\nthemlieoutafewdaysor a week todry\nand ripen off, turning them over once\nwith a common wood rake. They may\nthen be housed in drv, airy bins, three or\nfour feet deep. His crops range from\n250 to 1,000 bushels per acre. To escape\nthe maggot, the modern curse of the\nonion grower, plant the seed an inch\ndeeper, but not exceeding two inches. To\nprevent smut, change the location. The\nspores of smut fungi are contagious,\nand may be carried by tools, or the\nwash of fields. Nice carrota retail\nfor $2 per_barrel^and the balance sell\nlor irotn 53 to $>uf per ion. xney are\ncapable of 35 tons per acre, 36 bushels\nto ton. Of the English flat turnip,\nhe said they should be sown in August\nnot later than the 20th, and for a second\ncrop, after grass, potatoes or pease.\nHeavy seeding makes much weeding.\nTo prevent their being corky, late in the\nseason, he would cut off the top and\nbottom smooth in harvesting and cover\nthem with sand and other material in the\ncellar. Of the Swedes, which, are of\nmore value and greater cost than the\nwhite turnip, he would sow about the\n25th of July, but never undertake two\nsuccessive crops on the same land, nor\nharvest in large piles. Of the carrot, he\ntaid the intermediate short top was the\nbeat variety, and yellow enough to tinge\nthe best Jersey butter. He would plow\nshallow, and manure as for onions.
38773a48a351b18d65c33bb8e6367fa7 NEW BRITAIN HERALD ChronAm 1916.821038219743 41.681744 -72.788147 entered a plea of not guilty. The two\ncars sideswiped each other at the\ncorner of Stanley and Allen streets.\nMr. Hatch's car ramming a telegraph\npole, snapping it off short and caus-\ning it to fall across another automo-\nbile owned by Mrs. Elsie Levy.\nSolomon Weisberg was. the first\nwitness and was able to throw but\nlittle light on the cause of the acci-\ndent. William Fehr, chauffeur' for\nGeorge M. Landers, testified to what\nhe knew of the collision and to a\nquestion from Mr. Hatch said he\nthought the accident, was an un-\navoidable one because of the oily road,\nwhich made the wheels of Mr.\nHatch's car skid. Mr. Hatch said he\nwas sitting in the tonneau of his ma-\nchine at the time of the and\ndid not think the speed was exces-\nsive. He said he did not think his car\nwas going as fast as thirty miles an\nhour, as he told the , police when\nquestioned at the scene. He said that\nat the brow of Stanley street hill,\nseveral hundred feet from the acci-\ndent, his chauffeur had told him\nthat the machine was hitting a thirty\nmile clip, but he had slowed down\nbefore the crash. Mr. Hatch placed\nthe blame for the accident on the slip-\npery condition of the road and the\nfact that Mrs. Parsons' car made a\nwide sweep in turning from Allen\ninto Stanley street. He said he did not\nthink either ohauffeur was directly to\nblame, although they did not use the\nbest Judgment possible.'
1cdc9085d888149f3ec572a25f29400c MORNING APPEAL ChronAm 1887.3109588723999 39.78373 -100.445882 Colusa. April 22. The Indian\nboy who was with the Sheriff's\npossee wiiett the Chinaman was\nkilled above Butte City, while in\nthe pursuit of Hong Dt, Mrs.\nUiiliouV murderer, was in Cvjuu\nlast night ai.d reports that the Chi!\nDese in thatsectiou have threatened\nto kill ten wliiie men lor every\nChinaman killed. He says that\nthey have been witching him like a\nhawk. Upon inquiry as t whether\nbe was prepared to meet them or\nnot, bes'ated that he was, and that\nunless they killer1 him at the first\nshot he would seud another one of\ntheir race to the happy land. It is\nsaid that heis a peacable, unaspu n-\name and unoffensive boy. bu that\nbe can shoot a pistol with perfect\naccuracy, having killed twelve tur-\nkeys without missing, at turkey\nshooting some time ago, wbea the\nparties in charge refused to allow\nhim to participate further.\nThe boy does not seem much\nalarmed over the threats of the\nMongols, although he believes that\n will kill him if ao opportunity\nis offered, thinking that ha was tbe\none who fired tbe fatal shot. Judg-\ning from the rumors afloat, thera\nmay be serious trouble in the Butte\nCity section within tbe next two\nweeks over this affair, and unless\ntbe Chinese desist in their lawless\nacts Colusa county will be a very\nunhealthy place for them. Tbe\ncitizens are now awakeued toa sense\nof duty, enraged as tbey are over\ntho brutal murder of Mrs. Billiou,\nthereby ruining tbe happiness of an\nentire family, and are prepared to\nact in a moments notice upon not\nonly tbe real perpetrator, but any\nwho attempt to screen the guilty\nfrom a just puuisbmeut. It is gene-\nrally believed that the Chinese are\nthe cause of Hong Di's escape; that\nhe his been aideu by them in every\nmove since his crossing the river,\nand when you ask a question of one\nof them about one of tbem about\nthe matter, the answer is certain to\nbe.
1150c6538fe46b45c5c6917621b110a0 COUNCIL BLUFFS BUGLE ChronAm 1862.9602739408929 41.262128 -95.861391 AN uRDNAKCB to TacaU aod abeliab part, of\nCk-rtain sueeti and itrsaU aad alley* inMr»,\nParry' • aa sition to tL« Gay of Ceaacll Btsfi,\n#«- . 1. BS It ortaiaae by the 'Common Council\nof the city of Council Bluffs, That all the streets and\nalleys in th*i portion af Mrs Perry't Addsti >a to\ntfce' ityof Cvoncii Bluff*, tituated ou the K H of\nthe 8 W li «f section No Tl cownuhip No. TS N\n»f ranxe Nn 44 we*t; and ai» SS acre* off the east\naide of th« w * of Uie said iw*ol **id »«*ion.\nbeinti tw.- nt> r ^l<" in width and jne haodred and\n*ixty rod* iti letiirtb, iN'Qiainm* in all .' lie h-iodred\nacre*, with tbe exceptios uf B.- >adway street which\nU to be and remain a public bUhwaj, witbrtt any\nclaim of da oi as frMn th» pretent o*n« A *aid\nreal estate ' r hit a«tign> from **id nty of Goueci!\nBluffs, for the a«e »&i right m! w*y 1<>r said street\na* now 1 *-ste<i on a»! tbrouiib wild premne* be and\nthe same arc bereb) **i.Ated and ib»!l;«hed.\nThe Strevt* and alley* h«r«er vacated *nd *bol-\nuh»d, being tho*e contained in th*t portion of\nsaid Addition e*«t of * line .1ae north from s point\ntso feet e*4t from the *ooib-we*t corner of s*id\nAiii'.ion *ad the stteeu or part* of ttrcels hereby\nvacated aad sbvlishtd beinit iiAmod. jB tbe Record\npilt or sail AdJitisn ** Br<rwn, Myn»t«r, P<rrr,\nPorf«t,Ci*y High Monad, Wetater. Jeasw»«Mi, aad\n0*ilujUQ »UMU\nSec. S . That the city of CourKiJ Bluff# brrfby re\nluxjoith ail claim* to the *treeu and alleys in tkat\nBortion of said Addition d**cribed in »ection one of\n.his ordiaiiwe (with tb- e*c*Dt»oa of Broadway\n»Ueetj ami that b*reatter ii ahali ba the duty of the\nproper i&sts»ors in m*»in«: *s»e»sment» iifiinst\n•ai! r»al HUte d«*cnb«d in leotior. one of thi* or-\ndinaace af •iue hianlrod acrw (or TaltiaUon and tax­\nation tu *aie.»» *a:d one bnndredacre* of l*cd "» ith-\noo» reord t. the recorded p!*t acknowledsedby Ad-\ne«»!? M B Perry and recorded ia the Recordar*\naSlce of Pntaa tttAmie county 1- wa, on sail prSSB-\ni*e* sajjl plat being hereby atooUahod, lie *aid\ncitrof C ui> a B. ifft retaining oaly tb* rUbt of\nway for Broadway street a* n»w tocatad Uiroogh\naald one hundred acres.\nApproved, May W, »SS».
1a881628db68ab1eba1e04268b9940ce THE COLUMBIAN ChronAm 1908.8647540667375 41.004121 -76.453816 No sooner had tho former "lea\nKing," and manipulator of tho funds\nof the National Bank of North Amer-\nica heard tho sentence than the con-\nfidence that had marked his manner\nthroughout the trial gave way to\ntears. In the moment of his deepest\nhumiliation and disgrace when the\nfact was forced In upon him that\nprison stripes awaited him, Morse\nwas unable to restrain his emotion\nand he wept In despair.\nThe popular approval of the out-\ncome of the trial was shown In tha\nscene In court. The crowd, which\nfilled every Inch of tho room, ap-\nplauded when sentence on Mr. Cur-\ntis was suspended. Whatever It may\nhave thought of the former bank\nPresident it had genuine sympathy\nfor his wife. No one could look at\nher, almost fainting from tho tor-\n of her position, yet bearing up\nto render what comfort she could be\nto her husband, without feeling\nthankful that the court had seen fit\nto show mercy in his case.\nThe crowd applauded again when\nit heard the fate of Morse. It had\nno sympathy for the man whose sys-\ntem of speculation had been laid\nbare and seemed to hold him largely\nresponsible for the panic of hist\nyear and tho suffering It Involved.\nMorse was Jeered when, two or\nthree hours later, he walked ucross\nCity Hall Squaro under guard to Cen-\ntre Street and the Tombs, and the\nlast words that fell on his ears from\nthe world of freedom as the iron\ngates of the prison clanged behind\nhim were the taunt:\n"How would you like to bo the\nIceman?"\n"
75b0924769cf6d1652860f3704515281 THE NEVADA DEMOCRAT ChronAm 1862.2479451737697 39.261561 -121.016059 the idea of wailing to be eaten up.\nW. W . Boyce, of South Carolina, sided\nwith Foote. He was for offensive warfare,\nand for holding on to all the slave States.\nHe referred to the boast of the rebel Secre-\ntary of War, Walker, on the fall of Sumter,\nthat within a month the Confederate flag\nwould be flying over Washington, and said,\nsubstantially, that, instead of alartuiug the\nNorth by this threat, the rebel conspirators\nshould have done the deed while talking\npeace. Boyce was l ight about this bragga-\ndocio of the rebel official, for the threat of\ncapturing Washington had more effect in\narousing the North than the bombardment\nof Sumter. The peace disguise was thrown\noff a little too soon.\nIn the course of the debate, Boyce nam-\ned Beauregard and Toombs us the two\nmen to form a plan of campaign. Foote\ndenounced the Secretaries of\nWar aud Navy, Benjamin and Mallory, and\n“intended to one day make developraeulB\nthat would astonish at least somebody,”\nfor he had “startling facts” which he in-\ntended to;bring to bear on the subject. He\ncontinued to denounce the defensive policy\nso long pursued by bis rebel Confederates,\nand advocated the policy of pushing the\nwar to Philadelphia, New York and Boston.\nTo pursue this plan, Mr. Jenkins, of Virgin-\nia, mildly suggested tbut the Confederate\narmy would have to be increased <o double\nits present numbers; but military champi-\nons like GiDeral Foote look with contempt\nupon such trifles as overwhelming numbers,\nartillery and resources on the side of the\nenemy. The Herald likens this violent\nconflict of opinion, as developed in the reb-\nel Congress, to the wrangling, disjointed,\nand disordered councils of the Jews, when\ntheir sacred city of Jerusalem was besieged\nby Titus.
15b4f634a4ac6d599263492136cb0f91 THE WHEELING DAILY INTELLIGENCER ChronAm 1881.2753424340435 40.063962 -80.720915 O'Donnell hag given details of the a1\nmpt on tlie Mansion House to person\nare. He says there wore six men engage\nthe plot. It wea decided that if the G<\ncion bill passed, vengence waa to b\nreaked somewhere. The Lord M aye\nas elected because lie, although hlmse\n1 Iriabman, waa a etrong advocate of ci\ncion, and voted for it. In tho hot wei\nne hundred pounds of giant powder, an\nle box waa bound with tho stronger\noop Iron. At the Egyptian Hail side\nte Mansion House, whore the altemi\nas made, there are three policemen o\nuard around the semi-circle, which\nlere formed by Qeorgo street and 8\nwithin's Lane. Kach olllcer patrols h\nost every four minutes. Coleman too\nle box under liia arm and walked cloi\neliind the officer until he came to a nicl\n tbe built-up window. Ooleman rapldl\nmvftvnri thn hnr tn thn ninho. rnanhir\nvit an Iron railing to do go, ami placir\npiece ol carpet on the base ol the nlcl\n) deaden the aonnd ol the box aa It fe\npon It. He then save the box an Inwai\nlant, so that the force of the concnsslo\nroald be directed inward, lie cut tl\nise ao aa to reach the powder In a mlnti\nnd a hall, or abont a mlnnte before tl\nollcetnan wonld have returned. Aa 1\nlit he met a woman and child. Oolomi\nlined his accomplices, who WAited foi\nlocks away for tha report. llut the w\nlan observed the fuse on flro, and tl\nollceman whom she summoned, cut\nrhsn about a couple of inobes from tt\nuwder and saved tho Mansion House.\nxscAri or tui conspirators.
0006c7f3148e581e04ad109f504c8d59 THE TRUE NORTHERNER ChronAm 1892.8183059793057 42.217817 -85.891125 late production In the colonies. The men who\nwrote in the cabin of tho Mayflower the first\ncharter of freedom, a government of just and\nequal laws, were a little band of protectants\nagainst every form of Injustice and tyranny.\nThe leaven of their principles made possible\nthe Declaration of Independence, liberated the\nslaves, and founded the free commonwealths\nwhich form the Kepubilc of the United States.\nThe scopo and limitations of this idea of\nfreedom havo neither been misinterpreted nor\nmisunderstood. The laws of nature In theic\napplication to the rise and recognition of men\naccording to their mental, moral, spiritual and\nphvslcal endowments are left undisturbed.\nThe sum of human happiness has been Infin-\nitely increased by the millions from the old\nworld who have improved their conditions in\ntiro new. and the returning tide of lesson and\nexperienco has Incalculably enriched tho\nFatherland. The divine right of kings ha\ntaken its place with instruments of medi-\naeval torture among the curiosities of thi\nantiquary. Only the shadow of kingly au-\nthority Btands between the Government of\nthemselves, by themselves, and tho people of\nNorway and Sweden. The union in ono emplro\nof states of Germany Is the symbol of Teutonio\npower and the hope of German liberalism. The\npetty despotisms of Italy have been merged\ninto a nationality which has centralized It\nauthority in Its auclsnt capitol on tho hills of\nHome. France was ruddy roused from the\nsullen submission of centuries to intolerable\ntyranny by her soldiers returning from service\nIn the American revolution. The wild orgies\nof the reign of terror wero tho revenges and\nexcesses of a people who had discovered their\npower, but were not prepared for its beneficent\nuse. Sho fled from herself Into the arms\nof Napo!eon. He, too, was a product\nof tho Amerlecn experiment. He played\nwith kings as with toys,
3ba55599d45f9399f0a481cad870f898 EVENING JOURNAL ChronAm 1908.4030054328578 39.745947 -75.546589 society, so fresh from the Intermed­\niate ranks, seems to be doing nicely,\nand are planning to take their usual\nDecoration Day picnic on next Satur­\nday at Shellpot Park.\nThe C. E. Society of Delaware\nAvenue Baptist Church held a meeting\nut the Sunday Breakfast Mission on\nlast Thursday evening, led by their\npastor. These meetings are always ap­\npreciated by the men. A number of\ntheir Endeavorers also hold their usual\nservice at the Delaware Hospital on\nthe fourth Sunday of the month, which\nIs found to be very helpful both to the\nvisiting and the visited ones.\nThe Eastlake Presbyterian Endeav­\norers arc planning a social to be held\nat their church on next Friday even­\ning. Under the leadership of their\nhustling young president, Mr. Clifford\nSinclair, this society has held most\nsuccessful socials, and it is expected\nthat this one will be no exception U\nthe rule. A cordial invitation Is ex\ntended to members of other C. E\nsocieties to attend.\nState Union Doings.\nThe executive committee held their\nannual spring meeting last Monday\nafternoon at 3 o'clock In the Presby­\nterian Church at Milford. The follow­\ning were elected to fill vacancies on\nthe committee: The Rev. Clayboumo\nPhillips of Dover was elected vice-\npresident from the M. P In\nplace of Rev. F . H. Mulllneanx. The\nRev. S. J. Cleland of Dover was elected\ndirector In place of Rev. B. W. Kind-\nley. Mr. George O. Pennys resignation\nas transportation manager was accept­\ned and Charles F. Eastman of Wil­\nmington was elected to the office.\nReports were heard from the district\nrallies held last February. It was de\nelded to let the presidents of the dis­\ntrict unions take the places of the\ndistrict secretaries of Ihe State Union\nA committee, composed of Rev. W\nP. Roberts. Howard Johnson, Samuel\nEvans, Rev. Arthur Rlrards. Miss\nAnna B. Ellison and Miss Mary H.\nEastman, was appointed to arrange\nthe program and set the date for our\nState Convention to be held in Wil­\nmington next October.\nThe Rev. Arthur Ricarda suggested\nholding a Christian Endeavor Day at\nRehoboth sometime this summer. Rov.\nH. O . Keen. Samuel H. Reed and\nAlexander M. Daly wore appointed a\ncommittee to consider the matter and\nmake arrangements for the same If It\nwas considered feasible.\nIn the evening a reception was heb!\nfollowed by a rally. The president of\nthe local society. Miss Stidham, after\ndevotional exercises. Introduced Slate\nPresident Roberts, who then presldeq\nand Introduced the speakers of the\nevening. An excellent address was de-